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Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 1 - October 2, 1969

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-··THE
• -~·COLLEGE;-~UGHKE~IE,
NEW YORK ii6Ql
·
.....
New.
Academic.
Dealls
Take Office
· By Tony Barker
possibly more important to · the
With the departure of Dr.
students
is
the job of the
Edward Cashin as the Academic
Associate
Dean for Student
Vice President and Brother John
Academic
Affairs.
Brother
O'Shea as the Academic Dean,
Stephen's primary function is to
the duties of these two offices
relay
. the
academic
policy
. were combined into 'the office of
decisions of the Trustees to the
the Academic Dean. The job was
Student body at large.
then given to Brother Richard ·
In an interview with Brother
LaPietra.
· ·
Richard he gave many insights
New Deans discuss policies: L to R • Bros. Stephen Cox,
Richard
LaPietta, Kevin Caxoian.
Orie of the first things Brother
and observations into this· new
Richard decided to do was to
position _as· an -·Administrator.
divide the job up among others · The only regret that Brother
so that the functions of the
LaPietra has about his new post .
office_ could be carrie~ out more
is that it takes _him away from
e_ffect1vely and_ efficiently. At
teaching
almost
entirely.
first Brother Richard wanted to·- However,
he feels that his
divide
the jcib among three
administrative post represents a
Assistant Deans who would be
challenging step which he has
responsible_ for the three main
embarked upon. He sees that
areas of study, Natural Sciences,
there is a great aeal- to be done
Hµmanities and Business and
and. he feels that his post is one
Economics. But after discussions
' 'p o int.
o f contact
and-.
with the department chairmen,
communication"
which
is
!t was decided to drop the plan
necessary for bringing about th~
in
·favor,
of
the
present
necessary changes.
arrangement,
namely
two
Brother
Richard
sees the
Associ~te. ~eans, irrei?rdle~ of
educational
process as being
any d1sc1phnary considerations.
"the province of the . faculty."
Brother
· Kevin
Carolan was , and considers himself"a member
appointed the Associate Dean
of the faculty who was chosen
for
Academic
Services and
to
do
a specific
service
Brother
Stephen
Cox was
function".
In line with this
appointed the. Associate Dean
specific service function of the
for Student Academic Affairs.
Academic Dean Brother Richard
Vietnam
Moratorium
·To·
BegiQ
WASHINGTON - The Vietnam
action . w9uld . be expande·d to
Moratorium, a series of national,
two days
in
November, three
escalating anti-war actions, will
d·ays in December, escalating
begin October
J
5.
Students at
until the
war
is ended.
. .
more
than 500 colleges are
The National office.
is
staffed
already committed to spending . with veterans ofthe
McCarthy
__
the··d.ay~Jn
·-the•.•'?oirimunity~with~-
0
-,;and-:K:ennedy:•c·a.mpaigns.'·Ariioiig
do o r-t o-d o or
c ampa1gns,
those _are Sam Brown··26 one of
teach
0
ins, rallies and vigils.
the principle organiiers' of. the
A
C C O
m p _a
l1
y i n g t h e
youth wing of the McCarthy
campus-~ase~ actions will · be
campaign;
David Mixner, 24,
organ
r
zed
· e (forts
·-by
another McCarthy staffer who
_busine~smen,
clergymen,
currently
serves
on
the
. community
groups and labor.
Democratic
-party
reform
All ~c!i~ities a~e directed ag~st
commission headed . by Senator
~ontJnumg Umted States action
George McG~vern; David.Hawk,
in
Vietnam.
26
a draft resister and former
· The
Moratorium
has the·
sotithem civil rights worker who·
endorsement
of the National
was an all-American diver at
Am_ericans
for; Democratic
Corn.ell; Marge Sklenar,
23;
the
Action, the National. Student
former student body president
A s s o c
i
a t i o n ; th e N e
w
at Mundelein College who
is
a
.Mo bHizatiqn ·committee,
and-
veteran of numerous political
·
the . National New Democratic
campaigns.
·
Coalition.
.
. .
R
e
j
e c t i n g · r e c e n t '
Coordinated by
a
Washington
a
n n o u n cements
- by
offic\!,
the one
0
day October·._ administration
spokesmen of
Aderholdt
Heads
·
Security
A new
student
security
. program
has
recently
been
instituted
at Marist College
under
the
direction of
Mr.
Ronald_ Aderholdt, the Director
of Safety and Security.
·
. Before coming to Marist,
Mr.
Aderholdt had previously served
eight years in the United States
Marine -Corps during whfoh he
served one year
in
Korea and
nine months
in
Japan. Upon
his
release,
Mr. Aderholdt
took
some time out to travel about
the United States with his wife
. after which he became a ineinber
of the
Poughkeepsie
police
department for three years. He
then
Jeff to sell automotive
equipment and returned to the
Poughkeepsie police for a period
of five and one half years until
he
decided to accept the offer at
Marist College.
.
In an interview, Mr. Aderholdt
answered the question as to why
student security was instituted
this year as opposed to the
Burns Guard Security.
"Frequently I caught a Bums
Guard
sitting
and watching
television when he should have
.been making his rounds. Besid~,
I
had
requested that there be
three
Burns
guards on duty for
registration day and I was
sent
only one. I felt that a student
security
would be more
responsi~I~ since
this
i,;
their
campus and the. fact that they
are
living on campus makes
extras readily available if they
are needed:" .
_ ·
Mr. Aderholdt feels that the
student . security definitely will
. and has worked. He said, "Since
the student security has been in
• effect on . September
8
there has
been only one major incidence
of vandalism." This occured on
September 10 when a cafeteria
window
was
broken
at
approximately 2:30
A.M. ·
Mr. Aderholdt was also kind
enough
to
clear
up some
misunderstandings on the part·of
the students.
· "I know of no person in any
type of job who is not directly
responsible
to some type of
superior. I for one am dire_ctly
responsible
to Mr. Campilli."
Thls answer came in response to
the rumor that the Security
Department
did not have
to
answer to anybody
for their
actions. He al59 indicated that if
a campus crisis did arise, he
would take no action without
first
consulting tJte Dean of
Students and Mr. Campilli. He
would
also
like
to
make
it
perfectly
clear that be
is
the
Director of Safety and Security
as stated in
his
contract and that
CONT.QN3
token troop withdrawals, the
·coordinators said:
"The announced displacement
of 25,000 and 35,000 Am'erican
troops would bring the total to
6Q;O_OO,
.
.the· number former
President Johnson said could be
brought home without damaging
the. war efforL
· ·
"We will'- continue to work
· against the war· until United
States policies have changed and
the war is ended." _
*****
The function of the Academic
would sponsor activities which
Dean is basically the overseeing -would take
away
some of the
o f
"
d
e
v
e
l o
p m
e n
t
a n d
routine tasks
of
the faculty in
maintenance
of an effective . order to leave the faculty more
educational prngram. Thejob of
time to devote _to the preparing
the - Associate
Dean
for.
of lectures. · .
Academic Services is to supervise
As far as any specific plans for
the - academic services of the
any changes in the academic
college
so that the policies
sphere Brother Richard did not
adopted by the Trustees and the · discuss any specific projects. or
Faculty are effectively helped by
developments he would . like to
these
~ervices.
Lastly
and
see brought
about. He did
. .
CONT.ON7
Brosnan
Fil.ls
New·
·
A.dlllinistrative
Post
By Otto Unger
"I'm tne resource man; the
students laison with the outside
world," says Joseph Brosnan,
Campus Director.
"Socially, Marist suffers from ..
the big name hang-up. We,can't
afford
it.
We have
to be
practical,"
continued
Brosnan .
"I've had a chance to see what
other schools in New York City
and Rochester are doing. We
don't' have to copy them; but
let's try to expand wt,.at we have
here."·
Mr. Brosnan is not new to
Marist. He was President of the
, Student
Government
during
1967-68,
and President of the
Mid-Hudson
Inter-Collegiate
Association. He was awarded the
Cardinal Spellman award for the
"most promising senior."
Mr.
Brosnan· received an
M.S.
in Guidance
and
Student
Personnel
Services
from
S.U.N.Y.
at Albany last month.
Mr: Brosnan
came to his
position
at
Marist
following .
positions · as . Asst. Director of
Student Activities at Rochester
Institute
of Technology
and
New Paltz. Mr:
Brosnan has also
served as Asst. Director of Men's
Housing at Rochester and
Asst.
Director
of Residence •
at New
Paltz.
"I'm just feeling out my job,
but I've seen that the Campus
Center needs a lot of little
things, ,
says Brosnan. "The
Campus Center has deteriorated;
I want to bring it up to a .. C,.
level."
"A Campus Center
Board.-
could be.set up," continued
Mr.
Brosnan; "to help
me
make
policy f.or the next
few
years."
f'
An Activities
Council,"
queried Brosnan; ·"would make
space utilization at the Center a
reality."
A
s k e d
i
f
h
e
f
eJ
t
"administrative
structure"
would bog down the Center in
red tape, Brosnan said, "We've
got to remember the Campus
Center .is not just a building,"
explained Brosnan; "it's not just
for
one group or one person."
",There is no one Joe College
at Marist," explained Brosnan.
· "There's
the commuter, the
black student, the co:.ed, and
others. There must be quality
and quantity programming for
CONT.ONS
Jo,eph.
Brosnan
stresaes
importuice.
of file
Camp•
Ceatn
duillg
mteniew.
·
,]









































































I.
_
PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 2.
'1969
_

I
A new dimension in entertainment·
is
being presented this year on
EDITORIAL
I
Coffee House Circuit
.·Letters
I
the campus through the Coffee House Circuit. This entertainment, ·
·
-
obtained by the
·Social
Committee, features young talent at practical.
Dear
Sir:
.
.
.
.
·Nixon.·
A Body
at R_es,
t
-
prices on a regular basis. Having attended
last
Friday night's concert
Last weekend I visited Marist
by t)le "Croces," we of the Circle staff can attest to the excellent _ and obtained a· copy of "The
.
.
qualities of these performers. This. pi:ogram looks like it could be the
Circle_."
After
reading
the,
"All
liberals tend to remain liberals while all conservatives tend to
brigh~: spot of the Social Calendar, and could mak~ the difference-
newspaper
.
se~era_l things
remain
·
_conservative
unless acted upon by an external force:"
between just another mediocre. year and· a very worthwhile one. To
.
occurred to me.
.
Granted, this juxtaposition
of Newton's first law of motion
is
far
,
touch on a cJiche that gets tossed around every year,· it just. may
·
First, I would like to subscribe
from a hard, inflexible political dictum but at least intuitively it is a
dampen the excuse for continuous drinking on weekends, "because
to
''The
Circle and perhaps other
solid enough hypothesis to initiate the question as to why a staunch;
.there
is
nothing else to do on this campus." Acts may be set up for
.
alumni would also be interested;
hard
core
conservative, almost reactionary
oolitico such as
one night
_or
three or more
_consecutive
nights and the atmosphere
a permanent snotice in the paper
RICHARD M. NIXON would support an even moderately left-wing
.
can be that ofa concert or a night spot such as the«Bitter End" cafe
·
stating the cost arid address of
notion as he· does the contraversial nineteen year old draft.
in New York. Those attending "Fall Weekend". will see another
the subscription
editor
·
could
.
Admitted, passage of the nineteen year old draft.would at least be
feature of the Circuit,
'in
Brian Camey who will perform at the
initiate the program.
I would not
a step in the right (or left
if you· please) direction. But when the
Dinner Dance on Oct. 18th.
expect any immediate financial
ballyhoo and balloting are over what are some of the possible effects
profit from such a venture, but a
on the refreshingleftist movement in America.
.
program initiated at this time-
.
It
is
possible (though improbable) that a nineteen year old draft
,
·
an_d carefully µiaintained
·over
a
could cause a retrogression. After all once
a young man reaches the
c '
d
,
f
f
f
period
.of
years could account ·
a·ge of twenty he won't have to worry about being drafted oi: draft
.
a en a
r
.
0
ven
s
for a large portion or the entire
dodging. He could very easily decide to lead the ideal(?) peaceful
·
cost of publishing a newspaper
American life of a nine to five job in the city, wife, three kids, collie
FOR THE WEEK OF
..
and maintaining a staff.
and a split level in the suburbs while dutifully paying his taxes and
.
Secondly; since ''The Circle"
promoting truth, justice, the good old American way and the Daily
OCTOBER 6-TO OCTOBER
12
is more news worthy than the
NewsingeneratThisispossible.
'.'Alumni
N~wsletter,"
"The
It is also possible (though again improbable) th_at
a
nineteen year
Circle" staff might periodically
old draft would eliminate the roots of campus unrest in recent years.
This year the Circle in coordination with the Director or' the
issue a special alumni edition or
After all when a· campus radical reii.ches the age of twenty there will
Campus Center will publish a weekly calendar of events for the
insert
replacing
·the.
present
be no reason left for him to radicalize. He may even decide to get his
Marist College Community.
.
_
.
.
"Alumni Newsletter/'.
Such a
hair cut and study periodically. Even more probable, the student
If
you ';Vould like your organization's information included on this
move would relieve the alumni
radical may vanish altogether since he will no.longer have need of
calendar, it is important that you contact Mr. Brosnan's office at
a
d
m i n i s tr a ti on
of
t
Ji
e
the shelter the campus affords him against the draft.
.
least two weeks prior to the date that the event is scheduled to take
burdensome responsibility and
Mr. Nixon is no fool and fully realizes the above possibilities. In
place.
·
cost of issuing news to

the
short, the nineteen year old dr~ft shows promise of returning th~
Please Contact:
.
alumni; undergraduates
would
·
nation to the status quo - to the conservative normalcy typical of the
.
Joseph Brosnan
_
find such
·an
issue interesting
as
post war years. The President sees his chance of advancing
Director of Campus Center
they come to realize that they
conservatism under disguise of a liberal draft revision.
..
4 71-3240, Ext. 279
.
will. soon leave the College and
.
Still, THE CIRCLE has decided to support Mr.
Nixon
in his
therefore want to know what
support of the new draft law. Not because we wish to see.our nation
OCTQBER 6, 1969 _ OCTOBER 12, 1969
has happened to those who have
become a stagnant, unchanging and unmoving prison of
_humanoids
already gone.
as would the President. But because we see the new draft law as a
Tuesday, October
7
Thirdly,
most colleges that
liberal step toward the recognition of ones rights with respect to his
3:30 p.m.
Soccer_ H.H. Lehman
7
Away
have
intentions
of soliciting
military obligation.
4:00
Cross-Country-:- New Paltz. Home
funds from their alumni begin
8:00
P.M.
Film_
-
"War
&
Peace" - College Theatre
early to cultivate what feeling of
Stable Football Club
.
The Student Government recently purchased 1200 season tickets
at $6.00 each from the Football Club; Their aim
is
to sell these 1200
tickets back to the students at the discount price of $4.00 per ticket.
.
John "Barney" Kavanaugh has been appointed to supervise the
ticket sales and he has at least one member of the Vikings assigned
to each floor. The Student Government
is
very
.much
dependent on
the returns from these tickets in order to operate safely and to allow
clubs and
.
committees their normal activity for the semester; The
Football Club
is
very much dependent on the returns because they
would like to operate in the black for once
in
their life. This plan
gives them a guaranteed income, rather than just the hope of selling
more than 312 tickets; it also lowers the price of the ticket for the
students, which in
·
turn increases the gate because Marist students
have the natural propensity to bring relatives, girl friends, etc, to see
an exciting football game. With a guaranteed income each year, the
club would
firially
·
be operating with
a
stable budget, which would
enable them to decide where and when their money is most needed.
For a case in point; football jerseys are produced by "Champion"
at only one particular time and it is necessary for the club to know
exactly how much it has to work with, because it can purchase them
·
only at this time. As it is now, each player has to pay $40 just to put
his uniform on to go out and represent Marist. Hovi much more·
gridiron potential would be activated
if
only this financial burden
.
were removed! Actually, Barney should
-
be the most
·
sought after
man
on campus.
·For
the $4 you pay, you are entitled to
5
home
games, each of which is a $2.50 va,Iue. That's a $12.50 value for
$4.00 ('nuff said).
Circle. Policy
.
Life changes. With
it,
the world, the nation and MOTH change. Of
necessity, THE CIRCLE finds that it also must progress to meet the
needs of its ever evolving environment.
·
.
Throughout this academic year THE CIRCLE intends to publish a
journal of increased interest and quality even surpassing the
excellent volume edited by Paul Browne last year.
As the year )ilaSSes
feature articles, guest editorials, and editorials
should be of principal importance. Not that news reporting shall be
forgotti.it but it shall be minimized to the basic facts so as to leave
room
for
expression
of
·varied
opinions which consistently
circumvent vital issues.
The faculty
is
not forgotten this year either. With the introduction
of Faculty Focus the professors are no longer limited to "letters" in
order to express valuable opinions. Each week a different faculty
member will have the opportunity to expound upon anything -
anything at all - which-he desires. The same
is
also true for student
feature writers. They are not limited by the guiding hands of
dictatorial editors. Their columns hopefully will not be stereotyped.
The policy of "free reign"
will
be in effect for our feature writers.
As in the past, the policy of encouraging constructive criticism,
letters and interesting articles
is
still in effect. In this manner nobody
is
excluded from contributing to THE CIRCLE.
·
The policy of reporting the news and expressing the opinions of
those people existing outside the geographical boundaries of MOTH
will
also be promulgated this year. Selected press releases from the
College
Press
Service (CPS) and Intercollegiate
Press
(IP) will again
be printed to inform you
of
the most interesting actions by our
peers
in other
colleges
throughout
America. Additional
concentration on editorials concerningnational politics
will
also be
prevalent.
We of the Editorial Staff hope that you find this volume of
THE
CIRCLE informative,
interesting
and controversial. But most
important, we hope that you find it the independt:nt instrument of
intercommunication
between student and student; student and
administration and student and college community which we intend
it to
be.
Sponsored jointly by Russian and History·CJubs.
.attachment
they have
forr
their
Lecture. Dr. G.A.' Rechnitzz
ed
tic a tional
institutions.
One
_
American Chem. Society
way. in_ which these colleges
Subject: Ion Selective Electrodes _ Room 149
.
continue
to
show an interest in
·
their graduates and families is to
4:00
P.M.
Wednesday; October 8th
.
· pr<;,vide them with free copies of
Coffee Hour. - Welcome to Foreign Students
the undergraduate newspaper for
Gallery Lounge - Sponsored by Student Gov~mment
at least four years.
I think·
an· alumnus who
11:00
A.M.
.Saturday, October 11th
receives copies of "The Circle"
·
Cross-Country - Lehman Queens
will
.be
in greater communication
··
..
.
Van
Cort.
-Away
.with
:the--:
thoughts
of. the
Soccer
-
N.
Y.
Maritime - hoine
students arid be thus able
.
to
2:00
P.M.
7:45
P.M.
8:00
P.M.
,
·
·
Foo.tbaU - Kings· - away
· •
better aid the college in serving
Mixer - Black Afro-American Brothers Association
the expre~sed needs and desires
·
·
·
.
College Cafeteria.
0
f t h e s tu d.e n
f
body .
8:00
P.M.
Sunday, October 12th
·
·
.
.
-
.
Film - "Topkapi" - College Theatre
Student Government Film Series
Furthermore,
he will have
·
a
greater
knowledge
·of
the·
progress which the college. is
continually making and be thus
able
_to.
identify· m9re readily
October 11-12
sa· ili.·n·
g.•
_
.C:?-·.
0
·-
rne·ll· _-_Away with
a
changed institution; stiU
feeling a part
.
of the teani
·
"
Marist. I think that.
a
student
newspaper as a forum for alumni
news
-
would be a fine media·
TEST
O_ATE
FROM
S,
measures mastery
·
of the subject
they expect to teach.
Prospective
teachers should
contact the school systems in
which they seek employment, or
their colleges, for specific advice
on which examinations to take
and on which dates they should
be taken.
The• Bulletin of Information
for Candidates contains a list of
test centers,
and
information
about the examinations, as well
as a Registration Form. Copies
may be obtained from college
placement
officers,
school
personnel
departments,
or
directly from National Teacher
Examinations,
Box 911,
Educational
Testing
Service,
Princeton, New Jersey 08540.
*
* * *
*
DANFORTH
FROM 4
undergraudate
college.
Applicants· may be single or
married, must be less than thirty
years of age at the time of
application, and may not have
undertaken
any graduate or
professional study beyond the
baccalaureate.
Approximately
120
Fellowships
will
be awarded in
March,
1970. Candidates must
be
nominated
by
Liaison
Officers of their undergraduate
institutions
by November
I,
1969. The Foundation does not
accept direct applications
for the
FeUowships.
• ••••
·through
which to generate a
healthy mutual interest and to·
cefuphasize the
.cofiesiveness
and
;
mutual
:
purpose of
:
the several
,---------------
segments
-
of
the
college
community.
l
cannot conceive
PEACEl'-_
of maintaining the alternative of
each segment of the community
speaking to itself,
-
for that
is
a
community
border~ng
on
hebephrenic schizophrenia.
·
Stephen Harrison
John
Pinna,
Photo
Editor
Editors-in-chief
Joan·Rogener
F.M.S.
• Managing Editor
Kenny Dunn
Business Manager
FEATURE
WRITERS
Peter Masterson;Chris Sepe, Jack Corcoran
NEWS
WRITERS
,
Sincerely,
Thomas F. Heffernan
*
* * * *
Joseph McMahon
-
Dave DeRosa
Circulation Manager

Dennis Alwon, Eileen Weit, Tony Barker, Otto Unger, Pat
Grealy,
Ray
Frontain, Ann Torchia, Richard Douglas
SPORTSWRITERS
Joe
Rubino,
Don
Masterson
·
TYPISTS
Duffy, Steve Sawicki, Anne Berinato, Pete
Tom Mahonev. Eileen Weit. Anne Berinato





























































(.
t
.
OCTOBER
2,
1969
Faculty
Focus
Tlt'e
Second.
Dimension
-
By Roscoe Balch
If
·
I were . a ·young
man
courting a, girl, I'd scrounge a
couple of bikes, some bread,
1
cheese, arJ,d wine,
_and
mosey out
Quaker
Lane one September
afternoon.
As the
whim
directed,
-
we'd switch· from one
. ·
country road to another until
the·. first
whisper of sunset
·
started us
-
looking for the Salt
Point Turnpike
or 9G before
darkness
took
all sense of
directions away. At other times
-we'd. simply walk the roads of
northern
Dutchess.
•If
she was
..
good, I'd take her to downtown
:
Poughkeepsie and we'd raise our
eyes above street level and look
at the strange roofs, window
ledges and other decorations left
·
over from another time in a
town that grew too slowly to
·
tear them down. And if I knew
in advance that I ·was going to
propose, -l'd wait for springtime
at lnnisfree.
·
Almost anybody will tell you
that once-in-a-lifetime he'd like
·
to go to a foreign country and
stav for a while, stop hitting the
~purist· highlights, and really get
to know and feel the life of a
straQge place. Few of us do
unless we're sent to some such
place for another reason, like
~
·war
or a job. For a young man
or woman from the greater New
York
area,
the Mid-Hudson
region
can
be that
foreign
country.
This
is not
immediately
apparent. Herc are the
-same
gas
stations,
.highways, ·
hamburger
chains,
the standard
schlock,
All-Americana that disfigures the
landscape from L.A. to Boston.
You
could
drive the whole
. route, eating and sleeping, and
going to movies and never once
break
through
that
plastic
curtain.
The whole country
wears the drab disguise. Often it
fools even the·· natives. Some
people:·
live' .
iii
··that
·
plastic
'all
their lives.
' ·
If·
you've
never
·escaped
before, now's your chance. The
..
Mid-Hudson
is
what
is
·
technically
called "unspoiled"
..
There's
no established
·
tourist
industry,
no
"attractions",
like
Mystic, Conn. or Las Vegas,
Nev., simplified,. prettified and
vulgarized. for the beRefit of the
hit-and-run
tourist. The major
restorations
of the area, Olana,
·
Boscobel, and the Roosevelt and
Vanderbilt
homes
are
thouroughly
and
accurately
detailed.
Superb sites by any
standard
of comparison,
they
provide, in depth, the experience
of a unique place and time.
·
Innisfree,
the
piece
de
resistence, of Dutchess, and one
of
the
best
kept
secrets
anywhere, is not a restoration
but
an original creation.
As
Highway
82 continues north
toward Pine Plains, 44 swings
.sparply
west into the hamlet of
Washington Hollow. Slow! lust
before the gas station, a country
road sHps off to the right.
An
inconspicuous marker, no larger
than a· city street
sign, says
Innisfree. It's a charming little
road and if you're not careful,
.
you'll ·miss the next small sign
indicating_
the
turnoff
to,
lrinisfree. Sometimes a guard is
by the old barn gate to take
your dollar. More often, he's
not, but after wandering about a
bit you'll find the path into a 40
acre work of art which at first
glance
is only a woodland.-
Inspired
partly
by Japanese
tradition and partly by romantic
movement,
Mr. Beck spent
twenty years creating his garden
about· the lake. There isn't a
flower
bed,
or
indeed
a
conventional flower, in.it. lt's a
world
of running
watet,
of
stones apparently scattered, but
every one carefully placed, of
bridges,
garden
houses,
wildflowers
and
constantly
changing vistas. An old stone
mansion
blends hillside and
sweeping lawn. It is· a constant
surprise and a deep tranquility ..
l could go
on,
but, in this
gentle country each of us can
have his own personal valley.
You have only to step· out of the
plastic and look, listen, and feel.
A . man . could do this, could
outgrow the· tqutis_t's. role, and
yet remain a stranger. lfe .would
not know the people. The usual
way to do that is by interesting
·
yourself.
in
endeavors
and
activities with local people. The
.
range of such possibilities is very
wide. The student who follows
his own interest or who develops
.
an interest
be it sport
cars,
emotionally
disturbed children,
conservation,
or art
.
can find
rapport with local people. This
rapport can lead toward a wider
range of human experiences. The
DR. ROSCOE
BALCH
student can come to know both
place and people.
.
During his years at Marist, the
·
student can learn not only the
statics of the valley, i.e. the way
it looks,
but also the inner
dynamics,
the
way
the
community operates. This subtle
understanding
separates
those
who see contemporary
reality
first. hand from those who see
it
only through
the media. This
knowledge is hard won, but ever
a short look can go far to erase
naivete.
.
It
should be understood that
in some ways the student
is
-better
able to penetrate to the
heart of a local situation than an
adult,
for
example
a new
resident
is. A student
has a
certain status.
If
he is less than
an
M.D.or
a successful
businessman, he is more than an
average
employee.
He
symbolizes things which every
organization needs, .youth, hope,
· and future. He brings these by
mere· appearance. He need not
wait
till
his
·
hidden
talents
become manifest. If the student
shows
an interest;
discerning
people will seek him out.
In two short years, Marist's
now half-forgotten
Peter and
G corge
developed
friendships
with
·
interesting
and powerful
people
throughout
the vaHey.
They
became quasi~cerebrities
. themselves,
prototypes
for
characters in a published noyel.
They penetrated to the heart of
a politic"al
campaign,
did
research,
wrote press releases,
trav.eled
with the candidate,
philosophized
till
dawn with the
campaign manager.
But
politics
is only one
activity. The Ralph T. Waterman
club will teach you to identify
birds and let you track them
through swamp and hillock an~
you will know the "birds" who
CONT.ON 6
s·tover
·
Lectures
on
Draft
0
n
T·u es day
eveni.ng
instituted
rather than see Mr.
September
23,
Mr. Robert
Nixon's
proposed
draft plan
..
Stover, a draft counselor, began
passed.
Mr.
Stover thus gave
,
a lecture pertaining to the draft
reasons on how the people were
and its laws,·
__
.
falsely led to b_elieve that a

In the lecture he gave his view
voluntary-
service could not
·
on the · draft. He· said·· quite
work. They were:
I)
the military
frankly that he was ag~nst a
immediately raised the_ number
draft system, his reason being
of years to serve as an enlisted
.
that there was never a need for a
man; 2) they cut the pay of the
draft prior to world war II and
-
soldiers;
3)
they took money
_.
the only reason we have it now
away from the recruiters; 4)
is because we never bothered to
.
they
limited the number
of
abolish i_t, He took for granted
·
enlistments.
All these factors
the need of a draft during World. contributed to make the
_public
War II but he said there isn't any
believe that a voluntary service
need now.
·
cannot exist.
Following the lecture
there
·
Those who needed personal
was
tiine
for discussion
.
on
help with draft problems. were
various
issues. The topic of
taken care of as well as possible.
voluntary service was brought up
Mr. Stover has beeri the draft
by .Pat. Tracey. In response to
counselor
for Marist College
this Mr. Stover said he would
since last year but because of a
like to see a voluntary system
promotion he
wm
·not
be able to
Buy·
Football
·Season
Tickets Now!
cu
--~-
uuu

~
u ...-.:
• .-.
.....
...............
taA
-
Experienced Waiters_or Waitres.ses Wanted
for evenings and weekends
Apply
in Person:
MARINER'S HARBOR, HIGHLAND
be here
every
week as in
previous year.
If
you do need
assistance,
Dr.
Michaelson,
Professor of Chemistry at Marist
College, will gladly try to help
you with your problem.
*****
PAGE3
How the Other
Half Lives
By Chris Sepe
.
"Why
did
you
come
to
and tap dance down the corridor
Marist?"
If
the Marist girls have
and click their heels against the
.
been asked any questions about
wall.
their motives for coming here,
One of the best things on the
this
question
usually starts
floor is the refrigerator ..
It has
things off.
been filled since the day 1t came
It probably seems incredible
and is a great supplement to the
for the boys to believe, but the
cafeteria food. At present _it is
new coeds did not come to
on the balcony but when winter
Marist in search of a husband.
comes, the girls hope to move it
Most of the girls came because
into the janitor's room which is
they felt that all girl - all boy
also the iron~g
ro?m·
What
schools are a thing of the past
would we do without 1t!
and Marist is a fairly new college
The
lounge
is at present
with lots of room fgr growth.
sparsely fumis~ed, but _fo~r ~ls
They also feel it is a better way
on the floor, Eillen We1t,Juruor,
to get-ready for society. "We are
Christine
Sepe,
sophomore,
giving classes a new point of
Chris
Straub,
freshman,
and
view a more well rounded one
Mikey Pepe, freshman, are the
and
it
gives the boys a chance to
furniture committee and hope to
hear our side of things besides
.
make the lounge into a unique
just
their own,"
said Elaine
room. Thanks to Mikey,_ the
Quiric•oni,
a freshman
and
lounge at least has a rug, and the
president of the sixth floor. "I . refrigerator
was acquired
think it really helps
·prepare
us
through Franny Colligan.
for living in the outside world."
On the serious side of the
The community
life on the
sixth floor, a representative to
sixth floor is great. " ... just walk
the House Council, and floor
down the hall and call out what
officers were elected recently.
you
n ecd,
everybody
is so
Mikey
Pepe
was
elected
friendly and helpful, it is just
representative,
and the floor
like having fifty sisters!" Joan
officers are: Elaine Quiriconi,
Higgins is a freshman also and
president, Celeste Maneri (the
life
on the sixth floor is exactly
other half of the Maneri twins),
the way she describes it. But
it
is
vice-president, Ritajean Schmidt,
a good thing the girls don't mind
secretary,
and Luz Lubard,
sharing because they .have no
treasurer. It is these girls jobs to
choice
sometimes,
with only
conduct floor meetings, listen to
ONE telephone,
.and
ONE mirror
floor grievences and try to foster
among fifty girls. That is real
consideration among fifty girls
community spirit. Just imagine
and harmony with the five floors
what it is like in the morning
below.
when fifteen girls arc standing in
Even though
it
is a big burden
front of the mirror and trying to
being the first coed residents,
check their hemlines all at once,
with the thought of the future
or trying to use the telephone
coeds behind them and in the
for a_ VERY important
call.
It
present that definate minority
can be a bit trying at times.
feeling, two sixth floor coeds
The sixth floor also has its
summed
it
up beautifully. Dee
share of water fights, relay races,
Coutant, and Peggy Ann Miner
and .frisbee c_ontests. And let us
said, "I love it here, and I
not
forget. the trips
-to
the
wouldn't trade it for
anything
in
showers
for a
fully
clothed
the world." And I think almost
victim. But one of the best floor
every girl on the sixth floor of
activities is the soft shoe routine
Leo House would agree.
that
Ellen Garvey and Leslie
*****
Stymus perform. They shuffle
ADERHOLDT
FROM
J
of his two jobs he considers the
former the more important. He
hopes that
·
each student
will
realize
that
he
is here
predominantly
to protect
the
safety of the students and not to
act as a watchdog.
·
He indicated that Security at
Marist
·
is in its infancy and
is
subject to mistakes as is any
novice organization.
If
there are
any
complaints.
or criticisms
please
bring
them
to Mr.
Aderholdt
rather
than start
rumors.
He has promised
to
consider and act upon all valid
complaints.
·For
instance, some
students complained that there
was no safe place where they
could park their motorcycles
except under the rear entrance
to
Champagnat.
Because
Mr.
Aderholdt felt that this was a
valid criticism he is pleased to
announce
that sometime
this
week
a motorcycle
rack,
sufficient to hold fifteen cycles
will be installed in the lower
parking area.
*
* * * *
Harriers
Mr. Sto-ter presenting
his
opinions
at a meeting
spon31ned
by
T
.A£.
,
-
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....
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r.
i
i
/
,.-·
·
PAGE.f
THECIRCLE
..
OCTOBER
2,
1969
..
Biother Lanning briefs cast on upcoming play INCIDENT.AT VICHY •.
Stude"t
Refugee
·
Speaks On
Czech
Crisis
.
.
.
WHY?
Peter Masterson
Why must Marist
"women"
·
On Wednesday, September 4,
been ousted, he is still admired
pay an admission price
to
get
a lecture on the Czech crisis was
by the people, despite being
into our mixers? I've heard that
sponsored
.
by the
Cultural
portrayed
as
a
traitor and a
they have to pay the· price any
Committee: in cooperation with
revisionist
by the
Russian
Marist "man" has to, be'¢ause
the Marist Chapter of the Young
government.
after
all,
they
are
Marist
Americans for Freedom.
Two
questions were raised
·
"students."
The girls
.from
.
The guest speaker, "Yon," a from
the
floor.
The first:
Ladycliffe, Good Counsel/ and
student
refugee
from
"Would
you
return
to
the
Mount
can get ·in.·free
Czechoslovakia
had
been
Czechoslovakia?'.' Yon replied,
because "they have to pay for·
traveling around the country for
.
"Yes, I will, because it did no
the bus ride." Well, do girls from
the last two months under the
good to leave the country. The
Dutchess or New Paltz have to
a us pi
c
es
of
''Student
only
way to bring about a
pay for a bus ride? They get in
Community
, for Freedom•. in
change is from within." The
free. But Marist girls have to
Czechoslovakia." This is an ad second: "Why was Yon in the
pay.
Sure,
that's·

good
hoc committee of Y.A.F. Yon
U.S. speaking?" He answered,
incentive
-for
our usual mostly
spoke
about
his
experiences
"So that the people of the
male mixers. Next,
they're
going
during the Russian invasion. He United States could understand·
to make the band pay to gel
in:
also expressed anti-Soviet and . th~ true. valu~ of the. freedom
Why do we have Open House
pro-American
feelings, even
,
they· enjoy from day to day, and
only on Sunday?· Will Marist
though the· Czechs, in general,. which the Czechoslovakians had
men do "it" on Saturdays but
were
upset that the United
foroneshortspringinl968."
.
not Sundays? Hereweare,most
States did not intervene. He
·
Pat Tracey, chairman of the
of us 18 y·ears to 22·years,of age;
went
'into
great_
·detail
to
Y.A.F.,
is currently collecting
:.old
enough to get married,.earn
emphasize that the Czechs were anything
of educational
or.
a living, die in Viet Nam; but too
following a policy. of passive cultural value (books, magazines,
young to
·
be allowed
'a
female
resistance
(e.g.
raising the
records, etc.) to be sent to
guest
in our rooms· except
Russian flag upside down). Yon
··
Czechoslovakia to support the
Sunday. "Perhaps the dorms·will
went on to say that although
student resistance.
/
be noiser if we allow more Open
President Dubeck has officially
* * •
* *
House hours?"
They're
.
noisy
Student
Call
For
.
-
enough now, and I'm sure one
girl in one guy's room is not
going to make . it any noiser.
Besides; its part of the Resident
Advisor's job· to· keep· the noise.
-
at a minimum,
.and
I still can't
Theatre
Guild
·p·,.es.ents
Schedule.·-
by Ann Torchia-
Richard Douglas
.
.
This year; the Marist. College
Theat.re Guild will stage four
contemporary

American plays.
The plays have been divided into·
.
groups of two for· simultaneous
production
of two plays each
·
semester.
·
calls
.
for a total. male cast of
twenty-one actors.
·
·
·
.
.
·
·
This
·semester's·
second
production is a· play by_ William
·
Inge. The Dark at the fop of the
Stairs deals wHh the struggle of a
mid-western family trying to
discover each
.other
af the turn
of the century.
Inge.• won a
Pulitzer Prize for his portrait of
the Rubin Floods and the cast of
Stairs under the direction
.
of
Brother Stephen Cox hopes to ·
do justice to it. The cast has
been
.
selected and major rolls
were won by Phil Hume and by
veteran
.
actresses Bonnie Flynn
and Jackie Hughes.
The first production scheduled
for November 13,
14,
15,and 16
is Arthur
Miller's
powerful
Incident at Vichy. In Vichy,
Miller presents the struggle of
nine men·and a boy suspected as
Jews"during:the Nazi occupation
of. France. It is
·
a remarkable
study
into
the
source
of
viciousness and evil that so often
corrodes the spirit of mankind.
Incident at Vichy
is
under the
direction
of Brother Stephen
Lanning
·and
includes in its cast;
·
Phil DeGrandis, Jim Steinmeyer,
Joe DeTura, Joe Francese, and
many, many more. The play
Next semester will find the
Guild working hard to. produce
Edward
Albee's
A Delicate·
Balance and Tennessee
·William's.·
Camino Real.
·
Dates for casting
and production of the lat~er
will
be announced in the spring.
* *
* *
*
Vassar
Art· Exhibition···
POUGHKEEPSIE,
N. Y.,
resonant
colors. Rectangular
September 26,
1969 - "Forecast
core units give way to curved
•'69-'70,"
a series
of
·five
whimsical
·wings
-~
·a
exhibitions at the Vassar College con fi gu ration
somewhere
Art Gallery, has opene~ with a between the strict confines of a
one-man show by Robert
•Reed·
traditional pictorial format· and
oftheYaleArtDepartment.
the
absolute
freedom of a
The series will concentrate on
shaped canvas. This combination
exciting ·young artists, new ideas
and resolution of opposites .:.. of
and
·
the
highest
quality of
·
concrete
image· and, abstract
·
execution.
Organized by the
surface,
of expressionist a.rid
painter
Elizabeth . Da_mon, in hard
.edge
elements;of rectangle
cooperation with the Vassar-Art
and uniquely shaped canvas -
Gallery
staff
and
.
with the
..
becom'es
an imp9rt~nt
and
participation
of ad_vanced_ art
,
prophetic statement,· especially
history students,:Jhe series
.will,
against the dotnin'ant purism and
-
bring to the college the works."of· self-containnienf
of current
artists
responsive·
to,
and
.
conceptual painting.
·
,
representative
of,
this
:
This
suggt;stion.
,of
.a
new
generation.
.
.
. .
. .·
0
,
'.:
:
:
,'.
.::

·:
,
.
direction for abstra.ct.°painting is
Mr. Reed, whose show·of ten' therefore
·a.
highly significant
new paintings. and eight studies
theme for the first "Forecast"
will run- thro.'ugh
,Qctober.·12,·
showI
,
',
,.
:-
.
..
,·:·,·~>"·":
demonstrates
an original.
Mr.·Reed··has
had previous
direction for abstract conceptual
one-man
shows
at. Phillips.
painting. He develops each work
Gallery.,•. Salt
.
Lake
,City;
the.

•·into
a· refined
-abstract
Little
Gallery,
Minneapolis·
configuration
of hard edge
·
Institute
_of Art;
Hathorn
·against
fluid expressive shapes, · Gallery, Skidmore College; and
all rendered in explosive and
Morgan State College.
·
·
The Vassar Art Gallery is open
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m; Monday
through Saturday; and from 2 to
5 p.m. on Sunday.
*****
·
Vietnam
Moratorium
WASHINGTON
(Vietnam
faculty members and concerned
..
see why guys will
-
make more
-
noise with a girl around. Then
·
again,
I'm
not part of. the
Administration that doesn't live
here anyway.·
.
• **·• *
·Danforth~
fellowships
Election:
News
Inquiries about. the Danfort~
·.·
.
by Eileen Weit
Graduate
Fellowships, to be
awarded· in
-March,
1970, are
Due to the resignations· of
invited, according toMr. Jerome
Terry
Mooney
and
Philip
Remenicky,·Donelly.215
No.
3,'
Glennon
Preside,n.t
and·
.
Moratorium
Committee)
-
citizens can devote time and
Ending the war in Vietnam is the
energy to the-important work of

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
most important task facing the
taking the issue of peace
in
American nation. Over the last
V i e t n a m to
t h e
I a r
g
er
few years, millions of Americans
community.
have campaigned, prote,sted, and
If the
war
continues this fall
demonstrated
against the war.
a n d t h ere
is
no
firm
Few now defend the war, yet it
commitment
to American
continues.
Deafh
and
withdrawal
or a negotiated
destruction are unabated; bombs
settlement·
on October
15,
and fire continue to devastate
participating
members of
.
the
South
Vietnam.
Billions of
'academic
community will spend
-See- Gaels
Fall.
Sat.
...........
~
.......
.
.
the local campus (epresentative.
Vice-President of the class of '71
The Fellowships, offered· by
respectively, elections were. held
the Danforth Foundation of St
..
by
the .Junior
class
on
Louis,
·Missouri,
are open to men
September
I 8, Both Terry and
and women who are seniors or
Phil· are working for Mr. David
recent gr!}duates of accredited
Flynn,
·
Director of. Admissions,
colleges in the United States,
as Admission Interns.
'
·
who have serious interest in
·
John
Mauskaph·
defeated
college teaching as.a career, and·
..
Merwyn
Romeyn,
former
plan
to
study for a Ph.D. in a
·
Corresponding Secretary of the
.
f i e I d
CO
m m On to. the
·
Junior Class for the office of
CONT.0~2
dollars are spent on
war
while
the entire day organizing against
the urgent
·domestic
problems of
the war and working in the
this country remain unattended.
community to get others to join
Moreover
the war has had
a
.
us in an enlarged and lengthened
corrupting
influence on every
_
moratoriu_m in ~ovembe!. This
aspect of American life, and
process "'.'ill cont_mue untd there
much·of the national discontent·
1s Amencan withdrawal. or a
l-heatre
Guild:
President.
In the Vice-Presi- ·
dential Category Tom
_Voelker
was victor over Russ Jones·.
·1n-
the
Student
Council,
Salvatore Piazza has resigned 'as
Corresponding.
Secretary.·
Elections were ·held on Friday,
September 26 to fill the post.
Robert
·
Hawd, David DeRosa· ·
can be traced to its influence.
,
negotiated settlement.
_
The discredited policies of the
.
We ~ll upon all mem~ers of
past which have brought about
the
umvers1ty co~mumty
to
his American tragedy have not
suppo~ the moratonum, and '!'e
been changed. We follow the co!finut ourselves to orgam~e
same military advice which has
this effort on our ca_mpus and
m
created
a
futile
and
bloody
the large~·
~ommumty. We ask
conflict while we cling to the
others to Join us.
same policies which have caused
.
*
The "Student Call" has been
the Paris negotiations to falter. signed
by
nearly
5_00
college
The
token
displacement of student
body
presidents and
25,000
troops over a three
campus newspaper_ edito~.
A
· month period simply is not the
f~c~lty call 1s. bemg_ wntten.
substantial change in policy that
S1~ar
calls
will
be issue~ by
is
so desperately needed.
.
businessmen, l!'bor, professional
Thus it is necessary for all and commuruty groul?s; each
those
who
desire peace to
addressed
to
thetr
own
become actiVe again and help
constituency.
bring pressure to
bear
on the
*****
present Administration.
We call
for
a periodic
moratorium
on .. business as
usual" in order that students,
· Appoints
.
New
_·:·OIi
icer·s
The
Theatre
-
Guild
has
appointed Andrew Zoccoli and
-
Louis
Miressi
to
fill
two
vacancies
·on
its executive board.
Mr.
Zoccoli was appointed to fdl
the - office
of vice-president,
which has been vacant ever since
Phil
DiGrandis,
the former
·
vice-president,
took over the·
office of president from the
graduating
.
Robert Warren fms.
.....
Former
publicity manager,
James Steinmtyer, whose recent
resignation created the second
opening on the executive board,
recommended Mr. Miressi as his
possible
successor. Since
Mr.
Miressi had been working closely
with the publicity staff, the
exeuctive
board,
although
regretting
the
loss of Mr.
Steinmeyer, decided to accept.
the recommendation.
On
Thursday
evening
September
2S, Mr. DiGrandis
after
announcing
the
new
appointments
,befor_e
the
assem~led membership of the
Guild,
asked for a vote of
confidence.
On
both
appointments
the vote was
unanimously in favor.
·
·
We would
like
to congratulate
Mr.
Zoccoli and Mr. Miressi on
their
appointments
and, wish
them
every
·
success in their
endeavors to guide the Guild to
a highly successful season.
" * •
* *
........
·
.
and Terry McGowen competed
for
the position with Hawd
emerging the winner.
'·****-*
Junior
Class
Clambake
Sun.d~y
..,.



















































, OCTOBER
2,
1969
:Nixon·-
to .·Announce
· Draf
f
Reductions,
WASHINGTON
- (CPS) -
instructing draft _boards to take
President Nixon will announce
19-year-olds
first and· would .
soon a "meaningful" reduction
order the Army to send to
in monthly draft calls.
,
Vietnam
only
draftees who
According
to
a White House
volunteered for duty there.
source,
who refused to . give
But the White House official
exact figures, the lowered calls said although these are reforms
will be
ili
effect over a "period
included in the long-range goals
of
t_ime,"
paralleling
the
of the
administration,
he
"decreasing level of U.S. troop
"doubts"
they will be part of
commitment in Vietnam."
N i x o n's
an noun c em en t
The
October
draft call of · concerning
the lowered draft
29,000 men
will
not be affected.
calls.
The source, who is an adviser
He said Nixon has two options
to Nixon on the draft, said there
regarding a change i_n draft laws:
was "no truth" to reports that
*He could enact by executive
the administration
is · planning
order a "conveyor belt" system
for
the
near future a total
in which all young men would
suspension of
all
calls.
be subject to the draft only
White House press secretary
during the 19th year. The oldest
Ronald Ziegler said in a news
19-year-olds
would be taken
· conference
here recently that
first, and those not taken before
the possibility of suspending the
their 20th birthdays would be
· calls had come under discussion
free from conscription.
in Nixon's inner circle; but a
~By the same means, Nixon
decision _has since been made
could put into effect a plan
against that proposal, the source
whereby all turning 20 during a
said.
particular
year
.would
be
"If
you're going to suspend
vulnerable
to conscription
in
the
draft,
what
would
it
chronological
order of their
accomplish?
.All
you've done.is
birthdays,
along with those
to raise false hopes since the
whose deferments had expired.
calls would have to be reinstated
A person with a Jan.
1
birthday
at another time," he said.
would stand a greater chance of .
"As, long as there has to be a. being drafted than one with a
draft, it's. senseless to suspend it
Dec.
1
birthday.
.
then start it u·p again."
·
The spokesman said a third
.
.
·,,•···•'
.,·,
..
,
.,.,
..
,
.............. .

THECIRCLE.
t
PAGES
The New York Times this
proposal, the lottery,
requires
month . quoted
an
anonymous
congressional
approval,
and
critic of . the. administration
as
these two, which do not, are still
saying that Nixon would soon
in
the discussion stage.
sign
an. executive
order
*
* * *
*
Above, Pat ParceUs receives chemistry
handbook
for exceUence in General Chemistry last
year.
Three other
students received identical awards. Dr. Rehwoldt made the presentations. On same e-vening, Thurs. Sept. 18,
DI. T. Kneip of the School of Envu:onmental Medicine, New York Univetsity, delivered a lecture on ..
Ait
Pollution in the New York area.
·Test.
Dllte For
.
.
.
Muhlenberg
Drafts Policy
·
Teachers
· Announced
on
Obscenity
.
.,·
PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY;'·
September
15. College seniors
preparing to teach school may
take
the
National
Teacher
Examinations·on any of the four
different test dates announced
today
by Educational Testing ·
Service, a nonprofit", educational
organization Which prepares and
administers this testing program.
:New dates 'for :th~ testing of
prospective
teachers·
are:
Allentown, Pa. - (I.P.) -
A
November
8, 1969, and January
Publications
Policy Statement
31, April 4, and July 18, 1970., drafted.
by
a
ten-member
The tests will be given at nearly
student-faculty-administration
500
locations
througout
the
committee
at
Muhlenberg
United States, ETS said. ·
.
College has been unanimously
Results
of
the
National
adopted by the faculty.
Teacher Examinations are used
The committee
was formed
by many large school districts as last year after the administration
one of several factors in the
proposed
a policy statement
selection of new teachers and by
f o
11
owing
publication
of
several state's for certificatio11 or
allegedly '.'obscene" words in the
licensing
of teachers. • Some· campus newspaper.
Teacher·
Evaluat'ion
- colleges also· require all seniors
The policy statement:
-
preparing to teach to take the ·
A_.
The relationship between
Rochester,
N.Y. ·_ (I.P.) -
The
University of Rochester has been
awarded a ~grant to develop a
reliable method for evaluating
the
teaching
effectiveness of.
.., · college professors.
·
· The study, funded by $26,563
from
the
Essa
Education
Foundation,
is the first to
compare
three
methods
of
evaluation
currently
used on
campuses around the country.
They are: opinions of deans
. and_departmenf
chairmen;
opinfons
of cqlleagues; and
student
evaluations
by
questionnaire. Of the three, only
student
evaluations have been
shown to be reliable in previous
studies. The other methods have
never been tested.
On mo$t campuses teaching
evaluation
is based on the
opinions
of .deans
and·
examinations.
The
school
Muhlenberg
College and its
systems and state departments
student publications is the same
of ·education
which use the
as that existing between any
examination
results
are
publishing organization and its
designated in the Bulletin of
publications.
Information for Candidates.
To further its purposes, the
On each
full
day of ·testing, · College finances and otherwise
prospective teachers may take . makes
· p o s s
i
b 1 e st u dent
the
Common
Examinations,
publications
protected
by
which measure their professional
constitution
al guara1,1tees of
preparation and general cultural
freedom of sp~ech and freedom
background,
and a Teaching
of the
press
but
subject,
Area
Examination
which . however, to the restrictions of
law and the liabilities of civil
suit.
CONT.ON 2
Coffeehouse
Hobart•
M.
Cable's Cafe (a
coffeehouse) will open its first
full
year
of operation.
It's
location is, 249 Hooker Avenue,
across Whittier Boulevard from
Krieger School.
At Muhlenberg College the
Student Council is delegated the
responsibility
for acting as
publisher of the various student
publications.
B:
The special purposes of
student publications are derived
from and reflect the particular
ideals to which this College is
committed
as an independent
liberal arts college.
In order that these purposes
may be fulfilled, the College
is
providing this statement about
its student publications.
C. The foremost principle to
which
Muhlenberg
College
commits
itself
is academic
freedom. This principle is an
affirmation
of the conviction
that
the search for truth
is
conducted
best when all are
given the opportunity
to be
heard.
Consequently,
the College
recognizes
the right to free
expression
of unpopular
or
unorthodox ideas provided they
do not violate the principles of
this document.
The College believes that the
following conditions are those
under
which the search for
knowledge
and understanding
best takes place:
1 . Confident
reliance upon
intelligent discussion as opposed
to coercion and diatribe and
distortion;
2.
Courage to express· honest
· conviction and readiness to raise
sensitive issues;
,3.
Respect
for
the opinions of
others and humility about one's
own·
4.'
Competence
in observing
and reporting; in interpreting
and writing;
,
5.
Regard
for
honesty,
courtesy, and good taste.
·
D.
These concepts cannot be
precisely
defined
because
situations and media differ and
standard~ change. However, they
•. department chairmen, according·
to
an
American Council on
Education
study. Opinions of
colleagues
and
reviews
of
scholarly
research
are also
widely used..
.
"Most universities don't make
any formal attempt to find out
whether a person can teach or is
teaching,"
said Assoc. Prof.
George
Benston,
who
is
co-directing the study.
The coffeehouse
will be a
place
where
collegians from
Marist tollege
can enjoy their .
leisure in an informal, relaxed •
atmosphere.
Good
entertainment including musical
performers, poets, speakers, and
discussions, will be featured ..
-The
Birds
Is Coming
"Unless we can develop
an
evaluation
procedure which is
accepted by faculty and students
and implemented by university
administrators,
the resources of
, our universities might not be
directed sufficiently to teaching
until, perhaps, student
unrest
forces a change," said Benton.
* * *
*
*
Douglas
Kemerer,
a_n
employee of IBM and recent
college graduate, is the manager.
The format is designed to appeal
especially
to the thoughtful
student
from
area colleges.
Besides coffee, cider and tea,
pastries are provid~d at nominal
costs. The house will remain
open from 7:30 to 11 :30 p.m.
each first Friday of the month.
No admission will be charged
but donations of fifty cents will
be appreciated.
*****
SAN FRANCISCO - (CPS) -
Mass
attacks upon students by
militant black birds at the San
Francisco
State campus has
caused
some
suspicion that
producer Alfred Hitchcock may
have been foreshadowing things
to come in · his thrilier, "The
Birds."
Amateur ornithologist Alberto
Duro, an authority on Italian
birds, suspects that the birds get
drunk on a type of berry that
ripens in the spring and summer
months on
the campus. Resident
radical ornithologist
Paul
Kangas
says the birds are using guerilla
tactics. The birds, according to
Kangas,
have
a sense
of
territoriality and fly at the backs
of peoples' heads during
the
nesting and mating
seaons.
"They will not attack if you
look them in the eye," assures
the bird-watcher.
Seems they do
fear an eyeball
to eyeball
confrontation.
*****
constitute the ideals which not
only the publications
but
all
undertakings
of the College
should uphold in the pursuit of
excellence.
It
should also be
noted that conflicts among these
ideals
can
and
may
arise.
Whether a particular practice or
piece of writing is consistent
with
the
spirit
of these
statements
must be decided in
context.
E. Because of the impossibility
of precisely defining these ideals
or of ranking them in hierarchy,
it
may
be
necessary
that
judgments
must be made in•
certain cases.
In keeping
with
the principles
set
forth
here, a procedure
should be outlined whereby any
person. may raise a question
concerning
the
policies
of
student publications
and bring
the matter
to
a
decision by
following the procedures. The
opinions of all constituents of
the College should be considered
while the decision is in the
process of being made .
F. The
staffs
of student
publications
have the freedom
and responsibility to determine
the content of their publications
and are not subject to advance
approval of copy.
*****
BROSNAN
FROM I
all."
Outlining his initial actions
since assuming
his
position,
Mr.
Brosnan says he
is
planning for
Coffee
House
Circuit"
entertainers
during the school
year." "The chairs in the Center
will
be repaired,"
continued
Brosnan.
"Plans for the utilization of
Fontaine
Hall,"
are being
worked
out,"
continued
Brosnan.
"What I'm going to do is to
expand
what we have. What
•influence I'm going to have on
this, is respect for my opinions,
and
the off-campus
resource
outlets I have to on~r."
*****
..
-·'·
.,;;,,;
...







































THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 2. 1969
,,
In £ei:spectiYe
_
Sldlors domin~te Hudson in Sunday's victoriou~ Regatta~
HARRIERS:
F~OM 8
pace:
ou·r
runners
·were.
surpassed by the experience of a
State team on their own course,
and although we ran as a tight
team, Southern Conn. managed-
to keep
-their
lead. Running as a
unified
team
-
will
-
prove the
power of team effort
in
the
future.
.
·
The Marist harriers finished in
Proctor Annie Visits the shower once a month whether she needs it
or not. For
story,
1ee
Page
3.
•••••
this order: Placing 8th was Steve
Sawicki
(25:09
(ed. note - -
Sawicki moved from the back of
the pack
tq
cop eighth place and
first for_ Marist), Jim Corbett
(25:50) 9th place; John Petraglia
(25:59) 10th place; co-capt. Bob
Mayerhoffer who ran with an
injured foot, placing 12th in
26:47; co-capt. Joe McMahon,
still not recovered from a flu
( 27:01)
14th; I 5th was Jim
Ambury
(27:14);
16th Tom
Mahoney (27:26), followed by
Greg Nelson (29: 18), Charlie.
Rtissett (29:22), :rom Geraghty,
-
(30:43)
and
Mike
Moran
(31 :36). Steve Kopki was forced
to drop out after
2
miles due to
a-stomach ailment.
·
_
Despite· injuries, the team has
much to look forward to. We
were' blessed with the addition
of Freshman on
-the
Varsity and
two new Srnior Members. The
new. Frosh are looking very
strong and Jiave
·
proven that
potentiaJ·is Jying on. the surface
and will soon
.pour
out.
In the future, Marist is looking
forward to Fairfield on Wed.
Oct. l, and a big meet against
Westchester:, Madison,
FDU,
and
Hunter at Van Cortlandt Park on
Sat.
Oct;· 4th. We are also
scheduled
to compete in
3
Invitational Meets
in
the latter
part of the season. These
·will
put Marist against some of the
top
teams in the Northeast.
These meets are the Albany
Invitational
Oct. 25th, the
Upstate Champions on Nov. 1st
and the N.A.I.A. Championships
on Nov. 8th. The
Marist harriers
will
run against New Paltz at
Home on Tues. Oct. 7th and we
are
working
hard
toward
repeating
the close win we
achieved at New Paltz last year.
From
the performance
on
Saturday jt is evident that the
young, tight· running team is
bubbling over with potential.
With the return of
-Phil
Cappio
and Greg Howe, the team will
again
·
prove
that it
is
the
winningest team on campus.
••••
Bill Dourdis
.
.
Probably more than any other
individual,
Bill
Dourdis
exemplifies the winning-spirit at
·
Marist. Described by Coach Ron
Levine· as "One
.
of the finest
runners in all of club football,"
Dourdis has been the heart of
the
Marist offense since his·
Freshman year.·
Bill's 3 year rushing record of
2,607 yards is ample evidence of
his ability as
.a
runner, but
people forget that
Bill,
6'2" 180
lbs. also was a fine pass blocker
and receiver.
At Poughkeepsie High School,'
Bill was captain of both the
Football and Track teams. He
w'ds
'also
·named
to· the
All-League
_
team, arid played
both
·offensive and defensive
end.
·
As a Freshman, Bill started at
flanker, but when key players
were injured; he was switched to
halfback, and. has stayed there
ever since. In the Adelphi game·
that year, Bill was not supposed·
to make the trip because of a
serious elbow injury, btit went in
anyway
at
halfback, and.· he
turned
in such.
a
striking
performance that he was voted
th_e game l?lazer.
In his Sophomore year, Bill
. won the Club Football rushing
-title with 1101
·
yards. In the
Niagara
game, Bill caught a·
swing pass with 50 second left in
a
6-6 game
and
ran 80 yards
down the. sidelines to give the
·
Vikings their 14-6 victory.
As a
-
Junior, Bill suffered a
concussion
and a dislocated
shoulder,
yet he .played the
entire season. In the spring game
against Iona, Bill· scored one
of
the
touchdowns
.to clinch
Mari_st's first victory over Iona.
The history of Marist Football
-
will soon add other great backs
to its list; bu_t Bill Dourdis was
.ind_eed
the first. During the
off-season at the Big
U,
Bill has
shown
·
his
talents
in
.
both
Wrestling and
'track,
_ and has
served as Vice-President of the
Resident
Board
and Senior
Representative to the Student
Government.
·
.
.
*
*
*
*
*
·sailors
Win
Regatta
Last Sunday, September 28,
.
Consantino,
sophomores,
_
and
the Marist Sailing Team achieved
Mike, Larson;
'a·
junior. •"Two
a
rousing victory over Queens
freshman,
Penny Tirante and
College and Albany State under
John
Zoda,
drew
valuable
the direction of Coach Jerome
experience
by
_
assisting the
Remenicky.
Highlighting
-
the
Queens· team as crew. Final
sixteen races were· nine

first
scores. for the Regatta were
places by Marist Skippers John
Marist
_
5 6, Albany 51, and
Kren,
Art
Jung,
and Rick. Queens 34. This weekend Marist
Reynolds. Als9_ skippering for
_
will
take
part
.
in
_
an
-
area_
Marist was Don Pizzuto who· championship
at' Cornell
along with the other three took
University.
·
six second places.
-
.
*""
*
* *
-
On crew were Gaiy Jones, Jim
F°ACULTY~R0~3.:
.
are
interested
in birds.
Concerned about the quality of
American·
life?
So
-
is
the·
Landmarks Association. Social
service
.
opportunities are many.
The churches need you.
.
_
-
-
I
mentioned my plans for th1
_
-
column to
·Brother
Gus Nolan;
"Why not?" he said, "Let them
go touch it. That's where
it's
at."
.
._
..
:''\_;
send in all the subs in the fouith
...
quarter. It stands obviousJhat l.t
was a
.
great way to start off
.a
new.
_
season and it
.
all
points
·oward
·
a successful year on the
·
·
ridiron.
Today':s
Viking
,,.-.
·forinance
-
seems to assure this
fact.
·
*
*
* * *
.
Stepping
in
as placekicker, Jack McDonnell gets set to boom one
through the uprights as quarterback
John Hurly holds.
•••••

















OCTOBER
2,
1969 .
.THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
Two·
Fakes
Later
_A_
L~ug·her
Peas·
And Carrots
,-Campus
Stuff
By Joe Rubino
. TOPIC - The Game, The Game
· .The Vikings Footba),l game with Plattsburg turned out exactly the
way the Vikings planned it on the drawing board.- EVERYTHING
WORKED!!:-
The game lt>oked more~like the Green Bay Packers
. versus the Dutchess County Checkmates ...
Everyone; I mean
.EVERYONE, played well; most notably John Hurley, Bill Dourdis,
Don Ronchi, Dick·Hasbrouck, Bill Iacobellis, Bill McGarr and Dean
Gestal. I say, "mott notably" because obviously, there were the
"most
noticeable".· .. Hidden among the confusion
were fine
performances by Gerry Tyne, Emmett Cook, Frank Attanito, Bob
Harper, Bill Leber, "Benjie" McDonnell Junior Rooney, and others
whose
accomplishments
were
subtly
and
strategically
important ... The most encouraging performance was turned in by a
freshman defensive end, Marty Keely. Making numerous tackles and
recovering a fumble,,he has shown more promise at this stage than
any freshman in the past year. , .The most amazing player on the
· field was perhaps, Dean Gestal. Coach Levine asks his players to play
with "reckless abandoJ1."
If
anyone does not know what this means,
wats;h Gestal sometime. He operates with one thought only, "stop
the ballcarrier." Early in the first quarter, on a 4th and-short-yardage
· situation for Plattsburg, Dean came from 20 yards deep, ending with
a headlong dive to drop the ball-carrier for a four yard loss, setting
up the first Viking touchdown. He was hurt twice during the game,
·but returned to action each time. In the sec!)nd quarter he picked
off a quick slant-in and ran it to the
3
yard line where he was carried
· the rest of the way to Bill Iacobellis .. .If there is a better safety in
club football than Gestal, then
l
don't know why he's· playing club
football...
·
TOPIC - Beginning to See the Light
The Plattsburgh football program is a situation comedy. Their ·
team is so bad, the fans cheered:wildly one time when their QB, Kris
Kringle (Kris Kringle?), actually made it back to the line of
scrimmage. Their biggest charge was during the timeouts when43
little kids, an· about 7 or 8 years old, would go dashing out to the
Plattsburg, huddle with water, towels, cigarettes, beer, coloring
books, and many other interesting items. At halftime, the 43 of
them chose
up
sides and thrilled the fans with a football game of
_their own. After the game, the P.U. coach was seen asking the kids
the.ii shirt sizes .. QUERY! What comes first? A winning team or a
winning attitude? How does a coach acquire a winning attitude?
How does a team acquire a winning attitude? ..... Met question of
the week: How many 1962 Mets are still on the major league ,
rosters? Who are they? ... This weeks YGBKM Award goest to the
6'4" 2401b. "monster" on the Plattsburg team who got into a scuffle
with Bill McGarr. I guess he figured since 'McGarr was smaUcr than
him; he would be no trouble.
If
he only knew ... Start praying,
Iona ...
' *·
* *
*
*
In Perspective
In the words of Coach Ron
Levine, "Mike Towers is · the
perfect example
of the Marist
Football player. He's a young
man
who
came
to· Marist
without.
previous
· football
experience
and
he applied
himself to learning the sport
with ·dedication and zeal."
At
6'3" and 235 lbs., Mike has
all the physical characteristics
for a top notch interior lineman.
His potential
has been well
tapped, as he usually goes at
both offensive
tackle
and
defensive tackle.
After having played Varsity
baseball as a first baseman at St.
Mary's, Mike started his gridiron
career in the fall of I 966. What
he lacked in experience he made
,up in desire, He quickly learned
the ropes under the starting
guard,
Dick Ederle, and his
sophomore year
Mike
started in
the opening game against Iona.
Sine~ then, Mike has held on to
that starting role.
In last year's Spring game
against Iona, Mike played every
offensive
and defensive line
position except center. He also
threw the key block to set up
Dourdis' decisive T.D. run in the-
4th quarter, which iced the first
victory over Iona in the past
three years.
To sum up Mike's value to the
team,
Coach
Levine
said,
.. Without
Mike
and other players
like him, there would never be
any great Marist runners; indeed
there
would
be no Marist
football."
Aside from his contributions
to
the
Vikings,
Mike's
involvement
on campus has
earned
him the position
of
Secretary of the Varsity Club,
and the honor of President of
the Senior Class.
*****
by
Joe McMahon
It
should be another big year at the U especially with the Vikings
off to a good start. With my ~•comrade in crime," Joe Rubeano, and
my little pal Don Duffy,- we'll
try
to keep you well up on
· everything ... Tonight
we
should see just how much psyche is up for
Iona. Don't go to bed too early! •..
A
fresh crop of _chee_rleaders w~
be making their debut this season under
the dtrection of thetr
experienced leader, "Noodles Noona." Last year's "crazy kids" are
still around (you must have noticed the
sign
by the ice cream} but
they will· probably be spread out in different lines of action. -
· However, don't be surprised if they make
a
spontaneous comeback
the moment the spirits move them ... Why has everyone given up on
the idea of a training table? With a
few
changes, like letting everyone
serve themselves instead of having waiters on E.O.A., it could work
out
O.K.
In fact, we might even be ablt to talk Stan Hollis, who does
such a fine job at breakfast, into doing the cooking. After all, one of
the big gripes last year was that the outside help did not want to
cook after 6:30 ... A new dimension has been added to intramurals
this year with the swimming meet scheduled for Oct. 17th at the
new
"Y." Hopefully, it will be the start of something good. Jerry
Garey
is
running the show ... There's a good chance this may be the
year that we finally get our board track. Bro. Pat Gallagher has all
the blueprints from the one he helped build at Molloy and Bob
Mayerhofer is now writing to lumber companies for bids. If we can't
get the full appropriation from the administration, there just may be
another marathon (that should stir up a little excitement - only the
class of '70 was here for the first one) probably to last for a week
during which time the Spiked Shoe Club
will
go on an all-out binge
to raise enough money to start construe tion before the winter. If we
do get the track, it could_ mean that, instead of a bunch of
self-propelled enthusiasts who make the most of a 500 yard concrete
configuration, we might just have a solidly organized team. Then
you'd see more than just one miler at 4:20, and you'd see a
2
mile
relay well under 8:00 at the Garden. Our biggest handicap in
·recruiting Freshmen or high school students
is
not the lack of
scholarships, but the lack ofa place to train ... Have you noticed how
many more people are listening to the campus radio shows. President
"Snake" must be doing something right ... Why shouldn't managers be
invited into the Varsity Club? Should they be kept out of locker
rooms too? ... For those of you who have a gripe, or would like to
make yourself heard on the sports page, or you have a question you
would like to have answered (I'm sure J. Tkach will love this) just
write down the question, ,hand it to one of your local sportswriters,
and we'll take care of it, ala Dick Young ... RALPH!!, please make
PhiLCappio's knee better quick!!...Speaking of hard luck; what can
you do when you outshoot your opponent 21 to 9 and lose
2-0 •...
Erp ....
SOCCER
FROM 8
Manhattan the win.
Although
the team . lost its
opener, much can be said about
the young bunch of kids. The
front
line consists of three
freshmen,
(Rabbitt,
Martinez
and
Depercin),
soph. (Peter
Walaszek)
and
junior,
(Bill
· Kawina). Two freshmen stars
starting at fullback, (Saunders
and Bugin), make this a very
young team with much promise
for
the
future.
Only three
seniors
played, (Sabeta) best
defensive player this side of
Istanbul, (Jim Elliott) and most
important
goalie, (Bob Krenn)
who had 22 saves.
After away games at Western
Conn. State, Bloomfield, and
· Lehman,
the young boaters
return home to face New York
Maritime, Oct. 11 at 2 P_.M. It's a
young team, well worth a look
and. a yell, so 1'11 see you at the
Maritime game. Keep smiling
Nick!
Shots at Goal, Manhattan 25,
Marist
18; Goalies
Saves,
Manhattan
16,
Marist
22;
Offsides, Manhattan
4, Marist 6.
First quarter,
Manhattan
2,
Marist
O; Second
quarter,
Manhattan 0, Marist
I;
Third
quarter, Manhattan I, Marist O;
Fourth
quarter, Manhattan
O;
Marist
1.
Final
3 -
2.
*
*
* *
*
DEANS
"v..
0
~\
discuss the project which was
undertaken
last year on an
experimental basis by the three
Science Departments in forming
, themselves
into the Natural
Science Division. One of the
chief
outcomes
of
this
experiment
. is the
planned
offering
of
a major
in
Environmental
Sciences next
fall.
*****
by Don Duffy
Well, folks, I'm back after
spending third year abroad in
the Bronx. Now I have at least
six months to talk to you on just
about everything.
First
things to happen with
any excitement on campus will
be the fall ·sport scene. Football
is
on the surge again with an
excellent chance of having the
best season any M.C.F.C. team
has ever had to date. All they
need is a few hundred nuts to go
out there and scream their lousy
heads off. So go out and be true
Marist "Marines" and we will
have a most successful season.
Soccer
should enjoy another
very progressive year at Marist.
With a very young bunch of
kids, "Doc" Goldman hopes for
early
maturity
and a good
record, one we all hope he gets.
By the way, if you missed the
picture in the J oumal of our
fearless senior stars, you didn't
miss a thing - (Right Jimmy) -.
To
all our campus stay-ins,
spectators are allowed at soccer
games. I know at least 27 guys
who would be very happy to see
)'OU
at the games. I could_ say
something about cross-country,
but
I'm
sure
our
beloved
co-editor
will
take care of that in
"peas- 'n-carrots".
To all those Irish culture
fanatics, talk to big Ed Fogarty
about the Easter trip to Ireland -
Imagine
a Marist
cultural
exercise in a foreign country ...
Ireland might want to Join the
Commonwealth
again. Rumor
has it that "Das" Valez would
·like to have a swimming team
after the bash of the - 13th.
Congratulations from New Paltz
to "Murph" for the fine goal he
scored for them
in
the recent
scrimmage. Ask Jamie (A Real
Zoo
Man)
about
his
four-in-one-room-plan. Speaking
of plugs ... Wednesday night at
Sal's ... There is
a
new kick
with
the Seniors -
WORK**. Good
listening,
WMCR · Tuesday l :00
-2:00
A.M.
Well, I guess I could write a lot
more but most of it would be
unprintable. Before I sign off, be
sure and remember the home
opener for the Vikings
is .
Oct.
4th against Iona. Get out there
and
scream
your ever-loving
head off. Soccer• has its home
opener
Oct.
11,
against
Maritime. Be there!!! They need
· you.
I hope
Peaches is all
straightened
out now. And
remember,
"Electric,"
keep
turning on all season long. Well,
fans;its been a pleasure.
Love, "Duff"
*****
Gerry
Tyne (87), already past one man, prepares to move
by Kris Kringle.
He
gained
20
more
yards
before
_ being caught from behind at the
5.
This play set up the
Vikings'
first touchdown.
*****
..






























I
;

d
t
i
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- PAGES
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 2
2
1969
...
VIKINGS
WALLOP
PLATTSBURG
28-0
- BOOTERS-,
HARRIERS.BQW
...
. ·,
~
.
.
.;
Marty Keely pounces on a 4th quarter
Plattsburg
fumble. Coming up to assist
Keely are Don
Hinchey (40)
and
Dan
Faison
(44).
This
was one of many fine plays
turned in by the_Marist defense.
'
Soccer
.
t'8im.
Falls
To-Manhattan
3-2
· by'Don Duffy
played on the old World Wa.r I
.
.
.
. battlefield, just bombed hours
-
J'he -Manst Soccer Team lost · -before
the game. Manhattan
to- Manhattan 3.2 last Sa~urday jumped.off to a quick lead with
at Van C(?rtland Park m the
goals by Shimpf
~
and Chipe.
Bronx; .-The Young Red Foxes - Marist's defense didn't jive in the
·were subjected to · the worst
first thirty minutes of the game.
field, half the size of a normal
When Peter Walaszek "zinged" a
soccer field
with
rolling hills and · direct kick past the Manhattan
cricket
balls -flying
in_· all goalie midway in the second
directions. rm sure the. men at
period, the Marist booters came
Marist would like to thank the _ alive. The defense sharpened, led
Manhattan sports office for t~e
by the incredible "Izzy" Sabeta,
fme treatment.
·
John Murphy and frosh, Jim
Meanwhile,
the game w~s Heilman. Marist played
it
strong
Marist's
1969
Soccer
Team:
second half but Manhattan was
able. to score midway in the
third· period on a fluke goal by
Bowles. He never shot; it just
accidentally
hit his shoe and
.went in. Frosh, Tom RaJ:,bitt,
one of the most exciting players ·
Marist has ever seen, scored a
goal with about ten minutes left
in the last quarter. The rest of
the game was played down at
out goal. _ One great save on a
Wala~zek
bullet,
insured·
CONT.ON
7.
Football
JeCllil-
Cops FirSt-
. _ _
.By Nick Squicciarini
-· , The Marist Vikings started off
and
in
the air for . g9· yards, it
what
looks
to
be a most
seemed to solve the question of
successful season by humbling
whetlier the offense . would be
Plattsburg State today 28-0. It
able to move the ball.
was ,a one sided affair, Marist
Outstai!ding· for, the defense
dominating· both the offensive - was' Dean• Gestal, who scored a
and defensfve play and keeping. touchdown with an intercepted
Plattsburg contained in their half . pass and an . assist -from Bill
of the field all afternoon.
Iacobellis. Bill McGarr picked up
The backbone of the Viking
a fumbled punt and ran it for a
team,
the
defense,
played · touchdown;
dragging two men
inspired fodtball determined to
with him for the last five yards.
start the season with a win. They
Gerry Malovet and Dan Faison
· stopped the~ Plattsburg offense -al.i;o pilfered
passes for the
' cold, despite the efforts of their
Vik.es.
_
brilliant QB, Kris Kringle, and
The defensive line of Marty
scored
two
touchdowns
Keely, McGarr. and Joe Ritz at
themselves.
,
_ends, -,Mike Towers, · Micky
, The
offense
- also -proved
Cahill and Frank Attonito
at
themselves,
moving the ball
tackles
and
middle
guards,
almost at will and at times
Cahill, Henry Blum and Bob
looked unstoppable.
Moving on
O
Sullivan played·aggressive ball all
t_he_
ground for over 300 yards
afternoon
practically
shutting
out
the passing with a .terrific
_
Harriers
Drop·
Op·ener
by Steve Sawicki
. rush and constantly
stopping
ball . carries
c:Jn
the line of
scrimmage.
The defensive secondary of
Jack McDonnell; Junior Rooney
and Dean Gestal, shut' out their
receivers all through the game
The strong performance of the
and linebackers, Bill Leber, Don
cross-country team on Saturday,
Ronchi
and
"monster"
Bill
· Sept. 27th, was not enough to Iacobellis were all over the field
overcome the scholarship team and were in on the play every
of Southern Connecticut State.
time you turned around.
Marist bowed iri a 15-50 loss.
It
The offense, lead by QB John
was understood
that Southern
Hurley scored two TD's, one
Conn. State has been recruiting
coming on a 3 yard pass; Hurley
and had a very strong field., to Paccione.
Dourdis
and
Marist _
had only
3
men familiar Hasbrouck looked particularly
with the course and were missing' impressive running around and
such key runners as Phill Cappio
through
Plattsburg's
defensive
- consistently the lead man and line. Hurley also came through
Greg
Howe who has always with a fine game mcluding his
scored.
effective
passing
and agile
, The course at Southern Conn. running
ability,
adding yet
was _ mostly
·flat,
including
another dimension to the Viking
sidewalks,
asphalt and grass, ·ground game. The receivers, Bill
some sand and. two very. steep
Paccione,
BoQ Scott, Chris
hills; a .course Marist runners 'do McNamara
and Tom Cooney
not often encounter. The race were open all afternoon, with
· went out·. extremely fast and Cooney recovering a fumble.
continued
along at the same -
Coach Levine was even able to
CONT.ON6·
CONT.ON6
1st
row,
L to
R.
Frank
Getbes,
Bill Kawina,
Jim
Snyder, Nick Mvub, Ycji Kudo, Frank Demarzo,
Greg Murin.
·
2nd
Row,
L to
R. Dr.
Goldman, Tom Breslin, Neil Fenton,
Gonzalo
Martinez, Tom Rabbitt, Jim Elliott, Ray Asaph,
George
Saunders,
Bob
Krenn.
3rd Row, L to
R,
Ed Walzer, Dave~
Bob
Bergin,
Charlie
Depercin,
John Murphy, Mike Andrew,
Dan
Sobenko, Don
Duffy.
Missing: John
B1lbento,
Jim
Heiman, Isidore Sabeta, Pete Wawzet,
Dan
~
.
..
...
-