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Part of The Circle: Vol. 11 No. 10 - December 6, 1973

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1HE
VOLUME 11, NUMBER 10
MARISTCOLLEGE,
POUGHKEEPSIE,
NEWYORIC
12601
DECEMBER 6, 1973
Despite·an energy crisis; Charnpagnat·Hall manages to luminate the campus.
All.-ROlled
Out
Maris t Affected
-
.
By
-Fuel
Shortage
By
Maryanne
McQuade
.
following suggestion for con-
.•
servation will be followed:
Marist, like other
'places,
is
- Beginning Monday, November
beginning to feel the affects of the

·
19, the temperature in the dorms


fuel shortage,. which is plaguing
was lowered to 65 degrees.
homeowners, businessmen, and
-All windows and common doors
government· officials across the
will be shut in order to keep the
nation.
The . shortage,
due
heat within the building.
primarily. to a lack of oil being ·
.

- Radiators are to be kept on

exported from the Middle East, is
constantly to provide for an even
·.
greatly taxing our own oilsupply,
flow of heat throughout the.

and has caused serious cutbacks
buildings.
. •
..
:


·
on the amount of fuel which is
- Flush out the system during
-
available.


vacation.
This
will mean that the
The administrators of Marist
dorms will
.
be closed _ during
are seriously concerned as to how
Christmas so the heating system
the shortage will affect Marist.
can be flushed out and fixed so
--
As
it stands right now· if we
that all ·rooms will be receiving
consume·

fuel at the normal
adequate heat.
.

.
amount we.will be out ofoil by
-Turnoffthebathroomlights
February.
R,ecently the In-
when not in use.

terdorm
Council
held
an
- Keep one-half of the hall lights
emerge~cy meeting to

discuss
out.
'-


what ·possibl~ solutions there

.
- Shut-off stereo~, radios, etc.
By·
Jeanne Caligiuri

were to this problem.· The major
when not in. use. •

toward the campus a police roll-a~thon for their courageous alternative·
given
was
a

,
escort obligingly assisted all who efforts in their fight • against lengthening
of

Christmas
-Christmas_
••
lighting will be
A suddei{' realization that all joined in the massive parade of cancer. The
.
festivities began vacation fromfour weeks to eight
permitted only at specific times.
the anticipation, planning. and cars
an9
students
from when the first of three donated weeks. This solution would get us
The Council believes that
if
the
enthusiasm
"that
culminated on Roosevelt's Estate in Hyde.Park:- half-kegs was tapped .. A good through the- largest part of the
suggestions are followed that the
th_e_week:end-of
Nov. 16-18th, has Although.it was anticipated that time was had by all. •
. '
cold period. Lengthening the
amountoffuel wehavewillget us
.·.·
..
·now
settle~ into a
·sigh
·of
relief._ the
-~rrel
would arrive
_.at
ap-.
,Needless
to.
sa~,
_the
success
.
vacauo.n.wcmldnieanthe a~dition through the wi.,ter,
.
••
..
:
.
More th~.rtG0·exhausted stu(Jents: _-pre>~ately :3_:0~:0_0
·.p.m.
on-~can_:
oµly. be, attnbuted • to-
.the.
<>!
four.~,et:!J{s.
to t!J.e_end:o, the
-.
B_ef~ire
the._i;lolle of school, a
. o•.<1·..-.;;,;.._;.2.QJ.Jl2illiJ~}:1f~d:?~9g:O:~,iillc;i~~e_d
.:?Sun_g~~;_;}~_did
a~rive-at)lpos~velt\s~~~f;iye_r.ie,ss;/kf/-a~1.,:~hl:if,
:~:S~IY~.>;:~.c~o<>_lt,,;r.f:r:,.'.
.S_i~_ce
;·•
~\:11as.·.
~c~ec.~;,:wi_Jfbe·
made to·_see if any
·
the:: relief
>gamEfd
,,
by'<·:the. • Es~t~_: at:9 :J5, p;m.: on Sunday:''
\members
·of
House
I·•
under the secmmg1), Wldesirabl,e
·:
to
•.
all, ··_·.
fuet:·m
'bemg·conserved

bi
these
:
Thanksgiving. Vifoa.tion•
,
an:<!
i---T~is
defay,was due
:to
_the
trouble . we}J~rganized]eadership of, the

other pos~1ble alter~abves. had to

actions •• If riot,' another alter-
thrived_ on the relaxation offer~d
, ·they
had
·in .
the·· Bronx

with a_ conscientious or.igihator
_
of
this
be_
sug~ested
a~~ discussed:_-·
•··native
will have to be found which
.
after successfully achi~ving the.
-broken
axle;
-There
:
were·
also
successful
accomplishment,

The fmB:l decISmn,
ca_me w1_th
a
seeins more favorable than the
plans of rolling a beer barrel 250 several other occassions in.which Peter Wilderotter.Many thanks conservation I?rogram suggest~
closing of school·· for the ad-
.
miles.
-

the axle gave the rollers trouble have· been extended to the by _the Council. The school will ditionaltime. The Council and the
There were many highlights for o_r the frame, on the verge of- gracious lady, Mrs. Kopec for her , r~main ope:": ~uring Fe_bruary Administration
urge you to
the students individually but breakage, was at fault. Also, the. extensive efforts in publicity for with a poss1b1~ty of dosmg f~r participate in their conservation
collectively there were a. few
..
fact that Bergen
.
County, ·New making ''the biggest thing that three days dunng th~ !Ilonth
.
if
plan and rely on your good sense
moments which were shared and Jersey, would not

allow the hit Marist College" a total sue- necessary. The dec1S1on_
was
in following_ these suggestions.
will be remembered.for quite a b~rrel to be rolled.in the county,
_cess.

based on the hope that the
while. One incident which will ,be hmdered somewhat a time lapse.
remembered
.
was the gracious Hence, a reconstruction of an
hospitality by Anhauser-Busch as addition to the route in order to
.
marking the,mid-way point of the fulfill the designated mileage to
For' Boycott
G1·ows
beer. barrel sojourn. Although break
_the
world's record.
-
ByTomPage
there was a late arrival
·of
the
On, another occassion, the
barrel by about :two and a half fi?ale of the previous events, the
hou:s,

food
_
and drink_ still victory pa~y which occurred on;;- The petition for the boycott of
awaited the weary rollers of the T~esday mght, Nov. 20th, was the all lettuce which does not have
Service.
-
students. To achieve this; certain
In speaking to the students who areas

of the campus will be
helped to canvas all the dorms, it covered again since the . main
was discovered
that
most
problem in the petitioning is to
students were
.
readily. willing to
·find
people when they are in their
give their signature for the rooms. However,_
the canvassers
support of the United Farm
are optimistic in reaching enough

barrel as we~ _as the_rest of-the vis~al_ly end product of the the United Farm Workers Union
House I participants;
_·.
:
-
feelmgs and e~citement shown by
.
seal· has been
..
going
-around
One ot~er event
_.that
not
~~y
-.·
..
House I. At this event the money campus for about two weeks now.
_House
I,:.but the who~~ Marist>c?llected from the pledges was Thus far there have: been ap-
Coll~g_e c~_~pus was able to giv~n to !}le ~erican
Ca~cer proximately
.
420 ·_resident
participate
..
m was the last half Society. Lik~wJSe,
·
the Amencan

signatures accumulated. •
hour of the, roll~a-thon;
As
the -Can~er Society awarded. each
This work has
be.en
done by a
barrel was rolled
-down
Route 9 _pai:ticipant of the beer
·barrel
group of concerned students here
·workers
Union. However,, there
people.

were· isolated· cases of resent-
Jim Ladota has stated that if a
rrient toward the. boycott.
AP-
substantial
amount
of
the
proximately twenty students out resident
students
sign the
of 440 did not wish to sign the petition,
he will honor it.
petition;
.

•.
However,
'the
boycott
will

·
·
The' Marist Rollathon
-~t
it
s beginning

at Marist. Their goal is
fo

get
enough signatures
._·.which

will
.
represent a good majority of the
resident_ students ..
·This
petition
will then. be presented to Jim
.
Lado~, manager of Saga Foods
Itis hoped that the petition can probably not go into-effect until·
grow in its number of signatures· next. semester, since most
.
of
to about 600. This figure would Saga's food orders go out one
represent a major portion
of
the month· ahead of time.
approximate


900
r.esident
-M-arist:Parti.cipates·:ln
.Blood-
Bank
.
•.
..

By Gregory Conocchioh
.
• •
an estimated .350,000 pints of many components thatmake up_
~lood, 8:nd 'together
.
with.
,the
human blood and process five of
.
on· Novemb~r 15, Marist
pommunity blood council of tqem every day for the treatment
students; faculty and staff
..
once Greater- New Yo.rk

work to
of hemophilia, anemia, leukemia,
. again·· participated· in

the semi-
provide. three services

in

the
bur.ns, shocks, genetive disorders
annual blood bank drive spoil- area of blood processing; they
ancl for specialuses in surgery.

sored by t}Je Greater-New York are:.


_
-
The·. benefits
derived
from
Blood Program· and the Greater
• ,
I. To obtain an adequate supply
donating blood not only affect the
·New,:York

Chapter
_of
the
.
of donated blood
.
•••
donor, but members of .the
-.
American
.Rex :
Cross. The·

ll. To collect it in the area
donor's: immediate-:family.- By·
program
.sponsored
:.by .the
.centers
.
.
..
_
. .
.
making the donation
·annually
.
s_~ud~t·
government for the· past

Ill._

To provide an
.
orderly'

this gives the
.
'donor

and his

eight y~rs
,collects
annually an· system for making
it
available :family
unlimited
•·
blood
• ..
estim:ited·3oo pints of blood; The
'.
where. and when needed.
repl~ement credit for one year
·.,
blood program\Vhic)1
operates
in·
• :'In.
~ollecting
~350,000
pints of from lhe·date of donation. 'lbere
.
the~eventeen counties of Greater. blood.
:yearly_
.this-:
makes the
is never
a
charge'for the blood,
· •·New
-York
and Northern; New.: organization. the. largest
'.in
the
only a proc~ing fee-is involved
.
Y<Jerser
co~es
,,tc,
-M~ist·.
twice·
a

·\vorld/ while.it
also
'opet_ates·
one
,
which
·covers
the processing

of
.
>
ye~r ..
; ..
The.;· program· which-
.
of the foremostresearch centers,· the blood and th'e distributioo of

<
represenu, the effo~
of
the
two
-
in the United States which.carries • blooci should the· situation arise ...

•·groups
combined collect annually_.. _on.the
continuing-research on ~.
.
.
._____._.,.
-

-
••
'
'.
\
.;,
,.
,_.

















































PAGE2
TIIECIRCLE
DECEMBER
6, 1973
SAGA.,Surveyed
By Students
By
Mary
Beth Pfeiffer
.
The Food Committee, headed
by Don Wilson, has recenUy
completed processing

the four
hundred and sixty surveys of

Marist's food service which
students were requested to fill out
at dinner last month. Students
were asked to evaluate the food
on a scale of one to four, from
very gocd to JX>Or
respectively,
concerning
.everything
from
.
nutritive value to service of staff.
An area for suggestions. was
included on the survey and most
students took advantage of the
opportunity
to voice their
opinion.
Service of the staff was rated
highest by the students, receiving
a 1.8. A score of 1 is interpreted as
being very good, two is good,
three is fair and four is JX)Or.
Cleanliness of the dining hall and
attractiveness of the food display
each received scores of 2.1,
giving evaluations between good
und
fair. Rated lowest was
tastiness of the food receiving a
3.0 or fair. Nutritive value and
temperature of food were close
behind with like ratings of 2.9.
Freshness and variety of the food
were also rated between good and
fair with ratings of 2.8 and 2.5.
Breakfast was voted the most
enjoyable,meal with 147 votes.
"This doesn't
'indicate
too much
differentiation,"
said Wilson,
because lunch was voted most
_enjoyable
by a close 138 votes.
The meal indicated over-
whelmingly in
.
need of
·
most
improvement was dinner which
received 218 votes.
Suggestions of the students
towards improvement of the food
service
operations
were
classified
into
four
main
categories. "The most serious
response was given in the area of
preparation of the food," Wilson
told the Circle, "This category
included temperature of the food
which many students commented
upon.'
1
Pleas were made to fix
D. Id G
d K
'th
hilli
·
the fault
d
hi
"
ona
omez an
e1 P
ps are two of the representatives for
.
,
Y
so a mac nes, once
the Marist blind student
and for all" as one student put it.

One student termed the spaghetti
C
.

sauce as "water logged" and
.
OllllD.Ittee n
another called the
meat "50
.
Blindness
Acts
percent fat!'


The second category most often
commented upon was variety of
the food. Many students asked
that less starches be served.
Taste of the food and nutrition
were the third and fourth
categories of major concern.
Suggestions for meat at break-
fast more often and "getting rid
of the funny taste in the donuts"
were among those made.
The Food Committee, whose
advisor is Ursula Freer now
plans· to bring the-results of the
survey to the manager of Saga at
Marist, namely Jim Ladota.
Their goal is for "the main-
tenance of high standards of both
food service and quality at
Marist'\ Wilson
.
stressed the
point that the likelihood of
problems incurring between the
Committee
and

the
Saga
management is minimal.
By Jeanne Caliguiri
for basic facilities for the· blind blind children in the surrounding.
that are needed to survive in area.
Entitled
"B
.~;A.P. ",
It's about time facilities were college. One excellent example of
''Blind Children Are People" it
constructed on campus for the the good that could eminate from will serve as a catalyst to educate
blind and the partially
.
blind
·
a program such as this is a
blind children
.
with daily living
students. Students such as Nancy library;
-
a· library containing skills, mobility;-games, or even
Martinez and Keith Phillips, have necessary and vital books fQr the
simple activities such as tying.
already taken constructive action blind so there is no need of shoes or making beds. Although
toward a better living and wasting unduly time waiting for
.
the students
involved
with the
learning atmosphere more-so for the books to arrive
.
.from New start of such a program are very
future blind students at Marist York City or Albany ..
·
Even
optimistic, Naricy Martinez was
College. Along with Nancy and simple and basic books like an
very realistic when she said, "I
Keith, others have also taken an encyclopedia are presently not can foresee conflicts with parents
active part in originating a available to these students.
- some blind children are over
"Blind Committee": Martinez is
St. Rosa Co!lege in Albany has
protected".
,
the president, Don Gomez the already started a chapter of this
It seems that talk of this
vice president; Mime Diaz (a committee, the closest office is in
program has been unveiling since
commutor
from
Dutchess WhitP.'P!ai~s.-Tl,1,.r,:
b
110
chapter
October with Dean Wade as an
Comrmmity
C.:,i~e6
c::1
ine in the Poughkeepsie area but

advisor. Although· the most
secretary and John Conklin, there seems to be enough en-
difficult problems to overcome at
treasurer.

thusiasm and optimism among ;present are needed funds for the
These students
have the the blind ail~ partially blind
buying cf books and equipment
initiative to organize and start a sudents of Marist
.
College to
necessary and the area needed to
program where freshmen blind begin this worthwhile

program' supply a common groW1d for
students could come to them
if
for a better progression of

..information and contact in an
.
.
.
.
they needed help. Although campus life through the library
office, there
.
is still a great
2
00
·C
z
·
.

A
·

-
·
.
\
·
.
rp
.
prospects do nqt look promising, and community.
••
•.
amount of enthusiasm within the
·
.
,

·.

,'.U'
.
·.
·, 'r{r:1ves·
0
.::L
O
thereisstillhope~_finc!in~ room
In view of the community students in concentrated efforts



••
••
• 1
•.


.
• ••
.•.
:
·•


• ••
·,
.•
.
-•
•.

•·
on campus to convert 1t mto an aspect of this program, efforts
to get a program such as. this off
. _
office. If a room is contracted, it have been made to try to organize
the ground.
' .,·,
..

A id H
d •
.··
·

·
·
d
will serve as a central operation a workshop on the weekends for

ByDeborabTurne~n
,e~l~~ppe'

Bureau Looks At
There are signs and posters
all over campus· announcing a
new club called the "200 Club.".It
sounds very 50-ish but the pur-
pose is a very humane· and

special one. The
'club
needs 200
members. Membership os $20 per
person. This fee is payable by $1 a
·week
for
20
weeks. The club must
raise $4,000 Half of
·
the money
($2,000) will be for the purchase
of an Electronic Visual Aid
(LVA) machine to aid: those
students

who are partially blind

3. A linearity compensation.
circuit in the horizontal deflec-
tion circuit provides a picture
with very little distortion.
4. Stabilizing circuit in the
power supply assures stable
operation for voltage fluctuation.
The other $2,000 will go for
drawings. The drawings will take
place·between December 19,1973
to May 1, 1974. There will be two
(2) $25 drawings every t:wo
weeks. On May 1, 1974,
there will
be a
$500-$300
-$~0 drawings:
A
student is eligible to win piore
-Cons·u1ner Fraud
By Gregory J. Garville
'
Consumer Fraud is seldom on
anyone's list
··of
urgent public
issues, yet it involves everyone
from
shoeshine_ boys
to
millionaires. Millions of dollars
each year are lost

to un-
scrup1dous merchants by con-
sumers· who do not follow their
dealing. with reputable
.mer-
chants who have been in business
in your community

for many
years.
.
DON'T ACCEPT AN IN-
COMPLETE BILL FOR YOUR
MERCHANDISE.
Make sure the
total price' includes delivery,
installation
and
,
warranty
_charges;
and be sure the seryice
into a shop with an advertised
offer: of a fabulous bargain,
• •
refusing to sell it and switching
the customer to something more
expensive he did not want is
illegal. This.is what
·is
known .as
"Bait and Switch.''
DON'T ACCEPT OR RELY ON
ORAL PROMISES.. Get your
guarantee in writing.















































































DECEMBER
6, 1973
TIIE. CIRCLE
Ep~demic Proportions
Reached
_
By America's Social Diseases
By Lyn Osborne
It has been referred to for
years as a "social" disease, one
that is never mentioned in mixed
company or even among friends
of the same sex. It is never the
subject . of discussion in the
media, at least until recently. Its
name, of course, is venereal
disease. It is a known fact that
"good;'
girls and boys

from
"good" families never catch this
unmentionable germ, and even if
they do it must have been from a
toilet seat.
A known fact~ Hardly. But for
many - including a surprisingly
large number of supposedly
educated Marist students - it is
the only fact. There are those
who, approached with questions
concerning the diseases, claim
ignorance due to the fact that
"I

have no reason to be concerned
with
VD."
But it is precisely
these people who say
"It'll
never
happen to tne" that catch "from
somewhere" the disease. As for
the. symptoms, well, these are
never discussed openly, or even
in private, for many people have
only a vague notion of how VD
strikes.
There has been little know ledge

distributed before recent times,
with the exception of the eternal
bathroom-wall literature, about
what has turned out to be one of
America's leading diseases. The
fact is, there are - or rather were -
no iacts available to anyone on
this hush-hush subject. Doctors,
of course, learned in med school
the medical causes and effects of
venereal diseases, but seem to Somehow during contact with
have forgotten them as soon as heat and moisture it begins a
approached by an infected or foaming process which
kills
any
worried patient. Public health venereal germs present with no
agencies in the past have been discomfort
or
adverse effects to
inquisitors on the scale of
~e
either partner.
ancient Spaniards, as well as
But while for the most part,
Victorian moralists to boot. Just medical discoveries such as these

as "sex" educat~on (or "health" are
·
not available
to most

as it is· known in more timid Americans, there are other
cities) took
a
long· time in possibilities. Although the con-
coming, the knowledge of
VD ,dom is not hailed for its ef-
and its treatment and prevention fectiveness as a birth control

is still arriving.
product, it is, and always has
T~ke the word "prevention"
.been,
a good preventative
for example. Although there have measure to take
_
against the
finally been made accessable to chance of venereal disease. Also,
·
the public the symptoms and although most birth control
treatment for the cure of VD, foams offer less pregnancy
little has been made-known as to protection . than the popular
the preventative measures that "pill" it is a little known fact that
can - and should- be taken. One of at least one brand of foam does
the simplest and obviously most kill venereal disease. (We cannot
disregarded is that of thorough advertise or promote the product,
cleansing - soap and water do but it can be learned from other
have an effect on the germs, but sources). During proven field
not just after the fact: one should experimentation of this product
both before and after having.

in a Nevada brothel - where
relations with another, simply prostitution is legal - doctors as
wash. This is not
an
obscure fact, well as the company itself, were
not is it' one that is infrequently made aware of this fact as
practiced, but for many people is recently as
1971,
but due to
a
dangerously
overlooke~ national repression
of
an:v.
salient
practice.
factual. information concerning
Prevention can also take other venereal disease prevention, no
forms. Armed forces have for move was made to advertise such
years been protecting their facts.
.
overseas rank and file with an
However, the way is beginning
anti VD· type drug, which for to open for pertinent
VD
some
reason,
they
must knowledge. Articles in national
relinquish upon return to the magazines and newspapers, as
homeland.
·The
Japanese have
if
well as television exposure have
''foaming
action" tablet in the brought facts to the public. One of
form of an aspirin shaped sup-
posit~ry
used by fema.les.
.
Continued on
p.tgc 6
~-----~--------------~
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.-
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''RAT".
·
·
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A-CE-w-,N~E-
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·


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at
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FOR THE EARLY BIRD
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State Hospital
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.Tutoring
Toast or Hard Roll
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YMCA
gym assists
..
Only$L30
'
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I
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.
For more info:.
Room 214-A
Donn.

or 123 Champ.
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Ho~dbook
PAGE3
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The Paulists
are
trying
to meet the·
challenge
of today's world
in city
streets
and suburban homes
ori the campus

and in the parish
facing the issues
of pover!y and peace
injustice
and
war
and listening
for
sounds
of love
in
their
own way
to
achieve
their mission:
to help Christ
communicate
the ideas
from His mind
to the minds
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For more information about the
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articles, posters and recordings.
Wrilclo:
rather Donald C. Campbell,
Room 104
Paulist
1·:·























































PAGE4
TIIECIRCLE
DECEMBER 6, 1973
•CIRCLE
Letters
To The Editor
Volume 11 Marlst College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Number 10
Teacher
Education
Co-Editors
Jim Keegan and Anne Trabulsi
program. Only three of the eight "weak area". lbelleve
that
as a
arrived. However, that was their newcomer to this office I can be
decision and hardly to be tenned granted
••
some degree of ob-
To the Editor,
our "reluctance".
jectivity
if
I ~rongly disagree
The door to the Teacher
As for
his
charge of "cover up" with this description of the
Feature Editor
Maryanne McQuade
LayoutEditor
Lyn Osborne
Spora.
Editor
_
Jim Donnelly
PhotograJily Editor
Rich Brumme!t
Corresponding Editor
~ry Foster
Staff:
Brian Morris, Jim Nacca~to, Frank Baldascmo, Car~lY!)
Boyd, Jeanne Caligiuri,· Patrick Callagy, Greg Concocch1oh,
Katherine Finnegan, Kevin O'Connor, Tom Pag~,
Mary
Bet~
Pheiffer, Bill Werle, Mitchell Williams, Dave Pnstash, Candi
Education-Office is'.open to the.
we might perhaps go over the program. There are some great
anonymous editorial writer who
minutes
of
the
Teacher strengths in the preparation of
"would like some answers,,
Education
Advisory Council Marist's student teachers and
regarding the Teacher Education
meetings
of this semester,
there
are,
indeed,
some
Program and the Middle States
minutes which were available to weaknesses. One of the strengths
visit.
the visitor from the

state,
I have noted and appreciated is
On the occasion of his visit, we
minutes which are also sent to the the frankness students have
might perhaps
.
discuss
his
SAC representatives
to the demonstrated in coming to me to
allegation
that
we
.
were 'Council, who, incidentally, attend let me know of problems and the
"reluctant to have students speak
Council meetings. We might initiative they have demon-
up on both the positive and
discuss the visit
of
the state strated in inaking suggestions for
negative
aspects

of
the
representative
to
four strengthening various aspects of
.
program."
~
his co!lcern is a
7
cooperat~g teachers in a neigh- the program in the fu:ture.
/
curacy, he IIUght be mterested m
bormg high
.school
who
are
It
may be
tl_J~t
~e Cll'Cle e_ditor
pavis, Tim
·neBaun.

.
.
.
'Business
Managers
Mark Fitzgibbon,
Ken Hayes, Jack Reigle
In Response._
..
knowing that
.
at least eight
presently supervising Marist has heard cntlc1Sins of which I
student teachers
were
invited to
student teachers. Is "cover up;'

ought to
be
aware. I will welco~e
return to the Marist campus at
.
possible
under
such
cir-
hearing }hem. ~f
I
am
.
la~fmg
the end of their student teaching
.
cumstances? And what is to be under
false unpress1ons , I
In
response to a letter from the Teacher Education department the day to speak with the 11!presen- gained by "cover up"?
hope he ~ill feel a responsibility
CIRCLE
is
very happy to see that "the door to the Teacher Education tative from the New York State
Having discussed, in fuller to. M~rist and· the . teacher
Office is open". But this has not always been the case. One example ~Bureau of Teacher Education
detail, the ctbove items, perhaps education st~dents to bring them
betraying a less open attitude was an incident which occurred in who accompanied the. Middle our writer might let me turn to a to my atten~1on.
September when a CIRCLE reporter wrote a story about the ad- States team. Those invited were a
muchmoreseriousasswnptionin
••
The door
is
open. Please stop_
ministrative turnover within the department. The reporter as well
as
sampling from the five subject
his editorial -
his
charge that in.
Cordially,
Jne of the newspaper's photographers was "harrassed" for merely areas in the secondary education
teacher education at Marist is a
Elizabeth Nolan
relating
the story to the college commuruty.

.

Furthermore, using the word anonymous to. describe an editorial
writer is not applicable to the denotation of the word "editorial".
An
Congratulations
...
;:~tori.al
reflects the opinions of the editors which are clearly named in
nny publication. Usually, it is the shared attitude offuore than one TotheStudentsofMarist College;
editor. Iil the ~se of the CIRCLE, editorials are written by Anne
It
is
my pleasure to extend the
Trabulsi, James Keegan, Mitchell Williams or Brian Morris. (ThE>se
..
congratulations of the City of
names
appear in the "Circle Box" directly above).
New York to the students of
In
reference to the M:iddle States visit, in particular the meeting Marist CoUege who are "rolling
with the representative from the New York State bureau of Teacher
.~ducatio~,
the CIRCLE editors were completely aware that in;.
vitations were sent outto at least eight student teachers to attend the
S 1
· d ·
t
W
1,
J,
meeting. Wearealsoawareofthefact
thatthereare approximately
45
0 I
an
y
Of~5 ..
!:!.::;
out the barrel" to raise funds .for
the American Cancer Society.
Your "Rollathon" is a unique
way of demonstrating
.your
concern for the advancement and
treatment of this terrible illness ..
Our City appreciates your special
effort in the aid of this important
cause.
,
.
I
wish you success in reaching
both your goal to break the
barrel-rolling record and in your
goal of
.a
$3000 contribution.
Sincerely,
John V. Lindsay
Mayor
-

student teachers,
not to
mention those students involved
in
Special
and
Elementary education programs.We are
'aware
of the fact that of the

chosen eight itwas known that many could not possibly return from
·
the schools in which they teach in time to meet with the represen-
tative. Finally, of the three able to return in time to attend the meeting
only two subject areas were r_cpresented (English and. Modem
Languages). This indicates that ·Iess than 15 percent of the students
involved
in
theTeacher Education Program were invited, less than
½
of the subject areas were represented, and of. that small numb~

of
students',invited
not. even-the- consideration
foro tirri•es°':and
distances
mhi'.:'~
:m1eiy
includes Ll-iat of action and involvement on both
celebrating any one· day· or any sides of ~e· walls.· Let us get
one historical event to highlight
.
about NOW dealing with some of
BROTHERS
&
SISTERS:
either past achievements or those important issues that were
.
we extend to you the love and
present struggles. Our history raised.· and· which are wrecking
peace of a Brother; to you, of you,
has been one of a daily struggle, ha_voc

\\lith
our minds, lives,
and for you. Once again we have
each day_ constituting a '.'BODY children, brothers· and sisters.
managed to provide one another
COUNT" upon our PEOPLE by
Hopefully we will be able to
with love, warmth; Brotherhood,
the
·enemy.
We must not.lose the continue a working relationship

involved
in meeting the interview.deadline was given resulting in less
than.5 percent representation of the program.We see no reason why
an open invitation was not issued in a situation which seemed to
·
Sisterhood and a sense of com-
.ground
gained, on this day or fall

of SOLIDARITY WORKSHOPS
nutment and·, struggle
J>.~YO,I.!d
. ;
back.intQ
-old:
ways, habits:
~nd on
the
..
campus and within the
that : of
:personal .p~bleJ11S
aqd; , : va!u~,. ~ps~~q!l_et
~
ta.ke
flnn
prison in whicli

rear· solutions
sectarian· conflicts. We m!JSt grip. of the essence of the

shall
.come
"forth·'
to
··oe
im-
stretch beyond the molds that \ve . NOVEMBER 5th, _
1973
program
plemented.
.


.


.
warrant one.

have been pressurized
into,
and move to_ a higher level of
BLACKSOLIDARITY
COM-

MITTEE
To continue, now with references to the Advisory Council, CIRCLE
editors are aware of the fact that the Teacher Education Council was
concerned (or should the word worried be used) that some students
from the Social Studies area would speak with the Middle States
representative. SAC representatives to the Council are receptive and
sensitive to such attitudes. And at this point we would also like to say
that several students did take it upon their own initiative to meet with
Mr. Reich of Middle States after the scheduled interviews. We
maintain that the entire situation seems rat~r strange and that there
was a lack of a genuine effort on the part of Teacher Education to give
the Middle States representative
a
"Total" picture of the program.
Thanks
Jo BSU
Bro. Richard: We of the Black
Solidarity
·committee
speaking
for the general population wish to
thank you the

student par-
ticipants, for their wonderful
presentation.
-We
would have
liked to write individual letters to
the entire membership of the
Black Students Union, but this is
almost impossible due to_
the fact
we don't have their individual
names. Please convey our thanks
to
your
poets,

dancers,
dramatist, and speakers. You
proved to many ofus that we as
detained members of the black
community are missing but not
forgotten. This spirit that you
have· left us with must now be
nutured and not allowed to die.
For we need Black Solidarity
Since an editorial is by definition allowed
to
an emotional response,
let
us
delineate clearly the emotions we hope this response expresses.
A
desire to strengthen, change, and improve something is not an ex-
pression of arrogance and hostility. Quite contrarily, to the CIRCLE it
is the highest expre$ion of concern and respect for that particular
thing. The feeling· of dissatisfaction with the Teacher Education
program asit stands
is
not only prevalent but valid.
If
the people in-
Where
Have
All The Flowers.Gone
volved do· nothing to improve the situation, it will continue. And
whether or not the Teacher Education department can accept and

comprehend the. fact that their students desire to develop and
-
strengthen the program although they themselves will graduate and
no longer be affected by it, these students do care about its future.
Perhaps tile dissatisfaction, the charge of "cover-up"
.reflects
the
.
caliber of students with which the department is dealing.
By Michelle
Wyche
Where have all the flowers
gone? ... Long time pass_ing. As I
look at all of the beauty in the
world and relate it to my people, I
find myself asking; where have
S
f
t
A
t
M

t
all the beautiful and strong
a e
Y
a r
I
S

brothers and sisters gone?
_When
.
.

.
.
l
see the oppressor
.infi1trating

·
.
.
.
.· ·
our minds with disun.ity and
On December
29, 1970,
the Occupational-Safety and Health
Act
of unhappiness;
I
again ask myself;
1970
was passed. This act was aimed at improving safety and health when: will. they· 1earn, .when -will
conditions
in
industry and b!JSiness. How does this act affect Marist? they ever learn?
. ·
There are nwnerous regulations and requirements that are neee1ec1 We as a people are strong by
to be in compliance with the act. At any time inspectors
.from
OSHA
can make a spot check to see that all of the safety codes are being met.
If
there arc? any violations the college will
be
fined and will also have to
rectify the safety hazards. Both the fines and the repairs can cost an
enormous amount of money resulting in funds having to be reallocated
.
from other needed areas. At several other colleges it has taken a
tragedy to occur before.the admini&rationsrealized the urgency of
these hazards.

.
.
• ..

.


Marist is no exception from any other college and is subject to the
same provisions of this act. There are severalareas at Mari.st which
some seem to feel are unsafe. For instance, tne railings on the top of
Fontaine are not the height that is stipulated in the act, some feel that
the improvements on making the metal sculptures are still riot what
they should be: The students themselves can.cause fire hazards by
keeping appliances in their
.
rooms and emptying the fire ex-
tinguishers: Laboratories and shops, such as· our print shop,
are
two
areas where safety
:st'!ndards
are the most
strict.

• •
··
·,
The Security Department at Marist is in charge of maintaining the
safety standards, but it is the administration which ts resp_onsible
for
providing the funds necessary
fo~.
corrections.

·, /

SAGA COMMENDED
The members of the.· Black
Student Union would like to take
this.time to thank those SAGA
personnel who have been very
helpful arid generous with their
time
·and
efforts in making our
.
events successful. Special thanks
to Jim, Bob, Skip, John, Joe and
all the others.

·
- •
Peace,
Richard E. Green
Vice'Chainnan BSU
nature, yet the oppressor -has
succeeded
.in
weakening o·ur
minds and causing disunity
witnm the Black masses.
Where
.
have all
.
the flowers
gone? They have gone to prisons,
mental
asylums,

and
rehabilitation centers. They have
died in. the .Viet Nam "WJ\R",
they have become homosexuals,
.
and Uncle Toms. When will they
ever learn? We will learn when
we realize that· there

are too
many thorns and weeds among
the flowers,· when we r~lize that
POOL TOURNAMENT
An Eight Ball Tournament will
be held during the week of
December

10 in the· Campus
Center Game Room. There will
be monetary awards for the first
three. places.
A
registration fee
will be required depending·
..
on.·
how many people sign up. Lists to
sign up
.
will be in• the Campus
Center Game Room, Switchboard
a~d. Intramural Office;
everyday of the year. We also
wish to thanlc you personally for
the effort you put forth in our
solidarity program. Once again
from the bottom of our hearts we
wish to thank you
_one
and all.
There is much more that needs to
be said, but conditions cio not
allow for it.
.
We close as we
opened
iri
peace.
"Solidarity
Forever".
Thurman Harris
solidarity is the answer. We will
learn when we have admitted to
.

ourselves that a house divided
,
cannot stand.
I am here to say that I am for
solidarity, and if all of us here
feel the same
.way,
I would not
have
·to
ask where the flowers
have gone, for we wQuld not
be
here as a crowd; but as,a strong,
outstanding bouquet. Brothers
and sisters, Let us work together

to bring
_about
solidarity which
-
we all need to survive. When we
all get together,
and

grow
together, and die. together, we
will then know that our goal has
been

reached .... Long
time
passing. I le~ve you with peace.
Please
Note'
The Marist College Circle·
welcomes. Letters to the
·Editor,
but cannot guarantee pulilication
and reserves the right to edit and
comment editorially on them.
Advertising rates on request.
.
Appearance. of an adyertiseillent
in The MaristCollege Circle does
riot. imply editorial . endorsement
of the

product or service.s ad-
vertised ..
































DECEMBER
6, 1971
THE ClRCLE
PAGES
Lest We Forget
I
WAS
TAKING
TH£
TAPES
OVER
TO
JUDGE
SIRICA
...
BUT
I WAVE
A CERTAIN
QUALITY
... I
REMAINED
COOL!
.. AND.
DASHED
TO f
SI
RICA'S
OFFICE.
. . WHEN
I WAS
JUMPED /
BY
A'
PARTISAN
MUGGER.
I RESCUED
All BUT
rwo
OF THE
TAPES
...
Wr{AAf
~
Why
doesn't
anybody?
e.ter 041ieve me .....
By Bro. Richard Green
Dear Mr. Carter:
A very large percentage of
whites wish there were no
niggers on campus and much
more hate to see your nigger
center, Martin Luther King Jr .
Afro-American Center. It is this
type of place that adds to the
Black threat upon civilized white
society. Just do not forget that
many whites tacitly hate your
guts and would not flinch at your
disappearing one day. Niggers
belong in shackles and the
nigger's
free ride on the
whiteman's society is one of these
days going
to
come right back
and hit him in the face. GO BACK
TO AFRICA NIGGER!! We don't
want your black face here.
Very Concerned White
Students;
The above letter was addressed
• to the Director of the Afro Cen-
ter: Boston University ..... As an
open-letter to the Black student
body.
The essence of the above letter
somewhat epitomizes the general
subtle attitudes
of various
members of this college com-
munity. These attitudes have
seemed to intensify to a much
greater degree with the recent
ascension of the racist Nixon
regime. Marist College was not
spared of this gradual sub-
version. "Defacto racism" does
not necessarily run rampant on
'------------------•--------------------...,.
this campus,
but there
is
. Storey
Does 1
t
Again
The Contractor "A Play About
a Tent" by David Storey
.,
.. Reviewed by Qoug
.s':e.
~nd
· Mary Devine

David Storey
is rapidly
becoming one of the most ac-
. claimed playwrights in the world.
are a lovely old couple w_ho
have
worked hard during their lives,
and have .trouble understanding
both <-.'younger,·generations,"
evidence of such existing, in
isolated cases. Attributing it only
to the recent election results
would be over simplifying the
whole matter; since there are
other valid facts involved.
Many Black and White students
are experiencing for the first
time
an
exacerbating
in-
.troducUon.
to . each other ....
White
students. who have never.
been
exposed to Blacks other than in a
"mythical" relationship, will
have certain false pre-conceived
notions about. Blacks. This will
also be found in the vice-versa
situation. Conversations with
White
students
and
_ad-
ministrators have clearly in-
dicated this lack of a realistic
knJwledge of Black people. This
inevitably
leads
to
'pre-
judgement', and formulation of
some startling conclusions. What
stems from this phenomeon, is
one form of this subtle racism
that exists on this campus.
There is also those who have
been formally introduced and
involved with members
of
theopposite race, who have
consciously structured in their
minds those necessary artificial
barriers that are primodial for
being considered a racist. These
people reflect their attitudes in
their daily endeavors. In the case
of the administration,
these
actions are sanctioned when
there are no conscious efforts
be1ng made to eradicate blatant
prejudice from our community.
( e.g. Certain artibrary actions on
the part of the student resident
staff,. being supported and sanc-
tioned by the administration).
This 'is also prevalent in many
other areas of this community.
These actions again are not
spontaneous, they stem from
another contradiction
which
exists amongst us.
There is a certain crisis that
this college as well as others
faces: with the dilema of either
accepting 'minority students' and
the funds that they bring in; or
adhering to their traditional
academic standards as well as
their ethnical dogma. The 'open
admission' practice that evolved
in the late sixties, had its effects
on the Marist
community .
"H.E.O.P." (Higher Educational
Opportunities
Program)
represented this new direction at
Marist College. What has steadily
happened over the past five
years, is basically what has taken
place . in our society. In the
beginning the in-coming students
. were. accepted . with . .limited
restrictions ("liberally").
As
the
years progressed the acceptance
policies beome more rigid. The
new rigidity again reflects the
society's
attitudes
towards
programs
geared
towards
Continued on page 7
His first play to come to
Broadway was The Changing
Room, which, as you well know,
was a smashing success, winning
several awards. The Contractor
lives up to any expectations one
-might have of a Storey play - it
was excellent!
wandering soul (until he runs out
of money). He makes attempts to
be useful, but the· workmen are
,hostile toward him - he ends upin
the middle of several arguments.
Claire, the beautiful bride-to-be,
has hardly any personality at all-
much like • her future husband
Maurice (a doctor). The "old
folks," Mr. and Mrs. Ewbank
seem to be present to remind the
rest of the family that they
too
will be old some day: Grandpop is
almost totally deaf, and Storey
uses that to make several good
jokes which offer some com-
munication (people must shout
into his ear to talk to him). They
We feel that Storey ·had two
main themes running throughout
his masterpiece: the fragility of
humanity', and the ultimate
question of success in life. A
great deal of time is devoted to
watching the workmen slowly
peck away at each others' souls.
Kay and Bennett bear the brunt
of most of the cutting and
slashing remarks by Marshall
and 'Fitzy.' The effects of the
Commentary:
The
Continued
on page 7
Typical of a Storey play, the
plot
is
very simple. The daughter
of a rich tent company owner
("the contractor") is getting
married, and the owner has one
of his own tents erected on • his
estate. The action consists of
putting the tent up before the
wedding and taking it down after
the wedding. Our interest was
Prison G11:tes Open
M.entally Retarded
By Chris Liska
are children whose problem may
be that of a foreign language
problem. But those properly
fitting the definition are often the
hard-core, lower income bracket
workers; those that are taken
advantage of in simple daily
encounters. Think of "Charlie" in
the film by that same title and the
ridicule he faced from his co-
workers. Think also of some
workers we see every day on this
campus and the ridicule they
sometimes face from Marist
students.
By Deborah Turner
-captured by the two groups of
The newspaper put out by
people iri the play: the workmen Green Haven inmates is called,.
who do quite a bit of horsing "Operi· Gate." Its staff is very
around in addition to their work, small in contrast to the "Circle"
and the contractor's family who_ and yet, it has 12 pages compared
seem._ to be strangers to each to our 4 to 6 page newspaper.
other (they spend a lot of time Wallace Johnson is the editor of
worrying about staying out of the paper, who has also written
each other's way).
.
• for the Circle. I asked Mr.
The workmen are a motley Johnson what were his biggest
crew (to. be . generous). They problems in getting the paper out
consist of Marsjlall (a thrice-
of Green Haven.
married Irishman), Fitzpatrick
He said, "Censorship is one
(a
bar-hopping . bachelor);
problem. When we· make a
Bennett (a spectacle of wasted statement on something that we
. potential due to his wife's antics), feel is relevant and needs at-
and Glendenning (a mentally tention drawn to it, the censor
retarded man at the mercy of the can prohibit the publication
others). Their foreman, Kay, an unless
we
write a small editorial
ex-con who did some time . for in the paper concerning the
embezzling, is mainly concerned statement or story written in
. with getting the· Job done (a-real contradiction to what we have
'stuffed-shirt' type).
written." In other words what the
The contractor's
name is administration doesn't want the
Frank ("by .name and nature") puJ?lic to know, they rectify the
Ewbank, Present on the.estate at situation by having the inmates
the time of the wedding are his insert editorials.
.
_ wife, son, daughter, parents, and
The circulation of paper is once
• future son-in-law> Mrs. Ew_bank a month. The· inmates
do
is a seemingly kind-hearted soul everything
necessar;y
for
who.has .evident communicatiqn prepar~tion of the paper so that
problems with. the rest pf the when it goes out,it just needs to
family. His son, Paul, an Oxford• be printed. Usually copies rw1 up
arid Cambridge scholar who to 3,000._
The cos_t
.for such an
"!ioes nothing for ~ving"· is a, ~mount 1s approxunately $200 or
One of the few areas in special
more. The usual cost is $100 or a education with a fine national
little more without special issues. research team in this country is
The last few pages of "Open that of mental retardation. This
Gate"
are translated
into is due to the interest taken by
Spanish. There used to be three President Kennedy in the early
Latinos who did. the translations sixties. The President's Com-
but currently there is only one. mission on Mental Retardation
The translation is everything that .has remained intact and issues
is written
·in.
English in the ah annual periodical on the work
newspaper.
they are doing in the area. One of
The set up goes from a two- the findings published in the most
colwnn to a three-column, as recent report deals with the
·compared with the Circle which causes of mental retardation in
has a four-column set up.
the U.S.
Contrary to what
To combat some of the many people think, mental
problems, "Open Gate" will retardation encompasses many
become a journalism workshop
.. more problems than that of the
Participants will be from the Mongoloid child. What is causing
Poughkeepsie Journal, and other the
most
widespread
ex-
area newspapers. Other par-
ceptionality in children, that of
ticipants will be from Marist retardation rather than sensory
College, Jim Keegan, co-editor of disorders such as blindness or
the Circle, Debbie Turner, and deafness, is not primarily a
students from the campus -
genetic disorder or brain injury.
Neville Bolling, Ernest Royal and 75 percent of the causes for
a few others, who will be men- mental retardation are socio-
tioned when the program is in its encironmental factors. Of the
finality .. The money · for the mentally retarded, 89 percent are
program was set aside by the classified as mildly retarded.
institution. It was there last year, This classification is due mainly
but no one took the initiative to to social and environmental
formulate
it.
This
year, · conditions to which they are
hopefully, there will be a new subjected. . Mild retardation is
meaning.for "Open Gate" and its used to describe those people
awareness
within ·the· com-
whose I.Q.falls in the range of 55-
munity.
68. (Normal
is
approximately
100). Included in this category
It is a sad comment on the state
of affairs in this country which
actually fosters mental retar-
dation in their people due to
disadvantageous environments.
Working with the mildly
retarded is frustrating in that the
problems :tre often caused by the
non-retarded
members.
of
society. These frequently hard
working and good natured people
fall easy prey to drug and sexual
abuse as well as receiving the
lowest scale
of pay. Jim
Kavanagh of Newburgh Free
Academy is one of the few people
in the area
working with
teenagers facing the stigma of
mild retardatibn. This society of
ours if very efficient; it creates a
new cause of mental retardation
with
its
environmental
deficiencies then compounds the
problem by victimizing that.
same group.







































PAGE6
DECEMBER
6, 1973
Shout It Softly
Third Year View
By Fr. Leo Gallant

.
By Bob
Nelson
Interesting Ideas I'd Miss If I
debate, discussion, conversation
Even the day I arrived in
Didn't Observe Banners over
argwn· g provm·
g
e bal
• '
,
, V r
.
pmg-
Geneva, I noticed everywhere the
Thanksgiving
Weekend
pong In dialogue
I
keep
• t
. •
qwe
posters announcing the elections
(IIlMIIDOBOTW):
whil~ you are speaking. I listen to
for the Grand Conseil, or
High
"Lord, when we are wrong,
your words. I try to under&and
Council, the legislative body for
makeuseasytolivewith." "Lord
what you are saying. I
am
en-
the canton of Geneva. Since
give me this day my daily opinion' deavoring to think with you in
armchair political analysis has
and forgive me the one I had
your context, within you.
'
been one of my favorite pastimes,
yesterday".
"There are no
One breaks the dialogue when
I bought a few local papers and
strangers,
only friends we he prepares w~at he wants to say
took an interest in the camp"ign,
haven't met." "When life gives while another IS speaking, tries to
As in most of the• democr;ies
us lemons,· make lemonade." prove a point again& an oir
of Latin Europe, whether at the
''The greatest oak was once
·a
ponent.' In dialogue one seeks
·,.
local or national
level, one of the
little nut that held its ground;'.' understanding, not victory. In openness, we are trained not to most striking aspects of the
"The turtle only moves ahead by true dialogue there are no op- show our hand and to play it cool political arena is the large
sticking out his head." "Please,
ponents.
and to do the other guy in before number of parties. involved. In

be patient. God isn't finished with . What_ usu~y makes dialogue he gets us. We seek true friend- the United States, the two major
me yet."
~possible
is
fear
of
error and ship and usually encounter parties are pluralistic groupings mightnotbeabletomakeittothe
I also saw these on having an nnstake, lack of openness and

etiquette and politeness masking with similar ideologies, and polls on a specific day. In the
open mind: "Minds are like h«?nesty, . roles a~d masks. anything from dislike to in- elected representatives have no fifteen polling places in the city of
parachutes. They function only Dia~og~e
1S
totally pe~onal but difference. Frequently when we obligation to vote the way their Geneva and the fifty-three
when open." "Freedom has ~e live ma world w~1ch
1S
largely search for understanding, we party says: European parties, on

throughout the rest of the canton,
never relies on uniformity of unpe_rsonal.
~e ep1~me of.lack
·
meet people who are trying to the other hand, are very often the voters had a choice among
opinion." "You shall know the
·of.
dialogue is Archie Bunker. prove all sorts of things to us.
organized around a specific the following parties: Socialists;
truth and the truth shall
·make
Such people ta~ at people, when
Some· key words to describe ideology, such as socialism, and Worker's; Radical; Liberal;
you mad."-
"It
often shows a fine they are not yelling att~em. :i,tey dialogue are: open, honest, the elected representative who Christian-Democrat; Alliance of
command of the language to say approach every question with a loving (friendly) understanding votes against his party on an Independents; Taxpayer's; and
nothing."
preparE;<I,
central ~swer .. This thinking, sharuig, free, kind: important issue may find himself Vigilance. Before the elections,
I
suppose this leads to some dramatic_ p~sentation of the creative, hwnortoned, unafraid. without party support when the the ruling coalition was. com-
ideas on dialogue that I'd like to closed ~d
is f?~d funny by
We can see how difficult next election comes around.
posed
of • the Christian-
share with you.
I
believe that m~y viewers. It ISn t funny. Our dialogue is. What a boon it would Instead of the single member Democrats,
Liberals
and
dialogue
is
so important
in
life. societal structures ~d systems be to Marist if we had more district used in the U;S., in which Radicals with sixty-one seats;
Dialogue occurs in the w~rld of produce the ~losed nund. Rather dialogue. (Thanks to Fr. Mark ea·ch district
elects
one the opposition included the
understanding and ?nly
1!1
the than observing honesty, people Edwards, a Marist priest, who representative, the proportional Socialist and Worker's parties

world of understanding. It s not play roles. Instead of fmdmg gave me these ideas to share.) representation system is more with thirty-nine seats; none of the
·
common in Europe. At the ballot parties had obtained the requisite
I n1·us tices Exposed· By B·
oycott·.·:~di~~~!st~~t(~a;~~~I'e~·~!u!~
~:~::sa~;rcet~t
~ai~~i/
0
t:

-
,.
are not shown) instead of for a delegation in the High Council.
By Candi Davis
·
specific
person.
Should (Thus, the smallest number of
workers in the · woods receive fixed price for their wood and hypothetical Party A get twenty seats any party can have is
Three·,. strikes affecting the ab~utthesame amount of pay for eliminate the "'middleman'~.
percent of the votes, then it
will
s~ven).

• •
country today, are concerned their work, from sW1up to
SWl-
Caesar Chave:r.
i1> tho!:::,:;:.~-
oE ~::n·-.::
tw<:•E~!:
pe1·cent of the seats
It has be.en expected that the
with: the Mexican-American and down, as they received
25
years
the
United Farm Workers of m the legisla~re. In G~ne".a leftist opposition would gain
his struggle against Farah ago choppmg cotton.
The America. He has continued his where the High Council 1s slightly. The actual re~ults,
Manufacturing
Company, woodcutt~rmust rent his supplies strike for about ten. years, and comp_osed_ o~ one
/
hundred
however, were that all thep;;trties
Gulfcoast Pulpwood Association fr~m a middleman, who is linked has achieved much action in the deputi~s, f1~o/m~ the number of that had been reptesented in the
(GPA), and Chavez with the w1~h the paper industries. The aid of his pacifist strike. The. seats 1s fac1hty 1t:5elf.-the per-
High CoW1cil
lost one or more
United

Farmworkers.
Each pr!ce of wood also depends on the strike· has drawn national centage ~umber 1s rounded off, seats, and the Viglance Party,
a
~ro~p is a victim of social in- m1d~eman, an~ the_ paper in- publicity, which has helped and that is ~e number of se~ts somewhat xenophobic
·rightist
Justice.
~ustnes. Sometimes 1f the wood tremendously for his people. He Part¥ A will get. But which group whose slogan was "That
1:he Farah Manuf~cturing
Co.
1s too
-water-l?gged,
and
..
heavy
.
has staged
..
hunger strikes candidates. sponsored_ by the

Geneva Remain Swiss'\ made a
stnke t.3:kes.,
place:..m,.aEL.:~aso,.
~lle.<::~'.!:!iit
2!:.~1.1':?,
t!1,.et):
.
~~~-.
I_Ilid-.
thro~ghout the
,cou'1try,
.and.
.
party_ get
.
m
.
..and
.
\\'h1ch
don_'t? g~and entry,
into
the legislature
Tex:a~.
Smee May
1972,
Mexican- dleman r~Je<;ts 1t; _1ea'VU!g·
the continues to picket food. chains in:: ;Eafh_p~rty
dra~s up a,P~l;l.Y.
11~,.
with ten. seats. One of
the
major
Americans (m~stly ~omen) were w~odcutter ~th no
1
mcome_.
The order to obtain
_his
goal. One \\'..h_ich
1s the lISt of candidates planks
.in·
Vigilance's platform
forced to strike
.
m order to nuddleman isn't the total villain, example around Marist of the b~mg sponsored. Those can-
had been to halt the growth
of
the
achieve a decent living wage, and the real culprits are the big Farm Workers' influence is that ~dates that the party feels are many inte.rnational organizations
the right to join a union; Willie paper industries (like Scott S.A.G.A. only buys
"Union"
~mportant are .placed at. the top; with

their headquarters
in
Farah starts his workers wage Paper and International Paper)
..
lettuce. Chavez isn't too far from m our hypothe_bcal
case, ifParty
Geneva (such as the Red Cross)
earnings at
$1.70
jln hour. After Int~rnational
Paper
alone, the end, and there are ways we A_ had
.sponsored
thirty can-

because the "little man" was
four years,. a worker might
be
ach~eved
48_
percent increase of can help it grow nearer.
didate~ a_nd
got ~wenty per~ent of being· neglected in favor of the
able to obtama take home pay of net mcome m
'72
over
'71.
Why is
..
While interviewing.
and the vote ma legislature with one international
organizations.
$98.00
for his family of ten. That's. the woodcutter so abused when it achieving the above information hun~ed seats, the
_top
twenty Fortunately. a gain of ten seats
just one of the illustrious "fringe comes to his price for wood? Is from
Brother
Ronaldr,D.
candidates wou!d get in; the rest was not enough for Vigilance to
benefits"
accompanying the the _big paper business that Pasquariello, he made some w~uldn't. IL 1t sounds com-
enter into.the majority coalition,
wor~er's job. Employees must gluttmous, in that it must exploit suggestions about
how the pllcated,. don't w~rry -:-it is..
which. retained fifty-four seats.
fulfill unbearable demanding the poor southern woodcutter? students of Marist could aid in
To apply this theoretical
After noting that participation in
quotas of work to achieve
a
raise. !hese people are the worst case practically all of the strikes. One structure to the practical politics the election had been only forty-
If
the employees cannot fulfill mall three strikes. They have no major point was a "Christmas of the recent
_Geneva
elections four percent, most oC the
their quota, they must suffer the backings from other unions and Boycott". Brother Pasquariello should n?w be easy. This year, newspapers
shrugged
off
consequences
of
being fired for no publi~ity. It is hard for them expressed, ,·,that
if
all the guys of th~ elections were scheduled for Vigilance as another opposition
·
not withstan~g the physical and too, but
U:
they can hold out, they
C
.
d

.
Fr1day and Sat~day evenings, for the ruling majority to contend
mental stram. The people are are certam that they can obtain a
ontmue on ,xtge
7
and Sunday mornmg October 12- with. In effect: so what else· is
treated like machines; there are
14,
to accomodate those

who new?

no negotiated production stan-
VD Epidemic.
continued from
p-dgc
J
is a Walk-In Clinic every Tuesd;:ly
and Thursday at
5:30
p.m. at the
Dutchess County Office Building,
22
Market St., fourth floor: and
further information, call
485-4663
or 485-9800.
There is no reason other than
ignorence why VD cannot take its
i

dards. Maternity benefits are far th
.
g~neral
paresis
and. eventually
from humane, let alone adequate.
e most ~oteworthy efforts m kill. Venereal disease can be
When a girl return.s to work, she VD edu~at1on
~~s
been th~, PBS cured, especially. in its early
loses her position on the pay rate production of
VD
Blues
, .
an stages. Penicillin, as well as
scale, and must start as a extreme
1
y . c o_n
trove rs~ a
1
many forms of the antibiotic
beginner again. This is just one progr~I!l dunng its product10n mycins, cures VD; but this
example of no negotiated wage a~d a1_rmg,
~!though _we can now should not be taken as an in-
increase according to a schedule. view.
I~
as. mformative and en- dication that one can cure
The average annual income of a tertammg. .
.
.
themself with penicillan pills or
Farah worker is about
$3
588 00
VD education and discussion the like. Only a physician
.
can
In iennsofthe high cost oflivhlg: ~as reached many places whe~e actually diagnose. and cure VD.
is this a bearable amount for 1 to it has never
.
been before
-
m
Rather than list

an extensive
live on, let alone a family? The colleges and high schools, moves explanation of the symptoms of
strike has assumed national have bee~ made to destroy m¥l~
yo
here, ~uff_ice
it to say that any
importance, and is supported by conce_rm~g
VD,
c1v1c 1rreg~lar1ty m a person's bodily
people of prominence; but even orgamzat1ons have hel~ lectures functions should be noted
_quickly
though this .is a good factor, open to the general public, ~nd an and brought to t~e. attention of
!1
families have been living on effort has been made to counsel

competant physiCian
--
but. it
$30.00
a week (strike benefits) everY:one ~n every level ?f should be· remembered that
::..
since May 1972. This is hard for A1:11encan
life. Bu! knowledge 1s many peq,le never experience
:°{'
many families, but they are st~ not that widespread,
.
as any sympt?~s wh,atsoever. For
.~,.~.~.:_._,N\_~\:l·",·:_:,
..•
willing to suffer in order to keep evidenced by the still~grow~g complete listings of symptoms,
~:
their "dignity" and obtain their ( and . alr_eady:
;
.
ep1dem1c) everyone should_
make an effort
justified working salaries.
propo~tions of the dise?.se.
to contact the1r local. public
'.~~
A united striking effort con-
_Until~ow, UJtwor~ venereal health.agency •.
•.
_
~t,
cerning
black,
and
white disease and: germ have ~en
.
,Marist
College is far from a
\/
woodcutrers

and woodhaulers is batted a~ound ••• As

a

quick hotbt;!(l
of VD, although' there are
_"°·,,,··'.·'·.:~:··:.'~.·::::.
1
,._x_·:,
1
,·.:::·,··:·,·::.'·:::;.;
the
Gulfcoast
Pulpwood refresher, it sh~ul~ be noted th~t anywhere from 4 to 6_
cases that_
l,i
Association (GPA). The
.strike
we are spe~mg of two mam come ~o the a~?tion of the
established "down south" in the types • Syphilis and. Gon~rrh~ •. sch9ol nur~e
ea<:h month,
fall of 1973. The people on strike Commo~ly ~own as the
··
.clap
, generally male, who sh.e refers to
.
'provide·
the
per industry with Gonorrh~
IS
t~e mo~ commonI;y the
.
Dutchess.' County. Health
'f::
.
its most basirraw material. They reported infe<;tlous
disease.
VD
IS
Department (no n_ames
inV(!lVed, .
<
banded··. together in hopes of ~~a:n ?Kredict~dctar.boeadyan·.cdo!}t~ct

oDL
cortmuriie).t··Tref
at~ent
.at.,
the
••
ai
..
' ..
achieving better working con_.

:
·
· .
·
.
.
.

.
.•
~
no
,
.
epa
en
18
.
r~, confid~ntial,.
>
i~
ditions and higher
·pay.
The
.~ther
w:ay._
~
can c~pple! blind,
.
~nd offered
to
everyone without
,•.·.

.
·
cause. sterility, and,inf~tile. and-. le~~es or.em~~i;rasment, There
••
I
place besides
.
diptheria, small
pox, and the other infectious
diseases that have been virtually
wiped out:. but it
is
up to in-
dividuals to take the/ necessary

precautions and cures for the
protection
of
themselves and
·others.










































DECEMBER
6. 19i3
·
THECIRCLE
PAGE7
Theatre Guild. Promotion:
Mourning BecomesElectra
By Mary Beth Pfeiffer
What has been described. as a
play of "great dramatic intensity
and comic relief"
will
·
be
presented by the Theatre Guild
the second weekend in Decem-
ber.
The play
"Mourning
Becomes Electra," by Eugene
O'Neill is the only play to be put
on this semester because of the
"great scope of the production,"
Suzanne
Deak,
Assistant
Director, told the Circle. It runs
three hours, involves fourteen
scenes and has a cast of twenty.
The play "offers the audience
practically every type of emotion
- passion, violence, jealousy,
love, ·hate, comedy, loneliness,

helplessness,
·frustration;
it is
worthwhile intellectually and
philosophically as well as being a
great deal of entertainment,"
said Sue.
The plot centers around the
character Lavinia modified after
Electra in the original Orestia
Trilogy in
.
Greek mythology,
written by Aeschylus. Lavinia,
played by Nancy Thomas, is
desperately in need of love. This
theme is dominant throughout
the play as her mother Christine
takes a lover, Adam Brant, when
her "very military and cold"
husband, Ezra, played by. Paul
Tesoro, goes off to war. Adam,
played by Bill Sprague, comes to
court Lavinia "in an effort to hide
his affair with the mother,"
played by Kathy McCarty.
Lavinia searches for love not only
in him but . in her father and
brother.
The assistant director told the
Circle that it has been said that if
Freud had never lived, O'Neill
would have invented him, for
·shadows
of Freud'~ theories also
• appear in the play. Christine's
son, Orin, played by Gary
Traube,
has an unresolved
Oedipus complex for his mother
and Lavinia also shows hints of
an Electra complex towards her
father.
The presentation of this, "one
of O'Neill's most significant
plays,"
commemorates
the
twentieth anniversary of the
author's death which falls late
this month.
The rest of the cast includes
Mary Ellen Chevlon, Joe Demp-
sey, Lisa Mccarroll, Linda Sofio,
John Lyons, Jim Temple, George
Balser, Jim Britt, Bob Morely,
Lydia Tringali, Fran Fulling, Ed
Ringwood, Vince Carfora and
Eric Garrison.
December
.
6,
7 and
8
are the
dates, the Theatre is the place
and the price is free to Marist
students.
La Tuna. a gro_up of Spanish folksingers,
can
be seen here performing at Marist.
..
--·---Anno.
uncemen ts~··
'
'
.
The week of November 26 next semester, are advised to

forms were sent to all prospec- contact: John Coughlin Rm. 217,
·
4
d t
sf
Box 087C, Keith Phillips Rm. 921,
~ive 197 . gra u~
8
!!
reque mg Box 318, Nancy Martinez,

Rm.
mf~rmation that
1S
neE:ded
by the 304
s,
Donald Gomez Rm. 517 L,
Office
~~
the Academic Dean to
"Millie
Diaz in Leo.
or~er diplomas, caps and gowns,
..

Arrangements
will
be made for
Commencement announcements an interview.
and per~onal name cards
.for
We need someone who can play
prospective_ graduates. . .
guitar· or piano well;
-
This Monday will mark the
opening of a Veterans' Affairs
Office at Marist.
The purpose of this office will
be to advise and inform veterans
concerning matters relating to
the Veterans' Administration
Office, Marist's • Admissions,
.
Registrar, and Financial Aid
Office~, and any other veteran's
1
15
17
19
23
27
30
33
46
50
54
58

60
2
This weekend the Marist Theatre Guild will present
"Mourning Becomes Electra"
Crossword
3
4
5
7
8
10 11
Any sen~or who antlcip1;ttes
.
can teach
Arts
and Crafts;
co~pletrng.
graduation
can
help
with
mobility
req~ements by the end ~f the training;
related problems.
47 Debauchee
12 Free from sin

This office
will
be located in
ACROSS
49 -
year itch
13 Wreath for the head
Champagnat, Room 109.

1 Cattle-breeding
50 Pen point
14 Contemptibly small
Sp~g 1974 semest~r who did not
can teach theatre;
r~ceive a copy
of
this
fo~
should
can help with choral singing;
-
pick one_ up at t~e Office of the
can be a friend to a blind child.
Academic Dean m the Greystone
·
·

Building during the hours listed

below and complete it promptly.
Nation
51 Type of vegetable
or worthless
The office will be open the week
9 snare
53 Tavern
21 Show pl afnly
of December 10-14, from 10:30
15 south American boa 54 Widmark movie or
24 Epistemological
a.m. to 2·:00 p.m.
•.

16 Catholic nine days'
insect trap
visionaries
The present staff will be
devotfon
56 "Moonlfght -"
26 "Bet you can't
t
t
d
t
Th
M
17 Type of rifle
58 A crystalline
eat -"
ve eran s u ens:
omas
c-
18 Coornercial
alcohol
29 Non-imaginary
Williams, William Oswald, and
19 Here: Fr.
59 comes forth
number
December 5 • December 7
.
3:00-5:00
The Marist College Chorus will Thomas Walsh. These men will
20 Deliberates over
60 Redecorated
31 Adenosfne tr1-
present a "Winter Choral Con- be available this coming week to
22 Eastern daylight
61 Accumulations near
phosphates (abbr.)
cert" on Wednesday evening, all veterans attending
.
Marist
time (abbr.)

the shore
32 Great wannth of
.
Anyone. interested in working
with blind children ages five thru
thirteen on Saturda s be innin
December 12,
1973
at 8:00 p.m. in who are looking for infonnation
23
~:!!Y
f;~=~~er's
34
~t~~n
be endured
the Campus . Center Theatre;· or who wish to offer some advice
25 Rescue
DOWN
36 La _._ (opera)
Admission·wm be free.
in this undertakin .
26 scoff at
1 Of the visitation
37 Bring fnto being

27 Pigeon--
rules in a donn
38 Meat quality
thoroughly analyzed, and the again as I'd like to
...
I'll
never
28 card game
2 Short, amusing tale 40 "The Cat in the-Hat"
future of this institution as well as
·
find happiness ... I have nothing
30 on an oceari voyage
3 Most speedy
and "The Grinch Who
FORGET.
continued from JYage
S
'minorities'
·in
general. e.g. others will rest upon the ~bility to to hope for."
32 Fights with an
4 High card
Stole Christmas"
(O.E.O.,

Model Cities). These transcend
the
ethnical,
The Contractor is the first show
epee
6
5 AActhcr
1
azy
ft·
4
4
2
3
F
8
al!10uks
rRebinideer
• l
1· • l
t b
~
ed
t
B
d
,
33 Beatles song
re a c prepos 10n
roo s o nson,.e.g.
·words e.g. "HEOP" have become economica , po
_itica
,
and
o e peuorm
a
roa ways
35 Article of personal 7 Arabian seaport and 44 Arrested
code words for racism. "HEOP the<llogical
differences and thrive new addition; The Chelsea
property
adjoining gulf
48 A purgative
students" are the
.title&
given to towards that ultimate interest Theater. It is a converted Church
39 scatter (old
s
Distance
49 Pay out money
Blacks here
.
at Marist. The "Human". ____
which holds a small audience of
shortened fonn) .
9
Position oneself
51 Mexican slave
tat •
h" h th·

about 280 people The seating
41 Hr. Greene
defensively
52 Country south of
conno IOns w
IC
15
carries STOREY.
continued from page
S

42' "-
your money,
10 Words to accompany
the Caspian

are duel in meaning. The
plan is excellent. This com-
invest it"
ne;thers
55 Wartime Medical
negative meanings are the ones constant bickering are
a
near
_bination
of a new play and new
45 Hindu spirit
11
Tennessee power
Officer (abbr.)
that! refer to and are opposed to. fight between Fitzy and Bennett theater is one you shouldn't miss!
46 Turkish river
co,nplex-
57 Catch
The_· apol~etic. response to and an attempted firing
of
Fitzy
.,_ _______________________
_.
t~ese ills which exis~ serves very .-by Kay. Throughout the play,
INJUSTICE,
continued from page 6
coming up, and wrapping.paper picture
oJ
a black eagle on ·the
little_use!ul purpose m eventually Marshall and Fitzpatrick make a
.
_
is going to cost too much to buy package." He also made a point
eradic~tmg _them from: amon~st

fool· out
.of
Glendenning, who
Marist stopped· buying Farah
anyway, so why not be a non- that
"poor
people are oppressed
u~. _The

viable
.solutions
hes evokesmuch sympathy from the products, and its aliases (Golden comformist, and wrap your gifts for the benefit of big business,
withm e;ach ~f us,_
but _suppressed audience.


- •Scroll,
Passport, Su-Par, Daire,
with the SWlday "funnies" of and corporations; poor people
by- selfishness,
.
irrational
_stai;i--:.

Mr. Frank Ewbank is a quite
.
Club 20,
-Cliff
Mark, Beau Mark,
your local newspaper; It's cer• should acquire what is justly due
d~~ds and norms, and society s successful businessman who has Kainrod, Classic· 20's) we could

tainly original, and unique.
(If
them in the way of social
dilitorr excuse~. If Blac~s as well
Just
lost his daughter through aid the boycott greatly. -Also if any resident says it's impossible, justice."
as White~ co~~mue _to
'~!ew
_each marriage and his
.-59n
through everyone· influenced others
get in touch with me, I work for
Christmas is coming soon, and
.o~her
with
mythica~. dist~-
alienation. Several times in the (fathers, brothers, friends) not to the Poughkeepsie Journal and I what have you done lately to help
tions,
.t~en .
huma!1ity will play he says
urn
never do this buy the product we could really will be glad
_to
l),elp you). A someone in need-think
about

progress; mto st~gn~~1on.
~ere
againtt. -
.
a" statement which put
I
a dent in the
.consumer
suggestion
by

Brother
it.
...
th.er~
.exist~
U!'J~tif1ed
,bigotry
-
seems to exist on two.levels. The market for, Farah slacks/' Then Pasguariello for helping the
Anyone interested in learning
.w1thm
·a~. ~divzdual, the!} his surface level seems. to say "I'll in. order to aid .the W,;><>dcutters Farm Workers was "when you go more about.these strikes, contact

w~ole validio/. as a·
.rati~nal,
never ha:ve·to. marry off another strike,.boycott all paper products to buy lettuce, or
·grapes
in a· candi Davis; C-556 or _Brother
matu_re
...
bemg
••
should
••
be. daughter." The more•si.gnificant manufactured by
·international
supermarket
inquire if their
Pasquariello 'Champagnat First
_questioned:
These factors as
well
level,seems to be
:crying
out in Paper
.Co.,
St. Regis Paper Co., ''Union" certified, sometimes
Floor· -
Religious
Studies.

as many.
-
oth~rs
must
be frustration "I'll never-
start
over and Scott Paper Co, Christmas is
.
yeu can tell their "Union" by a Thanks. •
-













































I
I
1.;
-·-
"
PAGES
__
1llE CIRCLE
DECEMBER 6, 1973
Hi h
On
Sports
_g
. By_John ftach
IS TlllS WRESTLING'S LAST YEAR?
Dedication and self sacrifice are two _qualities that wrestlers can·
attribute more than anything else to therr s~ccess as a~hletes. It ap-
pears that wrestlers won't attribute anything to therr success .as
athletes at Marist this season,· for the ti.!11e
may have come w~en
wrestling is finally pinned as an intercollegiate sport here.
Surprisingly the reason is not financial._
The budget has not ~n cut,
but rather it has been increased, so what
is
the story? The story
lS
that
there·
is
currently on)J {our members on the team. So what dOf:S
that
leave for this year? Simple, no team. The fo~ members are dedicated
wrestlers who are hoping to keep the sport alive. It could be done.
MaristguardEdConlinsettinguptheRedFoxes
The daily routine
of
a wrestler can be best described as "hell". It
consists mainly of two hours of working out in an 11~ degree room,
doing physical exercises and calisthenics, {p~hups, s1tups, the ~hole
routine) .. Throw in for good measure runrung
m
1>lace for fifteE:D
minutes before you even begin to start to -wrestle. The workout
JS
topped ~ff with more exercising. Another added attraction of being a
wrestler is when you starve yourself for three days ~ore a match to
Hoops·t~rs LoseHeartbreaker.
By_JimDonnelly . •
early in the season.
scores, Allen Fairhurst with 8
Marist had to· rely
011-
two and Joe Nibbia with 6.

make weight.
• • .. _
••
Right now the first six matches of the season _have been cancelled
Hopefully the wrestlers will start fresh in the second semester, or
• The Marist College cagers. inexperienced men in· the front
Thesecondhalfwascloserthan
opened their. season on a sour court. Three sophomores shared the first
half.
The lead continued
·noteSaturdaywitha tough loss to this front court action, Joe to exchange leads as no team
maybe they will never start a~ain.
.
RED FOX HOOPSTERS FACE BIG TEST TONIGHT
rival Iona College. 70-67. A six Cirasella, Ron Glackin and Ray could break the·game open. The
-
point surge-in the· final minute Murphy~ Th.ese three played Red Fox deliberate offense kept
Marist collegiate basketball play resumes again ._ in the
and a half of the game brought especially well on defense and· finding the open man and their Poughkeepsie area tonight with the Red Foxes testing its attack
thelonaGaelsfroma67-64deficit
rebounding .. CirasellawasMarist
excellent offense kept.the Iona' against King's·college_of.Briarcliff Manor; N.Y. at
Our
Lady of
to 70-67 triumph.
high scorer with 12 points and he scoring
down. Clutch
per-
Lourdes High School, with var~ty action starting at 8:00 p.m.
_The game started out looking and Ray Murphy both had 7 formances by, Mike Hart, Joe preceeded by the juniorvarsity~at 6:00 p.m. Varsity players to watch
bad for the Red Foxes. Iona had rebounds tying for the lead in that Cirasella and Ed Conlon hitting 9, for are· Joe Cirasella, Mike Harl, who is coming off a pre-season in-
the taller team -with three ex- department
with senior. Jim 8, and 7 points respectively; With jury, JtinOsika, and Ron Glackin in frontline along with the.backcourt
cellent front courtmen Ray Osika.
l:55lefttogointhegametheRed
duo of Ed Conlin and Al.Fairhurst.
..
Hyland, Bernie S_ocha
and Kevin
The first half was a. see-saw Foxes·• led .67-64
.. A • jumper' -by
King's which has four. starters back from last y,ear's 13-14 squad,
Bass. Hyland and Socha were . battle as the lead changed hands Kevin Ba~ broug!ltthe Gaels to trails 14-7 in an eleven year series with Marist and· split in last year's
returning stars from Iona's .team many. times. Tenacious defense within one point. The-Red Foxes • two meetings. King's has a new coach in Hal Snl.ith, who has been
fast year. Marist was hurting. in • and percentage shooting kept the had the ball again with _l:
aJ
to go. . ·promoted after a successful tenure asJ. V. coach. The King's veterans
thefrontcourt with the absence of · Red Foxes close. It was a low They failed to score and Iona are 6-2 Karl Collison, who averages 18.5 points per game, 6-0 Jerry
returning
letterman
Roury scoring half ending with Iona on brought
the
uall
down with a Slocum at 3'1a ..
d;
sophomore center Bop_ Eelmann and 6-1 Dave
Williams, out with tendonitis and top 33-30. Freshman_Kevin Bass clutch hit. by
g11:1rtl
~-:~.-=
r; ..
JJ,
Walton.

, •


Mike Hart, leading scorer of last scored 12 of the Gaels. first half ·w:hich
was the go ~ead . point.
_year's
varsity seeing limited points. Marist's • scoring was The final~score was 70-67 Iona.
• action because of, a leg injury balanced by the two· leading
HA YES, MCGRAW
CHOSEN
TC>
C.A:C.C. ALL-STAR
TEAM
Little Red
Fo~es
RQmp
• Senior ken Hayes of Middletown, N. Y. and freshman John McGraw
of Levittown, N.Y. have been selected to the 1973 Central Atlantic
College Conference (C.A.C.C.j All.Star Soccer Team. Hayes is a
• lineman, while McGraw
is
a halfback.
.
... Hayes, a former Orange County Community College star, pumped in
13 goals this season, giving hini'a two-year total of 24.goals in Zl
games. This season_I{en was the Red Foxes scoring-leader with 13
go,als and 4 assists. In the conference scoring race, Ken was second
with 4 goals and 2 assists. Ken's finest conference performance came
against Dowling College in which he scored three goals in leading
Marist to a
6-0
victory. In only two seasons, Hayes has·splashed his
name all over the Marist record books. During the 1973 soccer season
Hayes was the Marist soccer co-captain, The 1973 conference selection
was a repeat from the 1972
team for Hayes.
The Marist
College J.v;
hoopsters look like they are1
hea_ding
for an excellent
sea&1n.
They easily defeated the Iona
J.V.
in their openin~ game
76-61.
Excellent execution of their of.:
fense and tough defense kept the
Red Foxes in control all the way.
·Freshman Phil Palladino was
the spark plug of t_heteam. He
scored 19 points driving right
through the Gael defense. The
boards were controlled by the
Red Foxes with Walt Janeczek
pulling down 12 rebounds and Bob
Lawerence pulling down· 11.
The
J.
V.
showed great promise
in its first game. They showed a ..
well drilled attack, hitting the
open man, good shooting _ and
strong rebounding __
marked the
offense. They control the ball well
and also play really good defense ..
They had good balanced scoring
, with 4 men in double figures. Phil
Pallandino, 19, Walt Janaczek-15,
Greg Giles, 13; and George
Priscoll 10.
The squad Js also looking for-
ward _ to. return . of promising
guard Tim Creighton, a former
John Jay High School star, who
·_
missed the Iona game with the
flu. The J.V .. plays King's College
-at
6:00 tonight:

• Answers
To
This past week Marist's Intramural Basketball program began,
.
INTRAMURAL
NOTES
McGraw is_a product ofisland Trees High School,-Levittown, N.Y.
John's finest conference game came against King's College (N.Y.)
in
which he scored the game tying goal. John was fourth on the team
in
s·coring with one goal and four assists.
Of McGraw and Hayes, Coach Howard Goldman calls them: " ..... a
pair of big game performers. Both Ken and John have the ability
to
rise to the occasion against tough competition.
Na~ed as honorable mention selections were junior fullback Tom
McDonald of Rochester, N.Y. and sophomore lineman Tim Hayes of
Seaford, N. Y., and halfback Bill Putre of Wappingers Falls, N. Y. also
a sophomore. •

TIDS WEEK IN MARIST SPORTS
TEN YEARS AGO ... Coach Tom Wade's Marist College Basketball
Red Foxes_won.their initial game of the season by dumping visiting
_ Western Connecticut State 77-73
at the Poughkeepsie High School gym. •
· • The North Road Raiders went into the contest with an 0-2 record,
having lost to King's and Iona. Later in the week Marist College took it
on the chin, dropping
a
68-66
overtime squeaker to Yeshiva University
at the winners court.

The Marist College Wrestling team tied Yeshiva University 20-20 at
Yeshiva.·
.
FIVE
YEARS AGO
... New York University scored a 37-7 victory over
Marist; in the season opening wrestling match. .
• Ken Thompson netted 25 points; 17 in the first half, to lead Marist
to
an
83-73 decision over Queens in a non-conference _basketball game.
Later in the week, a basket by Ed Traylor and a free throw by Jerry
• Pastre in the final minute gave Bloomfield a 71-66 victory in a Central
Atlantic College Coii!erence game. Also Iona -rushed to· a 2.8-point
halftime lead and coas.ted to a
!ll-60
victory in a non-conference game
at Mt. St. Michael's 1¥gh School in the Bronx .
ONE YEAR AGO
... Marist ripped King's 110-77 in a conference
·
--·
·
·
-
-
h f"
basketball game. Later in the ,week Brooklyn be?t Marist
83-71,
Jim
On Sunday, Nov.18, New Paltz State defeated
Mar_ISt 30
-6 int e
1~
st Osika scored nine of his 15 points withiri a seven minute period late in
Crossword
annual Mid-Hudson Intramural Touch Football Bowl. ·The .teams m- the second half to lift Marist fr<IIl a-43-43
tie to a 16 point bulge as the
_
eluded Post Mortem~~ intr~ural football champs of N~w Paltz and •• Red Foxes defeated C.C.N.
Y.
66-56
_
at Dutchess Community College,
~-
......
,.,..,.
... -the Zookeepers, Mamt s o~n mtramural fo~tball·champs. In soccer, and Marist blasted Bloomfield 69-59. ·

ENT
R
A P
the Used Bags ~efea~d Third Floor Leo 3-2 m the,Intramural Soccer
King's College won three matches by forfeit•and went on to defeat
~~~~~
League Champ1onshil)S.
Fred Krampe of the U.B. s was named most . Marist in wrestling 42~14. _
· -
-
.
valuable player.


• Two Marist College players, forwards Tim Trotta and Ken Hayes
were selected .to the Central Atlantic College Conference Soccer
All
Star Team. .


.
PALLADINO
NAMED MARIS'J,'
ATijLETE OF THE WEEK
..
Spprt$ Bulleti-,i
.
' .
.. .
.
• Phil Palla~no, a fre~an
from Kingston,
N.
Y_.
has been named
• _
On T~esday, the
V
~sitY,. cag~rs •·rebounds while Sophomore guard _College
~thlete of the Week for the week en~g~ec,_ 2. • , . .
lost their second straight game to Joe ·Nebbia' hit" for 14 points. •
P~lladino, a basketball player, led the IVIanst Junior varsity to a 76-
Bloomfield College by a score of •.
•.
. •
- .. , • .-
61 victory over !ona by scoring 19 points. Led by Palladirio's per-
78-73.
A cold shooting second half
:ro~igh~•th e,.V~rsity
will
meet form~ce; the Little Red fo11:e~
opep.ed tQeu-·
1973;.~4
season and will .
. droppeda2pointhalftimeleadto
Kmg
8
Co~ege. at
our
Lady of face King'~,..College,
Thursday, Dec.-6 at.6:00.p.m. at Our'I..ady of
,a loss, Jini Osika led
Marist•
in
~urdes Hi~ School. The game,:: Lourdes High S~hool 81_ld.«;ity
~llege_of New-York (C.C.N.Y.) away
: scoring with
19
·points and ·12:~ 1,~_at-8:00·p.m,.
-on,Sat. Dec. 8.
.. .

..
.
.


·,
r·.
t/?lri.~~,~-,
/
/