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The Circle, January 29, 1970

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 11 - January 29, 1970

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VOLUME
6:
N_U,MBER
11
MARIST
COLLEGE,POUGHKEEPSIE,
NEWYORIU2601
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JANUARY
29, 1970
Brow'tte
lnterYiews
U]S.
AmlClssador·
The · foUowing is . an exclusive
ofLatiil A:rriericari affairs?
· interview· With United · Sta·tes · '\FAUGHN:
I
realized a:fter 28
,HOiiis
Appointed
Leo.
HOusemastef
. A:mbassador
Jack · vaughn.
· or 30 ·professional prize~fights I
-Be fore. ~being
, appointed
wasn't .goi11g
__
to make it to the
· , ambassador ,··to Colombia Mr.
top, and I think when a person
Vaughn was·. Director
of the
realizes that in boxing, it's better
'PeaJ;e Corps urider the Johnson
.
to
withdraw
- -which I did
Adininistration._Jn
·1965
ungracefully just before I went
A inb ass~d or. Vatighh
.
was
into the military' service. So that
Assistant
Secretary
for , when
I
had .Cinished a second
Inter-American Affairs. At the
type,.of fighting in the .Marine
. sanie time he held the position
Corps in World War
II, I
rather
.as Coordinator for· the Alliance
had my fill of fighting of all
foi: Progress. The previous year,
kinds
-and
have since beeri
1964,
Mr .. Vaughn
was U.S.· 'engaged in ·other more peaceful
Ambassador to Panama. Jack
pursuits. When I came back from
Vaughn was· first introduced
fo
military service>! continued
my
life in Latin America when in .graduate work, and based in the
1941
he began a short-lived
great affinity
I
developed for
life
career
as .a prize-fighter
in
and working in Latin America as
Mexico.
.
.
a result
· of my Mexican
Interviewing
Ambassador
experience,
l.
majored in Latin
Vaughn is Circle corresponde'rit
American studies and retained ·
· Paul Browne. Browne is. the
my interest in Latin America.
Circle's former editor-in-chief,
I went
to.
graduate school in
C
u r r e n t l y . a
M a r i s t
Mexico, and was teaching Latin
third-year-abroad
student
American history; and· Spanish,
studying in Colombia.
'
and, French at Michigan and ·at
· ·
* * * * *
the · University of .Pennsylvania.
BROWNE:
Many .. would
Andfinallyfo
1949Idecidedto
consider
a
Mexican boxing ring · start working
"in
Latin America.
an unlikely starting point for·<t Arid, · that's
pretty · much my
· diplomatic career. When did you . history, ·evei: since. That's 20
first consider leaving the ring in years
·of more-or-less steady
exchange for a bout in the arena
.. CONTINUED
ON
PAGE
i
Mr.
Stan Hollis
Irishmen
to
See·
the ~,
Old
:Sod'r
The -March meeting of the
Marist· College Gaelic Society
will . be held in the torchlit
· Banquet Hall of Bunratty Castle,
Ireland.
The setting .will be
Fifteenth Century Ireland in a
mead .hall in county Clare and
you · are ,invited
to attend.
According -to Edward Fogarty,
President of the society, it is all
part
of a two
week
tour
spon·sored by the Gaelic Society,
leaving from Kennedy Airport
on March 24th. This tour will be
open
·to all students
and
residents of the area .
Stanley
Hollis has replaced
Brother Patrick Gallagher, who
resigned as Housemaster of Leo
House.· Bro_ther Pat Gallagher
who
rece~tly
returned
from
Appalachia_
continues
as . a
member of the faculty and · a
. faculty adviser.
.
• . · ·
Stanley' Hollis
is
now charged
with the dual roles of student
and administrator, and joins the
ranks of such activists as Bro.
Fred Lambert-and
Bro. Joseph
Belenger;
·
"Stan"
is no stranger to Leo
House life, for he has resided
there as faculty adviser for .two
· years.
· ·" The
new
Housemaster
is
. formerly
a native of Boston,
Massachusetts. He attended the
University·.of Massachusetts and
graduated
with an Associate
degree·
in the
Science
of.
Agriculture ~ft~r farming in New
England for ten years.
. : .. /There will be
an
Irish ],fight at . .
;?';:'cthe
•;·i::6U~ge_.,m··:
connettion ··with·~~-'-
'. the_ "Easter - in · lrela.nd" ·• tour, · '.
.Tuesday,
February 3rd, -in room · ·
249 . of· the · campus center.
Stanley taught at the Barlow
school at Amenia, New York. It
was at Barlow that Stan heard of
Marist. Stan was attached to the
Putney, School and served ori a
Board of Education.
Mr ..
Hollis has been an active
member of the Upward Bound
Program
and
is' currently
resident
Director of Upward
Bound.
Tho.ugh
his
recent
appointment
as Housemaster
ranks
high
in
terms
of
memorabilia
for
Stan,
his
November wedding to Miss Jean
Tuoti will be remembered by all
of the Miuist community.
· Stan
and Jean, who is a
registered nurse at Castle Point
Veterans
Hospital,
had their
wedding reception in Leo House ..
It is a possibility that Mr. Hollis)
and wife might retum to the
Marist- House System, if so, it
would be a college first. .
Starting at
8
p.m. thei:e
will
be a
speaker from .the Irish Tourist
· Board, · arid also a short film
presentation. by Irish Airlines.
Afterwards coffee and cake will
be served
at · an informal
question-answer
period
concerning the trip. · .. _ .. · , ·
. "Easter
in Ireland"
will
. · Student'I enjoy
·the
new recreational facilities
in
the former
Reynard office.
The
idea was conceived and executed by
Mr.
Joseph
Brosnan, Campus Center Director. Funds. from the machines
will
be
used
for
further development of
the
campus center.
These
facilities
are open from 12 noon until· 10
p.m:
during the week.
•. include ,a round trip flight via
Irish Airlines, plu's guided luxury
coach tour, with dinner, bed,
full
Irish
breakfast
and
luncheons
while on tour .at
.Grade A . hotels. The · second
wee~ of the trip
is ·
open for
personal
visiting and private
sightseeing,
The cost of the
flight and six day ,tour with all
Faculty•·
to
.
Vote
··
Soon
011.
APC.
Proposals
Above
is
the
livin~
room of --suite., 217 Sheaha.n
Hall.
Sl,e,l,ail
Stlldents
Try
NeW
..
Dorm
Concept
·
. mel}Is, hotels and all sightseeing
The
faculty
will vote on
.fees is two.hundred
and ninety
Thursday,
February
5 on the
nine dollars.
recommendafions
of the
The highlights of the tour are
Academic
Policy Committee.
the
Medieval
Banquet
at
The
APC
recomm·ended
Bunratty
Castle, the Ring· of
unanimously the following three ·
Kerry -tour, .visits to Blarney
major
proposals:
-(
1)·
The
Castle and the Guiness Brewery,
granting of the B.S. in Business.
plus much more.
(2)
The
elimination
of the
Contained in the Presidential
House Council.
For
further
information
theology requirement.
(3)
The
contact Mr. Fogarty by mail:
establishment
of a major in
Marist
College,
Box 131-C,
environment science.
Planning
CoIJ1mittee's report
The purpose was to _create a
concerning House and Life-style
definite
atmosphere
for
is the statement
to, "initiate
scholasttc endeavor. interwoven
architectural studies of the ·cost
with -practical living condi~ions.
of
converting·
existing
·Emphasis: was· placed on the
dormitories to smaller units." In
i m port an c .e o f a q u
i
e t
accordance with .this desire, Jim
atmosphere; with the adjoining
Daly, Bill Deucher, Ken Dunn
room,.studying or reading woulc!,
and Rich Anderson began to .. not
be
distui:bed
by a
design what they
felt
would be ,. conversation in the living room.
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. or phone·
The B.S. proposal originally
452-9143.
--prescribed
a core
which
* *
*
* *
contain·ed
no
language
requirement.·
This . however
Irish Night
inhabitable living quarters.
This new experience in living
In
connection
with their
D
· d
I
k
Id · d t
Easter trip to Ireland, the Marist
esire physical changes were
is on
Y
two wee s o , an_ ·a
College Gaelic Society will be
drawn
up and submitted
to
this point it cannot be predicted
Brother
Nilus ·DonneJly and
if
the experiment will succeed or
sponsoring an Irish Night on
House Master Brother Joseph
fail. Some have speculated that
Tuesday, February 3, 1970. The
Belanger.
It ~as proposed that
the problems of dorm _living will
evening will feature a speaker
1 •
l
from the Irish Tourist Board and
two consecutive adjacent rooms . be
magnified
and u tunate
Y
a short
f"l
t t"
would be joi!)ed by an interior
cause failure. T~e four students'
courtes
~f
Iii~~sen. a. ion
door connecting the rooms; one
invo_l'!ed
beheve
that
by
Afterw~s
coffee and
~{~1i
room would serve as a study
contammg all petty and selfish
be served
at an

f
1
room_, the other would double as
needs they will be ~bl~ _t_o
live question
and answ;:
~!:rC:J
sleeping quarters and a l(!unge.
and . study,
not
in
Just a
about the trip. Irish Night will
To allow for more space m the
donrutory
~ooJ!), but, as one
be starting at 8 p.m. in roo
b~droom two sets of bunk beds
visit?r put it, m a plac~, th at
249
in the campus center.
F:;:.
·
,vcre purchased.
remmd~ me m!'re of home.

further information
about the
Afte~ nu~e~ous
confere~ces
"f1!e unmediate succ_ess _o_f
thi s trip or the Irish Night contact
and
rnq.u1nes
concerning
proJect
does not lie
1!1
th e Mr.'Ed Fogart
Marist'Colle e
const~cllon
costs and other
eventual outcome,
but m the
Box 131-C P<i~ghkeepsie N'7'
n eceSSities, the proposal was
initiative shown by the students
or phone: 452-9143.
'
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passed by the Sheahan Hall
involved.
* * * * • ·
evidently met with · opposition
and the proponents for retention
of
the
language requirement
recommended that the B.S. core
requirement, at·least temporarily
be maintained
like the. B.A.
reg uirements
in
business.
Consequently,
if
the awarding of
th~ B.S. is approved by the
faculty, and this is expected, the
core requirements will have to
be established Jat~r by the APC.
The other two proposals are also
expected to be approved despite
the resistance by some faculty
opposed to the environmental
program due to the inadequacies
of
the library and to some
religious
studies
instructors'
objections
to
theology
requirement being eliminated.
The
APC
is
composed
of
voting faculty and non-voting
students.
The three . proposals
will
be
voted on by the faculty
only.
The proposals become
effective next fall .· once they
have .been approved by the
faculty, however a member of
the APC has. stated tliat if the
theology_
requirement
is
eliminated, that may take effect
immediately.
.
*****
F.P.C.
Proposes
Pay Raise
The Faculty Policy Committee
which
has
functioned
as a
bllrgaining agent for the Marist
· faculty, although
theoretically
there is no bargaining agent, has
. proposed pay raises amounting
to twenty
. percent
totally,
sixteen
percent
in salary
increases and four percent in
fringe
benefits.
The salary
increases do not effect all the
faculty· in the same proportion,
whether
the instructor
is of
assistant or associate professor
status, or other status is a factor.
The basis for salary comparisons
is made
by
corresponding
"ratings" of teachers throughout
the country. The fringe benefits
include free education at Marist
for instructors
children. Bro.
Linus
Foy
will ·
make a C()unter
offer to the FPC.
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PAGE2
111ECIRCLE
·
Browne
Interviews·•·.·
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Ambassagor
Vaughn:
Interview from 1
them?
.
·
be taken in constance with the
involvement. in Latin American
.
VAUGHN:
.
I. think
.
the
other Latin American nations.
affairs of one kind or another.
mistakes that we make are a We have a number of treaties
And
I re~
.lY,
Paul,
don't
.direct
result of being members
and
agreements
·
through the
consider thdt there is all that
·
of a ph.iralistic'society. That is:
OAS which require this, and I
much disparity between living in
.
were we a dictatorship, and_ were think we would do it. anyway.
Latin America regardless of what
.
the President or the Secretary of
The second point is, as iff good
you're doing and continuing to
State' able to do anyt_hing they
dancing,
H
takes two.to tango -
live in this kind of environment
.
wanted .to do in the way of. and l think before we change
which intrigues me. And l have· - policy. and changing policy and
our policy vis-a-vis Cuba, that
felt that we have so much in
in making fonds available to
ti?e're would , have
·
to be an
common and we. have so much

Latin America, then l think we agreement on the part of-.Cuba:
going for us, that we should do
.
could eliminate some. of the
to modify its policy. I think thtit ·
our very best to continue to
mistakes. But the mistakes often
we would have to be very clear
eliminate differences of op_inion· come from compromise - where
as to what they plan to do in
and find common ground for
for example, if we want to
.carry
·
terms
of
relations with other
.
joint activities to. make of the
out a policy we have to have the
nations: in
·terms.of
insurgency,
hemisphere the kind of place we
.
approval of the Department of
arms
shipments, attempts. to
all aspire to.
Agriculture,
of the Defense· overthro\Y

governments.
We .
So it was more a phase of my
Department, of the Bureau of
would
have
to have
the
life
that it was a real change of
·sud
get,
of the
Treasury
assurance that they wouldn't
pace. And I owe to my boxing
Department, of the Commerce
send ·any more Che Guevaras to
the.opportunity,
_in a sense, to_·,Department.
And
'this
has
fry
to
overthrow
Latin.
fall in love with Latin America
t ended
to
g i v-e us
a
_
governments.
where I've been ever since.
watered-down solution, and has
So I
,guess
·
that I'm not
'1~·,_,_i
_,
.•
;:·~!~;;
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·
·;ANuAJiv·29~
1970
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A well cle~ed parking lot reflects the thorough cleaning j~b
.
performed by
Mr.
Pa\'.elko's maintenance staff after the blizzard'
·
·
during th_e recent semester break,
·
BROWNE: In noting some
made for rather slow progress answering
you're
qu~stion.
·
disparities, as you mentioned,
because of the time required to
because I'm not in.a position to.
·.·c·,·,·c··u·
·
1·a:r
··Reaso·
.•.n•,n·

.....
Latin
,America
in· the minds of
.
get
decisions,
because we're
speak as
to
whether we might
-
many Unite.d States citizens is a
democratic and everybqdy's in
change our policy vis-a-vis Cuba.
--------------
strong-hold
for. anti-American
the acL But l think
it
would be
I.just point out two basic factors
·
·
c
11
sentiments. To what extent do
hard
to cite one particular
in making that determination:
A
"V:
er·'
y''.
.
C
'th
0·1
•c
O
.-eg:e
:
you think these sentiments
exist
deficiency that we might have.
that
·
w c wouldn't.
do
..
it
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a
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·.
_
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· ..
•in
Colombia?
..
I'm
speaking
in the Latin
·unilaterally
either in terms'of
_
VAUGHN: It's very easy if
Americans' view of us, unless it
what
·
other
La tin countries
,
you base your judgement only
would be our tariff and trade
thought, nor
·
would we do it
on the press, which traditionally
policies - where 'again we have unilaterally with regard to what
by Steve Harrison
has reported
problems and
lobbies
of producing people,
Cuba did or did not do.
It's a not so funny thing, but with all the tuition increases Marist
d i s a g r e e m e n t s , crisis,
manufacturers, farmers, unions,
BROWNE : My fin
al
two
has seen over the past four years, we are still' in much financial
revolutions, and the like. But
shipping
companies,
and
the
questions· concern more Latin
trouble. Not that this isn't the problem·ofalmost all colleges today,
I've had a chance in working in
like, who ·again arc
,part
of this
America exclusively
..
There is• but it is particularly magnified at MOT.H
foi
a number of reasons,
the Peace Corps,
·where
we were
pluralistic society and must be
much talk, I know among North
First off, we are a young- college with no alumni to speak of.
operating in 60 countries around
heard; and they ha_ve a certain
American
students and even
Without the aid of an elderly, financially stable alumni we cannot
the world, to visit all of these. amount of influence, so that we students
here,
that
Latin
e·xpect
·substantial
contributions for quite
a
few years to
_come.
countries and to. go out with
haven't been as generous as we
America
is a continent
of
Another reason lies.in the fact that Marist.has been unable to:gain
volunteers and meet the people
might.have been in according to
revolution.·
And yet, in my
many
.
substantial grants from private benefactors. This, too, is
and ignore the press. And I
Latin American nations special
opinion, the nations. of Latin · because Marist is a.young college which has grown so fast.that it has
.
\\'.OUld say
in
terms
of
trade preferences.
America· have been historically
had litUe time to become the prominent beneficiary of some
anti-American
feeling
or
We do .many
things: for
plagued.
with_
"palace
generous-philanthropist.

·
·
sentiment
·of
hostility, and in·.· example, in sugar we pay Latin
revolutions" or military coups of
So largely, Marist has been left
to
shift for itself. The·sttident at
terms
of percentage of the
American nations three times as
one
sort
or another .
.-
What
Marist gets exactly. what he pays for and
.no.more.
This· is·notthe

population Jn disagreement with
·
much. as -they. could get in the
countries, if
-any,
do. you. feel
fault of the college; ~nd in fact the college should· be complimented••
.
us, our
_civilization,'.
and our
-
world' mark.et. B_ut there.js, at
will soon expe,ri~nce wliat
..
<>ne
foi
giving

fairly decent helping;,
considenng·that·'tliere
·are,·few
··
..
:policy,thatthereisi'nuch,·ll\UCh-tne-same'time,agreaterlimitas·
co·u1d considera·genuine
'excessfunds'
..
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..
,
...
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··,
·.•
,···,:cc_
·;'::··;::,•:<--,:::,•····
..
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less
·
anti-American
feeling in
to how much they can ship to us
.
revolutidn?
·
·
. '
.
.
.
.
·
.But
this c~n:;dast' f~re\ier. The faculty ha;e proposed
·some
fairly
Latin America than· in any other
at that price; And this is b_ecause
VAUGHN:. I share your view
·
healthy pay hikes, new construction will, soon b'e un~er_ way and new
geographic area of the world. I
.
we have sugar producers,_ sugar
Paul, that looking at the history
,
majoi:s will soon be
·
added necessitating more salaried professors.
think this is more significa_nt. beet. producers in the. United
·of
.
the
·twentieth
century··•· in.
Something has to give.
· .
•.
-.
when you recognize that the
..
.States, and we can't, or have felt
Latin
America
that. the:..
One way.(and se_emingly the ONcY.way)
tq
alleviate
pur
painful
Latin Americans, by-and-large,
we couldn't,
_open
..
tlie flopd
overwhelming
percentage of
dilemma is to receive sfate aid, But asis riow common knowledge,
know us. better than. peopie in
.
gates and give special preferences
so-called revolutions
.
have· been
.
Manst has·,. again been refused state
,aid
·.because·
of the.
·Blaine
Asfa or Africa for example, or
·
to Latins in all fields. I have a
palace• revolutfons,. capitol c~ty
Am~_ndment
.wh,ith
~w,taiils
·the_
sel?aration of church
and·
state.
the Middle-East. They have hacl
hurich we're going to do much
revolu_tions; and that genuine
The college argues,this under the preIDisethatwe no l9nger have any•
more contact with us. There are
better in this regard. In fact the
revolutions,
.
w_here the total.
religious affµiation withtheMarist
Brothersand that we no longez:
millions of Latin Americans who
President has intimated
as
much
structure. is changed; have been . are a Catholic
.or
,a
Church school but simply a private institution
have
been
educated· in the
in his October 31 speech.
,
limited to Mexico, Cuba, and
entitled to state.aid, ·
.
.
. .
_
.
:
United
States and with'. the
·
If you look at th~ concensus
Bolivia. Whether
·there
will
be
,
+.for one am·not.satisfied,with
this argument at all. It leaves me
exchange:
.
the
-busines_s;.
~he of the, Vin~ del Mar, I tJlin_k
you_
·
real revolutions of this sort in
..
hanging in limbo.
Ori
one:side
I
hear that Mari.st is not a religious
academic exchange, people like
would believe. that this 1s the
the future is dependent ori what. -institution,. but
,on.
the other
.side:T-.see
a definitely· Catholic-
you coming ll.ere, they really
main
lamen:t
of the Latin
kind of reform is carried out by
institution. Now let's be honest. As Iorig·as the Marist· brothers
know us well. And I think it's a
.
American· nations - that- we are
existing governmen!s.
_
The kind
maintain almost total
,contror
of the administration, as long as they
very bright.sign indeed, knowing
:
too strlctin
terms of our trade
of thing that, for.example, the. maintain c,ontrol_pf the·dprms, as long
as
the studenibrothers have
.
us as well as they do that there is.
··with
.Latin.
America .. Beyond
military-
regime. in Peru has
segregated residences, asfo11g as the Chapel remains Catholic·rathet
so little anti-American feeling. I
·
that
l
really can't think of any
promised is in a sense revolution;
t}!an nc,,n-s.ectariari, as)ong as theology:(excuse me, religious studies)
·
think~ it's minimaL There's some
:
major deficiency, unless it would
-but
it
doesn't imply· murder and
.
is
encouraged,
_etc.-
Marist is as Catholic as the Pope himself.
.·•_
...
·
-~ ··
.
unhappiness,
obviously with
.
be the tc;>t1tl.
amount off\mds
great violence.· But ~t implies
·
·
Do not'.~sinterpret
me, I am noCknqcking "Brother Power" or
what they think is our
·policy
of
available.: As you know, the. radical reform in terips of land
Catholic·
institutions.
The Brothers· at Marist are, indeed
not doing enough for them, or
record of aid in the past four
ownership,. ownership' of the
indispensibl~. Butit is still lll.correct to·classify-Manst as.a privat~
being a little paternalistic. But
in·
'years
has been one of a steadily
means of production, spreading
institution. If
.we .wish
to become a
'.private
institution
anq
get a
dealing intimately
with other·
declining
cui"e
in total·
out income;
a
whole host of
chunk of. state aid.then we.must ~'decatholicize" and the brothers
countries. you are always faced· availability. And although
'Latin
things that will give the little guy
m1;1st
ineyfoibly·Iooseri. ui>, on the reins unless, of-course,
·the
·Blaine
·
with that problem: that is, doing
Ainerica under the Alliance for
a chance.
·
amendmeritis repealed.
.
. ·
.
.
•.
:
·
.
·
. •

·
.
'
. '
··
a lot in taking the lead and being
·
Progress
has done - relatively·
· Otir philosophy, yours··: and
Marist Cc:>Uege
ne~ds-state aid.soon-·very soon:lfwe do'notgetit
called paternalistic, and, on the

better than say, Africa, still they
.
mine
l
think, is. that it is much
theA the· students· are in·Jor
·
anot~er heartbreak.-
·And
many hearts
other
.hand
doing less and being. have experienced this decline in
better, easier, cheaper·
in
terins
h.ave been br~ke~ afthe l>ank.
·
· ·
..
<•
.
charged with abandoning them -
total. funds available ... which in
of cost and lives, if it is done
·
·
·
• ..
.
,
not
·
doing nearly enough. Well
their eyes meaps a lessening of
peacefully - and it can be, it has
·
., ·
·;
.
·
we're somewhere in between. In
interest.

been
done
that way· many
summary
I would
.say
the
·
BROWNE:
On a rather
places. So I can't and shouJdn't
so-called anti-American feeling is
different note, do you think the
predict whether
.
there will be
_greatly
overdone. I find that
.Nixon
Administration
·will
.
real
violent
revolutions
there are many North American
recognize -Communist Cuba, or
elsewhere
in Latin America~
students who are more hostile to
:make
·
initiatives
to
·
open
because this .is in the· hands pf
the· United States than Latin
channels'.
of communication
the leaders and people as to how
American students.
. ·between.
the United States and
they warit to do it. All that I can
BROWNE: Well as a student
·
Cuba?
.
say is that there is an increasing
myself, I don't consider myself
VAUGHN: I think that this
awareness,
that basic,·. fairly
asbeinghostile,butldolookat
question·
and
in similar
radical, changes are. needed in
the
.
faults, I suppose, more so
questions, that we are faced with
.
many Latin American countrie:5.
than. the good points, because
two
·considerations
basically.
To speculate on how these will
the
good
points
speak for
The first is the consideration of
occur is, I don't think, astute on
'themselves.
And on that note, in
doing or acting on a hemispheric
my part. AU I can predict is that
his October 31
·
speech President
basis. That is, not recognizing
they will occur in the coming
Nixon said, "Often we in the
unilaterally a nation such as
decade or two; .. at least I hope·
United States have been charged
Cuba. It's been our practice for
very much that they wilL
.
with an overweening confidence
many years, when there has been
BROWNE:
·
My f"}al q';'estlon,
in the rightness of our own
an unconstitutional
overthrow
Mr. Ambassador, 1s with the
'prescriptions:
occasionally we
of
a government
in the
renewed promises o! action on
have
·been
guilty of the charge."
hemisphere, to consult with our
the part _of the United St":tes,
Mr. Vaughn,
what, in your
friends
in· the
hemisphere
what actions do you consider
opir..ion, are some of the more
whether, how, and at what time~ important
for Latin American
serious
mistakes the United
we should recognize the new
nations to make in order to help
States
is currently making in
regime. So that's the first point,
themselves?
·
Latin America. and what, if
that we would do this. Any step
VAUGHN:
Speaking
of
anything, can we do t? correct
we took concerning Cuba would
renewed promises, I think that
they ire
a
lot ~o;~
;eali~tic
than
tlle earlier· 9nes
.in.
the,-Alliance
for
Progress which, were:- so
generaL
.
Fc;>r·
-~.xample,·
,we
.
promised
.l
0 billion dollars in
.
public.funds in-IO years;and·we.
set' as a target a two and one half
percent per capita increase in·
gross national product.
·I
·think
that the things that President
Nixon has suggested are much,
more to the point, much more
specific, and
.they
are going to
continue. There
will
be new
initiatives and
·
new agreements
reached
as a result of the
meetings
now
going· on in
Washington
(NOTE:
This
interview·
was
held in late
November) and the later meeting
in January of the ministers of
Latin America in Caracas.
But speaking of the things that
they can or· should do, there are
some obvious and crucial ones.
Such as, better tax programs
_
both in term_s of the desi~ !)f
the prograJ!l, l!nd i!).•coUectton;pf
.
taxes.
l::
think
there ,is!
an
enormous
need. for . increased
domestk -savings. I think that
·
there is an· enormous-need
for
.
better means of transportation,
:
here in Colombia as well. I think ·
this is orie of the cruc:;ial things
.
needed·
in
linking up the urban
'.
c·en ters
..
with
.
the campcisino
areas·; I think that this is crucial
in terms of. carrying
·
.out
the .
intent of the Grupo Andino, the
.
Andean Group, and the Latin
-
American Common Market. I
think that perhaps · the most
important
iri the
so-called
one-crop
economies,
is to
diversify their production,
to
expand their minor exports so
they
aren't
hanging on- the
vagaries of world markets when
they ha_ve one crop, whether it
be bananas or coffee, sugar, or.
some other crop. I don't think
CONTINUED
ON PAGE
7
:.1•,_:_1.:
·•,
:
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,JANUARY 29.1970
THECIRCLE.
··Clambakes
··in·-:Winterfl
· ·
·
.L-.
-.,
D.
-o
,-·
s
Howard·
Teaches
Course·!
On
Blaclr
America
.
-
.
.
.
'-
::
:
.
.
:.·
..
..
:
_Clubs
- Organizations·
:::
Rent Our Hall With
.)~ri
Indoor
"Barbecue'
••.
Pit
--Then Let us
-Mr.
Lewis.
H.
Howard
-
has
.
Howard is also a member
of
the
begun
.
as
-
instructor
in Black Association
of Negro History
America, a three credit course
and Culture, a group of experts
dealing· with. the history of the
whose·· purpose is. to condu~t
Black
.
man
·
in America, with
historical
investigation
and
references
-
to his African past, a
-
amass historical documentation
new look at the growth and
dealing with Black History. The
development of- the Ameri~~.
·
association
is
currently sifting
social order
.
·
and. the
·
specific
through some of the writings of
roles of black men
.and
women
the late-W.E.B. Dubois. ·
'
'Cater
or·ooYour
.Own
Thing.
Ski
who have contributed
.
to this
Black America,
Mr.
Howard
·
·growth
arid development..
..·
stated~ should not be seen as a
Mr.
·Howard
who obtained his
·
"catch all" for all of the many
Masters degree from New.York
forum matters pertaining to race
University and
'has
taken post
which
come
forth daily in
degree
courses at Yale and
contemporary America. Many of
Harvard,
has
inherited
a
these matters belong under the
tradition
which has. included . area
of the
Sociology
and
service as a youngster
in
NAACP Psychology Departments, stated
N~arby.
.
.
ADMISSIONS FREE
ON
WEEKENDS·
WlTHMARIST
-
· I.D. CARD
picket lines; classes in Afri~an
Mr. Howard.
·
History with the Garvey Famlly,
Black America is strictly a
counseling
Black
college
history course; and Mr. Howard
students
in Harlem• toward
shares the views of many on
college
.entrance
and guiding his
campus when he calls for the
own two children in their own-
creation of inore courses dealing
"struggle· for B_lack manhood
with Black Studies.
Rt. Z~
CltMYYIUE
and Black womanhood."
·
Mr
..
Johnston
Students
Plan
Own
Graduation·
Contract
, Jet
518~329-0992
·Group-
to Study
History
Dept.
Redlands,
Calif. • (J.P.} -
Students at Johnston College,
the new experimenting college ~t
.
the University of Redlands, will
negotiate their own "graduation
con tracts"
rather
than meet
standardized requirements.
Individual• "contracts'.' drawn
up between students and faculty
will serve as the measure of each
student's
academic
progress,
according
to
Dr. Edward
Williams, vice chancellor.
The mechanics of the contract
plan have been worked out. by a
faculty committee
headed by
Dr.-William McDonald, professor
As one result. of discussions
of English literature. In a report
concerning this school's plans
in
to the Board
of
Overseers, Dr.
.the
seventies held last semester,
M cD
O
n al d asserts:
"Th~
·a,groµp
of. Seniors
wi}l
conduct a
•·,principal.
concern
·
of ,the faculty
-
comprehensive
-
study
.
of !he
in formula ting
criteria for
History
-Department .at
Man~t.
graduation
from
Johnston
The• group.composed
..
of. Bill.
'College
·is._to
preserve
~he
Mckinstry,
Frank· lmbomone,
flexibility and relevance which
John Abbatiello, Tom Hoffay,
characterize our curriculum;"
Bernie
McGovern,· and
_John
The "contract"
concept takes·
Zebatto will concentrate on the
full. advantage
of Johnston
__
curriculum, suggest revi_sions 3:nd College's educational philosophy
new cou,rses, look at teaching
which encourages students to
methods and school resources
establish their own educational
for the major and attempt a
objectives.
It
is. similar to
constructive
critique of the
procedures followed in graduate
department. The grnup w~l n?t
~chools at some universities, Dr.
evaluate~ teachers per se, it will
Williams said.
investigate
_
the major and not
·
Dr. Williams explained that·
specific instructors; the students
the
con tract
plan is being
also
intend
to
·
"sit-in»·.
on
extended into classroom projects
department
meetings.
-~he
to prescribe student workloads
students stated that the Political
for each class, Students· and
Science

major would riot be
.
faculty co'ntract with each other
subject to. their evalu,ation at this
in their seminars and tutorials to
time - due probably to the fact
complete a· certain amount of
that' the major has only
,been
work, to attend class regularly
·
recently created.·
. •
:
and to participate . actively
in
The first task of the group,
discussion.
·
which ·assembled in
·Sheahan
last
"These
individual
course
Thursday,
.will
be to ask for_ the
icontracts
in tum imply a larger
history
.
µistructors'
sugg~sti~ms
·
contract to accomplish certain
for improvement of their own
objectives
_within
a particular
dep~ment.
The studeJ?,t l?'oup
semester " the vice chancellor
w_hich
Y'ill meet penochcally
observed: The next step is to_
throughout the semester hopes
broaden the contract to cover a
to make their report to the
full
program
·
leading
to a
school before the Easter recess.
bachelor
of arts degree. No
· · * • "' * *
predetermined set of graduation
byhanison
requirements
will
be forced. onto
any student,
Dr. Williams
emphasiz~d. ·
Each student
will
be directly

..,.-
:
WOIJbER.
l
7
-+-
I

~
-
.
.
.
Pt.
C..
1,
••
responsible for negotiating his
graduation requirements.
As a
freshman, the student selects an
advisor who then becomes the
chairm·an
of · the
student's
graduation review committee. In
his sophomor~ year, the student
chooses two additional faculty
members
.from.
differing
academic disciplines to serve on
the committee.
The student
will present a
written
proposal
to
the
committee describing in as much
detail as possible his educational
objectives
and his plans for
meeting those objectives.
Graduation
criteria express
concern
that students
should
consider the need for a foreign
language,
undergo
a
:
physi~al
education
program mcludmg
mastery of at least two sports,
develop
an
·
awareness
of
contemporary problems, mas!er
several learning methodologies
and experience a large measure
of independence in their studies.
0 ther
c'riteria
relate
to
meeting state requirements for
special courses, satisfying the
student's professional objectives
or
plans
for
post-graduate
education,
and providing for
integration.of a wide breadth of
knowledge.
The graduation contract must
also delineate a·«concentration"
of study. Each student should
decide on a major emphasis for
his work. When the student is
convinced that- he has fulfilled
the terms of his contract, he
may ask his committee to certify
that
he has
done so. The
certification may take whatever.
means
the committee
thinks
appropriate.
It
may involve
written or oral examinations or
the presentation of a project.
Other advantages are: ( l) the
contracts
respond to student
demands for relevant education
because
they
make student
initiative
and
responsibility
central
to
formula
ting
objectives,
(2) the lock-step.
approacll
to
graduation
continued on page 6
PAGE3
The Silver Brothers strum a
tune
in
one of
three performances at
MOTIi.
Silver
Bros.
Are
Golden
Arnie Silver and his "brother"
Mark Stevens whether playing
New York's intimate Bitter End
or touring coffee houses and
campuses from coast to coast,
·
have added a new ingredient to
the business of performing -
dedication.
Mark
states that the
writer of a song
is often the
forgotten man when an act does
a song. That's why Arnie and
Mark always mention the writers
of each number they do in the
show.
Arnie and Mark were both
members - regularly for Arnie,
infrequently
for Mark - of a
group called the Dovells that
moved
out
of their native
Philadelphia to hit the heights
with
a
million-record rock hits.
Since
1967 they have been
playing on their own. The duo
believes
that only a natural
approach.
to performing
can
make them acceptable
to all
areas of entertainment.
Arnie
and Mark flatly state that they
don't want to be "typed"
as
rock-singers, or any one kind of
act. Mark says, "what people
will pay to hear is two guys
sincerely
doing
their
own
things."
Their
three
performance
engagement
at Marist was less
than
a complete
success
probably because of the small
audiences. Nevertheless, the two
performed well in the intimate
setting
and their unrehearsed
humor was refreshing.
Religious
lies Bar
School
Aid
State Education.Commissioner,
..
religion
courses
as well as
Ewald B. Nyquist has ruled that
whether
such
.
courses
were
21 colleges in New York State
mandatory.
are ineligible for state aid; Marist
Article X~, S_ection 3_, ~f the
College is one of those schools.
State C_onshtutlon prohibits the
The institutions had applied for - expenditure
of s~ate. fu~ds on
funds in the "Bundy program"
any school or mstitution
of
which
was passed
by the
learning whoHy ~r in _part under
legislature in I 968 and financed
the control or duection of a~y
in l 969. The plan grew out of a
religious denomi1;1ati?n, or m
proposal by a select committee
which a~y ~enonunahonal tenet
jointly appointed
·
by Governor
or doctnne
1s
taught.
Rockefeller and the Board of
The schools approved for the
Regents.
state aid would have had to
Under the program, private,
prove" to the _ s_tate that there

nonsectarian
four-year colleges
were
no vestigial remnants of
and universities are eligible for
religious
control_." Evident!y
state
aid to "sustain
private
Marist did not qualify for the aid
in it i at iv es
in
providing
because
it
could not so prove
educational opportunity for the
and
because
of mandatory
students of New York State."
religious courses.
The aid would have amounted to
Other schools that were ruled
approximately
$400.00
per
ineligible
for
aid
.are
the
student for the academic year.
following:
Fifty-two schools applied for
Canisus
College, D'Youville
the state aid, of those, 21 were
College, Iona College, Manhattan
denied aid and five are still
Cqllege, Marymount College,
Mt.
under consideration, those under
Saint Mary College, the College
consideration
now
include
of New
·
Rochelle,
Niagara
Fordham University.
·
.
University, St. Francis College,
Marist College, was deemed
and Siena College.
in eligible
after
the
State
*"'***
Education
department
had
analyzed
the
institutions
purposes
and
goals,
the
composition
of its governing
body, and the content of
its


































































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.
'
Why I Caia't
Get Next To You?
by Daniel Faizon
For many years the human
race has been
separated by
differences in race; creed, and.
cultural
background.
In more
recent years we are faced with
the problems between the bla1:k
and the white race. I will try to·
explain why I can't get next to
·
you because I'm black and wlfy
you as a white man can't get to
me. I will show
.what
I think is a
solution to this problem.
I think
that
the
period
between kindergarten and high
school were the best days of my
·
life. Why? Mainly because in my
earlier years of my life I didn't
have all the hatred and fears that
I have now. Color meant nothing
.
to me then,
.
because I was too
communication
(T.V. programs
to ~e,.and I told him I had tom
and
.
movies which down grade
it playing ball. He knew better
black
·
people)
some
what
and that night
-1
got beaten-
·
militant people and by small but
severely for lying.
,
influential incidents.
Well,
three
days later on
Although John was my friend,
Halloween John wanted. me to
he was also white and our roads
go out with him and J'decided I
began to separate. Why? Because
·
would. When my cousin heard
one
,day
while I was eating with
this he angrily said: "Dumb son
John,
my black friends, or
of a bitch, you haven't learned
so-called friends, began blasting
yet.".
.
' ·
·'
me about being a cracker-lover
John and I went out together.
(a nickname for
a
white fellow).
We were having a great time and
Apparently
l could please
I was really
enjoying
his
neither side, because later that
company, when a group of white
day
I was jumped
in
the
fellows caught up with us on a
bathroom by three white guys
·
dark street. They were the same
who began calling me "nigger,"
guys who had beaten me in the
"black bastard" and other nice
bathroom.
I tried to run but
names · they
.
have for black
they caught me. And as. I was
:
people. One_ guy began telling
·.
being beaten up, John stood by
me he didn't like the way I was
saying
nothing.-
John
left·
Motes
From Bogota
young
to differentiate
black
from white, people were people
and I still feel the same way
today,
people are people no
matter what color.
dressed, so he tore my shirt off.
laughing and joking
·with·
the
The other guy said he didn't like
·
guys and I staggered bloodily,
. my looks
·
so he slapped me
home.
.
across the face. I asked them to
From thefr
·on
I felt the fears;·
Dateline
lima,
Peru
My first contact with a white
person probably was back in my
kindergarten class. His name
.was
that called
for
tuition payments
John and to
.
this day
l respect
from
students
who couldn't
and cherish him greatly as a
afford it, and also a planned
friend;
even
th.ough
my·
revision
of the
educational
kindergarten views have changed
structure
in Peru. (Students
greatly.
leave
me.
alone but they only
the hatred· and the prejudices
laughed. and began punching me
that arc comm in in black people;•
in the stomach.
· ;
.
·
.
.
I could no longer see the riglit
They left me doubled up in
way; I stopped seeing john and
by Paul Browne
LIMA, Jan. 6 • "Something's
happening here, what it is ain't
exactly clear ... " After bidding
fare well
to
three
traveling
companions
who returned
to
Bogota,
I strolled
Lima's·
downtown streets which are a
bit reminiscent of New York's. l
passed by some of Lima's swank
hotels (which student travelers
frequent in order to use their
amazingly elegant bathrooms. At
times it's possible to lounge
around a plush lobby reading
newspapers in English!).
At any rate. as I continued my
strolling the din of the city's
traffic was interrupted
by the
chanting of students from the
National
University
of
Engineering, one of Peru's 12
nation al universities.
The
military
government·
had
recently passed a law which
has
angered students to a point of a
citv-wide student strike and the
.
initiation
of a hunger strike. I
·
learned
today
_
that a stu_de_nt
.
died last evening after fasting
iri
protest
·
to the government's
interference
at the universities.
As a result students took to the
streets
downing podiums that
the police use to direct traffic.
Minutes
later
army
troops
flooded
'the
area
where
demonstrations
had been taking
·
place, and ordered water cannon
trucks to circle the block in
pursuit of the fleeing students. I
stood rather amazed as soldiers
in riot gear hurried. by me.
About
10 yards from where I
was standing a soldier fired a
round of tear gas. Although no
students were in sight (myself
excluded) other
.soldiers
began
issuing round after round of tear
gas. Since I am hardly an expert
-.in
the matter I thought the loud
shots were bullets, but my fears
were calmed when tears
·
began
welling up in my eyes.
Today I decided to visit the
University of San Marcos, the
oldest university in both North
and South America, to talk with
.
students who might be able to
·
give me a clear idea of what was·
happening
in Lima the night
before. The original university:

building at San Marcos ( I 551)
is
now a museum .. To reach the
operating
university I had to
board
a bus from downtown
Lima for a 15 minute ride to San
Marcos. On the way the bus.
driver was warning
·
me not to
visit the school. He said classes
had closed down and people
were throwing rocks at each
other,
etc.
It
took
some
convincing, but the driver finally
pointed out the university. and
let me off the bus. I thanked
him for his concern.
The
driver had been right
about classes being called off,
but far from being in a state of
turmoil,
the
university was
unusually
serene.
The only
evidence of disruption was the
riot
troops stationed
at the
university's entrances. Students
at San Marcos told me that the
gowmment
had issued a law
the corner after telling me that
if
started "hanging out" with· the'
l
told anyone they would kick
·gang.
There I was told many
my ass when they caught me.
stories
of
the white. man's
One of my black friends found
:oppression
of the blacks and I
me there and I didn't have to tell
didn't like what I heard. I began
he saw it written all over my
•seeing
how unequally we had
face. He said to me, "You see
been and still were treated by
what whitey will do for you," I
the white man; I also
.
saw that'
said nothing.
John and I really didn't have too
When l went home my father
much in common. He lived in a
saw that my shirt had been torn.
sixty-thousand
dollar house, he
He asked me what had happened
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
Through
A Broken
Window
here,
as in most of Latin
·John and l sat across from
America, specialize immediately
each other in class, so
it
was easy
when they enter college. The
for us to communicate with each
military wants a revision that
other
if anything important
would resemble the system in
arose in our minds. We began
practice in the States: that
is, at
talking a lot about cars, football
least two years of general studies
players and baseball. We had
before majoring.) As could be things in common and we talked
expected t_he students labeled it
about them. Later, we became
yankee
interference.
The
even closer as we began sleeping
disputed law is No. I 7437 and is by each other at rest period. At
called
"anti-university,
lunch
time we would'eat lunch
an ti - pop
u I a r,
and
together,
sometimes
sharing
Pro-imperialistic,.
by the
lunches. But never once did it
by Bill O'Reilly
Brendan
Mooney,
called El
students.
strike me as unusual thaf I was
Grande Tummy'
by the local
The militarv>junta
that noY.' eating and. sleeping with a white
:
Here
it is,
the
travelers
boys and girls. While Brendan
governs Peru:· took power in guy.
.
addition of "Through a Broken
has been abroad his mind has
I 968 after a bloodless coup
Then things began to get even
window"
or Europe on five
expanded and something else has
disposed
former
President
closer as we advanced in years
Hassles a day On December 7
also expanded. I only got to see
Belaunde. Terrv. The students
and grades. We started eating
after Edgar had packed his three
·
Tony Parga once arid that was at
have accused the junta, lead by. lunch together more often and
Jungle
Jim
shirts and his Roy
the Madrid zoo where Tony was
·
General Juan Velasco Alvarado,
eve_n slept on t_he same bla_nkets Rogers.
Buckaroo
belt
we
talking
-to
a walrus, Bill Smith.·
of
issuing laws in complete
at times. Still l didn't notice that
departed from foggy.England;·'.
was·also there·hitting.a,penguin-
disregard for the constitution.
there was a difference between
We bQlted
:through.·
France:
· ori the head with a taco
..
,
..
,'.:.,,·
But
.
then again,. Belaunde was black and white people. John
quickly because the excitement·
But southern Spain is really
the· constitutional
president
and I started liking girls who just
of
secin2
the Frerich building
.
where it's happening. Actually
when
he was ousted.
The
happened to be friends and so
m:or.e
1Dfrlleir
outdoor latrines is
Morroico is
,the
.place
.
t9
:be.
students are not the only group
there were more whiie people
too
nruch for anybody.
But,
Today's 'now
,peqple'.
all head
'in·
conflict
with
the
new
introducedintomylife.But:Still.
:alas,,
,v;•e
were
forced to spend
for Morroico. because today's
governI11ent.
Journalists
are
I didn't know the differences..
me
night
in beautiful Bordeaux,
'now thingf like mllrijuana and
fighting government restrictions
John and l were like brothers..
-close
to
the Spanish border.
-
hashish are sold. there relatiyely
on freedom of the press. A law, We ev_en got
into
tr,ouble
In beautiiul Bordeaux we-had
out in the open.
,As.
everyone
ironically entitled "Freedom of
together. One day we decided
a nice
room. overlooking
a
knows these· joys of. life are
a
·
the
Press Law;'' is seriously
that
at rest time when the
wounded
muskrat
for only
necessity for today-'.s 'in people'
t h re a t e n i n g • P er u v-i an
teacher was asleep, we would
$6.00 per person. This includes
who wish
,
to. lear.q; expand and
newspapers. Some of the best
crawl under the desk of the
Jive entertainment
by the
relax with the most
.natural
thing
·
dailies in the capitol city have teacher
and look under her
roaches in the room,, a beautiful
.
in the world, a. drug. And the
been _a~c_u~ed
of "subversion",
dress. Well, we did it and got
view
of
Bordeaux's
top
Arabs are only too· happy to
for cntlctz!°g t~e. govemm~nt.
caught, and we both ended up
attraction:· a dead tree, and a
assist you. For an outrageous
Velasco
s military
regime standing
in the same comer
free shower.(onlyits
a dollar if
price (Morrocan currency) they
prides itself in being at t.he together.
.
you use water).
will supply you with the finest
vanguard
of
the
leftist
Then came the real excitement
The next day we were up.early
.
of their product and then while
~ovement
in Peru. ~tu~.ents
·
of my life. John's birthday was
and we planned to hitch-hike to..
·you
are relaxini and expanding:
d1:>~gree
.. As one put it, .. The
Saturday and
all
the kids were
Spain.
The
plan
worked··
(and
doing
all
sorts
of:
military
IS
always
.the
military._ talking about it. John came to

perfectly and for four hours we
constructive things) with visions[
No thing
•more."
Student..
school with the invitations from
hitch-hiked
from Bordeaux to•
of sugar plums dancing in }
..
accusations of complicity with
his mother and I was the first to
Bordeaux.
Ah those· French.:
head, your friendly Arab dealer
~e ~ni!ed .States, however,
is
a receive one. After this party,
After getting a late
~train
we
will
·
dance
away with your:
bit
!-fOillC:
The gove~ment h~
·
Saturday after Saturday I was
arrived in Sunny Spain, home of
wallet,
passport, suitcase and:
nattonalized
the biggest oil invited over to his house for·
Generalissimo
Franco,
at
anything else that isn't nailed:
_outfit in the c_ountry - U.S.
·
dinner. And still I-didn't know
·d ·ght
·
'
d
A t 11 th A b...
1 t··
owned International
Petroleum
there was
a
difference between
.
,
m~~
ls a wild country but
lir~n. th~ u~r~g \s~~
~s ah~s=
(Standard
Oil).
It also has us.
'not
to wild. The beloved Franco
expanding -
only
while the drug'.
banned
a magazine
called
This was my
·early
life an age
seems to. have everything under
user is expanding his mind (oh;
"Vision" because it
is
considered
when color, creed and religious
control. Censorship
is
so strict
they do, they rcully do) the•
propaganda
·
of U.S. capitalists.
beliefs meant nothing to
·
me;
·that.girls
in bikinis have to wear
Arab is expanding
his
bunk roll ...
In Lima dissatisfaction with
The only thing that mattered
pictures of El Caudillo over their
So how can we judge.
;
the government
is
apparent. A was that I was treated like all the
navels. Also the Spanish people
Heading away from
Si,nin
we
·
lima businessman who, although
rest of the people, treated like a
·
are known for their speed afoot;
arrive at the sunny
JUvlcn1
where·:
is· in
agreement
with.
the
human being.
: .
after drinking t_he water one gets
everything
is
.
bright, cheerful,'
nationalization
of International
But when did it start, this fear
·
a hint why.
·
and tax dcductnblc. The
Riviera·
Petroleum
( .. They
had
it
and hatred that is now instilled
Spain was really great because
is a joy to behold but it's
very'
cciming"), said Peru will be in in me? Well,
'it
wasn't when I
this writer is very fluent in
tourist minded. In nn attempt to·
big trouble if the government
was in grade school, so it must
Spanish. From my two years of
find an old shop whctc things
doesn't
change its economic
have been when I
·began
my
studying
Spanish at Marist I
haven't changed since lunchtime,
policies.
In N orthem
Peru,
·
early years in high school.
learned just about every word
we combed the smali scdestults
·
however, the government seems
Rollo May says: "You can
needed for survival. Words and
of Nice. At last we came across
strongly
supported.
In the
take two children of different
phrases
like crayon, Apache,
an old shop run by an old lady
northern coastal town of Trujillo
color, creed and background and
duck,
caboose,
dill pickle,
. who
strangely resembled
the
(Velasco's birthplace) practically
put them in a crib together and
groovey, sparkplug, fire engine,
dearly
departed
Jenny
every
wall
is
sloganed with
they will play forever
if they
parachute,
and railroad track,
Rathskellar.
"Do you speak
support of the ''revolutionary"
didn't have to grow up. Until a
that
were stressed· at Marist,
English old French lady?"
I_
government.
Perhaps
the
child
is
old
enough
to
came in very handy at all times.
asked.
"No,
but we accept
military
feels secure in its understand
fear,
hate
and
We finally arrived in Madrid
American express cards, Diner's
. leadership
when it reads the
prejudice he has none. Fear, hate
and met the Marist third year
Club, DeGaullc pictures, First
writing
on the
walls;
for and prejudices.are instilled in a
abroad
gang
there.
Steve
National City Travelers Cheques
example, "The people of Trujillo
child by parents, other people,
Wyzowski has paid· me·
to
tell
and Purgatories Turtles discount
are
with
General
Velasco.
modem communication
and an
everyone that his new idol is
cards, would you like to
sec
a
Revolution,
si.
Elections, No. incident
which
might
be
Gunther
Sachs,
the
rich,
plastic Koola Bear in heat with
Long live the revolution."
influential on this child's life."
German, playboy. Since Steve is , Nice written on it - $20." I can't
* • * * *
I grew to hate, to fear, and to
a poor, Polish, immigrant, they
stand
it.
be prejudiced against some white
have a lot in common. A legend
Part 11 of Europe on Five
people
because
of modem
in his own time in Madrid is
Hassels a Day: Next week.
















































































·-~lAN~U~ARY=,:~19~i•l~9~70~··~
1
--~..;...-;:==============~~~,·~~==:::;:,::=::=:::::::::=:===========~===·:.P;t+;:;G:;E~5l~'~•,
/
••
, • I
'DIE
QR.CLE
.
. . . . . _. :
~
' ' ,· .
..
Letter
.
.
.
,
·'\
.':
Dear
Editor, ..
I am writing this letter in
response .to Bob Petrolino . the
sage of
'68
whose letter
I
have
just . read in the December issue
of the Alumnus.
·
He and. others like him view
history
as. something ~hich
supports their own close minded
point of-: view entirely,
It is
about time that he and the Spiro
Agnews of our world try to view
history more perceptively.
· 1
t may seem very surprising to
some
but
our
forefathers
guaranteed certain rights to the
citizens of their time and these
rights were further extended· by
their
predecessors
to all
Americans. Our forefathers and
many. of their predecessors were
probably
called crazy radicals
and many other nasty epithets.
These names accomplished very
little but our forebears did.
Throughout
our history we
have also made mistakes, among
these. were the massacring . of
lridian
tribes
and'the
enslavement -of an entire race of
people.
If
the ,Spiro Agnews· of
thqse past ages had succeeded,
we would not be the nation we
are today. · .
Our nation has been built by
men who have been able to
adapt to changing times. Why
. For The Week Of February 1-7
If
you would like your organization's information included on this
calendar, it is· important that you contact Mr. Brosnan's office at
least two weeks prior to the date that the event is scheduled to take
place.
·
Please contact:
Joseph Brosnan
Director of Campus Center
47 l,;3240, Ext. 279
SUNDAY - February 1 - 8:00 PM
Movie · - "Nevada Smith" College Theatre, Campus Center.
Sponsored by Student Government Film Series
TUESDAY - February 3 - 9:00 AM- 5:00 PM
Recruitment - Congoleum Industries - Placement Office
6:30 PM -
(JV)
Basketball - Kings - Away'
8:30 PM -
(V)
Basketball - Kings- Away
WEDNESDAY - February 4- 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Recruitment - Union Labor
Life
Insurance Co. - Placement Office
7:00 PM - Wrestling- C.W. Post - Away ·
THURSDAY-
February
5 - 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Recruitment - Aetna Insurance Co. - Placement Office
6:30 PM -
(JV)
Basketball- Monmouth
-Away
8:30 PM -(V) Basketball - Monmouth-Away
FRIDAY
-February 6- 9:30 AM -4:30 PM
Recruitment - Marsh
&
McLennan - Placement Office
.
SATURDAY - February 7
2:00 PM - Wrestling- Drew - Home
6:30 PM -
(JV)
Basketball - New Paltz - Away
8:30 PM -
(V)
Basketball- New Paltz - Away_ .
8:00.
P1'1
-1 :00 AM - "Italian Society Couples Pizza
&
Beer Party"
Dining Hall, Campus Center
·
ART EXHIBIT - Title: "SO LOUD TO MY OWN"
Artists: Student Show
Gallery Lounge, Campus Center
.
*****
. should we stop now because
someone says that to love peace
L..--------------------------
makes you a freak: I am both a
good Christian and American-
and
I believe in peace.
I also
do not recall any
reference in the. bible stating
. Darwin was the Son•· of God.
However the bible does mention
a . being . who spells his name
JESUS CHRIST. This son of
Financial,
Aid News
God did not preach survival of
Applications for financial aid
the fittest, but for some strange
for the 1970-71 school year are
reason he told man to love his now available at the Registrar's
brother and to seek the ways of Office.
·
peace.
-
S~ude_nts _who. expect
to
If
we are,· truly Christians and receive financial assistance under
good Americans we should heed any of ~he Feder_al Progr~m;
the lessons of the past. Our ·Educational
Opportunity
society has grown and prospered
Grants, National Defense Loans
only, because
it has .been
or Work-Study, should apply as
r.eceptive
to change. Christ soon. as possible. Since May 1st
.taught us what love_ was and our is the _qeadline for consideration.
history shows· that a· nation has of-
aid·
applications,· the Parents'
t_o change in order to-survive.
Confidential
Statement should
We can· not rely upon. the be'mailed to Princeton by March
policies of the 40's, S0's, or 60's.
15th at the latest.
· A
new decade
is
upon us, one
We have received a preliminary
which
will bring even more
estimate of the Federal Aid to
trying times.
If we as Americans
be received next year. Receipts .
choose the · old ways then we will not be adequate to take care
shall cease to exist.
of all eligible students so unless a
As
a
former Marist College student's
a pp
Ii cation
is
student
I hope that both the
completed by May 1st he will
·college and its students continue
have no chance of receiving aid.
to adapt to the times and remain
All applicants will be notified
Christians in. the true sense of by May 15th·
as
to whether or
the word.
not aid will be received.
-
Sincerely,
Herchel Mortensen
Ronald B. LaSusa
Registrar
**•**'
'.
***t*
Stephen H.·Hanison
·. John Regener F .M.S.
Managing Editor
Editots-in-Chief
Vincent Begley
Asst. News Editor
losel,)h Mc~atton
John Zebatto
News Editor
Calendar
Proposed
In a memo to the College
Community the Associate Dean
for
Academic
Services
has
proposed
an experimental
calendar for 1970-1971.
The
proposed
calendar
indicates
that
Freshmen
Orientation
will take place
August 24,25,26. Opening Day
for the college is set for August
26 and classes begin August 27.
The calendar is much the same
as this year's with examinations
beginning
December
14 and
ending
December
19.
Six
holidays· are included in the first
semester: S!!!ptember
7,
October
8,9,
November
2;3 and an
additional day on November 25.
The Spring Semester begins on
January 18 and terminates May
15.
-The proposal
is
offered for the
perusal an!l comments of the
college community.
*****
ED'ITORIAL
Maybe
Man's human adjustment is a never ending process of dealing with
frustration of two kinds, namely, those environmentally induced or
personal in nature.
Man's ability to• cope with his own personal frustrations is a
product of many factors, certainly including parental influences,
education, environment, and genetics.
.
Society is a key factor in this relationship. Society poses for man
the problems of his environment. These problems may, and often
do, result in establishing frustrations for man. One could posit a type
of society that induces such frustrations. The society would be such
that it would unacceptably so restrict the individual;
it
would be
corrupt; hypocritical; it would be of unreal value (money), really
valueless; it would be a society of greed and suspicion; it would be
Jhe society of brutality and war.
Such
a
society, in order to foster its existence, would of necessity
create forms of escape. These forms of escape many; the current
ones include drugs (cigarettes included) and alcohol.
Some forms of escape, in terms of their immediate effect are not
objectionable. Marijuana appears to make users both euphoric and
happy without any of the adverse side effects associated with
alcohol or other drugs or cigarettes. Furthermore, smoking "pot"
becomes a symbol of a societal group attempting to eliminate the
root causes of frustration inducement in the society.
However, regardless of any physical and psychological effects of
societies' forms of escape; they are in a sense detrimental to man
because they enable him to tolerate society. Thus, a most interesting
question arises, what if man could not escape periodically from a
society that he finds objectionable?
The answer is not clear, certainly, but one may ponder about
it.
Maybe, if man could not escape from his society, maybe, he would
improve it.
·
Last Laugh
"He who laughs last laughs best" goes the old adage and in the
case of Mr. Ronald Aderholdt, Director of Security, we hope he
laughs well. After receiving much ridicule and doubt from the
students at the beginning of the school year, Mr. Aderholdt has
devised a system of security which has worked well as a deterrent to
vandalism on our campus.
Mr.
Aderholdt is largely responsible for
the creation of a student security which is not only credited for the
decreased vandalism but is also a great financial aid for the student
guards. For the most part, the student guards have learned to
conduct themselves well and have generally earned the respect and
acceptance of the college community.
We of THE CIRCLE congratulate Mr. Aderholdt and hope that the
fine showing will not only continue during the second semester but
shall improve.
----
· · A
Christian Call
We are a Christian College and a Christian's job is to help his
fellow man. With this in mind, the Circle would like to take this
?PPOrtunity to inform the community that a handicapped student
is
m
much need of transportation assistance in getting to and
from
school.
If
anyone lives around All Angel's Hill Road in Wappingers
Falls and would be willing to help this student we ask that you
contact either the Editor of the Circle, Box C857 or Dean Wade.
·Sad State of the
tJ
nion
In a country such as the U.S.A. which is on the brink of revolution
over the Vietnam war, we of THE CIRCLE find it a pity, and
disgusting that the President of the United States should see fit to
completely ignore the issue in the State of the Union Address. We
would have expected more from Spiro Agnew .
..........
,,.;,,....,.
..
,.,.,,.,.,.,.,,.,.,.,.,..,
....
.
.
'
~
I
ORDER
YOUR
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'EDITORIAL BOARD ·
· .. Steve Hamson, Joe McMahon, John Zebatto
FEA TORE WlllTEllS
Peter Masterson, Paul
Browne,
Bill O'Reilly, Steve Harrison, Vin
Begley, Joe Francese
1, '70
REYNARD
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money grows
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NOW•••
Sign Slip
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whenyo!~:!.';;';~youdu-
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(Champ.
Lobby)
I
SPORTS WlllTEllS
Joe McMahon • Sports Editor
Don Duffy • Asst. Sports Editor
ture through a sound life insur-
111?1
Have· B
·111
Sent Home
ance program. And the sooner
~
you start, the belier . • . be-
Ill?
Joe Rubino, Bob Mayerhofer, Chuck Meara
PHOTOGRAPHY
Photo Editor - Rich Brummett
Bany
Smith,
Vin W"msch,
MikeLigotino
CIRCULATION
Dave
DeRosa -
Manager
Jack
Bany
cause ~'our premiums are lower
I
and your cash value builds
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longer.
let Northwestern
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1111.11,,,.,.,...,.,,,.....v-.u.aro..u...cr.J..17



























PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
JANUARY 29. 1970
Bitsy's
Bits
In_ Perspective.
By Joe Francese
I like to start off the New Year by·wishing everyone the best.for.·
the new semester. Also in. the tradition of many major publications·
I'd like
to
naine a man of the year. Although l realize the usual place
for this .is in May I'd like to name some one who won't be eligible at.
the traditional time. Not too many of us arc familiar. with all the
time that is put.into tunning the, campus cen·ter. It's an exhausting
job with few rewards. Up until this year no one was quite sure who
in fact did run the center. Many opinions were put forth but none
was founded in truth. In just a
few
short months someone has taken
the job and made us aware that the campus center was built for the
students. I would.like to congratulate Joe Brosnan on the finejob he
has done with the center and the many proposals he has offered for
its future. He has initiated the process by which the center
'will
again
be for the students. For this very important step forward I nominate
Mr. Brosnan for "Man of the Year."
·
All those interested in Bill O'Reilly's health. He is alive and well ·at
the University of London. All rumors that Edgar Royce has been
writing his column are definitely not true. Bill is presently employed
as president of Seymore Tours which offers the exciting prospect of-.
England on 200 dollars a day. The tour features many exciting
attractions such as the scenic "London at Midnight''. excursion on
the back of Bill's 50cc Honda. All kidding aside the fifteen Marist
students who went to England had a great time and spent very little
money. With the advent of the Boeing 747 air fares will be w·ay
down making travel to Europe possible for almost everyone. All
those interested· in a good deal should see Ed Fogarty who is
arranging an Easter trip to Ireland.
Sales for the 1970 Yearbook are now being made door to door in
all the dorms. This year's book promises to outdo last year's edition
which.placed second in a national poll of college yearbooks.
For all those who haven't seen the ad Vassar College has initiated a
series of weekly concerts to stimulate social life on campus. It ,
sounds Hke a good idea and should be interesting for anyone who'
cares to invest two dollars. More details available on request.
Finally I'd like to recommend two new movies for anyone in the
vicinity of New York City. "Tell Them Willie Boy is Her_e" is film
based on an actual incident involving our injustice to the American .
Indian. The film stars Robert Redford and Katharine Ross and was
directed by Abraham Polansky. Mr. Polonsky's first and only other
film was "Body and Soul" made in 1946. Mr. Polansky was
blacklisted during the McCarthy witch hunts and has just this year
been allowed to make another film. Another excellent film is simply
called
"M.A.S.H."
and
it
would.be an injustice to attempt a capsule
review. Just go see it.
"Tab Nussoo"
An original anagram.
Tom
Cooney,
~
.
,,
.
-..·-
...
,...
·••.·
·_:J:

\;_,;'
'
'--~
HISTORY JOURNAL
BEING READIED
The History Club and Phi
Alpha Theta have begun work
on the History Journal for this
year.
After an organizational
meeting this past Tuesday, the
two groups have announced that
they arc now accepting papers
for the journal. Students· who
would
like
their
papers
considered
for
publication
should
send
them
to Bill
Paccione
and Chuck Meara.
Thomas
Hoffay and Charles
Tom Cooney came to Marist . Tom's long .journey. down 'the
in 1966 from St., Peter's High sidelines turned the momentum
School in Staten Island. This fall of the game towardsMarist as it
he completed his 4th year on the. negated an early 7-0 Sienna lead.
Vikings footbaHsquad. His great Accor~ing to .Tom)he Viking~•-
a b_ili t y plus
his
pleasant
·,most.1mport_anLwm
wa_s their.
P!!rsonality made Tom a big plus ] g:.7,-.:vict~ry._
over Jona _in t~e .
for. the team on - and off· the · 1one' spnng game. This wm
field. Throughout
his
4
year helped to psyche the players for
participation he played the vital working-out. over. the summer.
role of a
utility
man being used an~ preparing themselves for
successfully as a defensive back,
their best season e~e!.
. .
a flanker, an end and possibly
Tom also part1~1pated m 3
'most effectively as a kick return
years of t~ack. Agam he couldn't
s p e c i a Ii st . T
<;>
m 's
m
O
st
be con tamed to ?De e:-ent . as
memorable
accomplishment.
TOJ!l has score_d
~
- 3. e_vents.
came this past season against
Besides . competmg . i~ th~ 220,
Sienna. He was instrumental in
Tom a!so throws the Javelm and
. the Vikings solid victory. over
broad Jumps. Wh~n he grad~ates
the Indians by returning two
fro~ . M_anst, Tom, a bus~ness
kick-offs for:long yardage, one a
m~Jor,
hopes
to get rnto
touchdown of some 85 y·ards
graduate school. .
.
*****
..
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~········~····
WRESTLING
MATCH SATURDAY,
HOME
·••·······
..................................
.
WMCR
Announces
·New
Slate Of Shows
WMCR cordially invites the
will be held sometime in late
college community to attend a
February or early March. This
Why
I
Can't Get Next
To You
FROM4
• Russett h_ave expressed · concern
over the funding for the project.
The deadline for submission of
history papers is March l, 1970.
s e m es t er
o f gr e a
t
n e w
will be similar to an
It
Pays to
en tertainmenL
Yes the new
Listen 'week where anyone who
WMCR is here with a bright new
should
have the fortune of
sound.
The
reception.
has
having his name picked ·and
recently
. been
improved
in
announced over the radio will
Champagnat Hall and plans are. win a free prize ·' Tpe catch?
had servants, and two big new
because he wasn't black. No
cars,
while we lived- in the
matter
how understanding he
ghetto. We had a ten thousand
was about the black situation, he
dollar house in a run-down part
never had to . experience the
ofthecity,andratsasbigascats
·
feeling, Even if. he lived ·in a·
ran all over
the house.
p r e d o m i n a n t I y b la c k
This was just a. small .part of
neighborhood, he was still white
our
uncommon
relationship.
and never knew the feeling of
Then my parents, who aren't
being
different.
Though we
prejudiced
agaJnst whites but
might have had some good times
who did live in/the South where
together, when it came down to
there was plenty of . it. They
the wire he was white and I was
began telling'me about their old - black.
life
before they came to the '
But it can't'be this way! We
North.
·
can't go on flowing away from
My father finished only. the
each other. Because if we do
eighth grade in grammar school
there
will
continue
to
be the
not because he wanted to quit,
hatred,
the
fear
and
the
but because the white man for
prejudices between us. · I think
whom his mother worked told
the reason we are so far apart is
her to take him out of school to
d u e
t o
t h e
l a c k
o f
work
in
.Mr. Charley's cotton
communication
between black
fields. My mother finished only
people and white people. We
the eighth grade before she was
must let down our hair, kick off
taken . out to keep house and-
our shoes and sit down and talk
take care of the white owner's
awhile.
. .
children, whom she had to call
Many people will say there has
Mr. and Miss even though she
been too much talking, we want
was the same age or older. Both
action and we want it now. But
of John's
parents
finished
even Rome wasn't.built in a day.
college and both have Ph. D.'s.
Some people think separation
. All these things made me one
is the
answer
but it isn't.
of the most ruthless students in
Because separatism can wreak
. school. My cousin taught me
the
delicate relationship and·
.how
to fight
and I began
understanding
that we young
carrying a knife just in case of an
Americans · have. I truly think ·
emergency. Later that year I was
separatism
is
not. the
way,.
in danger of being expelled
because together we stand and
because I cut up the three guys
divided we fall.
who had jumped me in the
Norman Podhoritz thinks that
bathroom and on Halloween.
ttie intermarriages of black and
· Later things started to change
white could someday end the
for the better and
I started to
problem.
Although
I think
widen my circle of friends to . intermarriage of white and black
include
new
people.
Even.
is not the right way to solve the.
though I still hated some white
problem, if my sister were to
people, I saw that I liked some
-marry a white guy I would treat
too.
him like my brother. But I
. When I entered sports I found
would first
try
and discourage
new friends, color difference was
her from marrying one because
there but it seemed to be a
of -the present racial situation
secondary thought now. Spo~ts
and because of all the troubles
seemed
to
bring
us closer
they wpuld
face in
our society.
together
like a family. Even
I think the teaching of. the
though I was better at sports:
children when they are young
than some white guys, I never
that
there
is no ·difference
looked down on a fellow player
between black and white might
for being white.
be the answer. Perhaps, with this
Then
I found out why I
type
of
teaching
and
the
couldn't
get close to white
intermarriage of the black and
pl!ople in general: because we
the
white
races, we might
had little or nothing in common.
someday eliminate the fears, the
I .:ouldn't talk to a white guy
hatreds, and the prejudices that
ahout the idea of being black
are within us today.
and h.:ing proud of being black,
* * * *
*
*
* *
*
*
Johnston
FROM3
requirements
is avoided, (3)
guidance is offered by. faculty
members
from
diverse
disciplines, and .( 4) traditional
deadlines
for graduation are
removed. -A progn1m may take
-two
or three or five years
depending upon the abilities of
the student.
.
One disadvantage~ associated
with the program •involves the-
amount· of time required· on the
part of faculty to draw up the
contract.s .. Dr .. McDonald is
confident the faculty
will
give its
full cooperation.
"Faculty · members came •to
Johnson
College not because
they were interested in efficient
education - mass lecturing and
the like· - but because they were
committed
to
.an
educational
. policy which 'treated the student
as a full member of the academic
community. The faculty is eager
.to 'experiment
with
the
program," Dr. McDonald said.
The
Quest
for
Meaning
seminars
are
the
"most
personal"
qf
the. educational
experiences for Johnston College
students,
· according
to Dr.
Williams. The QFM .. seminar
is
"the
axis around which the
curriculum revolves," he said.
Content
is
determined by the
interests
of the
seminar
members,
who may number
anywhere from 6 to 30. The
seminar's
focus may change
several
times
during
the
semester. Independent work is·
given heavy emphasis.
·
Dr. Williams is enthusiastic
about
the
Johnston
College
curriculum. ..The curriculum is
practically alive.
It
changes with •
the growth and development of
the
memoers
of
the
community," he said.
He observed that because the
curriculum
is
subject to sudden
change, it could become like a
Free · University
if
_carried too
far. «The contract plan makes
the
difference,"
the
vice
chancellor declared.
·*****
now in the making to purchase
Well in order to win you must
new
transmitters
which will
come to the station within 15
strengthen
our
powero\_'.er ,the· minutes
after your ···name is
whole
campus, .We are also ·. called,
if
you nam·e it' theri you
planning to . move the station
claim
it.
Th~ prizes \vill range
in
from its present location on the
value from records to radios to a
Ninth' Floor Champagnat to the ·. portable_TV:Therewill
be many······
Campus Center, but.none of this
gifts so there will be many
concerns us right now and right
chances to win. Listen to the
now is what is ·happening. First
radio for more news about this
of all the Radi~ Qub is going to
great · new fun week on our ···
play a game of basketball against
campus! Remember: Tune in to
one of the locatstations
in the
WMCR,
640 o youi: AM dial;
area
-
WHVW;· we are also-
you'll be glad you did.
_ planning a Radio Week which
*****
Radio
Schedule
SPRING SEMESTER I 970
.
Sunday night
.
.10:00-.11:30 - foe Arceri &.Ray Campbell- oldies
&
rock
l·l :30- 1 :00- Ed O'Neill - Music to sleep by.
· . .
· .
.
Monday Night
. 8:00
~
8:15 - Sports with Joan Bailey
.
8: l 5. -
9:
00 - Joan· Bailey Show - rock, oldies, goodies, .etc.
9:00 -
9:55 - Pat Orealy Show-: rock and new sounds
9:55 - l 0:05 - News with Pete Varol
·
·
10:0S~ I I :00 _. The Voice - discussion.~how
. .
.
. lkl :00 - I
:_OO
- Tiger Gre_g !duriri ~d Art Haab - c01nedy, oldies,
roe , etc.
.
.•
.
· 1 :00 - 2:00 - Mike Smith Hour - pop sounds
.
·
Tuesday Night
7:00- 8:00- Mr. White Show- Classical Hour
8:00: 8: 15 - Sports with Mike Arendt
8: 15 - 9:00 - Pat Tracy Show-?
9:00- 9:55 - Bob .. Cousin Moosic" Miller Hour - rock
9:55 - 10:05 - News with PeteVarol
. ..
10:05 -·.11 :00 ·- Ray Kennedy & Bob Kelly ,: Good tinie hour -
rock·
·
·
_ '
11 :00 - 12:00 - )oe Rubin~ - Basically Black - acid rock to folk
·rock
.
·
·
12:00 - 1 :0() - Ron Baumbach's Life With Harvey - rock, folk, fun
1 :00- 2:00 - Nick Squicciarini Show - country, rock etc._.
· .
.
Wednesday Night
·
·
8:00- 8: 15 - Sports
with
Joan Bailey
8: 15 - 9:00'" Paul Tesoro Show- folk-rock, country, blues.
9:00- 9:55 - Frank DiMichele Show- rock
9:55 - 10:05 - News with Pete Varol
10:05 - 11 :00 - Don Becker
&
Paul Wilson Show - an experience!
rock and'?
11 :00 -
i
2:00 - John «J.T." Tkach Show - acid rock
12:00- 2:00- Brian Doyle Show- from Ario to Zepellin
Thursday Night
8:00 - 8: 15 - Sports with Mike Arendt
8: 15 - 9:00 - Mike Arendt Show - pop rock
.
-9:00 -
9:55 -
John Huddy Time - rock, folk and country
9:55 -
I 0:05 - News with Pete Varol
·
10:05 - 11 :00 - Tom Voelker & Squatty Body Show - rock -jazz
I I :00 - 12:00 - Jim Elliot
&
Tom Mahoney Hour - OLDIES
12:00 - I :00 - Bernie MulJigan Show- rock
I :00 - 2:00 - Robby Mangiardi - rock, folk, off-beat classical etc.
*
*
* * *
I










































































,
·.
\
t
•.
~. '.
---~~;-
\~.~--~:~?,~:·-~,
~.-·.
,
_
...
__
IANUAR.Y.29.1970
·Two Fakes
La'ter
,,
.
'
.
.
.
The
P)."Qgres,siVe.
Era
,
.
Track
Team
.FROM8
.
Jfasbrouck competed
.in
the shot
..
and
hammer,· and Paul also
entered
the· pole vault. The
highlight of · these meets was
'Henry
Blum•s perfomiance
in
·
·
.
· '
·
·
·
by Joe Rubino
the shot. His toss of
38'6,,
TOPIC·~ INTRAMURALS.
.
·
·
.
earned him a 3rd place medal
It
should be
·obvious
to- everyone- that many changes have taken
.
because
his
handicap brought
place on our campus within the past year. Many more
will
probably
-
the mark up
·
to
5
l '9,,.
Hen_rr
tak~ place within the next year. A go¢ portion of these changes are
was only narrowly
·edged
out by
taking place in
.
the dormitories .. These changes are being made,
.
the top two marks of
5 1 '1 O¼"
presumably, with· the hope of
·creating
more of
a
community
and
51'9¼".
-
.
atmc,sphere among the students. A great emphasis is being put on
In the final competition of the
·
the re!atjonship of the people living together on each floor. People
vacation, Howe and McMahon
are bemg en~~:>Uraged
to take pride in their floor. The idea of this, I
entered the Junior Metropolitan
supp~s~, woµld be t~e h_ouses, and the floors, in particular,
A.A.U. Championships on
Ja!l·
?r&a~zmg and sponsonng different programs and events ... With this
7. They were both scheduled m
·
m
rnmd, I feel that an important change could be made in regard to
the same heat of the 1000 yard
.
intrainurals spprts. I think that we should can.the.present system of
run, and their times were 2:29.5
having intram.urals run by the Varsity Club; I say .this not in criticism
for McMahon and 2:30.5 for
of the members of the club; they are only following past policy.
I
Howe. The· winning time was
feel,: however, that_ this system is bad because it results in the
2:21.4 by Frank Campbell of
:
recruitment of several super teams who simply want to win, several
Fordham.
joke·teams who simply like to goof, both surrounding the majority
*****
of the teams that are in it for the competition and a good time. The
goof teams hurt anybody 'Yho wants to play a decent ballgame and
Interview
FROM2
the super teams are often just a coritest: to see who can corral the
best players six months before the season staits .... The result of the
whole situation is that the entire season
is
simply a burden while the
school waits. around to watch the finals. Our "intramural sports"
program thus means· literally nothing ... By now you're probably
asking yourself what this has
to
do with the house system. l feel that
the houses should take over the intramural sports program. Donn
that
stability,
economic and
leagues would take the place of leagues I,
II,
III, etc. The teams
.
political
stability
can
be
would be comprised of members of the floor, that is, one
..
would
achieved until such time as there
only play for a team on his. floor
(I
can hear Tommy Quinn
is economic
,de.velopment,
screaming already). The incidentals are not important at this time;
especially in terms of exports.
the point is.that this program might do more for the house system
The urban problem is growing
than'any other program, since, possibly, more guys can identify with
all the time - it is growing here
sports than any other form of
.community
cooperation ... Champa:gnat
and elsewhere. As you know
·
might house one league, Leo plus Sheallan another, with teams of
Paul, we in the United States
c9mmuters
·and
student brothers easily being incorporated into the
have not been
all
that successful
system. But these are all incidentals, which I've already said are not
.
in dealing
with
our urban
really important right now .. .lt would solve a lot of problem; for the
problems. And I'm talking about
organizers. Writing up a schedule would be
a
snap since there w.ould violence, the quality. of life,
be no need for the league would have much more overall- balance
··pollution,
-recreation,
beauty,
since the talent would be more scattered; no longer would there be
jobs, a whole host of things that
the same name on four or five different rosters ... The program could
are
involved
in our urban
·
not help but develop more coopera1ion and pride within each floor
problems. Well in some Latin
community. The result,
I hope, would be interfloor and interhouse
countries
they're even worse,
competition, and intra.floor and intrahouse unity ... Maybe even some
·
and they have fewer resources to
_of
the regular season games would be interesting to watch.:.
.
.
·
deal with them than we do. And
TOPIC '- FOOTBALL GAMES
.
.
.
I
see in the next decade or two
Ari interesting subject is the fact that we are not allowed alcoholic
an enormous challenge for them,
bev~rages at
.football.
games. The ban on this particular practice
the Latins, and us trying to help
seems to be, at the v_ery least;-in contradiction with current campus
them in resolving some of these
policy ..
.! am not advocating that everybody should .. bring their
..,urban
problems. And related to
own,".,but·iather that beer could be sold at the concession stand.
If
that
is
the
problem
of
~aAd}~~)>Y.
th.e..Jo~Jb_all,.
_cl~~!
,it_
c?i;il~p't, ~~li>
,but,~~~
,t.~em
0
_some
unemployment - where you find
added
,i::e,ver1ue_;,bes1cies,
1t mJght.Just at.tract.a
few
spectators ... Of
in
many-
countries'
urban
c:o~e·.I:.i::em,~~ber:the;days.of.Riverview when you took your life in
unemployment
exceeds
20
.
yqur hands. by
:\Vallcing
near the place. But let roe remind you that
-
-
percent of the labor force, and
.
those were pre- "drinking in the· dorm" d.tys - Serving beer at the
nation-wide in most cases it's
.
concession• s.tands Would eU.minate the danger of broken glass. Who
well above ten· percent. And as
e\'.er heard ofs<>.meone
-being
seriously injured by a thrown paper
you
know
our's.
has been
cup?,..
.
,
··.
.
.
.,
·
.
hanging between three and four
.
.
...
(NEXT WEEK -
_SCHOOL
NICKNAME)
percent in the
U.S.
·
-
·.
·
·
• • * * *
With all of our social benefits,
unemployment insurance, this is _
.
Peas
.
And.·.·.
Carrots
·;~:~:~(
1
;¥~~~~{:;~
·
·
··
·
·
•.
·
·
·
·.
·
·
·
·
unemployment
insurance and
·
byJoe McMahon
other
benefits,
and national
unemployment
is over ten
...
·'
.•
__ .
.-.
.
.
.
.
.
..

.
:.
The SeventiesareJess than a month old and already Donnelly Hall
has found new meaning in life, It's not much on the
'straightaways
but
·
it,'s heated,
well-lit, and
-it's
a
·.track.That
is, if· the
~'administration"
approves. The. other night thirteen of us ran a
workout in
'there
from 10:15 to U:00. The fast tiine
I
can
. remember wijeittliirteen
ru~ne~ showed up for the:same workout
was when Forbes, Goegel, and Charlie DiSogra were running the
show three years ago. In fa<:t there were more people at Donnelly on
Mon~ay ~gµt for
an
.unscheduled·
practice
than
there wer:e at the
scheduled team meeting.of last week. Why? Because there are quite a.
few people with talent in this school who refuse to compete or have
·
·"anything
to· do with track unless they.have a
'place
to
run. They do
·
(and especially in the winter), have_ a· legitimate
gripe ..
Can you
percent,
and
urban
unemployment
is over twenty
percent,
you
can see· how
desperate this is in many ways -
not the least of which has to do
with
violence
and
urban
.
stability.
·
t.
''
•··.
PAGE7
Campus
Stuff
·
by Don Duffy
.
.
· · ·
Welcome back to the Old U. for another semester. I trust you had
a
very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. The big Red Fox
had its share of troubles and joy since the last time we talked. The
X-Mas
tournament was its biggest disaster with Upsala coming from
behind to edge Marist out of sure victory 65-63. Marist couldn't put
it together·when they had too, and Upsala came out on top.
It
was
indeed a shame as Marist had a good shot at the finals if they could
have survived the first round. Another disaster was the· Albany St.
game. Mari~t played very sloppy in the beginning but were able to
stay with Albany,
a
team that last year received a bid to the NCAA
College Division playoffs. It again came down to the last few seconds
but it wasn't Marist who lost the ball game this
·
time, it was the
referees. With the score tied, Albany in possession and a minute left,
.
Albany decided to hold the ball for one shot. An over anxious guard
from Albany palmed the ball with 40 seconds left, an obvious palm
yet the ref afraid of his own life in front of the hostile crowd did not
see fit to call it. About ten seconds later, Terry McMackin chased a
loose ball and picked it up only to be knocked about ten rows up by
an Albany Player. Sure it was another obvious foul, but this ref was
really scared to call it and Bingo, Albany State scores with two
seconds left and that's all she wrote. I sure hope that ref was happy
because for the first time in my life, it was obvious that the State
fans should have carried the REF off on their shoulders instead of
the Albany players.
For the better part of the column,
I'll
talk about victory. The
Queens game was a farce as Marist played the game they were
capable of playing and therefore victory. The first conference game
against Bloomfield showed us exactly how strong we are in the
- conference (CAC), very strong. Lead by none other then the big Jet
Bobby Ullrich, the Marist Red Foxes cased this victory, the minute
they walked on the court. Jet Ullrich showed how strong the Marist
bench was with his 23 points, l
O
rebounds and countless blocked
shots. (one) The Jet, affectionately tabbed Super Sub, after the
game was quoted as saying; "Golly it was nothing." The jet was seen
last at the comer of Main and Market yelling out:
"I'm a star, I'm a
star." The Bloomfield games also introduced
to Marist Varsity
rooters the now famous group, Curtin's Raiders. Led by that famous
personality of Dennis Curtin these fearless bunch of scrubs captured
the hearts of the Marist Fans. With precise timing and undulated
courage the boys on the Raiders squad are never undaunted while
they wait to enter the game. Not always do they play but when they
do, they cause alot of excitement. Curtins' big moment came in the
last few minutes when he scored a bucket on a break away. Actually
it wasn't a· break away for Dennis because he couldn't go down to
the defensive end. He didn't know about the defense part of the
·
game as of yet. HE only got as far as the offensive part in his Bob
Cousy book. Anyhow after the gam:e they gave the game ball to
Curtin who as he took the basketball in his hands, said "What is
this." Good luck to the Raiders and I hope Marist is winning by
fifty, so you can play some more.
BITS-N-PIECES
If
you are looking for some real excitement in the field of sports,
go see a college Hockey game, you won't be disappointented. I had
the privelege of attending the E.C.A.C. Hockey Festival with a
distinguished person- and was very impressed. l saw Cornell who is
No.
1
·
in the nation. It was a great evening and one I'd recommend to
all ..... T-his Christmas season, I had an extra privelege of seeing some
of the best ball players in the country at Madison Square Garden.
·
First was that great team with about l
O
all-americans, South
Carolina. Led by two 6' 1
Q
stars in Tom Owens and Tom Riker this
team has it all especially for
its
great backcourt inan
John
Roche.
Roche
·
can play
·
with the best including Mount, Maravich and
Murphy. Next was the exceptional Cal Murphy and his surprising
Niagara team. Murphy is even better then last year when I saw
him.
He passes off more and makes the big play all the tinie and he still
has the quickest shot in the world. The next amazing team
l
saw was
in the holiday. festival, St. Bonnies. Led by the incomparable Bob
Lanier who resembles Willis Reed in every.aspect of the game, the
Boonies were just unstoppable in the semi's and the finals. I think
it
will come down to them against So. Carolina in the NCAA eastern
regionals this March. I have to mention Rick Mount of Purdue: He
was just great in the Semi's. I've never seen a person with as much
accuracy under pressure as Mount has, he
is
in every sense of the
word a real All~American ... Anyhow it was a very nice vacation and
a
busy one including a trip to see a sixth grade CYO team play. They
were pretty good and might give .Curtins Raiders a good game. I got
a lot of great presents for X-Mas including a big dart board and a set
of Dominoes. Whoppe?????????? ...... Start a save the Gatehouse
campaign ..... Well take
it easy one New Year's resolution,
l
promise
to keep my columns as bad as they were last semester, Right
Howard .... Be Good, Love Duff.. ..
*****
imagine the basketball team practicing outdoors.
. ,
.
.
.
We can only expect tfl compete with_ schools ffi.ce Queens,
Fairfield, Adelphi, etc., if.we have a place.to
tr~
regularly, and for
now Donnelly is ·the best answer
..
.A.n~w. look to-add class to Maiist
team~ ()n_ aw~y trips ., blazers are being ordered, only,
20
now;
but
thete will
·be·
mote next year. Don Ronchi chairman of the Athletic
Committe~, should receive credit for the. purchase, having,obtained
the allocation of $400'from the Student Council. The color decided
_upon
by the Varsity Cljib will.be."<:;arribridg~. a shade of
gray ...
A
big
lirieup· of intramu~ls for this spring ~mester - besides the standbys
of basketball, volleyball; and ~ftball; we willliave a return of the
wrestling tournament which met
.with
gre~t success two years ago,
plus the inn.ovation of an in.tramural crew season, and a
12
hour
bicycle relay race. Wrestling
will·
be handled. by Ted Brosnan;
Crew,
which will consist of 3 weeks of practice followed by races, will be
run by Rick Reuschle and Pete Masterson. If y9u want to enter the
bicycle race, talk to Steve Harrison ... Pat Fleming, showing much
improvement, and Joe Scott, with his usual strong performance,
were the only plus factoIS in the disappointing second half collapse
against New Haven ...
Bill Paccione, almost ecstatic with joy, had to
be helped
.
out of the yearbook office last Thursday when he came
upon pictures of the Iona game. We'll keep them nice and safe, Bill,
and when March rolls around they will aJI be available ...
Erp .••
In· Perspective
······
,
Bill
Leber
Bill Leber, of Union City, New
Jersey and St. Joseph's High
School,
has
.been
a starting
linebacker for the Vikings for
the past three years. Alternating
between
right
and
middle
·
linebacker over
his
four year
career, Bill gained the reputation
of being the hardest hitter on
the team.
In
his
first starting assignment
.
against Iona
in
Sophomore
year
Bill
gave everyone an indication
of the great things that
were
to
come. An excellent tackler, Bill.
has helped to anchor the solid
Viking defense both against the
rush and the pass ever since. It
was.in Sophomore year that
Bill
suffered a serious back injwy.
He made a strong comeback and
was back to top
form
in Junior
year, although he was forced to
wear
a neck brace that hampered
his
style.
Bill is a fine
. all-around athlete, who in
high
school excelled in football while
playing four years of tennis and
swimming two years .
Bill's
play
at
Marist
was
characterized
by his quickness
on the
field,
his
thorough
knowledge of the game and his
complete
dedication
to the
team. He was proud to finish his
career as a winner .
•••••
...












































































































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'PAGES
.
THE ClRCLE
·
.
JANUARY
29.
1970
1
Cager~:
Erra~ic
-
:'
•.•
I
.
R·ecotd
·sta/n·ds
·at•--5~5··.·
:
Having the ~anie type of
-
early
season
troubles
.
that
they
.
·
suffered through last. year,
·the
Red Foxes went into last night's
.
game
against Nyack with
-
a
.
record of 5-S, and hoping to
snap a two game losing string.
·
· Last Friday night the Foxes
played host to. the
.college
of.-
New
.
Haven. After leading for,.
most of the first half, the home
team
fell
apart and wound up on
the
-.
bottom
erid of a
·
84-70
ma r gin . The
_m,e
n in
red-and-whi.te
couldn't
cope
with the explosive
·
shooting of
.
New· Haven's Ron Rioidan and
Bill Battle who threw in 33 and
26 points respectively. Joe Scott
(18 pts.) and Ray Charlton (14
pts.) led the way for Marist.
The previous Saturday Marist
traveled
to Kings Pt., Long
Island where they were tripped
'up·
5_2-49
after
leading
thr':)ughoutmost of the cont~st:
~-
However, the home. club' cut the
Poor shooting and ballhandlmg
lead to
·
5
·
with a minute to go
proved to b.e the Fox's undoing
before Manning struck with two
as Kings Pt. moved ahead to stay
big buckets to ice the victory.
in the closing minutes ..
·
Ray
Scott with 20 pts. and Clarke
Manning and Charlton Jed with
·
with 16 pts. Jed the offensive for
15 pts apiece.
_
..
Marist, while To~ Clark picked
The
previous.
week,.
the
·
up 23 for P:S.O.
hoopsters
had
pulled·· off
.
Early
in. the
Christmas
successive victories over.Western
vacation,
the
:Foxes
had
Conn. SL
'(99-70)
and Plattsburg
journeyed to Montclair; N.J. for
St. (82-72). In the WCS game,
the
New
·
Jersey
Kiwanis
Marist led all" the way as Coach
Tournament.
Luck wasn't with
·Petro
su·bstituted
freely
the·m,
though, as they were
throughout.
Maiming led all
knocked out in the first round
scorers with 24 pooints while
·by
Upsala,
65-6.3.
Mari st
adding 16 rebounds>Bill Spenla.
outrebounded
their opponent
(18 pts, 15 rbs), Scott 10 pts.,
and led until the last 6 minutes
13 rbs), Charlton ( 11 pts., 8
when
-
their· mistakes beat· them.
assists) and Ray Clarke ( 13. pts),
Manning ( 18), and Charlton ( 17)
supplied the support. JeffOlsori
led the

Foxes . while Will Prall
topped "the losers with 14 pts. ·
(I
9) topped the victors.
In the Plattsburg contest the
* * * *
* •
Foxes led by a 10 or 12 pt.
margin for· most of the contest.
Bill
Spenla~ at the top of th~
key~
gets well in the
air
for his patented
·
one-:hand
jumper.
·
·
Frosh
Upset
New
Haven,
Bow
to Siena
Grapplers
-Fall
To
·
CCNY
Comp
c
ting
without
the
by John Petraglia
. sources of Coach Jerry Patrick,
the
.
Marist wrestlers droppe·d a
tough
··24-16
decision
to
C.C.N.Y. last Saturday. The loss
dropped the Red Grapplers to
2-3, all losses incurred· on the··
On Friday night the Marist Ne.w Haven team.
road.
Freshman
.
team. hosted and
Last Saturday night the Siena
In the opening match Johnny
defeated the Freshman Chargers frosh
defeate·d
the
Marist
Eisenhardt lost a 17-11 decision
of New
..
Haven College. New
yearlings,
·
·105-84
.. Siena never.
to City College's Pepe Randen.
Haven looked strong and they
fell
behind enroute. to their fifth
The difference seemed to lie in
had
.a
decided height adyantage.
straight victory and eighth in
Randen's great
_strength
and his
Thestrerigthof.theNewHaven
ni_nesfartsi·
.·.
··,
ability
to.escape
any
6(
team: lasted up until the early
.
With the score tied at
10-10;
Eiscnhardt's
attempts
to gain·
moments of the second. quatter
·the
··Indians
controlling
·
th!!
controlling position.
when Marist held New Haven
·
boards jumped to
a
47~29, with
Lance
Lipscomb:
did
an
scoreless
'for

minutes while
.
most. scoring coming from
.
fast
excellent
-
job.
of
b_rcaking
.
two
they h~ilt
up
a 15 pt. lead.
breaks. Marist was never again in
.
pfoning cOJ:nbinations by Mike
It
was
a
streaky game for the
the game
,as
Siefra led
.by
as
Murray, -ho_wever Murray
..
was
Red
_
F,oxes
yet
when they
much as 99-72 with 3:40 left to
too
'.m
ucli
for
the
··
126 lb.
·
clicked
.
they were sensational,
play. -
·
.

.-
.
Fre_shman· as he got the pin at
·
and they were clicking most of
Five Siena players hit double
4:49.
_
.
.
.
the time .. Plaudits should go to
figures with Tony Delgardo'}ligh
In the
134
lb, match City's
by Bob Sullivan
.
.
Johp
Eisenhardt
in action against Southhampton in an early season
home match. The grappJers are home Saturday again~t
·
many
for
this
game
but
.
with 24
·
points: John · Landy
Doug Lee was too much for Bob
especially to Marist's Jim Martell
.from
Marist Otook
-game
honors·
Sullivan.
Although.
Sullivan
whose game high 28 pts and-18
with32 points on 15 field'goals
.survived
a near
·fall
in the first
.
.
.
rebounds sparked the club,John
· ·
and 2foul shots. Jim Martell had
period, Lee came right back in
.
Ligget
·to
the mat and worked·
Heavyweight Bill McGarr won
Landy and Bill J.>ezzuti were· the_ 14.points with Biff Pez_zutti arid
the. second
period
to pin
fqr
ii:
pin in 6:3
I.
.
'.
.
his match easily. crushing City
other big guris for Marist as they,
Ed Reilly chipping in
I
2 apiece__ Sullivan.
.
.
' - -·
·
/
I67- lb. Jack Walsh ~ontmued
heavyweight
in
3:29.
.
tossed
·it.
23-and 20 respectively.
·
...
0
ri
J a ri · 17 ,'
'the•--
frosh
Rico Valez got the take down
..
the comeback as he gamed a 9-3
.
· Currently
below
-
.500
_
the
- The·
,all
aroiirid unhearalded
journeyed
to Kings Pt. where· by CC:N.Y.'s 142 lb. PaµI Rohn
Win over -~ete f:ra~co. _Walsh -C,rapplers have a tougli"s~cond
hi.Istie of Ed Remy· helped
.as
he
They knqcked
·
off. the host .
who
shtJt him out the rest ohhe
narrowly missed ~mnmg bis man
semester coming up. However
-
racked
..
up·,
j
n , the
·
assist
..
9_();.70. Landy led with. 34 pts
match. winning
a
hard fought
as th~ bu~zer Just beat the
they should be aided greatly by
department. · Mike Marso and
·
with Martell (23
·
pts., · IS i:bs), IQ;.2 decision. At
this point City· refe!ee s_whisUe,
.
the_· return. of Kevin O'Grady,
Super Sub·Rkk C:amike playing
arid Pezzutti
(15
pts., 16 tbs}
held a 16-0 lead and seemed
·
City Colleges pale
Shapiro
Mike
Andrew
·and
John
well
helped
-
the streaky
.red
giving the chief
'support
.. Al
ready to. walk a.Way an easy
halted
···
the: Manst c~m~back
Red ward,
'all
conditioning
foxes;<New •Haven's Bob Zoglio
.
Bleezarde led the losers with ·19
:
winner.
·
.
though, as he, took a tight 3-2
them.selves
after
preseason
and. Tony Simonelli cannot go
pts.

-
.
·
.

·
·
Here Matt Ifogan stopped the
~atch from a t7?
1~.
fr~shman
injuries.
:,
unmentioned as they.hit for 26
.
On.Jan'. 21, the freshmen met
tide by taking a 6-3 match from. Jim Lavery._Shaptros
w~!1
gave
,.
Last night the mat-men took
-
and 25 respectively, The major
Ulster Community College who
Doug Rushin. The match was
C.C.N.Y. a big
1?~11
lead;
. on MAD-FDU and on Saturday
-.
factor was the free throws put in
literally
ble~ · Marist off the . even until the third period when
.
Carlo
~hapiro
s_eal~d the
they will face Newark-Rutgers in
by Marist as tttey were 34-46
court, defeating them 12();.55. Rogan scored all six of his
C.C.N;Y.vicJOJ")'.by_pmmngl90
ahomematchbeginnirigat
2 :3o.
from the line; New Haven was in
Jerry Moss le~ Ulster with 35
points.
.
lb. George Fmn m 6.53;
*
* * * *
such bad foµl trouble that they
·
pts; while La~dy agajn led the
- .
Bill Moody had a tough time
ended up playing with 4 men on
home squad with 26 markers.
with 158 lb. Peter Ligget for the
the. court for
2
minutes. All-in
* * **
*
firsftwo periods. However in the
all it was a good game put
third
·period
the Marist Captain
together by M_arist over a strong
escaped from the-bottom,
took
Joe
McMahon
paces
through
the
rust
440 dmillg the¾
mile
nm
in
:m
A.A.U.
meetat the 168th St.
Armory
on Dec. 30.
·
Track
Team
Competes
.
In
,A:A.U.
Meeis
For. the third year in a row,
Marist participated in the series
of'A.A.U. Development Meets at
the 168th St. Armory in New
York. The purpose of
,these
meets
is' to bridge the gap
between the cross-country meets·
of the_
fall
and the regular·
scheduled indoor meets from
January to March. The races are
held on a flat floor 220 yard
wooden track.
On Friday night- Dec.5, Bill
Kalish
and
Steve
Kopki
competed in the 440, hitting
times
of
55.1
and
55.8
respectively.
While
Gerry
Wildner ran the I 00 yard dash in
10.9
seconds,
the
middle
distance men entered the open
IOOO yard event, with each one
receiving the same handicap in 4
different heats. Their times were
Paul
Blum
2:40.0,
Bob--
Mayerhofer
2: 3 0.0,
Joe
McMahon 2:28.8, and Andre
Albert 2:36.0. In the handicap·
~
.
.
.
.
;
soo·yard run, Greg Howe posted
.
a time
.
of 61.8 seconds. The
sprint medley relay was the final
event of the -night and
Biil
Kalish
(49 sec. - 440 - 75 yds. hndcp.),
Steve Kopki (26
_sec.
- 220),
Greg Howe (25.5 sec. - 220), and
Bob Mayerhofer (2: I 3.0 - 880)
carried the baton for Marist for a
time of 3:53.5.
On Sat. night Dec.20, at the
end of finals week, Greg Howe,
Joe McMahon and Paul Blum
entered
the 1 mile
·
handicap
· event and turned in times of
4:40,
4:53,
and
5:14
respectively.
At
the
third
development
·meet
on Dec. 30,
Greg Howe ran a 2:07.8 for the
880 and Joe McMahon hit 3:29
for the ¾ mile run.
Meanwhile, th(ee field events
meet were held at Columbia and
St. John's Universities on Dec.
6th,
13th, and 20th. Henry
Blum,
Paul Blum. and Dick
CONTINUED
ON PAGE
7