The Circle, March 14, 1974.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 12 No. 7 - March 14, 1974
content
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·MARCH 14, 1974.
Strike-
Plann~d
-
--
.
-
FollOwing·
Decision
.
-
.
.
.
.
'Backing
Schedule
.
--
.
'
by
Brian Morris
statement.· He noted -the com-
.. siuderit leaders .are planning a mittee's . recommendations ..
·In
stude~tstrike to· begin Monday, responding ·to the. committee's
- March 25th and to continue in-. statement.: that
the
ad- .
..
definitely. This development -ministration_ had , been in some
followed Friday's decision. by - respects .. unreaso!!_able, Foy
FacultymembersmeetanddiscusstheUniversityYear.for Action.
President Linus Foy to go ahead ref~FI"ed to the,reputation for
-
-
,
_ -
·;
Jvith a new class schedule that "f~irness" - 1;1nd "open~ess~•
F .
---it
C
n -
~
H
Id'
had received severe criticism . enJoyed. by Richard
La
Piet~,
acu
-v,
()
O(IQJUffl -
·e
..
from..·stiid·e·n·t:gr
.. oup.s.(See·•·pa·
·g.e; Acade·ml._ ~Dean. fo.rtl1e.Iast_f1~e
_ .J •
-_
_
"' _
·
- _-
-3)
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- -
_ · . · · · ·
years;,.He added! the a,~dem1c
-· ·
·
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· . Mediation of ·the difficulties dean . 1S not~ dictator. :· .
between · the -administration · and · · . Student l~_aders a~em}!le<:l at 8
students' failed early last' week. p.m ..• Fi:i<lay : mgh~. _ 1:he
· S~udents theri · went t4rQ_ugh sµg~esti~n of_ a, student·. strlll:e
. «appeal'' ., procedures.·
'A com-,. received unanunous suppor~. Tlie
-
-:.
·
·
·
-
_:-
<inittee set up l)y Foy and student students then sent telegrams to
.By~rene.Ross__
could ·not:understand why.the
-
doubted the-ability of the student ·leaders February 18th heardthat every meqi~r of theB~rd of
. .
.
. .
student would'.haye to ~e·the · to teach/:-1t .~was >stated '°:that ·
·
appeal. President . Foy, had· Tr~es, .~~Jhng the PrE:51dent's
-
Marist's Univ'ersity Year -for. course~ as indtmendent stuijy and altholigli' the
.
student v.rould---be
''promised''. "to be guided by the dec1S1on
mtr~~tab!.~ <iisreg~rd
Action
>progr~·
which ·. would' no_t attend-class.
The
answer to · able
Jo
t_each sue~ things
as
basic
ad hoc committee's report;'':
. fo!' student opm~on; .
A
~eetm~
·. allow Y.Ol~~eers.to ~ork With the . ~ w_~ ~~~_the pr_ogram h_as the accounting techmques, ~e. ,ould -
,<
The, committee, ~er ·hearing ... with Foy. for ~he fol!_owmg.
af-
t
-
·· ·.·· •.
.;u~l:>a11
foughk~~i~~area, .was _s~p~tion 9f
~
.40
_hour work ... nQt ~ve "'the.full re~ponsib,~ty of-
:'the
student appeal:recom:mended .ternoon _was .. Junked. _and.,. the
f·: ;
·
. .. . _
91St;:.ps~~-last.F.rid1;1Y,:¥_llr.?11·
8, . ~~k., ..
Jhe,., student:
.
~~ul~_be/:_t_ea~!rln~,-T.~e
.
. ~u~ent:wo1:1ld ,be .. that .···.:thEf ... administration, .stu~en~10~te~gsen~Foya let~r
~rt ·; · •. _
;.1~ a f~f~~r
c~~.Qelt.µ~--
> /'-... ·.
_e,]tpe£tecl
:tC>,''\V~t!c ,
,'!ith;:Jh~~:
:,e,xpe,c;~~'to. -~~e;~atco111;!~!!1 .. are ··· } 'reconsider'',
this
decision: Thef
_
•· statiqg Jlie~r. ~tent1~µ to strike
~;t?\,:·:_c~r;i~;®1tu1
3
ked~be~~r~;llfwd·gfs~l~{rl~
0
lbt·~~~fg~i1~~:~l!6if;{\;£\~~,:;.ajt~.~;ff,}re~~~~~fn~~1,$1,~:tteiit}1~lif~~!(~~-~%;~~~:W~;idih·g_a
.
.
.... peopn=
WO
.• .
nnvo v_e • . mce' - pnun ies. ::
'.!'..; :,
;'.'
'/i·c: ; : / . ':-::,·~ ·,,,:.
~.the:ability .. of;the,stui:lent~to·•, do'" proposed
,:,,,ne\v'.' ; ,.~
sell
a·
I •. - rescindment ''of''the''schedule
., , · : .
·the
u~ v
.A~ ~ould.~~(J~ir)g :witµ' ·-:
r·
9tliera
thought
tti'aftlie
courses fev~rythlrigt·e.xp'ected \~
:ana
?'t!i~j-'.
uhreasonabl~: '.
< {/\/ . ·,:
t
t
e ·
c-d#~lcf
1(
an(¼!great~rSvoice'
m
~:
·
the ;black, .comm,l111lty. a_,,;grE:8t . __ might be~ mucp for th~ student -: amount .of tune f~culty~empers · •Foy: then issued
·ms three
page .policy detel"ffii:nations: ·
.deal, black people woul_d,be m-
.to·handle
if,he_ 1S_ working ftill- :would have:. to: put mto<;the
·•·
, --
· · ·.
- -
··
·
·
·
·.
·
volved in all aspects •. The U:.Y.A;. ,~tiinei ·
II
ow ever, _one person
·
program. One person brought' up
would
be
working• with.' various · pointed otit that . many of the . a legal question; .· that
~is,
what
·
neighborhood organizations, and people registered in night courses would happen -
if
the U;Y.A: ad-
the program
'will ,
recruit both _ are working 40 hours a week and ·-_vised a · business and··' it .. went .
black and white students. .
.
•
they are-able to handle their bankrupt. -
- ·- .· ·
- Also
questioned was the idea of ,courses easily.
·.
-. . .·
-
.
--
Finally, it was stressed that the
the · student ~takirtg six credits . ·:_ There seemed to be_ some program depends .. _µpon the en-
--
each semester along with his c'onfusion over .the resp on- thusiasm which will be brought to .
ou~i~Et·work. So~e of the faculty sibilities of the· student. Some · it.
·
.. · --
·
Accreditation
.
.-
.
Eor-Marist
.
-
·Re-~A.ffirnied
····· ·•.Mariist
Gather~:Sllpport
· .. :F~or·'
<tostig•
•·
an
Tuition
Prog.,ra::·_Dl·
:_ ....
The
::::::sp:::iation g~~~tiesitit~::r~d.~enf~_:_
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·-.. . .
.
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·
_ _ . · · .· ··-. , : · .
: .
: · . _ , . . · · _ · . _ . • .
. - . · . . .
. voted to reaffirm the . ac- :also note_d Mai:ist College for_ the .
. . . , ·. . . : · . ,' .·. . .
.
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•
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_
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. : · · • • . • . · . · ·... · · .-· < .
·
creditation of Marist College:
"Variety - and: Vitality" . of·' its
. -·In an effort 'to gat.}ler suppor~. currently. before .. the_, State with.thes,1974-75freshman class'·· : Three·days of examination-and s~cialpiograms. The faculty of, - ·
forincr~asedtuitiona~stanceto Legislature --'.l'AP, propos~· by.- Dr. Foy:has indicatedthalMarist. judgement was undertaken by Marist College was highly -
- Ne}"; York _
_state college stu~e~ts, Asse~bl:(IDan ~ostigan, h~ad of is-~akingicontingency. plans to the- Middle_ ~ate Association to co~en?ed by the 1!fiddle States
·Mamt_plans to
mail
6,000 fliers--the. I;egislature'.s _ Study . Com- . redirect the College's student aid· ·evaluate Manst College for its re--. Association for their work_ and
· •_
.
·carrymg:a letter from-,President· mittee on·Higher Education; .the -···resources to the'present student accreditation. The report. of .the responsibilities to·· the college.
_·
Linus
·
•
R;
,Foy and basic . facts Stafford-Anderson ~Ian; :. jointly body should·TAP become Jaw. It , Middle States. . Association,
~
.The· evaluating _team also found
. · ':~bout tlie ·design an4 potential :pro~ed bY., Segate:-Majority is a1s9·p·ointed outthat lll81JY of presen~ed .the-...views of _the ~hat along with its gyowth and
· , impact of Assemblyman Peter
·J. •
Leader Warren M. Anderson and · Marist's
i
present.: students ihave · evaluating. team as• summanzed . ·advances. Marist.
·.
College has
· Costigan's . Tuition. Assistance · SenatorJlolM,d Staff~rcl; and the · · y01µ1ger membe~s- of the· family · by its chairman. The members of.. eff~ctiv~ly accommod~ted itself
Program (TAP)."
. ·.
·,
... ·
- .. Regents. Plan,- proposed by the ~• who would benefit from~ the. the.evaluating team consistec1'9f Jo ~hangmg student• life styles.
-~ The
mailing
will
be
addres~ed-,State Board
of
Regents:.
- , · 'passage ofa bill'such as' TAP;
nine.·. educators; who .are· all
After their_wor~ of
evaluating.
to.:an-:·students. (commuters at·_ All-:,the plans· r~ognize the
· ~ubseqil~nt-to the development faculty members ~-from other and .· reportmg, the . general
- the~ homes,: residents,: to' their, tuiti~n gap. between~private_and_
of.
tile curr~t ·Jl!8~g, Marist . insti~ti~ns. The ev~luat~ team . cons~sus. of the·~am :ev~ua~
.
mail !>oxes),~_ New Yo_!"kcstate pubµc colleges, aµd each has .~e hosted a meetmg of fmancial aid was divided acco~mgly ~to the Mar1St College ,as ~av~g an
---- alumm,
.·
parentsc· of ~ew·: Y:ork· common c featu_re __ of - offering personrieL r~resenting all, sec-
areas-·• 9f
•
behavioral science, -. ovei:all sens.e of good dire~1on.
In
State-students; factilty;,·ad- direct aid to stuiients•based.on tors of private e·ducationJ.n New finances, development, students, ·: ~eir·r.eport El_l!d_concl~on the _
ministrators, college
-
staff, ,family incomes.•Also, each
:one
· ¥,ork State
ori
.,·March•
5:,
to graduate
.
(MBA), :_teacher· .Middle State ~ociat1on left
graduate studerits,
·
and all senior , would expand tlie present·Scholar ·-evaluate. tuition assistance education, and µbrary. .
.
- Marist with _a tone of suggestion
high scho~l and_tra,nsfer st1;1dent~,.In~e~tive, Prog~m; which ~ffers
.
cQn~epts . -beforf .. t~e
.
State
T_he eyaluating team.un~ert<><>!c
.
and_':. reco~mendatiori. Th~y
. who have: app~ed
to'
M~1st for
mruam~
grants of only
$600.
Legislature ... Inv1tat1ons wer.e . ~heir work after. studymg an adv1Se Marist Co~ege ~o m!>ve m
the }:"all,)~7~ se~e~e~; ,
.
Accordirlg to M.~,:.Kelly;Marist sent t_o. the · offi~s~of .
Asse:rn~
mtern3:l an.d factual • se!f:-
a ~ore co~ei:vati~e <lire~1on.
In
. _ :~e. eff~~ 1S:b~m-~ «µrec~ed by; has. chosen to ._support th_e .. blynian'":Costigan, senator·~~ ,_evaluatic,m· prepare~ by·;~ar1St , their own_ ev!ilua.tion, statem~nt
. · ass1Stant '- fmanc1al ... aid . directo_r:. Costigan
.
pr9p1>$al. because "1t .. derson and Senator Stafford.: ... · . College. The tem:n did their wo!,'.k ... t~e - Association.· expr~d ·. its
: qerald
,Kelly;:::::the
maili,ng. iit see~: .to· haY'.e th,e
·greatest.
·. A'.representa.µye ofthe State -~md-- fin~she_d_ ,tlleir . .- evaluation,_ vie~ of-:reco.m~~ndatioli to_
scl,tedQ,led to.-be sent': ~ut· durmg· p~ss1bilityJor pass~ge,: b~s~ on ··E ducati6n .. _
pepartment -. was . . when they visited the campus ~. , Mar1St as follows: _We also felt,
_
·sem~r,br~k-/The ~et~r:'from .:t~efac;t that.tllEt Study Cor~m.uttee. p're~ent tq explain the
:different
~.ov_em~e:r 11-14, -1973., _Tl).e1r
lowever, .. thaLthe -~ollege--)1as
• ~r:esident~·.foy \urges_, friends
.of
has: :
;
done
:·.:.,the··.·,
.nece~sary . programs <prese~ted _to:;,the }IP~.g~_ were: presented, !lire~tly . be~n!unmng_so_h~~ ma numb~r ·
·Marist \to?wr~te:,:~ to,'. G~xernor_ -:~ome\Vo.rk;:· fo_r.the, :· succ~~l • .· -L_egislatul'.El/_ ~r~: K.eJly ... ¢oor~
',
: to l,\f~r1St. College befor~_ 1t -~mg ... : of•· .differ~nt;. ~ecti~n.9 that.· 1t .··
Malcohil:..Wil~o1r. and,_;thElU-_' state. 1mple_m.ent~tion_
~~J>f ___
tµition ..... dl,Jl~tedJhe/meeting . plans witll :_: c~nsidered by th~. CoIIU11:issiC?D on .. :• s'1~~d, from time to t~e · pause
--1egislators·,,to,~'E!sur~.·.tl!~;~t: .. as~i~11;ce,.,.~~·;•~at.:·•~e·5:c95_t·:t~e!i.ssis~c~o~_Ms.SusanDean,;:;::,Higher.·Eciu~tion:~f~~~. Middle .. ,tto·,~e.adeep·breath~-to.reflect ..
. p~~g~
•
of:•th.:~~;.~stigan:\bil!:IS:figure;'f.:~A:mil].t9~ -~"~~~Jo, dire~r;:,_of_..f~~ci~l,aici '.atthe,
..
:~~tes:AsSO<:J~~on. :.· ,: ..
.
·.
:' .. ··· '.:: on.·.1~ accomplls~ents,--:ai:ici ..
~
· · ~ec~_ary.:f~1::pr,1va~; ~uc,tion, JiayEl.: the; ;gr.ea~st : ~ssi,bi_hty,of Sta_te
:Umyei:s}!;f,
at ~eonta and ~" ., T~e-;,_eyal~ting., ~ · . ,follnd: ·, ~ss~. ca,refully: its: next ~teps. -.
as ... w~~F~_~s:.;:pglit1c11,~ly.: ,,·ad.,_ accepta!lce-'b)':;,~o~-i:¥~~\~r:sy·:,Gba:rles;~hi:e~p~rger/" dire<;~r_
,.,·MSJ"~tto
~e ...
~-~~~mg
_coll~ge;.: •. <'·P>~1~-: of: th.e
.
~P:Ort ·
!;SD:
l>E!··
.vantageous;,:<·:·:'c~'.,::://·:•.':;'/;\:: .and,the Gove1:"!}9r.'!··.:::·:i'.'.'.:•:>i< . ;ofi'. finapc~a,I'.)lid~:at,-:,,:I>µtc#less
<~~~~µ
..
~tl•·· :.:F~sp,on
.
d,i.mg
•
. ob.~~J~t.~e'. re~dent .. direc- .
. : .. Three·.,'': fopns >'.9f .· :-·tu1t1on \: Whilif:TAP woulq.be
phas_ed:
10 · Coni,munity;;(;olleg~; ;_,;:;;;:::
~r-:::;;' ~;:
;~f~a.~~Y:~Jr/,11.~:
:~~11,,)0t::
t.~e_,
-~~;.~,~~~c~--~d.~~
_lib~1¥ · .
'.
,,· -
ass~stinic~;'. leg~s_l.a~W\:· are''o~~{Yeal'.:.at.•f'·~a~/: beg~!°g
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.
PAGB2
-
THE CIRCLE
MARCH 14, 1974
Congressman ~erman Badillo
·
Badillo Addresses Marist
·
By Brendan Boyle
in the black and Puerto Rican
result
of
the poor people not
communities.
·
"Unless
·
the getting adequate representati<li.
The New York City Police policeman can identify
with
h1s
Badillo claims that
·
the di.!trict
Department
acts
like an "army community, he cannot be sue-
·
~ttomeys don
'
t bother to treat the
of occupation" when responding cessful in his job," said Badillo. poor people correctly and plea
·
to emergency
.
calls - they are
He also argued for
a
lowering bargaining is an easier solution
slow and must call for
-
rein• of the educational and physical
.
than a
trial.
·
·
·
f
orcements. The
·
result is that requirements in order to get
Badillo has been involved with
often 'There is no real police more blacks and Puerto
Ricans
the problems of the courts and
protection in the poorer com• on the police force. "I don't
think
the prison systems for some time
munities."
·
collegiate education helps any in
·
~ow. In
1971 he
~el~~
settle a riot
This
was one of the opinions of
police protection," declared·
m
one
of
the city
Jails.
·
He
also
Congressman
-
Herman Badillo
in
Badillo. He explained that higher helped to quell the Attica riot.
"A
his address, "Society's Ex• education doesn't necessarily
Bill
of
No Rights: Attica
.
and
the
pectation
in
Law Enforcement" solve the problems of
mistrust
for American Prison System" is
his
··
given last
Thursday
at
.
Marist.
the police •
.
Instead a
·
policeman book on
the
injustices
often
.
Badillo,
a
Democratic
.
with a "physical relation to the suffered by prison
inmates
;
·
-
Congressman from
.
the Bronx poor"
or
a . "feel
'
for the com-
A graduate
of
City College of
and two-time
·
candidate
·
for munity"
·
is needed
.
_
New York and Brooklyn Law
.
_Applications Taken
mayor
:
of New York, said that
..
Calling
the
bail system out-
School, Badillo
hB.-1 served
as
the
there is . "mutual
-
mistrust" dated
·
and prejuidiced
·
towards Commissioner
of
the Department
between the Police Department poor people
he
said that it
should
of
.
Relo~tion and
.
as Bronx
.
and the people of
.
the
·
poorer be eliminated
~
He said that the
.
Borough
·
President
~
.
.
He is
communities
of
New
:
.York
City.
bailsy~empermits the rich to go
·
·
currenUy
-
serving
his
··
second
Much of this.
mistrust, claims
free while the poorer people are term
as
a Congressman
:
in New
Badillo, is because
·
the
·
Police forced
t<>
stay
in jail.
·
·
_
York'
_
s
-
21st
·
Congressional
Department
does
not adequately
Claiming that Legal Aid isn't District.
:
.··
.
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
reflect the ethnic composition of too
.
effective
.
because of the
·
His
appearance
was
·
sp<>nsored
the city.
-
The Congressman feels
enormous amount of cases these bytheDepartmentofHistoryand
that it would be more ~eficial lawyers have
.
to
handle, Badillo Political
·
Science
·
as
;-
part of
its
·
to_ have ~ore black and Puerto
suggests
'
thaf much of
-
the plea
-
Criminal Justice Lecture
·
Series.
B~· Debby Nykiel
,
.
solid experience and educational
course work are
.
significant
·
aspects to look at.
.
.
-
.
·
.
Applications and qualifications
Dean LaPietra declined
to
are now being
.
-
considere4 and comment pe~onally on bow the
selected for placing a permanent Teache~ .Education Program has
.
Director
·
of
the
Teacher
·
been under the Acting Director's
·
Education
Program.
Applicants
supervision.
However,
_
the
·
are being considered of education response
·
from superintendents
administrators and teachers and principals in schools where
from
.
·
both on-eanipus and
.
the there are Marist student teachers
Ri.can polfoemen
walking
a beat . bargaining
-
taking place is
a
·
·
,...
..
•
'
·community
.
area
.
'
··
.
has
·
beeri good and supporting of
Three members of the
.
Marist the Teacher Education Program
.
community have
.
applied
.
for
.
the
·
Many schools are willing to
.
hire
·
position
.
They
.
are Dr. Olson and Marist graduates from the
Mr. Roscano, both of the History
.
Program for teaching positioos
if
Department and Mrs. E
.
Nolan
,
there are
·
any available.
·
Circle
Interview:
.
.
Richard
·
Bickley
Acting Director
of
the Teacher
Marist
·
has witil
.
Fe6
>
1975 to
·
by
.
Wayne
T
~
Brio
aP.peared to be apathetic; or put
EducationProgram
;
·
The position
.
µieet Jhe
.
Competency
.
Based
_
.
.
•
.
differently, they chose to remain
was
vacated by
Mr. Hazzard and Teacher Education requirements
·
_
The
following article
is
based
·
·
Jn the background. In order to
Mrs. Nolan was
·
named Acting byNewYorkState.Bythis
.
timea
-
on
.
·
an interview conducted
-
with facilitate more student par-
:
yDeari!~_torforthel974-75
:
academic
-
Teacher Education P
_
rogram Mr
.
Richard Bickley, iri!tructor
.
ticipatiori, different teaching
-
must
.
provide
·
a list of
•
coin-
of Psychology at Marist College. techniques were
·
called for, and
·
:
·
• ~ •
.c
Hazzard
'
s leaving
.
was petencies given to them
to
be
.
Mr. Bickley was born in Van- these riew techniques needed
'
c81'11ed by word
.
of
mouth
.
to
.
done and achieved by students
to
couver
·
Canada and came to immediate implimentation.
·
Manst ~nd the surr~un~ing
'
be qualified teachers ori
,.
the
·
Marist'
:
in 1971
·
'a1ong with
·
two
.
Regarding the administration
·
community a!ld apphcations el!ml:°tary level. By Feb
.
1971,
·
other psychology professors that her:e . at Marist,
.
Mr.
Bickley
·
·
began
~
come m.
The
S?'8ening t~ !i9t
_
must
.
be used for
_.
yie
yea.r;
Mr
,Cagle Moore and
Mr.
.
~entioned tl}at h~
. _
was highly
.
Comxµ1t~ee Joi'.
,
:
chosiJtg
:.-
th
_
e
,
.
:
.
tra,uung
.
of secondary
..
education Gerry
,
Breen.
,
.
;
/
~
..
-
x_
.
.
_
- ·
.
· .
.
·
•
>
<,
-
lDlp1:"essed
·
w1th Dean La Pietra
.
•
succeeding Dir
.
ector
'
.is presently
..:;:
teacners
t
'
w)ncl
F
will
'
stress
--
m
-:
: ..
•
;°·
1
'
•
.
:
,;;.~i;.~,i
!
Mr
,.
..
·
:
·
.
.
B
·
·
:'l,..
kl
.
•
·
.
.
,-:
•,
-
-~
;
;;.
";;;.
t
.
'
:,
'
·.
·
·
<·
arid
:
'
President-t.irius
,,
Foy
.-
,
Both
i
.·
·
wo~king
·
.
on
;
.
qualificati.00:3
.
and
.:
volv~~
t.'
A
:
~asl
(
~f
'
the
'
p~
.:
.
.
his
Wllill
impret~o~
~rirlri;~:
-·
,
'
these
:
admiriistrators
/
accordlng
·
:
:.•
f
the!! .
·
-pnor1ty
,
\n
. ·
reaching
a
manent
:
·
Educatio~
-
Dll'ector will
first
year
-
at Marist
.
Concerning
.
· to Bickley, "seem to
be
the ones
.
·
.
dec1Sion
_
concern~g
-
the name
.
of
_
be
:
to have
__
.
Manst's
_
Prol?-'mn
the
.
students, he
·
round a good who
.
represent
.
·
the
_
_
pro&Fessive
.
}
.
the 1:)irector
.
for
~e~
year.
Dean
_
·
fulfillthesenew"competenc1es."
number
.
of motivated
·
and
ex-
thrust for Manst; that
JS,
.
they
.
.
LaP~etra, Acadenuc
Dean,
feels
.
·
.
·
citing students however some wer~ trying to
.
lead Marist
fr<m
.
·
·
'
'
·
its relatively parochial past to a
·
Di~
1
·
.
·
.
c
.
.
T
·-.
·
h
·
·
•
·
,
more progressive future
.
"
··
·
Richard Bickley
ato
_
.
g
·-
~
u
.
·.-
_
C
.
·
.·
·
enter
.
.
r1ve
..
-.
·
S·
~~~:~/fue;~=er;di:a~ structorcanbefired:
_
·
first,"(lfflen
·
to me that he believed the ad:. the institution
can
no longer
By Teresa Stoutenbo
_
ro
nights,
.
a wine and
-
cheese party
.
Activities
·
in the
·
Marist ministrative efforts
·
were
.
being afford to
.
pay t~e teacher because
for students from various floors Dialogue center
.
began
in
Dec.
of
.
hindered. He felt (and still
.
feels) of economic factors; secondly,
A
new
"
hot spot" has come into
.
in Leo Hall on Weds. nights, and last
.
year
.
Originally
;
there was that the faculty in general is when th
_
e
·
t~cher is
.
guilty of
existence on the campus. It
'
s an informal geHogether with supposed to be two centers. Orte r.nore conservative than
their
.
.
"moral turpitude"; thirdly, when
-
called the
·
Marist Dialogue i;tudents
·
on Thurs
.
-·
nights
.
The was
to
be in the
.
basement of
Leo
administrative counterparts
.
:
.
a teacher has
been found
to
be
Center.
number of invited guests
·
µsually Hall
;
although plans
·
:
never 'Bickley suggested that "perhaps incompetent. The last
.
reason
,'
.
Located on the third floor of doesn't exceed seven
.
in one followed through.
-
.
this conservative atmosphere incompetency, is the
hardest
to
Leo
Hall, under the guidence of
·
evening, but there
·
have been
N
xt
B th
B 1
had
·
been caused by the prove
.
because standards for
e
year
ro er
e
anger homogeneous backgro
·
wid of the ev
.
aluating competen
_
cy
·
are
Brother
.
J.
Belanger, this three
.
·
occasions when approximately hopes
to
expand his
.
three
room
room suite allows both students twenty guests
·
have attended.
apartment and have enough for a l\_farist
.
Facuity." Bickley
.
con- deJ>.atab~e.
.
.
.
·
...
..
.
and faculty
·
the opportunity to
·
Brother Belanger employs five
.
•
piano andhi-fi
.
This
would create
-
tmued to say that the fB;culty
~
_At
_
this pomt,
.
I
.
-
asked. Mr.
achieve
a
better sense of ~mpus students for the plaMing and the possibility
of
having cultural
.
~eneral, seemed cool .
~
their B
~
ckli:y what rl:B~ons he believed
commwiity.
preparation of these gathering,. evenings
.
at the center.
·
mter personal relations Y'1th new '!ere ~volved m t~e ~tteppt to
'
.
'I'm just convinced . th~t Four of ~se students cook and
BrotherBelangerhasmadethe fa~ultymembers,-e
,
spec1ally
.
~as fire
~un.
He replled that
'
(1)
private c~~eges can't survive
if
clean ~bile
-
one serves as the
-
.
Dialogue Center available on Fri.
-
.
this
so
.
b
.
etween the sem~r certain_ member~ of
.
the depart-
they are
1
ust
·
barracks," stated
.
executive
·
secretary. S11ne oL
.
nights
.
_
Therefore, any groups
·
tenured
.
members
·
o!
his ~ent disagree with ~e conten~ of
~r .. B_elanger.
_
This
~on-
·
these students participate~ the interested
.
in reserving
.
it,
may
:
psychology d~pt. and
_
tlie new
.
h~ cours~;
.
(2)
;
his ~<;}img
rnstituhonal
-
center provides
·
.
work-study program.
·
.
check with
.
him.
.
.
·
. .
·
.
.
_
·
.
;
.
teachers
.
·•
-
.
.
philosophy is
.
radically different
resident students with
·
a
home-
·
Funding for this center has
.
·
Although the center has been in
·-
,
..
Although ~r. Bickley,
.
Mr.
·
8:"d
0
P}?Osed to
.
stan_da!d
·
_prac-
like atmosphere where they grow
.
be~n
··
.•
partically
.
provided by
.
:
existence for
8
,
short
.
period
.
of
.
M~re,
_
and
·
.
¥c:
·
}freen
·
were tlc~s, this has led to fric~1on
m
the
both
.
.
.
·
physically, ,
.
-
and
•
Marist College
;
Brother Belanger time,
.
Brother
_
Belanger'
.
feels
_
brought to ~nst ,1th one of the
.
department- co!lc~rnmg
.
such
psychologically .
.
-
··
also contributes
.
a part of
his
confidentthat
his
goals are
being
-
purposes
_
_
be~g to a~ new blood
:
iµatte~s as ~a.ding, (~) he has
-
The activities of
the
.
Marist
.
salary. Since he is a member
of
achieved.
.
_
.
.
.
_
.
_
~d new insights,
·
their presence
·_
me~
with
cr1t!c1Sm
wi~
.
re~ards
.
.
'
Dialogue Center include: a
-
_
:
tbs 'clergy, all expenses are
tax
·
·
·
·
-
..
JS
slowly
·
1?8in~ pb~ed out.
_
tohisownradi~lpolltlcal beliefs
_
faculty
.
get-together
on
.
Tues~
.
free.
~
._-
.
.
.
.
.
.
Pr~ently, Mt
.
Bicld~y
_
s contract
.
and practices. Bickley added that
. ·
·
·
. ·\
·
·
·, :
•
·
J±!~
r~
::::::}
.:
·
has not
·
-
been
·
renewed
·
and
it presenUy; he has protested the
'
.-
:
·
.
. .
.
·
;-
1
1}!
t::'
.
~
.
:
_
::
·
·
_
:-_
,,
'
.
:_
.
~
.
.
·
-
-
_-
•
:-:
··.-··~
-
T.~.-
...... :
_·~~;.
·:_~-~.
~
..
~
.
..
··
.·.
·.·.•:,
.·.
I
.
1
.
:
.·•
.·.
·
_
·
·
i:·
:
·
~:=;~in
th
~~~:;
;11J!~
;
:~::S!
~t
-
t
8
re::ns
ir:vo~!
·
,
._
'.[
:
~'.,
,
..
-
~-:
__
..
1
·
'
.
Mr.
Moore
will
_
no longer teach
a
.
violation
of
·
:
his academic
..
i
t¥;
but
will
workfull time in Marist's freedom. The
·
Faculty
•
·
Policy
.
;J
~
Counseling Services; while
Mr.
Coinmlltee (FPC) is supposecfto
:
i'
'
.
Breen's
'"
Wl?rk
in
Sociology has be
·
tooking
.
into t~ matter.
,..
·
<:
been
curtailed.
·.
:
·
·.
·
~
asked
Mr •
.
Bickley about his
<:
In
-_.
June,
;
1973,
·
Mr.
Bickl~y vi~ws concerning
.
grades.
:;
He
.
.
·
received
'
his annual evaluation answered that
.
one
·
:
criticism
..
.
~
·
,
;
f ~
·
Dr. Kirk,
.
chainrum of the
·
m~de
of
him
by
.
Dr
~
Kirk and
.
"
.
'
.
:
Psychology
:
nep
t!:
'.
Bicldey
.
said
·
.
Dean
•
La
.
Pietra
'.
dealt_
'¢th
.
his
·
that the evaluation was
.
not
.
grading distributions.
·
Never-
..
positive and
.
that
.
Dr.
Kirk
,·
was
theless; he
.
believes
·
that'there
is
·
_
recommending to
Dean
La
Pietra
•
•
:
aJL inherently
.
a~tboritarian
.
that Richard's
•
contract
:
not
.'
be relationship between
the
teacher
·
. ·
·
·
renew~. At preserit,
Mr.
B~ckley
_~
.
and
.
the
;:
s'tudeµt
_:-
concerrilng
.
·
has
·
received
·
no
.
further
.
i
ilotice
.
gra~es•
.
•,
still
_
he tried
.
to
.
break
.
fr.om
·
:
the
:·
academic
'.
dean
,:
,.
thisd_o~andcreateiiii~placea
-
· .
.
,
.
iegarding
his19~5:,
_
coritract
;
:
· .
.
.
:
>
~ore
.•
hWIUUU;Stlc
-
a~
·
~~fying
.
.
-
~
·
_
:
:
~tei:estingly
-
-
~ough,
·
Bickley
•
'i
~uden~cher
,
r~ati~~I?·
>
·
·
noted
:
that
"
there
'
are
:
·
three
·,
.
·
.·
·
. ·:
·
·
·
· :·
,
·
·
·.
_
legitfma~
'.
reasons
.
~
!'by
an
.
in-
.
: ·
·
C~ntiii_ued
o~
-
~iag~
_
8
.
, ·.
\
.
I
I,
.
r:
·
MARCH 14, 1974
THE CIRCLE .
PAGE 3
Curriculum Challenge Offered ·Through
ACMHA
by
Karen
Tully
Bard, Bennett, Culinary
IJt-
Registrar of the school with
cross
registrant does not get into
stitute, Dutchess Community which they
wish
to
cross register,
1
course before a Mari.st itudent,
For those
of
you who
are
bored College, Ladycliff,
Marist,
Mt. St. along
with
the assistance of John .and does not receive a priority
.
with the curriculum, page
'r/
of Mary's, New Paltz,
Vassar,
and O'Dwyer, the Mari.st Registrar. number;
the
Marist
catalog briefly covers Ulster Community College
allow
A
Marist student cannot take a
· ·
Many people come to Marist to
·
what
is commonly
known
as
their student body
the advantage
·
course elsewhere if it
is offered at use the science
·
department over
ACMHA or the Associated of cross registration with any of Marist. The student must have
a
any other. Presently there
are 11
Colleges of the Mid-Hudson Area. the colleges belonging
to
ACH-
·
2.5
index
to
·
apply for the Marist students attending other
Although there are only
8
colleges
MA.
· ,
program. The student
is
accepted colleges. Approximately
20
listed in the catalog, there are
In this cross registration only if there are adequate students
from
other sdlools are
presently
10
colleges which process
a
student would
be
openings in the course he wishes attending Marist. These nm-
participate in this consortium. responsible for contacting the to take. For instance, a Vassar Marist students pay their tuition
·
.
.
-
student coming
to
Mari.it mW!t
-
to
the college where the student is
·
Or
·
·
-
•
t •
B
wait until
all
registratioos ar( matriculated. This avoids the
_
-
gan1za Ion
.
egun
.
complete. before
-
~ey
will
be problem of receiving bills frmn
_
_
,
-
_
-
-
·
accepted mto a
Ma:rut
course
.
A two separate colleges.
One problem with the
ACMHA
program is the course schedules.
.
Not
all
colleges publish their
course schedules simultaneously.
Therefore a student who
has
to
register in November at his
-
college may not be able
to
cross
. register because the other school
schedule
is
not available. For
·
example, Marist registers
in
November for the Spring
semester, while Vassar registers
in January for that same
·
semester. While making it easier
Continued on
Page
8
· F
·
or-
Fund
·
Drive
By Mike Harrigan
tentative until
a
case statement
Volunteers Aid ''Learning Disabled''
on the subject
is
approved, at the
by
Joanne McCullough
ce~tral nervous system. 'f!l~e
Marist College has begun the next meeting of the
·
Trustees.
.
·
children are therefore classified
organization stage
of
a capital
Mr.
Strasbaugh pointed out
s~th street is a neighborhood , as . ''.l~rnirig disabled": This
fwid drive which will hopefully thatlheplanningandpreparation
service organi1.ation in
which 10
def1rut1on came about
m_
the
raise several million dollars.
stages include
·
· selecting
a
to
12
-
Marist students who 1950's when parents resented
·
A
camp~ign director,
_
Mr. campaign organiz~tion which
generally
.
want to g~
·
into their children being called
WayneV.StrasbaughofTamblyn w~l represent
Marist
during ~e elementary education, volunteer re~arded when they really
·
& Brown Inc., Washington
·
D.C., drive. He note<! that the drive
each Friday to aid children who - weren't. F~r example, a child
is
_
_
now working at
_·
Marist.
·
Mr,
would "emphasize the nee~ of
have difficulty inthe simple may excel m
.
math, but may not
Strasbaugh has beeinissociated the coUege,'.'
.-
_a
_
nd. (<the i_m-
.
learning processes.
-
·
·
.
be able to combine the letters
_
of
·
with
a
number of colleges
in
this portance of facilities m pursumg
.
.
These
.
children, between the the ~phabet together
.
.
·
respect, including Muhlenberg progr~s to fac~ty,,,students,
agesof3and9,haveadisorderin
.
This
volunteer program, first
College
·
in Pennsylvania,
·
Penn and fri~nds of Marist.
·
·
one or more
of the processes of sta!ted _
?Y
Gregory Hou~e
State, and Wake Forest.
President Fo~ and Mr.
speech, language; reading, residents mclud~s n~t only their
This
is
.
the first drive of this Strasbau~ were m agreement writing, arithmetic, or
•
other house, but the other dorms on
sort for Marist. Previous
.
drives, that tile d1:1ve would be_c~mposed
school subjects; resulting from a campus.
Chris
Liska, a
·
spaJl!Sh
such as one
in
1961 for the con- of ~re~ stages. The frrst ~ge, psycological handicap caused by and Ele!Ilentary education
.
_
struction of the Boathouse, and
·
which_
,
IS now undei:wal;,
IS
the a possible c~rebral dysfunction major, is one
.
of_ the con~ern~
·
one in 1965 for work on Cham- planrung and orgaruzat1?n
.
The
and-or emotional disturbances. students who 1s mvolved
m
this
pagnat,
.
had
_
been mainly
·
·
fu- ·
se~o!ld . stage ~ould include These children are not the result program. C~is and the other
•
ternal. This drive
will
be much S?~citation. The fm_al stage, the
,
of mental retardation, sensory M~rist volunteers donate their
more: far-reaching.
.
vISi~le part ofthe drive
will
~cur
'·
deprivation or motoi: handicaps. Fnday afternoon_s from
3 :30.
to
-
·
·
President
,
Linus
'
Foy
.
noted durmg_the next academic year. They
.
are
_
of
_
average,
·_
near 5:00 to these
'
children teaclu.!lg
some preliminary areas where
_
Presid~~tFoyhasnotedthatas avetage;
.
or above
,
average th~ arts,
.
ci:afts, and remed~l
the funds might be used inclu~g soon
,
as the .case statem~1!t general intelligence with lear- reading. Chris; who expressed
the library _·extension,
·
the receives final approval explicit ning and-<>r ceriain
:
behavioral hopes for other Marist students to
physical educatioµ
·
complex, and terms o~ the goals and lo1!g range
.
abnormalities ranging from mild g~t involved, seems quite pleased
·
facilities for the
.
disabled.
·
It
-
p~ns will be made pubhc
'.
to severe which are
.
associated with the program's present
shoulcfbe pointed ou(that this is
·
with
a
deviant
function
'
of the outcome.
She
believes that
·
without the aid of these volun-
teers, these children would
be
endlessly thrown about
in
the
Poughkeepsie school system and
accomplishing nothing.
Along with the basic classroom
·
learning, the Marist volunteers
would eventually like to have the
opportunity to bring these
children on a tour of the
campu.9.
Due to the fact that
the
tutoring
is
on
a
2
to
l
basis, the volunteers
feel
·
that this allows them to
become closer to the children and
therefore, more
.
rewarding. The
children themselves grow closer
to their tutors and look
forward
to
having
-
them come back
·
each
Friday.
Any Marist student who might
be
interested
in
·
helping these
children and taking part in this
program must be willing to in-
volve themselves
..
at
·
least once
·
--
every other
·
week;
,
There
·
are no
necessary requirements and if
·
someone is interested, Chris
Lis}{a or Gregory House
·
should
be contacted.
_
pesi~~~t
.
;
F9Yis
·"
st~te.1.11e~i
,
Q,i,
]lie
"
~~
-
sterSClted
ule.
.
' '
.
,.
·-
...
·•·
·
·
~-
-~
~
··
·
·
·
schedule f~r
·
~nother year, since
·
·
A
check of other colleges have the· major arguments pro to point this institution in the
thecommittee'ssuggestionsasto suggests that most colleges and con? Did he
-
give them
·
directionhedeemsimportant.-To
,
1) Status of this Report. This data collection are µnpossible to operate ori something similar to reasonable consid~ration?
If
he
allow everyone to second-guess
-
report stems from an appeal by implement in time for the. Fall -the old schedule. Vassar uses a was unreasonable m the. process the Dean, or to decide. after an
·
by
~
Linus
Foy
student
.
groups of an
-
ad-
1974 semester.
·
C01!1PJ,'Omi_se with
_
a meager
o!
~o~ect~g d~ta or argumen~, 1mfavorable decisfop:_ that he
ministrative decision taken .by
·
3, The Basic Problems and ration
-
of tnple slots. Rutgers has
,
did
this
give e:v1dence that he did
-
-
,
ought not
be
allowed to take such
-
the Academic Dean: The usual their Relative
.
Priorities
.
The used the riewschedule for civer a not tonsider the arguments?
-·
·
-·
a decision (when he has done so
route of such an appeal
is
through
-
fundamental
·
issues
·
are: the decade, and Mercy has employed • Some attention must
_
be given
for the last sixteen years) is
the administrator's immediate master schedule, and the process it for over five years. When to the concept of consideration.
wrong.
superior, in this case, the by which students participate in alternate schedules like this exist To consider an argument does not
Conclusion
President. Since certain aspects
-
academic decisions. Let us over a period of years, we can necessarily mean to agree with
I) The Dean wishes to install
of· this matter might be con-
consider the latter first. We are conclude that no analog of, it. Ina matter like this, one must the new schedule for a two-year .
sidered an administrative- - entering an era of student par-
Gresham's law will drive one or 'weigh the pros and cons, assign
trial period. I will not overrule his
student confrontation, I asked tile ticipation which is relatively
-
the other out of circulation.
relative importance to each and
decision to implement the new
:
Steering
·
Committee of the uncharted. Ttie sixties saw
I find it difficult to place the eventually decide upon a single
schedule. Perhaps a two-year
·
College Council t<i appoint
-·
a progressive decline of the in loco schedule problem on
-
a par with course of action.
period is needed to completely
committee to attempt mediation; parentis concept and a, con- the other problem, or at the level
Richard LaPietra is com-
feel the effects of the new
failing this, to
·
provide an ad-
.
comitant
_
building in of
-
student of some of
_
the major problems pleting his
fifth
year as Academic
schedule. However, I think there
visory opinion on the matter of
.
partkipati9n into the non
:-
facing Marist at this time.
Dean.
·
During this time, he has
may be preliminary evidence
appeal.
_
·
.
academic de~ision
-
making
4) My Analysis of the Com
-
acquired an enviable reputation
available during the first year of
_
·-
2) Report of the
.
Committee. machinery.
·
-
mittee Report. The Committee for fairness, foropenness, and for
operation. Hence, I direct the
The ad hoc committee met with
In the matter of academia;, has done
·
a great service in willingness to take action. In the
Academic Dean to meet with the
both parties, and filed its report there is a third force-
·
the faculty
·
·
sorting
·
thr.ough a mass of in-
absence of any positive evidence
Academic Affairs Committee to
with me on March 4; 1974. Un-
.
which has
'
enjoyed
.
a formation in a highly charged
.
that he deliberately refused to
•
discuss methods of review. The
fortunately, this report was preemiµent and well-established emotional setting to isolate the- co~sider some of the arguments,
schedule shall be reviewed in the
•
misstated in the Circle. For this position as senior partner with major factors. I agree with its I find it difficult to rule that he light of the Fall 1974 experience
- reason, it
·
seems appropriate
'
lo administ~tion in policy matters. analysis except for two issues. has taken an unreasonable and the Spring 1975 registration .
.
summarize its
_
major findings In
.
··
theory, faculty and
·
ad-
The committee report seems to decision.
Decision
to
continue or terminate
here.
_
_
.
.
'
.
ministration recognize the
_
need imply
.
that had the
·
Dean
Last year, the matter of the
the experimenti: during 1975-76
The Committee stated the to incorporate students
.
into the
.
researched
·
the
·
problem more calendar call.9ed controversy.
In
-
·
should be taken before FebJ:Uary
issues dividing the parti!!S: (1) Is process. The reyamping of the
·
extensively, he might have that issue, the Dean reversed
.
1, 1975.
the
Master Schedule
-
ad-
AAC and
-
the
.
heightened role or- proven some of
his
arguments. I
·
himself.
·
Subsequent to the
2) In
·
future,
·
should the
ministrative or
. ·
general, policy the SAC
.
are major steps in this believe he would have been able reversal, the Dean proposed a
schedule be a poUcy decision or
decision1?
_.
(2) What are
·
·.
the direction.
But
ther~ , a~e to marshal more support for his fonnat for handling such matters an administrative matter?
The
.
priorities of implementation? significant lacunae, especially m
.
proposal· and perhaps silence
-
in future. "This
·
proposal was Dean should discuss
this
with the
·
The coinrriittee,
indicates
the academic
_
matters of lesser some critics; but the
-
sllf\Tey circulated, and received general
AAC.
As_
it stands now, it
is
a
"compromise" solution to . be importance whic~ .are J!Ormally
proposed by the committee would
·
approval. In l;he matter of the managerial decision
to
be
made
pointles.9, and reduces the option handled by
_
administratioo .. '-!'he
·
not have changed the status of his schedule, I fmd he h~ sub-:
by the Dean. af~r appropriat~
to old vs. new schedule.
long-range goal of dev1smg
,
argwnents from a priori
to
a stantially followed
this
process consultation. - Should the
AAC
In
.
the
-
matter
of
appeal,
.
the
_
realistic
·_
mechanics for student posteriori.
Thus,
.
while it
_
would f~r includin~ student _and
staff
wish to alter
this,
the matter can
·
committee indicated
·
that
.
_
the participation
·
must be
.
classified have been
_
better for
him
to
do so,
·
and faculty mput.
If this process
.
be
taken
up
wi~
the
_
faculty and
Dean
-
had
-
been remiss
in
the as of extremely high priority for it
·
is
.
doubtful that
·
the
,
basic be defective, it should
be
revised.
the SAC.
following ways: (1) Not
-
·
sub-
_
_
Marist,'
,
. : ..
·.
arguments pro
,
and con wo~d But I cannot find the Dean
·
.
3)Regardlessoftheoutcomeof
.
_
stantiating
·
his arguments with
·
.
What
,
pr1or1ty shQul~ _ be h~ve chang4:<1 .
.
(~
_.
consultation · ~nreasonable for
having
followed
tlle aforementioned, there
will
·
sufficient data. (2) Unreasonable
.
assigned
to
the master sched~le?
,/
with pean
·
Bishop
.
of Rutgers, }1e 1t.
.
·
-
-
.
.
still remain decisions which will
-
·
handling
'
of studen~ input, by not 1thasbeenpredictedthatth_e11ew
.
mentil:med~
.
ostofthear~ents
·
The institution looks to the be taken administratively.
The
including student opinion
-
early schedule
will be
the salvati_oo. or put
forth
.
by the
_
,
Acadenuc
-
Dean .
Academic Dean, as it does
to
no
·
Academic Dean should work with
· ·
enough;
_
and
:
by
,
._
not
_
_
providing
.
_
the
nJ!n
of
-~~t.
:A,t the
_
_
ris}t
.of
·
as
_
well as war11e~ about many of other single person, for academic
· .
.
the student leadership
to
devise a
sufficient
.
time fo.r student oversunphficahon, ~he
.
old the
,-
probl.~~
,
-
~ d
:,
bY the leadership
.
He is not a
·
dictator mechanic
to
guarantee
smooth
·
r~se.
S:;
_
. ,
·
-
·
·
,
·
·
-
schedule may be descnbed ,s a studen~
;
).
_-
.
_
_
.
.
whose
·
every
whim
·
must be
__
om· ppeurtation wit_h early
_
student
·
.
,
'
'
The·
;
'c
'
oirimittee
'
·•recommends ,•mix
:
of
.-
,two-slot apd t~ee-slot ·
-
!
beliey~
.
~e
.
commi~e h~s. o~yed . .
In
•
matte~ of major
,
·
reconsideration
·
ci the Dean's co~s; the new is
~
mix of missed
.
,
,tile
.
•
:
·co11_c:ept
of, policy, his suggestions must be
.
· :
decision.
· '
In
·
the light
--
of tlie
_
_
single and d90b1, slots; ~bile the reasonableness iri
the
;
sense
.
.
the
>
supporte~
by
the
F'~cul_w
or SAC .
.
.
·
committee's findings, this is
.
compro~
_
provides for s~gle, Trustees intended it
to
be
used. Ip. l8ll58r
,
_matte~s, how
.
ever,.
he
,
.
. t'1Jltainount to.retention of the old
··
doubJe
·
and.triple slots •
.
·
.
,
_
The questions are:
did
the
.
De~: __
11~
.
the a,~istratlve leewa,
.
/
·
-,~
-
:
-:
i
;
,
V'
t
I
.
,
;
i
,
.
I
j
I
I
:
.
I
I
'
:;
,
•
,
'
,,'.,
.
,
.
.
,.
_,_~
,
.
.
•
'•
.
PAGE4
voL_ljME 12/
Marfst
College.
Poughkeeptla,
N.Yt.
.
NUMB~~
·
7
C~Editors
·
Gregory Conocchioli and
Lyn
Osborne
Layout Editor
·
Tim
DeBaun
Photography Editor
.
Dave Pristash ,
Staff:
Paul Pifferi, Karen Tully,
Brian
Morris, Diane
Petress,
.
Mary
\Monsaret, Bob Creedon,
Ray
Barger, Brendan
·
Boyle,
Irene Ross, Eli7.abeth Spiro, Wayne Brio,
Bill
Sprague, JobnT.
CJancyt
Debby NyJriel, Charles PePertin, Cathie
Russo,
·
James
B~~~.
Joan
McDermott
.Mike.Harrigari\
.
.
.
:
. ·
.A~rs-
.
··
James
Keegan and Ann~Trabul~
Busmess Managers
.
Jack Reigle, Mark F!tzgibbon
.
.
·.
-
.
-
_,
.
.
.
~-
.
The
·
Marist
College CIRCLE
is
the weekly newspaper of the
students
<i
Marist
<;oµege
.
and
.
is
p$1ished tlu'.oughout the
school
year .
.
exclusive of
vacatioo periods
·
by
·
the Southern
.
.
..
Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers Falls, New York. .
·
·
Edito
:
rials
.
.
·
-
'
-
.
.
-
~
·
:
S_treakin
·
g
·
HJts
.
Marist
.
·
.
·.
-
.
:
_-
-
.
1
THE CIRCLE
·
MARCH 14: 1974
Letters To The Editors·
M E I W · ht
She was starting college again, ''Sonnet 73". The only
pre$ure
fS
.
Ve
yn
rig
apprehensive at having
·
to was
to
present the genuine article
.
sharpen rusytools. A
sigh
or two; honestly: she met you most oUhe
.
•{
·
19
_
39
·
.
.
~1
-
974}
.
·
afewverylongpa~
in the hot way
with
an jnstinct:for poetry
.
room; one total, re~nant laimh that
was
strong
·
and sure .
.
·
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
that
·
came
all
the
.
way
fr(lll
Evelyn
was
gracious,
which
is
pne intolerably bot, intolerably Georghl'and
from.
places
I
do not better than "refined," and kind,
vague and tedious Poughkeepsie know much
of;
then a distracted which does not mean
.
demoo-
summel'. aftemoon
two
years ago; far~away look -
all
suggested a strative~ Other teachers and
•
a young
·
black woman
~
in
~er life already, one felt, heavy with those fellow
·
students who knew
early
thirties,
l
guessed --
.
hap- experience .. Maybe
,
a
life suf-
her shared
this
-
admiration Jor
pened upon
.
my
•
. office. Evelyn ficiently blessed and wounded·to
·
her quiet strength, her
dignity,
was
..
another of those
'
.
late-
·
lead her not to expect too much and her unaffe~d. concemfor
summer transfer students ••• with from
this
new
venture -
but
.
.
others. And for her nch humor
·
-
the
.
usual
.
problem of
·
·
piecing equally
:
to not exped too
-
littlP.:
:
to me, at least, the incarnation Of
·
together a
.
decent
·
curriculmn not
to
inflict one's own (however
•
au these abstractions, and of
.
from the scraps left
·
after spring legitimate) weariness of doubt
.
on more.,
This
combinatio~ of grace,
.
registration
.
Her
.
halting, slow- others
.-
There
.
was
if
-
serene
kindnes~ and
·
.
passionately
rhythmic
~
speech -- out
· ·
of
sadness
that
-
somehow converted reflective
•.
intelligence
.
.
is,
·
Georgia; muted by Philadelphia·~
·
in a
·
moinent to
.
an
equally
.
deep
•·
··
perhaps,
·
·
"culture''
.
which
.
has
·
.
- glanced back into
a
'
past
·
in-
.
and carefree-caring
.
laugh. )
nothing to do
:
:with class
c.
or
race
>
cQmplete
.
(study
·
at
.
·
·Temple cannot
.
remember
~,
·
Evelyn
.
On
;
behalf
of th~ faculty, ad-
U.n~~ersity .. ;some. teach~ng ~rt theorizing about life,
_
~hough she
-
mini~tration
,
an~. staff,
·
and
spec
.
m,1
.
prograII¥3) and
.~t?.
a ·struckmethenartdafteradeeply
,·
students c,f 114a~t College,
I
.
fqture f~y. '!Ith poss1~ilit1es
.
intelligent about it
.
.
.
.
.
w_ould extt;nd CQ~dolences
:
to
·
M.f
.
•.
(maybe J0~alism o~ radio ... or
Evelyn
·
was .. . patient,
.
She Sunon Wnght, he~ ~usbarid,
_
and
.
grad.
school).
The voice blended listened carefully, very carefully,
'. ..
to her other
:
~
.
\ll'Vlvmg relatives.
with th~ discootinuities
..
of the
.
to what you thought was of value:
-· --
·
·
·
Robert
P.
Lewis
day, as 1t suggested those of her DoMe's "Valediction Forbidding
past.
· MoU:rning", Shakespeare's
Streaking,
the
art
of
running
around
.
naked;
except
:
fo~
maybe shoes,
socks, and maybe
a
hat,
is
thflatest college fad gathering students by
the hundreds
·
every night
•
last
.
week across the
,
coUl)try
has
·
.
finally
··
reached the Maristccommunity giving us county-~wide publicity .
.
_
.·
::
•
·
.
.,~ .
.
.
~
.
:
:
,
,:;. ·
• .
·
Among r
,
eason~
.
for lll
_
e
,_
ne'w
-_
f8d
·
m8y
__
be.the
:"
:
new
:·
fouri~
sexual
S
·
•
t
'
st··
·
k,
.
-
~
-~
·:
.
--:.
·
freedomofthelatesj.xties,itcanbea
.
wayfor
·
young
·
~opletoshare
·
UppOf S .
rl
e
.
· .
.
r
the efforts
.
.
of
the student com: nextstepsholtldberiotificationof
somEthing ~n a Jess threatening way than giving intimate realtions.
It
·
mittee of
ten
to have the schedule
·
the
Board
·
of Trustees and
·
·
a
is springtime, arid it's the old fashioned rite of college ~xhibitionisrri;
·
C
·
·
· ·
·
·
..
·
1
·
·
·
·
u ·
rescinded. We believe tlia.t the student strike
.
of
.
classes begin-
Students claim that it
is
way to relieve pentup tensio!}
·
s·and pressures.
·
.
Om
.
m
lJ
er
/
•
r)IO O
·
committee
was
.
~
eitremely ning March
25 and
continuing for
While
the circle:i!! fully aware the pre
.
~ure of these
'
students
·
and
h1
~ .
.
reasonable,
.
perh
.
aps
.
too
.
ai;
long as is n¢cessary.
_
We urge
particular the Marist student, we feel that students
·
should use
·
a
little To the
.
Editors: .
.
.
. "'
re.~sonable,
in
finplly agreeing to
everyone,
'
,
:
a1,1d . coniinuting
<;ommon sense before streaking through such pµblic areas as the Main
·
This
•
lette
.
r
·.
is
.
to
·
.'
express mediation and placingJts faith
.ih
.
·
students
in
particular,
·
to
begin
a
Mall .
.
Last week
.
the arrest
.
9f five Marist students brought
.
untold· Commute_r
.,
Union
·
support of
.
the
.
Dr:
.
Foy's
·
.
.
acceptance
.
of
_
the
boy:cott
:
of classes
.
immediately
_
·
.
a
.
publicity and possible damage to the Marist conmiunity at
.
a time
of
strike
..
called by
·
the Student
:
Mediation
~
Board's
;
recom
~
following
·
vacation o
_
n
·
Moriday; ·
··
•·
severe financial difficulties. Marist officials
.
and some
:
students
·
a
·
re Government
,
.
beginning Monday,
niendations.
· •· -.~
.
·
,
·
·
·
·
·
March
25.
'
.·
· ·
·
·
.
.
:
·
,
.
:
·
·
·
·
·
trying to raise the imag~
.
pf Marist within the Dutchess Courity area March
25.
,
'
"··
;
· .
.
·
Di:
.
Fo;y,
;
has r~Jected
·
.
the
:
.
-
Thank
yoU:
_
.
.
. • .
.
and
tl:irqughou~ the country
:
as well. W,fdare say
:
th~tt~Jwill
'
heip
·
.
to
We
>'
have
~
•
been
.
consistently. re'7
.
~m~~nd~tion
,
,
: .•
~f ;
.
the
.
.
. .
·
. ·
.
.. Chiis)Vise.
cx:eate th~n,ewunag~
.
~hcl
.
ttheya.restnx~gfor£~
.
·
.:
,:"
..
,
·
~,..
. . ·
.
:
: .
•:•
:
.•
opposed
:
_t9the
.
11ew.class sch!),pa-: M,e~!1
.
~n,
_
B,oapf,th
_
~Jtht~~~ma
.,
• ,
:
;tti\
fon~p_~t~Jf?!?!If~~
.
l_?J;~t
.
1'lle arrest Iast
.
Vfeek served,
-
as
_
a sland
.
erous
.
attack <>i:t
i
~he
.
Mar~
··
~n<i~~1cula_rlyJhe.1n~thc,µ
t
of
,
1ts
,
·
;
b
_
e
:'.'i
r~~9I1~
1
9~,r~~
,;;
·
'3/:~
5.
o.f
.
p~e
;
:.
.
.
.
>
.i,;
.
~f{;.,:;
;'
...
,
'.
·
.
:
.::;;.
t:-~;;;.;
,
;,
,.,
.
~
.
.
.
commumty an~some
.
studenu;felt namesshoitld not ha~e appeared
•
m
•
1mplemen~t1on.
,
-,
We
.
;
sµpport~
::
..
c;P~~~~r
;,
Vl'\
10
~
i.
~~~~
.
th~t
:
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:
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,·
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the Poughkeepsie Jciuitiatit
·
is the opinion of the editors thaBliese
·.
·
,
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< •
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:C
· ·
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students
•
should have
.
made themselves aware of the
>
consequences
.
·
..
:
.
.
,
,,
<
..
;
that they would have
to
face in,view of getting caught.
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...
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While the Circle does not wish'.to
'
pome down ori ''.Streaking"
.
asa
Studenfs
<
Sfrike
..
:'
until ~tudent:; demands of total
"Collegiate S~rt", it does wish
:
to
~
point
_
out
to
students the serious-
·
·
-
·
rescindmenCof the
'.
new master
damage done to thec9mmunity
as
a wh~le. We alsodishope thatbthor
New
:
:
schecfJfe
:
:
.
time schedule
are
.
bme~.
-
Thist
·
whoares~ivingfora"~ewMaristimage'arenot: couraged
y~
e
•
.
..
.
,
,
·_
-
.
•
·
.
action is called for
y
studen
behaviorota
:
f~;wManst
,
s~uden~.
,
·
•
•
:.:
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·
..
_.-.
.
..
.
.
.
.
·
.
,
leaders
,
as
.
a
·
resulf.of the ad-
,
·
• To the
·
Editors: ,
.
iniriistratfon'suityielding and
Starting
·
Monday, . March
25 ,
irrespo~siblE!.
:-
action in
.
dealing
there
·
will be a student strike of
with
•
-
·
student
,
.
government
all classes. This strike
will
last
.
organizations on
this
campus
.'~.
•
Fire
.
n
D.r.i.lJs.
.
0
.
.
:
~
;
:
.,·
.
.
w~·as stude~ts are an in.legral
part
.
of. thf Marist
:
community.
We will not roll
.
over and play-
,:.
-
:
.
dead. We as students must have a
.
.
say in the
r@Jllllg
of our campus
and of our lives. We
·
iniist
.
be
united.
·
·
Sincerely yours,
,· .
. .
Eric ye
_
rgan
Foy
And
:· ..
DJ~cisipn
Hoc mediation board tcihear both decision ~f the Ad
.
Hoc
.
Co~-
~early
·every student
:
has.
S:t.one
:
t~e
.
or"ariotlief undergori(the
.
Ma
.
k(ng . . .
.
To the
Editors:
:
-sides
-
oftheargumentcoriceming mittee."
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,:
.
the
)
ipplementatiop of the new
·
Does he always mean wliat
·
he
schedule. In his ·offer to student says?
•
,
.
leaders President Foy stated
,
"I
·
·
.
P~ul Pifferi'
trying, but
..
necessary, practice known
as
a
.
•:fire
drill'!•
.
pier,e
~re
those
thahtre
quite tha~l
for,
thesE!.
.
interruptions of the daily rou~n~
- not only as a relief from soine undesirable task, but
alsQ
as salvation
from a dangerous fire.
.
· ,
.
.
.
·
.. , ,
, .
.
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
•
·
·
.
.
President Foy prope>sed an Ad
·
pro~e
~
be gt1ided by the
Fire
is
a danger~us and sc~y tbing, that l'!o. one
.
can de~y. ~d there
is nothing more scary than being awakened m the early
•
mQrrung hours
· by
an alarm, no matter how:inconvenient
.
or disturb
.
ing itIDay be: .
.
.
These persons who
for
the am~ement !>f
.
tllez_ns~lves
.
oro~h~rs fmd 1t
•
-necessaryto set
off
fire ala~
m
).ate
rught and ~rly
.
Il_l~I1J1Dg hours
.
are doing no one a favor
.
F1.re "drills" have proved sliff1cmetly to the
·
fire department t.ha;t
we
~ej~deed ~le to clear
.
.
the buildings ~
.
case
of emergency;-and these extra
C'drills"
or pranks
,
or even acCJ.d!:!nts
are not only an inconveJii~ce to
.
the
_
rest
of
,
the students, but- a
potential danger as
well.
. .
.
.
·
: ·
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
Handicapped students
.
have
.
to
.
b~
~arned down
.
flights
.
of
.
stairs,
students who are
·
sick;tired, showermg;
.
_
or what ha~e you
must tramp
,
.·
outsidewherethey
.
areallpreytoills
.
of~lsorts
/
:
.
.
:
·
.
.
. ·
.
.
·
.
Let's just cut the clowning for awhile;'. and learn a little r~po~
.
sibility
~
if
nothing else -,while we're h~re. .
.
"
.
.
.
·Correction
·
·
RE
.
: Article in
cmCLE
of
3-7~74
-
·•
.
..
·
'
.
'Report of.the Mediatio11 Committee~•
·
.
...
•
•
.
•
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•
•
; ' • . •
••
•
:
-
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_-
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•
•
.
:
••
.
Th~
~I~CLE
.
r~~ts
-
the ;ro~
~h
~ur
·
~rt contairiedJn the abt>ve
/
;
:,.
:-,
·
·
article.
The
·conclusion that was iriadvertantly
,
prjnted was that of the
.
•:
>.
student contingent,-:and
.
no(that of
·
the
·
Mediation
Committee
.
as
a
'..·:
M"l~-:::;::.~
whole.
·
.
·,c ..
:~
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·
·.-
,
.
In
view
on
the
receri(
devefopmenti
t
c
.
Ollcernliig
_
both
students
:
~
.
,
..
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admlni$"ation,
w
;
e
4o 119t4el!lD
.
it
~e~~sa,ry
.
te>
.
i:ePrintany
DlQr~
:
of
.
the
.
,:
·
·
'
·
· ·
·
-
riv:k~t~~~ri~~
'
tkttti~~~G.
·
~~ic:tfuriJ
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-
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.·
,,
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.
,
MARCH 14, 1974
THE CIRCLE
P1;esident
Foy
Gives Support
To· Tuition Assis~ance Program
Dear Friend of
Marist:
creasestudentaidtoamaximum; TAP become law. Also; inany of
Our State Legislature in of $1700. This bill
is
a logical! our present students
.
have
Albany
.
is
presently considering extension of the present Scholar younger members in their
.
.
new legislation
on
·
student aid Incentive Program which has a families who would benefit from
which
.
is
vitally important for maximum award
of
$600.
The the passage of
this
legislation.
every one of our students and for importance
of
this bill rests in the
Governor Wilson_ and the
·
Marist College: I wish
to
take a fact that the
.
student from a Legislature need to be
assured
by
few moments of your time
to
give moderate income family
will
be
'
students, parents,
alumni,
a brief purview of
this
legislation eligible for an increased award, faculty; &taff and friends of
~nd
to
·
recommend
·
a course of ranging
up
to $1500 undei" the Marist College that passage of
action
:
to·be taken by you.
.
Tuition Assistance Program
·
this, or similar legislation is
Marist students
are
caught (TAP).
Such
additional necessary- and politically ad-
between
:
~in¥ ~dt}cational
.
costs
·
assistance.
will
.·
provide
_
more
.
vantageo~.
I
UfSe you
to
re~~r
·
_and the diminis¥g
.
means _to students with a range of choices
.
your position
.l!f
Albany on this Joanne Ginter
and Cindy
Bodenheimer in
a rehearsal
for
m_eetcosts. The pnvate colleges, that,· hopefully,
-
will· include
.
matter by wnting the Governor Beeple."
''The
especially the sinall private Marist.
.
·
.
·
.
.
.
·
··
and your State Legislators.
·
colleges,
'
have successfully ·
TAP
would be
.
phased in one
_
Pertinent information
is
given on
,pleaded
.
their
~se
in J\lbany f~r
year
at a time;
~
begiru)ing with the the reverse
:
~de
_
of
this letter_ for
increased
·
asSJStance
to
their
--
1974-75 freshman class.
Our
.
yourconvemence as
_
you consider
-
students
.
.
The
Select Committee present student body-would not· takirig action on my recom-
on
Higher
Education, a joint
.
benefit
.
directly from TAP; mendation.
•
.·
IegisJatiye committee chaired by
:
however, we
,
are now making
-
_
Sincerely yours,
Assemblyman Peter
J;
Costigan, contingency plans
.
to
redirect the
Linus Richard Foy
has
·
.
introduced
-
~
,
.
,
tuition College's student aid resources to
-
·
·
President
0
a:ssistartc~
:
bill
~
that
_
would
iri-
our present studen~ body should
Theatre Guild FormS
Repertory (i-roup
Marist
Presents
''The
Beeple"
By Ray
Barger
centers around a planet of bees
who think that they are people,
Once again t?ie land of make- and how one day this colony is
believe ·will come
to
life as the invaded by
.
a human being (a
Children's Theatre presents
'
boy).
Allen Cullen's "The Beeple."
Cast members include Cindy
Directing
_
"The Beeple" is Bodenheimer,
Beth
March,
Barbara Jala wit~ Dan Edgcomb Joanne
·
·
.
·
Gintec,
Stephen
as
·
Assistant-director. Adeline Iacobellas, Vinny Carfora, Jack
Aquilino is the-producer.
. ·
Ledwidth, Linda Sofio; John
.
This
.
relatively
_
unknown fairy Lyons; Lucy Squiricini.
.
tale
will
bea breakaway from the
·
Michele Valeri wrote the music
traditional
·
classic stories that that
is
used in "The Beeple".
B~~llzabe~Spiro
.
·
the Repertory Theatre
'
·
will Belanger
.
He also directed its theChildren's Theatre has staged
The Marist Community will
· .
. · .·
:..
·
_
.
.
.
.
.
,
present the
.
dramas of three first presentation in 1960
Waiting
in previous years.
.
.
·
have a chance
to
see this show at
.
·
For thefirst time in its fifteen contemporary American for Godot, by Samuel Beckett.
"We are
·
excited
because we 8 p.m.onMarch28, 29and30, and
.
_year history~
·
the ~arist,C~lleg~
·playwrights~
The plays that WJ.ll Since then, the Guild has are not limited to a
.
classical
·
2 p.m. on March 31. •
.
_
Theatre
·
Gµild h~ fonne~
_
·
a be presented alte~nately during presented popular Broadway interpretation as we have been
•
·
This show
will
be performed for
l:tepertory Theatre
-
~oup
.
w)lose
·
that week
arl?:
Virginia
WooU by
.
successes as well as those plays
with the plays
.
done
in
the past;-•
.
th~ children in the area during
members will be responsible for Edward Albee;
:
Pla:r.a Suite
·
by
in
the classic mode. Some of them
.
said Dan Edgcomb.
·
·
.
the spring recess. Nine daytime
:
t~e
·
'g~neral
'
PX:o
,
duction -a~d Neil · Simon;
~
Tlie Eff.ect
.
of
· ·
are: The Wise Have Not Spoken
The
•
first production done by shows
will
be presented starting
d_1rect1on_
of its
·
dramatic Gamma Rays ~n
~n-~~tbe-
.
by Paul
v.
Carroll, directed by
this
·
relatively young theatre on Sunday, March 17 at 2 p
.
m.
prese~~tions.
.
,
-
.
.
.
: ;:
-
..
~OOJ?:
;
~rJg~~(fs
_
by
~-\1.ul ~llldell;
·•
Jim Britt, Twelve
Angry
,
Men by
organization ~as the "Wizard of
•
The group will be taking the
.
·
According to D~
-
· Jeptha
,:
Yiigini~~oolf}s.t?,e~p,,.g_~~
-
~t~
;
Reginald Rose,- directecLby
:
Dr.
Oz".
·
"Peter· Pan",
.
"Snow play to various
.
places outside
.
La~!1ing
;
·
who-
_
co-d1rects the
by-
~
~P!ryn
_
-
¥~~~y .w~o
<
h!ls
.
Lannirlg';_'
1
Fri~drich'•
=
o
·
uerr~fr,;
-
Wh
_
ite!',
'
·
an~-
:
'~PinnO<!hio!'
'
a_lso
· :_
Marist;. :Jimjt~ mainly
.
by
:
a
. -~
.
Theatre
.
Guild·
,'
.
with
·;,
.
Jim
··
.
•
Britt, a~ted m a number of productions mat's
'
The
{
Visft, J\farat
·
Sade
1
oy
1
_
.
preceded
·
this
se1p,ester's stag!ng
•.
shortage
·
of_ funds .
..
Tr_i ps
·
to
-
: :
a
_Rep~rtoryTheatrewillgiveso
·
me
.
smce~e;fr~~year.Shehas
,
Peter Weiss, J.B;
·
by Archibald
of-
,
'
l.
TheJ3eepl~"·
·
:
··
;
•
- .
.
VassarH~p1tal, Sa~erties and
.
-
-·
of
_
t~emoretalentedpeopleinthe
,
ale~dingrolemthispl?yaswell,
'
MacLeish and ~ugene O'Neill's
-
The story, m thts fall'Y tale DoverPlamsare bemgplanned.
.
.
-
.,.
··
..
~-
.
-
-
-
· -
·
-
·
.
Guild
an opportunity
.
to
'
add
,
.
Bill Sprague, ~other veteran
-
Molll'Ding Becomes:Electra.
greater scope to their abilities .
..
P~rfo"?er
·.
with the Gll;ild,
.
is
Thecastmembersforthe
.
plays
Dr; Lanning said: "lt.'is an
ex-
d1rectmg and performing in are: Plaza Suite - Gary Braube,
·
perirnent thaf we
will
try
and
.
Plaza Suite.
.
.
Donna Corrado, Mary
Anri
Ur-
later assess; Hopefully, we would
.
·
Man in the Moon Marigolds is
·
bano, Jim Britt John
Blue
Eric
··
like to
.
see
this
·
become
.
part of bein~
.
.
direc~d by Jim O'Brien,
·
Garrison, Sue Mclmrow,
Cindy
eac~ spring. semester, giving who 1s president of the Theatre Maser, Bill Sprague Eileen
semors a chance
to
try their hand . Guild. _He has been actiye iil
_
the Kentner , John Lyons. '.
..
·
·
at another a~ect of theatre art, (!&st.
m
s_et_ pro~uct1on ~nd
Virginia
Woolf - Bill Davis,
.
the directorial perspective."
br.
li~l!ng of
·
th~ Guild's presen- Kathryn
,
McCarty, Joe Martino,
·
Lanning
·
and Mr.
'
Britt
.
will tations.
.
·
Mary
·
Landers.
generally
.
oversee
·
.
the
•
produc-
The Th~tre Guild is _th~ oldest
Man-in-Che-MoonMarigolds-
tions butthe responsibility for the
extracurru~ular ~ctiv1tr on Nancy
.
Thomas, Lisa
.
McCue,
staging of the presentations rests campus.
It
has been m continuous Mary Meskers, Danny Edgcomb
with the student directors.
OJ)erat~on.sinc~ 1959 when it was Fran Fulling.
'
·
.
From April 16th
to
April 23rd,
organized. by Bro
,.
Joseph
·
-
Taking
an active
part
.In
,
~
new repertary
iroop are Bm Davis and Katby McCarty.
.
Marist·· Recruits
·
1
·
·
_·
T
.
h
·.
-
~
·
;..
-:
::
.
·
.·.
:
~
.
.
.
n
·
·
.
e
\..A.J1111llU111ty
C.B.S. for the Admissions Office.
Marist; in attempting to im-
'
The film illustrates the transition
prove relations between the Marist has undergone
.
in
recent
college and the community, met years. He then followed with a
with Kiwanis Club and spoke speech about how the field of
about the physical changes that communication has changed
Marist has undergone in recent since it became a new major. He
years.
It
was disclosed that moot demonstrated how the students
businessmen in the Poughkeepsie used their background· in com-
area still envision Marist as
'
a
·
mwtlcations to work
,within
the
school for Brothers.
community
in
such places as
-
However~ it_
is
the aim of
Mr.
radio stations, advertising
Robert Norman, head of the agencies;
.
·
c
·
able television,
·communications Department; to newspapers, and LB.M. He
make more contacbi
·
within the
·
stressed the importance of in-
business community. This way he
·
teraction between
.
the
.
business
-
can place more students in the community and Marist College.
working field. As a result they Consequently, the &tudents are
will acquire some practical Marist can
-
learn through
experience before entering into pragmatical experience.
the
working world prior to
Acting representatives of the
_
graduation.
communication field,
Glen
.
.
The main topic
of
this luncheon Manjoria and
Mary
.
Monsaert
which was held March 15th at the
·
spoke at length ori their own
Elles Club in Poughkeepsie,
was
experiences and insights. Their
the area of comuiunications
as a
comments combined with
Mr.
new and growing field at Marist. Norman's fine efforts, may prove
Mr. Norman began his lecture
fruitful
for future efforts in
.
with t~e new film produced by
communications for Marist.
Poetry Competition
The National
Poetry
Press
Each poem must
by
TYPED or
announces its spring competition.
PRINTED on a separate sheet,
'
The closing date for the sub-
and must bear the NAME and
·
..
mission of. manuscripts by
·
HOME ADDRESS of the student
, c~llege students
is
April 10. .
-
and the COLLEGE ADDRESS
~
·
Any student att~nding either well.
.
junior or seJ!ior c
_
ollege is eligible
Manuscripts should be sent
to
·
to submit hlS vei:se;
-
There
is
·
n~
·
:
the Office
·
of
the
?ress:
Th<
·
·
.-llmitaUon
as
to
fonn
or
.
theme.
--.
-National
Poetry Press, 3210
Selby
·short.er
works are
_preferred
by
..
Avenue,
Loo
Angeles,
California
the ~ d of J~ges;
-
.
because·of
- ·
90034;
•
.
.
·
·
. ·
,
·-
·space
limlations.
·
·
·
I
·
·.,
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,. ,·.
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~
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PAGE 6 ,
Shout It Softly
ByFr.LeoGallant
a
pastor.
So,
in
a way.
I'm har-
dened
to
criticism and I'm
not
too
My
last two
articles, dealing afraid of controversial
~es.
with
gossiping and labeling, were
Today
I
want
to
write about the
meant
to
lead up
to
this
article on most oppre~
-
minority in this
MARCH 14, 1974
Senior Campaigns
·
For
Office
homosexuality. !'write it with a country, the Gays, and about
bit of fear and trepidation non-Gays and priests who work
by
Brian
~orris
-
In
1953
Satiro broke his neck in
because of people's tendency to with them and for them for
an auto accident.
As
a result of
label a person because of the apostolic reasons at
a
risk of a
Marist College administrators
that accident he spent
six
months
minority group he is defending. reputation that deman~
un-
would no doubt welcome the
in a private sanitorium.
Later
he
At one time
I
think
people coo
-
common courage. Most of what
I
election of a Marist
,
alumni
to
the
was forced
to
quit his job as a
sidered me an alcoholic because say is from Fr. Gregory Baum's
·
governor's
_
office. such a
baker because that job called for
.
for eight years
I worked closely
:
article in COMMONWEAL (Feb.
governor might lend a sym-
heavy lifting, something he
.
was
with
Alcoholics Anonymous.
I
·
15).
creates a
new
sense
of dignity in pathetic hand _to the efforts of
no longer able to do. Satiro says
went to their meetings, and I was •
·
·
"Gays are people
·
held in them. This self-affirmation in small colleges m se.arch of sta~e
of
his
baking experience: «It's
up all hours of
the
night, living
·
contempt
by ,
society, - faith then becomes the source of funds. Well,_a Marist student_ is
the need to create. The baker
the
Twelfth
Step, helping men
·
marginalized by custoni,
_
vilified more positive,
·
generous and now a
_
candidate for l?a
_
t office
takes a raw material and
·
turns
who had slipped; who were in
_
by a vulgar or subtle language of
but one be sure that
if
elected
out a finished product."
.
trouble, who were spending the exclusions and judged
as
sick, as joyful living. But has the
·
.
-
,
·
·
.
•t
b'
.:
Satiro does not consider
.
night in the town jail In the eyes immoral, as perverts.
·
(Often
Christian community imparted Sat~d , Kazolias
:
~f
~
e
himself a politician;
.
·•
"I
·
never
of small-town people
_
these were
-
causing in themselves self- this hope
to
our gay brothers and any . Y .s man - excelpd
s.
0
'M.lt·
regard myself as a poll
_
·tician
_
.
.
, I
sisters?
· _ _
·
.
Sa~ro
18
a 47 year o seruor a
bums
·
and I was one of them.
.
rejection and self-hatred.)
Often
A fe
·
w
·
_.·
·
.
pri·ests are now Manst. H. e _
_
has
.
recently an-
meet eacll issue, take a stand,
-
InmylasttwoyearsinDetroit,
:
theGaysareledtobelieveinthe
dhis t
ti
t
t rthe
antldon't
·
equivocate." Satiro is;
I worked unceasingly to get thei
-
perversity of their own nature dedicating themselves
to
this nounce
· in en o_n
°
en e f
indeed; eager to m~t issues and
first black student in our school
.'
and deprived of the very ground cause
.
My
_
first year here I had in Democratic
,
.
.
p~imary
~
·
or
-
take
·
unwavering
'
positions.
..
He
·
f
If
t
Th
.mind to
.
have
.
regular prayer ~overnor.
.
.
.
Satiro,
.
-
~hose
The lily~white community had me, o
---
their se -re spec .
e services or Masses privately for b~ckground mc!udes being
~
.
has a stand on nearly every issue
labeled. One parent told another
'
·
:
behavior patterns
of
s~mE: are gay students but
1
didn't have the hrst~generahon
Greek-
of contemporary interest. A
that"Weoughttogetthatnigger-
probably due to their inner
. .
·
af
.d fb .- labeled
Amencan,
·
a
·
baker
-
for20years,
discussionwithSatiro(younever
lover out!"
conflicts, their handups, their courage,
rai_
0
ell!g
.
· and a manager of real estate
have a "conversation'.' with
E
t Marist thre
·
d bili"tatin f ars d
to ounds One of
-
these days I 11 be the
•
·
.
·
i
·
ti
·
al
·
s
t
·
)
.
· ·.
1
·
d
t
--
·
ven a
'
e years
e
g e
.
.
ue
w
Christian God wants me to be,
ru
·
con~erns, is a
I><!
i c
science
a iro may ea
on o any
.
ago I was criticized by a group of inflicted on them by society. be
.
ha
.
t Paul was
·
. Everythin
·
g maJor. H_ e has_ enliv~ed ~any a
subject from baking, to
-
politics,
priests
in...
Rhinebeck
·
as a
.
Society places e;no~ous
.
burd~ns
w
.
.
..
·
all.
.
·
.
d class discussion :with
his
pen-
to "Streaking."
-
.
-
.
publicity hound because my
-
on them ~nd it is almost ~- for everyone.
All
to ·
Butlnee
.
chant for bringing
a
theoretical
Addressing himself to the
picture appeared in the Journal a possible
·
for . per~ons
.
with a. lot more strength and 1¥ybe
-
a debate down to a practical level.
political
·
climate in America
few times, demonstrating for the hOm()$exuaI
·
orientation
to
,
grow
bit more ''Damned -with my A
dis · ·
·
fM
·
an be
Satiro
-
expressedhisview that the
Berrigans, Prison Reform, and
.
up without being expQsed to the reputation•; outlook. Until then
I
the
~~ftfo~
~
sa~~~fement
.
nation is threatened by a "form
Peace. Last year
I
w~
helping
,
threats
:
~d pressures of a cruel can plead with you also
to
grow on a new freeway in Dutchess . of tyrariny unknown
~ history"
out the prison chaplain by
:
world
/
'
-
·
'.
.
·
·
·
·
,
into human beings th8t
will
ac-
·
County.
·
-
.
:
·
_
.
unless the worker-"exercises his
visiting the youth
.
t'ell block: at
-
'
li Christianity is what it should cept all human beings, all, all.
Satiro
·
has
lived
in
-
political
·
power."
,.
Dutchess Comity Jail two or
_
three
·_
be, it w
_
oul
_
d
of
_
fer
_
strength
to
_
gay
Next issue, I'll comment on tbe p
ghk
·
11 hi
.
lif
Hi
•
In ontrast
to
Howard Samuels
times a week. One guard told me
.
people. Since one of the problems Bishop's guidelines for
·
prie
st
s
·.
0
u~t· ale~psti~ ·tya begsan .
.
in_e. 194:
who tas raIBed a million and a
e
lin
d-:.1:-g
.
with homosexuals. It has po ic
ac
lVl
.
.
.
·
•
.
.
•
·
that I was really brightening up is self~rejection, guilt 1e~ . gs a ~~le new pastoral approach. when he actively opposed half dollars to run
·
his campaign
things and the inmates looked imposed by society, the Christian
1
,
11
also write about DIGNITY,
·
a
_
abolition of rent controls. Since for the governor's job, Satiro
forward
to
my coming
.
But the message proclaiming
_
Go~•s
·
c
·
ath
.
oli.
_
c
,
Homosexual then he has run
-
for County planstospendhi~three-thousand
·
authorities finally told me
·
that
I acceptance of all people m Chr1St
-
-
·
Executive
·
and the
State dollars on campaign jaunts
couldn't visit the
jail
because I initiates men and women into a organization.
·
--.
Assembly, frequently attends
_
across the
.
state in his car.
wasn't the chaplain and I wasn't new sense of self-acceptance and
God, give us your eyes.
various county meetings, and is a
_
T~ically; ttJ:at c~r is cover~
_
Third
Year
---
·
view
-
major sourc
.
~
.
of letters to the
,
with bumper s_tick_ers
;
so~e
editor.
-
.
·
.
·
·
_
.
.
~
.
many years old, Judging by
,
their
·
Why does
a
man who by liberal looks
.
~atl!o p_lans to
.
c~nterhis
.
estimates has three toousand
.
campaign on
his
opposition to the
,-'
,
dollars to ~pend
,
on a ~ainpaign ~~te s~les
~ ! .
·
~
p~nsions fpr _
·
·
··
·
·
·
·
-
run for the goverµorship?
_
part time politicians and to ~e
By
Bob Nelson
nationalistic foreign,__p9.licy
t
tlu!!;
;,
.~oi-ts
_
~
~pite ofth_e b~ycott.)f,
~
-
"I'm
_
tired
.
of _ having '
.
'legal usury'' br,ought on bYc high
...
_
.
.
.
_
_
.
_
the actual pr~ic:\ent
,:-?
qe
·
orges
· '."
strong
-
,
front
of
oil consuming miillonaires tell the workingman
.
_
_
interest
.
rat~s.
__
.,,
.
_
. ~
~.,
"
·
.
:
:
:
The
'
recent Washington Con-
.
Pompidou, is cont4l,"\iirig
-
in
:
the
,
)
nations is f onned,
·-
:which tries
'
to
·
what
js
•
gooci
for
-
him. They can't
.
-
Satiro's
:
.
_
opinion of Marist
_
is
ference of oil consuming nations present crisis, a<!cording to
·
·
the cut o.fUhe:flow
·
onechnology to
·
perceive
·
or even undeq;tand the favora~~~; He
c~~
!t
~
"bal8!1ced
seemed to show, once again, the .American
-
press;
···
..
·•.·
·.
,:
'
·
•-
theArabs,
~
itisvery possible that
.
problems of working people s_chool.
Theydon tmd_octrin~te
irrationality of the men who work
·
-
But for "Pompe· a
·-
sous" (the, -the
.
oil Rroducers will find these !eying t? pay tJ:Ie~r mortgages and l~e t_he
,
state educational ~;
at the Quai d'Orsay, the complex French nickname
,:
for their
_
'Ieaksartdstopthemup.ltisafair pay their rents
:
" .
-
._·
,
stitutions .
.
They , ed~cate.
of government offices in Paris .
.
leading states111an; litei:ally
,
bet
t11ai
Qie ~abs can do without
But come on Satiro! How can However, if Satiro s V1ew of
With the formation of a bloc of oil
H
money pump .. ), as for de
··
technology longer than the West
-
you expect to ~ ?
·
Marist if fayorable, his view of
producing
couniries
that Gaulle,
this
intense nationalism can do without oil
.
Thus
,-
if
"I was told by a union leader
.
~?e co1:teg~,s . recent rash
·
; of
threatened to shut down the oil- was expressed more in the form
_
France followed the common oil that never in the history
-
of
s~reakings 1S le~ so. Satiro
dependent Western economies. of national interest; it was in policy
put
forth
at the American politics has it been so points out_ tha~ leg1Slators who
The logical step for these in- France's national interest to drop Washington _C_onference she ripe for a non-rich person to win. are debating increased
:
aid to
dustrialized countries would beto out of N.A
;
T.O. since she would
-
might end up with no oil People don't trust the run of the
~m~
private colle_ges will not~
form a block of their own, to
'
no longer have to rely on a resources at all, while the United mill politician or any politician.
.
mclined to vote .. for t~es~ m~
loosen the
·
Arab oil boycott by foreign power for her national States would hold a monopoly of People tpought that I was
a
kook
,
_
creases now
-
that
_
5.trea~mg has
withholding valuable technical security. In the oil.crisis, too, the the world's non-Arab oil. Then it in
1969
when
I-
said that day by become tQe
,
rage. Satiro adds:
resources. However, at the national interest and national would be reasonabl~ to apply.the day, hour by hour, we are
_
losing "I'd ra~er hav
_
e Marist ~own
Washington Conference this positionplayanimportantrole. It theory of the Gaullist fear of our rights. They're not laughing
for
helpµ1g to expand horizons:
united front was
.
not fully must be recognized that the American
_
domination,
for
·
any more. Watergate has shut than for the antics of 'free
.
realized, due to the refusal of one United States and France are in
-
France would be dependent not their mouths:"
think~rs
.
"
.
..
-
country- France:- to participate very different positions
.
as on the Arabs, but on the U.S.,
a-
in the formulation of a common regards their oil resources. The nation with which, France has
oil policy and cooperate to break U.S. has a large internal oil- less friendly relations, than with
the Arab oil shutdown. Thus; producing capacity, with the oil the Arab
_
countries.
according to a number of fields of Texas and Louisiana,
If-alloftheaboveistrue;howis
American newspapers and and with a sizeable technological it
·
that the United States
.
got .
·
magazines, the French are effort, could exploit the resources eleven countries to follow what is
irrational; a good summary of to be found in Alaska and in
the
:
esiJentially an American oil
'
this view may be found in the bituminous schists
.
pf Colorado.
_
policy? President Nixon made a
.
February 25 issue of Newsweek, Furthermore, the U.S. exerts a pointed hint to the conference
.
the
'
article ent~tled '' Jobert's
_
powerful influence on the oil delegates with the statement that
.
Fury". Why, one may
well
ask,
-
producing countries of the "security and economic con~
would the French rish weakening Western Hemisphere, and can siderations are inevit;ably linked
the
_
Common
-
Market,
·
and count on the Venezuelan fields for and energy cannot be
.
separated
angering the Americans in some time
to
come.
.
.
from either.JtA statement which-
'
pursuing such a policy?
.
.
France, however, is alinost m'ay be translated
·
to meanJhat
·
-
The most popular
·
explanation entirely
·
dependent on the Arab ·the United States might- cut
its
refers
back
to the foreign policy suppliers, and probably will
be as troop
•
levels iri
_:,
Europe
if
the
of former French president long as oil plays a major role in Europeans
·
did not
·
cooperate on
Charles de Gaulle,
:
who sup-
the French energy
_
industry.
-
energy policy: with such
-
a
_
with-
_··
posedly was afraid
of
any sort of R~ing this, the French have drawal of American
-
froops,
-
the
_·
relations with the United States,
_
tried to cultivate a friendship R ~
would supposedly
.
hav~
.
·
.
.
fearing
-
the domination of such a with the
•
Arabs,
-
_
breaking free run
_
over Europe
·
with theh·
:-
·
-·
superpower wider the pretense of diplomatic relations with
·
Israel · large
;
·
East
·
European armies.
.
·
--
protection against the Soviets.
It
as early as 1967. On the basis ·of. This
-
American Jhreat worked
o
·_
is in this
.
light that one can
uil-
this friendship, France has been· almost
~
perfectly:
_
.
ooly
·
France
'
derstand
·
the French refusal to able to negotiate
.
a
.
number of was not coerced into backing
the
·
:
_
sign the nuclear
.
nonproliferation
.
separate oil cootracts with
dlf.
~erican position.
,:
Why?
Since
treaty
_
in
1963;
since the French
_
f~rent
:'
~bcountri~,
'
'
and
'
has France
•
wil)drew
.
.
fr<m N.A.T.Q,
:
.
·
did not · trust the Amel'.lcan
.
.
thus
_
been able
to
assure
:
_
her ~here
·
hllve · been
_
no American
_
.
nuclear fOl'.ce
.
in th.,Sl
_
event:of)1
_
:··
su
_
pi>Jies
;
.
f
_
<?r·
,
_
som
_
e time·~ the'..troo
.
~on
_
,
F
__
~enchso
_
_
n,
,
an
_
~-so
_
·
.
·
-_
~e
·
.
Russian attack on
Paris.
And
in
· ..
future. It:is
·
true that this
.
is
a
'
Amencans
.
had
,
no
·
blackmail
-·
.
.
·
•
i:;
.
W!rib~tti:~W~;;rtfy
.
.
~~,
b~
·
Jtt:g~rerJ;-pc;~
-:
•
:
~~~
-
.
i~::~:
!t~=
,
.
-
Organizatioµ (N
:
A.T;O'.) ~fusing
.
:
that
-
has i(chance,
:
of succeeding. :
-
,
in~~tc1~,haye certain
_
! ~ ~
,
·-
to
:
be
dependent :..On American
.
Dllring the
·
recent
·
boycott
;
thel'e
.
·
points
to
it, after
.
all.
·
·
·
-
forces/ for Fr~nch
/military,
\
were11
nwriber
.:
ofoJl.''leaks~!;
'
oil
/
·
·
,,
,
;:
·
i
'
'
,: · . '
,·
·.
'
,
:
'
·
,
_,
:,-· :
·
defense.
It
is
thus
'
this
intensely
'
·
that
was
leaving the Persian Gulf
_
. .
·
'
·
..
'
,
•
•
,
#
•
•
. : . ·
•
•
~
•
•
:
•
•
'
•
,
-
. .
•
•
• • •
•
..,
•
.... ,
,
•
•
-
-
•
I
•
-
-
~-
-
--
-
---
~
---··-~--
-
-
-
·
-----·
-
-
-
--
·
-•-
·
•
-·
·
·-·-·-
·
··
----
-
--
-
--
--
•-·•-
-
·
··
-
·•
··
··
.
.
-•··
·•
'·
:. Satlro
Kazollas,
~ndJ-~
: ..
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
·.
.
.
....
-
.
MARCH 14, 1974
THE CIRCLE·
PAGE 7
·Announcements
The.English Association wishes
~o draw the attention of students
interested
in
writing to the
Writer's Guild
of
the Mid-Hudson
V
~ey. '!,'his is an organization of
wnters
m
the Poughkeepsie area:
who meet on the second Thursday
of each month to read and discuss
the !ork of its members. The
m~tin~s, which take place at the
UrutarI.aD
Fellowship Church on
Sou~ Randolf Avenue at
8
p~m.,
are info~tive and friendly.
The
e~phasIS_ IS on helping fellow
wnters unprove · and market
their creative work;
Financial aid applications and
Any student who has not picked
financial statements (Parents'
th ·
Confidential Statement and up eir class ring may do so by
Aide Sees Nixon
As
''Artful
Dodger''
either contacting Bob Sammon
Student's Financial Statement) (Dieges and Clust Represen-
~reavailableatthe
Financial
Aid tative) in Gregory 103 or Nancy
Office.
by Ray Barger
accountability, while Nixon
rejected it.
Any student looking for Fletcher (Balfour Represen-
financial aid for 1974-75 must tative) in Leo 219•
Friday night,
a
crowd of 1,000
Schlesinger compared Nixon's
heard Arthur W. Schlesinger
shunning of accountability
to
the
denounce President Nixon as
saying in "Love story": "Being
hedging
his
duty to be held ac-
President means never having to
countable for
his
actions and the · say you're sorry".
. Anyone interested
~
visiting is
welcome at the meetings. The
guild _is seeking authors of any
. age, but young writers are
particularly encouraged to at-
tend. Visitors may come to three
meetings without charge at
which they are free to read their
-work to the group for discussion.
After three meetings, those who
wish to join the guild are required
to_ pay_-a membership fee. of five
_ dollars for one year. -
have an application · and a .
financial statement on file in
order to be considered for aid.
The co-ordinators of Poets and
Painters have announced that
Joseph W. O'Brien
will
visit
Marist Thursday, March 28th, at
1
p.m. ·in.the Fireside Lounge .
The topic of
his
Gallery talk is:
Paint. - Poems - .Potentialities.
Mr. O'Brien is an.innovator
in ·
.
the integration ·of poetry and ·
painting.
His
works
will
be
exhibited in the Gallery Jrom
March
25 -
April
20. .
.
All
students and members of
the community. are
.
invited to
attend.
activities of
his
Administration.
Nixon's fear of the press, and
The former Presidential aide
ultimately
his
own
ac-
and Pulitzer.· Prize winning
countability, is shown by the
author spoke in the Vassar
relatively few press conferences
"· Chapel on "The Presidency and
he has had, Schlesinger said.
. the Press". -
.
"Franklin
D.
Roosevelt held
- Schlesinger viewed the role of
more press conferences in his
the press as "central"
-in .
the . first three months in office than
maintenance of Presidential Nixon held in .
his
first four
accountability since it operates years," noted Schlesinger.
between the "rulers and the
The former aide sees electronic
ruled".
media as a safe way for
However, Presidential regard Presidents
to
get ideas to the
for the press has steadily people in that it would not entail
deteriorated, especially since anything more than a dramatic
- Franklin
D.
Roosevelt,
presentation of a well~prepared
Schlesinger said: Most recently,
speech; no unexpected reporter's
Johnson resented, the need for
questions or anything else un-
- - - .;_ - ~·li:li"ii:Hi:Jtf:Jr:·=·=-nfiU'o.tiif='
planned.
1
.
~
lh~htitimpiclcil\lviiJivnii-----7 . - - - - - -... - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
,,Jn~
1
ikU:'~
~~P:~:ce
git~es
th!
I
.
Hyde
Park .
I
THE MALE
.
EGO
Presidency,hesaid.
I _
. .
_
. _ ,
-
I
Sdiac!tle.singer feelsb~at this false
I
A ·
7\.
T
S
·
me
unage com med
with
the
I
.
·
rm_
.y·
. . · -
1
~
.•
a .. v
...
Y. -·
tore.
••
BARBER-
&
StYLING
SALON
major political parties decline.
make "the President stand forth
I
10
01_
(AttheBeverageCenteronRt.9)
I
EXPE.RT RAZOR
&
LAYE.R CUTS
as the central focus" to the
I
7.0 ..
OFF ON
ANY
PURCHASES!
I
people even afte;.· a "bad dream"
L
JUSTBRING,THIS AD w:rTH You AND coME IN BY MARCH 1s 19 74
1
FORAPPOINTMENT:
THEMALLATHYDEPARK
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TOM
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..
·
.
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BY RICKY
~ '
.
'
·.·
..
.
.EXAMS HAD YOU
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VISIT
FRANK'S
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FROM MARIST
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·• .
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. '
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' .
...
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L
PAGES
THE
CIRCLE
MARCH 14
1
1974
Trackmen Tie
-
.
For
.
11th
.
Place
their best times of the season in
.
Lacking a strong and healthy the two-mile when they hitl0:27.5
·
one-two long jmnp punch due to and 10'42.7 respectively.
some key injuries, the Marist
Pete VanAken and
Phil
·
indoor track team could manage D' Amato
·
did great
in
the soot
only a tie for eleventh place in the put. VanAken set a new freshman
22-team
field
.
of the 21st Amual standanffor Marist with a heave
Collegiate Track Conference of41'
11"
while D'Ainato, another
-
Indoor Championship.
·
Toriy freshman, recorded his best
Wilger scored
·
all three Marist throw
·
ever with
the
lS
pound
·
points by placing third in the mile weight at
39'
2". Coach
Len
Olson
walk and setting
a
new school was very pleased
.
with
·
the
record in
his
time of
.
7:50.8.
.
t
_
remendous progress _of
•
both
wm
Marlst catch
sight
ohmfurled
~alls
this
spring?
·
Tim
Murphy, suffering from an men. Dave Schools ran the 60
.
ankle
injury, could not clear 6 yard li.igh
_
hurdles in 8.9 seconds
feet
in
the high jump and
·
did not also for the Mari&
·
thinclads:
_
Lac"
.
r
·
os
·
s
·
e·. Be' c
-
o
·
.
I l l
.
e
·
s
·
_
v
-
·a
··
·
·
r
·
·
.
·
·
s
_
1·1y
·.
;~;~f!:;~
_
f~;1i~ul
_
..
1 n
_
· -
: ~ ~ : :
,
an~ea~::~~~~in~;:;t~:!
.
.
.
. .
-
.
·
_.
·
·
·
.
.
Jump and did not make the finals. were beset in
.
some
of
their goals
.
·
.
·
·
·
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·
·
·
.•
·
·
:
_
•
·
·
.
·
_.
__
.
.
.·
.
.
'
He was the defending champion due
to
injuries, they nevertheless
_
. .
j
. .
prove to be competitive in its
.
MikeSecone;PeteVanacore ~d
..
in
both
:
events. FredJframpe, did accomplish
.
several
of
their
.
. by
Bill
Capozella
tqugh sched!Jle,
.
.
Mike Gentile, who will add depth ~ho had pla~d second las~ year :marks. They had
_
the first
.
win-
·
.
.
·
,
.
.
·
.
Lacr9S5e
IS
~e of
.
Pt~
fastest
.
to the
§<luag.
· ·
.
.
_
.
.
m ~e long Jump?
als~
~d DC?t ning dual~meet:season ever in
-
With the ever~hangmg athletic games PlafOO' on
~wo
.
f~t. The
.
.
Lacrosse offers simething for 9ualify
fo~
1:f,e finals wit~ his beating Io~a arid
_
KirigitPoin
_
t for
program at Marist, the Lacrosse game consists of ten players on every spectator
·
.
It has high
.
Jump of 19
11 .
Krampe sprmted the first tiines ever. They also set
team will compete a~ the varsity
·
·
each team. The three attackmen scorin
-
consta~t
-
h
-
.
.
the60 in 6.9 to Murphy's 6.7
in
the eight records during the season
,
level for the fgst _time this year. are
_
the
,
major offens~ve players actio/and. lots of
·
ooJWco~f:t
.
qualif~µ1g heat~. Neither one including:
600
yard
l'.Wl
.
(Dave
The
teani
l!as,e:mted as a club res~nsib~~ for
-
~or~. Th~ The 1974 Red Foxes
-
are lookin · made ~t to
_
the finals.
•
. .
.
Schools
_
l
:
19.1);
:
.
Two Mile Run
sport fo~_thepast two years. TJle pos!tions_ are
_
bei~g filled
_
.
by
·
for
-
a stron
-
t no t
·
-
g
·
Mm:ist
-
did show
.
so~e. bnght
·.
(Fred Kolthay 10:03.5),
60
-
yard
reasonf~r the chaµge to varsity seruo~ tn-<:aptain Bill ·Egan, who
,
•
Mwt's ne!.
v~~
:o:pp~rt
-
_
.
spots m the meet, despite its poor
.
high hurdles (Dave Schools
8.6),
s~tus
this
year was, accordingJ<t starred at Brookl)'ll·.
Prep,
and·
·
._ _
.
__
•.
_
•
. _
.
·
showing. Wilger did a great job in mile
walk
(Tony Wilger
.
7
:50.8),
AthJetic Director
Dr
.
Howard seniors Jack
:
Fagm{ and Jeff,
.
-.
_
:
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
.. __
·
.
.
.
the mile walk where he had only
.
880 leg
of
relay (Mike Duffy
Goldman, "the strong
:
support by
'
,
.
Mullen
;
:,
'l'here
·.
:
ar~
<
tnr
·
ee mid-
<
:
BI~~~)
\
~~t,~u~
·
.
·
:
:
.. .
.
_
placed
-
f9urth last year .
.
Thf
'
2:09.or two-mile walk (Tony
_
·
the
-
players who had
.
originally
·
field~rswmftraveJthefulllength
·
fro1npa~e?
<
·
_
'.
'..
-
.
.
>
. ·
competitionwasevenfiercerthis Wilger
.
_
16:34) Sprint Medley
initiated the sport at Marist and
·
oUht((ieJd playing
.
ooth
·
offense
.
. ~r. Bick,f!~ . thefefore;
·
ex-
:
year. Gary Slavin improved on
•
<
1:telar
>
(Daye Schools;
.
.
Mike·
·
that much of the equipment had and
:
de(ense
.
Each
·
team
·
has
per~ented
__
with
:
-
diff~rm,t ap-
his time
-
when he recorded
·
a Sainto.mas, Tim
.
Murphy
·
and
alr~dy been p~hased by the
·
sev¢ral midfield
'
liri~s
i:
which
,
proa~~
t9
gradin~
._
and
,
m one
_
9:04.5. Dave Schools broke his
·
MikeDuffy
_
3:56
.
5) andthefresh-
school."
·
.
· _
_
_
..
alternate pµtying
:
'
tune
·
on the exp~r~me~t J?any_ students ownrecordiifthe600yardrun
·
as nienshotput(Pete
;
VanAken41'
.
Last
season, the-team under field ~ue
·
to the
·
~rge extent or re~1v8$1
.
grades I'!lngmg
~r~~
B he ranl:19;1. Fred Kolthay ran
Jl").
::
..•
_ _
_
_
·
·
.·
·
•..
•
·
Head
·'
Coach Jeff Behnke~ and field area they must- cover. toA,t
_
hisresultedmthec;J:?,tic1sm
two good races again, placing
Thesemenarenowreadyfora
Assistaµt
~
_
Coach Ray
.
Panisp,
..
Starting at these po,sitions will be fr~m Dr.
'
Kirk and
·
.
Dean
·
_
Ls;
-
·
sixth in
~
the mile with a time of
·
challenging spring track cam-
posed a 2;.s record. Behnke's·first
·
senior
·
Jim
·
Donnelly, Doug P~etl'.a
.-.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
. "'.
.
.
·
:
·.
·
4:~.9, within two seconds of the
.
paign which
.
begins on Tuesday
year
as
a varsity coach at Mari.st Hampel and steve
·
Ryan
.-
-
Tri-
·
<Jn
~e
..
bas~
of
wha.t~s
been
Marist record and recording a ~pril
!6,
against
:
Sieria College in
.
is
the
culniinatton
of
several captain
·
:
Matty
-
Rogers
,-
•
Dennis
·
h~ppenmgJo
·
him and ottiers like
..
-10:27.8
in
the two mile later. Bill a night.
-
:rrieet under the lights
-
in
. ·
years of personal sacrifice
;
.
wne~
·
Patierno
·
and
'
Jim
·
Cassarir
.
p~y ~ ;
,
Mr
:
B~ckley
,
believes
-
-
~t
.
Krempel
:
and Jim
•
Mceasland had Albany's Bleecker Stadium.
h~ served in an unpaid capacity.
-
the -defensive
:
positions. Tending
_
the progr~S1ve thl-~t at:Mar1St
:
·
·
·
.
This year
.
the team
,
will play a
·
the
·
nets
this
seasori for the
•'.
Red has ''exh~usted
?
·
itself''·
·
He
· .•
.
.
riine
·
.
gam~ scliedule.
-
The
·
first
.
_
Foxes
.
'.
will:·. be
:
.
trifoaptain
'\
Jolut'
.
J>.0¥1~~
.
o:~~
.:
~t'.)>~~
·:
Mr;
-~~a.re
·
.
.
H •
1.:.....
-
-
·
.
·
· :
t~~:cr:t
!l
;r~
/
t
'.
·,
Ut
1
~3:3~
:
t!~ra,2t
-
:
:~~i~fl~
8
;
,
-
~
r
m
r
,
:
~;i~
t\!
~1~T
-
~~k1®~
/-:
~ii~:raw{
.
.
.
/
.
,
ff1gi1
: .
.
-
.
a
·
gainst Montclair
state
on
_
.
the
. ::
·
one
-
.
oL the
·
bright
·
freshnian
<
·
tea<;~er.s•
:
F~eFIIlor~
{
tti.er.~.1s
·
· · ·
•
lower field
:
•,
. ·
_•
·•
.
~<
" ·
:
.
'
prosp¢cts for
:
Marist-Lacrosse;is
·
l
:
:
lack
:~
o(
_
fenµ~t
.
!omen m
:
o
..
:
.
.
Ac;cording to Coach
·
Behnke's, Jim
· ·
McCue; who
·:
is one
.
of
:
the
•
structors at
,
~ar1st; ~1ckl
_
ey fe~s
•.
n
·
this year's
.
team
is
·
the
.
. _
b~ better stickhandlers on the
-
team. that M8!~
·
UJ
·
not fa~ng
u:p
,
to
its
.
..
_ .
.
· ·
.
.
··
·
•
·
Marist has
:
. fielded and should Other experienced returnees
·
are respons1~ilities dealing with the
·
··
·
·
·
·
-
·
·
·
·
.
''heritage both at
:
Marist
·
and in
s
·
·
'
·:
CRC>SS.WO~r,POzzt:
:
E
·
:
_
::;~c:~~~{acism
:
-'
and male
'
.
P
·
orts
·:
Whatever the
~
final outcome,
ACRO~'"
1.
Froli
·
s:Yotin
'
·
·
·
hog
·.
11.
Greek
·
.
market
-
.
place
·
·
-
12.
Old
Turk
:
.·
.
ish gov-
.
ernm
e
rit
13.
British
·
shop
,
_
keeper
_
1,5.
Break
.
.
bread
16.
Garbed
17
.
The one
-
. ·
·
boss rig
18.Astaor
·
Fala
21.Piaying
·
marbles
24.Atmos
'
ph!)re
25 •
.
Head•
·
qua~ters
for
Holmes
2. Indian
.
. ·
city
.
·
3. Frost, for
-.
example
•
•
··
,
.
4.Priorto
5. Cattleman
'
G
(
Flciral
'
·
• ·
.
arrange-
·
·
_
·
ment
··•-· _
"I.
_
Under~
.
world
characte1·
8
.
Killer
'.
whale
.
9.Had·
· .
dinner
10. Thrice
·
·
.
(mus,)
--::-
14
.
Goblets,
·
vases, etc.
·
I"/.
Opposite
·
of dele
·
18.
,
Voca\ ·
rendition
..
19. Russian
'
city
.
3W3H
.
.
-
~~
-
~
-
:
Mr.
Bfokley's presence will
·
be
.
missed
here at.
Marist.
Perhaps
n<>t
.
among his ow_n
·
peers,
but
·
by John Tkach
,.
undoµbtedly
·
among the students,
·
w~ere
_
h~ s~rved not
'
only as
·
a
·
ODDS AND ENDS
.
.
.
_
_
.
·
teach~r! but deaU
-
with st
.
udents
·
.
~Y.
the time you-will be reading this; the first intercollegiate com-
.
ht
.
a
)
i~9ue and
_
per~nal way.
.
.
petition for women·will hav~ been completed. Iain naturally referring
_
..
_
.
.
_
·
·"
·
to the basketball
-
game with ~o~t
s_t
Mary'
_
s last rues$y night.
-
ACMHA, Continued
.
,
.
_
.
_
.
-
R~gardless of
_
the ~core,
-
Mar~t is
-
still coming out of the game a
_
fr_om page
~
-.
·
.
_
.
.
·
·
·
.
·
·
._
· -
wmner. To the Marist community this game represents the beginning
for
·
Vassar,
this
would cause a
.
•
of women's
.
in~rcollegiate athletics. To Lorraine
Cou1din
the coach
:
pl:'oblem for
:
a Marist student.
·
and or.ganizer of the ~earn, this_ represents just the
.
sim!t of a full
·.
~~MHA
.
·
,
program
wa.s sch~ule of :women's intercollegiate athletics.
.
.
·
.
.
·
·
·
20. word
'
31. "God's
origm~ted
·
through
. .
.
tpe
·
Juan Cam1>0s, Marist's resident golf pro, reminded mtfthat anyone
·
•
·
with
~-
·
·
.
little...;;."
0
Assoc1ated_
,
College
-
of ~id-
interested in competing oil
the
varsity golf team should come to an
.
crasher
,
,
32
.
Hillock;
Hudson, which acts asa medi~tor organiza~on~l m~ting today,
_
Thursday,
-
March 14th,
·
during the Free
21. Not:up
.
_ ·
. .
.
knoll
·
.
.
-
for
all
these colleges. The office,
•
Slot Pt:nod m Donnelly ~om 210.
·
·
.. ·
_
.
.
•
·
·
·
_
.
·
~t
~f~~t:i-
. ·
'
·
~f
g~~~
city
-
·
~tt
,
6 Vallssa_rtRoad; runs maTh
_
~Y
Well after a long_ winters
_
nap,- the doc~ are in the water and that
24.Attempt-
•
._
.
.
employed
-
in er-;co egia e.programs.-
eir means only
_
one
thing.
T~e start of the old shell gatne;
Unless you
ingto be
35.High
.
-..
.
_.
_
goal JS to allow area s~dents to hav~n•t
-
~!ready gu~sed
,
.
I'm
-
t~ing about Marist's oldest sport,.
-
_
esthetic
.
.
jumper's
·
-
get
the
.
lllOSt o~t of their college
·
crew. This
.
season will start
.
off
with an
.
extra added attraction for
26. Sll)all drum
.
·
barrier
·
.
,
'
·
education
/
_
·
··
0
f•
·
·
.
_
..
.
those
_
loyal rowing fans,
.
and that is
.
the appe.arance
.
otColuinbia and
3G
.
Swiss
·
·
:
·
·
. :
<
Jeanne
.
~odewald,
a
counsellor Syracuse on the
-
H~~on for_the
first
t~e
·
since J947.
:
The varsity and
3
i}~'::giit
·
•
at th_e Mid-Hudson
·
office, com-
•
freshman-heavyweights will. be r.QWmg against these
·
two major
as.Nonsense
:
·
.
_
mented
.
,t
ha~ ma'!y of the college sch9<>ls
·
while
the. light\Veig~ts wm
·
face a pair of tough
8
9
.
•
problems
,
are trymg to
,
.
b~
customers
-
m Rhode-- Isljmd and Kmg's Point,
.
Coaches Austin
.
(2
wds.)
_.
1-:-
11
,.......,~-+---+-...;...i---
.
·
2'7
•.
Give
off
28. Bird's
·
·
,
.
,
neckap-
overcome.
:
College pr~si~ents _Lenehan, and McHugh, have reserved comment until after the doubl~
meeteyerytwomontbstod1SCuss workout sessions ilext
•
week. .
.
.
,
•·
.
.
.
·
,
, ·
.
.
pendage
29:
·
Unter-
,
..
. ·
.
Linden
.
:fo.
Molly'.
.
.
.
·
.
coddle
·
:
31.
Of
air-
.: ·
craft
.
32.King
.
.. •
•
·._
(Fr.)
.
35. Shrike
.
.
.
(2wds.)
-
.
39 .. Macaw
··
· ·
'
.
·
40. Kinder
:
•
:
::;:<<::
:
!t~!~dr;
:
.
_
.
.,_..
_
-,-+----ji----,;;.i.._;...,
:
:.-
.
. .
41
,
Mature
.
~~
36
•
31
·.
•
·
.,-
42.
Subject
..
.
i
·
1::·
·
~
·
"'1
'
--,-+--+---+-
.
.. :
-
.
·
::_:
.
:<
rio:;i
/
'
<
3
~
-
.
,
,
l
;
Baseball
_- .
.
.
t::'\:.l-t---t-i--+--
.
:
_
·
J
backstop
•
.
-
-
~..,.___,,_.._.,.i...; .....
•
-
:_
.
:.
,•
'
•,·,
:
.,
•
.
.--:;··
.·
.
1
•
what advances
:
cQlild
:
be
_
made in
_
INTRAMURAL ANNOUNCEMENT
.
:
_
.
,
-
·
·
>· ·
.·
_
.
•·
..
.
:
•
.
riew directi9ns
•
_and
·
also
·
to
/
Anyolle
.
interested in competing
iii
the Intramural Badminton
.
·
-'·
·
-
:
arrange ~ooperati:ve
.::;
~rograms T~111~ent sho~d sign up in the Intramural Office (D-216) deadline
~
.
tha~ share resources
;:,
m an a~- for
_
sigrung up w~ be Thursday, March 14;·T
.
he tournament will last
. :
tempt to get the Colleges working
:
Jhree
;
.
days startll}g
_
at 6
:30
each evening .
.
.
_
·
..
..
_
·
_
•
•
•
.
._
_
· •
·
.
_ .
:
togeth~r;. Dutchess and _
,
Vassar
.· --
Monday:
'.
(March ~) Men's
>
Singles; Wednesday:
·
(March
c
27)
<
,·
·. have 1I1Situ~
.
a committee
__
.
to
·
_
-
0
Women's
·
Sm~les;
·
Thu_rsday:
.
(March
28)
.Mi~e~ Doubles (Cired).
~
.
:
study sched~e chan~es, to
~
to .. · Con~r~~t~o~s are
!-I1
order. f<!r.$d Kosinski
.
and Norman Reis for
·
,
move
·
toward-- a
.
cooperat~ve c~pturing
.
~nd,ivi~µalt1tles last week: l{osinski
-
won the free throw
.
college calendar
,
·
.
_
contest-while
Reis captured
'.
the
.
one-on~one title.
<. .
· ·
·
·
. .
.
_
Qf ~e
-~
~5
-
~
.-~
·
stude~~~
:_
who
.
~e Wl~ER_NAME[?
:
MAR~T
:
A.~T~
..
OF
.
T}JE
'
~Ek
_
.
,
-
_
_ ,
ih~olved
:
.
in.
~CMHA;
._
30 attend
Tolly Wil~er, a sophomore from Huntington
;
New York, has
been_
.
:
:,
._
_
·
.
·
-:
V ~
:
:
whil~
~~1st
o
comes
::
in
·
na~ed Marist Athl~te of the WeekforJhe week ending Ma·rch 9th.
i
·
. ·
.
.
•
•
•
-:1
secon~
'°:_
Pl~
.
c~
_-
,·
w1th
::
~
a
_
bo-ut
,
2
_
~
.
.
_
·
J?ilge~,-a
mem!>ef
~Uhe in~oor
.
t~ckteam; broke
:
his own school ·
· ·,
/
_
~tu4~n.t~
;C'~
·
Jeann~
·
·
sa
W
,
·
_
the rec~r~
'}
D
J~e
mile
:
waI~
,:
durmg
·
the
:
.collegiate
·
.
Track
'
Conference
.
.
.
.
;
pos
.
s1bih_t_y
:.;.
o~
:
,
,
~1ght3r
·
c~oss
.
Cll:a!Dpio~hipiJ
.'
atQu
,
e~ni; 9<)~lege
/:
WilgerJin~~~ t~d
iri
:
the
:
race
·
:
··
/
"
~~g~~,~i90
~
if
:
an
mtercoll!giate
.
and ~as
:
the_
~~~y
-
~m
scor~r
:
as
.
·
!'dari:st
;
finishe~ a
:
disappointiiig ··
-.
i
'.
~
~WI
seryt~
coµld
~
est~bli~ed,
_.
el~venth
'.
T~
.
JS the s
,
econd
:
tune
this
year that Wilgefllas received
.
something
:-
that
.
the
·
Vassar
·
Ad-
,
_
thJS
_
award.
;
~
·
:
:-:;::-:-
,
>-
·
·
·
·
·
,
_.
·
·
•
.
:
->
;,
. . .
..
·
. '
ministration is
'
;
corisldering.
:>
;.
·
. '
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
:-
.
; ·
- - -
·
.
·
·
-
.
.-.
.
.
, .
.
. •
.
. --
.
:-
.
.
.
..
·
,
·
•_.
._,.·
·
.
·,:--:
.
,.
,
'
.
,
' '
,
,,
·
. .
.
I
••
•
•
'
•
• :
,
• '
J
•
•
. •
•
;._
.
~
·~
·
-
'
~'•
'
·
,
.
'
.
...
-
.
-
_•,:
..
.
..
·
.
.
.
'
_
.
,
.
.
·•
. .
'
.
"!
·
.
...
.
.
.
·
..
:.:
,
-
:
..
:
.
.
12.7.1
12.7.2
12.7.3
12.7.4
12.7.5
12.7.6
12.7.7
12.7.8
·MARCH 14, 1974.
Strike-
Plann~d
-
--
.
-
FollOwing·
Decision
.
-
.
.
.
.
'Backing
Schedule
.
--
.
'
by
Brian Morris
statement.· He noted -the com-
.. siuderit leaders .are planning a mittee's . recommendations ..
·In
stude~tstrike to· begin Monday, responding ·to the. committee's
- March 25th and to continue in-. statement.: that
the
ad- .
..
definitely. This development -ministration_ had , been in some
followed Friday's decision. by - respects .. unreaso!!_able, Foy
FacultymembersmeetanddiscusstheUniversityYear.for Action.
President Linus Foy to go ahead ref~FI"ed to the,reputation for
-
-
,
_ -
·;
Jvith a new class schedule that "f~irness" - 1;1nd "open~ess~•
F .
---it
C
n -
~
H
Id'
had received severe criticism . enJoyed. by Richard
La
Piet~,
acu
-v,
()
O(IQJUffl -
·e
..
from..·stiid·e·n·t:gr
.. oup.s.(See·•·pa·
·g.e; Acade·ml._ ~Dean. fo.rtl1e.Iast_f1~e
_ .J •
-_
_
"' _
·
- _-
-3)
-
- -
_ · . · · · ·
years;,.He added! the a,~dem1c
-· ·
·
-
· . Mediation of ·the difficulties dean . 1S not~ dictator. :· .
between · the -administration · and · · . Student l~_aders a~em}!le<:l at 8
students' failed early last' week. p.m ..• Fi:i<lay : mgh~. _ 1:he
· S~udents theri · went t4rQ_ugh sµg~esti~n of_ a, student·. strlll:e
. «appeal'' ., procedures.·
'A com-,. received unanunous suppor~. Tlie
-
-:.
·
·
·
-
_:-
<inittee set up l)y Foy and student students then sent telegrams to
.By~rene.Ross__
could ·not:understand why.the
-
doubted the-ability of the student ·leaders February 18th heardthat every meqi~r of theB~rd of
. .
.
. .
student would'.haye to ~e·the · to teach/:-1t .~was >stated '°:that ·
·
appeal. President . Foy, had· Tr~es, .~~Jhng the PrE:51dent's
-
Marist's Univ'ersity Year -for. course~ as indtmendent stuijy and altholigli' the
.
student v.rould---be
''promised''. "to be guided by the dec1S1on
mtr~~tab!.~ <iisreg~rd
Action
>progr~·
which ·. would' no_t attend-class.
The
answer to · able
Jo
t_each sue~ things
as
basic
ad hoc committee's report;'':
. fo!' student opm~on; .
A
~eetm~
·. allow Y.Ol~~eers.to ~ork With the . ~ w_~ ~~~_the pr_ogram h_as the accounting techmques, ~e. ,ould -
,<
The, committee, ~er ·hearing ... with Foy. for ~he fol!_owmg.
af-
t
-
·· ·.·· •.
.;u~l:>a11
foughk~~i~~area, .was _s~p~tion 9f
~
.40
_hour work ... nQt ~ve "'the.full re~ponsib,~ty of-
:'the
student appeal:recom:mended .ternoon _was .. Junked. _and.,. the
f·: ;
·
. .. . _
91St;:.ps~~-last.F.rid1;1Y,:¥_llr.?11·
8, . ~~k., ..
Jhe,., student:
.
~~ul~_be/:_t_ea~!rln~,-T.~e
.
. ~u~ent:wo1:1ld ,be .. that .···.:thEf ... administration, .stu~en~10~te~gsen~Foya let~r
~rt ·; · •. _
;.1~ a f~f~~r
c~~.Qelt.µ~--
> /'-... ·.
_e,]tpe£tecl
:tC>,''\V~t!c ,
,'!ith;:Jh~~:
:,e,xpe,c;~~'to. -~~e;~atco111;!~!!1 .. are ··· } 'reconsider'',
this
decision: Thef
_
•· statiqg Jlie~r. ~tent1~µ to strike
~;t?\,:·:_c~r;i~;®1tu1
3
ked~be~~r~;llfwd·gfs~l~{rl~
0
lbt·~~~fg~i1~~:~l!6if;{\;£\~~,:;.ajt~.~;ff,}re~~~~~fn~~1,$1,~:tteiit}1~lif~~!(~~-~%;~~~:W~;idih·g_a
.
.
.... peopn=
WO
.• .
nnvo v_e • . mce' - pnun ies. ::
'.!'..; :,
;'.'
'/i·c: ; : / . ':-::,·~ ·,,,:.
~.the:ability .. of;the,stui:lent~to·•, do'" proposed
,:,,,ne\v'.' ; ,.~
sell
a·
I •. - rescindment ''of''the''schedule
., , · : .
·the
u~ v
.A~ ~ould.~~(J~ir)g :witµ' ·-:
r·
9tliera
thought
tti'aftlie
courses fev~rythlrigt·e.xp'ected \~
:ana
?'t!i~j-'.
uhreasonabl~: '.
< {/\/ . ·,:
t
t
e ·
c-d#~lcf
1(
an(¼!great~rSvoice'
m
~:
·
the ;black, .comm,l111lty. a_,,;grE:8t . __ might be~ mucp for th~ student -: amount .of tune f~culty~empers · •Foy: then issued
·ms three
page .policy detel"ffii:nations: ·
.deal, black people woul_d,be m-
.to·handle
if,he_ 1S_ working ftill- :would have:. to: put mto<;the
·•·
, --
· · ·.
- -
··
·
·
·
·.
·
volved in all aspects •. The U:.Y.A;. ,~tiinei ·
II
ow ever, _one person
·
program. One person brought' up
would
be
working• with.' various · pointed otit that . many of the . a legal question; .· that
~is,
what
·
neighborhood organizations, and people registered in night courses would happen -
if
the U;Y.A: ad-
the program
'will ,
recruit both _ are working 40 hours a week and ·-_vised a · business and··' it .. went .
black and white students. .
.
•
they are-able to handle their bankrupt. -
- ·- .· ·
- Also
questioned was the idea of ,courses easily.
·.
-. . .·
-
.
--
Finally, it was stressed that the
the · student ~takirtg six credits . ·:_ There seemed to be_ some program depends .. _µpon the en-
--
each semester along with his c'onfusion over .the resp on- thusiasm which will be brought to .
ou~i~Et·work. So~e of the faculty sibilities of the· student. Some · it.
·
.. · --
·
Accreditation
.
.-
.
Eor-Marist
.
-
·Re-~A.ffirnied
····· ·•.Mariist
Gather~:Sllpport
· .. :F~or·'
<tostig•
•·
an
Tuition
Prog.,ra::·_Dl·
:_ ....
The
::::::sp:::iation g~~~tiesitit~::r~d.~enf~_:_
-·
.
·-.. . .
.
.
·
_ _ . · · .· ··-. , : · .
: .
: · . _ , . . · · _ · . _ . • .
. - . · . . .
. voted to reaffirm the . ac- :also note_d Mai:ist College for_ the .
. . . , ·. . . : · . ,' .·. . .
.
.
..
~
·
•
. . .
_
.
. : · · • • . • . · . · ·... · · .-· < .
·
creditation of Marist College:
"Variety - and: Vitality" . of·' its
. -·In an effort 'to gat.}ler suppor~. currently. before .. the_, State with.thes,1974-75freshman class'·· : Three·days of examination-and s~cialpiograms. The faculty of, - ·
forincr~asedtuitiona~stanceto Legislature --'.l'AP, propos~· by.- Dr. Foy:has indicatedthalMarist. judgement was undertaken by Marist College was highly -
- Ne}"; York _
_state college stu~e~ts, Asse~bl:(IDan ~ostigan, h~ad of is-~akingicontingency. plans to the- Middle_ ~ate Association to co~en?ed by the 1!fiddle States
·Mamt_plans to
6,000 fliers--the. I;egislature'.s _ Study . Com- . redirect the College's student aid· ·evaluate Manst College for its re--. Association for their work_ and
· •_
.
·carrymg:a letter from-,President· mittee on·Higher Education; .the -···resources to the'present student accreditation. The report. of .the responsibilities to·· the college.
_·
Linus
·
•
R;
,Foy and basic . facts Stafford-Anderson ~Ian; :. jointly body should·TAP become Jaw. It , Middle States. . Association,
~
.The· evaluating _team also found
. · ':~bout tlie ·design an4 potential :pro~ed bY., Segate:-Majority is a1s9·p·ointed outthat lll81JY of presen~ed .the-...views of _the ~hat along with its gyowth and
· , impact of Assemblyman Peter
·J. •
Leader Warren M. Anderson and · Marist's
i
present.: students ihave · evaluating. team as• summanzed . ·advances. Marist.
·.
College has
· Costigan's . Tuition. Assistance · SenatorJlolM,d Staff~rcl; and the · · y01µ1ger membe~s- of the· family · by its chairman. The members of.. eff~ctiv~ly accommod~ted itself
Program (TAP)."
. ·.
·,
... ·
- .. Regents. Plan,- proposed by the ~• who would benefit from~ the. the.evaluating team consistec1'9f Jo ~hangmg student• life styles.
-~ The
mailing
will
be
addres~ed-,State Board
of
Regents:.
- , · 'passage ofa bill'such as' TAP;
nine.·. educators; who .are· all
After their_wor~ of
evaluating.
to.:an-:·students. (commuters at·_ All-:,the plans· r~ognize the
· ~ubseqil~nt-to the development faculty members ~-from other and .· reportmg, the . general
- the~ homes,: residents,: to' their, tuiti~n gap. between~private_and_
of.
tile curr~t ·Jl!8~g, Marist . insti~ti~ns. The ev~luat~ team . cons~sus. of the·~am :ev~ua~
.
mail !>oxes),~_ New Yo_!"kcstate pubµc colleges, aµd each has .~e hosted a meetmg of fmancial aid was divided acco~mgly ~to the Mar1St College ,as ~av~g an
---- alumm,
.·
parentsc· of ~ew·: Y:ork· common c featu_re __ of - offering personrieL r~resenting all, sec-
areas-·• 9f
•
behavioral science, -. ovei:all sens.e of good dire~1on.
In
State-students; factilty;,·ad- direct aid to stuiients•based.on tors of private e·ducationJ.n New finances, development, students, ·: ~eir·r.eport El_l!d_concl~on the _
ministrators, college
-
staff, ,family incomes.•Also, each
:one
· ¥,ork State
ori
.,·March•
5:,
to graduate
.
(MBA), :_teacher· .Middle State ~ociat1on left
graduate studerits,
·
and all senior , would expand tlie present·Scholar ·-evaluate. tuition assistance education, and µbrary. .
.
- Marist with _a tone of suggestion
high scho~l and_tra,nsfer st1;1dent~,.In~e~tive, Prog~m; which ~ffers
.
cQn~epts . -beforf .. t~e
.
State
T_he eyaluating team.un~ert<><>!c
.
and_':. reco~mendatiori. Th~y
. who have: app~ed
to'
M~1st for
mruam~
grants of only
$600.
Legislature ... Inv1tat1ons wer.e . ~heir work after. studymg an adv1Se Marist Co~ege ~o m!>ve m
the }:"all,)~7~ se~e~e~; ,
.
Accordirlg to M.~,:.Kelly;Marist sent t_o. the · offi~s~of .
Asse:rn~
mtern3:l an.d factual • se!f:-
a ~ore co~ei:vati~e <lire~1on.
In
. _ :~e. eff~~ 1S:b~m-~ «µrec~ed by; has. chosen to ._support th_e .. blynian'":Costigan, senator·~~ ,_evaluatic,m· prepare~ by·;~ar1St , their own_ ev!ilua.tion, statem~nt
. · ass1Stant '- fmanc1al ... aid . directo_r:. Costigan
.
pr9p1>$al. because "1t .. derson and Senator Stafford.: ... · . College. The tem:n did their wo!,'.k ... t~e - Association.· expr~d ·. its
: qerald
,Kelly;:::::the
maili,ng. iit see~: .to· haY'.e th,e
·greatest.
·. A'.representa.µye ofthe State -~md-- fin~she_d_ ,tlleir . .- evaluation,_ vie~ of-:reco.m~~ndatioli to_
scl,tedQ,led to.-be sent': ~ut· durmg· p~ss1bilityJor pass~ge,: b~s~ on ··E ducati6n .. _
pepartment -. was . . when they visited the campus ~. , Mar1St as follows: _We also felt,
_
·sem~r,br~k-/The ~et~r:'from .:t~efac;t that.tllEt Study Cor~m.uttee. p're~ent tq explain the
:different
~.ov_em~e:r 11-14, -1973., _Tl).e1r
lowever, .. thaLthe -~ollege--)1as
• ~r:esident~·.foy \urges_, friends
.of
has: :
;
done
:·.:.,the··.·,
.nece~sary . programs <prese~ted _to:;,the }IP~.g~_ were: presented, !lire~tly . be~n!unmng_so_h~~ ma numb~r ·
·Marist \to?wr~te:,:~ to,'. G~xernor_ -:~ome\Vo.rk;:· fo_r.the, :· succ~~l • .· -L_egislatul'.El/_ ~r~: K.eJly ... ¢oor~
',
: to l,\f~r1St. College befor~_ 1t -~mg ... : of•· .differ~nt;. ~ecti~n.9 that.· 1t .··
Malcohil:..Wil~o1r. and,_;thElU-_' state. 1mple_m.ent~tion_
~~J>f ___
tµition ..... dl,Jl~tedJhe/meeting . plans witll :_: c~nsidered by th~. CoIIU11:issiC?D on .. :• s'1~~d, from time to t~e · pause
--1egislators·,,to,~'E!sur~.·.tl!~;~t: .. as~i~11;ce,.,.~~·;•~at.:·•~e·5:c95_t·:t~e!i.ssis~c~o~_Ms.SusanDean,;:;::,Higher.·Eciu~tion:~f~~~. Middle .. ,tto·,~e.adeep·breath~-to.reflect ..
. p~~g~
•
of:•th.:~~;.~stigan:\bil!:IS:figure;'f.:~A:mil].t9~ -~"~~~Jo, dire~r;:,_of_..f~~ci~l,aici '.atthe,
..
:~~tes:AsSO<:J~~on. :.· ,: ..
.
·.
:' .. ··· '.:: on.·.1~ accomplls~ents,--:ai:ici ..
~
· · ~ec~_ary.:f~1::pr,1va~; ~uc,tion, JiayEl.: the; ;gr.ea~st : ~ssi,bi_hty,of Sta_te
:Umyei:s}!;f,
at ~eonta and ~" ., T~e-;,_eyal~ting., ~ · . ,follnd: ·, ~ss~. ca,refully: its: next ~teps. -.
as ... w~~F~_~s:.;:pglit1c11,~ly.: ,,·ad.,_ accepta!lce-'b)':;,~o~-i:¥~~\~r:sy·:,Gba:rles;~hi:e~p~rger/" dire<;~r_
,.,·MSJ"~tto
~e ...
~-~~~mg
_coll~ge;.: •. <'·P>~1~-: of: th.e
.
~P:Ort ·
!;SD:
l>E!··
.vantageous;,:<·:·:'c~'.,::://·:•.':;'/;\:: .and,the Gove1:"!}9r.'!··.:::·:i'.'.'.:•:>i< . ;ofi'. finapc~a,I'.)lid~:at,-:,,:I>µtc#less
<~~~~µ
..
~tl•·· :.:F~sp,on
.
d,i.mg
•
. ob.~~J~t.~e'. re~dent .. direc- .
. : .. Three·.,'': fopns >'.9f .· :-·tu1t1on \: Whilif:TAP woulq.be
phas_ed:
10 · Coni,munity;;(;olleg~; ;_,;:;;;:::
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;~f~a.~~Y:~Jr/,11.~:
:~~11,,)0t::
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ass~stinic~;'. leg~s_l.a~W\:· are''o~~{Yeal'.:.at.•f'·~a~/: beg~!°g
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.
PAGB2
-
THE CIRCLE
MARCH 14, 1974
Congressman ~erman Badillo
·
Badillo Addresses Marist
·
By Brendan Boyle
in the black and Puerto Rican
result
of
the poor people not
communities.
·
"Unless
·
the getting adequate representati<li.
The New York City Police policeman can identify
with
h1s
Badillo claims that
·
the di.!trict
Department
acts
like an "army community, he cannot be sue-
·
~ttomeys don
'
t bother to treat the
of occupation" when responding cessful in his job," said Badillo. poor people correctly and plea
·
to emergency
.
calls - they are
He also argued for
a
lowering bargaining is an easier solution
slow and must call for
-
rein• of the educational and physical
.
than a
trial.
·
·
·
f
orcements. The
·
result is that requirements in order to get
Badillo has been involved with
often 'There is no real police more blacks and Puerto
Ricans
the problems of the courts and
protection in the poorer com• on the police force. "I don't
think
the prison systems for some time
munities."
·
collegiate education helps any in
·
~ow. In
1971 he
~el~~
settle a riot
This
was one of the opinions of
police protection," declared·
m
one
of
the city
Jails.
·
He
also
Congressman
-
Herman Badillo
in
Badillo. He explained that higher helped to quell the Attica riot.
"A
his address, "Society's Ex• education doesn't necessarily
Bill
of
No Rights: Attica
.
and
the
pectation
in
Law Enforcement" solve the problems of
mistrust
for American Prison System" is
his
··
given last
Thursday
at
.
Marist.
the police •
.
Instead a
·
policeman book on
the
injustices
often
.
Badillo,
a
Democratic
.
with a "physical relation to the suffered by prison
inmates
;
·
-
Congressman from
.
the Bronx poor"
or
a . "feel
'
for the com-
A graduate
of
City College of
and two-time
·
candidate
·
for munity"
·
is needed
.
_
New York and Brooklyn Law
.
_Applications Taken
mayor
:
of New York, said that
..
Calling
the
bail system out-
School, Badillo
hB.-1 served
as
the
there is . "mutual
-
mistrust" dated
·
and prejuidiced
·
towards Commissioner
of
the Department
between the Police Department poor people
he
said that it
should
of
.
Relo~tion and
.
as Bronx
.
and the people of
.
the
·
poorer be eliminated
~
He said that the
.
Borough
·
President
~
.
.
He is
communities
of
New
:
.York
City.
bailsy~empermits the rich to go
·
·
currenUy
-
serving
his
··
second
Much of this.
mistrust, claims
free while the poorer people are term
as
a Congressman
:
in New
Badillo, is because
·
the
·
Police forced
t<>
stay
in jail.
·
·
_
York'
_
s
-
21st
·
Congressional
Department
does
not adequately
Claiming that Legal Aid isn't District.
:
.··
.
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
reflect the ethnic composition of too
.
effective
.
because of the
·
His
appearance
was
·
sp<>nsored
the city.
-
The Congressman feels
enormous amount of cases these bytheDepartmentofHistoryand
that it would be more ~eficial lawyers have
.
to
handle, Badillo Political
·
Science
·
as
;-
part of
its
·
to_ have ~ore black and Puerto
suggests
'
thaf much of
-
the plea
-
Criminal Justice Lecture
·
Series.
B~· Debby Nykiel
,
.
solid experience and educational
course work are
.
significant
·
aspects to look at.
.
.
-
.
·
.
Applications and qualifications
Dean LaPietra declined
to
are now being
.
-
considere4 and comment pe~onally on bow the
selected for placing a permanent Teache~ .Education Program has
.
Director
·
of
the
Teacher
·
been under the Acting Director's
·
Education
Program.
Applicants
supervision.
However,
_
the
·
are being considered of education response
·
from superintendents
administrators and teachers and principals in schools where
from
.
·
both on-eanipus and
.
the there are Marist student teachers
Ri.can polfoemen
walking
a beat . bargaining
-
taking place is
a
·
·
,...
..
•
'
·community
.
area
.
'
··
.
has
·
beeri good and supporting of
Three members of the
.
Marist the Teacher Education Program
.
community have
.
applied
.
for
.
the
·
Many schools are willing to
.
hire
·
position
.
They
.
are Dr. Olson and Marist graduates from the
Mr. Roscano, both of the History
.
Program for teaching positioos
if
Department and Mrs. E
.
Nolan
,
there are
·
any available.
·
Circle
Interview:
.
.
Richard
·
Bickley
Acting Director
of
the Teacher
Marist
·
has witil
.
Fe6
>
1975 to
·
by
.
Wayne
T
~
Brio
aP.peared to be apathetic; or put
EducationProgram
;
·
The position
.
µieet Jhe
.
Competency
.
Based
_
.
.
•
.
differently, they chose to remain
was
vacated by
Mr. Hazzard and Teacher Education requirements
·
_
The
following article
is
based
·
·
Jn the background. In order to
Mrs. Nolan was
·
named Acting byNewYorkState.Bythis
.
timea
-
on
.
·
an interview conducted
-
with facilitate more student par-
:
yDeari!~_torforthel974-75
:
academic
-
Teacher Education P
_
rogram Mr
.
Richard Bickley, iri!tructor
.
ticipatiori, different teaching
-
must
.
provide
·
a list of
•
coin-
of Psychology at Marist College. techniques were
·
called for, and
·
:
·
• ~ •
.c
Hazzard
'
s leaving
.
was petencies given to them
to
be
.
Mr. Bickley was born in Van- these riew techniques needed
'
c81'11ed by word
.
of
mouth
.
to
.
done and achieved by students
to
couver
·
Canada and came to immediate implimentation.
·
Manst ~nd the surr~un~ing
'
be qualified teachers ori
,.
the
·
Marist'
:
in 1971
·
'a1ong with
·
two
.
Regarding the administration
·
community a!ld apphcations el!ml:°tary level. By Feb
.
1971,
·
other psychology professors that her:e . at Marist,
.
Mr.
Bickley
·
·
began
~
come m.
The
S?'8ening t~ !i9t
_
must
.
be used for
_.
yie
yea.r;
Mr
,Cagle Moore and
Mr.
.
~entioned tl}at h~
. _
was highly
.
Comxµ1t~ee Joi'.
,
:
chosiJtg
:.-
th
_
e
,
.
:
.
tra,uung
.
of secondary
..
education Gerry
,
Breen.
,
.
;
/
~
..
-
x_
.
.
_
- ·
.
· .
.
·
•
>
<,
-
lDlp1:"essed
·
w1th Dean La Pietra
.
•
succeeding Dir
.
ector
'
.is presently
..:;:
teacners
t
'
w)ncl
F
will
'
stress
--
m
-:
: ..
•
;°·
1
'
•
.
:
,;;.~i;.~,i
!
Mr
,.
..
·
:
·
.
.
B
·
·
:'l,..
kl
.
•
·
.
.
,-:
•,
-
-~
;
;;.
";;;.
t
.
'
:,
'
·.
·
·
<·
arid
:
'
President-t.irius
,,
Foy
.-
,
Both
i
.·
·
wo~king
·
.
on
;
.
qualificati.00:3
.
and
.:
volv~~
t.'
A
:
~asl
(
~f
'
the
'
p~
.:
.
.
his
Wllill
impret~o~
~rirlri;~:
-·
,
'
these
:
admiriistrators
/
accordlng
·
:
:.•
f
the!! .
·
-pnor1ty
,
\n
. ·
reaching
a
manent
:
·
Educatio~
-
Dll'ector will
first
year
-
at Marist
.
Concerning
.
· to Bickley, "seem to
be
the ones
.
·
.
dec1Sion
_
concern~g
-
the name
.
of
_
be
:
to have
__
.
Manst's
_
Prol?-'mn
the
.
students, he
·
round a good who
.
represent
.
·
the
_
_
pro&Fessive
.
}
.
the 1:)irector
.
for
~e~
year.
Dean
_
·
fulfillthesenew"competenc1es."
number
.
of motivated
·
and
ex-
thrust for Manst; that
JS,
.
they
.
.
LaP~etra, Acadenuc
Dean,
feels
.
·
.
·
citing students however some wer~ trying to
.
lead Marist
fr<m
.
·
·
'
'
·
its relatively parochial past to a
·
Di~
1
·
.
·
.
c
.
.
T
·-.
·
h
·
·
•
·
,
more progressive future
.
"
··
·
Richard Bickley
ato
_
.
g
·-
~
u
.
·.-
_
C
.
·
.·
·
enter
.
.
r1ve
..
-.
·
S·
~~~:~/fue;~=er;di:a~ structorcanbefired:
_
·
first,"(lfflen
·
to me that he believed the ad:. the institution
can
no longer
By Teresa Stoutenbo
_
ro
nights,
.
a wine and
-
cheese party
.
Activities
·
in the
·
Marist ministrative efforts
·
were
.
being afford to
.
pay t~e teacher because
for students from various floors Dialogue center
.
began
in
Dec.
of
.
hindered. He felt (and still
.
feels) of economic factors; secondly,
A
new
"
hot spot" has come into
.
in Leo Hall on Weds. nights, and last
.
year
.
Originally
;
there was that the faculty in general is when th
_
e
·
t~cher is
.
guilty of
existence on the campus. It
'
s an informal geHogether with supposed to be two centers. Orte r.nore conservative than
their
.
.
"moral turpitude"; thirdly, when
-
called the
·
Marist Dialogue i;tudents
·
on Thurs
.
-·
nights
.
The was
to
be in the
.
basement of
Leo
administrative counterparts
.
:
.
a teacher has
been found
to
be
Center.
number of invited guests
·
µsually Hall
;
although plans
·
:
never 'Bickley suggested that "perhaps incompetent. The last
.
reason
,'
.
Located on the third floor of doesn't exceed seven
.
in one followed through.
-
.
this conservative atmosphere incompetency, is the
hardest
to
Leo
Hall, under the guidence of
·
evening, but there
·
have been
N
xt
B th
B 1
had
·
been caused by the prove
.
because standards for
e
year
ro er
e
anger homogeneous backgro
·
wid of the ev
.
aluating competen
_
cy
·
are
Brother
.
J.
Belanger, this three
.
·
occasions when approximately hopes
to
expand his
.
three
room
room suite allows both students twenty guests
·
have attended.
apartment and have enough for a l\_farist
.
Facuity." Bickley
.
con- deJ>.atab~e.
.
.
.
·
...
..
.
and faculty
·
the opportunity to
·
Brother Belanger employs five
.
•
piano andhi-fi
.
This
would create
-
tmued to say that the fB;culty
~
_At
_
this pomt,
.
I
.
-
asked. Mr.
achieve
a
better sense of ~mpus students for the plaMing and the possibility
of
having cultural
.
~eneral, seemed cool .
~
their B
~
ckli:y what rl:B~ons he believed
commwiity.
preparation of these gathering,. evenings
.
at the center.
·
mter personal relations Y'1th new '!ere ~volved m t~e ~tteppt to
'
.
'I'm just convinced . th~t Four of ~se students cook and
BrotherBelangerhasmadethe fa~ultymembers,-e
,
spec1ally
.
~as fire
~un.
He replled that
'
(1)
private c~~eges can't survive
if
clean ~bile
-
one serves as the
-
.
Dialogue Center available on Fri.
-
.
this
so
.
b
.
etween the sem~r certain_ member~ of
.
the depart-
they are
1
ust
·
barracks," stated
.
executive
·
secretary. S11ne oL
.
nights
.
_
Therefore, any groups
·
tenured
.
members
·
o!
his ~ent disagree with ~e conten~ of
~r .. B_elanger.
_
This
~on-
·
these students participate~ the interested
.
in reserving
.
it,
may
:
psychology d~pt. and
_
tlie new
.
h~ cours~;
.
(2)
;
his ~<;}img
rnstituhonal
-
center provides
·
.
work-study program.
·
.
check with
.
him.
.
.
·
. .
·
.
.
_
·
.
;
.
teachers
.
·•
-
.
.
philosophy is
.
radically different
resident students with
·
a
home-
·
Funding for this center has
.
·
Although the center has been in
·-
,
..
Although ~r. Bickley,
.
Mr.
·
8:"d
0
P}?Osed to
.
stan_da!d
·
_prac-
like atmosphere where they grow
.
be~n
··
.•
partically
.
provided by
.
:
existence for
8
,
short
.
period
.
of
.
M~re,
_
and
·
.
¥c:
·
}freen
·
were tlc~s, this has led to fric~1on
m
the
both
.
.
.
·
physically, ,
.
-
and
•
Marist College
;
Brother Belanger time,
.
Brother
_
Belanger'
.
feels
_
brought to ~nst ,1th one of the
.
department- co!lc~rnmg
.
such
psychologically .
.
-
··
also contributes
.
a part of
his
confidentthat
his
goals are
being
-
purposes
_
_
be~g to a~ new blood
:
iµatte~s as ~a.ding, (~) he has
-
The activities of
the
.
Marist
.
salary. Since he is a member
of
achieved.
.
_
.
.
.
_
.
_
~d new insights,
·
their presence
·_
me~
with
cr1t!c1Sm
wi~
.
re~ards
.
.
'
Dialogue Center include: a
-
_
:
tbs 'clergy, all expenses are
tax
·
·
·
·
-
..
JS
slowly
·
1?8in~ pb~ed out.
_
tohisownradi~lpolltlcal beliefs
_
faculty
.
get-together
on
.
Tues~
.
free.
~
._-
.
.
.
.
.
.
Pr~ently, Mt
.
Bicld~y
_
s contract
.
and practices. Bickley added that
. ·
·
·
. ·\
·
·
·, :
•
·
J±!~
r~
::::::}
.:
·
has not
·
-
been
·
renewed
·
and
it presenUy; he has protested the
'
.-
:
·
.
. .
.
·
;-
1
1}!
t::'
.
~
.
:
_
::
·
·
_
:-_
,,
'
.
:_
.
~
.
.
·
-
-
_-
•
:-:
··.-··~
-
T.~.-
...... :
_·~~;.
·:_~-~.
~
..
~
.
..
··
.·.
·.·.•:,
.·.
I
.
1
.
:
.·•
.·.
·
_
·
·
i:·
:
·
~:=;~in
th
~~~:;
;11J!~
;
:~::S!
~t
-
t
8
re::ns
ir:vo~!
·
,
._
'.[
:
~'.,
,
..
-
~-:
__
..
1
·
'
.
Mr.
Moore
will
_
no longer teach
a
.
violation
of
·
:
his academic
..
i
t¥;
but
will
workfull time in Marist's freedom. The
·
Faculty
•
·
Policy
.
;J
~
Counseling Services; while
Mr.
Coinmlltee (FPC) is supposecfto
:
i'
'
.
Breen's
'"
Wl?rk
in
Sociology has be
·
tooking
.
into t~ matter.
,..
·
<:
been
curtailed.
·.
:
·
·.
·
~
asked
Mr •
.
Bickley about his
<:
In
-_.
June,
;
1973,
·
Mr.
Bickl~y vi~ws concerning
.
grades.
:;
He
.
.
·
received
'
his annual evaluation answered that
.
one
·
:
criticism
..
.
~
·
,
;
f ~
·
Dr. Kirk,
.
chainrum of the
·
m~de
of
him
by
.
Dr
~
Kirk and
.
"
.
'
.
:
Psychology
:
nep
t!:
'.
Bicldey
.
said
·
.
Dean
•
La
.
Pietra
'.
dealt_
'¢th
.
his
·
that the evaluation was
.
not
.
grading distributions.
·
Never-
..
positive and
.
that
.
Dr.
Kirk
,·
was
theless; he
.
believes
·
that'there
is
·
_
recommending to
Dean
La
Pietra
•
•
:
aJL inherently
.
a~tboritarian
.
that Richard's
•
contract
:
not
.'
be relationship between
the
teacher
·
. ·
·
·
renew~. At preserit,
Mr.
B~ckley
_~
.
and
.
the
;:
s'tudeµt
_:-
concerrilng
.
·
has
·
received
·
no
.
further
.
i
ilotice
.
gra~es•
.
•,
still
_
he tried
.
to
.
break
.
fr.om
·
:
the
:·
academic
'.
dean
,:
,.
thisd_o~andcreateiiii~placea
-
· .
.
,
.
iegarding
his19~5:,
_
coritract
;
:
· .
.
.
:
>
~ore
.•
hWIUUU;Stlc
-
a~
·
~~fying
.
.
-
~
·
_
:
:
~tei:estingly
-
-
~ough,
·
Bickley
•
'i
~uden~cher
,
r~ati~~I?·
>
·
·
noted
:
that
"
there
'
are
:
·
three
·,
.
·
.·
·
. ·:
·
·
·
· :·
,
·
·
·.
_
legitfma~
'.
reasons
.
~
!'by
an
.
in-
.
: ·
·
C~ntiii_ued
o~
-
~iag~
_
8
.
, ·.
\
.
I
I,
.
r:
·
MARCH 14, 1974
THE CIRCLE .
PAGE 3
Curriculum Challenge Offered ·Through
ACMHA
by
Karen
Tully
Bard, Bennett, Culinary
IJt-
Registrar of the school with
cross
registrant does not get into
stitute, Dutchess Community which they
wish
to
cross register,
1
course before a Mari.st itudent,
For those
of
you who
are
bored College, Ladycliff,
Marist,
Mt. St. along
with
the assistance of John .and does not receive a priority
.
with the curriculum, page
'r/
of Mary's, New Paltz,
Vassar,
and O'Dwyer, the Mari.st Registrar. number;
the
Marist
catalog briefly covers Ulster Community College
allow
A
Marist student cannot take a
· ·
Many people come to Marist to
·
what
is commonly
known
as
their student body
the advantage
·
course elsewhere if it
is offered at use the science
·
department over
ACMHA or the Associated of cross registration with any of Marist. The student must have
a
any other. Presently there
are 11
Colleges of the Mid-Hudson Area. the colleges belonging
to
ACH-
·
2.5
index
to
·
apply for the Marist students attending other
Although there are only
8
colleges
MA.
· ,
program. The student
is
accepted colleges. Approximately
20
listed in the catalog, there are
In this cross registration only if there are adequate students
from
other sdlools are
presently
10
colleges which process
a
student would
be
openings in the course he wishes attending Marist. These nm-
participate in this consortium. responsible for contacting the to take. For instance, a Vassar Marist students pay their tuition
·
.
.
-
student coming
to
Mari.it mW!t
-
to
the college where the student is
·
Or
·
·
-
•
t •
B
wait until
all
registratioos ar( matriculated. This avoids the
_
-
gan1za Ion
.
egun
.
complete. before
-
~ey
will
be problem of receiving bills frmn
_
_
,
-
_
-
-
·
accepted mto a
Ma:rut
course
.
A two separate colleges.
One problem with the
ACMHA
program is the course schedules.
.
Not
all
colleges publish their
course schedules simultaneously.
Therefore a student who
has
to
register in November at his
-
college may not be able
to
cross
. register because the other school
schedule
is
not available. For
·
example, Marist registers
in
November for the Spring
semester, while Vassar registers
in January for that same
·
semester. While making it easier
Continued on
Page
8
· F
·
or-
Fund
·
Drive
By Mike Harrigan
tentative until
a
case statement
Volunteers Aid ''Learning Disabled''
on the subject
is
approved, at the
by
Joanne McCullough
ce~tral nervous system. 'f!l~e
Marist College has begun the next meeting of the
·
Trustees.
.
·
children are therefore classified
organization stage
of
a capital
Mr.
Strasbaugh pointed out
s~th street is a neighborhood , as . ''.l~rnirig disabled": This
fwid drive which will hopefully thatlheplanningandpreparation
service organi1.ation in
which 10
def1rut1on came about
m_
the
raise several million dollars.
stages include
·
· selecting
a
to
12
-
Marist students who 1950's when parents resented
·
A
camp~ign director,
_
Mr. campaign organiz~tion which
generally
.
want to g~
·
into their children being called
WayneV.StrasbaughofTamblyn w~l represent
Marist
during ~e elementary education, volunteer re~arded when they really
·
& Brown Inc., Washington
·
D.C., drive. He note<! that the drive
each Friday to aid children who - weren't. F~r example, a child
is
_
_
now working at
_·
Marist.
·
Mr,
would "emphasize the nee~ of
have difficulty inthe simple may excel m
.
math, but may not
Strasbaugh has beeinissociated the coUege,'.'
.-
_a
_
nd. (<the i_m-
.
learning processes.
-
·
·
.
be able to combine the letters
_
of
·
with
a
number of colleges
in
this portance of facilities m pursumg
.
.
These
.
children, between the the ~phabet together
.
.
·
respect, including Muhlenberg progr~s to fac~ty,,,students,
agesof3and9,haveadisorderin
.
This
volunteer program, first
College
·
in Pennsylvania,
·
Penn and fri~nds of Marist.
·
·
one or more
of the processes of sta!ted _
?Y
Gregory Hou~e
State, and Wake Forest.
President Fo~ and Mr.
speech, language; reading, residents mclud~s n~t only their
This
is
.
the first drive of this Strasbau~ were m agreement writing, arithmetic, or
•
other house, but the other dorms on
sort for Marist. Previous
.
drives, that tile d1:1ve would be_c~mposed
school subjects; resulting from a campus.
Chris
Liska, a
·
spaJl!Sh
such as one
in
1961 for the con- of ~re~ stages. The frrst ~ge, psycological handicap caused by and Ele!Ilentary education
.
_
struction of the Boathouse, and
·
which_
,
IS now undei:wal;,
IS
the a possible c~rebral dysfunction major, is one
.
of_ the con~ern~
·
one in 1965 for work on Cham- planrung and orgaruzat1?n
.
The
and-or emotional disturbances. students who 1s mvolved
m
this
pagnat,
.
had
_
been mainly
·
·
fu- ·
se~o!ld . stage ~ould include These children are not the result program. C~is and the other
•
ternal. This drive
will
be much S?~citation. The fm_al stage, the
,
of mental retardation, sensory M~rist volunteers donate their
more: far-reaching.
.
vISi~le part ofthe drive
will
~cur
'·
deprivation or motoi: handicaps. Fnday afternoon_s from
3 :30.
to
-
·
·
President
,
Linus
'
Foy
.
noted durmg_the next academic year. They
.
are
_
of
_
average,
·_
near 5:00 to these
'
children teaclu.!lg
some preliminary areas where
_
Presid~~tFoyhasnotedthatas avetage;
.
or above
,
average th~ arts,
.
ci:afts, and remed~l
the funds might be used inclu~g soon
,
as the .case statem~1!t general intelligence with lear- reading. Chris; who expressed
the library _·extension,
·
the receives final approval explicit ning and-<>r ceriain
:
behavioral hopes for other Marist students to
physical educatioµ
·
complex, and terms o~ the goals and lo1!g range
.
abnormalities ranging from mild g~t involved, seems quite pleased
·
facilities for the
.
disabled.
·
It
-
p~ns will be made pubhc
'.
to severe which are
.
associated with the program's present
shoulcfbe pointed ou(that this is
·
with
a
deviant
function
'
of the outcome.
She
believes that
·
without the aid of these volun-
teers, these children would
be
endlessly thrown about
in
the
Poughkeepsie school system and
accomplishing nothing.
Along with the basic classroom
·
learning, the Marist volunteers
would eventually like to have the
opportunity to bring these
children on a tour of the
campu.9.
Due to the fact that
the
tutoring
is
on
a
2
to
l
basis, the volunteers
feel
·
that this allows them to
become closer to the children and
therefore, more
.
rewarding. The
children themselves grow closer
to their tutors and look
forward
to
having
-
them come back
·
each
Friday.
Any Marist student who might
be
interested
in
·
helping these
children and taking part in this
program must be willing to in-
volve themselves
..
at
·
least once
·
--
every other
·
week;
,
There
·
are no
necessary requirements and if
·
someone is interested, Chris
Lis}{a or Gregory House
·
should
be contacted.
_
pesi~~~t
.
;
F9Yis
·"
st~te.1.11e~i
,
Q,i,
]lie
"
~~
-
sterSClted
ule.
.
' '
.
,.
·-
...
·•·
·
·
~-
-~
~
··
·
·
·
schedule f~r
·
~nother year, since
·
·
A
check of other colleges have the· major arguments pro to point this institution in the
thecommittee'ssuggestionsasto suggests that most colleges and con? Did he
-
give them
·
directionhedeemsimportant.-To
,
1) Status of this Report. This data collection are µnpossible to operate ori something similar to reasonable consid~ration?
If
he
allow everyone to second-guess
-
report stems from an appeal by implement in time for the. Fall -the old schedule. Vassar uses a was unreasonable m the. process the Dean, or to decide. after an
·
by
~
Linus
Foy
student
.
groups of an
-
ad-
1974 semester.
·
C01!1PJ,'Omi_se with
_
a meager
o!
~o~ect~g d~ta or argumen~, 1mfavorable decisfop:_ that he
ministrative decision taken .by
·
3, The Basic Problems and ration
-
of tnple slots. Rutgers has
,
did
this
give e:v1dence that he did
-
-
,
ought not
be
allowed to take such
-
the Academic Dean: The usual their Relative
.
Priorities
.
The used the riewschedule for civer a not tonsider the arguments?
-·
·
-·
a decision (when he has done so
route of such an appeal
is
through
-
fundamental
·
issues
·
are: the decade, and Mercy has employed • Some attention must
_
be given
for the last sixteen years) is
the administrator's immediate master schedule, and the process it for over five years. When to the concept of consideration.
wrong.
superior, in this case, the by which students participate in alternate schedules like this exist To consider an argument does not
Conclusion
President. Since certain aspects
-
academic decisions. Let us over a period of years, we can necessarily mean to agree with
I) The Dean wishes to install
of· this matter might be con-
consider the latter first. We are conclude that no analog of, it. Ina matter like this, one must the new schedule for a two-year .
sidered an administrative- - entering an era of student par-
Gresham's law will drive one or 'weigh the pros and cons, assign
trial period. I will not overrule his
student confrontation, I asked tile ticipation which is relatively
-
the other out of circulation.
relative importance to each and
decision to implement the new
:
Steering
·
Committee of the uncharted. Ttie sixties saw
I find it difficult to place the eventually decide upon a single
schedule. Perhaps a two-year
·
College Council t<i appoint
-·
a progressive decline of the in loco schedule problem on
-
a par with course of action.
period is needed to completely
committee to attempt mediation; parentis concept and a, con- the other problem, or at the level
Richard LaPietra is com-
feel the effects of the new
failing this, to
·
provide an ad-
.
comitant
_
building in of
-
student of some of
_
the major problems pleting his
fifth
year as Academic
schedule. However, I think there
visory opinion on the matter of
.
partkipati9n into the non
:-
facing Marist at this time.
Dean.
·
During this time, he has
may be preliminary evidence
appeal.
_
·
.
academic de~ision
-
making
4) My Analysis of the Com
-
acquired an enviable reputation
available during the first year of
_
·-
2) Report of the
.
Committee. machinery.
·
-
mittee Report. The Committee for fairness, foropenness, and for
operation. Hence, I direct the
The ad hoc committee met with
In the matter of academia;, has done
·
a great service in willingness to take action. In the
Academic Dean to meet with the
both parties, and filed its report there is a third force-
·
the faculty
·
·
sorting
·
thr.ough a mass of in-
absence of any positive evidence
Academic Affairs Committee to
with me on March 4; 1974. Un-
.
which has
'
enjoyed
.
a formation in a highly charged
.
that he deliberately refused to
•
discuss methods of review. The
fortunately, this report was preemiµent and well-established emotional setting to isolate the- co~sider some of the arguments,
schedule shall be reviewed in the
•
misstated in the Circle. For this position as senior partner with major factors. I agree with its I find it difficult to rule that he light of the Fall 1974 experience
- reason, it
·
seems appropriate
'
lo administ~tion in policy matters. analysis except for two issues. has taken an unreasonable and the Spring 1975 registration .
.
summarize its
_
major findings In
.
··
theory, faculty and
·
ad-
The committee report seems to decision.
Decision
to
continue or terminate
here.
_
_
.
.
'
.
ministration recognize the
_
need imply
.
that had the
·
Dean
Last year, the matter of the
the experimenti: during 1975-76
The Committee stated the to incorporate students
.
into the
.
researched
·
the
·
problem more calendar call.9ed controversy.
In
-
·
should be taken before FebJ:Uary
issues dividing the parti!!S: (1) Is process. The reyamping of the
·
extensively, he might have that issue, the Dean reversed
.
1, 1975.
the
Master Schedule
-
ad-
AAC and
-
the
.
heightened role or- proven some of
his
arguments. I
·
himself.
·
Subsequent to the
2) In
·
future,
·
should the
ministrative or
. ·
general, policy the SAC
.
are major steps in this believe he would have been able reversal, the Dean proposed a
schedule be a poUcy decision or
decision1?
_.
(2) What are
·
·.
the direction.
But
ther~ , a~e to marshal more support for his fonnat for handling such matters an administrative matter?
The
.
priorities of implementation? significant lacunae, especially m
.
proposal· and perhaps silence
-
in future. "This
·
proposal was Dean should discuss
this
with the
·
The coinrriittee,
indicates
the academic
_
matters of lesser some critics; but the
-
sllf\Tey circulated, and received general
AAC.
As_
it stands now, it
is
a
"compromise" solution to . be importance whic~ .are J!Ormally
proposed by the committee would
·
approval. In l;he matter of the managerial decision
to
be
made
pointles.9, and reduces the option handled by
_
administratioo .. '-!'he
·
not have changed the status of his schedule, I fmd he h~ sub-:
by the Dean. af~r appropriat~
to old vs. new schedule.
long-range goal of dev1smg
,
argwnents from a priori
to
a stantially followed
this
process consultation. - Should the
AAC
In
.
the
-
matter
of
appeal,
.
the
_
realistic
·_
mechanics for student posteriori.
Thus,
.
while it
_
would f~r includin~ student _and
staff
wish to alter
this,
the matter can
·
committee indicated
·
that
.
_
the participation
·
must be
.
classified have been
_
better for
him
to
do so,
·
and faculty mput.
If this process
.
be
taken
up
wi~
the
_
faculty and
Dean
-
had
-
been remiss
in
the as of extremely high priority for it
·
is
.
doubtful that
·
the
,
basic be defective, it should
be
revised.
the SAC.
following ways: (1) Not
-
·
sub-
_
_
Marist,'
,
. : ..
·.
arguments pro
,
and con wo~d But I cannot find the Dean
·
.
3)Regardlessoftheoutcomeof
.
_
stantiating
·
his arguments with
·
.
What
,
pr1or1ty shQul~ _ be h~ve chang4:<1 .
.
(~
_.
consultation · ~nreasonable for
having
followed
tlle aforementioned, there
will
·
sufficient data. (2) Unreasonable
.
assigned
to
the master sched~le?
,/
with pean
·
Bishop
.
of Rutgers, }1e 1t.
.
·
-
-
.
.
still remain decisions which will
-
·
handling
'
of studen~ input, by not 1thasbeenpredictedthatth_e11ew
.
mentil:med~
.
ostofthear~ents
·
The institution looks to the be taken administratively.
The
including student opinion
-
early schedule
will be
the salvati_oo. or put
forth
.
by the
_
,
Acadenuc
-
Dean .
Academic Dean, as it does
to
no
·
Academic Dean should work with
· ·
enough;
_
and
:
by
,
._
not
_
_
providing
.
_
the
nJ!n
of
-~~t.
:A,t the
_
_
ris}t
.of
·
as
_
well as war11e~ about many of other single person, for academic
· .
.
the student leadership
to
devise a
sufficient
.
time fo.r student oversunphficahon, ~he
.
old the
,-
probl.~~
,
-
~ d
:,
bY the leadership
.
He is not a
·
dictator mechanic
to
guarantee
smooth
·
r~se.
S:;
_
. ,
·
-
·
·
,
·
·
-
schedule may be descnbed ,s a studen~
;
).
_-
.
_
_
.
.
whose
·
every
whim
·
must be
__
om· ppeurtation wit_h early
_
student
·
.
,
'
'
The·
;
'c
'
oirimittee
'
·•recommends ,•mix
:
of
.-
,two-slot apd t~ee-slot ·
-
!
beliey~
.
~e
.
commi~e h~s. o~yed . .
In
•
matte~ of major
,
·
reconsideration
·
ci the Dean's co~s; the new is
~
mix of missed
.
,
,tile
.
•
:
·co11_c:ept
of, policy, his suggestions must be
.
· :
decision.
· '
In
·
the light
--
of tlie
_
_
single and d90b1, slots; ~bile the reasonableness iri
the
;
sense
.
.
the
>
supporte~
by
the
F'~cul_w
or SAC .
.
.
·
committee's findings, this is
.
compro~
_
provides for s~gle, Trustees intended it
to
be
used. Ip. l8ll58r
,
_matte~s, how
.
ever,.
he
,
.
. t'1Jltainount to.retention of the old
··
doubJe
·
and.triple slots •
.
·
.
,
_
The questions are:
did
the
.
De~: __
11~
.
the a,~istratlve leewa,
.
/
·
-,~
-
:
-:
i
;
,
V'
t
I
.
,
;
i
,
.
I
j
I
I
:
.
I
I
'
:;
,
•
,
'
,,'.,
.
,
.
.
,.
_,_~
,
.
.
•
'•
.
PAGE4
voL_ljME 12/
Marfst
College.
Poughkeeptla,
N.Yt.
.
NUMB~~
·
7
C~Editors
·
Gregory Conocchioli and
Lyn
Osborne
Layout Editor
·
Tim
DeBaun
Photography Editor
.
Dave Pristash ,
Staff:
Paul Pifferi, Karen Tully,
Brian
Morris, Diane
Petress,
.
Mary
\Monsaret, Bob Creedon,
Ray
Barger, Brendan
·
Boyle,
Irene Ross, Eli7.abeth Spiro, Wayne Brio,
Bill
Sprague, JobnT.
CJancyt
Debby NyJriel, Charles PePertin, Cathie
Russo,
·
James
B~~~.
Joan
McDermott
.Mike.Harrigari\
.
.
.
:
. ·
.A~rs-
.
··
James
Keegan and Ann~Trabul~
Busmess Managers
.
Jack Reigle, Mark F!tzgibbon
.
.
·.
-
.
-
_,
.
.
.
~-
.
The
·
Marist
College CIRCLE
is
the weekly newspaper of the
students
<i
Marist
<;oµege
.
and
.
is
p$1ished tlu'.oughout the
school
year .
.
exclusive of
vacatioo periods
·
by
·
the Southern
.
.
..
Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers Falls, New York. .
·
·
Edito
:
rials
.
.
·
-
'
-
.
.
-
~
·
:
S_treakin
·
g
·
HJts
.
Marist
.
·
.
·.
-
.
:
_-
-
.
1
THE CIRCLE
·
MARCH 14: 1974
Letters To The Editors·
M E I W · ht
She was starting college again, ''Sonnet 73". The only
pre$ure
fS
.
Ve
yn
rig
apprehensive at having
·
to was
to
present the genuine article
.
sharpen rusytools. A
sigh
or two; honestly: she met you most oUhe
.
•{
·
19
_
39
·
.
.
~1
-
974}
.
·
afewverylongpa~
in the hot way
with
an jnstinct:for poetry
.
room; one total, re~nant laimh that
was
strong
·
and sure .
.
·
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
that
·
came
all
the
.
way
fr(lll
Evelyn
was
gracious,
which
is
pne intolerably bot, intolerably Georghl'and
from.
places
I
do not better than "refined," and kind,
vague and tedious Poughkeepsie know much
of;
then a distracted which does not mean
.
demoo-
summel'. aftemoon
two
years ago; far~away look -
all
suggested a strative~ Other teachers and
•
a young
·
black woman
~
in
~er life already, one felt, heavy with those fellow
·
students who knew
early
thirties,
l
guessed --
.
hap- experience .. Maybe
,
a
life suf-
her shared
this
-
admiration Jor
pened upon
.
my
•
. office. Evelyn ficiently blessed and wounded·to
·
her quiet strength, her
dignity,
was
..
another of those
'
.
late-
·
lead her not to expect too much and her unaffe~d. concemfor
summer transfer students ••• with from
this
new
venture -
but
.
.
others. And for her nch humor
·
-
the
.
usual
.
problem of
·
·
piecing equally
:
to not exped too
-
littlP.:
:
to me, at least, the incarnation Of
·
together a
.
decent
·
curriculmn not
to
inflict one's own (however
•
au these abstractions, and of
.
from the scraps left
·
after spring legitimate) weariness of doubt
.
on more.,
This
combinatio~ of grace,
.
registration
.
Her
.
halting, slow- others
.-
There
.
was
if
-
serene
kindnes~ and
·
.
passionately
rhythmic
~
speech -- out
· ·
of
sadness
that
-
somehow converted reflective
•.
intelligence
.
.
is,
·
Georgia; muted by Philadelphia·~
·
in a
·
moinent to
.
an
equally
.
deep
•·
··
perhaps,
·
·
"culture''
.
which
.
has
·
.
- glanced back into
a
'
past
·
in-
.
and carefree-caring
.
laugh. )
nothing to do
:
:with class
c.
or
race
>
cQmplete
.
(study
·
at
.
·
·Temple cannot
.
remember
~,
·
Evelyn
.
On
;
behalf
of th~ faculty, ad-
U.n~~ersity .. ;some. teach~ng ~rt theorizing about life,
_
~hough she
-
mini~tration
,
an~. staff,
·
and
spec
.
m,1
.
prograII¥3) and
.~t?.
a ·struckmethenartdafteradeeply
,·
students c,f 114a~t College,
I
.
fqture f~y. '!Ith poss1~ilit1es
.
intelligent about it
.
.
.
.
.
w_ould extt;nd CQ~dolences
:
to
·
M.f
.
•.
(maybe J0~alism o~ radio ... or
Evelyn
·
was .. . patient,
.
She Sunon Wnght, he~ ~usbarid,
_
and
.
grad.
school).
The voice blended listened carefully, very carefully,
'. ..
to her other
:
~
.
\ll'Vlvmg relatives.
with th~ discootinuities
..
of the
.
to what you thought was of value:
-· --
·
·
·
Robert
P.
Lewis
day, as 1t suggested those of her DoMe's "Valediction Forbidding
past.
· MoU:rning", Shakespeare's
Streaking,
the
art
of
running
around
.
naked;
except
:
fo~
maybe shoes,
socks, and maybe
a
hat,
is
thflatest college fad gathering students by
the hundreds
·
every night
•
last
.
week across the
,
coUl)try
has
·
.
finally
··
reached the Maristccommunity giving us county-~wide publicity .
.
_
.·
::
•
·
.
.,~ .
.
.
~
.
:
:
,
,:;. ·
• .
·
Among r
,
eason~
.
for lll
_
e
,_
ne'w
-_
f8d
·
m8y
__
be.the
:"
:
new
:·
fouri~
sexual
S
·
•
t
'
st··
·
k,
.
-
~
-~
·:
.
--:.
·
freedomofthelatesj.xties,itcanbea
.
wayfor
·
young
·
~opletoshare
·
UppOf S .
rl
e
.
· .
.
r
the efforts
.
.
of
the student com: nextstepsholtldberiotificationof
somEthing ~n a Jess threatening way than giving intimate realtions.
It
·
mittee of
ten
to have the schedule
·
the
Board
·
of Trustees and
·
·
a
is springtime, arid it's the old fashioned rite of college ~xhibitionisrri;
·
C
·
·
· ·
·
·
..
·
1
·
·
·
·
u ·
rescinded. We believe tlia.t the student strike
.
of
.
classes begin-
Students claim that it
is
way to relieve pentup tensio!}
·
s·and pressures.
·
.
Om
.
m
lJ
er
/
•
r)IO O
·
committee
was
.
~
eitremely ning March
25 and
continuing for
While
the circle:i!! fully aware the pre
.
~ure of these
'
students
·
and
h1
~ .
.
reasonable,
.
perh
.
aps
.
too
.
ai;
long as is n¢cessary.
_
We urge
particular the Marist student, we feel that students
·
should use
·
a
little To the
.
Editors: .
.
.
. "'
re.~sonable,
in
finplly agreeing to
everyone,
'
,
:
a1,1d . coniinuting
<;ommon sense before streaking through such pµblic areas as the Main
·
This
•
lette
.
r
·.
is
.
to
·
.'
express mediation and placingJts faith
.ih
.
·
students
in
particular,
·
to
begin
a
Mall .
.
Last week
.
the arrest
.
9f five Marist students brought
.
untold· Commute_r
.,
Union
·
support of
.
the
.
Dr:
.
Foy's
·
.
.
acceptance
.
of
_
the
boy:cott
:
of classes
.
immediately
_
·
.
a
.
publicity and possible damage to the Marist conmiunity at
.
a time
of
strike
..
called by
·
the Student
:
Mediation
~
Board's
;
recom
~
following
·
vacation o
_
n
·
Moriday; ·
··
•·
severe financial difficulties. Marist officials
.
and some
:
students
·
a
·
re Government
,
.
beginning Monday,
niendations.
· •· -.~
.
·
,
·
·
·
·
·
March
25.
'
.·
· ·
·
·
.
.
:
·
,
.
:
·
·
·
·
·
trying to raise the imag~
.
pf Marist within the Dutchess Courity area March
25.
,
'
"··
;
· .
.
·
Di:
.
Fo;y,
;
has r~Jected
·
.
the
:
.
-
Thank
yoU:
_
.
.
. • .
.
and
tl:irqughou~ the country
:
as well. W,fdare say
:
th~tt~Jwill
'
heip
·
.
to
We
>'
have
~
•
been
.
consistently. re'7
.
~m~~nd~tion
,
,
: .•
~f ;
.
the
.
.
. .
·
. ·
.
.. Chiis)Vise.
cx:eate th~n,ewunag~
.
~hcl
.
ttheya.restnx~gfor£~
.
·
.:
,:"
..
,
·
~,..
. . ·
.
:
: .
•:•
:
.•
opposed
:
_t9the
.
11ew.class sch!),pa-: M,e~!1
.
~n,
_
B,oapf,th
_
~Jtht~~~ma
.,
• ,
:
;tti\
fon~p_~t~Jf?!?!If~~
.
l_?J;~t
.
1'lle arrest Iast
.
Vfeek served,
-
as
_
a sland
.
erous
.
attack <>i:t
i
~he
.
Mar~
··
~n<i~~1cula_rlyJhe.1n~thc,µ
t
of
,
1ts
,
·
;
b
_
e
:'.'i
r~~9I1~
1
9~,r~~
,;;
·
'3/:~
5.
o.f
.
p~e
;
:.
.
.
.
>
.i,;
.
~f{;.,:;
;'
...
,
'.
·
.
:
.::;;.
t:-~;;;.;
,
;,
,.,
.
~
.
.
.
commumty an~some
.
studenu;felt namesshoitld not ha~e appeared
•
m
•
1mplemen~t1on.
,
-,
We
.
;
sµpport~
::
..
c;P~~~~r
;,
Vl'\
10
~
i.
~~~~
.
th~t
:
~~
.t .
.
:
":
.
,:
,,-~.
~
':
'.':.•~
·
·
.- · .
. · .. ·
·
.
:
.
..
;.
·
·.
,·
·
·
... ·
•
.
·:·
· ·
..
the Poughkeepsie Jciuitiatit
·
is the opinion of the editors thaBliese
·.
·
,
.
..
·
. -
·
··
·
·
< •
,·,
·
·
· ·· ·
·
·
.
<~_.
.
.
· ·
·
:C
· ·
·
·
·
·
.·
·
·
·
·
· ·
..
students
•
should have
.
made themselves aware of the
>
consequences
.
·
..
:
.
.
,
,,
<
..
;
that they would have
to
face in,view of getting caught.
·
...
·
.
.
.
.
.
•
•
.
··
..
·.
·
·
·
· ·
·
.
··
·
.
·
While the Circle does not wish'.to
'
pome down ori ''.Streaking"
.
asa
Studenfs
<
Sfrike
..
:'
until ~tudent:; demands of total
"Collegiate S~rt", it does wish
:
to
~
point
_
out
to
students the serious-
·
·
-
·
rescindmenCof the
'.
new master
damage done to thec9mmunity
as
a wh~le. We alsodishope thatbthor
New
:
:
schecfJfe
:
:
.
time schedule
are
.
bme~.
-
Thist
·
whoares~ivingfora"~ewMaristimage'arenot: couraged
y~
e
•
.
..
.
,
,
·_
-
.
•
·
.
action is called for
y
studen
behaviorota
:
f~;wManst
,
s~uden~.
,
·
•
•
:.:
..
·
..
_.-.
.
..
.
.
.
.
·
.
,
leaders
,
as
.
a
·
resulf.of the ad-
,
·
• To the
·
Editors: ,
.
iniriistratfon'suityielding and
Starting
·
Monday, . March
25 ,
irrespo~siblE!.
:-
action in
.
dealing
there
·
will be a student strike of
with
•
-
·
student
,
.
government
all classes. This strike
will
last
.
organizations on
this
campus
.'~.
•
Fire
.
n
D.r.i.lJs.
.
0
.
.
:
~
;
:
.,·
.
.
w~·as stude~ts are an in.legral
part
.
of. thf Marist
:
community.
We will not roll
.
over and play-
,:.
-
:
.
dead. We as students must have a
.
.
say in the
r@Jllllg
of our campus
and of our lives. We
·
iniist
.
be
united.
·
·
Sincerely yours,
,· .
. .
Eric ye
_
rgan
Foy
And
:· ..
DJ~cisipn
Hoc mediation board tcihear both decision ~f the Ad
.
Hoc
.
Co~-
~early
·every student
:
has.
S:t.one
:
t~e
.
or"ariotlief undergori(the
.
Ma
.
k(ng . . .
.
To the
Editors:
:
-sides
-
oftheargumentcoriceming mittee."
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,:
.
the
)
ipplementatiop of the new
·
Does he always mean wliat
·
he
schedule. In his ·offer to student says?
•
,
.
leaders President Foy stated
,
"I
·
·
.
P~ul Pifferi'
trying, but
..
necessary, practice known
as
a
.
•:fire
drill'!•
.
pier,e
~re
those
thahtre
quite tha~l
for,
thesE!.
.
interruptions of the daily rou~n~
- not only as a relief from soine undesirable task, but
alsQ
as salvation
from a dangerous fire.
.
· ,
.
.
.
·
.. , ,
, .
.
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
•
·
·
.
.
President Foy prope>sed an Ad
·
pro~e
~
be gt1ided by the
Fire
is
a danger~us and sc~y tbing, that l'!o. one
.
can de~y. ~d there
is nothing more scary than being awakened m the early
•
mQrrung hours
· by
an alarm, no matter how:inconvenient
.
or disturb
.
ing itIDay be: .
.
.
These persons who
for
the am~ement !>f
.
tllez_ns~lves
.
oro~h~rs fmd 1t
•
-necessaryto set
off
fire ala~
m
).ate
rught and ~rly
.
Il_l~I1J1Dg hours
.
are doing no one a favor
.
F1.re "drills" have proved sliff1cmetly to the
·
fire department t.ha;t
we
~ej~deed ~le to clear
.
.
the buildings ~
.
case
of emergency;-and these extra
C'drills"
or pranks
,
or even acCJ.d!:!nts
are not only an inconveJii~ce to
.
the
_
rest
of
,
the students, but- a
potential danger as
well.
. .
.
.
·
: ·
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
Handicapped students
.
have
.
to
.
b~
~arned down
.
flights
.
of
.
stairs,
students who are
·
sick;tired, showermg;
.
_
or what ha~e you
must tramp
,
.·
outsidewherethey
.
areallpreytoills
.
of~lsorts
/
:
.
.
:
·
.
.
. ·
.
.
·
.
Let's just cut the clowning for awhile;'. and learn a little r~po~
.
sibility
~
if
nothing else -,while we're h~re. .
.
"
.
.
.
·Correction
·
·
RE
.
: Article in
cmCLE
of
3-7~74
-
·•
.
..
·
'
.
'Report of.the Mediatio11 Committee~•
·
.
...
•
•
.
•
. ·
•
•
; ' • . •
••
•
:
-
, ~
•-
• •
,
~ : , :
.
•
w
~
•
.
'
' :
i•
,•
: .")
•
:
•
• ,'•
•
•
•
:
:
•
,
•
·
.
•
••
•
•
:
,,
..
:,
... :
.
.
.
,,
•.
.
.
•
·
;
. .
_-
:
•
'
c
.
•
•
.
:
••
.
Th~
~I~CLE
.
r~~ts
-
the ;ro~
~h
~ur
·
~rt contairiedJn the abt>ve
/
;
:,.
:-,
·
·
article.
The
·conclusion that was iriadvertantly
,
prjnted was that of the
.
•:
>.
student contingent,-:and
.
no(that of
·
the
·
Mediation
Committee
.
as
a
'..·:
M"l~-:::;::.~
whole.
·
.
·,c ..
:~
.· ·
•_.
· .
·
,.
;,::
•
.
--::
. '
·
·
.
·
·
:-.;
-
:
.
·
.
:
·
·
:·
:
"
·
·
,>
.
::
..
;_
.. :
.
.
:
.
:
._..~
·
·
.
.
.. ·.::
:-
:
·'
·
.
·
.
.
:,
·
:
··.
·
·.-
,
.
In
view
on
the
receri(
devefopmenti
t
c
.
Ollcernliig
_
both
students
:
~
.
,
..
:
-'.
·.
'
.. ,,
~
'.·
:/~
:
·. ·
'
•• :
:·
::
_;,
•
;·:
"
·
..
,,
.
:
.
admlni$"ation,
w
;
e
4o 119t4el!lD
.
it
~e~~sa,ry
.
te>
.
i:ePrintany
DlQr~
:
of
.
the
.
,:
·
·
'
·
· ·
·
-
riv:k~t~~~ri~~
'
tkttti~~~G.
·
~~ic:tfuriJ
{}f'.
~/~
'.t _:
,· ..
.
---~~~~~-:"-~~---~~;;..;;;~~~---~---
.
,~:.;.
·.
~~~;,;,_~~~~.;;;,.;..;;.:,J
.
.
'
'
.
'
.
'
..
'
.
.
.
'
..
•
.
'
.
•
.
','
.
~
.-~
-
:
~
"
..
'
....
..
.
.
,
·
,-
,
'
.'
.
'
.
:
•
,
"
'(
,:
/-,
v
.:<:
-,'~•~':
"
•!
.·
,,
.
.
,
MARCH 14, 1974
THE CIRCLE
P1;esident
Foy
Gives Support
To· Tuition Assis~ance Program
Dear Friend of
Marist:
creasestudentaidtoamaximum; TAP become law. Also; inany of
Our State Legislature in of $1700. This bill
is
a logical! our present students
.
have
Albany
.
is
presently considering extension of the present Scholar younger members in their
.
.
new legislation
on
·
student aid Incentive Program which has a families who would benefit from
which
.
is
vitally important for maximum award
of
$600.
The the passage of
this
legislation.
every one of our students and for importance
of
this bill rests in the
Governor Wilson_ and the
·
Marist College: I wish
to
take a fact that the
.
student from a Legislature need to be
assured
by
few moments of your time
to
give moderate income family
will
be
'
students, parents,
alumni,
a brief purview of
this
legislation eligible for an increased award, faculty; &taff and friends of
~nd
to
·
recommend
·
a course of ranging
up
to $1500 undei" the Marist College that passage of
action
:
to·be taken by you.
.
Tuition Assistance Program
·
this, or similar legislation is
Marist students
are
caught (TAP).
Such
additional necessary- and politically ad-
between
:
~in¥ ~dt}cational
.
costs
·
assistance.
will
.·
provide
_
more
.
vantageo~.
I
UfSe you
to
re~~r
·
_and the diminis¥g
.
means _to students with a range of choices
.
your position
.l!f
Albany on this Joanne Ginter
and Cindy
Bodenheimer in
a rehearsal
for
m_eetcosts. The pnvate colleges, that,· hopefully,
-
will· include
.
matter by wnting the Governor Beeple."
''The
especially the sinall private Marist.
.
·
.
·
.
.
.
·
··
and your State Legislators.
·
colleges,
'
have successfully ·
TAP
would be
.
phased in one
_
Pertinent information
is
given on
,pleaded
.
their
~se
in J\lbany f~r
year
at a time;
~
begiru)ing with the the reverse
:
~de
_
of
this letter_ for
increased
·
asSJStance
to
their
--
1974-75 freshman class.
Our
.
yourconvemence as
_
you consider
-
students
.
.
The
Select Committee present student body-would not· takirig action on my recom-
on
Higher
Education, a joint
.
benefit
.
directly from TAP; mendation.
•
.·
IegisJatiye committee chaired by
:
however, we
,
are now making
-
_
Sincerely yours,
Assemblyman Peter
J;
Costigan, contingency plans
.
to
redirect the
Linus Richard Foy
has
·
.
introduced
-
~
,
.
,
tuition College's student aid resources to
-
·
·
President
0
a:ssistartc~
:
bill
~
that
_
would
iri-
our present studen~ body should
Theatre Guild FormS
Repertory (i-roup
Marist
Presents
''The
Beeple"
By Ray
Barger
centers around a planet of bees
who think that they are people,
Once again t?ie land of make- and how one day this colony is
believe ·will come
to
life as the invaded by
.
a human being (a
Children's Theatre presents
'
boy).
Allen Cullen's "The Beeple."
Cast members include Cindy
Directing
_
"The Beeple" is Bodenheimer,
Beth
March,
Barbara Jala wit~ Dan Edgcomb Joanne
·
·
.
·
Gintec,
Stephen
as
·
Assistant-director. Adeline Iacobellas, Vinny Carfora, Jack
Aquilino is the-producer.
. ·
Ledwidth, Linda Sofio; John
.
This
.
relatively
_
unknown fairy Lyons; Lucy Squiricini.
.
tale
will
bea breakaway from the
·
Michele Valeri wrote the music
traditional
·
classic stories that that
is
used in "The Beeple".
B~~llzabe~Spiro
.
·
the Repertory Theatre
'
·
will Belanger
.
He also directed its theChildren's Theatre has staged
The Marist Community will
· .
. · .·
:..
·
_
.
.
.
.
.
,
present the
.
dramas of three first presentation in 1960
Waiting
in previous years.
.
.
·
have a chance
to
see this show at
.
·
For thefirst time in its fifteen contemporary American for Godot, by Samuel Beckett.
"We are
·
excited
because we 8 p.m.onMarch28, 29and30, and
.
_year history~
·
the ~arist,C~lleg~
·playwrights~
The plays that WJ.ll Since then, the Guild has are not limited to a
.
classical
·
2 p.m. on March 31. •
.
_
Theatre
·
Gµild h~ fonne~
_
·
a be presented alte~nately during presented popular Broadway interpretation as we have been
•
·
This show
will
be performed for
l:tepertory Theatre
-
~oup
.
w)lose
·
that week
arl?:
Virginia
WooU by
.
successes as well as those plays
with the plays
.
done
in
the past;-•
.
th~ children in the area during
members will be responsible for Edward Albee;
:
Pla:r.a Suite
·
by
in
the classic mode. Some of them
.
said Dan Edgcomb.
·
·
.
the spring recess. Nine daytime
:
t~e
·
'g~neral
'
PX:o
,
duction -a~d Neil · Simon;
~
Tlie Eff.ect
.
of
· ·
are: The Wise Have Not Spoken
The
•
first production done by shows
will
be presented starting
d_1rect1on_
of its
·
dramatic Gamma Rays ~n
~n-~~tbe-
.
by Paul
v.
Carroll, directed by
this
·
relatively young theatre on Sunday, March 17 at 2 p
.
m.
prese~~tions.
.
,
-
.
.
.
: ;:
-
..
~OOJ?:
;
~rJg~~(fs
_
by
~-\1.ul ~llldell;
·•
Jim Britt, Twelve
Angry
,
Men by
organization ~as the "Wizard of
•
The group will be taking the
.
·
According to D~
-
· Jeptha
,:
Yiigini~~oolf}s.t?,e~p,,.g_~~
-
~t~
;
Reginald Rose,- directecLby
:
Dr.
Oz".
·
"Peter· Pan",
.
"Snow play to various
.
places outside
.
La~!1ing
;
·
who-
_
co-d1rects the
by-
~
~P!ryn
_
-
¥~~~y .w~o
<
h!ls
.
Lannirlg';_'
1
Fri~drich'•
=
o
·
uerr~fr,;
-
Wh
_
ite!',
'
·
an~-
:
'~PinnO<!hio!'
'
a_lso
· :_
Marist;. :Jimjt~ mainly
.
by
:
a
. -~
.
Theatre
.
Guild·
,'
.
with
·;,
.
Jim
··
.
•
Britt, a~ted m a number of productions mat's
'
The
{
Visft, J\farat
·
Sade
1
oy
1
_
.
preceded
·
this
se1p,ester's stag!ng
•.
shortage
·
of_ funds .
..
Tr_i ps
·
to
-
: :
a
_Rep~rtoryTheatrewillgiveso
·
me
.
smce~e;fr~~year.Shehas
,
Peter Weiss, J.B;
·
by Archibald
of-
,
'
l.
TheJ3eepl~"·
·
:
··
;
•
- .
.
VassarH~p1tal, Sa~erties and
.
-
-·
of
_
t~emoretalentedpeopleinthe
,
ale~dingrolemthispl?yaswell,
'
MacLeish and ~ugene O'Neill's
-
The story, m thts fall'Y tale DoverPlamsare bemgplanned.
.
.
-
.,.
··
..
~-
.
-
-
-
· -
·
-
·
.
Guild
an opportunity
.
to
'
add
,
.
Bill Sprague, ~other veteran
-
Molll'Ding Becomes:Electra.
greater scope to their abilities .
..
P~rfo"?er
·.
with the Gll;ild,
.
is
Thecastmembersforthe
.
plays
Dr; Lanning said: "lt.'is an
ex-
d1rectmg and performing in are: Plaza Suite - Gary Braube,
·
perirnent thaf we
will
try
and
.
Plaza Suite.
.
.
Donna Corrado, Mary
Anri
Ur-
later assess; Hopefully, we would
.
·
Man in the Moon Marigolds is
·
bano, Jim Britt John
Blue
Eric
··
like to
.
see
this
·
become
.
part of bein~
.
.
direc~d by Jim O'Brien,
·
Garrison, Sue Mclmrow,
Cindy
eac~ spring. semester, giving who 1s president of the Theatre Maser, Bill Sprague Eileen
semors a chance
to
try their hand . Guild. _He has been actiye iil
_
the Kentner , John Lyons. '.
..
·
·
at another a~ect of theatre art, (!&st.
m
s_et_ pro~uct1on ~nd
Virginia
Woolf - Bill Davis,
.
the directorial perspective."
br.
li~l!ng of
·
th~ Guild's presen- Kathryn
,
McCarty, Joe Martino,
·
Lanning
·
and Mr.
'
Britt
.
will tations.
.
·
Mary
·
Landers.
generally
.
oversee
·
.
the
•
produc-
The Th~tre Guild is _th~ oldest
Man-in-Che-MoonMarigolds-
tions butthe responsibility for the
extracurru~ular ~ctiv1tr on Nancy
.
Thomas, Lisa
.
McCue,
staging of the presentations rests campus.
It
has been m continuous Mary Meskers, Danny Edgcomb
with the student directors.
OJ)erat~on.sinc~ 1959 when it was Fran Fulling.
'
·
.
From April 16th
to
April 23rd,
organized. by Bro
,.
Joseph
·
-
Taking
an active
part
.In
,
~
new repertary
iroop are Bm Davis and Katby McCarty.
.
Marist·· Recruits
·
1
·
·
_·
T
.
h
·.
-
~
·
;..
-:
::
.
·
.·.
:
~
.
.
.
n
·
·
.
e
\..A.J1111llU111ty
C.B.S. for the Admissions Office.
Marist; in attempting to im-
'
The film illustrates the transition
prove relations between the Marist has undergone
.
in
recent
college and the community, met years. He then followed with a
with Kiwanis Club and spoke speech about how the field of
about the physical changes that communication has changed
Marist has undergone in recent since it became a new major. He
years.
It
was disclosed that moot demonstrated how the students
businessmen in the Poughkeepsie used their background· in com-
area still envision Marist as
'
a
·
mwtlcations to work
,within
the
school for Brothers.
community
in
such places as
-
However~ it_
is
the aim of
Mr.
radio stations, advertising
Robert Norman, head of the agencies;
.
·
c
·
able television,
·communications Department; to newspapers, and LB.M. He
make more contacbi
·
within the
·
stressed the importance of in-
business community. This way he
·
teraction between
.
the
.
business
-
can place more students in the community and Marist College.
working field. As a result they Consequently, the &tudents are
will acquire some practical Marist can
-
learn through
experience before entering into pragmatical experience.
the
working world prior to
Acting representatives of the
_
graduation.
communication field,
Glen
.
.
The main topic
of
this luncheon Manjoria and
Mary
.
Monsaert
which was held March 15th at the
·
spoke at length ori their own
Elles Club in Poughkeepsie,
was
experiences and insights. Their
the area of comuiunications
as a
comments combined with
Mr.
new and growing field at Marist. Norman's fine efforts, may prove
Mr. Norman began his lecture
fruitful
for future efforts in
.
with t~e new film produced by
communications for Marist.
Poetry Competition
The National
Poetry
Press
Each poem must
by
TYPED or
announces its spring competition.
PRINTED on a separate sheet,
'
The closing date for the sub-
and must bear the NAME and
·
..
mission of. manuscripts by
·
HOME ADDRESS of the student
, c~llege students
is
April 10. .
-
and the COLLEGE ADDRESS
~
·
Any student att~nding either well.
.
junior or seJ!ior c
_
ollege is eligible
Manuscripts should be sent
to
·
to submit hlS vei:se;
-
There
is
·
n~
·
:
the Office
·
of
the
?ress:
Th<
·
·
.-llmitaUon
as
to
fonn
or
.
theme.
--.
-National
Poetry Press, 3210
Selby
·short.er
works are
_preferred
by
..
Avenue,
Loo
Angeles,
California
the ~ d of J~ges;
-
.
because·of
- ·
90034;
•
.
.
·
·
. ·
,
·-
·space
limlations.
·
·
·
I
·
·.,
''7'
,. ,·.
i
r.
~
i:\
i
i
·
__
i
}f
l~
si:.
.
.
;
I
Jr':
~
:'.
s
:
--
.,
1
,
1',
,
.
... ...
4·.
-::.:
j
·;,\:
PAGE 6 ,
Shout It Softly
ByFr.LeoGallant
a
pastor.
So,
in
a way.
I'm har-
dened
to
criticism and I'm
not
too
My
last two
articles, dealing afraid of controversial
~es.
with
gossiping and labeling, were
Today
I
want
to
write about the
meant
to
lead up
to
this
article on most oppre~
-
minority in this
MARCH 14, 1974
Senior Campaigns
·
For
Office
homosexuality. !'write it with a country, the Gays, and about
bit of fear and trepidation non-Gays and priests who work
by
Brian
~orris
-
In
1953
Satiro broke his neck in
because of people's tendency to with them and for them for
an auto accident.
As
a result of
label a person because of the apostolic reasons at
a
risk of a
Marist College administrators
that accident he spent
six
months
minority group he is defending. reputation that deman~
un-
would no doubt welcome the
in a private sanitorium.
Later
he
At one time
I
think
people coo
-
common courage. Most of what
I
election of a Marist
,
alumni
to
the
was forced
to
quit his job as a
sidered me an alcoholic because say is from Fr. Gregory Baum's
·
governor's
_
office. such a
baker because that job called for
.
for eight years
I worked closely
:
article in COMMONWEAL (Feb.
governor might lend a sym-
heavy lifting, something he
.
was
with
Alcoholics Anonymous.
I
·
15).
creates a
new
sense
of dignity in pathetic hand _to the efforts of
no longer able to do. Satiro says
went to their meetings, and I was •
·
·
"Gays are people
·
held in them. This self-affirmation in small colleges m se.arch of sta~e
of
his
baking experience: «It's
up all hours of
the
night, living
·
contempt
by ,
society, - faith then becomes the source of funds. Well,_a Marist student_ is
the need to create. The baker
the
Twelfth
Step, helping men
·
marginalized by custoni,
_
vilified more positive,
·
generous and now a
_
candidate for l?a
_
t office
takes a raw material and
·
turns
who had slipped; who were in
_
by a vulgar or subtle language of
but one be sure that
if
elected
out a finished product."
.
trouble, who were spending the exclusions and judged
as
sick, as joyful living. But has the
·
.
-
,
·
·
.
•t
b'
.:
Satiro does not consider
.
night in the town jail In the eyes immoral, as perverts.
·
(Often
Christian community imparted Sat~d , Kazolias
:
~f
~
e
himself a politician;
.
·•
"I
·
never
of small-town people
_
these were
-
causing in themselves self- this hope
to
our gay brothers and any . Y .s man - excelpd
s.
0
'M.lt·
regard myself as a poll
_
·tician
_
.
.
, I
sisters?
· _ _
·
.
Sa~ro
18
a 47 year o seruor a
bums
·
and I was one of them.
.
rejection and self-hatred.)
Often
A fe
·
w
·
_.·
·
.
pri·ests are now Manst. H. e _
_
has
.
recently an-
meet eacll issue, take a stand,
-
InmylasttwoyearsinDetroit,
:
theGaysareledtobelieveinthe
dhis t
ti
t
t rthe
antldon't
·
equivocate." Satiro is;
I worked unceasingly to get thei
-
perversity of their own nature dedicating themselves
to
this nounce
· in en o_n
°
en e f
indeed; eager to m~t issues and
first black student in our school
.'
and deprived of the very ground cause
.
My
_
first year here I had in Democratic
,
.
.
p~imary
~
·
or
-
take
·
unwavering
'
positions.
..
He
·
f
If
t
Th
.mind to
.
have
.
regular prayer ~overnor.
.
.
.
Satiro,
.
-
~hose
The lily~white community had me, o
---
their se -re spec .
e services or Masses privately for b~ckground mc!udes being
~
.
has a stand on nearly every issue
labeled. One parent told another
'
·
:
behavior patterns
of
s~mE: are gay students but
1
didn't have the hrst~generahon
Greek-
of contemporary interest. A
that"Weoughttogetthatnigger-
probably due to their inner
. .
·
af
.d fb .- labeled
Amencan,
·
a
·
baker
-
for20years,
discussionwithSatiro(younever
lover out!"
conflicts, their handups, their courage,
rai_
0
ell!g
.
· and a manager of real estate
have a "conversation'.' with
E
t Marist thre
·
d bili"tatin f ars d
to ounds One of
-
these days I 11 be the
•
·
.
·
i
·
ti
·
al
·
s
t
·
)
.
· ·.
1
·
d
t
--
·
ven a
'
e years
e
g e
.
.
ue
w
Christian God wants me to be,
ru
·
con~erns, is a
I><!
i c
science
a iro may ea
on o any
.
ago I was criticized by a group of inflicted on them by society. be
.
ha
.
t Paul was
·
. Everythin
·
g maJor. H_ e has_ enliv~ed ~any a
subject from baking, to
-
politics,
priests
in...
Rhinebeck
·
as a
.
Society places e;no~ous
.
burd~ns
w
.
.
..
·
all.
.
·
.
d class discussion :with
his
pen-
to "Streaking."
-
.
-
.
publicity hound because my
-
on them ~nd it is almost ~- for everyone.
All
to ·
Butlnee
.
chant for bringing
a
theoretical
Addressing himself to the
picture appeared in the Journal a possible
·
for . per~ons
.
with a. lot more strength and 1¥ybe
-
a debate down to a practical level.
political
·
climate in America
few times, demonstrating for the hOm()$exuaI
·
orientation
to
,
grow
bit more ''Damned -with my A
dis · ·
·
fM
·
an be
Satiro
-
expressedhisview that the
Berrigans, Prison Reform, and
.
up without being expQsed to the reputation•; outlook. Until then
I
the
~~ftfo~
~
sa~~~fement
.
nation is threatened by a "form
Peace. Last year
I
w~
helping
,
threats
:
~d pressures of a cruel can plead with you also
to
grow on a new freeway in Dutchess . of tyrariny unknown
~ history"
out the prison chaplain by
:
world
/
'
-
·
'.
.
·
·
·
·
,
into human beings th8t
will
ac-
·
County.
·
-
.
:
·
_
.
unless the worker-"exercises his
visiting the youth
.
t'ell block: at
-
'
li Christianity is what it should cept all human beings, all, all.
Satiro
·
has
lived
in
-
political
·
power."
,.
Dutchess Comity Jail two or
_
three
·_
be, it w
_
oul
_
d
of
_
fer
_
strength
to
_
gay
Next issue, I'll comment on tbe p
ghk
·
11 hi
.
lif
Hi
•
In ontrast
to
Howard Samuels
times a week. One guard told me
.
people. Since one of the problems Bishop's guidelines for
·
prie
st
s
·.
0
u~t· ale~psti~ ·tya begsan .
.
in_e. 194:
who tas raIBed a million and a
e
lin
d-:.1:-g
.
with homosexuals. It has po ic
ac
lVl
.
.
.
·
•
.
.
•
·
that I was really brightening up is self~rejection, guilt 1e~ . gs a ~~le new pastoral approach. when he actively opposed half dollars to run
·
his campaign
things and the inmates looked imposed by society, the Christian
1
,
11
also write about DIGNITY,
·
a
_
abolition of rent controls. Since for the governor's job, Satiro
forward
to
my coming
.
But the message proclaiming
_
Go~•s
·
c
·
ath
.
oli.
_
c
,
Homosexual then he has run
-
for County planstospendhi~three-thousand
·
authorities finally told me
·
that
I acceptance of all people m Chr1St
-
-
·
Executive
·
and the
State dollars on campaign jaunts
couldn't visit the
jail
because I initiates men and women into a organization.
·
--.
Assembly, frequently attends
_
across the
.
state in his car.
wasn't the chaplain and I wasn't new sense of self-acceptance and
God, give us your eyes.
various county meetings, and is a
_
T~ically; ttJ:at c~r is cover~
_
Third
Year
---
·
view
-
major sourc
.
~
.
of letters to the
,
with bumper s_tick_ers
;
so~e
editor.
-
.
·
.
·
·
_
.
.
~
.
many years old, Judging by
,
their
·
Why does
a
man who by liberal looks
.
~atl!o p_lans to
.
c~nterhis
.
estimates has three toousand
.
campaign on
his
opposition to the
,-'
,
dollars to ~pend
,
on a ~ainpaign ~~te s~les
~ ! .
·
~
p~nsions fpr _
·
·
··
·
·
·
·
-
run for the goverµorship?
_
part time politicians and to ~e
By
Bob Nelson
nationalistic foreign,__p9.licy
t
tlu!!;
;,
.~oi-ts
_
~
~pite ofth_e b~ycott.)f,
~
-
"I'm
_
tired
.
of _ having '
.
'legal usury'' br,ought on bYc high
...
_
.
.
.
_
_
.
_
the actual pr~ic:\ent
,:-?
qe
·
orges
· '."
strong
-
,
front
of
oil consuming miillonaires tell the workingman
.
_
_
interest
.
rat~s.
__
.,,
.
_
. ~
~.,
"
·
.
:
:
:
The
'
recent Washington Con-
.
Pompidou, is cont4l,"\iirig
-
in
:
the
,
)
nations is f onned,
·-
:which tries
'
to
·
what
js
•
gooci
for
-
him. They can't
.
-
Satiro's
:
.
_
opinion of Marist
_
is
ference of oil consuming nations present crisis, a<!cording to
·
·
the cut o.fUhe:flow
·
onechnology to
·
perceive
·
or even undeq;tand the favora~~~; He
c~~
!t
~
"bal8!1ced
seemed to show, once again, the .American
-
press;
···
..
·•.·
·.
,:
'
·
•-
theArabs,
~
itisvery possible that
.
problems of working people s_chool.
Theydon tmd_octrin~te
irrationality of the men who work
·
-
But for "Pompe· a
·-
sous" (the, -the
.
oil Rroducers will find these !eying t? pay tJ:Ie~r mortgages and l~e t_he
,
state educational ~;
at the Quai d'Orsay, the complex French nickname
,:
for their
_
'Ieaksartdstopthemup.ltisafair pay their rents
:
" .
-
._·
,
stitutions .
.
They , ed~cate.
of government offices in Paris .
.
leading states111an; litei:ally
,
bet
t11ai
Qie ~abs can do without
But come on Satiro! How can However, if Satiro s V1ew of
With the formation of a bloc of oil
H
money pump .. ), as for de
··
technology longer than the West
-
you expect to ~ ?
·
Marist if fayorable, his view of
producing
couniries
that Gaulle,
this
intense nationalism can do without oil
.
Thus
,-
if
"I was told by a union leader
.
~?e co1:teg~,s . recent rash
·
; of
threatened to shut down the oil- was expressed more in the form
_
France followed the common oil that never in the history
-
of
s~reakings 1S le~ so. Satiro
dependent Western economies. of national interest; it was in policy
put
forth
at the American politics has it been so points out_ tha~ leg1Slators who
The logical step for these in- France's national interest to drop Washington _C_onference she ripe for a non-rich person to win. are debating increased
:
aid to
dustrialized countries would beto out of N.A
;
T.O. since she would
-
might end up with no oil People don't trust the run of the
~m~
private colle_ges will not~
form a block of their own, to
'
no longer have to rely on a resources at all, while the United mill politician or any politician.
.
mclined to vote .. for t~es~ m~
loosen the
·
Arab oil boycott by foreign power for her national States would hold a monopoly of People tpought that I was
a
kook
,
_
creases now
-
that
_
5.trea~mg has
withholding valuable technical security. In the oil.crisis, too, the the world's non-Arab oil. Then it in
1969
when
I-
said that day by become tQe
,
rage. Satiro adds:
resources. However, at the national interest and national would be reasonabl~ to apply.the day, hour by hour, we are
_
losing "I'd ra~er hav
_
e Marist ~own
Washington Conference this positionplayanimportantrole. It theory of the Gaullist fear of our rights. They're not laughing
for
helpµ1g to expand horizons:
united front was
.
not fully must be recognized that the American
_
domination,
for
·
any more. Watergate has shut than for the antics of 'free
.
realized, due to the refusal of one United States and France are in
-
France would be dependent not their mouths:"
think~rs
.
"
.
..
-
country- France:- to participate very different positions
.
as on the Arabs, but on the U.S.,
a-
in the formulation of a common regards their oil resources. The nation with which, France has
oil policy and cooperate to break U.S. has a large internal oil- less friendly relations, than with
the Arab oil shutdown. Thus; producing capacity, with the oil the Arab
_
countries.
according to a number of fields of Texas and Louisiana,
If-alloftheaboveistrue;howis
American newspapers and and with a sizeable technological it
·
that the United States
.
got .
·
magazines, the French are effort, could exploit the resources eleven countries to follow what is
irrational; a good summary of to be found in Alaska and in
the
:
esiJentially an American oil
'
this view may be found in the bituminous schists
.
pf Colorado.
_
policy? President Nixon made a
.
February 25 issue of Newsweek, Furthermore, the U.S. exerts a pointed hint to the conference
.
the
'
article ent~tled '' Jobert's
_
powerful influence on the oil delegates with the statement that
.
Fury". Why, one may
well
ask,
-
producing countries of the "security and economic con~
would the French rish weakening Western Hemisphere, and can siderations are inevit;ably linked
the
_
Common
-
Market,
·
and count on the Venezuelan fields for and energy cannot be
.
separated
angering the Americans in some time
to
come.
.
.
from either.JtA statement which-
'
pursuing such a policy?
.
.
France, however, is alinost m'ay be translated
·
to meanJhat
·
-
The most popular
·
explanation entirely
·
dependent on the Arab ·the United States might- cut
its
refers
back
to the foreign policy suppliers, and probably will
be as troop
•
levels iri
_:,
Europe
if
the
of former French president long as oil plays a major role in Europeans
·
did not
·
cooperate on
Charles de Gaulle,
:
who sup-
the French energy
_
industry.
-
energy policy: with such
-
a
_
with-
_··
posedly was afraid
of
any sort of R~ing this, the French have drawal of American
-
froops,
-
the
_·
relations with the United States,
_
tried to cultivate a friendship R ~
would supposedly
.
hav~
.
·
.
.
fearing
-
the domination of such a with the
•
Arabs,
-
_
breaking free run
_
over Europe
·
with theh·
:-
·
-·
superpower wider the pretense of diplomatic relations with
·
Israel · large
;
·
East
·
European armies.
.
·
--
protection against the Soviets.
It
as early as 1967. On the basis ·of. This
-
American Jhreat worked
o
·_
is in this
.
light that one can
uil-
this friendship, France has been· almost
~
perfectly:
_
.
ooly
·
France
'
derstand
·
the French refusal to able to negotiate
.
a
.
number of was not coerced into backing
the
·
:
_
sign the nuclear
.
nonproliferation
.
separate oil cootracts with
dlf.
~erican position.
,:
Why?
Since
treaty
_
in
1963;
since the French
_
f~rent
:'
~bcountri~,
'
'
and
'
has France
•
wil)drew
.
.
fr<m N.A.T.Q,
:
.
·
did not · trust the Amel'.lcan
.
.
thus
_
been able
to
assure
:
_
her ~here
·
hllve · been
_
no American
_
.
nuclear fOl'.ce
.
in th.,Sl
_
event:of)1
_
:··
su
_
pi>Jies
;
.
f
_
<?r·
,
_
som
_
e time·~ the'..troo
.
~on
_
,
F
__
~enchso
_
_
n,
,
an
_
~-so
_
·
.
·
-_
~e
·
.
Russian attack on
Paris.
And
in
· ..
future. It:is
·
true that this
.
is
a
'
Amencans
.
had
,
no
·
blackmail
-·
.
.
·
•
i:;
.
W!rib~tti:~W~;;rtfy
.
.
~~,
b~
·
Jtt:g~rerJ;-pc;~
-:
•
:
~~~
-
.
i~::~:
!t~=
,
.
-
Organizatioµ (N
:
A.T;O'.) ~fusing
.
:
that
-
has i(chance,
:
of succeeding. :
-
,
in~~tc1~,haye certain
_
! ~ ~
,
·-
to
:
be
dependent :..On American
.
Dllring the
·
recent
·
boycott
;
thel'e
.
·
points
to
it, after
.
all.
·
·
·
-
forces/ for Fr~nch
/military,
\
were11
nwriber
.:
ofoJl.''leaks~!;
'
oil
/
·
·
,,
,
;:
·
i
'
'
,: · . '
,·
·.
'
,
:
'
·
,
_,
:,-· :
·
defense.
It
is
thus
'
this
intensely
'
·
that
was
leaving the Persian Gulf
_
. .
·
'
·
..
'
,
•
•
,
#
•
•
. : . ·
•
•
~
•
•
:
•
•
'
•
,
-
. .
•
•
• • •
•
..,
•
.... ,
,
•
•
-
-
•
I
•
-
-
~-
-
--
-
---
~
---··-~--
-
-
-
·
-----·
-
-
-
--
·
-•-
·
•
-·
·
·-·-·-
·
··
----
-
--
-
--
--
•-·•-
-
·
··
-
·•
··
··
.
.
-•··
·•
'·
:. Satlro
Kazollas,
~ndJ-~
: ..
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
·.
.
.
....
-
.
MARCH 14, 1974
THE CIRCLE·
PAGE 7
·Announcements
The.English Association wishes
~o draw the attention of students
interested
in
writing to the
Writer's Guild
of
the Mid-Hudson
V
~ey. '!,'his is an organization of
wnters
m
the Poughkeepsie area:
who meet on the second Thursday
of each month to read and discuss
the !ork of its members. The
m~tin~s, which take place at the
UrutarI.aD
Fellowship Church on
Sou~ Randolf Avenue at
8
p~m.,
are info~tive and friendly.
The
e~phasIS_ IS on helping fellow
wnters unprove · and market
their creative work;
Financial aid applications and
Any student who has not picked
financial statements (Parents'
th ·
Confidential Statement and up eir class ring may do so by
Aide Sees Nixon
As
''Artful
Dodger''
either contacting Bob Sammon
Student's Financial Statement) (Dieges and Clust Represen-
~reavailableatthe
Financial
Aid tative) in Gregory 103 or Nancy
Office.
by Ray Barger
accountability, while Nixon
rejected it.
Any student looking for Fletcher (Balfour Represen-
financial aid for 1974-75 must tative) in Leo 219•
Friday night,
a
crowd of 1,000
Schlesinger compared Nixon's
heard Arthur W. Schlesinger
shunning of accountability
to
the
denounce President Nixon as
saying in "Love story": "Being
hedging
his
duty to be held ac-
President means never having to
countable for
his
actions and the · say you're sorry".
. Anyone interested
~
visiting is
welcome at the meetings. The
guild _is seeking authors of any
. age, but young writers are
particularly encouraged to at-
tend. Visitors may come to three
meetings without charge at
which they are free to read their
-work to the group for discussion.
After three meetings, those who
wish to join the guild are required
to_ pay_-a membership fee. of five
_ dollars for one year. -
have an application · and a .
financial statement on file in
order to be considered for aid.
The co-ordinators of Poets and
Painters have announced that
Joseph W. O'Brien
will
visit
Marist Thursday, March 28th, at
1
p.m. ·in.the Fireside Lounge .
The topic of
his
Gallery talk is:
Paint. - Poems - .Potentialities.
Mr. O'Brien is an.innovator
in ·
.
the integration ·of poetry and ·
painting.
His
works
will
be
exhibited in the Gallery Jrom
March
25 -
April
20. .
.
All
students and members of
the community. are
.
invited to
attend.
activities of
his
Administration.
Nixon's fear of the press, and
The former Presidential aide
ultimately
his
own
ac-
and Pulitzer.· Prize winning
countability, is shown by the
author spoke in the Vassar
relatively few press conferences
"· Chapel on "The Presidency and
he has had, Schlesinger said.
. the Press". -
.
"Franklin
D.
Roosevelt held
- Schlesinger viewed the role of
more press conferences in his
the press as "central"
-in .
the . first three months in office than
maintenance of Presidential Nixon held in .
his
first four
accountability since it operates years," noted Schlesinger.
between the "rulers and the
The former aide sees electronic
ruled".
media as a safe way for
However, Presidential regard Presidents
to
get ideas to the
for the press has steadily people in that it would not entail
deteriorated, especially since anything more than a dramatic
- Franklin
D.
Roosevelt,
presentation of a well~prepared
Schlesinger said: Most recently,
speech; no unexpected reporter's
Johnson resented, the need for
questions or anything else un-
- - - .;_ - ~·li:li"ii:Hi:Jtf:Jr:·=·=-nfiU'o.tiif='
planned.
1
.
~
lh~htitimpiclcil\lviiJivnii-----7 . - - - - - -... - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
,,Jn~
1
ikU:'~
~~P:~:ce
git~es
th!
I
.
Hyde
Park .
I
THE MALE
.
EGO
Presidency,hesaid.
I _
. .
_
. _ ,
-
I
Sdiac!tle.singer feelsb~at this false
I
A ·
7\.
T
S
·
me
unage com med
with
the
I
.
·
rm_
.y·
. . · -
1
~
.•
a .. v
...
Y. -·
tore.
••
BARBER-
&
StYLING
SALON
major political parties decline.
make "the President stand forth
I
10
01_
(AttheBeverageCenteronRt.9)
I
EXPE.RT RAZOR
&
LAYE.R CUTS
as the central focus" to the
I
7.0 ..
OFF ON
ANY
PURCHASES!
I
people even afte;.· a "bad dream"
L
JUSTBRING,THIS AD w:rTH You AND coME IN BY MARCH 1s 19 74
1
FORAPPOINTMENT:
THEMALLATHYDEPARK
like Watergate.
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
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.THURS. NITE: NIGHT IN THE RAT
..
·
.
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....... ~-'PRE:V,ACATl?N/tRl"Y! .· .~.
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~ '
.
'
·.·
..
.
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.. ·P~4R·K
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·• .
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. '
'·
' .
...
. .
:. ' .
'
.
...
.
..
•
I
i
,
L
PAGES
THE
CIRCLE
MARCH 14
1
1974
Trackmen Tie
-
.
For
.
11th
.
Place
their best times of the season in
.
Lacking a strong and healthy the two-mile when they hitl0:27.5
·
one-two long jmnp punch due to and 10'42.7 respectively.
some key injuries, the Marist
Pete VanAken and
Phil
·
indoor track team could manage D' Amato
·
did great
in
the soot
only a tie for eleventh place in the put. VanAken set a new freshman
22-team
field
.
of the 21st Amual standanffor Marist with a heave
Collegiate Track Conference of41'
11"
while D'Ainato, another
-
Indoor Championship.
·
Toriy freshman, recorded his best
Wilger scored
·
all three Marist throw
·
ever with
the
lS
pound
·
points by placing third in the mile weight at
39'
2". Coach
Len
Olson
walk and setting
a
new school was very pleased
.
with
·
the
record in
his
time of
.
7:50.8.
.
t
_
remendous progress _of
•
both
wm
Marlst catch
sight
ohmfurled
~alls
this
spring?
·
Tim
Murphy, suffering from an men. Dave Schools ran the 60
.
ankle
injury, could not clear 6 yard li.igh
_
hurdles in 8.9 seconds
feet
in
the high jump and
·
did not also for the Mari&
·
thinclads:
_
Lac"
.
r
·
os
·
s
·
e·. Be' c
-
o
·
.
I l l
.
e
·
s
·
_
v
-
·a
··
·
·
r
·
·
.
·
·
s
_
1·1y
·.
;~;~f!:;~
_
f~;1i~ul
_
..
1 n
_
· -
: ~ ~ : :
,
an~ea~::~~~~in~;:;t~:!
.
.
.
. .
-
.
·
_.
·
·
·
.
.
Jump and did not make the finals. were beset in
.
some
of
their goals
.
·
.
·
·
·
-
·
·
·
.•
·
·
:
_
•
·
·
.
·
_.
__
.
.
.·
.
.
'
He was the defending champion due
to
injuries, they nevertheless
_
. .
j
. .
prove to be competitive in its
.
MikeSecone;PeteVanacore ~d
..
in
both
:
events. FredJframpe, did accomplish
.
several
of
their
.
. by
Bill
Capozella
tqugh sched!Jle,
.
.
Mike Gentile, who will add depth ~ho had pla~d second las~ year :marks. They had
_
the first
.
win-
·
.
.
·
,
.
.
·
.
Lacr9S5e
IS
~e of
.
Pt~
fastest
.
to the
§<luag.
· ·
.
.
_
.
.
m ~e long Jump?
als~
~d DC?t ning dual~meet:season ever in
-
With the ever~hangmg athletic games PlafOO' on
~wo
.
f~t. The
.
.
Lacrosse offers simething for 9ualify
fo~
1:f,e finals wit~ his beating Io~a arid
_
KirigitPoin
_
t for
program at Marist, the Lacrosse game consists of ten players on every spectator
·
.
It has high
.
Jump of 19
11 .
Krampe sprmted the first tiines ever. They also set
team will compete a~ the varsity
·
·
each team. The three attackmen scorin
-
consta~t
-
h
-
.
.
the60 in 6.9 to Murphy's 6.7
in
the eight records during the season
,
level for the fgst _time this year. are
_
the
,
major offens~ve players actio/and. lots of
·
ooJWco~f:t
.
qualif~µ1g heat~. Neither one including:
600
yard
l'.Wl
.
(Dave
The
teani
l!as,e:mted as a club res~nsib~~ for
-
~or~. Th~ The 1974 Red Foxes
-
are lookin · made ~t to
_
the finals.
•
. .
.
Schools
_
l
:
19.1);
:
.
Two Mile Run
sport fo~_thepast two years. TJle pos!tions_ are
_
bei~g filled
_
.
by
·
for
-
a stron
-
t no t
·
-
g
·
Mm:ist
-
did show
.
so~e. bnght
·.
(Fred Kolthay 10:03.5),
60
-
yard
reasonf~r the chaµge to varsity seruo~ tn-<:aptain Bill ·Egan, who
,
•
Mwt's ne!.
v~~
:o:pp~rt
-
_
.
spots m the meet, despite its poor
.
high hurdles (Dave Schools
8.6),
s~tus
this
year was, accordingJ<t starred at Brookl)'ll·.
Prep,
and·
·
._ _
.
__
•.
_
•
. _
.
·
showing. Wilger did a great job in mile
walk
(Tony Wilger
.
7
:50.8),
AthJetic Director
Dr
.
Howard seniors Jack
:
Fagm{ and Jeff,
.
-.
_
:
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
.. __
·
.
.
.
the mile walk where he had only
.
880 leg
of
relay (Mike Duffy
Goldman, "the strong
:
support by
'
,
.
Mullen
;
:,
'l'here
·.
:
ar~
<
tnr
·
ee mid-
<
:
BI~~~)
\
~~t,~u~
·
.
·
:
:
.. .
.
_
placed
-
f9urth last year .
.
Thf
'
2:09.or two-mile walk (Tony
_
·
the
-
players who had
.
originally
·
field~rswmftraveJthefulllength
·
fro1npa~e?
<
·
_
'.
'..
-
.
.
>
. ·
competitionwasevenfiercerthis Wilger
.
_
16:34) Sprint Medley
initiated the sport at Marist and
·
oUht((ieJd playing
.
ooth
·
offense
.
. ~r. Bick,f!~ . thefefore;
·
ex-
:
year. Gary Slavin improved on
•
<
1:telar
>
(Daye Schools;
.
.
Mike·
·
that much of the equipment had and
:
de(ense
.
Each
·
team
·
has
per~ented
__
with
:
-
diff~rm,t ap-
his time
-
when he recorded
·
a Sainto.mas, Tim
.
Murphy
·
and
alr~dy been p~hased by the
·
sev¢ral midfield
'
liri~s
i:
which
,
proa~~
t9
gradin~
._
and
,
m one
_
9:04.5. Dave Schools broke his
·
MikeDuffy
_
3:56
.
5) andthefresh-
school."
·
.
· _
_
_
..
alternate pµtying
:
'
tune
·
on the exp~r~me~t J?any_ students ownrecordiifthe600yardrun
·
as nienshotput(Pete
;
VanAken41'
.
Last
season, the-team under field ~ue
·
to the
·
~rge extent or re~1v8$1
.
grades I'!lngmg
~r~~
B he ranl:19;1. Fred Kolthay ran
Jl").
::
..•
_ _
_
_
·
·
.·
·
•..
•
·
Head
·'
Coach Jeff Behnke~ and field area they must- cover. toA,t
_
hisresultedmthec;J:?,tic1sm
two good races again, placing
Thesemenarenowreadyfora
Assistaµt
~
_
Coach Ray
.
Panisp,
..
Starting at these po,sitions will be fr~m Dr.
'
Kirk and
·
.
Dean
·
_
Ls;
-
·
sixth in
~
the mile with a time of
·
challenging spring track cam-
posed a 2;.s record. Behnke's·first
·
senior
·
Jim
·
Donnelly, Doug P~etl'.a
.-.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
. "'.
.
.
·
:
·.
·
4:~.9, within two seconds of the
.
paign which
.
begins on Tuesday
year
as
a varsity coach at Mari.st Hampel and steve
·
Ryan
.-
-
Tri-
·
<Jn
~e
..
bas~
of
wha.t~s
been
Marist record and recording a ~pril
!6,
against
:
Sieria College in
.
is
the
culniinatton
of
several captain
·
:
Matty
-
Rogers
,-
•
Dennis
·
h~ppenmgJo
·
him and ottiers like
..
-10:27.8
in
the two mile later. Bill a night.
-
:rrieet under the lights
-
in
. ·
years of personal sacrifice
;
.
wne~
·
Patierno
·
and
'
Jim
·
Cassarir
.
p~y ~ ;
,
Mr
:
B~ckley
,
believes
-
-
~t
.
Krempel
:
and Jim
•
Mceasland had Albany's Bleecker Stadium.
h~ served in an unpaid capacity.
-
the -defensive
:
positions. Tending
_
the progr~S1ve thl-~t at:Mar1St
:
·
·
·
.
This year
.
the team
,
will play a
·
the
·
nets
this
seasori for the
•'.
Red has ''exh~usted
?
·
itself''·
·
He
· .•
.
.
riine
·
.
gam~ scliedule.
-
The
·
first
.
_
Foxes
.
'.
will:·. be
:
.
trifoaptain
'\
Jolut'
.
J>.0¥1~~
.
o:~~
.:
~t'.)>~~
·:
Mr;
-~~a.re
·
.
.
H •
1.:.....
-
-
·
.
·
· :
t~~:cr:t
!l
;r~
/
t
'.
·,
Ut
1
~3:3~
:
t!~ra,2t
-
:
:~~i~fl~
8
;
,
-
~
r
m
r
,
:
~;i~
t\!
~1~T
-
~~k1®~
/-:
~ii~:raw{
.
.
.
/
.
,
ff1gi1
: .
.
-
.
a
·
gainst Montclair
state
on
_
.
the
. ::
·
one
-
.
oL the
·
bright
·
freshnian
<
·
tea<;~er.s•
:
F~eFIIlor~
{
tti.er.~.1s
·
· · ·
•
lower field
:
•,
. ·
_•
·•
.
~<
" ·
:
.
'
prosp¢cts for
:
Marist-Lacrosse;is
·
l
:
:
lack
:~
o(
_
fenµ~t
.
!omen m
:
o
..
:
.
.
Ac;cording to Coach
·
Behnke's, Jim
· ·
McCue; who
·:
is one
.
of
:
the
•
structors at
,
~ar1st; ~1ckl
_
ey fe~s
•.
n
·
this year's
.
team
is
·
the
.
. _
b~ better stickhandlers on the
-
team. that M8!~
·
UJ
·
not fa~ng
u:p
,
to
its
.
..
_ .
.
· ·
.
.
··
·
•
·
Marist has
:
. fielded and should Other experienced returnees
·
are respons1~ilities dealing with the
·
··
·
·
·
·
-
·
·
·
·
.
''heritage both at
:
Marist
·
and in
s
·
·
'
·:
CRC>SS.WO~r,POzzt:
:
E
·
:
_
::;~c:~~~{acism
:
-'
and male
'
.
P
·
orts
·:
Whatever the
~
final outcome,
ACRO~'"
1.
Froli
·
s:Yotin
'
·
·
·
hog
·.
11.
Greek
·
.
market
-
.
place
·
·
-
12.
Old
Turk
:
.·
.
ish gov-
.
ernm
e
rit
13.
British
·
shop
,
_
keeper
_
1,5.
Break
.
.
bread
16.
Garbed
17
.
The one
-
. ·
·
boss rig
18.Astaor
·
Fala
21.Piaying
·
marbles
24.Atmos
'
ph!)re
25 •
.
Head•
·
qua~ters
for
Holmes
2. Indian
.
. ·
city
.
·
3. Frost, for
-.
example
•
•
··
,
.
4.Priorto
5. Cattleman
'
G
(
Flciral
'
·
• ·
.
arrange-
·
·
_
·
ment
··•-· _
"I.
_
Under~
.
world
characte1·
8
.
Killer
'.
whale
.
9.Had·
· .
dinner
10. Thrice
·
·
.
(mus,)
--::-
14
.
Goblets,
·
vases, etc.
·
I"/.
Opposite
·
of dele
·
18.
,
Voca\ ·
rendition
..
19. Russian
'
city
.
3W3H
.
.
-
~~
-
~
-
:
Mr.
Bfokley's presence will
·
be
.
missed
here at.
Marist.
Perhaps
n<>t
.
among his ow_n
·
peers,
but
·
by John Tkach
,.
undoµbtedly
·
among the students,
·
w~ere
_
h~ s~rved not
'
only as
·
a
·
ODDS AND ENDS
.
.
.
_
_
.
·
teach~r! but deaU
-
with st
.
udents
·
.
~Y.
the time you-will be reading this; the first intercollegiate com-
.
ht
.
a
)
i~9ue and
_
per~nal way.
.
.
petition for women·will hav~ been completed. Iain naturally referring
_
..
_
.
.
_
·
·"
·
to the basketball
-
game with ~o~t
s_t
Mary'
_
s last rues$y night.
-
ACMHA, Continued
.
,
.
_
.
_
.
-
R~gardless of
_
the ~core,
-
Mar~t is
-
still coming out of the game a
_
fr_om page
~
-.
·
.
_
.
.
·
·
·
.
·
·
._
· -
wmner. To the Marist community this game represents the beginning
for
·
Vassar,
this
would cause a
.
•
of women's
.
in~rcollegiate athletics. To Lorraine
Cou1din
the coach
:
pl:'oblem for
:
a Marist student.
·
and or.ganizer of the ~earn, this_ represents just the
.
sim!t of a full
·.
~~MHA
.
·
,
program
wa.s sch~ule of :women's intercollegiate athletics.
.
.
·
.
.
·
·
·
20. word
'
31. "God's
origm~ted
·
through
. .
.
tpe
·
Juan Cam1>0s, Marist's resident golf pro, reminded mtfthat anyone
·
•
·
with
~-
·
·
.
little...;;."
0
Assoc1ated_
,
College
-
of ~id-
interested in competing oil
the
varsity golf team should come to an
.
crasher
,
,
32
.
Hillock;
Hudson, which acts asa medi~tor organiza~on~l m~ting today,
_
Thursday,
-
March 14th,
·
during the Free
21. Not:up
.
_ ·
. .
.
knoll
·
.
.
-
for
all
these colleges. The office,
•
Slot Pt:nod m Donnelly ~om 210.
·
·
.. ·
_
.
.
•
·
·
·
_
.
·
~t
~f~~t:i-
. ·
'
·
~f
g~~~
city
-
·
~tt
,
6 Vallssa_rtRoad; runs maTh
_
~Y
Well after a long_ winters
_
nap,- the doc~ are in the water and that
24.Attempt-
•
._
.
.
employed
-
in er-;co egia e.programs.-
eir means only
_
one
thing.
T~e start of the old shell gatne;
Unless you
ingto be
35.High
.
-..
.
_.
_
goal JS to allow area s~dents to hav~n•t
-
~!ready gu~sed
,
.
I'm
-
t~ing about Marist's oldest sport,.
-
_
esthetic
.
.
jumper's
·
-
get
the
.
lllOSt o~t of their college
·
crew. This
.
season will start
.
off
with an
.
extra added attraction for
26. Sll)all drum
.
·
barrier
·
.
,
'
·
education
/
_
·
··
0
f•
·
·
.
_
..
.
those
_
loyal rowing fans,
.
and that is
.
the appe.arance
.
otColuinbia and
3G
.
Swiss
·
·
:
·
·
. :
<
Jeanne
.
~odewald,
a
counsellor Syracuse on the
-
H~~on for_the
first
t~e
·
since J947.
:
The varsity and
3
i}~'::giit
·
•
at th_e Mid-Hudson
·
office, com-
•
freshman-heavyweights will. be r.QWmg against these
·
two major
as.Nonsense
:
·
.
_
mented
.
,t
ha~ ma'!y of the college sch9<>ls
·
while
the. light\Veig~ts wm
·
face a pair of tough
8
9
.
•
problems
,
are trymg to
,
.
b~
customers
-
m Rhode-- Isljmd and Kmg's Point,
.
Coaches Austin
.
(2
wds.)
_.
1-:-
11
,.......,~-+---+-...;...i---
.
·
2'7
•.
Give
off
28. Bird's
·
·
,
.
,
neckap-
overcome.
:
College pr~si~ents _Lenehan, and McHugh, have reserved comment until after the doubl~
meeteyerytwomontbstod1SCuss workout sessions ilext
•
week. .
.
.
,
•·
.
.
.
·
,
, ·
.
.
pendage
29:
·
Unter-
,
..
. ·
.
Linden
.
:fo.
Molly'.
.
.
.
·
.
coddle
·
:
31.
Of
air-
.: ·
craft
.
32.King
.
.. •
•
·._
(Fr.)
.
35. Shrike
.
.
.
(2wds.)
-
.
39 .. Macaw
··
· ·
'
.
·
40. Kinder
:
•
:
::;:<<::
:
!t~!~dr;
:
.
_
.
.,_..
_
-,-+----ji----,;;.i.._;...,
:
:.-
.
. .
41
,
Mature
.
~~
36
•
31
·.
•
·
.,-
42.
Subject
..
.
i
·
1::·
·
~
·
"'1
'
--,-+--+---+-
.
.. :
-
.
·
::_:
.
:<
rio:;i
/
'
<
3
~
-
.
,
,
l
;
Baseball
_- .
.
.
t::'\:.l-t---t-i--+--
.
:
_
·
J
backstop
•
.
-
-
~..,.___,,_.._.,.i...; .....
•
-
:_
.
:.
,•
'
•,·,
:
.,
•
.
.--:;··
.·
.
1
•
what advances
:
cQlild
:
be
_
made in
_
INTRAMURAL ANNOUNCEMENT
.
:
_
.
,
-
·
·
>· ·
.·
_
.
•·
..
.
:
•
.
riew directi9ns
•
_and
·
also
·
to
/
Anyolle
.
interested in competing
iii
the Intramural Badminton
.
·
-'·
·
-
:
arrange ~ooperati:ve
.::;
~rograms T~111~ent sho~d sign up in the Intramural Office (D-216) deadline
~
.
tha~ share resources
;:,
m an a~- for
_
sigrung up w~ be Thursday, March 14;·T
.
he tournament will last
. :
tempt to get the Colleges working
:
Jhree
;
.
days startll}g
_
at 6
:30
each evening .
.
.
_
·
..
..
_
·
_
•
•
•
.
._
_
· •
·
.
_ .
:
togeth~r;. Dutchess and _
,
Vassar
.· --
Monday:
'.
(March ~) Men's
>
Singles; Wednesday:
·
(March
c
27)
<
,·
·. have 1I1Situ~
.
a committee
__
.
to
·
_
-
0
Women's
·
Sm~les;
·
Thu_rsday:
.
(March
28)
.Mi~e~ Doubles (Cired).
~
.
:
study sched~e chan~es, to
~
to .. · Con~r~~t~o~s are
!-I1
order. f<!r.$d Kosinski
.
and Norman Reis for
·
,
move
·
toward-- a
.
cooperat~ve c~pturing
.
~nd,ivi~µalt1tles last week: l{osinski
-
won the free throw
.
college calendar
,
·
.
_
contest-while
Reis captured
'.
the
.
one-on~one title.
<. .
· ·
·
·
. .
.
_
Qf ~e
-~
~5
-
~
.-~
·
stude~~~
:_
who
.
~e Wl~ER_NAME[?
:
MAR~T
:
A.~T~
..
OF
.
T}JE
'
~Ek
_
.
,
-
_
_ ,
ih~olved
:
.
in.
~CMHA;
._
30 attend
Tolly Wil~er, a sophomore from Huntington
;
New York, has
been_
.
:
:,
._
_
·
.
·
-:
V ~
:
:
whil~
~~1st
o
comes
::
in
·
na~ed Marist Athl~te of the WeekforJhe week ending Ma·rch 9th.
i
·
. ·
.
.
•
•
•
-:1
secon~
'°:_
Pl~
.
c~
_-
,·
w1th
::
~
a
_
bo-ut
,
2
_
~
.
.
_
·
J?ilge~,-a
mem!>ef
~Uhe in~oor
.
t~ckteam; broke
:
his own school ·
· ·,
/
_
~tu4~n.t~
;C'~
·
Jeann~
·
·
sa
W
,
·
_
the rec~r~
'}
D
J~e
mile
:
waI~
,:
durmg
·
the
:
.collegiate
·
.
Track
'
Conference
.
.
.
.
;
pos
.
s1bih_t_y
:.;.
o~
:
,
,
~1ght3r
·
c~oss
.
Cll:a!Dpio~hipiJ
.'
atQu
,
e~ni; 9<)~lege
/:
WilgerJin~~~ t~d
iri
:
the
:
race
·
:
··
/
"
~~g~~,~i90
~
if
:
an
mtercoll!giate
.
and ~as
:
the_
~~~y
-
~m
scor~r
:
as
.
·
!'dari:st
;
finishe~ a
:
disappointiiig ··
-.
i
'.
~
~WI
seryt~
coµld
~
est~bli~ed,
_.
el~venth
'.
T~
.
JS the s
,
econd
:
tune
this
year that Wilgefllas received
.
something
:-
that
.
the
·
Vassar
·
Ad-
,
_
thJS
_
award.
;
~
·
:
:-:;::-:-
,
>-
·
·
·
·
·
,
_.
·
·
•
.
:
->
;,
. . .
..
·
. '
ministration is
'
;
corisldering.
:>
;.
·
. '
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
:-
.
; ·
- - -
·
.
·
·
-
.
.-.
.
.
, .
.
. •
.
. --
.
:-
.
.
.
..
·
,
·
•_.
._,.·
·
.
·,:--:
.
,.
,
'
.
,
' '
,
,,
·
. .
.
I
••
•
•
'
•
• :
,
• '
J
•
•
. •
•
;._
.
~
·~
·
-
'
~'•
'
·
,
.
'
.
...
-
.
-
_•,:
..
.
..
·
.
.
.
'
_
.
,
.
.
·•
. .
'
.
"!
·
.
...
.
.
.
·
..
:.:
,
-
:
..
:
.
.
12.7.1
12.7.2
12.7.3
12.7.4
12.7.5
12.7.6
12.7.7
12.7.8