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Part of The Circle: Vol. 10 No. 6 - October 19, 1972

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•ctRCLE
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VOLUME 10, NUMBER 6
OCTOBER 19,
1972
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
12601 .
Rosemarie Emery talks with Dr. Peter O'Keefe on her up-coming convention.
---Consciousness
c·o.nvention'·
Bf
Kevin
Laffin
.
This program offers a ch~nc~Jor ste}> in reversing the mentality
wpmen to s ~ to other women that produces such a tremendous
The picture at right shows the
new security. system installed in .
the lobby of Champagnat Hall.
After
3:00
a.m. on weekdays and
4:00 a.m. on weekends, anyone
wishing to enter the building
. must ring the buzzer for the at-
tention
of
the student on-desk
duty.
.
.
.
(Editorial on security appears ·
on Page
3)
Ticket-
Board-
On October
26,
Marist student;
concerning their anxieties and number
of
abortions
in
New York
Rosemarie Emery will attend the · joys."
· -
, .. - . • state alone. ,~Yet, . tlie ultimate
Women'.s
·
Convention ." and
:·.While. the group
"is·
now·_goal of, sei education. is
to
Workshop in New York City.
restricted to members of the:·produce
a
community based in
The three day ·program. is
c!ass, ~osema~ie,hopes that. the -love-and trust;
a
conirnunity
in •
The first meeting of the ticket
sponsored by the Urban
Cot-
size will ,~e. enlai:g~d_ ·n~xt w)lichthefearinherentin_today's
board will meet Thursday, oc~
poration for Equality and is open
semester,-
;'_H-:)he:
convention ~exual revolution is al~en and : tober 19, between 7:00 and 9:00
to
a11 wo~en ~or a fee of OJ}e
p~oyes \V~rthwhiJe;
t1le
program winecessarr." ·
.
.
. '.
·.·
. - p.m. in Room 271 Champagnat
hundred tlurty five dollars: Jtwm .. will_ . approach :- the
>
Student: Rose~arie .also states, '.'While
Any student or faculty member . _
be
held at. the Hotel Americana. ·--,•Government_., ·with a . budget
0
·today's sexual. revolution is said
with traffic tickets who wish
to
The pr:ogram will _incl~de le_c- . propo~lfor nextyear._We f~el tobebasedinlov?,itismei:elyan
bring_ their tickets before the
tures and wor~~ops wh1~ will
deservm~<of such fmanc1~1 ~xtellsi«;>.n of- soc_iety~s fear· and
board must co1t1e
to
the
meeting.
enable the participant to mvolve
support smce our program will 1nsec~1ty.whe.n it advocates the_ The board which consists of five
hers~lf better in her own com-
ha".e worth\vhile eJfect~ on the nega~fon of the:procreative gfory
members,' will.decide whether
mumty development.
entire. college\commumty. For of maajdnd.''
.
. . · : .· :·
•the
ticket must
be
.honored or
· ~osemarie'.s f~e was paid by
example, the group along .with
Commenting on the faculty's
discarded. The i:neetingwilL
be
private contributions o~ _the p~rt · S~\feral
.
faculty
members response. to. !}le group; she. said,
held the first and
tllird
Thursday
_gf
!he faculty and admmIB.trative · d1scus~_edxthe nee.d, for sex ''.I ltave found·. the faculty. of each' month. Violators have
, office~; asweUas grants from
educ11b_on on ~mpus:' .
rn'=!rnbers mQs( coopera,tive ... two meetings·to,appear before
f:be Depar_trnents o! Psychology
· The firs~ maJor pr«gra~ of the Th~e involved ai::e anythirig but
the board if they wish to. question
and Ameri~a~
_
Studies:. . .·
.
group wllL. b_e · to enlighten• 'male chauvinistpigs' "~. .
··•:.:the ticket:
If.
violators do not
,Ros~marie,1s a.~~mber of the stu?en.~s ..
~ to the 1;1se ~nd Rosemarie is-a junior English:., :come to· the .. two· meetings
Cons<!i?u~ne~s J._'la1s1ng pr,o~am avadablhty .· .. of ~ffecb~e _brrth and _hi.story major who is married . Jollowing the time they receive
at~ar1stw?1_ch1s~n.,extens10n
of
.control me~hods, . ~borb~n isnot·.to a history teacher at Our Lady •
·
the ticket, the ticket immediately.
Dr:-Petei:_
0
K~fe
s
~mergence 11ecessary m a society with _such of Lourdes Higll_ School in. becomes valid and must
be
paid
of .Wollle1_1" history class: She . access _ to
.
. contra<!epbves. Pougr.keepsie. - .
·
feels that . "women have many However, contraception is not an·
_. _ _
_
frustrations
jh
today'!! · worl~. end in itselLit is. a· temporary
.
··•
·.•
SECUR 1·TY
--
...
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- -A--
L
O CK -
UP
-3:
oo
·AM.
.
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-. - · ·
· . · - ... ·•· . ·
Blood
Bank.
Att.elltion
.
~•-·.s·e11.i.o.rs: ...
-ci~~xt;,w~.1l~-~~y;ta(~(lb._:k,fa~._,_.· .
.
:. ,:'·•·.·.•.·.-.
·
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';>/:·.:· ·" • -~- ·
":"c,'.ri:r\~~~ef;t1~~r~rJ~rlngth:·•
'.
·
e
Due to
a
number of complaints concerning the method of selection' , Fif.eside Lounge from 1
o:
3
o
to
.
a
·
..
· . -.
d.. .
p· . .
t'-···
11
for Who'sWhobot~this year,.and in. the past, a_pi:oposal has been
3:3~.
Whena bloodb,ankisheldon
... · · ..
o·a·
·
.
..
r ·
.
. . .
·
-

.
·a·. r· ·
.. ··.: · .. ·.·
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-
·
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submitted which will.go into effect irimiediately.";The deadline-for campus, we are not only·per-
submitting names has been extended one week by the National Who's· formihga service to the outside
Who Committee. The mefuod is as follows:·
. , - ··.
. ·.
community but: it ·also benefits
.
by Jack
c.·simconc.·
Marist
a
sijm tobil of $1750),
In
. . Recommendations
will. be. submitted by seniors; faculty,. and ad- .• · each individuaf Marist · student.
the past. two years the C. U.B. has
. ministration to a committee. This committee ~llconsist of: Faculty By:h?ving donors on campus any
Let. me r-~iterate
,
a distinct . sponsored · "upcoming" per-
., advisor ,·to . Commuter Union
(1);
Commuter Union President
(1) •
Maris( student who might be .. in point tha't fmade in ParH ofllisf -forming groups such as Seals and
Residence Director (1);. :.Campus ... Center .Director Ci); Faculty-·neE!d.·of bl()()(}
.will,
be covered, ·week's CIRCLE article,andthat Crofts, McKendrie:Spring, Don
Representative to S~nior Class (1),; Representatives from Senior Als<> the families :of the donors
is
.
.
the· conege
Union
Board McLean, and Jerry Jeff Walker.
Committee or Executive Board
(2). ·
·
are covered; Starting Thursday receives its $24
,ooo
allotment As a different approach
.to'
fulfill
The qualifications for a Who's Who menlber are academic per-
night,-_ volunteers/w,ill be goin~ through the students' activity . the need for relaxation and en-
formanceand general contributions
to:
the college. .
·
· around to sign peopJe up for time fee; thisfigure is d~rived as 4-9
of
tertainnient,. the Coffee House
Please submit your recom111endaUons by Thursday night, October slots. Last year, 135 pints of blood the$
3
0-pei:student fee. Last week CommHtee presents the op-
19 to Box 155L. Please sign your nam1fto eliminate duplications.
were received, piis Y,ear, we hope . l outlined two basic areas of portunity for college union
· The results of tl\e recent Senior class survey. were as follows: Caps to better the ·, m~J-k: A~yone concern:
·
u)
·
·1ecture -and members. to actively particjpate
and Gowns. -79; Sui~: Dresses -28; Other-13..
, .
.
.
wishing tc;, ~elp o_uq11:going from videotape, (2)
,
performing and in their own entertainment. The
The speakers for graduation were ra.nked according to preference. · door.J?
'do_ot:',,s~tting\up,
or
dean ·
fine -arts. The remaining,. un-
majority of such programming is
Therefore; the LOWEST total would indicate the favorite: Daniel · up see
.
either.Mark·Morhoff in: derlying programs are
c
3) social,
acquired _through. tapping·
Berrigan249; Eunice Shriver.366; Art Buchwald
4()7;
Pete Seeger 427; . room· C~725_ or Rich Bea!iey -iri concert, and coffee house; (4) . campus talents; the Coffee House
Ralph Abernathy 434; · Wi~liam Moyers_ 467. ·
· · .
1
,
room C-522.
. :
. film;
c
5 )
general costs.
. '.
includes
folk
music,
.
·
,
· · ..
The. Social' Committee, which
dramatizations,
contemporary
· -·:elass.:·
Prod.--Uees,
.
..\,
~o~s:o~t~!i~:ne:J:iv~!ie:_ ~i:isic~n/:::r:ta:rf;~i:a$~i~
small scale, is alloted
a
sum total
budget is the· smallest among the
·
,
,..
·of $1500. This area involves itself eight ·. committees._ • · The
S
.
d.
'
n . ' ; .
with active programming such as . philosophy behind programming
tu en t
S. . '. ...
_
1
9,m. -~
.
,:' _' }
mystery bus rides, picnics and social events in all three areas
,
.
,
• · U
.. -~.
.-
.
_
field:. days, nights
'in
the lies in the fact-that the bulk of
·
R. th k II r t
e t
. these costs.' is subsidized. by . the
.
• ·· .
. .
: . •,
, .
·
. , · - .-: . · "
.
· a s e e , ournam n s; as
.
By
~~vinLa"rfi!) · -
·iearned
·through experie~ce. · "?Pt!ng;, for•. r:utttl~- .God~like_: well"asco-sponsoririg ev~nts with students themselves.
-
·
·
Having. Bill iri tlle class will ·dignity:.~ T~·.::-· c~ntral_, ~~e, club!i and ,_9rganizations whose
. The second area· of
.
concern
- Students in the English class~· enable thestuderit to understand . .
~ccorcling_:to;t~e,::,clra~atist;·.i~,·. programs appeal to.the general.· here is the College Union Fili:n
The . Theatre,: have· "a ., unique · the wQrkings of the' writer:hf
tqe ·
W~~n
.Pt~
n~;~9r,tende_rn~~ is college_ union. On a higher. scale
series whic~ presents movies of
oppol'.flinity· for educational .communication:process.
1~-- ·
derµedr,·.br~tal!ty'Ja~~ ov~r..
.of:promotion
lies the area of
entertainment and educational
expei:i_ence this sem~ter," ac-
Accordingto".DeariCox, '·!Ti)is·
Tl_le-pr¢uct~on,wdLtake place concerts :which maintains
the
value servicing the.needs o(tbe .
cording. to. the instructor, Mr. ·
class
will coinplirne_nt the o~her Nqvember;_;m, December
1;
2, at . tremendous task of presenting
a
enUre Marist College Union.
· Gera"rd Cox: . . _.· ·.· ... · .• .
·
·•··
·,
, courses.that d~al with the purely the ·va~s~r.Jnstitute Building-_ in -. series comprise<!,of major and. ·F)lms of strictly. e~tertainment
. Mr:Cox,.who is alsoA.s.sociate:·
"
Iitefary.vahie: of•drariui,>While ..
,the:::J.C1Jy,.,:,ofy:J>,oughkeeps1e.
,·mini-concerts.·supporting the. value.· have adm1ss1on fees
_to;,
Deari ··for· ·student: Academic. - this is an:area'.of comniurilcatfori Through_Jhe·cooper~~_ion.·of ·
1)1-_ ..
tastes of the-studentbody here· at .. cover the bulk of pie cos~;.whil~_ ..
Affairs, announced· that the class · · where little research .has· bee~-- Al
bed
Newniap:
.and Mr.- John · · Marist ... A . big. · naine. concert
educa.tional ,moviE-:5 ·such· as
-
_the _
will. actively R~rticipate. in the. done, the class wi_ll!earn
m,ore ..
Stel~~r ··•• oC th:e '.J.~oughkeei,sie usually cos~about$7500 -~ $10,000, ._Interna t_ional . Du:ector Film
production of an original work by . about
H
through , the dramatic <;oll~g~., Center.;. tlµs :;wm __ be .
.
the which is financiallS;impossib!e
.to ,
Series are sh«;>wn fr~ of ~arge.
one of
its.·
own students; .·. The· experience.'>·
·
·
first, b_me that ~~r1st stude~ts -sponsor since this comimttee ·_
k
total. _of sixty. films will be
dramato be produced; '.' ... but not
T.his is the third production for have used the fac1hty. According. must work wit))
a
$4000. budg~t. •. presented throughout the_~all ~d
:
just. everyman,"
·
ii. written by drai:n.atist Bill.Davis;: whose
two·
to Dean C:ox, -the'production will · . On the other hand, the College . sp_ring •. semesters which. is
junior Eqglish major_; Bill ·pavis. previous works were produced on
be
"as econ9mical, as ·possible.
.
Union Board.has booked "name'',- phenomenal when _one realizes
· Unlike~_other: drama C!Oi.lrses,
ca~pus last. y~ar.~ A_.·natiye ,· of .• We are/ not_. ·c,<?nc¢,rned ,' w~th . groups ·
1ike
;'McKendrie _Spring-.· ~ t -~s · ~ommittee. is working.
The. T~e~µ-e _is
·a.
study-·of ~e
·
~~ughkeE:psie;,
~.in,
,has also . .
com~e.rc!al: fu.~8:tr~;'.,but w,it,h · (Oc~.: 27)and Muddy wa~rS' . Wl~ah_mitedb~?~etof $_3500. (~
·commumca tion · process in-
appeared m summers tock· at tlle . experiential, proJElCts." · ' .• .
(Nov.
11)
:whosefees are maJor , recentf1~m, e.g .. Little Big Man
volving : writer, : actors,
...
an·~: .
Hyde:·.Park Playhouse.·;:.' He .- . As·:·weu·-as pro<;fucing Bill's costs when orie is <lealing. with. or "S.tra\V Dogs/' costs· about.
.Caudierice/ '.'The··.purpose• of -the. transferred:-to. Maristaf~r>his ·.·. pl~Y, ..
,the
:-~lass·: \\'ill .. ·stuqy : a
such a·sma11 and'limited budget. , ·:$300.
to
.rent from an:agency)_.
•. class/\:: said_:'.De,an'? (:ox, ..
''it
.to·
.
·: freshIJ1~n/· year,.

~J

-~rn erstm .: numb el'., cif _'QP}~!'.~()fk_s.}!n"oti~h.
hf
.
this ··area
:.it ·•
"is -.
financially . '.Last, pt1t_ notleast; i,s . th~ ·a~ea.
· aUow:the •. stude.rit.·to better ,un-
.
·Coll(.lge":mB~ton:··BiJl.term~:theJ•.small_.,group.:;.prese11tations,
'
-,m:i· •.wor,thwhileto become·involved in ... underlying .gener{ll_:costs .. wh1ch ·
dcrsta:11d how _c,ominunicatfon:: f:!x~rienc~ ·. ~fl!r~11:ctfof!_-'as
''a_._.
cluding/_re'9~1Jgs}an~
!
ps:ycp<>" . block~booking : "1th.' 'New.;.Yc,rk ,· . includE;s> typic::al ~x~e_ndit_u~es
... takes/place\hf·the··>,th~tr~/·1_t .. :P0s.i_t\:ve·~<:_t'._i!1
.
~tse~f:'.'c_~s:.latest,_-~-dra11u1~;.th~.·~tu~~nts.,mvt:5!ig~te',•:State·J\rea;Co~eg?5::w~~r~by a· .. such_astelephon~bi~~,pubhC!ty, .
.

gives • the ,·.student-··. freedom
:'to.,
_,play
,cle.p1<;:ts · 111 ten'. episodes· the•
,
the. thea_tr,~!!J :c.Ol]llllumca tion·· · ·group's fee can possibly beJ!llt in . : postage, paper; . office· supplies,.
· · irivolve·:himself.\vith,·b-Qth. what: :_trarisioorf.of the:pr_otagonistfroni '·: proce~·~' .. :,: :
> -.·· .... :" •·· ·
.... · . ,
half <On:
.i
natic,nal block-book .. as-.weH as .,covering the ·costs·
of
·
, has-bee~: wrf~ten:-~~~ wha_t
·cal!'
.
be•
a. ·'_'v,ul.~er~~!ecre~t~re'.'.;t~ a
ma~ : \'
:> ·. : . -. , , •.
. . . . ·
ru:u_ddy:,,.Witers ::.
is_}i~If. • <:~sti_~: _ .... , · ·
CONTINUED
ON PAGE 2
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PAGE 2
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 19, 1972
A Day at Wassaic
Outside Looking
In
By Mary Beth Pfeiffer
Perhaps this helpless feeling I
have will last only a day or two,
but the memory, I know, will last
a lifetime.
Wassaic State School for the
mentally retarded is nestled
among the hills off
.
Route
22.
Wassaic houses thirty-seven
hundred patients, from tiny tots
to elderly people, all with
something in

common. They are
considered mentally-retarded -
·
that is, their lQs are
llP-
proximately eighty-five and
lower. Thet have been labeled
·
"socially inadequate" and the
causative factor for many was
probably inborn.
,
No great amount of suffering
.
goes on within the . walls of
Wassaic. The greatest epidemic
COLLEGE UNION
From 1
sending five program chairmen
.
to
.
·
the two
-'
National En-
tertainment Conferences during
the fall and spring semesters.
As
a result of hosting the A.C.
U. - I.
Conference at Marist, the C.
U.B.
has saved $300since Marist's fees
were waived by the region.
If any student or faculty would
like to see the entire breakdown
of the C.
U
.
B.
's budget, or has any
questions concerning our fiscal
policy, just stop into the
COLLEGE
UNION
BOARD's
Office (Room CC268) during the
daytime hours.
'
BOOTERS FROM 4
·.
Continuing along with their
near perfect season Marist quite
handily put Bloomfield away,
amassing a total of 42 shots on
goal as compared to Bloomfields
9.
Along wrth this great offensive
achievement, Marist managed to
shut out Bloomfield using both
Dave Tompkins and Bob Bergin
as goalies. Summing it up, Marist
has put together its best soccer
team
.
in years, · and come
November 11, foreshadowing
another Kings game
·
they will
graduate eight seniors who will
have compiled the
.
best soccer
record
·
in Marist history.
·
Lan-
dolfe, Gross, Rabbitt, Saunders
,
Heilman,
Squich,
Bergen,
DePercin.
·
seems to be }onliness. They don't
know they are lonely. They just
know that they want someone to
whom they can reach out and who
will take their hand.
Patients ,walking around the
grounds greet you with en-
thusiastic sincerity. Little
girls
met in the halls latch onto the
nearest person, hugging as hard
as
they can. Fourteen year old
"babies" in cribs give you an ear
to ear smile at the slightest bit of
attention.
Then there are the babies
,
five
months old, who
·
have been
crying for the ~asttwo months in
stretches as
·
long as
·
sixteen
hours. Those whose head size is
grossly out of proportion with
their bodies aren't expected to
live past their sixth birthday .
Four-year-old boys slam
.
their
heads against the floor wh
_
enever
spoken to. There are the older
.
men who lie
·
curled
.
up on a
cement courtyard floor from
morning to night, their
.
pants
saturated
.
and their noses drip-
ping
.
.
Some of the more intelligent
patie
"
nts are given menial but
time-consuming jobs around the
institution grounds. Time, it
seems, is an enemy
to
them.
It
isn't a precious commodity, but a
sentence they must serve
.
For
a
majority of the patients there are
no programs by which to pass the
days. These
,
patients are solely
under custodial care. Only their
physical needs are
seen
to
.
There
is always the cry, "lack of time,
money and energy to institute
proper care."
Remarkable pieces of art and
workmanship are turned out in
the
f~w workshops.
A
beautiful
hand-made wooden bench with a
woven seat is sold at one-tenth its
value. Hand constructed bird
cages and baskets are practically
given away.
How far have we actually
progressed from the days when
the mentally retarded were
considered demon
~
possessed
beings incapable of living any
form of productive life? There
is
a wealth of possibility within the
institution. These talents need be
applied to their benefit. A
number of patients are given jobs
in the Vocational Rehabilitation
Center. There they work under
·
company contract for minimum
wage sorting
-
·
and packaging
goods
.
Too many other patients
idly pass their time rocking back
and forthin a chair or clutching a
radio to their ear.
And from
·
us
,
the one-day
visitors brougl}i here by Dr.
Edward O'Keefe
·
as
part of the
learning experience
in
In-
troductory Psychology
I,
come a
few
shudders
;
·
some sincere
sympathy and a welcome
departure. Could we not qo
more?
·
Co-Op Coordinator Jim McCabe sta~ding in ne'f bookstore,
Blooming
.
Book~tore
By Joe Terranova
"A
bookstore should be more than a place to buy razor .blades and
sanitary napkins at." That phrase was thought to be the end
of
any
concept of a
.
co-operative bookstore, for with
_
those. words
.
its
representative was thrown out of
.
a Student Government Budget
Committee Meeting
;
:
.
_
where establishment funds might have been
·
attained. Undaunted, as could be seen by tne entrance to the cafeteria
.
where the campaign for bookstore volunteers was held last ~eek,
the
new non-profit enterprise set out to succeed with the $300 remainder
of
E
.
I
t •
A
·.
.
last year's ac~ivities funds
;
·
.
.
-
·
.
e
C
I
n
g
·
Helped by student volunteers, the first achievement of the new
·
.
·
·
.
bookstore has been the selling of the "New York Times." A daily
paper may be purchased at its base price,
9
cents, and a
/
Sunday
.
Nat;
0
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By Dr. Eugene
c.
Best
McGovern places the moral at no profi_t, which is about a one-th~rd discount. Paperbac~
·-
~re
,
responsibility
·
upon government already bemg sold, and use~ books given
.
.
away: free. _Co-operatl".e
Can religion
.
be a key to the to guarantee a Jiving income to Bo?kstore founders are_ hopmg that stud~mts will reciprocate this
difference between Nixon and every citizen."
.
·.·
attitude of trust by donating used books, which are
·
no longer needed
to
McGovern? Time magazine
Writer
·
of the Commonweal
the bookstore shelves.
.
<October 2 issue), Commonweal
·
article is Charles p Henderson
The co-operativ~ bookstore is currently situated in room 167C,
(September 29) and the National Assistant Deari of the Princeto~ althoughatthisrateitissuretoexpandbypop.ilard~mand.
catholic Reporter (also called chapel and author of the newly
F
d.
NCR -September 29) all think so
:
published The
.
Nixon Theology.
"
-
.
·
You might want to read their Reviewing this and four other
O
o
·
'
articles, for a better , un-
books on religion and the can- -
·
·
.
,
_
.
derstandi)!g
of
American didates, NCR
._
discusses another
C
religious forcec; in conflict. major division between Nixonand
..
·
.
0
.
.
.
nnn
·
1

t
·
t
e
.
e
-
·
Because when
·
we elect a McGovern in their approach to
president, we alsq
_
elect a the -churches. "Nixon is known
national minister
·
·
for what for the ease
·
, even cynicism, v.i1th
sociologist Robert Bellah has which he tries to manipula~
by
John Hunt
.
·
8. Every Thursday night
is
now
called American civil religion. religious blocs
.
McGovern has
Beer Night in the
·
Rathskeller.
·
Time claims that the difference tended to shun institutional
-
Last week the Food Committee
9
.
All salads, dressings, fish,
between "two Americas'' may be religion when it interferes with held its first meeting
with
Ken
meats, etc. wiU now
.
be labeled.
rooted in the Sunday
.
school ex-
bringing Christianity to the
-
Stahn and
.
Jim Ladota, the
·
10. The committee has also
periences of our candidates. Both people."
directors of the Saga Food Ser-
mentioned the
·
need for more
men were taught by their father.
America's
·
present
.
relig~o-
vice at Marist College.
consideration of the athletes
HARRIERS FROM
4
Quaker Nixon stressed
·
the ·political problem may well go · Following ~s 'a list of the ac-
when they
·
come in late after
guidance of the inner light and back to the
·
Roman emperor complishnients of the meeting:
practices
.
·
·-.
.
.
.
.
Saturday against always-tough rugged individualism. Methodist Constantine in the fourth century.
L Lunch hours
·
were.extended
IL Also an hour
.
of coffee
·
and
Queens
College and Brooklyn
.
McGovern
-
emphasized self-
Whenheestablished Christianity, on weekends from 11-2 p.m.
_
.
donuts will be held in
.
the
Poly
.
The race will be run at the sacrifice and the need to reach he gave Bishops rank
.
as
2. There is now
·
a
posting of all cafeteria
·
at night during
·
this
nationally vamous Van Cour
-
:
;
out to others. Says NCR: "Nixon senators, and
·
~hurches fax menus.
·
.
.
:
Mid-term
'
week
>.
·
·
· .
.
tlandt Park course in New
-
York represents the conservative, exemption. In
·
return; ~e ex-
.
3. This year the r,atio
.
of
·
We hope
.
that you
·
the students
·
City at na
.
m.
·
evangelical Protestant tradition, pected and got political support
.
margarine to butter
_
h;,is been
.
ofMarist are satisfied with our
while McGovern represents the through ecclesiastical blessing
.

changed from 3
:
1 to
2:L
·
·
efforts and the Food Committee .
·
more
:
liberal 'social gospel' And Christianity was radically
4. Also the orange juice has hopes
to
accomplish mor«
t
in the
tradition."
altered.In'America,inspiteofa been
·
changed to a better con-
·
cutui'e. rr
·
any
_
students have
.
American Protestantism has First Amendment prohibiting centration
.-
. .
·
·
:
· .
.
suggestions orcriticisms of the
,

·.
been split, acl'.OSS denominational
·
legal religious estab.lishment, the
5. The weekend menu is being
·
rood service, they
.
can
be
brought
.
Phi Alpha Theta
will
be
·
lines, sin<:~
·
early this century. de facto establishinent has been studied by Ken
·
Stahn
.
with the
to
following members
of
the Food
sponsoring Dr. Teng's "Return The evangelical concerns himself ·white,
Anglo-Saxon
and hope
·
of improving it.
.
Committee
.
.
_
They are:
.
· Elaine
From China" lecture on Wed-
with his soul's salvation, while Protestant
·
- wjth Catholics and
6. There are now speciallunch
: •
Quiriconi,
·
Kevin Kehoe,
·
John
nesday
·
, O~tober 25, in The the social gospel advocate wants JeW$ only recently-joining. And rates for commuters~·
-
_:
·
.
Hunt,
.
Patricia
·
Garax
·
and
Fireside Lounge at 8:00 p.m. All to improve social structures
,
As so we seem
to
have two kinds of
7. Meal
·
tickets can
.
be pur-
.
Wilhelmena Wolk.
,
·
are cordially invited.
NCR points out: "N~on and Cbristianity in
·
Ai:nerica, con-
·
chased fr9m Saga.
,
·
·
·
.
McGovern are

both heavily in~
.
fronting one another
'
in
·
the for-
.
-
p
·
·

.
.
s .
- - - - - - - - - -
.
fluenced by
,
the fundamentalist thcoming presidential elections.
.
·
,
-
zza
'
.
.
ee
·
e
·
r
·
.
.
u
·
·
·
·
cce

·
ss
RESEARCH MAnRIALS
·
tradition, but their application
or
.
.
Some
·
may

nc~t like the
.
Tim
·
e,
.
.
.
_
J
.
.
.
.
. .· .
.
_
·
...
.
.

.
that tradition varies
.
" Com-
Commo
·
nweat
:
and
NCR
On
.
Saturday,
."
October 14, the
·
Giovane
.
Italia" in another
All Topic;s
monweal shows how since his analyses. Butthese show cl~rly Marist College Italian Society
succ~~fll;l event.
'
'
'
.
.
Send for your descriptive, up-to
-
date,
college days McGovern has been that
·
religion
·
is more than a sponsored its
.
annual Pizi.a and
Also this week, the Italian and
128-page, mail order catalog of
2,300
"more interested in the social private or personal matter. One's· Beer Nite. Thanks to the club's· Gaelic Societies are sponsoring 2
quality research papers .
.
Enclose
application .
.
of Christianity~ religious convictions do
.
have· own professional chefs, the pizza
busses to
_
the all-impor~nt Iona
$1.00 to cover_postaie and handllnf.
·
rather than the salvation

of- significant
.
~Qcfo-cultural
.
arid
was
·
delicious;
-
as usual. . Beer
.
game on Friday night, The cost
is
,
RESEARCH UNLIMITED

personal souls."
·
·
.
·.
·
· ·
'
politico-economic
'
:
dimensions. : flowed throughout the evening
$3.50
·
includ
_
ing the admission
.
to
,
,
·
.
·
Boµt candidates accept
.
the And the
.
analyses raise disturbing
.
and almost 400
·
satisfied people
the ga~. you can't beaf the
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203
Puritan
-
ethic
of
work
;
·
Yet, as questions~
:
;
Are evangelical and danced to the sounds of "EAST."
.
price
·
,
·
.
and
·
a
go
·
od
·
time is
.
·
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024
:
.
NCR observes, "where
·
Nixon "social
·
gospel"
.
Christianity '11!anks goes out to all club
.
guaranteed
to
alL Tickets :will
be
,
(213)477-8.474
-
~ 4n5493
-
placesJ,he moral responsibility
.
fundamentally di(fei:ent?
_
If
O
so,
.
members .who h~lped
_
make the
.
on sale
'
in
,
front
.
of the
.
cafeteria
.
,
·
.
"
We need a locahalesm~n°
upon the individual tofind
.
ajob
;
which
j
s the religion'
.
of
.
Jesus?
·
evening a success and to

the
.
~uring lunch and
·
dinner.
·.
-
regar<il~ofthe ~~~mstances,
· · ·
•·
·
·
entirecommunityforaiding,:'La
:-'
.
'
LaGiovaneitaliaOfficers
·
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OCTOBER 19, 1972
THE CIRCLE·
PAGE 3
Circle Editorials
Security Measures
Why Who's Who
After too many weekends of as it_is.
vandalism
and
robbery
This past weekend, several
Champagnat Housema~ter'.
paintings were stolen from the
Patrick Forsyth, has tightened
gallery. The theft was report~y
security measures. The main observed
.
by ~ome Mar1st
door will now be locked at 3 a.m.
students. No witnesses came
on weekdays and 4 a.m. on
fon~ard. The question is, why
weekends. A bell will summon won t these people report what
the student on duty.
.
·
they saw~ Are fu.e~ fearful
of
Tonight there will be a second selectioo of Who's Who in
the
seni<r
class. This is being done due to a number of complaints in
the
selecting
process. Twenty two day division students will
be
selected.
We ask 'why does a class that is supposed to be a unit and a body
working towards similiar goals have to single out a chosen few who
supposedly have had outstanding contributions to the college com-
munity and-or an tmtstanding academic performance.
This move is unfortunately
repercussions or 1s it that they_
necessary. The
~
thefts from the
just don't dare?
.
We also ask who is capable to measure ~ach individuals contributioo
to the community? Why should the president or chairman of one
organization be chosen over a lesser official in a smaller, less powerful
club, when a selecter does not know the complete story on effort, and
circumstances of the possible selectees? Why should a student with a
3.5 in one major who's credentials may include a crop of guts be
singled out over his roommate who maybe a 2.5 in the institutions
toughest major?

dormitory and Campus Center
The Campus C_enter ~ught
~
be
have continued in spite of the
the heart of Marist.
_It 1s a veh1~le
.
Jock-up policy.
for cultural ands9cial exp~es~10n
With the · dorni locking up,
throu~out the college. Paintings
where is the Campus Center left?
hung m the gallery represent the
Among its choices to stem the
hard wor~of!alen~dpeople, who
tide of burglaries and malice are
.
s~are their gifts
with
o~ers. The
locking up earlier, all-night duty,
picture~ should be enJoyed and
camera
monitoring,
or appre~iated, then left for the
suspending •all art exhibitions.
pleas':11"e of others. None of
us
~s
Any of these is a _loss to Marist,
th~ right to deny another this
but the situation cannot remain
enJoyment.
On
P
·
ushers
Letter to Editor:
·
When
I
was teaching in Detroit,
I was
.
friendly with the top
detective against organized
crime in Michigan. He told me
once to do all I could to
discourage people from placing
simple bets with bookies, playing
Does anyone really care if they are chosen Who's Who? Apparantly
yes. And what resulted from the first selection may well appear again
next weekend, dissatisfaction.
·
Thus, if people do care, the selection board, its processes must
be
looked at, studied and reevaluated. And if there does not arise a
responsible and representative means of choosing Who's Who,
it
should be abolished.
·
To The
JJ{arist Community
l<,or anyone concerned with the
unnecessary loss of human life,
whether it be American lives or
Vietnamese, whether it be
reduced 98 percent
·
or one per-
cent,
·
whether it be done by pistol
or by bomb, the election· of
George McGovern takes on
a
supreme
urg~ncy
.
.
Under
Richard Nixon the war in Viet-
nam has been treated as if there
were reasons for it. While it is
true that there have been fewer
American deaths under Mr.
peace
·
and for
.
an erid to in-
discriminate death-dealing is
also a radical should serve as a
The renewed air
·
war has also
The opportunity for you to say
meant that millions of civilians
"No"
to all of
this
is at hand in the
have been killed and maimed. candidacy of George McGovern.
The truth remains, d~pite the Since 1963 it has been his voice
smoke-screen deceptions of which has most consistently and
Richard Nixon, that a war wages
·
humanely decried this senseless
on,
·
and human lives are being
·
kiiling. This issue alone should be
taken
.
The loss of human life is to more than enough
·
upon which to
be
expected in a war but wars base your vote decision.
must be predicated upon serious
The George McGovern can-
reasons. Reasons have long ago didacy, its success or failure, will
ceased to exist in regards to
be
a telling statement about this
Vietnam. What remains then, is country's true or imagined sense
not warfare but unreasoned of justice. Mr. Nixon's inference
killing.
that a person who is desirous of
strong indication
·
of how
.
far
America has strayed from the
path of sensibility. And what kind
of moral

paralysis has set in
when our President's concept of
an
·
"honorable end"
is
the killing
of people without apparent
cause? The cry "Come Home
America" is not therefore a
summons to isolation but rather
it is a clarion call back to moral
responsibility.
I
eagerly take this
space to urge everyone
to
vote for
George McGovern.
Brian Morris
the numbers
.
pool,• etc. because
.
.,_ _ _ _
..;;,_....;;. _____
,--------~-.....:...;....;;.......;. ____
~ - - - . . . ; . - - . - . . ; . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
·
~
-
these were
~
all:
part· of organized
.
crime which pushed drugs, white
slavery, prostitution and murder.
Not a dime should go in that
direction. Last year,
I wrote an
article and I mentioned we ought
to rough up hard-drug pushers on
campus. One teacher took me up
·
on this saying he was

utterly
shocked at my sugge_stion.
I
answered his letter, but the
editors misplaced my letter, lost
it. This week a young dedicated
.
federal undercover agent was
killed by drug pushers just two
weeks
·
b·efore
·
his wedding.
Pushers here
·
all knowingly, or
unknowingly, part
ci
that ring
that killed Frank Tetmillo- and
I
repeat, "Let's get those guys the
hell off campus, no matter how."
Sincerely,
Fr. Leo Gallant
Vote
If
you believe
·
in the present
administration show your sup-
.port now through active
.
par-
ticipation.
If you don't agree with
it ·work constructively to change
it!
''Maybe they gave us the
eighteen year olcl
_
vote because
they thought we would not use it -
prove them wrong VOTE!"
· Marist Young Repub~icans
.
Another Mass has been added
to the weekend schedule at
·
Marist. At the request of .
students, a 10:$0· p.m.
·
Liturgy
wiH be
.
held in
·
Byrne Residence
every
.
Sunday.
Four
ISsueS
The November 1972 ballot will include three Amendments to
the
New York State Constitution and one Propositioo. To become ef-
fective, each must
be
approved by a majority of those voting on
the
issue. A Proposition is a law which must be approved by the voters; it
does not amend the Constitution. Amendments to the New York State
portant office of district attorney closer to the people ... that district
attorneys serving three year terms are generaJJy elected in off years
and are more likely to be judged by capacity for office than by party
label.
Constifution are submitted to the voters after receiving the approval
AMENDMENT NO. 2: AMENDING THE CONSTITUTION
of two se1 Nixon it is also true that for
the
·
repeals Article 19 and creates a new Article 19 which continues
Vietnamese troops the
.
death toll
present procedures for amending the Constitution, except that the
PROPOSlcontinues at its genocidal rate.L
QUALITY
BOND ACT
Attorney General would no longer be required to give his opinion oo
OF 1972
·
.
·
·
·
the effect of changes proposed. This Amendment also changes
would authorize the State to borrow $1.15 billion for environmental
provisions for constitutional conventions. The question of
calling a
purposes:
$650
million to improve the quality of water, $150 millioo
to
convention would be submitted
to
the voters in 1985 instead
of
1975, and
improve the quality of air and
$350
million to improve the quality of
each 20th year thereafter. The Legislature would retain the power
to
land.
An
accompanying law spelling-out the use of this money will
go
.
submit the question at any other time. New qualifications would
into effect if voters approve the Proposition.
·
require delegates to be 21 years
of
age, eligible
to
vote, and resid~nt in
SUPPORTERS SAY that the State has run out
ci
capital funds fer
·
·
the State for at least three years. The Amendment clarifies the
environmental-purposes ..
.
that money needed Jor
·
_fightirig pollutioo amound of compensation for delegates and the methods for
filling
and for land acquisition should not be delayed ... that
85
percent of the
vacancies. Statewide elected officials <Governor,
Lt.
Governor, At-
funds will be used for direct aid to localities which cannot aff<rd these
torney General, Comptroller and the seven Judges of the Court of
cosily projects.on their own ... that federal matching funds will
be
lost Appeals) could not serve as delegates.
unless the State provides pump-primary money ... that funds
are
SUPPQRTERS SAY that this proposal is necessary to simplify and
needed to complete sewage projects planned or inconstruction. The clarify the language of Article 19 ... that qualifications for delegates
accompanying law will permit the
_
State to spend $27
.
million
.
to
protect should be specified ... that unless this 'Amendment is approved, voters
wetlands,
..
$59
million to extend Catskill and Adi
_
rondack pres er-
will be asked to consider a new convention in 1975,
too
short an interval
ves ...
$8
million for trails to areas now inaccessible ...
$68
'
million fer since the Convention of 1967.
·
parks ... $10 million to protect unique
natural
areas ~tter~ through
OPPONENTS SAY that more far reaching changes in conventioo
the
·
State ...
$3
million to buy stream rights
for public fishing ... $175 procedures are needed ... that the qualifying age for delegates should
million for local governments for recycling and other solid waste be
18 ...
some say thatlegislatcrs,
as
well as statewide elected cificials,
disPQsal projects ... and $50 millioo for the State and $100 million fer should be barred from serving
as
delegat~s, <thers say that expertise
localities to control air pollution from publicly owned buildings.
of important government officials should not be lost to the convention.
OPPONENTS SAY that the State should not borrow any more
money at this time ... thatdebt service on new borrowing_would have
to
AMENDMENT NO. 3: FIFTH JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT
be paid out
of
shrinking State funds needed for other
·
vital. services...
amends Article 6 to create a Fifth Judicial Department consisting
ci
that th
.
e Legislature has power to chance amounts promised for Nassau and Suffolk Counties, now part of the Second Department. The
specific projects ... that too many different uses are proposed for
the
~~'lte is now divided into four Judicial Departments; each hears ap-
money ... thaf
-
higher prioricy should
·
be given
.
to solid waste peals and administers the lower courts in its area.
.
management ... that there is
-
no way of knowing where in
tbs
State
SUPPORTERS SAY that the Second Department has more than 50
much of the money will be spent...that municipalities at or near their percent of theState's
:
populatjon1 and more appeals are filed there than
debUimits could not raise matching funds necessary to qualify for this in any other Department. .. that tlie continuing growth
of
Nassau and
bond money unless the
.
Constitution is amended to exempt future Suffolk counties (almost 3 millioo people) justifies creation of a
sewage projects from local debtlimits ... that with many projects now separate Department...that it is difficult to ·administer the Second
unger
.
way, there is time
.
to plan
a.
better bond
.
issue
·
at the 1973 Department which consists of
10
counties including three in
the
City
ci
legislative ses~ion.
'
New York .
.
.
that
a new Department wotild not
be too
costly because
facilities are already available in
.
Nassau.
-
-
-
-
AMENDMENT NO. 1: TERMS 'FOR DISTRICT AT'l'ORNEYS
OPPONENTSSAYthatthereisnolD'lduedelayinhearingappealsin
.
Senator James Buckley_ will
be
amends _Section 13 of Article 13
i!>
allow the Legislature to set terms the Second DepartmenL. that only 29 percent of Secood Department
·
at Dutchess Airport on October 26 of district attorneys at
three
or four years.
·At
present; district at-
appeals originate in Nassau and Suffolk and that
the
new
Department
at 4 p.m. If you
.
wish to go to the torrieys in most counties serve for three years.
would have the smalJest volume
of
business in the State. that
the
seven
airport and
·
hear Buckley,
SUPPORTERS
.
SAY that longer terms and less frequent electioo judges
·
needed to staff the new Department would be appointed from
transportation will be provided. campaigns
-
will
.
·
relieve
.

district attorneys
·
from
.
some political tf)e present Supreme
_
Court bench, drawing off judicial manpower
·
~
-
·
•.
·
·
··
·
' ·. · ·
Coritact: pressures and may
·
attract higher quality candidates ... that staff from trial courts ... that the high cost of administrative offices and
• Marist Young Republicans· turnover following elections will be reduced ... that longer terms would auxiliary services cannot
be
'justified now ... that the State court
·
' .
·
·
Fontaine Hall provide time
_to
complete complex investigations and prosecutions.
.
system needs more centralized administration whereas a
.
new
_
Room212
OPPONENTS SAYthut shorter terms keep the sensitive and im-
Denartment would fraR:mentif further.
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.......
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PAGE4 ·
nIECIRCLE
Vikings Crush New Haven
Harriers
And
Boote rs Also Victori us
OCTOBER 19, 1972
Bonnett
.
Paces Vikings
Boaters
·
\!Vin
Two
To 34-6 Conference Wj_ri
Fall
To Kings
Della Mura was hit before he
point
·
Bonnett scored
his
third
could hand off, the ball popped
touchdown.· Sheldon
Davis
ByJohnRedmond
wasn'tgoingtobeth~FtedFoxes
P
·
1r
Cl b F. tball'
l
d
·
d
hn
·
d hi ki ki
day. Kings scored three times all
By Bob Sullivan
reppmg 1or
u
.
oo
s
oose an defensive en
·
.
Jo
. regame
s c ng touch
to give
.
.
.
.
told while Marist was blanked.
In
version of the annual GAME OF Sullivan fell on it.
.
the Vikings a 27-0 lead.
,
Manst vs. Kings, Will we ever
THE DECADE,- Marist College
Determined
.
to make the most
·
-
Nigel Davis performed during win? Undoub~edl}'. there
ate
retrospect all things are t.(sually
stormed its way
,
to a surprisingly of the break, Da
_
vis

brought the the
·
second · drive, carrying 4
·
forces at work m this world that
·
explainable;
.
but not this game
,
easy 34-7 victory over the balltotheone,andBonnettsnuck ...timesfor6.5yards, including the
·
are greater
.
than any man_ or Over
·
psyche,
bad
'
luck,
University · of New ·Haven
; . .-
it in for his second touchdown
in
scori~ jaunt from three yards group of men ~an contend with, questionable cans, these ~ould
be
Saturdaynight,ina
·
gameplayed -less than two
,
miriutes.-
:
Sheldon out.
.
.
but enoug~ is enough. :r~e theanswers,anyoralloC-them,
at the losers home field,
Quigley
.
Davis again
:
hit the extra
·
point.
. .
.
.
Working
';
'.
against Marist's prese
.
n~ Ma~1stSoccer Team 1s
m
·
whatev
·
er
·
the case, the
·
jinx
Stadium in West Haven
.
_
The
win
·
.
After two exchanges
.-
of punts,
'
second defense, New Haven got the e~bmation of many, the most remains intact. Luckily this
gave Marist
·
a
:
4-0 record, New
·
New
-
~aven
;
found
·
jtself
·
in
a
oil
,
the
.
board in the waning
.·.
f9rm1d~ble tea~ ever assem~led
.
straµge quirk
_
concerning Kings
Ha yen dropped to 1-2~1.
. .
punting situation
·
on the Mai'ist. minutes, driving
·
66 yards in 15 at Ma~1st. Holding two preVIOUS
·
C:ollegedid not applyfo Fairfield,
:
.
Struggling to gain an early 44. Once
_
again,
:
how.ever,
:
·
poor plays
with
the
aid
of two key victories the team had sho~~ because in this game Marist who
.
advantage, the Viking offense
·
puritingwascostiy:andinstead
of
penalties-, one coming on a fourth strengt!t, bero~d
,
t
.
he drawmg had easily outdistanced the
was unable to generate any being against the
.
wall; the down situa
.
tion.
.
·-,.
~oard 11_1 which ev
,
eryone_looks Fa_irfield Stagsin acquirin
.
g
a
tw~
momentum until late in the first
·
Vikings had the ball at
:
their own
·
Statistically, this
.
was Marist's
..
1mpress1ve, an~ this Manst vs. ~mt lead at the ~alf almo~t.]et it
qu,ii"te
_
r
-
when
.
New Haven
, ·
20 .
..
·
..
.
.

.
·

. ·
·
.. :
.
.
.
.
,
l:iest outing since
_
their opening Kin~~
-
g~me, ~as hope~ to be sh~ away
.
~olll.ln~ _back
.
f~om
plagued all night by poor punting,
.
Mixing his
'
calls, Q.B. Bonnett win
-
against
.
Manhattan.
;
The Maris
ts
hrst v!cto1?' agamst the
-
their two yomt •it:!f1c1t Fa1rf1~ld
gave them excellent field position
·
drove the Vikings to the
·
Charger.
·
Vikings rolled up 305 yards on the ~o~s from
.
Br1arc~1ff. Howe~er, sco~ed tw!ce ~J!d hel
.
d the
.
game
at,theitown 44 yard line. Relying 26 with keygains
·
coriling on a 19 . ground
_
JIZ7 by Nigel Davis and
.
J1~mg up to
.
their re_putation
,
even until Tim Trotta
~u~ a
primai:ily on
~
_.
the
· ..
·
running of yard pass to Krampe, a 12 yard 114
-
by Murray Milligan) and 90
.
.
Kings·
.
was big
,
physical and pen~lty shot past
.
the
.
Fa1~f1eld
·
-
- .
halfbacks
:
Nigel D_avis and run by Milligan and a nm on his
·
yards in the air (5
:::
12). Enroute to talented.
. ·
.
.
_
.
go~h~. The fmal score
_
Mar1st 3 -
Murray Milligan
;
:
Marist mewed
: .
own
-
9L
2i
:
,,
yards
.
After three their five scores
;
, ·
Marist
.
ac-
.
·
Fo~ more th~n thirty mmutes,
.
Fairfield 2.
.
the ball. to the

New Haven 40.
pass~s felFshort
;
c
Bonnett found cumulated
:
16 first
·
downs while
.
a
.
stmgy Mar
t
s~ defense_ ~eld
CONTINUED ON PAGE
2
Quarterback Ed Bonnett then
·
split. end
-
Tifu.
c
Murphy
in
the
.
holding
·
,
New
.i
,Haveri to 6 first Kings from sconng, but1t Just
-
turnedto the air,)iitting wide
.
endzone with a 2s·y~d pass to downs
·
and·:114 yards
·
rushing.
·
1
·
.
An
.
.
d
v
·
oo
·..
.
·
· .
.
re<;~i_v.er Fred Krampe for gains
. ·
give Marist
a
coinfor~ble 20-0 ·New Haven
·
was unable to
·•

on
-
a
·
.
.
.
·
.
. .
. .

. ·
·


.
•·n·
·
g
·
··
s
of.
22
and 13 yards. Two
.
.
plays halftime
_
'
advantage,
:
·
:
. .
·
complete a
·
pass in ~leven at
-
.
-
·
.
..
·
.
·
.

·
·
.
.
·


··
· ..
:
_ -
.
·
.
later;
_
Bonnetf kept the
·
ball
After fumbling the first tinfe it
·
tempts.
himself and snuckintothe end
c
had the ball in
·
the
"
second
·
half
,


·
Marist

NewHaven
In
··
Sh
..
.
·
·
·
d
:.
·.
·
.
. · .
. ·
·
.
.
-
.
.
zon¢
:
S~eldori pavis
·
converted
.
Marist put together coru;ecutive
16
First
Downs
'
.
·
;-
·
.
6
.
-
·
.
·
.
.
-
OW
.
own
.
the
.
~xtra .point;
"
.
scoring drives of 79 and 72 yards. 305
·· ·
·
.
Yards Rushing
114
·
On-the ensuing kickoff, New
.
.
Thefirstdrivewashighlighted by 90
)'.'ardsPassing
o
by Jim
Keegan
Haven's
:
·deep safety Cliff Bush Murray Milligan
·
ate up
·
59
:
yards 5-12
;
.
Passes
.
0-11
The Iona
·
defense, which
had troub.le finding the handle,
-
in 4 carries. A pass interference
·
.1
Iritercepted~y
1
·
·

This Friday night at Mount perhaps is their only weakness,
and a hosi of Marist defenders call on
·
an
~
attempted pass
,
to
:
_
~
·
F,umbles Lost
2
·
.
Vernon Memorial
·
Field,
.
the
·
·
will use a 4-4-3 alignment quite
dropp~
_
d hirno~ his 4 yar
.
dline
.
On
·
Krampe, gave the Vikings
:
t~e
.
3
-
38
.
7
Punts
~
Ave
.
7-26.5
Marist College F-'ootball Club will similar to that of
.
Marist. The
.
the
.
first play,
.
quarterback
Ifay
.
ballo
·
n the
·
.rft: line; fron
t
which
,
,
:
,
q _
Play
the most important game in defensive bc:1cks, who
will
try to
·'>
'
.
,.-'
'
i
· ·.·.
· .
·
:
.
·
·
>
-
:
.. .
·•

\.
'.'.
,,
•·
~
·
· ·
, .:
·•
;,
-
.
-
·
.-
,.,
,
·
·-
·
·1_
1
:
·
-,.;_·
~\-, :
·
~
~eir sh?rt hist!)rY~
.
A win F_'riday cut
off
the
·
Marist air game are
·
.
.
·
·
Ha
·
·
.
·
r
.•.
·
,

.
·
.
.
·
,·e
·.
·.
·
r
·
s
··
·.
·
·
.
.
.
D
...
·
·
e
·
·
t e
·
·
a
·
.
t
s ·,
e
·
·
n a·
,
:
And .
.
B
·
r
'
.
·
o
·
-
0
Ii
I y
·
n
mght ~11 pla~e
·
the Vikings
·
that yciUiig and
.
_
inexperienced; but
f\
e e e
.
much clos~r to a number one
have
:
shown
·
moinerits
.
of
··
con-
ranking, a goal never attatned by
.
-
.
.
sistency during the season.
If
·
The Marist Running R~d Foxes
Mccasland helpid
·
the .
-
:
Marist Jiminy Weber who has been
·
out an_y
:
other _team from
:-
Marist.
Iona expects_ to win they must
extended their consecutive win
victory by
.
blocking
,
out Siena · of action
a
month with an ankle

Wit~ previously number-one have a
'
:
concerted effort in
streak
.
to four and put their 1972 funneis in posting slots teri
-
and
injury. His presence will add ra~ed Westchester losing twice stopping a strong Marist offense.
·
r~cord at· 7-2 by defeating both
·
eleven in the
.
race. Tony
·
Wilger, · depth
·
·
and
:
strength to

the team.
.
this year~t~e orlly_ oth~r
.
obstacle
Offensively,
·
watch for Iona to
Siena
.
College
(24-35)
and
·
running after a two
-
week absence
.
Before his injury, he was the for the V1kmgs to overcome will try and run the ball to the outside
Br~ldyn College
0~8)
on t~e caused by a
'
.foot injury, beat
·
team's fourth runner and con
-
be the Gaels of Iona College.
with the quarterback often taking
Ma11st c~mpus Saturday. This several runners in coming iri 23rd
.
stantly improving
,"
.
continued
_
Ion~ will ~how the strongest it himself.
:
so
far this year, very
was the fmal home game
of_
the
·
place. Marist scored
-
a perfect
Coach Stevens.
.
·
offensive
,
urut
·
that Marist has few teams have been able to run
season,
.
.
score·
-
against
·
Brooklyn . by
Saturday's race marked the
.
seen so far this year.
Led
by up the
.
middle against the
J:oe
.
Rukanshagiza fro_m Afri~a,
·
grabbing the first five
,
places last home
-
race for .the team and freshman quai:terback Eddie Vikings. This can be attributed to
a run~er who
·
has _tran~ed W!th agl!inst the

Brooklynites.
·

.
-.
the final. time that
.
senior co-
Kaminski, a Cardinal Hayes the presence of tackles Russ
Olympic gold
.
medabst Kip Kemo
_
_
·The strength ofthis1972Marist
-
captains

Bob Salomone and graduate, the Gaels are proving Humes and Bill VinceQt, along
from
·
Kenya, led a strong Siena t:ro$ cuntry
.
team is

seen iri the
·
·
Marty McGowan ran on
·
the themselves to be stronger with with linebackers Eddie
.
Aldridge
team on the
.
course
;
~e set a new fact that last year Siena
..
topped
Marist campus in a meet
.
"They
-
each game
.
Ironically
,
new Iona and
'
Tony Johnson
.
Backing them
course record by blazmg through
,
Marist 20-35 with the same team.
finished the
,
home season with head coach Joe Tricario and his up.
is
the
:
more than adequate
the 4
;
725 mil_e course in 24:54
.
5,
·
Also Marist's
'
1972 team has strong
--
·
_
runs," Coach Stevens assistant
·
John Bloss, both
~
defensive secondary
·
of .Tim
erasing Mike Redmond's stan
°
.
m;,tched
·
the
.
top four all
l
time' exclaimed.
,
Coach
.
Stevens· felt
.-
coaches from Cardinal Hayes, Ogden,
.
Tom Murphy and Dail
da!d set)ast year b}'. _three teamtimes(timeofthetopfive
·
thatJayDoyleplayed
.
akeyrole arebringingtolonathetype·or Faison.
· ·
-
· · .
·
seconds
i
Jay Doyle fm1shed runners in the race combined) in
-
in th
.
e
.
victory over Siena by football that
'
made Hayes a
_
For bot11 Marist and Iona, this
second also
_
breaking his o~n all four
·
home meets conducted placing
.
second
.-
"We told Jay n_ot
·
rootbal~
.
power -
··.

in
.
the
-
game
will
play an important part
Marist
school record
.
Dorie's old
_
.
thisyear;
It
was
theoveral
_
l_ team
.
to worry about Rukansl_!agiza
and
Metropolitan area. In six ye11rs at
·
in determining the conference
miirk of 25:_34 wa_s
,
hro~en;bY 3.5
·
balance displayed by
·
the Run-
his
.
pace
;
buno concentrate on Hayes, Tricario and Bloss champion of . the
.
Eastern
s~~nds wi~h his cl~king of ningRedFoxeswhichhasproven· gettingasecoridplaceforus.We combined to
,
compile ail i~-
·
Collegiate
;
Club
.
Football
25:30.5
:
~evmDaly of Siena, who fa!~l for the Red Fox o~ponents.
f«:lt this
,
would be
.
the key to our pre~sive 3~-u. won lost rec~rd, A_s~~ciatiori's metr(lpolitan
had beaten Doyle b}'. ~me t~ty
-
.
our team }?alaJ1ce 1s strong
.
-

victory
.
He had
.
a tough race, but wh1l
.
e
.
wm!lmg
two
c1~y-
d1V1s1on.
.
...
.
.
.
.
~econds.last y~ar, fm~shed third nght now
·
and will
_
·
'
even be
'.
did
'
an excellent job
'
againstDaly
·
ch~m~1onsh1p~
·
(68-70) with
As coa~h
.
Ron Levine stated,
m 26:00
;
But then ~ar1st's strong
.
·
-
stronger
.
by the

end of_the next
_ :
who nias~ered hiinlast year.
-
It
-
Tr1cano r
.
ece1vmg Coach_
.
of the :
·
~o~paris
.
on~
.
in this case
:
are
team
;'
balance
,
~as shown. The
_-
t"'.'o weeks;'\ ~tated Manst _c~ch
·
was 3 fine clutch ~rformarice by Y
.
e
.
ar ~onors on three different
_
d1fflcult, J'v~arist has had ~ougher
Runnmg Red
F~xes cap~ured the Hieb Steve~.
,
''We are ~hippi
.
ng
Doyle
;'
'
,
Coach
.
Stevens
.
stated occasions
(66~68-?0~ ..
A soft-
·
oppo~ents
m
the_early gm~g b_1;1t
n~xt four places to chnch the
.
ourselves mto
_
sha~ with

deep
proudly
.
-
·
.
·
spo~en m.an,'~ncario 1s a football
,
. there s no question ~at Im_ia_ 1s
Victory.
_
-
~ob
.
~
Salomone, Mark
.
conce,µtrated
-
practice workouts
·
.
The Running ned Foxes
.
wiUbe
.
gemu~ who this year has tak~n
an
e~tremely
;
tal~nted
.
.and
,
.
ncJJng
:
H~tor1lla,
,
Marty
-
~c(?owan ~nd
• _
now
~
.
-
g~re~ for
:
the
-
C
:
~
.
C.C.
-
,
training hard
.
aH
.
\_'/eek in
,
:
.
un~ehevably
young,
·
mex-
:
high at this pom
_
t ophe season.
Mike Duffy
,
ran well m
·
.
notching
·
Cha~p1onships
.
on
.
·
Oct
:

28
;
,
AI
.
so
-
.
preparation
;
for
:
.
their meet

this
·
per1enced
,
grou~ of players
.
and
,
The Gaels are gomg
.
to be a tough
_
spo~ four
.
through seven
.
~or
·
,we
will
be
imp~ov~d in
·
overall ..;_
·
·
,
-
CONTINUED ON
PAGE
2
-
·
molded
_
the~ mto a
,
football
opponent
.
"
.
,
·
...
;
.
:
.
.
·
:
.
.
:~·: ~: NR~J~~m~flli\/~n
Cortl~~hn
;
a Sat~
_
rday
The Mar1st.Runrung Red Foxes ~ms performance.
A
balanced course, breaking his previous
llleets.
Freshman Mike Duffy has
the team
'
s fourth runner in an
travel.to natio~ally
.
famous
_
V~n
;
team effort
_
has been the reason _ school r~cord. by
.
over thirty
come on fast and is a close fifth in early-season scrimmage a ainst
~rtland Park m New York Ci
.
tr
,
_
for the Mar1st 1972 suc_:cess story. '.'\seconds
.
·
Jle also _retained his
the
.
Marist rankings of runners.
Albany State when he suff!red a
this S~turday,
.
October
.
21, 1972
to
1:here has neyer been ~s cJose_a fr:esh~a
_
n school record.
·
He has
-
Both Bob N~lson
;
-
a
·
sophomore severe ankle' inJ·ur
·
which
·
·
has
meet. Queens CoJ}ege, Brooklyn ~1me spread between the top
·
fiv~
-
been backed closely by senior co-
from
-
Saugerties and
·
Jifn Mc
-
si
·
de
·
11
·
ned ·hi
·
m
-
':f
·

.-
n,.J ·
d K'
n ·
t
·
-
·
·
th t
'
,
-
.
.

ever srnce
c-u
y,
-,
an
mgs
_
rom_ -m a
_
.
.
o!
~even
runners m
.
e en-year
_
capta1~ Bob Sal~mone who has
Casland, a sophomore froin
Ulasewicz suffered
·
shin s lin~
quadrangu~ar mee~ at 11.00 a-!'1·
history
.
of
.
c~oss
.
country
.
. _
at
·
the shown
_
the ':Il.ost
-
1mprove
.
ment on
Beacon, have been particularly
_
earlier- this ear and is s1owl
-
·
The Mar1st ~arriers take with ·
~o~
Road. college. Nor

h~s
·
any µie team, both from year-00:.year
strong additions to
-
the team

this. recovering
ii ·
t d to
·
d~
~em a 772_ re
.
cord on
the
year and other Marist
-
~earn- shown ·as· and during the season
.
Freshman
·
year
·
in their ability: to-stay up
de th to
th
e is expec
_
e . a·
ar
f
o_(f- to their
·
best~t in
·
_
five
_ ·
much impr~vem~~t
_
from meet
_
~
-
- Mark Hetorilla came within three
·-
_
·
with ~e
.
co~petition anp displace
,
.
·
·
wtlo is ruti~i~ea~t:s
.
is
V'?f
.
1
7er'
-
year~
,.
--·
.
T~
'

feam h~l
_
ds the top
_

·
,meet
-
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.
tlµs
,
y~a~ s
_
squad has.
·
s~on~
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of
·
90}'.le's
.
.fr~hman
.
other team's runners
:
.
·
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con uerin
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g
.
r.
now
.
~
.
ter

fou
r
_alh~
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im~ te~~ times for
the
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Ja)'.- Doyle
.
~as notch~
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~ee r~~rd
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~t
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t
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ai:i~
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urrently
· .
Add~
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sµ-ength i
,
s expected to
·
M1rist gh~!~!e~~ei~
·
.
top
f~ve
,
i:t,1Mers m
~
~a~e
..
on the !1r~!5. ~ne seco~d, and op.
_
e ~bird,
'
the nulllber thr~e runner
.
:for _tlje
.
·
emerge now that freshman Tony
.
Brook!
p
·
1
·
K
·
·
st
. to
Mans1cou~~:
·
In
·
~cl!<ifthefo_ur m (1ve :r:a_c
.
es
-
this~se~onJo"lead

Rµnning
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ft_e~:]f
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o~~
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.
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-
·
-
:
·.
·
W,ilger,
,
Pete
·
_-·
u1asewicz, and

holdin
Y\
.
0
.Y
.
or
mgs .Pomt,
races held this :v.e~r o~ the Mar1st

.
•tJ:i~_Runr.ung
.
_
Red
:
F:o":~s.
_,
He
-
h~s
:
. --
·
: Sei:ii~r
'
::_:
co_:capta~n
:·.
Marty Jimmy ·Weber have recovered
·
·Brookin
p~~
0
·ttdv.~ntfge ·
.
ov~r
cQurse,
(
the :Running
-
Red fo~es
..
b_e~n ·a
.
cons1~tent
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runner:
:
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~1s-,· M~qowan
.
has
.,
given
-
Marist · a
.
fro':Il
·
i
_
njuries
i
-Wetier, a
:
distance
.
·
15.43 victor
~~d
~r _as
·
seasons
.
r,~~
:
an
.
all-time
_.
~~. best wh1!!11
,
year hee~~bhsped ~

ne.w
_
Mar!st
i
,
very
:
_
strong !ourth man _this
.
year
_-
sta
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ndout'atRoy c
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Ketcham
High
King•s
·
PoiJ aft
3
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t~e big
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~appingers FaHs
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was
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10.6.1
10.6.2
10.6.3
10.6.4