Skip to main content

The Circle, November 2, 1972 AM.xml

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 10 No. 8 - November 2, 1972

content

,.
1
-
""
·
.-
~i
'
;·~
·
.-
,
'
,
,.,,,
,
.
.
.
I.
Michels~n on Education . . p.2
Presidential Endorsement •
·
• p.3
-
1HE
VOLUME 10, NUMBER
7"
~
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
-
NOVEMBER
_
2,
197i
C. U. B.
Policy
Board
'
The following policy has been hours at the office of the Campus
1.
Pets of
.
any kind are riot
unanimously accepted by the Center <Room CCZ73)
·
for a permitted in the campus Center
College Union Policy Board:
·
periodofthree days. (2) Only two facility.
.
All
Student
Government groups will be permitted use of
2
.
Anyone who violates
.
the
Chartered
Clubs
and the space at any one time.
_
above statement will be subject
Organizations and
-
College Union
Raffles, sales of articles, and to a $50,()() fine, payable within
Board Committees are allowed to
.
requests for donations or con-
·
twenty-four hours.
use this space for any purposes tributions will not be permitted
·
3.
·
The enforcement of this
not specifically prohibited bylaw within the Campus Center.
policy will be the responsibility
of
or the regulations of the College
This policy will_ become ef-
the Campus
.
Center staff,
Union Board. Procedures for the fective November 1, 1972. For members of the College Union
reservation of this area ~are
·
further information, contact the Board,. and the security start
described as follows:
(1)
This
_
Office of the Campus Center.
This policy will become
.
ef-
space may be reserved on a first
The following policy has been
·
·
fective November 1, 1972.
come; first serve basis, through
·
adopted by the College Union
application during f!Ormal office
.
Po1icy Board:
:
·
.
.
Winter-Berger thrills audience
with
tales
of
~ashinl!!on graft,
·
.
Romam)ft
And
JUiiet
·.
The Theatre
.
Guild
-
has an-
situation that existed in the
-
15th
nounced that the play "Romanoff
.
Century can be recreated today
.
and Juliet
'~
by Peter Ustinov
,
will
,
The production
.
is under the
be produced in the College direction of
Mr.
Jim Britt with
Nixon
--
Administration
-
.
.
·
And Ellvironntent
Theater on Thursday
,
November Gary Traub a~d Luci Squiciarini
·
As of 1968, there was no formal established
..
agreement with
has been ~initiated to set more
16, Friday, November 17
~
and
,
playing the title:- roles.
~f
Federal agency to help protect thirty-oneaii:lines to cut down on
land aside for recreational
·
Saturday, :t-T'>vember 18, at 8
:
30
-
Roma_noff and Juliet
-
. Juliet s our quality of-life.
In
1970,
_
the pollution by installing control
purposes. More parks have been
P.M.; and Sunday, November 19
_
.
American parents are to
~
Nixon Adm in is tr at
fo n devices in nearly one thousand
located near large population
·
at 2:30
P
;
M
:
This play is an en-
.
played by Stephen
.
Iaccabe_lhs
·
established the Enviroiimental
__
jetlin~rs
:
The
·
Nixon
Ad-
centers so more people can take
tertaining
·
twentieth
.
century and
:
·
Althea Se~ver · Playing
,
'
Protection Agency
·
to enfoi:ce ministration
-
has also enacted the
'
·
advantage of park facilities.
-
takeoff of Shakespeare's "Romeo Romanoff's Russian ~aren_ts ar~ laws
·
against poUution
.
.
~fuse Act
-
of
_
}899 to
.
control
·
On President
.
Ni
_
xon's trip to
and Juliet." The two "star~ Paul Tesoro and Lydia Trmgah.
·
In four y
'
ears the President has discharge of industrial pollutants
Moscow,
·
Russia
,
and the United
crossed lovers" are the son ofa
Reservations
_
and information
_
doubled expenditures
~
ror
air into our waterways and has filed
,
States entered into
ari
agreement
Russ
i
an
·
ambassador
·
and
-
the
·
concerning this production
.
may pc:>llution control pr
_
ograms, The over 480 civWand crim
_
inal
·
ac-
to conduct joint research to help
daughter
·
of
an
,
American ariv be 01?ta
_
ined
~Y
,.
calling 471"3240
.
.
Preside~t
.
has
.
•·
also
.
issued
-
tions agains
l,
-
alleged polluters
.
·
preserve a healthful environment
bassador
.
.
Love
_
·
.
aboli~l)es
_··
Adm1ss1on pqces
_
are J?:50
:
.for
.
regulations under _the Clean Air The W~ter
-
Quality,I~provement
'
.
in
boQ}
countries-and countries
i
deological
_
differences

'for
:
the
, •
aduI~
-
.
and

$1.50 for s~u~ents. Act
fo
reduce motor
_
vehicle
'"
Act
·
has
·
set
,
down
_-
new penalfies
.:
.
·
the world over.
-
·
,,
·.:
:
0
j<
,
,
,
·
lo
;
ve~s
;
tiut
·
:
crea te~
·
:
problerp:S:
'

Ma
r
ist students sllc\11
be
admitted
·
.
"
'
polliitanfi
t
':
oy
~'J
i<
Y'
~
f,er~en
f
;
a
n
ff
·'"
-
·
arm
e
~'at)1a.Hinfuie
·
dis~lfarge
of
.
· .
·
withm their famihes
,
What
.
free.
.
·
·
·
·
.
:
refused to extend the
~
deadline
'.
to
·,
polluting
.

substances
·

.
mto our
·
.
follows is humorous proof that
·
a
meet those agrements.
-
-
·
waterways:
.
.
.
Jean Forrestal
M
e
di eva 1
··
i
.
The Nixon
.
Administration has
TheLegacy of Parks
.
Program
College
Results Of
The
ft/lOck
Election Of
Oct.
27th
Lecture
~
A lecture
.
on the ''Medieval
Co
.
u nci I
Woman: Beast, Bitch, Virgin,
Saint"
will
be given by Dr.
M
.
·
t•
··
,
Madeline Pelnar Cosman tonight
··•
·
ee
-
, ng
at 8:30 p.m. in the Theater. Dr
:


_
.
.
. ·
.
_
Cosman is the
·
Director of
.
the
·
Institute for Medieval and
Announcement
:
THE THIRD
Renaissance Studies~
·
·
PLENARY
.
SESSION OF THE
In addition to her work at the
.
COLLEGE
.
COUNCIL WILL
Institute, Dr .. Cosman also is an · CONVENE
ON
FRIDAY,
Associate Professor of· Com-
NOVEMBER
10,
1972 AT 3:30
·
parative Medieval Literature, as
P
.
M. IN CAMPUS CENTER
well as authoring books
·
on Ar
c
ROOM 249.
.
·
·
thurian Roma_nce, Chaucer's
_
.
imagery
,
with student co-
The agenda for the meeting will
authors. Hei: most recent b~k be comprised of preliminary
deals with Medieval Malpractice reports from the sub-committees
_
in the Medical Field as it existed
.
on Academic Viability, Budget,
in England.
.
· Student Life Style, and Decision
While the topic for the lecture MakingandAccountability
.
Each
will
be the Medieval woman
,
Dr
.
report will be
'
fol_lowed by a
Cosman will supplement her talk question period from the floor,
by playing
·
on the flute and
·
by The meeting will conclude with
. singing medieval songs.
,
All are
_
remarks from the
.
President.
·
welcome to participate.
The community
is
urged to
·
·
attend
;
·
"Jerusalem Today~- is the
The address, illustrated with
subject of
.
a lecture to
.
be slides, will deal with the past and
delivered in Room 249, Campus present of this city which has
Center,
.
at
3
·
p.m .
.
on Thursday, played such an important
.
role
in
November 9, by the Rev. John D. history and which is considered a
Wilkinson, Dean of Studies at St.
-
holy city by three major religious
·
George's 'college, Jerusalem.
traditions. The topic is of special
The speaker comes direct~y interest to
.
students
-
of history,
from Jerusalem where he
1
s religion and politics and the talk,
director of studies at St. George's
.
another
.
in the Faculty Lecture
CoJlege. Las~ January a cJass of
.
Series, is · co-sponsored by the
.
Marist students attended one of · D~partment
'
of History and
the special four week courses run Political Science and
,
the
by this center
_
for. students
.
from Department of Religiou
_
s Studies.
·
all over
·

the
.
,
world.
·
·
For more information, call
R..
. .
All are
·
invited.
·
Aarnission
Rhys Williams at 471-3240, Ext.
·
is free .
.
·
-203.
;
· '
·
·
·
· ·
·
..
.
,
; · ,
\ .
by Jim Elliott
Number of Administration, Faculty, Striqents and
.
Staffwhri voted ...
President of the United States
RICHARDM. NIXON
GEORGE McGOVERN
EVELYN REED
LOUIS FISHER
"
GUSHALL
NEW YORKSTATE ISSUES
Proposition One
AMENDMENT ONE
AMENDMENT TWO
AMENDMENT THREE
Sheriff of Dutchess
County
°QUINLAN
·
ONG
REPUBLICAN VOTES -
63
CONSERVATIVE VOTES
-_13
DEMOCRATIC VOTES - 126
LIBERAL VOTES -
29
.
.
SOCIALISTS LABOR - 2
SOCIALISTS WORKERS -
O
COMMUNIST -
4
.
ABSTAIN - 7
YES-
113
.
YES - 76
YES - 73
Yi);S -
s:.
NO - 27
NO- 41
NO
<
46
·
NO
.
- 34
REPUBLICAN VOTES -
.
29
CONSERVATIVE VOTES - 13
DEMOCRATIC VOTES - 96
LIBERAL VOTES -
'
35
ABSTAIN - 71
Associate
Judges of the
Court/of~:Appeals .
REPUBLICAN VOTES
a
42
GABRIELLI
'
CONSERVATIVE VOTES - 13
JONES
WACHTER
·MEYER
DEMBITZ
COOKE
~ARTUSQELLO
REPUBLICAN VOTES -
38
CONSERVATIVE VOTES - 12
REPUBLICAN VOTES -
-
42
.
LIBERAL VOTES -
Zl
.
DEMOCRATIC VOTES • 78
LIBERAL VOTES -
29
DEMOCRATIC
VOTES -
.
79
DEMOCRATIC
-
VOTES -
79
CONSERVATIVE VOTES - 15
LIBERAL VOTES -
28
244
TOTAL 76·
-
TOTAL 15.5
TOTAL 2
TOTAL 0
TOTAL 4
ABSTAIN
.
104
127
125
127
Total
42
Total
131
TOTAL65
.TOTAL50
TOTAL 69
TOTAL
107
.
TOTAL 79
TOTAL
94
TOTAL28
'
Of the total population of approximately 2100 members of
.
the Marist Community, onJy
244 members voted on Friday.
'
If
the National
_
election had been held then (and you
probably
.
would ·n~d a vivid imagination to accomplish that), ·only
,
11.5 percent of the
·
voters ofth~ Marist District would lulve voted~ This 11.5 perc;ent compared with a
nat
_
iooal
·
'-
percentag~ of
so
:
percent is a poorjUustration of
the
_
l\far.ist
.
concern for
,
government.
·
Perhaps the 2,000 circulars, newspaper
:-
articles; and the election
bocth
personnel was not
enou h to s ur enticement into the Marist Community.
·
·
·
·
·
, .
,.
,
,



.
,
.
,
_
,
-
~
. .
'
• •
,
:
.
•.
_
'.
,.'.
,. ,
'_'
• ,
..
•.-· ,
'



/
'
I
' •

:
I


..
·
..
.
·

'
..
~-

'
I
.
,

-
'
· _ ' '
I
.
.
i
_I
)
. I
I
.\I
I
-
1
-'
i






















































































































































I
PAGE 2
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 2, 1972
-EDUCATION At Marist-
by M.J. Michelson
"It
gets pretty depressing to
watch what
.
is going on in the
world and realize that your
education is not equipping you t!)
.
do anything about it." From a
letter by a University of
California female senior as
quoted in the Environmental
·
Handbook.
the massive environmental chaos And others must also consider documenting the failure of our
help eliminate rural and urban
we find ourselves in. It just seems resigning, following the lead
of
so
.
educatio~ system. What in
-
poverty by our sociology and
right that these problems should many students before us.
novative approaches
·
are being
anthropology departments? Oh
form a core of study-not to just
The faculty must begin to look
.
talked
·
over
by
Teacher
tl)at's right we don't have those
study the problem but to begin at themselves. What are we here F.ducation? Where is
.
Special
departments. Why not? Did we
go
the remedial actions that are for? What are we doing1 What is F.ducation? What is needed to
into MA programs to serve the
·
necessary so that at some future our purpose? Look around. bring humane teaching to our
middle class and not the
time this will lead to the Question. I don't understand young people? What difficult but
·
politically and socially aban-
revolutionary changes that our what the Psychology Department
·
necessary questions-and ac-
cloned of our society? Did we
society so desperately needs for is about when I see alienation, tions-must Hazard, Perrotte,
make a mistake with those MA
survival.
.
boredom
,
agression, alcoholism Olson, Bibeau, Broderick, Nolan
programs? Where is our con-
What seems to be coming and drugs here on campus. What be coming up with. Soon
.
It
is so
science? Does Marist College
The question of where students
_
through to me in the various courses, what
.
curricula are late! Or are we to keep cranking
have a conscience? Should
.
at Marist College are headed, as evening discussions that the King dealing with these problems, with out people who teach in the old
_
.
Marist College have
.
a con
-
.,
.
well as where I am headed, has committee is having this th~ p~ople who have these mold,
.
no changing keep the
science? What is the religious
-
been iii my thoughts for some semester with students, is
.
that problems;_not by teaching status quo, we know. our
study department courses doing
months now
.
One purpose cif this there are students questio~ng people to "adjust''-but to un
-
limitations, we know how to do it
with regard to conscience at
articleJs to begin some dialogue what is going on here at Marist. derstand why alienation?
.
why
the old way
.
Do not ask us for nev:
Marist? Hard
.
questions that
between· students,
.
faculty and They are concerned that
·
this drugs? So the faculty of Eidle, appi:oaches! Is this the path
Pasqueriello, Best
;
.
Michels,
administrators who sense a . place is full of bullshit
-
and O'Keefe, E:, Kirk, Bodanza, Marist College is ~ g ?
Williams, Gallant
,
Flanagan,
frustration and despair with aimlessness
and
pur-
·
Bickley, Moore and Breen must
What about Third Y:ear
Sullivan must
-
grapple with .
.
H
regard to the general lack of real poselessness. In the male con~ ask themselves
.
what are
>
our
·
Abroad? Are all students being
·
they're not doing it, why not?
,
purpose that education appears sciousness group I am
·
attending courses about? are any of them served that wish to be-if not,
If
they are dealing with this
to
.
be taking h
_
ere at Marist here on campus I am hearing the dealing with these real problems why
·
not?
A
hard
and
-
problem where, oh where, is the
College.
same sortofthings; students who as a teacher? as
_
a course? as a
philosophical problem that
·
conscience of Marist. I don't see
·
First off,
_
this is a personal flunked
·
out and desperately department? as an institution?
Belahger must grapple
_
with.
it. Do you?
testament
·
made necessary came back to Marist
,
only to
There is
-
physical pollution all
·
.
There's a
.
financial crisis at
·
What
_
_
philosophy do we as an
because for the first time since
·
·
decide a year later to voluntarily around
:
·
The
-
biology
• •
and Marist. What
.
better
·
course of
institution espous~what htimari
I've been here I feel like the separate themselves from this chemistry department me~bers
'
study
:
and practical problem.
·
.
values
·
are important
.
How do our
proverbial fish out
_
of water-
school. Why? Are the sensitive,
must ask 'themselves what are solving than to have qualified
courses relate to the problems of
somewhat out of step aria out of aware students leaving? Why do our courses doing-not
,
rnerely
business majors look at a real
·.
human
.
exjsten
·
ce
~
not
.
ab-
.
tunea I don't have a sense
of
what
-
people stay? The answers I hear tacking a week on pollution in this
problem-the
·
. financial survival
.
.
stractly-but here at Marist-:--iri
·
students or other faculty or ad-
ai:e that this
is
a good place to or that course but really dealing
.
of an institution rather than
·
the dorms,in the non-community
niinistrators want. Of inore enjoy oneself, to drink, to do
with
-
the problem
,
looking for
simulated games or textbook
-
thatwe have here. Questions that
personal importance
,
Ido not feel drugs, free wheeling sex, that alternatives and solutions .
.-
That's
problems that are doled out in
-
Benin
;
Drennen; Casey, Donohue,
that what I am committed to this is better
.
than being on the what Michelson, Menapace, Mc
courses. Look
for
alternative
:
Ryan must
.
attempt to answer--
makes much sense or has any
_
outside. What I am n
_
ot hearing Alonie,
·
Rehwholdt, Turley and
additional funding of
·
this
..
in•
and soon
.
"
_
.
..
.
. .
.
·_
·.
·
value to. students here ~t Marist
·
peoplesayisth
a
tthisisa positive Bettencourt must ask: what are stitution other
.
than
_
raising
·
We cangoori and on with all the
or to other
,
faculty or
to
ad-
·
place, a place where
.
learning your classes all about?

tuition
,
or tacking
:,
on an Mkin
.
other
.
departments such as
ministrators.
exists, a place where life's
.
·
Ther~•s political
_
corruption Bus
i
ness or Psychology
.
or Eng 1 is h ,
-
Lah g u ages,
Let me start off by saying what problems are being explored, and upside down political and
whatever to bring in bucks
.
This
·
Ma thematics:'--relatirtg
.
the
Ibelievfi! in·as.far as the college is where
:
alternativ_es
.
are
..
being social priorities
;
in
· ·
Dutchess
_
Messrs Kelly;
:
Prenting, Jorden,
.
discipline
.
to
.
concrete
·
and
-
real
concerned
.
'!
ani
committed to the

exaJl)ined and lived, where ideas county,
·
in

the
·
state,
·
·
in
'
the
Fried, McCarty,
·
Cone
,
Griffin,
_
problems
,
<
I ~nk if the answers
developineni_
of a
.
curriculum are resp~ted
,
analyzed; debated nation-where
··
are we
:
'
as
.
a
~ussell, Sypan is the question
:
·
the faculty come up with to
,
these
aroundstudent'sneeds,
-
interests and discussed, a place where p
'
oliticai science-history How are your courses dealing
problems are the old, tired
·
an-
and goals as far as practical. I experimentation is aBowed, department-division? What
.
are with Marist
_
·
college's financial
swer.s

of more exams,

more
.
believ
.
e we have not been as in-
where
'.
'failure
"
is seeri as
a
step our
·
courses doing? Not merely
-
survival? or Dutchess County?
needless
,.
read~ngs, more make
"
,
novative or creative as an
ii:J.-
forward because we tried inteHectu~l
i
zing th~ problems _}?ut
How
·
:
are
.
your courses dealing

wor~
,
then} think the
~a~~l~y
h~s
stitution in providing a more
i
i;om~thi~g new. _No! Tam not real solutions_;
;
ac~o_nsapd firm
with Marist College's financial
.
abdic~ted
.
1t:s
,
resP?~s1b1ht!8? m
personal'_f~~e of s~~Yf?r
~
eac~
,
he;m!lg
-
~es~
thm~s
<
µe
.
Y~U?
~.
r
,
ec
_
omm
·
enda!1o
_
ns
:
.
ba_se1
·-::
Oil
_
survival in
.
a
..
humane way
.
a
·
,
crea~mg
_
an
_,
;
exc1t
~
ng
.
hvmg-
.
student . .- .
.
. .
_ ·
.
·
.
·
·
.
·
• .
.
:
And
.
1£ this
,
place 1s seen
,
as
_
.,
a
,
_
knowl~dge
.
and
\
lll1d~rsyt11ding
.,
much more difficult pro~lem
,~ .
.
:
:
leanp11g . env1ronm~nt
'
,
he~~ at
I11 add~bon
;
I am
:
c
·
omm1tted to
,
"
booze pal:1ce on the Hudson~
_

·•
by.l
'.
QuesbonsJ~1at now must
_
be fac~d
,
noL
.:
survival by
,
eliminating

0
Mar!st ~nd
t
has
+
committed
'
dev~lopmg
:-
-
~ourses
·
a
_
nd a the
_
~a1or1ty
:
here,
,
then
_
rmust
_.
~y
;
Li;mdau
;
Zuccarello
,
·
O'KeE;(e,
.
· cla~sical-
.
studies
,>
__
rio
t
b
Y:
noth1~ shor
t
of murder-murder
curriculum which deal with the s er 1 o
.
u sly
cons 1
.
d e
:
r
•.
P,,
.
Toscano, Norton and White
.
weakening science by
.
dropping of spmt,
.
murder
.
of humaneness
difficu,}t problems faced by our resigning.,.and I maintain
_
so
Our education system is failing
·
physics, not by
·
· ticky tacky
·
and
·
murder
.
of
true
learning.
society whether these problems must President
·
Foy, our
·
chief with regard
to
teaching
-
yo
_
ung
solutions
,--
that's the easy way ..
.
Mass resignations Dlight be in
be
·
in th_e area of . urban exe~utive . office~, ;
_
seriousl_y peopl~ to read,
.
~o think, to
-
Almost everyone can do that.
o~der
,
but
t
feel that ~roba~ly
degeneration of housmg or consider this step, 1f md~d this question, to be creative, to be free
·
Alternatives in
'
financing a
will not be necessary for 1f Manst
·
.
education,
.
the
.
rural poor, law .turns out to be what most people human beings
~
the Fleischman
..
·
college. What a course of study!
goes the "old" way then Marist is
and injustice, penal questions or
·
think of as the purpose of Marist.
report is
.
still
.
coming
:
out
Where
·
are our
.
programs to no different than
·
other small
·
·
·
·
·
·
-
·
·
·
colleges with their tired, old
ways-which
.
don't deserve to
survive and many will fail-as
King
,
Committee
. they deserve.
·
But survival,
.
necessary survival for them and
,
fl
.
.
our society, requires
·
creativity.
r:;
Solid new, exciting programs and
,;l
·
_
wedo not have the luxury,oftime
by Denise de la Montaigne
·
·
i
for detailed
•_
over-studies by
would voice their opinions. The
·
-
committ
_
ees_;we
know
_ :
the
. _
.-
King Committee asks:
•.
1) that the
~
Once again
.
the King Com- APC open their meetings to the
_g
problems-we need thoughtful,
mittee went out
.
into the Marist
_
students and other faculty and let
O
aggressive, innovative programs
f
of action now
;
.
.
comfficunity arid sponsored a ,~
~lOW
what you are doing,
task where are the students-
social evening, last Thursday
2) that the students on the APC

·

night, Oct. 26, this time with the keep the Marist community in-
students
,
of all ages~from

the
members of Champagnat Hous~ formed by putting ~rticles in The
area community
,
from the
1.
The major
.
topic of the evening Circle, and
faculty, from the student body,
centered around the students and
3) that the
.
SAC become a
from the adminiSlration-that
.
their scl:iooL Do students want to strong and informative unit
Jim
.
Donnelly
and°
friend
.
·;t
8th
flooi: haunted house.
'
wish to develop,
to
participate
in,
·.
be apathetic, oris it that they feel between the students and faculty.
.
.
d
-
-
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
to create a curriculum that is
.
.
they just don
'
t have
.
any power?
- - - -
H
·

.
u
·
n
·
t
'
·
e
·
. .
.
H
'
·o
·
·
u
·
s

e
·
··
·
..
·
.
alive. Our chances are small
,
but
If
this school does not meet the
·
·
:
.
·
·
-
·
·
.
.

-
-
·
·:
·
.
.
.
~ u s t get started
.
·
1
:
am
.
needs of the students, can the
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..;.._~-----..... ....;
..
.
.
.
readY:,-and have been ready for a
students <!hange·it?
.
7ll.d
_
..
d
'
.
m
·
.
C
.
·
.

:
byJi~Phillips
while. Are you? The school has
··
When
-
the
.
King Committee
_-
1
_
f
.f
I
U
.
.
y
.
._
.
_
.
.
_
_

·
.
!It
·
e-,.
_
,~
.
If
you were
,
wondering who the given usa chance to develop an
brought up the possibility of
a

.
.:7
forty little
.
gremlins
·
were that
.
alternative curriculum~Applied
_
looking into the APC (Academic
1
·
C
·
haunted Champagnat House Topics in Science-funny name-
Policy Committee) and the SAC
n
.
·
on cert
.
Halloween Night, don't worry
·
.
;.
.
9credits. Let's use them to begin.
,
(Student Academic Committee),
.
·
-
·
·
·
.
.
_
_
.
·.
_

.
·
we weren't
.
being
.
·
invaded
,
but We can design an
.
alternative,
a number of students had never
·
·
·
-
.
delightftilly
-
entertained
;
.
They
.
integrative curriculum in areas
heard of these
.
committees. And
On Saturday, November
11,
the
"Like a Rolling Stone" and gave were the guests of honor at the you
.
.
wish--environmental
.
even the King Committee did not Marist
_
College,
.
College Union
.
.
both an English
-r
ock
:
group arid Champagnat House IV
-
Big
.
studies, alternativ.e
·
teaching, jail
.
really know
.
:what these com-
Board will be co-sponsoring with
.
an American rock magazine their
.
Brother Halloween
.
Party
.
.
Home reform,
·
law;

but
.•.·
it requires
mi
_
ttees were doing. Is this the the Hudson Val
,
ley Philharmonic · ·names. From listening
to
Muddy for them is the Cardinal Hayes
:
work; enthusiasm, dedica
_
tion,
- Muddy Waters in concert.
·
Who
··
Waters'

recor
_
ds, the late Jimi Ch
'
ld
'
' H
· M"llb
k
k
·
·d
k ·
· ·
g· t·
way
__
a
.-
college is
..
-
run?
.
The
1 ren s
ome m
·
1 roo
.
wor , 1 eas
,
wor , ,ma ma 10n,
is Muddy Waters?
:
·
.
.
.
Hendrix
;
taught
·
himself to
-
.
play B t
·
· ·
d k' g
·
f
.
1
think
'
·
d
-
.
·
k Th
students _
are kept unaware of
.
.
.
.
<
e ween
·
.
uc m
·
or
·
.
app es,
.
mg;

-
an more wor
·

ose
.
_
·
.
what the fac
_
ulty and ad-
·
Muddy Waters is probably the guitar.
·
:
·
.
.
· ·
·
-
·
·
.
playing musical chairs, trick-or-
·.
ofus who are a little fed up must
mostimitated blues artist of
·
all
.
·
,
Ori No
_
v.Jl, Muddy
_
W
__
aters will treat· g
·
t h' g
·
·
h
.
t b t
· · t
·
·
th t
ek
alt

·
ministration are doing,- and they
,
.
m ,
.
wa c m a
-
s or
·
-
u
·
1010 oge er o se
..
·
erna 1ves,
iri.
tum, don't
kn_
ow what
.
.
the times; Tunes 1ike "I'm Your
.
bH~gh
-
inscohncelrt
·
adit Poughkeepsie sc:~ry ghost skit, and just
·
plain
-.
_
to seek change
;
to question
,
·
:
to
.
tud
·
t
.
t
d
d Th
· Hoochie Koochie Man," "Got My - 1
.
·
c
_
oo .Au ·t~rium at half ra1smg hell, the ki~ had a night
J
llllderstand:'--:- But please, again,
s
en
_
s wan
.
an ~ee ·
es
_
e
.
Mojo·working,"
:
<'Long Distance
_
price rates to ~~r1st stu~e~ts
-
to remember,
<
;
·•·
·.·
_
,
-
<
no phonies here, most of the
·
rest
.
·
c~
.
m~ittees
___
are
·
suppe>sed to
,
Call/'
'.
'Baby, Pl~se Don
'.
t
Gi>
;
"
·
$2
'.
50 up
:
f!ont
:
·
and
.
$_1.50
_
·
m
·•
the
-::
-•-·
Besides
·

their
.
,
105
·
h~ts
·
from
·
-
:
maybe crap but this
cim
be
.
real
oo,nef!t the students
4
ut_ who ~n
,
"~oQey
·
•'
Beett
,.
and
. ·
scores of
J?:.ick; M~r1stwill provi?~ b~ses
,
to
.
House
-

IY,
...
many of:
·
the
:
other
·
-
if we
-
want it.
I
think .I

want it-at
benef 1~ when
-

_
t~e
·
meet~gs
_
.
a.r~ others
.
have
·
:
been . rE!~ c;,rded
_-.
by
.
_
and fro.1!1
·
Poughkeepsie Hi_gh
~
·•
:_
members of
i
Chainpagna t
.
House
.-
.
·
.
least
·
I'm willing to try
;
Are you?
.
closed
.
_.
· :
-
·
.
·.
.
-
.
.•
.
·
artistafterartistandgroupafter
,
thatweal},
;
~.A
i
S
_
ee
:
the
;
'
,
:
Ki.ng
·
of
:
joine
_
d
,
in
:
fo
.
,
help
.~
nja~e
.
:
the
·
\
-:
.
_
.
_ .
-
·
_.
:
Be~ause o(the King Gommi
_
ttee
:
group, attempting to catch
:
and
:
!,h~
Bl~s,
.
~
Tic:kets are
:
av~Ilable
·
evemng
a:
ball for the kids, and a
.
m
touch w1tn J)m Heilmann
·
Rm.
_-•
meet~11gs.
_
with
..
-the
.
••.
stude!'lts;
,
I
·.
captur,e th.El
·
.
feeling
:
relayed
·
·
_
10,
.
thecampus
..
c,enter--<>ffi<!¢· and
.
i
worthwhile night
.
of giving
for
.
the
>
_
·_
C-905
.
or Tom
.
Strairi
,
-Rm,
·
:
C
..
911.
··
hay~
reah~~ ~at stud~n~
_
really
,
,
through

the
::
master
,
~
-
·
.
Muddy
_
go
_
on sal
,
e 011t~!d~ t~ ~(E!~eria
:
'?n
-':
l,\'farist Com~llllity
:
,
:
:;
"'
·
:
_->
·
.
'
·
.
_
Takea chHd
.
to
:
a f0<>tbaU garrie or
:
..
~~
1r;::rrt~
in
the ~urd<:ului::, -
:
Waters.
·
·'
·
.
'
.
'

·
.
-
·
.
.
>
¥onday;
:
Nov
,
p.
~
-
him now Ill
.I{
i'
y
_
ou
·

missed
:
the kids
.
and
.
a
o
soccer
··
game or
•,
justsperid
a
<
.
,
10
~ -
~
·
prgr-3sms, an . m
,
.
~
e
.
.-
-

Iw~?54 h_e wrote the legendary
bis
.
<>nly
)
Ne~
r
.Vork. Sta~e
,
per.
'
would like
,
a
:
chance;to take
'
part
.
_. ·
satur
.
day
·
:o
f-
Sundaf
-
afternoo1(
.
!~c. mg me
<>
at M~ris~, an~
.
tune
.
Rolb_ng
.
_~tone," a number
:
fo,rrn
_
anc~ -
·
~uddy \Va
.
~e~s!
.
·.
:>
.
in
.
the House IV Big Brother-Big
·
·
with
.
them.
It
means the world
to
.
if
.,
given. the
,
op~~~~It~\
-
~~Y
.
th~t
)
ater
_
-
1nsp1
_
r
_
~d
.
Bob Prlan
'
s
:
·:
::
;

·
·:::
·
·
· ·
'
Sis~erPrograminthefuture,gef
.
them
.
.
·
..
·.
.
·.
:
·-
..
·
-:--.
'
'
'
, :
·,
I
I
·
,

.
r
,
\,
~.
'
·
.
•,.
I


•'•

'
t,
••
:


.,
..
: •
'
..
·. ' l
t ,
~
'
,
<
-
~
, '
-
;
·
,
•'
.



















































































'
,,
..
.
_
..
.
.
'
:
·
.

l
NOVE;MBER 2,
1972
'fHE CIRCLE
PAGE 3
Vote
Open Forum
Critical questions confront the eleven
-
million newly e n f r a n c h i s e d - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
voters approaching the ballot box.
Has
the man elected on a promise
to end the war broken faith with the American people? Can the
American people stomach the war now that the color of the bodies
has
changed? Has the sense of moral outrage over napalming and born-
In Summary And Rebuttal
.
bing been
.
exhausted? Do the nominations of Carswell and
Haynesworth to the highest court
_
mark a planned
_
retreat from the Students:
commitment to racial justice? Is the bugging
of
Democratic National
At this time we would like
·
to
Committee Headquarters symptomatic of an emerging Orwellian clarify some points that Mr.
nightmare? Has the Nixon Administration sold out to lig business?
Kissling made which appeared in
And what of the senator from· South Dakota? Will"his economic
-
the
Oct 26th edition
of
the Circle.
proposals bankrupt the economy?
Do
the Eagleton fiasco and the Mr. Droge is an aid to the
"refining" of the proposals of the primaries portend a presidency National Security
Council.
based on vacillation? Will McGovern
,
by reducing the military budget, Although he is not a member; he
diminish thediplomaUc flexibility of the U.S.? Invite agression? Pave bits twenty years of govern-
the road to war?
.
.
mental experience, knowledge
The questions are, of course, loaded .
.
There are few simple answers.
.
and service which have spanned
But remove the vituperation and the inflated promises and four facts
·
four
administrations
(two
are clear
:
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
·
·
Republicans, two Democrats).
awareness of this error.
President Nixon's platform.
Our
second
point
of
First: The
.
~andidates

vying

for the presidency
_
differ
·
·
widely in This error was never intended to
ideology and outloc,>k. The potential voter cannot sit this
·
one out on the be a deceitful tactic but was
grounds that the choice
is
between tweedle dum and tweedle dee.
merely a
-
human error (Thomas
Second: The new voter who re.fuses to cast a ballot is shirking the Eagleton could understand that).
responsibility which he claitned he deserved. To refuse to vote or to The error was not realized until
vote casually Js to solicit the.disgust of those who demanded the
18
the announcement
·
posters were
-
year old vote
,
It is also to invite the smuggest "I told you so" in history already made and
.
after Mr.
from the cynics and the skeptics.
.
.
·
.
. .
.
·
.
Droge gave his
talk.
_
we thank
clarification would
be
in
reference to the invitation ex-
tended to the "Nixon forces" for
an open debate.
It
was not the
decision of the Marist Young
Republicans to have such a
debate, the decision was in the
hands of the Republican Regional
Director for Dutchess County.
The reasoning behind such a
decision was that it is standard
political pfactice not to have open
·
debates. when national polls
declare your candidate in the
A point we would also like to
comment on is the attitude of
hostility in which Ed Kissling's
article was written. We cannot
understand why such a small
issue was completely blown out cl
proportion when
_
the issues of
race, poverty, and the pursuit of
pe~I!" are of much higher
priority, at least in our minds.
You accuse us of playing dirty
politics but what do you consider
.article? Our intention is not to
play a game of cemantics but to •
clarify some misunderstandings.
Let the games end here.
.
lead
.
Our alternative path, which
Sincerely yours,
Joe Mirrione
Mike Peyton
Third: The college student cannot choose to remain unaffected by Mr. Kissling for his astute
the direction
·.
of Natio~al leadership .
.
If
.
the president of the United
·

,
.
is presently being enacted, is a
,Dresenta.ti.on ~• Bill Steinhaus •
(Ass 't
.
Regional Campaign
Director)
·
who explains and
answers questions concerning
States chooses to tolerate unemploymE:nt'and underemployment, for
example,
.
the Ph.D.
-
of today will contjmie to be the cab driver of
toQ1orrow
,
and students
_
with B.S
.'
s and RA,.'s will continue to pour
into secretarial
.
pools and factories.
.
_
.
·.
-
-
:
.
.
Fourth : The Establishment lisfons to numbers. History will record
thaltheyoungrose up from the college campuses in search of a leader
to end a war they judged immoral. History should record that the
young also managed to sensitize the ncltion
to
the need
for
ecological
balance, population control, equal rights for minor!ties. By refusing to
vote, the student invites inattention and guarantees that the interests
of the
·
young will not be served.
·
.
.
· _·
·
.
·
. ·
The message is clear. An important choice must be made
:
Those
,vho use the ballot November
7
will participate in making
it
Those who
boycott the ballot box \ViUsucceed only in ripping themselves off
,
The message is simple. Vote.
·
·
·
.
<BB>
.
This Editorial was drawn up
_
by
.
the National Voter
Registration Drive.
On
.
·
.
oogs
Enough
Editor,
,
.
.
. .
-
.
Well it has finally happened. I have found a publication that contains
In last week's Circle Oct.· 26,
more useless rhetoric that a statement by a politician. Last week's
.
1972
someone wrote an a·rticle - "Circle" has out done them all
.
about dogs on campus
.
I
fear that
_
From "striving for awareness and freedom for ourselves and the
I
.
have
.
to
·
agree

that many
world
"
, to "We even have our own Sky Pilot here at Marist to
students do adopt puppies or ca~
-
legitimize these proceedings
.
" Unfortunately we're not done yet, let
us
·
and leave them here alone during
consider this headline, "Student Poll Favors Nixon.'' This is
a
curious
vacations .
.
However,
·
I also
article. One would be led to believe that this is an accurate statement
believe that most of the dogs are
from the statistics presented, but due
to
the existence of "stereotypes"
stray dogs that wander
.
onto the
on campus these Nixon supporters are obviously not, a) aware of the
campus.
-
Perhaps
.
_
the
_
people in
.
pertinent issues, b) not aware that they are stereotypes, c) not mtitled
the town leave them herie becaus~
.
·
to their own opinion, d) all, none, some, most
<i
the above
:
you have to
P{lY
_
the SPCA
$15
_
to
Onie would hope that by this time even the "Circle" had reached its
.
,
-
have
.
then1
-
tc1ke
-,
a- dog aw~y,
<>.r
-
: .
. ~ap~~ity, but cilas, foiled again,
:
'.'From
15
·
Concerned Students";
'
·
- . perhaps
c
they feeJ::;
·
that" some·, ·• smashes all
rur
hopes:Check this, .. ''demogogery or decency
in
public
·
· Mari st student will takf care of
··
· schools for our younger brothers and sisters", that
_
better than
''let
The election of 1972 has illuminated many interesting aspects .
.
_
the d~g and love it.
·
_
'
-
· ·
·
them
_
<:at cake" anytime. At least paid political announcements
oil
~rimarily, the contrast between Richard Nixon and Geor e
·-
_
You also stat~ that ~oth dogs
tel,~v1s1onarel_a~~edassuchsowecanturnthes~unddown..
.
McGovern's political i~eologies. Secondly,
_
this is the first maj~r an~ cats a!e
_
tembly mistreated
.
,
A ~hort ~tory,, was excellen~ also. I was gomg to_ read 1t durmg
electi~n in which th~
rn.
21 year olds will be given
.
the chance to express
It 1s amazmg to
_
me to find some
lunchm the Rat but I was afraid I
_
would offend the flies .
.
their votes. Both candidates have
.
thoroughly
_
presented their of the same ammals here from
I suppose the wor~t part of
~l~
this ":'as that these people actua
_
lly
proposals, and the questions a
_
nd
.
answers ~ey have raised are not
the
la~t year.
If
they have
_
been ~o
ta_ke thems_elves _se;1ously. Isn t 1t possible any longer to be offensive
least big ambiguous.
_
. _
.
·
·
·
mistreated then w~y are they still
without bemg trite ..
W~_, ~he e~itors of the Circle, cannot support the present Nixon here and whr
~1~ they come
William Tegan
Admm1stration. We cannot support a man who is playing a game of back--masochisbc
·
.
_.
.
chess with the world powers, while waiting for the right time
fo
make
You also statC? that the d~gs
. his move. Nixon's reelection is not warranted by his ending of a way r~am. arou nd
10
pac~s.
<m
-
which should huve been halted four year~ ago.
It
is obvious that there smuatmg that the~ ~e
_
v1c1ous-
has Been a great amound Qf both secrecy and incousistency con- they are ~ot) picking at the
._
cerning ·Mr. Nixon's dealings with Southeast Asia
.
and
·
his overall gar?age
.
Is1tso unusu;l for a dog
foreign policy.
_
.
_
to pick at the g~rbage
.
?ogs that
Brumm
1
ett Cited
Dear Editor:
·
old sport is always welcome and
for that the author is to be lauded
.
Sincerely yours,
Dr. Edward J. O'Keefe
Psychology Dept.
.
Change is imperative, and we feel that with the election of George are fed wel~ "'.71ll also pick at the
McGovern this change will be imminent. Therefore, we fully endorse garbage so it !Snot so abnormal.
the candidacy
·
or Senator George McGovern.
._
_
_
_
You also said that some peop!e
And, in the editor's opinion, it is abundantly clear that; "Given a feel uncomfortable by their
choice between
.
a politici
.
an, McGo\'.ern, and a psychotic, Nixon,
.
the presence. I say that _some JX:Ople
politician is the better bet." Perhaps
·
not an ace in
the
hole, but at
Ieasf . feel more at home with them and
.
a good hand
.
·
·
that
those
who
feel
un-
.
comfortable probably don't
It would be all too easy to fault
Richard Brummett's views (On
Football,
10-26-7'2)
as a case of
"overkill" and
the
shooting of
"straw men.'' But to do so would
be to miss the full thrust of his
argument, and to deny ourselves
insight into our own con-
tradictory (if not primitive)
thoughts and actions
.
To the Editors,
Richard Brummett can have
his opinions about football, but I
wish he had stuck to the truth
.
I
presume I'm the Sky Pilot and he
uses quotes in quoting me which
must mean I said that as worded.
I never did
.
Nor did he make that
remark to me which supposedly
brought on a
blank,
un-
comprehending look
·
on my face
.
understand.
The members of the Circle Editorial Board have
.
endorsed George
The purwse of this
_
letter was
McGovern for
-
the Presidency. In
all
conscience, I cannot concur with not to justify the existence of
this decision, nor can I actively support Nixon. While
_
the two can- animals on campus but rather to
didates represent very differeritpoints of view, neither makes a stand show the Circle
-
where I thought
l
could wholly endorse
.
.
·
. .
.
.
.
·
.
·
·
.
their reason for making such
·
While I supported McGovern for the
.
Democratic nomination, for he judgements are invalid. 1 am
did represent a choice. But
I
ask
,
how many of h~ promises can
:
m-
.
sure that th~re are some valid
hope to get through
an
.
unfavorable,
:
though Democratic, Congress·:
With
·
the troops out of Viet Nam in ninety days,
·
what of the
.
South
Vietnamese? Will only the body col<>r
.
change? Will Mr, McGovern be
able to hold back skyrocketing inflation?
,
-
<
·
·
·
'
.
.
.
The same
-
questionii'face
.
Mr
:
Nixon
;
lie,
too; faces an opposing
-
-Congress, has tried to end the war., and keep inflatioidn check.
·
I s1:1bn1it, therefore, are not these candidates, beneath theiI' surface
dis~nctions, very
_
similar? For that reason, I cannot back either
man
reasons'.
Love arid apple cider,
Dennis Alwon
CREATIVE PORTRATURE
completely
.
· _
.- .
_
.
.
·
This Election Day, vote carefully.and matureW Vote for the man
of
As part of the
·
Parent Day
your choice.
· ·
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
Weekend, Lizbeth Guerrino· will
Anne Trabulsi
·
be exhibiting contemporary
This is a personal opinion which in
no
way reflects the
position
of the portrature in Fireside Lounge
·
on
Circle staff.
·
Saturday and Sunday, Nov~mber
·
.
THECIRCLE
,
4
,
·
. ,

·
.
..
Edward O'Connell,
·

Co-
editor, Stuart cGross, Co-
.
editor
,
<i
Anne
_
,
Trabulsi,
.
:
.
Feature
. :
Editor,
_
'
Ji
·
_
·
_
Fred
:
':
.
·
Eberlein
- '
·
News
·
Editor
.
'
i
JirriKeeg~n
;
Sports Editor:
:
Richard
,
:,
:
B
r,i.t'mine
tt,
.
,
P~o~og~aphy
:
F;ditor
::
·>
;
-.
,
·
_
.
,
:
'
:
·
.
:
:
,:
.
·
··
:
'
·
';•
..
·.·
4
and
5.
.
Her outdoor portraits
_
have
..
Junior Rings
'
.
'
'
.
,
been ori exhibit for the last month
.
in the area. Mrs. Guerrino is a
member of
.
the. Professional
St al'. tfn'g •
_
We
.
d n es day',
Photographers Association and
.
November
·
1;
·
.
and
_.
coritinuing
; ·
,
has won this
_
month's
·
.
•.
portray
_
:
through al~ of'next week
/
Junior
.
award. For something different;
.
·
rings.
·,
will" be sold in Dorinelly
c?m
.
e see this unique exhibit.
·
.
::
_
fromi2:00p.m.'
,
to 3:00.p;,111.
·
and
·
at:7:po
:
p
:
m.,:to .9:00 p.m.
·
·
_
·
-
·
-
·


:.:

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

.
·
, .
.
!
.

.
Although
I
am a football fan,
my distain for the philosophy and
technique of Vince Lombardi,
even during the reign of the
"Pack
,
" accounts, no doubt, for
the responsive cord struck by the
article. A new perspective on an
Father
Leo
Gallant
History Curriculum
·
Students will soon be registering for courses for the spring semester.
In order to do this effectively, the students should work closely with a
faculty advisor. Together, they should discuss not mly the courses
f<r
the spring but tl1ey should also work on develq>ing a long-term
pl.an
<i
study geared to fulfilling the student's academic and vocational ob-
jectives.
·
The success of the curriculum in both history arid in political science
is c
_
ontingent upon
·
~areful planning by students. To this end, every
maJor has been assigned a departmental advisor.ilf you do
not
know
who your advisor is, contact me immediately.
If you have not received
a copy of the i:ecommended related courses for history majors con-
tact me immediately.
·
_
'
.
.
Caref~l planni_ng
can
result in the development of meaningful
goals,
and avoid the phght
of
the second semester Senior who wonders what
in the world he will .do after graduation.
·-
Upperclassmen especially are urged to avail themselves of the
services of the Placement office which can add a specictl dimension to
intelligent career .Planning.
·
Louis Zuccarello






























































































..
PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 2, 1972
Harriers Second In C.A.C.C .. 's.· ..
The Marist Running Red Foxes Then Marty McGowan ran his captured five of the
first ten
placed second in the Central best race of the year to earn him places in the meet to notch five
Nyack College on Saturday. "Most Valuable
Runner
of the · individual trophies in the meet.
Nyack won the crown for the Meet" and "Most Improved The second place firush for the
third
consecutive year behind the Runner of the Meet" awards in team was the highest finish for a
record pace set by Dave Billings. his seventh place finish. He was Marist team since their winning
The freshman Nyack ace shat-
closely
foJlowed
by
Bob performance in 1968.
tered tbeold course record
set
by
Salomone, Mike Duffy, and Mark
Jay Doyle's time of
25:21
was a
now-coach Mike
Redmond
of
·
Hetorilla; so om.-e again the
four
new Marist record for the
tough
Nyack by seventeen seconds in a
of them formed Marist's "Long
4.7
mile Nyack course under the
driving rain. Billings won the Red Llne". Bob Nelsoo placed rain conditions
.
and slippery
race by one minute and twenty-
sixteenth in the
·
race,
.
Jim Mc-
roadways. Marist's team time for
six seconds over Kings' Steve Casland
nineteenth,
Pete the.ir top Jive was also a record
Shunk
who nosed out Marist's tnasewicz 25th and Tony Wilg~r for the Nyack
·
course and the
Jay Doyle for the nmner-up spot 26th in the big m~t.
team displayed
·
·
a great. time
by four seconds.
·
Marist walked off with five spread for the top five runners
Nyack occupied the next three individual trophies,
.
more than also.
.
.
places in Allen Penberthy, Paul any other team, although Nyack
Much improvement was noted
·
Braun, and Blake McKinney.
.
won the big one. The Marist teain
.
in
·Marist's
performance as
.
Wrestling
ByJohnRedmonci
·
Needless to say, there
.
are very
few earthly entities which do not
·
compar.ed to their times and
score against Nyack the Tuesday
before. Nyack Coach Mike
Redmond c
·
omplimented the
much
-
improved team and was
amazed with their highly com-
petitive attitude. He marked to
Marist Coach Rich Stevens,
"Your guys did a tremendous job
today and had a very impressive
fl)p five performance. They must
have been really psyched for this
race, truly amazing after their
defeat here on Tuesday."
Coach stevens replied, "Mark
Hetorilla did an excellent job for
ll.5.
He was injured during the
race due to poor planning on my
part. I was extremely pleased
-
to
see him win a trophy which he
justly
_deserved.
The whole tea_m
.
did
a
tremendous job. Mar1st
should be truly proud of these
men for their outstanding run-
ning this season. Even when most
other teams would have been
down
after losing to Nyack
so
badly on Tuesday,_ these
-
~uys
closed the gap amazingly. Kings
was way far behind in third
place! They just never gi~e up."
-
Marist
will
compete m the
NAIA District
31
Cross Country
Championships this Saturday at
Van
·
Cortland Park.
. .-.Run
-
At
-
N.A.1.A~s
Saturday
·
~
.
~
.
carry the stigma· of subjectivity.
·
.,
Any organization, faction, or
g
The Marist Running Red Foxes is at Van Courtlandt Park, a
coalition will have its supporters,
~
will wind up their most successful neutral course, will really help
and cogversely its opponents, or ...
1972
cross country campaign in
us,
Nyack's home course is a
more timely,' its ~pathetic non-
1
the
'
NAIA District
31
Cross tremendous advantage to them.
commitals. Such is the case with
u
Country Championships at Van
As
a
matter of fact I have never
·
the
·
Mari.st
,
College Wrestling
g_
Courtlandt Park in New York seen a
·
team in
.
college hav~ a
·
team
·
of late; subjectivity
.
of-
·
~
City this Saturday. The meet will better home-course advantage
·
ficially begins now!
·
-
:
·
-
be the toughest ever with a most than Nyack has on their course.
Maybe its
..
the mediocre per-
impressive list of competing
So
they
.
have now lost that ad
;
formances of the past, or maybe
colleges .
.
The top
.
two favorites vantage and we'll see how much
.
.
the l~ck of a faculty influence,
will
be
,
Mori111outh College and that helps us.
·
Last year Nyack
,
but w})at ever the case there is
Nyack College. Other schools had beaten New Paltz pretty
·.
very little depth
on
the present
competing will include Marist, easily during the year, bufNew
wrestling team and a sore need
New Paltz,
.
Kings, · .Glassboro,
·
Paltz defeated Nyack by six
.
for exper~enced personnel in the
/
Excess
.
rain and lack of refs stop ganie
.
·

·
·
·
Newark, and other -schools
·
points in the NAIA Cham
0
middle ancl lower weight. classes;
_-:
possibly
,
Marist will also be pionships, so certainly we have a
.
B.eside~
.
the
..
obvious penalty of
.
· ·
-
·
,
'
.
scored in a dual meet while there shot at them this time!''
.
·
forf1"ets1·n
·
m
·
atche
·
sa
·
smal•squad
·
'T'L
·
·
·
·
a
·
.
.
·
.
·
·
· .
·
mL·
'
t
against
.
Hunter Co
_
lleg
·
e. The Red
.
.
McGowan and Salomone, co-
hurts
the:
team in many' other
.
·
·
:l
.
f
I,
e
·_
.
' .
.

a me
·
._,_
.
f
ia
..
r'
Foxes bring a
9--4
record into that ~ptains the past two years,
\Viii
·
ways. Withoufa variety of per,
.
meet. Maristdefeated Hunt~r
22-
·
be making their final runs for the
sonnel in practices, a team can
35
last year and hold
5-0
lifetime
.
Marist Running Red Foxes. Both
stagnate rather
:
than improve
.
~
7\..
T
. ·
·
· ·
.
·
TV/:
edge over
.
that squad.
have been tremendously helpful
through experience. Secondly,in
.
L~
.
-
~
e
.
.
ve
,
.
r
w
as
Although Marist on paper does during the yea
·
r in both leading
<.
asinallscnool a smaHteam does
not appear headed for a team the_ team and also in helping to
ni:>Lwarfant·the financial burden
·
·
-
trophy for placing in the top two conquer opponents. Bob was
it places on··the entire

athletic
ijy apb St1Uiyait
.
·
in
the
meet, Marist Coach Rich especially beneficial during the
prografns. Therefore,
a

small
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.. Stevens is optimistically looking early season when Marty was
wrestling
.
·
team cannot be con-
Wheredoes O?e be~1n
t?
tell ~e story of a game that never hap-
!?rw~rd to the competition. r~cuperating from an injury and
tinued and this year might be the
pened?
·
I~ wa~ hke Ripley s Beheve
It-
Or Not, the teams were both
Don t count us out.at all. We are siclmess, and now .Marty has
last
_
·
showing
.
or· the
.
Marist
-
the!~• ready to g4:1, warm-ups completed, the respective captains
·
really
· .
on schedule for another been
.
improving tremendously
Matmen. This, however, does
-
not
~a!t!ngto be escorted to mid-field by the ~fficials. The only hitch, the great !ea1!1 effo~t. The runners during
.
the late season while
.
have to be the case, there
,
are
-
offtc1_als were n~where to be found, not even
on
their way to the game. are still 1mprovmg and set .to Bob's knees ha
_
ve taken a turn for
many experienced and capable
If it ~eems_ hke fantasy concocted by a weary sportswriter be
peak
during
-
this meet. They are the
;
worse. Marty has been
wrestlers
.
sitting around now
hereby mfori_n~d
_
that it happened, this Saturday, at Marist Coll~ge,
all really p~yched ~or
·
this
·
one particularly impressive this_ year
making excuses for why they
where_the.V1kmgs wer~ scheduled to play Fairfield in an Eastern already.Itw1Ilbethe1rlastrunof atVanCourtlandtParkandmthe
can't come out. Experience, also
.
Collegiat~ Club
_
Foot~ll Con~erence tilt, which, in light
of
Westchester
·
the se~so1_1 a_nd it will be their best big meets. Since this Saturday's
need not be the determining
Commumty Colleges
31-7
victory over Norwalk Community College one, md1v1dually and collec-
meet is at Van Courtlandt Park
factor in Marist Wrestling. Bill
Salli!daY night, could have given the ECCFC~s Met Division crown to
tively. It will also
be
the final and is a BIG meet championship,
McGarr and Jim Lavery, two of
Mar1st.
,,
.
.
·
·
...
·
cross country runs for Marty both things are in Marist's favor.
Marist's past ana present greats
Neither team_see1;0ed co~cerned that the officials hadn't made their
McGowan, who seems to "own" Bob Salomone will enjoy running
never wrestled before their
appearance on ti,ef1eld untII both teams actually left the field to await Van· Courtlandt, and
Bob on a soft-surface course again
freshman year in college
,
The
the coin toss. At
_
this juncture both teams soughicover from'the
-
Salomone ... sowatchoutforthese after two runs
,
on Nyack's road
one point which is
·
crucial t_!>
do"."'llpour t~~t was threatening to turn the gaine into a Mud Bowl,
!,wo especially.
H
Mark Hetorilla ~o~se and hard pounding on his
.
wrestling is determination, that
wh!le _the V1k1~gs H~ad Coach Ron Levine went into conference with.
,
!s. fully rec~vered from
.
th~t leg mJured knees. Both
·
runners are
.
singular quality which on the mat
Fa1rf1eld mentor Tris Carta.
.
·
.
· .
. . ·
.
.
.
.
·
mJury, he wdl really be flymg on members of Marist's "Long Red
-
determines winners and losers.
Ip
themidstofthisconfusion MaristFootball President Bob Sullivan
that course since he
_
ran
'-
well Line''
-
of runners closing
·
in on
In wrestiing,-there is much that
-
contacted
_
a local ¥gh school officia}'s organiza~ion
;
and
·
discovered there two weeks ~go.
All
in all, Marist'~ front-ru~ner Jay J?oyle.
this re-creation of primeval man
that a game was bemgplayed at Roosevelt Field
in
Hyde Park. Levine
.
~~.re really lookmg forward to Doyle himself will be ~eekmg to
returns to those who participate.
r~~Eld to Hyde
,
Park and came back with the news
_
that the game of-
it.
.
capture the college s_ cour~e
There
·
are no plays or teammates f1c1als ~ad agreed to come to Poughkeepsie at the conclusion of their
But what about Nyack College?
record of
27: 50
set by Phil Capp10
to ease the burden of defeat,
garpe_ and rescue the Marist-Fairfield game from infamy., The
·
Can Marist possibly hope to in
1968.
Doyle already hol~ the
hence victory carries the same
Fa1rf1eld team and staff t~en went into caucus and returned with the overtake the P~rsons when freshman record for. Mar1st on
weight. There is no other sport
~nnoun_cement that they would not play after
3:00
p.in.
This being beaten by them twice_ now? "We
-
-
~e . cours_e. Jay ran a

27:53
which requires anywhere near 1mposs1ble the Stags promptly dressed. and headed back to Con-
·
really closed
.
the gap
_
last earher this year at Van Cour-
the perfection of mechanical
n~cticut, pausingalo1:1g tJte way to state t~t they woul
_
d not file protest . ~t~day and now they are easily tlandt.
physical ability or common sense
with the League office and that
.
they would not accept any forfeit within our
_
reach. The fact that 1t
reasoning
that
wi:-estling
should the 1eague declare one.
.
.
.
·
.
demands; There is no greater
In _the wake of ~turday's
_
events, the Vikings are .seeing the up-
feeling to know
,
that
.
you yourself
.
commg game ~gamst Norwalk in
-
a different light. After Fairfield's
have done

something. Finally,
departure, Levme expressed terrible disappointment jn their refusal
there is no greater knowledge
to stay and play the game .
.
He called it a terrible blow for many
than knowing that the limits
·of
members of the squad, some of whom were slated to start for the first
your existence are solely those
time.in
a
Marist uniform.
;
·
.
·
·
,
·
.
which you place upon it
,
and that
Contacted ~oday however"Levine stated that the occurance did not
through something as simple
as
effect the team morale as one might expect, but commented that the ·
an organized sport these limits
·
team has produced two
"tremendous
practices''
so
far this week The
can be
·expan~ed.
In closing,

I
·
boys realize tha,t_they 11:ave to beat Norwalk to win the division titl~ and
hope that these
,
words do
·
more they are preparmg to do j~~
,
that.
tharf fil~' columns
.
.in the sports
·
·
··
..
·
·

·
,
·
- - - -
pa
·
ge
.
For me
as
a senior, they
,
.
.
represent my concern
.
for a part
of my educatfori which has
.
been
wholly worth the time and effort.
Secondly, thisis an invitation to
'
8
those who are thinking about
5
wrestling to_ step forward now,
i
.
.because
.
without yo
_
ur con-
i
tribution~ there will be no future
~
wrestling. 'fhirdly, in bespeaking
0
:
the glory of
-
wrestling,- I.am.in-
o
·
dicating
·
·llly
confidence in
-
.
our
.
·
_
f.
·
new coach Mike
·
Titomas and
·
in
.
·
;
our; whole team who will s
_
urely
.

prove
,
~emselves
.,
,:in upcoming
'
meets
:
-·-.
.
.
•.
..
.
'
,
,,
'
.
·
.
'
.
·
,
·.
•<
I
Seniors
You have one more chance to
sign up for your senior yearbook
pictu,res. The photographer from
Classic Studios will be· shooting
on Sunday, Nov.
·
12,
.
1972
at
.
Vanderbilt. The times: will" be
from
12:00
to
5:00
and the
·
price
will
still be
$4.00
>. ·
·

.
. ·
•.
RESEARCH MATERIALS
.
All Topics
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date
128-page, mail order catalog of 2 300
quality
__
__
research papers. Enclose
$1.00 to cover postage and handling.
RESEARCH UNLIMITED
.
,
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUiTE 203
·.
,
LOS ANGELES, CALIF;
.
90024
·
(213) ~77J474
:

·
47_7-5493
·
·
--
''.We need lliocal salesman"
·
·
----
-


10.8.1
10.8.2
10.8.3
10.8.4