The Circle, October 23, 1969.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 4 - October 23, 1969
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._.\.MA'RlST'•:•.JO'l'NS~···1N··-'•oc1•.15t
.:MORAT'ORIUM
..
',,
,,,
Norton~ Drell.n,ert Keynote Speake~s
MR.
JOSEPH
NORTON
.
.
. · The
·p e op le_ o
J
the
·Poughkeepsie area joined forces
with thousands across the nation
last week in support of the
· ; Vietnam
Moratorium.
Local
~
· residents, high· school ·students,
students at Dutchess and Ulster
Community
Colleges, Vassar,
Bennett, New Paltz· and Marist
formed
a committee
to
coordinate·
their·
peace
movement
effort; they ·were
joined
also by teachers. and
· instructors:
• ·
Activities
during the day
include.d
memorial
services,
· films, and discussions on the war
held at various campuses. The
religious studies department at
· Ma rist
College
conducted
services on the eve and at noon
Wednesday. The Moratorium eve
service culminated in an all night
.,vigil
for
peace. During the
' afternoon
of. the fifteenth,
Marist students joined others in
a do or-fo-door
campaign
distributing
·leaflets
·and
· collecting signatures on petitions
· calling for an immediate troop
withdrawal. Later that day a
walk for peace participated in by
about
five thousand
people
throµgh
Po_ughkeepsie
·transpireo;
the
crowd
was
· enthusiastic but orderly_. The
CONTINUED
ON 3
THE
DR. D.A. DRENNEN
::
VOLUME 6 .
NUMBER
4
. 1dARIST
COLLEGE,.~OUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12'101
OCTOBEJ.,l
23.
i969 . .
i,,~;::~ttotatbtittnt:·C1l>sei:,.With·~
GaFdllel',·
lGSlt
and·
FiiS•-··.
-
Goodell,
-
Seeger
·
Higlllight
F.D.R.
-
Symposium
On a very cold fall evening When he flashed the peace sign, -
approximately
5,000. stud~nts· the
cr.owd
roared
an·d'
..
and ·residents of the Mid-Hudson
reciprocated with the same signs.
• ar~a throriged to Riverykw Field
When the crowd ceased its
for the second and final rally of
ovation, G_oodell proceeded with
.
the October 15 moratorium.
·· a speech which was frequently
Waving· banners, flashipg the
interspersed· with applause. _He
peace sign and holding candles,
spoke of
his
staunch opposition
the crowd had assembled to hear
to the war .and of his opposition
Pete Seeger ring out a
f~.w tunes
to the President's policy . .The
.
and to·hear the keynote address · Senator was quite emphatic in
•· · .. _by Senator
. Charles Goodell
stating that the U.S. treaty with
··" , (R-N;Y.) . .
Senator Goodell, who
South Vietnam simply promises
. ·delivered the main address to the
them equipment and training
- graduating class of
'69 at Marist
and that our troops were. not
last-May 31, is considered to be
obligatory according to the same
· a prominent figure in the success
treaty. -.·
_ _
.of · the Moratorium throughout ·
He stated that he could not
the nation because of
his
open
see using American troops in a
opposition· to President Nixon's
fight against Coriununismjust to
Vietnamese policies and.because
leave them in the hands of" ... a
of the bill which he introduced
government of corruption. And
to the. Senate which stipulates
you know what I mean by a
that
all
U.S.
troops
be -corrupt government.; .If they
withdrawan from Vietnam .;by want our help, let them change
January of 1970.
·
· ·
· their government."
The
ceremonies,
originally.
Goodell spoke of a previous
-.cheduled to start.at 7:30
P.M.,
rally -.where
a con_servative
were held up for one half hour.
student sarcastically asked. him
· When they did start, a gentleman
what he would do when he was
from WEOK radio gave a short
retired from the Senatein 1970.
. speech
and
proceeded
to
•-•I
will continue to work for
. introduce Pete Seeger. .
peace" was his reply.
Seeger, wearing a sweatshirt,
_ Except for one elderly _lady
chino pants, and a baseball cap
who pleased the anti-war crowd
entertained the gathering with
with her reprisal of Goodell by
. songs he and others popularized
claiming that
"I
never thought
over· the years. In keeping with _ that I'd see America come to
the spirit of the occasio~, most
this," and that she was ashamed
of his . songs displayed anti-war
of Goodell and would not vote
themes.
Particularly
well
for him, there were no counter
recieved were his· vexsions of demonstrations.
"Bring Them Home," a song
·
* * • "'
*
which dealt with the absurdity
of the military and a plea to
bring home the men in Vietnam,
and "I Want to Go to Andora,"
a rather quaint melody about a
nation that. "spent _$4.90. on
their defense."
Senator Goodell had entered
the
field
during
Seeger's
rendition. When Seeger finished,
Goodell
was
greeted by wild
applause and a standing ovation.
GOOD
WEEKEND
For
-Sports
see
,1. I
By Ray Frontain
The Fifth Annual Franklin D.
Roosevelt
Symposium
took
place Saturday, Oct. 18, in ihe
Campus Center. The theme was
:"FDR
as
a Diplomatist."
.
· In
his
opening remarks; Bro ..
Linus
Foy,
President of Marist
College, . welcomed
the , 200
guests
and called the Symposium
"a little Marist miracle," in that
so small a college as Marist could
attract so reputable and large a
community of scholars.
Joining
Bro.
Linus
in
welcoming · the group was Dr.
George H. Skau, Chairman of
the Marist History. and Political
Science
Department
and
moderator of the Symposium,
Dr. Skau
pointed
out the
relevancy of the theme in that,
twenty-five
years
later, the
problems offending a war and
securing a lasting peace (FDR's
goals· as a diplomatist) are still
very much significant. He also
expressed the hope that other
colleges and presidential libraries
would join together and produce
other events of this sort.
Presenting a , paper entitled
"Roosevelt:
Perils of · Second
Front
Diplomacy,''
was Mr.
Lloyd
Gardner, Professor of
History at Rutgers University
and
author
of· ECONOMIC
ASPECTS OF THE NEW DEAL.
In a panel discussion following
the paper,
Mr.
James MacGregor
Burns,
Professor of Political
Science at Williams College and
author of
THE
LION AND THE
FOX, stressed the point that
Roosevelt was tom between
his
own desires · and
those of
Churchill and Stalin, and
was
again divided by his desire to
be
a good commander-in-chief who
. would lose as few American lives
as
possible, and
~
desires to
win the
war as quickly
as
possible. and bring about his
Four Freedoms for the world.
Panelist John Tolan, author of
THE
LAST
I 00
DAYS,
commented
on Roosevelt's
tragic
naiveness of Japanese
problems and of our blunder of
entering into
a war
with Japan.·
He also spoke of the racial
implications of the war, how
they influenced the diplomacy
of the war, and how they still
affect
us today: "We do still not
believe in the self-determination
of nations unless they are white
nations."
A
third panelist, Mr. Irving G.
.Williams, Professor of History at
CONTINUED
ON
7
PAGE2
·:}:~s!~il~
.
·""·~-....,,."·
Fort Dix, New Jersey: Entrance to-the Stockade.
111ECIR.CLE
OCTOBER 23, 1969
''Freedom'~
at Fort Dix.
FORT
DIX,
N.J; (LNS)
represented establishment papers.
"OBEDIENCE TO
THE
LAW IS
and radio and
TV
stations.
FREEDOM," reads the sign over
"You can see anything
.you
the• entrance to the Fort Dix
want to see." (Col. William
0.
Stockade.
",
Gall, Chlef of Staff at Fort Dix.)
.
"Colonel, who was responsible
' ' N o
p h o tog rap h
s
·
,o
f
fortheselectionofthatslogan?"
pri-soners ... No contact
or
"Who was responsible? Well, I
conversation between newsmen
don't know, really. It's been
and prisoners." (Guidelines for
here for years and years and we
the Visit to Stockade by Media.)
really like it."
.
The newsmen were cynical
The Fort Dix Stockade is the
about the tour, and
·t_he
Arm's
largest military prison in the
refusal to let them speak to
country, with the exception of
prisoners didn't alter their view.
the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at
Nor did the steak dinner the
Ft. Leavenworth. During 1968,
men were being served in the
according to Army figures, and
mess hall.
It
was clearly not a
average
of 705
men were
typical stockade meal.
.
confined
behind·. the double
"I
wish you guys would come
cycl_one fence and concertina
more· often.
We'd get more
ba~b wire.· The guards in the _ steak ... We hate the food. People
stockade are unarmed; those in-. spit on it." (comments from
the guard towers have s_hotguns.
prisoners in the mess.)
The most common reason for
·
It's easy to
·understand
why
.
men being put
in
the stockade is
the Ar.my. is concerned about
that they went AWOL. About
"s.ecurity"
in
.the
mess hall and
one quarter of the men AWOL
throughout
.the
stockade.
ai:e from Fort Dix itself; the
Defiance· is in the air. As the
others·· are
men· taken into
newsmen
walked
past
'the
custody in New Jersey, New
barracks, prisoners leaned out
York,
or Fairfield
County,
the window and shouted:·
Connecticut.
.
."We're
fighting for peace,
Th~re has been a flurry of
.
man."
interest in the press and concern
"Tell the truth about this
.
in Congress about conditions in
·
place."
Army stockades, following the•
"There's
.no
hot
-water,.
not
murder of a mentally-ill prisoner
enough to eat."
·
in the Presidio Stockade, and the
"See
what they do to their
"mutiny"
court-martial of the
Vietnam veterans."
Presidio
27. - prisoners who
"Why won't they let you rap
protested the man's shooting by
with the prisoners?"
a guard.
·
A
sergeant snapped at the
Because
·of
this adverse public
prisoners:
·
"You, you're on
reaction,
the
PenJagon has
report to me! Get down there!"
ordered that several stockades be
·
The. men showed defiance of
Cell
Block
60
-was.
the
highpoint
Of ·
curiosity
·
in
··
the
minds of the reporters. Fourteen
men are being held there
as
alleged
deserters • including
.
Terry Klug, an. organizer for
RITA
(Resistance
·
Inside
.
the
Army), and Donald Williams,
who
was· sentenced
to
six
months in the stockade after his
voluntary return from
.Sweden.
.Cell Block 60 first_ gained
notoriety after the publication
of a letter written
by
Dpn
Williams. He
.told
how he was
beaten· by a guard, Spec. 5
Young, because
"I
·
had been
getting on hls nerves."
-'
.
Far grimmer than Cell block
.
6
0 , tho ugh-,
•
are
the
"segregation," cells. Thir:ty men
are being held
in
6'
x
8~ cells. Six
of them are in "disciplinary
segregation,"
.('~for.
fighting,
mostly,''. an army official said.)
.
The
rest
·
in ~•administrative
'
·
segregation" '.'""
because they are
considered
"escape
·:.risks,"
''homosexual,''..
-~'narcotics
addicts" or "sensitive!'
·
. ·.
-.Reports·
from
prisoners
indicate
that
.conditions
in
"segregation"
are subhuman.
·
An Army officer said,. "We
·
.
only· put men
..
in restraints
·
if
they are suicide risks."
. .
·
.
Men in disciplinary segregation
may be put on a ''restricted
diet"
for
-
14
days at a time
·
as
punishment.
·"It·
is•
·the·
·
same
meals served to other prisoners,"
Major Casey · said, "with the
exception .that there is no meat,
·
.
no fruit, no deserts, no milk, no
5,000
March
at Fort Dix
·.
opened to fours by newsmen.
that sergeant, and of· the bras~
On Wednesd~y, April 16,
50
or
who were herding the newsmen
so newsmen climbed into Army
through at a slow run; prisoners
buses for a trip to the Fort Dix
flashed
V-signs through the
Stockade.
Except
for two
windows and raised clenched
reporters arid a photographer•
fists.
When
LNS. reporters
from
LIBERATION
News
responded,
-the
fists and V-signs
poultry;• no dairy products. The
only drink permitted is water."
.
There
·are
some
hopeful
aspects. here, however. Last year,
FORT
,DIX,
New Jersey -
(CPS) - At least 5,000 persons
marched
Oct.
12
to protest
charges against 38 Gls of arson,
conspiracy, and rioting. The GIS
.
had protested their
·
oppression
while serving at'. Fort Dix ~nd
·
may be sentenced to.43 years in
.
prison
each.
CPS Reporter·
Nancy
Beezley attended
the
protest
march, and filed the
following report:
.
-
.
·
marching eiglit abreast. or at
least trying. sometimes two link
arms. sometimes three or ten.
save bullets for your army.
·
don't· break ranks or we'll
never conquer the united states
army.
three
helicopters
.
are
circling, circling, circling here in
wrightstown
new
jersey.
no-rights-town garden
state
u.s.a.
where 38 gj_s may be. sentenced
to
43
years each. because they
rebelled.
·
·,
·
.
.,.
because 750
.
prisoners were
crammed into a stockage built to
h.ouse 350:
•
because many were
cra_mnie.d into an army stockade
for
.opposing
the war in vietnam,
for saying, "g.i.s understand that
the
.same
system
which
.
imprisons black leaders, draft
resisters, and
•student
activists
oppresses them. our. struggle is
together." because when a man
asked for
_something
to drink on
a
hot
.
afternoon he was put in
the
hole. because men were
forced to stand at attention in
the sun for five hours.
so
they got tired and· the
rebelled and threw lockers. out
of
the
windows·
and
set
mattresses
on fire
·
and broke
some
windows.
over
200
rebelled.
38
have been charged
with
arson, conspiracy, riot.
anti-war g.i.s issued a call: "as
gJ.s we now recognize that our
personal
lives
are being sacrificed
for
the selfish
economic,
political, and sick motives of the
ruling class of this country - that
class
which
conceived
and·
perpetuates this army. what we
have
as
gis
is a situation in which
there is very little choice, the
stockade
or unquestioning
obedience to the m~litary; or to
quote the military, 'obedience to
the law
is
freedom.'
.. today (october 12), we are
gathered-together to protest the
inhumane
conditions of the
most powerful and destructive
organization in the world, the
united states army. for too long,
gi's felt along and isolated in an
atmosphere of fear and control.
for too long gi's. have said to
themselves,
,'what.
can
i
do
alone?'->'
•.
.
.·
.
.
.
.
so we came .. dema~ding~ the
release of the fort dix 38 and the
abolition of the stockade system
and the release of all political
prisoners
in
clvilian and military
prisons and an immediate end to
the war in vietnam.
.
.
5,000, inaybe more, marched
for the fort dix 38. chanted for
the abolition of the stockade .
system. rallied for the release of
the panther
.21
•
and huey p.
newton and the presidio
27
and
the conspiracy 8. got gassed for
the end to war in vietnam.
·
marching from the off-base
and
bullet-torn
.fort
dix
coffeehouse
...
to the on-base
stockade where the fort dix 38
are
.
imprisoned ... back off-base
to the main entrance of fort-dix.
·
chanting
fort
dix brass lias got
to go red red power
_tO"
.
the red
red people black
.
black power to
the black black people
gi
power
to the gi people power to the
people.
·.
·
·
·
..
· ..
past the town people. some of
··
them
_waving
·and
returnipg peace.
signs. sonie of thein just- looking.
some of th~m
.
shouting angry
words.
·
.··
past
the
.
warning
sign
unauthorized
demonstrations
prohibited. past the barbed wire.'
past the first. line of military
·
police. across the grassy field
toward
th~ stockade.
the
helicopters
circling
circling
circling.
·
·
·
·
stopping
in
a huge
quarter-circle near the stockade.
the army green cop cars speeding
across the field and a huge
prisoner wagon pulling up. «gi's
are our friends join
us
free the
fort
dix
38
end the
war
now."
the m.p.'s putting on
gas
masks.
hardly time
to
stop. no
time
to take notes. the soldier saying
disperse or we'll use chemicals.
everybody turning away. eyes
watering. coughing. trying to
breathe.
before
the march gassing
march there was a rally.
before the
march
kathy russel
whose husband is in the stockage
and
is
up for a possible 7S-year
sentence was
.saying
he wrote
kathy where's the compassion in
Service,
the
journalists
multiplied.
.·
·
· ·
.
·
· .
16 men escaped directly from
the, stockade, and others from
parole or work details
·
361
escapees_ in alL
·
Cor-nell:
·stud-ies
lihaca,
N. Y
.-(1.P.)-The
chairman of
,a
commission to
study
the future of student
organization
at
CorneJl
Univeristy
has
recommended
establishment
of a council
representing
_the
entire
.:St_uilent
·1nvolvemetii->
University community to make
·
committee, representative of the
vital policy decisions quickly.
entire University
'community,
·
The·
recommendation
is
"Probably
such" a. council
contained
in a report prepared
would be needed in the best of·
by Robert S. Morison, chairma1.
times
but
it
is· c 1 early
of the 13-member President's
indispensable in a time· of rapid
Commission
on
Student
change
like
the
present,".
In-volvement in Decision-making.
Morison said. "During the past
the world,·where are the people
The Commission was asked to
few
years, a number of incidents
who care? and here they are and
~.'~tudy
..
the ... (utur~
·
.qf
.stu4ent
l:ta ve
o c curred,
for
the
i
love you.
·
.
:
_
organization· ao d
·
how
it
can'f:1est settlement
of which rio clear
before the march they_ s~y line
relate· to tbe educational·
·and·
policy· line seems to have been
up
,eight
abreast. new jersey new
institutional· operation -of the; available. Most of
·
these
·
were
.
york.
then
philadelphia. link
University."
dealt
with
-by-
ceiitral-
arms.
·
but it's too hard. the
·
The
11
?-page
chairman's
adn,inistration
·
on an ad· hoc
.
anarchists have to
·carry
signs
report also contains a detailed:
temponfry
basis
and
·
then
and the radio free people have to
analysis of th e «discontented·:
ref erred
to: some· speciai
carry
;
tape
recorders
and
st udent"
an
<l
_ml;lkes
specific"' committee
-
or·
·comniissibn:
for
everyone has· to
·carry
a camera
proposals
for
correcting'
more·_detailedstudy.·:.,
'.
_
and
.
a
.
few people ~re ,wr;iting situations
.
which' 'bring about,'.·
"Ultinfately, the'·deliberatirii_i~
things 4own and
.the
rest are
st udent
unreS t ,. ~orison
of· such
a·
comrrijssion·:ni.ay.
carrying the
.
philadelphi
..
·a -free. emphasized
.
that. the report is;
.
.
th'
·r .
'f
.......
rt'
·
·
n'ot
a statement
of the:;
e11!frge
m
e
orrn·q
..
a:r~pQ •
press
.·and
the wall newspape~
Commission as a whole. He said.
·
This may· then be "referred
to
and
.
a
·publicity
sheet from_ the
it is his attempt
as
chairman to·· various
-relevant·
·constituendes
student mobilization committee.
ori
the camp·us for. further' stu~y:
write_ 267~2000 on· your hand
"summarize th
e
majorpoints of] and· discussfo·n.-·
The
·
ffoal
.
in case something happens. there
d~cussion
~Y
th e Commission
synthesis, if any, may take the
will
be lawyers at that number
.
wit~ emphasis on th os7 th at bear
form of a faculty resolution, an
and at
.
the state police station
partic~a~Iy_ o~he design of !!eW._. exe~utive action: on
:the
part of
and the county court and· the
orgaru~tional arra!1gements.
·
·
·
the
·ad~tratioii,
·
oi- forinal
wrightstown court and the jag
.
lt!~nson also. pomted out th at
decision
by the
Board of
office. carry the bust' sheet with
tndlVldual papers prepare~ . by
Trustees.
.
·
·
you in case you witness an arrest
me~ bers of th e <:omnuSSion
''At/
no
stage
in·.
these
.
it is essential for the· safety and
deal
m
m?re d7pth with s~rne of
proceedings is there opportunity
the
defense.
of your fellow
th e_ top,ics included_ m the
·
for direct exchange of views
demonstrators.
·
~hairman s report, and ,
m
several
among all the interested: parties,
and after the march we pass a m~tances_,
express
different
much less for determination of
middle-aged black woman sitting
pomtsofview.
some
group
decision·
or
in her car. an m.p. standing
E!ents
_of_ the
P~
year,
consensus.
In
these
beside. we give her a peace
sign
Monson said m the chamnan's
circumstances,,a decision by any
andaclenchedfist.sheraisesher
report,
have
revealed
a
one
constituency
is viewed
hand a little and gives
a
clenched
• '
P
r
O
f_o u
?
d
.,1
a
ck
O
f
purely on procedural grounds.
f'ist and a peace sign.
co~munications
between
"It would seem far better if
after
.the
march we walk back
va~1ou~ groups
within
the
major policy issues could.
be
past the rows of m.p.'s to the
!-fru_v~mty. He ad~ed that the
dealt with in the
first
instance
parking lot. things
are
more
CilSls atmosphere_ of th e last
by a broadly
representative
casual.
the good humor man
is
two weeks of April have shown
group already in being and•with
selling his stuff. we go in groups
how great th e gap w~ and has
experience in the consideration
of two or three. dozens of gi's su~est~
some machinery for
of similar matters."
give
the peace
sign.
some
look
clOSing it.
.
Alth
gh
f • ·
away. a nu"ddle-"'ged black cat
The_
r_e Po rt _said
the
ou
one
o
·its
important
-°
C
functions would be to advise and
says it
wasn't worth it was it?
if
0
~'!1
15s•~n con
51
dered
n_ew
consult
with
the University
it helps the fort dix
·
38. if
it
a":mmiStratiVe st ruct~
w!rlc~
President at his request as new
helps end the war. if dozens of
nught help ~Ive th e ~ruveJSJty 5
or unusually pressing issues arise
military police give the peace
problems.
A possible model
the primary function
of th~
sign.
it was worth it.
!V'as found at least by some of us
endit okay
m a council, senate, board or
CONTINUED
ON
3
'
.
OCTOBER 23.1969
DIE CIRCLE
Educational
Television
Offered
for Credit
·.
.
By· George Roarty'
·
1:here
are
four
programs
.
Presently,
the students at
available
·in
televis1·on on· e of talking to Bro. Brian Desilets,
Mans· t are able t
d"
head of the televis·
1·on center ;.,
0
earn ere it
which is offered this semester.
..
..
out side of the classroom in
Thi
Donnelly, he mentioned that he
several ways. Aniong these are
s program is sponsored by would like to see these programs
the ·.Independent
Studies
the University of the Air and incorporated
into the present
Progr~m,
. College Proficiency.
offers three courses: Beginning curriculum in the near future.
Ex
t
d
German (Guten Tag)-12.00 a Brother Brian went on to say i·f
amma ions an
Television
credit. American History J-22.45
courses.
!hese
courses were incorporated
The
IND E p ENDE
NT
per
credit;
Basic Astronomy
mto the· curriculum, students
STUDIE" PROGRAM
(Eye on th e Universe) 7.75 per would be. hired to video-tape the
.
..,
basically
credit. The other three programs
involves
corr
d
program so that it may be shown
espon
ence
are
Sunrise
Semester which
bet we
·
th
t
d
t
d
at a convenient time. In add1·t1·on
en
e s u en s an
offers a math course and a
professors who teach. the same
1
.
to this
teachers
would be
courses
~in
residence at the
geo ogy course; En France which em ployed
to register
the
institutions.
of the
State
is a language
course;
and students, correct any exams and
.
University of New· York. Besides
..
Channel
.
l 3/WNDT
.
mentioned
supervise the· class: However, he
above which offers courses in emphasized·
the
fact
·that·
correspondence with a professor
Amer1·cans
from Afn·ca and
t d
th
·
t d t · d"
·
s u ents and· teachers would
·
e s u en
is
1rected by a
Gu· ten
..
Tag·. Also there- are h
h
t d
·d
ul
ave to s ow an interest in such
s
u
Y
gw e, reg ar readings in
courses offered in the field of courses
in order
for
•
these
course.
textbooks
and
on
Contm· um··gEducat1·on.
b
·
·
d"
· al
programs to
e employed in a
occasion au 10-vJS_u aids, taped
Up uritil
_now
these programs
l
A
.
lectur·es and
th
d"
regu ar progr_
am.
n_
y mterested
,
·
·
o er me 1a are
have been· optional. How_
ever, in
available.
·
CONTINUED ON 6
·
Students who feel they have ____
.,.....
_____________
:;_,_::....:,::..:._:
__
_
That is, namely, removing the
urgency of the movement by
making the goals of the peace
movement, among others the
immediate
withdrawal
of
American troops from Vietnam,
a part
of administration
verbiage. He also questioned the
merit
of
making the peace
movement
·
"fashionable,"
as
happened with the civil rights
movement,
which
leads to
further cooptation and eventual
gained mastery
'in
one or more
courses in high school or have·
.
N_ORTON,
DRENNEN
g·ained
·
knowledge
from
experience outside the classroom
may.
take
·COLLEGE
PROFICIENCY
EXAMINA-
TIONS.· If for
example,
a
·.
student has· proved that he has
mastered a subject (through the
exam) which is a required course
at
Marist,
he may have the
.
requirement waived. Credit may
also be given for the course but
it must
·
be in accordance with
Marist's academic policies.
E D
.U
C AT
I
ON A L
TELEVISION
COURSES are
another means available to he
student
for acquiring credit
outside of class. These can be
used in both a supplementary
and complimentary way. In a
supplementary way they would
aug~ent
a. student's
present
curnculum.
·
There
are
no
prerequisites for
-
these courses.
The student
is
supplied with a
specially designed study guide
providing
him
with a general
su·mmary
of each
lecture
outlines·:· of assignments and
•
quizzes· used for the student's
own· self-evaluation, Each lesson
:
:
.
·
m~y be telecast more than once
· \
~hich i~ a
_help
in clearing up
some pomt that isn't completely
understood ..
·
In a complimentary
way
.·
!~ache~
-
:may
use this dynamic
from.
I
·
.
walk terminated
at Riverview
·Field· at which point several
speakers
·
addressed the large
crowd. Among the speakers were
.Reverend Hugh F. Miller of the
Dutchess
County Council of
Churches, J:leter Kane,
-a
1968
congressional·
candidate and
-
Reverend
·
Robert
Dixori.
A
second peace rally was held at
Riverview Field at seven thirty
that evening featuring folk singer
· Pete Seeger and
·
U.S. Senator
Charles Goodell of New York.
As
part
of .the
·Marist
community's participation in the
moratorium
two-
faculty
J)lembers, Dr .. D.A. Drennen of
the Philosophy Department and
Mr.
Joseph
Norton
of the
History
department
set the
theme cif the day with a round
of keynote addresses.
'
Mr.
_Norton,
the first speaker
of. the
day
enunciated
a
fundamental
·
thesis concerning
the
peace movement in the
United States.
Mr.
Norton, no
stranger to reform movements in
the United States, raised the
question
of the government
co-opting
.
the peace movement.
death of the movement.
Mr.
Norton
in his fervid speech
called for immediate withdrawal
of. American
troops
from
Vietnam,
.
an overhaul of the
military system eliminating the
draft,
an investigation
to
determine
.
"responsibility"
for
the war in order to prevent
anoth~r foreign
.policy
mistake,
and fmally. a broad inquiry
into
the
circumstances of defense
contracts,
namely
the
publication of the names' of the
defense
contractors
and the
names of former
military
leaders
wh.o · are
·employed
by.
these
contractors:
Mr.
:
Norton was questioned
concerning the timetable of U.S.
removal
of forces.
Several
persons
argued·
that
the
President's "Vietminization"
of
the war is a step in the right
direction. However most agreed
that
an accelerated
troop
.
withdrawal
is needed.
,Mr.
.
instructional·
.
tool
·
to bring
an
·
.
-added
~ensioIJ.
to the present
.--------------
cl.asstoom
situ,ation.: Subjects
·covered
oil the
television
programs may not be covered in
Norton's speech while fostering
. ·
an air of_ immediacy was also
a. students course or may not be
·
included in the curriculum at all ..
..
For example; Marist
is
lacking in
·
an Afro-American Course, under
Chan,nel_ · 13 /WNDT
T.V.
,
program
·any ..
interested student
would be able to take the course
A!ll~ricans
from
·
Africa: A
Histo_ry for credit and be able to
put
it
towards his B.A; degree.
Teachers may/ want to use a
particular lecture on T.V. which
may cover.
a
·particular
area well
or any
area
which
·
wasn't
included at
a11
·
in their lectures.
SOCIAL COMMITTEE
wishes to extend·
their. Thanks
to
the
Italian
Society · ..
for
their
<:fecorations
at
Fall
Weekend
The newly constructed motorcycle rack
will
add a
new dimension
to
tile
lower
parking
loL
The idea
was
conceived
by
Mr. Ronald
Aderholdt,
Director or
Security.
The rack affords tllert protection
but the students must
supply
weather protection themsem!S.
.
future oriented in the sense that
conce!n not
·only
for the ending
of ttus war, but prevention of
another
possibly
in
·
Latin
America, was affirmed.
Dr.
Drennen
gave
a
philosophical
and historical
·
· meaning to the Moratorium by
an analysis of the methods of
Mohandas Kararnchand Gandhi,
the great
_Indian
leader who
~orked
for
·
Indian. rights and
independence. The basis of the
.
address
was the
method
Mahatma Gandhi used; termed
Satyagraha,
a sanskrit word
meaning truth force and the
counterpart
of the method
·
.
A,hisma
·
meaning non-violent.
The
enunciated
method
of
Gandhi was adopted by the late
·
Dr. Martin Luther King in the
form of non-violent resistance.
*****
BLOOD
DRIVE
_MONDAY
FIRESIDE
LOUNGE
PAGE3
actual
residential life of 'the
faculty is no longer visible to
proposed body, Morison's report
students except as visitations are
-~id,
would be to foresee policy
arranged
during
freshman
issues and devise courses of
orientation week, and this has
action
before
the situation
about as much impact as a trip
reached emergency proportions.
to the zoo."
It
also
would
have overall
The report points out that the
responsibility
for other joint
student functions not only as a
committees set up to consider
member of the community but'
special
policy
or operating
as ~n individual.
It
gives
prpblems.
·
particular attention to ways of
CORNELL
FROM 2
The new body would · not
increasing the students' sense of
replace the Faculty Council in
responsibility and control over
matters normally regarded as the
his own academic career.
latter's
primary
sphere
of
One recommendation was that
influence. Instead, the new body
all. colleges and departments
would operate in the "broad
should
continue to
examine
range
of issues
for which
their requirements with a view
conventional faculty machinery
toward
modifying
them to
has been found inadequate."
encourage the student to take
Morison said it could be hoped
increasing
responsibility
for
that eventually the University's
fashioning his own educational
Board of Trustees might' "pay
career.
careful attention"
to the new
Another recommendation was
body's
recommendations
in
that faculties of various colleges
matters of overall policy.
.
should examine their advisory
The report, after an· exhaustive
SYS
tem and, where necessary
analysis
of the
situation,
·
take steps to ensure that every
concluded that student unrest is student has
a
chance to develop
not simply a revolt
against
an
a continuing relationship with a
existing order. Rather, it said
it
wise and concerned member of
is in large part.a quest for
3
se~se
the_ faculty who can help him
of community.
·
design an educational experience
"Today," the· report said, "a
suitable to his present capacities
·
f
and future needs.
community o students, faculty,
and
administrators
living
·
A third recommendation was
together
in relatively
close that the possibility be studied of
pr?ximity
·
and interacting one
postponing final registration and
w 1 t h t he
o t h er
i n the
encouraging students to "shop
deveJop~ent of
a
moral order no
around" at the beginning of a
1
term.
on~er
exists,
if indeed,
it
ever
A
final recommendation
on
existed.
Faculty
and
a dministrator.s,.
like
other
academic
matters
was that
middle-class
urbanites,
have
.
departments, educational policy
moved to suburbia.
comn:iittees
_and the college
"There
is an interesting
faculties provide opportunities
parallel between the abandoned
for qualified students to reduce
campus
and
the abandoned
course credit requirements and
central city. Like the central
pursue independent study and
city' the campus is simply a research. It should be left to the
place of work to the professor.
individual
coJleges to· decide
He comes to work at 8 a.m.
or
whether
the
effectiveness
of
·
later and leaves at s":30 p·.m. or such individual work should be
.earlier.
Occasionally, he comes
evaluated on the basis of
a
back for a concert, lecture, ball
.
general examination, a thesis or
both.
game, or reception at the White
Art Museum. Otherwise
after
five o'clock, the campus' is left
to the students.
"Thus, the student
is
given no
actual community leadership, at
least from the older generation.
The esteemed professor is not
there,
setting
some
kind of
example (good or bad but at
Ie~st 'Yith moral implications)
~1th h1s proper (or
c~nceivably
improper) wife and the campus
small-fry. The stern
,president
does not preside on the hill. The
Toralb·alla
To
Lecture
·
In a lecture that should be of
interest to both historians and
mathematicians,
Dr. Toralballa
will introduce his new discovery
of a coordinate-free· geometric
definition
of derivative and
tangent
to a curve.
This
presentation will be in the form
of a "sneak preview" of a major
article to appear shortly in the
Journal of the Society for the
Advancement of Science.
Dr. Toralballa will show that
his
.. new"
definition. stems
directly and. naturally from the
simplest of ideas as introduced
by the Greeks prior to 330 B.C.,
and makes no use whatever of
either Analytic Geometry or the
theory of limits of sequences. In
this connection, Dr. Toralballa
will clearly demonstrate that if
the
Greeks had possessed a
better
understanding
of the
properties of real numbers, they
would
have
most
certainly
discovered these new definitions
themselves, three hundred and
thirty years before the birth of
Christ. This should be sharply
contrasted with the fact that it
was not until the seventeenth
century (20 centuries later) that
the derivative and the related
problem of tangents to a curve
w
a s firrally given meaning by
the great Isaac Newton. After
listening to
this
lecture, it will be
difficult for the student not to
speculate on the impact such a
discovery would have had on all
of civilization had the Greeks in
~30 B.C. p~rsued these simple
ideas to therr logical conclusion.
*****
lEllERS
FROM 5
small college) has
to fight
harder
(than
graduates
of "Q.ig
name
colleges")
to prove
hlmse1f
.
worthy of a job.
I question
the
frame of
reference
under
which this
article is written. Was the writer
a paid
reporter
gathering
information or a Marist College
student,
or both?
Is that
possible? There
is
no indication
either in
ot
outside the article
relating
'to
the
writer's
credentials
or his sources of
information .
If
the author were a Marist
student - and he is - it should be
so stated. In a discussion with
Mr.
Begley, he informed me this
was implicit in his writing. I fmd
this not true to fact.
.
What has he written? He's
written a feature story or is it a
n~ws sfo~ about small colleges
with Manst as the representative
sample. On what basis does he
proport this?
•
M
a r i s t i s , r a t h e·r , a
s m a
l 1 -
-
-
-
-·
- - ~----college.
Can
someone fill in the blank? Mr.
Begley can't.
What
is the
truth
about
Marist? It's not
all
peaches and
cream, but we do have nearly
400
freshmen,
the
Marist
student is aware of himself, and
we
have
a multi-faceted
program. Thank you for stating
the obvious.
Is this a lead feature of a series
of articles about Marist College?
If
it
is,
I'm
sure
the
administration
would like to
contribute.
If
what you say is true about
the Marist graduate having to
fight
harder to prove he is
worthy of a job, then, distribute
. your series to the Class of I 970.
They'll need to read our own
publicity to suIVive the uphill
battle.
What you are really saying is
you acknowledge the inferiority
of the small college in deference
to the "big name" college.
If
Marist College needs this
kind of publicity to pat itself on
the back, then, Marist is really
inferior. We have the complex,
and rightfully, are living it.
I hope Mr. Begley will publicly_
: COllol'TINUED
ON 6
,I
• 1
i
I
PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 23, 1969
·
Faculty
·Focus
The
Ruminations
Noles
From.
Bogota
The·
Silent·
laiOrity
·
.-
·
By Paul Browne
·
assure·
its economic
sucCeSs
and
Of
a
·
Ma·
an·1,·gh·,.e·
r··
·
The moratorium
on dissent
security, there is now talk of a
~
.
.
.
'
.
,
.
, .
·
•
which President Nixon suggested
"Third World" - a world where
·
·
during his campaign for high.
capitalism USA-style is hardly•
,
·
by Charles
P. Brambilla
laymen committed
to serving
office, is one that must end.
welcomed. The question now
is_
A
Lecturer in Sociology - a
their community·
·
.
.
Silence on convictions is a rather
whether or not America's prime
Moonlighter
-
a part-time
'All
of this is said to describe
hazardous
road to- travel. As
concern
·will·
be U.S. profit
professor - an extra job.
~ a the student gap with which· I
Miguel de Unomuno said, "at
making in the Americas, or
iil
professional
social
worker
must identify. On the one hand,
times to say nothing is· to lie."
shaping
a meaningful foreign
-teaching
contemporary
social
the necessary academic training
As an act of unity with the
policy
that
can
evaluate
problems or applied sociology -
in Sociology, Psychology
a
nd
.
students in the United States,
intelligently
conditions in the
·
or the man who appears in the
Social Work to prepare me
to
and in order to explain' our
under-developed
nations
of
Day and Evening Division for
2
work in th e Social Welfare field.
opposition
to the
war
in
Latin America.
three credit courses and fades
On the other hand , th e daily
MR. CHARLES BRAMBILLA
Vietnam, students studying in
·
And in Asia? Will we continue
a·way
just
as unnoticed.
contact with very
real
people
. Colombia
have composed a
to assume
a
role that concerns
Fulfilling
this
role is very
with very real problems.
..
hours on Campus I have no pat
statement to. be
.presented
the
itself
pdmarily
with·· the_
rewarding,
providing me with
Is there a point
·at
which we
answers. 1 must spend mo st of
United States Ambassador here,
..
containment of communism? Or.
1
·
the opportunity
to share in an
can
separate
th e academic
my time in my
full
time job.
If
we. did
not
voice
our. - will we look· at Asia as an·
•
academic setting that
is
both
pursuit
from
th e personal
·
St ill I miss th e atmosphere of
opposition,
Colombians cou~d · expiodirig continent
fu-
need of
Challenoing and frustratm· g
..
An
experience? Is there a common
the real Marist community with
.
h
1
h
1
.
h
~
al
.
.,.
·
d
11 f ·
1
-··
th
.
_rig
t y assume
we. are
m
e p, wit vezy
..
1ew terna_t1ves
academl·c world niade up onJy·of
ground
for
the expenence
a o its concerns.
am sure
e
.
h
t
I
f
.
~
agreement wit our govemmen
.
e t open to 1t.
.
_
. ·
students..
evening student of thirty-.1ivc
older evening division students
- "at times to say nothing is to
.
And Africa? - Where nations
As One Who Was a
.
toddler
with
three children and·
.the
feel as
I do -.apart from college
,,
·
-
·f
lie..
'.;.
violently
struggle·•
or.
during the Depression, faced the
college senior of twenty who is
life. However; th e Day st udent is
But student protest-to the.war
.,
self-determination.
Our history
Draft in 1945 and 1950 and has
still dependent on his parents? Is
also apart from the community
mu st
make
meaningful
is not soiled there~ bufin .the::
spent 20 years in most phases of
there a meeting point· for the
and oftentimes too critical of a
conclusions, not just noise. Why,
..
future, how will our. policies
social work, from reform schools
student with thirty-five years of
society that he is not shaping yet
for example, has our foreign.
develop?.
.
to
foster homes,· from family
living
experience·
with the
but in which he lives.
li
d
d
f thl
ki
p
·d
N"
uld
h
po cy an
mo es o.
n. ng__
.
r~s1 ent
1xon
·WO
·
rat er
court to psychiatric clinic, from
twenty year old who has yet to
We talk about th e Draft. The
not changed, or at least made.
·
have us quiet. But as citizens and·
childrens' institution to family
face the exigencies of life? What
college
senior
•is,
of course,
adaptations in a changing world?
as
.
students.
we
-should
.be
,
agencies; I cannot help but look
is the place for the Moonlighter
concerned about his future. But
If
we are to assure that no more_ committed not to silence - but
.
at social problems through the
who brings his experience to the
he th inks only in terms of
Vietnams occur, the thinking in
to change; committed to change
eyes of experience. Experience
classroom
right
from the job and
Vietnam.
The older student
America,. which has allowed us
a
foreign policy which has led to.
that brought
me
in contact with
the
-professor
who spends all of
thinks· back
to
th e early days of to assume we had a
RIGHT
to
our intervention in Vietnam, and
personal po\·ertr, the ghettoes of
his time in an academic setting
World War II and a draft he has
intervene
in Vietnam, must
committed to make our policies
Harlem. the
i:lils
of New York
coping with the problems of
lived
wi th
and faced for
17
or
18
·
change.
.
creative initiatives of men, rather
Citr,
-
the
·family ,vho goes
academia?
years. The broad experienced
In
La tin
America;
where
than
destructive
devices
-
of
hungry and home le~, the drug
I have been asked to face these
viewpoint of the student who
blundering
foreign policy. has
government ..
addict, the college educated with
questions by my
'students.
The
sees
his
Country
and
its
been used by U.S. industry to
serious marital problems. But,
young students who want
·
the
·
committments all over the world
my work also brings me into
academic challenge but do not
- from Germany to Japan. The
contact with the administrators
have life's experiences on which
young student who sees only th~
of health and welfare agencies,
to test them out. The older,
current
conflict.
Experience
the host of professionals seeking
Evening Division student, who
provides the generic view of a
to alleviate man's problems, the
has the experience, the desire to
country
of tremendous
and
learn
but has all the other.
varied
opportunities.
The
Accents
Disconsolate
By
Ed Peck.
Ray
Pasi
.,-
.· -
Iri
a world where
a
man must
take
Corripoz before·.
he_
can
listen to what his neighbors arc
up to, and
in
a nation whose
advertising ad.vises its people to
take
multiple
vitamins since
their busy schedules don_'t allo.w
even one
full
family meal, a rare
moment.
emerges.
when
humanity begins to sense what it
means to be humanin the world.
During
this rare moment,
isolated individuals, people with
various attitudes
and opinions
from one end.of the spectrum to
the other, brought together their
.
concern,
most deep~y human,
and
.
ceasing
·
to be cogs .in a
wheel, they became members of·
a unified
and
feeling
community. That brief moment
came perhaps during the
singing
·
of a prayer, the· reading of a
thought, or during the vqcalizing
of
a
hope shared by all. It was
the briefest of moments, but all_
our
beginnings
are
brief
moments.
It
was an obvious time for
sharing. A little boy searched the
gutter
for
the
leaf
to be
mounted
on
a piece
of
construction
paper
for
tomorrow's
class. As a large
crowd went by
he
stayed at the
curb, yet with· a smile took his
place
in
the
movement,
JIOnetheless.
responsibilitiesofafulltimejob,
inexperienced
student
is
a wife, children
and
community
struggling, even as he graduates,
obligations.
with trying
to
find a
job.
I have learned in these past
As a Moonlighter and as a part
three yeats at Marist that both
of
that
contemporary'
scene
generatipns must communicate.
outside
the Marist. campus
l
That. experience and academic
participate
of choice and _of
pursuits can be merged. But the
necessity in that society we live
method' is illusive at times, I am
in with .its problems and its
convinced
that
-t-he
young · rewards.
,So
does· the. part,-time
student must study and read and
student in the evening program.
write but he must also live and
We have something to offer - yes
tune in to the total social scene
'
from experience but
..
also from
about him.
It
would help-
if
he
an
academic_
viewpoint.
As
just read the daily paper and
•
Marist strives
'.to
meet i_ts purpose
became concerned with school
to turn out a well rounded
taxes, welfare problems,- po_verty student,
I
feel that its· Day
and the price of food, to name a
students
especially
have a
few. It would
also
help if
-the
wonderful_
opportunity
·
by
older student concerned with
all
sharing the classroom with the
of the above would listen to the
part
·time
evening student. There
younger student and· share more
should be more sliaring -
all
of us
of his
concerns
from
his
have much to learn fr9m each
theoretical viewpoints.
other.
·
·
As a L~cturer who_ spends six
By Peter Mesterson
the Maintenance Club?
·
This club, one of tlie
recreational
·organizations
on
campus,
enables unqualified,
uninterested
and unconcerned
ex-custodial
engineers.-to
organize
several
groups of
equally unconcerned
teams of
do-nothings
to
roam about the
campus under many disguises
attempting
to waste as much
time and money on as little as
possible. The winner get to park
a bulldozer
in front
of
Leonedoff Field and· the loser
gets to park
.
a dump turck in
front of the gym. However, if we
were
to
call
up
this long
established Loafers Society, they
would reply immediately with,
CREDIT: Georgia Straight/LNS -
An older woman, too old to
walk, was involved enough to
wait on her porch for her people
in the march. She had a definite
impact on the group when she
shared
her
enthusiasm
and
encouraged
the marchers by
raising her hand in the universal
pc.ice sign.
She
couldn't be
in
the
street,
where there was
singing and the holding of hands,
but she could share the bond.
Why is Marist a mess?. Walk
around the campus at anytime
of the day. What a beautiful
place.
Trees, shrubbery,
the
river, hills,· beautiful· buildings,
garbage. Walk by the beautiful
dormitories
and , see the filth
littered
below the windows.
Ride
the
elevator
in
Champagnant and- stand on the
old paper cups, candy wrappers,
cigarette
butts, and outdated
bulletins or announcements .. Of
course, these shouldn't be there
in the first place. But where can
they .be disposed of. In a garbage
can?· Where can one find a
garbage can? Only in private
rooms or one
in
each of the
dorm lobbies. But you'll never
find
one
where
students
congregate, like in a lounge. Or
if one was to walk from one
dorm to another or
to
Donnelly
Hall and wanted to throw away
an
old cigarette box, where?
How about right there in the
middle
of the
parking
lot!
Naturally, if
its dropped there
you'll be able to
visit
it next
spring. It'll still
be there even
if
it's
covered with snow
during
the winter, you'll still
find it
after the thaw, with
all
the other
junk. Nobody cleans. up the
mess.
What can we do? Who can
we contact?
I
know! How about
••1t•s already been done!" How ... ---------~----'
about if we called the Club
Looking back, it seems
that
the important things was not the
different
motivations of those
involved, but the deeply human
spirit
that.
resulted. There was a
basic
hope to be expressed,
movement created a bond, and
something
was shared
and
CXJ'\!ricnccd.
The
Moratorium.
President?
(sometimes· called
.. what's his name") He,
rm
sure,
would respond to·· the campus
mess by immediately ordering,
two more brand new twenty
year old water frocks, and he
would dispatch these to wet
down the parking lot. In other
words, .. forget it." Marist
is
a
mess!
Will it stay that way? Why
don't
we save our wrappers,
paper
cups,
beer
cans
and other
junk; throw it where it belongs
in the Maintenance Club House,
and maybe Marist won't be a
mess. But we'll still have a
Maintenance Club, and that's a
mess!
Spend ~slmas
in the Orient!
Travel to Japan and Hong Kong
For 23 Unforgettable Days!
·
,
-~;
Obtain 2 Credit Cards m Japanese Culture.
See John Zebatto (mail C-459)
OCTOBER 23. 1969
, EDITORIAL
..
'
,..,
.
Technology
'.of
the Vacuum
Cleaner
. For at least three years now, and especially over the past year the
MAINTENANCE DEPARTMENT has definitely hit upon an "era of
deterioration."
No statistics are necessary for validation of this
statement. One simply has to take· a tour of the campus and count the
number o,f street lights lighting, showers showering, maintenance fleet
vehicles running and transparent windows actually transparent
(disregarding the broken ones). ·
-
·
But who do you blame for such a batting average? The students
cause natural maintenance problems through normal usage of facilities
and very few are the cause of blatant vandalism. So you can't blame
them. Admittedly, Mr. Pavelko may have a slight preoccupation with
· pre-Civil War automotive machinery. But with such an efficient crew
TIIECIRCLE
Calendar Of Events
For the Week of Oct. 27 - Nov. 2, 1969
If
you would like your organization's information included on this
calendar, it is important that you contact
Mr.
Brosnan's office at
least two weeks prior to the date that the event is scheduled to take
place.
_
_Please contact: Joseph Brosnan, Director of Campus Center,
471-3240, Ext. 279.
· Tuesday - October
28
3 :00 P.M. Soccer - Newark St. A WAY
8:00 P.M. Film • Leo Tolstoy's "WAR AND PEACE" Co-sponsored
by the History and Russian Clubs.
PAGES
Letters
Dear Editor:
It
would be unnecessary to say
that I was rather shocked to read
the interview appearing
in
the
second edition of THE CIRCLE .
I would
seem
to have an
extremely negative impression of
the College.
and the oudget Mr. Campilli gives him, how can you blame Mr.
_
Wednesday - October 29
• ._ Pavelko: However,
Mi.
Campilli only gives Mr. Pavelko the money · l :00 P.M. Recruitment - Mr. Francis B. Cole of Crawford
&
co. _
which the Budget Committee has allotted maintenance - so don't · Claims Adj_ustment - PLACEMENT OFFICE
It is unfortunate
that the
impact
of the written word
remains long after the spoken
word
is forgotten, and that
written inaccuracies can seldom
be completely eradicated. In the
case of last week's interview, I
feel that
the
College, the
administration, and myself have
been compromised because of
misquotation
and
the
concomitant conclusions.
· blame Campilli. But by the same token don't blame the Budget
ColJ?riiittee ·~embers either. They may allocate the funds but they
8:00 P.M. Film - Leo Tolstoy's "WAR AND PEACE" Co-sponsored
·don t supply the money. And Mr. Wade and Brother Brendan can
by the History and Russian Clubs.
apply all the pressure in the world - but they still need
20
cents to get
A promise
to have
the
opportunity to review the article
was not carried out.
If
it had
been much of the unfortunate
aftermath
could
have been
avoided.
I
feel that in the
interests of truth and honest
expression
that
persons
interviewed in the future should
receive this promise and have it
fulfilled. It will result in freer
discussion, fewer mistakes, and a
clearer
presentation
of the
person's views.
on the subway. This brings us_
back to the students who DO supply the
·money~ But how can you possibly ask for another tuition increase.
If
· you do 'there probably· will be no more students for whom to maintain
- a campus! No single person or group is responsible for the situation.
Let's call it a joint effort.
·
·
Something has got to be done and it has to be done quickly. And this
· -· does ·not mean rearranging the p.resent dust.
An
entire new system of
-maintenance must be inaugurated.
As reported in THE CIRCLE of October 9, the McCann Foundation
has endowed Marist_ with a grant to develop a long range master plan
for Marist College. Dr. Lawrence Menapace of. the Chemistry
Department was appointed by Brother Linus Foy to serve as the
director of this research grant. The third draft of the master plan will
· be under. discussion by the faculty and administration all day Friday,
October 24. Within this plan
is
a long range plan for the improvement
of maintenance-and a very plausible one at that ..
THE CIRCLE calls upon Dr. Menapace and the master plan seminar
to remove the maintenance section of the "long range plan" and place
-it on the "immediate action list" before it is too late.
Finally, we would like to quote from the goals set by the long range
development seminar under the goal entitled, "Learn to Live in a
Technological Age." : "These recent and rapid changes in science make
it necessary for an individual to be informed and knowledgeable about
these developments if he is to function in our society." We cannot
expect to reach the other goals set by the committee until we nieet this
one. And we cannot expect to meet this one until we have mastered the
technology of the vacuum cleaner.
Stimulus.
- Unresponse
The . people of the United States are enraged. They are enraged
~_ec!\!/,s¢,tij,ey
.be}l~;ve
,th~Y'.~.~v~ beep..J~ept, :wajting to_o long, T~e
Blaclcs
.in
Americ;i :waited six long years - they ;ire not waiting any
longer. They have passed from resistance to militancy. ·
The students, intellectuals, people of Wall street, the middle class,
the poor white, and again: the Black man, all have been waiting for-a
long time, too long. These Americans have been waiting for the end
ofthe senseless war in Vietnain.·They have indeed been patient but
they are growing impatient.
· The · moratorium was an orderly attempt to·· work within the
· · "system" arid to express
in
a lawful manner this growing impatience.
- It was an attempt made by the governed; the government however
seems Ull_!esponsive.
This is evidenced by recent statements made by
, . the administration, particularly the incredible speech made by Vice
President Agnew last week. ·.
- Mr.· Agnew before a . Republican fund 'raising dinner in New
· Orleans denounced the. moratorium as an unwise demonstration
"encouraged by an effete corps of impudent snobs who characterize
themselves as _intellectuals.'' He also stated· that "the young, at the
zenith of physical power and sensitivity overwhelm themselves with
drugs and stimulants."
In all sincerity we ask, · who is M;. Agnew kidding? The
moratorium was the ·execution of_ an Ameri~an right by a large and
varied ~egment of the American people. Mr. Agnew·
is either
ill-advised orill, or both.
.
_
If
the administration,· the government, continues: even if only in
word and n_ot deed, to be completely insulted from the public will,
how long will the public remain patient? It is unfortunate that Mr .
Agnew's statements make this question_ so urgent.
It
is unfortunate
that. the Vice President helps to develop a philosophy of violence in
the United States.
·· ·
Paul
McCartney
is
Dead?
Place: Brown Derby
Date: Sometime in Oct.
1969
.
-
Characters: Two Marist Students
Cosmo:
Did
you _ hear that thing on the radio about Paul
McCartney. They claim he's been dead since 1966.
Stanislaus: Of course I heard it - didn't everybody? Wow, when
you consider the evidence, you really can't deny it. Did you see the
cover
of
"Sargent Pepper's?" On one side John, George and Ringo
are facing us but Paul isn't and on the other side there's a grave with
a left•handed bass guitar in it etc. etc ... .
Cosmo: Ah it's a big hoax because .... .
*****
Place: Brown Derby
Date: Sometime in Oct. 1966
Characte~: Two Marist Students
-.-:.,:_
•---;..;~
·•~-.._. ;-h~..:;;
...
Hambone: Did you see that story about
•~od
is Dead" in the
newspaper today?
Amos: No, who
ca.res.
Want another beer?
Hambone: No, but
if they have any bash .....
*****
Think
about
it.
Thursday - October 30
3:30
P.M. American Studies Symposium - Discussion with Mr. Tom
Casey, FIRESIDE LOUNGE, CAMPUS CENTER
8:00 P.M. Panel Discussion· Marist Bros. '70 FIRESIDE LOUNGE,
CAMPUS CENTER
HAPPY ARTS WEEKEND
October
31 -
November
2
Friday - October
31
Showing and sale of art work by area students and residents.
Proceeds for Hudson River Sloop Restoration and Appalachian
Reaction. Admission: FREE Place: CAMPUS CENTER
Saturday - November
1
Cross-Country - Upstate Championships - AWAY
2:00
P.M. Soccer - Sacred Heart - HOME
7:45
P.M. Football - Siena - AWAY
8:30 P.M. Concert: "THE CROCES". Admission for this event:
$1.00 COLLEGE THEATRE
Sunday - November
2
8:00 P.M. Marist College Film Program, 1969-70. Theme:
Film
in
the Forties - The Rise of the Documentary: Titles: "The Fighting
Lady" "Le Retour" "Le Tempestaire" "Trut" "War for Men's
Minds"
COLLEGE- THEATRE Film followed by Discussion:
GALLER_Y LOUNGE ALCOVE - CAMPUS CENTER
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
. 11/1
and
11/2
,
Sailing-Team Champs - KINGS PT.
ART EXHIBIT CHAMPAGNAT HALL GALLERY LOUNGE
thru October
* * * * *
SURVIVING
WEAKLY.
EXPRESS YOURSELF!
.
.
-
IT MAY BE A NEW
I would
hope
that
the
CIRCLE would do more "to
accentuate
the
positive." I
would have . hoped for a fairer
representation of my views by
publishing
my reasons
for
coming to the college, for my
optimism about its future, for
my opinion about theexcellence
of its administration (remember
I
stated that this• one point was
Marist's greatest asset), and for
my thoughts
on education.
These would have represented
me. The interview as such did
not.
In the course of an hour and a
half interview, I would have
hoped
for a more positive,
balanced treatment rather than
the incorrect and very negative
one printed in THE CIRCLE.
Finally,
l
would hope that
all
this_ brouhaha
would
only
highlight the power and impact
of the written word and the
necessity for accuracy.
Thank you.
.
Sincerely,
Brother Patrick Gallagher, FMS
Housemaster
Dear Sir:
I've just finished rereading an
article entitled "Big Thou~ts on
Small Colleges"(sic) wirtteh by a
Marist College student, Vincent
Begley,
Class of 1970. The
article
appeared in a recent
edition of the MANHA TT AN
EAST,
a New York
City
subscription weeldy of 23,000.
readers.
EXPERIENCE
The article proports to make
CONTRIBUTE
known the "Big Toughts"(sic),
or rather the "Big Thoughts" of
TO THE CIRCLE
the
American
small college.
After rereading the article, I can
only ask who has written the
article.
The author, Vincent Begley,
is
.----------------------------
a Marist senior; He has recently
'frit!.
returned
from
Third
Year
• CZR
. · .
CLE-·_
•
Abroad in London, England.
~;
However, there is no indication
~-
to the careful reader that the
author is a Marist student.
Stephen A. Harrison
EDITORS-IN-CHIEF
John Rogener F.M.S.
MANAGING EDITOR
Joseph McMahon
David
DeRosa
Kenneth Dunn
QRCULATION MANAGER
BUSINESS MANAGER
EDITORIAL BOARD
Steve Harrison, Joe McMahon, John Rogener, Tony Barker, Peter
Masterson, John Zebatto
NEWS WRITERS
Tony Barker - NEWS EDITOR, Pat Grealy, Ray Frontain, Otto
Unger, John Zebatto, Qark Kent
FEA TIJRE WRITERS
Peter Masterson, John Zebatto, James Newman, Paul Browne, Bill
O'Reilly, Raymond Pasi, F.M.S., Edwin Peck F.M.S.
.
SPORTSWRITERS
Joe Mc.\fahon - Sports Editor
Donald Acquinas Duffy• Associate Professor or Sports
Joe Rubino, Steve Sawicki, Pete MastetSOn, Kevin Donnelly, Greg
McLoughlin,Jack Bany,Jimmy Olson
PHOTOGRAPHY
Richard Baummet, John
PiMa,
Lois
Lane
CARTOONISTS
~Garey,
Steve Harrison
QRCULATION
Greg Mcloughlin, Jack Bany
If
you take time to read the
EAST's lead article, you'll find
propaganda not worthy of a
college admissions catalogue. It
reads as follows:
"It
(Marist
College) is relatively unknown,
seldom publicized, and virtually
disregarded in college opinion
polls." Sound familiar?
Our saving grace, ho'!Vever, is
Marist "representative
of •. the
many small colleges throughout
the country." Editorial opinion,
Mr. Begley?
"It, (Marist) recently opened
its doors
to
four
hundred
freshman,
Marist's
twelfth
graduating class."
I
call attention
to the
1969-70
admissions
catalogue, and point out the
twenty-fourth
commencement
in
which
your
class
will
participate May 23, 1970.
One further point should be
noted for the record. I quote:
:.~!l1J:.'.'Jl~~-\(of
the
_______
llllllill/llt
____________
.;.....
_________________
_
I
I
1.
I'
•
PAGE6
.
11IE
CIRCLE
OCTOBER
23, 19"69
By
Swimming Meet Won
Fin and Racket Club
CREW
FROM8
In
Pe~spective
-
by Gerry Garey
The Syracuse crew was strong
and experienced. They averaged
6'2" and 195 lbs. And had good
reason to be confident
after
seeing the Marist
-Crew
which
averages 6'0" and 170 lbs. What
(1:162) ·Diving· (4 dives): Jeff we lacked in size,
we made up
S p u r r e d o n
b y
t h e
Viola, (22.5 points),
Bill Dibble for in determination. The first
aqua-blitzkrig
of
the
,(21.3
pts.); 75 yd. butterfly:
boat's start of
42. strokes per
Mid-Hudson Racket
&
Fin Club,
Jody Intermont
(1:
13),' Steve minute, which is unusually fast -
the
Fi rs t Annual
Marist
Cronin
(I:
19); 75 yd. free style:
for a Freshman crew, enabled
Swimming Invitational made a Bill
Munson,
(42:3),
Mark them to gain one boat length at
splashing
d
e b u t
at
Mahoney, (42.4); 75 yd back· the outset.
Poughkeepsie's
brand
new
stroke, Dean Gestal,
(1
:03), Bob
The- second boat, which has
Y.M.C.A. (Yes folks, they do
Scott,
(1
:09); 75 yd. breast five inexperienced oarsmen, lost
have
something
new in
stroke: Jim McGlumphy (1:02)
one boatlength at the start. As
Poughkeepsie.)
Bill
Dibble
(1
:09); 200 yd'. Marist
passed the half mile
The
international
field. of
relay:
Vikings
(2:041),.
marker, they had caught the
contestants
consisted of such
MHR&FC (2:221).
Syracuse boat and were passing
notab\es as: Jim McClumphy;
As the meet progressed, a theI!l·
At this
point
t~ey
the
champion
breast stroker
battle for supremacy shaped up
·
continue~ to take a commandmg
from West Virginia; Bob Scott,
between the Mid-Hudson Racket· lead· which they held through
.the
only
person
who can
& Fin Club and the Vikings. This the finish.
backstroke
with
his lips;·_ closely~matched
contest was
•
AndreAlbertwhoracedinthe
twinkle-toes Leber, off the low
only
·
decided after the firial second eight had a tough day. As
board;
and waterbomb
Tom· event
of the· meet
when
soon as he finished winning that
Tierney, whose main specialty is
MHR&FC prevailed.
·
race, he
,went
on to win the
emptying pools in a single flop.
Final Team Standings were: singles
skulling
.
(800 meters)
Tom
MacNamee,
the Bronx
53 pts.
MHR&FC
(led by. competition
.. Andre, only. a
bystander, suited up but was aqua-lip Scott); 45 pts. Vikings; Frt:shman?
(_150 lbs.) row_ed
unable to participate - since the
16 pts.
?
team (we never did find agams! a Jumor and a semor
.
SO
yd.
floating
event was out their name); 04 pts. Track from Syracuse. Last year he
cancelled.
Though
not
as
team
(who
immediately
rowedfortheN.Y.A.C.
Bob·Kretirl
.. lt's too bad he started ·to
play when he was
a
J
unioi:. If he
had been out
~
years earlier,
he'd make an outstanding goalie.
He has
worked
very. hard
without any background and has
ahead on
.
points in
·
the· last
.
period, but lost on a pin.-.
.
co
I
or
f
u
I ,
o u ts tan ding
challenged everyone to a job
Next Saturday Nov.
t
·
there is
performances were given by Bill around the pool).
.
a ~ual _meet betwe~n Columbia
•
Munsqn,
Mark Mahoney. and·
Appreciation and condolences Uruvers1ty and Manst. We hope
·
played soine outstanding games,
As a Junior, Krenn won 7 and
lost only 3 in the· 160 lb. class
.
Under
his
coach, Jerry Patrick,
he began
.using
a new· style of
wrestling, depending much more
on his le~ to build up points
·
and
some.times
·
for pinning
·
combinations.
Bob
was a
member of the famed· "Murders
Row"
with Bill Moody and
..
Bernie·
0
'Ii
are,
last season.
Together
.-they
each won
·
4
matches in succession for the
145, 152, and 1'60 lb. classes:
Bob Keller, in the many events
are extended to Varsity Crew to have the full support of the
that they entered.
coach, Mr. Austin. Appreciation
·
school at the meet.
Final
indi.vidual
standings
-
for
the
time and energy
were:
·
.
expended on his part in running
IOO
yd. medley relay: Vikings
such
a tournament;
and
(time:· 1
:057),
MHR&FC (time:
.
condolences
~
for his very sore
1: 194); 200 yd. free style: Bill eardrums
from
a
very loud
Munson, (2:23), Dean Scribner
starting gun.
(3:44); 50 yd. free style: Mark
. • ·
Gerry Garey
Mahoney, (0:27), Dean Gestal
* * * * *
.
(0:28);
100 yd. individual: Bob
·
Keller,
(1:
148), Jim Ezersky,
FOOTBALL
VIKINGS
vs;
ST .. JOHN'S
SAT. 2:00
Cheerleaders
warm·
up before
making their debut
(fust co:.ed
group at
MOTH)
at
·the
AMumptlon
game.
.
.
.
.
.
Those
·Amazing·.
Mets
by Ron Baumbach
.
" ,
.
.
flyball the roof seemed to cave
It_s a ground ba~ to_ Feli_x
in.
All fans became brothers.
It
Mantilla, he bobbles 1t, pick~ !t
didn't matter who was next
to
up, and
fires
to first ... where its
you ... shake his hand, pat him on
dropped by Marv Throneberry.
the back, give him five ... THE
0
_t~ose wert: the days, when
METS WON - it's not true, pinch
futility was king and a loss was
me.
Suddenly,
we found
to be_ e~pected. ~n fact, one
ourselves standing in the middle
Bostoman
_station
always
of centerfield, tearing the
grass
p~eceded their Met broadcast
from the ground for souvenirs
with t!>,e words: "T,oday the
and
gazing
with
a joyful
Mets will_
be beat by...
.
expression at the TV cameras.
Now eight years later, through
We made it baby our Mets are
all the Cliff Cook~, Harry Chitis
No.
I!
It all' happened so
and John DeMents, the Mets
fast ... Oh to be
a
Met fan in
Shea
have conquered the world. By
on the 16th ... Pure ECSTATIC
cooling the Cubs, scalping the
JOY!
LETTERS FROM 3
comment on my opinion. It
is
ot
.. great import
to the Marist
community."
In conclusion, I hope you, Mr.
Editor,
will
publish Mr. Begley's
article
in a later edition for the
purusal
of
the
Marist
community.
FROM3
students or parties who would
.
like further. information please
contact ·Brother Desilets in the
television center in Donnelly or
·
myself in C-705.
mostly with determination. He 1s
_just beginning
to learn
.
the
position, and I'd like to have
him
around for
2
more· years."·
This
is. the
feeling of Dr.
Goldman,
the_ Soccer coach,
about his goalie, Bob Krenn.
Bob went out for· the team as
a Junior to fill the
.gap·
left by
the graduation of Marist's only
goalie,
Paul
Sicilfan.
His·
contr'ibution to last year's· team
was one of the most important
reasons for its successful .500
·
season.
.
Bob (5'10" -· 160 lbs.)
is
a
graduate
of Chaminade High
School in Long Island,'_ where he
competed as a wrestler for two
years and also was a member of
the Marine Physical Fitness team
during
his Junior
and
Senior
years.
As
a
Freshman at· Marist,. Bob
·
continued his
·wrestlirig
career as
second man in the 152
ib.
class,
_
behind
Bob
Langenbach,
a
Senior. Krenn won 5 exhibition
matches that year, \\'.hile losing 3
varsi.ty
decisions·
after
Langenbach was injured. : · ·.
In Sophomore year, Bob held
down the No.
1
position in' the -
15
2 class again, and posted a
3-
7
rec~rd. He said that many. <>f
his
losses were
.
because he: didn;t
have enough toughness for the
3rd period. A few: times:
he
was
In Soccer, Bob has much the
same duties of a catcher in
baseball. He talks to the defense
and sets
_them
up, since he's the
only one who can see
·
what's
going on all over the. field. Bob
,:
.
says
·he's.
been. hicky
·
to•: have<
-
such good fullbacks in front of
him; especially
·Isidore .Sabeta.
Although
everyone feels
,
bad
when a goal gets by, the person
who feels the worst about it
is·
the
.
goalie-:° Kreiu{i:finds-: it.
a·.
unique
feeling
_in
sports,
especially. when he has to. look
·
over at Doc ori
.
the sideline.
Although last year's
.
team was
·
more successful, Bob feels more
a
-
part of this present· teain .. He
.
says there is a
'great
deal of
.
-:
potential. on the team but it will·.
.take
.
tiine, because · they are
mostly freshmen.
' ·· ·
.
.··
:Aside,from'.ali
the
.time'he
has
Spen·f~on
. athletics; · Bob has
,
'served
on the Resident Board,.'.·.
apd
is
also
C_orresponding
·
Secretary of theSenior Class...
·
The
·Sailing
Team lost a tough
.
Parcells
all
have shown marked
one this
past
weekend in a
.
improvement
<>ver their, past
Regatta of
six
schools. They
performances.
Things
are
finished 5th, losing to: Albany
beginning·· to look better
for
State, Hobart, Union and RP.I.
coach
Jerry Remenicky. The
\ye did,
.Jtowever,
show· enough
team
'hqpes
to
·
get back
·at'.·
· over all improvement'_ to pull
Albany in the. Frostbite Regatta
ahead
of Queens College when
which will_
be held
.on
our own
the race was over. The regatta
Hudson River on November 22
took place on the Mohawk River
and 23 .
in
upstate New York. Although
the team lost, they all
felt
that
valuable experience was
gained
by all members. Skippers Gary
Jories and Rick Reynolds along
with crewmen Paul Forti, John
Krenn, Don Pizzuto and Pat
·►
.
.
CONFERENCE·
.
•
~
CHAMPIONSHIP
::)
NEXT
0
u
WEDNESDAY
I
Ill
1ft
AT
0
•
HOME
u
Braves and plucking the Birds
they
came to be
NUMERO
UNO.
Marist was represented at
the final game by some 5th Leo
boys.
With
a banner that read:
"~farist College says Go Mets
-
Jive in Five" we cheered our
team to •ictory. To see 57 ,397-
fans
all
yelling, smiling, cheering,
crying
and
in shock
was
certainly a thrill.
-With
aeon
Jones' catch of Dave Johnson's
Otto
N.
Unger
aas-s
of 1970
Jim
Wilkens,
staying
in the pocket,
fu:es
long
for
Bob ScotL
I
l
I
;
I
4
4
I
'
OCTOBER
23, 1969
Two
Fakes Later
·Nothing
Ganie
By
Joe
Rubino
Topic - Assumption
·
·
· ·
-
·
·
As
in
the Bible, this was an occasion when someone rose to great
heights. This time it was our football team. We looked good, they
looked bad,
in
a game that was more of a ·"scrimmage before the
game"· than anything else. Not many people really_ cared ab~ut
·
Assumption everybody knew they stunk. Most were sunpJy. looking
ahead to St. John's .. .
The
game, however, did have many good
·
developments. The main one was obviously the fine performance by
freshman Q.B. Ron Very. His cool ball-handling and passing was very
encouraging, and since he
is
only a first -year. man,_ he should develop
greatly with more experience. Sophomore Jim Wilkens played most
·
of.the second half performing quite well also, this showing that the
Viking5 have fine depth in the Q.B. ~lot ... E~sily the best. area of the
Viking team
is
the defensive backfield. Cameramen Jumor Rooney
and Jack McDonnell, Safety Dean Gestal and Monster Bill Iccobellis
do
a
tremendous job considering the time that opposing Q.B.'s have
to throw the ball. They're all fast, have good hands and ~re deadly
tacklers. Dan Faison, a freshman, adds depth to t~
already
well-stocked backfield
..
.Junior Rooney has proved to. be one-of the
most improved players on the team this year. He
is
possibly the best
on the team in the art of pass coverage, an9
is
a deadly tackler on
sweeps. He, along with Benjy; returns all kicks and, not only ru~s
well,: but.
is
a greii_t. blo~ker :when .¥.cDQnnell _has. the. ~all .. His
constant,' headi;.up·.perfQrmances have·been a big factor in the strong
Vikirig .. defense this year; He's
a
class ball-player ... Still another
good showing was turned in by Cotton Nash, Marist's answer
-to
Deacon Jones, Gino Marchetti, and Gerry Philbin. He is a promising·
·
junior def-end majoring in phys-ed and he says his greatest thrill in
.
life was the day somebody told him that he had heard of LITTLE
FALLS,
N.Y ....
Topic~
I
See The Light
•
·
MET ANSWER: There were actually 5 Mets with the initials J .G.:
Jerry GrOte, Jesse Gonder, Jim Gasger, Joe Ginsber~,' and Joe
Gruzzenda.
·
Nobody got all five, but Chuck Meara and Vmny Mallon
got
.four
..
J
couldn't think of a good "Met" question this week, but
how about this one: Who
is
the only man in history to catch a T.D.
pass
from
Y
.A.
Tittle
and hit a home runn off
·
Sandy
Koufax? ...
John
Innocenti suggested that' I give the YGBKM Award
to the guy who lo.ses his cool but I'd rather give it to the guy who
forgets. , .Would you believe that some coaches actually do attend
practices? And on days of competition, some of them often expect
victory? ... Terrible crowd at the game Saturday. I hope more people
than
.
that venture down to the Coliseum this week against St.
John's ... Oh yeah, the cheerleaders were great. Clever cheers.
Especially the one that goes
"Kill, Kill, Kill,
.. .
",and "Come on,
sock it to me now something or other.
.
.'' I hope you have some
better ones next week .
.
. How about UNION TURNPIKE MIKE
.
TIDS (sis-boom-baJ)
...
In
-
Perspective
e-in.1acobe
His
For
··
3
years
·
Marist College
football has been exemplified in
the. person
of hardhitting
monster
back Bill
.
Iacobellis.
"Jaco," who came to Marist
after spending his first year at
Villanova, always gives 100% on
·
.
the field. Last year he suffered a
serious
·
knee injury and it was
.
doubtful that he would be back
t_o play for the Vikings this
season.
After
some
initial
deliberation,
however,
his
yearning for action won out, a
decision wihch has been a gopd
·
one for. the
Vikings;
.
·
As.-
monster back, Iaco is the
main· cog
jn
the Viking defensive
-
machine.
The job
of t.he
"monster,"
. or "rover"
_
back;
. :varies·
from
play
to
play,
depending
upon
the
.d°'wn
situation. In running situa°tiohs
he can serve
11s
a third iinebacker
keying•.·on
'a.
fullback, or' on
passii1g: situations he cari
as
.
a
deep defensive back covering a
fleet~footed·receiver.
·• ·
·
Bill enjoyed one of his biggest
games·
two
years
ago at
Manhattan, where he played a
big part
in Marist's
20-18
victory; During this game, in
which
he · played
defensive
tackle, Iaco· earned himself a
case of beer by getting to
I
asper
Q.B.
Kevin Shannon five times.
Perhaps
his
.
best days have
been enjoyed in games
with
Providence College, the school
against which he won his Viking
b laze r for
o u ts tan di n_g
performance. In their meeting
·1ast
year, Iaco was
all
over the
field, making
an
astronomical
number of tackles, as he keyed
on from half-back Dick Martin .
Bill was a fine all around
athlete in high school as he
played· football,. hockey,
and
baseball.
He went
on to
Villanova where he starred as a
goalie for the Wildcats hockey
team ....
,
.
.
.·
..
·
An English major,· who hopes
to.· teach
and
.coach
·after
graduation,. laco
is
enjoying his
final year· af Marist, particularly
with the advent of coeds. Never
one
·to·
lack something
fo
say,
Ia co can
-
usually
be
.
found
c_hatting in the. Rathskeller with
Lenny or
.:a-
coed" He has an
amazing way.
with
words, both
on
.
and
off.
the field,
.
and his
com·merits
are
usually loud
enough to be heard by all.
Never one to say die, Iaco
gives
his
all
for 60 minutes. A
strong
candidate
for club •
football
All-American honors,
Jaco,
like the Mets, is No.
1
in
his
field.
'IHECIRCLE.
RUNNERS
FROM 8
28: 13, Don
Paulson 26:17,
Smith
27:35,
.
Bob Salamone_
27:45,
Gerraghty
28:19 and
Mike Moran 29:23.
·
On Thursday, Oct. 23, Marist
will race Paterson State at home.
The runners. will then travel
north on Saturday to the Albany
State Invitational Championship;
and on Wednesday, Oct. 29,
they will be at home again for
the Central Atlantic Conference
Championship. The Red Foxes
won this championship last year
• make it a point to see them
repeat next Wednesday.
·SYMPOSIUM
FROM 1
St.
John's
University
and
specialist
on
the
Vice
Presidency, delved in part on the
point
that
in the
months
preceeding his death, Roosevelt's
decision making power was far
weaker than it had been
·in
earlier years, and this, then, had
much to do with the diplomacy
of this time.
A humanistic view of FDR
was given
by the luncheon
speaker,
Mr. Joseph Lash, a
personal friend of the Roosevelt
family and author of ELEANOR
ROOSEVELT:
A FRIEND'S
MEMOIR. According to Mr.
Lash,
Franklin
and Eleanor
Roosevelt worked as a team, and
though
they
had
great
differences in their method of
approach,
they
continually
complimented each other. This
was exemplified by their fight
over
a world
court, where
Eleanor wouldn't speak· to him
for three days when she thought
he
had
abandoned
his
convictions for a vote, and he,
subsequently, making one of the
most serious mistakes of his
political
career
in later
supporting it.
Mr.
Lash concluded his talk
PAGE7·
Campus
Stuff
.
By Don Duffy
My first three· columns were a lot of fun. I really haven't had the
time to write anything serious. Now
is
the time. I'm devoting
this
part of my column to the campus jerks who don't do anything but
talk. There seems to be something lacking
in
this campus concernin&
non-participating students over athletics. The people who don't give
a damn about sports on this campus usually are the people who are
the first to criticize a team that loses. I'm sick and tired of hearing
the dumbells say why don't they win,
is
it the coach, do the players
stink, don't they ever win. Well here it
is
lame brain, I have had it
with you and I believe all the athletes feel the same way.
If
you
don't like what the teams are doing why don't you get off your
rear-end and try and do better. Don't run around flying off with that
big mouth unless you can·do better. To participate in a college sport
takes a lot more then just playing a game once or twice a week. It
means practicing for hours each day, sacrificing a lot of social life,
· what
it all boils down to
is
that they b_reak their backs to compete
for Marist. And the funny part about
it
is that they are playing for
jerks like you who are so quick to criticize. So that is the set up at
Marist, a bunch of clowns try to low level our boys with no
knowledge of what's going on. One last reminder, don't talk first and
think later. Remember what these guys go through for four months
before you talk about losing. Bits-N-Pieces
Ask
Mike Ward about his marine trip to the Derby (A rea!
Z90
Man). .
.
.The Marist Soccer team would like to thank the clown
referee at the King5 game. As the game proceeded, he would make
up rules to fit in the game. I still think he is on the field saying to
himself, I'm a good ref .... Nice Column by Go-Go O'Reilly, glad he
is in England. With a little luck he'll stay there and call weird Rubino
to join him. They have such a nice relationship .... To all the crazy
people in the gatehouse, move to Siberia .... Ask Jim Elliott why he
worries once a month .... John Murphy asked me to put his naJUe in•
·
·
the paper so John Murphy, John Murphy, John Murphy:· ... Some
outstanding jobs held by last years graduating class included a
bartender .. a factory brush worker .. a garbage man ... and a truck
driver for a beer company, so all you seniors now know what to look
forward to next year
.....
Saw the basketball team practice last
·
week and the team looks like the best thing Marist has ever seen.
Poor Coach Petro has the tough task of cutting good ball players.
A
good record this year could net an invitation to the
NCAA
college
division championships. Good luck in 69-70 .... Well that just about
does it. Be good Electric, and to 625 there still is something missing.
My own special weirdo of the week award goes to the clown referee
at Kings. He person.ally was able to eliminate
four
Marist players by
inactivity with his blasted whistle. Be Good, LOVE Duff.
Peas
and
Carrots
with
·
an
image he believes to
by Joe McMahon
explain the Roosevelt's relation
You usually don't hear too much about the benchwarmers, but
in full: Franklin en th usiastically
did you ever see a more fired up ballplayer than No. 70 Bull Kelly in
wo~king on
a
pr~ject, calling in
last week's Assumption game'?
Bull
is
the only player who can make
a~visers and maki.I_lg_l_arge
plans,
two unassisted tackles on his first two plays using only one hand,
with _Elea~or. at.~
side, c~l~1 __ while. holding up.
his
pants. with
the.
o.ther. Knowing Bull, you would
tug~mg
at his . el boy,: an
expect him to be psyched, especially if you ever saw him go through
Pat i e _ntl
Y ,,
s
a
Ying
But'
the Alabama leg slapping drill in the study on the 5th floor Leo, but
FrTanhklinf.t
·
·
·
k
Mr
he certainly outdid himself Saturday. Add a dose of experience to
e a emoon spea er was
.
.
-
lik
th t
d
,
t
thin
t 1
k
t
f
w
Hebert Fe·
onsult nt to the
incentive
e
a ~n
_you
ve go
_some
g
o oo
ou . or..: e
r
IS, c
a
.
. ·
e
now have another highlight
_on
the mtramural program • Swimmmg.
Secretary
of w_a~ d~g
thd About 40 people showed up for last Thursday's meet, run by Gerry
Roosevelt
adnum st ration an
Garey and Mr Austin and everyone was up for having another one
au t·h or of several
books,
.
·
. '
·
$60
al " '
·
1 d •
c Hu R
c·H
ILL
probably m the spnng. The only drawback
IS
the
rent
1ee
}rOOSE~~fT
AND STALIN~
which the
.
Varsity Club has ~o shell out_ for the use
.of
_th_e
.
'
Poughkeepsie Y's new pool... Mid-Hudson
Fm
and Racket, or
IS
1t
!w{r
· F _eis. presented
a ve~
Racket and Fin Club, - anyway, it's the new elite club on campus.
It
impressioni stic ac~ount of th
rose to power last Thursday night, mainly because of the last minute
state of !he world m th,e mon th s
recruiting done by their pilot - Steve Cronin and his cohort
.Bob
(51
pre~eedmg
Roosevelt s, d:a_th ,
off the stick) Scott. They ran through the fourth floor Charnpagnat
~!ngmg fr~~ Roosevelt s hmng
and came up with a whole slew of highly touted aquanuts. They
eve7 assmme l?rofesso~ who
were definitely the pre-meet favorites - almost everyone they signed
wasn t all ready m Washmgto~
up had either full or partial scholarships
in
grammar school. Gerry
to come and tum ~ut ,1!1ef!l
05
,,
Tyne was high on their list - he swam for the C,Y.O.
-
and, when he
to Cordell
Hull s
mtsty
.
heard they might take him, he immediately flooded the showers so
sentence structure. .
he
could
work on his strokes. And·they weren't just taking anybody,
The
p~nel whI~h followed
if you know what I mean, - in fact, J.T. said he swam at Jones Beach
Prof. Fe1s SJ?eech mcluded Mr.
once, and they still turned him down .. .It's almost time again for that
Mo~~on F~ish,
Professor of
popular Autumn festivity, the Turkey Trot, or as one renowned
P(?lit~cal ~cie~ce at North em
columnist (Joe Whatshisname - he rooms with
J.
Tkach) once
Illinois University and auth or of
referred to it "Intramural Stomach Cramps.'' So if you'd like to join
POLITICS OF
_FRANKLIN
I?·
in the fun, and still retain friendly relations with your abdomen,
R~OSEVELT?
Mr. Gaddis
start getting in shape now. Just for a starter, so you won't overtax
Sf!1Ith,
~n
_Associate
_Prof~ssor of
your unused muscles too quickly, try
a
nice easy stroll from your
History at Yale Uruverstty and
dorm to Leonidoff Field this Saturday, to give the Vikings some
au t h o r
O
f AMER I CAN
well-deserved support as they knock heads with St.
J
ohn's
.. :How's
DIPLOMACY. DURING_ THE
this for
a
slap in the face. - Most people bought Gatorade because it
SECOND
WORL_D WAR, and
was a health drink, Now it's being reclaimed because the government
Mr. C:harles C. Gn_ffin, Professor
found one of its ingredients, cyclamate, to be an instrumental factor
of History, E~~ntus at Vassar
leading to Cancer! Now at least
I don't feel left out anymore when
Col!ege, who IS presently the
someone sits back to relax and lights up a Salem ... Erp!...
Assistant Dean of Faculty at
Vassar and a trustee of Marist.
With
the end of the panel
discussion,
the
audience
participated in a tour of the
Franklin D. Roosevelt Library,
Hyde Park.
. The Symposium was attended
by
some
200
people,
representing
30 colleges and
universities, 35 high schools, and
twelve states (including Illinois
and
Florida).
Sponsored by
Marist College in co-operation
with The Franklin D. Roosevelt
Library
and
the
American
Historical Association's Service
Center for Teachers of History,
it was, according to Dr. Skau,
«one of the most successful
symposiums to date," in spite of
the forced evacuation of the
auditorium during the morning
panel discussion because of the
broken
water
pipe
in the
Campus Center.
·····················-····················
TURKEY
TROT
4:00
NOY.
10
Faculty Race
3 Trophies
4: 15 - Co-eds Race
3 Medals
-
1¼
mi.
- ¾mi.
4:30-
Students Race - 3 mi.
1 Trophy
9 Medals
3 Team Medals
15 lb. TURKEYS TO WINNERS IN EACH RACE
.,,
'(
...
....
PAGES·
-1HE CIRCLE .
OCTOBER
23; 1969
VIK,_NGS~
HARRIERS,
FROS-H
CREW·
.
. GAIN.
WEEKEND
TRIUMPHS;
<
f
fosh
SWamp
>.
.
•
Run_Ders
·_
Win
. Sf
racuse
·
Three
·_
.
By
Jack
Barry
.
&
Greg McLaughlin
"They' laughed at us .last year,
f want 'em this year.'~ Coach
William "Butch" Lennahan got
what he wanted.
i
Last Saturday, Oct. 18, the
Freshman Crew Team scored a
s·tunning
victory·
over
the
Syracuse .· University Freshman ,
Crew. This was the first time
that Marist has overcome the
powerful Syracuse team in
its
crew history.
The race was, held on Lake
Onondaga directly outside the
Syracuse Boathouse. Syracuse, a
· member of the IRA , is rated as
;, .one .of.the top--ten crews in the
. country.' The race was one mile
. in length as opposed to the usual
2000 meters.
Bill Dourdis is hit by Assumption safety after one of his many gains in the Vikings 34-6 victory at ,
The irrst. eight consisting of:
. stroke;
Joe
Shrotz,
7-John -
Wilson, 6-Gerry Schaeffer, 5-Jim
Cockroft,
4-
John
Lyons,
3-Marty Grims, 2-Tom Maslinka,
I-Mark
Braatz,
and
coxswain-Harry Manley, won it's
race handily by out-pulling their
rivals
by three. boat-lengths.
They
completed
the rough
course in a
time of S: 14 while it
took Syracuse 5:29.
hom<la,tS,Vyikings
Roll
34-6
The second Freshman Crew,
m·ade
up
of
oarsmen:
stroke-Dennis Stauffer, 7-Andre
Albert,. 6-Tim. Petrone,
5~
Jack
Barry, -4-:Brian Weaver, 3-J.oe
Puvogel, 2~Skip Lacey, I-Steve
McDermott, and coxswain-Mike
~•M-ini-cHawk"
Hawd,
also
..
captured its victory ·. by three
-lengths;
The winning time was
5:44, 16 seconds better than
Syracuse's.
The third.boat, which was ther
, · but
did · not _ compete, is.
composed of: stroke-Bill Dibble,
··-7-John·
Dennin,
6-Jo,e
Fitzpatrick, 5-Greg. McLaughlin,
, -4-Ste~e Gil\en, 3-Kevin: Boland,
'.2-Phil Totonelly, l sPat Richards,
and coxswain-Time Long.
CONTINUED
ON
7
By Kevin Donnelly
The
Vikings in their best Frank Attanito and Mike did
· offensive showing of the year another fine job in holding the
beat Assumption College 34-6 at Assumption _team to only
6
Leonidoff Field last Saturday.
points. The defensive- rush was
In. the absence of. starting
stronger last Saturday than
it
has
quarterback John Hurley and in
been in the past few games with
an entirely new offense under
Marty Keeley, Henry Blum and
the
direction
of freshman
Frank
Lacombe
shooting
quarterback
Ron
Vuy, the
through to drop the Assumption
Vikings rolled up their highest
quarterback
before he· could
point total of the year.·
· throw.
.
Dick Hasbrouck, who scored
: The s~oring started early as
three touchdowns, returned to the Vikings drove down field in
.the lineup after missing the ·last • the. first. quarter_. with · Dick
·two games because of a· rib· Hasbrouck going .through the
injury .. It was the first time since middle for four ,Yards and the
Plattsburgh
that• Dourdis and score.
The PAT failed.' The
Hasbrouck were in the back field offense
scored again' in the
together.
They
made their
second quarter as Ron Vuy,
p):esence felt as both went over showing
.good. poise
for a
the JOO yard mark in rushing
freshman fired a fine pass to Bill
gaining
180 and 130 yards,
Paccione 'for the second score
of
· respectively.
the game. The PAT failed and
, .. The. Qffensive line of the
the half ended with the score
Vikings consisting of: Emmett
12-0 in favor of.the Vikings.
. Cooke, Bill McGarr, Mike Cahill,
Soccer.
Team Ties Nyack
l-1
/
..
October 14 offered the Marist through
the
opening.
To!ll ·Bubenko but was unable to do
Soccer teani some consolation
Jaston s.cored the goal for Nyack
so· and Btibenko' made the stop
on a very depressirig season. As
·
at 20:34. In 'the third period we
of the gaine · and saved the tie.
they. had done_ in past games, . outshot our opponents 7-1 but
Marist was able to tie Nyack 1-l
they
completely,·
dominated
were
still unable to score. At
although
they · outshot there
play,thistimetheoutcomewas
'6:39ofthefouithperiodapush
opponent-32-14.
It was a·
different as the score was 1-1 at
in the penalty area:· set up
a
gratefultie .. :
the end. The first period saw - penalty shot and Tom Rabbitt"
Saturday ,had nothing to offer
Marist outshot_ there opponents . banged· it home.· From then on . in the.way of excitement for our
6-3. The second period Marist ·
in
it was a _ tough defensive
soccer players. They journeyed
outsh_ot Nyack 11-5 but Nyack : struggle. Goalie, Bubenko saved
to Kings C.ollege to . play the
was able to score when
John
the gaine when with five minutes
Purple Knights. -They returned
Bubenko slipped in the · goal to go a Nyack player had a break
an injured squad• and a team
mouth
and
the
ball . went
away; He tried to out
position
thoroughly· beaten at their own
g
a m e . B e fo r e a. I a r
g
e
homecoming·
crowd,
Kings
handed
Marist
their
worst
beating of the season, physically
as well as in the score book.
When the final gun went off the
score
was Kings 6-Marist
I.
Marist lost four players in the
Bill Kawina
dribbles past
Nyack
defender as teams battled to
tie.
· game including goalie Bubenko
for. the second time. this year.
Kings scored in the first period
. on a penalty shot by.
R. Revere.
They netted another three goals
in the second period and by half .
time the game was out of reach.
. Dan Zelinski scored the only
goal for Marist on an assisf from
Tom Rabbitt at 8:02 in the third
period to make the score 5-1.
This leaves Marist's record at
0-6-1
overall
and 0-2-1
in
conference play. They have five
games remaining with Sacred
Heart their next home game on
Nov. 1.
In the
third
quarter
the
Assumption team scored quickly
as their
quarterback;
John ·
Frank, threw a pass to end Ted
Strojny from 15 yards out and ·
the score stood at 12-6 as the
extra point attempt failed.
·The Vikings wasted no time
in
coming back as Ron Vuy .hit
Chris McNamara on a down and
out pass: Chris turned the corner
and went 70 yards to score.
Andy. Herzing caught .a
,pass for
· the two point conversion and
the score became 20-6 in favor
of the, Vikings. An interception
by
Bill
Rooney _
set up another
touchdown as Dick . Hasbrouck
·· went through the middle for 15 ·
yards· for his second touchdown
· of the day. The two point
conversion
was good as ·
Bill.
Dourdis went off tackle.
· The
Assumption·
·team
controlled . the ball for. most of
the fourttt quart~r, but were
unable to score as the strong
Viking
defense
led by Bill
Iacobellis held them time and
time again. The score. ended :as
the Vikings again received the
ball · in good field position and
drove down to the Assumption
5
yard line where Dick Hasbrouck
scored his third and the - final
touchdown of the game. The
PAT failed and the final score
was 34-6.
·
There
were
some
fine
performances turned in by some
new faces ori the team .. To name'
a few,
Bob
Sullivan,
Jim
Wilkens, Frank Vanacore, Frank
Lacombe, Dennis Claire and Dan
Faison.
The
Vikings
next
opponent_ is a very .. strong St.
John's team. It looks like a good
one.
FOOTBALL
FILMS
IN RAT
TONITE
. by
Steve K~pki
On Saturday, October 18th
the Cross-Country team was at
full strength for the first time
this season. Greatly bolstered by
the return of Phil Cappio and
with a strong race by co-captain
Bob Mayerhofer, the team came
: through
with - a strong solid
showing.
Beating
Brooklyn
College 27-28, Drew University
21-37
and
·sacred
Heart
University, 20-43, the harriers_
ran ,together· as a team and ·
constantly
pushed each other
throughout the race. These three
opponents were actually better
than the three that defeated our
injury ridden squad last week.
· . After the first four places were
taken by runners from the other
-
schools, Marist came across with
a strong block of runners to gain
victory. Fifth, sixth and seventh
places were taken by Phil Cappio
30: 11, Bob ·Mayerhofer 30:43
and Steve Sawicki 31:01. The
scoring was rounded out by Jim
Corbett 31: 16 in the ninth slot
and John Petroglia 31 : 17 in the
tenth slot. The sixth and seventh
who helped
displace
were
co-captain Joe McMahon 32:20
and Jim Ambry 34:06. Mike
Smith 35: 15 and Tom Geraghty
36:33 ran well as eighth and
ninth men.
On Wednesday October 15, a
. much depleted Marist team was
soundly . defeated 16-41 by a
strong Siena team at Siena. The
course was shorter than most
covering only
-4.2
miles. The
scorers
from
Marist
were
Mayer ho fer
24: 11, Petraglia
24:34, Tom. Mahoney 25:25,
Greg
Nelsen
25:57,
Joe
McMahon
26:00. They were
followed
by Charlie Russett
CONTINUED ON
7
Orange
Crew
Tops
Varsity
and
J.
Y.
Early Saturday morning the
Marist College Crew challenged
Syracuse on the wind swept
2000 -meter course, on Lake
Onondago. The two teams lined
-up with
a strong stairboard
crosswind .. The Marist eight on
the starting command came off
the
line
at 33 strokes per minute
in'stead of the normal 38 that
they are accustomed to .. At the
end of the 20 strokes start, the
Marist College stroke Joe Ryan
dropped the beat to a
28. The
lanky Syracuse crew rowing at a
. higher rate jumped to a
4
seat
advantage but the strong Marist
team began to gradually close
the gap, and at 750 meters
Marist cox Pete Masterson called
for · a power 10 and his crew
took a slight lead. At this time
the Marist
eight was rowing as
-low as 25 strokes per minute to
Syracuse's 31. For the next 500
meters the two crews were· neck
and neck as t.hey sliced through
the choppy water. ·but then the
Syracuse eight, still· overstroking
Marist, gradually began to pull
away and going into the last 500
meters· had pulled out to a half
length lead .. About 20 strokes ·
later . Marist .stroke Joe Ryan
raised the .beat, but the Marist
eight was unable .to make up the
difference. Syracuse crossed the
line in 5:59 with Marist clocked
at
6:04. · ,
The
H. V.
boat came off the
line
strong
against a more
experienced Syracuse crew at 36
strokes per minute. Stroked by
John Weis and coxed by
Harry
Manley the boat settled to
32
and stayed with them for the
first 1,000 meters, but could not
hold off Syracuse's final sprint
to finish 2½ lengths behind.
CONTINUED ON 6
.:MORAT'ORIUM
..
',,
,,,
Norton~ Drell.n,ert Keynote Speake~s
MR.
JOSEPH
NORTON
.
.
. · The
·p e op le_ o
J
the
·Poughkeepsie area joined forces
with thousands across the nation
last week in support of the
· ; Vietnam
Moratorium.
Local
~
· residents, high· school ·students,
students at Dutchess and Ulster
Community
Colleges, Vassar,
Bennett, New Paltz· and Marist
formed
a committee
to
coordinate·
their·
peace
movement
effort; they ·were
joined
also by teachers. and
· instructors:
• ·
Activities
during the day
include.d
memorial
services,
· films, and discussions on the war
held at various campuses. The
religious studies department at
· Ma rist
College
conducted
services on the eve and at noon
Wednesday. The Moratorium eve
service culminated in an all night
.,vigil
for
peace. During the
' afternoon
of. the fifteenth,
Marist students joined others in
a do or-fo-door
campaign
distributing
·leaflets
·and
· collecting signatures on petitions
· calling for an immediate troop
withdrawal. Later that day a
walk for peace participated in by
about
five thousand
people
throµgh
Po_ughkeepsie
·transpireo;
the
crowd
was
· enthusiastic but orderly_. The
CONTINUED
ON 3
THE
DR. D.A. DRENNEN
::
VOLUME 6 .
NUMBER
4
. 1dARIST
COLLEGE,.~OUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12'101
OCTOBEJ.,l
23.
i969 . .
i,,~;::~ttotatbtittnt:·C1l>sei:,.With·~
GaFdllel',·
lGSlt
and·
FiiS•-··.
-
Goodell,
-
Seeger
·
Higlllight
F.D.R.
-
Symposium
On a very cold fall evening When he flashed the peace sign, -
approximately
5,000. stud~nts· the
cr.owd
roared
an·d'
..
and ·residents of the Mid-Hudson
reciprocated with the same signs.
• ar~a throriged to Riverykw Field
When the crowd ceased its
for the second and final rally of
ovation, G_oodell proceeded with
.
the October 15 moratorium.
·· a speech which was frequently
Waving· banners, flashipg the
interspersed· with applause. _He
peace sign and holding candles,
spoke of
his
staunch opposition
the crowd had assembled to hear
to the war .and of his opposition
Pete Seeger ring out a
f~.w tunes
to the President's policy . .The
.
and to·hear the keynote address · Senator was quite emphatic in
•· · .. _by Senator
. Charles Goodell
stating that the U.S. treaty with
··" , (R-N;Y.) . .
Senator Goodell, who
South Vietnam simply promises
. ·delivered the main address to the
them equipment and training
- graduating class of
'69 at Marist
and that our troops were. not
last-May 31, is considered to be
obligatory according to the same
· a prominent figure in the success
treaty. -.·
_ _
.of · the Moratorium throughout ·
He stated that he could not
the nation because of
his
open
see using American troops in a
opposition· to President Nixon's
fight against Coriununismjust to
Vietnamese policies and.because
leave them in the hands of" ... a
of the bill which he introduced
government of corruption. And
to the. Senate which stipulates
you know what I mean by a
that
all
U.S.
troops
be -corrupt government.; .If they
withdrawan from Vietnam .;by want our help, let them change
January of 1970.
·
· ·
· their government."
The
ceremonies,
originally.
Goodell spoke of a previous
-.cheduled to start.at 7:30
P.M.,
rally -.where
a con_servative
were held up for one half hour.
student sarcastically asked. him
· When they did start, a gentleman
what he would do when he was
from WEOK radio gave a short
retired from the Senatein 1970.
. speech
and
proceeded
to
•-•I
will continue to work for
. introduce Pete Seeger. .
peace" was his reply.
Seeger, wearing a sweatshirt,
_ Except for one elderly _lady
chino pants, and a baseball cap
who pleased the anti-war crowd
entertained the gathering with
with her reprisal of Goodell by
. songs he and others popularized
claiming that
"I
never thought
over· the years. In keeping with _ that I'd see America come to
the spirit of the occasio~, most
this," and that she was ashamed
of his . songs displayed anti-war
of Goodell and would not vote
themes.
Particularly
well
for him, there were no counter
recieved were his· vexsions of demonstrations.
"Bring Them Home," a song
·
* * • "'
*
which dealt with the absurdity
of the military and a plea to
bring home the men in Vietnam,
and "I Want to Go to Andora,"
a rather quaint melody about a
nation that. "spent _$4.90. on
their defense."
Senator Goodell had entered
the
field
during
Seeger's
rendition. When Seeger finished,
Goodell
was
greeted by wild
applause and a standing ovation.
GOOD
WEEKEND
For
-Sports
see
,1. I
By Ray Frontain
The Fifth Annual Franklin D.
Roosevelt
Symposium
took
place Saturday, Oct. 18, in ihe
Campus Center. The theme was
:"FDR
as
a Diplomatist."
.
· In
his
opening remarks; Bro ..
Linus
Foy,
President of Marist
College, . welcomed
the , 200
guests
and called the Symposium
"a little Marist miracle," in that
so small a college as Marist could
attract so reputable and large a
community of scholars.
Joining
Bro.
Linus
in
welcoming · the group was Dr.
George H. Skau, Chairman of
the Marist History. and Political
Science
Department
and
moderator of the Symposium,
Dr. Skau
pointed
out the
relevancy of the theme in that,
twenty-five
years
later, the
problems offending a war and
securing a lasting peace (FDR's
goals· as a diplomatist) are still
very much significant. He also
expressed the hope that other
colleges and presidential libraries
would join together and produce
other events of this sort.
Presenting a , paper entitled
"Roosevelt:
Perils of · Second
Front
Diplomacy,''
was Mr.
Lloyd
Gardner, Professor of
History at Rutgers University
and
author
of· ECONOMIC
ASPECTS OF THE NEW DEAL.
In a panel discussion following
the paper,
Mr.
James MacGregor
Burns,
Professor of Political
Science at Williams College and
author of
THE
LION AND THE
FOX, stressed the point that
Roosevelt was tom between
his
own desires · and
those of
Churchill and Stalin, and
was
again divided by his desire to
be
a good commander-in-chief who
. would lose as few American lives
as
possible, and
~
desires to
win the
war as quickly
as
possible. and bring about his
Four Freedoms for the world.
Panelist John Tolan, author of
THE
LAST
I 00
DAYS,
commented
on Roosevelt's
tragic
naiveness of Japanese
problems and of our blunder of
entering into
a war
with Japan.·
He also spoke of the racial
implications of the war, how
they influenced the diplomacy
of the war, and how they still
affect
us today: "We do still not
believe in the self-determination
of nations unless they are white
nations."
A
third panelist, Mr. Irving G.
.Williams, Professor of History at
CONTINUED
ON
7
PAGE2
·:}:~s!~il~
.
·""·~-....,,."·
Fort Dix, New Jersey: Entrance to-the Stockade.
111ECIR.CLE
OCTOBER 23, 1969
''Freedom'~
at Fort Dix.
FORT
DIX,
N.J; (LNS)
represented establishment papers.
"OBEDIENCE TO
THE
LAW IS
and radio and
TV
stations.
FREEDOM," reads the sign over
"You can see anything
.you
the• entrance to the Fort Dix
want to see." (Col. William
0.
Stockade.
",
Gall, Chlef of Staff at Fort Dix.)
.
"Colonel, who was responsible
' ' N o
p h o tog rap h
s
·
,o
f
fortheselectionofthatslogan?"
pri-soners ... No contact
or
"Who was responsible? Well, I
conversation between newsmen
don't know, really. It's been
and prisoners." (Guidelines for
here for years and years and we
the Visit to Stockade by Media.)
really like it."
.
The newsmen were cynical
The Fort Dix Stockade is the
about the tour, and
·t_he
Arm's
largest military prison in the
refusal to let them speak to
country, with the exception of
prisoners didn't alter their view.
the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at
Nor did the steak dinner the
Ft. Leavenworth. During 1968,
men were being served in the
according to Army figures, and
mess hall.
It
was clearly not a
average
of 705
men were
typical stockade meal.
.
confined
behind·. the double
"I
wish you guys would come
cycl_one fence and concertina
more· often.
We'd get more
ba~b wire.· The guards in the _ steak ... We hate the food. People
stockade are unarmed; those in-. spit on it." (comments from
the guard towers have s_hotguns.
prisoners in the mess.)
The most common reason for
·
It's easy to
·understand
why
.
men being put
in
the stockade is
the Ar.my. is concerned about
that they went AWOL. About
"s.ecurity"
in
.the
mess hall and
one quarter of the men AWOL
throughout
.the
stockade.
ai:e from Fort Dix itself; the
Defiance· is in the air. As the
others·· are
men· taken into
newsmen
walked
past
'the
custody in New Jersey, New
barracks, prisoners leaned out
York,
or Fairfield
County,
the window and shouted:·
Connecticut.
.
."We're
fighting for peace,
Th~re has been a flurry of
.
man."
interest in the press and concern
"Tell the truth about this
.
in Congress about conditions in
·
place."
Army stockades, following the•
"There's
.no
hot
-water,.
not
murder of a mentally-ill prisoner
enough to eat."
·
in the Presidio Stockade, and the
"See
what they do to their
"mutiny"
court-martial of the
Vietnam veterans."
Presidio
27. - prisoners who
"Why won't they let you rap
protested the man's shooting by
with the prisoners?"
a guard.
·
A
sergeant snapped at the
Because
·of
this adverse public
prisoners:
·
"You, you're on
reaction,
the
PenJagon has
report to me! Get down there!"
ordered that several stockades be
·
The. men showed defiance of
Cell
Block
60
-was.
the
highpoint
Of ·
curiosity
·
in
··
the
minds of the reporters. Fourteen
men are being held there
as
alleged
deserters • including
.
Terry Klug, an. organizer for
RITA
(Resistance
·
Inside
.
the
Army), and Donald Williams,
who
was· sentenced
to
six
months in the stockade after his
voluntary return from
.Sweden.
.Cell Block 60 first_ gained
notoriety after the publication
of a letter written
by
Dpn
Williams. He
.told
how he was
beaten· by a guard, Spec. 5
Young, because
"I
·
had been
getting on hls nerves."
-'
.
Far grimmer than Cell block
.
6
0 , tho ugh-,
•
are
the
"segregation," cells. Thir:ty men
are being held
in
6'
x
8~ cells. Six
of them are in "disciplinary
segregation,"
.('~for.
fighting,
mostly,''. an army official said.)
.
The
rest
·
in ~•administrative
'
·
segregation" '.'""
because they are
considered
"escape
·:.risks,"
''homosexual,''..
-~'narcotics
addicts" or "sensitive!'
·
. ·.
-.Reports·
from
prisoners
indicate
that
.conditions
in
"segregation"
are subhuman.
·
An Army officer said,. "We
·
.
only· put men
..
in restraints
·
if
they are suicide risks."
. .
·
.
Men in disciplinary segregation
may be put on a ''restricted
diet"
for
-
14
days at a time
·
as
punishment.
·"It·
is•
·the·
·
same
meals served to other prisoners,"
Major Casey · said, "with the
exception .that there is no meat,
·
.
no fruit, no deserts, no milk, no
5,000
March
at Fort Dix
·.
opened to fours by newsmen.
that sergeant, and of· the bras~
On Wednesd~y, April 16,
50
or
who were herding the newsmen
so newsmen climbed into Army
through at a slow run; prisoners
buses for a trip to the Fort Dix
flashed
V-signs through the
Stockade.
Except
for two
windows and raised clenched
reporters arid a photographer•
fists.
When
LNS. reporters
from
LIBERATION
News
responded,
-the
fists and V-signs
poultry;• no dairy products. The
only drink permitted is water."
.
There
·are
some
hopeful
aspects. here, however. Last year,
FORT
,DIX,
New Jersey -
(CPS) - At least 5,000 persons
marched
Oct.
12
to protest
charges against 38 Gls of arson,
conspiracy, and rioting. The GIS
.
had protested their
·
oppression
while serving at'. Fort Dix ~nd
·
may be sentenced to.43 years in
.
prison
each.
CPS Reporter·
Nancy
Beezley attended
the
protest
march, and filed the
following report:
.
-
.
·
marching eiglit abreast. or at
least trying. sometimes two link
arms. sometimes three or ten.
save bullets for your army.
·
don't· break ranks or we'll
never conquer the united states
army.
three
helicopters
.
are
circling, circling, circling here in
wrightstown
new
jersey.
no-rights-town garden
state
u.s.a.
where 38 gj_s may be. sentenced
to
43
years each. because they
rebelled.
·
·,
·
.
.,.
because 750
.
prisoners were
crammed into a stockage built to
h.ouse 350:
•
because many were
cra_mnie.d into an army stockade
for
.opposing
the war in vietnam,
for saying, "g.i.s understand that
the
.same
system
which
.
imprisons black leaders, draft
resisters, and
•student
activists
oppresses them. our. struggle is
together." because when a man
asked for
_something
to drink on
a
hot
.
afternoon he was put in
the
hole. because men were
forced to stand at attention in
the sun for five hours.
so
they got tired and· the
rebelled and threw lockers. out
of
the
windows·
and
set
mattresses
on fire
·
and broke
some
windows.
over
200
rebelled.
38
have been charged
with
arson, conspiracy, riot.
anti-war g.i.s issued a call: "as
gJ.s we now recognize that our
personal
lives
are being sacrificed
for
the selfish
economic,
political, and sick motives of the
ruling class of this country - that
class
which
conceived
and·
perpetuates this army. what we
have
as
gis
is a situation in which
there is very little choice, the
stockade
or unquestioning
obedience to the m~litary; or to
quote the military, 'obedience to
the law
is
freedom.'
.. today (october 12), we are
gathered-together to protest the
inhumane
conditions of the
most powerful and destructive
organization in the world, the
united states army. for too long,
gi's felt along and isolated in an
atmosphere of fear and control.
for too long gi's. have said to
themselves,
,'what.
can
i
do
alone?'->'
•.
.
.·
.
.
.
.
so we came .. dema~ding~ the
release of the fort dix 38 and the
abolition of the stockade system
and the release of all political
prisoners
in
clvilian and military
prisons and an immediate end to
the war in vietnam.
.
.
5,000, inaybe more, marched
for the fort dix 38. chanted for
the abolition of the stockade .
system. rallied for the release of
the panther
.21
•
and huey p.
newton and the presidio
27
and
the conspiracy 8. got gassed for
the end to war in vietnam.
·
marching from the off-base
and
bullet-torn
.fort
dix
coffeehouse
...
to the on-base
stockade where the fort dix 38
are
.
imprisoned ... back off-base
to the main entrance of fort-dix.
·
chanting
fort
dix brass lias got
to go red red power
_tO"
.
the red
red people black
.
black power to
the black black people
gi
power
to the gi people power to the
people.
·.
·
·
·
..
· ..
past the town people. some of
··
them
_waving
·and
returnipg peace.
signs. sonie of thein just- looking.
some of th~m
.
shouting angry
words.
·
.··
past
the
.
warning
sign
unauthorized
demonstrations
prohibited. past the barbed wire.'
past the first. line of military
·
police. across the grassy field
toward
th~ stockade.
the
helicopters
circling
circling
circling.
·
·
·
·
stopping
in
a huge
quarter-circle near the stockade.
the army green cop cars speeding
across the field and a huge
prisoner wagon pulling up. «gi's
are our friends join
us
free the
fort
dix
38
end the
war
now."
the m.p.'s putting on
gas
masks.
hardly time
to
stop. no
time
to take notes. the soldier saying
disperse or we'll use chemicals.
everybody turning away. eyes
watering. coughing. trying to
breathe.
before
the march gassing
march there was a rally.
before the
march
kathy russel
whose husband is in the stockage
and
is
up for a possible 7S-year
sentence was
.saying
he wrote
kathy where's the compassion in
Service,
the
journalists
multiplied.
.·
·
· ·
.
·
· .
16 men escaped directly from
the, stockade, and others from
parole or work details
·
361
escapees_ in alL
·
Cor-nell:
·stud-ies
lihaca,
N. Y
.-(1.P.)-The
chairman of
,a
commission to
study
the future of student
organization
at
CorneJl
Univeristy
has
recommended
establishment
of a council
representing
_the
entire
.:St_uilent
·1nvolvemetii->
University community to make
·
committee, representative of the
vital policy decisions quickly.
entire University
'community,
·
The·
recommendation
is
"Probably
such" a. council
contained
in a report prepared
would be needed in the best of·
by Robert S. Morison, chairma1.
times
but
it
is· c 1 early
of the 13-member President's
indispensable in a time· of rapid
Commission
on
Student
change
like
the
present,".
In-volvement in Decision-making.
Morison said. "During the past
the world,·where are the people
The Commission was asked to
few
years, a number of incidents
who care? and here they are and
~.'~tudy
..
the ... (utur~
·
.qf
.stu4ent
l:ta ve
o c curred,
for
the
i
love you.
·
.
:
_
organization· ao d
·
how
it
can'f:1est settlement
of which rio clear
before the march they_ s~y line
relate· to tbe educational·
·and·
policy· line seems to have been
up
,eight
abreast. new jersey new
institutional· operation -of the; available. Most of
·
these
·
were
.
york.
then
philadelphia. link
University."
dealt
with
-by-
ceiitral-
arms.
·
but it's too hard. the
·
The
11
?-page
chairman's
adn,inistration
·
on an ad· hoc
.
anarchists have to
·carry
signs
report also contains a detailed:
temponfry
basis
and
·
then
and the radio free people have to
analysis of th e «discontented·:
ref erred
to: some· speciai
carry
;
tape
recorders
and
st udent"
an
<l
_ml;lkes
specific"' committee
-
or·
·comniissibn:
for
everyone has· to
·carry
a camera
proposals
for
correcting'
more·_detailedstudy.·:.,
'.
_
and
.
a
.
few people ~re ,wr;iting situations
.
which' 'bring about,'.·
"Ultinfately, the'·deliberatirii_i~
things 4own and
.the
rest are
st udent
unreS t ,. ~orison
of· such
a·
comrrijssion·:ni.ay.
carrying the
.
philadelphi
..
·a -free. emphasized
.
that. the report is;
.
.
th'
·r .
'f
.......
rt'
·
·
n'ot
a statement
of the:;
e11!frge
m
e
orrn·q
..
a:r~pQ •
press
.·and
the wall newspape~
Commission as a whole. He said.
·
This may· then be "referred
to
and
.
a
·publicity
sheet from_ the
it is his attempt
as
chairman to·· various
-relevant·
·constituendes
student mobilization committee.
ori
the camp·us for. further' stu~y:
write_ 267~2000 on· your hand
"summarize th
e
majorpoints of] and· discussfo·n.-·
The
·
ffoal
.
in case something happens. there
d~cussion
~Y
th e Commission
synthesis, if any, may take the
will
be lawyers at that number
.
wit~ emphasis on th os7 th at bear
form of a faculty resolution, an
and at
.
the state police station
partic~a~Iy_ o~he design of !!eW._. exe~utive action: on
:the
part of
and the county court and· the
orgaru~tional arra!1gements.
·
·
·
the
·ad~tratioii,
·
oi- forinal
wrightstown court and the jag
.
lt!~nson also. pomted out th at
decision
by the
Board of
office. carry the bust' sheet with
tndlVldual papers prepare~ . by
Trustees.
.
·
·
you in case you witness an arrest
me~ bers of th e <:omnuSSion
''At/
no
stage
in·.
these
.
it is essential for the· safety and
deal
m
m?re d7pth with s~rne of
proceedings is there opportunity
the
defense.
of your fellow
th e_ top,ics included_ m the
·
for direct exchange of views
demonstrators.
·
~hairman s report, and ,
m
several
among all the interested: parties,
and after the march we pass a m~tances_,
express
different
much less for determination of
middle-aged black woman sitting
pomtsofview.
some
group
decision·
or
in her car. an m.p. standing
E!ents
_of_ the
P~
year,
consensus.
In
these
beside. we give her a peace
sign
Monson said m the chamnan's
circumstances,,a decision by any
andaclenchedfist.sheraisesher
report,
have
revealed
a
one
constituency
is viewed
hand a little and gives
a
clenched
• '
P
r
O
f_o u
?
d
.,1
a
ck
O
f
purely on procedural grounds.
f'ist and a peace sign.
co~munications
between
"It would seem far better if
after
.the
march we walk back
va~1ou~ groups
within
the
major policy issues could.
be
past the rows of m.p.'s to the
!-fru_v~mty. He ad~ed that the
dealt with in the
first
instance
parking lot. things
are
more
CilSls atmosphere_ of th e last
by a broadly
representative
casual.
the good humor man
is
two weeks of April have shown
group already in being and•with
selling his stuff. we go in groups
how great th e gap w~ and has
experience in the consideration
of two or three. dozens of gi's su~est~
some machinery for
of similar matters."
give
the peace
sign.
some
look
clOSing it.
.
Alth
gh
f • ·
away. a nu"ddle-"'ged black cat
The_
r_e Po rt _said
the
ou
one
o
·its
important
-°
C
functions would be to advise and
says it
wasn't worth it was it?
if
0
~'!1
15s•~n con
51
dered
n_ew
consult
with
the University
it helps the fort dix
·
38. if
it
a":mmiStratiVe st ruct~
w!rlc~
President at his request as new
helps end the war. if dozens of
nught help ~Ive th e ~ruveJSJty 5
or unusually pressing issues arise
military police give the peace
problems.
A possible model
the primary function
of th~
sign.
it was worth it.
!V'as found at least by some of us
endit okay
m a council, senate, board or
CONTINUED
ON
3
'
.
OCTOBER 23.1969
DIE CIRCLE
Educational
Television
Offered
for Credit
·.
.
By· George Roarty'
·
1:here
are
four
programs
.
Presently,
the students at
available
·in
televis1·on on· e of talking to Bro. Brian Desilets,
Mans· t are able t
d"
head of the televis·
1·on center ;.,
0
earn ere it
which is offered this semester.
..
..
out side of the classroom in
Thi
Donnelly, he mentioned that he
several ways. Aniong these are
s program is sponsored by would like to see these programs
the ·.Independent
Studies
the University of the Air and incorporated
into the present
Progr~m,
. College Proficiency.
offers three courses: Beginning curriculum in the near future.
Ex
t
d
German (Guten Tag)-12.00 a Brother Brian went on to say i·f
amma ions an
Television
credit. American History J-22.45
courses.
!hese
courses were incorporated
The
IND E p ENDE
NT
per
credit;
Basic Astronomy
mto the· curriculum, students
STUDIE" PROGRAM
(Eye on th e Universe) 7.75 per would be. hired to video-tape the
.
..,
basically
credit. The other three programs
involves
corr
d
program so that it may be shown
espon
ence
are
Sunrise
Semester which
bet we
·
th
t
d
t
d
at a convenient time. In add1·t1·on
en
e s u en s an
offers a math course and a
professors who teach. the same
1
.
to this
teachers
would be
courses
~in
residence at the
geo ogy course; En France which em ployed
to register
the
institutions.
of the
State
is a language
course;
and students, correct any exams and
.
University of New· York. Besides
..
Channel
.
l 3/WNDT
.
mentioned
supervise the· class: However, he
above which offers courses in emphasized·
the
fact
·that·
correspondence with a professor
Amer1·cans
from Afn·ca and
t d
th
·
t d t · d"
·
s u ents and· teachers would
·
e s u en
is
1rected by a
Gu· ten
..
Tag·. Also there- are h
h
t d
·d
ul
ave to s ow an interest in such
s
u
Y
gw e, reg ar readings in
courses offered in the field of courses
in order
for
•
these
course.
textbooks
and
on
Contm· um··gEducat1·on.
b
·
·
d"
· al
programs to
e employed in a
occasion au 10-vJS_u aids, taped
Up uritil
_now
these programs
l
A
.
lectur·es and
th
d"
regu ar progr_
am.
n_
y mterested
,
·
·
o er me 1a are
have been· optional. How_
ever, in
available.
·
CONTINUED ON 6
·
Students who feel they have ____
.,.....
_____________
:;_,_::....:,::..:._:
__
_
That is, namely, removing the
urgency of the movement by
making the goals of the peace
movement, among others the
immediate
withdrawal
of
American troops from Vietnam,
a part
of administration
verbiage. He also questioned the
merit
of
making the peace
movement
·
"fashionable,"
as
happened with the civil rights
movement,
which
leads to
further cooptation and eventual
gained mastery
'in
one or more
courses in high school or have·
.
N_ORTON,
DRENNEN
g·ained
·
knowledge
from
experience outside the classroom
may.
take
·COLLEGE
PROFICIENCY
EXAMINA-
TIONS.· If for
example,
a
·.
student has· proved that he has
mastered a subject (through the
exam) which is a required course
at
Marist,
he may have the
.
requirement waived. Credit may
also be given for the course but
it must
·
be in accordance with
Marist's academic policies.
E D
.U
C AT
I
ON A L
TELEVISION
COURSES are
another means available to he
student
for acquiring credit
outside of class. These can be
used in both a supplementary
and complimentary way. In a
supplementary way they would
aug~ent
a. student's
present
curnculum.
·
There
are
no
prerequisites for
-
these courses.
The student
is
supplied with a
specially designed study guide
providing
him
with a general
su·mmary
of each
lecture
outlines·:· of assignments and
•
quizzes· used for the student's
own· self-evaluation, Each lesson
:
:
.
·
m~y be telecast more than once
· \
~hich i~ a
_help
in clearing up
some pomt that isn't completely
understood ..
·
In a complimentary
way
.·
!~ache~
-
:may
use this dynamic
from.
I
·
.
walk terminated
at Riverview
·Field· at which point several
speakers
·
addressed the large
crowd. Among the speakers were
.Reverend Hugh F. Miller of the
Dutchess
County Council of
Churches, J:leter Kane,
-a
1968
congressional·
candidate and
-
Reverend
·
Robert
Dixori.
A
second peace rally was held at
Riverview Field at seven thirty
that evening featuring folk singer
· Pete Seeger and
·
U.S. Senator
Charles Goodell of New York.
As
part
of .the
·Marist
community's participation in the
moratorium
two-
faculty
J)lembers, Dr .. D.A. Drennen of
the Philosophy Department and
Mr.
Joseph
Norton
of the
History
department
set the
theme cif the day with a round
of keynote addresses.
'
Mr.
_Norton,
the first speaker
of. the
day
enunciated
a
fundamental
·
thesis concerning
the
peace movement in the
United States.
Mr.
Norton, no
stranger to reform movements in
the United States, raised the
question
of the government
co-opting
.
the peace movement.
death of the movement.
Mr.
Norton
in his fervid speech
called for immediate withdrawal
of. American
troops
from
Vietnam,
.
an overhaul of the
military system eliminating the
draft,
an investigation
to
determine
.
"responsibility"
for
the war in order to prevent
anoth~r foreign
.policy
mistake,
and fmally. a broad inquiry
into
the
circumstances of defense
contracts,
namely
the
publication of the names' of the
defense
contractors
and the
names of former
military
leaders
wh.o · are
·employed
by.
these
contractors:
Mr.
:
Norton was questioned
concerning the timetable of U.S.
removal
of forces.
Several
persons
argued·
that
the
President's "Vietminization"
of
the war is a step in the right
direction. However most agreed
that
an accelerated
troop
.
withdrawal
is needed.
,Mr.
.
instructional·
.
tool
·
to bring
an
·
.
-added
~ensioIJ.
to the present
.--------------
cl.asstoom
situ,ation.: Subjects
·covered
oil the
television
programs may not be covered in
Norton's speech while fostering
. ·
an air of_ immediacy was also
a. students course or may not be
·
included in the curriculum at all ..
..
For example; Marist
is
lacking in
·
an Afro-American Course, under
Chan,nel_ · 13 /WNDT
T.V.
,
program
·any ..
interested student
would be able to take the course
A!ll~ricans
from
·
Africa: A
Histo_ry for credit and be able to
put
it
towards his B.A; degree.
Teachers may/ want to use a
particular lecture on T.V. which
may cover.
a
·particular
area well
or any
area
which
·
wasn't
included at
a11
·
in their lectures.
SOCIAL COMMITTEE
wishes to extend·
their. Thanks
to
the
Italian
Society · ..
for
their
<:fecorations
at
Fall
Weekend
The newly constructed motorcycle rack
will
add a
new dimension
to
tile
lower
parking
loL
The idea
was
conceived
by
Mr. Ronald
Aderholdt,
Director or
Security.
The rack affords tllert protection
but the students must
supply
weather protection themsem!S.
.
future oriented in the sense that
conce!n not
·only
for the ending
of ttus war, but prevention of
another
possibly
in
·
Latin
America, was affirmed.
Dr.
Drennen
gave
a
philosophical
and historical
·
· meaning to the Moratorium by
an analysis of the methods of
Mohandas Kararnchand Gandhi,
the great
_Indian
leader who
~orked
for
·
Indian. rights and
independence. The basis of the
.
address
was the
method
Mahatma Gandhi used; termed
Satyagraha,
a sanskrit word
meaning truth force and the
counterpart
of the method
·
.
A,hisma
·
meaning non-violent.
The
enunciated
method
of
Gandhi was adopted by the late
·
Dr. Martin Luther King in the
form of non-violent resistance.
*****
BLOOD
DRIVE
_MONDAY
FIRESIDE
LOUNGE
PAGE3
actual
residential life of 'the
faculty is no longer visible to
proposed body, Morison's report
students except as visitations are
-~id,
would be to foresee policy
arranged
during
freshman
issues and devise courses of
orientation week, and this has
action
before
the situation
about as much impact as a trip
reached emergency proportions.
to the zoo."
It
also
would
have overall
The report points out that the
responsibility
for other joint
student functions not only as a
committees set up to consider
member of the community but'
special
policy
or operating
as ~n individual.
It
gives
prpblems.
·
particular attention to ways of
CORNELL
FROM 2
The new body would · not
increasing the students' sense of
replace the Faculty Council in
responsibility and control over
matters normally regarded as the
his own academic career.
latter's
primary
sphere
of
One recommendation was that
influence. Instead, the new body
all. colleges and departments
would operate in the "broad
should
continue to
examine
range
of issues
for which
their requirements with a view
conventional faculty machinery
toward
modifying
them to
has been found inadequate."
encourage the student to take
Morison said it could be hoped
increasing
responsibility
for
that eventually the University's
fashioning his own educational
Board of Trustees might' "pay
career.
careful attention"
to the new
Another recommendation was
body's
recommendations
in
that faculties of various colleges
matters of overall policy.
.
should examine their advisory
The report, after an· exhaustive
SYS
tem and, where necessary
analysis
of the
situation,
·
take steps to ensure that every
concluded that student unrest is student has
a
chance to develop
not simply a revolt
against
an
a continuing relationship with a
existing order. Rather, it said
it
wise and concerned member of
is in large part.a quest for
3
se~se
the_ faculty who can help him
of community.
·
design an educational experience
"Today," the· report said, "a
suitable to his present capacities
·
f
and future needs.
community o students, faculty,
and
administrators
living
·
A third recommendation was
together
in relatively
close that the possibility be studied of
pr?ximity
·
and interacting one
postponing final registration and
w 1 t h t he
o t h er
i n the
encouraging students to "shop
deveJop~ent of
a
moral order no
around" at the beginning of a
1
term.
on~er
exists,
if indeed,
it
ever
A
final recommendation
on
existed.
Faculty
and
a dministrator.s,.
like
other
academic
matters
was that
middle-class
urbanites,
have
.
departments, educational policy
moved to suburbia.
comn:iittees
_and the college
"There
is an interesting
faculties provide opportunities
parallel between the abandoned
for qualified students to reduce
campus
and
the abandoned
course credit requirements and
central city. Like the central
pursue independent study and
city' the campus is simply a research. It should be left to the
place of work to the professor.
individual
coJleges to· decide
He comes to work at 8 a.m.
or
whether
the
effectiveness
of
·
later and leaves at s":30 p·.m. or such individual work should be
.earlier.
Occasionally, he comes
evaluated on the basis of
a
back for a concert, lecture, ball
.
general examination, a thesis or
both.
game, or reception at the White
Art Museum. Otherwise
after
five o'clock, the campus' is left
to the students.
"Thus, the student
is
given no
actual community leadership, at
least from the older generation.
The esteemed professor is not
there,
setting
some
kind of
example (good or bad but at
Ie~st 'Yith moral implications)
~1th h1s proper (or
c~nceivably
improper) wife and the campus
small-fry. The stern
,president
does not preside on the hill. The
Toralb·alla
To
Lecture
·
In a lecture that should be of
interest to both historians and
mathematicians,
Dr. Toralballa
will introduce his new discovery
of a coordinate-free· geometric
definition
of derivative and
tangent
to a curve.
This
presentation will be in the form
of a "sneak preview" of a major
article to appear shortly in the
Journal of the Society for the
Advancement of Science.
Dr. Toralballa will show that
his
.. new"
definition. stems
directly and. naturally from the
simplest of ideas as introduced
by the Greeks prior to 330 B.C.,
and makes no use whatever of
either Analytic Geometry or the
theory of limits of sequences. In
this connection, Dr. Toralballa
will clearly demonstrate that if
the
Greeks had possessed a
better
understanding
of the
properties of real numbers, they
would
have
most
certainly
discovered these new definitions
themselves, three hundred and
thirty years before the birth of
Christ. This should be sharply
contrasted with the fact that it
was not until the seventeenth
century (20 centuries later) that
the derivative and the related
problem of tangents to a curve
w
a s firrally given meaning by
the great Isaac Newton. After
listening to
this
lecture, it will be
difficult for the student not to
speculate on the impact such a
discovery would have had on all
of civilization had the Greeks in
~30 B.C. p~rsued these simple
ideas to therr logical conclusion.
*****
lEllERS
FROM 5
small college) has
to fight
harder
(than
graduates
of "Q.ig
name
colleges")
to prove
hlmse1f
.
worthy of a job.
I question
the
frame of
reference
under
which this
article is written. Was the writer
a paid
reporter
gathering
information or a Marist College
student,
or both?
Is that
possible? There
is
no indication
either in
ot
outside the article
relating
'to
the
writer's
credentials
or his sources of
information .
If
the author were a Marist
student - and he is - it should be
so stated. In a discussion with
Mr.
Begley, he informed me this
was implicit in his writing. I fmd
this not true to fact.
.
What has he written? He's
written a feature story or is it a
n~ws sfo~ about small colleges
with Manst as the representative
sample. On what basis does he
proport this?
•
M
a r i s t i s , r a t h e·r , a
s m a
l 1 -
-
-
-
-·
- - ~----college.
Can
someone fill in the blank? Mr.
Begley can't.
What
is the
truth
about
Marist? It's not
all
peaches and
cream, but we do have nearly
400
freshmen,
the
Marist
student is aware of himself, and
we
have
a multi-faceted
program. Thank you for stating
the obvious.
Is this a lead feature of a series
of articles about Marist College?
If
it
is,
I'm
sure
the
administration
would like to
contribute.
If
what you say is true about
the Marist graduate having to
fight
harder to prove he is
worthy of a job, then, distribute
. your series to the Class of I 970.
They'll need to read our own
publicity to suIVive the uphill
battle.
What you are really saying is
you acknowledge the inferiority
of the small college in deference
to the "big name" college.
If
Marist College needs this
kind of publicity to pat itself on
the back, then, Marist is really
inferior. We have the complex,
and rightfully, are living it.
I hope Mr. Begley will publicly_
: COllol'TINUED
ON 6
,I
• 1
i
I
PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 23, 1969
·
Faculty
·Focus
The
Ruminations
Noles
From.
Bogota
The·
Silent·
laiOrity
·
.-
·
By Paul Browne
·
assure·
its economic
sucCeSs
and
Of
a
·
Ma·
an·1,·gh·,.e·
r··
·
The moratorium
on dissent
security, there is now talk of a
~
.
.
.
'
.
,
.
, .
·
•
which President Nixon suggested
"Third World" - a world where
·
·
during his campaign for high.
capitalism USA-style is hardly•
,
·
by Charles
P. Brambilla
laymen committed
to serving
office, is one that must end.
welcomed. The question now
is_
A
Lecturer in Sociology - a
their community·
·
.
.
Silence on convictions is a rather
whether or not America's prime
Moonlighter
-
a part-time
'All
of this is said to describe
hazardous
road to- travel. As
concern
·will·
be U.S. profit
professor - an extra job.
~ a the student gap with which· I
Miguel de Unomuno said, "at
making in the Americas, or
iil
professional
social
worker
must identify. On the one hand,
times to say nothing is· to lie."
shaping
a meaningful foreign
-teaching
contemporary
social
the necessary academic training
As an act of unity with the
policy
that
can
evaluate
problems or applied sociology -
in Sociology, Psychology
a
nd
.
students in the United States,
intelligently
conditions in the
·
or the man who appears in the
Social Work to prepare me
to
and in order to explain' our
under-developed
nations
of
Day and Evening Division for
2
work in th e Social Welfare field.
opposition
to the
war
in
Latin America.
three credit courses and fades
On the other hand , th e daily
MR. CHARLES BRAMBILLA
Vietnam, students studying in
·
And in Asia? Will we continue
a·way
just
as unnoticed.
contact with very
real
people
. Colombia
have composed a
to assume
a
role that concerns
Fulfilling
this
role is very
with very real problems.
..
hours on Campus I have no pat
statement to. be
.presented
the
itself
pdmarily
with·· the_
rewarding,
providing me with
Is there a point
·at
which we
answers. 1 must spend mo st of
United States Ambassador here,
..
containment of communism? Or.
1
·
the opportunity
to share in an
can
separate
th e academic
my time in my
full
time job.
If
we. did
not
voice
our. - will we look· at Asia as an·
•
academic setting that
is
both
pursuit
from
th e personal
·
St ill I miss th e atmosphere of
opposition,
Colombians cou~d · expiodirig continent
fu-
need of
Challenoing and frustratm· g
..
An
experience? Is there a common
the real Marist community with
.
h
1
h
1
.
h
~
al
.
.,.
·
d
11 f ·
1
-··
th
.
_rig
t y assume
we. are
m
e p, wit vezy
..
1ew terna_t1ves
academl·c world niade up onJy·of
ground
for
the expenence
a o its concerns.
am sure
e
.
h
t
I
f
.
~
agreement wit our govemmen
.
e t open to 1t.
.
_
. ·
students..
evening student of thirty-.1ivc
older evening division students
- "at times to say nothing is to
.
And Africa? - Where nations
As One Who Was a
.
toddler
with
three children and·
.the
feel as
I do -.apart from college
,,
·
-
·f
lie..
'.;.
violently
struggle·•
or.
during the Depression, faced the
college senior of twenty who is
life. However; th e Day st udent is
But student protest-to the.war
.,
self-determination.
Our history
Draft in 1945 and 1950 and has
still dependent on his parents? Is
also apart from the community
mu st
make
meaningful
is not soiled there~ bufin .the::
spent 20 years in most phases of
there a meeting point· for the
and oftentimes too critical of a
conclusions, not just noise. Why,
..
future, how will our. policies
social work, from reform schools
student with thirty-five years of
society that he is not shaping yet
for example, has our foreign.
develop?.
.
to
foster homes,· from family
living
experience·
with the
but in which he lives.
li
d
d
f thl
ki
p
·d
N"
uld
h
po cy an
mo es o.
n. ng__
.
r~s1 ent
1xon
·WO
·
rat er
court to psychiatric clinic, from
twenty year old who has yet to
We talk about th e Draft. The
not changed, or at least made.
·
have us quiet. But as citizens and·
childrens' institution to family
face the exigencies of life? What
college
senior
•is,
of course,
adaptations in a changing world?
as
.
students.
we
-should
.be
,
agencies; I cannot help but look
is the place for the Moonlighter
concerned about his future. But
If
we are to assure that no more_ committed not to silence - but
.
at social problems through the
who brings his experience to the
he th inks only in terms of
Vietnams occur, the thinking in
to change; committed to change
eyes of experience. Experience
classroom
right
from the job and
Vietnam.
The older student
America,. which has allowed us
a
foreign policy which has led to.
that brought
me
in contact with
the
-professor
who spends all of
thinks· back
to
th e early days of to assume we had a
RIGHT
to
our intervention in Vietnam, and
personal po\·ertr, the ghettoes of
his time in an academic setting
World War II and a draft he has
intervene
in Vietnam, must
committed to make our policies
Harlem. the
i:lils
of New York
coping with the problems of
lived
wi th
and faced for
17
or
18
·
change.
.
creative initiatives of men, rather
Citr,
-
the
·family ,vho goes
academia?
years. The broad experienced
In
La tin
America;
where
than
destructive
devices
-
of
hungry and home le~, the drug
I have been asked to face these
viewpoint of the student who
blundering
foreign policy. has
government ..
addict, the college educated with
questions by my
'students.
The
sees
his
Country
and
its
been used by U.S. industry to
serious marital problems. But,
young students who want
·
the
·
committments all over the world
my work also brings me into
academic challenge but do not
- from Germany to Japan. The
contact with the administrators
have life's experiences on which
young student who sees only th~
of health and welfare agencies,
to test them out. The older,
current
conflict.
Experience
the host of professionals seeking
Evening Division student, who
provides the generic view of a
to alleviate man's problems, the
has the experience, the desire to
country
of tremendous
and
learn
but has all the other.
varied
opportunities.
The
Accents
Disconsolate
By
Ed Peck.
Ray
Pasi
.,-
.· -
Iri
a world where
a
man must
take
Corripoz before·.
he_
can
listen to what his neighbors arc
up to, and
in
a nation whose
advertising ad.vises its people to
take
multiple
vitamins since
their busy schedules don_'t allo.w
even one
full
family meal, a rare
moment.
emerges.
when
humanity begins to sense what it
means to be humanin the world.
During
this rare moment,
isolated individuals, people with
various attitudes
and opinions
from one end.of the spectrum to
the other, brought together their
.
concern,
most deep~y human,
and
.
ceasing
·
to be cogs .in a
wheel, they became members of·
a unified
and
feeling
community. That brief moment
came perhaps during the
singing
·
of a prayer, the· reading of a
thought, or during the vqcalizing
of
a
hope shared by all. It was
the briefest of moments, but all_
our
beginnings
are
brief
moments.
It
was an obvious time for
sharing. A little boy searched the
gutter
for
the
leaf
to be
mounted
on
a piece
of
construction
paper
for
tomorrow's
class. As a large
crowd went by
he
stayed at the
curb, yet with· a smile took his
place
in
the
movement,
JIOnetheless.
responsibilitiesofafulltimejob,
inexperienced
student
is
a wife, children
and
community
struggling, even as he graduates,
obligations.
with trying
to
find a
job.
I have learned in these past
As a Moonlighter and as a part
three yeats at Marist that both
of
that
contemporary'
scene
generatipns must communicate.
outside
the Marist. campus
l
That. experience and academic
participate
of choice and _of
pursuits can be merged. But the
necessity in that society we live
method' is illusive at times, I am
in with .its problems and its
convinced
that
-t-he
young · rewards.
,So
does· the. part,-time
student must study and read and
student in the evening program.
write but he must also live and
We have something to offer - yes
tune in to the total social scene
'
from experience but
..
also from
about him.
It
would help-
if
he
an
academic_
viewpoint.
As
just read the daily paper and
•
Marist strives
'.to
meet i_ts purpose
became concerned with school
to turn out a well rounded
taxes, welfare problems,- po_verty student,
I
feel that its· Day
and the price of food, to name a
students
especially
have a
few. It would
also
help if
-the
wonderful_
opportunity
·
by
older student concerned with
all
sharing the classroom with the
of the above would listen to the
part
·time
evening student. There
younger student and· share more
should be more sliaring -
all
of us
of his
concerns
from
his
have much to learn fr9m each
theoretical viewpoints.
other.
·
·
As a L~cturer who_ spends six
By Peter Mesterson
the Maintenance Club?
·
This club, one of tlie
recreational
·organizations
on
campus,
enables unqualified,
uninterested
and unconcerned
ex-custodial
engineers.-to
organize
several
groups of
equally unconcerned
teams of
do-nothings
to
roam about the
campus under many disguises
attempting
to waste as much
time and money on as little as
possible. The winner get to park
a bulldozer
in front
of
Leonedoff Field and· the loser
gets to park
.
a dump turck in
front of the gym. However, if we
were
to
call
up
this long
established Loafers Society, they
would reply immediately with,
CREDIT: Georgia Straight/LNS -
An older woman, too old to
walk, was involved enough to
wait on her porch for her people
in the march. She had a definite
impact on the group when she
shared
her
enthusiasm
and
encouraged
the marchers by
raising her hand in the universal
pc.ice sign.
She
couldn't be
in
the
street,
where there was
singing and the holding of hands,
but she could share the bond.
Why is Marist a mess?. Walk
around the campus at anytime
of the day. What a beautiful
place.
Trees, shrubbery,
the
river, hills,· beautiful· buildings,
garbage. Walk by the beautiful
dormitories
and , see the filth
littered
below the windows.
Ride
the
elevator
in
Champagnant and- stand on the
old paper cups, candy wrappers,
cigarette
butts, and outdated
bulletins or announcements .. Of
course, these shouldn't be there
in the first place. But where can
they .be disposed of. In a garbage
can?· Where can one find a
garbage can? Only in private
rooms or one
in
each of the
dorm lobbies. But you'll never
find
one
where
students
congregate, like in a lounge. Or
if one was to walk from one
dorm to another or
to
Donnelly
Hall and wanted to throw away
an
old cigarette box, where?
How about right there in the
middle
of the
parking
lot!
Naturally, if
its dropped there
you'll be able to
visit
it next
spring. It'll still
be there even
if
it's
covered with snow
during
the winter, you'll still
find it
after the thaw, with
all
the other
junk. Nobody cleans. up the
mess.
What can we do? Who can
we contact?
I
know! How about
••1t•s already been done!" How ... ---------~----'
about if we called the Club
Looking back, it seems
that
the important things was not the
different
motivations of those
involved, but the deeply human
spirit
that.
resulted. There was a
basic
hope to be expressed,
movement created a bond, and
something
was shared
and
CXJ'\!ricnccd.
The
Moratorium.
President?
(sometimes· called
.. what's his name") He,
rm
sure,
would respond to·· the campus
mess by immediately ordering,
two more brand new twenty
year old water frocks, and he
would dispatch these to wet
down the parking lot. In other
words, .. forget it." Marist
is
a
mess!
Will it stay that way? Why
don't
we save our wrappers,
paper
cups,
beer
cans
and other
junk; throw it where it belongs
in the Maintenance Club House,
and maybe Marist won't be a
mess. But we'll still have a
Maintenance Club, and that's a
mess!
Spend ~slmas
in the Orient!
Travel to Japan and Hong Kong
For 23 Unforgettable Days!
·
,
-~;
Obtain 2 Credit Cards m Japanese Culture.
See John Zebatto (mail C-459)
OCTOBER 23. 1969
, EDITORIAL
..
'
,..,
.
Technology
'.of
the Vacuum
Cleaner
. For at least three years now, and especially over the past year the
MAINTENANCE DEPARTMENT has definitely hit upon an "era of
deterioration."
No statistics are necessary for validation of this
statement. One simply has to take· a tour of the campus and count the
number o,f street lights lighting, showers showering, maintenance fleet
vehicles running and transparent windows actually transparent
(disregarding the broken ones). ·
-
·
But who do you blame for such a batting average? The students
cause natural maintenance problems through normal usage of facilities
and very few are the cause of blatant vandalism. So you can't blame
them. Admittedly, Mr. Pavelko may have a slight preoccupation with
· pre-Civil War automotive machinery. But with such an efficient crew
TIIECIRCLE
Calendar Of Events
For the Week of Oct. 27 - Nov. 2, 1969
If
you would like your organization's information included on this
calendar, it is important that you contact
Mr.
Brosnan's office at
least two weeks prior to the date that the event is scheduled to take
place.
_
_Please contact: Joseph Brosnan, Director of Campus Center,
471-3240, Ext. 279.
· Tuesday - October
28
3 :00 P.M. Soccer - Newark St. A WAY
8:00 P.M. Film • Leo Tolstoy's "WAR AND PEACE" Co-sponsored
by the History and Russian Clubs.
PAGES
Letters
Dear Editor:
It
would be unnecessary to say
that I was rather shocked to read
the interview appearing
in
the
second edition of THE CIRCLE .
I would
seem
to have an
extremely negative impression of
the College.
and the oudget Mr. Campilli gives him, how can you blame Mr.
_
Wednesday - October 29
• ._ Pavelko: However,
Mi.
Campilli only gives Mr. Pavelko the money · l :00 P.M. Recruitment - Mr. Francis B. Cole of Crawford
&
co. _
which the Budget Committee has allotted maintenance - so don't · Claims Adj_ustment - PLACEMENT OFFICE
It is unfortunate
that the
impact
of the written word
remains long after the spoken
word
is forgotten, and that
written inaccuracies can seldom
be completely eradicated. In the
case of last week's interview, I
feel that
the
College, the
administration, and myself have
been compromised because of
misquotation
and
the
concomitant conclusions.
· blame Campilli. But by the same token don't blame the Budget
ColJ?riiittee ·~embers either. They may allocate the funds but they
8:00 P.M. Film - Leo Tolstoy's "WAR AND PEACE" Co-sponsored
·don t supply the money. And Mr. Wade and Brother Brendan can
by the History and Russian Clubs.
apply all the pressure in the world - but they still need
20
cents to get
A promise
to have
the
opportunity to review the article
was not carried out.
If
it had
been much of the unfortunate
aftermath
could
have been
avoided.
I
feel that in the
interests of truth and honest
expression
that
persons
interviewed in the future should
receive this promise and have it
fulfilled. It will result in freer
discussion, fewer mistakes, and a
clearer
presentation
of the
person's views.
on the subway. This brings us_
back to the students who DO supply the
·money~ But how can you possibly ask for another tuition increase.
If
· you do 'there probably· will be no more students for whom to maintain
- a campus! No single person or group is responsible for the situation.
Let's call it a joint effort.
·
·
Something has got to be done and it has to be done quickly. And this
· -· does ·not mean rearranging the p.resent dust.
An
entire new system of
-maintenance must be inaugurated.
As reported in THE CIRCLE of October 9, the McCann Foundation
has endowed Marist_ with a grant to develop a long range master plan
for Marist College. Dr. Lawrence Menapace of. the Chemistry
Department was appointed by Brother Linus Foy to serve as the
director of this research grant. The third draft of the master plan will
· be under. discussion by the faculty and administration all day Friday,
October 24. Within this plan
is
a long range plan for the improvement
of maintenance-and a very plausible one at that ..
THE CIRCLE calls upon Dr. Menapace and the master plan seminar
to remove the maintenance section of the "long range plan" and place
-it on the "immediate action list" before it is too late.
Finally, we would like to quote from the goals set by the long range
development seminar under the goal entitled, "Learn to Live in a
Technological Age." : "These recent and rapid changes in science make
it necessary for an individual to be informed and knowledgeable about
these developments if he is to function in our society." We cannot
expect to reach the other goals set by the committee until we nieet this
one. And we cannot expect to meet this one until we have mastered the
technology of the vacuum cleaner.
Stimulus.
- Unresponse
The . people of the United States are enraged. They are enraged
~_ec!\!/,s¢,tij,ey
.be}l~;ve
,th~Y'.~.~v~ beep..J~ept, :wajting to_o long, T~e
Blaclcs
.in
Americ;i :waited six long years - they ;ire not waiting any
longer. They have passed from resistance to militancy. ·
The students, intellectuals, people of Wall street, the middle class,
the poor white, and again: the Black man, all have been waiting for-a
long time, too long. These Americans have been waiting for the end
ofthe senseless war in Vietnain.·They have indeed been patient but
they are growing impatient.
· The · moratorium was an orderly attempt to·· work within the
· · "system" arid to express
in
a lawful manner this growing impatience.
- It was an attempt made by the governed; the government however
seems Ull_!esponsive.
This is evidenced by recent statements made by
, . the administration, particularly the incredible speech made by Vice
President Agnew last week. ·.
- Mr.· Agnew before a . Republican fund 'raising dinner in New
· Orleans denounced the. moratorium as an unwise demonstration
"encouraged by an effete corps of impudent snobs who characterize
themselves as _intellectuals.'' He also stated· that "the young, at the
zenith of physical power and sensitivity overwhelm themselves with
drugs and stimulants."
In all sincerity we ask, · who is M;. Agnew kidding? The
moratorium was the ·execution of_ an Ameri~an right by a large and
varied ~egment of the American people. Mr. Agnew·
is either
ill-advised orill, or both.
.
_
If
the administration,· the government, continues: even if only in
word and n_ot deed, to be completely insulted from the public will,
how long will the public remain patient? It is unfortunate that Mr .
Agnew's statements make this question_ so urgent.
It
is unfortunate
that. the Vice President helps to develop a philosophy of violence in
the United States.
·· ·
Paul
McCartney
is
Dead?
Place: Brown Derby
Date: Sometime in Oct.
1969
.
-
Characters: Two Marist Students
Cosmo:
Did
you _ hear that thing on the radio about Paul
McCartney. They claim he's been dead since 1966.
Stanislaus: Of course I heard it - didn't everybody? Wow, when
you consider the evidence, you really can't deny it. Did you see the
cover
of
"Sargent Pepper's?" On one side John, George and Ringo
are facing us but Paul isn't and on the other side there's a grave with
a left•handed bass guitar in it etc. etc ... .
Cosmo: Ah it's a big hoax because .... .
*****
Place: Brown Derby
Date: Sometime in Oct. 1966
Characte~: Two Marist Students
-.-:.,:_
•---;..;~
·•~-.._. ;-h~..:;;
...
Hambone: Did you see that story about
•~od
is Dead" in the
newspaper today?
Amos: No, who
ca.res.
Want another beer?
Hambone: No, but
if they have any bash .....
*****
Think
about
it.
Thursday - October 30
3:30
P.M. American Studies Symposium - Discussion with Mr. Tom
Casey, FIRESIDE LOUNGE, CAMPUS CENTER
8:00 P.M. Panel Discussion· Marist Bros. '70 FIRESIDE LOUNGE,
CAMPUS CENTER
HAPPY ARTS WEEKEND
October
31 -
November
2
Friday - October
31
Showing and sale of art work by area students and residents.
Proceeds for Hudson River Sloop Restoration and Appalachian
Reaction. Admission: FREE Place: CAMPUS CENTER
Saturday - November
1
Cross-Country - Upstate Championships - AWAY
2:00
P.M. Soccer - Sacred Heart - HOME
7:45
P.M. Football - Siena - AWAY
8:30 P.M. Concert: "THE CROCES". Admission for this event:
$1.00 COLLEGE THEATRE
Sunday - November
2
8:00 P.M. Marist College Film Program, 1969-70. Theme:
Film
in
the Forties - The Rise of the Documentary: Titles: "The Fighting
Lady" "Le Retour" "Le Tempestaire" "Trut" "War for Men's
Minds"
COLLEGE- THEATRE Film followed by Discussion:
GALLER_Y LOUNGE ALCOVE - CAMPUS CENTER
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
. 11/1
and
11/2
,
Sailing-Team Champs - KINGS PT.
ART EXHIBIT CHAMPAGNAT HALL GALLERY LOUNGE
thru October
* * * * *
SURVIVING
WEAKLY.
EXPRESS YOURSELF!
.
.
-
IT MAY BE A NEW
I would
hope
that
the
CIRCLE would do more "to
accentuate
the
positive." I
would have . hoped for a fairer
representation of my views by
publishing
my reasons
for
coming to the college, for my
optimism about its future, for
my opinion about theexcellence
of its administration (remember
I
stated that this• one point was
Marist's greatest asset), and for
my thoughts
on education.
These would have represented
me. The interview as such did
not.
In the course of an hour and a
half interview, I would have
hoped
for a more positive,
balanced treatment rather than
the incorrect and very negative
one printed in THE CIRCLE.
Finally,
l
would hope that
all
this_ brouhaha
would
only
highlight the power and impact
of the written word and the
necessity for accuracy.
Thank you.
.
Sincerely,
Brother Patrick Gallagher, FMS
Housemaster
Dear Sir:
I've just finished rereading an
article entitled "Big Thou~ts on
Small Colleges"(sic) wirtteh by a
Marist College student, Vincent
Begley,
Class of 1970. The
article
appeared in a recent
edition of the MANHA TT AN
EAST,
a New York
City
subscription weeldy of 23,000.
readers.
EXPERIENCE
The article proports to make
CONTRIBUTE
known the "Big Toughts"(sic),
or rather the "Big Thoughts" of
TO THE CIRCLE
the
American
small college.
After rereading the article, I can
only ask who has written the
article.
The author, Vincent Begley,
is
.----------------------------
a Marist senior; He has recently
'frit!.
returned
from
Third
Year
• CZR
. · .
CLE-·_
•
Abroad in London, England.
~;
However, there is no indication
~-
to the careful reader that the
author is a Marist student.
Stephen A. Harrison
EDITORS-IN-CHIEF
John Rogener F.M.S.
MANAGING EDITOR
Joseph McMahon
David
DeRosa
Kenneth Dunn
QRCULATION MANAGER
BUSINESS MANAGER
EDITORIAL BOARD
Steve Harrison, Joe McMahon, John Rogener, Tony Barker, Peter
Masterson, John Zebatto
NEWS WRITERS
Tony Barker - NEWS EDITOR, Pat Grealy, Ray Frontain, Otto
Unger, John Zebatto, Qark Kent
FEA TIJRE WRITERS
Peter Masterson, John Zebatto, James Newman, Paul Browne, Bill
O'Reilly, Raymond Pasi, F.M.S., Edwin Peck F.M.S.
.
SPORTSWRITERS
Joe Mc.\fahon - Sports Editor
Donald Acquinas Duffy• Associate Professor or Sports
Joe Rubino, Steve Sawicki, Pete MastetSOn, Kevin Donnelly, Greg
McLoughlin,Jack Bany,Jimmy Olson
PHOTOGRAPHY
Richard Baummet, John
PiMa,
Lois
Lane
CARTOONISTS
~Garey,
Steve Harrison
QRCULATION
Greg Mcloughlin, Jack Bany
If
you take time to read the
EAST's lead article, you'll find
propaganda not worthy of a
college admissions catalogue. It
reads as follows:
"It
(Marist
College) is relatively unknown,
seldom publicized, and virtually
disregarded in college opinion
polls." Sound familiar?
Our saving grace, ho'!Vever, is
Marist "representative
of •. the
many small colleges throughout
the country." Editorial opinion,
Mr. Begley?
"It, (Marist) recently opened
its doors
to
four
hundred
freshman,
Marist's
twelfth
graduating class."
I
call attention
to the
1969-70
admissions
catalogue, and point out the
twenty-fourth
commencement
in
which
your
class
will
participate May 23, 1970.
One further point should be
noted for the record. I quote:
:.~!l1J:.'.'Jl~~-\(of
the
_______
llllllill/llt
____________
.;.....
_________________
_
I
I
1.
I'
•
PAGE6
.
11IE
CIRCLE
OCTOBER
23, 19"69
By
Swimming Meet Won
Fin and Racket Club
CREW
FROM8
In
Pe~spective
-
by Gerry Garey
The Syracuse crew was strong
and experienced. They averaged
6'2" and 195 lbs. And had good
reason to be confident
after
seeing the Marist
-Crew
which
averages 6'0" and 170 lbs. What
(1:162) ·Diving· (4 dives): Jeff we lacked in size,
we made up
S p u r r e d o n
b y
t h e
Viola, (22.5 points),
Bill Dibble for in determination. The first
aqua-blitzkrig
of
the
,(21.3
pts.); 75 yd. butterfly:
boat's start of
42. strokes per
Mid-Hudson Racket
&
Fin Club,
Jody Intermont
(1:
13),' Steve minute, which is unusually fast -
the
Fi rs t Annual
Marist
Cronin
(I:
19); 75 yd. free style:
for a Freshman crew, enabled
Swimming Invitational made a Bill
Munson,
(42:3),
Mark them to gain one boat length at
splashing
d
e b u t
at
Mahoney, (42.4); 75 yd back· the outset.
Poughkeepsie's
brand
new
stroke, Dean Gestal,
(1
:03), Bob
The- second boat, which has
Y.M.C.A. (Yes folks, they do
Scott,
(1
:09); 75 yd. breast five inexperienced oarsmen, lost
have
something
new in
stroke: Jim McGlumphy (1:02)
one boatlength at the start. As
Poughkeepsie.)
Bill
Dibble
(1
:09); 200 yd'. Marist
passed the half mile
The
international
field. of
relay:
Vikings
(2:041),.
marker, they had caught the
contestants
consisted of such
MHR&FC (2:221).
Syracuse boat and were passing
notab\es as: Jim McClumphy;
As the meet progressed, a theI!l·
At this
point
t~ey
the
champion
breast stroker
battle for supremacy shaped up
·
continue~ to take a commandmg
from West Virginia; Bob Scott,
between the Mid-Hudson Racket· lead· which they held through
.the
only
person
who can
& Fin Club and the Vikings. This the finish.
backstroke
with
his lips;·_ closely~matched
contest was
•
AndreAlbertwhoracedinthe
twinkle-toes Leber, off the low
only
·
decided after the firial second eight had a tough day. As
board;
and waterbomb
Tom· event
of the· meet
when
soon as he finished winning that
Tierney, whose main specialty is
MHR&FC prevailed.
·
race, he
,went
on to win the
emptying pools in a single flop.
Final Team Standings were: singles
skulling
.
(800 meters)
Tom
MacNamee,
the Bronx
53 pts.
MHR&FC
(led by. competition
.. Andre, only. a
bystander, suited up but was aqua-lip Scott); 45 pts. Vikings; Frt:shman?
(_150 lbs.) row_ed
unable to participate - since the
16 pts.
?
team (we never did find agams! a Jumor and a semor
.
SO
yd.
floating
event was out their name); 04 pts. Track from Syracuse. Last year he
cancelled.
Though
not
as
team
(who
immediately
rowedfortheN.Y.A.C.
Bob·Kretirl
.. lt's too bad he started ·to
play when he was
a
J
unioi:. If he
had been out
~
years earlier,
he'd make an outstanding goalie.
He has
worked
very. hard
without any background and has
ahead on
.
points in
·
the· last
.
period, but lost on a pin.-.
.
co
I
or
f
u
I ,
o u ts tan ding
challenged everyone to a job
Next Saturday Nov.
t
·
there is
performances were given by Bill around the pool).
.
a ~ual _meet betwe~n Columbia
•
Munsqn,
Mark Mahoney. and·
Appreciation and condolences Uruvers1ty and Manst. We hope
·
played soine outstanding games,
As a Junior, Krenn won 7 and
lost only 3 in the· 160 lb. class
.
Under
his
coach, Jerry Patrick,
he began
.using
a new· style of
wrestling, depending much more
on his le~ to build up points
·
and
some.times
·
for pinning
·
combinations.
Bob
was a
member of the famed· "Murders
Row"
with Bill Moody and
..
Bernie·
0
'Ii
are,
last season.
Together
.-they
each won
·
4
matches in succession for the
145, 152, and 1'60 lb. classes:
Bob Keller, in the many events
are extended to Varsity Crew to have the full support of the
that they entered.
coach, Mr. Austin. Appreciation
·
school at the meet.
Final
indi.vidual
standings
-
for
the
time and energy
were:
·
.
expended on his part in running
IOO
yd. medley relay: Vikings
such
a tournament;
and
(time:· 1
:057),
MHR&FC (time:
.
condolences
~
for his very sore
1: 194); 200 yd. free style: Bill eardrums
from
a
very loud
Munson, (2:23), Dean Scribner
starting gun.
(3:44); 50 yd. free style: Mark
. • ·
Gerry Garey
Mahoney, (0:27), Dean Gestal
* * * * *
.
(0:28);
100 yd. individual: Bob
·
Keller,
(1:
148), Jim Ezersky,
FOOTBALL
VIKINGS
vs;
ST .. JOHN'S
SAT. 2:00
Cheerleaders
warm·
up before
making their debut
(fust co:.ed
group at
MOTH)
at
·the
AMumptlon
game.
.
.
.
.
.
Those
·Amazing·.
Mets
by Ron Baumbach
.
" ,
.
.
flyball the roof seemed to cave
It_s a ground ba~ to_ Feli_x
in.
All fans became brothers.
It
Mantilla, he bobbles 1t, pick~ !t
didn't matter who was next
to
up, and
fires
to first ... where its
you ... shake his hand, pat him on
dropped by Marv Throneberry.
the back, give him five ... THE
0
_t~ose wert: the days, when
METS WON - it's not true, pinch
futility was king and a loss was
me.
Suddenly,
we found
to be_ e~pected. ~n fact, one
ourselves standing in the middle
Bostoman
_station
always
of centerfield, tearing the
grass
p~eceded their Met broadcast
from the ground for souvenirs
with t!>,e words: "T,oday the
and
gazing
with
a joyful
Mets will_
be beat by...
.
expression at the TV cameras.
Now eight years later, through
We made it baby our Mets are
all the Cliff Cook~, Harry Chitis
No.
I!
It all' happened so
and John DeMents, the Mets
fast ... Oh to be
a
Met fan in
Shea
have conquered the world. By
on the 16th ... Pure ECSTATIC
cooling the Cubs, scalping the
JOY!
LETTERS FROM 3
comment on my opinion. It
is
ot
.. great import
to the Marist
community."
In conclusion, I hope you, Mr.
Editor,
will
publish Mr. Begley's
article
in a later edition for the
purusal
of
the
Marist
community.
FROM3
students or parties who would
.
like further. information please
contact ·Brother Desilets in the
television center in Donnelly or
·
myself in C-705.
mostly with determination. He 1s
_just beginning
to learn
.
the
position, and I'd like to have
him
around for
2
more· years."·
This
is. the
feeling of Dr.
Goldman,
the_ Soccer coach,
about his goalie, Bob Krenn.
Bob went out for· the team as
a Junior to fill the
.gap·
left by
the graduation of Marist's only
goalie,
Paul
Sicilfan.
His·
contr'ibution to last year's· team
was one of the most important
reasons for its successful .500
·
season.
.
Bob (5'10" -· 160 lbs.)
is
a
graduate
of Chaminade High
School in Long Island,'_ where he
competed as a wrestler for two
years and also was a member of
the Marine Physical Fitness team
during
his Junior
and
Senior
years.
As
a
Freshman at· Marist,. Bob
·
continued his
·wrestlirig
career as
second man in the 152
ib.
class,
_
behind
Bob
Langenbach,
a
Senior. Krenn won 5 exhibition
matches that year, \\'.hile losing 3
varsi.ty
decisions·
after
Langenbach was injured. : · ·.
In Sophomore year, Bob held
down the No.
1
position in' the -
15
2 class again, and posted a
3-
7
rec~rd. He said that many. <>f
his
losses were
.
because he: didn;t
have enough toughness for the
3rd period. A few: times:
he
was
In Soccer, Bob has much the
same duties of a catcher in
baseball. He talks to the defense
and sets
_them
up, since he's the
only one who can see
·
what's
going on all over the. field. Bob
,:
.
says
·he's.
been. hicky
·
to•: have<
-
such good fullbacks in front of
him; especially
·Isidore .Sabeta.
Although
everyone feels
,
bad
when a goal gets by, the person
who feels the worst about it
is·
the
.
goalie-:° Kreiu{i:finds-: it.
a·.
unique
feeling
_in
sports,
especially. when he has to. look
·
over at Doc ori
.
the sideline.
Although last year's
.
team was
·
more successful, Bob feels more
a
-
part of this present· teain .. He
.
says there is a
'great
deal of
.
-:
potential. on the team but it will·.
.take
.
tiine, because · they are
mostly freshmen.
' ·· ·
.
.··
:Aside,from'.ali
the
.time'he
has
Spen·f~on
. athletics; · Bob has
,
'served
on the Resident Board,.'.·.
apd
is
also
C_orresponding
·
Secretary of theSenior Class...
·
The
·Sailing
Team lost a tough
.
Parcells
all
have shown marked
one this
past
weekend in a
.
improvement
<>ver their, past
Regatta of
six
schools. They
performances.
Things
are
finished 5th, losing to: Albany
beginning·· to look better
for
State, Hobart, Union and RP.I.
coach
Jerry Remenicky. The
\ye did,
.Jtowever,
show· enough
team
'hqpes
to
·
get back
·at'.·
· over all improvement'_ to pull
Albany in the. Frostbite Regatta
ahead
of Queens College when
which will_
be held
.on
our own
the race was over. The regatta
Hudson River on November 22
took place on the Mohawk River
and 23 .
in
upstate New York. Although
the team lost, they all
felt
that
valuable experience was
gained
by all members. Skippers Gary
Jories and Rick Reynolds along
with crewmen Paul Forti, John
Krenn, Don Pizzuto and Pat
·►
.
.
CONFERENCE·
.
•
~
CHAMPIONSHIP
::)
NEXT
0
u
WEDNESDAY
I
Ill
1ft
AT
0
•
HOME
u
Braves and plucking the Birds
they
came to be
NUMERO
UNO.
Marist was represented at
the final game by some 5th Leo
boys.
With
a banner that read:
"~farist College says Go Mets
-
Jive in Five" we cheered our
team to •ictory. To see 57 ,397-
fans
all
yelling, smiling, cheering,
crying
and
in shock
was
certainly a thrill.
-With
aeon
Jones' catch of Dave Johnson's
Otto
N.
Unger
aas-s
of 1970
Jim
Wilkens,
staying
in the pocket,
fu:es
long
for
Bob ScotL
I
l
I
;
I
4
4
I
'
OCTOBER
23, 1969
Two
Fakes Later
·Nothing
Ganie
By
Joe
Rubino
Topic - Assumption
·
·
· ·
-
·
·
As
in
the Bible, this was an occasion when someone rose to great
heights. This time it was our football team. We looked good, they
looked bad,
in
a game that was more of a ·"scrimmage before the
game"· than anything else. Not many people really_ cared ab~ut
·
Assumption everybody knew they stunk. Most were sunpJy. looking
ahead to St. John's .. .
The
game, however, did have many good
·
developments. The main one was obviously the fine performance by
freshman Q.B. Ron Very. His cool ball-handling and passing was very
encouraging, and since he
is
only a first -year. man,_ he should develop
greatly with more experience. Sophomore Jim Wilkens played most
·
of.the second half performing quite well also, this showing that the
Viking5 have fine depth in the Q.B. ~lot ... E~sily the best. area of the
Viking team
is
the defensive backfield. Cameramen Jumor Rooney
and Jack McDonnell, Safety Dean Gestal and Monster Bill Iccobellis
do
a
tremendous job considering the time that opposing Q.B.'s have
to throw the ball. They're all fast, have good hands and ~re deadly
tacklers. Dan Faison, a freshman, adds depth to t~
already
well-stocked backfield
..
.Junior Rooney has proved to. be one-of the
most improved players on the team this year. He
is
possibly the best
on the team in the art of pass coverage, an9
is
a deadly tackler on
sweeps. He, along with Benjy; returns all kicks and, not only ru~s
well,: but.
is
a greii_t. blo~ker :when .¥.cDQnnell _has. the. ~all .. His
constant,' headi;.up·.perfQrmances have·been a big factor in the strong
Vikirig .. defense this year; He's
a
class ball-player ... Still another
good showing was turned in by Cotton Nash, Marist's answer
-to
Deacon Jones, Gino Marchetti, and Gerry Philbin. He is a promising·
·
junior def-end majoring in phys-ed and he says his greatest thrill in
.
life was the day somebody told him that he had heard of LITTLE
FALLS,
N.Y ....
Topic~
I
See The Light
•
·
MET ANSWER: There were actually 5 Mets with the initials J .G.:
Jerry GrOte, Jesse Gonder, Jim Gasger, Joe Ginsber~,' and Joe
Gruzzenda.
·
Nobody got all five, but Chuck Meara and Vmny Mallon
got
.four
..
J
couldn't think of a good "Met" question this week, but
how about this one: Who
is
the only man in history to catch a T.D.
pass
from
Y
.A.
Tittle
and hit a home runn off
·
Sandy
Koufax? ...
John
Innocenti suggested that' I give the YGBKM Award
to the guy who lo.ses his cool but I'd rather give it to the guy who
forgets. , .Would you believe that some coaches actually do attend
practices? And on days of competition, some of them often expect
victory? ... Terrible crowd at the game Saturday. I hope more people
than
.
that venture down to the Coliseum this week against St.
John's ... Oh yeah, the cheerleaders were great. Clever cheers.
Especially the one that goes
"Kill, Kill, Kill,
.. .
",and "Come on,
sock it to me now something or other.
.
.'' I hope you have some
better ones next week .
.
. How about UNION TURNPIKE MIKE
.
TIDS (sis-boom-baJ)
...
In
-
Perspective
e-in.1acobe
His
For
··
3
years
·
Marist College
football has been exemplified in
the. person
of hardhitting
monster
back Bill
.
Iacobellis.
"Jaco," who came to Marist
after spending his first year at
Villanova, always gives 100% on
·
.
the field. Last year he suffered a
serious
·
knee injury and it was
.
doubtful that he would be back
t_o play for the Vikings this
season.
After
some
initial
deliberation,
however,
his
yearning for action won out, a
decision wihch has been a gopd
·
one for. the
Vikings;
.
·
As.-
monster back, Iaco is the
main· cog
jn
the Viking defensive
-
machine.
The job
of t.he
"monster,"
. or "rover"
_
back;
. :varies·
from
play
to
play,
depending
upon
the
.d°'wn
situation. In running situa°tiohs
he can serve
11s
a third iinebacker
keying•.·on
'a.
fullback, or' on
passii1g: situations he cari
as
.
a
deep defensive back covering a
fleet~footed·receiver.
·• ·
·
Bill enjoyed one of his biggest
games·
two
years
ago at
Manhattan, where he played a
big part
in Marist's
20-18
victory; During this game, in
which
he · played
defensive
tackle, Iaco· earned himself a
case of beer by getting to
I
asper
Q.B.
Kevin Shannon five times.
Perhaps
his
.
best days have
been enjoyed in games
with
Providence College, the school
against which he won his Viking
b laze r for
o u ts tan di n_g
performance. In their meeting
·1ast
year, Iaco was
all
over the
field, making
an
astronomical
number of tackles, as he keyed
on from half-back Dick Martin .
Bill was a fine all around
athlete in high school as he
played· football,. hockey,
and
baseball.
He went
on to
Villanova where he starred as a
goalie for the Wildcats hockey
team ....
,
.
.
.·
..
·
An English major,· who hopes
to.· teach
and
.coach
·after
graduation,. laco
is
enjoying his
final year· af Marist, particularly
with the advent of coeds. Never
one
·to·
lack something
fo
say,
Ia co can
-
usually
be
.
found
c_hatting in the. Rathskeller with
Lenny or
.:a-
coed" He has an
amazing way.
with
words, both
on
.
and
off.
the field,
.
and his
com·merits
are
usually loud
enough to be heard by all.
Never one to say die, Iaco
gives
his
all
for 60 minutes. A
strong
candidate
for club •
football
All-American honors,
Jaco,
like the Mets, is No.
1
in
his
field.
'IHECIRCLE.
RUNNERS
FROM 8
28: 13, Don
Paulson 26:17,
Smith
27:35,
.
Bob Salamone_
27:45,
Gerraghty
28:19 and
Mike Moran 29:23.
·
On Thursday, Oct. 23, Marist
will race Paterson State at home.
The runners. will then travel
north on Saturday to the Albany
State Invitational Championship;
and on Wednesday, Oct. 29,
they will be at home again for
the Central Atlantic Conference
Championship. The Red Foxes
won this championship last year
• make it a point to see them
repeat next Wednesday.
·SYMPOSIUM
FROM 1
St.
John's
University
and
specialist
on
the
Vice
Presidency, delved in part on the
point
that
in the
months
preceeding his death, Roosevelt's
decision making power was far
weaker than it had been
·in
earlier years, and this, then, had
much to do with the diplomacy
of this time.
A humanistic view of FDR
was given
by the luncheon
speaker,
Mr. Joseph Lash, a
personal friend of the Roosevelt
family and author of ELEANOR
ROOSEVELT:
A FRIEND'S
MEMOIR. According to Mr.
Lash,
Franklin
and Eleanor
Roosevelt worked as a team, and
though
they
had
great
differences in their method of
approach,
they
continually
complimented each other. This
was exemplified by their fight
over
a world
court, where
Eleanor wouldn't speak· to him
for three days when she thought
he
had
abandoned
his
convictions for a vote, and he,
subsequently, making one of the
most serious mistakes of his
political
career
in later
supporting it.
Mr.
Lash concluded his talk
PAGE7·
Campus
Stuff
.
By Don Duffy
My first three· columns were a lot of fun. I really haven't had the
time to write anything serious. Now
is
the time. I'm devoting
this
part of my column to the campus jerks who don't do anything but
talk. There seems to be something lacking
in
this campus concernin&
non-participating students over athletics. The people who don't give
a damn about sports on this campus usually are the people who are
the first to criticize a team that loses. I'm sick and tired of hearing
the dumbells say why don't they win,
is
it the coach, do the players
stink, don't they ever win. Well here it
is
lame brain, I have had it
with you and I believe all the athletes feel the same way.
If
you
don't like what the teams are doing why don't you get off your
rear-end and try and do better. Don't run around flying off with that
big mouth unless you can·do better. To participate in a college sport
takes a lot more then just playing a game once or twice a week. It
means practicing for hours each day, sacrificing a lot of social life,
· what
it all boils down to
is
that they b_reak their backs to compete
for Marist. And the funny part about
it
is that they are playing for
jerks like you who are so quick to criticize. So that is the set up at
Marist, a bunch of clowns try to low level our boys with no
knowledge of what's going on. One last reminder, don't talk first and
think later. Remember what these guys go through for four months
before you talk about losing. Bits-N-Pieces
Ask
Mike Ward about his marine trip to the Derby (A rea!
Z90
Man). .
.
.The Marist Soccer team would like to thank the clown
referee at the King5 game. As the game proceeded, he would make
up rules to fit in the game. I still think he is on the field saying to
himself, I'm a good ref .... Nice Column by Go-Go O'Reilly, glad he
is in England. With a little luck he'll stay there and call weird Rubino
to join him. They have such a nice relationship .... To all the crazy
people in the gatehouse, move to Siberia .... Ask Jim Elliott why he
worries once a month .... John Murphy asked me to put his naJUe in•
·
·
the paper so John Murphy, John Murphy, John Murphy:· ... Some
outstanding jobs held by last years graduating class included a
bartender .. a factory brush worker .. a garbage man ... and a truck
driver for a beer company, so all you seniors now know what to look
forward to next year
.....
Saw the basketball team practice last
·
week and the team looks like the best thing Marist has ever seen.
Poor Coach Petro has the tough task of cutting good ball players.
A
good record this year could net an invitation to the
NCAA
college
division championships. Good luck in 69-70 .... Well that just about
does it. Be good Electric, and to 625 there still is something missing.
My own special weirdo of the week award goes to the clown referee
at Kings. He person.ally was able to eliminate
four
Marist players by
inactivity with his blasted whistle. Be Good, LOVE Duff.
Peas
and
Carrots
with
·
an
image he believes to
by Joe McMahon
explain the Roosevelt's relation
You usually don't hear too much about the benchwarmers, but
in full: Franklin en th usiastically
did you ever see a more fired up ballplayer than No. 70 Bull Kelly in
wo~king on
a
pr~ject, calling in
last week's Assumption game'?
Bull
is
the only player who can make
a~visers and maki.I_lg_l_arge
plans,
two unassisted tackles on his first two plays using only one hand,
with _Elea~or. at.~
side, c~l~1 __ while. holding up.
his
pants. with
the.
o.ther. Knowing Bull, you would
tug~mg
at his . el boy,: an
expect him to be psyched, especially if you ever saw him go through
Pat i e _ntl
Y ,,
s
a
Ying
But'
the Alabama leg slapping drill in the study on the 5th floor Leo, but
FrTanhklinf.t
·
·
·
k
Mr
he certainly outdid himself Saturday. Add a dose of experience to
e a emoon spea er was
.
.
-
lik
th t
d
,
t
thin
t 1
k
t
f
w
Hebert Fe·
onsult nt to the
incentive
e
a ~n
_you
ve go
_some
g
o oo
ou . or..: e
r
IS, c
a
.
. ·
e
now have another highlight
_on
the mtramural program • Swimmmg.
Secretary
of w_a~ d~g
thd About 40 people showed up for last Thursday's meet, run by Gerry
Roosevelt
adnum st ration an
Garey and Mr Austin and everyone was up for having another one
au t·h or of several
books,
.
·
. '
·
$60
al " '
·
1 d •
c Hu R
c·H
ILL
probably m the spnng. The only drawback
IS
the
rent
1ee
}rOOSE~~fT
AND STALIN~
which the
.
Varsity Club has ~o shell out_ for the use
.of
_th_e
.
'
Poughkeepsie Y's new pool... Mid-Hudson
Fm
and Racket, or
IS
1t
!w{r
· F _eis. presented
a ve~
Racket and Fin Club, - anyway, it's the new elite club on campus.
It
impressioni stic ac~ount of th
rose to power last Thursday night, mainly because of the last minute
state of !he world m th,e mon th s
recruiting done by their pilot - Steve Cronin and his cohort
.Bob
(51
pre~eedmg
Roosevelt s, d:a_th ,
off the stick) Scott. They ran through the fourth floor Charnpagnat
~!ngmg fr~~ Roosevelt s hmng
and came up with a whole slew of highly touted aquanuts. They
eve7 assmme l?rofesso~ who
were definitely the pre-meet favorites - almost everyone they signed
wasn t all ready m Washmgto~
up had either full or partial scholarships
in
grammar school. Gerry
to come and tum ~ut ,1!1ef!l
05
,,
Tyne was high on their list - he swam for the C,Y.O.
-
and, when he
to Cordell
Hull s
mtsty
.
heard they might take him, he immediately flooded the showers so
sentence structure. .
he
could
work on his strokes. And·they weren't just taking anybody,
The
p~nel whI~h followed
if you know what I mean, - in fact, J.T. said he swam at Jones Beach
Prof. Fe1s SJ?eech mcluded Mr.
once, and they still turned him down .. .It's almost time again for that
Mo~~on F~ish,
Professor of
popular Autumn festivity, the Turkey Trot, or as one renowned
P(?lit~cal ~cie~ce at North em
columnist (Joe Whatshisname - he rooms with
J.
Tkach) once
Illinois University and auth or of
referred to it "Intramural Stomach Cramps.'' So if you'd like to join
POLITICS OF
_FRANKLIN
I?·
in the fun, and still retain friendly relations with your abdomen,
R~OSEVELT?
Mr. Gaddis
start getting in shape now. Just for a starter, so you won't overtax
Sf!1Ith,
~n
_Associate
_Prof~ssor of
your unused muscles too quickly, try
a
nice easy stroll from your
History at Yale Uruverstty and
dorm to Leonidoff Field this Saturday, to give the Vikings some
au t h o r
O
f AMER I CAN
well-deserved support as they knock heads with St.
J
ohn's
.. :How's
DIPLOMACY. DURING_ THE
this for
a
slap in the face. - Most people bought Gatorade because it
SECOND
WORL_D WAR, and
was a health drink, Now it's being reclaimed because the government
Mr. C:harles C. Gn_ffin, Professor
found one of its ingredients, cyclamate, to be an instrumental factor
of History, E~~ntus at Vassar
leading to Cancer! Now at least
I don't feel left out anymore when
Col!ege, who IS presently the
someone sits back to relax and lights up a Salem ... Erp!...
Assistant Dean of Faculty at
Vassar and a trustee of Marist.
With
the end of the panel
discussion,
the
audience
participated in a tour of the
Franklin D. Roosevelt Library,
Hyde Park.
. The Symposium was attended
by
some
200
people,
representing
30 colleges and
universities, 35 high schools, and
twelve states (including Illinois
and
Florida).
Sponsored by
Marist College in co-operation
with The Franklin D. Roosevelt
Library
and
the
American
Historical Association's Service
Center for Teachers of History,
it was, according to Dr. Skau,
«one of the most successful
symposiums to date," in spite of
the forced evacuation of the
auditorium during the morning
panel discussion because of the
broken
water
pipe
in the
Campus Center.
·····················-····················
TURKEY
TROT
4:00
NOY.
10
Faculty Race
3 Trophies
4: 15 - Co-eds Race
3 Medals
-
1¼
mi.
- ¾mi.
4:30-
Students Race - 3 mi.
1 Trophy
9 Medals
3 Team Medals
15 lb. TURKEYS TO WINNERS IN EACH RACE
.,,
'(
...
....
PAGES·
-1HE CIRCLE .
OCTOBER
23; 1969
VIK,_NGS~
HARRIERS,
FROS-H
CREW·
.
. GAIN.
WEEKEND
TRIUMPHS;
<
f
fosh
SWamp
>.
.
•
Run_Ders
·_
Win
. Sf
racuse
·
Three
·_
.
By
Jack
Barry
.
&
Greg McLaughlin
"They' laughed at us .last year,
f want 'em this year.'~ Coach
William "Butch" Lennahan got
what he wanted.
i
Last Saturday, Oct. 18, the
Freshman Crew Team scored a
s·tunning
victory·
over
the
Syracuse .· University Freshman ,
Crew. This was the first time
that Marist has overcome the
powerful Syracuse team in
its
crew history.
The race was, held on Lake
Onondaga directly outside the
Syracuse Boathouse. Syracuse, a
· member of the IRA , is rated as
;, .one .of.the top--ten crews in the
. country.' The race was one mile
. in length as opposed to the usual
2000 meters.
Bill Dourdis is hit by Assumption safety after one of his many gains in the Vikings 34-6 victory at ,
The irrst. eight consisting of:
. stroke;
Joe
Shrotz,
7-John -
Wilson, 6-Gerry Schaeffer, 5-Jim
Cockroft,
4-
John
Lyons,
3-Marty Grims, 2-Tom Maslinka,
I-Mark
Braatz,
and
coxswain-Harry Manley, won it's
race handily by out-pulling their
rivals
by three. boat-lengths.
They
completed
the rough
course in a
time of S: 14 while it
took Syracuse 5:29.
hom<la,tS,Vyikings
Roll
34-6
The second Freshman Crew,
m·ade
up
of
oarsmen:
stroke-Dennis Stauffer, 7-Andre
Albert,. 6-Tim. Petrone,
5~
Jack
Barry, -4-:Brian Weaver, 3-J.oe
Puvogel, 2~Skip Lacey, I-Steve
McDermott, and coxswain-Mike
~•M-ini-cHawk"
Hawd,
also
..
captured its victory ·. by three
-lengths;
The winning time was
5:44, 16 seconds better than
Syracuse's.
The third.boat, which was ther
, · but
did · not _ compete, is.
composed of: stroke-Bill Dibble,
··-7-John·
Dennin,
6-Jo,e
Fitzpatrick, 5-Greg. McLaughlin,
, -4-Ste~e Gil\en, 3-Kevin: Boland,
'.2-Phil Totonelly, l sPat Richards,
and coxswain-Time Long.
CONTINUED
ON
7
By Kevin Donnelly
The
Vikings in their best Frank Attanito and Mike did
· offensive showing of the year another fine job in holding the
beat Assumption College 34-6 at Assumption _team to only
6
Leonidoff Field last Saturday.
points. The defensive- rush was
In. the absence of. starting
stronger last Saturday than
it
has
quarterback John Hurley and in
been in the past few games with
an entirely new offense under
Marty Keeley, Henry Blum and
the
direction
of freshman
Frank
Lacombe
shooting
quarterback
Ron
Vuy, the
through to drop the Assumption
Vikings rolled up their highest
quarterback
before he· could
point total of the year.·
· throw.
.
Dick Hasbrouck, who scored
: The s~oring started early as
three touchdowns, returned to the Vikings drove down field in
.the lineup after missing the ·last • the. first. quarter_. with · Dick
·two games because of a· rib· Hasbrouck going .through the
injury .. It was the first time since middle for four ,Yards and the
Plattsburgh
that• Dourdis and score.
The PAT failed.' The
Hasbrouck were in the back field offense
scored again' in the
together.
They
made their
second quarter as Ron Vuy,
p):esence felt as both went over showing
.good. poise
for a
the JOO yard mark in rushing
freshman fired a fine pass to Bill
gaining
180 and 130 yards,
Paccione 'for the second score
of
· respectively.
the game. The PAT failed and
, .. The. Qffensive line of the
the half ended with the score
Vikings consisting of: Emmett
12-0 in favor of.the Vikings.
. Cooke, Bill McGarr, Mike Cahill,
Soccer.
Team Ties Nyack
l-1
/
..
October 14 offered the Marist through
the
opening.
To!ll ·Bubenko but was unable to do
Soccer teani some consolation
Jaston s.cored the goal for Nyack
so· and Btibenko' made the stop
on a very depressirig season. As
·
at 20:34. In 'the third period we
of the gaine · and saved the tie.
they. had done_ in past games, . outshot our opponents 7-1 but
Marist was able to tie Nyack 1-l
they
completely,·
dominated
were
still unable to score. At
although
they · outshot there
play,thistimetheoutcomewas
'6:39ofthefouithperiodapush
opponent-32-14.
It was a·
different as the score was 1-1 at
in the penalty area:· set up
a
gratefultie .. :
the end. The first period saw - penalty shot and Tom Rabbitt"
Saturday ,had nothing to offer
Marist outshot_ there opponents . banged· it home.· From then on . in the.way of excitement for our
6-3. The second period Marist ·
in
it was a _ tough defensive
soccer players. They journeyed
outsh_ot Nyack 11-5 but Nyack : struggle. Goalie, Bubenko saved
to Kings C.ollege to . play the
was able to score when
John
the gaine when with five minutes
Purple Knights. -They returned
Bubenko slipped in the · goal to go a Nyack player had a break
an injured squad• and a team
mouth
and
the
ball . went
away; He tried to out
position
thoroughly· beaten at their own
g
a m e . B e fo r e a. I a r
g
e
homecoming·
crowd,
Kings
handed
Marist
their
worst
beating of the season, physically
as well as in the score book.
When the final gun went off the
score
was Kings 6-Marist
I.
Marist lost four players in the
Bill Kawina
dribbles past
Nyack
defender as teams battled to
tie.
· game including goalie Bubenko
for. the second time. this year.
Kings scored in the first period
. on a penalty shot by.
R. Revere.
They netted another three goals
in the second period and by half .
time the game was out of reach.
. Dan Zelinski scored the only
goal for Marist on an assisf from
Tom Rabbitt at 8:02 in the third
period to make the score 5-1.
This leaves Marist's record at
0-6-1
overall
and 0-2-1
in
conference play. They have five
games remaining with Sacred
Heart their next home game on
Nov. 1.
In the
third
quarter
the
Assumption team scored quickly
as their
quarterback;
John ·
Frank, threw a pass to end Ted
Strojny from 15 yards out and ·
the score stood at 12-6 as the
extra point attempt failed.
·The Vikings wasted no time
in
coming back as Ron Vuy .hit
Chris McNamara on a down and
out pass: Chris turned the corner
and went 70 yards to score.
Andy. Herzing caught .a
,pass for
· the two point conversion and
the score became 20-6 in favor
of the, Vikings. An interception
by
Bill
Rooney _
set up another
touchdown as Dick . Hasbrouck
·· went through the middle for 15 ·
yards· for his second touchdown
· of the day. The two point
conversion
was good as ·
Bill.
Dourdis went off tackle.
· The
Assumption·
·team
controlled . the ball for. most of
the fourttt quart~r, but were
unable to score as the strong
Viking
defense
led by Bill
Iacobellis held them time and
time again. The score. ended :as
the Vikings again received the
ball · in good field position and
drove down to the Assumption
5
yard line where Dick Hasbrouck
scored his third and the - final
touchdown of the game. The
PAT failed and the final score
was 34-6.
·
There
were
some
fine
performances turned in by some
new faces ori the team .. To name'
a few,
Bob
Sullivan,
Jim
Wilkens, Frank Vanacore, Frank
Lacombe, Dennis Claire and Dan
Faison.
The
Vikings
next
opponent_ is a very .. strong St.
John's team. It looks like a good
one.
FOOTBALL
FILMS
IN RAT
TONITE
. by
Steve K~pki
On Saturday, October 18th
the Cross-Country team was at
full strength for the first time
this season. Greatly bolstered by
the return of Phil Cappio and
with a strong race by co-captain
Bob Mayerhofer, the team came
: through
with - a strong solid
showing.
Beating
Brooklyn
College 27-28, Drew University
21-37
and
·sacred
Heart
University, 20-43, the harriers_
ran ,together· as a team and ·
constantly
pushed each other
throughout the race. These three
opponents were actually better
than the three that defeated our
injury ridden squad last week.
· . After the first four places were
taken by runners from the other
-
schools, Marist came across with
a strong block of runners to gain
victory. Fifth, sixth and seventh
places were taken by Phil Cappio
30: 11, Bob ·Mayerhofer 30:43
and Steve Sawicki 31:01. The
scoring was rounded out by Jim
Corbett 31: 16 in the ninth slot
and John Petroglia 31 : 17 in the
tenth slot. The sixth and seventh
who helped
displace
were
co-captain Joe McMahon 32:20
and Jim Ambry 34:06. Mike
Smith 35: 15 and Tom Geraghty
36:33 ran well as eighth and
ninth men.
On Wednesday October 15, a
. much depleted Marist team was
soundly . defeated 16-41 by a
strong Siena team at Siena. The
course was shorter than most
covering only
-4.2
miles. The
scorers
from
Marist
were
Mayer ho fer
24: 11, Petraglia
24:34, Tom. Mahoney 25:25,
Greg
Nelsen
25:57,
Joe
McMahon
26:00. They were
followed
by Charlie Russett
CONTINUED ON
7
Orange
Crew
Tops
Varsity
and
J.
Y.
Early Saturday morning the
Marist College Crew challenged
Syracuse on the wind swept
2000 -meter course, on Lake
Onondago. The two teams lined
-up with
a strong stairboard
crosswind .. The Marist eight on
the starting command came off
the
line
at 33 strokes per minute
in'stead of the normal 38 that
they are accustomed to .. At the
end of the 20 strokes start, the
Marist College stroke Joe Ryan
dropped the beat to a
28. The
lanky Syracuse crew rowing at a
. higher rate jumped to a
4
seat
advantage but the strong Marist
team began to gradually close
the gap, and at 750 meters
Marist cox Pete Masterson called
for · a power 10 and his crew
took a slight lead. At this time
the Marist
eight was rowing as
-low as 25 strokes per minute to
Syracuse's 31. For the next 500
meters the two crews were· neck
and neck as t.hey sliced through
the choppy water. ·but then the
Syracuse eight, still· overstroking
Marist, gradually began to pull
away and going into the last 500
meters· had pulled out to a half
length lead .. About 20 strokes ·
later . Marist .stroke Joe Ryan
raised the .beat, but the Marist
eight was unable .to make up the
difference. Syracuse crossed the
line in 5:59 with Marist clocked
at
6:04. · ,
The
H. V.
boat came off the
line
strong
against a more
experienced Syracuse crew at 36
strokes per minute. Stroked by
John Weis and coxed by
Harry
Manley the boat settled to
32
and stayed with them for the
first 1,000 meters, but could not
hold off Syracuse's final sprint
to finish 2½ lengths behind.
CONTINUED ON 6