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The Circle, December 4, 1969.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 9 - December 4, 1969

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:MARIST
COLLEGE;
POUGHKEEPSIE,
N.t{.12601··\·:
._D~E~BER
4;
1~~9 · '·.
..
-
,_:·:_.A·:
"<>·-·-.-d·-.--
.
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.
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.
·
· -;Don
tra~ford ~s ~o-ru~1r-ihe-mill~offe~ho~s~-;~~ehain~~)heis
a~ expe;ien~e, bort has b;~-~
d;~wirig
~rowds,
lik~
those which gathered
in
Marist's theatre a_few Fridaysago, wherever he
~i!S
perfopned. :
·
, ··
Crawford
.s
whole act centers on.the theme oflove,
m
one
fonn
or·another. Early
m
each perfon:nance
.
h~
_as~
the ~udience, "Would
it
embarrass you terriblyif

tell you
I
love
you?'\ after which he proceeds
·t?
sing "Say_Can ):'ou Fancy." Crnwford says,
"I
developed a strong,sense of whirrtsy:ldecided
~
long
hme ago that Lwould fight to_preserye
mywhimsy~
Tllat's how
I
came
to
write
niy
fairy tale songs.
I
starte.d three·and only finished one. Then
I
ran outa dope."
.
· ·
·
·
·.·
·
..
.··
·
·
.
.
::.
·
·
··
·
·•
,
·
·
·
·
·

<;:r~wford's political views are
_"righC'
on the
·mark
when he suggests to the audience toenter federal
Coffee Houa:
entertainment
itt
its
best -
Don
Crawfotd
captivates
buildin~ (such as Post Offices)_
..
.
-
.
.

,
. ·. .
.

.
.
• ..
.
.
.

,
overwhe~ing
.a_udien~
during
his
perforina~ce
in
theatre.
·
r~.1.i:~~i=faJ~f~
1
:.:~:~f;-
-:c·
.·L··.-A··
·'s
..
·--:s~••·
·'.··o:·.
·
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•1··
.~2·
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·1N·
·
·y··
1A·
T'-
ES' CAMPAIGN·
the--
everung Crawford sang a
·,
·
··
- -
:
--
.
·.
·
·
·song
..
called
·
''Silent
'.Screen",''-'
-
·

·
·
·
·
·
·

·which
he wrote and dedicated to
i!i-;~~?.~~1.~':f.~~
··•
·
..
•seeks·
ACtive
S~pporij9r Storefront
Be~~:iy-,Ct!r;J6;!~
::d
!~~ht.
.
..
by Bob S~th
. .
'
program the~suin ~f$2,000. The. broaderiing
.
~f-.
the·.· doHegi
mondtarily to the project.
first professional appearance at'
..
-1'.he "Black Afro•Athedcari
College
faculty
.have·: also, experience.
.
-.
.
.
- .
Marist
-
students
would
age 14. Since then he has busied
Brotherhood·
Association· and
endorsed.· the plan and
,.their
·
The storefront ideally would
function in non-decision makirig,
himself
with singing, jazz; acting,
the
Sophomore
·
Class (The
commitment to the project will be a
-
center of cultural and_
roles since the success: of the
-
.folk
-
singing, writing, freelance
Executive Board) have initiated
be announced before, the end. of educational activity,. combining
program depends on the Black's
photography, and retiring· (three
a campaign which wilt attempt
this
·;semester.
The
King
a
·
sensitized
_
tutorial

program
ability
·to serve
the Black
times). A). After riear death in ·to infonn the members of the
C_om·mHtee )s
_exp.ected·, :to
with
a

workshop
in Black
. Community's needs,
·once
they
-
an
auto accident
.in
1964 he
Marist Community concerning
·
commit a portion of
'its
·yearly History and· Heritage.
,
have
enlisted
their services.
moved
to Vancouver,
B.C.,
:_
BABA's:: store.
·front
program.-
budgetfo'the
storefront-this
to
BABA h~s previously stated,.·•
When BABA has sufficiently
Canada.;He now lives-in a thirty
Meetings between
BABA
and the.• be·, announced".•
before
with
college and· community·
organized the program (and this
room house by
a
lake in the-
Class of 72. took, place· on
termination.of the semester.
backing, that its basic goal
.is
to
is
·contingent
upon· student
woods North of Montreal.
Tuesday and Wednesday of this
Tli_e. Sophs hope that_ these stimulate culture and. education
financial and other support) it
is
.
Marist's.
cc.coffee
House·
week with the ex~hange of.ideas
discussioris·will help.to enlighten within
-
the Black Community.
hoped
that
.
the community
Circuit"
.represents
a· riew
to
resulf
in·some·
future
the student body regarding-the The Sophomo~e Class hopes to
could
..
eventually manage and
entertainment•
concept .. The _ enlistment· of student help· for
aims
and
purposes
of the sµmulate. student participation
supervise
the program; The
.
Coffee House Circuit is one of
the program.
· :project~
the monetary funding of in the program through a wide
ultimate goal of BABA
is
to have
the
~
0
st
fruitful
talent
·
Prior to !he meetiri~ ~etwe~n
the project, and
.the
role of the va ri et
Y
_
of activities
:aJJd
the community- assume control
development
_
pr_ograms on·
the Executive Board an_d BAB?,.,
Poughkeepsie community.
contribute
to BABA· in that-
and to
-
have the storefront
college
-and
_universities
.about
the
storefront
proposal had
.
/
. The_Executive Board feels that fasliion.
The · possibilities of
function autonomously.
,
two
ihundred
through out the
·•
S tu d en t-.
G
o v e r n men
.t
the storefront. could become
an
·
concerts, fund drives, and others
·
United States.Thus, through the.
endorsement.
The
Student·
invaluable means ofinvofvement
will
be explored;-by the Sophs in
Circuit, Marist has access to the
__
.
Government.
has alloted the·
in the
community
-
.
and· a
;rn
attempt.
to
c_ontribute
$pain
-Lecture
/f·;'..
very peiformers that the schools
(J
. .
l
,
z
.
-
.
11 R
.
-
t{
· ..
-
'.
h~V'~ h~l~ed,t~ ac1!,ieve::S~c~e~s;,
-
,.
·ar·
'.o
an·
.

-
UC-
car·e·. o:··
·e1·.
;O"t
..
, .
.
·.
by Tom Hoffey
'.
,,?,,-:~-
-
"'
-
.
_Doi:i.
,qrawford
.JS\
o~e
,such
-
.

..
.
,-
._
.
.
-
'
,
... .
..
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'
"

. :
.·on
we
d.ll es day: night
F~;~~;,.i:0J1'.i,~vi~~(,whb~is:~~'.rui;',wair,;-,as-t.-:·c':-:;-;
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0
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·:-
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-·--·•·---
·
·
..
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-,--
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-
·
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..
· ·
·;:··November_''
19,:·the<History
::,,---·:'~·~.c-·,
a,
result
,of
concerts·here and at
.. :,
·.
-
.
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.·.
_

.•. ·
·.
-.
,
_
,.
,:Departnieitt
sponsored its annual·
;}(.:·::::
:/othe(~chools;,
~rid tlµs
C~JJlPUS
~
,:c:_
..
·:-:\ori
::>,_:rlirr1cu~
Ulll::
·:
nst1tnte·
Phi Alpha Theta lecture. Dr.
r.:.';,>-:
:
;~;iss;l
exciting part
m
'
th
e
- _.
. .
.
··::

.
··.·
:
,_
..
:.:
-
.
·.,
.·de··
....
m.·o·c·ra.
t1·c
.·Pr·o·.
c'ess
·1:t·s-'e·
.1.f
...
·.•·cfh~ariemapc~tte~r:~m·all~asrlane:tchtus~r
0
e,~epn:tinn_t!l·.e!hde
::·<l°n:dctob;~26t~cictt>ber
28;
·:·was--:fo·
make the participating
r
Mr.:-Louis.Zuccarello'.and
Bro.
institution_s
·aware
.?f
the
~XJ?erience atotherjns_ti~tio~s:
•~Medieval
Spain/'
He was
r,t
····.·M.
·o·.·.·.··1·
h
.·._·.·-,.·.·M·_
..
.

..
•,·
...
h.·
..
·.·._.··.·Me·n·:
-KevhiCaiolari,
as representatives.
pro~l~ms
~nhere!1t
111 any .. m~cat~s that the
:maJonty
lS_
introduced by Mr. PeterO'Keefe
t,
of: Marist:
:college,
attended
ail.
~
cum~ulum m_no:v:ati~n·
an~ to·
.
or~manly. co!lsei;vative and tpat
O
f
t
h e
,
Maris t
·:.Hist
O
ry
[
.
_.Institute
Ori Curriculum Planning. Pt:OVlde t~es.e ~nstitut1ons with
<!-
~his· ma1onty,
pre;vents
an .·
Department,
WhQ
was
a
student
;1
'
._-
·
< .-:
·
·
'
·
·
·
···arid_
,J~no.:vati~n:
in
J>riv!ite
.
·sens~<?~
duectioI1.
· _
....
-·.·
.

,
.
-
1n
novatlve
mrnonty
from
·
o·f.
-
Dr.
o'
Callaghan's
at
;.l...........
--
Tr1·_
p'
-.
To"·_
Texas·
_Jnst_1tu~ons 9fH_1~er Educat~on

'
_.Cuinculu1!1
>innovation'
is
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
'
-
.
Fordham/
.
.
.

-
,W..
sp9.nso~etb.Y,ffi~t:r_ ~-4t1~atio!1
_
d1f~\:ul!,~ as
-
.. 1t
·.
_ca~ses changes:
.
·
CONTINUED·ON l :,
·
:·.
CONTINUED ON 2
t
--.
-
·

··,
Ex.e.cutive-:Assoc1ates;:;As
..
this·. which_ are. disqU1eti11g
for
.those
··
·
"··
Ori
Januaty.;"·22,_.i970;
·a·.
Institl!te, follo~ed
'.the
,.planning:
.·w!ip
·vdile_
••the
-,Security
.··and·
...
--
w·.
"h
..
'
.')_

..
·wh
.
·s
·

.,·.
.
;;:
,
delegation: of- Marist
:studeritii"semin~
on-.Marist in the 70's,
·certainty.
of the~·status
quo;'~
-..
.
.-.--
.
-.o·.·
..
···.·.•._·.·
..
·S
_·-_.·
.
,
.
O.·.

.
-e
·.ec·
.s·
·_.·.
\:6
and: facµlty. will.
.participate
;in the.·
p
arH~ipants,

had
the··
·
Oppositio1i- frequently develops
-
:':

the
Aririuar
Convention of the opportunity
to.- co1I1pare
.
their
·
toiilnovation because people are
-
··
.
.
_
·
1 •·
_
.···
·
t;_.
.
.
}::ti~~:::::~i~c~/hti:th{
t~i~~:~P{h~t~~"~~:bit
::
_._
:.h!~~e ~d
}::1
t~~.·~~~.id~y.j~. f.·T.
...
•.
•e~-
..
·-n·.
-.·,·
-·.,.'
.-T
h··.·r·.

·'e·
·.
·S.

-n·
·10-.


f:-·
San Antonio,
.
Texas
from offered to. the
:Manst
.College

consequences.
.
,
-
,
..
·
.
·.
.
·
.·.
.-
-
>
CONTINU.l;:D
ON
2
Community.
.
·
Another
· difficulty in
any
, _
",
_
• ..
·
.· .
_ .
.
~;;)'
.
The puri;;ose of the Institute
curriculum
innovation is the
··
The names of.-twenty three
.
Those selected inciude sucli
·
_-
Marist
College -students
will
Seniors
as:

I
oe Francese,
.
appear in the 1970 edition: of
.Student.
Council President;
Art
·
"Who's Who Among Students in
Quickenton,
Student Council
American
Universities
arid
Vice:.President;
Mike_; Towers,
.
.
.
Colleges,"
as
being among the
President. of the Seriior
·aass; ·
country's
most
outstanding·
Vincent Winsch, Editor of the
.

'
·-
.
'.
Th~
l\bo's
Who:team:
of
197~ Sea~d L
,o
:R-:T~
B~~
Phil
Crawfoni,
John
Clail~, R~ K~. Joseph .
.-
CriJllmmu,.
standing' L
·to
R.,
Ed
Walzer, V'm
W".ad,
'Mih'.Towen,
·Art
Quicmton;
Johri
.Innocenti, Bill
McXmmy,
Barry
uCombe, Joe
Francese,
Joe
DeTan, V'm Begley,
Don
Ronchi,
Joe McMallon,
Stoddad
_
Fedor.
.
.
.
Absent
from
photo - BiD
DomdG.
Andy
Heaa1g,
John
Tmin, F.M.S., Steve Nohe, Julie
R4othi.
campusleaders.
_
·
·
Rey_nard;
·
Joe
McMahon,
-
This
honor. is ·conferred
Co-editor
of the Circle_; Ed
annually
upon
outstanding
Walzer, Varsity Club President,
.
student•leadeJS from more
_than
.
Don· Ronchi, Chairman of the
one
thousand
institutions
of
A th le tic. Committee;
Bill
higher learning throughout the
· McKinstry,
·
Cultural· Committee·
United
-States.
In selecting
Chairman;
John
Innocenti,
candidates;· campus nominating
Social
.
Committee
Chairman;
committees are "instructed to
John
·
Clancy, Phil Crawford,
choose those· students whose_
active ·Resident Advisors; Bill
academic standing, service
to
the
Dourdis
and Andy Hening,
co mm unity.
leadership.
in
.
fo.otball notables; Ted Brosnan
extracurricular
activities, and
·
and Steve Nohe;Representatives
future potential are d~idedly
on
past
Student ,Councils; Joe
aboveaverage."
·
·
-
DeTura,
Children's
Theatre
. ·
As
documentary evidence of
President;
Vin
Begley_;
this honor and in recognition of
.
Recruiting
Representative to
the students• accomplishments, a
high schools;·
_Barry_
Lacombe,
certificate
will
be presented to
basketball manager; Ron Key,
each member on campus in May.
Commuter
Union Chairman;
In addition, nominees
are
invited
John
Tevlin,
a
student brother
to make
use of

special
·
now
teaching; and three evening
-
reference and placement service
division
leaders:.·
Joseph
maintained to
assist
the~
in
Crimmins, Stoddard Fedor,"and
s e e k i n g p o s
t -
gr a d u a
t
e
Julie Rigothi.
emp.Joyment
felJowships,
.Outstanding
students have
admission to the Peace Corps,
·been
honored in the annual
International Voluntary Service,
directory
since it
was
first
or other
similar
positions.
published in
1934.
Copies of
Marist's
nomination
quota, · Who's
Who
Among Students
based
on enrollment,
was twenty
may be purchased by writing:
three.
PO
Box
2029,
Tuscaloosa,
Alabama. 35401.
































































































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:
· ·:.
· .,
By Paul Browne
· at hand! .You have- nothing ;·to/'
:>::::·.:;_·:
.
:-'
;.Ji•'~·s~tt?t~iit~?\i:i_i/\(\:
':,,-.~~~rt1l:!~.
<;ii~rmreliv~
·t:::-})t
DJ{women
( or-slt~utcf}·say '•· lose.' but . a histoiic.:debilitating'
}'.. ~'\'"; ·: .
· ·::.:f_:}f.ltis/;~ol~~~--::is
:·devoted ,to·'
ad.d. re.ss .-enti..
tled >."Direction.al·<: girls?) ·of Marist College: •· · :
· stigma! You may not be;:a.i:-t~~:IY/<:;:: :- : ,
·a·nswer1ng
your
qu
t· ·
D · ·
·N
·
d
r. ·
Last
· h
M · t b an· · vanguar·d·.··
,•":there
•·a.re.··:•·_···'•.".,
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·.-~ ·;•
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.
. .
.. ., _ . . .
:
es ions ,
' eviation
orms .an . su·r1ace
o . · . .
year ... \\'.. en•
ans -
eg
.
. . , . .. _.
(
regarding the draft:·' Dr:.·
M.
r ·
Area in ri-dimensional Eiiclideari\
itf-;;pr_ocess .· of ·,cO.:educatioil,- others.,:
. -WITCH (V(~.m~.~-S
··:·,: ·_
--~
·~·-,
x
. Miche_lson, · Departme~t,:
of
.. Space:"•· T_his'. research woi-k' :. Ci:fcle, editois;an4 .staffers;were. _:Int e r!1'.a t i_l;)
n'a l.
:Te-r~.~ri.st,_•\:.:
/:f{.:
,~i
Chemistry•
(~229C)
a draft
. constitutes:: ..
the .'basis :'of,.Mr;c-,. deHgnted.r·.\'.Now.. -.w_e~ll
.. -have · ;Cons_Pir,_c:~. fr<>m'.·.HeU?:;:.NPW:;h'}:i;j:::•;::::t~
r.
co.usello_r • with
the ·· pr!'ft
-Alperts · Ph.D~
_
disse~atio~
in.
::people
;tc,_type our
:copy."
Even, : (Natio~a.l·
:~tg3:9.1~~~~~:~tJ>{::(~/i:\',
.:;
;(
CouIJ,sellmg
and Information.
Mathematics.-
·
0
D
r.
Leopoldo:·':-· b~fore you gotthere,:we.had p_ttt , , Women). etc:;
0 .,
-:<::
:,:.··
:'";:·.:r~'::.,~i·.
,::~~:,,,.
?~
Service of Dut~hess County, will ·
Tora l
ba
lla; ,, Professor
.: of'\
yoii in your place .. Oh,
l
know, : ·, Wha~ Lsuggest is ~.omet~i,n, a;>):>·,;:/
}'
attempt
to
answer
your.
Mathematics·
at
Newc York.; , there· was · talk that
women · bit more. l9cal to::'d.eal !!'.1th;:;·,
•.,
questions.
A booklet,· "The _
University ·and . Marist: College
'.
would ·.widen:the dimensions of ;
im·m
'ediate ,·probl1:ms
;(e·;g; ,·-•·-·.
Draft
Laws" by J. Griffiths
· wiU -presenf a related pape: ·. education· ·in .. our liberal arts : professors w~o m~e ill~~t!~m\'w ..
(Yale Law School) is available at
entitled: ''Piecewise Flatnessand
scope:
Bt1t
do you,, or do you_· : at humor
q~m~
~o tlle·mJJ1on.ty
the College Boqkstore for 40
·
·
Surface Area in'n-diniensional
no.t,
.. find•:·,Yo.u(selves
of·won1en_m'a_iµvenclassroo111;
cents.
.
-.--
Agent',
usually· a. lawyer, . is
Euclidean Space.'' .
· discriminated against beca1;1se
of · or who con~escend .to 3!1~er-'
Q.
What 1s a "fatherhoo_d available as alegal_advisorfo
______________
•sex·ifonlyinthemostsutitleo(
:•your·
typ1call.y_fem1nrne,
deferment" and who is entitled registrants
and to the local
wa;s?
. · _ .
. .
. questions, : or _better.: yet; t~e -
:
to one?
.
board. Often you can find out
·sPAIN
FROMl
Being
abroad.
(no, pun
;Maiist-Man~e type_,wh~ doe~nt
A. The so-called fatherhood
all: you
need . to know by:
intended), my observations on · give
a,
damn about your intellect,
.deferment
is set
forth
in speakingwiththeoffice-staffat
Th~ lecture.consisted
of ..
a
Madst's
second
year,.o_f.-mostlikelybecausehelacksone
Selective
. Service.· Regulation the local board. But
if you want
review of the main events in._ c_o-edu·cation
are necessarily :_himself.:.
·My suggestion
•,js
_:
1622.30
(a).
This provides for a
more
au tho r
it
at iv e
Spain during the · era of the
limited. However, judging from
WHAM
(Women for Havoc. at.
i
deferment of a registrant who interpreTafion
.of .draft
reconquestaridtheirsubsequent
·thefewinstartcestheCirclehas
·Marist).·
Th,ink
of ·_the
maintains a bona fide family regulations or-if you _think the
influence
on. the
Spanish
mentioned your existence, and . possibilities!:
_Q.ne
s,uch ·
relationship
with a child or local board is not handling your
character;
Dr. · ()'Callaghan
-· even more'discoutaging, the way
possibility~ a boycoU(orifyou
_.
children in his home. "Child"
case proptdy,
it
is a good idea to
stressed the close ties Spain had
in which writers have reported
wanted to interject some hl!_IDor,
.
includes
a step-child, foster contact the·Govemment Appeal
with
the rest
'of Europe,
your.presence on campus,'! can't· · a
1
'girlcott") of the next campus,·;
child,
legally adopted
child, Agent. For example, you might
especially France ties which had
help
but
conclude - . you're
mixer. A. fi;ien!}, Floyd, Alwon,:
illegitimate child or a _person do this
in
preparing for a · an important
influence - in·
fulfilling' your expected roles.· . once depict~d a inixer as a type
supported by the registrant in a personal apearance · before the
Spanish
development.
The.
How dreadfully boring!
· · ·
'. of catt!e show,. where the -bu,lls
relationship similar to that of board.
.
.. -
··
lecture was well attended
by.
I was surprised. NOT to find
see
·to
1tthat.co~s
are bused to'
parent .and child.
It
is not
When there are exceptional
lfothstudentsandfaculty.
any
indignant-·letters
to. the
Maristfrom·far·andnear-(better
necessary that the registrant be circumstances
or
so•me
_____________
editor "after ·the· Circle ran a
selection that way). Once the
married or living with
his
wife or m is under st an dings , t he
REPORT
F~OM
I
feature describing dorm
life
for
show -is under-way ..
th€: bulls
that the· child reside full time Government Appeal Agent can
the'''girls" at Marist. Apparently
examine. the· goods ·and: 1f they
with.the
registrant. The child sometimesserve·effectivelyasan
introducing
change foto the
m,fjor
concerns
are
the-
dori't like-what. they-see they .
does not have to be born yet,
It intermediary between you and curriculum.
The· use· of the
. telephone and' the mirror.'. .The, . wait for the next _r~~D;d,up
.. :
:O ·
is enought to have a doctor's
the board; He has the power to _ de m
O
c rat i c Process
. in
vanity of it all! How delightfully
.. But other poss1~ilities have far
letter conftrming pregnancy. of re.co mm end
reopening
any · curriculum revision often results
feminine! But ·a sports feature
·greater
cons~·queri,ces;
F_or
the remstrarit's wife or worn. an registrant's classification and to
·
al
that followed
.. in a
... la.
te. r ed.itioil
exam .. ·p1e,' odds'are tlfat. nm. e.9_tit
.,.
1
1
'fi
ti'
in com. promise solµtions, usu ly
,
with whom he is living in a bona appea any c ass11ca on.
representing the least· common
stressed
.your· m·ore noble
. of teri · indusfrial
1
recruitei:s:
th~t.
fide family relationship.
'Q,
Is it true that no men will
denominator
of acceptability.
characteristics.
How admirable
hit ·campus' discriminate against
Registrant·s
who_ meet be drafted
in November or
Attempts.to
involve studentsin·
of·yoti·gi.rls.to.
buy and,everi,
women in hiring;atidinsalaiies:
qualificationsforfatherhoodare
Decembei-ofthisyear?.
-
curriculum
revision
have
MAKE·,your.·very
own 'WHAM
cotild··demonstrate.
eligible for a III-A dependency
A .. False. The October draft
generally been unsuccessful. One
cheerleading
· uniforms .. How· : against · · su·ch "recruiters""·arid · .-·.
classification.
Two groups or call.
-of
29,000
men will be
reason -is that institutions have
fidel! .· Ho_w · DOMESTIC! The.
demand their removal from·tne
_registrants are· not eligible for _spread over October, November . not
been
able
to
devise
football fans I'm sure (as well as • campus.
. · · •·· .,
.
this
deferment:
(l)
doctors, and December. Therefore about
structures
which
will
enable
the. team) not only appreciate
_ Women ofMaristunite!
Assert
dentists or medical specialists,, 10,000 men will be drafted each
students to participate in a·truly
- your fidelity, but ·your mos! . yourselves!
and
(2)
students
who have month..
·
- .
-
·- ·
democratic
an<i . meaningful:· _ obvious trait, SEX; as well.
· ·._
..
requested
and received 11-S , So far, more men have been
fashion. Another problem arises -
Women of-Matist
(I
hope not
deferments since June 30, 1967. drafted
in
1969 • than
in
because students do notid~ntify
· GIRLS) unite! The revolution is · ·
_ Q.
The name of a Government corresponding months of 1968.
with student representatives.
·
!/rfceea\t1:\~cri'bt~!/
'j~~~
~~f1~e_q~~n:ly
l
ih6 /
0
~atl
t~~

In attempting to plan a. new ·• inductive rather'-th'ari. deductive;
;w a
Y.
of ; d et e r.l!lining ~-the
what is his job? .
approximately
the . same as in
curriculum,
every liberal. arts . that in any curriculum pJanriirig .. outcomes
of .. th~ li):>eral>arts.
A.
•·The Govemm.ent Appeal,1968.

·
colle~~ should attempttod<?fi~e
emphasis should be placed on· !experience.'
T,his,,,results,.Jn:
·
..
~he lio.eral arts ~xpenence w1~h_m
.. who:is being ,equcated and why;- ; ~ha_ngis_:·
\v_ith.
_'rf.'.o.
_a'ppa_re'iif>.
-
.
. .
.
.
its
own
contexLand
. social · tliat the traditiona1curriculum is.· 'JUStificationand
· no means o,f ·
.. ,-,
-.h·
·ro·
u,·g·h·.
·A··
..
·.·
B_
ro_·.
k. ·_·e.
·n
.. ·
..
w..
··,

...

.. o·

··
..
_··w
reality'
realizing
th
~t
th
e . teacher-orieii"ted as· ·opposed to <determiningwhetherthe
changes.,.'
approach must. necessanly
be_._ student-oriented·
arid .,that the.
·ar.e
producing
.the
outcomes that•
· ·
'
·
major emphasis 'now should,be
were
originally
envisi~me4;:
-
-
·
. on viewing education. as based_. Possible
means
-
of evaluati.ori
old house on their.roller skates
Vietnam watching first ).land the
on a set of experiences; rather . include
polling
· alu'mtii,
screaming:
"Where -are the
American
atrocities·
while
than exclusively on.the mastery'. -teacher-stug.ent
disc4ssions 'on
Well,
Christmas
Vacation
Fairfield boys,. where are the , sipping
tea with_· the North,. of ,traditionaL
content;
.To_· the. college experience arid::the
- _starts December
10
and one of
Fairfieldboys."
All in all a good
Vietnamese who refuse to· bear · impleirientthisifis
_necessary to • ordinary·
statistica!.
: te'stiri~ _·
the spots we are all taking in will time was had by all _except for
arms. But all these ·decisions are
realize that b,ooks ,are not the . procedtires, where appUcable.
,
~-- .
be Italy. Actually the infamous
the duck who was being chased
.
still
p·ending, so please/-Mr,
,
only ,scrnrce of·knowledge ',but-
· The 9yenµl imptessiorr9fb.oth
by Bill O~Reilly
motorcycle
gang (Purgatories
through the torest by the head·
Piazza, keep us infor_ined.
· merely o_rie
of many sources, and
participants.
ar
(his corifeience
Turtles) are going. to_ Italy to . History professor.
. .
- -.
.
-''
. '
that while·'teachiiig)sordinarily
. w_as that Marist-is. asking• the··
film their fast motion picture,
,WehereinLondonaregladwe
linear,,
sequential
and.
sam~
questions
·as other,
"Purgatories Turtles against the __
are
being kept informed' by
_,._
··hieratch,ical,
learning
Js '.
ins!itutions
-and that'we:•·are
Evil
Daughters of Cicero." The
Circle .writer Sal Piazza. Hsure is-~
nonlinear,
nonse_quentiaL a_nd, • f,acmg the· same ,problerii~:·.Both
film will star Barbra Billingsly, lucky·
that'
we, e-scaped to
·
nonhieraichicat·
_.
. ·.. .. . . , were encouraged bythefactthat
Hugh Beamont, Tony Dow and .. England just
hr
time.
l
0
always
- .: Aserious problem-facing any ·. M<ifist s.eemed to;be heading·fn ,::
Jerry Mathers as Easy Edgar.Of•
thought
that 'the Gestapo in
-'institution
which .is in ihe ··the·. proper ·direction :both: in · :·
course Clint Eastwood will play · _America's
Police
sta,te
was
process
of
curriculum revision is
aris~ering these questioill!,.im4
:>
the - title role of the· Grand
closing in. I feel sqrty for
my·
the lack .of evaluation. As the
solvmg the problems that were : .·_
Turtle. . .
, . ..
. .
friends and faniily who now niay
erids ·or goals
of
a liberal •arts
raised;'
.
- .
Speaking of the Italians
I_
have be. slav:eing
away
in some
· college · are vague, there is no
no.tread to much about Maiist's concentration
camp in New
• own LaGiovanni .Italia .(which Jer~y, due
to
some orders. by
-means "there is a hole in your Spiro Agnew who soine say is a
·undershirt
<;Juiseppe.") · Aren't first cousin of Henrich Himmler.
you· guys· planning any groovey _ We ·here in Londo~ also think
·social
events
this year like• that Americans should be tried
l
n v ad in g Eth io-p ia
or for War, Criminals, but lets go 'all
Surrendering to_ T.A:C. _Actually the way • have Chairman Mao
· rm only kidding, we need the preside over the heaiings - who .
Halian's (why· why do we need could ·make a better Chairman
the
Italians?
- aren't
there ·than a Ch~man?
_
enough barbershops?)
We also
.
think the list . of
·Last
.week
my English
criminals should be extended to
experi~nces were widened as
I
include - JOhn Wayne, Vince
att~nded a three day seminar Lomb a rdi
( for
his fa cist
group·
in the country. It was
1
eadership
in guiding
the
swell. For the first two days I sat R e.d skins),
W a
1t ·
Disney
and watched a drape die, then (Post-morten);
Doris. Day,
things got exciting. There were Dennis the Menace, William F.
groovey three hour talks on such Buckley, Frankie Avalon and of
subjects as "Should Kaola Bears course, Lassie.
_
.
have·
Equal
Rights"
and
We also would like to see the
"Window Shopping - ls.it right Imperial - capitalistic rulers, who
or wrong."
intend to dominate
the world
While on the Seminar we were through coca- cola, removed ·and
put up
in
a large old English a fair;
unbiased,
intelligent,
house (cause we were in England government
under· Bobby G.
• fellows, right) I knew the house Seale put in.
·
was ancient because the only
After all we've read here in
running water was the brook London we don't know whether
that cut through
my
room. I was to return to the U.S. or not. Will
not the only American involved the
S.S.
be waiting at the
in
the . Seminar.
Also
in airport? Will we be drafted and
attendance were two girls from forced to invade Canada for
Marymount in Tarrytown. These American living space? We are
girls were really great; for 3 days seriously thinking of spending
they kept zooming around the fourth year abroad in North
the best laid plans
... still take time to hatch: Start
huil_ding your future no,v, with
a sound life insurance program.
·why now?. Your premiums arc
lower and your cash value has
longer to huild. The reward is·
io the hold; never the· chicken.
NORTHWESTERN
MUTUAL LIFE
MILWAUKEE
'NML.
There is
.1
difference •••
-L
________
;
.1nd.the difference g~
THOMASF.HEFFERNAN
Special Agent
35 Market St., Poughkeepsie,
N. Y.
12602
Office: 452-8640.
· Stephen A, Harrison
· John
Rogener F .M.S.
MANAGING
EDITOR
EDITORS-IN'-CHIEF
_
.
EDITORIAL
BOARD ·
Stel'e_Hanison; Joe McMahon,John Zebatto, John
Rogener
· -
FEATURE
WRITERS
· · John Zebatto .
...
NEWS
EDITOR
Peter
Masterson,
James Newman,
Paul Browne,
Bill O'Reilly, Raymond
Pasi,
F.M.S.,EdwinPeck,F.M.S •. ,
·
.
·
SPORTS WRITERS ·
Joe
McMaho!t
-Sports Editor
Don
Duffy-Asastant
Sports
Editor
Joe Rubino, Steve
Sawicki,
Bob Mayerhof~,
Chuck Meara, Greg
Mcuughlin,
Jack Bany, Kevin
Donnelly '
"
· . '.
·
. .
PHOTOGRAPHY.
- . ·Photo Editor- Richard Brummett
RarrvSmith
Typist: Toi:n Mahoney
David DeRos:a
Cartoonist
Steve Harrison
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Circulation: Greg McLaughlin,Jack
Bany

l













































































































































..
THE CIRCLE
··
.,
...
,
',,•'.';·•,

i:.
.
. .
,~:·
--r::_:.-.:--~:~:.:;~·\\1
..
:\;-:,::
-/
_
..
·_'.f·.
'.;;{\
:·.
/DECEMBER.4.1969

(~}'.{!,Sti'{~f
!~it-!:.;
..
··
·C:i4efid9•t.
:·OJ
....
Evellts
/I
_.
··
c
.

:-,:Wheri_.-,.1
·
re;i.d ·. The Circle's
·
· ·
·
.
;·.·.<·e'ditodaL:;remarks,
:iri--.tJie
"FOR'THE WEEK
OF
DECEMBER 8-14,.1969
.
'/'\
.
: /
'':Novemtier;20tfrissue
corjceming·
i°.
Thi's year-ithe. Cfrcle
in.
co6rdination · with
.
tlie
Di~ctor.
of the
·
,.,thefo·peration
of·,the-Social
.Campus
Centefwilr'publish_a,weekly
calendar of events for the
l.:.,
.
,.·
:.C9minittee,I•agreed
with.them
MaristCollegeCommunity.·
·.
.,
....
-
·.··,
.
-
,,·
\.
\~
'.'.,.,:•
::}il_t'.J?~e.·;.,
serise{~~t was.: ~nrioye<f.
•.
·
.
It yQu would like your organizations' information included on this
kC:.

:;,;?X\:~?it~.t~tl~reamr~s::::/::~/i''.·.~-:>
calendar, itis:importanf-thaf
you contact Mr. Brosnan's office at
?:··
./.:
,.
;,/:'.}i,)Vas>t1nd~_r.·
~he~i~p~ssion
_Jea~t:_two weeks prior.to .the d_~te
_that
the event is scheduled to take
,··:;.·J;:·;:·
'11~t::~~~ortl,:3: Joµrnalist_·W<>uld; place.
,
. :.•·:·
·--:
· .
:-
·
. : ·.
.
,.
,
.
· ,
..

·
.
. · ··
\\,
.:,
::\,~~!~?nalize,
he
'.
wo~d .first
·
;do
·
<:Please
•contact:.
:
Joseph'
-Brrisnan,
Director of
·campus
Center,
.._-
;•s?mC.":~a,c~gro~~~lnlc·work:to
471-324o;·Ext.-279.•·
·
,,:.,·
.
·.
·,,.
·
·
·
·
·
·•:~.t1bsta:r1t_1ate
::_h~;:•l'.emarks::.Jt
·
:
·
.. ,-.-;
·.-
.,,:-
._.
·MONDAY;
December 8
.
.
.
appears:to
mec-that. The Circle.
··
-
··,
'.:,
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION- No Classes ....
~as be.e1_1
ni,gligC?nf:by noLdoing
·
8:00
P.M.
Movies -
"MARTY''
and "SKATERDATER";Sponsored
i.t~ ho~~w~rk~.
;•
·.
<
·.
·
.-.--:;.·
by
:
Student
Government Film
.
Series .. COLLEGE THEATRE,
~/1.t
i~ Jrue. that
.
._.''pack~ged''
.
CAMPUS CENTER;
. :
.
.
.
weekends/are ·on the way out.
The. Social. Committee realizes
8:00 P;M. _ lecture
Bro. Cyprian Rowe, former Marist faculty
,:<"thifaiid-has;been
in the process
..
inember, peakfug on the ~'BLACK REVOLUTION." Rooin 249,
of. changing
the
weeken.d
CAMPUS CENTER;
·
.
.
.
.
.
·.·.
structure
for next
,semester.
..
.
TUESDAY, December
9
.
·.\·Instead' .of.
having
-the
:"all
or. 3:00
P,M. -
Recruitment-
Irtvestors Diversified Services
..
,
ricithing!~;closed·weekend, future
weekends
will consist of various
.
5 :30
P.M.
Mr. Joel DeGrandis, Recruiter; for Management Trainees;
'-.
i
iev~ntf
,o_pened
to everyone.
Sales, Economics, and Finance.
.
.
.
··
·.
P.eople· will
.
be· able to attend
.•
,
whatever'
tlley want' because
--·.:.•.
·.-r ·.
:.
_::.the
re Will.·•:
b_e
:
a
,
separate
-
.
-.·
ad111issiori
.price
for. each event.·
6:30 P:M. Basketball -·Bloomfield - (JV)- HOME
8:30 PJd. Basketball- Bloomfield- (V)- HOME
.
.
WEDNESDAY- December
10
.
.
·
..
·.
_In:
coordinating
·these
'..
a·ctivities, we°: are
.
seeking
.
clubs,
_::and
classes . to. ,sponsor and run
the events. So.Jar,. The
,Gaelic
4:00
~
5:30 P.M. Movies. - "WORLD
OF
HENRY FORD" AND
"STEEL
ON THE: ROUGE" produced. by Ford Motor Co.
'PLACEMENT
OFFICE, DONNELLY HALL
..
·
7:30 P.M. Wrestling-_Tre~ton State -AWAY
..
.
.
, .
·
.
THURSDAY - December 11
• .
Society, the Italian Society, arid
..
·:

.the
.
Qass of '70
.have.
Qffered
.
their· ideas: and,: services. The
.
.
Social-,Cornmittee
.will
sponsor a
:
· Coffee
C
Hquse Circuit
_
act and
·,
something else.
If·.
any.
_other
•·
clubs
·
or organizations want. to
t~e
.
part
..
in•. this
:
project; I'd
.
appreciate jt ~f they c:ontact me ..
··
. While
.Fall.
Weekend had its
financial
difficulties;··
the.
8:00 P.M. lecture - Dr. M.A. Shiffman - "ENVIRONMENTAL
HYQIENE" COLLEGE THEATRE; CAMPUS CENTER.
.
.
·
6:30 P.M. B~ketball - Albany: (JV)
0
AW,AY
8:30
P.M.
B~ketball - Albany -.(V) - AWAY
:'.. .
., , : _
·.
FRIDAY-
December.12.
.
8:00.
P.M,-
Phi, Theta
·Delta.
Service. Social. Fraternity Cafe
FIRESIDE LOUNGE,
_RATHSKELLER,
CAMPUS CENTER.
we.ekend
•'.was
far
from-. a
·
'.~.f~a~sco.'~
Eighty-::two
..
couples
attended
Fall Weekend and
·.
I
think tliey:all had a damn· good
.
7:30
P.M.
Wrestling- Kings- AWAY
·
tiine~ Sirice NONE of the editors
.
SATURDAY - December 13
.
of, The· Circle. attended
.the
7:30A.M. - Graduate Record Exams
weekend, I'd like to kriow how·
·s:00
P.M.
249,
CAMPUS
CENTER.
they could call it
a
fiasco ..
:
·
.
· .
6:00 P.M. Basketball- (JV)- Queens~ AWA

·
•.
As· to your ~riticism
·
of·. the
8:00. P.M. Basketball - (V)-. Quel!ns -·AWAY

.iilixers;
I think your opinions are
·-7:30
P.M.·Wrestling- Kings- AWAY
.
hour.
.
dead· wrong. We've- held three
.
SUNDAY, December 14
··
mixers this·semester
,alid'they've.
·8:00
P.M:
·Movie·
~- "TOM
·
JONES"
Sponsored· by Student
·.
all
'heen:
successful. They have
Go'verhinent
Film
Series: COLLEGE .THEATRE, CAMPUS
:>.:'b_~;ei'('.;~e.11.>
att_epcled
_a.il<i
•.t~e
CENTER. •
0
·•:
··,·.
'·'

·•i
.•/·:
,·\
bandsihave been.exceptional.·,,•'
··.·•:,i.:/··•>('·•:w·E-:E.'K,::_O·'•F:,_
..
1.•·2\·•1:'s'-.:.·1··2·
-20-69 ..
E.,XA
..
:'M~EE·K·
..
?{;;,.'
..
,:
>:,<·\:::}
f
fi:rJJu~i
'.'iiiat
.
the
..
esteetneci/·•
·.
:_

· :
..
· . C
•·.
editoriaL'stiiff · of The.
:circie
is·
.
Art E:xhibit, "CORDLESS AND CHARGEA_BLE" thru December
'69
•:'
· ':'. ·,
composed
of senfors
(Joe.
L--------------------~------------.,.-----_,
..
• •

.
.1
McMahon,
.
John Zebatto, and.·, stated:. ''The. American people
terrible. But sometimes terribie
';~ -,
,,.
••
.•
-.,
Stev.e. Ha.iris.6.n:)
,,
so inaybe
·,
can not wait
·for·
the South to
.
situations don't get less terrible
"
.
.
·:
they~ve,, forgotteli
;
about
·
their
take over the
..
war. They want
if you run away from them.
PAGEJ
.
EDITORIAL
:_:.With
·Ele_~ttons
In'
Sight
·
In h¥o weeks the fall semester shall be ov.er. One
·month
later, on
January 19th, MOTH resumes activity and still one month lat~r t~e
__
ballyhoo of Marist politics will again be in full
-swing.
Beanng m
mind that Student. Council elections are a mere one and one half
school months away, it is not too' eariy to evaluate
this
year's
.
Council
·
and to think about what we would like to see in the
candidates' platforms.
.
·
As per the editorial in the October
9
issue of THE CIRCLE, we are
still happy to see that this year's Council took the initiative to alter
the method of allocation of funds. The Football Club, The Reynard,
B.A.RA., T.A.C., Y.A.F., and others have all benefitted by this
system.
.Since
that editorial, the Council has initiated some
encouraging election reforms which could send the best possible
leaders to the Council. At this time we would like to add these
reforms to the Council's "pro" column.
.
However, excluding these two isolated reforms, this Council has
simply been an imitation of its immediate predecessor.
No congratulations are in order for a lecture series which has fallen
far short of
its
original expectations,
and information and/or
resolutions concerning the highly volitile Marist in the Seventies
issue were virtually non-existent until the problem had reached an
apex. Council-student communications and Frosh elections (what
Frosh elections?) leave much to be desired.
The house system has recently instituted a policy providing that
resident advisors shall not be. teacher education students under the
premise that these students cannot sufficiently divide their time
during the professional semester. One solution to the problems of
this year's Council and the Councils to come may be similar
legislation preventing teacher education students from holding
council positions ot committee chairmanships if their professional
semesters occ,ur during the time they hold office.
The
Lottery
Richard Nixon's simple, one sentence draft reform proposal was
sent to Congress six months ago. It passed the House by a vote of
382 to 13. Then Aimed Services Committee Chairman
John
Stennis
guided the bill through the Senate. Opposition to the bill was
·
thwarted.
The passage of the lottery was perhaps a political move. If it leads
to the abolishment of the draft in return for an all-volunteer army
then its overall result will be good.
However, the lottery system's inequities are still prevalent and are
inherent. apparently in any draft. Deferments, autonomous draft
boards, the insanity of having numbers determine "human" destiny
are all characteristics of the new system. Still worse is the danger
that the. lottery. will provide for the "smooth"
.
functioning of the
. meaningless and disastrous war in Vietnam.
.
.
·
Ideally the.most advantageous method for providing men for the
army is by elimination of the draft. The voluntary army is not the
perfect alternative to the draft but it is certainly the lesser of two
evils.
-
Regarding the voluntary army the following must be noted:
Firstly, civilian control of the armed forces must be reaffirmed and
_days.as·underdassmen
without
immediate
withdrawal•
of
Sometimes
they_ get
more
.
cars:and•with curfews.:-
.
-
-American
forces; all
_of
lhein.'.'
terrible. Maybe there is another
,
·
.
Not
.ev.eryone
can get
.
to
·
.
This statement. is simply not
way besides direct withdrawal.
·snuffy's;
-the .Faux· Pas; or Sa}'s,
· ·.
true; According
:
to a Time
~
May be.
.
actively exercised and.mechanisms must be provided for doing this.·
The possibility that the military exerts undue pressure to the point
of control is not unreal - Vietnam has shown us this .
.
Secondly, the ROTC program should be revitalized
in
order that it
become the sole pool from which officers are taken. College
educated military leadership is· a necessity in terms of preventing
· mercenary force from developing. An educated military leadership
subject to civilian review is a good guarantee of evolving a balanced
··The
·SciciaLCominittee~ha.s
the
Louis Harris Poll, 36% of the.
.
Alertly yours,
.'; __
:;;·:
i~_~pbnsibiHty_ ·to . see:''Jhat:
.
American people.,. advocate an
Bill
O'Reilly.
••
••
0
,'
!it_iu:ltmts.
get a chance to
111
eet
··.'•immediate
· withdrawal. In.
my
London, Eng.
.
gu~s Jrom
other.::--schools
:by
:
estimation this figure pulls up
Editors
The
.
'Circle'
Marist
...
ha~tngJhem_ at our sch. oolorby-
\•cgnsid.
erably
short
of: the· C
·11
p
ghk
·
Ny
;
·:-~9
111
M
0 th en.~chools.
:
.
:
•·.·.··
.
American People in total:
0
ege O_ll. eepsie,
. .
.
,_
.·:

10,~:~upplement: the_se mixers,
_
.,·
_Now
turning
-to
the question
Gentlemen:
·
,
:
we
ve 1mt1ated the_ Coffee House
·
oil which the Circle has
.been.
Y
o u r
r e c
~ n t a rt i c
1
es
:,:\
_<Jircuit.
Vlhic~~ has
:been
.very

·
ci-y~tal
-
cleai of its support;
_
p'articularly those pertaining to
-.•.succ~ssfuLWevealsosponsored
·.
immediate
withdrawal·
of
the Vietnam
~conflict
are an
j,
.
:
'
_:
'or.
CO-SJ)Ol!SOred
a free Couples
..
American Forces
in
Vietnam;·
example
.
of propaganda in
its
)\'.c>-
··Beer:Party;aMysteryBus,~and.
-
·immediate
withdrawal
.would
·.purest
forni.
This type of
r:
..
: ...
tfansportat!ori
'to
.
SOfial and
be the quickestimd easi~st way
reporting belongs in magazines
i.
.
·
..• ,
athletic events._ Meni~ers of the
to
end the Vietnam situation.
and
newspapers
whose sole
\-.·.
·..
:~ocia1,·.(:om!1}itte_e·have
also
.,Butisittherightandbestway?
p~_rpose
is_ to
spread
a
~--
;:
.
··.•.·
.·._·.·
,attended,
reg;ioJ?-al
·
conf~r~nc~s
·
What about. the reign of tertor
·_
philos~phy or ideal not a school
armed forces.
·
Thus certain conclusive statements may be made. While the lottery
system removes some of the inequities of the former system the fact
remains that the
·draft
is still no· other than involuntary servitude .
·
The youth of this nation: regardless of how they "fare" under the
new system, can~ot Qe placated. They should accept no compromise
that
js
a political minded half-way measure. They should work for
the
.establislnnent
of a voluntary
army
subject to political safeguards
which prevent the military from exerting any influence at all in the
larger system. Civilian control, accountability, and an educated
military leadership can help to prevent military overbearence of
power. Tl1e military should thus become a defensive fighting force
under the precise control of policy makers.
·
1
cwh~re
.t~ey
got ideas
,which
will
·
whic!I would take place in South_ newspap~r where students are

•b,e
implemented.next semester~
.
Vietnam after
u.
s.:
forces left.
asked to be mature enough to ________________________
_,,;,_
.in:.tlie
~at, in the Fn:eside_and
How
.-a.bout
the.
many
,stu!fy.
bot~ sides
?~
a topic
..
·
Gallery Lo~nges, and m the qld
·
Vietnamese people,
_whom
peace
·
be~o~ makit_lg a d~cts10n on the
!
:
V: Room
~
Cha~pa~at.
advocates pay lip service to, who
validity of ~ither side. Instead of
In
~oncludmg,I d like ~o.sa_y
· ..
w~uld.
be slaughtered_
as. y~ur one ~!d;d c~mmentary o!1
JhaLrm:glad
that Tllt~ _(:~~le
lS
collaborators_ and sympathlZeIS this very
lU
subject, wouldn
t
co~t:entt:-'1 a.bout t_heactivitle~ of.
·.
with
.
the "eneiny;'!
·
Yes, but
have
.
been
:
not
only
mpre
·t1:ie
·
Social ~_omm~ttee. It ll!ight
maybe there would'nt be any
yatuable_ but also much more
-be
a good idea 1f the· editors
terror. What about Red China
interesting
to have used _the
spoke
to us before ma,king-
.
who the Soviet Union already
expertise available at this school
.
~ditorial
comm-ents fn our
recognizes
as
·the
.Far
East's
to trace the important
root
w.<>rkin~, I think they 11 {earn
«protector,"
.
what would her . causes of the problem and ~so
something.
role be. Yes but maybe
-the
.
some of the results that possible
· ·
.
Respectfully,
·
Commun
i's t
th re at
is
solutions might have? I think the
John Innocenti
non-existent as some would have· many departments of this school
:.
Social Committee Chairman
us believe.
'(I have
some
working together could come up
Editor's Note: The reference
Czechoslovak friends who would
with some information that has
to the major weekend was made,
debate the issue.) How about the
been completely ignored with all
·
not to
·
show them
as
a failure,
domino theory - is it capitalist
of todays rhetoric. Many times
but to contrast their value to the
propaganda?
.
we hear the pJuase, 'They can't
more successful new concept of
.
let's face it, idealists,
it
would
see_ the forest for the· trees,'
the small function. The editorial
be to Nixon's personal benefit to -which beais great value as long
WAS researched
·
and
one of the
pull out now. He would
·
be
-
as we remember that. the forest
editors of THE CIRCLE was in
hailed as a peace- maker
(a
la
·
has more than one SJde. Please
attendance at Fall Weekend in
Neville Chamberlain) and his
do not belittle the intelligence of
the capacity of a worker.
posters would be all over every
the s~dents
with the kind _of
Gentlemen:
college dormitory.
But maybe
reporting that does not requue
l
have just finished reading
Tricky-Dick
is getting
a any 31!10Unt of thou~t.
Present
your editorial Build Up .•.. Let
kick-back
from the na-palm
both sides of the topic and allow
Down. Get Out in the Nov.
6
factory and wants to
.
keep us the. ~tudent to draw his own
edition
of the Circle. 1 am
there to· amass a fortune for decJSion from the facts not from
apalled at the inacurracy of
himself.-
views or opinions of others.
some of your statements. You
The
Vietnam
situation
is
Sincerely, Bob Fales
.
Dear Editor,
Tonight (November
17th) I
a ttende·d
a lecture
which
featured the most distingaished
Dr. Balch speaking on "the
relevance of Rome." This lecture
was presumably sponsored by
the Italian Society of which I am
a member and the History Club
of which I am most pleased not
to be a member. What is the
History Club? Is it a club which
strives to provide history majors
as
well
as
the
campus
community
with
activities,
namely films symposium and of
·
course lectures?
It
did a very
finee
job
in organizing the
· 1ecture by Dr. Balch.
I am sure
everyone
saw
all the posters for
this lecture.
I
am sure the club
sent notices to all the history
teachers asking them to in form
their students (not all histozy
majors) about this lecture. Yet I
was happy to hear that they sent
notices to
·
all histoxy majo~
about the lecture but instead of
a week early, they shoulld have
·
sent them two or three weeks
early.
I
thank you History Club for
help
making· Monday night's
lecture a great success. Without
any of the officers (whoever
they maybe) to introduce the
speaker and help conduct
it
the
few
people
who
attended
perhaps would have gotten as
much for your fine attendance
at this also - it shows your
profound
interest in history.
You ask a man,
a
man with a
Ph.D. to speak then only three
of your members come. What
character! What dignity! What
class!
I
can see that you are a very
hard working club and I can
honestly say that I could never
be a member of your club -
I just
couldn't do all the work that
you do.
Sincerely,
James
Mangino

.,





























































































\
.
.
TIIE CIRCLE ·
••
I
:DECEMBER
4,
1969 ..
·'·
-'
·.
,, Rgxj~:,Ql)'I)
Opener>
.
Wrestlers·
>''
,
•,

>+
,

,
,, ...•..
: , ., .
,_. •.·
•.
,WFeck.Ye~liiVa

.: \ The Y~t{ho~psters
opened . : break to _tlieii_iuiv~tage;; :'
·.<
i-·•
,
to go, · Ray: Mwung_ 1ced the
· ,
',J
.· · :
~
. · . ·
; •·.
• ., ·

· ·
. ·
.
.
.. 'their
season. with.·a 73-62 win.,
Ih · the>second half,'•Yeshiva,
game with'a 3-point play •.
"--·.:·
...
·
1
._;
:
~,
by,~pb,.Sulli~an.
c:
:-s~c~n_d pe_no~.~
a~ h~. came fro!R
. oy.erYe~f.iva
last
Moriday
night :
urid~r
· famed. ~coach) Red
· Higliscorer·for_,Marist
was
Joe ·.·.·-Th~ Marist·wrestling·-teain w~n . behin":__to
pm_
Alan Shenher m
before··
0
a·small·crowd-.at
the-<Sar·achek,',·came
·o·uLin
a. Scott:withd6
points·. Joe.'also
altbutoneciriatchandracxedup
· .. 7:53.·.::·
_
·.,-· ,.,. ··.•
·,·.·
: ..
· Bo.wne _High ·;School
gyin·
iri
_man-to-man· defense··and Marist )ed ii_!..·
rebounds· with 17. The
four ;•pins 'as>they:
rolled- ·to · ,; ·
It .
took .a ~sti:o~g t:"~sh ·and
Queens.-'" :-
·· · - . ,
•·. .
switched from.its zone offense.
Poxes~ , well-~alanced
attack
victory,;'in their ·first·-match of ·, acc~tpulated
.. ndmg .. time for
" -The first half was all Marist
as
The. Foxes•. shooting ·fell
'.:off ·
showed 5'men m·double figures.
the ·seasori
39-5
.over· host.·· sem?r
~5>b Krenn .. to :edge
Mr. Petro used 9 of his players ·considerably (to 3:3%) as Yeshiva
Ray· Manning hit for· 14,·while
Yeshiva College last Monday..
Yeshiva's · Noah : Nunb_~~g 8•6 · ..
·' and th_ey held
a
4~28 advantage
came• charging .back. Marist's · Ray Oarke, and Ray. Charlton
-; .
Jommy
Eisenhardt ·opened the . Kren~,
158
lbs, ne~ded a rever~l
.at _the mid-way buzzer.. Against
defense ~as defmiteiy lacking in· each.scored 12, an~ Bil}Spenla, . match by sinking a ·half-nelson
~n~ taked_own m. the thir~
. Yeshiva's 1-2-2 zone defense, the
.the
second ·half and Yeshiva •. added 10. Bob Ullrich added7
.on,118
lb. Norm Bichoff •and. pe~od to _get the,wm; At t~
starting five moved the ball well
closed to within 4 "pts. at 62-58 _ points ·rrom his important role
as -·
driving it for a pm in 3 :·19. -
.
po~t Manst had a 21-5 margin.·
in the. firsf half, shot 4~% from
with about 4 minutes to go. Mr.
sixth man.·
·
. .
. ·
Yeshiva's· 126 lb: captain Bob · .. J:rnt .year ma!} Matt ),logan,
~
the floor, and worked the fast-
Petro then called time· out· to
Rich Salit was.Yeshiva's main
Weiss quickly evened the.score·
JU~or, ou~lasted
167 _ lb.
~VI
· , .
regroup his forces. The starting
offensive, threat hitting for 33 · however as he caught sophomore.
Tef!Y 2-1
.m
a battle_
m which
·
·•
five upped their· lead with ·two
points oh 12 field goals and 9·or
Mike Condon in 1 :08!' .
neither,
man
c~>Uld get · a
·F.·
r'
.o··.
s·h_
..
·.
B·o_w·.
.
quk:k points arid the_n with2:30
1.1
from the fo~l line. · ..
Then
came- the onslaught.
ta.kedown.
. _ . ·
. ~-0
J
as,pers.
<

·,
< ,,,.
,.._
by J.T: a~toldto J.C.
The Freshman'basketball team
was foiled in its debut Monday
night by a strong quinte~ from
Manhattan
96-88. Manhattan
· held
a 48-30
advantage at ·
. half~time.
·
Marist's leading scorer was .
John Landy, wljo had 26 points,
while Ed. Reilly, who was taken
out in -the first half because he .
sustained an injury, was second
, • ·with 14 points. Ed scored the
first . eleven points· for the Red
· Foxes.'
Jim
Martell, Terry Bauer
and Bill Pizzuti rounded out the
starting five for Marist.
..
Manhattan,
a much bigger
· squad, had. at least
5 ..
men in
double · figures; and had a very
strong bench. Gerry McCall Jed
· their scoring with 17 points.·
Sailors
Take·
2nd
MVP's Bill Dourdis and Bill
McGarr.
After a scoreless first -period,
.Anothe_!
first ·yr.
ma~,
seriior . Pete Masterson scored on
freshman Jim La-..:ery, -used his _
an escape in the second period
great str~ngt~ to· pm} 91 _
lb. Lou
and a predicament
·in
th,e third
Cohen with a nelson m 1 .40 ..
period.for a.3-0 win. Masterson·'
Jack_
W:i,lsh - and _senior
· controlled his man for the entire
c~-ca~tam Bip McGarr pick~d up
third period however he did not
5
P<?Ints apiece _on forfeits to
need_the points for riding time.
account for the fmal.39-5 score.
Rico
Velez.
sfarted
his
. , The
match
was extremely
wrestling career on an.impressive •· valuable
to the. wrestlers of -
_ note as he overwhelmed his 142 , Coach Jerry_ Patnc_k, _as s~v~ral
lb. opponent Mike Spero. Velez. new_.wr~stlefS won
m convmcmg
used
a
nelson. to flatten Spero in
fashi_q11
.. The next te~t for the
only 1:20:
. -. .·
·
: ·
Manst
matmen
will be on
In an excellent 150 lb. match,
Saturday when they host.tough
junior
captain
Bill Moody
Southhampton
College m the
survived a predicament in the
gym at 2:30.
Peas.
And Carrots.
•.

._i.
by
Joe McMahon
The i~t~inural;soccer playoffs-put the finishi!lg touch.on good ole
Leonicloff .. Next year it•sh9uld be newly "crowned"· and ready. for
Mc
.
'Gar·
r,·.
·oourd·,·s·

·.•.
ly-ne.
any kind· of.·w·eather; .. The Fluffs, captained by· Mike- McNeeley,
slushed "their , way to• the. championship, edging Desolation Row
,
.
Revisited in a wet and cold semi-final by one comer-kick in the first
·
· overtime period'. and ·.then,. on,,Tom. Bagar's goal, beating the
Honore
. d at Football
Banquet..
Alcoholic Reprobates, 1-0 ... Having·watched or played on or against
·
.
·
·.
.. . ·
each of the teams in . .the playoffs,.l've selected ,from th9se 4·groups
·
-
what I feel:would be·~ All-Star. squad - Right Wing, Steve Cronin,
Fall
sailing ended. Sunday,
Th·e .fifth
ann.ual. Marist
Ronchi. Bill Dourciis. and Coach · Desolation Row; .Inside Right, Bob Mayerhofer;·Desolation
Row;
November·23 with the Frostbite . College Football Club Awards 'Ron Levine were awarded silver
Center .Forward, ;Jim, McGee,. Alcoholics Reprobates; Inside Left,
Regatta
held here at Marist.. Banquet was held at Alloy's
inedals.
.
.. _. .
__
.· . . .
..
.
Bob Hawd,•Desolation Row; Left;Wing, Dean Gestal; Fluffs; Right
Albany'
>
State won, with 66 . Restaurant in Poughkeepsie_ bil
~
Jolln
."Barney"
Kavan_augh Halfback,.
G~rry,
.Coske,'.°,
Fluffs;·. Center.' Halfback;_.Ron- Zurawik,·
points·wbile Mapst again took a
December 2. In attendance.were
was elected president for the
'Qanana
Splits· A.~.; Left ;Halfbac!<, Steve-.Buriell,• Akoholic
very . cl_ose' second • with 60;
Messrs;. Robert Finn/:the: first
'70
s
'7 l season
along
wi~h.' Reprobates; Right. .F~llback;·,Tom .Voelker; Desolation Row; Left
points.
.
·
_ . . .
.
·
.. president of the Football. Club co-captains Jack McDonnell and
Fullba.ck;;Fred
·Merino;
Alcoholic R¢probat~s; and that all-important
'
Outstan~ing"Marist skippers in
and
James
Clifford,
the
Dean Gestal .. ·.
position, Goalie;- ~y.-Y1,1rch;Fluffs.,
_The Tournament
M,V.P.,
in my
-the Regatta ·and for the season
president
of the· Touchdown . .·. .
_··· •
·
opinion,.•would
be,Jj.m, ·McGee; .. _with Bob-· Mayerhofer a close
were John Kren, Rich Reynolds,
Club
oC-Poughkeepsie.
They
n ·-~.
GE
1·8 - _
se~ond .. : Club ·Baseball has started again an:d for .the first time,.
and Don Pizzuto . .Other skipp~rs
eac~ r~ceiVf~:gamefootballs for
r
A~
. ' . . . . .
think)t's
going tq. make it! ·Twenty-nine bodies ,showed up last
and crew
m:Cinbers · for the
therr aid dunng the past season.
. - . . . .

....
· .- • •·•
'I_'uesday night··Jor the )riitjal .meeting and maybe a few more
season
were Art Jung,
Crruy
As is .. customary,
fourteen
by Dori Ronchi ·
in~erested soul~ .we_re.
atthe football banquet; Two Freshmen., Jim
: Jones,
Penny · Tiiante;
Pat .' seniors received their maroon
_
· · . ·
·
.
Martell: and. Mike Arendt; have talked to Doc Goldman and are
. Jameson; Bill Sears, Bill Hartley · game jerseys .. The MVP tr~phy
:. : On page 18 qf th e-l.28 p~ge - following alLthe proper procedures. The possibilities look good for a ,
and John Zoda.
was awarded
to. both
Bill newMan st :C<;>llege
catalogue}s a · few scrimmages in the spring as a start, and then regularscheduled
Special thaJJks goes to E<f
Dourdis and Bill. McGarr. Mr.
one~h_un~red
wo rd detaile_d ganies in ~oth. tµe Fall and-Spring once;tne program.sets on its feet ·
Keneally from the team for
his
Robert Norman presented the
descnphon-
qf ,th e athl eti_c New Paltz, which, has, eiloughfacili:ties for half the Mid-Hudson
help.
, ,
.
:.c ·
. .
·

·
s e c on d
a
n n u a
r.
W H V W , progr,am, at _Manst· -Bene at
I?,
th18 valley; could bean ideal place. to play. The two biggest obstacles are
Finally
congratulations
·to.
sportsmanship trdphy
:to.
Gerry
de s;cn P tto 11 there
is a . money and the response ·of the students. If you'd like to play, or
Coach_ Jerry R~meiricky for a
:Tyne upon a unanimous decision·. consi~erable amount ·
of
blank you .just w_ant ·to help' out, b·e sure to_ attend the iiext. meeting on ..
good season and a gre,atteam.
by his fellowteam mates_.
. sp~ce, almoSt as th0 ugh th e Wed., Dec. 10 .... 1 understand the football banquet was a big success, -
· As · an added attraction this
e ditois. of th e c:i,t~log'-!e
: fe!t - Next· 'week's --In Perspective will highlight the Vikings' two
y
e_ar, .·-
..
B_
ron_ ze m_edal_
lions,
sorne~llJ.?g was. ~ussmg
m
thi s outstariding co:,Captains; Bill McG.arr and Don Ronchi ... Erp ... ·
·
· commemora,ting.
the
one . d.escn_
ption:- .

.
·
· · ·
· ·,
·
i,:J.l.OWlaQ:>J,\I
W!f ··
SJ OlIM
hu
ndredth
_y~ar of· ·collegia!e
,~:ei::J
\it
!tJft~~- ~~:mJ~t~
.. .
'Run·
ne··•,.·s·
·.
·w·,n.
K··,n·g·sto·n
·Roa·
d . ·Ra·
·c·e
.. football, ~ere presen~ed ·to Bill
something is missing! To mer~ly
_
- .
c
__
· • · • . ·
• -
.· .
_ ·
..
.
_ McGarr, Bill Iaccobellis and Don
·:
say that Marist fields teams .in
_
.
.
· •.
·
·
-
·
·
·
Campus
Stuf
I· ·.
foptball,.
socce.r·,
crew,.
First·
·in-door·
Meer·-F,riday
baske_tba~l~ . wi~stling,
· '?ro~s. ,
. .

, .
.
.
< .-·
·· . · _. .
-
country
sailing track . tenrns
· -
· ·
· ·
· · ' ·
·
·
··
· ·
·
and goir,
.
dqes ,. not begin to. .

'
·. .
. ,
' .
,
scratch
the
surface•. of the
With foµrouLof
the<top, ten
an
A.A.U. Development Meet at
'ineanipg
and value of athletics at,
finishers, the track team easily - the
168th
Armory,· in New
Marist.
copped the team trophy in the . York. Representing Marist
will
It is
our. considered opinion
three mile .event at the Kingston ·.be Greg Howe and Steve Kopki
.
. . :· BITS-N-PIECES
,
that
the · athletic program· at
Road Race on Saturday, Nov .. in the 500 yd~ run; Bill Kalish in
i
By the)ime
you i-e·ad this basketball
will
be in . .full swing. This ' Marist
has contributed
more
22. Oneonta State
WaJ!
the victor
the 440, Bob Mayerhofer, Joe
could be . the year that basketball an_d Man_
·st made the big swing
ti
t
th · -
· f M · •
. in the six mile race: The four
McMahon and-Paul Blum in the
towards some ·kind of name on-the East coast for small ti"me.· If·
pres ge
O
e name_
0
·
anS
t
med_
al
winnets for Marist were:
100_
o:
yd .. even_t, a_nd Tom·
than any other. single facet ·of
success should shine bn the Big Red Fox a NAIAand a NCAA bid.
the college. We. have competed
Greg
Howe,
fifth,.
Bob·
Mahoney, ·John Petraglia, and
could come their way. With all their experience returning from 1ast
proudly against such schools as
Mayerhofer, sixth; Steve Kopki,
Dori Paulson in the two mile. In
year and a strong bench, receiving both bids isn't a far fetched idea.
Manhattan,
Providence, New
eighth; and Joe McMahon tenth;
the
fin a 1 · eye n t of
·
the
Good Luck to the hoopsters in 69-70.: .While in England, I hope ._ York University, Notre Dame,
while Paul. Blum took thirteenth
competition;
two relay teams
Bill O'Reilley takes his tum at swimmi11g the channel. With a bit of
University
of Massachusetts,
to
round outt_he scoring.
will be entered for the Sprint
luck a_ ship will ruri over the darling boy."
.If
you fe~l like getting ill
Syracuse, and Columbia only to
The indoor te~m opens its
Medley - (440- 220- 220- 880).
and have the des~re to spit up, read Bill's grfat column, if that
name a few. It was our athletes
season ·Friday night Dec. 5th in
·
doesn't suffice then see some old football films with Bill kickirig,
who carried the· name of Marist
that.surely will do the trick ... Ace reporter Joe Rubino is trying to
to such big name schools .and
become. as cynical as Howard Cosen. It's nice to talk and not know ·-because of them that name will
anything.~
.If
anyone is interested in taking a trip to see the Trotters
not soon be forgotten there.
at Yonkers Raceway, talk to Jerry Kiesel in Rm. 303. Odds are 8-5,
· _ It is the athletic program at
he
will
know something about it ... Why are all the Football players
Marist that produces the greatest
aimlessly walking around with no direction. One thing for sure it was
an,ount of entertainment for the
a damn shame that Pace got invited to that Met' Bowl and not our
student
body. There are few
Boy~ Congratulations to Bill Dourdis
for
being the leading ground.
things
more
entertaining
or
gainc· in Club Football and to tricky Dick Hasbrouch for being fifth
exciting
than the drama of
in th.: country •.. No one has said anything about the spring bicycle
athletic competition.
race. Please Comment ... Big kick on the third floor Champagnat
What-
the athletic program
now is that -classical sports game of got you last. John Mauskapf
means to those who actually
thinks he is champ but
he
can
be
easily beaten ... Carrot and his · c()mpete cannot be answered.
adorable roommate Vinny are planning a June Wedding. •. With all
Things like pride, teamwork, and
the _talk of how the Co-Eds will five next year~ no one introduced a
the feeling that comes from
Harrad Experiment at Marist •. There
is
a new disease spreading
fighting for a victory have a
around Campus, It's from Roe-Jan ••• Well that ends another great . special meaning for- an athlete.
_ dialogue,
Be
Good Love Henry
VIIIIXCVIIXCVI
Just ask one!
· However, there is no doubt
that
the athletic program at
Marist could be better. We could
have a track, we could have
tennis couits, we could-' have a
field house, we could have better
attendance at games. There is no
doubt that there could be a little
more incentive for people to try
out
for
various sports. The
Athletic
Committee
of the
Student Council exists to try to
do something
about
these
deficits. Tonight at 9:00 p.m.
there
will
be
a Student Council
meeting where we will discuss
some .ideas
concerning
the··
promotion
of athletics
at
MOTH. We will at that time
again ask the Council for a
unique appropriation; one that
will
actually
give something
more to the athlete than 100
words on page 18. Come and let
us know how you feel-about
it.
.....................
Baseball
Meeting .
Wed., Dec. 10
·············-·······