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Part of The Circle: Vol. 10 No. 16 - March 8, 1973

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S.G. Constitution Clear-Up
This past Tuesday,
at a
meeting . of advisors to student
Government, it was decided that
a more centralized
Student
Government structure was called
for, so as t9 make student policy
.
making more cohesive. In order
elections with no constitution.
The referendum

on the con-
stitution will mw be held in late
March, with Student Government
elections taking place between
the sixth and the thirteenth of

April.
to the Executive Board of Student dinate the functioning of all the
Government. The Commuter
committees involved.
·different
from most proposals at
,Marist.:
little is done about them
wttil it is too late. Any questions
:on
the above may be addressed to
.Bernie
Mulligan, the President of
Student Government, or to Bob
Sammon, the election com-
;missioner.
Submitted by Bob Nelson,
Recording secretary
Student Government
to implement the new structure,
which
is
a basic rearrangement
of the former structure, it was
necessary to postpone Student
Government
__
elections, since it
was felt impossible to hold
The new structure proposed
would
m·ake
the
Student
Academic
Committee,
the
Q>llege Union Board, the ln-
terdorm Council, and the Q>m-
muter Union directly responsible
Union would be raised in status
Of course, the above structure
from a club. to a . Student cannot be implemented without
Government governing body. The
_
the permission of the various
Student
-
Financial
Board, groups mentioned, and this was
responsible for allocating Student cited as a reason for putting off
Government funds, would be the constitutional referendum
made a subcommittee of
.
the and Student Government elec-
Student Policy Board. The tions. A number of people have ,,
Executive Board would.act more expressed
confusion
about
as a steering committee for the elections, and it seems that the
Policy Board, and would coor- constitutional

ro osal is no
r-~-----~'""""""'
......
~""='!!'---------.
► CJJiCl.E
e
Bank Loans
by John F. Sherlock
Last summer all sorts of grief
V
under the old regul~tions.
• Part
C
of the supplement form
was caused
with
.
the new Students may now_ qualify for. isto be completed by the lending
..
·
procedures
in
-
obtaining
a these benefits even if the ad-
institution~ This
.section
is-
Guaranteed Loan, commonly justed .-family income is ov~r completed last. The lending
fo-
referred to as a Bank Loan.
$15,000. What is necessary m stitution then forwards the loan
After July 1, 1972, the College eithe~ case ~s that· a financia,l application
..
and supplement. to
_had.to cel'tify'financial need on need1s~tab~sh~~ytheCollege

the·State Guarantee Agency.
Ii1
the part ofthe student and giv~ a and lending 1nst1tu~1ons. _
New York State this agency is
recommendation to the lending
The paper work mvolved 1s as, called the New York
_Higher
institution
concerning_ the .follows:
....
_
Education

Assistance
Cor-
amount of the loan. This was the

1).
completion of the bank loan poration.

rub: the College was not in a application;
.
-
The third part of the paper
position to make a realistic
2). completion oL the sup-
work may be entirely new for
recommendation· in many cases plement to the bank loan ap-
many
students
seeking , a
with the information on hand. plication;
.
.
.

guaranteed loan. For the College
Consequently, in many cases·ihe
.-
3).
·completion
of a- Pa:i;-ent's to estimate the expected family
College made
·a
recommendation Confidential
Statement
or contribution
.
and to make a
much lower than was requested Student Financial Stat!!ment, or realistic
.recommendation
for a
by the applicant.
a Short
Form
of Family
loan amount, various data of the

This problem was not limited to Financial Information.
family financial situation must
Marist; it was nation-wide. -In
Thebankloanapplicationis the
be
known. Basically, this means
August of 1972 President Nixon same as in previous years.
income,_ expenses,
-
assets and
ordered a. return to the old
The supplement was required debts of the family, along with
-
procedures· in
obtaining
a last year; but after the order to any unusual
circumstances
guaranteed loan. This reprieve
return t<> the_ old system by which limit the family's ability to
was to last until March 1, 1973; President
Nixon, only
-
the finance their child's education.
when· the. new procedures were notarized part was required. This Only the income is given on the
1
Volu~e 10 Nur:nber 16
:

·



March 8,
·j973
MARI.ff @L\.EGE



-
•.



_Circle
K group rounds up debris along Route 9.
Route
9 Clean-Up
By Chet Kubin
.
.
_
• re-inaugurateq;_btit wi~ a little supplement must now be- com- loan application.

more sophistication..
_ ___
pleted by the student (Part A),
For many students this in~ This past Sunday, thirteen soon to come. The Circle-K Club,
Hopefully,
·this
year; with the
t,he_
_Col~ege_
<}'.'art B>, and. the formation is available from a members ofthe Marist ~ircl~-K

which
co-sponsored
--
the
_ .
__
!!<><>P.~!~
ti~n~
-~~!?,11~,-
st_u.d,~nt, lelJ~ng,iµstI~_utiQ_D
.<_P~d
9>,
-~
be f'.CS~r ~_fS which is_
f~led ~ith t~e Clu~ and the Pou~~eeps1e
HiJ?l
Wh~lchair
_D~y
__
in Poughkeepsie
•· Collegefand•lending, m~tltution,
,;.-ehg1ble.
for'.Federal.
mterest
·_Adnuss1ons
·-:or-·:
F.maneia1
....
&d
....
SchoorKey Clull
0
Jome_d
:h_ands-m-----last
semester With the Dutchess
the loan requested and the loan benefits:
·_
.


Offices for the coming. year.
_F.or_
cle;ming
4P
_a:
substiintial section
.
County·
.
Committee
of the
received may correspond.
_
Part A: Notarization is ab~ many
·other
students
.this
iri; of "the Poughkeepsie Arterial
Disabled, has also worked with
The-new procedure add more solutely necessary, This
_the
formation will berriade available"
·Highway.-··Eight
Circle-K'ers
'its
paternal
Poughkeepsie
paper work and additional steps
_
student must complete. Basically to the College by- the parents' managed to drag. themselves out Kiwanis Club this past year. The
_
in-obtaining a guaranteed loan. this is an affidavit in which the completion of a short form of the of bed in the ea_rly morning hours most_ significant of·'these latter
.
This burden is never looked upon student states that h~ or she will
·
family financial situation.

to go out and pick up garbage in programs wils the Auction held in
favorably by the individual. use the proceeds of the loan
If
the student is seeking a loan the soggy t~rrain

caused by the
the town for the benefit of the
However, • under
·
the
new entirely for expenses relating to
'withoui
Federal interest subsidy, Saturday night downpour. Their
..
Kidney Foundation. This growing
regula tfori.s there
are
two attendance at Marist.
it is not necessary for the College efforts were rewarded, however, Marist Club is unique in its
·,_
possible redeeming factors:
_
.
Part B of the supplement form
_
to complete Part _B of
_
the sup- as the sun ca~e C?~t
and only one potential and scope through the
.
_
First,
a
student may borrow up
IS
to_ be completed by. the
_
Ad- plement. The only mvolvement of managed to shp m the mud. The contacts and organization it has
-

to
$2
500
per year while in-college,
_missions
or Financial Aid Offices the College will·
be
a certification
.
combined college-high school
available from its father club in
. but the total amount of·. the un- of the College. In-this part these on the loan application that the forces met outside the Triple Star Poughkeepsie, and the first hand
dergraduate loans cannot exceed offices do the following:

.
student is enrolled.
_
.
. Diner and proceeded to the worst knowledge of contemporary
$7
500 for four years. A-student
1).
estimate
the
total.
Any student anticipating taking area, which was the Water Street community problems it has from
go'ing on to a master's program educa_tional
cost for
_the
period of out a bank loan for this' academic Exit. By
1
:30 p.m., more than its
sister
club
in
the
again may borrow up to $2,500. the loan;
-
year or next
is
encouraged to thirty five bags of everything Poughkeepsie High School.
each year but the maximum
.
2). estimate
the expected

become familiar with the paper from beer cans to sea shells,
The two clubs indeed worked
indebtedn~s permitted under the ~in~cia_l support fro~_the !ami!Y work and proc_essing
of
th~e bones
and
li'1ge~ie, we:re together well, and also enjoyed it
program for both undergraduate and mdicate other f1nanc1al aid loans and_to begJn the processmg c~llected along all ~•<f:es
of the very much. Route 9 is now a
and graduate years is
$10
000.

awarded;
.
as soon as possible.
highway from the Phillips 66 Gas cleaner
place
to
.
travel. -
Secor:id, eligibility for Federal
·
3). ~ive a school recom-
.
Forms
.
and the infe>~mation·
Station by _Marist to the Mid- Hopefully, it can remain as such.·
interest benefits will m longer be· men~t1on· for. a loan amount.

about procedures are available {lt Hudson Bndge. Also collected_
It
should not be allowed to reach
based
on
the adjusted
_
family <Arriving at this iigure will be
··
the Admissions and Financial Aid was
-
assorted junk such
as
a such a polluted mess.
of.
Utter
income being less than
$15,000,
as explained below}.
Offices.
~icycleframe, muffl~s, pieces of again. The Circle K is proud to

tire and a dead sqwrrel
have
.
been
.
able to. serve the
The main object was for both
:
Poughkeepsie
Community in
C
-
.
clubs to work. together in serving
.
such a· meaningfl.Jl way, and
··1v·.
·11·
Re·
1·1g·1on·
·1n
Ame·
r•,c·
·a
the Poughkeepsie Community in. woul~ be more than willing to

some way;
·Rathe~
than a very
.
clean it up again.
-

.
.
.
.
.
_
_
..
_
:
_
complicated program, it· w~s
.
The co-chairmen of the project,
B
decided
.
that both would try Tim Long and James Burke
Y Kevin Laff~n
.
.
something relatively simple and would like to thank all those wh~
"I am more convincea than American ciyil religion; yet
.each·
are absorbed into. the. matrix of.' yet very important. The success
.
• participated. You can definitely
ever that a·civil_~ligion exists in differed in their concep~ of what civil religion.
-
• •
.:
:
_
.
_ .
of this project is only a stepping· look forward to similar projects
America,"
_
stated Dr. Eugene the religion entailed.
Another'.
participant,.Professor, stone to other.cooperative efforts in the not
tQO
distant future.

-
Best after
..
returning from
·a
One discussant, Dr, Robert_ WillH~rberg,s~tedthatth~civ:il
----------------------------
national conference ori that topic. Bellah, argued

that . the civil' religion
.
,
of
.
Americans
.
is
bor",
would actually.die for their
-
Americans, therefore, contribute
.- On February 22-24, Dr. Best, religi~n has taken common. matetj~lism ..
In
repudiating Dr.
neighbor, _ unless they were
to the civil religion.
_
Chc1:ir!llan
of ~e Department of elements
from
- Judaism,
Bellah's contentions, he-stated
tllemselves_
personally
A·ccording to
Dr .. Best,
Religious· Studies, attended the
·.·
Catholicism· and Protestantism

that
.
the ultimate concern
-
of
.
threatened. .
.
.

.
, ''Everyone is affe<!ted
by the civil
conf~rence at Drew Universi~ in and formed a value system
by
America is a good home,
.steady
·_-A-
third discus~nt,
.
Martin

religion." He Sees the direction of

lV!adison; New Je!5ey, which.
:wh!ch
American can be judged. income,
.
and family
-
security.
Marty, with whom

Dr. Best , the religion to
be
importantto all
discu~sed the ex1s~ence ~n!1 Thi~ _system transcends
the According to Herberg, the Gog of

agrees, proposed ap argument
'
citizens. He asks, "Is religion
m~a!lmg of American • civil
_
tra~tional view~ ~f reli&jo~ and America . might be called the which• encompassed both Bellah. , nationalism" or does it transcend
rel1g1on.
.
. ·•
·
.
- apph~ the "v1s1on-of higher gross national prodµct.
.
andHerberg.Hestatedthatsome
and. give people a_ value··with
Dr. Best w~l
,discuss
the con- values ' to the role of the nation.
Her~rg contends that while
Americans_ believ~ .in:· God and
;
which to judge their leader and •
ference_on Friday, !\Jareb_
16,_
at
·.
For
__
exam~le, on Men:iorial many,Apiericans call them.selves • use their. belief to judge the ac-
system. 'Dr. B~t _states ~t
if
two thirty, p.m., m Fireside
.Day,
the nation prays for the
.Catholics,
Jews,-or Protestants,,
tions
.of-
America. This is con-
t'nationalism
is the ultimate
Lou~ge_in
the Campus Center. All blC;5Sings
of a higher being an they
:are
ultimately conc~n:ied
.-sistent·
with Bellah's view of a
.
American concern, then the "law
are u_lVlted. •
,
.
.
.
pitimate value beyo~d 1:h,e
nation with _the. prese~ation _of. the higher moral value being used as
,
becomes
a
divine institution and
Whµe_
~
had _al!eady ~ebev~
itself. However, this; value American way of hfe, which 1s to thestandardof the nation. Yet, in the president becomes. either a
~hat _i::ml rehg10n exists. 1.n. tra!1~cends. the barriers
of get every_tltjng. possible·_out
_of
accordancewithHerberg,Marty
igod
or.a divine spokesman."
Amer1ca,Dr.Beststatedthatit1s.
rehg1o_us
,difference
and ens Am~rica.'· , -
..
_
.
.
recogriiz·es
..
that. the ·ultimate
• ..
According to Professor Her-
.,
"a

much
more
co_~plex ~()rpora~

the entire c~tizenry

F_or.
Herberg, th~ clis~ussion
of,
·valu~
:oc
many;-is
:Jnate~alism.

berg, a person's reli~on can be
phenomena!;han Iha~preVI~sly
!n~o a s~ngle._system. This even Amer1can~oncern1s_redu~bl~tc> A159;'ltf;uty,includ~ the atheists
.
;
determiried
_by
'looking
~t his
understood. According to J:>r •. mclud~ ~ose who dC?
n~t adhere one• question:
,
'-'~t
are'._
'we.
-· .who~·while
denying the.existen~:
i
prejudices. Tbese,will Jllust:rate
Be~t! each· of
.three
_maJOr
_to
a rebg10,:i or a belief
ID 8
~od,, rea_dy
-
to die,· fol:"?':': Herberg
of: a god, •,still • ~dhere to
_an
I
his ultimate concern and what he
_
,
:i:1os1tions
held at:!)le:conferen~
for, according to.Dr. Best, 'the be~eves that . few· Americans, ultimate .

v~lue;
.!ii1cb


as
.
1
actually "will die for.'.'
....._,_
"(_...,.acc_epted
the eX1Stence of•-·.
an· ~nscendent norms of all. men"


while
_prea$ing_
"Love
_thy
neigh-
brotherhood, for example; All •


••


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,
,
,
,
_
..
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PAGE2
1
TIIECIRCLE
IIARalS.1973
The End
Of
AnEra
-
by Kevin Laffin
REPENT, SINNERS! THE
END IS UPON US!
While the Bible tells us that the
Final Judgement will come amid
chaos and destruction, one sure
sign of the end is indeed at hand:
the disembodiement
of the
Mariology section of the Marist ·
College Library.
With the announcement
of -
-Library
Director,
Adrian
Perrault,
that parts of the·
collection will be thinned out and
sold, another of the once famous-
Marist icons belongs to the ages.
The Mariology section will soon
inhabit that great Ivory Tower in
the sky which already holds such
former Brahmans as the student -
dress code, study hours, class
attendance, student Brothers,
books in twenty seven foreign
faculty Brothers, Art Green, and languages, including French,
Bill O'Reilly.
Latin,
German,
and
Once rumored as being the Presbyterian. It
is
being r~uced
largest collection of books on the in favor of religious matenal of
~
subject of the Virgin Mary, the more practical value.
-
volumes will be trimmed in
Unlike -most libraries, where
number from nine thousand to similar collections are formed by
five thousand by deleting all spending large sums of money,
duplicate
copies. Also, the this Marist collection was solely
remaining
books
will be further the product of donati~ns
and __
reduced through evalµatiQn of contributions
from six con-
their scholarly worth (a process tinents. tt would have been seven,
that, in the wrong hands, could • but Mary has never been popular
drastically
change
the among the Antarctic penq~.
registration figures at Marist).
According to Mr. Perrault, it 1s
This should leave a relatively not unusual for a school to
small collection of two thousand develop a large collection on. a
books.
specifically
religiou.s topic.
The collection is made up of Vassar College, he pomted out,
The infamous Mariology collection of Marist.
has a specialty in the writings of
S H•

R T
St. Thomas Aquinas (as an aside,
-
St. Thomas was turned down this





year by the C.U.B. Lecture
Vietna_m --
Peace
Accords':· Is It
.Over?
by Loreen McGinty
Committee,. - · TOO
CON-
As
founder member and spokesman for S.H.O:R.T., (Students- SERVATIVE!
l.
.
_
Is the
u.s,
really out of Vietnam? Is the strug~le within Vietnam
HatingOrRegrettingTallness), I wou!dliketo take this opportunity to
Mr. Perra~t beheve~ that the over? What has been the role of Moscow and Peking? These are the
charge Marist College with neglect in the_ construction of their cam"- excess ~ooks
m
the section can be_ major questions that• perplex the Ameri~n · people and a~_ unan-
pus. It is made for the average student and not for people of our sold s11:1ce otl_ler college~ are . swered by the Government. Derrick Mornson address~ hunself. to
organization.
-
-
-
-
develop.mg their o~n Mar1ology these issues in his talk entitled, "Vietnam and N~on's Wo~ld
When Itake a shower
I
have to bend over to fit under the water and collections. He cited Dayton Strategy''.. Morrison's studies an_d pers~nal e~eriences
with
when
I
stand up, my he;d sticks oyer the curtain. When
I use th~ sinksy University in °.hio and St • ~d- revolutionary movements and ~erican
foreign policy h?ve enabled
I
practically have to sit down because they are so low; and w,heu
I
lode w~rds_ College
10
Texas .as_
m-
hini to develop a thorough analysis of the contradictory developments
in the mirror,! only see from the neck down.
stitut~ons whe~e Mariology in the Vietnam war over the past several years. _ _ - . .
.
Ea ting in the cafeteria is like attending
a
doll
'flea
pai:ty. The plates materials -are bemg -sough~. '.
- Derrick Morrison born in
-
Detroit 26 years ago,
is -
a Black Marxist·
-arid L'le silverware remind me of a set
I
got for my Betsy-Wetsy at
S~; to the_ famed ~ar~ology journalist. As
a
s~ff writer for The Militant newspaper, he_ has
Christmas, ten years ago. The tables are so low I could practically eat .s~ction, -';~ bid a
ro
nd -Had and covered such events as the Attica prison rebellion and the _National
off my lap, and the food gets cold on the way from the· plate to my
r
arewell.
- --
• Black Political Convention in· Gary, Indiana, as -wel_l
as
numerous
mouth.

p •
·
antiwar·demonstrations.
-
,
_
·

. ·
My whole foot doesn't fit on narrow steps so
I
have to walk up tbe. _
·zo_n·
-
-ee
. ..,._
'S--
Hewasoneofthefounders
oftheDetroitCommitteetoEnd
theW~r
stairs sideways. I hit my head when the elevator stops suddenly, there
• ,
in,196Sand a year later organized Afro-America!ls to _End the -yvar
m
~:;o~~~t ~nd in the pool; and in order tom in my bed I have to _sleep
:In·_:_
_
r~e:~~~i::/:!e:;:lJ::ie:n~t;:~~tiUl~~cltt~:1::
}!~~~;~i
Since it is obvious that the dorms are inadequate, I su·ggest that
inaugura~on Day March~

·
-
·
._
, __
. .
S.H.O.R,T. be granted a new dorm. (Po~ibly the boat house?>
It
p._.-a,_
i•nti•ng
___
-__
.
Morrison visited Cuba in 1969 as part of a Young Socialist
would have a house philosophy of living, learning and growing ex-


delegation. In 1972 he toured the country with the Socialist Workers
perience. •
.
.
.
. __
- . ..

.
Party vice-presid~ntial ~andi~ate, Andrew Pulley, in ~pacitr
of,_
Unless somethmg is done to correct these situ_ations, members of,
..
The. -Office of the , Campus campaign secr_etary. ,.
-
S.H.O .R.T. will STRIKE\ We
\Vill
sit in the front row
~f,
th,~
theater so . Center in <,!Onjunction
with the
Coauthor of : the Black:-->Uprising.5
A!ti~a:
\_Vhy
Priso~e,;:s
Are•··.
no one could see the movie; we will"not'open mailboxes· on .the top row,
Na
ti6nal -Gallery of Art js Rebelling; and Black Liberation and Political Powe~, he
IS
a~so. a
and will sit in the last row of the class so no one could hide behind us.
If
delighted to present • _a public contributor to the, anthology Towards an American Socialist
-that is not sufficient, we will use violent tactics and step on people.
showing of Kenneth Clark's new Revolution,
·-
·
· ·
I also suggest that
in
order for various persons on campus to see the film_ series "PIONEERS
OF
immediate-needs of our organization, they should for one day walk
qn
MODERN PAINTING;"
_
stilts. Let them hit t,heir heads on doorways, get rained on first and
Each of the six programs is
take up two booths at Franks.
devoted to • an artist
who
-
I.D.Cards-
We live a life of short pants and cold ankles. Any help from Marist significantly
influenced
the
To eliminate possibility of recording and-or interpreting student
people will be really appreciated. We are real people who do more development of twentieth century numbers and • riames, a new, procedure will be implemented .fQr
than just play basketball. But at least we can write home saying that art.


registration.
- ·•

.
.
· .
we're at the top of our class.
Each of the 45 min. color films
Students will
be
required
to
present their I.D. card at the time of
wi11 be shown on the following registration. An addressograph machine similar to those u~ed for
WEEKEND MEALSCHED.
Thw-sdays at 2 p.m. in the credit cards will imprint student name and number, th~ reduc1~g the
Fontaine Art Workshop.
-chances of error. This will'necessitate each student havmg a vahd I.D.
DININGHALL
March 8 - Edouard Manet
with name and number embossed. Should you not have an I.D., make
Sat. and Sun. - Regular Hours
Mon. and Tues. - Breakfast
9-11, Lunch-11-2, Dinner -4:45
RATHSKELLAR
Sat.-Sun. Mon-CLOSED
Tues. 9:00a.m. to 11:00p.m.
March 15 -- Paul Cezanne
arrangements in .the Registrar's Office to_
obtain a !1ew card.
If
you do·
March 22 -- Claude Monet
- have an I.D. that is.not embossed, take 1t to the library and request
March 29 -- Georges Seurat
that they embos_l?_
it. -
- ·
_ · .
_

April 5 -- Henri_ Rousseau
The intention of this system is to reduc~ chances of error. Therefore,
April 12 -- Edvard Munch
your cooperation is necessary.


The films are free to all.
Praise
For
-Brother"
T
arcissi'us
-_

Cubicle· Correction
I
wouldHke to correct
a
mistakeinade iµ the currenrcubi~le,
issued last week concerning the Theatre Guild's Spnng
,, Production. As al~ays, there will be no admission· charge for
-'.
Marist sJudents who wish to experience th~ s~ow. • This y~r the
by
Joe
Terranova
One person sometimes taken
for granted on campus is Brother
Vallieres Tar!;isus, the printer.
This week is Brother Tarcissius'
48th year as a Marist Brother; he
has been the college printer.since
1946.
Most
of
the printed material
originating on campus is due to
his efforts, including, at onetime,
the Circle.
From 1931 to 1936, Brother Brother Tarcissius worked ten
Tarcissius was
in
charge of and sometimes twelve. hours per .
tending the sheep, cows, and pigs day. "Now,'' he says, ''I've got
fo _;
-
owned by the Marist Brothers. take it a little easy."
•• • _

Tarcissius has also worked as his
But "a little easy" 'to Brother
house's tailor, sewing garments Tarcissius is not what you might
for the other brothers.
expect, for. his day at the shop·
• In 1946,
he was appointed to the -beginsat8:00andends at 4:00. Of
printshop: where, before his course, there is time for .a· little
heart at~~k several
years
ago, snooze_
after lunch, -and th~n it's
back
to the machines. Puffmg on
his stogie, _
"in ,
his long • bJue
- Guild is presenting "An Evening of the Absurd," compnse_d of
three, one-act plays ,by three leading_ playwrights in· the field. - -
They are: TheLesson by Eugene Ionesco; T!1e Room by Harold
Pinter; and The Orchestra by Jean. Anowlh: '!heatre of the_
Absurd is a relatively new and revolutionary dep~ture from the
traditional realistic drama to which we are most accustomed. I
cordially invite you all to attend what promises to be a most
imaginative and entertaining evening .. Tlle performance dates
are the ·13th, ~4th, ~nd 15th of April. ,
-
- Paul Tesoro
SOPH. ELECTION, NEWS
coveralls which hide a fancy
It is that _
time ~f year again _ position
in
th~ 7.3-74
Sophomore
print shirt, Brother Tarcissius
when most school-activites hold - Class Gov't. year• pl~se conta_ct
_-
smiles a
nd
points
_to
-his favorite 'elections. The Freshman class is. or see. Chip Ermish
10
Room 113
resting spot, an overstuffed green
no exception.
Champagnat Hall. All ballots
armchair:-
• ·-·


Ifthere1·sanyFreshman who1·s must_
bereturnedby_Tuesday, the
"Next year,'' he continues,
"I'm just going to be working
interested
in running for, a _2oth·of
~~~~~:
................ -........ -
part time, probably a few hours
in the morning." - > . · •
-.
On -the glass of the . print shop
door is· a.::,sign,-which reads:
.,;
-
"Happin~~ is, a peculi_ar_
feeling
Performin~f~eommittee
C.U.B.
Performi~g
.Arts·
-
you • acquire. whem you are too_
_ .
presents _ , ._
busy
to
,be .miserable_.'' :While
---~-
AnOpen_
Dress_
Rehersa
__ I
Brother Tarcissius is a_
devotee of
the motto,
he
µiay f~d
'1
pleasant
The Hudson
V
a11~
Philha~orrlc·
. way ofconl!'.a~cting it next year._ ::::
.
_
ClaudeMoriteawc; director,
.
• With spare,: time on his hands,,·::::
·onMarch lG,l973inthetheatre
::::
he'll be able_
to :watch niQre of his : ::::
-
-- .. - . , -
-
.
:::: -
favorite_T.V
..
shows·-.sanfordand';:;:;
----•--
,atS:OO-,
:
_
illl.
-, ·:·Son
~~
;:~e-F.~:I., - : --
•••
-
~
Jt::::~::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::;::::;::::::::;:::::i;::::::::::::;::;:::i:::i::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~f.
-
,/
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...
-'·:
PAGE3
fflECIRCLE
1
MARCH 8. 1973
►CIRC/£

-Open
Forum-
MARIS,:
C.OL~GE,PO!,iGHllt_E~~e.~ew
VQ~K
12061 :
Dover
Plains:
AnneTrabulsi
Jim·Keegan
Editors-in-Chief
A Look
Back
On Education
Brian Morris
Lyn Osborne
Mike Peyton
News Editor
Associate Editors
By Michael Maffai


Note: I was part of the original is thelastexerptfrommydiary.
I
very critical of my work in.Dover
team of eight Marist students have held on to what
I have
this semester. The one thing it
who lived and worked in Dover .Iearnedfartoolong.
It's
time that
has given me, though, is a ton of
Plains in the Fall of '71. During I shared my experiences with a
experience.
Experience
in-
Maryanne McQuade
Feature Editor
Jim Donnelly
Sports Editor·
. thattimel kept a diary in which I cummunity that desperately
valuablenotonlytomyself,but to
recorded my thoughts and ob-
needs to know the joys that do lie
those who follow us out. We came
servations as well as my actions.
within an education. I offer no ,Jn very
cold,
with
scant
The major part of my work was solutions, no panacea.
Only -knowledge of the area and its
in the local grammer school and questions. • Please take them to problems, and we spent nearly
Staff: Juan Campos, Loreen McGinty, Christine Ljska Nancy
Gribbon, Kathy Miller, John.Redmond, Ed O'Connell: Eileen
Kehoe.

.
··
Photography: RichardBrummett', Lance Lipscomb and
Jerry Shaeffer •
.
.
.
. the day care center, working heart,
evaluate
them,
and
the entire semester just learning.
about 2 to
·3
days · per week in perhaps try to answer them for
We initiated some programs that
each. Although I saw many
yourselves. .
may have an effect (high school
things th~re that annoyed me,
1
12-19-71
-- I cannot really call
equivalency, welfare rights) but
S.G.
Seats
For
Commuters
also saw the kids, and became
my work in the grammer school a
our giving was comparatively
• turned on to what lies there. For
succ_ess.
I started out fairly well, little. We did not cure all the ills
. the first time in my life education doing sight vocabulary with some
of our society, but we gained
meant more than a piece of of the slower kids, but
it
kind of • knowledge - the education of
paper. Its_ very difficult to pin-
died there. There were several
living. Confronted with problems
point it exactly, just as it is _very reasons. First of all, it's difficult
(including the one of learning to
difficult for me to answer people to work around the teacher's own live with seven other life styles in
when they ask me what Dover program. The students have to
the same house), we worked hard
was like. I cannot separate my pretty much follow it, and there's
to meet them.
Commuters should take notice
,
that six seats on the Student
Government are op.en; For those
commuting students who. wish to
make their presence felt in the
Marist community, these seats
offer an excellent opportunity.
Declarations of candidacy are
d
feel_ihgs
about education from my no way that many of them can.
So
It is difficult to pin down
ue .. bY March
9,
_Nominating
th·
t
h Id
b
k
h
tl
h t
• d A
Petitions are to be received experiences last Fall.
1s sys em
o s
ac - t e
exac yw a we game • person
bef
th
This semester, I am engaged in brighter kids, but really messes
takes an English course to gain
ore _ e 16th,

campaigning
th J
Thi
1 d '


f 1·
two proJ·ects on education. Again, up es owerones.
s may ea
an apprec1a on o 1terature and
starts on the 20th, and the elec-
b 1·
h
th
ho
full
I am_ finding it difficult to define one to e 1eve t at
e students
pe
ytoattainsomesoughtof
tions take place on the 23rd.
h Jd b b
I
G
d
education as something apart
s ou
e roken up into the tract
persona growth.
I
have attained
00

Luck and keep on · from what I learned in Dover.· system where all the bright kids . an appreciation of what it means
Truckin', Commuters!
l

Did I say learn?
Am
I being far
are
umped together in one to 1ve and work, and hopefully,
I
Commuter Union
• •
11 h
h
too
presumptuous to believe that
sect10n, a
t e slow ones in
ave grown. I have held a three
Faculty
.C.o.lloq
ulun1
-
one
can
concr:etely·
and
another, and so on. I don't think
yearoldwelfarechildinmyarms
realistically
learn
(become
that this is a good way. It's tunnel. and tried to understand her fears
educated) outside a classroom? I • vision; just too narrow. It's not
and her joys. I have tried to
don't think that learning and fair to the kids. The slower kids
understand why a nine year old
what we have lived can be need the brighter
ones for
learns, and why he fails. I have
separated.
• stimulation. And being put in the
tried to . understand
why a
• What follows this introduction bottom class is a rather h~vy
physically disabled veteran of
_____________
stigma for a nine year·· old to
one of our great wars must swim
carry. It's bad enough that the
in beer every night. These things
. kid next to you in the lunchroom
cannot be. confronted. in a. text~.
calls you stupid, but when the
book. They are things· that lie
school officially declares you so,
beyond classrooms, but yet are
by Beth-Ann Marsh
Thefaculty colloquim of March,
_first was centered primarily on
the third year program. The
· program would allow above-
average high school seniors to
enter Marist and -finish upon
completion of
96
credits, or in
. other words, in three years. The
criteria for ·admittance would be
thatthestudent have: atleast 600
in both the English and math
scores on the College Boards; 16
Carnegie credits; an upper tenth
percentile
ranking
in their
graduating class; and have over/
an
88
percent average for high
school. The student must also
. . take an achievement test, and
produce
letters
of recom-
;mendation, coupled with an in-
,terview_ by . the ~dmissions
Committee ~t Marist. • Aiso; while
Chaplain's
• -Counsel
the student
is
at Marist, he or she
in
shaping this type of program.
must maintain a
3.0
index and He further explained that stifling
.participate in seminars to be creativity
has
a
definite
given each semester by Brother detrimental
effect, and the
Xavier Ryan.

_
negligence of
30
-elective credits
This program would enable the would mean acceleration at the
more
intellectual
and expense of growth in the in:
progressive student to advance at dividual. In conclusion to his
his or her. own rate. For, as was· remarks, Dr. Teichman stated
brought out at the colloquium, that the fusion of all creative
so~e students may fully reach streams should be incorporated
their college· level potential in into all subjects at this college.
less than the four years usually
Discussions also arose con-
set asi?e for the average higher cerning the necessity of a change
educat10n.

in methodology involved in such a
Some menibers of the-faculty program, and the need of an
wondered if this might possibly individualistic approach .
become only an honors program,
Although· no formal statement
thereby separating the.individual was made, there was a general
from.the
active college coma expression conveyed by the
~um!y,
and
through
this group: Marist must keep in step
isolation, preventing the student with the • changing times and
. to ~each both an academic and seriously concern itself with
-
social optimum. Dr. Teichman innovationsthat are necessary to
' brou~~t . out the point that sustain any private college facing
creatmty should not be neglected an economic crisis.
that's kind of tough. You can belt
the very core of education.
the kid in the mouth, but what do
While it appears as
if
I have
you say or do to the school? You been
sidetracked
from
can be loud and noisy and nasty
examining my work in the
and just bellow out "go to hell",
grammer school· to making a
or you can take the choice that
course evaluation, I really have
many kids_ have taken:
"If
I'm
not. In taking a round about
really that stupid, what's the use -route, I have opened up my own
of doing this at all?"

eyes to a possible solution to the
This despair that has set in is grammer school problem.
If
I
the toughest thing for an outsider
feel that
I
have learned much
to overcome. Whether a people from a non-classroom situation,
are
poor
financially
or would _I be too presumptuous to
academically, they eventually
say that nine year olds could also
• become poor in spirit. How can
benefit from such an experience
0
this be broken down? My hopping Is_ the approach
of Marist
from desk to desk is just not the students in the Resource Center
answer. Which leads to the
(now Union Street School) a
second reason for my lack of possible alternative? Can nine
success. My own lack of initiative
year olds ( or high school students
stalled Iile. I was content to desk •. or college students) be taken out
hop because it brought about of a classroom so that they can
quick results. Timmy now knew learn? Maybe I have found no
five more words, or Julie could do answers in Dover, just questions .
·the
three-times table. But I
I
want to know why things have
faltered here. This initial success happened the way they have, and
was very self-satisfying but I I want to know what can be done.
didn't push it to bigger things. I Is this not the very essence· of
can cop out and say it was more • education?
my lack of experience than lack .--------------
of initiative, but I cannot let it
To the Editors:
P.-- ers·onal
Coun_
selingo
restthere. After a while, I myself
Since silence can be construed
despaired;
I
became too en7
as approval (for instance I heard
• tangled in just tutoring and coul~
C.U.B. Theatre Trip Friday,
March23to
''That Championship Season"
Linda Jenness's talk in silence) I
see no alternative to It.
. would like to tell the Marist
However' I am now -blessed
·· I th
with the gift of hindsight.
I
am
fami y at my stand agrees with . Dear Student:
community services, faculty- --------------
the·
following
statement
It has come to my attention staff consultation
and 'spon-
(although I'm hardly a "Roman that th_ere is limited knowledge sorship of topical programs.
If
you are
going to fly
catholic scholar.''.) "In the light about the personal cQunseling Testing .is not provided by our Anywhere in
th
e U.S. Fly with
of the recent decision of the services that are available to all office; although assistance is T.W.A.'s one third off Youth
Supreme Court on abortion laws members of the Marist ' com- offered to those students who Passport Discount Card.
we Roman Catholic scholars, munity. It is my hope that this wish to pay for testing by other
Contact: Brian McCulloch
many of whom disagreed with . letter will-. give you S,Oiile in- members of the . psychology .
Gregory House
• sofme ohf
the practi
1
caI concl~ions
~cation of• the present structure ·department.· or private-practice
~•.'-:•:•:•:•:::•:•:::•:•:•:•:•:-:-:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•.•.•:•.•·····~~.t~:~~.
o
t e
papa
encyclical
and activity of y<>ur
-Office of psychologists in the community.
;t······················································•-•.•.•-·-•-•.•.•-·t::~
"Humanae Vitae" •on artificial ··Counseling Services. . •
Referrals ··are accepted from::::
• CLASS of '75 /
!=:~
contraception, affirm our con-
The Office of Counseling . the entire campus community 1:::
presents
·::~
viction _that individual human life Services • at Marist, College is alth~ugh we prefer actual a~
I(:~
"BARNYARD FRIENDS"
!:~
!S present, before the time of the • staffed by faculty members from pointments • be made by the :::

starring
1==~
. viability
of the fetus. We the psychology and religious person being referred either in:::
BOB LYNCH
\:~
• !}lerefore strongly urge others to . s.tudies departments. The sta_f- person
(D100)
or by t~lephoning :::
and
::~
• ·accept this_ understanding -and. fmg pattern represents various the
Counseling
Services(:::
WINNIESAIT'l'.A
::~
act.in accord with
it.''

part-time commitments.:
secretary Ext
286 •
f:::.
·
THURSDAY,MARCH29 .
:t
.•· 1
··._Sincerely •
S~CE!;S. provided are shoft -
• '
• cig1e L. Moore
11
CHAMP~~NAT "BARN"
(:3
Father Leo Gallant. term mdiVIdual and group per- •
coordinator
1=:::
,
~dmiss1!>n
25 cents .
::~
..; Chaplain s·onal counseling, refer al to
:::: : Mixed Dnnks 50 cents
• ::~
• • ( . .
. -.
.
~
:::~::::::~:::::::::!:$::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
==~
.·,· •.• '
' ••
<' ••••
, ••
',•·'•I
I
l·t
'.'"'·
·,,
1.1·•
,.
,
,
I;
Jason
Miller's
• powerful
; naturalistic play is a character
study of four ·former basketball
teammates with their high school
coach reunited
in a rough,
• bra)Vling! drunken night which
takes us mto the deeper theme of
how authority
figures
can
manipulate young minds, per-
verting their human values into
bigotry and hypocrisy. Spendedly
directed by
A.
J. Antoon and.
acted by
a
fine ensemble cast·
including Paul Sorvino Charles
Durning, and Richard° Dvsart.
Tickets will be : on sale" on a
first come basis • on Thursday
March 15 from
12:30 - 2:30
(Fr~
Slot Period). at the Campus
Centre Information Desk. Cost
for ticket and transportatim is
$5.00.
Bus leaves at
3:00
p.m. to
allow time for people to dine
before
the 7:30 p.m. per-
~ormance.
.....
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I
I
I
I.
1.
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f
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1 ••
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PAGE4
TIIECIRCLE
MARCH 8z 1973
Kansas City:
HERE in:co
El
.Sopho~or~
Mike.Hart showing
why
he was named the tour~
·' .
nament's Most Valuable·Player..

_.

.
.

lacrosse
Begins
••
In case many of you hayen't Rogers, Jim Donnelly, Mike
realized it, Marist has a new club Secone and Pete Vanacare should
sport
.
ori campus:~ The
.
Marist help to provide a good defense.
by Jim and Paul Landolfe
opening minutes of~e game ~th
game. The final S!ore was 79-72
.
·John
Dillon sconng
-the
first with Mike Hart S!oring 32 points .
.
Even before the 1973 season
ints with a jumper from the The victory enabled
·
Marist
to
was under Y_!ay,
the word was out ~rner; and Mike Hart following enter the final game of· the
that_
~ar1st
wo~l~ h_ave a
·with
a 25 footer. On defense, playoffs with Dowling College
rebuildingy~. T~1mplies that Marist's full murt press enabled who defeated a strong Monmouth
a young or mexpenenced group Jerry
Finestone
and
Alan team in the second game that
,,£_players would be p~t to~ether Fairhurst to pick the ball from rµght.


this year·
t!'
work pnmarily
_
for the embarassed
Plattsburg
The victory was really sweet
ne~
.
year s s~son. However, guards. After a minute and half, since it was a team effort.· Jim
aft4:r
,a
crushmg defeat to
.Plattsburg
finally scored. Marist
Osika did some tremendous
nationally ra!1ked ~anhattan


ed t
un and pen_
etrated
rebounding,
Ed
·.
Conlin
O>ll_
ege the·· rebuilding· buncll con mu
O
r
t d
offense when
be

·at-
Io'n
..
a a school that had the confused Plattsburg defense penetra e

on
'
til M • t Jed b
s 18 needed, Bill Ross gave Marist a
previously beaten strong Marist .un_
aris
Y as many a
smooth effort on both endS, and
teams for the last seven years. pomts •• The contest would have
Coach Petro literally called a
After seven
_games,-
the
.Marist
been over; ~ow~ver, ~lattsb~
.
good game ..
.
misfits record stood at five wins came_
back with~ome fme oµts1de
,
and
.two
-defeats.
As the season shooting for the1rguards, and the

BULLETIN
progr~ssed
Marist
.
slumped f~st half_ended ~t a_44-35 score
.
.
th
badly;::
tltEt.
pr9!:>lems s~mmed
:WI
th l\faristleading.
.
.

o~
Tuesd?Y ~arc~
6,
•.
e
from- Marist-;s. low. scoring of-
The se~~?d half open?ct-.with Marist
·College
Basketball team
·cease, and
:•numerous
.mental Rour_y Wi:!hams _contro~ling t~e
won the NAIA district cham-
~ors'. After a disasterous loss to o~nmg tipoff for Marist. This
pionship by defeating leag~~-
~wling,. with Marist
,
scoring faile~
_to
move the_ team, and
leader Dowling College 55-49 m
ooly·42points, Co~ch Petro let his Marist start~d walking back on. overtime.
team-.looseand· they showed a defense. Manst took~ number of
The· revenge factor was the
willingness
,
to
.
run,

winning a pretty ~hots but
·
ffilsse~ them;
focal point of this game sin~e the
gallles,.
·while:
losing
•three
and ~d Coac~ Petro ca~ed time out
Lions of Dowling had prev10usly
averaging over 80
:points
per with
1~
minutes left m th~ game.
defeated the Foxes quite handily
game.
••.

. .
.
.
.
.
Mar1st came out runmn~ a~d
on both the road and at home in

On
-the
.
merits of this late took good shots that were gomg m
league play. It· seem:S~
however,
showing,-and also a convincing and ou~, while Plattsburg was
that everything was against
defeat
of
NCAA
bound C()nvertmg- some
·tough
shots
Marist going into this tour-
Southbampton, Marist received a from the outside ~nd p~lled into
nament; the game was being
berth to the. N.A.I.A.· district theleadbyfourpomtswithabout
played in Dowling's
home
playoffs.
.
.

.

.
.
. .

_
.four minutes left. Then between
territory where the advantages
On Monday; March 5; at
7:
oo in Jim Martell picking up fouls, and
are obvious, and for the past four
an exceptionally
large high converting shots, Joe Cirasella
years the Foxes have never been
school
"
gyi:n,

the
..
r.~.buHding, getting~ offensiv_e rebounds and
·
able to get past
_the
second round
··bunch''. mefas,trorig team from Mik~
_-
~.art scoring when. the - of this tournament. This is the
Plattsburg: iri
·a·
1ocally televised
·pressure
wasJhe greates, ~arist
farthest any basketball team in
closed circuit game.
.
pulled ahead to stay. Fmally,
Marist history has ever gone and
Marist
seemed
.mentally
Allen Fairhurst stole theballand
itistrulyrepresentativeof a total
psyched and·· dcimH1ate~ the scored•t~oJolilshots to ice thE:_ tea~_¢ffort,
_
,Cj'C
Indoor Track
Chaltlpionship
Saturday-
Coll~ge_Lacross team ha~ begun.
The attackmen. are fine
.stick
working out in preparation for handlingveteransfromlaS t year.
TheMaristRedFoxescloseout
Wilger has been especially im-
4:37.2, and also will be trying to
their second
·season.
They did most of the scoring laSt

their 1973 indoor track season pressive in workouts and hopes to
set the two mile mark. Mark has
The team was just formed last year and sho-.y
'great
promise for, with participation in both the break the eight-minute mark,
a· chance of placing in either
year and is hampered
by this year. The veterans are Doug varsity
and junior
varsity
while -Slavin should be also up
event and
•winning
medals for
financial difficulty and a lack
of
Hampel, Jeff Mullen; Steve ~yan divisions of the Collegiate Track r_iear the top for Marist. Fred
himself.
playing experience. Although and Bill Egan.

Conference
Indoor
Cham~ Krampe will hope·to equal his
Marist's one-mile relay team
coming off a
.winless.
seas~n1

Behind the team are ~wo pionships ai Queens College this performance of one y~r
a~o will consist of Jim Gillen, Dave
Coach Jeff Behnke is optimistic dedicated coaches. Head coach Saturday, March 10. This will when he beat all competitors m
Wenz, Bill Sprague, and Jim
over the fine turnout this spring. Jeff Behnke,

is_

a former mark Marist's first entries ever both
.the
.
junior varsity and
McCasland. Mccasland will also
Because last years team had only Lacrosseplayerwho is a German in the varsity coippetition in tl_le varsity-division in the longjump
·
run the 1000 with Weber; while
a small-·• core

of experienced. teacher and head soccer coach at 26~team conference, featuring while he was competing in the JV
·
Gillen will run the 600 for Marist ..
players: much of the· practices
,
Ketcham High_ School.

~he such track· stro~gholds as· C.W: division. His jump of 21'
l"
_was
a
Sprague will be competing in the
were· based on fundamentals.- defensive coa~h is Ray Pamsh, Post, Adelphi, Queens, Southern JV meet record, and Marist in-
high jump where he can place in
With the return of most of last
an elementary ~hool teacher and central Connecticut, and door record;
-Krampe
wm be_
:
the top three for a medal. He has
years players and the addition_
of and also a· forme~. Lacrosse others.

..
. •
·
• .
backed by Tim Murphy_· who· jumped 6 feet twice this indoor
••
two
••
experienced
men; Jim
-
,play~r.
Th~~ two men are
_
Marist has f~ur competitors in. jumped 21' 8" outdoors last
season. Sprague will also run the
Streibel

a
defensemen

who confident this
_squad
can p~oduc~ the varsity
.
division including: spring, ~though he has never
·
60 yard high hurdles. John

played at C.W. Post College and. the firs_t winning Lacross season two. iong jumpers,
.two
walkers, jumpted indoors. Both should be
Carberry will go after the indoor
Jack Fagan, a former Seaford at rdanst
one high
,
jumper;· and one
.
high up in the_ competition f?r
.
high hurdle record of 8.9 seconds
<L.U High Schoolmid-field star,
sprinter. Gary Slavin an_d Tony medials and pomts. Murphy will which he has come .1 second

hopes
'for
a winning season are
Wilgerwill be.entered in the mile also be competing in either the 60
·
away and also go after a place in.
high
,
walk, and both have a chance at yard dash- or the 600 yarcl run
the high jump· where he has
,
The· defe~ive teain is led by

scoring points for the Red Foxes. depending on the field in th~
·
cleared 6 feet this year. Dan
second year goalie John. (Leon)
.
two events.-
However,
his
Faison will be out after a new

Merlino. J'ohn proved himsel( to..
w·.·
..
_re·s····
__
t··

..

·r
.·.

._-··._H.·
··e·
_a.d·
_...
strongest event,,where he_has·a

installment of his indoor 60yard
b'e
a first rate goalie underfire in

chance of placing first ~d where dash record of 6.6 seconds, as
·
.our
rookie year. The care of the
he shouid·grab another medal; is both he and
.Tom.
Murphy have
defense is based
,on
five solid

the high
·jump
where h~. has_ been the best bet on placing for Marist.
veterans,
-
Mike Meddaugh,
a consistent 6'4'.' and has even
...
They' will be backed by Matt
Dennis Patierno,

Jim Ca~ra,
F
.'
·
1
· ·
·
jumpted
_6'6"
this season.
McGarril and Mike Saintomas.
.Bob
Bergin and Rich Ft:eccia.
•.
o·r·
..
·
O.W_.
a
Marist has some strong per~
Marist's
JV weight-events
With the addition of Jim Streibel
formers competing in the junior tea_m will be composed of Bob
and promising rookies Rich Bott,

varsity competition in the tough Guida, John Redmond, Dom

Dave Flynn, Marty Twilliget and

by Jim Donnelly
'
.
.
.·-
.
CTC field. Jimmy Weber will be
.
Mucci and Ron Glackin. Guida
Rich Beany, this defense should
The name of. Marist College is could not go because of previous' outto break his own 1000 yard will throw the shot and has
·
be strong.
.
being carried further into the commitments so. Farrell
.
and record which he set two weeks heaved it over 40 feet in the past.
The midfield is solid
with
interior of the U.S. than ever Lovery w~ll compete> Bobby will ago at' Queens in 2:26._3.
He also This will be "Big Bob's" first
returning :vets; Pat Lavelle, Skip before. Two fine representatives
compete m. the 150 lb._ ~lass and will anchor Marist's two-mile meet of the year. Redmond and
Lacey, Ed Lynch, Bob Farrell of our wrestling team will Apples in the 1
7?
lb; <:lass. These relay team of Frank Synan, Mike Glackin will back up Guida's
and Mike Gentille. ln addition, journey to ~e N:A.I.~. Natiopal tw~.have co!!lpded fm~ record~: Duffy, Chris Williams, who will throwing with Redmond showing
newcomers Jack Fagari,: Matt

Championships m
.Sioux
City, as Bobby. fllllshed with
ll-l-l •
be out to break the Marist indoor steady progress in all_ weight
Iowa. These. men will face the recor_dandJimmye nde<:1upat
lO-, record also. Williams, a transfer events. Redmond and Mucci will
I

1 ·
••
toughest wrestling competiti~n 2. These two have alread)'.' faced from Kansas State Univ_ersity, is throw
·
the 35 pound weight for
nt
ra
ffl
Ura
$
_-
Marist has. ever faced •. This some of the str ong competiti~n to ineligible for varsity competition, Maristand should pass the
35
foot
• _
.
tournament is comPQsed
_of
the come when they competed_ 1
11:
a and will also run.the two mile in mark.
Softball.I tr
Is illbe.
: finest small college.wrestlers
to~rnaf!lenfat
John Ch~rro~ JVcompetition,tryingtoshatter
".The·team
is•hoping·for new
n a~m:a w •
gm,, from all parts of the. country. In Umversity, Cleveland O •
0•.
the Marist indoor.· record
·
of records in the two mile relay,

weather_perm1tti~g.
_m t~o; rd
t
alify you must first place_inth1:nationalswouldbr~ng: 10:24:6. Mark Hetorilla; who has high hurdles; two-mile run, one
weeks: Rosters-are ayailable m ~neryo~.?~eight
class in the real. prestige to, µte \Vrestling: blossomed into·Marist's foremost mile walk, and possibly in the
rooms
_C-905,
C-925. and_. F-ro2.
!
districts·. Three Marist wrestlers
.program
.at• Mar1st. The
.Jours:
_distance.
runner,
.will
.be
out to miJe,•.iooo
yard run, 60 yard wish,
.
.
femfoaaslee.~opecr
m·if~~~
~[~:e::e_!_;
qiiaJified
.Bob:
·Fa'rren;
.
Jim ~ament. sta.rts todaSay anda<i
.
~he: brt:,ak his own_indoor
mile ~cord_
·1ong·jump,
__
and 600 yard
run.
-~ter;
.
, •

-
!
,
Lovery a_nd
John
_Roo.tnond._
.,:?~
·
finals
,will
be held
ll;lr
Y.

,
which· he set m
·
the last meet
ex
,.
. .
.
.
•.
r
.
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