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Part of The Circle: Vol. 9 No. 23 - April 13, 1972

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·
,
.
.
·
p.8
Bill
'
O
'
.
Reilly •.•
p.
3
Varsity Ret~rn:s Fro~ Florida
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1HE
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NUMBER
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23
MARIST
:
COLLEGE;. POUGHKEEPSIE. NEW
-
YORK I 26() 1
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.
Where Were
You .
.
·
·
.
.
.
.
Th is
·
Easter
::.--
·
By
,
Kevin Laffin and James
·
·
Corcoran
Contimled
OD
PJile
2
:APRIL 13,
1972

































































































































































































































































































































































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PAGE2
nlECIR.CLE
APRIL 13, 1972
.
C.
u~
B. . .
'
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.
-
'
'
1
iayRtt
1
~Jd
t?:lr~:,
£!f
·
£1
(
..
, ,
·
·
.
_
.,
·
>
BY James Elliott
.
·
·
.
.
Lampus
'-.AeD
.
er
.
"We
.
feel
_
thattheelectedmembersofhe
"
classha~eusedthepower
:
-
·
By
Bob
Greene
.
.
of office to lias votes in
the upcoming elections." Such w~_one of the
·
I
·
·
1d lik:
·
.-
to
-
·
.;.
-
L,
th
-
·
t
·
·
'
to
. -
the
·
·
.
.-
r
-
em
·
oval
_
·
of
.
office and
·
My
·
first article
·
was
0~
the CUB
allegations made against the duly elected "representatives". of the
-
wou
e
14Ae is une
:
·
·
Class of '75 by Misses Dillion and Beatty made in
'
response
'
to
Olll'
:
explain to
the
reader what the classroom
·
space aod th
e
0ther elections. And it has come to my endorsement of Bernard Mulligan for Student Government President.
.
·
CUB has bee
.
n do1·ng
·
on
his
o
·
r her
·
can
·
didate made ment1·on that the
·
attention that many
·
people have
.
·
·
·
1
·
feel that
.
in this case Misses Dillion and Beatty have mistaken an
.
- .
.
behalf. On March 13, 1£r72 all the
.
Campus center should
.
be made misconstrued the
.
purpose of that honest and experienced
-
opinicn for
''petty
.
politics", perhaps a
.
members of CUB were given a more totally suitable for student article.
It was
.
not
_
.
written
~
to
.
projection
.
of their own orlentation in the matter. They
say
we have
copy
of
the "Report oh Campus
.
use and the
.
CUB finds itself in
.
down-grade the CUB or my fellow
_
tried to bias votes in this election,
-
an
·
a<;cusation
,
that
.
has malignant
Center Space Utilization" by Joe complete agreement with 00th elected officers· The newly
.
connotations and which is detrimental
to
the integrity of each of the
Brosnan. This report dealt with these proposals. And once again I elected officers had nothirig to do
members on
-
the executive bord'of the Class of '75.Jfbeing-bias is
three major
·
areas, one, the
·
must refer backto the "Report on wi th the
pa
st election.
·
· wishing to
.
_
preserve the best. interests of the class which• we
philosophy of the Campus Center, <;:am pus
.
Center
_
.
Space
And.upon closer examination, I
"represent", than I always hope to remain 'bias" in that respect,
As
.ID
_
.
second, the present uses and
.
Utilization"
.
as my p9int of found out that one man ran the
-
our qualification for making such a
.
decision, I feel.that
.
it was an
futtll'e
·
needs of the
-
Campus
·
reference
.
Sc> one might ask then,

election on behalf of CU
_
B
;
·
It is
.
opinion expressed by a group of
-
people ~ho
.
have experienced the
Center, and third, specific
· ·
"Why aren't steps being taken to !:;:~f:~b~i~r~:~:::tn ::
. : th~~

wor:kings of
-
Student Government and who
·
have been intrust~ as
proposals
~
This report
_
is concrete follow through with
.
these report that I take off
·
my
.
h
·
apet
.
to thispe1
·
n- .
_
re_pr_ese
_
_
ntatives by th
_
eir class.
I
do_ n 't know if:this
.
reply by
.
ld1sses
-
.
in all areas, but I would like
.
to proposals?" The answer is that
O II
dB
tt
beg
t
t
of
to
t
urposes
or
.
focus your attention to the area of
·
th~
report was the first step in
di
vi dual. I am not retracting my
I
ion a~
ea Y
~~
0
~
·
_i~orance
our
rue P uld
li~ ID
"Specif1cProposals" in regard to
.
this direction, the second part of previous statements
·
on he
out of theirow_n pohbcal s~asion <bias)?, neverthel~s; I wo
.
·
"Classroom
.
-
Spa~e
.
"
'.
:
. _
·
.
The
the
answer Jies
,
in
.
the present set-
election for it was
:
a
mishap
but
·
ask the
.
m tha~
if
they ~ve any further problems or
-
~sunders~ndi~
following is
.
quoted from
_
this
.
up
of
.
the Campus Center.
only ~ause of
a
lack
·
of in-
-
regarqing ~s matter, please contact one of your represei:itatives an
f ·ts
·
ed
f
t
ted
k
·
.
d th.
·n
·
.
speak
..
to them personally.
.
-
.
·
.
·.
.
.

-
-
.
·
report:
.
.
_
Some o 1 room is
-
us
.
or
eres
wor e~, an
. ·
is wi
.
On Tuesday
·
night, March 21st; Mr, George Balzer made an ac-
Classroom Space
· ·
classroom space.Eachyear more noCUtBhappen agail)
·
on behalf of
cilsatio
_
n a
_
g
·
ainst th
_
e
_
off
_
icers of
the Clas
_
s of '75, claiming that o_ n~ of_ the
.
;:Jc~ir:~~~!~~/f:::O~t:!
-
-
~:~~!:d;o~=~~~gadf~
~~
As.
far as
·
_
the
-
present CUB
namesontheendorsementletter, th,~t of_ClassRe~re~~ntative;t3r1an
.
an inform~l a"rrangement
.
of
·rnoice;",
So
the problem arises as Bo~d all I can. say is fantastic.
>
M~e~:~•ttifst~ii defines.forgery
-
~s
-
"lb~
~~
:
of
counterfe~~
·..
.
tables and chairs.
·
.
to
where these courses are to be Their only goal is to work for the .
.
.
the handwriting of another
.
with inteiit
·
to defraud· to deprive·o( some
·
·:
,
b) Remodel
·
c:;249 so that it is held. There is a critical lack
·
of
success of Our CUB. All com-
·

ht
··
·
·
.
,
t
,
·
·
t b d
--
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r
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-·,
·
,
.
· ·
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··
·

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·-


,
_._.
,
,
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, ,
·
,

Sound-proof.
·
'
... d·d p
· ·
ro,iection ar"'"
.
classroomspace,so are we to say
.
mittees are making plans for the

rig
-
e>r meres
·
Y
,
ece1> 1~:
.---
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-
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·
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·
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-


.
'
•.
.
n
.,
- -
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.
_
:
With
-
regard
_
to
the
.
.
elidorseinent l~U~r

.
.
~et:e was
.
~~sba~}~.J~
-


and
include
.
T.V.
_
(possibly no more classes are to
7
be held !n
n,ext
sch~I year _and from what
-;
copying ofMr.
:'.
~cCu!loch
/
s
'.
n?n.i,e onto
_
~e ~ny
,
~!>Pi~
:
~ t
~
-
l;la~
...
-
·
cable).
·
·
· ·
·
.
the
_
Campus Center·
,!\nd
ID
I ve seenitlooks hke a
good
year
.
made the result
-
was 400 letters
of
.
the endorsemenrw1thout Brial)'s
I
.
I
:
I
!
.
,I.
,
·
·I
.
I
.
I
r
i
'
:
.
.-,
,
.
I
..
.
•.
i:
.
f
!
_
:
.
{
.
c) Refurbish seminar rooms so
_
~s~nce deny o~rselves
,
t~e But we do_have l?r~lems
_
and the
·
Hanc6ck onit. To rectify the situation we ·asked Mr. McCidlocli
to
sign
·
.,
that~ey are more attractive
an~
~01ceof ?f1expanding course hst
'.
answers he ~Uun
yo~ .
.
_
.
400 letters,
.
buthe was unable
:
to do so at the time
:
What'Brian did wa~h
·
.:
.-
···
functional.
.
.
.
.
,
c
or
a!e we to work ~o a
,
happy
,
O~ March 9, .1972 th~
-
Cir~}e
:
to
_
give
;
me ~rmission to sign his name to the letters and
·
Lwillingly.
d) Relocate present ~us1c
,
_m~wn,
cla~s unti~ 12.30 .
.
·
pu~hshed
..
an arbcl~
_
enbUed
.
A
·
agreed
>.
Therefoi-e, no defraud,. no d~eption, and no Jorgeryd ex-
.
Workshop classroom to C2~9 .
..
·
.
~o~er pomt
.
that
.
comes to Suitcase Col!ege
·
·
by
·
:
John ; plained
this
·
to Mr
>
Balzer prior to
·
his
;
grandstanding
'
accusatioo_ in
e> Concentra~e all
·
formal,
·
m1Dd 1s that t~chers, at present
·
Duane .
.
Th_earticle was
verr
true,
.
. front of the 'mee(the Candidates' meetiog.

Since I humbly e~lairied
scheduled classes so that none have offices
m
_
the Campus for
.::
th~arbclestated~atonce the
thenature
'
oftheincidenttoMr.Balzer Iwonder\Yhatmotivatedbim
·
.
.
·
.
:
-
.
-
:
~
·:

.
-
would be held after
.
12:ao
_
p.m.
·
Center.
·
Agai_n
·
~
~e only ~~son
·
weekend
_
co~es
_
MariS
t ,s stude~t
.
to make such an
"opportune"
accusatioo. B«rrowing
.
a quote
.
FROM
,
~
·
·
·
.
:
·
.
-
.
This report goes into many
.
!}ley have offlc~ m our bwldi~~•
·
~dy begms 1~ ma5s exoduus, m
.
Mr. Balzer himself,
_
inreference to his opinion of the charact¢stics
<i'
.
·
.
·
_
other a~eas such
,
a_s: }ounge,
_
·
IS
because there
IS
a lack of omce thi~
Casf:
to
_
Sie?~
:
And
-
tha,t at
Freshm~n
·
atMarist, I would like to saythatitis quite
obvious
that~
:
-
'
·
.
·
recreational;
-
office
·
.
.
and
:
:
space.
·
It has been proposed that pr~nt
-
-
~
-
_cu~
s problem
:
·
.We
-
<
:
Balzer'himself"doesnotknowhisasfromhis
'
elbow".
,
,
·
-
,
.
·
.
·-
_ ·
-
organizaton space. A copy
of
this
'
when the library
_
is move<l to
·
are
.
not _sitting idlely, But rath~r
·-:;.i
Whenllooked around Marist
this
election time lcould
see
a
'
scti
\
e

.
·
_
report is your's for
the
~eading
~

.
Fontaine, that this
.
a_r
_
ea: be
·
us~
.
·
~e t~ng steps to correct; thi!
:
,•;
reminiscent
_
of
"~tty
backroom
·
poll
ti~".
~h~
i
!U'.e
·
we;
going
w
:
~
.
.
. ·
request at Joe Brosnan s offic~
_
m
·
forJhe
.
teach~s ~{fie~-
-
Agam, situation .
.
What are
.
.
w~
-
do1Dg.
· .,:
confront the real ISSues;and when are we
.
go1ng
.
_to
_
wake
·
from
·
our
,
.-.
·
:
.
the Campus CentE!ror by getting t
_
he CU:B
.
1s
·
-
•~
·-.
com_pl
_
ete Lets take a look at the
,
a~ea
:
of
:
"sowish
'
sh.imber"
:
arid unite to
·
save
Marist=
·
from

immanent
..
,
.:,,:'c
gii£~~i!
{t
~~1!~~
7
~~~i.~
,
,~;~~~
,
,~
;
Et~;~~~
1
i~H!~~~:1iz~~~
'
~
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D/'.,;i:
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~~:::-:r~~~~!~~:~~forP
1
tt~
'
:
:
t;~t:ins":id~:d;n~:i~~
.
:
~;.;~~ftf:e~~:~pi:;i~i::~
{)":-
.
.
·
.
;
.
.
·
.
·
:
Needed
.-:
:
.
.
!:
.~
-
-,
'"-~
->-
-
:----
·
-::
<
-
,
i':

•<:
;r
·
·
.
Presidence. Both
·
candidates wuty for the
.
future
:
of
.
our
·
all for at the present date,
-
two
-
-'
·
·
·
-
niadementioh in
.
their respected
·
:
Ca
_
mpus Center;
.
.
.
·
·
·
dollars.
.
,
·

.
_
.
_
·

·
-
·
·
.
.
.
·
·

,
.
.
.
_
.
.-
-
,
_
..
.
:·:
platforms
-
to the
:
campus center

.
l'he purpose
of
my articles are
Movies ar~ goin~to be held on
.
:
March24;
·
fo½;
N~w
Yo~k. Ne~
.
. ·
an orgaiuzatfo~
:
-
out=
·
of the
-
~
1968
,
:
..
and the use
of
.
such area.
.
to inform the student body of the the weekend and
if
CUB can get
·
.
Communities,
·
Inc
:
·-
has an-
,
Poor
._
..
People's
·
·
·
campaign;
-.
: .;

.
,
,
,
... ,.
,
,
...
·
One candidate made mentiollof hap.sand mishap.s of OUR CUB. the back to back free peri~s,
-

nounced its
-
plan for
:
recruiting
·
-
dedicated to the concept that.
_
:
.
·
.
::.\

~

.
-
· .
.
-
: ..
:
A
. -.
-_ ..
,
..
·
.
..
,
-
...
_
e
·
.
·
·
.
·
a
·•
:
.

_,·--.

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.
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.
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1
b~k::t:k
.
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: ~ R ~ J : : ~ ~ ~ ~ t r o i =
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.
,
_.
·
-
.·'
-: • ·
·
_
·
·
.
.
·. · .. ·
IBM
..
Cont
.
was turned

down by the faculty,
owned and operated
-
5,743, acre cooperative
·
ventures,
'
,
both
..
.
,
.
·
_

·
-~
.
·

l
'
I

·
but we have not given up hope.
farm in ~
.
County,
·
Georgia, . farming·
.:
and
.
,
market~g.
·
The
·
·
.
.
·
·
.

·
·· ·
:
_
At present the CUB is trying to
.
now going back into
..
its third Co~ition
·.
has
·
been
_-
set
"
up
·
-t;o
·
1
·
·
.-'
·
·
-
1 :
·
-

·
·
··
obtain Jethro Tull for
a
concertat
_
·
harvest season. An
,
exciting
·
·
coordinate
,
fund-raising, r,ecnut
. --
.-
n
·
·
: '
·
1

m
·
·
e
·
Acc~>r<ting to Peter Cunn~n, the beginning of this up-coming
-':
realistic
<
venture
,
:
where
,
POOR
\:
hatve.sters;
,
~rr!illge
.
fo
_
r
a
"
~ome
·
• -
.
.
/
_
\ ••
.
'
· . -·
'.
,
,
.
coord1~tor ~f !,he IBM
-
~~Ject,
·
.
May
:
I mention thi~ not• to raise
·.·
Blacks
:
a11d Whites

ai:e filidiitg
:
,
,:(·
~
;
~n~
/
~ty
;
:
to
J
10USf:
-
the ~r
~
.
/
·
·
.
.
.
·
-
:
·
·
-
.
,
":
-
'
,
.
"there 1~ a distmct poss1b1lity
.
of
·
false hope but
-
~ po1Dt ot;tt to the
,
way of cont.rolJ_ing
_
_
t~it
~
'.
·i
r
,
ester~
,-
.-
d~
_
vel<>t
~oop
_
~l".a~1v:~
; \
. -.
Stepping
,
-.,Crom
·
the bus
·
m
·
arrest 1£ we enter
.
011to IBM
·
reader that we are working, and
:/
political and
'
ecorioniicatreality

-
-
rnat~eting
r
otitl~
:
~d
-
.
:
arrange
.
:
,:

.
: ·
,
_·•

;
Harrisburg,
'
_PeorisyJavania
·
·
one
_

property .
.
In
such a c
_
ase
:
some of.
:
working
hard on their behalf
.
·
·

;
NCI
·
carr
:_
bec~e
i
a
\
tnili
~
\Tiabl~
;,;/
for
;
~ftf:iic~
;:'
!'P~
q,aµtton
is
>
\ :
·
could
.
not help but feel he was
.
the
demonstrat<>rs
.
wdl enter IBM
-
•.:
Marist will remain a ~called
·:
business
._
.
this
i
swfuner
-
,,
as
,•
the
,;,
a
-'
bi'oad•tialieQ
_
'.
,
group
,
,
of
,-
people
- :
·
·
_
;
i.
-
:
.
tre~ding the
'
cobblestone streets
:
property and face arrest
.
while suit case
-
college only
if
the
-
_
--
crops of watermelon
~
~uasli,
:
aii~
·
.-
_
from
:
bwjiness
/
iridus!rj'
,'
~
labor,
.
·-
.
of
-
ancient Jerusalem .
.
Observers
·
others wil~
.
s~t up camp
·
.
at
·
an
·
.
stude!'t
body
_
wills i
_
t. CUB is
:
.
okra will,.J~
-
i~
,
f,irst time,,
be
-
_-
:::
ed~~ti~•
-
(
e11~ertainm~11t,
~
.
al!d
:
>
-
__.
on
_
hmid
,
.for
.
the
_
trial
·
of. the
·
alternate site m order to carry
on
~ork~ng
to correct
·
these
-' -
truc
_
ked
.
tO
'i::
New.
-
,
-York,
:.
C1ty;
--::
re~1g1~~
-
;
=
_
}t
_
,
:~
1~
.
c:l~~~s _-._lbc~1e
-
=
,:.
_:
:
/;.
Harrisburg Seven
.saw
the city
.
the pl".ojected week- long ac-
Situabons: But all the
,
work will
.
Washington;
·
;D,C
:{·
_New
>
·
J~rsey-

·
Hav~~; ~v
>
F:.
~
fk.>u8lll8-.S
~It-
:
·-
·
,
:
transformed into
the scene of the tivities." :
..
:
·· •
·
·
.
_
.
·
.
be in vain unless you take
_
the

and
,
=::::
other
:
,
,.
::
,:,
1'lorthe:ast~rn?
)
P1-'iidc
/
\
P ~
f:
.
~tton,
Di'°a
, .
·.
_
::: '
first
·
Holy
_
Week. The
·
defendants
·
The week··.long
·
demonstration
.
~me
_
to see
.
how we're spendi
_
ng
;,.
cooper.1tive
:"
marke
_
ting

:
·
ou~b!
/
i
Sands,
:=
Etige~
·
.
~llender,
:,
~~d
._
~-
·
were
charged with conspiracy
·
to
.
will
.
close on April 15 with a noon
·
your
money.-
,
Sc> stick
.
around and
~:
which are now being tJevel~ili:
>,
ma~y
-
others
~
.
Tllese
_
.
peo
1
P!e
:
are
·
,
.
-,
r
-
·
.
kidnap presidential aide
/
Henry
.
.•
march from IBM's
'.
front lawn to
.
we
Will
J_rulke it worth
..
your
.
while
.
'.
'
--
~
glietto areru;
;
?:;'.:
;
/
(
'.-
:;
.
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,:
;:
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=
3'.,'f)
,
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t~
'.
!J~
=-:
rev~
utiOllu-y

..
: _
·
.
>
,:
:
.
·
;
.
.
;· -.
.
Kissinger, and to
destroy air
·:
the
Internal Revenue Service
·· ...
-
-
-
·
.
.
·
. -
':
\
·
-
:
-::.
::.
:-=;,
The
caJt:rw.
:
hiirvesters
_
is gointf
c"::
,
co~pt
:
~at
~
~PJf!
_
can

c::on~ol
_
:.
.
::
:
,_-;
·
:•
;
:
·
~ ~
-
~
,
-.z5fi
-
sj>lracy
in Harnsb~
W:~rf!
ID
_
,

taxresi~~~.
-
~garuzers

of
.
the
·:
~ t a ~
~
of
_
U.S. a1
_
r-
.
powt:r;
,?
Aptjl
:.:
U/
-
in
:,
N.YC
J
a
_
t the
:
NYU
:
: -
Iilform~tion
-
.
<
-
:
a~µ~
-
:
·
the
}::
/
_
.
-
:
.

·
.
.
:
=:
drast~c contrast to the non~V1ole11t
-.
,-
IBl!f
.
ProJe<:t
_
expect
·
~o ~ye a
:
:
~IS
-
.
techru~~-
.
·
of
..
:
au~ated

Re_ligi~
~~
:
at
-
2 W~shington
-?
moyem~~ and ~-mee~s can
,
,_;-:
-
.
teachings
of
the
defendants.
·
Also
·
,
.
_
~!!

group of
~
·
to
OO
>
people
_
warfare utilized
:
conc
_
ealed
;c:
:Squa~
~
.
Notth
-
·
at
;
J
;
OO p.m. In-
:c-
be
:
~ ~ ~ br
,_
con~<:ting
,
tll~
.
:
:

likeJesus,
the
defendants offered
_
participating in the·
·
weekJong
·
sensi~ devices d~ignedto
1
send/ terested
.:
persons
/
who cannot
:_.
peopl~:

·
'
'


:
·

..
-
::
·•
.
·
nodefensealtbougbtbeir nu~tives demonstration.
·
A
greater coded signals to
:
two huge' IBM7.:attend
.
should
'
contact the people
·._·
::
L
:
.
Cornbread ·
::
Givens; c-o
:
.
·.
were based on~ judg~'s refusal number are expected to par- 360 computers in Thailand.·
-
.
The: iisted
_
bel~.
·
Recruiting offices
.-
Juckon <;hurch, 55 -Washington
·
·
.
_
·
to_grantimmunityforttiedefense ticipatein the ~rch on April 15. computers interpret the
'
data,
,
·

·
:andlater.
workshops will be set
·
Sguare South,
·
New
·
"fork, N.Y;
.
.
wi
_
tnesses
·
_
and t9
·
accept a
''We
-
are calling upon IBM to analyze the best means
.
of attack,
up
in the New
·
York and
·
New
·
:
10003
.
.
(212)471--0352
.

Weekends
reduction of
the
charges. The end
its
complicity with the war," and relay strike orders to a
.
:
·.
·
Jersey areas; as well as other
and evenings call (201 )675-6055
.
coincidental
·
abnospbere would Cunneen elaborated, ''we have squadrQn of B-52's
.
IBM-
areas.
The office on each campus
2. Dave Rogge, NYU Religious
not have been complete without met and discussed with IBM produced bomb
.
navigation will
be operated
·
by interested
Center.
·
2 Washington Square
its Judas: government informer executive personnel the urgency systems then take over to release students and faculty
:
Details for
North, Room 3.5, New York, N.Y.
Boyd Douglas.
As
in the case
of
of individual and corporate the bombs automatically at the setting up
·
recruitment
.
and
10000. (212)598-3.586.
_
·
·
.
his
counterpart,
Douglas responsibility to cease being a proper moment. This system
-
workshops
·
are available on
·
Information for
-
setting up
received ample remuneration for part
of
iostitutionialized murder. defines anything that moves as
request.
·
recruiting should
.
be obtained as
bis part in this passion play. The We have told IBM of our
.
an enemy. Consequently, it is .
The NCI harvest period
-
is
soon as possible.
roles of high priests
.
and demonstration weU in advance." im~ssible
to
distinguish between· approximately
onei month
Pharisees were mirrored by the
CUnneen went. on to say th~t 5?ldiers and civilians. Whole
beginning the end of June. with
·
local Roman Catholic bishop and
·
"IBM
pla~s an mtegral part ~n ~llag~ thus may be
\\iped
out
by
·
transportation, food
.
and housing
clergy in their refusal to support the operation
of
the electromc air ~ehvered·ordnances designed
being provided for volunteer
the
priests, mms and laymen on battlefield in Indochina. As
to
kill anyone who ventures into
harvesters.
·
trial. In spite of intensive American ground troops have the target area."
A Coalition to Save New
government prosecution, their been withdrawn and replaced by
.
- - - -
Communities. Inc. has been
acquittal resuiTe~ted a new machines,
the
character of
the
formed
by
the
Poor People
'
s
dimemion in moral values.
war bas been increasingly
developmentFoundationwhich is




















































































I
.
MR.IL 13~
197i
:
TIIE CIRCLE
Circle Feature ...
By Bill O'Reilly
.
..
'
.
,
'
.
.
.
'
Tips For Teenage Parents
·
'
.
.
.
.
.
'
Lets
,
Talk About Kissing
Editors note: Bill · O'Reilly,
class of
'71,
was the author of the
·
sometimes controversial feature
.
column,"Attitudes Outrageous".
kind (personally my lips
·
get
They
·attend
movies that depict
chapped) but I usually look the
kissing, they read trashy novels
other way regarding the cir-
that describe kissing in explicit
cuinstances mentioned
·
above.
A
detail and often they hide in the
good rule to follow and teach is
closet when their parents are
·
.
.
During the course of
·
my many
·
that kissing is alright as long
as
it
fooling arowid.
conversations with teenagers
does
not involve another person.
Young people are bombarded
froni all over the world
I
have
Can you dig it?
with kissing, especially if they
been repeatedly taken aback by
·
Another important thing to
run into another teenager who is,
··
'blunt questions on the subject of
remember parents, is that
shall we say, "loose." Just the
PAGE3
/
·
kissing. Youngsters the world kissing, like marijuana, can lead
other day one boy I was coun-
over seemed preoccupied with
to greater evils. In a survey taken
seling slashed his wrists because
thoughts about kissing when they

by
the Monks of St. Stanislaus in
he was so despondent after
should
be
developing
·
healthy
the highlands ·of Nepal, it. was
.
watching
two
adolescents
interests in horseshoes, bowling,
proven that kissing definitely
"making it", for five hours. I told
or
taxidermy.
Questions leads to other barbaric sexual
this boy, as
I
now tell you
·,
that if
I
regardintkis.sirig seem
to
be
oil
·displays
-
such as hugging and-or
were he I would have gathered a
the
.
lips
.
(pardon th_e pun) <>f
hanaholding.
·
group of my friends together and
:
al~'ost
:
·:
.·every···
.
adolescent,
·
Parents take note. There are a
severely beaten the two sinners
Two
kl'IIS
about lo indulge in ~he sinf11I acl of ••• kissing.
es~ially
'
th~ from lower class few tell-tale signs that can expose
·
with automobile jacks.
.
Boys have also revealed to me
neighborhoods;
.
you
·
.
teenagers as ••kissers.''
Another important fact that all
(sometimes under heavy torture)
.
When
a
·
child
_
approaches me Some of the more obvious are: a
parents should stress to their
·
that there are some girls who
with a query
.
about kissing
.
I
puffing up of
.
the
lips, loss
·
of
children is that boys and girls actually want to kiss. I find this
immediately try to communicate appetite, turtle-neck sweaters,
who do engage
·
in kissing very
·
·
Wtbelievable but I have a sworn
with hini in his own language.
lipstick on the collar, and water often die young. The tissues in
affidavit signed by a ~nage boy,
Thw; Isaythingslike
.
"Right
on",
·
on the knee.
It
is a wise parent their brain become damaged and
just before he died, stating that
a
"Digit",and"Cool".Ialsotryto who keeps
an
eye on his or her theirtoeshaveatendencytodrop certain girl was actuaJly sliding
get my message across using the· teenager.
·
·
off. In ancient times it was not over toward the boy while he was
words
of popular "heavy" songs.
There are, however, a few
uncommon for a teenager to
driving. She then slowly un-
The song lyrics I
use
the
most situations where indulgences can contract Leprosy soon after bottoned his shirt and slid her
frequently in discw;sions con-
be granted in kissing cases. engaging in kissing. That's not all
hand ... Anyway you parents get
cerning kissing are the following:
-,
Engaged couples and blind dates parents, kissing also affects a
the picture. If you don't I have a
"What do you get when you kiss are allowed three kisses a week.
person's health. There is an old
few available at three dollars
a
guy and-or girl?
_
·
Each kiss cannot last more than adage
·
passed down to us from
each, in the interest of sociology
You get enough germs to catch
8.4
seconds.
It
is a foolish boy or Helen Gurley Brown which
of course.
pieumonia."
·
girl who does not have
a
stop-
states: "a kiss is
a
symbol of the
A girl of this kird who allows,
After
.
this
I
immediately watch on every date.
heart. Each time a kiss is given
and even desires, herself to be
deliver
a t'!o
!i'iur}~~~
~J~-.
-
-
,:
:
~
~~nµ~~
~y_e
r~l~ted to me ~wa~, a small piece of
the
heart kissed should~ !brown out of
the
·
dangers
.,
c:,f~pneumotlia;
-.
;,,
,
, '"
'
~

.
,:-::
c
,
,
•"
·
'
kissmg
0
almost

alwaya
;
causes·
·
a
··
,
·1s·,given·
.
":'away_"

too:
·
'7Eventually
·
·
'.
car:Not
when 1t-1s at
a
stop but·at
·
:
By
talking to the teenager in bis
·
certain
·
kind of
.
pleasurable there
·
is
·
no heart left" This of
.
a speed of
60
m.p.h. This should
own
language you· establish a
feeling to sweep over the body.
As
course is how heart attacks are demonstrate to her that teenage
·
rapport with him. You
can
gain every healthy parent lmows the caused. Did you ever wonder
kissing will not bf! tolerated .
.
hisconfidence.Onceyouhavehis body
.
is to be disciplined not what type of people are getting
Of all the sights ·that are
confidence he
.
will be more pleasurized. When the temptation these heart transplants? Well its
susceptable to youl'J ideas. to kiss stirs within a child it is
no
longer a secret; they were
disgusting to a decent individual
the one that is most appalling to
me is a picture of two girls who
are ... wait a minute, oh yeah, is
the sight of two teenagers kissing
in full view of the public. Just last
Tuesday evening
I
saw two
teenagers smooching for
·
ten
minutes in the girl's living room.
They did all this right in front
of
me. I almost fell off my ladder
and through the window.
Finally I would like to state to
you parents that no boy or girl
will ever, I repeat ever, have any
regrets about refraining from
kissing. Tell your children to save
their lips for the highest bidder.
Save their lips for the
Qne,
.
tbe
one
.
.
.
who ~feJ:$:,them
.
what
.
you
.want.
..
.
In
this
way, especially for you
.
older parents, can a handsome
retirement be had.
Remember, parents, always end wise to advise him
to take a teenage kissers! Ask your
your sentences with
:
the words:
·
freshly
.
oiled black leather strap children, after you present the - • - - • - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
"Can you dig
it"
and
.
beat himself· into un-
facts, if it's worth it.
·


,.

• • •
Getting back on
·
today's sub-
consciousness. This is one sure-
Now that we have examined
ject, I
.
always
·
try to make
·
one fire way
·
to overcome the temp-
the perils of the art of kissing
.
Jet
point
·
perfectly
.
c l ~ kissing is taton of kissing.
me offer to you some suggestions
not always bad. I
know
this may
It
goes without saying that to curtail it. One of the best ways
·
shock

some of you
.
parents immodest touches of the body are for a girl to avoid the sinfulness of
(especially
.
you New Englan-
seriously wrong. These activities a kiss is to go out with a certain
ders), btitit's true. For a teen
to
.
.
are only for married couples,
·
in type of boy. The type of fellow I
.
kiss his
dog
.
9r his teddy or his times
of
w~ess, and convicted have in mind is a little different
mom is not always sinful unless, rapists.
than most other guys. He is
in-
·
of course, the kiss
is
held
too
long.
Young
_
people today are ex-
terested in different things. He
.
Ido
not
·
encourage kissing
of
any
·
posed
to kissing quite regularly.
-
probably has more in common
'=-
·
·
with girls
-
than other girls! Now
. this
·
type of guy may sound
.
Bill O'Reilly. former
Circle
Colamnist
.
unappealing to some girls but if
-
they look at it objectively they
can have a lot of fun. This kind of
·
boy and the right girl can go
shopping together, trade purses,
do
each others hair and, if they
really get friendly, they can peek
into each others diaries. A girl
can really get "tight" with this
kind of boy and not have to worry
about sin.
A
good way for boys to get
away from the scandal of kissing
is for them to eat plenty of
chocolate, potato chips, french
fries and ice~ream. In this way
their complexions will become
so
uninviting that no girl will even
look at them much less kiss them.
Mark my
words: it is
a
wise
boy
who eats fourteen Hershey
bars
a
day.
Many girls have complained to
me that
boys
expect to kiss
on
dates. Well, I advise you
parents
to teach
your girls the art of self-
defense. A well placed kick
can
render a frenzied boy helpless. I
caMot, in good conscience, tell a
girl where to kick
a
boy but I
mually give them this
hint:
aim
for a spot above
the
thigh and
below
the
bell Remember this
girls! An attempted kiss deserves
an attempted kick.
One
more
thi~,
guys like girls
who
have
spunk!
JU A
a
. . .
U U U U U
U¥?A
'
l
.
,
I
:
I
;
I





















PAGE4
,111ECIRCLE
APRIL 13.1972
Pictorial Essay
/
J.
-e.
:
Directed.by
Jim
8.r.itt·
,i~:, ...
:L.,;._
,
l'';~'.~;'_;~-~~~.~-,;~Pr.d.dii·t.~d::by]>ci(,1)q-,~~'.6~b:·;;t;·;\;~;::;;~;}
','~j'/~;
:.·.;.,:;·!;; ...
; .-::
···-\
"·
·;
~
. ..,_ ... _._-~-
·:,·-··
·.·<' :.-;•-:.,-:~~:,•~-~·~.~·;~~~:-~::.,·~.,
-' A
tribute
to the Theatre Guild
























































APRIL 13, 1972
·
CirCle Editorials
Anyway
You
•·
VVa11t
·
11
·
·
From blutred. sounds of the TV
to
the feature pages of the
Poughkeepsie_ Journal we are awakening to
the
fact.
of
a Presidential
Election Year.
:
Since the Constittitiona_I Amendment was ratified
giving
the right to
vote to 18 year olds,many people ~tween the newly enfranchised ages
ha
.
ve registered to vote.
.
. .
. ··
:
·
·
But, there are many more
.
who haven't registered to vote. And
usually in a Presidential Election only
60
percent or
so
of the elec-
torate vote.
.
.
.
.
~
.
·
·
some individuals claim that voting is a
was~
and is
unreal.
To them
·
we offer some facts:
·
~
.
_
All candidates
.
for all offices in-1968 in the U.S. spent a total of $15. 70
per voter.
.
If
one person in each election district voted for Humphrey in
.
'68
who
didn't vote, Nixon would have lost a second time.
.
·
· ·
.Your v9te
is
a valued commodity -
by
.
the candidates, by the
media,
and
it
should
be
by yourself.
·
·
Register now and vote
iii
November.
·
The
JJ::[sl>urg
submitted by Emmet
·cooke
Bernie Brogan; Ed O'Connell, Kathy Harvey, J. Fred Eberlein, Ea
Kissling
Stuart Gross, Anne Trabulsi. Bernie Jellig, Wally
Baldascino, Bob Norman, Jim Voelker, and·
J.
Tkach
It
was fitting that the trial
d.
the Harrisburg Seven came to
an
em
in
Holy Week. Not that any one
d.
the defendants represents Jesus in any
exclusive way. Every Christianlives in Christ and imitates him ac-
cording to
his
own conscience. Yet the drama of Harrisburg, like all
human dramas that spring from conflicts over. fundamental values,
has parallels in the drama of Jerusalem:
an uneasy
power structure,
threatened beyond reason by fears of conspiracy; conspires to tid
itself of its troublemakers once and for all; the instrument of the law
il!
an
informer - not simply an honest policeman doing
his
job, but a
man
once loved and
trusted
by the accused who goes
to
,
the authorities and
Trash
Clash
Letters
To
...,,,
••
says, ."What will you give me?''
..
.

·
The Editors
The Harrisburg trial will stand
as
·
testimony. to the inability
of
this

·
government
to
understand and
cope
with the
real forces
cf
evil
at
work
.
·-
---
_.,,,
......
n
...,
.
;:
~~::-;.~~~~J~es=~~=::i=~~:r:e~~~~&:
1
:::1:!,,
I~ffr!~::r
io
the
article
~j;;
~i~~%,:ti;o:~~~~~~:~~
.
Department
bas
little concern
-
for organized
.
crime or
gun
control;
.
it
·
by Mr. Naccarato in reference to <the Freshmen Class,
J but rather
·
seems preoccupied with the re-election
of
the-President, planning the
.
the "extremely UJJcooperative" the
.
buyer's and
.
we are not
·
Repub1ican convention in
San
Diego
and
accommodating
I'IT
.
Em-
·
solution to the garbage in
the
responsible for misuse of
baqassed by the Scarlet Pimpernel elusiveness
of
Father Daniel
·
theatre, may I attempt to
. ·
Benigan, S.J.; anxioo.s to prop
up
the sagging reputation
of
loose-
reasemble the situation. The pr;:e::iting the article, Mr.
·
·
talking
J.
Edgar Hoover, and desperate for some way to discredit the
stand was set up with
the
in-
Naccarato gives people the
critics of
the
Vietnam war, the Administration diverted public at-
tention of supplying the College impression that I and the entire
tention, two years' work and a million dollars to one
of
~
oldest
_
Community with inexpensive Freshmen Class are the people
bogeyman stories
i."l
the world-conspiratorial priests and nuns.
·
refreshments
. .
after the first responsible for the denaiJ of
In the end it
has
exposed some
of the
wealmesses in one branch of
.
showing was over, Mr~ John enterance of all refreshments. 1
the so-called Catholic
.
Left: they may be guilt of careless talk,
.
of
Gilmartin and 111yself were ap-
say it is about time we stop the
tossing arowid ideas in moments of desperation that would make
proached by Mr. Naccarato and Freshmen Class from taking
many of their supporters shudder, of flirting with the violence ~ey
Mr.
Robert Greene
.
The question "enough garbage''. from Mr.
should deplore. Understandably, the
_
reading of the Father Philip
was asked of us,
.
"What are you Naccarato and Mr. Greene.
Berrigan-Sister Elizabeth McAlister
.
correspondence filled the
going
to
do about the trash
in
the
courtroom with gloom. Yet, rather than exposing any conspiracy, the
theatre?" At this 1>9int,
I
asked
Jamess~~c~~~!rii
·
government had exposed its own ugliness.
It
smeared Dan Berrigan
what he
·
had in mind. We were
President of the Class
by publicly naming him
as
a co-conspirator, then dropping his name;
then told of the Senior Concession
.
of ,
75
Student Government
after publicizing
.
the twinel
0
bombing and kidnapping gambit
.
it and Mr. Greene stated something
changed the indictment to include old draft board vandalism the
about "you wash my hands and
defendants had already taken responsibi1ity for.
Its
own
·
agent
we'll wash yours.'\ Once again I
provided explosive manuals and offered
to
furnish a
gun.
It
confronted
asked them to get to the point. I
the defendants with
an
unfriendly judge in
an
unfriendly place.
·
was told that they wanted
me
to
How will the outcome affect the Catholic Left? 'lb.e Catholic Le.ft is
clear up this mess
.
Because of
the community of all those whose experience of Christ and study of
the distasteful attitude of Mr.
Christian social teaching have convinced
·
them they must work for
Greene and Naccarato, I told
radical alternatives to a political and economic system where wealth
them that I would not clean up the
is hoarded, the weak are oppressed and human life is disregarded -
garbage
.
As to whether the

even destroyed
-
where
it should
be
nourished. This belief does not
Freshmen Class would clean the
stand or fall
on
courtroom verdicts
.
As
long
as
this war continues, the
Garbage, I said no
.
Now if Mr.
Catholic Left will resist
it. And it will continue to turn
ifs
energies
Naccarato and Mr. Greene had
against injustice at home. What counts is
the
verdict
of
history. Even
some common sense, they would
with all their alleged faults - their "arrogance," "Impatience" and
know:
"oversimplified" thinking etc.
-
history will show that the Berrigans
1)
that the trash deposited in
and those who
stood
by them
·
were passimately aware of
the
great
the theatre is a risk their
moraJ crisis of
OJI'
time, that they faced it with all they had, that they
management has to take. Mr.
dramatically heightened public consciousness
of
the
immorality of
the
Naccarato himself stated that
the
war and won for the church
a
·
glimmer of moral respectability
with
personnel was "more and more
those young people who had given it
up
for dead. That
is
more than
can
Lenient.'' To my knowledge this
be
said for some of their
critics
and most of the dlurch.
is enough evidence
to
show that it
Financial Aid
check or money order for $3.25,
must be mailed immediately to
the
College Scholarship Service,
P.O. Box
176,
Princeton, New
Jersey,
08540.
H
you are
filing
a
Student Confidential Statement
is his fault.
2)
we
serve the entire Marist
Community and
a
~nµnon
law
d.
business is
.
the tranferral
of
ownership.
If
the
Freshmen Class
selJs refreshments to anyone - a
All· students must complete
both
the Application for
Finan-
cial Aid and
the
Parent's Con-
fidential
Statement Form.
THE
APPLICATION FOR
FINAN-
CIAL AID
.
FORM must be
returned
to
The Financial
Aid
Office, Room 109 DoMelly Hall,
no later
than
April~. 1m. The
family should
also
submit
a
copy
of
the
1971-1!'12 Federal
Income
Tax
Return.
the fee is
$3.25, and it must
be•-------------
Scholarship
Service no later
tnan
April~. 1m.
Anyone
wbu bas
questions
concerni~ financial
Aid
should
come
to
the
Office in
Room
109
Domelly Halt
•••••
Dear
Editor:
I would like to thank Jim
.
McLoughlin for the excellent
work he performed as Election
Commissioner
for the recent
student government elections.
That over
700
students voted is
·.
evidence of their desire to par~
ticipate in self government and
shows a realization of
the
imc
portance of the new student
government structure
.
I hope this
participation and interest will
continue throughout the coming
year. Thank you.
Sincerely,
Bernard Mulligan
The Parents.
·
Confidential
Statement,
accompanied
by
a
mailed
to
the College Sch9larship
Service, Box 1501, Berkeley,
CaJif
ornia
94701.
Either the
Parents' Confidential Statement
or the Students'
Confidential
Statement, whichever
applies
sbc:>uld
be
filed
with
tbe
Coll_ege
John Sherlock
Jim
McLoughlin

·
'
......
,
,,,....







































































































































I
l
I
r
,
I ,
PAGE6
AlternCJtiVes
THE PURPOSE
OF
.
THIS
COLUMN IS TO ... '. ..
i
.
.It
is
stated
.
there
·
is at
.
present
6
percent
unemployment nationwide.
-
There is at present, 10 percent
·
.
overpopulation
maybe
more.
(I'll
hear
from persons within the
coinmunity wh~ would view this
as a racist
··
remark). The
inevitable truth
·
is mail has
become so overwr9ught with
.
By
S!uart N. Gross
..
i
'
.
quantity he has
.
overlooked effectual it may become in the
quality. This quality is n~t to be following. academic year.
It
is
found: in the air
we
breath, the urged that the persons respon-
food we eat, or the education we
·
sible
·
for
the

committees
receive. Yet each
of
us
will
do his
--
culmination from ideas to reality
best to oversaturate, to the very make a step within the three
limits.
weeks left to
.
this semester .
.
li
The
preceding
was
the interest is allowed to want it
f!laY
culmination of a dialogue bet- create the demise
.
of
a
possibly
ween
two Marist students.
potent and resourceful ideas.,
After
a
great deal
of
interest in
It
is hoped that the
.
persons
the College Council, there seems involved in
·
th s_tudent electJons
to be a lack
·
of drive. The longer that were not winners, continue
the community must wait for their
.
interest by directing . their
formation,
i.e.
elections, acumen and dr1~e to benefit the
procedures, agenda and par- college community.
.
ticularJy realization. The less
ALL
THOUGHTS WELCOME.
-
Seventh
.
Ce·ntury
Returns
111ECIRCLE
·
APRIL
U,
1972

The

Draft
.
A Re
·
newed Trickle
Of
ByDaveMc~adden
.
·
Manpower
<Dave
McFadden,. Field year.
_
.
-_
_
oowever, i~
no{
a
binding con-
Secretary for The Central
The

projected ceHing for
.
tract,
and no,military obligation
Committee
.
for Conscientious reached numbers for this year,
-
·
is
incurred
by
signing it. Military.
!
Objectors, writes an irregular however,
·
may
change·
.
as
obligation is only incurred when
colwnn on the draft and the recruitment for
the
.
New
the student signs a' "Reserve
Selective Service for College Volunteer Army is not doing as
Contract" at the beginning of the
Press Service).
.
well as expected and more
junior year .. The Deferment
(CPS)--The Draft is back. drafted manpower may be
.
Agreement does not specify any
Inductions, virtually suspended needed.
·
sanction except loss
·
of
·
the
.
·
during last summer and fa11 and
There is a_lso talk of
a
draft for
deferment if a man
.
drops the
completely
.
halted for the first
the
Nati
9
nal Guard or Reserves,
ROTC program at any time prior
three months of this year, have
-
as enlistments in these branches
.
to signing the Reserve Contract.
.
been authorized for April and of
-
the military is significantly
·
·
.
.
Tl\_e
2-D, or divinity student
May to fill a 15,000 man quota
down,
reflecting the generally
·
deferment, is yet another
recently set by the Pentagon.
reduced draft threat.
_
.
.
alternative for new students
.
'Ibis
Selective_. Service, operating
In addition, there is speculation
.
deferment is available to two
wider a new "uniform national that the Administration may ask
categories. of men: those at-
call"
policy
.
whereby all local that the draft be extended when
it
·
-
tending a. theological school
draft boards throughout the comes up for renewal
in
July of
?lrsuing a course of instruction
country draft
.
up to a certain 1973.
leading to a full-time ministry or
lottery number, has setfifteen
as
In general, however, current
those pre:enrolled
·
in such
_
a
the lottery ceiJing for the next two Selective Service policies dictate
school while still
.
an un-
mont~
.
Local boards will
·
con-
that fewer and fewer men will
dergraduate.
·
·
sequently begin the inducti.m face
.
possible
induction.
To satisfy
the
requirements for
process
for all men with numbers Tightening regulations and
the
.
the latter category
~
· an un-
of fifteen or under who received elimination of certain
.defer-
dergraduate rieeds; first, cer-
their lottery numbers
in
1971 or ments, however, also mean that
tification by a
·
recognized
One week from tomorrow, the classical and rock music in
earlier and who are classified 1-A those liable for the draft have
seminary that
the
seminary
will
College Union Board will present beautiful arrangement. On April
in
1972.
.
fewer and possibly more difficult
·
accept him upon satisfactory
THE SEVENTH CENTURY in 21, next Friday, they
will
play a
If
the needed
15,000
men are choices than ever before.
completion of his undergraduate

concert. The Spring Weekend large assortment of rock num-·
delivered there will be no in-
Those subject to
the
draft are
work and, second; certificatitm
concert was originally scheduled hers featuring former trwnpet
ductions in June.
If
not, the lot-
the men who have literally lost
in
by
.
a church that he
.
is working
to
feature the New York Rock

playerQf Blood, Sweat and Tears,
tery ceiling should rise a few the lottery .
.
But though the
·
towards becoming a minister.
Ensemble, but due to com-
Lew Soloff. With
the
addition of a
numbers and more men would be number
.
of
·
optioos
is reduced,
·
Those possessing two
·
such
-
plications and cancellations
we
new lead guitar player they wi11
inducted in June.
choices are still available to these
.
·
.
documents soould have little
have decided to bring back for provide for you hours of really
Men in the extended priority men.
·
·
trouble
obtaining a
2-D.

this year's Spring Concert THE fine, soothing music.
groups (those who have been 1-A
.
.
One of these options which
is
The 2-S,
·
·
or regular un-
SEVENTH CENTURY,
together
The previous performance by
since late 1970orl971 and still not little understood is the 1-D
dergraduate deferment,
is
only
with
the
Hudson
.
Valley THE SEVENTH CENTURY
drafted although they had drawn deferment for college ROTC:
The
available
to
men
who
··
ha\''.!
·
Philharmonic: ·
.
.
. .
speaks for itself and if
you
have
low
·
·
lottery numbers)
.
are I-D deferment is now available to
qualified
an
full-time students
"
Forthoseofyouwho
.
bave seen heard them, I know you will be
generally escaping the draft. The any
'
undergraduate enrolled
.
in
_
p-ior
to
the summer session
.
of
.. _
- ·:>·
and
experienced
~e
.
SEVENTH
there.
.
·
·
.
·
..
.
·
.
_
.
.
.
_ Jegal period of draft eligibility for
·
ROTC

who signs .
the
·
ROTC
.
1971
_
. Formerly
a
secure
·
sane-
-.\
:::.
·~
-
.
.
·
-:.
:
:;;)_:;i
.
:
'\.
~~~':(fl}n~~-
-
~i
:
~tJoli
.'.
:I>tirc~ase
-
_
tic~ets
.
··_
outside
._•
the~- ·_·•
-•
thest?rnt?ne~il:-ed,·on Marcll3l~t'.
/
I)e~eJ.'.Ine_nt~llle,nt'/,jVi~

~
,:

~ry£9tA~Ue~e
students;
.
a
'.
2-S
is·
~'
•,
·' ·
·
can expect a bit more, and for caf«:ter1a startmg
'

'-
Wednesday;w
~•,
.
;-
,
,,1
\y
·,i,\t,,,,:
'.
,
,

'
''
:''
'.'
''"
0
}
·
,,~---·-•,·r,
··:
1: ,
_
·
eliminationofallnewsmd,ent(~
,•
'r'
~:\~pg~·
-
9btainable by students
'r"
those of
you
who have
not,
I
must Apnl
12.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
_
.
N
_
a
_
tioitwide, pr
_
esen
_
t
pr
_
_
o
_
jec-
S) deferments
_
the
_
I-D _is
:
one
'.
of
'
!
entering s
_
~h
-
ool
a
_
fte
.
r
,
the cited
f
·
say,
please
come.
THE
More detailed information will
tions
.
areJor 10-15,000 men to be the few ways anincormng fresh-
cutoff date.
· ·
_
.
·
. _
_..,
.
.
1

SEVENTH CENTURY is a fif-
be
printed in next week's CIR-
drafted i11 each
,
&'quuter!'
or man can get a deferment
:
,
.
.
.
Likewise a 1-SXc) ii'defennent
·
·
--
-
...
teen piece group who play
;
a CLE.
·
)hree
month period remaining in
·
By signing th~ Deferment
.
postponing
for otherwise non-
magnificent coinbinatiori
-
/
of
- - - -
1972
.
.Thi
_
s would
, ·
project a Agreement
·
a
-
-
·
man
-•
-
agree.c;
to
deferred
. -
·
-
_
students
-
· for one
''reached" lottery nwnber for complete the basic ROTC
_
course calendar year, is

no longer

1972 ofno higher than forty-five and
to
.enroll
in the advanced
:
·
available; Instead students faced
orfifty
;
All those whose number course, if accepted. He also withpossibleinductionduring the
SATURDAY APRIL 15TH
Noon - assemble on
.
IBM front
lawn
·
·
l
p.m. - begin march to Internal
Revenue Service on
Mill
St.
·
3
p.m. - rally and demonstration
at IRS office
BETHERE!!
.
.
~guyshould
.
S3\1e
tblsad.
·
_
'
,.
.
If
~he girl you're going with should ever want
an abortion, you should be able
to
tell her about ZPG.
Yi
e
can help her get a legal,
safe,
inexpensive
abortion~
.
By
an
M.D.
in a clinic or hospital.
·.
If
she h~ the abortion during the first 10 weeks
of pregnancy, 1t will cost only about $150. And no
..
ma~rwhen she has
it,
there's no charge for our
sel'Vl.ce.
-
So
put
this
ad
in your wallet or on the wall.
So
youknowwheretocall: (212) 489-7794 Monday
through
Friday, between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. New
Yorktime.
·
fnm~~•ialScnke
has
been or
will
be reached are agreestoaccepta commission; if
academic year can defer
in-
.subject to the draft for the offered,
and
if ordered, to serve duf!tioil until the end of the
calendar year in_ which their on active d~ty for atleast
,
two semester or quarter in which
the
number is reached plus the first years.
·.
·
'
·
.
induction .or~er
.
was
·
issued
;
three months of the following
This Deferment
·
Agreement;

·
Graduating seniors, oowever, ar~
··
·
·
·
·
able to postpone iridtiction
until
C. U.B. Coffee House presents
NICKY SEEGER
and a
new
one-act play
"The Family of Jesus"
Thursday,April 13at?:00p.m.
in Fireside Lounge
Admission
Free
I
L
...... _ _ _ _ _ _
_;_ ______
..,;
·
·
the completion of tlie full year.
··
-
.
Iri
closing, anyone
-
with
:
TERM PAPERS

questionsaboutthedraftisurged
·.
to
see
a
counselor
hi person.
For
_
R""''
"
"""""·.;.,,tten
,
aodprole~sionally
'
-
th
_
e
·
a
_
Mress
_
_
·
_
;
·
of
_
·
.
.
on.
·
e
·;ie
_
ar
_
·
j,o
_
u
_
·
;-
'
typt?ct~ All writt-r$

h
;
1
_
vi
_
,
-
_.
a minimum

1
BS
.
BA
dC!JWt:. '
.
"".lil~ll
Service.
:
.· '
·
contact
-
The
-
Centra
Committee
_
.
for
;
--
consci~iitiojii(
Objectors
,
'
CALL
·
TOLL.
FREE
·
·
.,.,
CCCCO)
at
any
of
-
the following
·
{anvwhere ;,;
the
c~uritry
for
.
i
nfor:
addresses: 2016 Walnut
·'.
St.;
maticm and ratesl
-
Philadelphia,
Pa:
19103;
·
711
_
s.
· ·
800-:638-0852
-
Dearborn
St.,
Qli.cago,
Ill,
60605;
·
·
,
Call Collect
,~'(1
656,5770
140
'
Leavenworth St;,
,
'
·san
EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH. INC.
Francisco,
-
Ca.
94102;
·
1460
5530
·
Wisconsin
Ave. •
Suite
1690
Permsylvania St., Denver, Colo
.
.
'
Wash(ngton, D.
c.
20015
80003;
or
734 Mo~oe
Dr.,-
N.E.,
-
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' Atlanta,
Ga. 30:.DJ.
.
.
c .
.
u.
B. Presents
COLLEGE UNION BOARD
presents
THURSDAY
-
Coffee
Hot.L5e
Nicky
Seeger
plus
"The
Family of
Jesus"
(a
one-act play)
9:00p.m.
Fii:esideLounge
Free Admission
Free
Refreshments
FRIDAY
Dance: 3½boursof
music
by
"Sutton
Ho"
Cafeteria: 9:00p.m.
All
the beer
you
can
mink!
Admission: $2.00
guys
$1.50girls
SATURDAY
"Oldies Night
in the Rath"
8:30p.m.
Music
by
mouse
Reduced beer prices





























































































APRIL 13, ·
1912
fflE
CIRCLE .
.PAGE7
,lt Takes·
l•t•Tftief
·
Snow
White Tours Area

March
,27
.<Champag~t) :. "Maryarin, what's
tije
matter?"
"Oh, I can't believe'it.
I
was so happy just a little \Yhile ago.''
"What happened?"
.
'
·
. "Remember I told you I lost my gold bracelet? Well a kid on the
sixth
floor
found it and l>rought it
up
to me. I was
so
happy I went to the
campus phone and told Roseanne I got it back ...
. "Yeah?" .
·
.
.
.. ·, "WhenI came back to my room there were two guys standing right
. next to my door. I knew I shotildi:I'fhave left the door open, but
I
was
only gone two minutes. I asked them if
they
were looking for anybody.
They
sa~?,
'Ah, yeah, ah Sue Cablioshky,' I told them I hada list of
everyone in Champagnat and would look up the room number. I looked
but there was nobody by the name. They said something stupid and
.· left. I didn't lhink too much
of
it until a
half
hour later when
I couldn't
· find my wallet. I left it on the dresser when I made the call."
.. "Whydidyouleaveyourroom"open? Youshouldlmow .. ,
"I was only gone two minutes."
. •
· . ·
· .. "Did one of those guys have a purple shirt on and some kind of a cord
·· around his neck?"
·
• · · ·
. ''.Yeah!"
,
·«I saw those guys walking around the ninth floor.· It always
seems
you can tell when somebody doesn't go. here and if you ask them who
_ they're looking for it's a name you've never heard before.''
·
·
· "Yeah weUI'm stiHmissing forty dollars, my drivers license, a·
charge card, a bunch of pictures ...
. ; .. '
. ~. .• .. : :.· - > ;- -~---
'.:. _'. '.: --: _.
·_,_ ..
>
C
Under the direction' and
~clung
of
i>r:
H. Goldman and·
Johr.
,.
In the same manner that any
show tours various cities
before
opening on Broadway, the SNOW
WHITE production was on tour ·
last week before it's spectacular
opening at Marist.
There was a total of seven
shows performed in various parts
of· the . Dutchess County. The
opening performance was. at
Union Street Center. From here,
the cas.t moved to Violet Avenue
School. The response · from the ·
children on the first day of per-
formances inspired the ca~t for
the remaining shows., The
audiences at Astor Home,
Wassaic . Mental Hospital and
Dover
Plains
were
very
responsive to the show. The
fantasy of Snow White came alive
before them.
·The most fascinating part of
the tour was the performances at
Wassaic. Tile cast left this place
-feeling that they had reached
these people through the show.
· The characters in the cast
became so believable in their
parts thatthe children were_ able
to ~mell the skunk when he was . this are what helped those in-
on,. stage or· they_ wer': even volved in the show to realize that
. f~rful ,of Snow White _eating· ~he a children's audience is very
pmson~d apple. Experiences hke tmique.
Teac·her
A
special thanks should be
given to Mr. David Ward for
arranging the schedule of the
shows.
·
,
Spring
Seiverding, the Marlst,
College Soccer· team
is
now
in.
practice. The
, · practice bas consisted
of
light
workouts
and
drills. The drills are
used
,to help
sharpen
the
sills
and timilll after a long
winter
lay..off. • .. ·
. ·.. · The Circle
w~
advised tbilt a (ICNllible ICl'inunage
may
take place
between the Manat College
Boot.en
and a
West
Pcmt
team
during the
Evaluation
Weekend
PRINCETON, N.J. - A new
student's reasons for taking the
program that allows to evaluate
course and the gr~de he expects
D ·
· · ·
theperformanceoftheirteachers
to receive. In addition, an in-
ance
, .
.
has been developed by Educat-
structor is free to include
following
weeks
left
to -~
semester. .
·
-
:
· ··
HI
· ·
s · •

onal Testing Service ETS>.
questions. of his own
to learn
~
. ·__ ·· · ev·
en
'
·
en1ors .
Besides
·
allowing students a
more about factors unique to his
The officers and members of
I , ·~- .·
,._.!·
_-_·
.. : ·:• · ••
~•·_
••
-,.,. ,· ..
_.
.. , -

.
::~~~:~sl;x~~~
!::e:i:!~
!:[;~cu~:;ul~as:~e T!1;poi~=~ti1~; ~!nG:va~~ \~!iaJ:::!:S J:fe~
r . .
:·,,·>:•"·"'··:'_~.~:_,.;:·~:-. •
( :: .-;·, .. ,;:
.. ,· :, ..
:,.•a·· .. -•.·.·.
teach~r:s,:italsogivesill:ltructo~s ~acp_classas,agr,o~p, not for Annua\SpringWeek~endDinner
""'-··· _, .
~
•• ,:,.,i.;~a,.~;,:.
c,.:.,;~,-...i
~"
~~n-,~:W.e
?
,,,,,.
rJ "',' ..
r•· --
_.,.mi
O~Jecbve w~y-to ~oru~r their . mdw1dual -student_s,. '"' ·"' ' ., · .. ·.
Dance'. this,·.
·ear'
to·-be"'
lieid
·on .
. ··•.'', :,~. ,s,;,_ ."( ..
~v
..,-.I.;;,
... ·
_
own·performance and'progress . . . Student evaluation of teachers Sat
ct'
A
y
·1 22
D"
·n
· · ·
· .-·~- · -'· ·.,·.".:,. ··
· co·L·
·L·.:EGE
A-
T·H. ·LET.· ES. OF
Called
the
Student
In- ·· 1s not a · new concept.
The
.
u~ ay • pri
. ·
mner wi
<·
Elev~n-Marist
eofiege
sttiderits
structional Report SIR> the -· _procedure has. been used for cons•st ord_a _mam cdou~ti~e ;thof
havebeench_os_e. ntoappearin_the AMERICA included strength of
·
ff t
to· ' ·
•.
somtftime·atvar·o s
·nsrtur ·
sausagean peppersan zi
WI
h .
t
1 d
hi
both
d
program_ .1s anede or
.. improve
b
t
ETS
. SIR1 uh i Jd1
io~ds,
all the wine you,_can drink. There
· 1972
edition _oL OUTSTANDING c arac er, ea ers
P
.
on an
instruct on bas
on responses to
u
says
s ou
provi e
·
·
COLLEGE ATHLETES ··.OF off. the : playing field, and ·.·. .
1
d .
d
.
.
·.
· t · t
·th
·ru:
r
t
will be continuous music by a live
AMERI
.CA
.
sc_.hol_arshi_
·p·.
.
.
.
an ETSs es1gne -questionnaire · an ms rue ~r wi
I
orma 10n o band from
8 .30
pm to
1
am
. .
. .
-" - .- ••• .
. ··• .... .
.
.
supplied--to students by - the compar~ his_ pe~or_m~nce with Tickets wm
~
sold in.front of
th~
; ?'
Selected.from the· locai school . In' congratulating. t~e atpletes
colleges themselves.
others
·m
his d1sc1phne on a . . .
.
·.are:....
.
.··:
. selected, Head Footl5all Coach .···Th . ·.•.· ... t· ..
. .
national_ .. scale. The program is
dimng room and
m
the CO!fl·
·• . .
.
·•B·11· B
tu· . f th U .
·ty f-
... ·.
e . ques 10nna1re
was .
.
.
muters lounge
$8'a
couple with
. >
Lester. Chenery,. Stephen Sah- ·•·· . 1 . a e
0 •.
e . mversf,
·? ;.
developed
by
ETS researchers available
to . · institutions
·.
-- .
·
.
ckel, James Cosentino,' Henry Tenn~s~pomted outtha~. their .. with the ·aid of college faculty· throughout the United States and
!-~-
We sincerely hope.rou will
Blum ._ Martin Torrey •· Emmett . selection 1s based on quahties
of. ·
be
d
b.u:i.
ts
It .
Canada.
.
.
JOm
us for what will, un-
: eooke,
Cbai:les.,Va!1 'Nostrand, :_lea?':rship and cha~~cter _.in .:~°:,os~ ._ao~ q~es:~ns- abo~:
More info~mati~~ about
SIR
doub~edly, be a_ very enjoya_ble
J>~ul Lacombe, Mi~hael Erts, addition to ~e ~<>mpetitive drive
-
specific teaching practices· and ma~ be_ obtained by contacting:
even~ng. Help m~k_e Sprmg
J~mes _ .·Fantauzzi,., .James .•
~n~
geterm!natim_!lecess~y for . more general topics including
.
Instituhon~l Research Program
Weekend a success.
,
\Vil.ltens: . ·.
. .
•. .
. .· ,b.emg __ ,a wi~er
_m
.th~ arena. -such queries as: - Did the. in- . for
. Higher . Education,
_. >,-··A9~ouncement ·.
:O(
..
:t~~ir;_,'fhese
~~e yi_tal .mgredients,,ror .structor enc<>ttrage students to · Ed_ucational Testing Service,
; • '1 ••
sel~tio_Ilw.as.mad.~ by;theJ~oard succe~
111
l~e.,af~er ~oU~ge.
think for themselves?. Were the Prmceton,·New Jersey
00540 .
. :).i.,
.of,;\Advis.o~
,,«;>f, 0.W~J:,\Np,ING_~;- 8ta
.r
Rwpung Back Gale~yer.s .·cQurse'-objectives made -clear? -
Initiated by ETS in 1965, the
:: :Di-
C,9.tL.~GE..;
,-h:'I;:1u ..
F;!ff:S:,:~,,.0F, ·: of,,~~'~hi~g~ ~rs.said Uu_s · How inuch effort did students put Institutional Research Program
c;
;.-.:~·~.R~9.(\,,.·.,~..:.'~®t1al,
1
~:Wai:ds.
)year
-
s. :{_)utsta,nding;, .CQllege. ,in.to the co~rse? - Were ~tudents J>!?Vide_s· coll~es · and·. univer-
' ·· .. volum~srP.1c1.6hsbe<l · .· tcr: ,Jionor .• Athlete -~uu~ers ,have set. goa!s
informed of how they would be s1bes w.1th a variety of methods to·
·.: " ~erica's_finestcolle~e~thletes. · for ~emselves t~ be_~~ ~ t m .. evaluated?
.
·
use in evaluation and self-study
-
. ·Coac;b~
and athletic directors- -the field They ~ll fight wtth all · - The ETS questionnaire also programs.
f~Jl!- i!}~yiduaL colleges . ~d 'tJ:i:ey ca_nJo _achi~ve ~~ccess, ~d · includes questions about a
- - - -
muversities across _ the nation ... with _this determmation they wdl
·
.
··
c ·
nominated the wini:Iing athletes·:sur':lY atta~n {tt-
.. ·• .. · .··
·
.·.
Football lub
orr the _basis ·of. ,their. displayed
·
.. · B1ograph1es of all Outs~nd1~
Thanks
To.The
3rd :Floor
. abUities.,no~ only.in athletics:but _,,Col~ege
A.thl~~
of_Amer1~
.will
.
•·: .. : ~so
jn·community. servicejmd ·.·-.be.mcl~ded~1~ 1:fie·lS,:,2 edition to.
.Isthi~
anyway to
run
a football
club?
Mc.tsuccesaful
clubs
operate
I would like to extend a note
of
'/
:
.
¢ampus:activities,
o'.
_C---, . . -~
·pubhsheii
1n
July: . _. _ .
.
on
phenomenally large budgets
with
full-time
coaches and ad-
thanks to the following members
.· ,_:~ '''Other -··criteria for:, those , '.
,
The program's Board~_of' Ad-
· ministrators. Marist still functions on
a
minimal budget with
ad-
of the third floor Leo who helped
·.; :'.:selected for :OUTSTANDING,-:visor~ ,: i~;<chaired ::by ,James
mini~trative p'olicies formulated by an annually-elected Executive me in carrying out
the
par-
. 'f:}'E["\J<\');2.;
:]{·.}f~g/J~';l'.ai/J¾:O:: ··
tfJifi!!i"l:t;:!1.i;~~·v:
~:.r;,.:;
~fier='.½~J!i~.
're~ains.intact-and
rightly so! Bob Sullivan, President
of
the
Football
Harris, Scott · Davis, Steve
_Club and Head of the Executive Board, relates, "We could solve
our
Griffin, Bob Norman, Bob Green,
· financial problems merely by raising the price of admissim to the Mike Condon, Bob Gessner, John
·r-.. - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - , - - - . - -- - . - - - . - - - - - - - , - - - -...
games. At present
our
ticket price _is lower than most. But we don't Gardiner, Paul Gallagher, Wally
--G·a·
.·_el
·,c
s·o··'c•
·.-·,e···t.y
.
··
wanttoputtheburdenonthestudentsifwecangetbywithafewless Neff, Tom -·:McDonald .. , Jim
rolls of tape or a makeshift shoulder strap." Required funds not Naccarato and Bob Guida.
provided by the Student Government are obtained from undertakings
Sincerely
D •
D
· ,
such as raffles.
,
,
James McLaughlin
. I
n n e r
.
. a n Ce
The inexperience of the students in operating the business aspects
ci.
, the club
is
definitely a disadvantage to the team. However, Coach R o n - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Levine contends, "The annual shuffling of officers and training
ci.
new
Continued from Page
8
·
·
-· Re-scheduled For
·Moy 5th 1972 .
ones has resulted in only minor difficulties. What the students on the
Board lack in experience, they make up for in sheer effort.
And
before
long they're doing a fine job." The administration
ci.
the club provides
a valuable learning experience for the students. The members of the
Board are operating in typical business situations.
There is another perhaps greater reason that Marist maintains its
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • present administrative system: Coach Levine
states,
"Since its in-
ception Club Football has emphasized student participation in all
its
phases. We feel lhat the present system provides maximum student
participation." More students are involved in and support the
Marist
Vikings than any other activity on campm.
Is this any way to run a football team'?
You
bet
it is!
shape and ready for the opener.
Freshman John Jasinski will be
Marist's leading pole vaulter,
having cleared
11'.
The team has
its largest
schedule ever for the coming
season, including meets with nine
teams,.participation in two relay
carnivals, and
participation in
three
championship
meets.
/
..






























































l
PAGES
:TIIE
CIRCLE
APRIL l:l, 1972
.
·
scott
And:-
-
_·Clar.k:
Post'
·:se.ason
·
.
Ho:n:ors .
.
:: ·.'
: Marist 'Cdlege Se~iors
1taY·
~~ies ~ver Ki~'s Joe pr(!Ved
t~
_
Clarke and; captain
'Joe .
Scott differenc~. ,
~~f:h ._
~3. : J)Ol?lts
m
have·> been ·named. to the
1972 ·
Jea~mg ·. Mar1~t . to ,_v1ctorr,
· ·eentral· Atlantic College Con-
Agamst.Bloomf1eld
J~
tur11ed m
ference All-Star Team; . __ . . .
- another - . (!Uts_tandmg . per~
Ray'
·c1arke,.
a
guaz:d, is; a fo~ma~ce !ughhghted
b~
a ·
.31
repeater from lasfyear's All:5tar . pomt ~tb\ll'S_t-:.
< .::,- - . · '
-Team. '.fhis, season,' -although
Besides
·
.bemg -selected to
hampered
-
by .·-injuries;,.·-Ray _ C.A.C.C. Alt.Star Team and-the
managed to finish ninth in the, ~.C.A.C. All-East.Team
J_oe was
· league in scoring 06.oppg) and given.an honorable 1!1ent10~ the
the league leader in assists
(9.0 · 1972
N.A.I.A ... All American
avg.). Ray turned in his best ream. Joe w~ also ~el~ted
to
p,e r form an
c
e
again st the N .A.I.A. fmal statistics.
Southampton College,. _ in a
Head Coach Ron_ Petro sums
up
disappointing
Joss
iri the league .Joe. S~tt
_
by_ saymg· " ...
H~
~as
championship game. Against.the those !ntan~bl~·-char~ct~nstics
Colonial Ray pumped in
29 ~ints of des1~, wmmng attitude. and
before fouling _ out late in the . aggressiveness. that make him a
·game. Head Coach Rori Petro has great basketba:11 ~layer ... "
.
-· DuringtheEaster- vacation; the stroke from
30
per minute
to
34
water, Marist did not expect
to
only words of praise for Ray ... ·
.
'Because of his fme play during
Marist
College
Varsity per minute and back again>.
win the Regatta, but did expect
to
"Ray has provided Marist with
the past season _Joe has been
heavyweigbtcrew team travelled Oarsmen were moved around in do better. · After the race the the continual, reliable, good
selected to play m the Nassau-
to Florid~, practicing and raci~ . -the shell to find the best- seat for oarsmen were given two days off performance for the past three Suffolk
College
Basketball
in the warni weather and good each man and the best com-
in Dayton·and ~- Lauderdale
to
years ... "
Coaches Association AH-Star
rowing condi_tions. The Red · bination for movement
of
the reJax.
·
Joe Scott, a forward, has been
game on AprH 15 at C.W. Post
Foxes arrived in Lakeland shelJ in the water.
C~ch · _Austin seemed very selected
to
the All-Star Team for
College.
·
Florida, March 25th and stayed· . On April first, the Red Foxes . pleased. with the progress that a third· consecutive year. This
The gaJl!,e_
~ill
put the Senior
at. Florida Southern College. left Lakeland and travelled to was made · during the stay at season
Joe led the league. in
College D1V1s1on All-Stars fr~m
Being
in Florida did not mean a · Winterhaven, Florida to compete Florida. The team -returned
to
scoring
c22.o
ppg __ )
and
Na~au aJld Suffolk_ Counties
vacation, but many hours of hard in the· Cypress_ Gardens Regatta. MaristApril 5th,
to
continue their rebounding (22 rebounds per
agams~~ the
Senior. . ~.11-
work on the
part
of
Coach A_ustin There were twelve ·schools trainingonamuchcol~erHudson game) -and was a unanimous
Metropolitan (?ol!e~e D1v1Sion
and the oarsmen.
.
participating
in the
Regatta. The River,· The .main objective was choice for
the
league's Most
All-Stars.· Joe· lias
·been
selected
Every day the oarsmen had twelve schools which par-
obtained, which was
to
find the Valuable
_
Player Award. Joe
to represent
the
Metropolitan
double sessions under · the ·, ticipated are as follows: Marist right seatfor each oarsmen in
the
turned in two outstanding per-
Area in
this
game a recognition
supervision,
oC
Coach- Austin. College, Coast Guard, · Florida shell. The sheJUs now set up as for~ances during the season in
for his outstanding play. as a
Practices were held every day· lnstit4te of Technology,_ Rollins , follows: bow· <Sr.) Cap't. Marty leading the Red Foxes .. to vie-
colle~ian. _
from 8:30 'until
10:30
in the College, Morris Harvey College, · Torrey;
2,
<Jr.> Joe McHugh;
:3,
morning and then ·again from l<'lorida'
-Southern, · Tampa •, <Jr.> Joe Pavegel;
4,
<Soph) Bob
4:00
until 6:00 in the afternoon.
University, Worcester Poly, Creedon; 5, (Jr:> Steve· Mc-
After each practice the team ran Tech., Citadel, Jacksonville Dermott; 6, (Sr.> Matty O'Brien;
quarter mile spr:in~
to
build- up. University, and East Carolina
7,
<Jr.') John· Wilson; stroke,
endura~ce for races. Coach University. Marist qualifi~ for <Soph> · DicK Cotter; Coxwain
Austin put much emphasis on the finals but was eliminated in <Jr.> Mike Hawd: ·
drill
rowing, working on style and . the second heat, and as a result
strength. He also had the oar-
placed sixth out of tne twelve
smen work on. the positioning
of
schools. Since the other· schools -
the stroke. (i.e. moving the had more practice time on the

Tennis
S(lllad
The Marist College Varsity
Jumor
John
Machado
Tennis squad will open a nine
<Millbrook),
the
probable
match season against Quinnipiac
number. one doubles
.
combinatio
11
College- on April
14
at Hamden . ~or Mar1st, have peen i~pressi-ve
Conn.
,
m pre-season workouts .
Head Coach Ron Petro feels
Coach Petro is also optimistic _
that 'this will
be
a building year
of ' . Sophmore ~ark Leahy.
:
for the Red Fox netmen.
Senior · . <B~con)
and
Frosh
Ray
Barger
.:;. Brian Neerie, <Beacon> and
.
(Beacon)._
·
-
.
~'.
.
'~-
.
.
.
,$prirlg
.

·r,;taclf> ..
. Team
Qper1s.
The Marist College spring
Notable quarter-milers: in~lude tr.ip
to:
th~
-
,N;AIA- nationals.' Jike a sure
bet
to oreak 40' out-
hurdle evenis. Adding some
rugn
track
teall_l
will open up its
1972
Mike Cassedy. a sub-so•irihigh Backing ujHiank in .the javelin doors. Bob--will.also try his.hand
quality d,epth this year will be
, campaign this Wednesday,' April ,.school .. local standout Tim and hammer throw events., are aHhehaininer ariddiscus_events .. · freshm~n Tim Murphy, formerly
12
with a .home meet at the
''
Murphy who'has
nma sub-51
in, sophomore,
Dom
Mucci, ·.rohn Jerry ,,Wildner; a. converted oft.ourdes, who has high jumped
Dutchess .Community College
county track . action last year;,Jredmond, ·and John
_
Durenzo. sprinter and. Marist . college
·6'6'!
and Jong jumped
21•
5'' and
track· against Brooklyn College. . returning letterman Bill Carey Dom thre\i.i:ov'er 150' in -his fresh-
record . holder
dn ·
the~
:220,
,,has
sophomore Fred Krampe who
- -This will mark the first home
who showed great improvement ·man year and
·
has improved ·improved to
'ST'
in
the·
shot put wori' the CTC· Indoor cham-
m~t ever. for the Red Foxes
during the . indoor< season; treme~dously in.
the
hammer and•is how working on ~he other pionships at
st.
John's University
thinclads.-There wiJI be three
returning letterman Pete Biglin throw.· John .Redmond <Marist throwing even~. He plans
to
for Marist last month with a leap
other.
-
home meets during . the , who is recovering from a bout , NAIA district 198 lb. JWrestling compete in several decathlons· of
21 •11
12,,. Both Fred and Tim
season at the Dutchess track.
with pneumonia. and local chainpl who will be competing: this year.
.
.
_ .
will also compete ·in the triple
Brooklyn College will
be
one of -standout Tom
-
Murphy:who
also
for the first time.:_ has already . : · I~ the ~ping. ·e:v~nts, v~r- . jump.
the toughest foes for Marist !,!Xcels iil the· 100 and 220(Backing thrown: 15Q' in, pr~ctic~. and sable_ B9b .M,!)gtar~, Mapst
In the hurdle events, veteran
during the _spring season as they
Tom Murphy_ up in the shorter shows great promise- m th,e
,
~ol_lege recor? fioJ~er m th~ h1gl_l
-
·Pete R~k and freslifuan Deimis
bring in .. many outstanding sprin~ wiUbe his trother.Tim as hammer and
discus
ev_ef!ts .. Jo~ Jump _and ~nple
)~P,
W1ll
0
1?8·
Dubatowka' are· . both:' in:•
good
·runners .as·well as some
of
the
welJasFred Krampe. theteam's Durenzo has great potential m, back•~ actu~n this year _as will
·•,,· ,,_
_.
- _· ,-. .
:
·
·
strongest jieiw.it men Marist will
lorig jumper .. who broke the CTC the hainm¢r throw also. In the versatile Bill Sprague from
continu~ on Page
7
see.
.
Indoor · long 'jump record one shot put. B(!b Guida who threw Arlington-High School, who also
The Marist team wiJI be
month ago. Biglin and Carey are
:~n;•
2 ..
indoors for Marist. l~ks does the pole vault and both
stronger tha_n its teams
of
the ·
also capable of running excelltmt
past due to some added running-
shorter sprints.
strength;'Last year in many
pf
The team
will
be
a~embling
the meets -the distance events
what should
be
a good one mile
were almost'·(orfeited to the _relay team for .particip~tion i!l
opponents•· sit1ce there were ·
no
both the· Queens-Ima Rt>Jays and
distance
runners
on the team and
the.· Penn Relays. Vying . for
only a,few sprinters. He~ding up . berths on this one-mile relay
the
.1972 Marist distance corps
team will
be
both Mw-phys. ·
will
be
Jay Doyle, a freshman,
_
Cassedy. Doyle and McGowan
· and the record-bolder for the
from· the distance corps, Biglin.
Marist cross
country
course who· Krampe, and Carey.
consistenUy ran ·. strong •. during.
In-the field events and hurdles.
the
cross country campaign. He
the outdoor Marist squad looks
wilf
be
backed
up strongly by ev_en better than last year's
Marty McGowan, one
of
the
1972
powerhou.5e. Only John D'Arcy.
cross country co-captains and · the Marist record holder in
the
Bob Nelson, · another - freshman ··hammer
throw
will not
be back
and another member
of
the cross due to graduation. Leading the
country team.
Bob
Salomone, the . field
men
will be
-the high -point
other cross country co-captain, is man
of
last year's team. Senior
a verydoubtfulnumer this spring
_Hank
Bhim. Hank competes in
since.he
bas
suffered a seriom the shot put, javelin, discus, and
knee injury
and
will probably
be
hammer
throw
and holds
the
sidelined
the
entire
seaS<ll. His
Marisi record in all
of
them
injury definitely hurts the except
the
·hammer throw. _Hank
distance brigade, especially
in
also won
the
New York State
the
depth
he
would have provided
javelin
pir_·
ow
championship last
the
team
in
the distance events.
year
(lx,6').
Shortly
thereafter
he
'l1lereismuchbopethisyearin suffered ·a leg injury
which
the sprinters
woo
are much hamJ)ered
his
efforts for the
larger
in
si7.e
this
year also.
The
!IA
nationals last May.
One
of
, number
of
sprinters
has
doubled
goals this
year
is
to
exceed
over
what it
was
lat year.

in
the
javelin and
to
earn
a


9.23.1
9.23.2
9.23.3
9.23.4
9.23.5
9.23.6
9.23.7
9.23.8