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The Circle, February 12, 1970

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 13 - February 12, 1970

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1HE
\

I
VOLUME 6 ·NUMBER 13
,,MARIST
COLLEGE,:~UGHKEEPSIE,
NEW
YORK
12601
FEBRUARY 12, 1970
Math
Break.through
Proclah~1ed
One
of the
world's
top
Louis Alpert, Chairman of our
research journals, ''Monatshefte
Department of Mathematics. Mr,
Fur Mathematik",
is about to
Alpert, whose Ph.D; thesis is
.publish Doctor L.V. Toralballa's
based upon his contribution to
recent "breakthrough".discovery
. this
discovery
is currently
embracing
the solution to a . generalizing this new theory to
fundamental
problem:
in
higherdimensionalspace.
-
_
mathematics
that has baffled'
Mr. Alpert predicts th~t this
mathematicians
since the year
new discovery. will reduce most
1868. This ·research discovery
of the research perf<_>rmed
. in
entitled "A Geometric Theory
"Surface Area" over the last l 00
of Surface Area" was studied
years to obsolescence' and that
intensively for nearly one year
because of this an· international
by
some.• of
the
leading
battle challenging the validity of
mathematicians
of Germany
this discovery may- commence
prior to its final acceptance last
upon -its .publication by the
week by the "Monatshefte Fur
"Monatshefte Fur Mathematik".
Mathematik". Doctor Toralballa
It
is
most significant to.add here
w.ho
is
a Professor
of
that
the
"Monatshefte
Fur
Mathematics
in
-the
Graduate
Mathematik" had at least once
School of New York University
before been the battleground for
and. Adjunct
Professor
of
an international controversy in
Mathematics
at Marist was mathematics. In 1931 tnisworld
assisted in this discovery by
famous journal published one of
..
the most controversial papers in
the . Hi.story
of Mathematics
entitled
.. Uber
Form al
U nen tszheid bare
Sa tze . der
Principia
Mathematica
und
Verwandter
Systeme''
( translate_d:
· "Q.n
Formally
Undecideable
Propositions
of
Principia
Mathematica·
and
Related
Systems").
T_his
epoch-making paper written by
the great mathematicians, Kurt
Godel, presented to the world
the conclusion that all formal
mathematical systems with any
respectable degree of complexity
can ·never· be fully axiomitized.
This paper literally destroyed
the
"Formalistic.
School"· of
Hilbert, which up . to that time
had
. dominated
a
Ir
of
Mathematical Logic..
· ..
l f -Doctor Toralballa's
new
_theory
wea·thers.
the
international battle· tha is- soon
like_ly
to deve.lop
among
mathematicians,
there
now
appears to be little question that
. he will be awarded. the Field
Prize in Mathematics, which the
New
York Times' columnist
·Harry ·schwartz refers to as the
-"Nobel Prize" in Mathematics.
This
international
prize is
awarded just . once . every two
· years to the mathematician· who
has made the most significant
contribution
-to the overall
development
. of mathematics.
Doctor. Tdralballa's
battle for
this "NobeLPriie" is scheduled
to go into its~ final round when
he
defends
his new theory
. before
the
International
Congress
of Mathematicians'
Annual Meeting in Niece, France
· on Sept. 1, 1970.
Mr. Alpert is scheduled to join
Doctor
Toralballa
at this
meeting· in Niece. A limited
number of math majors at Marist
whose plans already include a
trip to Europe this Summer will
be given the oppertunity to join
Doctor
Toralballa
and Mr.·
The faculty dc;licts a serious mood as they consider the APC
p1oposals, hlsl Thursday in Donnelly Hall. It was the first time
since last May that the faculty had gathered for a vote. _
FACULTY
VOTES
.B.S
.. Degree
.
.
and::New.
Major
The faculty voted this past
The faculty also approved the
Thursday
to award the B.S. granting of a B.A. with a major
d e g r e e
i n
B u s i n cs s in Environmental Sciences. The
Administration.
to
begin on the
area of. concentrations
for the
fresfimen and sophomore level, m'ajor·
will
primarily
be
in the Fall, 1.970. The new biological. The curriculum has a
program,
presented
by Mr. core 9f· 17-20 credit hours, an
Panel
Discusses
Aid
Continued on page 4
Kelley
representing
the
area requirement of57
credits
Department
·of
Business.
consisting
of
History,
· Economics
grants a· B.S. in ·.Mathematics,
Economics,
Business Administration,
With Psychology, Biology, Chemistry .
.. . concentratjons.,,in
.. Accounting., Earth. Science, and J>hysics
..
The .
. and
Fin·an·ce,-
Marketing; or· major field requirement is· 25.
BY THOMAS RABBIT
·
this year's cost. Bro. Foy stated
by Frank Denara
A student- committee called a
that the additional cost would
parii::l. of Marist administrators,
go to teacher's salaries and other
including Bro. Foy, Bro. Fred
student services. No additional
Society will not stand still and
·Lambert, Bro. La Pietra and Mr.
mo n e
Y .
wilt
be spent . on
allow environmental degeneracy
Wade~ jn order that they inform
"building projects.,, ··
· .,.
to go on forever:" With these
· the· student body regarding the. , While Bro; Foy.., .indicated a
words, Dr. Robert_E. Rehwoldt,
college's failure to qualify for
tuition
increase regardless of
Chairman
of the· Chemistry
state;
aid, this past Monday·
state aid for next year, tuition in
Department, . began a sparked
night. . · -
'
the following years certainly will
and· informative lecture on the
The
administrators
were
correspond to sta~e help.
factors which are destroying the
OpcrationsManagement.
credit
hours
of
'Biology,
·
The curriculum· of the B.S. is Chemistry
and Environmental
composed of 44 credits in the
Science. Four new courses are
core, a major field requirement
included
in the. major· field
of 33-42 credits and elective requirement:
•~Analytical
credits of 34-43. The new degree
Procedures."
namely lectures
differs from the existing B.A. and laboratories from Analytical"
core
in that the philosophy
Chemistry, two more courses in
requirement
has been reduced· the .area of water chemistry or
by. 3 credit hours; the English biology
,ind . another -course ·
requirement
has been reduced
entitled .. the Natural History oi
by 3 credit hours; the 6-12 an EstuarJ.
credit hours in languages has
The final action of the faculty
been deleted.
w.._is the
approval
of
the
certainly on the·"firing line," as
When, Bro. Linus was asked
quality of our air and water
students
probed
for
an
why .'the
state had "rejected supplies, riaturallakesandrivers."-
explanation
regarding
the
Marist; he ·answered,
1
'1
don't
Dr. Rehwoldt
is
perhaps the
question of religious .ties.· The
know" 'but explained that the
most knowledgable member of
students who gathered (filling to . · cqllege. was evaluated on the
the Marist faculty in regard
to
capacity--
room
249)
were
basis
of a form containing. ·. environmental Pollution. He is a
interested
primarily in what
thirteen _questions:. At first the
consultant to Mayor Lindsay.on
state aid means in terms of the
state indicated· that a theology
the Commision for New York -
price of tuition.
.
requirement would· not inhibit
State Estuaries and is currently
elimination
of the theology
. _ requirement. Th~ Department of
Religious Studies
will
also revise
ADVISES DEFERMENT
its curriculum.
·
The
faculty
will
now-·
· SENATE PANEL
ELIMINATION·
·concentrate
on curriculum
revision. The three proposals.
.A
Senate
subcommittee
were easily ·approved: however.
headed
by Senator
Edward some interesting problems were
Kennedy
proposed
that all raised.
The
Department
of
wartime
draft deferments
be Business
and Economics will
eliminated,
except for high probably
need an additional
school students and hardship instructor as will the Divison
of
cases. The panel proposed the Natural Sciences. The Theology
end to 'all college deferments
Department·
was questioned
auring wartime, and anend to· closely
on
the
issue
of
Selective Service examinations denomination,
the chairman
for fathers and men· in certain stated that the instructors were
crucial
occupati 9ns. Senator of Catholic
background.
Kennedy suggested
in a separate However
this
position
was
s ta tern en t the possibility of clarified by the assertion that
ending
student'
deferments
"Catholic
theology"
was not
altogether.
being
taught at Marist. This
Bro. La Pietra .was candid in
our chances but late_r.they used
conducting
research in fish
his. answer
to the student's
the requirement' as· one o_f the
preservation in the Hudson. Dr.
q ties lions
concerning·
the
cp.teria for rejection;· Bro. Foy
Reh
w
oJd t · was
the·
man
importance
of State aid. "We · commented.
·
· ·
responsible
for writing the
want to serve the people we are
The
President stated:
"My
program for the Environmental
now serving," and to do this;
contention is that we· are not
Sc.ience major,justpassed
by the
"we need state aid."
under the control of a religious· Academic
Policy Committee.
As the stud en ts continued · to
denomination, nor do we teach a
Says ,Dr .. Reh wold t:
"The
press for an indication· of what
religious tenet. We do however·
Environmental Science major is
- the tuition will rise to next year,
suffer from an "image" that
$1
O
billion; $2 · billion dollars
Bro.-Foyansweredthatwithor
would have some.people
think·
worth
of projects
will
be
without state aid (although the
this is a religious/ institution."
Community, State and Federal
budget
will assume that· the
Vincent
Begley" agreed and. government
supported.
The
$134,000 from, state aid will be
. indicated .that a particular failure
other· eight billion will be spent
forthcoming) next year's tuition,
of the public relations effort at
on National Projects ..
room and board will amount to
He summarized
the main
$2,800 ·, a n·se of -t350.00 over
Continued on page 4
.
"'
pollutants into three categories:
Ron
Baumbach
leads
his
saga
Execume
Boazd.
in
their instinctive Alka-8eltzer cheer at the
Leo
Skit Show on
Tuesday
ni~t.-in
the
Theatre.
Action took place during
5th
floor skit
oxides of sulfur, derived from
oil, gas and coal; oxides of
nitrogen, 60% ·of which comes
from
car
exhausts;
and
particulate
matter
-
solid
particles from smokestakes and
incineratC1rs. Air pollution is a
natural
and
global problem -
therefore work on it must begin
on those levels.
During
the
question
and
answer period, someone asked
for
comment
on
President
Nixon's SI
O
billion program . to
aid in the purification of the
environment.
..It
is a good
grogram," Dr. Rehwoldt replied,
.. It
should make a good dent in
the
air
and water quality. The
problem lies in how the money
should be proportioned."
Kennedy and his. panel also discussion arose apparently· due
recommended that a computer
to the conflict over state aid.
handle the next annual random The granting of the B.A. in.
selection of draftees contening_ Environmental Science was not
that the initial draft lottery,
a_ccomplished · wi_thout some
Dec.
1, resulted
in heavy criticism·,
with
the faculty
concentrations of early dates in d_ividing along the lines of the
some months.
"humanity
versus
science"
Another recommendation of disagreement.
.* * * * *
the Administrative Practices and
Procedure
Subcommittee
has
been enforced by the Supreme
Court; namely, that punitive
reclassification of registrants is
forbidden. Previous to the panel
recommendation
and
the
Supreme Court decision, the
selective
service
had often
inducted antiwar protesters.
The
panels
suggestion of
elimination
of deferments
follows Vice-President Agnew's
similar request on Face the
Nation some time ago ..
*****
STUDENTS ASSAIL
LIBRARY
A student ad hoc committee
under
the
chairmanship
of
Terence Mooney has recently
been conducting an investigation
into the services of the librJry.
It
has accused the library of failing
to
provide
service
to the
academic constituency.
Stating that only one other
institution of higher icarning in
_ lontinucd
on page
'J.



























































































































..
PAGE2
...
ntE CIRCLE·
.
'
PEBRUAllY 12; 1970
·
..
-·.
:r-·
ffi"
ft,.
L

:,,·+,,,,,,('
.
...
Newcomers and vets compose cast for Come Blow Your
Horn; a laugh a minute comedy scheduled for
A:,ril
I 6, I 7, 18,
19.
TEACH IN GHANA
OR NIGERIA?
~ri:
Dtsplay Depicts
.

-
·-
.
,
.
.
··ciea_.-··
F.resh·rie·ss·
..
BJ
M.
PHILIP
F~RBES
order
with a
..
kind of· bold
.
The accomplishments
of
our
.
,coni
plication;
almost
the
complex culture have pushed the
·
complete. anti-thesis.of the w:ork
~
· .
inside perameters of imagination
·
of Stoffel.
By
using subtly· gay
·'
to
·
limits beyond
which the
colois vocabulary Richard has
vision·of:fewer and fewer of our,
..
shown that the consciousness of
young people can penetrate. We
:complexity
does not necessarily
are
.•
becoming a. society which
preclude
the
.
possibility of a
can see'·neither truth nor beauty.
unified vision:
-
.
.
.
.
with any clarity. In the light of
Dan McCleary .comments on
this confused situation the clean.· mechanical
geometry
with· a
freshness of the current show at• vocabulary
.'
of colors· wltich
the. Marist College Gallery is a
would jolt even a
high
voltage
real sign_
of hope.

ti
ans former. Like the flashy
Mrs. E. Rimai Fisher, has
,
mechanical
_illusions
of
-our
assembled a group
.showing
of.
modern automobile commercials
young artists, mo~t of. whom
.
these
paintings raise a very.
work in a hard-edge purist mode.
,
uncomfortable question, "What
They display real talent
and
·
is it all about?"
·
·
some have the same spark of
..
Floyd Alwon has produced a
bright freshness which marked.
pleasing set of geometrics which
the first decades· of the New. overcome
the realm
:·of.
the
York School.·
.
.
.
·
formal with
a
singularly pleasing
Sam Forlenza
is
an urban
color vocabulary. These pieces
painter who is well grounded in
of work provide a rather special
the reality of rum! freedom. In a
sense
of peace
and joyous
kind of earthy flow of freedom
dignity.
.
,
·
Theatre Guild
Announces·
New
·Cast
he
presents
bold, informal,·
Dennis Alwon has presented
flowing
expression,
which
us
with
rcalJy
wondcrf1,d
betrays
his worship· of the
·
miniatures
..
These l..\ttle works
freedom
:of
the gesture.
·A
are expressive of the unusual
Y cs: •·
If
you...
particularly impressive- study in
hu_mor which

our culture
·oft~n
I.
Have a Bach·elor's Degree;
black and white is an eloquently
perpetrates onits children.
preferably
a
Mastcrs.Dcgtce.
strong and free statement. of the
Ray Kramer has one w_all
hung
2. Have
at
least 30 semester
· h ·
J d'
t
·
hours credit in cine of these:
serene possibilities in the plastic
wit s1mp e, tree canvases m a
·
·
relationship.
·
grouping.
They are a direct
BY
L.
MIRESSI
working on costumes for Vichy
a.
physics, b. t:h
emiS
t
fY•
c.
John Witter has aiven in to the
response. to the accusations of
d St
·
biology,
d. mathematics, c.
.,.
The Marist College Theatre
an
airs.
industrial
arts,
f •.
French, g.
secret beauties, unseen by most,
those who say that young people
Guild, ~ftei much deliberation
pr
O
duct i On d at cs
f Or
geography, h. home economics, or
in the bold, geometrically simple
do not know where they are
and delay; has announced the
Calculated Risk arc March 19 to
i. busines.~
education.
·pannels. His work is a statement
going.
·
casts
for
their
upcoming
22,
slightly
more than four
3. Desire to teach at the
about joy in the medium of..
The show,.
·which
has been
productions.
At casting last
weeks aWllY• Due
.to
the shortage
secondary school level.
.
pastel monocrome.
He simply
.
hanging in ChampagnatHall is a
w. e_ek, Director Phil De Grandis
of time, and the nature of the
4. Arc in good health; single, or
does not create a single painting,
refreshing display which proves
Show
Brother
Stephen has
married (without children). Both
b
b
·
b
f
h
h
surprised
the
auditions
by

·
ut y Juxtaposing a
.num
er o
t at not
everyt ing,.., in our
h
.
f
C
announced a rigorous rehearsal
spou~s much teach.
large monocrome
canvases, he
environment is pollution.·.
.
announcing
1s cast
or
ome
1
·11 b
·
Blow Your Hom on the· second
schedu e. This cast wt
e
tn
WRITE:
designs. entire festivals of color
M. Philip Forbes.
night of readings. Cast in Neil
rehearsal four nights a week
TEACHERS FOR
and. shape. By creating whole

*
*
behind closed doors.
WESTAFRICAPROGRAM
walls
of. design
John
._has
¥¥¥_ •·••••••••·
¥¥¥•¥>
•Simon's
laugh-a-minute comedy
I
d
f
·
Then~
is stil
a nee
or
ELIZABETHTOWN
COLLEGE
.
achieved
an effect which is
scheduled for April 16,
.17,
I 8
&
J
k
19
·,were
Andy Zoccoli and Lou
interested
peop e to wor
on
ELIZABETHTOWI'.'{,
PA.
17022
architectural
and moryumental;
.
·
various "un-glamourous" aspects
and yet, b_e_cause
of a profoundly.
.
Miressi
as

Alan and Buddy
f
·
.Baker~
-Nick
Buffardi and Sue
o
.
the
theatre.
Anyone
joyo_us color
.sense;
warm,./
B;tl_ask_._oas:t_heir_·
par_ents,Mr_.and
interested
.iri
joining
the
· ...
·:.
.
··..
.
peisonalandentir¢lypleasing.-,
Weekends a Drag?·
Want
to
try
OSomethingNew?<
\::,,:
.r_
;..
.;:
.
;;,;•;:-.•
, ..
,
>--~
,,·_;>
,:,
\J':
,',·;_r
r:•-':'\
'.'>-
..
~

'.,'"
••

••
I

Mrs/' Baker: and
>as-.
the.
two
.
production
/teams•
for
:these
,:.•,thousand.
an.d five>-tho:u~and .
'::
Eugene Sto.ffel: is.' a big, man
.
·.·
romantic
interests,· Miss Carol
shows should. contact
Brother.' respectively;' according
ti:Hthe
who does big work. His convases
Spina and Miss
,Patricia
Jamesori
;~~~ifngfo~~::rite
Gra
nd
is for
co;h~it~~~wect'. pul'pose
cjf
th~
~:~e. :i~e~i
.
;n~?~e~~~~i~rpiiri:
-~.
'
\SEAR
CH
:
w
EE
k
END
,/
:
·
..
as Connie Dayton and Peggy

* • • • •
d
·
·
·
·
t
'd
·
Evans.
.
.
stu ent committee ts. o prov1 e
not often seen·. in the current
,
LIBRARY
from
l_
,
pressure. to
induce
the library to
forms
of work,_ T. his young
This cast represents an even
II th M · I

·
h. h
"A. E
·
·
distribution of Guild newcomers
the Unite·d States can boast of
se
e
ano ogy sec wn, w tc
painter has discovered that there
n xperience in
and veterans. Mr. Zoccoli, Miss such
an extens_ive Mari~logy
.
it conte nd s is wor th money to
is real beauty in the
engineered
Awareness"
Sectl ·on
the
.
studen·t.
gr·oup some buyers. It is true that Saint
had edged geometrics of. our
. .
Spina
and Mr. Miressi have
A d
h
·
·
h' h
D
t
·1
··
appeared in shows going back to
inferred that the·· collection of
n rews, t e semmary
·
w tc
culture.
·
.
·
8
a, s:
Marat/Sade,
I IO
in
the Shade,
books
was
of no practical use to
has vacated. its eSlate on th e
R i Ch a rd
Dutka
.
has.
.
.
Bro:
F. Lambert
C-534
Detective Story and Between
the College. The group cited the
Hudson, h!ls sold many· of its
_contradicted
the possibility of
..
·
Two Theives for Mr: Zoccoli,
fact that the Mai:iology section
books to libraries and buyers in
·•
• •••
• •
¥
¥ •
¥ •
¥ • •-• • •
.
M
has
.
n·ot · been
used by.
_the
New York City.
-
·
Look Homeward Angel for
iss
Th
lib
·
·1
d f
··
·1
·
stu·dents· or fa· culty. and that
e
.
rary_ was ct e
or 1 s
Spina, and Be_
twe_
en Two Theives
· b"lit
·
t
t
·
some
.books
have not been used
ma 1 Y
O
suppor
·
any
·new
and Incident at Vichy for Mr..
·
(
·
·
h
·
·
h
Miressi.
.
since_ 1952. The chairman of the
ma Jo rs
s u c
·
as
t
e
J
group, Terry Mooney,

ru·rther
environmental
science
-..major)
..
Newcomers,
Miss
ameson,
d 1 th
·
·
h' h
·t
ff d
Stat.Cd
t
·hat
such·,a
large
an aso
emannerm.w
1c 1
Miss Balasko, and Mr. Bu ar i
d th
all
d
·
Bitsy's
Bits
are
to
be congratulated
for
collection
might be used by
spen s
e money
.
ocate_ to it
·
ma,iors
1-0
Man·ology but only. t"f by the Administration. Brother
,
BY JOE FRANCESE
obtaining
their first important
,
.
Ad ·
th
d" ·1
·
f
·
h
G
d
.
he could· read Span1·sh, French,
nan·,
.
e
tree or o
t
e
·
.
·
.
-
·
·.
·
..
·
rolls·.
Director
De ran 1s, a
lib
·
dl
·
h
.
Congratulations
to
5, 6, and Leo Hall on placing respectively first,
l
d
Or German, Sl
·n·
ce most of the
rary, 1s reporte
y to
ave
.
student
·
here, is very Pease
t t d th f 11
·
· ·
1
·
·
second and third in the Leo Talent Show. The skits of all three
Y
book
·s
are
wn·tten 1·n those
s a e
e
O
owmg pnon tes m
.
.
.
with
his
cast. Come Blow
.
our
f
d'
f
floors demonstrated a really closely knit spirit within t11e floors. The
·b
M • ,
·

languages.
terms o expen 1ture or next
Hom promises to e
anst s a
th
f'
Impossible Dream of a constructive House system is becoming a
Id
d
Marl.ology
books compr1·se year:
.-
e ust one was a new
time comedy
hit
and shou
en
t ff
ff'
th
1
· ·
Id b
reality.
c.
LOO of the year_ awar.d
·goes
to the_ third floor L.
eo. Their
·
·
f 11
a·bout
ten
.thousand
of
..
the
s a.
0
ice,
e nex wpu
e
the season very success u Y.
th · t 11 t·
· f
1 d"
"skit" was a pure horror show t. hat would· make any sailor blush
Sl·xty-five thousand volumes or
e ms a a ton o a a 1es room
Chosing
his
cast
more
d th third
· ·t
1·d b
AND IN FACT even made a few Marist Men turn shades ofscarlet.
abo ut one-sixth of the library's
an
e
pnon Y. wou
e
conventionally, Brother Stephen
th
t f b
k
·
Th
Their displa_y
.proved
that tastelessness is not yet dead at Marist,
it
is
worth which totals.
$465,000.
e procuremen
o
oo s.
-
e
Lanning
announced
on the
Books which
·support
the maJ·ors student
committee
.had
taken
simply fading.

.
.
.
.
following night who were to fill
·
·th
th
ct·
t ,
d
f
.
Look in the
''Hy.de
Park Townsman",_for a surprise.
H
l·n the languages and sciences
issue
WI
e tree ors or ero
his·. cast
for
Joseph
ayes'
·
·u·
A,ttendance was poo. r at the forum the other night' at which Br._
amount
Only to about One
.
pnon es.
' • w h o ~dun - it''
m Y st er Y
Linus and certain other administration members were available for
Calculated Risk. Major rolls were ----------------------------.
· ·qu.estions concerning the future of Marist. More.of these are planned
filled by Jim Steinmeyer and
~
and it is hoped that the turnout will be better.·
.
Diana DiGrandi. Mr. Steinmeyer
~~-
;,~~
~
Several mysterious armed men crashed the Italian Club party the
and Miss Di Grandi last appeared
,,
other night. They ran into the affair and put several rounds of blanks
together
in Between
Two
into the band. With the speed of lightning they made their escape
Theives. Mi5S
Di
Grandi has not
into the night. Don Dom La Bosco·who has sworn revenge keeps
appeared
on the Marist stage
count your savings
Ii
asking the same question, "Who were those guys?"
·
since, however, Mr. Steinmeyer
/
~
The big news in Poughkeepsie this week is that "Midnight
was seen last semester as
'Prince
· · · and st
ill
have the best life
I
f
I
Cowboy" has finally started playing at the Juliet theater.
This
in my
Von Berg in Incident·
.at
Vichy.
insurance program money can
·
I
opinion is the movie of the year and should not be missed by·
0
h
G
·
ild
l
·
·
R.
k
huy:. Let Northwestern Mutual
t er
u
regu ars m
ts
are:
anyone.
.
Joe
Fitterer,
'Bill Castellane,
Life, national leader in low net
The film centers around the friendship of Joe Buck, a young bum
Merwyn
·
Romeyn, Bill
Cotter,
coSI, help you. Remember, the
from Texas and Enrico "Ratso" Rizzo one of the many denizens of
Steve Brown and Kathy Kirby.
earlier you begin, the lower
New York's Forty Second Street den of iniquity. Jon Voight and
Again a sizable number
of
the premium, and the sooner
Dustin Hoffman play Joe and Ratso. The performances are faultless
freshmen
will
be seen
in
cash value starts
10
build.
and
if there was ever justification for dual Oscars they should be
important
rolls. Rich Douglas,
NORTHWESTERN
MUTUAL
LIFE
awarded unanimously this year. I don't want to say anything else
R a y
F r
o
n t a i n e ,
Dave
MILWAUKEE
because I feel a close analysis before you see it would ruin it. Just as
Rittenhouse,
and Mal Schaurtz
NM. L
There
is
a
difference...
a tip, pay close attention to the flashback sequences.
are all of Vichy, while Rich
.
...
. ___
..
and th; difference
~~
Ultimate Question
·
Checcia joined the Guild for The
"Why is there something instead of nothing'?"
Dark at the Top of the Stairs.
One person who has worked on
both
of
last
semester's
productions,
but was not seen
on stage
will
appear in Risk. Miss
Christine Woisin rounds out the
cast of Cakulated
Risk, after
THOMAS
F.
HEFFERNAN
Special Agent
35 Marlcet St., Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
12602
Office: 452-8640
~




















































FEBRUARY
12
1
1970
111ECIRCLE
PAGE3
Letters
Co,~e,i~ar Of Events
· · :
FOR THE·WEEK OF FEBRUARY 16-22, 1970 , · -
EDITORIAL
Dear Editor:
.
If you would like your organization~s information included on this
.. I read
.with. •·interest your
:calendar, it:is important that you contact Mr. Brosnari's office at
JL------------_:..---------------
editorial Out. of Focus in. the - least two weeks prior to the date that the event is scheduled to take •---------------------------.
·February 5th CIRCLE.
. place..
,
..
.
~
The significant line I feel is:
Please contact:
Joseph Brosnan, 'Director of Campus Center,
·
~--
.✓-
·-:: "This : campus.
could
be a
471-4320; Ext. 279. ,
.'.
- ·
.
.Jiif:"
~,;;r.
•.•.community.-~!
I • think the
;;;,, \-',..
~
.sentence should have read: "This
-
. TUESDAY - February 17
-:.s:m:
·
ca
ni·
pus
· M U S T
b'e
a.
9:00
A.M.
Recruitment Program .
..:::,..
"community."", The campus must
function
·as-_a
community,
a
grgU:p : of people, -living, and
working· together fck
a
,common
end and
foi
the comriioh good
o(all:its
members, if life in th~
-dorms is to survive. In our dorms
.
.
'
.
4:00
P.M.
Travelers' Insurance, Placement Office, Campus Center
6:30
P.M. (JV)
Basketball - Siena - Home
8:30
P;M.
(V)
Basketball - Siena - Home·
· there is much to be done.
·
7:00
P.M.
Wrestling- Lehman - l:lome
· · My first though is reading:It's ·
.my business;
I "think every
WEDNESDAY - February
18
student
in the· dorms sh·ould · 9:00
A.M;-
5:00
P.M. -
Recruitment Program, Central Hudson Gas
carefully
rea'd ·and_ re-read
&
Electric, Placement Office
·
·
Dietrick
'Bonhoeffer's
Life.
Together.
Bonhoeffer carefully
explains:
the · delicate • art of
relating .together in meaningful
experience.
·
9:00 A.M. - 4:30 P.M. - Western Publishing Co., Placement Office.
4:00 P.M. Discussion: Dr. Malvin Michelson, Topic: "DRAFT AND
CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTOR", Fireside Lounge, Campus Center,
Presented by Faculty Policy and Campus Life Committees.
0
ur people must begin to
develop
a sensitivity to the
feelings and the rights of others
in order to · make life in the
dorms. a profitable experience.
THURSDAY - February
19
"I bet that's how they plan to get us out of Vietnam.
8:00 P.M. Lecture -Topic: "THE BIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE
They're going to send us all to Thailand!"
HUDSON RIVER" Speaker: Dr. John Blake, Raytheon Corp.,_ ________________________
_
College Theatre, Campus Center.
If a few people make a plan of
dorm
life
for themselves 'based
on Bonhoeffer's ideals and begin
to recruit others to follow suit,
6:30 P.M. (JC) Basketball - Sacred Heart - Home
·. then
from this nucleus will
spread
a clear influence to
restore the lost sense of balance
in the dorms.
8:30
P.M. (V)
Basketball - Sacred Heart - Home
FRIDAY -
February 20
Sincerely,
J.L. Hores
Assistant librarian
8:00
P.M.
Benefit Concert for Randolph School,
singer, Don McLean. College Theatre,
Campus
Donation.
·
Featuring. folk
Center $2.00
SATURDAY -
February 21
To whoever you are:
6:00
P.M:
(JV)
Basketball - Stonybrook - Home
.. Thanks is such a small word
for all you did for us. We most
appreciated your kindne&S - .Gee
we were shocked and-the calmer
were you two guys: You were
GREAT. We only wish we had
gotten your names so we could
write · and say thanki · but we
decided to write in hopei thii
would be poited and yoti'd see
8:00 P.M. (V) Basketball - Stonybrook - Home .
Wrestling- NAIA Champs -Away
8:00 P.M. Spiked Shoe Club Mixer, College Dining Hall, Campus
Center
SUNDAY, February 22
it.
. .
.
•.
.
.
8:00
P.M. Movies - DAY AT THE RACES and NIGHT AT THE
OPERA· - College Theatre, Campus Center, Sponsored by' Student
·
Maybe we'll meet again under ·
nicer cfrcumstancei. .. Thanh
so
Government Film Series
·
·,
much:arid God
bless. :
·-• .
'ART EXHIBIT;.'. .... Ti°tle: ''SO LOUD TO , MY OWN" Artists:
Students Show.GALLERY LOUNGE, CAMPUS CENTER
The crew with the two flats on
the Garden State. ·
·
:
· · ·.
*
* *
*
*
·Sr. Marguirete, O.P.
*****
Lecture: Dr. David J. Benney, Prof. of Math. at Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. TOPIC: "Singular Perturbations" Coffee
hour to follow.
Two Fakes Later
PART 11
.
.•
. . • , . .. . By Joe Rubino
TOPIC..,.. NICKNAME, PART
II ,
. Last week I .made the mistake of stating that anyone with a
-suggestion for a new school nickname could simply tell ,me when
they saw me. As a result, all week people have been screaming
-suggestions in my ear every five minutes. I don't remember most of
them
but: l know .that
I've _heard everything
from THE
ARMADILLOS
to THE
RIVER
RATS to THE -GREEN
WA VE ... Realizing I was going. about it the wrong way, I now say
that anyone with a suggestion must write it out and drop it in the
campus maii" by next Friday. Address
is
Champagnat Hall, 'Box·
375) ... l really don't wish to get systematic, but my rationale is that
if not many people even have enough interest in changing it, then
there's no sense in anyone trying to do all the work for them ... After
I get a few, hopefully, good suggestions, they will then go to the
Student Opinion Board who will poll the students ... After finding the
. most ·popular suggestion, the next step· would be a schoolwide
referendum, officially changing the nickname ... But if the majority is
apathetic, then fine. You will all go to your graves Red Foxes ... •
TOPIC-
NONEXISTENCE, PART
II
When the new Student Government .assembles in a couple of
months, one of the issues that ought to be taken under consideration
is the "idea" of- an Athletic Committee. I say i~ea · because, still, in
the minds of some individuals, an Athletic Committee such as we
have
is
impractical and almost useless.· Some people, myself not
necessarily
included,
feel that there are better· means of
accomplishing the goals of our present system. What these other
means are, I don't quite
know, but I suppose that almost anything,
· even nothing,· would have worked just as effectively as ~his year's ..
committee ... But, for the sake of discussion, let us assume that such a
committee should exist. The next problem would be choosing the
members of the committee, · and when to choose these members.
After Don Ronchi, the two key members of this year's committee
are Bill Sperila (basketball cap't.) and Joe McMahon (track cap't.)
Personally, I can't trunk of two finer representatives. However, the
problem is that Spen'
besides being a R.A., is also chairman of the
Food Committee. McMahon is both the co-editor of this paper and
literary editor of the REYNARD. It would be ludicrous for one to
ask these two to devote much time and effort towards another chief
concern. Besides that, it
is
hardly consistent with one of last year's
campaign themes, that is, more decentralization of authority and
responsibility ... Another point worth noting is the fact that this
year's committee, with the exception of chairman Ronchi, was
chosen on our return to school this
fall.
This may not seem
important, but it does take . time for people to learn to work
together, and if the entire committee could have been chosen in the
spring, its just possible that the members would have been more
familiar with their duties a lot sooner •. .ln writing this I am not
attempting
to second guess anyone's judgement.
I am simply
reminding the S.G. of what has happened and asking the new S.G. to
take it under consideration ...
Summer
Jobs
Students
who
will
need
summer
employment
should
investigate
the possibility of
working
under
the Federal
Work-Study Program.
We expect to have many more
jobs available this year, both in
the Poughkeepsie area and in
New York City under the Urban
-Corps program. The. area jobs
will be on campus and at various·
non-profit organizations in. the
area. Day Hops and students
who expect to. attend summer
session should be interested in
these. Students living in the New
York· City area may find a very
interesting
and educationally
profitable job with the Urban
Corps.
Eligibility for these jobs is
based
upon
financial
need. -
Students interested should file
the
usual application
and a
Parents Confidential Statement
by
March
15th.
Both
are
available at the Registrars Office.
*****
Mit Prof.
Professor David J. Benney of
the Department of Mathematics
of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
will
deliver a lecture
entitled
.. Singular
Perturbations"
at 7:30 p.m. in
room C-249_, Feb. 16
Dr. Benney is the author of
numerous
articles in Applied
Mathematics
and is a world
authority
in the
field
of
••Hydrrodynamics.''
Representatives
from Vassar
College, New Paltz, West Point,
Mount
St.
Mary's, Dutchess
Community
and
Ulster
Community
Colleges
are
_
expected to attend.
Refusal to Defuse
The war in Vietnam has come to mean fewer casualties, a "steady"
withdrawal of U.S. troops and a "gradual" shift of the b·attlefield
burden to the armed forces of South Vietnam. ln one year Richard
Nixon has taken the war off the front page and tucked it into the
back of most American minds. The President has furthermore
convinced many of his countrymen that, through "Vietnamization"
he intends to end the war - even in the total absence of progress at
the Paris peace talks.
The youth of the United States are not easily fooled however, the
Vietnam war weighs heavily upon them; they will not forget it.
lt
is certainly true that the war is over, its been over for a long
time; the United States lost.
But Americans are still there dying and being wounded and the
change of rhetoric will not change the facts. The danger of increased
escalation, bombing or nuclear employment is ever present if the
President is to be believed. He has warned that a Vietcong victory
will not be tolerated.
Tossing temporary draft call reductions bones to students, using
the lottery as a diversion, and even the relatively .unsizable troop
- withdrawals as sops to· the people won't and shouldn't
provide tlle
excuse for months and months more of chatter, clatter, and young
American deaths.
The importance
of providing pressure on the government
is
realized as one contemplates the possibility of another Vietnam.
It
is
an open secret that the United States Air Force and Navy fly several
hundred sorties daily over Laos, even though the United States
acknowledges only that American planes fly "armed reconnaissance"
.missions at the request of the Laotian Government.
lt
is also known
that the United States has many "advisers" in Laos to help the
Laotian government defend against the Communist Pathet Lao.
Only increased action at home can illustrate to the Administration
the reluctance, even the refusal, to fight on in Vietnam or anywhere
in . the world where American presence is uncalled for and
unjustified .
* *
* * *
1HE
► CIRCLE
Stephen A. Harrison
John Rogener, F.M.S.
Managing Editor
Joe Rubino
Sports Editor
Editors-in-Chief
EDITORIAL BOARD
Joseph McMahon
John Zebatto
News Editor
.Vincent Begley
Ass(. News Editor
Steve Harrison, Joe McMahon, John Zebatto
FEATURE WRITERS
Peter Masterson, Paul Browne, Bill O'Reilly, Steve Harrison, \'in
Begley, Joe Francese
SPORTS WRITERS
Don
Duffy -
Asst.
Sports Editor
Gerard Geoffroy,
F.M.S.,
Bob Mayerhofer, Chuck Meara, Bob
Sullivan, John Petraglia
PHOTOGRAPHY
Photo Editor• Rich Brummett
Bany Smith, Vin Winsch,
Mike ligotino
CARTOONIST
Steve Harrison
CIRCULATION
, - Manager
Jack
Barry
R£PRESENTEO
FOR
NATfONAL
,..
.. ovERTISING
DY
A
National Educational Advertising Services
""V;
A DIVISION
OF
V
11EADER'S DIGEST SALES
&
SERVICES,
INC.
360 Lexington
Ave •• New
York.
N. Y. 10017






































































..
PAGE4.
TIIECIRCLE
-Stonehill
Ellds
'Streak
'•
.
.
.,
·
.. · BY .JOE RUBINO
-.:·
Coincide~ce is a furtny' thing.
Our two biggestgaines this_year
.
(at least, oui: two biggest home
·
·games)
were• both played· at•
.
.
Dutchess
Community
College.
wit_h seven mi~iutes to go in the
'another point as. Marist led by
game.
Brian McGowan's
5
·
in the last
Manning led· all scorers with
min1:1te,
_reeled off 13- pts. ~-- a
24 points while Spenla followed
rO'f whHe Monmouth was.
in
a
with
17,
·
·mostly
on long
·.
state of shock.
·
.
·
.
'Both.
times .we've gone int_o the
set-shots. · Steve. Dare led the
The game was a see-saw battle
losers· with 15.markers.
that saw_ Marist up
38-35 at
.
game
heavy underdogs.
·
Both
..
times w__e've almost pulled the
·
game out. Both,time_s a fight has
broken out at- a crucial moment.

Both times we've lost the game.
A week ago Wednesday the
halftime. But the Foxes won it
.
Foxes pulled off their biggest
·
at the foul line with 23 for 29 to
·
coup of the year iri knocking off
Monmouth's
10-22. Scott (24
Monmouth' College, 73-66, at
pts, 16 rbs) and Charlton (16_
Monmouth. With 3: 15 to go the
pts) led Marist; while Ed Halicki
host made the score 66-60 in - (21 pts) and John Barone (16
their favor. They never scored
pts) topp~d Mo·nmouth.
Our· 70-61 loss to Stonehill
two nights ago was the perfect
example
.of concentra_ted
frustration
for our basketball
·
te.am,
·
as-· well as for an· who
attended.
Whether they were
justified o·r not, the fact remain~
that the 16 fouls called against
·
the Red Foxes in the second half.
p.roved to be the difference in
the ballgame.
.
But, although fouls provided
-Stonehili
with their margin of
.
victory the reason they won was
that they were superior
-in
the_
arts of shooting
and playing
·
defense. Only the hustle of Ray
Clark
Ray Charlton, and Joe
Scott' along with the offensive
reboi:nding of Ray
,Manning
and
Bill
S penla
kept
us in the
ballgame. True, we
.
could
_have
-
beaten them, but we didri't.
_.
.
Ray Clarke played clearly h~s
finest game of the season. His
·
defensive play was outs!andi11g
·
and his. foul-shooting
kept us
dose in the late stages. However
even his fine performance could
not help beat. a team that rarely
ever
·needed
·
an offensive
rebound. .
.
The
previous Saturday
the
Red Foxes had crossed the river
to pay a visit to our area rivals,
,
•-
New
Paltz
St. The contest
.
proved
·
to be no-cont~st
_as
·
·
Marist
-
waltzed
_home

with an
85-61 win.
·
The waltzing didn't start until
the second half, however, since
gene_ral
1a·cka_daisical
pl~y
resulted .in . only · a 34-26
·
Manst
..
,
'

0
7
lead
at
the
half.·aut the vis~tors
·
fastbreak·woreout
the-host.and
tlie lead was 29 pts. and· rising
After stealing paM and racini downcourt,
Bi!I
Spenla· soars
high· to drop in easy layup. Action occurred dunng second _half
of Marist'~ 85~1 victory;over_Ncw ~altz Hawks Sa_turday m~t.
Mile Relily
Race:s
Af-
·K.
:_:._·ot--·
c·.
Meet
Competing in the 51st Annual
tape at 3:23 while
·
Manhattan
New York Knights of Columbus
·
College was second withJ:23.5
··
meet at_ MadJson Square Garden
and Villanova
_
~a~
third wi~h
on Friday night Feb: 6, Marist's
3:24. _The_ remammg teams m
·
mile relay turned
_in
a time of
the
.
ev:ent included_ Holy C~oss,
3:36;2,. finishing eighth in a field
:
P
rovt
de. nee,
Kings
_Po~n~,
·
of nine.·'Jersey
City State won
Merrimack,
and
V1rgm1a
this handicap event, hitting th!! University.
Marist's

foursome
Peas·
An_d
.Carrots
BY.JOEM~MAHON-,.
Tuesday
night was one of those rare tim~s
.w~en
two very
.
worthwhile forms of entertainme1.1t were occurnng simultaneously.
..
·At Dutchess College. Gym - a game against Stone~ll, one of the
·toughest.
teams_on the schedule. In the theati:1:
__
- a Skit Show by Leo
·
House - the first of its kind and a success._.But why botlrat the same
time? I, for one, wanted to be at both and I'm sure there were about
a hundred- or so more at the theatre who were also psyched to see
.
the Varsity take oh the mighty Stonehill (Hopefully th_ey'll
all
be at
the Siena game Tuesday). Actually this is the second time there has
been a conflict on our must-see schedules. When Iona came to town
on Dec. 3 the famous author Tom Wolfe was also arriving to give a
lecture ... F~rtunately
a three-way collision was avoided this time
through the foresight of Mike Towers who mo".'~d the Senior (100
days
to
go)
Cocktail
Party
back
until
next
Monday
night ... Congratulations
are in order to the leaders ':)f Leo House
.
(except to the third floor) especially winning 5th floor producer,
Gerry Garey, and House Master Stan Hollis for what has to be the
most productive accomplishment ever to come out of the dorms.
Now if intramurals could be run by the House System, maybe there
would be more entrants and less of a burden on the Varsity
Club? ... Elise Maneri deserves credit for being both a competitive and
grateful loser_ By the time this column is printed we will_ know
if
she the reigning Turkey Trot champ, can last for 3½ mlles ___
The
va:Sity. even though their streak is broken, is really starting to click
now. Ray Clarke, apparently in good health now, has returned to his
top form, and Jim Cosentino, especially against New Paltz, is_playh,g
like he never did before ... Starting next Tuesday, the team 1s home
for five straight games in eight days!! ... Kalish· informs me that
Stonehill had 7 men on the court for most of the game and two of
them had whistles ... Seeing the absence of the cheerleaders, the crazy
.
kids (Noodles and Nolan) reacted in true form to bring the crowd to
me as they
·did
so many times last
year.
(The girls
will
be
back again
n~xt game)
..
.lt must be getting ~ate, our missionaries
!O
the Sout~
have just returned from the Mardi Gras - John Innocenti, Joe Geraci,
Jim Elliott. and .. Golden Glover" Tom Mahoney ... Erp __
J
• • • •


included·•
leadoff
man Steve
· Kopki (50 yd. handicap 49.8),
Greg
Howe
(56.3),
Joe
McMahon
(55.4)
and
anchor-man
Bill
Kalish (54. 7).
. Highlights
.
of
·-the
meet
·
included
Villanovan·
Marty
Liquori's
·
come
from
behind
victory over· William and
.Mary's
•Juris
Luzins in the 1000 yard
run. The time was a new meet-
record of 2:07.3.
·
·
John Carlos, representing the
School of Seamanship; won the
60
1
yard dash
·in
6.3. The mile
was won by Tom Von Ruden of
the Pacific Coast Track Club in
4:02. Art Dulong of Holy Cross
took the 2-mile with- a time of
8:43, followed by Ro_n Stonitsch
of C.W.
·
Post
.
in 8:48. Two
Metropolitan
runners, _Andy:
O'Reilly,
formerly
of Bishop
Reilly- H.S.
and now
a
senior at
.
Villanova, and Marcel Philippe, a
•freshman at Fordham
and a
-graduate of Mater Christi H.S-
fought it out in the 880 with
O'Reilly winning by a narrow
margin in 1 :53.
·
Marist's next meet is Feb. 14
at Albany - The Capitol City
Invitational.
On Friday night,
Feb_ 20,
-
the mile relay returns
to the Garden for the Garden
Invitational, and on Feb. 21, the
team meets its arch-rival Queens
College
in a dual meet at
Fitzg.:rald Gym.
•••••
TUITION from
·1
Marist was the failure
to
publicize our changes.
.
The panel denied
that the
theology
department
was
denominational· but indicated
that
a
multi-denominational
approach to theology could be
taken.

FEBRUARY 12. 1970
M·atmen-
Reverse·.
Dr:ew
BY.BOB
SULLIVAN
Mallence
iii'-
just :4L Co-capt.
.
Aft~r a· siri~g of six successive
Bill Mc Garr theri proceeded to
·
losses
to very
formidable_
get an even faster fall as, he
opponents,
the wrestling team
crushed Drew's Lester Lampee
-tasted
victory
again
last
in just :36. ~eavyweight _John
Saturday, coming_ from behind
.
Redmond
gamed .
_
a forfeit to
to stop
•Drew
University. 30-20.
,
clinch the 3(?-20 wm.
and raise their record to 3-6.
.
Earlier
in
the
week
the
·
Strength in the upper weights
.
gr a
p
p 1 er s,
·
met
a,n other
made·. the
difference.
After
po:werhouse
m
C.W. P~st. ~n!y
·
Johnny Eisenhardt picked up
his
·
two grapplers
·
p_osted victones m
third forfeit of the year, Drew's
the. 36-8· Ios~. Jim Lavery took_ a
lightweights
brought
hom_e
_
3
15-:2
decision
from
Oll!e
·pins
and a forfeit to give them a. Cro.mwell
and
190 lb._. Bill
20-5 lead.·
McGan pinned Al~~ Guttierrez
.
In- the 126 lb. match, Lance
in 1 :24. One prom1smg note ~as
Lipscomb put up a strong fight
the performance of heavyweight
but: finally succumbed to Caesar
John Redmon_d. Jus~ !ecovered
Chaveas
·
in 5:41. Rex Merrill
from
a senous
inJury, the
·
used
a.
guillotine to pin 134 lb.
f re sh m an
sh o w e_
d
~
o o d

Bob Sullivan in
-
2:54.
·
Marist
potential, although dropping a
then forfeited the
J
42 lb. match.
I
3~
I 2
decidion-.t? Stu StewarL
Matty Rogan also
.
found the
Howeyer the. importance
·
?f
going rough as .Drew's 150 lb.
the
match
laid m. two b!g
Carmen Rienzo established a 9-0
injuries.
1_
18
I~.
semor Kevm
lead
·before
getting
a
pin in 6:50.
O'Grady, _JUSt reco~ered from a
At this point Capt. Bill Moody
cra
7
ked
{I?,
p~t himself out of
delivered a very important win.
·
action agam with a broken hand.
Working with ease and never in
Rico
Ve 1 e
z, .
a
142.
1 b_.
trouble,
the 158 lb. junior
sophomore, tore ligaments in his
pinned Drew's Stanley Stumph
shoulder. Bo~h men are out for
·
in 3:51. Jack Walsh made the
the year with the result, as
com.eback
a real_ threat
by
evidenced in the Drew m~t
7
h,
escaping from the
_bottom
and-
that Marist is currently forfe1tmg
pinning 167 lb. Arnold Altman
a weighposs.
.
. _
at :58 of the second period.
The
.
next
match
for the

From here the match was no
grapplers, who met New Paltz
contest. Freshman Jiin Lavery
State last night, will be Saturday
raised his rec_ord to 6-2-1, and
in New Jersey against Setan Hall.
set a record for fastest fall by
* * * * *
overwhelming
177 lb. Marlin
Camp-us
Stuff
BY DON DUFFY
BITS-N-PIECES
.
With the Varsity nailing down its third straight conf~rence ~in
against Kings,
it
sets the stage for the big confrontation
against
Dowling this Saturday; Dowling is also undefeated in CACC play and
has only lost one game . this year. Dow_ling has the big home-court
_;idva11tage
and should be a big test for the Madst hOOJ?Sters
who ha".e
just begun to discover how go<?d th.ey re~lly are_this year ... Denms
Curtain did it agairi breaking-his career high agamst New Palt_z (~
-
points); When he sank a-technical foulshot,
the cr~wd gave him a_
·
standing ovation. Not really, it seems when· Denn~s gets. to play
everybody leaves. Could it be he has bad breath!!. .. B1ll Paccione
was
so excited that no one was picked. from Marist in the prO'football
draft. Bill believes San Diego
will
.
pick
.
him next
Yl?ar,
Maybe as a
waterboy' Bill or maybe the Newburgh Whirl~b~rds will_ pick you up
as a free agent...Does Chatham, N.Y. really e~1st ... Tune
111
WMCR on
Tuesday nite between 1-2 a.m. The D.J. 1s probably one of the
greatest humans alive .. .It must be e:ool to park your car i~ fr~mt of
your house and get it robbed. Ask Moe, room 307C .. .I d like to
thank you for all the comments about the school. nfoknam~. Not.
one!!! One thing I like about MOTH men, they are quick to
react ... Congratulations
to our new Sports Editor, Howard_ Cosen
Rubino. Thank
.God,-no·more
Erps ... Well another great article
_has
.
ended. Poor gatehouse, it's like Peyton Place ... Be good, Love Duff.
* * ** *
.
Frosh
C_lick
On
Road
..
:L
BY JOHN PETRAGLIA
S--aturday
night
·
saw
.
the
Freshmen travel to· New Paltz, a
usualiy strong rival, who they
·
defeated
93-70, to lift their
record to 10-4. The caliber of
basketball in the first half was
not up· to par
·due·
to a number
of tum- overs, and poor shooting
for the
.
junior foxes. However
Marist stayed ahead due to the
sharp-shooting
of Bill Pezzuti
who hit for 6 baskets and added
6 rebounds in the
I st half and
the strong rebounding· game of
big center
Jim Martell who
pulled in a total of 24 rebounds,
1 2 in the first half. Marist
although much stronger led only
by
8
at halftime.
The red-foxes came out from
the locker room eager to cushion
their lead. The Marist cagers
crashed
the
boards
for 37
rebounds
in the second half,
their shooting percentage went
up decidedly
and the assists
started adding up
as
Ed Reilly
and Terry Bauer ended up with
6 each. John Landy, Marist's
..Pistol Pete" had 32 pts. as he
had 9 field goals and 14 for 16
from the Free Throw Line. Jim
Martell and Bill Pezzuti ended
up with 19
pts
each, while Ed
Reilly added 14.
Two days earlier Marist visited
Monmouth and came up with a
87-79
win.
Jim
Martell
continued to do a fantastic job
rebounding as he had 20 for the
night,
11
coming in- the first
half .. Ed Reilly-and John Landy
·1ed
Marist, scores in the 1st half
with
4
buckets each with Landy
.
adding 5
_of
his
7 assists in tne
.
1st half. Jim Martell and·
Bill
Pezzuti had the hot hands for
Marist as the club began another
of
their
usual
second half
streaks. Jim and Bill had 5 and 6
baskets respectively, Jim ended
with
17 pts
and
a strong
rebounding game; while
Bill
had
20
pts, 10 rebounds
and 4
assists. Terry Bauer added
-8
pts
and
8
rebounds with
4
assists, as
Marist continued to hit the open
man and ended the night with a
team total of 21 assists. Ed
Reilly recovering from a short
illness started, and added 16 pts.
John Landy again was the junior
foxes'
.high
scorer for the night
with 24 pts. Marist ended with a
8
pt
·
edge as they defeated
Mon'mouth
despite a 25 pt.
performance by Pete Cusick, the
games' high scorer.
*****
MATH
from I
Alpert
in Niece when they
defend this controversial theory
before
the
International
Congress. Special arran-gements
for Marist Students
to attend
this
meeting
on the Frence
Riviera may be made through
Mr. Alpert prior to· March I,
which
is
the deadline for all such
arrangements_