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Part of The Circle: Vol. 12 No. 11 - May 2, 1974

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VOLUME .12, NUMBER 11
MARIS~
COLLEGE •. POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
F ....
:i
MAY2, 1974·
.Styden.t~ w~o _Pi'.op~se,dCNSF:·J)rogram are, iri the back;Mike Pantiliano,JoeAb s, .·
.
~ni:LL9u,Graf1ano: m·thefor~gro~_nd,
Pet,~r.Pless, PattyTillou,>and;Ginny,=Alb/n~ ...
Task .Force··.
Fi11.ishes '"Input"
· InVestigation · ·
. byMikeHarrfgan
action.
We \\'.ill
be'.•
working hard
to . realiz~ our · goal of strong
.. - .President
Linus
Foy's Student.• student voice in. decision-
Task Force, fortned after< the · · making."
. . . . .
.
schedule .· controversy;
has
The report on the Development
:finished its investigations into the
Office · recommended. ·. that
possibilities of increased.student programs under· independent or
· input
in·
decision-making;. ·
·
work study be organized for
The Task Force has written
a
students ~o work on.publicity.
report·. which addresses itself to
. As
·
for. ··the Office of the
the ~in: ~reas of the
·
_college . -Academic Dean, it · was recom-
administration; ·President Foy J!l:en~ed th.at there be equal
has
called this report a
1
'working
representation for faculty and
paper", and plans more meetings students on the Academic Affairs
'with the group in order.
tQ
discuss .. Co.mµiittee/
and
student
the report.
<
:
·
representatiori on the Committee
. Not pre~entis Harry Geldes.
·
·
·
·
·
·
'
·
·
. : The report of the committee · for Faculty Development;
_contains .
.
numerous . reconi- . Recon:unendations for- input in
m~ndations; ea·ch"·i:,ertaining;to a
~he Dean· of StuJlents office . ·
: specific.,'.. segment : of. the ad~
contained a student evaluation of
.
·
ministration ... Recoinmendations : the office, a feinale associate to
.- r_r· .a· ·-n· _ts·
.
rl•\7-en:
T.o ·M·a·
r·.-1·_-~-S--
:1·_--B.y·...
towards the: office:: of. the the Dean, and more formalized
'-7
"'7
President, include: . 1)..
a
-cori11nunic11tion ·with ·student
regeneration
.
of" the College ··• leaders. Included
in
this
section
· N '}
.
Council which was inactive ac- · were recommendations for the
. -·at~-
Q.·.·
.. _-..
-.c._.·1•_.·e
...
_.n
-
-...
·C
... ·· ..
e
... ... -
.
•.·.
v _
. . : ... .
,o
.. · ··• un· __
.a__
a·11·
o
.. n: .. -.:
..
cordingtothe committee, 2) the· .. Residence
,
Office. "'Members of
.
U
_
.I.~
U
.
~tu~ent Govel'IlllJent .. Pr~siµent
tpe residence authority should be
., ~r::::2
.iz~~~~~~•O::f,~~~?1~~~
..
~~it~~;·.Y~~~,
.··.T••·•· .•
·
·•··· ..
==~~~~~~•~~
..
s~:-~e
;~=rt~
_,
.
l '
' . .· ...
One·,, ..
fi~n!lred,i'~and::'--twenty
>'!'~\'.Aftet"ffi1{pr'i>p<iSS:1~wa'.s'
7
wfilteii·,:t,;'.ftiolo~y~"'i~,;t~.;:':g~~~ts,
t
rr, ;::1li~dinihlstrative
:
·coW1cil'~3)
Ci{.,
"
weeng·:stude11f ..
serv~~~·
~~
~
.
·.·.•·h!)llege:ethl'ourot'!_~ii;e;:co~~ry:~~studen~"'-.;corttacied::_-'sev~ral·~eii~'.-:
·
·:$cierice':~iiiar~;s''"°tli~;:~;~:~t~bieriilie(~t'.State;~oft~the,;',Cejlleg·irfracadi'riitcs::;;
•e
,;,Sr.,,,;,;~:i:',;;,?;,:_._ ..•
;
.. ·.. · aveti,
f
en_
:
"th
ei
~ti •...
°i'
se~elv~ . .
·yironmental' ag_fncies.
and; as~~d -
,students-'.
~r,e n-~~-~evalii'ating .
Addte~f-'/
'.'.~y:~/the·:
:
}:Coi~ege , :'~
?I'!i~;f~port)iso~cpiis"l_ij~tiid}tli~
. gl'.an
~oIIl.
e . a ~na .. cumce
if
.these agenc1e~ .woµld
be
:m-
applicatiomrfrom:students from
p_r~1d~nt.
> . ·. : · · . :: . : ,,
bu~uness .
0
e>ff1ce,
,;lµ}d:,:~uggested
:{Jundation, and Marist
IS
one of t~rested in endorsing _the• cause. . othe_r,:schools,. and
-they·
hope. to • . .president F<>y expressed f~ars · . that b~iness majors -:c~uld
be ·
Wih
th. bl
f
.
.
Stude~tsthensentthispr~posal have a total of'lO,studentsina ·th!1t.these recomm~ndat1ons
usedto_mcreasetheeff1c1en.cyof
.·.
~ . . . e e P o a stude!}t to Washington, D.G; w~ere
1
twas volved in thisj>roject.
> . : ·
:
.
rrugh~ place
•_itoo
much- of
a
that <>ff1ce, !1nd that r~ults of an
a~vise>r, nilmely. Dr. _I14alvm approved.:Afthough-.the proposal· .• The project,will begin on
·
Ma
burden on the Student Govern-
ann~l audit be published for a
Michaelson,. ~udents . or1gmated . asked for.$18,000, Marist received 27 and last for approxunately l~ .ment President"> He e~lained
''more.
con~cious ·
se
If-
. a_prop~salwhich enab~es them to g!'ants up to $12,000: .. ,
weeks.. Students will . live , in that ~e Trustees meet
11.1
full
evaluation''. ThlS section also
st!idY. the-Hudson River. They
The:. seven_ students who Gregory House or off campus; conurutte~ .only abou~ twice a
caµ_~d
.for
~uden~ _on the Ad~
willres~arch~eavymetals;plant orgamzed .this proposal are: Each student wiirreceive three year,. but that variou:- sub-
IIlllllstrativt:Councllmorderth~t
. fnd a ~ l
lif~,
and polluta~ts . Harold _.Gerdes, _Joseph Abys; and $80 per week for
his
work.
conuruttees work on different
stude~ts nught have a say m
.
. o'!l°d
m
the. rive~ .. Along with- Michael Pantoli
_
ano, Peter Pless, · One of the: students involved
areas.· Student·: Government spendµlg.
·this, -st11dents ,'YJ:ll s~~dy. ttie . Patty Tillou; wu· Gi'azi~no, ~and Joe Abys stated,. "It's.
a:
small r,resident Bria~ , Morris · ~id,
In general, President foy
R
. · ·· . . . ·.·: .- . . . : .
p ·
· .· •. . . : ~· . . · · ...
•••· ..
·
breakthrough for Marist,. but it
-Our . report_ is a w_orkmg
note~ that the report c~?tamed
rogralll..
s·· .-
,
ro . · · . _] .
may . help future .•• classes; and document While I recQgi_uze that nothmg_ . that was
earth-
.. ..
.
· . .,.·
. . .. . poseu
mayl>e ·students_of·other'
·
majors. many, of o!ir rec~m~endations _shattering'', ~nd that the
..-
.
·.
·
,•··
· · .
. ___ ,·
'.
to try- the same type of W()rk." .· ar~ susceptible to _adJus~ent. I
r.ecommen~ahons
seemed
___ •. .-.. . ._. ~ - . . . •...
.
. . .. ·_. . . ·
.
.. . _ . .· . ,_ . .

think they remam gwdes to
reasonable .
_lle1ore
.
-
-G~lloqUiunt~
]>yElizabeth~Ji.rio ' . -
·meeting•. this:~eidate-
·
need
Fairness Seen -As ~riority··of AAP
. \YOUld be _unique :
·
since few

,
-
· •
·
· -At the student colloquium held · collages haye full-fledgedocon-
1'lnrrsday in t~e·Th~atre,Jaculty .
.
centrations_orithe undergraduate
representatives emphasized• the level.'.',·,
·
.
. ..
.
·
·
by Cathie Russo
staff, ~nd the maintenance and
also.
desfral:)ility of iricluding;two new .. :· Mrs.- Gonzales. stressed -the
security staffs.
. .
. ·
.In the clerical,. security, and
__ programs
in
the curriculum.•
needJor_,~ilingual Educators in · •·'~}:lighest .on today's priorities
The_ Marist policy ·concerning' Ill;8intenartce~ffs,similar goals,
. ··· -The colloquiwn. was held-in schools, hospitals arid 'urban for W()men; higher than degrees, th~$e staffs is "to recruit, ap-
will be attained · through em-
order
·tQ
.give the departments -programs, s.inci( there a_·re five diplomas, or certificates; is fair pomt, retain, train, pro_mot_ e,_ and . ployee._ replacement. due to tur-
_sponsoring Jhese
·
prcigr~ms, miJiion ·
·
Spanish-speaking
in- .
treatment." -. ·· · ·
·
•. .
·
compensate employees in all
nover.
·
Bilingual
Education.C ·and·· ·dividualsAri the United.States;
· The Committee on Women at areas and at all levels of the
· The formulation of these goals
Paralegal
;
~tudies;•Jan., op-
.••~owever!•,-·she. :said; ''this Marist College· who submitted college without. discrimination
into' -the Affirmative Actiori.
p9rtunity
.
·to(answer
.
•·students', conceritration;_w'ould''=encompass · this stateI!}entin.their,March·n, because of race, ·color,religion;· _Program was due to thee(fort of
questions: before_ the prop<>sal
_ar.e
c1ll la
.
ngµ!:lge. :maj()rs : arid. is not report to the ~xecutive~_council, s_ex, ~ge, or national origin.)'·
Ms;_. Ann Hoyt, assistant to ·
voted ·up,Qii" thisc.we.ek
:
:by:·
the .· geared for Spanish majors only." are now in. the process of for-
· In promoting this policy, the · President Foy, and her, fifteen
·
Student Academi'ciCommittee
i·'.
Mrs~
·
,. •Nolan· clarified :t.the mulating the Affirmative Action· Affirmative Action Program ·is . member Committee on Women .
. and the F.'aculty.
i:,i.: _
.. · .
.
.

ques!~on of
'
certijic~tion in ·tms Pro_gram to fu_rther . p~omote developi!}g a data base on au job · This committee was formed last
: :.The
,·prograrns:for Bilm,guaL'· field:· She sta~d: :'
,
~Th·~re;is,no posi~ion,a_l e_qua~ty within_ the class_i~ications, examining all
November when President Foy
-Edticatton ,., is •·-. lleing ' joinUy". •. N~~York: Sta:te:cer:tif~c,atio_!Lin
:,.-Marys~
·
~_OllllllUlllty,~ . The AAP conditions. inv_ol~ed ·
i~
em~
called for · the formation .·of a :
sponsored,by·the department·of. Bd_1!}guaL\Educ~tlon; or
:
in· describes. -ac~iviti~s , . and · ploymen~,. id~ntifymg · areas of
commi~e to study the role of
· Modern .: Languages · arid ,. the tea~hing . Eriglish ,, as a·· second . progl'.ams at ~~t:which reflect· unde_r:utilization;· . and
·
develope
women at Marist, and
to
direct
, Teacher: EducaJiori
.
, Prograin. · . lang~g~; Ilowever, :
this .
con- .. · lbe:~<>llege's int~ntion
_to
assure . specific plans
to
O\!ercome these . attention
to
the problem affecting
· ~epresenting-:these/departments _. cen~ration /.wo.idd be·:;a, cl~finite •·· that
·
~qual . ·. emplc;>Ylll~nt op- :areas;·. and. develop· .n~erical - , 8!1~1- participation . in ... the . ac-
·- at.tlie colloquium were: Casimir enriclunent .for students .m the. po_r:tlll!1ti~ 8:re made _ayailable to. goals_ and tun~tabl.es.
·
tlVlties• of ·the college.
·
.
N~tkeli~, .. Maµrice .. ~ibeau, Teacher.Educ.ation Progr9:m. It. mJ.?
0
r
1~:
~r~up:_ m~b
-
~rs. and-·. 'Throu~
this
pr~cedure, .t~e
· :T~e
4ffirl!lative
Action
· America Gonzales and-Elizabeth would make.them_mor.e·desll'able :v.:omen.. . . ·
.
. . .
. college
will
be working toward·its , Program.-IS being .drawn up in
Nolan.
:
~·-
·
.·•_. ..
,~,.-> . .-
_
.
·
because. they.,wohld·:have
'
ad-··
Now
'
m __ :!ts·::-JJU_tia} ~g~-of gQ~l 9!:Provlding_·more op-- _compliance with'.'Executive
• . :According.
to
Mr:':Norkeliunas, · ditional preparatiofrand would be . d~~elopl!len~, • th_e
~
~
be p~rtu!}~t1es · f ~r women and . Order._- 112~6, :. whose· · main
;!
-, .·
there
'
is':a:·
reai. 'need ·for·. trained ·) better qualified.
't · :;· :·..::. : · · ,•. ·_: --.
.
;~YJ~ed--~to.
four· sectioµs. Each " ~ogties _
on its· administrative .-·:provision · is that institutions
' ·
· · people
'
.in
·
ittiilf area::. m(·said: :".:' The. progr~ ::_f~r·:-.,.Paralegal ~~on_-wi~ ·r~~er
to:
?ne·
.
. C?f ~e· · :-~~-p~of~ional"stafis,. creating : hoiding federal contracts have a
· -. •-~'Ibere are
extensive
opeilil1gs
in

:
Studies
is
being sponsoreii-by
the:.
four. ~jor
·
~ployee_,grou~ ·at. more o~ a ba~nc~
_
of:male -and ·.
written
plan of action
!'to
remedy
; thia~field--but'tfewj~ple ·:
t<> •
fill ,·~ Hjstory -, and
.
:-Politi~ ·

Science,:
Ma~-.-
th~. ~cti_on~,: ~ .
t.
fem_a~e ·: p~sitlon~ · on;'•lt~ :-~in-
~
effects of.~ discriinination
. these '/positions! ;;A--i program·.,.',:·
;3 · ,
·
, ·. "• ;··' '. : . ..
. ·.
·
·.
·
the
> .
acµnim 5tra~ive ' .. and ·,strµctiona~
·_staff.
with
~creased .
and~
p~ent-ffie ~ntinuation of
.
,-
·
<.
:Y,,,f;:r~<,
~
1,t~ :
1
--;:-,j•,
.
.. ,. _._·:·;
:::
·
•.::-•.:,•.~nt_~~':1
-
~.-on
~
..
5· , · ·
P.~~~~;
~ • : ~, .~erical:_-.effort
-
-to~rd-: ~ority>groups · any future discrimiriation.".
~
.. '
, .. ,
.'~:''.';•
•,:-
J
,~•
• • • • ~ ;
•. , •• ,.

• •
:·-.

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i

I


































































































































































·
Mr.
Robert Norman of the Communications oe·pan
.
merit
Norman Participates
In Broadcaster's
,
·convention·
byMaryMonsaert
creasingly respec_ted by mem-
of a BEA chapter in New York
hers of the broadcast profession. State with an inital meeting at
In order to strengthen the In relation
.
to other schools ~arist h,light be
.
helpful in
MA.y 2,
1974
Volunteers· Work
In
Departtnent
by
Debby Nykiel
.

Volunteers are presently
_
working
in
the Hyde Park and
If you are alert, observant and Poughkeepsie
areas.
·
The

feel you might be interested in
classroom setting often revolves .
te~ching,
the
Education around the volunteer. The
Departme1.1t has volunteer work teacher schedules time
.
for the
in Special Education.
.
·
volunteer to supervise and the
·
Mrs.
·
E. Nolan,
·
Director
·
of students come to depend on
·
the
. Education; hopes that in the volunteer's presence. Each
future the work will be equivalent volunteer has to give time faith-
of a three credit course. In ad~ fully, full-tifl:le, be prompt and
dition, there will be a more committed.
formal introduction in teaching to
Mrs.
E.
Nolan, feels the Special
follow up visiting and observing Education volunteer is being put
.
the classroom setting.
.
·
to
.
a test, "The volunteers are
.
A
group of sophom,ores who are testing themselves, \heir desire
involved
.with.
special Education to teach and gives them an idea ·of
have
.

had visits
.
arranged to what teaching is like. Some may
Special Education classes; which
.
.
find outthey don't like the
.
idea of
have requested volunteers: This teaching school."

group isthe first who will be able
.
Students aren't automatically
to get a full scope of the field in accepted as studeni teachers.
their college careers, .
if
they Both the student and· the college
chose to pursue it. At this point it examine the desire to teach.
is
·
too early
.
to tell what
.
the Teachers learn how to look at a
students' response has been
.
to
·
·
child and his education,
·
anci the
the volunteer work
.
·
teacher's responsibility,
·
.
.
·
Reynard Proves
Financial
Success
·
communication field at Marist,
.
represented; Marist was unique establishing Marist as one of the
,
Mr. Robert Nomian took part in
in the fact that we have turned better communication schools in
·
by Ray Barger
ceeded by his associate editor
the 2oth Annual Broadcasting our lack of facilities into an ad-
the state.
.
.
Mike Maloney.
.
Convention and 52nd Annual
.
vantage.
· ·
In
,
speaking with
.
Mr. Norman
Reynard
'74 will
surpass its
Dave Pristash
will
be photo
National Association of Broad-
Most · broadcasters said that about the convention he said,
"If
budget for this year, catapulting
editor for Reynard
-'75.
All other
caster's Convention in Houston,
"the
expansive (acilities
!
needed
-
I
had to ~haracterize the theme of from
·
a
·
history
·
of deficit
.
spen-
·
staff selections are still
'
being
Texas.
by the large midwesterncolleges my talk before the BEA, it would ding.
·
·
.
made
.
with
.
many positions still
-
While at the convention, Mr.
se~ve littl~ use to ~he
·
stu~~nt · ha':'e to .b~ that}he colle
_
ges and
_ _
Marist's yearbook,
$5500
in open
.
·
,
Norman delivered an address on gomg to _his or-her first p~sit10n umvei::s1t!es can provide the
~
debt, will better its
$8000
budget
···
The main thrust for next year's
·
"The
:
Broadcasting
.
Curriculum becaus_e i~ p4~Jhe student
_
i~t?}irl
.
e:'!{pertise
,
so
:
-~o~~ly
;
,
needed _by •by
$500 s.$1500,
aJJ~wing it to pay
.
book, Traube said,
"is
t~
open the
arid Cable" and served
as
a
panel
·
u_nreaJisti,~
~
an~
,
oft'!n,•
-
u{op1fm
.
, J;ap1f:
,
.,
.
.
c!?mPf]tpe~
:
{or
m-
.
:5omE1
.
pf
;.
its :lJills;
,
r
?
_
''> ./
:
_
.
:
·
:.-
yearboo.k_
up t!)
.
the e:'1tire Marist
member with other educators in situation .
.
.
Mai::ist student's
_
have stru~tional ~nd ~ultui::al . com-
.
.
:
Gary
,
Traube, Ed1tor~m-Chiefr
:- ·'
Commumty so that it
may
.
be a
discussfng the use.s of Cable T.v:
·
·
the opportumty to
.
.
actively
·
·
mumty service and this 1s the was
,
handed the job
.
no one else
:
representative
.
·
work of
:
.
the
in higher education.
-
Another ~articipate in the communication
.
onlY: effective way
.
Cable co~-
.
wanted. Many people wondered
if
.
school."
-.
·
.
.
.
_
.
.
r
~
·
·
.
,
.
.
.
,
~
~
r
'
, •
.

I I ; ,
;
IJ1ain
objective that he stressed field. Students have been
.
placed parues, pressed by commercial there would be
a
yearbook at au
.
The financial outlook
.
for
was an internship plan for first in
6
radio
·
stations,
2
:
daily competition and lacking trained this year.
·
Reynard
'75?
:
·
.
.
semester seniors and to discuss new~papers, and 2 caple

~o.m-
pers?nnel, can sery~
,
the co~-
_Traube attrib
.
uted Jhis year's
"We have proven ourselves this
the advisability of the internship parues,
as
well
as at advertising
mumty that grants 1t s franchise success to "general hard work .
.
year, "Traube affirmed. "Next
programs in the industry itself.
.
agencies.
.
in the first place. 1J:ie method by from my staff and the faculty
.
"
year we can shift our main thrust
The conference was beneficial
Another
:
good point that ~as y,hich the exp~rtise can be done
-
Traube
will
be traveling to from the financial aspects to the
in establishing Marist as a leader
·
brought out at the
:
_ convention 1s ;rom a particular department
.
Oxford, England next year for aesthetic and creative focuses of
.
in
the
internship field with the which would be beneficial to
·
through the
·
communication study abroad
.
and will be sue-
the yearbook."
--:
BEA (Broadcast Educators Marist was the establishing a department and passed on to the
.
·
Association), and as being in-
BEA chapter. The establishment community at large;"
Executives
Begin
New
Year
by Charlie Tackney
As a result of tlie April
11
elections; a new Executive
Committee will begin a year of
running activities, overseeing
budgets, and attempting to in-
crease student participation in
the student government. The
Executive Committee will "take
over" on May
1, 1974.
.
.
Elected officials Brian Morris
·
(President), Charlie Tackney
(Vice-President), and Brian
.
Morgan (.Treasurer) have held
several preliminary meetings.
One
-
meeting, on April
19,
resulted in the appointment of
Chris Wise as Secretary.
·
This week the full Executive
Committee will begin meeting to
.
discuss goals for
·
.
the coming
year.
.
.
'
Aderholt
·
Completes
Course
At
Institute.
·
by
Dian~
Petrus
·
week cram course, he arid the
All materials and fees
·
were

.
other attendants were brought up furnished
·
by
..
the
·
federal
Ronald D, Aderholt, director of to qate on the current safety laws government for the week
.
that the.
safety and security, has recently in reference to the OSHE Act of program was held;·
<
:
·
.,
·
>
completed training at the U.S.
.
1970
(Occupation SaJety and
·
.
.

Currently M
_
r'. Aderholt has"just
·
Department of Labor Institute at Health
.
Act} which states that finished setting up·
a
program for
·
Rosemont, Illinois. The institutes anybody who hires or employs
,
safety and secur~ty o~ campus.
It
·
program covered the Occu~~on people who have anything to do has :not yet been determined
if
his
·
Safety and Health ,Act ofJ970 and
.
with commerce must provide a
-
proposed
,
program will be: ac-
·
the minimum standards accepted safe place of business
for
all
.
. cep!~d.
<:
-
'.
\
.
. .
.
i
. •
·
by
law.
·;
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
..
.
.
~ployees,

'J,'he
:
co1.ll'se covered
;:-
~
-:
Commentmg <>n the course, Mr.
·
·
··
From
:
F.eb:
4-8;
,
Mi;
:,~derholt· _·all_..sorts_
,
.
of
• ,
~ploym~t,
:
so
_
J_lle

A~
.
e~hol~
.
saidthat.''t~ was
:
a
:
g~
.
.
was
:
enrolled
··
in
·
a
.:
ClUfde
.
to
·
.
b
.
emg
·
·
first
·
aid,
.
,
sJorage,
.
·
m~
~
co~
aM
lmet
a
lot ofpecipl~.
!'
·

Voluntary Compliance'
;
for-.iri.;.
_.
specti01'S;
·
lighting,
_
and
'.
fire
· · .
,
:
.
··
: ,
·
;.:
·
·structors.only.
Through
this
one,;.
'
.
protection •
. ·
.
,.
,.
.
:
•.
.,.
··
''\
.
"
.
4
.
. -_ .

.-

.
_
..
., .
;
.
-
~
.
:
•. -
.
-
...

.

,.



Mr. Ronald Aderho
_
h. Dirr.ctdr otSecuiity
.
:
.
·
.
,
.
...
.

,
.

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
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'
.
.
...
'
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,
.
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,
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:
.
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'
·
'
.
·
.
t'
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'•
..
,,
.
.
·
,
-
1
'
'
.
~
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.
.
·
..
.
,
.
;
·
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'


• I
• • ' •

_'•
,
.
·
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,
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,
:
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~~
,,
r ..
i
\
.i
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MAY 2, 1974
Students Ap
.
pointed
.
As
.
Co-ordinators
Olin.
The Office of Student Affairs
Cathie Russo is a sophomore
has appointed two students to be aJso. She
is
a political science
Jhe co-ordinators of the Campus major who will begin her third
Community Action Program year as
a
CCAP volunteer next
(CCAP) for the academic year fall. Cathie also sees the high
1974-75.
value in student participation
Olin Burkhart and Cathie within the community. "CCAP is
Russo are filling the positions left structured .
with
enough
by Bruce McGann and Lynn flexibility,
so
that it allows
Hamilton. They will work under students
.
to
·
become involved in
the direction of Isabel
.
Andrews,
·
areas of their
own personal
the CCAP Director.
concern, and follow a work
Olin is a sophomore majoring schedule
which
is
ac-
·
in biology
.
He
is
now completing coinmodating to their class
his first
-
year as a student schedules
·
and free time. We've
volunteer of the CCAP
;
Olin s~es
-.
alr~My begun to contact com-
great value in student par- munity organizations-who might
ticipation in community affairs. nead the services of Marist
"There are times
.
~ when the volunteers next year,
·
but
college . environment tends to students are always Jree
_
to
isolate students from community
.
initiate other programs through
interaction
.
In order to grow
.
as the CCAP," added Cathie
.
individuals,
.
_
students must
The CCAP will begin taking
continue to be aware of the needs names of

students interested in
of the society around him,
_
and serving the community through
deal with these ne~ds in the areas next year
'
s p!'ograms this week.
where
..
his interests and talents
-
Anyone interest'ed is asked to
lie;
·
CCAP
·
is
.
~eant to utilize send their name
·
and campus
student service in this way,»says · address
to:
CCAP,
Box
BOl
~
C
;
FUJI
GiTANE
B~TAVUS
BEST CYCLE
.
/
·
·
.
."THE
_
Pl;lOFESSIONAL BIKE SHOP"
CAMPAGNOLD
· -
SHIMANO..;. SUNTOUR
0
(9
1
4) 297-·2924
THE CIRCLE
This week ·s
.
pleasant weather brought out groups of students
··sud1 as this who enjoyed the near-summer sunshine.
Food Report Completed
by
Brian Morris
room and board will be around
student can opt for either points
$1300.00
against the present or coupons. The coupon plan is
The price
·
of eating in the
$1230
.
00
.
Mr. Tony Campili,
essentially the same as the
·
cafeteria will increase next year. Business Manager, has said that present system, however, the
Saga food service
will cost about
·
he will do everything he can,
cost of this option
will
definitely
70
d,ollars more per person for a while negotiating with Saga to
exceed
$1300 00.
JOHN WEBER
TOM BEST
full school year. Administrators keep the cost under the thirteen-
The
points
system
will
have also
·
decided to initiate a
.
hundred dollar mark
.
Saga has represent a major change for
points and coupons system to stated that some increase is
Marist students now accustomed
keep the cost of board from going
inevitable due to the rising cost of
··
to a guaranteed
21
meals a week.
~~-
~
.
.
~~~b~
8 MILL sT
.
REET
Thus
,
inSeptember
,
thec.9
_
stof
Under the new food ~lan, a
receives points worth ap-
w
A PP INGER s FALLS
_
, N. y
.
12590
I - - - - ~
:t
v@IDU)A
i
B
:
fil.f
l
!:QO:U
:
R@N
/
- - -~ --.
f
r~!;~{~~~::~~o~:!i:1
f
·
H d
, ·
T>
k
I
nearly
40
percent of the meals
Y
e
C 8
r
.
-
offered in the cafeteria. It
is
I
·
·
I
supposed, that the student who
p,

.
·
t
"
"
,
" :

:-"
:
.
,
Ar.m~
.~
:
-
Na
-
Vy,
~
Store
-
----- .
.
J.
.
!~::~is~~~p~o~t~e::~i:at:
a
r
s
I
IO
%
(At
the Beverage Center on
Rt. 9)
I
fast me~ls and an occa_szonal
0 ·
·
,
.
lunch,
will have enough pomts to
.
.
I
OFF ON ANY PURCHASES.
I
last the entire semester.
If he
L
.JUST BRING THIS AD WITH You AND coME rN BY MAY 21. 1974
J
runs out, he can buy more points.
RT. 9
·
G, HY
.
DE PARK
.
·
PART~TIM
_
E HELP. WANTED
PLEASE CALL:
·
229-9191
ui~,s11~-
-
put this 1n
·

your .purse
before
-
they
·
getm
-
·
..
your hairJ
~
-
;
:
.
.
~
-
.-
;".~
·..
.
.
.
\.
.
.
.
.
.
The
·
earth
_
shattering noise
-
fro!fl this purse-fitting horn
gives you the protection
-
you've been looking for ag
a
inst
· muggers and rap
i
sts. Just snap two penlight batteries
into
.
.
this amazing· new Vigilant Aiarm and you're ready.
No
·
wires required
.
Complete pa
.
i:k
a
ge includes super simple
.
instructions
·
showing how the Alarm c
a
n
a
lso be eas
i
ly
ins
t
alled on windows or doors. GET. VIGILANT BEFORE
THEY GET VOL.I.
.
SUPPLY LIMITED
.•
.
.
.
MI\IL THIS COUPON TODAY!
Se
n
d me
.
.
of V
i
g
i
la
n
t Burglar Alarms
1 enclo
s
e
$3,Po for each Vigilant Alarm
.
Family Jewels
Ltd.
'
I understand that
i
f
f
a
m no, totally
satisfied, I will receive a complete
r
efund
3431
West Villard Avenue
it
_
retuf~ed w~thin 10 days.
·

M
i
lwaukee. W
_
iseonsin 53~09
NAME---'--_;._ _ _ _
.;..___. _ _ _ _ _
__.__
ADD~ES$ _ _ _ _
.;._:c.....,.,--,--.;._-:-------
. CITV_.;._"---------- 3TATI: _ _ _
. ZIP. ____
.
-
- - - -
-
-
,
- - -
-
- -
-
- -
-
-
-
-
-
-
The mathematics of the points
·
Gelco
COMPLETE LINES FOR ALL
YOUR SPORTING NEE OS
EQUIP
ME NT
AVAILABLE
FOR ALL
.
CAMPING,
_
FISHING, GOLF,
BASEBALL NEEDS, ETC~
plan are important. Breakfast
will be worth
2
points; lunch
,
3;
brunch,
4;
and dinner,
5.
Students
will have to plan their meals to
insure having enough points to
last
a
semes,.ter.
While the points plan calls for
students to plan carefully it also
allows more flexibility. Students
can have their guests dine on
their points. The points can also
be used in the Rathskeller
.
.
-
2
&
4 MAN INFLATABLE
.
BOATS
BIKES AVAILABLE IN ALL SIZES
&
SPEEDS
Students and Administrators
worked for several weeks before
reaching the decision to go ahead
with the new system. They
discarded as too costly or
inadequate several other options
ranging from an
a
la carte plan,
to a proposal for eliminating
seconds.
The
Administration
has
promised to notify students of the
exact cost of the program when
_
negotiations end in late summer.
\
RT. 9
.
Wappingers Falls
297-4825
ffJ
Manhattanvill~
·college
Summer 1974
Theme Studies:
Competition and Cooperation
Humanities and the Professions
Arts, Music, Sciences
Master of Arts in the Humanities
M
a'ster of Arts in Teaching
THREE SESSIONS:
I.
lune 10-luly 26
(7
weeks)
11. June 24-July 25 (5 weeks)
Ill. luly.29-August 29 (S weeks)
For undergraduates, graduates, qualified high school students
·
Manhattanville offers:
• S
c
lf-Desig~ed Program of Study
• Interdisciplinary Progr:11ns
,
Teachers' Certification Cours(!S
• Day and Evening Cours<'S in Air-Conditioned Classrooms
• Residential, Recreation
a
l, and Cultural Facilitic~
.
.
For brochure write:
·
.
Director of Summer Admissions, Manhattanville College, Purchase, N. Y. 10577
(914) 946-9600
.
.
.
.
;
.-
I

















































































































































































PAGE-i-
... CIRCLE
·y=!J~V'Martrt
Col~,
P~IJhkMP1r., N.~
NUMBE~ 11 ,..
Lay
Co-~Edi-
rs
-
Gregory
Conocchloli
andLYn Osborne
.
ou.
_
tor
-
-
_
Thn
DeBaun
Photography Editor
_
Dave
Pristaah
·
.
S.taff
_
:
Paul- Plfferl, Karen
Tully,
Brian Morris,
Diane
Petresa,
.Marr
\Monsaret,
·
~
Creedon,
Ray
Barger,
.
Brendan
·
Boyle,
.
Irene
Rosa,
Elizabeth
SDiro,
Wayne Brio,
Bil Sprague,
John
T.
B
Claney;ke, Debby Nykiel, Charles D.ePer(:ln, Cathie Ru.,so, James
_
~
; ~oan
McDermott
,Mike Harrigari\Jam~
Kennedy
.
-
Adv)jo~.
·
James
Keegan
and
.AnneTrabulsl
liwpness
~ e l ' i
.
Jack
Reigle,
Mark F*gibbon
The
Marist College CIRCIE
is the weekly newspaper
of
the
students
ci.
Marist
·
College and
is
published
·
throughout the
school
year exclusive
of
vaca~m
periods
by
the
Southern
Du~ess
_
News Agency, Wappingers Falls, New York.
·
Editorials
TIIEQRCLE
_
MAY 2,
1974
Letters To -The Editors
In Retrospect
former group.
·
Those who live in at Marist. The dorm situation
the donns, for the most part breeds sloppiness, disorder and
Dear Editors,
should
·
never have come to disorientation. If this situation is
I feel that for the
last
issue of college. For these fools, the aim
·
not resolved then I question the
the Circle, as
-
a
graduating of college
is
to indulge .
ii!
future of Marist as a school.
A
senior,
I have some comments on hedonistic pleasures, pot, beer, school canriot educate,
if one
half
Marist College which
I would like basketball and sex, which at of its students live out their four
to direct to those
-
who read
this
Marist
·
is totally devoid of years in a perpetual stupor. They
for their consideration.
·
romance or the ethic of love and do.
·
It
.
has been empirically
Academically,
'.
over the past
is
more often than not a proven that the grades of the
four years I feel
.
this college, niechanistii;: copulation between commuting ·students a.re higher
utilizing its limited human ·and two unconcious organs of
·
a
-
than those of the resident student.
financial resources has come a dehumanized character.
·
Yet I know also, that there are
long way. For instance~ the in-
If
as a wise and intelligent man
·
some fine and serious students
terdisplinary
.
programs
_
-
of study recently told me. education is to
·
_who
_
~re
.
residence people.
-
.
that American Studies majors
instill
_
wisdom into those who
·
The comparison of
·
grades
avail themselves of has grown in avail themselves of, as a primary reflect
·
the difference
in
en-
scope with the development of goal, then those who live in the
·_
vironment.
__
_
·
"American oriented" courses by dorms will not be educated when
In the future, I w<>uld hope that
sur..h departments at Philosophy, they graduate. Yet Marist ad-
Marist College developes rriore
·
Many Thanks
Religious Studies and
.
English. I missions due to financial realities
·
int~rdiscipliriary programs
_
of
-_
feel Marist has some excellent admits people to college
·
who
·
st~dy.
_
In
·
a technologically
.
,
teachers and offers high quality should have never applied. These
--
oriented world, where upto now,
comprehensive programs'
·
of "st_udents''.
,
live here.
As
I'm now
.
. society
:.
has
-
not -yet
_
placed
_
a
study to theserious student. We- graduating
.
I feel a sense of ac-
hmµane value on Jechriological
as a private institution of higher complishment and satisfaction. I programs with the result being
learning can hold our own against put a lot ofwork into my B.A. for increased specialization. This
any large college and university, I
chose
academics
_
over specialization assumes a
·
more
·
the only difference is money. For socializing.
To
many this choice

_
mfopic pragmatism that lead_$ to -
we do
_
not have
_
the financial goes
·
unnoticed. Many will the
·
tragic
· ·
equation that,
-
resources that other schools graduate with me not feeling that technological progress
_
·
in our
_
-
might, thaf would enable us to they know what they will be going area equals ecological
.
en
-
' This being the last issu~ of the CIRCLE for the academic year ,73~
--
expand
·
present progr~ms ~nd to do .
.
This
~
-
pro
_
ba6ly bf:cause vironmental and social disaster
74, there
.
~re
_
many
-
things t~say to many people:
·
there are
_
explore others.
_
There
is
a high
_
they never
;
did a damn ~ g
-
of
-
inotherareas.Weneededucatiori
·
congratulations and thank_yous m _order for many p~ople throughout degree of personal contact. bet-
any educational worth while
_
they
·
to see the full contexfof'our world
the co~ege c~ncerning Job assigmnents, work completed
-
and ween~tudentandfaculty: !3emg_a w~re here. Many do not stop to and its problems. We need at
·
·
graduating semors.
·
.
-
.
·
-,_
_
'
·
. -
·
small school we can utilize this think of wh~ they are, why are
.
Marist. interdisciplinary
·
ap-
At"
tl_lis time, the C~RCLE wquld( like to congratulate
'
and extend • cha~ac~eristk,
-
th':15 making __ they here, what goals are the true proaches
:
.
to higher education .
.
best
wi
_
shes to Mrs; E
.
_liz
.
ab
.
e!h
.
Nolan on her appointment to the position edu
_
catl~lil
·
.
mo_re
.
v1
.
~r_an
_
t . and ~nes,
.
.
an~_what !h
.
_
ey want out. of
..
Also
I hope that the teacliers in
-
of Teacher_ Education Director. We would also like to extend reward~ng
.
with
:
a personal life ..
Thr
con
_
~ciousne~s ~f life the-future structure their courses
con_gratulations to tpose p~rsons who_ have been
.
selected for
-
the demens1on added on. Ourfaculty qu~lity
~
utterly -lackjng m. t_p.e
.
to include more seminars arid
residence
staff
for the
·
coming year,
:
-
_
_
,
.
_
_
.
.
.
_
_
.
: are concemed With students who
:
-:e3ldenc~ halls. Accountability discussion periods, perhaps the
·
-
There are a ~umber of. tha~ yous in order.,for a great
many
other
_
·
show the~elv~s
_
t<
(
be d~d!catE:d
_
goes un!ested
·
in
an l:"vironment new schedule
will
be condusiw to
·
••·
people .. A special th~nk you
IS
exte~ded to
.
tho~e people in the In- to education. pie faculty
1:5
m thi:;
.
that
thinks
t~ere 1s -ab~olu~
this.
Learning comes from being
.-
troduct1on to Journalism class for their contributions to the CIRCLE; quite perceptive
in
knowing who Jree~om
.
. avadable
.
.
This 1s
_
able to verbalize what has
·
been
·
as ~ell
as to Mr. Ed Baron, who taught them well. Mark FitzGibbon,
·
is and who
·
is
not


-
a
-•
sedous
·
tragicallyJmmaturea:nd
.
gr.ossly internalized
'.
from
:
reil°ding

_
arid

-
Busmess
_
Manager, and Jack Reigle, Advertising Manager ,
.
are also to student.
To
.
those who
.
are, )gnoran,t
;
.
Freedoril
•.-
without
,
ac-
'
lectures,
bf
discussing
·
!'feel
.
the
.
::
be thanked for thell' time and effort given~ the CIRCLE
.
In
addition
teachers have respect.
::
This· is
_
:
c9~tal>ility is mere indulgence .
.
teacher
:
will
'
h1iv
_
e
_
.
a
;
keener
,
~
the C~CLE t~anks all !hose peoele
~
fa
cult}', staff_and s~udents -
-
who _ constru<!ti:V~
; i
ct
_
n~ Js
~
_a_
·
pfiinary
,<
11tos~
,
.
inv_qlve~
i
\'i'i~
_lea~ership

.:
pei:ception
·,
of
-

ho)V
:
to~
{
griqe

a
submitted art1cl~s for · pu~-µcation,· and
.·.l.11
,
pan1clllar
,
·
Fa_ther
,-,
Leo· · •·human resource on this cainpus.

roles m
.
tbe r~1d
,
en~e staff should
,L
student's academ1c
,c
competence;
.
_.
:
·
GaJ!ant,.C.Oa~:Iu~Stey~ns,JohIJ _
_J'fcach,.a~d~ver~eas
;:
c.ontfib~tor;
,
_.\We
.'
'.
:
aJso
"C
.liave
··
··
some
,
.
.
·
serioii$
·_
.•b;e
•.
fired
;\
_
fcorp
}f
,Rrecl,,.LambeI"t
j
,;1!
~0se
,>
w~o
:
._
i:~~~
-
:}Vtµ
_
,
,
h11v.e
;:
no
.
.
Bob ~elson.< .
· :"
.
;

·
·
..
.-
.
· ·. •·
_ :
··
,
·
·
O:
·
·
.
,.-
_
'·_.studeritf;wh,!>, although by thefr ·;right
:'-
~~:wr(to
:
any
:
hOU5-~ma~er,
\
prob!~ here.:> . _-
}<:
·
;
.
-
·
:
Whµe all those mentloned
·
~ave contributed vis1_ble tasks, we would -- · grades may'l)i>t set the world on R.A or
'
~.C
;
who merely
:
ac
f
-,:•
·,
?,'o conclude: '!e n~d-fmally, m
.~.
also like ~o thank all those people who have
_
contributed to the Marist
.
fire
·
are nevertheless
·
resour- commodates
-
t!te~elves to
.
the
Ahis
c9llege and
mthis couµtry to
I
commuruty ~t large an~ who hav~ at most times go!le UMo!iced.
·
_
_
_
ceftill and competent. They will prev~iling i~mora~ity. and
_:
.
de~el~pe
a
~pirit oL "realistic
...
:
_
\
To ~e seruors who will
be
leav~g us, we would
·
like to wish the very
,
_
be
:
tomor,;ow•~
.
leaders, µut they
·
une~hical
_
,
quality of life

m the
-
op~lSlll''
_
·

m:st
.
ead
- ·
of
.
squan-
.
·
l best m the~utur:e
.
As
.
a partof M.,anstCollege fou have no~ only shaped are
.
in the minority.
·
_-
·
·
_
residence
·_
.
halls.
-
-
Th
7~.
have
_-
deriJ!g
_

our mtelle,ctua1_
·
_
and
.
i
your own lives, but h_ave contributed to the ideals and lives of

those
_
_
'
·
From

being atMarist for some
·:
negated
-.
their responSibility
:
bY emotional talents
_
-
to cyruc1sm.
I
around you.
_
.
-
.
·
_
--
-
:
_.> -
time
now
:
I know there are two failing to set and
'
maintain
·
For cynicism breeds only more
.
Vf
e woll!d
also
at ~s tune thank those students who have

par-
di!ferent ' student bodies.
·
One through
.
enforc;ement
-
ethical cynicism and we will have many
i
_:J~c1~~ m academic programs and activities too numerous to lives and vegatates in the ghettos
.
standa_rqs of social. behavi_or more !_lichard Nixon types and
-
I
,n:irtiallon. t
ll st d
ts
.
te
.
d . h -
.
wecalldormitories,andtheother conducive
:
to
..
academ1c and m-
"Watergates" than. we as a
I
m
Y,
~
a
u en , ~e ex n wis ~s for good luck and good
student body is made up of·Jellectual accomplishment. The
.
democratic people will
be
able to
grades on final exams
.
EnJoy your vacation!
_
commuters.
Of
the two I feel that - residence staff,

I_ feel grossly stand. Education· taken
,
more
.
1
the latter group takes the concept violated
its mandate
for
·
seriously and a rekindled "spirit
of education more seri~usly, and leadership, toanexten~sohasthe of76" will insure democracy and
· therefore appreGiates what they
--
administration of this college in responsible freedom.
_
.
.
·
Re:
·
Retrospect
-
are learning, more than does the
.
.
dealing with the dormitory set up
. Tom Malone
~
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

.
.
,
·
.
'
.
,
_
..
:
~
~
-
;
·
,;
'l .
:
.
-
~...
.
,
··
.
·
:
.
.
_
The
·
past
·
few
-
weeks have seen the publication of many critical
submissions to the '
.
'Letters To The Editors" section of the CIRCLE,
·
this
week being no exception. Tht' letters have, however, induced both
·
spoken and written comment
.
by a good portion
·
of the Marist com-
;
~
-
.
~
-
,
.
.
.
·
.
··~,;.
,_
munity.
.
- ,
As
this,
once again,
is
the final. issue of the CIRCLE, we feel it
necessary to reply to one of the letters in this week's paper rather than
let it go unnoticed.
·
.
.
. ·
·
,
:
.
.
Tom Malone, a graduating senior, had.some ·very caustic
.
comments -
to deliver concerning
·
his
four years at Marist and some of his ob- ·
_
-
servations. Whilewedonotattempttod
_
e
_
meanMr
__
. Malone's ideas, we
·
~
nevertheless feel
.
responsible to·take offense at
.
some of the remarks
·
~
leveled at the resident body.
·
·
-
_
·
·-
·
..
·
.
·-
_
·_
-
· ·
_

To refer
to a
resident as 011e wno "lives and vegetates
in
the ghettos
·
-
~
we
call
dormitories," should not ·only
.
be offensive to resident students •
·
~
\-

themselves. We think
that
-
anyone reading that would find some
·
"
•~--
:
grounds for quarrel. To lump together
all
resident students as
·

"hedonistic'' and "studentswhoshouldneverhave colJle
·
to college~'
is.·
_
morethanunwiseorimprudent-itisdamnablywrong.. ·
-.-
.
·
-_
.
Mr. Malo11e does,
-
however, offer som,e of what he feels are
partial
solutions
:
to the proble~
';
as he sees them at Marist. ~e
.
in-
.
discriminate
firing of
-
those in a position of
_
leadership, such
as
the
Residence
staff, is one of
his
proposals.
-
_
.
'
_
: ,
The reasoning behind much
-
of
Mr.
Malone's
_
observations
is
at best
.
·
fuzzy;. be g'?es from social structure
in
the dorms
.
to academics and the
,
·
·
. commuter student to interdisciplinary
-
·
study, human
.
resources,
_
and
.
,
_
-.
·
the
need
fQr more seminar-style courses.
His
conclusion that
Matist
is
seriously in need of "realistic optimism,,has escaped
.
us completely:
.
As
the Editors of the cmcLE are all resident students, and seem to
find time away from their ''wild" lives in the dorm
to
voluntarily hold .
responsibility for
.
the
.
production of
.
the _instrument by whicli·his ·._

·

..
:
coinm~ts are printed, his
·
_
remarks seem·utteriy·incongruous and·<
inapplicable. -
.
·
-
.
-
.
_
_
_
.
.
_
,
·
: .
·
·
·

· -
·

.

· ..
w
...
e
·
alsowoul
_
dliketo
.
pointoµtthatM
_
r'.Mal
.
~neis.fr
.
.
orr1the~<!
.
ipi~
-
o(
..
the school,- and does not necessarily have to live on campus, nor i:foes
·:
he. have
,
to li\1e:m
Ho~
.
IV of Chanipa~at,
,
where~
:
quite
_
fr@y,
•:
he
·
_
·
might
be
exposed
to
more o~~ebellavior
he
seems~
sod,spise;
·
·
·
·
:
.
..
--~
-
·
.
·
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_____:__
















































MAY 2, 1974
THE CIRCLE
'ELEMENTARY, MY DEAR HEARST ••• YOUR DAUGHTER
IS
OBVIOUSLY A
CRIMINAL!'
letters, Continued
PAGES
Announcements
On Sunday evening May 5th the
Commuter Union will spomJr a
night at Frank's from 8:30 until
closing time. With Marist I'D.
beer will be sold at reduced rates.
All
are welcome.
The Marist College bookstore
will be buying back your old
books from May 8-10 from
~
p.m. -They will
be
buying back
books regardless of whether they
were used on this campus or not.
On Tuesday evening May 7th
the ticket board will hold its last
meeting of the semester from 7-9
p.m. Campus Center, Room
270.
Students are reminded that this
is
the last time you will be able to
appeal any tickets you may have
received.
The Mount Saint Mary Cultural
Center and student Body present
Gilbert and Sullivan's H.M.S.
'Pinafore on Saturday May 4, 2:00
p.m.
and on Sunday May 5 7:30
p.m. Call 561-5690 for reser-
-vations.
The people in the Creative
Coping Program are sponsoring
a show on Sunday May 5th in
ths
Fontaine Workshop from
1-4
p.m.
On Saturday May 4th Gregory
and Benoit Houses will hold their
second annual International Soul
Food Cookout. Residents of the
two houses
will
try their culinary
talents at their favorite dish. The
event
is
scheduled to begin at 1
:00
p.m. Administrators, faculty,
staff and students are all
welcome.
Students are reminded that on
Tuesday May
7
from
2-4
p.m.
tests will be given in the college
infirmary for Coaley's Anemia.
The tests are being given under
the
auspices of the Public Health
Nursing Program.
Commuter
students
are
reminded that elections will be
held today for two positions on
the executive board. · Elections
will be held in the Commuter
Union Office, Campus Center.
Investigation Of
CIRCLE Funds
only regret was that the CIRCLE consistent program of com-
initiated ~. - this
internal munication and auditing with the
management question into a CIRCLE, for future Student
public political issue. · But .pow
I
Governments to fo1low.
cooperati.on from attorneys."
feel that the CIRCLE did a ser-
Hopefully, the future holds no
PROPOSALS, continued
Mrs. Landau emphasized the
To the Editors: ·
vice to the student Government, more · investigations · for the
from page
1
fact that having a certificate in
· In accordance with the ·duties because the students can see that · CIRCLE. Yet; if circumstances
Paralegal Studies which would be
; specified
by -the
Student . they have an active and vigorous· arise again,
:rny
Student departments. Caroline Landau
granted by the American Bar
Government_ Constitution,
I
government.· Accordingly, lam Government treasurer will in-
represented these departments
Association
to
students com-
~. gathereg information concerning grateful to the,CIRCLE .. · .
stitute action similar to mine. No
at the colloquium.
pleting the program, may
· the financial-management of the
Since the reasons for the initial organization is above question. ·
Mrs. Landau stated that:
facilitate acceptance into law
CIRCLE. I delegated primary investigation ·are printed public Politics· and personalities will
"There is a definite demand for · school. She added: "In some
'responsibility of this task to Mark matter,
l
will not recount them. hold no quarter. -
. . _
this program arid we have had states,
a
·concentration in
Plamondon. ,Special 'Prosecutor
I
·
wish.
to
commend Mark
We will be"in contact with you · many inquiries for it. There is a
Paralegal Studies replaces the
Plamondon· · h~d ·full·· in-
Plamondon for an excellent job in concerning any.· questions you
shortage
of
paralegal-· first year of Law school; Fur-
dependence in the collection of gathering and evaluating the have about the requests, or feel
professionals at the present and thermore, certification and five
facts.-· He evaluated them in pertinent financial workings of free to see Mark Plamondon or the demand for them should years of experience in the field
·
regard to-the CIRCLE .. A. brief the CIRCLE~ Because of ·
his
myself. We care as you do forthe
increase in the future. Prospects often qualifies a person for taking
· >fuves\igation by -me prior
to,
the
·
recommendations to
m~,
I have betterment of Marist College:
for
opportunity- in this area are the Bar examination."
unfreezing · of< CIRCLE • funds . __ decided to request the CIRCLE to
With this guiding goal; we will
very bright."
··
Students enrolled in the
· aosolved inmy mind any possible implement as fa,r. _as possiQle
my
not .fail! ' .· ... - , _
,According to - Mrs. Landau, program would have access to
->-'dishonesty::i . ._,;,., or, -, .. ;,_major; ,recol_l)lllendatiops. T.o,~pl~IJ)ent· - ·. Qnceagaµi thank,you: · .. ,.
- . attorneys ·-would conduct the the State and County Law
' ,-,-,: rrusmarnigement:bY
tne:.·91RCLE
•vthem~,
;1'i;ibeliev.e
1 ,
:wc,iilq :•
:l::ie
·
.!~:c:
f-;\j,,..,
-::f;;:,\;,,;: '
:-;;{if!:•
'.'·ij;i
:".Sin~~rely ;;,:.;.i;,QJJI:~s)n.Jhe .. P!'Ogram as, paid _
Libraries.
. . . _ . • ... , _
staff;' ·
· : : __ .
'c- ;:,
·
_
<'"''positive: •:step<·.> towards.--_
:
·
•• i __
:.·
_E:clwardJCissling · insfrlictors';She
said:
"Ho·wever,
The·
colloquium
was
directed
· , ._

At ·this 'time ,I would: like-to : establishing a well-oiled business_
; _student Government
they would
be
paid
at
a lower rate by Mark Fitzgibbons, president
·thank
"the business office, ;and enterprise.
. _
,
· 'fyeasurer (1973-1974f of compensation than their of the student Academic Com-
especially the~_staff of the
cm-
For the student Governments
regular fees. We expect ready mittee.
CLE for their cooperation.:My ,_ sake,
I
pledge . to establish a
r -_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..;..,. _ _ _ _ _ _
_
.A
Reply
A
reply
to
the letter by Dr.
William
Olson in
last -week's
CIBCLE.
Dear Bill:
I -thank you for yo}ll' lucid
presentation of the milieu within
Marist College. Your letter to the
editors of the "Circle" on April
25,
1974
is
the real beginning of a
self ~evaluation for · this in-
stitutiQn,
I
hope that it will serve
as such· an· instrument. ·
I would like to share with you
Teacher- Ed.
Program
my concern about Marist.
Although· we· have increased the
number of programs dealing with-
extra-campus involvement, some
institutional
policies
have
become dangerously introverted
-
witness hiring practices
(screening
commit!ees
in-
cluded!). Yet the faculty, which
surely has responsibility in these -
matters; has. been either
WlllJ·
terested, or ineffective in
_ reversing the trend. I fear that
as
finances · and · students . become
less available we will see even
more of this type of parochialism.
This year has been witness to
an event ~hich you alluded to in
your letter. The faculty at Marist
has.- clearly_ demonstrated that it
can be. manipulated by the ad-
ministration: We have no power
to exert in times of honest ·
disagreement. For·methismeans
• we·nave lost some integrity and
credibility. I wonder whether we
really have
a
genuinely healthy
enviroiiment. __ on this campus.
How will the malaise affect our
personal and professional growth
and that of Marist College?
.
Sincerely,.
George
E.
McAlonie
_ Chemistry Department
inadequacies that are manifested thony DiRosa, Charles DePercin,
. in the program, and to allow such Adeline Aquilino, Joseph Mar-
anintellectuallyimpoverished -
tino, Glenn Manjorin, Marianne
program to continue on its - Schuster,
·
Cynthia : Maser,
present course
is
indeed a sad_ Marianne Poprcisky, Joseph
To
the
Editors:
comm~~ry on the intellectual McCann, Philip Petrosky, Diane
It
is
incumbent upon the ad-
integrity of
Marist
College. ·
Petrus, Patrick Buckley, Mary
--ministration. of· Marist College to
We, as , former _ and -. future Crilley, Gregory ·M., Conocchioli,
recognize_
its
obligation ._to its. student teachers, call upon the ThomB:s Gill, Patrick Armid~,
_ students . and .. upgrade the
~
faculty and the students _to Joe Cll'asella;_ Joseph Scuderi,
-'Teacher Education Program. At-. demand that this program either Catherine.Szczesie~ Ed Benisz,
. -·present the program
is
mediocre, ,. be ~proved 1;1pon drastically, or Kathleen
Roberts, Ch!irles
F.
and_· requires that -the stud~ts ~bolished entirely:
- - ·
-
- Hanlon, Dorothy Krupski, James
:meet
only
minimal requirements~
·

~
--· ·- ·
Smcerely,Yours,
.
,B. _Keegan, Kathl~n M.
Phillips,
-mandatep by the state of New'
Barbara
M.
Kearney,
-
::Elizabeth ~- --Spiro, Margaret
.. · . .-.York.for:certific~tion. , . _ _ _ . Kathleen Brady, Robe,rt
J.
Parra~;
Tim
DeBaun;:
. /-'='i\:,'ffilcurrerit:seniors•are soured • Hanna, Patric!a Luzon, _Elizabeth
·f\ -
·
· and embittered
as
a result-of the ··_ Mullen; Sheri!~ Lemon, ·
An-
administrators, parents, .. friends ·did a vegetarian's delight with
and students joined together
_to
his egg-plant;
Paella was
;'Soul Food
relieve the pre-final examination presented by Leonard Terrible;
pressures.
· ·
·
·
without question; the affair was a
·. This event is labeled
.
in-
gourmet's dream.
_
ternationalbecause of the:many -... The ·cook-out
starts
at about
On Saturday, May 4, Benoit and dishes presented that reached- 1:00 p.m. and will terminate
Gregory~ Houses . will hold their across racial, ethnic and national when the people . say they have
second annual internatio~al soul boundaries .. For example,
Missy·
wined
and
dined
su!ficiently.
food cook-out. Those of. us-who .. Matthews presented. her ·• con- · Littl~ people are invited too;
"were arciund
,
Iast ye11r this time coction of:West Indian•rice and'- there.will
helots
of hot dogs and
-remem~
the cook:.Out~s,one _of ,_pe~s; -· Ms. ~·P9:uline
leart
sodas. Everyone
is
welcome.
._the most memorable_ events
that
presenJed curi:1ed ·
ch1~ken,
Drop
by.and
share
th~
fun.
- took place. on
campus.
Faculty,.
>Jamaican
style;
Eddie· Michels ·
· _ --
Gerry
Sundiata Hooks
' ·.: .... ··. : . .<.,:_·_..
:·< ._--,


, .. •
. : .. ·
,., .. , . . . . ~-. ..
.-

.-•·
.. ··•
·_•

C
R
0
s
s
w
0
R
D
p
u
z
z
L
·E
Fred Allen
Woor1v Allen
Jdck Bennv
Carol Burnett
Burns and Allen
George Carhn
ACROSS
I
Comedian Hope
• 4
Correspondent
tab.I
8 Ship"s occk
12
Third ~ing ol
Judah
13
Migratory worker
14
Japanese
aborigine
15
Old comedy team
18
Film:
Rosemary's
19 Smart
20
President (coll.I
, 22 From
a
distance
23
Puerto•···
24 Nerve-cell
process
25
Buzz•-•!
28 Musical ·
composition
29
Not at all
30 Egg-shaped
31
Tiny
32 Fresh
water
fish
33 Prefix: half
34 Ancient gold.
alloy
35
Throat infection.
for
short.
3ti Flatter. as beer
39 First Hebrew
letter
40 TV comedienne
44 A certain canal ·
45 want
45 Gold in Valencia
47 East Indian fiber
p!ant
48 Anglo Saxon
slave
49 Take a wife
OOWN
1
Babvlon,an
1~11 ,
2 Columbus school,
for short
3 Cook out
4 Comedian Bill
5 All ripht
. 6 •··
Tin Tin
7 -TV comedian
8 More pallid
COMEDIANS
8111
Cnst,v
Alan King
Rodney Dangerfielt1 Bob· Newhart
Phyllis Diller
Joan Rivers
Redd Foxx
Rowan anc1 Martin
George Gobel
Flip Wilson
Bob
Hope
Answer to Puzzle
1
,a
13,,.,
31N1<o.:f
""
II 111S
oil!
o
:11 :a'l4ln ■ 3
, 1.111:;a
103
, 1 /1m,;:
I
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31
l>i
u
tl:O -
I.to
IQ I.!
HI lll
0::,
ti
0
3 Certain paintings
10
Certain bills
11
Weak
16
Largest of the
Cyclades Islands
17
Isles in Galway
Bay
20
Stem
21
Mellow
22
Self-evident
proposition
24
Foolish
25
Superabundance
26 Renown
27 Comedian who
masquerades
as
Geraldine
·
30
Cockney lodging
place
32 German jackass
·34 Comedian
Woody•····
35
Skid
36
Roman goddess
of hope
37 From end to end
lvar.i
·
38 161h Hebrew
letter
39 British prime
minister.
1955-57
41
His (fr.I
42 Belo,~
lpoe1.1
43 Comedian
Dangertield
.
Dlstr. by Punles, Inc. No.
147
c
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t.
THE CIRCLE
Cheryl McCann
Bob Piersa
Karen Conlo9
MAY 2, 1974
Shout It Softly
.
doesn't have that luxury, unless
he feels
his
-
"being on the job"
In my last article of the year, I
everyday isn't that important.
am
pleading for prayers
from
I love my job at Marist ·
I'm
those who still believe in prayer.
deeply and particularly loyal to
· After four years of perfect health
it.
I_
am not ~shamed of my
at Marist where I haven't lost a
·
passion for Mar1St and
·
1 am not
single day because of illness, I
reluctant to admit it. My job
!)ave
.
undergone surgery which
hasn't been without its blemishes
leaves a lot of question marks in and weaknesses. Comments
my mind.
·
My plans for the about me
.
haven't always been
by
Father Leo Gallant
Seniors Give Reflections
On
Years At Marist
summer
.
are
ruined: I was going flattering.
_
Some
.
were not true
to be a hospital chaplain at a
and hurt me deeply. Despite the
hospital in Massachusettes for a
few rough spots, life has been
few weeks; then I was going to beautiful here
.
!love Marist, the
work in New York with the people here, to a fault.
.
.
Sisters of Theresa of Calcutta, a
·
It's at Marist that the Gospel is
workshop among the yery poor. real to me. ,lesus reveals himself
As far as Marist, I always to
..
me
_
through
·
you, students,
.
·
considered the Chaplain's job, a staff; faculty, administrations
-
job for a very healthy person. To and w~rkers. He still
,...
challenges
do the job I want to do calls for a me .daily
.
··
·
'.
-
lot of vigor_ and day-to-day g_ood
.
I can be deeply grateful for
health. P
_
ar1Sh men can always be
_
what Marist has done for
-
me.
replaced by their colleagues
-
That's why I plead for prayers to
when they come down with the
.
come back strong and vigorous.
by Irene Ross
Reflections of their four years
at Marist bring back, for some
seniors, memories of "the zoo".
lack of a gym com_ple~, and im;
provements in dorm life.
Cheryl Mccann, who feels that
dorm life has improved, says that
the people in dorms are quieter
and more considerate of others.
However, Cheryl thinks that one
improvement to be made
.
should
be better guidance, especially in
the psychological area.
Karen Conlon also thinks that
there has been an improvement
in dorm life since her freshman
year.
·
She added that living on
campus is a big part of college
life.
·
"Commuters are neglected to a
point," she said. "When you live
on campus, you
·
always know1
what
is
going on;"
·
.
·
Although Karen thiriks that
.
the
.
efforts made so far for the women
on campus have
_
shown
_
that
women are a part of.the campus
and do have iI)terests tha
_
t should
be
satisfied,
she
pointed
'.
out that
there are plenty of women· here
.
who have the potential to become
.
student leaders, but they haven't
been encouraged,
.
_
.
"I think that the administration
is
eager to see the role
.
of women
~efined and developed, and now it
is
up -to the women to
.
·

prove
themselves;" she said.
-
·-
Greg Pope remembers a good
computer room and labs, but he
emphasized the need for a new
gym. The dorms?
"They've improved somewhat
as far as the students are con-
cerned," Gr~g explained. "The
·
dorms
·
used to be
-
cliquish, Jmt
-
now they
_
are more unified."
{
Debi Foster thinks that the
libraryshould be improved . .She
Rich Mangan
:
·
t

.

·
'
,
.'
,,
, ..
..
,
·,

.

.
.
has definitely found a lack of
noise in them. However, he thinks
books, especially in
.
Spanish.
that
the
academic
and
Debi agreed with Karen Conlon
disciplinary rules should be
that dorm life is an important enforced more strictly.
·
·
·
part of the college experience;
, Rich Mangan said that the
What about Saga?
~arist student has a lot going for
_
"I've visited other schools,"
him, as compared to some of the
flu, etc. A chaplain; liv.ing alone, Love to
.
all.
·
·
'
she stated, "and it is a better food
other schools.
·
service than in any of the other
·_
"Th
·
e students in
a
lot of other
.
Socialist) Mitterand is my
schools."
.
schools have poor
_
attitudes
:
By BobNelson
favorite.
.
·
John Mulvey, who has lived
Nothing
.>
bothers
.
them," he
. ~--
.
-
The main thrust of my studies
both on and off campus, takes a
stated
:
C'You will
·
find

these
Looking back at the first
·
here in Geneva has been on the
different view ofihe dormatories.
characteristics here, but there is cohimn I wrote for the CircleJast Third World, but I have never
"In the past two years/' he
a certain trend rebelling against October,
l
rec
_
all the objectives
I
·
gotten around to writing a
said, "the people in dorms have
that."
})ad set for ~yself:
_
~hare the
.
column on that subject. Contrary
become very immature. People
.
Rich
-
_
thinks that the· dorm life abroad·
·
experience with those
,
to the popular
.
opinion in the
throw things out the windows,
has lowered itself with the out-
back at Marist, investigate the United States, the countries of the
and those who live in the dorms
side reality in that people can get international·
·
atmosphere of
"periphery" are
·
not catching up
t~ke it ~s part of their
-
everyday
away with things in dormatoriei;, Geneva, see what the European
withthe industrialized countries
life, while those who live outside
when they normally wouldn'.t get pr~ss though~ about Nixon:s dirty
but instead are becoming eve~
of the dorms find it deplorable."
away with them elsewhere.
dom~s, describe my a~aptmg to a
more underdeveloped
·
in relation
John ais<? thinks that it should
·
To!Il Mauro
_
remembers people foreign culture, and give my own
·
to
·
the West
.
Thanks

.
to the
··
·
be
a reqmrement that the Ad-
movmg from "the
-
zoo" men-
viely'

·
On the ,American political
usurious rates of interest charged
missions Office speak to every
tality
_
to the establishment of scei:ie. l can-t say that I
.
~ave
by the
_
capitalist countries for
.
prospective
freshman
in-
their-own individuality.
_
f':{lfilled all of my
·
ambitions,
·
econo
_
mic development funds,.
dividually, arid only after then
"During
·
mYfirst two years at smce as
_
I read or heard ab9ut thanks
.
to the international
decide
if
that person is fit to come
Marist," he stated, ''there was no
_
'
other topics that interestedme or division of labor
;
and thanks .to
to Marist.
_
_
structure and 'the zoo' was a
_
tha~ I thought would make a good _ the mar~et-hungry multinational
Jeanne CaliguirL feels · that major influence
·
on camous;'J was
.
a~icl~, I wrote about them. In corporations, the
·
Third World
since
·
~fu.le~ics
·
do
,
plax
_
a
~
large
:~
p~~
.9
.
f
.
tthia
_
zQo'. Jhen
',
arid 1
·
have

.
_
_
pr~ciple, a
_
columnist
,.
sh~uld
~e
~
_
ha.
_
s _ ref:P.a
_
in~d. t~e
__
.
Thtid \V
_
orld
part
_
in
·
student
.
organization,
·

.
.
.
had.
s:1riie
·
fne.tril:>rabJe
/
t'frnes
.>
um9u~ly conc~r~ed
---r
~1tli=
,
,
h_1s
-
,
-;
and does
·
not'
~
appear:
-
Jo
:
_
have
i
a'
better
athletic
facilities should be

there. Then
,
people
.
started to _audience
_
a!}d what
_
he thinks will
,
grea~ deal of hope for-the future.
provided for the girls
.
Jeanne break
_
up by moviilg
;
off campus attract their ~ttentlo!}; how~ver,
It might. be
.
wel1to
·
-
not
_
e
.
that a
added that Marist has been
_
a
and_ into oth~
_
r dorms. Although I must _admit ?avmg
-_
writt
_
en
_.
very large nll:1Ilber of. people l~ok
place where she has been able to many
·
have gone their own ways, some articles
~inlr
to
.
mte~~ify
.
upo!1 t~e Uruted States,
,
_
leading
grow.
.
· _
most members of my group have my
O':'ffi
experience_ by wr1tmg
_
capitalist ~oun_try and
>
protec~or
. . "One thing that I appreciate retained the dose friendship of about it. Of co~se, sm~e It~~e a
o~ th~ m1;11tmationals; as the ch~ef
.
through all of the good and bad son;i.e _
of their friends
.
from
·.
~the . great deal
~f
,mterest . m. politics,
villam_ m
-
the s~he~e
-
of -m-
times" she said "is that the zoo."'
·
-
·
wherever
·
its happerung, my ternational exploitation of
.
the
peopl~ I've met h~ve allowed me
Tom thinks that there should be ~olumns often dealt with political Thi~d World by the industrialized
to grow anq develop as a person. more academic programs geared issues.
.
Due to these last t~o !)B~10n~. ~d I a;111 sure, th
.
at when
That is one quality of the Marist to
_
working in the Poughkeepsie facts, th~ relevance to the M~~lSt
it 1s within their
.
power
_
to. d~ so
student that I think is out-
area. He added that there should community of what! was writing
(as the
_
Arabs have v1v1dly
standing."
be more practices and
·
less m~st not always_have b~en self-
demonstrated),
~he
un~
A high quality of teachers and theory. How does he feel about evident; combined
-
with the derdeveloped
nations
will
good audio-visualequipment are Saga?
_
·
·
·
l~ngth . of. ~oi:ne of, my
..
~ore demand _ample recom~nse
:
for
som~ of the
_
good aspects
_
of
"Although the quality of food
discursive articles, Im afraid_ I
the service they ~ave s~ ~ong
Marist, according to Bob Piersa. has been at a mediocre level for may not have reached as ~ny rendered to the md!J~trialized
Bob thinks, too, that the dorms four years, Saga has
_.
become
·
students as I would have liked. · world,
,
_
that of ~roviding
·
raw
have gotten
.
much quieter and more concerned with the taste of
Well~ .
.
enough
,
; of
. t~e ITiaterials: I espe~ially h~pe t~at
that there is no longer constant people."
a~t~~ntique and
·
Jou~nahs_tic .someon_e m Washington is
_
domg
Greg Pope
Jo
_
hn,
Mulvey
·
criticism-:- I guess
I'U
·
Just
wmd
_
something to ~hange the uns
up
_
this
.
column (the article
.
as bearably paternalistic attitude of
well as the
_
series) with
a
few
the
·
American
government
odds and· ends that just never towards the countries of
-
Africa,
Tom
.
Mauro
-
·
Jeanne Caliguiri
.
•:
,
.
.
.
.
·.
"
.
.
·
1
seemed to
fit
in an~here else. I
·
Asia, and
Latin
America.
can't help but consider myself to
Finally, I have never·been able
'be very lucky to
-
be in France to get over the fact that every
when". the
_
death of
·
Georges European I have met
:
spoke
-
at
Pompidou,
:
President
·
of
·
the

least two and usually three
Republic, was annoUilced.- I was languages fluently. I realize ri.ow
strolling through a park
·
in Nice,
how isolated, culturally as well as
when

"I
saw the
.
headlliles
:at
a
.
geographically; the United States
nearby
.
newst
_
and;
·
·
in
_
the
·
is, arid -how
·
little °Alllericans are
following \Veeks,
I
was able
_
to
·
concerned
·
:with what goes on
wi
_
tness the national anguish over
.
outside their borders. I think that
.
Pompidou•~
_
death
·
and the
·
we all need
·
to realize that the
struggle going on
,
for
his
·
sue-
_
_
U.S
.
is not the
_
only country in the
cession. (Since there is no
vie~
world; and thatthere are millions
~res~~ent ~
-
]!ran~e, new el~c-
-
·
·
of _pe~ple
:
.
who live with ways of
tions must unmediately be held thmkmg and
'
doing entirely
to
.
determine
~
wh<r will lead the
·
foreign to an American; To un-
,.
country); At
_
one point, thirty~two
.
·
derstand the rest of
·
the world
-
,
Frenchmen and womeri
_
had and our own future,:"we must
dedar_ed themselves candidates; combat our
.
ethnocentrism. Who
_-
thotigh•that number has
,
since
.
knows? As Italy was once the
been
:
thjnned
.
out by the
·
Con-
colony of Greece, and the roles
stitutionalCommission to twelve. were later changed, so
-
may the
I !lfge
·
you to keep abreast of the
.
United States and the Third
news in this
·
area,
.
if
only
·
to World change places - though
1
_
_
become familiar with the French perhaps not in our lifetimes.
.
poli~cal
_
spectfum I <:~nnot help
·-
·
·
1•ve
·
enjoyed writing this
but
·
.
de
_
clare
.
niy
·
\
political column; otherwise I would never
preference in this
)
election
,
..:. of h~ve doneit. The bestof luck on
the
\
~~e
·:~
lea
_
ding candidates
·
y'Qur
'.
eJICams, have. a
,
good
sum~
_
_
·
((?habar~Dell!las; _
_
Gaullist;
.
mer,'

and
'
may~ I'll
:
see
·
you
,
ill
.
G~rd
~
d'Estamg, Indepe~dent
·
September>
·
.
'
·
·
1
-
_
Republic~tjf
·
arid
'
Mitterand,
· ·
·.
-
_
-
--'-_..;..-
.
·
.
.
·.
.
'
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PAGE
7.
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I
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l
One
-
v
i
ew of Maiist
'
s Lacrosse teain
i"n
action
.
MAY 2,
1974
THE CIRCLE
La Crosse Team Drops Two;
.
.
Gives ExCellent
Showing
The score at
·
the
half
was ~2,
the
team
as they are the
Red
Maritime. Marist gave an ex- Foxes rival in LaCrosse. Jum-
The Varsity
_
LaCr~e
team
·
cellent showing
in
the second
hall

ping to an
.
early
2-0 lead on goals
dropped two tough decisions in its
-
fighting back to a 7-5 score before by Jim.Donnelly and Jeff Mullen,
debut season
last
week~ losing
to
the two Maritime
.
goals finished the offense_ ~ed after
that.
A
Maritime
'
l2-7 and on Saturday 7- them off. The comeback was led
·
poor
day
m fieldwork -allowed
-
4.
:
Both·of the games were close by
·
freshman-
-
mid-fielder
-
Ken
·
Fairfield to
.
storm
.
back and.lead
most of the game with the Red Mangan with two goals and ex- 4:-2 at
the
_
half.
Foxes giving an excellent cellent field play
·
and by senior
_ ·
_
The second
~If
was
.
not much
showing in their first year
·
Bill Egan, who scored
_
two goals. better !or Manst as the off~nse
·
against experienced
teams.
The The final score
.
was .12-1. Other
·
could
.
not generate a sustamed
losses
_
dropped the Marist record goals
.
were
.
scored _ by
.
Doug attack. A goal by Bill Egan
1-4
.
_
.
.
.
_
. _
Hampel; Jim Donnelly and
-
Jack bf(!u~t the score to:..4-3, but ~e
,
>
.
The Maritime game looked like Fagan. ·
. ,
_
.
.
_
.
_
Fairfield
team
came back with
a disaster in the early going as
_
Coach Behnke was pleased
_
two more
to
lead with a ~core of~
.
they
jumped
into
_
an
_
early lead
.
withtheperfoi:'niancealthougbit
·
3. Bill Egan scored
his
se~ond
Maritime :was w~ll
-
drilled and was a
·
loss. The
.
next team never making it
Ji-1,
until
.
Fajrfield ·
had
·
an
-
-
experienced- team.
·
folded
·
·
and staged
.
a
.
nice scored again in the
.
-
final three
Keeping the Marist team
in
the comeback. Giving ah excellent
:
seconds
'
winning the game 7-4.
game was another
.
great per
'.'
fight
to
the more experienced
·
·
Goalie Leon ~er lino
·
and
formance bygoalieLeorrMerlino
.
~
_
team
;
the defense played
.
a fine defense
_-
Jim Cassara,
_
.
Jim
making some
.
dazzling
_
saves
·
on game.
.
.
>
__
_
.
__
·
·•
Bohren and
·_
Rich
,
Beany
_:
all
the relentless Maritime attack.
·
_
Fairfield was
.
a,tough loss for turned in excellent games.
.
·
·
·
.II
1

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t)-
_

_
·
,
-
-
--
-
1----.I
~
·
II
·
~-
-
·
-
c
-
·
.
_
-•
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'
.
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'
-
-
on

·
.Sports
Mllrist WinsJlt3{{atta
+
. - -

'
- .
,
.
:
. :
·
_
.
:
_
.

_
,
contest from
_
the
~
beginhing
·.
with
·
,
-
T}ie
·
ughtweight race
-
had
_
six
.
__
_
_
.
.
_
_
- _-
.
.
..
.
.
.
Marist gaining
tije
1.~~
fro:111
~e
~
entries with the
.
~rong
_
ones ~ing
,
·
·
,
·
by
_
J,ohii'.}'kacb
.
:Ma~ crew team captured the start and never relinqwshirigit.
·
~~rist,
·
Trinity and
,'
Iofia;
·
You
.
_
_
..
.
. ·
,
-
·
·
.
. .
,
.
P~es_1denrs
_.
~
Cup Regatta by
:
Ma.ristcrossedthe
:
µnel0secorids couldfeelthe"terisiontunthrough
~
-
-
· PRESIDENT CUPCHAMPIONSREADY
-
FOR RUSTY

CALLOW
wmrung 4 ~ut ~f th~
5
i:aces tll_ey
·
:
·
_
ahead of their
·
nearesf rival,
·
the crowd
,
as
·
th!;!y
>
awaited Jhe_ REGA:'f.TA-T~ .WEE~ND
·
·
>
.
_
·,
_
-_
_
·
·
entered.
_
.
· •·
.
.
·
.
,
.
·
'1'.J'r
~tY
:
-
~

This
:
vi~to~Y:
/
~bl_~d race
;
At the siart
:
Triru
f
y
_-
gained
·
:
All five of_Marist Coll~ge's ~rews will travelto Lake Wara~ug, in
_
~e first r~ce
~e>
c~ll_le,do\\11
th~
_
-
,
Manst to
·
move
.
within one
:
P.omt
·
the lead
:
ovet
,
Marist
:
With
,
,
500 -
,
N~rtl} Preston; ~onnecticut this weekend for the Rµsty Gallow Regatta
C!OUl'SEtwas the. v~rsity ~1ght ra~e.
:
,
'
of Trinity in the r~ce
_
fQI' thti team _ meters to
,
gt>
;
;
Tr:irifty lead
W
over

and
a
try at ~ew ~ngland
_
small ~o~E!ge rowing titles.
-
.
. ,
·
.
_
-
.
- ·.
·
-
St. Joseph, Trlilltf, W.P.l.;
·
Holy trop~y
~
-
--
:
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c

-
_
_
.
>
\<
.
_
, ..
:' •:'
,
_
:
_
-
:
a
:
l~n~n:
:
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_
<·
·:
.
.
,
,
_, _
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,
For Red Fox crews sweptt~ v1ct~ry ,it the PresJdent's Cup Regatta
_
Cross
..
and
W~hinzyi11

CoUege
~
,
~1th
_
the J>~~u!iful ~eather,
-
the
·
·
.
When the cr~wssam~ into sight
,
last
~a~rday
on
_
theH;udso,n R1v~r;
~
~oughkeepsie, New York
;
It was
had all ente
_
red the
.
race.
J\t
_
the
_-_-_.
_
crowd
·
-
·
••
viewmg

the
.
·
-
race
.
had
.
,
there was silence· from
,
··
an the
·
·
·
lvfarISt
-
s SE:Concl overall teani title
.
mJhree
-
years
;
.
-

..
:
:
:
•·
_
-
·
-start of the ra~e. Washingto1_1 s~9t
'; ·
gro;..m U:pv,ar~
:
.
Qf
·
t;200j>eop~~
/
cr~wd
;
,excip
f
Jor
a
:
_
.
li~ndfur
:
of
.
,
·
,
The
'.
Manst varsitt hea~eight
_
creYI whichJs captained by
_
Bob
o~t ~o a
.
~urpqsmg-2 lengtll lead
_
Th~
:
:
exci~me11t could
.~
be
:
f~
!
t
·
as
-
·
Tr~~ty fa~
:
for:_it
i
app~ared tl}at
.
,
__
~reedon of Dre:ii;el
IIill;
PeW1~ylva~a, ranks
:
~ one o~ the c~~tenders
:
witll,Mar1st
m
secomi foll9w!3d by
J
hEl J
;
V .
.
cr:ews

r.9we
_
d up
,
for:
.
the
-•·
M~nst hopes for
-
victory
.
had been
. '.
m th~ ~~~'VYJ'~igpt
.
e~e11t
_
~l~ng
WI~~
4efending
_
chapioµ
-
Trimty,
·
and
the
.
rest
.
of
.
the
.
:
pack.
,
The
~:
order
.
-
next race
;
,
;
,
-.
·
.: .:
·

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·

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.

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·
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·
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·•
.
:
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-
·
,-
.
Wesleyan
;
·
:.
,
:
.
-
·
:'·
.
"-
"
·' ,
.-
.
:
.
·
·.
·
··
·
:
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-----_
--.
-
-
, .
.

·

/ ,
.
.
,
.
--
-
-
-
-.

-
<
.
-
stayed
'
th~
-
sajtie
::
ui> to
\
t~e
-
·
l,!)00
_
. :
in
the
·
J
:
\T.
,
race'
fririitj,
'
~aine
.
,
.
nieri
\
jf
iiatpe~
~
d
\
with
:
30
-: :
Th~
_
~e~
F?~
li
~
~v~ei~hfcrew flliished
second~
iast.year's
Rusty
.
meter
IIl~ll'.k
.
:where Tl'Ullty and off · the
;
line· first
·
followed
{
by·
,
strokes leff
.
in
:
,
tbe
:
race
.
Marist
·
·.
Cal19w ~ncl {Inl~l,ie5!, thkct~-last we~k'.s Presid~nt ·c:;up behind
,
Trinity
_
St
>
Jo~'.smade
:
the~mo.y~,
.
A~Jlle.
_
W.P.I. Mari~t
f
trailed
_
betiiifd
"
b{ calle(for ~ti
e:
sprqit
/
Y~u could
-
~nd
'.
St
_
;
·
l9s~ph'~
:'

/
:
.
.

:
,
;
·
;
,
.
,
_
-

_.'.:
_
,
.
• .
:
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<
.
.
-
, , .
; , ·
·
1,~
_
meier
·
mar~
:
it
J
vas Tr1nity
_
J
>yer
:
~
a
-
le._ngth
'.
..
~h~
-
-
)
?i'.dt?r
-
-
~ee
·
tnerri
i
*plo
.
de
· :
_
through the
--
,
--
1:h~
.
M~nst
·
_
lightweigh
t
_
varsity, ~hl,C!h IS
__
-
co-captamed by
_
Dave
·
closmg on Wa~hijt~o11
;
follo!!e~
.
.
·
-
remamecl the same
.
up to.the 1,0()(}

.-
:
water. The
.
C!r9wd
,
.
went
.:_
wi~d.
·
Phillips of Colli!1gclale, ra. a
.
r:id Fra~
_
Hoover of Glen?lden,
f~·
ranks
closely_ by; St .
.
Joe s Jmd
.
~aI'!St.

:
-meter ~rk bu~ M11nst ~ad rnad_e M~rist was
_
·
II_UI.kiilg their
·
move
,
.
-
as, ~ne of _tp~
.
!'.!r!avor1tes
.
JD
their
,
event along· with
,
Trm1ty and
Comlll~ mto th~Jast 500
.
,it :wa
.
s up µiuch
:
of the ground they had \\'1~h 10
.
s~roke~ to go
·
they were Williams
:
_
.
_
_
_
.

·
·
,
.
.
·_
.
.
.
_
-
·
• _
<
·
_.
_
_ ·
any~odt s
,
race. s
,
t
'.
;
~Qe s and
.
Jost
·
?n
:
the
s~~
~
It
was her~ t~at
_
¢"'.en
.
{
l1l~y
,
~hen
;
~~lkec!
right by;
::
,
~e Red Fox
:l
ight~~1ght crew ~lnlshed second
.
to Coast Guard, who
Ma~~
.
s~~~
-
Jo 5prJ11t e!3rly, Manst
_
·
·

_
C!~lled
:

:
f~~
.':'
theiJ'.
:--
D,11d~
0

Trinity in
_
theJast ten stfokes to will r:iot b~ entE!J:'ed
,
m. la~t Y~~r•s Rusty Callow an~ wo~ last week's
whil_e
,
_
Tnmty
·
-
.
seemed
:
to
:
~e
_
_
course sp_nn~:-~~ismgthestrok~:
.
win the.:Presiden~
.
cup.
-_
·
.
.
_
Pre
_
sid
:
e~t s_Cup\ beating'.l'r1mty, I
_
o9a and tl1e Umvers1ty o~ Rhode
hQl_d:i!1g
,
b~ck.
All
~oats were m 4 bel:lts, Manst
·
came off the
_
·
The day belonged toJhe Marist .Island
.

·
·
·
·.
·
.
· ·
:
-.
.
.
stnkmg:,1l~tance
_
with 30 stro~~s spring with
·
a half lE;JJgth
.
.
lead
:
_
crew team.
_
_
.
_
_
_ _ ·
.
·
INTRAMU~AL ANNOUNCEM~NT
_.
_
.
.
. _
.
-
to go
'.
.
Trinity
.
then Ill8de their F'r
_
~m t~ere

to t~e end ~he race
.
To top off the near perfect day
Congrat~tions go ou~ to 'Y}lo s ~ext, wmner of the_ Intramu~al
moye and
:
~th
an
_
awesome
-
was theirs. Ma~st continued to Marist Jightw,_eight freshmen
-
Male
Le
13~~e Volleyb,all title with~ victory over Earth, Wmd _and Fire
_
spnnt
.
walk~
__
a\V~Y from the
·
walk ~way, they held clown the cap~ured the open race defeating 8:nd J~arue s
_
Jokers who won the Intramural Co-Ed League Softball
pack. St.
,
Joe•~ fm1sh~d second sprint
so
they could hear the roar Rhode Islarid ani:l Washington
,
title ~th a win over The He's and the She's.
-

_
.
follo'Yed
._
by _
M~rist
and of the crowd, theri sprinted home College.
· _
.
_
_
_
-
_
_ __
McLAUGHLIN N~ED MARIST ATHLETE
,
OF THE WEEK
. Washington all
within
_
5 seconc,ts
_
to a 9 second victory followed by
: ·

'l'.he
·
mood
.
,
was
,
festive as
·
the
.
Joseph McLau~hlin, a sophomore from Ale?(andria, Virginia, has
of
.
one another.
_
..
.
_
_
.
Trinity and ~.P.I
:-
_
te~Iri trophy :was presented to the
·
beer:i named MarISt C_o~ege
_
Athlete of the_ W~ek for ~he week ending
The :n.ext raceswe~e
.t.
hE:

fot1rs
The
.
scene was
_
set
_
for final race
·
coaches and senior member the
_
April

28th. McLaughlin,, a
.
memb~r of th~ Jumor var~1ty heavyweight
0
and
.
pa1rs r.aceswhich
_
did not that counted·towards
:
the_team team.
_
Seniors Bob
-
Creedon
crew,
-
stroked the J.V-.s
.
to a
_
victory
.
~ the President's
.
Cup last
count to\Vards the
:
team trophy.
,
trophy this wa~,.the
.-
Jightweight
"
Franlc
Baldascino;
·
Ken Ousey: weekend
·
.
-
-
.
.
;
·
, .
.
.
Manha~n ~~p~ured
,
the fo~r

·
race
:
_
.
The - race
.
had
.
·
_
.
been and
.
Dave ~hillips marked their
T~IS WEEK IN ~IST_ SPORTS - PRESE.NT
·
,
.
.
race, \\'bile Ti'Inltywon the pa1r, rescheduled from an
:
el3rlter time last
.
home race with a victory
.
_
__
Friday, May3-Te~msat~iena-3:00p.m.
_
; j
.
In
~h~
race_for t~e team tr~phy,
_
d~e to an equipment
-
probl~m
·
:
Madst
·
has
-
two
_
-
_
races
Saturday
!
~~y
4
~
~rew at Rusty Callow Regatta; Sailing Har~ley
Manst wc1,s t1E:d with~- Joe_s
_
_
for
·
with the Iona
.
crew
:
The
_.
point
.
-
remaining: the New
.
.
England Cup at Marist, Tenms at_New ;Haven, 12 no9n; Track at Collegiate
second
-
two pomts behind
.
Tr1D1ty
.
_.
totals
·
go~g ·into
·
t~eifinal
-.
race Championship this Saturday arid
·
.
'frack
_
Conference
-
Championships
,
at
c.w.
Pos~.
11
:oo_
a.m.
·
·
_
.
The next race
_
to follo\V
_
~as the
_
were Manst· l8,
·
Tr1mty 18.
'.
·
The u~e Dad Vail
.
Championship the
-
M
0
??3Y, May 6 -Lacr?sse vs. K~an, at LeomdoffF1eld, 3:30 p.m.
fI"eshmanrace.
·
__
·
·
-
.
·
team
-
trophy came down to the
·
followingFridayandSaturday in Tenms atNew
_
Paltz - 3.3
o
p
,
m.
--·
·-
The fl:-eshman race
-
was nev
_
er a
.
lightweight eight race .

·
--
·
.
Philadelphia.
·
··
·
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,
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12.11.1
12.11.2
12.11.3
12.11.4
12.11.5
12.11.6
12.11.7
12.11.8