The Circle, December 12, 1974.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 13 No. 10 - December 12, 1974
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~ARIST COLLEGE~ POUGHKEEPSIEi l)tEW_YORK-12601.
·· - DECEMBER 12, 1974.·
/(J9u1lcil
/".f6-;VOte-.
--• Qi.
Agreem~nt
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~
,
:py
Til!l DeBaJn.:- '.
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Campus, Life· ·wilf assj_st in, thi; :
_ .. · . - <: , .:"
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.: .,
. ·· ..
c: ......
:matter:· After: the :mid - term ·
. _Jhe')Jtterh·()~~~
-
". C()\frH~il is-,
:
point,
:.the .
remaining occupant
d_r~wing up a:ho1,1sirtij·;~grefment : wil~ 9otb'¢ charged superior rates·
f~i: a,ll res1de11Lstuden~ Jc:>r'Fall :,\f<>r,~Jhe- remainder , of that· .
... 1975;:: The putpose?·of ~the\ ;,em~stei:.
-·
... . .
,-
.
agreement is· to. give ooth the
_-
?~fhe third point reads that· the
· -
stti(leqf. arid . the . col!ege
·:.'soP?,~,:;'
coll¢~e -,c~~s~rves : the dght .. to
_.
11:iisal
:
.recourse for pol1~y
_
dealmg-: Jermmate.
-
the
-
·agreement if·. the
>
with gn _
_
; campus. housing: · The i ·. ·norms of
a
house are violated·or
T/
co:t¥n~it ·: will·
.
. · vpfe
_
:
.
Frid~y;, .
0
Jfth1fnorms ofthe college; which-
. :,Decem,b~r'.~)3,on
:
the·;follo\Vmg.•···.are.·found:jnc.the handbook ·are•
·
poin~s}o, be in.
,
t~e: agr~~ment.> . ". yiolatf:!d '.bf.the student..•·.··.•· '. .:,
~
.. :.
lfhe: fi_rSL:p91qt states .
.
that·.·· ,}'hefoui:th point dealswith the
-: :.fr~~lp'nen : and,~ ~QppOlllQr,e~ . ~fe ,f~es>
_
Beginning :with the
·
. fresh- .
.
_
• reqmred/to-'s1gn ya
·
f!,lll_~-Ye~;r 'i/irleri. class.t th_is
.
corning- Sep- ·
•
.
·. : contract Jtw.o :semester[>) \\'.hile •)e!J)ber;.the room reservation fee
.
': ju~ors ~lld:senio~s··wm'o~·give~
\~!II
.be
:$~5:00,
'TheJiability ·fee .
.
" ·:. the :,,
,
op_ti<;>n3p: r~new . their_ ~on° . wiltremam at $50.00., Room·. and ..
,
.
..
. . . .
.
. ..
rr..·
.
>tracts
:Qri
a setqester ·basis;' Also :. : hoard fees
wili be'in accordance -
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.Qne~ft~e~e"".('stla~-~lsI~tsupahealthie.t~AGA.
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. :c:'.
·
~in(!}µd,e~:wouldbe_tlie possibility, '.,,,._ith:::.the. ·.•. annuai. · recom-
.
~.-.
. ·
,
.
·.-Bea
1th~:
n~h-;fi,ii::'~-e-
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'--·'t·
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/~e···it· •··' .·
ttc!il~1Irrn!~l
0
f~tlLl:iwiu~~~. itt:!~ons_.wi
th
t~e
Boai<l '
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t-: ..
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b
·S:
tr~:ckPric~s forthe
,
·_1a~ijr_-_tWQ
'Jhe
refunct:'poHcy wiii;b
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i tl~e
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ar~:stil_l_9pe1:rfor•Mgottat1on.·The :same as presently.stated'in the
~: )4
cp_.·/7')4 ·
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:-r;, · "-·
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.J;J_
:,(ij_'- ·
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reas9II fortbe.opti
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on ~fc
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ontfacts .. college ·<:a,talt>grie · with one :ex-
-.0.c.:I.. U..c:I:
E
-
OOu:·
k!:1e~vzc
·
n: ; '
for;~ppercl?§S1:llen:,~as}here~~lt::cep!i?n:3i person.who withdraws
.
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c;; __ -.
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.ora.comp_rom,ISe_c!>y·the _c9unc1l.:
:
: from .the coUege
for-.
any reason
·
·
· potential
·
spreader <_>f -pacteif? chance lo-react
to
the-inspection Sipe~ Jhe maJopty of freshrrlen. othei- _than academic dismissal .
,,·· _
.
_ -~
_
.
_
.
-- ..
_
. , _.:-~-
..
due.to.the Jae~ o; snee;e~~u~r~;
-
,- wit~out·bei!')g'under the threafof .:and-:sopn~mores live onpa~pps;' h.:!alth, or_le,c1~eofabse!1~-e.befor~
~
·
:
.,
-
-
·
:: . ~--An ·1~~p~ci1on
,
_Qf
,;~~!:)·
-
~~1'.1$1 .-and _th!:!-
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servm& :ta,~l!'l' 11«:a~ .. ~he,: sh~~ing do~a. tthJIJ.k 1hat,better--
'
y~_e_cqµnc1l ~aw no:n~-~~.1~ g1v~_ng the: t~~,mation-:of-. ~1s (_)r _.her
.
·
-
- .-.:._. ·
.
· _ ·
.
-Coll~g~--
->~
0
.c~~~tei:i,a ...
:.,>
a_pd:
.
. 'Y'?SL,walV_Qf. tn~:~cafE;?teri!1: w~~-: than
1
:75:;·per.
.
'cent:
·
:of::•all-,·coril-;\'tliemJJ}~·seme~ter
.
ontion.-:,-
·
-·
-
· .agr~e_me~~.; the
.
hab1hty fee-will
.
. ··
'. : ' _-
·
.
·
~- .. R_ath~k~!!ar _' :~_by,,
.
}~e .;:;.J:?
_
u~cr e~s ?f!ISC~~t!!?.~e -:_-
" Sll,lli!~9t)3w!ti~J ;:; m.,ei:ctal .. ·ltitchen~.: iO:•, town ,;woul_~
: ·
-;).'fi:~!..~fOf!~-p~mts~ t~s· tl?,at t}!e . _.
qe
_h
_
~lc:1:
l)r
.
-t}lE;
_
'..-.c.~ll~ge:
~
· .
.
:. -.. , -.. :
..
:. · " ·
.
~~
.. ·-... ~,,.,-"".._,_Co.unty,,,._,,,.,,K~.altlj;..~~,.n.a.&tJ1.1:~nt.;;£!otild.:,r.~ql_-
tlie;'.;spoilage{of::..:;be:~closea_:~do.wnW:ilcs'ubjectea::to· •.
:-.;,?i
1
~e~~.,::".;thr:
0
,1;1~~,;:-,~!\!l-::_.q_g!cE;_,,<?fs:
·
t".iJ.1i~.counc;i11s·mv.estigating,-,the -· ·. · -._, ·_
'·
. _r~sultect· m a :shutdown of uotli .. food .. _
;
_--
C •
• '
•
•
~-"
"";.
'·:,.>•",'·
:,,.'.~-~isucn"'idliorougli~iiispecticin~"~~:~
.
- ~
-
a~p~~•Ijfe;·'.:Wifl:
·
·ma}c~: ;eve~y- .;' p:(_)ssibility.: oFa ·.rooril::'.anci:'boafa
.
" .......
· · operation~ last Wed~esgay_ nig~t · -
·
. ·•'.ffie'::;:in§pe~tors /also !\'reco~,~ :-'~Deanficif)Students:::
.
T.fioma'Si :·:~-~f-~r,t_:
_
'if<>.,;;h~!H)r·\f~,cp,r,~ss~-~-
-
, r~missiQri :'.p,rograrrfwher~in~:for- ·
- -
.Thein~p~cUon\wa.~ :COii~u~ted. :qiefid~d.that' a
;
srnhoth~r{,easier'.,;wa'de'":':'#fio:}attend,ed:~the;::coii~: .':pr_~~er~n!!_e!i:J9r, ro9Ili_:, · assi~ll~··· each' renewal·' oft~:
•
four
>···
year:
·
_flCC?rcling .. t~; ~he. stand!3rds
.
Qf:a .
fo'..
cl~a¢.·
:
~Qorcs~a~(;~.e:Oi~fqern,efe'~-fielq/ib~tweenL·CQtlllty · -l
,
!ll~n~. R~~m
_
an~:.dC>r,m spa11~es: agre~ment:,_ thE:re
:\\'.il~.
bf
fQr that
~ew,-Jllore r1g1~healthcodeJo g9
·
,stalled_,_:_i~:.th.e·-kitchen,-;-::'IJ'ie: Jn§peGtQr.s •:and:'Saga ,officials/ :,w!Jl<_
l).~.-.. ·
.
h.onored ,,when_~v~r· ·. year a:"~25,00'reduction.·in room
· ~to ·. ~ffect
·.J
anu~ry
L ·
_Several, evening's plan.:n,ed .. d,innef:\Clf· · wasI;plea.sed, with the '"."outcome;" ... p<>ss,1ble, and;- .the• stu~ent ~s: ··· ~1_1d .board -co~ts, In other words,
. v19latlons . were cited co_ncermng ·•·. baked"chicken hi¼~ tQ
~.e.
thfO:\Jll:
.('W(e learn~d tljatthe Df
pijrtmerit :- ;_.gu~rall~.e;~Pre r<>~m \\'hi Ch'
~~
,IS
If
students .. re11e\\'. _: their: housing
the· cleanlmess Qf lhe, kit
_
clle11
a~
.ou~ due to a. faultJ_n· the .. cookmg--' of
-
Health .can educate as
,
well as, . ass1~n~d under J~e. , .fo.IJ_owi!!~- .. _agreements for· four. years, they
.
... w~Uas t~e·actuatf?O~:care ~n~' J)roc~drire ·which
·
,a~afu· ~i&hY ·erifgrce reg1:1iat1o~i:
.
Th_~y~offei:-~d;.··c.°.n~~tlonr , .. ~:-:: ')} ·•
·
, ::: ,
wm
par _$75:~0}ess __ for room ~,nd.
preparation.
_
liaveJed ,to a spread·.of bactena.,_ to hold semmars and discussions
.
· : In the ey~nt thiat on.e of the, board
!"
their semor year than .
"What. they found w~re a lot. of
.
·. ·
.. Sag~'--employees
C
worl{ed
incist . ~with
.
the
'kitchen staff ·so we ·can· ··: occup~nts vacates a. room b~fore ·. their . freshmi:in year:- -
... , .. -
.. little ... thm~s,". ,·· _expla~~d •· Saga,_ of
w
~dtiesday
0
,night: . a~E},'!Jiut- •·•" p~evei:it :
.
. this from, . ·happenmg. , t'1~!.:. mid ----tei:m. pomt. o~
.
. eith~r .·. ,· The fif!h point
·
covers security;
.. manager·J1m Ladota,> but a l_ot .sday
-
morning
:to
::-corre~t
.
the ,again/'
.
.. :·· ; . ': , ; :. ··, ,::-. ,, -·
:
semeste.i:,
t~e
reIJ!aI!,11ng_'.OC- . The t1se ofpass.keysis permitted··
, .
.
_.of, the_m!'. Co11_nty: •mspect.o_rs: ~l~jillliness
vi,olati_on.~•
::AIL}
-
i•~t \Yf!:dhe. _bes(itrid :toughest. e_upant-w1U.have .. tvre~ ·weeks; to _-·by _a~thorized co_llege personnel · ·
_-c
. ·
called. f~r hght:covers Jo-,b.e _m~: structural:.. change~? must~ , b
_
e:· : iri_sp~ction
·-
~_rveC:seeri'\•: Ladofa'.. fan~
a.
or ac~ept
a .
n~w ~oµs~ng . (hous1~~ a!1d !118m~e~ance s~ff)
. ·.. sta~ed
m
the kt!c~~n ,
_
to, prote~t-~co~pleted.. by -Feb1:~1:yJ.
>
•
, ·
,:~a,id, <<'~nd) i.t · can·· -only/prove
:
... a~s1gnme~t.
.
. .After :·.this . .
t!IP~ ,
he.·.: for · p~r1od1c .. _mspecttons ·. of the.·
, again.st tl1e. po~1bµ1ty . of ·J:>roken ·. _· .. Ladota
felt
·.that· 1t- was· a -very ... beneficial to.::.both . the-;staff· arid
•·.·
·
.~II_ ·
l:>e . charged: super.1Q1:,,· o.c
0
.
rooms. and to clean and - or make
. · glass
·-
:contammatmg
·
the · foo~.· ~oilgh. and
i
strict )rispeciton>.:''I ,':, the :consumers : in -this' case 'the
<
cup!!IlCY rates on
~
:Pr~ -: i:ata repairs. The resi.dence staff has
Th~· ~alad·_bar
· _
was noted as
_
a
:was upset-thatwew~ren'tgiveri a,. students."·,.,;·•
_
' ..
>·
,. :
.
· ,- ,
bas1s,,for.-J~e-~remamqer:·<>f.
'
the: Jhe right to:·use the. pass key
·.
:
·.•
·
,>~ - ·
-;:<;
· ·
·
,;term.orm1titsuch
·
a·ttmeashe
.·
- ·
:·> .·· ·• ·
.
.
?
\~Q~!1:lit~~~
Jcl~~p~~~~"~•-J~•i• ·
.. ·
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nnds•,~mnm~.
Th~
mfice·of-•
·Co~tlnued on
page4
· Folt.
·Sen1or:.
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,/\lft~ek·'-
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::>_:;\.:- :-~·:::-;,. .. ,: __ :·-_ .. :.:::><
_.:
··::)"7' _'.~'-:..~·--.. -~.:,-: :· ... ·
.
, casino night, concert~ r,affle, :: speak _: at
!.,-
the .:.g'radt'iation. ,
.
.
-
. __ .. .
. .. . . .. . . .
. iµght
.in
t~e :Ra~k~ller ~and or,
0
:cer~iq~j}y'·on Saturday May:.J7, :\
·
:·
,
The Senior.~Executive · Com~ ·movie nights; Theseideas:willbe <1975 in-the eariy ·afternoon;·Johil,; ..
·.mitte~>on/campus'·)s::·~blisy .·:.·pJanned·:pi:}the>fnud\ra,ising-:i
•
P~*ghj)jty;:.(d_ev;elopment'.
•·• prep~riilg:for:senio'r·week: which:-:_conµnittee:in orderto,t~ise _extra·' <director,··win haridle
th~
selection .
. wiUtake. place
in
mid ~: May.1975 ·. ·. money.fc,r senior: week activities:> and. invitation
·
:ofJhtr s~aker; . ·}
·.• acc~rd!nt '.:to ...•• Bo b:;:sa'ill!]lO~;\:{l'ti:e;· a.ctiyitie~,sligge!5ted:'for __ th~,.\
.
:·
I!}
llif
~ven~-tha.t
·
i:i~ne· o_f guest ::.:
·:chairman. ·of. the executive: : weekmdicated by the survey are :--speaker candidates will be able to -. ·
.: :c9inmittee;} The; conirilittee
.:_:.a
_picyuc(iliriner/dance/ coctail
0
\a,tteild
:
.the· ~er~mony~·a··.sp'eaker··.•.
·.
·
•··
,
members·are _Paul': Pifferi,\Jean
·
.· party;_·_boa(ride;:
·
IIJ.a§S,,;hayride :; .will,:be·:; seJE!~teg/'fronf, a:list.
of/· ..
·.··•.Forrestal,·_J•fancy,Fletclier,Jack:~::and:'.clambalcetThe,seiii,or,week·.:.;selecte!f·.C!lames·'..
~
of' .. ,·camptis-·· .
.
·
.
·Gilmartiii'and'
·
James~E:lliot. ·The,: :coinmitte'e;- •wnt· .. ·~a·ndlif:, th(/.facw.tymernbers and students to':,)
·.
'.
~Onuiii~e,._h~~:0:r~e!v:e<i:'ma~y,::c_~e,~ct_i~ri?and.:rilayi~/a.lll,e;:~o/:,l?e,.•.guestspea~er.·~Th~,fac!Jlty,~~-.-·
:
.. 1deas:.for '.seruor ·.week:·and•:·.ac~. : combme.·a·:few of the, activ1ties . .::,me_mbers,:.are.,Br,other:N1lus
•
::-
... tiyities·.tobttheld.froni-seniors:in '::
::Jthe
·seniol'. speak~r icommittee·i-':I;>_onnelly;-' Linus' ,Foy;·Rrederick:,:,
. a survey:taken
:
in :_.early()ctobef .. alori1fwith•Johil·Dwyer;·registrar . ;. Lamb.ert;' ·Xa.vier\ Ryan .... The"'./
.. . . this' year.,,: ; .,: .. -~ ·.·.. _;, :
.
.
·
.: -; ·-,
,<
·~~
; .
and frederick Lariloert/director> stti(lents -
are'.·
J:ean :. .. F'orrestal,' '·
0
: .
,::.
:
.?:·'.F'.r~iµ-'.,this{sticyey/Jhe':,senior:
·
•:.i>f;'.cainpus:life;i,ijavG;slioi:,tened :Brijin·Morris;;E4wa'rd
Kissli,ng;-::·.:
.·.,: ,-:,::.:c1!iss_:'has_','9
_
ecid~cl :to,;&ra~~ate.: th~;list:!lf gu_est_speak~~Jrofu.·,29•\All.:<>f t9e<guest. spea,ke~s,~all1es
t;
, \.\V!.th:
cap~,,}111g•· go~,.~
I~t
th~,.,:::.t~
.7
11a~e~. !le!oE~ ~rrung ,the.llst/ w.~r.e ·
Ja.k~~ •
;fr,01n
.
.
:the;·' .
.
s~ruor, ·•
0
·•• cost of.the we.eks activities- from ·:-:o:ver to· the -board, of <trustees.=:of
:?
smxey'. -The guest speaker. win be: :
,·;i(f:;}J:/:t:~/titi~:(~,rti!ffit~f::;~ti~tl~::!3f~1~~-rf!NtJ.[~Th\Nt::t:_lfJ;/:~t~f.}tft;~~~~2{?.~.{.:!
'
'·: : }.~c~~r~ng
t~~.
~aiP.Jtio~J~~
dim:le! .
.
-s~~I<~rs;wlio:_af~ fresid~~troi;~i<-'.:/~Y-:.~~I1:1;or.:.·:w_i5l1!ng_, to :
P.~~f-/
. : : .·:2;,:·dance location'IS: bemg ;checked ,
:
<,and :.,-Ethel/Kennedy: .. :-The:<otlier,:: ::bc1pate/1DJ orgaru;mg , the' ::ac~- .. ·:·
·.·.· -. ,:_:::,mfo:butidtiiffo}the\limited"'cost
·
~\five\~fre··GoveriioriElect:;:Htighf'.:-tivitiesi~by:;·':helpingi,the;."com~'.,·')
_
· .
,
. . . ~- }pe.r
·coiiple':elecied:6fthcdila
·
ss it
_
··carey;t.{tt.<;'.:Gov:·<Marianne· <.mittees'ismorethan:welcome--:
To<,:
:
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: ·_··.:::µiaf:.•h~:v~Jo·:l?,Ej_µe~d~~ri-:~ariipus~;\Kr;µp,~~-,:~:i~W~lt~r,~:-,qro*
·
kite;' ::~~:-:~:;con~c()i~f;,o~e>:~f:_the., .. -'.
.:
··:, · . : : : 0 '.
:~other--resiilfs,_;,-taken·:,from·
,
the.·,Barbara:-~Walters;·
:
and:;Mictiaeb,executive~•.comrmttee_.:members.:,: .· . •
.
. - ::·
-
·: -: .. ·,/;:stirvey:;lia:ve;shown'.tluitldeas-fcfr-':·Harrington.\The ~:class
twill:
:be
·
;:to1h!ain_P.us; ;:::· ::,
.
:'.:-:~- ,-;, .. :.,..:'~ :,--;:
·
:- __
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"f1;
.
DECEMBER 12, 1974
_Joseph ~olinaro, Director of HEOP.
THE CIRCLE
PAGE2
Gtlvernlllent
.
·
Board
Review
A letter
fi:om
Brian
Morris
working on severalprojects. You
,
continued pressing for the
might not know it
.
but former
completion of the
'
tennis courts.
Attorney General Ramsey Clark Meanwhile our Financial Board
The Student
·
Government spent.a night at Marist. Perhaps
.
was
.
ousily performing its
Executive Board tho'ught it wise our biggest venture
was
to give
.
:traditional function of allocating
to publish some sort
of
semester our support and
:
energies
·
io
the
·
the
25 thousand dollars entrusted
end review
·
of the Student construction of six
·
new tennis
to
··
us. The Financial Board
Government's work. (For your courts. Countless hours went into
supported a group of students
information the Executive Board these
courts
:
The courts stand
interested in selling advertising
consists
·.
of : Brian
,
Morris,
today
/
as a testament
·
·
to the
for
·
the
:
.
Circle
,
The programs
President; Chip Ermish, Vice -
ability of the . student Gov~rn-
:
shou!,d
.
save our
.
treasury two
President;
Tom
· ·
.
·
Walsh, ment to get things done.
It
1S
a
.
thousand dollars
. :
.
.
.
.
.
.
Secretary;
.
and Brian Morgan,· project for which we
.
.
are im-
,
· Recently/Tom Walsh and Chip
Treasurer.)
~ .
·
'.
·
.
mensly proud
.
At the end of ·
,
Ermish
·
·
c
.
anie
·;
ori
>
board. Since
When the new Executive Board August, the Student Government
:
.
their arrivai our w9rk on gaining
·
was elected last
.
May it was sent what we called the Student
signaturesfor repealofthe sales
fortunate that two of its members Government Digest to the homes
.
·
tax on textbo
.
oks has
.
been
!ived in the Poughkeepsie area. I,
·
of over
.
200
Marist students.
compieted.
_
Pete
.
Wilderotter
10
turn, decided to stay and work
As
school resumed"the Student
. -.
·
amassed
·
his
/
org~nizational
at Marist
,
so
~
three out of four
G
.
·
t b
t
·
1
·
·
t
·
b·lir
d
·
·
B ·
F · d
..
Executive' Board
·
members were
overnmen
.
egan o pu
m
o
-
a 1 1es an ran rmg a nen
.
present
.
Reflected
.
in this
•
.
fact
.
operation
·
some of _the ideas
t(? Marist· Day.
;nus
..
St,!_ldent·
·
was our
-,
.
bellef that M
·
·arlS·
·
t
·
i
·
s
·
'
a
·
12
·
developed over the
.
previous
Government
·
pro1ect
.
.
brought.
..
three months .
.
Things somewhat
•
,
almost
40
visitors to
.
our campus
month a year operation, not a
9
.
stalled when two
·
members of our
.
and only time
will
·
tell
:
how ef-'
.
month
·
operation
.
.
The summer
Executive
,
Boardresigned but we
,
.
·
fe~tive it was
.
in recruiting new
.
for ;
ll:S
was
ma
j
nly
.
a tim
.
e for
qu
i
ckly
_
recovered.
,
Myself arid
·
students for
.
'
Marist. By. this
bramsto
.
rming
.
A
·
July Leader-
·,
Brian Morgan stopped people
on
·
.
.
project students began to play a
.
ship Weekend for
:
Marist
'
s
.
big
··
their way to classes as a means of
part in addressing crucial college
organizations
.
(Student
·
·
Govern-
·
communicating with students
.
•
.
problems
:
In another area, 1'4ark
_
·
m~nt,
.
CUB, amt Inter
'.
-
.
·
Ho.use
·
We tried to inake extensiv
·
e use
·
of
,.
Plamondofi: investigated
·.
·
severaL
0
.
_.
Councd)
•
w~s very productive.
·
the Circle
,-
a'ncl we posted
-
inany
.
maUers in
.
which we were in-
Our own pnvate meetmgs were
.
bulletins throughout the camp
u
s
·
terested
,
For
'
their
:
pa
d
,
·
the
'
also helptu~
.
:
·
.
.
•
·
·
.
.,
•
•
·
·..
in
·
an effoft
.
.
-to be heard
:
We
·
Student'Judiciary Board appears
.
·
By
the end of the summ~r
-
the
carried the
i
dea of
a
State of-the
.
well qrganized :..iso( this
writirig;
Studen~Governmentwas already
·
College Address to
,
fruition
:
We
· .
We feel;:_ too, that relations
.
l)
.
.
·
·.-
•
·
·
·
•.
'.·
.
·
'
· ·
.
· .
, ·
.
._
·
.
.
.
.
between the
' .
adniinistration arid
.
' .
i
..
recto
.
·
r
·
.
Na
_
·
m
.
.
.
ea
.
--
.
·
.
'.
·.
b
.
o
.·
.
•
·
·
.
·
:
.~
:
·
p
.
.
.
·
.
.
r.
·
·.
-
-
o
.
.
:
.
···
·
.
LYri
.
.
·.··•.
:
.
am
.·
_
'..
·
•
·
•
,
.
lt~~~
·
~~t:ii~
a
Gi::t1::n;ic!~1
.
·
-
~
'
progress has
.
been made since
by
Chip
Kennard
.
_
,
·
.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
· .
·
,_
·
~
.
,
..
.
.
lastyear.
-
As ari example of.this
Molinaro said, "I felt there was a
·
objectives for
:
the suc
c
essful
e
.
a~h
.
H.E.O
,
P.
,
.
student
'
a
.
par-
.
•
:.
ne need
.
:
only
.
remember
,
-the
.
The
.
Director of the
·
Higher
•
re:31 need for ~e t~
·
be here .. 1'.he
'
.
?P~rations of
_
H
:
E.O;P,, ~as
.
to -ticular
·
tea~her
.
~¥r
·-
·
have in
·
•·
·
Lbnnis
C!)Urt
project.
1n
·
addition
.
E.dµcational Opportun.ity things l_was do~n~ m Model
.
Cities
brm~_the p~ogram out
:
to :Jhe
.
clas~, t~ keep\the Imes
.
of
_
co~-
-
few
-
people know that this
.
year
.
.
P~ogram at Ma
i;
ist
·
inten.ds
·
to
,
c?vered certam asp~cts of admnustration
,
:
~
faculty a~d
·
<
murucat1on
·
_
open between the there are three students sit~
~
ng on
initiate a more
·
positive
.
iden- d1sadvant.ag
•
J~ pe?PIE:
,:
and
.
I studi::nts
·
of Marist..
,
He
.
said,
H
.
E:0.P .
.
office ~ndJhe facuJty. the College Co -
,
ordinating
tification of his program in an wanted
'
to get !nto 1t a httle l>.1t
.
·'basically 'Yhat I_ w~nted Jo do
:'This type
_
of
_
supp<;>rt
:
could len~ Cotinci_l. This is an
.
important
effort to unite the administration more .. As director
.
of this was tostraighte!1 this program
in !h.e: d
7
tectwµ of a studeJ!ts
..
·
outgrqwth of last years schedule
faculty and students of
fti~
program,. I will be qirectir
fo.
out, There s~ems
:
to be alot of
.
def1c1enc1es, and hopefully
.
will
_
turm
·
oil..
.
.
.
_
_
-_
• .
college with the operations of v?lved with the st:uctents fman-
.
friction
.
and
r
ejection
J
>n
both.
: ..
help us
-
to help
t
h
.
e
• -
student
;'
'
Many
,
lesser
'
problems
:·
have
H
.
E.0
.
P
.
and its members
. ·
c1ally,
academically
and parts, ~he H
,
E
.
O.P
"
st11dents, and
.
l\1olinaro said.
.<
~
.
.·
·
, .:
been add
r
essed
;
Our
;
files
.
are
·
The new director,
·
Joseph
··
socially."
..
·
the re
.
mainderofthe
,
college.
·
·
"We hopeto promote
·
a
clear bulging
..
with
letters
~.nd
.
Molinaro, left his 3 year position
In
.
·
the Circle interview
,
.
Mol~niiro feels,tl)atthe lack oC r~pport _betwe
·
en thestudents and correspondence to any number of
.
·
as Director
cir-
Model Cities
·
in Molinaro
.
expressed his concern
:
genuine communicatiQn
.
between
t~~ir professors
;
he
.
said
,
:
•
i
a Marist people
i
We've acted on
:
Poughkeepsie
;
.
when
,
he
.
had
fo
r
the 87 H.KOi~>,
-
s~ud~~½>
;
an,d
-
bo~np
,
~rti~s ~ould be
,
\1ealed
:
_He
_
~a.jor proplem no\Yi~ th~t f:1}
£_
r
e
problems;no
·
matter how Illinute,
.
,
heard a.bou\the re§igna.tion pf Jh~f
.
h
,
~
~poke,a
_
ll<>ut)li,s a.!Ub1t1ons
.
f.or
.
•
.
·.
sa!~,
•
,.
W.-~
,
)VJll
~a:v~
;
~o lea
.
rn
.
.
t~
r
,
1;, httle or
!1~
com
.
mu111cation, and
•
.
,
when we've see~
.
them, We think
.
.
forinei-
'
Director
,
of ·
·
H
:
E
.
0:P.;
•
his
·
new _Post
·
_
and
·
its
:
potent1a,
t
•
,
know ~
.
ach othe
r;
~
;
pµrpose§
JJ
ere,
.
9,!JJY
,
.
~;mm1m
.
~tg_111ount•
.
~(!t.:.co
,;
:
~;
.
Jl]?
.
t
~
J1_ayg
_
g~1ue<!
.
.
~!P.O$.U
[.
~
qn
;,
Donald Fleeks
;
·.
·
Fleeks
·
a ban-
'
'
constructive power
·-
to
'
help re
_
--
-
both
.
as
,
students and as people.''
oper~t10p
:f
rom
.
both
·
parties
·
in
~ '
campus
,
thought tn~r.e 'us much
, •
doned
:
his office at the beginning buildtheimage
.
oftheprogramto
.
Headqe~V'lwillalwayskeepmy
volyed.11 Molinaro said that he
·
ID()
~
e to
-
be
.:
dOil~
,-
It's
.
sad
:
t~t
of this semester
.
·
'
· ·
· ·
both the H.E.O.P
.
·
students and door open for the students,
,
and
behevesthat this lack of com-
yourelectedStudentGovernment.
When
.
asked
:
why he had
.
'the Mari.st
:
cor_nmunitf
.
.
·
.
-
.
.
.
f~r.any?ne eise
;
who
'.
may wish to
inu~c~ti()_n hurts th~ ~t~dent,and
..
office
·
rs are
.
not.known
-
by
decided to apply for the posi~ioil,
.
.
One of
.
Molmaro's 1mmedmte v1s1t
·
this office.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
that it
15
his
_
responsibility to go ~o
eyeryone.
~
But
--.
here too
·
we've
r
.
·
•
·.
.._
·
.
.
.
·
:
.
-
·
•
.
·
·
When asked how he mtends to
the fac
.
ulty and ask
.
for their moved ahead
.
.
-
J
know that"
I
~
-
~
.
.
~
..
.
~
.
.
.
~
.
.
~
-
~
..
~--
.
~~
i't
br
.
in.g th
.
.
e p~o
-
gram ~u
-_
t-in t
.
.
he
.
op
.
en
.
.
su
·.
pport
_
. a
.
n
.
.
d
.
un
.
der
·
s
·
tan
.
·
ding
•
·
;··
_
.
-
·
.HE_)
·
mys
·
e
· · ..
!f ·
.
h
.
.
av
.
_
e
_
.
;.i
..
h
.
a
:
·
d
·.
·_
. s
_
e
.
.
v
.
.
eral
.
o
_
p
_
-
· .
.
'
·
.
·
·
_-
-
·
,.
·
.
c
.
'
,.
·
•
_ .·
·
'
•·
.
· ·
. ,
~
·
·
1
agam, Mohnaro s~1d,
"
we
.
want also
.
said,
.
'.
'I am not
·
aqvocatmg po.rtunJbes to address
,
large
ACE
·.
,
L
·
1Q
·
u·
·oR·&
..
.
.
to arrange an appOll}tl!lent.to see that these studimts be set -aside crowds.
_
.
.
_
·
:
•
·
-
·
· ·
.
·
.
~
.
.
·
·
.
·
all the
_
heads of the va~ious
·
f~om the other~
in
any ~ay;
.
~tit
.
.
c
This shortsuin~ryctoes
.
not
.
.
.. .
.
·
. . ·
.
.
_
·
· ·
.
JI.
academic
depart~ents
on rather that the facul
.
ty recogmze represent thetotal picture. We've.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
,
ff,
campus to let them know who we
the situations
·
as they
.
are;''
:.
:
spent many hours in the
.
office.
~
·
WINE . STOR
..
E
I
are,. and to pr~sen
.
~
our
progra
.
m
. .
A~ th
.
.
e direc~or
.
of
_
.
the prog
__
r
.
am,
w
_
e•
.
.
ve tr
.
ie~
-
to
_
·
.
be
·
inform
__
.
ed
011
all
_
ff,
.
.
.
.
to them. We mtend_to let them MoJm~ro said he feels "an college matters
,
so as
·
to
,
com-
!
.
·
know o:ur problems and what we
:
o~l!&ation and a large
<
resp~n-
petently
,-
represent
·
you. In
.
Dom
.
in ick
C
O
ns tan tin
o,
Prop.
1
.
wo.
~
.
.
Id bke to have
.
them doJ
.
9
.
h
.
el
.
p s
.
1
·
..
b
.
1ht
.
y
to
.
.
.
~he
.
st
.
.
ude
.
nts
.
.
ti
!:fe
_
s
.
aid
.
•
.·
·
gener
.
al,
.
it
.
.
has
·
b
··
een a product
.
ive
·
us m our efforts for re •
,
con-
"ILI brmg a person mto the semester. Nevertheless there is
I
.
.·
.
structihg
.
many
·
of the com-
program, then
.J
have to. make
·
much more to be
. ·
done
.
We
··
''THE
_
NAR~
.
OW
.
ST
·
-
OR
.
E
·
~
.
ponents ofthe program."
·
·
·
sure they
_
understand whatthe
-
promise
·
you ihat when
:
school
-
.
«
·
One idea that Molinaro men-
prqgrami~allabout,andinturrirresumes
:
in
,
January we willbe
.
.
3P.
·w
·
.
ITH
.
_
T
·
·
H
.
.
E
·.
WIDE
1
·
.
ti
.
. O
_
ll
.
_
.ed
·
..
Y!
.·.
as}_llep
.
oss1
.
·~.i
... ·
lit
·
y
·
·
or
.
the
.
must make
·
·
.
sure
.
·
th
.
at each ablefo
.
pro
_
v
.
.
i
..
d
·
e
·
y
..
o
.
U
.
Wl
.
·thourgoals
..
~
.
. . .
.
·
·
.
_
.
..
·
:
;
~ar101;1~ depart~ents . assistance
.
c
·
.
·
·
d
.
·
7
•
.
:
and
:
hopes _for
,
.
the spring
,
;
.
·
.
.
~
·REPlTT
.
.
A
TI()N'i
"
.
(
:
_:
..
\
if'l:1'9~r!il
•
!!~"':
•
~• ••••'"
•n .
.
ontmu•
.
on
page
..
semester.
·
.
•
.
.
.
~
112 W h · t
St Ph
..
.
;11.
LOOKING
.
.
F.()R
·
1Poug~:~~:it;;y:'4s2~1~~1
··
··
A
CHANGE
OE
PACE
·_
~8t:~~~~~~~~~
ff
-·
•
AND
:
A.
>
G()O])
<
TIME
.
:
:
·
.
· ·
.
\
· VISIT
·
:
·
·
·
.
-
. .
.
.
. .·
·.
'
·
MaristJD
STREAKING, FROSTING .
.
&
•
PERMANENT.WAVING
.
CALL 454-9239
for
yc,ur
-
appointment no
.
w
.
·
·
··
· · ·
'
'.
.
o
·
N THE MAIN
MALL
3
LIB■lliTY
STRHT
.
'
~
(Above
Capitol Ba~ery)
.
·
~
,:
.
Entrance Arcitind Corner
'
.
,
-~
·
:,
<
,•
_
.
'·
~
~,·4·;.•
:
•
··
·
.
.
.
,·.
,
1:
,
.
.
'
-
-
.
.
·
.
.
rP1\)~0llJ~
{
,:.
·
.
'
..
~.
.
.
.
..
.
;
:~,: ._,~:1
·
.·.
·
.•
:
-...r.
:,'
'
::::
·
:
·
-
~
.
-
~
.
-
.
·..
.·
.wr
.
_·
.
.
•
~
·
·
· ~ ,
~
·
.·
.....
i;,_~
.
·
·.
.
-
.
UGI-~
.
'
-
,
..
}.l.}
:
V:ff.
).
/4~~i~
··
·
•,-
.
.
..:
.
_
..
-
DECEMBER 12, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGE 3
Suicide
Seen
·
As
Threat
To College
Students
By Paul Feroe
(CPS) - "I take it that no man
is eaucated who has never dallied
with the thought of suicide." -
William James
Historically, there
is
no ab-
solute position, Stoics and Nazis
idealized it, Camus elevated it
to
a
philosophy. Yet throughout the
Middle Ages; English practice
included dragging the bodies
through the street, hanging them
upside-down for public view and
impaling them on stakes at public
crossroads.
,
Suicide. The causes are
• Higher standards of entry are
{!lore likely to lead to selection of
£he mentally unstable." At all
.
colleges it is the better students
who are more prone to suicide. A
1966 study discovered that
"students who committed suicide
had a higher grade point average
(3.18 as opposed to 2.50) and a
greater proportion of them had
won scholastic awarcls.".
fears, disease - the list
is
endless.
The safest conclusion
is
that
suicide
results
·
from
a
multiplicity
of
reasons, a sad
combination
·
of contributing
events.
One of the current explanations
for suicide
is
stimuli overload -
simply beirig faced with too many
decisions,
too
many choices and
too many expectations.
,.
comple~, tl1e·statistics confusing,·
L
..
.
d
. ·
R
·
.
}
,
p •
k
.
d
and the analysis muddy, but the
ea
.
.
··
·. .
O
es
.
·
IC
e
..
•
fac~
_
remains
·
th~t suicide is a
The study found that students
were never secure despite their
high
grades:
"Charac-
teristically, they were filled with
doubts of their inadequacy,
dissatisfied with their gr.ades and
despondent over their general
academic aptitude
.
"
_
Dr. Ari Kiev, head of the New
York Psychiatric Clinic, has
suggested that the stimuli
. overload is an acutely important
problem
today
because
·•traditional mechanisms like
religion and customs -
which
served to screen out the stimuli -
have been lost and the individual
has no framework within which
to make choices."
-
·
·
-.
.
.
-
. ·.
.
,
maJor and
·
continual threat to
·
..
.
.
·
·
·
thousands of college students.
Why does it happen? Freud
·
attributed it to the death instinct;
for Jung it was expression of
longing
·
for
rebirth
and
sociologist Emile Durkheim saw
it as a
result of social
deprivation. Loneliness, sexual
A
·
1
·
•
·
·
·
1
·
.
p
·
·
..
d·
.
•
By most
·
estimates 10,000
·
·
1
·
c~e
-.
·
n -
.
ro U
·
CtIO
·
·n
students
·
·
will
make serious
·
.
·
.
·
.
· .
·
·
-
.
.
suicide attempts this year and of
Paradoxically, Dr. Kiev has
pointed out, suicide can seem a
Continued on page
8
those
·
,
·
1000
will
succeed.
shows presentation; this coming Nationally this compares to
April 9
~
13.
.
.·
.
25,000-50,000 annual
.
suicides,
.
a
This years Children Theatre
·
Directed by
Llsa
Mccarroll, figure encompassing
·
all
ages,
production is Lewis
G.
Carrol's Bob Lyncl}_ will be doing musical sexes; races and·professions.
·
"Alice :In Wonderlimd."
.
With 45
direction with Frank D'eKoskie as
Two recent studies have in-
characters,
15
of them
·,
major
.
producer. Th
·
e
·
,
cast
will
include: dicated that students are more
roles, this
,
year's
·
p
r
esentation Patricia O'Leary as Alice, Beth
·
suicidal than non-students - up to
will be the largest
.
in Children Marsh as the White Rabbit, 50 percent more than their non-
.
Theatre
·
history;
.
'
-~-
.
.
'
Danny Edgecomb as the March academic peers. In addition
·
·
Auditions were field December Hare, Dena Kenny
·
as the Q
'
ueen, several studies have shown that
3 - 5;·exhib(ting anapproximate. Jim Browning
.
as Humpty suiddes
'
··
at
high-status,.
turn
·
out of
,60
peopl~ .
.
Parts Dumpty, Chris Leffert as
·
the prestigious schools
'
are much ·
assigned, . practice
will
·
begin King, Llnda Sofio
-
as
.Tweedle
greater than at other schools.
You
CAN NAVE
CONFIDENCE
WHEN Yc1fl"
CA,
.
/IIS"ll~ANCE
l'~N.J
FlloM MARIHAiL
/STERLIN,!
·
shorpy
in
·
prepa~ation
for-
•
the Dee, Beth Edwards as· Tweedle
·
A 1961 study reported a suicide
Dum; Dayid
·
Wenz as
_
the Blue rate
.
of 15 per 100,900 at Harvard
Caterpillar; Winnie Saitta as -the
.
and 14 per 100,000 at Yale
·
- well
Cheschire Cat, Elizabeth Waters above the 7-10 per 100,000 national
as the Dutchess, Tommy Sales as average
for
the same age group .
·
,
_
_
.
.
HYDE
PARK
. ·
·
ARMY-NAVY
STORE
.
,
.ROUTE
..
i
.-:i:?~,
,:
;;_
NE-xr
l:
'hr
< .-·
·:
o
·
LSCOUNT BEER
STORE
·
10%
DISCOUNT
WITH
-
;HIS
.
.
AD UNTIL 12/19/74
_____________
__,
._
the Walrus, Nancy-Thomas as the
Similar studies in England
Carpenter, Fred Natoli as Dodo,
have also indicated a high suicide
Suzanne
.
Isabella as/ the Lory,
rate at the
·
more prestigious
..
Kathy Loffio as the Eaglet and
·
universities
:
•
~
•
Brez as the Mad Hatter.
~-
.
The
-'
question that has
,
never
'.
The first n~aq
.
:· through_
.
will
-been
fully answered
:
is:
do
.
take
.
place
•
'.fhursday;
;
December
-
,
colfoges
·'
'.·
·,··
accept
'
,
.
,.:
·peopl~
12;
-:
at 7:30
)n
r6oilF268
'
of
·
tlie' predisposed to suicide
of
does the
Cal,llpus
,
Center
:
--
fyliss McCarroll
·.
college environment itself create
welcomes anyone
·
still interested
-
.
the desire?
MARSHALL
& STERLING, INC.
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.
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A 1959
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to
-
attend.
-
.
'
·
-
·.
_
_
··
~
-
____
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.
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'
i
.-
'
'
..
,.
I
:
Dt:Ct-:.'t\BER 12,
1974
THE
CIRCLE
PAGE4
• CIRCLE
letters
·
·
To The Editors
.,
.
,
.
Chu~h at Highgate. The bishop
.
up the Houses of Parll.ament - on
/.,~'(
'J•✓
..
-
•
l
....
More Notes
as well as the vicar and deacons
5
November. Oxford,
,
which I
1-----V-O_L_U_M_E-,4-M-ar-lst_C_o_lleg-e,~P-o-ug_h_k_ee_ps
__
le-,N-.-Y-.--.-----1
·
were
.
featured in ~his mass
visited today, exemplifies this
1------------------------1;
From
Abroad
celabrating the 49th anniversary
mixture
.
of age and
.vividness
in-
.
.
•
-
of the Saint Augustine Church.
the
>
educational institutions
- ·
-
'lb
M ·
t
Coll
·
cm
Dear Man·st students, faculty, The vestments
·
worn by
.
·
these
-
moot
·
of which assumed their
e
.
ans
ege
. CLE
is_
the weekly
.
newspaper of the students
·
d'
1 g thi
.
·
c tr
·
·
t
·
·
a
·
·
··
d
f M ---" C ll
nd
blis ed
thr
and adm;.,;.,trators,
c
·
elebrants were
.
very
.
elaborate
me ieva
O
.
s. uc ure
.
roun
o
.
au.:.~
o eg_e
a
_is
pu
_
h
oughout
_
the schoo
.
1
.
year ex-
.. ...,
th 13th
t
till
f
t·
elusive of vacation periods by the Southern Dutchess News Agency,
In the past few.weeks since my and
.·
colorful: The
·
elaborate
·
e
cen ury_- s
·
unc ion
Wappingers, New York.
. ·
.
·
·
· ·
·.
·
··
last letter, l have indeed had a reception following this service
and serve the younger generation.
very busy. schedule
~
.
con~
:
featured many various types of
of students today, .Lguess
.
that
Co-Editors
Lyn Osborne and Gregory Conocchioli
i:.:entrating
·
on
·
essays; readings, . delica'cies and
.
sweets.
these
-
same values could
be
seeif
'
Associate Editor
_
.
Irene Ross
and the normal elements of
.
:
My experiences
.
at various
in _the
'..
c<>lleges
·.
~t_:: ~aiI!bridge
Layout Editor
Tim
DeBawi
study.
The
-·
"
courses
and other religious
·
services at the
whiclf! int
_
e1ld,
.
t
0
:"~i~
~
~ tne
:
nea~
Pho~ography~ditor.
·
··
DavePristash
professors
-
of my study
·
abtoad SwissCottageChape_l;inaddition
.
·
futu~e;
·
· ·
/·
'>
'
.
-
.
.
;.,
·
;.: .
;
..
,
Staff: Jerry Profita, Rich Burke, Maureen
.
Dennigan, Chip
Kennard, Dave Kazdan, Julie Schott, Donna Corrado, Eleanor
Bert, Gary Norman, Earnest A. Royal, Debbie
.
Nykiel, Cathie
Russo, Karen Tully, Rich Stevens.- Fr. Leo Gallant, John
·
Tkach;
Lin~a Franco, Jim Kennedy, Tom McTernan
.
Terry_stoutenboro,
Jamee Colleran, Pete Provost; Bob Baulch, Brian Morgan, Bob
l'felson,
·Rhoda
·.
Crispell, Al A~olphi, Bill Russo 4 and
•Frank
Schiavi.
· ·
include:
.
History of
-
Political to the Saint Augustine Church,
·
l'lie oth~r Slg~ts:w~ch
_I
:
have
·'-
'
-
Thought
taught
.
by
E:M. lead me to believe thatthe-British . had the ~p~ortumty to seeu1dude
Vallance; Political Behaviour tiave
·
a
strong tendency to
.
value~
.
•
.
theNaJional
·
,
qall~ry Muse~
.
at
taught by J .A. Eva
_
ns; Economic
.
the past as well as holding
a
great
.
,,
:
-
Trata
.
lgar Squ.ar:~• Jhe
:
~rit1s~
Principles (III, IV)
.
taught by
.
and everlasting respect for their
;_.:
Museum
,
:
sa"'
,
'~
Magna
_
Carta
.
R.J. Allard· and
·
International institutions. These
.
tendencies
-
eap~rs and Rosetta Ston.e
,
- the
Political
.
ai;tory
'
from
-_
Late 19th· could
,
b¢ exempHed
.
.
in both the
; /
Postal Tow~r,
·
,
.
~lJd the Mayo:-'s
Century
·
-
taught by· Professor
_retention
. of
.
several Latin
.
·•
Monun;ient as
.
:
~~!_La~, the
_,
Lor_~·-
Leslie. Most of.these coursei;'are phrases and hyriles,
,
and
O
at the
·
Mayors S
_
how
:
i!1·
:
whi
_
ch
c
a
_
ne~
taught
.
in
.
.
·
an
.
_ East L<ifidon
.
•
Saint Augus~ine ~hur~h service -
,
:.
mar.or
.
for
.
t~~
.
ci
_
ty _of ½>
~
n~on
1:5
.
"c'
..
BusinessManager
.
_
.
GregWelsh
.
.
ouildi.J)g
.
which used
:
to be a
_
dog the emphasis
.
on the
_
1mportance
,:,
d~ig
_
nated
.
._Ip_ad~ibon, I
.
.
hf!y~
_ _
A_d_ve_rt_IS_.
·
_m_g_M_a_n_ag_e_r_
.
_ _ _ _
..
_ _ _ _ _
.
_T_o_m_M
__
c_D_o_n_al_d_
.
...... biscuiffactoty.; Marist isn't even
.
.
of the church institution as_
,
~X:'
VISitedG:e~nwich -
r
O_bserva~ory
·
that bad!
_
,
_,...
,
.
.
_
.
pressed
iri
the homily
;
In addibo11
-
.and _
_
Pnm~
.
-
~~ridian
.\
L~!)e_,
. Despite an :this
•
work, I have
·
to
·
the re}igious sector,
..
this
.
:~
N_a t!onat
•
ryt~ntm~l?.:J\1.p§ellm,
Editorials
-
still ma11aged
·
tofind
.
tin1
.
e·to· do'
•
Jogging
.
for th
_
e pc1st;
..
•
in_British
·
,
;
Royal--.N'avat
,
C91lege,
.
a_n_~
/
~he
.
some
·,
..
•
sightseeing;
-
-
·
touring,
_
values
·
, cc1n be
.viewed
in both the ·
: ,
Cu!ty Sllark
,
~
,
an~ I-Ias~111~s
-
'
(er
.·
conversing/and obserying. From
·
-
political and educational iri-
reso~t on the
_
E~gh~l_l Ctian.n~l);
:
.
these experiences, I believe
that ~titution:s.
However, the
r~ally
_
Hastmg~
:
Cast~e, Samt
.
Clernert~
.
.
there are severalge11eralizatioris
:
great
·
~
thing
·
abo,ut these• in~
;
Cave, the Eci
_
st
,
anct,
.,
~est
:
l:IiYs,
which I
.
could make abo
_
ut
.
the
'
'
s~itutiQ.ris'.is ;that
;
>
ct,espite their
·.
and: the}~ow~
,
Centftli
·
as
-
~~~lc1s
.
·
.
.
.
Food
Service
·British
.
people,'. For
:
·
.
one;
.
the
.
aging,
·
«-!heiI"
vivi
_
t;lness
·
ll_a,s.
,ktipt
..
i
seemg
.
se~er~l:, ..
•
plars
.
a
:
.~.
British
,
certainly treat. their
••
·
them in stepwithtoday's
_
mode of
·
_Shakespear
.
e,s
·
.
·.
;-M!Jc
.
h
,,-:;.
i\do
.
.
historicai:
.
figures
,
with
:
a
.
grea{
C'
Hving.
:
:
For
.
exampJe,
·,
th.e vivid~
:,
.
Abo,uth
:'
I'J()thm~t!;c;a
_
nd
:;:
!.~
~~~
_
(!S
-
..
de~1lofiespect·:a as I iinm.ediately
.
.
ness ofthe
:
.Hol!l?es
.
of'_Parl!anient
:·
:
ChqstSup~rs~ri
.
9ver}h~
:
past
:
...
•
..
·
· .
·
.
,
concluded
from
1ust
;
visiti~gtlie
.
:.
·
can
·
. ·::
'_
be
'
v.ie~eg
:
_
:
ih,
.
,
_
;
the
.,
r_e~•(
we~~s.
J
:
h.~Ve}~~s_o
,
h~t;l
}
lle
·
,-
·
-
-
Westmjnster Abbey
:
an.d
·
viewing
·
Pa
_
rliaineritary
:.
debates
:
_;"'
'
9ft¢n
:~
opportt1mt):'
,
'
J9
·
,
a.rn~e
,
.
\Vl!~
::.':.
a
<
·
..
its great
-
halls under'which lay
·
acute,)oud, hi.up..ou'rous,and even
,::2-
Persor1. bY.
,:
~q~
:
11all}~
-
of
·
Jam
_
es
_
Last Wednesday, inspectors from the Dutchesi County Health
.·
·
.
ttie
bodies
•
of sucb-gr:eat
.
figur~s
·
chpdish,
·
()f:course, on~ could see
.
farn
..
·~
..
~
J~r
'.
1tish resrd~ri
.
t
_
stuqellt_<
..
,
.
Department made' a
.
routine
.
inspection of the ca£ eteria, kitchen
as
~
.
w
inston
.
.
·
·
•
ch u
'
rc hill,
,
.·
AtJ ee the
•
trying· aspeds
.
of ~his po}itical
:
.
: .
C>f
•.
N ~therhall House
:~
:
ai:>c,ut)he,
. . :
.
.
.
·
and_ratskellar:
•
Because of
the
things
.
they
.
fot1nd,
_
SAGA was
:
Stevenson;
·.
Lord
•
.
Salisbury,
·/
jiistifotj911
.
just by)oi>kijig'at
:·
the
_
.
or~glnS
f
Qf
:
>
-
the
c
\
1ip
:
er1c,!r,i
:
',:
0
•·:
advised to ~o_luntarily
·
c1ose its kitchen- in order to correct sorrie
Thomas
·· ..
.
Hardy;
.. ,
:
Rober.t
·
<
beaµtifiIIrndiance oHhej~old a11d
···
ReJ?lut1Qn
:
an
_
q
·
wh<>p:mse.~
,
ll tlle
.,
·
,
.
.
,
·
of the_ cond1tio
_
ns anc.I procedures. Among th~ areas of conc~rn
.
.
Browning; and Chai;-les
~
Dicke1k
.'.:.
green
·
·
ugh
.
L refle
_
cting
-
:
oJf the
·
,
Bnt~sh o~
:
.the
,
Alller1~a11S
>
4.
·:
~rq
>
were improper handling of some food, servmg
_
of food at 1m-
·
Seconqly,
,
one
•can
-
say that
.
the_
;
Hou~es
:
,
of
0
Par
.
liam~ht
>
af
·
11ight.
: ,
Sll_ff
y9u~knov.
,
~o..y be
'.
wC>u}q
:
~
_
aye
:c,;
proper temperatures, and cleanliness.
.
British
.
are certairily
.\
very
.
)'he
:,
vividne·ss
,
:
J
1f
\
the . Br.itisl
k
?~~
_
ued
;
1t
\X
ol! m}l~t·: ~now;
-
,
of-.. ·
.
_
.
We
realize that SAGA has many things to think about. Plan-
,
eiaborate in their ceremonies ~
-
in
.
political
.
fostJtution
·
s,
.I
~-suppose·;
.
.
_
cours_e, th_at
.
th
_
e_·
Bntr~~
.
are
.-
Y
_
~ry
-
: ·\·
: .
mng mea~ for _sQ
1
many people, along with the rising costs of
..
both- the
___
pubHc
~ric!
religio~s
:
_.
_ii
;
ould_ di
,
ffer: f~QITl_
~
the
.
s~,ic
,
;
~1.ubborn
·
m
:
the
_
1~
-
.o~d-
_
ways ..
'.
.::_
.
:
-
·
food certaml~ 1sn t an easy feat
. .
..
·.
.
.
_
,
: ·
.
.
.
sectors.
-
lil the pubhc: sector,Jhis
_
:
Ame
_
r1can
\
Ones
;;
~\•ti1ch seem
.
_
tc,
_
, .
Q
:
ver}h
7
:
-
Shrist~~s
;:
recess(
.I:.
:
_
H!)w~ver, 1t must be
.
emphasized
_
that
..
cleanlu~ess
.
,
•
find
.·
.
.
.
elaborateness
:
can be
·
seen
·
in
•
the
'/
_
have
:
dfoencdeadehed
:
by
the
·
-iack
,
am
_.,
plallilmg
\
~n
.
;
yisitmg
}
:
Paris
,:
.
·
sarutat1on
.
are
.
.
extrem~ly
,.
impoitanLYes, U1e
:~e~lt~,
pepat}
/
~
·.
/.
chajlgirig
:.:
o(lhe
•,
guard
\
aiid
;
iii~
:
of
?
::
publif
'
c<M!~ci~n~e
t,
br()j:iglif
::\
~~n~va;
':·
~p9
,:
j
\~t~r~~r,n/
),
:
~n.d
..
·<
..
m
.
~nt
.
prob.a
_.
~_ly
.
wo
...
',l~
.
d fmd·
.
m
..
_uch
.
?f
.
,
t
.
h
.
e.
S~!Il
.
e
.
.
.
•
~
.
~
-
~
.
-
g
.
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.if
...
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!t.
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~.Et
.
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.
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.
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.
ic
.
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;'c.
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sl).e
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cti
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o
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:c:
·
.:c.
er·.·e
···
rri
.
<>~i~
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.
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f
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.
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.
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f
/
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,
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-
.
·
.
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a
...
r~
...
.
~fe
J
•
o
..
:•.
·_a .
.
n
.
.
. 2:
·
•
··
·
.
e~J~Y
.
mg
·
·
.·
.
.
_
check
•
rest.aur
_
ants
'.
But· ~e are
·,
~ot
,
speakmg'
''
?
_
f.
:
:E!~~
-
urantl>
_\
:: :;
Buckfogharif:::{•
:
P.a,Iac;e
t
'.::~an~,
):
\Vatefg<c1te::)if~n~
I
case;-_it m~s
.
t
_
h?hd,ay;:1ike~1se; I would !ik~ to·
·
.
where people can choose for :themselves whether
:or~
notJhey
'." ,·
'WhitehalF
'
·
.
.
The
·
·
,;
·elaborate
·
.•
·
·
also
:
be
<
si:ated
~
that the stropg
.
wish
.
.
au
J>f
,
you
;
a
.
n
,
_
el~JOJUlg
..
..
want
,
to
:•
eatthere,Weare
·
speaking
:
-
of
:
a college
-•
foocl seiv1~e
.·
'
{·:
cha
.
racter·
,
~
·
or
· '
the
i
re_ligious
•;~
-
r
.
espe~t;
-
p:r
,
t.he 13ritish,
:
forthei<
;
;
hol
_
i~?Y:,
/
3,
:,
~erp
1
•
.
;
.an
.
d
·
,
jofous
)
where we~ students, have to eat
_
and
.
cleanliriessis
:
ari)inportant
· ..
.
•
'
.
'
cerenionies
c::.
·
was
·
·
brought
,,
forth
•
:
.
poUtical
)
iristitution~,
'
:
could
'
:
.
be
,
_-
Christrr,ia,s
"
':
~~d
~:'
a
,
•,
~?llPY
!:
:·
and
'
.
factor. Also important
is
thaUo.od should be sefye~
,;
at
.
proper
: ·
.
·
•.
mosf
conspicµOusly' to
·
nie
~
by
:
an
}
:
ix.einplified
~
:
~y
~
~
·
the
·
·
a_niiual
·
.
:':
pr
_
osp,1~rc:>us ne:\\' y~a~
<
·
·
.
·
·.
:
:
:
:
;'
,
::-
i
:-
· ..
temperature~-
;
We ~re all
.a'Yare
·
of the effeGts o~ fo~d, spollag~.
Ariglica
-
r(Church service which
r
·
f
¢ele
_
bratio;1 of the
.
execution of
'
· •
< -
.
•
, ·
·
.
..
·
.
.,
1,i~c
.
e~ely,
.
·
0~
the pos1trv~ side, however, ~e CIR;C1:,E
tJ:tin~
that SA9:A
attended
.
at
:
the Saint
.
Augustine.
.
Guy
Fawkes -
.
who
.
tried to. blow
.
.
An
thony'-M.)\Tilger
has ~ken a tµm for the better smce this mspection occurred.
.
·
.
.
. .
.
.
,
,
.
..
·
·
·.
·
.
;
, .
,
•
.
··. ·
. ·.•
.
.
·
The ~fferencein the
.
temper~ture of food i~ noticeable alld the
.
COUNCIL, Continued
fr~m
,
dow11! ~pe
.
co!~ege a~re~s to repair
..
pay
.
_ exti:a
:
-
for
_
.
the
_pnv1l~ge
_
o~
.
servmg of salc!-ds and
:
otMr foods,
-
rather-
.
than- hav:ing
.
the
:
. •
.
:
..
:
·
,
,
:
·
·
a
e'
'.
l
'.·
~he ~!sf11~ction
__
or mdicat~
.
'Y-~en
__
~tayi~~-
_
.
.
·
..
.
.
.
students handle them, is a much better idea.
.
:
.
.. ·
.
·.
.
-.
.
· ·· •
.
. ,
..
.
_
_
P ~
-,
:
::-
·
..
:
~e~i<!~ will !:>
.
~resto~ed ~1thm 24
.
.
The ~1.rth po1~t says ~hat
_
the
..
.
Th~ col}ege and the Health Department are supposed to be
.,
anybme wherrthere
_
1s susp~~10I1,
;
hours.
:
A:f~er
,
_
s1:1
_
ch;. a
·
bme the
_
.
college is
_
not _!'.esponsi
.
ble _f~r
-.:
-
workmg more closely from now on so that the food serviceis
danger, physical ~arm,
:
or
..
con_-
,
c~Jl~~e
.~ll
providl:
.
~lt~rq~~e stolen or
,
~amaged
_
pers
_
onal
aware_ of all health codes. Tht; CIRCLE sincerely hopes that the
tr~band.
.
.
...
.
.
/ .
.
hou~mg 1f school
·
1s
~tin
,
m
· ·
property uhJ,e~s the_ md1vidual
two W).11 work
.
more closely so
.
that these health codes-will be
The
co~ncd recq~mends th
_
at
:
sess1011.
-
-
..
. ,
.
.
.
,.
..
•
can prove neghgence on
_
th~ part
complied with.
·
·
·
·
·
every res1~ent
_
b~. gi~en a Jroilt
,
. :
;
·
~'lle
~
colle~~
_
also proviqes an
.
of tile C?llege:J'he
:
~olleg~ps 11ot
·
_ _ _ _
door
.
){ey m
.
adcl1tion t_o
~:
a
,
room
,.:
mfmnary d1spe11sary for non
.
-
:
·
responsible for any1temsthat the
·
>
.
key. This way;the front doors ca1f
.
prescription drugs an
_
d minor ills .
.
studen~
may.
choseto store during
:
·
.
..
.
_
.
.
.
be locked at stipula
_
ted hours,
·
·
rh·e
_
seventh po
_
int is a policy on
:
the vacatfoii' period .
.
. ·
;
· . ;
.
.
.
_
·
_ ·
.
.
. ·
.
·
·
.
-
• -
•:
.
.
_
Repla<:ement of the fr~nt
_
door
··::
:vac~tion
·
time- f
.
or all
·
th~se
:
not
·_
. The ·tenth c1n~ .el~vent~ p<?i!lts
. .
.
.
.
·
.
·
··
.
-
&lt.4'.~Ldl.~i~i~~•!t-
:
key
will be at a
,
cost oL$5.00
<
.
on a J2 mollth agreement,
.
the
,
read -that cookmg and ~ookmg
~~IV-~~~~-c-t"l!i'~T~~~ti,"'
·
~"'
-
_
~hereas the
.
cost
.
of a
~
~oom key ::rooms
IllUSt
.
oe
·:
vacated
~.
during
-
,~
utensn~
.
are
:
riofpermitt~d
-
ii(the·
•
.
·
·
.
:
·
_
·
··
·"
:_
·
, :
s-
.
·
:
.
·.
_
.
.
:·
,
.
. :
_;
\VillresultJn
.
~h~ i:~placeme.ntof?
,::'._
periods
:.
that
·
sc~ool
.
is not in.
,
,
{'.esidence
halls (state law) unless
.
.
.
·
..
·
.
..
:..
.
.
_
..
:
·
.
-
·
·.
.
·new.lock
to assure better security
,:
s'ession.
:
Tl_le college resery
'
e1>
thEr
.
.
provided
:
for
:
in soine
:·
cases-:
No
:·
_
_
The
-
CIRCLE wishes;everyone a_happy,andhea
_
l ~ o h ~
:.
at
a price of $14.00 to $15.00 to the
.·
,
right to utilize t~e rooms 'f?_r
_
its,
·
pe~
·
wm be allowed
..
in
.
)~e
-
season. But wh,i:t you re celebrat1~g,Jt:,ese next _ . \
1
P
.-
-
•_student._
· -
. .
·
-·
-_
.__
'
,_._
own p1:1rpose dunng these tunes
.
.
residence halls. _
·
-
:
.
.
.
remember that tis the _season
!O
beJ.lUIETas well ~s JOI y .....
,
.-
The sixth p_omt_$~s ~hat the
-:-_
It
must be understood, tha~
·
The_ last
_·
point says
.
tha
_
t all
Exams
AND
snow are 1n the air~ so please be ~ns~derate ~,
1
.
college will provjde
.
.
a bed,
.
anyqne on a 12 month
·
agreement resident students mu~t sign up.-
others so we can all enJQY our ~ell-de~erved
_
va~t10
.
n
d
,
~Y~---.
dresser, closet,- light,
--
mirror,
·
_
.
is guarante
·
ed c!:
.
room·
-
but not for the
.
c.!)llege food
·
service.
··
.
.
•
.
. r
:
: .
.,
.. ·
..
·
.
;
·
·
•
.
_
:
,
·
_:
·.·
..
..
'•
;
/
;
<
.
,->
desk,
·
and
.
c
_
hair.'.
.
·
~n
:
~d~iti~n; ~he
,·
necessa.rily
-
-t~e
:
5c1m_e
·
?ne
_
when
"
Ifanyone
·
:
ha~_any
.
:
questi~ris
:
or
.
•·-
.
.
,
MERRY
.-
CtlRI
_
STMAS
!
·
·
..
· ..
•
· ...
·
:
<
.,
~olleg~
·
.
guara_nte~s
-
1amtori,aL
-
.
school 1S
•
not m
,
sess
_
1on.
·
,
.
..
.
arguments
.
with
:
·
the
.
twelve
.
. .
·
.•
•
·
·
•.
··
.•
..
·
.
· ,:
_
:
•.:~:
:
'
-
:
.
.
i .
·
-
·
>>:
· ·
:
-_
/
services
.
J~1
\
d~anli11e~s
·
.
and
<
.
·
t
The eighth
·
point
·
states
/
that
>
points(please
·
seetheinterhotise
~~~~lVIK"\t--~~9"1_:'sani~aUo~
:
a9d
.
•
.·~fl?<>
,_
essenti~l
; -
~riy_o11e :.:v,'~g-~
_
;iS
..
·.
~o~ng
.
t<r
:
'sta_y
_
.
.
Coun_Gil
,·
feprese11tative
:,
:
.iii
.
::
the:
:
._
.
•
'.-:
.
·
.
.
.
•
.
•
·
-
•
·
.
.-·
·
·
·
·
·.·
,<services
":
for-
-
heat and
.
hot
-
w,ater.
;'
dum:ig vacation penoqs; who is .respective
.
dorms. ·.
· :
·
-
. :
·
·
,
-
"~ In the e~ent of
a
l10ilet break.,-
:'
not on a 12 m9Iith contract,
:
must
-·
·
:
·
·
·.
_ .
. _
·-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
;
-~
.
--
.-.·:
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
·
.
-
~
.
.
..
·
·,:·
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
11·
. .
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
... OKAY,. E~L.LA ..... JUST L.I~
J:
TAUGHT YA,
Now .•... FE.TCH
Ti.I~ FRISBE.E!"
.
.
.
.
,• '·
-
.
'
.
,__
.
.
-~
.
.
.
'
.
-
----
DECEMBER12, 1974
Outlook Looks Up;
Jobs For Grads
by Frank
Schiavi,Jr.
being offered pay $8,500 annually.
The same jobs will- pay $10,520 if
Although
the
country's the student has graduate ex-
. economic situation looks dismal,
perience, work experience or an
the outlook for jobs for college outstanding academic record.
graduates may
be
just a little
According to the commission,
brighter than anticipated.
there are three occupations in the
According to the United States New York area which are con-
Civil Service Commission, there sidered in the
"shortage
will be 5,000 more ]Obs available category".
If
a students' major
with the Federal government field includes phannacy, soil
than were available in the past science or soil conservation he or
two years. This will bring to a she would have better em-
total 23,000 new jobs nationwide. ployment prospects with the
Also, to. the college graduates government.
benefit, two new trends are seen.
Other occupations offered are
First, retirements are running historians, writers, editors and
double from about a year ago public information specialists but
(12.5,000 this year). Second, ex-
there are relatively few available
pansioh is· anticipated in the positions in these areas.
technical, energy and medical
If
anyone is interested in fin-
. fields...
·· ding out the dates for the job
The bulk of the available jobs examinations,
contact
the
are included in the· insm:ance, placement office. The office wi:l
claims; engineering, and ac-
provide the necessary addresses
counting fields. Most of the jobs and information.
Marvin believes that there is ·a · are all assodated with the
.~:
. Dr.
-
JaIJ!esori 1\1:a"rvih of·Vassar ·good deal ofinterest inthis area Hudson Valley Philharmonic .
.
. • .' C<>ll. ege:fac.
·
idty.
·
has.'. or.ganijed a for this: type of m~sic.
. -
· -Dr. Marvin is the director of
''Mas$,,. In P~odii.ction;
Audit!ons Being Held
.. cffamber.
:
choir and orchestra
The. ~easoi:i for a 48 .member Vassar's . chorus and chancel . ··· In_ April ofd975 Poughkeepsie perience for everyone involved.
:
specialiiingin sacred niusicfrom group.as .oppo~ed ~o the usual 16 choir: He has an undergraduate
Ballet Theat~r ~nd th~ Huds?n
Following are the dates and
~--•'
·
th .··
·
· · . · •
.... · .
Th
.
.. •.
to 20 member choirs of the 16th degree in music theory and
vaHey
Philharmomc
w1l! .. times for vocal and dance
,,, : '
.
: k e
·
B~roque?erwd·
.
F ~t_gr:oup, centurf(is that niodern in~ . history; a masters in choral .produce Leonard Bernstein·~ .
.
auditions to be held at the Dut-
">
_n9~_,
-
~s . ape· a
·
es iva, is struinentsproduce a)ound _much conducting and a doctorate in. ·~Mass" in the Hudson Valley chess Theater Dutchess Cof11-
~TiP1:"i~~s~fa.;~· f~~~e~sac~t.Jou~er. than th_e/instrmI1ents of·
.
.. choral music. Hehas alsoserired . with performances on April 19th munity Colleg~ Poughkeepsie
-, •.. :cnrisfarias:-Oratcirio nexp;unday
;
Jh~ Baroq1;1e peno~_
0
an~.therefor as an intermim ccinducfor of the . and 2oth at Poughkeepsie High New York.
'
'
~Dec. lSth at 7:30 p.m:. in ·-the Dr. l\.farv_m /has _1ncr:as~d. the Camerata Chorale and·
·
is a ~chool, April 25 at Ulster Co1;1nty
Saturday, December 14; Youth
.Vassar CoJ}ege Chapel., ·
number .
.-
o. voices .. · propor-
member of the Ranaissance Community College, and Apnl 26 Chorus (teenagers) : 9:30 A.M. to
-·· The ensemble's name. ~eans ·.- tionately. . ·
.... Consort.
. . .
. . . . .
at Suffern HighSchooL"Mass'.' is .11 A:M. and 3 P.M. to 4 P.M.
" festive chapel and refers
·fo
the_ . Dr. Marvm feels that all of his: .. An, oratorio form of. musical a total theater .piece involving Children's Chorus: 11 A.M. to
.. cliurch choirs of Europe In the, _smgers can
·
-be
.called . work is longer than and of larger .three choruses of voices, as well 12:30 P.M. and 4 P.M. to 5 P.M.
: lSth and lGth centuries. Their ''professiona~••·,
:
They, ~ll ha~e' prop9rtions than
a..
cantata and as an ·orchestra, dancers, and Adult Classical Chorus: 1 P.M. to
music wilL be -concerned. with had extensive:; experience m .. grew· out of the'sacfed operas of players.
3 P.M.
_
· .. · .. t
ft
th-
h
ch .·
D
choral singing; The same ~olds. the ·1talia1{ Counter --- . Refor-
1
Tom Adai~
1
the Artistic
Sunday, De"cember 15; Youth
··
·
:~music O i •· · e
_
c .ur ·· ·year;·· r. true for the instrmnentalis~who, ~t~pn.
·
·
Director of Poughkeepsie Ballet Chorus .11 A.M. to 1 P.M .
. ·:·~·~;;1~·s.t"·lii~i~~;,:::st~dents'·,·~~~i~!~~~¥.rl~·•;~f
~;~~~~t;:~;~
., c:
. ,
.
production.
·
· .
·
_On
Sunday, December 15, from
Three. new choru~es ~11 ~e -1 P.M, to 2 P.M. auditions will be
for~ed for t~e pr?duction, m~ held for dancers interested in this
cludmg a Children s Chorus, a exciting theater piece that will
Yout~ Chorus, .. and an Adult involve many types of dance
CJ~ss1ca~ Chorus. Members of the including
classical
ballet,·
C::hlldren s Chorus and Youth modern dance Israeli dance and
:Marist:~tiulents·at-e invi~ed 'to
yeat's
~inners'.we~e
•! •••
winners' GLAMOUR staff and
will
receive
:participat,e : in
GLAMOURinot"because·ofw~at :they -wear. a $500 cash prize.
Magazines Top T.en College·
:
but beca.u.se oLwhatthey do
7 ,
Anyone who is interested in
_Co!}test for)975,
·
y?!Jri~
.
_wo~en
·
~ancer research, ~_rt;journalism,
entering the .search should
from .colleges. c1nd. umversiti~s cho~eography, speech·pathology, . contac.t Shaileen Kopec, Com-
' througho_ut the c<>untry
.
\Vill, student-lobbying:
U
you're in-
muni~ations Director, for -more
· c~mpete
m
GL~()UR's search volved in something_ that's information. Her office is in St.,
for. ten outst~nding students ..
A
meaningful t<> you and others, Peter's-( ext. 278). The deadline
panelofGLAMOUR editors will enter''GLAMOUR's Top Ten for submitting an application to
select the winners on .the basis of· Coilege Contest"
·
GLAMOUR is February 15, 1975.
their· . solid · records
·of
The Top Ten College Winners of
achievement-in academic studies 1975 will · be photographed· by
Choru~ will be given the op- New Orleans Jazz.
'
portumty to take, at no charge,
Singers should come prepared
stage movement and. dance with a short. familiar song. For
-classes to be taught by Tom further information please call
Adair. Participation in "Mass" 889-4989.
'
will be a unique learning ex-
arid~or-·ih
>
exti';¼cµrricular ac- leading New Yorkphotographers
.
.
·
HO~-
'..· tivities .on·· campus or
.
. in the. and. featured in GLAMOUR's' .
.
-
; . _ -
.·.
·
.
• · . .
· .·
.
. .. ~<!O~rn;tJ&~izi_ng·· the·· contest, ·s:~s\h~
0
i~~e~~;~ ~riri~;·
Chris
tlllaS
GLAMOUR pomts out that. last invited.to NewYorkto meet the
·
·
·
0 · ·
,-....
· , ···
· ·· · · ·
.'(j
U 01N SPRFAD
Fern
lflE ME$AGE
_,
...
.
·
CPScENs· - .If· you've been
having·a hard tim
.
e figuring out
what ~o give your favorite fern or
· · coleus for Christmas, look no
·: longer: · ·
· ·
, The.; Funny Forum of In-
·
. dianapolis, Indiana. has . released
:an.
album of music and poetry
designed especially for the house
plant. ·
.....
··
.
·
· ·
· · The LP is ~alled ''Vegetation
· Conversation:·
Music .. and
Thoughts for Things in · Pots;"
and. it was made for "people who
don't have time to·entertain their
lonely· plants,'.' acc~rqing to
manufacturers.
. .
- The liner · notes claim · that
musical . and · poetry selections ·
"provide the plant with the vocal
vermiculite, audio attention, and
musicalm·amire
fo
accelerate its .
· growth. arid ·well-being ·.in .. the
. .· . owner's absence." : ·
. .
·
·
·
.
.
Among the cuts are "l..amentto
- · a Plant;" .''Oh·.the
.
Coleus," and ..
·. '.'No.Matter How Fertile; There's
. ·No
Place
Like
Loam." .
1..
OF LO'JE ... lflE
-LO'JE OF CHRlsr
FOR ALL PEOPLE.
Have you
ever
considered the priesthood as a way
to serve people? The Paulist Fathers
are
a small
communi~y of American priests. Progressive, ~earching.
young and energeti_c. they form a religious family.
A Paulist is a man of the Spirit, a.man of his time.
He rejoices
in
the signs of hope
around
him and
celebrates with the people he serves.
·
Every Paulist is a missionary: in the pulpit,
or
parish
house, on the campus, in the inner-city. He comm uni·
cates with the spoken word, the printed page, and with
contempora_ry'media. His mission is to all of America.
His message is love; the lov~ of Christ for all people.
For more information send for The·Paulist Papers
Write to: Father Don C. Campbell; Room 100
PAULISF
FA1RERS·
415 WEST59TH ST •• NEW YORK.N.Y.10019
l;
!
;.
}·
:
·
:
t,
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_
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1
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_PA_
.
_G_E_6_~-~----------------....;....;,T,;,;,:;HE CIRCLE
Code
99
_DECEMBER 12, 1974
~counseling
.
Experience
On
Thanksgiving Day at home
I;
ripped the lip off. And it suddenly
probably set a record that should let go, no ripping; only slight
As
pressures close in on us, we to do?
go in the books. People have
.bleeding;
and we retuq1ed to the
are affected. But rather than
·see
·
·
The coW1Selor begins by finding ·
choked on chicken bohes, some table and finished the meal.
ourselves as changed, anxious, out
·
just
where we are and
·
by
have had heart attacks, others
So I probably belong to a new
fearful, depressed, we tend to being there with·us - we are no
have dropped the turkey on the
·
minority of one: People who
project these ,feelings onto our longer alone. The
.
coW1Selor is
floor. Not me, I have to be
dif-
.
c
_
lamp
.
their lips
_
with broken
environment; the world becomes willing to participate in our
·
ferent. I boldly took a turkey turkey wings. But
·
what's new? I
more hostile and threatening, understanding of the work and to
wing and as I chewed on it a
.
already belong to a minority:
and consequently deserving of see the
.
reasonableness of our
broken bone clamped my lip and 40,000 priests among 250 million
our
.
more cautious approach.
fears and anxieties.
_
A dialogue
I couldn't remove it.
Americans; a Marist priest, only
People around us react
,
to our can again
. _
be established.
There I was, utterly em-
·
400 in this country; a college War, for the Berrigans, for prison more anxious and withdrawn
J'hrough
this
dialogue our world
·barrassed, with the long wing of a chaplain, a member of a real reform. Practically every other state, confirming
-
for
us
the becomes subject to reality testing
'
21 pound turkey
·
tenaciously minority of which· other
,
priests week I
.
was marching in reality of our position.
and we begin to get perspective
hanging on to my blushing face. say "You can have it, you nut." Poughkeepsie with the students.'
It's ahnost as though we take a again. With,the help and support
For20minutesmyfamily worked Even among Chapla,ins, 1~m When the students became less
.
step sideways out of our true of this new allay we can begin to
feverishly to remove it. I didn't probably uajque
in
the sense that involved and Jes?. demonstrative, stance in life, and everything is
.
face those
.
problems that had
·
want to rip my lip so they worked I say three Masses daily so
_
that I followed suit. But I didn't.rest. I
··experienced
from
-
·
this altered
··
thrown us off track
-
in the first
with tweezers, magnifying glass, students may have easy access to decided
·
to give them -
·
op-
perspective
:
.
Things, .b
.
ecome place. Sometimes these problems
and a glass of Brandy in case I some time set aside to worship portunities to
.
pray and worship rational that wouldn't have been
.
are the result of attitudes carried
passed out.
.
.
.
·
Goel; to fulfill the
.
firs~ Com-
and rediscover God. I haven't from where we
-
stood before
.
'
with us from childhood that are
We decided to go to the hospital mandment to love God wholly for
;..
exactly remained passive. I am Expedences take on a
·
different
shaping
our behavior, and ii
emergency room
.
All this time Himself; to celebrate the
·
fact now fasting a few times a week meaning,
.
friends are riot
.
the becomes import;mtto sort out the
my Dad kept eating. He li,kes his thatthey are fulfilling the second
( that's why I'm not seen
,
in the same
·
.
,
•
.
·
.
-
·
.
·
.
·
-
past, Sometiines problems
.
come
·
food warm. warm. My brother -
·
Commandment to love the neigh-
cafeteria as often as I used to be
.
Communication with those
we:
from having to.
deal
with several
·
in - la\;' was about to go to his tool bor (those involved
.
.
in
NFW
) ;
I pray more, believing in that had been dealing
.
:with tends to
.
·
coritradi~tofy mes~ages coming
box to get his
.
cutters so I support, or fasting for the star~ dimension which touches and
·
break
.
down, inhibiting reality at us through various levels
;
of
_
wouldn't have to walk into the
,
ving millions, or Day Care, or heals hearts; and I'm working on
_
testing even further. Objectivity communication., Then_ we
·
need
hospital with that giant wing, but Projects
fo
Poughkeepsie, or an underground project, which and
·
subjectivity merge. as· we not only to _1d~nt1fy
..
~hese
.
·
just an inch or two hanging from TWA,. or betterment
of
.
campus again
-
puts me jn a minority give up dialogue tor ~onologu~ .
.
.
mess~ges,_ b~tto_un~erstand o~r.
the lip. Suddenly I though of the life.); to hear again the story that group, and
·
that is founding
.
a
All of us have experienced this role m
.
.
tbfs; mteract1ve
.
process
.
consequences: The hospital staff God lives in us arid we live in
,
Dignity Cl'Japtei-, for Catholic anxiety and
,
isolation and the
.
The counselor can help
_
because
in hysterics, The Eagle Tribune Him; to give
Him
a
_
half _hour a .
;
Homosexuals
.
who want to Jee}ing that no cine can
:
help, no
-
.
hisinvestmentis
_
no_t in
·
s~aping
making it a first p~ge item. day j~st loving Hin_i.
.
.
_.
.
.
.
remain in the,Ghtirch, despite ~o
'"one
can really understand. Some us to some end" butm freemg us
Maybe·
.
The
·
Poughkeepsie
I
.
•
was
·
much
_ •
~nvolved
m
,.
much misunderstanding, per.:.
·
of
us manage to stuinble through
·
·
·
to firid and be oµrselves
:
.
The goal
·
Journal picking it up._ So I began demonstrations
:
my
·
first two secution and ridicule
:
_
Un-
.
iL iind
,
get
·
back on
,
· :
track, cif counseling,
.
then, unlike most
·
to pull
·
away, not caring if I years here: against the Vietnam fortunately it has to
:
'
be uri°-
somehow, up ahead.
·
·
Others
·
other
·.
experiencesr
.
is
-
:
not
derground -
·
even at
.
.
Marist
.
continue
.
oii
from their
l
altered
,
.
socialization
.
-
.
for all societies
·
.
Coll~ge
._
which is supposed to be
.
frame of reference:
·
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
main fain
.
their own
·
.
ongoing
·
·
GAS[
·
IGHT
·•·.
9
.
Located on Rt.
-
9
Wappinger Falls
Next to
'
A
&
P
MONDAY NIGHT
.
FOOTBALL NIGHT
.
.
_
•
..
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.
·
..
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-.
-
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' .
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,·
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Fre
·
e Hotdogs During Game
·
-TUESDAY
MUG NIGHT
Any Mug Filled For 30c
WEDNESDAY
OLDIES NIGHT ....
~
.
'
.
.
.
.
AARDVARK JAM PERFORMANCE
Frne Champagne
·
To
:
All:People
:·
,n
<:·.
.
:
:-
'
.
'50 Garb
Get Screwey - - ~crewdrivers • '. . 50c
.
.
.
.
'
THURSDAY
.
DRINK TILL YOU [)ROWN
.
All The Beer
:
You Can
.
brink:
:
_
:$2.00
_·
FRIDAY
·
Band -
~
(?pen Road
PITCHER NIGHT - - N
Pitcher Of Beer •• $1.25
Pitcher Of Sangria •• $2.00
·
SATURDAY
l.D.
NIGHT
. . . ·,·
.
.
S~ow
Student
1.D
.
.
At The Door
...
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of e!lucated, un~
How <;an talking. help?
.
What· neuros~s - but autonomy
.
and
derstandingp~ople'. Tm probably can a counselor
·
do
that friends freedom,
.sticking out my neck for.ridicule, and relatives have
·
not been able
.
·
>
_
putting my reputation
.
at ·stake;
-
-
.
-
.
-
_
,
---"!' ___________
'!""'"' _____________
...,,;_
but
as
long
.
'
-
as
.
human
Pa.peri for
.
the:Acagemic ci~arterly are
·due by
.
being.;;
.
·
are
.
vfctim·s of .-the
.
.
-
December 20
··
·
·
·
··
·
inhumanity of other
.
human
.
.
They
__
can be submitted to Mary.Snyder
at
.
>
'
•
beirigs,
_
I'll be at their side.
-_
·
·
·
·
·
..
·
~i:egory t.iouse
·
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VIEW FAR
-
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.
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..
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EQUESTRIAN
·
cENJER
POUGHKEEPSIE; N
,
Y.
IOFF EAST
DORSEY LANfi
.
914-47l,1918
,
._
·
·
OPEN
-
DAILY
.
:
.
.
TILL
·~
9
·
·
·
·.·
·
·•
·
····
.
.
·
·
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12-s
~b:NDA;'
·
-
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<
¥
¼
.
-
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AND
½
KEGs
~
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AVAILABLE
..
·
.
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. .
.
.
.
.
·
WITH
EQUIPM
·
ENT
·
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ooMESTlC
-
AND
·
IM:PORTED BtER
-
.
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·
.-
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.
.
OCTOBERF'EST
,
BIER'lS
.NOW
,
AVAILABLE
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.
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' '
' .
THE CIRCLE
DECEMBER 12. 1974
Soaring Sugar ;Prices Continue To Affect Country
-
.
.
.
.
.
...
by
john
Ghrist .
THE HEALTH AND
WEALTH BOYCOTI
have raised what used to be
a
The company will try making the
nickel candy bar to
20 cents."
gumballs more hollow inside, and
A spokesman for Hershey
if
that doesn't work it will have to
(CP~)--
Christmas
candy and
FOQds;
the home of the .world's go to a sugarless gum.
For now, the most direct action
.other goodies are going to be a lot largest chocolate factory, ad-
Bakers everywhere have been seems to
.
be in the hands of
more scarce - and a lot more
mitted
freely that the consumer hurt right at the holiday season consumers. Groups advocating
expensive, - this year. In addition is getting less chocolate in
his
when their business is heaviest. the boy~ott of sugar have sprung
to the already inflated costs of candy bars - for more money.
Sugar prices have risen too fast up across the country - and not
making,
transporting . and . A chocolate bar that weighed_ to be effectively passed on to the all of them have stressed the
marketing, there has been a
1.26
ounces and sold for
10
cents coPsmner.
economic benefits _of cutting
'growing shortage of both sugar last January now weighs
1.2:
BIGSUGARLEARNS
down on sugar.
and chocolate.
__ :
•,.
.ounces and costs
15
cents. This
FROM BIG QIL
"This latest rip - off is a
Sugar has gone up
300
percent shaving process is. necessary to
blessing in disguise," and Ida
over the cost" of a year ago~- and keep the candy bar price from
But many people have become Honoroff, a major figure in the
. cocoa
beans·
have gone µp the- "going through the roof," the suspicious: In the midst of the California - based Consumer
-same amount over two years ago. Hershey man-insisted.
..growing_ shortage, profits of Health Against Monopolistic
· "Sugar is beyorid belief," said · Leo Leary, president of the sugar refiners began to soar, just Profiteering (CHAMP). "During
one • supermarket .owner in Ford Gum and Machine Com- as oil profits soared duringthe oil the meat boycott consumers
Philadelphia ..
"It
goesup every pany said his firm is struggling to shortage.
·
learned to do without animal
week.-" -The 'President·.
of ·-_
the keep producing giunballs, which
Last we.ck, Albert Rees, protein - learned that vegetable
Wawa
Supermarket chain, ai:e
75
percent sugar.
Chairman of the Council on Wage proteins provide! _them with
. Lester
Broadbelt, agreed.. : · ..
«We experimented with a two - and Price:stability blasted sugar essential protein - and amino
"Sugar reflects itself .
in
an cent vending machine in one companies for not providing acids.
.. awful lot of products,'' Broad_belt town, and to me, it is not the way enough information on :their
"They will now learn that they
noted. <'Two candy: companies to go/' Leary explai.r_led recently. prices. · Rees. complained that don't need refined sugar. Fruit,
figures were not given for the vegetables. and honey can
.
MOLINARO,
Continued_from page
2
profits of all major refiners. provide them with natural
-
· ·
·
·
Unforl;unately, the Council has no sweeteners,'' Honoroff declared
student gets· What .the program problem of sfoi:lent health plans authority to even subpoena such in a recent newsletter.
has_ to .offer,-"
"I don't -believe and insurance. ·Molinaro said,. information and must rely on the
According
to
. CHAMP
that this· has been· happening· in <Cwe · plan to investigate and honesty of the companies in-
researchers, excessive use of
the past!' · ' ' . .
. . · · · ·
hopefully . come up with some volvei:l to get a clear picture of suga_r has been linked with
_
both
· .. Another goal of
-
the. new form of a· health plan ·to help
h t ·
·
0
·
·
h.
1
·
_ directot:is .to bringing tests that· H.E.0.P. students who:
·
lack w a is gomg n..
.
· igh anc!
ow blood sugar,
· · ·11 h I ·
t
l · te· th
f
t
hea· Ith i·nsura-·n· ce.and the m· eans
Aside from Rees' unproductive coronaries, diabetes, blindness,
·· WI
_e_p
O
e~a ua · e u ure
. -
.
price hearings, the. federal and tooth decay. CHAMP has
·1
-
.· . .
incoming freshman students, and to purchase medications_ when . government has been doing very _ advocated a boycott of sugar,
to detect their deficiencies so that needed,»
"they can be better directed into a
little about the sugar situation.
replacing
H
with
fruits,
· curriculum that. would· be·· more
i
comfortable< and beneficial
·
to .
I
them. Marinaro also hope~
·
to · '
~
"initiate a pre ; - college type of
I
..
refresher .course .curricultiniain
f·
·order · to- get the<freshmari"'
~-
students · working on a college
I
:.r*~:r.:.~·~=;!~
@!,
~
·
each students firSt
year
in· the
J.! ... •·
program.
i•
He added,
."I
would
i'!.
select ·those ·courses that each
if
student. needs the most, before a
i
student could dive head first into
•·
. · a
concentration which may later
pfove to be too difficult'' __ · :
;:..
~
: / :Mtiliriaro",. together: with ·the
~.•··
ri"ew .· H.E.0.P. Academic.< Coun> ··
/1:. .
selof, Jackie Curtis, believes that
/
i,._-
a very ,powerfultool tha(wilf be~
used. this year to help program
~
students:- -are·.
the:··-various
su~
portive services within the
program itself. Ms, Curtis said,
··,ve will "re ~-evaluate the Big
Brother
Sister tutoring
· program, that the H.E.0.P, office.
,:uns; an_d_ make- the necessary
• '~hanges·needed .. We plan to begin
various workshops that
will
assist the. peer
~
counselors· in
better understanding the needs of
those students they are to tutor,
and to better orient them with the
· essential basic!: they will- require
in order to function within the
·_ program. She also said, "the
tutorialprogram is an immediate
necessity that will aleviate many
of the academic uncei:-tanties·that ·
· our students face."
· · ·
• .The supportive services will
also . be · conducted to help the
H.K0.P. Green Haven students
··at Marist. .Ms. Curtis.said, ''we
have ·a counselor at present from
the ~ssociated Colleges of the
.. Mid -~ Hudson. Area, Louis .
Howard, who· serves as
··a·
liason
for the Green Haven students and
the Marist cqmmunity." .. .
There are ·
9
Green Haven -
Marist students enrolled within
the R.E.0.p; program at present.
Ms. Curtis said, "Many are in-
vegetables, and moderate use of
honey.
Elinor Gueggenheim, New
York commissioner for consumer
affairs, said she normally does
not urge boycotts. "But in this
case, I honestly think - for health
reasons and cost - we need to
boycott the purchase of sugar,"
she said.
"I am urging consumers not to
buy sugar, not to buy sweet
drinks, not to buy anything that
contains sugar."
Other groups have entered the
boycott biz strictly to protest
prices. Groups in Denver and
New York have advocated a
sugar boycott to reduce demand
at home and force domestic
prices down. .
MERRY CHRISTMAS,
HAPPY EASTER
Whatever the outcome, even
the most optomistic have not
predicted a break in the sugar
situation until next October,
when the North American sugar
beet . crop
will
be ready to har-
vest.
If the weather holds.
Candy
canes,
Christmas
cookies, chocolate Easter bun-
nies and other delights will put a
historic dent in consumer wallets
by then - as distasteful as that
might
be.
•
volved in the University Year For·'
. Actiori,Program this semester."
She· also said, "they are . very
successful students, and we are
expecting
:tc;,
have
-4
more
students from Green Haven in the
In the time.it takes to drive
yo!,lrfriend llome,you could save
his life.
·
· · ·
·
for killing young people are most
'DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT.
Y* -
-
-
7I
often other young people.
I
BOX
2
.
345
_
·
• Take ten minutes. Or twenty.
_ program by next semester.». ~ue
added, !•a·n example. ofttie
- potential of these nori-traditional
students from,-,Green Haven is,
-:Gerald Hooks; a Marist senior
-who
was the first Green Hayen - · .
· Marist_ student :
to:
enter. this
college,•aild th~.first
to
graduate·
-this:coming spring." · .. :'/. .
·
: <
'Both Molinaro and Curtis: have · ·
· : be'er(: ·working towards ;:the
:.·,
:··:·•·--::.
·
··
..
"
• . •
·,••··:..··
·
,
. . . If your friend's been drinking
too much, he shouldn't be driving;
·
The automobile crash is the ·
number on~ cause of death of people
your age. Andthe ironic.thing is
th_aHhe drunkdrivers responsible
Or an hour. Drive your friend
I
ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852
I
home. That's all.
If
you can't do
I
I want to save a friend's life.
I
that, call a cab. Or let him sleep
I
Tell me ~hat el~e I can do.
I
on your couch.
·
My
name 1s _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
,
We're not.asking you to be
I
I
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
a doctor or a cop. Just a friend. .
I
I
. City _ _ _ _ _
State _ _ _
Zip __
-
·• .
.
·.
.
_L _ _ _ _ _ - _ _ _ _ _ _
_j
, .
.,,....
. .• .
·
·
•VOUlltlllGIIWAYSAFETYADVISOKYCO\tMffl"EE
: \ " " ~
IFYOU LRA'FRIENDC DRIVE DRUNK,YOU'RE NO FRIEND.
{fl)
.
.,..,'1,_(1111
)
I
.,
DECEMBER 12, 1974
•
·
Hoopster_S
·
·
Win
·
·3
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
.'
I
i
I
! .
'
13.10.1
13.10.2
13.10.3
13.10.4
13.10.5
13.10.6
13.10.7
13.10.8
·· - DECEMBER 12, 1974.·
/(J9u1lcil
/".f6-;VOte-.
--• Qi.
Agreem~nt
1
. ' . :
'
•
• •
. •
•
•
-
'
~
,
:py
Til!l DeBaJn.:- '.
.·
.
-
Campus, Life· ·wilf assj_st in, thi; :
_ .. · . - <: , .:"
.
.: .,
. ·· ..
c: ......
:matter:· After: the :mid - term ·
. _Jhe')Jtterh·()~~~
-
". C()\frH~il is-,
:
point,
:.the .
remaining occupant
d_r~wing up a:ho1,1sirtij·;~grefment : wil~ 9otb'¢ charged superior rates·
f~i: a,ll res1de11Lstuden~ Jc:>r'Fall :,\f<>r,~Jhe- remainder , of that· .
... 1975;:: The putpose?·of ~the\ ;,em~stei:.
-·
... . .
,-
.
agreement is· to. give ooth the
_-
?~fhe third point reads that· the
· -
stti(leqf. arid . the . col!ege
·:.'soP?,~,:;'
coll¢~e -,c~~s~rves : the dght .. to
_.
11:iisal
:
.recourse for pol1~y
_
dealmg-: Jermmate.
-
the
-
·agreement if·. the
>
with gn _
_
; campus. housing: · The i ·. ·norms of
a
house are violated·or
T/
co:t¥n~it ·: will·
.
. · vpfe
_
:
.
Frid~y;, .
0
Jfth1fnorms ofthe college; which-
. :,Decem,b~r'.~)3,on
:
the·;follo\Vmg.•···.are.·found:jnc.the handbook ·are•
·
poin~s}o, be in.
,
t~e: agr~~ment.> . ". yiolatf:!d '.bf.the student..•·.··.•· '. .:,
~
.. :.
lfhe: fi_rSL:p91qt states .
.
that·.·· ,}'hefoui:th point dealswith the
-: :.fr~~lp'nen : and,~ ~QppOlllQr,e~ . ~fe ,f~es>
_
Beginning :with the
·
. fresh- .
.
_
• reqmred/to-'s1gn ya
·
f!,lll_~-Ye~;r 'i/irleri. class.t th_is
.
corning- Sep- ·
•
.
·. : contract Jtw.o :semester[>) \\'.hile •)e!J)ber;.the room reservation fee
.
': ju~ors ~lld:senio~s··wm'o~·give~
\~!II
.be
:$~5:00,
'TheJiability ·fee .
.
" ·:. the :,,
,
op_ti<;>n3p: r~new . their_ ~on° . wiltremam at $50.00., Room·. and ..
,
.
..
. . . .
.
. ..
rr..·
.
>tracts
:Qri
a setqester ·basis;' Also :. : hoard fees
wili be'in accordance -
'
'
..
.Qne~ft~e~e"".('stla~-~lsI~tsupahealthie.t~AGA.
'
. :c:'.
·
~in(!}µd,e~:wouldbe_tlie possibility, '.,,,._ith:::.the. ·.•. annuai. · recom-
.
~.-.
. ·
,
.
·.-Bea
1th~:
n~h-;fi,ii::'~-e-
·n·
'--·'t·
•1···
·
··n·
••,
:
s.
/~e···it· •··' .·
ttc!il~1Irrn!~l
0
f~tlLl:iwiu~~~. itt:!~ons_.wi
th
t~e
Boai<l '
0
!
.. :/·.;~i-
·•✓:·:
,
~¥:.'IZ-r,~.•-•
_
t-: ..
.:!11
_
<
> . •
ri
b
·S:
tr~:ckPric~s forthe
,
·_1a~ijr_-_tWQ
'Jhe
refunct:'poHcy wiii;b
'
i tl~e
-
' ··~ >
·
:- ,...: __ · · · · .:
·
.:·:'-~- ,
1
·
· · •
·
: : : · • •· ~
· -
,.;..
: . . ' ·
> .:;-::i<' • . .
.
ar~:stil_l_9pe1:rfor•Mgottat1on.·The :same as presently.stated'in the
~: )4
cp_.·/7')4 ·
·
:-r;, · "-·
·
.J;J_
:,(ij_'- ·
-• · .:, .. ~-
"
-
.
:.
:
.
reas9II fortbe.opti
.
on ~fc
.
ontfacts .. college ·<:a,talt>grie · with one :ex-
-.0.c.:I.. U..c:I:
E
-
OOu:·
k!:1e~vzc
·
n: ; '
for;~ppercl?§S1:llen:,~as}here~~lt::cep!i?n:3i person.who withdraws
.
.
;; .
. .
:
'
'
, .
•·: '
-
c;; __ -.
.
.ora.comp_rom,ISe_c!>y·the _c9unc1l.:
:
: from .the coUege
for-.
any reason
·
·
· potential
·
spreader <_>f -pacteif? chance lo-react
to
the-inspection Sipe~ Jhe maJopty of freshrrlen. othei- _than academic dismissal .
,,·· _
.
_ -~
_
.
_
.
-- ..
_
. , _.:-~-
..
due.to.the Jae~ o; snee;e~~u~r~;
-
,- wit~out·bei!')g'under the threafof .:and-:sopn~mores live onpa~pps;' h.:!alth, or_le,c1~eofabse!1~-e.befor~
~
·
:
.,
-
-
·
:: . ~--An ·1~~p~ci1on
,
_Qf
,;~~!:)·
-
~~1'.1$1 .-and _th!:!-
.
servm& :ta,~l!'l' 11«:a~ .. ~he,: sh~~ing do~a. tthJIJ.k 1hat,better--
'
y~_e_cqµnc1l ~aw no:n~-~~.1~ g1v~_ng the: t~~,mation-:of-. ~1s (_)r _.her
.
·
-
- .-.:._. ·
.
· _ ·
.
-Coll~g~--
->~
0
.c~~~tei:i,a ...
:.,>
a_pd:
.
. 'Y'?SL,walV_Qf. tn~:~cafE;?teri!1: w~~-: than
1
:75:;·per.
.
'cent:
·
:of::•all-,·coril-;\'tliemJJ}~·seme~ter
.
ontion.-:,-
·
-·
-
· .agr~e_me~~.; the
.
hab1hty fee-will
.
. ··
'. : ' _-
·
.
·
~- .. R_ath~k~!!ar _' :~_by,,
.
}~e .;:;.J:?
_
u~cr e~s ?f!ISC~~t!!?.~e -:_-
" Sll,lli!~9t)3w!ti~J ;:; m.,ei:ctal .. ·ltitchen~.: iO:•, town ,;woul_~
: ·
-;).'fi:~!..~fOf!~-p~mts~ t~s· tl?,at t}!e . _.
qe
_h
_
~lc:1:
l)r
.
-t}lE;
_
'..-.c.~ll~ge:
~
· .
.
:. -.. , -.. :
..
:. · " ·
.
~~
.. ·-... ~,,.,-"".._,_Co.unty,,,._,,,.,,K~.altlj;..~~,.n.a.&tJ1.1:~nt.;;£!otild.:,r.~ql_-
tlie;'.;spoilage{of::..:;be:~closea_:~do.wnW:ilcs'ubjectea::to· •.
:-.;,?i
1
~e~~.,::".;thr:
0
,1;1~~,;:-,~!\!l-::_.q_g!cE;_,,<?fs:
·
t".iJ.1i~.counc;i11s·mv.estigating,-,the -· ·. · -._, ·_
'·
. _r~sultect· m a :shutdown of uotli .. food .. _
;
_--
C •
• '
•
•
~-"
"";.
'·:,.>•",'·
:,,.'.~-~isucn"'idliorougli~iiispecticin~"~~:~
.
- ~
-
a~p~~•Ijfe;·'.:Wifl:
·
·ma}c~: ;eve~y- .;' p:(_)ssibility.: oFa ·.rooril::'.anci:'boafa
.
" .......
· · operation~ last Wed~esgay_ nig~t · -
·
. ·•'.ffie'::;:in§pe~tors /also !\'reco~,~ :-'~Deanficif)Students:::
.
T.fioma'Si :·:~-~f-~r,t_:
_
'if<>.,;;h~!H)r·\f~,cp,r,~ss~-~-
-
, r~missiQri :'.p,rograrrfwher~in~:for- ·
- -
.Thein~p~cUon\wa.~ :COii~u~ted. :qiefid~d.that' a
;
srnhoth~r{,easier'.,;wa'de'":':'#fio:}attend,ed:~the;::coii~: .':pr_~~er~n!!_e!i:J9r, ro9Ili_:, · assi~ll~··· each' renewal·' oft~:
•
four
>···
year:
·
_flCC?rcling .. t~; ~he. stand!3rds
.
Qf:a .
fo'..
cl~a¢.·
:
~Qorcs~a~(;~.e:Oi~fqern,efe'~-fielq/ib~tweenL·CQtlllty · -l
,
!ll~n~. R~~m
_
an~:.dC>r,m spa11~es: agre~ment:,_ thE:re
:\\'.il~.
bf
fQr that
~ew,-Jllore r1g1~healthcodeJo g9
·
,stalled_,_:_i~:.th.e·-kitchen,-;-::'IJ'ie: Jn§peGtQr.s •:and:'Saga ,officials/ :,w!Jl<_
l).~.-.. ·
.
h.onored ,,when_~v~r· ·. year a:"~25,00'reduction.·in room
· ~to ·. ~ffect
·.J
anu~ry
L ·
_Several, evening's plan.:n,ed .. d,innef:\Clf· · wasI;plea.sed, with the '"."outcome;" ... p<>ss,1ble, and;- .the• stu~ent ~s: ··· ~1_1d .board -co~ts, In other words,
. v19latlons . were cited co_ncermng ·•·. baked"chicken hi¼~ tQ
~.e.
thfO:\Jll:
.('W(e learn~d tljatthe Df
pijrtmerit :- ;_.gu~rall~.e;~Pre r<>~m \\'hi Ch'
~~
,IS
If
students .. re11e\\'. _: their: housing
the· cleanlmess Qf lhe, kit
_
clle11
a~
.ou~ due to a. faultJ_n· the .. cookmg--' of
-
Health .can educate as
,
well as, . ass1~n~d under J~e. , .fo.IJ_owi!!~- .. _agreements for· four. years, they
.
... w~Uas t~e·actuatf?O~:care ~n~' J)roc~drire ·which
·
,a~afu· ~i&hY ·erifgrce reg1:1iat1o~i:
.
Th_~y~offei:-~d;.··c.°.n~~tlonr , .. ~:-:: ')} ·•
·
, ::: ,
wm
par _$75:~0}ess __ for room ~,nd.
preparation.
_
liaveJed ,to a spread·.of bactena.,_ to hold semmars and discussions
.
· : In the ey~nt thiat on.e of the, board
!"
their semor year than .
"What. they found w~re a lot. of
.
·. ·
.. Sag~'--employees
C
worl{ed
incist . ~with
.
the
'kitchen staff ·so we ·can· ··: occup~nts vacates a. room b~fore ·. their . freshmi:in year:- -
... , .. -
.. little ... thm~s,". ,·· _expla~~d •· Saga,_ of
w
~dtiesday
0
,night: . a~E},'!Jiut- •·•" p~evei:it :
.
. this from, . ·happenmg. , t'1~!.:. mid ----tei:m. pomt. o~
.
. eith~r .·. ,· The fif!h point
·
covers security;
.. manager·J1m Ladota,> but a l_ot .sday
-
morning
:to
::-corre~t
.
the ,again/'
.
.. :·· ; . ': , ; :. ··, ,::-. ,, -·
:
semeste.i:,
t~e
reIJ!aI!,11ng_'.OC- . The t1se ofpass.keysis permitted··
, .
.
_.of, the_m!'. Co11_nty: •mspect.o_rs: ~l~jillliness
vi,olati_on.~•
::AIL}
-
i•~t \Yf!:dhe. _bes(itrid :toughest. e_upant-w1U.have .. tvre~ ·weeks; to _-·by _a~thorized co_llege personnel · ·
_-c
. ·
called. f~r hght:covers Jo-,b.e _m~: structural:.. change~? must~ , b
_
e:· : iri_sp~ction
·-
~_rveC:seeri'\•: Ladofa'.. fan~
a.
or ac~ept
a .
n~w ~oµs~ng . (hous1~~ a!1d !118m~e~ance s~ff)
. ·.. sta~ed
m
the kt!c~~n ,
_
to, prote~t-~co~pleted.. by -Feb1:~1:yJ.
>
•
, ·
,:~a,id, <<'~nd) i.t · can·· -only/prove
:
... a~s1gnme~t.
.
. .After :·.this . .
t!IP~ ,
he.·.: for · p~r1od1c .. _mspecttons ·. of the.·
, again.st tl1e. po~1bµ1ty . of ·J:>roken ·. _· .. Ladota
felt
·.that· 1t- was· a -very ... beneficial to.::.both . the-;staff· arid
•·.·
·
.~II_ ·
l:>e . charged: super.1Q1:,,· o.c
0
.
rooms. and to clean and - or make
. · glass
·-
:contammatmg
·
the · foo~.· ~oilgh. and
i
strict )rispeciton>.:''I ,':, the :consumers : in -this' case 'the
<
cup!!IlCY rates on
~
:Pr~ -: i:ata repairs. The resi.dence staff has
Th~· ~alad·_bar
· _
was noted as
_
a
:was upset-thatwew~ren'tgiveri a,. students."·,.,;·•
_
' ..
>·
,. :
.
· ,- ,
bas1s,,for.-J~e-~remamqer:·<>f.
'
the: Jhe right to:·use the. pass key
·.
:
·.•
·
,>~ - ·
-;:<;
· ·
·
,;term.orm1titsuch
·
a·ttmeashe
.·
- ·
:·> .·· ·• ·
.
.
?
\~Q~!1:lit~~~
Jcl~~p~~~~"~•-J~•i• ·
.. ·
•
·
·
nnds•,~mnm~.
Th~
mfice·of-•
·Co~tlnued on
page4
· Folt.
·Sen1or:.
-
,/\lft~ek·'-
-._
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
,
'
.
·..
.
'
.
:
.
~
.
~:
•"::· _
_._.' :-: .. <:--·
·
:-·· '.-- : . .
::>_:;\.:- :-~·:::-;,. .. ,: __ :·-_ .. :.:::><
_.:
··::)"7' _'.~'-:..~·--.. -~.:,-: :· ... ·
.
, casino night, concert~ r,affle, :: speak _: at
!.,-
the .:.g'radt'iation. ,
.
.
-
. __ .. .
. .. . . .. . . .
. iµght
.in
t~e :Ra~k~ller ~and or,
0
:cer~iq~j}y'·on Saturday May:.J7, :\
·
:·
,
The Senior.~Executive · Com~ ·movie nights; Theseideas:willbe <1975 in-the eariy ·afternoon;·Johil,; ..
·.mitte~>on/campus'·)s::·~blisy .·:.·pJanned·:pi:}the>fnud\ra,ising-:i
•
P~*ghj)jty;:.(d_ev;elopment'.
•·• prep~riilg:for:senio'r·week: which:-:_conµnittee:in orderto,t~ise _extra·' <director,··win haridle
th~
selection .
. wiUtake. place
in
mid ~: May.1975 ·. ·. money.fc,r senior: week activities:> and. invitation
·
:ofJhtr s~aker; . ·}
·.• acc~rd!nt '.:to ...•• Bo b:;:sa'ill!]lO~;\:{l'ti:e;· a.ctiyitie~,sligge!5ted:'for __ th~,.\
.
:·
I!}
llif
~ven~-tha.t
·
i:i~ne· o_f guest ::.:
·:chairman. ·of. the executive: : weekmdicated by the survey are :--speaker candidates will be able to -. ·
.: :c9inmittee;} The; conirilittee
.:_:.a
_picyuc(iliriner/dance/ coctail
0
\a,tteild
:
.the· ~er~mony~·a··.sp'eaker··.•.
·.
·
•··
,
members·are _Paul': Pifferi,\Jean
·
.· party;_·_boa(ride;:
·
IIJ.a§S,,;hayride :; .will,:be·:; seJE!~teg/'fronf, a:list.
of/· ..
·.··•.Forrestal,·_J•fancy,Fletclier,Jack:~::and:'.clambalcetThe,seiii,or,week·.:.;selecte!f·.C!lames·'..
~
of' .. ,·camptis-·· .
.
·
.
·Gilmartiii'and'
·
James~E:lliot. ·The,: :coinmitte'e;- •wnt· .. ·~a·ndlif:, th(/.facw.tymernbers and students to':,)
·.
'.
~Onuiii~e,._h~~:0:r~e!v:e<i:'ma~y,::c_~e,~ct_i~ri?and.:rilayi~/a.lll,e;:~o/:,l?e,.•.guestspea~er.·~Th~,fac!Jlty,~~-.-·
:
.. 1deas:.for '.seruor ·.week:·and•:·.ac~. : combme.·a·:few of the, activ1ties . .::,me_mbers,:.are.,Br,other:N1lus
•
::-
... tiyities·.tobttheld.froni-seniors:in '::
::Jthe
·seniol'. speak~r icommittee·i-':I;>_onnelly;-' Linus' ,Foy;·Rrederick:,:,
. a survey:taken
:
in :_.early()ctobef .. alori1fwith•Johil·Dwyer;·registrar . ;. Lamb.ert;' ·Xa.vier\ Ryan .... The"'./
.. . . this' year.,,: ; .,: .. -~ ·.·.. _;, :
.
.
·
.: -; ·-,
,<
·~~
; .
and frederick Lariloert/director> stti(lents -
are'.·
J:ean :. .. F'orrestal,' '·
0
: .
,::.
:
.?:·'.F'.r~iµ-'.,this{sticyey/Jhe':,senior:
·
•:.i>f;'.cainpus:life;i,ijavG;slioi:,tened :Brijin·Morris;;E4wa'rd
Kissli,ng;-::·.:
.·.,: ,-:,::.:c1!iss_:'has_','9
_
ecid~cl :to,;&ra~~ate.: th~;list:!lf gu_est_speak~~Jrofu.·,29•\All.:<>f t9e<guest. spea,ke~s,~all1es
t;
, \.\V!.th:
cap~,,}111g•· go~,.~
I~t
th~,.,:::.t~
.7
11a~e~. !le!oE~ ~rrung ,the.llst/ w.~r.e ·
Ja.k~~ •
;fr,01n
.
.
:the;·' .
.
s~ruor, ·•
0
·•• cost of.the we.eks activities- from ·:-:o:ver to· the -board, of <trustees.=:of
:?
smxey'. -The guest speaker. win be: :
,·;i(f:;}J:/:t:~/titi~:(~,rti!ffit~f::;~ti~tl~::!3f~1~~-rf!NtJ.[~Th\Nt::t:_lfJ;/:~t~f.}tft;~~~~2{?.~.{.:!
'
'·: : }.~c~~r~ng
t~~.
~aiP.Jtio~J~~
dim:le! .
.
-s~~I<~rs;wlio:_af~ fresid~~troi;~i<-'.:/~Y-:.~~I1:1;or.:.·:w_i5l1!ng_, to :
P.~~f-/
. : : .·:2;,:·dance location'IS: bemg ;checked ,
:
<,and :.,-Ethel/Kennedy: .. :-The:<otlier,:: ::bc1pate/1DJ orgaru;mg , the' ::ac~- .. ·:·
·.·.· -. ,:_:::,mfo:butidtiiffo}the\limited"'cost
·
~\five\~fre··GoveriioriElect:;:Htighf'.:-tivitiesi~by:;·':helpingi,the;."com~'.,·')
_
· .
,
. . . ~- }pe.r
·coiiple':elecied:6fthcdila
·
ss it
_
··carey;t.{tt.<;'.:Gov:·<Marianne· <.mittees'ismorethan:welcome--:
To<,:
:
.:
· ·. :.• ·,'· .
.
: ·_··.:::µiaf:.•h~:v~Jo·:l?,Ej_µe~d~~ri-:~ariipus~;\Kr;µp,~~-,:~:i~W~lt~r,~:-,qro*
·
kite;' ::~~:-:~:;con~c()i~f;,o~e>:~f:_the., .. -'.
.:
··:, · . : : : 0 '.
:~other--resiilfs,_;,-taken·:,from·
,
the.·,Barbara:-~Walters;·
:
and:;Mictiaeb,executive~•.comrmttee_.:members.:,: .· . •
.
. - ::·
-
·: -: .. ·,/;:stirvey:;lia:ve;shown'.tluitldeas-fcfr-':·Harrington.\The ~:class
twill:
:be
·
;:to1h!ain_P.us; ;:::· ::,
.
:'.:-:~- ,-;, .. :.,..:'~ :,--;:
·
:- __
.> ..
0
-
-
,
•
•
l
C
;<.
"f1;
.
DECEMBER 12, 1974
_Joseph ~olinaro, Director of HEOP.
THE CIRCLE
PAGE2
Gtlvernlllent
.
·
Board
Review
A letter
fi:om
Brian
Morris
working on severalprojects. You
,
continued pressing for the
might not know it
.
but former
completion of the
'
tennis courts.
Attorney General Ramsey Clark Meanwhile our Financial Board
The Student
·
Government spent.a night at Marist. Perhaps
.
was
.
ousily performing its
Executive Board tho'ught it wise our biggest venture
was
to give
.
:traditional function of allocating
to publish some sort
of
semester our support and
:
energies
·
io
the
·
the
25 thousand dollars entrusted
end review
·
of the Student construction of six
·
new tennis
to
··
us. The Financial Board
Government's work. (For your courts. Countless hours went into
supported a group of students
information the Executive Board these
courts
:
The courts stand
interested in selling advertising
consists
·.
of : Brian
,
Morris,
today
/
as a testament
·
·
to the
for
·
the
:
.
Circle
,
The programs
President; Chip Ermish, Vice -
ability of the . student Gov~rn-
:
shou!,d
.
save our
.
treasury two
President;
Tom
· ·
.
·
Walsh, ment to get things done.
It
1S
a
.
thousand dollars
. :
.
.
.
.
.
.
Secretary;
.
and Brian Morgan,· project for which we
.
.
are im-
,
· Recently/Tom Walsh and Chip
Treasurer.)
~ .
·
'.
·
.
mensly proud
.
At the end of ·
,
Ermish
·
·
c
.
anie
·;
ori
>
board. Since
When the new Executive Board August, the Student Government
:
.
their arrivai our w9rk on gaining
·
was elected last
.
May it was sent what we called the Student
signaturesfor repealofthe sales
fortunate that two of its members Government Digest to the homes
.
·
tax on textbo
.
oks has
.
been
!ived in the Poughkeepsie area. I,
·
of over
.
200
Marist students.
compieted.
_
Pete
.
Wilderotter
10
turn, decided to stay and work
As
school resumed"the Student
. -.
·
amassed
·
his
/
org~nizational
at Marist
,
so
~
three out of four
G
.
·
t b
t
·
1
·
·
t
·
b·lir
d
·
·
B ·
F · d
..
Executive' Board
·
members were
overnmen
.
egan o pu
m
o
-
a 1 1es an ran rmg a nen
.
present
.
Reflected
.
in this
•
.
fact
.
operation
·
some of _the ideas
t(? Marist· Day.
;nus
..
St,!_ldent·
·
was our
-,
.
bellef that M
·
·arlS·
·
t
·
i
·
s
·
'
a
·
12
·
developed over the
.
previous
Government
·
pro1ect
.
.
brought.
..
three months .
.
Things somewhat
•
,
almost
40
visitors to
.
our campus
month a year operation, not a
9
.
stalled when two
·
members of our
.
and only time
will
·
tell
:
how ef-'
.
month
·
operation
.
.
The summer
Executive
,
Boardresigned but we
,
.
·
fe~tive it was
.
in recruiting new
.
for ;
ll:S
was
ma
j
nly
.
a tim
.
e for
qu
i
ckly
_
recovered.
,
Myself arid
·
students for
.
'
Marist. By. this
bramsto
.
rming
.
A
·
July Leader-
·,
Brian Morgan stopped people
on
·
.
.
project students began to play a
.
ship Weekend for
:
Marist
'
s
.
big
··
their way to classes as a means of
part in addressing crucial college
organizations
.
(Student
·
·
Govern-
·
communicating with students
.
•
.
problems
:
In another area, 1'4ark
_
·
m~nt,
.
CUB, amt Inter
'.
-
.
·
Ho.use
·
We tried to inake extensiv
·
e use
·
of
,.
Plamondofi: investigated
·.
·
severaL
0
.
_.
Councd)
•
w~s very productive.
·
the Circle
,-
a'ncl we posted
-
inany
.
maUers in
.
which we were in-
Our own pnvate meetmgs were
.
bulletins throughout the camp
u
s
·
terested
,
For
'
their
:
pa
d
,
·
the
'
also helptu~
.
:
·
.
.
•
·
·
.
.,
•
•
·
·..
in
·
an effoft
.
.
-to be heard
:
We
·
Student'Judiciary Board appears
.
·
By
the end of the summ~r
-
the
carried the
i
dea of
a
State of-the
.
well qrganized :..iso( this
writirig;
Studen~Governmentwas already
·
College Address to
,
fruition
:
We
· .
We feel;:_ too, that relations
.
l)
.
.
·
·.-
•
·
·
·
•.
'.·
.
·
'
· ·
.
· .
, ·
.
._
·
.
.
.
.
between the
' .
adniinistration arid
.
' .
i
..
recto
.
·
r
·
.
Na
_
·
m
.
.
.
ea
.
--
.
·
.
'.
·.
b
.
o
.·
.
•
·
·
.
·
:
.~
:
·
p
.
.
.
·
.
.
r.
·
·.
-
-
o
.
.
:
.
···
·
.
LYri
.
.
·.··•.
:
.
am
.·
_
'..
·
•
·
•
,
.
lt~~~
·
~~t:ii~
a
Gi::t1::n;ic!~1
.
·
-
~
'
progress has
.
been made since
by
Chip
Kennard
.
_
,
·
.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
· .
·
,_
·
~
.
,
..
.
.
lastyear.
-
As ari example of.this
Molinaro said, "I felt there was a
·
objectives for
:
the suc
c
essful
e
.
a~h
.
H.E.O
,
P.
,
.
student
'
a
.
par-
.
•
:.
ne need
.
:
only
.
remember
,
-the
.
The
.
Director of the
·
Higher
•
re:31 need for ~e t~
·
be here .. 1'.he
'
.
?P~rations of
_
H
:
E.O;P,, ~as
.
to -ticular
·
tea~her
.
~¥r
·-
·
have in
·
•·
·
Lbnnis
C!)Urt
project.
1n
·
addition
.
E.dµcational Opportun.ity things l_was do~n~ m Model
.
Cities
brm~_the p~ogram out
:
to :Jhe
.
clas~, t~ keep\the Imes
.
of
_
co~-
-
few
-
people know that this
.
year
.
.
P~ogram at Ma
i;
ist
·
inten.ds
·
to
,
c?vered certam asp~cts of admnustration
,
:
~
faculty a~d
·
<
murucat1on
·
_
open between the there are three students sit~
~
ng on
initiate a more
·
positive
.
iden- d1sadvant.ag
•
J~ pe?PIE:
,:
and
.
I studi::nts
·
of Marist..
,
He
.
said,
H
.
E:0.P .
.
office ~ndJhe facuJty. the College Co -
,
ordinating
tification of his program in an wanted
'
to get !nto 1t a httle l>.1t
.
·'basically 'Yhat I_ w~nted Jo do
:'This type
_
of
_
supp<;>rt
:
could len~ Cotinci_l. This is an
.
important
effort to unite the administration more .. As director
.
of this was tostraighte!1 this program
in !h.e: d
7
tectwµ of a studeJ!ts
..
·
outgrqwth of last years schedule
faculty and students of
fti~
program,. I will be qirectir
fo.
out, There s~ems
:
to be alot of
.
def1c1enc1es, and hopefully
.
will
_
turm
·
oil..
.
.
.
_
_
-_
• .
college with the operations of v?lved with the st:uctents fman-
.
friction
.
and
r
ejection
J
>n
both.
: ..
help us
-
to help
t
h
.
e
• -
student
;'
'
Many
,
lesser
'
problems
:·
have
H
.
E.0
.
P
.
and its members
. ·
c1ally,
academically
and parts, ~he H
,
E
.
O.P
"
st11dents, and
.
l\1olinaro said.
.<
~
.
.·
·
, .:
been add
r
essed
;
Our
;
files
.
are
·
The new director,
·
Joseph
··
socially."
..
·
the re
.
mainderofthe
,
college.
·
·
"We hopeto promote
·
a
clear bulging
..
with
letters
~.nd
.
Molinaro, left his 3 year position
In
.
·
the Circle interview
,
.
Mol~niiro feels,tl)atthe lack oC r~pport _betwe
·
en thestudents and correspondence to any number of
.
·
as Director
cir-
Model Cities
·
in Molinaro
.
expressed his concern
:
genuine communicatiQn
.
between
t~~ir professors
;
he
.
said
,
:
•
i
a Marist people
i
We've acted on
:
Poughkeepsie
;
.
when
,
he
.
had
fo
r
the 87 H.KOi~>,
-
s~ud~~½>
;
an,d
-
bo~np
,
~rti~s ~ould be
,
\1ealed
:
_He
_
~a.jor proplem no\Yi~ th~t f:1}
£_
r
e
problems;no
·
matter how Illinute,
.
,
heard a.bou\the re§igna.tion pf Jh~f
.
h
,
~
~poke,a
_
ll<>ut)li,s a.!Ub1t1ons
.
f.or
.
•
.
·.
sa!~,
•
,.
W.-~
,
)VJll
~a:v~
;
~o lea
.
rn
.
.
t~
r
,
1;, httle or
!1~
com
.
mu111cation, and
•
.
,
when we've see~
.
them, We think
.
.
forinei-
'
Director
,
of ·
·
H
:
E
.
0:P.;
•
his
·
new _Post
·
_
and
·
its
:
potent1a,
t
•
,
know ~
.
ach othe
r;
~
;
pµrpose§
JJ
ere,
.
9,!JJY
,
.
~;mm1m
.
~tg_111ount•
.
~(!t.:.co
,;
:
~;
.
Jl]?
.
t
~
J1_ayg
_
g~1ue<!
.
.
~!P.O$.U
[.
~
qn
;,
Donald Fleeks
;
·.
·
Fleeks
·
a ban-
'
'
constructive power
·-
to
'
help re
_
--
-
both
.
as
,
students and as people.''
oper~t10p
:f
rom
.
both
·
parties
·
in
~ '
campus
,
thought tn~r.e 'us much
, •
doned
:
his office at the beginning buildtheimage
.
oftheprogramto
.
Headqe~V'lwillalwayskeepmy
volyed.11 Molinaro said that he
·
ID()
~
e to
-
be
.:
dOil~
,-
It's
.
sad
:
t~t
of this semester
.
·
'
· ·
· ·
both the H.E.O.P
.
·
students and door open for the students,
,
and
behevesthat this lack of com-
yourelectedStudentGovernment.
When
.
asked
:
why he had
.
'the Mari.st
:
cor_nmunitf
.
.
·
.
-
.
.
.
f~r.any?ne eise
;
who
'.
may wish to
inu~c~ti()_n hurts th~ ~t~dent,and
..
office
·
rs are
.
not.known
-
by
decided to apply for the posi~ioil,
.
.
One of
.
Molmaro's 1mmedmte v1s1t
·
this office.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
that it
15
his
_
responsibility to go ~o
eyeryone.
~
But
--.
here too
·
we've
r
.
·
•
·.
.._
·
.
.
.
·
:
.
-
·
•
.
·
·
When asked how he mtends to
the fac
.
ulty and ask
.
for their moved ahead
.
.
-
J
know that"
I
~
-
~
.
.
~
..
.
~
.
.
.
~
.
.
~
-
~
..
~--
.
~~
i't
br
.
in.g th
.
.
e p~o
-
gram ~u
-_
t-in t
.
.
he
.
op
.
en
.
.
su
·.
pport
_
. a
.
n
.
.
d
.
un
.
der
·
s
·
tan
.
·
ding
•
·
;··
_
.
-
·
.HE_)
·
mys
·
e
· · ..
!f ·
.
h
.
.
av
.
_
e
_
.
;.i
..
h
.
a
:
·
d
·.
·_
. s
_
e
.
.
v
.
.
eral
.
o
_
p
_
-
· .
.
'
·
.
·
·
_-
-
·
,.
·
.
c
.
'
,.
·
•
_ .·
·
'
•·
.
· ·
. ,
~
·
·
1
agam, Mohnaro s~1d,
"
we
.
want also
.
said,
.
'.
'I am not
·
aqvocatmg po.rtunJbes to address
,
large
ACE
·.
,
L
·
1Q
·
u·
·oR·&
..
.
.
to arrange an appOll}tl!lent.to see that these studimts be set -aside crowds.
_
.
.
_
·
:
•
·
-
·
· ·
.
·
.
~
.
.
·
·
.
·
all the
_
heads of the va~ious
·
f~om the other~
in
any ~ay;
.
~tit
.
.
c
This shortsuin~ryctoes
.
not
.
.
.. .
.
·
. . ·
.
.
_
·
· ·
.
JI.
academic
depart~ents
on rather that the facul
.
ty recogmze represent thetotal picture. We've.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
,
ff,
campus to let them know who we
the situations
·
as they
.
are;''
:.
:
spent many hours in the
.
office.
~
·
WINE . STOR
..
E
I
are,. and to pr~sen
.
~
our
progra
.
m
. .
A~ th
.
.
e direc~or
.
of
_
.
the prog
__
r
.
am,
w
_
e•
.
.
ve tr
.
ie~
-
to
_
·
.
be
·
inform
__
.
ed
011
all
_
ff,
.
.
.
.
to them. We mtend_to let them MoJm~ro said he feels "an college matters
,
so as
·
to
,
com-
!
.
·
know o:ur problems and what we
:
o~l!&ation and a large
<
resp~n-
petently
,-
represent
·
you. In
.
Dom
.
in ick
C
O
ns tan tin
o,
Prop.
1
.
wo.
~
.
.
Id bke to have
.
them doJ
.
9
.
h
.
el
.
p s
.
1
·
..
b
.
1ht
.
y
to
.
.
.
~he
.
st
.
.
ude
.
nts
.
.
ti
!:fe
_
s
.
aid
.
•
.·
·
gener
.
al,
.
it
.
.
has
·
b
··
een a product
.
ive
·
us m our efforts for re •
,
con-
"ILI brmg a person mto the semester. Nevertheless there is
I
.
.·
.
structihg
.
many
·
of the com-
program, then
.J
have to. make
·
much more to be
. ·
done
.
We
··
''THE
_
NAR~
.
OW
.
ST
·
-
OR
.
E
·
~
.
ponents ofthe program."
·
·
·
sure they
_
understand whatthe
-
promise
·
you ihat when
:
school
-
.
«
·
One idea that Molinaro men-
prqgrami~allabout,andinturrirresumes
:
in
,
January we willbe
.
.
3P.
·w
·
.
ITH
.
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·.
WIDE
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the
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must make
·
·
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sure
.
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at each ablefo
.
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~ar101;1~ depart~ents . assistance
.
c
·
.
·
·
d
.
·
7
•
.
:
and
:
hopes _for
,
.
the spring
,
;
.
·
.
.
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.
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A
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on
page
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semester.
·
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St Ph
..
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LOOKING
.
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·
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·
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STREAKING, FROSTING .
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.
CALL 454-9239
for
yc,ur
-
appointment no
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·
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· · ·
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Capitol Ba~ery)
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-
DECEMBER 12, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGE 3
Suicide
Seen
·
As
Threat
To College
Students
By Paul Feroe
(CPS) - "I take it that no man
is eaucated who has never dallied
with the thought of suicide." -
William James
Historically, there
is
no ab-
solute position, Stoics and Nazis
idealized it, Camus elevated it
to
a
philosophy. Yet throughout the
Middle Ages; English practice
included dragging the bodies
through the street, hanging them
upside-down for public view and
impaling them on stakes at public
crossroads.
,
Suicide. The causes are
• Higher standards of entry are
{!lore likely to lead to selection of
£he mentally unstable." At all
.
colleges it is the better students
who are more prone to suicide. A
1966 study discovered that
"students who committed suicide
had a higher grade point average
(3.18 as opposed to 2.50) and a
greater proportion of them had
won scholastic awarcls.".
fears, disease - the list
is
endless.
The safest conclusion
is
that
suicide
results
·
from
a
multiplicity
of
reasons, a sad
combination
·
of contributing
events.
One of the current explanations
for suicide
is
stimuli overload -
simply beirig faced with too many
decisions,
too
many choices and
too many expectations.
,.
comple~, tl1e·statistics confusing,·
L
..
.
d
. ·
R
·
.
}
,
p •
k
.
d
and the analysis muddy, but the
ea
.
.
··
·. .
O
es
.
·
IC
e
..
•
fac~
_
remains
·
th~t suicide is a
The study found that students
were never secure despite their
high
grades:
"Charac-
teristically, they were filled with
doubts of their inadequacy,
dissatisfied with their gr.ades and
despondent over their general
academic aptitude
.
"
_
Dr. Ari Kiev, head of the New
York Psychiatric Clinic, has
suggested that the stimuli
. overload is an acutely important
problem
today
because
·•traditional mechanisms like
religion and customs -
which
served to screen out the stimuli -
have been lost and the individual
has no framework within which
to make choices."
-
·
·
-.
.
.
-
. ·.
.
,
maJor and
·
continual threat to
·
..
.
.
·
·
·
thousands of college students.
Why does it happen? Freud
·
attributed it to the death instinct;
for Jung it was expression of
longing
·
for
rebirth
and
sociologist Emile Durkheim saw
it as a
result of social
deprivation. Loneliness, sexual
A
·
1
·
•
·
·
·
1
·
.
p
·
·
..
d·
.
•
By most
·
estimates 10,000
·
·
1
·
c~e
-.
·
n -
.
ro U
·
CtIO
·
·n
students
·
·
will
make serious
·
.
·
.
·
.
· .
·
·
-
.
.
suicide attempts this year and of
Paradoxically, Dr. Kiev has
pointed out, suicide can seem a
Continued on page
8
those
·
,
·
1000
will
succeed.
shows presentation; this coming Nationally this compares to
April 9
~
13.
.
.·
.
25,000-50,000 annual
.
suicides,
.
a
This years Children Theatre
·
Directed by
Llsa
Mccarroll, figure encompassing
·
all
ages,
production is Lewis
G.
Carrol's Bob Lyncl}_ will be doing musical sexes; races and·professions.
·
"Alice :In Wonderlimd."
.
With 45
direction with Frank D'eKoskie as
Two recent studies have in-
characters,
15
of them
·,
major
.
producer. Th
·
e
·
,
cast
will
include: dicated that students are more
roles, this
,
year's
·
p
r
esentation Patricia O'Leary as Alice, Beth
·
suicidal than non-students - up to
will be the largest
.
in Children Marsh as the White Rabbit, 50 percent more than their non-
.
Theatre
·
history;
.
'
-~-
.
.
'
Danny Edgecomb as the March academic peers. In addition
·
·
Auditions were field December Hare, Dena Kenny
·
as the Q
'
ueen, several studies have shown that
3 - 5;·exhib(ting anapproximate. Jim Browning
.
as Humpty suiddes
'
··
at
high-status,.
turn
·
out of
,60
peopl~ .
.
Parts Dumpty, Chris Leffert as
·
the prestigious schools
'
are much ·
assigned, . practice
will
·
begin King, Llnda Sofio
-
as
.Tweedle
greater than at other schools.
You
CAN NAVE
CONFIDENCE
WHEN Yc1fl"
CA,
.
/IIS"ll~ANCE
l'~N.J
FlloM MARIHAiL
/STERLIN,!
·
shorpy
in
·
prepa~ation
for-
•
the Dee, Beth Edwards as· Tweedle
·
A 1961 study reported a suicide
Dum; Dayid
·
Wenz as
_
the Blue rate
.
of 15 per 100,900 at Harvard
Caterpillar; Winnie Saitta as -the
.
and 14 per 100,000 at Yale
·
- well
Cheschire Cat, Elizabeth Waters above the 7-10 per 100,000 national
as the Dutchess, Tommy Sales as average
for
the same age group .
·
,
_
_
.
.
HYDE
PARK
. ·
·
ARMY-NAVY
STORE
.
,
.ROUTE
..
i
.-:i:?~,
,:
;;_
NE-xr
l:
'hr
< .-·
·:
o
·
LSCOUNT BEER
STORE
·
10%
DISCOUNT
WITH
-
;HIS
.
.
AD UNTIL 12/19/74
_____________
__,
._
the Walrus, Nancy-Thomas as the
Similar studies in England
Carpenter, Fred Natoli as Dodo,
have also indicated a high suicide
Suzanne
.
Isabella as/ the Lory,
rate at the
·
more prestigious
..
Kathy Loffio as the Eaglet and
·
universities
:
•
~
•
Brez as the Mad Hatter.
~-
.
The
-'
question that has
,
never
'.
The first n~aq
.
:· through_
.
will
-been
fully answered
:
is:
do
.
take
.
place
•
'.fhursday;
;
December
-
,
colfoges
·'
'.·
·,··
accept
'
,
.
,.:
·peopl~
12;
-:
at 7:30
)n
r6oilF268
'
of
·
tlie' predisposed to suicide
of
does the
Cal,llpus
,
Center
:
--
fyliss McCarroll
·.
college environment itself create
welcomes anyone
·
still interested
-
.
the desire?
MARSHALL
& STERLING, INC.
- Since is6~ -
.
PROFESS\ONAL \NSURANCE CENiERS
:_---;
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, .
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in"{?~rticipating in the prodtic,tion,
A 1959
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:
to
-
attend.
-
.
'
·
-
·.
_
_
··
~
-
____
...., ____
.
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'
i
.-
'
'
..
,.
I
:
Dt:Ct-:.'t\BER 12,
1974
THE
CIRCLE
PAGE4
• CIRCLE
letters
·
·
To The Editors
.,
.
,
.
Chu~h at Highgate. The bishop
.
up the Houses of Parll.ament - on
/.,~'(
'J•✓
..
-
•
l
....
More Notes
as well as the vicar and deacons
5
November. Oxford,
,
which I
1-----V-O_L_U_M_E-,4-M-ar-lst_C_o_lleg-e,~P-o-ug_h_k_ee_ps
__
le-,N-.-Y-.--.-----1
·
were
.
featured in ~his mass
visited today, exemplifies this
1------------------------1;
From
Abroad
celabrating the 49th anniversary
mixture
.
of age and
.vividness
in-
.
.
•
-
of the Saint Augustine Church.
the
>
educational institutions
- ·
-
'lb
M ·
t
Coll
·
cm
Dear Man·st students, faculty, The vestments
·
worn by
.
·
these
-
moot
·
of which assumed their
e
.
ans
ege
. CLE
is_
the weekly
.
newspaper of the students
·
d'
1 g thi
.
·
c tr
·
·
t
·
·
a
·
·
··
d
f M ---" C ll
nd
blis ed
thr
and adm;.,;.,trators,
c
·
elebrants were
.
very
.
elaborate
me ieva
O
.
s. uc ure
.
roun
o
.
au.:.~
o eg_e
a
_is
pu
_
h
oughout
_
the schoo
.
1
.
year ex-
.. ...,
th 13th
t
till
f
t·
elusive of vacation periods by the Southern Dutchess News Agency,
In the past few.weeks since my and
.·
colorful: The
·
elaborate
·
e
cen ury_- s
·
unc ion
Wappingers, New York.
. ·
.
·
·
· ·
·.
·
··
last letter, l have indeed had a reception following this service
and serve the younger generation.
very busy. schedule
~
.
con~
:
featured many various types of
of students today, .Lguess
.
that
Co-Editors
Lyn Osborne and Gregory Conocchioli
i:.:entrating
·
on
·
essays; readings, . delica'cies and
.
sweets.
these
-
same values could
be
seeif
'
Associate Editor
_
.
Irene Ross
and the normal elements of
.
:
My experiences
.
at various
in _the
'..
c<>lleges
·.
~t_:: ~aiI!bridge
Layout Editor
Tim
DeBawi
study.
The
-·
"
courses
and other religious
·
services at the
whiclf! int
_
e1ld,
.
t
0
:"~i~
~
~ tne
:
nea~
Pho~ography~ditor.
·
··
DavePristash
professors
-
of my study
·
abtoad SwissCottageChape_l;inaddition
.
·
futu~e;
·
· ·
/·
'>
'
.
-
.
.
;.,
·
;.: .
;
..
,
Staff: Jerry Profita, Rich Burke, Maureen
.
Dennigan, Chip
Kennard, Dave Kazdan, Julie Schott, Donna Corrado, Eleanor
Bert, Gary Norman, Earnest A. Royal, Debbie
.
Nykiel, Cathie
Russo, Karen Tully, Rich Stevens.- Fr. Leo Gallant, John
·
Tkach;
Lin~a Franco, Jim Kennedy, Tom McTernan
.
Terry_stoutenboro,
Jamee Colleran, Pete Provost; Bob Baulch, Brian Morgan, Bob
l'felson,
·Rhoda
·.
Crispell, Al A~olphi, Bill Russo 4 and
•Frank
Schiavi.
· ·
include:
.
History of
-
Political to the Saint Augustine Church,
·
l'lie oth~r Slg~ts:w~ch
_I
:
have
·'-
'
-
Thought
taught
.
by
E:M. lead me to believe thatthe-British . had the ~p~ortumty to seeu1dude
Vallance; Political Behaviour tiave
·
a
strong tendency to
.
value~
.
•
.
theNaJional
·
,
qall~ry Muse~
.
at
taught by J .A. Eva
_
ns; Economic
.
the past as well as holding
a
great
.
,,
:
-
Trata
.
lgar Squ.ar:~• Jhe
:
~rit1s~
Principles (III, IV)
.
taught by
.
and everlasting respect for their
;_.:
Museum
,
:
sa"'
,
'~
Magna
_
Carta
.
R.J. Allard· and
·
International institutions. These
.
tendencies
-
eap~rs and Rosetta Ston.e
,
- the
Political
.
ai;tory
'
from
-_
Late 19th· could
,
b¢ exempHed
.
.
in both the
; /
Postal Tow~r,
·
,
.
~lJd the Mayo:-'s
Century
·
-
taught by· Professor
_retention
. of
.
several Latin
.
·•
Monun;ient as
.
:
~~!_La~, the
_,
Lor_~·-
Leslie. Most of.these coursei;'are phrases and hyriles,
,
and
O
at the
·
Mayors S
_
how
:
i!1·
:
whi
_
ch
c
a
_
ne~
taught
.
in
.
.
·
an
.
_ East L<ifidon
.
•
Saint Augus~ine ~hur~h service -
,
:.
mar.or
.
for
.
t~~
.
ci
_
ty _of ½>
~
n~on
1:5
.
"c'
..
BusinessManager
.
_
.
GregWelsh
.
.
ouildi.J)g
.
which used
:
to be a
_
dog the emphasis
.
on the
_
1mportance
,:,
d~ig
_
nated
.
._Ip_ad~ibon, I
.
.
hf!y~
_ _
A_d_ve_rt_IS_.
·
_m_g_M_a_n_ag_e_r_
.
_ _ _ _
..
_ _ _ _ _
.
_T_o_m_M
__
c_D_o_n_al_d_
.
...... biscuiffactoty.; Marist isn't even
.
.
of the church institution as_
,
~X:'
VISitedG:e~nwich -
r
O_bserva~ory
·
that bad!
_
,
_,...
,
.
.
_
.
pressed
iri
the homily
;
In addibo11
-
.and _
_
Pnm~
.
-
~~ridian
.\
L~!)e_,
. Despite an :this
•
work, I have
·
to
·
the re}igious sector,
..
this
.
:~
N_a t!onat
•
ryt~ntm~l?.:J\1.p§ellm,
Editorials
-
still ma11aged
·
tofind
.
tin1
.
e·to· do'
•
Jogging
.
for th
_
e pc1st;
..
•
in_British
·
,
;
Royal--.N'avat
,
C91lege,
.
a_n_~
/
~he
.
some
·,
..
•
sightseeing;
-
-
·
touring,
_
values
·
, cc1n be
.viewed
in both the ·
: ,
Cu!ty Sllark
,
~
,
an~ I-Ias~111~s
-
'
(er
.·
conversing/and obserying. From
·
-
political and educational iri-
reso~t on the
_
E~gh~l_l Ctian.n~l);
:
.
these experiences, I believe
that ~titution:s.
However, the
r~ally
_
Hastmg~
:
Cast~e, Samt
.
Clernert~
.
.
there are severalge11eralizatioris
:
great
·
~
thing
·
abo,ut these• in~
;
Cave, the Eci
_
st
,
anct,
.,
~est
:
l:IiYs,
which I
.
could make abo
_
ut
.
the
'
'
s~itutiQ.ris'.is ;that
;
>
ct,espite their
·.
and: the}~ow~
,
Centftli
·
as
-
~~~lc1s
.
·
.
.
.
Food
Service
·British
.
people,'. For
:
·
.
one;
.
the
.
aging,
·
«-!heiI"
vivi
_
t;lness
·
ll_a,s.
,ktipt
..
i
seemg
.
se~er~l:, ..
•
plars
.
a
:
.~.
British
,
certainly treat. their
••
·
them in stepwithtoday's
_
mode of
·
_Shakespear
.
e,s
·
.
·.
;-M!Jc
.
h
,,-:;.
i\do
.
.
historicai:
.
figures
,
with
:
a
.
grea{
C'
Hving.
:
:
For
.
exampJe,
·,
th.e vivid~
:,
.
Abo,uth
:'
I'J()thm~t!;c;a
_
nd
:;:
!.~
~~~
_
(!S
-
..
de~1lofiespect·:a as I iinm.ediately
.
.
ness ofthe
:
.Hol!l?es
.
of'_Parl!anient
:·
:
ChqstSup~rs~ri
.
9ver}h~
:
past
:
...
•
..
·
· .
·
.
,
concluded
from
1ust
;
visiti~gtlie
.
:.
·
can
·
. ·::
'_
be
'
v.ie~eg
:
_
:
ih,
.
,
_
;
the
.,
r_e~•(
we~~s.
J
:
h.~Ve}~~s_o
,
h~t;l
}
lle
·
,-
·
-
-
Westmjnster Abbey
:
an.d
·
viewing
·
Pa
_
rliaineritary
:.
debates
:
_;"'
'
9ft¢n
:~
opportt1mt):'
,
'
J9
·
,
a.rn~e
,
.
\Vl!~
::.':.
a
<
·
..
its great
-
halls under'which lay
·
acute,)oud, hi.up..ou'rous,and even
,::2-
Persor1. bY.
,:
~q~
:
11all}~
-
of
·
Jam
_
es
_
Last Wednesday, inspectors from the Dutchesi County Health
.·
·
.
ttie
bodies
•
of sucb-gr:eat
.
figur~s
·
chpdish,
·
()f:course, on~ could see
.
farn
..
·~
..
~
J~r
'.
1tish resrd~ri
.
t
_
stuqellt_<
..
,
.
Department made' a
.
routine
.
inspection of the ca£ eteria, kitchen
as
~
.
w
inston
.
.
·
·
•
ch u
'
rc hill,
,
.·
AtJ ee the
•
trying· aspeds
.
of ~his po}itical
:
.
: .
C>f
•.
N ~therhall House
:~
:
ai:>c,ut)he,
. . :
.
.
.
·
and_ratskellar:
•
Because of
the
things
.
they
.
fot1nd,
_
SAGA was
:
Stevenson;
·.
Lord
•
.
Salisbury,
·/
jiistifotj911
.
just by)oi>kijig'at
:·
the
_
.
or~glnS
f
Qf
:
>
-
the
c
\
1ip
:
er1c,!r,i
:
',:
0
•·:
advised to ~o_luntarily
·
c1ose its kitchen- in order to correct sorrie
Thomas
·· ..
.
Hardy;
.. ,
:
Rober.t
·
<
beaµtifiIIrndiance oHhej~old a11d
···
ReJ?lut1Qn
:
an
_
q
·
wh<>p:mse.~
,
ll tlle
.,
·
,
.
.
,
·
of the_ cond1tio
_
ns anc.I procedures. Among th~ areas of conc~rn
.
.
Browning; and Chai;-les
~
Dicke1k
.'.:.
green
·
·
ugh
.
L refle
_
cting
-
:
oJf the
·
,
Bnt~sh o~
:
.the
,
Alller1~a11S
>
4.
·:
~rq
>
were improper handling of some food, servmg
_
of food at 1m-
·
Seconqly,
,
one
•can
-
say that
.
the_
;
Hou~es
:
,
of
0
Par
.
liam~ht
>
af
·
11ight.
: ,
Sll_ff
y9u~knov.
,
~o..y be
'.
wC>u}q
:
~
_
aye
:c,;
proper temperatures, and cleanliness.
.
British
.
are certairily
.\
very
.
)'he
:,
vividne·ss
,
:
J
1f
\
the . Br.itisl
k
?~~
_
ued
;
1t
\X
ol! m}l~t·: ~now;
-
,
of-.. ·
.
_
.
We
realize that SAGA has many things to think about. Plan-
,
eiaborate in their ceremonies ~
-
in
.
political
.
fostJtution
·
s,
.I
~-suppose·;
.
.
_
cours_e, th_at
.
th
_
e_·
Bntr~~
.
are
.-
Y
_
~ry
-
: ·\·
: .
mng mea~ for _sQ
1
many people, along with the rising costs of
..
both- the
___
pubHc
~ric!
religio~s
:
_.
_ii
;
ould_ di
,
ffer: f~QITl_
~
the
.
s~,ic
,
;
~1.ubborn
·
m
:
the
_
1~
-
.o~d-
_
ways ..
'.
.::_
.
:
-
·
food certaml~ 1sn t an easy feat
. .
..
·.
.
.
_
,
: ·
.
.
.
sectors.
-
lil the pubhc: sector,Jhis
_
:
Ame
_
r1can
\
Ones
;;
~\•ti1ch seem
.
_
tc,
_
, .
Q
:
ver}h
7
:
-
Shrist~~s
;:
recess(
.I:.
:
_
H!)w~ver, 1t must be
.
emphasized
_
that
..
cleanlu~ess
.
,
•
find
.·
.
.
.
elaborateness
:
can be
·
seen
·
in
•
the
'/
_
have
:
dfoencdeadehed
:
by
the
·
-iack
,
am
_.,
plallilmg
\
~n
.
;
yisitmg
}
:
Paris
,:
.
·
sarutat1on
.
are
.
.
extrem~ly
,.
impoitanLYes, U1e
:~e~lt~,
pepat}
/
~
·.
/.
chajlgirig
:.:
o(lhe
•,
guard
\
aiid
;
iii~
:
of
?
::
publif
'
c<M!~ci~n~e
t,
br()j:iglif
::\
~~n~va;
':·
~p9
,:
j
\~t~r~~r,n/
),
:
~n.d
..
·<
..
m
.
~nt
.
prob.a
_.
~_ly
.
wo
...
',l~
.
d fmd·
.
m
..
_uch
.
?f
.
,
t
.
h
.
e.
S~!Il
.
e
.
.
.
•
~
.
~
-
~
.
-
g
.
-
.if
...
:
!t.
''!_~
,
~.Et
.
,
l
.
.
.
~
.
ic
.
•
',
;'c.
,_
sl).e
.
cti
..
o
.
n
;t
:c:
·
.:c.
er·.·e
···
rri
.
<>~i~
.
l:!
.
.
~
::
::;J.·a.
t
.
•·
.
·
.·.t.·::
f
.
<>
.
!:1h
J\•
b
.
.
Y.!'·
:·.
~
tl;l
.
t:
8 ..
f~
·
J
·
l
...
~;cte
.·
.s
.. ;
.
.
~:
}
>
.
_
f
/
.
.
J
..
oo
.
~
-~
..
,
•.
fO,f.W
.
-
.
·
.
•
a
...
r~
...
.
~fe
J
•
o
..
:•.
·_a .
.
n
.
.
. 2:
·
•
··
·
.
e~J~Y
.
mg
·
·
.·
.
.
_
check
•
rest.aur
_
ants
'.
But· ~e are
·,
~ot
,
speakmg'
''
?
_
f.
:
:E!~~
-
urantl>
_\
:: :;
Buckfogharif:::{•
:
P.a,Iac;e
t
'.::~an~,
):
\Vatefg<c1te::)if~n~
I
case;-_it m~s
.
t
_
h?hd,ay;:1ike~1se; I would !ik~ to·
·
.
where people can choose for :themselves whether
:or~
notJhey
'." ,·
'WhitehalF
'
·
.
.
The
·
·
,;
·elaborate
·
.•
·
·
also
:
be
<
si:ated
~
that the stropg
.
wish
.
.
au
J>f
,
you
;
a
.
n
,
_
el~JOJUlg
..
..
want
,
to
:•
eatthere,Weare
·
speaking
:
-
of
:
a college
-•
foocl seiv1~e
.·
'
{·:
cha
.
racter·
,
~
·
or
· '
the
i
re_ligious
•;~
-
r
.
espe~t;
-
p:r
,
t.he 13ritish,
:
forthei<
;
;
hol
_
i~?Y:,
/
3,
:,
~erp
1
•
.
;
.an
.
d
·
,
jofous
)
where we~ students, have to eat
_
and
.
cleanliriessis
:
ari)inportant
· ..
.
•
'
.
'
cerenionies
c::.
·
was
·
·
brought
,,
forth
•
:
.
poUtical
)
iristitution~,
'
:
could
'
:
.
be
,
_-
Christrr,ia,s
"
':
~~d
~:'
a
,
•,
~?llPY
!:
:·
and
'
.
factor. Also important
is
thaUo.od should be sefye~
,;
at
.
proper
: ·
.
·
•.
mosf
conspicµOusly' to
·
nie
~
by
:
an
}
:
ix.einplified
~
:
~y
~
~
·
the
·
·
a_niiual
·
.
:':
pr
_
osp,1~rc:>us ne:\\' y~a~
<
·
·
.
·
·.
:
:
:
:
;'
,
::-
i
:-
· ..
temperature~-
;
We ~re all
.a'Yare
·
of the effeGts o~ fo~d, spollag~.
Ariglica
-
r(Church service which
r
·
f
¢ele
_
bratio;1 of the
.
execution of
'
· •
< -
.
•
, ·
·
.
..
·
.
.,
1,i~c
.
e~ely,
.
·
0~
the pos1trv~ side, however, ~e CIR;C1:,E
tJ:tin~
that SA9:A
attended
.
at
:
the Saint
.
Augustine.
.
Guy
Fawkes -
.
who
.
tried to. blow
.
.
An
thony'-M.)\Tilger
has ~ken a tµm for the better smce this mspection occurred.
.
·
.
.
. .
.
.
,
,
.
..
·
·
·.
·
.
;
, .
,
•
.
··. ·
. ·.•
.
.
·
The ~fferencein the
.
temper~ture of food i~ noticeable alld the
.
COUNCIL, Continued
fr~m
,
dow11! ~pe
.
co!~ege a~re~s to repair
..
pay
.
_ exti:a
:
-
for
_
.
the
_pnv1l~ge
_
o~
.
servmg of salc!-ds and
:
otMr foods,
-
rather-
.
than- hav:ing
.
the
:
. •
.
:
..
:
·
,
,
:
·
·
a
e'
'.
l
'.·
~he ~!sf11~ction
__
or mdicat~
.
'Y-~en
__
~tayi~~-
_
.
.
·
..
.
.
.
students handle them, is a much better idea.
.
:
.
.. ·
.
·.
.
-.
.
· ·· •
.
. ,
..
.
_
_
P ~
-,
:
::-
·
..
:
~e~i<!~ will !:>
.
~resto~ed ~1thm 24
.
.
The ~1.rth po1~t says ~hat
_
the
..
.
Th~ col}ege and the Health Department are supposed to be
.,
anybme wherrthere
_
1s susp~~10I1,
;
hours.
:
A:f~er
,
_
s1:1
_
ch;. a
·
bme the
_
.
college is
_
not _!'.esponsi
.
ble _f~r
-.:
-
workmg more closely from now on so that the food serviceis
danger, physical ~arm,
:
or
..
con_-
,
c~Jl~~e
.~ll
providl:
.
~lt~rq~~e stolen or
,
~amaged
_
pers
_
onal
aware_ of all health codes. Tht; CIRCLE sincerely hopes that the
tr~band.
.
.
...
.
.
/ .
.
hou~mg 1f school
·
1s
~tin
,
m
· ·
property uhJ,e~s the_ md1vidual
two W).11 work
.
more closely so
.
that these health codes-will be
The
co~ncd recq~mends th
_
at
:
sess1011.
-
-
..
. ,
.
.
.
,.
..
•
can prove neghgence on
_
th~ part
complied with.
·
·
·
·
·
every res1~ent
_
b~. gi~en a Jroilt
,
. :
;
·
~'lle
~
colle~~
_
also proviqes an
.
of tile C?llege:J'he
:
~olleg~ps 11ot
·
_ _ _ _
door
.
){ey m
.
adcl1tion t_o
~:
a
,
room
,.:
mfmnary d1spe11sary for non
.
-
:
·
responsible for any1temsthat the
·
>
.
key. This way;the front doors ca1f
.
prescription drugs an
_
d minor ills .
.
studen~
may.
choseto store during
:
·
.
..
.
_
.
.
.
be locked at stipula
_
ted hours,
·
·
rh·e
_
seventh po
_
int is a policy on
:
the vacatfoii' period .
.
. ·
;
· . ;
.
.
.
_
·
_ ·
.
.
. ·
.
·
·
.
-
• -
•:
.
.
_
Repla<:ement of the fr~nt
_
door
··::
:vac~tion
·
time- f
.
or all
·
th~se
:
not
·_
. The ·tenth c1n~ .el~vent~ p<?i!lts
. .
.
.
.
·
.
·
··
.
-
&lt.4'.~Ldl.~i~i~~•!t-
:
key
will be at a
,
cost oL$5.00
<
.
on a J2 mollth agreement,
.
the
,
read -that cookmg and ~ookmg
~~IV-~~~~-c-t"l!i'~T~~~ti,"'
·
~"'
-
_
~hereas the
.
cost
.
of a
~
~oom key ::rooms
IllUSt
.
oe
·:
vacated
~.
during
-
,~
utensn~
.
are
:
riofpermitt~d
-
ii(the·
•
.
·
·
.
:
·
_
·
··
·"
:_
·
, :
s-
.
·
:
.
·.
_
.
.
:·
,
.
. :
_;
\VillresultJn
.
~h~ i:~placeme.ntof?
,::'._
periods
:.
that
·
sc~ool
.
is not in.
,
,
{'.esidence
halls (state law) unless
.
.
.
·
..
·
.
..
:..
.
.
_
..
:
·
.
-
·
·.
.
·new.lock
to assure better security
,:
s'ession.
:
Tl_le college resery
'
e1>
thEr
.
.
provided
:
for
:
in soine
:·
cases-:
No
:·
_
_
The
-
CIRCLE wishes;everyone a_happy,andhea
_
l ~ o h ~
:.
at
a price of $14.00 to $15.00 to the
.·
,
right to utilize t~e rooms 'f?_r
_
its,
·
pe~
·
wm be allowed
..
in
.
)~e
-
season. But wh,i:t you re celebrat1~g,Jt:,ese next _ . \
1
P
.-
-
•_student._
· -
. .
·
-·
-_
.__
'
,_._
own p1:1rpose dunng these tunes
.
.
residence halls. _
·
-
:
.
.
.
remember that tis the _season
!O
beJ.lUIETas well ~s JOI y .....
,
.-
The sixth p_omt_$~s ~hat the
-:-_
It
must be understood, tha~
·
The_ last
_·
point says
.
tha
_
t all
Exams
AND
snow are 1n the air~ so please be ~ns~derate ~,
1
.
college will provjde
.
.
a bed,
.
anyqne on a 12 month
·
agreement resident students mu~t sign up.-
others so we can all enJQY our ~ell-de~erved
_
va~t10
.
n
d
,
~Y~---.
dresser, closet,- light,
--
mirror,
·
_
.
is guarante
·
ed c!:
.
room·
-
but not for the
.
c.!)llege food
·
service.
··
.
.
•
.
. r
:
: .
.,
.. ·
..
·
.
;
·
·
•
.
_
:
,
·
_:
·.·
..
..
'•
;
/
;
<
.
,->
desk,
·
and
.
c
_
hair.'.
.
·
~n
:
~d~iti~n; ~he
,·
necessa.rily
-
-t~e
:
5c1m_e
·
?ne
_
when
"
Ifanyone
·
:
ha~_any
.
:
questi~ris
:
or
.
•·-
.
.
,
MERRY
.-
CtlRI
_
STMAS
!
·
·
..
· ..
•
· ...
·
:
<
.,
~olleg~
·
.
guara_nte~s
-
1amtori,aL
-
.
school 1S
•
not m
,
sess
_
1on.
·
,
.
..
.
arguments
.
with
:
·
the
.
twelve
.
. .
·
.•
•
·
·
•.
··
.•
..
·
.
· ,:
_
:
•.:~:
:
'
-
:
.
.
i .
·
-
·
>>:
· ·
:
-_
/
services
.
J~1
\
d~anli11e~s
·
.
and
<
.
·
t
The eighth
·
point
·
states
/
that
>
points(please
·
seetheinterhotise
~~~~lVIK"\t--~~9"1_:'sani~aUo~
:
a9d
.
•
.·~fl?<>
,_
essenti~l
; -
~riy_o11e :.:v,'~g-~
_
;iS
..
·.
~o~ng
.
t<r
:
'sta_y
_
.
.
Coun_Gil
,·
feprese11tative
:,
:
.iii
.
::
the:
:
._
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hot
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w,ater.
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dum:ig vacation penoqs; who is .respective
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dorms. ·.
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a
l10ilet break.,-
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THE CIRCLE
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... OKAY,. E~L.LA ..... JUST L.I~
J:
TAUGHT YA,
Now .•... FE.TCH
Ti.I~ FRISBE.E!"
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----
DECEMBER12, 1974
Outlook Looks Up;
Jobs For Grads
by Frank
Schiavi,Jr.
being offered pay $8,500 annually.
The same jobs will- pay $10,520 if
Although
the
country's the student has graduate ex-
. economic situation looks dismal,
perience, work experience or an
the outlook for jobs for college outstanding academic record.
graduates may
be
just a little
According to the commission,
brighter than anticipated.
there are three occupations in the
According to the United States New York area which are con-
Civil Service Commission, there sidered in the
"shortage
will be 5,000 more ]Obs available category".
If
a students' major
with the Federal government field includes phannacy, soil
than were available in the past science or soil conservation he or
two years. This will bring to a she would have better em-
total 23,000 new jobs nationwide. ployment prospects with the
Also, to. the college graduates government.
benefit, two new trends are seen.
Other occupations offered are
First, retirements are running historians, writers, editors and
double from about a year ago public information specialists but
(12.5,000 this year). Second, ex-
there are relatively few available
pansioh is· anticipated in the positions in these areas.
technical, energy and medical
If
anyone is interested in fin-
. fields...
·· ding out the dates for the job
The bulk of the available jobs examinations,
contact
the
are included in the· insm:ance, placement office. The office wi:l
claims; engineering, and ac-
provide the necessary addresses
counting fields. Most of the jobs and information.
Marvin believes that there is ·a · are all assodated with the
.~:
. Dr.
-
JaIJ!esori 1\1:a"rvih of·Vassar ·good deal ofinterest inthis area Hudson Valley Philharmonic .
.
. • .' C<>ll. ege:fac.
·
idty.
·
has.'. or.ganijed a for this: type of m~sic.
. -
· -Dr. Marvin is the director of
''Mas$,,. In P~odii.ction;
Audit!ons Being Held
.. cffamber.
:
choir and orchestra
The. ~easoi:i for a 48 .member Vassar's . chorus and chancel . ··· In_ April ofd975 Poughkeepsie perience for everyone involved.
:
specialiiingin sacred niusicfrom group.as .oppo~ed ~o the usual 16 choir: He has an undergraduate
Ballet Theat~r ~nd th~ Huds?n
Following are the dates and
~--•'
·
th .··
·
· · . · •
.... · .
Th
.
.. •.
to 20 member choirs of the 16th degree in music theory and
vaHey
Philharmomc
w1l! .. times for vocal and dance
,,, : '
.
: k e
·
B~roque?erwd·
.
F ~t_gr:oup, centurf(is that niodern in~ . history; a masters in choral .produce Leonard Bernstein·~ .
.
auditions to be held at the Dut-
">
_n9~_,
-
~s . ape· a
·
es iva, is struinentsproduce a)ound _much conducting and a doctorate in. ·~Mass" in the Hudson Valley chess Theater Dutchess Cof11-
~TiP1:"i~~s~fa.;~· f~~~e~sac~t.Jou~er. than th_e/instrmI1ents of·
.
.. choral music. Hehas alsoserired . with performances on April 19th munity Colleg~ Poughkeepsie
-, •.. :cnrisfarias:-Oratcirio nexp;unday
;
Jh~ Baroq1;1e peno~_
0
an~.therefor as an intermim ccinducfor of the . and 2oth at Poughkeepsie High New York.
'
'
~Dec. lSth at 7:30 p.m:. in ·-the Dr. l\.farv_m /has _1ncr:as~d. the Camerata Chorale and·
·
is a ~chool, April 25 at Ulster Co1;1nty
Saturday, December 14; Youth
.Vassar CoJ}ege Chapel., ·
number .
.-
o. voices .. · propor-
member of the Ranaissance Community College, and Apnl 26 Chorus (teenagers) : 9:30 A.M. to
-·· The ensemble's name. ~eans ·.- tionately. . ·
.... Consort.
. . .
. . . . .
at Suffern HighSchooL"Mass'.' is .11 A:M. and 3 P.M. to 4 P.M.
" festive chapel and refers
·fo
the_ . Dr. Marvm feels that all of his: .. An, oratorio form of. musical a total theater .piece involving Children's Chorus: 11 A.M. to
.. cliurch choirs of Europe In the, _smgers can
·
-be
.called . work is longer than and of larger .three choruses of voices, as well 12:30 P.M. and 4 P.M. to 5 P.M.
: lSth and lGth centuries. Their ''professiona~••·,
:
They, ~ll ha~e' prop9rtions than
a..
cantata and as an ·orchestra, dancers, and Adult Classical Chorus: 1 P.M. to
music wilL be -concerned. with had extensive:; experience m .. grew· out of the'sacfed operas of players.
3 P.M.
_
· .. · .. t
ft
th-
h
ch .·
D
choral singing; The same ~olds. the ·1talia1{ Counter --- . Refor-
1
Tom Adai~
1
the Artistic
Sunday, De"cember 15; Youth
··
·
:~music O i •· · e
_
c .ur ·· ·year;·· r. true for the instrmnentalis~who, ~t~pn.
·
·
Director of Poughkeepsie Ballet Chorus .11 A.M. to 1 P.M .
. ·:·~·~;;1~·s.t"·lii~i~~;,:::st~dents'·,·~~~i~!~~~¥.rl~·•;~f
~;~~~~t;:~;~
., c:
. ,
.
production.
·
· .
·
_On
Sunday, December 15, from
Three. new choru~es ~11 ~e -1 P.M, to 2 P.M. auditions will be
for~ed for t~e pr?duction, m~ held for dancers interested in this
cludmg a Children s Chorus, a exciting theater piece that will
Yout~ Chorus, .. and an Adult involve many types of dance
CJ~ss1ca~ Chorus. Members of the including
classical
ballet,·
C::hlldren s Chorus and Youth modern dance Israeli dance and
:Marist:~tiulents·at-e invi~ed 'to
yeat's
~inners'.we~e
•! •••
winners' GLAMOUR staff and
will
receive
:participat,e : in
GLAMOURinot"because·ofw~at :they -wear. a $500 cash prize.
Magazines Top T.en College·
:
but beca.u.se oLwhatthey do
7 ,
Anyone who is interested in
_Co!}test for)975,
·
y?!Jri~
.
_wo~en
·
~ancer research, ~_rt;journalism,
entering the .search should
from .colleges. c1nd. umversiti~s cho~eography, speech·pathology, . contac.t Shaileen Kopec, Com-
' througho_ut the c<>untry
.
\Vill, student-lobbying:
U
you're in-
muni~ations Director, for -more
· c~mpete
m
GL~()UR's search volved in something_ that's information. Her office is in St.,
for. ten outst~nding students ..
A
meaningful t<> you and others, Peter's-( ext. 278). The deadline
panelofGLAMOUR editors will enter''GLAMOUR's Top Ten for submitting an application to
select the winners on .the basis of· Coilege Contest"
·
GLAMOUR is February 15, 1975.
their· . solid · records
·of
The Top Ten College Winners of
achievement-in academic studies 1975 will · be photographed· by
Choru~ will be given the op- New Orleans Jazz.
'
portumty to take, at no charge,
Singers should come prepared
stage movement and. dance with a short. familiar song. For
-classes to be taught by Tom further information please call
Adair. Participation in "Mass" 889-4989.
'
will be a unique learning ex-
arid~or-·ih
>
exti';¼cµrricular ac- leading New Yorkphotographers
.
.
·
HO~-
'..· tivities .on·· campus or
.
. in the. and. featured in GLAMOUR's' .
.
-
; . _ -
.·.
·
.
• · . .
· .·
.
. .. ~<!O~rn;tJ&~izi_ng·· the·· contest, ·s:~s\h~
0
i~~e~~;~ ~riri~;·
Chris
tlllaS
GLAMOUR pomts out that. last invited.to NewYorkto meet the
·
·
·
0 · ·
,-....
· , ···
· ·· · · ·
.'(j
U 01N SPRFAD
Fern
lflE ME$AGE
_,
...
.
·
CPScENs· - .If· you've been
having·a hard tim
.
e figuring out
what ~o give your favorite fern or
· · coleus for Christmas, look no
·: longer: · ·
· ·
, The.; Funny Forum of In-
·
. dianapolis, Indiana. has . released
:an.
album of music and poetry
designed especially for the house
plant. ·
.....
··
.
·
· ·
· · The LP is ~alled ''Vegetation
· Conversation:·
Music .. and
Thoughts for Things in · Pots;"
and. it was made for "people who
don't have time to·entertain their
lonely· plants,'.' acc~rqing to
manufacturers.
. .
- The liner · notes claim · that
musical . and · poetry selections ·
"provide the plant with the vocal
vermiculite, audio attention, and
musicalm·amire
fo
accelerate its .
· growth. arid ·well-being ·.in .. the
. .· . owner's absence." : ·
. .
·
·
·
.
.
Among the cuts are "l..amentto
- · a Plant;" .''Oh·.the
.
Coleus," and ..
·. '.'No.Matter How Fertile; There's
. ·No
Place
Like
Loam." .
1..
OF LO'JE ... lflE
-LO'JE OF CHRlsr
FOR ALL PEOPLE.
Have you
ever
considered the priesthood as a way
to serve people? The Paulist Fathers
are
a small
communi~y of American priests. Progressive, ~earching.
young and energeti_c. they form a religious family.
A Paulist is a man of the Spirit, a.man of his time.
He rejoices
in
the signs of hope
around
him and
celebrates with the people he serves.
·
Every Paulist is a missionary: in the pulpit,
or
parish
house, on the campus, in the inner-city. He comm uni·
cates with the spoken word, the printed page, and with
contempora_ry'media. His mission is to all of America.
His message is love; the lov~ of Christ for all people.
For more information send for The·Paulist Papers
Write to: Father Don C. Campbell; Room 100
PAULISF
FA1RERS·
415 WEST59TH ST •• NEW YORK.N.Y.10019
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_G_E_6_~-~----------------....;....;,T,;,;,:;HE CIRCLE
Code
99
_DECEMBER 12, 1974
~counseling
.
Experience
On
Thanksgiving Day at home
I;
ripped the lip off. And it suddenly
probably set a record that should let go, no ripping; only slight
As
pressures close in on us, we to do?
go in the books. People have
.bleeding;
and we retuq1ed to the
are affected. But rather than
·see
·
·
The coW1Selor begins by finding ·
choked on chicken bohes, some table and finished the meal.
ourselves as changed, anxious, out
·
just
where we are and
·
by
have had heart attacks, others
So I probably belong to a new
fearful, depressed, we tend to being there with·us - we are no
have dropped the turkey on the
·
minority of one: People who
project these ,feelings onto our longer alone. The
.
coW1Selor is
floor. Not me, I have to be
dif-
.
c
_
lamp
.
their lips
_
with broken
environment; the world becomes willing to participate in our
·
ferent. I boldly took a turkey turkey wings. But
·
what's new? I
more hostile and threatening, understanding of the work and to
wing and as I chewed on it a
.
already belong to a minority:
and consequently deserving of see the
.
reasonableness of our
broken bone clamped my lip and 40,000 priests among 250 million
our
.
more cautious approach.
fears and anxieties.
_
A dialogue
I couldn't remove it.
Americans; a Marist priest, only
People around us react
,
to our can again
. _
be established.
There I was, utterly em-
·
400 in this country; a college War, for the Berrigans, for prison more anxious and withdrawn
J'hrough
this
dialogue our world
·barrassed, with the long wing of a chaplain, a member of a real reform. Practically every other state, confirming
-
for
us
the becomes subject to reality testing
'
21 pound turkey
·
tenaciously minority of which· other
,
priests week I
.
was marching in reality of our position.
and we begin to get perspective
hanging on to my blushing face. say "You can have it, you nut." Poughkeepsie with the students.'
It's ahnost as though we take a again. With,the help and support
For20minutesmyfamily worked Even among Chapla,ins, 1~m When the students became less
.
step sideways out of our true of this new allay we can begin to
feverishly to remove it. I didn't probably uajque
in
the sense that involved and Jes?. demonstrative, stance in life, and everything is
.
face those
.
problems that had
·
want to rip my lip so they worked I say three Masses daily so
_
that I followed suit. But I didn't.rest. I
··experienced
from
-
·
this altered
··
thrown us off track
-
in the first
with tweezers, magnifying glass, students may have easy access to decided
·
to give them -
·
op-
perspective
:
.
Things, .b
.
ecome place. Sometimes these problems
and a glass of Brandy in case I some time set aside to worship portunities to
.
pray and worship rational that wouldn't have been
.
are the result of attitudes carried
passed out.
.
.
.
·
Goel; to fulfill the
.
firs~ Com-
and rediscover God. I haven't from where we
-
stood before
.
'
with us from childhood that are
We decided to go to the hospital mandment to love God wholly for
;..
exactly remained passive. I am Expedences take on a
·
different
shaping
our behavior, and ii
emergency room
.
All this time Himself; to celebrate the
·
fact now fasting a few times a week meaning,
.
friends are riot
.
the becomes import;mtto sort out the
my Dad kept eating. He li,kes his thatthey are fulfilling the second
( that's why I'm not seen
,
in the same
·
.
,
•
.
·
.
-
·
.
·
.
·
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past, Sometiines problems
.
come
·
food warm. warm. My brother -
·
Commandment to love the neigh-
cafeteria as often as I used to be
.
Communication with those
we:
from having to.
deal
with several
·
in - la\;' was about to go to his tool bor (those involved
.
.
in
NFW
) ;
I pray more, believing in that had been dealing
.
:with tends to
.
·
coritradi~tofy mes~ages coming
box to get his
.
cutters so I support, or fasting for the star~ dimension which touches and
·
break
.
down, inhibiting reality at us through various levels
;
of
_
wouldn't have to walk into the
,
ving millions, or Day Care, or heals hearts; and I'm working on
_
testing even further. Objectivity communication., Then_ we
·
need
hospital with that giant wing, but Projects
fo
Poughkeepsie, or an underground project, which and
·
subjectivity merge. as· we not only to _1d~nt1fy
..
~hese
.
·
just an inch or two hanging from TWA,. or betterment
of
.
campus again
-
puts me jn a minority give up dialogue tor ~onologu~ .
.
.
mess~ges,_ b~tto_un~erstand o~r.
the lip. Suddenly I though of the life.); to hear again the story that group, and
·
that is founding
.
a
All of us have experienced this role m
.
.
tbfs; mteract1ve
.
process
.
consequences: The hospital staff God lives in us arid we live in
,
Dignity Cl'Japtei-, for Catholic anxiety and
,
isolation and the
.
The counselor can help
_
because
in hysterics, The Eagle Tribune Him; to give
Him
a
_
half _hour a .
;
Homosexuals
.
who want to Jee}ing that no cine can
:
help, no
-
.
hisinvestmentis
_
no_t in
·
s~aping
making it a first p~ge item. day j~st loving Hin_i.
.
.
_.
.
.
.
remain in the,Ghtirch, despite ~o
'"one
can really understand. Some us to some end" butm freemg us
Maybe·
.
The
·
Poughkeepsie
I
.
•
was
·
much
_ •
~nvolved
m
,.
much misunderstanding, per.:.
·
of
us manage to stuinble through
·
·
·
to firid and be oµrselves
:
.
The goal
·
Journal picking it up._ So I began demonstrations
:
my
·
first two secution and ridicule
:
_
Un-
.
iL iind
,
get
·
back on
,
· :
track, cif counseling,
.
then, unlike most
·
to pull
·
away, not caring if I years here: against the Vietnam fortunately it has to
:
'
be uri°-
somehow, up ahead.
·
·
Others
·
other
·.
experiencesr
.
is
-
:
not
derground -
·
even at
.
.
Marist
.
continue
.
oii
from their
l
altered
,
.
socialization
.
-
.
for all societies
·
.
Coll~ge
._
which is supposed to be
.
frame of reference:
·
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
main fain
.
their own
·
.
ongoing
·
·
GAS[
·
IGHT
·•·.
9
.
Located on Rt.
-
9
Wappinger Falls
Next to
'
A
&
P
MONDAY NIGHT
.
FOOTBALL NIGHT
.
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Fre
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e Hotdogs During Game
·
-TUESDAY
MUG NIGHT
Any Mug Filled For 30c
WEDNESDAY
OLDIES NIGHT ....
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AARDVARK JAM PERFORMANCE
Frne Champagne
·
To
:
All:People
:·
,n
<:·.
.
:
:-
'
.
'50 Garb
Get Screwey - - ~crewdrivers • '. . 50c
.
.
.
.
'
THURSDAY
.
DRINK TILL YOU [)ROWN
.
All The Beer
:
You Can
.
brink:
:
_
:$2.00
_·
FRIDAY
·
Band -
~
(?pen Road
PITCHER NIGHT - - N
Pitcher Of Beer •• $1.25
Pitcher Of Sangria •• $2.00
·
SATURDAY
l.D.
NIGHT
. . . ·,·
.
.
S~ow
Student
1.D
.
.
At The Door
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made Up
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of e!lucated, un~
How <;an talking. help?
.
What· neuros~s - but autonomy
.
and
derstandingp~ople'. Tm probably can a counselor
·
do
that friends freedom,
.sticking out my neck for.ridicule, and relatives have
·
not been able
.
·
>
_
putting my reputation
.
at ·stake;
-
-
.
-
.
-
_
,
---"!' ___________
'!""'"' _____________
...,,;_
but
as
long
.
'
-
as
.
human
Pa.peri for
.
the:Acagemic ci~arterly are
·due by
.
being.;;
.
·
are
.
vfctim·s of .-the
.
.
-
December 20
··
·
·
·
··
·
inhumanity of other
.
human
.
.
They
__
can be submitted to Mary.Snyder
at
.
>
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beirigs,
_
I'll be at their side.
-_
·
·
·
·
·
..
·
~i:egory t.iouse
·
·
·
,
..
.
,.
~
-
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.
.
.
'
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·,
·
..•
·
..
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VIEW FAR
-
MS
.
·,
.
.·
·,
..
·.
.
.
.
.
EQUESTRIAN
·
cENJER
POUGHKEEPSIE; N
,
Y.
IOFF EAST
DORSEY LANfi
.
914-47l,1918
,
._
·
·
OPEN
-
DAILY
.
:
.
.
TILL
·~
9
·
·
·
·.·
·
·•
·
····
.
.
·
·
·
12-s
~b:NDA;'
·
-
:
···
<
¥
¼
.
-
-
AND
½
KEGs
~
~
AVAILABLE
..
·
.
·
. .
.
.
.
.
·
WITH
EQUIPM
·
ENT
·
.
-
• ·
·
ooMESTlC
-
AND
·
IM:PORTED BtER
-
.
.
·
.-
--._
.¥:
.
.
OCTOBERF'EST
,
BIER'lS
.NOW
,
AVAILABLE
:'"
'·
.
...
,
.
.
.
.
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' .
THE CIRCLE
DECEMBER 12. 1974
Soaring Sugar ;Prices Continue To Affect Country
-
.
.
.
.
.
...
by
john
Ghrist .
THE HEALTH AND
WEALTH BOYCOTI
have raised what used to be
a
The company will try making the
nickel candy bar to
20 cents."
gumballs more hollow inside, and
A spokesman for Hershey
if
that doesn't work it will have to
(CP~)--
Christmas
candy and
FOQds;
the home of the .world's go to a sugarless gum.
For now, the most direct action
.other goodies are going to be a lot largest chocolate factory, ad-
Bakers everywhere have been seems to
.
be in the hands of
more scarce - and a lot more
mitted
freely that the consumer hurt right at the holiday season consumers. Groups advocating
expensive, - this year. In addition is getting less chocolate in
his
when their business is heaviest. the boy~ott of sugar have sprung
to the already inflated costs of candy bars - for more money.
Sugar prices have risen too fast up across the country - and not
making,
transporting . and . A chocolate bar that weighed_ to be effectively passed on to the all of them have stressed the
marketing, there has been a
1.26
ounces and sold for
10
cents coPsmner.
economic benefits _of cutting
'growing shortage of both sugar last January now weighs
1.2:
BIGSUGARLEARNS
down on sugar.
and chocolate.
__ :
•,.
.ounces and costs
15
cents. This
FROM BIG QIL
"This latest rip - off is a
Sugar has gone up
300
percent shaving process is. necessary to
blessing in disguise," and Ida
over the cost" of a year ago~- and keep the candy bar price from
But many people have become Honoroff, a major figure in the
. cocoa
beans·
have gone µp the- "going through the roof," the suspicious: In the midst of the California - based Consumer
-same amount over two years ago. Hershey man-insisted.
..growing_ shortage, profits of Health Against Monopolistic
· "Sugar is beyorid belief," said · Leo Leary, president of the sugar refiners began to soar, just Profiteering (CHAMP). "During
one • supermarket .owner in Ford Gum and Machine Com- as oil profits soared duringthe oil the meat boycott consumers
Philadelphia ..
"It
goesup every pany said his firm is struggling to shortage.
·
learned to do without animal
week.-" -The 'President·.
of ·-_
the keep producing giunballs, which
Last we.ck, Albert Rees, protein - learned that vegetable
Wawa
Supermarket chain, ai:e
75
percent sugar.
Chairman of the Council on Wage proteins provide! _them with
. Lester
Broadbelt, agreed.. : · ..
«We experimented with a two - and Price:stability blasted sugar essential protein - and amino
"Sugar reflects itself .
in
an cent vending machine in one companies for not providing acids.
.. awful lot of products,'' Broad_belt town, and to me, it is not the way enough information on :their
"They will now learn that they
noted. <'Two candy: companies to go/' Leary explai.r_led recently. prices. · Rees. complained that don't need refined sugar. Fruit,
figures were not given for the vegetables. and honey can
.
MOLINARO,
Continued_from page
2
profits of all major refiners. provide them with natural
-
· ·
·
·
Unforl;unately, the Council has no sweeteners,'' Honoroff declared
student gets· What .the program problem of sfoi:lent health plans authority to even subpoena such in a recent newsletter.
has_ to .offer,-"
"I don't -believe and insurance. ·Molinaro said,. information and must rely on the
According
to
. CHAMP
that this· has been· happening· in <Cwe · plan to investigate and honesty of the companies in-
researchers, excessive use of
the past!' · ' ' . .
. . · · · ·
hopefully . come up with some volvei:l to get a clear picture of suga_r has been linked with
_
both
· .. Another goal of
-
the. new form of a· health plan ·to help
h t ·
·
0
·
·
h.
1
·
_ directot:is .to bringing tests that· H.E.0.P. students who:
·
lack w a is gomg n..
.
· igh anc!
ow blood sugar,
· · ·11 h I ·
t
l · te· th
f
t
hea· Ith i·nsura-·n· ce.and the m· eans
Aside from Rees' unproductive coronaries, diabetes, blindness,
·· WI
_e_p
O
e~a ua · e u ure
. -
.
price hearings, the. federal and tooth decay. CHAMP has
·1
-
.· . .
incoming freshman students, and to purchase medications_ when . government has been doing very _ advocated a boycott of sugar,
to detect their deficiencies so that needed,»
"they can be better directed into a
little about the sugar situation.
replacing
H
with
fruits,
· curriculum that. would· be·· more
i
comfortable< and beneficial
·
to .
I
them. Marinaro also hope~
·
to · '
~
"initiate a pre ; - college type of
I
..
refresher .course .curricultiniain
f·
·order · to- get the<freshmari"'
~-
students · working on a college
I
:.r*~:r.:.~·~=;!~
@!,
~
·
each students firSt
year
in· the
J.! ... •·
program.
i•
He added,
."I
would
i'!.
select ·those ·courses that each
if
student. needs the most, before a
i
student could dive head first into
•·
. · a
concentration which may later
pfove to be too difficult'' __ · :
;:..
~
: / :Mtiliriaro",. together: with ·the
~.•··
ri"ew .· H.E.0.P. Academic.< Coun> ··
/1:. .
selof, Jackie Curtis, believes that
/
i,._-
a very ,powerfultool tha(wilf be~
used. this year to help program
~
students:- -are·.
the:··-various
su~
portive services within the
program itself. Ms, Curtis said,
··,ve will "re ~-evaluate the Big
Brother
Sister tutoring
· program, that the H.E.0.P, office.
,:uns; an_d_ make- the necessary
• '~hanges·needed .. We plan to begin
various workshops that
will
assist the. peer
~
counselors· in
better understanding the needs of
those students they are to tutor,
and to better orient them with the
· essential basic!: they will- require
in order to function within the
·_ program. She also said, "the
tutorialprogram is an immediate
necessity that will aleviate many
of the academic uncei:-tanties·that ·
· our students face."
· · ·
• .The supportive services will
also . be · conducted to help the
H.K0.P. Green Haven students
··at Marist. .Ms. Curtis.said, ''we
have ·a counselor at present from
the ~ssociated Colleges of the
.. Mid -~ Hudson. Area, Louis .
Howard, who· serves as
··a·
liason
for the Green Haven students and
the Marist cqmmunity." .. .
There are ·
9
Green Haven -
Marist students enrolled within
the R.E.0.p; program at present.
Ms. Curtis said, "Many are in-
vegetables, and moderate use of
honey.
Elinor Gueggenheim, New
York commissioner for consumer
affairs, said she normally does
not urge boycotts. "But in this
case, I honestly think - for health
reasons and cost - we need to
boycott the purchase of sugar,"
she said.
"I am urging consumers not to
buy sugar, not to buy sweet
drinks, not to buy anything that
contains sugar."
Other groups have entered the
boycott biz strictly to protest
prices. Groups in Denver and
New York have advocated a
sugar boycott to reduce demand
at home and force domestic
prices down. .
MERRY CHRISTMAS,
HAPPY EASTER
Whatever the outcome, even
the most optomistic have not
predicted a break in the sugar
situation until next October,
when the North American sugar
beet . crop
will
be ready to har-
vest.
If the weather holds.
Candy
canes,
Christmas
cookies, chocolate Easter bun-
nies and other delights will put a
historic dent in consumer wallets
by then - as distasteful as that
might
be.
•
volved in the University Year For·'
. Actiori,Program this semester."
She· also said, "they are . very
successful students, and we are
expecting
:tc;,
have
-4
more
students from Green Haven in the
In the time.it takes to drive
yo!,lrfriend llome,you could save
his life.
·
· · ·
·
for killing young people are most
'DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT.
Y* -
-
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7I
often other young people.
I
BOX
2
.
345
_
·
• Take ten minutes. Or twenty.
_ program by next semester.». ~ue
added, !•a·n example. ofttie
- potential of these nori-traditional
students from,-,Green Haven is,
-:Gerald Hooks; a Marist senior
-who
was the first Green Hayen - · .
· Marist_ student :
to:
enter. this
college,•aild th~.first
to
graduate·
-this:coming spring." · .. :'/. .
·
: <
'Both Molinaro and Curtis: have · ·
· : be'er(: ·working towards ;:the
:.·,
:··:·•·--::.
·
··
..
"
• . •
·,••··:..··
·
,
. . . If your friend's been drinking
too much, he shouldn't be driving;
·
The automobile crash is the ·
number on~ cause of death of people
your age. Andthe ironic.thing is
th_aHhe drunkdrivers responsible
Or an hour. Drive your friend
I
ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852
I
home. That's all.
If
you can't do
I
I want to save a friend's life.
I
that, call a cab. Or let him sleep
I
Tell me ~hat el~e I can do.
I
on your couch.
·
My
name 1s _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
,
We're not.asking you to be
I
I
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
a doctor or a cop. Just a friend. .
I
I
. City _ _ _ _ _
State _ _ _
Zip __
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_L _ _ _ _ _ - _ _ _ _ _ _
_j
, .
.,,....
. .• .
·
·
•VOUlltlllGIIWAYSAFETYADVISOKYCO\tMffl"EE
: \ " " ~
IFYOU LRA'FRIENDC DRIVE DRUNK,YOU'RE NO FRIEND.
{fl)
.
.,..,'1,_(1111
)
I
.,
DECEMBER 12, 1974
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Hoopster_S
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13.10.1
13.10.2
13.10.3
13.10.4
13.10.5
13.10.6
13.10.7
13.10.8