The Circle, November 20, 1969
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 8 - November 20, 1969
content
--,.:'.NOYE_MBER 20,1969
~··.BABA
Pfoposals-?BiSCUS.Sed
Peisfij::0,1,e·ee
eo111mu11ity
• •~
•
•
•
-
I
.',.
.,
•
1
;
by
Das
Ve)ez
'
~mritunity
organizations which
wel~omed by the c~mrriunity ..
•.
In
a ·.well.~· oiganized.
and.
fully.' endo.rsed
the cultural·
· Mr; Pren ting; an· assistant
sophisticated
· presentation,
. center.
. .
·
. .
professor of Business, asked if
.BABA explained ·and:· discussed
·
The , discussion · before• the
.
the equipment necessary; for the .
· • their storefroJJt propqsal
·
before · ' college•··
body. fast · Thursd·ay,' was · program · could .not be borrowed .
. the·· facultf·.studejits
<
and
ari
important
step . in: BABA's.
,A
;representative
from Vassar .
.
.
administrators
·of
the· college
drive· for; moral. and. ,firiaricial -stated that ·a "second hand"
· · commu'ility .this past Thursday;
suppoi:Lfrom the Marist College · approach
to the community
1'he presentation be~n v,'ith_a
Community. •.. · '.•.
.would contribute to the .already.
brief historj,
of
the wqrk that
.. ·:The.theme ofthe.pres,entation
racist.
i_mposed ·inferforit-y
: BABA has dorie. concerning the
·
was
t,hat
while
the
good
complex,
that
plagues Black
pi"opo,5.al.
BABA had-considered
intentions of people are helpful
communities today.
.
this program· last semester and
that as far as the black people of
Dr. Gold man,. an associate.
submitted
i
to
the• Student
the. community
are concerned
professor of physical education
... ·cquncil a tentative budget this
(and apparently nationally also)
at Marist, asked if it would be
past,_stimmer. However, since the . the-blacks cannot simply follow
practical
to perform.
the
Coiihcil -had .. changed its system
·
paternal- advice but 'i:ather. must
renovations · involved· with the
of _allocating funds the proposal . be led by black leaders with . storefront by using
:i
labor.force
was ·not
considered .. BABA
.
both moral and financial backing
from
. the
Marist
C9llege
:
.
'·..
.
/·
'
.
.
'.
-'•_
.··_
.
,
:,
...
'
'
Dr. David Miller explains su~mary of his research. to audience.
· submitted
a more
specific
. from
all
people.
co.mmunity.
Rudy·
Silas, a
pi:oposaHhis fall and this one is
A good
indication
of the . member of BABA, pointed out
.nowbefore·th~C.ounciL.
,:.
-receptivity
by the
college
thatifthecenterwasnotmade
· BABA
:decided. to use·: the
community
of the
BABA
attractive the youths of the area
· Union Stre_et Center
•
for .their
proposal is apparent from the
would riot gravitate·to
it
and the
program since
it
contained
an.
dialogue of the meeting. ·
program
would faiL_Ronnie
_attic ·and aud.itorium. The group .
.
Dr. Balch, a history· professor,
Pearson noted that the labor
also decided that coordination
,at Marist,
asked whether a
needed
for· renovation
would
:with• the Vassar ,Urban Center
cultural center was·· desired by
require
more
than
just .. a
R
.. ·:
:
. ...
.
.h• F..
.
·a-. . a··.
.
would.
also
fa'cilita.te
.their . the· ,black
community
...
of . temporary
commitment
no
·e•···
s·
e: a· ..
r··
C
...
-:
u· ·n •·· ·e·.
·.. .
-
;Program ......... ··
Poughke.epsie ..
Mr.·
Tarver, a ·matterliow enthusiastic and that
.
.. -
. · · .
, .
.
·.
·
•.
··BABA
also
·Wanted
to
black.teacher.from
the Middle .the need
for such prolonged
. -
. .
.· · .. · ..
·.
·· . · ·:
: • . • . •· ·
. .
determine their statuswithih.the
Scli?ol,
1
respollded
-that
;a labor
~ig_ht jepordize·
the
t·
.·
.
· - .
· .. ,,
··
·
. ·
.Poughkeepsie- community
and.
cultural center for Poughkeepsie . progr~m•1f,1t was dependent on
.
.
t
'
, •,
.
·
,
e , -'.
, · ·m
, .
-:
..
~
- ..
-::--.
thus .. sounded· the ·community
was
-definitely·
p.eeded by._ .the, ,. student help.· . · . _
., ,
.
·
·
..
:
(;/
.....
··0'
'n"·.
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·,·
·,;,,,
..
·.· , .. ,
.•.,-·.
out·for
opiruons·•abotit-the
·
·cultutally'deprivec:rblack1foflhe:·
..
:'
..
,·';
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inquiry,1was ·a ,public-statement
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the. Testing
and .. Counseling
...
e?(penmental-:,counselilig
\with.
-
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..
.
_. .
.-
..
·. _ .
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.
ti_'.-.
.
.~enter, pre~e~t~d a Sllffi!Jl~ry:of ., freshmen:".'--·.
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.
.
. . . . :
.:·,
·
the ·research'
he has· been .' Although
psycholog1sts-·.a1so
;..
f
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ge· · .:-,
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'.·:· .. c.o·n._du···c.ti~g·~.1.··1:4-i·in.·_m.
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aha
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;-.·d·o.··
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r.·.e.s~ar
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c.h
... w
...
ith
:v.·1.·de
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.:-_'.\:.'.:.:·:, .
·e·
C·.e1ve.·s
..
:.·.
·w·ar
·,l~:-;·::. ·
..
,de1aye_d·audiotapean~.videotape,.;,playback.oftherapeuhc
,
· ..
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. ·.·.,
· ...
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·:i:>:":.<'-·
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·.··
..
··p1ay~ack
of-.gfoup/couiiselirig.:;:coUnseUµg_,::prefer..•)mme~iate.
R. . ·
a·
··.,.
, ·-..
·
. '"
•;,_
'.fr':::.>
- . ::
The ':research, :was_ pitrt of;'Dr~ :)pla yba~k; .Dr; , Miller~s. ·results-
_· . ·
.e
nte ·.·
·._
·
:
Th~-<Z6l~mbia. Scholastic Press ·~
.. photography/'but-
.. stressed the
f\, ·/ , ' . :•
,M.i!let's_, Do<ftor3l
,pis,sei::t!!Jion
>:
sh'~w no .statis!i~llY:}signi~ic~t
:.
,,_ ._.
-.
"~
.·
_
·
· Association,
: a nati on'wi d_e
r
~ !leed••
for·
adequate cap_tions
_to
(:,.-, :
.
. . which also.st:rvel:l-~ ._the basJS_
c;>f. d .. 1 f f e
r
e n c e
b_ et w_
~
e
1:1
. -
•
By Anne Berin,ato
·
.ye'.arbook-r_ating _o_rgariization, -~terpret
and. supple-!Il.ent. th,e .
,:¼:·~\.,-• _
-l'!-•-~10,000 ,resea_rch .grant _to h.me~of:plarback
_cond1~1~ms
_· . · f
-·d -
d . r~cently·awarded a·second plac:e
pictures.
It
seemed.evident that
_,;.: .
-:
,,
· : MarISt -College from, the. Office (that
is,- 1mmed1ate . ~_1th·
A group
0 ..
stu ents an •Jrating to the,1969 Reynard. The·
the officials liked the section
.~,--:,.
·of Education, :D_epartment of· _delaye4~. ~owe".er, Dr._~Miller's, faculty of ~anst _College_,have_ yearbook,'·edited
last year by
entitled·.:.'T-he
Unforgettab\e
;'::·· ::-· ·
Health,;Educat1on
and.Welfare .res1,11ts·:i~~cate t~at v~deotape _rent~d a_ski lod~e on ~ospect.
Fred House,and Dudley Davis;•. Years.".'.fhethrustandef!ectof
•:~::·
:_ · ~. . . (fIEW).- "The ~EW ProJect
~!15 -
pla)'.'b_ack.1s
~ore. e~fective t~an
.·
Mount_aui, . near Benruallngtond a·chieved a total ·of 820<out of a ' . ~his·
tho ugh t.;, pr_o
V?
king
..,~--: .. :· .• · :espec.ially dt:51gne~
foJ:
_group ~ud1otape-playb3:ck m enhancmg
Vermo~t.
!
18
e>pen_
to
, a~ , .. ,possible.
1000
points.-
.This
ass em~l_age of
meJ!lorable
·
.. ,.,;,'
.\
_
_counseling
with ~tudent~
µ1
the.'. self :·concept-1de~l self, .c~J?-Cept.~
:rese_:i;vat1?11:s
may• be made w1th . marked
the .first time thaf a
photographs !eflected highly on
.:: . ,·
-:·
,: Te_ac~er :EdJ.lcation' Progr~!Il,'' c.o~gruence. "Jtfs.my_ °-R1!11on,"
··. t~e.a.dffilllt~rators,Qf th e lodge. , . Marfst
yea·roook.
has
been
the,. creativity
of, last · year's
' :, D!- Miller.~~!
·~bpt)he reSl!lts . Sa.id
Dr:'.'. _M,1ll~r,
.. n1.at
. Lo
C
_<tt~_d i,on
J.>rospec,_t
recognized for a.nysuch citati.on
Reypard~s staff. .·
... · ·
.
.. -
..
·
-:
.-~;tll_u_s
,f~r. appe,ar SIIllilar to i-the
CONTINUED ON
2 .
:
M.o1:1n¥.ft,£1t.
.talces
a~out ~wo,
Tlie C.S.P.A.; · in:commenting
, Wit~ t.h~ success of last year's
-··
pre.v,10)-1.S
study
which
.
r:
~:~~
--;hou;,t<?lkt to.the .. on the.merit.of
the Reynar(,i,
bookmmmd,.t~e
1970Reynard
,
-·u-·,,·,
··o··
g.
s'
,·o·
n·
e' ·.
'Sp-ea··ks
-~
-~{.:~%k\~t~~~rit~sn!!::~~
i~iti:.~p~edt~~6~~h~;%n:~ll:
:.::Jl.ti6~
0
Jt;ro~.
0
uc·~.f~
0
~t.a~~;.
•
•
•
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:
-
0 -
:
<? •
.
~
· ·
es • s
areas
tn
.
~
e~ '
.
caref1,1f
planning and a desire for - . yearbook.
.
•
••
:
_
-
-
•.
•
•
_
1
•
•
_
•
·
are fif~een -and twenty lll11!Ut~s excellen.ce." The layout,
in
the
!he prest:,nt st~f 1s. head.ed by
.. .
.
.
,
_.
resp~c;tivelyJro-!Il. the lpdge. . ·.
opinion of the judges, "shows
an
ed1t?t-1n-chief V~ V{_rnsch, and.
-
..
1
~
•
l k· St d ·
.
_Acc<?mo;d~tlpn_!; include a'. understanding of.the principles
he_ 1s __
ac~omparu~a by lay<>ut
7-
•
on a e
U
y
-.
ldtc~en, . ·.
<lini.
n.g room .• l~unge,
of unity. balance, and contrast.,,
editors·. Rich Davis and Kevin
.
.
•-. two and a half baths and fifteen
C · · ·
·
· · · ·
· ·
ed
Devine
S 1
f
thi
· '
·. . . · ·
. -- .. ·
·
·
: . ·
·
· ., -
,
•··
.
... ·.· , .. beds
•1tis
available for individual : · onstructtve cntJctsm was. aim
.
. . .
a es
or .
s year s
By.Fran_
kD~nara .
- Spring,'
of:•
1969
arid· o·r~.· i~nt.als
at: three .dollars _per
at -~ertain p~ints, especially ~he
book_
will
COJ?meJ?,Ce
this week
·• Rehwoldt is the Director- of.the, person per: night family rentals
desire : for ,a . mon: ~xtensive
under _the d~ection
of Tom
· Dr.·· Daniel A>Livin~tone,
· Lecture Series>". -~ · ·
•
. -.
, · of the entire lodge for a week· :coverage o~ academ1c mterests.
Ula~wi_cz, with :the date of
· Professor
of.
Zoology, at Duke:.
-
Di . .
·Livingstone p~ented.
a·.:
for seventy-five dollars.
· In. ~valuating. the book,. t~e
. publication scheduled for Jwi.a!
University, delivered
a
lect1,1re
on
lecture on his work:in the field
CONTINUED
ON
3
en t1 cs
comm ended
the
_11, 1970.
~mpus on Thursday ,.November..
of ecology
in
lalces
in
Africa, and.
· ·
13 at 8:00 'p.m. in Room
249.
.
the. work· of. his friend,
Mr:
Dr.' ·Robert·
E .. · Rehwoldt,
Robert Kendall, who discovered ·
Director of the, Environmental · ·
··
f
·
Sciences
. Lecture
Series
at
a new:. inethod
o
counting
M
.. ar.ist,•
.·.in.fr, o. du.
·c._ed.
Dr.
pollen
grains
through
·the -
ecological proc~
in sediment
·
Livingstone; whose le~ure was
many tens of thousands of years
~ntitled "African Lake Study'\
old on the bottom of· African
. Prior to serving as Professor of
J;a kes.
By •
finding
the
Zoology~ Dr. Livingstone served
.-
·
as·:--Associate
Professor
of
approximate number of pollen
grains trapped in any given time.
Zoology at- ·the.- University of
period, one
is
able to. derive
Maryland, · special
·
lecturer in
certain
characteristics
of the
Ecology and Biogeography at
type of environment • · heavily
Dalhousie
a nd -. laboratory
wooded,
flowers, ice, barren,
assistant in Generai'Biology and
etc. This type of work-Which Dr.
Ecology at Yale University.
.
Livingstone is carrying on could
He is a member of the· Nova
S.cotia Institute of _Sc.
ience, the
. be very valuable to botanists and
ecologists to be used in other
A m er
i
c
a n · · S
O
c
i
e
t
Y · ·
0
f ·
lakes all over the world.
E c h
t
h Y
O
I
O
g
i s t s a n d ·
A brief question and answ·er
Herpetologists, Sigma
Xi and the
period. followed the lecture. A
·American Society of Naturalists.
more h:n1.1y technical
lecture
The Environmental
Sciences
19
u
Lecture
Series ·was
started
was
presented
by
Dr.
through
a SI 5,000.00 grant
Livingstone on the same subject
from the I.B.M. Corporation in
COl'fflNUED ON 3
John
Hurley, rolling to his
left,
lofts a
T~D. pass for Tom ~ooney, just inside the flag.
·'!-·--
··•··-
~.---
~-
-
Me~bers of the Tlieatre Guild held audiences sp~llbound in theh prodtl.ction "Incident at Vichy"
Thr0i9h
A
Broken
-Window
By Bill O'Reilly
·
Our tour book recommended
p~tol he
was
not too successful
that we see Queen Anne's room
and was put away. So now every
This is my third column in my
·
because it
·
was really out of
year all the English boys and
continuing correspondance froin
sight. Of course the price was
5
.girls
celebrate Guy Fawkes day
beautiful
London
E,rtgland. I
schillin~ and the wait one hour.
by
.
shooting,
off fireworks,
wish to thank. all those who
When we finally were admitted
setting
.
their houses on fire,
· acknowledged
my first two
..
were delighted to find that this
setting each other on fire and
columns and special thanks to
indeed w~ Queen Anne's room.
generally having•a great old time.
Adonis
.•
D on
Duffy
for
There was the bed Queen Anne
I walked up to one litt)e tyke, as
mentioning me in. his
_column.
slept in, the
chait
she sat in,
,a
he was removing all the clothes·
Don, as you all know by now,
is
real old copy of Readers Digest· from the store window he had
a real Marist
·
Zoo Man. You can
which
·she
thumbed through, a
just smashed; and asked
·
him
tell this by the animal noises he
·
closet, a rug, a window, a fly
what Guy Fawks d_ay meant to
inakes while walking around,
walking up
.
a drape and some
him. "Its a
.
day of sharing" he
eating and writing to his mom. · words scratched on the wall that
said,
as
he loaded his booty on
Don's
column
is
..
one
my
said "Louis XIV is a sissy and I
his
red wagon, "sort of like your
favorites .;. it's great to real bits
hate serfs."
_Needless
to
say,
Thanksgiving."
·
of my old columns again written
Queen Anne's room·· was the
F i n a 1 I y
a
s p e c i a I
under Don's name.
:The
.
parts
highlight of our trip.
announcement:
Membership
iri
•.•
,•
.
Peace
'.Corps-College
,.begree:
··
·
-
Prograni
Extended
.
·.>
.
.
•::
.
.
.
p'
·'. .
·.
·c·
orps··.v~_
llinte_:e_·
rs
.w.
ill_b~_:_off_·.·.o_·ri
•
'The·
officials of t.he
eace
·Corps
and the State University
·their
··.Lat
fn,: America_n
'/
·or•
·New
:York
CoJ}ege· a,t
assignment.'· As:in~mbe~•of.:the';'.
a·r_o ck'p.
0
rt
i
a
ri
no uri_ce d
st"affs of
>.teache(:.training
:.
·completion
.
.of arrange~~nts for
·
·•
iristitutioris:
·:and/.or
-.,consultants
·.
continuing and extending the
··.to
secondary
·
teachers:;
of
unique
:Peace
·corps/Co~ege
.
mathematics or scienc::e, they.are
Degree
·
Program tp
_a~m1t .
a
.
important
participants· in
;.
the
,
fourth
'group
of candidates
m
/
educational development efforts·-
.
June·
J
970: The members of the
of their:_ host. countries. Dtiri_ng
·
first 'contingent completing ~he·
-
their two year sojourn they,have
fifteen-month
program
:
which
the opportunity
to
earn· up to
combines
the. upper .division
twelve. semester hours graduate
undergraduate
education with
credit.
·
..i
.
:
.
. '. :
· ..
·
-
_
Peace Corps,preparation ~e ~ow
Peace
corps
.and
•
college
s e r v in g_ on
b_i.; n at 1 On al
·
officials pointed, out the. several
educational development
.teams
features which make_· thisjoinf.
-~
..
in the Dominican Republic, the
'
program.
unique.·
jricluding:
second group
•js_
now serving in
,.academic
credit for Peace Corps
similar assignments
.
in
.
Peru and
training, two fully subsidiz_ed
·
Honduras;. the third group
'is
..
summer sessions. totalling. thirty
now in the academic year phase
-
semester
,credit
hours; in':depth
ofthis joint project and is slated
.
·J.>.e
ace
-Co
r.p s
..
tr?- ining
.
'_:
for_
overseas assignment
iil
Latin
synchronized
··with .
the_: liberal
·
America in August, 1970'.
.
,
arts and specialized professional
·
The candidates will be selected
·preparation,
indiv.idualized
from the ranks of students
·m
programming, opportunity
foi-
good standing
-at
an· accredited
double majors and supervised
college who are completing the~
overseas graduate work.,
.·
..
sophomore or 'junior year by
.
~-
-"This integrated. program
·is
·
June; 1970.
·Those
selected will
·
based
ori
·our
,two
i
fold
be able to earn an A.B .. or
RS.
·
conviction that (1) to combine
degree and be eligible fo_~
a Peace
·
the
college and
.
Peace Gorps
Corps
assignment
10
one
experiences is' to make both·
. academic year flanked by two
more. relevant
·
and meaningf~
summers· of ftJllY subsidized arid
•
a.~d, the personal product· m!lre
integrated academic courses and·:,-va_,l ua ble
(
2?
·.·to::
p~oy1de
Peace Corps training. They are
much-needed_ skilled spec~lists -
expected
.to
major
in·. mathematics
and
science
mathematics
or the scien~s;.
teachers
-
-. as-- ?eace
:~oIRs
those who have completed their
-Volunteers
m Latt1:1 A1:11~nca
is.
junior year prior to. entrimce
..
to
-m.aJse
a s1gn1flcant.
,
into
the
program. have. the. co!ltributi<?n
.to
all concerned,".
opportunity for a double-major.
·
said
President Albert Warren
At the end of the second • Brown, of the State Universi~y
summer armed with the degree,· Colle
g~
:
at
BrocI_cport.
1!1-
a teaching license, in-depth cross· a~ouncmg
the ~xtenS1on of thts
·
cultural preparation. and fluency
umque partnership'.·
in Spanish the graduati:s as Peact:_
.
that I like best about" Don's
Halloween
in England
was
·
"Purgatories
Turtles,»-
the
columns are the secret stuff like
really wild. I went trick or-
infamous etc. etc. will be· open
"Be Good Electric" and "Pat
&
treating dressed as Joe Rubino
to Americans for a limited time.
Ann get the wierdo of the week
(line furnished by Bill Smith) so
Just serid your name to tne or
award." Gee, Don, you just keep
·
to find
·suitable
clothes for the
Edgar (we both live in the same
,•
. _
.· .
•
·
..
·
.
· ..
··.
.
•
.·
~·
,
_
.•-.·
-
...
·.
·
_·
..
:
,
..
.
.
everybody
guessing.· Actually
occasion
L had.
to sack
-a ·
place
so
who cares?)· and two
:r,,
·<th'·'·.:·,.-
..
t::
..
,:->·:
·
· ·
.:N.:•y·
: ..
--t•-b
-
--
·•
·
I'm alittle.:worriedaboutD?n
,_salvation
__
army truck. But
_the ._checksfromVicki'sand}'.OUwill<'JOU
·.
e·as
ern->·
·,'_
..
·:.-:·1
.··
rary
:-=~
____
·:·.
___
bh~s~~~;tl_ie la_s~-~m~;l-_sawd
·-\1:1
·-ts'~allyG,bigF
da,; k~ E~d~!!-dl_t~§-~~y._
.. ,.
rTeurt~eivle.Pla·
..
d~em~edr~8!bP·C:rt~'-~i-
\\,,,-?' ..
..:·
,.
:_ :-
,,;
'<,i~,;;:
;:c.)i/:,i,.-:< /~::;,
;,,:,~;;.,
:,~.:/(';.·•"2:n(,;•;i,
-.;;:>
..
;
-•
-
...
e was runrung ,arou_n •. e;•·:
,·a
uy
aw es
-
ay.
1
'
seeiµs
.'.
e,.
_e_
ge
·an
a. re_
-
~-
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.. ,,,,):_,
;.,,,.{...,.,,,,,::.:
'!
-·~·
_,
.
.
~~:
;c
·.·.
,.,-..
···c.1···'-.
.,.
.
·
boathouse in his·red and green
,'tliat.way.
back'in
1610.Guy
·yo·u,·don.'t
even
,f\eed•
a::•.°•,,"•._:•:
::R:--
.
.
,.,
...
'-·
-,
·-s··-·
-
·o·
-,n-
-~,
,.,:
..
·::
jump suitscreaming"rmgonna,
Fawks
tried-to
destroy the·. motorcycle-.tojoin-Yi~pee·-.Y_i
_:
... ,,-
__
. -
-esource
·_
u ...
·.
-~·
be a canoe, I'm gonna· be
-
a
Parliament of King James
L
Of
_
- Yo.
·
· ·
_
.
•
_
-
:
_-
:· :, :
. ·.
·
-
..
. _
.
·.
.
--
-
.
.
.
.
'.
·
_
. ·
,•.
.
·
cano~."
•
.:_
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
course since all he had was a cap
·.· ..
.
. .
.
..
.
.·
·-
·
-.--..
'.'
$.,_
..
1·2·;
soo·_
- ·
?o·o·
..
·
fi
.
.
college
.
lib_
-_raries_
...
ha~. been re~eive_
d_
b_y.;
the_.
Things m England are ;urnpmg
.
.
. .
.
.
.·.
.
.
... .
..
. ..
.
. .
. .
.
-.
.
.
,
.
.
or
.
. .
.
_
_
..
.
,
.
. .
.
..
.this week. "Purgatori~s Turtles,"
PEAS AND CARROTS
from 6
_the
Moohmen flip out on the
..
ote .:· Southeastern New York Libra~ Resources Council from- the
_U.~.
the infamous motorcycle gang;
deer he shot Monday morning at
sutj'ace.;. Erp!.
··
..
,
Office.of Education as the first-mstaUmen~ ofa
$50,~90.00
gra11t to
are
.on
the
inove.
·
I have
8:30, on thefiist day ofhunting
-----~-
......
--:--~~"""
improve research resources in·the_area.
-
·
appointed myself leader of the
season; Scott perched:himself in
BABA
fr_o~
1
~'..
.
._
..
·
Bard, Bennett; Vassar, Ulster
;
·::
_
.
.
.
,
.
gang and am known as· Grand
a tree near Esopus at 4-:30 a;m.
Dr'. Drennen,;· a: philosophy
.·
Community
College)
State;
·'.._The
librilflans rhose colleges
.
Turtle O.Reilly or G:T.p. Edgar
•
and waited
·patiently'Aor
four
·
professor at- Marist, voiced the
Uni\'.ersity College at-New:~altz,
receive
a_ssistance from-· the·
'
Royce_is the_ Imperial Turtle and
hours.
-
The d~er
·
skin_is
·hpw_
.
op.ijiion (hat while Marist has,in_ .Mou_nt Saint _ _Mary, St.- Thomas
.
fede~~ _grant h_ave agre~d ~o
admisstons director, he.~omes up
mounted on his
'bulletin
board
_
the past shown· c·oncern.Jor.the _ Agumas, Manst,, a11d Rockland
~cquJre mfo~matton m~tenals m
...
with all our catchy phrases like :
'
(S
13 Leo); it's in perfect shaper b 1 a ck
·
c:o
riuri
u n tt,y> of
...
Community College will receive
_
self:ct~d s~bJe~ts so as to make·
_·
...
Don't.
go_ to
~ell,. ~o
·to
except
for
_two sltig
'.
holes
·
·Ppughkeepsi~
:tliat_this~program
~,
assistance" fr?m the Council
.for
the1r libranes,mutually useful:
.
.
Purgatones Turtles.: YessJr that
.
through the nbcoge area, and
·.
would
•be
ideal>m-- terms. of:,the
purchasmg of books and·
_-
_
:·.
Edgar has some
_wit:'·
.,
.,; ·
·
...
the skull is hanging. ou.t_.~e
'~c'ollege.
:·participation.
'..J,arry_
·-
oth~r librao/ ~ateri~ls:
..
Last. week t~e
_Turtles
set out· window! Scott's next· gam~ 1s
-.,
Am bramosky
,
state_d that: t!1e
·.
.
An ap~licatto!}
Jor
~he grant
.
for Wmdsor,
.·m
the. South of
Moose (about 1500 pounds of
time has
.
arrived ,when Manst
-was filed m ;'\PPl of thtS year by
England,.
to see. th«? famous
.
it) which he aims to get in either
must
.
contribute' mor~::to' tlie
the
Southeastern
New X()rk
castle
t~ere
c.alled
.Windsor
Can_ada
or
Ma!iie du~in•g
iminediatecommunity,·.··
:::
Library Resource~,Counc_iLas
Castle. As we approached t~e
Chnstmas
vacation.
Vmny·
-
,
Dean· of
-
Students
:
Thomas
·
part_ <>f
the Councils progr~mto
huge stru~ture v.:e thought it
_Winsch
hopes: to _go along to. Wade, voicect':the opinion that at
incre·a_se and. make·' ava}lable.
might be_ interesting to_. star~. a
capture
the
_action
for
_the
present the
·.college
perhaps
is
_
t:C?s~arch resopr~es
to
.
the
·
mock a_ttac~ on the <:astle like
·
y e a r b o o
~
•
.
. T he
o ril
y
·
l
a
c k
i n g
>i
-n
·
·
s _o c i a 1
:·
~
n d _ ~cholars and p~otess1onal persons
they·
·did
m
older times. We med a 1- winner
for
th~
extracurricular activity for,Black
10
the Hud~on Va~ey.
_
.
donned
_our
helmets a_n~ goggles,
•
Cross-Country team this season
students and
this
progtaitlcould
..
T-he
.
c;o~n ct I s p o_n
~
ors
took
qut
our
Wilham
the
was. John Petraglia who took,7th,
·
certainly
··add,
to. the college
:
COmf!lUOlCatiOilS
.
3:n~
·
delivery
Conquerer Rubber_ swords ~nd
place in the Conference Champs. experi~nce:.C::
_.·_··
.
".
.
·
...
:
,
,:seryices.
to facilitate
~he,.
charged up
.
the
hill
screamlllg
Only a frosh,
John
-
has great
:
Mr.
_
Fierce, the director of
-
exchange of. re5t:arch rnatenals
"Death
..
to Canute,
-·Death
to
potential_ and
is
off to a, go?d.
vassar:
College's·· Urban_:Cehter
among
.the·
libranes ·_of Putnam,:
Canute." Unfo~nately
H~~Y
start. He's also a deans ~t
committed
all
of their-resources
Dutchess,
Columbia! Greene,
Canute
is
the Chief of Police m
student and if he can only avoid to
BABA's
storefront. He also
Ulster;
Orange? Sullivan, and
Windsor.
.
·
'
s~hedu,ling his_ prom_s
.fo~
the
noted th'at he'.·progi:arits _sh1Juld Ro~kland counties.
After-
postmg
bond,
we
rught before a race, theres no
..
be coordinated
·
a·mong
..
the
decided to
-have
a look a! ~he telling how far he might go... agencies.-:,
-_
:,:
:
/>t
:·
.
.:
·.
inside of
_the
Castle. Adrrussto_n
·
Add a B~sketball rally to your
The meeting was imp!,Jrtant in
was free so we thought we had it
-
must-do list for Tuesday Dec.2, terms
·
of informing the ~ollege
made.-Inside the Castle many ?f
the night before the Iona game.
community
·and
the proposals
the
people
were dressed m
Last year's freshman team (two
were well ieceived by 'th~e in
Medieval costumes. Guys were
·-•
of
.which
will be starting for the
attendance;
-
..
It
is hoped that the
wearing
armour! swords and
varsity -' Ray Clarke and Joe
-.good
wishes· will be manifested
sn~ers.
The girls
_had
l_ong Scott) trounced lopa's_ frosh last
by financial_ support". 81lid
l_tµ_dy.
flowing ~owns and_ little _stgns
·
December
at the Mount- St. Silas in closing the discu~i9n~.-
·
.
that
said stuff
·:like.
Shirley,
Michael gym to mark the first
· ·
·
·
'
··
·
·
Room 411, dµngeon._One guy
time
any
.Marist hoop team
RESEARCff_
from
1
had feathers
all
over hun and as
defeated the Gaels. This year it's
he walked· by I_asked him what
the
home
opener
- it's at
he was supposed to be. ••rm a
Dutchess
and it's one you
Medieval Duck, what's
it to ya"
wouldn't want to· miss! •.. Some
he replied.
So
I threw him a roll
·people
laughed when I ordered
and he went away. The interior
"Run Run, Run," a $3.00 book
of
the
Cast I e was
very
from Track and Field News, Inc.
interesting. We saw the color
"Run -Spot, Run" - .. See the
T.V. that King Arthur watched
Carrot Run", said the mocking
and the washing machine Anne
hecklers with the impish grins on
Boylen used to wash the gravey
·
their faces. But now it's in the
stains out of Henry VIll's shirts.
library on reserve for coaching
Neat thin~
like the Duke of
class... And now it's almost 6
Windsor's personal shoe polish
a.m. - Time to put away P's and
were al5<?
on display.
C's for another week and watch
play_ing-back
·
aspects of group
counseling gives individuals in
the group an
.
opportunity
to
actually experience what their
behavior sounds like and looks
like to other persons. Videotape
playback
will
·
then assist these·
individuals in modifying their
behavior and these changes can
actually be less-than-<:onscious."
Dr. Miller's dissertation will be
published in the forthcoming-
Journal of Comparative Group
Studies. He
has
made plans. to
;
..
:
"CONTRIBUTE
TO
THE
.
APPALACHIAN
CL9THING
DRIVE··
NOV. 24 TO DEC. 2"
continue his research work in
this area.
••1t is my thought that
specit;c kinds of playback
might
be more effective with specific
kinds of individuals or with
individuals having specific needs
and goals. At any· rate, the
playback process promises to
be
a valuable
tool
for
the
psychologist and counselor."
Any
one
interested
in
obtaining
:
further infonnation
concerning Dr. Miller's research
is invited to visit the Testing and
Counseling Center, Room 107,
Lower Donn~~Y_
Hall. ·
. .
•.'
,
# ••••
' •. ,. ! •
blast·
':.~..
.
..
_
......
'
off
to a saie and solicf future ..
Start invesiing
·
your dollars
.
in.•
life
insurance right away. And
save hig money on lower rates
..
Build up tax-free cash value
sooner. Spread your wings. Act
now .. Happy landing.
NORTHWESTERN
MUTUAL LIFE
MILWAUKEE
NML
Thttt
!! •
difftrtnce ...
•nd
the
diffettnce
~
TifOMASF.HEFFERNAN
Speeial Agent
35 Market St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
12602
Office: 452-8640.
Resid~:
297-8203
i·
i
..
,
Federal
:Financial
Aid,·
.....
'FOr,,
ICldst
Studellts
· You . niay be interested<in · ·: determines eligibility and nee·d
be
sure that both .are returned
•• :·. knowing
h<>w. the <federal
changes from year to year,-we
before 'May 1st. The PCS should
. _Government.'.s '. fintncial
aid
must
·have
a ne'Y application
.31.1~
·
be sentto Priiiceton well before .
,·programs are functioning here at . PCS.
.
. .
.
,
April 1st.if you want to be sure
·· Marist. These programs are the ' · Applications and PCSs will be
it •will be back on time. Do Not
National Defense Student Loans, . available at the Registrars Office
expect aid if your papeis are not
~.-The Work-Study .. Program and·
iii
December. Pick youis.uP. and.
on file by•May 1st. ·
· .·:
· the ·Educat_ional_ ppportunity
.
·
· •
·•.
·
· '
· ·
·
·.::u"i:l?~:!•~~~~~~·':~
Students
.Jcfin
larch
. :~v:~e~r. ;!!n~orM!i\u:i:i1:
: ..
·o·.
·.n·
·
..
·
...
····.w·.·
··a:·:.-s
...
h···
..
·1··n·
_.,.,o·n.·
applicants did not. receive aid.
EOGs were cut from $80,000 to
$60,000; loans from $65,000 to
It.
was cold Friday ~vening and night driving along the Baltimore
$30,000 and: Work~Study from.
to Washington expressway. The traffic seemed heavier than usual,
$70,000 to ,$37,000. (Something · there were a lot ofbuses from colleges all over the United States but,
to do· with a war in Vietnam I
the eastern .and northern schools predominated. There were a lot
· ·. · · · · · · · · · • • · • · ·PAGE,3
· understand) Initial EOGs ·were
autos filled to over capicity with kids, teachers, blankets, and food.
especially short. We had enough
At each turnpike . gas station,
the. sc_l!ne was like a minature
. initi.aJ
funds
for
only. 14
"Woodstock" with people spilling out over the parking areas from
· Freshmen and 4 upper classmen.
the resturants.
·
. .
.
Fortunately .for your Financial • As one reached the capital, traffic became heavier and eventually
Miguel Reyna "gets into" . his own music during a Rathskeller
medl._ey.
·
.
·
·
Aid Director, who does not like
stood still for hours twenty. miles out from the capital district; for
to make decisions, we had just
there were simply too many cars and buses using the roads.
enough funds to take care of all
. · The Capital's population had swelled overnight and by early
renewal applications on file at
Saturday morning finding a place to sleep was
a
challenge. The
the deadline ~of . May 1st. Of
colleges and universities in Washington such as Georgetown, Catholic
course no funds were available
u.,
Howard, and .the American University ~long with many churches
for renewal applications received
and monasteries were filled - with entire gymnasium floors utilized
after that date.
-
as camping grounds. ·
·.
Reyna Plays
Deportation Tune
Loan applicants qualified for ·
On ··Saturday
morning
.
the · students, teachers, farm workers,
By MIGUEL REYNA
a
P
proximately
$200,000.
businessmen;·familieS and others amassed at the mall near the capital
· Approximately
half of the
building. ·Jt was the largest gathering of people that had been seen by
On Wednesday, November
12,
$30,000 available was used to . anyone · in Washington. There were different types of people in
Marist College saw Miguel Reyna
match EOGs. In most cases the • different groups but they were united. by a spirit of comradehip,
and
his trio
in an expert
balance was. u·sed to. bring a
helpfulness, towards each·. other and respect They were united in
exhibition of jazz at its best.
students
need
down . to an
their effort to end the Vietnam War. There were so many people
Sponsored
by the
Human
of being arrested if he returns to
Peru,
certain
students
have
organized
a petition . to let
Miguel remain in America. Some
faculty
members
have also
contacted Rep. Hamilton Fish in
hopes that he will intercede into
the Reyna case .
. aniount that could be borrowed
that not all could march down Pennsylvania Avenue - about half of
Relations Committee, and the
- under
the
Gover
it men t
the huge crowd marched down Constitution Avenue or walked to · Class of '72 in unison, the
, Guaranteed loan program.
.
the rally at the Washington Monument.
·
evening took on an air of being
LIVINGSTON
from
1
·
There
were·
158 qualified ·
Saturday's demonstration was the largest in the capital's history. · one of the best social events· on Friday afternoon in Donnelly
applicants for Work~Study jobs.
A.t one time or another 800,000 .persons attended the rally at the
sponsored by Marist College this
Hall.
Our original allocation of funds
Washington Monument.
·
·
year. A little beer along with
The final lecture of this series
allowed ortiy 30 jobs for the
The question on everyqnes mind, both participant and observer,
Reyna's
masterful
talent at
on Environmental
Science for
school year .. These jobs were -was whether any American political leader could afford to ignore a
bringing out. the . best in his
the
fall
semester will be given on
fille·d
· by· May
15th·.
A
demonstration
of. public sentiment
as
.large, as forrent and
as
audience provided an excellent
Thursday, December
11
at 8:00
supplemental grant du~ng the
prepondevantly dignified ·as the· peace rallies of November 15th in
setting
for
continuous
p.m. in the College Theater. Dr.
summer made it possible to have
Washington, D.C.
.
.
·
sing-along5 and dancing in the
Morris Shipman, Professor of
35 addi~ional jobs for. the FaU
The demonstrators,
with but a few exceptions,
conducted
aisles.
·
Environmental
Science and
semester orily since. this money
themselves with
a
gr~cious., good _humor and self- assurance that
Everybody had to get into the
Health
at the University of
:IJ)U~·:b~;'
i;p,en.i by p~~~l>er~ ··!i.tQo4.:,.(µi::
·-~arked_:··~on,t~s\> to the nl!rvou~· di~~emper of the
act."'M.r. Paul Teichman provided
South Carolina,
wUl
.Pr.esent. ,a .,. , .... ,.,,,
' 31st~~;~.~~
c;,t,,,,
. ·
·
<·:
Z
J; -:;·
f>·.
·1Administmtion.they,·challehged.
,".:,.,-..i
,\.,,
•.
·<·
:,,.·,::
~',·::>.::i, \· ,,..,·:· •· · .. , an:: excellent; medley. ·of ·son~
·1ectilre concerning the problem
·->·/-='--,:~,dui-ipplication .. for'funds for.
'--The New Mobilization Committee to•Endthe)Var in Vietnamand
:with
a
·surprisingly
excellent
of
AifPoflution.
Dr. Shipman
is
· · - the··.1970-71
·
~ch?ol '. year .~.·•;other
gr:oups.had lfeen prepared for the weekeilds·events; They were
voice while Mr. Lumia "rocked . an expert
in Environmental·
- ~eeri sent to :Washington. We .do ·
well'
6rganized _and effective .. The 3,000 man ."marshall" force
the rat" with a rendition of
folk
planning
and
Community
hope
t•hat
Congress
an~.
composed~of young peoplej· primarily college students, prevented-
songs
al
Italia. For
this feat,
Development, Public Health as a
·President.
Nixon.
will make
violence
and
perfonned the nearly impossible task-'of guiding and
combined
with
his glorious
fun ct i
O
n
O
f phys
ica
1
'
, '. availaple
the,
full
amount
. directjng more than one half million people.
_ :
. .
turkey trot victory and class
Environment,
Environmental
aut:\1onzed for the. programs.
Aniongthe
marchers were
IO
tea.ms of 10 marshalls each. These
· cancellations
on Friday, Mr.
Factors influencing Health and
Perhaps a letter from students or
teams were termed "trouble - shooters" and were prepared ·to leave
Lumia
has
earned the title
we 11 Being,
and
Food
parents to their
Senator arid . the march at any pointwhere violence seemed imminent. They were
"Faculty Hero of the Week."
Sanitization.
.
Congressman·. will help se~ure · ·not :needed. ·About 100 marshals locked arms and ste·pped off to
In the meantime, through all
Dr. Rehwoldt said what
Dr.
· enough
funds for all· needy
siart the march in order to help clear the streets. A team of
l
00
the pomp and good times in the
Shipman is an "environmentalist
students. Even be~ter, a no~e.of
marshal!l was stationed outside the F.B.I. building. They were part of
·rat, Reyna is fighting a battle
in the true sense of the word."
thanks from thosenowrece1V1ng
the l,571
·marshal
team that was stationed along the route. More · with
the
United
States
He is not a natural or social
financial aid might be _such .a marshals were stationed at the Monument. The police worked with
immigration
authorities
to
scientist,
but. he has the
pleasant surprise to Congressmen
the marshals throughout the day.
remain in the States. Authorities
advantages
of both. As an
· that
they might extend. the
· ... On Saturday the building5 along Pennsylvania Avenue were closed,
purportedly
wish to deport , environmentalist,
he is not a
·program.
.
.
.
·on the rooftops were soldiers with rifles, pistols and tear gas guns.
Reyna
to
Peru . be.cause of a
physical or social scientist, but a
••
· We cannot stre~s t_oo much· t~e · · Marines were guarding the C!i pital Building. ·
misunderstanding in his conduct.
hybrid _ equiped in functioning
fact that in order to secure aid
After the rally the people left the city, many left by six o'clock;
Because Reyna stands a chance
in both areas.
under· any of these progra~s, a but those remaining people· who. had assembled in Washington
Dr. Rehwoldt announced that
student must apply and furmsh a departed from the capital throughout Saturday night and Sunday.
an application
will
be submitted
Parents: Co~fidentail Statement.
For many students the weekend was a good experience and not
to the APC describing a B.A ..
These are one. year pr~gr~m~:
If ..
just a "good time".
It
was not only for those who are politically
w
Hy?
Degree with a major field of
we do not have,: an apphcation
oriented but was a part of many youth's lifes for this short time
·
study in Environmental Science.
and PCS by May 1st of each year . deriving fr.om a conviction and motivation to demonstrate to the
The skelton of the program is as
no • aid is given. Since need . United States government the profound ·need to end the war.
·
■
follows,
Brother Linus Foy appeared
.before
the students _on two
occasions last week as part of his
plan to inform the students
Qf
the two-year and long range
plans for the college.
·
On Tuesday night, November
11 and
Wednesday
night
November. 12, · Bro. Linus
was.
available for discussion . of the
plan.:
·
.
· Tuesday's
presentation,
sponsored -by the Sop!J.?more
Class,. included an expoS1tion. of_
two architecf s · plans for· the
school plant in the futur~. The
architects' plans are of their own
making and display items which
are subject to discussion and
final approval by the Board · of
Trustees .,. both steps are a long
way off. Nevertheless the plans
are · interesting
in that some
features
are rather close. to
implementation
and have the
support of the committee.
Bro. Foy said on Wednesday
night that during January and
February
contracts
will
be
awarded
to
further
study
specific features of the plans and
that within six months these
plans along with cost estimates
will
be
available.
· In response
to· a question
.
One artist's conception for a rennovated
Marist campus.
concerning implementation
of curriculum some light on the
the plan, Bro Foy stated that all future of courses was shed in
parts of pl~ would have to be response to a question from a
approved and then of course student
in the
audience.
funded.
F<?Y. also stated that Regarding the classification -of
student op1ruon was. welcomed
Maxist
for purposes of state aid
and valued, howeve~ there was and ·. in regard to the theology
no
~t~te~ent regardmg stud~nt requirement,
Bro. Foy
stated
part1c1pabon on the planrung that theology is not mandatory
committee forthcoming.
and
that movement towards
Although
there was not becoming optional is evident.
sufficient time at these meeting.;
to ;tnalyze fully the future
by Peter Masterson
Why do we get condemned
when we express an opinion?
Regardless
of whether this
opinion is of general agreement
or not, many others are ready to
jump down our throat, merely
for indic~ting what we feel. For
instance, the topic of whether
America should be intervening in
Vietnam
has
long
been
discussed. A few years ago,
if
someone
at
Marist was to
announce that we should get out
of Vietnam, he was immediately
attacked (usually verbally) for
being
a "Communist,
Pinko,
Red,
Socialist,
traitor,
or
coward." Everyone would argue
with him but no one would
listen to his point of view.
Lately,
the political opinion
among many of our students is
that
peace
is of ultimate
importance,
that we should
de-escalate rapidly and pull out
of Vietnam immediately. Now,
if someone
disagrees to the·
current
vogue
of political
philosophy,
he is a "Fascist,
war-mongering, pig."
CONTINUED
ON
4
( 1 ) 4 6 Credits in Natural
S.cience
(Chemistry,
Biology,
Physics)
( 2) 9-1 2 Credits
in New
Courses
(Dealing
with
Environmental Science)
(3) 18-22 Credits (Electives) in
Social Science Area (Political -
Science,
Sociology,
and
Psychology)
When asked of a possible
starting date for the program,
Dr.
Rehwoldt
said:
"The
program
is currently
being
worked out. The program w~
proposed for September, 1970.'
He was hopeful of starting thi~
new major in September of next
year.
SKI LODGE
from
1
During
the
period
from
December 19 to January 20 the
lodge will not be available for
family renting5 only individual.
The weeks of January 25-30,
February 8-13, and February
15-20 have alreadv been rented
to families.
•
Some skiers plan to use the
lodge to expand their skiing
activities farther north to such
places
as Killington
~nd
Roundtop. Get your reservations
in as soon as possible.
I
PAGE4
fflECIRCLE
•·
My point
is_ that_
·sonie
'~onsist
.
of students becoming
'students~ here havent't begun to
concerned and involved in
.this
Vice President' Agnew in ·. a
·
understand ·what actual college
·
process from i_ts
formulation.
:0,
speech during this past week,
.work
means and what
/are
its
However, student involvement
-
-
-
adino~s!ied
_'commentors-_
to
-
be
.
objectives.
-
If
_Marist
offered a in such issues has· been less than
·
more
-
aware
of their
own course in "How to Beat· .the
-
competent nor enthusiastic. A
prejudices_ and influence·· when
System"; some of our illustridus
few· examples: . if the
.
facu~ty
·
they present the news and that
._
constituents
,would
get A's_'with members- on a given committee
.
-
they should also speak more
_
no sweat. The real problerifhere
work
5
to_ 10 hours per week
often about the positive aspects
is
that the counter system to
prepad.ng
·
for. a• particular·
and achievements of our society.
beat
the
system.
has; been
meeting, should not the students
With regard
_to
that academic
_
perpetuated and
.each
freshmen
on that same committee be as
society known as Marist College,
-
class is quickly ind~ctdnated in
well prepared?; there is little
here
are the events of the
-
its basics. Alright so what if at active response to
-
a suggestion·
--
ordinary day and comment.
·
every other school guys play to expand the SAC; and
__
the
Item: There
is
a small segment
beat the system, all I ask
is;
what smaller
·issues_
like eliminating
of our faculty which gives very
is
preventing this school, Marist final exams,".which go untouched
poor courses.
College, from not playing- beat
because
there aren't' enough
-
It is
my opinion that such a
-
the system?
.
_
_ ..
students to work on them. The
segment does exist and that
Item: Some students are able basic
question
then is - is
these courses are far below the
to succeed at Marist solely on
participation in· decision· making
level of higher education. These
their •natural ability'.
,
worth the effort?
..
courses
are established and
It is my opinion that some
·
As
-
a final
comment,
-
the
..
':·.
-
T~~
adventurous ctieds get ~rapped ~-p in-~ne
·of
Ch~die Alf~~'.s
-
weekly Judo classes held in
tlie
Browsing
Library.
-
-
-
BarklOg'
Up
Tree
perpetuated
·
by the instructors
rn e rn b er s of
o u r n ob le
-
present systems for
-trying
to
involved who are impervious to
undergraduate population have evaluate
.a
particular
__
class
_-
in -
criticism
and- reject
-
such
'simply
not been working at the
terms of seeking to better that·
criticism out of hand by saying, b u s i n e s s of
educating
_
course, are impersonal, less than
"It
can't possibly be me, it has themselves, no matter what form
adequate, and in the· end, result
to be someone else."
·
that education might take. They
in
little_ if any change in that
By_
Tony Barker
column l pointed ouHhatthese
-
However, there is a group who
have b~en content to view their
course. I would suggest then that
meetings are closed and held at
-
can be said to be as guilty in this ability to throw the proverbial
some class
time
be set aside to
Now that open house has be~n
places and times unkn~wn
_to
a--
perpetration. The 'silent' group
bull
as sufficient
toward
-
evaluate that particular class.
passed,
many
,people
have
-
large number of the students, In
of students
who take
-
these succeeding in this college.-
_. •
·>
-
Such
·that
a dialogue would take
-_
questioned what I will be able to_ defense of this policy of closed
courses and say nothing about
In order to do this, they must
place between the teacher and
say' in this column. Well after
meetings one -House Master said
how had the materialpresented
have some assistance. These are students where each examines
great
soul searching,
_I
have
that there were toci many people
and methodology used are. Their_ those faculty members who have
_-
the other's role
in
that class, the
managed to limit the scope of
_
on the council which,
.would
_.
·silence
appears to stem from an
·
not formulated standards for
extent to which each should and
this article to two main points:
make them unwieldy; There, are
-
-
ancient philosophy - Don't blow
each· particular class aJ!:d even did participate,_ and· in general,
Item No. 1
·
-
--
,
,
.
,
17
members on the Champagil.at
a good thing, namely, good
when
they
do have
such
·
the relative successes and failifres
·1NNOCENT
UNTIL
-
Council
_and
11 on tqe, Leo
marks.
.
_
standards,
do not adhere to
,
which took place in that class.
.
PROVEN GUILTY
·
House Council. However
·the
Item: I have yet to observe at
them. I would like to know the
-·
As a member of the "vocal
Urilike
·the
legal
system'
student council once elections 6f
this institution
a situation in name of any institution, whether
·minority",
I have to accept the
-
.
prevalerit ori the ~ontinent of
fre.shnien
ups are held
-Will,
which the instructor's theory or a ~ompany or
_a_
peace group,
fact
of
t_he tre~endou_s:
Europe, the guiding principle of
_
consist of 13 students and they_ .
posit-ion:
was
-
·so severely
which w~en wantmg a report on opp_orturuty and po_tenbal that 1s American jurisprudence (except
have meetings the time ap.d place
_·
challenged that he forced to
a pa_rt1cular
day,
gran_ts Manst College'. Thi~ c_ollege has
for Chicago, Illinois)
is
that a· of which are:published_and the
_
·questionit.-·
extensions; or accepts_slopplly
made
the
-d·ect's1_on
-a~d
man
_is
iilnocen~
until._prOven
·_stu~ent-_body_~_ayatten~)so·.-1_>~:
···----
It
is my opinion that such a done ?.r inaccurate; w~:k and
com~itm~nt to t!Y to establish
guilty. Aside fro_m C_hicago; the
really can't agree that the House_·
·
.goal
can be.attained; It requires
says
Well,_ he, tned.
-
T~ey
·
a_nd P!ov1de for its_ me_mbe~ a
most flagrant v10labon. of the
Council
meetings
are too· -
_
a lot of wor_k but that's
all
demand a~hievement. I thmk
.
meamngful,_ expenen!ial, and
aforementioned principle is right
:
un wi~ldi~g ·to
:
be open to<
.
-_.
.
really, becau~ a_ll
he has on you,
.
that
Manst
College should
.
~real' education.
My
discontent
.
here on the old.moth campii.
:
;
students ..
-
:
•
__
___
_
.
.
._
_ __
.
the student, ~s a few years rather
demand achievement.·_-
.
_
<
_-
lies
.in
the:
,reality
ofhuamn
..
:
How could I dare make such Item ,No. 2
..
>'
.,'.
.
'.
·
·
; _---
-,
_than_
that he is necessaply more·... lte iri : St ud_e nt s
_
~eek
__
·beings
and'. espec:ially·those who:.an:
outfandisl1
'statemerit'?:,:Jt
is>'/_:, .
:_;):!MY
COUNTR'vi:;
;,/;:.
:,',>_·;
0:<.-
-
:
Ir-•,
!t!~•~1fi;i!~~'.c~htt,it1{E!itttl:!:'~t:~~ifi,£1!1ff.!tt
'1'~!f
!!J:1!~1::1r;!t'ttf
i~~i,\i!!f~~tt''i;f
/ft;;.
r
·
lo~c~ and co~s1sten! argupi~nt_
.
.,
nece~~ary :one? if ;to~eges art:}<?
/
pe?pl
7 .
w_hp
w1~
:nqt
_1mpliment
'
:can_:
find
_a
copy'of these;''lc;>ok
at Na_m
_-:
Moratonum
D11.ys~
51ie _
·
·
>>>
_
· ·
1
or1s 1t something he1s throwmg
-'continue·
as mst1tut1ons which_ its spmt. In this article lhave
the-:sectiori
called - discipline'.
,
-Daily
N_ews (you, kriow
·that_.
"
>.
>.:.
r
together ?fCthe
_top.of
his head?
_
are, reflective oftheirsociety:and
trie_d to foc_us onth~se segineri~
'.
i
Before/I
·go
further; iet
-me
say:.: paper,_ the' on~- that's orily. good
·.
_
·/
>:--:_'-
,
_
You
might._ fmd that w_hen not
:
".accuo\ls
•-
ivory
_towers;_
If,
-
which do
-~ot
and will n<>t allow
'that
my
chiefreference is to'.Leo
-,
.
for
wrapping
fish) rah
a
guest
.>''.·;_
j
·:/
>:
(
-
c?rn
7
red the~e
~,♦eople
come ~>Ut this objectives
is
soimpo.rtant to the· potential <;>fMarist College _
HO:usl!;
.;where
-iiiy
body lies~: editorial
_by
some man
-rianied:'
'
·
•
---
,
7.
f1~ting and_ 1~
IS
then that
ypu
achie,ve, should rtot the means to
-
to be
·fully
reahzed. What should
dowzf'tq
·sleep.
This is to avoid
--
Stephen Decatinwho
in'
a dinner;-
r
-
begm_ to
-
rea~e
that you are
achieve
this
_
e_?-d a_lso- be
,
CONTINUED ON
5
.,
..
,anyqne
wanting to do ine b99ily
.
__
in
his· honor in 1816 said
~'My
learning something.
_
important?
-
The•
-mea!}s-
should
:-
-
-
harm; because
_w_hat
--
I· may
_
saY.:·
'.
country
,in
her intercourse with
-·
. 'doesnot
apply to his particular\Joreign
nations, may she always·
-
-
-
-
-
-
WHY
r~om
3 -
•·.-
__
-
,·
,
·
housei
_
_
_
-
__
.
_-
_
-
,
-_-
:
·.
be_
right) but my country right or -, .
·M,
a---r
__
-.,_
k
__
----_e
__
-_-_-d--
____
----,•
__
-.
__
-U
__
-
-
___
r·
--_._-._,_,g-
-e:
·n·
___
··t-
__
-
.,._
Likewise, at· Marist;.
if
yo~
.
In. Jhe minutes of me Leo-:-. wrong;''.,_TheDailyNt;ws rari this'
_
_
_
-
s111
_oked
marijuana
_
three years
-
H otise
,
Council;
·
the way the
·.
in
-
connection._ with so' called
-
.
.
.
_
__
,-
_
_
_
_
_
-
ago you were a "hippie, acid,
handling of the disciplinary cases
-
«Hon·or America" Week" whic_h
·
-
has
its share of nonsense items freak, drug addict, pot head,
is des~ribedJeaves. one tc, doubt
·was
supposed
_
to
b·e
a
_James
McLou~hlin
.r:·
also.
;:.
_
_
-
·
long
haired bum." However,
:
whether; the_-· accused has-_ any mobilization of Nixon's ''Silent
-
·
''·pe·r-
haps·
_·tliere·
·1·s
_
no
_better
now
if
.you
do_n
__
't indulge 1n th_
e
rights
'it,
-all> All that is said is
__
Majority".
The reference to
·-
B iafra,
··like
__
Vietnam,
is
h-
th
--t·d
·
t (
--
·o
·'
·
-
d
example
that}
--
the
money;
pleasures of ma1~.juah~
orhashish
___
tat
.
e/S u en
__
no na~es are:
ecatm s statement 1s suppose
everybody's
problem not just
Americans spend, on their dead. you_ are con~idered
-
an
'_'old
:everdnentioned)-
'is
a'ccused_ of
•
to hint that this country can do
-
Uncle Sam's: Both areas dictate
_
Each.year millions of dollars are fashioned, straight, square, grog
committing such an
-
offense or
..
no wiong no matter what.
.
sectors
of
--
the human race
_
spent on_ high grade
_
metallic
.
head."
·
rather the student in fact did
---
This.is a ridiculuous statement
:
suffering from war, famine arid casket
5,
va uHs,
flowers,..
_The
same
m II n n er
_
0
f
comrititt such an offense and a·
_·_that
the News made·but wliat is
-
-
perdlence.
In
Vietnam,
--headstones
and other types of
-stereotyping
is•followed among
'motion_was:madehyperson·or--
__
everi-more ridiculuous, is that
Ahamv_ee_riieans-pso·
nf~_
l_/~~e~h~r :~rsrif
memorials. To be sure; resp_ect all of Marist's sub -sub sub _ perscms unknowl). to levy a· there
are freaky people who-·
for the dead should have its cultures. Whether yo~ are ~n an - penalty
_
usually
not
~eing
'-
believe -that"my
country right
this troubled
country. Those
place. in everyone's heart. But athletic te.i.m,
in
~am.pus politics,
allo~~d the use o!the do!ffi1to~, 2r .wrong" We should always·be
who.
have
not
-
actively
does not consideration for our on-the Dean's list,pr drinking on
·--
fac:H1ti~s
for a penod of
tiJ!l~:
,: :
thankflll that these_ people.
fo:t:
participated in the
war
effort
starving brother deserve priority
the side of
the
river, you are
._,
Tll~re:1s all too mu£h s_ecrecy the most part are dymg out._The
have - made
in v o lu n tar Y over
.those
who are already far casually labeled and categorized::. -about
-~he
whole runn!,llg qf the sooner they all go
_the
better off
contributions
th rough
th e
-
b_
eyond_ any· help· we can mve
_
AJ)d,
_if_
you make your pe_
rsonal
-_._
House
__
System, t~ satISfy.cmany- we are.
income surtax_i_mposed on them.
,,.
f th
t d ts
-
I
1 t
them.
Maybe, then,- chari_ty opinion known, you are many
''
o
.
e
~
u en . n plY, as
In Biafra, however, the United
·
-
k
b
-
h
'
-
States either as a nation: or on an should
-
not begin at home but
times attac ed y someqne w o ---
..... ,;,....--
____
...;..
____
......,.;,..._;.....,__.;.;.;.
___________
___
m
. di"vidual basis,
has
done little_ rather where it
is.
most needed.
·
disagrees. ~erhaps
_this
is all
PARQUSiA
from
6
______
-
_
.
In the year nineteen sixty nine
human nature, and of course this
·
·
·•.
-·
to aid th e st arving millions.
-
that area seems to be Biafra.
o,ther,-
·who
is
__
in d_
is_ao·reem_e_
nt
··tli~t
the w_-_-
orld
•·
se_emed like it
·was
out to screw the Marist College·
This troubled area should be
.,,.
with you, has
_
every right to
•
soccer.team;_.
,By
no means am. I cutting upon the squadi In fact, I
WJi~m!lv~~~~~rn
~~:!/~~~
show.
·his
feelin~, but does be-_---
am.sayingjust the opposite.-1 feel that a disservice has been done to
the war they can indeed send_
-c1otb_
ing
Ori,e
have to label you or disregard, .a teamwhich consisted mainly of freshmen, and upperclassmen that
-
fmancial contributions to such
-
-
your opinion?· Can't
-
he merely
had very little soccer experience. I wish Donald had talked about the
relief agencies as Unicef or the_
e.xpress his opinion, without
·
?CComplishments ofa team
·that .did
so much with so much going
Red Cross
·which
are ready and
·
Marist College's Appalachian
.
mentioning yours?
-
And
-
if he
-
against
-
them. Or al:_>out
thejob
_
that Doc Goldman did, producing a
willing to help.
Reaction Club
-
will
sponsor a
can't, when he ;ittacks y~ur
unit out of a group of guys who had hardly played at all, previously,
It seems
that
A rnericans clothing drive.in c~njuction with
opinion; he ought tobe sure of , let·alone played_ together ... Donald's contribution
_to
t1_1e
team as_
a
_
depend
too
much
on the groups
from-• several
other
-
what
he's
saying; especially
manager and its number one bon were extremely valuable, and the
government to solve problems colleges. The clothing collected
-
concerning
-
your opinion.
·
Also,
._soccer.team
should
-
be grateful they have him. But why must one fill
which they themselves can, for here, along with the food and
if your opinion is general, s_ho~ld the air with sour grapes?
the
most
part,
correct: A other supplies collected on the
he read
between the
-
lines?
cancelled
check
from
the other campuses, will be sent to
Should he set specific? And if he Topic:. The Light
Income Tax Bureau should by Lancaster~ Ky. where
it will
be
. 'does
read between
-
the lines,
no means serve as a basis for a distributed to the centers there.
does he know what he's reading?
carefree
attitude
towards a
Letters have been sent
to
the
Perhaps it is your fault, for not
.
deeply troubled world. On_ the parents
of aJ day stu dents
communicating
bet~er,
but
contrary, a combination of good notifying th em of tbe drive. The
communication
is
a two way
conscience and ugly facts should clolhlng will be collected by
-
process ~nd the interpretation of
stimulate all of us to help in floor representatives after the
·
this communication should be
whatever
way we
are able. _
s tu d en ts
re turn
from
done with
-
regard to personal
While. it may
be
true that Thanksgiving
-vacation.
biases and attitudes. And
if
it
Uncle Sa_m's budget includes too Commuting stu dents may bring
isn't
right
do we have to
their
donations
to Fontaine
· t
?
many .. luxuries" such_ as space
commumca e.
Building during the week after
* *
* • •
:ind nuclear missil~ for defe>;se, Thanksgiving.
the
3verage American's budget
J._ Tkach, assistant varsity basketball coach· at Marist, has re~ently
been named jayvee. coach at the Poughkeepsie Jewish Community
Center .••
J
.
.T.
has begun work on his new book, THE GAME OF
BASKETBALL, or, MY LIFE WITH BARRY. (with forward by Joe
Lapchick)
...
This weeks YGBKM Award
goes
out to Michael
McNeely, for completely grossing out Junior Rooney's girlfriend,
Dirty Ernie. Mike's only comment was, .. I didn't know she was
standing there." •.. No
-Paccione
, you don't remind me of Tommy
McDonald...
-
**************
i
'·
l
I'
___,._
·,
· ·-L'ette·rs-
DearS,if
, , Congratulations: o~ your .fine
.supplemenLt9.
the ·last .issue. of
. '. THE
CIRCl.J:.\,:::<· : /· ·· •.· : ,.
· I thoroughly:enjoyed
reading·
· it; and
.
r
thought.:the · 1af•out,
choice· of. photoi{' were. ·very
simple,
and
yet attractively
done.
.
;
.
·
..
• . ·· •· ·
~
I enjoyedJdsc, · the· quotations.
·in. the end:margins·whichi~
my
opinion · speak loud.er• and' more ·
forcefutthan the articles.
.
Again, congratulations.
·. • · . . Sincerely,
:
)~ L.
Hores,
. Assist~n t librarian
TIIECIR.CLE
FORTHE WEEK OF NOVEMBER 24-30, 1969
:~:JLy.ou would
lik~
y6ur org~i~;tioris'\~r~r~ation
included on this
calendar, it is important that ·you contact
_Mr.
:Orosnan's office at
least-~wo' weeks prior-to the date that the event is scheduled to take
place.'
, · :
· . · ·
•.
_·. . · ·
·
. Please contact:.
'
·
'
·
.. Joseph Brosnan .·
Director of Campus Center
471-3240, Ext .. 279
. TUESDAY- November
25_
. .
8:00P.M.
Lecture
Dr: Charles. Hoyt oLBennett
College will speak on
"WITCHCRAFT AND DRUGS." ROOM 249, CAMPUS CENTER .
7:30 P.M.
Lecture
and. Discussion - King Committee
- .. THE BLACK
· I would like- to express my . · E)~PERIENCE" FIRESIDE LOUNGE, CAMPUS CENTER
thanks
fo
all ~the· students who
'
Dear
Sii;.
helped make· the ninth· annual
THURSDAY - November 27, 28,.29, JO
Marist Debate Tournament
,a·
. success.
It
is always difficult
to
.
THANKSGIVING RECESS
give up. part of
a
Saturday but
- those who served ·as· chairmen
- · gav~ up their time with a fine
SUNDAY - November 30
8:00 P.M.
,
Film:. Sponsored by Marist College Film Program. Theme: Film in
the. Forties. Title: THE RISE OF THE EXPERIMENTAL FILM:
PAGES
EDITORIAL
BABA-
The -Circle· fully endorses the proposal for a storefront
in the
Poughkeepsie area submitted by Black Afro American Brothers
Association. We feel it is a most constructive program, one that is
indeed needed by the .Poughkeepsie community. BABA's proposal
affords Marist with the opportunity to actively help the community
·in which it is located and to do so in keeping with its· highest
principles.
,
-
Furthermore
the Circle applauds BABA for this attempt to
alleviate in some way the problems of the Black Community in this
area.
However,. BABA and the community need more than praise and
mere vocal support. They need physical and financial support for
this project. The Circle staff calls for this support and calls for a long
term commitment to this cause by the Student Government, the
Administration and Faculty and Board of Trustees.
-The· BABA proposal is a good one. The success or failure of the
program is dependent upon our support. Even with our support
success . is not guaranteed - but 'this is unimportant.
What is
important is the attempt to help the Black Community. Let us help
those who are helping.
And· The Beat Goes On
spirit of generosity. Particular ·
·credit should go .to Br. Thomas
Lee . who did ·much_. to organize
the day's 1::vi::nts
and to see ·to·it
that our high school guests had a
"MOTION. PAINTING. NO: 1 ;" "SWINGING THE LAMBETH
WALK;" "TH~ LONG BODIES;" "BOUNDARY LINES;" "LE
The flags are again flying around George Washington's Monument
TEMPE_STAIRE;"
"TOSCANINI."
and touch football is again in vogue on the W~tehouse lawn. The
profitable day.
'. · . · .
: ·
·
* * * * *
city
buses that purposely blocked
the Whitehouse view -of
.
sfu_ce_rely_·yo'tirs·,·
-
··,..
Pennsylvania Avenue as well as the eight thousand soldiers are gone
from the Capital. Also gone are the half million Americans who in
Louis C. Zuccarello -----------------------------'
spite of many difficulties demonstrated to the President and all
_Dear
Sir:.·.
.
•..
.
'
alcoh~lic beverages,- open hbuse;
in part at least, because the
people
their
profound
dissatisfaction
with the government.
.... My first Jeaction-
to_ Peter
etc .. · Although
.
I.
personally
college
has
been somewhat
Nevertheless it is now business
.as
usual in Washington, D.C.-and the
· Masterson's article in last week's • supported several of these; I am ·progressive in anticipating
the
disastrous-and meaningless war in Vietnam continues.
.
Circ:le was that. he was simply
well aware that the "reforms"
need for change, rather than
The huge demonstrations
both in Washington, D.C. and San
· . "doing his thing" -via a romance
hav_e·· genirated
some. rather
simply reacting to demands for
Francisco have 'raised some urgent questions of the United States.
wit1' U~e metaphor .: in .indi~ting
vexing problems of their own
it? Whereas Mr. Maste.IS0n seems
The peaceful marching· did not end the war - neither did the candle
the Marist community for not
and are thus riot without fault. . to view the lack of a violent
holding nor the singing. Many, many Americans are asking just how
• 'being "pr9gressive."
If'
I read
3. it
is
an error to maintain
confrontation as a negative sign,
long the people will continue
to sing, hold candles, and act
him' correctly; something akin to
that' the Administration has been
I view it positively.
peacefully. How long will Americans tolerate ever stiffening official
the _"Gunfight -at OK Corral"
is ' '
o v e r p r o t e ct iv e"
·and
Sincerely,
government resistance and repression? ·
the mark qf pr1Jgressiveness.
My .
"inflexible"
in its attitude
Dr. Edward
J.
O'Keefe
The answers to these questions are discomforting. The non-violent
second reaction was simply t_o toward the·student
body, while-
Dept. of Psychology
movement to end the war in Vietnam is in the process of
characterize· such an indictment
at the same time citing a great
re-evaluating its posture. The • view- is held by many that the
as being in vogue, and-therefore
many changes which of necessity
Dear Sir;
.
,✓
government is entirely unaffected by the large arid fervent peace
not to be taken seriously. Error
had to be sanctioned by them.
: I am a deeply
concerned
rallies in Washington and.San Francisco held this past weekend. The
must. always be' taken.s~riously,~·· Students
have
a voice.
in.'. youth aboutthe basic q\ia}ities it
Ad~inistration's
statements and actions have served to frustrate the
however,particularlythe:printed,_;
practically
eyery" decis.ion of, ... takes to make the necessity for. anti-war movement and thus accelerate the possibility of.violence.
··•
error/and,t~us.
t'.feit\b'ompell~&:' m;ijor iinppr;tarice inade'..by',the'
~~ whibh I find· myself writing 'this< Thl,s ·violenc? could 'assunie the··
form'
of assinations or
guerrilla
~to··react'/alcingtfhe?Jollowing.'college_,;and•to>maintaifl'
letter to you: It iswitn'much~.
warfareorevenrevolution.'
;
-
·
. , lines. •-•
,'
>; ·/
....
,
·:)
:: .
< .·•·
: , , ..
·
.otherwise is to. ignore. tile. facts. , . heart .full wealth that I pour out
. How can these violent acts be avoided? The Administration must
kit
js-'an, erroi'.to maintain· Articles· appearing in the last
to
an·
the
person
and·
move to solve the crucial problems facing it. It must end the war in
0
that.the;
''.progressive": changes , issue• of the Circle written by
furthermore it is that concern
Vi~tnam and withdraw the troops now.
It
must dismiss from the·
· tha_t·have.occutrei:lat,Marisfover ·• students_ support this point.
If
that prompts this for
if
not then
government those who are attempting to provoke student and other
the .years -have··been by' dint· of.· 'the student body does not feel
all would if they could but then
violence. It must disassociate itself with the military and rightist.
student<
effort ,a1one.
Many. represented
by the. particular
I would · so niuch ·· like to be · elements in American society _and terminate their influence upon
members. of the facuity and students who
serve
as a liason
attested to the fact that it is
American policy.
It
must do these things quickly for it seems that
administration
have played. ah with the. administration, :they
concern that does develop into'
time is running out for Nixon and his government.
important part in initating and should resolve the issue througl1
the adam of all deep heart felt
·
supporting
tlle
·changes·
their o:wn studenf government.
warmth that surrounds all those
.mentioned
.. Faculty
and
Thus the "door to the boudoir'.'
who make it their duty to be
'administrators
have been quite · (is that
FreudiaJ?,?) has been . forthwith knowledgeable in the·
vocal over the .years concerning
~pen for a long time,_ and only
basics that concern not orily
these matters, and their efforts
timQrous characters fad to enter.
man but the_ whole- entire that
as•cwell as ·those of concerned · By a rather strange sort. of
surrounds wha( is too be and
students have beeff responsible : logic. -
(if
I interpret. his first
what is not that furthermore it
is
'for.progress.
·.
.
paragraph
corr1:c~ly),.·Mr.
definite
and remembe_r that;
2; It is
.an
error to say that
Masterson seems to imply that
'Profundity
is nothing but a
. •.there . has been no "adverse • because the college has not been
disguised absurdity,• Thank you.
reaction"
to the
"reforms"
racked by turmoil and violence,
-A Confused Student
__
nien!i,oned. __
Not _everyone agrees . that it has not yet :fme to_ ag~;
. Editor'_s
Note: We hereby·
that
the
college is· the better for that the lack .of an anarchist m
declare this National "Be Kind
having·
al,tered
Its . policies
residence": is the mark of a
To Don .Duffy"
Week. J.M.,
· concerning
:pass-fail;
responsible
second-rate institution. Is
it
not · S.H., J.Z.
atte'ndance,
classroom attire,
possible that order has_prevailed,
Stephen A. Harrison ·
John Rogener
F.M.S.
MANAGING
EDITOR
EDITORS-IN-CHIEF
EDITORIAL BOARD
SteveH~n,Joe
McMahon,John Zebatto,Jc:>hn Rogener
FEATURE
WRITERS
Joseph McMahon
John Zebatto
NEWS EDITOR
Peter
Masterson,
James Newman,
Paul
Browne, Bill O'Reilly,
Raymond Pasi
F.M.S.,EdwinPeck,F.M.S.
:
-
•
SPORTSWRITERS
Joe
McMahon
-Sports Editor
Don
Duffy-Assistants~
Editor
Joe
Rubino, Steve Sawicki, Bob Mayerhofer, Chuck Meara,
Greg
McLaughlin
JackBany,KerinDonnelly
"
'
PHOTOGRAPHY
Photo Editor -Richan! Brummett
Peter
Dovi,Bany
Smith
V"mcent
W"msch
Typist:
Tom Mahoney
David
DeRosa
ORCULATIONMANAGER
Cartoonist
Steve Harrison
Circulation:
Greg
McLaughlin,
Jack
Barry
Dear Sir;
In
view ·of s'ome rather rash
statements
made in the Circle
concerning.
the condition . of.
Leonidoff.
Field
and those
responsible for its condition, it
behooves me to say one or- two
things anent this situation.
· There· would have been no
football game on Nov. 1 S were it
not for Art Campbell and· the
crew he supervises. That . they
worked at all is evidence of their
dedication
considering
the
weather
and the equipment
available.
The soccer game played on the
previous Saturday was possible
mainly through the efforts of
the football club, the soccerteam
and again Art Campbell.
The
field
needs
better
drainage,
it needs a higher
crown, it does not need 13 days
of rain. The obvious need not be
restated
but where were all the
vocal people complaining about
the condition of the field when
we needed them to work. Of
complainers
and destructive
critics we have plenty, would
·that these people had the same
desire to work as they have to
carp.
Sincerely,
H.Goldman
. Zoot
Suits And
Major Weekends
The era of the big band is gone, Zoot suits are out and telephone
booth stuffing is passe. By the same token, the major Marist
weekend is dead and the mixer is in its death throes.
For the past two years we have made ourselves believe that such
social events will ·make a comeback. We have made ourselves believe
that an apathetic student body has caused our weekend flops and
mixer failures. This is hogwash. Students don't go to weekends
because they want to bring a girl to the campus at their own
convenience and not the social committee's. They want to spend
what they want to spend and not what the social committee tells
them to spend. This is obvious. On any ordinary weekend now there
are just as many couples on campus as there are on major weekends.
Students no longer distinguish major weekends from any other
weekend.
·
The mixer is also dying because most students would rather meet a
girl
at Sal's, the Faux Pas or Snuffy's rather than meeting one who
has been herded on to the campus and then "putting her on the
bus."
We have to stop fooling ourselves. But most important, the Social
Committee has to stop fooling itself and wasting our money. The big
weekend is out.
.
But what is in? The rat is in, Fireside lo!!nge is in, Leo Lounge is
in, the coffeehouse circuit is in and Miguel Reyna is in. As was so
adequately displayed by Mr. Reyna last Wednesday, the small
function is most definitely in.
_ All these factors considered, THE CIRCLE awards its highest
congratulations to Das Valez and Tom McDonald for introducing the
Miguel Reyna style so_cial function to the campus and to John
Innocenti and the social committee for· the Coffee House Circuit
endeavor. But we must further caution
Mr.
Innocenti against
planning any future major weekend fiascos!
INTELLECTUAL
from
4
be
done by them and by you, I
cannot answer.
A.P.C. news • The A.P.C.
is
determined
to work toward
curriculum
revision and will
concentrate most of its energies
on
this
objective. However, the
tremendous amount of proposals
is making such concentration
difficult.
Experimental
course
in
Science-passed;
to be offered
Spring '70.
Intro.
to
Contemporary
Higher
Edu cation-tabled,
Correction-Russian
literature
course was tabled, not passed.
••••••••••••••••
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
from the Staff of the Circle
·•
-PAGE6
TIIE.CIR.Cl:E
Bitsy's Bits·
.
by Joe Francese
at Howard Uriiversity.
·.:
·.,
they live their
·parts.'.The·
film
...
·
.
- :. -
: ·
. ·
_.
,'
. ;
:
,
.
._.
Congratulations are in order to
.. ·
concentrates on Ray ~d
,Alice
.,-
It
occured to me the other day
Bill McKinstry. for
·
lining_ up
Brock.
It
tells the story of.Ray's
_
.tha~
this y~ar•s;"Circle•~ wasjil~
these fine sp·eakers to. conclude·· hopes· qf establishing
~
modern
a little
-~it
too
-negative.
This
the-semester.
,
·.
Utopia
.in
an: a~andoned church
~ltimn· wm:· be. de~~c~_ted. to
.
Anyonej~te~stedin'
joining a_.· in
-'·Stockbridge;
.Massachusetts.
some of the
_more
pOSttive sides
·
rock~blues>'group-please see
.me
·-Like·
all- Utopias· it• falls
·very
ofon and off
_campus
life.
.
_
.
.
inS l
7
·
Leo>.Two. fellows fro~ a
·
shOrt
·
of its original
:
in~entions.
Great·
news.
1:he. Marist
..
:grout?.
called._ the· ~r~s Chalice
•_'.
.The:
(ilin
.:'js
b~autifully
. _
College
Lect~~
0
Senes'.1s-.µrtally, came,to;se~_-me the. otl:ier day_· photographed
and· caJ)tures
·
a
,.
···.under
way~ On-November 25 Dr._ and · asked· ir- there. were any
true sense of Americana. From.
·
.
Charles
Hoyt· will
_·deliver
a
qualified
· lea_d Guitarists or · the mountains
.·of.
Montana to
lecture titled "Witchcraft and
.
organists on campus. Hold them the skyscrapers of New York the
D!ugs" .. Last. xear pr.· Hoyt
I'd try to find so~e. These guys viewer is constantly aware of the·
.
·tnggered.
a_ campus wid~ spo~k
are_ currently ~han~g a farm
.m
_
majesty inherent in America.
hunt
__
which sent many- intrepid
Rhinebeck-
·with
·
The. Buddy
.
The. best scene in the film is
gh9st chasers shrieking through
)Miles·
Express".
It
looks like a
~:
witliout a doubt the funeral of
the. hills
,_-or.
Millbrook._ The
·
good de_al if. you're.interested
·
the Brock's friend, Shelly. Shelly
sec~nd maJ?r lecture .will be
and qualified.
.
.
"·
,
, ,is a
·former
drug addict who has
delivered on
·.
December
.-
3 by
M<;>vie
of the week.
Alice s
.
been unable to break his habit.
Tom Wolfe.
_Mr:
Wo]fe
1S
best
Rest~urant~•.
I_~ stars- Ario
In a fit of despair he commits
~own
for his c~orucle of the
_
G\lthne
.and
it begins Nov~mb~r suicide._ His funeral
•takes
place
nse of _psychedeli
7
cult~re. The
19,
at the Ba!davon The._i.tre
•?
in a snow swept Massachusetts
Electric
Kool-Aid Acid Test
Poughkeep~ie.
The
-
film
1S
cemetary. He is surrounded by
follows the. escapades of Ken
expertly
directed
·by_
Arthur
.
friends on all sides and in the
Kesey and his Merry Pranksters.
Penn
whose
la_st film w~
background
a girl plays· Joni
Kesey who authored One Flew_ "Bonnie and Clyde''··. ~enn
·
1s Mitchel's· lyrical
·lament
"Song,5
Over _the Cuckoo's Nes~ an_d probably the ~ost. ~nlhant of to Aging Children" .
.
Sometimes · a Great Notion
IS
the new Amencan directors. In
The last scene of the film is an
known as the f3:ther of the ac!d
·
~'Alice's Res~aurant" he bring,5 enigma as is the generation the
culture
that 1s· currently m
to the screen the hopes, morals, film
represents.
J leave any
·
vogue.
dream~. and
lo~ses
~of·
_?Ur appratsal of that scene to the
On December 8 Br. Cyprian
generat10n. The film y1Sualizes individual viewer.
..
·
Rowe formerly a member of
.the
the talking blues.sto.ry that Ario
"It is not so hard to die as it is
Marist
faculty will deliver a
Guthrie made famous. But it not to live.''
lecture entitled "Africa and Its
does much more. It records a
.
Victor Hugo
Relevance in the World Today".
whole way. of life.The people in
Br. Cyprian is currently studying
.the
story do not act as much as
..
,•
...
In.-
f
~rsp~ctiye
>
Ghris••·McNamclra.•
.
With the.
·conclusion
of ·the Although he is · noted for his
·
next twoi Marist games,
.one
of receiving
.
Chris
alsc;,
_
enjoys
the
-•great
.. Viking careers will setting up plays with his fine
come to-
a
clo1,e. Over the past 4
.
blocking.• As satisf,ying, as
·
any
.
years;
Ch_ris McNamara; has_
•pass
reception was the key block
played a strategic part in·,many:_ he threw.agai~st Siena to·enable
of the_ Viking wins. Chris holds
.M:irist-
to score_
its
final.<
the. school
-
record· for most-- 'touchdown and ice the game.
passes caught. in a sitigle
·year
:
-···•-Chris
is. a
.
water
skiing
50 ... This was accomplished in his enthusiast from Oyster Bay; L.I.
.: sophomore
:year;
breaking the anc:l
,
attended . St.
•
Dominick's
~rt·,.,,,,,;.\./,L~,.
,,,;
.
.
.
. _·· ·old
.i:~cord
held:_t:,y
Jim
Conroy,-. High Schqol. .f\tS.t_._-Domiilic_k'.s.
-
::_·•
·•
·'.',.-Vf
h<>;1'.'.sii:onically,'
,,
was;,. tlie(.mari
··,hf
playeft;4,
-Y.~~rs.
Q(i{
oQtbaU ~i;id_
:· :.
·
·who)quart¢rpackedJor;Chris;;He
,a
lS,9:J'Y·l!.S:,.
<;:~Pt~m,,of;,
,t:\l,e
...
·
:.-is
·
the
1
·
alL time ,leading pass basketball team: He.
is
a business
-·
·
re:ceh(er
'.in
·
Marist
Colleg(
major,who hopes to conµnue)n
.
history .. His
·
receiving
..
records·· this field after his graduation:
:·
·
will be around for a long time.
·
Chris . has been vefy happy
.
·
Ch
iTs.
h_
as-_ had
rn any
qver the support that the fans::
outstanding games· in
a.
Marist have shown the tearn·this season,_.
-uniform.
He won his blazer for
-~This
has been true, he_ says,·.
Quarterback
John
Hurley. flips back to trailiilg back Bill Dourd.is
~
they execute· a
success(~
~ptio.;:J>lay.
-
.
'
.:
.
'
,.
.
.
·.,.
·_"
:
.
an\ outstanding
performance CSP.ecially at away games
.w,here
against.
Pr.ovidence.
_in·
his: the fans. have_ to travel long
Sophomore year. Agaipst S.eton_ d~tances
,
to support the team.
hall in his Junior year, Chris, He
also
Jeels
that
the.
playing as·
if
he was floating on cheerleaders
_have
done a_ great
air,
caught
·two
passes for· job.in their support"ofthe·team.
·
touchdowns and also. caught a chris. wiU be closing out a, fine
·Two .
Fakes Later
-Parotisia·
··•
-
pass.for 2 extra points to score
·<;areer
in
.two
more games
·and.
·
VARSITY
f~om
8
·:.
-'.
all of Marist's
14
points. This nothing could be more. fitting
· ,
'
ball and hlS shot is gciod .from up
season. his touchdown
agairist than
.
to have two'. large- crowds
to 20 feet away~ He needs inore_
.,
Assumption on a
-70
·
yard pass t_um· out to
.see
Chris help lead
work
·
with
defense;: but he
·
play
_w_as
surely oile of the the Vikings to two_ more big
·should
be able•to do thejob, Pat
-
highl~gh.ts
of the
season.
wins,
-·
·
Flem~g arid Ron Palumbo are
'.
Topfo-TheEnd
ByJoeRubffio
fij!f~i~~Et~fi~l~
Peas.
And
carrots
.
.
. .
: play a big partjn Marist's plans
.
·
·
. -
. •--
.
.
· ·
•
..
. ·
·
.·-•
.
By clobbenng Providence
-31-0,
the Vikings ended a successful_ is Jiin Cosentino. At 6:2 Jim can-·
by Joe McMahon.
se,ason with a r_ecord o_f 4-3, a recor~ which, with 3:
few
more bre_aks,. play either up• front or back ·.
..
.
..
_.
. ·
.
.
•
·
__ ·
-
·
-
··_
..
' .
could have eastly ~een 6,
I.
The wm over the Friars was especially
court. Heis a good jumper and
if.
_
The r3:11ks of.Club
~ootball
_:.
Soccer
-
team; A~ Campbell and
sweet for the semors_ on the team;
it
was a great way to end a he
can
control his·o.wn tempo/
.All-Amenca
tllay so_o~'mclu~e-
the boys, Doc Goldman, a~d a
career ... !he three biggest_ plays of the game came
in
the fourth
he will get a lot of playing time.
t_he
.
n~m.es
or
Vik~g,.,;
_
Bill number of the merry men _wh,o
_
qµarter. FlISt Dean Gestal P!cke~ off.a pass ~nd tre~de~ w_ater for_80
..
Overall,
_Jhe
team has, good
._
IacobelllS and B~ ~ourdlS. They
supp_ort the
Football. Clubs
yards and a tou~hdown whlle his mother did an 01lpamtmg of him; . height and stiength;The starting
·
·
were both nomma~ed
·
rece';ltiY
.
endeavors ....
It
took all season,
Later on! Roome Vuy :ntered. the game and threw T.D. p~es to
five is
-experienced
and should:
bf- the N;C.F.A. through rat:i,Il~ bµt Barney and Noodles finally
Route Nine Ty~e_and Bill Paccione. The one to Tyne was easily the
-
give all the· tearns on
.
the·
give':!-: by. the_ coac~es,
·-and
got a taste.of th~ pre-~me st~ak
most crowd-pleasmg p~y o~ the season. Bu~~the fans weren't the
schedule_-a good battle. Depth"in
certainly they dese_rve 1t ... Next
breakfa_st
-. ,11ot_hrng hke
only. ones "."ho loved 1t.
It
1s hard _to conceive that one could be, backcourt could
·be
a problem
year's· team
_may:
find it v_ery
_
on-the-Job
_noun~hmer.it.;.
hap~1er than ~el"o/. was _when ~e hit the end-zone ... ~he pass ~o but
if
Tallevi
_and .
Cosentino . tough to replace the 16 seruors
A_nother ,first_ 1s. CO!fllng to th;
·
.
Paccione -was s1~~1ca~t
•!1
that.it t~pped off a season which saw Btll . come on, there should not be
that are gradua~ing.·There is one
B~g U -
a _3~ay B1q-cle Race
.
.
lead the te~m· m re~eptions, m _his first year as a regular. Many
too
much
•trouble.-
Although
,
area,
however,
where
no
t~ be held m the sp~ng. Teams
people c~>ns!dere~ B~ th_e most 1mpro~ed p_layer on the team this
lacking the one big man, Marist
~ebuilding
_is
.necessary - the
will be made up of e1!her 6 ?r.8
year. I d1dn
t. I dtdn t t~k
he. was so improved because I_ thought
·
seems to have the essentials for a· defensive
•secondary.
Dean
mem~ers (we have~ t dec1d~d ·
he was j~st as good a-r~ce1ver ':3~t year, b~t he never got_t~e chance
good season. The schedule
is··
Gesta_l,
:
Bill-- Ro~ney,
Jack _ yet) and-_the race ~ill ~ollow _a
to show
1C Next y~r,
if
the
y~gs
pass more
_often,
he will appear
tougher with the addition· of
·.
McDonnell,_ Don Hinchey, and
_
relay procedure-which will entail
to be a lot better still. But he 11 simply be showing you how good he
four teams that were in either
-
Dan
.
Taisson· represent
.
a unit
·
at least 3 or 4
-
hours of hard
really is .. •
·
the NCAA or NAIA post season
that was second to ncirie this
riding each- day. T~e r3:dio and
playoffs last year. Marist should
season. Don't be surprised ifthe
new~~pers
will
-give
1t. good
be well-balanced
in scoring,
ranks of All-America-are dented
publicity; the only problems are
better
in
defense than last year
again next year when four out of cars (around the oval) an~ a
with more depth on the bench.
thi~
sparkling
crew
·
will
·
be
foolpfoof system for counting
A successful season
will
depend
seruors •.. The field managers
laps.
We
expect
strong
on
how fast the sophomore
(namely Noodles, Nolan, and
competition
from such highly
substitutes adjust to the varsity
Barney Kavanaugh), who went
reputable campus powerhouses
competition, and how well the
around wa~g
people up
_at
6 as the
Tin-an<!-Racket. Club,
team does against the new teams
a.rn. would like to thank those
Z_ymurgy _(no mhumaruty
to
added to the schedule.
that
showed
up
Saturday
bicycles
~
be
allowed), the
Topic - What's Going on Here'?
Has it come to tbe attention of anyone elsebesides myself (and, of
course, you dear Charles) that our soccer team suffered all of its
losses as the result of poor playing conditions, bad calls by
-the
officials, fluke goals, etc. At least this is the impression on~ would
receive through reading Don Duffy's soccer articles or his column,
.
·
·•campus Stuff." It all strikes me a little strange. I was in attendance
·
at several soccer games this year, and it was obvious that we did
receive more than our share of bad breaks. But isn't it possible that
some of t~ schools that beat us might just have had a better team?
·.
Or did the other twms play on a different field than us? Or were the
refs always rooting for our opposition'?
It
strikes me very strange
CONTINUED ON 4
morning
to dry
up
Lake
Banana Splits A.C., etc., ...
Leonidoff for the Providence
Recognition
is deserving to
game.. The Whirlybirds are tops
Scott McKenna, Marist's answer
on their
list
(Mr.
Campilii to Frank Buck, for the 4-point
·
arranged for a helicopter to part
the waves), then there was the
CONTINUED ON 2
I
I
--·
.
.
•,
...
\
1
~Q".f5fll~.~~.i9~,!¥9
.
>
'WRESTLERS.
TO OPEN
AT YESHIVA
•..
The::
Marist J\'restlirig
·.
Team
.
the
m•JSt likely· to SU_fCeed:
llpens,its.season on.December l,
Rogan,
a junior; is• new, to.
against
.
a
:·-stubponi
Yeshiva
·
wrestling but he is learning very
·squad
·
.
,
,
·
·
.. ,
·
·
_f~t
and has shown himself to be
.
..
Th~
..
gi~ppl~rs
.
have . been
a very·strong and mean wrestler.
·
..
working:,_.
out:
for
a
month in
·
..
·
Jack Walsh has
.
shed
·
weight
_
preparation. for
·
the:. fiist
··big
·
apd
_
looks
·
to
,
be-
·a
strong
-•
match:< Although
·
captaiiis have·
.·,
candidate for· the 164 lb. class.
•
not. beefr elected Bill
:Moody;
has
·
Walsh,. a junior, finished strong
been
::assisting-
..
Coach .~Jerry·_
·_
Iasf year, although
jt
was his first.
---
-Patrick
guide
.the
teiim through
year.· on the mats: With that
its workouts.',--.
_
_...
.
.
.
.
experience
and
.confidence,
~A
total of fifteen riien' are on
Walsh should .l;iave a good yea't.
the
·squad;
seven
-of
them
.There•is_a
real:bahle shaping
returning· from last .year's club.
up in the 177 lb. division. Leo
Weight. dasses have not been
Larkin, a sophomore who came
definitely. filled yet
-it
appears
·:
9ut for the sport
·in
the closing
.
thafJoluiny
Eisenhardfwill be
weeks
·
of last
season,. and
·
·
the' first grappler on the mats at
freshman
Jim
Lavery are really
1:18
'lbs.
:Eis\~nhardt
·.
was
going·at it.. Both boys are very
-
originally
:.:scheduled.
to· go
.
strong and fast for their size, and·
-
·
against
the
t_2'6
·
1b. class.
eith~r will do well against varsity
However
,a
serious injury
-
to
-
competition.
·
Kevin
·O'Grady·
has forced him
All one· has to'say about the
to keep losing wdglit.
·
191 lb. class
is
that Bill McGarr
<:
Sophomore
I
Mike''Candon,
·
·will
be wrestling there.
A
senior,
who
,w_restled
for two years in
McGarr has been phenomenal in
higlr school seems to have •the
his
past two seasons.
,Lacking
126 lb.
cla_ss wrapped up:· outstanding speed, Bill relys on.
Candon
.
is a· quick aggressive
.
his great strength and knowledge
wrestler
who relys
on a
·
of wrestling
to
.
carry him
·
phenomenal sense of balance to
through.
.
In Perspective
keep control of his opponent.
At
·
present
_
the heavyweight
.
Senior Pete Masterson will be
situation
is
cloudy.
John
the
-
big· man at
134 lbs.
Redman
could wrestle there
Masterson.has wrestled.for three_ once he heals a preseason injury.
years at
..
Marist and
will
-be
•
·
Several injuries ltave already
looking for
_a
big'senior year.
·
occured which could weaken the
either
118
or
1 26 lbs. is
freshman Lance Lipscomb while
Bob Sullivan is after the 126 lb.
slot. Rico Valez is working to
knock- out either Bill Moody at
142 lbs. or Pete Masterson at
134
·
lbs;
Another
Freshman
George Finn, is anxious to br<i_ak
in at either 191 lbs or as a
Frank
Attonito
'Every
team should
.
have the
.
tea1it. John Redman has not
problem
Marist
·
has
_in
its
even· worked· out. yet as· he
'
14 2-15_0 lb. classes. Bill Moody
·
suffered a broken collarbone in
and Bob Krenn are both capable
early October. Kevi!l O'Grady;a
of winning in either
class.
At
this
senior, suffered a fractured rib
·
point it seems Moody will
_
be
last week and when he will
dropping to
.
the
,lower.
class; return is still uncertain .. Mike
Moody had a poor start·but by
'Andrew
didn't even have
.
a
the
·end
of the season he was one
chance to warm up when he
of the most electric· wre'stlers
·
suffered a dislocated shoulder in
,around.
Very aggressive,•· very
his
first. practice after soccer
.
strong and highly, experienced,
season. Andrew is lost for the
·
Moody is out to start this season
first semester. Pete Masterson
·
the way
·he
finished
..
up last
-
was hit also as he suffered a
·
_
year's.
·
·
_
·
_
minor anh·
kle. injury. However it
·
.
Bob Krenn' has just finished
-·
ap~ears e w,ill be able to wrestle
the soccer season.-but·he looks
agamst_Yesh1va;
;-
,; _..:,··.
··
,,,
i.like'.>ii~
<wrestled
;aU!:'Y~ai:
..
1::.,Pus~g.th:e
._a,b~ve·-1:ll-~ntioned
····:·:!Aiiotnet·qufclCgfapp}.et;'·Krenn
1s
~-iior,_o,wrestlmg·.,.<p~~ltlons•rtare
· :
."agiiiii/6uckihg·''fof
'a•:.:.sfof-fri
::,~everal
· aggressi_ve'
wrestlers
_wh,o
·
.. _
.. M·
'd
•
·R·
.,,_
..
_,. ·::·:-,_
·,
· .,·
·--are
newcomers- to the··sport.
,
-
:·
·.:.M\
1s\b~rMattJlbg
0
an
seems struggling
·
for a position
-
at
-
heavyweight.
.
After the Yeshiva match, the
grapplers come home for their
orily first semester home match
against Southampton.
.
The
matmen
finish
the
semester with matches against
Trenton· State on December I 0,
and Kings on December 12.
The bulk of the schedule,
eight matches, comes after the
semester break with the two
biggest matches being
·
agairist
C.W. Post on February
4
and a
home· match against New Paltz
on F~bruary
1 L
Campus
Stuff
~--
by Don Duffy
·
It.
ju·st has to be
-
an exciting
yards
for
the score. This was just
heaven we bid adieu
.to
Marist
-
day. when it starts with the noise· one· of the mariy great plays
Club Football
.this
year.
::.
of the·
'helicopter
·hovering over
little Dino made Saturday. He
BITS-N~PIECES
·
.
.
.
. ·,thefieldinanattempttodryit,
recovered
a·fumble-and
Our beloved
editor, Steve
-
-
...
lj:;i:'
};
,
:::'!;,~;ii::
.<
r:
}:1
ti~;
·":--~'.!'.
'
I
L
I
I
or when a maintenence man tries
_:
iri tercepted ·
__
two passes. One
Harrison has to get some kind of
·
todcy
it by burning:it.
He
still
·
thing many fans didn't
.know
'record
for getting two·speeding
:
_couldn't.
understand why the
..
was that 4is: arm \vas· badly
·
•tickets
in less than 20 seconds.
··
match kept going out when he
·.
injliried yet he played·one.of the
·_
With people like him running the
·
put• it iri: a puddle of water.
.
best· games ev:er. Tom Cooney_ paper no wonder we have terible
·
It
·
has been frequently said
line for Marist. He feels that the
.Anyhow
the water problem was
gets
.an
A+ for Saturday's game.
editions: .. News Editor
John
that the offensive linemen are
Iirie has been working well this
·solved.
and
.'the
charge· was
'.Besides
the touchdown·~pass he· Zebatto gets an_ award as the
t'he most
over-looked
and
season.
He
says
that one of the
sounded of'let the game begin';
almost' broke away on a kici<-off cheat of the year.
It
seems John,
under-rated
.
members
of a
reasons for this is the constant
Marisdtruck first with a
,tS
yard
.
going 6() yards·· before
:he·
was_ while running· in the· Turkey
football team. The only time
talking of the different linemen,
.
nm·
by Bill Dourdis hopping in
stopped; The deferisi\ie plays of
·
Trot, became incensed with the
that the average fan concerns
helping
each
other out. One of
for
.
t-he touchdown ..
·
Hudson
the game -were just ainazirig.
idea of beating his roommate
himself
with
an offensive
the satisfying moments that a
Hurls riext scurried around left
·
<'Gentle Ben·" jy McDonald and
Tom McNamee. Running dead
linemen is when his man beats
linemen can enjoy is when a
end
..
for 38 yards and set up a
Marty Keeley b'oth intercepted•
last and with no one insight
him and gets to the quarterback.
back runs through a hole that
.touchdown·
pass to._ "Crash"
.
key passes to stop· offensive
·
except a giant ant with no legs,
Fans always seem to see this and
you have opened. Frank feels
Cooney. ~hen-John runs for 38
.
threats. Don Hinchey, Henry
John decided he make his own
forget the many times he has
·
that one of the highpoints of his
yards· there is· no way
.you
can
Blum and Danny Faison made. course one that would be about
handled his man. Frank Attonito
career_ was in the Assumption
-·
1ose.
·
Ron Vuy came in_ as the
great .tackles one right after the
2 miles shorter than the original
is an excellent example of this.
game when he opened a hole
fourt'h
quarter
began
and
other. Bill Dourdis and Dicky
one. John finished 16th without
Oftentimes going both,ways, on
large enough for a· hack to
.
quickly•
passed
for
two
Hasbrouch picked up
_157
and
_
sweating and also accepted his
offe11se at right guard and on
scamper
into
the
endzone
touchdowns.
(I'm-sure
glad
121·Yards
respectively
in
stick
joyfully.
What.
a
defense at middle guard; it is
untouched:Frankfeelsthatthe
Marist has no offensive threat)
establishing one· of· the best 1-2
du!Ilmy!!!! ....
We understand
only_ the ardent Viking fan who
spring game against Iona was the
The··nrst
one came-.to Route
·punch-in football today. I
guess
Jim Dorian is starting
a
new
.
knows that no. 64 is Frank
most satisfying victory of his
Niiie·Tyne on a 29 yard jobber
married·.life doesn't tire the fast
column in the CIRCLE called· Attonito. Going both ways is
career.
He feels
that
the
right· over the
-
middle. Jerry
Greek at all or
_maybe.
he
fs
Student Out Of Focus after }lis certainly
an honor for any
offensive line played superbly,
·
scored with two Frairs hanging running away from Jo-Ann. Billy
run in with the Marist pole ...
If
football player and 2 way tackle
both
in_ opening
holes and
·
all over him. Being very elated
Iacobellis couldn't play due to a
you ever get a chance to meet
Frank
(or two way guard'?)
protecting the passer.
-
.
after the score, Jerry ran up and
leg injury but we understand
Jim's crazy sister Nancy and her
certainly handles both positions
Frank earned a decal for his
down
the
sidelines
tE:lling that he was awarded socialable
-
·
adorable friends (Nancy, Anne
very capably. Fran~ certainly
excellent
performance in the
everybody how good he was, He guy of t~e year 31ward wit_h his
·
or Maureen) pass it up
...
Lets
has as much spirit as anyone in
•.
opener against Plattsburg this
convinced one seven year old kid
famou~ list of ruc~names. (The
give a big hand to the Marist
dub football and can often be
season. He feels that the Siena
.that
he was all American
Lee Sisters). Chris McNamara
cheerleaders
who
did an
heard
shouting
words
of
game, thisseason,wasoneofhis
material after pounding him over play~d his last game of ~s career
outstanding job. The reason it
en c o u r a gem en t to
his
finest. Looking forward to his
the head with his helmet. Last and It was a d!1fldy. Gomg both
might not seem that way to the
teammates. (rip his throat out!)
last game in a Marist uniform,·
seen Jerry was telling Mr. Vicky
ways
some_hmes
he was a
fans was because they gave them
One of the bigger Viking
Frank
has seen many hard
how. great
he was!!!!
Bill v~luableassetonthefiel~.(That
nosupport,sorah,rahthat..
I
players Frank is 6'0" and 210
knocks
and
bruises.
To
Paccio~e caught
·
another great
wdl be five d~Uars, Chris) La~t understand Alcholics Anoymous
pounds.
It may be hard to
appreciate the value of lineman
pass from Vuy for a 49 yard games of semor co-capts_ Bill is starting a chapter on campus
imagine but in his high school
like Frank one must look at the
tally. Bill has already headlined
M~a~
and Don· Ronchi ~nd
with
headquarters
at the
days at Chaminade Frank was an
statistics. It is no coincidence
the Newburgh Press as being a theI!
~s
no w~y
!
can possibly
gatehouse. I think they are too
outstanding sprinter running the
that Marist has one of the best
star so maybe they
will
give him dese:nbe
therr four years at
late to save those people ... Well. 100 and 220 yard sprints in
rushing attacks in the naion. It is
the paper now, (I wonder
if
the Manst
except GREAT. Bob
that's about all for this week.
addition to playing 4 years of
the offensive interior lin
:men
Catholic News will run a feature
Harper, Bill Leber, Joe Ritz,
Basketball and Wrestling start
football. A native of Westbury,
like Frank who open the
llolcs
on you this week, Bill boy.) To Fatty. Towers and big Frank
Dec.
I.
How does a three day
L.1., who majors in History, he
to enable the backs to pie:; up
be serious, Marist scored one ~lt~rut~ were all over the field
bicycle race in the spring sound
has been developing an interest
yardage.
other touchdown that coming m b.rg wm Saturday. So Football
to you Let us know
Be
in lacrosse
and also. enjoys
from
defensive
gem .. Dino"
•6_9
ends on a big winning note,
Good, Love D·uff.
watching basketball.
Gestal when he intercepted a so as the football players drift·
This is Frank's 3rd year on the
Frair pass and ran it back 60 slowly
·to
their
touchdown
◄
I'
I,
._.
...
;
.
·
g:~:·
;:{
::~:=~i:::f)frni~~~:~;->·
Jan/23.
~.~.;.:
....
; .....
: ..
;;.~New
Haven·.-·•
Jan. 28
•• ,.-;;;:••~;~
.... :;"···--···
....
Nyack
'
Feb.,7 ... ; .......... .,. ...........
New.Paltz
.
·
Feb.
IO ......... :; .. : ••
: ...... ~.:-:.storiehill-
..
Feb. 17 : .......... ;., .... ~.;
•• :;.;
...
;
Siena
·.
•·
...
Feb
•.
19.
;:;
•••
;;.;:; ••••••
;.~:sacied
Heart
'
-
:-::L
li;)ij.f
~;~~:::I:::~;:~~i1~~i~;•:;
Coach Ron· Petro
·
has decided
:on
a
14
nian basketball team this
year.' With five lettermen
r,etuming; the team
is
confident
Ray Charlton· co-captain.
·
:
Qt:c;
1
'
••••
:;.;;:
•••
;
...........
:
....... Yeshiva
:,·
__
Dec;):12 ..
~;-.;
........ : ........
: ..... ;
Alb.any
Dec.
13
;
........... : ...... ; ...........
Queens
Dec. 26~29 ••
;
................. New Jersey
- •• ;:
••••••
:·.;
•••
;
.... :Kiwanis Touma·ment
Jan;l3 ........
i ........ ; ........ ;:.
W. Conn •
Jan:·
IS .; •••
;
•••
:: •••
Lo
....
~;
••
Plattsburgh
•
JaJJ.
'I
~
...................
; ..........
Kings
Pt.
...
Jan,
31.: ......
,
.. ; •• ;.;: ............
Oneonta
Feb.)_:~
...
;.; •• :.;: ••
: ............ ;; .. ,
..
J<irigs
Feb.
S .....
;
...........
;
....
;;
...
Monmouth
·•
;:
F~b.13 ••••
;
........
:
...
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Southampton
_<_
Feb;
.14
~
...
o.;.,,.u.-.
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.
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Dowling
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~,,!",!.,(Jf
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~Ra,
~to.,,
Rori
~if':.;,
~,•T.ie,;;!im
.
,
Standing
(L.
to ~)
-Coach
Ron Petro,
Dennis
C~tin~ Brian Mcqowan, Ray Manning, Bill Spenla; Joe Scott,.
Terry McMac~;
Bob
..
Ullrlch,
J. Tkach (mgr.),
Bany LaCombe
(mgr.).
. ·
·
.:..
•
C
•
,.-
••
,
••
•.
_..-
.:,·
... •··
,,.,,.,i•::'.·:.::·,;,,·.·-·,
..
,
..
'.c·,1·0···
.
.
.
.
·
/-:
;IF.SI
_J,:,:_:
--,
,
....
,
.:
--•.
~
.
of having
a
good sea.son; ~th
•·
a~ay a fe~ fu~hes
~
height ~d
,
fill
fu,
at, center or fo~ard and
;_
Rich Talievi: Rich
will
see a lot
the ultimate· objective· being to
weight, Ray makes up for it with
he gained
.
valuable·. experience
of' action as
·he
can· handle the
.
better
last'.
year•~
fine-
19-8
his
knowleclge o~,the g,ame and· last year as·a·sub. He has a great
. ·
.
record:
.. . .
·
·
.·
.
.
•·
.•
-
his·grea~ ~nticipation.
·
·
....
,
jump shot and can take the
CONTINUED
ON 6
The· starting five- looks
.solid
·
,
.
Heading the backc.ourt ~ill be bigger
men away from
·
the
·with·
four
1
et t er
in
en·
c9-captain
Ray. Charlton.
basket. Joining Ullrich up front.
,commanding
the
posiJions.
Charlton,·a transfer last season should
be sophomore Brian
Team leader ap.d co.captain Bill
from
Suffolk
Community
·
McGowan. McGowan led the
.
Spenla
will
be teaming with high
·
College, averaged 12.0. He
is
_in
.
freshmen
last
year with a 16.3
school teammate (Don
·
Bosco
great shape_
?,OW
and looks
~
.
average. Brian· is a good shooter.
High, Ramsey,
N.J.)
Joe Scott to
thol!gh he will lead the team
m
·
and will
·be
a. valuable substitute
fill the forward slots. Both are
the fast break as well as in
'
for Scott and Spenla throughout
excellent off the boards and
shooting. The other backcourt
the season.
.
.
.
possess greatjumpingabilityand·
position will probably
_go
to
.Others.·
who
will
play
timin~ Both have a tremendous
sophomore• Ray Clarke. Ray important roles in the forecourt
competitive attitude and
.
they
averaged 10.~
~
for the
-
freshman
,-
a re
.
so_ p horn ores
Terry
'
are very strong.1Jtey should be
last year. He
IS
a steady player
McMackin, a tough
6:2,
200
able
to handle
the taller
who can shoot~ ballhandle and with
a
strong desire and good
forwards with no problems.
pass,
as well
3S
play defense. He rebounding
power;
Dennis
-At center
will be Ray
1s a tou~ ballplayer, who, once
Curtin, a
6:4
center who will get
Manning. Manning.is
not. as
he
gets
used
to varsity
betterwithexperienceandSteve·
flashy as some of the others but
90mpetition wilI be a vital.cog in
Shackel,
a
6:3
swing man who
he.is a
great
team ballplayer who
the Marist attack
•.
•
.
can shoot the eyes out of the
gets the
job
done. He did average
For the first
time
in Marist's baskeL·
'
··
13.3 last·year and
was
second on
history there
will
be a strong
In the
•
backcourt will
be
a
the leaf!! in rebounds. Ray
w~
bench. Bob Ullrich, a
6:4
junior
handful of inexperienced players
also named to two tournament
lett_ennan from las~ year will be
.
backing up Charlton and Clarke.
teams last year. Although giving seemg a lot of action. Bob can
Probably the best of the group is
.Bill"Spenla,
co-captain.
J
~··.BABA
Pfoposals-?BiSCUS.Sed
Peisfij::0,1,e·ee
eo111mu11ity
• •~
•
•
•
-
I
.',.
.,
•
1
;
by
Das
Ve)ez
'
~mritunity
organizations which
wel~omed by the c~mrriunity ..
•.
In
a ·.well.~· oiganized.
and.
fully.' endo.rsed
the cultural·
· Mr; Pren ting; an· assistant
sophisticated
· presentation,
. center.
. .
·
. .
professor of Business, asked if
.BABA explained ·and:· discussed
·
The , discussion · before• the
.
the equipment necessary; for the .
· • their storefroJJt propqsal
·
before · ' college•··
body. fast · Thursd·ay,' was · program · could .not be borrowed .
. the·· facultf·.studejits
<
and
ari
important
step . in: BABA's.
,A
;representative
from Vassar .
.
.
administrators
·of
the· college
drive· for; moral. and. ,firiaricial -stated that ·a "second hand"
· · commu'ility .this past Thursday;
suppoi:Lfrom the Marist College · approach
to the community
1'he presentation be~n v,'ith_a
Community. •.. · '.•.
.would contribute to the .already.
brief historj,
of
the wqrk that
.. ·:The.theme ofthe.pres,entation
racist.
i_mposed ·inferforit-y
: BABA has dorie. concerning the
·
was
t,hat
while
the
good
complex,
that
plagues Black
pi"opo,5.al.
BABA had-considered
intentions of people are helpful
communities today.
.
this program· last semester and
that as far as the black people of
Dr. Gold man,. an associate.
submitted
i
to
the• Student
the. community
are concerned
professor of physical education
... ·cquncil a tentative budget this
(and apparently nationally also)
at Marist, asked if it would be
past,_stimmer. However, since the . the-blacks cannot simply follow
practical
to perform.
the
Coiihcil -had .. changed its system
·
paternal- advice but 'i:ather. must
renovations · involved· with the
of _allocating funds the proposal . be led by black leaders with . storefront by using
:i
labor.force
was ·not
considered .. BABA
.
both moral and financial backing
from
. the
Marist
C9llege
:
.
'·..
.
/·
'
.
.
'.
-'•_
.··_
.
,
:,
...
'
'
Dr. David Miller explains su~mary of his research. to audience.
· submitted
a more
specific
. from
all
people.
co.mmunity.
Rudy·
Silas, a
pi:oposaHhis fall and this one is
A good
indication
of the . member of BABA, pointed out
.nowbefore·th~C.ounciL.
,:.
-receptivity
by the
college
thatifthecenterwasnotmade
· BABA
:decided. to use·: the
community
of the
BABA
attractive the youths of the area
· Union Stre_et Center
•
for .their
proposal is apparent from the
would riot gravitate·to
it
and the
program since
it
contained
an.
dialogue of the meeting. ·
program
would faiL_Ronnie
_attic ·and aud.itorium. The group .
.
Dr. Balch, a history· professor,
Pearson noted that the labor
also decided that coordination
,at Marist,
asked whether a
needed
for· renovation
would
:with• the Vassar ,Urban Center
cultural center was·· desired by
require
more
than
just .. a
R
.. ·:
:
. ...
.
.h• F..
.
·a-. . a··.
.
would.
also
fa'cilita.te
.their . the· ,black
community
...
of . temporary
commitment
no
·e•···
s·
e: a· ..
r··
C
...
-:
u· ·n •·· ·e·.
·.. .
-
;Program ......... ··
Poughke.epsie ..
Mr.·
Tarver, a ·matterliow enthusiastic and that
.
.. -
. · · .
, .
.
·.
·
•.
··BABA
also
·Wanted
to
black.teacher.from
the Middle .the need
for such prolonged
. -
. .
.· · .. · ..
·.
·· . · ·:
: • . • . •· ·
. .
determine their statuswithih.the
Scli?ol,
1
respollded
-that
;a labor
~ig_ht jepordize·
the
t·
.·
.
· - .
· .. ,,
··
·
. ·
.Poughkeepsie- community
and.
cultural center for Poughkeepsie . progr~m•1f,1t was dependent on
.
.
t
'
, •,
.
·
,
e , -'.
, · ·m
, .
-:
..
~
- ..
-::--.
thus .. sounded· the ·community
was
-definitely·
p.eeded by._ .the, ,. student help.· . · . _
., ,
.
·
·
..
:
(;/
.....
··0'
'n"·.
'' ·.,
·,·
·,;,,,
..
·.· , .. ,
.•.,-·.
out·for
opiruons·•abotit-the
·
·cultutally'deprivec:rblack1foflhe:·
..
:'
..
,·';
. .,:,.· :-:· ...
·.-.·•,••::,.,>:,;
..
,.,,.,.,.-~-··"'
•,,.-:
• , 0·•
··•< · ·· :·-- --·--
·_ •
·
•• · · .-.
•
•
· •• , •.,
,~,.
t.l
W ~. ;
:i
·:
·: ·,,·
0
~·t'J::"'
~
.. •.,::-:,.
inquiry,1was ·a ,public-statement
-
'·,:,:
·.
· , ...
:..-,:.'
:;-·:
·
·.'
7 :.:.-·,; . ,
·
.-,-: , ..
-•:•.
• ,. • '
'··..
-
• ·.
•· ·
·
i: . .
-
:· -_--;
~t·
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, :_--{
_,: ·
'_>t:
--:·'.
;~:g::
f
~0~: ··;.:•::~.:,::~;;_:
__
)~:·:.<i?m~·~a·!Jl~?:;~:J~e;ifrc"s~1t_:'>cff::')rus'.~·.:·~'a,~~-f~~Al}.at;~µi~#e~:··woA1cf~:ef!'::''t·•.~;f_~~~•~~FI!"~N-
2 "_;"· ·::
· ...... •
·.
.·
i~~-~:~=!d~~
;\:·-:\:·:
l:•~·'6~-··9·~
·:R~-e.:,y'
n;~a-r·d·:
.·-
:·
c~:
.
-.,
-
.c:
·
the. Testing
and .. Counseling
...
e?(penmental-:,counselilig
\with.
-
.·,.•
..
.
_. .
.-
..
·. _ .
_ ,
·;;
.
- .
.
.
ti_'.-.
.
.~enter, pre~e~t~d a Sllffi!Jl~ry:of ., freshmen:".'--·.
:.:-
_:·-.
·_:c·:
:, ,
-
· ·._:
s
k.·._•
·.
u·
:··,
tI,': ·
~
. ·. _
. ·.:
: : ..
,
..
'
.
.
. . . . :
.:·,
·
the ·research'
he has· been .' Although
psycholog1sts-·.a1so
;..
f
·o
ge· · .:-,
· ...
:',.R··:
'·.·
·
·· ■.,
_-,
.·.
·A
. .
d·
.
. ,_
'.·:· .. c.o·n._du···c.ti~g·~.1.··1:4-i·in.·_m.
·e·di·.
:.·.a.te.
aha
.....
;-.·d·o.··
.m.·
·g···.
r.·.e.s~ar
..
c.h
... w
...
ith
:v.·1.·de
.. otap~.-d -:·.. ' -
.
.; .
. '._.
:
.
.:-_'.\:.'.:.:·:, .
·e·
C·.e1ve.·s
..
:.·.
·w·ar
·,l~:-;·::. ·
..
,de1aye_d·audiotapean~.videotape,.;,playback.oftherapeuhc
,
· ..
·
__
.·' ...
~-
/>·,:··
. ·.·.,
· ...
·.·.
·:i:>:":.<'-·
··.
·.··
..
··p1ay~ack
of-.gfoup/couiiselirig.:;:coUnseUµg_,::prefer..•)mme~iate.
R. . ·
a·
··.,.
, ·-..
·
. '"
•;,_
'.fr':::.>
- . ::
The ':research, :was_ pitrt of;'Dr~ :)pla yba~k; .Dr; , Miller~s. ·results-
_· . ·
.e
nte ·.·
·._
·
:
Th~-<Z6l~mbia. Scholastic Press ·~
.. photography/'but-
.. stressed the
f\, ·/ , ' . :•
,M.i!let's_, Do<ftor3l
,pis,sei::t!!Jion
>:
sh'~w no .statis!i~llY:}signi~ic~t
:.
,,_ ._.
-.
"~
.·
_
·
· Association,
: a nati on'wi d_e
r
~ !leed••
for·
adequate cap_tions
_to
(:,.-, :
.
. . which also.st:rvel:l-~ ._the basJS_
c;>f. d .. 1 f f e
r
e n c e
b_ et w_
~
e
1:1
. -
•
By Anne Berin,ato
·
.ye'.arbook-r_ating _o_rgariization, -~terpret
and. supple-!Il.ent. th,e .
,:¼:·~\.,-• _
-l'!-•-~10,000 ,resea_rch .grant _to h.me~of:plarback
_cond1~1~ms
_· . · f
-·d -
d . r~cently·awarded a·second plac:e
pictures.
It
seemed.evident that
_,;.: .
-:
,,
· : MarISt -College from, the. Office (that
is,- 1mmed1ate . ~_1th·
A group
0 ..
stu ents an •Jrating to the,1969 Reynard. The·
the officials liked the section
.~,--:,.
·of Education, :D_epartment of· _delaye4~. ~owe".er, Dr._~Miller's, faculty of ~anst _College_,have_ yearbook,'·edited
last year by
entitled·.:.'T-he
Unforgettab\e
;'::·· ::-· ·
Health,;Educat1on
and.Welfare .res1,11ts·:i~~cate t~at v~deotape _rent~d a_ski lod~e on ~ospect.
Fred House,and Dudley Davis;•. Years.".'.fhethrustandef!ectof
•:~::·
:_ · ~. . . (fIEW).- "The ~EW ProJect
~!15 -
pla)'.'b_ack.1s
~ore. e~fective t~an
.·
Mount_aui, . near Benruallngtond a·chieved a total ·of 820<out of a ' . ~his·
tho ugh t.;, pr_o
V?
king
..,~--: .. :· .• · :espec.ially dt:51gne~
foJ:
_group ~ud1otape-playb3:ck m enhancmg
Vermo~t.
!
18
e>pen_
to
, a~ , .. ,possible.
1000
points.-
.This
ass em~l_age of
meJ!lorable
·
.. ,.,;,'
.\
_
_counseling
with ~tudent~
µ1
the.'. self :·concept-1de~l self, .c~J?-Cept.~
:rese_:i;vat1?11:s
may• be made w1th . marked
the .first time thaf a
photographs !eflected highly on
.:: . ,·
-:·
,: Te_ac~er :EdJ.lcation' Progr~!Il,'' c.o~gruence. "Jtfs.my_ °-R1!11on,"
··. t~e.a.dffilllt~rators,Qf th e lodge. , . Marfst
yea·roook.
has
been
the,. creativity
of, last · year's
' :, D!- Miller.~~!
·~bpt)he reSl!lts . Sa.id
Dr:'.'. _M,1ll~r,
.. n1.at
. Lo
C
_<tt~_d i,on
J.>rospec,_t
recognized for a.nysuch citati.on
Reypard~s staff. .·
... · ·
.
.. -
..
·
-:
.-~;tll_u_s
,f~r. appe,ar SIIllilar to i-the
CONTINUED ON
2 .
:
M.o1:1n¥.ft,£1t.
.talces
a~out ~wo,
Tlie C.S.P.A.; · in:commenting
, Wit~ t.h~ success of last year's
-··
pre.v,10)-1.S
study
which
.
r:
~:~~
--;hou;,t<?lkt to.the .. on the.merit.of
the Reynar(,i,
bookmmmd,.t~e
1970Reynard
,
-·u-·,,·,
··o··
g.
s'
,·o·
n·
e' ·.
'Sp-ea··ks
-~
-~{.:~%k\~t~~~rit~sn!!::~~
i~iti:.~p~edt~~6~~h~;%n:~ll:
:.::Jl.ti6~
0
Jt;ro~.
0
uc·~.f~
0
~t.a~~;.
•
•
•
•
:
-
0 -
:
<? •
.
~
· ·
es • s
areas
tn
.
~
e~ '
.
caref1,1f
planning and a desire for - . yearbook.
.
•
••
:
_
-
-
•.
•
•
_
1
•
•
_
•
·
are fif~een -and twenty lll11!Ut~s excellen.ce." The layout,
in
the
!he prest:,nt st~f 1s. head.ed by
.. .
.
.
,
_.
resp~c;tivelyJro-!Il. the lpdge. . ·.
opinion of the judges, "shows
an
ed1t?t-1n-chief V~ V{_rnsch, and.
-
..
1
~
•
l k· St d ·
.
_Acc<?mo;d~tlpn_!; include a'. understanding of.the principles
he_ 1s __
ac~omparu~a by lay<>ut
7-
•
on a e
U
y
-.
ldtc~en, . ·.
<lini.
n.g room .• l~unge,
of unity. balance, and contrast.,,
editors·. Rich Davis and Kevin
.
.
•-. two and a half baths and fifteen
C · · ·
·
· · · ·
· ·
ed
Devine
S 1
f
thi
· '
·. . . · ·
. -- .. ·
·
·
: . ·
·
· ., -
,
•··
.
... ·.· , .. beds
•1tis
available for individual : · onstructtve cntJctsm was. aim
.
. . .
a es
or .
s year s
By.Fran_
kD~nara .
- Spring,'
of:•
1969
arid· o·r~.· i~nt.als
at: three .dollars _per
at -~ertain p~ints, especially ~he
book_
will
COJ?meJ?,Ce
this week
·• Rehwoldt is the Director- of.the, person per: night family rentals
desire : for ,a . mon: ~xtensive
under _the d~ection
of Tom
· Dr.·· Daniel A>Livin~tone,
· Lecture Series>". -~ · ·
•
. -.
, · of the entire lodge for a week· :coverage o~ academ1c mterests.
Ula~wi_cz, with :the date of
· Professor
of.
Zoology, at Duke:.
-
Di . .
·Livingstone p~ented.
a·.:
for seventy-five dollars.
· In. ~valuating. the book,. t~e
. publication scheduled for Jwi.a!
University, delivered
a
lect1,1re
on
lecture on his work:in the field
CONTINUED
ON
3
en t1 cs
comm ended
the
_11, 1970.
~mpus on Thursday ,.November..
of ecology
in
lalces
in
Africa, and.
· ·
13 at 8:00 'p.m. in Room
249.
.
the. work· of. his friend,
Mr:
Dr.' ·Robert·
E .. · Rehwoldt,
Robert Kendall, who discovered ·
Director of the, Environmental · ·
··
f
·
Sciences
. Lecture
Series
at
a new:. inethod
o
counting
M
.. ar.ist,•
.·.in.fr, o. du.
·c._ed.
Dr.
pollen
grains
through
·the -
ecological proc~
in sediment
·
Livingstone; whose le~ure was
many tens of thousands of years
~ntitled "African Lake Study'\
old on the bottom of· African
. Prior to serving as Professor of
J;a kes.
By •
finding
the
Zoology~ Dr. Livingstone served
.-
·
as·:--Associate
Professor
of
approximate number of pollen
grains trapped in any given time.
Zoology at- ·the.- University of
period, one
is
able to. derive
Maryland, · special
·
lecturer in
certain
characteristics
of the
Ecology and Biogeography at
type of environment • · heavily
Dalhousie
a nd -. laboratory
wooded,
flowers, ice, barren,
assistant in Generai'Biology and
etc. This type of work-Which Dr.
Ecology at Yale University.
.
Livingstone is carrying on could
He is a member of the· Nova
S.cotia Institute of _Sc.
ience, the
. be very valuable to botanists and
ecologists to be used in other
A m er
i
c
a n · · S
O
c
i
e
t
Y · ·
0
f ·
lakes all over the world.
E c h
t
h Y
O
I
O
g
i s t s a n d ·
A brief question and answ·er
Herpetologists, Sigma
Xi and the
period. followed the lecture. A
·American Society of Naturalists.
more h:n1.1y technical
lecture
The Environmental
Sciences
19
u
Lecture
Series ·was
started
was
presented
by
Dr.
through
a SI 5,000.00 grant
Livingstone on the same subject
from the I.B.M. Corporation in
COl'fflNUED ON 3
John
Hurley, rolling to his
left,
lofts a
T~D. pass for Tom ~ooney, just inside the flag.
·'!-·--
··•··-
~.---
~-
-
Me~bers of the Tlieatre Guild held audiences sp~llbound in theh prodtl.ction "Incident at Vichy"
Thr0i9h
A
Broken
-Window
By Bill O'Reilly
·
Our tour book recommended
p~tol he
was
not too successful
that we see Queen Anne's room
and was put away. So now every
This is my third column in my
·
because it
·
was really out of
year all the English boys and
continuing correspondance froin
sight. Of course the price was
5
.girls
celebrate Guy Fawkes day
beautiful
London
E,rtgland. I
schillin~ and the wait one hour.
by
.
shooting,
off fireworks,
wish to thank. all those who
When we finally were admitted
setting
.
their houses on fire,
· acknowledged
my first two
..
were delighted to find that this
setting each other on fire and
columns and special thanks to
indeed w~ Queen Anne's room.
generally having•a great old time.
Adonis
.•
D on
Duffy
for
There was the bed Queen Anne
I walked up to one litt)e tyke, as
mentioning me in. his
_column.
slept in, the
chait
she sat in,
,a
he was removing all the clothes·
Don, as you all know by now,
is
real old copy of Readers Digest· from the store window he had
a real Marist
·
Zoo Man. You can
which
·she
thumbed through, a
just smashed; and asked
·
him
tell this by the animal noises he
·
closet, a rug, a window, a fly
what Guy Fawks d_ay meant to
inakes while walking around,
walking up
.
a drape and some
him. "Its a
.
day of sharing" he
eating and writing to his mom. · words scratched on the wall that
said,
as
he loaded his booty on
Don's
column
is
..
one
my
said "Louis XIV is a sissy and I
his
red wagon, "sort of like your
favorites .;. it's great to real bits
hate serfs."
_Needless
to
say,
Thanksgiving."
·
of my old columns again written
Queen Anne's room·· was the
F i n a 1 I y
a
s p e c i a I
under Don's name.
:The
.
parts
highlight of our trip.
announcement:
Membership
iri
•.•
,•
.
Peace
'.Corps-College
,.begree:
··
·
-
Prograni
Extended
.
·.>
.
.
•::
.
.
.
p'
·'. .
·.
·c·
orps··.v~_
llinte_:e_·
rs
.w.
ill_b~_:_off_·.·.o_·ri
•
'The·
officials of t.he
eace
·Corps
and the State University
·their
··.Lat
fn,: America_n
'/
·or•
·New
:York
CoJ}ege· a,t
assignment.'· As:in~mbe~•of.:the';'.
a·r_o ck'p.
0
rt
i
a
ri
no uri_ce d
st"affs of
>.teache(:.training
:.
·completion
.
.of arrange~~nts for
·
·•
iristitutioris:
·:and/.or
-.,consultants
·.
continuing and extending the
··.to
secondary
·
teachers:;
of
unique
:Peace
·corps/Co~ege
.
mathematics or scienc::e, they.are
Degree
·
Program tp
_a~m1t .
a
.
important
participants· in
;.
the
,
fourth
'group
of candidates
m
/
educational development efforts·-
.
June·
J
970: The members of the
of their:_ host. countries. Dtiri_ng
·
first 'contingent completing ~he·
-
their two year sojourn they,have
fifteen-month
program
:
which
the opportunity
to
earn· up to
combines
the. upper .division
twelve. semester hours graduate
undergraduate
education with
credit.
·
..i
.
:
.
. '. :
· ..
·
-
_
Peace Corps,preparation ~e ~ow
Peace
corps
.and
•
college
s e r v in g_ on
b_i.; n at 1 On al
·
officials pointed, out the. several
educational development
.teams
features which make_· thisjoinf.
-~
..
in the Dominican Republic, the
'
program.
unique.·
jricluding:
second group
•js_
now serving in
,.academic
credit for Peace Corps
similar assignments
.
in
.
Peru and
training, two fully subsidiz_ed
·
Honduras;. the third group
'is
..
summer sessions. totalling. thirty
now in the academic year phase
-
semester
,credit
hours; in':depth
ofthis joint project and is slated
.
·J.>.e
ace
-Co
r.p s
..
tr?- ining
.
'_:
for_
overseas assignment
iil
Latin
synchronized
··with .
the_: liberal
·
America in August, 1970'.
.
,
arts and specialized professional
·
The candidates will be selected
·preparation,
indiv.idualized
from the ranks of students
·m
programming, opportunity
foi-
good standing
-at
an· accredited
double majors and supervised
college who are completing the~
overseas graduate work.,
.·
..
sophomore or 'junior year by
.
~-
-"This integrated. program
·is
·
June; 1970.
·Those
selected will
·
based
ori
·our
,two
i
fold
be able to earn an A.B .. or
RS.
·
conviction that (1) to combine
degree and be eligible fo_~
a Peace
·
the
college and
.
Peace Gorps
Corps
assignment
10
one
experiences is' to make both·
. academic year flanked by two
more. relevant
·
and meaningf~
summers· of ftJllY subsidized arid
•
a.~d, the personal product· m!lre
integrated academic courses and·:,-va_,l ua ble
(
2?
·.·to::
p~oy1de
Peace Corps training. They are
much-needed_ skilled spec~lists -
expected
.to
major
in·. mathematics
and
science
mathematics
or the scien~s;.
teachers
-
-. as-- ?eace
:~oIRs
those who have completed their
-Volunteers
m Latt1:1 A1:11~nca
is.
junior year prior to. entrimce
..
to
-m.aJse
a s1gn1flcant.
,
into
the
program. have. the. co!ltributi<?n
.to
all concerned,".
opportunity for a double-major.
·
said
President Albert Warren
At the end of the second • Brown, of the State Universi~y
summer armed with the degree,· Colle
g~
:
at
BrocI_cport.
1!1-
a teaching license, in-depth cross· a~ouncmg
the ~xtenS1on of thts
·
cultural preparation. and fluency
umque partnership'.·
in Spanish the graduati:s as Peact:_
.
that I like best about" Don's
Halloween
in England
was
·
"Purgatories
Turtles,»-
the
columns are the secret stuff like
really wild. I went trick or-
infamous etc. etc. will be· open
"Be Good Electric" and "Pat
&
treating dressed as Joe Rubino
to Americans for a limited time.
Ann get the wierdo of the week
(line furnished by Bill Smith) so
Just serid your name to tne or
award." Gee, Don, you just keep
·
to find
·suitable
clothes for the
Edgar (we both live in the same
,•
. _
.· .
•
·
..
·
.
· ..
··.
.
•
.·
~·
,
_
.•-.·
-
...
·.
·
_·
..
:
,
..
.
.
everybody
guessing.· Actually
occasion
L had.
to sack
-a ·
place
so
who cares?)· and two
:r,,
·<th'·'·.:·,.-
..
t::
..
,:->·:
·
· ·
.:N.:•y·
: ..
--t•-b
-
--
·•
·
I'm alittle.:worriedaboutD?n
,_salvation
__
army truck. But
_the ._checksfromVicki'sand}'.OUwill<'JOU
·.
e·as
ern->·
·,'_
..
·:.-:·1
.··
rary
:-=~
____
·:·.
___
bh~s~~~;tl_ie la_s~-~m~;l-_sawd
·-\1:1
·-ts'~allyG,bigF
da,; k~ E~d~!!-dl_t~§-~~y._
.. ,.
rTeurt~eivle.Pla·
..
d~em~edr~8!bP·C:rt~'-~i-
\\,,,-?' ..
..:·
,.
:_ :-
,,;
'<,i~,;;:
;:c.)i/:,i,.-:< /~::;,
;,,:,~;;.,
:,~.:/(';.·•"2:n(,;•;i,
-.;;:>
..
;
-•
-
...
e was runrung ,arou_n •. e;•·:
,·a
uy
aw es
-
ay.
1
'
seeiµs
.'.
e,.
_e_
ge
·an
a. re_
-
~-
••. ,..,.
.. ,,,,):_,
;.,,,.{...,.,,,,,::.:
'!
-·~·
_,
.
.
~~:
;c
·.·.
,.,-..
···c.1···'-.
.,.
.
·
boathouse in his·red and green
,'tliat.way.
back'in
1610.Guy
·yo·u,·don.'t
even
,f\eed•
a::•.°•,,"•._:•:
::R:--
.
.
,.,
...
'-·
-,
·-s··-·
-
·o·
-,n-
-~,
,.,:
..
·::
jump suitscreaming"rmgonna,
Fawks
tried-to
destroy the·. motorcycle-.tojoin-Yi~pee·-.Y_i
_:
... ,,-
__
. -
-esource
·_
u ...
·.
-~·
be a canoe, I'm gonna· be
-
a
Parliament of King James
L
Of
_
- Yo.
·
· ·
_
.
•
_
-
:
_-
:· :, :
. ·.
·
-
..
. _
.
·.
.
--
-
.
.
.
.
'.
·
_
. ·
,•.
.
·
cano~."
•
.:_
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
course since all he had was a cap
·.· ..
.
. .
.
..
.
.·
·-
·
-.--..
'.'
$.,_
..
1·2·;
soo·_
- ·
?o·o·
..
·
fi
.
.
college
.
lib_
-_raries_
...
ha~. been re~eive_
d_
b_y.;
the_.
Things m England are ;urnpmg
.
.
. .
.
.
.·.
.
.
... .
..
. ..
.
. .
. .
.
-.
.
.
,
.
.
or
.
. .
.
_
_
..
.
,
.
. .
.
..
.this week. "Purgatori~s Turtles,"
PEAS AND CARROTS
from 6
_the
Moohmen flip out on the
..
ote .:· Southeastern New York Libra~ Resources Council from- the
_U.~.
the infamous motorcycle gang;
deer he shot Monday morning at
sutj'ace.;. Erp!.
··
..
,
Office.of Education as the first-mstaUmen~ ofa
$50,~90.00
gra11t to
are
.on
the
inove.
·
I have
8:30, on thefiist day ofhunting
-----~-
......
--:--~~"""
improve research resources in·the_area.
-
·
appointed myself leader of the
season; Scott perched:himself in
BABA
fr_o~
1
~'..
.
._
..
·
Bard, Bennett; Vassar, Ulster
;
·::
_
.
.
.
,
.
gang and am known as· Grand
a tree near Esopus at 4-:30 a;m.
Dr'. Drennen,;· a: philosophy
.·
Community
College)
State;
·'.._The
librilflans rhose colleges
.
Turtle O.Reilly or G:T.p. Edgar
•
and waited
·patiently'Aor
four
·
professor at- Marist, voiced the
Uni\'.ersity College at-New:~altz,
receive
a_ssistance from-· the·
'
Royce_is the_ Imperial Turtle and
hours.
-
The d~er
·
skin_is
·hpw_
.
op.ijiion (hat while Marist has,in_ .Mou_nt Saint _ _Mary, St.- Thomas
.
fede~~ _grant h_ave agre~d ~o
admisstons director, he.~omes up
mounted on his
'bulletin
board
_
the past shown· c·oncern.Jor.the _ Agumas, Manst,, a11d Rockland
~cquJre mfo~matton m~tenals m
...
with all our catchy phrases like :
'
(S
13 Leo); it's in perfect shaper b 1 a ck
·
c:o
riuri
u n tt,y> of
...
Community College will receive
_
self:ct~d s~bJe~ts so as to make·
_·
...
Don't.
go_ to
~ell,. ~o
·to
except
for
_two sltig
'.
holes
·
·Ppughkeepsi~
:tliat_this~program
~,
assistance" fr?m the Council
.for
the1r libranes,mutually useful:
.
.
Purgatones Turtles.: YessJr that
.
through the nbcoge area, and
·.
would
•be
ideal>m-- terms. of:,the
purchasmg of books and·
_-
_
:·.
Edgar has some
_wit:'·
.,
.,; ·
·
...
the skull is hanging. ou.t_.~e
'~c'ollege.
:·participation.
'..J,arry_
·-
oth~r librao/ ~ateri~ls:
..
Last. week t~e
_Turtles
set out· window! Scott's next· gam~ 1s
-.,
Am bramosky
,
state_d that: t!1e
·.
.
An ap~licatto!}
Jor
~he grant
.
for Wmdsor,
.·m
the. South of
Moose (about 1500 pounds of
time has
.
arrived ,when Manst
-was filed m ;'\PPl of thtS year by
England,.
to see. th«? famous
.
it) which he aims to get in either
must
.
contribute' mor~::to' tlie
the
Southeastern
New X()rk
castle
t~ere
c.alled
.Windsor
Can_ada
or
Ma!iie du~in•g
iminediatecommunity,·.··
:::
Library Resource~,Counc_iLas
Castle. As we approached t~e
Chnstmas
vacation.
Vmny·
-
,
Dean· of
-
Students
:
Thomas
·
part_ <>f
the Councils progr~mto
huge stru~ture v.:e thought it
_Winsch
hopes: to _go along to. Wade, voicect':the opinion that at
incre·a_se and. make·' ava}lable.
might be_ interesting to_. star~. a
capture
the
_action
for
_the
present the
·.college
perhaps
is
_
t:C?s~arch resopr~es
to
.
the
·
mock a_ttac~ on the <:astle like
·
y e a r b o o
~
•
.
. T he
o ril
y
·
l
a
c k
i n g
>i
-n
·
·
s _o c i a 1
:·
~
n d _ ~cholars and p~otess1onal persons
they·
·did
m
older times. We med a 1- winner
for
th~
extracurricular activity for,Black
10
the Hud~on Va~ey.
_
.
donned
_our
helmets a_n~ goggles,
•
Cross-Country team this season
students and
this
progtaitlcould
..
T-he
.
c;o~n ct I s p o_n
~
ors
took
qut
our
Wilham
the
was. John Petraglia who took,7th,
·
certainly
··add,
to. the college
:
COmf!lUOlCatiOilS
.
3:n~
·
delivery
Conquerer Rubber_ swords ~nd
place in the Conference Champs. experi~nce:.C::
_.·_··
.
".
.
·
...
:
,
,:seryices.
to facilitate
~he,.
charged up
.
the
hill
screamlllg
Only a frosh,
John
-
has great
:
Mr.
_
Fierce, the director of
-
exchange of. re5t:arch rnatenals
"Death
..
to Canute,
-·Death
to
potential_ and
is
off to a, go?d.
vassar:
College's·· Urban_:Cehter
among
.the·
libranes ·_of Putnam,:
Canute." Unfo~nately
H~~Y
start. He's also a deans ~t
committed
all
of their-resources
Dutchess,
Columbia! Greene,
Canute
is
the Chief of Police m
student and if he can only avoid to
BABA's
storefront. He also
Ulster;
Orange? Sullivan, and
Windsor.
.
·
'
s~hedu,ling his_ prom_s
.fo~
the
noted th'at he'.·progi:arits _sh1Juld Ro~kland counties.
After-
postmg
bond,
we
rught before a race, theres no
..
be coordinated
·
a·mong
..
the
decided to
-have
a look a! ~he telling how far he might go... agencies.-:,
-_
:,:
:
/>t
:·
.
.:
·.
inside of
_the
Castle. Adrrussto_n
·
Add a B~sketball rally to your
The meeting was imp!,Jrtant in
was free so we thought we had it
-
must-do list for Tuesday Dec.2, terms
·
of informing the ~ollege
made.-Inside the Castle many ?f
the night before the Iona game.
community
·and
the proposals
the
people
were dressed m
Last year's freshman team (two
were well ieceived by 'th~e in
Medieval costumes. Guys were
·-•
of
.which
will be starting for the
attendance;
-
..
It
is hoped that the
wearing
armour! swords and
varsity -' Ray Clarke and Joe
-.good
wishes· will be manifested
sn~ers.
The girls
_had
l_ong Scott) trounced lopa's_ frosh last
by financial_ support". 81lid
l_tµ_dy.
flowing ~owns and_ little _stgns
·
December
at the Mount- St. Silas in closing the discu~i9n~.-
·
.
that
said stuff
·:like.
Shirley,
Michael gym to mark the first
· ·
·
·
'
··
·
·
Room 411, dµngeon._One guy
time
any
.Marist hoop team
RESEARCff_
from
1
had feathers
all
over hun and as
defeated the Gaels. This year it's
he walked· by I_asked him what
the
home
opener
- it's at
he was supposed to be. ••rm a
Dutchess
and it's one you
Medieval Duck, what's
it to ya"
wouldn't want to· miss! •.. Some
he replied.
So
I threw him a roll
·people
laughed when I ordered
and he went away. The interior
"Run Run, Run," a $3.00 book
of
the
Cast I e was
very
from Track and Field News, Inc.
interesting. We saw the color
"Run -Spot, Run" - .. See the
T.V. that King Arthur watched
Carrot Run", said the mocking
and the washing machine Anne
hecklers with the impish grins on
Boylen used to wash the gravey
·
their faces. But now it's in the
stains out of Henry VIll's shirts.
library on reserve for coaching
Neat thin~
like the Duke of
class... And now it's almost 6
Windsor's personal shoe polish
a.m. - Time to put away P's and
were al5<?
on display.
C's for another week and watch
play_ing-back
·
aspects of group
counseling gives individuals in
the group an
.
opportunity
to
actually experience what their
behavior sounds like and looks
like to other persons. Videotape
playback
will
·
then assist these·
individuals in modifying their
behavior and these changes can
actually be less-than-<:onscious."
Dr. Miller's dissertation will be
published in the forthcoming-
Journal of Comparative Group
Studies. He
has
made plans. to
;
..
:
"CONTRIBUTE
TO
THE
.
APPALACHIAN
CL9THING
DRIVE··
NOV. 24 TO DEC. 2"
continue his research work in
this area.
••1t is my thought that
specit;c kinds of playback
might
be more effective with specific
kinds of individuals or with
individuals having specific needs
and goals. At any· rate, the
playback process promises to
be
a valuable
tool
for
the
psychologist and counselor."
Any
one
interested
in
obtaining
:
further infonnation
concerning Dr. Miller's research
is invited to visit the Testing and
Counseling Center, Room 107,
Lower Donn~~Y_
Hall. ·
. .
•.'
,
# ••••
' •. ,. ! •
blast·
':.~..
.
..
_
......
'
off
to a saie and solicf future ..
Start invesiing
·
your dollars
.
in.•
life
insurance right away. And
save hig money on lower rates
..
Build up tax-free cash value
sooner. Spread your wings. Act
now .. Happy landing.
NORTHWESTERN
MUTUAL LIFE
MILWAUKEE
NML
Thttt
!! •
difftrtnce ...
•nd
the
diffettnce
~
TifOMASF.HEFFERNAN
Speeial Agent
35 Market St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
12602
Office: 452-8640.
Resid~:
297-8203
i·
i
..
,
Federal
:Financial
Aid,·
.....
'FOr,,
ICldst
Studellts
· You . niay be interested<in · ·: determines eligibility and nee·d
be
sure that both .are returned
•• :·. knowing
h<>w. the <federal
changes from year to year,-we
before 'May 1st. The PCS should
. _Government.'.s '. fintncial
aid
must
·have
a ne'Y application
.31.1~
·
be sentto Priiiceton well before .
,·programs are functioning here at . PCS.
.
. .
.
,
April 1st.if you want to be sure
·· Marist. These programs are the ' · Applications and PCSs will be
it •will be back on time. Do Not
National Defense Student Loans, . available at the Registrars Office
expect aid if your papeis are not
~.-The Work-Study .. Program and·
iii
December. Pick youis.uP. and.
on file by•May 1st. ·
· .·:
· the ·Educat_ional_ ppportunity
.
·
· •
·•.
·
· '
· ·
·
·.::u"i:l?~:!•~~~~~~·':~
Students
.Jcfin
larch
. :~v:~e~r. ;!!n~orM!i\u:i:i1:
: ..
·o·.
·.n·
·
..
·
...
····.w·.·
··a:·:.-s
...
h···
..
·1··n·
_.,.,o·n.·
applicants did not. receive aid.
EOGs were cut from $80,000 to
$60,000; loans from $65,000 to
It.
was cold Friday ~vening and night driving along the Baltimore
$30,000 and: Work~Study from.
to Washington expressway. The traffic seemed heavier than usual,
$70,000 to ,$37,000. (Something · there were a lot ofbuses from colleges all over the United States but,
to do· with a war in Vietnam I
the eastern .and northern schools predominated. There were a lot
· ·. · · · · · · · · · • • · • · ·PAGE,3
· understand) Initial EOGs ·were
autos filled to over capicity with kids, teachers, blankets, and food.
especially short. We had enough
At each turnpike . gas station,
the. sc_l!ne was like a minature
. initi.aJ
funds
for
only. 14
"Woodstock" with people spilling out over the parking areas from
· Freshmen and 4 upper classmen.
the resturants.
·
. .
.
Fortunately .for your Financial • As one reached the capital, traffic became heavier and eventually
Miguel Reyna "gets into" . his own music during a Rathskeller
medl._ey.
·
.
·
·
Aid Director, who does not like
stood still for hours twenty. miles out from the capital district; for
to make decisions, we had just
there were simply too many cars and buses using the roads.
enough funds to take care of all
. · The Capital's population had swelled overnight and by early
renewal applications on file at
Saturday morning finding a place to sleep was
a
challenge. The
the deadline ~of . May 1st. Of
colleges and universities in Washington such as Georgetown, Catholic
course no funds were available
u.,
Howard, and .the American University ~long with many churches
for renewal applications received
and monasteries were filled - with entire gymnasium floors utilized
after that date.
-
as camping grounds. ·
·.
Reyna Plays
Deportation Tune
Loan applicants qualified for ·
On ··Saturday
morning
.
the · students, teachers, farm workers,
By MIGUEL REYNA
a
P
proximately
$200,000.
businessmen;·familieS and others amassed at the mall near the capital
· Approximately
half of the
building. ·Jt was the largest gathering of people that had been seen by
On Wednesday, November
12,
$30,000 available was used to . anyone · in Washington. There were different types of people in
Marist College saw Miguel Reyna
match EOGs. In most cases the • different groups but they were united. by a spirit of comradehip,
and
his trio
in an expert
balance was. u·sed to. bring a
helpfulness, towards each·. other and respect They were united in
exhibition of jazz at its best.
students
need
down . to an
their effort to end the Vietnam War. There were so many people
Sponsored
by the
Human
of being arrested if he returns to
Peru,
certain
students
have
organized
a petition . to let
Miguel remain in America. Some
faculty
members
have also
contacted Rep. Hamilton Fish in
hopes that he will intercede into
the Reyna case .
. aniount that could be borrowed
that not all could march down Pennsylvania Avenue - about half of
Relations Committee, and the
- under
the
Gover
it men t
the huge crowd marched down Constitution Avenue or walked to · Class of '72 in unison, the
, Guaranteed loan program.
.
the rally at the Washington Monument.
·
evening took on an air of being
LIVINGSTON
from
1
·
There
were·
158 qualified ·
Saturday's demonstration was the largest in the capital's history. · one of the best social events· on Friday afternoon in Donnelly
applicants for Work~Study jobs.
A.t one time or another 800,000 .persons attended the rally at the
sponsored by Marist College this
Hall.
Our original allocation of funds
Washington Monument.
·
·
year. A little beer along with
The final lecture of this series
allowed ortiy 30 jobs for the
The question on everyqnes mind, both participant and observer,
Reyna's
masterful
talent at
on Environmental
Science for
school year .. These jobs were -was whether any American political leader could afford to ignore a
bringing out. the . best in his
the
fall
semester will be given on
fille·d
· by· May
15th·.
A
demonstration
of. public sentiment
as
.large, as forrent and
as
audience provided an excellent
Thursday, December
11
at 8:00
supplemental grant du~ng the
prepondevantly dignified ·as the· peace rallies of November 15th in
setting
for
continuous
p.m. in the College Theater. Dr.
summer made it possible to have
Washington, D.C.
.
.
·
sing-along5 and dancing in the
Morris Shipman, Professor of
35 addi~ional jobs for. the FaU
The demonstrators,
with but a few exceptions,
conducted
aisles.
·
Environmental
Science and
semester orily since. this money
themselves with
a
gr~cious., good _humor and self- assurance that
Everybody had to get into the
Health
at the University of
:IJ)U~·:b~;'
i;p,en.i by p~~~l>er~ ··!i.tQo4.:,.(µi::
·-~arked_:··~on,t~s\> to the nl!rvou~· di~~emper of the
act."'M.r. Paul Teichman provided
South Carolina,
wUl
.Pr.esent. ,a .,. , .... ,.,,,
' 31st~~;~.~~
c;,t,,,,
. ·
·
<·:
Z
J; -:;·
f>·.
·1Administmtion.they,·challehged.
,".:,.,-..i
,\.,,
•.
·<·
:,,.·,::
~',·::>.::i, \· ,,..,·:· •· · .. , an:: excellent; medley. ·of ·son~
·1ectilre concerning the problem
·->·/-='--,:~,dui-ipplication .. for'funds for.
'--The New Mobilization Committee to•Endthe)Var in Vietnamand
:with
a
·surprisingly
excellent
of
AifPoflution.
Dr. Shipman
is
· · - the··.1970-71
·
~ch?ol '. year .~.·•;other
gr:oups.had lfeen prepared for the weekeilds·events; They were
voice while Mr. Lumia "rocked . an expert
in Environmental·
- ~eeri sent to :Washington. We .do ·
well'
6rganized _and effective .. The 3,000 man ."marshall" force
the rat" with a rendition of
folk
planning
and
Community
hope
t•hat
Congress
an~.
composed~of young peoplej· primarily college students, prevented-
songs
al
Italia. For
this feat,
Development, Public Health as a
·President.
Nixon.
will make
violence
and
perfonned the nearly impossible task-'of guiding and
combined
with
his glorious
fun ct i
O
n
O
f phys
ica
1
'
, '. availaple
the,
full
amount
. directjng more than one half million people.
_ :
. .
turkey trot victory and class
Environment,
Environmental
aut:\1onzed for the. programs.
Aniongthe
marchers were
IO
tea.ms of 10 marshalls each. These
· cancellations
on Friday, Mr.
Factors influencing Health and
Perhaps a letter from students or
teams were termed "trouble - shooters" and were prepared ·to leave
Lumia
has
earned the title
we 11 Being,
and
Food
parents to their
Senator arid . the march at any pointwhere violence seemed imminent. They were
"Faculty Hero of the Week."
Sanitization.
.
Congressman·. will help se~ure · ·not :needed. ·About 100 marshals locked arms and ste·pped off to
In the meantime, through all
Dr. Rehwoldt said what
Dr.
· enough
funds for all· needy
siart the march in order to help clear the streets. A team of
l
00
the pomp and good times in the
Shipman is an "environmentalist
students. Even be~ter, a no~e.of
marshal!l was stationed outside the F.B.I. building. They were part of
·rat, Reyna is fighting a battle
in the true sense of the word."
thanks from thosenowrece1V1ng
the l,571
·marshal
team that was stationed along the route. More · with
the
United
States
He is not a natural or social
financial aid might be _such .a marshals were stationed at the Monument. The police worked with
immigration
authorities
to
scientist,
but. he has the
pleasant surprise to Congressmen
the marshals throughout the day.
remain in the States. Authorities
advantages
of both. As an
· that
they might extend. the
· ... On Saturday the building5 along Pennsylvania Avenue were closed,
purportedly
wish to deport , environmentalist,
he is not a
·program.
.
.
.
·on the rooftops were soldiers with rifles, pistols and tear gas guns.
Reyna
to
Peru . be.cause of a
physical or social scientist, but a
••
· We cannot stre~s t_oo much· t~e · · Marines were guarding the C!i pital Building. ·
misunderstanding in his conduct.
hybrid _ equiped in functioning
fact that in order to secure aid
After the rally the people left the city, many left by six o'clock;
Because Reyna stands a chance
in both areas.
under· any of these progra~s, a but those remaining people· who. had assembled in Washington
Dr. Rehwoldt announced that
student must apply and furmsh a departed from the capital throughout Saturday night and Sunday.
an application
will
be submitted
Parents: Co~fidentail Statement.
For many students the weekend was a good experience and not
to the APC describing a B.A ..
These are one. year pr~gr~m~:
If ..
just a "good time".
It
was not only for those who are politically
w
Hy?
Degree with a major field of
we do not have,: an apphcation
oriented but was a part of many youth's lifes for this short time
·
study in Environmental Science.
and PCS by May 1st of each year . deriving fr.om a conviction and motivation to demonstrate to the
The skelton of the program is as
no • aid is given. Since need . United States government the profound ·need to end the war.
·
■
follows,
Brother Linus Foy appeared
.before
the students _on two
occasions last week as part of his
plan to inform the students
Qf
the two-year and long range
plans for the college.
·
On Tuesday night, November
11 and
Wednesday
night
November. 12, · Bro. Linus
was.
available for discussion . of the
plan.:
·
.
· Tuesday's
presentation,
sponsored -by the Sop!J.?more
Class,. included an expoS1tion. of_
two architecf s · plans for· the
school plant in the futur~. The
architects' plans are of their own
making and display items which
are subject to discussion and
final approval by the Board · of
Trustees .,. both steps are a long
way off. Nevertheless the plans
are · interesting
in that some
features
are rather close. to
implementation
and have the
support of the committee.
Bro. Foy said on Wednesday
night that during January and
February
contracts
will
be
awarded
to
further
study
specific features of the plans and
that within six months these
plans along with cost estimates
will
be
available.
· In response
to· a question
.
One artist's conception for a rennovated
Marist campus.
concerning implementation
of curriculum some light on the
the plan, Bro Foy stated that all future of courses was shed in
parts of pl~ would have to be response to a question from a
approved and then of course student
in the
audience.
funded.
F<?Y. also stated that Regarding the classification -of
student op1ruon was. welcomed
Maxist
for purposes of state aid
and valued, howeve~ there was and ·. in regard to the theology
no
~t~te~ent regardmg stud~nt requirement,
Bro. Foy
stated
part1c1pabon on the planrung that theology is not mandatory
committee forthcoming.
and
that movement towards
Although
there was not becoming optional is evident.
sufficient time at these meeting.;
to ;tnalyze fully the future
by Peter Masterson
Why do we get condemned
when we express an opinion?
Regardless
of whether this
opinion is of general agreement
or not, many others are ready to
jump down our throat, merely
for indic~ting what we feel. For
instance, the topic of whether
America should be intervening in
Vietnam
has
long
been
discussed. A few years ago,
if
someone
at
Marist was to
announce that we should get out
of Vietnam, he was immediately
attacked (usually verbally) for
being
a "Communist,
Pinko,
Red,
Socialist,
traitor,
or
coward." Everyone would argue
with him but no one would
listen to his point of view.
Lately,
the political opinion
among many of our students is
that
peace
is of ultimate
importance,
that we should
de-escalate rapidly and pull out
of Vietnam immediately. Now,
if someone
disagrees to the·
current
vogue
of political
philosophy,
he is a "Fascist,
war-mongering, pig."
CONTINUED
ON
4
( 1 ) 4 6 Credits in Natural
S.cience
(Chemistry,
Biology,
Physics)
( 2) 9-1 2 Credits
in New
Courses
(Dealing
with
Environmental Science)
(3) 18-22 Credits (Electives) in
Social Science Area (Political -
Science,
Sociology,
and
Psychology)
When asked of a possible
starting date for the program,
Dr.
Rehwoldt
said:
"The
program
is currently
being
worked out. The program w~
proposed for September, 1970.'
He was hopeful of starting thi~
new major in September of next
year.
SKI LODGE
from
1
During
the
period
from
December 19 to January 20 the
lodge will not be available for
family renting5 only individual.
The weeks of January 25-30,
February 8-13, and February
15-20 have alreadv been rented
to families.
•
Some skiers plan to use the
lodge to expand their skiing
activities farther north to such
places
as Killington
~nd
Roundtop. Get your reservations
in as soon as possible.
I
PAGE4
fflECIRCLE
•·
My point
is_ that_
·sonie
'~onsist
.
of students becoming
'students~ here havent't begun to
concerned and involved in
.this
Vice President' Agnew in ·. a
·
understand ·what actual college
·
process from i_ts
formulation.
:0,
speech during this past week,
.work
means and what
/are
its
However, student involvement
-
-
-
adino~s!ied
_'commentors-_
to
-
be
.
objectives.
-
If
_Marist
offered a in such issues has· been less than
·
more
-
aware
of their
own course in "How to Beat· .the
-
competent nor enthusiastic. A
prejudices_ and influence·· when
System"; some of our illustridus
few· examples: . if the
.
facu~ty
·
they present the news and that
._
constituents
,would
get A's_'with members- on a given committee
.
-
they should also speak more
_
no sweat. The real problerifhere
work
5
to_ 10 hours per week
often about the positive aspects
is
that the counter system to
prepad.ng
·
for. a• particular·
and achievements of our society.
beat
the
system.
has; been
meeting, should not the students
With regard
_to
that academic
_
perpetuated and
.each
freshmen
on that same committee be as
society known as Marist College,
-
class is quickly ind~ctdnated in
well prepared?; there is little
here
are the events of the
-
its basics. Alright so what if at active response to
-
a suggestion·
--
ordinary day and comment.
·
every other school guys play to expand the SAC; and
__
the
Item: There
is
a small segment
beat the system, all I ask
is;
what smaller
·issues_
like eliminating
of our faculty which gives very
is
preventing this school, Marist final exams,".which go untouched
poor courses.
College, from not playing- beat
because
there aren't' enough
-
It is
my opinion that such a
-
the system?
.
_
_ ..
students to work on them. The
segment does exist and that
Item: Some students are able basic
question
then is - is
these courses are far below the
to succeed at Marist solely on
participation in· decision· making
level of higher education. These
their •natural ability'.
,
worth the effort?
..
courses
are established and
It is my opinion that some
·
As
-
a final
comment,
-
the
..
':·.
-
T~~
adventurous ctieds get ~rapped ~-p in-~ne
·of
Ch~die Alf~~'.s
-
weekly Judo classes held in
tlie
Browsing
Library.
-
-
-
BarklOg'
Up
Tree
perpetuated
·
by the instructors
rn e rn b er s of
o u r n ob le
-
present systems for
-trying
to
involved who are impervious to
undergraduate population have evaluate
.a
particular
__
class
_-
in -
criticism
and- reject
-
such
'simply
not been working at the
terms of seeking to better that·
criticism out of hand by saying, b u s i n e s s of
educating
_
course, are impersonal, less than
"It
can't possibly be me, it has themselves, no matter what form
adequate, and in the· end, result
to be someone else."
·
that education might take. They
in
little_ if any change in that
By_
Tony Barker
column l pointed ouHhatthese
-
However, there is a group who
have b~en content to view their
course. I would suggest then that
meetings are closed and held at
-
can be said to be as guilty in this ability to throw the proverbial
some class
time
be set aside to
Now that open house has be~n
places and times unkn~wn
_to
a--
perpetration. The 'silent' group
bull
as sufficient
toward
-
evaluate that particular class.
passed,
many
,people
have
-
large number of the students, In
of students
who take
-
these succeeding in this college.-
_. •
·>
-
Such
·that
a dialogue would take
-_
questioned what I will be able to_ defense of this policy of closed
courses and say nothing about
In order to do this, they must
place between the teacher and
say' in this column. Well after
meetings one -House Master said
how had the materialpresented
have some assistance. These are students where each examines
great
soul searching,
_I
have
that there were toci many people
and methodology used are. Their_ those faculty members who have
_-
the other's role
in
that class, the
managed to limit the scope of
_
on the council which,
.would
_.
·silence
appears to stem from an
·
not formulated standards for
extent to which each should and
this article to two main points:
make them unwieldy; There, are
-
-
ancient philosophy - Don't blow
each· particular class aJ!:d even did participate,_ and· in general,
Item No. 1
·
-
--
,
,
.
,
17
members on the Champagil.at
a good thing, namely, good
when
they
do have
such
·
the relative successes and failifres
·1NNOCENT
UNTIL
-
Council
_and
11 on tqe, Leo
marks.
.
_
standards,
do not adhere to
,
which took place in that class.
.
PROVEN GUILTY
·
House Council. However
·the
Item: I have yet to observe at
them. I would like to know the
-·
As a member of the "vocal
Urilike
·the
legal
system'
student council once elections 6f
this institution
a situation in name of any institution, whether
·minority",
I have to accept the
-
.
prevalerit ori the ~ontinent of
fre.shnien
ups are held
-Will,
which the instructor's theory or a ~ompany or
_a_
peace group,
fact
of
t_he tre~endou_s:
Europe, the guiding principle of
_
consist of 13 students and they_ .
posit-ion:
was
-
·so severely
which w~en wantmg a report on opp_orturuty and po_tenbal that 1s American jurisprudence (except
have meetings the time ap.d place
_·
challenged that he forced to
a pa_rt1cular
day,
gran_ts Manst College'. Thi~ c_ollege has
for Chicago, Illinois)
is
that a· of which are:published_and the
_
·questionit.-·
extensions; or accepts_slopplly
made
the
-d·ect's1_on
-a~d
man
_is
iilnocen~
until._prOven
·_stu~ent-_body_~_ayatten~)so·.-1_>~:
···----
It
is my opinion that such a done ?.r inaccurate; w~:k and
com~itm~nt to t!Y to establish
guilty. Aside fro_m C_hicago; the
really can't agree that the House_·
·
.goal
can be.attained; It requires
says
Well,_ he, tned.
-
T~ey
·
a_nd P!ov1de for its_ me_mbe~ a
most flagrant v10labon. of the
Council
meetings
are too· -
_
a lot of wor_k but that's
all
demand a~hievement. I thmk
.
meamngful,_ expenen!ial, and
aforementioned principle is right
:
un wi~ldi~g ·to
:
be open to<
.
-_.
.
really, becau~ a_ll
he has on you,
.
that
Manst
College should
.
~real' education.
My
discontent
.
here on the old.moth campii.
:
;
students ..
-
:
•
__
___
_
.
.
._
_ __
.
the student, ~s a few years rather
demand achievement.·_-
.
_
<
_-
lies
.in
the:
,reality
ofhuamn
..
:
How could I dare make such Item ,No. 2
..
>'
.,'.
.
'.
·
·
; _---
-,
_than_
that he is necessaply more·... lte iri : St ud_e nt s
_
~eek
__
·beings
and'. espec:ially·those who:.an:
outfandisl1
'statemerit'?:,:Jt
is>'/_:, .
:_;):!MY
COUNTR'vi:;
;,/;:.
:,',>_·;
0:<.-
-
:
Ir-•,
!t!~•~1fi;i!~~'.c~htt,it1{E!itttl:!:'~t:~~ifi,£1!1ff.!tt
'1'~!f
!!J:1!~1::1r;!t'ttf
i~~i,\i!!f~~tt''i;f
/ft;;.
r
·
lo~c~ and co~s1sten! argupi~nt_
.
.,
nece~~ary :one? if ;to~eges art:}<?
/
pe?pl
7 .
w_hp
w1~
:nqt
_1mpliment
'
:can_:
find
_a
copy'of these;''lc;>ok
at Na_m
_-:
Moratonum
D11.ys~
51ie _
·
·
>>>
_
· ·
1
or1s 1t something he1s throwmg
-'continue·
as mst1tut1ons which_ its spmt. In this article lhave
the-:sectiori
called - discipline'.
,
-Daily
N_ews (you, kriow
·that_.
"
>.
>.:.
r
together ?fCthe
_top.of
his head?
_
are, reflective oftheirsociety:and
trie_d to foc_us onth~se segineri~
'.
i
Before/I
·go
further; iet
-me
say:.: paper,_ the' on~- that's orily. good
·.
_
·/
>:--:_'-
,
_
You
might._ fmd that w_hen not
:
".accuo\ls
•-
ivory
_towers;_
If,
-
which do
-~ot
and will n<>t allow
'that
my
chiefreference is to'.Leo
-,
.
for
wrapping
fish) rah
a
guest
.>''.·;_
j
·:/
>:
(
-
c?rn
7
red the~e
~,♦eople
come ~>Ut this objectives
is
soimpo.rtant to the· potential <;>fMarist College _
HO:usl!;
.;where
-iiiy
body lies~: editorial
_by
some man
-rianied:'
'
·
•
---
,
7.
f1~ting and_ 1~
IS
then that
ypu
achie,ve, should rtot the means to
-
to be
·fully
reahzed. What should
dowzf'tq
·sleep.
This is to avoid
--
Stephen Decatinwho
in'
a dinner;-
r
-
begm_ to
-
rea~e
that you are
achieve
this
_
e_?-d a_lso- be
,
CONTINUED ON
5
.,
..
,anyqne
wanting to do ine b99ily
.
__
in
his· honor in 1816 said
~'My
learning something.
_
important?
-
The•
-mea!}s-
should
:-
-
-
harm; because
_w_hat
--
I· may
_
saY.:·
'.
country
,in
her intercourse with
-·
. 'doesnot
apply to his particular\Joreign
nations, may she always·
-
-
-
-
-
-
WHY
r~om
3 -
•·.-
__
-
,·
,
·
housei
_
_
_
-
__
.
_-
_
-
,
-_-
:
·.
be_
right) but my country right or -, .
·M,
a---r
__
-.,_
k
__
----_e
__
-_-_-d--
____
----,•
__
-.
__
-U
__
-
-
___
r·
--_._-._,_,g-
-e:
·n·
___
··t-
__
-
.,._
Likewise, at· Marist;.
if
yo~
.
In. Jhe minutes of me Leo-:-. wrong;''.,_TheDailyNt;ws rari this'
_
_
_
-
s111
_oked
marijuana
_
three years
-
H otise
,
Council;
·
the way the
·.
in
-
connection._ with so' called
-
.
.
.
_
__
,-
_
_
_
_
_
-
ago you were a "hippie, acid,
handling of the disciplinary cases
-
«Hon·or America" Week" whic_h
·
-
has
its share of nonsense items freak, drug addict, pot head,
is des~ribedJeaves. one tc, doubt
·was
supposed
_
to
b·e
a
_James
McLou~hlin
.r:·
also.
;:.
_
_
-
·
long
haired bum." However,
:
whether; the_-· accused has-_ any mobilization of Nixon's ''Silent
-
·
''·pe·r-
haps·
_·tliere·
·1·s
_
no
_better
now
if
.you
do_n
__
't indulge 1n th_
e
rights
'it,
-all> All that is said is
__
Majority".
The reference to
·-
B iafra,
··like
__
Vietnam,
is
h-
th
--t·d
·
t (
--
·o
·'
·
-
d
example
that}
--
the
money;
pleasures of ma1~.juah~
orhashish
___
tat
.
e/S u en
__
no na~es are:
ecatm s statement 1s suppose
everybody's
problem not just
Americans spend, on their dead. you_ are con~idered
-
an
'_'old
:everdnentioned)-
'is
a'ccused_ of
•
to hint that this country can do
-
Uncle Sam's: Both areas dictate
_
Each.year millions of dollars are fashioned, straight, square, grog
committing such an
-
offense or
..
no wiong no matter what.
.
sectors
of
--
the human race
_
spent on_ high grade
_
metallic
.
head."
·
rather the student in fact did
---
This.is a ridiculuous statement
:
suffering from war, famine arid casket
5,
va uHs,
flowers,..
_The
same
m II n n er
_
0
f
comrititt such an offense and a·
_·_that
the News made·but wliat is
-
-
perdlence.
In
Vietnam,
--headstones
and other types of
-stereotyping
is•followed among
'motion_was:madehyperson·or--
__
everi-more ridiculuous, is that
Ahamv_ee_riieans-pso·
nf~_
l_/~~e~h~r :~rsrif
memorials. To be sure; resp_ect all of Marist's sub -sub sub _ perscms unknowl). to levy a· there
are freaky people who-·
for the dead should have its cultures. Whether yo~ are ~n an - penalty
_
usually
not
~eing
'-
believe -that"my
country right
this troubled
country. Those
place. in everyone's heart. But athletic te.i.m,
in
~am.pus politics,
allo~~d the use o!the do!ffi1to~, 2r .wrong" We should always·be
who.
have
not
-
actively
does not consideration for our on-the Dean's list,pr drinking on
·--
fac:H1ti~s
for a penod of
tiJ!l~:
,: :
thankflll that these_ people.
fo:t:
participated in the
war
effort
starving brother deserve priority
the side of
the
river, you are
._,
Tll~re:1s all too mu£h s_ecrecy the most part are dymg out._The
have - made
in v o lu n tar Y over
.those
who are already far casually labeled and categorized::. -about
-~he
whole runn!,llg qf the sooner they all go
_the
better off
contributions
th rough
th e
-
b_
eyond_ any· help· we can mve
_
AJ)d,
_if_
you make your pe_
rsonal
-_._
House
__
System, t~ satISfy.cmany- we are.
income surtax_i_mposed on them.
,,.
f th
t d ts
-
I
1 t
them.
Maybe, then,- chari_ty opinion known, you are many
''
o
.
e
~
u en . n plY, as
In Biafra, however, the United
·
-
k
b
-
h
'
-
States either as a nation: or on an should
-
not begin at home but
times attac ed y someqne w o ---
..... ,;,....--
____
...;..
____
......,.;,..._;.....,__.;.;.;.
___________
___
m
. di"vidual basis,
has
done little_ rather where it
is.
most needed.
·
disagrees. ~erhaps
_this
is all
PARQUSiA
from
6
______
-
_
.
In the year nineteen sixty nine
human nature, and of course this
·
·
·•.
-·
to aid th e st arving millions.
-
that area seems to be Biafra.
o,ther,-
·who
is
__
in d_
is_ao·reem_e_
nt
··tli~t
the w_-_-
orld
•·
se_emed like it
·was
out to screw the Marist College·
This troubled area should be
.,,.
with you, has
_
every right to
•
soccer.team;_.
,By
no means am. I cutting upon the squadi In fact, I
WJi~m!lv~~~~~rn
~~:!/~~~
show.
·his
feelin~, but does be-_---
am.sayingjust the opposite.-1 feel that a disservice has been done to
the war they can indeed send_
-c1otb_
ing
Ori,e
have to label you or disregard, .a teamwhich consisted mainly of freshmen, and upperclassmen that
-
fmancial contributions to such
-
-
your opinion?· Can't
-
he merely
had very little soccer experience. I wish Donald had talked about the
relief agencies as Unicef or the_
e.xpress his opinion, without
·
?CComplishments ofa team
·that .did
so much with so much going
Red Cross
·which
are ready and
·
Marist College's Appalachian
.
mentioning yours?
-
And
-
if he
-
against
-
them. Or al:_>out
thejob
_
that Doc Goldman did, producing a
willing to help.
Reaction Club
-
will
sponsor a
can't, when he ;ittacks y~ur
unit out of a group of guys who had hardly played at all, previously,
It seems
that
A rnericans clothing drive.in c~njuction with
opinion; he ought tobe sure of , let·alone played_ together ... Donald's contribution
_to
t1_1e
team as_
a
_
depend
too
much
on the groups
from-• several
other
-
what
he's
saying; especially
manager and its number one bon were extremely valuable, and the
government to solve problems colleges. The clothing collected
-
concerning
-
your opinion.
·
Also,
._soccer.team
should
-
be grateful they have him. But why must one fill
which they themselves can, for here, along with the food and
if your opinion is general, s_ho~ld the air with sour grapes?
the
most
part,
correct: A other supplies collected on the
he read
between the
-
lines?
cancelled
check
from
the other campuses, will be sent to
Should he set specific? And if he Topic:. The Light
Income Tax Bureau should by Lancaster~ Ky. where
it will
be
. 'does
read between
-
the lines,
no means serve as a basis for a distributed to the centers there.
does he know what he's reading?
carefree
attitude
towards a
Letters have been sent
to
the
Perhaps it is your fault, for not
.
deeply troubled world. On_ the parents
of aJ day stu dents
communicating
bet~er,
but
contrary, a combination of good notifying th em of tbe drive. The
communication
is
a two way
conscience and ugly facts should clolhlng will be collected by
-
process ~nd the interpretation of
stimulate all of us to help in floor representatives after the
·
this communication should be
whatever
way we
are able. _
s tu d en ts
re turn
from
done with
-
regard to personal
While. it may
be
true that Thanksgiving
-vacation.
biases and attitudes. And
if
it
Uncle Sa_m's budget includes too Commuting stu dents may bring
isn't
right
do we have to
their
donations
to Fontaine
· t
?
many .. luxuries" such_ as space
commumca e.
Building during the week after
* *
* • •
:ind nuclear missil~ for defe>;se, Thanksgiving.
the
3verage American's budget
J._ Tkach, assistant varsity basketball coach· at Marist, has re~ently
been named jayvee. coach at the Poughkeepsie Jewish Community
Center .••
J
.
.T.
has begun work on his new book, THE GAME OF
BASKETBALL, or, MY LIFE WITH BARRY. (with forward by Joe
Lapchick)
...
This weeks YGBKM Award
goes
out to Michael
McNeely, for completely grossing out Junior Rooney's girlfriend,
Dirty Ernie. Mike's only comment was, .. I didn't know she was
standing there." •.. No
-Paccione
, you don't remind me of Tommy
McDonald...
-
**************
i
'·
l
I'
___,._
·,
· ·-L'ette·rs-
DearS,if
, , Congratulations: o~ your .fine
.supplemenLt9.
the ·last .issue. of
. '. THE
CIRCl.J:.\,:::<· : /· ·· •.· : ,.
· I thoroughly:enjoyed
reading·
· it; and
.
r
thought.:the · 1af•out,
choice· of. photoi{' were. ·very
simple,
and
yet attractively
done.
.
;
.
·
..
• . ·· •· ·
~
I enjoyedJdsc, · the· quotations.
·in. the end:margins·whichi~
my
opinion · speak loud.er• and' more ·
forcefutthan the articles.
.
Again, congratulations.
·. • · . . Sincerely,
:
)~ L.
Hores,
. Assist~n t librarian
TIIECIR.CLE
FORTHE WEEK OF NOVEMBER 24-30, 1969
:~:JLy.ou would
lik~
y6ur org~i~;tioris'\~r~r~ation
included on this
calendar, it is important that ·you contact
_Mr.
:Orosnan's office at
least-~wo' weeks prior-to the date that the event is scheduled to take
place.'
, · :
· . · ·
•.
_·. . · ·
·
. Please contact:.
'
·
'
·
.. Joseph Brosnan .·
Director of Campus Center
471-3240, Ext .. 279
. TUESDAY- November
25_
. .
8:00P.M.
Lecture
Dr: Charles. Hoyt oLBennett
College will speak on
"WITCHCRAFT AND DRUGS." ROOM 249, CAMPUS CENTER .
7:30 P.M.
Lecture
and. Discussion - King Committee
- .. THE BLACK
· I would like- to express my . · E)~PERIENCE" FIRESIDE LOUNGE, CAMPUS CENTER
thanks
fo
all ~the· students who
'
Dear
Sii;.
helped make· the ninth· annual
THURSDAY - November 27, 28,.29, JO
Marist Debate Tournament
,a·
. success.
It
is always difficult
to
.
THANKSGIVING RECESS
give up. part of
a
Saturday but
- those who served ·as· chairmen
- · gav~ up their time with a fine
SUNDAY - November 30
8:00 P.M.
,
Film:. Sponsored by Marist College Film Program. Theme: Film in
the. Forties. Title: THE RISE OF THE EXPERIMENTAL FILM:
PAGES
EDITORIAL
BABA-
The -Circle· fully endorses the proposal for a storefront
in the
Poughkeepsie area submitted by Black Afro American Brothers
Association. We feel it is a most constructive program, one that is
indeed needed by the .Poughkeepsie community. BABA's proposal
affords Marist with the opportunity to actively help the community
·in which it is located and to do so in keeping with its· highest
principles.
,
-
Furthermore
the Circle applauds BABA for this attempt to
alleviate in some way the problems of the Black Community in this
area.
However,. BABA and the community need more than praise and
mere vocal support. They need physical and financial support for
this project. The Circle staff calls for this support and calls for a long
term commitment to this cause by the Student Government, the
Administration and Faculty and Board of Trustees.
-The· BABA proposal is a good one. The success or failure of the
program is dependent upon our support. Even with our support
success . is not guaranteed - but 'this is unimportant.
What is
important is the attempt to help the Black Community. Let us help
those who are helping.
And· The Beat Goes On
spirit of generosity. Particular ·
·credit should go .to Br. Thomas
Lee . who did ·much_. to organize
the day's 1::vi::nts
and to see ·to·it
that our high school guests had a
"MOTION. PAINTING. NO: 1 ;" "SWINGING THE LAMBETH
WALK;" "TH~ LONG BODIES;" "BOUNDARY LINES;" "LE
The flags are again flying around George Washington's Monument
TEMPE_STAIRE;"
"TOSCANINI."
and touch football is again in vogue on the W~tehouse lawn. The
profitable day.
'. · . · .
: ·
·
* * * * *
city
buses that purposely blocked
the Whitehouse view -of
.
sfu_ce_rely_·yo'tirs·,·
-
··,..
Pennsylvania Avenue as well as the eight thousand soldiers are gone
from the Capital. Also gone are the half million Americans who in
Louis C. Zuccarello -----------------------------'
spite of many difficulties demonstrated to the President and all
_Dear
Sir:.·.
.
•..
.
'
alcoh~lic beverages,- open hbuse;
in part at least, because the
people
their
profound
dissatisfaction
with the government.
.... My first Jeaction-
to_ Peter
etc .. · Although
.
I.
personally
college
has
been somewhat
Nevertheless it is now business
.as
usual in Washington, D.C.-and the
· Masterson's article in last week's • supported several of these; I am ·progressive in anticipating
the
disastrous-and meaningless war in Vietnam continues.
.
Circ:le was that. he was simply
well aware that the "reforms"
need for change, rather than
The huge demonstrations
both in Washington, D.C. and San
· . "doing his thing" -via a romance
hav_e·· genirated
some. rather
simply reacting to demands for
Francisco have 'raised some urgent questions of the United States.
wit1' U~e metaphor .: in .indi~ting
vexing problems of their own
it? Whereas Mr. Maste.IS0n seems
The peaceful marching· did not end the war - neither did the candle
the Marist community for not
and are thus riot without fault. . to view the lack of a violent
holding nor the singing. Many, many Americans are asking just how
• 'being "pr9gressive."
If'
I read
3. it
is
an error to maintain
confrontation as a negative sign,
long the people will continue
to sing, hold candles, and act
him' correctly; something akin to
that' the Administration has been
I view it positively.
peacefully. How long will Americans tolerate ever stiffening official
the _"Gunfight -at OK Corral"
is ' '
o v e r p r o t e ct iv e"
·and
Sincerely,
government resistance and repression? ·
the mark qf pr1Jgressiveness.
My .
"inflexible"
in its attitude
Dr. Edward
J.
O'Keefe
The answers to these questions are discomforting. The non-violent
second reaction was simply t_o toward the·student
body, while-
Dept. of Psychology
movement to end the war in Vietnam is in the process of
characterize· such an indictment
at the same time citing a great
re-evaluating its posture. The • view- is held by many that the
as being in vogue, and-therefore
many changes which of necessity
Dear Sir;
.
,✓
government is entirely unaffected by the large arid fervent peace
not to be taken seriously. Error
had to be sanctioned by them.
: I am a deeply
concerned
rallies in Washington and.San Francisco held this past weekend. The
must. always be' taken.s~riously,~·· Students
have
a voice.
in.'. youth aboutthe basic q\ia}ities it
Ad~inistration's
statements and actions have served to frustrate the
however,particularlythe:printed,_;
practically
eyery" decis.ion of, ... takes to make the necessity for. anti-war movement and thus accelerate the possibility of.violence.
··•
error/and,t~us.
t'.feit\b'ompell~&:' m;ijor iinppr;tarice inade'..by',the'
~~ whibh I find· myself writing 'this< Thl,s ·violenc? could 'assunie the··
form'
of assinations or
guerrilla
~to··react'/alcingtfhe?Jollowing.'college_,;and•to>maintaifl'
letter to you: It iswitn'much~.
warfareorevenrevolution.'
;
-
·
. , lines. •-•
,'
>; ·/
....
,
·:)
:: .
< .·•·
: , , ..
·
.otherwise is to. ignore. tile. facts. , . heart .full wealth that I pour out
. How can these violent acts be avoided? The Administration must
kit
js-'an, erroi'.to maintain· Articles· appearing in the last
to
an·
the
person
and·
move to solve the crucial problems facing it. It must end the war in
0
that.the;
''.progressive": changes , issue• of the Circle written by
furthermore it is that concern
Vi~tnam and withdraw the troops now.
It
must dismiss from the·
· tha_t·have.occutrei:lat,Marisfover ·• students_ support this point.
If
that prompts this for
if
not then
government those who are attempting to provoke student and other
the .years -have··been by' dint· of.· 'the student body does not feel
all would if they could but then
violence. It must disassociate itself with the military and rightist.
student<
effort ,a1one.
Many. represented
by the. particular
I would · so niuch ·· like to be · elements in American society _and terminate their influence upon
members. of the facuity and students who
serve
as a liason
attested to the fact that it is
American policy.
It
must do these things quickly for it seems that
administration
have played. ah with the. administration, :they
concern that does develop into'
time is running out for Nixon and his government.
important part in initating and should resolve the issue througl1
the adam of all deep heart felt
·
supporting
tlle
·changes·
their o:wn studenf government.
warmth that surrounds all those
.mentioned
.. Faculty
and
Thus the "door to the boudoir'.'
who make it their duty to be
'administrators
have been quite · (is that
FreudiaJ?,?) has been . forthwith knowledgeable in the·
vocal over the .years concerning
~pen for a long time,_ and only
basics that concern not orily
these matters, and their efforts
timQrous characters fad to enter.
man but the_ whole- entire that
as•cwell as ·those of concerned · By a rather strange sort. of
surrounds wha( is too be and
students have beeff responsible : logic. -
(if
I interpret. his first
what is not that furthermore it
is
'for.progress.
·.
.
paragraph
corr1:c~ly),.·Mr.
definite
and remembe_r that;
2; It is
.an
error to say that
Masterson seems to imply that
'Profundity
is nothing but a
. •.there . has been no "adverse • because the college has not been
disguised absurdity,• Thank you.
reaction"
to the
"reforms"
racked by turmoil and violence,
-A Confused Student
__
nien!i,oned. __
Not _everyone agrees . that it has not yet :fme to_ ag~;
. Editor'_s
Note: We hereby·
that
the
college is· the better for that the lack .of an anarchist m
declare this National "Be Kind
having·
al,tered
Its . policies
residence": is the mark of a
To Don .Duffy"
Week. J.M.,
· concerning
:pass-fail;
responsible
second-rate institution. Is
it
not · S.H., J.Z.
atte'ndance,
classroom attire,
possible that order has_prevailed,
Stephen A. Harrison ·
John Rogener
F.M.S.
MANAGING
EDITOR
EDITORS-IN-CHIEF
EDITORIAL BOARD
SteveH~n,Joe
McMahon,John Zebatto,Jc:>hn Rogener
FEATURE
WRITERS
Joseph McMahon
John Zebatto
NEWS EDITOR
Peter
Masterson,
James Newman,
Paul
Browne, Bill O'Reilly,
Raymond Pasi
F.M.S.,EdwinPeck,F.M.S.
:
-
•
SPORTSWRITERS
Joe
McMahon
-Sports Editor
Don
Duffy-Assistants~
Editor
Joe
Rubino, Steve Sawicki, Bob Mayerhofer, Chuck Meara,
Greg
McLaughlin
JackBany,KerinDonnelly
"
'
PHOTOGRAPHY
Photo Editor -Richan! Brummett
Peter
Dovi,Bany
Smith
V"mcent
W"msch
Typist:
Tom Mahoney
David
DeRosa
ORCULATIONMANAGER
Cartoonist
Steve Harrison
Circulation:
Greg
McLaughlin,
Jack
Barry
Dear Sir;
In
view ·of s'ome rather rash
statements
made in the Circle
concerning.
the condition . of.
Leonidoff.
Field
and those
responsible for its condition, it
behooves me to say one or- two
things anent this situation.
· There· would have been no
football game on Nov. 1 S were it
not for Art Campbell and· the
crew he supervises. That . they
worked at all is evidence of their
dedication
considering
the
weather
and the equipment
available.
The soccer game played on the
previous Saturday was possible
mainly through the efforts of
the football club, the soccerteam
and again Art Campbell.
The
field
needs
better
drainage,
it needs a higher
crown, it does not need 13 days
of rain. The obvious need not be
restated
but where were all the
vocal people complaining about
the condition of the field when
we needed them to work. Of
complainers
and destructive
critics we have plenty, would
·that these people had the same
desire to work as they have to
carp.
Sincerely,
H.Goldman
. Zoot
Suits And
Major Weekends
The era of the big band is gone, Zoot suits are out and telephone
booth stuffing is passe. By the same token, the major Marist
weekend is dead and the mixer is in its death throes.
For the past two years we have made ourselves believe that such
social events will ·make a comeback. We have made ourselves believe
that an apathetic student body has caused our weekend flops and
mixer failures. This is hogwash. Students don't go to weekends
because they want to bring a girl to the campus at their own
convenience and not the social committee's. They want to spend
what they want to spend and not what the social committee tells
them to spend. This is obvious. On any ordinary weekend now there
are just as many couples on campus as there are on major weekends.
Students no longer distinguish major weekends from any other
weekend.
·
The mixer is also dying because most students would rather meet a
girl
at Sal's, the Faux Pas or Snuffy's rather than meeting one who
has been herded on to the campus and then "putting her on the
bus."
We have to stop fooling ourselves. But most important, the Social
Committee has to stop fooling itself and wasting our money. The big
weekend is out.
.
But what is in? The rat is in, Fireside lo!!nge is in, Leo Lounge is
in, the coffeehouse circuit is in and Miguel Reyna is in. As was so
adequately displayed by Mr. Reyna last Wednesday, the small
function is most definitely in.
_ All these factors considered, THE CIRCLE awards its highest
congratulations to Das Valez and Tom McDonald for introducing the
Miguel Reyna style so_cial function to the campus and to John
Innocenti and the social committee for· the Coffee House Circuit
endeavor. But we must further caution
Mr.
Innocenti against
planning any future major weekend fiascos!
INTELLECTUAL
from
4
be
done by them and by you, I
cannot answer.
A.P.C. news • The A.P.C.
is
determined
to work toward
curriculum
revision and will
concentrate most of its energies
on
this
objective. However, the
tremendous amount of proposals
is making such concentration
difficult.
Experimental
course
in
Science-passed;
to be offered
Spring '70.
Intro.
to
Contemporary
Higher
Edu cation-tabled,
Correction-Russian
literature
course was tabled, not passed.
••••••••••••••••
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
from the Staff of the Circle
·•
-PAGE6
TIIE.CIR.Cl:E
Bitsy's Bits·
.
by Joe Francese
at Howard Uriiversity.
·.:
·.,
they live their
·parts.'.The·
film
...
·
.
- :. -
: ·
. ·
_.
,'
. ;
:
,
.
._.
Congratulations are in order to
.. ·
concentrates on Ray ~d
,Alice
.,-
It
occured to me the other day
Bill McKinstry. for
·
lining_ up
Brock.
It
tells the story of.Ray's
_
.tha~
this y~ar•s;"Circle•~ wasjil~
these fine sp·eakers to. conclude·· hopes· qf establishing
~
modern
a little
-~it
too
-negative.
This
the-semester.
,
·.
Utopia
.in
an: a~andoned church
~ltimn· wm:· be. de~~c~_ted. to
.
Anyonej~te~stedin'
joining a_.· in
-'·Stockbridge;
.Massachusetts.
some of the
_more
pOSttive sides
·
rock~blues>'group-please see
.me
·-Like·
all- Utopias· it• falls
·very
ofon and off
_campus
life.
.
_
.
.
inS l
7
·
Leo>.Two. fellows fro~ a
·
shOrt
·
of its original
:
in~entions.
Great·
news.
1:he. Marist
..
:grout?.
called._ the· ~r~s Chalice
•_'.
.The:
(ilin
.:'js
b~autifully
. _
College
Lect~~
0
Senes'.1s-.µrtally, came,to;se~_-me the. otl:ier day_· photographed
and· caJ)tures
·
a
,.
···.under
way~ On-November 25 Dr._ and · asked· ir- there. were any
true sense of Americana. From.
·
.
Charles
Hoyt· will
_·deliver
a
qualified
· lea_d Guitarists or · the mountains
.·of.
Montana to
lecture titled "Witchcraft and
.
organists on campus. Hold them the skyscrapers of New York the
D!ugs" .. Last. xear pr.· Hoyt
I'd try to find so~e. These guys viewer is constantly aware of the·
.
·tnggered.
a_ campus wid~ spo~k
are_ currently ~han~g a farm
.m
_
majesty inherent in America.
hunt
__
which sent many- intrepid
Rhinebeck-
·with
·
The. Buddy
.
The. best scene in the film is
gh9st chasers shrieking through
)Miles·
Express".
It
looks like a
~:
witliout a doubt the funeral of
the. hills
,_-or.
Millbrook._ The
·
good de_al if. you're.interested
·
the Brock's friend, Shelly. Shelly
sec~nd maJ?r lecture .will be
and qualified.
.
.
"·
,
, ,is a
·former
drug addict who has
delivered on
·.
December
.-
3 by
M<;>vie
of the week.
Alice s
.
been unable to break his habit.
Tom Wolfe.
_Mr:
Wo]fe
1S
best
Rest~urant~•.
I_~ stars- Ario
In a fit of despair he commits
~own
for his c~orucle of the
_
G\lthne
.and
it begins Nov~mb~r suicide._ His funeral
•takes
place
nse of _psychedeli
7
cult~re. The
19,
at the Ba!davon The._i.tre
•?
in a snow swept Massachusetts
Electric
Kool-Aid Acid Test
Poughkeep~ie.
The
-
film
1S
cemetary. He is surrounded by
follows the. escapades of Ken
expertly
directed
·by_
Arthur
.
friends on all sides and in the
Kesey and his Merry Pranksters.
Penn
whose
la_st film w~
background
a girl plays· Joni
Kesey who authored One Flew_ "Bonnie and Clyde''··. ~enn
·
1s Mitchel's· lyrical
·lament
"Song,5
Over _the Cuckoo's Nes~ an_d probably the ~ost. ~nlhant of to Aging Children" .
.
Sometimes · a Great Notion
IS
the new Amencan directors. In
The last scene of the film is an
known as the f3:ther of the ac!d
·
~'Alice's Res~aurant" he bring,5 enigma as is the generation the
culture
that 1s· currently m
to the screen the hopes, morals, film
represents.
J leave any
·
vogue.
dream~. and
lo~ses
~of·
_?Ur appratsal of that scene to the
On December 8 Br. Cyprian
generat10n. The film y1Sualizes individual viewer.
..
·
Rowe formerly a member of
.the
the talking blues.sto.ry that Ario
"It is not so hard to die as it is
Marist
faculty will deliver a
Guthrie made famous. But it not to live.''
lecture entitled "Africa and Its
does much more. It records a
.
Victor Hugo
Relevance in the World Today".
whole way. of life.The people in
Br. Cyprian is currently studying
.the
story do not act as much as
..
,•
...
In.-
f
~rsp~ctiye
>
Ghris••·McNamclra.•
.
With the.
·conclusion
of ·the Although he is · noted for his
·
next twoi Marist games,
.one
of receiving
.
Chris
alsc;,
_
enjoys
the
-•great
.. Viking careers will setting up plays with his fine
come to-
a
clo1,e. Over the past 4
.
blocking.• As satisf,ying, as
·
any
.
years;
Ch_ris McNamara; has_
•pass
reception was the key block
played a strategic part in·,many:_ he threw.agai~st Siena to·enable
of the_ Viking wins. Chris holds
.M:irist-
to score_
its
final.<
the. school
-
record· for most-- 'touchdown and ice the game.
passes caught. in a sitigle
·year
:
-···•-Chris
is. a
.
water
skiing
50 ... This was accomplished in his enthusiast from Oyster Bay; L.I.
.: sophomore
:year;
breaking the anc:l
,
attended . St.
•
Dominick's
~rt·,.,,,,,;.\./,L~,.
,,,;
.
.
.
. _·· ·old
.i:~cord
held:_t:,y
Jim
Conroy,-. High Schqol. .f\tS.t_._-Domiilic_k'.s.
-
::_·•
·•
·'.',.-Vf
h<>;1'.'.sii:onically,'
,,
was;,. tlie(.mari
··,hf
playeft;4,
-Y.~~rs.
Q(i{
oQtbaU ~i;id_
:· :.
·
·who)quart¢rpackedJor;Chris;;He
,a
lS,9:J'Y·l!.S:,.
<;:~Pt~m,,of;,
,t:\l,e
...
·
:.-is
·
the
1
·
alL time ,leading pass basketball team: He.
is
a business
-·
·
re:ceh(er
'.in
·
Marist
Colleg(
major,who hopes to conµnue)n
.
history .. His
·
receiving
..
records·· this field after his graduation:
:·
·
will be around for a long time.
·
Chris . has been vefy happy
.
·
Ch
iTs.
h_
as-_ had
rn any
qver the support that the fans::
outstanding games· in
a.
Marist have shown the tearn·this season,_.
-uniform.
He won his blazer for
-~This
has been true, he_ says,·.
Quarterback
John
Hurley. flips back to trailiilg back Bill Dourd.is
~
they execute· a
success(~
~ptio.;:J>lay.
-
.
'
.:
.
'
,.
.
.
·.,.
·_"
:
.
an\ outstanding
performance CSP.ecially at away games
.w,here
against.
Pr.ovidence.
_in·
his: the fans. have_ to travel long
Sophomore year. Agaipst S.eton_ d~tances
,
to support the team.
hall in his Junior year, Chris, He
also
Jeels
that
the.
playing as·
if
he was floating on cheerleaders
_have
done a_ great
air,
caught
·two
passes for· job.in their support"ofthe·team.
·
touchdowns and also. caught a chris. wiU be closing out a, fine
·Two .
Fakes Later
-Parotisia·
··•
-
pass.for 2 extra points to score
·<;areer
in
.two
more games
·and.
·
VARSITY
f~om
8
·:.
-'.
all of Marist's
14
points. This nothing could be more. fitting
· ,
'
ball and hlS shot is gciod .from up
season. his touchdown
agairist than
.
to have two'. large- crowds
to 20 feet away~ He needs inore_
.,
Assumption on a
-70
·
yard pass t_um· out to
.see
Chris help lead
work
·
with
defense;: but he
·
play
_w_as
surely oile of the the Vikings to two_ more big
·should
be able•to do thejob, Pat
-
highl~gh.ts
of the
season.
wins,
-·
·
Flem~g arid Ron Palumbo are
'.
Topfo-TheEnd
ByJoeRubffio
fij!f~i~~Et~fi~l~
Peas.
And
carrots
.
.
. .
: play a big partjn Marist's plans
.
·
·
. -
. •--
.
.
· ·
•
..
. ·
·
.·-•
.
By clobbenng Providence
-31-0,
the Vikings ended a successful_ is Jiin Cosentino. At 6:2 Jim can-·
by Joe McMahon.
se,ason with a r_ecord o_f 4-3, a recor~ which, with 3:
few
more bre_aks,. play either up• front or back ·.
..
.
..
_.
. ·
.
.
•
·
__ ·
-
·
-
··_
..
' .
could have eastly ~een 6,
I.
The wm over the Friars was especially
court. Heis a good jumper and
if.
_
The r3:11ks of.Club
~ootball
_:.
Soccer
-
team; A~ Campbell and
sweet for the semors_ on the team;
it
was a great way to end a he
can
control his·o.wn tempo/
.All-Amenca
tllay so_o~'mclu~e-
the boys, Doc Goldman, a~d a
career ... !he three biggest_ plays of the game came
in
the fourth
he will get a lot of playing time.
t_he
.
n~m.es
or
Vik~g,.,;
_
Bill number of the merry men _wh,o
_
qµarter. FlISt Dean Gestal P!cke~ off.a pass ~nd tre~de~ w_ater for_80
..
Overall,
_Jhe
team has, good
._
IacobelllS and B~ ~ourdlS. They
supp_ort the
Football. Clubs
yards and a tou~hdown whlle his mother did an 01lpamtmg of him; . height and stiength;The starting
·
·
were both nomma~ed
·
rece';ltiY
.
endeavors ....
It
took all season,
Later on! Roome Vuy :ntered. the game and threw T.D. p~es to
five is
-experienced
and should:
bf- the N;C.F.A. through rat:i,Il~ bµt Barney and Noodles finally
Route Nine Ty~e_and Bill Paccione. The one to Tyne was easily the
-
give all the· tearns on
.
the·
give':!-: by. the_ coac~es,
·-and
got a taste.of th~ pre-~me st~ak
most crowd-pleasmg p~y o~ the season. Bu~~the fans weren't the
schedule_-a good battle. Depth"in
certainly they dese_rve 1t ... Next
breakfa_st
-. ,11ot_hrng hke
only. ones "."ho loved 1t.
It
1s hard _to conceive that one could be, backcourt could
·be
a problem
year's· team
_may:
find it v_ery
_
on-the-Job
_noun~hmer.it.;.
hap~1er than ~el"o/. was _when ~e hit the end-zone ... ~he pass ~o but
if
Tallevi
_and .
Cosentino . tough to replace the 16 seruors
A_nother ,first_ 1s. CO!fllng to th;
·
.
Paccione -was s1~~1ca~t
•!1
that.it t~pped off a season which saw Btll . come on, there should not be
that are gradua~ing.·There is one
B~g U -
a _3~ay B1q-cle Race
.
.
lead the te~m· m re~eptions, m _his first year as a regular. Many
too
much
•trouble.-
Although
,
area,
however,
where
no
t~ be held m the sp~ng. Teams
people c~>ns!dere~ B~ th_e most 1mpro~ed p_layer on the team this
lacking the one big man, Marist
~ebuilding
_is
.necessary - the
will be made up of e1!her 6 ?r.8
year. I d1dn
t. I dtdn t t~k
he. was so improved because I_ thought
·
seems to have the essentials for a· defensive
•secondary.
Dean
mem~ers (we have~ t dec1d~d ·
he was j~st as good a-r~ce1ver ':3~t year, b~t he never got_t~e chance
good season. The schedule
is··
Gesta_l,
:
Bill-- Ro~ney,
Jack _ yet) and-_the race ~ill ~ollow _a
to show
1C Next y~r,
if
the
y~gs
pass more
_often,
he will appear
tougher with the addition· of
·.
McDonnell,_ Don Hinchey, and
_
relay procedure-which will entail
to be a lot better still. But he 11 simply be showing you how good he
four teams that were in either
-
Dan
.
Taisson· represent
.
a unit
·
at least 3 or 4
-
hours of hard
really is .. •
·
the NCAA or NAIA post season
that was second to ncirie this
riding each- day. T~e r3:dio and
playoffs last year. Marist should
season. Don't be surprised ifthe
new~~pers
will
-give
1t. good
be well-balanced
in scoring,
ranks of All-America-are dented
publicity; the only problems are
better
in
defense than last year
again next year when four out of cars (around the oval) an~ a
with more depth on the bench.
thi~
sparkling
crew
·
will
·
be
foolpfoof system for counting
A successful season
will
depend
seruors •.. The field managers
laps.
We
expect
strong
on
how fast the sophomore
(namely Noodles, Nolan, and
competition
from such highly
substitutes adjust to the varsity
Barney Kavanaugh), who went
reputable campus powerhouses
competition, and how well the
around wa~g
people up
_at
6 as the
Tin-an<!-Racket. Club,
team does against the new teams
a.rn. would like to thank those
Z_ymurgy _(no mhumaruty
to
added to the schedule.
that
showed
up
Saturday
bicycles
~
be
allowed), the
Topic - What's Going on Here'?
Has it come to tbe attention of anyone elsebesides myself (and, of
course, you dear Charles) that our soccer team suffered all of its
losses as the result of poor playing conditions, bad calls by
-the
officials, fluke goals, etc. At least this is the impression on~ would
receive through reading Don Duffy's soccer articles or his column,
.
·
·•campus Stuff." It all strikes me a little strange. I was in attendance
·
at several soccer games this year, and it was obvious that we did
receive more than our share of bad breaks. But isn't it possible that
some of t~ schools that beat us might just have had a better team?
·.
Or did the other twms play on a different field than us? Or were the
refs always rooting for our opposition'?
It
strikes me very strange
CONTINUED ON 4
morning
to dry
up
Lake
Banana Splits A.C., etc., ...
Leonidoff for the Providence
Recognition
is deserving to
game.. The Whirlybirds are tops
Scott McKenna, Marist's answer
on their
list
(Mr.
Campilii to Frank Buck, for the 4-point
·
arranged for a helicopter to part
the waves), then there was the
CONTINUED ON 2
I
I
--·
.
.
•,
...
\
1
~Q".f5fll~.~~.i9~,!¥9
.
>
'WRESTLERS.
TO OPEN
AT YESHIVA
•..
The::
Marist J\'restlirig
·.
Team
.
the
m•JSt likely· to SU_fCeed:
llpens,its.season on.December l,
Rogan,
a junior; is• new, to.
against
.
a
:·-stubponi
Yeshiva
·
wrestling but he is learning very
·squad
·
.
,
,
·
·
.. ,
·
·
_f~t
and has shown himself to be
.
..
Th~
..
gi~ppl~rs
.
have . been
a very·strong and mean wrestler.
·
..
working:,_.
out:
for
a
month in
·
..
·
Jack Walsh has
.
shed
·
weight
_
preparation. for
·
the:. fiist
··big
·
apd
_
looks
·
to
,
be-
·a
strong
-•
match:< Although
·
captaiiis have·
.·,
candidate for· the 164 lb. class.
•
not. beefr elected Bill
:Moody;
has
·
Walsh,. a junior, finished strong
been
::assisting-
..
Coach .~Jerry·_
·_
Iasf year, although
jt
was his first.
---
-Patrick
guide
.the
teiim through
year.· on the mats: With that
its workouts.',--.
_
_...
.
.
.
.
experience
and
.confidence,
~A
total of fifteen riien' are on
Walsh should .l;iave a good yea't.
the
·squad;
seven
-of
them
.There•is_a
real:bahle shaping
returning· from last .year's club.
up in the 177 lb. division. Leo
Weight. dasses have not been
Larkin, a sophomore who came
definitely. filled yet
-it
appears
·:
9ut for the sport
·in
the closing
.
thafJoluiny
Eisenhardfwill be
weeks
·
of last
season,. and
·
·
the' first grappler on the mats at
freshman
Jim
Lavery are really
1:18
'lbs.
:Eis\~nhardt
·.
was
going·at it.. Both boys are very
-
originally
:.:scheduled.
to· go
.
strong and fast for their size, and·
-
·
against
the
t_2'6
·
1b. class.
eith~r will do well against varsity
However
,a
serious injury
-
to
-
competition.
·
Kevin
·O'Grady·
has forced him
All one· has to'say about the
to keep losing wdglit.
·
191 lb. class
is
that Bill McGarr
<:
Sophomore
I
Mike''Candon,
·
·will
be wrestling there.
A
senior,
who
,w_restled
for two years in
McGarr has been phenomenal in
higlr school seems to have •the
his
past two seasons.
,Lacking
126 lb.
cla_ss wrapped up:· outstanding speed, Bill relys on.
Candon
.
is a· quick aggressive
.
his great strength and knowledge
wrestler
who relys
on a
·
of wrestling
to
.
carry him
·
phenomenal sense of balance to
through.
.
In Perspective
keep control of his opponent.
At
·
present
_
the heavyweight
.
Senior Pete Masterson will be
situation
is
cloudy.
John
the
-
big· man at
134 lbs.
Redman
could wrestle there
Masterson.has wrestled.for three_ once he heals a preseason injury.
years at
..
Marist and
will
-be
•
·
Several injuries ltave already
looking for
_a
big'senior year.
·
occured which could weaken the
either
118
or
1 26 lbs. is
freshman Lance Lipscomb while
Bob Sullivan is after the 126 lb.
slot. Rico Valez is working to
knock- out either Bill Moody at
142 lbs. or Pete Masterson at
134
·
lbs;
Another
Freshman
George Finn, is anxious to br<i_ak
in at either 191 lbs or as a
Frank
Attonito
'Every
team should
.
have the
.
tea1it. John Redman has not
problem
Marist
·
has
_in
its
even· worked· out. yet as· he
'
14 2-15_0 lb. classes. Bill Moody
·
suffered a broken collarbone in
and Bob Krenn are both capable
early October. Kevi!l O'Grady;a
of winning in either
class.
At
this
senior, suffered a fractured rib
·
point it seems Moody will
_
be
last week and when he will
dropping to
.
the
,lower.
class; return is still uncertain .. Mike
Moody had a poor start·but by
'Andrew
didn't even have
.
a
the
·end
of the season he was one
chance to warm up when he
of the most electric· wre'stlers
·
suffered a dislocated shoulder in
,around.
Very aggressive,•· very
his
first. practice after soccer
.
strong and highly, experienced,
season. Andrew is lost for the
·
Moody is out to start this season
first semester. Pete Masterson
·
the way
·he
finished
..
up last
-
was hit also as he suffered a
·
_
year's.
·
·
_
·
_
minor anh·
kle. injury. However it
·
.
Bob Krenn' has just finished
-·
ap~ears e w,ill be able to wrestle
the soccer season.-but·he looks
agamst_Yesh1va;
;-
,; _..:,··.
··
,,,
i.like'.>ii~
<wrestled
;aU!:'Y~ai:
..
1::.,Pus~g.th:e
._a,b~ve·-1:ll-~ntioned
····:·:!Aiiotnet·qufclCgfapp}.et;'·Krenn
1s
~-iior,_o,wrestlmg·.,.<p~~ltlons•rtare
· :
."agiiiii/6uckihg·''fof
'a•:.:.sfof-fri
::,~everal
· aggressi_ve'
wrestlers
_wh,o
·
.. _
.. M·
'd
•
·R·
.,,_
..
_,. ·::·:-,_
·,
· .,·
·--are
newcomers- to the··sport.
,
-
:·
·.:.M\
1s\b~rMattJlbg
0
an
seems struggling
·
for a position
-
at
-
heavyweight.
.
After the Yeshiva match, the
grapplers come home for their
orily first semester home match
against Southampton.
.
The
matmen
finish
the
semester with matches against
Trenton· State on December I 0,
and Kings on December 12.
The bulk of the schedule,
eight matches, comes after the
semester break with the two
biggest matches being
·
agairist
C.W. Post on February
4
and a
home· match against New Paltz
on F~bruary
1 L
Campus
Stuff
~--
by Don Duffy
·
It.
ju·st has to be
-
an exciting
yards
for
the score. This was just
heaven we bid adieu
.to
Marist
-
day. when it starts with the noise· one· of the mariy great plays
Club Football
.this
year.
::.
of the·
'helicopter
·hovering over
little Dino made Saturday. He
BITS-N~PIECES
·
.
.
.
. ·,thefieldinanattempttodryit,
recovered
a·fumble-and
Our beloved
editor, Steve
-
-
...
lj:;i:'
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or when a maintenence man tries
_:
iri tercepted ·
__
two passes. One
Harrison has to get some kind of
·
todcy
it by burning:it.
He
still
·
thing many fans didn't
.know
'record
for getting two·speeding
:
_couldn't.
understand why the
..
was that 4is: arm \vas· badly
·
•tickets
in less than 20 seconds.
··
match kept going out when he
·.
injliried yet he played·one.of the
·_
With people like him running the
·
put• it iri: a puddle of water.
.
best· games ev:er. Tom Cooney_ paper no wonder we have terible
·
It
·
has been frequently said
line for Marist. He feels that the
.Anyhow
the water problem was
gets
.an
A+ for Saturday's game.
editions: .. News Editor
John
that the offensive linemen are
Iirie has been working well this
·solved.
and
.'the
charge· was
'.Besides
the touchdown·~pass he· Zebatto gets an_ award as the
t'he most
over-looked
and
season.
He
says
that one of the
sounded of'let the game begin';
almost' broke away on a kici<-off cheat of the year.
It
seems John,
under-rated
.
members
of a
reasons for this is the constant
Marisdtruck first with a
,tS
yard
.
going 6() yards·· before
:he·
was_ while running· in the· Turkey
football team. The only time
talking of the different linemen,
.
nm·
by Bill Dourdis hopping in
stopped; The deferisi\ie plays of
·
Trot, became incensed with the
that the average fan concerns
helping
each
other out. One of
for
.
t-he touchdown ..
·
Hudson
the game -were just ainazirig.
idea of beating his roommate
himself
with
an offensive
the satisfying moments that a
Hurls riext scurried around left
·
<'Gentle Ben·" jy McDonald and
Tom McNamee. Running dead
linemen is when his man beats
linemen can enjoy is when a
end
..
for 38 yards and set up a
Marty Keeley b'oth intercepted•
last and with no one insight
him and gets to the quarterback.
back runs through a hole that
.touchdown·
pass to._ "Crash"
.
key passes to stop· offensive
·
except a giant ant with no legs,
Fans always seem to see this and
you have opened. Frank feels
Cooney. ~hen-John runs for 38
.
threats. Don Hinchey, Henry
John decided he make his own
forget the many times he has
·
that one of the highpoints of his
yards· there is· no way
.you
can
Blum and Danny Faison made. course one that would be about
handled his man. Frank Attonito
career_ was in the Assumption
-·
1ose.
·
Ron Vuy came in_ as the
great .tackles one right after the
2 miles shorter than the original
is an excellent example of this.
game when he opened a hole
fourt'h
quarter
began
and
other. Bill Dourdis and Dicky
one. John finished 16th without
Oftentimes going both,ways, on
large enough for a· hack to
.
quickly•
passed
for
two
Hasbrouch picked up
_157
and
_
sweating and also accepted his
offe11se at right guard and on
scamper
into
the
endzone
touchdowns.
(I'm-sure
glad
121·Yards
respectively
in
stick
joyfully.
What.
a
defense at middle guard; it is
untouched:Frankfeelsthatthe
Marist has no offensive threat)
establishing one· of· the best 1-2
du!Ilmy!!!! ....
We understand
only_ the ardent Viking fan who
spring game against Iona was the
The··nrst
one came-.to Route
·punch-in football today. I
guess
Jim Dorian is starting
a
new
.
knows that no. 64 is Frank
most satisfying victory of his
Niiie·Tyne on a 29 yard jobber
married·.life doesn't tire the fast
column in the CIRCLE called· Attonito. Going both ways is
career.
He feels
that
the
right· over the
-
middle. Jerry
Greek at all or
_maybe.
he
fs
Student Out Of Focus after }lis certainly
an honor for any
offensive line played superbly,
·
scored with two Frairs hanging running away from Jo-Ann. Billy
run in with the Marist pole ...
If
football player and 2 way tackle
both
in_ opening
holes and
·
all over him. Being very elated
Iacobellis couldn't play due to a
you ever get a chance to meet
Frank
(or two way guard'?)
protecting the passer.
-
.
after the score, Jerry ran up and
leg injury but we understand
Jim's crazy sister Nancy and her
certainly handles both positions
Frank earned a decal for his
down
the
sidelines
tE:lling that he was awarded socialable
-
·
adorable friends (Nancy, Anne
very capably. Fran~ certainly
excellent
performance in the
everybody how good he was, He guy of t~e year 31ward wit_h his
·
or Maureen) pass it up
...
Lets
has as much spirit as anyone in
•.
opener against Plattsburg this
convinced one seven year old kid
famou~ list of ruc~names. (The
give a big hand to the Marist
dub football and can often be
season. He feels that the Siena
.that
he was all American
Lee Sisters). Chris McNamara
cheerleaders
who
did an
heard
shouting
words
of
game, thisseason,wasoneofhis
material after pounding him over play~d his last game of ~s career
outstanding job. The reason it
en c o u r a gem en t to
his
finest. Looking forward to his
the head with his helmet. Last and It was a d!1fldy. Gomg both
might not seem that way to the
teammates. (rip his throat out!)
last game in a Marist uniform,·
seen Jerry was telling Mr. Vicky
ways
some_hmes
he was a
fans was because they gave them
One of the bigger Viking
Frank
has seen many hard
how. great
he was!!!!
Bill v~luableassetonthefiel~.(That
nosupport,sorah,rahthat..
I
players Frank is 6'0" and 210
knocks
and
bruises.
To
Paccio~e caught
·
another great
wdl be five d~Uars, Chris) La~t understand Alcholics Anoymous
pounds.
It may be hard to
appreciate the value of lineman
pass from Vuy for a 49 yard games of semor co-capts_ Bill is starting a chapter on campus
imagine but in his high school
like Frank one must look at the
tally. Bill has already headlined
M~a~
and Don· Ronchi ~nd
with
headquarters
at the
days at Chaminade Frank was an
statistics. It is no coincidence
the Newburgh Press as being a theI!
~s
no w~y
!
can possibly
gatehouse. I think they are too
outstanding sprinter running the
that Marist has one of the best
star so maybe they
will
give him dese:nbe
therr four years at
late to save those people ... Well. 100 and 220 yard sprints in
rushing attacks in the naion. It is
the paper now, (I wonder
if
the Manst
except GREAT. Bob
that's about all for this week.
addition to playing 4 years of
the offensive interior lin
:men
Catholic News will run a feature
Harper, Bill Leber, Joe Ritz,
Basketball and Wrestling start
football. A native of Westbury,
like Frank who open the
llolcs
on you this week, Bill boy.) To Fatty. Towers and big Frank
Dec.
I.
How does a three day
L.1., who majors in History, he
to enable the backs to pie:; up
be serious, Marist scored one ~lt~rut~ were all over the field
bicycle race in the spring sound
has been developing an interest
yardage.
other touchdown that coming m b.rg wm Saturday. So Football
to you Let us know
Be
in lacrosse
and also. enjoys
from
defensive
gem .. Dino"
•6_9
ends on a big winning note,
Good, Love D·uff.
watching basketball.
Gestal when he intercepted a so as the football players drift·
This is Frank's 3rd year on the
Frair pass and ran it back 60 slowly
·to
their
touchdown
◄
I'
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Jan. 28
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Heart
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-
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Coach Ron· Petro
·
has decided
:on
a
14
nian basketball team this
year.' With five lettermen
r,etuming; the team
is
confident
Ray Charlton· co-captain.
·
:
Qt:c;
1
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Dec;):12 ..
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Dec.
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Dec. 26~29 ••
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- •• ;:
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Feb.)_:~
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Feb.
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,
Standing
(L.
to ~)
-Coach
Ron Petro,
Dennis
C~tin~ Brian Mcqowan, Ray Manning, Bill Spenla; Joe Scott,.
Terry McMac~;
Bob
..
Ullrlch,
J. Tkach (mgr.),
Bany LaCombe
(mgr.).
. ·
·
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,
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--•.
~
.
of having
a
good sea.son; ~th
•·
a~ay a fe~ fu~hes
~
height ~d
,
fill
fu,
at, center or fo~ard and
;_
Rich Talievi: Rich
will
see a lot
the ultimate· objective· being to
weight, Ray makes up for it with
he gained
.
valuable·. experience
of' action as
·he
can· handle the
.
better
last'.
year•~
fine-
19-8
his
knowleclge o~,the g,ame and· last year as·a·sub. He has a great
. ·
.
record:
.. . .
·
·
.·
.
.
•·
.•
-
his·grea~ ~nticipation.
·
·
....
,
jump shot and can take the
CONTINUED
ON 6
The· starting five- looks
.solid
·
,
.
Heading the backc.ourt ~ill be bigger
men away from
·
the
·with·
four
1
et t er
in
en·
c9-captain
Ray. Charlton.
basket. Joining Ullrich up front.
,commanding
the
posiJions.
Charlton,·a transfer last season should
be sophomore Brian
Team leader ap.d co.captain Bill
from
Suffolk
Community
·
McGowan. McGowan led the
.
Spenla
will
be teaming with high
·
College, averaged 12.0. He
is
_in
.
freshmen
last
year with a 16.3
school teammate (Don
·
Bosco
great shape_
?,OW
and looks
~
.
average. Brian· is a good shooter.
High, Ramsey,
N.J.)
Joe Scott to
thol!gh he will lead the team
m
·
and will
·be
a. valuable substitute
fill the forward slots. Both are
the fast break as well as in
'
for Scott and Spenla throughout
excellent off the boards and
shooting. The other backcourt
the season.
.
.
.
possess greatjumpingabilityand·
position will probably
_go
to
.Others.·
who
will
play
timin~ Both have a tremendous
sophomore• Ray Clarke. Ray important roles in the forecourt
competitive attitude and
.
they
averaged 10.~
~
for the
-
freshman
,-
a re
.
so_ p horn ores
Terry
'
are very strong.1Jtey should be
last year. He
IS
a steady player
McMackin, a tough
6:2,
200
able
to handle
the taller
who can shoot~ ballhandle and with
a
strong desire and good
forwards with no problems.
pass,
as well
3S
play defense. He rebounding
power;
Dennis
-At center
will be Ray
1s a tou~ ballplayer, who, once
Curtin, a
6:4
center who will get
Manning. Manning.is
not. as
he
gets
used
to varsity
betterwithexperienceandSteve·
flashy as some of the others but
90mpetition wilI be a vital.cog in
Shackel,
a
6:3
swing man who
he.is a
great
team ballplayer who
the Marist attack
•.
•
.
can shoot the eyes out of the
gets the
job
done. He did average
For the first
time
in Marist's baskeL·
'
··
13.3 last·year and
was
second on
history there
will
be a strong
In the
•
backcourt will
be
a
the leaf!! in rebounds. Ray
w~
bench. Bob Ullrich, a
6:4
junior
handful of inexperienced players
also named to two tournament
lett_ennan from las~ year will be
.
backing up Charlton and Clarke.
teams last year. Although giving seemg a lot of action. Bob can
Probably the best of the group is
.Bill"Spenla,
co-captain.
J