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The Circle, November 6, 1969

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 6 - November 6, 1969

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MARIST
·
1N
:
JHE.
SEVINJl'ES
The following is a staff rep'ort ~hich
.is
the iesult of a CIRCL~-.
inquiry
;i!}~<>
tne Pre5:1dentail Planning Commit~ee;
·
the Faculty-
.-i
Workshop, and the Lo,:ig-Range Plan for Marist College. Various
·
members of the faculty we~ asked to comment on the planning for
Marist in. the
·
'70's .. Included
in
.this
compilation• are student
comments from the SAC representatives and o.thers. The purpose of
this report is'to inform the students of the existence of the plan and
the faculty's opinions on the plan and to furthur discussion about
the planning of the school.
It is hoped that the students willconcem
themselves with regard to this. long
·range
plan· and make their views
A··
Special:
Jl'eport
known. An explanation of the document willnot be attempted - this
_v_:,o:L:U:_M:E:6::,N:UM:,:,B:E:R:_':6:::•MARl:_::_:_ST::_C:_O:_::;L_L:E:_G:E:,:PO::U:'3:HK::E:E:PS:_:IE:,:,N:E:,W:_.:.Y_
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will be done by the Presi4enfaitd. the Planning Committee at a date
.
to be decided. Copies of the third draft of the plan are available in
the library.
. .
.
·
..
,,
··
Bro.
-Linus
Foy
Brother Linus Foystressedtwo.
key. points. in regard to the
two-day
Faculty
Workshop.
First,
although
there.,
was
controversy over a few items, a
great deal of the plan provoked
litUe comment
indicating that
there. was more agreement than
people think: Second, the fa~t
that students were not involved
these two-days does
·
not mean
they. will not be consulted.
·
.
Brother
Foy believes that
much of the controversy among
the faculty stems from a• faulty
understanding of Chapter one in
the
plan. Because too many,
people misunderstood
it, that
exam p
1 e, . b e·c au
s
e ~any
chapter
will
have
to
be' graduatesdonotimmediatelygo
rewritten.
When it was first
.
on to: graduate
school and
printed in the second issue of
.
therefore
would
.
rather
.
take
the Ci.rcle, many of the faculty
courses
in which they feel
saw it as an attack
on the
.
genuinely interest.
.
humanities·
instead
of five
Although
technology
will
limited objectives. that .we would
pervade the educational process,
Dr.·
M~
.. Teichman
·
Doctor
Milton.
Teichman,
Chairman of the Faculty,' was
-
asked
to comment
on the
workshop held this past October
24th and 25th. Dr. Teichman, a,
professor
dedic.ated
to
'the
enrichment of the individual
in
the
humanities
in particula~,
necessarily has a certain
set
of
values reflected
·
in this opinion
on the workshop.
In response
to a
.
question
concerning student participation
in the workshop, Dr. Teichman
expressed
:.tµe.
view that students
could have: been involved in the
early planning
.
stages, such, as
student
participation
on
,the
Planning.
Committee
itself.
However Dr. Teichman did state
that students from the SAC were
present at
'the
meeting; Asked to
.
comment on Faculty response to
the document of the· Planning
Committee,
Dr.
Teichman
observed that a large portion. of
·
the
faculty
wishes to see a
stronger humanistic
.emphasis
in
the statement.
Dr. Teichman
offered the
·
following
personal
views
regarding
the
Planning
Committee document:
1)
The document
·
does not
take sufficient account the social
problems and social revolutions
of our times: the alienation of
youth,
their
search for an
e x
p_
a n d e d · a n d r
i
ch er
consciousness,
the
"new
morality",
racial strife, the
poverty problem, the
·anti-war
movement, etc.
·
2) The pr9gram should include
a study of the humanity. of man
Cont. on
4

be concerned with in two years.
it must look
·to
the humanities
.
Regarding the second point,
for
the value
.system.
which
Brother Linus had taken steps to
determines its· application.· No
insure that
·a
student meeting
-
preferential treatment was· given
would be held so that opinions
to.· the sciences in the plan and
could be voiced and the Planning
there were no plans
for
major
Committee
wo.uld then have expansion
. of equipment
or
Ame·
..
·
s·,
,.
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siu.·
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...
, •·
the ideas Qf the plan and answer
sciences; and that
in
this current

·
·. ·
.
.
·
·-'
•. '" .,
, .. ·
·

·
•:
.· .·. -.·.:
.
·
.
,
·

all qtiestio~s is necessary-"..
.
,
age~ to some
.extent
"a· scientist
·
·
•·
.
::-:->::/'.;'
·
·
..
·
·
·
,·>
··
·
Brother Linus
felt
that there
has to become'a humanist and-a
·
·
·
·
·
·
·

on
·"D:-.'"
·,.
15

m". The fill'S·t of
was
a
need for more courses on
a
h u.mariist
ni°tist
become
a.
:by·Ted
BrQsnan
.....
" .....
·
·
these discussions was held
·
in
.
practical
l~vel, in math for
scientisf."
In September of
1968 seven
Fireside Lounge on··oct.
.30th
We
.
know
that...
We must
juniors took
up
the challenge of
..
with Messrs .. Casey and Lewis
appreciate the fact that we are
the American Studies Program,
being the principal speakers. Mr.
living in a technological age. As
t h e
f i r s t
a n d
.
o n l y
Casey offered an explanation on
w e
l earn
t
O
live
i h
a
interdisciplinary major at Marist.
philosophical implications• while ·
technologic.11 age
·we
must also
Since theri, the Program, under
Mr. Lewis presented a liter~ry
learn to live with other human
the direction
·of
Mr. Casey·, has
i n
t e
i:
p
r et a ti
O
n, a n d
beings_-! am in favor,ofthis ... We
grown to ~ncompass tw~nty four
understanding. The sevenfaculty
mustnotdooneandexcludethe
students
·and
six·. distinct
and
,fifteen
·students
in
other;"
disciplines:
-
·
attendance· then
·
discussed the
When it
·
was pointed
-out
to
.
H9wever; a vital opportunity·
points made, the highlight being_
Doctor Menapace that although
has also been provided by the
a further contribution by Dr.
E.
t.he goals of the plan specifically
Program far from the environs of
O' Keefe
·co
it
c er ning
the
stated·
the.
n'.ecessity
for
the
lecture
hall. Last year,
psychological
aspects
of
.
humanities, the actual plan itself
.
various
stud en t-·f a cul ty
Darwinism.
.
.
.
.
c
O
nt ained few if any direct
discussions were instituted and
The second part of the series
P
r·ograms
.
to
.
enhance
the
this year such extracurricular
will take place today (Nov.
6)
at
humanities he commented that
·activity
has
expanded
in ·
3:;30
in Fireside Lounge-topic,
·
"I-would agree that the plan has
importance and purpose into an
"Darwinism:
an economic
no·t .addressed itself to how to
American
Stu~ies· Symposium
interpretation."
·Or.
L.-
Menapace
make our humanities program
more vital.- In my opinion
.the.
·
problems
in
_th_e
humanities are
best handled· by the people in

the humanities.'.' He also pointed
Doctor
Lawrence Menapace,
·
0
u. t th a·t the
proposed
the Chairman of the Presidential
·
Environmental Scien.ce major is
Planning Committee, was quite
a program designed
fo make·
disturbed
by
rumors
and
science
more meaningful to
misrepresentations
of the goals
someone
concerned
with his
of the long range plan. He feels
fellow man.
,
In
·a
manner of
that the goals were set down as
speaking
it can be called a
guidelines for the plan and are
humanitarian science.
.
·
not
necessarily
finalized
Dr. M~apace then continued
statements of what Marist must
to express his
·
opinions on the
or intends to achieve
·
by the
n e c e s s i t y
o f s t u d e
it
t
plan. He thinks..that student arid
par
ti
ci patio
n at faculty
f•a·culty
have
lost
their
meetings ... I want to make it
perspective in yiewing the goals
quite clear that student opinion
as a totality ... A lot has been
is
valuble",
commented
said. about goal number one,"
Menapace, "I objecf to pitting
said Menapace, "but little has
students
against faculty in a
been said about goal four. .this
game in which one side has to
goal (no.
4)
calls for involvement
win.
I
think it should be a
in the community.'
-
comm\mity
action."
With
The number one goal to which
particular regard for the recent
Dr. Menapace referred
is
the
faculty
workshop
Menapace
highly
touted
goal
which
feels that the administration was
concerns learning
to live in a
quite liberal in its regard for
technological
age and how
student opinion.
"I
definitly feel
Marist is going.
to
handle the
that the student body should
problem.
In relation
to this
have been. represented.
It was
problematic goal Dr. Menapace
my opinion that SAC was that
said, .. We are definitly living in
a
group of representatives. I
feel
technological age, the emphasis
satisfied
that
we did have
of the first goal
is not that we
are living in a technological age.
Cont.on

....
American Studies advocates listen attentively as Mr. T.
Casey
and Mr •.
R. Lev,-udiscuss"Darwinism."
.
c
Br. Gerard
Weiss
Concerning the work of the
planning commission· we are
all
·
aware
·
that it has published a
long-range projection for Marist
College.
It
should be kept
in
mind, however; that a projection
is a statement
of goals and
.
desired outcomes. Rather than
being·
a
fai.t accompli it is
something
that is subject to
review, analysis and change. In
its
en tire ty it represents
a
statement of direction, but in
each of its component parts it
is
subject
to
the
scrutiny,
evaluation
and. approval or
rejection by the various sectors
of the: college community.
Also,
.
many things which
are
put
into
.a
long-range
projection
are put
there'
precisely · because such
directions
have already
·
been
indicated by what
is
happening
at the institution ..

A case in point, and one with
which
J
am
closely involved; is
the core
.
curriculum. The entire
college community is aware that
a study of the core curriculum
is
· in progress. Initiated
by the
Acaaemic Policy Committee last
.
:year,
it has been the proper
concern of
·every
segment· of the
college· community
since tqen.
Phase
.
one
consisted
of the
student~faculty
·discuss-ions
which took place in the- dorms
and lounges over a six-week
period la:;t spring. Phase two was .
the
self-evaluations
recently
c-onipleted by each academic
department. Phase three will be
a' report from various student
·
and
academic
offices ·or the
college. In view· of this, the
long-range projection makes two
statement
relative
to
the core
curriculum,
namely, that the
next year and a half should be a
time
.
of experimentation
and
minor
revisions
within the
framework of the existing core
and that in 197 I a revision of
the core curriculum should be
initiated;·These
two statements
are
.predicated
on the fact that
evaluation and study of the i::ore
have already been undertaken.
The second point that I would
like
to
make
concerns the
dissemination of the work of the
planning·
commission
to the
college community.
The APC
had suggested
a tw~ay
faculty
workshop this semester, so that
the faculty could discuss the
departmental
self-evaluation
reports and the problems of core
revision in much the same way
that
the
Student
Academic
Committee had done last spring.
However, it became evident at
the meetings of the APC this
semester that a discussion of the
departmental
reports
and the
core
curriculum
would
be
impossible
without
any
reference
to
the
academic
implications
contained
in the
Cont. on 6
······
..
•·.··•·
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...
,.·.
PAG°E2
.
THECIRCLE
Br~
Stephen
Cox
sessions have qualities which are
·
characteristic
of the more

permanent
members
of.:the
community. For exampie,-in the
various discussion groups there
was an authentic, professional
concern regarding the language
of the Planning Committee's
statement of the extensions of
the goals of Marist College. In
short.
the
-faculty
called for
greater
concreteness
in the
wording of these extensions of
the traditional goals. The faculty
response indicated that in some
parts it was not a question of
vagueness·
but
rather
the
introduction
of terminology
which
connotatively
could_
produce
a negative response
unless
the
terminology
had
denotative clarity.
The Student Government is

planning meetings at which the
student
body will
.be
able to
·
Mr.'
Louis
:Alpert·
The recent Faculty Workshop
react to, to offer suggestions for,
was not, as some would have us and to ask clarification of the
believe, a reincarnation of Lewis work . done
·by.
the Planning
Carroll's·
school
in Alice's
committee.
If
more students
Adventures
in Wonderland
become involved than in the
wherein .. reeling and writhing"
past, the greater
will
be· the
were
taught.
The
Faculty
refinement of the work which
Workshop was not a convocation
has been done and greater will
of legislators summoned
into
be our consciousness· of the
secret session to enact a new law potential of the future ..
of the
land.
The
Faculty
No
single
meeting
or
Workshop, as designed by the
workshop
can
mark
the·
Academic
Policy Committee,
beginning or the end of the
was a meeting·
·at·
which the
pro'cess that we are involved
fo
faculty could learn more directly
realizing. But each meeting and
of
·
the work which had been each workshop should have a
done to date by the Planning specific purpose which will bring
Committee,
to react. to it, to us closer to our goals and to
offer suggestions, to ask for. each other - if nof through
·
clarification and then to move physical
presence
at these
on
to
the
resumption
of
meetings, at least through the
discussion of curricula revisions. communication
which follows
As one member of the college
·
from the meetings.
,
I shall confine my comments
in this
ai~icle
to the first goal as
stated in the document "Marist
in in the Seventies".
.,
GOAL 2: I: "Learn to Live in
a Technological Age"
The very first statement under
this heading reads: "Man is living
in a
·
rapidly
developing and
changing
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'_'.
There are two diametrically
opposed
interpretations
t~at
come to mind after reading this
statement: The first
is
that the
.
statement has such, an obvious
meaning that if
it
were included
in an eighteenth century college.
catalog (just in print after the
invention of the Cotton Gin) it
would hardly cause the most
conservative college trustee to·
•o
I•••.••
NOVEMBER 6, 1969
raise ari'eyebrow.·
·
The second
:
kn owl edge
'.
and ell)otion'al
interpretation
-would.
cite this
-
orientation.· What concerns (cir
very "first" goal'
as
a radical.
'excites')
one
four-year
realignment· of
.
the priorities in
·
generation will bore the next, as
the objectives of
.the
educational
anyone can verify by
;reference
..
.
institution,··
i.e., training in
to popular music. And so it
is
·
"technology".
will
take
with
literature, politics, and the-
.
precedence over the
·
traditional
' current view of creeds and crises.
aims of a liberal arts education;·
If
a university
is
not to beconie
The
fir s-t ·of·
these·
an educational weather vane,
il
_
interpretations
deserves no
sort of weeklY. journal published
further comment. The second
orally by aging P.H.D.'s~ it must
does.
Upon
researching this
avoid all "relevance"
of the
.
la fter
interpretation,
the
obvious sort. The spirit of its
following
words and phrases
teaching will be relevant if its
appear
to be unavoidable:
members are good- scholars and
·
"relevance",
"instant
utility",
really teach" .. ; "The reviyal of
"preparation.
for life", etc. I
the
cl~ssics
(and· the 'great
shall devote the balance of this
books') in the past twenty years
article to an analysis of these
shows that they had neither
words and phrases as I see them
gained
·nor
lost relevance, but
used in relation to the purported
mere:Iy
found
convincing
aims of "higher education".
.
interpretors" ... "You can forget
"RELEVANGE"
"INSTANT
the
details
of history
·or
UTILITY",
"PREPARATION
chemistry
and
have gained
FOR LIFE"
:

immense
.profit
from learning
'In
the first
_place,
I would like
them, because by learning them
the
word "relevance"
to be
you have become a different
thrown out of the academic
being, but forget the details of
vocabulary.
Am I guilty of
real-estate
management,
or-
oversimplification· if I say that
ice-cream making, and you have
the only "relevant"
·aim
of a
nothing".
·
liberal
program
of
·
higher
.
The phrase "preparation
for
education is that which teaches a
life"
is, pei:haps,
the least
student
how to think - for
understood on college campuses
himself?
It is. this attribute (or
today. Busiriess executives
and
the. lack of
it),
above all others,
professional leaders scream· at us
upon
which
todays
college
until they are "blue in the face":
.
graduate is ultimately judged - if
·
"Don't
try to
·
prepare your
he intends
·
to be much more
graduates for our techniques and
than
a· "technician".
Jacques
routines,
which may change
Barzun, in hfa la.test' study, "The
overnight. In-service training will
American University - How i.t
teach
·the
tricks; you teach them
Runs - Where it is Going", can
to use their brains, work hard,
say
,
things
so much
more
and be adaptable".
-
effectively than I:
To summarize my feelings on
"The belief that a curriculum
this last point, I would remark
can be devised and kept relevant
to. the present i11 an illusion:
Cont. on Page 3
whose pr(?sent, in the fir.st place,
and
relevant
for
.
how long?
Students
differ
in
tastes,
Show
You
·Care
community
who
had
the
Withinthcpastweeklhadthc
experience of working with. the opportunity
to meet with one
Planning Committee and as one group of students
who
.
were
who· did
participate
in- all interested in discussing student
sessions
of
the
Faculty
participation
in academic
Workshop, I believe that it did· deliberations. I hope to remain
achieve the purposes for which it available· to· all students who
_
had been cacalled . By dealing individually
or collectively,
with one
..
part of the college form.ally or informally, express
community
(the
·
faculty) the concern for student
academic
suggestions which came from the affairs.
St d
.
t
Ad
·H
ByDonDuffy
u en
.
.
oc
On Oct_. 25,
1969,
Bill Cupo
the comet and bass player for
Student
C
•,,
F
·
-
·
·

·
d
the last t_hree years at Sal's died
Om_
ffl_
I 88
.
··
Orme
Fi
1ts!frita~=~~~:t-~a~~rr~
.
.
die,
·
doing
what he himself
As
a
direct repercussion of the
meeting
,~as
very instructured
"'.anted• to do,in 'life._ Music
is.
wid~spread
·camp.us
controversey
an~ at
-first-tended
to stray,away.;,·
,o~.~-
,_£?.f.;
••
9l~;
~~~te.~t~.
!
0
lHl~
·
of,,
..
,
.
:,:
..
/
:.··
Re·presentation'
·
which-~
.has.•.arisen
over the
•from
its
.purpose
which was to
commuruc~tion,
111
-~
•.
w_orl_d:
·.
content of the long range plan
find the most efficient manner
a n d
~
1
1. 1
.
C:
u P
O
._
d
1
~-d
for
Marist
College· and the
of informing the students of the·
comniurucating "'.1th a!l dif!erent.
Purported·
mishandling
of
activities
during the faculty
p~ople ar?un~ him,
liSte!llllg to.
by Edward O'Neil
student
representation
at the
workshop.
:However,
Ted
~
do
his_
thin
g.
Death 18 a_sad
.
As an appointed representative
r~port (published on page
1
of Faculty Workshop of.the twenty
Brosnan. brought
the meeting
thing but it OC<_:Urs
~ the time
to
the
Academic
Policy
the
Circle
Oct.
9)· be
fourth
and twenty
fifth of· backtoitsoriginalpurpose
eventopeoplelikeBilly.
_Committee,
my function is to
implimented
that the definj.te October,
a Student
Ad Hoc
.
After one hour of fuiitful
<?n Nov.

9;
l9_69
we at·
reflect
studerit opinion with
problems of the humanities be Committee
was
formed
to
discussion
a number
-of
F~ivolous
S~l s_ will hold
..
a
regard
to
specific academic
dealt with. I also stated that the
investigate
the
·
circumstances
propositions for informing the
.
tnb~t~ fo~ Billy Cupo. M~y
issues. The major. difficulty is humanities themselves have not
surrounding the controversy.
~tudents of the procedures of
musicians m ,the local area will
trying to formulate a position
been
c r ea'tive
in seeking
The Committee was formed'
the
faculty
workshop
were
·
come _to Sal s that Sund~Y, to
which is a true indication. of
solutions to these problems. The on Tuesday night October· 28
·
decided to
be

worth
further
-
P~Y tnbu~e to_ a ~eat Musici~n,
·
what
-1400
other people feel,
reason for this asserti_on is that
when
a group
of' resident
consideration~
Among these
Li_v~
Music
·
will include· Ban;o,
which
will
demonstrate
a· the
humanities
have
..
been. students decided to quell some
were plans for a student-faculty
Dixiela nd , Jazz a1!d J:olk. The
positive good for the
.student
working under the delusion that
heated
arguments
and
convocation and an investigation
management ofS_al swill present
body,
and
·
which will make
through such external means as a misunderstandings
surrounding
to

be_ conducted
by. "The
a~ ~oney taken
m
tha_t day and
Marist
a
better college.
.
number of additional humanities
the faculty workshop. -The Ad·
Circle.'' Des Valez proposed that
give it to th e Cupo family,

The
Student
Academic
instructors and an 'interrlectual
Hoc Committee was concerned
letters
be
-sent
to various
-
If
y~u really
_want
to do
Committee is the main organ of
in residence,' the problems of with the substance of.the faculty
b
f th Ad · ·
-

something for the good of the
this
f
qr
mu
1
at i
.on
. With
the humanities will immediately
workshop
in
order to form an
mem. ers
O
·
e
mimStTat~on
people who you live with in this
representatives
to
each
be eliminated. Of course, such opinion about the substance of
~~~'r!ftte;a~~~tiess~~ag°n;::
world
_then
this is it. Death
is-a
department
·
and students from
means would be of assistance the workshop. They did not
Committee's intentions
·
sad th mg but ~how how much
·
each year,
it
is a knowledgeable
but they would not get to the. collectively take a
·stand
on the
·
·
you care by gomg tp Sal's next.
d
fl
·
Y
f h
·
·
·
***"'*
~-.
Sunday.·
an
re ective group.
et, it is
root o t e problem which is a issues
of planning
for the
r
·
still not representative
of all
lack:
of
regard
for
-the·
college.· The students
on the
1400.
different
opinions .. educational
needs
and
committee
however
were
However, in knowing both sides
perspectives of today's student.
concerned that- they were not
of a particular. issue, it
·
can
~his is reflected in the attitude, informed about the workshop
formulate an opinion whieh in
which asserts that the only real a n d
f e I t
t h a t
f u t u re
the least is better than that of
college. educa.tion comes from misunderstandings
should be
the average ~tudent, or group of
books while our generation is avoided.
students.
learning
what life is about
·
Ted
Brosnan,
.
one of the
There is still
.the
factor of the
through television, movies such founders of the Committee said
·
receptivity
of the faculty to
as- 'The Graduate' and 'Charly'
"l see this Committee as a~
student
opinion which is at
and through life experiences in attempt by concerned students
times less than enthusiastic. It
the dormitory. Is it the feeling (who only claim
to
re.present
a_ppears that some of the faculty·
of superiority of the academic
themselves)
to
ask some
lives under
the delusion that
world which keeps a teacher
questions
and
seek
their
because a person is a 20 year-old
from admitting that his students
respective answers. We did not
student, that he can't have any
can - learn more in one hour come into existence in a spirit of
creative
ideas
'in
education.
~ef~re .a ~.V. than
~
~eek of negativism, ·but rather in hopes
These same people could then
s1ttmg m his class? This 1s not to of establishing procedural steps
wonder
why the saying 'Don't
downgrade the role of teacher in for
.
meaning
fu
1
student
trust anyone over 30' persists.
today's world but rather to put understanding of the nature of
The main cause for this attitude
it in its proper perspect.
the Workshop and its future
could be a retained bitterness
The teacher is an educated,
development."
Brosnan further
following the published faculty
aware person with whom the added, "We have already been
evaluation of three years ago.
student must interac_t in order to partially successful having met
Such evaluations do have merit
understand
and interrelate the with Bro. Foy, Bro. Cox and Ed
-
when they are done well; this
divergent concepts in his world. O'Neill. As a result ·we have
was not. Willil)gness to listen to
Students and teachers are people become aware of many facts
student
opinion has improved
entering
a relationship
which
w h i ch
previous
1
y been
somewhat
in
recent weeks and
should
'benefit
both toward overshadowed by hearsay."
particularly
·as
demonstrated at
becoming better
persons. This
The fust official action of the
the faculty workshop of Oct.
objective has yet to
be reached C om m i
tt
e e occur e d on
24-2S.
on a campus which
is perhaps Wednesday
night
when the
I, as Co-Chairman of SAC,
better suited for it than any Committee
met
with Bros.
took
theposition
at
that
other in the country. This is the Stephen Cox, Ron Gagnon and
workshop that before the goals
real challenge of Marist College Ed O'Neill
of the Student
of the President's Committee
in the Seventies.
Academic
Committee.
The
-
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,"
.;
..
-
.
-
..
► CIRCLE
Stephen A. Harrison
_
Joseph McMahon
·
EDITORS-IN-CHIEF
John Rogener F .M.S.
MANAGING EDITOR
David DeRosa
Kenneth Dun.n
CIRCULATION MANAGER
BUSINESS MANAGER
EDITORIAL BOARD
Steve Harrison, Joe McMahon, John Rogener, Tony Barker, Peter
Masterson, John Zebatto
NEWS
WRITERS
Pat Grealy, Ray Frontain,
Tony Barker -
John
Zebatto,
.
.
FEATIJRE WRITERS
Peter Masterson, John Zebatto, James Newm.an, Paul Browne
Bill
.O'Reilly, Raymond Pasi, F.M.S.,
Edwin
Peck F.M.S. .
'
.
SPORTSWRITERS
Joe McMahon -
Sports
Editor
·
Donald Duffy
·.Assistant Sports Editor
Joe Rubino, Steve Sawicki, Pete Masterson~ Kevin DonneUy, Greg
McLoughlin,Jack Bany, Bob Mayer Hoffer,Chnck Meara
PHOTOGRAPHY
·
.
Richard
Brummet
CARTOONISTS
Geny Garey,
Steve Harrison
.•
ORCULATI0N
Grog Mcloughlin, Jack 8.any
TYPISTS
.
Tom Mahoney
.
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.I
!
NOVEMBER 6, 1969
Ron
Gagnon Speaks
By Ron Gagnon, F.M.S.
At
I
2
a.m.
on Thursday
with APC for a year on the
morning of last week,
I
attended
curriculum study and tha every
a meeting
of an Ad Hoc
effort
to
ascertain
student
Committee of Seniors -who had · opinion in this regard had been
gathered together in the Fireside
attempted,
SAC was permitted
Lounge to draw up a plan. of
to take active participation
in
action concerning the Faculty
the Workshop. Any interested
W~rkshop. Their main complaint
student could have attended.
It
was
that
they resented
the
is also the general consessus of ·
students' not being informed by
these
student
representatives ·
· the faculty of its undertakings
that the faculty drew from them
: and not being invited. to attend:
to full extent as a source of
They
opposed
the · faculty's
student opinion.
If
I
can speak ·
making
of decisions without
in behalf of SAC, We resent the
student voice and opinion which . fact ·mat with the many hours of
THE CIRCLE
Dr. G.
s·ommer
I also would certainly oppose
labor put into this project we're
were that the case. · · ·
. co~sidered as individuals merely
I returned from the meeting· speaking for ourselves.
One of the principal fears that
rather
·depressed feeling that
I sensed a contradiction at this
many faculty members had upon
-nothing I would-have said could
Ad Hoc
Committee
meeting
reading the chapter on goals in
have had any effect upon them.
when on one hand the students
the document
"Marist in the
I was impressed by the fact that
were saying that the SAC didn't
Seventies"
was that · Marist
on the basis of information they
really
represent
the student
would, in the future, be laying
had received, they had taken a
body
and
on
the· other
heavy stress on the technological
stand, but if one is to speak of
protesting
that at a previous
at
the
expense
· of
the
the "lack of communication"·
faculty
meeting last year a
humanities. As a matter of fact.
that exists in this daY, and age,
member of SAC was not allowed
since
September
when the
this was a prime example.
to speak in behalf of the student· · statement of the goals was given
The Faculty Workshop was an
body.
· to the faculty perhaps Iio other
attempt
on
behalf
of the
.
My question· to the student
,single topic was more discussed
Academic Policy Committee to
body is: Qo we or don't we
among members of the English,
determine
faculty
opinion on
( SAC)
represent
student
history,
philosophy,
and
the curriculum study which
is
opinion? And if we don't, where
language
departments.
Then
presently underway in hope of
were you when we needed you?
when
the
remainder
of the
revision
by
197
I.
A
similar
When
SAC conducted
the
document was distributed a few
attempt was conducted by APC
student
opinion
polls
on
days before the Workshop it
in conjunction with the Student
curriculum revision in behalf of
seemed
to
the
humanities'
Academic
Committee
last
APC
and
the
various
departments
that
their fears
semester
to discern student
departments,
student
response
were well founded, for of eight
opinion on curriculum revision
was poor and in many cases non
new faculty
projected
in the ·
so that I must point out that the
existent.
We reported
the
next few years none were to be
students were consulted first.
findings ori the basis of the
allotted to the humanities.
_The fact that the report of the
information we had. Therefore,
At the Workshop itself the
Presidential Planning Committee
if our reference is incomplete,
principal
topic in all of the
on the "Goals of Marist in the
it's
due to lack of student
seminar
sessions
on Friday,
7
O's"
was presented
at the
interest.
Why be up at arms
October 24th, was the chapter
Faculty Workshop and not to
now? When one is dissatisfied
on
goals. In some form · all
the students last spring was that
with something, he takes the
seminar
groups
expressed
it · was conducted
during the
means he has at hand at the
dis sat is faction
with
the
summer and felt of value to be
proper
time
to rectify
the
statement as presented. Most, if
considered
in
terms
of
situation, and we at Marist do
not all groups, requested that
curriculum revision. However, it
have the means.
this section of the document be
is also a fact that Pres. Foy has
SAC
is"
quite well aware of
rewritten
to indicate
the
consulted
with. Pres .. Francese
what's
going
on
at Marist ..
centrality of the humanities at
concerning a student discussion . academically
among students
. of: !liis
·.Planriiifa .·
Gomtjiitt~e
and. faculty; and if• studerits'are .
Re'p_ott iri't.lie itearTuture:'
... ·
interested: enough to check the
To' say that students· weren't
bulletin
boards and read the
a
II
owed·
to ·aft end
and
Circle, they's realize that every
participate
in
the
Faculty.
attempt
is made
to solicit
. Workshop
is quite
unture.
student response and to keep the
Assuming g that the members of . student
body informed
as
to
SAC are the 1aison between the
goings-on. We 'could use a little
faculty
and student
body in
more support
and confidence
· academic affairs and that SAC
from you.
,
•-.
· h~s been working hand in hand
·
Bro. Ron Gagnon (SAC)
Mr.-T. Casey
Let me begin by expressing
my
appreciation
of the efforts
involved in giving birth to the
Marist College in the Seventies
document.
Such a document
represents
a
positive
accomplishment in the sense that
· it furnishes a point of departure
for community wide discussion
on the direction
that we ought to
pursue in the immediate and
remote future.
I
would hope that the Planning
Committee would take steps to
reconcile
the discrepancy
between . their intention and
substantial faculty interpretation
regarding the_ goals for Marist
College_
In my opinion,
2.2
of chapter
one treats the problem of student
motivation
in a limited
perspective_ As early as 1956.Paul
Goodman stated in his Growing
Up Absurd what proved to be
prophetic of the student of the.
late sixties_ .. Socialization to
·what? to what dominant society
· and available culture? And if this
question is asked, we must ask the .
other question, ls the harmonious
organization to which the young
· are
inadequately
socialized,
perhaps against human nature,
and not w,orthy of human nature,
and therefore there is a difficulty
in growing up?
If this is so, the
disaffection
of the young is
profound and
it
will not be finally
remediable by better techniques
of socializing. Instead, there will
have to be changes in our society
and its culture, so as to meet the
appetites and capacities of human
nature, in order to grow up."
. I submit that the student of the
seven ties
will
manifest
a
diminishing
concern
for
immediate career goals. His .(her)
focus will become more broadly
value oriented than individually
occupational. In short, the career
of humanity
itself is gaining .
ascendcy over the career 9f the
individual and it is precisely
technology which is elbowing this
question to the forefront.
Finally,
,a
few
random
observations of a more sr,ecific
nature_ 1.
1
am disappoint::d to
note that the second and third
largest departments (History and
English) were not represented on
the Planning Committee by either
a departmental
chairman
or
senior faculty member.
2.
The 20-1 student-teacher
mean should be complimented by
information
regarding
the
standard deviation of this mean.
I
think
that such information
would assist us in isolating many
of
our problems.
3.
Section 2.2.2. (Establish
Cont. on
Page4
Dr. D.A.
Drennen
In a recent interview with Dr.
D. A. Drennan, on the series of
faculty,
student
and
administration
colloquiums
concerning the future of Marist
College, he stated that he felt
somewhat
embarrassed
to
- initially comment in view of the
editoral in the Oct. 30 issue of
the Circle which seemed to stress
negative aspects of the meeting
more than the positive ones. He
stated that these meetings were
the start of something· which
should have been done some
time
ago. He indicated
that
students
weren't
deliberately
excluded from the meeting, and
that some students did attend.
Mr. J. Norton
Mr.
Joseph
M. Norton,
Instructor
in
History,
has
become a very active member of
the Marist community in the few
months he has been on campus.
Mr. Norton in speaking about
the
Presidential
Planning
Commission projects the ideals
of the rights of the individual
and
the need for an active
concern
for
the
social
revolutionary
problems of the
seventies - both themes that he is
particularly involved with.
Asked about
the need for
Marist.
It
was also requested that
other sections, such as that on
faculty
projections,
be
re-evaluated in the light of a new
statement
on goals.
It
is my
belief that this will be done; at
least, I shall be looking forward
to either a rewritten statement
of goals or else a statement from
the Planning Committee or the
Administration
on the subject.
I also am greatly concerned
about the teacher-student ratio
among the humanities. English,
history,
philosophy,
and
religious studies range between
30:1 to 50:1, while the overall
ratio in the college is 20:1. Since
the
departments
and faculty
were urged to be "inventive and
imaginative"
about
their
approaches
to
the
faculty-student
ratio, it would
seem,
in the
light
of the
projection that no new faculty
were
to be allotted
to the
humanities,
that
these
departments
should be
MORE
"inventive and imaginative" than
either Business or the Science
departments.
I shall be looking
for further developments on this
subject.
. A third area that
I
believe
should
be examined
is
the
overall allocation
of budgets.
The
$1,100.00
allocated to the
English
Department
for the
current academic year is but a
small fraction of that granted to
any one of the sciences. The 250
majors in English is about three
times that of chemistry and two
and
one-half
times that of
physics. I
full
well realize that
the natural sciences require very
costly equipment
and
I don't
begrudge it to them. However, ,
· $1,100.00
is a very small amount
for a department
with eleven
faculty
members and which
numbers about one-sixth of the
entire
student
body as its
majors.
To my knowledge students
were
neither encouraged
nor
discouraged from attending the
two-day
FACULTY workshop_
This two-day period was (again,
to my knowledge) planned as
Drennan stated that the plans
were
not considered
"master
plans" but rather "institutional
projections."
He said that the
main thrust is upon flexibility
and
technique,
and
that
everyoi:e should be interested in
the
ov:-irall
welfare. of the
college.
H?-also
felt
that the job
of the faculty and administrators
should be to lift and broaden the
sights of the students.
The meeting outlined various
directions and goals that Marist
hopes to eventually head for and
therefore
the views of the
faculty were likewise, many and
varied_
· Dr.
Drennan's
own
impression
of last
week's
meetings
was that
it
was
definitely
beneficial
to the
college and the first of many
steps in the right direction.
st
1
.1dent participation
regarding
long
range
planning of the
college, Mr. Norton, pointed to
the
necessity
of especially
recognizing the students view.
Mr_ Norton stated that teachers
can only give opinions of what
the students think but only the
·students
themselves
can
accurately -relate
to
the faculty
what
they feeL
Mr_ Norton
advocates
full
student
representation
on the Planning
Commission
-
namely total
equality
numerically
and in
terms
of influence
of the
students and faculty_ Thus the
notion of students "paid and
paying" evolves and the role of
the administration
should seek
to accomodate these forces_
The document
itself in Mr.
Norton's view displays a 19th
century utilitarianism which is
too emphatic
with regard to
technology.
Furthermore,
the
document seems not to be an
.. open minded" one that in the
future, teachers will be hired on
the basis of agreement with the
document,
whatever the terms
of the document might be at
that time. The document is also
too attuned to the student who
does not wish to immediately
advance his education but who is
looking for a job.
In
conclusion,
Mr. Norton
stated
that
although
the
PAGE3
faculty sessions on projections
for the future of the College and
the curriculum. The faculty
represents
about
fifteen
departments and numbers more
than eighty persons. Only very
infrequently can there be "cross
ventilation" of ideas on a large
scale among the faculty-and
almost never can the faculty be
alone. This is not meant as a
slighting of students; the fact
that
I am in the business of
education and the relationship
that
I have with students should
indicate that
I
like and respect
them. However,
I believe that
there should be occasions when
the
faculty
can exchange
thinking. Therefore,
I do not
believe that students should be
present at FACULTY meetings,
or FACULTY
colloquia,
of
FA CUL TY workshops.
I believe that students should
be apprised of administrative
and faculty
thinking
through
formal
memoranda
and and
meetings and through informal
discussions with them.
I believe
that faculty and administration
should
be tuned to student
thinking
through
the Student
Council, the SAC, the Circle,
and discussion_ I further believe
that
decisions,
whether
long-range or short, should be
made with the student viewpoint
and bias in mind.
But above all, I
do not believe that students
should have a vote in college
decisions.
The
faculty
and
administration
are specifically
charged
with
providing the
intellectual atmosphere in which
students grow but students are
neophytes to the academic life
and by the time that they begin
to understand some few of the
basics of this life they are gone.
Students are transients passing
through an academic institution.
Hopefully, the institution
will
make
a deep
and
lasting
impression on the total life of its
students, but the means that the
institution
employs to create
this
impression
is
the
responsibility of the faculty and
the administration,
NOT THE
STUDENTS.
document
seems
to
de-emphasize
the humanities,
the humanities
have thus far
failed to enunciate
its goals.
The humanities must therefore
be realigned.
In addition,
if
Marist is interested in long range
plans it should in the absence of
abundant finances and unhibited
by tradition, seek to observe and
adapt the changes that are seen
on other experimental campuses.
By
both student
and faculty
observation of other campuses,
Marist is brought out of the
''vacuum". By opening ourselves
up to other experiences,
Mr.
Norton
believes, we may be
better
able
to
become
continually relevant and to cope
with the problems
of mixed
education
in terms of race,
creed, sex, religion, and social
background.
ALPERT
from
2
that the "rapidly developing and
changing
technological
age",
alluded to in the
"first"
goal for
the seventies, would seem to
place more demands than ever
on the student for developing a
capacity
for independent
and
creative
thinking;
and this
capacity, paradoxically,
will
not
be increased by orienting our
curriculum to the technologies -
but rather by expanding and
broadening
our base in the
liberal arts and humanities_















































































'P"'GE
4
..
' .
THE CIRCLE
·
<,
>
/BEJl;~,.
1969
.
;,.;;;.;;.;;;_,;.._
__
;.,_....:.,_....;..;...;..._,
__
~----------....;_-....;_
____
....:,:::::::..;::,;.:;.==:;;;,,.__;
__________________
_
The Croces, in conjunction with the Happy Arts Weekend,
entertained the masses at the Folk concert on Sa:urday evening in the
Theatre.
The Fall
by George Papp
The Fall is a beautiful time of
the year. The leaves are changing
colors and falling to the ground.
When all the leaves fall you can
see the kids raking them up, and
making dummies, and jumping in
them, and just having a ball.
Soon all the leaves
will
be off
the trees, and then you can tell
that winter
is not far away. You
can see the kids getting ready for
-
winter, and so full of happiness
and laughter it looks like they are
about to burst. That is what is so
beautiful about this time of year.
(This composition was written by
a young girl from Highland,
N.Y.)
Well its nice, very sweet, and
very
sentimental, but what is
it
doing in 'a college
_
newspaper?
Let's not.be naive, leaves are not
the
only
things falling, and
somewhere
a G.l. is using a
dummy for bayonnet practice,
and every time he plunges his
weapon in it he yells, "KILL."
What is the composition doing
in.the paper? [tis true that in our
contemporary
world there are
·
·
certain guidelines one can follow.
if
he w·ants to write an "effective"
_
article. First you pick the. right
names;
Nixon,
.Kennedy,
Lindsey,
Procaccino,
or Paul
McCartney are good examples.
These help rouse the emotions as
well as the intellect so your reader
-
will take the step which is so
important in our society, that of
-
taking a stand, lri the article you
will also have some "useful.terms
and
phrases,"
for instance;
inflation, withdrawal, Viet
Nam,
moritorium,
the campus, sex,
black power, Middle East, or
racist. These too are used to
evoke the balance of emotion and
intellect
the writer wishes in
order for you to "take a stand." (I
can see myself being put in some
useful term category right, left,
pacifist, agitator.)
Then of course there always
comes a time when you are not
sure that your audience is going
to buy what you have to say. In
this case we sally forth with the
one word that renders all readers
defenseless.
The word that
·
stimulates the ego and attacks tl)e
'
tt~~
IJA1t1/E /
.S
£1-YA6
K.AIJ5l#OW.EA,
11Nt111lf'I,
%
G,o;
,9-><,3
lf-.S
A
hlARISr
SIICt.1 Ali
foc.:/111
D,
concepts or right
and
justice,
whether you are in the apple pie,
mommy,
and peanut
butter
world or a more
-
promiscuous
one,
The
word
is ~'CHAL-
LENGE,"
and
boy doesn't
Cont. on Page
6
Blood
-Bank
On Monday October 27th the
first
Blood
Bank
for
the
1969-1970
school year was held°
at Marist.
It
was a success despite
the late arrival of the nurses and
diminishing of the· blood donor
time.
·
...
The Marist College Blood Bank·
was started.two years ago. It was
instituted solely for students at
that time but has now been
expanded to cover all those
JJn
the campus and their,immediate
families.
lt
has,
since
its origin,
saved at least one life per year.
The yearly quota for the Marist
Blood Bank is 300 pints.
All-
donors arc covered for their four
years at school and for one year
af~e~ ~actuation.
· ·
Teichman from I
depersonalization
in an- ever
increasing technology.
3) The
document
could
express a higher estimate of the
student being educated at Marist
and a deeper commitment
to
helping him realize his highest
potential.
4)
It should emphasize more
fully a concern with ultimate
questions: what is the good li(e,
the good society, what are man's
responsibilities to his brothers,
what are his loyalties, etc.
Dr. Teichman also stated that
he hoped tliat Marist would in
the future
be enriched by a
greater
diversification
of
students
in
terms of race, creed,
and
economic
and
social
background. Such diversification
makes for healthy intellectual
friction and ferment.
The·
ReCllization··.of-Ti1ije
By Stephen T.J. Sawicki
After
reading
the few
(maybe everyone).
If
these years
paragraphs
Benjamin Franklin
are spent (mark hungry) so we-
wrote about, The Ephemera, "a
can get
a
better job then
·you
kind
of little
.
fly,
whose
wasting time now and probably
successive
generations,
were
-will
continue
to waste
·your
told,
were bred and expired
entire life,· frustrated!
We are
,
within the day!" I was troubled
supposed
to
be (learning)
about
·the
·
amount
of time
·
experiencing
life. This means
humans
.
spend_ doing things
doing
(as much as possible)
which they
.think
are,· just a. · everything with.the outlook that
waste of time,
life
is
what
"I"
want to make it,
In
the
story
a group of
not necessarily what our parents
ephemera were in dispute over
want us to be or what they told
·
two
·foreign
m usi cia n s,
us
is necessary to be (successful).·,
"seemingly as regardless of the -There
is
no such thing as normal
shortness of life as
if
they had
and if your
-
trying to achieve
beensureoflivingamonth."
normality/normalcy
your_
If
.people
realized how very· wasting your time. Trying to do
-
short the human· life span
is they
everything with a purpose? Why
would surely (get more out of
.do
we
·
need a purpose? -please
life)
Live. There
is
still another
don't tell me, ("because .....
")
demension
to
this,
the
you
are
already
making a
realization
of how extremely
purpose!
If
you do everything
short the years which are labeled
with a purpose your going to be
our
best,
young,
learning,
frustrated and unhappy.
productive,
or whatever_ you
Being here on the Hudson at
want to call them are·. The years
Marist
.College
may be a total
so many of us are in now
bore are you going to be bored
,:
£or 4
yrs.?
If
at, times (you·
think) there is nothing to
_
do
then your to blame and only,
·
yourself .•
If
Y..ou think
.your
wasting time then ,you are. You
must develop· the attitude that
-
everything you do is
~Y
·
an
_
experience {something to do).
-
-
Walking to and from classes
is
something to do because you
don't
know · everyone around
you
·and
people become «they"
·
people
'have
names and they
smile-smile
back, d.on 't be so
self-conscious.
If
this isn't
making
you
think----you
are .....
-
CASEY
from 3
flexible quotas. by major field.
Restrict change of m_ajor into a
field that is overloaded) is
a
suggestion
meriting extensive
-
exploration. Oµr ability to create
a balance of majors involves much
of the solution· to the present
advisory
problem
-and
our
common desire to be a small
liberal arts college.
Barking
Up
a
Tree
by Tony Barker_
Many things have happened
that they ~ere wasting their time.
since this column appeared last
They told me it was this simple.
and
I
will
try to give my view of
The administration
was doling
some of them. Before
-I
launch
out another dose of the old serum
convince me.
Item Number Two
Wake Up
-
-
any attack
I would like to remind
Responsibility.
The way ·this
In January and even more in
all those who might be offended
worked
was that the House
June seniors-will graduate from
by anything
_contained
herein
Council could vote in favor of a
Marist. This we all know. A
that this article represents my
change in dorm policy such as
government exists in this country
own personal opinion and not
open house. Then the proposal
which_ enjoys
depriving
_men
necessarily_ the opinion of the
would
be forwarded
to the
-
between
18
and
26
years of age of
editorial
board of this paper.
Resident Board for action, lf the
their
"inalienable
rights, that
Resident Board approved
the
among these are
life,
liberty, and
I tern Number One
change 1·n pol1'cy then 1·t would be
th
·
f h
··
'
h
e pursuit o
appmess,' T is
I have on my desk here a notice
the new. policy. This i~ what
government does this through a
that I borrowed from the bulletin
representatives
on the House
system
commonly
called the
board on my floor. It is addressed
Council told me. They mentioned
Draft. Many of these seniors to
to the residents of Leo House
nothing
about anything· being
not know
what few rights they
under
which heading_ I come
promulgated by anyone. One of
have
under this system and
under since
I live. on the fourth
the big features of the whole
among the ones
J
-
have talked to
floor of Leo Hall.
lt
reads: There_-_ system
i~
that the Hou:je Masters
, ·~one.
of_. them- really. care: They
is
--
NO·
·oPEN
-
HOUSE
this
-and
·Resident
Director have
·no
are sitting back.and,waiting-for_
weekend except for the regular
vote. But I look back at the notice
-the
Draft to be ended by the time
times on Sunday from l p.m. to 7
from the bulletin,
it
doesn't say
they are out of here, President
p.m. This really doesn't upset me
that Brother Brendan has to-abide
Nixon never said he would
_end
in the least. For reasons- of my
with the decision of the Resident
the Draft system, he said that he
-
own I couldn't really get upset in
Board. It doesn't say if his
-
would reform the system. Just a-.
the least about Open House or the
promulgation
is immediate
·or
word
,of
advice,
if
the sound of
__
lack of
it.
What upsets me is what
even forthcoming. What
it says is:
bullets whizzing past your ear is
is said in the next little p~agraph
"It
is to be understood that the-
not your thing, it would be
·to
which I-wonder how many people
saine hours remain in effect for
your
advantage to get some
read and. thought about if that
future weekends, until there is a
·advice
from a competent draft
were
'possible.
To avoid
specialannouncementofchange
counselor.
One
such
draft
misquoting
anybody
I will
from Brother Ginnity's Office."
counselor
is Doctor
Mal.
reproduce this paragraph in its
Also have you ever tried to go
Michelson
in the Chemistry
entirety.
to a meeting of your House
Department. He has hours from
••NB;.
Although the House
Council. Their location, time and
draft counseling on Tuesdays
Council
has approved certain•
.
date are probably one of.the best
from.
11 :30
to
1:00
1n the·
changes in theregulation,and
the
kept
·se,crets
on the Marist
afternoon.
-
·
Resident Board has gone along
_
campus." -Why? If you ahppened
with them, the CHANGES ARE
to find the meeting you_ would
NOT- IN EFFECT, AND WILL
-
not be allowed to attend, I
NOT BE IN EFFECT until they
understand:You
are supposed to
are
promulgated
by Brother
make
your
feelings
and
-Brendan
Ginnity
Director of
suggestions known to your floor
Residences.
·
representative and· all would be
If
I may
-
ask a rather sharp
wonderful
and good. Suppose
question, what the hell is going on
you are a skeptic and want to find.
here? When I returned to Marist
out
if your rep made your
this Fall, I Jea·rned about this
opinion_ known at· the. meeting.
wonderful
new
bureaucracy
The
student
government
called
the
House
System,
·publishes
detailed minutes. Not
consisting
of I Director of
sowiththeHouseCouncil.
Residence;
with three House
I have tried to
'point
up a few
·
Masters, I Resident Board with
questions concerning the House
three
House
Councils.
Not
System now
it
is, in my opinion,
particularly liking bureaucracy in
time
for the administration
to
any form quickly scoffed at this
d1spel any doubts in the minds of
whole setup. In
-
,
talking with
the believers in the wonderfulness
members
of
·the·
Leo. House
of the House System. But please
Council, I told them·
·that
I felt
~on't waste_ you~ time trying to
'B~T
"11t~Ry~
S.oH
!
\
~~
/Ji.:
THEAE.
NEV~R
~U!R£
~Ny
R,.Pss
I
Plc.Rl)iAS
o
R
-
A,~
rs
olJ
C.,,,,,,-.,sl
Item
Number
Three
Mass Indigestion
·
Have you
_
noticed that the
·
repast provided in the College
Dining Hall is looking less and less
like what is commonly called
food. The fault probably can not
be solely attributed
to Saga
foods. The equipment
in
_
the
Cafeteria looks like what the
Greeks used
_
to feed the troops
during
the Pelopenesian
War.
Steps should be taken to improve
the food service.
It seems in
general we are paying more and
getting less for our money with
each p.- 'ling year. This applies
not only to the food service but
other areas as well.
*****
'
...........
•··
.....................
.


























THE.CIRCLE
Calendar
of
Events
.
PAGES-No. I
Dear Editor:
CALENDAR OF EVENTS FOR THE WEEK OF
'NOVEMBER
10-16, 1969
·
May
I-
use your Letters coiumn ·
to convey
this
messate
·
of
gratitude
to
those
of
·the
·.
administration;
faculty and.
students
who wrote to me
.
·
during
IPY
recent illness?
If
you would like your organizations' 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 Brosna.n Director of Campus Center 471-3240, Ext. 279
I
have · never, really known
until this time how enjoyable·
and
important
the
simple
.
expedient of letter opening and
·
reading
·
can mean during idle
hours. The "get well" and "sick"
cards were as clever was were the
salient traits of some people
whose
letters were of great
surprise!
I
found originality in
prose,
humor,
poetry
and
sketching
I
never knew these
people possessed.
WEDNESDAY,November
12
..
4:00 - 5:30 p.m. - Movie -.Placement Office - "SEARCH" and
"ENGINEERS IN THE MAKING" - COLLEGE THEATRE, CAMPUS
CENTER
8:00 p.m. - Lecture. and Discussion - "THE EFFECTS OF
IMMEDIATE AND DELAYED AUDIOTAPE AND VIDEOTAPE
PLAYBACK OF GROUP COUNSELLING" Presented by Mid Hudson
Psychological Association - Dr.' David Miller, ROOM ·249, CAMPUS
CE~TER
My
sincere thanks to all!!
Jim Britt
Drama Pirecfor,
M.C.T.G.
PLAY-November 13-16 ·
THURSDAY, November
13
3: 30- 4: 30 p.m. -American Study Symposium with Mr. Tom Casey -
FIRESIDE LOUNGE, CAMPUS CENTER
*****
Dear Editor:
Just what in the name of Sam
Hill gives you the right to award
me at
.
one of your intramural
functions. I sensed fowl play the
moment
your
perverted
8:00 p.m. - Lecture - Dr.··
D.
Livingston, Zoologist from Duke
University - Topic: "ENVIRONMENT AL ZOOLOGY" ROOM 249,
CAMPUS CENTER
- propaganda
hit
my
doorstep.
I
would just like to know what
sadistic
minded
birdbrain
organized this whole affair. You
call this a sport? Myself.and my
fine
feathered·
friends don't
think
people of college age
should
gobble
up all this
melarkey
without
any
consideration for us. In fact we
think
this plan deserves the
proverbial ax.
Anyway, what c.ame first, the
Turkey or the Trot?
.
Sincerely,
Tom,Turkey
Grand Union
Market Street
*****
Circle Editor:
Having read the last issue of
.
the Circle, . I was
·
very much
·upset
to firid the article which
I
,
··had
.supposedly
written,
substantially
·
changed from· the
original
version.
I
do not
necessarily
object
to the
rewritten
version,. however I
most strenuously· object to the
use of my name on any editorial
.
without
my having
been
extehaed the common courtesy
of proofreading al
I,
ridiculous
for me to suggest the inclusion
of
·one
student
at each.
departmental
meeting;
this
system has been
in
operation in
most
.
the published form. With

regard to· the published article,
I
-would
like
to
conect
one
misquotation. It would be rather
ridiculous for me to suggest he
inclusion of one student at each
· departmental
meeting;
this
·
system has been in .operation in
most departments for this last
semester. What
I
did suggest, on
the
other hand, was. that a '
student from each class (senior,
junior,
·
sophomore,
freshman)
attend these meetings, thereby
increasing student representation
to four.
I offer this suggestion
feeling
quite
strongly
·
that
certain problems and suggestions
in departments are relative to
each
class
(senior,
junior;
sophomore, freshman) _and_
th~t
increased student part1c1pahon 1s
necessary in the departmental
meetings.
Sincerely,
Edward Timmes
Student Academic Committee
*****
FOXES
from
8
able
to sustain a real solid
attack. Newark St. was able to
score late in the fourth period
on a dunk shot which
was
overlooked by the ref. The final
score was
Marist 2 - Newark
St.
l.
Saturday, Marist faced one of
their strongest opponents of the
'69
season
in Sacred Heart
College. Sacred Heart had a
record of
5-1-2
coming into
today's
game.
With
thirteen
minutes gone in the first period
Dan Zelinski
passed
the
ball
thru
8:30 p.m. - Play - "INCIDENT AT VICHY" by Arthur Miller.
COLLEGETHEATRE,CAMPUSCENTER
FRIDAY;
November 14
8:30 p.m. -Play-COLLEGE THEATRE, CAMPUS CENTER
SATURDAY, November
15
2:00 p.m. -Cross Country-St. Francis- HOME
2:00 p.m. - Football-Providence-HOME
Fall Crew - Class Day Race -HOME
·
.
SUNDAY,Novemberl6
2:30 p.m. - Play, - Afternoon Performance' COLLEGE THEATRE,
CAMPUS CENTER
8:00 p.m. - Movie - "THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING"-Sponsored
by Student Gov_emment, COLLEGE THEATRE, CAMPUS CENTER
Sailing- War Memorial Trophy-NAVY
*****
lest Schedule
DAY: DIVISION STUI>EN_TS
Below is the tentative final
examination
schedule for Fall
Semester. As in previous years the
exams
will
be. scheduled
a·ccording
to slot. No conflicts
should result except on Tuesday
Afternoon when. both slot 9 and
slot 12 courses will be held .
-
If
you have a conflict on this
schedule please report it by filling
out one of the conflict slips
available at the switchboard.
Leave the slip there or return it to
me.
This must be done by.
Wednesday November 12th so
the final schedule can be ready by
November 14th.
Herchel Mortensen - Registrar
TENTATIVE
SCHEDULE
Monday, December 15th
9:00a.m.
All 1st Slot Classes
·
l
:30 p.m.
All 8th Slot Classes
Tuesday, December .16th
9:00 a.rri.
All 2nd Slot Classes
l:30p.m.
All 9th and 12th Slot Classes
Wednesday,December 17th
9:00a.m.
All
3rd Slot Classes
I
:30 p.m.
All
4th Slot Classes
two
S.H. defenders to Pete
Walaszek for the first score of
the game. It was Walaszek's
fourth
goal in the last three
games. The Marist rooters only
had
16
seconds to cheer as that
was the time it took Sacred
Heart to score. The goal was
scored by Skirnsuy with an assist
from
J.
McGuigan. Very little
shooting occurred in the first
half and the score remained at
.
1-1.
Marist
outshot
their
opponents
9-8.
The second half
was exactly like the first with
few shots on goal. Only
four
shots were taken in the thii-d
quarter with- each side shooting
twice.
With ten minutes left
J.
McGuigan broke free in front of
the Marist goal, he scored but
the goal was nullified when a
Sacred Heart player
was
offside.
Regulation time ended with the
score
Marist
I ,
Sacred Heart
I .
Marist took control of the ball
in .the overtime. They went right
at the Sacred Heart goalie. With
Thursday, December 18th
9:00a.m.
All
5th Slot Classes
l:30p.m.
All
7th and 7 A Slot Classes
Friday, December 19th
9:00a.m.
All
6th Slot Classes
l:30p.m.
·
All 6A Slot Classes
Saturday, December 20th
9:00a.m.
All
I
0th Slot Classes
l:30p.m ..
All I 1th Slot Classes
only 2:27 gone by in the first
overtime period Pete Walaszek
crossed the ball
in
front of the
Sacred Heart goalie. DePercin
nudged the ball to the post and
"Dirty Dan" Zelinski booted the
ball
in for the winning tally.
Marist won· the game
2-1
for
their third straight victory.
It was a great double victory
for the hooters.
An
excellent
defense
is
the main reason for
the wins.
A
defense led by the
great
Izzy
Sabeta, aided by three
Freshman
backs,
George
Saunders,
Bob Bergin
and
Jimmy Heilmann, have been the
outstanding players in this three
game win streak. Goalie Bob
Krenn had only allowed two
goals
in those games while
making a number of great saves.
Marist
has one home game
remaining
this
Saturday against
Dowling. It all happens at two
o'clock at Leonidoff field. Come
see the Little Red Foxes end the
season on a winning note.
''.'
''
•,,,
o

o
1

o
IO
Of
•I•
I
'.
\..,,.'
PAGES
EDITORIAL
''The Fortunes of
·
The Human
Race''
·
The battle is on. Ad Hoc Committees are forming, heads are rolling,
heated arguments are being waged and tension is at a maximum. The
Long Range Plan for Marist College in the Seventies has been releas~d.
The Presidential Planning Committee has released a document which
holds the potential to destroy Marist College if it
is
not properly
discussed and revised appropriately. But conversely,
if
the proper
adjustments are effected, the document holds a similar potential to
develop Marist into an institution with a reputation second to none.
THE CIRCLE has decided to ignore the former potential and has
concentrated on fostering the latter.
Looking at the actual docu!Ilent itself reveals five_ state~. goals of
which the most controversial 1s goal number 2.1 entitled,
Learn to
live in a technological age." Basically, this goal is marvelous and_ does
not hold any potential for turning Marist College into a community of
"technocrats". For besides proposing that the ind!vidl!al be infor1;11~d
of the technological advancements
in
modern society 1t als? spec1f1~s
that,
"A
vital program in the humanities is, the_refore, ~ssential 1f on~ 1s
to enter. this highly organized and tecqnological society as a creative
and critical individual: one who can articulate perspective and valu~s,
and one who can incarnate tradition." Consequently, all prospective
"technocrats" may cease worrying about the ST A TED GOAL - it does
provide a channel for maintaining your sanity.
There are mequmes within the plan. For example, section
2.4.2d) calls for the maintenance or slight increase of the 20: I student
faculty ratio. This proposal is fine but it makes no provision to correct
the
lopsided ratios of 130-50:
I
in English, History and Business as
compared with I 0-20:
1
ratios in Science majors. Let's face it. Some
students (and not the science students) are being cheated.
.
The CIRCLE realizes that it is much easier to censor the plan than 1t
is to laud the good points. But the good points will take care of
themselves: what we have to accomplish by
.this
issue and this editorial
is to provoke educated discussion of this vital document before any
decisions are made.
Finally, the CIRCLE leaves you with the foilowin~ w~nds from
Francis Bacon, (These words were found at the beginning of the
..:hapter entitled "Scientific Humanism" from Herbert
S.
Muller's book
Science and Criticism: The Humanistic Tradition in Contemporary
Thought).
·
"For the matter in hand is no mere felicity of speculation, but the
real business and fortunes of the human race, and all power of
operation. For man is but the servant
and
interpreter of nature: what
he does and what he knows
is
only what he has observed of nature's
order in fact or in thought; beyond this he knows nothing and can do
nothing."
Build U p ... Let Down.
Get Out ...
The first indication that Mr. Nixon would make a major speech on
Vietnam came from the White House shortly before the· day of
moratorium on October 15.'The scheduling of the address three weeks
in advance was unusual. It prompted speculation among the critics and
they then relaxed their attack in the hope of peace. In the fi~l?s of
Vietnam the soldiers waited for the Presidents address - the nuhtary
commanders reported that the soldiers were not responding to orders
as usual. They thought perhaps they were going home. Much of
"silent"
America waited
as
well
as
"vocal" America, for the
presidential speech.
Then on November
3
the President displayed a most profound lack
of political agility knowledge of history (Vietnam history), and
misunderstanding of his electorate. The speech was a let down. It
turned the clock back to the days of Johnson. The talk of rejection of
immediate withdrawal, the lack of progress at the negotiations, the call
for domestic support, and the implication of escalation to counter
enemy attack are all too familiar. The American people do not want to
hear it. They rejected it last November.
The American people do not want a "secret" timetable contingent
upon battlefield gains. The American people can not wait for the
South to take over the war. They want immediate withdrawal of
American forces; all of them.
It
remains for concerned Americans to work for the immediate
termination of the war. The Nixon government must be made to
understand;
Every available means of demonstrating
to this
government our disagreement with policy should be used. November
14th and 15th
will
afford us the opportunity to do so.
*****
The students, intellectuals, and financial leaders of America realize
that the war is over and that we have lost. We have lost the funds that
should have gone to the ailing cities, that should have been used for
eudcation, elimination of poverty, for control of pollution and many
many othetS. We have lost the peoples faith in the American
government. We can no longer talk to one another regarding racial
·
problems for we have
lost our patience. Finally we have lost lives, loo
many
lives,
too youthful, too far from home. We have lost the war -
let
us now bring the boys home.
*****































































_;
...
:•
......
.
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PAGE6
In·. ~erspective
John
Hul"l8y
Who
scored
the·
first
game blazer for his outstanding
touchdown on Leonidoff Field?
performance
in
this
game. The
Who led
Marist to
its
first
last game of the season against
victory
over arch-rival Iona?
Providence proved to be his
Who won the Best Athlete of the
most disappointing game in a
camp award over Lew Alcindor
Marist uniform. Trailing 13-12
in St. Jude's Daycamp of 19S8?
with seconds· remaining John
Who scored his first touchdown
rolled
around
I
e
ft
end
for Marist as a flanker and was attempting to score the
2
extra
p r o m p t l y switched
to
points but he
.
came up inches
quarterback
.
in his next game?
short.
.
Who quarterbacked Marist to its
This spring season's game was
only victory of the 1968 season
the highpoint of John's college
in his
·
first
quarterbacking
career. Leading the Vikings to a
effort?
thrilling
18-6
victory
over
The
answer
to all these
arch
- riv a I Ion a John
questions
is Marist College's
quarterba.cked
a
tremendous
quarterback 'John Hurley. John,
game, hitting his receivers Tyne
a native of Milford, New Jersey,
and· again. His accurate passing
came to Marist half-way through
was the difference in the hard
his
sophomore
year from St.
fought battle.
.
Joseph's
in Indiana.
John
In the season's opener against
attended
·Don
Bosco
High._ Plattsburg John:led
'M~rist
to a
School.in New Jersey
·where•
he
2s.,o,
victory.,' 'Jo~n
·
has had
played football and basketball.
outstanding
success hitting
his
John is an avid boxing fan who
short receivers and hitting his
majors in. History and hopes to
man in the end zone. In the
work
-for
the Government after
exciting game against St. John's,
graduating.
Hudson
Hurley
(in contrast
THE CIRCLE
MENEPACE
·from
I
students there· participating. The
students who were there were
allowed to participate openly."
However, he did coinnient _that,
"I think it would have been
unwieldy
to have
several
hundred students there."
·
As a.• final remark, Doctor
Menapace made the
·
following
commentary:
"I
would make a
plea
for· people to read the plan
with
an open '"mind and to
attempt
to_ understand·
the
general thrust of the plan rather
than to isolate individual, parts
of it and ·taking these p;irts out
of context. The goals are not all
inclusive. but represent
.poiri_ts
of
emphasis for the present Ume.
All
the goals are interrelated and
are·
consider.ed
of equal
importan<?e,"
·
NOVEMBER 6, 1969
Why? ..
By Peter Masterson
Why is Marist still a virgin?
been No adverse reactions to
When will the seductive evil
these reforms which indicates
forces of student militarism and·
that
.
our
Administration
is
·
campus violence rape our fair
·playing
the
role
of .an
maiden
Marist?
Columbia
overprotective, domineering old.·
.
. . Corne
1 L . .
and · n ow
·
lady, whose inflexible Victorian
·
Vassar ... all defiled· by the
attitudes
ate
inhibiting
the
insidious
grip
of student
.academic,,
social, and moral
agitators...
but
_not
Marist!
growth of her
.young,
growing
Virginal,
clean,
wholesome,
student body.
sweet,
untouched;
·
pure, and
The fault is not entirely with
invio)ated. Marist, blossoming in
the Administration. There comes
her
-innocence
and maidenhood,
a time when every girl must
app_ears
to the
concerned
·
grow up and prove herself

· community as a thrust to the
.
woman. She must expose herself
bust
of intellectualism
while' to the advances of current ideas,
sitting on the ass of apathy. She
as it is her responsibility
to
seems to
·
flaunt her figure of
present herself to the undressing
academic
potential
yet flees
eyes of modem society ..
Thus,
FALL
from
4
from the first seductive glance
the Marist students must assert
every on
c
ju m p on
·that
from a pr~gressive program.
.
themselves and. cast off these
bandwagon,
teachers, parents,
Responsible
attendance.
maternal
apro.n
strings and
government, media, and even . .
·
. p r o p e r
c
1
a s s room
create a more responsible and.
friends. Y,es
sir the great call to
attire .•

.pass-fail.: .-reduction of
mat_ure relationship
with the
"'MEET· THE CHALLENGE."
core
curriculum
.. .improved
Administration. But how?
Aren'.t you getting sick
.
of it?
c
u r fews.
.
. al c .oh o l i
c
In
_the
past, students
have
Aren't you fed up with the "big
p riv i l e g es . . . o
p
e n
repeatedly
knocked
on the.
names" and "useful terms and· housee(?) ... these
are. the
Administrations door, and after
phrases?"
Maybe
.
our· papers changes
.accomplished
·
through
not receiving
an
answer, have.
should be full of compositions
theaggressiveeffortsandpatient
ripped
down
that
door.
like,
"The
Fall?" Maybe the
·
labors of many concerned and
However, there is one easier
whole world should take the hint
progressive students. Some -were solution. Let's merely open that
.
from nature and drop dead for a years· in coming due to the
door ourselves, and meet the
·
while?
u n f o u n d
J
ears.
of
the
Administration face~ to face in
·
.
What'sthat?Yousaythcrcare
administration
that
these
their.ownboudoirwherewewill
'some
things you
arc
really fed up innovations would cause adverse
be heard.
·.
with, but. ..
BUT
WHAT?
reaction. There have, however,
*****
Jon'·has
been
the Marist
to ... Union Turnpike Mike) llo(i
q.uarterback
since the fourth
the inspired Vikings ~o a near
game of the 1968. season. He
upset over highly ranked St ..
.
started the season as a defensive
·
John's
Moving the club by
.
back but was switched to flanker
consistently mixing
his
running ·
in
the second game of the
.season
game
and his passing_ game,
·and
it was
'here
that
he scored· John's efforts were instrumental
Marist's only touchdown in a 7-6
in the Viking attack .. In what
-
loss
to
Kings.
,
John's· next
was one of Marist football's
appearance was at quarterback
finest hours, John's courageous
against Niagara.
It
was in this
performance in spite of a back
game. that John thrilled the
injury won him great respect
Viking fans with his passing and
throughout club football.
·
(fop Row)
(I.
to r.) Jane Pancheri, Peggy Miner, Elaine Zuiri_coni, Mikey Pepe, Shevaun Hall. (Bottom Row)
Judy
Sch~udnecker, Fanny Colligan,
Muy
McGuire,
Linda
Cloer,~
Coutant.
.
running. He was rewarded the
Sports. Special
WEISS·.
long-range projection, which it
did. The question. was also raised
concerning student participation
in this
.
workshop. The student
members of the
APC
discussed
this with me, and
it
was decided
that the student representatives
in academic matters, namely the
members of SAC, would attend
the
workshop. Meanwhile,
the
president
of the college had
announced that plans were being
formulated
with the Student
from I
overemphasizing
the
technological. Rather, what was
intended was a reaffirmation of
the role of the humanities in an
New· Cheerleaders
Boost
Mo.role
By
Linda
Cloer
age
which
is
becoming·
As the
'1969
athletic season
increasingly technological. How opened
a new dimension in
does Marist,
a:
liberal arts college, support was added. For the f"trst
continue
to probe the real time, Marist College has
a
female
meaning of man in an age ·when cheerleading
squad. Chartered
man's very existence on this under and sponsored
by the
planet is being threatened?
Booster club, the cheerleaders
hope to be an asset in spirit to
.
~r~~:e~ta~~i~a~~o~~i;?~~
t----•t
known to the student body.
I was asked if the long-range
projection stressed technology at
the expense of the humanities.
This hypothesis is based on the
statement of goals developed by
the planning commission and
which were printed
in an earlier
issue of The Circle this semester.
The misunderstanding developed
because of the wording of the
.
first of· these goals which
is
entitled
.. Learn to Live in a
Technological
Age." At the

workshop
it became painfully
evident that what was perhaps
clear to the members of the
planning commission was not
as
clear to the people who were
just being introduced
to the
document
The discussion of
that day helped to clarify the
fact
that
Marist
was not
Soph. Pete WaJaszek
shoots ball at
Sacred
Heart goalie in Marist's 2-1
victory at Leonidoff field.
the Marist student body.
In conjunction
with past
-experience and ability a quaHty
characteristic of the cheerleaders
has been a
·
desire to be well arid
deservedly received.
This
has
been evidenced in the willingness
to deyote time and energy to
practice, making of their own
skirts and buying their own
sweaters and
-
accessories. The
squad
includes captain, Jane
·
Pancheri, Maty McGuire, Linda
Clair,
·
Elaine Quiriconi, Judy
Schaudnecker, Frannie Colligan,
Dee Coutant, Mikey Pepe, Peggy
Miner and Shevaun Hall. They
wish
to gratefully acknowledge
all the support from the stands
and express the hope that it-will
continue and grow. You can see
the squad in action this Saturday
at the soccer game and Sunday
at
the
football
game. Both
promise to be exciting so come
and give the teams your support.
This Week In Sports
During this week in
·1966,
Mr.
Ron Petro was preparing for-his
first season as Varsity Basketball
coach, taking over for Mr. Paul
Arold, the famed crew coach. His
starting
five that year were:
.
center, John Murphy, a senior,
who would later pass the
I 000
point
mark;
forwards, Rick
Schneider, a junior, and
Bill
Gowen, a sophomore;
and
2
sophomore guards, Rick DiPa~ri
and Tony Powers, who were
cousins ...
At this time in 1967·. the
Varsity Club, under President
Paul Sicilian donated the trophy
case to the Rathskeller ...
On Oct. 29, 1966 John Forbes
led the Cross-Country team to
victory
in the
Conference
Championship at Van Cortlandt
park. John Goegel
was
second,
and
a freshman named Phil
Cappio
finished
third
for
Marist
...
On Nov. l, 1967, John Forbes
set the record. of 24:22 on the
Marist 4.6 mile Cross-Country
course
...
On Oct. 28, 1967, the Vikings
defeated Niagara I 4-6, as Bill
Dourdis took
a
flair pass from
Jim
Conroy and sped 80 yards down
the sideline with the help of a key
block by Andy Herzing to break a
6-6
~ie with l ½min.remaining. ..
!
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.
NOVEMBER.
6, 1969
Frosh.
Crush·
Columbia
Crew
by
Greg
MCLaughlln
and Jack Barry
.
.
On,-
Saturday, ·Nov.
1;
the
All
three Marist crews swept
all
Freshman Crew Team met with five sprints by at least a length
the Columbia University Frosh and a half. The Marist victory can
Crew for a dual meet on the be attributed
to the keen
Hudson:
.
coaching of William "Butch"
The race was not as important
Lennahan. The Frosh crews were
as
the
Syracuse
race was, well disciplined for the Columbia
although
·
it
·
yielded up-to-date
race and found it a welcome
reports for the coach'es as to the respite
between
the rough
·
progress of their personnel: The workouts.
·
·
· ·
·
TIIECIRCLE
FOOTBALL
from8
· to Siena's 35 yard line. Hurley
was sent in for Vuy. Even
though Hurley could not throw
because of a. shoulder injucy he
did some nice running, going
over from the two yard line. The
PAT
was no good and the ·game
ended with the score 27-13.
A
few injuries were sustained
in the game. Those injured were
Mike Towers, Andy Herzing and
Jack McDonnell. The injuries are·
,
not serious and
all
will probably
see action next Sunday against
Seton Hall. Bill Dourdis will also
return to the starting line-up.
Next week
·
the Vikings play at
home against Seton Hall at 1 :30
team
ftself
found the race..
This Sunday afternoon at the
invaluable because it enabled Orchard
Beach Lagoon, the
them to see how they would react N .Y .R.A. will sponsor a fall
under pressure. It also gave them regatta. Among the colleges and
the experience and confidence clubs entering are St. John's,
they will need for the spring Fordham,
John Jay CoJlege,
season.
·
.
Stony Brook, Columbia, Iona and
, Sunday afternoon.
Corne out
·.
and support the home team.
The normal one mile distance Manhattan. There will be events
for the race was abandoned
in in
fours, singles and eights. Marist
.
favor· of five 500 meter sprints. is entering a varsity four and a
This short distance racing enabled
·
freshman eight as well as a four.
the
coaches
to get a truer Andre Albert and Mike Camardi
evaluation· of the crew's power will race in the singles for Marist.
.
than a long distance race.
*****
TURKEY
TROT MONDAY
(see them run!)
.
Marist's
second and thhd Freshman boats soundly defeat Columbia on the watets of the Hudson last Saturday
momin~·>..:
·
,~ -
.
: ••••.•
,., .,.,.,... ·•·
Campus
Stuff
By
Don
Duffy
Only one word can sum up last Saturday, Great, Great,
Great ..• Every Marist team that competed won and that has to be
great. Marist has come of age sports fans and this won't be the only
time that this is going to happen, you can bet youryour last dollar
·
on that.
·
·
The frosh crew did nothing less
.
then win everything they
competed in, with the only boat from Columbia surviving was the
varsity shell because they didn't row. Rumor has it that this frosh
team is going to be victorious at the D~d Vail in
May .
.:rhe Cross
Country team didn't get discouraged after- their loss in the C.A.C.
but instead beat two teams from the big city with ease. The football
team hasn't beat Siena in the last four years but that jinx ended with
a 2 7-13 victory. And then tthere is the soccer team. After lo~ing six
out of their first seven games, salvaging only a he, they didn't lose
faith and soon they were a three game win streak. Led by those
sparkling front liners of Walaszek (4 goals and 2 a~sists in ~hos~ three
games), Zelinski (winning goal Saturday) and Tom Rabbitt (tied ~qr
scoring lead and ace Penalty shooter), who have back up by Jim
Elliott Bill Kawina and the ever persistent Izzy Sa beta and the great
frosh fullbacks in the personage
.of
Fly boy Saunders, Adorable Jim
Heilmann and boom-boom Bergin, this team has heart and now they
have a respectable record. Lets get dowti to the game on Saturday
and see our obys win their last game of the season.
_i
BITS-N-PIECES
Hope
-Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Larkin had a very nice fall weekend at
their Hyde Park estate. All I want to know is w who stood ~P for
you Steve was it Mr. and Mrs. Popeye Nolan ... .If your ever m the
mood for' a great time come see Jet Ullrich or Emmy Cooke and
they will let you listen to lovely poetry on their recorQ player. Oh
those two are so much fun .... Go see the gatehouse queens before
they move .... If you ever need some motherly advice go see
Ma
Krakower she will take care of you •... Congratualtions to Cooney
on
his
si'
yard run Saturday against Siena. See Tom, there
is
some
one slower than you. Does Tom Mahoney really get lost on those
irve day weekeds of
his .••
.I don't like carrot, the Ra~bit
does. ... Saw Joe Rubino at the football game Saturday, I was Just
tickled pink ...•. Turkey Trot
is
next Monday,
if
your interested get
in touch with Jim Elliott,
Rm
804 c. Get in touch with him before
Friday because Pattie is making a r1:turn trip t~ weekend to the old
U. Any late entries can be handed mat the Red Bull •••.• Ther'- 1s a
great show on
WMCR
every Monday nite at I a.m. I won't tell you
who the DJ. is, but he is just magnificenL ••• Noodles Noo_nan
would like to thank all those adorable people who went to the Siena
game Saturday. He would also like some info on _his whereabouts
that same night because he can't remember anything. ... Well that
ends another rotten column. I wonder
if
Pat and Ann aren't really
escapees from that institution across the·stree_t'? Electric ~oesn't like
her nickname
so
see if you can come up with something else for
her ... Don't forget about the Turkey Trot. They are giving away
three birds as first prizes. Love Duff ....
DAVEGA
from8
type. with a tough defensive
struggle coming about by both
sides, Diaspora· was unable to
gain any_ ground at all as their
receivers
found diffkulty
.
in
catching the ball. Midway
in
the
second period, Davega forced a
punt deep in Diaspora territory.
A strong rush by Davega blocked
the punt netting them a safety
and the only score in the game.
Late
in the
second period,
Davega established the first real
offensive threat of the
·
game.
Ken Gestal's erid sweep netted
five yards. A pass to "rule book"
Kelmer was good for twenty
yards
and
another
Gestal
completion
to Tom Roman
placed the ball just one yard
.short of a touchdown as the half
ended. Strong defense marked
the next two quarters with little
offensive gains. Davega was able
to place Diaspora in terrible field
position due to the tremendous
punting of the "golden toe"
Chuck
Stebener.
Excellent
coverage
of punts
pl_aced
Diaspora in rotten field position.
Leading
th·e coverage
was
awesome
Tom
Roman
and
Captain
Marvel
Mullany.
Diaspora was unable to move
offensively. Late in the fourth
quarter, They. received the ball
and started . to move but the
threat
was stopped
by Slats
Gormley with a key interception
with 11:47 left
in
the game.
After the game the boys from
Davega were ecstatic with joy.
When
Ken
Gestal
was
approached
for a comment
about the game, he was heard to
say with a tear in his eye; "They
played
good but we played
better."
Due to the amount of faculty and
administrative opinion in this edition
of
TIIE CIRCLE, FACULTY.
FOCUS
has been deleted.
It
will
reappear next
~-eek with Mr. Casimir Horkeliunas
and "Some Impressions of the Soviet
Union."
PAGE7
Peas
am
Carrots
by Joe McMahon
You
might
say the football
Saturday at
2
o'ciock, Seton Hall
team was a little psyched last to play the Vikings Sunday
Saturday at Siena. It's a good afternoon at two, and the Turkey
thing for Bleeker Stadium that
Trot on Monday at four .. .If you
the half-time wasn't any longer,
want to stretch the weekend, the
or there probably wouldn't be Cross-Country
tea_m ends its
anything
left of the locker
season at home .Wednesday at
room ... With
Bill
Dourdis
4:00 .. .I hope our next feature
sid~lined by an injury, and John
"This Week ln Marist Sports" will
Hurley out for most of the game,
go
·over
as well as In Perspective
with
a bad
shoulder, Mark did. Unfortunately, my files only
Rowinski and. Ron Vuy were go
-back
to. 1966, so
if
anyone
called on to do the job and both
could
.
fill me in on some of
came
through
well in the
M,OTH's
action-packed
thrills
clutch: .. Andy Herzing helped
from the days of yesteryear,
out the cause with a number of ·whether it be headline or trivia, it
timely receptions, including two would be most welcome. . . I
circus catches which he hit with
wonder
how
many football
one hand and caught with
.
the players were given a decent meal
other. Speaking of circus plays, last
Wednesday
after
their
one pass from Vuy
.in
the 3rd practice at Riverview. But, no, a
quarter went off Bill Paccione's
training table isn'ttoo important!
chest straight up l
O
yards in the
RIGHT? I mean what's so big
air and landed right back down in
.
about missing a meal? Athletes
his arms. In the 4th quarter, the
are supposed to be big and strong.
ball was jarred ·loose from Dick Especially runners - they're all
Hasbrouck and the alert Bob nearly 140 lbs. And wrestlers,
Scott picked it out of the
air
for they never come in tired or
what looked just like a 3-yard anything! And there's always the
forward
lateral.
.. The best
Rat or Vicki's - what better place
second-effort of the day came to use the spending money from
from Chris McNamara who, with
our
athletic
scholarships!!
two defenders on him, hauled in a ... Don't pay any attention to
40 yard bomb from Vuy on the
what Tom Turkey says in his
four and almost dragged everyone
letter to the editor. Show up at
across the line with him as he 4:00 Monday for the highlight of
lunged to the l foot line to set up
the year in_intramurals.
·.
I've yet
the
3rd
touchdown
... Mike to receive an entry from the Big
Towers came through with a key
Fatty
A.C. Last year's group
play in a very unexpected way. madeittotheriverbuttheynever
Being the last man with a shot at
came back ... Gerry Rondon, last
Siena's speedy halfback, who had
year's champ, has made
it
known
reversed his field twice at the l
O
that he wants another Turkey.
yard line to get
by
everyone else His time. for the 2.8 mile course
on the kickoff team, Mike got an was 17: 24 and he . beat Tom
angle on him at full speed and
Mccutchen by I 2 seconds
...
The
·
knocked him out of bounds
Banana Splits A.C. are the new
around midfield, thus preventing
sensation
of the Intramural
a sure 6 pts ... We have a big home
Soccer season. Don't miss their
week end
coming
up
with
psyche cheer
...
Erp!.
..
Dowling here for Soccer on
*****
.In
Perspective
Isidore
Sabeta
To anyone who has been to a
home soccer game in the last
three years, it is obvious that
one athlete stands out above the
rest. In the eyes of the spectator,
"Izzy" (as his soccer team-mates
call
him)
may not seem as the
most
colorful performer
nor
does he seem to have the flashy
moves. But no spectator has ever
seen a soccer player get the jo_b
don·e as he does. Izzy's «job"
is
to stop the opposing offensive
line and he does so with amazing
consistency. Br. Sabeta came to
the U.S.
·
four years ago from
Rhodesia. Soccer is close to a
national pastime in Rhodesia,
therefore, Brother Sabeta got his
start
playing
in elementary
school. He· began playing as a
goalie and continued as one until
he
reached
Marist.
After
considering the size and ability
of Br. Isidore, Doctor Goldman
decided that he would be more
valuable to the team on the field
rather confined to the goal, and
Izzy
has
been stand-out
at
fullback ever since. Br. Isidore
also has the ability to handle the
ball on offense as he proved
against Nyack this season. With
the score tied late in the game
Izzy came from his defensive
spot to continually feed the ball
to our offensive line and prevent
Nyack from clearing the ball
downfield. Doc. Goldman says it
best of the value of Br. Isidore
Sabeta: " •.. the only words to
describe him are cliches like
fantastic, and outstanding; he
has been more than just a soccer
player, he's been a symbol to the
rest of the team who are always
happy to see
him
out on the
field. For three years he has
been the bulk of our game;
unfortunately,
there is only one
of him; at a big school with the
proper publicity, he would be an
all-American."
Br. Isidore is
presentJy devoting most of his
studies to Chemistry and he says
although his future plans arc not
certain, he feels that he will
teach eventually.
..

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. PAGES
· · , THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 7.1969

Vikings
Upset.
.Siena
21~13
SoccetWins
Jw~; Frosh
Row
Over
Lions
....

.
.
Vikings
Meet
Seton
Hall
Sunday
At
Home ·
The
Vikin~,
led by Ron_ Vuy
at . quarterback, beat , a strong
Siena
team. last Saturday" at
Bleeker Stadium in Albany by a
score of 27 to 13. It was the
third win for the Vikings which
brings their season mark to __
3
and 3 with two games left to
play.
.
The Siena team ranked. eighth
last week could not get going as
the strong defense of the Vikings
held them time and time again.
Henry Blum, Marty Keely, Bill
Leber, Jack McDonnell, ·and Don
Ronchi
all turned
in fine
_ performances
in holding the
Indians to only 13 points. Their
season scoring average was 27
•Points·
per
game.
Jack
McDonnell
added
to his
interception total by picking off
three Siena passes. .
all.
It
looked as though it was with the 'score 21-7
in
favor of
going to be a high scoring game; the Vikings. .
.
. ·
but the Viking defense. tightened
The second ·· half , became a
and did riot allow the Indians to defensive duel as neither team
·score again
in
the first half.
was able to sustain. a .drive. Late
Shcfrtly
after
the
Viking in the ·third quarter Sieila•started .
touchdown
Keely. blocked a to move. With the fine ruiutlf!g
Siena punt. McGarr picked up · of Joe Grasso and Jim Broderick
the
loose ball and went to .the Indians moved to the Viking
· Siena's
10
yard line before being 30 yard line. From there reser:ve
knocked out of bounds. Three · quarterback
Pete ,Diamond
plays later Vuy hit Herzing in threw a perfect pass to ~ike
the · end zone for the .Vikings Schongar for the second Stena
second touchdown.
The PAT score. Smith missed.the PAT and
was missed and the score became the score remained 21-13.
13-7.
Still
behind
21_-13 in the
· In the second quarter The fourth quarter Si
7
n:a was fore:ed
Vikings started a drive from to throw. The Viking defensive
their 45 yard line. Vuy hit backfield o! McDonn~ll, Gest~,
Herzing for· 20 yards as Andy Rooney, Faison and Hinchey dtd
made a. fine catch for the ·first a great job intercepting
four
down. Vuy then threw a long passes and knocking down scores
pass to McNamara, who caught ofothe~.
.
.
The offense kept rolling as
·vuy's passing and Hasbrouck's
running proved too much for the
Siena defense. Vuy went
9
for
23 in passing am! 127 yards
whHe Hasbrouck . gained
I 13
yards
rushing;
The
viking
offensive line-consisting of Mike
Towers, Mike Cahill, Emmett
Cooke, Bill McGarr and Frank
AUanito
did a .fine job in
·protecting
Vuy and also
in
it on the two yard line. From
Late m · the fourth quarter
there Hasbrouck took
it
over for McDonnell intercepted · a Pete
the score. The try for two points· Diamond- pass and took the ball
was good as Vuy hit Herzing in
the end zone. The half ended
· Cont. on Page 7
Pete Walaszek crosses ball to Tom Rabbitt as Marist moves downfield
enroute to 2-1 overtime victory aagainst Sacred Heart
last
Saturday.
Foxes
··1op Sacred
·Heart
2~
1-In Overtim·e
-Davega
_Wins
2-0
By Oon Duffy ·
.· enabling Hasbrouck to
gain
113 .
yards. Mark Rowinski replacing
injured Bill Dourdis turned in· a
strong performance .. ·
,.·TI_te
scoring .started early
in.
The
Marist .. soccer · team
the first quarter. Sieria received
defeated Newark St. of Union,
the opening kiclcoff bringing the
N.J. by the score of2-1 on Tues;
ball. out to their own 40 yard
Oct.
?.R
It w.11s the "econd
line.- From there Joe Grasso on •a . straight
wm tor the young
halfback option . threw a pass to
boaters.
second period 6-4 .. The• third
was credited with the goal at the
period was .much like the first
9:20 mark with Walasiek. and
period with _little· ·action until· . Zelinski getting assists. Marist
Marist started to ·go deep
into
outshot
N.S.
64
in
the third
Newa}'.k St.· territory.
Dan.·. period. Marist played defense-in
Zelipski got .off a shot which . the last period with neither team
.deflected off both Walaszek and · · · ·
· Rabbitt into· the goal. Rabbitt ·
Cont. on Page 5
Lead by a tremendous defense
the senior team, Davega, was
able to win it second consecutive
football
intramural.
championship
on the lower
· soccer field before a capacity
crowfl.
of
150
fans.
They
defeated Diaspora by the score
of 2-0
,
- The
fir.st quarter featured
. mixed gains in the small variety
Cont. on Page 7
Mike Schonger, who took the
On a cold,
overcast. day
ball· deep into- Viking territory
neither
team
was able to
before being-caught from behind
maintain much of an offense,in
by
Bill
Rooney.
On. the
the first ·twenty-two
minutes ..
following play Brad Spring went
Marist was outshot in the first
• off .. tackle for 12 yards. and the
period 2-1. The action came
score. The PAT was· good and
early
in the second period.
Siena led 7-0. ·, ,
Marist was able to penetrate on
Ha.triers
T·op Tw-~ City
··schools
FiniSh
·
Thil'.d In C.A.C. Champs
The Vikings wasted no time as , the Newar:k St. goalie and when
Tom Cooney took .the kickoff
a direct kick was sent his ·way by
and raced 82 yards down the-
Bill Kawina at the 2:30 mark,
sideline for the touchdown. The · Pete
Wa.laszek was able to
PAT was good and with only a
deflect it by him for the first
few .seconds gone by in the first
score
of· the
game.
Marist
quarter the score was tied at 7
outshot their opponents in the
By Steve Sawicki
· On Wednesday Oct. 29 Marist
was host to the Central Atlantic
Conference· (CAC) cross-country
run, There were· only four teams
Co-Captain Bob Mayerhofer and Freshman star John Petraglia pick
up
speed
on
nats
after climbing the
mountainous
"water-works"
hill.
Petraglia
garnered
a medal at
this
c.A.C. Championship
by
finishing a strong 7th
place.
in the race but the performances
were excellent. Kings College,
Nyack
Missionary ·Bloomfield•·
and Marist · engaged in a close,
w_ell fought
race, producing
some of the best times ever on
the Marist Campus.
· The race went off late with
Kings
tak~ng the early lead.
McClements and White of Kings
soon held the lead positions and
remained unchallenged until the
very end. Tlie remaini~g runners
were intermixed, forcing· them
to produce better times · and
. separate into small groups where
competition became fierce as the
race progressed. The four teams
fielded
32 -runners in which
Marist placed 4 in the top 12
due
to
the
.excellent
performance
of John Petraglia
and Tom Mahoney who lowered
his
time
from
29:55
to a
personal best of 28:28.
.
Kings battled to retain the
lead positions as Jenks (Nyack)
challenged
their
ability
to
endure.
McClements of Kings
took first with an excellent time
of 27: 11 followed by. teammate
White in 27:27.
The first runner in for Marist.
John fetraglia placed 7th overali.
and lowered his time from 29:26
to 28:00. Tom Mahoney placed
I 0th with the excellent time of
28: 28.
The
I Ith and
12th
positions were a tie between
Co-Captain
Bob Mayerhoffer
and
Steve
Sawicki
(28:40)
Marists 5th position and -18th
overall was held by Jim Corbett
(29:35)
Co-Captain
Joe
McMahon placed 21st· (30:33).
Following
closely were Greg
Nelsen
22nd
(30:45)
Don
Paulson
24th
(3 I :25) Mike
Smith
25th
(31 :42)
Tom
Geraghty 26th (32:09) Charles
Russet 28th (32:20) and Mike
Moran 29th (33:48).
Although the Marist Harriers
turned in excellent performances
Kings won the meet with 29
points. Nyack was second edging
Marist 48 to 57 and Bloomfield
ran up 100 points.
On Saturday Nov. I Marist
competed against BroQklyn Poly
Tech
and
Hunter
at
Van
Cortlandt Park. With a stiff wind
blowing against the runners the
paces were slowed significantly,
resulting in · poor times for s_o
late in the season. Marist ran a
clos~.
·race
with
Hunter,
overpowering.,_them 21 to 35 and
succeeded in toppleing Brooklyn
16to45.
The winning time of 29:30
was held • by C. Vercoe of
Hunter. The next 4 places were
captured by Marist displaying a
phenomenal team effort. Steve
Sawicki placed 2nd overall and
was 1st (or Marist in 30:45 John
Petraglia
was 3rd in 31 :03
Co-Captain
Bob Mayerhoffer
was 4th in 31:13
and Tom
Mahoney
5th
32:15.
Joe
McMahon placed 8th in 33:35
Don Paulson in a spectacular
I 00 yard sprint finish against
Senapica of Hunter placed 12th
in 34:35, Charles Russett placed
14th
(36:26)
Tom Geraghty
16th (36:43) and Mike Moran
17th (36:45).
With these two additional wins
the Marist Harriers raised their
record to 8 and I 0. The Hamers
will run their last two meets of
tlie •69 season in the N.A~I.A.
meet at Trenton Sat. Nov. 8 and
a home meet
with
St. Francis on
Wednesday Nov. 12.
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