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The Circle, September 27, 1973.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 11 No. 3 - September 27, 1973

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Male·
Chauvinism
P. 8
.Editorial
P. 4
Vandalism
P.
4
Marist A"l!road Program
P.
5
VOLUME 11, NUMB~R 3i
MARIST COLLEGE,

POUGHKEEPSIE;. NEW YORK
SEPTEMBER 27, 1973
Cqmmittee
Formed
IoiAidi•.Handlcapped
by Mitchell Williams
intensive iutorers,-:-attendants, tendants are also necessary to
••
In general, the committee will
-
cerns are, and then we. will deal
A committee to aid ban-
c~unselors, and an ~ssJstant aid in the physical handling of take an overview of the_
problems • with these
.
problems and con-
dicapped students at Marist

dil'ector. These positions
•·
a~e.
-such·
students. Many probl~ms_
-as
they exist, deciding together cerns operating within the terms
Co\lege has tentatively been
.necessary
to_achieve acadenuc arise for· them which become
upon·tne
·posstple·
solutions to oL the grant. The continually
formed. Dean Ed Walters in- f~illments
.
and to attempt: to hardships over· a period of time
if
these problems:-: By dis<;ussing increasing numbers of han-
formed us that a special services

.
restr_uctur:e and regr:oup the continually neglected. 'Tutors, of
·and
analyzing
these
p.,roblems,
.
dicapped
·at
Marist
says
graiit of $50,000
was_received by present standards seL for. the course
will
·
assist
in
the · the best possible action will be something about what we are
Marist. An unknown percentage handicapped here at Marist
acadenrlc endeavors
.
of
.
these executed. This will allow both a now doing; what we do now and
ot this grant willbe used to aid

For example, blind, partially-
-
students in a· broad sense. Their
_,
social and an. academic living Jn the near future with the special
the students involved. Currently,. sighted,. deaf, and partially-deaf usefulness· can be.
·seen·.
as
a~
experience for
.
the·
.students
services grant•and in all areas of
negotiations are being_made
with ~tudents ~eed intensive tutoring solutely necessary inlight of the
··concerned.These
problems must the college will show whe~er we
the United States. Office· of
·
m mlllly instances.: to complete

mobility problem faced by many. be exarriin~d ar:_id

closely really are committed to assist

••
Education in regards to this _ their term projects and written~ An assistant director will also be analyzed in. order to bring about these people and Whether we
issue.

.
assignments. Counselors will .be

.
part of
.
the. personnel whose . the best answers to them, as well really value their contributions to
The aim of the committee is to
.
used to assist and advise students
.
purpose would

be
.
to
.
assit in
·
as to allow. communications on a
.
Maiist

College." '
assist these students in any
..
way in
,various
aspects of
..
their
directing the

various; other broad basis with the students.·
plemented in the near future,
possible, and to enhance the

academic endeavors. Recreatfon positions;

be available for
Dean Ed' Walters had this
to
pending negotiations. The Dean's
social and academic atmosphere
.
or ente~elit
for example, nece$,Sary advice, and allow for say, ''What we want to tlo
ts
find

office· will keep us posted on
here at
~
for· th~
.
The
could: be
_dealt
with by
-~
positive change in the direction of out. from the
.
handicapper
further developments, and of
positionsJo•befilledm: tutnN._ oeioD1e
in
a-oracti~_way._ Al-
the program;.·
·-

students themselves what their course. the finali1.ation and en-
problems

are, what their con- forcing of these plans.
by Mary Beth Pfeiffer

plan" and promotion of "the
tremes
.
of dislikeness
and
••
It appears
that
the fruits of the environmental aesthetics· of the
likeness respectively. If the
class of
'77
are
in
early bloom this Marist College commuruty and
resp·o~ of the students seems to
fall with the birth of the En- its environs.,, • They

also- are
lie
against the art, the Committee
·
·
·
·
·
·
·


will act towards its removal.
vironment Design· Committee. w<rking towards "a channel of
However, no funds have been
.
The group takes its origins from a communication between student
requested for this endeavor. Paul
freshman orientation workshop body
.
and
·administration
said that the EDC would
on environmental
·problems,
pro~oting mutual be_tten,:?ent
of
''pressure
.
maintenance into
wmse opinion
,it
was· that the environmen_tal _design. Paul
doing·it for us.''
Marist environment did
.
indeed sugges~d_that tins
be
~one by ~e '
Some of the pieces of art. are
have a· problem. Paul Mezzner, formation of a con:uruttee w~ich also to be questioned as a matter
who· represented
-the
Committee wol!ld overse~ the Job of camJ?US of safety, Paul- told the Circle.
in an interview with the Circle, ~es1~, but give s~~dents a v~1ce Certain ones directly in front of
said

th~t the main point
.m
pohcy all~ decJSions.
.
.
Champagnat inhibit athletic
discussed in the dialogue was the
The
_Environmental
_Design activity. Other pieces, such as
central. mall in front of Cham-
.
Committee has
.
submitted a

those of the right side of. the

pagnat which appeared "very budget to the Stu~en_t
_qovem-
.
courtyard in front of Cham~
barren"and.the artwork about it ment. for $590. _Theu-miti~l BJ!d
.p·
agnat could
·be
harmfu-·1 i·f
••• ''didn't do anything to h_elp." most costly pro1ect as outlined m

someone were to fall onto them .
. The EDq now numbers tw~ty-
the budget· ~ould b_e for the
The Committee
is
headed by
five to thirty students, mainly purchase and installation of trees Brett Portman with Paul Mezz-

fre~~en and Paul seems op-. abou~ the campus. The budget ner assisting, Future .projects
turustic that more followers are also mcludes expenses to be put include development of the
to <;om~,,
• • once ~e ball gets towards a student po~ of the courtyard
.
outside the cafeteria,
rollm~.
.Up until no~ the present~rtwork. Tentatively, the perhaps by the addition of a
C~e_e
has received little or si:tteen hundred ballots to be garden, and revival of the rock
.
'!0 pubµcity among the student dJStribute~
w,ill
have photographs:· garden to the right <i the road to
6ody.
.
of the vanous pieces of sculptor D
11 Th
be
f th
Tllli window
8Jld
~
Is
Npn!HlllaUve or,pae
rt■lq
vandallsm
00
"IThe:tm~obj~edves
1
aredfora andstfudents,,wtoillb+e
2
askefdtorate
.
·E~ep~n
i:.
~~e-rsw:rk
of
campus.
(See Edltorla!, P.
4.)
_
.
j
.
ong-..cnn orgaruz

an ~e
them rom,-~
or rom ex- weeding at1d gardening them-

Financial'
Boar·d
'·Continues-,
Allocations
::;:t~~tO:d~:Ocgrs
th
ife.~
·



· • ·



·



·


C~ordmator of House
m
in
.
by Tom Page
constitutionality of the Financial . Financial Board
Ji
that. -0f

the
.
asking. for·
is
somewhere around Champagnat has purchased four
Boa~d.
_}!e
protested its. validity. yearbook.
'The ·budget
they are • 10,000 dollars. ThisJs meant to trees with donations from each of
The .-Financial Board of
_the
concerning
..
the
.

appointed cover the 5,000 dollars deficit of more.than last year's and some . the four houses. Two blue spruce

Student
,·Go~er!lment'.
m~t members~-~~dthis
~as.to be sent .last year and toe set~
year's
will be less.''
>

.
.
,andtwosilvermapletrees
are to
:rues~y, September, 17, to
begin
·to
th~ Judi~ial Board, However, book off to a new
start.
However,
:
• The Financial. Board's basic be • planted- in front of. Chain-
its allo~tion,s of ~e 27,000
dollars
•.
the n~xt day
it
!Dee
ting was held in talking to Ed Kissling. it seems policy. this
year·
~
concentrate pagnat. This past weekend· tulip
used. ~Y t!te. vanous clubs and
.
at which ~th sides were present that, -excluding the deficit,
2,000·
.
on

keeping close tabs_ on all and crokus bulbs· were planted •
.
orgamzatio!l~
on_.- ~amp~.
along. \Vlth

Dean Wade. The dollars 'will be the. most the checking accounts thereby giving The.· total. cost came to $190-in-
Althou~. this task_
IS
:
still
_
~-
matter seems to
be
re~lved and yearbook to get. what it wants,

them data with which they
can

cludingpeat moss and bone meal.
denvay, a· rundown of the maJor
.
the Commuter Union was to bring. cutbacks of mammoth propor-
.
workout new procedures for-the

The motio~ was made at'~n~ of
. •
proceedings thus far_ is in order.

.
forth:
its·
budget Tu¢sday,
:
Sep- tions in other organizations would ~lloc~tion of funds. ;Another
ar4:3 the RC meeting_s
~1.JSe it was
·
•.
The Com,muter Umon;-a major tember,25.

·,

.
be necessary._ H,e"-also_.·said
·that---mwhich.~e
F.'.in~_cjm_Board
will __
_:
__
agr~ tha~ the bro~~
l~ck
_of,
group on
.campus;
was-schedwed
-\
In talking to both sides about
.
the Financial Board has
an
open -be working
is
that
.of
grant trees, and outstanding pieces of

to meet with tMFinancial•Boifrd;, this·• matter, .it; seems
·_that.
both'
-
mind for tl\e yearbook-but that it money, The.re.
will
be
an.
attempt

metal.
•.
sculpture
made· the
:at- -JO
.:
o'~l§ck c·.ttu~t-J,.eyeni~g;
.
are:
_willing
to work together to
.
cannot <_hinder. the;.:... other
to· . _.
secure

n1:oney from
c!lmpus loo~ . somew~a! _un-
Ho~ev~r; d l!e to ;Pr~vit11:15,de.Ia~;
,
.i;olvf
ffi,e
·
prol>lemi
.
Ed~ Iqssling, organizations;
:
.
:
:
:, ·:.
.;
·
· , .•
:

.
.
educational. institutiol)s such· as sightly. Tom said that 1fus
1:5
Just •
theu-.turri·di~_not~~E:;,up,_UJ?til-'•~ch~anoft~eFinanc~lBoar!1,
.-In
.g~ner~"tJiere:jiave.'been
,.Carnegie,
...
·Ford;··.
~lld._.·t~e a start and_he hopes·.·thJit
Other.
10:40
.and
this
~~-
11c.conipam~.
_'-sa1!i,·:·
,','It's ·-because
of- this

tentative·· figures· made
'on
the
·Rockefeller
Fo_undat1on.-This groups,wil~ follow..
. •
.
.
•.

with an. apology;; Before· getting·
;problem···
thaFthe· Commuter allocations,, but tliese:.would:
nof
:
money would be
.usecl
for certain
- .Appropnat.ely,
the_
motto <i the-

into· the'.' ina~r.
·of·
moriey,
'Joe

Union
:and
.
the-'Student; Govern~ be-made available~ However

as • organizational
·projects
.such.·
as ,
.
Environmental' Design Com-·
.
.Tiedemann,:,•:preside'nf' of.'. the

ment are now workbigtogether."

was statecf by Kwling; "F_or'ihe
·
:Marist
Ecology Action
··and
the
:
mit~~.
is
."There's
more to.come,
CommuterUnion; questioned the •
·:Another
~roblem facing the· most J?aft; no
-budge~
will
be
CONTINUED_oN·PAGE'
3
folks.

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PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
f!!.1.!Pcial
Aid Budget
Cut
"The financial aid. programs of a Parent's
·confidential
Funded by the state govern-
sponsored by .the Federal and statement. The possibility of a ment is the ij.Y
.s.
regents
New York State government has NDSL loan rests solely upon the Scholarships ana Tlie Regents
decreased markedly," according amount needed by the student Scholar Incentive Award, the
to
Mr.
Gerald Kelly, Assistant and from the funding by the scholarship is awarded to those
Financial Aid Director, "the Federal Government. However students who live in N.Y. and are
reason for the decrease was there may be more money attending a school in New York,
because approximately
500
new coming to Marist
in
late : second the award, given on a com-
, schools and institutions have now semester from other colleges and petitive basis, may range from
become eligible for- the funds schools whose students did not $200 to $1000 yearly and· is
appropriated by both govern-. use up all the funds set aside for renewed annually for.four_yea('S_.
ments, for example last year them.
The Scholar Incentive Award,
under the National Defense · Under The N.Y. State loan ranging ·from $100 to $600, •
Student Loan program Marist program all students accepted or depending upon the previous
was a warded $305,577,
while this attending a credited schools in years family income, is available
year only $124,003
. was ap-
N;Y .S. and again demonstrating only to those who are attending a
propriated to Marist, the·rest of financialneedareeligible; In this school in New York and who are
the money not received was used program the amount of the loan permanent residents. The award
to fund these 500 new institutions may range from $1000 to
$2500
is granted yearly upon ap-
financial aid programs. .
depending upon the year in plication to The State Education
SEPTEMBER
27, 1973
Assistant Financial Aid-Director,
Gerry Kelly. •
Many freshmen
received
school. This loan is renewable- Department, Albany. New York
money under _these programs yearly
with
applications
State also offers a Higher the students financial need, we dropped- .f~om. that simply
while many upperclassmeh's aid available in The Financial Aid Education Opportunity Pfogram then try to meet • these needs because of the-growth of eligible
was either taken away or cut office or the lending institution. (HEOP). This program headed throughalltheprogramsthatare
schools. Students eligible for
considerably, simply because . Along with loan programs
at Marist by
Mr.
Waters (D162) · available to Marist."
work-study can ·now work in the
Marist was not aware that the available through the federal and and is available to "students who
"The student should also note cafeteria or Ratskeller. The
appropriations they prevfoµsly_. sta~_government, there is also ordinarilywoqld.nothavehad the that working through college is opportunity to work
is
available •
received would be taken away ~vailable _to students grants and academic
qualifications
or / still the age old way of financing on campus in offices, with
dif-
untilJune of 1973,
while freshmen scholarship programs. Funded financial ability to attend one's education.'' The federal ferent organizations, while there
financial aid packages are made .
~Y
the feder~l governm~nt there college." The program started by government allocation for the is aJso a demand within the
out
in
March under a projected 1s the Basic Education Op- Marist in 1968, serving only 18, Work-Study prograni was- the Dutchess County Community.
·budgetofatleastthesameaslast
po~unityProgram(BEOG),this
hasgrownto~erve104students;
only program that increased in
Students who may be an-
years program. Since the money . available only to all freshman and the summer programs here funding for the academic year
72-
ticipating foreign study -should
had already been allotted to these entering college, and is deter- at Marist. This year the program -
73;
Marist_received-$82,923._!Vhile
also be reminded _that they
new students when it came time mined, along with the -expected - is funded with $100,000
from the in
73-7
4 that ainount increasecrto--remain_eligible for any· ·grants,
to
make '
uppercl~~sm_en .Jam~y • contri~ution.
The state and $60,000 from Marist $104,199.
The
main
reasonfor the loans and-scholarships that they.
packages there was no money to ~maxunwn award 1s $14()0
o_l"
one General Funds.
increase accorging to
Mr.
Kelly may have procurred while here
give out. Under the NDSL half of· the educational costs. : To be eligible for these is that "Marist has·demonstrated at Marist, they can· gairi'._em-
program full or partime students Equal Opportunity ~r~nt
(EOG).
programs . a student • should that it has a successful work ployment from a member of the
who show a financial• need are Those students eligible must submit
I
a . Financial Aid Ap- study program, increasing each· Marist.
.Abroad
Staff.

Ap~
eligible for assistance. These have a strong financial need. The plication,_ P.G.S, form and
if
year in enrollment and the plications for financial aid
students may receive up to $5000 grants may r~ge froID;
$200
to necessary
the . Student's
number of jobs that we actually abroad can b·e--·obtained from
in the course of their four years of $1500
.yearly with a maxunwn of Financial Statement,
if
living have on campus." ''We seemed to Brother Belanger, Director of the
college education. The loan is
$4000
in four years. This grant
is
independently from his or her also have a successful
NDSL
and MAP.

renewable yearly upon ap-
renewable yearly, subject to parents. According to Mr. Kelly EOG program, yet we were still. • -
• plication to -the Financial Aid . financial nee~_
and availability of "we, use a standard of
$4000
in-
office -along with the submission _funds.
elusive of all fees to determine
_ :~arist Services
Community
.,
•• 1"·:~-·
...... ~~--~-~~~-.-·:· ::.-;:~~: .. ;-:-~.----~:.• ,'·-··-~~-·-,--,..-.,.~
_. __
.. ,.- .
·i • . :·.- ,, ___ . ...,.--~ .. .;.. -.
. ...
,:-----:-••.~n-.:.·
-::~-
-~
-. ::,~,,
...
-.;
=--:.,; -~,'-~
When --And Where
Thursday: Sepember 2712:30
p.m.:
C.
U.B. Fine Arts Presentation -
Caqipus Center. 1:!)0 p.m.: Art Gallery-Talk, Gene on Stoffelism,
Gallery Lounge, Campus Center. . . . . >

.-.- · -
• Friday; September 28
7:3ff p.m. Football;Ma_r~\ys.,Ion~. :JUJer-
view Stadium:
.
.


· • '. . •
-
Saturday-September
29 2 :00 p.m. Soccer, Marist _vs.
Sacfed· Heart -
Department of Philosophy. He munity College. This procedure is Home Greaser Night in the· Rat cancelled;
. • •

then sends it to
Mr.
Nick Bruno,· handled by . Brother Bibeau,
Tuesday, October
2
8:00 p.m.~ CUB
film -
"Public.Enemy and Little
.by .Deborah Turner
Marist instructors have been Director of Educational Programs
Modern Language Department. Caesar".
.

. .
. . .
teaching courses at Greenhaven atGreenhaven, who authorizes it His record is reviewed by. the
Ticket Board
to
meet every Tuesqay night at 7 p.m. in room 248
Correctional Facility since last and submits it to a committee administration;
upon
ac- C~pus Center. The Ticket Board will have full authority on all
Spring semester, 1973.
Because of which reviews the books before ceptance, he is given a room i( he Parking Tickets issued to Faculty,· Staff and Students. Security. will
the program's success, the entering the prison. Each· in-
is to stay on campus and has free not void any tickets.
If
tickets are not presented to the Ticket Board,
Federal Government has granted structor meets with his class once use of the campus-· as other • the find will have to be paid to the Business Office.
monies toward its operation. a week for
two hours.
students. If his release from
••
c·.
• •
al
J. . •
According to Dean Waters, ap- _ The classes are run similar to prison is some tim.
e after classes_
rIDl.lll
·
ust1c·
e· ·
. proximately $15,000
was granted Marist's schedule. They give a have reswned the college may be
.
for this year's program. In ad-
mid-termexamand·afinalexam.
able (insomeinstancestheyhave


.
.
ditiontotheMaristinstructors,a
GradesrangefromCtoA+.Ifan
accomplished such) to get him
s •
B · •
few from Dutchess Community inmate fails a course or is below releasedsoonersohecanstarton

er1es
eg1ns
College and New York City.
average, he is given an NC (no time. If he wants to transfer his
Cour..ses
offered are: English, credit) instead of For D.
credits from Dutchess io Marist,
by
Kevin O'Connor
The S
&
H Foundation offered
Psychology, Sociology, Urban
On Saturday mornings from that process also goes through
36.Lectureship
Grants to colleges
Planning and Black History- 9:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m., the Bro. Bibeau.
Marist College is presenting a and universities across the
Literature. These are selected by Marist student tutors meet with
The purpose of this program is lecture series entitled "Criminal country, Marist being fortunate
the college administration in inmates to discuss any problems not to reorientate these men to Justice - In Service to Society." enough to win one.

corroboration with the inmates they may . have or to review society and vice versa, but to give The.· series consists of six lee-
The next lecture will be
wants and needs. The inmates material discussed in the class. them an incentive or goal.
Mr ..
tures, which are free of charge Thursday, Oct. 18 dealing with
taking these courses obtain credit • These students are paid by the • Samuel Hodge, a Psychology and open to the public. Dr. Louis Reform and Reality in the
if
they have a . high school College Work-StudyProgram.
instructor at Dutchess Com- Zuccarello, chairman of the
Corrections System. The guest
diploma or equivalency. With an
Ifaninmate'stimeisshort (his munity, says, "They really give History and Political Science lecturer is Prof. Leslie T.
accumulation of enough credits, release from prison is soon) and me a charge." According to Department, has stated, "The Wilkins, a former Dean of the
one can obtain his B.A. or B.S. he has taken one or more courses Gerry Breen of Marist, "They're lecture series is not only aimed at
school
ci Criminal Justice at the
and-0r A.A.S. or-.,A.A.
degree.
while in Greenhaven but would so eager to learn:'' From wat- serving the interests of students University of California and now
Each instructor makes out a , like to continue his education, he ching the inmates; they, too, in the Criminal Justice field, but associated with . the Graduate
book list for his course and may request
forms
to -register enjoy these brief moments of also at serving the needs of the ' School of_Criminal
Justice, State
submits it to Dr. E. Donahue, into Maris!' or Dutchess Com- conversing with outsiders.
local community" by bringing University, at Albany.
.

------------------------------------
prominentspeakersin the field to
A· tentative acceptance.' has.
the Mid Hudson area."
.
been made by. Congressman ,
• q)NTINUED
FROM PAGE.3
The
girls
involved in the course male chauvinism is quite, subtle.
seem to him to be very strong on The chauvinism here, with a few
independence and · believe . that isQlated exceptions, is • not
. being a woman
is
more than · aggressive.
cleaning . house. . They . do,
In •
a
M:ale Conscioti~ness .

--~RUG
PRO-L-,tS.
·-CAN·
.. '•
_
The first lectw:e in the seri~
Hef!Dan Badillo to speak on .
was Wednesday
mght on the topic Society's Expectations in Law
of "Education and the Future of Enforcement for the third lee•
the Crminal Justice System." ture; •.

The speaker.:was,
Dr. Donald H.
Be1ow.·
is a schedule of the-
·Riddle·._nr.
Riddle'is president_of lectures: •
,
• • •
_ Jotm. 'Jay· ~lle~e ..
o~
-Criminal·--- ·Wedne$y, Septembel".16,
1973
, Justice, ~ew York City.-He_
has
-Education and the Future of the
em:ned ~is P~.D. (rom P~ceton , Criminal Justice System.
. however, still want to ~·women .. Raising Seminar
he
held for the
·nr.
O!Keefe's belief is that the· -Free· University last year,
Mr.
feinale
~
given quite an edge Bi~ey and the members of the
, . over the .male·
jri
that the male class came to the concJuswn·that
. must fight -for-
his
succ~
.an~ .
it
was a .
very evident and
-HAVE A
SOLUTION·-
Ururemty ,an~·~
·edited and
Thursday, October 18, 1973 -
.. published a· numbe:
ot
~les.
Reform_. and Reality . in- the
• The _lectl_ll'e.
senes •
is:
ticing Correction System. . _ ..
.......
acceptance whereas a. woman,. po~~
force here at Marist.
with
poiS&!,
personality, and !!(}me
.. Steps in
.th~
direction of female
intelligence need not fight but ._.
and male ~w~r.enes.s • groups
rather use her womanhood to a . would,,.•
he believes, help . the
'definite , advantage. That •
im- •
situation ..
: There's ...
an apathetic,,
_ . balance
.causes
a strong tension, d~ctive
!ltmOf.Jphere
~~
Mr. •
especially . at the college level. . Bickley • believes
ll_lust
be oyer-
. Mr. Richard Bickley, Psychology. come for any progress to. take
teacher- and counselor, insists· .Place. "Sticking our heads m the
that, Marist is
a
highly male sand is ridiculous. So much <:0uld
• dominated campus, but that the.
~
done."·· ... -
INNEWVORKCITY.
CALL:·246s9300 •
ELSEWHERE
IN NEW
YOB
KSTATE
CALL:
aoo-s22-219a,
:·<ton~tree)

• sponsoJ:'.ed
by a $2,000
grant'from • Wednesday, November 28, 1973
the$
&
H Foundation, Inc. The S
'.' Society's Expectations in Law
• &
H • Foundation is in - tum
Enforcement..•• : • . • :
• •
_sponsored by, the. Sperry and
Thursday, February· i4, 1974 - ,
Hutchinson Company,. a : well . Politics and the Criminal
J
ustic'e
. known· company in. the fields of '.. System.
•.
• . • . • .. • .. . . •

• prc:>motional
~d· business:_ser-_ ••.·.
:Wedn~stiay, March
21,
1974 - •
vie~. The FQ.undation
offers . a : : After Prison "'·
What?. •-• . . . •
large n_umbel'.
Qf programs aiding ... , Thursday, :
APi:il:
;25.,' ,1974 -
, education: through grants, and
Careers and Growth for Criminal .
scholarships,
etc.
Justice·Personnet : • • • .•• · · .•
..

~
.

.
.
.
.
.
.
'•".I
It
I
I
I
I
I'
I
I
1

t
If
I
I,·•

















































SEPTEMBER 27, 1973
Male Chauvinis,n:
Proble,n Or Not?
by Carolyn Boyd
and Katherine Finnegan
seriously and instead joked about
the situation. When pressed for a
serious answer
·they
again

Does male chauvinism exist
on
declined to admit'the proportions
•.
the
.
Marist

campus? In what of the problem and admitted that
ways. are women discriminated it was a rather relative and
against at Marist? How do the personal question that could be
males and females at Marist dealt with along with individual
view each other?
What
can be relationships. On~. girl thinking
done to improve attitudes?
that it was not a. community
These questions seem to swn problem said, ''It's
a
battle not to
up the thinking that many b·e fought en masse, but rather
members of the Marist com- individually."
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
munity have done concerning
Mrs. Landau, the only woman
male chauvinism here.
.
While faculty member in the Political.
there appears to be discontent Science Department, says that
among the women, many find it since Marist is a smaller version
hard to actually pinpoint where it of the large~, c_ommw:nty
and th~t
exists and how it affects them male
_chauv1D1Sm
e~ts there, ~t
personally. Likewise, many men certainly must eXISt
on
this
feel they are not chauvinistic, buC campus too •. However, she_ has
cannot deny its existence, It n~ve~
..
re~e1ved any
-
direct
seems to be an overall feeling d1Scrumnation from her f~low
that some· believe to be quite faculty memb~rs. She ~lieves
apparent, but unexplainable.
.
tha~ women still have things to
Are tbe females at Marfst becoming·more
and more Isolated?
Since Marist went co-ed five achi~ve on_ C8!11P';'S
and that
years ago, many women have Ma~1St should institute courses
complained that there are no · ~es1gneq t~ help women succeed
facilities for women; In· these

m the 0!1ts1de
world.
past years Marist has not at-
T~e history department offers
tempted to organize any type of a course Emergence ,of Womei:i,

intercollegiate sports for women. taught by Dr. _Peter O_
Keefe. It 1s
·
If
a:
woman wants to be involved the. close&. thing_
Manst offer:s to
in athletics she is limited to in- a c~urse ~volvmg so~e of the
tramurals or managing one of the
_bas1~
qu~sbons concernmg m~e
male teams.
A
large

majority domma~1on.
The student r~act10n
also feel that many students of to and m_ a ~~ur~e of
_this
sort
both sexes do not have the proper would g1~e ms1ght mto ~he
attitude that adult men and general a~1tudes here at Marist.
wonien should have for one
.
. Academ1cs has always. b~en
another. Just what the attitude is auned at _the men, begmnmg
and what can ·be done. is being
.
:Wh~n ~arist was an all male
discussed among the women
,
of msbtution.
.
Leo in an organized attempt to

However, Dr. O'Keefe thinks
make changes. They feel that a that . _th~ g~neral
ma~e
dialog should be established
chauv1D1Stic
att1tud~s ~n this
between the males and females campus are o! no proportion to be
Do the males on campus see any problems among the sexes?
.
on

campus to realize what it t~kei:i . se_nousl~.
..
_
As
f_or
.
means fo be a man or woman on d1scr1IDinat1on
agamst or special
the Marist campus. On Tuesday
.
allowance for
.
~e
co-ed, he
.~e~
·oevelopntents
For Marist
night, Sept. 25, an encowiter is
.
believes_
the.Manst faculty to be
..

·planned
between
-
these women
·
quite
farr •
·



;


by
Patl'i~k J. Callagy
·
·
have been extensive. In
1966 Mr.

and the men of eighth and ninth . As far as the particular course
Dougherty developed a Con-

floor Champagnat. The basis of Is concerned, the number of boys
This past week, Mr. John J. temporary Americans Award
the meeting is an attempt at an enrolled (only about 3 out. of 6~ Dougherty has elaborated on his Dinner
whereby prominent
intelligent exchange of ideas and ~tu~eny; last .~emester)
IS
an accomplishments which he has leaders of the country were
an airing of gripes c?ncerning the mdi~at1~n
that. th~ h~mguJ?
about

called "fantastic,
fabulous,
honored
for
their
ac-
supposed unfair attitudes. Many boys t~gs:,g~ls
things 1s very
.
tremendous,
and

ear-
complishments The donation for
students-refuse to attend on the much abve.
thshattering."
His
programs for attending the dinner was fifty
grounds that it will be a goof or
CONTINUED
o~
PAGE
2
creating publicity for Marist dollars per person. Held in New
because of the sheer absurdity of
York
City,
it
pro-
the idea. The results will indicate
ved to be a successful innovation
whether such an exchange is
and grossed a profit ranging from
possible or profitable.'
sh·
O·Ut
It.
Soft.
ly
.
thirty-five to forty thou.sand
Not only socially, but in the
dollars for the college. It was held
classroom as well, the Marist
annually for five years with the
woman is in
.
the minority. I_t
last orl'e held at Marist College
in
appears that members of the
1971.
Asked why the program was
administration
and faculty
Fr. Leo Gallant
certain values so that in warfare discontinued, Mr. Dougherty
welcome
'and
encourage more
they would not descend to the stated that this was due to the
women to challenge themselves
If
recenUy I seem to be walking level of beasts.
lack of a chairman in New York
in fields· usually restricted to around trying to hide around
So when I put a stole over my City. However, he stated that he
men. Business is one such field, every corner, it's because of the shoulde:·s and prepare to go is making strong efforts to
that has not attracted· many bright, bright red jacket I'm among my brothers and sisters continue the program this year -
womeri in the past, but, says Dr. wearing.
I
belong
to
a as a guru or spiritual leader, I possibly in January.
Robert P. Fried, thatis changing. congregation of priests whose utter a prayer that I might be
Mr. Dougherty was also
He stated that he.does not con- guiding principle is "ignoti et part o~ a new revolution, a state responsible for creating an an-·
sider himself to be a male quasi
.
occulti,"
translated
of d~ namic hope, where young nual breakfast held. at Marist
chauvinist, that he likes w-0men "unknown and as it were hid- Marist people might come alive College. This was designed to
and respects talent and com- den." It means doing your own and work to change people's honor one or more persons on

petericy.
He

sees
no
work
in a way that you yourself suffering into hope, to bring food campus or in the community for
discriminatio11
..
within that
don't stand out. Last week the to the hungry, learning to the their outstanding achievements.
department.


.
_
football team presented me with ignorant, beauty to those who Rather than

being a profit-
Student opinion ranges
•from
a jacket, maybe the brightest on know only ugliness. To bring new oriented program, the breakfast
c<>mplete
passivity on the issue; campus, which makes me in- life to the dispossessed, and show is designed to expose leaders of
''There

are- more important
finitely visible. I feel very self- them that survival is possible in the commwiity to Marist College.
:

things· to··think-about,". to deep conscious, . but

the Marist spite of man's greed, that this Futhermore, Mr. Dougherty has
·concern
'''we
girls are being

behemoths warned me:''Wear it survival rests within themselves. stated that it is a means of

-takeri
.a'dvaritage
of and· I. don't or·. watch out for
a
guided To give fearful men vibrant allowi,ng the community to get
appreciate
:.it."··
The
-
great
muscle." So I'm wearing it, feelings of joy, to survive, grow, involved with Marist, while a
~~jority of attit1:1des greaUy ~hari:lefully'
aware that it makes learn to love and build a good life guest speaker
talks
about
·parallel
the Jirst quote.·
•Quite
a me hardly "unknown and as it for themselves, so that they wake specific accomplishments or new
.
few: male students said-that sex • • ~~e, hidden!"

· :
:
.
up in J;he morning with hope and programs on campus. This year
.
difference,s are rarely conscious
.
.
Yet I fee}' no qualms of con- go to bed happy, that they might will mark the seventh annual

:in
tlie··grea:t~r•piirt:
oreveryday science when I
·
wear gaudy recognize
·the
beauty of being breakfast to beheld on November

situations· and see no reason for vestments for the liturgy. These alive,:that essentially they learn
13.

criticism:·"r.would hold the door are signs and symbols that! wear what it means to be a man. To
• The result of such publicity has

for' someone; man or woman,
-with
honor .. They are a reminder bring some out of the hell of

been fruitful. For example, Mr.'
.simply
out of'coinmon·coilrtesy." tomeand tci students ~hat I am a damaged spirits into the light of' Dougherty has stated that he
•.
The
·radical
feminist is a rare man,
·a
sinner, weak.·with many hope. To bathe in the light of the invited Dr. Leonidoff to par-
··creature
cin the Marist campus, if

faults, yet, chosen to be a sign of lord and be relieved of the weight ticipate with ?4arist College. Dr.
indeed there are
any.
The simple -transcendent values and· hope. of the violence,despair and pain
·
Leonidoff
is
a

generous
thing
.most
co-eds are
·pleading
.
All through the history of ~en, that is the world's gift to its benefactor to the college and has
for is to be treated as a complete there has been a place for a priest dispossessed.

donated the football field and a
person with the sexual role µeing. in their lives, in· every culture.
I dream whe.n I put on the stole scholarship fund.
.
only a part·of thiiwhole·per~. A ·Armies had their,-priest, a non- that the. group I'm about to join
Mr. Dougherty's work also inc-
--tremendous·
amount- of stµdents
-
fighter, who traveled with them
.
might become all that. I dream lud~ contacting certain
.
foun
7
when
·asked''seriously
-for·
their
·:to
raise their minds and courage and hope.:. But I still
think
the dations for possible donations to.
,.
:views' -'declined· -to
;answer
·and·
valor, to
-remind
theni of football jacket
is
too bright.
Marist College. Moreover, his




.

'

,.

••

.,,.


•.

'I,.
.

••




~
••

-


.•
work is reciprocal in that he is an
active member of the Mid-
Hudson Civic Center.
.
After the senior class has
submitted a list of prospective
speakers that they would like to
have at graduation ceremony, it
is his responsibility to contact
these persons for a reply. Finally,
Mr. Dougherty has stated that, in
the near future, he hopes to
conduct a special program for
Marist students. He is interested
in
·
students who are active
1
members or leaders
in
campus
clubs and organizations. He has
written a publicity manual which
gives basic information on
publicity techniques and is
anxious to conduct a seminar for
this purpose. The seminar would
include three or four members of
the community who work with
the media. They would give
lectures
along
with
Mr.
Dougherty followed by a question
and answer period. He expressed
his strong belief that such a
seminar would be of vital
assistance to both the student and
his organization.

These are just a few of the
many

functions
and
ac-
complishments with which Mr.
Dougherty is involved. He has
stated that there are thousands of
other duties performed through
his office which few people are
aware of.
CONTINUED
FROM PAGE
I
(
Harlem Valley Association. This

type of funding would be
beneficial
in
many ways since it
would take the load off the
student activities fee. Therefore,
this
project of the Financial

Board is of great importance not
only to the organizations involved
but also to. every student.


















PAGE4
Co-Editors
News Editor
Feature Editor
Layout Editor
Sports Editor
Photography Editor
Jim Keegan and Anne Trabulsi
Mike Peyton
Maryanne McQuade
Lyn Osborne
Jim Donnelly
Rich Brummett
Staff: Brian Morris, Jim Naccarato, Rodney Lemon, Cindy
Cusrunano, Frank Baldascino, Carolyn Boyd, Jeanne Caligiuri,
Patrick Callagy, Greg Concocchioli,
Katherine Finnegan, Kevin
O'Connor, Tom Page, •
Mary
Beth , Pfeiffer,
Gary Traube, Bill
Wrly, Mitchell Williams. Jeay Marlyou
• •


_
Business Managers
Mark Fitzgibbon,
Ken Hayes, Jack Reigle
Editorials
Equal
Rights
Right now women account for over 1-3 of New York State's work-
force. (',. recent ~tu_dy
by the United States Equal F~mployment
Op-
p~rtunity Com:nussion
has shuwn that almost
70
percent of New York
City's WOJ?en
workers are in clerical jobs and that in many instances
mm get higher pay for working in identical positions .....
THE CIRCLE
SEPTEMBER 27, 1973
I:,} •
Art: Another
Point
Of View
by
Br. Ron
Pasquariello
Five years ago the prophets of symbol-maker invests himself in protestors.
the
student
revolutionary
artistic symbols which refute the
Non-representational
art,
in its
movement were Mao Tse Tung, established
order.
(This,
refusal to picture the world
Che Guevara, Ho Chi Minh, and perhaps, indicates why the great
around us, has for years
Herbert Marcuse. It was Mar-
artists are seldom accepted by protested man's destruction of
cuse - septuagenarian, German their own generation, but, more himself, his fellows, and· his
expatriate and professor at the often than not, by the next.} The environment, to which con-
University of California - who cathedrals of the middle ages temporary
movements
and
was. the dominant intellectual stood in stark contrast to the. slogans
-
"civil
rights,"
force behind the movement. His daily lives of the serfs, peasants,. "ecological disaster," "the peace
One Dimensional Man became and even of their masters. The • movement," etc. - have made all
the guidebook for the student majestic. dimensions and awe-
too·:few of us sensitive. Those
movement, and was read by filling harmony of these great
"great monuments of steel" -
more students in the West than stone monuments cut across the
because they were not wrought
Mao's Little Red Book.
squalor, drabness, drudgery, and • from freshly drawn metals, but
Marcuse praised art - par-
haphazardness of medieval life. were rescued from the
junk
piles
ticularly
the
art
con-
When certain artistic ex-
of the callous polluters of our
temporaneously ptoduced by a pressions become accepted or world - protest against the
culture - for · its revolutionary- absorbed by the society which wastemakers of society.
power. Revolutiqnaries are those gave them birth, they lose their
A few years ago,. many
of •
us
who are perceptively sensitive to antagonistic power, their power were rushing from the suburbs to
the subtle oppressive structures to facilitate transcendence of the the ghettos on Saturdays for
of the present situ~tion, and who status quo. When this occurs, "Spring Things_ in the City" to.
are· attempting - violently or non- they• can, and often do, become help eas~ the burden of every day -
violently - . to negate the· present instrwnents for the domination existence amidst urban_ squafor.
( what
is)
for the sake of and· repression of society.· This is Among the things
_we
did were to
establishing• a society that will the profile of the history of Soviet paint buildings and fences with
liberate man (what ought to be). repression of ari.istic expression symbols of hope and. calls to
Man's hope for liberation, for up
to
the· present
day.
freedom. Even our recent past
· hwnanization, lies in his power of Recognizing the antagonistic
testifies to the liberating power of
negation, his power to say "no" power. of free artistic .. sym-
art.

.
• •
to what is.
bolization, the State has set and
Art is a cultural constant; The
"Art contains the rationality. of enforced rules and regulations protest
against . its
con-
negation. In its more
-
advanced for its artists.

These efforts temporaneous expression by
positions, it is the Great Refusal- - reveal the neo-,conservatism of society, history teaches, is
the . protest against that which the Soviet regime. Protests • usually a great leap nowhere.
is." (Marcuse) Man creates, that against man's artistic creations -
The time used to protest against
is, brings forth the new, the literary, musical, poetic, pie-
it would be better used to salve
ui1foreseen, to free himself from torial - often indicate similar - and save the thousands who are
existing servitudes. Man the attitudes on the part of the suffering on our. little-spaceship.
A
survey of over
100
major corporations in New York State reports
that women hel:! o!11Y
3.~
percent of the management positions, and
4.7
percent of professional Jobs. Furthermore, it has become increasingly
clear th!'it women wor~ beca1!-5e
th~y have to, and that the typical
wcrke_r
is
41
and married. It
IS
obvious that women are grossly un-
d~r~1d_an~ that ~e federal, state, and ~ity laws which prohibit job
dJScriromation agamst women are practiced only in theory and not
____ reality.
.
--How-does-thEfMarist woman respond to·the~discrimination-that
she.
Thousands·
Protest
is faced with on a daily basis? Why are so·many women at this college.
so unresponsive to the negative attitudes generated by males on this
~ampus? Witho~t ~e~g offensive, but simply appl'?aching the matter
ma rat~er realistic light, on~ can see tJ:iat t~e typical Mari~ College
• stu.d~t
1S
the
product of a white, Catholic, middle'-Class
environment.
This lifestyle
is by no means being
condemmed but.simply recognized --- , -·
as a very strong contributing factor in shaping our present values
toward the sexes. The attitude on campus concerning both sexes is
generally accepted by both, but definitely unchallenged. When will the
attitudes be challenged? •

On Tuesday night, House
IV
of Champagnat Hall and the second and
sixth floors ~f Leo Hall met to discuss some of the •
probelms that
presently e,ru;t ~etween the mal~s a!1d females on this campus. They •
hoped to ._open
hnes of commumcation that have been virtually un-
tested 01fth~ Marist Campus. This
is
obviously communication that
should ~ave been taking place years ago, and this paper is most
. .. supportive of these forces. At the same time we would like to en-
courage the formation of more groups not only among students, but
also among the Faculty and Administration.
---
\.
Rampant
Vandalism
The
right-wing
military
chanting "Watergate and Chile,
takeover in Chile has sparked Nixon's the one" and "Hands off
demonstrations and picket lines the political refugees." • •
in cities across the U.S.
The action, called by the
Protests have centered on the Committee for
.
Solidarity with
junta's
abrogaUcin of civil Chile, saw ·participation from
liberties and jailing of political other groups, including_ the
refugees granted asylwn under United States Committee for
the Allende regime. Demon- Justice _to Latin· American
strators also scored U.S. com- Political Prisoners (USLA).
plicity with the coup and More than half of the demon-
repression in Chile. •
strators were Latin Americans,
Actions have occurred at including a large contingent of
federal buildings, on campuses, Dominicans.
_
and at the offices.of ITI' and its . Tinl,ed with the opening of the
subsidiaries. The picketing of General Assembly of the United
ITT
indicates
widespread
Nations Sept 18, a group of 250
revulsion at ITI''s previous at- protested at the
UN
against U.S.
tempts to topple • the Allende involvement in the coup and then
_
regime. Two protests occurred in marched to. ITT headquarters.
The
1
·
New York City. Nine hundred - On the same day, four Nobel
Mar· t ~nse
ess
destruction of property has long b
people marched
.
from Union Prize .laureates urged the
UN
to
infli~ed olleget.hScar~ly
a weekend passes where so::
l
problt:m at Square to Herald Square Sept. .15 send observers to Chile to protect
.
upon e residence halls or th
amage 15 not
'
th • ii l'b rt·
f both
Chil
disturbin~ to realize that this ra . _e.
ground_s
of the-school. It
is
-
. _
_
.
e civ 1 e 1es o
eans
punThisc~ed
m
doors cause only rnin~r Ji!c:SslS1·onso
Wld
despread_ that holes
Letter
TO
Ed
It
or •
and political refugees. The group
.
_ p_ast weekend, a rock was to
an comment.
consisted of Fritz Lipmann and
wmdow m the private diriin ro
ssed throu~ a large plate glass _

.
Edward Tatum
·of
Rockefeller
Leo was also shattered. rfese o~f the cafet~ria an? a ~ass door in To The Editor:


.. _ University, Salvadore Luria of
can only be called malicious van'¾! ~ere wtf!iout JUSt!fication
and
iThe articule conrerning John· MIT, and George Wald
of Har-
stud~ts who are not involved in
hsm.
It
15
upsettmg to those Doughertypamectmeverymuch.
vard.

, •
• • ••
cussions. Everyone pays for some osnuecph
acts, toshave to suffer reper- ·Some students think that when
In New York,
USLA
is planning
The cafet ·
·
erson s aturday f
th
• t -


h.
ari indoor rally for Oct.
3 •
.USLA
ill
eriawmdowwillcostseveralhundredd
un • .,
ey
m
~rvie~·-someone, t e hasputoutaspe' cialletter·toa11
w tJ:ie
damage in Leo. Whose eke . .
ollars to repair, as person will tell them all the
contribute from one source or a:the~will
it
come out
o~?
We shall all wonderful things he does: and if its affiUates _and·, supporters
all
of
ours: It is-all of ours·for
the
tim~~osfures[°nsilnlity is it? It
is
he doesn't, then he can't be doing urging participation in
.building
-:~ funny but somewhat destructive
r::
th u1;-ed at an action that that much.
Mr:
Dougherty has e~r:f~r~~=:~::~d
for
!ing broken and said no~g, and fo; all the~ unes--we_
saw things been - ~str~en~l
in ge~ing. a.continuing cam·
pa1·gn·
'm•
defense
u-""
. _
.
.
.
mes we did not speak -more fmancial donations for this-
There
IS
only one solution to th th
h

college than_ anyone else. If I of victims of political persecution
p1agu~d. Marist and it is conde~J:;
UAessStva!1dalism
that has v.:ere to give him a title, I'd call in Chile. It points to the ·danger
am11:9mg
only when there is an audience w • .· . . ~pid destruction is h~ . "Marist's Best Friend$.,, threatening the lives of Peruvian
M~rISt begin to question such destru ti hofmds1t_funny.
When we at Mar1st students
owe Mr. peasant l~der H~go ~lanco and
ultimate losers; then the situation ~gho~ ~nd reali1.e
_that we are the Dougherty an awful lot. It's too' other political exiles. •
• .·
.
. . ·.
.
.. unprove.
bad that he should be attacked -
More . , tha~ ,
1,000 •
p~ople
because he refuses to boast.. . . • d~onstrated m San Francisco's
.-Siricere]y U:ruon
Squar_e
Sept.15. Amon~ the
Fr. Leo Gallant . spe_akers were: Angela-Davis of
-the._ Communist l>arty, : Lew
.....
·,ti•
I
I
I
I;)
l
,,,
.,
'
'''.
''
FROM "THE MILITANT"
Pepper·of USLA, striking United
Farm· Workers, and several
Chileans._
..
The action was organized by
the Ad Hoc Committee. against
Intervention in Chile, which
includes . USLA, Communist
,_
Party, North American Congress
on Latin • America, Young
Socialist Alliance, New American
Movement, Socialist· Workers
Party, and others. ··.
The rally was carried live. on
two Bay Area radio stations. A
• picket , of some
25
junta ' sup-
porters marched once around the
demonstration and then· 1eft.: •
Two hundred '· demonstrators
picketed the White House_Sept.11
in an ·action· called by the Com-
mon Front for Latin America.
Participants
included·
representatives

from Vietnam,
Veterans Against the War, USLA,.
SWP, YQwig Workers Liberation
League, and UFW. Alice Arshazk ·
spoke for the United Mine
Workers and expressed solidarity
with the struggles of the Chilean
mine workers.

Two ,-demonstrations in the
De!roit ~rea, including one at the
University of Michigan, . each
drew . about 250 . people. • Four
hwidred people demonstrated.in
Boston-on Sept. 13.· Actioris were
also . reported in Cincinnati,
Aust~n, Hous~on, Pittsburgh,
~ad1~01!, Chicago, and In-
dianapolis. •
Candidates. of the • Socialist
Workers· Party for local offices
arowid the country marched in
many of the actions, and released .
state~e!1ts . denouncing l,J .S .
complmty
m
the· coup . and
defending democratic~ rights in
. Chile; • • ... ·· •
- •
;

~
·,_ ,.1.


















SEPTEMBER 27,.1973
,·.{'
-,\,
.-:-
,
·-~
.
)
·H
i.l
~
'
As a ~arist Abroad Student,
this
view of Notre Dame now costs -
four times what
it
did
last year!
Women
In Revolt
(Ms. Linda Jenness is --a Many couples, both married ana
• member of the Socialist Worker unmarried, have teamed up on
_ Party and a well-known sup- the road for companionship, to
porter
of
the
Women's travel, and-boost their income.
Movement. She is a regular
Gail Ricker put it this way,
columnist for the Socialist "He'd come home, take a-shower
Newsweekly "The Militant" and and leave again; I didn't feel
has granted us permission to married. So I decided
to
join him.
reprint her column.)
And I love it. Why, we've been to
just about every ~iate and we
On a cross-country trip today don't get lonely for each other."
• you might pass, or be passed by, • Other women have become
one of more than 22,000 women truck drivers because the pay
is -
truck drivers. The number of much better than what they could
women truckers
is
growing so earn as secretaries, teachers, or
fast that
a
National Women's waitresses.
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
Marist Abroad Program
Jumps To $800 Yearl~'
by Maryanne McQuade
attd Gary Traube $450.00
which goes exclusively to
Beginning this year there will M~ and $350.00 which goes to
be a new arrangement
for Manst.

.
operating finances of the Marist
Brother Bel~ger explained ~e
College Abroad Program
(MAP).
MAP charge m the folloW1I1g
Last year a cost analysis of the manner:
.
program was conducted and
1.
Replacement value of the
some financal changes made.
MAP
director. This means that if
Previously, -the fee for par- Brotl_ler Joseph we~ unable to
ticipation in this program ranged continue
as
director,
a
from
$20i).OO
to
$300.00.
The fee replacement woul~ be neceSS:3ry
has now been raised to $800.00 who would be paid a part time
and Marist students are con- salary.
. Curr~n.tly • Brot~er
cerned as to why tlie cost has Belanger
IS
~ece1vmg
a part time
increased.
. salary as director of_
MAP
b1;1t
In an interview with Brother a!most
60
percent of
~IS
money
IS
Joseph Belanger, director and g1".en as scholarships to those
founder of the program, the gomg abroad. Even though
reasons for this increase were Brother Joseph .does !lot accept
explained. Brother Belanger said the full s~ry, a substitute would
that the program had always not be obliged to do the same.
been conducted without financial Therefore the _
cost must be ab-
question, but that last year a cost sorbed bl'.'
the students who make
analysis was done, indicating use of thts program.
.
that in past years the program
2.
T~e need for a part tune
had been operating in the red. professtonal secretary to handle
Through the cost analysis it was large amounts of correspon-
discovered that in order to meet dence.
.
costs an
$800.00
fee was
3.
Genera} UJ?~e~e of t~e
necessary. This $800.00
charge is program.
~his
prunaril~ entails
broken down into two areas; keeping m touch with the
students who are currently
abroad by both mail and
telephone. _ Also correspondence
between Brother Belanger and
the various schools in which
Marist students are placed.
Brother Joseph explained the
additional
$350.'00
this way:
"Every single Marist student's
college tuition goes almost ex--
elusively for educational costs,
however,
$350.00
dollars of the
tuition is for non-educational
costs such as maintenance of the
college. Since those going abroad
are fully matriculated Marist
students carrying thirty credits,
they too must contribute to this
upkeep.
Another asset of the program is
the fact that all grants, i.e.
Regents Incentives,
Marist
Grant-In-Aids, Higher Education
Loans etc., are all applicable to
your year abroad.
..
Brother Belanger summed up
the interview saying that if you
can afford Marist as a resident
l?tudent
you can afford financially
going abroad.
S.A.Exists After Orientation
.
.
by Mark Plamondon
Trucking Association has been
Still -others are consciously
formed, and truck stops -have striking • a blow for women's
bElen forced to expand _ their liberation. Jean Sawyer, who is
facilities to -accommodate the organizing the National Women's
women drivers.
Trucking Association, has been a
of the Marist community but also Dutchess County Committee for
The Student Advisor Program
to keep them iil tune with what Economic Opportunity which
is
a volunteer program and is they can do for the . outside • among other things runs the
• often underestimated.
Many community.
Matteawan. State Prison In-
Gail Ricker, , one
of
.many driver .for about a year. It's a
women --who team -up
with
their steady:"job with decent· pay, she
husbands, says • that when she says, but also, "!like to do things -
started driving three years ago men think I can't."

rest room facilities on the road
Jean Sawyer is five feet tall
were only for men. "Now all the and weighs less than 100 pounds.
major stops have clean places, Sometimes she has to wrench
some of them with showers -and herself out of the seat in order to
lounges." Union Oil, Texaco, and work-the 13 gears on the diesel _
many independent truck stops she drives. "I can do anything
have begun to offer "For Women with a truck that a man can do,"
Only" facilities.
she says. ·Nobody seems to
people think that a Student Ad·
Each week we will take . a centive Program, the Campus
visor's job ends at the conclusion specific program and write a Community Action Program, and
of Freshman Orientation. To short article explaining the others.
.steer people away from that idea fundamentals ofit and direct you . 'rhe purpose of a volunteer
we Student ·Advisor's hav.e

on· how. to--contact the ·people program is to prm1ide other
. decided to write a weekly column involved for further information. educational opportunities either
in the Circle.
Some of the programs we will be within the school itself or through
The purpose of the column is to discussing are the tutoring outside
communities.
The
inform the freshman as well as program • for St. Francis and Student Advisors are trying to do
the upperclassmen of volunteer Hudson River State Hospitals, their job a little better by in-
programs and student services Big Brother Program, Dover forming you of · these op-
available to all members of our Plains Rural Poverty Program, portunities. Now it's up to you to
community. Wefeelthatitispart
Circle
K, CCD Volunteer carry out your job: to get in-
of our job as Advisors, not only to Teaching, .College SOS, the volved.
ke~p in contact with the members Volunteer Service Bureau of the_
There would probably be a lot disagree.
more
women drivers,
but
executives of trucking firms are
still -reluctant to accept women.
Their excuse is usually that the
work
is
"too hard" for women,
which the - women drivers are
proving a lie.
One executive, however, ad-
mitted to the Wall Street Journal
that he was against women
Free University Registration
Takes Place October
2-4
drivers simply ·because he still
Challenging and dynamic
likes to think of trucking as "a· subject matter that you explore
man's·· world." He hastened to because of a genuine desire· to
add that he didn't want to be learn may sound a bit far-fetched
ideritified for-fear that he'd get -in an age wl:fere a college
"all those libbers on my back." education has come to mean a
-
But many of the men who work credit rating of 12.8.
More than a
with the women truckers have a possibility,-this - is _ now reality
• different opinion. -They can thanks. to a number of talented
evaluate the work these women people· in. the Marist community
do first hand and have developed and the Poughkeepsie area who
·a new respect for them.
- are generously offering their
perience beyond the class room,
free of charge. The only cost to
you
is
for the materials, if any,
needed for the course you choose.
Held under the auspices of
58 --Japanese
War
59 Fiendish
.61
Oklahoman
city
62
Expect
63 Moslem
potentates
64
Abstainer
29
Leaves out
Gregory House for the second
year, this program is known as
the Free University.
Registration
will take
place _
in
Donnelly Hall on October 2, 3, 4
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
15
32
Argentine plains
1 •
and a detailed description of
courses and workshops will be
available in the commuter union
office and the commuter lounge
in Donnelly.
A dispatcher for - Leonard skills to students wishing to
Brothers.Trucking Company.was bro~den their educational ex-
asked by the Dallas Morning
News if he felt the women could ------------••
.DOWN
34
Spahn'.s teamna~
t-:·-:;,--+.:...;...+-_.
36
Part of an
22
to the job. "You'd J:>e
amazed,''
he said "these gals can handle a
rig better tha.n, a lot of men. It'd
blow your mmd.'' .

. .
.
~10
'IllS
WK' S
PUlZI.E
WI.LAWEAR
Why are women m. mcreasmg
numbers taking to the road? A
variet
of • reasons are given.
.1'EXr
\\HK!
\
.-
ACROSS
l Lm,er
back
11
Highest point. -
:5
fear of Ii.eights
16
Oiscumfort
17
Circus perfonner
• (DL)
'
, 18 l!ass,.-
.. of}ech.
19
Part of
wedding
ceremony (pl.)
20 German
city
22 __
-
-Scully
23
Never: Ger.
24 Type of soup
• 26
Sweetsop
28
Man's name
30
John or Jane
31
Medicinal
substances
33 One
named afar
another
35
Rests.·
.
37
Italian coiri
38
~ah Hefner bUnny

..,..
42
Hard ~rker
46
Poetic term
47
Advertise111ents
(slang)
49
Alaskan
city
.50
Florida resort
city

52
Play on
words
53 fuel

54 1965 baseba 1l
MVP
57 famous sh1p
1
Aids to digestion
1-Sourness
3
Crosby, e·.g.
.4
Swoboda
and llunt
5
Make a choice
6 If -
a
hanrner
7
Arthur Mi
11
er
family
8 Spanish or
Portuguese
9
U.S. Military
decoration
10
Peggy -
11
Relating to bees
1_2
G. 8.
Shaw play.
13
Recognized
incorrectly
14
Conman
suffix
21
Bul
1
ff ghter
. 2S
Born
27
Eastern group of
• colleges (abbr.)
28
"Such -.
for the
course"
intersection

38Goto -
·•-+--+--.
39
Going away
40
Region of Asfa
Minor
41
Try to equal or
surpass
43
Sound
44 Come
forth
38
4S
Secondhand
dealer
48 12-'l
cents
h-Jr-+--t-~
51
Urges
55 Malay law
56
Brazilian heron
57_
Palm drink
58 Body
of water
60. Ignited·


















































































































/
/
_,,,.
.
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PAGE6
,
THE CIRCLE
SEPTEMBER 27. 1973
,~~··
----------------------------------------...;;..~
..........
/"
·
I WAS
IN LOVE
WITH
A GIRL
.
.
I KILLED
HER.
ED
__,·
Every year 8,000 American·. __
.
__
:__~_.people
between the ages·ofl5and
25
·are
killed in alcohol related··
·'.
crashes. That's more than.combat ..
More than,drugs. More than suicide~
J·:
_·_

-
..
.
.
-More
than cancer.
-
-
-



"It_
was last surrl1Iler,_arid
I
.•.
was 18. Cathy was 18 too. It was
The people on
-thispage
ate
·.
not real. But what happened to them
is very re_al.
.
.

·_
.

The automqbil~ c~a~h-~s.t_he
- . _-
-_
••
_
n1:1mber
orle cause of
.death:e>(p~ople
-
. ·: ·:
your
age:
And theitonicthingis'.:_.-'.-'.-
.'.
.-
_.
_
,:·:_-·_:
that the drunk driver·s·
responsible····-"°:···'
,,
-

for killing young people areriiost
-
often other young
·people.; --
,
_

-
the happiest summer of my life. I
,..
___________________
~
__
~
_..,
had never been that happy before.
DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y*
..
:
__
I haven't been that happy since.
BOX 1969
r

And I know I'll never be that
WASHINGTON, D.C. 200i3
__
.•
:
happy again. It was warm and
I don't want to get killed and !:don't
:


,
beautifu
..
l and so we bought a few
_
want to kill anyone. Tell me how I can.
:
.
help. :t-Youths Highway Safety
1
bottles of wine and
·drove
to the
Advisory Committee.
·-
1
I
country to celebrate the_ni_ght.
We
M

y
name
1s._---'-----------,-.
1
drank the wine and looked at the·
Address
1
stars and held each other and
-
City ____
State _______
Zip__
:
laughed. It mu~t hav~ been the stars
&..--~------------~------:---'
and the wine and the warm wind.
Nobody else was on the road. The
top,
was down, and we were singing
an?~ didn't even see the tree until
-
SlOP.DRIVING DRUNK.

I hit 1t."
·
..
·
.
STOP KILLING,ACH
OTlt!,~D
,-.,
·

..
,
,_.•.:


.

~-:~


::;·

'"'rnol
:


•.
,

''••-.
•.
'.
···1
.
U.S. DEPART~ENT OF TRANSPORTATION
~
NA'IWNAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION
......
t-
.
.
.
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SEPTEMBER"'27, 1973
THE CIRCLE
Red Foxes Dea.dlock State
With Final Second Score
The Marist College soccer from the Marist net.
to a 3-2 lead with eleven minutes
team fought to a
3-3 tie Monday Marist drew first blood
in
the left in the game.
on a dramatic
last-second second period, when
.
Trotta
The last ten minutes were a
penalty kick by Co-captain Ken booted in
an
unassisted goal at seesaw battle, but as time ran
Hayes. The goal was set up by a 3:04. This was Trotta's second big out, it seemed that the Foxes
direct kick following a hand ball goal of a big afternoon, putting would go down to defeat in their
by a New Paltz defenseman. The the Red Foxes ahead
2-0. New first contest of the season. Marist
direct kick was lofted high in Paltz got· on the board twenty escaped from the jaws of defeat
front of the goal where several· seconds later on a goal by Walter when two successive New Paltz
players leaped to head the ball, Blair.
penalties set up the last second
resulting in a pushing penalty
.
The tide began to turn as New penalty kick. A tie rested on the
against New Paltz and the late Paltz started to control the game, right foot of Ken Hayes. Hayes
game penalty kick for
.Marist.
keeping the play in the area of t~e beat the New Paltz goalie to the
With· one second remaining, Marist, goal. Freshman goalie left corner of the net to salvage
a
Hayes booted the game-tying Jay Metzger had his hands full, tie;
tally.
as the New Paltz offense would
The Red Foxes meet Sacred

The
Red
Foxes dominated the not let the ball past midfield. Heart at 2:00 Saturday
at

first half, but scored only once on Metzger turned in a fine debut Leonidoff Field in their third
a
·goal
by Tim Trotta early in the performance with fifteen saves,
.
contest of the season.
game. Excellent defensive play many of them on key shots.
by. Tom McDonald and Bill Unfortunately, he could not stop
Capozella kept_ the ball away all the shots, as New Paltz surged
Har.ri~rs . Outleg Jersey
State A~nd-N.-Y.
Tech
Ken Hayes ooots.,m_e_-
~tyi~n...;;g;.;g_,oa_l.
_____
~
..
---
........
-
......
/
-------,.__
Led
-
by freshmen_...,,-Ffed_ Marist~oring•punch.by·placing
·one-race
at Vari Cortland Park
Kolthay's Marist frosh record seventh in the race and beating (142:18).

and the best Marist team effort the

Red Foxes'..freshmen Flash
The J?pread between Marist's
ever at Van Cortland Park,
·ttie
Tom Jordan by·
tw.Q
seconds. first and fifth runners was only
.
Marist Running Red Foxes,
,Tony
Wilger, who has.improved 1:58; the spread
between

easily defeated its first two op- fantastically from last year,
Marist's first and seventh run-
.
ponents of the 1973 cross country easily surpassed his 1972 Van ners was only 2:20, between first
-
Easter
~Road--Grafts-·Co-op
Hughsonville, Route 9-D South
of Wappingers

Falls Open
Thursday - Sun., 12-5. Now
-accepting·Iocally-madinrafts~
on consignment. Bring to Co-
op, S~t. 12-5. 896-6437

JUNIOR LEAGUE
BARGAIN BOX
541
Main
Street
.
( across from
--~
--
Mid-Hudson Chevrolet)
.
GREATUSEDCLOTHES
AT LOW PRICES
.
for gals and guys
Open 104 Tues.-Fri., 11-3
Sats .
season Saturday at Van CQrtland Cortlandtimeandplacedninthin
and tenth was only 5:04, and'-------------
Park in 'the
.-Bronx:-
Marist the race, as the Running Red between first and eleventh
was .-.,.IN'IIN'l~~----~~~wWW'N'NWWWW----~~~M,-.
defeated New York Tech 16-47·
by Foxes placed eight of the first 5 :26. These all were Marist's

f
1)
..
,. /
\ 1
capping four of the first five nine men across the line to show records for Van Cortland Park.
1
r
12 7
A
/VI
G
n
T

places, and shut out Jersey City their massive depth. This was
Coach Stevens was highly
State College 15-60.
by capping done despite losing Mike
.
Duffy impressed
with the
team
E
VE
R '/
M
O A
eight runners. before Jersey's and Pete Wilderotter,
twQ
other
showing. ''It
is great to know that
~
.
.
/

0
N
·
-~
first man crossed the line:
top Marist runners, to injuries for
-
we can achieve these great times
C

For Kolthay, running in
his
thisearlymeet.MikeCarneyran
soearlyintheseasonandwithout
1(orry_
b-p
rry:
to
_
\l:OD
P,l'r)
first cross country race eyer, it a fine race
in
placing fourteenth close, fierce competition in the
was..a supreme job. He eclipsed in his first collegiate cross race. I was especially pleased to
t\
v
-f)
~
L


l
l
, ,,...

J
Jay Doyle's old frosh mark of

country race and Dave Van~ see that we have enough depth to
~
1

fl
1
C,;.J.Y
,1.
01
yl-l. (
~
L
f!Z.Z. {\ -
Z.
(JO
28:13.5 by 34.5 seconds on way to Dewater and Jim Gillen show~
not-have to worry about, losing
"X
--p
t
l

-P
15
\
t
hisfirst-placefinislrfortheRed:Jremendous_improvements,
the oneortwokeynienlik1'i'Duffyor
u.
••
1 C,JLr
...

-
51<:j__
71.:Z..J.:.().
,35
Foxes. Brian Costine also broke former being selected as the Most .Wilderotter, since we stiU have
Z
Qf.
-p
1
fib
t;-
:J
l.'/_D
the old frosh mark in his 27:56 for Improved Runner of
·the.
Meet. men who can take up the burden
second place honors in the race.
Besides Kolthay's new fresh- of· losing them. Krempel did a
r:
R_I
LL Op E N
r-
V'
E RY N'
I
r
HT
••
Jay Doyle placed third in the race men record, many other Marist great job in filling in for Duffy.
'-..::i
c.
11
with a 28:09 and Bill Krempel crosscountryteamrecordswere
He was selected as our Most
'TILL
LE'AL
crossed the line fourth in another set in
this
first meet of the Valuable Runner of the Meet for

t..r
CL O 51 N
G-
TI ME
superb Marist finish. Tech's season.
U
·was
the first time in
CONTINUED ON PAGE
8
0
PEN··
SUN
DA Y.S. r-oR·.
F.
00TBALL
GAM
r5
Steve Majoros prevented a Marist cross country history that
c:
double Marist perfect score·(t5
·Maristhadtwomeninthesame
------------
1},~f.d
..
nif
51>1c,1o._/
f.o._c.L
S -'

points) by nosµig out Marist's meet at Vanny under 28:00; the FREE! VGS DISCOUNT
CARD!
i
r
'J
u.9
~o.y

Jim Mccasland by two seconds. first time Marist had four men Discounts
on Musical
In-
11
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..
.
.
Team· Co-Captain
Jay Doyle.
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PAGESj
THE CIRCLE
.J
a.sp.ers
Stun. Vikmgs
25-22
At
Gaelic
Park
by Jun Donnelly
• Along.with the.
air
attack, Bon•
Linebacker
Jim
Joyce stopped
.
.
The
Manhattan
College n~ also scored on a ~6-yard
run,J
the
.
Manhattan drive with an
. JaspersstunnedtheNo. lranked
a_nd Fred KraIJ1pe hit ~.24-y8!(1 inte_rception, ~g
the offense
.
MaristCollege Vikings bya score field goal._
(The longest m Marist • the ball on their own 42. From
of 25-22 in one of the
.
biggest C~ege history). All·
~
com-• there, they marche~
.to
the
• upsets in club football history. bmed _for a 22-7 lead. which was Manhattan 17 on big p~ plays to
.
, The thriller was marked by 3 lost m the shocking fourth Cassidy and Murphy; Here· the
fourth quarter .Manhattan touch- quarter.
.
.

.

. drive stalled, and Krampe was
dowm which reversed a 'J:JL-7
.
Manhattan controlled the first called ori to try a 24-yard field

deficit into a 25-22 victory. q~rter as they stopped the first-goal. The kick was perfect, and
LeadingtheJasperswas running· two Viking offensive sets and Marist took the lead.for the first
.
back St.eve
'Holmes
who gained .
•.
broke the. lee themselves on a
44-
time, 9-7.
270 yards and scored three touch-. yard touchdown scamper by . The Viking defense held once
downs.

.
si:eve Holmes. The
.Qll;llrter
ended again and Marist took over on
The Vikings first offensive play with Man1?3ttan leading 7-0.
·their own 44. Quarterback
from scrimmage foreshadowed a ' It was

m the second quarter Bor10ett wasted no time

as he
long afternoon
·
as star running t!JatMarist lost their
_first
~ame
made a perfect
.
inside fake to··
back Nigel Davis injured his foot tightness and _began
to ~~IDlD,te. Davis and sail~ aro:und,,fo
end 56
•••
and was to be used sparingly for After a
.Marist

goal line
.
stand yards for the score. 1The con•
.
the remainder of the game .. h~l~ Manhattan. on the.•
two, the \tersion failed,.and the/half ended
Ed
Bonnett sprints for bfg yardage.
Qu~rterback

Ed
Bonnett,·. Viking
.
offense

exploded. Maris~ 15 - Manhattan 7.
H
·. .
h
.
0
s·.
--
t
working with this. severely· quarterba~k
.·Ed.
~onnett hit
The second half opened with
,
I
g·_
_
n
-
P_.
or s
hampered running attack, was t~t-end Mike Casszdy over the. Ma.rist rec.eiving. The game
forced to go to the air where he· middle for 15 ~ards to. the· 17. seemed to be !1eaded for. a
found·
a
good degree of success. Then on a_
beautiful roll out pass, runaway as· Manst marched. 70
..
.
He hitl0-22 for'210 yards and two·· Bonnett hit Murphy for 83 yards yards for the score.

. Bonnett:
,
·_
.
.
.
.

.
by John Tkach

touchdo.wns,
his longest.being
an
and. the touchdown. The con-. called on,
.-:
Murphy once again DOWN THE-STRETCH
...

.
_
83-yard pass to Tim

M~by.

vJersaon
w;
O
blocked out,
and
the·
for two big gains, and hooked up

The countdown's started; the stretch drives are on. And so another



·

_
..
_ • •
UDerS
led
r~-
·
..
with_Krampefor20yardsandthe
baseballyear.is<irawingtoconclusion. With~visionalplayoffsaswell
The Crew team ~ts
ID
a long day.
score; Murphy ended up with six·
as
the cl_{lssic
World Series soon to burst upon us, millions of fans
receptions for 130 yards for the
across the natioii'-are rooting for th~ir. favorites and ~hanging
day~ Krampe hit the conv~rsion, • allegiances
I
in orderto rootfor front-runners to th~ flags.

.
and Marist had a comfortable 22-
• ,
Baseball mania builds in
·a·
crescendo
.·this
·time
ci
year, when the
7'Iead at the end o'f.three quar-
•.
heat of summer subsides and the cool off all seems to put a little more
.
ters.
·
·
.

._

.
. .
.
..
·
'!whap" in the sound of bat
·hitting
ball.
-
•.
.

.

The wild fourth quarter was
The weather seems to signal the approach of the baseball spec--
.

started
·off
by

an 80-yard
tactular to fans both young
an4
old. From scho,;,l }tids sneaking pot'-

Manhatta:n

.drive·

behind
.
the
tables· into classrooms to small crowds. gathered
.around
televisions
rwining of S~ve Holmes and two
and radios everywhere for the Series, the ex~itement which reaches
key Marist
..
penalties ..

Holmes out to everyone is as welcome as the
sun
on a frosty morning.
capped the drive with a five~yard
Although you'll p~obably draw arguments from football
·diehards,

screen pass from quarterback
..
most people won't blink an eye when the statement is made dtiring·a
Brian Smith, coinpl~ting his
tense playoff
or,
jeries ganie that bas~ball is still America's No. 1
second touchdown and bringing
.
sport

•.
,.
.
.
.

Manhattan Jo a 22-13 deficit: ,
,
:
An~, who. will; really, dispute the fact that

once the two league
..
Tbe.Jaspersjumped on their· champs go at it in the S(lries, new~found
fans.and interest are drum-

n~xt-
opportunity to.
·score:.
with
. _med
up in proportions unequaled by the Super Bowl, Kentucky Derby,
another 80,yard
·drive
.. The; big
._.U.S.
Open
·Tennis.
and the Masters Golf··Championship thrown
-
plays were a 30 yard •
:run
by together.'


.
..
. . ,
.
.
.

.
.
Holmes,, and--a 20 yard pass to
--·This
comes about mainly through the longevity of the thing.
_From
tight.
en~
·.
Dqug
·
Dowd. Holmes . . the best three-of:five intra-1ea·gue-champio~hips ~o the best fot1r~f-
scored his third touchdown on a

seven World Senes.
..
.
.
..
.
.
.
blast from the
>1
yard
-line.
These playoffs telescope fandom's attention to the final series as
Manhattan was back in the game
smoot}was frosting slides on a cake:

·


.

..
.
.
·.
trailing 22-19.
This year, especially, has been a good one for the theory of. baseball"'.
With less than four minutes to
America's No. lsport. With close races in the four divisions of each
go, the Viking offen_se was
league, interest has been keen practically all season.
• •

.
.
stopped, and Manhattan

took
,
~Three spots have already been decided and the fourth, the Nation~
over. with good field position. League Eastern Divi$ion, is still up for grabs. Look for the New .York
Hdmes
once again spearheaded

Mets, under Yogi Berra, you know him he is the
.one
who does mi~
the attack with a 1.2
yard run, and derwear commercials, to come through in the East.

a critical screen pass reception to FEARFUL FORECAST...

the Marist5.
From there, Jasper
After hauling my cloudy crystal ball up from the murky depths of
"Ready All-Row
Crew Tean1
·_


·
.
QBSmithhitendJimlrishfor the
.
the Hudson River, I'll hereby, forewith and at this particular point in
clincher. Bonnett completed two time make , my for-what-little-they're-worth 1973 pro football
, ,.
passes
to Krampe and ~~idy,
predictio~.
_
.
-

.
..
.
•.
.
.
.
but time ran out on the Vikings.
.
1. President Nixon will not bet any money on the G1ams; smce he and
ThefinalscorewasManhattan25
his staff think Joe Namath (a listed White House enemy) plays for
- Marist 22;
them.
.
.

.
.
.
The-loss was not a conference

2: Knute Rockne will be reported to be alive. and well and living in
gaID:~
for Marist, but it· showed Param~, N .J ., but Pa~ O'Brien will deny the i:umor.
•.

.
the weaknesses
.
and strengths
3. Damel Ellsberg will not go to any Redskins' games. with Martha
·.
alongwiththeneedformorehard
Mitchell.
••

.
.

.
·; •
• ·:

.
•·
.
w<rk.
Manhattan ran up 458 total
4. Pete Rozelle will not let Lanc::e

RentzeU become a
_color
com-
.
.
.
.
·
Finds New·:Faces
yards and 25 points ~gainst the mentator on Jets'·te~ecasts.

.
.
-
by
Frank
Baldascino
and Lenehan to work together on·· (Jef~f!l3_e,
the. most po~ts scored
5. Howard Cosell will say something that makes sense.

The old familiar view of crew the varsity levels.
against-Mang de{eµse m th~ last
stiells
on the river· with their
. ·Finally,
the most interesting
.
three seasons. The offense.~.he.
_'f~-\V~~-!N
MAR~T. SPO:a,'1;'8···
.
_

idei -Ilk
has
.



thing of all is that the Marist crew. bolstered by the return of N1~eL.. 'fen years ago
•··.
Ma:nst College s soccer players co_mpeted
m thell'
.
9
farterd e ~-
once ~gam _ team
has
for tlie first tiine
·girl
Davis who gives their runnmg first game of-their first season. at Bard College ~1eld and Coach
s
e •

.

•.
·
.
Of
th· f •
.
f
bin
game much more power. The Howard Goldman came away with a 10-5 defeat. Five years ago ...
.
.
·
Mollday, September.17, was tl_le
.
co~w8!11s·
.
.
e •v;e res
en· Viking play rival "Iona College Souther!) Connecticut State and Fairfield downed Maiist in a double
.

o~g
day for, Bea~ Coach Bill coxswams, f(!ur ar~g.u-ls who are_ tliis Friday night in their fi:
t
.
dual cross country meet..
.
.
.
..
.
.

.
.
.
A.
ustinh
h anfullyd
C'!3~hdBillbe.
Letteneban
~earnin:. -~e_
:::a~~er
than conference match-u . •
···Gordy
Walton was the Spark plug
~
the Red Foxes igriited in their
w o
.o'l!8
.tOUD
a
r :w,ay
0
,
season soccer opener to drub Dowling College 5-1.
of trammg during the fall season:
.
One year ago ... Ed Bonnett thr~w
·a
fourth down pa$ in the flat to
they f~l that. ~~ter. s.~ss, on.
.CONTINUED
FROM PAGE·
7
Mike Cassidy,
_who
streaked 24yards for·a. touchdown with le$ than
harddistanceniiiniilgandsmall
••
.
••
·
suc·rm·nutes·
Ieftas·the
116
._.-...is·t
Coll
·vlk·
·d
·f
·ted·t
nked
boat work-outs wfil

oveto be a, thatreason.Butican'tsingleout
meetwiththeinthelastsixyears.

.

.
,mau
••
eg~.
.
mgs
.
e ea
.

cp-ra
b
·
·
~
·
·
pronin_
·
··
·th
·
any' one
.
as all eleven men
ran.
After losing by near perfect
Westchester Comm1U1ltf
College, 14-o, man Eastern Collegiate Club
etter _sy~m ,orir
..
gout
e_
.
•·
·
·
.. .
.
the ed F
nl 1
t'
FootbaU game at Leorudoff.Field


.

condit1orung
problems.:
.

·
·; gre~ces.
ltloo~eal
good f~r ~~e:ist
ye!
at
M~
oan~ iris

Sophomore
·Jay
Doyle became' the first Marist runner to place first
.
This year's
crew~as
{she, ~!mg.a
;=;b;"
guys are thought that.this could be·· tile.' against~.outhe~Connec~cutashe_blaze<facro$theMarist4,72>-mile
.
largest turnout ever>.
.
ere
a
·•·
.·The
team was
to
have its first
.year
.
the
.
Running
.Red
Foxes course m 25. mmut~ 34 seconds m ~. non.-conferen~e
9ll;lldrangular
total of 6~ membersf of ~~ch
2.8
h·orne
·
meet

of the
>season:
break the ice. Marist is
4-0
m~tSaturdaythat m<:luded
Drew Uruve~s1ty
an.d Qwnmpiac.College
.

are va?.:1ty ~en
an
•..
cox: yesterday at 4 p.m. against U.S. against
.:Quinnipiac
and
.Js
ex-
_ Tun T_rotta
s~ored hlS second goal late
10
the f1:fst
half t~ break a 1-1
::i~~d
5
~o=~·:_
~
Merchant M;arine

Aca~e~y/ pected to concentrate its effort~ tie an~ Ii~ r.1:~r_ist
C_ollege
S~(!er tea~,~ a 3-1 wm over Sac~ed Heart.
yearfs
team
also
has
the largest. Then this Saturday the_ Runnmg toward Southe!ll Connecticut:
Ori
KOLTHA
Y
NAMED MARIST·
ATHIETE. OF THE-WEEK
· ·•

·
be

f
tumin.

·
..,;.;,.,:.;
·ed
Red Foxes travel to·.Southem Tuesday, Marist travels to Kings
.
F

.;.,iK ,
-
·f •
hm.

·N
·
·

.·•


num ro i-e
ge-AtA:uenc Connecticut$tateCoilegetomeet. College for their-first meet in
roeu o,thay,a res
anfrom ewHam~!ll'g,N,.Y.:andagraduate
athletes.
.
'.
.
•.
.
,
.
•. '·. .
Southern
.
Connecticut
?and
:
quest of a 1973
c.A.c.c:
Cham-
,
of the OakwOQd
~chool, ~as been, na~ed Ma~st ~ollege Athl~te of:the
.. AnCJt!ler
new addition .. to. the Quinni 1
.
C ll
.
-Marlst
is •· •
nshi Th Red Foxes will not, Week for the week e~ding Sept. 23 ..
·
..
.
.
.
. .. .··
.
.
.
.
team
JS
Freshmen, ~ch
-~~
.
. P ac.
0
ege.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
pio

e
·
t
.
·
til
Kolthay, a cr<>SS
country runner, rµnning his first Cl'O$ country race
McHugh, .a gradll8te of·Mar~
reallyloom,igforward,tomeetmg_
,have
a home mee agau,i, un
.
ever, turnedin_a supreme•effort in turning in a-time fi•27:49:at Van
and.last yeal''s _captain of the and. _l>e_atmg
So!Jthern

Con-. Saturday,. gctober 20•
•.
Cross Cortlandt Park.His time eclipse.the oldfrosh·mark of28:13.5by34.5 .
,
team; :~oacb McHugh
will
be J!ecticut ~- D!e

8,
00 foxes
-a~
_co~ty
Day
·
h~r:e at MariSt:,}~~ seconds; Led by Kolthay's fiJ:'st
p:i,ace•
finish the Maiisf Ruiming ReQ

•.
:~G:~~--~\!~-
~~~~t~~fiittlt~J;
:tr~ti~~l;~e
.hi~
school_ m

~~~_defeatedNew.:~~~--~e~_16~!~~4_shut.out}era~yCity~ta~,e15-
.
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