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Part of The Circle: Vol. 18 No. 4 - October 7, 1976

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THE
.
.
CI-RCLE
YOI.UME
18, NUMBER
4
.
MARIST COLLEGE, PO,UGIIKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
.
12601
OCTOBER
1,
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PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 7. 1976
College- Curriculum
'
To Be
Studzed
-·Alumni
Celebrate
By
Maureen
Tully
By Jim Birdas
/
help th_em develop the ability to · · Homecoming 1976 was the
deal with the value issue. and to highlight here la-st weekend.
Marist College -has been assist students in developing Alumni from one to 15 . years
granted $3,645 from the_ National basic skills.
·
,
-.
ago gathered · together _ to
Endowment Committee for the
Dr. Zucarerro pointed out that celebrate Alumni Weekend.
Humanities to study the college's the study which began a .year
- The weekend started
with-
an
current curriculum. This grant ago, · has had students in- alumni executive board meeting
was secured by Dr.
Louis
C. volvement since the beginning. followed by a cocktail hour,
Zuccarello, Academic Dean and "The students who were taken Alumni Recognition and Awards
Dr.· Edwa~ O'Keefe, chairman from the student Academic Banquet and the Oktoberfest
&
of the Academic Affairs Com-
·
Committee have given us some concert. ·
·
rnittee.
good ideas," said Dr. Zuccarello.
Four awards were given out-at
· The mon~ will help "to assist
John Orr, Associate Professor the Recognition Banquet. Three
us in t_he introduction of a core of Religious studies and head of awards were given
to
the three
curriculum" said Dr. Zuccarello. _the School of Religion at the most·successful alwnni for their
The_ college is evaluating· its University
of
Southern - outstanding achiev~ment since
present curriculum and plans to _ California, and also a consultant leaving Marist. Another une_x-
•edesign its general education. for the National Endowment for pected award was given, to Dr.
fhis however does not include Humanities, said, "I was im-
.
.
_.,
'
George Sommer for 25 years of weekend thus far, the alumni
continuous service
to
Marist. Dr. dinner dance gave the day a
Sommer, an English professor touch of formality.
Cocktails
and
began teaching here part-time on dinner were the final events
September 29~
·1951
and has which ended a day full of ac-
continued his dedication to · tivities.
teaching literature ever sine~.
Sunday morning, a brunch was
. On Saturday there were held in the new dining room. The
various events which started with weekend was ·completed by
a 1966 Reunion Breakfast, giving tours of the new facilities
followed by many other· ac-
of the·campus.
tivities. Some of these included a
·· When asked how she liked. the
soccer game, an alumni crew weekend a 1975 .graduate who
race, a football game and _fl t?µr didn't want to be identified said,
of the Mccann Recreation "it was a lot·of fun." "The -0nly
Center. The soccer and football thing I would liked to have seen
-teams
put on a good show for the was a cocktail party for alumni
alumni- by winning both their and seniors since these are the
gaines.
people the alumni know.~•
With the casualness of · the
electives, added_ Dr._ Zuccarello. pressed by the rather creative
The major goals of the study, manner in which Marist is at-
according to Dr, Zuccarello are; tempting to create ·a core that
"to provide breath for the integrates thematic approaches
students academic experience, to to the general education."
Scienc(j Major~
Maf
Bet.·B.S.
/
.
.
-
Still-Unde-i-waY
:By
Wanda Glenn
recognized Ba~helor of· Science requirements.
program, but they need your YES
Two weeks from riow in their _
Here is a chance for s-cience
vote.
. classes, science majors wm··be ,
majors to gain a Bachelor , of · . A Bachelor of science, degr~e handed yes or no vote ballots on
_Science degree while at Marist.
would require 90 · science, .30 ·this issue.
··
..
-
·
As a science major on.e may liberal arts credits, as ·compared _ . ·
If you don't get one in class,
qualify or come close to to 60 science,· 60,. liberal arts· contact.:the · Sigma·
Zeta
Honor.
qualifying' for a B.S. by taking credits for a Bachelor of Arts ~Society'. ' :
-'
.· ·· ·
:
more science courses a BS · d~gree,,defined by N.Y. State. .
For further .. information con-
degree could -be in. range,
.
The jobs at hand for · the . tact Ginpy · Neilson-· - Gregory
Those who want nothing more committee ~re: .
' . .
.
House Rm. 203 {ir Diane Potter .; •
·thanaBachelorofArtsin science
1. To:seek·the advantages and Gregory House.Rm. 105.
By
Fran Hurley
of Marist.
It
is·
the. financial would still have that option.
disadvantages of
✓a
BS degree ' .Student support is needed. The
A committee of three science·· progi:_am .. _
.. - -
· _
_.
.
_ cormnittee iswillingto get belµnd
.
support; the spirit, and Jhe
in-
tea h
f m th s·gma
Zeta
2
~
tat
d d
r
hat
ff
r
t · f
f
What has become of .Goal '76,· terest -_of these people which has_
· c ers · ro
e 1
. ' "· · ···
0
s
e an
e mew
are your a irma ive
VC\
e m avor o_.
Honor Society, JJr. Bettencourt, · science and what ar,e liberal arts a Bachelor of Science program
· the development program _ to-,made Goal '76 such a success. · Dr .
.
Michelson and Dr. Perrotte courses. Come up with a· 90-30 for·Marist.
-
/. provide new· 1~arning resources . "Fund raising
is
a tremE!ndous are willing to push for a state schedule
to
meet . state
and improved facilities on the organization problem. You need.
·
·
-
.,
OVJ~i~~~i,~~:first phase·ofa
~~g~riiz~e~~~c=ll~~r~~~
lnte ....
-Ho··•-:-·use· -
co·

nc1··1.
*I·e'
ct-ed· -·
.
$15,000,000 capital' campaign Development Director Thomas
.
.I.;
n-
·
kicked-off with the spirit and goal . Wade.
_
_
. .
,
.
'. , .
._
, ,
. . .
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. •.• •
... ··· . ofmeetingurgentandlongrange
. Wade-continu~dto say;uu is . .
.
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support the . necessities of a . Goal '76 _is -~ one ·-year period
Champagnat, Leo and Sheah~n
~
and Peter McFadde~ along with- J1as b~en allot~d ~o thei_r do_rm for
strong academh.: program· was ending
.
April 22, _1977. It -is . a Halls have set up house councils· C_rane. : Tl_le,
third_ ... floor . ·th~ y~ar. Th~y
will
be fl~~tmg-~he
among the immediate needs.
., program of the M~rist College - for the 1976-~7 school ye_ar. The representatives are _
Kathy pnnc1ple, ,-.the adm1mstration
A recreation center to serve Development Office designed to house council deals with any Murphy; . Beth Weaver and . _cannot step on the students
both the phys1cal education and attain a financial ·objective' of prob~ems the~e dorm~ feel should Marilyn· M~Donough. The. th_eme ri~hts.>' The _
12 . represe~tativ_es
recreation nr;eds of the students $4 170 000. But the idea behind be given their attention..
__
of Sheahan s house ·council is to :wlll be workmg on gettmg t_he
was another necessity for the . Gqal ~76 goes far into the next
Champag~at ·will . have -~ix_
"get mefilbers of .the.-house -in-
leak !n_th~ roof of"Stone Lo1!-Jlge
expanding campus population. decade.
·
. representatives along wi_th: volv~d ;,in _
h_ouse a!ld ca~pus repaired. ~he representat~v~s-
More academic space_ for
"If
people believe in what" you housemaster Peter _:Amato on its affctn:s._ • _The COll}DUttee will_ be are R.C. MiKe Nuge!lt who_ 1s in
classrooms, faculty offices, the are doing, they'll support you all staff. Th~re will·· be
·
one d1v1de9 _into: three c~tegori~s. 9harge of t~e meetm~s. Oth~rs
music :md art departments, the the way," Wade said.
represen_tative from. each ~ouse These--win be academic
1
social mclude G_mo . ~artmo, . Jim
audio-,,isual - i.elevision center
. In three days, $4,000 of the along with one R.A .. (Resident · and cultural .· and athletic; The, Desmond, Jay Laria, Mel Cr1lley;
and the computer center is still proposed $10 000 fodhe students Advisor) and one R.C. (Resident house council will~eet every two Guy Greco, Karen Muckenfuss,
another se1ious need.
_-
goal, was 'pledged.
·
Coordinator_). Elections_ for ~he
weeks in !he. Shea~an lo!1"ge. , · Nona Petioni, Mary Vitale, Kat?y
.. w~ere, howe~er, is this money
The pool area should be representatives are ~till being
The_m9:in iss,~e in ~o s_ hous~ Forrester, John Boylap, and Tim
.coming from m
.
order for the available in second _ semester, held. Amato would hke to see councll_will be..- st_upen~ rights.
Whelan.
.:
·
individual goals to be ·met?
however, the complete tomplex s_ome changes ma_de .. ~~-.would .. They wi}l.
be
dealing with;-the-$5·
Goal '76 is a cooperative will riot be· available untiLSep-
like to ~ee Champagn~t a really . key ?eposit, the cpntroversy over
volunt€"er
effort dnvolving tember of '77.
~etter place,~o st~dy. He ~ould
trustees, ,alumni,
parents,
The McCann Foundation has like to see quality educational
studer.ts. employees and -friends granted a gift of
$750,000 and has . progr~ms set· up.)' Amato _would
,Key Case
Stagnat~s
By
Pat Larkin
extended •a challenge grant · of _also like to get mvolved with the
$500,000. The complex is being . other dorms. · , .
..,
named in honor of ·James
J.
S,heahan
wlll_ . have nine_
Mccann, the benefactor of the
r e
P r es e n t a t iv e
~
.P
l u s,
By SherrySmith ,
· 28 for· bunk beds
for
students in
Mccann Foundation. Plans for
ho~semaster Greg Kil~ariff on ·,
two and three-room 'suites. _ -
the dedication ceremony are the~r staff. T?m Crane
w~
be th~
Comme.nting on the invasion of
"To the best of my- knowledge;
presently underway.
chauman f?r- the. council. -Qther
privacy in students' rooms in
niy resident· staff _
:were notified;
--'----·
i:epresentatives mclude Glenn
Champagnat Hall, Mr. -· Peter the majority of people knew that "
Milner; Jim Koob, and Joe
Amato, Residence Director of we were searching-for bunkbeds
'
, · .
..C-b.ampagnat HaU state!!: "My· that day, We obtained permission
understanding is that
if
prior from· eighty .· percent~ .of . the
-
noti<:e.is.given, I have a right to resident students.. For the
I _
· · .· -
see1.: ou~. ~allege property: .we- r~mainmg rqoms; • we _ simply
s s U-es.
wer~ tq,l;Ilg to ass~ss the ov~r9:~--,.;.open~d the_ door_ and lo"oked_in."
·
.
·
-
availability of _burikbe_ds within'_·
In conJunction .. with . the
' ··
. . .
,
. ·
~e dgrin• for the conyenience' of maintenance staff, we
a_I"~
trying
"Nothing has changed. I don't
see . any change . at all,,, This is
what Dean Perez said as he spoke
about the
$5
··key deposit .:con-
By
Adrienne Howard
Dean Antonio, Perez to -cease.--;,
troversy.
··
· ,
Green feels that the receritly
. students who w~r~
m
need of to,develop an. overall proposal of
bunk beds, . particularly those · what should be in the rooms in the
students in suites; First priority future, what students
need:.
and
. for bunk beds is given to students how
·
: these · needs <can · be mor.e
wiU~ ~tiitei,,"
· ,. _ _ -
. · .· · adequately. fulfilled. in. ihe
Dean Waters is · backing up
"The Student Governmentwill hired Dean of St.udents should
Perez. He says the 'two · students back the students of Marist construct a· cohesive relationship
challenging the key deposit, Mel · College in every way" possibl~, with the student body. ·
·
Crilley and Guy. Greco, will have
judicially,
financially
a_nd
.''We feel thaUSeo Deli should
to bring their appeals · t:o
physically, with
_
all the strength . be :owned arid operated by John
·President Foy.
·
that if has.!'..
'
· :,
Blue and Valerie Bellarosa. The
. Crilley. and Greco already have
Andre-.-·-.·. ·creeii,
· Studehf equipment; plus the . fact that '
ari·.appointment with :Foy.
·
It is Government President at Marist there,, is no written policy.
Alf
roo~s we_re check~d. Sept..' future."
-"..
·
··
- scheduled for·october
18.
If Foy said this. regarding ·the, con- · prohibiting -the, ownership of
turns down their appeal, · Qrmey tro'versies of, 'l'fie operation of the
business functions by students of
says .. we•u-_have to ~o
to·
court;'! 'Deli, the recent ~ction taken by
I
this campus:, These' !ss·ues' are -·
1
.Congratulations go to Kevin and Donna Ca~olan on the birth of thei~
'l'here seems to:
be
a lack. of ; students over ,the
·
key deposits, _ crucial, .and judging from .the first child; Sean\Joseph.
Sean
was born at 9:31 a;ni; ori November
communication· .between · Per,_-ez ('and :the' size. limitatioris\'of · response,.support_and petiti9nirig -. · third. ·
, ; .
·
\
·
::_
SD?
tl.l~
stµde~ts, ·. ~c~9rd_ing ,.t~ ·: C81JlpUS re~rigerators/
'
now e_,c~ .,:
of~~~
t_hree rnatters_of con~ern,
.r'. ·
Cnlleyand.Greco
-
becal!:s~,Perez:. tended and .• ·effective\ next> the students
.
are,behin<l us;·and ;." ..
.
/ _ .
. . -
. .
.
·c_ ._ -._'
.··-'. · ' ·
..... -~ever :gave""'~the~ ;a:\·'Y~ittei,· .• sernester· .
.l;''It'.s'!:tiine
for
.
:theiill~ '. >,we.~ill gotc:, cCluit
if
we
.
haye,.to!'' . : Congratulations a~o go 0llt to_.Dr.--:Llnus and_Mari Foy on the _birth·
.. responsf to•
i,te,ir
fi~st
.
~pp~l\·_'./ .
f
Qti~g~d
policr/1etefrninatio~s
~f, · ' :
·<,, ..
··<-: ( '
·
. . · : -. -
-
./. '.,
of_thei(seco~~ chil_d, ~ri~get Jtfor,ley, w~o .was born
cin
September
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,.,,,.
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:
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OCTOBER
7,
1976
·
Free Classes
By Carmen
Rivera
of the students.
The four major concerns of the
Free University? • what
is
it?
program deal with the following
The ideal school! The opportunity
I
activities:
for students and faculty to move
1. Academic Quarterly •
·
which
into areas which can't
be
covered is a collection of outstanding
·
in the.'<:lassroom for some reason scholarly work in the form
·
of
or another. Free·.;. without cost
to
term papers done by students and
participants. No grades
.
or faculty members. Dr. Sommers
hcmework. You get out of it what is the
·
faculty advisor for the
you want; what you feel is Quarterly
.
-
beneficia! for you.
2 .. Lecture Series
-this
gives the
Free University is run through faculty a chance
to
try out new
Gregory House; Jim Honan, materials and cover areas they
Resident Coordinator·of Gregory wouldn't cover in a classroom.
House, works closely with Bob
..
3. Dialogues - open form
Griffin, the Programs Director discussions about campus issues.
·
for Free University. ~onan and
Jt-·
gives students
'
and faculty the
.
Griffin cannot successfully run chance to come into direct
th~ program without the supPQrt
. ·
·
Continued on page
7.
SUPERSA VINGS ON Ali.
·vouR LIQUOR-NEEDS
.

411.
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BLEND ....... .
··.
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VODKA 80° ....
_
39.9
GIN·9G' ..
II • • • •
·

459
BOURBON 86° .

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.


COMPARABLE
SAVINGS •
.
.
ON
1
2 GALLONS'
.•
.
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o
·
T.
·
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·
·
H
·
aso
.
·
5
.
19
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5

.• :
_
AS
HYDE PARK MALL - AT. 9
(NHI
lo Shoprite)
Are you independent, c~eative, flexible,
dedicated to God-and
w.ondering what to do
with

your
life?
/
.Join-Father
Bruce-a Paulist Father ...
~
-
.
Father Bruce doesn't let his idealism
go
to waste ... or his love of God
remain
·abstract:
He's a doer
-
not just a
·
dreamer. A man on
._
the
move:.,..from his P~ulist parish in downtown Manhattan over
.
to The
_
·
·
·
Juillard School of Music to talk
10
the
students:
across
to
Roosevelt
,
Hospital to con~ole the sick: d
·
own to the
.
Tombs to visit the im-
.
·
prisoned. You
'
ll see him running wilh his guitar
.
to meet his youth
group (numbering over
.
100!) for pH.,yer and recreation; or to conduct
_
a longer retreat with teenagers and you
·
ns adults
;
.
'
·
What rriothiates this young Paulis! Father? His convicliori.that
people
·
can
-
·
encounter
.
God
.
today:...no
·
matter what their ethnic'
:
group, economic class. or living environment ....
Father Bruce Joined the Paulists because h~ saw in them a
·
1
·
unique chance to use all his talents in a free and. creative way. But he
did not wanl to work alone
:
tfe wanted
·
a community; a fellowship of
·
·
Catholic priests all committed to
.
speaking the Gospel message in the
many different idioms
.
and In the many different ways ii lakes to trans-
form our society.
·
·

.

·
~:
. .
'
· :
·eoastto
coast, the Paulists scope
is
broad-from Manhattan 1
.
o
GreensborQ10 Houston to Los Angeles to Fairbanks. And so are their
·techniques-parish work, preachlng
;
adult educaiion, campus min-
.
·
.
istry, publishing
_
,.
mass communications.
.
·
.
·
·
The
joy
and inner satisfaction Father Bruce expuiences as
·
a ,
.
Paulis
I
can also be yours.
·
His
·
unique gihs permit his personal
·
con-
·-
·
1,lbutioniFind out whal your unique gihs can conlribtile
.'
Discover
.
our conim,nily. Turn your dreams into reality:
·
_
.
-
_
,
.
.
fill
out tht
·
cou~n ~dow for ~ort- l~forma~lon abo~t thr PauU,1:
.
_ _
.
Dear
Fa1he
·
r De$iano:
.
Please send me more information on the work
of the Paulasts and the Paulist Pc!esthood
;
.
Rev. Frank OeSiano.c.S
.
P
. ..
·
·
> ·
·
.
Director of Vociiiions NAME
·
·
:c_
· .
- - -
.
- -
.
- ' -
_
- : . . . . . . - - - - - - - - -
PAUllST fA!"'ER~
STIIEET
ADDRESS-
·
:...
·'
: . . . . . . - - - - - - . - - , - - -
.
Depl.
A
14'
·.
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. _
4l5
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Wui59thSrreet
C I T Y - - - - - - - - , -
STATE--
·
ZIP-
..
New
York, N.Y.
·
_
10019
·
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qJLI.£GEATTENDING-----,--,..-~-
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CLAsso
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F - - - - - - - - ' - - - -
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THE CIRCLE
PAGEJ
Theater News
Bor8k Named Direc.tor
By
Elaine Brusoe
The reason I came to
Marist
"hinges around
why we chose
this
.
play."
says
Mr.
Jeffrey
Borak, the new
Marist Theatre
Guild director.
Mouse Trap
"is
different from plays Theatre
Guild has normally mounted."
says the arts.reporter and drama
critic of the Poughkeepsie
Journal. He considers· it to
be
· "better and more ambitious"
production.
·
.
.
"The orientation of the
Marist
dra.ina
program
·
is
not
professional," he said. "The kids
are obviously interested in
theatre but not seriously con-
sidering theatre as a career,."
Mr. Borak
·
feels that Marist
theatre experience should be
. "challenging
but
not
frustrating." He
.
says that the
Theatre Guild has done plays that
·were worth doing but were ex-
traordinarily
demanding.
Students "could be frustrated if
they don. 'thave the experience it
demands."
Mr. Borak
.
said that it is
·
"important
to choose plays that
will
entertain the audience."
"Mouse Trap is not a haphazard
mystery. There are eight
dif-
ferent characters .:.. each very
clear and distinct and each
propose different problems for
the actors." He feels that
this
·
play "is within the reach of
Marist people." He says "they
can handle it and have fun doing
it at the same time."
Mr. Borak, who worked in a
university
_
in Ethiopia while in
the Peace Corps and as a teacher
'in
Hyde Park for a year says he
is
looking forward to working with
college people again. "I haven't
done it in a long time and
it's
a
kind of contract that I'm looking
forward to making again. I hope
it will
be
a. good, fun experience
for all of us./' he said. "I am
looking forward to learning as
much from them as I hope they
can learn from me."
·Who
'II
,
·
Be
Doing
It
By Cynthia Fairbanks
·
student
.
·
The play will be
pre
·
sented
November
flth
Celebrating its 23rd year of through 13th at 8:00 P.M. with a
continuous run; The Mousetrap, matinee on November 14th.
by Agatha Christie will be
A murder mystery,. the plot
produced by the Theater Guild at evolves around a newly married
·
Marist College this fall. The play couple that run a guesthouse, and
·
was originally performed on its first five guests. Before
the
·
November 25, 1952 in London and play's action a murder has been
bas been staged by professional committe
·
d. A notebook con-
.
as
well as amateur companies taining two addresses-is
the
only
ever since.
·
.
·
clue, one address is the victim's,
.
Jeffrey Borak
·
will
.
direct,
.'
the other is
.
the
,
guesthouse. A
assisted by Maria Mellilli a detective
arrives
at
the
guesthouse believing another
murder will be committed. These
eight people are isolated together
when a v,iolent blizzard cuts them
off from the outside world.
The cast includes Barbara
Cherelle as Mollie Ralston; Kent
McHale as her husband, Giles;
Christopher Faille as Christopher
Wren; Regina Clarkin a,s Mrs.
Boyle; Kevin Stack, Major
Metcalf; Maureen Crowe, Miss
Casewell;aand
Shafig
Fathealam, as Mr. Paravicini.
.
:
.
.
.
tOiiStitUtiO,i
Dkii,Yed.
~
.
By
l,,am
Striegel
.
.
The
.
executive board of the
Commuter Union adopted a
.
new
constitutioi1 yesterday, which has.
been under construction for about
eight months.
·
.
Last year-the Commuter Union
(C.U.) operated without a con-
.
stitution; former President John
Woodin set up a committee to
construct a new document to
govern the
·
organization:
.
·
In order for the constitution to
be passed, at least ten percent of
the commuters must sign
petitions during the next two
weeks, approving the document.
"I expect it to be passed," said
acting President Jim DeFelice.
Should any student oppose the
constitution, he;
will
have an
extra week to get ten percent of
the commuters to sign a petition
rejecting it.
If
it is rejected, a
referendum will
be
held to settle
·
.
the issue, DeFelice said .
The new constitution resembles
the procedures which the C.U.
. has used
.
in the
past. "It's
basically
_
what had been followed,
but there are some
.
major
:
dif-
ferences," he said.
·
·
The
·
major disagreement in
adopting the constitution was a
provision giving
·
the president
two votes as opposed to one by
the
treasurer, lstvice-president, and
the 2nd vice-pres
'
ident.
represent students from the
commuting area
.
Also,
the
office
of second vice-president has been
created to replace the secretary
who presently retains a vote
while being the only member of
the board to receive a salary. The
newly elected second vice-
president will have a vote while
the secretary will perform
regular duties and collect work-
study money.
"There are two reasons why
the president should have two
votes," said

DeFelice. "The first
and probably the most important
is to break
.
ties. SecondJy, I think
it puts
·
down to reality the
~
DeFelice, wh~
is
not planning
philosophy behind what the to run
_
for electi~n due to otl_Ier
president is. 1 don't think the comnutments, said he would ~ike
president could be a dictator by • to see
.
the status of the C.U. un-
having two votes
.
"
prove~. "It's very a~biguous."
Jiowever, vice:president Sue He said
he
would li~e to_ see
Van
.
Parys was opposed. "I student government give bun a
realize why we need a tie vote of confidence. "I tf}ink the
breaker. But the president has student government views us as a
power by name and would only
-
club. But we're a representative
need one person on his side to body.'.'
·
.
make the vote three against two.
Resident students will also be
There should be some other way allowed to join the C.U. "Some of
to do it. But I won't prevent the the aims of the C.U. are not only
constitution from being passed " to represent commuters,
.
but
she said.
·
'
students in general," DeFelice
Under the new
,
procedures, an said.
advisory board of volunteers will
.WMCR
To Begin
.Broadcasts
By Phil
Colangelo
yet," said Capozzi.-
"The
·
materials
-
have been .ordered
.
The campus station, WMCR, however, but we have
·
to wait
which suffered

severe
-
losses since the United Parcel-Service
is
from a robbery this summer;will on strike."
open the week of October
.
18th
The station will open even if the
according to the station's general materials are not received on
,
Illaiiager Vin Capp~i.
time, but
.
there
will
be some
·
.The losses included two match problems.
·
"A
,
lot of .people
· coupling· units, two
~,n
,
the air complained of a hum
i!t
'.
Cham;.
lights, two power splitters, a reel pagnat last
.
year. The materials
of cable and 15-20 record albums. that
·
were stolen would have
The losses total
'
$422.20.
.
taken
care
of this, but until they
··
·
"The security department has are replaced there
will
still
be a
not informed us o( any recovery·
·
hum
."
Also Sheahan Hall
will
not
be hooked up until the equipment
is replaced.''
The station
is
waiting for an
allocation from
·
.
the financial
board to cover the losses. "We
,
haven't'had our hearing yet; but
we put in for it," said Capozzi.
In
·.
addition to Capozzi the
station
will
be
run by Ed Mulvey,
technical advisor; Julie Schott,
station
.
man~ger;
Brian
O'Connor, operation director;
and Tom Hudak, program
director.
··
·
'
,..

•.
'

..
•.
•.
·•
''. ' • >.-•
·
..
,
....
.
.
.
.
'.
,
.
-
l
.
i
I



































































































































































































































































PAGE4
.

THE CIRCLE
The Maris! College CIRCLE
i
s the weekly newsp0per of the stUdents Of Marlst
COiiege and is Pl.lbliShe<S throvo11ou1 !he $Ch0ol year excl11$lve
ot
vaca
!
lon perJO<ls
by the Southern DutchHS News 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 Lark.i.ri, Kevin Stack, Maurreen
Tu~y, Wendy Stark,
-
Jim Birdas, Elaine Brusoe, Sherry
·
~nth, Regina Clarkin, Andrienne Howard, Alison Hickey,
.
Lisa McCue, Cathy Ryan, Wanda Glen, Robert Morley,
Carmen Rivera, Bill Mc Loughlin, Edward DeLlse
,
David Ng,
Tom Hillan, Andrea Anthony; Phil Colangelo.
--
·
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 7, 1976
interest, but it is of the interest of Resident Student; rather
.
ihan
.
the entire Marist Community.
·
benefittmg
just
Leo Hall, and the
To the Editor:
Therefore, the present issues students thereof.
.
.
.,
·
.
What exacUy are the values on are not only concerned with
·
If
we--as students view these
·
which the Marist College student personal rights, but with com-
·
consid~rations
·
fro~
.
the
body are basing their arguments, munity rights.
··
.
viewpomt of.personal nghts,

We
·
in rebelling so vociferously
·
We
must
realize that there are
will
realize, that the greatel;" the
against recent administrative certain fac1s which
·
exist, with
.
~onside~tion. we give
·
to
_
~e
decisions?
~
The one value which which we must
be
aware,
if
we
commuruty_ng~ts;the greater.IS
should be held foremost in tbe
-
are to discuss the various issues the protection of
0!11"
-
own per-
minds of
aiI
conce~ed,
is
that of
.
of Keys, Refrigerators
·
and
·
the sonal ri~hts to.maxunum return
, understahding both sides of an Deµ.
·
·
·
· for ou_r._ mves
,
tments.
.
.
.
.
.
issue
_
before taking a stand. Has ITEM
.
,
.
,
.
.
In light of
what
eVIdence
.
_has
.
anyone stopped
t(?
consider tbe.
1.r
Ove~
150
room keys
'
and been presented ~ere,
..
:1:
~ould
circumsta
,
n.ces
·
and reasoning
.
over 10 master key~ were ~ot advocate a reconsi~E:raµonby aµ
which
.
lie at
,
the base of recent returned
,
at the end 9f .last stud~yi of _the IDE:~ts ~f
_.

rec~nt
decisions
_
concerning
such
_
semester;
.
,
~
-
'
.
-
.
.
ad.niil}IStl'ativ~ ~ec1Sions as
,
they
·.
exaggerated issues as
:
K,ey CONSEQUENC~
·
.
·.
.
p e ~ to the
ri~b;
of the J~~l
Deposits, Refrigerator
·
Size and
·

.
a.) A total stranger
.
cow,d
,
be
·
M~~
,
comJ!11µuty.
_
1f
:
the
:
.
m-
the opening of the
·
Leo
·
Deli?
.
.
holding a key
.
that will fitthe lock
:
stitution of: ~
-
e po~cies se~ f~rth
The
.
most
·
loudly
.
voiced in your ro.om.
··
.
·
-
.
·
···
.
•.
,
~Y ~e aclmfuist:l;~tion
;
can r.es.utt
-::
1-------------------------.;...----1
arguments which
.
:
oppose
·
these
.
.
·
b.)
An
amount in excess of
$350

JD
grea_~r
;
secunty
:
-::fQt:
;
~~~m~
:
decisions
,
seem
to
"
be
based
'
on
.
of::
--
your money
.
-
.
was spent
.
to
.
,
.mil,
the4"
:
prop~rfy
/
<
C!lll
_.
.
:
saye

the premise

thatpersonal rights change locks;
-
rei>:face_~keys, and
·:
mQney
.
on
:
repair
:
c~ts
:
~«!
:.
ker
,
·
are in~olved.
:
Let's examine tbe to
:
pay
·
1abor wages for .
.
these
·
·
replac;elll~t, ~d·
.
C8J.1
:
lea<tto
'.:
a
·
·
Ed_itorial:
It's
.
All
Ah
.
out
Tiine ...
.
-
"


• •
<"'






concept of individual rights as it
·
sei-vices.
·'
·
·
.
.
. .
.
.
. .
grea~!
\
':.
mvesu,n~t
".
r e ~
:}
bY
relates to the situation here at ITEM
.
.
.
. .
. .
.
.
providing better livmg con.ditu:>
.
ns
Marist
~
..
.

..
.
·
2
;
) The
.'
cost
_
of repairing hereat~t.~~il
·
lbeliev~
.
that
,
I believe that.all. s_tuderits will
.
damage done to
·
tbedormitori~
,
.
"
.
t~~ovenill !ffipro
.
ve~~t_will be
agree, that anyon~
who
chooses
:
last
year,
some of which
·
may
···
w:~rththem!Dor:sa~rifi
_
ceofafe.~
to go to school at Marist College
",
have
_
been
:
caused by the
,
moving p
e,
rsonal cony~µieil~es.
_
~
·
~
..
·:
.
.
_ .
is making
-
ail investment
~
in
;
this
:
of large
·
refrigerators, was in th~
:.;
Iri
·
~
con
.
c;lusion
;

l
,
,;
w~ajd
,
·
institution
;
This investment does
.
·
area
of $2500
~
$3000:
·
.
.
.,
.
.
cballenge
-
thafif
,
tfie
:
~cle
·
~~
::
notonlyfuvolvea
·
nieremonetary CONSEQUENCE
.-
,:
·;:
.

-
:~
·
·
·
we.retrulyde<li¢atei:l~i:eportmg
.
The CIRGLE editors
.
think it
JS
ironic that only two years
-
after the figure
.
.
of approximately

$4500
·
a
·
·• ·
· .
a,.)
··
'.There

is
·
that
.
.
much
·
.
less
:
.
.
the

;t.act~
.
:
_
_surr_oundn.i~
·
·
these
·
implementation
.
of
.
the present schedule,
·
a
.
.
'
.
'new"
·
master time year in tuition and fees; but also
-:
money-to spe11d 90
·
benefitting the
·.
~ues;
·
tJ:iey
:;_
would
,
con,J~e
:
~P
schequle is . being considered (or
.
the
·
.
Fall '77
.:
seriiester. (The four a student invests four
,
years of his

:
students
·
interests,
.
thus lowering
.
·
·
some
:
·
tr~
_
c;:e?of
·
jow:-nalistic m~
;
,
proposed schedules are

basically the same as the previous one-witb ~e at Marist. When.each student
.
·
.
the
·
return ori
.-
tpeir in:vestment.
.
. :·
,
tegnty and
'
'
challenge
·
·
the
·
~c;I-
,
.
only
.
slight differences.)
O
What is more ironic is the way tbe
.
ad~ has
this
much at stake in his ITEM
'
·

ministrators face·to face; to find
ministration, including
·
.

President Foy, former Academic Dean college experience
.
he should not
.
·.
·
3.)
..If
,
the College Dining
·
'-Ser~
.
.'.
out tlfe facts, ra~er than as~g
..
,
Richard La Pietra and Registrar John Dwyer fought two years ago,tor be content to settle for anything
·
:
vice were
to
operate the •Leo Deli
;
·

n o
.
n
~
-di re cti:v e
J;
het on ca
.
I
·
·
the implementation oUhe present schedule.
.
,
··
·
·
.
·
less
.
than maximum return .
.::
.
,
:-
the pro(its realized from that-
·
questions such as "What's Going
Al~hough it is too early to state
a
policy
.
one way
.
or the other, the
,
The
,-
·
realizat~on
.
.
of this
·
venture,
·
may be
·
able
-
to
·
be
On?"
·
-
·
,
·
editors feelthcit
it is
important
for
all
students
to
become involved
in
~ximum
return is not orilY
.
:
~

reinvested in the Diiluig Service
,
:
·
.
.
·
. ·:
Sincerely,
.
the d~cisio~ concerning
.
the new
/
m8~er
-
time
.
schedule
.
· .
.
,
·
_
_
:
.
matter
.
_
of each stucJe,-its
·
~tsonal
·
benef
i
ttitig
:
·
·
.
_
everj

'
.'
···-_~
Marist
:· ._·
-
~-·
·
_
:
--
J~ff~~c~r:_d
:
We are
·
pleased that students are being informed well in advance in
'
·
·
·
·· .·
~
·
·
-
'
"

·
·
' '
,:,
·
.
>.
",
'.:/
?
:_::
'
-,
:
,,
.
·
~
,
~
orderto avoid a reoccurence of past everitsi such as a student strike,
.
·.
.
.
.
. .
.
-
:
.
.
-
.: .
.
.
. .
_
.
.
.
·
..
·
/
:~ ·
·
.
.
which oc~ured becclilse of blatent
.
admin~tr~tivepeg(ect two
:
years
. .
schl?(>l•
;
W~ depend
~.
on·
,
pro~l'aw
,
}_9otball
:
,
~.
•.
Thµs_
·~
the
.
":
PO!i(:Y
::•
·
'
":
ago.
.
·
.
.
.
_

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

.
. .
.
.
.
. ·
·
..
·
·•
.
.
.
•.
·
..
.
.
·
.
.
.
_ . , .
a.dv~~ise
r
.
sales,
_
i;~~o~
~
~c~~t
\ :
~~
.
n~~;
:
J~! ~!fti.mfdm:i!,1~
-
.
tl_le
~
-:'.
.
· .
.
>
We
·
agree, that the
.
present Wednesday
.
class
·
scheduling has not . ,
•:
,.;
,
.
>
.
• ..
_,
.
:
....
,
:,,'<'•::':
'
>,>
,
. ~

.
,
·
>
:
·
:
.~,~~-.?
r
~
,
,
~t~~!
"';
!i:Rm;Yte,.,~!Y,4~nt
·
x
.i
~~~
,
!3..
,,
,
~J:";:;a,J?al,l;,
,
gaJne;
~<
~!.L
·
• .
,..,..
.
.
0
.,

.,
·
,
:
:, -
~
.
0

....:..-.,,ut·
A·t· •

-
,, .
.
·
·
·

·
·
.
d
·
.·.
··
·
·
·
·
-
~
·
~
.
-'-
.
·
·'
·
·
·
...
.
·
··- .. .-M-

rt
·
st
·.
"
·
.
,.;,;

.-
.
·

tt1
·
·
·
~

'
·
- ·
~
.
11

·
·
'To'·th
.
. e-'Edi
.
tor;
.
t
:
-:·""·,,.,

,;--
·--
~
'
.
'"'
·
-·,•
,c-,:".'~
'-·•
:

g
.
overnment
·
·
:
·
·
a
.
nd.
:
:·: ..
·our
·.
:
:
gate
:
.

.
..
.
anyo
.
.
n


e be
·
adfiiittedl
.
free •
. ·,
.

,
:~
.
.
--
;-;
.. on~,u eu o.an aca em!c a:wuospu_~re.a~
.
a
.-
auu
.
.
a~
.
..... es ay .
.
,
. .
.
·

.
. ·
.
. ,
.
.
·
.
·
-
·
... , ...
. ,
.
. ,
.
·
,
.
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.
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·
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.... ,,
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.
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,. ·:::;
.
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.
,.
····

.
j•·

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

,
.
;
1ights
and
:
Wednesdays have tur
_
ned
into
a second
_
weeken~ for many . ·
,
As
the
,
n~w
.
du-~ctQr
,
,
of
,
.l,da~t receip~
,
.
t4)
:
support_,
QU~>
Jatn,
,
)Ii
.
~?n~Iusio11,. I.d
,
like;: to
:Scl:Y
. ·
:
.
·
s
tudents .
.
·
. ,:
.
:
.

.
...
a,
. .
·
.
.
<~
·
·
..
<
.,
·
.. ._
<
,,
_
,
football,! would.l
;i
ke_to ~kE:
·
f:his
.
(~ppro~~tely
1
$~7,0QO S,
.
Y~t
.
~ :
,
w.zn,
lose or
.
draw;
.
~hJS 1s
·
.
:
·
_
-We feel that this is riot the real reason students should
be
at Marist.

opporturuty _to e~plam expli£itly 9udget)

.
The players th~m,,selves,
.
,
-
y()ur footb,~ll
:
team, Yl)ur friends •
.
·
Therefore,
we
urge all students to atte!}d-the meeting in
:-r
oom D-246 our prese~t gate
·
p~licy, I

·
per~
.
~)_.so par.
a}~e
.
ot~
.
~8.c
.
~
,
t4'
.,
P~Y
.:
. .-
I!!
.
~he ~~ys
,
of
:
''big time
,
~
;
big

·
,

-..
on Oct.15 at2:10 p;m. and seriously discuss these proposed schedules. sonally heard Manst
,
.,
students
_
football for
,
Mart_.St.
·
.
. · ...
~
. -
..
·
....
·
busm~
,.
colJ.~ge f1>
.
otball
1
1t
~
:
a
,
·
·
·
·
·.
.
·
·
·
·
·
grumbling ab()uJ the fa~tthat at

;::
We asked ye>_u,Jhe
~
~tudent.
.
to refreshing change
·
to wat~hJ9e
·
·. ·
·
·
·
·
·
--
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·

·
rio time will anyorie be admitted help support. our foot6all teani by
:
Ma,ris~
.
dub
.
.
playing
.
for
:
nothing
EDITOR'S NOTE: AllJetters submitted for prhit
must
be
signed. free to our home
..
games.
·;
:
.
.
bu~g
,
a
~
s~son
.
ticket

.
f<1r
.
the
:
excepttheJunofit.
_
They
~
v,fgiyen
·
.
_
·
However,
if
the author wi~hes
his
or her name not
.
to
be
printed a
The situation is this: Football reduced
~
rate
·
of
.
$5;
,
put
.
of
·
a
. ,
us, here at Marist, 50 much to· be
requestm
·-
person must
.
be made Monday
_
or Tuesday evening
to
the here atMarist is a chib
:
sport. We
.
·
..
C~lllptis
/,:.
population
:
);,f
.
·
;
ap,,-
j
froud
pJ,
dori'tyou
think
Y._QU
:
owe
editor, in the CIRCLE office between 8:00 and 8:30 p,m. The CIRCLE receive no money from
>
the prox.iniately
.
2,000,-
:
we sold
·
120
. •
them something? Please
·
come
office is
iri
room 268 campus center.
·
·
'
·
·
·
.
:
seaso_n ti<:kets. The _biggest ex.: out and support the
.
Vikings.
: , .
.
cuse the
·
players -
-
and
·

·
··
·
··
DirectorofFootball
managers heard while trying to
.
.
.
Steve Van Buren
.
seU tickets
..
ori campus
.
was that
_::
P
.
S
.
Recent ~1gh-school football
~
~ - • •
.
·.
·

.. whys~o~d we (the
_
~tuden9,buy games
·
~harge
.
$1.50
per. adult
.
-
At-
. _
--
a season tlcket
.
,wh~n we can get our
$5
per season·ticketrate; for
·
_.,_
. .
.,.
:
Jn 'free'·at_~lftinie/~
.
four home
.
games, we have
:
·
·
·
I.
feel-,this is
,
an
apathetic at.:
·
provided the
·
opportunity to see
.
_
:
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
_
.

;
titude towards
.
the football team,
,
the best in collemte club football'.
·
· -·
·
-
.
the school

itself,
.
·
all
)
~
Jeams,
~
,
.
at a
.
.
ch~apter
.
rate
.
than
·
·
high
.
.
.
.
·
·
·
·
and your
·
own friencls
·
who play
·
school games
.
'
.
·
:.
On October 13, beginning
.
at
~
P.hysi«!ai Education
.
Activity sponsored by the Theater
·
Guild:
- ..
·
.
·
--
·
·
-
·
7:30 p.m. room 249,
'
the
·
Marist
-
Courses start October
11,
.
1976. Open to
:
everyone;
-
.
.
Chapter
of
the
.
American
.
Job PreparationWorkshop Oct.·· To
·
all interested
·
skydivers:
. ·
·
··
·
pow~rs
.
of
,
tbe Presidency have so
Marketing .Association \Vill J2··at 2:30
.
in G 269. Resumes, there will
·
.
be a
.
meeting on
.
,
-:
greatly increased since 1933 that
-
present~ talk by
·
Dave Schmidt, Cover Letters,
·
civil
·
Service· Monday Octob
.
er
11
at,9·p.m. in To the
-
Editor.
.
_
·.
·
.
they
,
now
.
present;·a ~ariger
·.
to
:
·
-
~-
National _Sales
.
Manager of. the
.
Exams.
.
,
. .
·
the
.
Campus <::e,ntei:'s
.
Fireside
Regarding your article on th
.
.
e
liberty; and that an equilibrium
>
Delaval Seperator Co.
"
Ml'..
Sch-
Senior Students
--
interested in Lounge
.-
··
f
·
·
b
t
·
th
·
·
E

··
d
·
midt,
·
Na
.
tio
.
nal Sales will talk
.
o
..
n app
.
.
lying for
.
.
tbe New Yor
.
k
.
.
State
.
-
_ _ _
..,_
.
Presidential

pre erence
:
poll.
·
T
.
e ween
1
.
e
xect1 1v
.
e
.
an
.
7

.
.
.
am thrilled
·
,
that
,
mention
·
was
,
Legislative branches
·
oFgoverQ
::
.
~~~if~fliri'c~~d~e~~"si~!~~s~;
·
.
.
~:rroe:shis
·
Le~;
.
G~~~~~~
·
.
,
Volunteers are ri~eded
to
a~ist
. ·
.
mad~
of
,
the Eugene
..
.
McCa~y
.
m
.
ent
.
must
..
be
·
~estored.
,c:
;.
/<
_.
::
, ·
..
.
a 20 minute
·
fi1m.
·
.
'.
>
- .
'
.
materials in
,
the Office of
:
the handicapped
·
stuaents
:
·fn the
~
~ant:idacy, a r ~
.
thailitbrillfd
--
:
::
b~~2fTnrthJ'e:8l6::rStbatt°.:.~
:
After

this presentation,
'.
those Academic Dean. The applifation YMCA- Swim
:
Program
\
'
OD
.
·
Y
e one
;
0

.
.
.
apa
.
Y ra e.
-=
. .
_,
.
" -
·
.
.
, •
.
••
.
. .
: .·.
interested
·.
in
joining
.
•.
t
.
he deadline
is
Jan. 21, 1977.
. .
Wednesday evenings
·
from 8-9 However, I believe the reasons
:
µndei:stand it a petlti
,
on dr~ve to
Marketing Club can
.
get

·
in-
·
Appl,ications for admission to p.m;
:
Oiivers are also needed for for
th;at
le~eLof.
.
ap~tbY
;,
are:
:
the
.
get
ru.s
na~e
.
on the ballo~
,
i,s
.
s~ll
1:-
formation
a bout
upc
.
oniin
.
g the
.
secon
.
dary
.
t
.
ea
.
c
.
h
.
e
.
r
.
e
..
d
.
ucation transportation .
.
I_f intere_sted
.
utt~r uneptltude of _either For~ or . underway:
.
·
:1
would
:-
advise
:
in-
.
. .
.
ta t J
Hin
th Off
f
Carter and the widespread .1m•
·
.
terested p~ople to bnng a pen to
. .
.
events.Thiseventisopentoau
·
programfortheSpringsemester con c oe
es m .e
iceo
press·on that a votet..:has
·
only
the
,
pollingplace•andwriteinthe
:
students, from_ anf major
.
or must· be:•·filedby
'
Oct. 8. In-· Special--Seryices (Champagnat
.
those
1
two
choices. ·.aerie
.

Mc-
_
name if
.
necessary ..
,,
·
>
.
. :
·
,
.
.
concentration;
·
·
.
·
.
.
formation ·and
..
applications are .J05)
0
i:
.
call ext
:
? 74

·
.
earthy is att
.
empting
.
.
to
·
provide
..
·
.
..
,
·
·
.
~ank
.
...
yo
_
u,
·,, ,
·
·
Tomorrow, Mixer in cafeteria available from
,
the
·
Teacher
·
·
.
.
·
·:
.
.
·

,
,
_,

th
ti
·th
It

ChrisF ill
·
$2.50
admission, 8 p.m.
.
Education
.
Office,
i
Rni
/
218 D .
.
·
The

Institute

..
of
.
I.livine
"
·
·
_e
.
na
.
~n
'_Vi
·
'
.
~n
.
~ erna ive.
:•;
·
·
·
·
.
.
.
·.·
\
·:

r
.
Tickets available for this
There
will
be
·
an
,
unportant Metaphysical
·
,
Reseal'.ch, In~.
His
political
.
position
.
IS that tbe

•~
-
season
,
to
Great Adventure produc,tion meeting for all people
.
pres~nts ,Iec!ures
.
~pen
,
~
the

.
,. ·
-
·
.
,
·.,
..
amusement park. Original price interested ih working
·
on the
·
public
·
O~
:
1:'µe,sday.,s (8-1.0 p.m_.)
-...
.
,,.
·

.
was
$9.50,
no:w
$5.
Inquire
.
in
·
Ute pro<:!UCtion
··
of
.
·
"'me
.
Mous
-
etrap
~•
_
;
·
-~
and
.
-
~
~
~nd
_
ay
,
s
-:.
:
~.
(~-5
~
,-_-
~
p.
_
m;
_
)
~
--:
·
1~
·
·
·~
·
C
.
U.B~ office.
·
.
If
anyone
.
is
interested in being Campus Ce~re,r
:
roo~
i•9;
.
,.
: ..
-.
,.
,
.
;
'
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
'
.
.

·
·
,
, .•
·
·
:
A
.
Photography
.
Contest, ass!stant
.~
~OUS}~
·.
:
·
rn~ager,
~
.
......
,
-::·
,:
:
.
.O:>
'
.
'
.
~
::
:
~
' ·
-
_
.
\
productfon.

The
following
.
can
be
~
rea.ched;
.
Pho~e n~ber,
'
'
;
.
.
sponsored ~yGregory House, :will
·
ass_1stant
·
~1gl:ltmg
.
·
director, . T~e. )~<:
.
tores
.,
a
_
re
.
for -the · positions
..
·
·
are
· ,

available_: pos
_
itions

_
applyJng for,
·
_
and
.
·
be .held
_.
d~n~g Parents W~ek~nd.
ass1s~nt
.
mJStre~ of sound
.
e~;. ~q~!tiYeJ~~~o~ ,rho wan~
,
to
:
choreographer~
.
·.
Technic;:ar.
:
previo'!s . exper~e.nce,
:
to
·
~he
.
.. ·
·
}_
.
Prizes
:
.
\VIII
be aw.arde
.
d
}<r
the
,
fects, p,;ops or any other aspe~t of Jcnow !Ile
.
,
'Y.~Y
:<
apo11t
.;
?~~
.;
Director,
,.
·Stage . Mana.ger~
.
Marist'
'
College.
~
:
Childre~•s
..
;
,
.
th~~e
.
. b~ photos~
..
$
.
10._1>0
·
,
~o~
:
.
1
..
tile show; ~o~e to
:
µt~ th~~e~ at 5 .Cre.atoi:i ror
.
.
~~re infoml~tion~_.
.>
Assistant
.
S!age_:" Manager;
: :
Theater
;
A,Qy_;_q~~~ons
-::
!"~(e
.
~
J~
.:
·i
l
pi:ize,.
$5.~
Jor, 2
·
.
,net 3
;
pnze;
.
,
p.rn. :t~ay ·
•·
·
Yf
,
e
/
!ti!lld
..
like ·
:
as
. .
conta,ct l.lJ..M
,
,
R.,
,
P/?:
B9;x: 17~,
.
.
.
>
Lighting
:
,.
:
Dfr
.
ector ;-
.
; Make.:up
i

:
:V:~ilny
/
:,
:
:
G?P9~Zl :
·
. -
\
;
.?r9~
.
u.
.
c
.
~r
:
: ,
.,
i :
.
..
·
..
SubmJt" phofos
.
!o
_
Gmn~ N1e~~n,
.
ffi:8nype<>ple
.
~~ ~!~lt,to
;
work
, _
Po11ghlte~p~i~
_.
l2601c•
,:' :
.-;
,
·
.
.
\
j, ..
.
·
.

I)irector,
:
Sound
.
'
Director;
:
House
:
·
·
,
(secondfl~r
:
~eaha~),
::'
·
.

.
t
·
<
.
:;-
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. ,
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.
·
,
.
.
-
The secon
_
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elul
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;
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)
loom,
.
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,,
~1>,Pli~
.
\if~
·
.
f~
f
(
~e
:
.7
,
G;n.
,
.,
,
your
c.
name
-: :
address where
;:
you
·,
.
.
,,
.
:
.
,
·
Cqntinuea
.
~n
:
p
.
age
;
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,i





































































OCTOBER 7, 1976
THE CIRCLE
·Teacher Hopefuls
-
. By
Andrea Anthony
Poughkeepsie High SchQOl.
break-down after the first week."
English . major
Patricia
'Sue Francese,. Math major,
A
new
innovation
has Perretto,. student teaching · at studentteaching at Haldane High
developed in the _Teacher's Myron J. Michael.Junior High Sclfool, Cold Spring, said, "I got
Education Program.· ·This year School, Kingston, said ..
I
thought to see bow students react on the
. for the first time student teachers it was an excellent idea starting first day. The students got to see
attend _the first full . week of .from day one.
I got to know the us, we weren't someone who
cla~es at their_ ~igned school. studenw, leam their
names,
and came in during the· middle of
In
previous years, the student they got a c!lance to
know
me. October."
teachers met· with· their classes· You get your feet wet _right from
"The other teachers made me
on· the
first
day o, opening, at- the beginning.'!
feel very comfortable. I really
tended thetwo required, courses
"lwasableto_participate in the enjoyed it," ··said Katherine
. here at Manst;. Methods of- orientationof-seventh graders to Miller, Science major, student
Teaching
·
· and Educational_ junior · . high,"
·
said Keith teaching at Orville Todd Junior
Psychology and · vi.sited . their _·. Blankley, English major;student High School.,
.
assigned schools~orice. a' week; .:.teaching at J. _ Watson Bailey
The students have had no
The·~tudentsare.stUI requifed to Juniorffigh,_Kingston. "I-thought problems at their schools. But
attend<the · courses and the it
was
very important. This way many feel the course Education
· schools once a.:week, but this year ·we got a chanceto see procedures Psychology should have been
·-· :tlfey
baa.
a chance to see how a tha~ w:~.don~t usually see. It gave taken in their junior year as a full-
.teacher begins.
. _
_
me a good idea of what to expect semester course: "At times you
· · ''I think it's
the
most useful -- October 18th."
feel rushed with the readings. We
PAGES
Sommer Adaresses
Medieval Scholar
ByLlsaMcCue
Dr. George Sommer, professot
of English at Marist, will job.l
more than
500 scholars of
medieval studies at . the Third
Annual Ohio Conference on
Medieval Studies in Cleveland,
Ohio. Approximately
200
papers
will
be delivered at the con-
ference concerning many aspects
of medieval thought, life and
literature.
Dr. Sommer's paper, "The
Integrity of the Troilus Epilogue
and the Franciscan Passio"
attempts to question the opinion
of some scholars
that
the
con-
cluding section of Chaucer's
Troilus and Criseyde was either
an afterthought or
a.
later ad-
dition to the poem. Dr. Sommer
proposes that the section was
intended by Chaucer to be the
conclusion.
The conference is sponsored by
John Carroll University and is
from Oct. 11th - 13th.
Mosaic Together
experience -a· bElginning teacher
Nilda Burgos, a Spanish major, have to read twenty-two chapters
can get," said Mrs. Elizabeth student-teaching at Spackenkill in six weeks, and they're not
Champagnat. or leave word in
. Nolan, - director·._of. Teacher High School, Poughkeepsie,.said always discussed in:class," said
BySuzanneBreen
P.O.
Box C-312. People are
· -Education., "There's so much to
"I
loved
it.
I felt it was
a.
really Katherine Miller. The students
needed for reviewing material
be done duririg_the first week and j.nteresting ·. , experience·· getting feel the course is too much and
The Mosaic, a. campus literary submitted and to help in the
' this
new.- program will giye the involved during the first week. It doesn't pex:_tain, to a real class
a
nd art magazine will be layout of the magazine.
students an ·advantage.''" _ · <made , me'- feel · like a real situation.
published once again for Mari5t
TheMosaicwasfirstoriginated
Some of the student teacher's -teacher."
-
.
-
The students attend each st~dents. It is a I?agazine by Dr. George Somers, a Marist
conuri_enw·were: "lgot a charice _
,
. · "l got to see the ·other side," course four times a _week for six _orientated to the creative ~o~ks
Professor. Somers ran it with
to __ meet all ~e students and: said George Castiglio~e, Science weeks and visit their a~ig~ed of studen~. Anfone ~ho ~- m-
students for four years. Dr.
"faculty members.:.It's a
.
Jot of major, student teaching at .Red school ,once a week. Begmmng · te!'_ested
m
havu:ig
-~IS
origmal - Milton Teichman then took it
work, and thaUirst week helped Hook Junior High School, ··Red Oct~l;>er 18th
the
student teachers works of short stories, poetry•
over for a short period of time.
· me
realize what
fwill
encounter · Hook. ''Now I.know what it feels will attend their ·assigned school prosf, artwork or p~otog_raphy
Then
Mr. Robert Lewis took it
.
andwbli!twilU>EH'~uiredofII1e/' like·to·be a:
_
teacher ~tead-of .a full t.ime for ~ine weeks.
·
publishe~ may_ submit them to
and is still involved with it now .
. _..,said - EngHsh ·maj~r -_ Sylinder student.
I
.
finally µoder.stood why
P?st
Offlc~ Box numbers 312, 43
For the past thr.ee or
four
years
_ ·:.Curtis, .-student_teaching'-::at a_.teacher' is ready· to have a •"
or
47•
all~ Champagnat _Hall.
nothing has been done with the
. . ·. ,.::. . . ., ., _, . ·c· ·'
.
__
.
.
.
All
work
1s
to be typewritten or
Mosaic. .. It had existed on
~
,.: . $1··.·. -.-. . . T..
A·.·
p
.~ri!lrf~i\eg~r~~~:_:.p~~~ campus as a student literary
. , ,' . ·ow· - ' -
·work
Wlll
not. Everyone
1S
magazine and faded out," said
·
.
·

_
• ·
_ •
requested , to please put their
Ms.
Nguyen. "Since it was still
in
·
·
.
... .
. ·
.
.
- names on the back of all the constitution we are trying to
material.
reinstate it. We are hoping the
Anyone interested· in helping . magazine will be more ar-
construct the magazine will also tistically done this year, and we
. be welcomed. Those interested are also hoping by next year to
may contacf Rosie Nguyen, at
629
_put out two copies a semester."
~
·•·.
. ..
. By
Charles.Yates . .
. B~siness Manager: ''Now we;find
.
.- . ·
· · · .
,-thaLmany _ students _will not receiveifbythis date .from
TAP,
-Delays )11 ___ · processing>TAP:.: : receive __ expected.- amount,'.\ .he have not been receiv.ed, due :to
applications
have
resulted in
a
said/and
the
student must come increased n~ber•of. city college
- ctjticaF situation·. ·accordirig to· up· with_ the . difference by mid students applying· for.
the
-same
Gerald Kelly;
E
inancial . Aid terms..
- .
···
mQney .. Consequently shOrt-tenn
,Pirector. De!,lys ~ye_niea~t that · Many students .
.
. are .seeking loans, on an _in~erini basis, muS
t
. students' often,cannot accurately . ~cl~tionaLfinancial aid sources, be ~ken,
m -
order to
m~~
,iapprise,,;.their.~i_financial\\iaid<_-
.
ana;.'the·,
,
busiriess.;~offi<!e.:.:cmust.operativg.~xp~nsesL,Campilu __ , ..

.. packager
1
Iit';adaiti9ii,';'mijny 'dup1icate~'itiCwork in'reviewilig expects_ ~o,_clo -~at, HO~~ver, '
Tracy's Girls
,.
'
~tU:deilts tiave 'receiVea refunds,".• students' fina~cialaid package." ~et:e W~l not·be ~_n)'.•c~ilmen~
based on students' projectedTAP
Thousands of. doUars that m se~~ce, accor~mg to both
By
Sherry Smith ·
grants,"·said
·
Anthony Canipilii
Marist ·would normally .. have Camp1lli and ~es1den_t Foy.
"My whole family rows and
--
·.
·

. ,


, 0 -
- - •
'
··


·
·
"If
the delay, m receipt of TAP
that is how I got an interest."
·:~A~"
()l§C:OU~T
... '3lVt~_4_t3~·,·1~.c.·
ALBANY
POST.ROAD. HYDE
PA.RK.'N.
Y. 12538
TELE,.HONE~l 914
(=229~9000 .'
.
-
· "returnables"
. PabStS
dep0$1~ -
$4.25
.
'
12
oz.
bottle.s·-·.
ROSJ VIEW·f
ARM
'ENGLISH·RIDING,
.
.
.
.
.
.
LESSONS
~
·,
\\'
·.
Instruction at
zt's,v_eiy:
best.
, In.door-Outdoor -
riding,.
'"'"· •'f?tiiraj .
facil_ities
·. ·~-
· >.,__. , ,, ··:··· :
Alf Ages.
·. Get.together with y,iurfriends
. . . . : forSpecial Group Disc(!U1Jts ·
- (.


·' .
.
, .·. : ·.
:
'
.... '··
-_
.
· . - _
_ I- . ,-
• : · <:
Dutchess HIii
Road,
(>ff.East ·
,_ :.,l>c;,rsiy.Lcin~i,P0,ughke~psie'
. .>PtE~st.cA~(:4:,f
19i8Joi
~ppointmerits. :
_
;
.,
'
.
_
_..-_
-
.
••.
·,
.
.
-
·,_
.,.-,..
•.
.
_.
..
:
•..
. .
._
·,
..
'
.
'_
.
·,
funds extends past December l,
"I never even heard of crew
we will have to borrow
a
lot of . before I came to Marist. My
money, at prime interest rates,•. · friends were in the program and I
eight to nine percent;'Before this
got my interest thro1=1gh
those
has been clearechlp, it will_have
friends who -rowed. I really
cost Marist thousands of dollars wanted. to get involved with it."
in interest;" says Foy.
·
"I was a freshman: You know
how you join- everythmg when
The
VILLAGE CUTTER
UNI-SEX
HAIRCUTTING
If
you_ like good music
friendly people and greqt
ha_ircuts then you 'll like
.
.
t/J~
Village. -:Gutt~r
Uni-S(!x Hai~cutting
Salon.
6 LaGrange Ave.,
~- 473-3750
.,.'\
.
3 Church St.
New Paltz.
255-9925
~
'
..
..
)
.
.:__
..
~.
.
~
you are a freshman!"
These .are comments by
members of the women's crew
team at Marist Their daily
practice consists of "grass
drills" .which iriclude 10 men's
push-ups, 20 jumping. jacks, 25
sit-ups, 20 toe touches and a ,
quarter-mile run. The. team rows ·
three to four miles a day. ·
"I think we have a much more
posftive attitude this year
because Greg Tracy, our coach,
has a much more positive at-
titude and we feel the con-
ditioning has made us better,"
states Kate Lynch, two-year
veteran of women's crew. •
"The whole crew ,experience is
not that I am trying to · prove
anything to anyone, but it
represents
a
real
ac-
complishment to me," states
Kathy Brennan also a two-year
crew veteran at Marist.
Mary Keir, states
"It's my first
year. The training ii:! really good
for us and definitely makes a big
difference.
It is hard, but you ·
surprise yourself by what you can
do. Even though practice
is
tough, you do it for the team
· benefit."
.. All three agreed it takes a
certain kind of person to do
women's crew. "You have to
ignore a lot of bias on the part of
students, male and female, and
outside pressures.
It
takes a
supreme . effort
to .
keep rowing
when· 'the going gets rough!"_
,
.
classifi~d
punk • Hurry up
and
fhoose
your
-4
PF'sl
L.G. Hello. Don't work
to
hard. D.D.
Selllng your refrigerator. We'll
listen to
any rea~able price.
Box
L-33 •
Happy Birthday Wanda!
. Glvelttheole~]legel-2.A&J 19,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
.
. .
.
.:-. ·:.
~ -·.,r ..
J
~
,
• ...
'
,

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..
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'




























































































































































































































































































PAGE6
:
.
THE
CJl;lCLE
OCTOBER
7,
1976
Career Classes -
PersoniilityOf The Week
I'
I
i.
.
~
.
•.
,
·
By
Lisa
Mccue
"It's a start on the road to get a
job," said
·
Warren Greene, an
intern in
.
the career counseling
office, about the
class
sponsored
by that office. "Some people
come to class and don't
·
even
know anything about· where to
look
for a
.
job.
·.
We
try·
to show
them," said Greene
.
The purpose of the class
-
is
to
show students
·
where to begin
looking for job openings, what
civil service jobs are available,
how to arrange to take a civil
service examination, and how to
write a reswne.
The classes
·
are taught by
Warren Greene and another
intern, Sue Weisberg. They occur
every two weeks at 2:30 Tuesday
afternoon in
room
·
C-269,
"They're very ~ormal," said
By Sain
Delgado
·
Green, "we present ihe
·
in-
formation and anyone
can
ask
a
·
"The
·
guy · who

runs
a
question whenever they
··
want." demolition derby
·
has one arm
There is a
limit
of
12 students and goes around telling everyone
per cl~ss and any student
,in-
to keep their anns in their cars
terested in attending one of the
because
thats the way he lost
sessions must go
to
Larry
his,"
explained Guy Greco as he
Snyder's office,
C-113, and
·
sign tried to relive
his
experience
as
a
up. Although the classes are demolition derby driver this
opened to all students, they w.ere
-
swnmer.
,
instituted with the junior and , Guy, a
thih
good-natured fellow
senior students in mind.
-
·
with a mustache
is
known by
Greene said that
·
they
'
expect
.
many from the fourth floor
Le~
as
the classes to become more the new D
.
J. at Franks
.
·
popular around January when
"One of the sponsors
,
of the
students realize the need for derby did the bodywork on my
·
them. In
.
refering to the success car and that's how I found out
of the first class Greene said,
'!
A
·
·
about}t
:
I filled ~utan application
few days after the
·
class one and paid my five dollars entry
person ... brought
·
a resume that fee
.
"
.
,
·
he wrote to me
in
the office to see · Greco, who is from Kingston,
how he did. Another person ... said New
·
yo~k,
}s
.
a sophom?re
she got a lot
.
out of the class."
Commun
,
ications Arts maJor.
·
·
"They run the
·
derby up a~ Dietz
stadium in Kingston
.
Its
.
a rec-
tangular track. We get there at
8
o'clock in the morning and party
till the race starts in the-"'af-
ternoon."
.
.
·
'
·
In Greco'sfirstrace
·
he finished
first.
.
"The last car thats left
moving is the winner. The
smartest
thing to do
is
get your
-
front end in a corner so they
.
can't
touch your engine and
smash
the
other cars with your rear."
·
In demolition derby there are
many safety rules. "There's no
·
glass in the
.
.
wb)dow frames
because
you can get cut
by
it. The
fastest way
to
getoutof a burning -
car is by jumping out the
.
win-
dows. There are lots of
.
fires." ·
Alterations on the cars
·
are kept
to a minimwn
.
"I took my gas
.
tank out, put'it in
tne
back seat
and built
a
firewall around
it.
I
took my battery out and wired it
down
in
th
_
e seatnext to me. You
can't change
:
anything

on the
body though.''
.
'
For Greco
·
_
running
·
i
n the
·
demolition derby is not
·
a matter
of, .fame or money.
·
"I can't
remember
c
how
.
mu~h
.
the prize
was/' he said. •
-
·
·
,
.
,
i
.
Parent
Weekend Set
,
s
r
,
Trotter of "The Mousetrap"
will
New York
will
be
there to select served. Come
and
join the
.
Fun!
be held this Saturday at noon
'
in
.
the cast Some people may want
·
.
·
.
'
·
·
.
.
.
.
·

,
· ·
.
-
-
·
the theater. Anyone interested
-
in to
·
audition to demonstrate a
reading please come.
speciaLtalent, while otners who
~fting on the Colorado River
'
only have the desire to perf~rm through the Grand Canyon
will
be
can meet the director and he will the subject fQr Sierra Club, Mid-
Marist College faculty iuem-
recommend possible roles. In any Hudson Group, October
12
·
at
8
b
D
La
case~ we want all members of the p.m.
ers, r
.
wrence W. Menapace
.
commuru"ty

to feel
·.
·
.
·
w
·
elcome to
Th
·
tm .

•~
.-
and Dr. R. Rhys Williams,
·
have
.
.
·
.
_e m~ g is open

io
,
the
been selected to participate in the explore
.
what

contributions they public, Room 249, Champaghat
National Science Foundation can make. Refreshments
will
be
Hall.
-
-
,
· ··
Chautauqua-Type Shor,t Course
·
in "Ethical Issues and the
.
Life
Sciences."
·:,
·
.
.
The primary objective
.
of

the
program is to make available to
. college teachers, as

quickly as
i,ossible, new· knowledge about
HYi>i:
itJlili<
ilOOli:Vi:Lt
i>iliVi:·in
i:Hi:.-li:ili:
Rte.9,tt,de
Parll;
CAll-2000
Rte.9,
Hyde
P.,.k; CA9•2000

top
.
ics of churrent
.
interest in such
·
.
('J
t})K
,
·
.
-
a
.
way t at
.
ma~erials
,
will
.
be _
·
·
J:'\ \
.
'
ByADRIE~H<:)WARD
Oct. 16
.
:
Dolly
·
Bodick,
.

Coordinator of
:
.
Parents
·
.
weekend
is
'
scheduled
·
.
.
College Activities, states that the
..
for Octgger 15
,
thni
.
October
17,
Parents Weekend will-'give
,
the
-
1976
;
Entertainment
-
arid ac-
·
parents "an
.
oye~iew of
what
tivities inclui:k
.
performm.ic
_
e by
MaristCollege is about" "It's
a
t~e
Rhondo Dance

company
(
a
..
·
concentrated
.
periog of.. many
~r~sident's Breakfast,
.
·
.
various
·
concentrated activities
,
You have
departmental
·
J:ireseritatforis,
·
to
keep track of ev~cything at one
residence halls
:
open houses,
.
a
)ime.
As
the
years
go by.it gets
soc~er
,,
g~me, and tours of
..
the
·-
less panicy,"
_
says
_
Ms
~
Bodick.
Vanderbilt
,
an
.
d
_
. Roos~velt
·
.
Beth Sager; Resident
·
Director
Estates ..
Th~
traditional
·
ru,nner- ·
,
: of
Le!)
Hall,
is
assisting
·
·
in
.
the
.
dance \Vlll be held at
8:00
p
.
m. on
,
coordination of
.
activities
··
':·
-
,
WiiUifiiitit.,;
·
~
~~
,1;.;1
,\
'.u.))1\1
,,
\
,\,
\,Lli,~
-
'
_
,:
·
.
Unisex Hair~utting for Guys~Gals
·
.
-
.
.
:
.
.
drrectly
.
useful
.
m
·.
c11rr~nt or
.
. '
{' \
l)
LL"

;;.
.
.
.
planned
.
.
educational.
-.
progra~;
·
_
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.
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·.··
.
·
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1\71;~r
.
·-.
'
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made
.
bt
Drs.
·
Menapace and
.
I
l ll
l1
J
L,
t1
y•_
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$
.
·
-
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Will
_
iains to·
..
dev~lop
.
a
co
.
urs
.
e in
·.
L

£
·
IG
·
~H
·
.
,
l
"Science, Medicine and
.
Ethics".
-
.
·
·
1
· -
.
·
"-
The
.
course will deal with
.
the
.
.
.,
.
,
.
-
-~
~
-
<
··.
,
·
moral implications of some of the
more recent
.
developments
iri
,
science and· medicine; Topics to
be
.
considered
.
include the
following: new developments in
genetics, abortion, death
-
and
dying, truth telling in medicine,
organ transplants
,
research on
human
subjects
and
en-
vironmental issues.
Dr
.
Menapace
is
Associate
Professor
of
Chemistry and Dr .
.
Williams
is
Assistant Professor
of Religious Studies.
A
talent search is underway in
Dutchess County, as the "Follies
'76"
committee of Vassar
·
Brothers Hospital invites
.
men
and women from throughout the
area to
·
participate in a
·
major
musical variety revue scheduled
for this fall.
A fund raising project for
Vassar Hospital, "Follies
'76"
will be professionally staged by
the Jerome
H.
Cargill Producing
~
Organiiation of New York City.
While the reyue will
be
directed
.
professionally, the cast
.
will
be
comprised of amateur talent.
The
program is slated for November
19
ai:id
20
at the Poughkeepsie
High School. and
will
.
b,enefit
Vassar Hosp~tal's Coronary Care
Unit.
,
.
·
.
According
to
-'
Debbie de Cor-
.
dova and Betsy Gellert, Talent
Co-Chairmen,
·
the
.
committee is
looking for men and women. who
can sing, dance or act, as well as
those who are interested
·
in
production work; such
':
~s sef
design, lighting
~
and make up.
,
.
Those
.
interested in
,
·
par-
ticipating in the revue are invited
to
.
·
.
attend ,"Meet

the
.
Qire~tor
Night" on Monday;
·
November
,
l,
beginning
.
at
.
7
:
p.m
.
in
Tower
_
Auditorium
·
atVassar
Hospital;
·
·Reade
..
· Place;
.
·
City
·
of
Poughkeepsie.
1
-'
,
·
The professional
·
director from
.
'
.
'
··•_';
'
.
'
.
..
.
.....
.
.
PC:
.
tcJDffJ!IJ(Nl
Frivolous
-Salli
·
Entertainment
·
.
.
,,
.
-
·
.
7 Nigh
·
ts·
A
_
Week
.
Wednesday
Nite
.
Happy
;-
Ho
'
~r

Pric:es
Foo
.
d
Served
-
Until,
CloSi'ng
II
I'
·
,

,
.
...,,
.
.
The _Latest inVolumetricCutsfrom
N.Y
;
C
,
;
.
:
"AIICuis°
'.
;.
.
-
~
.
v
olum
.
efri~
.
·
.
··
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eg.
:.
s
1 7
50
.
c;=r.~
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BOC>'( PE~M
.
2
9.
:.
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..
.
,
.
,
,
.,
~
o~d••~~••
,
Sha:poo
&
· -
·.
~
Highl
.
ightirig • Special Precision
·
·Cuts
Conditioner
17 So.
Ha~
i
ltori
·
s,.,
Poughk.;epsia

Block South
·
of
Main
Mallf
.,
,i
;
~_
471,-4383~54-
.
9984 Mon,
0
Sat
,
9:30-5:30
T,hurs: Open Late
I
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
WILSONS-COUNTRY
,
-
TAVER
_
N
; .
..
:
oF
· POUGHKEEPSIE'S
.
.
.
7FOOt
·
·
·
.
·
.
·
·
-
. ~-
. ·.·
·
·
: ",. ,
·
··
Movfe
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\
OCTOBER
7,
1976
Pe9ple You
·
Meet
/
-
,
.
Football Managers
\
By TOM M~TERNAN
season are Kathy Krall, Pat
Mald, Betty Brix,
·
Regina
Some people may frown upon Clarkin, Mary Ellen
.
Mullen,
gir~ hanging out
·
at football Barbara Alden, and Fran

Guz-
practices, entering men's locker man.
.
,
rooms befo
_
re and after games
According to Schott, most of
and dragging boxes of equipment
·
the girls don't know what
is
in-
.
\
between the gym and ~e football volved
·
until they are around
for
field. But to the Marist football awhile.· "No one can
-
,be
lazy
players and coaches, the girl around here; there is
·
a lot of
managers play a special role that heavy work to be done." She
·
inakes them an integral part of added
.
that while road trips are
the
,
team.

·
·
generally enjoyable,:they usually
.
The
·
managers,
,
under the result in extra work due to the
'
:
direction of
.
Club President
·
Val unfamiliar surroundings. "At
Bellarosa and Head
I
Manager ~st at Marist we know where we
Julie Schott, perform many
·
can find
:
what we need," she
duties which are necessary for explained.
.
·
.
the smooth operation of the entire
Schott disagrees with those
·
..
program. Among others, they are
·
who claim that the
.
job
.
is too
.
responsible
·
for
handUng
.
unfeminine. "Sure we g~ into the
·
eg·uipment be!ore
.
arid after
-
locker rooms, but the players and
·
games arid practices,
.
providing coaches lire
.
careful a
_
bout what
·
the players
,
with water
·
and they
.
say in our presence/'
oranges, and
·
assisting with on-
Despite the work; Schott ·feels
· ··
campU$ publicity arid recording
.
that the
·
managers are also
statistics
;
.
.
~
,
.··
benefitted in different ways .
.
·
Basically; .according to Schott,
·
"You get a sense of satisfaction
·
·
·
·
"we go
·
arourid arid do whateyer
.
in
.
being looked
,
upon as
-
part of
·
"'
.
needs to be done;
·
~o,
we help
,
the team.
If
,
they
,
win, you feel
•.
·
.
keep
.
up- the team morale."
·
Not
.
like you made a
·
contribu~ion."
· -
to
·
mention
·
,
attending
·
team The managers, Schott continued,
meetingfind meal:5
_i
~d riding "also get to m~t with the guys on
the
team
bus to
away
games
,
·.
the
·
team;
..
there is
.
a good
.
-
·
The
<
managers for the current possibility of iµiptoving
.
one•s
·
?
·
; . ,
--
-
-
.
.
'
THE CIRCLE
social life."
noted, "We love working with the
In describing their relationship
.
coaches. They are very .friendly
with the players,
,
Scho~ said, and down-to-earth and ap-
"They are really nice to
,us
and predate
_
what we do. It gives you
treat us like part of
·
the team.· a good feeling when they com-
They also include us
in
their pliment you.
parties and consider us good
·
One such compliment comes
friends."
·
-
from head coach Ron Levine.
As for the coaches,
·
Schott "They are dedicated and make a
'i6
PAGE7
tremendous commitment. We
always wanted girl managers
because they paint a different
picture. They bring a lot of life
and fun with them and do
a
beautiful job."
And as one play~r remarked,
"They are very pleasing to look
at during practice."
CoaCh's
-,
Corner
X-COUNTRY
Continued
tough invitational and both ran
excellent times in the rainy, cool
and windy
·
conditions. Scholder
.
.
..
,
1-
-
.
..
.
,
set another meet record with
his
~y
RON
LEVINE
·
s
..
identifies the occupant of
the
·
and court sessions, Levine has
time
of 24: 15 and was only two
TOM MC TERN AN
.
.
office. He
is,
of course, lawyer survived losing seasons,
the
seconds off the course record set
.
,,,.
.. .
.
Ronald

Levine, who spends his
·.
changing Marist atmosptiere,
late last year. At one point of the
·
The office at
11
Cannon street
.
:
autumn afternoons and weekends chronic financial difficulties and
race he had veered off course
a
is
.
just around the block fron( the
.
.
as he~d coa
_
ch of
.
the
·
Marist an evolution
·
of
·
student altitudes
little and this alone had cost
him
·
.
Main
>
:
:
.
Mall
.
in
:::·
downtown
>
Vikings.
,
It
would appear
.
that
.
to
..
enter
.
his
,
.-
twelfth season ~s
the c9ur~~
;
.
r~~Qr<:l.J~tiJ1.in evecy
·
·'.
~oi:ig~~~§i~
/
·
Ll:iokinlf
'
m
'
,
from
--c.
;
'liere'i~

wherethe;upcoming
·
g~e
·
·
coach
of
theWikings
~·~
Ind~ed,he-
·
·
race
.
except one that he has run
the hallway one observes a wide
.
:
plan
,
1s worked 9ut
·
to
·
·
be
IID-
declared,
"I'll
.
bet that no more.
this
·
year Jerry has set either a

'
-
desk
'
clutter,ed with legal papers., plemented at the
.
afternoon
·
than twelve people have been
·
at
course record or a meet record.
law books, memos and unopened practice at Marist.
·
Marist longer than me."
·,
The one race
he
didn't was when
~il
.
-:-
a
·
setting one would likely
.
I.,evil!e assured
his
interviewer
And despite a bad
:
season now
he was lost with two other leading
·
find
,
m
.
any
:
.
oFthe
.
several law
;
that such
_
doodlif!g is
·
done only and then, Levine has
:
been very
runners in an unmarked course.
·
firms iidhe
·
area;
'
-.
· .
·
.
.
·
during free
/
periods during the successful. We have the
·
best
In all regular season meets he
Upondo~er~crutiny, however,
.
·
day. He pQinted out, "Law is
!DY
record in club football over. the
has set a course cecord and in all
one
.
discovers that the yellow
-
occupation and always my first lasttwelve years," he said. "Our
invitationals he has set a meet
legal pad in the
_
middle of the
.
priority; After
·
all, I have to
·
feed

approach to the sport is what has
record. It
is
a
truly amazing and
desk is
·
cover~d
.
with X's and O's.
~
my
·
kids." But so~ehow
,
ttle
.
made us so successful. We can to his present residence in Hyde
astoundingly consistent per-
It
is this
.
diagram amidst
.
the suspicions continue to linger.
stand on the field against teams Park in 1968, the year he also
fonnance of excellence.
_
legal documen~. that readily
·
Through countless cases, briefs w~ch should
.
blow us
.
out." moved into
.
his Cannon Street
.
Kolthay was only slightly
Levine added that although
the
office.
·
behind Scholder with
his.
secorid
I
.
.

.
-
WHO AM
.
I?
I AM
.
MY BROTHER'S BROTHER.
.
'
.
1
I was asked that question one day~
.. .
It isn't an easy qu
·
estion to answer
wn'en you
··
see yoursel
_
f
-
as
-
Hving
differently from most people.
_
Sure - I have a job and responsibilities.
J
have a family-and friends. I enjoy
··
my weekend
.
$ and vacatiqns. If you
_ passed me on the street you probably
.
wouldn't even look twice.
'.
,
...
.
So:....what makes me different?
-
I
am a
.
.
_
,
.
.
..
·
Marist Brother. Marist is the name
·
·
·
,
given to us, aJ:_pmmunity of Brothers,
who embrace in
.
a
.
radical and single-
minded way the v~cation for which
every
.
man is created:
TO
.
KNOW G9D, AND To'
LOVE
HIM WITH
ALL
SOUt,
.
STRENGTH
ANt>
_
Ml~D~
.
-
.--
-
,
·
.
.
. ·
Does this Hfe make serise to
'me?
YES.
,
Does it make sense to you?
.
.
.
'
•.
.
.
.
·
·
,
.
_
,..
·
·
Contact:
i
\
-
MARlST
,'
.
Brother Philip Ro.bert
·
·
-
·
Archbishop Molloy
H
$.
;
,
C
BROTHERS
'
~::!;a~~~~}~r;:~s
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2124{21()0
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Vikings are taken for granted
at
In 1965, Levine was approached
place finish of 24:31. Then three
Marist, they
.
are very respected by friends of his brother who
SMU runners came in, followed
by their opponents. "When attended Marist to coach the
by a couple of other team's
Manhattan beat us two weeks newly-organized Marist Football
runners. Coufal ran another
ago;
·
it was a really big
win
for Club. As Levine recalls,
"They
strong race
·
tor Marist finishing
them."
tried every high school coach in: eighth with a time of 24:59.
Asked to explain
·
that ap- Dutchess County but none of
Dennis O'Doherty, running
·
·
his
proach, tevine replied, "We let them wanted
,
it because they first race in
·
a week after a brief
the guys enjoy themselves and didn't think it would last.'
1
·
·
sickness, placed
12th
with
25:18
,
engage in other, activities, ~s long
Levine also noted that club and Brian Costine completed the
as they are serious enough to football was bigger in
.
the
1960's
--Marist
scoring with
his
25:20
prepare themselves for the next than it'is today. "There was total clocking for thirteenth place-
game.- We pretty
.
much leave student involvement as we had When the scores were tabulated,
their off-the-field actions to · several hundred members in the
it came out to be a tie of 36 for
themselves."
.
_
.
Club at one time. Also, the night both Marist and
SMU.
The meet
Levine, who grew
,
up in the gaµies at Riverview Park were director, Bob Dowd of
SMU,
Poughkeepsie area, was an honor exciting and drew large crowds," wanted to declare both teams co-
student in high school and was ~xplained
·
Levine .
.
It
wasn't champions, but Marist coach
awarded a scholarship to Cornell uncommon for the Marist-Iona Rich Stevens told Dowd to en-
to play football or baseball. After game to draw6,000 fans including force the NCAA tie-breaker rule
two years of
·
playing
.
both, nine busloads from Iona
.
·
which
-
states that the sum of the
academic considerations forced
.
According to Levine,
·
support
·
first four runner's ranks be used
him
to
choose between them and diminished after 1969 due to three next. Thus
SMU
was declared the
he picked football .
.
fie played factors:
1)
time disadvantage for
·
champion with a 21-23 margin
.
quarterback on the school's 150- most students who had to work to over Marist .
..

·
lb: tb,am.
meet rising
-
college costs, 2) the
"I
don't agree with the rule, but
· He remembers,
.
"I was a
-
good necessary involvemeqt of
the
when ~ere's a rule you've got to
runner and also completed 65 Athletic
Department
.
an_d
-:
abide.by it and use it," declared
percent. of my passes." Despite Business Office to oversee Marist Coach Rich Stevens. "I
his size,
·
he claims that he was operations formerly left to the
think
the rule should be
-
in an
able to7hrow a football further students,
·
and
3)
the changing

invitationallike
this
to look atthe
·
than
·
anyone
.
he
·
coachea
·
at lifestyles of the student body. He
two teams that are tied and get a
.
Marist, including perennial
_
All-
noted, "Drugs
.
didn't hit
.
the
dual score between them. On
this
American Ed
.
Bonnett.
Marist campus until 1970. I feel
basis, we would have beaten SMU
After receiving
his
Bachelor's that the transition back to the
26-29. However, I am proud of our
degree in 1961, Levine remained
·
normalcy which existed before
.
performance.
·
·
at Cornell to attend law school the Vietnam War has not been
and
.
serve as
·
offensive coor- completed."
·
.
.
· ·
·
CLASSES
·
Continued
dinator of the
-
1
.
50-lb. team· and
He emphasized that the sport
scout forthe varsity.
has
'
nothing to do
.
with the
<.
Upon completion of
.
his Doctor
.
diminishing
.
interest.
·
"Everyone
of Laws degree
.
in 1963, Leyine can identify with football. In my
·
went soutp

.
to
·
practice in
·
-
·
New
·
.
opinion it is the toughest physical
·
York
·
City but
·
returned
.
to
an
_
d mental sport that exists.
Poughk~psie in
.
1964. He moved
·
:
(



.
,
;
I


• •
"
'.


,'
contact with one another and
discuss important campus issues.
4.
·
Series of Workshops -
a
chance to bring out the creativity

in all of us -
:
Gourmet Cooking,
Arts and Crafts, and Guitar
Lessons are
·
just
a few
.
..
·
·

··


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PAGES
·
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER
7,
1976
On Sports


18.4.1
18.4.2
18.4.3
18.4.4
18.4.5
18.4.6
18.4.7
18.4.8