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The Circle, January 31, 1969

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 5 No. 8 - January 31, 1969

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tr:GiSHIN.
RESIGNS;tAs·
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·
VICE.-PRESIDENT.
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·. <-.E~11rard
·ca~hin::
Ph;D.;' has
begin tCl&ching
agadn, perhaps in .. and students from this
area:
. -· .
planning.
. . .
.
·.Christopher,
Columbus
High
announ~_Jilil
· resiination·'as'
·his
.Jiometown:
of Augusta,.··.
Dr.
C~
exp~
his hopes · Dr. Cashin·
stated,
"This·
School,
Miami, Florida; He
·. Vic~ President of M~
College· Georgia:
In the · immediafe ·'to e~entually
return.· to the
decision
represents a. gradual •. served as coordinator of the new
and as a Marist Brother. Dr.
future, however,. he will act as· college,butfeelshisdepartureat
development
in. my own
Exchange Program .with Paine•
Cashin expressccl
his
sentiments.
consultant for the
.New
Yoik .-this: moment
is personally.
religious life, and in no way
College, Augusta, Georgia.
·
· by ~ying the religious life is in a : Sta te<Education=. Department. · required •. · . •. ,
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\ •
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·. . ·should· be . interpreted
so
as to· .
Dr.
Cashin served as President:
process
.of;evoltition,
and his. Viewing· it
·as
"an
.interesting
->
Foi-
the. past .. month,
Dr:
cast
doubt or discredit on the.
of the
New York· Catholic
own.: personal :·evolution has led
opportunity,"
Cashin' will. work · · Cashin .has worked oii ·a study of•· Marist Brothers·or ~e work they
'Forensic League, ·President . of
bim
"further"away.
from the
in Albany with the Division of the resources of the Associated
.do.
·1:
feel privileged to have been
the .Miami Catholic Forensic
monastic
tra:dition; and the
Planning
in
Higher Education.
Colleges
of . the Mid-Hudson
part of Marist College's growth·
League~ General
Chairman
of the
commuriity•life/' He stated that
This. state agency~ which deals'· Valley· to determine ·to .what
during the past
six
years."
National
Catholic
Forensic
he.
is
;making_ a new beginning
with .. the· master-planning of extent
existing
colleges could
After graduating from Marist
League
Annual
Tournament,
w-hi-ch
n.e~essitates
his
higher education· in New York,
support a graduate center in this
College, Dr. Cashin received his . Vice President of-the Dutchess
. resignation not . only. from the
.
will allow Dr. Cashin to serve the
.
area. He will be concerned with
M.A.
and Ph.D. from Fordham
C o u n t y Committee
for
Marist Order, but from his office · Mid-Hudson
Region
by
an expansion of
this
study in
University. Dr~ Cashin formerly
Economic
Opportunity
and
as vice president~.· .. - ; ·
,
investigating the possi~ilities of a .. Albany,. as weUas
with ot!ter ·taught
at Mt.· St. Michael
.
.
Eventually Dr. Cashin plans to·. graduate center - pooling fa<;ulty aspects of graduate education
Academy·
Bronx
New York and
Cont.
on
page
6
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VOLUME
5
·NUMBER
8
(.
1fff_.·
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
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JANUARY
31, 1969
rA~d
Ho.c:
Committee
Will Name.
JJ4e.w·
Vic:e.
Presi.dent•
By·.April

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Brother.Linus Foy announced
President and 'Academic· Dean
named. about April 1, 1969. He
that he has been authorized by· are overlapping. President Foy , would take office on July
I.
In.
the
Boa~d
of Trustees
to · expects that the committee ·will the meanwhile, the duties of the
assemble· an ad hoc . advisory
recommend
-
that.
· central
Academic Vice President's office
. committee.for
the purpose.of
·academic authority be centered
would
be shared·
by t.he
. selecting a successor to Edward
in a single officer. It will be the· President
and the· Academic
Cashin, . who. has resigned 'as · role of the ad hoc committee. to. Dean.
· .
.
. .
.Academic
Vice President of suggestatitleforthisofficerand
·. Brotbet·
Foy
expressed
Marist, effective February
I.
The
to block out a job description .. gratifude
for. the
excellent
ad hoc committee will be named ·
"This
work
should
be
service Dr. Cashin had rendered
- · by the. Board of Trustees at their · c
o
ri
s id e r e d a r o u t in e
Marist College 'during
his
five
, Ft:bruary,
.6
me~ting .
.It_
is·_
reexamination of our structures,
years
as
Academic
Vice
·, ex·pected·
to
consist
of ·and
is
in·no way meant to be . President. He was. instrumental
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.
administrators,
.faculty, and
derogatoryto.themenpresent1y··
inpreparingthereportwhichled
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~r.DanielJ~ir~;~an.~fthePay~ol~_departll!ent;
.
. ·
~dents .. Thre~.ad~rators.
ho\dillg;!ld~ra~v:epositio~.
· to ac,cr~ditatfori,
of
M~
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!Jro:.:fmtis··F~y.
~~oµn~~,i~·-turn/of.
ey-ents,\not·~hly-_Board:ofJrust~es,which-makes.
of!icer:••.The_T~ees
consider . .
: ._ .
(al
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•.; .,:.
. .• ,.r~~entJY:: t~t.,.)3r<?: Da~el)~.irk
b eca_use,
•.1
t ch11:1fies ,t~e-
•the fin~, appo1Dtm.ent. Before
!his o~fice so_lJ!1POrt._ant
thatthe
.: .. . ..
-
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.
··
·
•:'
• has- sub.m1Ued,
his
'.resignation
relattonsh1p:
between, Manst ,: scre1:nmg
_candidates,
the
mcommg official
will
need the ·
Ted,. Prenting
Assistant
.\ .:
' from:the ~arist BroffierstciBro:. College ·and theMarist
Brothers
co!Dnu!f:ee .wiUmake a .study.·of support of all segments of the
Professor.
of Btisiness
and
..
CKieialL.Biennan,· Provincial° of.but-·al~i:> because it_guarantees · tli~_.academtc<-,o~ganization at. colle~e community, and. most·
Consultant
to
the:·computer
t~e ~ou~e,epsie
.. Province and. the :confu.iu~nce'
of
J)r.·· K~k~s .. Ma9-st a:11t\
propose any c~llg~ · .. especially. the support ,of_facul_o/ Center, confirmed today that he ....
. , . me.mb·er\
<?!
the
:-Board "of
valuable se!!1ce t<? · the ~ollege.
.
~hich seem oppo~une __
at: ~his . and stud,ent~--Hence, it
ts
qwte
was -pt~paring
a preliminary
. 1):ustees h~r~. ·:. · ·

: . ,
c: ~-
Ela borat~g
>
fuqher · on . the · tim~.
' -- ·_ ·
.; ·. . . · · · ..
· . ~atural to !-llclude faculty ~d
draft of a completely new early
·.··•
· · Br.o.
••··
Fo~ ·•.
furt,her m~tcated prec~~ent ~emg set by Dr.-Kirk's . · At.· .the• present
time- the .. stud e_nts ,!n this
selection
registration system which might.
that I>r.: Kirk, ~.ilLcol!tmue as ~e~lSl<>~; Broe Foy furl:1!,_er
.,
·Pr_es1.d1:nt
lS
seryed by
J<>~
com~ttee.
.
•· . .
be introduced into the College
·
frill:
professqr and <:hair_lllan
·of:-mdicatedthat1t.nu~ber_ofpnor
, execut1vr
(or, line) officers.
P!es1dent Foy was ask~ 8:bout -·by next September. While the
, .th~ psyc::hology department. This. steps'had seLthe'stage for:.this · ·A ~adem1c
Dea_n, Dea~. of
a tun~talb~ for the comnuttee.
registration
process has been
. : ~ar!cs::!h~•fir~ ~stanc::e ·in the.' eventuality .. At a meeting held ,· Stud en ts,_ Chief_ B.us1.ness _ H c
-
1 nd_ica_t ed
.tha
t _the
greatly .. improved
with· the
·, c
.~o_ry
:f
~nst
College of the on May
J
7, l.~68 the- B~ard of
Ma_nag~r, and
Du1;~tor · of membership~ of the comnuttee
introduction
of the computer,
_contmuea tenure ··of
ii
Marist Trustees passed a resolution that
Develop!Dent .. In ad~1tlon, the . would
be approved
at the
college
officials believe that -
-~.~>
r,.<_
Brother·ronowing
1¥8
resignation · stated in part t~at any brother· ·· Acad.enuc. Vici: J,'resid4:~t and · February 6 T~ee
meetil!g. _He planning of the schedule can be
from the Congregat1~n. Bro. Foy whq separated himself from the · Con.trqller, while i:xerClSlll, no
hope~ that the Job descnptlon
advanced, giving each student a
expressecl c;t~ep satisfaction at . Manst Order ~d
who holds
authonty
Of
executive fun~ons, • · and title would be agreed upon
better opportunity to plan his
••
I
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. . ·
. . . .
· .. tenl!fe may con!mue to t88:ch at
a!e r~ponSible_ for acadenuc and · by tl:1,e end. of· f:ebruary, . 8:nd . ownj,rogram;
' N

.
·1:·
'·.
·:d·
..
Manst College 1f he so WlShes. fman~ialplanmng .......
··.
candidates. mtemewe.1. dunng
.
. .
ew
_
i
.a
en a
r
Bro. • Foy who.
is
also a· !Dember • . . It,~- generally agreed, !hat. t_he M_arch, ~opeftilly, th~ n~w chief
·Cottt.
on page
6
.
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.
of the Provincial Council of the · pos1ttons.-
of ,Acadenuc Vice academic
officer
might be
-
-
-s·
. ,
:-
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-
·
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Marist Brothers; stated further
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IS· cheduled
::~::.~:-~r;:;::S
·
•.T._-
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_o.·
...
··•.·r.
ab_
.·.e.
Ila·_
De.livers
·
Find
ii
gs
· : The
new
.
calendar for the Provinces; Thus he concluded
· -
··t~r:d~\h;Y:,~pl!tio
6
:~r9t1~
~~!~
~~\~c~:r~tnili:·
·,:,·
.·.·1·
·.n·
·.
·n·
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I •.
ath
Conven1·1on.
.
.
. first semester before Christmas, role of the Marist Brother at
_
· with· examinations. scheduled for • Marist College and
his
role in the -
··· · · ·
··-
.
December l~ throughDece!fiber
Congregation
of the Marist
· Dr .. Leopoldo Torabe.lla of the
20; -Th~-CJm.stmas recess will be ·Brothers. -
It
makes clear· the
Math Department here, deh"'1-ered
.
·
co_mbined ·:with: the •~mester independence of Marist College . an a~dress on surface
area
at the
b re a k . res u 1 t
~
n g
ID
the
from the Congregation of. the
seventy-fifth annual meeting• of
resumption ·of.classes as late as Marist Brothers while at ·the
the
American
Mathematical
January 19. The second se!D~er
same· _time recognizing
the
Society. His findings, delivered
will also be_ effected, ternunatmg valuable · historical role that the
on Sunday,· January 26, w~e
a wee~ earlier than usual.
Marist Brothers have played in
explained in a paper entitled
In order
to affect
these the
establishment
and
"quasi-piecewise
flatness,
changes registration·
will
ta_ke · development of Marist College.
differentiability
and · surface
place ~n: .se.ptember 3, ~th
Dr.
-Kirk's resignation from the
area.!',
This
new geometric
classes irutiatmg the followmg Marist Brothers also has financial
theory of surface area brings .to a
day .. Also,
3:11
·
holidays from implications according to Bro.
close 100 years of investigation
r e g
1
s
~
r_
at 1? n t
~
r? ugh
Foy. He will continue to receive
began in 1868 by
J.A.
serret. As
Thanksgmng will be eliminated.
his
ftill wary but will no longer
a result of
his
address, whigh
A
consensus of students and . participate in . the annual gift
holds wide-range implications in
faculty members have
agreed
to that the Marist Brothers make to
the
mathematical
world, Dr.
the . 11;med . schedule which will Marist College. This annual gift Torabella
has been approached
b e Imp l
1
men t e d on
an currently constitutes the
largest
by a professor from Moscow
experim~ntal b~.
Accord~ to endowment of the college.
State University. to deliver
bis
Acadenuc Dean O Shay, the new
After graduating from Marist
fmdings in Rusma.
calendar is subject to revision
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Cont. oa
page
6
Collt.
Oil
page
6
Collt.
Oil
page
8
Mmst
stadetats·
ucl fac:alty, 111d
"Jue"
at
die
Playboy Chb
ht Jllew
Odens.
They,
except for
Cite
bmuty, W
hell
attelldiRg
a
fou-day Mada
COlmlltioll
tltere.
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.PAGf l
President Richard Nixon, after his first post-inaugural pres.c
· conference, announced that the United States will continue to block
the admittance of Communist China to the _United Nations.
For some reason President Nixon, like so many others, is under
the irnpressionthat the U.N. is a haven for peace-loving nations (like
Israel and the
UAR?) .. He
apparently feels that China's mef!lbership
would be ·a threat to all these peace-loving people.
(
The United Nations offers a definition of itself as a place where
nations meet where • the . "spokesmen for all political views, . social
systems, and .cultures are freely heard." Yet, President Nixon
suggests that we continue to ignore one quarter of the world's
population, or at leastthe government which rules them. .
. If
there is to be any hope of world understanding, we must begin
to try to understand everyone in the world - most would feel that
includes China.
If
we cannot a
al to the President throu
cries
11
f»E ·
fA)I
LL
I
G
Na
rt
E
:·CHINI\,
.••
THECII.Cl.2
PARIS
TALK
T)ear Sirs:
While the jeans and shirts are
drying on the radiator, I thought
I'd send you some miscelaneous
observations.
'
· ·
Last Sunday one of the guys
here took me on a tour of the
University of Nanterre, where.
the events of May originated.·
The dormes ·there are mixed,
with alternating rooms of guys
and girls. It seems that one of
the main factors that started the
-rioting was that the girls could
visit the guys• rooms, but not
vice-versa. I guess everything is
relative. Back at Marist we are
struggling for weekend visiting
privileges on a regular basis. I
.hope that someone in a
high
place there realizes soon that the-
current
policy
amounts to
nothing · more than trying to
shelter us. It's a bit late for that,
I'm
sure.
Privacy might be
infringed
upon? Okay, what
Marist man wouldn't put on a
pair of jeans to go down to the
shower room, • if it meant he
could have female visitors? As·
for noise, every resident knows
'
.
was ~ippalling. ·
Outside
of
Lisbon, people were still
living
in
he 18th century. Illiteracy was·a
close second to literacy, and
barefeet to shod. You neYer miss ·
what you have back home until
you leave
it.
· Dear Editor,
I have just read the current
issue of the Circle (Dec. 19).
This was the first copy of the
paper'· had eve! ~een. In r~~ly t?,
the article. "Spmt of Susp1c1on,
may I just reply - isn't time we
got off our Pessimistic Kick and
looked up?
A
rather
interesting quote
.comes to my mind, "Two men
looked out through their. prison
bars; The one saw muJ, the
other stars". - Stevenson.
. / An Upstate Marist Mother,
Mrs.
J.
Evans
.,
:•.
JA.MUAI.Y
3l
1
,l9t\9
·Tom
Pluta
•10
· 104,
Rue de
Vaugirard
Paris 6e,
France
Ed; Note: Alcoholic
beverages
have
been i>erinitted
in.·
the
dorms since before Christmas.
''WEAK END''
Well, it
is
most definite _now;
Winter
Weekend . has been
' cancelled. Now the students .of
. Marist ask. why;·, .. so .I ·Will
make an attempt to. answer their
valid questions. .
.
(1)
Less than _50%·
· of the
student body purchased football
season tickets. , . . .
·
(2) Basketball games don't
draw enough students to fill our
own gym.....
.
(3). Our. first home wrestling
match had a fantastic support of
nearly 100 students ....
Cont. on
page
6.
Curriculum
Crisis
••. Ot-lL'J
·A,
Gl2EA1
DIIAJ~ER
Tfl
OU~$£
I.
VE 5
11
that a few decibles more isn't
Adapting itself to the needs of
to the
meeting
,circulated
going to derange anyone.
an ever demanding generation·, material · stating the increasing
As for drinking, just about
the Circle is running a series of
importance
of math today,
everyone here has some wine on
articles concerning academic life
refused any cut in the Math -
hand for social occasions (Very
at Marist. The first editiori will
Science area. The Philosophy
good wine, I might add.) The
treat
the current . curriculum· department held the same pat
French, of course, have been
crisis and identify the professors
answer, ·yet the foreign language
brought up on wine, even as we
behind. the issues. we .hope to
department became_ hostile .over
Americans are raised on milk.
illumine some benefits of a new
the ... suggestion .. that individual
L.--------------------------a
There
is
no taboo associated
core change and focus on some
departments would rely on their
for world understanding, then perhaps the more basic cry of "know
with drinking, nor
is
it any big
of the setbacks which exist
own judgement in .the language
thy enemy"holds more potent implications for Mr. Nixon.·
thing. Its just accepted. MariSt
under the present system.
field. Dr. Belanger, a leading
Al h gh A
·
·
1
d
·th di
r
t
t h
• has shown itself capable to
On Dec. 18th, '68 the faculty
spokesman
fo_
r · the French.
t ou
menca 1s p ague w1 . scom1or s a
ome, we musL . hanclle responsible attendence
·
all
·"
Ii "
d R d
chin·.·
·
·
·
t
t•'
by a · 20% m_argin ·vetoed _two depart_ment, felt that if this plan .
now
ow our po cy towar
e
a to co~tmue ms agna ion. and
dr_ess, now how about
·
f~
h lib
al
rt
new core proposals. The . first . was put m e ,ect
t
e_ er a s
Robert Kennedy, in out-lining the initiation of relations with · responsible drinking?
.
core _change dealing with Science - appearance
~f. ~ari~t mi~t ·
China,, said, "~olicy demands finally a conscious . and -open
Tell me, ninth floor, what . majors wanted the core to be cut . disappear, the ;tmplicatlon.bemg
recognition that we live in the same world and move in the samt. . have you go~
t?
hide'?. l hope
to just- six .c()urses in History,
th!lt the busmess • department
continent, with
Chin_·
a - with its_ ~angers __
and possibilities, strengths __
}'.obu_o}:_,~~-
fn_tg'_:on:f_on_iJ~~::
Theology and Philosophy with __
might
,drop the
language
d
·bl f
··
01
h
·
thi.
alit
·
·
· •·
·"
··
·
·Jy
:no-morethanil2'ci-editirinariy
,.r~quir~!l],egt
..
-
,,.
·:,'_:~:·,:;_;,,··
an tern e rustrabons.
..
n y w en we ;accept
S:re
Y
can
.we
··'furnihlre·,
were
you? :1' m · _of tJ;iese
ai~as,
.in·
addition;. 12 ":' · D.u~g: 'th~, fac~ty\)nee.t!flg,
·work toward our central ·task: to. bring about Chinese acceptance of opposed
fo
~he_-idea
bf
ar!>ifrary- credits fa. be taken in Social or · testlmon}' came. from both _sides.
the fact that it too must live with us. and, other• nations of the. searc~, but it ~s r:ith er difficult . B ehavor'iaL
sciences.
The
of the issue.Mr. Zuccarello tri~d
Id.,,
·
· · · ·
· ·
to hide a chatr m the rooms,
_Ph·
1.10-_sophy dep· artin __
ent un_·
der vali.
'..an.
tly· todefen. d his_·.
P.
la_ns_,
but-
wor ·
wh1· ch, as you
so astutely
b
d
t t b
f
· ·
d
ill
p
·d
'the leadership ofMr. Casey and
1g, 1 ~s. necess1 a e
tg
names.
Hopefully the reality o China at o~
oorstep w· move res1 ent
pointed out, was it's objective.
Dr;
Drennen launched verbal Perhaps _ a delegate fro~ each
Nixon to formulate.foreign policy more realistically.
Also, let's have the courage of
salvos
at ,this plan;. sirice a depa~ment-sele~ted by. his (her) .
. our. convictions and sign our ' Science major could escape from
Cha l~~an
nught
be mo~e
·
C
·
·
letters, huh'?
taking ariy of their courses.
. prest!gious · and successful
tn
Q

t
O
·
.
I'm not asking for perfection,
_ The second proposal at the
draw1_ng up new proposals.
U
I
e .
n , am
pus
but th e proof-reading of th e last
faculty meeting concerned itself' Inv~lvmg the concern of · the
·
.
_ _·
_
_ _
issue oftj:11fCircle left something
with. the Humanities area.
It
P,hllosophy
depart~ent,
Mr.
.
to be·desired. Putting my letter
would cut the Math~- Science. Casey questioned·thepolicyofa
·
.
. .
.
.
.
aside; where it belonged, I never
requirement oF9
credits and liber~ arts ~ollege that. would
·
· .· '
·
hll
h
th S · l C
·tt
h d
fl
d t · did find out why''.· .th ere were
have 12 credits of core in the
requrre p.b.ys1c~ education· yet
Wow!Ithought·fo,ra~
e_t at
.e ocia
ornrn1
ee a.
e.
0
thosethatdidnotfavorachange
History.
Philosophy
and
notmetaphysics.Lwouldliketo
Miami Beach for pre-Christmas vacation, but I found out therr plane, in the
requirement
policy, · Theology ~phere. There is also a, ask •'the. J>hilosophy

department
· was hijacked and they took finals in Havana. Catch the.latest game because .. :" (to be continued?).
stipulation.
of letting
each how-liberal
is
it to deny students
craze on campus - it appears under several aliases: "Bookies Bet . · Let's
c~t. the· ta~. a)Jout · department
···
determine·
the
a choice in selecting teachers in ·
H
On Marist Mixers " or ''What Ever Happened to Sam Perry."
teachers be~g entert.ammg. If
foreign language requirement for the established core area. Tzying :
eavy.
.
'
-
you_ ·don't like an mstructor,.
·
·
Th
h
hr
t
r
d
rth
al
·
Butthingsarelookingbette~'.
.
.. .
.
.
change
sections.
If the
its maJor.
ese are t et
ee . o_ m any w,o
or
v
ue m
If
you h_
ave_
n't been hearm_
g. anythiri__
g from the_ Student C_
ouncil administration says no, then you
hottesf points of contention in lectures swelling over the three
the second plan'. Mr. Alpert of hundred
stu4ent
mark,
-and
· lately, don't panic: you're not . deaf. They ( excluding
L.L.)
are _have. a right, eve!l an obligation,
the Math departme~t, who _prio~
Cont. on page
6
struggling to remain _incognito. Their presses ar~. currently going to. bitch ab_out it. Really, how
·
· · ill-·h
t
·t · t
th to re read many of us would change from
under reparr so you
Vi
ave o wai JUS one more moo
-
an easier to a more difficult
, the same perennial promises (lies). So face the truth folks, scrap all section -because the teacher was·
. the flyers that
will
·soon litter your room which make entrance more entertaining?. · _
inaccessible and vote for your friends. Really - no one is going to
I just got ba~k from a two:
change his spots
' ... · · .
,
week tour.of Spam and Portugal,
'
· ·
· ·
·
h ·
il
M
and I'd like to pass on a few
Yet Manst Men tak~ he.art. The .faculty has broken t e
~ ence~ r • things .. that struck me. First of
Alpert successfully orgaruzed a tnp to New Orleans and if any new all, we in America think i(
problems are solved by our erudite teachers we might getsome other
extra.o~dinary . that · someone
is
opportunities to travel.
Mr.
Nork~n_as has organized a trip to the mult1-}!ngu~I. The man ~n the _
S · t· U ·
hi h
will
last' the ·entire Easter vacation. And Dr. street
10
Lisbon and Madnd ~n
oVIe
ruon
W
c

. .·
.
: .
. .
speak · French and/or English;
Rehwol<!_t is starting some research proJects With the aid of IBM and
many
speak Italian or·
grants. ·
. . .
.
German.
It
was a very humbling .
But
beware!
Terror
still· lurks. The motley work crew experience.
.
_
affectionately known as Andy's Gang is still waiting to work. }'here
Se~ndl~, the extent
!O
which,
·
·

• •
d Amencan ideas and habits affect·
is
an
air
of mystery abou~ the whereabouts of this once exc1t~ng an
everyday
life in Europe
is
. energetic group. It has been rumored that a few of the workers were astounding.
Supermarkets are
former members of a
thrill
seeking motorcycle gang but were everywhere, and th~ televisio!1 in
booted-outwhen they tried to introduce tricycles.
.
Portugal had straight . Mad1:5on
· ·
·
N
kn
h
ill
I
B
Avenue
- type commercials.
Adinlfllstration News!
0
one
ows as yet w
O
w
rep a~
r. Those in the movie theaters here
Cashin as vice-president, but a few lay names may appear
10
the are direct translations of the
running. Aside from this the faculty had to give· up· th~ir private American soap-opera variety. In
restroom facilities which was converted into a womens powder 'f,rance. you,, can park .m a
room. The faculty is still considering the considerations of the , , Park
1
~
g, ,, c
1
a m P
ID
a
f
APC
If his
d
. 1 d.
Oh
II·
ca mp1ng,
ose
your
considered opinion o the

t
soun s nus ea mg-
we • '"self-control,"
and suffer a
Like teacher like student.
"breakdown." Needless to say,
THE
<&+CIRCLEe
....
-,
Editor-in-Chief
: ..............
; ...........................
,;.; ......... Paul.Browne
Managing
Editor .....................................
Patrick McMcirrow,
fms
· Sports Editor ........................
; ........ _.
.. _.
...... :.::
......
Joseph McMaholJ
·. -
Feat~~ Editor ..................
; ..... : .. ; ...... : .. : ....... .-.. .-,
.. Joseph Thorsen
Photography Editor ......................................
:John LaMassa,
fnis.
Circulation
.........................................
: .... ;, ............
David DeRosa
Financial Manager
.................................................
Thornas.Bagai:·.
.
"-
•.
.
'
.
.,
News Staff:..
. .
. .
Tom Buckley, Nick Buffardi, Charles Clark, Phil Coyle, Richard .
Dutka, Phil Glennon, Jeremiah Hayes, Anne Berinato, Otto
Unger, Bob Miller
.
Feature Writers:
Ti.m Brier, Vincent Buonora, Vincent Begley, Richard Gorman,
Richard Bruno
·
Sports Staff:
William Baker, Joseph Gebbia, Joseph Nolan, Joseph Rubino, .
Robert Sullivan, Roger Sullivan, Joseph Thorsen,
George
Bassi
Layout:
John Rogener, fms, Tom Tinghitella, fms
Typists:
Laurence Basirico,
Bob Gurske
You may have noticed the trays and the tidbits of delicacies le!t ~II you ~ear on the I}l~em ra~i~
on the cafeteria tables, but this
is
one issue which the students can t
IS
Amencan and Bntish rock n
pass the buck.
If
one feels the compulsion to act like a pig he should· ro~.hirdly
the differences in
Fred House, Kevin Bue~~:~~}~
Tmghitella, f~s, Daniel
be allowed to do so. However, a section (pen) should
be
roped off to Jiving sta'ndards between the
Waters, fms, John Pinna, fms
accommodate others of the same
ilk. -
J.T.
haves and have nots in Portugal· .._ ________________________
_





















































































































I.
...... - ........
- ..
, ••
-
,
1' ··1·.'
•••
~
·.9
7 •..•
'•· ~-
... -
•••••.•.
~.
' ........ --·-·
............
-
•••••
~
.• ·---
• ..., ••• ,. ·-
,
·,
"J.ANUARY 31,
.1969
THEClllCLE
...
PAGEl1
:Open A New·
Window
bJV"
__
t..,
.. I had a hard
tun~
in de~d_ing how to
start this article. But, since it
JS
not _up for any Journalistic awards, it really doesn't matter. All I
know
JS
that the
first
Oxford Term
is
over and the Marist Campus
·has began its new semester.
'
,
I
thought
I
would mention something that occurred a few weeks
'back. A group of st~dents went to Stratford to see one of the Royal"
Shakespeare Productions. On the way home
I heard a familiar accent
(~eing h~re you become very sensitive to American accents). On his
. dIScove~g that
I was an American we just naturally started a
conversation. After he told me hii: name,
I
thought
I
had heard or
seen it somewhere before. It didn't take long before
I realized where
I
had seen it before.
His
name was Brian McGuire and had wrote an
_article in Post
Magazine (Sept.
21, 1968).
It was one of three articles
on "Students and College Rebellion."
I remembered how impressed
I
was by
his
article that it was· a
pleasant
·
su~rise to meet him. He
was
the top graduate from
.B~eley
University. The uticle •ea1t with the regrets he had in
bemg numb:t
one.
~
woa't
go
into
his
article, but I
would·
recommend
it
for
aayone
wbo
cua aet a
hold of it.
I
w .. inore
interested
in
talkinl
about·.9erte.ley
fl.
Marist.
He admitted
bi
1Lad
Student Brodlen
lll0"4
from
Fontaine
Hall
illto
1lleir
..ty'
coastructed
residences during semester break_,
·
_fte'fer beard about
Marilt, but he
wu
interated.
I toot advantage of
·
tile lituation'
and
admittedly
brqpd
about
Marilt .
.
I
told
bim about
Faculty Emuation,
S!udeat
imolvement_
in
the Academic Policy
and the Budget ComJD1ttces. Then
I
told him how
down to earth the
-Institutional
Darwi-nis·m
by
Vin
Buonora
Why is
the
·
American Church tradition
is
catalyzed by the
·
examples of genuine celibates
divesting itself of its traditions,· strong influence of secularism
are
Tom
Dooley
Thomas
especially in religious life? The among "lay congregations" such
Merton, and others ~ho freely
apparent secularization in modes as ~he_
Marist and other religious
chose this way of life.
of dress, work, and conduct as societies.
.
The demise of the traditional
well as the increasing number of
The _wo* of t~e re~gious ~European religious institution in
religious who are leaving their
~
r g_
a. n 1
z a
ti
on s
1
s h 1 g hly
America by no means signifies
orders and congregations every s1gnif1cant _to the development
the
end
of the
needs for
year
is
evident of the fact. These
.of
man_
m the
~phere
of Christian involvement. Christian .
actions
are
not
necessarily educ~ h?n.
Howt:v.er,
t~e
life in America is developing to
frivolous novelties but serious sec~anzation . of religi<?us _ life signify no longer the meaningless
deliberated
decisions of some which ~nables its absorption ~to
_
recitations and outward symbols
influential and highly respected the .m~n strea!ll of the Amencan
of an archaic tradition.
It
means
men
·
in religious life. Marist capitalist S<?C~ety demonstrates
something
·
which
is
evolving -
College
is
witnessing this fact that ~onasttcISm nee~ not carry
something
which
I. can not
with the resignation of at least on t!ris work. Education can be
predict.
1
hope and believe it will
four Marist, Brothers from the contmued as the. work
.
of the
be beautiful.
faculty was.
·
. He couldn't believe all the things that we had; he told me he was
Jealous. of them. According to him, Berkeley was just mass produced
e~ucatlon. There was no opportunity to really become involved.
Either you devoted your time to rebelling or kept your nose in a
book.
The point of this whole conversation was
I found there
is
too
~uch down t~lk at M~t.
Many of the Circle articles reflect a
dISgust at Manst.
I don t think we realize how much we have and
how much more we
can
have; Everything isn't the best but we have
the ?PPOrtunit_y to make it the best. There
is
always s~meone eager
to listen. Manst has J!Ot become rock-like, each student can help
mole the future of Manst.
I
wouldn't give two cents for a Harvard or Oxford education.
I
hav~ b~en :3-ble to loo~ at t~gs
objectively and still retain
a
~ubJecttve vtew. Pe~ple m Manst are not wrapped up in their own
importance; there
is
no reason for a college to think they are
infallible. Just because people have never heard of Marist it doesn't
mean we're inferior to any other college.
All
we have to 'do
is
start
t~g
about Marist with a capital "M" and people will start
listerung to us. We don't need unconstructive
criticism but an
optimistic and sincere interest in our college's welfare.
'
I
have probably bored most of you with this article but
I
couldn't
pass up the opportunity to pat Marist College on the back. It's a
gre~t College, and I will be looking forward to going back for my
,seruor
year.
-
_I'll close wishing all a successful semester and hoping that
1969
will be a new and a better year for all at Marist.
faculty in the last few months. laymen.
If
the . life style and
However, the movement is not work of the religious can be
particular to. Marist but to many
.
acc<?mplished by laymen; why
religious societies.
.
. . ·
should
the institution
be
so ---~-------------------------_.,:_
_______
.,;_ __
_
·
Th~ American
Church·
is
distinctive
as to be called.
-
;)~i~-~J!8'?l!1_~;c~~--:~~~~Q~ailiz!-
·ti:~ligious!''·
Th~·~increasing
P'.a[t
J.
of
S.e
rJes,
..
t o~
,
as
•one
a~thor
i_>U!
1tdt_
is·
1ilvolvemen.t.
of::
religious
in
sertmg out on 1ts own - not orily secular life seems to point to
·
Th.
··s
-
-
-
.
.
.
passively ignoring its European
.
assimilation.
The assimilation
·e
e· arch
·
religious traditions, but actively
·
can.
be deep
·enough·
to erase all
.
thrusting 'its attack against. these distinctions between "Mr."
and
.
traditions which people believe "Brother." Without a distinctive
·
·
arc stifling human development.
life
style
all the titles and
Some
of
these traditions
are: a
.
forinalitios
which reprelellt
a
.
·
Jameniltic attitude to sexuality
s,emu:.
identity
·
in
·
ta•itiaaal
aad·
pleasurable
activity,
CCllllCepb
ofrcligiouslifebecollle
·
European
liturgical ritual
in.
but
i■-cnificut
symbollt
of
a
Church
wors:h.jp,
and
tbe hollow
ia1titutio11.
Id
tlle
dictatorial image of the paternal
rdigioul
congregation
becomel
superior .. I>emocratic
ideology
in
_
less
distinct it
will
abando■
the
religious
"politics"
in the
symbols
of its past distincti'~e
American Church has nurtured a
·
quality; cl(?thing will become
distrust arid loss of confidence in secularized,
and· titles
and
-
·
the
.
prudence
of religious
privileges
of the traditional
·
authority.
_
institution will be dropped ..
__
What are some more specific
. Non-Catholics
·
have
·
Men
circumstances of the apparent
highly
critical of celibacy in
·"de-Romanization"
and
religious
life and
with
just
consequential depletion of the
rea90M.
The repressive attitude
Marist
Brothers?
Marcellin
of Jansenism
is
evident in
past
Champagnat
founded
the catechetical
instruction
on
-religious
congregation to instruct matters of sexuality~ Is celibacy
youth in the teachings~fChrist.
a nJid.
human
style?
The
He lived during a period of question
is
complex.
"For tho,e
revolution, war, aad chaos of the who
can !ake it, let them ... ," as.
Napoleonic
era.
The order we
read m the New Testament.
spread throughout
the world. Recently.
Bishop Dearden on
The
Eur&pean
religious
NBC gne
some
traditional
traditions
weaved themselves reasons for the Church's stand
into the life style of the
Marist
on
celibacy;
both
were
Brothers who e.entually came to abstractions. He said, "cdloacy
America to continue their noble eaaltlcs one
to
dedtcate
ltimllelf
woct.
But
why ii tile
American mOR
tQ the
aemc:e
of
othm ud
congreption
dmatitlg from the
nen
tllil
ii dcNtable smec it
is
tra4itional
imate
wllich
bllilt abltnc&
111d
ipores
tile
real
itself
_a
corcaeptioa
of
tea
1itu1ie11
.of •
-•s
life.
It
tho.and
me111ben a
few
yelft
lllalllt
aet
N
~e1ented •
an
ago, tlle 1ee0nd
1:ugest
teaelug
at.o111te tndl.
Ho
allo
~
order to the Jes.its?
tblt
c••
~
ii a
dmnc
cal
a •
Tile
mere
physical
separati&a
apeaal
wnea
anll
piac:e
in
the
of
America•
religio111
c•eraal
tia ..
011.
1llis
is
a
.
C0111111Unities
from tile "original
serioa
00

t•,ation.
To
,._e
speciel
of
Emopean
~
Chiillliw it
ii
mid. Howewr,
life"
sets a climate
fOI'
eml&ttioa ..
I.et-,
him
who
can
take
it,"
and
clla11ie.
Tite
secularimC
·accept
tllis
calling.
Thi•
character of American society is explaaatioll
for ceboacy saould
not aerved by the European not
K
usecl
as a
rationalization
monastic
or semi-monastic·
and justification for those
who
tradition. The withdrawal and
find themselTes in religious life
sheltering of religious from tile ,
and
Ially.
..skould have not
.actmties
of the world have not. taken
it ... "
proven too effective in meeting'
Fortunately
religiom
are
tile
neea
of youth and adults ..
blukills
away from meaninpcsl
Since there
is
little need for
such'
••4
eftll
harmful traditioul
a life
ltJle
in
Aaerican
life, it
beli8fa
a1K>ut
God,
1exulity,
pad9IIJ
hcomes estinct.
TM ~- ... Yet
cdihc;y
aa a way
_of
4i11ppeara■ce of E~.
hfe
•• beHliful.
lteal
.
life
Wrestling
in his
sleep,
entwined
in the grasp of a
tossled COYer and a half
tom
sheet,
.
Adam suddenly
awote
to
the
startlinc realization
that
the
ICan:h
mwt
now
begia.
Ju..._
from
llis bed,
he.
rihollt
hesitation.
fitted
his
tattcnd
jeans
and
oversized
parka
onto
his
limbs: Dressed, he
opened
the bedroom door, paused, and
then suddenly returning to
Im.
desk, he riffled the papers in the
bottom drawer·until he came to
a slim change
puISe
which
he
quickly opened and counted the
five pound ten pence it held. ·
Once again returning to the door
he opened
it
and silently crept
down the tilting staircase to the
street below.
Outside,
he
realized it
was
nearing dawn. The cobblestone
street leading
to
Euston road
was
black with the remaining
·
darkness. Without hesitating he
.
quickly
waited
through
the
misty
rain up the narrow street
toward
the
underground
entrance. He
.
caught the iust
train
a■d
reached
Upminister
'by
d
a
wa.
Adam was on tile
motorway
before
the
fint
slaadows ••
al,Je
to make
dear
ouUi•es
Cit
tlle
coUllt1'ylWe
aroait
MIL
He ••
ready
tCl
hitcll
hi1 way toward
llil
uncataill
Mlllilly.
Tu
lo,ry
P1llled
into tile
dOCQaN
al>o1lt midaftemOOL
TIie
baldia&
.-:tmty of the yard
· tenN
notice
tlut the
Do-,er
ferry
w•
preparing·
to depart.
Automobiles liaed the entrance
ramps,
aJMI
queues of
lorries
waited
impatiently
to
unload
their
merchandise
into the
undersized holds of the
cargo
deck.
Adam
had begun
~
journey
by first
travelling
northward,
backtracking
to
·
Oxford with the
first
pickup
AM
then
adnncing
again
pat
Londoa
toward
Deal
in
tJae
S••• .. •• ..
•r•
tip
of
llaltfallllile.
'he
fiMI
me ...
__
,,.·
..,...,.....,
received was
a
lorry which.
was
likely.
ct
d!'3ftdodier who hoped
.
carrying
·
poultry toward Dover
:o
1009C
himself
from the shame
for
the
cllannel
cro-■-
in
>f
the country
he
disffowell.
.
1earch of
d
European -ket.
However, the
&<>od
doctor
wu
SeA1iag llil deleiny.
AMIil
1
,atle
man
a.ad
the
·
1"lc,ed
boarded the
ferry ...
ldtW
yovttl touclted
bit
heart. He left
himaelf
on
a
beadt:
-slbatcd
A4a•
on
Uae
outskirts
of
toward
the
front·
of
the
aft
•k.
·
VM•
ht
not before
supplying
There
he
sileatly watcbed the
,he J011th with a loaf
at
bread
quiet
waters of the channel
and
a
bottle of the cheapest
suddenly break on the tip of the
wine
he
could purchase in
a
ferry and qwckly spiral
away
to
roadaide shop. Thankful
for he
both tile left and right.
Through
had but
little over two
quid
left
the approaching darkness and
1ft" the channel crossing, Adam
the starlit ni&ht
Ile
sat, thinking
.tat
by_ the roadside and gingerly
of, neither
past
nor future.
The
.
at~
his
bread and sipped
his
pre1ent being only a synthesis of
wme.
·
·
the two, Adam seemed not to be
The road ran north and south.
a
part of the world around him.
.t\dam
sat quietly eating, holding
At midni,ht
the swift ferry
his
thumb up to each passing
docked snusJy into its French
,ehicle. He sat on the we1tern
home.
Hitchin1
his first
:ide of the road
so possibly he
successful ride. Adam continued
thou&ht to head south. However
eastward.
A French Doctor
h~
sat where
his
thoughts
Jead
returning to
Verdun
took pity·
~?
by
~
patch of blooming
o n
t
h
e
Youth
who
so
da1S1es which he
so
intently sat
unforcefully held
his
tllumb in when
an
automobile
was not
front of the
passiDa
alltomobile.
approaching. To
his
left was a
'They ·
reacMd
Verdun about
sbup
cune with a mound which
noon the second day.
By
this
welded
him
from the
view
of
time, Adam
alnNy
blew
that
;out»ound
traffic.
lie did
nat
tbe
aucceuful.
doctor
wa
tlaiA_k
to
move
and
shortly.
retaaiu&
llome
·aftu
bis
medicll
bd'Gle
dut
tbe
o11i1J
car
to
lk>p
c:na'ircnce • , _,._
Tllat
lae
ap~
f~
tbe
lOIIIIL
-«-ed
.....
--.me
aaemil
Tbe
eil'er
wa
a
Dllkllawl
u11
tut
~
r
a •
~er
hecfiaa ~-
~
Hill
Clilp
w
eren _,.
_....
u
~
1l
l■ e•Alil.-lliaoattobe
rilla--...._Dedem,rill
• O.tell
~
no••
tam
lcMW
l/1111:y
dsat
A,_
..
rehlalills
to
tk
a~
aa
Aa•ricca,
••t
·-••
seNioa
II
dis
~
Court .
f11II
hniM.. _.
.._. -
-
flt...
.
,._ -
-
wuwww.
die
GIiiy ~---
Ile
Mitller •
~
nor a
le -.
_.us
I
I to· Adla
WM
why he
but a
waywml
}'OUtlt ••
-•
Ill •
tllt
eppoail&
silSe
of
the
"ICUChing. ..
And
lie
OmJ
f...i
roM
if
Ile ~esired to
So north.
Adam to
be
an America• by
his
Whea
Adam
uswered
th.at
there
Boltonian accea& for had not llis
·
were no
ftowm
on
tle
other
learned
associate,
Dr. Pierre side,
it seemed
tllat
tt1e
Marchmont.
studied
at the
Dutchmu
undentood
and the
Harvard
Medical
School.
only other remark he made was
Marchmont's
adopted
English that the young man would covet
accent
was
easily
recognizable
th~ tulip fields which were the
nen
on
a
bagaboad
youth.
Also
pnze
of
Roland. Ai
that
he
the
Frencluaaa
euily
sa.:
lapd
illto silence,
aDd
as the
A4am's
most
prc"rio11s
iourMY
WOlllhl
its
tllm.,_.
ilklc,cMCat
meaa•ar...atol
·
waJ
_..
soae
d•biows
so.rce,
IIIClll
.....
;
..
;

--
· ::t:}1~:;:
'{lrf
~t--
.:
......
,...,
·'




























































































































,
..
1.
I
I
_PAGE4l
. ..
;
. THE ClltCLE
.
JANUARY.31,.1969_ .
·•·The•••······1(18ugural.·•-Odd8$SJ··•-·_·•••
.
.

by
Anthony
Buker (Special
to ~e- Circle)
Peace
Corps
Show$
Rise
.
In Yol1nteers
/

\

>
:
,
.~
••





._·.
-.



• ..
.
In the ·spirit of the ancient
·
After about an hour and a half
A quick visit. to tile office of
Washington- During the spring next 4-5.
yea.rs.
Volunteers will travelers
and explorers
.
four
·
of
circling
around northeast
·
Sen. Charles Godell (Rep .. N.Y.)
of 1969 the Peace Corps will work in the capital Conakry for
.MOTHmen
set out- 011 a journey
·washingtori
we saw a rather
•paid
off
.with
t~o tnor,e pmes_
train
1,465
Volunteers
for government
·
ministries, doing
to
witness
the
forty-sixth
peculiar sign which read "Marist
and we were on_ our
way.
The
service in 25 of the 59 nations
on-the-job training iri equipment
Presidential
.Inauguration
in the . College." At first. we believed it · ceremony itself went

without
where Volunteers are
.
at work. repair. Men are needed with
.
history of the United States.
to
be
some sort of hallucination
incident because ·of tlie elaborate
This.represents
an increase of backgrounds
in
general
Again:·in
the
spirit of the
ormirage,thenwethoughtwe
securityprecautionsan.d·-the.
300 more openings than were. mechanics,
diesel,
heavy
ancients
our
group
of
·might
have solved the mystery
·necessityofpassestogetwithin
available
during
the
same equipment,.
machine,
MOTHmen had no idea of what
of where the signs in front of
·
sight of the President, H9\Vever,
trainingcycleinl968.
automotive-electrical·,
they would find once they got
our
hallowed
institution
of
during the tnotorcadefr9m•the
These Volunteers are needed industrial-electrical,
diesel fuel
there
.
or what· lodgings they
higher learning had been going. Capitol
.
to
the
Presidential
to work in 55 programs in such. systems, and
.
rewiring motors
·would find for themselves.
too.
After rejecting both of
Reviewing
."Stand_
~me
·buckets
varied job areas-
as
agriculture,
and generators.
Our journey began on Sunday
these premises as unlikely we
of paint
and other
'assorted
education,.health,
cooperatives,:
These programs, and niany
morning Jan. 19,)969
at 7:30
decided to see what this place
objects.
were' hurled at· the
fisheries
and
community
more, begin training. January -
a.m. in front of Leo Hall. As we
was all about. We also had hopes. limousine containing Mr. Nixon.
development.
In many cases a, May 1969. To find out more
started out, we had no idea of
of obtaining a place to stay .in
None of these missiles-reached
portion. of the training will take ab out, how
your
skill
or
exactly what .this day had_ in
order
to witness the events
their inark and strangely enough
place in the country where the background· can be used,in the
store for us. After we picked up . surrounding the inauguration of
this
incident
was totally
volunteers are to serve.
Peace Corps, contact your Peace
the entire crew·. for this venture
President Nixon. We knocked at
.
overlooked. by the news media.
Here
are examples of the. Corps liaison on campus or wirte
into the unknown we were on_ the door, explained our plight
After
returning
·to
Marist
programs:
-
to:
Peace Crops Information
the New Jersey Turnpike by
and were welcomed we were
.(south)
at around.five we went
...
In
Venezuela
single
Center, Room 715, Washington,
1:30 p.m. and on our way. We given private rooms, a meal,and
to
the
·catholic
University
women
.
Volunteers
with
D.C. 20525.
·
arrived
.
at Washington D.C. at
then were given a tour of the
Rathskeller for a while and then,
b a ck g r o u n d s in
home.
five thirty and began to look for
city by two seminarians. we
returned to the·- seminary and
economics, social work or liberal
Mixer Saturday
Catholic University to see if we
~went
back to the school (which
spent the evening packing. The
arts are needed to work with the
could find someone to lodge us
is a seminary for Marist priests)
next morning we set out early
Division of Rural Housing to
at 8 P.M.
in their dorms.
and were given a mii:lnight snack
·and
went
to
the
Kennedy
help·
bring
about
better
______________________
....;..
____
and then-went to bed.
·on
our
Gravesite in. Arlington
before
sanitation in new communities
_
tour of Washington that night
returning.
·
·
·
··
1
·
· ·
·
··
·
·
throughout
Brazil. They will
SEA"CH
C~ntinued from page 3
.
,
we saw the hundreds of people
In closing I might say that we
work with individual families
the
country-sized
city
of
~gainst and although_ the fury ~f\ who were taking part in the
had an experience that none of
and
community
..
leaders
to
·
Luxembourg
and
t_h en
its pressure would still ~e felt, 1t
1
Anti-Inaugural activities. As we us, Bob George, Rich Scott,
promote better health through
northward,
the silence should
would ilt le_ast be quiet. The walked
among them on the
Tony Romano and myself
·will
community,
home site and
have lullabyed Adam to needed
Dutchman silently understood,
street, we felt out of place due
soon forget. There are so many -
house improvement projects.
slumber.
Instead, it appeared
and left Adam_ where req1;1ested. to the fact that we were the only
people. who helped niake
·
our
...
In India, some highly_ that Adam relished the·pointed
Before
leaving,
he directed
ones who weren't
carrying a
.
visit to Washington possible, yet
skilled Volunteers are needed for
quiet for his eyes remained clear
Adam toward a distant ~arnyard · sign.
· ·
.
a special note of thanks must go
a special education program to
as he continually looked out of
where
,
he
..
may
find
an
The next morning we awoke
to the seminarians at Marist
h e l p sup p
1
y more
and
the side window. The hours
undist.ur~ed place to rest before
early to get an early start for the
College who took
us
in_ and
better-trained,
teachers. These
passed by as well as the changing
the sunnse.
.
Capitol and try to get as close as helped us so much._
· ·
Volunteers
will teach TESL
countryside.
The valley of
Adam thanked
his
benefactor
possible
to
witness
the
Toity Barker
(teaching English as a second
·Luxembourg
quickly rose to the
but when he was l~ft alone, he inauguration. on the way there
Washington D.C.
language) methods.and·supervise
elevated
forests leading into
mei:~ly ~egan ~alkmg after the. two of mY, companions met a
_
Jan. 21;1968
practice
teaching
in basic,
Belgium.
As Adam
stared
shr_inking
image
of the
girl
with Whom they attended.· _______
....;.
____
___
t
r a i n i n g s c h o o l s a n d
·
openeyed, the light of the full
Volkswagen. He c<>ntinued o~ high school, who ha~ two extra
teacher-training
colleges
moon danced between the lilting
the r?ad toward DeHauge until
passes to the standing room on
throughout Madras state.
spruce trees evenly spaced aside
morrung, when he
.
came
t?
the the grounds of the Capitol itself.
PtD
H,OC
from
page_ 1
·
.
Volunteers
for this program
the·road. As the road wound its
crossroads where the road is cut
·
should have a master's degree, or
way around the contours of tlie
by
the
big h w a Y. joining
CRISIS
• ·
Asso~iatio.:.~-
iri
1964. His. stay
else have experie~ce in TEFL
earth, the moonlight first moved
Rotterdam
and
Amsterdam.
Cont. from page 2
.
_. :.·•._,
·,
....
also w_
it_nesse_d o~e_
..
__
.revisio_
ri
__
of
(teachin~ English as a foreign
from the east and then slowly
Here, he waited until. he was
th
11
ul
th
language).-Or they shpuld have a
strayed from right to left
.and
picked
up by a truckdriver
.
discUssio'nless'\preceptorials
/ •
.e ~
0
.
ege
curpc
u!'f
iv~
bachelor's .degree iil'. education
'
back a~a~ ....
'
I
.• ,::
'·:·-i·.'
.
\
C?:i:cying_
Ip~
~~rly
,morn~g
.c~r~o
iwoµl4
har~ly seem liberal
':Of
as·, wmnmg
.9!
~~v~ratJ
1
t~;Y
al
.·,.
···with'
so·me

background
·
in
.
;
By• m1dmght
·
the
;couple·,
to the-moutli of the Grand·Canal
· 'Whitehead•iemarked/tReceptive~,
graµ~s.}or ~~f~ntlf~c,._a_u,
~~~~h
>··
linguistics or !EFL.
·
...
,
·
reached Brussels and stopping at;Iin Centi'~! Holland.
Fioni
there,
·
tobeauty,orhuman
feelings;'.>·
,.a
n,d,
'.f_Y
'_e_q
1:1.1Pll!ent,::.,
t
e
... In the South Pacific, the
·
the
·railway
station they thought
,
the cargo would then be shipped
''-The
important questons in'this-:
.
prep_aration
;a
nd use,_of.})tl~_U
Go_veinment of FiJ'i wants_ Pe_
ace· to· ge·t_
a·cup·· of ca·fe
-_au
la1·t.-On-:'
_along
with_ the
._produce_·
of the
curriculum·
crisis. inv·olve far
gra~ts, th e mtroductton,of
·
th e
·.
·
.
·
·
-
wh·
·
Paine
College
.Exchange
Corps Volunt,eers to help stepyp
·paying
the l'additii:in, the well fit
·
rest of t~e Westcountty to the
more than a core. c~ange.
~t
..
p
·
·
th Third YearAbroad
th
co ntry
s
food production
·
D t h
..
d t
t hi
rt
t
f A
st
d
purpose
does ' Manst have
.
m
·
·
rogram,
·
e
.
-
.
.
.
-
·
-.·
-
.
an~ her p develop some natural
w~i of
::C~8.;J:~~nto
0
~~
ves:
sef;e
~cirn~g ~a:r :.:~
and
being a college'?
.
How does it
.
P~ogrw, ttsrdta
Piogy;am, a~d
economic resources~
_
.
_
·
picket. Insisting on payirig the
bright and the Dutchman was in
define itself with regard_ to its
.
t e
.
or ~- u
¥
.
r.9l?'am
a1!11
Volunteers with farm or ranch
bill
Ad am. only
said
"I
a talkative mood. He knew little
students and what extra benefits
psychology·
His d~t~es
0
backgrounds or with degrees in
.
appre-ciate your g·uiet
sir."
It was English, but that
.did
not disturb
·
separate
it
from
other
·
rnclud,ed
·
·
th e recruitmg
·a
nd
.
agriculture or liberal arts will. the first sign of appreciation
him •. He continued
.bantering
institutions of
·higher
learning. It
evaluatmg of college fa~?1ty .. ,
k ·
·
al
h b d
·
(b fha
·
h
hi
·
Ad
K
·
·
h t
is obvious the
·present
core must
Broth er Foy stated, There is
wor
m
amm
.
us
.
an ry
ee ,
Adam
d
s own
s vanous
-.
away to
.
am ..
·
nowmg t . a
go, but more· dynami·c measures
_.
n_.
0
do_ub_t..
in
__
my m~.-
d
that_· _Ed
cattle, pigs and dairy fanning) or
chauffeurs. and·· the . Dutchman
Adani did· not understand him,
l
h
l
in rice growing projects.
seemed to-understand,
the Dutchman did not expect
must be taken to prevent
·the
,
was_
lD
st r.umen~a m }~ P!Dg
Volunteer_ foresters_ are also
The tw·o_
a··pproached DeHauge
Adam
to
answer.
So_. he
college from taking a firm hold
Man~t de~elop_ mto
~a _coµ~ge.
.
h
-

.
w h 1 ch
·.
1 s
1
n
q
u
1
s
1
t
1
ve,
needed to operate forest stations_

soon after meeting· the rolling
-
chattered away about his family,
on· t e se~ond rung, It
1S
evid,ent_ forward-looking, and \\'illing to
and
train
the
-
badly needed
flatlands
that
is Holland.
his job, and his problems. He
that Manst. cannot attract the
try new approaches to academic
personnel
to tap Fiji's great
Although••
the
canals
and
cursed
the
feathers
that
cream of_ hig~ ~cho_ol
.S!aduates
pro,blems;
·
Doubtless
his
forest potential.

windmills
were hidden from
constant1y·rained into.the.cab of
due ~o its nsu~g- tuiti~>n and
success'or
will - do things
Volunteers
with_ -geology··· Adam's sight by the now cloud_ the truck,
for -his cargo was
mediocre
position
in the
d'ff
-
1
- ·
8
- ·
1
h•.
·
·-.-~;.;t
th
·
ill
I
d
..
f
h
d
d
f
m· tellectual
.world,
but
1•.t'
_can_
..
1 er_ent_
y.
·_._ut
__
.
op_efi
14
,
ee -
degrees w
hep carry out
a
covered· moonlight,
he sense
·
made
up.• o
un re s o
t f ill
t
han
much-needed
systematic
.their-.presence.
Even thol!glJ_the
moulting chickens which were
place a higher value on the. impnn_
·
0
'!'
ll!gness
O
c.,, _g
geological
mapping
.
of Fiji's
turbulence
of the nortll wind. constantly
,
shedding
their
student. Next week "THE WHO
·
a nd imagi_natlve~ess,, remams
entire
7,040
square miles.
They: which forever rolls across the
feathers: in
the open air, rear
AND WHAT OF
MA
RIST"
fixed at
ManSl
College.

..
·· ··
will also train local personnel for.·
·northern·
lowlands of Holland,
compartment. Meanwhile, Adam
the
geological
survey
Adam
could
taste
their
listened intently, the rising and
department.
otherwise·
serenity.
He
·
was fal]ing
.intonation
of the
...
Guinea
.
has requested·
spiteful_
of: the · distasteful
multi-syllabl~fanguage not tiring
V
9iunteer
mechanics
-
to help
murmur that the wind caused as him
__
as
'if
it bad
.been
the
train
the
200-300
Guinean
it
whistled
·throuoh
the
monoto!ly
of English,
:but
m:..echanics needed within the
Volkswagen and before
~eachinif.
actually
stimulating
his mind
DeHauge,
he
asked to be left off.
while_
not
commanding
its
.
I
S,000
ciai1
I
a
w:i1I
die.
tllil
amtll
ia
'liafra.
T11eir
cfthQllllliNae_· ..
llupr ...
s1••toa1
are 1wollca
ltCl ••
ct.a
ad
llblltal llolics.
Mt
caw
ii walltv.ik.
n.
o■ ly
aatWote
i• .....
~HCffa.
.
111111
Clldr -
,:
y«1e·
........ ,...ff,
Coa1ressm1 ■,
·
6r State
Coaaal.,..
a■tillg
fer
6ec:t
federal
aid
to
Biafra hospitals.
PeJSOnal contributions can b<
sent to the Biafran Appeal
in
care of the United Nations.
He was hopefui- that
in
.
the. attention.
·
.
-
.
.
.
barren
countryside,
the wind
.
To be continued
wollld
have
no for~ to bound
D.
C.
Insights
...
....
.,
..
~
We anwN
in
1'1
Y
str•
a.·
11rnvin1
·along
widlNt
lilucbl
Fnlay
llefore
J-,,
21 •
bolablc
Ntil
a
poke
QOMi..,.

~
die
I~
ol
tbe
was
11attad·wida
_.
UIII
l'fuW.eat
of
Ille
UIIMII
IOCks.
.
.Aduliy
acml
1P
of
a
ltatea.
0.
iataallt
Naw
11a1
motan:yca -
_. .• ,,.
fee
C
011·tlleolliaaaieitia,
111e
.....
rocth•11•
r,t
mcewacewklaetaodela'U..
~•d
tJle
·,ace·
ra ••ors
two blocks
to llidlard Nixon
could
not
be bdd
responsible.
and Spiro
Agnew.
The security
At the end
·of•
the march we
was
very
tight. Phil Glennon, Bill ·-treacled down to a new wing of
Thomack
and
myself turned ow:.
·
the Smithsonian Imtitute being
attention to the new left.
dedicated
by Spiro Agnew.
The following Sunday. yippies
Various groups being confronted
took to the streets in what was
by
mounted
police,
began
to
be· a---peace
march. We
harassing the police. The
noise
encountered the demonstrations.
frightened the horses so m11ch,
about
two blocks from the.
that
there
was almost
a
CARE
_
Capitol building and proceeded
stampede, yet the shofiting of
to take some pictures on our
cameras. The peace march was
.._ ___________
...J
-"
Cont. on
pqe
6
ATTENTION ALL SENIORS:
Recruiting schedule from Jan. 27; to Feb. 18, 1969
.
~
ORGANIZATION
DATE
OPPORTUNITIES
Ayerst Laboratories
Feb.5
.
.
.
Pharmaceutical Sales
-------------------------------------
County National Bank
Feb.6
· .
Management Trainee
--------------~ ----------------~
---
Texaco, Inc ..
Feb.
10
.
AccoWttiag
.. '' 0-miiltry·
lndllStrial RelatioRS
·
.Penoanel
---------------------------
.·-
.•
.
--
.
---
Feb.
II
-----------------------
-
-----------
-
Alstate
Fft. 13
Sales A llaR111tant
-
-
--
------------------~
-------
RJ. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
Feb. 18
All interested.
-------------------------------------
.
If
interested, report
·to
the Placement Office
(Room
100,
Lov.:er ~nnelly)
for further information and an appointment.
No mtemews
will
be granted unless an appointment has been
made at least one week beforehand.






















































































































• l
• -·····:·:
....•..•
•: . •
•.
", .•.•
..
,-JANUARY
31.-1969.
·-•
.
:
--·
-,-7,
THECIRCLE
·
:·'\
.PAGE
5
'
Stldents' Records
The Washington
Disgrace
''
Ar_··.
e Ke_'
·p·

-Private
.
.
Washiftgton
(CPS)
-
·1n
.
The
man:h along Pennsylvania· schoo1'1udents and a number of
Washington, by January 20, the -
-A
venue
took
place
almost
· ·middle-agers
were also there
.
.
St."Paul,Mmn.~(I.P.)-"We
Fle~ming,
Pr~vost
Lucius
M~bilization_toEndthe_Warin
without incident. Atone point
The
next
morning,
feel that. a student's record at Garvin;
and Dean Goodrich
Vietnam had shown that it
is
police
·on
motor scooters chased
Inauguration
Day, a smaller
Macalester
is
a
-private
matter dec~ded to inaugurate
_the
·new
confused and divided over goals .several marchers out of lanes group
of demonstrators
-
between that student and the policy.
.
.
.
.
.
and techniques.
open to traffic, but otherwise
numbering
about
1,000
-
college. We're riot going to hand
Dean Goodrich emphasized,
..
The climax of the
·weekend
everything went the way the stationed themselves along the
·
out information about a student however, that the college
is
very
.:
activities for demonstrators - a
Mobe said it hoped - peacefully.
parade route with banners and
to
someone
just
because
happy at any time to send any
march
from the Washington
But later in the afternoon of jeers. As President Nixon's car
someone-asksforit."

·
informationanywhereatrequest
.Monument
to the capitol in the
Jan.
19, police briefly battled
passed, they threw rocks and

This. was the
way
·
Dean of the student. In addition
to
opposite direction from Nixon's
so·me
1
of
the
demonstrators
beer
cans and tried to jtet
Keririeth P. Goodric~- ~escri~e~ Selective Service Information,
_route
after his oath - taking -· outside a reception of Spiro
through
police lines. Officers,
t1:3-e
·.
c<?ll!'ge positio~ . as he the
policy
also will affect
drew more than
10,000
people.
Agnew.
.backed
up by a group of military
dJScussed the r~cent d~ISlon not dealings
with
·
the
veterans
S~udents, housewives, families
For most of the marchers, the
police, pushed them back.
,
toreleaseanymf?rmat1onabout-
administration
and
any
with young children, teachers,
parade
was fun. They sang,
The demonstrators ran onto
students to outside persons or scholarship
.
sources
which
workers
and
a number
of
waved banners and balloons and
side
streets
in downtown
groups;· including the Selective
·require
information
on
active-duty
G.l.s marched in
passed out literature to the' cars
Washington, and for the next
.
S~r\'ice.
Syst_em,
without
a
scholastic progress.
cold and mud for several hours.
stopped by the parade. Most of
three or four hours played tag
specific request by the student.
· · ·
·
the police along the route were
with police. Seven or eight tiines
.
·
What this means is that no
Ed •
·
·
E
polite, and many smiled and
roving
bands
of protesters
·change
of academic
status,
___
·.
ucat1.o·
_n
..
·
xpenses
waved at marchers' yells for
clashedwithpoliceonthestreet
incl_uding
termination
of
"Higher pay for police!"
corners.
More than
80 were
.
attendance,. will be. released· to
At the march's end, it was arrested during the afternoon,
anyone
.
unless
the
student
C
·
·

T CI b
turned away from Capitol Hill, and several demonstrators and
involved
specifically requests

n
t
In U
e
o·.
.
·1
m
and started back toward the
policemen were injured. No tear
that the information be released.
.
.
_
·
Washington Monument. From
gas was. used; most injuries came
This is about the same as the
there, a group of demonstrators
from thrown rocks.
previous
policy;
the
only
Iowa City; Ia. - (1.P.) - .The. should not be shifted onto the
went
to the
Smithsonian
Mobe
activities
began
_information
the·
college.
process of study and scholarship
student, who, according to this
Institution
museum where the
Saturday
(Jan.
18) with
previously volunteered were the
called higher education does not
view,
already
carries
a
Agnew reception was going on.
workshops on various aspects of
.
names
of• students who had lend itself well to cost-cutting
·substantial
share of the cost,
Park
police
on horseback
the
Movement.
Some
300
· ..
graduated,
transfered,
or· efficiencies common in most
including
foregone
earnings
charged into the crowd, and
persons left in the afternoon to
dropped out.
.
parts of the economy, according
while in college.
A
financing
were met with flying rocks and
march on the Washington Hilton
In commenting on the effects
·to_
University of Iowa President
proposal by Bowen has gained
other
missiles .. Perhaps
a
Hotel, where the "All-American
of
_this
~ep, Dean Goodrich
Howard R. Bowen.
wide
attention.
in higher
half-dozen were arrested. The
Young
People's Salute" was
stated that "while it is the legal
The Iowa· economist recently
education.
spontaneous
demonstration
taking
place.
After walking
:duty
of a student to report
made
the
observation
in
The Bowen formula relates
ended as the youths left for the
nearly two miles in the rain,
changes to his draft board, this introducing projections offoture
federal
support
to
.
ea.ch
"counter-inaugural
ball" in a
they
picketed
the entrance
.would
conceivably allow him.to
expenditures
for
higher
institution
to the institution's
gigantic
circus tent on the
jeering pro-Nixon youths dressed,
make his own decisions in the education which show operating
changes
in
per-student
Capitol Mall.
in formal wear. Inside, the
"Up
matter."·
costs
climbing
from $12.3
educational expenditures and in
Earlier in the afternoon, about
With People" singing group was
The decision arose when a billion now to $33 billion in IO enrollment. Under this formula,
10,000
-demonstrators
had
a big hit.
reporter
from
one
of the years. Bowen notes that· the
the federal government would
gathered in the tent for a rally
For
most
of Washington,
metropolitari newspapers called anticipated total-of expenditures
finance half the increase in the
full of anti-war rhetoric. "We've
Inauguration weekend was not
registrar· Dorothy Grimmell and in IO years would amount to
per-student expenditures for all
had a lot of trouble organizing
much different from any other.
·
_asked
her
·to
outline college- only
2.6
per
cent
of the
students,
and
all
the
this demonstration," said Mobe.
·Except
that helicopters
were
policy on notification of the estimated
Gross
National
expenditures
for half of the
Chairman Dave Dellinger, .. but
continually-flying overhead, and
Selective Service System, in.view Product. Today expenditures for
increase in students.
one thing's for sure: we know
an extraordinary
number of
.
of the fact that the University of higher education amount to
1.9
He declares there·
is
no doubt
why we're here - to stop the war
chauffer-driven black Cadillacs
.
Minnesota had. recently. taken per cent of tlie GNP.
·
that
·
America can
.
afford to
and impress the public wish for
on the streets. As one observer
similar steps;. It was determined
Bo wen said
the
federal
support higher education on the
peace on Nixon." They were
put it, ''This town's full of
.
that.no formal decision had been government now provides
30
per
scale of the projections,
but
there also t~ revive the peace
.drunk
Republicans driving big
. ;--.ma~.e ·
with regards
·
to the, cent of operating funds to higher
cautioned that higher education
movement in America, which
·
Buicks, and sober Republicans in
.
.
.
,,~.e1
ec.~ive
__
Serv~,ce.
:,S_y~tem,
·
educa~io~~
,Accord,~g.
t?
the. U
_.faces
a financial,
problem
has seemed
.to
lag since the
;black
Cadillacs."
.:::
)
,: .:alth·_oug.11
,_1t;::.ll~d,,.·
l:leen:·.,
.the_,:
,of.!Lpres1dent's,pr0Jecbons;.
the
:
..
_b.ecaus_e~
o.f.'
/'.certain.
ad.verse
.
bombing halt
in
Vietnam.
-_-""""'.'"
_ _;_ ________
_
,,,·
<l.:
.,··.
~;,Iohg~esfab~hed··
policy oCthe
federal'share by'1979~8o
will
be
·•features
of the politi!=al-climate,
.
'·_
More~ j,eople'turiied
oufthan
..
··
..
.
·
., -.sch90J
ri_ot
to
;release·
any, 40 per
.:cent
.. He· foresees one
competing claims for public and
were expected, primarily from·
.
.
iJif
ormaUon
fo
private sources.
.
point drops
iri
the percentage of
philanthropic funds, and likely
cities on the East Coast and
,
It turned· out that the 9rily SSS funds coming Jrom student fees
continued
high
defense
Midwest
_college
campuses. While
CORE CHANGE
Details Next Week
..
notifications· sent were those and.private gifts to
24
per cent
expenditures."
·
· -
the
_crowd
was primarily
.
naming students who had left and
4
per cent respectively.
·
.
colle~e-age,
many were high
school for various reasons. As
a
The Iowan holds the view that
result,
President
Arthur S.
increas~g
costs of education
Cont. on page .
6
One True.
Mode
Of
.
Expression
...
(CPS)-The word is synthesis.
.
.
on categories at all. Suppose the
.reason
Archie Shepp chooses to
·
It·
began_ about two years ago, play differently
·
from
-Charlie
and
·the
conclusion hasn't been
·Park'er·is
due solely to the fact-
. :reached.
It
started·as a desire to tha_t
he
wants
to
play
·
make the original venture more differently. Not that he
is
trying
·:-interesting;
_and
may conclude to
'."'synthesize
Bop
and
with
the
destruction
'of
Avant•gatdejazz,~• but that he is
categories and the creation of
a
.
merely attempting some kind of
·
·
·
new art form known as MUSIC' communication
different from
·
·
Buiteifield
and the Blues Parker's.
Project has the right idea -
try
to
.
Communication,
perhaps.
A
combine
.
forms of expression relationship
between human
presently existing into a new one.
-
beirig.,. The most perfect form of
that
will
appe.al to everypne who re
1
at i On Ship
• Orie that
liked-
each of the· old ... Rock"
transcends the mind and lets you
and ."Blues"
and
··even·
the
·
feel rather than think.
·
·
amorphous,
maligned
..
jazz"
..
If tl;lere has been any direction
began
moving
toward
one in the
synthesis of· modem
another- caatiously.
·
music, that direction has been
.
Now:.
eYerybody
wants
to get

that
·
of intensification
of the
into the act;
tllere seems
to be
a
relationship between perfonner
mad
.
fUllh
to·.
fll the
gaps with and audience.
Why
does
·the
aew
:categories.
''ltllyt)un
.
ud
Grateful Dead's
aew
albURt
have,
·
blues"
Sllddnliy
Mame
"sotll";
a sltott
~.ion
that
says, "Come
c-trr
·and,wa&rm
aet
ltONrt
on,
ncryWy,
_.t
up
aad
-
Zhnaerma■.
"Felk
mac"
4uce!"
Why
4ea
tile
Jeffersoa
~
I
ti
ah
Fraaklill'•·
Airpaa-
p,der
a
·w
wlten
kite.
ll's
taaila _
_. •
lme-i&.
·tlten
1ft

eeats?,
fty
does
a«k ......
..._
...
Atdlie...,
..
www
..
~
~•lialma-Cla•_.
&o ...
anr
~
to-1lil
tl•••••ri
..
,_~fi!.«:•iaa
itq:cof
r1
■ ?
.

JDl1IIII).
's ...
--·--·
..
f
a\dfl
o•
J•; a •
-...,,..._
to
Clllls •
..-C
d
tllw
..,,_
S,
1 ....
(,._
._
.,...
Ill
1'lleJ
aft
.lnCerestm
oae, I
~
, .. ).
Al
~ooper -
in
re 1pease,
reaction,
what's
tllat?
A
fraty
one-man
sponUaeous
feaing.
They
want
band that plays better than any emotion rather than intellect.
other one-man group around.
It isn't surprising, in light of
The word.
Say the word and this most recent development, to
you'll
be
free. The word
·
is
see that jazz does not reach so
synthesis. Synthesis
·
of musical many people. Y
01U1g
whites arc
forms.
Maybe
it
we forget about drawn less to quiet mediution
some of these words we might now
'than
their parents were.
even end up
liking
some of this Even this generation contrasts
stuff.
-
sharply with the beats of a few
Suppose,
just
for a minute, years ago. The beat trademark
that
music
doesn't r~y_depend
was a
coffeehouse
with TABLES
and CHAIRS. The hip landmark
is
a hall, large enough to hold all
the people it can possibly hold,
a
hall where people dance.
·
Jazz, it was once said, became
unpopular
as soon
as
people
stopped
dancing to it. Not
precisely ~rue, but nonetheless,
something (called the intellect)
entered into jazz and made it a
Cont. on paie
6
Group
Calls
For 18
·vote
Stockton,
Calif.
(CPS) -
Aaother
campaign
has
been
launched to_ lower the voting age
to 18.
TIiie source
of
the
aew
_ma.eaeatisa~ailft~
. Sea.
aird ..., ..
(Db,.).
tta.
Ullivcaity
c,f
the .._.,
IDcated
ia
Stocttoa,
60
llliles
..a
el
S..
f'ra ■ cisco.
8aJIII, a •~
,11p1u■t
.t
Ole
II;
u111
-...,..-
UOP•
ar ..
to,-
1111
......
fl
....
~
.......
.....
llle ..
liril .. .
Tile
at"4ent
,o.er ■ •e•
decided to follow up
on
9ayh's
suggestion and picked
·Dennis
Warren, a junior debater, to run
the campaign.
A week
later, with
an appearance
on the
Joey
Bishop television show, Warren
had launched LUV • Let Us
Vote.
On the show he asked students
to
establish.
independent
Cont.
on
p•
6
THE
SOCIAL
AFFAIRS
COMMl'ITEE
OF VASSAR
COLLEGE
AND
TllE
COMMUTER
UNION
OF MARIST
COLLEGE
PRESENT
TOM
PAXTON
INCONCEllT
ftllDAY
•VENING
.....
TICU:D
AV.AD.AN.£
AT:
RECORD LAND
251 MAIN ST.
THREE ARTS
56 RAYMOND A VE.
..i
.....
















































































I
I, ,
:
.,..
..
PAGE6
. THE
"clRCl,B
JANUARY 31. 1969
Cashin
. Kirk leaves _Oi'der:
,
letter-s.
Cont.
fro.
p11e
2
Cont.
&om
pap
l ,
Coat. from
pqe
I ' . . :
.
.
.
c
O
~ c h a i r m a n
O
f
t h e Dr. Kirk. taught
at Marist high
others could best be realized
1D
Catholic-Jewish, Conference at schools in New York City and· the present context. In response
Marist College in 1966.
Wheeling West Va. Shortly after. to a q_uestio~• ab~ut the reason
, . While at Marist, he was the coming
to Marist, Dr. Kirk
for . his· resignation • f_rol;D the
coordinator
of federal grants, completed
his
doctoral studies at · Manst
Brothers he mt1mated
moderator_ of the Marist College St. John's. The first class ·of that the decision was a ~ifficult
Roosevelt Symposium in 1965 psychology majors graduated in · o n e_ · and
no t
w 1th~ u
t
and
1966,
Delegate. to the
1966 and since then more than
considerable
personal anguish.
General Chapter of the Marist . half have been accepted into
He ~at~d that·· he h~d. been
Brothers in Rome in 1967 and
graduate
schools.
This past
cons1denng and r~~xa~mg
the
1968.
.
summer Dr. Kirk read a paper at_ nhature off the r~ligious lillfe ?tvher
(4)
Fall
Weekend
was
far.from
bectuse of the added expense of.
a social success .• · .but those that
t h e i r
r
i n g s a n d t h ,
,did ·go had
a
good time because
accompanying weekend.
.
they made it so. . • •
So why run the risk of a huge
(5)
Freshmen
election
f'mancial loss with the above.
speeches drew no more than
20
1
"bacJcing" behind you?????
students....
.
t
We hope
to make Spring
( 6) Winter
F~ntasy
was Weekend a success, but we need
cancelled
..•
ticket
sales.· you
behind
us. With your
amounted to
43
couples. Every support we will give you the
year this dance was held at the; social life you want; it must be
same time, and every year
it
was done with the student body not
a·success. . . . .
.
just the social committee.
'
(7) Juniors would obviouslj.r
Thanks,
not
support
the
w·eekend
Vin Winsch.
He
was
a ·consultant for the
the
American
· Psychological
t e past ew years as we as
e
New York
State. Education
Convention,
on the _work cha!lges that have co~e abo~t
Departm·ent
Title VI grants,
training program initiated in the
d~~ that sa!lle penod. His
Catholic University. Affiliation
spring of 1968. Dr. Kirk h~ a t~g,
he said, ~d been to
Program,· and the Mid-Hudson
member. of the. first elective resign. The conclusion he stated·
REGISTRATIO.
"

Association of Colleges.
faculty committee an_d curre_ntly. ~ould not ~e understo_od ex~ept
has already done considerable
Dr. Cashin
is
a mcmber,ofthe
.is
a member of the.Committee
in
the llght
of his seno~s
Cont.
froIR
page I
investigating with the registrar,
American Historical Association,
on Faculty Development. He
is.
evaluation of himse~f and
bis
recorder, computer. center and
CatboUc ·.Hilt~cal
Association,
also
chairman
-of the
King
personal
1C;Mfs.
Dr. Ktrk ~ent_on -.
, - One or" the most. interesting
business office.
H~mr,
a great . Phi
Atph_a.
Theta,, American_ coml!littee
•established
last to
c111pbuize
that lul
reS111t:at10n
.
. : _features of the proposed process
number
of details must"be
Association·_
for
High·er
·. spring
by
tJie members
of
the
from:
tlle
M_arist
Broth~
m _no.
is
a sample
model
for
worked out before the fmal
Education~
Dutchess_. County
Marist Colleae Community. Dr. war. rc,-re,ents
M,
alienation
registration, which would take
decision to change over is taken.
Historical
ASsociation, Marist
Kirk
senes as a
member ·of the from
tm:
congregation nor the
· place
in
February.
The
Educational Committee, Board
following boards: Community
termination
of_ the personal .
departments
would propose a
EXPRESSION
of Directors. of the Dutchess
Chest Rehabilitations Inc., and relationshiP.s
·and friendships
schedule of courses. A carefully
cont. from pages
c
ountr
Committee
(or
the
Astor Home Out-Patient
that he has made within the
stratified
sample of students
Economic Opportunity and the
Clinic. Currently, Dr. Kirk
is
Order.
would be invited to register. This . music to be listened -to and. Mid-Hu
d s
O
n p I an ning
President ·of the Mid Hudson ____________
_
sample would be used to predict
understood. Suddenly everyone
c
O
m mitt e e f
O
r Nursing
·Psychological Association.
.
E_
XPENSE:rrom
page
s
the
trouble
spots
in the
was acclaiming Dave Brubeck
Education..
When asked about his decision
schedule.
These
would
be
because "he makes you use yow -----------------
to continue at Marist College,
remedied. The actual registration . mind." .Hendrix makes people or rock
musicians
or folk
Dr. Kirk indicated that this was
would take place in April. Any
lose their minds.
musicians,
or even
black
the outcome of a deep sense of
conflicts would be tak~n care·of
So white kids went to rock as musicians and white musicians.
c o mm it t m e n
t
t o a n d
before the students leave campus , soon as Presley moved his body.
In the end there are only human
involvement with Marist College
in May. Students thus registered
And jazz followed, The New beings trying to. Illake a contact
a n d · t h e
P o ugh keeps i e
would be guaranteed entrance
Jazz or New Music defied the that will pass by the mind and
Community. He stated that the
into
these
courses. Transfer
conceptsuponwhichintellectual
touchtheheart..
continued
pursuit
of his
students,
new
students,
jazz was based. It refused to be·
That's what synthesis
is
all
committment to the service-·of
dismissals,
and
registration
limited,
to
let an artificial
about, brother. That's why John_
changes for individual students
structure
come between the Coltrane
died.
Not enough
watched as they threw balls,
would
be
handled
on _a emotions of the performer and people would put down their
sticks, and beer cans at the
continuous
inventory
basis
the ears of the listener. And thoughtsandopentheirarms.
President's
motorcade.
I
during the summer.
Emotion became as important as -------------
overheard a group of serious
Mr. Prenting ind:cated that the
form.
·
demonstrators say they couldn't
Bowen also pointed out tha
many parts of the economy car,
offset rising labor and other
costs by improving efficiency.
But · large amounts of human
time are required in the personal
process·
of educatio1!,
and
scholarship, he said, and ma,iy
educators, I among them, have
.grave
doubts
about
t_he
practicability
of· imp!ovmg
efficiency very much without
great
sacrifice in quality of
pe~formance."
key
to the system was the
Rock, in its own way, began as
D.C. INSIGHTS
sympathize with that type of·
d . t·
d 1 A
th
·
·
· I
C t.
f
4
act1·on, not .. many. ·d1·d. v1·01ence
18
VOTE
fi:om page
5
pre 1c 10n mo e .
no er
an experiment
in
vio ence.
on rom page
important factor in the proposed
Violence that was implicitly and the obscenities still prevailed all
erupted at this scene. Peace signs · chapters across the country. By ,
registration
system
is the
explicitly
sexual. It . quickly day. Police were everywhere and
were memories of yesterday. It
early
January
there
were
assignment
of prioJ'.ities for
absorbed sorrow and fear from we were
waiting
for some
seemed as if the purpose of the
chapters
on
207
college
registration. This could be done
blues,
and gained incredible counter-action
which never
whole movement was forgotten.·
campuses and in about 1,500
on a random
basis.
(The
potency
in the
hands
of materialized.
They
were
.Agitators
were a mixture~ of
high schools.
computer would_ assign priorities
engineers·,
sound
men and tolerant:
teeny-b~ppers, college s~udents,
Previous
campaigns
·
have
via
a lottery.•,
essentially· a
amplifiers capable of creating
We concluded the day by-
and social dropouts. It seems ~he •always fallen· afour of criticism
computerized.
version of the .. earth tremors. Space in which to making
out/ debut_,·at
. the·
youn~er age.group kn1::w
nothing'. -by aging legislators that persons
. present
.·system).
A1_10ther . breathe.
was added ... through
coiinter-inarigural.baU.
lt>,was
bu~ violenc~. They ap~eared the ··under
2l-;
are to immature.·
method.
would be
to
'assign
jazz-improvisations
··made.
it absurd:: If you ccnild-h_ear above·
most_harassmg.-,,
>·.:' ·; · . ·•·
···;·
;Bayh:ts 'constitution
'revision
priorities on the basis of class
possible·
to
get into things the roar of the crowd ·one could
We watched the police take a subcommittee held hearings -last
and rank in class. (Again this
because the things got deeper.
have made ounhe voices
of
Phil · lot
of ver_bal abuse.
They
year on a proposed amendment
'
could
be computerized
quite
Most recentiy, the range · of Ochs; Ed· Sanders and the Fugs.
responded with care, an~ are to
but they . came just · after the
easily.)
·
emotions exploited by country
We ·became disgusted ,and -left.
be commended.
Boos
and
student
revolt
at- Columbia
Preilting noted that the college
music was opened when Dylan Monday
and
the
Jriaugural
shouts, that's all there was for
University and died ·quietly in•
has
looked
for
existing
began recording in Nashville. Parade scene gave new
insights -
anything
that
represented·
the committee.
·
computerized
registration
Pathos and proteat entered by into Ule discontents. S.D.S.,and
authority .. We left D.C ..
IUJ!l
W!re
. Warren:
hopes
extenaiv~
procedures at other ~olleges, but
way of folk music. Rock has . the police.
While
staading where
glad:
D.C, • place to distinguish
student
· lobbying
-
aquina,
had found none which gave the
expanded to accommodate th~ · all
the
actic,•
.was, we were able
the ms
from
the
outs. ..
amons other things, that student
stu~ents
u
much freed~m of
desire
of its performers for
to
Met:
the
demonatnton
make
.
,
.
.
.
· ·
umellt
is
partly
the result of the
cho~ce as
he
presently enJoys at
expression.
· _ . ·
fooll
•··•••••ha
••
JUke
LETTERS.TO THE
EDITOR
~c~
of
.youth participatiOll
in,:
Manst. As a result, the q,llege
It's
happeniag
everywhere.
Richard
Hixon
uacomfortable
· · .
·
·
i
·
government • can chailge
~t.
decided to design its own. He
There are no real jazz musicians
by
making obscene
gestures.
l ·
Box
857.
,
He expects .it · to take 2•5
years.
a
CALENDAR
Cont.
from
page
I
after one year to evaluate itsJimplimentation
in following.
-
years.
MAIE
AMERICA
lat 181
Pl.ACE.
M
Tu
w
Th
F
Sat.
September
X
X
3
5
Registration
4
Sept. 1, ~bor Day; Sept. 3,

Day
8
9
10
11
12
15
16
17 18 19
-
22
23
24 25 26
October
29
30
1
2
3
6
7
8
9
IO
.
13
14
15
16
17
20
21
22 23 24
27
28
29 30 31
November
3
4

6
7
10
11
12
13 14
'
17
18
19 20 21
24
25
26
X
X
Nov.
27, 28 -
Thanksgiving Recess
December
1
2
3
4
5
.
X
9
10
11
12
15
16
17
18
19
20
.EXAMINATION WEEK
Semester
grades
are
due
in llecorder's
· SPRING SEMESTER
Office not later
&han
MoRday, Dec.
29.
M
Tu
w
Th
F
Sat.
January
19
20
2.1
22
23
Resi5tratioa -
Moolay,
Jaaua,y
19
26
27
2s·
29
30
February
2
3
4
5
6
9
10
11
12
X
LiRcoln's
Day
~
w
falDAY
16
17
18
19
20 ·
23
24
2S
26
21
Marell
2
3
4
5
6

10
fl
12
13
16
X
18
19
20
Mar.17,St.Patrict's.
23
24
25
X
X
Easter
Recess
X
X
X
X
X
.
April
6
7
8
9
10
13
14
15
16
17
Aliril 13
5
Thursday's
schedule
20
21
22
23
24
pril
1 , Friday's
schedule
27
28
29
30
1
May
4
s
6
X
8
~nsion~,_
II
12
13
14
IS
16
TION
..
~
.
-
:;
"..
~
-...•-'•
..
-,
'
~-Satwday._~
23,
1970
.
,

,t_
.
...
""
......
.
..
..
. .:F -·
,
y.,,
....
. t
i
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...
I.
~ANUAllY
31.
1969
·<T\¥0-·Fa~s<~Latei,:::>A·::'·~'..'.
.
. • ·•··
··
3'··w:~1~:

:i11Jf.".:'.
,. >';:,:_;' . .;••;"'-..
· ..
.:.<,
.
.'•
.l •,,

','
· • ,,
•-J<.•?.'••·•·,r·••~~
.' ,. _., ... , ..• ;.... ~· •
. ,
.. "" . ~·~~:::
,,.-~':·~·~·
':.'·':•'•"
.:·~-2~!-~~:-.\~,~:~~~:~~?~~~:;:~~::~':"'·'?,:
:.:>,•:~:>-'•
y,'~D,
I
_tri~
but
I could~'t'
keep
o•R~y•s·
article
from getting
pnnted this t1B1e.
I
burned the last
one so
1t
couldn't get
in the Xmas
edition, but this time
I decided
·
that Gogo · would be more
embarrassed
if
it was printed·thaJi
if it wasn't ....
Pete Tortorici told
me that Ohio St .. plans to
red-shirt
him next year
so
that they'll at
· least have somebody after
Rex Kem
graduates ... Congratulations to
T'?m Do~d on the signing of his new long-term contract. Evecybody
wJShes him the best of luck. Luck is something that he didn't have
too much of this year. Tom, co-:Captain of the football team this
season,. was one of ~he best linemen ever to put on a
Viking uniform .
..
-
• 4
. ,' ' .
_.
fllEQICJcl
. Members of pie new Executive Boud for the_ 1969 Football.Qub ..
(Seated,
left to right), John Kavanagh, John
Kelly. Kevin
Devine
Steve
Caiola, Bill
Nolan,
Bill
Noonan.
Ray Kenney
is
absent from this
picture.
·-
•'
..
..
,
. But
Jhis
.year
1
w~c~ he hope(l was to be his best~ turned into
nothmg but. disap~~>1ntments, On the first day of summer practice,
he p~ed _a ha!llstnng muscle, and after that injury followed- injury.
Despite his pain, however, there still was not a better blocker on the·
fieldr H~'!l be tough to replace ..•. For all you characters who missed
th
7
Manhme game, you missed a great show. Maritime was so bad,
I
~hink that our faculty team could have beaten them. On the opening
Jump-ball,. the men_ of the ~ea were so sure that they would get the
tap,_ they had their two guards standing under their own basket.
Their secret weapon was supposedly their
6'8" center. But when
Blue Chips Spenla · out-jumped him by a foot and tapped the ball to
Ken Thompson for an
easy
lay-up, it was hard
·to suppress a
laugh ... Speaking of basken>"1J, the freshmen team shouldn't lose
another game this year, that,lis, if they don't die of boredom first.
Their onl}'. tough game was.'ithe one in which they lost to Ulster
. Community
College, 102:.100. This. was possibly their best
performance of the year, and it came against a strong team. Ulster's
record· over the past two years
is
something like 35-4, while
averaging about 100 ppg. Their game with our freshmen was
John Kelly has been named to
The new board plans many
been the main crowd drawer
probably one of their toughest yet ... Again speaking of basketball,
succeed
Sean O'Neill in the
different
money
making
here on campus and the new
my sources tell me that Chuck Meara's MMSCAC is a dark horse
position
of President of the
innovations for the approaching
administration holds the hopes
candidate to go
a
long· way in the intramural basketball league.
FootbaU Club for. the upcoming
season. The
high
point. of these
that the Marist students will
Chufk leads the squad with about 20 pts. per game. (Hey Chuck,
year. Working with him, Kelly
will be the initiation
of an
continue,
if
not better, their
thats
better than you_ do in French) ... Chuck's star center,
J. will have
a
new executive board,
annual "Alumni
Game."
This
support for the team.
Tka~h. has !,een slowed down this. year because of injuries he consisting
of Ray Kenney -
game will give the old members
(Ed.
Note)
- While
the
suffered in a game with Barry "Rules'? Lacombe.
It seems that _Executive Vice President, Bill
of the original '.'rag team" a
executive board appears to be
"Rules" stepped on J.T.'s toe, breaking ·his leg ...
Speaking of Nolan
-
Secretary,
John
chance to "thump heads" with
well-staffed this year, it must be
"Rules''
(the man who popularized
the
art.
of giving out
Kavanagh
- Treasurer,
Steve
the current Vikings.
noted that there
is
only one
indiscriminate technical fouls) I'd like to announce the publishing of Caiola
- Public
Relations
At present, the officers are in
officer who
is
not a member of
his new book. The book is
all
about the 1001 official rules from the
Manager, Bill Noonan - Exec.
the process _of getting things in
the class of '70. This shows a
files of Barry ."Rules" Lacombe. The title of this•masterpiece is Asst.
&
Field Manager, and
monetary
order and making
definite need of more interested
C'The 1001 •official
Rules from. the .Files of Barry "Rules"
Kevin
Devine,
the
lone
arrangements for next season's
souls from the classesof'71 and
LaCombe." (clever title, Barry) I asked Barry how he thought the _Sophomore
representative,
-
rugged schedule.
.'72 to carry the Viking tradition
book was going· to sell' and he replied,
"I
make it a rule never to Ticket Sales Manager.
The Football Club has always
.in the future.
make any predictions" ... The You Gotta Be Kidding Me Award this ~---------------------------------------
week goes
_?Ut
to Bill Iacobellis' father (how'd ·he like the game,
laco?) ... Give up, Innocenti; you don't look anything like him ....
VARSITY
· Continued from
page
8
·
Observations L.T.D.
b)'. Bill O'Reilly
Spenla,
14, Waldbillig,
9, ·
scorec1 .Uttle
until the closing
Manning, 8, • and Kuhnert,
7. stages of the game.
First. of all the name of this
· seems one night Fife was tagging
Thompson's
10. assists were a
On· Jan.
11,
Marist.
put
column is not "Goings Ori At
an
ambulance
which
had
.valuable contribution,·
.· ...
··
everything together for the third
The Moth.!" Although this title
stopped in an orange-decal zone.
•· '<Marist · meets·•·King's again at , ..
game·in a·row to.down Dowling;·· brings .. ·a tear· to,:my· eye; the~• After .doing this our member of
the end of the season, and .this · l 07-B2, The 'Foxes . were in
dummy. editor inade a mistake
the Mod Squad returned to his
game could · prove .to be •.the control from the opening tip_. .when he put it atop my last
hiding place under a pile of .
battle ..
· for the championship of · They shot
49%
from the floor
outrageous article. ''Goings On
leaves. . . Meanwhile, down in
the C;A.C. · ·
·.
·.
and held ·a decisive edge in the
At The Moth" sounds like the
the _Lost Valley, Tough Tony
Our
next
.opponent
was offensive
rebounding
social calendar at Kaola Bear
Tortorici and the Townies were
Maritime on Jan. 9. Playing as department.
The
leading
Heights, Missouri, where the big
stripping the lower parking lot
the visiting · club this time, the
rebounder
was
Bill Spenla · with
event of the week "is watching a · clean with visions of sugar plums
Red. Foxes had little trouble
22, followed by Tom Waldbillig-
cricket cross the street. Enough,
dancing in their heads. Yes, my
against the weaker home team.
17 ,.
and Ray Manning - 10. Four
now down to serious business.
sons, what we need
is
better
Jumping out to an early lead, men hit the scoring column for
Item: The Avengers Irk Marist
security in the lower lot (or, as
and being· up by fifteen at the . d o u b
1
e figures
. ·
K
·en n y
Auto Owners
.
some call it, snow-city).
half, Marist won going away; Thompson was high man with,
Barney Fife arid his trusty
: Item:
1968 Yearbook
Stirs
73-41. · High men for us were.
26 points.· Close 9ehind, Tom
companion
Gabby Hayes (are
Controversy
Kenny Thompson
-
19, Ray Waldbillig and Bill Spenla each
you kidding, that guy had to be
Recently there has been some
Manning·- 15, and Bob Ullrich.
hit
for 24 points, and Bob
around in the thrilling days of
commotion on Campus over the
10. The r~bounding was led by Ullrich had 11 markers. Ullrich's
yesteryear)
have invoked the
'68
Reynard.
It seems that some
Bill Spenla with
13.
and
Dori 11
gave him 21 points for two·
wrath of some Mothmen on. people
object to the visual
Kuhnert,
who had
11.
The games (not bad for a guy who's
Wheels by doing a super-zealous
effects in the book which seem
highly
acclaimed, .
6'8"
Skip been riding the bench most of
job of tagging illegally parked
to indicate that the main thing
Clemens, center for Maritime, - the season); Waldbillig put in his
cars though· being somewhat lax
Marist Men have on their mind is
proved .to be a drop
in-
the best . performance to date for
in guarding our cars in -the pit.
partaking of the cup (yes, my
bucket-for Spenla and Man~g.
Marist, while Kenny Thompson
One of the top grease-monkeys · sons, drinking). How anyone can
(depending
on who
was
played a beauUful floor game
on Campus, Chevy Jones, told
say this
is
beyond me! After all,
defensing
him).
Clemens
was. and Bill Spenla was unstoppabl~
me of a recent dream he had.
It
Marist
is
filled with activities
com~letelr
overpO\yered and
under the boards.
every minute, there is so much
to do there isn't time to drink..
-One can sleep, eat, and even play
basketball (Gee, Beav, isn't that
swell) .. So
it
really comes down
to whether the Yearbook should
tell it like it
is
or like it should
be.
Item: Jean-Claude Killy Envies
Marist
One
of the most thrilling
activities
at Marist is skiing.
(Yes, son, . Marist has a ski slope
and if you go there, you
can
use
it free). Ah, think of it, the
outdoors, the thrill of the ride,
.the wind rushing into your face,
the dull thud of hitting a rock
on
your
way
down,
the
sickening splash as you hit the
swamp and are devoured by a
turtle when you hit the bottom,
the ....
Item:
Christmas
Gifts for
Marist Notables
This
Christmu
many
Moth-peopl_e received just what
they wanted:
Andy and the
Gang received a nice, shiny,
remote control tractor (as shiny
as
Bill
Iacobellis' head, no not
that shiny). Mr. Vicki got just
what
he wanted:
a lasso, a
whistle, a radar set, a ... Wizard
Sports Writer Joe Rubinowitz
got an autographed picture of
J.
W. 0' Reilly. Finally,
it
is
rumored that Andy got use of
Fontaine Hall after the Brothers
move out. Andy plans to tum
F«:mtaine into a machine shop,
with every machine having its
own
room
and
bath.
Yes,
Sidney, this is all true.
Item:· Heywood Smith would
like his name mentioned in this -------------•
Joe lamascia strains
to
avoid a
pin as
Steve
LoUo
applies the p~re.
column
Heywood
Smith, Heywood
Smith,
Heywood
Smith,
Heyw •...
NEW MAJOR
Details Next Week
TRACK PRACTICE
3:30'.Mon. - Fri.
MEET
AT GYM
SCHEDULE
Garden Invitational
Queens
Colby Invitational
Queens
Queens-Iona Relays
Stony Brook
&
Adelphi
Fairfield
&
Lehman
Penn Relays
New Paltz
Bridgeport
Feb. 7
Feb.22
Mar.
1
April
5
April 12
April 12
April 19
April 26
April 30
May3
..
.
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r
,;..·.
''.
•\·
..
•~r_
.....
_:·.
"I
l
,.
-

·,.,
.,·.,
....
.
.
:
.
. THE CIRCLE
.
JANUARY
31, 1969
Cagers
,Jaie
·
Three;
Plc1y
Home
lollday
.
Th~ y~
1969 has been good_· in3!ksmanship.
~is
45 _points,
to our basketball team at-least
which he amassed despite the
so far.
With some very improved tough defe~sive work against
men doing
a
good job, ~d a
him,
were hi~ personal.higbfor
couple of mainstaysreturning to
·
the Yeat:·
_
.
. _
;
...
.
.
_
.
their old- form Coach Petro can
-
.;
Leading
the
:Manst
. sconng
boast~ of a tlJee game
winning, w~e Thompson wtt~•.27
;;Spenla
.
streak at the semester break.·__
_
with.·23, and· Manrung_with_ 22.
·.
Returning to the hardwoods at_ Rebounds were_distribu~ed,quite
_
home· on~Jan. 7, the Mothmen evenly
among the big men:
found the going a bit
·
tough_ as
they wo_n a 105-103 squeaker
(.Co?t.
_on
page_7
·
~~e!bfein~\e~t:
__
:-w·Tr:r_\~.--M-·1·1e·
-_
-R··:e·
l·ay·
fought
battle
was tight
_
..
.
_
throughout with· no team ever
..
'

-

.
_. ·.
-
having.
more
than
.
a 6 pt.
·At
-
G-
-
·
--d-
-
-
advantage. The entire ga!De w~
_
:
:'
a r en
a basket-for-basket affair
·until
·
·-
-
Kings opened up a six point lead·'
-
,
Oh.
Friday, Feb.
1
at Madison
-
with about 3 minutes to go
..
Square Garden, Marist's
-
Mile
Marist then closed the gap to. Relay will be entered in the
gain . a tie
at. the
end
·
of_ afternoon preliminaries
-
of the
regulation play,
_
,
-
-
· ·
Garden lnvitatioriaL
·
·
_
The· first overtime went much
F'eatured on this relay are· two
.
_
John Ei.,enhanlt, well
in
control,_
sets up
his
man
for the eventual
pin
in the same manner and after the juniors,
·
Bill · Kalish and Joe
"th
4
ds
r
·
five
minutes
were ~P, the
·
McMahon;and two Sophomores,
·
wa
secon
le
t. ·
·
· ·
·
'
·
·
·
,

-
·
.,
·
, ,
contest was still a standoff. In Greg Howe and Steve Kopki.
··. W_,.
re_
st_
l_e_rs_
i
Nip--_-
_·ped_-
_

B_-
_··,•·
C.W.Pos_t
_-t:1d::i:~d;1~1:_e£i!'?k?e
i;~;6:~:~£
i~~iiii:
throws, and Bill- Spenla sunk middle
d'istance
.runners
.
.
.
F o"r f e
its.
tw'o
stro~g
see~gly
insurmountable
15-0
·
~most unbelievable 42 seconds.
three-clutch baskets to give the However, all four have'hit the 52
performances in the early going lead. -
_
·
· ·
Jack Walsh ·put up
a
strong
Foxes a 6 pt.'
·advantage
with range for the 440 distance in
· and
a partisan home crowd.·
: ,_With
the forfeit in the 130 lb; fight but
.
he too ·succumbed to
_
about a minute left. But King's previous outdoor seasons, and
.
almost spelled upset as powerful class, action moved to· the 137 -an aroused Greg Barber in 2 :38_ roared back as
Jim
Bergholtz, this is comparable to a 53-54 for
C. W. Post barely escaped' with a · lb. class. In a match that went
The eostteain had tied the score
their cine
-man
scoring machine; indo~r
:_
season on a
·
I 60 yard
21-1& victory· over the Marist th"e. distance
Post's
Mark
t 18 18
·
·
hit four quick points to bring_. board tra~k, such as that at the
wrestling:team
ori
January
s;.:
_
Vanderlofske pulled out a~ 10-3
-~
~t
·
~ll ·ca~e down to th~ last
-
King's within two. With
_
two Garden.
.
.
.
· ·.
P~st, hiitderedbyinjuries
and·. d'ecfs_io~ over freshman; Phil. match. the heavyweight division,
seconds left
,King's
calJed--time
·
-
Each one of
.the
quartet
·has
. SJ,ckn~, helped_th~ c~use,of_tlle Davis. Bi:1}.
Moody p~ovecl_
c!h~ between· Marist's bigi•inan Bill
out to
set
up
a
-Bergholtz
fmal
..
been
running
since.
·before
.
R~~
Foxes gr~tly as·_1t
forfeit_~
_
Red out
_to
~n 18-~
1~~~,
as
..
~e --McGarr. ~d
Post~s _ huge Dan
·_'shot.-
But Ray·Ma11ning
~~
cross~country
season,
and,
_the
matches.m-the
130 lb; and- shllt out Howarc_l Sadwm-9-0,m
_
Tomazewski:·Tomazewskigotan·
the.strategy
by intercepting the
recently, they have competed in
l
p
lb_
•.
_classes.
:T1!,us ·Kevin-.
th~ 1_15_
·lb_:
cla_ss.
·
At thi~ point,
early ai:lvantage··ani:l
used
his size·
·
ilt~b_ounds. pasf and holding it
·the
A;A.U;-in~ets at the 168:S_t
.
.
~.Grady
and
·JJe~e
·
O'f!are: wit~·· onl_Y,
_fouz::
JJJai£~CS
,·lef.t_
·:
to
,controlMcGarr,and
u11·out a·:
_
until~he b\lzzer.
,c;:
,i-::-'), ,·'.·
_. ::-
·
Arm?lY•
The Garden- meet will
.
picked up five e_asy:
pomts ap1~ce

·M,ar.3~t
;.
~em~d
;~
·
a·_
11.0.',V~lll
i.13-4
win
aiJd,a,21
"18'
c~riie ffom
:• ;,
<,
Ber$hoUz;·
,;de~~te
:
the.
-!oss; --•
provtde excellent exposure for
and gave . Mllrtst
___
a
_l~-0
Jead-
,POS1!_io11._
_
_ '}
· •

:>
·:
behind_victo
for Post:',•,.:_
-:
:<
.

came o_ut.a
_w~ner:a.~
;he
t1uill_e<t, t.~~-' t~am _a~d
-
should help
_ before actl~~ had
.
eyen begun.
.
Post
accepted.the
challt:nge·
The;
!led
,::-atnien·
l.-j
oii the
:
:
the
'-o/owd
:
with· his
,fab~ous
maintain the~ sharp edge.for the
John~y
El~enhar9t. let Post:_ however andbegan
t?
i:ne>ve.
In· seasollhave six matthes left the
shooting performance. He hit 2~ s~as<>n's
·
f1rst dual meet at
know _1t had its· work; ~ut out ~s the 160
'.
lb. class_ Ric
·Buc_holz
·
.fast
three at hoine arid a winriing
_
fo!
3~ from the floor_ an~ his Queens on
_Feb.
22.
h~ pi~ned
.
the
vtSI!o~
-
Bill
_:
prohved _too much for:B~b ~ref!n
:
season._ is
.
a· definite possibility
_
-
dnbbling and plarm~g-,
~ere
_
e •
e • •-•-
_
.•
ei •·• • • • • •
41
-
_
Angevrne
a_t _7:56
_mt~_
the
:
a~ e pm_ned-the Man~Ju~or
1_!1
_
judging
I
by
.
the performance
_outshone
,only. ,by.
hi~
deadly
match. The big five pomts mJhe
L56; Steve Lollo contmued -the versus Post
·
-
-
-
___________________
......;
______
...;. __
_
__
123
.lb.
class gave the Maiist surge_ as he put Joe
.Iamascia's
·
·
. matmen
_a comlllandirig
a~~
>~boulders
tci the mat. in
ari
-
-
MATH:
from
page
1- -
____
_.;_..;,_......,.;_......,
__ .;;...
__
--:~------:.....,,.~__,..----
_:·
.Accompanying ''tir. T~rabella ,·
_F-
'.
:
.
. ...
were Louis Alpert; Chairmanof
r
.
-_
.
·h
the MathDepartmeµ~ ]Jere; and.:
-
·os

16. s_tudents
(mostly
math
,
-
•-
-
SWani'p
King's
majors} from the cciUege. The
,
delegation spenHour days at the.-.
:
.
_
...
-
_
.
New
.
Orleans'
convention,
_-
Wit~ostone-half
of the;-
The leading scorer.is forward
_
returning to
ldiirist. last M?.nday.
_.
se~so-'! complet~a,7_he
·
frosh Brian McGo~a.it
~it~
an ave~ge
.
-
·over
500addressesweregivenat
-
squad,~_weUonittway
t?ward.-of-20.4,.Bnan,
_a
fme outside-_
•.
the coriferen~ ori various fields
-
compiling the best re.cord m the~•shoote:r has hit for over 51% of·
of
interest
;dn
advanced
~ory:of.
the s~hooCW:ithJq_!hisshots~Also:astrongdefensive
.pia theinatical.
study
and.·
~ames !o go, t~e~ r~cord_ st~nd~ player,. he· is_. averaging 10.2
•.
research.
>
.
_
·
--_
-<: -.
_
.
.
_at _5::l,
and they should- hav~ no . rebounds per contest. His best
,,
-
_
Th·e. Marist delegation; bein&
: :
mo!e tr<_>Uble
•with -
t_he· rest
-
of
-
game was agaiJist Iona· when he
-.--·
apostl~ qf both work and play'
_
the1r schedule.
·.
·
_-,' --
·
_scored
35 points despite playing
-_spent inost
of
their evening$
fu.
·
__
-·_
.Between
Chnstmas.,and
only about 27 minutes.
_ · _·
N_ew
-
Or_l~ans!
.
t_he French
·
,semester
b~eak;
-~~
.fro~ll-squad
--
J\t
on_e of the guards
is
Ray
.Quarter._
Saturday evening Dr.
.
has:: !tad
-_only·
one. g~~e,:_ Clarke,:
.a -
fine
an-around
-
Torabella · invited tlie entire
-
d~featin~
·
Kings
113-60. IQn;'s,
!
tiallplayer who
is
unspectacular
· delegation. to dine with him at
w~t~,th~ best f!esh11u~n_playmg: but very steady. ~e is
:a
great,
the
-
·
l.>Iayboy
-Club. -_
Although
on
.
·
~ ~-~
.-
varsity.~· were
·~~o-·-defensive
player and never stops
most
.of
the.Marist students were
~
competition at all as they
,were
hustling while on tl;le
court.
Ray
_
buried
'in·
math books that··
down· 50-24 at: t~e
half.
Joe
_sports
a _Lpt. avg. along with
puticular
night;
Mr. Alpert
Seo~ led the sconng with 22 4.2 assists pergame.
.
, ,
-
managed to convince them to_ points
as· he completely_
·
At
_the
other
guard
is
accept
Dr; T o r
a
b e I I a '
s
·
·dominated.
the boards· while he
i
ballhandler and. sparkplug· of the
·
invitation.
·
·
·_
was in there;
.Reserves
saw inuch
i
team Ron
Wilson.
Ron
is
a fme ·
-
Meeting.at the same time as_ actio~ as_DeJll!is Curtin_5e:0~ed,·pass~r
and
possesses·great·
th~_ -Am~rican
Mathematical
·14 po~ts and J1m Cosentino and defensive ability; He has scored
Society was the Association for
Joe Wilson grabbed 12_ and
-9,
so far· at a 14 pt. norm and-has
-
S y m b o I i c L o g i c , t h e
-
rebounds, r~pectively.

--
·
.
·
-
averaged 5;3 ~sts
·
per game.
Mathematical
Association of
·
_
-
The
main
reason for !he Against Queens earlier. this year,
America, and a
-
meeting of the
success of the fre;,hmen team JS.a; he led the team with 21 points.
National Counsel of Teachers of
trem':Jldous 5!3rtmg_
five. The big·
The fifth starter, and probably
·
Mathematics.
man m the lineup
JS
center Joe
-
the
_
most
-
consistent
is
·
Steve
The
delegates· from Marist
Scott.
Built along the
lin~ of: Shackle. Steve sports ~n average·
were free to individually attend
Pat Riley or Don
May,
he
JS
not
'
of 12 ppg. to go along with 9
any of the meetings in order
to!
··very
tall
(6'
2") :o~ a center, b}lt rebounds per contest. A master
select topics of most interest to
rather
ne
relies
on_ his at the
art
of tapping
in
them.
tremendous strength and great I rebounds he has hit at almost .
Because of the overwhelming
jumping ability. He
is
averaging! 51% of
his
shots. Perhaps the
.response by interested students
18 pts: per game ~d l~ds the
i
best indication of his value is the
_
in attending the New Orleans
team m rebounding with an
fact
that he has suffered only
meetings, Mr. Alpert
i,;
curioUS' aYerage of 15.3
per
game. !oe's: seven_ tumoTCIS in the
rust
6
as
to next
year's
reaction. The
best
game
was
·
aga_1nst· games, far less than the other
conference
will
be held in Miami
Bl<?Omfield when he
scored 31 ;_
regulars.
Each.
pomts and_~bbed 31 rebounds.;
Coapbin
1111
Moody
gm
ill
nlable
riding
time
at
the expeme
of
Post's
Howard
Sadwin
nom
lie
bluted,
9-0.