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Part of The Circle: Vol. 12 No. 4 - February 21, 1974

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--~--------...;.
.....
_____
.;.;;.
_______________________________
..;_
______
...;..
__________ _
VOLUME 12, NUMBER 4
MARIST COLLEGE, t-oUGHKEEPSIB, NEW YORK 12601
.
FEBRUARY 21, 1974·
.
.
~
Strike
·
Averte
·
d •·.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
'
New Schedule
lllStjspension
.
_
by
Brian Morris
.
1:'resi~ent_ Foy_ arranged a
.

:
...
.
.
· ·
· .
·
.
.
Friday meeting with the student
··
.
A stud~rit strike,
iri protest of group~
·
offering
.
to
·.
establish a
.
.
the Administratfon?s handling of mediation board whose
.
decision
·
the
J
new class
·
,
·
schedule, was would
·
not be
·
binding ori the
· .
.
averfedMondafafternooii~
-
after Presiderit
:
and rejecting student
·
.
:>
a:
.
{Jurfy of weekend negotiating
·
demands
·
.
that the schedule
·
}
\
I
,.
'
~.
i-:
..
l
-1
t
·.

\
·
-r
,
,
,
,:
.
,.
'
1
.
l
.
,
between
student leaders i:dtd decision be
.
rescinded.
'
·
"
]?resident Lµnis Foy
i-
:
·
Both Foy
··
After a
.
meeting aDlong
,
and the students agreed
.
to
·
the themselves the
-
students fired off
.
i
\
.
J
.
,
establishinerif
.
of a .qiutually
:
a
.
two
·
page letter to President
.,
. _
acceptable mediation board and Foy threatening to strike if the
}
.
fo
.
Jh~
-
suspension of tlie
·
new decision was not rescinded and· _
_
.
J
sch~dule
'
pen~g the
.
outcome of the ~atter re-submitted
..
to the.
·
i
.
_
tli~ medi~tion
.
·effort
:-

.
·:
· -
MarISt faculty and student lx.>dy.
·
.1
=
I.
'
.<
.
:.
·
.
;
The
.
damor
.·.
b
_
egan
:
.
:
when the
.
·
M_ond~y
;

the
(
students
;
met.
,
·
\'.
.
Administrat~ori,
·
early

iri
_
a~ain with President
-
Foy to ~~ar
-
;
'
l
·
·
·
·
,

· -
•·
· -
·

·
·
·

- ·
·
·
..
.
.
F eb':llary, announced its deci~ion hIS reply
.
In
~
. tw<rpage poS1bon
·
,
St uden\s,-
:
!}l
·
e
(
t{)
:
det·errrtitje t)-te
·
coUrse
:
o
factio·n concerning the
.
_
,
. :
:-
to
.>
1mplem~n,t
<
a new
·
,
class )>aper
h~
c!anf1t!d w~t
·
~~
-
meant
\:
ihstituti~n e>
(
th
f
propo}ed
·
J
c
f
e
,
cfa1le
:
/:'.-:
,
,· ..
.
:
<:
:
·

·
·
·
·
;.
.
.
.
i
.
,
sc:hecfule
.
for next
·
September.
by
medi
.
ation;
.
promISmg "To be
.
·
'
Y
s
.
·
.•.
·
.
••
·
.
:
.
1
·
·
3
.
_
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.
t
·
;·•·.
e
.
·
·
···
·
·


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·
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·
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.
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·
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.:·_-

.
.
i
· ·
r;;~•fJf f:fiEJ!tIFIW;tit~i!S~~:~1
.
.
t
:.Ii.
:
sch
_
~~ule proposabThe. pf9posed
.:
decision
:
.
:.
be _resc~~ded
·
.
or
t
.

~-
"
.
. · .
.
. ~
· . .
.
.
.
.
.
. ·.
..
,
·.• .
<
. .
scpedule _itself
!
·
,
de
_
signed to
\
~-
·
:
suspended,
.
argu_ing that such
8
}:
year.·
.
Tlie
·/
otijections iiame two Comµuttee
__
of ~he
.
Qouncll, and
•.
.
qe~se part~time
·
commuting mov~ would
,
be interpreted as a
,
J
. .
separate
'
put
:
related,issties:
-
the
_-
:
will
'
consist
.
:
oLthr~
'
members
.
:
enrollment, drew_ heavy criticism
.
sign of
_
no confidencEf
µt
the
Dean
:
t
'f.;.
.

.
·
/
Linus ~
>
Foy
,

·
.
<:
· .
master schedule
·
for
:
1974-75; ~e
._-
,
d~t~.frof!i
;
st@ents,
:
faculty'anq
:.
.
·
f,;om
_
n4111efous
.
~iide.nt groups
;-
:.
o~_t[~dtei;rut· cs
_
arid ~
-
~ii;
other
i
}.
:
.
.
.
·
February-}9
,
1974
·
..
'
· .
... ,
..
proc~lll'.e

by whi~ st~de~t mput
:
~U1•~•~rat1y:e
.
staff.
:
'?
.
.
::
:
>;
~
·
,
Tpe Student
·
Academic
.
Com-
i
,'
aU11w,~ ~a ors.
;

.
<
:-
_
,,/
. ·
._

. .
·,
c-
})
i
1¥z
:cf
5
~
li~,
i~ff~;
io~
i
if
~J
;
~
ili~i!tlt~i
m1
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i
i~,~ll
i
ili
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a,1t\a1i!
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7
·
?''•
··
·,
.
.
~
·
.
.
,
.
. :
• ·
·
.
·.·
·
.
·
.
·

·
··· ,
'
:
, :
·
-
.
.-
·
•>

::':'.·:
·'·
-
·
.
·
·
:
·••
:.:
>'
b'.
offered
0
to
~
establish·a
'•
med1at1on
:,"
·
'
·
:
LMve
0
Jurther
;:
asked
<
that
:,
no
·
·
,.
·
pla1,11~
,
was~hatcclassper1_odsof75
"
.'
agreement
,
,
~1~ ~s
,
9ff~-of
:

a
..
·
.·.
if
:
''
.
-
·:
_
:
;
:
.
rile

/
student
.::
Goveritmen
L
·:
iirocess
;
?
'
:
::'-':'.:'.
:
·
·
t<
·
·;.
\t;:.:•
-
--
:
;
:
, ..
~iirther
'
steps
.
be
'.
'.
taken
:

to
~
.
fjn
~
.

~in
_
utes
r
arid
·
3
'
li9ui's
'.
"
w
'
ere
too
,
n_iediatio~
·
c:
boar_d _
_
but
-'-
they
.
still
.
·
·.
g
"
_.
(repre§e~ti_ng severaF~ti~ent
·:
\
~
;
Tiie
·
:
pro~sed inecliatio~
group
,
Ple:flleilt
.
the new schedule ~~f?re
. ·
1ogg .
.
·
-
....
·
'.
. : .
.
<>
·
.
.
: ,
wanted
.
a
.
sµspens1on of the new
.
_
·
,'{'
'
groups)
;
has
.,.
protested
>~•
the
.
will
be an ad
-
hoc comnuttee
.
of
·
'-'
the
·
report
.
of
,
the
>
mechat1on
~
:
'J\t t~o
.
meetings
.
l~s~ we~, a sc~ed~e. When approached for a
·
enactment
<
of
.
>
a
/
new ·master the President's College
c.
Colll!cil.
·
committee has b~en received;
:
. ,
gathel'ing of members
·
of various
:
third time Pres1de
.
~t Foy . con-
·
·
~
scheduleforthel97H5academic
.
It'wiirbe
:
chosen by:the Steering .
·
·
··
· .
··-
··
.
student organizat!911s,
:
~uic;l
·
:
,:f

s.ented to a suspension
;-
_
cla1med
1
.
.
·

.
·
. .

.
.
-
.
.
.
. .
. ··
·
.
.
·
.
.
.
. .·
stu
.
dent colloquium,
.
A_cadernic
)o
be nec~~ary by th~ ~udents to
1
) .
.
'."
f i e
·
·
.-.·
··
..
·
t
·
·.
e
·
.
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· ·
.
.
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J
.

'7
·
.
·
·
,r-
,
1
·
·
·
.
U
student criticisms. In both in-
Admm1Stration's stand
.
It was
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
. :
·
.
.

·
.
.
·.
·
.
.
i
_
·

'
·
·
.



.
.
.
·
·
.
.
·
·
.

·
stances, he maintain~

that
a
:
cl~se to 5 p.m
;
·
Monday when Foy
,
·
·
.


·
·
.
·
.
·
. ·
.
·
.

.
_
.
::
:
.
.
·
.
.
·
.
·
/. .
. ·
.
.
·
.
.
·
,..
· ·· ·
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
reversal of the
:
·
decision was read the last letter ~rom the
By Elizabeth Spiro
·
.
College
,
L1~rarr which
·
-
_has
_
,on the
.
shelf.
It s}1ould also. end
.
impossible
.
·.
because .

the
·
·
student group and mdicated to
·
proven 85
·
per~ent effe
.
~tive. the n~ed ~o collect
b,ook~
from the
,
registration process
was
already S~udent_ Government
· _
P
_
resident
.
.
.
·.
.
-
.
.
.
.
;.
.
.
·
When someoni:
IS
attempt1!38 to
:
dor~to~~esat th.e. end
~L
Jhe weeks behind
.:
schedule
.
and
Jun
Elliot that he could agree to
.
.
•·
Plans
.
are
.
:
:
bemg
.· ..
finalized . to
.
.
.
·
take a
·
h<>ok
.
'!1,tho1;1t checking 1t
~
Spring semest~f · According to couldn't afford
~
ailY
more
~
delay
~
·
both mediation and suspension
.
include . a
·
Book_ 'l'he{t
,
Det~1on
·
out,
_
Ute t
_
t1r11~Ue will l~k a~d.
an
··
Mr.
,
Perrault
: ·
Last
.
~Wle, f~ur He
also
.
expressed his regret for
.
·
.
The

mediation
·
·
board
will
be
System in _the LibraryJvhen 1t is
_
:
:
.
aia1111
:
\ViU sig~
.
al:_the
_
librarian.~' . book tl'Ucks were
·
fi~ed with thewayinwhich the decision had composed of one student, one
relocated at F~ntam,e
.Fia:ll
n~t M_r.
:
J>errault
:
e:st1mated that 1t books that were.left behind bY. the been implemented.
.
·
fact1:1ty
:-
member, ana one ad-
.
Fall. Acc_oi:~mg
.
_to
:
Adr~an
_
w~ cost approXIIIlately
-
$12-15,~ students.
Tw~
~
these
.
contained
.
-
Then last Thursday,
.
student
.
minIStrator chosen by the College
.
·
.
·
.
P~r~ault,

Li~rary I?~ectOl'.;
~
~uch,
·
:
..
_
to
.
lilS~H
.
_tlle syst1:111
;
:
at
.
MarIS
_
t
·
.
boo~
.
bel~ngmg
_
to
-
the
.
:
V~sar

lea
·
ders, oppos
.
~ to the
-
schedule Council and
·•
accepted
·
by
.
. the
.
.
lln
_
mstalla~o~_1i. neces~!u:y
:.-
to
/
deperidiJtg
_
µpon
:
~hich
~
~~t~~
.
of

College
;
.
Li~rary
.
·
.
and
.
Adr1~ce
,
lind to tl)e
w~t
it':was
ini
-
sl1;1d_ent,!eaders arid
.
the
Ad-
~
offset the r~ m the
nlllllber
of
.
··
purchase 1s ch~en.
- ·
· .
·
· ·
·-
.
·
• MemonaJLibr~r,
00
!1~
?fwhich
.
·
plemented, wrote
·
President Foy mmIStration;
-
~
The
..
board; once
.
.
books stolen ann~J.Ir.
(.
·
<
.
.
.
,
·

,
.
'I'he ~v~ral
..
mcth9(ls
of pur•
:
-'
had
.
.
·
.
b~~n
:
·
legiti.lllat~ly asking him "to rescind the
,
ratifiediµthis manner,will hear
·
1'4r ... P.errault stat~d
:
th
_
at:
.
.
c~seru:e: l)
.
fW:1 paymentatthe borro~ed'. . The
DElte~t1on
·
decision and
to
·
establish an ad
·
·
arguments from both
·
sides
:
·
' 'Marist 1s reluctant to :mstall the
·
}1me of _m~aµatj,on;
2)
.
payment
_
s
, .
Syste.!11
'.
should en,d
suc1!
abuses,
·
·
hoc committee
.
to
·
.
decide whether
..
.
before
.
reporting .. ·
to ,
.
.
President
system b~t feels
,
that
_
1t
~ust
d
_
o
.
·
~~~~ndmg
:
·
O';er
.
..
a
four-year he said, and allow the Ii:b_r~ to
-
-
the riew schedule
·
should-be put
.
.
.

.
.
,
.
:
.
.
.
.
.

so.
·
Librana~ aren~i l>C?.~cem.~-
.
_.,
p
_
e1'19(1,
3,)
!easingJtllll;ua.llY,
fJ.l"
4) ezpan~ its
.
research
_
facilities.
.
.
.
·
into effect or
not
·
·
·
·
Contmued on
page
2
.
.
We at'.e relymgon
·
the
·
honesty of
.
:
leasmg w~th the option
·
.
of
pur-
-
the students
>
I
L
is unfortunate
:.
chase
-
after
.
,
two years
with
60
'
;that
WE!
no lotiger
CWJ
depentl
~l'l
'
-
p~rc~t
of
th~
)~se
'
pa~ellts
·that honesty.''
·
.

·
:
:
'.
applied to
·

the purc!Jase price.
·
-
.
.
,
Referring
to
.
a recenUy·'.com-
· ..
•;
.
.

'.l'healternativetoinstallingthe •
.
.
pleted survey
.
~xt«mding
~
6ve~
,
.
a sys~em i~
.
th~ hiring
,
of policemen ·
;
·,,.
four-year
_
p¢ri()(;i;
:
the
.
Director
,
,
'to
:.:
m~inta
.
in
/
sec_urity·
·
.
ir1
·.
th€!
··
'
revealed
~
a
':
$50,000
·
Joss
·
·
to
:c
the
'.·
:
Library:
:
How_ev:er, Mr.
:
Perral;llt
...
.
,
Library due
.
to
·
book theft;,
'
He
.
.
.
·:
st
.
ated
,
that
/
this method
:
Of

·
·
:
·
·
said:
.

•~w~ .
found
:.'
3,20.!)
·
.books
,
,.
preventioi
f
ari~
'c
de~ection
·
is
:
1~
·
.
mis~ing from
·
tht
(
·
$elv~. -
:
The
"
·
effective

th~ri

th.e) other
.
apd
:
is
.
.
average cost o{ each book 1s $10;

'
_
'psycholog1cally ·offensive'.'.
-
.-
·
inexpensive booksusually
_
are no
.
t
·
'-'Furthermore,''.
·
he
·
a
_
dded,
·

'
.
'the
'.
··:
:
stolen
;;
In
·
a~~tion to the
.
valueof
.
,~
tt¥erise
:
incijh-edbyltiring
;.
these
the
:
books
/
tlle
:
Iat>Qr
.
mvolved
.
i~
,
.
meri year
·
after'year
c
w(luld
.
·
ex.:.

.
:
processing
.'.
therp r:ntist
:
:
be
_
coo~
:
·
:
ceed
,
1!1~
Pl¥.'Chase_
·
price
,:
of: the
:
·
·
-
sidered;''
,
The
·
:
survey , also Detection
·
System. •At least
,-
t
.
wo •
determined that the rate ofth~t
-
.
:
znen would
,:
be neededdaili:Jo
increases each
"
j•~ar
>
and
.
t~t
.
cover t_he hotirswhen
the
Library
.
-
most of tlie missing booki
l'
were
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PAGE2
Elliot Interviewed
Subject: Schedule
By Ray
Barger
A: "Yes."
Q: Are the faculty for or
.
Jim
Elliot, President of the against
this new system?
Student Government, was in-
A:
"According
to Dean La
terviewed
this
Monday, Pietra, the faculty members
are
THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 21, 1974
Lourdes
Particip•ates
In
-
B1·idge-Year
Progran1·
February 18, about the coo- in favor of it."
·
·
By Irene Ross
troversial time schedule.
.
Q: What actions, if any, bavE
problem of boredom ip
·
the senior
Q: What is the issue:- the new been taken
to oppose orpromct,
The ~•bridge-year'' program
.
·
year,'' he stated. "Many seniors
time schedule or how that the new system?
has made it possible for twenty-
.
in · high
.
school have already
schedule was implemented
·
by·
A: "We haven't taken any.
W.
eight
our
Lady of
LoUrdes
High
completed their requirements,
Dean La Pietra?
·
want the new schedule to b
School students to study fresh-
·
a!ld the bridge-y~ar . program
A: "Both of them are the
issue.
-
reviewed. Student opinion is not
Jim
Elliot
men college courses at Marist
·
·
gives the student
·
a chance
.
to
First, the way it (the new time respected,
.
it is just thrown
this year.
·
.
,
_
-
_ .
spendtimeonth!,highscbooland
schedule) was implemented. away."
.
·
.
Taught by Marist faculty, these college fampus.
.
Second,thetimescheduleitself."
Q: When you spoke to there was personal·prejudice on students are
.
able to complete a
.
Dr. _OKeefe al~ called this.a
Q:
Do you
think
the
new President Foy on Monday, what the
part of the Academic
Dean.
freshman. college year during learnmg experience for the
schedule would
be
beneficial or alternatives did he offer you?
Third, whether the Academic
.
their senior year in high school. college
.
faculty.
.
The ~rogram
harmful to the college?
A:
"He really didn't offer any
.
Dean acted in a reasonable
The students come on campus g~ts college
_
.
teachers

mto the
A: ''I
don't want to answer the alternatives. He asked us to take manner."
·
Monday, Wedn~day
_
and Friday high_ school
.
and makes
th~~
Question because it would an offer of mediation. He wanted
Q: From your meeting with afternoons to study a foreign
.
r~lize that
_
there _ar~ specific
prejudice both sides!.'
us to set up
_
a committee con:. President Foy, did, you find his language of their choice; and

-
differences between high school
Q:
.
How many students are sisting of three members chosen solution ~cceptable or not?
.
biology or chemistry. Biology and college; _

,
·
·
.
opposed
to
the new system and
.
from the college council - one
A: "No, we did nol We ask for a
·
nd chemistry labs
·
are also ot-
. .
"I
taugh~ high schoolfo~. eight
,
how many
-
are for it? What is faculty, one staff, and one two things. First, the new fered. American
.-
'
literature, years/' saup:>r,
:
_O'Kee~e,
and I
.
your basis for this answer?
·
student. Their functions_would be schedule be
.
suspended or stop- history of medieval Europe, thought
·
I ~ew what 1t was
all
A: "In a recent meeting I had to
.
mediate the dispute;
·
If
ped. Second, the membei s of the. mathematics analysis
·
n,
and about, butit s a whole new world.
with all the· student organization anything can't come fro~ their mediation
.
board proposed
·
· by principles of economics for those The program has sho:wzi
us
that
leaders, only'
a
handful want the mediation by
.
March 2, then he President Foy would
·
be ac- not taking
.
math are
.
taught
.
at
··
·•
we take
·
the
.
maturity of
.
the
newsystemandahahdfulwanted
··
would want them
.
to review the ceptable by both the
·
ad-
Lourdes in the moriµng;
-
~
_
ollegefreshmanforgranted. We
a
compromise. The over-
case for appeal basis."
.
.
ministration
and
·
student
:
Because the
_
program was new 311:5t assume tlult the freshmli!l
whelming majority
,
wanted the
_
.
Q:
Wha~ would an appeal en~ leaders."
·
·
.
· ·.
and contained the usual risks; the will do the work and the program
-
old system back.
·
·
.
.
.
tail?
.
.
.
·
. ·.
.
..
·
Q:
In
what way do you play to first group of students accepted
·
has· helped
us.
to ~;tter
Wl·
Q:
.
<·
To
.
the best of your
,
·
A: .
·

"First,
.
whether
'
the handle .~e s_ituation? . .
.
into
the
program went through
a
derstand_ the
.
students.
.
.
·
.
.
.
kno·wledge;. did
·
_
the
··
leaders Academic Dean has before him
..
.
A:,
.
Vie_ are, waitmg for
·
lengthy screening process.
.
·
.
The bridge-year students have
question
·
a sizeable nwnber of the major facts and arguments Presid~nt
· .
. Foy s
·
r~spo~~e,
_
·
Guidance counselors arid reacted

·
favorab!Y
.
.
to
.:
the
students about the new system?
·
pro
'and
con. Second, whether everything hinges upon that.,
.
.
.
teacJiers at Lourdes went through
· ·
program. The_y
.
are unpressed by
·
·
·
· ·
class
,
averages arid sclt~lastic the academ1~
-
_
chaUen~e,
·,
~he
-:
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.
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.
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.
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·
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·.
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·
·
·
e
__
.
·
s
·
~:~:et~~~~s~tt~i~u:o~g
,
.
i~?:v:fs~i~_:':~;~
.
:i~~
Lf
.l
I
UU
J
Tt
.
_
.
and, although sonie others were fee1:ing about bemg on
·
campus. -
·
.
. ·
·
··
.
·
·
.. · ...
· ·
-

•·. · .·
·
·
·

·
·
-
·
·
·
'
·
.
·
.
.
not in honors groups, they
.
were
;
Suwe thes_e ~udents
,
ar~ con-
.
D
.
·.
·
·
.
. .
·
·
Dz
··-:
. ·

·

. ·
.
·.
.
.
.
·
: .
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·
· ·
.
.
..
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. .
.
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· .
good students. However, the s1d~i:e~. co!lege fre~me'!-, th_ey
LX
tra
·
-
~
as.s
room
.
ea
rrt
-
l
·
TJ
g
~~~~~~:
~Jd!~t~ntexiloarstaait~
:
:
i~~
~~::;iet~tio~~:~~f~~~t:;
<
-

·
-
·
_
·
'.
ding will be allowedinto it.
· . .
year mhigh schoC>l 1s w<!-ived and
a week, just would not be enough
A
statement- tiy Paula I'esackis
·:.
or. Peter O'Keefe, director of can be used tO\vards_ their coll~ge
· MaristStudentsareinvolvedin
>
_
time; However, if one student sums up the worth of
.
the whole
theMarist-Lourdes
.
program an e~enses. Regents_. scholarships
the Middle School Program for a gains or if one poor teachfng
.
program,
'
.
'ifl
can
)nake
one
associate professor here
-
has will
_
b~
:
retreract1ve,
.
and
.
all
_
_
.
_
variety

of

reasons but
.
basically
.
method is uncovered the center cl)ild
.
a bit,
.
more
.
interested in

·
·.
named definite advantages to the cre~1ts accumulated
.
can
·
be
_
·>':
to
~:
obtain·
>
\mowledge
·
r
·
th!~ug~
·
~-
g~~s.Jr
.
oi:_n,jt
,
Jt~qµld beJ>etter
-
i(
>
beµiglhei-e and wanting
:to
.1~111.
·
.
.
program,
.
·
.
.. ,,
<.
,
.
_
,
·

.
_
i .
:
.i
·.•.
.
.
. .
..
.
·apl)bedto
any C9llegl! the ~tudent
By
Mary Monsaert
extra~classroom
,
,
learmng. The more students could put more then we both have gained."
.
·
"This
'
has
,
alleyiated
·
,
the
·
may laier
._
attend.
Middle School Prograni
·
affords
.
time
in and
if
the
adminisfratiozf
_
·
·
.•
·.
..
··
· ·
· ·
·
the student to do something would cooperate whole hear-
r
concrete. In talking with one of tedly.'' Other students involved
the students involved, Barbara have
.
agreed that the
,
program
Hanna, she feels th!3-t"theMiddle would be
.
better
if
they had
School Program
will
broaden my
.
.
previous practical preparation in ·
experience in the classrooui and working with these youngsters.
prepare me more completely for Frustration
·
and sometimes
a career in education.", Like
·
verbal abuse from the children is
man_r of the other ~rograms th~t often a hindrance to t
_
heir ability
Marist sponso~s, Middle SchoolIS to teach them.
If
they had soine
u~der the gwdance of Dr.
~~l
guideline to follow besides their
Michaelson and the
-
followmg everyday experience, perhaps
Marist Students participate in the
·
the program
.
would run a little
program; Barbara Hanna,
·
mote smoothly.
James Greene, Pat Nevins,
Ed
Marist
. _
students
·.
are giving
.
Nicholas, Paula Pesackis and themselves to the kids un-
Bill Wright
·
seHishly. Most of
.
thein are in
In
.the resource center where classes each day before the rest
the students t~ch, they work of the,Marist community goes to
with
.
·
slow learners. Basically their early morning classes.
students with readµlg or math Their minds must be alert all day
.
·
problems;. They
·.·
.
.
also
-
~elp as the kids depend on the student
students
with
language bamers teachers to learn the things that
and
.
generally
-
anyone
_
in s~ial they can not
.
grasp,
.
in
the
need of
extra
help or who 3w;t
.
classroom.
.
For the Marist
, .need
encouragement.
.
.
Students and other aids, its
a
full
Meµtods ~ed by tl!e stl;ldents
:
time job.
It's
not
lik~
going to
·
are V1Sual aids and prunarily the classes here at Marist, for in the
one
to
:
one
correspondence. The
.
center the students
must
perforni
.last one
·
is
most important as it for the kids.

.
.
.
.
,
.
.
·
forces the child
to.learn without
·
The feed back from the Marist
·
distractions. The
.
resource center
·
Students about the· program has
is starting a new curriculmn with been favorable. Barbara
·
Hanna ·
<
Title
I money. called Leaming looks at the program "as being
.·ss.
CAN.GET
-
YOU
$10■
WITH
:
FOOD
.
·
·.
·
·

•.
sTAMPS
:
100.
This
,
program makes
ex-
nothing but
.
beneficial
.
to any
-
·
,
.
tensive
.
use
·
.
of labol'atory college student willing to work
.
:
,
equipment such as taps and the
.
with the
staff
.
at. the resource
Food
Stanips mean niore food for people with a small inco·me • .
.
·
.
.
;
video.
·
.
,
.
:
·
·

: ·.
.:
center. The teachers
.
are-
·
cm-

,;
you are eligible it's_your l~gal
.
_
right to buy/9od
.
sta
_
mps at a
_
disc~IJnt or get t~ell!
.
free.
.
_
·.
·
.Like
man
_
yothei'progr
_
ams.,
__
the
..
cern_e<L not only ,with
_
·
their
_
·
·
.·:
·
·
·

-
·
·
···
·
·
·
·
•.
·
·.
·.
·
·'
·
·
·
chool
1...
its
d
WH
.
O GETS fOOD STAMPS?
your.family without spending ariy
FIND OUT IF YOUR FAMILY
Middle
:
S
.
~aas
·
.
.
p
_
ro.s
.
an
·
·
stud
_
ents,
.
but

.
t
_
bey are als
_

.
·
s E IGIBLE. NOW
·
, p
ul
p
kis feels
that
d
'
foc,d
.
s1
'
amps are
-
for people·who
more money.
·.
I
,
L

. .
.
.
.
.
·
cons. a a
esac;
.
.
.
.
concerne
.
·
with making
this
.
a
jupport
a big family
ori
a small in-
·
·
.
·
You do not have to be
:
unen:iploy
-
.
.
"the
,
program· is
.

run
.:
well,
·
:,
lea~ing
,
experience for
.
the
·
come.
Or lor
,
elderly people who
.
:
g~ggE~r
~fJ:Es
:- ·
ed
or
-
oh
i
weUare to
J
5e: eligible for
_
_
·
h
·
o
·
.
w
·
ever
.
it'
.
s the typ
_
e
.
.
of s
_
it
_
uati
__
·
.
on colleges
_
t
_
u
_
d
_
en
.
t."
It
.
i
_.
s
a
_
rec1'p
·
roca
·
I
.
ciarn
fittlf;' and livl' un
_
Social
.
Se-
·
,
food stamps
,
However
.'·
you should
.
.
: .

0
f
·
..
b d
.
-
11
.
Almost .111 fcod stores
.
take food
.
•.
·
check
·
·
,vi'th
yo
1
·
1
r
·
foca
·
f
·
weffare
.
.
of-
.
·
.
.
..
.
·
• whi
.
ch
wortrh,n with
·
these

1 · ·
g
··
·
r1
·
f
··
b th
,
curity
;
•·
·
r
':or
.
3ny o
•f
.
w,
,
·.
a
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.
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'6
.
·.
.
..
.
earrun
.
expe ence
·.
or
o
.
:-:S
mallincome who is eligible; De-
~tamps :or nod Purchases. ts~
-
.
fice to find out whether you
.
are
·
children
24
hours
a
day
for 7.days
students· and the school
children;
..
pending ori your inccme: th~ gov-
fOOd
dt'J
1 for .the
store
because it eligible.· where to go and what to
·
ernment sells you food stamps at
incr~ases total bus

hi>ss when you
do
.
In some areas,
.
the local
_wel-
.
NEW SCHEDULE,
.
continued
from·page
·
1
·
.
.
.
a
·
big
.
discount or gives them to
use food stamps lo buy extra food
·
·
fare office even gives oui or sells
Foy.
Part
of the
·
agree
_
m
_
erit
is
•.
w
,
ith
the o
_
utcome
of
_.
-
.
th
_
efr
,
talks
_
.
you
.
free;
.
.
'
.
.
YOIJ
'
HAVE A LEGAL RIGHT
.
the stamps,
.
If you run into any
.
·
Pre
'd
t
F
·
·
,
. •
.
TO FOOD STAMPS
..
·
problems
.
write:
.
.
...
.
that ·the mediation
·
board
is
to
with
.
SI
en
oy.
Jim
.
Elli9t
.
_
AS GOOD AS MONEY
,
.
·
Your iegal right
to
food stamps is
: ···.
FOOD STAMPS
.
concentrate on whether or not the.
'.
·
sUlted:
;:
11
we
are
proud
·
that at
.
. '
.
':.Food
stamps are like money. You
.
protect<'d by Federal Law. In addia
ROOM 301
.

·
decision was implementedJairly
:
-Marist
,we
/
cari negotiate
>
our
.

-.
u
.
se
.
Jhem to
.
buy food as if th.ey
.
lion. you have a lfgal right
to
gef
·
·-
1424 16th
·
STREET N,W.
without going inio
:
debates
of
,the
>
differences
(
;
Jt
is: i~pera~ive
;
. .
.
were cash. l"t,t'y stretch your food
.
·
food sta_rnps as soon as ~OU move
-
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tega! righ\ tCl}
~
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dec;ision on
:
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for
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mon
·
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·
,
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process;
:
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·
·
·
to
:
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the
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t9
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a
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FEBRUARY 21, 1974
Students tampaign
For CUB Offices
As
the campa1gnmg for the
be brought together by being
C.U.B. elections draws
to
a close,
more involved with CUB ac-
the candidates await the results
tivities."
of election day. The nominees for
Like Messner, Joan Stauffer,
President are Mark Mahoney and also a freshman, is running
Kathy Manning; Vice President,
unopposed. Joan
also
expressed
Paul Messner; Treasurer, Joan the importance of student in-
Stauffer; and for Secretary, volvement and that she ."would
Elizabeth Waters and Sheila
like to see a lot more activities for
McKay.
the students and
that
the students
Mark Mahoney, Sophomore,
get more involved in more
stated that as President he would
events."• '
'
like "to see more student in-
Two more Freshmen, Sheila
volvement in the CUB". Mark
McKay and Elim beth Waters
are
continued by saying that his way
the candidates for the office of
to achieve this result would be by
secretary. Sheila who is also
"means
of
innovative running for Chairman of the
programming - something new
Performing Arts Committee,
and unusual." His opponent,
said that when she arrived in
Kathy Manning, 'also. a second
September "there was a need for
year student, expressed that the
students to know more about the
"CUB has very good structure to · CUB." Her · opponent, Elizabeth
utilize to its full capacity, and
to
Waters, wishes to "build
up
a
take every opportunity and use it better relationship between the
to its fullest potential." In view of
students and the CUB." She
\ the CUB events and activities, continued by saying that "there
Kathy continued by· saying• that is a lack of interest on the part of
she would- like to put "as many the student, and that the CUB can
· events and programs into effect,
do something about it." . ·
by making use of the CU]3."
, This Friday, February
22,
is
The candidate for· Vice the voting day for the election of
President,_ who is running the CUB officers. Eric Yergan,
unopposed, is Freshman PaµL the CUB president whose. tenn
THE
CIRCLE
Kathy
Manning
Mark Mahoney
PAGE3
Announcements
HAPPY AND ARTIE TRAUM PERFORM
AT MARIST
Happy and Artie Traum and folklorists, and a host of other
their five-piece band
will
be things ..... " They can be heard on
performing at the Marist College albwns by Bob Dylan, The Lovin'
Cafeteria
on
Wednesday, Spoonful, Maria Muldaur, Allen
February
27,
1974 at
8
p.m.
Ginzberg and scores of others.
The New York Times has Artie composed the film score for
called them "a brilliant and "Greetings" and both Artie and
_ unique entity · in the world of Happy have written eight books
country-folk
music ..... between · on guitar playing.
them, they've been studio
Tickets are on sale
in
the
musicians, composers, Campus Center Office. The price
comedians, writers, editors. is $2.50 or $3.00 at the door.
NOTES ON MONTREAL TRIP
Just a reminder to all those
who have bought tickets for the
Montreal bus trip.
The bus will leave the Donnelly
parking lot at
8
a.m. on Saturday,
February
23.
Please be advised that Mon-
treal is somewhat colder than
Poughkeepsie and that it would
be a good· idea
to
bring along
warm clothing, also remember
that anything brought across the
border is subject
to
Canadian
Laws and a Customs check.
Thank you' for your over-
whelming response to this trip. I
feel confident that it can be done
again.
The Fine Arts Committee
I
· Messner. Paul said that ·"there ends March 1st when the· newly
has to be more of an emphasis on - elected persons assume their
the cultural side of Marist respective offices, expressed his
College.!' On the. topic of em-
optimisma!Jdconcerninviewof
s-_tudents Participate In Internsh1·ps
phasiS, l)e added that he would the candidates. Eric hopes· that
like to "change the narrow "the new officers and chairmen
perspective· of the CUBICLE, the
-
utilize tl1e potential of their of-
By Teresa
8t0
utenboro
of dealing with people in real life
professional position where they
monthly calendar
.
of events fices to. achieve their set goals
In accordance with the At- situations.
are looked upon as a staff
puf?.lished · by the CUB.>' In and that the students at Marist torney_ General's office, Marist
The Attorney General's job is
member. The. training · period
closing Messner sai~ .that •·the realize and ap_p_reciate their time students are given the · op- to protect, represent and cowisel
lasts approximately two weeks.
commuters and residents could and effort."
·
,•
·
portunity to participate . in a the State of New York. He acts as
In this time the student must be
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . work-study program under the
a
mediator between consumer
able to fully comprehend and
••
H• yd··~·
na.
rk··
,,
,
,·••
guidance of Mr. Limardo. The and merchant. Students are also. - apply t~e basic philosophy of the
r
I
ouri;>ose of this program isto give expected. to perform in this
work u~volved. ~~though the
studen~ the .practical experience manner. They are placed in a
student
1s
not qualified to go _out
•• .
A,.rmy. -
Mav.,y
Stor~; ·
~
... -.-,-,,-.. ------..... --------------· -·-..
\~~e~i~~1~:~
1
J:fot1}1fl
F
uJ1
significant
because
in the
final
I
·
(Atthe. Be. verageCeiiteronRt.9)
I
GnANE
analysis he
will
determine
I
BATAVUS
I
l O
Of.
·
whether or not a fraud
has
been
. · . 70
_0FFONANYP~~C~SES!
.
/
I
commited.
I
JUST BRING THIS AD WITH You AND·COME 1N BY-MARCH
1, 1974..1
BEST CYCLE
According to Mr. Limardo,
L--·-------------------
,
chief investigator for the At-
ELECTIONS·
4
c~u.B.
VOTE FRIDAY·
9 AM- 5 PM
CHAMPAGNAT LOBBY
SPEECHES~ THURSDAY
.
'
9
PM CAMPUS CENTER
NEW DIN.ING ROOM
ROSE VIEW FARMS.
.· ENGLISHRIDINGLESSONS:$7PERHOUR
BEST F ACil.,ITJESA VAil.,ABLE
.
. -. . . , 225FT~ INDOORRIDING.RINK
. .
INQUIRE ABOUT STUDENT GROUP
.
. RATES FO~ REDUCTIONS!
· ,CALL.~71-1918FOR,4PPO~ENTS
, ·.<LOCATEI>S-I0MIN~FROMCAMPUS ·
,
DUTCHESS Hll.,LRD;,- OFF
EASTDO~EYLANE
IN
POUGHKEEPSIE ·
JOHN WEBER
TOM
BEST
745MAINST.
THE PROFESSIONAL B,IKE SHOP
CAMPAGNOL O
SHIMANO
SUNTOUfl
,9141 297 2924
8 MILL STREET
WAPPINGERS f-ALLS. NY
1259'0
JAKE NUSSBAUM
AUTO PARTS
EVERYTffiNG FOR YOUR CAR!
454-5750
HEADQUARTERS FOR MONROE
&
GABRIEL SHOCKS
BRING THIS AD AND SA VE 5 PERCENT!!
torney General, "The system has
worked very well, we are looking
forward to continuing. the use of
this program which helps both
students and us."
Warren Edwards, a political
science major currently involved
in this program, commented that
''it is a good opportunity to get
work experience which relates to
my major. The program is ex-
cellent, and I recommend any
political science major to take
advantage ofit."
The internship program is
limited to juniors and seniors.
Because of a tremendous
response from students, the
number of participants is limited.
SODA
'SPECIALS
SNOWPEAK
CAN
SODA
CQCA-COLA QTS.
.
COTT.~ WHITE ROCK & JIOFFMAN·
DIET SODAS
13/$1.00
3/.95
· 16
oz.
·s11.oo
PARK DISCOUNT
BEVERAGE, INC.
(RT.9)
ALBANY POST ROAD HYDE PARK
229·.9000
*
¼
and
½
ke,gs available
*BOCK BEER AVAILABLE
·*GENESEE-PABST AVAILABLE
*SOMETHING-NEW:
FOSTER'S IMPORTED BEER-25 OZ. CANS
.
.
,,
.
. .
.
.
.
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PAGB4
9t+CJRCLE
·
\!.OLl}ME 12,
Marlst
College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. NUMBER 4
.
C~Edito~
Gregory Conocchioli and
Lyn
Osborne'
Layout Editor
Tim
DeBaun
Photography ~ditor
Dave Pristash
Staff:
Paul Pifferi, Karen Tully, Brian Morris, Diane Petress,
Mare Monsar~t, Bob Creedon, Ray Barger, Brendan Boyle
Irene
~ss,
Elliabeth
_
Spiro~ Wayne Brio, Bill Sprague, John
T:
B
CJankcy, Debby Nykiel, Charles DePercin, Cathie Russo,
James
ur e,
Joan
McDermott
·
Advisors-
r
··
James Keegan and .Anne Trabulsi
Business,Manage~
.
JackReigle,MarkFitzgibbon
·
.
Tbe
:
Manst College CIRCLE
is
the
weekly newspaper of the
students
of
Marist
Co}lege and is published
.
throughout the
school

year exclusive
·
of vacatioo periods
,
·
by the Southern
.
Dutchess News
_
Agency, Wappingers
Falls,
New
.
.
York.
·
Editorials
THE CIRCLE
FEBRYARY 21, 1974
Letters To
·
The
~
Editor
.
Financing The Cost
Of Higher Education
plan would be fully implemented, balance between publ~c and.
a student could
be
eligible for a private
.
.schools;
maximwn award of $1700
.
as
.
a
.
The second of these
.
goals
freshman and
.
sophomore
_
and canriot be attained
.
when the
$1500
as
a junior and senior.
.
financial crunch
.
-
forces the
·
In
the last
.
two i.s;ues of the
It
is necessary that all students
.
demise
·
of many private schools;
Circle there appeared
· ·
an at Marist College take a long-
such as Marist:
editorial and
an
article on
·
tuition
range
·
view to the
.
pcx;sibilities
Itis
time
for every" student, not
assistance plans which have been
which either of
the
above plans only to consider ~
-
or her
·
own
proposed to the State Legislature
would do for the College.
financial
·
stab!llty in
·
meeting
in Albany.
·
·-
·
. .
.
The financial crunch which costs at
·
Marist,
·
but also to
-
.
The one plan
·
is the Tuition
many private schools face today
·
.
cons~der_ th~ financial
st_a~ility
of
.
Assistance ~Ian ('rAP)which is
cannot allow for a short-sighted the
_
mstitution .. What will that
.
the
.
proposal of
-
Assemblyman
.
view. This short-sighted view is
BA
f~om Marist College mean
_
Peter
J.
Costigan, Chairman of
.
expressed in various ways; for
·
when. it becomes_ necessarr
_
to
the Select Committee on Higher
.
example: 1) "I ama senior and I explain that Marist ~llege no
Education.
This
plan
will
provide
·
stand to benefit by only a
·
couple longer
-
is in operation
_
?
·

.
·
.
a
maximum award of $1700
:
(The
·
hundred dollars,
so
why bother?"


It
is
·
projected that Mar~t
.
maximum
-
-Scholar Incentive
2) "My
·
parents'
_
income is near

C~llege students, by 1976-77,
_
will
·
award
·
is $600 presently). This
the cut-9ff for eligibility, so that I
.
receive
.
over
.
~0,000 more
:
per
.
plan~ould be phasedirl om~
_
year
.
will
.
probably end
_
·
up
with my
_
•f,ear_
~an_
-
they are p
_
resently
ata

time,beginningwiththel974-
'
usual $100 anyways/'. 3)
"Lam
rece1vm~
if
one of the above
75 freshman
..
class.
:
The other
not
·
a New York resident;
.
how plans
.
.
1s
·
~nacted by
..
_
the
New
-
Blood?-
classes would continue under the
can tuition
.
assistance
-possibly
·
Legisl~ture

1!1
Alboo.y,
:
Over
.
a
_
·
present
Scholar
Incentive
benefi
.
t rne?" 4)
"If
C<>stigan's four-year l!enod Manst
_
students
.
program.
-

. ·
·
. ·
:
Pian is enacted,
:
why should
I,
a
. ,
.
would receive anywhere fro~~½

A
second plan.
i.sJ,be
:
Regents' · sophomore; get excited aboutJts mill,io~
.
dollar
_
s to 13/,i xpillion
·
Plan.
This plari is
-
ideilticalwith
p~ssage?"
.:.....
.
.
.
. .
.
.
dollars
-
more than. whaLJ~ey
OnFb
·
18
.
ltt
·
·
·
.
tioth
t
.
.
.
:
·


.
.
·
T~~xceptirlthema~er
"
in
.
Iri deve~oping a
.
Jong-range woiild'berece~vinginthe
_
same
·
justco~p~~th~~ ~r:J:v!~~einenfJi~:ts;~e~orsk;ho:rd which it,would
.
be phased m. ~he
_
·
vie~ to
_
'
the
.
proposed
_
tuition
..
:
time
_
period
-_
~der
·
the
0
;
pr,~nt
.
Program at Marist. The
·
Ietter began by
:
ex.pl
-~ge:hatth
uc\/'
1
-
·
Regents Plan calls for
.
do1;1bhng
·
assis~ce plans
..
we should look
·
·

Sch~lar Incentive
:
prograrn,
.
:
:
_
for Director of Teacher Education was now :acant
·
·
d
e posi. on the ~ount ~f the m~um
·
at two of the stated g~ls _of thei;e
.
_
G_1ve!1
.
these
·
f~cts .
_and
.
ministration was in the
'
rocess ofa
intin a
.
erina:nti~e::/ft Scholarl!lcentive ~ward
~
1~74~
P
,
lans
=
:<
l)
:
to
:
,
maximize op~
.
.
pro1ec~ons
;
we
~llilot
re~i
~1~ ~
..
was also stated in thi:i' futter that
J~
M1-lEI1zabeth N
1
.
d D
75 for altundergra~uates,
.
the~e
-
porturu~1es for all
>
students to
.
~llort:sigllted view.
_
<
C-
.>.·,.
.
Willia
Ols
.
h d
·
·
li d
r
h
·
. .
· ..
·
.
0
an
an
.
r. would be" further increases m
·
enter higher
.
education and 2) to
·
-
·
-
:
·
.
·
.,.., ·
·
. m
.
on a
aJ?P
e
.
1or t e position ;md
_
that 1t would
_
b~ ap- 1975•76 and in 1976.
77
,
when the
·
f st
·
·
.
d
· -
. .... '
·,
h ·-'th
..
·

Gerald Kelly
preciated
if
students
m
the program would forward an evaluation on
'
'
-
;
0
er
·
an
.
mamwim a
~~
,
Y
- · .
,_
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
i

.
·
either one or both of th~ applicants
:
·
·
/
·
.
·
..
Evert tltough the
·
letter was,
to
some .extent, informative,
.
jt
.
is
St
t
·
I
·
:
'
.
~ecessary'for the ~~rifstration :to explain its
.
role in m~ing the job
ru
C
u r~
.
.
n
.
open to thr _publi~.
,
. Rectmtly,
l~
}:las
.
been
.
brought
t9
our attention
.
·.·
.
.·.
is aUowedto ~esign and adhe~efo
b~ne~its
'
Of
cui:fews, -
riland~t9fr
'
·

that!Jirposipon_wasn~tmade
,
Im
.
~wnon~\'eryvvidescal~and that the
.
The Dorms
his
-
:
own personal
;
definition
of
,
.
study hours,
·
and
'
more respon~
·
administrati.on 1s not mterested
:
l!l
,
_
havmg
-
any
''new"
or "outside"
·
·
responsibiljties
·
and
·-
rules,

sibiliti~s
:
on
·.
the
:
part of
.
the

·
.
blood apply 'for the p~ition. If
.
this
is
:
the case,then the Faculty,
.
.
.
however the question
I would
lik~
·
residents. In conclusion, rwould
-
Students, andStaff ofthiscollegeare all entitled to an explanation that To the Editor,
.
..
·
_
·
.
to raise
is when does the exer-
.
·
-
like
to
say that this
.
is the solution
.
;
·
·.
stat~
_
whythe Administration~ po~ inte~ested in theh4,:ingof anyone
!would like to co~ent
~
uMn ~ising of
·
our
·
in~vid~ljigl.!_ts to
·
.~e
:
~d~sprea
_
d acad~c
.
-
·
·
_
o~e_r th~
·
t~ose alrea~y affiliated ~th
-
the
.
roµege .
..
If the
_
ad-
the lack of structure
_
m t
_
he d~zm:-
.
impose upon the
:
rights of others?
:
.
.
-defic1enc1es
_
that many
'
freshmen
. ,:__
.
_
mu11strat1on cites expediency
as
a
.
factor Utenwe must
.
quickly point
·
s.Iam fully aware of Manst's
-
·
It
is
>
here that
-
T
--
would
Iike
:
t
0
.
ai:e
_'
expe
·
riencing at the pfesent
.
·
out that
:
knowledg~ of thtf opening
,
was
.
~
-
o~. as
:
far back
__
as
S¢J>::
·:
.
~urrE:Dt
.
pol
_
icy.
i
y;hic~
:
Jllow
.
~
_
Jor
,
;
thampion any.
,
e(for~
on
:
the part
.
tune
:
.
>,.
.
·
·
· .
"-c
..
..
.
·
·
·
·
'
·
·
,
·
.
·
tember,
m,id
t}m,t a
-
ne~cl
-
tc_> !tasternhe sc_reemng pro«;_ess
'
'is
:
'.
by"
:
J
ill
;,"
mdi~4'!al
c
de.':eJ.~P.~~9~
;\
9!1
·
.
tp,e
1
/
~f th~
-"
adinirtist~atiori

and~ot
/'.

.
·
:
.. .
..
;:>',
'
:_,.
Thank
;
you;
· .
.•
means an.example of meffiCiency
.
at i.ts
·
best
·
.
.
·
:...'
..
L .
.
·
:
,.
·
r,
.•:
/:.'."'
Part _of·
:
the
:-
~~udent
.
T~~
:
_
basic
:
/
-
~s~dept1s h~
F
staffdo
r
provide
'.
: -
:-- _·
·
i'
Namewitlili~la
'
_: ,
be11efit ofth1s
_
1s ~at the s~udent r.e~1d
.
ent
..
stud~nt
_
s
'.
.
•,
with the
,
·
uponrequest
.
Ele
~
-
t·1on Costs'
-
Environ
:
mental
..
~rtremelike
:
'
:.
..
con
·
-
~ide
of
Champagnat
.
with 69.3
·
'
v
.
<
The
'
s~udent
·
response,
.
-
t
-
f th total
t
-
·
,
.
.
.
_
-
.
.
'
~
-
-~
D
.
esign
_
.
·.
.
-
si~ting
:
of
521
.
completed percen
o
e
_
_
VO
es
;
.
.
-
-
· -~
evaluatjons, was substantial. The
-
6
>
The piece receiving the
Students here at Marist pay for tuition, fees, books; transportation,
·
results of the poll:
:
highest percentage in the plus 2
room and board, but they also unknowingly pay for the College Union To the Editors:
..
_
·
-•.
1)' The
·
average evaluation of
_
3
c
0
°
1
8
wnn
·
~ats
.
~~e
chess set
.
w_itll
Board elections.

.
.
·
.

:
...
.
·
.
.
.....
.
The Environmental : Design the artwork was -1.00.

·
.
percen ·
.
··
-
,
. .
.
.
·
In view of this fact students must begin to considerthe re~lvalue of Committee, formed last fall
.
for
-
2)
.
Th~ piece with
'
the lowest'
: -
7J
·
·
The
.
piece
<
receiving ~he
·
-
·
C.U.B. elections and their relationships to the College Union Board,
·
the furtherance i:if discussion and average
:
was
_
the vertical !~beam

..
greatest
·
percentage of
m-
evidenced by the fact that positions available are going ~opposed ~nd a~tion concerni~g
·
the
....
. e1:1- near
_'
the gym receiving a-'-1.69
:
.different
"
votes was the larg~,
that next year only present sophomores and freshman
will
be
ru~ru~
vironment of Manst College,
m
vote.
.
·
.
·
·
·
.
..
.
_
horseshoe shaped SCW;pture
_.
m
C.U.B. astheyaretheonlystudents "filling"theballot.
·
December took a
_
poll of t?e
.
_art-
_
3)
·
The piece receiving the
.
front of Champagnat with a 16.3
.
Since C.U .B. cannot adequately fill t~ese positions one should begin '\VOrk
·
on campus. Our fU19ings
_
highest average was the chess set
-
percent
.
·
tally.
.
.
,

toexamineth~~resentelectoralstructureanditsneed
to
C.U.B
. .
are. n~w
ready
·
tot.
·
,
iJ?itial
by
the Camp~
Ce~ter
_
witp
a plus
.
·
We
"_
would
.
like, to
~
tllank

.
the
,
C,:U:,B;
administrators should also take no~ of the fact an~ ~egm to publicatl(?n.
_
Detailed stat1Stl<:5, a
.
0.36
average .(the
-
only piece to student~ who filled out t~e
_
questiQn
.
the present electoi:al
.
process, whil~ als.o reex8;Illlllmg
·
the
.f~
report and recommend~tions
·
receive
·
a
_
positive evaluation):
.
evaluation forms
.
for _their
.
structure of C. U .~
.-
and meeting_ the
.
needs of student~ (?,bviously t~ese
.
will be release~
later.
·
.
_
·
4)
·
There
.
were
'
14 pieces rated
·
.
responses.
_
.
We
_
would als~ like

to
needs
·
~
_
e not ~mg met~ evid~ced
.
by the el~tion ballot
~o~
the
.
·
The
~11
cons1ste~ of students c1bovethe
:-~-1
average and ,18
...
thank_ the m8;Illb~ ofthe
EDC,
197~~5 acadenuc year.
.
.
·
·
- ·
.
.
,
:
·
·
-
.
·
. .
.
-.
·
,
.
.
.
..
_.
evaluating the 32 pie~es
-
of
.
~rt-
r
pie~es below.
- ..
_...:.,,_..
,
.
;;
.;
;'
~specially
_
Skip ~ilmore, fo_r _the
..
.
~ e .
the
CIR~ quest1~s this
.
.
practice
of
c.
U-~-
fw;ided cam- ~ork_o!' campus. Th~
_
p1eces
:
were
::
,
5 )
',
-
The piece
.
with the highest effort expended
m
the tabulation.
.
.
paigns,1t also questions the value~ the
~.{!.B.
electoral l_)rocess wllen
,
iden~if!d
·
·
by phot~raphs
·_.
and
··
percentage
·
of
~2
evaluations was
.
E>
_
aul Me5S!1er: a11d Bre~t. Portman
.
1t cannot
·
fill
the ballots for dections.
·
We
als9
f4!8;l
:
that
with
coµege
..
rated on
a
scale of
mmus
2
to plus the

short; vertical
·
I-beam
.
with
..
·
·
Co-ctuurmen- ~nv1ronmE:Dtal
~~~piraling the ccx;t of C.U.B~ elections need not
.
be
a
.
~
?f that
.
.
· .2
ranging from extrer~t
:
~lµdil~e to
_
fins
-~~~f~erit
fu
tgeroa,d of{to. th~
_:
Design Comnuttee
-..
.
..
.
.
,
.
·
·
..
.
-
Past
HiStory
\
--
-.
.

.....
·
'
'
·
·
.
.
. .
'
.
The signs are stili there, the event islong ovet, this is the Marist
bulletin board
·
'
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
_
·
·
.
·
.
·
.
·
·

·
Many' organizatio~
·
feel
.
it
is
.
necessary
1o
inun~te stucle~ts" and
,
.,
·
.

faculty alike with announcements
o(
events,
'.
yetothers are repulsed by
·
their
.
obsession. At a time when severe
·
threats
·
of paper shortage is
·
imminent, people and
_
campus organizations should
.
concerri th
.
em-
.
selves with a crisis that they help to create.
·
.
·
.
·
:
·
· .
·
·
.
Bulletin boards scattered
.
throughout
·
the campus are there for
.
·
announcements: However; many people pass them by s~ply because
.
·
·
of the mass of ''junk literature" and signs
_
that ha:ve been left;ther.~
to

·
yellow with age an~ fa~e th~ destrucU:on
an~!
grafitti
'
of
:
the· ~~ist
· ..

student
..
·
:
.
. •
:
.
·

-
:-·,
_
,.:
._:
,
;
.-
.-
·-
:.
_
,_
.
.-.
, :
.::-.·

··
It
is
not the intention of the
Circle
to
·
diminish the
·
educational and
-
,
social value
of
the boards. Rather;
..
~~
suggest that the biille
_
tin
.
boards
that ~re set aside for
i
"
pa.J.ticulJir.
i
orgariizations
·
bE(
used
:
_
o!'llY
.
bf.
:
theirl
.
·
and enforced bythem~Those·students
.
and faculty connected with the
·.-
.
·
·
,
event'should behe_!~
-
-
~espQlis.ible
'
fQf;tJ:i~¢oJl~~io~
:
~~
-
~~~~val
~
O.f
,
~he
;
··
.
..
.

.,
·
'Wl~
-
GII, ML PIIIIDINT,
rrs
NICI OF
-
YOU
yo
·
o,;lll~TO CAMPAIGN
.
~
MY
■EHALF
:
­
..
..
:
a~ounf~en.~
,
o~~
,
,th~
-
i
~Y
:
F
:
~
~
,
.:
~%~
-'::l
<
:
:~•;\f:i~J//
:y:
:
~
-
<.
(\r:·
:
.
,:'.
~~
::
~'1'.:'0U
_
NAYl
_
~~•NO
_
!~
~
-:
•~
,,
CHIN,~
~u~.,~
~
;
~~1Pµc1 .
..
.
,.f'
· '
·
·

:::::-:.,::
·
.
.
... ,
..
..
_
_
..
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· >:
..
:
0:
.
>
-
'
:

..
•.
. :
:;
·
:
.~
,
-
-..
.
·
<.-
.
;
.
,
.
·
:
·
~:
;,
:
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:
\>
·
::i,;:
:
:
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/L-/r?~f
.
{t
.
:.
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'/·
.,
.
·_
;
,
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.

·
·
·

.
.
'
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-
~
,
I


I
~
;


...
.
,
,.
·
.
·
' .
'

I
••
.
.
.
..
·,:
'
..
-~
.
..
·
;
~
·
:_:
?
.-
·
·
·









































































































FEBRUARY 21, 1974
THE CIRCLE
More letters
··
ro-Jhe Editor
Destroyiog
7
Campus
_-.
.
.
.
.
-
·
.
,,,,
.
changes
wiU
inake Marist more
-
Marist to face. Turning the
attractive
·
to students
,
who mw;t
.
campus into a real commwiity
commute
·
long distances to where people communicate,
campus~
-
- But_ Marist
<r
.
any learn, and grow although most
:
college would become a dreary certain to attract many on
·
-
· · -·
·
··
friendless place indeed with the

campus, students
.
is
a
much
-
Jo the ~ditor:_, _
.
.
campus life . destroyed
--
o·r more complex task, requiring

Although
.-
-:the
..
..
··
fmanc1al
.
diminished.
Perhaps
.
.
the
great · hum~m
·
effort
and
·-proble~
of Maris!; are reaJ; th~
-
-
-
·
challenge-
o
-
L
.
.
·
providing responsibility
.
It
.
seems to
be
·
d
.
estruction
·
..
of. · a
··
campus
.

at-
·
-
_.
educational opportunities on much easier to impose a concrete
mosphere
·
.
as a
-
means
·
Qf
·
.
.
campus, that
will
.
best meet
·
::
fiasco of a
-
solution which would
.. ·
:
e~~!}OmiC
~
~~storation
'
is
.
inex~
..
students
.__
I
_
teeils;
: .
and
'
more
.
destroyJhe little s~se of campus
_
:
cusable.
lt1S
appa~a.nt that
-
~he
··
s
.
ati~fyin_g
"
sttident~faculty commwiity that now. exi~s.
·
recently pr.oposed sc~~dulmg relationships
is
_
too
_
great for
:
·----:
~cottSilberg
PAGES
Crossword
9
10 11 12
13 ·
15
16
39 Please·reply
11 Bits of colored
43 Carpentry need
paper·
ACROSS
1 Prestigious Eastern
44 Agreement
.
12 Avoid
university
45 Sailor
13 Awafts dec1sfon
8 Narrative poems
46 Sufffx: one who
15 More indolent
13 Lobe of the brafn
.
47 Illuminated solarly 20 -
O'Brien
14 Shrink back
.
49 Robert
·
Vaughn TV
24 More beloved
16 Leave the country
·
role
:
26 Hangs from
.
17 -
·
-
-
Starr
50 Loose-leaf notebook
·
21-across
18 Not any
.
52 Hyenalike mamial
27
_
-
dive
19 Part of men's
:
54 Suburb of CMcago
28 Wagers
formal attire
·
.
55 Computer memories
30 Pack
21 Turkish headgear
56 -
France
31 Short. stumpy tail
22 Container of
57 Calms
32 WWII target
genetic code
33 College subject
23 Birthstone
·
DOWN
·
.
(abbr.)
24 Cicero's cat
34 Bring into practice
25 Famous talks
'20s song or
.
35 Becomes alarmed
27 In a -
.
(angry)
woman's name
38 Sunflower state
28 "Petrified Forest"
2 Bathroom fixture
(abbr;
l
·
star
3 -
Andrews
40 Curly. e.g.
29 Egyptian city
.
4
FronrEssen
·
(abbr.) 41 Steakhouse chain
·
31 Two--(small
·
car) 5 State: Fr.
42 Teachers (abbr.)
·
32 Fond look
backwards
6 Able to reason
·
44 Thick soup
·
35 Clergyman
7 Pastime of many
.
47 Moslem title: var .
.
-
.:.
..
·
36
_
Fun~tioni"19
.
students
48 Walked on
.:
easlly
~
endure·the
;
chiuige."
..
, _
are some students"
·
whose
·
.
at-
37 Thirty-nfnth Vice
8 City in Iraq
4Q ll~be Ruth h~er
· .
. ·
~
··
.
AlL
·,
everiiqg,-
'.:
coufse
·
f
~
,frt·
ten
1
t,i~nf'Will,
:
~giiit
.
)fwa'.ver
-
~ft~r•·
·
'•
3sJ~!
1
:,"~ii1~
·
t
.
·1i
~::~/uu,a
rd
.
;
· .
.
b~!~emeasu~e.
·
\
·
·
-
·
·
··
-_.
seventy~five>IJliiiutes
:
}orig;
,
why
on Ya . e)V mmu
es.
Often this
1s
To
'
the Editor:·
.
.
has
.
there
been
,no
crusade
to
the
fault
of· the material or
With all" the· talk over
·
a new
·
·
liberate the suffering
.
evening the ·method
·
of presentation.
If
class
·
schedule a curtollS
myµi
is student from the
:
dreaded
_
longer classes fori:!e professors to
·
rampant
-~
·
concerning
the severith-five
-
minute-ittis?
I have revise their lectures it would not
detrimental effect
.
that
-
longer tak
_
en eighteen seventy~five be
a
bad thing in some cases.
·
.
class
·
periods would
··
have on minute classes
.
.
and presently
-
-
-
As to borderline students they
students .
.
As
an average Marist
-
have a three hour one. Education must be taken ~to consideration,
student,
I
feel insulted that so seemsJ<i proceed a"irsmoothly in
·
but a school cannot gear
.
itself
many people believe that my . them as it does in fifty
.
minute around them and expect to serve
Study Abroad
:
Through SUNY
..
attention span is
so
~hort
that
=
I
slots. When
I
was working a tIBM the majority. Marist students are
.
cannot
·
concentrate on: anything
.
I attended several
.
computer supposed to be of college age and
.,
..
for
-
longer than fifty minutes.
education classes where you sat matuc:ity. ~f they find that they
~
.
People are not born with a set at the same desk; had the same cannot maintain interest in a
attention span: it is governed by instructor; and studied the same course for longer than fifty
_
.
,interest and habit.
If all courses subject

for seven hours a · day, minutes. without requiring a nap
·
had been
·
thirty minutes lorig and five days a week.
·
time then they should look to
were being µicreased to fifty I am
In
.
any class attention
·
is themselves to
·
determine the
sure
,
that the
.
same people would maintained by those interested in problem and. not the schedule.
be
.
arguing that
·
they could no~ what
is
going on.
Of
course there
_
·
·
J. Michael Keupp
Plight CtJntinU~s
F'or
-
N<Jbet
Writei-
.
.
~
-

-.
At
-
New Paltz
By
Debby
Nykiel
·
American overseas program, but
doesn't aim for total saturation
SUNY at New Paltz has
into the culture as Marist at-
notified all SUNY schools and
tempts to do.
Also,
the
In-
-
colleges with which
·
they have a
ternational Study Program exists
·
cross-registration policy, in-
with a large element
of
tourism
.
·
eluding Marist, that they are now
·
over
.
study attitudes.
accepting applications for their
·.
Last summer
125
students
International Study Program on
studied abroad under the
.
an open admissions basis. Both
college's auspices and at present
undergraduate and graduate
108
are taking part in academic
courses for the summer and
year programs. Marist sends
academic year
1974-75
are being
approximately
35
students a year
offered.
in comparison with a cum-
The majority of
·
students ac-
mulative average depending on
,
.
cepted have
a
commulative major for acceptance.
·
By John Taylor Clancy
'
:
_
something, that if realized, leav~ no room
i
fot
this
.
type
of average of 2.5.
An
interview is
The SUNY schools have
·
·
~
~-
-
becomes
·-
embedded
·
in
a
·
pei:son .
.
diss
:
ertti.Ori.

=>
nie Soviet-
officials required only if
the
P~-ogram
programsavailable
in
areas such
.
.
.
-
This honesty;
if handled properly, who

run
-:
the
·
union
,'.
-
found
·
:
it Director requests it. The
.
as art, music, International
.
..
·_
It
.
is a
.
time when most
of
us, at matures as life goes on .
.

-
·
·
·
necessary
>
,
in l!Hi9
.
to
.
·
blacklist Program includes fees
.
for
broadcasting, history, political
-
Marist;are thinking about the
·
Alexand_er
,
Solzhenitsyn, for Solzhenitsyn from .the union
-
tuition, round trip
.
air fare,
science, criminaljustice, foreign
.
coming of
_
mid-tenh
_
grades and honestyinhis-uncensoredversion
,
because .
:
he could not be cultural activities and usually a
languages and social science.
~hew:orkthatinustbemadeup.It of the Stalin years, wasJorcibly pressurediritoaccepting,without reduced rate on forms
of
tran-
Students from various schools
would also
·be
an
_,
appropriate exiled from R~ia: It has been a question· official falsehoods
.as
sportation while in the foreign
around the nation are studying in
time
to
look at the plight of one number .
of
years
·•
since
.
truth.- Expulsiori from the wiion country. No American student
connection with International
.
Alexander
.
I.· Solzhentsyn.

For
.
Solzhenitsyn completed his means ·that
·.
a writer
.
may· no should live
with
·
·another
Study Program. In France the
here is a
..
man
who
has received awarded work. Since then he,
his
·
longer have
his
works published American because it may be
program has students from
one of.the most coveted awards;
-
·
.
family
and friends,
·
have
,
faced
.
iri the Soviet Unioo.
.
·
·
inhibiting to meeting the culture
American University, Colorado
.
the NobelPrizein literature, and
;
numerable· hardships; The
'
least
Marist College. and in this and country.
State, Middlebury, Smith and
yet has been unable
to
publish ttie of all these
_'
being
his
inability to particular case 'fhe Circle, has
If SUNY at New Paltz doesn't more. Some Marist students who
-
famed works in
his
awn country.
·
accept the I;lobel Prize
.
which
·
he given me
the
opportllllity to shed have a study program
in
the area
.
were rejected from
the
Marist
.
It
is
truly hardfQr one
-
liying a
·
w:as
awarded.
' ·
· .
· -·
·
some light on the subject of which an applicant desires they
Abroad Program have applied,
life
·
style-of•a liberal arts college
-
R
.
ussia
·
too,
.
possesses unions censorship
:
Ithasalso given you, can advise the student to try for
·
-
been accepted and gone to
·
to
·
understand; -arid feel, the
:
J<ir
·
the people,-although different the reader, a
_
chance to dwell on acceptance with another SUNY
foreign coµntries with the
In-
situation that Solzhenitsyn faces. from those in the United
·
states.
·
the often, ''taken for granted" collegethatisofferingtheareaof ternational Study Program.
·
Aftermore than three y~ars-at
·
The Writer~ Union
-
~ one which ideaoffreedomofexpression. Sit study. Also the Program offers a
More information and a
·Maristitseems.clearthatwhatis

differs quite a bit from the ones backJand before you start the University Wide Studies schedule
brochure is available from the

sought

from·mostprofessors;
·
in
.
:we are·accustomed to.
:
.
-
Many
·
of
·
_cramming,-count
your blessings which enables a student to study
Office

of
.
·
International
'
their assigned projects,
is
not the
-
'
the
·
union strik~
hav~
fostered
a
that.you have a mind of your own a liberal arts program abroad.
Programs, Administration
.
:,.
•:
final.'
.
'A" result,:but rather a·:well dislikEL or:.
:
disgust: witllin
.
'.:
the
.
'and:
a pl~ce:
to
.
use
it
~
here at
Brother · Joseph
·
Belanger, : Building 5Q3, State Univ_ersity
·
·
..
.
Jhc;,ijght
·
outHruthful express~~
-
,
AIJ!e
.
ric8!1people~wardsuni~ms:
,
Marist College; ·
.
.
.
Director of
··
Marist
.
Abroad College, New Paltz, New-
.
York,
·
<,
of onesell
-
-
withhi the
.
work;
It
1s The:
:
Wr1ters
:,
Umon, however;
·
·
- - - - '
-
Program, feels that the SUNY
12561,
phone
257,-2233.
_
_
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·
·
·
·
·
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programs
.
:
.
is
.
the
normal
.
.
·
...
.
..
...
.
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.
,
,: :--
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I',,


































































































































































































































,.
I.
t
,
:
.
.
:
.
PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
·
FEBRUARY
21, 1974
Shout- It Softly
Third Year View
By
Father
Leo
Gallant
Weweretakingastep backinto different shade, while
in
the
sounds from nature, voices;
nineteenth-century Russia by
.
vaulted roof a moaning Christ
smell fields, the
ocean,
food;
walking a few blocks on a Sunday looks down on the parishioners.
Here's a bold
.
statement I dare taste things,
·
wine, grapes, figs;
morning to a strange
.
white There are no pews to obstruct the
to make,
which
might antagonize pick up beach sand and let it run
marble building with
six
golden dark colors of the mosaic flocr,
a few people:
If colleges continue through one's fingers; touch the
cupolas
·
shining
.
brightly in the only chairs ranged along the
to get away from the liberal arts, hair of a child. Men like
sunlight. We enter. Darkness;
walls. We stand throughout the
the humanities, the,great books, Chesterton and Belloc knew how
then slowly I make out a huge two-hour ceremony; I feel like
the classics,
poetry
and music, to live and enjoy the world and
be
wall, papered in a pattern of
fainting.
.
and become straight vocational more
·
aware of the divine.
·
Eastern crosses, with three doors
·
Motions from
the altar. The
schools teaching only business
For many, God
is not real and
in. a marble colonnade .
.
The
.
oldest of the. priests, an ar-
courses, computer courses, etc., vibrant because they are not
central door
is open, and we can chbishop, dons his jewel•
they are going
to
graduate a poets. God becomes real
to
us
Fr; Leo Gallant
see five figures
in
luminously encrusted mitre, and swinging
generation which
is going
to
lose through his living
·
word, the
embroidered cassocks huddled
his incense burner on a golden
all idea of a vibrant, living, Bibl~, which is filled with
poetry
the bravest, the greatest,
the
over an altar; a rendition of the
chain, turns
.
to face the crowd,
personal God
H
it
loses
God, it and unagery.
H
we are not
poets, ,
most real human being of
the
Last Supper hangs over their·
muttering a blessing in a
loses all hope.
It
might know how then we'll never see
God. Fun• Twentieth Century.
.heads
above the central door of
language we cannot understand.
to make a living, but never know damentalism, taking the Bible
One needs
·
a . math major, the colonnade.
It
is ominously
Th
.
ere
is
a sudden burst of rich
the joy of living.
· ·..
.
literally, scientifically, has done computer courses, pgychology, silent; an oppressive smell of
voices from ~hind 1:he two closed
l believe
in
a solid liberal arts more to
kill God in our lives than education courses to make a incense }}angs heavy in the air, a
~oors,. mounting and descen~~g
.
·
education, the humanities, that anything else. Then everything living; but none of these will ever low fog obstructing
.
our view and
m their orchestrated turn; 1t 1s
bring out the best in people; in dies.
·
make you stand up to the most clogging our nostrils:
·
t~e ocean crashing against the
fine
arts
(painting, music, ballet,
·
Probably the moot touching powerful nation in the world.
·
I look about. Everywhere
is
an
.
fort. A younger bearded priest
drama, etc.) which make people scene that l experienced last
_
Only poetry can
.
make. you do opulence
'
worthy of the moot
tespondsto the choir, a low
.
voice
sensitive
to
the highest things in week was tQat
of
a man carrying that For me, the greatest and
.
expensive movie sets.
~The
walls
booming against the waves; he is
life. I believe in the practical arts a bouquet of flowers. I think most inspiring poetry is in the are of a dark wood, carved and
a ship, intricately_ wrought with
horticulture, agriculture, makilm
.
many college
·
students and Bible.
·
And I'm afraid colleges, painted in an almost Chinese
gil
_
ded sails and a cargo of rare
people aware of growing
things:
I professors would
be
turned off by more and more, are not turning fashion, supporting an un·
_
spices. Three women weave their
believe in- developing all the a man carrying flowers. But that out poets who willbe able ,o read
·
believable array of paintings and
way .through the crowd, bearing
senses: see beauty, color; hear man was Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, the Bible.
·
.
carvings,
.
trinkets
.
glittering .red velvet cushions and placards
.
against

the darkness. Massive
· ·
with a strange wrJting. There is a
Re-esiablishment Slated
·
marble icons display painted
clink of coins, coins
:
with which I
images in their fra~es, looking
am onlr now
.
bec_oiajng familiar.
through
·
the mist. Candles glow
There 1S
.more
smgmg
.
from
·.
the
·
.
everywhere; from the chan•
.
choir and the priests,

who nQw
.
deliers
.
and icops to the X-shaped
·
close'.the central do
.
ors and
di~w
wands of parrafin on the altar,
-
a red curtain behind them. For a
• c..
.

.
,
.
.•
:
, .. _
,
.
• ••
.
.
~
.
.
.
For Radio
.
Station
..
;
each given
a
halo by the particles
.
time, we hear voices
'but
see only
of incense
.
floating. A carved th~ ~op~
•,
<;>f
,,.
.
the . red curtain,
.
.
.
_
,
golden head
.hangs
qn
.
the wall. swishing now and again as the
By Bill Sprague
·
..
-
.
·
·
.
·
·
· near the
.
entrance, but has
n<i
·
priests pass n~ar
it.
The incense
-
/
b~
.
Inete~f;~gds. with
..
fin. a
.
ncial am.bitions _of
·
the people
:now
·
face.- The stained g~ass windtjws
grows
:
heavi~r. A womari ap-
.
.
trying to reit_tstate WMCR will
be
,
care a webbing of chicken wire,
P!Oaches an
:
1co11
·and makes the
· This Thursday night the problems WMC~ plans to help
·
rewarded with success.
.
.
,.. .
··
each tiny hexagon
.
.
a

.
slightly
sign of the cross, touching the
student government is scheduled support itself. Hu
·
gh Knicker-
,
·
·
·
·
· ·
_
ground in penitance, three times;
-
to decide on appropriation of hocker, financial
'
director; says
,
·
k. · g th ·
·
f th

·
·
funds to reestablish the campus the night in the rat
.
theme is just __ ,
'"'1.ent
·
·
1e E'atapult s''
_
J~1;afteit~ifr3
·
sign~
.
Olli~~
radio program .
.
·
An interested one money making venture
V
.
_
Q
,
.
_
follow her,
:
while the heavy
group of students has asked for tentatively planned to help the
wooden
.
doors swing
.
open once
$1,100 to purchase a turntable, a radi9
·
station meet its operating
·.
·
again, and the archb!fihop, silver
cartridge machine, microphone expenses.
·
•·
-
·
'
.. ·
·
· .·..
·
...
·
..
·.
·
,
·
beard flowing clown
.
on gold
and
.
oUi~r
.
necessary
.
equipment
_
.
/
·.
·
Theftis the p~r.ennial _enemy of .
-
~il;t
c ~1:1yi~:is
:
planajng
.
anoth~r
,
:Ji:o~
·
'New
·

Hav
·
en, whl:fl:! he
cassock, raises
.
a
.
deeply
-
chased
Campus radio in the
·past
has
,··
WMC~.
'
In
~ddit1on to
·
mer eased
·
pl!ir
,
,
rh1s
:
~~l.H;1ost
·
y_Jt
,
e_!yJ>~
;
!}J~
.
,
,
q1rect_1;
,
',i
;
..
~~g:
:,.
M_af~ha]! m
··.
The
.
chalice aQOV~k,the
_
(
head~
:
of the
been an on again off again
·
affair
·
sec~mty, ~mckerbocker says the }ast drru_n~bc
~
e
_
ndeawr
.
a
,
t
-
MarJSt
.
Master
·. ·
B.mlder
·
:;;aid . that crowd. The
comfumiaf"
wine
:"'.
is
.
plagued by lack of funds,
..
radio ~tation wotJ1d _take out_ a ~ollege.His
·
~1rst;was perlon:ned
:
M~tonoiawas the
.':
best thing
·.
~e
~administered
-
with
~
·
similarly
.
.
repeated thefts, mismanagement
·
theft l!lsuran':e policy ?n its. m December. 71, m the chapet
n-
had seen on or o!f
·
Broadwa~ m
·
chased spoon; after communion
and lack of interest. The present expensive eqmpment. Thi~ has wa~ .
·
enht_le
.
d E".erym_~n overa_year."_He compares bill's
the people return to.their places
.
group of people seeking student never b~en done before but it has
.
:
Rev1S1ted lhich
,
was later_ Jo
··
work m
·
pc1rt
·
U?
that of_ I~?D'
·
to

partake
of
a small
.
roll
,
of
government funding for
.
campus bee~ discovered
to be very
.
become
·
,; ., ... but
.
not Just
-
)"alter Borawsk1 says ~f bill, he
bread, a heavy, yeast~laden host.
radio have an optomistic and feasible. For·$~ annually, a $~00 everyman
..
and was performed is
an
extr~mely poeti~
}'.0~g -
!
The archbishop com~s forward
creative
approach
to
these dtlductable poUcy_ would provide a~ost ElXactly ?De year later at ~an and hi~ work a~ th1S J?Omt m
yet
_
again; yellow cassock and
problems.
·
.
.
coverage
·
exce~dmg the $1,100 the.Vassar Institute
.
In between hIS ca~eer
.
is stamped ~th the gray beard,
.
initre and incense.Ji"
·
First
·
they plan to operate cost of the eqwpment necessary these two works, he presented an occassionally. bru~l naivete
.
of
is a recital in monotone
·
that we
WMCR in the businesslike to resume broadcasting.
evening of theatre entitled early Eugene O'Neil."
hear,1iow,
.almost
a relief from
manner of a commercial radio
The
.
cost for purchase of· this Dominus, Demon, Dogs and Dad,
One- .of the. readers for
.
The the vocal acrobatics
of
the choir .
.
station and do away with the
·
eq~pmentisnotthe onlr expe~se which was a ~e~es
of
-
one-act Malbolll:1e Th
_
eatre Company
_
in
The monologue finishes

to the
radio club type image of campus facmg WMCR. T~e ~di? station
.
plays; ~ree ongmals and three
·
~ustraha s~id after re~?i,~g ringing of the carillons, one in
radio.
Bill
Bellows, general op~ra~es by radiatmg
~ts
tran-
a9:aptations.
.
(Two
of
the
..... but not Just eyerrman
A , each cupola, six bells ofdifferent
manager says the radio station srmssion through a coaxial cable origmals were later performed at work such
.

as
.
this
·
is
-a

rare tones playing together, gold~
1
seeks
.
to'
.
be "responsible and strung ar?u~d the campus. Most the "Old ~oat" in Po_ughkeepsie.) achievement for anyoi:ie, much bells with golden voices.
.
.
·
responsive". It
·
will be respon-
of the eXIStmg cable has to be The.evemngdealtwi~Jesus, the lessforone~oyoung ..... ifhewere
.
.
.
..
sible
.
by incorporating proven replaced and new cable will cost devll (a la Dostoevski), dogs-,as a Melbournian I would strongly
_where
-
gender and ambition has
commercial.radio techniques. A approximat~ly ~6½ cents per a focus ?f purity and as an o~ject urge you to bring him irlto the slig into the recesses ?f the ~nds
-
practical orientation to broadcast foot. The mght m the rat ~on-
of
_
abusive love, and t~e friend· company of your ~heatre." of th_ree old m~n. Enc Garrison,
technique
will
also be a sored by WMCR and tentatively ship between a housewife and a Gerard Cox
·
says, ''bill has
_
a Neville Bollmg and
-
Steven
requirement for those interested scheduled for Mar. 2 will
-
be the young neighbor.
unique combinatioo of talents. In Iacobellis play the three old men
in being a disc jockey, in addition prime means of paying for the
From bill's
.
relationship with my work with llim over ~e
·
past and Jean Calligeri
.
plays the
to the enthusiasm and interest new cable.
.
,.
two of the members ofthat
.
cast, two years I have been contmually nurse, Roslyn, w~~e fear of
that served as
.
the only criteria
The people involved with
-~
_
c~e the play, Celebra_ting
·
the impressed by his
-
views of
·
the death
·_-
~
k~eps
.
·
her at an an-
for involvement in the past.
WMCR
..
have an
.
ambitious First .F_'ew Months which was world and his ear for language;" tagomsbc d1st~nce from the
·Programming•
,
will attempt to PfOject

and have
.
worke~
·hard
perlormed four months after:the
.
_During ~ecember and January three men.
It will be pe~onned
·
be respoltsive
to the Marist sm~e last ~emestei: to revive the successful run
of." .; ...
but not Just bill has wntten Gentle C~tapul~. at
·
the
N
a_ssar · Institute
·
-
·
community, including
,
campus radio. station. '.fheir long r~ge
.
everyman". A
.
theatre
.•
owner
It'~ a play
-:-
about. a fr1,___~~hip
..
Poughkeepsie fQllege
·
Center •
news items, taped coverage of
.
g;oal
lS
to
.
obtam a broadcasting fro~
New
Pal_t~,
Donald whi~h occurs amid the stark
·
12VassarSt.,Po.k.!M~rch7,8,9,
sports
.
events, ski reports,
talk
hcense
.
from the F.C~C. and .Be!~ger,- cam~ to see the play purity of a homefor aged men, 10 at
8:30.
J\dmissio.n
_
IS $_1.00.
shows and other. programs which ope~ate
.
a
..
campus ba;sed
..
~M
_
apd asked that 1t
be
presl',lted ~
.
t
·
will
·
relate well to the

student station that
-
would serve not only
·
.
hts
.
theatre, The Academy, m
NIKKO
·
·
..
·
·
body. Progr~~g in the p~t Marist _but the surroundi!}g ~ew
_
Pal~. H~ des_cr~~~d
:
bill's
1
·
PANASONIC LINfAR
PIONEER
~
·
has been an
.
mdividua1' selection commumty, as many colleges work as metaphysical .
,
~
varying from D.J. to
·
D
;
J. apd and universities
,
acr?ss the ·
:·.-Duri_pg
~e summer, whi_~e bill
ei::
·
.
·
·

·
,
.
.
.
,
~
consisting mostly of favorite coµntry
.
are currently d?mg. Tlle
,
,
w
.
as wr1tmg M~ton~ia,
.
.
he
ll.J
fllJllJa
··
fJHff
C00R[5 .....
·
:i!~ks
~~:
r~fpo~~~~r:::
·
·
f:~~ff!s~~:h~i:::~::~:lit~t~~~
~
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1
f~:i~e:
·
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.
,
.
.
.
·
.
·' .
.
· .
..
···
.
I •
.
·.
;




.
·
;
•·
• .
I
radio
is
the
sense of community an eJISl!l!llal
part
ol
a _college
With .
York_, Austm .Pendle.ton,
w_ho
.
nu~
.
FORMERLY
awareness
-
that has been buried
-
a growl!lg commurucation arts· read
;
and was m~st:, unpressed
·
1
·1

·
THE
'
F/XIJ SHOP
'
·.
by
too many posters on too
;
many
.
department
;
It
i~ hoped that the
..
with~ ~or~. He
.
C8-J!le
up
.
~ see
·
·
.
1
:

.
.
.

.
.
·
·
·
·
·
· .
·

·
·
Metonoia which turned

out
to be
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TRAINED
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CERTIFIED ELECTRONIC
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CHNIOANS
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ANNOUNCEMENT
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A 1st Aid Course:is being of•
fered this semester :'If anyone is

interested contact Ed
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Holowinko
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VO'FE
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KATHY
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MON THRU FR/8 TO
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FEBRUARY 21, 1974
THE
CIRCLE
PAGE7
HIGH ON SPORTS,
continued from page
8
MURPHY NAMED MARIST ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Gym Available To Women
Ray Murphy, a sq,homore from Flushing, New York, has
been"
named Marist Athlete of the week for the week ending February 16th.
Murphy, a basketball player, scored twenty points
in
a
heart-
breaking 62-61 loss to Sacred Heart.
This
is the second time this year
Murphy has received the award.
.INTRAMURAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
In I.M. championship action,
this
week Fitz Wright Inn, behind
29
points from Vinny·Caruso, ·defeated the Duds 61-57 to win the Co-Ed
League championship. In the Female League championships, Joan -
Small scored 20 points in leading Who Cares to a 47-13 victory over The
,Sixth
Appeal Both Caruso and Small were named Most Valuable
Player.
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Anyone interested in competing in either the Intramural Volleyb~
league or the Foul shooting contest should sign
ilp
or pick up a roster
l:Jl
the Intramural office
D-216.
Deadline for_the foul shooting contest
IS
Wednesday Feb. 27th. Sign up in I.M. _office and competition begins
Thursday Feb. 28th at
7:00
p.m. Deadline for submitting rosters for
the Intramural VolleyballLeague is Thursday Feb.
28.
There
will
be
two leagues, a Male and_ a Co-Ed League.
. Vote experience -
~Vote
Monday
Mahoney
CUB
.PRESIDENT
By
Karen
Tully
been extremely cooperative with
her requests.
With the advancement of
The role of womens' athletics
women in .the Marist sports ·
will
hopefully improve
with
the
arena in mind, the athletic use of the gym.
All
facilities
will
department has made it possible
be accessib~ during the time
for the gym to be set aside, for
period, except for the trampoline,
women only, once a week. Dr.
which requires professional
Howard Goldman,
athletic supervision.
All
mats, balls, nets,
department director, approved etc.
will
be provided.
the all~women program
and
said
One problem the athletic
, that he saw no problem with it. department did see was the
The possibility of the women
enforcing of "ladies night"
.in
the
having the gym has come up gym: how to keep the men out.
before, but with the establish-
The proposed solution
was
to
ment of the women's basketball inform the work-study students
team,
the athletic department who run the gym of the day and
pushed harder
to
obtain the gym times that women would
be
using
exclusively for coeds. The time thegym. Thedoorscould then
be
made available for women is
on
locked, giving the worker the
Tuesday nights from 7-9': 30, ability to keep men out while
starting Tuesday, February~-
It
giving ladies the go-ahead.
was with the assistance of John Another consideration that had to
Tkach that this time was made be made was the tight schedule
available.
for the gym. It is used alm~t
Dr. Goldman feels that it is constantly from early morning to
important for the women to have seven o'clock in the evening with
the gym
to
themselves and feels
gym classes and various team
it might improve college athletics practices. Thus, the establish~
· from the women's point
of
view. ment of gym time came from the
Gym teacher and promoter of Intramurals program schedule.
women's-
basketball,
Miss The women's basketball team
Conklin, commented . that the practices on Tuesday evenings
entire athletic department has. from 9:30 until 11.
So
the entire
..., _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
............ .,.....,.._._.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
., night is devoted to Marist's
athletic women, not . making it
-AIR-/.GROUND'/ LAW
J
A MARI NE · .Officer Candidate's -Program ex-
clusively for.full-time students (day or evening),
·the Platoon Leaders Class (PLC) Course leads to~
Second Lieutenant's commission.upon graduation.
All _training Js conducted during the· summer at
. Quantico, Virginia, and :students are.evaluated in
SPECIALTIES INCLUDE:
AVIATION (Pilot)
RADAR INTERCEPTOR
(Missile Control Officer)
. ENGINEER
COMMUNl~ATIONS
areas· of leadership quaJities - physical fitn-ess · -
academic perform~nce.:
A
stipend
i~ awarded to
those students who~ successfully complete
·
the
initial .
COl;JrSe
($90_0,
a . year . tax-free)',
".
June
graduates are now eHgible·-to apply
.tor
a t"en'"weeks
.course which
convenes thi~ coming summer.
JUDGE ADVOCATE .(Lawyel'.')
·,
$9,_093.36
.INFANTRY
S_UPPl:-Y
ARTILLl;RY
Al R TRAFFIC CONTROL
. TRACTED VEHICl.ES
INTELLIGENCE
(minimum starting)
$12,977 .7;6
· ·cm axJm um starti_!'.19)
COMPUTER MANAGEMENT
A MARINE · CORP.S OFFICER .SELECTION
.TEAM WILL- BE'
ON. CAMPUS: 26 FEBRUARY
1974
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. necessary to evacuate the gym at
any point during the night.
Seeing the gym as
an
important.
aspect. for women, John Tkach
also feels that the bad turnout for
certain Intramurals, along with
Miss Conklin's cancelling of
particular
all~women
gym
classes,
due
to
lack
of
registration, were indications of
women's
attitudes
toward
athletics. It is hopeful that the
gym will not go unused during the
designated time. It
is important
to . voice your support of the
women's gym by your: presence
and participation on· Tuesday
evenings
between 7 and
9:30.
Some doubts have been raised
concerning the program's initial
success, but the hope that women
will turn out, has made this
program a significant first step
for womens athletics.
Any
suggest ions or
t:omrncnts should
be sen! to Dr.
Goldrnan.
CREW SCHEDULE
FOR SPRING '74
POSTED
HEAVYWEIGHT
SCHEDULE
April 6 -
Columbia and
Syracuse at Poughkeepsie, 11:00
a.m.
April 13 - Wesleyan and Ithaca
at Middletown, Conn.,
10:30
a.m.
April
20 -
Marietta at Marietta,
Ohio,
12:00
p.m.
· April 27 - President's Cup· at
Poughkeepsie, 11:00 a.m.
May 4 - New England ·Cham-
pionships, · "Rusty
Callow
Regatta" at Worcester,
Mass,
2:00
p.m.
May
11-12 -
National
Cham-
pionships,
Dad
. Vail,
Philadelphia, Pa., heats
&
semi
finals Fri. Final - Sat.
LIGHTWEIGHT SCHEDULE •,
April 6 -
Rhode Island,
negotiating Notre Dame
Tatia
Maritime, at Poughkeepsie,
11
:00
a.m.
April 13 - Wesleyan, ithaca and
Iona, same as heavy.
Everything else, is the same as
the heavy with possible extra
races during the first two weeks
against Notre Dame and· New
York Maritime.·
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PAGES.
. ~arist
J
.V. hustleldn contest\~ith Siena:
THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 21, 1974
Foxes
Contillue
· To
DrOp
~ames
The . Varsity Red Foxes case in the Sacred Heart game
The second varsity loss was a
dropped two more. games
this
which pitted the F~xes against _a • 73-48 trouncing by powerful state
week to Sacred Heart on Wed-
stronger and taller team.
ranked Siena College
of
Albany.·
nes_day·and •Siena. m Saturday..
The first half saw some. ex:-
The superior Siena team was held
The
cagers are cUITently in a . cellent playing · by sophomore by the Marist slowdown··
in
the
disastrous slump losing nine out Ray Murphy who scored 14 points first
half
which they were only
of their
last
10
games.
.
and covered the.boards well. The leading by five. The second half,
Without the.services of front-
Red: Foxes.
all
played "tough· however, was display of a well-
court stars.Mike Hart and Roury
defense" and entered the
half
balanced and determined Siena
Williams, the Red Foxes have only trailing by one point_. The
attack, and ·as the. cagers fell
been unable to pull off a victory. second half was also even with a
further ·behind. the slowdown
Without the· height and with no
balanced game being turned in
became useless. ·
consistent · outside shooting . the by everyone. The
f
rontcourt did ·.
Siena outsc_ored Marist by 20 in
cagers . h.ave· ·been• trying a new
especially well against the much the· second. half · and · winning by
.. ·slowdown· offense·. concentrating. taller Sacred Heart. despite the , '25. No Marist player scored in
·. on-good shots and good defense.· height disadvantage.
It
seemed double figure§· and the height
· Knowing the varsity can'L''gun like the upset was
in the making -man was Junior Al Fairhurst
·and
nm"
with most of the bigger as Marist led by one -with .4 ~with
9 • ..
and better teams on the schedule seconds left and possession of the_.· , This. weekend.
tbe
Foxes trayel
has, for the niost part;. kept the. ball. However, a bad pass and a
to Long Is~and to ~ace Dowling
.score low a
0
nd'.their ·opponents1n buzzer· shot- by the Pioneers· and Southhampton on Friday and
· · r~ch.
It
has almost pulled ui>§ets
ended the Foxes dream.
. Saturday nights respectively.
over schools such· as Bentley, ·
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nehill·and:Stoneybrookbufto
11· • ·- h O · ~- ·
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ort·s
9 games the varsity's margin of .,
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defeat was two or less on- four
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ByJohnTkach ·
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,JJ,fl!,~e;s
R-ifaily . .
,.t:J:•,~ili~~.!t~;.l~;;,;~.:;idruaMi::~:,b~!:O:.
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Among
its
recent rowing graduates are Joe McHugh (Marist Fresh-
. TheSpl;'ing '74
crew
season is in-
There are
·
only . six- rowers--: Maris( crew: winning. Not that man ~rew Coach); _B9bCreedoii-(Varsity Heavyweight Captain), and
·· high gear as·the Marlsfciarsrrien . ret~rning from last year's bQat other·Marist oarsmen are losers, Lightweight po-_eaptains. Dave-Phillips an_d Frank Hoover, along with
get rea,dY- fort
their

tot1gh w-hichfinished 5thattheVails in· butthese freshmeii"are'some of varsity lleavyweight oarsman Tom Duffy and Dave Tees.Over the
· schedules,
It.
seeµis,.to ·
be
a a:'field of exce}len_t-lightweight the best in the East.and
.
they're years, competition for seats in the varsity boat at Bonner have been so
-· · ·: · promising •year. fol'-,
tbe
:
·Marist co11;1petition,. The ·boat.·
will
haye .
us~µ _
to .winning. .
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fie~ce .. that .. John ,q~ppeletti( a~ 197.0 .·Bonner.·- grad~ate and the ._ 1973
. · cr~w-s,' with
an
experienced and·.. semors _!{.en Ousey, ·a· four. year.
. .The· co.aches also: deserve a
lciL
HeISman TrophY: "!VIJ¥ler· fron1 I'enn, Suite, was .reJe.cted because he
· talented group: of ... oarsmen .: ~, veteran . of yarst~y Uglltweigh~, · of ctedit. for ·the, c.re\Y
.
pr.ogra:ilf _v,as not_tough enough:
~t,
least t~at\Vas w,h,tB ob,Cr8E:d9n told me. . .
<
probablythe best ever atMarist> · aµq, · Dav~ ·Philips;- .·.· another. -here;_Head Coach is Mr.
·
William,,-

. '!'he reason:that·T have;meJ1tioned Bonner amt their'.strong rowmg
'. i
/·This.
year•s·',heavyweighFcrew · BonnerHigh Graduate; The other . oAustin, . Lightweight \ <Joach
··Is
progr~ni is,tha~
l
have recen,tlyre_ceiv~d word that this spring they are
· looks: :like · the . strongest

that ·· · four· are ."juniors
-;J_ini
_Hoyle, Bob . ·Butch
·
.. Lenehan : and·.:Freshman· . droppmg tJ1e sport.The reasons given are the ,old standby~, money and
:Maristna,sfielded in th'el~stfew ·Siie~~ri~•.·•.•Fran!t_:-:·Ho_over;:.: and:, CQach;~--Joe·M~Htigh;'.~lJ;three, .~he
.
. -~ergy.crisis'.'l\.fyco~versa_tions ·,with -~1>me .. of.the old ~~nner
· Y~~rs, T}J~y h~ye 16 experi~nced Kevm

O'Conner;.
_
Three of.
,
the ; , de$erve
_
.· praiset:'for
->
their _gar~m1en ~veled me to beb~ve d~erent. I have been told that it is not
.. ~arsD1~n.fi~htmg for _s~ts 1n the .·. four~, wer~ ,; also: m~m~rs .-•· of · r e~r~i,ting .progra.i:n . and/ the_ · moner .or, lack o.ffuel that .1s holding· B~ru:ier a~ the dock, but rather
-frrst ei~ht. '.fh~e
~~ .six-~retur~ - Mar1St's frrst,DadVail,wm~ The. ·.quality·
~
oarsmen they, have, apathy.on the:part
·
of the school's admirustration.
nees fron1 l~t ·reai;'s eiW1_t a~_!l-.i(otl}.e,rJwo
_
;· seats: in the boat,are :. brought
,to
·
_Marist::·Jt:)iioks~like • · . This ~ra~tice of dropping "mil10r sports" _ap~rently. fashionable gn
theJ>nly ~emoi:
lS
B~p~C_ree~9~
,
a: ,_b~_u.:,.g;f~ughtJfor
0
by'. l)an·.,Glow,··; thisye_arthey.hi(ve:a'.goodcharice···. the\~billY:;Schoolboy_ .level, ~opefully .. will.· not- .start to· becoll}e
•~onsignor:Bonn~r:gradu~te !'1th_cJun
.,
•D1e~ic, --Mark
-
McCarthy; ···
·
.,to'.get p~d;:,tfack'~for
ttiefrilia~d
'f~~'1fopt:1.~le
.
,.9~Jh~P1Jug~eep3!~.colleg1ate
.
level,· .·. :· . ,. · ./.
·
.a.years ~fJ!xperi_en~e.·_There are · Georg~>D1Stefano, .·and·.,RoberL workwithsomewms
·
attlieVails, ,: •
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fiv~•fun1o~;·retummg from last· Orlan.do, · · •. •

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·F:9X_
HOOPSTERS TRAVEL TO. LONG ,·ISLAND. THIS
year s varsity and they are: Tom;
T~e Freshmen· team should ~e • ·crew ptogiain;it Marist
,
The new · ··. WEEKE~ .
·
_Duffy, Pat Dw,£Y, Dave Drews, a wmner with·the.kind of talent innovatioriis.a new type of crew
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Joe Guenther,
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and John Tracy. ·
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they-have. · Head . Coach· Austin · shell '.•· built>: by · · Schcienbrod, ·. a ·_. After closmg out_ theU: h()rrie season with a conference game agamst
All of_ t~ese: oarsmen were.·.·.deserves·cx:editfortherecruitirig -craftsman troni Germany-who _game Nyack,_the.Mar1st coµege basketball team trayels to Long
members o_f. the 1972 · Mar!St
.
:job hf s done. Marist _prQ_bably -lives
·in.
·eonnecticut and makes- Island fo,r a pau·_of ~8Illes agai~t South3t91>t.on and Dowling.
.
. Freshman e1gh~ -the only 'Ma~ISt ... has· the_ -1Jest .·.collection -of
.
.
· fresh~ :crew SQ ells. '.fhis ne:w boat is
a re-• .
~outha~t.on is first on the
lis~
and·.
~ill . carry. a 12-10. reco_rd mt.o
crew ev~r to
~
the _Da~ Vails. ·men oarsmen for-a .small college • . enforced fiberglass· model which. Fr!day mght s COI}test. -~eal Meai?b3!Il 1~ the lea~g scorer with a. 18
The Heavy-weight
boa~
will all be on the t:ast coast; Re~ruited from ... ·
is
20:-3!) pounds lighter than .. the pomt average:- Mike Smith, a ~7 Junior, 1s. the; le!idiIW rebounder
with
veterans. of last year's Freshmen • good high schools. like. Bonner, .
·
. conventional -shell: .Although _ a
_1_0
per game average .. Last s~ason Manst .spilt ·with Southampton,
crew w~ch placed 7th out of 20
~
,:Father J_u~ge, "F,C . .Williams, and· more expensive;--it is much more w~mng at h~me 79-74; and losmg·on the road, 89-47; The Red Foxes
the Vails. The on~s that go~ t Holr Sp1~1t:: six fre§}Imen. hav:e · durable; and in the .long run; it trail th~ series l0-5. .
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make the heavyweight boat ~l · national titles. Pat O'Rourke; and--
will
save money. The· design-'of.. Dowling holds a. 16-7won-l~t mark and plays the Fo_xes Saturday, m
then make up the J.V. boat which Tony Weczypor are ,botll niems the seat and foot stretcher make a Central Atlantic <::ollege ~onference clash; -Marist sports. a
_3-4
could. very well be .~e · most bets of
the
prestigious Vespers the boat more comfortable, and ~onferenc~ record whi~e the L1ou_s are 5-2. I>aul Krabbler,
~
6-6 J~or,
successful b~t ~t. Ma~st. .• .
. Boat-Club, one of the best rowing . with . the maker .
as .·.·
close .. as . ~s the leading sco~er with a 23 ~oint avel'fige. Larry ~lites a 6-5 Juruor,
The Varsity lightweiijhts are clubs in the world; and have Connecticut, repairs_ and ser-. isnext_on t_hescormgparade_witha 14pomJaverage. . .
_
the
~n:w
·
to· watch . thµ;_ y~ar. _
trayeledtwice to ~u~pe. with the _ vicing. will. be" more convenient.
. Earlier m the year, Dowling b~t Manst, atputchess. Commumty
ConS1Sting of a reallf stro_ng. Umted States Yout~Team, . . : This_boatwill be:.used mainly by C~llE~ge79{i9,buttheR~Fox;e~stiUleadthes~nes7-4.
group of oarsmen whi~ good
Coach~d by MarJSt _ graduate the lightweights.
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experience, they ha:ve a really : Joe McHugh; these freshmen are
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THIS WEEK IN MARIST SPORTS .
· g(M,)d
shot.
~t_
winlµng
the
,Vails.-·
bringing · a new • tradition to
TEN ~EARS AGO-Taking on the tough Fairleigh Dickinson ~gers
the. Manst College basketball: team. dropped· a close 75-71 contest.
Marist rallied
in
the final minutes but a19 point lead was
too
much for
the Foxes to overcome.
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Later-
in
the week the cagers· were overrun by LeMoyne 76-50 in a
free scoring battle.
·
·
.F . .
er·. ....
"T
·. .
C
FIVE YEARSAGO.:. Oneonta State used the icy fingered shooting of
•. . ·or·.
.
·. ·
.. e·
W... - . ·
·e··a·"" · ·
the ~arist cagers to roll Jo an.~ victory over theRed Foxes in a

.· _

. · . . -. . . , . -
· _ "
· · · . . :..i..1. -
collegiate cage encounter at Roy
c~
Ketcham High School. Later in the
.
.
-
.. ·
· ·. >
.
--~,
· ·
· · · . .
week, Gene. Willfard·tossed·in two baskets in the'.space·of eleven .
. There are
'
three crew captains
. 'F.he heav~eight' captain•.for secon~ to-push ~t.onY:brook·past the-Foxe.s;63-58. ~-
.
. . ..
·
named
·for·
this.se.ar: _ Bob• tll1s year is, Bob·- Creedon. . .. Mar1St_. Colleges freshnum basketball team cam~ from behind
~
Creedo"n Frank Hoover arid Dave' Nicknamed-. "Bonner:•· .he's
a ·
defe~t,Siena, ~h84 at:Roy-,C. Ketcham H.S. Later.in the week, Bill
Phillps·:.'· ·:.
":':- ·.:..
·
> _:\., •
popu1ar.guy with
his
teammates,
-
: Myrick thre.w m 28 pomt~ to lead the Stonybro_o~ freshm~n to a

Sl-67
- - - - - - - - - - - ·
·----· ~. Dl;;tth - major, as .
.
well as . a
rout of Mar1st_. The Marist frosh also rolle.d to its) 4th victory of the
.. _ , .. Left:· -Bob ·creedon-· ··.
gr,:~duate <>f BonnerHigh-~chool, s
.
eason, crushing Nyack US-79'.
. , .. •·.
.
. •·
.
..... -
- .- · ,.
.
,-. ·. _ --..., Bonner:
has had:·logg· years .of ..
..
C.C.N.Y, ran 11:P_anU-0 lea~ ~ft~r the first thre~ matc~es and hllf,g
13e)ow., _pave:P.h1hps ..
. expenence; and. in · freshman on for a 21-18 decisio~ over ~~rJSt m colle&e wrestling. .
.
. .
_and Frank•Hoover·.
· .year ·.h.e ca
... pta.ine. d ..
··th.
e fr.eshman.
·
... QNE.i~'EA. R
.. ·:AGO -... John Rechn. o!ld P. inned . .Ma.·nn·•
.. y--Bodn. er··.iQ_ .30 :-;
boat!·.
>
: (. /_ ·. · · ·•·
seco~qs
1!1 ~-
l)ea"Y'Yeight bout. to clinch a 2.8-24 win for 'M.arist over
... The two othei·;-captains, Frank Yeshiva in a collegiate .wr~tling m~.et. _, · .,·
·
. _
·:
· ·
. · ·•
·
Hoover-and.Dave Phillips,-are
. Quee9_s C~Uege_won rune of ~n trac~ events, !3az:iding MarISt and
· from the lightweight boat. Both
Ion9: losses in a trian_gular track meet on the Que_~ns camp!,JS; : · _ .
. are- ,also .graduates of Bonner
~ikeHartof Marist \Vas-_named. to the F;astern Collegiate Athle.tic
, High;·oave, nicknamed !'Pip", is ~onferenc~ weekly, a¥-st!ll'· te~.
.
.
- . rowing
in
his fourth· year here.
The,Man~t C~llege Junior varsity ~asketball_temn u~d.a fuµ cou~-
·-· ·-He's,
ti
·6iisiness. major from
press to;gam .a 39-17 halftµne lea~·~nd coasted ~o
~
83-45 w~ over·
--.
:Collingdale, .-.Pa. Junior . Frank· Nyack. Ba~e_r m the week five Manst players.scored m doub}_e figures
.
. :Hoover is.~lso a b1:1Siness major. as the JuruorFoxes_outran New Paltz,88~7~, ma ~am~ played_~t
our
~·", ...
·
Rowing in his tlilid:year;Frank _.L!~y,of 1:><>urd~
f11~
s
_
ch~ol.
.
. . . .
· . .
. wasonemberofthe'firstMarist: ··
~~ ?sika hit·.a three pomt play :~1~·23 seconds to·go
to
_
assure
. :.boat~·ever·,to win -··a ·-Dad ·Vail -~arist_pf_ a 79,-74. b~sketball .wn:i ov~~ Souf.paml)ton.before-a
.
~ellout
q~pir,~p'. ·:. ·..
,, . : .. .. ~- _· _w;rJ·it~~N~~hl~zL~~8f~n~~~11~: 1';,~. M~!~ ·also-beat
. '" ·- ' ·,
::_;.:~;· \":.\:/ :: :/·_;:~·~:,c~;~!f~e~
0~
a>a,~7 ·::·.·


12.4.1
12.4.2
12.4.3
12.4.4
12.4.5
12.4.6
12.4.7
12.4.8