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The Circle, February 5, 1970

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 12 - February 5, 1970

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RELIGIOUS
Tl'ES
SPUR
DEBATE
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State.
A·id ·;in
Qu.estio~-
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'
I~ th~ last issue of the Circle a news story was'reported con~ernmg
the failure. of . Marist College ·to qualify · for State. aiq'.
In
a. column
· appearing . in . the same . lssue, the co-editor-in~hief
proclaimed his
opinion ·regarding this development and sought .to enlighten the
college community .in terms of its importance and to. place it in
perspective.
'
. ·
--
, . . .
·
.
_ . . : .

. The article, entitled Circular Reasoning, provoked _such w1d~spre~d
. discussion and controversy that the staff has ~een fit t<? ~ontnme its
coverage .. •

, ·
.
· '.,
· .. ·
·· VOLUME6
NUMBER12
MARISTCOLLEGE,POUGHKEE~IE;NEWYORK
12601 · FEBRUARYS,1970
·• A::, this expose .was being readied the.· co~troversy
_,-had.
not _.;... ____________________________________
~----------------
subsided, conflicting viewpoints
were
apparent among the papers'
..
staff as well as the students and faculty .. · ·
·
Co-editor-in-chief)
Stephen - Harrison,. in light 'Of the . current
controversy · in this issue seeks to. defend his. position. Assistant
_News Edito~, Vincent Begley who had been working on a ne,ws story
regarding the religious control issue. tak(:S a· different position.
Brother Frederick Tambert who had voiced, opposition to the article,:
makes his position clear with. a defense of the schools' religious ties.
Prur·
Glennon,
a former Circle staff member,- d_efends Catholic
education but _searches for a _way in which it can ~xist in changing
times.
.
At
stake in the controversy is part of the $24-miUion program
designed 'to·a_id private collegesand uriive~sities. ~a1_1y
of t~e c?llcges
that were reJected had a Roman Catholic assoc1at1on. ReJechon of
the application was made in accordance with the New York State
Constitution, Article XI, Section 3 which prohibits th~ epxenditure :
of state. funds- on ,"any school or in~titution of learning wholly
or
in
part under the-control or direction'of any religious denomination·, or
in which any denominational tenet or doctrine is. taught.''
.
*****
Br.
Fr'ed·
Lambert
As a' member of the Editorial
Board oCour school paper. The
Circle,
Mr: Steve. Harrison"s
trend
toward
consistent
'five trustees and a number of
irresponsib°le
journalism
has
key staff officers a& members of· reached crisis proportion
and
I
the· sponsoring religious order;
can .no longer remain sile~t on
that all students must complete
this issue. True, and gratefully .
six semester hours in courses in
so, it _is one of inalienable rights
religious studies; that the course
in
this
country
to share a
. offerings deal almost exclusively
freedom of the press, .However.
with
Christianity,
and arc
while
runriing
the
risk of
described
in · the catalog as
souri.ding
trite:
freedoi11 does not
probing
' ... the fundamental
c
O
n d
O
ne
n
O
r
war d1,n
t
concepts of the Christian faith
irresponsibility.
l
.think
,it
through intensive study of the
iinportant
for him . to make a
old and New Testament;
and
distinction in the future between
that college-sponsored ·activHies· personal whim and educated and
are ·exclusively Roman Catliolic
informed
opinion.
We arc
-Vincent
Begley
·. in style." • ·
granted by our Constitution the
and sustainect' by the culinary
artistry of
Br:
Brendan Ginnitty
through
several l~ng and hot
summers the Brothers built· the
chapel, . Fontaine
halt: Adrain
building;
the gym, Donnelly
Hall. .
· . • ·
, -
Furth.crmore
'every
Brotlfor
,vho has been edm:ated here
while · taking a full load of
courses ;.ilso .had to ·put in a week
on "'project:· as it was called. to
complete .. the buildings while the
other stutknts- went to class in
buildings built by us.
To
·
get mon· concrete
and
more
-up to date. for those
suspect of• ·proofs of anything
from history, for the the first
dcc,ide or so of our cxistcncL' as
a College the Maris( BrotilL'rS
worked free of charge in order
to keep the tuition low for· the
other students. And this· very
year a sizeable sum is donated
by
the
Marist
BrotltL,rs in
contributed
services to the
College. t-o kc.:p the students
tuitiondown and to defray rising
operational
costs.
This
contribution is somewhere in the
CONTlNUED ON 6
Steve
Harrison
I
was quite aniazed to read
that
Brother
F.·
Lambert
considered my article in the Jan.
29
issue of the CIRCLE,
''A
Very
Catholic·
follcge .. an
"'uninformed position.•· Quite to -
the
contrary
it
was
well
informed
and the conclusions
whicil were· dniwn amazingly
similar
to
those
of 'State
Commissioner
of· Education
Ewald B. Nyquist. In his official
statement as to why Marist did
· not receivo: state aid this year
Mr.
Nyquist
said: " .. .I have
.noted that lite catalog and other
publications
of the college
·· Before
.I
attempt
to clarify
right to publish the latter in
some of the ambiguous attacks,.
professional
.journalism
and
At this. point.
it.
should be
I'll
stick with· some obvious -· anything
less is. cheap and
.-
,J
•.
'evident
to everyone that the :ones .. -Alf--quotes
are from
tawdry
sensation.alism
or
-~·.
·,

. cvidcnn·
a strong
religious
•·om mitt m c n t: ·that
the.
p1:esidcnt. five tnistces
and a
number of key staff officer,s arc
.members
_of· the sponsoriilg
religious order: that all studcnt.s
,.
. . ...
.
,
State
has
rejected
. Marist's , cqrrespond~r1cei;-' bc:tweer1 Maris! • possibly bland arid ,-unqualjfied _
> ·." ".,,~
· .
•d•-' ,
i;/:.z;~)_;;i.:t,:~\\;:;,:;;;~i~~fi~~:li~t\i~iftc;~~iilfi:r:!J~~
>.tit.J1fJitts-?Jfd'·t.,~I~ttt:ft
·Jj~;.oJ!~i:ti~\t:i~ict·i~sti;~J\~{
- -·:
J;: . : ~:-
· \
~
·:·
-~)f:
·,:·
.:;-:·
..
11\
US
t ..
CO 1\1p
\ete. ·.
six· semester
.,•,//_,t·./;J.!i1~-~:r~ii:{:~_11?~~~J~t~l~t~i/t;t:~t~ii.·:.:.
.•: · ,'
·
· that:nio'stipeople' have 't_tl'eir:ow'n
:o
··-:_-They· dairil ~ti-i'at/therf
'1s

ab
o.v e c
O
mmen ts .is
Jvli _. .
f .
·;.-"'•~·<
re as On S
>:wfry,·,
A
''Student.
strong
representation
of
the ,
'Harrison's · opinion with regard
Lt.
•• \.'
::
C:
'·tfeaJ•
,il1i1ostc:·
exclusively' ·with
·
· C'hristianity
... aild' that
the.
Committee·. has \been : working -· sponsoring order running Marist. ·· to
the· College not receiving
u_
-
with the full cooperation'of
the' . First of all; the Marist Order
State aid. I am gladJhat he feels
AdministraHori
in ilivestigating .·doesnotsponsdrMaristCollege.
the·
Brothers
here ·to
be
our rejection.
It
is 'important,
· ~-'Marist College is controlled by
•'indispensable"'
but . I was
not·only
to.infor1ii the student
an
independent:
Board
of
wondering as I read his article if
body· of our rejection, but to
Trustees. The president of·Marist
he really ever co_nsidcred how
clear up.- many- · misconceptions
College is the only ex· officio - indispensable we were and arc to
we·have
of Marist. Ifwe,
the
member
of this.
Board
of
Marist College. My purpose in
student
body,
aren't
sure
of.
Trustees. All other members are
writing this article is not to be
what Marist actually; is, we really
elected for three year terms by
overly critical of Mr. Harrison ·s
can't
expect
the· State
to
the board itself. The present
·uninformed.
position,
nor
understand.
·
Board
is composed
of nine
dramatically
defensive of the
college . s·ponsored. ,a'ctivities are.
exclt;sivclv Ronian
·catholic
in
style:·. since Mr. Nyquist was
.
-
-··A.letter dated December 31,
laymen
a_nd six
b·rothers."
. Marist Brothers but to educate
1969 was sent to
Bro:
Lim.is Foy
Perhaps we the student body
his opinion and to make a few
\ explaining
why
Marist was
aren't folly aware of the Board;
issues very clear once and fora!!.
rejected. I think it is important
what. do th~y re_ally do? (a
· Very often the past is not held
to point out· that Marist was
quest10n for_d1scuss1on).· .. -·
in· too
high
r.egfrd
simply
informed
of ·this after it was
Secondly it should \Je_pomted
because
it
is the past, but this
released to the press. The letter
our that Br. Foy contmues' as ·college is so rich in its traditjon
froin
Ewald
B. Nyquist,
president as Jong as the Boa;d
that the past is·ever present and
Commissioner-
off Education,
feels he is competent. TheMan~t
active •on this ·campus. First of
stated:
order has no control ove~ _his all
if
it were not for the
"On
the
basis
of . all
position. The other key officials
dre~ming of a very adventurous
iriformation now at my disposal,
of Marist are:· Bro. LaPietra,
•man called Br. Paul Fontaine
I find that I must still conclude
academic
dean; Mr. Thomas
who tried to respond to a need
that Marist College is not eligible
Wade
dean of students;
Mr. · both for his Brothers' education
for state aid .. under the relevant
John'
Dougherty,
dfrector
of
and
also to serve the male
provisions
of the New York
dev_elopement;
Mr. Anthony
population
of the .:re_a this
State Constitution.
While my
Campilli,
business
manager.
present campus would still be a
conclusion is based not on any
Excluding Bro. Linus, the only
farm.
. _
.
single factor, but ·rather upon
other key offi'cial belonging to
If- it weren't for the hundreds
my . understanding
of
the
th~ Marist order is Bro. LaPietra.
of Brothers who gave up their
institution
as a whole, I have
Bro LaPietra was one of 27
suinmers
fo
work
on
t'1e
noted that the catalog and other
applicants for the position; the
construction
crews the only
publications
of the college
committee
consisted
of I l
buildings that would exist today
evidence
a strong
religious
members
three of whom were
would be the Greystone and the
commitment; that the. president,
Marist
Brothers.
I . think this
"marian" building. With the able
CONTINUED ON 2
direction of. Br. Nilus. Donnelly
B.A.B.A.
Submits
Housing
Request
~Y Ronald A. ~earson
The.following article is printed
for informational
purposes by
the paper unedited as submitted
by B.A.B.A.
In September
of the year
nineteen hundred and sixty-eight ·
seventeen black freshmen were
added to the total population of
four black students in residence.
These seventeen students were
. placed in a situation which was
foreign
and
sometimes
personally
d_egrading.
But
wishing at that time only to
succeed here at Marist "College
we allowed these conditions .to
prevail.
For example, we forsaked our
own cultural and culinary habits,
for ones sometimes unique to us.
We roomed with individuals who
at times treated us like freaks
and
were forced to tolerate
other mental abuses. The worst
of
these such ·· abuses having
definite racial overtones.
But
now
with
the black
population
here
at
Marist
increasing .and the adoption _of
an African communal spirit, a
change in life style must be
made. No longer can we put up
with the noise in the halls and
other
barbaric
outbursts.
No
longer can we cat the foods
which do not lend to us a stable
diet.
In essence we need a facility
so that we may come together
and live
in a · harmonious
CONTINUED ON 7
Phil
Glenno·n
· int me rsed.
in· information
In 1958 Earl J.McGrath ,vrote
concerning
tile problem
a1id
.. the . four
year . .independent
since he- complies with virtually
liberal arts college has been with
all · mv conclusions - save one.
us for· over 300 years and it
then ft can be presumed that
isprobablc that it will be with.us
Brother
Lambert"s statems'ilt
..
Tl
concs·rning thc authentidt\.'
of
over 300 more,
te serene
.
atmosphere
in the academic
my, position·
is at minimum
world of. the S0's which gave
unfounded. But for his' sake
let
birth to McGrath's statcmeilt,
me clar1fv sofne of the facts,
would -not he able to withstand
fic.tion
·and
contradictions·
th
d
· ·
ct
drait1at 1·,. circumventin° thc-controverse)'.
. e
y.nanuc
an
· ·
~
0
·
The first tiling to investigate is .
period _ of change which __
the
-
following
dccacadc
was to
religious
tie.s
with
.thc
'foster.- The great socio-economic · ad ministration.
The. official..
upheavals we have experienced
college
position
states_ that
have ·caused many to question
besides Brothers Foy and La
~the four year span of-college.
Pietra,
the
front
line
While 837,, of our 2.000 four
administrators
are
Mcssers.
. · year institutions arc on the old· Wade, Flynn;· and Campilli · all
fashioned
semester. basis it is
laymen. But according. to Bro.
conceivable that .these
,vill
not
Lamb crt's
informed
position,
be
typical
of the future.
M.:sscrs. Wadc. Flynn, Campilii
William De Vane former dean of
and
Dr.
Schroeder
arc .the
Yale sees the survival of the four
prominent administrators.
Now,
year college threatened by two
disregarding
the
obvious
fl·r·t
pr •ssur, from
•·ontr.·1tliction here .. we sec tltat
pressures,
s . a
c. . c
~
below
by the. widespread
accord1n!! to the Marist Chart of
advanced
placement; which is
Organization, Mr. Flynn an·d Dr.
affecting
the
traditional
Sc-hroedcr
arc.
directly
curriculum of general. studies in. responsible to· Brother LaPictra
the early years of college and
and
that
l\lr.
Campilii
· is
CONTINUED ON 6
CONTINUED ON 6
Benoit House. which next year
\\-ill
be. vacated by lilc
brothers. will house siudents. organized in a "iro115e
.. b:i~is.
Sever.ii groups arc competing for residency. B.,\.B.,\.
whmc
statement is printed in this issue faces competitive bid:;
hom the
French House and from another student group.
*****

































































,
.
P.
..
,·.
r
r
t
I
[
..
,PAGE2
DIE CIRCLE
FBBRUAIIY'Sf 1970
BEGLEY
FROM 1
·
shows that Bro. LaPietra was
Norto,
n,
Luce
'Debate
••
elected
beca·use
of
his
competency
and nothing else.
.
'

. .
·
~~:
~~Jen::o
?~~~il~~ si~p~~~
Camp·
us,
·and
Rev_
o
ut_
,on_..
-
academic
committee
was
approved by the Board, again on
d p t
Americans ·'foi: . Freedom,• Mr .
. the basis of their.competency.
By Salvatore Piazza an
a
Luce
now
serves as YAF's
An objection might be raised
Tracey
College Director.
· ·. · . •
Even though senior Fred Apers and his girl live in town;they
find the college "ride board" interesting.· The ride board, a
means to communicate the need or availability of rides, has not
really been used· by the students. Hopefully they will sta~t to
utilize it.
that·. the Marist order indirectly
M N
' '
f" t
The
Man.st .,College Young
This is
r.
orton s 1rs · year
sponsors-
Marist by providing
M · t
d · h
h
1 e d
Am erl. c·a·ns for . Freedom
will at
ans
an
e
as a r a y
teachers
and
monetary
1· h d h'
If
··
·
·
present a debate on Wednesday· est ab 1s e
1mse
as a
assistance.
This
position 1s
·
· th
·
·
February
I 1, I 970 in the
competent mst~uctor m
e area
explained in Marists apphcation
·
H' t
for aid:
.
-
College Theatre. The topic of
of Amencan
1s ory. :
, "Marist College·: receives no
the debate will "be _Campus and·
. Mr. Norton earned his B.A; as
f
Re. voluti·on. The part1·c1·pants·
in
well as· his
M.A. from Providence
financial
assistance
rom. any
·
d H ·
religious denomination.
In the
the debate will .be Mr. Phillip
College in Rhode Islan ·
e
IS
past,
it received
two gifts,
Abbott Luce and Mr. Joseph
presently a candidate:for a Ph.D .
totaling
$25,000
(-15,000 in
Norton. ·
·
at· St.· John's
University- and
1957; 10,000 in 1965) from
The
y
AF representative,
plans to. have completed
his,
Cardinal
Spellman
for
its
Phillip Abbott Luce is a former
doctoral disserfation_within two
building campaigns.
leader ·of the New Left and
years.
The
college
has received
member
·or the
Communist
Mr. 'Norton -came to .. Marist
considerable
financial support
Progressive Labor Party, Phillip ·from St. Bonaventure's College
from
the
Marist
Brothers
Abbott
Luce
broke
from
where he was involved in several
Corporation, Our accounts show
Communism in 1965, and· has
disputes with the administration
that '·the investment due to the
become a symbol of resistance
over the concept of due process.
founder- comprises $3,248,571
to Left Wing radicals. Mr .. Luce
Mr. Norton ·may be regarded as a
T Y A
out of a total fixed assets of
is a graduate of MississJppi State
Part i
ci Pant
in · the
new
·•

· •
$10,745,849. About half of this
University with an M.A. Degree interpretatioh~
hof,h·-Amebrican
·
b

B
g1
amount
represents
cash
from Ohio State University. He history
w 1c
as
een
y mcent
e ey
contributions,
-the remainder
has lectured and debated before
developing
since · the early
To go Third Year Abroad, or
this inadequacy
I had to go
consists
of
manual
labor
civic
groups
and
college
1960's. He'bases -his. study of·
not
to . go, is that
really a
about changing it; twenty years
contributions,
appreciation
of
audiences across the nation, arid history on what is considered a
question?
So, much is heard
of .patterned existence isn't the
plant values, and value of land
has lectured at the U.S. Air
quasi-Marxian
theory_:
In
about tlie Third Year Abroad · easiest thing to change. I finally
transferred to the College.
Force
Special·
Air Warfare
conjunction with other so-called
.Program (each year the Circle
began to see definitions
and
In
addition,
the
Marist
School,
Counterinsurgency
"New Left" historians, Norton
carries
at least two weekly
purpose, a rebirth, and Europe
Brothers extended short term,
Course . .Now a consultant
to
appears
to be interested
in
articles) But what ever happens . became my playground. Rome,
no-interest
loans
to Marist
conservative youth groups, his
historical figures as people not as
to these people. when they come
London, Vienna, Paris, Nice, etc.
c
O
l leg e . The
present
articles have appeared in such
myths which are to be-deified .
. back? Since I subjected people
gave me beautiful experiences. I
indebtedness of the College to
publications
as READER'S
In asking Mr. Norton about his
to a column
I wrote while I was
was young and I was in Europe.
the Marist Brothers is $100,000,
D I G E ST , · S A T U R D A Y scheduled debate with Mr.,.Luce,
in England, I thought, perhaps, I
But Europe isn't the essence
payable in four equal, annual
EVENING POST, NATIONAL
he said that he was anxious to
could make one last gasp before
of Third Year Abroad, it's what
installments. The College does
REVIEW, and he is contributing
confront
him on the issue of
graduating.
you do with
it.
My return to
not anticipate receiving either
editor to HUMAN EVENTS.
Campus
and Revolution:
Mr.
I can only speak for royself,
Marist had me confused. l. didn't
gifts or financial assistance from
Mr. Luce is the author of two
Norton said that he heard Luce
everyone who goes·abroad reacts
know if I was returning from the
the Brothers in the future."
b o
0
.
k s ,
R O A D
T O speak
previous ,to .what the
to
it
differently. I really can't
Theater
of Vaudeville to the
All faculty Brothers are paid a
REVOLUTION and THE NEW · former calls "Luce's
190. turn
say why I went, all I knew was I
Theater
of the Absurd, or
salary according to the rules set
LEFT,
as
well as co-author of about" in political thinking and
had to.
It
wasn't because of any·
perhaps
it was vice-versa .. I
for any other faculty member.
A N
I N T E L L I G E N T is interested in what" motivated
displeasure
with Marist, but
quicklyre-evaluatcdmyposition
student
Brothers receive no
STUDENT'S
GUIDE
TO
suchadecision.
·
.
h
If B f
d l
k d
E
SURVIVAL.
.
*****
displeasure wit
myse . e ore
an
oo e
upon
urope as a
College · tuition reduction, and
going abroad I had never really
Theater
of
Experience,
and
they must fulfill the entrance
An active member of Young
thought,
never given myself
M arist
was
a Theater
of
requirements
held
for any
_ purpose or definition. I felt if I
Commitment. Since l had found
student entering Marist College.
f
didn't go I would be reminis.cent· . purpose and definition
~
had to
Faculty and student Broth~rs
·H,·stor,•a·
n
Wa•ns·o .
of the narrator• in T:S.' Eliot's,
commit myself to it.
aren't living on campus gratis,

.
I
1
·
. ·
· Burnt Norton:
<
I find now that each day is
they. pay the college for Benoit
··
·
c;~:J:}u~ir~}s:~~~t~?~i.ii:t~
·
£!1,1~~~et~~~~~
iire~:li1tf
I
J::f
;!
iJ:°fr
1
;JJ~ii~~ii:e'tS:
Neg_
lect
in
ff
unfanifies:
falls echo in the memory down
at class work as a challenge; not
stand
in regard. to religious
.
.
the passage we did not take
only should l be challenged,
l
support ,gr control.The facts are
Dr. Barnaby
c.
Keeney,·
we are; and·the future, where we
toward
the
door
we never
should challenge my instructors.
clear,
-it
is only
a matter
chairman
of
the
National
· are going. An historical and
opened.. .
The best way to learn
is to ask
interpretation.
Each one of us
Endorsement for the Humanities
analytical approach is essential.
. My
motive
was selfish; I
questions; since
l
have very few
has to be satisfied that Marist is
testified
be.fore
a· joint .
Where we are is the result of
wanted to find myself. I did,'and
answers (very few) I have to ask
actually run by an Activefloardof
Senate-House subcommittee
on · where we have been and. has a
it wasn't very pleasant. I was
questions.
·
:
.
Trustees, not by ayuppet Board. . January 26 and warned of the
decisive influence on where we
only half as big as life, afraid to
"To put· meaning in one's life
A problem
a~1~es wh_en we
inherit danger in an American
· are going. Where we are now is·
take
chances,
afraid to risk
may end in madness but life
lookmtotherehg10usaspectof
·Education
which
ha·s its
in
real
trouble.
We have
myself. But once I got off the
without meaning is the torture
our rejection.
At present the
priorities centered on science.
ch~rished kno·wledge of material
ship it was a risk, risking the
of restlessness and vague desire -
on~y- religious
activiti~s . are
Dr.
Keeney,
the
former
things, but we have· not given
security that had prevented me
It is a boat longing for the sea
def1111tely Rom<1n Catholic, but
president of Brown University
sufficient attention
to· abstract
from taking chances. When I saw
and yet afraid."
the
Chapel
1s not for the
advocated
research
in the
considerations.
Intellectual
In Residence
By Edward O'Neill
.. The greatest boon to the. power structure which exists in the
United States is a generation which tunes itself out on booze, grass,
or drugs. This is so because what results is a_ power structure dev?id
of scrutiny, without evaluation, or most 1mportan~ly, . not b_emg
made susceptible to the forces of necessary . change 111 the so~11:ty.
One who is 'tuned-out,' simply cannot or does not care to scr~tm1ze,
evaluate, or bring pressure to bear on those who are ruling the
society toward their own ends.
·
.
.
To concretize the point, a student body of a college m a mce,
quiet suburb of Poughkeepsie w1Ach tu!1es itself out on e~ucat_ion
and specifically, the academic onentation _of that educ~t10n, 1s a
great boon to at least part of the . 'power structure
of that
institution. To tune out by spending $3,000 a year to be able to do
your own thing which in fact is noTHING; by figuring out who can
be cut who 'gives' marks, and who is a soft touch for a good so.b
story; ~nd by being satisfied with perso!1al mediocrity; allows this.
power structure to exist and perpetuate itself free from any real or
effective checks.
However most members of this particular power structure are
concerned ~bout this situation and are persistently trying to develop
the means toward which a 'tuned-in' student body can develop.
They do this out of an inner security that they are among the better
people in their profession and they reali,,_e that just maybe, every
once in a while they might learn somethiqg from a student. Others
though, within this structure become very paranoid when the lowe~t
class within this structure seeks to demonstrate its rights. Their
insecurity in their own abilities, their satisfaction in holding "safe"
positions and their fear of honest confrontation of principles, be it
between
administrator
and student,
teacher and student,
and
· relations among students; leads to their attempts at limiting the
effectiveness of those who attempt to agitate for the assertion of
those rights.
Here then, is one way of viewing the societal structure of this
college: the power structure, the major portion constantly seeking to
better itself and even encouraging the participation of the student
body in its affairs; the minor portio?, !earful of_such participation
when it endangers and reveals their madequac1es; and finally, a
student body which for the most part,
is
'tuned-out' and concerned
solely with that greatest of all human achievements, the college
degree. These then, are some of the realities each of us faces as we
choose our position or place in that society and determine how well
we will perfonn the responsibilities of that position.
exclusive use of Cat!iolics. "T~e
humanities
to solve society's
We have attempted to put new
· Co~l~~e offers t~e use _of its
serious problems. Excerpts from
knowledge
together
with old
fac1hhes. to any agency. m the
his testimony follow.
assumptions in the naive belief
·com_m_umty ~h_ether th~y are
It
is.my own conviction that
that the more one knows the
poll tlcal, rehg10us, socrnl, or
·until
the electorate
and the
better one will understand, and
academic. The c?llege, di~ a~t. as
persons
they
elect can use _ possibly even accept.
a_ co-sponsor_ with B
n_ai B r~th
historical
and
philosophical
The
result
has
been t11e
(m 1966)-ot
~
Ca_tholic-~ewish material
to help decide the
destruction
of our system· of
Conference. Tlus was cons~de~ed· major ·public questions of the
values, so that our·people now
a conference . · abo1;1t. preJud1ce
day, we shall not solve those
have no real guide for their lives.·
r<1the~ than.
religion.
Our
problems, and until the general
New assumptions are stated as
expen~nc~
has
been
that
public
is capabfe
of
using
proven fact and the result is
denommat10ns
. prefer to use
knowledge of the past
fo
solve .. violent disagreement, and I mean-: ·
their own f~cilities_for activities
personal problems, we shall not
violent, or passive indifference,
rather than
~~
_ava!} themselves
have an orderly society.
or worst • of all, · an effort' to
of college f~cil~tles.
.
Certainly, many of . the most
accept several value systems.
On quest1onmg Bro. Lmus _on
important
problems cannot- be
A · country of. this size and
whether he thought something
solved by science, which we have
complexity
cannot
proceed
could be done t<;> n_iakc the
greatly supported and which has . successfully without · consensus
Ch_apel non~cnommaho~al,
he
. rn a d e
m a n y i m p
O
rt an t
on major issues and we no longer
said that 1t could easdy be
contributions
to our society.
have
this· consensus, though
accomodatcd
to represen_t an
Science
cannot
solve these
possibly it is appearing, 'and
ecumeni<:al atmosphere
rather
problems
. because·
scientists
again not so much as the result
than a stnct Caihohc one.
.
alone cannot decide what to do
of scientific but of humanistic
. The crux of _t~e problem ~1es with
the
knowledge
that is
thought.
in
_the
Rehg10us
Studies
produced.
·
Our'physicalenvironmentisin
requu_-emcnt. On T~ursday, Feb.
There is a great imbalance in
serious trouble.
A frequently
5, ~h1s_proble!11 wdl b~ solved.
education
at every level from . overlooked
part
of the
Ind1cat1ons po~~t to _a rcmo~~l ?f
school through graduate school
environment is the intellectual.
the_ passage . credit core
m
in favor of the sciences.
1t ·
is
This consists of the product of
Religio~s Studies. Upon removal
obvious from even. the most
thought, but it also consists of
of _this I feel al~ fr_es~man
casual
fospection
of any
the product
of taste and it
applicants should be informed of
university campus, where most
contains the values of which I
this fact.
of the new buildings are. for
spoke.
-
-
Above
~11,
ea_ch person
scicntificuses:
Herc we have little, if any,
connected with _Manst should be
I support and have supported
agreement. We ~ave generation
aware that ~!anst has ~o r~as?n
government
sponsorship
of ✓
faced against generation, race
to _go out'?! its ~ay to Justify its
scientific research and teaching,
against race. To the best of my
existence.
Des~>Ite th~ presence
but the imbalance is now
50
knowledge, there is no way
to
of older, more _PrC:5tI~ous and
serious
that
it is seriously
bring various opposing forces
more a~fluent mst1tut1ons and
threatening the education of our
together
except by a better
~he. ra~1d ~owth
of the sta_te next generation.
understanding of the past, a
m~t1tut1ons Jn the area, Manst
Lack of Understandim!
better analysis of the present
still
remarns the only area
What this country, and indeed
and a better.view of the future.
college_ to grant _a bach~lor
the whole world lacks, is. an
*****
degree m the evening session.
understanding of the past, where
CONTINUED
ON 6
we have been; the present, where

































































'
FEBRUAllY'S,i1970
We support our black students
at Marist
·in•
their efforts to
obtain·
Benoit·
House ·as a
residence.
.
...
As members
of another
minority
'.group,
we feel
compelled, to bring out a very
strong.
p·arallel
.
in our own
heritage:
THECIRCLE
Calendar OJ ·Events
_FOR
THE·WEEK
OF FEBRUARY 8-14, 1970
.
If
you would like your org~nization'll hlformation included on thill
calendar, it
is
important that. you contact Mr. Brollnan
11l
office at
least two weekll prior to the date that the event is scheduled to take
place.
.
·
Please contact:
·
Joieph Brollnan, Director of Campull Center,
47.1-3240,
Ext.
279
.
Sunday, February
8
8:00
P.M.
Marillt College Film Program, "THE WELL DIGGER'S
DAUGHTER"
College Theatre,
Campull Center. Coffee and
Dillculliioil to follow.
There
·
was a time, not too
many years ago, when the initial
solidification, and yes, the initial
self-imposed segregation
.
of our
own
·
group, proved to be an
indispensible step in ~chieving
Monday, February 9
·the recognition it so obviously
9:
00
A.M. -
5
:00
P.M.
Recruitment
Program, U.S. General
enjoys
in• contemporary
AccountingOffice,PlacementOffice
American
Society .. With this
recognition has finally come the
10:00
A.M. -
5:00
P.M.
U..S. Army, Gallery Lounge, Campull Center
beginnings of our group's real
and meaningful integration into·
·
Tuellday, February
10
the ranks of American Society
1:00
P.M. -
5:00
P.M.
Recruitment Program, F.W. Woolworth Co.,
together with the breakdown of
Placement Office
.
our old self-imposed ghettoes.
.
.If.
we have learned. anything at
8:00
P.M.
Basketball - Stonehill - Home
all from. history,
our black
LAST DAY FOR DROPPING COURSES WITHOUT PENAL TY OF
students should not only be
·FAILURE
permitted,
but
should
be
'
Wedne:.day, February
11
strongly•
encouraged to take
10:30
A.M.
-
3:00
P.M. Recruitment Program, U.S. Internal Revenue
. Benoit House as their residence,
Service, Placement Office
with
..
the fervrent hope that in
some·
,real,
way. this
.
will help
7:30
P.M. Wrelltling - New Paltz - Home
them· to achieve their worthy
goals
of·
recognition
and
8:00
P.M. DISCUSSION - YAF Director, Phillip Luce and Marist
meaningful
integration
in a
College Inlltructor Jo:.eph Norton, College Theatre, Campus Center.
society• that belongs to· them as
much a:. to any of us.
Friday, February
13.
Don't let anyone ever tell you
HOLIDAY FOR LINc;::OLN'S BIRTHDAY
that self-impos.ed segregation is
the same as externally-imposed
7:00
P.M. (JV) - Basketball -_Pace Away
•.
segregation.
They
are
far
different things.
8:00
P.M. (V) -
Ballketball - Southampton - Away
·
L.
Alpert, Chairman,
Dept. of Mathematics
Saturday, February
14
P.
Teichman, Dept: of Physics
Annual Middle Atlantic Inter-Collegiate Sailing Association Meeting,
All Day - Gallery Lounge, Dining Hall, Campw, Center.
Dear Editor,
.
As a concerned member of the
2:00
P.M. Wrelltling- Seton Hall - Away
6:00
P.M. (JV) -
Ballketball - Dowling - Away
sophomore
class,
I find it
difficult
to
comprehend
the
actions taken by fellow members
,
of my
.class.
The result of last
·
8:00
P.M. (V)
-
Basketball - Dowling- Away
week's kidnapping incident was
a disgrace·
·not.
only to the
.students
:·involved,
.
but to the
dignity of Marist College as well.
I
am n.ot suggesting that
I
am
ART EXHIBIT ...... Title: "SO LOUD TO MY OWN'' Artilltll: Student
Show GALLERY LOUNGE. CAMPUS CENTER
opp o.s.e):l;
?·.t;o
_
_>,\'.s
o~
~a).Je
,d
.··
.,.,·:
'.
traditfoifs/'
tout:
the· physical
abi.u;e. of any. student cannot be
tolerated.
-.
.
.
.
The role of a freshman student
.is one of.adjustment and a most
.
difficult one. He looks to upper
classman
·
in respect, for guidance
SENIORS··
Freshmen
.
Election
1,
Resu,lts
T·lJe
-Elections
for
tlle
Freshman Class were completed
last
Thursday,
when
the
President's spot was filled. The
delay was due to an intensely
close race from . the primary to
the first election until the final
election
held on Jan. 29th
.
The Freshman Class Slate is:
Robert Lane
O
President
PAGE3
EDITORIAL
Religious Ties?
The question ~f religious ties at Marist is a complex one. Complex
because of the nature of this school, the trends in the Roman
Catholic Church, the loss of faith in organized religion and the New
York State Constitution.
·
It
is not for us, the students, to question the commitment of the
Marist Brothers in the past; they built the school. However,
it
is right
to ask the administration to do all that it must to insure the best
education possible while keeping rising tuition costs down.
-
The Blaine Amendment is a reality that must be faced in terms of
securing state fu11ds and the Blaine Amendment has little success of
being removed or
altered.
Maris! needs state aid; all schools do.
If
in order to obtain state aid
changes in operation arc necessary, let the changes be made.
The needed changes are not immediately or
exactly
identifiable.
<:ertainly this college is Catholic. Catholic, is not meaningful in the
same way to all - what the state designates as Catholic however is
important.
_
As of this Thursday, the theology requirement will be eliminated,
thus removing a key stumbling block to the granting of state aid.
Other changes arc needed .
The college must act promptly in order to be
considered
for state
aid before
197 3.
In a few
short
weeks the deadline for application will have been
passed and another application cannot be made until
1973.
*****
Out of-Focus
One of the real problems of society today is the establishing of
"community··
among men. Community is a problem because of
several forces that operate in society.
This campus could be a
"community.''
However the incidents of
the past few weeks indicate that we have far to go towarcls creating a
community spirit.
Traditions arc found to be un-traditional and violence is used to
enforce the ··un-tradition:·
This is shameful.
Drinking oneself into dmnkeness becomes the weekend pastime.
How docs this practice contribute to anything?
Vandalism in the campus center occurs. While
students
litter the
theatre with cigarette butts, they violate fire rnles in the process.
This does not make sense on a campus of men and women.
Clearly the spring semester has been witness to a student body, to
a campus "community,-
that was, out of focus. Let us work on
ge_nerating·a
·communal
spirit.
*****
Safeguard?
.
and
asllistance
..
The image,
however,· that we have been
trying
.
to present to freshman,
has been greatly tamed by Jast
-
week's events.
Tonight is the last
chance to sign up
for having your name
printed on
the
cover
of your yearbook.
Michael Ward - Vice President
The Presidential decision to
expand
the Safeguard antiballistic
Bernard Mulligan - Treasurer
·
missile system is a profound disappointment
to many Americans.
lt
.
I
..
can only offer
an
apologetic
·
plea to freshman, not to allow
.
this
incident
to have
.
a
detrimental
effect
in your
judging of other Marist students.
My hope
is. that
a
greater
relationship can be formed, in
spite of this misfortune.
Signed,
A
Concerned Marist Student
To the Editor,
By now we all a~e aware of the
incident
which occurred last
Thrusday
night.
The newly
.
elected•
freshmen
president,
Bobby Lane, was brutally beaten
- by. some
sophomores
who
claimed
that it wai. in the
·tradition of Marfa;t.
,This
raises
some interesting questions.
.
Fint;
·
if anyone initiates a
kidnapping,·
they llhould be
aware that the victim is going to
defend· himself. But the fact
remain:. that the sophomores
were the antagonistll. Next we
mus;t remove those who engage·
in this tradition which produces
such
a
negative
effect. We
neither need nor want thes;e
hypocrites in our community.
They must be punished and
:.erve
as an
example for all
would-be offenders.
I
am
personally calling .
for
their removal ai. soon as pollS1ble.
If
this cannot be done through
immediate expulsion, then they
s;hould
be
moved off campus,
stripped of all privileges, and
~
ordered to leave at the end of
this semester. Anything less will
be just a slap on the wrist.
Michael Ward
Vice-president
Class of '73
Cost js$.50
Paul Tesoro - Corr. Secretary
is one
of tile 1n.1jor mistakes of ti1e present Administration, which
James
Cockroft
-
Rec.
had be.:n very cautious.
Secretary
Expansion of the ABM is uncalled for on two
counts.
The most
·
Patrick McNamara - Rep. to
significant
danger
inherit
in the expansion
of
irny
military system is
Stud. Gov't
that it can bring
about
that which it is trying to defend
against.
John Petraglia - Rep. to Stud.
Namely, the expansion of the ABr-.-t
lessens our security rather than
..
Gov't
adds to it because it is likely
lo
spur the missile race with Russia
.,. ____________________________
without signifo.;antly improving security against Communist China
Stephen
A.
Harrison
·John
Rogener
Managing Editor
Editors-in-Chief
Vincent Begley
Asst. News Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
Joseph McMahon
John Zebatto
News Editor
Steve Harri~n, Joe McMahon, John Zebatto.
FEATURE WRITERS
Peter Masterson, Paul Browne, Bill O'Reilly, Steve Harrison, Vin
Begley ,.Joe Francese
SPORTS WRITERS
Joe McMahon - Sports Editor
Don Duffy -
Asst.
Sports Editor
Joe Rubino, Bob Maycrhofer, Chuck Meara
PHOTOGRAPHY
Photo Editor - Rich Brummett
Barry Smith, Vin Winsch,
Mike Ligotino
CARTOONIST
Steve Harrison
CIRCULATION
Dave DeRosa - Manager
Jack Barry
R£PRESENTEO
l"OR
NATIONAi.
ADVERTISING
BY
.
A
National Educational Advertising Services ")
A DIVISION
OF
l,
ltlEADEll•a DIGEST SALES
8,
aERYICES. INC.
360 Lexington
Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017
for the United States. More importantly however expansion
of
the
ABM
is posited in such a fashion so as to make
it
non-negotiable at
the SALT talks.
This
expansion
could
wreak these
t;ilks.
The second reason why ABM expansion is unwise is because it
insults the national priorities. It is inconsistent with the attempts to
trim the federal budget and hence
slow
inflation.
The only hope in this bleak ABM affair is that Congress may
refuse to fund the program.
*****
Book Of The Year
We of the Cirde feel
it is our privilege to bring your attention to
another campus publication.
which is now on sak, the
1970
Reynard. Having shared a darkroom and, at times, and office with
the yearbook staff, we are well aware of the type of production they
are evolving. The creativity and devotion of its staff has marked the
1970
Reynard as an art form of superior quality.
Growth and change is the theme of this year's Reynard, and the
feeling of this motif flows freely throughout the book's
304
pages.
At times it is reflected in the student's attitudes, at times in the
campus appearance, or perhaps in the outlook of the administration.
The photos and literary work of this book are expertly mixed in
a
special type of vision, one that
will
be meaningful to all its readers.
The
1970
Reynard has a deep sense of beauty, one that will he
lasting and still rewarding as you look back upon it many years
hence.
Vin Winsch, the Editor of the
1970
Reynard. has supervised
th~·
entire production, and from cover to cover, the book reflects on
:ii-.
natural artistic creativity. Aware·of this. the Circle Editorial Board
feels fully confident in predicting that this
will
be the most :-uperh
yearbook ever to be published at Marist.
*****

















r,
1970
REYNARD:
A
glance at Marist reveals
its
never ending pace. Aglance cannot, however,
tell the whole story.
Will Marist really, uh .•.
Change
me?
,,.j:-,i.Ct
-~f,
~;,.,_;.~t,}
• ·:•
·~,,
.. ''·':>.,:
,.\
.. •:::_:

..-,:,.:
·-,
..
":-···'
·,.·.
,
I
won't grow long hair
Or turn on
Or tune in
Or drop
out
Or be different
Or be invo·lved •••
/
,
~".
~-
..
,··-;-·'-
.. ' ..•.
:,,w,,<y

























r
--.--.--,
-
MARIST
·
COLLEGE
...
That Last
A Lifetime
.
.
'
.
.
.

J
Planned peoplehood. Unplanned. People living both ways
and every other way ...
... And so you come to Poughkeepsie
Along
Route 9 by the famous Hudson .•.
.
. .. And it begins .•
_!
•.• so when
you
leave,
Down those
same·
paths, ...
.•. You feel different
Not Changing
Changed.
~--,-_

.
...
'






























































(
'
.-··.,:-··
..

.·.
THE
CIRCLE
FEBRUARY
5~
1970
LAMBERT
FROM
1
area of
$70,000.
With regard to the Brothers
holding
the
\reins"
of · the
administration,
unless Messrs.
Campilli, Wa~e ~nd Flynn and
Dr.
Schroeder
are the
·
first
married
Marists,
to
my
recollection, the only· other main
line office is held by Br.
·LaPietra
and he
was
selected to fill the
position
he
holds
by his
professional
coll~agues,
the
majority
of
which are not
Marists.
Of the two pr~blems
•identity
Catholic college in years to come
La Pietra seem to control the.
religious institution.
l. mean
.no
•·
must
be
coped•.
·with
first,
.
should
be spear-heading
·
the
academic
··
policies
of
this
disrespect.'
for
:
th.e Marist
:
·
Catholic colleges appear today·
.drive for redeeming social ills.
It
campus. True, the Faculty
is
·
Brothers.:
They
·
built Marist
/
to
be seeking a new identity;_ should practice Christianity, and
supposed to control academic
literally with their own hands.
l
The
effort
1s to
detach
be able to·car'ry
on scientific
policythroughtheA.P.C:butin
commend and sincerely thank
themselves from the stigma of a~ research without apprehension
the light of tlie ·recent theology
them
:
for doing so· and
·
l can
closed,
religious
orientated
and
be the impetus in the
dilemma _this does not bear out.•
s y rri pat hize. with,
Broth.el'..
community to create one more
evolution of
·
Catholic thought · According
fo
the. students- who
·
Larriberfs
-nostalgic
review
..
of
open
and
hopefully
more
keeping
pace with our- ·ever
work for the admissions office,
MOTH history. But life isfull of
intellectual.
changing world.
·
they were· instructed to inform
..
trials; tribulations
and sadness
The main focus of this effort
As it is vital for Catholic
any prospective
·Marist
applicant
'
and
.
the Marist. -Brothers
.mu~t
so far has been a liberalization of
colleges to find a new identity if' th.at theology was NOT required.
·
face them along with the rest of
rules,
to
become
privately
they are to survive, it is also vital
Brother· Foy also stated at a
us, Someday
l shall have a child
controlled,
and a change in
that they in some way find an
Student· Council· meeting that
of my own just as Marist is the
academic requirements.
answer to the financial bind they
theology
'.was
·No_T
mandatory.·
brainchild
.
of
,
the
·
M arist
As far as the dorm government
is concerned a quick look at any
dorm council or resident board
will show that the students hold
the controlling vote since neither
Brs. Ginnity, Lambert, Gallagher
or Bellanger have a vote in
Council.
Cat ho Ii c c o!leges
exist
are
.
now
in.
While
tuition
,
But at·the'same time, the catalog
Brothers.
I
hope never to be.
supposedly
on the assumption
increases may offset the spiraling
does
1 is t
.
theology
as a
.
faced with a· situation · where
I
that they have something unique
inflation, they do not
.
meet the
requirement
··
and
today,
must place the .child up for ·
to offer American society. Js this
increased expenditures
needed
Thursday, the.' faculty is voting
adoption because I am unable to
a fact or is it an assumption?
to keep abreast of the rapidly
on an A.P.C.
proposal
to.
support
it.
But
if such a
What
dat,s tht, Catholic college
changing and. complex business
eliminate
th·e requirement.·
.
situation should arise,
I for one
instill in
a student that makes
of higher education, nor do they
Because
the Faculty
is only
·
would_ be certain to place the
him diffrn·nt
from the student
offset the diminishing number of
voting on the
.
proposal today
child on the adoption lists as
·
of
.i
statt.· unin:•nutr or some
vocations in teaching orders.
It
then their control of academics
much as it might hurt inme.
oth.·r
s..·1.·ttbr institution.
Does
appears that if Catholic colleges
seems very puppet like since
·
* * * * *
Perhaps, one of' the
few
\"alid
thoughts
expressed
in
Mr.
Harrison's article were hi:-
,iew-:-
on
the
Catholic char,d
and
religious
·services.
l ima~ne
however if he had thouc.ht
t°'f it:
that could have been blamed
t1n
the Marist Brothers too. Sin~e
a
good percentage of our student-:,
here went to Marist
high
schools.
which were Catholic schools and
they might have liked
what
they
saw, some might have thought
"why not stick the Brothers out
another
four
years:·
That
thought
might have made us
even more "indispensable."
I trust this quick session in
Marist history has helped in
some small way to educate Mr.
Harrison's opinions and-we may
rely in the future that he will
upgrade the responsibility of his
journalism.
One thought
in closing: if the
State ever needed a witness for
the prosecution in a hearing on
Marist getting State aid they
should call on
Mr.
Harrison. Our
College community
should be
indebted
to Mr. Harrison for
slowing down the process and
the
possibility
of
Marist
receiving State aid.
*****
GLENNONFROM
1
th~
~.!m;ms
l'f
;1
Catholic colkg.e. arc to financially survive some
somebody has over ruled them
rr-·.:-','nt "- Ch.rntfan
i1tmospherc
form of state aid must be forth
and already declared to every
ami
sf
it u1.~-s.
what
is it
comming. In seeking s_tate aid
high
school
senior
on the
smHx-i..~i
t,._,
instill in a student
colleges
have had to prove
·
Atlantic Seaboard that there is
(h;i
wm
m:sk..:-him
ht,ttl'r.
All
themselves non-dcnominationa.
no theology requirement.
The
~t::tl~~
fn~.m
C::.thl.)lic
rnlleg.es
How far can the Catholic college
circulated argument that
"it
was
·
t~l~ -1."'>f
n1.n\•
ihe
respective
stray from its straight
I
line of
inevitable
that
the Faculty
~"-h:..:-~~i1.,n
:1t
Uti-s.
sc.hool
has as
intended purpose in order to
would vote to drop theology"
iis
ptiq~
..
,
to
instill
the
spirit of
financially
survive, and is it
bears little weight - remember
th<' Hoh· Ghost, et~'- How is such
possible that in straying too far,
Tom Dewey? So we can see
a tlung
dom·: ~·an it
be
done"?
the
es sent i a
I
go a Is
are
what Mr. Nyquist meant about
Tht~ Carholil-
institutions
circumnavigated
an~ hence its
the administration
having ties
sought to develop a better whole
basis for existence?
....._
with
the sponsoring
religious
reason.
ro do
this
they
Lloyd Averill, vice-president
order.
·
st r u ct tired
their
colleges
of Kalamazoo
college
has
Now we can take a look at the
differently;
at the same time
devoted
much
attention
to
supposedly lay board of trustees.
though
they
had
to
win
problem
of purpose for the
It -is composed
of. fifteen
acceptance
as a reputable
church
related
college, Mr.
members - nine laymen and six
academic institutions, the result
Averill has said that "adding
brothers - so that at first glance
being that they often became • 'Christian' to the designation of
it appears that the laymen have
followers and copiers of secular
a college means at least two
the upper hand: But let us not
institutions and the effort to be
things. First that the college
forget that the brothers form a
different
fell on rules and
rejects
any
standard
of
block vote and thaMhe brothers
regulations, in a sense attempt
competence which does not also. along
with
any
two other,
was not to teach how to be a
include goodness; and second,
trustees form a simple majority.·
better person but to enforce it.
that
th_e college claims the
It is similar
to having six
Things have come to such a
freedom to take a position on
r e p u b l i c a n s a n d. nine
point
that
the distinguishing
the source of human good. And
independents· on a congressional
mark of a Catholic institution
is able to do both things without
committee.
Just
as the
grew to be strict regulations,
in any
·way
subverting
its
republicans
will
control· the
When
it
became apparent that
primary
intention
to be a
committee,
the
brothers
can
the goals of Catholic education
college.
control °(not necessarily
;will but
were not being realized through
It
is estimated that by
1985
can)
control
·
the Board of
these means, they. were dropped.
over
80%
of Catholics receiving
Trustees.
So we see
.
more
The effort was to throw off that
their collegiate Educa~on will .be religious ties and control.
old stigma but the problem now
ti
mg so at se_cular instit~ti<;-ns
Next we come to the point of
was how do we reach that goal'?
. h~
-
P~<;-v~ded
-._rehg1ous
religious ties in the financial
second a pressure
from
above by.
'Perhaps
it is not'rule's but Young· .· ,pporturuties.;.f~r,
all, ~tude~ts
··
area.·
The'
,official·
college·.
the strong trends towards
early Christian men and women living
and
,
co~rses
111
t_herr fa1th
position on this reads as follows::
and
narrow
specialization
as
together
in a "sanctified'
approachmg the quality offered
"Marist
receives no Jinaricial
more and more students press
atmosphere
be offered
to
at• the
better
Catholic
assistance
from any religious
-toward
graduate or professional
American society as something
institutions.
·_Also
·current
denomination ... The college does
school.
·
spei;iai Are people educated in
esHmates judge· that only four
.
not anticipate· receiving either
Jacques Barzun in his essay
isolation?
Many
Catholic
per cent
(500,000)
-of
the total
gifts or financial assistance from_
"College
to University - and
colleges,
are
now
.
privately
u~iversi~y
st ude1!t _po~ula!ion the brothers in the future." Such
After,"
predicts that th,e- four
controlled. This is as important
will be m Catholic. ms_tltutio!1s a statement is necessary to prove
year college· as we know it will step for
it
removes the college
b
Y
~
9
8?
·
Q.uantitatlvely
its
that the college maintains no
find that it has no proper place
from out under the hand of the
~o~tn~~tlon · would be almo st
financial
dependence
upon a
in the scheme of things. It will
local bishop, who too often in
msigmfican_t. ~nd w_e hay~ yet ~o religious
order. Yet Brother
find that the secondary school
the past would stifle intellectual
prove Catholic um~ersitles will
Lambert's
informed
position
has added a year or two to the
creativity because he
felt
it was
produce
better
mtellectual
specifically states thatthe Marist
present
curriculum,
that the
contrary to church doctrine. In
leaders.
than-
the• secular
Brothers
have donated
some
graduate school has kidnapped
this
respect
a privately
universities.
·
$70
000 to the college within
all college juniors and seniors·. controlled
college
has the
R_,
_M:. Keefe,
dean
~f
the' past
year.
If Brother
into its own departments.
All advantage over a sfate school
Adm1ss1ons
at SL· Louis
Lambert is correct
this means
that will be left in colleges is the
who too often become political
University has said,., ... "let us be
that Marist does h~ve financial
dean
and
he is .the
most
pawns. This in itself is a strong
quite clear in stating that as ties and does receive assistance
expendable of creatures."
,.argument
for the continuation
much
as
.we
should like to
from the brothers.
·
While
these
are
critic...
of not merely Catholic but all. believe
it,
there is no Catholic
,
But witli
·
all this. two facts
·
problems
which our secular
p.rivate
schqols,
for
·an
collige.
or university
which
remain. First Marist does need
institutions
face when· added
educational
system under the
enjoys the luxury of
a
great bulk
.
state-aid and 'second we will not
with those confronting Catholic , control
of the
state
is a
of applications for a
few
places
receive-state-aid because we are a
.colleges
they appear small.-
dangerous thing.
in a freshman class ... " In these
__
.
_____
.
_______
_
Catholic
colleges
in this
To again ask the question,
ecumenical
times why spend
BEGLEY
FROM·l
,
counw
were founded due to
"Do
Catholic
Colleges offer
$2,000
to send
Jack
to
the cieep
felt
prejudice felt by
something unique?" I feel the
St.Jeromes when ~e can attend
This is only one example of our
Catholics at secular institutions
answer would have to be no. I
the local community co~lege for
very clear purpose ofserving the
and
in
an effort- to promote
fail
to
see a difference
in
$200. IO
It
~ecomes qmt_e clear
~_people
of the State ofNew York
missionary activity
in
the newly
-
attitude or values from those at
that C~tholic colleges m ~he·
_
in
..
any way that the college
·
founded
country.
·
Catholic
a secular campus to those at a preceedmg decad~ were facmg
senses true need."
education,
for
many years
Catholic one. Some might even
~he needs_ of_ a s?c1~ty then and
I t
see-ms
. that
the
hibernated from the mainstream
go as far as to argue that
if C!itholic institutions
are to
administration is willing to do
all
of
the
American
academic
Catholic colleges have developed
continue
they . must h~ve the
they can to obtain this aid. In a
world. For many years it was the -people to a lesser_extent due to
courage to reali~e !he different
letter
to Mr. Robert
Stone,
practice of a number of Catholic
the homogenious nature of their
needs of todays_ so<:1-et>:
and face
c
O
u n s e
1
·
a n d
D e P
u
t y
high schools'. to discourage their
student
bodies.
What then
them. Secular_ 1i:ist1tutions may
Commissioner for Legal Affairs,
students
from_ applying
to
should be done? Should Catholic
express a Chnstian c~nc~m for
Bro. Linus states: "We would
sec u Jar
institutions.
The
colleges
be abandoned,
and
todays
world but 1t 1s not
also like to point out that Marist
realization of a different society
should teaching orders develop
necessary for them_ to d?do so
College is willing to accept any
brought
on
by Ecumenical
stronger
ties. with
secular
and
hav1: a valid ex~tence
conditions imposed by the State
thought,
has brought about a
schools?
It
might be argued t~e
whereas this should_b~ a l?n"!ary
Education
Departmen(
to
marked change, for one thing
c~urch should _stan~ by Catholic
goal for the <;!t!1!'!1c
mst1tut1on.
guarantee
tha't
any
funds
admissions officers of many of
higher education
Jt1st by the
------------
received by the College be used
t h e
h i g h
J y
ran
k e d
nature
of th~
size of the
HARR,ISON
FROM
J
for public purposes."
.
non-secretarian colleges find that
commitment
it has
m_a~e,
We all recognize the fact that
outstanding
students from the
~owever there c~n be no v~lidlty
responsible
to Comptroller
we need the state-aid. In order
finest Catholic high schools are
in
the perpetuation of _a nus take.
Brother Cornelius Russell. This
to obtain it we have to have a
applying
in rapidly increasing
What
ts·
needed ts a new
leaves Mr. Dougherty and Mr.
unified front. In order to clairfy
numbers.
"type" of Catholic college and
Wade.
But the Development
any
questions,
the student
Earl
J. McGrath was not the
recent re-assesments at various
Director hardly seems to be a
committee
has arranged with
only one to
fail to see the
swift
institutions
are beginning to
front line administrative office
key officials to come before the
changes the 60's would bring to
reflect this need for change. As which leaves Mr. Wade, Dean of
s t u d e n t
b o d y
for
a
the academic world for Catholic
mentioned
the stress has gone
Students, as the only front line,
question-answer forum. The date
colleges are now i~ what some
off student !e~lation
and _what non~religious administrator.
and time will be announced, and
might call a crisis period, this
is nee~ed m its Pl!lce
1s
·
an
But two very important men
it
is
imperative that anyone with
crisis stems primarily from the
emphasis on a acad~mic program
have
been
ignored
here -
questions attend this forum. It is
inability as of yet to solve two
that
would
enhghten
and
Brothers Cox and Carolan who
time to discuss the immediate
large
problems,
Identity
and
broad_en
s~udents
to
a are
both
associate academic
futureofMarist.
Finance..
responsible social awareness. The
Deans and who, along with Bro;
uu•
time is
inoney

... and you don't wan• •.~ waste
,
money, so why waste· time?,.
Start- your life insurance pre>•
: .
!;\ram now-when
your· premi~
ums are lower ·and
,your
cash
,

value
builds longer. Build your
future with the Northwestern
.
·
·
MutuaL May we give
you
some
.:6(
our lime?-,

1
·

:
,;
~
.
NORTHWESTERN
MUTUAlliFE

MILWAUKEE
lr=N·-=,,·M--,-L-,l
There in
differenet,' •
.-.

I
!
~nd lh;;-differcrice grow,;
.. ·
TIIOMAS
F. HEFFERNAN.
Special Agent
35
r..,arket
St., Poughkeepsie,
N. Y.
.
12602
.
.
Office: 452-8640
_(lambalres·
·.
i
fl
,
;Win
terll
·--
LI.DO'S-
Cl!JbS
- Organization_s
Rent Our Hall With
/ An Indoor
Barbecue
Pit - Then Let ~s
Cater or Do Y<>_ur
Own Thing. Ski
Nearby_.
ADMISSIONS FREE
·.
ONWEEKENDS
WITHMARIST
LO.CARD
Rt.
23
CIMYVlll.E
·Tel.·
518-329-0992























































FEBRUARY.S) 1970
THE
CIRCLE
PAGE7
·:10
·,Pe[sp·ective·
Ray Charlton
Campus
Stuff
By Donald Duffy
.
Varsity Basketball
Perhaps the• main reason that
the Marist machine stalled out in
.
the recent King's game was the
below
·
average performance
of
·
"Downtown"
Ray Charlton.
This
.
game gives one a good
indication
of the
·
tremendous
part Ray plays
in
_the
Red Fox
attack.
·
·
The S' IO" playmaker leads the
fast break, sets up the full court
press, and is the team's most
reliable
outside
shooter.
He
considered
Tuesday's game the
year's most.important
so far. He
felt this way because· Marist
·
played
no where near, their
potential· but yet still inanaged
to win ...
,,:·.•.<·

As co-captain, Ray serves as a
.... :
..
:
.:
.. good
·team
dnfluence
·.
off the_
court as well as on it. A native of
Bridghampton,
L.I.
and formerly
of· Sulfolk
·,Community
College,
}~:
i",,?i
;-,·_
~\~:,·
..
! .-·
_J
--~
.
Two·
Fakes.Later
''Dead Foxes'_'
By Joe Rubino
·
Topic - Nickname
.
Ever since the first time
I
heard someone speak sarcastically about
our dear school nickname (which, by the way, was also the first time
I
heard someone mention our nickname),
I
started to think that, just
possibly~ the men of Marist might not like being referred to as the
"Red Foxes."· In three years,
I
have yet to find a student who
actually does.like our calling card .... So, following Love Duff's lead,
. I tried to find out if and how our nickname could be changed.
·
·,
According. to Doc Goldman, the process is
•not
really that difficult.
.
But rather the two main problems are: l. do the students really want
it changed? (or are we just finding something else to complain
about); 2. to what do we want it changed ... Off hand,
I
would say
It
seems that last year at this time, I remember reading
a Joe
Rubino column asking the question, How can a team be so good one
night and be· terrible the next night? Well
1
think that would be a
good question
to ask now. Marist ·has the potential
to be a
powerhouse
in their division yet it seems that this has yet to
materialize. When Marist played Kings Point they seemed to forget
how good they really were and proceeded to throw the game away.
They were at least 20 points better yet they ended up losing by
three points. What it all adds up to is something
1
cannot answer.
he came to Marist during the
second semester last
.
year and
immediately
stabilized
the
.
backcourt situation.· He teamed
up with the since departed Ken
Thompson
to give the
•Red
Foxes as fine
a
set
·of
guards as
there was in the area.
.
Since.· joining the varsity, he
has aided Marist in posting a
22-9 mark. He looks forward to
playiitg
Southamptom
·
College
later on this• year, his best game
last year coming against this
same
squad.
He also looks
forward to the Dowling game,
confident
of knockiltg
them
from the ranks of the unbeaten.
'
With the two most recent
wins
against Nyack and Oneonta by
lopsided
margins maybe
Marist has started
to realize
their
tremendous talent. l certainly hope so for the tough part of their
schedule is coming up and victory in all future games is
a
must.
Women's Sports Program
"Sugar
Bear,''
a Business
major, loses his eligibility at the
end of. this year (although
he
will return to Marist next fall)
since he· played for two seasons
at SCCC. A great competitor, his
biggest wish is to go out a
winner
as he hopes
to lead
Marist
into
their
sec.ond
post-season
tournament,
in as
many years.
*****
OUR CLOTHES ARE
AT TOM'S
DRY CLEANERS!
ARE YOU.RS?
Has anyone given this a thought'? I'm not talking intram~rals but
on the intercollegiate level. It seems that if anything is going to be
.done
for next year now is the time for it t9 start. When Marist enter
into the Co-Ed field they should have thought of this also. With next
year's female population rising to over 200 on the U., it is reasonable
to consider the idea of fielding teams on the college scene. Take for
instance in the field of basketball.
It
wouldn't be too hard to start
·with tl1at ~pQrt. Many girls
.schools
jn N. Y. C. compete like St.
Joseph ·s, Molloy. and S
l.
John's. Rival schools in the local area
might be ,Mount St. Mary's or New Paltz, maybe even Vassar. I'm
very sure· that it wouldn't
be that hard to begin but it must be
supported by our lovely Co-Eds. If you girls want this now is the
time not next year. Think about it and get involved .....
Bits-N-Picces
The Nyack game brought about the return of that famous group,
Curtin's Raiders. Lead by their famous leader Dennis Curtin, who
had a career high of three points, the Raiders excited the crowd with
a new typ..- of baskl'tball. strange. Dennis had seven big rebounds.
five on one shot.
It
seems that the ball just didn't want to go in.
When I ·asked Dennis why he tapped the ball five times without
getting the ball in the hoop. he replied, .. No one told me that l was
suppose lo score ... I just can·t understand Mr. Curtin .... Speaking of
Dennis. his roon1111atc Ed Kilduff and Himself have gone in th~
shoeshine business. Anybody who wants their shoes shined just
go
to
room
312 C for a shine. Cost 25 ce11ts .....
On Tucsdav and
Wednesday night Frivolous Sal's is offering 25 •.;ents Mug Nights.
Worth a try ... The big question is now who is the. best pin ball
machine player in the school.
I
understand that
.t
group is,inter..:stcd
in conducting an intr.imural championship
in tliat field. What will
happen next..·
..
It
seems the words hastlc. bash and have another
were a little too much for even odds man Jerry Kiesel last Friday
night. Saturd:1y found
him
a litth: peaked and a
kw
trips to
St.
Francis were in store. Ask Jerry about his new <l..:sert crawl. his
specialty ... Anybody interested in finding out the ending to Nevada
Smith ... From
the kt
to Super Sub. Bob Ullrich h,1s another
that the majority of us do want it changed, but finding a nickname
Expert Laundering
and Quick
that·everybody
is going to dig is an immense task
...
Love Duff and
1
Service ... "Cheapiest
Prices in
have formed sort of a committee to try and handle these problems.
the Hudson Valley- ... "
If anyone has any suggestions,
I
would ask you either to see us, or
TOM'S DRY CLEANING
.
SERVICE
send us yo.ur suggestion via campus mail.. .
Open: Mon. thru Fri. 5:30-6:30
Topic - Nonexistence
·
·
-
.
_
,
Main Desk. Champ. Hall
..
·-·
Gee, I reaa where··the athletib coniinitte·e
..
ptocured blazers for ---------------
nickname. Instant Offen·sc for
his
great
ability
to break up three on
one breaks. To most people that would be
a
great thing to do but it
seems he breaks up Marist fast breaks. Bob is also becoming a foul
shooting expert. Very Foul. how does
38%
sound
....
Well that's
about all for this week
...
Be
good. Love Duff
·. vars.ity athletes. Not bad for a year's work.: . .In reading through the
school catalogue the other day,
I
noticed that
the athletic committee
· was still on page 18 ...
,
Topic - None
·
In Perspective
The
article
entitled
.
FPC
PROPOSES
PAY
RAISES
should have stated that the pay
raises amounted
to
IO percent
across the board and
6
percent
merit increase. The figures in the
previous article were erront:ous.
We regret the error.
Query: Why doesn't the 6th floor Leo like The Circle? ... Whatever
happened to the Faculty-Varsity Club basketball contest? .. .In the
recent Oneonta game, Ray Manning set a school record for most free
throw·s made in one game with his l 5 for 20 from the charity stripe.
He broke the record of 11 formerly held by Bill: Gowen (3 times),
Bill McKinstry, and Rick Schneider, all set during the '67-'68
season ... The YGBKN Award goes out to me, for not thinking of
one ..
_.
*****
Peas
And
Carrots
by Joe McMahon
Starting
·next
issue, my job of Sports Editor will be turned over to
..
none other than that man about campus, author of "Two Fakes
Later" - Joe Rubin<>. There probably won't be any major changes
since Joe had· been doing a good share of the work each week
anyway·;::With
people
flocking~ to Donnelly
Hall for nightly
-,~
workouts
now, it seems. we might get a good response for an
intramural meet, say around the beginning of March. There would
,
..
_ probably be a big hassle from the a_dministrators il)volved, but if. it
;;;
could be worked out, it might be a successful venture. It would be
,.,_
organized according to the "house system" with each floor entering
a team. Relays would be stressed, as well as individual races, Special
races could be held for the co-eds; and maybe even a .. Masters"
section for the faculty-under
·35
and over 35. The special event,
if
_the meet does get apprpved, would be the "Invitational
Handicap
Mile." (handicap being 3/4 of a mile) for such notables as Don
D1;1ffy, Joe Francese Squatty Body, Jim "Fotzo"
Barone, etc
....
The·
track is 180 yards long, 9¾ laps to the mile, and somehow has
produced
an unbelievable
multiplication
in the ranks of the
team ... Speaking of the House System, Leo will be having a .. skit"
night
next.
Tuesday and the height of the competition
will be
betw!!en the 5th aitd 6th floors. The riyalry has become so keen that
the floor leaders Gerry Garcy and Elise Maneri have signed a
contract to the effect that the loser will be forced to
run
IO
laps
outside around the oval (which totals about 3½ miles) with oak tags
. on front and back upon which will be written whatever the winner
chooses to write. The run must take place in broad daylight and
..
there must be at minimum
a
humongous crowd in attendance ...
Thursday night, tonight, Ladycliffe opposes Mt. St. Mary's in a girl's
varsity basketball game. To get a game arranged between our co-eds
and Ladycliffe or the Mount is now Don Duffy's goal for the month.
At least eighteen girls on the sixth floor are interested in playing, so
why not? ..
.lf
anyone would like to purchase tickelS to the IC4A
Indoor Track Championships at Madison Square Garden on March
7th, sec me with $3.50 ... Throngs of people are just storming Steve
Harrison's door to enter the 12-hour bike race.
So
far there is one -
Isidore Sabeta - and he wants
to
challenge anyone in a race from
Albany
to
Poughkeepsie. Isidore says that all
he
needs is two spare
tires. Good luck Izzy ... Erp ...
*****
Phil Cappio
*****
When one. speaks of distance
runners at Marist, the name of
Phil Cappio invariably rises to
the top of the list. In one short
year
this remarkable
student
brother
managed
to dominate
every
phase
in the art of
footraeing from the half-mile to
the classic marathon
t
26
miles.
385 yards).
As
a frcslrman.
out of St.
Mary's
lligh
School
in
Manhassct, where he it.id been a
2
:00
half-miler.
Phil
was
s
p oradiciilly
bothered
by the
injury jinx. Still he hdd down
the No. 4 position in his first try
at 5 miles on the Cross-Counlrv
team that was
18~3
that year. 1;1
the spring, Cappio
was
one of
the
12
who competed
on the
record
I
00-hour
marathon.
In
sophomore year, Phil was No.
2
man on tlic Cross-Country team
until another injury forced him
out.
Junior
year saw Cappio
finally put
it all
toget!Jcr,
going
tac full year without an injury.
He
won nearly every dual meet
or the
season,
leading tile team
lo a 20 and S record. and he
finished
5th
in
tile
NAIA.
Championships
with
a school
record time of 27:50 for Van
Cortlandt
Park. indoor season
was the same story
as Phil.
·co-captain
of the team, won
both
the
I-mile and
2-mile
against a strong Queens tt:am
that won every other race. In the
spring,
Phil
was
al
his peak.
lie
doubled and sometimes tripled
in every meet. Against Albany
State he hit 4:22 for the mile
and then came back an hour
later
in the two-mih: to run
9:54. When he was needed ia Hte
·
half, he turned
in
a 2:01. The
high point of Pltil's career came
---------------------------·on
April
21. 1969
when he
BABAFROM
I
atmosphere. Quite simply this
facility is Benoit House
and
its
acquisition is essential to our
well-being.
We
have learned of its future ·
status and wish the use of this
house
for
our community.
Under
tlte system
we
will
p_etition certain qualified white
students
to
try
and
live
with
us
in harmony. To provide for a
qualified few a look into the
black experience, we
will make
prov1s1ons for lectures,
plays,
extended himself to the limit in
etc., which will give some insight
the famous Bos!on Marathon.
into black and white relations
.Out of a field ol 1200 runners.
I
cannot stress the importanc~
Phil covered_ the, 26-mile.
385
of
our need for Benoit House. to
yard course
m_
~
,tour~,;. and ten
provide
a focal
point.of
seconds
to_f1111sl! b9th.
and
existence for black students.
It
is brcak John l·orhes
_record
wl11d1
m
y
b
e
I
j
c
f
t h
a
t
th
c had
hcen
3
hrs. 8
nun.
administration
here at l\larist
l'ltil.
.111
Englisli major. pl.1;1~
College will operate
in good
to leach at a _:\lanst l11!!h sdinnl
faith, as they have demonstrated
ui:on g.raduat1<;m._
and proh;1hl~
in the past.
will
expand
Ins
1nvolvcmt·nt
m
*****
track to still another rc:1l111.
1::,·
field of coaching.
***~*

•.





































































































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.

THE
CIRCLE.
FEBRUARY
s.
i970
HOopsters
Sque~k
By
Kings
_65~63
· ..
.
face<New·Paltz·
..
· S8tUrday
,
.,,,_.
Varsity Aims
TO
.Keep Strellk
. AliVe At Moiitnouth Tonight·.·.
!
A week ago Wedn.esday
-.the
inexplicable
freeze
with
the
squad took on Nyack at home.
·
Marist subs desperately trying to
·
It
proved-to be no-contest as the
get their hands on. the ball.
It
host squad built up a 49-23. almost
seemed
as' if
·Nyack
halftime margin
-enroute
to_ a_. believed the score was reversed.
final score of 94-49.
·
One of the games finest stints
The Red Foxes had
..
all the
was turned in by Rich Tallevi as
edges on the poor Parsons as he showed
·
fine hustle and
they
.
scored
almost at will improved defense. On numerous
throughout
the contest.
Joe
occasions
he
Ii tcrally dove
Scott led the scoring parade with
through the air. to come up with
.
25 points. He was followed by
some miraculous saves ..
"Sugar Bear" Ray Charlton (
I
5),
NYack's scoring. was led by
arid
Bill
Spenla
and Brian
Serge Duss
_with
l'l
points, and
McGowan (12 apeice). The rest
Duane Stekel and Phil Nelson
of the scoring was quite spread
who threw in IO apiece
..
out since Coach Petro could
The following Saturday
the
substitute· quite freely without
men in red travelled to Oneonta
the course of the ball game
where they· avenged last year's
changing drastically.
embarrassing loss by defeating
The 'closing minutes of the
the Red Dragons 80-63.
contest proved quite rag-tag as
Ray Manning
.
turned in his
the
Parsons
went
into
an finest varsity performance as he
Ju'nior
-Foxes
·:Roll
by John Petraglia
Last Saturday night the frosh
hoop
squad
preceeded
the
varsity's conquest with a win of
their
own. over
Oneorita's
freshmen, 89-74.
..
.·.
The
.
front
.
court str!,!ngth of
the junior foxes proved fo be
too mu.ch for the fast-breaking
.
Red
_Drago_ns,
who couldn't get
enough rebounds to· make their
attack effective.
·
The
men
in
red
held a
consistently
strong
l~ad
throughout
with
'Oneonta,
'at
one time only closing-to within
8
.points.
The big gun, as usual,
,vas guard John· Landy who
smoked the nets for 18 markers,
as he continues to· average over
25 points per game.
·
·
Forward Bill- Pez:i:utti posted
pumped
in
·27
-points
while·
pulling down 21 retrieves. ·Joe
·
Scott (19 pts.; 13 rbs,), Bill
Spenla (IO pts., 11
-
rbs.), and
Ray
._Charlton
(14
pts.)
·
supplement
the scoring· attack.
-After
on,erratic-first
half
which saw them go to the locker
_room
leading. by only 39~38,
Ma_rist built up a quick l~ad early
in the second session. With the
visitors leading by 1 I, a rash of
technical fouls hit Oneonta, and
when the
.
smoke cleared, the
Dragons coach was gone from
the scene, and:so was any ·chance
Oneonta had of pulling the game
out.
Ron Edelstein, with
I
5
pts.,
and Bryan Hasset, with
ll,
led
. Oneonta.
*****
..
-
.17
.
points
·
·while
,
center
Jim
·
·
Martell added· 12.
·These
·two/
along
with
Mike Marso,
controlled
.
the· boards, negating
·
the oppositions
attack. Guard
Rick Carmike continued
·to
'do
a
good job of. ball handling as he
.
filled
··
in for
ailing
starter Ed
Marist's flashy guard,' Ray Charlton, goes
·up
for the tap
against Kings College Tuesday night. The Red Foxes went_
on to
take their third
in·
a row and also pick up an important league
victory.
·
Reilly.
·
*****
· Trackmen
Occupy
Donnelly·
Hall
By Greg Howe
. discussion
developed
·
bet\veen
.
Mr.
Aderholdt
,a1id the two
members
in
which
Mr.-··
For the past three years, th~ Aderholdt
stated
·
that
·
Mr.
track team has been practicing
·
Pavelko informed him that he
for
1 nd oor
Track,
o.u tside
did not want the team running
whenever
weather
permitted.
in the halls for safety reasons.
During these three years, many
He also ·said that he did · not
of the runners began to look for
know of any
·
permission given
some place to run indoors. A for. the use of the halL- The
few places had been considered
heated discussion finally ended,
(like.
Dutchess
Community
when the two members were
College Gym, the Brother's Gym
ejected
from Mr. Aderholdt's
in Esopus, and the Poughkeepsie
office.
After
their
abrupt
Armory), but nothing could be discussion,
the two members
materialized.
The team finally
decided
to see some of the
decided that
they would use people involved in the matter.
Donnelly Hall which some of the
First, they saw Mr. Pavelko who
runners used· four years ago but
said he knew how much trouble · ·
discarded because of possible leg_ the team had gone through in
injury. Now, however, we know
the past, but was still fearful of
that this is not a valid excuse.
the safety hazards that could be
Coach Petro talks strategy as a tired Ray Charlton·gets
a chance
for
refreshment during a second half timeout.
Wrestlers
Bow.
To·
.
.
.
.
-
Jersey
Powerhouses
i,y Bob Sullivan
.Last
week the Marist wrestling
in 7:34 ..
team went up against two big
F.D.U. quickly put the match
wrestling
schools from Nt!w
out
of reach however. Don
Jersey and came out dazed. Even
Calaluce was too strong for 167
the
cozy
campus - coluseum
lb. Jack Walsh pinning hi!]l in
·couldn't
halt the tide'us Madison
-
...
'
I
:34.Then
Al Orzechowski took
.
-. F.D.U.- took a
3
l'-1
S
decision
a 9-0 decision from J°im Lowery,
fast. Wednesday· and 1'lewark •
The
.muscular
freshman did"a big
Rutgers
followed
up on
job in fighting
_off
·several
near
Saturday with
a
43-5 win.
falls during the match
.
In the match-against Fairleigh
·
Larry
McLain
ended_
the
__
:Dickinson
Kevin O'Grady,
scoring
by pinning
191 l_b.
wrestling for tile first time this
freshman George Finn in 3: 14.
year after an early injury, found
Bill
McGarr was awarded
a
the
.gqjng
rough as Herb Web.er
forfeit
in'
the
heavyweight
pinned him in
I
:53.
.
division.
.

.
, .
John Eisenhardt then picked
.
In Saturday's match only Jim
up
a
forfeit wi11. However from
Lowery was able to stem the
here
F.D. U.
proceeded to put on
tide as he reversed his
177
lb.
a great display of wrestling as
.
·opponent,
Stiles, and
,
pinned
they opened to an 18-5 lead.
him in :58. Newark-Rutgers won
-
Skip Maan pinned 134 lb. Lance
all the other matches by fall,
:Lipscamb
in'· 2:30. Then Dave
except at I SO lbs. where Matty
...
Chee fen,
'although
unable to
·
_
lfogan dropped a.s,o decision to
register a pi1i. beat Rico Velez
Newark's Feretti.
·
I0-2 ... Then Jim Orzechowski,
Both
of the
New Jersey
the younger of two brotlfers,
schools
give
wrestling
caught Matty Rogan in
I
:5
I.
scholarships, in fact the entire
Here· Capt. Bill Moody
.put
F.D.U. team receives aid.
Ma.rist back in the picture as he
Last night_ the tearri
.··
took on
wrecked
U
58 -_ lb. Craig Lifer.
another
powerhouse
at C.W.
Moody, working
for a badly
.
Post. On Saturday the grapplers
needed
..
pin, proceeded to build a
lost Drew University at 2:00.in
12-2 lead before stopping Lifer
the gym .
he thought
he was the man
responsible for giving permission
to use Donnelly/ Hall
.
but he
would first have to look into the
matter
.
About 7:00 p.m., 8
hours
·
after the two members
met Mr. Aderholdt, Greg Howe
received a call from him. The
conversation centered about Mr.
Aderholdt's effort to understand
the situation about the team
.
Mr. Aderholdt finally told Mr.
Howe that he would like him to
stop the team from running that
night until he could give the
team an affirmative or negative
answer
the next day. Next
morning, Greg Howe went to see
l\lr. Aderholdt
who told him
that everybody he talked to was
willing to let the track team run
in the Hall. That night, the team
was back in Donnelly, running.
. For two days, the team used created if the team ran in the
Donnelly until word was given halls. Next, they went to- see
by
Dr.
Goldman
that
Mr. Bro .. Linus Foy, but he told
Aderholdt
didn't
want them
them that they should see Dr.
running the halls. Right after
Dr.
Goldman
for pennission.
On
Goldman gave the bad news, two their w~y to Dr. Goldman, they
m<!mbers of the team· (Greg met Bro. LaPietra whom they
Howe
and Steve Kopki) went to asked if he could help them in
see Mr. Aderholdt.
A heated
anyway. Bro. LaPietra told them
John Gallagher l~ds Bill Kalish, Jim Corbett, and Steve·
Kopld through a fast two-lapper (360 yards) at Marist•s new
indoor arena. Donnelly .Hall .
At the time this article was
written, the membership of the
track team has increased from
ten
to
thirty. Maybe this
is
the
reincarnation of a sport that one
of our deans regarded as the
dead sport at Marist College.
*****