The Circle, October 3, 1974.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 13 No. 3 - October 03, 1974
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VOLUME 13
MARIST COLLEGE, f:'OUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
OCTOBE~ 3,
1974
Fred
.
Lambert. Director of (ampu's
Life
.
.
'
'
.
.
~.
.
:
..
.
-
Lamhert
\
Appointinent
.
Has
·
All-Eri~oJllpas$i~g Duties
?
·
.·
Review Slated
For
Ne
.
w SChema
._
concrete action taken to get aday
care center started.
·
-
By
Rhoda Crispell
~e new t~e schedule will
be
The administration explained
rev1ewe~ this sf:!mester in ~rder that one of th
_
e major reasons for
-
to decide whether the ex-
.
this new schedule was the effect
peri~ental
.sched~le
wi]L be
.
·
the gas shortage might have on
continued or
..
termmated
•
next commtiting
_
.
students. This new
-
year
: ';
The Stude
_
nt
..
Academic plan would make it possible for a
Com~ttee
.
.
.
· is forming
.
·
a sub:-'
.
.
.
student to plan his schedule
·
so he
.
committee to evaluate the ef-
could coine to
·
school from two to
·
fectiveness of the new schema. four davs a week rather than five
_
.
,A.ccording to S
.
A.C
.
President, days a week.
_
·
·
_
.
.
B~b Sarriil_lorr;this subcomnlittee
:
Aecordirig t
.
o Sammon, not only
wiU look mto why the schedule is the commuter being effected
has ~en inaugurat~;
·
and then by this new schedule, so is the
·
see
.
1f
.
these reasons have been resident who
..
only has classes
.
·
followed
.
thre>ugh.
:
Sammon
·
.
three days a week. "Is Tuesday
_
suggested
.
that
·
maybe some of
-
night becoining a partynight on
·
-
t~es~ reason~ have not bet}n campus?
·
Is
·
the schedule
carried out
•
.
.
...
_
.
___
.
_
damaging the academic
at-
.
The new schedule was
·
sup-
·
mosphere on
campus?"
pose~
:
to
.
att~~ct m?thers
-
to
Bob Sammon suggested that
Mar1st by h~vmg two mstead of
.
one action the subcommittee
three dassesa
·
week, and by
<
might take is
to
conduct an
making p]ans to ~rovi~e
·;
a
·
day
-,
opinion. poll ofthe st4dents to get
care center forthe1r
.
chddren. At
:
their views on the continuation of
tllis
poiilt, mere
has
not i,een any
-
the _scneduie.
· · ·
· ·
-
;
By Jhlie Scho~t
.<
·
::
.
m.ember of.Lambert's staff, is the Inter~Ho1.1Se CounciL the
·
Student
- ·
·
··
R · ·-1
··
·
··
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
'.
;
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-
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·.
'
,
.
.•
.
. .
•·· .·
·.·
·.
·
.
.
•
..
a.
•
,
,
coordinator9(CollegeAct~vities. Academic Committ~e the
:
Black
·
..
,.
e
O
_
C
_·
.
:
_
a
_·
_
._
.
.
t
.
ion
P
.
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_
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e
_
d
.· ·.
ic
.
·t
_
e
·
d
t
;
Mr. Fre~
:
Lam.bert hasr~~ently
·
_
She
:
'
:
will supervise all
_
school ·st~dent Unioil;the cohege Union·
.
.
_
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v:Js10
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all
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campus
.-,
Jllpm~li;
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\
,\Vaqe
f:
<
Of??
:
~du.~
.
ect
;
,
that\the
'
.-
tone
''.
of;the
•
social
··
en~
t
·
,J::
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,-1c-
.
,
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.
·
,
.
·
;
and
it:,
(ac1lities
.
by students and·
'."!'
.
· ~01µ,ing
;::
Lalllbert:if riew
_:
i>osi\ioif
,
r~~P;ri(lst~!l.ity
/'
Qf
/
~a,~p~s
:,
l~fe
/
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viroiune·nt wil_t ~: irii~i:ov~d:
·
He
--
, ···
>
.
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-
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-·
.
.
-
. .
·
•
-
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:
·
.
-
·
.
·:-
._
·
faculty_; .)\lso
,the
~acuity
-
"'.hich _is
'·:;
i·,
'
. .
.
•
·
. .
.
,
!
'
.·
,
:•
'
·
,
•
·:
IS
all:-emcompassmg.
;
-
:
>·
< '
.
;
~u~~e
:
he
,
IS
;
a~o
.
.
.
m
_
.
<;harge
'
:
Of
·
hopes
.
that activ1tleswill be more
•;
-
E?{p~nses: for
•
~pgradm~
.
-
J'!OWbemgoff1ced mFontame will
.
l
-
·
J'he
director
of
campus life is
·
:
coun~eUng services;
:
financial
·
mature
aiici'
adult-oriented
.''.'
l'iri
·
Fonta!ne
i
w1th
-
the i:ie
.
cessary be
·
able to have a work-study
.
\
responsible for campus residency
c
aid, and the
.
fligher
·
Educa
.
tion
·
·
very
·
pfeased
:
with Jhe
:
way the.
_
~lectnca_l, Illech_an~cal
-
and relationship.
_
. ...
.
and its
staff,
the campus center Opportu1:lity Program. .
: :
.
campus has reacted thus
far
to· . conStr.uct•o~al
_
repair~
m __
o~der
.
to
.
·. -
c
.
.
.
~
.
.
,
• · ...
•
.
·
.
·
.
·
and its staff, the health services,
.
.
Lambert reports that there is
a
·
the establishment of the
.
norms · hous~ ~he. library
_
·.
brmg curr~nt
•
The move will
.
equip the library
food
•
services, and
·
religious
.
new additi<>n to
·
the
·.
student and in the keeping ofthe norms:"
predictl?ns for
.
the relocation
✓with
faculty seminar rooms and
services, as well as student
·
a,:-
government this year as a .result
"Because the
·
.
.
various
·
· com-
completion
!
0 September
197
5-
workshop areas which
will
enable
.
tiyities
·
and governances.
-
The of the
,
Leadership
_
Workshop held ponerits of the campus life will
-
.
·
The
.
eSt lmated
cos~
,
of
,
the faculty
.
to setup many
·
dif-
studenf activities include all over the summer
>
It is called the
.
now be organized under one head,
relocatmg
th
e campus hbr~ry ferent types of programs much
C?ffee ~ouses, house parties, and . common council
.
and c;iperates
:
as
I
fee\ that we can work as a team,
~~ir
.
ponn$
5;~
1
~ta~ to F3-ntame easier than in the past.
_ mghts
m
the Rathskellar.
a
.
student senate whose function and a team effort will definitely
·
a
.
is
.'
O.
.
.
ccor mg ~o
.
_To
help keep the
·
cost low
_
Mrs
;
-
Dony
.
Russell, a graduate
·
is
to unify the differe_nt int~rest ~e strengthening to the stud_ent
rresideir$5~~ii
R
1liy, d~hi~ during -the
.
mov~-.. student
_in-
of Vassar College, who is a new
groups. These
.
groups mclude.the life."
·
·
tigufret
0
-
t -'t·
cou
t be at
-
·
the
volv,,ement 1s aJ?tic1pated which
_ _ .
.
o u ur~
m_ ion co~ s u
. e
.
means students are expected to
·
·
Efee
•
Ull,it)ersii:y
-
Begins;
·
.
.
:f::fuS~·:h!J~?ii~~~
~~d!="¥Jin ••
~~dl%1~
·
.· D
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
necessary money with good seemed an impo11sibility but the
.
.
,,_._
:
·e~ch e.s ?4.-ll~
Tirne
:
:
High
·
'
?Th
1
~r::r;;:iten_forthemo;e ~~~P~\i~wsr:Je!~ebod~. ar.!i~
_,
.
_
..
-
-
.
,
_
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
.
_
.
_
.--
.
.
.is that the llbr~ry
_
will nee_d more
.
have the cam.pus library in the
·
By
Ea:rnestA-~oyal
'
c
,
0
college. TheUniversity staff this
-
sity m.ust become
-
effective here
r.ooIIl_ for m<>re book,s and to- same manner.
'year is gearing
,itself
towards l!,t
•
Marist
;
'
,
.
:
-
·
: -
·
_
-
·
·
· ·
perm1
_
t better use of tne library
Uis the generalsentitnent of sophistication,' as. well as a
1he
.
members
....
of
F-REE
.
tighter organizational body.
UNIVERSITY thatthe university
·
Sammon
described
--
the
is now at an all
.
time
.
high. Bob µruversi~y as being a publicity
-.
Sammon
-
and
'
Jim
·
Elliot
·
are rnecl:tamsm,
.
an9
_
.
feels
:
that
·
coordinating
. ·
the
·
·
"Free
·:_'.:
despiteJhe
'.
g~neraUhreat posed
Univ~rsity" this ye~r-
'
When
.
by_
th~
•
c~llege
·
the
. _
free
.
questioned about the
·
aspirations
.
University will have a good year.
·
of Free University Sammon
·
.
A
t~c~nt_opinion poll taken by
.
~he
replied
''74-75
will be
·
a do year
·
.
_
U!11~
.
e~s1ty
:
showed
:\:
that its
,
for
.
us, and we'll proveit."
>
•
··
cumculum 1s
.
a favorable one
.
·
-
~e curricgJ.lu~ is set up with
7
:
_
:
.
Students, facul~y, a<lminis!~ators
ma3or courses wfiich
·
are not
.
and many
.
:
different
'
campus
offered in the regular curriculum
·
groups have
·
~xpressed attitudes
-
at Marist: It is the general
sen-
:
toward ·
.
··
Free
·
University.
timent that Marist offers
'
;
only a Education being a positive thing,
:
limited
.
academic
·
experience
.
for
.
. ·
.
Ji'
ree
.
Univers~ty
is
.
none slio
_
rt
:
o(
i~
students
;
The
.
Free University
•.
positive
;'
:
Ther~
/
curri~ultiin en-
·
is described
.
as a
-
living; learning,
·
.
tails
-
different
.
courses as
.
well as
.
expei:-ie11ce and offers those who workshops
r
and
:
.•
.
·
an
.
interesting
partake
,
a . definite
·
le~ming. ex-
·
.
_
film
_
series.
\
Allmember~
•-
of Jhe
perience
:
i11. different areas.
·•
The
..
.
student:
body
arf
urg~d to: share
curriculllm
>
of
_
fers
·
.
w.or:k
_
sho
·
p
;
,
in
.
·
·
tn_e
·
:
1eafoing
;
of
•
free
:
.
Upiver~
_
·
.
pr~grarns,
·a )~(?tUre
.
~eri~
;,":
:
a
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sity
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...
dialogu¢ sen.e.s,
a
.
film
,
program,
.
'
Dile to the atitudinal:change of
_.
·
a cooperati:ve
·
exte~ion program
•
·
•
the
·:
Marist
:
.
philo~_ophy
z\
Free
·
.·
and'the·ac~denii
_
c\quart~rly._
:
_
)
.
·
lJ.!1ive~,sJty
.
~ek~_Jo;-.~fldM
•
~he
,
·
__
-
..
·
.
Sl:lnun~1:1
.
· f~e~s
•
tt1a~ there
::!s.
a
:•,
\\lldenmg gap
.
bet\V~en acad
_
eII11cs
.
.
_
:
commu_wc~tion gap
,
·
ar.id
,
µµit
-
~1
;.'
and social
,
awar~1J~s.s;J11.;oi:der
_
to
..
.
.
bridgeing
:
o~
:
thi
(
donn~~ry
_;
and
'-
·
lMlUer
_:
prepa:r~
_:-;
Marist
>
~ttid~~ts
:
Donnelly
i
'c
Wlll
;.
_
better:
:
·
enr1ch
,
the
.·
,
for
;
the
,
fast
'
:
paced
,
-
society,
:1.n-
.
academi
'
c
/':
~xp'_ei-_i'en?e
.-
at
:'.
th,e
.
:
stitutloris
t
such
;
as
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Ftee
·
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univ~r-'
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PAGE2
Jim
Genova
Maureen O'Toolc
Peter DeSantolo
OCTOBER 3.1974
Prohletns Identified
For Marist Woinen
By Eleanor Bert
Marist women have problems
according to the Committee on
Women report, delivered to
President Foy. "Marist, together
with all societies institutions has
an obligation to clear away some
of the obstructions and
-
make
more visible the way ahead for its
_
effectively with some of the
identified problems."
The first meeting for this
purpose is
.
scheduled
for
Tuesday, Oct. 15, at 3 P.M. in
Fireside
_
Lounge,
Campus
Center:
d
S
'
d
D .
women students." The report
R . •
.
t t
·
• t
·
_
.
s
sidentifies
problem areas and
es1 en
-
U en
-S
ISCU
of~ers
_
·
recommendations for
-
-
change.
.
_
_
Any Marist woman
·
interested
in sharing her ideas, who is
unable to attend this meeting, is
urged to con~ct
Ms.
Haggerty.·
She can be reached at ext. 286,
rocim 111 of the Campus Center.
The goals and objectives of the
permanent organization will
come from this meeting.
·
Ann
.
Haggerty, counselor,
N
SAGA F
d S
notecl the acl hoc committee was
--
-
ew
·
•
.
-
-
_
O
_
0
-
·_ _
_
y
__
s
_
t
_
.
_
e
_
In
!?i~!cce:i:~~.leat:~;;:cct~~:~~
Slated for discussion will
_
be:
the development of a woman's
studies program, ways
·
to
_
chan&e
the attitudes of the athletic
department and publishing a
woman's "yellow pages".
Pete went on
-
to say that he
preferred last year's
·breakfast
For. ahnost a month now, time which continued until eleven
'
Marist residents have found o'clock as opposed to ten this
themselves adjusting to a new year, and he felt lunch
·
might'go
and experimental food system on until two-thirty.
·
.
here on the campus. The points
Maureen O'Toole, senior,
and coupons plan has been the expressed the common sentiment
·
.
subject of much conversation and
·
of all students enrolled in the
:
speculation throughout the coupons plan.
''I'm
_
more con-
dormitories.
scious of missing meals
.
because I
Jim Genova, junior, fe
_
els he know
·
I'm
paying for them,"
By Rich Burke
Women in Higher Education,
.
_ held in ApriL "It's time," said
Hopefull};;°a student survey to be Haggerty,
.
<Cto_ get
:
our Marist
taken in a few weeks time will women organized mto a per-
give each individual a chance to manent group to enable us to deal
make his feelings known.
Bridge
Year
"
PrOgraTn Offers
Opporiuititii!s For
·
.
Students
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
has benefited economically from Maureen S?id.
_-
.
the new plan. Jim put it this way:
Another senior using coupons,
By Maureen
·
Dennigan
"I've utilized my option to eat in Michael Milone, is happy with the
the rat several times during the system, but he has found
The Mari
st
"Bridge· Year student from elementary school the first experiment of its type to
past month because of
_
the points problems elsewhere in
-
Saga's Program"
:
offers
.
students of througJt c
_
ollege
.
to 16 · years; appear in
.
the . public
.
school
·
system. I've saved many points program.
Lourdes
_
and Spacken,kiH High Particular
.
·
emphasis has
.
been
.
system .
.
Its basic requirements
in this manner."
"The only complaint I have Schools· the opportunity to placed
.
on the duplication consist
.
of average academic
..
Marie Bollella, a senior on the about it is the switching of dinner ~omplete a
.
fre~hinan
;.
college believed pres.ent in the senior talent and maturity. The course
points plan, is also content with
.
hours," Michael explained. "I year:
·
while
_
they: al,"e seniors in high school year and the
-
fresh
0
offerings
are
in
English
the new system.
._
·
-
.
;
·
feel this poses a disadvantage to high_ school.
.
_ ,
.
·
man college
·
year
,
.
.
·
_
Literature and
•
20 Century
"I'm
a lot happier with points,''. any
_
re~ident taking a six-fifteen
The
idea
..
for
.
the
.
program
·
·
Last'yeadhe Regents changed Europe.
·
·
.
_·
·
·
.
she said;
"because
I don't feel
·
classbecausethestudentisfaced locally
•
originated from
an
Jn- a section
'
of th~ commissioner's
· .
Dr. Peter O'Keefe, director of
I'm wasting money when I miss a with long lines
.
and a shorter time terview witl1 :R.ussell
T:
·
ta:uper,
-
i·egulations
_·
to
·
-
authorize
,
the
: -
the
.
program; feels that the most
meal.
,
And I'm open to other to eat dinner."
director of summer
·
school
·
and award
·.
of
.
a
high
·
school important.Jong term goaLof the
options such as the rat."
Michael feels that last year's continuing
·educ~tion
·
af C.W. equivalency
-
diploma based on
'.
'Bridge Year Pr,ogram"
·
to be
Sophomore Pete DeSantoio dinner time of four~thirty to six-
Post College, who developed one evidence of successful com-
-
the initiation of dialogue between
likes the idea of. the points plan, thirty .was better_ fitted to allow of the
·
·
nrst
.·
such
_
programs, pletion of a year o.f col!ege study. th,e
.
college
..
and high school
,
but his,
.
app_et\te exce
,
eds their any . student a )e1s~rely dinner, .. together
._
with
;
Ch~rrnin~d~ High __
.
Iri
selecting Jtie· courses:, to
.
be co
_
tnniunit~~s.
He
is not interested
value. ·"On the
-
whole; l
'
like
l
ttie
\ •
··
'Overa11,
·
- it
·._c·
seems
'.
t):\at-,
'.the
S~hoo,l~~~
-
~
:Mill~~\~
;:::,:.~"
·
\/;.
~. ::,
?, ;:-,
•.iffet:~d
.
·
int
'.
:
tlie:,ji~W.S• P.fOgr4
m;,
.,
iri
Mv~J:tg_jp.~t_g_ '.'.ilriIJ1ber'.:
of
high
:
('
points;" said Pete, "but"it
·
would
·
'
residents "tiave
:
accepted aUeast
-
.
Ha\Tmg decided that some' .ManstCollegestayedcloseto
_
the
··
school
---
students here
.
at Marist
·
be better if the p·oints were worth
-'
the
.
concept
.
of the points arid variatiimof tliis idea was ft?asible dassicaP freshman ,_. core but in creating a greaterrapport
a higher percentage of the meals.
·
coupons plan and enjoy its and
:
desirable,
.-
Dr,
·
Ric:hard 1
'
equiremerits
\
s~nce many of
,
the and
-
unde~standing' betwee
·
n the
_.
I'd also liketo see extended lunch benefits;
·
although
some LaPietra,
·
academic dean of Lourdes
··
students
:
probably· will two academic worlds.
·
and breakfast hours."
,
questions have been raised. Marist, and Dr
.
Peter O'Keefe,
enter.
colleges 9ther than Marist.
Last Friday, September 27,
- - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
director
_
of Marist
·
>
L,ourdes
"<
Since the Lourdes students are Mary Lou Feo became the first
"bridge year program,''
·
ap- college freshman as well as high "Bridge
Year
.
Program"
proa_che~
,
t~e
>
Lou,rde~ ag-
.
s~h(?Ol s~nio
_
r~,
·
_
the_y ar.1: eligi~le member to leave Marisf as part
\\\6 _
Leave Your Head to Us!
GUTTERY
-
UNI-SEX
F ~ O
HAIRCUTTING
$
6
w1"th
.
BLOW DRYING
·
STREAKING; FROSTING
·
Marist ID
&
PERMANENT WAVING
s
CALL 454-9239
_
for your appointment
_
now
'.
ON
TH ■
MAIN
.
MALL
3
LIB■RTY STR■■T
. (Above Capitol Bakery)'
Entrance Around
·
Corner
~tiCA/1
HA~E
C~FID
.
ENCE
,
WHtN
_-You~·
C41t
/NS'~MCE
l'tJ/flJ
FlloM MARSHAlL
'¢-STERllf:l~l
MARSHALL
&.STERLING
;".
INC.
.
.
.
•
.
;:.
Sine~
1864-"
: _'.
.
.
:
:
PROFESSIONAL INSURA~ce·ceNTERS
~RLINGTON
.
: ·
POUGHKEEPSII{
.
,
_44 Plaza
·
\
'.
7~
Washi~glon
St;
4
_
11
-
&100
·
454
,
oaoo
·
.
·
.
WAPPINGERS FALLS
·
.
lmperi~i
Pim
·
·
·
-
297-3701
ministration last February .
.
The for the
.
same fmancial aids of the Third Year Abroad
res{)onse. ~as positive
_
and
·
av3:ilabl(to other kes1m?-an aJ!d program; Mary Lou is an 18 year
several meetlllgs were conducted
·
their Regents scholarships
_
will old sophomore spending the
with several-
-
·
Lourdes ad:
i
be retroactive.
coming year studying in Paris.
·
ministrators including the Right
·
The
.
purp<_>se of this new ap-
There exists no question
Rev. Msgr
:
Rob
'
ert Kane, proach to education is to bridge whatsoever as to the success of
supervising l)rincipaL
the two worlds
_
existing between the program. It is hoped that the
College and high school of- high school
.
and college in- program will be a step towards
ficials point out that the State stitutions. The program is offered
·
bridging
·
the gulf·
.
between
Regents and the
.
Carnegie
·
in a way that allows the in- academic
·
institutions and
·
in-
Commission on Higher Education dividual student to adapt it to
.•
his
.
suring a constant and beneficjal
-
have
•
recc;>mmended shortening or her o~ person'-1 progra~.
.
flow
-
of dialogue throughout the
the period required to educate a . Invol~m~
24
students, this is program and all those concerned.
-
.
.
.
Eve.ry
Nite
L
f
VE· MUSIC
tSUN.-MARTHA
·:
VELEZ-JERRY MOORE SHOW
1.
.
M0J4:~GOJsr
~
NfrE·
·
o~T:
.
-7th Goob
·
FRIEND
COYOTE
. , _
.
·
_
·
'
.-
(lCT~
>
l4th ERIC WEISSBERG AND D~llVERANCE "DUELi.NG BANJOS~'
.
-:.
_
<
·
__
ruEs.::TEQUILA
.
NiTE~sK
·
vf
-
·
· ::_ .:'_
·
-
·
··
.
,
.
.
·,
. ,
WED.-BEER°J~ITE
.
· SNEAKER BROS;
>
..
·
.
.
THURS.-~S
-
t°STER
·
Hlll(GUESl
NITE.)
·
.
FRt,-
SAT.-BANJ~_:-i)l~IELAND BAND
· ....
.
.
·.
:
.
I
·
AD*·
o--
_
,
-
·
:
·
~-
'
•
1
,
•
•
OCTOBER 3, 1974
A
sampling of the offerinj:!s of
C.C.A.P.
Prograni Helps Community
By Dave Kazdan
community where help is needed,
and placing those students there
T~e
Campus . Com~unity as vo!unteers. There are many
Action ~rogram
IS
helpmg the orgaruzations which have con-
com~uruty_ by supplying local tacted the program for volun-
age~c1es with volunteers · and is teers, including the Hyde Park
helpmg the . stud_ents by giving Head start- Program, and the
them a w_ay to donate free time Hudson River state Hospital.-
constructively to the community.
The
Campus
Community
. .The program, ~hich works Action Program
is
expanding this
thf"ough Dean Wades office, and year, after several years of
-
with Dean Wade, Dean Cox, Dolly ser_vice through the SOS hot line,
Russell, Fred Lambert and which has been discontinued.
others, hopes ~o k~ep open
a
line Among the on-campus ventures
. of ~ommumcation between ?f the program is student input
Manst . College
and· the mto the Parents Community
surroundmg community. One of Weekend to
be
held November
8
the ways it hopes to do this is
9,
and
10.
This weekend will in:
throug~ hel~ing students with elude a dinner-dance, football
free time fmd places in · the game and more .
. The program · will set up a
display . table in the camous
center m order . to let students
know just what the program can
make available to them.
The
Campus
Community
Action Program would like to
connect students who are willing
to donate their free time with
those in the community seeking
volunteer
help.
Interested
students should contact Olin
Burkhart, Cathie Russo, Isabel
Andrews, or Dean Wade's Office .
The program is interested in
anyone willing to donate· time,
and places for students who want
to help those_ in the community
seeking volunteers services.
.
. •·· ~qlle~e EfJe.et!!t Jnnot,ative
~
Teacher .Education Program
. By Donna Corrado·
all the above factors are taken
~to. consideration before_ cer-
tifymg a teacher.
_
.
An important question was
raised at the colloquium:
Continued on pagc-.7
colloquium was held in Donnelly
ANCY .
I( . . ..
19 Academy St. .
Last Tuesday, September 24, /a
~
L -
Hall. It's purpose was to inform .
.:., . _ _
__ - . ·: ;.
(
above
the Pick)
students who are involved with
/ "
the teacher education program -
/ ·
·
All
your printing needs-
and also the faculty of Marist that
PAGE3
.
.
..
'
eszgnatzonsAbound
As Chris Wise
Joins Tackney
By Tim DeBaun
Junior Chris Wise resigned
from her office as student
government secretary Sep-
tember
19,
only two days after the
resignation of Vice-l;'resident
Charlie Tackney.
''My reasons for resigning are
three-fold," said Chris in a recent
interview. The first reason was
similar to that of Tackney's. · ..
1
tend to agree with Charlie," she
said.
·
"The student government
hasn't shown much leadership!"
was Chris' second reason. She
felt that the stu9ent government
could be doing a great deal more
on campus than they are
presently doing.
Her third reasqn, she said, was
related to the second one. She
primarily had misgivings about
being appointed instead of
el~cted. She went on further by
relating this story.
After Tackney's resignation
she had made a proposal to
President Brian Morris. She told
Morris, Thursday, September 19,
that she would like to take over
the vice-presidency and at the
same
time
continue
her
secretarial duties. According to
her, -Morris agreed.
However, the next morning,
Morris wanted to take the job
back because he had at that time
someone else in mind to fill the
vacant vice-president's office
said Chris.
"I suppose you could say that
was the straw that broke the
camel's back," commented
Chris.
She further commented that
things were done irregularly by
the student government She
believed that student government
should be changed fast.
··I
dl''l 't think it is ethical to
accept
200
dollars of the students'
money for a job
I
believe is ob-
solete," she said in closing.
Chris, a commuter, is presently
active on the Commuter Union
and the woman's committee,
both positions which she main-
tained while ·secretary.
THE RED FOX INN
Presents:
(formerly. "The RathskeUer")
WAITED DIN~ER SERVICE
·saturday Nigh~ - 10/5/74
Entertainment From 8-2
RESERVATIONS ONLY-LIMITED NUMBER
Must Be Made By FRIDAY 12 NOON!!!
a new competency .based teacher
custom printed shirts for
education program would be put
clubs, socials & sports.
into effect in the near future.
Prices reasonable and
M U G CH AR G
E 5 0
t
: A
film
was shown and Dr.
quick
d~Jivery
::~;w
w{~~tt,
sf
:tictJ~c!1J:
CALL
evening; 226-6866
RESERVATION S TAKEN AT SAG A OFFICE
*
Department.spoke. -
~~====~====::::;===========:!!::=================~~~====~
The idf;)a behind this new
I
program is that steps would· be
taken by · the competency based
program to _insure that emphasis
of teacher. ed· programs in
colleges - would
be
ori skills,
knowledge and ·attitude of
prospective teachers.
·
The movie viewed at the
colloquium explained the new
procedure; In brief, the idea of a
- consortia will be established.
Actually,
a
consortia
is
a group of
teachers in the community who
will submit· a proposal or an
outline of categories to the school
district, in which the new teacher
should be qualified.
.
·
In order to be appro\Ted by the
state as competent, the
0
.student
must prove himself in a· number
of skills; and the methods he uses
' evaluated. His delivery skills will.
be_judged. These · include lec-
tures, effective use of media,
field trips and his overall • an-
ticipation !of the needs· ·of
students. Secondly, a· teacher's
interpersonal skills will
be tested.
These. are: the. teacher's in-
.· teract_ion •·
:with ..
the community
and the social adjustments he has
·· to make. ~ost important
'is
the
·-. relationships, ·with .other.·. ad~
ministrators,•. Lastly;
··the
~r~
sonal .. traits,·· habits• and. overall
· acti5>n~ will.be viewed_ .. ~Qte·that_
/
,S\\\f('tS.
~-e,-s·
JaAtJS
Swe~t_S
Soc.l(S
. ·L,fATH~:.
~oes
·
c:.
--o•
-
r~e,-~ec>.
., -lee.
_Le.u,
I
I , '
•
'
1
•
Ol\\l 6
·.1)~
f\B
-
3~0
rnA,~
m"L\..
~~\tee~\
e-
N'
If
11.-CfTJ/-9
'.
'
'
' '
• '•
'
' '
• · • • • • • ' I • I • I I '
I
I \ I , , , , • , , I • , ,
'
.
.
' ' .
'
'
.
.
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-
OCTOBER 3, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGE4
1HE .
• CIRCLE
Letters To The_ Editors-
VOLUME 13 Marist College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. NUMBER 1
Voter Registration
resulted. from the chaotic and
·
undemocratic ways in which we
. The Marist College CIRCLE is the weekly newspaper of the students
· regulate how people may · vote.
of Marist College and is published throughout the school year ex-
To the Editor:
.
_ Instead of universal voter
clusiv~ of vacation periods by the Southern Dutchess News Agency,
~n . the 1974
Democratic enrollment, we limit the voting
Wappingers, New York.
-
primary, less !!1an 25 pe~cent of process by setting registration
1-------------------------....
New
York s
reg1stere_d_ dates which vary by county, as
Co-Editors
Lyn Osborne and Gregory Conocchioli
Associate Editor
Irene Ross
Layout Editor
Tim
DeBaun
Photography Editor
·
Dave Pristash
staff: Jerry Profita, Rich Burke, Marueen Dennigan, Chip Kennard,
Dave Kazdan, Julie Schott, Donna Corrado, Eleanor Bert, Gary
Nonnan, Earnest A. Royal, Debbie Nykiel, Cathie . Russo~ Karen
Tully, Rich stevens;Fr. Leo Gallant, John Tkach. Linda Franco; Jim
~el1!1ed} .Toni McTerniin. Terry Stoutenboro,J2nice Colleran,
ete Provost, Bob Baulch, Brian Morgan, and Bob Nelson
Business Manager
-·
Greg Welsh
Advertising Manager
Tom McDonald
Democr:ats vo~ed. -In~_part, this _weft,' as having -elaborate
d~pressmg. t?m-out. refl~cted the . requitements of residency · and
distance . ~o many people · feel proof of registration.
from their_ governme1:1t and .. Until this unfair system can be
representat1__ves. But 1t also changed, those of us who par-
Abroad Notice
Dear student,
This is the last alerting
to
t}:le
unique possibility of~spending
next year abroad. The following
placements are . of particular
interest and benefit:
Biology: U. of York
Business:
-u_
of Birmingham
Communications: ·Trinity ~hd.
All Saints' Colleges, Leeds
Economics: U. of York
English: Manchester College,
Oxford National U. of Irelarid at
Maynooth City Literary Institute,
London·
. . . -·
History:·· National U. of Ireland
at Maynocith : .·
.
.
U. of Lagos, Nigeria•
Political Science: U. of Shef~
field, U, of London
Psycho.logy:
Hatfield
Polytechmc, England U. of
Lagos, Nigeria
There are, of course, several
other pC>ssibilities,. particularly if
ticipate in the electoral process
must help others to register, vote,
and speak out. T_owards that end,
I have asked workers in my
Senate campaign to devote much
of the next two weeks to an in-
tei,sivc, ,tate-wide, non-partisan
voter registration. drive.
The country needs it. , ·
Sincerely,
Ramsey Clark
you speak a foreign language.
All placements -to the above
must be completed before
Christmas.
It
is
ur-gent,
. therefore, that you inquire as
soon as possible.
·_
My office hours are: Mon. and
Thurs.: 10:00 -12:00 A.M.; 3:30 -
4:00 P.M.; Tues.: 3:30 .~ 4:45
P.M.
and by apporntment.
--
Fraternally,
Dr. JosephL. Belanger
Editorials
·
·
Resignations -
-Revitalization
ministration interact; .. including
that existing .Student Govern-
. open gates of communication and
nient is a bit too innocuous or
To the
.
Editor,
· . ··
responsiveness:
.
... : .
'. remote/he :should make known
Not long ago MariSt was visited
· The lattedwo paragraphs- a·re his position and a_ tt. erilptto.· inv. est
by
an . evaluating . team
1- t-
f ·
f th
·
nt- "
During the past few weeks the CIRCLE has had little enough time to
a is mg o some o . e esse . 1a
1
~thin the various offices people
kee
·th ·~·..
·ff · · 1 t 1
f 11
d ·-
t
th
representing the Middle
·
~tates ob. s. erv.ations. of the. study._Ob- ·w· ho
·w·
•1·11· ·1·espon·d · to ... s· tudent
p up
WI
1...,. own a arrs, e a one. o ow an. commen on
e Association. of Colleges. The
.
1 th
d'd. t
., d
changes in student Government Today we have found ( or perhaps we
·
b
·
vwus Y, e group 1 no spen a sentiment, after all, the functions
should say made) the time.
committee's findingshave een great deal of time here.
In fact, of student Government include
At a time in our history when most former.· rules governing politics published,
th0ugh poorly they were ·.on campus only follr r.ep· rese.n. tatio.
ri,. .
not.:
only
distributed, and they provide us d
B t· th· · th · ·
th· t
'
and politicians are liable to cham!P. from day to day, it should probably
ays. · u
1s IS
e rmage. a
regulation. · ·
·.
.
all with an . in. val.uabl.e. op-
M · t·
· ts · d
t
·
come a_ s no. surprise that st.udent.government.s are undergoin. g th. e
· ·
·
ar1s ·.pro1ec ,.·an ex raneous .·-·Be .. cmd.the.r.ight
.. offranchis.eis
d t
portunity . to· learn . where .. the
·
h
th M'ddl St t
~
same 1 en !ty-crises. Is an office nece~sary·_simply because it was College· stands as seen .from an. groups sue as e . I
e a es the right of each studentto j(?in
deemed to be? And perhaps a bit closer to honie ~· will the resignation
•
Association are content to accept the organizations of · his . choice.
from that office effect any c~ange in the system-of that government? objective point of yiew. ·
· ·
this facet
.
of campus life .. That•is . There are a.number of clubs on
( The federal government seems to be getting along without a vice-'
Briefly' the report reflects the why those of us who make Marist campus .which serve variegated
president.)
committee's. stirprise · that MariSt a part•· of our· everyday Uves
interests, they cari all use, active
Marist College Student Government is supposedly the backbone Qf hasn't bogged itself down in red must ourselves; perceive the members. ·. ·
·
·
·
student representation on this campus. Can it function without two of ~pe'. The · campu~ itself: was . fraHties we encounter here and
...
The .
survival : of the school
·ts
1
t"
·t·
?It
nfrt
t·th·t
· 1 td ff.
Judgedf~vora~ly,with P.~rtwular realizethatwearetheoneswho•·d·
d·
· ··t•· .·
.
·•·t· ··td
.
1. ,e ec 1ve pos1 ions.
app~iirs
U
o. _una e a our e ec e (). 1c.ers emphasis on.,the ~architectural.
. . . . ; .· .. . • .. , . .. __ .
.
epeµ S upon ,as .I\'.e, m erese
have no alternative to·the"'presuined· uselessness of'their'pcisitioris d .... ·
f'th"' (; ..
.
,,.;,
·c ·
t • , d · must r~y1~Uz~_~ho~E: .cpn~1tlOIJS-
students,: To.ec:,mvolvlemenh:of
other'than resignation.'
·
•·.
. .. ..
'
·
·.·
·
. .
.
· ..
.
.,
.
.
·
Cl!Igllfi""~ iip;l~hs • ~n e~.an,
Thr!r~ is truth.in the ass~ssrnent ·:these:people could wellJ:ie. the
·
That the idea of the necessity for a functioning vice-president may Do1:1ne .
Y .
a. '. · ·. e. . usilless of our College, but. there 1s also a most effective way of confronting
be outmoded is no novel idea - many of. the. nation's founding fathers Office was praised for
t
be, m~rale plethora , Qf unsubstanUable . the ..issues . that· impede the
saw no definitive reason for the post.. We'd like to think that Charlie ad!ld c~mt p.etfe~cet.
0
11
f
.
thtes
1
t.atffl. thtse opinion; we must. separate the
progress of significant living at
Tackney.was making a comment on the state.of our student govern-
iversi
Y
O
me ec ua. · a en
two.
M · t ·
·
mental system and not particularly on the lack of duties it afforded within ~he studentcbo~y ~md the
Once each student has decided
ans ·
Fraternally yours,-
him.
-
school s.t sta~ure c;g'~~l~n the to act on the problems he
.
· Brian Morgan
But the ideaofourstudentsystem functioning without a secretary is commum
Y
w n re
.. · ·,
recognizes, he. may .follow
student Government
another matter: to say that the functions of a secretary are un-
Further, .the t~a~ ~om~ended various courses of action.
Treasurer
necessary seems a bit suspect. Who will be performing the important, the enthusiasm·
wi
th which • the
His niost important right is that
albeit routine, duties vacated by that resignation?
students, f~culty • and ad- of franchise; if a student feels
The CIRCLE has every confidence in the remaining two elected
officers, but we do question their ability to function as four: no one is
Li' br·
ary. Featu·
res
super-human.
,
$2000.00 over each
of
the past few
reasonable
levels
without
We also question the validity of appointment to the two vacated
years. This personal check of disturbing everyone else in the
offices and-or the legality of the president appointing someone not only To the Marist Community:
briefcases, etc., .is not· the most Library. The acoustics in the
to fill the two vacatee posts, but to incorporate as it were the two
I was flattered to see t~at some desirable system and there are present Library have• been such
vacancies into one position and then fill that. (Could "executive· of my comments regarding. plans plans to install. a. cliffererit as_ to make even the slightest
privilege" be at issue here at Marist?)
for the Library were considered amfrigement when .the Library whisper audible from a distance.
The CIRCLE has come up with many questions - hopefully, both for important enough to merit nicives to F~ntaine .. The libr~ry While not perfect, there is liope
our satisfaction and that ofthe student body, they will be answered editorial comment in the, Sep-
staff appreciates the cooperat10n .that these dividers will allow
soon.
·
·
.
tember 26th issue of The Circle. I t~ey · haye r~ceive~ from - all . conference to take place without
In the meantime, we would suggest to the student Government that .was also encouraged, by that !1brary u~ers m their. efforts to disturbing others. . -
. .
rather than spending time and materials cranking out a special same editorial, t~ r.e~lize that. Improve llbrary security..
These are some of the efforts
"communication"ontheprogressofthetenniscourts (something that there are many mdmduals on
.Another .new feature_ m the the Llbrary staff is making
to
could have been better covered and more widely distributed through campus who recognize the .im-
L1br_ary 1s. t~e . paperback' deal with the limitations of our
exposure in the CIRCLE) they get out a special report on the state of portance ofthe Library and are - carous1:1 which 1s. locate~ near presentfacility. Hopefully the
their disunion.
concerned with its development
~h~
.ma111 entrance. The Libr3:ry Fontains complex . will be
·
proiectiles
c and expansion. With this in mind . 1mtially stocked the car9usel with designed to alleviate. these. and
I wouldlike to use this letter as an·· over $100.00 worth of· paperbacks other · problems for.· .the· future.
opportunity to publicize some of and_ is . encouraging . all to trade Certainly more money for books
the changes-that have been_ made . their. ·old or ,al).'eady read :would be helpful, but would not be
in the Library this year.
•
p~per~acks. for ours; Any con- · the only answer to providing a
Toe most. immediately .visible . tnbutions of paperbacks anyone stimulating library environment .
During the past year or two it has been noticed that certain in-. ,change has been the•installation would care to !Ilake wou!d ~e at J.14arist. I am always willing to
dividuals . in . Marist's dofll!atories
,
have tak~n up the
.
activity of of a modest traffic control system , greatly appreciated and Will. listen
to
any suggestions or ideas
throwing objects out of the windows. Proiectiles have run the gamt•t • by cre3:ting e.n~ran,ce' an~ ·exit allow the staff.· .. to ~eep . the aboutthe improvement. pf. our
fro. m bow. ling ball. s to. ice• cream cones to· furnit. ure,. and even. doors With a d1v1!ier to delineate carousel w~ll provided for.
.
· learnmg resources here . at
bathroom tissue.
.
. the entrance ·and exit. corridors.
A third new feature is the use of Marist..
··
·
Last week, while walking.out of the side door of one of the dorms, "This,' together
.
with·· a' check .· sound ·absorbing dividers. to .
·
'···
·. Th~hkyou,
. someone· was struck by what seems to have been a' chunk of ice; for- system at the desk, will hopefully ·. create small conference-ar~as in
Vincent L. Toscano
tunately, it. didn't hurt.this person. On that same night, anoth.er person reduce losses froni .theft. which . the lowe(levelwhere groups.can
have . averaged·. · approximately mee~ together . and converse at
just missed being hit when some object was, again, thrown out of a
,
. . · · _ .
•
·
window from the same building. . · . ..
· . ·
· · .
.
. . -
.
We_don't know what the reasons are for these actions·and, frankly,•
Europe.·.a.
·11
Trips_ ... ··..
: ·
eastern states have less to pay· climb of the U;S.-dollar against;·
__ ., . , •we don't care. No reason could everjustify such conduct.
.
than students at western-schools. ·· .falling • European currencies
We wonder if it has ever occurred to these · people that someday,
••·
·..
.
Also, lower winter rates offer further decreases the cost
of
a
someone will inevitably
,be
hurt. Some ofJhe,.objects thrown could .Dear Marist:Students:- .
s~iers inexpensive .trips:· to trip to Europe.· . .
, ·
have seriously injureo someone ifhe was hit byit.·We also wonder if.it
Some student air fares.- to Austrian and Swiss slopes. One
· For students staying in Europe
has· occurred to th~~ people-tha~. it .might·be .~ery annoying to . Europe·ar~ ~till,in·effe~t: Youth .. sctluuddin~ngt• Sk! trip is only. $550; in-
longer than- a. 2-week ·ski ·rung,
. someone to have ~n ice c~~m cm~e drop. frC?m a Window onto a new . fa~es a_nd ~ther i:educed a1rJ~es
.
the round trip ~1ght temporary paying jobs are. also
·
. coat. We furthur wonder.if 1t has ev~r ~c~~e~•.to ~h~e people that. bemg_sold.m Canada and M~co; bc~et and. accommodat1~ns available ... Most jobs: are
.
:,in·
some passers-by often think ~f ~he ~ossibili1! of berng st':"llck. by:'a°, and .. cont~nued.: use .. of, s~hool . dunng two weeks on .~he Aus~nan, ·r~staurants,;.hotels; · and
•
ski
o!)Ject as they walk by. a buUding_ ... · ..
·
.· . ; . , . . • . .··•·
, . · charter flights
·
all:-make._Europe • slop~s .. • . Geµ.eral : ·.·~ Ameqcan ·
.. resorts. Standard :-wa:-ges : are
:T.HE,
CffiCLE. sinc~rely hopes th~~ these mdividua~ give so!Il~ .~till, -~ery;:inµ_ch -available:.to 'tou~1sm to: ·Europe '.was·
Clff-
_
paid, biitthe big saving is the free
ser1o~;th()~ght_t~ ~s'. And the ne~ tune someone feels)ike throwi!1g .'.travel mrnd~·~plle_ge•students -
s«;>mewhatthis past.summer.
As
a :- room:· and board :that· goes 'with .
~met~ng outofa wmd_ow,·we hope thatcommons~nseand ma~tY.- even::in ~he:fac~.
of~~~~r- .
in-•.•··res~lt, ..
~!1Y
Au~~an ski resorts •.· each,,job!;
:<:~ ~' ·,·
·
' · · · ·. · •·
Will .. stifle. tlle urge.
·
.
..-,·· ·
·
' ·.
· , :
creasing internatio~al air:f~_res. ·
:.~i:e
dr,~P,;>I_ng_ their ·ra~ for the
· . :: ; . ,,.
.
. · ;,
,
- - - -
. As_'i1lways,-stu~ellt$:llvytg.µ_1·.Pte ·--~~~~s1q.~ro~~~,~o,thes~dv
''Co'ntiinied:·on:page
8
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OCTOBER
3, 1974
THE CIRCLE
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'~FUNNY> WHEN
T~E.V'RE
T\-lROUGH
THEY
KEEP
AS\<lN
.
G
HOW
i'O
l=L.US~
IT!"
-
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-
PAGES
Get Out
·And
Vote!
In order to exercise your right
to vote this November, you will
need to know the following in-
r,.~rne.t;
·
on.
Iri orderto register to vote you
must
1.
be 18 years old on or
before November 5, 1974. 2. be a
U.S.
citizen by
birth or
naturalization. 3. have been a
resident of the city or village
where-you plan to vote for 30 days
prior to November 5, 1974.
You
must
renew
your
registration if
1.
you have
changed your address.
2.
you
have not voted in a general
election in the past two years
(primaries do not count).
If
you wish to register where
you now reside, check with your
county Board of Elections as to
where and when to register.
Information on
Absentee V
_
oting and
Absentee Registration
·
If
your home is in a different
.;..__,...;.. __ _;;.;..., ___ _;...;. .... __ ...;. ______
~
__ ...;. _____ .....;, ___ -:==-::---------:------
county from where you attend
Senior
Search
,
Begins : Placement
E~~:~~~r~i'::1:t:¥£
------------------------------~~-__,;=------------------------
sentee registration from any
ltis hard to get a job, even if can be particularly good
.
if
you usually provide lists of available information to The College Board of Elections, but this
you have (or will soon have) a have the patience to sell yourself jobs (jobs rarely
.
stay available Graduate
Register,
In-
application must be mailed to the
.
college
·
degree: The
fact
is over_ an.d. over again
;
Re
_
sume for more than
.
2 weeks), and corporated, 250 Fulton Avenue, Board of Elections in your home
.
simple: there ar_e too
·
many
-
r~prmts do cost some money, and request a fee be sent to be listed Hempstead, New York 11550 (but county. This must be postmarked
people currently driving faxis it is important to
_
write and with· them, only
·
to be com-
don't wait, because the deadline no
later
than October 10, 1974 if
-
·
with
.
a
·
Bachelor's
·.
diploma prepare the resume properly the pounded by an additional fee
.
for is November 22, 1974), along with
you wish to vote this November.
hang~g
,
outof
a
back pocket; and firsttime forjust this reasop._.
If
actual
_
placement
(
in some
·
a carefully ivritten 60-word self-
The application for absentee
.
the unemployed rate seems to
:
the resume is clear;
·
concise,
.
cases)
.
Once you are matched description
.
No
guarantees
are registration includes the ap-
continually
.
soar.
_
There is
·
.
.
a
·
neatly done,
.
·
and
.
necessarily wi
_
th a job (whether you want it or made for jol}s, but ~hey can save plication for an
.
absentee baUot.
·
degre_e
:
of complacency that sets impactful, it
-
~as been d?ne riot), the
·
money has been paid, you money in mass resume ex-
If
you are registered in your
iri sometime in the middle of the properly. Rapid reproduction and their concern becomes posure.
home county, you may write to
senior_ year, where worry about a services are less expensive ~han strictly profit-minded; Once
The search need not be a the Board of Elections there,
··
-job seems to be a
.
good
:
thing to xeroxing (and of higher quabty), again; scrutinize and investigate reason for worry; you are not
requesting an appli_cation _for _an
·
put
_
·
off for . a .few days .
.
That so stop by a local printer
.
before
.
.
before spending any money.
alone. Placement directors are . absentee ballot.
This
apphcatton
·.
,
behavior easily tides
.
you through
·
.
spending .100
,
.
.
dimes
.
,
in
,,
-
the·
.
One. orgctnization;
·
neither.·· a hir~~ spe~itic,ally to
_
assi!?t you(in . should be
.
returned to th~.J~oard·
'-'
'
Iilid~terrns, ahd before
·yoli
:
know
1
machire~atthe
libtart
·
•
-
<:
.piaceirient
agency
·
-
~or
'
an
'ein-
getting the right job. Their offices
'.
ol: Elections by October 29. The
,
.
·
it;
~
the
.
time
.
has
· :
come
:
to start
·
Spare no reasonable expense m ployment service, was developed dre filled with means to this end,
.
Board of Elections will then send
finishing papersfor the end of the yourjob searching;
,
sinc~
.
you'll to assist in the job search.
·
The and you'll find that they.·re fully
·
you an absentee ballot which
s_emes~er .
.
~ere rea}!y is
.
very pro~ably ~ake most
.
of 1_t
,
back
-
emphasis here is_ on
.
exposure;
.
trained to help. The placement
must
be
returned to them no later
bttle ttme, ~f yourat10nahze as ~urmgthefirstweekonaJob~ou much in the fashion of sending •director will
be
able to give you
than 12:00 noon,
Monday,
· ·
well as everybody else, to look for hke; There are ways of spendmg out resumes
:
to a large group of far more information than this
November 4, 1974 .
.
a job through your. senior year.
plenty of
·
money, howeyer,
'
companies
~
The differences here, article could possibly provide
.
Forfurther information, please
It's
·
always
.
mce. to. know nota
_
l.>ly employment s
_
ervices however, are significant. First See him at your earliest possible
contact the League of
·
women
somebody to get the first Job, but and placement
.
_agenc~es. An the list of employers is resear-
convenience.
•
Voters or the Board of Elections.
more and more of these contacts employment service will take ched extensively. Second, only a
find the job market too tight !o
·
your name a~d qu~lifications_and small fee is charged to the stu- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.....
help out. A few years ago, you
11 match you with a Job that might dent in return for space in a
be told, there wo~ld have been no become available. These se~ic~s periodical devoted intirely to
problem,
·
but thmgs are really do have the resources to mamtam mini-resumes ( 60 word self-
tight right now. The job marketis long job listings, but it will cost descriptions as they are called
:
as bad as you've heard; but there you as much as 3 percent of a by
.
the
College
Graduate
·
are jobs available
-
if you're year's earnings
.
(3 percent of Register).
These
·
self-
willing to ~ake the time to really $10,0:f> is $300). Some e1:11ployme~t descriptions are listed in
seekthem out.
.
services are honestly mvolved m classified areas (Social Science,
The most reasonable way to_ do helping seniors, but the few t~at Media, Engineering), and sent to
·
this is the oldroutine of sendmg
·
have operated at the edge of m- personnel offices at over 1000
out resumes
'..
and letters of tegritr have given
·
·
::-~ason ~or· companies.
If
interested in being
inquiry, making f~llo'?'·Up ~hone scrutiny before. deahng with part of the January issue (which
calls,
.
and ammg~g mterviews. employment services .
.
Plac~ment is not
.
too
·
early for May
This can be gruehng after the ~genc~esa_re equally deservmg_~f graduates, if you think about it),
first 100 attempts, but tl!e r~sults mvestlgat10n.
·
These· ·companies· students are asked
·
to send for
·
Teach
-
er
·
Education-Offers
Ce~tification
.
Programs
·
Marist College
·
offers a
.
New credits of graduate study.
.
Education Office, may do so any
·vork state-approved
,
program
·
.
Applicationsto the secondary
.Monday
through Friday from
·
!e&:iing
·
fo .
provisi:ma! cJr• education program may be ob- 8:30 through 5:00 P.M. in Room
·
tification for teaching Grades 7 tained at the Teacher education. 218 Donnelly.
through 12 in the fiel~
.
of:
.
Office; Room 218 Dof!nelly fr()m
Inform_ation
_deScribi~g
t~e
_
English,
s_ocial
•.
studies, 8:30
,
to 5:00 P.M. daily through programm seecial education
°"'.111
mathematics, 'biology,
.
qc,tob~r 8, Sophomores
_
and also be available. The Special
.-
chemistry, physics, Spanish a11d ju!llor_s, are invited
.
to mak~
:ap-
Educati?n
·
Progr3:m,
a
French. Certification is awarded
.
phcatton. students accepted mto cooperative program with Mount
following
,
completion
·
_of
a
.
B.~.
_
the program for . the se~o!1dary
·
Saint ~ary CQllege i~ ~ewburgh,
degree, specified credit hours m
.
schoohl!lust
.
attam a mlilllllum l~ds ~o du~l provisi~nal cer
-
the academic discipline and.the cumulative
.
mdex of
.
2.5 and an tlflcatlon
in
special
and
.
prescribed program at Marist
.
app_rox~te B: average in their elementa17 education.
.
including courses in educ
_
ational maJor ~UbJectf1eld by the
.
~nd
.
of
The Teacher Education Office,
psychology;·. philosophy
•
;
of
.
their
. ·
Juruor
,.<
year .. Applicants Room 2l8 Donnelly; will be open
education; methods of teaching must _also
submit recom- from6:00 P.M. through 8:00 P.M.
_
and
sociological .
.
and mendations from three faculty_ Tuesday, October
.
8, and Wed-
-
phUosopllicaLJoundations of member~ anf!Dust successfully
.
nesday, .October
·
.
9
; :
Interested
.
education. In ·addition
.
to a pass an mt~rv1ew conducted by students are invited to make
·
:
·:
:
!lupervised student
:
teaching the
.
· ..
·
_Seconda~y
.
·.
Teacher, inquiries at that time regarding
·
experienc~ ~n ~.seco?dary school ;ducation
,
Councd.
...
.
.
.
.
application to -the Teacher
·
·
during senior year; a juni9r-year
:
;
,,
Freshmen; and s_op~omores Education
;
program
'
;
from the
·
.
>
fiel
_
d
:
exp~r~ence
,
.i~
:.
re9uire~. interest~~
-
-
o.111
.
~e~chmg
.
~he
:
·
evening s~io? program.
·
Permanent
:
·
certification
-
:
1s
·
mentallyretard~or
.
the l~rrung
·
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.
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·
. ·
.
.
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granted by NYS u~~
-
comple?on
· :
disableji,
.
who
;
have not
·
as
,
yet
ofa
.
master's degree
..
or
.
thirty
r~giste~e.d. ~1th
_
the Teacher
.
--
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·fr(]j
ieg~()IJ
'1!t
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. OCfOBER 3, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGE6
Code
99
By
Fr.
Leo Gallant
ug~~. poverty, disease, ex-
ploitation, oppression, instead of
Commentary -
Two weeks ago I explained the merely pitying the poor, the sick,
title of my column and I the exploited, the oppressed, only
dedicated it
to
those who want to then will we have come of age. On
bring new life to
this
campus. I that day our convictions will have
believe very much in the "power caught up with our gestures. That
of the few" for good; the salt that hour must come soon, for our
preserves and flavors, the light cities are in a race with time and
!)ult
Uiat doesn't have to be very time is running out."
By
Gregory Conocchioli
large to light up a whole area. I
I've heard of 'dirty tricks' a person in quiet solitude, a
like to think of Rosa Parks, the played on this campus, of acts power that goes out and in-
black woman who, on one hot done completely out of malice, of tangibly touches · and heals
Alabama day, refused to move to residents so crushed by students' hearts.
(The following
column
will
be a
regular weekly feature of the
CIRCLE.
It
is written
by
Co-
Editor
in
Absentia
Greg
Conecchioli .
and will reflect his
life as
a
student aborad. Greg will
be writing . from England where
he
is
attending . London-
Pol)1echnic Institute of London
this fall.)
.
140,000
student identity cards
were issued last year.
While some of these card
holders were studying, others
remained behind
ro
study. Course
credit-seems available for most
anything at some schools; in-
cluding working on a kibbutz in
Israel· for the summer. One
student at Antioch College in Ohio
studied in southern . India while
earning
his
degree
in
photography, while another
Antioch
stu'dent
studied
education and sociology in India,
the back of the bus. "The inhumanity to students. I may be
That's why we have so many
movement sparked by her small things, but the wickedness "power services" on campus.
decision to break the law by that wtderlies them is the same Daily, a quiet, short Mass at
sitting. up front, broke open the_ wickedness that exploits people noon; a
5
p.m. Mass, a vibrant
whole idolatrous web of law and in the world. We need a few Code community worshipping together
order that kept black people
'm
99'ers to counteract this hatred before dinner; a
10:30
p.m.
their place.' When Martin Luther with love, care; •we need people scripture-oriented Mass in iriy
K~g asked Rosa Parks why, who are "tired" of hatred. We, ho~se,, a most peaceful .ex-
after a _lifetime· of law.:.enforced need prayerful people who can . penence at the end of the day.
· Fifty years ago this past month
American
students
at
Marymount College participated
in an overseas education
program. The six young college
women sailed for Paris to study
at the Sorbonne while living with
other- French · girls in -a home
owned by the college.
· also.
· The. off ice of International
Education states ''that while the
popularity of the study. abroad
program continues, it has leveled
off in_ the past year because of
economic- problems."
subservience, she finally lost .contemplate a few minutes ·daily
Then I know many students ·
patience, she replied simply, 'I and take on the love of God today are using quiet moments of
was tired'." ·(N.C.R. Aug.
16)
!umself.
the day to meditate, to encounter
Cardinal Cushing once said:
I
believe in the power of
God.
There'll
be
many Rosa
"Only when we begin to hate prayer: that mysterious f-o.wer. of Parks in this generation, '
Children
'S
Theatre To Meet
Mari~t College Childrens' "Pinocchio" to the gleeful d~light '. E~comb, a three year· veteran,
Theatre has announced the first of tens of thousands of chlldr_en Lucy Squicciarini, and Com-
general meeting for the up- - and adults throughout
the
Mid-
munity Childrens' _
Theatre
coming
1974-75
season. The Hudson area.
- .
D'
t
J
·
· ·
·11
b
t
8 00
PM
"Al. · ·
w
d
-
Irec or, an Denmson
meeting
wi,
e _
a - :
. .,
_IC?,
,in
on_ erland," ,:'The
The workshop will ~llow iti-
Thursday. Oct.
3
in .room
249,
:!£
1
bbit?
B;bestm royland and terested people t
9
experience and.
Champagnat.
. eepmg . eau
Y,,
are s~me learn dramatic skills, such as
This meeting begins Childrens' Ideas for this year_ s prod1:1ction, mime, improvisation, dance .
Theatre newest season- and will and group. reactI~f!S
wlll
be movement, · expression . and
serve to provide a meeting soug~t for a decision at the creativity. Theatre familiarity
ground for Childrens' · Theatre mAeetmg.
.
.
.
set construction, lighting and
and the Marist Community.
Creative
Dramatics video,work will
be
included in the
Childrens' Theatre, a Student Wo_rkshop,
-sponsored _ by workshops
Government funded, student-run Ch1ldrens' Theatre, is being
· _ _ _
_
theatre· organization, yearly. conducted this,year by Childrens''
produces such shows as "Peter Theatre Director, Lisa Mc-
Pan," "Wizard of
Oz," ·
and Carroll, Assistant Director, Dan
,\
.. :s ..
-~-~'E~aaerrSpeak~-:()n·
Prison Reforni
The junior year · abroad has
survived the half century very
well .with the most dramatic
changes occurring in the past two
decades. Language· studies, what
· .was once the most popular reason
for studying aborad has been
replaced to a large deg·ree by
interest in the dramatic arts, for
in the Marymount program
today, one in twenty seven girls
will be studying in Paris with the
other twenty six - studying in
London. The greatest change,
however, is the number of
students involved in study abroad
programs and the · variety of
those programs.·
·
. According to the Institute of
International Education, ·
34,000
American students were enrolled
in f9reign institutions-·. two years
ago, with the bulk of those
studying in at least one semester
programs with a. slightly lower
nt'.Illber in · summer programs.
<
Adding
to-:
the, numbers •
has
- bE>.en · the recent· suriirtiertime
groups of· students. According to
the International Educational
Exchange office,
777
United
Nations Plaza, N.Y., N.Y.,
The idea of study abroad
developed from Renaissance
Englishman's "Grand Tour"
which was supposed to complete
his education as a gentleman.
The first group of girls from
Marymount lived in the h9use~ at
78
Boulevard · de la Sausage
where. even now, a Marymount
school' stands. Today, the girls
live· in a student hall.
In Paris, _ Marymount girls
were· at LeBourge ·Airport_ when
Lindburgh landed in
1929,
while
another survived
·
the Andrea
Dorea sinking in
1956.
·
Interesfinthese-programs has
grown to involve the teenage set
with post~secondary school ex-
change such -as those sponsored
by the American Field Service to
high school juniors and seniors.
· Foreign governments and
educational institutions are
. beginning · to set _
limits ,on· the
·number of :Americans they
will
accept,· in . some cases seeking
acceptance at an American
Graduate school for their own
students.
· ·
By Chip Kennard
criticisms of the criminal justice
system·with major references to
An acknowledged leader in· the numerous unjustices and the
prison reform movement, spoke complete ineffectiveness of the
encouragingly in an effort to correctional system. He stated,
motivate creative community "You cannot deal with prisons
programs concentrated on en- and their problems unless you try
Free
·
·university
ding the isolation in prisons, and to gain an overview of criminal
This month, the Gregory House
in assisting those
who
are paroled justice and its problems.''
Free University will once again
from them.
Variden Heuval, who in
1970
be sponsoring tutoring programs
William - Vanden Heuval, a served as Chairman of the Board
,at
Smith Street Center . and
' prominent . Manhattan lawyer, of Corrections in New York City
Regina Coeli School in Hyde
an_d dynamic speaker in favor of cited many · of the weaknesse~ Park. For all those interested in
prison reforms, lectured last and callous opera.tions that education of .the young, these
Wednesday evening in the Marist existed within the prisons he had programs. offer a unique op- ·
College Theatre before a crowd become involved with. He defined · portunity for experience in the
concerning the grave problem: the present prison situation as fields oMearning.
"After Prison; What?" Vanden
·
·
-· · :
··
Regina Coeli
is
a co-curricular
Heuval presented constructive
Continu~d
ori
page:
7 .
program geared to reinforce
r-----------------••----•--••••---•---•
within the students,· the subject
material covered in their grades,
William Vanden Heuval
.
.
'
PARK
DISCOUNT.
BEVERAGES
through creative and active
participation in exercises-leading
to growth and development.
·
The program at Smith street is
oriented towards furthering tioth
the cognitive and physical
spheres of education of the
. children living in the- area. The
students involved work towards
developing
an atmosphere
conducive to growth
and
development through reading
skills, arts and crafts, and sports.
.
.
I
For anyone wishipg to share in
these worthwhile programs,
. the_re will be a brief meeting
October· 7, at 8:00 ·P.M. in
Gregory House .. For further
information, please contact
either Danny Morea\e, Eileen
. Kehoe, · or Lynn Texter in
Gregory House._ · • ·· .
.
OPEN·:DAILY:TILL 9
12-5 SUNDAY·
QPEN_24
IIOU-RS
7-DAYS
.A.
WEEK
.NEVER AN
EXTRA CHA_RGE'. FOR co.to
:_BEER
¼
ANp
½
lEGS AVAILABLE WITH EQUIPMENT
.
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SERVIN_G
.
'
-
:B
.
REAKFAST• _
.
--
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-LUNCHEON
471~7-939 ·DINNER
O~TO~E~FEsf··e_l~R-·
'
·1~:NOW·'AY~~L~.BlE'::
.
.-119·:r~k~r
A~e~:~Pokeep·sie,-N.Y~:
________________
.....................
~
.....................
·
...
-
.
' '
.
,.
.,.
'
.
OOMESTIC AND IMP.ORTEo··eEER
:
,.:
·
.
'
"
.
-·}
.
.
' ( ' ' r t
f ' '
' I I , J
1 , ,
I •
r . '
I O \ '
Things
were
jumping
for
Marist
booters
at
pout
wn
Co
n tin u e
d
fro m Page
6
prepare a man for his exit from mented on the poor medical
being, "warehouses . ot social the prison, and a suitable entry facilities and staffs within the
problems that we just do not want back into society; however, they city prisons. "Health is a vital
to face." When he spoke about fail pitifully. Vanden Heuval factor that is largely neglected.
prison_populations, he termed the recognizes. and voices this The possibility of recruiting para-
majority" as being, "those least .failure, and he works hard for medical personnel to work within
capable and most vunerable who practical and effective systems the prisons appears to be the best
cannot deal with surrounding of positive withdraw! from .the possible solution to date."
social problems." ·
prisons. for these people. "An
Mr. Vancien Heuval concluded
_ The victims of social problems. economic source of support, a job his lecture with
a
question and
became.a main starting _thrust in -and people who really care are answer period in which this
his lecture. Vanden Heuval drew what we need for prison reform." question was raised by a ~arist
a
verbal outline of the various Training
systems,
both College student: "What can this
problems and· difficulties that practical, · vocational,
and -community in the Mid-Hudson
such victims face before prisoµ, educational need to be set up and area do to help promote prison
during prison and even more so, functioning within the prisons reform?" Mr. Vanden Heuvals'
after they leave the prisons on themselves. The idea and answer was a positive one.
parole. One of the largest reasons practice of job development and
He asked the members of the
begin with the lower· class people job· placement could ' possibly
audience to support community
who have, as Vanden Heuval put open up a new life for those who
programs that exist already,
it, "no stake in society."· He were less fortunate earlier in
such as Greenh,aven's · South-
added, <(these people are the their lives before being sent off to Forty .Program, and the Marist-
uneducated,
unestablished, prison. Programs that exist now,
Greenhaven Program. Vanden
unrooted and. unprotected ·vie- such as study-release programs,
Heuval also made the suggestion
tims
to · societies
power work-release projects and half-
that local churches, parishes and
pressures."
_ _ .·. · .
way houses are a step in the right
synagogues should . become in-
Vanden Heu val offered in-. direction, but more community
volved in this long-needed and
novative suggestions aimed involvement
is
needed to force
overdue reform. "Help pursuade
towards-. constructing a united<the ·. correctional systems
to -the clergy, teachers, volunteers
reform - movement · within the conform.
·
and your community leaders and
penal systems .through what he
Many inmates within· -the
members to go into the prisons
called, ''.creative community confines of the correctional in-
and work towards developing a
PAGF:7
Hooters Tie Score
In Final Minutes
by Tom McTernan
Bills, who had
12
saves. Marist
There was no hope. Kings had goalie Jay Metzger had 11 saves
scored at the 34:58 mark of the in reducing his goals - against
· second half and now with less average to
1.67.
than one minute remaining in the
Last Wednesday in the Bronx
game, everyone was thinking of the Red Foxes were leading
the one that got away. But John Fordham
3-0
before Leonard
Metzger, who thought_ other"'.ise, Kelly, All-State lineman, tallied
3
eluded two.Kingsmen m the ri~ht times in a ten minute span in the
corner, tlien set up Ludovico second half to spark the
Rams
to
Aprigliano, who scored from
!O
a·
4-3
win over Marist. John
feet out to lift Marist to a
1-1
be Metzger,
McGraw
and
with Kings in their CACC opener Aprigliano all scored for the
Tuesday at Leondoff Field, losers. Jay Metzger was bombed
closing out a busy week for the with
30
shots and saved
23.
team.
At Sacred Heart on Saturday,
Marist, now
2-1-1,
had con- John McGraw scored with seven
trolled the ball for most of the minutes left as Marist won
2-1.
He
second half when the visitors also assisted on the other Hed
scored on a rnixup in front of_ the Fox goal, by Tim Trotta,
in
the
Red Fox net; they outshot Kmgs first half, that gave Marist
a
1-0
10-4
"in the half for a
24~13
edge halftime lead. The Pioneers tied
overall; The first half, played
in
a it at the
3?
mu:iute _mark of the
steady rainfall, was qui~e even, second penod ~ix ~mut~s before
with both _ sides getting _ many McGraw .woµ 1t with his sec~nd
good opportunities. Most of the goal of the season, one behind
Red Foxes' chances were on Aprigliano for ~he t~am lead.
breakaways by Tim Trotta and
Next game ts this Saturday,
John McGraw. That we_re Oct.
5,
v_ersus J:airfield at
2
P.M.
stopped by the Kings' goalie, on Leomdoff Field.
. interactions and support." He stitutions due possess incredible
more progressive employment
believes that communities must talents, andthese talents should
atmosphere _
for . these people
__ . __ umte.and~t!'.iY.eJntl}e c\i!'.e~ti.<m of,:~ .. p_i:~n:QQt~d .Jlnd. :. e11c,o_ur~getr.
_wcohmenmtu!lnei.Yt~i-e:Ps·~_~'f.rt!,:•J
0.-:_.0_
-~~A?~o: .
•
.-
. employment: for_ ..
_
tho.se. who are_·vandeh .- Heuv_al ·b~lieves. that
preparing
:-to
leave - prison to such talents should be·carried out
William
Vanden
Heu val
rejoin society, in the combined
.
of the prisons and filtered: back
responded to.this questi~n with_a
effort . to prevent them
·
from into• our communities· to help
positive answer. -How might you,
returning to prison in the future; form positive members of · the
as members of the Marist College
Vanden Heuval felt ·that em- community from those who have
Community, respond to such a
Rehabitational programs in the served their time of punishment
question and such an urgent and
various . state and federal in the prisons.
. .
critical necessity?
correctional facilities should Vanden - Heu val also com-
Continued
from
page
3
Q:
Exactly how would the'state
bring about this new change in
the program?
.
A:
The state expects a con-
sortia with the school district.
· . The people · appointed would
agree on a revised program so
· that the student can demonstrate
his knowledge immediately.
0
The
traditional approach in Jhe
present college system is· that
certification is granted ·after the
required amount of hours in each
·· course.
.
Alf colleges that offer training
· for elementary an~ · special
education teachers are to submit
their competency based proposal
·by- February
1, 1975; ·
This ..
proposal when in effect will affect
teachers atreaay certified. ·
· A
few· students voiced their
opinions fater · on after the
colloquium. One female student
enrolled in teacher education felt
that a re-evaluation of the
·. program was essential but who
actually · is qualified to judge
what competency really is? How
reliabie would the judgement
made_ on the student
be? ·
·
Shared views were · expressed
ARMY-NAVY
STORE
. .
HYDE° P.ARK-ROUTE 9'
NEXT TO
DISCOUNJ BEER SJORE
-
among students that this · new
program categorizes and stan-
dardizes new teachers but
doesn't review the competency of
the· certified ones.
One male student also in the
program
here
at
Marist
discovered that it's unfair to
assume a- crash course in a
semester of teaching makes an
excellent teacher. This is ac-
tually what the state will expect
from the stu_dent. He feels too,
that the feelmg of personal ex-
perience would be eliminated
after . this
new
progr_am
measurmg teacher competency
is put in effect.
"Ready ... Aim ... Kick!"
THE ·eROW-N· DERBY
H
A MARIST TRADITION "
96 Main St.·
~oughkeepsie , N .. Y. 12601
ANNOUNCES
EVERY MON.PAY NIGHT
:Televised
FootbaU ·Games In Color
PIZZA AVAILABLE
.
EVERY TUESDA Y
-
N-IGHT SPECIAL
ALL BAR LIQUOR - 50¢ /
-
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GLASS OF BEER - 20¢
EVERY WEDNE.SDAY
! ! ·
BEER -BLAST
I
111
•••
$
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Gets Yo~
In J=oor
ALL The
Beer You Can. Drfnk
-··- $tarts ~- 8:3.0 .
.
- .
.. A·lso Serving The· Finest .. ln Sandwiches
Little Ne.ck Clan:,s··AvaHClble Anyt~me Raw or Steamed
: . ' ..• a",',·.
.
'
I
,
,
i
OCTOBER 3, 1974
Victory Reigns
At Marist
Home
·
Opener
By Tom McTernan
·
·
Nigel Davis and Ed Bonnett
Once again, the offensive at-
accounted
·
for two touchdowns tack was basically on the ground,
api~e and thff defense
"
sparkled as the backfield of Bonnett,
again, leading Marist to a
28--0
Davis, Jack Maher, Bill Brisson
rout over St. John Fisher in the and Charlie Gormley totaled 335
Vikings' home opener Saturday
·
yards
·
.
rushing. Bonnett's first
in a driving rain
.
at teonidoff
.
pass completion came in the thirti
Field before a small but spirited quarter, a 15-yard
.
TD pass to end
crowd.
·
·
Tim Murphy after St. J9hn had
In the previous week's
6-0
loss surprised the fans by kicking on
Nigel Davis in gridiron action against St. John Fisher.
toHutgers;theoffense had failed
·
third down. Tom Kelly's fourth
·
TY
.7.1•
n n
1·
n
·
g
Stre
9
k
Stov.v e
·
d
··
·
~nt~
.
e
.
u~d~~c
.
i:i~\~o~enr~
.
r:;:
.
:;:~cse::::::g~onversion clo~d out
Jr
·
·
i
.
U
,
and quarterback Bonnett
·
was
-
.·
The defense came up with
·
-
determined to correct that right another strong effort, holding the
R
e
.
"
d Eox
·
es·
·
Mee
·
·
t
Match
atthestart, evenif he had to do it
.
visitors to a total of 110 yards,
himself,
.
which he
·
did
.
·
most
•
of which came after
·
Coach
·
.
After
·-
Nick
··
Mancuso returned Ron Levine had
--
r
_
emoved the
The Marist Running Red Foxes
•
sickness and an injury to contend coach r~spohded;
.
the opening kickoff
fo
the St
;
John
:
starting unit Marty Terwilliger
met their ma~h this pastweek as with. Definitely any of these
.
· The Red Foxes had a
·
nother 32, Bonnett twice ran
'.
for the let the St.
;
John backs know that
three powerful New
·
Jersey three were capable of doing the tough as~ignment yesterday needed
·
:
yardage
.
on cqnsecutive
:
·
the
•
middle was off llm.its and the
schools stopped
,
three Marist
·
job we needed on their· fourth when they
,
were
:
to meet New third down situations before
:
visitors were forced to run out-
winnirig streaks, First on Wed~ man, so this is one loss we have to
.
Pc!ltz and Oneonta State at the rolling right fromthe fivflo tally side or passthe rest of the game
.
nesday
i
:
the iindefeatecl Mon~ chalk
.
~p to ba,d
.
luck
,
wit_J,t injuries
.
New
.
Paltz course.
·
OneoHta
.
the Vikings' maiden scor~·ofthe Captain Bill
.
Pitcairn
.
intercepted
niouth
.:
Hawks defeated
·
the and sickness
.-
.
However we
.·
had
.
·
scored the worse loss on Marist in y~ung season.
.
.
.
a pass in the end zone at the end
·
·-
:
Marist.harriers 20-3~behirid
.
the
-
excellent pedormarices fromour the_last t~ee
.
yearswhen they
'
Late in
-
the quarter Marlst
·
of the first half to thwart St .
.
·
1;2
r
unning punch o(John Sltisla!(. olher r~ers
.
and
,
I
am truly dumpedthe
.
Red Foxes
two
years r
_
ecovered
.
their oppon,ents'·
·
John's only. serious threat
>
and Steve Foster, both
..:
cross pleased
·
with our progress, The .ago there 19-42,
-
Then Marist's fumble of a
·
punt and started a
The win evened the Vikings'
•
· .:.
~oimtry
i
scholarship 'receipiants rest
.
of
/
o
.
ut
,
,
season
.
story
,
will varsity
:
will travel for
.
an over-
dri\Te from their
.
own 47
·
that record
an~1.
They travel to New
·
.
anhe schooL.
_
·
. .
.
depend oh howwel}-we
·
re~oyer night stay in
:
North Dartmouth
;
en
.
ded
·
early in
.
the
:
second period Rochelle
:
Friday night to open
·
·
Trentori State
.
the
.
host
.
school from the.§e injuries
,
and prevent
.
Massachusetts
:
for
.
·
participation· with Davis dragging
·
tacklers 17
.
~heir ECCFC
.
schedule against
of ov1:fr
>
8,000.Ju'll~time
•
studerits;
.· ·
9~her. opes
from
:
occuring
;
.
;
•
:
.
·
this Saturday 4tthe Southeastern
·
yards into end zo._ne to make it 14
-
·
Iona, then will meet Matta tuck in
.
.. '
air'J
-
topped the ;Re.d Fo,ces 2':1-32
.
:
,
/r~d
.
K
.
olth~y Jed
a
·
st~ong ~~s~::ichusett
.
s
.
Urii".er~fty
,
fo-. _
_
o.
~e s~oi:ed ~gain
'
on
.
the .next another
.
league game
·
next
·
.Yiaristhad won 19 in
a
row
iiu~il
.·
r
.
.
ar:st.
:·
1+1
·
punch against v1~tio
.
I1a};
:
Ma,::ISt
-
earlier
.
this
'.
.
~ries ~th ab:utst up the middle Saturday, October 12 at 1:3D
·
pm
.
this
·
me
"
et
,-
.
including t\velve
.
ttadit~o_nally
.
str,ong
,
So~thern year
,
.
IJ.laced
·
sec
.
and in·· the from4 yards out and the Vikings on Leonidoff Field.
consecutive
.·
wins
·
on
•
the
.
road
.
·
Connecticut as
·
they posted third,
·
Glassboro' Invitational.
·
nad
_-
a 21-0 halftirn"e
·
lead,
·
· ·
·.
.
·
,
Fr~d
:
·
,
Kolthay, despite
•
falling
i
fo
.
urth;
:
an!i
.:,f
ifth pl~ce
,
s
,i
n the
.
·
dowij and .running of(
.
course at. mee.t an~ all came
·
~it~n twelve
:.
·
·
one
.
stretch of the race
•
·
1ed Marist
·
.
·
· seconds
_-
of
•
the Mari st
.·
record
.,
on
.
.
•
·
arid was only twellty~(our
:
seconds
:
~he
:
~ourse 011
,
a poor
/
d~y
.
for
.
.
,.
·
.
beJ)in,dtr,~
}
racewinriet
:
·~9lthay
;'.
r-u
,
nnmg.
·.
·
Tpe
'
Marist lea~
c
·
·
>
beat
,
all,
'
'
of
::
Trenton's
.
,
rtinriers.
,,
recorde<i:the
:
~
t
team effort
for
.
.
· .
.
·.:·
,
Both
·":
of
,
;
tnese.:.teams
-:-,
wer
e
:
::
new
i\
.the
:
;
·top
/
five,
C
rtirine
r
s
'
.
·
ever
:i
at .
:
.
.
add
.
itions to the Marist schedule
\
!\?.~fist
''
iii
'
:
~
a
·:·
130 :06
""
·c}/icking
t~
the largest
·
and tougtiesf schedul~
·
·
t9pping t~e old
.
mark set last year
·.
eve~
:
Jor
l:l
:
Madst
,.
cross
.
c;ountry
.
on
,
Oc!ober
:
20
,
of
.
130 :~J
/
?l~is i
_
~
.
team
>
.
-'
< ··.
.
·
.
·
.·
.
.
· ..
<' \ ..
really trnmendous
,
smce it.is
,
so
•.
Behind Kolthay'
.
for the Run:
.
early
)
n the
:
·
season a~d
'
it was
'
ning Red Foxes were George such a
.
ba(l'day ~or running arid
Mccutcheon,
_
8th place; Brian the ~o
.
urse was
.
m such terrible
Costine
~
12th
;
Steye VanKeuren,
_
condition. We
>·
look
,
for even
·
.14th; J,ohnVanDervooort 15th·
·
gr~ater progressin the future."
.
:
';•
J
i
m
'
l\1cCasland,
:
'
16th;'
.
Tom the
•
M~ri;t: coach reso~ded
> .
·
Jordan, 2oth;
·
Mike
·
.
Sommar,
-·
~arist s
.
Jong red
.
lme was
23rd; and JimHonan
;
27th
.
.Only
.
evident as: the team cap~ured 16-
the Marist varsity runners at- 19th spots mthe 62
-
man field with
tended the meet. Two ofMarist's
.
clutch performances. by Jim
varsity men,
-
Myles Gibbons
·
and
·
Mccasland, Mike Soriuriar, Steve
·
Ed Jennings,hadtobe left behind VanKeuren, and Will Morrison.
at Mari§t due to injuries they had Th_en more Ma~i1,t depth was
suffered. ·
·
.
.•
:
.
.
·
evide1_1t as the
.
Big R~d Running
.
Injuries played a
·:
big part in ~Iac~me ~otch~d spots 23 through
Marist's third loss of the season 26 with Jim Honan, Ed Jennings;
as William Paterson
.
College the Tom Jordan, and John
Van-
i·
t -
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
defending New Jersey s'tate Dervoort. C~mpl~ti~g Marist's
champions, notched a close one-
·
strong
··
showing
.
m
..
the home
point victory 28-29 in the home Of!en~r
_
were Chr~s ~accione,
:
Jim
.
opener, run under a steady rain Gillen, Geo~f
.
p~1lhp~,
.
and
·
Dave
Saturday. This ended two other Schools
.
F1v~
i
Marist runners
,
streaks for Marist.
.
were not able to participate
.
·due
·
High On
·
Sports
Maristhad won eleven straight toJnjuries.
:
·
.,
·
.
.
·
·
·
·
·
i
,
::
.
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
home
·
matches and had
.
:
just
.
Our front t
.
hree
.
ran ".~ry
start~ a tw~team
·
losing streak
··
strQng .
.
,
yte
•
had
·
.
real· great Jobs
due to Wednesday's los~es.
·
tu~ed
·:
m
_
by Jim
,
~cCaslan_d,
.
_This Sunday, ~ctober 6_,
.
the Seco~d Annual
.
Intramural Bike Race
However the Long Red Lin
.
e was Mike,
·
So1;0ma.r,
·
.<!rd-. Wi
,
11
will
.
J?e
h~ld. ~•s event 1s op.en to all Faculty, Staff and Students.
able to topple Southern Con- Morrison.
_
Jim Gillen.ran his best
~a~mg time.will be
.
2
:
~ p.m'. mfront of Ch~mpagnat Hall: This event
necticutState College for only the race
.
ever also to give
.
us more
·
·
WEEK'S PUZZLE
,
1s being c<rsponsore
~
hv1th the College Union Board
:
There will be two
third time in twelve outings depth than expected. We nee~
•
a • ~ - - - - - - - - - - - -
races,a male and female ra~e.
,
Prizes will be
.
awarded to winners in
between the
.
two schools, 27-30, st~ng~1;
.
fol1!1h ma~
.
1
:md I
think
HEALTH
:
CAPSULES@
· _
b<>th races. The College
.
umon
,
Board has beeri gracious en:ou h to
and
.
also glided pa~t Fairfield w_e
11
liaye
1~
once y;e .g~t ~ur
by
Michael
A.
Peui,
!'1
.
D
:
·.
donate a quarter keg of beer to be.epjoyed by all contestants. Thilmay
Un_iver$ity 1 ~ ai.
:
well ~n~ot- s1ck.nes~es
.
.
~
a~?
>
1n3ur
.
1!!s
.
:-
.
;
15
..
•
.
,:..-Po
.c.
.
"'
..
IBL
.
E
•
.
"
. ; . , r _
.
o
.•
G
·
A
.
IN
.
pber
_
ecfeornesnumce.e
·
d b
.·
e
.
(
_
ore
·
o
·
r
.
~
.
fte
.
.
r
-
.
the
.
rac
,
e
,
.'
.
-
·
de
.
P
...
e·n
,
din
..
g on
.
your
.
bio
•
l
.
ogical
•
chmg
.
·
shutouts
·
over
<
Pace
·
straightened
_
-
o
_
ut,
•.
the MarISt
,
7;7
·
10
.
University and
.
.
Quinnipiac
~EVERAL. PoLlNEJS
·
oF
WEIGHT
·
F
.
or furt
.
. her information contact eithe~ the Colle
-
ge U~ion Board
College 15~0.
.
Continued ffom
..
page
4
·
IN
ONE
DAY
FR
0
MA
~MALL
Office or the Intramural Office .
..
.
.
•
·
..
,
.
.
.
•
.
.
.
w
.
illiani Paterso
.
n,
.
dis
.
· plavin
.
g a
·_
·
·
·
•
·
·E
.
·
· ·•
E -
·
·
-
·
•·
"
t.1Mouf'JT; aF
,
FooJ>
2
.·
~.
,J -
·
-
L TT RS
·
·
·
·
·
-
-·
·
-
-
·
·
·
·
·
·
•
·•
.
·
·
.
· ·.
·
really fin~ t~in
,
effort;
-
had two
,
·
·
-.
;,
·
··
·
•·
'
··
·."
,
-
·
' ·
. .
·.:
.
:
:!
DAVl$
.
.
NAMED ATHLETE OF THEWEEK
·,
runners cross thefinir.h lineJirst
.
.
.
. •
.
.
·
.
:
\
r:
in a tie; Ron
·
Veneman and Jeff.
.·
Any
·
:
interested
·
:
student
,
·
.
,
:;
.
.
Nigel Davis, a senior from Po~ghkeep~i~,' Ji~s
-
been
.
named
·
Marist
·
Kicia. However,
~
it was their
:
mayobtaim
\
.free
..
traveL.in
::.
n
Colleg~
.
Athlete_ofthc.WeekfortheweekendingSeptember 29.
~
fourthman whoaciually defeatecL fonn~ti9p
f
.
~nd
;
job
•
application
-
-
_
,; . Dayi~, a
.
m~b~r of the club !ootbaU ~earn
,
ran for two touchdowns
the
;
Red Fox~;
:
according to form by "'.l"itingtos
,
os, 22 Ave
~
·
:
,
. mlel!dmgtheV1kmgstoa~-Ov1
.
ctory
.
oyerSt;JohnFisher.
Manst Coach Rich
.
Stevens.
<1
We de ~a
.
Libert~
~
Luxemborg,
·
.·
!f
· ·
·
'
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
nee.d~d one
·•
ID!)r.e runner·to
,
top
'
:':
Eµrope
;",,
Job
:
_
pr<>
,
~essing
·
,
can·be
:::.._~~;;..p."==~~ .
THIS
WEEK.IN MAijISTSPORTS
.
.
th
_
e1r
:
fourth man
·
__
and we
.
would
:
speeded up
·
by
,
-
obtaining arid
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
· ·
·
·
··
·
·
·
,
..
.
. _
have ~4?n tllem.
·
We qormally
'
J1olding 3 p_a~port~iz~ p~ot~f~n.~
·
::
YEf
)
F-.YoiJ8 i,oby
,
RE7A;NS
Friday October
4
~Fpotballationa, 8:00
pirn
.
.
'
••
.·
·
•
.
. w
.
. ou
.
ld
..
·
have
•
.
gotten
..
this
<
from
·
.
•
a
•
lette
.
rofre
.
co
.
mmen
.
datio
.
nfr
.
o
.
m
-f~IJIOEA~tL'l,
·
~Nv
..
YollEAT
SaturdayOctober5 Socce F irf. ld
·
th
.
'·
~
.
IAL
,.
·
.
Ti
,
.
foo
·.
·
.
n,
·.
·
.
¼
·
u
··.
'°'.'A•i
.
.
·
•
.
··•
.
·
C
.
·
.
.
.
-:
.
~-:
_
a ie
.
,(Honie),:t:00p
;
m;
.
.
~
·
er Jim
.
HoQan,
.
who
. ·
was a teacher or
:
sch90l official: ,
·
·
"" ''-' ,._,..,..
·
ro:S-S
;
~ount,ry
.
- Southeast~tn Massachusetts
:
-
,
..
·
·
.
plagued
:
_
by
a
•
.
bad
cold;
_
John
.
.
:
.
.
:;
.
:
·
,
.
·
.
'._
.:
.
_
11iaiyc yoii~
--
<'.
RE{,:-.ltf~EfERAL
:
Poi.IN~
;
In~i~tio
.
nal at North
.
D~r:trp.o'u~; Mass
:
11-
;
oo
:
a.m.
. .
.
.
'
.
:.
Vs·p
·
ilrna.De1·nrve
.
.
doo
.
·
.
·
~
.
·
a
·
'n
·.·
·
kwlhe~.
•
..
h
.·
.
·
.
~
..
·
odr
·
.·
.
.
.
a
.
·
·
.·
....
·
sbatedlv
.
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·
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.
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;
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?F
FLl.1_
.
tf? •
.
·
..
. ·
_
<
.
SSailidng
-"
o
•
Team Race.~limmations
,
at Cornell
,
.
..,
,,
.
.
.
..
.
,
.
~f.•~i~:=:.,:ib::..
':x:•;;;;n:,~~::~:
:
-: :
.
'.
un
~Y,
cto~r 6 ~Sailing~
l'~3:ni
Race ~liminations at Corne1i.
'
•
·
.
:
Y
.
/l
.
,
~!u
.
..
.
.
.
r~n;
:
-
r~
,
.
.
o
.
·
,
.:
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·
.
·
.
.
l:1
.
.
.
·1·
.
·
.
a
·,
·
•
·
.
d
...
90th
\
ll
.
:
.
,
_
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:::
·
,
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.
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.,
=
.
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.
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.:
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·
·
.
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..
.
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..
,
.
·
.
.
:
·
.
·
..
·
..
.
:
~~~~~~prt~pe
.
r9
:
Soc~~rlit N:~wJ'orkl\faritiiµe;
·
3:30 p;m .
.
"-
•
~
.
.
.
.
,:-
.
,
,
.
.
•
·
·
.
,
·
'
._
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·,
.
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-
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,
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,
-
~
.
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.
•
-
.-
.
.
..
_ ......
. .
·
;
.
·
.
_
:
:
··
.
,
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-
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·.
'
•
'
.
_
:
··
'
,_ .. ,
·,'
_
, ..
'
•f
13.3.1
13.3.2
13.3.3
13.3.4
13.3.5
13.3.6
13.3.7
13.3.8
VOLUME 13
MARIST COLLEGE, f:'OUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
OCTOBE~ 3,
1974
Fred
.
Lambert. Director of (ampu's
Life
.
.
'
'
.
.
~.
.
:
..
.
-
Lamhert
\
Appointinent
.
Has
·
All-Eri~oJllpas$i~g Duties
?
·
.·
Review Slated
For
Ne
.
w SChema
._
concrete action taken to get aday
care center started.
·
-
By
Rhoda Crispell
~e new t~e schedule will
be
The administration explained
rev1ewe~ this sf:!mester in ~rder that one of th
_
e major reasons for
-
to decide whether the ex-
.
this new schedule was the effect
peri~ental
.sched~le
wi]L be
.
·
the gas shortage might have on
continued or
..
termmated
•
next commtiting
_
.
students. This new
-
year
: ';
The Stude
_
nt
..
Academic plan would make it possible for a
Com~ttee
.
.
.
· is forming
.
·
a sub:-'
.
.
.
student to plan his schedule
·
so he
.
committee to evaluate the ef-
could coine to
·
school from two to
·
fectiveness of the new schema. four davs a week rather than five
_
.
,A.ccording to S
.
A.C
.
President, days a week.
_
·
·
_
.
.
B~b Sarriil_lorr;this subcomnlittee
:
Aecordirig t
.
o Sammon, not only
wiU look mto why the schedule is the commuter being effected
has ~en inaugurat~;
·
and then by this new schedule, so is the
·
see
.
1f
.
these reasons have been resident who
..
only has classes
.
·
followed
.
thre>ugh.
:
Sammon
·
.
three days a week. "Is Tuesday
_
suggested
.
that
·
maybe some of
-
night becoining a partynight on
·
-
t~es~ reason~ have not bet}n campus?
·
Is
·
the schedule
carried out
•
.
.
...
_
.
___
.
_
damaging the academic
at-
.
The new schedule was
·
sup-
·
mosphere on
campus?"
pose~
:
to
.
att~~ct m?thers
-
to
Bob Sammon suggested that
Mar1st by h~vmg two mstead of
.
one action the subcommittee
three dassesa
·
week, and by
<
might take is
to
conduct an
making p]ans to ~rovi~e
·;
a
·
day
-,
opinion. poll ofthe st4dents to get
care center forthe1r
.
chddren. At
:
their views on the continuation of
tllis
poiilt, mere
has
not i,een any
-
the _scneduie.
· · ·
· ·
-
;
By Jhlie Scho~t
.<
·
::
.
m.ember of.Lambert's staff, is the Inter~Ho1.1Se CounciL the
·
Student
- ·
·
··
R · ·-1
··
·
··
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
'.
;
·
.
-
. .
·.
'
,
.
.•
.
. .
•·· .·
·.·
·.
·
.
.
•
..
a.
•
,
,
coordinator9(CollegeAct~vities. Academic Committ~e the
:
Black
·
..
,.
e
O
_
C
_·
.
:
_
a
_·
_
._
.
.
t
.
ion
P
.
r
_
_
.
e
_
d
.· ·.
ic
.
·t
_
e
·
d
t
;
Mr. Fre~
:
Lam.bert hasr~~ently
·
_
She
:
'
:
will supervise all
_
school ·st~dent Unioil;the cohege Union·
.
.
_
.
_
.
. .
_
_
;\
1
•
K_
2
-
~;
~~
,.
:
_J
1
__ .••
~
:
-.
:
~
.-,,.,
;,,,.
....,.·
"'·~
-
~-·:,•super
,
v:Js10
.
n,·
••
·of:
_:
all
,·:
campus
.-,
Jllpm~li;
;.,:.
\
,\Vaqe
f:
<
Of??
:
~du.~
.
ect
;
,
that\the
'
.-
tone
''.
of;the
•
social
··
en~
t
·
,J::
••-
,-1c-
.
,
Y:
.
/
1
rY
:
::,-
0
~5l
,
0
_.
. ,
.
·
,
.
·
;
and
it:,
(ac1lities
.
by students and·
'."!'
.
· ~01µ,ing
;::
Lalllbert:if riew
_:
i>osi\ioif
,
r~~P;ri(lst~!l.ity
/'
Qf
/
~a,~p~s
:,
l~fe
/
i
i
viroiune·nt wil_t ~: irii~i:ov~d:
·
He
--
, ···
>
.
•
-
.
-·
.
.
-
. .
·
•
-
·~
:
·
.
-
·
.
·:-
._
·
faculty_; .)\lso
,the
~acuity
-
"'.hich _is
'·:;
i·,
'
. .
.
•
·
. .
.
,
!
'
.·
,
:•
'
·
,
•
·:
IS
all:-emcompassmg.
;
-
:
>·
< '
.
;
~u~~e
:
he
,
IS
;
a~o
.
.
.
m
_
.
<;harge
'
:
Of
·
hopes
.
that activ1tleswill be more
•;
-
E?{p~nses: for
•
~pgradm~
.
-
J'!OWbemgoff1ced mFontame will
.
l
-
·
J'he
director
of
campus life is
·
:
coun~eUng services;
:
financial
·
mature
aiici'
adult-oriented
.''.'
l'iri
·
Fonta!ne
i
w1th
-
the i:ie
.
cessary be
·
able to have a work-study
.
\
responsible for campus residency
c
aid, and the
.
fligher
·
Educa
.
tion
·
·
very
·
pfeased
:
with Jhe
:
way the.
_
~lectnca_l, Illech_an~cal
-
and relationship.
_
. ...
.
and its
staff,
the campus center Opportu1:lity Program. .
: :
.
campus has reacted thus
far
to· . conStr.uct•o~al
_
repair~
m __
o~der
.
to
.
·. -
c
.
.
.
~
.
.
,
• · ...
•
.
·
.
·
.
·
and its staff, the health services,
.
.
Lambert reports that there is
a
·
the establishment of the
.
norms · hous~ ~he. library
_
·.
brmg curr~nt
•
The move will
.
equip the library
food
•
services, and
·
religious
.
new additi<>n to
·
the
·.
student and in the keeping ofthe norms:"
predictl?ns for
.
the relocation
✓with
faculty seminar rooms and
services, as well as student
·
a,:-
government this year as a .result
"Because the
·
.
.
various
·
· com-
completion
!
0 September
197
5-
workshop areas which
will
enable
.
tiyities
·
and governances.
-
The of the
,
Leadership
_
Workshop held ponerits of the campus life will
-
.
·
The
.
eSt lmated
cos~
,
of
,
the faculty
.
to setup many
·
dif-
studenf activities include all over the summer
>
It is called the
.
now be organized under one head,
relocatmg
th
e campus hbr~ry ferent types of programs much
C?ffee ~ouses, house parties, and . common council
.
and c;iperates
:
as
I
fee\ that we can work as a team,
~~ir
.
ponn$
5;~
1
~ta~ to F3-ntame easier than in the past.
_ mghts
m
the Rathskellar.
a
.
student senate whose function and a team effort will definitely
·
a
.
is
.'
O.
.
.
ccor mg ~o
.
_To
help keep the
·
cost low
_
Mrs
;
-
Dony
.
Russell, a graduate
·
is
to unify the differe_nt int~rest ~e strengthening to the stud_ent
rresideir$5~~ii
R
1liy, d~hi~ during -the
.
mov~-.. student
_in-
of Vassar College, who is a new
groups. These
.
groups mclude.the life."
·
·
tigufret
0
-
t -'t·
cou
t be at
-
·
the
volv,,ement 1s aJ?tic1pated which
_ _ .
.
o u ur~
m_ ion co~ s u
. e
.
means students are expected to
·
·
Efee
•
Ull,it)ersii:y
-
Begins;
·
.
.
:f::fuS~·:h!J~?ii~~~
~~d!="¥Jin ••
~~dl%1~
·
.· D
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
necessary money with good seemed an impo11sibility but the
.
.
,,_._
:
·e~ch e.s ?4.-ll~
Tirne
:
:
High
·
'
?Th
1
~r::r;;:iten_forthemo;e ~~~P~\i~wsr:Je!~ebod~. ar.!i~
_,
.
_
..
-
-
.
,
_
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
.
_
.
_
.--
.
.
.is that the llbr~ry
_
will nee_d more
.
have the cam.pus library in the
·
By
Ea:rnestA-~oyal
'
c
,
0
college. TheUniversity staff this
-
sity m.ust become
-
effective here
r.ooIIl_ for m<>re book,s and to- same manner.
'year is gearing
,itself
towards l!,t
•
Marist
;
'
,
.
:
-
·
: -
·
_
-
·
·
· ·
perm1
_
t better use of tne library
Uis the generalsentitnent of sophistication,' as. well as a
1he
.
members
....
of
F-REE
.
tighter organizational body.
UNIVERSITY thatthe university
·
Sammon
described
--
the
is now at an all
.
time
.
high. Bob µruversi~y as being a publicity
-.
Sammon
-
and
'
Jim
·
Elliot
·
are rnecl:tamsm,
.
an9
_
.
feels
:
that
·
coordinating
. ·
the
·
·
"Free
·:_'.:
despiteJhe
'.
g~neraUhreat posed
Univ~rsity" this ye~r-
'
When
.
by_
th~
•
c~llege
·
the
. _
free
.
questioned about the
·
aspirations
.
University will have a good year.
·
of Free University Sammon
·
.
A
t~c~nt_opinion poll taken by
.
~he
replied
''74-75
will be
·
a do year
·
.
_
U!11~
.
e~s1ty
:
showed
:\:
that its
,
for
.
us, and we'll proveit."
>
•
··
cumculum 1s
.
a favorable one
.
·
-
~e curricgJ.lu~ is set up with
7
:
_
:
.
Students, facul~y, a<lminis!~ators
ma3or courses wfiich
·
are not
.
and many
.
:
different
'
campus
offered in the regular curriculum
·
groups have
·
~xpressed attitudes
-
at Marist: It is the general
sen-
:
toward ·
.
··
Free
·
University.
timent that Marist offers
'
;
only a Education being a positive thing,
:
limited
.
academic
·
experience
.
for
.
. ·
.
Ji'
ree
.
Univers~ty
is
.
none slio
_
rt
:
o(
i~
students
;
The
.
Free University
•.
positive
;'
:
Ther~
/
curri~ultiin en-
·
is described
.
as a
-
living; learning,
·
.
tails
-
different
.
courses as
.
well as
.
expei:-ie11ce and offers those who workshops
r
and
:
.•
.
·
an
.
interesting
partake
,
a . definite
·
le~ming. ex-
·
.
_
film
_
series.
\
Allmember~
•-
of Jhe
perience
:
i11. different areas.
·•
The
..
.
student:
body
arf
urg~d to: share
curriculllm
>
of
_
fers
·
.
w.or:k
_
sho
·
p
;
,
in
.
·
·
tn_e
·
:
1eafoing
;
of
•
free
:
.
Upiver~
_
·
.
pr~grarns,
·a )~(?tUre
.
~eri~
;,":
:
a
::
,-
sity
~
i
"
";'
(
::, .
: :
.
··
.
:
.':°
:
.
> -
,
,
•r
...
dialogu¢ sen.e.s,
a
.
film
,
program,
.
'
Dile to the atitudinal:change of
_.
·
a cooperati:ve
·
exte~ion program
•
·
•
the
·:
Marist
:
.
philo~_ophy
z\
Free
·
.·
and'the·ac~denii
_
c\quart~rly._
:
_
)
.
·
lJ.!1ive~,sJty
.
~ek~_Jo;-.~fldM
•
~he
,
·
__
-
..
·
.
Sl:lnun~1:1
.
· f~e~s
•
tt1a~ there
::!s.
a
:•,
\\lldenmg gap
.
bet\V~en acad
_
eII11cs
.
.
_
:
commu_wc~tion gap
,
·
ar.id
,
µµit
-
~1
;.'
and social
,
awar~1J~s.s;J11.;oi:der
_
to
..
.
.
bridgeing
:
o~
:
thi
(
donn~~ry
_;
and
'-
·
lMlUer
_:
prepa:r~
_:-;
Marist
>
~ttid~~ts
:
Donnelly
i
'c
Wlll
;.
_
better:
:
·
enr1ch
,
the
.·
,
for
;
the
,
fast
'
:
paced
,
-
society,
:1.n-
.
academi
'
c
/':
~xp'_ei-_i'en?e
.-
at
:'.
th,e
.
:
stitutloris
t
such
;
as
·:
Ftee
·
·
univ~r-'
-
.
•.
:;::;'_
·
::';':
', _·
(
•
:.
?:
,.~
\>:::.\
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:'(;:
:
.<:-'._''.;/
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,
,
..
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?:':',
:_:·.:_::
::.'.·.:\:::•
:
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'
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.
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,
'
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.
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;
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' . •
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,
'
.
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,
.
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PAGE2
Jim
Genova
Maureen O'Toolc
Peter DeSantolo
OCTOBER 3.1974
Prohletns Identified
For Marist Woinen
By Eleanor Bert
Marist women have problems
according to the Committee on
Women report, delivered to
President Foy. "Marist, together
with all societies institutions has
an obligation to clear away some
of the obstructions and
-
make
more visible the way ahead for its
_
effectively with some of the
identified problems."
The first meeting for this
purpose is
.
scheduled
for
Tuesday, Oct. 15, at 3 P.M. in
Fireside
_
Lounge,
Campus
Center:
d
S
'
d
D .
women students." The report
R . •
.
t t
·
• t
·
_
.
s
sidentifies
problem areas and
es1 en
-
U en
-S
ISCU
of~ers
_
·
recommendations for
-
-
change.
.
_
_
Any Marist woman
·
interested
in sharing her ideas, who is
unable to attend this meeting, is
urged to con~ct
Ms.
Haggerty.·
She can be reached at ext. 286,
rocim 111 of the Campus Center.
The goals and objectives of the
permanent organization will
come from this meeting.
·
Ann
.
Haggerty, counselor,
N
SAGA F
d S
notecl the acl hoc committee was
--
-
ew
·
•
.
-
-
_
O
_
0
-
·_ _
_
y
__
s
_
t
_
.
_
e
_
In
!?i~!cce:i:~~.leat:~;;:cct~~:~~
Slated for discussion will
_
be:
the development of a woman's
studies program, ways
·
to
_
chan&e
the attitudes of the athletic
department and publishing a
woman's "yellow pages".
Pete went on
-
to say that he
preferred last year's
·breakfast
For. ahnost a month now, time which continued until eleven
'
Marist residents have found o'clock as opposed to ten this
themselves adjusting to a new year, and he felt lunch
·
might'go
and experimental food system on until two-thirty.
·
.
here on the campus. The points
Maureen O'Toole, senior,
and coupons plan has been the expressed the common sentiment
·
.
subject of much conversation and
·
of all students enrolled in the
:
speculation throughout the coupons plan.
''I'm
_
more con-
dormitories.
scious of missing meals
.
because I
Jim Genova, junior, fe
_
els he know
·
I'm
paying for them,"
By Rich Burke
Women in Higher Education,
.
_ held in ApriL "It's time," said
Hopefull};;°a student survey to be Haggerty,
.
<Cto_ get
:
our Marist
taken in a few weeks time will women organized mto a per-
give each individual a chance to manent group to enable us to deal
make his feelings known.
Bridge
Year
"
PrOgraTn Offers
Opporiuititii!s For
·
.
Students
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
has benefited economically from Maureen S?id.
_-
.
the new plan. Jim put it this way:
Another senior using coupons,
By Maureen
·
Dennigan
"I've utilized my option to eat in Michael Milone, is happy with the
the rat several times during the system, but he has found
The Mari
st
"Bridge· Year student from elementary school the first experiment of its type to
past month because of
_
the points problems elsewhere in
-
Saga's Program"
:
offers
.
students of througJt c
_
ollege
.
to 16 · years; appear in
.
the . public
.
school
·
system. I've saved many points program.
Lourdes
_
and Spacken,kiH High Particular
.
·
emphasis has
.
been
.
system .
.
Its basic requirements
in this manner."
"The only complaint I have Schools· the opportunity to placed
.
on the duplication consist
.
of average academic
..
Marie Bollella, a senior on the about it is the switching of dinner ~omplete a
.
fre~hinan
;.
college believed pres.ent in the senior talent and maturity. The course
points plan, is also content with
.
hours," Michael explained. "I year:
·
while
_
they: al,"e seniors in high school year and the
-
fresh
0
offerings
are
in
English
the new system.
._
·
-
.
;
·
feel this poses a disadvantage to high_ school.
.
_ ,
.
·
man college
·
year
,
.
.
·
_
Literature and
•
20 Century
"I'm
a lot happier with points,''. any
_
re~ident taking a six-fifteen
The
idea
..
for
.
the
.
program
·
·
Last'yeadhe Regents changed Europe.
·
·
.
_·
·
·
.
she said;
"because
I don't feel
·
classbecausethestudentisfaced locally
•
originated from
an
Jn- a section
'
of th~ commissioner's
· .
Dr. Peter O'Keefe, director of
I'm wasting money when I miss a with long lines
.
and a shorter time terview witl1 :R.ussell
T:
·
ta:uper,
-
i·egulations
_·
to
·
-
authorize
,
the
: -
the
.
program; feels that the most
meal.
,
And I'm open to other to eat dinner."
director of summer
·
school
·
and award
·.
of
.
a
high
·
school important.Jong term goaLof the
options such as the rat."
Michael feels that last year's continuing
·educ~tion
·
af C.W. equivalency
-
diploma based on
'.
'Bridge Year Pr,ogram"
·
to be
Sophomore Pete DeSantoio dinner time of four~thirty to six-
Post College, who developed one evidence of successful com-
-
the initiation of dialogue between
likes the idea of. the points plan, thirty .was better_ fitted to allow of the
·
·
nrst
.·
such
_
programs, pletion of a year o.f col!ege study. th,e
.
college
..
and high school
,
but his,
.
app_et\te exce
,
eds their any . student a )e1s~rely dinner, .. together
._
with
;
Ch~rrnin~d~ High __
.
Iri
selecting Jtie· courses:, to
.
be co
_
tnniunit~~s.
He
is not interested
value. ·"On the
-
whole; l
'
like
l
ttie
\ •
··
'Overa11,
·
- it
·._c·
seems
'.
t):\at-,
'.the
S~hoo,l~~~
-
~
:Mill~~\~
;:::,:.~"
·
\/;.
~. ::,
?, ;:-,
•.iffet:~d
.
·
int
'.
:
tlie:,ji~W.S• P.fOgr4
m;,
.,
iri
Mv~J:tg_jp.~t_g_ '.'.ilriIJ1ber'.:
of
high
:
('
points;" said Pete, "but"it
·
would
·
'
residents "tiave
:
accepted aUeast
-
.
Ha\Tmg decided that some' .ManstCollegestayedcloseto
_
the
··
school
---
students here
.
at Marist
·
be better if the p·oints were worth
-'
the
.
concept
.
of the points arid variatiimof tliis idea was ft?asible dassicaP freshman ,_. core but in creating a greaterrapport
a higher percentage of the meals.
·
coupons plan and enjoy its and
:
desirable,
.-
Dr,
·
Ric:hard 1
'
equiremerits
\
s~nce many of
,
the and
-
unde~standing' betwee
·
n the
_.
I'd also liketo see extended lunch benefits;
·
although
some LaPietra,
·
academic dean of Lourdes
··
students
:
probably· will two academic worlds.
·
and breakfast hours."
,
questions have been raised. Marist, and Dr
.
Peter O'Keefe,
enter.
colleges 9ther than Marist.
Last Friday, September 27,
- - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
director
_
of Marist
·
>
L,ourdes
"<
Since the Lourdes students are Mary Lou Feo became the first
"bridge year program,''
·
ap- college freshman as well as high "Bridge
Year
.
Program"
proa_che~
,
t~e
>
Lou,rde~ ag-
.
s~h(?Ol s~nio
_
r~,
·
_
the_y ar.1: eligi~le member to leave Marisf as part
\\\6 _
Leave Your Head to Us!
GUTTERY
-
UNI-SEX
F ~ O
HAIRCUTTING
$
6
w1"th
.
BLOW DRYING
·
STREAKING; FROSTING
·
Marist ID
&
PERMANENT WAVING
s
CALL 454-9239
_
for your appointment
_
now
'.
ON
TH ■
MAIN
.
MALL
3
LIB■RTY STR■■T
. (Above Capitol Bakery)'
Entrance Around
·
Corner
~tiCA/1
HA~E
C~FID
.
ENCE
,
WHtN
_-You~·
C41t
/NS'~MCE
l'tJ/flJ
FlloM MARSHAlL
'¢-STERllf:l~l
MARSHALL
&.STERLING
;".
INC.
.
.
.
•
.
;:.
Sine~
1864-"
: _'.
.
.
:
:
PROFESSIONAL INSURA~ce·ceNTERS
~RLINGTON
.
: ·
POUGHKEEPSII{
.
,
_44 Plaza
·
\
'.
7~
Washi~glon
St;
4
_
11
-
&100
·
454
,
oaoo
·
.
·
.
WAPPINGERS FALLS
·
.
lmperi~i
Pim
·
·
·
-
297-3701
ministration last February .
.
The for the
.
same fmancial aids of the Third Year Abroad
res{)onse. ~as positive
_
and
·
av3:ilabl(to other kes1m?-an aJ!d program; Mary Lou is an 18 year
several meetlllgs were conducted
·
their Regents scholarships
_
will old sophomore spending the
with several-
-
·
Lourdes ad:
i
be retroactive.
coming year studying in Paris.
·
ministrators including the Right
·
The
.
purp<_>se of this new ap-
There exists no question
Rev. Msgr
:
Rob
'
ert Kane, proach to education is to bridge whatsoever as to the success of
supervising l)rincipaL
the two worlds
_
existing between the program. It is hoped that the
College and high school of- high school
.
and college in- program will be a step towards
ficials point out that the State stitutions. The program is offered
·
bridging
·
the gulf·
.
between
Regents and the
.
Carnegie
·
in a way that allows the in- academic
·
institutions and
·
in-
Commission on Higher Education dividual student to adapt it to
.•
his
.
suring a constant and beneficjal
-
have
•
recc;>mmended shortening or her o~ person'-1 progra~.
.
flow
-
of dialogue throughout the
the period required to educate a . Invol~m~
24
students, this is program and all those concerned.
-
.
.
.
Eve.ry
Nite
L
f
VE· MUSIC
tSUN.-MARTHA
·:
VELEZ-JERRY MOORE SHOW
1.
.
M0J4:~GOJsr
~
NfrE·
·
o~T:
.
-7th Goob
·
FRIEND
COYOTE
. , _
.
·
_
·
'
.-
(lCT~
>
l4th ERIC WEISSBERG AND D~llVERANCE "DUELi.NG BANJOS~'
.
-:.
_
<
·
__
ruEs.::TEQUILA
.
NiTE~sK
·
vf
-
·
· ::_ .:'_
·
-
·
··
.
,
.
.
·,
. ,
WED.-BEER°J~ITE
.
· SNEAKER BROS;
>
..
·
.
.
THURS.-~S
-
t°STER
·
Hlll(GUESl
NITE.)
·
.
FRt,-
SAT.-BANJ~_:-i)l~IELAND BAND
· ....
.
.
·.
:
.
I
·
AD*·
o--
_
,
-
·
:
·
~-
'
•
1
,
•
•
OCTOBER 3, 1974
A
sampling of the offerinj:!s of
C.C.A.P.
Prograni Helps Community
By Dave Kazdan
community where help is needed,
and placing those students there
T~e
Campus . Com~unity as vo!unteers. There are many
Action ~rogram
IS
helpmg the orgaruzations which have con-
com~uruty_ by supplying local tacted the program for volun-
age~c1es with volunteers · and is teers, including the Hyde Park
helpmg the . stud_ents by giving Head start- Program, and the
them a w_ay to donate free time Hudson River state Hospital.-
constructively to the community.
The
Campus
Community
. .The program, ~hich works Action Program
is
expanding this
thf"ough Dean Wades office, and year, after several years of
-
with Dean Wade, Dean Cox, Dolly ser_vice through the SOS hot line,
Russell, Fred Lambert and which has been discontinued.
others, hopes ~o k~ep open
a
line Among the on-campus ventures
. of ~ommumcation between ?f the program is student input
Manst . College
and· the mto the Parents Community
surroundmg community. One of Weekend to
be
held November
8
the ways it hopes to do this is
9,
and
10.
This weekend will in:
throug~ hel~ing students with elude a dinner-dance, football
free time fmd places in · the game and more .
. The program · will set up a
display . table in the camous
center m order . to let students
know just what the program can
make available to them.
The
Campus
Community
Action Program would like to
connect students who are willing
to donate their free time with
those in the community seeking
volunteer
help.
Interested
students should contact Olin
Burkhart, Cathie Russo, Isabel
Andrews, or Dean Wade's Office .
The program is interested in
anyone willing to donate· time,
and places for students who want
to help those_ in the community
seeking volunteers services.
.
. •·· ~qlle~e EfJe.et!!t Jnnot,ative
~
Teacher .Education Program
. By Donna Corrado·
all the above factors are taken
~to. consideration before_ cer-
tifymg a teacher.
_
.
An important question was
raised at the colloquium:
Continued on pagc-.7
colloquium was held in Donnelly
ANCY .
I( . . ..
19 Academy St. .
Last Tuesday, September 24, /a
~
L -
Hall. It's purpose was to inform .
.:., . _ _
__ - . ·: ;.
(
above
the Pick)
students who are involved with
/ "
the teacher education program -
/ ·
·
All
your printing needs-
and also the faculty of Marist that
PAGE3
.
.
..
'
eszgnatzonsAbound
As Chris Wise
Joins Tackney
By Tim DeBaun
Junior Chris Wise resigned
from her office as student
government secretary Sep-
tember
19,
only two days after the
resignation of Vice-l;'resident
Charlie Tackney.
''My reasons for resigning are
three-fold," said Chris in a recent
interview. The first reason was
similar to that of Tackney's. · ..
1
tend to agree with Charlie," she
said.
·
"The student government
hasn't shown much leadership!"
was Chris' second reason. She
felt that the stu9ent government
could be doing a great deal more
on campus than they are
presently doing.
Her third reasqn, she said, was
related to the second one. She
primarily had misgivings about
being appointed instead of
el~cted. She went on further by
relating this story.
After Tackney's resignation
she had made a proposal to
President Brian Morris. She told
Morris, Thursday, September 19,
that she would like to take over
the vice-presidency and at the
same
time
continue
her
secretarial duties. According to
her, -Morris agreed.
However, the next morning,
Morris wanted to take the job
back because he had at that time
someone else in mind to fill the
vacant vice-president's office
said Chris.
"I suppose you could say that
was the straw that broke the
camel's back," commented
Chris.
She further commented that
things were done irregularly by
the student government She
believed that student government
should be changed fast.
··I
dl''l 't think it is ethical to
accept
200
dollars of the students'
money for a job
I
believe is ob-
solete," she said in closing.
Chris, a commuter, is presently
active on the Commuter Union
and the woman's committee,
both positions which she main-
tained while ·secretary.
THE RED FOX INN
Presents:
(formerly. "The RathskeUer")
WAITED DIN~ER SERVICE
·saturday Nigh~ - 10/5/74
Entertainment From 8-2
RESERVATIONS ONLY-LIMITED NUMBER
Must Be Made By FRIDAY 12 NOON!!!
a new competency .based teacher
custom printed shirts for
education program would be put
clubs, socials & sports.
into effect in the near future.
Prices reasonable and
M U G CH AR G
E 5 0
t
: A
film
was shown and Dr.
quick
d~Jivery
::~;w
w{~~tt,
sf
:tictJ~c!1J:
CALL
evening; 226-6866
RESERVATION S TAKEN AT SAG A OFFICE
*
Department.spoke. -
~~====~====::::;===========:!!::=================~~~====~
The idf;)a behind this new
I
program is that steps would· be
taken by · the competency based
program to _insure that emphasis
of teacher. ed· programs in
colleges - would
be
ori skills,
knowledge and ·attitude of
prospective teachers.
·
The movie viewed at the
colloquium explained the new
procedure; In brief, the idea of a
- consortia will be established.
Actually,
a
consortia
is
a group of
teachers in the community who
will submit· a proposal or an
outline of categories to the school
district, in which the new teacher
should be qualified.
.
·
In order to be appro\Ted by the
state as competent, the
0
.student
must prove himself in a· number
of skills; and the methods he uses
' evaluated. His delivery skills will.
be_judged. These · include lec-
tures, effective use of media,
field trips and his overall • an-
ticipation !of the needs· ·of
students. Secondly, a· teacher's
interpersonal skills will
be tested.
These. are: the. teacher's in-
.· teract_ion •·
:with ..
the community
and the social adjustments he has
·· to make. ~ost important
'is
the
·-. relationships, ·with .other.·. ad~
ministrators,•. Lastly;
··the
~r~
sonal .. traits,·· habits• and. overall
· acti5>n~ will.be viewed_ .. ~Qte·that_
/
,S\\\f('tS.
~-e,-s·
JaAtJS
Swe~t_S
Soc.l(S
. ·L,fATH~:.
~oes
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OCTOBER 3, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGE4
1HE .
• CIRCLE
Letters To The_ Editors-
VOLUME 13 Marist College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. NUMBER 1
Voter Registration
resulted. from the chaotic and
·
undemocratic ways in which we
. The Marist College CIRCLE is the weekly newspaper of the students
· regulate how people may · vote.
of Marist College and is published throughout the school year ex-
To the Editor:
.
_ Instead of universal voter
clusiv~ of vacation periods by the Southern Dutchess News Agency,
~n . the 1974
Democratic enrollment, we limit the voting
Wappingers, New York.
-
primary, less !!1an 25 pe~cent of process by setting registration
1-------------------------....
New
York s
reg1stere_d_ dates which vary by county, as
Co-Editors
Lyn Osborne and Gregory Conocchioli
Associate Editor
Irene Ross
Layout Editor
Tim
DeBaun
Photography Editor
·
Dave Pristash
staff: Jerry Profita, Rich Burke, Marueen Dennigan, Chip Kennard,
Dave Kazdan, Julie Schott, Donna Corrado, Eleanor Bert, Gary
Nonnan, Earnest A. Royal, Debbie Nykiel, Cathie . Russo~ Karen
Tully, Rich stevens;Fr. Leo Gallant, John Tkach. Linda Franco; Jim
~el1!1ed} .Toni McTerniin. Terry Stoutenboro,J2nice Colleran,
ete Provost, Bob Baulch, Brian Morgan, and Bob Nelson
Business Manager
-·
Greg Welsh
Advertising Manager
Tom McDonald
Democr:ats vo~ed. -In~_part, this _weft,' as having -elaborate
d~pressmg. t?m-out. refl~cted the . requitements of residency · and
distance . ~o many people · feel proof of registration.
from their_ governme1:1t and .. Until this unfair system can be
representat1__ves. But 1t also changed, those of us who par-
Abroad Notice
Dear student,
This is the last alerting
to
t}:le
unique possibility of~spending
next year abroad. The following
placements are . of particular
interest and benefit:
Biology: U. of York
Business:
-u_
of Birmingham
Communications: ·Trinity ~hd.
All Saints' Colleges, Leeds
Economics: U. of York
English: Manchester College,
Oxford National U. of Irelarid at
Maynooth City Literary Institute,
London·
. . . -·
History:·· National U. of Ireland
at Maynocith : .·
.
.
U. of Lagos, Nigeria•
Political Science: U. of Shef~
field, U, of London
Psycho.logy:
Hatfield
Polytechmc, England U. of
Lagos, Nigeria
There are, of course, several
other pC>ssibilities,. particularly if
ticipate in the electoral process
must help others to register, vote,
and speak out. T_owards that end,
I have asked workers in my
Senate campaign to devote much
of the next two weeks to an in-
tei,sivc, ,tate-wide, non-partisan
voter registration. drive.
The country needs it. , ·
Sincerely,
Ramsey Clark
you speak a foreign language.
All placements -to the above
must be completed before
Christmas.
It
is
ur-gent,
. therefore, that you inquire as
soon as possible.
·_
My office hours are: Mon. and
Thurs.: 10:00 -12:00 A.M.; 3:30 -
4:00 P.M.; Tues.: 3:30 .~ 4:45
P.M.
and by apporntment.
--
Fraternally,
Dr. JosephL. Belanger
Editorials
·
·
Resignations -
-Revitalization
ministration interact; .. including
that existing .Student Govern-
. open gates of communication and
nient is a bit too innocuous or
To the
.
Editor,
· . ··
responsiveness:
.
... : .
'. remote/he :should make known
Not long ago MariSt was visited
· The lattedwo paragraphs- a·re his position and a_ tt. erilptto.· inv. est
by
an . evaluating . team
1- t-
f ·
f th
·
nt- "
During the past few weeks the CIRCLE has had little enough time to
a is mg o some o . e esse . 1a
1
~thin the various offices people
kee
·th ·~·..
·ff · · 1 t 1
f 11
d ·-
t
th
representing the Middle
·
~tates ob. s. erv.ations. of the. study._Ob- ·w· ho
·w·
•1·11· ·1·espon·d · to ... s· tudent
p up
WI
1...,. own a arrs, e a one. o ow an. commen on
e Association. of Colleges. The
.
1 th
d'd. t
., d
changes in student Government Today we have found ( or perhaps we
·
b
·
vwus Y, e group 1 no spen a sentiment, after all, the functions
should say made) the time.
committee's findingshave een great deal of time here.
In fact, of student Government include
At a time in our history when most former.· rules governing politics published,
th0ugh poorly they were ·.on campus only follr r.ep· rese.n. tatio.
ri,. .
not.:
only
distributed, and they provide us d
B t· th· · th · ·
th· t
'
and politicians are liable to cham!P. from day to day, it should probably
ays. · u
1s IS
e rmage. a
regulation. · ·
·.
.
all with an . in. val.uabl.e. op-
M · t·
· ts · d
t
·
come a_ s no. surprise that st.udent.government.s are undergoin. g th. e
· ·
·
ar1s ·.pro1ec ,.·an ex raneous .·-·Be .. cmd.the.r.ight
.. offranchis.eis
d t
portunity . to· learn . where .. the
·
h
th M'ddl St t
~
same 1 en !ty-crises. Is an office nece~sary·_simply because it was College· stands as seen .from an. groups sue as e . I
e a es the right of each studentto j(?in
deemed to be? And perhaps a bit closer to honie ~· will the resignation
•
Association are content to accept the organizations of · his . choice.
from that office effect any c~ange in the system-of that government? objective point of yiew. ·
· ·
this facet
.
of campus life .. That•is . There are a.number of clubs on
( The federal government seems to be getting along without a vice-'
Briefly' the report reflects the why those of us who make Marist campus .which serve variegated
president.)
committee's. stirprise · that MariSt a part•· of our· everyday Uves
interests, they cari all use, active
Marist College Student Government is supposedly the backbone Qf hasn't bogged itself down in red must ourselves; perceive the members. ·. ·
·
·
·
student representation on this campus. Can it function without two of ~pe'. The · campu~ itself: was . fraHties we encounter here and
...
The .
survival : of the school
·ts
1
t"
·t·
?It
nfrt
t·th·t
· 1 td ff.
Judgedf~vora~ly,with P.~rtwular realizethatwearetheoneswho•·d·
d·
· ··t•· .·
.
·•·t· ··td
.
1. ,e ec 1ve pos1 ions.
app~iirs
U
o. _una e a our e ec e (). 1c.ers emphasis on.,the ~architectural.
. . . . ; .· .. . • .. , . .. __ .
.
epeµ S upon ,as .I\'.e, m erese
have no alternative to·the"'presuined· uselessness of'their'pcisitioris d .... ·
f'th"' (; ..
.
,,.;,
·c ·
t • , d · must r~y1~Uz~_~ho~E: .cpn~1tlOIJS-
students,: To.ec:,mvolvlemenh:of
other'than resignation.'
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Cl!Igllfi""~ iip;l~hs • ~n e~.an,
Thr!r~ is truth.in the ass~ssrnent ·:these:people could wellJ:ie. the
·
That the idea of the necessity for a functioning vice-president may Do1:1ne .
Y .
a. '. · ·. e. . usilless of our College, but. there 1s also a most effective way of confronting
be outmoded is no novel idea - many of. the. nation's founding fathers Office was praised for
t
be, m~rale plethora , Qf unsubstanUable . the ..issues . that· impede the
saw no definitive reason for the post.. We'd like to think that Charlie ad!ld c~mt p.etfe~cet.
0
11
f
.
thtes
1
t.atffl. thtse opinion; we must. separate the
progress of significant living at
Tackney.was making a comment on the state.of our student govern-
iversi
Y
O
me ec ua. · a en
two.
M · t ·
·
mental system and not particularly on the lack of duties it afforded within ~he studentcbo~y ~md the
Once each student has decided
ans ·
Fraternally yours,-
him.
-
school s.t sta~ure c;g'~~l~n the to act on the problems he
.
· Brian Morgan
But the ideaofourstudentsystem functioning without a secretary is commum
Y
w n re
.. · ·,
recognizes, he. may .follow
student Government
another matter: to say that the functions of a secretary are un-
Further, .the t~a~ ~om~ended various courses of action.
Treasurer
necessary seems a bit suspect. Who will be performing the important, the enthusiasm·
wi
th which • the
His niost important right is that
albeit routine, duties vacated by that resignation?
students, f~culty • and ad- of franchise; if a student feels
The CIRCLE has every confidence in the remaining two elected
officers, but we do question their ability to function as four: no one is
Li' br·
ary. Featu·
res
super-human.
,
$2000.00 over each
of
the past few
reasonable
levels
without
We also question the validity of appointment to the two vacated
years. This personal check of disturbing everyone else in the
offices and-or the legality of the president appointing someone not only To the Marist Community:
briefcases, etc., .is not· the most Library. The acoustics in the
to fill the two vacatee posts, but to incorporate as it were the two
I was flattered to see t~at some desirable system and there are present Library have• been such
vacancies into one position and then fill that. (Could "executive· of my comments regarding. plans plans to install. a. cliffererit as_ to make even the slightest
privilege" be at issue here at Marist?)
for the Library were considered amfrigement when .the Library whisper audible from a distance.
The CIRCLE has come up with many questions - hopefully, both for important enough to merit nicives to F~ntaine .. The libr~ry While not perfect, there is liope
our satisfaction and that ofthe student body, they will be answered editorial comment in the, Sep-
staff appreciates the cooperat10n .that these dividers will allow
soon.
·
·
.
tember 26th issue of The Circle. I t~ey · haye r~ceive~ from - all . conference to take place without
In the meantime, we would suggest to the student Government that .was also encouraged, by that !1brary u~ers m their. efforts to disturbing others. . -
. .
rather than spending time and materials cranking out a special same editorial, t~ r.e~lize that. Improve llbrary security..
These are some of the efforts
"communication"ontheprogressofthetenniscourts (something that there are many mdmduals on
.Another .new feature_ m the the Llbrary staff is making
to
could have been better covered and more widely distributed through campus who recognize the .im-
L1br_ary 1s. t~e . paperback' deal with the limitations of our
exposure in the CIRCLE) they get out a special report on the state of portance ofthe Library and are - carous1:1 which 1s. locate~ near presentfacility. Hopefully the
their disunion.
concerned with its development
~h~
.ma111 entrance. The Libr3:ry Fontains complex . will be
·
proiectiles
c and expansion. With this in mind . 1mtially stocked the car9usel with designed to alleviate. these. and
I wouldlike to use this letter as an·· over $100.00 worth of· paperbacks other · problems for.· .the· future.
opportunity to publicize some of and_ is . encouraging . all to trade Certainly more money for books
the changes-that have been_ made . their. ·old or ,al).'eady read :would be helpful, but would not be
in the Library this year.
•
p~per~acks. for ours; Any con- · the only answer to providing a
Toe most. immediately .visible . tnbutions of paperbacks anyone stimulating library environment .
During the past year or two it has been noticed that certain in-. ,change has been the•installation would care to !Ilake wou!d ~e at J.14arist. I am always willing to
dividuals . in . Marist's dofll!atories
,
have tak~n up the
.
activity of of a modest traffic control system , greatly appreciated and Will. listen
to
any suggestions or ideas
throwing objects out of the windows. Proiectiles have run the gamt•t • by cre3:ting e.n~ran,ce' an~ ·exit allow the staff.· .. to ~eep . the aboutthe improvement. pf. our
fro. m bow. ling ball. s to. ice• cream cones to· furnit. ure,. and even. doors With a d1v1!ier to delineate carousel w~ll provided for.
.
· learnmg resources here . at
bathroom tissue.
.
. the entrance ·and exit. corridors.
A third new feature is the use of Marist..
··
·
Last week, while walking.out of the side door of one of the dorms, "This,' together
.
with·· a' check .· sound ·absorbing dividers. to .
·
'···
·. Th~hkyou,
. someone· was struck by what seems to have been a' chunk of ice; for- system at the desk, will hopefully ·. create small conference-ar~as in
Vincent L. Toscano
tunately, it. didn't hurt.this person. On that same night, anoth.er person reduce losses froni .theft. which . the lowe(levelwhere groups.can
have . averaged·. · approximately mee~ together . and converse at
just missed being hit when some object was, again, thrown out of a
,
. . · · _ .
•
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window from the same building. . · . ..
· . ·
· · .
.
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We_don't know what the reasons are for these actions·and, frankly,•
Europe.·.a.
·11
Trips_ ... ··..
: ·
eastern states have less to pay· climb of the U;S.-dollar against;·
__ ., . , •we don't care. No reason could everjustify such conduct.
.
than students at western-schools. ·· .falling • European currencies
We wonder if it has ever occurred to these · people that someday,
••·
·..
.
Also, lower winter rates offer further decreases the cost
of
a
someone will inevitably
,be
hurt. Some ofJhe,.objects thrown could .Dear Marist:Students:- .
s~iers inexpensive .trips:· to trip to Europe.· . .
, ·
have seriously injureo someone ifhe was hit byit.·We also wonder if.it
Some student air fares.- to Austrian and Swiss slopes. One
· For students staying in Europe
has· occurred to th~~ people-tha~. it .might·be .~ery annoying to . Europe·ar~ ~till,in·effe~t: Youth .. sctluuddin~ngt• Sk! trip is only. $550; in-
longer than- a. 2-week ·ski ·rung,
. someone to have ~n ice c~~m cm~e drop. frC?m a Window onto a new . fa~es a_nd ~ther i:educed a1rJ~es
.
the round trip ~1ght temporary paying jobs are. also
·
. coat. We furthur wonder.if 1t has ev~r ~c~~e~•.to ~h~e people that. bemg_sold.m Canada and M~co; bc~et and. accommodat1~ns available ... Most jobs: are
.
:,in·
some passers-by often think ~f ~he ~ossibili1! of berng st':"llck. by:'a°, and .. cont~nued.: use .. of, s~hool . dunng two weeks on .~he Aus~nan, ·r~staurants,;.hotels; · and
•
ski
o!)Ject as they walk by. a buUding_ ... · ..
·
.· . ; . , . . • . .··•·
, . · charter flights
·
all:-make._Europe • slop~s .. • . Geµ.eral : ·.·~ Ameqcan ·
.. resorts. Standard :-wa:-ges : are
:T.HE,
CffiCLE. sinc~rely hopes th~~ these mdividua~ give so!Il~ .~till, -~ery;:inµ_ch -available:.to 'tou~1sm to: ·Europe '.was·
Clff-
_
paid, biitthe big saving is the free
ser1o~;th()~ght_t~ ~s'. And the ne~ tune someone feels)ike throwi!1g .'.travel mrnd~·~plle_ge•students -
s«;>mewhatthis past.summer.
As
a :- room:· and board :that· goes 'with .
~met~ng outofa wmd_ow,·we hope thatcommons~nseand ma~tY.- even::in ~he:fac~.
of~~~~r- .
in-•.•··res~lt, ..
~!1Y
Au~~an ski resorts •.· each,,job!;
:<:~ ~' ·,·
·
' · · · ·. · •·
Will .. stifle. tlle urge.
·
.
..-,·· ·
·
' ·.
· , :
creasing internatio~al air:f~_res. ·
:.~i:e
dr,~P,;>I_ng_ their ·ra~ for the
· . :: ; . ,,.
.
. · ;,
,
- - - -
. As_'i1lways,-stu~ellt$:llvytg.µ_1·.Pte ·--~~~~s1q.~ro~~~,~o,thes~dv
''Co'ntiinied:·on:page
8
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OCTOBER
3, 1974
THE CIRCLE
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'~FUNNY> WHEN
T~E.V'RE
T\-lROUGH
THEY
KEEP
AS\<lN
.
G
HOW
i'O
l=L.US~
IT!"
-
.
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PAGES
Get Out
·And
Vote!
In order to exercise your right
to vote this November, you will
need to know the following in-
r,.~rne.t;
·
on.
Iri orderto register to vote you
must
1.
be 18 years old on or
before November 5, 1974. 2. be a
U.S.
citizen by
birth or
naturalization. 3. have been a
resident of the city or village
where-you plan to vote for 30 days
prior to November 5, 1974.
You
must
renew
your
registration if
1.
you have
changed your address.
2.
you
have not voted in a general
election in the past two years
(primaries do not count).
If
you wish to register where
you now reside, check with your
county Board of Elections as to
where and when to register.
Information on
Absentee V
_
oting and
Absentee Registration
·
If
your home is in a different
.;..__,...;.. __ _;;.;..., ___ _;...;. .... __ ...;. ______
~
__ ...;. _____ .....;, ___ -:==-::---------:------
county from where you attend
Senior
Search
,
Begins : Placement
E~~:~~~r~i'::1:t:¥£
------------------------------~~-__,;=------------------------
sentee registration from any
ltis hard to get a job, even if can be particularly good
.
if
you usually provide lists of available information to The College Board of Elections, but this
you have (or will soon have) a have the patience to sell yourself jobs (jobs rarely
.
stay available Graduate
Register,
In-
application must be mailed to the
.
college
·
degree: The
fact
is over_ an.d. over again
;
Re
_
sume for more than
.
2 weeks), and corporated, 250 Fulton Avenue, Board of Elections in your home
.
simple: there ar_e too
·
many
-
r~prmts do cost some money, and request a fee be sent to be listed Hempstead, New York 11550 (but county. This must be postmarked
people currently driving faxis it is important to
_
write and with· them, only
·
to be com-
don't wait, because the deadline no
later
than October 10, 1974 if
-
·
with
.
a
·
Bachelor's
·.
diploma prepare the resume properly the pounded by an additional fee
.
for is November 22, 1974), along with
you wish to vote this November.
hang~g
,
outof
a
back pocket; and firsttime forjust this reasop._.
If
actual
_
placement
(
in some
·
a carefully ivritten 60-word self-
The application for absentee
.
the unemployed rate seems to
:
the resume is clear;
·
concise,
.
cases)
.
Once you are matched description
.
No
guarantees
are registration includes the ap-
continually
.
soar.
_
There is
·
.
.
a
·
neatly done,
.
·
and
.
necessarily wi
_
th a job (whether you want it or made for jol}s, but ~hey can save plication for an
.
absentee baUot.
·
degre_e
:
of complacency that sets impactful, it
-
~as been d?ne riot), the
·
money has been paid, you money in mass resume ex-
If
you are registered in your
iri sometime in the middle of the properly. Rapid reproduction and their concern becomes posure.
home county, you may write to
senior_ year, where worry about a services are less expensive ~han strictly profit-minded; Once
The search need not be a the Board of Elections there,
··
-job seems to be a
.
good
:
thing to xeroxing (and of higher quabty), again; scrutinize and investigate reason for worry; you are not
requesting an appli_cation _for _an
·
put
_
·
off for . a .few days .
.
That so stop by a local printer
.
before
.
.
before spending any money.
alone. Placement directors are . absentee ballot.
This
apphcatton
·.
,
behavior easily tides
.
you through
·
.
spending .100
,
.
.
dimes
.
,
in
,,
-
the·
.
One. orgctnization;
·
neither.·· a hir~~ spe~itic,ally to
_
assi!?t you(in . should be
.
returned to th~.J~oard·
'-'
'
Iilid~terrns, ahd before
·yoli
:
know
1
machire~atthe
libtart
·
•
-
<:
.piaceirient
agency
·
-
~or
'
an
'ein-
getting the right job. Their offices
'.
ol: Elections by October 29. The
,
.
·
it;
~
the
.
time
.
has
· :
come
:
to start
·
Spare no reasonable expense m ployment service, was developed dre filled with means to this end,
.
Board of Elections will then send
finishing papersfor the end of the yourjob searching;
,
sinc~
.
you'll to assist in the job search.
·
The and you'll find that they.·re fully
·
you an absentee ballot which
s_emes~er .
.
~ere rea}!y is
.
very pro~ably ~ake most
.
of 1_t
,
back
-
emphasis here is_ on
.
exposure;
.
trained to help. The placement
must
be
returned to them no later
bttle ttme, ~f yourat10nahze as ~urmgthefirstweekonaJob~ou much in the fashion of sending •director will
be
able to give you
than 12:00 noon,
Monday,
· ·
well as everybody else, to look for hke; There are ways of spendmg out resumes
:
to a large group of far more information than this
November 4, 1974 .
.
a job through your. senior year.
plenty of
·
money, howeyer,
'
companies
~
The differences here, article could possibly provide
.
Forfurther information, please
It's
·
always
.
mce. to. know nota
_
l.>ly employment s
_
ervices however, are significant. First See him at your earliest possible
contact the League of
·
women
somebody to get the first Job, but and placement
.
_agenc~es. An the list of employers is resear-
convenience.
•
Voters or the Board of Elections.
more and more of these contacts employment service will take ched extensively. Second, only a
find the job market too tight !o
·
your name a~d qu~lifications_and small fee is charged to the stu- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.....
help out. A few years ago, you
11 match you with a Job that might dent in return for space in a
be told, there wo~ld have been no become available. These se~ic~s periodical devoted intirely to
problem,
·
but thmgs are really do have the resources to mamtam mini-resumes ( 60 word self-
tight right now. The job marketis long job listings, but it will cost descriptions as they are called
:
as bad as you've heard; but there you as much as 3 percent of a by
.
the
College
Graduate
·
are jobs available
-
if you're year's earnings
.
(3 percent of Register).
These
·
self-
willing to ~ake the time to really $10,0:f> is $300). Some e1:11ployme~t descriptions are listed in
seekthem out.
.
services are honestly mvolved m classified areas (Social Science,
The most reasonable way to_ do helping seniors, but the few t~at Media, Engineering), and sent to
·
this is the oldroutine of sendmg
·
have operated at the edge of m- personnel offices at over 1000
out resumes
'..
and letters of tegritr have given
·
·
::-~ason ~or· companies.
If
interested in being
inquiry, making f~llo'?'·Up ~hone scrutiny before. deahng with part of the January issue (which
calls,
.
and ammg~g mterviews. employment services .
.
Plac~ment is not
.
too
·
early for May
This can be gruehng after the ~genc~esa_re equally deservmg_~f graduates, if you think about it),
first 100 attempts, but tl!e r~sults mvestlgat10n.
·
These· ·companies· students are asked
·
to send for
·
Teach
-
er
·
Education-Offers
Ce~tification
.
Programs
·
Marist College
·
offers a
.
New credits of graduate study.
.
Education Office, may do so any
·vork state-approved
,
program
·
.
Applicationsto the secondary
.Monday
through Friday from
·
!e&:iing
·
fo .
provisi:ma! cJr• education program may be ob- 8:30 through 5:00 P.M. in Room
·
tification for teaching Grades 7 tained at the Teacher education. 218 Donnelly.
through 12 in the fiel~
.
of:
.
Office; Room 218 Dof!nelly fr()m
Inform_ation
_deScribi~g
t~e
_
English,
s_ocial
•.
studies, 8:30
,
to 5:00 P.M. daily through programm seecial education
°"'.111
mathematics, 'biology,
.
qc,tob~r 8, Sophomores
_
and also be available. The Special
.-
chemistry, physics, Spanish a11d ju!llor_s, are invited
.
to mak~
:ap-
Educati?n
·
Progr3:m,
a
French. Certification is awarded
.
phcatton. students accepted mto cooperative program with Mount
following
,
completion
·
_of
a
.
B.~.
_
the program for . the se~o!1dary
·
Saint ~ary CQllege i~ ~ewburgh,
degree, specified credit hours m
.
schoohl!lust
.
attam a mlilllllum l~ds ~o du~l provisi~nal cer
-
the academic discipline and.the cumulative
.
mdex of
.
2.5 and an tlflcatlon
in
special
and
.
prescribed program at Marist
.
app_rox~te B: average in their elementa17 education.
.
including courses in educ
_
ational maJor ~UbJectf1eld by the
.
~nd
.
of
The Teacher Education Office,
psychology;·. philosophy
•
;
of
.
their
. ·
Juruor
,.<
year .. Applicants Room 2l8 Donnelly; will be open
education; methods of teaching must _also
submit recom- from6:00 P.M. through 8:00 P.M.
_
and
sociological .
.
and mendations from three faculty_ Tuesday, October
.
8, and Wed-
-
phUosopllicaLJoundations of member~ anf!Dust successfully
.
nesday, .October
·
.
9
; :
Interested
.
education. In ·addition
.
to a pass an mt~rv1ew conducted by students are invited to make
·
:
·:
:
!lupervised student
:
teaching the
.
· ..
·
_Seconda~y
.
·.
Teacher, inquiries at that time regarding
·
experienc~ ~n ~.seco?dary school ;ducation
,
Councd.
...
.
.
.
.
application to -the Teacher
·
·
during senior year; a juni9r-year
:
;
,,
Freshmen; and s_op~omores Education
;
program
'
;
from the
·
.
>
fiel
_
d
:
exp~r~ence
,
.i~
:.
re9uire~. interest~~
-
-
o.111
.
~e~chmg
.
~he
:
·
evening s~io? program.
·
Permanent
:
·
certification
-
:
1s
·
mentallyretard~or
.
the l~rrung
·
·
.
.
·
.
.
·
:.
•
.
·
·
. ·
.
.
.
.
..
·
granted by NYS u~~
-
comple?on
· :
disableji,
.
who
;
have not
·
as
,
yet
ofa
.
master's degree
..
or
.
thirty
r~giste~e.d. ~1th
_
the Teacher
.
--
·
·fr(]j
ieg~()IJ
'1!t
.
; I
I
'(J(/;
II I I
I•
.
.
.
.
. ~ t
• ' • I ' •
•
..
'
..
.
.
.
'
.
,I
i
'
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•
)
.
::,,;.~
. OCfOBER 3, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGE6
Code
99
By
Fr.
Leo Gallant
ug~~. poverty, disease, ex-
ploitation, oppression, instead of
Commentary -
Two weeks ago I explained the merely pitying the poor, the sick,
title of my column and I the exploited, the oppressed, only
dedicated it
to
those who want to then will we have come of age. On
bring new life to
this
campus. I that day our convictions will have
believe very much in the "power caught up with our gestures. That
of the few" for good; the salt that hour must come soon, for our
preserves and flavors, the light cities are in a race with time and
!)ult
Uiat doesn't have to be very time is running out."
By
Gregory Conocchioli
large to light up a whole area. I
I've heard of 'dirty tricks' a person in quiet solitude, a
like to think of Rosa Parks, the played on this campus, of acts power that goes out and in-
black woman who, on one hot done completely out of malice, of tangibly touches · and heals
Alabama day, refused to move to residents so crushed by students' hearts.
(The following
column
will
be a
regular weekly feature of the
CIRCLE.
It
is written
by
Co-
Editor
in
Absentia
Greg
Conecchioli .
and will reflect his
life as
a
student aborad. Greg will
be writing . from England where
he
is
attending . London-
Pol)1echnic Institute of London
this fall.)
.
140,000
student identity cards
were issued last year.
While some of these card
holders were studying, others
remained behind
ro
study. Course
credit-seems available for most
anything at some schools; in-
cluding working on a kibbutz in
Israel· for the summer. One
student at Antioch College in Ohio
studied in southern . India while
earning
his
degree
in
photography, while another
Antioch
stu'dent
studied
education and sociology in India,
the back of the bus. "The inhumanity to students. I may be
That's why we have so many
movement sparked by her small things, but the wickedness "power services" on campus.
decision to break the law by that wtderlies them is the same Daily, a quiet, short Mass at
sitting. up front, broke open the_ wickedness that exploits people noon; a
5
p.m. Mass, a vibrant
whole idolatrous web of law and in the world. We need a few Code community worshipping together
order that kept black people
'm
99'ers to counteract this hatred before dinner; a
10:30
p.m.
their place.' When Martin Luther with love, care; •we need people scripture-oriented Mass in iriy
K~g asked Rosa Parks why, who are "tired" of hatred. We, ho~se,, a most peaceful .ex-
after a _lifetime· of law.:.enforced need prayerful people who can . penence at the end of the day.
· Fifty years ago this past month
American
students
at
Marymount College participated
in an overseas education
program. The six young college
women sailed for Paris to study
at the Sorbonne while living with
other- French · girls in -a home
owned by the college.
· also.
· The. off ice of International
Education states ''that while the
popularity of the study. abroad
program continues, it has leveled
off in_ the past year because of
economic- problems."
subservience, she finally lost .contemplate a few minutes ·daily
Then I know many students ·
patience, she replied simply, 'I and take on the love of God today are using quiet moments of
was tired'." ·(N.C.R. Aug.
16)
!umself.
the day to meditate, to encounter
Cardinal Cushing once said:
I
believe in the power of
God.
There'll
be
many Rosa
"Only when we begin to hate prayer: that mysterious f-o.wer. of Parks in this generation, '
Children
'S
Theatre To Meet
Mari~t College Childrens' "Pinocchio" to the gleeful d~light '. E~comb, a three year· veteran,
Theatre has announced the first of tens of thousands of chlldr_en Lucy Squicciarini, and Com-
general meeting for the up- - and adults throughout
the
Mid-
munity Childrens' _
Theatre
coming
1974-75
season. The Hudson area.
- .
D'
t
J
·
· ·
·11
b
t
8 00
PM
"Al. · ·
w
d
-
Irec or, an Denmson
meeting
wi,
e _
a - :
. .,
_IC?,
,in
on_ erland," ,:'The
The workshop will ~llow iti-
Thursday. Oct.
3
in .room
249,
:!£
1
bbit?
B;bestm royland and terested people t
9
experience and.
Champagnat.
. eepmg . eau
Y,,
are s~me learn dramatic skills, such as
This meeting begins Childrens' Ideas for this year_ s prod1:1ction, mime, improvisation, dance .
Theatre newest season- and will and group. reactI~f!S
wlll
be movement, · expression . and
serve to provide a meeting soug~t for a decision at the creativity. Theatre familiarity
ground for Childrens' · Theatre mAeetmg.
.
.
.
set construction, lighting and
and the Marist Community.
Creative
Dramatics video,work will
be
included in the
Childrens' Theatre, a Student Wo_rkshop,
-sponsored _ by workshops
Government funded, student-run Ch1ldrens' Theatre, is being
· _ _ _
_
theatre· organization, yearly. conducted this,year by Childrens''
produces such shows as "Peter Theatre Director, Lisa Mc-
Pan," "Wizard of
Oz," ·
and Carroll, Assistant Director, Dan
,\
.. :s ..
-~-~'E~aaerrSpeak~-:()n·
Prison Reforni
The junior year · abroad has
survived the half century very
well .with the most dramatic
changes occurring in the past two
decades. Language· studies, what
· .was once the most popular reason
for studying aborad has been
replaced to a large deg·ree by
interest in the dramatic arts, for
in the Marymount program
today, one in twenty seven girls
will be studying in Paris with the
other twenty six - studying in
London. The greatest change,
however, is the number of
students involved in study abroad
programs and the · variety of
those programs.·
·
. According to the Institute of
International Education, ·
34,000
American students were enrolled
in f9reign institutions-·. two years
ago, with the bulk of those
studying in at least one semester
programs with a. slightly lower
nt'.Illber in · summer programs.
<
Adding
to-:
the, numbers •
has
- bE>.en · the recent· suriirtiertime
groups of· students. According to
the International Educational
Exchange office,
777
United
Nations Plaza, N.Y., N.Y.,
The idea of study abroad
developed from Renaissance
Englishman's "Grand Tour"
which was supposed to complete
his education as a gentleman.
The first group of girls from
Marymount lived in the h9use~ at
78
Boulevard · de la Sausage
where. even now, a Marymount
school' stands. Today, the girls
live· in a student hall.
In Paris, _ Marymount girls
were· at LeBourge ·Airport_ when
Lindburgh landed in
1929,
while
another survived
·
the Andrea
Dorea sinking in
1956.
·
Interesfinthese-programs has
grown to involve the teenage set
with post~secondary school ex-
change such -as those sponsored
by the American Field Service to
high school juniors and seniors.
· Foreign governments and
educational institutions are
. beginning · to set _
limits ,on· the
·number of :Americans they
will
accept,· in . some cases seeking
acceptance at an American
Graduate school for their own
students.
· ·
By Chip Kennard
criticisms of the criminal justice
system·with major references to
An acknowledged leader in· the numerous unjustices and the
prison reform movement, spoke complete ineffectiveness of the
encouragingly in an effort to correctional system. He stated,
motivate creative community "You cannot deal with prisons
programs concentrated on en- and their problems unless you try
Free
·
·university
ding the isolation in prisons, and to gain an overview of criminal
This month, the Gregory House
in assisting those
who
are paroled justice and its problems.''
Free University will once again
from them.
Variden Heuval, who in
1970
be sponsoring tutoring programs
William - Vanden Heuval, a served as Chairman of the Board
,at
Smith Street Center . and
' prominent . Manhattan lawyer, of Corrections in New York City
Regina Coeli School in Hyde
an_d dynamic speaker in favor of cited many · of the weaknesse~ Park. For all those interested in
prison reforms, lectured last and callous opera.tions that education of .the young, these
Wednesday evening in the Marist existed within the prisons he had programs. offer a unique op- ·
College Theatre before a crowd become involved with. He defined · portunity for experience in the
concerning the grave problem: the present prison situation as fields oMearning.
"After Prison; What?" Vanden
·
·
-· · :
··
Regina Coeli
is
a co-curricular
Heuval presented constructive
Continu~d
ori
page:
7 .
program geared to reinforce
r-----------------••----•--••••---•---•
within the students,· the subject
material covered in their grades,
William Vanden Heuval
.
.
'
PARK
DISCOUNT.
BEVERAGES
through creative and active
participation in exercises-leading
to growth and development.
·
The program at Smith street is
oriented towards furthering tioth
the cognitive and physical
spheres of education of the
. children living in the- area. The
students involved work towards
developing
an atmosphere
conducive to growth
and
development through reading
skills, arts and crafts, and sports.
.
.
I
For anyone wishipg to share in
these worthwhile programs,
. the_re will be a brief meeting
October· 7, at 8:00 ·P.M. in
Gregory House .. For further
information, please contact
either Danny Morea\e, Eileen
. Kehoe, · or Lynn Texter in
Gregory House._ · • ·· .
.
OPEN·:DAILY:TILL 9
12-5 SUNDAY·
QPEN_24
IIOU-RS
7-DAYS
.A.
WEEK
.NEVER AN
EXTRA CHA_RGE'. FOR co.to
:_BEER
¼
ANp
½
lEGS AVAILABLE WITH EQUIPMENT
.
.
.
SERVIN_G
.
'
-
:B
.
REAKFAST• _
.
--
.
-LUNCHEON
471~7-939 ·DINNER
O~TO~E~FEsf··e_l~R-·
'
·1~:NOW·'AY~~L~.BlE'::
.
.-119·:r~k~r
A~e~:~Pokeep·sie,-N.Y~:
________________
.....................
~
.....................
·
...
-
.
' '
.
,.
.,.
'
.
OOMESTIC AND IMP.ORTEo··eEER
:
,.:
·
.
'
"
.
-·}
.
.
' ( ' ' r t
f ' '
' I I , J
1 , ,
I •
r . '
I O \ '
Things
were
jumping
for
Marist
booters
at
pout
wn
Co
n tin u e
d
fro m Page
6
prepare a man for his exit from mented on the poor medical
being, "warehouses . ot social the prison, and a suitable entry facilities and staffs within the
problems that we just do not want back into society; however, they city prisons. "Health is a vital
to face." When he spoke about fail pitifully. Vanden Heuval factor that is largely neglected.
prison_populations, he termed the recognizes. and voices this The possibility of recruiting para-
majority" as being, "those least .failure, and he works hard for medical personnel to work within
capable and most vunerable who practical and effective systems the prisons appears to be the best
cannot deal with surrounding of positive withdraw! from .the possible solution to date."
social problems." ·
prisons. for these people. "An
Mr. Vancien Heuval concluded
_ The victims of social problems. economic source of support, a job his lecture with
a
question and
became.a main starting _thrust in -and people who really care are answer period in which this
his lecture. Vanden Heuval drew what we need for prison reform." question was raised by a ~arist
a
verbal outline of the various Training
systems,
both College student: "What can this
problems and· difficulties that practical, · vocational,
and -community in the Mid-Hudson
such victims face before prisoµ, educational need to be set up and area do to help promote prison
during prison and even more so, functioning within the prisons reform?" Mr. Vanden Heuvals'
after they leave the prisons on themselves. The idea and answer was a positive one.
parole. One of the largest reasons practice of job development and
He asked the members of the
begin with the lower· class people job· placement could ' possibly
audience to support community
who have, as Vanden Heuval put open up a new life for those who
programs that exist already,
it, "no stake in society."· He were less fortunate earlier in
such as Greenh,aven's · South-
added, <(these people are the their lives before being sent off to Forty .Program, and the Marist-
uneducated,
unestablished, prison. Programs that exist now,
Greenhaven Program. Vanden
unrooted and. unprotected ·vie- such as study-release programs,
Heuval also made the suggestion
tims
to · societies
power work-release projects and half-
that local churches, parishes and
pressures."
_ _ .·. · .
way houses are a step in the right
synagogues should . become in-
Vanden Heu val offered in-. direction, but more community
volved in this long-needed and
novative suggestions aimed involvement
is
needed to force
overdue reform. "Help pursuade
towards-. constructing a united<the ·. correctional systems
to -the clergy, teachers, volunteers
reform - movement · within the conform.
·
and your community leaders and
penal systems .through what he
Many inmates within· -the
members to go into the prisons
called, ''.creative community confines of the correctional in-
and work towards developing a
PAGF:7
Hooters Tie Score
In Final Minutes
by Tom McTernan
Bills, who had
12
saves. Marist
There was no hope. Kings had goalie Jay Metzger had 11 saves
scored at the 34:58 mark of the in reducing his goals - against
· second half and now with less average to
1.67.
than one minute remaining in the
Last Wednesday in the Bronx
game, everyone was thinking of the Red Foxes were leading
the one that got away. But John Fordham
3-0
before Leonard
Metzger, who thought_ other"'.ise, Kelly, All-State lineman, tallied
3
eluded two.Kingsmen m the ri~ht times in a ten minute span in the
corner, tlien set up Ludovico second half to spark the
Rams
to
Aprigliano, who scored from
!O
a·
4-3
win over Marist. John
feet out to lift Marist to a
1-1
be Metzger,
McGraw
and
with Kings in their CACC opener Aprigliano all scored for the
Tuesday at Leondoff Field, losers. Jay Metzger was bombed
closing out a busy week for the with
30
shots and saved
23.
team.
At Sacred Heart on Saturday,
Marist, now
2-1-1,
had con- John McGraw scored with seven
trolled the ball for most of the minutes left as Marist won
2-1.
He
second half when the visitors also assisted on the other Hed
scored on a rnixup in front of_ the Fox goal, by Tim Trotta,
in
the
Red Fox net; they outshot Kmgs first half, that gave Marist
a
1-0
10-4
"in the half for a
24~13
edge halftime lead. The Pioneers tied
overall; The first half, played
in
a it at the
3?
mu:iute _mark of the
steady rainfall, was qui~e even, second penod ~ix ~mut~s before
with both _ sides getting _ many McGraw .woµ 1t with his sec~nd
good opportunities. Most of the goal of the season, one behind
Red Foxes' chances were on Aprigliano for ~he t~am lead.
breakaways by Tim Trotta and
Next game ts this Saturday,
John McGraw. That we_re Oct.
5,
v_ersus J:airfield at
2
P.M.
stopped by the Kings' goalie, on Leomdoff Field.
. interactions and support." He stitutions due possess incredible
more progressive employment
believes that communities must talents, andthese talents should
atmosphere _
for . these people
__ . __ umte.and~t!'.iY.eJntl}e c\i!'.e~ti.<m of,:~ .. p_i:~n:QQt~d .Jlnd. :. e11c,o_ur~getr.
_wcohmenmtu!lnei.Yt~i-e:Ps·~_~'f.rt!,:•J
0.-:_.0_
-~~A?~o: .
•
.-
. employment: for_ ..
_
tho.se. who are_·vandeh .- Heuv_al ·b~lieves. that
preparing
:-to
leave - prison to such talents should be·carried out
William
Vanden
Heu val
rejoin society, in the combined
.
of the prisons and filtered: back
responded to.this questi~n with_a
effort . to prevent them
·
from into• our communities· to help
positive answer. -How might you,
returning to prison in the future; form positive members of · the
as members of the Marist College
Vanden Heuval felt ·that em- community from those who have
Community, respond to such a
Rehabitational programs in the served their time of punishment
question and such an urgent and
various . state and federal in the prisons.
. .
critical necessity?
correctional facilities should Vanden - Heu val also com-
Continued
from
page
3
Q:
Exactly how would the'state
bring about this new change in
the program?
.
A:
The state expects a con-
sortia with the school district.
· . The people · appointed would
agree on a revised program so
· that the student can demonstrate
his knowledge immediately.
0
The
traditional approach in Jhe
present college system is· that
certification is granted ·after the
required amount of hours in each
·· course.
.
Alf colleges that offer training
· for elementary an~ · special
education teachers are to submit
their competency based proposal
·by- February
1, 1975; ·
This ..
proposal when in effect will affect
teachers atreaay certified. ·
· A
few· students voiced their
opinions fater · on after the
colloquium. One female student
enrolled in teacher education felt
that a re-evaluation of the
·. program was essential but who
actually · is qualified to judge
what competency really is? How
reliabie would the judgement
made_ on the student
be? ·
·
Shared views were · expressed
ARMY-NAVY
STORE
. .
HYDE° P.ARK-ROUTE 9'
NEXT TO
DISCOUNJ BEER SJORE
-
among students that this · new
program categorizes and stan-
dardizes new teachers but
doesn't review the competency of
the· certified ones.
One male student also in the
program
here
at
Marist
discovered that it's unfair to
assume a- crash course in a
semester of teaching makes an
excellent teacher. This is ac-
tually what the state will expect
from the stu_dent. He feels too,
that the feelmg of personal ex-
perience would be eliminated
after . this
new
progr_am
measurmg teacher competency
is put in effect.
"Ready ... Aim ... Kick!"
THE ·eROW-N· DERBY
H
A MARIST TRADITION "
96 Main St.·
~oughkeepsie , N .. Y. 12601
ANNOUNCES
EVERY MON.PAY NIGHT
:Televised
FootbaU ·Games In Color
PIZZA AVAILABLE
.
EVERY TUESDA Y
-
N-IGHT SPECIAL
ALL BAR LIQUOR - 50¢ /
-
PITCHERS-.$
l.75 _
GLASS OF BEER - 20¢
EVERY WEDNE.SDAY
! ! ·
BEER -BLAST
I
111
•••
$
2.25
Gets Yo~
In J=oor
ALL The
Beer You Can. Drfnk
-··- $tarts ~- 8:3.0 .
.
- .
.. A·lso Serving The· Finest .. ln Sandwiches
Little Ne.ck Clan:,s··AvaHClble Anyt~me Raw or Steamed
: . ' ..• a",',·.
.
'
I
,
,
i
OCTOBER 3, 1974
Victory Reigns
At Marist
Home
·
Opener
By Tom McTernan
·
·
Nigel Davis and Ed Bonnett
Once again, the offensive at-
accounted
·
for two touchdowns tack was basically on the ground,
api~e and thff defense
"
sparkled as the backfield of Bonnett,
again, leading Marist to a
28--0
Davis, Jack Maher, Bill Brisson
rout over St. John Fisher in the and Charlie Gormley totaled 335
Vikings' home opener Saturday
·
yards
·
.
rushing. Bonnett's first
in a driving rain
.
at teonidoff
.
pass completion came in the thirti
Field before a small but spirited quarter, a 15-yard
.
TD pass to end
crowd.
·
·
Tim Murphy after St. J9hn had
In the previous week's
6-0
loss surprised the fans by kicking on
Nigel Davis in gridiron action against St. John Fisher.
toHutgers;theoffense had failed
·
third down. Tom Kelly's fourth
·
TY
.7.1•
n n
1·
n
·
g
Stre
9
k
Stov.v e
·
d
··
·
~nt~
.
e
.
u~d~~c
.
i:i~\~o~enr~
.
r:;:
.
:;:~cse::::::g~onversion clo~d out
Jr
·
·
i
.
U
,
and quarterback Bonnett
·
was
-
.·
The defense came up with
·
-
determined to correct that right another strong effort, holding the
R
e
.
"
d Eox
·
es·
·
Mee
·
·
t
Match
atthestart, evenif he had to do it
.
visitors to a total of 110 yards,
himself,
.
which he
·
did
.
·
most
•
of which came after
·
Coach
·
.
After
·-
Nick
··
Mancuso returned Ron Levine had
--
r
_
emoved the
The Marist Running Red Foxes
•
sickness and an injury to contend coach r~spohded;
.
the opening kickoff
fo
the St
;
John
:
starting unit Marty Terwilliger
met their ma~h this pastweek as with. Definitely any of these
.
· The Red Foxes had a
·
nother 32, Bonnett twice ran
'.
for the let the St.
;
John backs know that
three powerful New
·
Jersey three were capable of doing the tough as~ignment yesterday needed
·
:
yardage
.
on cqnsecutive
:
·
the
•
middle was off llm.its and the
schools stopped
,
three Marist
·
job we needed on their· fourth when they
,
were
:
to meet New third down situations before
:
visitors were forced to run out-
winnirig streaks, First on Wed~ man, so this is one loss we have to
.
Pc!ltz and Oneonta State at the rolling right fromthe fivflo tally side or passthe rest of the game
.
nesday
i
:
the iindefeatecl Mon~ chalk
.
~p to ba,d
.
luck
,
wit_J,t injuries
.
New
.
Paltz course.
·
OneoHta
.
the Vikings' maiden scor~·ofthe Captain Bill
.
Pitcairn
.
intercepted
niouth
.:
Hawks defeated
·
the and sickness
.-
.
However we
.·
had
.
·
scored the worse loss on Marist in y~ung season.
.
.
.
a pass in the end zone at the end
·
·-
:
Marist.harriers 20-3~behirid
.
the
-
excellent pedormarices fromour the_last t~ee
.
yearswhen they
'
Late in
-
the quarter Marlst
·
of the first half to thwart St .
.
·
1;2
r
unning punch o(John Sltisla!(. olher r~ers
.
and
,
I
am truly dumpedthe
.
Red Foxes
two
years r
_
ecovered
.
their oppon,ents'·
·
John's only. serious threat
>
and Steve Foster, both
..:
cross pleased
·
with our progress, The .ago there 19-42,
-
Then Marist's fumble of a
·
punt and started a
The win evened the Vikings'
•
· .:.
~oimtry
i
scholarship 'receipiants rest
.
of
/
o
.
ut
,
,
season
.
story
,
will varsity
:
will travel for
.
an over-
dri\Te from their
.
own 47
·
that record
an~1.
They travel to New
·
.
anhe schooL.
_
·
. .
.
depend oh howwel}-we
·
re~oyer night stay in
:
North Dartmouth
;
en
.
ded
·
early in
.
the
:
second period Rochelle
:
Friday night to open
·
·
Trentori State
.
the
.
host
.
school from the.§e injuries
,
and prevent
.
Massachusetts
:
for
.
·
participation· with Davis dragging
·
tacklers 17
.
~heir ECCFC
.
schedule against
of ov1:fr
>
8,000.Ju'll~time
•
studerits;
.· ·
9~her. opes
from
:
occuring
;
.
;
•
:
.
·
this Saturday 4tthe Southeastern
·
yards into end zo._ne to make it 14
-
·
Iona, then will meet Matta tuck in
.
.. '
air'J
-
topped the ;Re.d Fo,ces 2':1-32
.
:
,
/r~d
.
K
.
olth~y Jed
a
·
st~ong ~~s~::ichusett
.
s
.
Urii".er~fty
,
fo-. _
_
o.
~e s~oi:ed ~gain
'
on
.
the .next another
.
league game
·
next
·
.Yiaristhad won 19 in
a
row
iiu~il
.·
r
.
.
ar:st.
:·
1+1
·
punch against v1~tio
.
I1a};
:
Ma,::ISt
-
earlier
.
this
'.
.
~ries ~th ab:utst up the middle Saturday, October 12 at 1:3D
·
pm
.
this
·
me
"
et
,-
.
including t\velve
.
ttadit~o_nally
.
str,ong
,
So~thern year
,
.
IJ.laced
·
sec
.
and in·· the from4 yards out and the Vikings on Leonidoff Field.
consecutive
.·
wins
·
on
•
the
.
road
.
·
Connecticut as
·
they posted third,
·
Glassboro' Invitational.
·
nad
_-
a 21-0 halftirn"e
·
lead,
·
· ·
·.
.
·
,
Fr~d
:
·
,
Kolthay, despite
•
falling
i
fo
.
urth;
:
an!i
.:,f
ifth pl~ce
,
s
,i
n the
.
·
dowij and .running of(
.
course at. mee.t an~ all came
·
~it~n twelve
:.
·
·
one
.
stretch of the race
•
·
1ed Marist
·
.
·
· seconds
_-
of
•
the Mari st
.·
record
.,
on
.
.
•
·
arid was only twellty~(our
:
seconds
:
~he
:
~ourse 011
,
a poor
/
d~y
.
for
.
.
,.
·
.
beJ)in,dtr,~
}
racewinriet
:
·~9lthay
;'.
r-u
,
nnmg.
·.
·
Tpe
'
Marist lea~
c
·
·
>
beat
,
all,
'
'
of
::
Trenton's
.
,
rtinriers.
,,
recorde<i:the
:
~
t
team effort
for
.
.
· .
.
·.:·
,
Both
·":
of
,
;
tnese.:.teams
-:-,
wer
e
:
::
new
i\
.the
:
;
·top
/
five,
C
rtirine
r
s
'
.
·
ever
:i
at .
:
.
.
add
.
itions to the Marist schedule
\
!\?.~fist
''
iii
'
:
~
a
·:·
130 :06
""
·c}/icking
t~
the largest
·
and tougtiesf schedul~
·
·
t9pping t~e old
.
mark set last year
·.
eve~
:
Jor
l:l
:
Madst
,.
cross
.
c;ountry
.
on
,
Oc!ober
:
20
,
of
.
130 :~J
/
?l~is i
_
~
.
team
>
.
-'
< ··.
.
·
.
·
.·
.
.
· ..
<' \ ..
really trnmendous
,
smce it.is
,
so
•.
Behind Kolthay'
.
for the Run:
.
early
)
n the
:
·
season a~d
'
it was
'
ning Red Foxes were George such a
.
ba(l'day ~or running arid
Mccutcheon,
_
8th place; Brian the ~o
.
urse was
.
m such terrible
Costine
~
12th
;
Steye VanKeuren,
_
condition. We
>·
look
,
for even
·
.14th; J,ohnVanDervooort 15th·
·
gr~ater progressin the future."
.
:
';•
J
i
m
'
l\1cCasland,
:
'
16th;'
.
Tom the
•
M~ri;t: coach reso~ded
> .
·
Jordan, 2oth;
·
Mike
·
.
Sommar,
-·
~arist s
.
Jong red
.
lme was
23rd; and JimHonan
;
27th
.
.Only
.
evident as: the team cap~ured 16-
the Marist varsity runners at- 19th spots mthe 62
-
man field with
tended the meet. Two ofMarist's
.
clutch performances. by Jim
varsity men,
-
Myles Gibbons
·
and
·
Mccasland, Mike Soriuriar, Steve
·
Ed Jennings,hadtobe left behind VanKeuren, and Will Morrison.
at Mari§t due to injuries they had Th_en more Ma~i1,t depth was
suffered. ·
·
.
.•
:
.
.
·
evide1_1t as the
.
Big R~d Running
.
Injuries played a
·:
big part in ~Iac~me ~otch~d spots 23 through
Marist's third loss of the season 26 with Jim Honan, Ed Jennings;
as William Paterson
.
College the Tom Jordan, and John
Van-
i·
t -
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
defending New Jersey s'tate Dervoort. C~mpl~ti~g Marist's
champions, notched a close one-
·
strong
··
showing
.
m
..
the home
point victory 28-29 in the home Of!en~r
_
were Chr~s ~accione,
:
Jim
.
opener, run under a steady rain Gillen, Geo~f
.
p~1lhp~,
.
and
·
Dave
Saturday. This ended two other Schools
.
F1v~
i
Marist runners
,
streaks for Marist.
.
were not able to participate
.
·due
·
High On
·
Sports
Maristhad won eleven straight toJnjuries.
:
·
.,
·
.
.
·
·
·
·
·
i
,
::
.
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
home
·
matches and had
.
:
just
.
Our front t
.
hree
.
ran ".~ry
start~ a tw~team
·
losing streak
··
strQng .
.
,
yte
•
had
·
.
real· great Jobs
due to Wednesday's los~es.
·
tu~ed
·:
m
_
by Jim
,
~cCaslan_d,
.
_This Sunday, ~ctober 6_,
.
the Seco~d Annual
.
Intramural Bike Race
However the Long Red Lin
.
e was Mike,
·
So1;0ma.r,
·
.<!rd-. Wi
,
11
will
.
J?e
h~ld. ~•s event 1s op.en to all Faculty, Staff and Students.
able to topple Southern Con- Morrison.
_
Jim Gillen.ran his best
~a~mg time.will be
.
2
:
~ p.m'. mfront of Ch~mpagnat Hall: This event
necticutState College for only the race
.
ever also to give
.
us more
·
·
WEEK'S PUZZLE
,
1s being c<rsponsore
~
hv1th the College Union Board
:
There will be two
third time in twelve outings depth than expected. We nee~
•
a • ~ - - - - - - - - - - - -
races,a male and female ra~e.
,
Prizes will be
.
awarded to winners in
between the
.
two schools, 27-30, st~ng~1;
.
fol1!1h ma~
.
1
:md I
think
HEALTH
:
CAPSULES@
· _
b<>th races. The College
.
umon
,
Board has beeri gracious en:ou h to
and
.
also glided pa~t Fairfield w_e
11
liaye
1~
once y;e .g~t ~ur
by
Michael
A.
Peui,
!'1
.
D
:
·.
donate a quarter keg of beer to be.epjoyed by all contestants. Thilmay
Un_iver$ity 1 ~ ai.
:
well ~n~ot- s1ck.nes~es
.
.
~
a~?
>
1n3ur
.
1!!s
.
:-
.
;
15
..
•
.
,:..-Po
.c.
.
"'
..
IBL
.
E
•
.
"
. ; . , r _
.
o
.•
G
·
A
.
IN
.
pber
_
ecfeornesnumce.e
·
d b
.·
e
.
(
_
ore
·
o
·
r
.
~
.
fte
.
.
r
-
.
the
.
rac
,
e
,
.'
.
-
·
de
.
P
...
e·n
,
din
..
g on
.
your
.
bio
•
l
.
ogical
•
chmg
.
·
shutouts
·
over
<
Pace
·
straightened
_
-
o
_
ut,
•.
the MarISt
,
7;7
·
10
.
University and
.
.
Quinnipiac
~EVERAL. PoLlNEJS
·
oF
WEIGHT
·
F
.
or furt
.
. her information contact eithe~ the Colle
-
ge U~ion Board
College 15~0.
.
Continued ffom
..
page
4
·
IN
ONE
DAY
FR
0
MA
~MALL
Office or the Intramural Office .
..
.
.
•
·
..
,
.
.
.
•
.
.
.
w
.
illiani Paterso
.
n,
.
dis
.
· plavin
.
g a
·_
·
·
·
•
·
·E
.
·
· ·•
E -
·
·
-
·
•·
"
t.1Mouf'JT; aF
,
FooJ>
2
.·
~.
,J -
·
-
L TT RS
·
·
·
·
·
-
-·
·
-
-
·
·
·
·
·
·
•
·•
.
·
·
.
· ·.
·
really fin~ t~in
,
effort;
-
had two
,
·
·
-.
;,
·
··
·
•·
'
··
·."
,
-
·
' ·
. .
·.:
.
:
:!
DAVl$
.
.
NAMED ATHLETE OF THEWEEK
·,
runners cross thefinir.h lineJirst
.
.
.
. •
.
.
·
.
:
\
r:
in a tie; Ron
·
Veneman and Jeff.
.·
Any
·
:
interested
·
:
student
,
·
.
,
:;
.
.
Nigel Davis, a senior from Po~ghkeep~i~,' Ji~s
-
been
.
named
·
Marist
·
Kicia. However,
~
it was their
:
mayobtaim
\
.free
..
traveL.in
::.
n
Colleg~
.
Athlete_ofthc.WeekfortheweekendingSeptember 29.
~
fourthman whoaciually defeatecL fonn~ti9p
f
.
~nd
;
job
•
application
-
-
_
,; . Dayi~, a
.
m~b~r of the club !ootbaU ~earn
,
ran for two touchdowns
the
;
Red Fox~;
:
according to form by "'.l"itingtos
,
os, 22 Ave
~
·
:
,
. mlel!dmgtheV1kmgstoa~-Ov1
.
ctory
.
oyerSt;JohnFisher.
Manst Coach Rich
.
Stevens.
<1
We de ~a
.
Libert~
~
Luxemborg,
·
.·
!f
· ·
·
'
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
nee.d~d one
·•
ID!)r.e runner·to
,
top
'
:':
Eµrope
;",,
Job
:
_
pr<>
,
~essing
·
,
can·be
:::.._~~;;..p."==~~ .
THIS
WEEK.IN MAijISTSPORTS
.
.
th
_
e1r
:
fourth man
·
__
and we
.
would
:
speeded up
·
by
,
-
obtaining arid
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
· ·
·
·
··
·
·
·
,
..
.
. _
have ~4?n tllem.
·
We qormally
'
J1olding 3 p_a~port~iz~ p~ot~f~n.~
·
::
YEf
)
F-.YoiJ8 i,oby
,
RE7A;NS
Friday October
4
~Fpotballationa, 8:00
pirn
.
.
'
••
.·
·
•
.
. w
.
. ou
.
ld
..
·
have
•
.
gotten
..
this
<
from
·
.
•
a
•
lette
.
rofre
.
co
.
mmen
.
datio
.
nfr
.
o
.
m
-f~IJIOEA~tL'l,
·
~Nv
..
YollEAT
SaturdayOctober5 Socce F irf. ld
·
th
.
'·
~
.
IAL
,.
·
.
Ti
,
.
foo
·.
·
.
n,
·.
·
.
¼
·
u
··.
'°'.'A•i
.
.
·
•
.
··•
.
·
C
.
·
.
.
.
-:
.
~-:
_
a ie
.
,(Honie),:t:00p
;
m;
.
.
~
·
er Jim
.
HoQan,
.
who
. ·
was a teacher or
:
sch90l official: ,
·
·
"" ''-' ,._,..,..
·
ro:S-S
;
~ount,ry
.
- Southeast~tn Massachusetts
:
-
,
..
·
·
.
plagued
:
_
by
a
•
.
bad
cold;
_
John
.
.
:
.
.
:;
.
:
·
,
.
·
.
'._
.:
.
_
11iaiyc yoii~
--
<'.
RE{,:-.ltf~EfERAL
:
Poi.IN~
;
In~i~tio
.
nal at North
.
D~r:trp.o'u~; Mass
:
11-
;
oo
:
a.m.
. .
.
.
'
.
:.
Vs·p
·
ilrna.De1·nrve
.
.
doo
.
·
.
·
~
.
·
a
·
'n
·.·
·
kwlhe~.
•
..
h
.·
.
·
.
~
..
·
odr
·
.·
.
.
.
a
.
·
·
.·
....
·
sbatedlv
.
.
Ye
·
,..
.
·
~.
;
.
/
.
.
\·
) ..
\~
:
_
:·.••
•
.
:;:.
__-::
,
.
:.:t
?F
FLl.1_
.
tf? •
.
·
..
. ·
_
<
.
SSailidng
-"
o
•
Team Race.~limmations
,
at Cornell
,
.
..,
,,
.
.
.
..
.
,
.
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13.3.1
13.3.2
13.3.3
13.3.4
13.3.5
13.3.6
13.3.7
13.3.8