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The Circle, April 25, 1974.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 12 No. 10 - April 25, 1974

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-
·
-
·
1HE
.....
.
-,_-
VOLUME 12,NUMBER 1_0
_
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW
YORK
12601
APRIL 25, 1974
·
Student Government'
<
FreezeS, Releases
.

Funding Of Two
·
Cain}lus
·
Groups
-
CIRCLE
FinaIJ.ces
·
Frozen
'
..
.
~
byK~enTully
Keegan concerning
·
this
ev
.
ent:
.
. . . •.
..
·
.
~
...
....
Nothing was said
.
to either
·
-
·
Last _Tuesday, April
.
16,
.
the
·
present Co-Editor.,,
Lyn
Osborne
Stuc:len
_
t Government in:iposed
·
a or
:
Greg
.
previous
.
to
.
...
the
freeze on CIRC~E finance~,
·
publication
_
of
_
his ''freeze" letter. ·
althou~ over
.
the weekend after
,
Ed also wants
·
it ''known''. that he
ni
tich ''inv¢stigation'~
'
the freeze acted oh his owri as Treasurer of
on CIRCLE ft.tiid.s was lifted .
. ·
.
the Student Government. Student

Tpe fi;-eeze
--
w~
i.
a
:.
result of
.
.
Government
,

President
..
Jim
.

.
suspicions held
·
by St
.
udent
·.
Elliot,
was
merely inforrna:l of
.
:
G~v~~nment
.
Treasurer
·
Edward
·
the
·
procedure being follow
Erl
by
K1sslmg'.· T~e problem arose Ed and had
.
nothing to do with
· when it came
-
to Ed's
·
attention
,
subsequent event.i
·
·
.••
:
t~at t~e
:
CIRC[..E should)1ave
'
a
.
,
The followmg day, Wedn~day
higher balance
:
than
·
.was shown
·
Aprill7; Ed was to leave Marist;
..
oi:i
~
~IRCLE co1!1JXJ.ter pririfouts,
.
·.
for
·
aJour day conyE!ntio11 in New
g_rv111g
.
·
thent
/
the
':
,
CIRCLE
t
s York; and dtiring
·
his absence
.
fmancial status
.
.
'J;'he initial appointed Special Prosecutor
Studen.t
:
Government
:
allocatioq St.eve Schlitt.e
to
follow up on the
.
<,.
came
,
to
:
$7000;
.
but
-
-the CIRCLE events of
,
the CIRCLE freeze.
·"
· :-
aijo
:
receives
:'
iiicome
·•
from
>
ad~
·
Neither
<
CIRCLE Co-Editor was
.
~'
.
:
\
yeiy$ing.
;(
SJ>8.~
::
sol(,l
,
1:o
'/
1<>
,
cal
·:'
c
_
onta:ctecf bf
:
Mr
/
S~itte
;
·
Ac-
-
.
,.
-t
:.:
m~r~h~nts
::,
-:-
,
:.
The
.
·
.
_
Student
,
,
cording Jo
.
.
Greg
.-:
Conocchfoli
--.:.
.
,
,···• ·
.
,
..
·
.
.
.
:
,
...
·
.
..
· ·
.
.. ·
.
. . ··.
·
.
.
.
.
..
,
.. ,
.
.. ,.
.
· .
·.
··
..
·.· · ..
·
·.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
.· .
.
.,,· . .
. .
. ·.
,
.
.
•..
..
.
·
.
...
. .
·
.
-
.
,
,
..
Gover:runentTreasuter felt that
/
'iwhen Ispoketo Steve Schlitte
-
:.
·
,
·. ·
·
· .
·
·
,
·
·
,
,
.
,,.
·
.
·
-
-
,>
-
·
..
-
·'
rules
;
:
anfstu~ent
~
group which
/
get
:
oack
:
to
'
myse1(
:
,
of
.
my
-
-
·
'.
...
.
~
/
-!\
;
..
. ._.
.-
_
.;
._
.,.
._:
.
_
... _
,
__ .
· ..
.
...
.
,
..
--
~
·
_
..
- ·
_
.. _.
.
..
.
·
-:-:.,
.
. _
.

.
_
_ .
·
re,c¢ive~
_
_.._
a~~
·
ation
_
s
·
c~not ,have
·;
_ --
~~ine
·
_ss
-
Man~ger,--.
Mar~
-7
-
Fit- ·
:
by
Mike Harrigan
'
ori the niattedi;t
.
which it was
.
,
-
~H(!\Vever,
·
on Sunday;
·
funds
,
outside
-
~ccouiits;
.
Also financial
·
zgibbons;
'
However this
<
was
·
·
·
·
·
stated that 1he comments on arid
.
wer_e unfrozen beC8use
.
·
of. the
·
r~cOi-dsshould be~ade
..
av8ilable
-
..
Jlever
.
.
don8."
<
..
:
_
.
·
-

·- ·
. ·
Two
misundersfa~mg caused
_
in the letter "were
.
intended only
.
-
memoranduni
..
issued
.
..
by to the.Student Goveminenfupon
:
,
Furth
·
er
.'
investigation by this
theSttidentGoveninient
t.o
freeze
..
in the int.er.ests
~
of hwnor,
.
and WhUeseir
-
and Kazolias; and · request.
:
•Alorig with
_ .
this
.•
in-
_
reporter,in the Business Office's
..
· the
-
fundsoftheCommuter
:
union wereregardedinthis
,
inaiinerby
'
becaµse of a
·
Jack

it
.. ··
sub~
·
formation; Ed

received
·
word
-
role in the conllict
·
resulted in no
last
'
:w~k, However,
:
onSunday Mr.
·
Kazolias." The
.
ij'lmioran
<
stanti~ti?n
.
9n
the ~sue of
,
tpe fro~
a
CIRC!,E
.
staff

member,
,
.
substantial know!edge,
·
of the
/
·
·
• these
:'
nµsftriderstaooings were
·
dwn also ·assured
.
that Kazollas
·
.
·
funds.
·
K1SS1ing declineq_"to state stating that 1he CIR
_
CLE '.'might''
·.
conflict by either Mr.-Campilli or
·
__

.
·
·
·
.
resolved,
':
and ~ftmd.
.-
were un-
·
had planried no legal action; and
··
who had
:
made
·
the allegations,

.
have
··
·
·
outside
.
·.
accounts;
.
.
which
·,
.
Mr; La:Rose. Mr. LaRose pointed ·
.
:
·
,
frozeri
>
: _
_
•.
,
.
:
·
··
.
-.
.. ··.
.
W~te~eUap<>logize<h''for
.
what:is
_
b
.
ut_ st~ted that
·
"Tre Co~uter hav~ beer:ikept secret.
.
-·..
.
. .
outthatth~rehadtobemorethan
'
·
·,
The
'
Jirst misunderstanding atbast
:-
abadjokf'
.
:C
.
. ,
.
·
·
..
Umon
_
·
co~operated with the
..
W1ththisreasoning,Edsenta
.
oneaccount:oneforexpensearid
·

concerned an
:
,u'ticle in the last-
,
·
.,·
The
,
second
-
misunderstarrling
.
Student Go'verruna:it; aiid.l want _letter to CIRCIE
·
Co:Editor Greg
·
one
.
.for income:
·
·" At the year's
issue of
_
the Blurb, the
.
commuter c onc~rned
_:
allegations
-
that to thanlc th
_
em;
I'ni
hopeful that
·
Coriocchioli, sta:ting that CIRCLE
:
end they are put together and
.newsletter; The article, written Commuter. Union
.
funds
were
·:
the, week's
;
freezing of
'
funds finances were under freeze until netted,:but
wring
the year there
.
by
.
Rick Whitesell, consisted of a
·
,
beirig pfaced
.•
off
·
,
campus; Ed didn't cause loo·mtx!h bf

an
iii,,
,
t:l1ey could
be e:iqunined.
are always two
.
separate ac-
letterby~atiroKazolia
.
s; who has
·
"Kissli
_
ng;
.
Student
\
Governinerit conyenience
.:
to them;'
'.
-
.
Ki$ling
-
,
·
Mr. Kissling
-
'
stresses
.
that counts. The records
.
are open
.
if
.
declared
.
him~lf a
·
candidate for Treasurer
/
o'rdeted
·
tJie
:
freezing
.
_
also
.
:
expre~ed
_
happiness that '
'.
official'
.
'
_
-
,
proc
ed
ufe
.

was
·
.
.
:
there are
,
any questions~ Greg
·
-
governor of N
.Y.
State in ~hich
.
:
oii funds
.
on the baajs
'
ofc¢r
.
tain eve~g- worked
_
~ut;
,
··
.
.
.
.
·
.
follow~ so that
if
tl!_ere were any
.
·
also said,
"If
~d hadbothered
'
to
.
certain conim~
_
ts were placed. allegations
·
made
:
to
.:
him
:
apoi.lt
:
Chrjs jV,1se;
:
preside
.
n~. ~Lthe . questi
,
ons concerning these
.
·
look atthe,two a::counts, perhaps

Reportedly, there w eref ears that
·,
the
'-
runds;,,,and
'
~
beca
use
.,
ottne
,
Comm.ut¢r. Union; expressed that , events, a ]lXlicial board
·
would the whole co~ct may have been
.
.
. Kazolias would
.
take some legal
'
Blurbletter. The issue~wasto be
;
it.was aUa "mistake'', and that it
'
. note that
.
Ed had
.
·
followed due averted:. However
.
Mr .
.
Kis!lling
action
:
:
·
•...
.
.
.
.
·
.
·.· .. ··
.
.
·brought<before
.
Jhe Student was "blown
·
out
of
a:ll
propor- process; although Ed sp_oke to
·
didn't do
:
this upon· his
.
initial
··
.'
·
Howev~r
/
· White$ell
.
and
·
.
·
·
Government
·
Judiciary
.
for
-
in- tion."
-
-
·
-
·_
former CIRCLE Editor Jim
actions
_
at
the
Bus~es.s
·
Office."
C
Kazolias issued
:
a meriioramuri
f:
>
vestigation and resolution.
.
.
:
::-
·.
,
.
.
'.
.
.
.
.
'
..
·
·
.
E1;~,i~ii
f
:
li~~ri.Ils
·
·
Sltow
••·
·
·
·
. ·•
N~~
MJ:i-i~f
~r~diliori
.
.
.
·.·
.
.
.
.
.
.
\
:
.
··-::
.
.

~a'.s
:
o~~~~cb;
f
;~ on
.
e/,receiveif
{
Gov;r~fJlt President m,aies the
.
. .-
. ( -~
:~
.:
; :
:.
,-
.
.
'<\,"
,
·.
.
.
190
,
:votes
,
in
"
hi.(
:
favQr,
;-
with
'
127
-
,
qew]y elected
:
offidaJs
,
are no
.
..
·
..
..
:
Stiiderif
.
GoVeriunent elections
;
stiiderits
:'
'
'
abstairiing
>
:
_-
Brian
.
newcolllei:s
,
to student
.
politics
.
.
.
;
:
<{
~i:
:
~f
.
U~oriiillg
,
Yea
f
,
.
h~ld
:
,
on
,:"
~9rgari,
;
1
9ef~iti~g
:
}1!~
/
opponent
,.;
and have wo~ed ~g~t~er befo
_
r~,
:
·
.
.
·
:,
·
·
.
:
:
AprU
/
l~jii
-
;
.
:
)en~
.;
.to

.
.
·.•
~ow
:.
a
.
:
Ro~ey
_
L_em~nbtsom~J5_vot~,
.,,
~nd
:
fee1s
.
~h~
·-
Job
.
~
.
bemg
,
placecl
.
.
..
.
·
·
.
·
·.

·
traditiqn
·
',
begmnmg
·:
-
~t
,
Marist.
·
;
was
.
;,
elecled
: .
to
:
the
'.f
off1<;e
,
.
ot-
.

m
:
proper
.
authonty.
!
'Over
..
the
.
·;
~.The
·
:
:
tradition·=:·shows
\
a
/
liiilited , . Student Goyernmerit-
:
Treasurer. past 21/l
.
ye
·
ani during my
,
sµi.y.
at .
·
·
.
.
·
voic
t
itj
/
stµdeii(p~l~l~s
'.
due
:
to
_>
"J;h.e
ball_ot,:w~s
.
1Q4
~}7~
~ith 34
:,
Marist
!
,
havifh~
.
~d tl;le cr~es
:
of
..
.
.
·,
:
lirriiteii
>
YQ~g
:
;
~
perc~~ge
(
:=
Ot
:,
a~
_
ste,nt1on!i
.<
-~
Th~
~
:
pos
,
1
,
tu>n
)
of
.
:
.
_
student
.
:w;ir.es
,
t,_ and the
·
derual of
-
.
·
·)
il"~pto
_
xi
_
ip:llt~ly
:i
~ 40
,
0,
:/
s~
,
~ents
,)·
S
_
~d~~t
:-
po
_
v~11.u:ne~t
r
Secretary ,
·•·;
the
_
s~dents,y
,
01~.e by, the
.
~ude~W
: :
enrolled
:
,
:,>
at
,
:
:
Manst;
:~.
the
,:-,
to~l
:~
-
Jor
,
$,Uch 110 9ne ra,n; will be held
-
.
.
thell!selv~
;
·
·
.·>
·
,
:
:
-.
.
;
~
\ i ;
.
·
,
nfuri~~ofvo~es
'
~ast~aj1311Jth~
.:.
by
::
a11
:
ap~intee
/
sE!le~~d by
,
the
..
..
.. A
.
~atio
:
shows
.
that du~g.this

.
,net
.
t:o@
i
~~g:~1~
;
as
.:
~
.:
~b~en~e
..
:
n~w.
:::
pr_es1d_~y
:
Elec~1ons
.
· .to
l,
th~
/
,tune,pe
_
r1odJ~s,than-

~
:
.
of
-
the .•
·
.
ballots
.
wa-e
7
casL
;'
"
'
'
.,
:
.
<
·•>:'"
'./(. -:'':
-
,r
Fmancial'boom
·
,
:
were a.Iso
.
4e~d;
,
stude11ts
·
-
·
J~11rolled
,
llave
<
cast·
,:
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
. .
.
.•• .
.
.
.
.
1
~
~
,
~
~
~:i
~:
~~
t
t~n
<
hi:
f::
oppoiient
/
,
Cbfis
:'
)l/is
_
~
-
~
-
\
"JC1$ephBau~;
,.
who
;
rece,1v,ed
..
l8\
;
;·:
fim,a~
:.
f~f
;,
~
-

r_epr~~nb,IU9n
_
;_
iri
\:.
:
.•

,,,
riglit:
·
..

Vice
~
~ie
·
sident
:
ciiarl~s
••
.T.atkne•/
~
Treisii1er
:
Bria
·
n
'
,
The
-:
ballotingiwas
'
i'.151
F/
Morris;
.:
-
{
an.d
:
J3ob1\~orley
,-
!:l)~o~s;A
;:
~
.
9f.:ilk sw~ent
.
.
a.ptiy_ities,and
·
the
,
1>9wer .
,,
..
''·
Mor
'"
·
:
--··
·

'
d
·
P
·,
•·
.
·
·a
·
·
·
·
·
·th
'
.
.
:
.
,
'.
;
M
'
"" ;
·
.
'
'
s'
•·.
{\f'··r.
!
;
·~

,
,
-
1
·
·.

.:
-
-
- ~ ~
?(~
-·~
~
~~
;
••
.
.
_;.~:;
.'
,
~
~
.









































































































































































































































































































:
:
--
:
-
.
...
.
PAGBi
.
Machinery invades the Sheahan
iot.
Land Fill Undertaken
11!,
·
sheahan Lot
APRIL 25, 1974
Tuition
,
To
Increase
.
.
.
··-
.
.
Who Will
Pay?
By Ray
Barger
funds.
If
the present criterion for
need is m
_
et, the student's tuition
increase
·
over tlm year will be
Tuition at Marist this fall niay paid by
Marist
increase as much as
$4
per credit
.
Gerald Kelly, head
of
Marist's
($120
per year).
financial aid; said that he has
·
The increase
is
due
to
rising calculated Marist's gain from the
costs.
T .A.P. to be about one-half
Linus Foy has stated that the million dollars.
boost would
be
the maximum
·
The State
-
Senate
·
has aJso
increase that there would be; The passed a financial

aid bill No.
actual amount of the increase
.
9550.
This bill wruld be directly
hinges upon two financial aid aimed at both uwer and lower
bills now in the St.ate Legislature, classmen.
·
_
lie said.
It is limited, however, to only a
..
These
bills,
if'
passed, would one year commitment.
relieve some of the student's
.
It
would aJso direct it's funding
financial bmlen.
·
through-
·
tlie SGholar Incentive
The Assembly's bill No.
9169,
Program, but would increa
·
se the·
has just recently been passed, student's award in proportion to
and will
_
be brought before the nettaxable income .
.
·
The
$600
State Senate for
a
vote.
This
bill
.
maximum award now, for in-
woulcl
institute
a
Tuition stance, would become
$1000.
·
-
By Charles de Percln
Assistance Program that would
·
.
"It
:
is my opinion that the
be active for four years and Senate's bill would not
be
as
mi.tnity .. To assure that Marist Marist College.
.
benefit

directly only incoming be~eftcial in the long
run,''
said
would not have such problems as· · The old water works is located freshmen .
.
Money would
·
,
be
'
.
Mr. Kelly. ''The Assembly's
.
bill
The terrain
-
located behind air quality and safety hazzards, towards
·
the river side of awarded through the Scholar
.
has idour year commitment; it
Sheahan House is the site of a an airplane trip to Buffalo was Champagnat's parking lot, and it Incentive Program.
·
wou~d pump more IJlOney into
land filling operation which is taken_ by Brother
.
Nllus Donnelly will
be
the future location of a
However, upperclassmen will MarJSt."
-
.
being undertaken by the city and to observe
·
towns
.
which have number of olymP.ic size
·
tennis benefit
_
indirectly
"
through
'
a
town
oi
Poughkeepsie.
·
Workers sewer plants similar
to
the
.
one to coUN. The brick house which is redirection
of
Marist's av~ilable
are preparing the land for the be built by the city and town of standing on
.
tbs old Water work
.
·
'
·
.
.
.
·
---
-
·
·
.
.
.
~:~:~uc¥t~at~e~~
-
~e;~!Tri~ ~=:s:hlndSheahanhouse
.
~an~~%
.
~lara~
0
.
mtci~;er
·
t
.
.
:!i
.
·
~~
:
E
·
.
-

·
xp
··. :
e
'
·>
.
r
·
·
·
·
·
t
,:
q-fo
·
.
.
·
s
.
.
.
·
.
.
k
..
station
·
which
will
cost about
10
was chosen
-
because of its Access
.
to the courts will be
·
.
. ·
.· _
-
·
:
_L
-
~
I
~
ea
.
.
.
.
million dollars.
location which
·
serves the city's facilitated
.
by stairs connecting
·.
·
.
·
·
.

·
.
··•
Marist College concern for me need. The intention of the city and the old water work land
·
to the
·

i
ecology and other factors per-
town of Poughkeepsie was to buy Chru:!}pagnat parking lot. .
.
~
·
.•
·.M
_
.
•d E
!
!
~:~ll~~ri=p:dsa;~!~~~ ~~ri=:p~p~~~~e:x~k~;!~!' s~!:e!~~~;ti:!~
0
~e::ficti

.
:
~
1.7,t ' .
.
·
l
·
..
.
·
..
.
·
.
.
.
.
ast.
.
}
because of the proximity of the
99
years land lease of the old to Marist College for it is con-
·
I
station
_
to
.
the campus
..
com-
water
.
works was requested by tributingtotheecc;ilogyof}\iarist.
.
.
·
"
·
in the' Mid-=i:ludson
·
area~ His

t
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
!.'r,
:
D~vid E. Long, one of the appearance
,-Is
sponsored
.
by
.
.
J
._

.
_
. . . .
_
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
CO!ffltry
~
foremost; e'!Cl)erts on
.:..
Marist
_
in c~pei:ati!>n
.
with the
·
t
·
Residence Sta:££
SCICctea
~~&i.~~~~I
~a4t4:~:g~~::
...
J

ByBren~an:O.,yle
-
Moore
:
of Co~s~ling Se~ces;
"
Sam
.
m
.
on
.
;
.
Greg
-
ory
.
•,
·
.·.
Rob
.
ert fairs, will speak at
-
Mari
st
_
on political analyst for Israel and
.
J~
...
·
·
-
·
·;.;
'
:
.,
.
::
.
:..
.
.
.
d Ed
d
o•~
ef
f
th ,
.
.
. .
. .
.
~ednesday, May
-
1,at
l:~O P-~-
the
··-
Afabian
O
Penninsula
~
in
,
the
'.
Res~,!ent'Staff positions for
.
the
'
an .
'Yar
·
.
·
.
.
e
_
.
e
'
ron,i
.
.
e.:
.F,e~rark
·
~!l~
,
il.Jiin;,
.c:
~mel_'ico
..
111
:-tbe
,;
c:a.mp~
..,
9!mter~
.;
His
,
~PlC
..,
,..
B ureati
':--
of.·•'lntelligence
:',-
and
acade:TJ(-
,_~
_
ear
1974-75
_
have
.
been
_.,,Psychology .Department.-
.
c
:-
·
_
Llu-veras; Leo; J oauUrkiel; Leo; will
;,,.

_
be
,
_
.
·., Psychological
.
Research;a position he has held
Selection of RC's and RA's was .
·
Deb6ie
·
Villano,
,
:
r;eo;
.
Peter P~esuppositions.
?f·•
the Cummt
-
since
.
·
1970:
He also
c
·
served
.
·
··
·
.
filled.
tk~-
of
111
applications
35
.
~one through a
:
process
,
.
of Wilderotter,
, .
House
-
I Cham-
:
Middle East cnsJS."·
-
,
·
· ·
·
-


,
.
studerc ,
.

IO
Reside
·
nt
·
Coor-
·
nwnerous screenings. Of
.
the
111
pagnat·
William
Hoar House
II
-
,
_
0
.
Lo
ill
ls
akt ov_epieas as aforei~ officer and
;
..
dm'
at.ors
·
~"d
25
·
Re
"d
t Ad
Ii
ti
40
dr
d Ch
'
.
·
·

'
·
.
~-
.
ng
.
'I!
~
-
0
spe
. .
o
:
has completed ass•anments at
.
,..
. ·
,...
.
·

SI
en

-
-
·-
app ca ons,

.
,
were
-
.
oppe
··
_
ampagnat,
·
Rubert
Lynch,
.
various academic
:-
and
..._
c1v1c th
·
-
A
·
.
·
E""
··
b
·
-
t
:
visors,
:
ha~e
,
been
selec:ted
;
··


·
•·
.
,immediately
because th~yJailed
·
House
.
.
III
.
Champa gnat; Jmeph groups during
~
three-day stay K~rtoummerican
· ·
m
.
assy
.

a
·
<
-
,
:
f;tarti.JignextFall the residence to meet the basic requirement.a of
D.
Frem, House
IV
Champagnat.
·
..
-
-
·
· •
·
staff;wili
-
be
.-
required
.
to· take a good academics, leadership Except for Lluveras this will
be
'
·
·
.
.
-
·
"
-
·
·
s~ial
:
3-crl:ld.it
:.
cru
_
rse
·
,:
:
called
.
potential, or
·
perscnal dynaqlism. the first time any of these people
·
·
.
'•~ersonnel A~irii~istt
.
~tioi:,i iri !'he
'.
remaining
:
app!!ca:nts were
·
has served as a RC.
-
Higher
::
mducati.on;'
·
D1r
.
ector
.
of
·
interviewed
,
by
.
.
a committee
·
Salaries for the RC's and RA's
·
Reside1:,1ce.
:
_
Fred
l;.ambert
_
says c
·
omprised
.
of Lambert and vary depending on the dormitory
··
thatthecourseisintendedtooo
:
a
.
current
.
staff members from they work
in.
RC's in Cham-
.
w
_
orkslfop' wbe're)?y' the
'.
s~ff will varius dormitories. The
~-
final pagnat and Sheahan will receive
·
-
·
seek
:.
to
discus.s
-
the
·
theocy
.
of screening was done by a com-
$1000,
in Leo they will
·receive
·
.
admiriistrating and the
·
actual mittee from the
·
donnitory or
$900
and in Benoit and Gregory
.
••
·
practice of that
.
theory.
·
The
·
·
house in which the applicant was
_
the RC will oo payed
$1200.
RA's
·

course will pe
:
taught by
Lam-
·_
to be assigned.
·.
·
will be payed
~00
in Cham-

bert;
.
Dan
·
·
'
·
·
Honeman~
Following is a list of students pagnat,
$900
in
·
Le_o and
$850
in
;
·
Housemaster
:
of
.
Otampagnat;
,
chosen as Resident
.
Coordinators: Sheahan.
·
/
Laurence Sullivan
,
·
and ,Cagle
,:
N
_
eville Bolling,.Benoit; Robert
••
, Opi,0FstullitiCs Limited

.
..
.
. ·
.
·.
·
:
·-
.
.
.
.
.
.
-.
:
Jior
.
Sum111~r
Elllploymenf
,..
.,
__.
.
-
.

-
'"'
.,,.
M
,,
,
~
.....
.
:
.,.

•-

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,



.


. " . :

·



,
,
·
·
,-,
·
.




, •



,"
·



.
I
..
.
.
<~-,--,<~•.f
ByD~bbyNykle(
-
.
.
-
.
-,
_
:'
'
arefor.part1imehe1p
·
iiithePost that companies have called in
.


.
0

.
.
,


,

Office, work inthe Security Office
'
and the student r~ponse has
:;
.
:·_
If
~>:stu:d~~
~e
-_
co~~er~g
:'. -
for botlt
.'
nialesari~
-
fen.iales:Also
been poor;
·
-
The

reasons
:
·
the
· .

·
:·:
remammg
;
in:'_tlie
'
I'oug~eepSie
·
- a large number of: students are students
:
reject
:
the
.
jobs
:
have,
·
·,
area for the
·summer
'
arid
'
;
are

·
·
needed
.
to work for five
to six
either been the.work hours didn't
seeking empJoyment
-
~oligh
-
~e:
\
weelri(helpiiig move the
·
library fit
.
their
.
·
schedules
.
or not
ui-
college, the opepmgs
·
are
limited:
..
books.
and
;
equipment
'
to its' riew ·. terested
.
in'
.
the job itself. The
Most positio~ : ~ave
:
..
~~
.,
fill~
,
·,il~~O!l
.~
in
:.
F
.
ontaint!.
_.
The
.
.
·
ad-
Office doe~n•t have much contact
, and there
is
a
preference
·
toJhose
},
vantag~
()f,
holding a sununer Job ":ith maey
·.
e~ployment _agen-
: .
whom have held the job before.
:
·
on campus:is the·odds are good
-c1es
.. Jobs which are available
·
<
·
·
Programs under the
,
auspices
·
the student;:ca11have the position are called
·
to
the
.
Office
:
rather
·
.
:'..:
of
·
students
·
or
.
th
.
e
\ i
J4arist
.
,
i
pilr,t
\
~~
-)
~~g the
.
acadeini~ . than the ~fi~e
:
calling
_
agencies
·
~
:
Brothers are
seeking
peop~
.
to
-
year.
-
-
,
·
..
·.
·
'
.
.. • .
,

-
;
.
<
:
·
.:
·
or.compames,
.
unless
.
the student
-
.
::

einploy. There
,-r~
.
_
pl'9gr_a
_
ms
,

'
.
. G
.
e~all;J:Kelly_,
:
of the
-
Fmanc,iat
•:
r~uests
~
_
specifi~
-
tYJ>E; of -job.
',
·
. ·:
such
_
as
.
camps
_
li_ke
~e.
:
M.a~t ~1d .
·
Of
,
fic~,
.
commented
,
on
·
,
Compames, Marist.offices; and
-
>
Brother
:
Summer
·
.
Program at
.
helping students find jobs;
"If
programs prefer to
.
hire students
·
-:
Cold Springs
_.
and
'.
:
Ellenville as students ask for help
_
in
finding
a who
·
are on
.
the
·
College .Work-
-:
wellas.LOO.e~eople's Wo~ksJ}op
._
tob;'we_wn1
·
s11ow them a list of S~d~ Program. Tile
-
reason
:
for
Dr. David
.
E .
.
i.o
..
ng, Mid.;Eastexpe
.
rt,
·:
.,,..
.
-:
and
·
Maris~
:
,
Su_mm~r
·
·
Stock
·
JObs
_to
choose
,
frOI11
·
whl
,
cl,1 com-
th¥l
IS
.
the
·
government
pays
80
.
,
.
.
:-
.
Theatre. 1Student.1
'
interested in panies.-have
·
·
caned m.
··
ILthe
·per~enLof .the
.
salary, andthe
. ·
}
·
·
·tbe;se_:~o*
have
_
to
0
check
_)V~b

stu:dent d
_
oesn't
fin<l
any.suitable, ~ompany
·
.
.
·
or
,
·
colfege . the
·
-
.
··
·
-:
.
·
eacll.gro.up
to
fµid
0
out
·
:wliat
~
::
wewlllputhlsnameolia listwitll· remaining
20
percent ..
On
cam-
·
,
Due to his
·
recerit-illnei~,'Father Leo
·
Gallant's coiu
'
mn,
. :
.

avallit~:
'
~
'lbe
:
:
Little
>
'
~aple~s
:
:
·
his prefere~ce
anl;l
call
him
~
a
:
pus~ there
is
anefforqonuuntain ·
. ~·shout
-
It Softly'
.
\ usually Jound
:
on page
_-
6;-will
'
not
.
.
.
:,:
-
_
.
W ~
,
is
~
-all
C:
!~df
:-
in
-
. th~
:
·
:
Jobalongth~linesis ~ediri.~'
·
a
balance of
employing students
; .
.
appear:this.week~
,
:
.
,_
·
.
.
'
·-
.· .
·
_
.
·:
"'
:
.. ·

..
.
.
.
·

·
.
:~
·
_procetitl'
o f ~

P~-
-
-\-:>'.::
.
.-
Jnt!Je
·
~ ;
,
th(Fin81lciat:Al
_
d
:;
Who
-•
.
are
:
,
(11
:
tbe
_
/
Work~dy
:
·
.
-
··,
_.
..
:.
,
yre~alfwish
:
Eath
_
e_r
_
~allan_f a
:
spe
·
edy
.
r,ecovery'.
_
:
· .. ..
:PcJilttou
,
whlch are
·
still.open
.:,
Offlcehuoffered
·
openP9iitions
·
Program
and
those who
are
·
not
,.
.
.- ,.
---
.
,
, .
.
. :,
.
.
.
·
.
·
,
<
.
;
·
,
..
,

· · ..
·
,
·.-:--
.
-
·
·
·
··
·
-
·
.
.
'.: ..
_
:.
_:·
.
·
.
-.
'
.·•
'
.
·
.
>
;."
.
·
<:
·
<
/•

:
•.-.
·
..
·
.
·
<;:,
e::-:
';
';
-
'
~
:-·
:-. .
·_
:
_
.
·
_
.
·

'.·
.
-
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.
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.
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:
:
:<:
>;:·.
·
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~:-';',
.
'_
:
:
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·
;,_

_:::
·
.
'
\
.









































































APRIL 25, 1974
THE CIRCLE
Creative Coping Offers
Innovative Experience
By Irene Ross
enables the students
to
awaken
their own creativity and to en-
Creative coping is NOT the counter imaginative approaches
typical classroom experience! to the hwnanities.
Mrs. E. Rimai, Fisher,
Mr.
What have the ·copers found
Norman Olin, Brother John significant in the course? Many
Sullivan,
Brother
Ronald have found that working so
P asqueriello, and Mrs. Eva Plaut c los·ely . with each other is like
are the organizers of the 15 credit living in that they are able to see
course offered under the art and many different sides of everyone.
music departments.
.
"You have to learn eight other
Nine students are registered personalities," said Maureen
for the course and tbey work McGeary, "and you have
to
learn
closely. together at their own to work both with· and without
speed. A seminar is held every them." Also, since you are
Tuesday when the copers. read working together so closely, you
and discuss different books. On have to learn· to keep yourself
Wednesdays,• Tl\ursdays, and from becoming distracted.,,
Fridays, one can usually find·
Others · enjoyed
working
them in Fontaine Hall working at without a schedule.
such things as painting, sculp-
· "!feel a lot freer in school. The
turing, or jewelry-making .. They pressure of exams and deadlines
also set aside time for poetry or · has been lifted and lean perform
mime workshops. Every M~nday better with these pressures gone.
morning, a review of their work I. feel more· balanced and I'm
tal_tes place,-and each coper exploring things that are really
ciisplays the work that he or. she important
to
me,"', explained'
has done. for the week while the Linda Roberts.
others comment on lt.
: 'Kevin Nash feels that creative
Experience
is
a key word in coping offers enrichment in the
creative coping.· The course abstract.
It
is a, chance
to
be
creative in a field that is not
generally exposed
to
everyday
life on campus.
"Creative coping is a new idea
within standardized education.
Human relationships are greatly.
involved and that's what
art
is,"
he stated.
The copers would recommend
the course to anyone, but they
added that students interested in
creative · _coping
must
be
responsible and willing to work.
Joella Casse said that the course ·
would be good for anyone who
wants to see if he can work
without a schedule, but also said
that he would have to be able to
rely" on himself
to
do the work.
Ruth Marquez added
"If
you
don't want
to
work, I wouldn't
advise you
to
take creative
coping."
The copers will be displaying
their work at an art gallery in
Fontaine on Sunday,May 5, from
1-4 o'clock. They will also per-
form in dance, song, and poetry
reading.
Aneniia TeSts Offered
, PAGE
3
Students "creatively cope" in
the
Marist Art Department.
Marist Coordinates
-· Workshop
By Charles de Percin
This summer a staff of Marist
College students will help
coordinate the Little People's
Summer
Workshop.
This
program evolved from the staff's
interest in children and their
involvement with Marist College
children's theatre productions
such as Peter Pan, Snow White,
Pinocchio, the Beeple, and other
works sponsored by _the Marist
theatre program for children.
The workshop
is
operating for
its third year. The formation of
the Little Peoplf s Summer
about every two weeks. Parents
are treated
to
the plays acted by
their children. Participation in
athletics, reading, singing,
swimming. and music are also
included in the workshop ac-
tivities with constant supervision
of the Little People's Summer
Workshop staff.
.
--
Workshop was created by Cindy
:on Monday May 7, from· 2-4 '. victim alive. The area with the people marry who have the trait, Bodenheimer and Dean Thomas
p.m. tests for Cmley's Anemia greatest concentration of · this one of four of their children may Wade. The main orientation of
will be giveniri -the infirmary disease is in tl1e centraJ portion of have the disease, according .to the program is theatre activities
under the auspices: of the Public the Mediteranean, along its · Mendelian Law at least one of the for its participants. Children
Health· Nursing
Program. northern shore, and especially in other· children may· carry th·e taking part . in the workshop will
Parents enroll tlleir child for a
period of one to eight weeks
in
the
Little
People's · : Suimn_er
Workshop, The program offers
family rates and scholarshipirare
given to
under-priviledged
children of the . Poughkeepsie
area. The workshop. is for
children of the age of 4
to
11 years
old. They are divided into four
age groµps of 4-5, 6-7, 8-9, 10-11.
The need.of the workshop: w_as to
get
kids
of the .community. in-
volved during the summer. The
program session is as follows,
July 1-12, July 15-26,
July
29 to
August 9, and Augusf 12-23.
• · Coaley's . Anemia, . medically Greece anµ Italy .. :• ,
· · · trait.
be· guided towards creativeness .
: k_nown. as,:'.l'hala_se~ia; is. at .·
Pilot sc~een.ing projects show . · It" you are·of Italianor Greek in arts and crafts. The staff's
· ,~presen~:;811', mcura bl~ -;childh_ood ;c·.thaLas high;,as,;l7..; .percen.~-.,of · l}eritage, you .'owe·
it
Jo ·yourself : 1ntention for this swnmer is to
blood ~sorder ,.reqw_nng blood Greek-Americans may have,the · and your family fo°have'this
·test:
have th_e' childreit put· on a· play
·· transfusions to keep the young Coaley's Anemia trait. When two · · ·
·
·
· ·
· ·
Th~re's·n~ easy way f9r Charlie Neison to become
Dr.
Nelson.
.·· . But there. is
a
way to make it somewhat e~sier.
Antonio. Or the National Naval Medical Center in
·our
way. The Armed Forces Health Professions
Bethesda, Marylancl, ·recognized worldwide
tor
its
.Scholarship Program. It won't soften the demands•- · work in Medical Research. .
.
. of your professors, or those you make upon yourself . · ·. And if'yo!l've read this f<!r, you may be interested
-::.but it may free you from those financial problems
in-
the·. details. Just send· in the coupon and we'll
. ·which, un~erstandably,.-c;an put a crimp in· your-
. supply them. ,
·
··
· ·
-=
concentrat.ron.
. ._ -_-
-
,
_:- .
·
r-----------------------
lf.you qualify, our scholarship progran:i will cover .
I
Armed Forces Scholarships
,
,.,
.. ,,,:'the.~osts·.ot .. YOl!r,_medic;al,~d,ucation. More, you'll.·
1 .·
so~A
.
·
· . .
·
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' . receive a good monthly allowance all through.your
· - u~,y~r"'.ic,iy,T~xas
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s
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. .·
··
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·, schooling ·
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·
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o
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.. . .

.
, . .
·
.
Navy.□
A,r Force O Med1eal/0Sleopath1c

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I
.
. But what happens after you graduate? ·
I .
ve1er,nary•

_POC11a1rv
o
_Other {please specify>
. Then; as a health care officer in the military ·
·
·
·
I
branch of your choice• you enter a professional .
· Name
(please print>
I
: environment· that is challenging, stimulating and
soc. sec.#• _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__;__;_;_,;__---'
I
: satisfying.
·
· ·
· ·
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An environment which. keeps you in contact with
Address,_,,..,.... _ _ _
- - ' - - - - - - - -
I
. : practically all medical specialties. Which gives you
City
'-
I .
the time to observe and learn before you decide on
your specialty; Which may presentthe opportunity
s1a1.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _
_;,:ip, _ _ _ _

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to train in· that specialty. And to practice it. . · • ·
Enrolled at:-------,,==----'---.,__
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'· You may also find some· of the most advanced
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Togradua1e·in.,.· -,--.,-,..,:..-.;.,;_;_-__;__-'--_
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. San Antonio,. Texas;·long.noted for its Bi!ri:i Treat~
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-------~-----.--9!11 _______ ..
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.
ARMED FORCES HEALTH-CAR&
DEDICATED TO MEDICINE AND THE PEOPLE WHO PRACTICE IT
ROSE VIEW FARMS
ENGLISH RIDING LESSONS: $7PERHOUR
BEST F ACll.ITIES A VAll.ABLE .
225
FT; INDOOR RIDING RINK
Ask ~out student·group rates
CALL 471-1918
FOR APPOINTMENTS
LOCATED 8-10 MIN. FROM CAMPUS
DUTCH~S HILL
RD.,
OFF
EAST DORSEY LANE IN POUGHKEEPSIE
Pick •n Shovel
· 19 Academy St. -
. THURSJ)AY-Be_er Ni,ht 9-12. :.
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AT
DOOR .
HAPPY HOUR·, 12-2
.
.
·•
. "
....
FRIDAY PETE:.RAWSON ,:&:.FRIENDS,::
,,
.
.
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.
SATURDAY
sKrrCH
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~
·'
(
:
'-:;
;'.·
PAGE4
-
~CIRCLE
~
.~OLUME"1~v
Mar1st College. Poughkeef)lla,
N.Yi
NUMBER
,
10
.
·:
~Editors
Gregory Conoccbioli and Lyn Osborne
Layout Editor
Tim
DeBaun
Photography Editor
Dave Pristash
S
_
taff: Paul Pifferi, Karen Tully, Brian Morris, Diane Petress,
J.fary
\Mon:saret, Bob Creedon, Ray Barger, Brendan Boyle,
Irene Ross,
0
Elizabeth Spiro, Wayne Brio, Bill Sprague, John T.
Clancy,
Debby
Nykiel,
Charles
D.ePer~in, Cathie
Rmso, James
Burke, Joan McDermott
Mike Harrigari\James Kennedy
_
.-
A ~ ~ -
·
.
-.
'
James Keegan and Amie Trabulsi
J:Susmess Managers
Jack Reigle, MarkFit;zgibbon
The Marist
_
College CIRCLE
is
the
.
weekly newspaper
·
of
-
the
students·
of.
Marist College and
is
published throughout the
school year
.
exclusive of vacation periods by the Southern
-
Dutchess
·
News Agency, Wappingers Falls, New York.
Editorials
THE CIRCLE
APRIL
2S, 1974
Letters To· The Editors·
Reflections Of
Malaise
students who wruld
be
called
apathy. Instead of mobilizing the
upon to follow that sch~ule.
_
substantial good will
of
students
voting in Department meetings,
and Faculty to assure Marist's
the Faculty were given onlr two
continuation, the administration
To the Editcrs:
choices- yes or no. Interestingly,
has created a panic psychology of
There
exists
currently on this alternatives or
-
combinations of
impending doom, not to mention
campus
an
insidious
.
malaise,
the
·
best
features of both were
extensive divisiveness.
which could easily prove fatal to
explicitly not to be ~~nsidere~, a
Both Faculty and students have
thecontinuedexistenceofMarist position which remamed dunng
been· publicly silent on the
College.
·
This malaise results the recent disCU$ions between
leadership
_
crisis at Marist,
-
f roma widespread feeling among students and administration. In a
strange because privately
.
such
students
.
and Faculy that the thirily veiled threat ~o ~he
sentiments have been voiced with
administration ( defined as upper Faculty, the President unplied
increasing frequency over the
management) is unable to lead· that the Faculty would do well to
.
last several months. Is it perhaps
the College through the difficult oppose the students on this
too much to hope that these views
times ahead. This malaise -- is question, since should the
will be subject to serious con~
reflected in the apparent.failure students be successful, they
sideration bythe administration,
of several hundred students to might well challenge traditional
or will they be perceived (in-
-
preregister fortheFall tetm.
It
is Faculty prerogatives. The failure
correctly) as the rwninations of a
further mirrored in the decision
to resolve the issue satisfactorily
disappointed
·
applicant
·
for an
of
more than a few members
of-
left many students angry an~
administrative post?
It
would be
the Faculty
·
fu
assess
·
other
.-
disgusted.
_
unfortunate, indee~; if
·
yet
employment opportunities; The
Considerable alienation has
·
another issue were reduced to
-
malaise is real
_
been the result. In both ca
·
ses,
personalist tertns; for the nature
The
·
current leadership crisis honest disagreement
·
and con-
of the
_
inalaise is eminently ap-
-
F
· -
·
F
-
a
·
has bec9me e
_
vident
tJtis
year,
structive criticism of the ad-
,
parent to anyone
·
prepared to .
·

raze n
,
-
Un
·
s
·
although this writer would assert
.
ministration wa-e viewed as
·
·take the pulse of this campus.
-
-
-
-
·
·
·
·
that it has been
.
-
.
ominously more than suspect. They were
Constructive criticism carries
~
: ·
.
·
-
-
·
·
-
·
-
·
__
.
-
·
·
_
present
_for
some time.
It
has
:
interpreted as personal affronts
a concomitant obligation for
Several weeks agotheStudent Government led·students in aprotest surfaced now because the quality to the·a<µninistrative leadership.
responsible
.
·
_
ac1:i_on;
.
Toward
·
that
over~ process; a proc~ss tll~t the St!J~ent Go~ernment de_emed wrong
of
leadership is tested not in the
It
is a strange ph~nomen(ll o.n
end this writer
:-,
would
.
:
be most
-
because of the lack of mpt4 mto d~isio~ making. However, the ~bles
.
best
_
but in the worst
of
times, and this camp.us ~hat on~ finds it willing to discuss these issues
arE: turned and· we the e~tor
_
s wo.uld
·
like
·
to protest the process by these are indeed tenuous times nearly impossible to disagree on
immediately
following
_
·
·
the
whic~
;
our ~unds
.
were
fr9Z~
·
last ~eek.
·
.
::·
·

-
_
_
_
_ .-
_
-
_
_
·
for small private colleges. The an
·
issue
without
such
.
colloquium on
·
Friday,
0
26 April.
Pnmary
m qurprotest against this practice is the fact that student
:
failure
_
of
.-
administrative disagreement being viewed as an
Perhaps through
:
·
an
_
informal
governme,nt Je
_
aders
_
ip gene~lai:idt~eJr~~urer~ particular did not leadership has
.
reached such ad hominem attack disguised in
-
forum we
.
can th
_
us begin_ to
·
ha~e
-
the
:
decen~y or
-
r1;5pect
:
f~rour positions with t~e CIRC~
to
proportions that the
-
very purpose
the garb of academic issues;
re~ap~ure the uni~y 3md cleter-
notify
all
<Jf
theappropriate pa~~ thatmayhayeb~enmvolyedm our

of
·
the
-
.
College
·
-
_
teaching
_
_
and
-
It
is symptomatic
.
o~
_the
-
mmation
.
so
-·-
·
essential
:
to .the
-
alleged nususe of advertismg
_
mo.:,me: The
.
~suse
.
appears
.
to ~~veJearning
-
~
-
has been seriously leadership crisis that decISions
future of our college. Thi~
,
~nter
stemmed_from thefact that on our budget prmt
_
out
·
fi:om the
_
busmess
.
eroded .
.
How


then have
.-
we are
.
made in sledgehammer believes tllat t
_
he
·
Faculty
and
office,· our advertising income doe~,
:
as
,
did
-
no
.
club's incoming reached this
\
current malaise?
·
·
fashion or not at
an.
Advice of
_
students care. very much abrut
reveriue
_
s the
.
~irst
;
_semeffi!r ap~eanjp this
.
p~rti~ular reco~d ofthe
;
-
The
.:..
crisis
·
began
·
wlh
-
the those not
·
part of the ad-
the future of our institutio1t
_
present funds
,
:
· _ •
·
.
-
·
·
--
_ ·
.
_
.
:--•_
:
.
<
.
-
_
,
debate in Fall,
197'l,
over Faculty
·
ministration is in reality rarely
-
__
There is no
-
aoub~
_
in
_
.
this
It31Iso:
'
seeII,1s

to .. have steI,!lilled}rom the
.
fast a CIRCLE
staff
tenure quotas, an
.
issue
.
that sought,
_
and communication write
.
r's mind- that
:
_
the ad-
m~be~Jnadvert~tlyJold the t~eas~rthat money ~rom the ads was
.
discouraged and
..
divided
.
the
-
outside of a small circle. ministration is dedicated to the
put 19to
{l
se~a~te a_ccount, ~ l e this ~aff member; s account
.
of our F acuity;
Of
ipecia
_
l
_
roncern were generally appearn non-existent.
-
vial>ility of Marist College
, :
(in~
morues ~as illfounded, we believ_e that it
W~
up t~ the tr~sure~t•>-
_
arguments that
<
were weak in
_
.
.
Thel.'e is, therefore, an isolation
deed, µiany members
>
.
<>!
:.
the
· spe~ with t~.properpeople concerned b~fore carrymg o
_
ut his du~es. substance and the administrative
-_
ofthe leadership contingent that administration Hterally
.
l>u~
_
the
~~fently,
.~t
Jlllght
have also been W!~e of
.
the
.
t~e~surei:,:<> a~ failure to consider alternatives. results in decisions made without
College);- But
so as
we,llare many
_
pomt a special prosec'-!tor who was familiar. with this case, rather
_
.
D
_
ue to the decision by
_
the ~olA'd
<
adequate
-
consideration• for their
-
students
_
-
-
ancl F:'c1culty
/
dedica ted
. t~an
one \Vho h~d t~ w.ait
_
for
t~~
returll,
~
did we
~

o.f
_
th~
:
departecl
-
-
.
.
o.
f
>
jl'ru~tees
· _ -
_
an~
.
_
.
th~
.

;_ad~.
<
j~iP.lica
_
tions?
.
either lil
_
ort-~rm or to .
. _
!hi~
.--;
inst!t~tii>n.
, -
'fhe
_
ad-
tr~asurer conside1?-Jlg th
e
~ctt\l;at,tp~
_
1r~aspr~rt,Me~ h~
~
\\'.oulg. ~
"
.
minµ,tr-atio~
/
fo
.:;.
:
Wit;hdl-aw
,
\
the· ·
·
1ong.;ierm;
., -- •
•'
.·-
.
·

· _
-•
·
-
mmIStration
.;
.dCies
,.:
not:
.
have
.
a
. 8

.,
;..~l__f
or the remamder of ~he we~, and
did
not deem .it necessary to proposal; however, the issue was
·
In
'
.
addition, performance monopoly on dedication, '111e lack
r
1
c:~
1-:
~
un~,;the
~~Y
of his
_
departure, we w~e ~ut
111
an awky;ard never fully.joined
.-
..
·
_
criteria for administration are
ill-
of unity, the credibility
gap
and
.
·
_
~v<;~;;:~ylm°a
1
:°cufncult
t.o
believe that the treasurerfelt
"
he had
.
Th~ri
~~n-.
20
·
June
·
19'.73
the
:
defined,
if
at all, .resulting in a
_
the failure ofet:fe<tive;iea~~rship
enoLgliiriputinto thiisi~uationbefore he made his decision, which by
_
Presu,l~~•~
!SSU~~.,,!
.unilateral
_
g~n~ral perception that ad-
have r~ulted m t~e
;
,
mab!lity of
thew ay is the very thing that the treasurer was most adamant agai11St
:
sta tem~nt e~t .. .., ,lo'>hmg
.
rank
_
mmIStr~tors a.re not accountable
the current a«;lministratio~ to
intheStriKe
'
conflict,andifhedid;.wewoulds
·
urelyliketoseeevidence prom
_
o~ion . quotas.
Without.
.
for their actions. Faculty. and
govern. More unportantly, the
of that input-because certainly no input
was
given to
him
by the editors dIS~ussion
_
~ith the Faculty, the students are evaluated, a!}d
if
the
-
_
_
College
.
_ cannot successfu~y
orthebusinessmanagerofthe CIRCLE,anditw:ouldappearto us that policr!Vas ~plemE:r.ted and the res~~ of those evaluabons are confront un"-er
.
.
t.hese . cir-
this action was
·
one that
was
carried on by the treasurer himself
am
no a dmmistrabon phil~~oph:>: ap-
sufficien~y poor, both faculty
cumstances the difficult times
othei<member of Student Government.
:
.
..,..,.---
.
-
peare~
~?
be ~ne. of take-1.t-or~ mem~rands.tudentare ask~dto ahead.
Perhaps it may seem unwise to "bite the hand thatfeeds us" but we leave-it. The timmg,_pro~edu~s leave. ~~nutJ:rient procedures
It.
wo~d be the supreme act of
(irmly belieye that you the
·
student are the people who feed us, anditis

and substance of .this direc~1ve for adminIStrative per~onnel, as de.di.catioi:i for the. current ad-
-
you the student who we want to represent most'At this tinie we would
.
·
were open to serious. ~uestion. well, reflect an ~willingness to ~m1Stration to
.
retire from the
like to remind you of your responsibility to keep as watchful an eye
0~
T?e
_fact
th~t the decismn w~ encourage apph~ants from
.
field of maiagem~t, so that
Student Government as they find necessary to keep on us.
.
.
dlS~~bu~ed
m
the swnmer,
~ts
beyond Jh.e ~onfmes of
.
the othera can seek to create the tone

·

ratification
._
by the
.
Board of College, while sunultaneously the
·
and atmosphere that is
.
essential
Trustees without Faculty con-
·
administration champions to our future. Such an
'
·
act will
,,.
--
-

~cree~ing Process
sultation, and the shifting faculty and stude~t diveraity.
require courage but the
.
malaise
_
justification for the policy - all The effect of this evaluative and
_
must
be
reversed,Ifit
is
not, the
·
cont':i~~ted to a rapidly widen~g recruit~~t double standard on men who built Marist College will
.
credibility gap, exacerbated m morale is mca_Ic!J]able:
.
just as surely preside over her
recent months.
The
admm1stration
has
~
destruction.
·
,
.
/
·
·
..
.
_
-
.
.
.
.
_
,
.
.
_
:
.~itn
the F~cu~ty severely manag~ to accomplish p~ecisely
.
.
Sincerely yours,
·
--
1n
the
·
past few weeks there has been on this campus the
un-
divi~e~
:
an~ disheartened, the those attitu
.
desmo~t ~E:trunmtal
-
~illiamC. Ol~on,
controllable urg~ to
·
screen people, for ·administrative
-
areas
.
of the ~dminIStration then proceeded to
-
to the
.
contm!Jed yiability
·
of tile
Ass1Stant P.rofessor
college,forresidencestaff/andforresidenceinGregoryHouse,while i~plement
·.
a
n~~
s~h~ule
.
Coll~g~: .
. _
d1suruty;
-
lack
,
of
-
ofHistory
_
theCIRCLEdoesnotwishtomakevaluejudgementsontheseresults,
.
without
_
consultation
-
with the cre~ibihty, low morale
·
and
we would like to point .out that in
,
one particular case

a pers(ll or
-
·
·
·
persons was accepted to a position - and or positions to which they had

.
not yet applied.
,,
,
-
.
·
·
·
It
has come to the attention
·
of the
·
editors that the screening process
,
-
for residency in Gregory House is an example of
this
practice, and w~
·
refer to the ·fact
-
that
fo
one
·
case
.
a n
_
on-applicant
.
was accepted to
-
a
·
position thathe had not yet a
_
pplied for. Jns accptance
·
to the house
was
·
based on his on&time desire to live there, and
_
.on coniinents about
him
by those
p_e~ple
on the screeriing comm,.ittee who knew him,
.
some

.-
·
. perh~psin'a
_
vicarious
·
way.
·
·
.
,
.
-
·
-
:
:
:
·

.
·.
_
-.,<
;
_
:
While it is
'
not the intention of
the
cmcLEto
dictate to any
depa~-
·
·
ment;
o.ffice
.
or campus
organization
the method
,
of acquiring new
people
we
do question
this
practice and would also like to add that such
.
-
.
-
:
pra~tices as
:
these
'
e9uld
:
·
become
.
disasterous
-
for
·
~e
-
comm_unity
-
_
at
·
-
:

_
Gregory House,
:
Perhai>,!
if.
people :w~ted to· play
a
game of politics
-
· they wotild remain in the larger
:
houses. wberes~~practices can
be
·
:
ignored, foi' it would seem apparent to us that
_
such games are being
. ,
pla_yed.
·:
.
..
,__.:
.
.
..
'·_,
-
.
..
:
.
'.
.
,. '
.'
~
:
:
_
,
.
·,.,
'
-
-:"
._
...
.
-
_
_
,
:
-
_
.
-
- _
·
Vje
·
wouI~
·
.
.
~e
to
·
recominerid
;
ffi.at
·
insfead
of
_
adopting'
ho~e
-
philosophies,-those members would better spend their time adopting a
· ·-
house policy 9£-"what's
good
fororie
is
good
for all."
.
· ··
:,
·
.
-
.
-.
"
<~:.'~
·
>·
:.-
--
; ...

·
:;
..
.
).,;
_;'-
·
,
,
:
::,.:-
·:
·
__
.
.. ~::
:
... ·
~
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.
:
.-·
,
;
·
··
>·'
·._
-
.
.
~ '
·
..
,

j
.
.....
-

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APRIL 25, 1974
~
.
.
·-
..,.
..
-
1.
YOtJ
HAVE
A co
_
~Y OF
·
Ttlf
TtST?
010 You
_
HAVE
AN I.Q. OF 1.50?
You
l~UGlffO AT
ffl~
JOKES? YOU
WORE
ASttoRt
DRE~5- ..
I.
TH{tf
USUAUY C,OES
TO
-'lUO£MT.5
WHO
-'HOULO H~ve CJOTTfN
AN•t,..·:
·
More Letters
·
.
To
The
:
_:
Editors
Recruiting
.
,
Rebuttal
-_
ctisations for a brief, un-
sU:bs ta nt ia te d
editorial,
·
·
especiaUy by
.
people lacking
a
real understanding of the nature
'
and changes
1n
contemporary
To 'th~·co-Editors:
religious life.
.
..__
·
·
·
>
}
flie unfortunate' editorial on
,
May
,
I suggest
.
that you ap-
"Recruiting'' was
.
in bad taste proach
·
life~
people, and a per:.
and
.
reveals
a
.
·very
superficial
'.
son's motives with much greater
k'
·
-
:
and confusing view of what is acc1.1racy; awareness,respect
~
,~
,

sacred in the
-
lives of religious. and sensitivity.
.
. ~::.'
· .
.
Hyprocrisy, not paying taxes,
.
··
.•
·
·
-
.
·
Thankyou,
.
j
>
and
,
exploitation are strong ac~
.
·
.
~auriceBibeau
<,
,
.
.
:
·
.>
·--.--
..
. -
.'
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,
.
.
. ·.-·
.·J,;_;, ~--:--:.
.
-~
.
.
.
Trencha'nt
;
.
,
.
<: .
; .
_
me
·
a
Gordiaii
'
knot of doubt and
THE CIRCLE
l A
·· ,.
4
THIS Ol?ADE 00f'5
f •
H YES THE.
c .
GIVEN
TO THE

TO THE LAD WHO
8LEND
IN
5tUDi:NT.
THt 5TUDfHJ
DION'- AOnEE
OR
WHO.You
couLorn REMEMBER.
1
I(
,
..
.
THE ~TUDfNT THAT
l OOl<ED TOO
Dlff£Rf NT
TO
~ERVE
HIM
R•Gttt.
THIS STUDENT
DIDHT
~£Ally
EXIST.
kE
WA.:!>
iERo,
tu
010-.i
TRY,
Ht OIOHTCARE,
HE DIDN'T ...
PAGES
.···
•·
·

·
•·
· ·
,
·
·
·
··
:
.
.
frustraijon
.
as
.
to
Uie
ev9lving
·
.
·

·
·.
·
·
meaning ofMarist College and
..
.
Some ofMarist's fin.est exhibit their talents at the annual "River Day" festivities
''.
Comments
-
.
:
·
..
.
MaristBrothers. Wecannowrest
,:;~
;:;_·
.J,
_
:~
:',:
.
;
, :
·
·
·
·
:
'
easy
-
.bronzinginthesun
·:

:.
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, ·
.
·.
·
·
·
·
·
.

.
_
;
!~~~~~~!~~lrd
:
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··
.
thaniis
·
'.'
f~r
.
·
•:•:
~t~~~J~
-
a~:i~~~re~sh~~~~
('
'
~
l : T r t e n i ' p
·
··
1oy
·
·'
e
·
d
:
,_,
Stlldents
:
:
·
.
·
·
:-
-,
.
your trenchant ccmments on
.
creased this commg year so that
.
-
·.
·
.
.
. ·.
-
_
_
.
.
·
.
.
·
'-
·
·
.
·.
·
.
'
.
'Recruiting"
.
:
The thoroughness
muchm<ireresearchandthought
·
·
·
·
,
·
Cl
p
·
}
of
.
historical research and the cancoritinuetoenrichtheMarist
.
·
·
St
_· __
a
·
k
·
.
.
··
e
·
.
v
.
..
our
a1·nt.
'
'
··.·
ar
·
1
·
..
I
_.
clarity of theological
,
thought co:rruµunity.
.l
have finally cut what has been for
.
Fraternally,
-
myconfreres,mycolleagues and
·
Bro. iJosephL.Belanger
··
suSPENSION OF
·
BENEFITS , not come from the state's general
Benefit rates for
.
the few
·
who
.....
_
..c.
.
lack Of
-
·
-
·
Insight Cited
tax fund, but
·
from
·
unem-
.
were unemp]pyed rose hardly at
Leaving a part-time job while ployment taxes employers have all during the war. Wages con-
walk into a job
in
practically any in college to look for a fu:ll-time
paid into the state's unem-
.
tinued to rise after the war's end,
Marist school seems to exclude job
.
elsewhere may merit a
ployment insurance fund.
but unemployment benefits did
·
·
-
any possibility of commitment suspension of benefits in some
You, the employee, earned the not increase proportionately.
and belief. Religious life today is states, but
_
not in others.
If
you
right to collect unemployment More and more people began to
challenging, demanding, and were laid off you will probably
insurance by working. Unem-
receive less than one-half of their
To the Editors:
rewarding.
It requires com- collect without
'
difficulty.
If
you
ployment benefits are paid out of former
·
weekly wages
as
I was very disappointed when I
'
mitment and belief on the per- were fired for misconduct, your a state "trust fund" you may unemployment
compensation.
read your ,recent
··
editorial on sonalandspirituallevels:Putting benefits will be sus nded (B t
draw benefits from
if
you are out
No federal standard requires
recr:uiting
by the
.
Marist on a habit and receiving a ti~e being fired for ~effi~ency is not of a full-time job and have the states to guarantee an
Brother:s .
.
What disappointed me does not Jl!,ake one
~
Mar~t .necessarily, being fired for recently worked.
unemployed person this fraction
most
,
was not the editorial itself, Brother. ~t.
JS
the man m all his
:misconduct).
·
You do not take money away of his-her fom1er weekly wages.
but the lack of insight it showed. complexities that makes the
-
If you had se'-:eral_ jobs, the
from anyone else if you
.collect.
In 1954, then Secretary of Labor
·

You infer a lack of community MarISt Brother. .
reason for leaving the most
There are several billion dollars Mitchell stated that maximum
spirit is the ·prime
·
cause for the
As . for : hypocnsy, your ac-
.
recent one often
·
determines in reserve earmarked
·
for unemployment insurance weekly
·number
.
of people leaving the cusation
_JS
very strong. No whether you are suspended from
.
unemployment insuraree.
benefit amounts should be raised
.,
religious life today. You also hu~an b~mg of group of ~~an benefits.
·
to two-thirds
of
each state's
. infer that attraction
·
·
to the
·
beings
.
~~
-
perfect. Rehg_1ous
If
suspended,
.
you
will HISTORY: UNEMPLOYMENT average weekly wage.
·
·
religious
,
life
:
could
-
be based on co~umb~$ ~re no ex~epti_o~. (depending onthe ~ate) either UNDERPAYMENT
For example,
if a state's
the fact that "you can.walk into a
.
If• hypocr1~y .does exist, it 1s have to wait a period
of
time
average weekly wage was $75 in
.
.
teaching position in practically mor_e than like~y to be the
.
res~t
.
(usually five to seven weeks,
.
Although some people abuse 1954, the maximum weekly
any-Maristschool."
_
You alsodte of d~erent beliefs and values m more in some states) or will have unemployment
-
insurance by unemployment benefit amount
_
hypocrisyasonemorereasonfor conflict
.
_
..
..
.
to
.
earn upto several hundred collecting and not looking for wouldhavebeen$50aweek-·and
leaving the religious.
'.
life. Ap-
,
Marcellin Cliampaganat was a dollars (and be alid off or quit
.
work
(if
you draw benefits and to receive this aperson would
parently, your
·
observations are m~w~o responded ~o the needs withgoodcause)before you may work at
.
the same time, a com-
havehad to earn about $100 a
Jiased on your
_
~terpretation of ofhlS t~es. The ~anstBroth~rs collect.
· ·
puter which checks the unein-
w
.
eek while employed.
.
what a Marist
·
Brother should of t~ar are dedicated to Jiving
If
you feel you were given a ploymerit rolls against social
President Kennedy introduced
and-or should not
be. Before you out his 1~eals. Because a
'.
type ~f "raw deal,,,
appeal.
The secl.lrity- deductions will catch a
·
bill to make
this
recom-
inake
:
any more
.
observations I apostolate does not a~pear to fit determination
.
issued on
·
your you), a more important issue is mendation the law of the land.
jvould
ask you to consider several
.
your concept of a Mar1st Broth_er
.
claim, as well as the claimant's that the
·
unempJoyed are un-
President Johnson did the same.
__
points.
·
.
does not mean that the Ma~t handbook issued by the state derpaid.
l
-
·
.
.
And President Nixon did so last
.
'.
_
.
A.man's development aoes not Brothers
.
~v;e not .evaluated this
.
employment agency, will inform
·
At the beginning of.the federal-
April.
.
.
.
.
cease when he enti:rs the relgious apostolate
_m
the light of Father
.
you of your rights. -
.
..
.
·
state unemployment insurance
.
In
fact, in his 1974 State of the
:
life, nor does
he
a
·
dopt
·
a
.
ready Champaganat-
~
a response
.
to
Inanyevent,youmaynQtstart program
·
m
1938,
.
most people Union A~dress, President Nixon
·
madementajitywlµcllforces
him
.
the needs
-
o~ the
.
times.
.
.
•·
.
receiving checks ro
·
r several received one-half of their fonner said, " ....
l
urge
_
again. that the
to abandon
his
owri.personhood.
Those~~lingtotake;m~rethan weeks. You
-
.
get all the back weekly wages as unemployment
·
energy measures
-
that I have
_
:In
recent years many
-
people
··
a superf1c~l glance
will
find ~hat checks you've signed for w~e~ insurance. A person
·
who had proposed be
·
made the first
have left .the religious life as a the_ . Mapst
.
Brothers
.
a.r
.
e the paperwork is caught up:
(And
earned $30
·
a week while em-
.
priority of
this
session of the
_
result of
.
·
many changes
.
and deflllltely
·
much more than
·
.a
.
ln most states there is an un- ployed would draw $15 a week if Congress.". One of the measures
.
_
updatings
.
which have_ caused recruiting
.
poster
,
or this letter compensated ~aiting
-
period
,
of unemployed. This ~as generally th~ ~resident· w~ts passed in -
them
<
to corisider.
.
the personal. makes them out to be. Take a
·
one week.) --
-
.
thought to be a
-fan-
amount of thisb_ill,HR8600,mtheWaysand
.
value of this type oflife. Ifa man good look and consider the
•.
·
unemployment
cmnpensation .. Means Committee.

·
·
.
'.feelsthathecannotciintinuehis
possibilities there
·
may be for WHERE THE'MONEY
-
COMES
W,ages
-
rose quickly during
Currently only four states
:
p~rsonal'
'
,
;
and
:-
:-
spiritual you.
.
.
FROM
World War II,· Unemployment have, on their own initative,
/
development
m
the
·
religious life,
·_
.
.
·
-·.
H:i~es~:!l
Al;ho~gh
_
:.i
uriemployment
-
t~:i:i~~l:~~ywt&s~:
·
-~!=16~e!f!~~it-~
,
:,ei!!,:
·
··
tbe
:
option:ro. leave
ft
;
is
_
ms.
,
-:::
:
," ·
Chicag
9;nunois
.
che
_
cks
·
are
>
:
s~te
,,
chticks, longer the major socians'~e)t_
·
thirds
·
of
their
state's
average


·,~
~~W'
·
inferen.ce
.:
~t
:
~e
can
unemployment

insurance
does had been during
th~
Depression. weekly rates.
,
·
>/'.
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r
·
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PAGE6
Mn.
Elizabeth Nolan, new Director o( Teacher Ed.
Colllniittee
Holds
Lecture, Workshops
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 25, 197S
New Director Named
To Teacher Education
By Bill
Sprague
Another important aspect of education. February 1977
is
the
P .B
.
T .E.
·
is the concept of deadline for
.
programs in
Mrs. Elizabeth Nolan has been
·
''module"
education:
"a secondary education to comply
named by Academic Dean statement of the objectives of a
with the new standards.
Richard LaPietra as Director of particular item
-
-
of instruction
As
director
of
teacher
Teacher Education at
Marist
which allows students to
in- ·
education, Mrs. Nolan also
College. Mrs. Nolan has ser'ved corporate their individualism by forsees continued growth in the
as acting directorofthe·Teacher choosing different ways to special education program
Education Program
_
since last achieve the same goals."
establ,ished this academic year.
December.
Revamping Marist's teacher Through
· a
_
cooperative
In announcing Mrs. Nolan's
education program to meet arrangement with Mount Saint
appointment, Dean LaPietra P.B.T.E. standards will be time Mary College
in
Newburgh,
praised the screening committee consuming, because all the Marist students can qualify for
which decided
-
on and in-
primary and secondary schools teacher
certification
in
terviewed qualified applicants.
-
involved in the program must
:
elementary
·
and
·
special
He noted "it was the first search concur with the "competencies" education. Special education
committee that involved both
necessary for a teacher.
This
will deals with
-
mentally retarded
faculty and ~udents" that he had entail many meetings. Adapting children and children with good
-
-
encountered
-
at Marist. "The academic courses and student native intelligence, but who are
committee operated well
·
and
,
teaching schedules should be less hampered by some type of
professionally,"
.
~e
_
said.
difficult than agreeing on and learning
·
disability. -
Mem~r~ofth~committeewere:
pu~Jishing a list of "com-
'
Enrollmentinthisprogramhas
Mr. Wi).ham Perrotte, Mr;
J~hn
petencies", as required by the increased from
11
students this
B~denck, and Bro.
--
Maurice state Department of Education.
year to 18 prospective students
Bibeau, faculty members; and
Evaluation of students
.
in the for next year. Mrs. Nolan says
Miss, Susan Kelly
·
and
.
Miss
teacher education program will
"teachers and students on both
M1;1r1el Taylor; s~ud4:nts ap-
also
_
be
changed, says
'.
Mrs .
.
sides are pleasea with the
pomted by ~ark _F1tzg1bbo~s
.
of
_
Nolan. "Instead of receiving a
program and its success."
the Academic Policy Committee
;-
letter grade at the end of a
The O!llY aspect of the teacher
Mrs.
·
• _
Nol_an's
·
primary
:<
course, all along
.
the course (a
education program that Mrs.
By
Jim.Kennedy
strength
.
to women." The ch{lllenge
as
dire~tor of teacher student) would receive constant Nolan
-
regrets is the great
.
.
discussion touched on such things education
,
will b
·
e adj~til}g
the
·
evaluation
·.
of
'
(his) abilities."
number
.
-
of teaching candidates
Through Thursday,
·
April 18th, as tenure,
in
view of cutting off program to meet 1hestandanls of Feedback will
_
be an important competing for the
·
limited
the Marist Women's Committee ,potential female teachers and the new Comp~tency
·
Based
·
element
to
enable the prospective nwµber of teaching positions
sponsored a day
1,:mg
series of administrators:
When
asked of
.
, Teacher
-
Education
.
!ill~
.
Per-
·
teacher ~o<l~orrect and revise to
available
_
. "The only limit on the
·
·
lecturesandworkshopsunderthe
.
Marist's high percentage of

forma~ce
Ba~iad
Teacher meetobJectives."
growth of teacher education is
topic
·
of
·
••wo~eit'.
in
Higher faculty personnel with tenure,
·
Edu¢ation. Known ~s C.1\tT.E:
·
.
Mrs. Nolan is enthusiastic the job market. A bleak market
Eduration."
:
Friday's pro~am PresidentFoyrespondedthatone and
_
P.B.'r.E .
.
_
respectively, about P.RT.E. because of "the may
-
have a dampening effect''
w:as the beginning of what
is
cannot single out Marist alone, th~se terms are
'.
m~i:changable greater
opportunities
for
.
Mrs .
.
Nolan
,
is also
·
un:.
hoped to
be
a
,
ccinti~uing
.
campus but rather thatc''this is a
.
problem
_
--
for the federally _fun<l~d program students" and
-
its "field based
.
plementing a volunteer program
dialogue of :W<>rnen in
.
lµgher
_
at
all
colleges and universities,"
;
N~w
Yor~
.
state ~as
·
·
t,idopted_ to
-
a
_
pproach.'' She belie:ves "more
.
with area schOQls designed
to
·
education;
as
'
w~
_
as in
_
the
µlter in the day,
-
Dr. Carley upgrade
·
teach~!=' ·education tim~hasto be spent working with
·
give
.
underclassm~n more op-
society at
.
large
.
·
- ·
_·:

_
·
_
Boggard~ and Ms.Julie Peterson programs
;

,
.
_
.
·
studentsin
.
the public schools."
portwiities
·
in the
·
c1assr6om.
·
_
The days
_
gf
:
e~ents began ~11 spoke
·
on "Women Studies
·
-
~
_
_
_
The r()~ts
•-

of
·
this
_
n~w
The Regents of the University
·
Int&ested
.-
freshmen
·
and
p.m. in the
.-
Theatre
:
President Developing
a
Program/'
-
This
·
m<>yement
m
teacher education of the" State of NewYork - the sophomores are encouraged
·
to
f()y began with
·
an
introductory was followed
-
later, in
.
the go back
.
to
,
late ~967 a11Cl early citizen'.s group
-
which decides on
inquire at the
.
teacher education
address,, fo,Ilo
,
wed
.
. b~ guest evenin~, by Dr. Jenny Farl~y 1968,
.'
~hen,
"
~ea~her~
and educat1ona~
.
goal~ 811d the New
.
...
office
in
.
Donnelly Hall..
,
-
-
·
spe~ker
;
Pr,,
.
Christme
.:
M.
_
speaku:1g
:
_
-
on
·
.
"Wome~
m acad~t~c
-
~~istrators a~ross Yor
_
k _State
.
Dep~~tment
,
of
__
.
Mr~.
Nolan a~ ad~ises
__
any
H~.-v~:rlQCk,
.
apr.9fe
_
sSQi:
.
a
.
tyas~r
_
rdanagement'
'.
in
'
/
the
-_
Fireside t~e
.
cour:itry
·
---
.
~~P.F~~~-E!
,
~
Eq~<;:ation_
;.
:
:
-
~~
-
.c
,,_
c~v
.
il
;.
~~rvailt~
.
:)
Jr~~en
-
wh<>. think they_ JWght
College·: WilliainValenti:ne, noted Lounge;
J'
·
:
.
-
:
;'
-•
,
.
,_

·
d1ssa~~~{~c
_
hon
;
.
_
with
·
t~
_
actier
.
who
}
a~IStratf
"
those
:
_
goals,
<
poss1b1y be
.
.
mterested
m
·
:
~y
in tbe program as a Specialist in

This day-long program was a
·
prep~raUon. Impetus
was
_
added have set February of 1975 as the
aspect ofthe teacher education
Ci,
:
: Rights, spoke on the "Focus result of President Foy's calling by rouri_g t~achers
>
encountering deadline
·
for• teacher education
,
prog~am to contact her
,
,
f~r
on Wm,,
.
~ninHigher Education.
» "
for the formation of a com~ difficulties m the classrooms and programs
:
to
:
meet
.
P.B.T.:E .
...
Etdy1ce

on
-
courses they
_
will
Th:H
-
? sssembled th~i;epar~ted
;
mittee
·
to studythe role of women realizing they should have been stai1<1ardsinprimary and speciaL need."
into
· :.
~ee workshop groups
held
'
at Marist and
to
direct attention better prepared. Currently, the
-
.
in
.
;
vutous
.
--
l
.
o~atio11s in the to problems affecting women federal government
is
sponsoring
Campus
.
Center
; .
.
.
.
_
equal participation iilthe ongoing
10
model i;rogra~ {New York's
Mr
.
Valentine
.
directed the activities of the college." The is one) to improve and develop
workshop in
·
C-249
wher~ the committee consists of faculty, teacher education programs.
prevailing topic was "The
Im-
students, administrators
,
and
_
The P.B.T.E
.
programstresses
·
pact of
·
Affirmative Action on secreterial staff, which sub- achievement in teaching through
·
Faculty and Administration." mitted a report to the Executive learning and acquiring teaching
.
· ·
..
Those pa_rticipants included male Council urging a "college forum skills
·
while in
.
a teacher
and
·
female faculty members, (to) be scheduled
.
this spring so education program. For Marist,
·
and members
--
of
,
the ad- thatareasofcampusconcerncan "Wemustr&think the program
ministration. Mr. Valentine be examined and discussed."
very carefully'' saysMrs. Nolan,
touched on
.
th~ Equal Opportunity
The
committee, chairpersoned "to
·

decide what
-
are the com-
Act's "me:e existence, has had by
Ms.
Arin
Hoyt, hopes that
.
petencies a teacher must have.''
.
great.
impact'.'
_
_
on women ob- Friday's effects "will mark a
AccordingtoMrs
;
Nolan; a key
-
taining .eqiµtl
.
positions. When
·
beginning of

a continuing ingredient
·
of P .B.T.K is the
,
asked
.
of
,,
the· y8-rlous women's dialogue
'
on the many aspects of "role aerived" concept: "what a
liberation groups that exist, women in higher education. as teacher
.
does
·
(to
teach)
Valentine replied,
-
"Women
'
s well as in the society-at-large
.'
'
·
establishes what behavior should
ifrganiza~ons· ~ve given mµch
beevidentforastU:dent to learn."
-
~
...
-
'
.
.
.
.
.
Attention
,,
Freshmen
If
-.
you are
'
considering
·
·
-
the
possibility of a teaching career in
the field of special education, but
·
do not yet want tom~ ea positive
career decision, it is very
·
im-
portant that you begin now to
explore your interest in this field.
-
-
·
For
-
the
-
fall semester
.
of your
sophomore
·
year, you should
register for
_
Psych 975 Child
.'
·
--
.
.
.
Development to ensure that you
haye
the
sequence
.
of
-
prerequisites
.
necessary
-
for-
.
admission
to
methods courses
.
and student teaching in
·
junior
and senior
.
year.
You ~ay still register for this
course at the Registrar's Office
on April 25, 26
aoo
29.

LOOt<tN&f,
.
Fo.R
4!:::aOME:.
·
AC.TtON
·
P
'
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--
.
.
.
.
.
/
I
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APRIL 25, 19
_
74
·
THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
Maguire
·
Speaks At
·
Marist On Mercy Killing
By
Elizabeth Spiro
transplants, the p-ospects of ethics of dying are simple", he
perfecting an artificial heart said .
.
the
taboo."
man
on the grounds
<i
temp<rary
A change in the attitude of within two years and the
According
to
Professor
Americans towards death was conquering of cancer within ten Maguire, "There may be cir-
cited by Professor Daniel years. Furthermore, research is cwrutances when it would be
Maguire as
·
basic to the re-
being conducted to develop a
·
acutely
reasonable
and,
evaluation of the morality and hormone that would retard the therefore, moral
·
if
one uses
etllicality of mercy killing and its aging process. According to reason in a Toomistic sense, to
relevance to man's "moral right Professor Maguire,
"It
is no terminate life through either
to die with dignity."
longer absurd to preduct that positive action, such as the use of
Professor Maguire's presen-
man's life span may extend to potassium chloride or morphine,
tation on April10 at theCafeteria 150-200 years. Some may not wish or by calculated benign neglect
Also
dismissed was the
ob-
insanity was
the
only
means
by
jection
on the grounds
that rures
which
he could be saved
fl'(IJl
a
for the ill person may be found. murder convictioo; ''The man
Professor Maguire said that had
to
be deprived of his
".some patients are so far gone, reputation as a
mentally
that even
if
a cure were
found,
it balanced person by a group who
could not help them. Fur:-
were unequipped to make this
thennore, it is predictable as to decision." The fa1acy of the law
when these cures will come."
in this regard was emphasized as
.
Lounge was sponsored by the to live that long."
rather than to await in awe the
College Union Board Lecture
The fact that medicine has dispositions of organic tissue
.
"
Committee and student, Barbara evolvedmethodsfor keeping man He continued: "In situations
Flynn. Professor Maguire is a alive has resulted in what wherein recovery is impossible
faculty member at Marquette
.
Professor Maguire calls "half- and
the
individualis existing as a
Professor Maguire stated that was the inapplicability of the
the absence of legal develop-
charge since first-degree murder
·
ments in the area of mercy killing includes malice of intention as
is another factor that is causing one
of
its
prerequisites.
the need for re-evaluation. "Clearly,"
said
Professor
"
Mercy killings do occur in our
.
Maguire, "there
is
no malice in
society", he said, "but we have mercy killing. 'I:his is a con-
no legal category to handle these tradiction in tenns."
University.
-
_
cures". These result, he main- non-person, death
.
has a value.
According
to
Profess
.
or tains, in nothing more than man The particular situation should
Maguire,"We are a culture that becoming
"an
oxygenated corp- be the determining factor."
is very uneasy with death. We are se". According to Professor
Objections to mercy killing on
terrified of it The dyipg process· Maguire,
-
"These mechanical the grounds that it may lead to
is mark
_
ed by deceit and, when devices, namely respirators and excess were dismissed by
the unmentionable happens, the
·
stimulators, can prop you up in a Professor Maguire
·
as being
embalmers embark on their post condition that
is
intolerable. The meaningless. He said: "It is true
mortem cosmetics to make the brain, the seat of consciousness, that when a taboo is broken out
dead person look alive. This does- the distinctive area constituting of, excesses often occur. But that
not supply the atmosphere
·
in personality, is non-functional and is no reason not to break out of
situations. We put them in the
Professor Maguire maintained
same area as first-degree that the right to choose mercy
murder and make no distinction killing as a means of terminating
where there are real differences. one's own life or the life of a
The law is unreal and because of member of one's family should
this, juries do ridiculous things." not rest with the doctor. He said:
Citing a recent example of the ''The doctor may be well trained
mercy killing of a man by his in
his
field but he
is
not trained to
which man's
·
moral rigl}t to die often becomes liquified."
with dignity can receive its
"Death
might well
be
brother, Professor Maguire said
that the jury's acquittal of the
Continued on page 8
Delegates Attend Mock Senate
needed r~valuation."
··
·
preferable
to
this",
said
Professor Maguire maintained Professor Maguire. "Perhaps,
that
this
re-evaluation must take death should, in these instances,
place in
..
view o~ cer,tain
ex~
. ✓
!>e
~een, as it was inthe past and
L~t week "senatofs" from
Marist was designated to reside
traordinary medical develop- is
,
ll,l
.
other cultures, as man's Mar1St College were m Albany
in the Majority Party and Tom
merits that have occurred.
He
friend."
·
presenting a bill they had labored Kelly was elected Majority Party
said:
''It
is possible that the
·
_
Professo~ MagU:ire stated th
_
at over
fo_r
months? and debating leader
.
It
was his duty
·
to call
decision for death is being taken these medical discoveries and and votmg on various others. The party meetings and formulate
off our organs and onto our extraordinary means used to "senators" were participating
in
delegation ideas.
wills.".
.
·
·
sustainlifeare''causingthearea the New York State
In-
Jean Forrestalgaveacoricise
license while attending the five
week course was passed almost
'
unanimously in the mock senate
session.
Cathie Russo, as delegathn
leader, was the spokesman for
Marist in all cases of
·
roll call
.
This is
·
due
,
to the
·

ever-
of ethiC$ to stir; We are no longer tercollegiate Mock Senate.
presentation to the Senat~
fi.
the
increasing success

of. organ living in a time
:
in which the
Marist's
·
delegation
was Marist bill. Marist's bill involved
··
·
·
· ·
coo
.
rdinated by Dr. Hill'old Sims an amendment
to
the Vehicle and
voting.
·
.
Mock Senate is in its 24th year.

.
·

.
·
:
,

:.
·
-
bow
I
e
.
.
wn1s11e
,_
of the Political Science Depart-
Traffic law by increasing the
merit and Senior Joe Mirrione.
suspension of a driver's license
The delegation members in-
,
for the first offense of driving
eluded Mirrione, Senior
·
Tom
while intoxicated. The bill also
Kelly, Jean Forrestal, a junior;
provided
·
for the institutim of
·
and Sophomore Cathie Russo.-
-
Education Gounseling Facilities
· The
·
Marist delegation lost
·
a
which would educate the driver
voting member
t.o
the senate's about the effects of alcohol cin
·
most honorable position -,:-
,
Jim
·
driving, the social problem of the
Mirrione
·
was elected President alcoholic driver and the means
of the Senate by
·
the· various
by which a driver could test his
It
exists as a corporation made
up of a Board of Trustees. Its
purpose is to reenact the
legislative process for the enrich-
ment of the educational ex-
perience .. On April 17, the 1974
Mock Senate drew to ·
·
an
esteemed

closing for Maris
t
College when a member of
its
rl
..
.
'delegations.
.
·
'>
. ,
,
.
_
.
alcoholic
_
cont~nt
.
anli
_!h~~~~f.
~
Another
.
· Marist student was
exert -more responsibility as a
elected to one
:
of"
·
the
·'
·most
motor vehicle
.
operator; The bill
pi'oniliiant senatorial positions.
which provided for an interim
-
delegation, who presided as
president - Joe Mirrione - was
a warded an
·
honorary
·
mem-
bership of the New York State
· Mock ·senate
·
Board
'
of:Trustees;
.
Now you can
.
.
-
.
protect yourself
_
_
.:
·
against
.
muggers, rapists
and worse with this
amazing new

whistle. Wear it
as a necklace
·
or
·
carry it
_
as a key
.
chain. Its long-range
.
penetrating shri.11 brings help in a hurry
.
The next dark
·
.
·
night (that's tonight!! you'll feel a lot safer just knowing
·
·
you have the greatest protection in the world. Gives
obscene phone callers
a
shrilling earful, too.
"
GET IT BEFORE YOU
HAD IT!
·
..
,
-

COME INOA MAIL HANDY
COUPON
Yesl
·
1
want io be saved! Send m e _
·
Londori•Lil\e Whistles
_-
-
Kev Chain _N
e
c
k
lace
(Number)_ Chrome _
·
_
I enclo
_
se$3.00 for e
a
_
ch London-Like
Family Jewels Ltd.
Whistle. I understand that
if
I ani not
J43l
West Villard Avenue
.
totally satisfied, I will receive a complete
.
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
53209
_
refund i
_
l reu
~
rned i~
10
days
.
·
NAME_;;,
·-
- - - - - - - - - " " " ' - - - - ' - - -
STREET NUMBER
.
_:.
_ _ _ _ _ _
" - - - - - -
C I T Y - - - - - - - ~
·
S T A T E - - Z
I
P _ _
·
·
·
AnnOuncementS
OnWednesday,Mayist,at8:00 3718.
College, Newburgh, on Friday
p.m;; Counseling Services and
.
April 26 at 8 p.~: in the college
the King Committee will
be ,
·
On Thursday May 2, at 8 p.m. theatre
'.
Admission · will be
sponsoring an evening of films
the office of the chaplin and the charged.
__
-
_ _
and discussion on the national Blanche Kahn Memorial
Cc.m-
commuting
.
.
students
are
liberation struggles in Southern
_
mittee of Vassar College will reminded that two (2) positions
Africa. TwomEmbers of the East present Miss Angela Davis as are now available on the
Coast Unit of ttle Liberation
their
guest lecturer. The lecture executive board of the Commuter
Support M_ovemmt will be on
will be held in Vassar chapel and Union. Please see Chris Wise in
hand to answer
-
questions, admission is free.
that office.
provide information and lead
- - - -
discussion.
·
Professor J.P. Ostriker of the
The sailing regatta which was
Further information regarding astrophysical sciences depart-
to be held this weekend has been
the prograin
-
is available from
- ·
ment at Princeton University, postponed until the
"
weekend of
Richard Bickley Qf Counseling will deliver a lecture on ''High May 4 and 5, because of a
·
conflict
Services at extension 256 or 471-
Energy
·
Astrophysics and
_
the with this
'
week$ p
·
resident Cup
,,, ______
=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.•.=.=.=.=.:l•!•••••••••••••• ..,.---------..
_
Death
.
of
_
ths Stars'.' at 8 p.m. Regatta.
_ _ _
·
(
:
)
~1day
I
1;rl!
26b i~/h; Vassar
.
Gallery
.
Talk°: and
.
.
Reception,
"1111
_ _ _
_
_
-
s o
.
_
__
_
p
-
.
-
~
·
_
_
_
_
-
s_P_~c.!~-
-
-
J
_ _,~
.-
·
-
o ege
P
ysics
Ul
10

Sunday April 28, 3 p.m. Gallery
·Lounge,
-

Cam.pus
.
.
Center.
A celebration in sound; the Lawrence -
·
Pipillo,
_
:.
"Recent
Paul Winter Consort
will
.
be Paintings Oil
on
~yas~•, exhibit
appearing at Mount Saint Mary through Sunday May
:
:?Jl .
. ·
Dr
Pepper
48
oz Diet

~
-
-
Regular Buy 2 get one free
Nedick's
·
28
.
:
oz
·
NO RETURN
~
5/$1.00
. '
.
'
'
.
~
-
SODASPECIAL
-
ENDS APRIL 30th

>
:

:
·
.

.
FUJI
,
G
-
ITANE
BATAVUS
,
.
BEST CYClE-
·:•THE PRO.Fi;'~S
-
IONA
:
L: BIK-E
i
SHOP
-

•·
·.
-
.
.
.
.
_,<
ci~MP~_GNOLD
·
_:_ SHiMANO -
su
:
~{r.qi/R
-
.
.
.,
..
·
.
-
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-
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.
_
C9_!4J ~97-2924
.
.•
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~ES
_
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..
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.
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_
L.1:
.
sTREET
.
WAi>PING~
_
RS
i
FALLS
;
N.Y.
12-5
'
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I
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\
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 25, 1974
WinAnd Lose Splits
.
LaCrosse Team

goalie, Leon Merlino sparkling in
The Red -Fox stickmen put the nets .
.
together their finest game in
Saturday's
·
game was
a
dif-
their short three year histo.rylast ferent story. The offense was
Thursday downing Southhamp- stalled
.
by the Dowling offense,
ton College 9-5. Tqis was the first
·
scormg only four goals. The first
at varsity level

for Marist half
was
exciting
8Ji
·
the Red
Saturday; the Red Foxes famed Foxes held their own, trailing at
erase against the Lions of the half by a score of 4-3.
Dowling College
·
14-4.
·
·
·
Matty Rogers was excellent as
·
"A total effort" quotes Coach oii' defense
.
and Leon Merlino
Jeff
Behnke
about
· ·
the made some beautiful saves in the
Southhampton game, lleveryone goal. The Red Foxestied the
played together
.
and well". The
.
game
.
early
.
in
.
the· second
.
half
nine goals that they scored
:
was with
·
a score of4-4 but that was
the highest goal total in their
.
the lastMarist score>After three
three ye~ history. J ~ck Fagan
quarters
the
·
score was stm
;
d
·
ose
pla~ed
·
an
:
o~tsta!}dmg ,a~e
,
with Dowling leading the way
.
. .
s<!ormg four goals and turrung
m
with
a
score of 6-4. Dowling in the
·
~riaii'McCue, Number 2
for)darii;t, is ieen in
.
a~tion at Southampton. contest.
a gre.at game all ove_r
.
the fi_el~i
·
1ast period exploded
'
for
·
eight
_
,
.
_
Jeff
·
~ullen and
'.
Jun
Mccue goals as their.
·
offense started
>-P~c.,~,
,:e· a
!
m
·
R
.
etu
·
r
·
ns
--
,~
=:~:i;~ou~rf;:tsan;ir cu{:ftai~orew~Dowling~.
~
--~·l?i.a:
·
:
'-.;;I
,Y
.
,
T
···/
l I
·
·
McCue runnmg the offense,
·
Jnn Marist's
·
Red :Foxes 4. Jack
.
.
. .
.. . . .
.
.
.
. .
. .
·
.
_
.
.
· ..
.
.
. ..
:
-
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Do~elly adde~ a goat~d.Dave Fagan
.
andD~~ HampeFscored
.

·
-··
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,." .·
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.
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-
:

·.
_ ·

·
.
.. - ·
.
· •
·
Steiger_
.
and Dan
-
Augustine
_
one hy
.
o goals each
:
with Matty
.
-
-
f-'rQlll
I
Oli1.<>:
.
·.
~htlt ~pl1t
.
.
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. .
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·
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..
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·•·
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.
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>
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mar and
.
Matty Roge~ shut ?ff
:
.
field
·
this Saturday for
·
a game
'.
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. ,
.
Y
~
0
b
.
r~e
:
ed
.
<>n
.
,_.
.
con1petitio!! m Trinity; who are
·
c
,
aptur_e
.
the P~esi~ent's Cup._
::
""

~
the Southhampto
_
n a_!!ack with
:
. ag~irist Fairfield
.'
.
.
·
.
.
··-:
,.:
·
..
.
·
.
-
:
reporte«l t.o pethe threat to
.
the
_
Mar!stvars1ty;
.
J
,
V
_'.
andhghL
·..

·
·
· .
·
•·-
·
"'
·
·
··
.
. ·.
;
Marist Crew
Team
traveled
to
Jre.shmen's
.
~omineree .
.
-
_

·.
.
freshmen all
,
were
~
defeated:
·
.
The
II
/.
.
.

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·
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'
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,

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UghtwE!:igh~ race)\fiu'ist m
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.
of def~at w.as about the
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.
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;;;,
·
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.
over a

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than
·_
the .... lengthiTh
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It
was:.
a
'dua}
:,
meeC with
-
freshmen. 'l'he r11ce
·
.
'Yas not the J.V;
·
race
i
as
.
Marietta
.
.
.
·
·
··
··
··
·
·• ·
.
.
Mar
_
i~tta the

po.wedioi.tse
")>f
decided toJh~J~al
J
~11.~trol{es of :. sprinted
·
,
from
.
behind
to.:
g~n
.
row~g: Thefreshme,i
.
open~th
_
e
·
.
th~
_
rcice
·
.
~~e!J
.
.
·
,
.
~ar~t

pull~d ·
..
victory
·.
in ~he last
·
500
·
!li
.
e~ers.-
..
.
By J~hn
Tkach
-
.
:
·
· Illeet
:
in
.'.
, i,ajpfessiye
,;
style
A>Y
ahe!id by
:
a
7.
q~~rter
~
Qf a-lengtP--; :
.
!;he o~tlCJ
.
ok f~r tlle,~es1dent's

.
:
i
·
;
·

,
:
_
..
rowing
'
fa~a
:
5:Jeilgth
,
vi~tpr.y, TM
.
-
.
~~i!e
;.::
co_a£h
:
-
1:,~11~a~an
.. :
waJ;
·
cup
·
1ooks
.
.
.
:
g9od
:
witll
_
;
Maris
_
t
·
· ..
a.
·
CREW-
.:
TEiM
'.'
.;
.MAKES
.-.
.
FINAL
·
:
:
PREPARATIONS
·
.
.
FOR
·
race
wal? riever truly competitive

:
Plea~d witl
t
tlle; victory.
,:
he
·
was
.
.
strong
:
favorite to
.
take
·
the
.
over
~
:)
_'RESIDENT'S

CUP
·
.
·
·
·
·'
·
·

· ·
-
/-
·
...
·-
·
·
·
· -
:
witll
the fresrurien
"
rowing
~
a:~vay no~
'
al{Qge
.
9ier
,
pleased
.
;with
-
his
·
ali"teamiitie
;
·
Tfierac~:s'wnlstart
J
.:_c·
.
.
.
<
.
:
· ....
-~
.
.
.
.
·
·
_
. ,
'_
,
·.
.
. .
.

.
. _
.
.
.
..
from them right from the
'
start
i
:
cre~•s perlortn~ce
.
::
He
·
.
judged

af9
:
30
:
There wil.lbe
·
at
:
least
4
• ·
.
·
After
:
a fot1r
.
'.
secondJoss
to
Marietta Cq_llegeof
·
Ohio, thf
F
Marist
.
>
_
.
··
.
a
'
.
Ori Satur~ay
;
th~
.
fi-_psh hope
l~
.
h~
c
;
i;~w. su~i-if_i:
:
t
_
o ~bf! }eveI--
_
the
<
;
;_
b_pats
.
ii
t
.
~~
}
ace
:
w:ith Trinity_
/
Colleg1:;
..
Heavyw~~ht cre
.
t will
.
be
.
~ruling fof a .vi~tory wh
~
ii
.
they
·
· ·.
·
·
.
.
,
·
:
·
·
repe~ttheir perfor.manc~
-
at
:
.
the
·
~hm
.'
yict9rY.,
-
, ·
111
J
i1
,
c
.
ated.
.
~~
\
a11d
)
it;
~:
·
J
_
osepp.
_
's
;
l¢aqing
:
the J1~sq~e)~h
:
Annu~J?resi~ent's
.
:
.CU_P :£:legatta Saturday.
.
~
i:.:

.
.
.
.
.
·

Presid~nt's
.
qup
/
a.:lthoqgh th~y ~
-
~ess~?,
:;.
a
..:
.
be~er,
.
.
>
perfo~ance.
.
entries
:
:
;
'.·
.
:
_
:
/\: ·
:
.
.
-
_
·
.
. ·
· ·.·

.
.
.'.:
0
:
TheJ~-~<! I(
.
oxerh~vywe1~tvar5-1ty
:
:
cw:;rently holds
_
i,q-4
.
record
:
.
..
.
. ,
,
·
i_
~ill
;
be

facing
,
m.,ucll
:
;
t9ugller
.•
will
-
ha.ye
:
t.o
.
~~
tumect in
\
to
:.
·
·
·<
>
?
>'
·
,
..
·
.
:
~itlllo~
_
es
J
:o)~esley_an, Ithaca,
.
Syracuse an
.
d 1\farietta and with
.
its
•·

·
•·.
'
·
••
·•

,··•··"'
·
'
·:•-
,,
.
·•···
·
·>
-
·
,>
· ·
>
· ..

.
·
·
··:-
·<···
· ·
.. ········•
.
··.
·
>
.
<
smgle
·
wm
·
commgagainst Columbia
·
··
·
···
.
.
·
....
·.
.
. .
-
M
.-
.
...
...
.
rist
>$~
-
it~
+
·t'tl
t
••
W1fi ·,·
·
-
~:w1~l1~=~~i~;~;~:~~S!~~~~
.
.
a
:
·
~
.
" ·
.
·
. .
.
·.
.
.
.
.
. ·
..
·
.
.
:
.
·
·
·
.
·
.
·
·
-'
.
·
·
·.
·.
·
:
,
,
The v1:1rsitr lightw:eights
.
ru,-e
:
conung off a seat length victory over
.
-
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
- .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Marietta.
,
TheJiglltweight varsity currently hol~ a
5-0
record with
.
o~
.
Saturgay
/
April
'.
)
o
~
. ·,
~e
:.
west
/
Po
.
irit,
:
w
agner
'.
:
;
arid
,
did
~fine
job
{
~oug,~out the daf
.
wins over ~hode
·
Isl~d,
.
Marietta, Iona, Wesleyan and King's Point.
M~
_
nsi: Sail mg Team competed
m
Syracuse were tough c_ompetitors
"
The teams next regatta will be .'.!'hi~ weekend the lightwei~hts:will defend their President's Cup title
theS7rin~Festi":alatWest
_
Point .
.
'!!l
_
til the~~ twor,ces in !i'._hi~h
-
this
.
weekend
.
at
Sruthhampton
.
ag~~st top conten~erswhich mclude
·
Fordham;Iona,
:
Rhode Island,
Despite light wmds and
.
strong both Ma~1Stand
-
Uruon turned
m
.
·
Tnmty; and Washington Golle
·
ge.
.
·
·
currents, the
.
Marisf team fine performances.
·
.
.
----------------...;...--...
.
-
·
,,;
:
·
.
..
·
·
··
: ·
·
managed to take
_
an
.~
early lead
•;
·
Promising
.
freshman.
:
Mike
fiNTRAMURAL ANNOUNCEMENT
.
and maintained it throughout the Nugent showed
·
Ji
.
~e ability
.
Answers ,to
.
fhe last puzzle
day to
'
win·the Regatta

· .
.
sailingwith
:
McCann
in,
the ''A''
found iii-the
.
CIRCLE
. :
The Nons
.
WQri
,
the Intramural Co-~d Volleyball title for the second
time tl}is year' with a vict.ory over
House
·
II.
Earlier in the year, the
:
Nonswonth!_! fall title with.a victory
·
over
.
this same House
II team.
·
~oe
McCann was
t.op
,
~kipper in
·
division. ;In the
·
final
.
race;-very
...
.
the "
,
A" division
·
witQ
.
9
p9ints, light· winds
·
prompted coach
while.
,
"B" division skipper Bob Jerry Reminicky
.
·
to replace
Lennon finish~ out the ~ay with
.
Nugent
.
with
·
Sti1.anne Isabella,
8
points bringing the Marist
team
·
This strategy paid
of
as Joe and
.
totaLto
·
17
·.
points.
·
The
.
closest Suzanne finished fir~ in the final
·
compe~tor
-
...
was
·
union
·
_
College
·
.
race to a~ure
.
the Marist vidory.
whofinished
.
5
'
pointsbebiiidwith
-
Sajling
.
wlh
Lennon
.
in
i
the
''W'.
:
.
2~
poiji~;J'he otlier
tlµ'ee
~~
;
qi~o~
'1'88
Pemr
:
Pa.il~en whif
''.
.
..

.'
:
.
S ·0 U A R I S II
I
_
M I S S I T
.
C U R L I C U E
E T H A N E
·
'
Once again Dave Higgins was named most valuable· player.
·
R A B E L A I S
~j_
E N N A
.
U V
A ■
E N C I N
AS ■ S
UM
·
;
LENNON NAMED ATHLETE oF
:
THlwEEK
F E N S
T I TU S
E K E S
'
-
·
.
·
.
F R
I.:
u-
o•
DAN
B U RN T
.
B I N E
T ■
D E R I D E
.
p
R E $ T I D I
G I
TATOR
.:
"
'EV IT E

0 R E
Bob Lennon, a sophomor
·
e from Oceanside, N
.
Y.,
has
been named
Marist College A~lete of the week for the week ending April
21.
Le!}n~n,. a me~ber of the Varsity sailing team, was th8 low point
skipper ma Mmor regatta last weekend at WestPoint as Marist was
'
the Q.Ver'all
.
.
winner. qthef

sC!)loois
:
coqipeti~g in the event were
Syracu~e, Wagner,
·
Uruon,.and
0
:
host,U.S;
.
Military Academy
;
o s -
.:
AM
I D 0
l N
E ■ NJM
E S
-
CE D E
,
L
A
p
E L
A
I. NE
·
-
r,.
n
E ■ ,J\.Qil
·N
.
U S
■ $DA
RI N T I N T ERAPH'IM
.
DA C I A N C REATIVE
.
S L EAZ.Y
H YDRATED
•·.
··
'.
..
,'
.
_
'

•,
-


'
.
.
.
.
'
.
THIS
.;
WEEK IN
MARIST
SPORTS
:.
:
PAST
··
.
'
'
.
.-
'
.
. , , , • _ .


12.10.1
12.10.2
12.10.3
12.10.4
12.10.5
12.10.6
12.10.7
12.10.8