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Part of The Circle: Vol. 10 No. 11 - December 8, 1972

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.
-
Education Awareness
.
Week ...
Page2
Casper Published...
..
Page 4
19
-
73 Who's
c:
Who Announced
students in American Univer-
munity, leadership in ex·
The 1972-73
edition of Who's
\\ho
Among -Students
in
·
·
1
tracurricular
activities and
Wh
A
·
'
St d
·
An1erican Universities
. ·
and
-
.. ··.
~iU~_a_~d <;ol
_
~ges.
·
d
futw-e potential are decidedly
Am:rica:o~ni ver~itr::s
a~~
('oJleges .
.
is
·.
~to
.:
.:
proride ,- a .
.
..
:-..
.
-<-
·,,-:·
·
!'JQmJn
.
ations
.
are ~u~mittb
above average.
Colleges was
released this past
democratic,nabonalbasisfor the
·
-
.
annua
_
lly ~!ter. sel~ctu:~!1
Y
At Marist, the process in which
week
by
its diredor H. Pettus
'
recognition
of
·
outstanding
campli:> nommatmg comm1!rs.
the candidates were selected was
Randall.
·
·
campus leaders.
First published
In
most cases these commi •
ees
done somewhat
differently in the
This honor
is conferred
an-
in l934,
this directory
has
ap-
are
·compo~e
.
d of ~epres~ntatiJes
sense that
a point scale system
all
din
d
t
peared annually
·
a unique
in-
of the admmiS1rabon, the fac
ty
was not used. First, the
:
•:-:
nu
Y upon outstan
g stu en
stitution which now includes
and
th
e student b~y. .
d ts
1
ft
:•:•
;_
~:
·
~=·i:•i.
:
-
~ll~1:sf1:~ a~~~1I'ti~r/·:
thousands of listings from over
.
f
<:thods .for iudg
.
mg the
:~;n:ii~~f ~~:~r:.n ait~!~ulety
l:):i::•j.
1 t
.
1000
schools iri all
&I
states, the
r~ ahve merits
~ various can-
members,
and administrators .
...,
United States. In se ec mg
.
Distri·ct of Colum
·
bi
'
a and sever
·
al
.
_
didates vary widely al_ though
h
.
•·
·
·
:::3
candidates, campus
nominatim
be
t
The nominations were t en given
:;:;
...,
comm
·
1·ttees are i·nstructed
_
to
foreign nations iir North
.
~
and
there has en a ~o~mg .en-
to a selection committee which
.....
.....
-
So
th Am ·
ca
· -
.
·
· -
·
·
dency to use an
obJecbve pomt-
.....
ii
~~::!i~~~di:.~:~c~~:ili:
_
. ~f!IY coi~e
-
se~~s, Juniors,
.
.
·
~
:r!~:1:~~mT~/
1
~':~!:n~m~
~ :
:e~~e~fotu!~e~~~~~~~
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:::::
community, leadership m ex~
.
and
-
-
.
.
grad,~ate
.
. stude~ts
,
.
..
mittees are
instructed by the
committee, the Commuter
_
Union
::::
:::~
tracurricular
activities, and ·
matriculated i~
f~IJ!•~ear
_
_
un•
·
· ·
national organization to consider
_
M_oderator,
the
Residence
::::
~
:::
futw-e potential are decidedly
dergraduate mstitut!o!ls or
t
d
t
h e
academic
Director. the Campus Center
:::
:
:
::::
graduate
schools are eligible for
s u e_n s
w
.
os
::::
l
a~~= ta~~g~oncept
of Who's
-
nomination
to
Who's Who Among
-
standmg, service t~
~~
..
~~~
··
··
·
···
·
············
·
·
·
·
··
·:~~~~~~.~
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-·-►-CIRCLE..

student
.
Go
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·
"Year F
-
or
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_
VOLUME 10;NUMBEA 11
·
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o
_
ECEMBi:RE!; 1:372
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MA
RIST C()LLEGE!POliGHKEEPSIE,"'.'EW YORK
12061
Action"
.
By Bernard Mulligan
McNamara from the Budget
Committe
e.
_Brian Doyle .
.
Fred
WASHINGTON, D.C, Nov.
14,
·
Student Government is seeking ~berleiCilh. GayL
_
le
Ml ullkaheyd
,
1972
-
Planning grants that will
ways to best express student · erome
erry
,
arr
y
..as
O
an
add
.
.
30 more
_
colleges and
voice iri matters pertaining to the Tom l<~arrell from the College
<.'-Ouncil, Harik Hammer from the
universities
_
to the University
Maris!
.
com·mupity. To
.
gain
_
the ·hite
r
dorm
C
oun
c
if. .Jack Simeone
YeqI" for
ACTION
program were
insights from
._
knowledgeable

and Terr
f
Curtiri from
-
the
announced today
_
by
·
ACTION
·
people in this field, a workshop
Director Joe Blatchford
.
The
was held on Saturday, November College Union
·
Board· Dean of
UY A
program e
_
nables students
·
25th in the Campus Center. The st udents Thomas Wade a nd

to
·
earn academic credit
·
while
areas discussed were budgetary
-
Campus Center Director Joseph
spending one year
off
campus
procedures, the garnering
..
of Brosnan·
working with the poor.
. ·
student opinion
,
coordination
·
of
Blatchford said final ac
~
- student policy
·
making and the
'
·
Miid
.
ceptance of program. proposals
structure
.
of
Student
·
Govern'
.
'
from
.
the new schools .would add
inent
.
ThE!
most practical result -
TJ77
·
k /
.
600
fulltime student vohmteers
to
. .
.
ofUy_s meeting win~ the Student
_-
.
..

w
:
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r
,
,
-
$_
_lop
.
the program by spring. This will
.
Pohcy
.
Handbook
.
wh1ch
:
.
stut:lep~ .
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student-volunteers.
-,
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.
.
·
CHRISTMAS CONCERT
:·:
·
·
·
·
·

·
·
relationships
·
among various
UYA
~ai
established by AC~
'
·
·
·
studentorganizationsand with
_
·
TION
,
the
'
citizeh service corps,
D
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·
.. •
.
.
. .
·

·
.
.. .

·
·
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... •
.
k
_.-
.
.
.
d
.
.
.
-.
-
the rest of the campus. This area
Once psychology was confined
as
a pilot
-
program
·
involving
10
.
-
·
_
na ions
..
.
-s
-
e
·
·
.
has for the
-
pastfew
y
ears been
·
to
:
a
couchihaprivateofficeorto
schools and
500
student volun-
very unclear.and students have college
·
1aboratories, but more
teers in September,
·
1971. It
_
was
·
·
·
-
-
been disorganized

in
'
expressing and
-:
m
·
ore
_
_ '
the
<
knowledge of
made a pennan~nt program
Ori
For .F
-
-
_-
a
·-
m
·
_
·
_
·
.
_
:
·11
-
y
·
th~ir voice on campus
~
wide and
·
human behavior
·
1earned in the
July); 1972
. ,
internal affairs. This document - e
x
perimental laboratory is being
Among the new schools are the
s
hould strengthen student unity
_
_.
applied to our everyday
.
life and
University
.
of Hawaii, University
.
Fire has destroyed the home
muter
_
Union Office, Monday -
and improv
e
·
the quality o
f
the
·
social institutions that shape
of Virginia
;
Princeton, Rutgers,
and all possessio11s of a married
1''riday between the hours of
1:30 ·
student expression. Anyone who
our behavior. Psychology is
Minnesota, Hampton Institute,
commuting
student,
Day
_
and :l
:
30 p
.
m. by Miss Francine
di
wants to workon the handbook or
:
~ay as much con.:erned with
-
St. Mary's College in Indiana
-
and division.
An
aid program has
Grandi
."
· ·
.
:
.
see a
-
copy ofthe minutes
or
the
schools.
businesses
,
and
California
.
State University
in
been set up by the Commuter
.
Clothing sizes -Wife
:
slacks
18,
workshop should contact Bernie
correctional institutions as it
Fresno, Calif.
·
··
Unionto provide this family with
blouse
,
36,
shoe
_
1
1
;1
,;
<Marist
Mulligan
<
Gregory) or Bob
once was with teaching rats to
The
planning grants, totalling donations ~f food, clothing and
-
studentJ Husband: Shirt
I5
1
f
r33
Nelson
·
<Sheahan 112)
.
press levers. Psychology has
$150,000,
were awarded to in-
money
.
or
:
12
,
pants 32-32 shoe
10
1
h.
.
Many were invited to attend th~
moved out into the field -- and
a
stitutions in
17
states.
There are two collection points
Brother: Shirt
15;
pants 32-32,
s
e
ssion
.
and those who attended
potential revolution
in
sociaJ
Blatchford said,
'.'A
year ago
on campus -
·
one
_
located in the shoe 12;
4
month old girl; size
I
should be thanked for their
management is in the making
.
170
·
schools applied for the switchboard room, Donnelly and year;
4
year old boy: pants
5,
dedication and work on a
What effect will psychology ha,
"!
. program and only
20
could be the other in the Commuter Union
shirt
6,
shoe
8.
_
·
Saturday ctfternoon. These people
on society and the individual
,
a
accepted
.
because of the limited Office, Room
174,
Campus
· ·
Please be generous. Any
-
were Bernie Mulligan
,
Bob
the next twenty years? We a;J
fwids
available for what was then
Center. Monetary donations will donations wi11 be deeply ap-
Nelson, and Ralph Ranellone
must determine that answer, no~
CONTINUED PAGE 3
only be collected in ~e Com-
preciatcd.
from Student Government, Pat
just the psychologists.
____
...;.;.;... _____________
....;; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
...;. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
·
- - - -
Behavior modification is un-
. · ·
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
cloubtedly the most controversial
.-
_p
__
._
.
l
_
e
_
·
·_
ss,
_
Sch
·
o
_
-
.
Jiel
·
d,
·
.
Wil
_
son
an
_
,
d
·
_
Komis
~fcho;~~~e;r:\~inc~;f~ a;~
being applied to social problems
·
.
.

,
-
.
like job dissatisfaction, inef-
E
I e cte d To Freshman Class Executive Board
~?~iff···~f;:;:~1fr.:1.~~~
-
1
problems like childrearin~, •
.
'
·
Peter Pl~
The freshman
·
class held its
first elections last Tttesday and
·
out of
466
possible votes only
181
people voted.
· .
·
The students
·
voted for
·
four
_
offices while the.roleo(secretary
was not on the ballot;•
. ·
.
The results of" the
:
e
_
le¢on
·
_
.
·
follow.
. ·
. .
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·
·
·
.
President: PETER PLESS74;
:
Rick
.
Dineen 59;
Peggy
·
Maddon
·
39· abstain 5.
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•·.

·
Vice
President:
· ·
JACK
_
SCHOFIELD
:
96;
~ich~
_
~l
.
~oore
_
.
68;
·
abstain
7
.
·
·
>
>
':
·
-.
Treasurer:
·
DONALD WILSON
.
112; abstaih !?0.
<
·
:
.
.
Corresponding
·
;
Secretary
:
GOLDIE KOMIS
.
114;abstain 47 .
.
.
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CONTINUED PAGE 4
Goldie l(~f'is
:
Jack Schofield
.
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THE
CIRCLE • ·
DECEMBER 8, 1972
·s,pe~jal_ Awareness We~k .In. Hou~e 111 __
·
·• · ·
· · -'
Rudberg dealt with a very im
students present in the lounge.
portant issue -- the problem~ that
-
This week, House No. _
3_. of _
. ·(llampagnat House presented
to
: · the.
students, · factilty, and, com-
munity-; .. "Spedal : Education.
Awareness Week", W.e dicl this
as
- . part ·
of_ our.
Dorinito~ _- Leisiµ-e
,
··Education
Program, in which we
, attempt
~to bring . 'ed~c!1tional
pro~ams: of _sp~ial_ interest to
the college commuruty and the
-· comrinuiity ·at large, To this. end, ·
·
we· ·ask'ed Special Education.
Leaders in the. community ~6.
.
assist
us
fo
making; the. students
arid the · Dutchess County area .
,· more ·· aware
of. . Special
. Education, _·. the · . facilities, the
-progress that has.been made, and._
the problems that must be face~. •
· On Monday evening, DeceII1ber.
4;
at_·
·g:oo
p,m.,
sister Nancy
Mahl
em,
Director of Special
Education at Mount St. Mary's.
Colleg~ presented
an
i~troductiori
to the · Exceptional, Child .. She
: prt,isentecl an._e~plana~ion ~of.
·· · various . types. of exceptionality _
· and -the problems that the ~x-
ceptional child faces.
A
slide
· show that depict~ the various
. probleiIJs that the ._Learning
Disabled-child faces and
a
film
m .
. · the· same. subject . were . also
jresenied. .
.. . . .. .
- . .
Sister Nancy answered a good
deal ·of· questions from the
Questions
concerning
the
the families of Exc_eption~l
teachers involved and the
Children encounter
m their
development,. of a .-Spe~ial
. everyday lives. She prese~t~
Education Program ~ere . also
· first-hand knowledge
of what 1t
1s
discussed. . . . . _:: : , : · : .
· like to be. a parent of an Ex-
. On Tuesday iljght,.:O~e~ber 5
ceptional Child. This _provided a
at 8:$0 p.m., Mr.:Frarik.Falanga,
·thought-provoking. questio~ . and
Director 9f _Special Edu~tion
~t
answer period from the a~dience.
the ' Dutchess County · Board of
. · Mrs. Rudberg also explamed the
eo·opetativc~ ·E.d,ti~ati~l!~l: S~r-
role of the· ACLp in the. co~-
vices. presented a. description of
miiriity and wha:Uhe orgaruzation
the .. various-kinds .of pr.ograms
:provides
both
socially a~ well ~s
that BOCES has
to offer
tQ
the
. educationally for the children m
vari.ous school districts:
Mf.
the program;'. .
. .. -
11
Falanga :answert'iq guest~ons
·· .Tonight, House 3 co~d1a Y
dealing wfth: the . -~iring.- of
invites the entire co~m~ty to -
teachers and what they have
to
the .
final .presentation
m
the
offer· to· them. Included:
in_
the
series: · Mr. Donald LaBarg~,
questiqµing was .. the ~utl;lfe of
· • Director of Resource Centers _m
BOCES .aiid Its role in, the Dut-
Dutchess County area will
chess Cotmty area .. _He cited
_pre~ent a tal~ on how. the E:e-
predictioris :that stated . that the
ceptional Child perceiv~s. his
Dutchess County. · population
world and· will , summarize- the
within the'i1ext·several years
will
week of prese_ntations.
grow
to
such an extent that the
.
House
3
has a two-fold p~se
expansion. :.of. the ... BOCE.S'
· ·for . presenting this Special
program_s:
~.Irl?e
in~yi~ble. . ,-
· Education Awareness Week. The
.On
We~esday mgbt,
~ -dif-
first was to expand our ~isure
ferent type.ofle~ttirei: confronted
Education Program m the
the students
in.
the Joiuige. , The
• : · Dormitories and the second was
Marist . Comm_i.mity. was .ad-
.. to provide information and to
dressed · 'by ·Mrs: Celeste Rud-
· answer questions regarding what
berg, President of the Dutchess
·. •we consider an important and
ColDlty Association for C4ildren
·,··expandingarea.
with Learnin~ Disabilities. Mrs.
By Frank Denara and·
Joe Longobardi
... more tonight on 6th· floor Oiampagnat
See
Yo.Ci
next.Scnieste~:. •
. The CIRGL~ Staff
. WISHING EVERYONE
HAPPY
NEW YEAR
, WELL
ON
THEIR_ EXAMS


































































































I
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DECEMBER
8.
1972
Thirty
Colleges To Joi·n
''Year For Action''
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
THE CIRCLE
an experiment. UYA
-
has liv'ed up
-Provide bilingual Spanish-
converted
into
one-year
to
its expectations and
I
am English instruction and
coun-
·
operating grants.
confident it will continue to grow
seling
in day-care centers, public
Director Blatchford said that
in the future."
schools and a street academy for the number of schools par-
University Year for ACTION is drop-outs, through St. Mary's
_
ticipating was much larger than
the newest citizen service
·
College, Notre Dame, Indiana. anticipated
·
because
par-
p-ogram of ACTION, which in-
-Help set up farm cooperatives ticipating schools have agreed to
eludes the Peace Corps, VISTA, for raising pigs and processing absorb
·
a higher percentage of
Foster Grandparent Program, and marketing meat, through the administrative costs. Iri
·addition,
Active Corps of Executives University of Southwestern some costs will be borne by local
<ACE), Retired Senior Volunteer wllisiana'.
-
governments, such as the cities of
Program
<RSVP)
and Service
Additionally,
46
students from
New York and Fresno,
Calif.
·
Corps of Retired Executives nine New York City colleges and
Blatchford estimated' that in
<SCORE>.
.
Princeton University will par-
·
accordance
.
"".itµ
·
.
existing
Through UYA, universities
.
.
ticipate
_as
a
_consortium
with programs,· approximately
.
40
help com bat local . poverty New YC?rk's health depaz:tment in percent of the
UY A
·
yol~teers
_
p-oblems by placing students in prov1dmg health te~tmg and · would
·
be members of minority
fulltime, year-round volunteer treatmen~ to 140,<J:<>0 high school
groups
·
,: more· than
.
· half would
servi'ce. While involved in UYA
.
students
.
m
the city, under the have previous
.
v
·
9
_
lilnteer
.
ex-
projects, students receive
·
full city's Urban ~rps' Mobilization pei:ie11ce
'
and
·
_
that the average
academic credit and a modest for Adolescent
·
Student Health
age would
be
aboye 23:
·
..
.
living allowance.
irograi:n:
. . .
_.
.
.
"The
·
number of universities
The new programs include
1:'our of the schools, ~innesota,
applying· t«q,articipate_ and the
plans to provide the following
Kam:~,
Hampton ~nstitute. and success
·
ofthe program in the
assistance:
·
Virgirua Polytechnical Institute first year leads us to believe that
-Provide treatment through
~ill
pl~ce arch!tecime students
the idealism among students and
family clinics in Arizona for m proJects to improve housing
their imiversities
~
a
·
real concern
double the number of sick and provide long-range planning
for their· commuriities
·
- is
·
very
children
from
low-income
,
for low_-iilcome· communities,
much alive," Blatchfor~ said.
families, through
•Glendale
under a p_rogram ~eveloped by
C.ommunity Collige.
.
.
th~
.
Amenc~ InstI~ut~ of Ar-
.
-Teach
English to 500
Filipino
ch1tec~. H~p~on Institute and
PAGEJ
Shaping The
Shapeless Into
Community
A storm had come up. The men were in the boat, facing death. And
Christ was asleep, not only asleep but he had made himself com-
·
fortable with his head on a cushion.
The apostles knew that
God,
their God, their master their teacher
stood for harmony, for peace, for salvation, for life, and there he w~
right in the middle of the storm which spelt death, disharmony and
horror; it could not
_
be
God, because God's p-esence could not be in
harmony with what was going on.
They forgot that'
God
is
the Lord
of
the storm just as he is Lord of the
stillness, the serenity and the harmony of things. They turned to him
who should be their salvatim and
~w
him completely indifferent,
asleep, at rest.
. This is what we accuse
God
of continuously. We never stop accusing
him of that. We are fighting against death; anguish disrupts our lives;
fear makes them unbearable; death is abroad, suffering
is
killing
us
and
God
is not only there, indifferent, but
,
in perfect comfort because
he is beyond reach in these things. "For all you care we are dead "
the apostles said to Christ.
·
.
_ .
.
'
'
.
Then Christ said "Oh, yoti of little faith!" and turned to the storm
~d commande~ it
t!)
be
still, projecting, as it were, his own serenity,
h!sown peace, his own stillness, his own harmony
oo
all things around
him
·
•.
·
·
The apostles had
:
allowed the stor~ n~t only to rage around them,
~ut to enter into them;_ the,storm had become an internal experience;
1t had conquered. In Christ,
·
it remains outside of himself· it is
conquered.
He
·
qas overcome the w_orld: he can project on
'it
the
meas~ement, t)'lecategories
c;if
eternity, stability, serenity, salvation,
security.
· ·
In ~he face of storms,
_all
of
us
c~ say '.'it may happen, it will hap-
pen, 1t has happened, and yet because_
I
llave lost all human hope,
I
stand firm and
·
unshaken on
_
divine hope."
This is a summary of'a chapter of
a
new book: "God and Man" bv
Archbishop Anthony Bloom, a Greek Qr.thodox priest. I wanted
to
share it with you.
.
·
..
· ·
_ ·
.
immigrants in Honolulu, through VPI will part1C1pat~ as a team.
the University of Hawaii.
-
If
the
planning
phase , - - ~ ~ ~ - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ; _ ,
..
-Provide personal counseling
to
demonstrates
that
each
T •
Sh
t
D
double the number
-of
parolees university's program c~n make
.
Illl.e
ee s
ue
and probationers than is now m~as':lfable and endurmg con-
possible, through the University tribubons to the welfare of poor
F
D
p
of Montana.
people, planning grants will
'be
.
0
r
.
ec. a
yro
II
All
students are reminded that
study
program should adhere
·
to
their
final time sheets for the
the
same schedule.
·
,
·
semester must be approved and
Any student working after-
submitted to Mr. Gerald Kelly, December 12, wishing to
be
paid
Chess
Tourney
College CounciJ
Meeting
Financial Aid Office. no later in the
'72
calendar year, must
than December 13, i972, 12:00 have their approved time she
_
ets
During the weeks of November
noon.
into Mr. Gerald Kelly's offic~ by
Z7
thru ~amiary 19, the College
Mr. Casey requested that the
2· All sub-committees should
Payro1l
checks
will
be December 27. Payroll checks will
·
Union Board <C.U
.
B
.
> is spon-
Council Sub-Committees send the appoint a recording secretary to
distributed on Friday, December be distributed on December
29
for
soring a college-wide Chess
minutes of their meetings
to
all providesummariesandminutes.
J5.after12:00noonintimeforthe the balance of the year. Other-
Tournament. The
6
semi-finaliSl
Council members.
President Foy gave a report to
Christmas holiday. Students \\ise, hours will be calculated
from the resident halls and
Fred Lambert, Academic the College Council which touche-
working under college work- with the January payroll.
Com mu tor Union have been
_viability, emphasized the need to don two main areas:
competing among each other in
establish criteria and priorities
1.
Budget - The deficit in the
matches that consist of three
for new educational directions at 1972-73 budgethas been narroweq
---_-A==---=1::=-~-c~~--~~~~-~-~~-------J
games. best two out of three
Marist. and to locate and to approximately $3,000. The
ote
·
s
winning the match.
stimulate
.
areas of academic 1973-74 budget is in the final



Marist CoJlege will
be
sending
leadership on
·
campus. The stages of preparation.
.
the two finalists as delegates to
Committee
will
continue its
2. Planning - President Foy
I.
The committee was informed that Dr. Balch had agreed
to
in-
the
1973
Association of College
research
.
with the appropriate indicated a model for planning
t·g t
f,
A
p
C
th
Co t· .
Ed

Pr
Unions International <ACU-l);
.
which included fom key factors:
ves
I
a e or ·
· ·•
e
new
n mwng
uca JOn
ogram at Iona
the tournament is being held at
ag~~~~~
Tegan, Budget, stated a. students;
·
b.
programs; c.
Cof~~
Chairman offered some suggestions concerning the types of
Albany state during the weekend
that the Co ..... mi·ttee had not been facilities; d. personnel.
th t
uld b
ff
d t .
.
h.gh
h
1
of February
8
whereby all ex•
.,,
.
courses
a co
e o ere
o mcommg 1
sc
oo ~niors if an
-11
be
able to deal with the 1973-74
Any planning muSt take into early
·
admission type program were to be established.
penses wi
subsidized
by
th
E
budget because l
·t
1
·s still 1·
_
n- accountthe interrelationships
3 M
D .d Fl

t
f Ad . .
ted
d
College Union Board.
·
.
r. av1
ynn, 1rec or o
m1ss1ons, presen
some i east<,
h f
II
COmplete. At
.
present the Com- between these four factors.
A
p C
.bl
th
d
f
ch
. h
T e o owing six students are
. . . on poss1 e new programs, e nee or
anges wit in existing
mittee is reviewing the 1972_73
The two immediate areas of
th

.
t d .,. h
be
.
ki
d
participants in the Marist Chess
budget.
concern are:
I.
admissions;
2_
programs, e ques 10ns prospectives u en..,, ave
en as ng, an
To·urnament:
Joe
Abys, Rich
the whole area of recruitment. It was pointed out that we don't haye
Ch
Fred Eberlein, Student Life Capital Fund Drive.
th t
all
ttr
ed
th
.
: Brwnmett,
arlie McKay, Rich
The categories for longer range programs
a gener
Y
a act co s,
at prospective applicants
Kohrumel, Don Jones and Phil
Styles, said that the Committee planning include: a. computer often ask about such areas as elementary and special education,
Walotsky; the Chairman is Kathy
has decided to act as a coor- facilities; b. library; c. ad- . communications, and sociology, that high school students presently
Miller.
_
dinating agency for the. various
are more career conscious, that the State Universities had been quite
·
groups On Campus Whl.ch deal missions; d. facilities; e. long -
1

.
t
b t
d
11
dth.
Progressive results of the
se ec 1ve
m
pas years u were un er-enro e
1s year.
Ch
T
II
b
directly
WI
.th student li"fe.
range planning;
f.-
programs.
Ad"
. d
1
d
th
1

h.
fA
PC
t th A d
.
ess ournamcnt wi
e posted
·
1scuss1on eve ope on ere a 10ns 1p
o
.
. .
o e ca Cffilc
·
th
c
c
G
11
Pat McNamara, Decision
A general diseussion followed Viability Committee of the C.o1lege Council and also, to the Chairmen's
~n_
e am pus
enter'
a ery
Making and Accountability, the report.
Council.
u,unge.
stated that the Committee has
The meeting was adjourned at -
developed an outline, of the
4 :
55 p.m
·
decision making process
at ___ .;;.. _ _ _
M
____
_
______
s
_____
_
---------s---------,--------------.....
.
::~~~n~~
1
~!eeo:~~tt~~~:

ar1st
_
tudents
·To
e
,
nd Te
egram
To
seen
as
having
three
possibilities:
.
I.
Communication _ making
s
··
th
-
U .
.
t
~:~~~he
schema for-decision
.
•.
'
-
:
·-
:
-
~:
._
9
.
Y..
-
_: _
_
-i
ern
-
_
·
.
-
~-~
:
vers,
__
y
2. Investigation - continuing to
__ ..
__
__
,
.. _
. __
.
__
.
...
__
.
_
. .
.
.
.
analyze
_the
decision making
.. - : : ·:
:
·
·
.
processes.
3. Investigate the College
C.ouncil's relationships to the
other agencies on campus.
Mr. Casey made a number of
announcements:
1.
All College Council members
who are not presently serving on
committeesand who wish to do so
.
should see any member of the
Steering Committee.
The following is
a
draft of a
We, members of the student body
of the true facts in this matter
telegram a ~oup· of concerned
of Marist College, deplore the
.
·
by a federal investigative team
students will .send
.
to the
murder .of two students at -
and that
·
charg~ be brought
Governor of Louisiana
·
and the
.
. Southern University
:
and the
-
-
_
· ·
against
·
those
:
guilty of the
administration
·
of
.
Southern
'
·
:
closing of the campus to
·
·murders.
Students can no
University.
If
you wish to
be
a· co-
.
:
students. We feel.these actions
.
·
longer tolerate the murder of
sender
-
of this
'
telegram, s1mply
·
are typical of. r:acism in our
their peers without expressing
sign below and
·
mail
.
·
the
..
s~ciety : an!'.f
.
of:-malignant
their outrage.
"telegram" to Chropp
.
agriat;Box
outside
-
intervention.
We
.
Signed - - - - - - - - -
840, by Monday, pe~einber nth.
-- ·
-
demand-an
·
imme'diitte report
.
~
~

,
.
.
.
.
-
~
.
~
.
.
.
One must feel strongly about
the rights of free expression and
speech on a college campus and
the right of students to have a
voice in their future. Take a
minute to mail this to the Student
Government mailbox Box C-840.













































































































·

PAGE4
THECIRCLE
DECEMBER 8, 1972
MOD WORKSHOP
Play Review
"Everyman"
by
Stuart Gross
Davis
.
Sees
Drama As
alcoholism, or even cigarette
smoking.
If
the predictions are
accurate, sooner or later yoti
will
come in contact with some
aspect
of ''behavior mod" as its
use
becomes more and more
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
highlighting the development of
the
behavioral
school
of
psychology
·
and forecasth!g its
future direction. Dr. Brown and
Dr
.
Presbie have conducted
several seminars
·
on Behavior
Mod and are guaranteed
to
pre~ent an enlightening and
dynamic program
.
But Not Just Everyman ...
widespread. Behavior mod isn't
... a play written by Marist College student Bill Davis and directed
~1.1•r· ..
o
__ .
·
r
_
·
_
.
.
O
·
_
.
l~
without
strong
opponents,
by students Brian Doyle and Richard Checcia, transcended the
1ri,

1
J
h>wever, and its ethical
im-
humble surroundings of the Poughkeepsie Community
_
Center,
-
Jiications must be considered by
November
30,
December
1
and
2.
_
.
·
_
~I
· ·
:
·
.
'.
'
us
all. Are we moving toward a
"Everyman," a morality play that deals
(as
all morality plays do)
1r.1J0•9l
·
co
··
de
society where each individual is
with the forces of ~od and evil in men's lives, centralizes arotmd Matt

U
conditioned through behavior
and his 'differentness.• (Searching, Questioning, pacifism and non-
mod
to
play an appropriate·· and
competitivism) - the transformation of Matt from soft and easy to
perhaps unthinking •• role in the
hard and callous; from son to father and relations encountered in his
e1·11 Dav1·s
_
:
total society? Or is behavior mod
life.
offe_ring real and valuable
·
The compression and fusion of time is deftly done to show Matt's
solutioi;:ts to persistent social
growth and aging. There are three scenes that stood apart from an
problems
.
already excellent and tightly directed play. They were done well
·
Tonight at
8
:
00
p
.
m. in the
enough to add new dimensions, and to mention
.
·
bf
l(Slin Laffin
theater,
the .
.
Psychology
The opening scene begins with Matt's father (Paul Tesoro) and
"My purpose in writing is to
Department is sponsoring a
Mother (Rose Marie Emery) discussing his 'differentness.' The restructure the moral code of this
workshop entitled "Behavior
histrionics of Rose Emery was an accomplished acting job
.
Patil country," says Bill Davis, Junior
Mod: Yesterday,
.
Today, and
T
' t
h ·
·
def
"
"tel
·
·
·
fr
drinki" g to
Tomorrow!" Drs. Patil L. Brown
esoro s s age mec amcs were
101 y impressive om
n
English major. Bill.is the author
reading a paper, not a movement was out of place.
of ..... but not just everyman,,,
.
~nd Robert J. Presbie of SUNY,
A scene between Matt as a teenager <Don Edgecomb) and Mrs.
J.
B
1
1
-
- .
1
College at New Palti will present
<Kathy McCarty), was excellently portrayed. Mrs. J, a middle aged
According to
i 1
• ..
a
_
l evi
this multimedia seminar (with
.fi
1
ho
stems from self-hatred
.
It
is the
films
and demonstrati
_
ons)
·
Many students are helping to
.
sponsor the program and psych
students
have
submitted
questions and sugge~tions
_to
the
speakers. Member colleges of the
Associated Colleges of the Mid-
Hudson Area have been invited to
attend the workshop and the
Psychology Department also -
encourages the participation
of
non-psychology students.
If
you've never heard of
behavior mod, all the more
reason why you shotild come and
learn about i
_
t .. ILyou know what
·
we're talkirig about, you'll know
why you shotild be there.
woman
,
was finely done; except orate ep
ne
conversation.
tiltimate sin."
,
Bill sees this
-
-
The last scene to be mentioned ended in spontaneous applause for country as generating self-hatred , - - - - - - - - - - - , - ~ - - - - , - - - - - -
-
-'-
-
- . , . - - - ~
Pat the workingman (Paul Tesoro). Without a doubt, the scene since '
_
'its dependence on func
~
became an avenue to further show the audience of his talents.
An
tionalisin stifles humanism.
admirable performance by Bob Coffin as the other working man gave Through
.
the capitalistic code,
depth to •
~
.~ scene
.
·
·
·
th
·
-
t· s
·
and
LEGAL ASS'T
Nancy Thomas showed acting versatility in the different roles she
mgs,
corpora ion •
appeared in
.
Playwright Bill Davis as the older Matt, seemed at home buildings have priority over
_
in
:
only 3 months
with lines.
people. Tenderness is viewed as
·
·
an exclusively female
.
quality,
College graduates
.
and other qualified persons !m
a
le and femalel-our in-
Lighting by John DeMastrie was simple but effective. Suffice to say
·
detr1·mental to
·
the s
·
trength of the
t
t
I II
t
·
.
.
I
l ·11 t .
o to become a legal assistant
that the
.
totalentourageofthisEverymanplayshotildbelaudedfor
:
country.''
.
.
srucors a
_
prac
_
rsmg
._
awyers w,
ram Yu
.
,
··
to. perform
i
paralegal
.
services under a lawyer's
.
direction and supervision (but
their credible performances. The play was a composite of previous
Bill sees his new play as !'a
not as a legal secretary,..-in fact, you too
will
use the services of a legal
and new scenes was synchronized to express
its
universal theme
:
~ext
realistic ··example of how self-
secretary). Attend classes days or evenings for only 3 months
.
Housing ac-
time, See
It
.
·
..
hatr
.
ed 1.s made,
·
even in the
.
name
commodations are available at. an extra charge.
.
.
.
·
·
We will teach you practical, "how to" information and techniques on COR-
of love. Hopefully,
the
audience
PORATIONS • SECURITIES REGULATION .. LEGAL AND NON
-
LEGAL RESEARCH •
will
be repelled by the demon-
DOMESTIC
.
RELATIONS • LITIGATION' AND TRIALS • MERGERS AND
.
ACOUISI•
WHO'S WHO CONTINUED
FROMPA9E 1
President, and
'
the
-
Commuter
Union President.
.--
.
N•
.
-
-
-•
__

.
__
-
-d
·
-

·.

_

..
-d•
_.
_
- - •
stration and respon~ wit~ ac-
.
.
.TIONS
~
TRUSTS AND
.
ESTATES •
·
REAL ESTATE • PUBLIC
.
AND PRIVATE
-
e e
.
·
··
e
:
.
c~pting the need for tenderness.
. .
FINANCING • and much, much more
.
,
.. Drama itself is a mirror of the

Ent~;
.
a new and exciting field
_
and become involved
moral code .
.
Without moral
.

.
Do interesting research, analysing
;
·
discussing and writing
decision there would be no

Earn a high salary
·
The total number of students
selected from Marist is twenty-
two and they are: qeorge
_
Byr
e
nes, Don W. · · Catlow;'
·
Fraiik
'
At the end of January, there
will be an editorial turnover of
the Circle .
.
New
·
staff members
~
-
-~
.
ve
.
~d
,
ed t9 fill., yarjOlJS rQle,s
.
~
.
Any
:
member of· the college
t
com
·
munity
whti
woulcf like to
become
·
part of the staff is asked
to drop an
·
index card
·
with their
name on it into the campus mail
and the area that they would like
h
.
·

Accept responsibility
drama." Bill hopes to ac ieve a

Perfarm and be treated as a paralegal specialist
new realm of drama
,
where

Associate with lawyers and their
_
clients
.
:!w'rit~r, ... ~ire<;tOJ-'.S,
;,
,
c!D
.
g.
.
a~tOfS ". ,,
e,
lncre
_
a
_
s,. your knowledge ·and potential
would . be
.
sensitive
..
to_ one
.
.

Become a skilled cii,d
:
valuable'•part_:_of
'
the
growing
.
legal industry
·
Denara,
.
Rayiriond:."Frolitairi
;
Stuart
,
Gross, Henry· Hammer,
Jr.
,
Catherine M. Hart, Robert
Jammal, Larry Lasko, Patrick
McNamara
,
Celeste Maneri, Ian
Masterson, Bern~d Mtilligan
;

·
Jane Pancheri,
·.
John
·
Petraglia,
Richard Pulice, Thomas Rabbitt,
John Redmond. Vito W. Russo,
Jack Simeone, and Michael
'
another;"
This
-
co'ni!ep
t" '
is
·
·
op-, . '
,
,
CLASSES ARE NOW FORMING: APPLY FOR ADMISSION RIGHT AWAY.
po
_
~ed
·
to the
"
master-slave
i
:
--
- ·---

·
·
·
··
·

· .
- -
-
I
relationship of diree:tor dictating
Call or write
i
PARALEGAL INSTITUTE,
Dept.
5D
I
to the actor" which
Bill
sees
for
FREE
I 132 Nassau Street, New York, N
.
Y
.
10038
fowoi-k in
.
_
·
·
·
prevalent in other forms of
8 0 0
KL ET
1
··
~
-
1
drama
.
According to Bill,
_
the
_
l
Name
-
.
.
..
___
.
-
·-
...
.
_
__
Phone
___
_
j
Editor, The Circle
Box C
.
8.57
.. good interaction of
,
personel has
NY
·
<
212
>
i
dd
A
I
resulted in beneficial script
964-4705
I
A
ress
-
- -
--
·:·
-
-
· - -
·
-
-
· -
pt - -
1
changes."
©1972 by Parol
e
g
,,
I ln
~
tltui-
'.
City
.
·
__
_
.
.
_______
State
.
..
.
___
_
Zip - - -
I
'
,
______
.
·
-
·
-
·
----------1
Ward
:
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..
Faculty Member Will Publish
Book
Robert
D.
Casper.
little comfort can be placed
was singing with the
Paltz, is currently working life,
.
Gasper says his ats loving as we live
,
·
Lecturer in
.
English at
.
inthefuture,orinthepast,
_
Gborus at
.
the Chattagua
Marist College, has
_
had a
_
:
either.for tha
_
t matter. Life
Perpertory Theater
.
Huhen
collection of his
.
poetry
-
is
-
.
more actionary than
asked him if he were in-
accepted by Atheneum
·
reactionary.''
.
terested in studying vofoe.
Publishing
Co.
The
.
Casperis also concerned
.
The result was a full
collection
is
entitled
about
.
the masks people
·
scholarship to the school.
·
·
Butterfly
Wings
and
wear in life, about
·
the

.
While travelling with the
·
.
·
.
Thoughts and Things, am;I
-
facades they are obliged to
Winged
.
Victory Chorus,

on
another book, Cori
0
tifode about life can be
And living is the truth
fessions of a Brat
;
which illustrated in the following which love would give.
will
be
·
about his country
·
couplet:
·
boyhood. Recalling his past
For truth
·
is found
_
in
is schedtiled for release
assume ... Perhaps there is
Casper met and
.
performed
·
sometime in
1973.
The
no
,
:
such thing as a true
with many entertainment
_
poetry is of three styles;
identity
,-
that is,
.
it is
;
not
-
personalities, among them
sonnets
;
a very tightly-
really possible to ex-
Lenny Bruce (''
.
.. Lenny
structured syllabic
.
_verse
-.
perience a
·
person
'
s total
was far ahead of his time ...
that is influenced by haiku;
identity in one encounter
.
he tried to show that
free verse
.
The uncountable masks we
.
society wears masks to
Casper, who has had
ALL wear are part of
.
~n
-
:
protect itself.,.''.).and Rod
poems published in the
an:,orphic entity
-
an entity
McKuen <".:
;
Rod explores
·
Ciminaron Review, the
which manifests itself in
.
alienation ... one of the
Arlington Quarterly and
our interaction with every
greatest
individual
the Btill State University
second of our experience of
problemf- in the 20th
Forum, and ·who received
living.''
century .
.
.'') ·
first
prize from
the
Casper
describes
Casper's family life
:
is
National Poetry Press for
teaching as "biting into a
very important to him
.
He
one of his poems, says that
piece of eternity
.
The class
lives with his wife Joni and
he is influenced "by nature
isonlyalaunchingpad-the
his
.
children
_
Avery
_
and
.
~9
the
_
philosophy that
important thing is to teach
John
·
in Highland, which
grows out of nature
.
" He
students to continue to
has
-
been the
,
--
teacher's
,;ays, "I had a country
teach themselves.
·
Being
horrie
·
all
-
or his
·
me
:
·
H
e
.
childhood, and many of my
around young people keeps
snares such
·
activities as
·
poems hearken back to a
your spiritual age at about
rock
and bottle collecting,
.
farm boy's dreams."
·
18.'
.
'
·
hiking and scouts with his
·
·
Casper . says
his
.
A music majQr in high
children. Mainly
·
·
because
.
memories of his childhood,
school, Casper was the
of his wife and children,
-
indeed,allofhis memories,
.
conductor of the band and
.
Casper
·
says th~ughtftilly,
are "involuntary,
.
evoked
·
·
chorus
.
. H~!?angand playe
:
d
.
..
I
_
f fwereto
·
die
_
today, J'.d
by events; sensations
.
and . piano in a honky~tonk band
·
die
:
perfectly happy."
.
·
relationships that
-
take
when
.
he was

inhis early
:
casperhasnotgiven up
·
place now, Every part of
-
teens
,
Formerly
·
a member
.
music entirely.
In
addition
:
our existence that has been
·
of
.
·
_
the Winged
-
Victory
:
.
to
writing and teaching, ~e
. .
.

.
is dead,
<
and
:
"
cannot be
.
Chorus,
Casper
·
was
plays evening
-
piano at the
·. ,

altered by us. Only.~ now
,
''discover€ld'
:
~
by
·
Juilius
Camelot
Inn
.

.
-
is alive. 'Seize the ~y• is
·
Huhen
:
:
of
; -
the
·
Eastman
:
Tliewriter,agraduateof.
·
my motto! forit!Strue
.
tha~
-
-
·
School of Mus~c-
·
when,
·
he
,
· ·
the~tate.UniversityatNew
.
.
'
'
.
.
'
·
--
·











































































DECEMBER 8, 1972
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
Circle· Editorials
Freshman Elections
Open
Forum
Every few years a class of
freshmen comes along and
pledges to be concerned students,
to care about their class and the
way they want it run. This year's
freshman class does not fall into
this category.
pure apathy on. the part of the',
students.
Despite the inactivity of your
fellow freshmen (and we
do not
mean all), we would like to offer
our congratulations to the four
winners, andhope that they could
be the force to unite the class that
will someday determine many of
the policies of this college. My
condolence to the losers, we
remind you that many students
are needed to become involved in
many other activities including .
freshman representatives to the
student government.
Birth Control Clinic
There is actually no excuse for
a freshman class of 466 students
to only place
1s1 ·
votes in their
elections. The candidates all well
publicized themselves on every
wall and in every corner of the
campus, there is no way that the
election could have been missed.
We attribute this reluctance to -
Why
Football?
All of a sudden I'm hearing
women on campus saying that we
need a clinic where we can go to
get birth control information.
And I say, why? And they tell me
about all the women who are
having abortions because they
were having· sex without using
adequate
contraceptive
measures. And I say, well, if a
woman is in a position where she
needs a birth control device, then
why doesn't she go
to
a doctor?
And they say, it's too expensive.
· . And I say, abortion is expensive.
And
if
a private doctor really is
The Marist fans did not know what the feeling of defeat was
Dear Editors,
too
expensive, they can go to· the
Planned Parenthood Clinic. And
they say, you have to wait two
weeks for your appointment date
to come up. And I say, that's not
true. I checked, and you only
have to wait for three and a half
weeks, which is about par to see
any doctor, private or public. So
then they say, many women on
campus are too embarrassed to
go to a doctor and talk about sex.
And I say, a campus clinic won't
'help them
If
they're that uptight -
about what they're doing, then
they certainly won't go to_ a clinic
where their mere presence
will
advertise their activities to the·
campus at large.
So they say, -
most doctors won't prescribe
birth control to unmarried
women. And frankly, I say
bullshit. There are doctors
hanging around who still cling to
the old morality, but they are
easily a voided.
So then they say, -
you just don't understand. And I -
say right.
Morna Moore
like.
It
was the very first time in more than a year that the
I would like to take this op-
Vikings appeared. in the losing colwnn. But did we really lose?
portunity
to
thank several people -
1
W-"
mw::wm::
¥1?713$m:~rnz~~::W~%',s"W.rmmmmmdl:1
Every year at Marist, a group
of
some forty-¢d young men
who have helped make this years
ii.:=
·
·
-
I ·
leave work a few days early in August and venture up to
. CUB Social _Committee events a
W
l,
Poughkeepsie where they take part in what is known as pre-
success.
.
~.I.~.
Michael _Peyton
j
season training. The hot August days are usually well over 85
First I would like to thank Jim ..,
==-=
degrees, and you can add onten more degrees sine~ it ooes ~e
Ladota,
of
Saga,
whose
m
t.;~:
__
l.y~:~:_l:
__ .::
place on.an open field. The drainage on that field
lS
so terrible
assistance with the Nights in the
I
M .
t'
F
t
e ''"
that
if
it did rain, the field would remain wet for days. If-you've
Rat, is greatly appreciated.
1
also
!«.~,:
__ ,~.--.
.
a
r.1.S.-.
s _
.u
U r
;::;::
never done it before, try running around on a hot, muddy field.
thank Lenny Travaglione
for
his :.:;:,
t~
They usually have two sessions a day in the early part of the
technical assistance · throughout
@· ·
fil
season, so there really isn't much else for a footb~ll player to be
the semester.
!
i;:::
thinking about his first few days back at Manst. A football
At this time I will thank the
~
A few weeks ago there was a great deal of talk aboutthe future
i
player at Marist must also pay the football club $40.00 to pl~y ·
members of the social committee
fil
of dorms and dorm residents. Too many resident students were
ft
This $40.00 entitles the player to&> many benefits.
It
affords
him
.
for there valuable assistance and
I
deciding to live off campus. The result would be the possibiHty of
¢
the. opportun~ty to receive ~orrie ''excE:1lent" sec,o_nd-hand
·
. hard work. Thi~ c~tjim_, ,consisy,_ ;.
,closing 'one _of the dorms.- and the Sl,lggestion ;of_ contrac.ting __
--.m ,
eqwpment which probably won t·fib A•Manst playe~ rmght also~· · of Kathy Miller, Jack Schofield, -
students
fo
live .. ori· carripus:·
In
·reviewing ·the' situation;· the ·
t~ ·
findoutthatallof his expenses aren'~ necessai;!ly pa1~ for by the
Nancy Price, Sue Peterman,.
problem does not lie with the dorms themselves but with the
~
club. He might !ind out that ~hen gomg to an 3:way game, for
Dennis Odgen, Scott Rigrod,
financial, academic and administrative policies of Marist
I
example, Providence, he might have to pay his expenses and
Karen Kennedy, Eileen Car-.
College.
--,.,
possibly have to !in1 a way t~ and
~o~
~e gam~. yet, every
mody, Cindy Van Conas, Laura
Financially speaking, the number of reasons in favor of off
year you will fina enough dedicated 1!1~v1duals willmg to-play
McCrave, Mike Fornaci, Jean
I
campus living is its costs. At present, dorm residents are paying · .
football, under these ridiculous con~hons. . . .
.
Berkery and John Mulligan.
~
·-
$600. a semester for a room of double occupancy and sharing
ffi
Before I continue on further relatmg what it _is li~e bemg a
Sincerely yours, .
floor facilities with fifty other people. Off campus residents are
!
football player at Marist, perhaps I should explam a httle about
Eric
Yergan
ij paying in the range of $350 to $400 per semester (based on a four
I
playing football at rival Westchester Community College. To
CUB social committee chairman
j
month period) for room and board. Living facilities of much
1·':
begin with, the football club at Westchester receives a "mere
ll
betterqualityareonlysharedbyfourorfivepeople, including in
-
stipend" of thirty-eight thOUS!-1Jld dollars from the SjudE:nt
- - - - -
some cases cablevision. Off campus residents are also not
:
Government. Yes, that figure 1s correct -
$38,000!
The MarISt
subject to the $50 room damage fee and the noise discomforts of
$.
football club received $4,000 from its Student Government, along
s
A G A
dorm life,
.
ill
with the fine facilities and joys mentioned previously that are so
·
Academics are plays a role in the future of dorms.
If
Manst
i
existent at Marist. · Why would anyone in their right mind play



·

can't offer quality education at a half way decent level then why
fil
football at Marist? Also, how did these "crazy guys" who play
bother to apply or enroll? Dr. Michelson's article contained a
:::::,
football at Marist come within two yards of being the national
~Ile~~~
Students of Marist
'
few good points on the releva_ncy of the present cu~ricul~. But
_j _
club champion?
·
During exam week, Decemberl
~- · more important than updatmg the present curriculum 1s the
,I
Seton Hall was . a good football team, but not as good as
expansion of it in or~er to obta_in better quality. Where ar_e the
i ·
Westchester Community College. On_ September 30, 1972, the
12th - 15th Tues.
"·Fri.,·
between
elementary and special education courses that were promised?
ii •
th be

lub
~
tb 11
w
t
the hours of 9 p.m. - 1.a.m. the -
.


1
?
A d h ·
,.~
Vikings defeated odnbee of Se sHat t
11
eam~ c ti
1
~
ada -
1
es -
Campus Center will maintain a •.. . Why isn't there a maJhaor _progra!ll m socio og;.
n w y 1s
ti
chester. If that ha
en eton
on
par c ar
Y,
am ,· quiet a.tinosphere for studmng.
Marist so unique in not
vmg a mmors program.
1
.. •·
certain that M arist would have won. 'lhe reason why Marist lost
., •
Most of the above questions are financially doomed at present
be
1 f 1 •
b ·
Coffee,. donuts, and cookies will
~
,

d
£
M • t
1
to a strong Seton Hall ~earn on Novem r 25,
ee ,
lS
an .o vious -. _
be
served-in. the Gallery Lounge
-due
fo
administrative red tape. But m or er or aris to reso ve · . ,
one. I believe that. Marist played a very tough first half of a
<compliments of Saga Food
the residents situation_. Thi::; l;ails for a_n administrative cha~ge
I
season. The second half, .or last four games (one which was
Service>.
in the prospect of Ma~1~~ as a small private coll~e. 0>?1petmg
ill
rained out), did not excite me in the least.
In
the_ beginning; the
. against the better facilities and low cost state uruvers1bes, both
·
Vikings began by-playing very g~d.football agains~ a strong
C.U.B.
the administration and studentis must soon decide on Marist's
opposition, and like most good teams,
it
rose to a certam apex as
.
F.
·r· ·.·om
survival.
a team. Again, I feel that this peak we~t on a oo~ward t1:end as
.
.,{.@~"'-':%-:$:WM'~W:Z-mmm.
the quality of opponents did not ~ntinue durmg
th~
last four
weeks of the season.
It must be pomted·out that playmg su~ a ·
.
''weak" second-half is by no means the fault of the Club, smce
.
p
_
·e t·e·
··r
the scheduling is done almost a year in advance.
·
·
The question of football on this campus is one which is being
· debated by many students. I respect the people on campus who
p
I
·
·
feel that football should be abolished, because they do have the
.
.
.
e
S S
right to express their opinion and should have the freedom to
do
this without physical confrontations .. I just feel that by ex-
plaining all questions concerning football, one cannot say that
tlie people who are involved in football are not truly dedicated.to
football. In looking at society, and all the problems that lie
. therein, I'm not sure that we can criticize the sport offootball.
J. Keegan
Sports Editor
~
THE CIRCLE_ -
EDWARD O'CONNELt
STUART GROSS
ANNE TRABULSI
FRED EBERLEIN
JIM KEEGAN
RICHARD BRUMMETT
.
......
...
-
'
CO-EDITOR
CO-:-EDITOR
· FEATURE EDITOR
/JEWS EDITOR.
,,
SPORTS E[)ITOR.
PHOTOGR~PHY.
To the Class of '76,
I would like at this time to
thank you for electing me and the
other members of our class to
office: We will work hard to
accomplish everything we as a
class want.
·
I hope that those who were
quite capable
yet
unsµccessful in
their bid for office will.still play a
role in our class government.
Most importantly, I appeal
to
you
to help make the. Class of '76 an
active and'.involved part of this
campus.
Thank you,
.
Peter Pless
Class of '76 President
.
",
~-
-
'
l - . -_.-·:-·: .
..
,,.,.,.::
.
.,
'

..
·
·
~
.
Suggestion
Box
There is now a suggestion box
located in the Donnelly Hall
Lounge. The Commuter Union
would
like
to
hear
any
suggestions, complaints, or any -
comments that any member of
the Marist community might
have
about
Marist.
All
correspondence, must be signed
in order to be considered for
evaluation.
Sincerely yours,
Commuter Union Office
473-1099
Box
C-860
From
Kathie
Pugh
I would like to thank the
students, faculty and ad-
ministration for their con-
dolences offered me at the
passing of my/father the late Mr.
James Edward Outlaw, who died
of Uremia, at the age of 53, on
-Sunday, October 22. 1972, in
Windsor M
.
emorial Hospital,
Windsor, North Carolina.
Special thanks to the Black
Students Union who sent a beaut-
iful wreath.
·
.· KatieJ~ugh
·i
....



























































































I.,.
.
(
PAGE6
TIIECIRCLE
DECEMBER 8, 1972
Psych
GrCJd
Program
Subj~ct ivity
Stuart N. Gross
Moving
Well
The Graduate Program in undertake a detailed study of why people ~an or cannot get
SIMPLY AL LITERATION
Psychology at Marist College, community Health, Welfare and along. ~ere 1s a very re~ need
·
·ts
r
t
·
·
ti
Education Services.
for social research m an
now~,. irs year,ismnova_ ve
Allof the students
.
must take organization as large as IBM,
both m its purpose and operation.
to
f th Model
City
N "gh
ch
·
el
rel
tionsh.
The program is designed not only
urs
O
e
.
ei . •
su ~s m personn
a
1
JlS
t
·
t d t
1
. d borhood. Much of the testing m and
job
placements. There are
0
kgive s
':1
en s
a
S?
1
the program is taking place with
lSOpsychologists in IBM already,
ba_c ~round m psychological Day-Care center children, older
but most are in human
prmc!ples and theor
_
y as well as children who have
been
in-
.
engineering. They are concerned
prov\de the~ "".1th use~ul, stitutionalized, adolescent
drug
with the man-machine interface,
comp ex and •~entifia~le skills, addicts, the unemployed (and
that is, they try to reduce the
but also has as its ~ic concern underemployed> and the aged
lrustration level of
the
men who
very real community problems.
.
. '
·
.
Fascinating facts formulating fallible forms;
Falling faster futily.
Space serenely secret, suspended successfully; sacrosanct,
stable and secure.
·
Colors climbing clinging; choosing e:oral cl~ters;
Copying contentment cautiously.
Distrustful deceit, delightfully dangerous;
desperately defeatable.
Not now, not no, now not, now
no;
No
now, no mt.
Marisfs Graduate Psychology
Dr.
Daniel Kirk, ~ofessor of
us~ and operate _the machin_es
.
Program
is
part of the college's Psychology and Chairman of the
In_the production of t~aching
NS
F THE MIND
step-up in community orien-
·
De~rtment o~ Psychology at -
machmes to be.
used
m our
SITU A TIO
0
tation
.
Fully endorsed by the Ma_r1~t, has this to say about the schoo!s, psycho!og1sts could work
college's administration, the aff1J1Jty between the program
~~
.
.
hand-m-h~nd with th~ develope~s When I was young, not as old
as
today.
program is positive that the ~e needs
.
of
_the,
community.
_
_
of teach11
_
1g machmes. Their
I guess it must have
been
yesterday.
college can serve as a research
The . <;om.m~ty
:
1s a compl~
.
knowledg~ a~ut ~ow to teach
center for study in order to make orgamsm, diff1ctil!
··
!<'
fathom .
.
l;>etter
..
and with~ h1ffer success
suggestions to resolve com- The students mus. fmd _out for rate wo~ld_ be vital.
"
munity problems and contribute the~selves what agencies
_are
. Mr. B1emak co:'1cluded, There
to community planning.
available, a~dhow !,hey function.
1s always a definite, real need for
Certain courses
..
are offered They are
.
disC<?v~r1ng
.
wh~t
,
t!te
an ~ffort to under,stand com-
~
bad a dream of success and fame;
Part of a Scheme, a little bit of a game.
Hard work and time given to make a name.
It was real then, but 'know' it
is
gone.
I've seen another dawn, another day; and other ways.
The same colors
·
take on different shades.
Ridiculous aspects are given no height.
I'm
enjoying the freedom of life with delight.
.
A time to see each and every sight: With no need
to
be
.
wrong or
,
for that matter right.
with the intention of producing
·
stat~~ of the eXIstmg agencies_ 1s,
':Duruty psychology:
,
generalists oriented
.
toward that1s,how well they are mE:ebµg
· _
Mr~
,
.
Barbara Stern,. a coun-
prob~em-rc!ising and problem- re probl
_
ems they were designed
selor m the Poughk~eps!e Schoo~
solvmg.
:
Other
.
courses, par-
0
.?1eet.
.
,
·
.
Sy~tem
.
and a maJor m
~!111
ticularly
,
laboratory courses
.
in
~eca~e P01_.ighke~ps1e
.
1s
.
a
sehng, says of the program.
.
As
counseling and experimental medi~-s1zed ~•ty, with a less-
,fc!r
a_s
_
I am co!lce~~. gradµate
psychology, will provide the comply_x. sery1ce
..
SY.stem
.
__
~nd
stt
_
.1dy
.
a~ ~~r1st will create
.
a
student with practical experience JTJore \1S1ble commlllllty offlc_1als
s~ronger
-
haiso~
.
.
between home
and train him in the techniques of than ot~e~, larger metropolitan
.
~!'Id sch_ooL
It
will be vaspy useful
Without
_
the you being taken out of_yotmg.
.
/
research. A core of community cente~$
1
1 t 1s a [~vorable place for
m reJatmg the home envi_i-o~~llt
Younger th~n tomorrow: Not old and lost in Sorrow.
psychology courses is provided to a
.
Comm un!tY . f'.sy~hology
to
,
th;it.
of
the schoo~, and m
_m-
enhance student knowledge and Pr_ogram of _this kmd,
It
1s hoped tl?rpretmg both.
It
1s most
_
1m-
un derstanding of community Poughkeepsie can s~rve. as a
.
por~nt}or Ill(?
:
to
.
set': what
.
the
activity and organization
;
model
Cot
.
other un1vers1~y_ _or
b~c
.
kgrounds oLthe
.
children are,
There are two majors in the coUege
_
t~~!;
.
that woU,d b~, m-
~n
-
~


personaL level, so. that
program. Counseling relfes terestt?d
lll ~uch
.
a Pf~raip
.
·
~
0
1:Ulse,
_,
may be gear~d with _a
heavily on testing, trying to make
Mr•
9arl
.
B1eJ'!iak,
a
~o:11co~~ of home and school
.
m
an immediate impact based on programmer at. IBM,
·
and
.
a
mm~ .
.
.
·

.
professional
.
contact
.
·
with the ~aduate of . :Ub~a
.
~ll~ge of
.
Holding to the ~ontemporary
poor
,
.
Social Psychology students s.1,ra~~e ,Ui:iiyers!tY,
JS
m
:
th~
,
VIe~
,
~( ~oUeg~
-
.
fS
:
C~Qters
.
~f
devote much of
,
their time to Ex~rtlllentlil,S~c1al Psycho}o~y
a~tto~for_the
.
solutu_>~ o( soc1
_
ety s
a ·h 'th
t .
t d
t
maJ?r· Mr. B1emak says he 1s m
.
pressmgandemergmg problems,
rese re.
.
a is pres~n e
O
Manst's program because it the
Graduate
Psychology
local officials and agen~ies. Mo~t appeared to
be
"a
new and
.
dif-
Program at Marist is
.
using its
students ~rom
bo
th maJors ~re 1

ferent approach to psychology."
resources to
·
develop
.
hard data
~::i~ich>~r~~~o:~~~~:
~~
Mr:
~J
_
e~-~k
i~
·.
J?!i!.ticul~rly jn-, adnd
._
:
~~pe~imental
_
designs
.
·
~or
the formation, organizatio
'
n
·
and
.
te1:eshte
.
1
~
~
.
n
~~I~
·
soc•~
.~sp~c~
,
,<?f.
.
.
.
}t~b
,
1
l~g
:
·
witb
_
:,
9
_
r~acbsomµi-411~ty
structure of the community. Next psyc
O
ogy.
~
moSt mterested
.
pro ems.
·
·
.
semester.
/
most students wilf m human relations . .. how ~nd
- - - - -
C
_
hr is
t
m
OS
Party
.
Eric Yergen
..
.
SEASONS
·
GREETINGS
TO ALL
c.u.a.
FREE
CONCERT
Jea~uring
''Arthur, Hurley
_
& Gottieib''
·
Friday,
.
Dec.
8th
This Friday, Dec.
8th,
the
Saga dinner that everung at 6:00
·
fireside lounge, and there will be
::::
C. U.B. social committee is
and will last till 8:00.
dancing (similar to a night in the
::::
8:30
p.m.
.
I):\
sponsoring its annual community
Santa will be giving free gifts
to
rat> in rm
.
249.
::::
:;::
l
(llristmas party in the gallery
all, there will be eggnog and
a11
So. don't forget, tomorrow, ::::
(After
Ch
_
rist111as
P.
arty
'
)
'_i.·_=
__
i.
·
_:.
ounge of the campus center.
the other Christmas trimmings. from 6-8 p.m. in the gallery ::::
_
It
will start after the special
· Also there will
l}€
a fire in the lounge fun for all! ! ! !
:::::::::::::::::::;::;:;:;::;:;:::;:::::::::;:;:::;::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::{:i:
-''A
Breath Of Fresh Life''
.
by BRIAN DONNELLY
The feeling of Christmas
The knob on the stairwell corridor. I heard a scream
one of the infamous friends inside it with a
in the air can do strange door was hanging on by one that pierced the gloomy
Christ m a s
trees , magic wand! The flash of
things to people.
It
can thread on the bolt, and as I silence of the night. Out of
.
benevolently
borrowed cameras brightened the
even tempt a boy like me flung the door open it made the corner of my eye, I
from the Route
9
roadside, darkness. The screams and
who failed Sister Clare an irritating rattle. A thought
.
I
spotted by the lumber
·
jacks-
shouts
.
filled the dead air
Angelus'
third
.
grade nake<l bulb at the top of the ~mething coming out of extraordinaire of Cham-
with a brightness and
English course
to try and
stairs
surrounded ine with one of the rooms which
pagnat House
I.
And that freshness that
.
could only
write a story ...
ghastly
green
as
it looked like sort of a .
..
rabbit! That was no
o'r-
lift the souls of those who
It
was three
O
'clock in the luminated the walls. For a
"'human
rabbit." I wanted
di
nary rabbit, that was one experienced it. To look into
morning, the hail outside sec~nd, I stood still as a to turn around and see of the amazing girls of the eyes of some who
pelted against the window sense of coldness overcame what was really behind me,
House I dressed up in her stared at the huge "green
panes. For more than an me and a shiver passed but my body refused
.
I ran
"foot-pajamas."
(For--any thing," was like watching a
hour,
the
.
clatter
of through my spine. Ah, what faster and faster, through reader who has not had
the
child on his first Christ-
typewriters ceased
to echo a miserable night!!
the lounge
'and
up the ~eat honor of seeing a girl mas.
through the halls. A
I turned to descend the stairs. But it was too late!
m foot pajamas, it is
A
·
breath of fresh life
strange cloud of depression stairs, when my eyes The door behind me simply a pair of pajamas burst through the house.
hovered over the dorm. beheld a sight which was crashed open, I could not with feet in them
;
as
_
op-
Laughter, smiles, Bing
The ominous presence of more
awesome
and escape! My whole body
posed to those without Crosby singing "White
coming exams spread its terrifying than anything I trembled as
·
I
,
turned to feet.> And now there wasn't Christmas," Bob Lynch
spell over all. I dragged had ever read or heard meet my fate.
.
one screaming rabbit, trying to sing "White
myself down the corridor. about. My heart was
·
What was this a dream??
·
l mean girl,
in

foot Cllristmas," presents from
My
.
feet scraped
·
against pounding in my
'.
chest, my O:iuld it be true?? For a
.
pajamas,butthere2, 3, 4 ... Kris Kringle, they all filled
the
bare -tile
floor
.
blood rushed to
.
niy head. A moment
I
·
remained
· ·
some wearing
.
blue, some the air with wonder. But
producing a very eerie huge "green thing" that
.
stunned, and then my mind red.some striped pajamas, does the magic have to
sound. I was heading for looked like a!l imm1:nse cleared.
·
·
IT
·
WAS all of them hopping around end? Must the light in our
my
bed
in order
to escape cone was comu:ig s~aight DECEMBER! . Christmas with smiles larger than the
·
hearts die as we pull the
from the foreboding image for me! My bram wb1r~ed! tre
_
es, snow, pr.~sents,
·
piles of dust under my bed cord of the
.
Christmas
of an exam booklet which
,
!thought I heard the voices laughter, snowflakes
'
cut th~t
·.
the cleaning
.
lady lights out for
.
the last time?
hung threateningly.in
.
my
of ~meone or s~methi~g o~f
of
paper; strings
;
o_f forgotJo pick up.
· ·
,
Must the spirit of frien-
minq.
,
My head pounded which was . behmd th~s popcorn to decorate the
.
In mo~ents; the gloomr
.
dliness wither like the old
,
with the thought,
.
"! have a

monster, trymg to
·
push 1t tree. What a fool I was!
cloud vamshed
.
It
was as 1f Olristmas
·
tree must do
paper on. Hawthorne
.
due- at me. I spun around and God,
_
thafwas no ordinary someon~
·
had touched the
·.
when it's finally taken
ne
_
xt week."
.
·
·
·
rushed through the
:
dark green monster! That was
.
~use an~ the hearts of our down?
..
\/
- , - -
Throughout our lives
.
we
seem to be making a
journey along a
.
sort of
highway
;
Anyone who has
travelled at all
·
can
remember the times when
he
has
stopped
off
somewhere only to gas up
and get rolling again. Do
you ever stop and think
about all the things we miss
because we can't stop, but
we have to "keep rolling?"
We pass every exit, and
before we know it we're at
the end of our road.
Shouldn't we sometimes
just stop for the sake of
seeing something new and
·
maybe
.
picking
up
something which
_
coulcl,.
help us through our jor/-
f}ey? Christmas is·a pr
..
<ty
important stop along the
highway. Maybe if we slow
down the rat-race for a
while and take a break, we
can breathe in a
-
little bit of
some new life and carry it
with us throughout the
journey for the rest of the
coming
year.
Merry
Cbr:istmas !












































































































'j
,.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
'
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i
.
.
.
DECEMBER·s, 1972
1HECIRCL
E
PAGE 7
The Season
1
2
'
·_
3
··
4
TOTAL
,
54
.
5·3
.'
'5··3'·
'
_:
·7_:0-:
,
.
,
~
....•
.
230
VIKINGS
.
.
,
;
~
.
.
'
..
.
.
.
-
.
.
~
·
.
-
~
.
.
...
C
"
.
:
.
.
~
:
-_
'
~
.
.
.
,
.
;
..
,,
OPPONENTS
13
-
-
1·:4
·
·
13
21
61
I
'
.
,
,
Phys. Ed. Oberlin
·
Style
and head gymnastics coach at activity classes.
'
Among the
·
In an equally significant move,
OBERLIN • When radical Stanford, was hired in late July. seminars and
·
courses being upon Scott's recommendation,
sociologist Jack Scott accepted Millman.
·
who sees gymnastics om~red are "Spoitand
·
Politics," the
·
Oberlin
·
administration
the job as physical educa~on-
.
more as an art than a sport, gave ·•sport and the Mass Media," discontinued the practice of
chairman and athletic director at up a chance to be the coach of a "Sport
·
and Literature," and charging admissions to athletic
Oberlin College last March, the national champ at Stanford to "Mind-Body Harmony.''
·
·
events.
·
eyes of the Phys-Ed world turned come to work with Scott, because
The administrative· changes
The elimination of an· ad-
to Northeastern Ohio to see if of their common commitment to
·
that Scott and the department mission charge, according to
what he had been professing for new ideas in athletics.
have made most- recently deal Scott, "further emphasizes our
yearscouldbecomereality.
If
the
Paul
:
Hoch, sport philosopher- with
·
sex discrimination
·in
the commitmerit to
·
participation
first month of this school
·
year is sociologist, and Dell Martin, a college's new $5 million gym rather than commercialism. The
any indication, Scott, the founder former Rhodes scholar and sport complex, racism
·
and com- decision also does away with any
of the Institute for the Study of literature expert, are also new mercialism in sport,
·and
im; distinction of major.'and minor
Sport and Society, is a man who additions to the staff.
portant ··town-gown" relations.
sports."
·
practices what he preaches.
Most important, however, are
Late last wiriter, befcii'e Scott
Scott went on. "The concern of
At least three developments the new women at Oberlin; was hired. a women's group ori Black student leaders
,
who felt
caused talk on this historical
·
women
·
who love sport' and want campus charged th~ physical the college might be intending to
campus in the past two weeks, to spread their enthusi8$m
to
education·
'
department with cxploitTomniieSmithbymaking
following tremblings tha.t shook other women at this school which "blatant sexism," pointing out money from ticket sales at the
the place all summer. Before prides itself in being the first co- unequal
locker
facilities, contests involving teams coached
classes started on Sept.
1
2, Scott educational college in the world. discriininator'y
·
e
_
gu
·
ipment by Mr. Smith was not without
recruited some of the finest •:new
Jane Mann, graduate of the distribution, and unequal access foundation.
'
given the history cif
physical educators" in the University of Wisconsin, is the to the gym's sauna.
·
racial relations
in
American
country to teach at Oberlin. They intramural
-
leader here. Leslie
In one sweeping move earlier
athletics."

are
all masters of their specific
·
Rudolph. a former All-American this momth. Scott and the P.E.
"Integration. when it has oc-
and varied fields.
·
swimmer.
is
the new women's department voted unanimously curred in American sports, has
Tommie Smith,
1968
Olympic swim coach. Response to to respond to the worn.en's
almost
always been because of
.
Gold medalist and the center of Rudolph has been so great that recommeridatfoiis
;
:
,
;i\:
fac;ulty
pfess'injf
'"
ecort'oniit'
r-r~as'oiis"
'
the Black demonstrations in more women turned out for the locker room was eliminated an
·
d rather
·
than for moral or
Mexico
City,
·
was· named swimming -squad this year than given to women students. Women <•ducational co_nsiderations."
assistant
athletic director in did men for their team last year. will now receive their athletic Scott continued. "Blacks have·
April. Smith will also coach track
With
these new
faculty equipment at the
same
location
·
only been given opportunity in
and basketball besides teaching members. the physical education as men
.
And the new locker
.
set- the athletic world when the white
classes. Dan Millman, a former department
is
offering almost as up for women means equal ac- men
.
who control sport felt they
world champion on trampoline many academic courses as it is cess to the sauna
.
were needed to keep the turn-
Cagers Coming
a
LongByJ!f:!-Y
Everyone has been laughing that they took from Manhattan
these past few weeks over the was perhaps the best thing that
fact that Ron Petro's young could have happened. They were
basketball team would have to a completely different team and
face
a
nationally
ranked proved it by forcing I
_
ona to
Manhattan College. But from the commit innumerable mistakes.
looks of things the Red Foxes Also. it is very rare that a team so
could have the last laugh.
overwhelming in size such as
They won two of their first Jona could be outrebounde
_
d by a
three games and are beginning
to team that was so much smaller. -
look more impressive by the · Who knows where the answers lie
minute. Last Wednesday night but for a team that was supposed
the Red Foxes travelled down to to
be
rebuilding, they came quite
Manhattan College and met the a long way in one night by win·
-
Jaspers <Petro's alumni l for the ning
62-49
against a much bigger
first time in their basketball Iona team.
IT'S ALL OVER CONTINllED FROM PAGE 8
helplessly as Newark State .took
l3eat Siena 4-0
control of the entire game, and
\\'ith goalie
·
Dave Tompkins
ultimately won by a score of
4-3
:
out. fullback Bob Bergin
took
·
To
add to their problems, Goalie
f)ver
the nets
and
did an
excellent
Dave Tompkins was injured Job of keeping
an
erratic Marist
mid way through the second
:
tea~ together on such
-.
short
period putting him out of action notice: The Re
_
d Foxes simply
for ttie remainder of the season. overpowered Siena, controlling
Again
.
the question, What hap· the game
.
with f!ne ball ~andling
pcned to the Red Foxes?
and passmg. l• or Marist, Ken
,
,

,
stiles turning and the do1lars
flowing
.
It
would seem ap-
propriate for Oberlin College to
have an ·admissions policy that
would clearly indicate Mr. Smith
was not brought to Oberlin as the
college's first Black coach in
order to increase
·
athletic
revenue:"
Scot. added that free ad-
missions to athletic contests also
destroys
.
·
the ··
:
conservative
argument that women's in-
tercollegiate athletics will never
by
"successfu1.:·
·
that
.
is,
prpfitable.
.
l<'inally.
·
a
new
·
School~
<.ommunity-College Recreation
Program became reality. The
program allows for the
.
coUege's
new gym
.
to
be open six hours
each weekend for people of- the
Oberlin community.
·
In
·
recent
years Oberlin young people.
especially Blacks. had been
chased from the gym by mem-
~rs
_
of
.

-
~4e
.
p\ly
_
sical . education
departmenLMany of, these staff
members. rigid. racist and anti-
intellectual. have left or
will
be
leaving
Oberlin
soon.
Physical education
·
is being
redefined
at
Oberlin. History is
being made
.
·
1
lnyes
had
two goais
and
oqe'
-
assist. while Tim Trotta'. added
two goals with an assist from Chi~
I lsien Wen on the
second
goal.
·
Perhaps one of the most unc
publici:i.:ed players throughout the
season was junior Chi-Hsien Wen:
Against
Siena
Wen played
a
fine
game
and
-
added three important.
assists. /\ quiet man on and off
the field. Wen·s contribution·
cannot be allowed to go un
,
noticed. With one more game left
against Hunter College the Red
Foxes had an opportunity to
improve
an
unimpressive fi-6
· won-lost record.
On that rainy November
11.
the
Hed Foxes found themselves
again in the dileinma of ''not
being
able
to put it together".
Although Marist outshot Hunter
22-16,
they were still unable to
capatalize on any of their scoring
threats. This was the first time
Marist had lost to Hunter, and in
my opinion it' should never have
happened.
The M arist soccer team had the
potential to go on to greater
heights.
Why
they
.
did
·
not reach
the
.
goals
.
that were so easily,
.
history. Led by former Rice High
.
Last Tuesday night the Marist -
Schl>OlstandoutBill Campion and C.Ollege basketball team, opened·
backcourt whiz Greg Seawright,
·
its home season at Our Lady
Of
the
·
J aspers proved a bit too much Lourdes High School by defe?ting
for M arist by handing them a
101-
Kings College by a score of
110-77.
65 defeat. In that game Marist
It
was the first Central Atlantic
showed its inexperience just by C.Ollege Conference game of the
their inability to get the ball to · season for the Red Foxes. Marist,
mid-court on many occasions.
It
led by veteran Mike Hart along
began to look as if the season with Sophomore AJ"Fairhurst and
would be a very long and painful

Frosh Jerry Finestone ha~e
· accessable has left me and many
·
others thoroughly confused.
.
one.
·
.
really
.
come to life since ~e,r
-
.
Like so many things in life the opening
game
against
outcome of a basketball game Manhattan. Juniors Jim Osika
can never be accurately and John
·
Dillon although not
predicted. Three days later
the
scoring as well as they can ~re
Red Foxes went up against a • contributirig with an agress1ve
stipposedlysuperior Iona ~earn at defensive game. For the past ~o
.
Mount St. Michael
·
Academy
.
.
It
years Marist
.
has won
·
the!r
was Iona's
·first
g~me of the year co11ference and even though this
and when lookit

at how many year· has been cited as a
times the Gaels lost the ball and - rebuilding year the Red
·
Foxes
missed important foul shots it will continue to surprise many of
·
was more than obvious. From a its opponents throughout the
Marist standpoint,
·
the trouncing course of the season.
·
·
·
Basketball intramurals arc now under way ,
/
,
How does one begin
to
evaluate
:''
a· team that on given days could
·
beat anyone they were up
against? .Where does one begin to
explain how a "good" soccer
team loses a 3-0 lead and even-
tually the game? The answers
to
these questions will not be found
easily; A team must win as a
team, and lose as a team. At the
same time they must look at
themselves as a team and try
to
solve the most perplexing
question at our age. \Yb~?
....

























I
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l
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i
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PAGES
Bob
Sullivan
Monday Morni·ng
Quarterbacks·
TilE CIRCLE
DECEMBER 8, 1972
set
QllllWHif
f
SioPSENSWE ~ARS
OFTIIB
v~mcs
Vikings
in
Schaefer
Bowl
20 - 18


10.11.1
10.11.2
10.11.3
10.11.4
10.11.5
10.11.6
10.11.7
10.11.8