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Part of The Circle: Vol. 13 No. 4 - October 10, 1974

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VOLU\1E
13,
~ E R 4
THE
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGf:t KEEPSIE~ NEW YORK 12601
OCTOBER
10, 1974
Receive
Free
--.___
.
.
~
:
Tuition Aid
·.
students, depending
·
upon the
By Fran1'J
t
Schiavi, Jr.
number of college age children
,
per family
:
<
·
·
·
It's
not'
too late for a Marist
'Although 'Only freshmen are
.•
freshman
.
to z.:~ceiye
·.
up
.
·
to
$1500
·
.
eligif?le for &rants under the ne~
·
free tuition assistance for this 74-
.
program this year, Kelly said
0
·.
75
.
school
.
tenn.
,
Tiie deadline to many upperclassmen aren't even
apply
fot:
a grant for the present taking advan~ge ?ft~e in~ent!ve
semester
is
May
15
1975.
This
program. KeUy said his ob1ect1ve
The
.
w6rks
.
<>(Rjcharl&ist are n~Wo~ ~xhibit in the Gaile,;
founge
.
of'the Olmpus
Center
'.
largely unknown fact:was
·
told to
is
to "make ev4:ry stud~~t a war~
·
·
·

·
.
•·•·
60,nmftf.et3-Begill
:
s
·
·
·
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.
.
·
:
.
.
.
·
..
·
,
:
:
'f~!tiori
~
.
~ssis~ari~e
:
Program~
:
~
.
"thin the next two
.
.
years •
.
Kelly
·

.

··, •
_a
;.
,
:
·
·
,

.

.
..
.
·
.

·
·
. . .
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.
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'nus program gives students noted thatthe budget grew by
$35
-
/
ByMarieDonovan
·
.
·
·
.
.
::
·
·
:
.
·-
·.
.
·
·:
·:
:
-

more money than
·
the Regents mill!o~
·
1ast year
·
~nd t~at
:

.
,
.
.
.
_
1s stnvmg f~r academic
~~-
·
have. E_ither write !}r stop by the
.
J_1_1centive program which
!S
still prov1_sions are alreaay b~mg
_
.
'.-fhe student Acad~m1c
.
_
Com-
.
ce}!~
_
nee, the library hours-bei~g SAC ?ff1ce located
m
room C-266.
·
operative. The new program considered for the ~art-time
~
·
,
.
..
·
~tte~ has met thr
,
ee tunes so far extend~d can
.
only
.
r~flect
•·
~ts Meetings are hel~
.
every
·
Thur
-
bases
.
its grants
.
upon pare
'i
its'
.
student. Toe money is available,
·:,;c
this
_
.
~emester .
. :
Headed . by B~b commit!!)ent
.
_
to
-
.
this goal. sday at-10 :00 p
.
m., m room C-269.
·
taxable income
.
up to $20,000 .
.
If
a
.
but it will not be put to good use
:
_


Sa~mon, the Committee
·
1s Regardl~s
?~
the amount of In~e~ested_ st!lqents, and faculty
parents taxable· income exceeds unless- students contact the
.
compose
.
d_ of
.
!hree stude~ts s~1:1dents. ~V:l~mg themselv~s
,
of alike ar~
·
m~1J~
..
.
~o
:
-~~d.
.
. ·
_$flf,OOO,
·
chan
_
ces are good
.
that..
Fin~ncial Ai
.
d_ office ~oday.
·
l,
'.~~~:<

.:'
·
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· ·
.
SAC will also
.
:
appoiri
t'.
two for
.
the st~dent body
·
to sign, and
.
__
.-
.
V
.
·

·
- .-·

·
- ·
.
.

·
.
·
_
students to
represent
.
the
.
the response has b
.
een fav.orable

·
-
·
·
.
·
·
.
.
.
·
,
·
.
-
.,.
·
University Yeal'.
·
for
'7
Acti
.
on
.
s.o far.
.
... .
.
.
,_
-
·
·
-
-
-
..
'.
.
.
·
.
·
program at the next meeting.

.
Jhe other ; sub-~omm1ttee,
By ~icliBurke
tation.
:
·
Dean Cox said
. ·
-
SAC
_
members
·•
work closely
.
.
compo~d
:
_of. ~mny
~
~bano, .Joe
"This year,"
-
said Dean Cox,
·
.
But
.
Dean Cox- also stressed
.
with the faculty
.
by attending Gigbotti,
:
Chip
·
.
~nnlSh,
,
Dena

\
Toe
.
faculty adviserprogram is · "~he S.A.s
m~t-_
periodically student
>
rli!spohsibility. "In
their respective
.
departmental
·
··
H~iyey,
·
and
·
Regma
.:
Gallagher;
:
·
under way
·
again,
·

·and
·
.
D
.
ean
tlu:oughput
·
each
·
semester
.

with short;':' he said,
.
''students
·
must
.
meeting11. Two members of SAC, was form~
_-
~o cresearc~ other GeraldA.Cox,hli!adofthefaculty
.
.
their advisees and are prepared make
·
decisions;
·
academic ad-
Jean Galligan and Mike Malone,
;'
:
colleges' policies concerning the
.
adviser program
;
has announced to.work with faculty advisers as visers provide
,
studerits with
.
·
are· also
. ·
members of Ahe
'
sending home
.
of
_
Jreshnle~ and
·
his
.:
policy
for
the coming year.
communication
_
links in our
.
information that makes informed
Academic Affafrs Council (AAC). sophomore
.
grades
;
.
The sub-
·
Academic {allure is
a
reality at advisory program."
.
.
decision-making possible.''
They are the SAC voice at AAC comini~ee was req1:1ested of SAC
Marist College: last year
·
more
·
Dean
·
Cox feels
it .
is
·
a
Any
student who doesn't know
meetings (held every
.
other by
,~
Brian

Moi:ns, Student t~an
.
sixty students
·
were tremendous a~et for the

student who his faculty adviser
is
;
OI'
any
Friday
.
at 8:00 a
.
m.), and
:
report Governm~nt

_President.

.
.
.

..
d1smisse~ fro1!1
.
school and
.
to get to
.
know
.
- one faculty student requesting a change of
the minuteslo the SAC.
-=-
·
'
.
. .
SAC obJectives fortheyearare
,
:
am>ther
.
runety-flve w~re placed
.
member better than others, arid adviser, should
.
contact Dean
·
Two ~AC st1hicommittees have many. O~e
·
of
:
them is to evalua~e
·
on ~cad~mic probatio~; Dean Cox that such a program is necessary Cox's office. New students are
been formed so far. One, con- the new tune schedule
.
Another
IS
,
estimates ~hat two-:thirds of these to
·
education.
··
...
.
.
·
.
urged to request a meeting with
,
sisting
I
of
_
·
pe~~ie
·
}<'r-ied
.
ow,
,
to_dev._elop adosel'.
.:
working µas~n
:-' .
stu~ents_ did ~ot see~
_.
heJp from
.

.··
.
"The resp~nsibility
to
.
ma~e
.
their advisers within the week so
Charles
,
Depercm; and
·
Jean
·
.
·

with
··
·
the Student
·
Advisor s
·
the1_r re:,pectiye
,
,
11
.
dvi,s.ers
.
once ourselves available as adv1Sers
lS
.
thatthey will have met with them
Galligan;-is seElk~gan
·
extensicfn
:
Program .
.
..
..
.
, /
,
·
.
.
,
,.
d~';1"g the
,
~nt~re ;Y~ar
:,
,.
,
:
···:- •
.
_.
as important as teaching itself,'" befo
.
,
-.
f:.~
J
J:ie':end of this month.
of-lib1:ary
.,
h1:>Urs.
:
As
B(?b smwion
.
.
.
The . SAC
.
.
en~our~ges _the
·
•·
Ac;aclem1c ady1S1ng 1s
µsua}!~•
-
explains,
'c
«ToEl lil>r~,:y is
.
.
~f :vital
·
~tude~t bodY. t? use th~1r ~rvices but by
.
l!o means
.
solely, con-
importance
·
'.
fo
,
any
.
academic
.
·
as 5in academic
.
orga~zati~n, for
.,
.
,
cen:i1ad with
-
J?roble~ re~a~
.
to
·
·
st
·
t
tl
And to Marist
.
which any academic problem_theymay
.
chmc_e of
.
maJ_or, m.;,i.3orfiel~
_
and
m i u on.
.
. .
·
-
·

.
·
,
·
· .
·.
·
·
·
·
·
-
·
· ·
·
.
·
·
elective reqmrements, choice of
.
courses for a semester, and ways
D
.
.
.
;-
.
.
·•
.
·
1

·
·•
·
E--
d
··-
.•
for
.:
improving
.
academic
.
per-
.~
.
·
:
·
e
_
v
.
e
Qn,in
.
..
e
.··
·
.
.
ll
.
.
t
.
·
_·._
.
·
..
· -
..
.
,
x
.
·
·
p
·
..
a
.
n
.

·
.

·

·
·
··
·
S
..
·'
formance
:
wmchisunsatisfactory
·
.
I '
·
·
·
:,
to
·
the
'

advise
.
e andsor :the
.

·
..
..
.
.
.
-
- . .
·
.
.
·
·
..
.
.
·
·coiiege," Dean Cox expfailled;
·:
Ex
·
j~
ti
.
ng
:
:
.}i:a
~ilities
-
··
;~:c~~f
aJ:~~ti~
~1}:n
r~~~
.
-
.
•·.
.
.
constitute successful advising."
·
· · Three
·
,- classifications
:
of
ByGary.Norman
..
·
.
offices( and
-
academic depart- students, freshmen,
.
transfers;
.
.
.
.
:
.
: .:
:
,
ments, and campus development and those on a~ademic pr_gbation,
Toe Marisr College Devel<>f>-
· ·
which includes renovaµon
_
of the
·
a:re obligated to meet
.
with ;heir
~
ment Program
·
is
a
conmiittee
·
campus
.
cen~er a!ld modification faculty aqvisers. three or
:'
four
that will
be used to help Marist
_
of structures so that they can times
a
semester. ,
..
.
College expand
·
ana upgrade better serve senior
,
citizens and
·
"We believe that each student
existing facilities.
:
physica~y handic~pped students
·
in these classifications should be
The program is form.ed of,the

through the use of elevators and
t:
inteniiewed
,
:
by
>
his adviser
·
at
college
'
s Board of Trustees and
~amps;
. .
'
. '.
: .
'.
.
least once before the rriid-tepn
· President's Council · and it
.
is
.
Th~ ~timated. c~st of
}he
e~-
·
period, again after the iss~nce
·
..
.
under ti:ie direction of
Mr.
Wayne
·
pansion
lS
$15 mil!ion whi~h will of mid~term
.
grades;
_
and fmally
strasbaugh.
:
· ·
.
·
·
··
be spread over th~ next25 years;·
:;
beforetneendofeach sem¢er,"
The purpose o( tJte program
is
·
'!lie

,
e~cted cost
.
of
;.
the,

first .
·.
Deafr
.
Co:it' said .
.
·.,
.
·
·
·
·
·
.
.
to raise
.
funds fo_!'
_
a
_
ll of·th
.
e.ex- phase
~
lS
:
~
i
170
1
000.
·
. ·
·<
-
.

..
~:very
·
_
student,
.
.
.
howe~er,
pected develo~J_llents on c1;1mpus,
·
· ·
·

Anyoz:ie mtere~oo,
in
obt3illing
:
regardless
.
of academic standing,
~
-
..
Some
:
.
of
:
these
:
.
developmez:its, mor-e
.
mform_a,tion about

t~~
..
has
:,
bee11
.:
,;
a~ign~d a.
·
facul~ ·
.
~
which are
:
li~~ed
·
,
under)he
'.
fll'st
.
program can p_1_ck
!IP~
~opy of the adviser
,
and
:is
urged to
,
~onslilt
·
·
·
phase
?
of..:
.
t~e

pr9.gr~;
·
~~e the case~tudy
.
whichis book~et.form
.,
·with
·
·
rum
.
·
.
on
_
·any problem
.
that
.
relocation
;
an~
·
.
~~n,siori
,,
~~ U!e
_
an4
·
giv~st~ewholedescr1p~on;o,f 11l8y
.:
arise
;
. ~::
·
.
·
_
.i:_
·
/
'
·
.
>>
.
.
.
·
campus
--:
library,
::
'
:
a
,
,:
new
. :
.
1,1'1d
.
tt,ie
..
progratn
.
_
<
Also,
.
t!J
.
o~e
.
:
m-,
'.
"
.·.
A,

·
new
:
:
~spe~t
·
Jo
:
this
.
.yea,1,''S
• ·
.
..
·
.
urgen~Jy
:
·
:
)fee~e__d
,:f
phfsical
\
.
terElsted
.
. ·.
11;1ay contact
.:
· Mr.
·
.
pro~i;aµtj ~
.
tM'folf of.~e studer1t
/
.:·:
education
..
cen~er,
.
rem4?rlelmg
_
of
:
.
st,.a,sbaugh
..
m • Jhe
·
_Qev:elopm
.
e!lt
/
advJSer.
:
Preyu~usJy ,
..
ti}e
:
S.A'.J1~d
.
present builclings
:
tQ
create
more
.
,
Pr,ogr.a:ip

: ,
Ro<>i:n

:
J9ca
.
te~
,
/
lD
(
served
.,
merely
:
as
,
an
:
aid
"
during
.
.
;
,
··
.
·
space
\
(or
,
'..
cl~SSl'OODlS
/
,'
·
(a~iJ.lty
.:.:
.
fon~lDe
·
Hall:
:•,
·
.
..
.
,
.
.
-
-
:freshmen·
.
an!i
,
/
transfer
:
.
Or:ien-
.
.
.-
.
..
.
. .
.
-
·.
-
.
-'
.
'
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
:
·
.
.
.
,
,
··
·
'
-
·
-
_.,
.
.










































































































PAGE
·
2
·
The
gang
down at Smith Street takes some
time
off.
OCTOBER 10, 1974
Counseling Takes
Active Part In
.
Workshop Weekend
The Marist College Counseling pills, even call a doctor - u11til we
Center participated in the feel "ourselves" again.
workshop for student advisors,
This same process does not
resident counselors and resident take
.
place with emotional
advisors conducted this year over
·
problems. Because emotional
the Labor Day
.
week-end. At this problems affect our thinking as
workshop the
·
Counseling Center well as our feeling, they are in a
addressed
·
itself to these issues: sense learning experiences.
An·
.
When does a person need help; unfortunate
or
unhappy
What
is
the referral process; ~otional
··
or interpersonal ex~
.
and
.
perience not only creates its· own '
·
What actually takes place in a symptoms (anxiety, depression)
counseling session?
.
it also warns us about the risks
These topics are so important
.
involved in putting ourselves in
to an understanding of
.
the that kind of situation again. That
counseling function that they will
is,
the experience generalizes to
S
·

h St
t
p
.
· ·
·
•d
·
be
.
discussed
-
here .
.
\
.
·
othel'. potentially similar ex-
m
·
zt
.
ree
rovz e· s
The. first problem
·
a person periences. Several
.
such ex-
.
.
.
·
·
·
.
·
confronts_ in dealing with a periences and our world· view
C
..
·
·
·
· •
c
·
·
psychological problem
is
when changes and we are not the same
0
.
.
.
m
·
m
·
u
·
n
l
i
·
y
n ·
ta
·
Ct
·.
does he need help. In other words, selves .we
:
were
.
before, but in-
. .
.
.
·
. .
.
. ·
.
. ·
·.O
, • ·
·
what are some of the symptoms
·
stead of seeing this more cautious
of emotionally rela
.
ted problems? and fearful person.as "not us.,we
By Julie Schott
Lynn Texter, Frank Synan, and ht>pefully we will be a:t>le to in~
..
We know-when we should see a see the world as
·
warranting a
Eileen Kehoe, all Gregory Ho
.
use crease the effectiveness of the
doctor -
a
virus; a broken bcirie, a more cautious arid fearful a1r
Gregory House's
.
desire to students, were also
·
involved, in program."
sick stomach; unfortunately proach. This creates a
.
climate
come
in
more direct contact with
·
the program·.
An
other project undertaken by
these clear-cut g
·
uidelines
·
don't where this process can easily
the community has r:eslil
_
ted in
,
This
.
year; since Chris has Gregory House students centers .exist
for
emotional
·
or snowball. As others react more
two very
'
worthwhile extra- graduated frolll Marist, Lynn around Regina Coeli, a grammar "psychological" problems. There distintly t9 the new
·
more cautious
curricular projects. One
.
of these Texter is in charge of this project school in Hyde
·
Park. Danny
are two reasons for
this
:
us, our cautiousness becomes not
is the
·
Smith Street project. ·
which
·
·
is part of the Gregory Morreale is the student in charge
.
First, while both physical and only justified but reasonable, and
This
.
project ~volves Marist House Co~i:>perative Extension of this co~curricular tutorial psychological ailments weaken this learning experience leads us
·
.
students going over
.
to the Smith Program. Lynn
·
hopes that this
··
reading program, and
he

hopes
·
our resistanceto further infection further
.
from where we once
.
street Housing Development and year they can dC> more things thaf
·
other students might be
(as an untreated
.
sore throat can were.
.
.
playing with the
·
childrenwho live with the c::hildren, who range in interested
-
in
joining this develop into a chest cold and
Counzeling is a way of taking a
in the area after school. The boys age from kindergarden to junior program.
.
_
from there to flu; or anxiety anc,l
·
kin~ of !'time-ou!" f~om. !he
enjoy such sports as basketball
·.
high school levels. She would like
Last year the
.
students went
·
depres~jon stemming from one tactics we e~ploy m d~ily hvmg
and football, and both girls and to see the children come over to over to Regina Ccieli and worked
relationship can infect all other to
. examine . their
.
·
~p-
boys experiment with arts and Gregory more often,
.
~oo. strictly in reading workshops
relationships and eventually our propriatenes~, their constructi".e
crafts and are tutored ih reading Although the Smith Street pro1ect · with children .from kindergarden
.
whole existence) there comes a or
.destructiveness,
and· their
skills. Grice,
.
during, the spring;
.
originated iri Gregory, Lynn says through third grade. This year,
point with a physical problem effectiveness; a tll!le to see 'YhY
all of the children :were brought thaL anyone is
.
welcomed to Morreale says
.
he would like to
when
-
we recognize that what we we use these
.
particular tactics,
0"£-r
.
to Gregory House
.
for a
·
.
become involved, and s~e urges help teach other co~rses such as
are
.experiencing
is
a
symptom of aqd. a tll!le. to explore o~h~r
picnic.
·
·
.
.•
those
_who
haveso
_
me t~e and; home
...
·
economics
·
·
and
something (acold,the flu)thatis av~ilaple options. In~ sense it~
The Smith street project began
.
who like
.
to play \Vlth children.
photogi-aP.hY tothe upper grades.
esseptially "not us''and ~e stop
a
.
back to the d_rawmg boa~d
last
·
year w_h.en Chris
.
Liska, than
.
·
·
·
.
When asked ~bout_~e futur~
_
of
.
"Our
mail)
.
goal is to bring
what we are
.
doir)g and begin approach when things start gomg
· -;
a:
;
1-1\a'rist
'.
sel_U.or;
~
Jnq':1,ir
.
e~
~
;
as
·
,
to
.
.
_the:~ro1~ct.,J•Y.i:ll.1
,
sa1d,.''W.~h~~e
-
creative approaches
,
to tutoririg

'
taking steps to· be ri<!
.
of. our wrong and don't get better.
where she could go
·
to work with applied
·
to the stuqent
:
govern- in grammar.schools;1n,the areas
· ·
symptoms
~
·we
:.'
go to ·bed;
·
take.
:··
. .
,
.
.
children. The Adriance Library ment for the allottment of funds thafthe students really
.
need
to
·.
·
·
c

-
·
·.
·
1
·
...:
..
d .
.....
. · ·,
·
te~~: f:!er:;:er~f:o/\l'11ii5~ f;~r~u;a~~;ial
·
cifrog:~r::~!~r~~~l work on," stated Mqfreale.
·
-~
:
a
.
en
.
.
er
_
Smith street Housing Program.
~quipment.
··
With
·
these aids,
Thurs. - CUB Film, "The Producers," 8 p.m. Theatre, Free,
.
.
Alulllni
.
Week
,
end Planned
.
.,
l
Fri.- Night in the Ratskellar with Winnie Saita 8 p.m.
Sat.
··
~
Football, H Mattituck 2 p.m., Cross Country A Brooklyn
Maritime, Van Cortland Park,
11
a.m. Soccer A, Dowling 2 p.m., Bon
Fire,
Lower Southfield, 8 p.ni., Entertainment, -Beer.
Sun.
·
~
Sailing - Nevins Cup, Kil)gs Point.
.
.
.
.
.
Mon. -
·
Marist
·
Film Program,
-''L'Ehance
Hue" (French)- D246 8
The
.
Marist College Alumni party in Champagnat Hall.
..
choice of events. A cocktail hour
·
p.m. Jazz Ensemble from Dutchess 9 p.m. -
ll
p.m.
Association has planned its ninth
The annual alumni-varsity and dinner dance will. be held in
Tues. - Senior Cocktail Party, New Dining Room 8 p.m. CUB Film,
anriua}Homecoming Weekend
.to
crew race will be held on Champagnat Hall beginning at "Socrates,'' Th~atre, Free
l!.
J:!.m. State of the College Address; In-
take place on campus October
11,
Saturday at 12 noon on the 7:00 p.m. At the same time, a troductory Lecture on TranscidentallMeditation -
-
Tony Brazil - 7:30
.12
·
and 13.
·
.
·
·

·
.
Hudson. tunch will be available cocktail party and entertainment p.m. Room 249C;
·
.
·
Gerard Dahowski of Hyde at riverside. At 2:00 P.M., the
·
will be offered in Fontaine Hall.
.
Wed. - CUB Fine Arts~ "Paint In," 2 p.m. Campu~ Center:- Cross
Park, James P. Friel of Cen-
Marist Vikings will meet Mat-
Homecoming will conclude on Country
.
-A-Nyack,Sienna4p.m.Soccer-A-NewPaltz,3:30p.m.
terport a~d James V. Gargan of tatuck Community College on Sunday
_with
an indoor-outdoor
Howard Beach are chairmen
·
of Leonidoff Field for a club football picnic
.
in
the Rathskeller
this year's program. The game.
featuring live entertainment.
weekend will begin on Friday
.
On Saturday evening, alumni Tickets are available through the
evening with an alumni cocktail and their guests will . have a Alumni Office at- Marist.
Announcements
Due to a typegraphical error on faculty of the Political Science
the
.
CUBICLE, October 25 · is Department on Tuesday, October
scheduled as a holiday. THIS IS 22, at 2:30 p.m. in the Campus
-----•------------111!11-------
11111--------•AN
ERROR. THERE ARE
·
center.
·
The pµrpose of the
PARK DISCOUNT BEVERAGES
O
_
PEN
.
DAILY TILL 9
12-5
SUNDAY
-
-
NEVER AN EXTRA CHARGE
·
FOR
·
COLD BEER
¼
A"D
·
½
KEGS AVAILABLE
:
WITH. ~Q
_
UIPMENT
D
:
O
.
MESTIC
,
AND
-
IMPORrED. BEER
.
OCTOBERFEST
\
BIER
:
IS. NOW
::
AVAILABlE
i
.
\
.
CLASSES ON FRIDAY, OC-:
,
meeting is to acquaint ~ajors
TOBER 25. SORRY......
with the department, to discuss·
·
the activities of the Political
NOTICE TO ALL POLITICAL
·
Science
.
Club, and to solicit in~
SCIENCE MAJORS: There will teraction among members of the
be a meeting of all students and depai;tment .
.

.
·@
ti
,
.
..
,,
V
:.:
.-
,
.
~










































































'
'
i
·'
I
OCTOBER 10, 1974
THE CIRCLE
Work Begun On "Lark"
By Debbie Nykiel
message can also have con-
be
portrayed by Mary Ellen
temporary meaning, "In a sense Shevlin. The cast numbers about
The Marist College Theatre Joan may stand forefront of the twenty-five
including
Bill'
Guild has begun its semester's women's movement by her Dunlevy,
·
Dan Edgecomb, Ed
work on the dramatic production ability to lead, her individual Rubeo, Tom Checcia, Harry
of The Lark _by Jacques Anoulh, struggle against forces above her Ottinger, Linda Sofio, Chris
and adapted by Lilian Helhnan. and still maintain her desire to Seaman, and Robyn Bareland.
The p_lay takes place at the trial right wrol)gs and preserve her
Suzanne Deak, in addition to
of Joan of Arc. Within the trial integrity."
· her duties as President of the
are flashbacks of
Joan's life
Dr . Lanning feels English and Theatre Guild, will be Assistant
symbolizing how she tried to History majors may find more Director and Producer.
If
any
follow her convictions with ac- meaning in the play than others students are interested in
.
ceptance
_
and rejection.
in the audience, but for everyone working on any production crew
Although the play js historical it will provide good dramatic

please contact Suzanne Deak
in its setting, Dr. Lanning entertainment.
C416. The play will
be
presented
Director of The Lark, feels its
The lead character of Joan will November 14, 15, 16 and 17.
,Scien
-
ce
~
Grants Available
-
WASHING TON,
_
D.C. - The periods of three years, the second twelve-month tenure with no
National
.
Research Council has
.
and third years contingent on dependency allowances.
again been called upon to advise certification to the Foundation by
Applicants will be required to
thP. National Science Foumfation
.
the fellowship institution of the take the Graduate
.
Record
in the selection of candidates.for
-
student's satisfactory progress Examinations designed to test
the Foundation's
.
program of toward
·
an· advanced degree in scientific
aptitude
and
Graduate Fellowships. Panels of · science.
.

achievement. The examinations,
eminent scientists appointed by
These fellowships will
·
be
·
administered by the Educational
the
·
National
.
Research Council awarded
for
study or
.
work Testing Service, will be given on
will
evaluate qualifications of
.
leading
_
to master's or doctoral December 14, 1974 at designated
applicants. Final selection will be
·
degrees in the mathematical, centers throughout the United
made by the .Foundation, with physical, medical, biological, States and in certain foreign
awards to be .announced -on engineering, and social sciences,
.
countries.
·
March 15, 1975.
and in the history and philosophy
The deadline date for the
Initial
-
NSF
Graduate of science. Awards will not be submission
.
of applications for
Fellowship awards are intended made in cJinical, education, or NSF Graduate Fellowships is
for students
_.
at
·
or near the business fields, in history
.
or December
_
2, 1974. Further in-
beginning of the~r graduate social work, or for work leading formation
and
application
study.
_
Jn g~neral, therefore, to medical, dental, law or joint materials.may be obtained from.
those eligible to apply will
be Ph.D. -
.
· professional degrees. the Fellowship Office, National
college seniors or
.
first-year ·Applicants must
be citizens of the Research Council, 2101 Con-
graduate students this Fall. United States and will be judged stitution Avenue; Washington,
Subject
·
to the
·
availability of solely on the basis of ability. The D.C. 20418
.
funds, new fellowships awarded annual stipend

for Graduate
in the Spring of 1975
will
be for Fellows
,
will be $3,600 for a
:
:
Stud
-
eµ.i Governin~nt Sponsors
,
''StateO(CdHege''
.
Ad(li-es~
.PAGE3
Panko Appointed
To Newly-Created
Directorsh~p
Dr. Stephen M. Panko has been
He was
a
chaplain in the United
appointed the first director of States Navy for six years, and
continuing education at Marist currently holds the rank of
College, it was announced today commander in the United States
by President Linus
R.
Foy.
Nav~l Reserve Chaplain Corps;
Formerly assistant director of he is attached to the Naval
graduate studies and continuing Reserve Center, Liverpool,
N
.
Y
.
-education at Ithaca: College,
.
Dr.
·
He continues
_

as
.
·.
pastor ot
.
\'he
Panko is developing . a .broad Methodist.Church' inVarna,
·
N.Y.
program of continuing education
Dr
.
Panko has had numerous
for Marist College designed for magazine articles published, and
the adult population of Dutchess has won three Freedom Foun-
This Tuesday,J)ctob~r 15 at 2 and address himself tosome of strike. Dr. Joseph Belanger ws
County and neighboring areas. dation Meda
_
ls for essay
·
s written
p.rii., the Student Government is the philosophical and attitudinal first to suggest this means of
Throughout the year, he will in competition with men and
sponsoring a presentation en- aspects of the college. Mr. Kelly rea·ching the
.
college community. announce a series of new women in all branches of the
titled "The State of the College." will have a unique opportunity to His suggestion was that the programs which will include the military. While administering the
Addresses will be made by Dr. speak to sonw of the problems President of the College give an introduction of extension centers, Nursing Home Administrators
Linus Foy; President of Marist that bewitch the faculty.
·
Mr. annual address. The Student professional
seminars
for Llcensure course offered through
College, Dr
.
Jae~ Kelly, Chair-
Morris wiU be given valuable Government has enlarged the businessmen
,
educational travel the Ithaca College continuing
man of the Faculty, and Mr.
·
time to address himself
.
to idea to include Dr. Kelly and Mr. opportunities, and innovative education program, he took the
Brian Morris, President of the student problems
.
Morris.
class scheduling for both un- state Jicensfog examination and
Student Government.
In sponsoring this program,
_
the
The theatre
·
has been reserved dergraduate
and
graduate received a New York State
The speeches are expected to Student Government brings to for this occasion. There
-
is no courses. His responsibilities also nursing home administrators
outline, from three different fruition a proposal made in the
-
admission
.
It
is hoped that include administration
.
of the license.
perspectives, the state of Marist task force report last year
.
That everyone will attend as it is evening division and the summer _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
College
.
President Foy will be report
·
was formulated after the imperative
_
that we have an in
-
school.
afforded the opportunity to come schedule crisis of last year and formed community.
A
graduate of Iona College, Dr
.
out from behind financial charts the attendant one day student
Panko holds a master of divinity
~;;.;..;;~~;;.:;.;;~.;.,;,;;;;,;,;.;;~.;..;;...;.;.;.;..;...;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,.-;... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,,_., degree from Union Theological
~
The
_
pay schedule forthis semester is as foilows:
Seminary in New York City and a
Ph.D.
·
in humanities from
Time°sheetsduein
·
PayDayat
Syracuse University
.
An or-
.
Financial Office
Business Office
dained Presbyterian minister, he
-
10-18
-
11-15
12-13
12-30
~i.J.
CAN
HAVE C'ONFIDENCE
WHf.rJ
You~
-
CA~.
/NS'lll(AIIC€
eow.s
FAoM MARSHAli. /STERLIN~!
MARSHALL
&'
STERLING,
.
INC.
- Since 1864 -
·
·
·

·,
.
PROFESSIONAL INSURANCE CENTERS
.
',.
.
'
.
.
'
ARLINGTON
·_
·
POUGHKEEPSIE
WAPPINGERS
.
FALLS
44 Plaza
7$
Washington St
.
l;.,per
_i
al l'laza
471-6100
454
-
0800
·
297
-
3701
10-25
11-22
12-20
has served as senior pastor of the
First Presbyterian Church
in
Skaneatales, N.Y.
MOUNTAIN
MUSIC
COME TO:
THE BROWN DERBY
96 MAIN ST.
POUGHKEEPSIE
N.Y. 12601
-FOR A GOOD TIME NIGHTLY-
ARMY-NAVY
STORE
HYDE PARK-ROUTE 9
NEXT TO
DISCOUNT
BEER
STORE





























































































































PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 10,1974
1Hf
• CIRCLE
Letters To The Editors
VOLUME 13 Marist College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
f
u
------------------........ ---------1
ree niversity
.
There are seven major areas of
limited academic experience for
its students." On the contrary,
Marist offers quite an academic
experience for those who wish to
challenge themselves.
Our
program's purpose
is
to enrich
the experience already
.
offered.
·
·
Sincerely,
The Marist College CffiCLE is the weekly newspaper of the students
of Marist College and is published throughout the school year ex-
clusive of vacation _periods by the
.
Southern Dutchess News Agency,
Wappingers, New York.
_
·
.
Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Layout Editor
Photography Editor
Lyn Osborne and Gregory Conocchioli
Irene Ross
TimDeBaun
·
Dave Pristash
Staff: Jerry Profita, Rich Burke, Maureen Dennigan, Chip
Kennard, Dave Kazdan, Julie Schott, Donna Corrado, Eleanor
Bert, Gary Norman, Earnest A. Royal, Debbie Nykiel,
·
Cathie
Russo, Karen Tully, Rich Stevens, Fr. Leo_ Gallant, John Tkach,
Linda France, Jim Kennedy,
.
TomMcTernan Terry Stoutenboro,
Janice Colleran, Pete Provost, Bob Baulch, Brian Morgan, Bob
Nelson, Rhoda Crispell,
Al
.
Adolphi, Bill Rusc,ell, and Frank
Schiavi.
·
To the Editor,
I would like to thank you for
your publicity on the Free
University Program in last
week
'
s paper.
·
However, for a
better understanding
.
of the
program, I would like
to
make a
few
_
clarifications on the
.
article.
Student
-
-
Government
the Free University Program.
These areas are the Curriculum
Series, the Workshop Series, ~e
Film Series the Lecture Series,
the
Dialdgue
Series,
the
Cooperative Ext~nsion Program
and the Academic Quarterly.
It
is
not the program's con
-
tention that
"
Marist offers only a
We are pledging ourselves to
the task of re-arranging the
student governance system. We
To Everyone,
envision
·
a
strong student
In a Circle editorial last week I governance body. But I will no~
.
was invited to shed some light on throw in the towel on the present
the state of the Student Govern- system until a new one is for-
ment. l welcome and accepqhe mulated.
·
The need for student
invitation
;
·
representation before
,.
.
the ad-
BobSammon
Free University Coordinator
.for
homosexual
students,
problems for the handicapped -::-
. I am amazed and saddened that
some people can suggest that the
executive board needs only
-
two
members'. I would like 50
_
workers
.
tomorrow. "Workers", I said, riot
Yes, the Student Government is ministration has not waned one
Business Manager
·
Greg Welsh
in dire need
·
of reorganization. bit
.
'Die need for a student group
.__A_dv_e_rt_is_in_g_M_a_n_ag~e_r ___
1
_
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
T_o_m_M_c_Do_n_a_ld _ _.
·
Authority has been decentralized to work fo_!" rep~al of_the sa!es tax
_
talkers and
·
not philosophers!
,
I
·
say
.
"not philosophers" only
because, to my
_
eyes, the
problems are so clear, the time
for action ~
-
much
.
ul)On us,
.
that
we need a new reality, not an old
-.
vision.
·.
:
·
·
-...
· ·
·
over the last few years to the on textbooks is evident m my
·
extent that
a:
strong
,
centralizing mihd. The need

for a student
force
is
necessary. The Inter- group
·
to come
.
up with and
House Council, the SAC, the CUB, support plans for vitalizing our
and the Commuter. Union need recreational facilities
is
strong.
sonie1ntegration
.
More
·
so;
·
they · And shouldn't some student
need co-ordination. I want this group be working on
·
a student
Editorials
So, I will
be
appointing two new
officers. I
will
work with them to
get a new
.
constitution.
:..
And
-
,
we
.
·
will work together to achieve our
··
F
·
I A
.
-
college
'
s administration
to
know role in the hiring and firing of
·
.
acu
_
ty
.
.
d
v.i
sots
··
-
~tf~!tgo for th~ student view ~~:~~~tfor R:i:ien,p~~~i~~
goals
.
Thank you. •
·
-
-
Sincerely,
Brian Morris
Pr
·
esident of Student Gov't.
.
.
Common Council
Faculty ad~isors hav~ been assigned to ever-y
-
student and each
·
,

·
student is urged to see his advisor as soon as possible. The Circle
Correction .
.
.
·
.
seem
·
as if.this
_
w
_
ere a
_.
pres
_
~nt is
,
"
awaitlng
_
its
_
t
_
ime''
and
_
J.~
:
not
a
.
would like to stress the importance of the advisors.
. ·
Last year.many students
.
experienced severe academic difficulty
>
I.feel
-
it is
_
important
-
to clarify reality;
a
cha
_
nge
·
in
·
the student
-
"reality.
.
.
.
·
There were several reasonsfor the poor pex:fpnnaiice. Some students one of the sections oUhe article governance structure. This
is
not
l
.
would
welcome
.
any
had overloaded schedules. Soine had listened to the advice of their done on my new position, which the case. During the Summer sugges~io11s
from:
. ·
various
·
peers and ended up with the wrong courses. OtfJers knew that they appeared in last
.
week's
.
Circle. Leadership
..
Workshop; tfJe
-
:
quarters
.
of
.
the campus
:
con~
.
were having problems, but were too shy to talk to ariyone about it.
'
·
The section in
·
question refer.red vadous
·
'.
student
_
govern~
_
nce
·
·
cerning new structures or
_
new
.
We feel that if the need for faculty adv
_
isors had been emphasized to the new addition
to
Stud
_
ent bodies examined possibilities for directions for
.
our
·
student
mote, both to the student and to the advisors; some of these students Government,
-
which
.
was a
.
new directions and new ·struc:.
·
govern\rig body
:, _
·
·
might not have had as much difficulty
.-
We urge each
,
advisor to talk Comrnon Council or Student
-
--
lures, orie
.
of these being the
> .
-
••
·
· .
_
_
Sincerely
;
with the students
.
and to carefully consider each one's schedule
;
_.
Seriate
.
·
.
·
- ·
Common Council
of
.
students;
~
,
FrederickA. Lambert
especLJ-
~
in
the case of the
'
freshmanwho might be taking upper level
The tone of the article made it however,
_
itis still airidea, which
··
·
-
Df~~~tor of Campus Life
·
courses without knowing it.
·
.
.
·
·
. .
.
· ·
·
_
·
On the other hand, it i~ necessary that ea
"
ch st~dent goes to see
.
his
.
_
..
·
..
~-
-
-
"
·
,
,
_ _
_
Sec
t
et~r:6:ould b~
·
con1bin"ed a~d
.
Gov
.'
t.
"
i said that the time was
·
.
.
~:~:
0
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-
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·
P~~si~ly help
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Thetirclehopesthateach~~µdentandhis'aavisor
·
yii1(periocµcally'.
:
··
·
·
,.
"
·
·
···
··
.
·
•. ··
·
· · ·
·
·
·
·
·
ht tli
·
"bl'
··
,
...
-.~- ~
-
....
discuss problems, courses, and schedtilirig so that there will not
·
.
be a
Mi~reptesent:atio·ns
'
,:
·
~~1~~yd~~WY%~~r
.
~!t\th~ ascr~~~·rltiJid
-
to
your
edit~rfal,
recurrance of last year's academic PFObJeffi:s.
·
·
·
·
.
.
'. -
·
·
"middle
·
of the road" course>It
.
if
you had considered all
3
of my
To the Editor
:
·
cannot be all
'.
things to all people
.

reasons for resignation, including
Wednesdays
.
.
.
As the semester wears on; it becomes more difficult to determine
when one weekend ends ancl another begins: more and more, people
are taking advantage of "free" Wednesdays afforded them by the new
schedule and enjoying themselves to the fullest, often putting the rest
of us at a disadvantage.
.
.
.
Those who originally opposed the new schedule on the grounds that
just
such a problem would
·
arise have had the somewhat dubious
satisfaction of seeing (and hearing) their fears re
_
alized.
.
-
·
·
It
is
a toss-up as to who is more miserable comeWednesday morning
-the teachers, who find it hard enough under nonnal
.
comlition to keep
the attention of students for

hours, let alone students who can
barely keep awake (either due to hangovers from the
"
if
you can't
beat 'em" philosophy or as a result of beingawoken as each new wave
·
.
returned home); or the students themselves.
.
.
.
,
.
· .
·
Retwo articles in the October
3
and
·
·
I could
:
not, ingood
·
con-
.
the irregularities involved in the
issue of the
·
Circle entitied science
,
contiriueto
.
pl_ay politics Vice-Presidency issue, I' doubt
"Resignations Abotind as·
_
Chris with issues such as the dormitory that you could
.
have found
·
my
Wise Joins Tackney
JJ
and structu
_
res; the tennis court resignatiori "suspect"
.
A human,
·
Editorial:
"Resignations", project and the choosing of a vice even personal reaction perhaps,
..
several errors, misquotes
·
and president.
·
· ·
·
_
·
·
_
·
'
·
·
but" not
"
suspect"
.
.
• ·
.
misrepresented facts should be
.
_
3)
·
·
The
··
-
-
catalyst of iny
.
H
-
You describe the
"im-
corrected. llistthem in the order
,
resignation (I doubt that I
,
ever portant, ~lbeit routine" ciutiegof
in .. which they appeared in the called it "the straw that broke the a secretary. As
-
I stated
.
earlier,
articles.
.
·
. ·camel's
.
.
backt>) was my aps my official duty ·was keeping
. ·
A - I, Chris Wise, am
a
senior~ pointment as Vice-President by
.
minutes of
.
meetings. All other
.
not a junior.
·
Brian Morris, and his subsequent tasks (which
I did all summer,
B - I resigned (and you can retracting of the post. _ ; .
_
i~~identally)
·
su(!h_ · as typ~g,
_
_
check the Student Gov Ts
.
copy of
D · I !lever h~d
.
.
m1Sgivmgsa filing, ma11i~g
.
notices;
.
etc.
:
a.re
·
my
·
resignatiqn) on
'
Monday
,
,,.
abou_t bemg appomted, rather, I
-
handled
.
by
:
the
0
wo~k~study
September
23
,
5
.
long and un-
.
_
cons1~ered the gestu~e made last se<:retary
·
w
_
ho re~eives
_
'(I
.
settling days
·
after Charlie Apr 11 _,
.
pa rt i cu tar
l
y

bel_1e~e) $6
_
00. for her
:
services
.
.
Tackney did
.
·
··
m:agnarumous ..
,
.
_
.
.
This 1s as it should be, but ren-
:
·
C"' My reasons were:
.
E :--
If
;
as the a~icle s~tes, I ders
_
the StudenL
_
Government
This year was to be one of
!
'norms" in the dorms'"°'.
.
but ~Ile blame fo°r
rowdy climates is many of the residence halls should not fall
.
otithe
residence staff alone. In most
·
cases the residence staff
.
has done
.
an
1) My
..
conviction that the
_
was
.
offered theVice-Pr~sidency Secretary somewhat redundant
_
·
Secretary
_
o(the Student Gov't_ is on September _19 and it was not
·
and ~his is w~y I felt I could sel"'.e
:
a role whose time has come - and retracted until September
_
20,
:
as Vice-President as well as take
-•
gone. Especia~y sin~e the _only Why
_
wo~d I, have resi~ed onthe minu
_
~ o_r else save us all $200.
excellent job in preserving
·
quiet.
· ·
.
.
_
.
,
As
the time for re-evaluation of the schedule nears, we feelthat no
examination of overall effects would be· complete without serious
consideration of the "partying" problem and its relation to the
duty
_··.
was takmg mmutes
.
and 19th. I didn t.
.
··
-
by resigrung.
keeping the office open. I felt the
.
·
F
·
-
In
_reference _to ''.fast"
,
·
jobs
·
of
·
Vice-President and
·
·
chang~s bemg made
_
m
Student
mid week break
.
,
-
·
The Circle itself has no quarrel with the idea of personal enjoyment
-.
_
(we have quite
_
a time ourselves
·
occasionally) but we do feel that
enj~ymen~
_
a~
.
the e~nse of others is nothirig
·
more than blatant
selfishness without which we'd ALL be better off.
.
·

.
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
During'the past week the CIRCLE has received many comments on
·
the content

of some
·
of last week's articles, and not all of
.
them
favorable. (Just take a look at the ''I.etters"column for a sampling!)
..
We
would like to take this opportunity
_
to state that the CIRCLE
sincerely regrets ariy direct misquoting that may hav
_
e taken place
during the course of some of the interviews.
·
-
. .
·
·
However, we would aiso poirit out
.
that our staff is unexperienced in
the art of interviewing and
·
that if
.
those
.
persons
·
being interviewed ·
would make themselves giore
.
clear :when 13peaking to ~ur- r~porters,
perhaps the need for
_
''clarificati
_
on" may·_notarise,
:.
·.
·
·
·
·,
-
,
·
'

·
. '
i
.
'

,_.
:
.


·
1
-'
:
<
·
.•
·
-
·
:
.
.
~~-
.
·
.
.
Thankyou,
·
CµrisWise
-
'
.
.
\
.




























OCTOBER 10,1974
TIIECIRCLE
Wishnow Hired By Foy;
S<ir~eizliCommuniCatiollLink
their field of study as well as circling-the globe's longitude and
ByMaureenDennigan
·
assisthiminhis dealings with the langitude and crossing the
st~!lent -
community.
The Atlantic, via balloon.
·PresidenfLimis Foy has hired program is only for two years,
Mobility is a priority high on
Harold Wishnow,· a City College within which time tuition and Wishnow's list, the flexibility to·
of New York graduate-Of salary are allocated the position, move wherever and to do
-psychology, as his new assistant as well as the,_experience of whatever a person likes. He
and intercomrimnicative · unk working through the presidents attributes much of his versatility
between the_ administration and office.
·
·
to luck, considering himself a
student body;_ · ·
.
Wishnow obtained his B.A. · iri very lucky person in terms of
• _ _Dnder.PresidentFoy, Wishnow psycho1ogyfromCCNY,taughtin- be_ing able to recognize a
wil~ ~erv~ as an ea~ to stud~nt the New · Yor}5 public school situation for whatit is and has to
· acttvity ,· i~ hopes. of mtercepti_ng. system for three -years, is a offer, and moving with the
.. any complications that may arise licensed pilot,·· locksmith, and current, thus reaping the benefits
as _a. !esult o_t_ poor com~ free wheelinjfspirit
.
with a host of of all it has to offer.
murucatio~.
It · i~ hope_d that commendable accomplishments
Wishnow
is
busy taking ad-
through his dealings with the under his belt
vantage of - Marist's . offerings
student _body, a_g~eater . un-
He . is , responsible
for while in his•situation- here. As a
~erstanding of _their needs and establishing the country's first Champagnat House resident, he
. mvolv.emen~
Wl~
be brought to. educational:... bi-lingual_ d~ug is more than amply exposed to
.
!.~!L-,t~ttt~r~l?P-
{_?!;;)A; ·
,
a:d- progra~,
~ER~:
.(~erv1ce, student activity
:
and influence,
- m1n1s ra ion. · - · • · · . -- •
edu5!at10n, ,~ehab1htat_1on and which' should •aid. him in his at-
Wishriow was hired under a two. addicti~n), ·of
,
- which · he: .was . tempts to establish a more supple
yearprogramc:>f President Foy's, deeply mvolv~d fortw~ years.·He- and meaningful liason between
available to·. graduate• students spent n:iuch time tourmg Eurol?e the college administration and
· who · are' given _, the
op- something he hopes to resume m student population.
portunity to do graduate work in fulfilling his life ambition of
PAGES
Sponsor Workshop
By Earnest A. Royal
A
Creative
Dramatics
Workshop coordinated by Daniel
Edgecomb, Lucy Squicciarini
end Lisa Mccarrol will be
sponsored by the Childrens
Theater this year. The workshop
is designed to orientate people for
the dramatic experience and
instill
confidence
before
auditions
for
upcoming
productions.
The workshops will be held
every other Thursday beginning
October 10 in the Campus Center,
room 268. They will be broken
down into four different sessions
of at least one to two hours. The
workshops will include exercises
using the five natural senses, as
_ _well as a role playing, sensitivity,
movement,
sound,
dance,
imagination and creativity.
The workshop of November 7
will feature a demonstration and
also a video taping of a
professional
mimist (pan-
tomime). On the 21st of
November Doris Morrison will
sponsor a dance - workshop
featuring cultural as well as
modern dance.
When asked -;vhat is the main
thrust of the dramatics workshop
Dan Edgecomb replied, "The
workshop
is
designed to augment
the theatre productions on
campus in a dramatic sense."
The workshops are also designed
to expose students to the ex-
perience of drama as well as the
creative;
experience.
The
workshop of December 1 which
will be the final workshop, will
also encompass auditions for the
childrens theatre.
It is the general sentiment of
the players of the Dramatics
Workshop
that
creative
dramatics is informal drama
which exists for the enjoyment
and benefit of the players
themselves.
It encourages and
guides the creative imagination,
develops confidence and spon-
taneous creative expression.
All members of the student
body are urged to participate in
these dramatic workshops. For
further information members of
the coordinating staff may be
reached at 471-8497.
Howard Wishnpw (on right) and unidentified friend took tim! to pose for tlns
infomial
shot
Bennett Holds Fall Weekend
BEFORE THE FALL
Capricorn recording artist,
Livingston Taylor, is the featured
attraction of the Bennett College
Fall Weekend Folk Concert on
F,riday, October 11. Slated for
· 8:30 P.M. in Harkaway Theatre
on the - Bennett campus, the
concert will be opened by Reeve
Little, a prominent Boston-based.
musician.
-
Liv __ Taylor, youngest in a
family of well-known song
stylists, will _ be _ making . his
second. appearance at Bennett
since 1970. Liv's performance
promises to be as entertaining as
his standing-room-only per-
formance four years ago. Tickets
go on sale for Bennett students,
Monday, October 7 and for others
on Wednesday, October 9 bet-
ween
10
A.M. and 3 P.M. and 7
and 9 P.M. near the campus shop
in the Campus Center. On Friday,
October 11, tickets will be on sale
until 5 P.M. The price of tickets
for Bennett students with
stickered i.d.s is
$4,
$5
for others.
As of noon on October 11, all
tickets will be
$5. Since seating is
very limited, interested persons
are advised to buy tickets early.
On Saturday, October 12, a
Bogart Film Fest will be
July and August spent in the west and
ever• so often· trail ends of ·conversations,,
fragments - drifting round in the spaces
-between paragraphs-and people, as if
overheard from a bathroom stall or,
_
-as Joe mentione~ in September, ain~rphous phrases
Soliloquy
overspoken

from a railcar. on 'th.e Loop' -
'-
..
literally in the · wind, . conspiracy and
·
·. collapse
Anonymous
l .
institute
'f
o
Open
By
Bob Nelson
Tonight, I hacf nothing in
particµlar to do, so I picked up a.
map of the world that was lying
on my desk, and looked it over for
a while. Maps have always
fascinated· me. Man was able
to
represent the surface of the earth·
on paper, long before astronauts
were able to verify the shapes of
the continents from space. Can
(CPS). - Feminist philosophy history, psychology, creative the earth really be so diverse as
will _be _the f~cus of .the Sa_gari'!s writing, political theory. and this piece of paper shows it to be?
Institute, a_ college ope~mg m j?urna~ism from a feminist Over a hundred and forty
, Burlington, Vermont m the"-Vl~,wpomt.
,, .
political divisi~ns ~rowd a planet
summer .of 1975.
. .
_ _ .. Present courses, . noted Dr. made increasmgly smaller by
Billed asa !ffeminist-humani_st:.toan Peters,
OJ?~
of the foun~ers, improved communications. Look
alternative" _·.to · the m~le- _ ,Jeave something ~o be desire~. · at
·
all those places you will
· dominated ·-higll.er:
.
_education-·
·
probably- never get to. And
. system in this countq,, U1e scho?l ·
Continued
011
page
8
wonder atthe variety of peoples,
. -_will offer.·· courses m women s
cultures,
_
and -customs ·' which
match the lines, colors, and
characters on this map.
What does Bamako, the capital
of Mali, look like? Are. there
shady, palm-lined streets· with
white stucco houses? Are there
small brown general stores, with
wid!;l porches and a Coco-q>la
sign out front? Are there sand-
storms or rainstorms? More
importantly, what are · the
political, economic, · social,
cultural, and religious changes
that the past twenty years have
brought?
·
I closed my eyes and plopped
my finger down on another spot
on the map. Talaimmannar,
Sri
Lanka. The former British colony
of Ceylon .. Talaimmannar is a
port city. What color is the sea at
Talaimmannar? Blue? Blue-
presented in M-K Auditorium.
"Casablanca"
and
"The
Treasure of the Sierra Madre"
will be shown between 2 and 5
P.M. Admission for non-Bennett
students will be $1. Saturday
evening an 11-piece soul-rock
band "The New Revolution" will
be featured at a- dance in the
Campus Center between 9 ,P.M.
and 2
A.M.
Admission for non;.
Bennett students will
be
$1. The
entire weekend is sponsored by
the Student Activities Com-
mittee. For further information,
call 677-8281 or 677-3441 ext. 245.
green? Are there coral reefs and
sandy beaches, or straw huts and
flies and squalor?
Harnmerfest, Norway. This
city
is also on the sea, but at the
mouth of a long Norwegian fjord.
I wonder if there are any trees at
Hammerfest. What can life be
like, five hundred miles north of
the Arctic circle? What
is
the
history, a cumulation of years
and peoples and places, projected
into the present, of Hammerfest?
Talca,
Chile;
Urumchi,
Sinkiang, China. Hargeisa,
. Somalia. Makasar, Indonesia.
Petropavlo\l'sk, Kazakhistan,
U.S.S.R.
Wagga
Wagga,
Australia. Atagilari, Brazil.
Moundo,
Chad.
Yamagata,
Japan. La Rochelle, France.
Poughkeepsie, New York.







































































































l
/
I
~)
~<
PAGE6
Code
99
.
By Fr.
Leo
Gallant
wasn't)° when I heard of more
students' inhumanity to students.
I experience many colors at I used to
think
that one residence
Marist. Recently I encountered
hall
was the greatest on
this.
the warm sWllight GOLD when I
.
campus and it seems to have
saw a group of students initiating deteriorated so much this year.
such inspiring programs for the
Then I felt YELLOW because I
people of Honduras. A catholic want to get something going on grumbling because he had gone
chaplain in a nearby college told
this
campus and I don't have the as a guest to the home of a sin-
me he couldn't move a soul fort-
guts. Butthat YELLOW is slowly ner." (Lk. 19,6) "You are a Jew
hat cause. Here students needed turning to another hue because and I am a Samaritan. How can
no push.
.
I'm beginning to feel that it's a you ask me for a drink of water.
I encountered a soft glowing
tremendous privilege
.
to identify Jews will not use the same dishes
SILVER when a student brought
with One who was accused of that Samaritans use." (Jn. 4,9).
a doggie bag from a restaurant associating with outcasts. "Why
If
minorities can find a friend
for
·
Maggie.
. · ·
does he eat with such people?" in me, if others grumble because
I felt a GREEN of hope when a
(Mk. 2, 16)
"If
this man were a
f
th t th
1 'd tif
'th Chr' t
handicapped student told me
prophet, he would kriow who this
O
a
en i en
Y
wi
·
is
th
and I walk his road paved with
ere was talk of putting an
woman
is
who
is
touching
him;
he people, lonely moaning outcasts,
elevator in the student
,
Union.
would
.
kriow what kind of sinful with both hands held out. I'm not
Ifel! very BLUE
(It
could have
life she leads." (Lk. 7,39)
"All
the my brother's keeper. I am
-
my
been
a
RED of anger, but it
people who saw it started brother's brother.
Commentary
By Greg Couocchioli
·
You_ must apply for foreign program.
.
· ·
.
·
study, and the application
is
Programs are planned with a
For those students who are available
to
·
all
·
students budget in mind and are relatively
unaware of the International presently enrolled
in
a public or inexpensive. Academic year
Study Abroad Program · ad- private institution in New York programs cost between
$3000-3500
·
ministered
·
by
.
the
State state. Deadlines vary
.
for each including tuition, room and
University otNew York, here
is
program,
_
but the majority fall board, books, fees; air travel
some info~tion and
.
~e~ils f~r between now (October) and (round trip), spending
,
money
th?se who wish to part1c1pate m March. Applications require and a field trip or other fet:s for
this type of p~og~am.
.
.
a c ad em i c
in fo rm at i
O
n , belonging to the program. The
OCTOBER 10, 1974
Coun~il
Ch~nges;
Restruc~uring
By
Tim
De Haun
The council
is
made up of the
director of campus life; an ad-
The Inter~House Council is ministration representative,
being restructured this year as a Gerald Cox; a Housemaster
result of the cha'lges made in
r
epr e sent a ti v e, Don al d
administrative duties. A ne\11 Honeman; a faculty represen-
constitution is presently under tative, Zavier Ryan;
two
consideration by the council to represe_ntatives from
.
Benoit,
affect these changes.
Francis Sanabria and
·
Andre
The co_uncil was originally Green; two fr~m Champagnat,
formed as an advisory group to · Bill Hoar, president, and Mary
Jo
the residence director.·However Tracy; two from Gregory,
th~t position has been phased out ~ichael ~ip and Tim DeBaun,
this year,
_
and
·
has been in- vice-president; two from Leo,
corporated into the duties of the J.R.
.
Dempsey ·and Beth
.
Ed-
director of campus life.
As
a
·
wards; and two from Sheahan,
result of a leadership workshop Carol Sheehan and Mary
_
Ellen
held on campus this past sum- Brosn~n.
·
.
mer, it
.
was decided
.
by the
U
is
·
t~e duty of each
director of ~~mpus life that the representative to get a feedback
council should be more than just on a~ proposals made by the
an advisory group.
·
.
counctl from the groups they
Since Fred Lambert
the
·
represent. The ouncil initiates
director of campus life, will be in no
_policies
__
wit~out
.
firs~ cons
charge of all
·
campus activities
.
sultmg

the
-
vanous residence
.
ahd groups as
.
well as the halls on campus.
.
_
residence halls, he has given the
The
.
council _wi~ vote
·on
the
·
·
Inter-House Council the power to propose~ constitut10n tomorrow.
legislate campus
..
wide residence They will
·
then concern
.
them-

policy. And; as the proposed selv~s with a contractfor campus
constitution states, "to assist the housing.
.
.
.
director of campus life in the
.
Open
·
meetings will
.
be con-
performance of his duties· to ducted this
_
year
-
with the
assist in
.
coordinating the ' ac-
.
stipulatio1!
·
that
,
the

council
·
can
·
ti vi ties
-
of the
.
.
various house
·
call for a closed meeting if the
councils and to act as facilitator need arise and is agreed upon by
for matters p
_
ertaining
to
the well two-thirds of the council. A
-being
and interests of
'the
meeting place has not yet been
residence
.
students."
·
set for the
·
meetings.
·
,
.
·
-
Presently,-~ m
~
London with references from teachers, and yearly program costs ap-
th~
~~te,Uruyers1ty of Os~ego acquaintances, permission of proximately the same as
,
Marist
participat1:0g m an Intern~tional parents _ or guardian, and a costs now, but there's
·a
whole·
Broadc~tmg ~rogram at the medical reference.
,
A
_
deposit ,>f
-new
experiEmce and theoretically
Poltechnic Institute of _Cen
_
tral
$100
.
.
is
.
required before your the overall yearly cost is lower.
London _as a _Commurucat~o11s application can be processed. The state University programs
A
· ·
·
Arts ma3or. This program
-
is a Thisofcourseisrefunded,ifyou are
..
divided up by majors and
-
.
· .
.
·
·
nn
· ·
o·u
·
·
n
·
·
ce...-ne
·
· n
·
t
·
,me
semest~r program; although are not accepted or if up
t
9
two programs
-
with
.
each different
-

.
·
.
·
.
.
.
.
·
.
, .
• •
11
·
.
full _academic ye~r programs are weeks after your acceptance
.
State University
.
. acting as a
·
_,_
avT!il!3ble.
.
. .
th t f
.
should
.
_you
-
decide n
_
<it

to
-
par.: director for that program. While
Dr
·
. Daniel Rodas: lectµrer in Financing
·
. America's
. -
·
Early
.
JS.
my opm1on
a
.
oreign ticipate.
.

...
.
mine comes under Oswego,
history at MaristTollege, will be Transportation System."

.
_
·
·
·
stud)'.
-
1.S
f
Jr
_eve~yone
~h? has a
state University students who
.
languages
.
comes under New
a guest speaker at the
-
fall
·
con-
A
member of the American
gemune cunousity a willingness study abroad remain registered Paltz and History
:
under Brock-
ference on Regional Economic Historical
.
Association and the
to learn, _courage_ ~nd t?e overall at their home
.
college
·
and
<
pay
.
. port, etc,
.
The
_
qu!ckest way to
Hi~tory to ~e he;d at_Ele~therian Organization
of American
.

·
academic nua\1hcations.
'.
The
-
· ·
·
._
·
..
'
·
·
·•
· ··
·
·
·
·-f·
·
d
·
·
t
-
·
h.-t
·
·
h
·
·
1
··
·
· ·.
·
·
Mills
Historical
Library
·
H' t
·
·
H d
h
'
ld
·
BA
,
,
.
.
.
, •..
.

lie·
.•
·

·
-
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.
.
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--c.tu1t1on-_to thatJ~oll
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are
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:
:
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.
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,
is onans,
.
o as · o s a
.
.
,
qua
1.1ca
1ons
1
er_ among ea~li from _ noll.:state
"."
:
·
urriv'er-sittf-~mg
:
sllpervu;e:d
~
by
,
would
-
be ,to-
:
.. Gr~envill
.
e;
;;;:
DeL
~
on_,Dctober
-.2L
,
MA. and PhD from New York
.
program and their
.
academic schools : are
.
a:utoniaticaHy' call the Internation~l Center at
·
A
.:.
.
formal
·
-
post.:gradu1:1te University. He
t:tncf
his wife
purp?se. Most
.
of the programs enrolled as visiting students to New Paltz or
.
write to: In-
research fellow

at Eleuthenan Rosalie
.
reside at 2 St. John's
require a good a~ademic record, Oswego and pay
-
tuition to ternational Center, Rich Hall,
Mills
.
Hi~torical Library, Dr. Parkway,
:
Poughkeepsie. They
per~nal maturity, and go~d Oswego, as well as a registration S.U.N.Y. Oswego, Oswego, New
Hodas will speak about "The
.
have three children.
physwal. health. ~rograms . m fee at Marist. It's very important Yorkl3126,
Merchant
.
as
·
Fittanceer:
·
·
non-F~ghsh spea~mg . coun~nes to note that at Marist all visiting
·
The_ only drawback
.
that I've
sometimes reqmre
.
prev1?us student applications go through experienced so far has been the
·
knowled~e o!
the
foreig!1 the Department
.
Chairman, lack of housing
_
in London: I'm
language, but m some cases
_
1t Registrar's Office and Dean stiHwithout permanent lodgings.
has been learned on th
_
e spot. Cox's office. rrs also important ·However it 1l_a~ been fun finding
Som_e upper-lev_e~ prograll'!s to know that as a visiting student out about the city
_
a
.
s you walk all
dealing m specific academic
-
you are still eligible for·financial around
.
trying ·to find suitable
content. .
have
.
course aid through Marist (Marist grant accommodations,
·
so you could
prereqmsite~.
.
in aid not applicable) and scholar say the· only drawback has been
The
~~t
tun~ to sta
rt
plannuw incentive awards through
.
the another experience and fun.
to particip~te m the prograll'! is state. When you return the
I write this mainly as an of-
now. Durmg these plannmg academic work successfully fering to stuqents who have been
.
sta~es ma~e s~e that the ex- completed
·
(Marist requires at put out or rejected
·
by Marists'
~nence_ fits_ mto your total least a C in all visiting student
-
o_wn orogra~
,
~nd its at-
academic picture
.
Will the programs) credits can be titudes and obJectives for each
program_ o~fered count
·
toward transferred
if
your program has student; While l too would have
your ma3_or. If not, can you take been approved by the Depart- preferred to go through MAP,
the re1uired c
_
ourses when you ment and the Registrar. Usually things
·
didn't work ~mt that way;
return. What about P;ofessional you earn 6-9 credi~ in an eight
.
·
_
.
_:
:
.
se~esters an~ exams·
~
these week summer program and 12~15
·
Continued on
page
.
a
things count ~n the end picture! credits· in a one semester
·
RosE
·
v1
,
Ew
.
FARMS
EQUESTRIAN CENTER
·
.
.
DUTCHESS HILL ROAD
POUGHKEEPSIE,
N.
.
.
,
.
.
H'WOf
'
Y.
U,tll.

~
. "
!Off UST DORSEY LANEI
914-4°71-1918
-
)
.
\\\6
.
·
.
.
Leave Your Head
to
Us!
GUTTERY'
_
-.
UN\~SEX
F ~
/
HAIRCUTTING
BLOW
,
DRYING
S
6 with
-
STREAKING, FROSTING
&
PERMANENT.WAVING
Marist ID
CALL
454-9239
for your appointment now
ON
.
THE MAIN MALL
.
3
LIB■RTY STR■■T
(Above Capitol Bakery)
Entrance Around Corner
Frank
1
s
Restaurant
-
.
Draft.Beer
8oz>
·
glass .
,,
25~
-·_
:Pitch~r.
-
s-2~00
.
.
~
·
--·
)
: ~
.. ----
..
~ ~ - ~
.
•,,~l'lt"r't"....,._,,_..._.-.~-














OCTOBER 10, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
First Of Two Parts
Contraception; Dealing With Varied Approaches
By
Cathie Russo
(Editor's note: This article was
originally run
in
the Circle last
spring.
It
is
our belief that the
information contained herein
warrants a rerun; and so, we are
once again_ offering this as part
one of a tw<rpart series.)
number of out of wedlock births
Oral · contraceptives are the
may be "wanted", as may be most commonly used form of
those first pregnancies conceived birth control. There are two types
out of wedlock but later of birth control - pills, the com-
legitimized by marriage. To the bination pill and the sequential
extent that these out of wedlock pill. Recent reports have in-
births and "early . marriages" dicated that the combination pill
represent timing failures, they is tile most effective and that it
can be regarded as unwanted for has the fewest harmful side ef-
the ·purposes of this analysis in fect.s. Both types are nearly 100
Understanding sexuality and that they most likely would not percent effective when taken as
-contraception is a vital aspect of have occurred when they did if directed and are considered, next
a responsible existence.
effective contraception had been to sterilization, the most reliable
According to Manuel Garcia, encouraged and available.
way to prevent unwanted
an Executive High School Intern
The Center for Disease Control pregnancy.
working with Youth.and Student. estimated that some four hun- · When a woman becomes
Affairs; parents· allow their dred thousand legal abortions pregnant, he_r body produces
children to receive all kinds of were performed in the U.S. in enough hormones of estrogen and
information concerning drugs, 1972. Statistics from the Joint progesterone to stop the release
health, safety guidelines, etc., Project for Study of Abortion of additional ripened eggs from
but when it came to sex, many California, 'New York, Hawaii, her ovaries. This is nature's way
_teena~ers did not have a direct and Washington State mdicate · of insuring that only one
ana valid source of information to that at least a quarter of these pregnancy will take plaee at a
serve them in whatever way they - abortions were to single young time. Birth control pills add a
nc~d. "Many parents today insist· women in 1972.
·
small dose of · estrogen and
that their teenagers insist sex is
There is little specific data progesterone,. in synthetic form,
only acceptable in ·marriage." available on the extent of illegal to to a woman's natural supply.
This is Mr.-Garcia's explanation abortion. However, analysis of These synthetic hormone, in
for the upsurge of interest and New York data suggests· that effect,
produce
a · . "fake
quest for information about birth .. though legalized abortions ap-
pregnancy" each month and in
control met.hods, once these . pear to have reduced the number this way prevent the release of
young adults find themselves of out of wedlock births, it has not ripened eggs. Thus, no pregnancy
with more independence such as done so to any great extent. Dr. can occur.
on a college campus.
,
Tietze who has done studies on
Before taking birth control pills
Due to the outcome of the lack abortion statistics in New York a woman must wait until the fifth
of · knowledge
about
con-
State, estimates that 70 percent day of her. menstrual cycle,
traception, unwanted pregnancy of the legal abortions of New counting the first day of bleeding
among single American. women York City residents has replaced as Day
1.
Starting · on the fifth
is an issue of grave_· interest to illegal abortions .. This indicates day, she takes one pill a day for
researchers as well as policy that legal abortion is, and has twenty or twenty-one days, at
makers.
Recent
abortion been, quite. widespread.·
about the same time each day.
statistics indicate- the extent of
For the sexually active female,· There are, however, some brands
unwanted pregnancy, exceeds birth control rather than_ abortion of pills that are taken each day
that
of
unwanted
births, seems the most viable prevention .for the entire twenty-eight day
especially for the unmarried. In of unwanted births. The various cycle. It is wise to select a time in ·
many cases an abortion, legal or methods of birth control, their the middle of the day to take the
illegal,in all but a few cases, is.a advantages and disadvantages pill so that the irregularities of
response ·
to
an unwanted and their relative reliability need awakening and retiring cannot
pregnancy; A somewhat greater to be discussed.
·
. interfere with ~aintaining the
schedule.
If
a pill is forgotten for
less than twenty-four hours, it
should be taken as soon as
remembered.
If
more than one
pill is forgotten, all the pills
which were missed should be
taken as soon as remembered,
but another method of birth
control must be used in addition,
since the hormone level of the
body may have dropped to the
point of permitting the ovaries to
release a ripened egg.
Birth control pills are popular
because they eliminate the need
to plan for intercourse. They are
also popular because they are
easy and inexpensive to use. Most
of all, it is their effectiveness
when taken as directed.
_
A woman who wants to take
birth control pills must consider
that the long range effects of
taking synthetic hormones are
not yet certain. Every woman
who wants to take birth control
pills must first have a thorough
physical
examination
and
discussion with her physician or
gynecologist. Some women do
have side effects while taking the
pill. Such sy~ptoms as nausea,
fungus infection, weight gain or
loss,
tender
breasts
or
depression. Sometimes all that is
needed is a change from one
. brand of pills to another, but in
some cases the woman must be
taken off of the pills entirely.
Women with a history of blood
clotting, varicose veins, thyroid
disease, or cancer will probably
not be allowed to take the pills at
all. A woman taking the pills who
develops any of tpe following
symptoms should immediately
call her doctor: frequent or
persistent
headaches,
discoloration of the skin, unex-
plained pains in the chest,
unusual swelling of the ankles,
shortness
of
breath, any
disturbance in vision such as
seeing double or any loss of
vision, unexplained pains in legs,
lumps or growths of the breast or
persistent vaginal bleeding.
Out ot 100 women using birth
control pills for one year, only
one-tenth of one percent will
become pregnant. (Next week a
discussion of other birth control
devices.)
RUNNING FOXES, Continued
from page
8
Marist was also scored on a
dual meet basis against the
University of New Haven so that
they would not have to make the
trip to Marist later in the year.
Marist recorded their fourth
shutout of the season to set a new
record for most shutouts in a
single season. The Big Red
Running Machine travels to Van
Cortland Park this Saturday for a
double-dual meet against New
.York Maritime and Brooklyn
College and then the team races
the Marist cross country alumni
in an alumni race at 4 4PM in a
2.5 mile race on the Marist high
school course. Last year the
current team beat the alumni 23-
34. Later at 7:30 PM, the team
fetes the alumni in a banquet at
the Camelot Inn in Poughkeepsie
in the traditional Marist Cross
Country Alumni Banquet.
ROCKIN' STEREO SOUND
-
7
NIG.HTS WEEKLY
-
*
·*
*
FREE:--DRINK, WITH THIS AD
*
*
*
:A GREAT NEW NIGHT_S.POT!!!
168 MILL ST. POUGHKE.EPSIE.






































































































































PAGES
Marist' hooter, Tnn
Trotta moves in
on
a
shot
in
Saturday's victory.
·
·
.
.
·
FoxefExcelJnRunningWeek
/
OCTOBER 10, 1974
Switch Sparks
Hooter's ViCtory
·
half as Biff Daino replaced Jay
Metzger for the Red Fo=es. Tony
·
·
Seeking to b.,J.ster an offense Ciccone got Fairfield back in the
d ed
·ust
7
ls ·
game with a goal atthe 1: 25 mark
that had pro uc
J
goa m to narrow it to 2-1; But the Stags'
four games, Marist soccer coach rough
_
play-led to their own un-
Howard Goldman
-
made a
·
line
switch that
.
sparked the Red doing.
.
. /
.
·
Foxes
to
a 5-1 rcimp over Fair-
·
Captain Tom McDonald scored
field Saturday at Leonidoff Field .
.
.
an insurance goal· at 3:57 after
The
.
move, which· · had Vito
.
John M~raw was knocked down
Aprigliano and Tim Trotta switch attempting a shot on goal. Mc-
positions on the forward line,
.
Donald, who played an out-
paid instand dividends. With just standing game at fullback,
1
:29
into the game, Aprigliano
·
unleashed a booming drive to the
converted a centering pass from
.
)lpp~r
right co~er that Stag
right winger John
·
Metzger for his
.
goalie Sean Harngan could
·
only
fourth goal in five games and a 1-
_
wave at La~r Mc~ona~d
.
sent
o
lead.
·.
-
· ·
.
·
. .
the ball
,
upfield_ to Aprig_hano,
By
Tom McTernan
·
·
Fairfield had played well
t~
.
who
.
se( up McGraw wit~ a
that pou.itand Marist goalie Jay,
_
perfect
.,
.
paqs _on
·
left
~m
9.
Metzger was busy right from the
·
.)\fcGraw
s
'.
~11-t over ~amgan s
start playing outfielder to Jhe head made 1t-:4-1 ~nd signa~e~ a
Stags' high
,
shots. Four minutes
-
-
wave of substitutions f?r ~arist,
·
·
·
·
-
·
·
after the initial goal, the visitors 8:s all
:
~layers saw action
m
the
The Marist Running Red Foxes ~as the Marist coach's response. competed
·
in
.··
the invitational. misplayed a corner kick and Bill
.
finat_mm1;1tes.
.
.
had an excellent week of r:unrung Rukanshagiza is a
·
Kenyan Marist beat the ,1973 third and
.
_
Putre headed the
-
ball ofa Stag
.··.
Al Robinson _scored ~he final
last
,
weelt
·
·
beating

tliree
·
o~ runner
·
attending Sie
.
na who
__
fourth place
.
finishers Stonehill fullback into the net
'
for
:
his
,
first
.
goal after takmg an mbounds
ponents in
,
their regular
:
season placed second in
·
the NCAA
.
College and Brya11t College
.
easily
.
goal of the season
.
and
-
Marist led pass
·
f~om Doug Morg~n and
.
-
schedul~ and placing
.
well in their Division
II
National"
-
Cross Jor third place. LehmaQ College
2-0
:
at halftime.
·
:
·
..
.
·
'.
convertmg f
_
rom
,
theieft side. ~.
second invitational of the season.
.
Country
..
_
Championships
·
last' actually finished fourth this year
.
,
It
was not one of the Red Foxes'
_
after four close games, Marist
FirsttpeMaristharriersbeatone .
.'
year.
.
..
.

·
·
. .
,,.
.
c:
just
.
ahead of Fairfield
·
Univer-
.
ilettergames.Insteadofburying got a breath
_
er. 'Ibe
_
Red
-
Fox~s
of the top teams'in ~he state when
Freshman standouf;George
:
c
sity.
. .
.
. .
.
.
. .
.
.
.
·
.
· ·
the visitors;
·
Marist became
.
took 21 shots at Harrigan and his
they topped
:
Oneonta
.
State 26-29 Mccutcheon backed up
'
Kolthay
\
F'red Kolthay
,
Jed
:
the -Marist disorganized
.
on offense and the
.
replacemen,t, Larry Sweeney,
·
at
.
New
.
Paltz
:
on
i
W~dnesday; with ariother
'
great
.
run
·
and r~ers
:
again
).Ii
a
·
Strong fifth defen~e
:
w.as
_.
out of _position ori
who
.
.
stopped 13.
·
The
·
Stags
Marist also shutout New Paltz 15- placed .second in
..
the
'
.
meet only pJace runwhere he averagecl 5:01-- . numerous
: ..
occasions
once
·
managed 16 shots at Jay Metzger
50
;
to ..
set ·
.
a
:recorq.
>
for'
·
most twenty'."two seconds
.
behind for each of his five miles covered. leaving
:
Jay
·
Metzger defenseless

.
(5
,
saves}
.and
Daino (7).
.
_
sh!,ltofits in _a singfe s~a~on, t!tis Kolthay .'.: Brian
.
<:;ostin~
_
:
~laced Brian Costine
.
placed thirteenth, as Fairfielq
.
right . winger Tim
'.!he Red
_
hooters : take th_eir
bemg the Long Red

Une
_
's
.
third
··
fourth;just
.
behind an
.Oneonta .
George
:
M.;~Cutcheon 16th., John Reiley
.
blew
.
a wide~pen shot show on the road, facmg Dowhng
oftlle young season.
,_
·

..
.
·
.
:
x:unner and passed two
·
onec.nta
.-
VanDe1:yoortpth,J\1IkE!_~mmar from lS
'
feeC
·

Saturday and New Paltz Wed-
.
.
·
Oneonta placed thirdlast year
..
runnersduring the last
µiil~
an
·
a 20th, Steve VanKeui'en 24th,
-
and
· .
.
-
The visitors came out deter~
·
nesday. before returning to face
··
in
;
the !,'lew
i
_York ~a
.
te Ups_tate
,
-
halt stretch
;

·
After
:
-
,
four
.
~ore
.
Jim
'
Mc<::asl;md 25th. The top
m m
.
·

.
ed
.
and tough in
_
.
the secorid
Bloomfield Saturday, October 19.
··
Champ1onship
_
s, rrussmg second Oneonta runners crosseclthelme, tweilty~fo:ur runners all received
by
·
only one point Marist had steve
·
VanKeureri
.
and Jim Mc,: tee shirtsfor their fµie runs. The
-_
placed sixtq in
·
the same me~t. ~asland put the finishing touches
.
top
·
.
.
three teams
.
·
_
rec
_
eived
. .
n
·

.
1...
:
.
0
s
.
.
t
·
Th
_
.
.
.
e
_ .
Ha
.
w_k_ s- had most
.
of tJieir on the Marist yictory
.
as they
"
~rophies. Tom
·
Jordan _ placed
-
·
.
.ig.11
n
p
Or s
s:i1.ad back, wb,ile
·
Marist
·
has placed ninth
..
ancl
.
t~µtQ
..
a11c!-
·
..
fourth in the
;
JV
.
race and Jim
.
.
··
,

.
·
.
.
('nly
,t\l'..d'
r_e~urrung
.-
·
l
_
ettei;m~n. comp,eted
.,
the
,
.
~arist;scoring .
.
lfo~an
,
placed
'
'.
seyenth
_,
i!J the
.
.
.
-
.
,
·
~:.
·
·-
,
·
i~>/
i
from theirJop
'.
nirie
(
Oneonta
'
,
had
:
:Both;
of
<
tnese
:,
men
:
..
also
,.
,passed.
::-~e
-,
r'MeAo
\
conjplete.
a- very
.=
/..
. .
..
,
.
.. .
·
·
·
,
·
·
giyen Ma~ ~ts
·
:worse
~o~
_
of
,
.
µt~ .
Oneonta
..
rµnntirs' in
:>
~he
· ,
clo_sing : ~rorig
cl~Y.
for
.
MarisC
<
;_J
C
.•
·
·.
·.
THIS

;
WEEK
-
IN. MARI ST
.
·
last thr,ee·.yea
:
rs when
<
they
'
·distance.:The
.
rest
.
of...the.Marist
>.
'~The
"
·
performance was·'just
·
..
.
THEF
·
AL

·
..
L

'
s
·•
HE
.
L·L
__
···G•
AME
.
_
COLLEGE SPORTS.
druµbed the Red Foxes
·
1942,.two
·
depth
:
wa
'
s· evideiit
:
as Tom· Jor~ great- our best to
·
date. The two
.
.
.
.
y~arsago
_
in a
'
double::dual
.
meet dan·,
..
Mike
.
S(!.r.nmar;_
Wm
tec1ms w-Nch
_
geat
-
us are really
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
_
Saturday,October1_2-Foo~ball
·
at
-
New Paltz:
.
·

·
c'

·
Morrisoii Jim
:

Honan
·
and Jim tremendous teams. But our team
·
The Annual Alumm R.ace,
-
. - Mattatuck at LeomdofCField,
:_-
Marist foach ~ch Stevens was
:
pilleii
:
pl~ce9
_
fourt
_
eenththrough
-
·
-
di9
a

great jo}?
~
na~linJf down
'.
which
:
will be held
.
~hi~ Saturday 2 :00 p.ni.
.
.
.
' .
elated over tl)ev1ctory. "We beat
·
.
eighteenth m the race. Qeoff
.
third
.
Wtl had
_
great times from
.
mornm&. as
-
:
part
.
o_f

the

.
Soccer -
·
at Dowling, 2:00 p.m
.
.
ct
1 eally greatteam! 'Ibey were Phillips
·
completed the Marist all nin
.
e of our runners. Eight
·
of homecommg
.
week~nd; will open
Cross Country - Brooklyn
·
and
O!l
top of
.
us 26-32 atthe
,
3½ mile harriers across the
.
line
;
/
them broktl
-
27:
·
oo minutes on this
.
afour regatta Mar15t_(;ollege fall New .York Maritime
.
at
·
Van
·
~rk,
.
but we had too much
:
~
_Saturdar Marisf placed five~mile
..
course

we had all crew sched~le.
·.
·
.
.
.
.
.
Cort~B:ildt Parki 11 :00 a.m.
.
,
·
strength and endui:a11ce for them .. third. m the
..
rough Soutq_eastern seven of our varsity runners. in
.
Th
_
e
-
~ce
1S
sc?ed~ed to begm
:
.
Sailing - N.evms
.
Cup at Kmg s
.
All
of our runners passed at least- Massachusetts
-University
In- thetopiwentyfivewhich is really at
_
noo? and
~11
kick. off the Point, N.Y:
·'
;
one of them to instire the win. It
·
vitational
in
:
North Dartmouth, great. Oui'teanispreadwas good upc?mm~
-
rowi~g s~ason .. Once
.
. S11!19ay_,_Octo_ber 13.
. ,
·
• was. a
:total
team
·
ef(ort!" the Massachusetts. Defending and it was a total team job. We again, Bill Austm win be_.at_ t~e
.
~~g
- Nevms Cup at ~ll_lg s
Marist coach responded.
champion
Plymout~
State showed our depth and strength he~ f?r
"
the_ Red Foxes; Austm}S
'
Pomt; N.Y.
<

·
Fred Kolthay won the race, showed
its
overpowering well. Again if we can keep our beginning his seventh season as
Wednesday, October 16
.
·
coming just eight
.
seconds from strength as
.
Jhtiy
.
captured first; injuriei.
_
in check, we'll really be head coach.
Soccer- at New Paltz, 3: 30 p.m.
setting a new course
.
record. second,
,
sixth~ eighth, ninth,
.
impressive at the end of
.
the year
·
Cross
.
Country - Nyack and
·
"Fred's run was tremendous. twelfth,andeighteenthplacesfor in the championship meets!" THE1974MARISTFALLCREW
.
.
Siena,'atNyack, N.Y.
·
When y~u are only
:
eight
·
ari amazingly low 26 points. Host said
_
an
·
elated Coach Stevens.
SCHEDULE
·
·
seconds m_back of Siena's Joe SMlJ-placed
:
secondwith61while
·
c
·
·
on
·
t·1nu

·
e
·
·
d
·
on
·
.p
· ..
a
·
·
ge7
-
.
-
.·.
s
·
at. oc
·
t .
.
·
12
....:
,
Af
·
umn
·
i•
_
._
Ra
·
·
c
·
e
·
,
·
DAVIS NAMED ATHLETE OF
Rukanshagiza,
.
.
you
·
know
;
you Marist was
a
close third with 71.
THE WEEK ·
must have been really flymg!" TwelveteamsfromNewEngland
Poughkeepsie; N.Y. Noon.
.
·
€ourts·
·
'f0
Open·
.
'
'
'
.
-
:
·
.
.
,
.
'
'
'
Regulati0lls Listed
.
.
. . .
·
---
The tennis courts are planning to use
-
the courts .
.
The
:
~tt;~~dani
.

·
to open on or around October 11, will be urider strict orders to have
. 3· Guests muSt
·
purchase a
.
1974. 'Ibis depends on the weather Eyeryone
.
show their I.D. or ticket for play from attendant.
as the colored
.
top surface
,
must member$jp card
·
and also sign
Weekdays- Each Guest
-
:-$1.00-
.
have days of 55 degrees or above up for a
·
court.
·

All Day
-
to complete the job .
.
With
The courts will be cipen
··
until :- Weel(ends
_
~
Each Guest -$2.00 -
financial lielp froni the students aroun~ NoveJ!lber 15, 1974, All- Day
.
·
. .
and Mccann F.oundation, · as well depending upon
:
weather. 'Ibey
. 4· A~ion _to the courts will
as
the cooperatio~
.
and work
.
,
of will re-open early
~
the _sp
_
r~g.
·=
be
prohibited ~thout student I.D.
Nilus Donnelly, Lou Greenspan,
Any comments, suggestions, or or memb~rship card:
students;-
_
and the Athletic complaµits can be taken to Mr.
5-
.
Physical ~ducation cla~ses,
Department, Marist College will Ron· Petro, 3rd l}oor, Fontaine. ~heduled
_
t~nms teBI!l practices,
have six au.:weather tennis
.
.
The
tennis
:
courts can provide mter-co~e~iate te~rus
_
matches
courts. 'Ibey are located west
·
of hours of recreational activity
to
:.
~ave priority. See ~ither coach or
the Cliampagnat parking lot
.
.
the entire ~arist
_
community. inst~uctor concern1:~g the use o~
Entrance will be via
a
path whjch
·
~lease abi9e
:
bf t~e rules as sef
th
:
~used_ c~urts.f th
.
thl t·
starts
in back of the Rathr-':ellar.
·
up.
·
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
ermlSSlon
°
e a
e ic
Rules and
·
regulations
·
:
have
1.
·
eo~
1,
~
and
·
3
_
will be
·
department m1;1~ be
.gr~ted
been
set:·
up by
,'
the
.
,
athletic . available for re,servations
.
up to ·.Pf!~~~any t~~~~}_es~n~ can ~be
departm~nt; 'llley appr-11r
.
below .
.
- one_ wee~ in
..
advance. '
_
J._l:ese~-
·
g 7.
-
No
.
food,
.
·bever~ges,
.
· or
-
The tenni~ cow:ts will ~
-
staffed yations.will
be
h~~~ for
,
~~ mmutes smoking
-
··
allowed·

on
.
tennis
--
by~- Marist
_.
Coµeg~_ work-st~dy
.
if.others.are
..
~~utmgc
_.
_
·
.
.courts:
..
-
.;
'.,
.
_
0
;
. . . .
;

• . ' :



-
studen!. ~e
~ll;rts
wilJ
,
be closed
.
2 .
..
Courts
·
4,·5
.
and 6
·
will·_be for
:
-~
8:.Sneakers'
-
cinly.
·,
.-
·
.
·
·
:•:
-
.
~any ou~~er
.
t_inl~
,
a_guest
f~
:
·
P~
play. P!ay
~~
·
~e limi~
to
··:
.
:
..
9;Courtsopenfroni'!i:'oo a·ni
to
. ·
_
IS
.,
:
paid
; :.
OiilY
>
?daiist
.
_Coll~ge_
:
one ho~~rom
.
fl.le
_
t~~
Y,~~
f:M:~
_
Dusk:
:,,
..:
·
.
..
:
..
;
_
.
.-
:
>.<·
.<.
·
·
·
stud~ts with. a yalld
.
I:D. and
..
playing,
if

people
:
are
:
wa1ti!lg.
-
.
.
.. ·
-
.--.
-
'.~
paying members
,
will be
·
~nowed
:
·
p1ease
,
sign . up
:
with attendant;
~
.
-
.
. . .
.
...
.
.

.
. ·.
:·1
.
.
.
-
.
Suri. Oct.
..
20 -
Poughkeepsie
·
Nigel Davis, a senior from
Regatta, Poughkeepsie,
:
N.Y.
·
Poughkeepsie, has been
·
named
11
:00 a.m.
. ·
·
··'
,
Marist College Athlete of the
Sun. Oct. 27 - Head of the
•Week.
for

the week ending Oc-
Charles, Boston, Mass.10:00 a.m
.
tober
-
6. 'Ibis marks the second
Sat.
.
Nov. 23 -
Frostbite consecutive week Davis has been
Regatta;
.
Philadelphia, Pa. 10:00
·
the recipient of the award.
·
a.m.
.
···
}?avis, a member of t}le club
football team, ran
·
for
·
three
touchdowns in
·
leading
·
the
Vikings to a 34-13 victQry over
.
REM~~BER
EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT IS WOMEN'S
NIGHT
·
IN THE GYM
.
INSTITUTE,
·
Continued
froin
·
page
5
Iona.
·
·
·
cording. to an Amazon
-
iegend,
Sagarius was a double-edged
.
sy;ord used only in self-defense.
.(n
many
_
:
schools the
.
women's
COMMENTARY
-
Continued
studies are controlled by men or
·
.
.
.
~
·
'
:
· .
.
· · .·
·
,
locked int<> a system that does not
.
from
page 6 ·
allow adequa~~ ~~domJor in-
.
but Lwas determinei to g4>, and
·
.
t~lle~t!}al gr?wth. -
;
:.
.
·
·
.
this progr~ was amon~
-
th~
'J'wtlon, sa1d
·
Dr .. ~eters, will be many others available suitmginy
arra!}ge~ on
a
~~ding• scale_ ac-
.
social and intellectual needs. The
~ordinir to a~11ity-t<rpaY, and
:
thirig that I.really want
·.
to put
mcludmg
.
,
<!P,Ild · car~
·
.
w~en acr,oss here
i;;
_.
that if you
~
want
.
to
necess~ry .
-
,
. Wh~n fman~mg

go abroad to study. and you
.
know
.
n.iakes}~ JM!~Ible,
_
we'll ~P.Elra~
·
you cail
.
do
it,
don't be
'
:
dissiiade~
.
.
-
~~ar~ro1111d,
.
.. she ~
.
~d~?.·
.: '
:-'~
by anyone;
.
anywhere, an~
·
to

.
.
'.fhe
:
n~e ~~gar1us
.
JS
f:ak~n
,
remember that there
·
is
always
fr?Dl
.
Greek
.-_
myt~
_
ology .
.
A,<t

another
way!
_
.,
.
.
~c.
>
·
(.
.
.
.
.
.


13.4.1
13.4.2
13.4.3
13.4.4
13.4.5
13.4.6
13.4.7
13.4.8