The Circle, February 17, 1972.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 9 No. 17 - February 17, 1972
content
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._ FEBRUiRY
17.1972
•
.. .
•·','l.chool
·
.
payS'.'mEOia,· ..
Never
E11,):D\{/:
· · B M"haelR"
· · .
·
.· -,
_
_._ · ~,. --·
-
-· .. ·
- ·
•.-;,. ·
' · · ·' fhifi
r
"l'elovedmusic can -already·feel·the greater--·
.·. :_
• .. y _ic -
lZZO '. ' . 'senior_citi:i.ellSto~verrecei~~the··~-';J\S the p~ogr11m~an moyi~ _,.
0
s ej.1~~-h _v "d "only a:_ enjoyment of.my surroundings>} '
_
... !God
blesswho ever-thought· chlltlce __ o~ e~1encmg·h1gher:frompapertoiracbce/benefmal an my. 1fe, . e ~alth". urse··,1n the:past'few:weeks_,r-have
.· .
.. this up for
uf'
·exclaims ~s
..
c
ed!J(!at1on_ ~nd as a-~esult have
-
,results _b~8'!n, ·:to . _apJ)~ar ·: coupl:1r~ds!:\:,°vie: ft°in a ~-·become a much
happi_ei:
~~~-
a~d.,. _: .
. Helen Hane, one_Qf the new
65
l!een <11;.opped.-~ei:~ !s no ~?ur~e
_
m_~nyfold. _Mr.;_and Mrs.Jrv!ng !ve have never seen .music:·
I
arn ;also extremely grater~~~-':":_
- Ye3!S and . over stu~ents newly fee for the s_emor c_1ti~e~ .. :
:
~uc~ -
of. Rh1n_e~ck, ~a~ned
Y
I
in m life!'
..
.•. Marist ~ollege for a~ ~hey bave_ . .-
registered at Mar1st: College:
The only r ~ lurutabon_ .aJ>.:' :ove_r_ .
45
)'.ears, . are, Jomtly before . Y .
. .
one of - done for me and my
wife.''.
Mrs.
"They've just taken me_in and. pears. to be m. respect tO''the
.
,re~1stered.
m·
anthropolgy and
M~v~~[:,sm!!~~~r;,• Henry -HeimJ,er ·gratefully:,_saidf'.'-'The.
made.m.ea partofthem" was her number of coursesto be f!hosen .. plulosophy.~ They have become as
.
. al
.
t
d. the
refre. sh1"ng memor
.. 1es it . has
·
·o ·
·
t
t· · ·
1· te-cl b .. th · · t · ·t "f'lled · "th
· Wandel 1s
so reg1s ere m
.
.
·
. appreciative reaction to this new . . nee reglS ra _iorus comp e . -
,y -
ey __
,PU :
I ' .
l . .
WI_
. -
en- .
' .
M
w
ndel
returned ·to my mind are unex-
edticational experience for her
as
regular full-bme students, the thus,.
asr;n-
from the . program.,, . same_ music courdset.h r '. .ulats· he .. p·ressabl·e - Eve·ryone . at. Mar· i_ ·s·t· -
-
·
t d t
·
65 · · ·· 11
d to·
Mr.
·Ra h dd d "It' · such a
happily expresse
e res
·
·
·
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,
. - , .
well
as
22·others ranging in age s _u ens over . · are a ,owe .
5· _ uc a . e • .. s .
•
d th
f ·
"I'
e
has giveri -their all to .inake
·us \/
from
65
to
·
88
'
.
.
·
pick· from the . courses which . great, great opporturuty for us to
has encou~tere : fd ar ..
t \ -
happy,,.· . _ .· . --: ·.· . ·
.. , ... ., . -.·
Accord~ng. to the,'·head of. capacity. level; has not_ been·_ be able to· use Marist's-fac!}ities: .. had<! ~us}~iroJeclasr;a~
~O
..
The· s~riior ··citizens ·at• Mariit:
~evelopment, John J. Dougherty,
.
reached. They are !l~owed
.
to They have ma~e ;everything so ·- my mmd
the
a cou le.of
are
now
a great.deal happier and,.
it-all came abo. ut. when. a motion
... , take as many courses as they- eas. Y for
us
that it
IS
a pleasure to
years, and after onllyl
P .
g·rea·t ·de· al m'ore "fiu .. lfill
.. ed.·,,_. ·as·
·
·
·
d ·
· · · ·
·
··
1,,..; ·
· •
t d·· ·th ·
11
th·· ·
weeks in the co ege music . a
.
_
,
, was raised to _give the "for~otten · esire.
. . . · . '
. .
·
=
associa, e wi. a. · e
mce .
it -
5
be
innin to come-
to
one· put it. Most-· of thenf are-
members of the commumty, a :,
Mrs. H~len Lozier, a. retired JJE:OPI~ we ve come
m
co_ntact 'course,
l
g
me1hin
ma
.looking forward to continuance of.
great and rewarding opportunity.
·
nurse
takm&
art, .~xpressed ~er w1
t!3;
.. ' · · · . . · · · · • ,,
t~e surface. S_o"
· g_ .
y
the ro ram which· is inevitable
· This motion . originating· in the· grateful feelmgs. •
I really thmk
'Im fascmated and grateful,
_fmally come of it. f
dr.
•
Pdi.gg to-- the i·ru·ti·.al··r·
·
es· ults. '
• •
-'
.
·
·t• · · · t
t · ·t ·f·
•
"d M
R
h · "f
th.·
· ·
Years and years o
eammg,
accor n
. _
.
• ·
Admimstrabve Council and voted . 1 s -~ gre_a_ oppor um Y or us, _as sa! . . r · . au~ . •
or
e .
0
1r .
. . ·
··
h
·
M Dougherty· said that "right
u on favorabl b the Board of.• sen_1or citizens. '.l'here's ~uch a l)Or~umty of bemg: able_ to_, do - hoping and _wondermg ave m a
. r.
_
__
, : . . .
J
t
Y · rti t d f
th"
great atmosphere at Mar1st and something I've never. had. the
very short time for many
of
these
now !he program 15· baSically .
- s
~t
ee!;:C:~~;ru a e
or .. _. is the students are just won,derful' to chance . to ·do before. • This
people, be_come realities ~n_d soon
expe_riment~"' lie .expec_ts ' that . ·
PA sfor was l~ced in the local
.be
in class with. lonly _wish
I
had program at Marist has really
to
be
achieved goals. Time _that
Mans~ ·President, Dr. L1!1us.
R.
y
P ·
. -·
··
•
as much to give to them as they_ made me look at life in a new
once - passed , slowly and un-
Foy will call for a r_ev~~uabon one
pap~rs,,
explarned . , Ma~1st have given to ine"
.
light"
.
.
productively has changed to , year. from now to
iliscusi; the
Registrar· Brother John Kmg
.
. · . :
. -
. ·
. . ·
·
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f
-
1
· ·
d
·r
t
plan·s of thi"s n·ew· system·•
,,
' · • · · ·.·
·
• ··. • '
-
Brother King al.so said, "They
.. Along with the Rauches, many .moments o anxious earrung an
u ure .
. .
. .. ·
. . ·
and quahfymg candidates
. ·
h - .
th.
. d
· . •. · .. . . ... _ h ·
•t·
d
t
Through this program the
"65
which simply nieant· the be at are as muc a part of . e. stu ent of the other se111or citizens ~ve
~
exc1 _mg a ven ur~s:
.
.
,,
d .
h ..
bee. . ..
I
t
65
.
f
· -
Y
h
body
as
anyone else registered at expressed the new and rewarding . This new experience has also
and over stu ents ave .
ome
eas
/'ears?.
ageH.were cdddn . Marist, Exams are optional and interpretation that have come
aroused in many of the "over newer and better people. '.fhey
~,ccor m_g
•i"
f · e
.
1 ·
.e · '
up -to the senior citizens them- -- about as a result of attending only
65's" a new enjoyment and have helped to make Maru~t a
\vh~~~egiri::ud~· t~~O:cif1l?~~gd
:
selves. •No. credits are received a small number of _classes.
~r. · personal; satisfaction, as is ap- _ ·newer ~nd better.'
_
I~~rn~ng
I
·
f ·
·
p d ·. 't and they are not forced to take -Salvatore LoDato mstructor of ·_parent with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
community. )i':arly sign_s
.
. shpw
arge sums o money ma e 1 · ·.
.
· , . . ·
.
· '
·
H
·m1
· ·
ti · ·
t ed ·· ·
t
·
-
··-
impossible ·for· the deserving par.t-m the course, but
1_t
1s the mandolm for 1T1any years,
e1
er,.1~m yreg1s~r
n.ia~.---
Cont.onpage_S ·.-
.
.
• greatly desired that they do."
now taking music at Marist told
As Mr. He1mler explamed it, ·
I
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Mus:ic, Movies
and,
MGR
Cornme_nt(]_r}' _
WMCR Radio .
_Bangafa·
Desh
Record: Jl.e,';iew·
We· re NQt
Coming
Agai,n
>-:.-; :
,. . By Nikki Sic_howski
By Mike S_mi
t!1
·,. By Ed Murphy·/
- - In Champagnat Hall, Tuesday hig}J.t, three Town of.Poughkeepsie
Policeman faced seven, student;; and said, "We're not coming.here
. Iri.spite ofdifficulties last week
Gonna . give you some -truth
This is~lhe ficst in
a
·s~ri~- of' . again.-" For the_!hird time in a row, ~fforts to hold·a student-police rap .
-- in which a transmitting tube was about the · soon-to;be released
album reviews of current· ·sessio!i _had failed, Since October,,;1970, there have been four- proposed_-.,·
burned out and quickly replaced, Bang ala Desh Movie. It seems as
releases of · major 'recording rap session?.- Only t_heJirst;, whjcli~Iosely 'followed a series of
dri,ig · ..
· .Sund,ay has been added to . if .· both · Apple. ·and Twentieth _ companies, presented by WMCR ·· raids; received any response\ Since then, the sessions have. been .
WMCR's-broadcasting schedule. Century ·Fox will distribute and
640 AM (Marist College Radio). spar~ely attended;'.resuUirig'i~,Tuiisdays near washout '.
._ \;:;::· ·
. This Sunday, starting at 7. p.m., .. pr,omote<the J1istorical ,J14adison
;-
· PA UL. SIMON, ·( Coltiinbia )-- ·• · _Mr,_ Ronald Aderholt,
,
chaitnian_ and organizer
·or
the session •cited ·
.
. ·. Mari~t CoUege Radio
(640 AM)
Square : Garden :'!Concert, for·, Th,is :is Sime>n's initial release.- the removalofposters heralding the event and the presentation of a
•. . . · . , , . : features Brian Shea; . at
8
.
with,:
BangalaJ)esh~];;that saw;_Geor-ge-,
d
siricehis split with Art Garfunkel :;Popular,'rri'!vie:on.-Tuesday':night·
.
as ,supporting factors
0
to<the inain
'?•"·t,,,\';«,s ..
,-,;_.,,~;,:"'\)\~Conuoti.'--;-.~i\d;~~n·;1f'J,\s\\0~~1~-l\8:TTi:5on:.•:~!'~;"~a;vi-:7c~h~nk~~~;~t:nidwaY,_:;through"'.).970;'··Buf .. 'theiPI:?~ie.iH5'0Qt1:!£1~t:,p~thy: MI;1;Ader!J.a'lt~rparkeci'.IB,at?~en:there·is_
. Pete-1\1:cCart~ey. gomg ·on· from· 9 ·. organize anq ·· ex~_c'-!te•; sue~ :, a_. :: s°'unds .• · of that team . are _here,-·· :a.ra,d 00sca~pus_;CUienthe _students are_ wilhng to: confront·~•· poHce ·
.
to
I
2, playmg contemporary ·, legendary,even,t_.w1t4mthi.; space ·
with
arrangements gomg-from .a· and complam. But
_
when things are runmngsmo9th, they dontt.care;"
·
sou.nds. _;
.·.
-
.
·
.·
.. ·
of justfour dayi;. The profits from -, Jamaican-style ''Mother and -
The purpose of the sessions were to aqua.int both sides
with
the ideas
· . . An added dim
_
enson ·onWM,CR tbs admissions
of
the
fi_lm will
be>
Chi1d Reunion" (also.Paul's ne~ and actions of each group. MrtAderijolt stated·Towri Police-Chief
· is nation!3l, local:. ~md ~mpus · donated ~tirely to.the UNICEF
sin~le) to a, ~e~tle protest tune . Charles Spha~e w~lingly_ collaborated ~ith
him
on.-thi~pr~h,_tation
ne~s. with possible ed1tor~ls .. Fund, as are ~he profits fromthe , enb~Ied«Arm1sbce·Day". Worth. a!}d Sl)~c1ally _ass1g11ed ,t\Vo of ·the three e>ffi<!ers pr~sent to,\the
wntten · by the _1?Js _ bemg Apple al~um. Scheduled release: getb_ng.
.
. . .
. .--
d1sc_uss1on. But none of the policemen thought,that-they
.
would be'back
· broadcast every mghL- Als~. for the~fdm:is slated for Easter - .. The Doors (Electra)--WEIRD agam.
·
• .
· .; . · .·
_
.·. .
>. . • · •· , ... ~.
> · ... ·:.:
_listen to. the advertising, from and wil~ simultarie<>us1y open in ,SCFJ-lES_
INTO THE. GOLD
·
_The patrohnen _understood that across:the haHthe
c:ufB:\v'as .:
which ¥~rist ~tuqents _can-pick·
~e~
)'ork
.
and six .other· m~jor : M~NK The gol~ mine'- ,that's . presenting a f~mous flick, a.nd,that, giv(;!n
:the'
choice, .i:nore'studentf
up _add1bonaJ
·
1nf~rmabo_n fr°:?1 ._cities: ._
-
,.:· -... __ : . :--;. ·
¥mg spok_en of 1s the voice of wo~ld rather Vlewthefjlmthan talk
to
cqps .. C:~tit they h1:1ahoped.Qlat .
theirloca1 J:>re~enes, etc._ .· ..... .
I11
the film; t~e giants ;of rock: J1!". Morrison--an _album con-
more than the few studen~ presefit:would be interested in finding :out
-
On l\ionday
mgli~
from 7 to _s . a~e there:. Harpson; B9b Dyla~.. tammg
22
<>f
the great J?oors abo_ut the police, and the curren~ relationship between student and · ·
p.m,. for you dass1ca.I buffs, 1s
.
Ringo Starr.Leon Russell; Enc songs. A two/record set, the cop. ·
·
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_.J~rrr W.hite,: th~ ,,re~owne_<l ·C)ap~o11, in addi_tion. toShaQkar,: material is_ exc_eptionc1:I_ a!}d. the
As one cop said; •:~ops are.the scapegoats in·the stre~t/•'.:'flie{~'/
_history teache_rAt Manst.
lfjS
Badfmg~r,~11d a score of oth~fs . . n:iemory ofMomson.fmgers on., neve_r perform their-_duties·to the fullest tiriless thefuri<ierstand·-too·,
scheduJE: for: the nextfew wee,ks 1s, , , -But d1d_,you ever. 11sk_yo1J~self • TH~ LAST
PIC,TUR~
SHOW . public and the_public understands
Utem .. -
· · · : ·.
; ·
\,
~
c, . _ .
as fQ!J9v,s; :February.~; Ex
0
shy? Can_1tbe that all are_there·to
>
.<~o~n~trac]_{_
l
Colum,brn)--T~e
·
··
. .
· .
·- .·. : _-
·· . .
.
KevinLaffili
.
:?'·· .
·
.. cerpts; from
~
RoQert Deverau; .. make us.aware of ~e s_er1ousness . movie 1~ now
m
the Poughkeepsie
.
-
·
· · ... _ ,, ,,
< , ,
·
, ·
Maria·stuarta and AnriaBolena ofthssituatiorithatis-happening?,
area
<Dutch_ess:Ginema), b_ut if.
~
-
_·
_. ;:--:,/. _·\
byG.-Dc>nizetti;March'6,Harold·rndeed, th~y_:ar¢notth.ere·f~r you'relooking:;fors_ome heavy_
L·ttl
p· _._,·,,
w· ..
_-;·< . .'_
.. ,. -:•
--
in Italy:and_ excerpts_
:
from the. political,. motivations,
·
but -.are
so
.. unds, a.p1far¢n·~.l.y···y·ou .. mad. e the
I
e _: eop· e-_$ __
-
or·kshop' ::_
;
--, ..
Requiem._by
-
Hectof,Berlioz; .present because they are artists,· wrong
turn
somewhere.· Songs ·
·
,:-.:
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March 13,'C<inc~rto for-Orchestra : and it is tf!r~ugh their music tha~ like . the ~ri~irial ·/'Please Mr.
,
, ·
_
., By De~it-Deenan .- .::,'
·.-<
>·:--
.
by-~~a
~
.Bartok, ..
andSymphony.~
•-
._~eyw~~_t--t9~eii,fr~th~ag9ny,: .
.
_Su_n'-'(~ohiln1~~Y~.,/~Cold,..Col~-- _.
~
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· ,No:·7 by_Jan S~belius; Mar~ 20,
_the
0
pain,,. and the._ distr'es~ of: Hear.r•. (Tony Be~111e~tt and
·
Little,,... Peoples , '1:heat~r . creatmg backs~ge.:sCE:Pel'Y,:~d . .
·• CQncertoNo.
2
m Rflat Ma3or
J>Y ·
Bangala ~hand
o!
the
tef!lgees , .
"SI~
Pok_e'' · (Peew~ King) are~: trkshop, a b~an~h
~
ChQdren s •.·,,
pr~~_
for our·
_
~IDclll '.p~~uc.tions.
- <Johannes Brahms: .
,. .
who came.mto India-this 1s the: a
bit
out of.focus for today's .. · .. at~, ~rga~zes_children a~es ·: W1thm.~~ two_)¥_eekssess1011;a
\ -_
_,·Sunday: 7~p;m: Brian Sliea;
~
message . oC tbs · histori~al . charts, but with the. nostalgia ·
:Hl·
~n unaginabve
'
th~tncal -·.·
De\¥
play
,will
be workeil:on
:AA<J
9,JiinCoridom; 9-12pan Walsh·&, program: But with the presence · thing_ the way.it
-
is, you'll be ·_exercises ev~ry ~~day from
,
. pr~uc~ by the chilc:tren:u,nder ,
- Pete McCartney.· :· , · · _ ·. - . , .
of
the
album, the conc~rt, or the · hearing
•
about this collection of -
!
2•
2· Out of this activity arose the : .·
the
~irection of, an ·experienced•~:
,
_
: Monday 7-s'•~erry
Wliiie;
·s-9
' CONTINUED.ON.PAGE7 ·. · ·.
·
CONTINUED
ON
PAGE7 ·
:
1t:Tl°r
~
SUJ!1ltler day camp for> s~ff.
~
the_area,of_~~eti<:5; ~~
-
, ·
Jim
Elliott; -9-10 Brian Shea
&
·
·
·
· ·
-
- · ·,:
· _, · · ·
·
·
c 1 .ren
pro_grammed _an_d - ch1l!lren._wlll
!>e
,mvolved
·in~:.··
Craig Miller; 10-12 Jirn
Nae~:
•J
B C · · · · ·,· · : · ·. · "'
staffed by~~ar_1St stud~~ts, 1b1s
imaginative·. orgarii7.ed :gaDl~_s: ... ·
car,oto;.12-1 Mike O'Toole. ~:
_,,
·'!· ·
.
-__ .··•
J ~---· ·.".
·a' ~st·.·,- Na·· ·m.
__ ··
·e'd _-
semesterCin<fr_-1;3od~e!Dleranf
field
trips;
~cing and"sports.-
.
·
,·J•u~day 7-9 J9e Condek
&
-.~d
·-. "'- ,
_
myself are taking an mdepen~nt ·We
~~t also
be
~ble.
to
~e·
ad~
·
Lynch;
·
9-10. Mike
Smith;
,
10-12
-..
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study c ~ e unde~ the provmce , vantage ofJhe:Marist swirrimitig
1•starship''withNi
.
kkiSichowski;
.
-
;By ~rge B~es
of
-B!(Jther Lannmg
-~~~-
.. ·pool forsessions.each,.day. ,
_
:·,•-·•- ... •
12~2 Bob ()'Keefe.
• _ The'Marist Theata-· Guild
has
_Of!Jer cast mell_lbers mclu~ - ~ngh~h. - DE:partmE:!lt : btle,d; - : T~ecamp willbelocated on
tbs · -
.
Wednesday 7-9 Bob Green; 9-11
now completed casting
Jor
their
~ch
·Carnes, S~e Iacabell1S, · Admm1str.a~mg
~
.~~mer Day
J\!al:'lst. CoJ}ege c.
qipus
~d
~II : · :
F.d
Murphy; 11-1
Larry Elmer. presentation ·
0
r
J.B., the Pulizer
Rich
Anderson, Bill ~r9:gue,
~
°!mp for
C!Iildren_ .
At Pl'.~n~.
have use
¢ ~-
~6llege. theater, .
.
:
_
Thursday8-9Kevin O'Neil; 9-10 priZ(;! winning play by Archibald . Cou~t.
J°'nn
,~1~no.
-
.Bill this
camp
is ~nlY. a theore~cal · .~m a_nd
campus
c':nter.
A w~ll . -· ·
Dan Walsh':
Pet4:
McCarthy; 10-: · MacLeish.
The
presentation has · Davis, . Lydi~ Tnng3!1, Terry
stag~.
O';f aspi_rations •:can.it
be,
expertenced s~ff o~- Marist ·
12JackJanc1
&
Mike O'Toole;
12-
-been scheduled for March
23,
24, McGraw, Lmd~ Sof10, Tony
·realized .. -· :
-··:: ·
--::·
·
College students wtll direct and -
2 Glen Lastrico
&
Pat Hoffman:
the
Th
·
Frontera, Carla Bergold, Kay . The camp W?uld
run m three - encourage the children
to
develop .
.
2.5
at·S:30 p.m .. in
. eater:· GI
L
Zbo ·
nf
Rich
two
week sessJ.ons fiv d
h ·
·
The cast is
,
a ·Jarge one and a
cUJc:r,
;ynn __ . nan a
.
.
' l e ays a - t e1r . imaginations . through ..
C. U. 8. Presents·
THE ARM BROTHERS
in
concert
'~ -
'\
8:30
Wednesday
March 1, 1972·
theatre admission: $1.00
-
be. of
th
. _."
di ti
ti
Oieccia.
week
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m .. The
scheduled activi.
·ues
The staff .
num r
e pa,.., are s nc Y
J
B ,
· l .. ·
· -
ch
'ldr
ould b
di ·
ded ·
to
·
·
· · · ·
of challenging variety. The role
· · s
P. ot is a strikJng
1 en w
·.
«:
vi .
10
·
will
be
cl1o~n·through their in-_
of
J.B.
will be played
by
Paul . reconstruction ~f
the·
b~hcal age
grotups
and directed
m
the. vol~eme,-it 1
!1
_Little_ People's
. Tesoro and the art of his wife
Book
of Jo~; se_t
m
modern tim~ _ areas-o ~ts and crafts, theater : Theater, their expenence and
Sarah
'by
'Nancj Thomas Two and explonng
m
modem terms, 8!1~~thlebcs. The arts andcrafts .. creativity. We sincerely .believe
other cllaracters in tbs Ia·
Mr
man·s and God's inhumanity to di".1Slon would encourage the.
we
could offer: a · worthwhil_e
zuss
(played by Tony ta:;one) f!lan.
It will_
be
1J!lder_ the direc-
~hild_ren_ to ~evelop their . _ experien~ _f~r~children of this-
and
Nichels
(played by Kevin llonofMr.J1m_BnttWJth_Brother 1magmat1or:is thfou~ puppetry, . area by irutiatmg such a camp·
Keenan> are MacLeish's in-
Steph!ID
Lannmg handling the w~od~orkmg.
painting ·
and _thi~ summer ..
triguing conception
of God
and
tecti.
hmcal aspect
of the
produc-
~
~
~ .
~
.
- ~ o n . _ .
.
-,~~~
¥
·:··,
·
.:
_
.
.
.
·
.~·
'
:
,
~:
·
·~
:
:
~
...
.
}
••
~-
~
Ji-!'I
.1
,
•
.
-
~
.:
llUA.RY
17~ -1972
PAGEl
,
;/;
Waid's
.
WordS
·
·
·
TOm
Walsh
,
- -
,
j
(
/£iriilUJlllJ
-Exe~/ A
.
-Probl~,n-
,
.
·.
:·An
.
.
_
ybody·JL
_
·
ave
The
Time"?
.
TIIECIRCLE
'
"
·
·
'
.
·
,,
:·,.
:
:-:
--
·-:•
_
;:
·
:
.
·, .
. .'.
·
..
.
<
·
.
.
:._·
.
,
.
··
,:
..
·-.
·
:
.
by
.
MikeWanf-
,
·
.:
·.
_
,
-:·
.
,
·
:
·It
.
~JN.
to me~a.~.there ~asbeen
an
easing~up on the issue of drugs
.
·
1
went
:
for a walk on a quiet afternoon, and
1
wondered what
oo
...
.
by
J:'ie
:
~alled
:
Establishment."
There
are
.
fewer •
busts
on
pot
,,..
thought about.
·
·
:
·. ·
,
: _,
par.ti~
by the Police and less concern over whether marijuana wm
·
.
.·
"What
,
do you think about if you've never read Nietszche ..
or
you
. ,.: •
·
· r
)~d
~
har~~r d
_
rug~. Though there
.
will be a har
_
der crack-down
on .
couldn't corilP.are the afternoon.to a·Monet ... and you didn't realize that
... ·. ·-·
-:.
~rder· drugs;_ _herom and acid, the 'previous concern that
pot
is
-'-
the sun was
-
making surealistic splashes on a wall...and the eclectic
. ·:
~
-
-~ng~~~.~as
JlS~
abou~
been
eliminated. Now that the pa~c is over,
collage of the absurd that makes
up
the universe wasn't weighing you
>
:
1
,l
may
;
be
~
ge>od
~n:1~
to
·
loo~ at
_
~ aspects of marijuana objectively
.
down after the
·
all night discussions over cigarettes .. :and you weren't
.
,c
and
:
:
make
.
a value Judgement
,
.
·
·
· •
·
.
·
·
:
.
·
.
•
. :
· ..
..
•
·
·
thinking about how. things were
·
going to turn out -and what you're
.
;:•,-,:
So}ar r~afc~ ~as:not}>een:able.to
.
pnwe
that'pot
is p~ysically
·'
_·
,
-
goingto
_
do,andwhoyou'regoingtobe,aridif ...
harm~ul, and.µ,,.1t·1s_hai:mf~,
,
1t_ probably will be
no
more. ~o than
_,
.
"Here comes Daddy! Here comes Daddy!"
•
;
<h:Jnkmg alcoh
_
ol.o,r smo~ng cigarettes. ~me people hav~ PQinted out
Kevin and Terry threw the football down and ran after the car as it
that.m9sl_Pf:o_ple W,h<?.ar~.o~ ha
~
rd;drugs sta~ted
on
:
pot
and therefore
-
pulled in the driveway. Before he could get the doc;>r open, they had
·
.
.
·
pot
1s a~i,Jictiveto~tronger drugs. I~ cari also be pointed out·that most
·
..
already surround~ the car
.
He lifted one up in each arm, and carried
••-
al~ohohcs started out by
_
drinking socially
;
but
this
does not mean that
them
·
toward the side door. They both laughed as they felt those big
.
·.
'
al[social dri~ers wm become alcoholics or thatall
pot
smokers
will
.·
hands around their waists .
.
•
·.
,:
0
\,
~coine h_eroin addicts~ I.agr_ee
with
the9pinion
:
thanhe'people
,
who
try' _
.
"Hey Dad, did you bring us anything home? Did ya?"
, -
·.
hard drugs ha~e personalities that waI'l!ant escape mechanisms.
"What makes you think I should bring you two guys home anything?
·
,.:;
So with the idea that marijuana is
as
safe
as
alcohol, let's compare
"
,
·
•:
·
.
Well?"
.:
·
•
·
·
·
··
·
.
.
.
. .
.
.
thei
_
r influence on a person'.s body.
An
excess of alcohol produces
.
the
.
-
..._
·
· They looked up at him, their faces surprised and disappointed: As he
.
"
.
:,
~
•
·
,
. ·
.
drunken state which can
be
compared to being stoned
on
marijuana.
.
opened the screen door, he reached into
his
back pocket and threw
·
·
,.
•
.
The
.
P:efSOn's mjnd loses contact with reality
·
on
~th, butit still seems
,
·
. ..
them each a pack of football cards.
·
~
.
·
.
•·
·
,
.
th~the' canfunction
to
a reasonable' degree while stoned. Ari example
"And don't eat the gum before dinner."
·
"
·
-
>
,.
·
_
ofthisjs thatthe
'
person is-a safer driver while
he
is
·
on pot than when
"Don't worry Dad we
·
won't."
·
\
.
.
,
~~
/s on alcohoL
It
is alsoknown that the pot smoker is less violent,
.
·
-
He sat down on the steps and
·
become.sless depressed;and.doesn'tfacethe troubles of an
-
alcoholic's
started
to
untie his
.
bo<rts. He
hangover
.
.
·
.
..
·
· .
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
heard the washing machine going
·
.
·
· 1-
qon't
know
wheth~r mari~an~ is
-:,
habit-fortning or whether
·
the
·
in the cellar.
· ·.
.
·
·
·
•
_:
.
person becomes psychologically depc;indent on it, but it seems that
·
"Hi honey, I'm home."
.
·
.
· '
.
haoitual smokers have
_
much in common
.with
habitual drinkei:-s
i
They
.
"I'm down the cellar doing the
seein to
be
constantly_high and_out of touc_h with i;eality. They bec<>me
· laundry. There!sham in the oven,
shallow and cannot get.into a deep conversation because they get hung
·
it should
be
ready
in
about
.
half
an
'up
·
on parts of the c<>nversation
-
arid lose
·
the meaning of the whole.·
,
hour."
.
,
·
.
,
M
_
aybe these people can function better
ori
this levef but they
.
seem to
·.'
.
. :
_
.. I don't have
·
time. Uh
.
i'll
just
.
be~ome supe~fici
.
al:
·
~t could be that
pQi
has
.
~
means ofescapi~
·
•
·
grab a sandwiclI."
.
.
·
:
'.<
pl'oblems wh!ch they cann~t or
.
d9
·
not w~nt to
~
~lve._ Smoking pot
.
"O.K.. I'll be up in a minute."
.
·
under these circumstances seems
.
like runrung down tram tracks with
He walked into the living room,
· ih~
·
trairi right behind; it
is
not the solution.
.
·
·
.·
· • · .
·
·
:
·
·
where Kelly and Jenny met him
•
.
:I
believe that tlte
-
individualrnust examine the concept of drugs and
·
·
with big kisses.
·
_
.
.
~
·
·individually determine how far
'
he
·
is going to get involved. Th.ere
is
a
"Daddy, I got a
95
on my Geography test. Wanna see it?"
·
.'
,,-
good possibility
tllat
marijuana
will'
eventually become legalized and
-
"Well, I don't have time now. but leave it out and I'll look at itlater
,
·
-
>
-:
"
i(
it
.
~~'
it
ini~ht
as well~ soon because ·r
_
i~
.
t n~W
.-
people
·
are
·
being
-
·
~hen I sign
yOur homework
.
O
.
K ..
?"
·
·
arrested .for
.
s.omething
.
which is no more harmful than drinking.
"O.K. Dad."
.
Marijuana may
~
provide a good
_
time, but
just
like everything else an·
'
He unbuttoned his shirt as he walked up
the
stairs and noticed the
excess can·have s~rious com.equences.
·
1
·
'
light shining from the bathroom and started to pound on
·
the door.
'\-.:
"Alright. this is the police. you've got two minutes to get out of there,
' '
·
.·
,
-
·:-
before
I break the door down."
:.-
•
.
:::
·
·
· ·-
.
-
-
,
·
·
- ·
~
'Alright~
You
got me." "I give up."
"I'll
come out clean.
0
.
.
.
.
,.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
.
-
·:
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
·
·
1
.
.
.
/ ·
·
As he walked i!')to the bedroom, he heard laughter from the
_
·
::-·
;
.
>
.
.
·
·
<
: :
:
.
·
·
i-X
;
.;
.
·
•
.
.
, '
: ·
..
..·.
'.
.
•
.
..
,
-·
' ..
•..
,:
.
-
.
bathroom at'the joke he had missed. He changed his pants and sat
oo
·
.
:
l'y_e alV1ats be~n a·Jl09~
"
!ClSer
.
In
th'r
semmary I re.member ~mg
.
·
.
''Make sure you teH them about the law11. they were supposed to
.
reprimanded_J>Y my_su~n<>rs
-
!or argtJmgJOO. much with-
,
the offiCJ!PS
have it
:
done last weekend
.
"
,
in b
,
asketball and f~~all
;
{or
·
gettJng
angry
wtth mem_bers of the sa~e
·
·
"Sure;
·
r11
tell them."
.
•
.
.
.·
:_-•
baseball
_
team fop
,
no
.
t
_
U1'i,~~
ellpugl>;.
_.
As
:
a
te
_
acher
.
ID
Mame
at1d
ID
.
He threw some cold water on his face and scrubbed his hands with
•.
·
:
M
_
iCAigan
,
I
teme~be~
·
tx.:ocx,Ii~~jill
,
rught
·
~ter our teams lost games.
.
.
;_
··
-Borax. He checked the clock again and
.
hurried down the stairs.
_
:
.
.
.
:
E_v~n
h
1
ere
a~
-
1\fan~t;
~
ve peen so c.Jtoked
~
up
__
after
af09
_
tball loss that I
·
.
.
-
.
·
-
·
-
•
·
"Your sandwich
is
ready.
!
'
:
·
_
, ,
cotildn t
_
say a
.:
wo~d
.
m theJocker room
.
.
·
·
.
•
- .
.
.
..
,
.
"I don't have time now
.
Give it to one of
,
the boys,
I'll
eat when I
.
,_·
B~t this_c~l~n 1s·n~t
.
on sport5
bu,t
on marrrage. Whenever
I
p~r-
.
come h~me.".
1
·
.
..
.
•
.
Jorm awedding;
-
IfeeH m part
_
of a ~ -
-
And
-
I w.ant that team to
wm.
.
And with a kiss on the cheek, he was gone.
;
.
Wheriev
,
erlfeelthat the wedding ha~ poo
_
r chan,ces of success, then!
·
What does he think about?
·
·
,
·
--
·
. '
Jor>'t\varit
to
be
part
Of
thanea
_
m. be
_
~_!luse Pm
_
a
~rloser
;
.
.
.
.
"'
I
suppose _when
,
he walks along he
_
notices
.
what he's stepping
·
>
_
Pro!-;)ably
_
the.most
~~l~~
~
-
~ID
,
the
_
w,orld 1s to conv~nc~ young
· .
.
.
,..
·
on
:
.
.
and what its like to come home
...
and thatlife just feels good
:
.
·
·
oeople that then· wedding isn't gomg to w.ork. U's so hopel~ that
.·
I
·
·
•
·
.
.
·
don'f ~ven attempt What I do is get out aridlet soine other
.
pries~ take
·
, ,.
..
.
,
~
·
c
·
..
.
.
t
·
. .
.
.
u
,
■
·
.
,
'
>
_
•
ov~r
;
. This wasn't-ea*y durjjlg
.
-my,two
·
:years of .P~ri~h ni_inistry
':
·
,
·:
.
.
o
·
m
.·
.
ffl
.
.
u
.
·er
-
s
.
.
n10
·
·
'
n
.
·
.
(:·
·
hecause weddingswt;rea,s:.iizned tous. Butl have refused weddings <i
·
-
~
-
.
"
reiatives and
.
others
·
cevcii
.
.here at Marist, or since I've been
·
at
.
.
.
•
·
Marist>, giving
such
excuses as I'm not free
.
that day or
I'll
be
a
,
way .
.
·
·
.
To me the odds against
those
weudfogs succeeding w~re
to~
gr~L A!Jd
·
·
.
'
•
I'm
a
·
poor
)()l;Pr'
·,
•
<
·
.
·
.
·
·
·
...
-
·
.
·
•
._
..
·
•·
.
·
..
.
~-->
Fifty-one
pe
;
rcen_i
nf,
teei1age weddings end in divorce .
.
So
I'
n~
,·
:
\: .
.
.
0
•
•
· _
•
·
.
pretty solid evidence othat these
teens
are
m&ture
before
I
accept
to
<
,, , ·
_,
'
· ,
be·pait
·
or
·
·
thaf
team.
·
·
:
.
:
. ·
•
·
·
.
··
. · .
·
· .
.
.
, "
.
There are many ways
of.
judguig maturity
·
within
a
few minutes,
,·
although I nfaybe completely wrong
,
but Fil still refuse because
I'll\
a
.
..
·
•
.
.
·
~or.loser.When a young couple is getting ready to take
·
on
·
the_alinost
.
.
·
.-
-
insurmountable burden of marriage and they
sit
in front of
_
y<,u like
,.' '.
:
two poutmg
·
'
ctyldren scoffing at the Church, discardi11g everyOti!Jg
·they have been taughfin religion (good
.
a1id bad), showing
'
infantile
..
.-:
coriterhpt for all authority
·
and their parents, then some other priest
.
·
can take over. This
is
a losing team and I'm a
poot
loser.
.
·
.
•
...
When Catholics say they haven't been to Mass for years and don
'
t
see anythil)g in the sacraments or prayer,
the!i
~
prefer that t!tey ~o
.
·
tltrough a ~cramentless and prayerless wedding and
·
go <;>ut on
.
th~1r
own to probable defeat. I'm a poor loser.
·
··
-
.
·
·,
,
.
•
.
·
·
Marriage
is
a sacrifice. (To sacrifice is to make sacred>. Human
·
love is made into a timeless, tireless love.
·
The wife sacrifices the
·
husband
(Makes
him
.
sacred
:
) 'lbe husband sacrifices the
wife:
·
God
makes them one in him, iri order
to
give them the capability of loving
.
·
·
each other as he loves them. A ll!ltural love passes•irito a supernatural
.
.
.
love. It means giving
·
up an
awful
lot (sacrifices); selfishness, op-
-
~rtunities, advantages: people. This demands mabtrity, spiritual
strength. By marrying one
•!1111!1•
·
another they become sacred
.
.
-
Since so many here are close to
that sacred step, I have written a
series of short articles on marr-
iage. These
will
appear weekly in
the Bulletin that we put out in the
·
chapel on weekends.
·
Also
•
our
Wednesday
discussions (8
P.M .
.
Byrne
Residence) might beon marriage
for the next few .weelG.
Many inquiries have been received about the Commuter Union's
.
'
Survey
.,
.
In
,
response, the
,
Commuter Union has prepared this
·
statement The Survey has been through a preliminary analysis and
.
the finalized draft will
be
published in J
_
anuary.
Certain topics brought forth in the ·survey appear to have immediate
implicationsonthecoBegecommunity.
Many inquiries have been received
·
about the Commuter Union's
Survey
.
In response
,
the Commuter Union has prepared this
·
statement. The Survey has been through a pfeliminary analysis and
the finalized ~aft will
be
published in January.
·
·
Certain topics broughtforth in the survey appear to have immediate
implications on the college community: One of these themes is the
.
parking systems. The
.
co~muters opinion emphasizes that north
parking lots should
be
open for all commuters.-
With the majority of
the snow storms before us, plowing will reflect a considerable decline
in parking space. The Commuter's Union proposes that Mr; Aderholt
reclassify the
·
parking lots as open
to
all commuters. Thus, any for-
seeable parking problem will be alleviated.
Second issue, that reflected a majority
·
of the commuter's descen-
sion is the library situation. Rec,ently
,
Marist's library has initiated a
new time schedule. This permits the library
to
be
open to midnight
during the weekday providing more services for the residents. The
commuters feel
.
that the
-
library should also be
,
open earlier on Sunday
because the present opening time creates many hardships. The
commuter's Union supports the opening of the library at 2:00
P.M
.
oo
.
Sunday. Thus, the library will provide more time
for
usage by the
commuters .
_
The final issue of immediate ramification deal!I with the Rat prices
of the food, mood of the help, tone of the room, and the tardiness on
opening at
9
:00 in the morning are the major areas of complaints. The
Commuter's Union happily reports that the Rat will be renovated
during the semester break. Also, the Commuter's Union submits
that
the Rat be open one hour earlier in the mcrning. An eight o'clock
opening will allow most commuter's the opportunity to have coffee
before
the
first class.
Other areas such as academics, maintenance
and
security are being
investigated and a finalized report will
be
presented to the student
body, administration and faculty.
,
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PEBRUARY.
:
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-Sign
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of-"
',
()g.r
lime
:-,.
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Traveling up
.
Route
·
9,
·
,
one
passes a neon sign
.
.flashing
"Diner'\ and two. well
lit
·
gas
stations
·
advertising Clay's and
Shell. Moments later we hear
the
screaching of brakes
as a
visitor
.
.
skids by the
·
poster paper
-
sign
.
.
tacked to a free with the
~
words
.
'Marist.College' crayoned on
iL
·
Once
our guest is on the campus
there would
be
no problem fin-
--
ding the Resident Artist's
·
parking
space. ca campus land-
.
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mark>. ortheChampagnat House
For three
'
years now; I've been -
Master's parking spot
.
-
Now asked the
,
question
~
~
WIJere
is .
.
trying to find Champagnat House Marist1,Now
I
know why - no one·
rs
:moth.er story. It's amazing ·can find it!'We
,
have a beautiful
how. after spending so much campus. but
-
mosttravelers'just
money on inner campus im-
pass
•
it by
;
:
L
don't think
':
it
iif
provcmcnts. we forget a
.
simple asking too much to
.
p
_
ut up a sign,
C
but exterior sign
.
.
especially
· .
when that
.
little
Now.
I am sure someone is
.
triangle in f'rorifof the
scboal is
going to argue that "i
.
t will o~ly
just waiting for
a
companiclri.
be
taken
down".
But
rve never
Who
-
knows,
people might
stop
seen anyone walking aw~y with
a
askin2 wtiere we
are.
ceme~ed
down
sign
.
Have you?
As ...
led .,.;.;;,
~
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];~
f
t
~
r
'
T"'1 iaiiii)alfuii,or ;,..
./
installment
ci
a permarient
structtirfto
.-
be
place,r at the
entrance
·
cl
.
-
,:
,
the college with
the
word ''Mari.st" inscribed on it
:-As
the
Circle
went
·
to press
thisweek
we
have not
.'
yet witnessed
tbt
fruits
of
thaf
venture.
·
.
.
ItWas
_
also acknowledged
_
at
that
tiJJie
·
that the
.
placement
of
another
.
·:
cardboard
:
~tastrophy wo~d
-
only ~d ridicul_e
to
·jut .
already
·
.
• deplorable situa
_
tion
;
I~
is
obvious that
that
hypoPJesis
has bet;n proven '
, ·
wrong.
·
Itwas bad enough that we had no sign at
all,
but;
·y.,e
do not feel
that half a sign
is
m1,1chofanimprovement. (But tben
'
itmayverywell
.
bethatthectilpritisinagree1t1entwithour
-
ideals.)
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The
~
•Disney Gwdet>no\V in front
of
our c~pus
;
.
is not
our
idea
.
<i
:
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,,
th¢solution
to
our problem.·It a p ~
to
us
that
the ca1;pentet. was
,
put
.
toworkoiladiagramrathertbanadirective.
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The Circle Staff
does
notfeel it is
too
mticb of a burden
to
installa
·.
·
,
permanent and durable structure
.
in
front
<i
our
campus, Wecan
·
rio
,
longer fhid
:
valid reasons'for
these
artificial
facsimile. For petesake~.
'
Let's have the
r._eal
thing! .
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The
.
question mar be asked
whethr,r
a halC _
~
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sip
is
l>etter
than none.
~
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111ia
is
the
carpenter
shop
which
is
IO
broadly
'risualized
on
.
the newly
,_...4iremoftal,mp.
"
"Dialey
Guide"
in
fronr
ol
campa.
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FEBRUARY 17~ 1972;
·,.
, 111E CIRCLE
PAGES
,.
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.. :_tircle·
~t~gorY
·
Editorials-
,-. ,, •.,
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>Ho
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~-:(.~
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.
,.}ihe~~af~ng ~{
G~;~ory··~Q~e·fo'orie~/~ix'~~~ying··gr~ps will
· take place in-the very:n¢ future. It seemaa·sbame that there can
· · ·
·:only
be
one
selected. because each interested groups reason for
ap-
. plying
appears
to be' as v~id
as
the µext. E_ach group has set forth
a
definite and relevant· purpose in the,application.
, . -· ·
. ·' ,<::!'
Although ()nly·a
half
dozenprospective~cupents applied, numerous
· _,- 'other groups made serious considerations oh·the matter but failed to
· · ·, :submit' proposal~ beca~e of the obvio~ heavy :competition.
. · ... ·
·
From
the
success of Benoit, Fontaine and Sheahan ·Houses, it can
easily beseen that the trend of group initiated common-quarters
i_s
the
· ultimate. in community living. ·_No longer; can\ we stand aside. and
consider Champagnat and
Leo
House as architectual mistakes and let
· the.unrealistic living:cohditions remain; Steps_ have been taken in '
, . •· recent years through the separate "house" system
and
co-ed floors in
.,, Champagnatanp iilternate co-ettfloors irH.eo; but the answer has yet
. . to arrive. ..
.
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. ' Why not have the proposed tutQrial progi:-a_m, foreX:amplE: with the
.
breaking down of
afew
walls, moveJnto sbcth. floor a living room and_
, make kitchen facilities available. This ofcoui;-se does not compare
"·with a Gregory House, but
th~
Circle feels it would be a step in the
proper direction. -- .:_;_
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Charige
... EOI' The
Colllmunity
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. Certain issties:should be. put to the:community for
a
vote.
In
the
· works righfnow; is
_a
cliange 'for scheduling of class~s·to allow for
. · more free·
periods
during the
week.
Ai!Cf.
the change of time for the
.. semester bl'.eak of Fall and Spring to emcompass &_weeks instead ~.
4.
· Though the ideas and prowsals
are
ainied a benefiting the college
: community;
:this
same c<nnmunity. should bav~
bee1f_
consul~,
en·
·
mass through soine sort
of
communique .. :nie community should als:, . :' . ,, . . . . _ ..
.
,
,, "' ·
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·· h~?,~t~f!J0-t;J~k~tl~
«!~sio!18
ma~e .. : -. : . · · ·.
~fii~~ff~it
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··trfadequate
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.FclCilities
· Om~;s ~nv~o~ ~r·~uhdings, as many
will
agree, play a vital and , .
determining role .in the character and actions of the individual.
•
Through our environment we adopt numerom characteristics, somE: .
. begeficial and others. detrimental, to our overalhomposition.
· .
While
at college, we should live iri an environment of education._
· Since college is the institutiov of education it should therefore provide . .
for an environment geared towards education in an effort. to better
'
· those who are·part of·it. · ·
.
· Unfortunately however, the opposite'often occurs. Such is the case
at Marist. where the average student, already irresponsible (because
of his inability to maintain the responsibility that comes with the
freedom ·of campus life) is encouraged by his surroundings to live in
accord with a socially-oriented community. a, community in which
there is little emphasis on education.
Basically. Marist does pot have the proper facilities to encourage
and create an educational environment. The' library is poorly
equipped and definitely not suitable. for a college community. Being
extremely limited in sources, and concerned more with a Mariology
section of unused and untouched books than with ·providing room for
new books. The Browsing-Library too, is by no means conducive to
an
educational environment. Characterized by improper lighting,
provided·by lamps with 25~watt light bulbs (which only work on oc- ·
cas1on) by the banging sound of
a
piano. in the· neighboring Fireside
Lounge; and by the shuffling of feet and frequent -noise in the hall.
Another example of this environment.can be found
i!l
~e ~orms, such
as in Champagnat, where the presence of a telev1s1on
m
the study
lounge has priority over studying. ,
·
·
_
0
If
Marist
is
to become a community-oriented toward education, it
must change. The facilities on campus must be improved to encou·rage
students to partake of the educational opportunities available, and
ultimately to change Marist to a true institution of education. An in-
1stitution in which one who desires
an
education can find it. -
INF
e+CIRCLE
Bernie'Brogan, Ed O'Connell,:Kathy Harvey, J.-Fred Eberlein, Ed.
Kissling .. • ;Stuart:. Gross,_ .i\nne Trabulsi; Bernie . Jemg, Wru,Iy
·· .. ',J~~(~p.-.;~c;~~:'.~f;~ltU:t\}~-~rny,._~~~~~•:..4;;."'~-:.:.;-4~~;.
<Because
of
my
·
-ignorarice last
terview. Those chosen to be in-
throw stones,
Septemb~t-,>thave to
;.wait
until
<
terviewed wiil meet· with the
; Finally we would like to offer a
· .
.-.··· .. •e.He/
·rs_ ·
.. ·•·.·1o·
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....
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:d'~f!!~!:i°:il:~li~!scl,~:
f~f~~g
f~ri:i~:::~~~: ::
~!~mtii~;tor~~e1f:n:Marist
IJ
II It:
[U
meetings and i11terviews at least
-
mitteewill make its final choices.
"Oh. the weather outside is
·
.:Whal.en
,
.
Answers
· ..
a few days ahead of time. ,
PRESENT
RAs
and H~
frightful,
. .
.
than a selected few.
··
Many students especially
· No
staff
member
is ·
But the fire is so delightful.
.
· · . ·. Just.for th
tfsake
of beating. a commuters ·carid not only fresh-
automatically promoted . or
Oh.
a shoveling we.altwillgo;,
, · : .. dead horse, Sat. Feb.
5, 1972,
a-.
men) must work and cannot -rehired. The present HAs 'and·
Let it snow, let it snow, letit
dance workshop was held in the attend dub meetings,-or they
RCswill
be
admitted
to
interview. snow~"
· CoUege,Theater, admissi~n two have transportation difficulties;
on\ the basis . of their floor
·
.dollars,--cost
$l,250.00.
ID
at-
as a result, these·st~dents who
evaluations and,the decision of
. tendance between
50 ,
and
75
are working just
to
stay at Marist
the £foal screening committee.
· Febi~ary
4,
1972
i>e.ople:
~o,:
m.ore · than
$l50.00
are labeled as apatheticby the
Present staff members do not
Regards,
Bill O'Reilly
•71·
Joe Rubino
'71
Miami Beach, Flor.Jda ·
.. The Circle: ,:· ,
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. ,
0 '. -
could have been
~~nee~
at the rest
of
the community, ~ause
necessarily have a better chance.
.
latiende(l'a dance.held in the door;,, a 1~ ,of_
$l,lOO.OO.
·
1
they cannot join clubs>lt is too
at -such positions than new ap-
. Marist College Cafeteria, ori'the . ·.
Ttl~
Manst.College C.lJ.B. ~osJ bad we are all not rich.
. plicants.
''e~enirig.of,Friday,
Fep. 4, 1972. I
at :least
~l,500.00
tha~ weeken -
Kathy Scott
now· realize how·difficult it is to - and proVJded; entertamment for
get~
.
a CF,;:i'day .. · night's- ·en- .no mo~e -
than
200
people ..
I!
tertairimenL·T had
:to suffer, somethu~g wrong S!)mewhere.
~ing pbysically'handled by the
· John P. Whalen
people in charge, degrage myself
to sneaking .
in;
partake . iri an
abusive · arguement; · and
threatened
to
·be
serit to the
Dean's Office.
1
Some people may . question,
why Jexpect ..
to
attel_ld ,the dance
for free when·othershave
to pay
, two dollars? -
.
··
.
.
'·
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1.'
Is
it possible that there are
students who can't afford to pay
two dolJars atJhe
door? · '
2.
Don't these students pay the
same fifteen dollar activity fee
as
the people who can_ afford
to
pay
two dollars?
.
·
If
my point
is.
not yet
clear,
let
me present
the
facts about the
dance. There were no more than
fifty students present -
<I don't
know how many paid). The two
bands
cost
$350.00
and. $200.00. At
two dollars a student no more
than
$iOO.OO could have
been'
collected at the door. '!bat means
$450.00
from
the
activity fee, the
fee myself and the other students
required to wait outside, paid.
Why is most · of the en-
tertainment at Marist held only
for
those who
can
afford it? Why
wasn't only one band
hired
for
$350.00
and admission free. We
would have _saved $100.00 and
~ded
entertaimnent for more
I
(Jn·
Ell
:
iot'·s
Dear Editors,
·
A · th' ·
NOTE OF IMPORTANCE: We
.
. p·a .
y ·
feel .. we have not 'a sufficient
.
. ·
· . •
.
number
of
girl applicants for the
Dear Editor.
'
position
of
Resident Advisor. We
As a member of the class of
'75
are therefore re-opening ap-
1
am responding to the frosh plications for girls until Friday,
apathy -article. We are well Feb._
18.
Freshmen girls are
aware
of · the
numerous welcome to apP.lY as we'll as
organizations and clubs -
now! upperclassmen. You may pick
up
However in September it was
a
an application in the Residence
different' story.;
I
for one, knew O(fice CC134) beginning today,
nothing about them, and
I
usually ·Monday. A letter of recom-
received the. leaflets in the ·· mendation from your RC and RA
campus maff
the
day after the wilJ be required.
meetings.
I.
can even .•
cib:
_an
SCREENIN~ PROCE:EDURE
example.
I
applied for a position·
The screenmg committee for
as a student advisor, and
I
got the Champagnat House consists of:
letter telling me of the interview,
m
those faculty members and
the day after the interview was students. who wrote recom-
supposed to have taken place.
I
mendatioos for the applicants.
called and someone
took
the
(2l
final screening committee -
message.
I
have heard nothing the Resident Coordinators -
since.Itwiilprobablyseem thatl <Emmett.._Jude,
Ra~,
Pat> - the
skipped the interview.
Housemaster c~atrick B: For-
If
Marist is to have a more syth) - the Residence Director
involved freshman class, it bas to . <Frederick
A.
Laf!lberl!-
.
be a more informed one.
I
would
_1be final screerung
conuruttee
suggestthatl\taristcrganizations
win
~d
the
letters
of
recom-
send informatioo about their m~abon and
choose
(on_ the
respective clubs
to freshmen
the
baSJs
or.
those
recom_mendati~)
summer
before
they enter.
who
WIil
be
admitted
to
in-
Patrick Forsyth •
Housemaster
·
From
Florida
Dear Editors.
We would like to take exception
to the remarks made· by one Leo
Gallant about us in the January'
Zl
edition of Reader's Digest.
The story as he tells it, about
his
Miami
trip
is . pure
unadulterated bilge. Actually
Father showed up at our place
and demanded to be taken
"drinking" or he would set
SCHOOL DAYS.
from
page
2
that much · good and ·-effective
progress_ . can be ma.de with ·
respect to Maris~ College and
everyone involved with it.
One of the senior citizens
summed it by quoting a song title
fr«1m
his "younger days" which
goes "ThisCould Be The ~tart ~f
Something Big". ~omethmg b1~
for them and all of us, unless
1t
gets so
big and there'is no ~oney
to continue .. ·This would be a sad
commentary.
·
himself on fire. Since he was half
CALENDAR
from page
6
in the bag at the time· we decided
to save his life. We took him to
dinner during which he threw his
present academic calendar was
salad at a man sitting
next
to us
influenced by the opinions of the
because he failed to say grace.
68
students who replied. A survey
Next we took them to a private based on a sample is obviously
club for a "nightcap... (Father cheaper .and faster than one
had
had a busy day). He -
based on the whole population. It
promptly downed his
Harvey
is, therefore,
a
valid procedure
Wallbanger and demanded that
for determining student opinion
the barmaid join him in a chornc; ..
on
a topic of interest. However,
of Kumbaya.
for the sampling method to be
Despite Father Leo's cherub-
valid, it is essential that everyone
like coutenance in the picture
in the sample answer the survey.
above his cohmm, the man
is
a
Students who have
been
selected
case.
As
far
as
his description of
in a survey
can
perform
a service
us
being
"as crazy
as ever" we
to
other students
by participating
would reply that the people who
in the survey.
live in glass
hol.6eS
shouldn't
-·
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FEBllUARY
,
17;:1972,
_
_
_
:
,
,
'72-·
~
Ar:>;F?.lltOtiOns
:
~b.Qr:ti9n,
......
c
~,ie
·
rAatl
-
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~
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~Ykit'rab~isi
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Issues : ,
,
.
;-,,it'SJriie
'.
tOthe
ef(J,Ziige'
;
?
:
.
'
.
..
.
·.
:
-
~
..
~
\
;
·
~
-
I
.
.
,
._·
>
.
- _
.
,··
:
LI
:
~
,,
._ ·
. •
·
·
·
•
· '
·, ·
.
. :
..
.
·
:
-
·
.
·.
1
.
_
'
By ~illiam Sears
...
·
.
~
·, ..
·
:
-
·
·
.·
_
.
·
·
..
_
··
·
.
.
;
:.
,-
.::
,..
,_.
.
.
·
;::
By
,
~tuar~
_
~r~
.
.
. .
:
:
.
,
'
.
·
:,.
.
:
.
..
.- .
.
_
,
~:
>
Like
.•.
~any
·othe~ .priY,~te
•
..
part of
-:
t~ co~m~
·
hav~
.
m-
_
.
.
From February
21
to februafy
·
.
The pur~
.
of
~is
co)unl!l
•
is
to. -~
-
.
.
..
·
.
.
_
:
.
-
·:
_._-.:
.-
· ·
...
f
;_,
.
(:"Oll~es in
,:
New Yo!k
.
Stat~,
~
. flue~
,
fyd
-
·
potential
.
students
_
to zrthesecond
·
rogram of the New
•
College
union
B_oard
_
Elections
_
~~ c o ~
.
up
_
_
and.
~
turn
(ltltllas
.
·
;
:
.
~
'
'
:-V
~
l
.:
·
· :
,
number
!>!:
applications .f~ .~e~t
·
',
apply
,
.
T
_
he
--
l~terns came across · Corisciousn!ss Series
:
will
·
be
·
be_en
good.
If ~ou feel your money
.
1s
not
_
bemg spel!t nght yo~
can taKe.
•·
.
_
:
y.e~•s ri:eshman
:
<:l~_r1:8
~ w n
_
;Y
-
~
s~udents to other studen~ and shown
:
The ·prograµi
·
entitled,
this
.
op~rtun1ty
.
t.o
.
ch~nge th!ngs:
run
for. oo,e o~-;t~ ~f1~es
_
ope~.·· .
.
'Ibe Offtc~ of. Adrniss10~ at~
thr~gh _ them th~re h.ave. ~en
"Do
Yoti Own Your Body'?"
Ursula, m the Campus Cente~ office has
_
applic~tions.
.• .
.
:
-
~
,
.
.
.,
ttibutes ~1s
~
thr~ r~sons:
.
~e
.
aP.ph~bons received. from ~he
_
.
·.
begins with
_
a brief look at some
.
•
:_
Th_er~are tw? programs !>~n to
_
the
,
_
st~
1
n~
-
~
-
~!
.:
~a~?st
_
<:()~-
·
.
· .
draft;wllichi~making many. high D1str1ct
.
of
.
~oluf!1b
_
1a, Ohio,
..
of the
·
nearly unbelievable state mumty
,
concemmg
:
~
education. -
.
,
.:~
,
:
>
•
•
:
·:·
.
:
·
,
.
.
.
,
•
.
·
,
.
·
. >,
school senio( bo~s
·
_
think
_
:
twice
.
~e!l~ucky; and Flor1da
_:
:
St~dents laws
• ·
concerning _"lewd
:
·
and
:
T~e first
,'
is ~
-
ability
to
c~~s register.for c.ow:s~
_
:.
(not offered
-
at
.
about going right !nto
_
college; the
,
v1s1ting the schooJ h~ve srui:J that lasci.vious co-habitation'•
:
and
.
Mar!st> at any
•
of the following
.
colleg': camp'.15~'.
-
Bard,
•
Bermett,
.
Jow
cost of:_ the city and state the s~dent a_d~!ss1ons_-wor~ers
•
'. '.'unnatural acts."
•·
·
.
__ ·
·
. ..
.
·
Dutche~s. New Paltz, va~sar and
.
l!lster.
If yo~
re
·
mter~t~ for the "
·
universities
.
as
.
.
oppose? _to
.
t,~e
were mfluential
!D
~ettmg ~em -~ ,OOEH>f today's techniques, for ·!all'Sei:iie~~e_r, s~_the Reg1~tr~s o!~tce f~ moreuifo~matioo,
·
.
hi~~e! cost of the . private in
-,.
to~PP
.
\
.
among the extensive
.
freeing the body (!f the con-
.
. ·.
°The
other
program
·
ano~ y~u
•
.
st1tilttons; and the ftct:nat
m~~~
-
use:!rl~f 1:tudent personnel for straints of the past IS the body-
.
to spend a full aca.dernic
-
year at
.
stude~Js
·
are
_.
00
1
g
·
.
-.
·
.
work and it is
,
felt awareness cla5:5
.
The program
_
other colleges in the State of
·
New
voe a tionally
.
ont:nted or:1at~1:i
:
..
~af
'
1~1f;svahiabie, so
.
that
Uie
·
includes a
.
session
..
conducted by
:
•
York
.
I ~0!)'t ~now w,hich
<:<>lieges
-
such_
a:
J~~na!:~iberal Arts college maybe better fitted to the Professo~. Bury
I
.
P~y~e,
_
who ·areparbc1pating
so
you
wdlhave
:_.
mumca ion
~
.
I
. s "new
students.,,
.
·-.
contends, In our society; wear~
to
·
contact ~Dean
.
Cox( .
: ...
·
.'
.-
•
as ~e~l ~s t
mca
ma~or e
·
·
·
·
·
never
,
allowed to be ~sane.'!
.
As was advertised in the Circle,
.
·
•
leadmg to Jobs. Another J:!OSS~bl
_
_
Profes.5<:ir Payne
-
argu~s that_Qur
·
any group.J,nterested iri
proctitjng
·
1
re~so~ fo~_ the
droi /
0
ts ap
.
i
bodies
·
and
.
e>~r
.
mt?ds
--
have
·
__
.
Gregory
_
Hotis~
-
shQuld
:
see
·
Fred
phcabo~s 1s that s u en
1
~
become frozen mto attitudes that
-
·
Lambert'.
,
.
·
/
,
·
i<
•
•
•
in~r.easm~ numbers ap~r to
be
other people say we shoul
_
d have.
..
Rip~orr of
.
the
,
Week
.
·.
.
.
takmg
.
a breath
,
.
as it
_
were,
-
"Do You Own. Your Body'?"
·
·
.
•
·
Th
·
·
11·
"
·
oo
·
,
~
;..t
·
•
·
.
· "
ts
·
·
bet
. h'gh chool and college
..
.
.
..
•· .
.
•
.
.
. .
,
.
:
•
e
"
co,, ege
.
.
9~
ore warr~
.
.
.
dween
1
k.
5
traveling The
focus
.
es
,
on the ques_bon .. of ~ore tJ:ian a
<
httle post
.
script.
·
.
., .
·
an are wor mg~
·
·
·
·
abortion law reform with birth
. · .
.
·
. ,
·
·
.
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•
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.
·
.. ·,
•.
·
'
'.
.
· ,
.
·.
·
.:
'.
;
:'
•
•
. .
,
·
•
effects of this
will
not, however,
·
~
control and abortiori-on-demand
·
<
Probably
.
th~ source of more irritation an<i'uiconV!ertce Uian
_
any
.-
other
·_
be fel_t for at
_
lea~t
3
year or
tw~-
.
..
crusader
.
Bill
:
Baird
,
presenting
single entity'~n
·
campus.
·
Put together
:
their
fnigartiol.!l's
.
(12
~
5p~)
_
and
.
While apphcattons are ~rwn
11
1-
C
•
his
i
controversial
·
views.
.
.
··
·
. .
.
·
.
their inabH~ty
,
~() stoi!~ some useful
,
it'er~u
L
(paper,bac~
_,.
a fair assort-
.
.l
sheer JJUm~ers: the qua
ir
-
~
.
·
:
-
,
_
'J:he
·
case against
· .
abortion-On-
. ·
.
ment
.
of
.
gr~etmg
.,
car~,
·
etc.)
.
and
you ha~e our _fnendlr basement .
.
those-applymg is
.
compara_ e
.
. · demand is voiced by Catholic
·
s
_
hylock shop
.'
I had always thought bookstores earned books.
_
·
.... · · _
.
that of last ye~r, t~a~ ish
!{
.
,
-
theo•i)gian
·_
Fr.
,
William Burke;
.
Iwil_lgladly~etanyoneprin~soinethirig~this<!Olwnn,ifi~
-
!,lleets
:
the
:-
percent three year hig
,.
sc
O
.
•.
.
S
;-
J.
~
. and
'
by the presiden_t and
.
fo!lowmg fequ1rements:
1)
It's
fr~
!,O
the
~liege ~mmlll!Io/,
2)
and,
averag
;
e. a class rank of the tohP-
:.
:
physfcian
i
from the Value of Life
.
·
•
··
wt1l
_
help ~em~rs of the commumty
~Y
1nforrrung
:
~e~of
~
~ha.t•~
·
•
_
.
thrce
-
f1f~hs, a~d 500-5
oo
00
t e
·
·
Committee
:
.
·
·
·
·
available m the (1eld of grants
,
scholarships; and educa~1on,
?)
an~ht's
Scholastic Apbtude T~~t. Thl(!f~
·
-
.
.
.
.
·
•
·
·
Firially, "Do You owii Your
·
-
-
free
:
.
. .... :
.
,
,
'
·
.
.
,
.
·
.
.
~·
•.
.
:
.
.
.
..
.
·.
'
.
:
'
.
··:
;.
·
.:
_'
..
ar
_
e Fev.:er boys !Jl!ng ap
·
>
c
:J3oclyr'
:'
allpws
_
the viewer
:
to
:
Apr1)15th ts,tax ~•me.
If
yo~ 111eome
-
for the_y~_rw~s;~~~r
1;700
..
·
;
,;
.
. ,
phcat10ns. but. more girls. ~o
!
rriake
up his or her mind on the
·
·
dollars, yo_u're
'
enti~e.d to receive
all
the
_
bptes
,
you:pa1cl m
._
So clo!}'t
.
·
•
hundred forty-eight have applied
.
_,
.
abortion issue by
.
presenting the
-
forget
-
~o
.
ftle
_
for your_ rebat~
.
.
AnyC>ne available t~ ~elp
·
:
~~rs
·
with ,
·
.
·
.
The Student_ Interns who
,
ultimate fact in the argult).ent: a
.
prepanngth~1rtaxforms pleasecontacttheO.rcleoff!ce
:
.
•
•
·
•
:
::-
·
·:
.
dur
i
ng the
_
first sem~ste
.
~.
_
DAVIDFLYNN
-
.lookat
-
whatanabortionactually
.
.
Thefollowingpamp~lets~eFREEforthe,_
~
~iting:
.,··
·
.
.
. ,
.
· . ,
·-
-
~
/
.
traveled
to
variou~ places
m
this
·
involves.
·
With
·
Bill
-
Baird
Tar and
.
Nicotine Content pf Cigarettes.
No
,
,7700-034
·
..
-,
:: _-
.
·
_
.
• R
s
·
•
carefully explaining
an
the
.·
Cost
,
of_Operating
~
~utomobµ~:No; 77oo-oo4
:
eosts ofmainten,an,ce,
Pol
Ice
.
a·
.
P
e
·
ss1on
·
niedicalprocedur~s. ~e c~meras accessor1e_s,parts,
.
bres;gas, oil'msuranc~,
etc:_
·
•·:,
/
, '
.
.
· .
.
.
.
.
·
·
follow
·
a young college
.
woman
.
.
How the Consumer
.
Can reP?rt to t~e
food
an~
Drug',A~~st
_
ratun
through
-
an interview, the com-
NQ. 770:02L
How
,
!_o report, nuslabehng, or falsE: ~dv~tllsmg
~f
f ~
on Tuesday night, February 15
,
long-range effects of smoking
-
plete abo
_
rtion operation; and
_
a
flo
_
thmg Repairs
~
No.
01oa-rns
.
.
?,wenty Jr.lye !epa1~
-.
that can
·
~
three Town of Poughkeepsie marijuana
.
Patrolman Gallo
·
post:operative
··
interview..
··
don~mthe
_
hometoprol~ngthemefuln~ssofdothing.
_:,
_
r,
-
-'"
·
_
.
·
:-,:-
police officers shared a rap cited that he "wouldn't want to
Whether
.
yot1 are pro or con o~ the
.
All though~)velcome .
.
,
.
session with Marist students in
.
see more
.
infoxicat~~ people
·
abortion
·
question, this
;
program
·
•
·
·
· ·
•
:
·
,
.:
.
.
Chainpagnat Hall. Through the around".
·
.
-:,
,
_ :
.
_
·
..
,
.
_
,
.
.
.
will
give
:
y~u
th,e
~i:~J~~tswhich
'
·::
.
_
..
:::
·
.
.
_.
,
..
. .
.~
eUorti;ofMari~t Security Officer
;
;
,
'fhe
.
omc~rs
:
stressed
.}
!1
.
e
~i
'\t;.~,«!.:.:-::
.
JiayeJ<>r
.
tQolongpe~nJius~~q
_
UJ)
_
;
"
-~_,~,,.;.,,-,.~
"'Mt':4\on~
~
~dethbHit
'."'
"
PatroTnten
··
~
ror
·
·.r·
·-
po11
c
e
~'·
publi
c~
.:
rel
_
a~ions
<;
-- .
.
Ti111~s
-
ot
·:
programs
will_
be
pos-
.
.
~
Joseph Gallo, William Galbraith, department
.
~hich
'
would
.
work
·
ted.
:
.
·
·
·
_ :
·.
-
'
..
- ,
·.
:
:
-
-
.
and Robert Boy
,
ce discussed
·
toward
·
better community un
-
·
._
·
·
·
·
•
·--
· • •
·
-
•
·
·
l
police attitudes and operations in derstandirig of
-
the role of
.
today's
:
-·
M
·
e
·
_
_
-:_
·
1
·
1·
··
n
··
.
·
d
·.
·
a
:•
.
··,
:
,'
c_:·
,
_
.
_
· ... ;: ·
.
. ··
~
,
,
the Poughke~psie area. The policeman. Patrolman
·
Gallo
·
· .
·
'
:
•
f.:
.
session was lightly attended and stated that the
.
public sees very
.
.
/
.
.
•
.
_
_
·
·
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
·
,
:
.
"'
short lived
.
lasting only an h~ur,
little
of
.
the
good
work that
police
-
_ .
.
By
KathY
.
·
HaI"Vey
~
_ .
_
~
.
.
r.
•
>
;
,
·
-
but the officers willingly an
-
do in the community
,
such as life-
.
.
Meiinda
'
s affection
:
was
-
what
>:
.
.
.
..
>
swered the
.
various
·
questions saving and home
·
assistan~
_
e
,
.
·
.
ove'rwhe~med
me
durjng our:fu:-,!i
(
'
.
asked.
.
.
because it is '.'not newsworthy".
meeting. I:Iei--irinocent:bh.ie
:
eyes
. .
.
.
.
.
.
Among the issues
·
raised was The officers cited ·the minimal
were darting
··
back'
·
and · forth,
·
.
·
. ·
··
_
·
the fairness of many present press coverage of the Town
catching
.
all the activities
:
of the
.
·
; .
:
.
..
marijuana laws
.
.
The officers Police's
.
contract
,
squ~bbles
.
,ward
,
She hugged
~e
.
evefy
time
(
,/
·
:
,
.
.-. ,
:
.;.,--.
·
agi:eed
.
that their judgements because of lack of violence and
·
Ismiledor
,
talked to her
;
iri_f;ict
;
'
:·:
'.;
;_/
<
\:·
·
·
depended
·
upon
·
the results of injury.
she wanted all
:
Jriy
•-
at~erition
·::} .'
·
\
:,'
~
-,
current
_
tests to determine the
.
devoted
,
to her
:
:
I'
sensed her
·
·
: -
·
.
·
.
·
:
·
C
I
.
.
.
d
.
.
Ch
·.
.
.
.
-
starvation for attention
'
and
:
J
,
·
·
.,,,.
;_
,
~
:
.
'.,·
a en ar
_
.
·
·
ang
·
.·
e·;i~~=~~~t~!s~~u~~
;
be~~~/
:
0
\
(:
}t::
/
/
c-
·
i
.
.
.
o
·
·
.
f
.
'.
-
.
t
·
·
·
.
d
.
·
. . .
.
I
_
could
'
meref
:
speculate
'
on
·
;
,.
•\
.
.
•?
.
e e
·
a
·
e
.
·
l'dalinda's history;
/
the
i
orily
,•
in
~
.
.
.
_.
.
-
.'
Jormat~on J.was able t<>/iiid
;
out
/
:
.
·
HILLCREST
ACADEMY
.--.- . _-.
:
·
~
.
-
-.
·
·.
·
·
· ·
·
··
·
·
was thatshe had ~n
·
t!) many·
·
-
>·
<·
•
.
_
·
·
.
-
-
:
.
,
:·
.
•
·
.
.
•
•
:
:
_ ,
,
: ;
.
.
:
·
.
,.
·:,
-
·
.
.
_
.
.
A
survey was conducted recently
-
to ascettain the reaction of the
instftµHons since _very
'.
earJy
,-
•
be
'
co
'
ine"
l
ii.yP,er
~
a,ctive
_
"
()),"
/
ex
-:'.
'pleas for ~edo stop, J:>uihei-eyes
:
college community to the academic calendar for
1972~i973.
'
The ~- childhood. ·There
j
vas
':
~ rule
at
.
:
treniely: with.<h'.awi)';' Ttieref!)re
; .:
wer.e
·
fn
j
iblank
·
.¢n_;eand~er face
·
questions asked and the results were
as
follows
.
.
Hudson River ~fate
-
:,
MeQtaJ any
:
impr~v
.
eni:enf
:
or
pfogres~
a
·
would
7 '
~h<>w
·
rio
:
'
emotjoik
,
·
'.l'o
·
1.
I think the January recess should be extended
.
Hospital that stated
_
:
that
/
the
•
-
patieraf
.
might
.
achieve · tiu'.ougb
·
coritr(>l
.
these
~
situations
.
.
w~s
One Week·
Two Weeks Not
at
-
all
volunte~~
_:
Wer~
.
not ~
.
pro~e
,
1~~
~
· ·
thi~
_
~
o~
:
to
:
One situ~\i
_
on
·
me:a~s
n-
. ·
-.
aJrn~~t
-
in:ipo~i~Ie
·
"'
_-
my
·
.
~µ-eng~
~
_
;
..
--
Commuting Student
14
percent
·
·
'Zl
percent
59
percent
·.
·
any
.
ease
:
history
,
'
:
while
:
tltey
~
·
:
oiliirig.whe
_
n
·
the other ten
'
gir_ls
_ ·
wa
·
snot enough toover~()me bf!rs.
Resident Student
o
.
·
4 .
'
96
work~ afthe h.!JSpiµil,
:
Myjob
as
·
-
;
·
areunmanagable to handle for
·
· Theatteiidents·lcepheminding
m
Faculty_
15
29
.
56
a
-
volunteef, .was to
·
'
·
'.be ·a big
·
two days after.So,
until
hospitals
.
that:
·
we should never
tuni
our
Staff
16
12 ·
.
72
.
sister to
my
little girl.'
'
My
-
actual
.
cari
be
staffed better,· they try
·
backs on the children and be
irf
,
.
.
duty was to give all-my a!tention
.
and
"
survive with the aid of
control at
·
alltimes.
This
'
might
2. I prefer to have the Spring recess after mid-semester instead ~fat a
_
nd love to
·
Utis orie little girl f,:,r
·
student volunteers.
·
-;
•
.•
.
_
·
·
-
,
.
have been ~asy_for
·
a
_
behavior
·
Easter.
·
· ·
·
·
one afte~noon a
.
week.
,
:
From the
.
·
.
My
.
only hope
.
·.
as . Mehnda
s
probl~m child, but Melinda
_
was
·
. mo!11ent I
·
_walke~ onto the ward
·.
volunteer was to be able to
.
rea~h
semi~augistic,which means
.,
that
·
_
Commuting
,
Student
Resident Student
F~culty
Staff
··
Yes
riq.
NQ opjnioo
,
_
until I said farewell, she was her and· talk to her and see
a
at times she would retreat.into a _
18 percent
68
percent
14
percent
right by
!11Y
si<!,e'.
• •
·
·;
· .
response. We walked_
around
·
the-:
''she}!'
;
and w9uld a~knowledge
-.
u
.
85
.
4
.
Each h
_
~Ue girl kn~ws exactly
.
.
hospital and ran through lhe
no
outside stimulus.
·
·
.
33
47
20
when he~ volunteer 1s s~~eduled
grass
la_ughing until we fell.
We
Then after eight weeks of going
·
12
68
20
to come. 1l
seems
that their week
· .
also climbed
.
the
-
monkey bars
lo
'
see her every week,
·
I had a
·
3. I think we should have a mini-5emester- during April and May
instead of January.
Commuting Student
Resident Student
Faculty
Staff
Yes
·
1s percent
26
16
'
20
l\lo.
68
percent
62
58
48
No. Opinion
14
percent
13
26
l2
cen_ters around the
.
day
.
when
·
and made faces
·
at each other,
break-through with her. We were
the1rvolunteercomes.Theymust
_
an
.
dlwa~_sohappytosee
.
that.she
outside in
ths
play area of the
be
good
for two ?ays before the
imitated me - it was a response.
hospital and it was
-
time to go
volunteer_comes :imt
so
that t~ey
B.ut then. for no reason at all, she
inside. Melinda· would
.
not come
,
·
a~e
per1!11tted to have
fr~
time
would
.
begin to cry,
her
face
and she broke away from me and
"'-1th th!!ir volunteer. Dunng the
would be full
of
fear and her tiny
ran into
.
mud. She then
proceeded
other
~1x
.
days of t!te week, they
hands would grasp the ba_rs tmtil
to Jay in this mud. kicking her
ar~ g!ven very httle
.
personal
,
they were white .
.
No amount of
feet -and swinging her arms
attention because
of
the lack of
~rsuading or sympathy on my
wildly. Just seconds before she
Asaresultofthissurveytheacademic calendar for 1972-J973will
be
s~ff. They relate to the other
part could relec1se her from her
and I had been walking and
sim
_
ilar to the present
1971-1972
academic.calendar.
.
chli~ren .
00
the ward for com- thoughts. I was stumped
·
with
smiling at each other, so I asked
pa~1onship
,
but usua~y they are
these attacks and wanted very
.
her where her· smile was and if
The
questionnaire
was
sent to 157 students who were chosen at quite alone: Ocassionally, .an
much to be
.
able to reach her
·
she would show it to me.
Im-
.
random. The responses of the students thus chosen were to form
the_
atte;:dei~ldwdl attempt to giyale
during one. This beca~e a must
mediately. she_ looked up and
basis for estimating the opinions of the whole student
body
to the eac
c
I
a ~ertam speci
because sh
7
would go 1!1l?
these
smiled and then got up and ran to
.
proposed changes. The decision to ~ntinue with
the
format of the t!t<>ughthor comph!1'ent, but many
tra~c~ \\~tie sh? was hitting me
me:
~rasping
my hand .
.
\Ve were
·
tlf!les t e
othe:
girl~ are hurt or
·
or mfhctmg pam on the other
sm1hng at each other V1>1th a new
·
Cont. on page
5
re1ected by this action and they
little girls.
~
could
hear
my
.
1D1derstanding - she was mine.
.
' I : ,
.,
'
·
:'
.
:-:
.~
<~\;\
s
j~~-
~
_
·_:.
· .
.•
FEBRUAR.Yl7;.19.72
'
I
.
mE
CIRCLE
·
' '
j
' '
t
•
,
t
\
PAGE7
·-
....
~
:
·
.
/\
:~
.,
""
:l
.
i&ld
•
·
·
···"se
···
···:N
·
eeded
·
.
.
)':';;:'
.
}
:\
_
_.)j
>t/.;_/<:?'E
t)"<
'
.
·
.
I
.
I
•
.
.
•.
..
. ·
.: <
'1rl'
its
•··
second
·
meeting
•
·
of this .
..
.
.
~mester,
:-:
the yarsity
:
_
~lub·
·
got
-
:
,'.
:
•
·
downtosome
·
specffic mattersof
;,
:
·
.:
--
<'
its
·
:
service
.
·
'.
to
\·
Athletics.
;'.
Many
'·
.
·
_.
· -
:
·
.
ideas
<
were
--
proposed
::
on
·
·
the
.
·
.
;, .
:
.
:
.
subject
of
.
~rvice
and th1ftheme
·
.
·
· ··
.
':
of
this year'sclu~ will most likely
-.
_.
·
6e
·
as
Jund
raisers .. '
.. , ,
.
_
•
·
·
:'
•
ban
<
Faison,
.
of' the footban
·
,
_:
.
,
.
tearri
/
~as elected as _secre~ry.
·
Anyone wi$ing
~o
post any notice
.
on the athletic bulletin board will
_
have
\
to receiye-rus. perrriissfon;
.
.i\U
,
other notices
will
be taken
:
down
'.\:
Lately ,
'-
there
•
have beeri
-
a
'.
.·.
- great many
:
:
'
d!mplajnts t?
'
the -
Athlet,ic
:.
departm~n~: of non~
·
·
students
.
using
~
the gym
,
when
·
.
there isn't even eri4?ugh room for
.
'
_
..
Marist
·
swdents'
.
us(! •
.
If such
,
is
· . :
the
.
case, each individual student
.
• :
.
-
.
-
rimsf consider•
,
himself
.
respon-
. ·
.
.
sibie
:
·
on such occasions, students
.
haven'Fsaid a
~
word
to
-the nori-
- ·
·
students in thif Gymriasiunf. The
.
.
only, other alternative in this case
would be
'
':t"o
,
have
·
our-
security
·
·
··
force set
-
·
up a
·
system whereby
·
-
.
on,Iy
.
sttidents with
_
an
ID would
be
>
..
allowed
'.
to
use the
·
Gym during
·
·
.
,
reserved-hours.
.
:
::
.
-
..
·
.
..
,
:
.
-
. _
•
~
-
:>
_
,
Speajdng
_
atJJ~e
~eetj~g was
,
:
;'
·
Dr.
Howard Goldman;
'
Director
_,
·
.
of
·
.
Physical
·
·
education
·•
and
.
·
.
.
Athletics
at
Marist' The
-
bulk of
the
!
cjt,i¢sti.on~ ;
_
dfre~ted
.
·
.
towards
,
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
,,
.
.
.
.
·•
him
~·.
\\i~f~
..
con~erne9
'.
\vjth }he
.·.·.
and an
equipment supervisor.
:
In has been .brought out on several for the alumni
.
office to contact
buildir:tg
'
·of ,
.
. t~e pro~~ed f1~ld
.
:
speaking of how to a:ttain the
'
occasions
~Y.
alumni that they those who would
be
wHlirig
to -
house andJhe f~d ra1_smg ~1ve
'
·•
·
.
funds for the field house Dr. would be willing to donate to the give. Since studerit pressure is
:
in Septeµif?er:, Dr. ,Gold
_
man
.
·
Goldman stated that
·
the federal field house if they were ever
_
generally respected here at
.
stated
·
·
that the cost of the com-
,
.
,
government would provide a contacted by the alumni office for Marist." anyone wishing the
·-
_
plex would be in the
.
area
_
oL
·
grant of
35
percent of the cost, such a purpose
..
The fact is that alumni office to take on such a
·
$1,500,000
to
-
$3,000,000;
.
depen-
..
_
provided
·
that physical education Marist alumni have .never been
.
function.
fill
out the coupon below
..
·
ding
:
what
would
'
be put i~
it
~
·-
.
:·
classes be
.
taught there. This is contacted for such a purpose. and return
1t
to
Jim
Cosentino-
_:
Maintenance costs could
be
kept"
_ ·
presentlydone and would
.
present
·
With the field house fund drive
·
Box
92
Champagnat
.
in the area of
:
$30,Q0Oyearly. Thi
_
s
-
•
.
:
no
.
problem:
·
The goverll!lle!}t coming upin §eptember, the V.C.
There is an obvious need for the
would
:
incltide such
:
service~
as
·
would
.
also be willing
~
to lend members feet that this
.
would field house as related to such
cusfodiaris; ~lectr_icity
,
:
and heat,
·
'
Marist
20
percent of the costs.
It
pres
_
ent
ari
exceHent opportunity areas
as
intercollegiate
:_,
-
_
-
(fi~cle
·
)t~te~view
:
)::>
_
;
... ·
.
; :
)/if
c,
:
o
<>;
/:>?
o
'
~
~
:.n;;:\tJJ11lti'te
•
ftf
t•,
·
•
·
·
~
t
tJ,o
<
·
:m'·t(/
.
:
,
,
•
·
:
e
.>
x
:::
·
·
:
;ci
:;
.:.
.
.
;,:i'~
•
-
-
·-
i
?
f
r
.
_
iJ
:_}
:
:
.
:_
~~~
J
i
l1
-
~lt
t
.:
i!
--..
~
!i\
~
·
::
:
~<
/fl
.-
·
.
, ..
-
..
~
-
:<:
:_
tI :/
;
,
;:
·
c_E:f
note)
-
'J,'.he
'
{t)µol'?pgjnt¢fvi
.
~
-
~rygipally
aweai:ecI,i~
·
the
.
Circle,
_
·
·
'
-
-
-
-
-
one
-
yearagoJ
.,
··
- .
'
:
-
0 ~•-
.
~-
·
· , -
·
·
.
-
·
-
·
.
, . ,
• .. :
•
•
•
•
•
.
·.
The
·
questions
·
revol~ng around the· proposed new
-
athletic complex
·
are so many
.
arid
-
so :varied
.
that
-
The Circle
:
has decided
_
to
.
preseris
·
· .
.
(informatfori
'
suppiiecflii an
·
intervfew
v,;ith
Dr. Foy, conceJ;riing
_
this
.
issue
:
·
. , :
;:,
.',
·
'
5.'
J
'
'
.
·
•
..
.
·
.·
:;·
·:
.
:;:
>
<>
;
-
.
-
.·•
,
.
.. :
~
-
-
Itniightbeinterestfrfg
.
to
·
note that
.
a major fear
is
that the complex,
·
·
'.,
which-Would c<>st :roughly
·
three
:
and
a
half million dollars would
·
be
.
•
:
:
btiiltfr<>m afrincrease in tuiti<in/rhis is
.
urifounded according
to
Linus
:
>
:
F.
.
oy ;
·
the complex.would
•
Ile
f?uilt
:
ffo~'gift funding.
The
only building
-
. <
:/
on
c~~pµs
that::,Y~ fihailced bytuitio,ri. funds was .the
_
campus
cent.e,;.
-
-
·
-
,
J
Basicallf the sittfatfon right n<:1w with
:
the athletic ccm1plex is that
·
it
.
..
··i.:'
'
is in
:
the
:
pre
"'..
planriing stage
:
It
wiffnio:it likely
be
locafed on
.'
th~ south
·,
end
.
ofcampj.Jfa
·
nd
•
would house.an indoor:0utdoor pool.Io addition to
-
·
.,
the
.
poohind basketball court
various
instructional facilities would
be
·.T
~
induded
,
~(.
\
:
;_
·
.•.
-
·
_.
··
·
. ·
,
:
: -.
-
'
'
'
'
•
.
-:
-_
: .
·
;rhe
term
pf
e-planm
_
rig stage
·
w~§
explained by
Dr.
For as being a
·
:
.
; :
stagein
·
develoP.fuent
.
where
,
Marist bas received a space-cost study
m
.
"
.
-
•
.
tµecoii}pl~x
t,
Tlie space'.<=osfstudy
.
~as completed recently and
as
sai
.
d
-
-
the
:
pJaris
wo
.
iild
caU
for"a price tag of three and a half
milliori doll~s.
·
.
·-
'A:major PfOblem
·
that occurs from a venture of this size is the cost
of
maintairiiftg the building, it has beeri' approxim~ted that it wotild
'
cost
·
-
.,
$100,0QCfd<illars
a year. 'l'bis
~~!
<:oo.Jd possibly raise the cost
ri
tuition
_ ,
Qne
·
buiidred;..dol!ariia'year
·
per
,_
student.' \ --
_
·;
_ ·
·
..
.
·
•·
basketball, track, and tennis.
These teams
ai:e
-
working under
very undersirable conditions
which handicap
_
their per-
formances
.
Little is said of
.
the
benefits of a field house to the
·
student who isn't involved with
intercollegiate athletics. The
Physical education
.
courses could
be enhanced and expanded with
the acquirement of the- field
house. Courses such as male and
female swimming and track and
field could be taught. In-
~
-
tramuralscould
be
improved and
co-ed intramurals would become
a reality. Students would no
longer have to wait
45
minutes to
play a basketball game at night
,
·
and girls would finally be able to
use their fair share of the
facilities. Female athletic teams
could be started. The need for a
· field house is a real one. Such
activities as Alumni' games
· during homecoming are just not
feasible
with · our athletic
facilities. The role of a field house
as money
-
maker has been un
-
fortunately played down
.
Other items on the
·
agenda
included:
<
l)
the awards dinner
in early May.
(2)
tqe possibility
of trophies for second place in
intramurals and
(3)
the size of
the
·
club membership. Any
varsity atJ:)lete with one year's
experience is
·
welcomed and
,encouraged to join as the
membership is still quite small.
I
would like to see the Alumni
Office tak
_
e an active part in the
upcoming field house drive in
September.
S i g n a t u r e - - - - - - - -
•
,;'.
'
Whatrriust be
mderstood
is
that this athletic complex
wiU
not be
of
· .
field
_
ljow;e pJ,"oportions but ra~
_
her it
-
is
'
being designed for the use of
·
_
·
·
1600 people. Ttm complex is still a
few
years off and to be sure there
_
_
_
.
MARIST
COLLEGE
BASKETBALL STATISTICS
.
.
1
.
will
most
p~b~y _be oth~r c~anges on campus before
.
w~
-
see
,
~~
.
-
'
NAME
-
~~!_llple~ c~ntpl~;
::.
-
:
'
:
,:
·
..
"
, '
.
.:·.
-
·
·-
·
·
_
-
.
'
GAMES
FG.
'
FGA. PCT. FT.
'
FTA. PCT. REe:AvG.PTS:AVG.
'
.
.
.
~
.
.
.
•
,•
.
.
..:
:.·
-
COLLEGE
CO~CIL
from
page
1
'
.
.
·
~
:
O>D~
·
shoold;
.
'
.•
,;
.
such
'
a
<
m~s.
yet it
can't
.
be
.
.
· .
a.
Re.ippoint the
_
remaining
..
neglected.
If
we c;m lend
a
hand
·.
Jiv~
.
staff
_
:
members
to
·
the
'
to
Bangala
Desh,
to
the refugees
·.
fQllowing
·
.
scheduJe; three
,..
ap-
·
'.
of
India, ·
to
any partictilarly
pointed
for
two year terms and
·
distressing situation
:
where
two
appointed for <11e
year terms.
·
tragedy has· struck,-perhaps
we
·
b. In addition, -be sbouJd ap-
can understand why.
_
-
.
point
•
-one additional staff
·
.
member
to
·
:the• J)erman~nt
·
RECORD REVIEW
f~m pige
2
>
College Council
for a
one year
-
term;
-
·
_
·
_
.
songs
recorded
way, way
back
in
4. We recommend that
the
non-
tbs
early '50s. Take it or leave
it.
·
graduati~
·
student members or' Leave it.
this year's interim College
Al Green
(Hi)
_
LET'S ~SfAY
Cotmcil be retained
as
members 'OOGETHER-All you brothers
of
the permanent College Council out there -can hear Big Al make
til
the"
·
du
ti
things happen. Other than the
,un
..
-
1
r
.
~
a.
on.
title song, the
Bee
Gee's
"
"How
·
BANGLA Of.SH
from page
2
Can You Mend a Broken Heart?"
reading
ex any
written
material
·
and
''La
La for Yo~" make a_
on the subject, it
.
is rather
dif-
good pa~kage.
.
·
ficult
to
feel
the
pain
of Bangala
·
Al!
this
and
mor~
1s
on
your
Desh
where so
many people are
Manst
College
Radio \VMCR 640
dying fasL
It
seems so
far away~
-
AM Sunday through T ~ a y 7
even
out
_
fl
our
~gue to
consider
p.m.
to
7 a
.
m. Tune us m
.
'
JOE SCOTT
.
18
124
·
242
.512
69
99
.697
342 19.0
317
17.6
..
.
640
4.2
.
RAY CLARKE
.
16
97
247
.
392
32
so
67
226
14.1
BRIAN McGOWAN
14
46
lll
.414
•
31
56
.554
122
8.7
.
.
123
8.8
MIKE HART
17
72
162
.444
44
56
.786
'
10s
6A
188
11.1
JiMMARTELL
·
-
16
48
136
.353
22
41
.537
118
7.4'
118
7.4
NICK JACKSON
8
25
47
.532
8
19
.421
25
3.1
58
7.3
JIM.BELCHER
11
14
33
.424
4
11
.364
22
2.0
32
2.9
.
JIM COSENTINO
.
14
34
67
.507
30 -
43
.697
69
4.9
98
7.0
LESCHENERY
·
12
36
119
.303
-
14
.
28
.500
53
4,4
86
7.2
JOHN DILLON
12
8
24
.333
5
6
.833
26
.
2.2
21
1.8
JOE
.
JOHNSON
8
12
28
:429
14
18
.777
31
·
3.9
38
4.8
STEVE SHACKEL
13
36
88
.409
14
18
.777
49
3.8
86
6.6
JIM OSIKA
4
3
7
.
429
0
1
.000
13
3.3
6
l.S
.
BILL ROSS
4
2
7
.286
0
0
_
.000
33
0,8
4
1.0
MARIST
18
551
1318
.423
287
446
.64-3
1048
58.2
1401
77.8
OPPONENT
18
446
1137
-.392
355
527
.674
.
735
40.8
1247 69.3
RECORD 13-5
conference record 7-2
NEXT GAME vs NEW HAVEN COLLEGE
2/16n2
home HOME
AT
LOURDES
H.S.
...
.·.·
.
.
i
·.E()~es-.:.116st
,
;;Si~tla:·.-c~S~~ll~81tY.;.
_,·.·-... :.\·t
·
:---:-··,~
'
... ···,. ,: .. ~-·~---'
-·~ .. ··
-~-,-·: ..
"
·: , .... ,..· ...
·-' .' .· .•_ ..... •._,.,:./ ·_-_ .... -,·_• .. : :·_,·:-.: .. :_·
:< ... _. · ... _~-~--~' . .;. __
-:_•·_'·./.:
:
_;,>.::
·
-:·~ ... _:··.-.:·-" .. , .. ::.•'"• .. ~---._.-_·:~:;•,:·:_:::.·.:-~.':_ . . .
·:··,' '·.
-
.
~ .,
.
:
,.
.
'
.
!: .. ". . · ;.;;. :
R~--
~~~"\~n'
~t -~ -~
oVer · K~•s.
booste~{lthe F~es · ~~~gtb.}i'heJildlans::~:
lef
~f ·,
6
1
4.
:~Ol>~~r~.:
it_o~(::Brt!(>~ Xis.~,-
~
:_This Will.be ih~ ~i~tti. m~ting. .·
· -.<~
7
Iridians\.of ':
~iena.·~
c,otlege;-'
~
:_:_confe~~c~nn~rk, 11>
.
:7~2 ~d k~pt :. s•10 .~op~·omore ~~nter . _Eric
pp~>
~.d.f
1
~
Junuf ~
15
-,~:frb ·
'.~J:!~ofm°~l
3
W:e't::
<'; :
Saturday'also at S:!)O at Louicles(, .them. :
m
.c<1ntent!~n,.y .Marist • Sta~~~ck .. (13.7, .ppg.) .
.
. 8!1d.
~
•
. This. w~. -th~r ..
~~ ~
. with .
def
ted
the
Kingsrrten
65-63
last
•· The:Foxes
:
are.13-5 atter·-two simply.outgunn~Ki.t11.'s~l~ege,.
Forw~ds Fred.Shear,. a Jumor_ .ll}~tmg
« ..
es~.~wv.,,
111:5 . . . ·
ea
·..
-
.1. .
.
.
··c_, ..
impottalil';.'.victori~·:•against·~-Fi'es~mariMike.Har.tpum_ped· ... ·<f~)an~av_eraging.19:~ppganc;t/;,.s1.e~ holdintt"a1n~·•!l~~=r~._·ye~_atBrookl~.:
. King.'s<College·
(104~93).,·and,· m'-30 pomts~ 9n
.
~turday.·01gh~, 6 3. semcr. Dave
·
:Wright.
'rile,
.
.
Last season .~'. ..
;uts . . • .
t
·
.
c .
·
-
. StonehilV.J88-77)i,• ~e vk?tory;,.-Marist,pla~ed•th~ll' ~stg,me of- Indians ba<:kc~ is, ~ade
_up
of :
~
f~~e.s
~~
:~ 77.
7
72
-~~~a
.
•. · , . · · • ,,
\
· ··. ·
lhe
season
10
their
upset
~n over- ,_
, Siena. , -- : -:. . .
.
. .. ,..
: .
':.stc>nehill .. Senior ~y,CJarke led .·.
·.- , On ~onru,lY
rught_,
F~br,uary 21 ,·
_ the
Foxes with 27 points: Senior
,the
Kingmen .of ~rooklyn College _
, . Captain
Joe
Scott. continl!es . to ·.
will·. battle Man~t at ,.Dutchess
·
.
· lead· the. Foxes in·scoring
-01:5· .·
.. eounty.Commwnty Co_!l~e .. at
: :ppg), · . and' ., tre~c:,unding '. ·
. s:~Brookl¥11 Collegecomes,ID~
·
' •(19;Orebs~>: Senior
lfay
Clarke
the game w~th.a
7-12
record but ID
,
(14.l,Ppg;)-and Freshman Mi~e :
.. ~e ~ast_ha~
~v~~ the Red Foxe~ ..
·Hart are theot>nly otber·players ID .
a difficult. ttme: Brooklyn: em
·. double figlll'es.'' .: ... ·
·.
'.
· .': ·
. · ploys_a
_three
forward offense led·
,:: C:
The_ Indians of ~iena College .
. bt ,!um~rs: Hytnan. La.sner and .
_
_
· corite into Saturday
ni~t•s
game
Jim .Mitchell and ~reshman ·
,vith· a misleading.12-9 rec_Ol'd.
, Clar«:nce~~gh. Rounding out the · .
. · Siena
has
been
hall)pered , by .'
startmg line.up are ~uar95 Gerry · _
1
.:·injuries all season hirig and.will .
Seabrook - (6'0)
1
and ·· Eustacio _
be probably., operating at full·.·
. . ..·.
. .
Waisoi:ne
.(5710). :
_
.
MIKE
HART
"····•, ... ·· .. lhB;.Seasons·-~Hailge
·ana:so.
Oo
\•r .. ,.~
ThereAs:. no hiding now,, they . .,. responsibility-is first to himself· essence :~ they · parallel the set a
new
win
re<:~d
this.year
at'
·their. records
were
f~hman Ed
··-+
·rudJi'tdrop the pass
or
miss•the ~;and secondly ~.the:
team ..
No·· ,den'larids_'of life itself. It's
.no
fiveand.eight.
0
1ricludedin
tlilsis·.
·Foy(1~2),.Wayne Kezirian .(3-8);
/ .. bl~J:piere is no one to bl~e.;" oth~rsport is
as
selfco~~i!JUS ~r wonde~ : more·. people : don't. a 0-52.shutout·by· N(::AA rated
.
/J:ack,Clowe
(1~5), Bob
F~ell (8-
.. >
~s 1s::~ne on on~ .. compeb~~~
·,.as .
personally .. i educational , as ·
·
wrestle; no wonder the world isn't-: Trenton S~te; and
a
first
time
2); .Bill Burke: (2-2), JuniolJl;
co.•
,_·,, with>ev~cyone_.\\'.atching, tb.i.s
JS'.'
wrestling.,
The
.
mat{pririgs .out "in betterishape:
This
is what :victory over.:~.U.N.v;: at New'. :capts. LanceLipscomb (5,:2) and .
. :,;:Wrestling; At.present there ai:e·,·every desire;·s~ill
•
lll'lctstrength : wrestling·, is. What the Marist -Paltz·. Six wrestlers had
winnii:ig
James La:\iery (9-3-0,
and
.Pat
7.-/.
veryJeW, sports which call .for. ,t}ie: : that · any indfvidw,il:
,
:can
,
·. com.a: ·: Wresµi~.- Team·- has: done . this,: .records .
this
season,
and with. a . ·LaveUe (3-0)'Johri Redmond (8-2)
·.
:
/•de~ica,tion .· that - wres_tl,m~< mand;· and-:: success <is not ·season was to striveto meet the\' match total.of on1y·10 bouts
we
.warren Brown·
(3-0).
With the
)/ demand~;- And .deinand i(does, · me~slll',¢ in' winning/:\ but in
'.'te1W'. . As
for.
their, ac• , have a • statistical _misnomi< regular
season
behind them now,
; ..... every: :wr.estler' has to sbµ".ve; .. :kn.owing that:,there'.WllS•nO more
coinplishmerits;. they are,Jlistory acknowledged bythe'fact tbatfor: si~ .wrestlers wiU be going to
, ,;:; dehy~ate and· condition harder' ·. to give: -Such ·
~e:
the
'rigors of ,· now save\.
the
·.district'.
cbam~,
irianv bouts Marist was liriable
to .·
SOuthh_ampton
College_ this·
<?
•~i(}~ ..
:ariy_
oth~ sport; T~' \.Yl'~tling, ca.JlecI::bY;.mapr,-baf- .·'pio~lii~ thi~·weeten~t
:As·for_.
fiellacomplet4:teai!_l; ~rid'for'a 'weeltend ~. participa~ _in t~e
/ ~~.om
for this beu1'-a wrestlers.· .ba11,c · and/:1tr1JeSO~_«!; .yet
m
the sea~s historfi;.~ matm~ ~eamtotal forfeited186 points:
Of·
ij.A.LA: district
31,,
cham~ionship
· ·
·
·
... ,
,_.
,
,,
·•.·•.·•.·· .. ·: ,,
. ·. c. · •·
the whole
·squad; many ._efforts>toumar.ient. Of these six men,_
. .
,
.
.
. were put forth .. with little .of no iMarist is: ·expecting
to
return
wrestling experience, among
th_e · .. ilolJ!e
·With six .medals, a feat
_ •· more.·.fain.ous .of:·the :do or/die· .. ·. ~ich ~faccgmplislied will triple
. Ma'iistathletes, were
Mike
'mini'· the.previotiifschool record.
AU
in
··:Hawd;,
John
·
M:iilvey:Cand··
~kip,
)tll~e season •was
one
of.great
· Lacey; Otherteam·members'and '.: maturation . for. the . Marist
l(f
lll!!;
1
f
!f
~If
!f ~:~-~-...
-~ -'-~h.is ~~day: ieb~~y_,.19.Uie
J-~
·~~~lit
·hi~
:jumping. Pete
Manst CQll~e ·-.ln~~r. Track .Rock,. Spragti~, .and Dennis
Te~
.travels,to:Queens:College,/Dubatowka will share the ·hur-
... ··•·· to take ori ootlf.QueeJis.and Kings
?.i:Uing
.
for the
:
.Red Foxes. .· ·
. Pointina·double:dtialmeeLBoth · ·: Newcomers Tom Herman and
, · Queens
.
ai:id'.•
·
i9ngs :PoiriLsport :
·
Marty.,Ward. who have been ·
.
. strong and
18;1'g~]
~a~
in iridQ.or<· \vofking· out f9r only a couple .of ·~ ·
•~~;•Bothcydexcepttonally:~~ll.• ~~~ir.haviilgjoi~d. the squad
:In the,P'f(} Ind~ ~lay•.Carmv_al
;
\).ate;:will ruri_the 60 yard dash and
two ,w~eks ag~, .... ··· ... •• , : .
i · - \::,
·
·;
·
.:.
corripettf in the:.,nori-scoriilg 300
·
Marist's.bigg~t~handicap ~
:
yai:d dash ·a1so.:Bill
.~arey;
the
be._the facttha.tthe.t_eaill.has a .. ·sblhdout in-Marist's CTC.Relay
~IllaUsqw.ad of oiily about 15
~tn ., :
competition in the. 440 yard
run,
.
. : meµibe~ iu)dwill.befaced with··,,willrun
ffieooo
yard dasb'aDdthe
'.{iit
1
[1;({Jr· .... ; ...
·
.. ·.
;;i./fr:·.i~:sh Bo~-#~;.-ie~ssk,Nt;_~
,
for
~n/::.
J
'.t:
t.: . • • •· : :·
:<>
-
. : . : .
~1~~'
.;;~a1:~~h}~t;~._
-
:J~$ti:::J~r~~~i~~ .
'·-
:
}t,11:•1n_.>. .
•s· .-
.'::an·~•:
·
·a·
.
·
'"'1-s:
<
·.;.s;:"'·•'.a,/
·:r:·., .,:
I)··.
-e,·
e·a·
.
·
.''·t·
:e·'.
··~r·:
::!f~'!.iiupo~tsth
~::~~~n:r.··:•--·u;~~;»i:~t~:;iit:.1~r;i~~
,, ....• -/}.-'://t;'_'.; ..
,.-g
,·_.·::,'-c>/':<<'': ..
··.
•
·!.••:•:f·::'.c\
·
•c:(O•:·••::J>··.:;
:\:~,;\':,·ByMike:Mii!'-<··:·fs~e~iili~l
.
~~,if:~~'.~:J·.~:~·,~~;1=~~f~::~'
. :-; L~lb/l'~ursday _,the . Ma.tI~t.)about<
14 .
inmut~-;-:,r~rpa.uung.
.
·> ;_;- :.' ('-
y-.
'io
b
V · -: ·." was Marist'sfirstiumier,ever to .
Mar:fst
me~iri
tbe.1000
yai'd
run·
:~ fdere11Jima:nh·" 6~sketball · .. t~m.:: 'FI:om there bof!l
'
t~m~ ·play~:' atea. smurpTrhe~s~lni· gttlye· redufoxes acsamsaer . . run a Sllb-five
~
minute·,mile
in~ ..
backed ,
up· - strong}. y by. .Marty·'
.
f~~
:!
e Kings-college·fr~ll <ou.t.the g:.ime a11dJ!tnpt1ed th~ir
.
· .
··
., .
..•. . . ~• ·. · · · : .. ·
doors
hi
the
n.;..;.;.ns ·
'\ml ·
o: -- · · - •. · .. , · ..
·
' . teann~>
80. -
: : ... //:\\ benches~·-
•
: ;
·
. ·, :,
~S\;,> ' ..
<
out OD
top
by
the,
~ore~ 81
~
58. : the mile,i~ard
r::tand ~:t .
.-;:~::~r:»:~~:~ -~:
,_ ; T~;~~ewas
all
Mal',ISt.~
the:
, ;
·:
·
'I'~e high, scorers}Qr:Ma~st . I~~~baf,fw:::rl!8~ ~·. 'return after
only
a
'ten-minute
sharetlieloaditfdie two-inilerim
.. httll~?.'~.·.··' ..
Joxteenes.
~~nt.tl- oudttto:
·
~.
-
.. ;-... ·.:..··•hiw_egh~
Jl>e.
8~ts·
_e.·cu:1
..
·
.. '~.t.h;;;--~ ghoamt.
e ._
t:~
t ..
iiea~
for a g«:t~°or .
rest
to run.:
a·
1eg
in thf ~<>:rriile ... :
(or.
M.arist.· ::•:1'le\:two-mile . relay . ;
.. ear.Y.~_eyen . pom ea a_ 22-5. :·, .
~
potn .
irase~ s
a , the first half. Marist then caught relay. Tru.s
tak~-
tr~enclous .:.
tea~
wip :~·~om~ of".Jobn -
-:...
As
~e~fprogressedso ~d the_>JantasticJ5for 18 andalsQ_pulled .
the hof-hand
with
·about. five. ~~ance as well as speed . Jas~nski as le~d:-0ff: man,
~
Mar.•~~-Jead. The excellent .. down.25 rebo~._AJ li'8.1r!M"~t,
... -
..
'111.
littl
oot · ,_
abihty. .
. . -
_
.
.followed by Jay.Doyle· Marty
sh~mg.-.,and good- team •w_ork had 20, ~reg WoJCi~ski had
mmutesto
_
go . .
· e
.er.,
oxes -·
Maristwill
be
bringing.along a 'McGowan and
anchorJJian
Bob
gave!11~/~a5.5to32half.t!Jne •Cl~andT,tn1Mtu'p~f,had.l0.The- ~ead:l)thto,'rlatthed .halhaJff,:M ···t strong. weight .contingency,.of Salomooo:.
,
. . .
lead.-·-,-\,
.
.
high scorers for Kings were Dave
In -
e secon . . . . -
ans
·nc1
·
ord
1u.1de
Hank
Bl · ·
·•
· •· h -
·s11·
·
. .
.
uch
: . Ih :ih~·'.second half
the frosh
Walton with 29; Ste,re Strumbeck · ·domina~ pla}'. as theyJJUt on a
i oor rec,
.•. ,.,
r.
wn.
.
.
Ma~~hs-. op10g to
!)W
m ..
continuecf:the good ..
Juw.H...r
and
··th
12
d Ra
silhemi
with
11_ .
21*7-bursfto.lead
by
a score of 56 _who_~lds
the
mdoor record of 44
time - m~provements
10
their
.. ·the.
·
~ .
• ·
WI
an ·
Y
.
·
•. '
to 42 with about six minutes gone
feet
WJ
th the shot put. as ,well as -~ners m all events from
~
n;
~·~ J>allmed
to 74 to 44
with_
Last Saturday
the
frosJI
played - in
the
s ~
half. 1bis sealed
the . thr,ee o~r possible 40 . men:
times
recorded two
'!eeks
.ago m
game up for-the frosh
and
both
,Jerry '!ilder,_.Dom Mucci,. and the CTC Relay ~mval.
Frosh
net
2
in
tape contest.
tearris
just
played to. nm out
the
Bob Guula. Bill S r
will do
clock~. :· _
.
.
· -~ ·.
: _,_ ..
- The high scorers . for Marist
were
Joe·
CiraseUa with
a game
high 19, · Brian McCullough had
14, Tim.Murphy ,had 12 and Al
Fairhurst had· 10. The .high
scorers. for Vassar were Steve.·
Ganster with 12 and
John
Sprogel
with 10. .
. .
The
freshman team record
of
'now 7--3. The next game
for
t,be
freshman
team
will
be
against .
Siena College.
The
game· is
on
Saturday, Feb. 19
and is at Our
Lady of
Lourdes
High
School.
The
- game starts at 6_:00 p;m.
Mighty.~cGowan
leads~
through~
9.17.1
9.17.2
9.17.3
9.17.4
9.17.5
9.17.6
9.17.7
9.17.8
~--~
.
-,._
)
,, . · •·· '.". 1{~littiff'1/Jfii~::~-•)
1"JIJ~i
7 ·
.
.,.
..
~-~:-
.
"
•·
.
.
.·
'.
:
.
..........
'
..
:
:
..
_;:~(-.··:.;
~~ ~
~~:
·<'.:
~!:'.: -~·
·::::·'
~
.
'
,.
;
.
I -
·,
r
...
.
..
.•
.·
. .
'.
,·
' ·;. : -
.
'
. \
._ FEBRUiRY
17.1972
•
.. .
•·','l.chool
·
.
payS'.'mEOia,· ..
Never
E11,):D\{/:
· · B M"haelR"
· · .
·
.· -,
_
_._ · ~,. --·
-
-· .. ·
- ·
•.-;,. ·
' · · ·' fhifi
r
"l'elovedmusic can -already·feel·the greater--·
.·. :_
• .. y _ic -
lZZO '. ' . 'senior_citi:i.ellSto~verrecei~~the··~-';J\S the p~ogr11m~an moyi~ _,.
0
s ej.1~~-h _v "d "only a:_ enjoyment of.my surroundings>} '
_
... !God
blesswho ever-thought· chlltlce __ o~ e~1encmg·h1gher:frompapertoiracbce/benefmal an my. 1fe, . e ~alth". urse··,1n the:past'few:weeks_,r-have
.· .
.. this up for
uf'
·exclaims ~s
..
c
ed!J(!at1on_ ~nd as a-~esult have
-
,results _b~8'!n, ·:to . _apJ)~ar ·: coupl:1r~ds!:\:,°vie: ft°in a ~-·become a much
happi_ei:
~~~-
a~d.,. _: .
. Helen Hane, one_Qf the new
65
l!een <11;.opped.-~ei:~ !s no ~?ur~e
_
m_~nyfold. _Mr.;_and Mrs.Jrv!ng !ve have never seen .music:·
I
arn ;also extremely grater~~~-':":_
- Ye3!S and . over stu~ents newly fee for the s_emor c_1ti~e~ .. :
:
~uc~ -
of. Rh1n_e~ck, ~a~ned
Y
I
in m life!'
..
.•. Marist ~ollege for a~ ~hey bave_ . .-
registered at Mar1st: College:
The only r ~ lurutabon_ .aJ>.:' :ove_r_ .
45
)'.ears, . are, Jomtly before . Y .
. .
one of - done for me and my
wife.''.
Mrs.
"They've just taken me_in and. pears. to be m. respect tO''the
.
,re~1stered.
m·
anthropolgy and
M~v~~[:,sm!!~~~r;,• Henry -HeimJ,er ·gratefully:,_saidf'.'-'The.
made.m.ea partofthem" was her number of coursesto be f!hosen .. plulosophy.~ They have become as
.
. al
.
t
d. the
refre. sh1"ng memor
.. 1es it . has
·
·o ·
·
t
t· · ·
1· te-cl b .. th · · t · ·t "f'lled · "th
· Wandel 1s
so reg1s ere m
.
.
·
. appreciative reaction to this new . . nee reglS ra _iorus comp e . -
,y -
ey __
,PU :
I ' .
l . .
WI_
. -
en- .
' .
M
w
ndel
returned ·to my mind are unex-
edticational experience for her
as
regular full-bme students, the thus,.
asr;n-
from the . program.,, . same_ music courdset.h r '. .ulats· he .. p·ressabl·e - Eve·ryone . at. Mar· i_ ·s·t· -
-
·
t d t
·
65 · · ·· 11
d to·
Mr.
·Ra h dd d "It' · such a
happily expresse
e res
·
·
·
-
·
'
,
. - , .
well
as
22·others ranging in age s _u ens over . · are a ,owe .
5· _ uc a . e • .. s .
•
d th
f ·
"I'
e
has giveri -their all to .inake
·us \/
from
65
to
·
88
'
.
.
·
pick· from the . courses which . great, great opporturuty for us to
has encou~tere : fd ar ..
t \ -
happy,,.· . _ .· . --: ·.· . ·
.. , ... ., . -.·
Accord~ng. to the,'·head of. capacity. level; has not_ been·_ be able to· use Marist's-fac!}ities: .. had<! ~us}~iroJeclasr;a~
~O
..
The· s~riior ··citizens ·at• Mariit:
~evelopment, John J. Dougherty,
.
reached. They are !l~owed
.
to They have ma~e ;everything so ·- my mmd
the
a cou le.of
are
now
a great.deal happier and,.
it-all came abo. ut. when. a motion
... , take as many courses as they- eas. Y for
us
that it
IS
a pleasure to
years, and after onllyl
P .
g·rea·t ·de· al m'ore "fiu .. lfill
.. ed.·,,_. ·as·
·
·
·
d ·
· · · ·
·
··
1,,..; ·
· •
t d·· ·th ·
11
th·· ·
weeks in the co ege music . a
.
_
,
, was raised to _give the "for~otten · esire.
. . . · . '
. .
·
=
associa, e wi. a. · e
mce .
it -
5
be
innin to come-
to
one· put it. Most-· of thenf are-
members of the commumty, a :,
Mrs. H~len Lozier, a. retired JJE:OPI~ we ve come
m
co_ntact 'course,
l
g
me1hin
ma
.looking forward to continuance of.
great and rewarding opportunity.
·
nurse
takm&
art, .~xpressed ~er w1
t!3;
.. ' · · · . . · · · · • ,,
t~e surface. S_o"
· g_ .
y
the ro ram which· is inevitable
· This motion . originating· in the· grateful feelmgs. •
I really thmk
'Im fascmated and grateful,
_fmally come of it. f
dr.
•
Pdi.gg to-- the i·ru·ti·.al··r·
·
es· ults. '
• •
-'
.
·
·t• · · · t
t · ·t ·f·
•
"d M
R
h · "f
th.·
· ·
Years and years o
eammg,
accor n
. _
.
• ·
Admimstrabve Council and voted . 1 s -~ gre_a_ oppor um Y or us, _as sa! . . r · . au~ . •
or
e .
0
1r .
. . ·
··
h
·
M Dougherty· said that "right
u on favorabl b the Board of.• sen_1or citizens. '.l'here's ~uch a l)Or~umty of bemg: able_ to_, do - hoping and _wondermg ave m a
. r.
_
__
, : . . .
J
t
Y · rti t d f
th"
great atmosphere at Mar1st and something I've never. had. the
very short time for many
of
these
now !he program 15· baSically .
- s
~t
ee!;:C:~~;ru a e
or .. _. is the students are just won,derful' to chance . to ·do before. • This
people, be_come realities ~n_d soon
expe_riment~"' lie .expec_ts ' that . ·
PA sfor was l~ced in the local
.be
in class with. lonly _wish
I
had program at Marist has really
to
be
achieved goals. Time _that
Mans~ ·President, Dr. L1!1us.
R.
y
P ·
. -·
··
•
as much to give to them as they_ made me look at life in a new
once - passed , slowly and un-
Foy will call for a r_ev~~uabon one
pap~rs,,
explarned . , Ma~1st have given to ine"
.
light"
.
.
productively has changed to , year. from now to
iliscusi; the
Registrar· Brother John Kmg
.
. · . :
. -
. ·
. . ·
·
.
·
f
-
1
· ·
d
·r
t
plan·s of thi"s n·ew· system·•
,,
' · • · · ·.·
·
• ··. • '
-
Brother King al.so said, "They
.. Along with the Rauches, many .moments o anxious earrung an
u ure .
. .
. .. ·
. . ·
and quahfymg candidates
. ·
h - .
th.
. d
· . •. · .. . . ... _ h ·
•t·
d
t
Through this program the
"65
which simply nieant· the be at are as muc a part of . e. stu ent of the other se111or citizens ~ve
~
exc1 _mg a ven ur~s:
.
.
,,
d .
h ..
bee. . ..
I
t
65
.
f
· -
Y
h
body
as
anyone else registered at expressed the new and rewarding . This new experience has also
and over stu ents ave .
ome
eas
/'ears?.
ageH.were cdddn . Marist, Exams are optional and interpretation that have come
aroused in many of the "over newer and better people. '.fhey
~,ccor m_g
•i"
f · e
.
1 ·
.e · '
up -to the senior citizens them- -- about as a result of attending only
65's" a new enjoyment and have helped to make Maru~t a
\vh~~~egiri::ud~· t~~O:cif1l?~~gd
:
selves. •No. credits are received a small number of _classes.
~r. · personal; satisfaction, as is ap- _ ·newer ~nd better.'
_
I~~rn~ng
I
·
f ·
·
p d ·. 't and they are not forced to take -Salvatore LoDato mstructor of ·_parent with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
community. )i':arly sign_s
.
. shpw
arge sums o money ma e 1 · ·.
.
· , . . ·
.
· '
·
H
·m1
· ·
ti · ·
t ed ·· ·
t
·
-
··-
impossible ·for· the deserving par.t-m the course, but
1_t
1s the mandolm for 1T1any years,
e1
er,.1~m yreg1s~r
n.ia~.---
Cont.onpage_S ·.-
.
.
• greatly desired that they do."
now taking music at Marist told
As Mr. He1mler explamed it, ·
I
'
,.._
.
-
.
'
..
'
.
..
Mus:ic, Movies
and,
MGR
Cornme_nt(]_r}' _
WMCR Radio .
_Bangafa·
Desh
Record: Jl.e,';iew·
We· re NQt
Coming
Agai,n
>-:.-; :
,. . By Nikki Sic_howski
By Mike S_mi
t!1
·,. By Ed Murphy·/
- - In Champagnat Hall, Tuesday hig}J.t, three Town of.Poughkeepsie
Policeman faced seven, student;; and said, "We're not coming.here
. Iri.spite ofdifficulties last week
Gonna . give you some -truth
This is~lhe ficst in
a
·s~ri~- of' . again.-" For the_!hird time in a row, ~fforts to hold·a student-police rap .
-- in which a transmitting tube was about the · soon-to;be released
album reviews of current· ·sessio!i _had failed, Since October,,;1970, there have been four- proposed_-.,·
burned out and quickly replaced, Bang ala Desh Movie. It seems as
releases of · major 'recording rap session?.- Only t_heJirst;, whjcli~Iosely 'followed a series of
dri,ig · ..
· .Sund,ay has been added to . if .· both · Apple. ·and Twentieth _ companies, presented by WMCR ·· raids; received any response\ Since then, the sessions have. been .
WMCR's-broadcasting schedule. Century ·Fox will distribute and
640 AM (Marist College Radio). spar~ely attended;'.resuUirig'i~,Tuiisdays near washout '.
._ \;:;::· ·
. This Sunday, starting at 7. p.m., .. pr,omote<the J1istorical ,J14adison
;-
· PA UL. SIMON, ·( Coltiinbia )-- ·• · _Mr,_ Ronald Aderholt,
,
chaitnian_ and organizer
·or
the session •cited ·
.
. ·. Mari~t CoUege Radio
(640 AM)
Square : Garden :'!Concert, for·, Th,is :is Sime>n's initial release.- the removalofposters heralding the event and the presentation of a
•. . . · . , , . : features Brian Shea; . at
8
.
with,:
BangalaJ)esh~];;that saw;_Geor-ge-,
d
siricehis split with Art Garfunkel :;Popular,'rri'!vie:on.-Tuesday':night·
.
as ,supporting factors
0
to<the inain
'?•"·t,,,\';«,s ..
,-,;_.,,~;,:"'\)\~Conuoti.'--;-.~i\d;~~n·;1f'J,\s\\0~~1~-l\8:TTi:5on:.•:~!'~;"~a;vi-:7c~h~nk~~~;~t:nidwaY,_:;through"'.).970;'··Buf .. 'theiPI:?~ie.iH5'0Qt1:!£1~t:,p~thy: MI;1;Ader!J.a'lt~rparkeci'.IB,at?~en:there·is_
. Pete-1\1:cCart~ey. gomg ·on· from· 9 ·. organize anq ·· ex~_c'-!te•; sue~ :, a_. :: s°'unds .• · of that team . are _here,-·· :a.ra,d 00sca~pus_;CUienthe _students are_ wilhng to: confront·~•· poHce ·
.
to
I
2, playmg contemporary ·, legendary,even,t_.w1t4mthi.; space ·
with
arrangements gomg-from .a· and complam. But
_
when things are runmngsmo9th, they dontt.care;"
·
sou.nds. _;
.·.
-
.
·
.·
.. ·
of justfour dayi;. The profits from -, Jamaican-style ''Mother and -
The purpose of the sessions were to aqua.int both sides
with
the ideas
· . . An added dim
_
enson ·onWM,CR tbs admissions
of
the
fi_lm will
be>
Chi1d Reunion" (also.Paul's ne~ and actions of each group. MrtAderijolt stated·Towri Police-Chief
· is nation!3l, local:. ~md ~mpus · donated ~tirely to.the UNICEF
sin~le) to a, ~e~tle protest tune . Charles Spha~e w~lingly_ collaborated ~ith
him
on.-thi~pr~h,_tation
ne~s. with possible ed1tor~ls .. Fund, as are ~he profits fromthe , enb~Ied«Arm1sbce·Day". Worth. a!}d Sl)~c1ally _ass1g11ed ,t\Vo of ·the three e>ffi<!ers pr~sent to,\the
wntten · by the _1?Js _ bemg Apple al~um. Scheduled release: getb_ng.
.
. . .
. .--
d1sc_uss1on. But none of the policemen thought,that-they
.
would be'back
· broadcast every mghL- Als~. for the~fdm:is slated for Easter - .. The Doors (Electra)--WEIRD agam.
·
• .
· .; . · .·
_
.·. .
>. . • · •· , ... ~.
> · ... ·:.:
_listen to. the advertising, from and wil~ simultarie<>us1y open in ,SCFJ-lES_
INTO THE. GOLD
·
_The patrohnen _understood that across:the haHthe
c:ufB:\v'as .:
which ¥~rist ~tuqents _can-pick·
~e~
)'ork
.
and six .other· m~jor : M~NK The gol~ mine'- ,that's . presenting a f~mous flick, a.nd,that, giv(;!n
:the'
choice, .i:nore'studentf
up _add1bonaJ
·
1nf~rmabo_n fr°:?1 ._cities: ._
-
,.:· -... __ : . :--;. ·
¥mg spok_en of 1s the voice of wo~ld rather Vlewthefjlmthan talk
to
cqps .. C:~tit they h1:1ahoped.Qlat .
theirloca1 J:>re~enes, etc._ .· ..... .
I11
the film; t~e giants ;of rock: J1!". Morrison--an _album con-
more than the few studen~ presefit:would be interested in finding :out
-
On l\ionday
mgli~
from 7 to _s . a~e there:. Harpson; B9b Dyla~.. tammg
22
<>f
the great J?oors abo_ut the police, and the curren~ relationship between student and · ·
p.m,. for you dass1ca.I buffs, 1s
.
Ringo Starr.Leon Russell; Enc songs. A two/record set, the cop. ·
·
· .
. .. ··
·
.
_
.
.: .·· · ... ' -
c· ·• · •·
_.J~rrr W.hite,: th~ ,,re~owne_<l ·C)ap~o11, in addi_tion. toShaQkar,: material is_ exc_eptionc1:I_ a!}d. the
As one cop said; •:~ops are.the scapegoats in·the stre~t/•'.:'flie{~'/
_history teache_rAt Manst.
lfjS
Badfmg~r,~11d a score of oth~fs . . n:iemory ofMomson.fmgers on., neve_r perform their-_duties·to the fullest tiriless thefuri<ierstand·-too·,
scheduJE: for: the nextfew wee,ks 1s, , , -But d1d_,you ever. 11sk_yo1J~self • TH~ LAST
PIC,TUR~
SHOW . public and the_public understands
Utem .. -
· · · : ·.
; ·
\,
~
c, . _ .
as fQ!J9v,s; :February.~; Ex
0
shy? Can_1tbe that all are_there·to
>
.<~o~n~trac]_{_
l
Colum,brn)--T~e
·
··
. .
· .
·- .·. : _-
·· . .
.
KevinLaffili
.
:?'·· .
·
.. cerpts; from
~
RoQert Deverau; .. make us.aware of ~e s_er1ousness . movie 1~ now
m
the Poughkeepsie
.
-
·
· · ... _ ,, ,,
< , ,
·
, ·
Maria·stuarta and AnriaBolena ofthssituatiorithatis-happening?,
area
<Dutch_ess:Ginema), b_ut if.
~
-
_·
_. ;:--:,/. _·\
byG.-Dc>nizetti;March'6,Harold·rndeed, th~y_:ar¢notth.ere·f~r you'relooking:;fors_ome heavy_
L·ttl
p· _._,·,,
w· ..
_-;·< . .'_
.. ,. -:•
--
in Italy:and_ excerpts_
:
from the. political,. motivations,
·
but -.are
so
.. unds, a.p1far¢n·~.l.y···y·ou .. mad. e the
I
e _: eop· e-_$ __
-
or·kshop' ::_
;
--, ..
Requiem._by
-
Hectof,Berlioz; .present because they are artists,· wrong
turn
somewhere.· Songs ·
·
,:-.:
.'
·
March 13,'C<inc~rto for-Orchestra : and it is tf!r~ugh their music tha~ like . the ~ri~irial ·/'Please Mr.
,
, ·
_
., By De~it-Deenan .- .::,'
·.-<
>·:--
.
by-~~a
~
.Bartok, ..
andSymphony.~
•-
._~eyw~~_t--t9~eii,fr~th~ag9ny,: .
.
_Su_n'-'(~ohiln1~~Y~.,/~Cold,..Col~-- _.
~
-·-
-:---
·
·,- .
-
·_·
.
-
,
·
_
~--·
_-: . .
1.
- .
,,.~
• • • ~;--:-,~::--
. . .
· ,No:·7 by_Jan S~belius; Mar~ 20,
_the
0
pain,,. and the._ distr'es~ of: Hear.r•. (Tony Be~111e~tt and
·
Little,,... Peoples , '1:heat~r . creatmg backs~ge.:sCE:Pel'Y,:~d . .
·• CQncertoNo.
2
m Rflat Ma3or
J>Y ·
Bangala ~hand
o!
the
tef!lgees , .
"SI~
Pok_e'' · (Peew~ King) are~: trkshop, a b~an~h
~
ChQdren s •.·,,
pr~~_
for our·
_
~IDclll '.p~~uc.tions.
- <Johannes Brahms: .
,. .
who came.mto India-this 1s the: a
bit
out of.focus for today's .. · .. at~, ~rga~zes_children a~es ·: W1thm.~~ two_)¥_eekssess1011;a
\ -_
_,·Sunday: 7~p;m: Brian Sliea;
~
message . oC tbs · histori~al . charts, but with the. nostalgia ·
:Hl·
~n unaginabve
'
th~tncal -·.·
De\¥
play
,will
be workeil:on
:AA<J
9,JiinCoridom; 9-12pan Walsh·&, program: But with the presence · thing_ the way.it
-
is, you'll be ·_exercises ev~ry ~~day from
,
. pr~uc~ by the chilc:tren:u,nder ,
- Pete McCartney.· :· , · · _ ·. - . , .
of
the
album, the conc~rt, or the · hearing
•
about this collection of -
!
2•
2· Out of this activity arose the : .·
the
~irection of, an ·experienced•~:
,
_
: Monday 7-s'•~erry
Wliiie;
·s-9
' CONTINUED.ON.PAGE7 ·. · ·.
·
CONTINUED
ON
PAGE7 ·
:
1t:Tl°r
~
SUJ!1ltler day camp for> s~ff.
~
the_area,of_~~eti<:5; ~~
-
, ·
Jim
Elliott; -9-10 Brian Shea
&
·
·
·
· ·
-
- · ·,:
· _, · · ·
·
·
c 1 .ren
pro_grammed _an_d - ch1l!lren._wlll
!>e
,mvolved
·in~:.··
Craig Miller; 10-12 Jirn
Nae~:
•J
B C · · · · ·,· · : · ·. · "'
staffed by~~ar_1St stud~~ts, 1b1s
imaginative·. orgarii7.ed :gaDl~_s: ... ·
car,oto;.12-1 Mike O'Toole. ~:
_,,
·'!· ·
.
-__ .··•
J ~---· ·.".
·a' ~st·.·,- Na·· ·m.
__ ··
·e'd _-
semesterCin<fr_-1;3od~e!Dleranf
field
trips;
~cing and"sports.-
.
·
,·J•u~day 7-9 J9e Condek
&
-.~d
·-. "'- ,
_
myself are taking an mdepen~nt ·We
~~t also
be
~ble.
to
~e·
ad~
·
Lynch;
·
9-10. Mike
Smith;
,
10-12
-..
. . .
.
study c ~ e unde~ the provmce , vantage ofJhe:Marist swirrimitig
1•starship''withNi
.
kkiSichowski;
.
-
;By ~rge B~es
of
-B!(Jther Lannmg
-~~~-
.. ·pool forsessions.each,.day. ,
_
:·,•-·•- ... •
12~2 Bob ()'Keefe.
• _ The'Marist Theata-· Guild
has
_Of!Jer cast mell_lbers mclu~ - ~ngh~h. - DE:partmE:!lt : btle,d; - : T~ecamp willbelocated on
tbs · -
.
Wednesday 7-9 Bob Green; 9-11
now completed casting
Jor
their
~ch
·Carnes, S~e Iacabell1S, · Admm1str.a~mg
~
.~~mer Day
J\!al:'lst. CoJ}ege c.
qipus
~d
~II : · :
F.d
Murphy; 11-1
Larry Elmer. presentation ·
0
r
J.B., the Pulizer
Rich
Anderson, Bill ~r9:gue,
~
°!mp for
C!Iildren_ .
At Pl'.~n~.
have use
¢ ~-
~6llege. theater, .
.
:
_
Thursday8-9Kevin O'Neil; 9-10 priZ(;! winning play by Archibald . Cou~t.
J°'nn
,~1~no.
-
.Bill this
camp
is ~nlY. a theore~cal · .~m a_nd
campus
c':nter.
A w~ll . -· ·
Dan Walsh':
Pet4:
McCarthy; 10-: · MacLeish.
The
presentation has · Davis, . Lydi~ Tnng3!1, Terry
stag~.
O';f aspi_rations •:can.it
be,
expertenced s~ff o~- Marist ·
12JackJanc1
&
Mike O'Toole;
12-
-been scheduled for March
23,
24, McGraw, Lmd~ Sof10, Tony
·realized .. -· :
-··:: ·
--::·
·
College students wtll direct and -
2 Glen Lastrico
&
Pat Hoffman:
the
Th
·
Frontera, Carla Bergold, Kay . The camp W?uld
run m three - encourage the children
to
develop .
.
2.5
at·S:30 p.m .. in
. eater:· GI
L
Zbo ·
nf
Rich
two
week sessJ.ons fiv d
h ·
·
The cast is
,
a ·Jarge one and a
cUJc:r,
;ynn __ . nan a
.
.
' l e ays a - t e1r . imaginations . through ..
C. U. 8. Presents·
THE ARM BROTHERS
in
concert
'~ -
'\
8:30
Wednesday
March 1, 1972·
theatre admission: $1.00
-
be. of
th
. _."
di ti
ti
Oieccia.
week
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m .. The
scheduled activi.
·ues
The staff .
num r
e pa,.., are s nc Y
J
B ,
· l .. ·
· -
ch
'ldr
ould b
di ·
ded ·
to
·
·
· · · ·
of challenging variety. The role
· · s
P. ot is a strikJng
1 en w
·.
«:
vi .
10
·
will
be
cl1o~n·through their in-_
of
J.B.
will be played
by
Paul . reconstruction ~f
the·
b~hcal age
grotups
and directed
m
the. vol~eme,-it 1
!1
_Little_ People's
. Tesoro and the art of his wife
Book
of Jo~; se_t
m
modern tim~ _ areas-o ~ts and crafts, theater : Theater, their expenence and
Sarah
'by
'Nancj Thomas Two and explonng
m
modem terms, 8!1~~thlebcs. The arts andcrafts .. creativity. We sincerely .believe
other cllaracters in tbs Ia·
Mr
man·s and God's inhumanity to di".1Slon would encourage the.
we
could offer: a · worthwhil_e
zuss
(played by Tony ta:;one) f!lan.
It will_
be
1J!lder_ the direc-
~hild_ren_ to ~evelop their . _ experien~ _f~r~children of this-
and
Nichels
(played by Kevin llonofMr.J1m_BnttWJth_Brother 1magmat1or:is thfou~ puppetry, . area by irutiatmg such a camp·
Keenan> are MacLeish's in-
Steph!ID
Lannmg handling the w~od~orkmg.
painting ·
and _thi~ summer ..
triguing conception
of God
and
tecti.
hmcal aspect
of the
produc-
~
~
~ .
~
.
- ~ o n . _ .
.
-,~~~
¥
·:··,
·
.:
_
.
.
.
·
.~·
'
:
,
~:
·
·~
:
:
~
...
.
}
••
~-
~
Ji-!'I
.1
,
•
.
-
~
.:
llUA.RY
17~ -1972
PAGEl
,
;/;
Waid's
.
WordS
·
·
·
TOm
Walsh
,
- -
,
j
(
/£iriilUJlllJ
-Exe~/ A
.
-Probl~,n-
,
.
·.
:·An
.
.
_
ybody·JL
_
·
ave
The
Time"?
.
TIIECIRCLE
'
"
·
·
'
.
·
,,
:·,.
:
:-:
--
·-:•
_
;:
·
:
.
·, .
. .'.
·
..
.
<
·
.
.
:._·
.
,
.
··
,:
..
·-.
·
:
.
by
.
MikeWanf-
,
·
.:
·.
_
,
-:·
.
,
·
:
·It
.
~JN.
to me~a.~.there ~asbeen
an
easing~up on the issue of drugs
.
·
1
went
:
for a walk on a quiet afternoon, and
1
wondered what
oo
...
.
by
J:'ie
:
~alled
:
Establishment."
There
are
.
fewer •
busts
on
pot
,,..
thought about.
·
·
:
·. ·
,
: _,
par.ti~
by the Police and less concern over whether marijuana wm
·
.
.·
"What
,
do you think about if you've never read Nietszche ..
or
you
. ,.: •
·
· r
)~d
~
har~~r d
_
rug~. Though there
.
will be a har
_
der crack-down
on .
couldn't corilP.are the afternoon.to a·Monet ... and you didn't realize that
... ·. ·-·
-:.
~rder· drugs;_ _herom and acid, the 'previous concern that
pot
is
-'-
the sun was
-
making surealistic splashes on a wall...and the eclectic
. ·:
~
-
-~ng~~~.~as
JlS~
abou~
been
eliminated. Now that the pa~c is over,
collage of the absurd that makes
up
the universe wasn't weighing you
>
:
1
,l
may
;
be
~
ge>od
~n:1~
to
·
loo~ at
_
~ aspects of marijuana objectively
.
down after the
·
all night discussions over cigarettes .. :and you weren't
.
,c
and
:
:
make
.
a value Judgement
,
.
·
·
· •
·
.
·
·
:
.
·
.
•
. :
· ..
..
•
·
·
thinking about how. things were
·
going to turn out -and what you're
.
;:•,-,:
So}ar r~afc~ ~as:not}>een:able.to
.
pnwe
that'pot
is p~ysically
·'
_·
,
-
goingto
_
do,andwhoyou'regoingtobe,aridif ...
harm~ul, and.µ,,.1t·1s_hai:mf~,
,
1t_ probably will be
no
more. ~o than
_,
.
"Here comes Daddy! Here comes Daddy!"
•
;
<h:Jnkmg alcoh
_
ol.o,r smo~ng cigarettes. ~me people hav~ PQinted out
Kevin and Terry threw the football down and ran after the car as it
that.m9sl_Pf:o_ple W,h<?.ar~.o~ ha
~
rd;drugs sta~ted
on
:
pot
and therefore
-
pulled in the driveway. Before he could get the doc;>r open, they had
·
.
.
·
pot
1s a~i,Jictiveto~tronger drugs. I~ cari also be pointed out·that most
·
..
already surround~ the car
.
He lifted one up in each arm, and carried
••-
al~ohohcs started out by
_
drinking socially
;
but
this
does not mean that
them
·
toward the side door. They both laughed as they felt those big
.
·.
'
al[social dri~ers wm become alcoholics or thatall
pot
smokers
will
.·
hands around their waists .
.
•
·.
,:
0
\,
~coine h_eroin addicts~ I.agr_ee
with
the9pinion
:
thanhe'people
,
who
try' _
.
"Hey Dad, did you bring us anything home? Did ya?"
, -
·.
hard drugs ha~e personalities that waI'l!ant escape mechanisms.
"What makes you think I should bring you two guys home anything?
·
,.:;
So with the idea that marijuana is
as
safe
as
alcohol, let's compare
"
,
·
•:
·
.
Well?"
.:
·
•
·
·
·
··
·
.
.
.
. .
.
.
thei
_
r influence on a person'.s body.
An
excess of alcohol produces
.
the
.
-
..._
·
· They looked up at him, their faces surprised and disappointed: As he
.
"
.
:,
~
•
·
,
. ·
.
drunken state which can
be
compared to being stoned
on
marijuana.
.
opened the screen door, he reached into
his
back pocket and threw
·
·
,.
•
.
The
.
P:efSOn's mjnd loses contact with reality
·
on
~th, butit still seems
,
·
. ..
them each a pack of football cards.
·
~
.
·
.
•·
·
,
.
th~the' canfunction
to
a reasonable' degree while stoned. Ari example
"And don't eat the gum before dinner."
·
"
·
-
>
,.
·
_
ofthisjs thatthe
'
person is-a safer driver while
he
is
·
on pot than when
"Don't worry Dad we
·
won't."
·
\
.
.
,
~~
/s on alcohoL
It
is alsoknown that the pot smoker is less violent,
.
·
-
He sat down on the steps and
·
become.sless depressed;and.doesn'tfacethe troubles of an
-
alcoholic's
started
to
untie his
.
bo<rts. He
hangover
.
.
·
.
..
·
· .
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
heard the washing machine going
·
.
·
· 1-
qon't
know
wheth~r mari~an~ is
-:,
habit-fortning or whether
·
the
·
in the cellar.
· ·.
.
·
·
·
•
_:
.
person becomes psychologically depc;indent on it, but it seems that
·
"Hi honey, I'm home."
.
·
.
· '
.
haoitual smokers have
_
much in common
.with
habitual drinkei:-s
i
They
.
"I'm down the cellar doing the
seein to
be
constantly_high and_out of touc_h with i;eality. They bec<>me
· laundry. There!sham in the oven,
shallow and cannot get.into a deep conversation because they get hung
·
it should
be
ready
in
about
.
half
an
'up
·
on parts of the c<>nversation
-
arid lose
·
the meaning of the whole.·
,
hour."
.
,
·
.
,
M
_
aybe these people can function better
ori
this levef but they
.
seem to
·.'
.
. :
_
.. I don't have
·
time. Uh
.
i'll
just
.
be~ome supe~fici
.
al:
·
~t could be that
pQi
has
.
~
means ofescapi~
·
•
·
grab a sandwiclI."
.
.
·
:
'.<
pl'oblems wh!ch they cann~t or
.
d9
·
not w~nt to
~
~lve._ Smoking pot
.
"O.K.. I'll be up in a minute."
.
·
under these circumstances seems
.
like runrung down tram tracks with
He walked into the living room,
· ih~
·
trairi right behind; it
is
not the solution.
.
·
·
.·
· • · .
·
·
:
·
·
where Kelly and Jenny met him
•
.
:I
believe that tlte
-
individualrnust examine the concept of drugs and
·
·
with big kisses.
·
_
.
.
~
·
·individually determine how far
'
he
·
is going to get involved. Th.ere
is
a
"Daddy, I got a
95
on my Geography test. Wanna see it?"
·
.'
,,-
good possibility
tllat
marijuana
will'
eventually become legalized and
-
"Well, I don't have time now. but leave it out and I'll look at itlater
,
·
-
>
-:
"
i(
it
.
~~'
it
ini~ht
as well~ soon because ·r
_
i~
.
t n~W
.-
people
·
are
·
being
-
·
~hen I sign
yOur homework
.
O
.
K ..
?"
·
·
arrested .for
.
s.omething
.
which is no more harmful than drinking.
"O.K. Dad."
.
Marijuana may
~
provide a good
_
time, but
just
like everything else an·
'
He unbuttoned his shirt as he walked up
the
stairs and noticed the
excess can·have s~rious com.equences.
·
1
·
'
light shining from the bathroom and started to pound on
·
the door.
'\-.:
"Alright. this is the police. you've got two minutes to get out of there,
' '
·
.·
,
-
·:-
before
I break the door down."
:.-
•
.
:::
·
·
· ·-
.
-
-
,
·
·
- ·
~
'Alright~
You
got me." "I give up."
"I'll
come out clean.
0
.
.
.
.
,.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
.
-
·:
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
·
·
1
.
.
.
/ ·
·
As he walked i!')to the bedroom, he heard laughter from the
_
·
::-·
;
.
>
.
.
·
·
<
: :
:
.
·
·
i-X
;
.;
.
·
•
.
.
, '
: ·
..
..·.
'.
.
•
.
..
,
-·
' ..
•..
,:
.
-
.
bathroom at'the joke he had missed. He changed his pants and sat
oo
·
.
:
l'y_e alV1ats be~n a·Jl09~
"
!ClSer
.
In
th'r
semmary I re.member ~mg
.
·
.
''Make sure you teH them about the law11. they were supposed to
.
reprimanded_J>Y my_su~n<>rs
-
!or argtJmgJOO. much with-
,
the offiCJ!PS
have it
:
done last weekend
.
"
,
in b
,
asketball and f~~all
;
{or
·
gettJng
angry
wtth mem_bers of the sa~e
·
·
"Sure;
·
r11
tell them."
.
•
.
.
.·
:_-•
baseball
_
team fop
,
no
.
t
_
U1'i,~~
ellpugl>;.
_.
As
:
a
te
_
acher
.
ID
Mame
at1d
ID
.
He threw some cold water on his face and scrubbed his hands with
•.
·
:
M
_
iCAigan
,
I
teme~be~
·
tx.:ocx,Ii~~jill
,
rught
·
~ter our teams lost games.
.
.
;_
··
-Borax. He checked the clock again and
.
hurried down the stairs.
_
:
.
.
.
:
E_v~n
h
1
ere
a~
-
1\fan~t;
~
ve peen so c.Jtoked
~
up
__
after
af09
_
tball loss that I
·
.
.
-
.
·
-
·
-
•
·
"Your sandwich
is
ready.
!
'
:
·
_
, ,
cotildn t
_
say a
.:
wo~d
.
m theJocker room
.
.
·
·
.
•
- .
.
.
..
,
.
"I don't have time now
.
Give it to one of
,
the boys,
I'll
eat when I
.
,_·
B~t this_c~l~n 1s·n~t
.
on sport5
bu,t
on marrrage. Whenever
I
p~r-
.
come h~me.".
1
·
.
..
.
•
.
Jorm awedding;
-
IfeeH m part
_
of a ~ -
-
And
-
I w.ant that team to
wm.
.
And with a kiss on the cheek, he was gone.
;
.
Wheriev
,
erlfeelthat the wedding ha~ poo
_
r chan,ces of success, then!
·
What does he think about?
·
·
,
·
--
·
. '
Jor>'t\varit
to
be
part
Of
thanea
_
m. be
_
~_!luse Pm
_
a
~rloser
;
.
.
.
.
"'
I
suppose _when
,
he walks along he
_
notices
.
what he's stepping
·
>
_
Pro!-;)ably
_
the.most
~~l~~
~
-
~ID
,
the
_
w,orld 1s to conv~nc~ young
· .
.
.
,..
·
on
:
.
.
and what its like to come home
...
and thatlife just feels good
:
.
·
·
oeople that then· wedding isn't gomg to w.ork. U's so hopel~ that
.·
I
·
·
•
·
.
.
·
don'f ~ven attempt What I do is get out aridlet soine other
.
pries~ take
·
, ,.
..
.
,
~
·
c
·
..
.
.
t
·
. .
.
.
u
,
■
·
.
,
'
>
_
•
ov~r
;
. This wasn't-ea*y durjjlg
.
-my,two
·
:years of .P~ri~h ni_inistry
':
·
,
·:
.
.
o
·
m
.·
.
ffl
.
.
u
.
·er
-
s
.
.
n10
·
·
'
n
.
·
.
(:·
·
hecause weddingswt;rea,s:.iizned tous. Butl have refused weddings <i
·
-
~
-
.
"
reiatives and
.
others
·
cevcii
.
.here at Marist, or since I've been
·
at
.
.
.
•
·
Marist>, giving
such
excuses as I'm not free
.
that day or
I'll
be
a
,
way .
.
·
·
.
To me the odds against
those
weudfogs succeeding w~re
to~
gr~L A!Jd
·
·
.
'
•
I'm
a
·
poor
)()l;Pr'
·,
•
<
·
.
·
.
·
·
·
...
-
·
.
·
•
._
..
·
•·
.
·
..
.
~-->
Fifty-one
pe
;
rcen_i
nf,
teei1age weddings end in divorce .
.
So
I'
n~
,·
:
\: .
.
.
0
•
•
· _
•
·
.
pretty solid evidence othat these
teens
are
m&ture
before
I
accept
to
<
,, , ·
_,
'
· ,
be·pait
·
or
·
·
thaf
team.
·
·
:
.
:
. ·
•
·
·
.
··
. · .
·
· .
.
.
, "
.
There are many ways
of.
judguig maturity
·
within
a
few minutes,
,·
although I nfaybe completely wrong
,
but Fil still refuse because
I'll\
a
.
..
·
•
.
.
·
~or.loser.When a young couple is getting ready to take
·
on
·
the_alinost
.
.
·
.-
-
insurmountable burden of marriage and they
sit
in front of
_
y<,u like
,.' '.
:
two poutmg
·
'
ctyldren scoffing at the Church, discardi11g everyOti!Jg
·they have been taughfin religion (good
.
a1id bad), showing
'
infantile
..
.-:
coriterhpt for all authority
·
and their parents, then some other priest
.
·
can take over. This
is
a losing team and I'm a
poot
loser.
.
·
.
•
...
When Catholics say they haven't been to Mass for years and don
'
t
see anythil)g in the sacraments or prayer,
the!i
~
prefer that t!tey ~o
.
·
tltrough a ~cramentless and prayerless wedding and
·
go <;>ut on
.
th~1r
own to probable defeat. I'm a poor loser.
·
··
-
.
·
·,
,
.
•
.
·
·
Marriage
is
a sacrifice. (To sacrifice is to make sacred>. Human
·
love is made into a timeless, tireless love.
·
The wife sacrifices the
·
husband
(Makes
him
.
sacred
:
) 'lbe husband sacrifices the
wife:
·
God
makes them one in him, iri order
to
give them the capability of loving
.
·
·
each other as he loves them. A ll!ltural love passes•irito a supernatural
.
.
.
love. It means giving
·
up an
awful
lot (sacrifices); selfishness, op-
-
~rtunities, advantages: people. This demands mabtrity, spiritual
strength. By marrying one
•!1111!1•
·
another they become sacred
.
.
-
Since so many here are close to
that sacred step, I have written a
series of short articles on marr-
iage. These
will
appear weekly in
the Bulletin that we put out in the
·
chapel on weekends.
·
Also
•
our
Wednesday
discussions (8
P.M .
.
Byrne
Residence) might beon marriage
for the next few .weelG.
Many inquiries have been received about the Commuter Union's
.
'
Survey
.,
.
In
,
response, the
,
Commuter Union has prepared this
·
statement The Survey has been through a preliminary analysis and
.
the finalized draft will
be
published in J
_
anuary.
Certain topics brought forth in the ·survey appear to have immediate
implicationsonthecoBegecommunity.
Many inquiries have been received
·
about the Commuter Union's
Survey
.
In response
,
the Commuter Union has prepared this
·
statement. The Survey has been through a pfeliminary analysis and
the finalized ~aft will
be
published in January.
·
·
Certain topics broughtforth in the survey appear to have immediate
implications on the college community: One of these themes is the
.
parking systems. The
.
co~muters opinion emphasizes that north
parking lots should
be
open for all commuters.-
With the majority of
the snow storms before us, plowing will reflect a considerable decline
in parking space. The Commuter's Union proposes that Mr; Aderholt
reclassify the
·
parking lots as open
to
all commuters. Thus, any for-
seeable parking problem will be alleviated.
Second issue, that reflected a majority
·
of the commuter's descen-
sion is the library situation. Rec,ently
,
Marist's library has initiated a
new time schedule. This permits the library
to
be
open to midnight
during the weekday providing more services for the residents. The
commuters feel
.
that the
-
library should also be
,
open earlier on Sunday
because the present opening time creates many hardships. The
commuter's Union supports the opening of the library at 2:00
P.M
.
oo
.
Sunday. Thus, the library will provide more time
for
usage by the
commuters .
_
The final issue of immediate ramification deal!I with the Rat prices
of the food, mood of the help, tone of the room, and the tardiness on
opening at
9
:00 in the morning are the major areas of complaints. The
Commuter's Union happily reports that the Rat will be renovated
during the semester break. Also, the Commuter's Union submits
that
the Rat be open one hour earlier in the mcrning. An eight o'clock
opening will allow most commuter's the opportunity to have coffee
before
the
first class.
Other areas such as academics, maintenance
and
security are being
investigated and a finalized report will
be
presented to the student
body, administration and faculty.
,
·
•
_-
_
I
.
/
.
'
.
~
.
'
,
;
--:
,
.
.
'·
.
.,.·
ntEaRCLE
· ·
l
u • ,
.
•
•
'
~
PEBRUARY.
:
if197~
..
:
·'
:
.
.
..
.
. .
.-
.
;
;
:
'
I .
,
-Sign
·
s
·:
of-"
',
()g.r
lime
:-,.
.
.
,
.
.'·
...
_.
_
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
_
;
Traveling up
.
Route
·
9,
·
,
one
passes a neon sign
.
.flashing
"Diner'\ and two. well
lit
·
gas
stations
·
advertising Clay's and
Shell. Moments later we hear
the
screaching of brakes
as a
visitor
.
.
skids by the
·
poster paper
-
sign
.
.
tacked to a free with the
~
words
.
'Marist.College' crayoned on
iL
·
Once
our guest is on the campus
there would
be
no problem fin-
--
ding the Resident Artist's
·
parking
space. ca campus land-
.
.
I
-
.
'
.
.
.
:
·
.
.
.
mark>. ortheChampagnat House
For three
'
years now; I've been -
Master's parking spot
.
-
Now asked the
,
question
~
~
WIJere
is .
.
trying to find Champagnat House Marist1,Now
I
know why - no one·
rs
:moth.er story. It's amazing ·can find it!'We
,
have a beautiful
how. after spending so much campus. but
-
mosttravelers'just
money on inner campus im-
pass
•
it by
;
:
L
don't think
':
it
iif
provcmcnts. we forget a
.
simple asking too much to
.
p
_
ut up a sign,
C
but exterior sign
.
.
especially
· .
when that
.
little
Now.
I am sure someone is
.
triangle in f'rorifof the
scboal is
going to argue that "i
.
t will o~ly
just waiting for
a
companiclri.
be
taken
down".
But
rve never
Who
-
knows,
people might
stop
seen anyone walking aw~y with
a
askin2 wtiere we
are.
ceme~ed
down
sign
.
Have you?
As ...
led .,.;.;;,
~
~
];~
f
t
~
r
'
T"'1 iaiiii)alfuii,or ;,..
./
installment
ci
a permarient
structtirfto
.-
be
place,r at the
entrance
·
cl
.
-
,:
,
the college with
the
word ''Mari.st" inscribed on it
:-As
the
Circle
went
·
to press
thisweek
we
have not
.'
yet witnessed
tbt
fruits
of
thaf
venture.
·
.
.
ItWas
_
also acknowledged
_
at
that
tiJJie
·
that the
.
placement
of
another
.
·:
cardboard
:
~tastrophy wo~d
-
only ~d ridicul_e
to
·jut .
already
·
.
• deplorable situa
_
tion
;
I~
is
obvious that
that
hypoPJesis
has bet;n proven '
, ·
wrong.
·
Itwas bad enough that we had no sign at
all,
but;
·y.,e
do not feel
that half a sign
is
m1,1chofanimprovement. (But tben
'
itmayverywell
.
bethatthectilpritisinagree1t1entwithour
-
ideals.)
·
.
.
,
>
.·.
.
0
:
•·•
-
The
~
•Disney Gwdet>no\V in front
of
our c~pus
;
.
is not
our
idea
.
<i
:
.
,,
th¢solution
to
our problem.·It a p ~
to
us
that
the ca1;pentet. was
,
put
.
toworkoiladiagramrathertbanadirective.
-
•
· ·
.
·
-
<_
1
• ·
-'
.
The Circle Staff
does
notfeel it is
too
mticb of a burden
to
installa
·.
·
,
permanent and durable structure
.
in
front
<i
our
campus, Wecan
·
rio
,
longer fhid
:
valid reasons'for
these
artificial
facsimile. For petesake~.
'
Let's have the
r._eal
thing! .
·
·
·
·
:
_
,
•,
•:
The
.
question mar be asked
whethr,r
a halC _
~
-
~
•
sip
is
l>etter
than none.
~
-
\
111ia
is
the
carpenter
shop
which
is
IO
broadly
'risualized
on
.
the newly
,_...4iremoftal,mp.
"
"Dialey
Guide"
in
fronr
ol
campa.
--
.,·
_
_
·/
,.
FEBRUARY 17~ 1972;
·,.
, 111E CIRCLE
PAGES
,.
I .
,
.
.
.. :_tircle·
~t~gorY
·
Editorials-
,-. ,, •.,
~
• .I
'
~-
>Ho
l.J'
s e ·.
~-:(.~
.
.
,.}ihe~~af~ng ~{
G~;~ory··~Q~e·fo'orie~/~ix'~~~ying··gr~ps will
· take place in-the very:n¢ future. It seemaa·sbame that there can
· · ·
·:only
be
one
selected. because each interested groups reason for
ap-
. plying
appears
to be' as v~id
as
the µext. E_ach group has set forth
a
definite and relevant· purpose in the,application.
, . -· ·
. ·' ,<::!'
Although ()nly·a
half
dozenprospective~cupents applied, numerous
· _,- 'other groups made serious considerations oh·the matter but failed to
· · ·, :submit' proposal~ beca~e of the obvio~ heavy :competition.
. · ... ·
·
From
the
success of Benoit, Fontaine and Sheahan ·Houses, it can
easily beseen that the trend of group initiated common-quarters
i_s
the
· ultimate. in community living. ·_No longer; can\ we stand aside. and
consider Champagnat and
Leo
House as architectual mistakes and let
· the.unrealistic living:cohditions remain; Steps_ have been taken in '
, . •· recent years through the separate "house" system
and
co-ed floors in
.,, Champagnatanp iilternate co-ettfloors irH.eo; but the answer has yet
. . to arrive. ..
.
. . : . . ..
1
•
. . . • .
•
,
.
.• •
. ' Why not have the proposed tutQrial progi:-a_m, foreX:amplE: with the
.
breaking down of
afew
walls, moveJnto sbcth. floor a living room and_
, make kitchen facilities available. This ofcoui;-se does not compare
"·with a Gregory House, but
th~
Circle feels it would be a step in the
proper direction. -- .:_;_
·. · ·
• •
· - ; - - ;
<
- - - -
Charige
... EOI' The
Colllmunity
.
.;·•
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,'
·
'.·,:.
'
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,.
,·
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.
.
.
'
. Certain issties:should be. put to the:community for
a
vote.
In
the
· works righfnow; is
_a
cliange 'for scheduling of class~s·to allow for
. · more free·
periods
during the
week.
Ai!Cf.
the change of time for the
.. semester bl'.eak of Fall and Spring to emcompass &_weeks instead ~.
4.
· Though the ideas and prowsals
are
ainied a benefiting the college
: community;
:this
same c<nnmunity. should bav~
bee1f_
consul~,
en·
·
mass through soine sort
of
communique .. :nie community should als:, . :' . ,, . . . . _ ..
.
,
,, "' ·
·
·· h~?,~t~f!J0-t;J~k~tl~
«!~sio!18
ma~e .. : -. : . · · ·.
~fii~~ff~it
·
··trfadequate
.
~·.
.
'
-
'
.
.
.
.
.FclCilities
· Om~;s ~nv~o~ ~r·~uhdings, as many
will
agree, play a vital and , .
determining role .in the character and actions of the individual.
•
Through our environment we adopt numerom characteristics, somE: .
. begeficial and others. detrimental, to our overalhomposition.
· .
While
at college, we should live iri an environment of education._
· Since college is the institutiov of education it should therefore provide . .
for an environment geared towards education in an effort. to better
'
· those who are·part of·it. · ·
.
· Unfortunately however, the opposite'often occurs. Such is the case
at Marist. where the average student, already irresponsible (because
of his inability to maintain the responsibility that comes with the
freedom ·of campus life) is encouraged by his surroundings to live in
accord with a socially-oriented community. a, community in which
there is little emphasis on education.
Basically. Marist does pot have the proper facilities to encourage
and create an educational environment. The' library is poorly
equipped and definitely not suitable. for a college community. Being
extremely limited in sources, and concerned more with a Mariology
section of unused and untouched books than with ·providing room for
new books. The Browsing-Library too, is by no means conducive to
an
educational environment. Characterized by improper lighting,
provided·by lamps with 25~watt light bulbs (which only work on oc- ·
cas1on) by the banging sound of
a
piano. in the· neighboring Fireside
Lounge; and by the shuffling of feet and frequent -noise in the hall.
Another example of this environment.can be found
i!l
~e ~orms, such
as in Champagnat, where the presence of a telev1s1on
m
the study
lounge has priority over studying. ,
·
·
_
0
If
Marist
is
to become a community-oriented toward education, it
must change. The facilities on campus must be improved to encou·rage
students to partake of the educational opportunities available, and
ultimately to change Marist to a true institution of education. An in-
1stitution in which one who desires
an
education can find it. -
INF
e+CIRCLE
Bernie'Brogan, Ed O'Connell,:Kathy Harvey, J.-Fred Eberlein, Ed.
Kissling .. • ;Stuart:. Gross,_ .i\nne Trabulsi; Bernie . Jemg, Wru,Iy
·· .. ',J~~(~p.-.;~c;~~:'.~f;~ltU:t\}~-~rny,._~~~~~•:..4;;."'~-:.:.;-4~~;.
<Because
of
my
·
-ignorarice last
terview. Those chosen to be in-
throw stones,
Septemb~t-,>thave to
;.wait
until
<
terviewed wiil meet· with the
; Finally we would like to offer a
· .
.-.··· .. •e.He/
·rs_ ·
.. ·•·.·1o·
.. ·· -. ..
~·&L._-~
' .. --
..
.
,
_c~·11o·.·
....
·rs'.·.:',
.
··
:d'~f!!~!:i°:il:~li~!scl,~:
f~f~~g
f~ri:i~:::~~~: ::
~!~mtii~;tor~~e1f:n:Marist
IJ
II It:
[U
meetings and i11terviews at least
-
mitteewill make its final choices.
"Oh. the weather outside is
·
.:Whal.en
,
.
Answers
· ..
a few days ahead of time. ,
PRESENT
RAs
and H~
frightful,
. .
.
than a selected few.
··
Many students especially
· No
staff
member
is ·
But the fire is so delightful.
.
· · . ·. Just.for th
tfsake
of beating. a commuters ·carid not only fresh-
automatically promoted . or
Oh.
a shoveling we.altwillgo;,
, · : .. dead horse, Sat. Feb.
5, 1972,
a-.
men) must work and cannot -rehired. The present HAs 'and·
Let it snow, let it snow, letit
dance workshop was held in the attend dub meetings,-or they
RCswill
be
admitted
to
interview. snow~"
· CoUege,Theater, admissi~n two have transportation difficulties;
on\ the basis . of their floor
·
.dollars,--cost
$l,250.00.
ID
at-
as a result, these·st~dents who
evaluations and,the decision of
. tendance between
50 ,
and
75
are working just
to
stay at Marist
the £foal screening committee.
· Febi~ary
4,
1972
i>e.ople:
~o,:
m.ore · than
$l50.00
are labeled as apatheticby the
Present staff members do not
Regards,
Bill O'Reilly
•71·
Joe Rubino
'71
Miami Beach, Flor.Jda ·
.. The Circle: ,:· ,
.
. ,
0 '. -
could have been
~~nee~
at the rest
of
the community, ~ause
necessarily have a better chance.
.
latiende(l'a dance.held in the door;,, a 1~ ,of_
$l,lOO.OO.
·
1
they cannot join clubs>lt is too
at -such positions than new ap-
. Marist College Cafeteria, ori'the . ·.
Ttl~
Manst.College C.lJ.B. ~osJ bad we are all not rich.
. plicants.
''e~enirig.of,Friday,
Fep. 4, 1972. I
at :least
~l,500.00
tha~ weeken -
Kathy Scott
now· realize how·difficult it is to - and proVJded; entertamment for
get~
.
a CF,;:i'day .. · night's- ·en- .no mo~e -
than
200
people ..
I!
tertairimenL·T had
:to suffer, somethu~g wrong S!)mewhere.
~ing pbysically'handled by the
· John P. Whalen
people in charge, degrage myself
to sneaking .
in;
partake . iri an
abusive · arguement; · and
threatened
to
·be
serit to the
Dean's Office.
1
Some people may . question,
why Jexpect ..
to
attel_ld ,the dance
for free when·othershave
to pay
, two dollars? -
.
··
.
.
'·
·
1.'
Is
it possible that there are
students who can't afford to pay
two dolJars atJhe
door? · '
2.
Don't these students pay the
same fifteen dollar activity fee
as
the people who can_ afford
to
pay
two dollars?
.
·
If
my point
is.
not yet
clear,
let
me present
the
facts about the
dance. There were no more than
fifty students present -
<I don't
know how many paid). The two
bands
cost
$350.00
and. $200.00. At
two dollars a student no more
than
$iOO.OO could have
been'
collected at the door. '!bat means
$450.00
from
the
activity fee, the
fee myself and the other students
required to wait outside, paid.
Why is most · of the en-
tertainment at Marist held only
for
those who
can
afford it? Why
wasn't only one band
hired
for
$350.00
and admission free. We
would have _saved $100.00 and
~ded
entertaimnent for more
I
(Jn·
Ell
:
iot'·s
Dear Editors,
·
A · th' ·
NOTE OF IMPORTANCE: We
.
. p·a .
y ·
feel .. we have not 'a sufficient
.
. ·
· . •
.
number
of
girl applicants for the
Dear Editor.
'
position
of
Resident Advisor. We
As a member of the class of
'75
are therefore re-opening ap-
1
am responding to the frosh plications for girls until Friday,
apathy -article. We are well Feb._
18.
Freshmen girls are
aware
of · the
numerous welcome to apP.lY as we'll as
organizations and clubs -
now! upperclassmen. You may pick
up
However in September it was
a
an application in the Residence
different' story.;
I
for one, knew O(fice CC134) beginning today,
nothing about them, and
I
usually ·Monday. A letter of recom-
received the. leaflets in the ·· mendation from your RC and RA
campus maff
the
day after the wilJ be required.
meetings.
I.
can even .•
cib:
_an
SCREENIN~ PROCE:EDURE
example.
I
applied for a position·
The screenmg committee for
as a student advisor, and
I
got the Champagnat House consists of:
letter telling me of the interview,
m
those faculty members and
the day after the interview was students. who wrote recom-
supposed to have taken place.
I
mendatioos for the applicants.
called and someone
took
the
(2l
final screening committee -
message.
I
have heard nothing the Resident Coordinators -
since.Itwiilprobablyseem thatl <Emmett.._Jude,
Ra~,
Pat> - the
skipped the interview.
Housemaster c~atrick B: For-
If
Marist is to have a more syth) - the Residence Director
involved freshman class, it bas to . <Frederick
A.
Laf!lberl!-
.
be a more informed one.
I
would
_1be final screerung
conuruttee
suggestthatl\taristcrganizations
win
~d
the
letters
of
recom-
send informatioo about their m~abon and
choose
(on_ the
respective clubs
to freshmen
the
baSJs
or.
those
recom_mendati~)
summer
before
they enter.
who
WIil
be
admitted
to
in-
Patrick Forsyth •
Housemaster
·
From
Florida
Dear Editors.
We would like to take exception
to the remarks made· by one Leo
Gallant about us in the January'
Zl
edition of Reader's Digest.
The story as he tells it, about
his
Miami
trip
is . pure
unadulterated bilge. Actually
Father showed up at our place
and demanded to be taken
"drinking" or he would set
SCHOOL DAYS.
from
page
2
that much · good and ·-effective
progress_ . can be ma.de with ·
respect to Maris~ College and
everyone involved with it.
One of the senior citizens
summed it by quoting a song title
fr«1m
his "younger days" which
goes "ThisCould Be The ~tart ~f
Something Big". ~omethmg b1~
for them and all of us, unless
1t
gets so
big and there'is no ~oney
to continue .. ·This would be a sad
commentary.
·
himself on fire. Since he was half
CALENDAR
from page
6
in the bag at the time· we decided
to save his life. We took him to
dinner during which he threw his
present academic calendar was
salad at a man sitting
next
to us
influenced by the opinions of the
because he failed to say grace.
68
students who replied. A survey
Next we took them to a private based on a sample is obviously
club for a "nightcap... (Father cheaper .and faster than one
had
had a busy day). He -
based on the whole population. It
promptly downed his
Harvey
is, therefore,
a
valid procedure
Wallbanger and demanded that
for determining student opinion
the barmaid join him in a chornc; ..
on
a topic of interest. However,
of Kumbaya.
for the sampling method to be
Despite Father Leo's cherub-
valid, it is essential that everyone
like coutenance in the picture
in the sample answer the survey.
above his cohmm, the man
is
a
Students who have
been
selected
case.
As
far
as
his description of
in a survey
can
perform
a service
us
being
"as crazy
as ever" we
to
other students
by participating
would reply that the people who
in the survey.
live in glass
hol.6eS
shouldn't
-·
·,
I
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FEBllUARY
,
17;:1972,
_
_
_
:
,
,
'72-·
~
Ar:>;F?.lltOtiOns
:
~b.Qr:ti9n,
......
c
~,ie
·
rAatl
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~Ykit'rab~isi
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Issues : ,
,
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;-,,it'SJriie
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tOthe
ef(J,Ziige'
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·
·
•
· '
·, ·
.
. :
..
.
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·
.
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1
.
_
'
By ~illiam Sears
...
·
.
~
·, ..
·
:
-
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·
.·
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.
·
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..
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··
·
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Like
.•.
~any
·othe~ .priY,~te
•
..
part of
-:
t~ co~m~
·
hav~
.
m-
_
.
.
From February
21
to februafy
·
.
The pur~
.
of
~is
co)unl!l
•
is
to. -~
-
.
.
..
·
.
.
_
:
.
-
·:
_._-.:
.-
· ·
...
f
;_,
.
(:"Oll~es in
,:
New Yo!k
.
Stat~,
~
. flue~
,
fyd
-
·
potential
.
students
_
to zrthesecond
·
rogram of the New
•
College
union
B_oard
_
Elections
_
~~ c o ~
.
up
_
_
and.
~
turn
(ltltllas
.
·
;
:
.
~
'
'
:-V
~
l
.:
·
· :
,
number
!>!:
applications .f~ .~e~t
·
',
apply
,
.
T
_
he
--
l~terns came across · Corisciousn!ss Series
:
will
·
be
·
be_en
good.
If ~ou feel your money
.
1s
not
_
bemg spel!t nght yo~
can taKe.
•·
.
_
:
y.e~•s ri:eshman
:
<:l~_r1:8
~ w n
_
;Y
-
~
s~udents to other studen~ and shown
:
The ·prograµi
·
entitled,
this
.
op~rtun1ty
.
t.o
.
ch~nge th!ngs:
run
for. oo,e o~-;t~ ~f1~es
_
ope~.·· .
.
'Ibe Offtc~ of. Adrniss10~ at~
thr~gh _ them th~re h.ave. ~en
"Do
Yoti Own Your Body'?"
Ursula, m the Campus Cente~ office has
_
applic~tions.
.• .
.
:
-
~
,
.
.
.,
ttibutes ~1s
~
thr~ r~sons:
.
~e
.
aP.ph~bons received. from ~he
_
.
·.
begins with
_
a brief look at some
.
•
:_
Th_er~are tw? programs !>~n to
_
the
,
_
st~
1
n~
-
~
-
~!
.:
~a~?st
_
<:()~-
·
.
· .
draft;wllichi~making many. high D1str1ct
.
of
.
~oluf!1b
_
1a, Ohio,
..
of the
·
nearly unbelievable state mumty
,
concemmg
:
~
education. -
.
,
.:~
,
:
>
•
•
:
·:·
.
:
·
,
.
.
.
,
•
.
·
,
.
·
. >,
school senio( bo~s
·
_
think
_
:
twice
.
~e!l~ucky; and Flor1da
_:
:
St~dents laws
• ·
concerning _"lewd
:
·
and
:
T~e first
,'
is ~
-
ability
to
c~~s register.for c.ow:s~
_
:.
(not offered
-
at
.
about going right !nto
_
college; the
,
v1s1ting the schooJ h~ve srui:J that lasci.vious co-habitation'•
:
and
.
Mar!st> at any
•
of the following
.
colleg': camp'.15~'.
-
Bard,
•
Bermett,
.
Jow
cost of:_ the city and state the s~dent a_d~!ss1ons_-wor~ers
•
'. '.'unnatural acts."
•·
·
.
__ ·
·
. ..
.
·
Dutche~s. New Paltz, va~sar and
.
l!lster.
If yo~
re
·
mter~t~ for the "
·
universities
.
as
.
.
oppose? _to
.
t,~e
were mfluential
!D
~ettmg ~em -~ ,OOEH>f today's techniques, for ·!all'Sei:iie~~e_r, s~_the Reg1~tr~s o!~tce f~ moreuifo~matioo,
·
.
hi~~e! cost of the . private in
-,.
to~PP
.
\
.
among the extensive
.
freeing the body (!f the con-
.
. ·.
°The
other
program
·
ano~ y~u
•
.
st1tilttons; and the ftct:nat
m~~~
-
use:!rl~f 1:tudent personnel for straints of the past IS the body-
.
to spend a full aca.dernic
-
year at
.
stude~Js
·
are
_.
00
1
g
·
.
-.
·
.
work and it is
,
felt awareness cla5:5
.
The program
_
other colleges in the State of
·
New
voe a tionally
.
ont:nted or:1at~1:i
:
..
~af
'
1~1f;svahiabie, so
.
that
Uie
·
includes a
.
session
..
conducted by
:
•
York
.
I ~0!)'t ~now w,hich
<:<>lieges
-
such_
a:
J~~na!:~iberal Arts college maybe better fitted to the Professo~. Bury
I
.
P~y~e,
_
who ·areparbc1pating
so
you
wdlhave
:_.
mumca ion
~
.
I
. s "new
students.,,
.
·-.
contends, In our society; wear~
to
·
contact ~Dean
.
Cox( .
: ...
·
.'
.-
•
as ~e~l ~s t
mca
ma~or e
·
·
·
·
·
never
,
allowed to be ~sane.'!
.
As was advertised in the Circle,
.
·
•
leadmg to Jobs. Another J:!OSS~bl
_
_
Profes.5<:ir Payne
-
argu~s that_Qur
·
any group.J,nterested iri
proctitjng
·
1
re~so~ fo~_ the
droi /
0
ts ap
.
i
bodies
·
and
.
e>~r
.
mt?ds
--
have
·
__
.
Gregory
_
Hotis~
-
shQuld
:
see
·
Fred
phcabo~s 1s that s u en
1
~
become frozen mto attitudes that
-
·
Lambert'.
,
.
·
/
,
·
i<
•
•
•
in~r.easm~ numbers ap~r to
be
other people say we shoul
_
d have.
..
Rip~orr of
.
the
,
Week
.
·.
.
.
takmg
.
a breath
,
.
as it
_
were,
-
"Do You Own. Your Body'?"
·
·
.
•
·
Th
·
·
11·
"
·
oo
·
,
~
;..t
·
•
·
.
· "
ts
·
·
bet
. h'gh chool and college
..
.
.
..
•· .
.
•
.
.
. .
,
.
:
•
e
"
co,, ege
.
.
9~
ore warr~
.
.
.
dween
1
k.
5
traveling The
focus
.
es
,
on the ques_bon .. of ~ore tJ:ian a
<
httle post
.
script.
·
.
., .
·
an are wor mg~
·
·
·
·
abortion law reform with birth
. · .
.
·
. ,
·
·
.
·
•
.
.
·
.. ·,
•.
·
'
'.
.
· ,
.
·.
·
.:
'.
;
:'
•
•
. .
,
·
•
effects of this
will
not, however,
·
~
control and abortiori-on-demand
·
<
Probably
.
th~ source of more irritation an<i'uiconV!ertce Uian
_
any
.-
other
·_
be fel_t for at
_
lea~t
3
year or
tw~-
.
..
crusader
.
Bill
:
Baird
,
presenting
single entity'~n
·
campus.
·
Put together
:
their
fnigartiol.!l's
.
(12
~
5p~)
_
and
.
While apphcattons are ~rwn
11
1-
C
•
his
i
controversial
·
views.
.
.
··
·
. .
.
·
.
their inabH~ty
,
~() stoi!~ some useful
,
it'er~u
L
(paper,bac~
_,.
a fair assort-
.
.l
sheer JJUm~ers: the qua
ir
-
~
.
·
:
-
,
_
'J:he
·
case against
· .
abortion-On-
. ·
.
ment
.
of
.
gr~etmg
.,
car~,
·
etc.)
.
and
you ha~e our _fnendlr basement .
.
those-applymg is
.
compara_ e
.
. · demand is voiced by Catholic
·
s
_
hylock shop
.'
I had always thought bookstores earned books.
_
·
.... · · _
.
that of last ye~r, t~a~ ish
!{
.
,
-
theo•i)gian
·_
Fr.
,
William Burke;
.
Iwil_lgladly~etanyoneprin~soinethirig~this<!Olwnn,ifi~
-
!,lleets
:
the
:-
percent three year hig
,.
sc
O
.
•.
.
S
;-
J.
~
. and
'
by the presiden_t and
.
fo!lowmg fequ1rements:
1)
It's
fr~
!,O
the
~liege ~mmlll!Io/,
2)
and,
averag
;
e. a class rank of the tohP-
:.
:
physfcian
i
from the Value of Life
.
·
•
··
wt1l
_
help ~em~rs of the commumty
~Y
1nforrrung
:
~e~of
~
~ha.t•~
·
•
_
.
thrce
-
f1f~hs, a~d 500-5
oo
00
t e
·
·
Committee
:
.
·
·
·
·
available m the (1eld of grants
,
scholarships; and educa~1on,
?)
an~ht's
Scholastic Apbtude T~~t. Thl(!f~
·
-
.
.
.
.
·
•
·
·
Firially, "Do You owii Your
·
-
-
free
:
.
. .... :
.
,
,
'
·
.
.
,
.
·
.
.
~·
•.
.
:
.
.
.
..
.
·.
'
.
:
'
.
··:
;.
·
.:
_'
..
ar
_
e Fev.:er boys !Jl!ng ap
·
>
c
:J3oclyr'
:'
allpws
_
the viewer
:
to
:
Apr1)15th ts,tax ~•me.
If
yo~ 111eome
-
for the_y~_rw~s;~~~r
1;700
..
·
;
,;
.
. ,
phcat10ns. but. more girls. ~o
!
rriake
up his or her mind on the
·
·
dollars, yo_u're
'
enti~e.d to receive
all
the
_
bptes
,
you:pa1cl m
._
So clo!}'t
.
·
•
hundred forty-eight have applied
.
_,
.
abortion issue by
.
presenting the
-
forget
-
~o
.
ftle
_
for your_ rebat~
.
.
AnyC>ne available t~ ~elp
·
:
~~rs
·
with ,
·
.
·
.
The Student_ Interns who
,
ultimate fact in the argult).ent: a
.
prepanngth~1rtaxforms pleasecontacttheO.rcleoff!ce
:
.
•
•
·
•
:
::-
·
·:
.
dur
i
ng the
_
first sem~ste
.
~.
_
DAVIDFLYNN
-
.lookat
-
whatanabortionactually
.
.
Thefollowingpamp~lets~eFREEforthe,_
~
~iting:
.,··
·
.
.
. ,
.
· . ,
·-
-
~
/
.
traveled
to
variou~ places
m
this
·
involves.
·
With
·
Bill
-
Baird
Tar and
.
Nicotine Content pf Cigarettes.
No
,
,7700-034
·
..
-,
:: _-
.
·
_
.
• R
s
·
•
carefully explaining
an
the
.·
Cost
,
of_Operating
~
~utomobµ~:No; 77oo-oo4
:
eosts ofmainten,an,ce,
Pol
Ice
.
a·
.
P
e
·
ss1on
·
niedicalprocedur~s. ~e c~meras accessor1e_s,parts,
.
bres;gas, oil'msuranc~,
etc:_
·
•·:,
/
, '
.
.
· .
.
.
.
.
·
·
follow
·
a young college
.
woman
.
.
How the Consumer
.
Can reP?rt to t~e
food
an~
Drug',A~~st
_
ratun
through
-
an interview, the com-
NQ. 770:02L
How
,
!_o report, nuslabehng, or falsE: ~dv~tllsmg
~f
f ~
on Tuesday night, February 15
,
long-range effects of smoking
-
plete abo
_
rtion operation; and
_
a
flo
_
thmg Repairs
~
No.
01oa-rns
.
.
?,wenty Jr.lye !epa1~
-.
that can
·
~
three Town of Poughkeepsie marijuana
.
Patrolman Gallo
·
post:operative
··
interview..
··
don~mthe
_
hometoprol~ngthemefuln~ssofdothing.
_:,
_
r,
-
-'"
·
_
.
·
:-,:-
police officers shared a rap cited that he "wouldn't want to
Whether
.
yot1 are pro or con o~ the
.
All though~)velcome .
.
,
.
session with Marist students in
.
see more
.
infoxicat~~ people
·
abortion
·
question, this
;
program
·
•
·
·
· ·
•
:
·
,
.:
.
.
Chainpagnat Hall. Through the around".
·
.
-:,
,
_ :
.
_
·
..
,
.
_
,
.
.
.
will
give
:
y~u
th,e
~i:~J~~tswhich
'
·::
.
_
..
:::
·
.
.
_.
,
..
. .
.~
eUorti;ofMari~t Security Officer
;
;
,
'fhe
.
omc~rs
:
stressed
.}
!1
.
e
~i
'\t;.~,«!.:.:-::
.
JiayeJ<>r
.
tQolongpe~nJius~~q
_
UJ)
_
;
"
-~_,~,,.;.,,-,.~
"'Mt':4\on~
~
~dethbHit
'."'
"
PatroTnten
··
~
ror
·
·.r·
·-
po11
c
e
~'·
publi
c~
.:
rel
_
a~ions
<;
-- .
.
Ti111~s
-
ot
·:
programs
will_
be
pos-
.
.
~
Joseph Gallo, William Galbraith, department
.
~hich
'
would
.
work
·
ted.
:
.
·
·
·
_ :
·.
-
'
..
- ,
·.
:
:
-
-
.
and Robert Boy
,
ce discussed
·
toward
·
better community un
-
·
._
·
·
·
·
•
·--
· • •
·
-
•
·
·
l
police attitudes and operations in derstandirig of
-
the role of
.
today's
:
-·
M
·
e
·
_
_
-:_
·
1
·
1·
··
n
··
.
·
d
·.
·
a
:•
.
··,
:
,'
c_:·
,
_
.
_
· ... ;: ·
.
. ··
~
,
,
the Poughke~psie area. The policeman. Patrolman
·
Gallo
·
· .
·
'
:
•
f.:
.
session was lightly attended and stated that the
.
public sees very
.
.
/
.
.
•
.
_
_
·
·
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
·
,
:
.
"'
short lived
.
lasting only an h~ur,
little
of
.
the
good
work that
police
-
_ .
.
By
KathY
.
·
HaI"Vey
~
_ .
_
~
.
.
r.
•
>
;
,
·
-
but the officers willingly an
-
do in the community
,
such as life-
.
.
Meiinda
'
s affection
:
was
-
what
>:
.
.
.
..
>
swered the
.
various
·
questions saving and home
·
assistan~
_
e
,
.
·
.
ove'rwhe~med
me
durjng our:fu:-,!i
(
'
.
asked.
.
.
because it is '.'not newsworthy".
meeting. I:Iei--irinocent:bh.ie
:
eyes
. .
.
.
.
.
.
Among the issues
·
raised was The officers cited ·the minimal
were darting
··
back'
·
and · forth,
·
.
·
. ·
··
_
·
the fairness of many present press coverage of the Town
catching
.
all the activities
:
of the
.
·
; .
:
.
..
marijuana laws
.
.
The officers Police's
.
contract
,
squ~bbles
.
,ward
,
She hugged
~e
.
evefy
time
(
,/
·
:
,
.
.-. ,
:
.;.,--.
·
agi:eed
.
that their judgements because of lack of violence and
·
Ismiledor
,
talked to her
;
iri_f;ict
;
'
:·:
'.;
;_/
<
\:·
·
·
depended
·
upon
·
the results of injury.
she wanted all
:
Jriy
•-
at~erition
·::} .'
·
\
:,'
~
-,
current
_
tests to determine the
.
devoted
,
to her
:
:
I'
sensed her
·
·
: -
·
.
·
.
·
:
·
C
I
.
.
.
d
.
.
Ch
·.
.
.
.
-
starvation for attention
'
and
:
J
,
·
·
.,,,.
;_
,
~
:
.
'.,·
a en ar
_
.
·
·
ang
·
.·
e·;i~~=~~~t~!s~~u~~
;
be~~~/
:
0
\
(:
}t::
/
/
c-
·
i
.
.
.
o
·
·
.
f
.
'.
-
.
t
·
·
·
.
d
.
·
. . .
.
I
_
could
'
meref
:
speculate
'
on
·
;
,.
•\
.
.
•?
.
e e
·
a
·
e
.
·
l'dalinda's history;
/
the
i
orily
,•
in
~
.
.
.
_.
.
-
.'
Jormat~on J.was able t<>/iiid
;
out
/
:
.
·
HILLCREST
ACADEMY
.--.- . _-.
:
·
~
.
-
-.
·
·.
·
·
· ·
·
··
·
·
was thatshe had ~n
·
t!) many·
·
-
>·
<·
•
.
_
·
·
.
-
-
:
.
,
:·
.
•
·
.
.
•
•
:
:
_ ,
,
: ;
.
.
:
·
.
,.
·:,
-
·
.
.
_
.
.
A
survey was conducted recently
-
to ascettain the reaction of the
instftµHons since _very
'.
earJy
,-
•
be
'
co
'
ine"
l
ii.yP,er
~
a,ctive
_
"
()),"
/
ex
-:'.
'pleas for ~edo stop, J:>uihei-eyes
:
college community to the academic calendar for
1972~i973.
'
The ~- childhood. ·There
j
vas
':
~ rule
at
.
:
treniely: with.<h'.awi)';' Ttieref!)re
; .:
wer.e
·
fn
j
iblank
·
.¢n_;eand~er face
·
questions asked and the results were
as
follows
.
.
Hudson River ~fate
-
:,
MeQtaJ any
:
impr~v
.
eni:enf
:
or
pfogres~
a
·
would
7 '
~h<>w
·
rio
:
'
emotjoik
,
·
'.l'o
·
1.
I think the January recess should be extended
.
Hospital that stated
_
:
that
/
the
•
-
patieraf
.
might
.
achieve · tiu'.ougb
·
coritr(>l
.
these
~
situations
.
.
w~s
One Week·
Two Weeks Not
at
-
all
volunte~~
_:
Wer~
.
not ~
.
pro~e
,
1~~
~
· ·
thi~
_
~
o~
:
to
:
One situ~\i
_
on
·
me:a~s
n-
. ·
-.
aJrn~~t
-
in:ipo~i~Ie
·
"'
_-
my
·
.
~µ-eng~
~
_
;
..
--
Commuting Student
14
percent
·
·
'Zl
percent
59
percent
·.
·
any
.
ease
:
history
,
'
:
while
:
tltey
~
·
:
oiliirig.whe
_
n
·
the other ten
'
gir_ls
_ ·
wa
·
snot enough toover~()me bf!rs.
Resident Student
o
.
·
4 .
'
96
work~ afthe h.!JSpiµil,
:
Myjob
as
·
-
;
·
areunmanagable to handle for
·
· Theatteiidents·lcepheminding
m
Faculty_
15
29
.
56
a
-
volunteef, .was to
·
'
·
'.be ·a big
·
two days after.So,
until
hospitals
.
that:
·
we should never
tuni
our
Staff
16
12 ·
.
72
.
sister to
my
little girl.'
'
My
-
actual
.
cari
be
staffed better,· they try
·
backs on the children and be
irf
,
.
.
duty was to give all-my a!tention
.
and
"
survive with the aid of
control at
·
alltimes.
This
'
might
2. I prefer to have the Spring recess after mid-semester instead ~fat a
_
nd love to
·
Utis orie little girl f,:,r
·
student volunteers.
·
-;
•
.•
.
_
·
·
-
,
.
have been ~asy_for
·
a
_
behavior
·
Easter.
·
· ·
·
·
one afte~noon a
.
week.
,
:
From the
.
·
.
My
.
only hope
.
·.
as . Mehnda
s
probl~m child, but Melinda
_
was
·
. mo!11ent I
·
_walke~ onto the ward
·.
volunteer was to be able to
.
rea~h
semi~augistic,which means
.,
that
·
_
Commuting
,
Student
Resident Student
F~culty
Staff
··
Yes
riq.
NQ opjnioo
,
_
until I said farewell, she was her and· talk to her and see
a
at times she would retreat.into a _
18 percent
68
percent
14
percent
right by
!11Y
si<!,e'.
• •
·
·;
· .
response. We walked_
around
·
the-:
''she}!'
;
and w9uld a~knowledge
-.
u
.
85
.
4
.
Each h
_
~Ue girl kn~ws exactly
.
.
hospital and ran through lhe
no
outside stimulus.
·
·
.
33
47
20
when he~ volunteer 1s s~~eduled
grass
la_ughing until we fell.
We
Then after eight weeks of going
·
12
68
20
to come. 1l
seems
that their week
· .
also climbed
.
the
-
monkey bars
lo
'
see her every week,
·
I had a
·
3. I think we should have a mini-5emester- during April and May
instead of January.
Commuting Student
Resident Student
Faculty
Staff
Yes
·
1s percent
26
16
'
20
l\lo.
68
percent
62
58
48
No. Opinion
14
percent
13
26
l2
cen_ters around the
.
day
.
when
·
and made faces
·
at each other,
break-through with her. We were
the1rvolunteercomes.Theymust
_
an
.
dlwa~_sohappytosee
.
that.she
outside in
ths
play area of the
be
good
for two ?ays before the
imitated me - it was a response.
hospital and it was
-
time to go
volunteer_comes :imt
so
that t~ey
B.ut then. for no reason at all, she
inside. Melinda· would
.
not come
,
·
a~e
per1!11tted to have
fr~
time
would
.
begin to cry,
her
face
and she broke away from me and
"'-1th th!!ir volunteer. Dunng the
would be full
of
fear and her tiny
ran into
.
mud. She then
proceeded
other
~1x
.
days of t!te week, they
hands would grasp the ba_rs tmtil
to Jay in this mud. kicking her
ar~ g!ven very httle
.
personal
,
they were white .
.
No amount of
feet -and swinging her arms
attention because
of
the lack of
~rsuading or sympathy on my
wildly. Just seconds before she
Asaresultofthissurveytheacademic calendar for 1972-J973will
be
s~ff. They relate to the other
part could relec1se her from her
and I had been walking and
sim
_
ilar to the present
1971-1972
academic.calendar.
.
chli~ren .
00
the ward for com- thoughts. I was stumped
·
with
smiling at each other, so I asked
pa~1onship
,
but usua~y they are
these attacks and wanted very
.
her where her· smile was and if
The
questionnaire
was
sent to 157 students who were chosen at quite alone: Ocassionally, .an
much to be
.
able to reach her
·
she would show it to me.
Im-
.
random. The responses of the students thus chosen were to form
the_
atte;:dei~ldwdl attempt to giyale
during one. This beca~e a must
mediately. she_ looked up and
basis for estimating the opinions of the whole student
body
to the eac
c
I
a ~ertam speci
because sh
7
would go 1!1l?
these
smiled and then got up and ran to
.
proposed changes. The decision to ~ntinue with
the
format of the t!t<>ughthor comph!1'ent, but many
tra~c~ \\~tie sh? was hitting me
me:
~rasping
my hand .
.
\Ve were
·
tlf!les t e
othe:
girl~ are hurt or
·
or mfhctmg pam on the other
sm1hng at each other V1>1th a new
·
Cont. on page
5
re1ected by this action and they
little girls.
~
could
hear
my
.
1D1derstanding - she was mine.
.
' I : ,
.,
'
·
:'
.
:-:
.~
<~\;\
s
j~~-
~
_
·_:.
· .
.•
FEBRUAR.Yl7;.19.72
'
I
.
mE
CIRCLE
·
' '
j
' '
t
•
,
t
\
PAGE7
·-
....
~
:
·
.
/\
:~
.,
""
:l
.
i&ld
•
·
·
···"se
···
···:N
·
eeded
·
.
.
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.
}
:\
_
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>t/.;_/<:?'E
t)"<
'
.
·
.
I
.
I
•
.
.
•.
..
. ·
.: <
'1rl'
its
•··
second
·
meeting
•
·
of this .
..
.
.
~mester,
:-:
the yarsity
:
_
~lub·
·
got
-
:
,'.
:
•
·
downtosome
·
specffic mattersof
;,
:
·
.:
--
<'
its
·
:
service
.
·
'.
to
\·
Athletics.
;'.
Many
'·
.
·
_.
· -
:
·
.
ideas
<
were
--
proposed
::
on
·
·
the
.
·
.
;, .
:
.
:
.
subject
of
.
~rvice
and th1ftheme
·
.
·
· ··
.
':
of
this year'sclu~ will most likely
-.
_.
·
6e
·
as
Jund
raisers .. '
.. , ,
.
_
•
·
·
:'
•
ban
<
Faison,
.
of' the footban
·
,
_:
.
,
.
tearri
/
~as elected as _secre~ry.
·
Anyone wi$ing
~o
post any notice
.
on the athletic bulletin board will
_
have
\
to receiye-rus. perrriissfon;
.
.i\U
,
other notices
will
be taken
:
down
'.\:
Lately ,
'-
there
•
have beeri
-
a
'.
.·.
- great many
:
:
'
d!mplajnts t?
'
the -
Athlet,ic
:.
departm~n~: of non~
·
·
students
.
using
~
the gym
,
when
·
.
there isn't even eri4?ugh room for
.
'
_
..
Marist
·
swdents'
.
us(! •
.
If such
,
is
· . :
the
.
case, each individual student
.
• :
.
-
.
-
rimsf consider•
,
himself
.
respon-
. ·
.
.
sibie
:
·
on such occasions, students
.
haven'Fsaid a
~
word
to
-the nori-
- ·
·
students in thif Gymriasiunf. The
.
.
only, other alternative in this case
would be
'
':t"o
,
have
·
our-
security
·
·
··
force set
-
·
up a
·
system whereby
·
-
.
on,Iy
.
sttidents with
_
an
ID would
be
>
..
allowed
'.
to
use the
·
Gym during
·
·
.
,
reserved-hours.
.
:
::
.
-
..
·
.
..
,
:
.
-
. _
•
~
-
:>
_
,
Speajdng
_
atJJ~e
~eetj~g was
,
:
;'
·
Dr.
Howard Goldman;
'
Director
_,
·
.
of
·
.
Physical
·
·
education
·•
and
.
·
.
.
Athletics
at
Marist' The
-
bulk of
the
!
cjt,i¢sti.on~ ;
_
dfre~ted
.
·
.
towards
,
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
,,
.
.
.
.
·•
him
~·.
\\i~f~
..
con~erne9
'.
\vjth }he
.·.·.
and an
equipment supervisor.
:
In has been .brought out on several for the alumni
.
office to contact
buildir:tg
'
·of ,
.
. t~e pro~~ed f1~ld
.
:
speaking of how to a:ttain the
'
occasions
~Y.
alumni that they those who would
be
wHlirig
to -
house andJhe f~d ra1_smg ~1ve
'
·•
·
.
funds for the field house Dr. would be willing to donate to the give. Since studerit pressure is
:
in Septeµif?er:, Dr. ,Gold
_
man
.
·
Goldman stated that
·
the federal field house if they were ever
_
generally respected here at
.
stated
·
·
that the cost of the com-
,
.
,
government would provide a contacted by the alumni office for Marist." anyone wishing the
·-
_
plex would be in the
.
area
_
oL
·
grant of
35
percent of the cost, such a purpose
..
The fact is that alumni office to take on such a
·
$1,500,000
to
-
$3,000,000;
.
depen-
..
_
provided
·
that physical education Marist alumni have .never been
.
function.
fill
out the coupon below
..
·
ding
:
what
would
'
be put i~
it
~
·-
.
:·
classes be
.
taught there. This is contacted for such a purpose. and return
1t
to
Jim
Cosentino-
_:
Maintenance costs could
be
kept"
_ ·
presentlydone and would
.
present
·
With the field house fund drive
·
Box
92
Champagnat
.
in the area of
:
$30,Q0Oyearly. Thi
_
s
-
•
.
:
no
.
problem:
·
The goverll!lle!}t coming upin §eptember, the V.C.
There is an obvious need for the
would
:
incltide such
:
service~
as
·
would
.
also be willing
~
to lend members feet that this
.
would field house as related to such
cusfodiaris; ~lectr_icity
,
:
and heat,
·
'
Marist
20
percent of the costs.
It
pres
_
ent
ari
exceHent opportunity areas
as
intercollegiate
:_,
-
_
-
(fi~cle
·
)t~te~view
:
)::>
_
;
... ·
.
; :
)/if
c,
:
o
<>;
/:>?
o
'
~
~
:.n;;:\tJJ11lti'te
•
ftf
t•,
·
•
·
·
~
t
tJ,o
<
·
:m'·t(/
.
:
,
,
•
·
:
e
.>
x
:::
·
·
:
;ci
:;
.:.
.
.
;,:i'~
•
-
-
·-
i
?
f
r
.
_
iJ
:_}
:
:
.
:_
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.-
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.
, ..
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,
;:
·
c_E:f
note)
-
'J,'.he
'
{t)µol'?pgjnt¢fvi
.
~
-
~rygipally
aweai:ecI,i~
·
the
.
Circle,
_
·
·
'
-
-
-
-
-
one
-
yearagoJ
.,
··
- .
'
:
-
0 ~•-
.
~-
·
· , -
·
·
.
-
·
-
·
.
, . ,
• .. :
•
•
•
•
•
.
·.
The
·
questions
·
revol~ng around the· proposed new
-
athletic complex
·
are so many
.
arid
-
so :varied
.
that
-
The Circle
:
has decided
_
to
.
preseris
·
· .
.
(informatfori
'
suppiiecflii an
·
intervfew
v,;ith
Dr. Foy, conceJ;riing
_
this
.
issue
:
·
. , :
;:,
.',
·
'
5.'
J
'
'
.
·
•
..
.
·
.·
:;·
·:
.
:;:
>
<>
;
-
.
-
.·•
,
.
.. :
~
-
-
Itniightbeinterestfrfg
.
to
·
note that
.
a major fear
is
that the complex,
·
·
'.,
which-Would c<>st :roughly
·
three
:
and
a
half million dollars would
·
be
.
•
:
:
btiiltfr<>m afrincrease in tuiti<in/rhis is
.
urifounded according
to
Linus
:
>
:
F.
.
oy ;
·
the complex.would
•
Ile
f?uilt
:
ffo~'gift funding.
The
only building
-
. <
:/
on
c~~pµs
that::,Y~ fihailced bytuitio,ri. funds was .the
_
campus
cent.e,;.
-
-
·
-
,
J
Basicallf the sittfatfon right n<:1w with
:
the athletic ccm1plex is that
·
it
.
..
··i.:'
'
is in
:
the
:
pre
"'..
planriing stage
:
It
wiffnio:it likely
be
locafed on
.'
th~ south
·,
end
.
ofcampj.Jfa
·
nd
•
would house.an indoor:0utdoor pool.Io addition to
-
·
.,
the
.
poohind basketball court
various
instructional facilities would
be
·.T
~
induded
,
~(.
\
:
;_
·
.•.
-
·
_.
··
·
. ·
,
:
: -.
-
'
'
'
'
•
.
-:
-_
: .
·
;rhe
term
pf
e-planm
_
rig stage
·
w~§
explained by
Dr.
For as being a
·
:
.
; :
stagein
·
develoP.fuent
.
where
,
Marist bas received a space-cost study
m
.
"
.
-
•
.
tµecoii}pl~x
t,
Tlie space'.<=osfstudy
.
~as completed recently and
as
sai
.
d
-
-
the
:
pJaris
wo
.
iild
caU
for"a price tag of three and a half
milliori doll~s.
·
.
·-
'A:major PfOblem
·
that occurs from a venture of this size is the cost
of
maintairiiftg the building, it has beeri' approxim~ted that it wotild
'
cost
·
-
.,
$100,0QCfd<illars
a year. 'l'bis
~~!
<:oo.Jd possibly raise the cost
ri
tuition
_ ,
Qne
·
buiidred;..dol!ariia'year
·
per
,_
student.' \ --
_
·;
_ ·
·
..
.
·
•·
basketball, track, and tennis.
These teams
ai:e
-
working under
very undersirable conditions
which handicap
_
their per-
formances
.
Little is said of
.
the
benefits of a field house to the
·
student who isn't involved with
intercollegiate athletics. The
Physical education
.
courses could
be enhanced and expanded with
the acquirement of the- field
house. Courses such as male and
female swimming and track and
field could be taught. In-
~
-
tramuralscould
be
improved and
co-ed intramurals would become
a reality. Students would no
longer have to wait
45
minutes to
play a basketball game at night
,
·
and girls would finally be able to
use their fair share of the
facilities. Female athletic teams
could be started. The need for a
· field house is a real one. Such
activities as Alumni' games
· during homecoming are just not
feasible
with · our athletic
facilities. The role of a field house
as money
-
maker has been un
-
fortunately played down
.
Other items on the
·
agenda
included:
<
l)
the awards dinner
in early May.
(2)
tqe possibility
of trophies for second place in
intramurals and
(3)
the size of
the
·
club membership. Any
varsity atJ:)lete with one year's
experience is
·
welcomed and
,encouraged to join as the
membership is still quite small.
I
would like to see the Alumni
Office tak
_
e an active part in the
upcoming field house drive in
September.
S i g n a t u r e - - - - - - - -
•
,;'.
'
Whatrriust be
mderstood
is
that this athletic complex
wiU
not be
of
· .
field
_
ljow;e pJ,"oportions but ra~
_
her it
-
is
'
being designed for the use of
·
_
·
·
1600 people. Ttm complex is still a
few
years off and to be sure there
_
_
_
.
MARIST
COLLEGE
BASKETBALL STATISTICS
.
.
1
.
will
most
p~b~y _be oth~r c~anges on campus before
.
w~
-
see
,
~~
.
-
'
NAME
-
~~!_llple~ c~ntpl~;
::.
-
:
'
:
,:
·
..
"
, '
.
.:·.
-
·
·-
·
·
_
-
.
'
GAMES
FG.
'
FGA. PCT. FT.
'
FTA. PCT. REe:AvG.PTS:AVG.
'
.
.
.
~
.
.
.
•
,•
.
.
..:
:.·
-
COLLEGE
CO~CIL
from
page
1
'
.
.
·
~
:
O>D~
·
shoold;
.
'
.•
,;
.
such
'
a
<
m~s.
yet it
can't
.
be
.
.
· .
a.
Re.ippoint the
_
remaining
..
neglected.
If
we c;m lend
a
hand
·.
Jiv~
.
staff
_
:
members
to
·
the
'
to
Bangala
Desh,
to
the refugees
·.
fQllowing
·
.
scheduJe; three
,..
ap-
·
'.
of
India, ·
to
any partictilarly
pointed
for
two year terms and
·
distressing situation
:
where
two
appointed for <11e
year terms.
·
tragedy has· struck,-perhaps
we
·
b. In addition, -be sbouJd ap-
can understand why.
_
-
.
point
•
-one additional staff
·
.
member
to
·
:the• J)erman~nt
·
RECORD REVIEW
f~m pige
2
>
College Council
for a
one year
-
term;
-
·
_
·
_
.
songs
recorded
way, way
back
in
4. We recommend that
the
non-
tbs
early '50s. Take it or leave
it.
·
graduati~
·
student members or' Leave it.
this year's interim College
Al Green
(Hi)
_
LET'S ~SfAY
Cotmcil be retained
as
members 'OOGETHER-All you brothers
of
the permanent College Council out there -can hear Big Al make
til
the"
·
du
ti
things happen. Other than the
,un
..
-
1
r
.
~
a.
on.
title song, the
Bee
Gee's
"
"How
·
BANGLA Of.SH
from page
2
Can You Mend a Broken Heart?"
reading
ex any
written
material
·
and
''La
La for Yo~" make a_
on the subject, it
.
is rather
dif-
good pa~kage.
.
·
ficult
to
feel
the
pain
of Bangala
·
Al!
this
and
mor~
1s
on
your
Desh
where so
many people are
Manst
College
Radio \VMCR 640
dying fasL
It
seems so
far away~
-
AM Sunday through T ~ a y 7
even
out
_
fl
our
~gue to
consider
p.m.
to
7 a
.
m. Tune us m
.
'
JOE SCOTT
.
18
124
·
242
.512
69
99
.697
342 19.0
317
17.6
..
.
640
4.2
.
RAY CLARKE
.
16
97
247
.
392
32
so
67
226
14.1
BRIAN McGOWAN
14
46
lll
.414
•
31
56
.554
122
8.7
.
.
123
8.8
MIKE HART
17
72
162
.444
44
56
.786
'
10s
6A
188
11.1
JiMMARTELL
·
-
16
48
136
.353
22
41
.537
118
7.4'
118
7.4
NICK JACKSON
8
25
47
.532
8
19
.421
25
3.1
58
7.3
JIM.BELCHER
11
14
33
.424
4
11
.364
22
2.0
32
2.9
.
JIM COSENTINO
.
14
34
67
.507
30 -
43
.697
69
4.9
98
7.0
LESCHENERY
·
12
36
119
.303
-
14
.
28
.500
53
4,4
86
7.2
JOHN DILLON
12
8
24
.333
5
6
.833
26
.
2.2
21
1.8
JOE
.
JOHNSON
8
12
28
:429
14
18
.777
31
·
3.9
38
4.8
STEVE SHACKEL
13
36
88
.409
14
18
.777
49
3.8
86
6.6
JIM OSIKA
4
3
7
.
429
0
1
.000
13
3.3
6
l.S
.
BILL ROSS
4
2
7
.286
0
0
_
.000
33
0,8
4
1.0
MARIST
18
551
1318
.423
287
446
.64-3
1048
58.2
1401
77.8
OPPONENT
18
446
1137
-.392
355
527
.674
.
735
40.8
1247 69.3
RECORD 13-5
conference record 7-2
NEXT GAME vs NEW HAVEN COLLEGE
2/16n2
home HOME
AT
LOURDES
H.S.
...
.·.·
.
.
i
·.E()~es-.:.116st
,
;;Si~tla:·.-c~S~~ll~81tY.;.
_,·.·-... :.\·t
·
:---:-··,~
'
... ···,. ,: .. ~-·~---'
-·~ .. ··
-~-,-·: ..
"
·: , .... ,..· ...
·-' .' .· .•_ ..... •._,.,:./ ·_-_ .... -,·_• .. : :·_,·:-.: .. :_·
:< ... _. · ... _~-~--~' . .;. __
-:_•·_'·./.:
:
_;,>.::
·
-:·~ ... _:··.-.:·-" .. , .. ::.•'"• .. ~---._.-_·:~:;•,:·:_:::.·.:-~.':_ . . .
·:··,' '·.
-
.
~ .,
.
:
,.
.
'
.
!: .. ". . · ;.;;. :
R~--
~~~"\~n'
~t -~ -~
oVer · K~•s.
booste~{lthe F~es · ~~~gtb.}i'heJildlans::~:
lef
~f ·,
6
1
4.
:~Ol>~~r~.:
it_o~(::Brt!(>~ Xis.~,-
~
:_This Will.be ih~ ~i~tti. m~ting. .·
· -.<~
7
Iridians\.of ':
~iena.·~
c,otlege;-'
~
:_:_confe~~c~nn~rk, 11>
.
:7~2 ~d k~pt :. s•10 .~op~·omore ~~nter . _Eric
pp~>
~.d.f
1
~
Junuf ~
15
-,~:frb ·
'.~J:!~ofm°~l
3
W:e't::
<'; :
Saturday'also at S:!)O at Louicles(, .them. :
m
.c<1ntent!~n,.y .Marist • Sta~~~ck .. (13.7, .ppg.) .
.
. 8!1d.
~
•
. This. w~. -th~r ..
~~ ~
. with .
def
ted
the
Kingsrrten
65-63
last
•· The:Foxes
:
are.13-5 atter·-two simply.outgunn~Ki.t11.'s~l~ege,.
Forw~ds Fred.Shear,. a Jumor_ .ll}~tmg
« ..
es~.~wv.,,
111:5 . . . ·
ea
·..
-
.1. .
.
.
··c_, ..
impottalil';.'.victori~·:•against·~-Fi'es~mariMike.Har.tpum_ped· ... ·<f~)an~av_eraging.19:~ppganc;t/;,.s1.e~ holdintt"a1n~·•!l~~=r~._·ye~_atBrookl~.:
. King.'s<College·
(104~93).,·and,· m'-30 pomts~ 9n
.
~turday.·01gh~, 6 3. semcr. Dave
·
:Wright.
'rile,
.
.
Last season .~'. ..
;uts . . • .
t
·
.
c .
·
-
. StonehilV.J88-77)i,• ~e vk?tory;,.-Marist,pla~ed•th~ll' ~stg,me of- Indians ba<:kc~ is, ~ade
_up
of :
~
f~~e.s
~~
:~ 77.
7
72
-~~~a
.
•. · , . · · • ,,
\
· ··. ·
lhe
season
10
their
upset
~n over- ,_
, Siena. , -- : -:. . .
.
. .. ,..
: .
':.stc>nehill .. Senior ~y,CJarke led .·.
·.- , On ~onru,lY
rught_,
F~br,uary 21 ,·
_ the
Foxes with 27 points: Senior
,the
Kingmen .of ~rooklyn College _
, . Captain
Joe
Scott. continl!es . to ·.
will·. battle Man~t at ,.Dutchess
·
.
· lead· the. Foxes in·scoring
-01:5· .·
.. eounty.Commwnty Co_!l~e .. at
: :ppg), · . and' ., tre~c:,unding '. ·
. s:~Brookl¥11 Collegecomes,ID~
·
' •(19;Orebs~>: Senior
lfay
Clarke
the game w~th.a
7-12
record but ID
,
(14.l,Ppg;)-and Freshman Mi~e :
.. ~e ~ast_ha~
~v~~ the Red Foxe~ ..
·Hart are theot>nly otber·players ID .
a difficult. ttme: Brooklyn: em
·. double figlll'es.'' .: ... ·
·.
'.
· .': ·
. · ploys_a
_three
forward offense led·
,:: C:
The_ Indians of ~iena College .
. bt ,!um~rs: Hytnan. La.sner and .
_
_
· corite into Saturday
ni~t•s
game
Jim .Mitchell and ~reshman ·
,vith· a misleading.12-9 rec_Ol'd.
, Clar«:nce~~gh. Rounding out the · .
. · Siena
has
been
hall)pered , by .'
startmg line.up are ~uar95 Gerry · _
1
.:·injuries all season hirig and.will .
Seabrook - (6'0)
1
and ·· Eustacio _
be probably., operating at full·.·
. . ..·.
. .
Waisoi:ne
.(5710). :
_
.
MIKE
HART
"····•, ... ·· .. lhB;.Seasons·-~Hailge
·ana:so.
Oo
\•r .. ,.~
ThereAs:. no hiding now,, they . .,. responsibility-is first to himself· essence :~ they · parallel the set a
new
win
re<:~d
this.year
at'
·their. records
were
f~hman Ed
··-+
·rudJi'tdrop the pass
or
miss•the ~;and secondly ~.the:
team ..
No·· ,den'larids_'of life itself. It's
.no
fiveand.eight.
0
1ricludedin
tlilsis·.
·Foy(1~2),.Wayne Kezirian .(3-8);
/ .. bl~J:piere is no one to bl~e.;" oth~rsport is
as
selfco~~i!JUS ~r wonde~ : more·. people : don't. a 0-52.shutout·by· N(::AA rated
.
/J:ack,Clowe
(1~5), Bob
F~ell (8-
.. >
~s 1s::~ne on on~ .. compeb~~~
·,.as .
personally .. i educational , as ·
·
wrestle; no wonder the world isn't-: Trenton S~te; and
a
first
time
2); .Bill Burke: (2-2), JuniolJl;
co.•
,_·,, with>ev~cyone_.\\'.atching, tb.i.s
JS'.'
wrestling.,
The
.
mat{pririgs .out "in betterishape:
This
is what :victory over.:~.U.N.v;: at New'. :capts. LanceLipscomb (5,:2) and .
. :,;:Wrestling; At.present there ai:e·,·every desire;·s~ill
•
lll'lctstrength : wrestling·, is. What the Marist -Paltz·. Six wrestlers had
winnii:ig
James La:\iery (9-3-0,
and
.Pat
7.-/.
veryJeW, sports which call .for. ,t}ie: : that · any indfvidw,il:
,
:can
,
·. com.a: ·: Wresµi~.- Team·- has: done . this,: .records .
this
season,
and with. a . ·LaveUe (3-0)'Johri Redmond (8-2)
·.
:
/•de~ica,tion .· that - wres_tl,m~< mand;· and-:: success <is not ·season was to striveto meet the\' match total.of on1y·10 bouts
we
.warren Brown·
(3-0).
With the
)/ demand~;- And .deinand i(does, · me~slll',¢ in' winning/:\ but in
'.'te1W'. . As
for.
their, ac• , have a • statistical _misnomi< regular
season
behind them now,
; ..... every: :wr.estler' has to sbµ".ve; .. :kn.owing that:,there'.WllS•nO more
coinplishmerits;. they are,Jlistory acknowledged bythe'fact tbatfor: si~ .wrestlers wiU be going to
, ,;:; dehy~ate and· condition harder' ·. to give: -Such ·
~e:
the
'rigors of ,· now save\.
the
·.district'.
cbam~,
irianv bouts Marist was liriable
to .·
SOuthh_ampton
College_ this·
<?
•~i(}~ ..
:ariy_
oth~ sport; T~' \.Yl'~tling, ca.JlecI::bY;.mapr,-baf- .·'pio~lii~ thi~·weeten~t
:As·for_.
fiellacomplet4:teai!_l; ~rid'for'a 'weeltend ~. participa~ _in t~e
/ ~~.om
for this beu1'-a wrestlers.· .ba11,c · and/:1tr1JeSO~_«!; .yet
m
the sea~s historfi;.~ matm~ ~eamtotal forfeited186 points:
Of·
ij.A.LA: district
31,,
cham~ionship
· ·
·
·
... ,
,_.
,
,,
·•.·•.·•.·· .. ·: ,,
. ·. c. · •·
the whole
·squad; many ._efforts>toumar.ient. Of these six men,_
. .
,
.
.
. were put forth .. with little .of no iMarist is: ·expecting
to
return
wrestling experience, among
th_e · .. ilolJ!e
·With six .medals, a feat
_ •· more.·.fain.ous .of:·the :do or/die· .. ·. ~ich ~faccgmplislied will triple
. Ma'iistathletes, were
Mike
'mini'· the.previotiifschool record.
AU
in
··:Hawd;,
John
·
M:iilvey:Cand··
~kip,
)tll~e season •was
one
of.great
· Lacey; Otherteam·members'and '.: maturation . for. the . Marist
l(f
lll!!;
1
f
!f
~If
!f ~:~-~-...
-~ -'-~h.is ~~day: ieb~~y_,.19.Uie
J-~
·~~~lit
·hi~
:jumping. Pete
Manst CQll~e ·-.ln~~r. Track .Rock,. Spragti~, .and Dennis
Te~
.travels,to:Queens:College,/Dubatowka will share the ·hur-
... ··•·· to take ori ootlf.QueeJis.and Kings
?.i:Uing
.
for the
:
.Red Foxes. .· ·
. Pointina·double:dtialmeeLBoth · ·: Newcomers Tom Herman and
, · Queens
.
ai:id'.•
·
i9ngs :PoiriLsport :
·
Marty.,Ward. who have been ·
.
. strong and
18;1'g~]
~a~
in iridQ.or<· \vofking· out f9r only a couple .of ·~ ·
•~~;•Bothcydexcepttonally:~~ll.• ~~~ir.haviilgjoi~d. the squad
:In the,P'f(} Ind~ ~lay•.Carmv_al
;
\).ate;:will ruri_the 60 yard dash and
two ,w~eks ag~, .... ··· ... •• , : .
i · - \::,
·
·;
·
.:.
corripettf in the:.,nori-scoriilg 300
·
Marist's.bigg~t~handicap ~
:
yai:d dash ·a1so.:Bill
.~arey;
the
be._the facttha.tthe.t_eaill.has a .. ·sblhdout in-Marist's CTC.Relay
~IllaUsqw.ad of oiily about 15
~tn ., :
competition in the. 440 yard
run,
.
. : meµibe~ iu)dwill.befaced with··,,willrun
ffieooo
yard dasb'aDdthe
'.{iit
1
[1;({Jr· .... ; ...
·
.. ·.
;;i./fr:·.i~:sh Bo~-#~;.-ie~ssk,Nt;_~
,
for
~n/::.
J
'.t:
t.: . • • •· : :·
:<>
-
. : . : .
~1~~'
.;;~a1:~~h}~t;~._
-
:J~$ti:::J~r~~~i~~ .
'·-
:
}t,11:•1n_.>. .
•s· .-
.'::an·~•:
·
·a·
.
·
'"'1-s:
<
·.;.s;:"'·•'.a,/
·:r:·., .,:
I)··.
-e,·
e·a·
.
·
.''·t·
:e·'.
··~r·:
::!f~'!.iiupo~tsth
~::~~~n:r.··:•--·u;~~;»i:~t~:;iit:.1~r;i~~
,, ....• -/}.-'://t;'_'.; ..
,.-g
,·_.·::,'-c>/':<<'': ..
··.
•
·!.••:•:f·::'.c\
·
•c:(O•:·••::J>··.:;
:\:~,;\':,·ByMike:Mii!'-<··:·fs~e~iili~l
.
~~,if:~~'.~:J·.~:~·,~~;1=~~f~::~'
. :-; L~lb/l'~ursday _,the . Ma.tI~t.)about<
14 .
inmut~-;-:,r~rpa.uung.
.
·> ;_;- :.' ('-
y-.
'io
b
V · -: ·." was Marist'sfirstiumier,ever to .
Mar:fst
me~iri
tbe.1000
yai'd
run·
:~ fdere11Jima:nh·" 6~sketball · .. t~m.:: 'FI:om there bof!l
'
t~m~ ·play~:' atea. smurpTrhe~s~lni· gttlye· redufoxes acsamsaer . . run a Sllb-five
~
minute·,mile
in~ ..
backed ,
up· - strong}. y by. .Marty·'
.
f~~
:!
e Kings-college·fr~ll <ou.t.the g:.ime a11dJ!tnpt1ed th~ir
.
· .
··
., .
..•. . . ~• ·. · · · : .. ·
doors
hi
the
n.;..;.;.ns ·
'\ml ·
o: -- · · - •. · .. , · ..
·
' . teann~>
80. -
: : ... //:\\ benches~·-
•
: ;
·
. ·, :,
~S\;,> ' ..
<
out OD
top
by
the,
~ore~ 81
~
58. : the mile,i~ard
r::tand ~:t .
.-;:~::~r:»:~~:~ -~:
,_ ; T~;~~ewas
all
Mal',ISt.~
the:
, ;
·:
·
'I'~e high, scorers}Qr:Ma~st . I~~~baf,fw:::rl!8~ ~·. 'return after
only
a
'ten-minute
sharetlieloaditfdie two-inilerim
.. httll~?.'~.·.··' ..
Joxteenes.
~~nt.tl- oudttto:
·
~.
-
.. ;-... ·.:..··•hiw_egh~
Jl>e.
8~ts·
_e.·cu:1
..
·
.. '~.t.h;;;--~ ghoamt.
e ._
t:~
t ..
iiea~
for a g«:t~°or .
rest
to run.:
a·
1eg
in thf ~<>:rriile ... :
(or.
M.arist.· ::•:1'le\:two-mile . relay . ;
.. ear.Y.~_eyen . pom ea a_ 22-5. :·, .
~
potn .
irase~ s
a , the first half. Marist then caught relay. Tru.s
tak~-
tr~enclous .:.
tea~
wip :~·~om~ of".Jobn -
-:...
As
~e~fprogressedso ~d the_>JantasticJ5for 18 andalsQ_pulled .
the hof-hand
with
·about. five. ~~ance as well as speed . Jas~nski as le~d:-0ff: man,
~
Mar.•~~-Jead. The excellent .. down.25 rebo~._AJ li'8.1r!M"~t,
... -
..
'111.
littl
oot · ,_
abihty. .
. . -
_
.
.followed by Jay.Doyle· Marty
sh~mg.-.,and good- team •w_ork had 20, ~reg WoJCi~ski had
mmutesto
_
go . .
· e
.er.,
oxes -·
Maristwill
be
bringing.along a 'McGowan and
anchorJJian
Bob
gave!11~/~a5.5to32half.t!Jne •Cl~andT,tn1Mtu'p~f,had.l0.The- ~ead:l)thto,'rlatthed .halhaJff,:M ···t strong. weight .contingency,.of Salomooo:.
,
. . .
lead.-·-,-\,
.
.
high scorers for Kings were Dave
In -
e secon . . . . -
ans
·nc1
·
ord
1u.1de
Hank
Bl · ·
·•
· •· h -
·s11·
·
. .
.
uch
: . Ih :ih~·'.second half
the frosh
Walton with 29; Ste,re Strumbeck · ·domina~ pla}'. as theyJJUt on a
i oor rec,
.•. ,.,
r.
wn.
.
.
Ma~~hs-. op10g to
!)W
m ..
continuecf:the good ..
Juw.H...r
and
··th
12
d Ra
silhemi
with
11_ .
21*7-bursfto.lead
by
a score of 56 _who_~lds
the
mdoor record of 44
time - m~provements
10
their
.. ·the.
·
~ .
• ·
WI
an ·
Y
.
·
•. '
to 42 with about six minutes gone
feet
WJ
th the shot put. as ,well as -~ners m all events from
~
n;
~·~ J>allmed
to 74 to 44
with_
Last Saturday
the
frosJI
played - in
the
s ~
half. 1bis sealed
the . thr,ee o~r possible 40 . men:
times
recorded two
'!eeks
.ago m
game up for-the frosh
and
both
,Jerry '!ilder,_.Dom Mucci,. and the CTC Relay ~mval.
Frosh
net
2
in
tape contest.
tearris
just
played to. nm out
the
Bob Guula. Bill S r
will do
clock~. :· _
.
.
· -~ ·.
: _,_ ..
- The high scorers . for Marist
were
Joe·
CiraseUa with
a game
high 19, · Brian McCullough had
14, Tim.Murphy ,had 12 and Al
Fairhurst had· 10. The .high
scorers. for Vassar were Steve.·
Ganster with 12 and
John
Sprogel
with 10. .
. .
The
freshman team record
of
'now 7--3. The next game
for
t,be
freshman
team
will
be
against .
Siena College.
The
game· is
on
Saturday, Feb. 19
and is at Our
Lady of
Lourdes
High
School.
The
- game starts at 6_:00 p;m.
Mighty.~cGowan
leads~
through~
9.17.1
9.17.2
9.17.3
9.17.4
9.17.5
9.17.6
9.17.7
9.17.8