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Part of The Circle: Vol. 14 No. 5 - March 6, 1975

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1HI
VOLUME 14. NUMBER
5
MARIST COLLEGE. POUGHKEEPSIE.
NEW
YORK 12601
·
Ma~nteriance Disputes
By
_
fo:111
Stcgcnga
loads. After two weeks those who
.
v
olunteered wanted their old
. The Business Office has been
po
si
tions back. They reported the
trying to uphold the right to· pay
work load was too strenuous
..
mailitainanc
e
workers according
Ilow
e
vei:, the Labor Board was
.
.

to the amount
of
labor and
skill
116t

.s
a
tisfied. saying
·
''
they
felt
·
imparted
b
y
ea
c
h employee.
members
of
the
·
·
staff were
Over three years ago an i!l-
pushed
·
_
into
·
making
.
such
·
·
2
·
,;
spectorfro1n the Wage and Hour
report.
'.
'
.
·
·
·
:
Administration made
a
surprise
Staff
-
members
are hfrcd to do

.
visit
,
to
·
M
a
rist ai1d
.
found
.
that
e
ither
·•
fight"
or ··heavy
"
-ivork
Marist
..
.
\\
'.
as
··
allegedly
.
violating
.
whereas
·
heavy work require
s
the
,:
··Equ
a
l· Employment
Op-
more skilt and muscle

which
portuhitf'
>
sectioii
of
the
l!lli4
include op
·
erating heav'y floor
.
•·
·
·
.. -
.
· ·
·
·
·
·
··
·
·
CiviL Hights Ad. The. inspector polishers, buffers and vacuums
Member§ of the Maintainance
·
Depaitmenrin action.
disagre~.d
·
with the salary
-
·
.
·
.
At
:
..
the
present titne a
·

·
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
--
·
·
·
-
·
.

,
,
:
·
_
·
.
.
·
.
. .
. ..
distribution
-c
to maintainance i
·
eclassification of niaintainance
T
:
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..
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work
.
ers, citing the unequalrate
·
jobsisbeingsent.totheWageartd
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·
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·
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,:-
·
·
.
·
·
·
.
·
·Last
·
.
semester
.
.
Marist
-
in an to
.
Mr
.
Campilli
·
·Marist can
..
.
F
·
'
.
·
or

-
:
s
·
e
·
,
..
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·
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·
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·
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·..
.
.
efforttoprovetotljeLaborBoard
c
l)ntinue piiying wages based on
_
..
_
that they
were
not discriminating work
.
· _
loads.
~\
The
.
new
·
.
job
· ·
:
againstthe sexes
;
females ori
·
the descriptions
.
ei~taiF
•·
Jllr
.
ee
·
.
.
,
,
maintainance staff were offei:.ed
·
-
.
divis
i
ons of
work,
~
ligl,t w.otk
or
.
,
.
a
Jry_
/
at
.
.
the -~
1
1eavy work/' housetiold
,.-:.
chores,
.
a11d
.'
heavy
.
.
·
.
.
.
·
..
·

.
· -
.. ·.
·.
·
··•
.
,
.
. . .
.
: ·-
-
.
. .

.·.
howeyer

-..
more
.
phy
-
sically \vork which wilL be divided into
..
,
ByReidScott
.:.
.
,
.
math ~evels, 0~her
_
areas \_\Ti~hin this area:
:
otJ:i:er
:
projects'jnt!ti~ de1I1a
ri
d\riw
·
wor!c
:,
such
as
lift~ng
,..
.
.
.
·
::
.
.
.
·
..
·.
:
·
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.
·
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-
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U~ban
_
~d1,1cati_on
,-
_
_
mclude
fl~ld
area· il}clude
_
~e~ai:~
-
right
.
cases __ :
was
,
~
ot
!
nc
_
lud~d
m th~
~ew wo!~
-
-
.
.
,
.·_
·
..
Cont
:-
on poe. 3
·
-
_
,
.
!f!le
Maris~ Coll
_
egeJJmvers1ty
:
trips
~O
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an
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is preparing
fpi:
its
_
sec'onq
·
year
.
of
~
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0
··~·
'fye Jl}Ve~Q.e
:
~e
.
h
_
nqu~ncy
:
area
::
,
,
.
..
-,:
··
·'

·
·<
}:'?/
'
its
tllree year
·
grant. The
'
$90,000,
·
is
:
atternpting
~
to_
:
red~,;:e
·
the
:
rate
..
:
·
·
grant was awarded in
-
the
'
spring of
·
youth~refat~d
:
·::_
criIJlE,?S
,
by
·
of
1974
by the federal government
.
.
crecitirig constructive projects for
··
to Marist
,
..
_
'-
·
the young
·
p~ople within the city
:

U
.
)'_.A
.
is an
.
anti
-
poverty
-
T~ey work
.
with th
_
e.
.
Police
·
program, in which Marist College
Community R
_
elations
.
Center,
.
focuses
;
on
the
.
City
of Salvation Army; and
.
the
.
Youth
.
Poughkeepsie. Its
··
goal as Bureau of Poughk~ep~ie Police
·
described -· by
,
Dr.
.
Malvin
.
J. Department.
0
:
'l'hEl
projecti, in-
Michelson,
U.Y.A.
Director, is to elude theater
:
arts, personal
help the• po_or ou.t
_
of their po"'.er~y
counseling, girl scout t
_
roop!
:
and a
.
cycle,
:
It attempts
,
to
;
d
.
o
-
this
m
sports·progi:a.m.
.
.
·
..
.
·
.
three
.,
different
:
areas:
.
.
lJrban-
.
Urb,m
·
Bus1!1ess
:
1s att~mptmg
'
·
Education, Juvenile Delinquency to stimulate trade in t}le
400
.
blocll!"
.
Preverition
;
and
-
Urban .Business
.
.
which
is located just above the
.
The Urban

Education com
-
.
Main Mall. This ar'¢:a
'
was left out
.
poneJtf
·
works
'
·
iri
.
·
the
'
of the Renewal Project and the
··•·
Poughkeepsie
.
sch
_
ool
.
district to
.
·
.
U
.
Y .A

is J,eeking
,:
funds
..
fo
_
r
·
the
- hel~ jmprove
:
~he
.:
reading

and
iinpro_veTI1ent of ~he storefronts in

.
·
·
'
.
·,

.
·
·
:
Or.
·
Mal ~ichelson,
U.Y.A.
Director
.
.
··
.
By Tommy
Ke~y
they
_
.
try
;
to
make
·
helpful
'
regard to other schools
.
.
.
..
. .
.
recommendations.
.
Salaries

.
.
for
·
·
The Faculty Handbook
is being
Th~
·
Fa~ulty P?licy
_
Coniinittee faculty ~creased
4.4
percent last
·
-
revised and. upda~d
wi~h
regard
·
concerns itself with any problem year, which would b~ good except to
.
faculty rights and gnevances.
that might
.
intrude upon the that
_
the
'
cost of living increased
·
(If
a teacher
is
working
.
in twQ
faculty. Since these problems
will
I
around
9
percent; the point being departments; he
still
h~s only one
. also

effec
t>
tlfe
·
student, the that

faculty problems
·
are the vote in elections, that being the
decisioi'is
.
macle by cll~iqnan·Dr.
sai!).e
in
many ways as those of department
:.
he was
.
orig_inally
P.erfotte
,
and other committee the
·
.
student
.'
·
·
..
.
·
-·.
t
contracted under.)

.
.
.
. meinbers,
-
·o~
;O"
Do11~hue,: Dr.
.
_.
The F\P
.
c
,
·
meets once a week,
Proper office.space
is
anoth~r
·Fried,
:
Mr
/
Menapace, ~nd Mr .
.
but
if
a
major problemd~yelops,
,
area
.
of concern, and a larger
Norman;
_
will
effec_t directly
.
or they may meet
_
every day~ If a
.
concern
is
if
the new "Weekend
·
->
~dii'edly

.
~
--
_
s.tudent's
:
study- at
·
teacher
:•
wa:s aisnµssed
'
and
~
felt
_
.
College"
will
spread
·
the present
.
·
·
Marist.
·
·
:
·
_
.
·
<.
·
thafhis
J
icademic
'
ffeedom was
:
faculty too

thin.
If
it does, .... the
·:•·
·
As
'
a!)

~lected
/
i;:h~irman
·
·
Dr
i
<
lnfrmgeciupon
/
he
_
~ouldgo
to
·
-
the
,
F.P.C .
.
wjll
recommend
_
ad-
-
·
·:
·
_
_
-
:;:k;~~~~~~J':.i1ufl,i°lt!:ii
·
·
:.
r
:
~~t
i
lutf!~i:fr
·
:rJ:i~:~

•••
t~~~;n~Jui%-°if:i~led;8or
0
~
·-.
:
the facts
·
; ey_e~t~allyy9u\vaitfor
.
\
_;
the
i
teacher m
·
·
que§tion were
:
sta~f
,
would hapdle a weekeilcl
_
thingi; toO}"iappen
.
befoi:e yoifact'! ,
.; ,:
veyec1
;:
-and wotild
'
report back
·
.
course~
·
Presently a·
~o
ratio is
. ·:.:
All
'
oHhe elec~ed
'
_
IIlembers
'
.of
to
i
KE>
.C.
·•: ·
-
·
.
- . ,
..
·
.
.
kept between assistant
·
Jecturers
: _tM
r
J,::P.9
:
·;
:
~erye
:
-
; ..
t9re~~y~ar
-:".:
)'.\
~er,
'
·
·
pro,~1~
:-
:
.
be~g
/
de~lt
-
··:
!n a
,
department and
'
upper
,
.leyel
· · terµis;
·
Dr
_
; Rerr.o,~~
lS
lll'h,is
~ll"st
_
:
l-.
:
:..a
:,
~te
'
,
early ·
:
·r.~ti_rement,- ~tructors. · Proble~
.
regarding
Coinniittee Olltlines Prohlenis
.
\
.
.
-
.--
.
:
.
.
year
.
a~ chall'Jll8p;
•·
-.
>.
1
.-
: ,
_
;
.
";- .: . ·
,
:
.
-
·
.
Sabbatical:I.:.e
_
ave,
:
which·
.
enables

_:;
tenure and promotion are
·
'1an
-
: '-::
Inherep(in
.
its
:
main
'
obj~ctives
<
a
·
teacher tocontiriue his
.
sttidj.es;
:
:
dledby
_
the
·
committee of J:i'aculty
.
.
. .
:~
-
·to
,
givf
·
stnictifr~
•:
to
_
,
th~
'
facul
_
ty,
_
~
Salaty
O,.
arid
:
'

Fi-irige
:
benefits
.'
·.
A.
'f
Pev~lopment.
The F:~.C.'
act.s bY;
·
·
:
. _
:
:o
Jh~
{
!f
:J\C:
/.
o,ve
.
r,sees
;
e!~~Uoiis)f
.
{
'.
~aJ'.ripllfJ 1:Jfe
.
C9IDJ:rii~eeJia
:
s
been
,<-
setting
:
µp

guide~.L.
·
!o(
C.-r
:o .
.
.
-
.
_
.
.
_
_
. ·.
.
.
.
·. :
'.
.
·
.
-
-
-
.
·/' .-
:
~
·
.
:
.
..
_
;;~
clla~~p
_;:
~o
··
:
~ll
.
:
i
dep?m.rr~Jl~.
:/
~e~11p:
.
to
,
stmif.:~ObleD1S
:
r~lated
_
J
¥.~tp~t'!~
.
u}~ ca!-1!
.
out
.
:
·
_
·:
.
_·-
·
Dr.
Perrotfo.
chaitman
of,the Faculty
P~anmng
·
Comrm~t~:
·
"'
S~J,9:ry a11:d
._.
~nng~
-
Ben~~•ts
,
~~e
::·
!o
·
_
do~
-:
study
1S
-
a_~
~~~~aY.
.

:
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:
·
.
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·
.
..
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i
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w~rks on;
·
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·
mthe
area
_
~f (aculty
_
exchange
iri
-
-
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·

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I.
PAGE2
-
THE CIRCLE
MARCH 6, 1975
Dignity Group
·
Formed At Marist
Father Leo Gallant,
DI
_
GNITY
group moderator at recent_colJege services;
_
Committee Plans Bicentennial
DIGNI.!fY,
a
national
organization
of
Catholic
homosexuals has been founded on
the Marist campus, with Father
Leo Gallant serving
_
as the
group's moderator.
·
DIGNITY, an association of
Catholic homosexuals has its
national headquarters in Boston
and Father Gallant visited with
them during the Christmas break
and he is currently planning to
attend a workshop in April on
"Counseling the Homosexual
/
'
The
-_
primary

goals· of
-
the
organization are
_-
to change
-
the
-
_
.
1ased attitudes of the church an9
society through deep and inten~e
spiritual
·
programs.
The
. organization also wekomes
. hetrosexuals, priests, and other
religious who are interested a:11d
willing to worlf and pray• wi,th
them.
.
.
.
. Founded· last
·
-
semester the
group meets
_
.weekly in Byrne
By
:
Rhoda
C~speU
Residence
;
At
·
the group's
·
last
"We feel the revolution has not · the
·
values
·
of
the
· .
Fren- meeting Father Ned
·
Murphy,
been completed
.
America has chEnlightenment. We need
.
more who
··
was
_
.
also the Campus
_
The Academic Dean has ap-
fallen away from religious and of a sense
·
of community, not Ministry's principal speaker
_
at
pointed a Marist Bicentennial
.
political ideals; the proud social isolationism 6r
.
com- the
·
Poverty
·
Meal last· week
,
Committee to plan and coor- humane values which brought petitiveness.
. .
·
addressed the group. Murphy,
a
dinate activities concerning America to the Revolution and
As Robert Ballah proposed in Jesuit,
,
spoke
to
:
the group about
America's BicentenniaL
the founding of the Republic;" "The
Broken
.
Covenant", other
-
priests who are working
The members of this Ad
.
Hoc stated Dr. Best.
.
.
~
business values
,
Jaissez-faire with homosexuals, and he
c
ommittee include Eugene Best
, ·
The committee will examine captalism have subverted the referred to Father John McNeil,
1
Thomas Casey and
_
Joseph whether the values and

moral concerns
for

community,. another Jesuit who is presently
Norton:
concepts which underlay
_
the honesty, and integrity
_
which
_
working with homose:imals in
The committee
!S
considering Revolution are part of
-
the con-
were part of the early Puritan
'
New York City and is writing a
programs and activities per-
temporary America and Marist tradition
.
·
.
-
_
·
-
book
.
.
on the theological ap
-
taining to the Bicentennial for the scene
.
·
"Has America been faithfuLto proaches to homosexuality
.
fall of1975
.
Such programs might
"Colonial America responded its own
.
·
tradition?· Have we
According to Father Gallant,
include lectures, a possible film in
.,
a political way
_
to a moral broken
.
the covenant the pilgrims
·"
homosexuals are a persecuted
series, and even a team-taught crisis. Amer_ica
is
again in a and
the
founding
fathers minority and he believes that the
course
.
focusing on the "Un-
moral crisis," expressed Dr. established?" asks Dr .
.
Best. church's concern for them in this·
finished
Revolution."
The Best. We must try
_
to affirm With
.
racism; political im;
·
committee is looking
for freedom and respect for the law. morality, injustic~in high places,
country has been invisible and
virtually non-existent.
Homosexuals as a minority group
have been subject to a great
many unjust and oppressive laws
along with soxial and
social
restrict
i
ons
·
which serve as
.
ob-
stacles in the Christian liberation
of that group."
.
~
He refers to the Gospel
·
which
demands
"
that every minister of
the Gospel actively work for the
.
liberation of every human being
-
suffering
from
oppressive
restrictions
.
" He
also
states that
"individuals,
priests
and
ministers usually
-
encounter
social and
.
psychological stigma
as a result of their work with
'
homosexual groups,.and that the
stigma is the single most ef~
fective obstacle to individuals
who
wish to
work
with
homosexuals." Fr. Gallant would
like to
·
go on record
-
as supporting
minist
r
y to homosexuals
.
and he
-
will work
·
with them on this
·
campus even though

it means
.
underground
·
and
·
linanno!lllced
.
meeting times, due to
.
many
students homophobic tendancies
and
u~r~asonable
discrimination.
·
_
Father Gallantalso has a one
-
hour
·
long
.
tape,. "Straight _Talk
·
about Gays" by Father Paul
Shanley, the
,
'
'
Stre_et Priest" of
Boston
,-
and who is the only priest
in the
·
country
_.
assigned by
a
bishop to work
..
exclusively
among homosexuals
.
He says "he
_
j
s
_
willing to
.
play it for groups or
dasses, and that it will correct
many false
.
notiqns about
.
homosexuality."
suggestions an<:1- an expression of
In 1645 • John ':'7inthrop
.
said, cvan.~. we cele~ra(e
,
.
the
,
Bicen-
student
and faculty interest.

'
.
'The
great ',questions thaLh~ve · tenmal by saymg
.
no
_
w,
r
great
_r
we
·
According
·
to Dr. !3est, the
_
troubled· t~e country ar~ about are, ;or _by repentance
:c
and
committee feels that a
.
.
lot of
-
the authonty of the
.
mag1Strates rededication to the Declaration of
irrelevant activities are being and the liberty of the people
:
" Dr.
'
Indepen
.
dence and the Con-
Par'ty
De1l~lops
.
.
.
,
promoted for the Bicentennial
Best believes that the
,
relation- stitution.
.
.
Such activities
.
include people ship of authority and
.
freedom
_
We can treat others as b~others
dressing up in Revolutionary War was the g
_
reat
_
question 200 rears or not, but if
,
we ~oi:i
'
t t!eat them
outfits,
the
firing
of ago, and IS the gr~at question of as brother~, they Will
_
rISe up and
Revolutionary War muskets, today.
revolt agamst us
;
--
Plan
mothers and daughters en
-
The Bicentennial Commi~tee
In celebration
,
of America
'
s
Dominic Baranello and Sarah the widest possible dissemination
couraged to
·
serve bicentennial ~ll also compare today's value~ Bicentennial
.
we should ev_aluate
_
Kovner
,
Co-Chairpersons of the of information relating to the 1976
meals, and children encouraged to colonial American values. The what ~a11:1es
we
ca
_
n reaffirm to Affimiative Action Committee of selection processes for delegates
to make Bicentennial crafts.
committee will attempt to
.
make !_mow life 1s sacred, and we should . the New .York State_ Democratic to the Democratic National
Dr. Best thinks that many a
·
program which w9uld relate not rip-off on~ another and insist Party have announced that the Convention and for me~bership
.
Americans are apathetic about today's problems with yester- "I want it my way
.
"
- _ .committee has developed an
·
of the State pemocratic
_
Com-
the Bicentennial
.
People see it as day's values to malce a better
If
a0:yone has P!ans or Affirmative Action Plan for the mittee
.
Party leaders throughout
an
·
"occasion to indulge in an tomorrow.
suggestions concernmg the
.
selection of delegates to t~e 1976
,
t1:1e State will hold a ~e!ies
-
.
of
orgy of
-
patting oneself on the
-
-
Accordin~ to
Dr.
~e.st, Bicentennial c~lebratio_n, please Democratic National Convention
-
news conferences explammg the
back and saying how great
"
AI;ierica IS
.
not
.
a
.
Chr1st~an CO!)tact the B1centenrual C<>!fl-
and members of the Democratic methods of becoming
a
;
Con-
America is how successful we nation. It's a capitalist nation nuttee who would be h~ppy to State Committee.
vention delegate and
·
State
.
.
are,
and ho~ great we are living with the veneer of Christianity." help you in any way. they can.
_
Under
'
the Delegate Selection Comm!ttee
.
mei:nb~r: The State
up
to the founding .fathers' Business
,
values have replaced
,
Rules for the 1976 Democratic Comm1tte~ and mdiv1dual county
ideals."
our Judea-Christian values and
National Convention, the Plan is committees will issue a series of
now being distributed throughout explanatory news releases and
New
York
.
State
to · the will encourage all registered
Democratic Party organization,
0
_
Democrats
·
to actively
'
par-
Looney Expresses D~sire
-
.

·
,.
.
.
.
·to press and media outlets, and to ticip~te
.
in t_his. most
·
basic
. constituent organizations and exercise of the1r rights as_ a
_
free
.
groups, all of
.
w)lom willbe af-
peo~le.
.
Broc~~res_ :win
.
be
~-
-.forded
30
_
days,
'
beginning today,
:
•,•
publis~ed con~mm~ jnformat!on
·
By Rick Whitesell
·
To Start Tea1n
within which to comment on the
·
about' the
, ·
respective s~lection
Plan.
_
.
·
· ._
.
·
.
_
_
processes. State Committee news
-
Mr
.
Baranello and
Ms
i
Kovner releases
-
,
.
.
w_ill be given the
expl~ined
.
that the Affi1n1,.ative ~road~st pos~ible _distribution,
.
are some strong players to be soirieplayerswhocouldmakethe
·
.
Actiori
·
c;,ommittee is
.
:•
placing
_
mcludin~ethnicpewspapersan:d
found at Marist."
·
,
tournament date,"said Looney. special emphasis
<>n
solici_tingthe
:.
electronic
·
media, that reach
· In an interview conducted this
Marist was recently sent
.
an
_
In the future, however,
.
he hopes opinions
·
of
-
those

groups that- selec
_
ted mar~ets'. .
,
·
past week,
Glen Loone
·
y, invitation from West Point to to determine how much interest have been tradition~lly under-
..Jn c<>nne_ction wit~ the
,
s.tate
.
PresidentoftheCommuterUnion send a group
·'
of players
Jo
the in team competition there is on represented in the Dem0£fa~1c De~o
.
cr~tic
.
~arty s over-all
and a member of the United United States Military Academy campus and form

a team com-
.
Party. They have urged that
all .
,
Aff1.!1Ilative Action program, M
_
r .
.
states Chess Federation, ex-
to compete
·
against represen-
prised of the
_
top Marist players. members Qr.the
:
public
_
\Vho have
<
Barane~lo and
Ms:
Kovn~r also
pressed
an
interest
"in
tatives from other area colleges
·
If you enjoy playipg chess, and comments on the Plan . should have
_
announced Jhat
.
six ad-
establishing a permanent chess in a tournament
_
,
scheduled for would
like
to compete against submit them to the Democl'atic ditional
:
·
. me~ber~
·
.
·
of ;the
,
club at Marist.
·
.
March 8. Although there· is no
.
area players, contact Glenp
_
state Committee
.
as
-

soon
_
as Dern~r~tic National Comnuttee
-
·
Looney spoke erithusiasti~~lly chess dub presently operating, it
·
-
Looney by visiting
him
in the possible.
· .

.
,
,
/-,,
.: ·
,
_
·
from
,
New
,
york
:
State and
.
a
about the prospects of
-
fonnmg
~
is expected that ~t
)
east three Commuter Union office located in
The Plan
.
will be considered by Tr.ea surer
of
..
.
the
State
strong chess club here.
-
· •
.
_
Marist play~rs
will
.
attend..the
-
thesecond floor
·
of the Camp~s the entire
.
New
·
vork
·
state
,-
Democratic
-
Committee will
.
be
"Interest in chess
·
w'as greatly
.
tournament tomorrow.
_
'-
_
..
_
Center, or
·
by
.
dropping a note Democratic
· .
·
Committee ar
.
its elected b}'
_
thestateCommitte~ at
.
.
enhanced
.
by the publicity given
·
Looney
.
hopes to generate with your name a!}d where you
.
March lO
:
nieetirig.
,
At the con-
_
its Mar,chJOmeeting. They hav:e
to
t~e Spassky ~
-
Fischer
chain-
enough interest
~
here
.
on camp?5
may
be CO)!tacted m the campus clusion ofthe
:
3~ay
_
comment
,
urged
:
.
·
t~at Jhe
.
_name !)f any
pionship mrtch held in Iceland
in
:
in
..
the formulation of a
·
Manst mail. I~
.
this atteplpt to-:
_
form: a,
eriod, the Plan must
be
formally
,
_
prpi.;pective cand1dat~ · for
-
t~ese
-
1972,"
he
stated.
-
"M~ny
:
_
team
to_
~ke. a n~l_Tle_ f~r the team 1s
,
succ~~sful,
_
.
1t ~1U ~do ted
k<
promulgated .
.
and posts ~ho~ld be s~bm1tte~ to th
_
e
A~ericans ·
were
c~ught
!
schoo]
·
m ·: area
.
ch~ circ~es.
.
represent.
t?e
.
i
first J>rgamz~d _ sub&tted
·
to
}
tne
',
.
Compliance Democ~~tic S~te-'Comnu,,ttee at
;:
.
up m the fad and learned how to
·
"Obvtously;-Ihaclto workagamst
_
c~ess
,
activ:1ty ~ere at Manst Review
-:
commission
,
of
<
the
.
800 Tlurd
'
Avenue, 26th Fl~r,
.
,
,
play
the
•~ame
:
of kings,' many· theJime fac~r
.
in~he case
:
of_the
_:
smce
·
~a J~rge tournament was Natioii~I
-
-Dem))Cratic Party
·
for New.York, ~.y
;
l~22 a~ soon
;
as
,
_
have.cont,~~~
to~dy
_
chess u~o!llingW~tP~mtm.3tch,
,
~nd heldherem
_
the
.
f'.a.llof
_
l
_
9~2~o
_
appr9val.
,
,
:
:-
·
,
:
..
_
,
,
·
.
.
possible
.
,
:
·
-
<
_-
-
.,
~hnique Sir.ce the interest
·
was
·
this
.
IS
_
\Vhy
·
it
.,
_was
ba&cally
a
1:111·
·
.
de~rmm,e
cl~
,top P~Y.er
:
w,it~
·
,
.
As
developed
;
the Plan calls for
·
aro~and,
.
co~u~tly
_
,
-
~ere
-
possible
to
·
do
~
m~e than
.-
f~d
·
.
t~e
...
college
;
comm~ty.
·
·
.
·
:...
·
··
,
.

-
"
"
_.
.
··
-
. :


·
-


· ~ .


'
• • •
,
>



• •
";,

' \
· .
'
'
-


~
.
..
'
.
.
.
J


















































MARCH 6, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Drug Abuse Council Conducts Survey
l CPS) --
Twelve million
Americans
currently
use
marijuana but more than half the
adult US population favors
maintaining or toughening the
penalties for its possession.
according to a recently released
nationwide survey conducted by
the Drug Abuse Council.
marijuana or the use of it, while
40 percent believe there should be
tougher laws for possession of
small amounts. Thirteen percent
said they favored retaining the
present laws.
also live in cities of more than one
half million population, while
only 4 percent come from cities
under 50,000 population, thus
making marijuana primarily an
urban phenomenon.
· "This is the first national
marijuana survey to ask the
public's opinion on a variety of
changes in marijuana laws
The survey tumed up at least
one quirk: 5 percent of those
calling for tougher_ penalties also
admitted to being regular users
of the drug.
According to the survey, 18
percent of US adults over age 18
have tried marijuana, and
8
percent are currently users.
Among teenagers, 14 percent
have tried the drug and 5 percent
are current. users.
Of
those adults declaring a
political
preference,
a
significantly greater number of
independents have tried or
currently use marijuana than
either
Republicans
or
Democrats.
Two-thirds of the adults who
use marijuana do so once a week
or less. 18 percent admitted to
smoking once a day or more.
_currently being debated by many
state legislatures and the
US
Congress," stressed Council
President Dr. Thomas Bryant.
A
College
-
cross section of 2133 adults and
Prep are
S
~05 te.en.agers acr_oss th~ count~y
The Drug Abuse Council, which
released the survey,
was
established by a group of foun-
dations in 1972 to serve as a
· · 11onparti~'ln source of in-
formation and public policy
evaluation in the field of drue: us£:
and misuse.''
·
were polled· by mterv1ewers m
This means that 29 million
Americans have tried marijuana
at some time,in their lives.
· _
.
·
.
their homes.
· ·
·
The survey _ showed that 39
One-fourth of all current users
are under age 25, as are almost
half of the total number who have
tried it.
For
·Womens' Day
By Genevieve Fitzgerald
There will also be seminars in
each dorm. The programs,
. International Women's Day organized by the RAs and RCs,
will be celebrated March 20. The will be different in .each house.
day will be a "festival" day There will be a singer, speakers,
centering around the changing __ and discussion groups. There Will
roles and the growing awareness be· movies on ·women in sports,
of women and meri- throughout and on reactions to women's
the world.
_
changing positions iri our society.
Thursday, SAG
A
will give a These · activities · are open to
special dinner to which all Marist everyone, not just the people in
Students, on c~mpus and off; and each particular. house.
faculty are invited. The price will
Saturday; the 22nd, will be
be
$2.85._
There will also be en-
Activity Day with sports and
., tertainment; Movies will be held games organized by Maureen
all day long in the Campus Brey, Garey Waters, ;-~·-1 Pat
Center. and all evening in Don-
Connelly.
nelly.
cont. fromyge.
I
two categories 111volving either
eustodial · activities or the
operation of heavy machinery.
--u.
however, the government is
not
satisfied
·with , the
re'classifying of maintainance
jobs. Marist does have another
alternative
plan.
Lawyers
fighting a similar case for
Columbia University have been
contacted and it has been agreed
upon that they would assist in the
labor dispute should Marist need
their assistance, · just how they
would assist is not known at this
time" according to Campilli. He
terms Marist's present position
as a "let's wait and see attitude
and says that Marist will fight the
alleged charge all they can.".
Facing the possibility of losing
the battle would result in the
payment of back wages to all the
·.
:':":,,.,: \C~·Jt:.·
women workers employed in the
light housekeeping division.
Because of this possibility,
110
new housekeeping staff has been
recently hired. Through attrition
the staff has been reduced from
ten to six, however this. is also
related to the alleged negative
reaction to the· cleaners in the
dorms ..
Because of the cutback in the
housekeeping area of main-.
tainance, the women's work
loads. have been decreased to
compensate for the increased
area that the women cover. Thev
cover each floor less often and
have been shifted from dorm to
dorm with each woman cleaning
one floor per day .. -
·
According to maintainance
employees, there is now in-
creased walking and working, the
room~ can only be cleaned once
every day. and the cleaning of
each room requires more effort.
.
, _,Getextra
six-pack$ for the
weekend.·
.
.
I
GPACKS
I
~~
--
<:U:ltae/ell'
·
when
you're
hoving_·
· more
than
one.
AVAILABLE: AT FRAN~'S RESTAURAl'JT
~
MARIST RATHSKELLER
percent of the adults polled favor
the . elimination of criminal
penalties for the sale and-or
possession of small amounts of
Nearly one half of the users
Progra,n
Offers
Abroad Study
Each year for six weeks of the
C
'.ervantes ,111d Don Quixote. Sixty
summer, a program is offered to students made a four day tour to
students to travel and study .in Santiago de Compostela
and
Spain. Last summer
!16
students 'Leon.
from 25 states, Cuba, Canada and
Once or twice
a week
a group
Puerto Rico departed from trip was scheduled to visit such
Kennedy Airport and flew to historical places as Valle de los
Madrid.
Caidos; El 1•:scorial. Segovia,
The group was lodged
'in
Avila, Toledo. Museo del Prado,
Colegio Mayor Marques de
I~
Palacio Heal, Fabrica de Tapices
Ensenada, in the campus of the etc. Students found that they had
University of Madrid, where they also more than enough time to do.
lived and attended classes; The see and learn whatever they
dormitory had its own private chose.
pool, tennis arid basketball
As part of the program. a trip
courts. Courses ranged from was taken to Southern Spain,
1<:}ementary _ --Spanish..
..,
to visiting. famous cities . such
as
·Literature-·and Culture,,.Students
-COJ'doba.~
...
-Sevilla
,-
.
a,Grana<la.
toured La Mancha visiting all the Malaga and two days were spent
interesting' places related to in the beautiful Torremolinos
Beach, in the Mediterranean. The
tour went through Moorish
Mosques
a_nd
Christian
Cathedrals. Moroccan night
clibs, flamenco dances etc. Along
the road thev saw a battle
for-
tress and ;_1•atchtowers
that
seemed to teil stories by them-
. selves.
In
each
city
U1e group was
c1ccomodated in deluxe hotels as
Colon in Sevilla, Luz Granada
and Holiday Inn in Torremolinos.
To complete the excitement
of
this tour. );ome students cr~ssed
the Strait
of
Gilbraltar anc spent
a
day in Tangiei•, Africa. When
the tou,· was ov~r. the group
retunwd ,to
.Mc1drirl for· one. more ·
day wilere parties of farewell
were
given and the,
back home!
Workshop Begins
By
Peter Allen
· After two years of planning, the
·•r
Can" Workshop has opened its
doors ,to fourteen handicapped
children.
·
'.fhe Workshop ueals with
children who have a minimal
amount of brain damage · and
have slight emotional problems.
The goals of the program are
primarily to give the children a
better concept of themselves
through the positive experiences
he encounters in the work..;hop
activities:·These activities are all
recreational and. include arts &
crafts, a dramatics workshop for
plays and skits, physical exericse
and musical therapy. There is a
reading prograin but that is also
purely recreational.
The program meets every
Saturday afternoon between the
hours of 2:30 and 4:00 in the
campus center. The idea of
workshop was begun in 1973 when
a committee of Marist students
were studying the needs of the
handicapped students on cam-
pus.
Keith Philips who is presently
the programs administrator
came up with the basic ideas
which, with the aid of the coun-
seling office, developed into the
actual program. ·
The program receives student
· government funds and is staffed
by
twenty student volunteen
One .of the highlights <'f th
program is the
fact
that eac-
child has his own counselor, wh
can give him individual attentio.
in areas.where he might have
am
difficulties.
·

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ALBANY POST ROAD,· HYDE PARK, N.Y. 12538
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...











































I
I
,
r .
r
r
f
PAGE4
• CIRCLE
VOLUME 14 Marlst College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
The Marist College
cmcLE
is
the weekly newspaper of the students
of Marist College and
is
published throughout the school year ex-
. elusive of vacation periods by the Southern Dutchess News Agency,
Wappingers, New York.
·

Co-Editors
,:· Photography Editor
Sports Editor
Layout
Staff
Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Gregory Conocchioli and Irene Ross
-
AlAdolfi
Rich Burke
Llnda Franco and Mary Beth Pfeiffer ·
GregWelsh ,
Tom McDonald
Staff: Peter Allen, Janice Colleran, Rhoda Crispell, Susan
·Dunderdale, Genevieve Fitzgerald, Father 'Leo Gallant, Charles
Garret, Joe Gigliotti, Tommy _Kelly, David Llvshin, Paul
Mangieri, Thomas McTernan, John Reilly, Cathie Russo,
Richard Schneider, Julie Schott, Reid Scott, Joe Sexton, Karen
Tully, Rick Whitsell.
·
.
·Attitudes
.
Homosexual rights and attitudes. towards homosexuals
appeado be changing and the Editors of the CIRCLE are
pleased to note the emergence of yet another group on the
Marist Campus. The organization an offshoot of the national
organization, DIGNITY has been established here by Father
Leo Gallant:,Gay liberation groups have sprung up across the
nation in an. attempt to meet the needs and to address the
recurring problems that we as students along with society
have placed upon the'homosexual.
There is inspite of all the literature that has been written,
filmed and broadcast about homosexuals many myths about
the homosexual which still prevail, and we can think of no
better place than a college campus like ours for the at-
titudinal change to take place. One of the largest obstacles ti;,
the truth is · ignorance and prejudices, and presently
homosexuals are working toward the re - education of the
society. 'The growth of these groups across the nation on so
many university and college c~mpuses is proof in itself of the
fact that ,people are becoming educated to the fact that .
homosexuals exist and ~hatthey.functio11 as.hurqan,beings, ,,,
.,ometilpes
right beside us. _
·
·• : . -
... . · ·.
-
c· :
:- .·.··•····
.' ,_
·, The obstacles that Gay liberation groups have broken down
with the steady increase in their numbers is that of at-
titudinal change. They have forced people to see them dif-
. ferently, to see new things and they have exposed .them to
:1ew ideas. and not the stereotypes that much of the society
,iases its prejudices on. Society is now waking up an.cl seeing
,nd portraying homosexuals as they really are, people, just
ike you and like ourselves. They are students, doctors,
awyers, psychologists, mathematicians, .historia,1s, clerks,
ootball players and all those other positions that we only
!link are being filled with "Straights", only we just don't
.now.
What the Editors of the CIRCLE would like to see most is
he acceptance of these people, so that their meetings can be
mnounced, so they do not have to be underground, we call for
·.his acceptance for no other reason than the fact that these .
Jeople are hUillqn beings with the same rights that we all
1ave. Along with this the CIRCLE would like to see a rise in
'.he education of : the Marist campus on such issues as
•1omosexuality. We urge all faculty members who may _be
:ible to contribute something to Father Gallant's. group to do
10,
we urge you to take him up on his offer to listen ·and use -
his tape to better educate yourselves and your classes. We
also ask that the Counseling Services, Psychology and
Sociology departments get behind _the group to see that the
campus is educated, or at least' exposed tci the real facts
surrounding the homosexual. Only education about the
homosexual can replace the stereotypes with the truth, and
the myths with the· realities.
A change in attitude toward the homosexual population on ·
this campus can only take place through exposure, . contact,
education,.and confrontation with the fact that they do.exist
on this campus. Barl;>ara Gettings
a
leading gay activist has
said ·"the only way to break down misunderstanding and
prejudices is by ~eeting and working .with and learning to·
understand people, but then, most people have ·met and·
worked with homosexuals without realizing it."
The CIRCLE would also like to thank Father Gallant for his
courage in accepting the stigma that will eventually be.
placed upon
him
and we hold him up for other members of ·
- the community to see and take example of. We commend him
for his willingne~s to help people overcome the obstacles to
their own ignorance, while at the same time working with a
group that can no longer remain silent if they are to function
in the community like the rest of us,the way we want them
t
.
.
. .
'
o.
.
,
"The desire of knowledge, lik~ the thirst of riches, increases•·
even with the acquisition of it.", Lawren~e Stern
·
·
. .
'
. .
' ' •
.
:
' C
,'
, , •
.
>s•
: • •
' #
THE CIRCLE
MARCH 6, 1975
,,

• ·•
.
.
.•
,
, \
.1t-~
,, . . . .
"
"11Mt;S
A~
-rOUGUfRT/./AN
:!
"1UOUGUT ..;_
-:r
WAS
L-AJD
Of-7:-11-IE
UNEMMYM~~
UN~
iODAY
! 11
,
.
.
· .
-
Letters lo The Editors
S.G. · uEdict"
yet as I : recall, all clubs
.
are , mentis searching for some kind
required · to ·· keep accurate · of support and in order to getthat
records of all. monies spe11t
to
be
support, the clubs are required., to
· submitted· . to. the· student advertise for them. A Student
government .tre~surer.
.
Government sliQuld need only the .· .
To the Editors:
'fhf
staten1ent also gives Jhe advertising caused by the actions ·
The topic of this writing is the ··impression \that t'he . Student. ·and reaction~ that· .. · it . causes
newstudentGovernment,''edict'.'
Government·.
is· .
·
being directly. If.it has to 'be.sold by
that requires all clubs and
magnanimgus:
)n .
allo_cating those
to
wllom . funds are
student G over nm e
!1
t
"our" money .. Like\Vlse, it's not • allocate~ . then maybe some .
organizationsto place tl~e phr~se ., the ~ude~t Governm_ent-Policy changes a~e necessary.in Student
"Funded by Student Govern•·
,
or Executive 13oard tl:tat does all Gover-nment personnel and
ment" on all advertise
·
ments and.
,
the-·work for. an ,event;
Ws
the policy or perhaps'there shouldn't
announcements.
,
.
-
.
·.
,
~empers,ofthirrespectiveplubs;- be a Stuaent Government.: :· .
":rti(~YP_~c~r·fea~~ri ·~iven~'for
>.
aridthey,·alo#f~t:iould gefp;edit,
;; ;,
;:·' ,,.:,_;/t'I'pankY.QU~
,
this edict , has:- something to, do
not- student: g(?vernm~nt;: ·, "
.
,
< ,
Mark ,Mahoney
with.the accountability of funds,
,Jt looks like. student Govern-
Spring C~rnival
Wonderful World Shows. The
Shows will.start on Thursday and
Friday evenings from.dusk to
11
more . information see Jack
Schofield CC271- Wednesday 12-5
p.m. . or Dolly Russell . (?C272
anytime.
·'
p.m. Saturday from
2-11
p:m. and
Sunday from 3·10 p.m.
It
is .the
TO: -Au Charterer Clubs and hope of The College Union Board
Student Orga.'nizations:
as well as Wide World Shows that
The College Union, Board is our chartered organizations take
lookirig into the idea of hosting_a a part in these events; Options
Spring Carnival. It is scheduled are available . to set up .. Food
to, begin on Thursday night, April . Booths, Games,· etc. All proceeds
16 - Sunday April 20: The · Com- ma.de by the booths will go to
We need your. help to make this
a successful event . that • will
enhance our spring weekend. · ·.
The event will
be
held on the
lower south field.
Take care.
. pany we . will be hosting is. your clubs or organizations. For
Jack Schofield
Program Advisor
· Campus Center
Condolence

.
.
.
.
been _intending to write you. The difficult task I've ever had to do;
news in last Wednesday's New
So I write simply to say to.you
York Times ·about your recent and everyb!)dy at Marist College
tragedy on campus affect~ me that we at Wagner share your · .
deeply.
. . _ . . . . -· ,
sense of shock and fervently pray
.
,. February 26, '1975
I am the chaplain of Wagner that such tragedy-will never be
Rev. Leo Gallant
.
·
College and last November we . visited upon either of our com-
Marist College
losta_ sophoJ?ore co~d due to an Illunities again._ · .· · ·.·. . ...
Poughkeepsie, New Yol'k
amazingly similar. c1rculstances.
.
Sincerely,
.
.
_
_. Visiting the parents that night to
.
Lyle
R.
Gutta
Dear R~v. Gallant,·
.
info~ them of their ~aughter's
Chaplain, Wagner College
For. ~1ter.ally_. days now I haye death 1s perhaps the s1_ngle most
-
Attention Seni_ors
now;
___ .
. graduation extra h•ours will be
Not every · prospec.tive ein-
arranged. Evening)lrjd graduate
player has to be reached by mail. students are always· invited, to
Personnel offices will
be
open. Go
~
utilize the office. ·
in :person. Fill out applications
It
is my hope to have a session
Dear Seniors:
and try for on the spot interviews. on "Preparing Interviews"• soon·
Spring recess will soon begin · Make good use of-any' or
·an
_after. _we
return. from,:, the··
and most of you who .have not· contacts. Do not letthis-.vahiable. yacation, ,Those who feelthatthis ·
niade special-, plans·
will
,.be time·goto ·waste.;··.· ·., , · .
.
. ·
= •·
.w<>uld
_
:be:
'
.bi:lneficiat should .. ·
·spending theJime·at home.: This.
The Placement Office·will be •.•. contact foe so a convenient time,
.
•· week WOllld be.
a:µ.
excellent
01)-:'' .•
oped :Wednesday, /fhursdayjind ,'.'
~an,
9e · aminged: ThaJik •you;,:. '
:portuajty.to:begiri-looking for(a ·F:t:.id~y ofvacaUoriwee)t: Regular ·' · · · .
·
?· .:
'
:
·
.:
Larry~riyder ..
- job, espec{ally
if.
yo~ .have
.
,done
hours
·
are 8_:30,to.
·
-12 and-from 1,.s
.
• Career.Counselor '
•.. ·.·nothirig]>o~i~~Y,e·.a~outthis up/il ·
p.ni/
however:
_
b,~'Y~er :~~-t-~-~:d
.... ·~
,
.-
··J
-•-~,....,.
A


























'··
1 •
PAGE6
Code
99
By Fr. Leo Gallant
Protestant
and
Jewish
clergymen involved. There will
THE CIRCLE
MARCH 6, 1975
Applications A vail~hle
The Application for Financial
Aid and the Parents' Confidential
Statement (Student Financial
Statement for an independent
student) are available at the
Financial Aid Office ( Cham-
pagnat - lO0A.)
automatically renewable Marist
grants-scholarships).
All students who wish to be
considered
for
financial
assistance from these programs
must have their applications and
financial statements on file in the
Financial Aid Office.by May 31,
1975.
.
.
.
I have
a
stack of notes for a be · more work among the
future article. I want
to
get at it · minority groups.
butit'seightyardsaway; Maggie
In the past the campus
my dog,
is
snoozing at my feet, ministry team has been mostly
comfortably listening to The involved in liturgical functions.
Miracle by the Stylistics: "The So, next year, besides musical
sun belongs to the sky, the leaf leaders, guitarists, typists,
belongs to the. tree, the grapes sacristans, and liturgists, we will .and the rest are . Europeans. I
belong to the vme, and you, you need part time secretaries
hope the renewal will make me a
belong to me. Isn't it a 'leaders, and workhorses for th~ better .<:haplain at Marist next
·mira<:le .... ;" ,I jl!-5t-can•~ disturb volunteers program, awareness year.
Maggie, so I
11
Just write three programs and ecumenical ser- .
3)
I have been named unofficial
news items.
vices. Anyone interested should CatiJolic Chaplain at the Culinary
Both the application and the
financial statement must be on
file in order to be considered for
financial assistance · · from · the
Federal loan, grant, and. work
programs, and institutional
programs (except for the
The Financial Aid Office en-
courages all students who foresee
the need of financial assistance
for
1975-76
to file early.
1)
We are already asking for see me.
Institute and I share a liturgy
volunteers for next year's
2)
I hate to see the end of the there e,very Wednesday at
9
p.m.
ca_~pus mi!ristry team. Campus school year come because it and Saturday at
7
o.m. More and
numstry
Wlll
be much expanded means, for me, being uprooted more Marist and the Culinary are
nex~ year so a. l_arger and more from my happy home. But this doing things together and I hope
varied tea~.
will
be needed:.- year
I
have
something · my little share
will
help this
''Rhetoric -Without
/
'
·,,
~onsequences
Campus milllstry next year
Wlll
tremendous waiting for me. I endeavor. •
· _
take on the vol~mteer. services have been accepted as one of
Here's a little thought for
department, which will mean thirty Marist priests in the world people with the Code
99
spirit.
having an office in Donnelly. to make a month's renewal in ''Information is a right..: Com-
There will be more ecumeni~al St.Brieuc, France, in July and munication a duty .. Communion a
awareness programs,
with August Three are Americans joy."
By
Cathie Russo
world of limited resources, he
said ·'there is enough. on this
earth to fill men's needs but not
men's greeds." .
n=====
)[

(I
I
I I
llmt\~I
I
T['>TTf>l'.E
<fl
.
'
h1surnnce from
Mo,~holl
G. 6te,1in9, Inc..
-11il'
",n· s1wcializc in toinorn:w"
ARLINGTON
44 Plaza .
47,1~6100
POUGHKEEPSIE
75 Washington St.
454-0800
\
WAPPINGERS FALLS
Imperial Plaza
297-3701
Frankt·'s. Restaurant
DraffBeer
8oi.:_glass.
25~
Pitcher
,".:
··s2.·oo
..
•. 0
0
"Liberals in the t_ru~ American
sense,. support the rhetoric
without the consequences" said
Reverend Ed "Ned" Murphy to a
capacity · audience in the back
dining room last week at the
Campus Ministry's Poverty
Meal. .•
.
His speech was aimed at
shaking up all of those who speak
of the need for justice · and
equality and 'yet remain alqof
from the consequences and self-
denial necessary to promote
social change. Murphy was at one
time a conservative '.'goldwater
Republican" until he became aff-
ected by the movement for peace
and justice in early
1968.
Since
then he . has · become a political
activist. who is seekin
·
g . change
through non-violent. courses . of
action. His most recent- m-
dictment · was on the ~harge of
destroying files of a foreign
government • South ... Viet_na~.
This was done as an express1011 of
opposition , to our,, gcivern.xn~nt's
military spending in a country so
desperately
in
· need
of
sustenance;
, .
At the Poverty. Meal; Murphy
stated that·'while the U;S. ·is one
sixth of the world's population, it
consumes one third of the world's
food supply. He also .said ·•that
while Americans find injustice in
the handling of fuel resources, we
are eqm1lly unjust in .· our
domination of the world's food,"
·He expressed further-_a thought
from Mahatma Ghandi c~m-
cerning the world's survival in a•
More than just a proponent of
liberal rhetoric Murphy· is con-
victed to
·
aJife of consequences.
He spoke of his thirty day fast
from
. Thanksgiving ... until
Christmas ,and· · the effects of
existing solely-on water for thaf
period_ of . time. He · said tl1at he
·~gained a deeper commitment to
the millions of people who or-
. dinarily exist . under such cir-
cumstances; with no end in sight
except their Jnevitable death."
During a question and answer
period which_.followed the meaL -,.
Murphy indicated. that his fast
has caused.him permanent spinal
damage, which makes traveling
to speaking .. engagements very
uncomfortable. He believes that
in speaking to otliei,:s he is helping
to bring about what he terins .. a
revolution of awareness.:'.
It is his
belief that: people must become
deeply'.aw~ire. ofsociai; injustices
~~
and th.en.develop·tliis ·awareness
into· thoughtful.;. analysis.
-
--This
· analysis will prciqiote th~ -~oral
outrage which he
f~:.
is
necessary for change:;.,. Father
Murphy also spoke of the
reluctance of people to submit to
any type of change _ in their
lifestyles for the benefit of others.
He concluded his talk with a
Buffy· St-Marie .
.
so·ng ivhich
specifically pin-points what he
b~lieves.
·•It
is by their poverty
that we prosper."
StudentS Settle At l\lount
By John M. Reilly
seem to be much of a burden to
covered here at Marist before
them.
. going to the Mount,
In the second year of the
·Mrs. Nolan ·mentioned - that
Another problem the students _
Special Education Program at Marist ·would- like to have·· a
have come across is that they
. Mount St. Mary the number -0f Special Education Program here musLdo all their work at the
Marist_ students in Special at the college itself. The State Mount library because the
Education has doubled. This Education Dept. however is not Marist's library is inadequate for
semester there are nineteen ready to approve a new program their needs. Many of. their ·
Maiist's students studying at the here at Marist. This is due_to the assignments. involve preparing
Mount.
fact tha:t there is a decline in lesson plans and the Mount has
Mrs. Nolan who is the head of students at the .lower grade an _ excellent
Education
the Special Ed. Program said, levels. But on the other hand.Mrs. _ Curriculum library.
"the Mountis adjusting for the Nolan· said,
:.'A
recent Rand ·. The students. going to the
Marist's students." She also feels Survey released in Chicago Mount agree that it would ·be
that the students from Marist stated that there will be a teacher more convenient to have · a
have settled in at the Mount. shortage in 1980." This is good Special Ed. Program here at
There have been no major · newsfor- anyone interested in Marist.
It is difficult driving back
problems with the program this teaching esp
·
ec~ally students and fo_rth to t.he Mount every day
year that she's seen.
entering college in
1976
who want and its also expensive. The
. She mentioned that. at the to be teachers.
·
_
·
students must pay the cost of
· beginning of the year the students
Some of the students who are commuting themselves.
might have found'- themselves taking Special Education at the
Ms. Isabella said that she feels
with a lot of free time between · Mount are.• Suzruine . Isabella, the program at the Mount· is
classes· but. this should be no Joseph . Frien; - Marion M.c- · excellent. However, she and Ms.
problem now, since the free time . Cormack;: Michael Moore and·. Harvey agreed that there.· is a
can be utilized working in schools Dena''Harvey: · Ms. Harvey and , definite IJeed for· better.•. com-
in the Newburgh area. Most .of Ms. Isabella said that they found rpunication
between· _ their
the course_s·require\fielu .. work, the~elves•poorly prepared for teachers . here and their
and the class work is also quite · some oHhe c9urses they're now -•
.
teachers at the Mount. In
im-
derna~ding. . ,
.
· . · · .
takin( aOhe · Mount, especi~lly proving the program Mrs. Nolan
Mrs. Nolan was surprised -~Y
for ·a Methods; and Materials. feels that they must work with
how \Vel~ the students make out m Psychology . ~O}l~se. • . The M?unt . ·
.
the preparation that the students
commuting · to , the Mount.. The teachers are:givmg_ the Mar1st
\s
akeady have and built on
it. · ·· _
students cooperate well, and the students extra sessions
to
cover
·
· - - - -
traveling back ~nd forthde>esn't
work that they should have






















































































MARCH 6, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE?
.
Catalogs A vailahle
·
CIEE's new Student Travel
Catalog is required reading for
any young traveler who wants to
plan a trip that
'
s both fun and
inexpensive. Wherever in the
world a student is going in the
U.S. or abroad, the Catalog can
help.
travel guidebooks.
For everyone who is worried
about the high cost of going
abroad this year, the Catalog has
information on CIEE's money-
saving travel group charter
flights. These flights are open to
anyone in the • educational
community, but reservations and
deposits are required at least 65
days before departure. The
schedule includes over
90
round-
trip flights connecting New York,
Chicago, San Francisco and Los
Angeles with Amsterdam, Paris
,
London, Dublin and Madrid
.
·
First, there's th~ International
Student Identity Card (ISIC) -
internationally recognized proof
of student status carried by over
1,000,000
students all over the
world. The ISIC entitled holders
to travel on student charter
flights within Europe and on to
·
-
Asia and Africa. On presentation
of the ISIC, students may
·
also
The
Student Travel Catalog
is
free and available now from
CIEE
,
a non-profit organization
that has been serv
i
ng traveling
students for 27 years. Write for
your copy to CIEE
,
Dept. SC,
777
United Nations Plaza
,
New York,
New York
10017
.
or
235
East
Santa Clara Street, San Jose,
California
95113.
Cast rehe~rses dance numbers for the .. George M
"
production.
Vikings Become
Part
Of
C.onf
ere nee
·th
11 f
·
·
swr_ iter for the Vikings: "'That
By Rich Schneider
.
.
Wl
a o its teams ly
i
ng in
a
6
0-
will
be
pretty hard for the Vikings
. 75 mile radius from Marist, with
to ~lay in a eighUeam league and

·
.
·
. Progress and change has th~ e~ception ~eing that of
facing top Hight competition
•·
f111al_ly ov
.
.
ertaken
.
the te
·
n year old Fairleigh-Dickenson
·
which is in
k
N
J
N
every wee .
"
however he added
,
Manst
.
College
.
V
.
i·km
·
gs' club
ew ersey. ori:nan says this is
.
It
.
.
t
h
d
.
-
·
· .
1s no
.
so muc the winning
,
football teain, who now find a goo move smce it cuts down on
which I think they are capable of.
themselves in a new and hostile traveling expenses for the club
It
'
s the pressure that they'll have
playing environment.
.
.
teams.
"
Club
-
football should laSt
to be able
fo
handle."
·
...
The Vikings, premier cham- longer,'
'
he said.
Tom
Walsh: a member of the
pions of
'
the

old
.
.
ECCFC
,
-
have
As
for
the members
of
the
't d
G
M ·
t
V"k"
,
·
f
S u ent
.
'overnment, saw things
.
become part of the Metropolitan
·
ans
.
i mgs
·
·
ootball team,
differently - both good and bad
.
·
8-Conference made up ex- most pla~ers are happy about the
He said the go9d point was
.
that
~lusively of four-year coHeges te~m bemg a _part of t~e new
·
'
teams in the new conference
!ron:i the metropolitan
··
·
area.
·
league. They cite the c~hber of
might be more evenly matched,"
Mar1st h.ad formerly
_
played two- the teams as a whole, while 0ther
but detected a
weakness:
year
.
colleges
,
such as
.
West-
-
players are concerned about the
•'Hopefully
,
one team won't
chester and Mattauk, along with
·
wee~-to-week. pre~surt'.S
of
entfrely dominate a league."
.
some four-year colleges while as play111g new teams 111 th
e
new
·
a ~en:iber of the old ECCFC. But league";
-
.
.
this ~11 be
.
the first time everfor .
·
H~re s ~hat the pl~yers. said:
,
Marist
,
to
·,
play
.
, the four-year
_B!ll !3-~isso~: t~il~11ck on
schoC>l~
:
?.~OSt,.
,
ex
,
cl usiv:ely .
.
, "'
"
.
.
:
••
y
iki~~s
.
.
{
I
_
-
ttu.~k ~~s
:
i~
.
11
;.
~O?d
·
'!'hat
,
means the Vikings will ide~. We
,
are
_
-
playI_IJg
7
,cho_ols
·
face teams
.
such as Manhattan, equ~valent to our c~hber.
·
,_
.
.
·
Iona,
.
St .
.
John's University
_B111 Dun~: defensive en~: "We
_
Brooklyn, Concordia Pace and wil! be all right as long as we play
F11irleigh-Dickenso~, _ a good the strong teams." .
·
number of
.
which Marist has
Tom ~elly: graduat111g soccer-
never played before.
.
·
style
·
kicker:
.
·'Sur~, we have
Bob Norman an avid supporter
·
beaten some teams like Iona and
and boost~r' of the Marist M~nhattan _b~for~. But don't
Vikings' football teams,
.
said the fo1 get the V1kmgs hav~ a, lot of
'
!
M_e~ 8-Conference is good for the
..
goo_d players that
clidn
t see
V1
_
k111gs because_ theleague takes acti~n
-
_la~~ year. They are ready
·-r
\
\
the mo~t important schools and to fill m
.
.
. ·. .
,
.
.
more importantly the league
Joe Wright. V1kmgs game hlm
..
..
~
---
gains better contro'I of its teams came~aman: "That's ~eautiful.
by controlling recruiting abuses That 1s what
_
we are trymg to
·
do
by its 4~year schools upon the 2_ for the l~st ~ouple years.
Off
year schools, which was the case course,
_
llemg 111 the ne""'. Met 8-
'
in the old ECCFC.
Confe~enc~ me~ns we will form
..
Another key feature of the
:
new r1yalr1es wit~,,the
·
teams we
_
Met 8-Conference .is
that are gomg to play.
·
traveling is greatly reduced
Thomas McTerman: Sport-
Workshop To Begin
..
-
.
.
..-
.
.
By Peter Allen
community atmosphere:
·
The children range in between
1'.he
":-'
Llttle Peoples Summer the ages of four and eleven, are
Workshop will begin
.
its fourth divided into six major groups,
season this June with the promise
.
·
four
·
·
of these are according to
of Jots of fun, exercise and most age, the other
·
two are for
.
ofall the revealing experience it children
:
with
emotional
·
yields to both the children and the
problems. The iittlepeople make
counselors.
.
good use of the campus facilities
: .
The workshop
·
runs for eight ·using the theatre for plays, the,
weeks and is divided into four two
fields
·
and pool for
.
physical
.
ac-
·
week
'
sessions. Each session
tivities and some classrooms for
·
..
meets five days a week between
arts and crafts. The workshop
the hours of19:00 a.m. and
:
4:00
also
.
off~rs a reading program
p.m, A success ever since the
and
.
movies on various subjects .
.
program began, each of the four
.
The su~er program is staffed
·
take advantage of reduced fees at
museums, theaters and cinemas
and a worldwide network of
student hostels and restaurants.
the
Catalog
also provides in-
formation Qn low-cost insurance,
reduced rates on rail tickets and
car leasing and it includes order
forms for the best in student
T)ie Poverty ivkal sponsored
by
the C
:
1111pus lVlini
s
try to
create anawarl'ness
10
the
c
ontinuing problem of work\ hunger
colk
c
1cd
S37
.
00
al tlic
dinner held
011
February
25
On
Tuesday
M:1rd1 4
.
lhl' Pcrforn1111!! Arts
Committ
e
e
_,
sponsored I he N:11io11
:
il Jazz Ensemble
a
t a
benefit concert for the
W
o
rl<l I lun
g
c
i
Co
:
1li1 ion. Anyone int
:
'.r
es
tcd in makin
g
fr1rthcr
..:ontributions t6 the group is asked
10
contact ClwrlicTac!<ney at
Gregory House
01
Fath
e
r Leo Gallant.
U
.
S
.
C
[
PA
R
TM[Nl
or
H[AllH
,
[OU
C
ATION. ANO W[
lfA
RE.

lh
l~
S
pa
ce
Co
nl
flbM
tt
<S
a,.
a Pu
b
lic. Ser
vic
e
·
.
.
.
·
25
.
)'t;ARg,d)
E.Y 'v\t:ULD.
~AVE.
GIVQJ U9
MBR£A9QNSFCRNOf9
sessions
J
iraws nearly
·
.
one
,
.
by eleven Marist students under . .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
. . .
..,
,
hundred children
:
from the
·
the direction of Bob Lynch. The
,;
~~ years ago the worst they could say
·
was
.
_
·
·
Dutchess
.
County
.
area. The
staff is also aided by volunteers
r
primary
·
objectives of
.
.
the
fro~ local high
·
schools.
·
The
"Nice girls don't smoke" or
11
lt'II stunt your growth."
program are to enhance the
workshop also
.
'
affords
.
the
·
·
Now we know:
.
.
.
childrens
.:
il!lagination
and
.
childr~n'to meet 0thers th8t they
W
_
o,
.
men .who sm
.
oke are dying· of lung cancer and
.
other
·
channel
.
their
.
,
creativity
,
into a
.
might not have the ch
,
ance to
.
·
·
~~-r-:~~....;.---,-....;~-._;_....;_;_...;. _ _;_ ____
.
:..:._
·
____
·
smoking-reiated
,
diseases at twice the rate of.women who don't.
,
·
·
_thej~I_RSLE
is-furiied
·
by ad
_
ve~tisers
and
r
-
eceipt
of.
:
These days there's no such thing as
a
dumb reason for not smoking.
-
.
·
.
Stud
_
ent _Governinerit Furids
,
. ·
_
·
·

·
~
I
.
'
..
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'-
_
!
.
'
.
.
' . '
.
.
.
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...
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.
..
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f
I
, ·~.~·~.~\.
!
-THE
CIRCLE
MARCH 6, 1975
Cagers End Season
With Victory
By
Thomas Mc Teman
finished with 1343 points for his
~nd the Geneseo all-tourney
.four-year varsity stint. Earli~r
team.
- The . Marist College basketball this season he was named MVP m
DePercin, from New York, ran
team ended the current season on the Geneseo· tourney after a 36-
the high-scoring ~arist . offe~e
a
high
note with a 92-86 upset poirit performance in the ~in~l.
this season and will do so agam
victory . over Albany State at Despite injuries that had hun m next year. He is an excellent
Dutchess Community College and out of the lineup.all.season,
ballhandler and good passer,
last Wednesday. The Danes were he still paced the team in scoring
handing off an average of
6.7
the tenth-ranked small college in average (19.0) and field goal ·assists per game. DePercin also
the state and have accepted a bid ( .501) and free· throw. (. 784) · improved his shooting during the
to. participate in the NCAA percentage. ·
season
(19
versus Dowling) and.
Division III playoffs. ·
The other seniors are · Joe
will be more of a threat if he can
The win gives the Red Foxes a Cirasella and· Al- Fairhurst, both
continue to gain confidence in his
16-10 record,
·a .
complete· tur-
three-year' varsity performers.
shot. · ·
.. ·
_
.
naround over last year (9-16) and Cirasella, a 6-3 forward from
· A resident of Flushing, Murphy
their best record iri three years. Eastchester, ,vas forced to'sit out improved greatly as the season
Their 84.8 scoring average . the last six games when he broke
progressed and has developed
represents the highest offensive his jaw against Sacred Heart intoaJ.l!le.rebounder (6.9) as well
output.in the schC>ol's _history., .
after scoring 24 points··for the
asa strong outside shooter (11.3);
Following a .season-opening · second: consecutive· ganie: ·He
He was named to the all-tourney
double-overtime loss to Iona, the
·
was coming on strong following a
team at the . conclusion of the
Foxes won nine oftheir next ten slow start and finished thiid)n Squires Classic in December.
A tense moment during
_
the ~inal game.
games, including first place in .. scoring . (11~6) . and second in
~
. Two freshm~n.gl}ards also saw
·
· •
the Geneseo Tip-Off Tournament rebounding (7~~)._Fairhurst, a 5~., · plenty of pl~ym~ tune and ma~e
I l · ·
-k
s · ·
"." ..
·.
:
r;" .
··a·. . .
and third place in the Squires 11 guard from Scarsdale, was strong contributions to the team s
.ci.
'o.
C .
ev-
easo.nn n s
.
.
·
_
Classic. But after the mid-
second in assists and,.: despite-
0
play, Glynn Berry, of Brooklyn,
.l
.
semester break they lost crucial · seeing limited playing tune down· and Paul Ka~e, of Rhinebeck,
.
. . ,.
back-to-back contests to DQwling the stretch, provided the spark of averaged 8.3 -and
.
5.2 points
-
._ ,- · . .
. •.• ... ·· fromtheJ?~mtbrmgmg~~-esco:1"e anciKings.(N,Y.) and had'to manyrallies ..
-~ ·
·1;espectivelya·ndwHlbecounted
. ~'lar1st s s~atmg .Red ~oxes to 4-3.. .
-
·
· . .
seWe•for
a
secon~~place tie.with · Next year, .three :retul'ning •-on for even greater production iff
fllll~~ed. · their seaso_n with. ,a .. M~nst co~ple!ely domma~e~ Kings
.
in the Central Atlantic starters will-be expect~d ~o carry . th_e _future: Be1;ry led _the team_
decisive 6-3 v1ctorr-over Jocko s the fmal l?enod led off by Wa~h
Golle_ge ., con_ference, won by .the load. They are -Jumors 6-5 · wit~ 20 p~mts m t~e first game
Hockey qub at Millbrook School burn skatmg the lep_gth of the Ice . Dowlmg. Closmg out the schedule center-Earl .Holmes, 6-4 forward-
agamst Nyack while Kane had
Sunday mght. . . .·
. ·. . . .
to score another goal... Mc-
against strong opposition, Marist Ray Murphy and 5-
~1
gllard.Eric his high of 13 points versus Stony -
TI_i~
tea!D . opene~ -the.,.first
.
Cut<:heo
11
s~ored ~he last ~oal of defeat~d . Sou~hampton .·· and · DePefrin,. But• .''carrying .,the· . Brook.
peno~ with
a
strong for~- the game
'Yl
th .a perfect fhp shot .. Albany State while losing ,tough. _load" is nothing ·new to them, as ·
·
. Rounding _out the team w~re
checkmg_ gal!le that resulted
m
to t
th
e upper-ngvtc9rner ~~_th~ -"·b~ttl~s. to·Siena; C,W. Post and_· t~ey fac~d that-situation ·several·· ju?iors Steve· Sullivan.and. Jim
three qmck goals. _Georg~ . Mc- ~:e to brmg the sf ore to a f!!Jal 6
Dowling; all ranked ·a~ong the tlTT}es with · ~ood su~cess when- . D1rscherl; sophomore .. Walt
C!,1tche~ntmadet~e-fifrst_goaloB~lal,
Ron
·
c·larke·: playe·d
.. ·-n . u·t· ..
-
state's sm. all·· colleges, and ... Hart and .C1rasella· were both. Janeczek. and freshman Walt
pm-porn
pass
rom .
I
-
.
.
a -
0 · •
'M
th·
.
.• . . ·
I
·NAIA
·
"d

d "th· · ·
1
t . th . B . k
k"
E h
·
. d
Schneller .. Schneller then rifled a. standing defensive game as di.d . _oni:nou ' a perenma , . · · •
..
SI
e me·
WI
m1une~_ a em e .·· nc ows
.I-
.
ac_ . game
'
shot to thEr shorCside· of Jocko's Duffy. Both cleared the puck to :11stnct_ contender fro~. l':fef . se~sor-
\
··•· t·
~

·
f .··
. va~u~~~f{xgearce/h1s s~:son
goalie 'to. raise the score to 2-0.
the offensive line with great
e~:~~t will · los~
·
~rily· three Mor~·~fJ~ 'J~nio~a~i
1
f[ge
~:S ·
~~
n:t ·ylar'~ sq
1
~ict°r
P
0s1
IOns
.. 'fhethird-and final· oalofthe control.
Dave· Richardson ·. -. - · .. ·· ·. ··.
. · .
- .-
··
1 .·

. · ....
. ' . · · · /. . ,
_ · . .
<-
period· was scored. b/Al \V~sh~ as~isted Mccutcheon and Washs
,
semor~_to grad~abop .th1s
_
sprmg, the• teams ._most dep~end~ble . ~1th
the
~oss• of only th~ee
burn who fired the puck from ten burn on one goal each, . . .. ·. ... bl;lt one 0Uhe!31
IS
Mik_e Hart, who performer and top r~boun~er_ ~em ors, coach Ron Petro has nme
feedn front ofthe crease:
<....
GoaJie .Dave Prista:sh held
off .
sc;ore~ 33: PAmts agamst Albany:·~ (11.0) an~ was s~COJ?-d
m
scormg
1
etu~~es and
fl
strong J.
V.
team
·Jocko'sretaliatedinthesecorid 42 shots
·
on· goaLwith .. ·expert
_
Statemhisf~11algatneto_leadthe ,(-1_~.3)'.;liis s~~son h1ghs_wer~ 33 movmg up to
1
form the base_()f
-eriod ..
by
scoring three'· goals. precisio~,:Managei-}l'im Qe~~~n -~
li'«>'E_~, ·
t~, -v1cto~y- ,_.I:Iart.I:)l
-
~-5. p_o1nt~
:
_a_gam_st IC>na, "llnd: -17 next season s t~am. l\:f~rzst
Marist'later' added another-when. was the ref~f_E,le for theiSkatlilg for:ward from fo~ghlfoep~1e,. r,el:>o?fds versus Ne\\'_ Paltz. He basketball fortunes are defm1tely
p
·tDuff • -
1 · .. ·
d.
1
h
t Red'Foxes win;
.. ,, , . · .. · bro~e. the .. scJ10_9l s alH1me ., w~s; ~lso named
1
to the ,ECAC on-the
w~y up .
.
~
.
.
•··.. y_s .a~e_
.!~.
a s ap
~
0 ,
.. -
, .· · . .
·
scormg record Jast month and· D1v1sion
III
weeldy All-Star team
_ _ _
.;_
<
.
,'\VO
·
lllell·---·(J'ii,:s,e-
. -. . -.
. . - . ..
,
Seas<>ri
~igJt
On
Sports
By
Thomas McTernan
munity Center in Newburgh,
·
·
were they ever glad they did.
__ By Thomas McTern~
Queens College and Im-
After-a back~and-forth first half
rria<!ulata may have achieved a that en.ded w1th Sµiall'swishing a
first woman ever to be named Binghamton tourn~y in April ....
breakthrough _last month when· 25--footer at the buzzer to -bring
J.
V. BASKETBALL
· -recipient ofthis award.
Couldn't
believe
that
they met in the first women's . Marist .within• -27-24; Joan ex-
·
LOSES OU
1
5
·
Small, a -5-3 co-captain of the Southampton beat Dowling 65-64
basketball ever .at Madison· • ploded for 18 points in the second
·
C
T
1 -
women's basketball team, scored last week. The Golden Lions, who
Square Garden. But for the half, -including two three.:point
SEASON
28 points and controlled 13 won CACC title and own 27-1
women's basketball team at plays, the s£ n.ond of w.Qich opened
rebounds in · leading -the Red record; .. rebounded
to
defeat
Marist, the just-compieted '. up a _4f!-38 L~g_e wit!} only 8:05
Foxes to a 53~50 thriller over Mt. · Bloomfield 74-61 in first round of.
season· was a breakthrough .in a re~imng.
·
~\'ble. -~all had a . With:.. Damian Farley con-
St. Mary in Newburgh Saturday _NAIA _District 31 playoffs Mon-
smaller yet equally· important mediocre. ·first period, ... Susan · necting on ·12 .of14 field goal at-
night. Last Wedriesday she had 26 day· ... Leo Olson, field coach at
sense.
· ·
· . ·
'
· · • Baroni kept the Ped Foxes·within tempts; Marist raced to a 63-33. points-and 15'tebounds in the 61- _ Marist, won second in the shotput
As they closed out their second striking rarige
\.'th-
timely out- halftime lead over Mount

St. 48 loss toNew Paltz. Her season's at the AAU Masters Indoor Track .
season with a 3:-3 record following ·· siqe shooting. Eh
1'
_-n Oregg also Mary, then coasted to a:season-
average was 20sl....for the 3~3 and Field Championships last
Saturday's 53-50 comeback win · ha!1
a
good first h., "f with eight . ending 105-77 ·triumph :Jit 'the Foxes, coached by Lorraine wee_kend ... After missing last- .
· over: Mount St. Mary; the team pomts and strong.rel.:
Junding
and Jewish Community ... Center.·. in . Conklin.
second shot in Monday's big
has shown that they .. are r~adyto defense._.·But the :,e_c~md half Newburgh Saturday'night. ·.
match against Benoit, Marsbars'
· e?(:pand -their schedule and helonged to Sm11ll. · _
.
·
Farley ended 17-22 for 34 points·
_Ron ·macklin declared,
"If
we
become an integral part ·.of the
The
Mqunt opene~
1
he final in •a spectacular shooting per-
deserved
to
win I would have
Marist cand Dutchess County t\l: ·
't:·
TUinutes with
t •;
·
'
baskets formance. His backcourt part-.
NOTES FROM THE
made it ... but we didn't."
SPORTS DESK
sports: sc·ene. · The ·hope is that fo1
; ·. -24 lead. Joan , ; en made . ner, John Vandervoort,. also -~.
they <?anJoin a 'conference with a twt· . •yu~ and
·
i\Jir.h
~II;inay. · played a. strong game, leading
!Em-game schedaje: _by· next falt con~
;i.
'Cl
-a
rebound·-~~ tie the Jhe team in rebounds. (~) ~and·,
, The .. ·women, ·.coacl.t.ed' . by: gam,!. 1·,,vo exchanges_,
c
basket!; ::"assists (8) while scoring 8 points.
.
INTRAMURAL ·
·•.
BASKETBALL
· Lorraine Conklin of the physical: lateri R;;.
1
in Smallwooc.:·scored on Greg' Giles and Neil Lajelll)esse , George· McCutcheon . set two -
education. department;
.
pragtr~ed. a bam '-;1ot to ,pµt Marist ahea,.d : each added 18 points for the Red · new sc.hool records in the · CTC .
three .. ·days ·a ·week. duriiig
'
·the ·31~35vr.thl~:20left.Ov~rthenex:t';Foxes, who.completedtheir first -~Indoor. Track Champlom;hips at
season; ~•we had four girls qiiit, five /illJUtes, SmaU made _
.
5 :, season under· coach Ed Conlin Columbia· University Saturday. · · ·The :biggest game of the In-
buf-the team has. ·shown good ·steals,.cQntrolled 7·rebounds and ·.with an 11-5 record.
.
-•
McCutc_heon ran the mile iri • tramural basketball season took
improvement·: in the Jast· · two : score4 11 p9ints, in~luding the .. ::~Last · Tuesday; Albany State " 4 :30.3 andth~ .two mile, in9 :56:7, pla:ce Monday . night. bet:ween
·
games,''' notes.··•. Conklin,
.
:in"· crucial three-pointer. The,home
'
· scored four.oaskets in 29 seconds breaking both previous marks by·· Benoit ~House· -and the· "Mar-
reference .to the.'61-48 Joss to a Jeam rallied ·with fiye straight with twelve minutes remaining· a~ost. seyen seconds .:. Will·· shars" of fourth floor Leo. Before ·
more-experie1_1ced New Paltz. b~s~e~s; _in :
~he
.
,
fi~al'' three"- and vi~iit
on
to def.eat Marist 66~ ,Morrison ran~ fine 4:35.3 in his :
a
capa_city · cr_owd,
Ben
_
oit
squad .last Wednesday_ and .the mlJ!utes!._but it. ~sn_t enO!JSh: 55. •LaJeunesse paced the losers heat_for the .µiile. In the660 Dave·. rEicoverea from.a slow:.start. and
victory over Mount.· ·
·
., · .. Joa_n•s·~e score read: 2e·pomts,
·
_;with.22 .points. and 10 rebQunds. Schoolshad 1:21.laiid J!m Gillen ·held· off a-late rally by'. the
•. Theonlyproblem'aboutnext 13_rebounds,l~_steals;~;biockE:<I ·: .. ·
·
·
·
·
·
l:24A,:. · _ . . _
:
. Marsbarstowin-~42-41tllriller.
year
is that ~ey will have to do shots and 4 assists. Who s Debbie
At
-
the · RPI Indoor . Soccer The game went down to the final
withoutthe seryices of 5'3"'senior ·Mason? _.,: ::·
..
: .
· .
-Tournament- in Troy Saturday. ..secimd · · whe1v Ron Gla~klin,
co,captain
:f
!)an Smal!:. Witli:out:a : , Roundmg out the team are
.
_An1,1 . · ·
MS. SMALL NAMED
,Marist .was _el_im~ated a~er
-tv
1arsbars' cente
·
r, . mi.ssed . •· a
doubt, she 1s the he_ar!: and soul of Goger, ,Dena Kenny-and· Gmny
1
·
ATHLETE OF THE·
:
g~~~·byfllllshing_last 11:1::tht:_
repound·layupona shot by Skip
the team- the leading i;cor~r, th~ O.'Sllea, all of wJ:iozn. come off the
. . .
.
:- div1s1on. Red Foxes first dropped .Cleary,
·
· ·.
· • : , . ·
·best foul shooter, • the.:. most. bench.tQ spell the regulars .. ~ven
.
· ·
·WEEK
·
:a
1-0 decision to. RPHhen lost
to •
·· ·
· aggressive· deferct.er, thf::be!lt. :Jyithot1tt~eif spperstsarftheteam · . . · · '· · · ··
·
.
·
- -~
: Hartwick; the eventual;'.cham- · ·
_playmaker::.you nameit:Queens
;--
1salreaey}Q<>~gf?~!irdton.ext-~: • .••
••
. :·, •
·
; . ..
:pion, 3~1. John-McGraw scored
- may
0
have;·•:~r. Debbie·-
0
.(the-·.,.year
.
and, the.p~1bµity .of
_C~I}~-:
-~oanSmall,-a ~eru~r.f!om Glen M~rist's only:goalofthe day:.._. __ , .. ·._
P~!l} .
Ma'!ion'.~ijiit. Marist ·has
_
;ference,P1!tY• And the_ G,arden ~:;: Cov~r,, N:Y.,- h,as.:,~een named Team
·will
·not::col!lpeOO. •in ~:New>'' -...
the1r .. Joa,n._(Drr•J:) .~all.<And' only ~2,:,miles .. a\Y~Y•;.:
- _
·_: .
· M~nstAt!1}etepftheWeekf?rthe · Paltz tourname~t:duE!,to.
,
_spling _ .: .:
Saturday
~
att the JeWJSh · Com;.
I · . " '·
·;:.:< · · ·
.
·
·
· .. · -~
-
. ·
.week .endmg March 1.: She
1~
the. recess
but ·-- may
.
· enter _
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14.5.1
14.5.2
14.5.3
14.5.4
14.5.6
14.5.7
14.5.8