The Circle, February 19, 1970.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 14 - February 19, 1970
content
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·-.
MR. JOSEPH
NORTON
1HE
,
.:
.· .•.
.
I
··MNUsr
COLLEGE;POUG~EPSIE,
NEWYORK
126Ql ·
NortOn,
LeWiS
· Debate
, lft -
a
left ~Right
Duel
Mr. Joseph No1ton, Instructor
taxes.
in History at Marisi: debate.ct Mr:
Although
Fulton
J.:,ewis
Fulton Lewis Jr.·irt the theatre
ct·escribed
himself
as a
before
a standirtg~room-only, . Libertarian
(namely one who
crowd
on · February · 11. Mr.
advocates full · civil liberties) he
Lewis
is
·a
newscaster for the
d i d
n o t o b j e c t. t o ·. h
is
Mutual Broadcasting System, a
classification as.a member of the
news network of independent · "right";
his statements
during
stations,
and
is
heard daily . the evening_ indicated that he
throughout the country. Fulton
was certainly a member of the
· Jtewis
is also a conservative and
"right."
'copsented to·debate Mr. Norton
Lewis
praised
the
ABM
after .Philip Abbott Luce bowed
defense system stating that it
out because of illness.
would increase U.S. security and
·The.
debate
presented
prevent an accidental nuclear·
originally as a. discussion entitle9
firing:
.He also
professed
"Campus
and
Revolution".
optimism·. in the SALT talks.
.turned
out to be· much more
Lewis advocated implementation
broad·
in
scope, i!}cluding for · of Black Capitalism as a cure for
contrast the _issues of Vietnam,
Black economic ills although he
. the. ABM system, the Black
was unable to define what the
revolution,.the
Biafran war,'the
system
wo_uld entail..
He
process·
of change
iit the
advocated a volunteer army and
American system, pollution, tlie
stated that the goal of American
military-industrial
system and
troops in Vietnam is to enable
Norton's
most
important
so I u
ti
on . dealing with world
peace was the development of
the one world concept, namely .
the strengthening of the United
Nations.
Lewis. showed.
a belief in
Conimunisin as being aggressive
throughout' the world and that
its spread anywhere would be ·
agairist America's interest.
He
condemned
the activities of •
Americans, Ererich, and Soviets
in the Biafran War but denied
that the U.S. had takc·n anv
direct action in the conllicl.
lie
discounted
the effect of the
U
nit e d Nations
as a peace
keepilJR force
in
the world and
domestically
he advocated
reform brought about as a result
of normal
responses by
the
establishment..
Norton
expressed the
view
CONTINUED ON
3
FEBRUARY 19, 1970
MR. FULTON
LEWIS JR.
Draft
Director
Unmanned
the
Vietnamese
to elect a
government.
He defended the
policy of containment and the
Childrens
Theatre
· Draftee. Death Rate Rises
•. military
and
indicated
that
Communist aggression could be
thwarted only from a positioi:i of
strength.
He stated
that the
United Nations had become an
Rehea·rsing Oz
Several
Nixon choices for
would seem to indicate that it
international
chess board and
Each Tuesday and Thursday
- gathered
together
some
Selective Service Director have will be difficult to find a young,
denied world peace as possible
nigh.t
the
cafeteria
is
interested ·students
to put his
refused
. the . job. Three are director of the Selective Service.
by reliance in that institution.
transformed into the land of Oz.
plan into action. The Marist
known · to . have . rejected· the• The
refusal
of. the. coaches
Mr. N9rton opposed tlie ABM
Director Joe · DeTura · and
his
College·
Theatre
Guild
lent
nomination. John Pont, football - apparently
has negated. the
system stating tha~
it
would n<-?1 Assistant D~~ctor, Ed Barry. can
enough · financial support
and
coach·.ocfodiana University arid Administrations plans to find a
add to U,S. sec;unty because it
be seen gu1dmg the cast of !he· .. help to put the show on ·the
't'. ·
Paul Dietzel. now .coach. of the
d irectoc
whiclf . would-- be . thre.atened the SAL'J'. talks and
•·Wizard.of Oz toward its April
29 .·
ro~d .. Children's Theatre's first·
·{i~,..;
:~:
,':
< , ••
·.:·
u:
1!,iv'crsH:Y,::
9f
:.·--
£<>uth:·J?ar?li!l:a·
,: ~!atfi;a~tivif '· t0;,t~_o:~oung.·•-:"cO.'
. :" a!sP.
..
\s:t~s~en;.d~i)h~•ta_n;1?S;:·
ra,~e
...
/:t?i;ru'·;May·J.:-p'erforn1~nc~s;::Cast': .
b
_production; .. Cinderella.
~a:S ::so;
.JQotb~:te,amihavedecliried
Jo_'
--
'
0
In°a~relatc::d
i,tory .. the)~entag'?n .... N9.rton.,refw.c::.d":tJt.e
,cpil:~eP,t_<?f ,:nc::mb~rs •.include.· --R1t.aJean
successful •·that.'·
they decided to
takethepositic:>n'.:,.·';·>>
.•·
declaredthafthewarinVietrlarri
B_l~c;k:.CaP.1talism:_de11yll)-~lt_s: S,chm1dt
as .Qo_rothy,
Pat
·charter·
themselves under· the
-. The most recent choice. for the
·
ha.s
"claimed•
more than
l
2,000 - e x1ste11ce • as an. mdenhf!a~le .· McNamara playing the four faces • Student Government as a Marist
posLw:as Charl_!!s
L
DiBona; a · deat}ls among draftees. most :of
program. He sug~e,sted thatm 1t_s' of Oz,· and · Stan_ Bojarski as · Service Organization.
31~year
old former: Rhodes
them.~
the.army. Roughly
.33
P!ace,·the Amencan g~vemment
Elvira._Gulch (the Wi~ked Witch).
· Now Children's Theatre .. is a
Scholar .. DiBona has served
in
per cent,. of.· American deaths
divert defe1_1se
exnend1tures _for · Travelin~ to Oz with Dorothy
club thatis here to stay; it works
the
offices .of the Assistant . were
draftees,.·. these deaths
the
purpose
of rep_aratlon
ar~ Kevm McArdl~ (Scarecrow),
interdependently
with
the
Secretary
of Defense
for
resulting from combat: In· the
payments owed to • the Bl~cks Vincent Begley (Tm Woodman),
College Theatre
Guild, often
Systems Analysis from 1963 to · army, one out of every two
after 200 years of oppression.
Matt Grady (Cowardly Lion);
acting as a training ground for
·
I 966 and as special assistant to . soldiers
who· have died in
Nor ton. attacked
the _defense and following close behind, John
the Guild.
·
the
Under . Secretary
of the
combat have been draftees, even · e st a bl is h men
t and
the
DiMastri as Toto.
.
· Since a production of this sort
Navy. He has· also headed a though drafte~s comprise only
military-industr)al complex. _He - . Althou~
this. is the second
runs into
a
considerable sum, the
private, concern in Alexandria, · 40 per cent of the Army.forces.
suggested th~tm order.to bnng
production
for
Children's
. · members had to raise money.
Virginia, that does· research·for
in Vietnam.
, .
. .
.
to the attention of the people of
Theatre, many students have no
The Children's Theatre realizes
the Navy.
· Draftees·are more likely than . the world the danger..of nuc.lear ·jdea how Children's Theatr~ was·
that would:never have been able
DiBona was. the · President's · volunteers to be in combat as - we~pons,.
that_ the
U.~.
and
started.
J9e
DeTura, founder of
to
prepare
this
production
choice but DiBolla unexpectedly
infantry . rifleman. As. the war. ~ov1et. Umon d1s~~m until ea~h
th_i~ organization,
traces
its
without the help of its backers.
with drew
his
name ( from
lengthens,
more
and more
possess~d
a capab1hty of ove~kdl ongm back a~ lln answer to a
Joe DeTura
in
behalf of the
consideration
when he
..
was ~raftees are being_ turned into
of one _-and not the mult1pl_e need: "I thought t~ere was a
Children's Theater, "would like
cri~icized
for
advocating
infantrymen.
power 1t- now p~ssesses. This
nee.ct_ to
nrov1d~
fr~e
to thank all the people who
aboHtiort of the draft .. Senator
•Bet
w e,e n March.
a n_d · Ill1;1sJrates
the
not10n that
the
entert.amment for the children
m
helped
us
in
obtaining· the
Margaret Chase Smith. of Maine ·. Septem?er of \ast year, a .!otal ?f
!1.11htary _and,, gover~me!lt has
the a~ea. I also thought there
necessary money for the show.
, "objected to DiBona stating that
2,074 mductee~ ;were .killed.
m
.
normal~zed
!he .not10n of
was a need for prograll!S that
In particular Art Greene, Stan
the draft director should not be
combat,.
a :rate · of 297 per
destruction
ana
death from
would ·be. under the complete
Hollis arid Saga Foods· all the
-·
.an "acknowledged -liquidator of
n10nth. This-rate is higher t~an. weapons.
. .
control a_nd direction
of. the
Pizza
salesman
and' buyers,
the system." Senator John
C; ·
the one for the four-year penod
_ Lewis challerig~d the members
students;
1t
wo_uld also provide a
Special thanks to the Marist
Stenriis
of Mississippi
· also from· June 1965 to June 1969, • of the New Left' to corrie. up
new
d1mens10n. for Campus
Associates, Mrs. McArdle, Marist
supported Mrs~ Smith's position·.
whic_h is about
249 draftee
with solutions to the problems
Theatre.'_' .
.
_
Evening division and fhe. faculty
The · three
known- refusals . deaths per month.
that
the
Y
raise.
Norton
On this premise, Joe DeTura -wives:" -
responded that
it
was his duty to
criticize- those who have chosen
fo
rule wh~n they . have not
performed· their tasks; that he
didn't need solutions since he
wasn't in power, but
if
he was· in
power .he would have solutions.
Panthers
Attacked,
Nationwide
CfD
-Discussed
·
in• Dorm
NEW YORK (LNS) -
In a.bold
attempt
at extinction
of the
Black·
Panther
Party;
the
government
is waging ·a
nation-wide · offensive with an
arsenal of frame-ups, no · bail, ·
kangaroo courts _whose judges
conduct
half .the prosecution,
and just plain bullets.
Within the past six months
alone, more than 40 Panther
leaders and about
125 members
have been. arrested, and many
are facing charges which could
lead to life imprisonment
or
death. In the few years the Party
has
been
around,
28 Black
Panthers have been murdered.
Panther offices
in a number of
cities have been attacked by
police,
who
sometimes rain
automatic rifle fire at the walls
and windows as they storm the
steps. (They bring warrants for
.. fugitives,"
non-existent
or
miles
away.) Hidden assailants
have
shot at
Panthers
on
the.
streets
of Kansas City twice this
fall.
Chicago is turning
.iri
sonie of
the · ugliest . news, In the week
CQJ',j'TJNUED
ON 2
BY
PHIL GLENNON
In a discussion organized by
Tom
McDonald on the second
L to R,
Mr~
Thomas Wade, Bros. Richard LaPictra, Fred Lambert, and Linus Foy expound
upon the legalities of traditional Marist religious affiliations to a full capacity audience in
room
C249 Mon. Feb. 9th. The informative meeting
was
coordinated by Vince Begley, the assistant
News Editor of
TIIE ORCLE
in
order
to quell some heated arguments
which
surrounded the .
religious ties
controversy.
floor
of Champagnat
last
Monday
night
Dr. George
Hooper discussed the worl_dngs
of the Committee on Faculty
Development·
particularly
in
reference
to the degree of
emphasis the student plays in
evaluation of faculty.
When' a faculty
member
requests
promotion
to eithe:r
Assistant
Professor, Associate
Professor, or Professor; or when
a
faculty
member
is being
considered
for tel)ure, he· is
evaluated by the Committee on
Faculty
Development.'
This
evaluation
is
based
on.
Departmental Recommendation,
Student
eval~ation,
and
classroom
visitation.
After a
brier summary concerning how
CFD
works students submitted
various questions
to Dr. Hooper.
.On the question concerning
the degree of emphasis placed on
student evaluation
Dr.
Hooper's
response indicated
that much
CONTINUED
ON 3
i
\
FEBR
VARY
19'
.
.
.
.
.
.
_Farulty
·Focus
.
.
Do
NotFold,
Staple
.
.
~
.
..
.
. .
. .
.
.
'
Through
A
·
..
·.•.
·Bf
Oken
WilldOW
BY BILL:O'REILLY,
on the ride was this darkclooking
or ·M·utilate -
When we last left · out two
Spanish guy with Juan Valdez
heroes they were heading toward·
·
written
across
:his
hc:>lster.
BY H. GOLDMAN
-various
guises
we
·go·
through in
---sunny
Monac·o- where sand and : · Suddenly he ·jumped· up, a!Jd,.
Last year a friend of mine who
this funny world.
- ·
·
·
sunstroke
.
are a way of life.
.
shouted •.~Hey guacho take thees
.has a sporting goods busine~
Say "8:30 class" to a student
Monaco is· a nice place but it
boat
_to Cuba." The
..
Itali~n
was asked by a
High
School
and watch the basic response, or
definitely flatints·its location on
gondolier looked up and. said
Coach if he could get ten pain
say "late Friday class",
.
and
the Riviera. The. Chase Bikini
"No speak broken English_." The
of cross-country shoes within a watch
the
similar response.
·
Savings Bank with its' ·motto.
Spaniard jumped up and down
d a y
o r
s o . B e i
n
g an
Some students enter the class
"you won't find a meanie at
and
.screamed,
"In ze· rombrf of
accomodating·sort
of person (a~ with complete blankness behind
Chase Bikini"
(I
know,lknow),
·
Che Guevarr_a take thees boatto
.··
salesmen are supposed to be) my their eye balls
.
expecting the
DR. H. GOLDMAN
,.
·
is just one example of the lively
_Cuba."
"Che_ Guevarra;. wha_t:~
friend
c.a:
11 e d the
shoe
instructor to
fill the void. Some up the mess he leaves, or puttirig · atmosphere. Of course, Princess
that, some_ km~ of· mamcot_tl,
manufacturer anci asked him to instructors
enter . the room,
his refuse in places designed for
Grace lives in Monaco but we
the gondolier said. The Spaniard
send the shoes posthaste. The. discharge volumes of words at garbage where
it
will not offend
missed her because while we
muttered something like,
.
"I'm
manufacturer
replied, "Gosh,
I the student creating nothing but
or litter the local scene.
.
were there
.she
was
·on
location
coming Fidel"
•
and .theri dove
·
sure would like to help you out intense ennui.· Both types retain
Two other sets of instructions
with·
Frankie
and
Annette
overboard·
never·· to be seen
especially since you are. an old their programming
-
the student
might be put under a master
shooting. a riew movie entitled:
again.
friend ,and good customer, but
forgetting that he- must strike
punch card with the label of
"I was a teenage Sandcrab."
From Venice we
·boarded
a
my computer won't let me." Bill sparks from the instructor by
h.edonism.- The weaker of two
No
.visit
to Monaco would· be
train for Yienna, Austria. While
Murphy
the former Brother
challenging his statements and
,ets of programs is that set into
complete without a trip to the
on
the·
train
an elderly
William Murphy used to tell the the instructor by assuming that
the pot-heads who are tuninf
famed gambHng casino at Monte
gentleman wearing a helmet, red
story of the Parisian taxi driver this is the way he did
it
in the
-out
a system they dislike. This
Carlo. So off we went. Easy
armband,
-
and boots sat down
who would refuse to stop for red past so it is still appropriate to
,ystem may
.be
home, school,
Edgar was, as usual, dressed
·
next
-
to me. About five minutes
lights
.because
they
were
repeatthematerialthesameway
society or the world;and
they
p·erfcctly fortheoccasicinwitha
Jater he turned-to me and.said,
controlled by a machine and he now (even to the inclusion of
arc avoiding
coming
to grips
dark blue blazer and matching
•~The Fueher
·-is·
alive and· in
was a man not to be dominated
the same jokes pencilled on the
with reality by creating
·
their
short pants. The white llama rug
Tierra d_el Fuego; he's· coming
by a machine.
.
margin
of
the
notes,
now
own closed system. ln thinking
in the casino went perfectly with
..
back,.
Himmler,
Goering,
Two
_sides
of the same coin? yellowing with age.)
their own deep thoughts they
his socks. The casino· was really
·
Goebbels, they're all coming. We
Possibly, btit both examples of
Say government or country to
are
(sic)
solving
all
·these
great
but
we were quickly
will
·crush
the aggressors. We will
extreme. behavior prompted by one of the anti-establishment
problems in the "twilight zone",
cleaned out at the "Go Fish"•
fight on• land, on· sea,: in· the
t he
a d van c.c of
mans'
types and his response is
"it's
no
or simply avoiding thinking at
table. Later on we ventured into
valleys,. in
·
the forests; under
technological
·
ability
.and-
his damn good - tear it down". No
all. The result, nothing except
a
the ballroom to. groove to the
rugs, in Woolworths ... " Austria
con commit ant
inability
to
·
s o l u
t
i o n s
o ff
c r c d , n o
strong desire to make pot legal.
velvet sounds of Kenny and the
was great - the people were just
understand or control either the alterna lives,
no
_redeeming
More unfortunate
are the acid
Mad Monsters.
·
tremendous - you· could.ask- any
technology or himself. Even our features
noted.
Just
the
droppers and pill poppers who
·Out.
next.
stop
on the
question and you would always
language has lost some beauty
pro gr
a
m med
response,"
are doing actual physiological
continent was Italy. -We zoomed
get the same
·
friendly reply:
when we speak of someone or everything must be put down.
If
damage
fo themselves - and
'on down the Italian Riviera and
"Out of my-way,-Swinehundt."
something being
"programmed"
you disagree you have to be-torn
possibly ·others. Their programs
stopped
at the
·first
sign of
After Austria it was time to
or "updated."
We cannot see a down too because your right of
push them further from the real
civilization which, in Italy's case,
head ·back
:
to London, but not
person but ome being with an free expression is valid only so
.
world they dislike but again
was a cave. The cave turned out
before stopping in wonderful
_ appropriate slot for
a
punch card long as it agrees with their
provide no answer or even ask
to. be a money exchange place.
·
Zurich, Switzerland where snow,
to
be
inserted
causing the prejudices.
Once you differ,
no questions that might help
and; after exchanging dollars to
ice, sleet, and cold are a way of
appropriate response. Once these their machine shuts down arid
change things for the better.
lire at a rate of 265,000 lire
to
life. But it's clean. The Swiss are
actions have been performed,
turns you off. Do not attempt to
What their programs result in· is
the
dollar,
w·e took
our
wonderful p'eople who yodle anci
the being resumes its natural
confuse their programri1ing with
eventual
self-destruction· and
wheelbarrels and headed for our
ski and,
when
you're
not
state
(generally
indifference)
facts or ideas.
·
certain
predictable
responses
two
prime
objectives:
the· looking, take your wrist watch.
until
it is time for a new
Stand at a busy area of the
when the proper stimuli are
Roman ruins and Joe Rubino's
-
They then sell you a Swiss
program to be inserted or the campus on a Friday at 2:00,
coded into-. their punch cards.
gr an d father's
·
home.
Hansel and Gretal watch for
previous one to be repeated.
.
p.m., and watch the programs in
.
"It's all in protest" is the stock
Unfortunately
it was impossible
$50.
Machines were
.supposed
to action. Flashing by our vantage
response
-:-
protest of what -
to tell the two apart. We finally
If you are ever in Switzerland
free· man from drudgery, allow point.we
·see
clearly two distinct
.
their
inability·
to think
··
for
. •
found Joe's grandfather running.
be sure to take the cable car-ride
·
him to create new ideas, and use
.
types
.
of performance,
with
themselves· and to communicate
around
··in
his
suede Aoga
into the Alps. The.ride features,
his life contributing
.
to. others'. others
Jess
...
obvious buL still
.
their .··ideas;'.
lf.
college· people
·
screaming, ~'Share the wealth,
• ·an
.l!ttack
,by
an
·.Abominable ·
·.'._'There·: ....
i~-
'.nothing·
.iritrinsically
,
:P
e_rJorming;
.
First :•nrnving('
(hefrspresumptiveto
this.world)
.-._.~death·to
Carlo:PohtL~':/;:·
-.'.>';
·.•
..
·
0
Sno.winan;•-.• a_,,breakdown·;\and
.-·wrong.with
machines, computers
,
through·•· our
.
vision comes the
.
_.cannot·
control ··themselves· how
: ::
•.·
Italy
':
was
·really.,excitirig
•arid
/delay
-
of- five:-·:hou:i:s\in/5
·
:_deg;
•·.
!1re
_.
on!y
-
as• ~ood
as. the. "slantstiouldered
suitcase
.could
they> ever expec;:t;to
,
the_',people,there-madf:_uscfoel
-\ternperature;-•an_'avalanche,
one
mformatlon_ put
.mto
them, cars· carrier" hurrying
.
to.·· catch .the
..
influence or.· help or direct other
.
right
at· home
.•
by
.. :squashing
·
,
of
_
th~
~cable~
snap_Ping,
.
~nd
~t.
are only as safe.as the
·pef$on .car,
traifr orwhatever
to-carry·· people.
.
.
.
.
.
grapes on.our
clothing;
Italy_is': l~ast fifteen_httlekidsgettmgair
driving wants to be. Machines him back to the
-comfort ·of
Even
our fashion-conscious·
considered
a
backward country
·
sickness~brmgyourcamera.•<
are. idiots_· and if they are home.and hearth. The cry-of this input has beconie trite: Look at
by some but it's notJrue. Hertz·
.
Fr<>m
_Zuric~itwas
h_ead home
controlled by idiots and obeyed
specie
is "there's nothing to do.
·
the styles proposed by Gernreich
rent~a-chariot has· three offices.
·
,to·
London
..
tune where we. met
by idiots we are in trouble.
around
here"
translated
to
lately (he didn't shave his hair
there
.and
so what.if there
is no
u•p with-
the-
"horde
of
People, on the other hand, are English means
"I
don't warit to
off)' arid unisex, and our own
·
running water.~ you can count
intellectuaJs, from Marist who
supposed to be able to direct do anything except go home".
fashion
.plates
that,wear
onafloodatleast6nceaweek."
cameto·London_to.furthertheir·
their
.own
behavior and be He could create some activity or
Salvation Army·rejects. To "do
-
Venice was the highlight of
-
c~lturaL-e_ducatio!1 .. Also along
responsible.
for their actions. get .involved but the grooves of
your own thing" meanslo_ok, act
our Italian
·
journey.
-
Venetfan
was Artie-. Qu1ckenton,
The
Lately
many of us seem to_ the program are well worri now ..
·
and respond like the rest.of us.
people take great
.pride
in.the
horde
spent
much-
.time
exhib_it
some
.form
of
"Coming
from
the
other
Th_e.reat·truth
is•jnside
of
fact·thattheyhavegarbagefrom
researching inSoho.
But more>
programmed
.performance
in the
..
direction we se.e the •~bent-arm every
.
person and no
·artificial
.
all over the world floating· in• about.
t~at,., next· time.·
:Joe
·boo·ze
carrier" .laying in his
.
stimulant
or depressant will
their canals. While in Venice this. Francese also came- to London
----------------
weekend
sustenance.
His
cry
bring it out. Nor is the answer in
.
writer took
·a
ride on a gondola
·
but was arrested by the custom's
starting around Friday at 2:00
the words
·
or sounds.· of- the
which is sorf"of a.hollowed
.out
agents for. tr,ying to sell them a
p.m.,
sounds like "we gotta
phony rock groups preaching
telephone pole. Along with me
·
hot tricycle:-Why foe?
·
·
drink"_repeated
rapidly for
15
.Love. Love
in
this instance is a
minutes. at hourly. intervals for
euphemism for cheap
and
easy
48. hours. At the end of this
sexual adventures. The truth lies
period the cry changes to
"boy
in
.
the respect
.
you have for
did I tie one on» accompanied·
yourself as a person and for your
by an idiotic grin. Unfortunately
fellow
,hum_an
being as an
his
programming
does not
individual.
.
include directions for
·cleaning
*****
·
.
.
,
.,-
...
It
' •. .,• ! ,
'.........
'
blast
PANTHERS
FROM
l
.
which ended with the pre-dawn
slaying of Illinois Panther leader
Fred Hampton, police shot two
Panthers
on the street and
severely beat three others in a
Chicago ap?1rtment. The week's
toll:
three
·
dead
and
two
critically wounded. Other
_cities
also report new developments· in
the· government's
attempt
to
wipe
out
the
Panther
organization.
Party Chairman Bobby Seale,
,
recently sentenced to four years
off
to a :-aie and solid iuture.
in jail for demanding his right to
Star! invesling your dollar.; in
representation by-a lawyer of his
liic
in~urance right away. And
own
choice
in Judge Julius
~ave hig
money on lower rate~.
Hoffman's Chicago courtroom,
·
Build up tax-free cash
.
value
is now
in
San Francisco County
moncr.
Spread
your wings-.
Act
Jail.
now. Happy landing.
.
While Bobby Seale was in his
"-:ORTHWESTERN
MUTUAL LIFE
maximum-security isolation cell,
;\\ILWAUKEE
agents of the Presidential force -
the Secret Service - arrested
NML
Time!?• diffmnce · · ·
David
Hilliard,
the Panther
.a
nd ihe differ~ce II~
Party's national Chief of. Staff,
ntOMAS F. HEFFERNA.~
on Dec. 3
in
downtown San
Speciaf Agent
Francisco for remarks he made
35 MarketS
t.
;;sorkeepsie,
N.Y.
during
a November
15 rally
Office; 452-8640
against the war at Golden Gate
____
R....,est..,·d_enc.._,.;.e;.,.29;.;.;7_-8;.2_03
___
~
Park.
At_ the·
rally,
Hilliard
---
denounced
the
fascism
of
American
society
and
the
viciousness of its attacks on the
Black Panther Party. By the end
of the speech Hilliard
·
made~ no
attempt to conc.;al his anger:
"We will
.kill
Richard Nixon.
·
We will kill anybody that stands
'
in the way of our freed9m. We
·ain't
here for no damned peace,.
because· we· know that we can't
have
no
peace because this
country was built on war. And if
you want peace you got to fight
for it."_.
A
vague law
in
direct defiance
of
the·
.First
Amendment
prohibits anyone for saying what
Hilliard said that day. Put in any
name but the President's and it's
quite within the law, but since
"Richard
Nixon" is what he
said, Hilliard is now being held
on $30,000 bait
Meanwhile, developments in
the New Haven Panther 14 case
have confirmed
the Panthers'
allegations that George Sams, an
ex-Panther whose tes"timony is
responsible for their arrest in the
fir_st place, is nothing more than
The above
is
tl,e product of vandalism which occurred
•
Wednesday evening, Feb. 11,
in
the new varsity locker room of
.
·
the
gym.··.
·
a police agent. George Sams and
whether
Sams ever fled
·
to
Loretta Luckes cooperated with
-
Canada or was captured there
the police Dec.
l and pleaded
after the Rackley slaying, as the
guilty to charges arising out of
police claim. They believe he
the murder of Black Panther
was probably with the police all
Alex Rackley last May.
a
1 o n g
a n d
t h a t
his
The Panthers say Rackley was
"disappearance" was used as an
and will always be known as a
excuse for the police to blast
memberingoodstandingofthe
their
way
into
Panther
party killed by police and police
headquarters in Detroit,-Chicago
age·nts.
Panthers
from New
and Denver, where they burned
York, New Haven and Berkeley
food intended for the Panther .
who know Sams describe him as
free breakfast program, looted
a "madman.''
He was expelled
and destroyed files, and smashed
from the party by the Central
office
equipment
while they
Committee last year.
supposedly "searched" for Sams.
Many
Panthers now doubt
*
* * * *
.
--
FEBRUARY,19~
1970
Letters·
To
the editor: ·
.
•·After having listened to. the
· debate between Mr, Norton and
Mr. Fulton Lewis,
I.
(eeLMarist
owes· Mr. Lewis ait:'apology. -
It
seems to be the practice around
·here . .that'if
y_ou disagree with
someone's,
views, "gross 'em
ou.t."
·.That•
is exactly what we
_ did .. Whether or .not we agreed
with what ,he had to say, we
should have -at least allowed him
_ the-· opportunity
of
i
voicing his
· · ideas without subjecting him to
public mockery .
. It
was shameful enough that
the stude.nts should deride Mr.
Lewis,
but
I found
it
unpardonable
that Mr. Norton
should encourage it'with a series
of amusing .. little remarks and
glances directed at his opponent.
I would think that before you
pran·ce
about
criticizing
everything you see, you should
•a·cquire.
a little
common
· courtesy. I didn't realize that
disrespect was a prerequisite to
being in
a
debate.
Dear Editor, .
Sincerely,
James_ Quinlan
To whoin it may concern
Something to think about!
Bolting from Vickies. . ·
Why?
Please
ask yourself
sometime.
If
its just for the kick
one might get ·by seeing someone
·-aggrevated or flustered, why not
"bust"
a little
on
your
roommate, or the guy down the
halt • I'm sure they can use it
much more than Danny or Paula
· can.
If
its just for the hell of it,
stop and think of something, or
someone
else,
besides your
stomach.
The reason for. this letter is
quite
simple
yet
rather
upsetting. Since I have known
. Danny, which is almost 2 years,
I believe I've noticed a definite
. · change_ and deterioration in his
. health
and . physical make-up.
.
'
I
THE CIRCLE
·
Calendar OJ Events
.·,
·This year the Circ1e in coordination with the Director of the
Campus Cepter wm pubHsh a weekly calendar of events for the
Marist College comniunity.
_ ·
. ·
·
If
you would like your organization's information included on this
calendar
it
is important tltat' you contact Mr .. Brosnan's office at
least tw; weeks prior to the date that_ the eve.pt is sche~ulcd to take
place.
.
.
.
. Please contact:
Joseph Brosnan, Director of CanJpUs Center,
471-3240, ext. 27-9. ·
MONDAY - February
23
6:30 P.M.(JV) - Basketball - Brooklyn - Home
8:30 P.M. (V) - Basketball - Brooklyn - Home
WEDNESDAY - February
25
9:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. Recruitment Program, Employers Commercial
Union, Placement Office, Campus Center
4:00 P.M. Placemen( Movies - "DRAW ME A TELEPHONE" and
"PATTERN FOR COMMUNICATION" Presented by New York
Telephone Co. College Theatre, Campus C_enter.
6:30 P.M. (JV) - Basketball - Lehman - Home
8:30 P.M. (V) - Basketball - Lehman - Home
7:00 P.M. Wrestling - Lehman -·Home
8:30 P.M. and 10:00 P.M. Movie - '.'MODERN OBSTETRICS,
NORMAL TECHNIQUE'' Sponsored by Beta C'hi - (Biology Club)
Theatre, Campus Center
FRIDAY - February
27
9:00 A.M. Recruitment Program, Metropolitan
Life
Insurance Co.,
Placement Office
8:00 P.M. Basketball - Ulst~r Co. Community College - A WAY
8:00 P.M. Coffee House Circuit, College Theatre, Campus Center
_
SATURDAY - February 28
3:00
P.M.
Benefit Concert - Miguel Reyna (24 hour marathon),
College Theatre, Campus Center
SUNDAY - March
1
3:00 P.M. Miguel Reyna marathon ends.
8:00 P.M. MODERN LANGUAGE WEEK
Movie - "HAMLET" (Russian)
College Theatre, Campus Center _
Thru Febr'uary - ART EXHIBIT - Student Show, Gallery Lounge,
Campus Center .
Granted
that_-. pan's·. apparent
Italian Society· party until the
~-aging,
0
-ma.y:.,.not
be;.,, tot.ally- ,. end,•.thatis;,,when~my:girUriend
:attributed:, toHhe·' aggrevation , and .I discovered
that· some
-which
occurs in one: nights work
manner of person liked her new
·
or alLthat
has occurred but I
suede coat, enough to take it
certainly believe it does not help
with' them thus washing out the
CFD·FROM.1 ..
·em·phasis: is -placed'. on these
evaluations, particularly when a
faculty
inember
is being
considered for promotion frqm
Instructor to Assistant Profcs.for.
• hini.in the least.
. ·weekend not to ·mention making
Without being inelodramatic I
my girl quite upset. -
. realiy . believe _
it
takes a little
This has happened before to
· more out of Dan each time a guy . other students attending social
"bolts"
out . the door at the
functions.
Doesn't
everybody
diner. Plenty of times the guys
have enough scruples to act like
who "bolt"
the most are in a
decent people or do we live in an
state which one might -term as
age· of suspicion, mistrust and
ossified, but I've seen some who ·-thievery?
.
have been stone sober pull the.
-l would like 'to thank the
· same stunt; -in fact those guys
human being, and I use the term
· moved so fast
I wonder whether
loosely, for ruining our weekend
Coach Olson -_
should visit the
and making two people very
diner
to
recruit for the track
unhappy. I only hope that the
.team: Seriously, if guys are a bit
person doesn't live on campus or
und'er the weather, or just blown
·even_ attend Marist college for I
·- out
of
their sneaks, usually ther~
would be ashamed to know that
is
or
should be orie person in
such people belong to a pretty
the ·group who has retained his
good community.
fa cul ties; and hopefully
will
bringttJ_e ·othersto
their senses.
Plenty
of
people
find it
amusing to talk about "bolting,"
I did for awhile, butwithin
the
past
year it has lost its hilarity. I
.c.
wasn't: there but
L
believe the
number was· about, or at least,
. 50-'l 00 guys wlto though tit was
funny enough to stage a sing-in
at the ._diner, singing· a
·
song
capped with the title "Bolt in"
sung • to the tune of "Proud
Mary.''. Kind of revolting if you
think about it now.
The next time· you go to the
diner take notice of what I have
mentioned.
I'm sure you will
realize
that
I am
not
exaggerating when I make a plea
to be considerate for Dan's sake,
and
also for your own self
concept.
Sincerely,
Chuck Lobosco
Class of '71
To the Editor:
For four years at Marist I was
taught responsibility, maturity
and honesty. And
I
believed it;
moreover
I Jived it
a1ong -with
99% of the Marist population.
I
direct this letter not to that 99%
but to the 1% who place low
regard on honesty.
This past weekend was a very
enjoyable one highlighted by the
Sincerely,
· -Joseph C, Arcieri
To the Editor:
A subcommittee
of College's
King Committee is attempting to
·survey all the volunteer services
presently
being operated
by
Marist
students
or faculty
member.
Any group which is engaged in
volunteer activities designed to
serve special groups of people, or
to address itself. to community
needs is asked to contact one of
the
members
of
the·
subcommittee
during the next
week.
Mr. LarryLamuto
Dr. M. Michaelson
Dr.
L. Zuccarello
To the Marist Community:
After the display we gave on
the past Tuesday night, we, the
residents of Third Floor Leo,
felt it necessary to extend to our
fell ow residents our sincerest
apologies.
Although
our
performance in no way meant to
cause
any embarrassment
to
anyone, it did display a lack of
taste an9 courtesy on our part.
Althougfi it is too late to rectify
the situation, we can only once
again
extend
our
deepest
apologies to all.
Sincerely,
Residents of Third Floor Leo
ln response to the question
whether
tenure
immunes a
faculty member from scrutiny
Dr. Hooper surmised that
it
did
n cg ate
the
possibility
of
dismissing
a tenured, faculty
member but pointed out that
just· because a faculty member
has tenure docsn 't mean that a
request for promotion can't be
turned down. He also noted that
in ter-departmel}tal
evaluations
do take place for both tenured
and
non-tenured
faculty.
He
stated the problem of how to
deal
with a tenured
faculty
member is a difficult one to deal
with because of certain criteria
established
by the American
Association
of University
Professors
for
college
accredidation by them.
*****
DEBATEFROM
I
that at times the establishment
had failed to effect change and
pointed to the history of the
Negro as an example.
The two participants sparred
with
each
other
and with
students
in the audience. The
students were won over to the
side of Mr. Norton by every
indication
although a group
from the Y AF was present in the
theatre.
The
discussion was
heated, even hostile at times
between
the participants
and
students.
INDIANS
·FROM 4.
the Foxes up
61-57. Marist never
again relinquished the lead and
wound up
72-66 victors.
·
Scott again led the offensive
thrust with 22 points and
11
rebounds.
Charlton
(l
4 pts. ),
Manning (
11
pts.), and Spenla
(9
pts., 10 rbs,) provided support.
· Ron Cargill, Southampton's
fine soph. guard who elim;natcd
us in last year's past season
tourney, led the losers with
29
pts. Tom Bubka chipped in with
20 markers. ·
*****
PAGE 3
·EDITORIAL
" Parental discipline is
the
gateway
,;.~ to knowledge." ....
Spiro
T.
Agnew
'-=: :·-:-.
.
Contempt of Justice
The trial in Chicago is without any doubt, a farce. It is without
precedent in the American system of justice.
The trial is illegal on scwral counts. The following indictments scrvl'
notice [o the American people: Judge Julius Hoffman conducted the
Chicago conspiracy trial in a scandalom:ly biased manner, His rulings
seemed repeatedly to align him with the Governments case. The law
under which the seven were tried for alleged conspiracy to incite riot
is considered unconstitutional
by many lawyers. and a judicial test
of the law will most likely prove this so.
·Judge Hoffmann in sentencing the defcndan ts and their lawyers
lo
jail for contempt violated the spirit of the
1968
Supreme Coun
which stated· that without
a trial
by
jury, no person can he
imprisoned for more than the maximum sentence for pl.'lty offonsl·s
- six months - Mr. Kunstler was sentenced to jail for over four yc•ars .
The Supreme Court has also found that actions such as tak,.m
by
the'
defense attorneys, were a continous course of. conduct and nwrited
at that most one act of conte1i1pt. not 24. Justice Felix Frankfurtl~r
has written .. that a judge should not subsequently sit in judgml'nl on
his assailants:"_ Judge Hoffman summarily punished· the_dc~.fend;,ints
·,and their 'lawy'ers, 'Fui'thermciri.•. Judge' Hoffman -did 'not ~orivi..:t
· Uw
lawyers· until the end of the trial thus failing to giw them notice
,;f
. the charges and failed to permit them to present
:1
defense,
Judge Hoffman's behavior was outrageous. The only thing
t/1:!l
was in contempt in Chicago was the justil;_e.
· Far-Fetched Trek
The following is an interview with Captain James T. Redfox and
Commander Smock of the Star Ship MOTH in the year 2525.
Circle:
Captain,
what are the thri,:e greatest engineering
accomplishments of your ship?
. Captain
Redfox:
The impulse po~er
engine,_ the matter
-
antimatter reactor and the perpetual alcoJuana machine.
Mr. Smock: That, Captain, is highly illogical.
Circle: Captain, since you introduced your Scientific master plan,
do you see a lack of humanism on the part of the crew?
Redfox: Huma what?
·
Smock: A logical deduction Captain.
·circle:
It
has been reported that the MOTH has been denied
-Federation aid this year .. Is this true?
Redfox: Well, this is true but
it
is also a lie, You see, the present!Y
standing Earth history requirement was dropped long ~go and will
probably be optional next week, Also, all the helm officers except
Messers. Scott, Zoolu, Checkon, Flaherty, Havens and myself are
non-earthmen. That means Mr. Smock, who is a Vulcan.
Smock: Illogical, Captain, Illogical.
•
Circle: Captain, as Chairma_n of the Star Ship Council, do you
think that the council is ineffective and power crazed as do the
crewmen?
'
Redfox: Let me make myself clear. I am the Captain, Make no
mistake about it, I am the Captain. If I say it is effective,
it is
effective.
_
Smock: That too, Captain, is highly illogical.
_
_ Redfox: And you, Mr, Smock, are about to take a long hike back
to Vulca!
·
(too be continued some day)
THE
<®+CIRCLE
Stephen A. Harrison
Joseph McMahon
Editors-in-Chief
John Rogener,F.M.S.,Managing
Editor,
John Zebatto,
News Editor
Joe Rubino. Sports Editor,
Vincent Begley, Asst. News Editor
EDITORIAL
BOARD
· Steve
Harrison,
Joe McMahon,
John
Zebatto
FEATURE
WRITERS
. Peter
Masterson.
Paul Browne.
Bill
O'Reilly, Steve Harrison, Vin Begley, Joe Francese
SPORTS WRITERS
· Don Duffy.
Asst. Sports
Editor; Gerard
Geoffroy,
F.M.S.; Bob Mayerhofcr,
Chuck Meara. Bob Sulliv;m,
John Petraglia
PHOTOGRAPHY
- Photo
Editor
- Rich
Brummett.
Barry
Smith, Vin Winsch, Mike Ligotino
CIRCULATION
Manager, Jack Barry
CARTOONIST
· Steve Harrison
· PAGE 4
THE CIRCLE
Indians
SCa_lped
95-64
Foxes
Stand
12-'.7~:
'
. -.
'·/:,);
.. ••
~f
·,
BY JOE RUBINO
. Siena n'ever should have got.ten
off
the:, bus .. After about
8
minutes 'of; play, Marist was up
27-9 and th~ game was. as good·
as over. The ReiFcixeS'c.ould do· back and forth until~ Ddwiin~ '3
wrong and the hapless, tqough
pt. play put them .up 80-77 with
scholarship-laden; Indians could
26 secs: left. With time ·rimriing
do nothing right; • .
·
out; .. ·Bill. Spenla scored· and
·. It seemed like the·Foxes were called
time~out
.as
the ball
taking turns· leading the band.
dropped .through the ·hoop. But
First, it was Joe·. Scott from in while his time-out was · being
close. Then, Billy Spenla started
granted° the last second . or so
·pumping from the outside. Next,. vanished mysteriously.
So did
Ray "Sugar Bear')Charlton
did · our conference championship.
his thing all over the Indians,
Joe Scott led
all
scorers with
sporting
some. moves Elgin
28 pts. Manning (18 pts.)·and
Baylor would. have been proud
Spenla . ( 15 pts.) supplied. the
. of. Meanwhile, just as effectively · main support. Clarke dished out
·. though much more quietly, Ray
8 assists while also dropping in
M a n n in g w·a s d r opp in g
l
O
markers.
·
· everything in t.he bucket except " . The previous night the men in
Barry LaCombe~s rulebook, and fed had achieved a big victory
· Ray
Clarke
made .like Walt
over always-tough Southampton
Frazier as he destroyed Siena's
College.
lt
was a close contest
press and piled up 10 assists.
throughout
and with 5:37 left
· Manning led the well balanced
the score stood at 57-all. At this .
attack with 20 pts. and .11 rbs.
point Charlton hit. with a field
He was followed by. Spenla ( 17 · goal and two free throws to put
pts., 11 rbs.), Charlton ( 17 pts.),.
CONTINUED ON
3
,
FEBRUARY 19;1970
Co-captain Bill McGarr putting one of his many moves on
New Paltz's Gary McClure before pinning him in the second
round. ·
an~i~o~eV~tr~\lJ~~!3:1ack
G·,·.
ap'.
p·
· 1··e·
rs·
Gro·,
..
·
nde·d·
1w·1·
c·e
·.
~~f
;~0~;"
p~L5
Jia~~~
1t:dlo~;;s~
· ·
. ·
.. .
· .
..
·
'
Ray Charlton skies over
Stonehill defender enroute to
his fast break deuce. ·
Last' Sat,u_rday
the squad
· dropped
a heartbreaker
to
Dowling in overtime, 80-79, to
relinquish the CACC conference
title it had held the past two
years. The Foxes were up S with
· 40 secs.
fo.
go in regulation, but
their
inability
to break
Dowling's press · and a crucial
tei;hnical foul call against Marist
tied the score. The OT went
Peas
And Carrots
BY·JOE
McMAHON
Although a Phys Ed building supposedly fosters the development
of .bqth th.e body .and mind, the vandalism to the Varsity
locker-room last week shows that some members of our community
i
possess great strength of.body but aiather marked weakness in the
~:~
.:....
.. ·._:~
....... " .:.i.·,-.·.•:··•·
..
•·.,
mind. To fationali~~lthat the'gyf m ~s aTshub-par
bliuildhing
is ail~surd. T~e
• ·
.
administration is we l aware·o th.IS. . ey rea ·ze
t
aFwh.
e
w.e wait
. for our dreamland .field house
we
have to make the best out-of what
we. have .. 1'hey were interested
in both: the varsity and intramural
sports, . as ~well as. improving the situation for. visiting tearris.
Therefore; they built the new. locker facility and improved the old
one. Some people appreciated the change; not satisfied, perhaps still
angry, but not • bitter
or irrational.
Obviously a
.
few others,
apparently ''out of .focus" with the college community, are not so
appreciative, and feel that brute force can still overcome all
obstacles .. Perhaps in the future they can find a more constructive
outlet for their energies whenever'another challenging crisis steps out
to meet them ... Number
I on: the Recommended Reading list -
"Athletics for Athletes," a controversial book just released by Jack
Scott. It's a free swinging barrage on the U.S. sports system which he
feels has become ·overly coach ~nd spectator oriented. The book is
boun_d . to produce a · storm of reaction from those attacked.
· Hopefully, rage won't totally blind them to the key message Scott is
trying to get across - "that athletics are basically a setting for
self-discovery and the intrinsic joy that accompanies it",,,Look for
'good ol' Mr. Alpert to appear on the Andy William's show soon.
He111 be answ_ering questions (it's obvious!)- concerning· his new
off-Broadway play.
(I
think he produces
it on. Sunday ·nights in
b,etween his visits to the Circle office and Floyd's) .... What sports
event.holds the all-time reco}'d for attendance? Super Bowl? World
Series? Roman chariot race? Even Rubino was stumped
011
this one -
3,000,000 spectators attended the 1969 Boston Marathon to cheer
on 1200 competitors ... · Order your 1970 y'earbook now before
they're all sold, out...Erp ...
*****
Track·
Team
To Meet
· Queens
Saturday
The
Indoor
Track
team
invades
Queens
College's
Fitzgerald Gym this Saturday to
engage in the annual dual meet
with the host arch-rival from
Flushing. Marist wilf have had a
number
of preparatory
races
before
encountering
Queens,
including the -Invitational meet
at Albany this past Saturday.
BY BOB SULLIVAN
Ther~ were few . bright spots
for the grapplers this week as
. they strµggled · through losses to
New Paltz · and Seton Hall by
respective scores of 29-11. and
33-1
l. The losses dropped their
record to 3-8.
Against
New
Paltz,
the
direction
of the match was
established after
the 118 lb.
dual. Johnny Eisenhardt did an
excellent job against New Paltz's
Scott Hammond and walked off
the mat the apparent winner of
an 8-7 match. However a mixup
in the riding time clocks was
discovered and Hammond was
awarded. a very ·dubious 9-8
victory.
Then New Paltz's 126 lb. flash
Jim.'. Longo had his bid .for .a
' quick
pin
foiled -by .Lance
. Lipscom~e: Longo's experieQce
was too · much however as he
even tu all , pinned
the· game
freshman in 4:00.
In the 134 lb: match, :Bob
Sullivan bridged out of a first
period pin but Steve LaTinco
came right back in the second
period to reverse Sullivan and
cradle.him to the mat in 2: 19 ...
After forfeiting the -142 lb.
class to the Hawks, Matt Rogan
put up a good battle against 150
. lb. Bruce Hartzen, however a
third period blitzing by Hartzen
gave him a 10-0 decision arid
New Paltz a comfortable 21-0
lead.
·
Captain Bill Moody narrowly
missed pinning his man as he
scored · 10 pts in the third period
for a come-from-behind
I 3,11
decision
over 158 lb. Bruce
Ellison.
Going into
the last
period Moody: was trailing 9-3,
· In the next match Jock Walsh
put in one of his best matches of
the season as he destroyed 167
lb. Dave Premore 16-3.
Gary
Fesfeldt
·ended the
Marist_ comeback, and insured a
New Paltz victory by knocking
off
the tough freshman Jim
--Lavery 11-3.
In the 190 lb. match, Bill
McGarr continued to destroy the
opposition
as he pinned· Gary
McClure in 4: 17 after racking up
.an 18-2 lead. New Paltz's 226 lb.
heavyweight
Steve Keene was
simply
too
big
for
John
Redmond, in the evening's final
match,
pinning the promising
freshman in 3:39.
Saturday's
match
against
Seton Hall was similar to the
match against New Paltz. An
injury to 126 lb. freshman Lance
Lipscomb put another hole in
the lineup forcing the grapplers
to.give up 10 pts each match.
The
Pirates
tore
through
Marist's ·· lightweights until · Bill
Moody
again
stopped
the
shutout. Moody, downS-4 going
into the third period, shutout his
opponent . Calvin Cahill, · while
scoring .5 p.ts himself for .a 9-5
win;, ... ·
.:
. · : .
Only other wins .for Marist
came from Jim Lavery and
Bill
McGarr. Lavery used his great
strength to dominate his smaller,
quicker
opponent · and gain a
13~ 1 win. In the 190 lb. match
_ McGarr raised his record to
1
0-1
by carrying the "crusher" to a
pin
over Dudley
DeNoca in
4:4~.
.
.
There were two "firsts" for
the grapplers this week.- Both
John
Finnegan
and
Frank
Attanito stepped onto the mat
for the first time, Finnegan in an
exhibition match
against New
· Paltz and At'tanito filling in for
John Redmond at heavyweight
against Seton Hall.
On Friday the team will travel
to Trenton State in New Jersey
-for
Saturdays
N.A.I.A.
_tournament.· Four ·wrestlers are
currently
entere4:
118 lb.
Johnny Eisenhardt (5-6); 150 lb;
Capt::
Bill
Moody (8-3); 177 lb.
Jim Lavery (7-3-l);·ilnd
190 lb.
co-capt. Bill McGarr
(l
0- l ).
*****·
'
Campus
.
Stuff
BY DON DUFFY
A
temper is an easy thing to ignite when any competitive thing
exists . .Such is the way on the basketball court where a close struggle
can erupt in a brawl.
It
is not right to encourage this ,sort of thing
but. it does happen and it will go right on happening. But it is just
the ball players that are involve9 in the game no one else therefore
there should be no fan involvement in a fight
if
one should start. It
has happened on two occasions this year at the Iona game and just
recently at the Stonehill game. It is a bush move for the stands to
empty out. When it occurs
it not only looks bad for'the-fans but also
for t~e sc~ool they atten_d. It should never happen and I only hope
that 1t will not occur
ui
the future. Leave the game and what
happens at it to the players and leave fan involvement to rah-rahs
l).Ot to swinging fists.
CAMPUS ACTIVITY
Why are different events scheduled at the same time on this
campus? Is it the intention to give the student a choice? Bull! This
school
is'
only going backwards and nothing else.· When -the
·•basketball team play_ed at New Paltz, the Italian society has a pizza
· mixer and when they play Stonehill, probably the best team on the
schedule, Leo house has their skit night. Surely these events could
have been held another time, the question I want to have an answer
.to is Why weren't they. There are always people saying there is not
enough to do yet here is a case where there was too much to do.
Why can't these events be coordinated
so double events don't
happen? Why can't people look at the sports schedule before
planning something on campus? Maybe
if
people started
to think
around· here they would find the experience an exciting thing. Try
it
you might like it.
·
.
BITS-N-PIECES
Congratulations to Joe McMahon (Carrot) for breaking the school
record in the I 000 yard run last Saturday in. the Albany meet. The
record was formerly held by Harriet Wilits; a one legged runner from
Pimp Falls, Alaska. Great job Joe ... .l'd like to say one thing to the
refs at the Stonehill Game but it is unprintable .... To the Stonehill
coach goes similar greetings ... The basketball team has only four
gan:ies left on the schedule and needs to win every one
if they arc to
get a NAIA bid. All the games are at home. They need tremendous
fan-
support so why don't you take a look at the team .... Once again
I'd like to send out my thanks to the great response to the Marist
nickname question by our beloved students. Nobody likes the name
but won't come out and say it. Maybe they are afraid Mother
will
At Albany, Henry Blum, the
no. I man in ,the weight events,
threw the shot 38'9¼" to add 4"
fo
·the school record.
Gerry
Wildner tied Bill Kalish's mark in
the 60 yard dash with a 6.8.
Kalish competed
in the 600,
hitting a I :23.4. Ian Masterson,
in his first attempt at the college
hidt
hurdles.
turned
in a
respectable time of 9.2 seconds.
Joe
McMahon
lowered
the
school b~-st to .:?:.:?8.4 with his
. 4th place finish in the 1000 yard
nm.
Jack Walsh maintains control over his New Paltz opponent in
an exhausting match that Jack won
by
decision.
_. spank them ...
.l
wonder who is mailing me strange cards? Will that
person please come fonvard out of Peyton Place .... Be Good Love
Duff
'
.
·-.
MR. JOSEPH
NORTON
1HE
,
.:
.· .•.
.
I
··MNUsr
COLLEGE;POUG~EPSIE,
NEWYORK
126Ql ·
NortOn,
LeWiS
· Debate
, lft -
a
left ~Right
Duel
Mr. Joseph No1ton, Instructor
taxes.
in History at Marisi: debate.ct Mr:
Although
Fulton
J.:,ewis
Fulton Lewis Jr.·irt the theatre
ct·escribed
himself
as a
before
a standirtg~room-only, . Libertarian
(namely one who
crowd
on · February · 11. Mr.
advocates full · civil liberties) he
Lewis
is
·a
newscaster for the
d i d
n o t o b j e c t. t o ·. h
is
Mutual Broadcasting System, a
classification as.a member of the
news network of independent · "right";
his statements
during
stations,
and
is
heard daily . the evening_ indicated that he
throughout the country. Fulton
was certainly a member of the
· Jtewis
is also a conservative and
"right."
'copsented to·debate Mr. Norton
Lewis
praised
the
ABM
after .Philip Abbott Luce bowed
defense system stating that it
out because of illness.
would increase U.S. security and
·The.
debate
presented
prevent an accidental nuclear·
originally as a. discussion entitle9
firing:
.He also
professed
"Campus
and
Revolution".
optimism·. in the SALT talks.
.turned
out to be· much more
Lewis advocated implementation
broad·
in
scope, i!}cluding for · of Black Capitalism as a cure for
contrast the _issues of Vietnam,
Black economic ills although he
. the. ABM system, the Black
was unable to define what the
revolution,.the
Biafran war,'the
system
wo_uld entail..
He
process·
of change
iit the
advocated a volunteer army and
American system, pollution, tlie
stated that the goal of American
military-industrial
system and
troops in Vietnam is to enable
Norton's
most
important
so I u
ti
on . dealing with world
peace was the development of
the one world concept, namely .
the strengthening of the United
Nations.
Lewis. showed.
a belief in
Conimunisin as being aggressive
throughout' the world and that
its spread anywhere would be ·
agairist America's interest.
He
condemned
the activities of •
Americans, Ererich, and Soviets
in the Biafran War but denied
that the U.S. had takc·n anv
direct action in the conllicl.
lie
discounted
the effect of the
U
nit e d Nations
as a peace
keepilJR force
in
the world and
domestically
he advocated
reform brought about as a result
of normal
responses by
the
establishment..
Norton
expressed the
view
CONTINUED ON
3
FEBRUARY 19, 1970
MR. FULTON
LEWIS JR.
Draft
Director
Unmanned
the
Vietnamese
to elect a
government.
He defended the
policy of containment and the
Childrens
Theatre
· Draftee. Death Rate Rises
•. military
and
indicated
that
Communist aggression could be
thwarted only from a positioi:i of
strength.
He stated
that the
United Nations had become an
Rehea·rsing Oz
Several
Nixon choices for
would seem to indicate that it
international
chess board and
Each Tuesday and Thursday
- gathered
together
some
Selective Service Director have will be difficult to find a young,
denied world peace as possible
nigh.t
the
cafeteria
is
interested ·students
to put his
refused
. the . job. Three are director of the Selective Service.
by reliance in that institution.
transformed into the land of Oz.
plan into action. The Marist
known · to . have . rejected· the• The
refusal
of. the. coaches
Mr. N9rton opposed tlie ABM
Director Joe · DeTura · and
his
College·
Theatre
Guild
lent
nomination. John Pont, football - apparently
has negated. the
system stating tha~
it
would n<-?1 Assistant D~~ctor, Ed Barry. can
enough · financial support
and
coach·.ocfodiana University arid Administrations plans to find a
add to U,S. sec;unty because it
be seen gu1dmg the cast of !he· .. help to put the show on ·the
't'. ·
Paul Dietzel. now .coach. of the
d irectoc
whiclf . would-- be . thre.atened the SAL'J'. talks and
•·Wizard.of Oz toward its April
29 .·
ro~d .. Children's Theatre's first·
·{i~,..;
:~:
,':
< , ••
·.:·
u:
1!,iv'crsH:Y,::
9f
:.·--
£<>uth:·J?ar?li!l:a·
,: ~!atfi;a~tivif '· t0;,t~_o:~oung.·•-:"cO.'
. :" a!sP.
..
\s:t~s~en;.d~i)h~•ta_n;1?S;:·
ra,~e
...
/:t?i;ru'·;May·J.:-p'erforn1~nc~s;::Cast': .
b
_production; .. Cinderella.
~a:S ::so;
.JQotb~:te,amihavedecliried
Jo_'
--
'
0
In°a~relatc::d
i,tory .. the)~entag'?n .... N9.rton.,refw.c::.d":tJt.e
,cpil:~eP,t_<?f ,:nc::mb~rs •.include.· --R1t.aJean
successful •·that.'·
they decided to
takethepositic:>n'.:,.·';·>>
.•·
declaredthafthewarinVietrlarri
B_l~c;k:.CaP.1talism:_de11yll)-~lt_s: S,chm1dt
as .Qo_rothy,
Pat
·charter·
themselves under· the
-. The most recent choice. for the
·
ha.s
"claimed•
more than
l
2,000 - e x1ste11ce • as an. mdenhf!a~le .· McNamara playing the four faces • Student Government as a Marist
posLw:as Charl_!!s
L
DiBona; a · deat}ls among draftees. most :of
program. He sug~e,sted thatm 1t_s' of Oz,· and · Stan_ Bojarski as · Service Organization.
31~year
old former: Rhodes
them.~
the.army. Roughly
.33
P!ace,·the Amencan g~vemment
Elvira._Gulch (the Wi~ked Witch).
· Now Children's Theatre .. is a
Scholar .. DiBona has served
in
per cent,. of.· American deaths
divert defe1_1se
exnend1tures _for · Travelin~ to Oz with Dorothy
club thatis here to stay; it works
the
offices .of the Assistant . were
draftees,.·. these deaths
the
purpose
of rep_aratlon
ar~ Kevm McArdl~ (Scarecrow),
interdependently
with
the
Secretary
of Defense
for
resulting from combat: In· the
payments owed to • the Bl~cks Vincent Begley (Tm Woodman),
College Theatre
Guild, often
Systems Analysis from 1963 to · army, one out of every two
after 200 years of oppression.
Matt Grady (Cowardly Lion);
acting as a training ground for
·
I 966 and as special assistant to . soldiers
who· have died in
Nor ton. attacked
the _defense and following close behind, John
the Guild.
·
the
Under . Secretary
of the
combat have been draftees, even · e st a bl is h men
t and
the
DiMastri as Toto.
.
· Since a production of this sort
Navy. He has· also headed a though drafte~s comprise only
military-industr)al complex. _He - . Althou~
this. is the second
runs into
a
considerable sum, the
private, concern in Alexandria, · 40 per cent of the Army.forces.
suggested th~tm order.to bnng
production
for
Children's
. · members had to raise money.
Virginia, that does· research·for
in Vietnam.
, .
. .
.
to the attention of the people of
Theatre, many students have no
The Children's Theatre realizes
the Navy.
· Draftees·are more likely than . the world the danger..of nuc.lear ·jdea how Children's Theatr~ was·
that would:never have been able
DiBona was. the · President's · volunteers to be in combat as - we~pons,.
that_ the
U.~.
and
started.
J9e
DeTura, founder of
to
prepare
this
production
choice but DiBolla unexpectedly
infantry . rifleman. As. the war. ~ov1et. Umon d1s~~m until ea~h
th_i~ organization,
traces
its
without the help of its backers.
with drew
his
name ( from
lengthens,
more
and more
possess~d
a capab1hty of ove~kdl ongm back a~ lln answer to a
Joe DeTura
in
behalf of the
consideration
when he
..
was ~raftees are being_ turned into
of one _-and not the mult1pl_e need: "I thought t~ere was a
Children's Theater, "would like
cri~icized
for
advocating
infantrymen.
power 1t- now p~ssesses. This
nee.ct_ to
nrov1d~
fr~e
to thank all the people who
aboHtiort of the draft .. Senator
•Bet
w e,e n March.
a n_d · Ill1;1sJrates
the
not10n that
the
entert.amment for the children
m
helped
us
in
obtaining· the
Margaret Chase Smith. of Maine ·. Septem?er of \ast year, a .!otal ?f
!1.11htary _and,, gover~me!lt has
the a~ea. I also thought there
necessary money for the show.
, "objected to DiBona stating that
2,074 mductee~ ;were .killed.
m
.
normal~zed
!he .not10n of
was a need for prograll!S that
In particular Art Greene, Stan
the draft director should not be
combat,.
a :rate · of 297 per
destruction
ana
death from
would ·be. under the complete
Hollis arid Saga Foods· all the
-·
.an "acknowledged -liquidator of
n10nth. This-rate is higher t~an. weapons.
. .
control a_nd direction
of. the
Pizza
salesman
and' buyers,
the system." Senator John
C; ·
the one for the four-year penod
_ Lewis challerig~d the members
students;
1t
wo_uld also provide a
Special thanks to the Marist
Stenriis
of Mississippi
· also from· June 1965 to June 1969, • of the New Left' to corrie. up
new
d1mens10n. for Campus
Associates, Mrs. McArdle, Marist
supported Mrs~ Smith's position·.
whic_h is about
249 draftee
with solutions to the problems
Theatre.'_' .
.
_
Evening division and fhe. faculty
The · three
known- refusals . deaths per month.
that
the
Y
raise.
Norton
On this premise, Joe DeTura -wives:" -
responded that
it
was his duty to
criticize- those who have chosen
fo
rule wh~n they . have not
performed· their tasks; that he
didn't need solutions since he
wasn't in power, but
if
he was· in
power .he would have solutions.
Panthers
Attacked,
Nationwide
CfD
-Discussed
·
in• Dorm
NEW YORK (LNS) -
In a.bold
attempt
at extinction
of the
Black·
Panther
Party;
the
government
is waging ·a
nation-wide · offensive with an
arsenal of frame-ups, no · bail, ·
kangaroo courts _whose judges
conduct
half .the prosecution,
and just plain bullets.
Within the past six months
alone, more than 40 Panther
leaders and about
125 members
have been. arrested, and many
are facing charges which could
lead to life imprisonment
or
death. In the few years the Party
has
been
around,
28 Black
Panthers have been murdered.
Panther offices
in a number of
cities have been attacked by
police,
who
sometimes rain
automatic rifle fire at the walls
and windows as they storm the
steps. (They bring warrants for
.. fugitives,"
non-existent
or
miles
away.) Hidden assailants
have
shot at
Panthers
on
the.
streets
of Kansas City twice this
fall.
Chicago is turning
.iri
sonie of
the · ugliest . news, In the week
CQJ',j'TJNUED
ON 2
BY
PHIL GLENNON
In a discussion organized by
Tom
McDonald on the second
L to R,
Mr~
Thomas Wade, Bros. Richard LaPictra, Fred Lambert, and Linus Foy expound
upon the legalities of traditional Marist religious affiliations to a full capacity audience in
room
C249 Mon. Feb. 9th. The informative meeting
was
coordinated by Vince Begley, the assistant
News Editor of
TIIE ORCLE
in
order
to quell some heated arguments
which
surrounded the .
religious ties
controversy.
floor
of Champagnat
last
Monday
night
Dr. George
Hooper discussed the worl_dngs
of the Committee on Faculty
Development·
particularly
in
reference
to the degree of
emphasis the student plays in
evaluation of faculty.
When' a faculty
member
requests
promotion
to eithe:r
Assistant
Professor, Associate
Professor, or Professor; or when
a
faculty
member
is being
considered
for tel)ure, he· is
evaluated by the Committee on
Faculty
Development.'
This
evaluation
is
based
on.
Departmental Recommendation,
Student
eval~ation,
and
classroom
visitation.
After a
brier summary concerning how
CFD
works students submitted
various questions
to Dr. Hooper.
.On the question concerning
the degree of emphasis placed on
student evaluation
Dr.
Hooper's
response indicated
that much
CONTINUED
ON 3
i
\
FEBR
VARY
19'
.
.
.
.
.
.
_Farulty
·Focus
.
.
Do
NotFold,
Staple
.
.
~
.
..
.
. .
. .
.
.
'
Through
A
·
..
·.•.
·Bf
Oken
WilldOW
BY BILL:O'REILLY,
on the ride was this darkclooking
or ·M·utilate -
When we last left · out two
Spanish guy with Juan Valdez
heroes they were heading toward·
·
written
across
:his
hc:>lster.
BY H. GOLDMAN
-various
guises
we
·go·
through in
---sunny
Monac·o- where sand and : · Suddenly he ·jumped· up, a!Jd,.
Last year a friend of mine who
this funny world.
- ·
·
·
sunstroke
.
are a way of life.
.
shouted •.~Hey guacho take thees
.has a sporting goods busine~
Say "8:30 class" to a student
Monaco is· a nice place but it
boat
_to Cuba." The
..
Itali~n
was asked by a
High
School
and watch the basic response, or
definitely flatints·its location on
gondolier looked up and. said
Coach if he could get ten pain
say "late Friday class",
.
and
the Riviera. The. Chase Bikini
"No speak broken English_." The
of cross-country shoes within a watch
the
similar response.
·
Savings Bank with its' ·motto.
Spaniard jumped up and down
d a y
o r
s o . B e i
n
g an
Some students enter the class
"you won't find a meanie at
and
.screamed,
"In ze· rombrf of
accomodating·sort
of person (a~ with complete blankness behind
Chase Bikini"
(I
know,lknow),
·
Che Guevarr_a take thees boatto
.··
salesmen are supposed to be) my their eye balls
.
expecting the
DR. H. GOLDMAN
,.
·
is just one example of the lively
_Cuba."
"Che_ Guevarra;. wha_t:~
friend
c.a:
11 e d the
shoe
instructor to
fill the void. Some up the mess he leaves, or puttirig · atmosphere. Of course, Princess
that, some_ km~ of· mamcot_tl,
manufacturer anci asked him to instructors
enter . the room,
his refuse in places designed for
Grace lives in Monaco but we
the gondolier said. The Spaniard
send the shoes posthaste. The. discharge volumes of words at garbage where
it
will not offend
missed her because while we
muttered something like,
.
"I'm
manufacturer
replied, "Gosh,
I the student creating nothing but
or litter the local scene.
.
were there
.she
was
·on
location
coming Fidel"
•
and .theri dove
·
sure would like to help you out intense ennui.· Both types retain
Two other sets of instructions
with·
Frankie
and
Annette
overboard·
never·· to be seen
especially since you are. an old their programming
-
the student
might be put under a master
shooting. a riew movie entitled:
again.
friend ,and good customer, but
forgetting that he- must strike
punch card with the label of
"I was a teenage Sandcrab."
From Venice we
·boarded
a
my computer won't let me." Bill sparks from the instructor by
h.edonism.- The weaker of two
No
.visit
to Monaco would· be
train for Yienna, Austria. While
Murphy
the former Brother
challenging his statements and
,ets of programs is that set into
complete without a trip to the
on
the·
train
an elderly
William Murphy used to tell the the instructor by assuming that
the pot-heads who are tuninf
famed gambHng casino at Monte
gentleman wearing a helmet, red
story of the Parisian taxi driver this is the way he did
it
in the
-out
a system they dislike. This
Carlo. So off we went. Easy
armband,
-
and boots sat down
who would refuse to stop for red past so it is still appropriate to
,ystem may
.be
home, school,
Edgar was, as usual, dressed
·
next
-
to me. About five minutes
lights
.because
they
were
repeatthematerialthesameway
society or the world;and
they
p·erfcctly fortheoccasicinwitha
Jater he turned-to me and.said,
controlled by a machine and he now (even to the inclusion of
arc avoiding
coming
to grips
dark blue blazer and matching
•~The Fueher
·-is·
alive and· in
was a man not to be dominated
the same jokes pencilled on the
with reality by creating
·
their
short pants. The white llama rug
Tierra d_el Fuego; he's· coming
by a machine.
.
margin
of
the
notes,
now
own closed system. ln thinking
in the casino went perfectly with
..
back,.
Himmler,
Goering,
Two
_sides
of the same coin? yellowing with age.)
their own deep thoughts they
his socks. The casino· was really
·
Goebbels, they're all coming. We
Possibly, btit both examples of
Say government or country to
are
(sic)
solving
all
·these
great
but
we were quickly
will
·crush
the aggressors. We will
extreme. behavior prompted by one of the anti-establishment
problems in the "twilight zone",
cleaned out at the "Go Fish"•
fight on• land, on· sea,: in· the
t he
a d van c.c of
mans'
types and his response is
"it's
no
or simply avoiding thinking at
table. Later on we ventured into
valleys,. in
·
the forests; under
technological
·
ability
.and-
his damn good - tear it down". No
all. The result, nothing except
a
the ballroom to. groove to the
rugs, in Woolworths ... " Austria
con commit ant
inability
to
·
s o l u
t
i o n s
o ff
c r c d , n o
strong desire to make pot legal.
velvet sounds of Kenny and the
was great - the people were just
understand or control either the alterna lives,
no
_redeeming
More unfortunate
are the acid
Mad Monsters.
·
tremendous - you· could.ask- any
technology or himself. Even our features
noted.
Just
the
droppers and pill poppers who
·Out.
next.
stop
on the
question and you would always
language has lost some beauty
pro gr
a
m med
response,"
are doing actual physiological
continent was Italy. -We zoomed
get the same
·
friendly reply:
when we speak of someone or everything must be put down.
If
damage
fo themselves - and
'on down the Italian Riviera and
"Out of my-way,-Swinehundt."
something being
"programmed"
you disagree you have to be-torn
possibly ·others. Their programs
stopped
at the
·first
sign of
After Austria it was time to
or "updated."
We cannot see a down too because your right of
push them further from the real
civilization which, in Italy's case,
head ·back
:
to London, but not
person but ome being with an free expression is valid only so
.
world they dislike but again
was a cave. The cave turned out
before stopping in wonderful
_ appropriate slot for
a
punch card long as it agrees with their
provide no answer or even ask
to. be a money exchange place.
·
Zurich, Switzerland where snow,
to
be
inserted
causing the prejudices.
Once you differ,
no questions that might help
and; after exchanging dollars to
ice, sleet, and cold are a way of
appropriate response. Once these their machine shuts down arid
change things for the better.
lire at a rate of 265,000 lire
to
life. But it's clean. The Swiss are
actions have been performed,
turns you off. Do not attempt to
What their programs result in· is
the
dollar,
w·e took
our
wonderful p'eople who yodle anci
the being resumes its natural
confuse their programri1ing with
eventual
self-destruction· and
wheelbarrels and headed for our
ski and,
when
you're
not
state
(generally
indifference)
facts or ideas.
·
certain
predictable
responses
two
prime
objectives:
the· looking, take your wrist watch.
until
it is time for a new
Stand at a busy area of the
when the proper stimuli are
Roman ruins and Joe Rubino's
-
They then sell you a Swiss
program to be inserted or the campus on a Friday at 2:00,
coded into-. their punch cards.
gr an d father's
·
home.
Hansel and Gretal watch for
previous one to be repeated.
.
p.m., and watch the programs in
.
"It's all in protest" is the stock
Unfortunately
it was impossible
$50.
Machines were
.supposed
to action. Flashing by our vantage
response
-:-
protest of what -
to tell the two apart. We finally
If you are ever in Switzerland
free· man from drudgery, allow point.we
·see
clearly two distinct
.
their
inability·
to think
··
for
. •
found Joe's grandfather running.
be sure to take the cable car-ride
·
him to create new ideas, and use
.
types
.
of performance,
with
themselves· and to communicate
around
··in
his
suede Aoga
into the Alps. The.ride features,
his life contributing
.
to. others'. others
Jess
...
obvious buL still
.
their .··ideas;'.
lf.
college· people
·
screaming, ~'Share the wealth,
• ·an
.l!ttack
,by
an
·.Abominable ·
·.'._'There·: ....
i~-
'.nothing·
.iritrinsically
,
:P
e_rJorming;
.
First :•nrnving('
(hefrspresumptiveto
this.world)
.-._.~death·to
Carlo:PohtL~':/;:·
-.'.>';
·.•
..
·
0
Sno.winan;•-.• a_,,breakdown·;\and
.-·wrong.with
machines, computers
,
through·•· our
.
vision comes the
.
_.cannot·
control ··themselves· how
: ::
•.·
Italy
':
was
·really.,excitirig
•arid
/delay
-
of- five:-·:hou:i:s\in/5
·
:_deg;
•·.
!1re
_.
on!y
-
as• ~ood
as. the. "slantstiouldered
suitcase
.could
they> ever expec;:t;to
,
the_',people,there-madf:_uscfoel
-\ternperature;-•an_'avalanche,
one
mformatlon_ put
.mto
them, cars· carrier" hurrying
.
to.·· catch .the
..
influence or.· help or direct other
.
right
at· home
.•
by
.. :squashing
·
,
of
_
th~
~cable~
snap_Ping,
.
~nd
~t.
are only as safe.as the
·pef$on .car,
traifr orwhatever
to-carry·· people.
.
.
.
.
.
grapes on.our
clothing;
Italy_is': l~ast fifteen_httlekidsgettmgair
driving wants to be. Machines him back to the
-comfort ·of
Even
our fashion-conscious·
considered
a
backward country
·
sickness~brmgyourcamera.•<
are. idiots_· and if they are home.and hearth. The cry-of this input has beconie trite: Look at
by some but it's notJrue. Hertz·
.
Fr<>m
_Zuric~itwas
h_ead home
controlled by idiots and obeyed
specie
is "there's nothing to do.
·
the styles proposed by Gernreich
rent~a-chariot has· three offices.
·
,to·
London
..
tune where we. met
by idiots we are in trouble.
around
here"
translated
to
lately (he didn't shave his hair
there
.and
so what.if there
is no
u•p with-
the-
"horde
of
People, on the other hand, are English means
"I
don't warit to
off)' arid unisex, and our own
·
running water.~ you can count
intellectuaJs, from Marist who
supposed to be able to direct do anything except go home".
fashion
.plates
that,wear
onafloodatleast6nceaweek."
cameto·London_to.furthertheir·
their
.own
behavior and be He could create some activity or
Salvation Army·rejects. To "do
-
Venice was the highlight of
-
c~lturaL-e_ducatio!1 .. Also along
responsible.
for their actions. get .involved but the grooves of
your own thing" meanslo_ok, act
our Italian
·
journey.
-
Venetfan
was Artie-. Qu1ckenton,
The
Lately
many of us seem to_ the program are well worri now ..
·
and respond like the rest.of us.
people take great
.pride
in.the
horde
spent
much-
.time
exhib_it
some
.form
of
"Coming
from
the
other
Th_e.reat·truth
is•jnside
of
fact·thattheyhavegarbagefrom
researching inSoho.
But more>
programmed
.performance
in the
..
direction we se.e the •~bent-arm every
.
person and no
·artificial
.
all over the world floating· in• about.
t~at,., next· time.·
:Joe
·boo·ze
carrier" .laying in his
.
stimulant
or depressant will
their canals. While in Venice this. Francese also came- to London
----------------
weekend
sustenance.
His
cry
bring it out. Nor is the answer in
.
writer took
·a
ride on a gondola
·
but was arrested by the custom's
starting around Friday at 2:00
the words
·
or sounds.· of- the
which is sorf"of a.hollowed
.out
agents for. tr,ying to sell them a
p.m.,
sounds like "we gotta
phony rock groups preaching
telephone pole. Along with me
·
hot tricycle:-Why foe?
·
·
drink"_repeated
rapidly for
15
.Love. Love
in
this instance is a
minutes. at hourly. intervals for
euphemism for cheap
and
easy
48. hours. At the end of this
sexual adventures. The truth lies
period the cry changes to
"boy
in
.
the respect
.
you have for
did I tie one on» accompanied·
yourself as a person and for your
by an idiotic grin. Unfortunately
fellow
,hum_an
being as an
his
programming
does not
individual.
.
include directions for
·cleaning
*****
·
.
.
,
.,-
...
It
' •. .,• ! ,
'.........
'
blast
PANTHERS
FROM
l
.
which ended with the pre-dawn
slaying of Illinois Panther leader
Fred Hampton, police shot two
Panthers
on the street and
severely beat three others in a
Chicago ap?1rtment. The week's
toll:
three
·
dead
and
two
critically wounded. Other
_cities
also report new developments· in
the· government's
attempt
to
wipe
out
the
Panther
organization.
Party Chairman Bobby Seale,
,
recently sentenced to four years
off
to a :-aie and solid iuture.
in jail for demanding his right to
Star! invesling your dollar.; in
representation by-a lawyer of his
liic
in~urance right away. And
own
choice
in Judge Julius
~ave hig
money on lower rate~.
Hoffman's Chicago courtroom,
·
Build up tax-free cash
.
value
is now
in
San Francisco County
moncr.
Spread
your wings-.
Act
Jail.
now. Happy landing.
.
While Bobby Seale was in his
"-:ORTHWESTERN
MUTUAL LIFE
maximum-security isolation cell,
;\\ILWAUKEE
agents of the Presidential force -
the Secret Service - arrested
NML
Time!?• diffmnce · · ·
David
Hilliard,
the Panther
.a
nd ihe differ~ce II~
Party's national Chief of. Staff,
ntOMAS F. HEFFERNA.~
on Dec. 3
in
downtown San
Speciaf Agent
Francisco for remarks he made
35 MarketS
t.
;;sorkeepsie,
N.Y.
during
a November
15 rally
Office; 452-8640
against the war at Golden Gate
____
R....,est..,·d_enc.._,.;.e;.,.29;.;.;7_-8;.2_03
___
~
Park.
At_ the·
rally,
Hilliard
---
denounced
the
fascism
of
American
society
and
the
viciousness of its attacks on the
Black Panther Party. By the end
of the speech Hilliard
·
made~ no
attempt to conc.;al his anger:
"We will
.kill
Richard Nixon.
·
We will kill anybody that stands
'
in the way of our freed9m. We
·ain't
here for no damned peace,.
because· we· know that we can't
have
no
peace because this
country was built on war. And if
you want peace you got to fight
for it."_.
A
vague law
in
direct defiance
of
the·
.First
Amendment
prohibits anyone for saying what
Hilliard said that day. Put in any
name but the President's and it's
quite within the law, but since
"Richard
Nixon" is what he
said, Hilliard is now being held
on $30,000 bait
Meanwhile, developments in
the New Haven Panther 14 case
have confirmed
the Panthers'
allegations that George Sams, an
ex-Panther whose tes"timony is
responsible for their arrest in the
fir_st place, is nothing more than
The above
is
tl,e product of vandalism which occurred
•
Wednesday evening, Feb. 11,
in
the new varsity locker room of
.
·
the
gym.··.
·
a police agent. George Sams and
whether
Sams ever fled
·
to
Loretta Luckes cooperated with
-
Canada or was captured there
the police Dec.
l and pleaded
after the Rackley slaying, as the
guilty to charges arising out of
police claim. They believe he
the murder of Black Panther
was probably with the police all
Alex Rackley last May.
a
1 o n g
a n d
t h a t
his
The Panthers say Rackley was
"disappearance" was used as an
and will always be known as a
excuse for the police to blast
memberingoodstandingofthe
their
way
into
Panther
party killed by police and police
headquarters in Detroit,-Chicago
age·nts.
Panthers
from New
and Denver, where they burned
York, New Haven and Berkeley
food intended for the Panther .
who know Sams describe him as
free breakfast program, looted
a "madman.''
He was expelled
and destroyed files, and smashed
from the party by the Central
office
equipment
while they
Committee last year.
supposedly "searched" for Sams.
Many
Panthers now doubt
*
* * * *
.
--
FEBRUARY,19~
1970
Letters·
To
the editor: ·
.
•·After having listened to. the
· debate between Mr, Norton and
Mr. Fulton Lewis,
I.
(eeLMarist
owes· Mr. Lewis ait:'apology. -
It
seems to be the practice around
·here . .that'if
y_ou disagree with
someone's,
views, "gross 'em
ou.t."
·.That•
is exactly what we
_ did .. Whether or .not we agreed
with what ,he had to say, we
should have -at least allowed him
_ the-· opportunity
of
i
voicing his
· · ideas without subjecting him to
public mockery .
. It
was shameful enough that
the stude.nts should deride Mr.
Lewis,
but
I found
it
unpardonable
that Mr. Norton
should encourage it'with a series
of amusing .. little remarks and
glances directed at his opponent.
I would think that before you
pran·ce
about
criticizing
everything you see, you should
•a·cquire.
a little
common
· courtesy. I didn't realize that
disrespect was a prerequisite to
being in
a
debate.
Dear Editor, .
Sincerely,
James_ Quinlan
To whoin it may concern
Something to think about!
Bolting from Vickies. . ·
Why?
Please
ask yourself
sometime.
If
its just for the kick
one might get ·by seeing someone
·-aggrevated or flustered, why not
"bust"
a little
on
your
roommate, or the guy down the
halt • I'm sure they can use it
much more than Danny or Paula
· can.
If
its just for the hell of it,
stop and think of something, or
someone
else,
besides your
stomach.
The reason for. this letter is
quite
simple
yet
rather
upsetting. Since I have known
. Danny, which is almost 2 years,
I believe I've noticed a definite
. · change_ and deterioration in his
. health
and . physical make-up.
.
'
I
THE CIRCLE
·
Calendar OJ Events
.·,
·This year the Circ1e in coordination with the Director of the
Campus Cepter wm pubHsh a weekly calendar of events for the
Marist College comniunity.
_ ·
. ·
·
If
you would like your organization's information included on this
calendar
it
is important tltat' you contact Mr .. Brosnan's office at
least tw; weeks prior to the date that_ the eve.pt is sche~ulcd to take
place.
.
.
.
. Please contact:
Joseph Brosnan, Director of CanJpUs Center,
471-3240, ext. 27-9. ·
MONDAY - February
23
6:30 P.M.(JV) - Basketball - Brooklyn - Home
8:30 P.M. (V) - Basketball - Brooklyn - Home
WEDNESDAY - February
25
9:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. Recruitment Program, Employers Commercial
Union, Placement Office, Campus Center
4:00 P.M. Placemen( Movies - "DRAW ME A TELEPHONE" and
"PATTERN FOR COMMUNICATION" Presented by New York
Telephone Co. College Theatre, Campus C_enter.
6:30 P.M. (JV) - Basketball - Lehman - Home
8:30 P.M. (V) - Basketball - Lehman - Home
7:00 P.M. Wrestling - Lehman -·Home
8:30 P.M. and 10:00 P.M. Movie - '.'MODERN OBSTETRICS,
NORMAL TECHNIQUE'' Sponsored by Beta C'hi - (Biology Club)
Theatre, Campus Center
FRIDAY - February
27
9:00 A.M. Recruitment Program, Metropolitan
Life
Insurance Co.,
Placement Office
8:00 P.M. Basketball - Ulst~r Co. Community College - A WAY
8:00 P.M. Coffee House Circuit, College Theatre, Campus Center
_
SATURDAY - February 28
3:00
P.M.
Benefit Concert - Miguel Reyna (24 hour marathon),
College Theatre, Campus Center
SUNDAY - March
1
3:00 P.M. Miguel Reyna marathon ends.
8:00 P.M. MODERN LANGUAGE WEEK
Movie - "HAMLET" (Russian)
College Theatre, Campus Center _
Thru Febr'uary - ART EXHIBIT - Student Show, Gallery Lounge,
Campus Center .
Granted
that_-. pan's·. apparent
Italian Society· party until the
~-aging,
0
-ma.y:.,.not
be;.,, tot.ally- ,. end,•.thatis;,,when~my:girUriend
:attributed:, toHhe·' aggrevation , and .I discovered
that· some
-which
occurs in one: nights work
manner of person liked her new
·
or alLthat
has occurred but I
suede coat, enough to take it
certainly believe it does not help
with' them thus washing out the
CFD·FROM.1 ..
·em·phasis: is -placed'. on these
evaluations, particularly when a
faculty
inember
is being
considered for promotion frqm
Instructor to Assistant Profcs.for.
• hini.in the least.
. ·weekend not to ·mention making
Without being inelodramatic I
my girl quite upset. -
. realiy . believe _
it
takes a little
This has happened before to
· more out of Dan each time a guy . other students attending social
"bolts"
out . the door at the
functions.
Doesn't
everybody
diner. Plenty of times the guys
have enough scruples to act like
who "bolt"
the most are in a
decent people or do we live in an
state which one might -term as
age· of suspicion, mistrust and
ossified, but I've seen some who ·-thievery?
.
have been stone sober pull the.
-l would like 'to thank the
· same stunt; -in fact those guys
human being, and I use the term
· moved so fast
I wonder whether
loosely, for ruining our weekend
Coach Olson -_
should visit the
and making two people very
diner
to
recruit for the track
unhappy. I only hope that the
.team: Seriously, if guys are a bit
person doesn't live on campus or
und'er the weather, or just blown
·even_ attend Marist college for I
·- out
of
their sneaks, usually ther~
would be ashamed to know that
is
or
should be orie person in
such people belong to a pretty
the ·group who has retained his
good community.
fa cul ties; and hopefully
will
bringttJ_e ·othersto
their senses.
Plenty
of
people
find it
amusing to talk about "bolting,"
I did for awhile, butwithin
the
past
year it has lost its hilarity. I
.c.
wasn't: there but
L
believe the
number was· about, or at least,
. 50-'l 00 guys wlto though tit was
funny enough to stage a sing-in
at the ._diner, singing· a
·
song
capped with the title "Bolt in"
sung • to the tune of "Proud
Mary.''. Kind of revolting if you
think about it now.
The next time· you go to the
diner take notice of what I have
mentioned.
I'm sure you will
realize
that
I am
not
exaggerating when I make a plea
to be considerate for Dan's sake,
and
also for your own self
concept.
Sincerely,
Chuck Lobosco
Class of '71
To the Editor:
For four years at Marist I was
taught responsibility, maturity
and honesty. And
I
believed it;
moreover
I Jived it
a1ong -with
99% of the Marist population.
I
direct this letter not to that 99%
but to the 1% who place low
regard on honesty.
This past weekend was a very
enjoyable one highlighted by the
Sincerely,
· -Joseph C, Arcieri
To the Editor:
A subcommittee
of College's
King Committee is attempting to
·survey all the volunteer services
presently
being operated
by
Marist
students
or faculty
member.
Any group which is engaged in
volunteer activities designed to
serve special groups of people, or
to address itself. to community
needs is asked to contact one of
the
members
of
the·
subcommittee
during the next
week.
Mr. LarryLamuto
Dr. M. Michaelson
Dr.
L. Zuccarello
To the Marist Community:
After the display we gave on
the past Tuesday night, we, the
residents of Third Floor Leo,
felt it necessary to extend to our
fell ow residents our sincerest
apologies.
Although
our
performance in no way meant to
cause
any embarrassment
to
anyone, it did display a lack of
taste an9 courtesy on our part.
Althougfi it is too late to rectify
the situation, we can only once
again
extend
our
deepest
apologies to all.
Sincerely,
Residents of Third Floor Leo
ln response to the question
whether
tenure
immunes a
faculty member from scrutiny
Dr. Hooper surmised that
it
did
n cg ate
the
possibility
of
dismissing
a tenured, faculty
member but pointed out that
just· because a faculty member
has tenure docsn 't mean that a
request for promotion can't be
turned down. He also noted that
in ter-departmel}tal
evaluations
do take place for both tenured
and
non-tenured
faculty.
He
stated the problem of how to
deal
with a tenured
faculty
member is a difficult one to deal
with because of certain criteria
established
by the American
Association
of University
Professors
for
college
accredidation by them.
*****
DEBATEFROM
I
that at times the establishment
had failed to effect change and
pointed to the history of the
Negro as an example.
The two participants sparred
with
each
other
and with
students
in the audience. The
students were won over to the
side of Mr. Norton by every
indication
although a group
from the Y AF was present in the
theatre.
The
discussion was
heated, even hostile at times
between
the participants
and
students.
INDIANS
·FROM 4.
the Foxes up
61-57. Marist never
again relinquished the lead and
wound up
72-66 victors.
·
Scott again led the offensive
thrust with 22 points and
11
rebounds.
Charlton
(l
4 pts. ),
Manning (
11
pts.), and Spenla
(9
pts., 10 rbs,) provided support.
· Ron Cargill, Southampton's
fine soph. guard who elim;natcd
us in last year's past season
tourney, led the losers with
29
pts. Tom Bubka chipped in with
20 markers. ·
*****
PAGE 3
·EDITORIAL
" Parental discipline is
the
gateway
,;.~ to knowledge." ....
Spiro
T.
Agnew
'-=: :·-:-.
.
Contempt of Justice
The trial in Chicago is without any doubt, a farce. It is without
precedent in the American system of justice.
The trial is illegal on scwral counts. The following indictments scrvl'
notice [o the American people: Judge Julius Hoffman conducted the
Chicago conspiracy trial in a scandalom:ly biased manner, His rulings
seemed repeatedly to align him with the Governments case. The law
under which the seven were tried for alleged conspiracy to incite riot
is considered unconstitutional
by many lawyers. and a judicial test
of the law will most likely prove this so.
·Judge Hoffmann in sentencing the defcndan ts and their lawyers
lo
jail for contempt violated the spirit of the
1968
Supreme Coun
which stated· that without
a trial
by
jury, no person can he
imprisoned for more than the maximum sentence for pl.'lty offonsl·s
- six months - Mr. Kunstler was sentenced to jail for over four yc•ars .
The Supreme Court has also found that actions such as tak,.m
by
the'
defense attorneys, were a continous course of. conduct and nwrited
at that most one act of conte1i1pt. not 24. Justice Felix Frankfurtl~r
has written .. that a judge should not subsequently sit in judgml'nl on
his assailants:"_ Judge Hoffman summarily punished· the_dc~.fend;,ints
·,and their 'lawy'ers, 'Fui'thermciri.•. Judge' Hoffman -did 'not ~orivi..:t
· Uw
lawyers· until the end of the trial thus failing to giw them notice
,;f
. the charges and failed to permit them to present
:1
defense,
Judge Hoffman's behavior was outrageous. The only thing
t/1:!l
was in contempt in Chicago was the justil;_e.
· Far-Fetched Trek
The following is an interview with Captain James T. Redfox and
Commander Smock of the Star Ship MOTH in the year 2525.
Circle:
Captain,
what are the thri,:e greatest engineering
accomplishments of your ship?
. Captain
Redfox:
The impulse po~er
engine,_ the matter
-
antimatter reactor and the perpetual alcoJuana machine.
Mr. Smock: That, Captain, is highly illogical.
Circle: Captain, since you introduced your Scientific master plan,
do you see a lack of humanism on the part of the crew?
Redfox: Huma what?
·
Smock: A logical deduction Captain.
·circle:
It
has been reported that the MOTH has been denied
-Federation aid this year .. Is this true?
Redfox: Well, this is true but
it
is also a lie, You see, the present!Y
standing Earth history requirement was dropped long ~go and will
probably be optional next week, Also, all the helm officers except
Messers. Scott, Zoolu, Checkon, Flaherty, Havens and myself are
non-earthmen. That means Mr. Smock, who is a Vulcan.
Smock: Illogical, Captain, Illogical.
•
Circle: Captain, as Chairma_n of the Star Ship Council, do you
think that the council is ineffective and power crazed as do the
crewmen?
'
Redfox: Let me make myself clear. I am the Captain, Make no
mistake about it, I am the Captain. If I say it is effective,
it is
effective.
_
Smock: That too, Captain, is highly illogical.
_
_ Redfox: And you, Mr, Smock, are about to take a long hike back
to Vulca!
·
(too be continued some day)
THE
<®+CIRCLE
Stephen A. Harrison
Joseph McMahon
Editors-in-Chief
John Rogener,F.M.S.,Managing
Editor,
John Zebatto,
News Editor
Joe Rubino. Sports Editor,
Vincent Begley, Asst. News Editor
EDITORIAL
BOARD
· Steve
Harrison,
Joe McMahon,
John
Zebatto
FEATURE
WRITERS
. Peter
Masterson.
Paul Browne.
Bill
O'Reilly, Steve Harrison, Vin Begley, Joe Francese
SPORTS WRITERS
· Don Duffy.
Asst. Sports
Editor; Gerard
Geoffroy,
F.M.S.; Bob Mayerhofcr,
Chuck Meara. Bob Sulliv;m,
John Petraglia
PHOTOGRAPHY
- Photo
Editor
- Rich
Brummett.
Barry
Smith, Vin Winsch, Mike Ligotino
CIRCULATION
Manager, Jack Barry
CARTOONIST
· Steve Harrison
· PAGE 4
THE CIRCLE
Indians
SCa_lped
95-64
Foxes
Stand
12-'.7~:
'
. -.
'·/:,);
.. ••
~f
·,
BY JOE RUBINO
. Siena n'ever should have got.ten
off
the:, bus .. After about
8
minutes 'of; play, Marist was up
27-9 and th~ game was. as good·
as over. The ReiFcixeS'c.ould do· back and forth until~ Ddwiin~ '3
wrong and the hapless, tqough
pt. play put them .up 80-77 with
scholarship-laden; Indians could
26 secs: left. With time ·rimriing
do nothing right; • .
·
out; .. ·Bill. Spenla scored· and
·. It seemed like the·Foxes were called
time~out
.as
the ball
taking turns· leading the band.
dropped .through the ·hoop. But
First, it was Joe·. Scott from in while his time-out was · being
close. Then, Billy Spenla started
granted° the last second . or so
·pumping from the outside. Next,. vanished mysteriously.
So did
Ray "Sugar Bear')Charlton
did · our conference championship.
his thing all over the Indians,
Joe Scott led
all
scorers with
sporting
some. moves Elgin
28 pts. Manning (18 pts.)·and
Baylor would. have been proud
Spenla . ( 15 pts.) supplied. the
. of. Meanwhile, just as effectively · main support. Clarke dished out
·. though much more quietly, Ray
8 assists while also dropping in
M a n n in g w·a s d r opp in g
l
O
markers.
·
· everything in t.he bucket except " . The previous night the men in
Barry LaCombe~s rulebook, and fed had achieved a big victory
· Ray
Clarke
made .like Walt
over always-tough Southampton
Frazier as he destroyed Siena's
College.
lt
was a close contest
press and piled up 10 assists.
throughout
and with 5:37 left
· Manning led the well balanced
the score stood at 57-all. At this .
attack with 20 pts. and .11 rbs.
point Charlton hit. with a field
He was followed by. Spenla ( 17 · goal and two free throws to put
pts., 11 rbs.), Charlton ( 17 pts.),.
CONTINUED ON
3
,
FEBRUARY 19;1970
Co-captain Bill McGarr putting one of his many moves on
New Paltz's Gary McClure before pinning him in the second
round. ·
an~i~o~eV~tr~\lJ~~!3:1ack
G·,·.
ap'.
p·
· 1··e·
rs·
Gro·,
..
·
nde·d·
1w·1·
c·e
·.
~~f
;~0~;"
p~L5
Jia~~~
1t:dlo~;;s~
· ·
. ·
.. .
· .
..
·
'
Ray Charlton skies over
Stonehill defender enroute to
his fast break deuce. ·
Last' Sat,u_rday
the squad
· dropped
a heartbreaker
to
Dowling in overtime, 80-79, to
relinquish the CACC conference
title it had held the past two
years. The Foxes were up S with
· 40 secs.
fo.
go in regulation, but
their
inability
to break
Dowling's press · and a crucial
tei;hnical foul call against Marist
tied the score. The OT went
Peas
And Carrots
BY·JOE
McMAHON
Although a Phys Ed building supposedly fosters the development
of .bqth th.e body .and mind, the vandalism to the Varsity
locker-room last week shows that some members of our community
i
possess great strength of.body but aiather marked weakness in the
~:~
.:....
.. ·._:~
....... " .:.i.·,-.·.•:··•·
..
•·.,
mind. To fationali~~lthat the'gyf m ~s aTshub-par
bliuildhing
is ail~surd. T~e
• ·
.
administration is we l aware·o th.IS. . ey rea ·ze
t
aFwh.
e
w.e wait
. for our dreamland .field house
we
have to make the best out-of what
we. have .. 1'hey were interested
in both: the varsity and intramural
sports, . as ~well as. improving the situation for. visiting tearris.
Therefore; they built the new. locker facility and improved the old
one. Some people appreciated the change; not satisfied, perhaps still
angry, but not • bitter
or irrational.
Obviously a
.
few others,
apparently ''out of .focus" with the college community, are not so
appreciative, and feel that brute force can still overcome all
obstacles .. Perhaps in the future they can find a more constructive
outlet for their energies whenever'another challenging crisis steps out
to meet them ... Number
I on: the Recommended Reading list -
"Athletics for Athletes," a controversial book just released by Jack
Scott. It's a free swinging barrage on the U.S. sports system which he
feels has become ·overly coach ~nd spectator oriented. The book is
boun_d . to produce a · storm of reaction from those attacked.
· Hopefully, rage won't totally blind them to the key message Scott is
trying to get across - "that athletics are basically a setting for
self-discovery and the intrinsic joy that accompanies it",,,Look for
'good ol' Mr. Alpert to appear on the Andy William's show soon.
He111 be answ_ering questions (it's obvious!)- concerning· his new
off-Broadway play.
(I
think he produces
it on. Sunday ·nights in
b,etween his visits to the Circle office and Floyd's) .... What sports
event.holds the all-time reco}'d for attendance? Super Bowl? World
Series? Roman chariot race? Even Rubino was stumped
011
this one -
3,000,000 spectators attended the 1969 Boston Marathon to cheer
on 1200 competitors ... · Order your 1970 y'earbook now before
they're all sold, out...Erp ...
*****
Track·
Team
To Meet
· Queens
Saturday
The
Indoor
Track
team
invades
Queens
College's
Fitzgerald Gym this Saturday to
engage in the annual dual meet
with the host arch-rival from
Flushing. Marist wilf have had a
number
of preparatory
races
before
encountering
Queens,
including the -Invitational meet
at Albany this past Saturday.
BY BOB SULLIVAN
Ther~ were few . bright spots
for the grapplers this week as
. they strµggled · through losses to
New Paltz · and Seton Hall by
respective scores of 29-11. and
33-1
l. The losses dropped their
record to 3-8.
Against
New
Paltz,
the
direction
of the match was
established after
the 118 lb.
dual. Johnny Eisenhardt did an
excellent job against New Paltz's
Scott Hammond and walked off
the mat the apparent winner of
an 8-7 match. However a mixup
in the riding time clocks was
discovered and Hammond was
awarded. a very ·dubious 9-8
victory.
Then New Paltz's 126 lb. flash
Jim.'. Longo had his bid .for .a
' quick
pin
foiled -by .Lance
. Lipscom~e: Longo's experieQce
was too · much however as he
even tu all , pinned
the· game
freshman in 4:00.
In the 134 lb: match, :Bob
Sullivan bridged out of a first
period pin but Steve LaTinco
came right back in the second
period to reverse Sullivan and
cradle.him to the mat in 2: 19 ...
After forfeiting the -142 lb.
class to the Hawks, Matt Rogan
put up a good battle against 150
. lb. Bruce Hartzen, however a
third period blitzing by Hartzen
gave him a 10-0 decision arid
New Paltz a comfortable 21-0
lead.
·
Captain Bill Moody narrowly
missed pinning his man as he
scored · 10 pts in the third period
for a come-from-behind
I 3,11
decision
over 158 lb. Bruce
Ellison.
Going into
the last
period Moody: was trailing 9-3,
· In the next match Jock Walsh
put in one of his best matches of
the season as he destroyed 167
lb. Dave Premore 16-3.
Gary
Fesfeldt
·ended the
Marist_ comeback, and insured a
New Paltz victory by knocking
off
the tough freshman Jim
--Lavery 11-3.
In the 190 lb. match, Bill
McGarr continued to destroy the
opposition
as he pinned· Gary
McClure in 4: 17 after racking up
.an 18-2 lead. New Paltz's 226 lb.
heavyweight
Steve Keene was
simply
too
big
for
John
Redmond, in the evening's final
match,
pinning the promising
freshman in 3:39.
Saturday's
match
against
Seton Hall was similar to the
match against New Paltz. An
injury to 126 lb. freshman Lance
Lipscomb put another hole in
the lineup forcing the grapplers
to.give up 10 pts each match.
The
Pirates
tore
through
Marist's ·· lightweights until · Bill
Moody
again
stopped
the
shutout. Moody, downS-4 going
into the third period, shutout his
opponent . Calvin Cahill, · while
scoring .5 p.ts himself for .a 9-5
win;, ... ·
.:
. · : .
Only other wins .for Marist
came from Jim Lavery and
Bill
McGarr. Lavery used his great
strength to dominate his smaller,
quicker
opponent · and gain a
13~ 1 win. In the 190 lb. match
_ McGarr raised his record to
1
0-1
by carrying the "crusher" to a
pin
over Dudley
DeNoca in
4:4~.
.
.
There were two "firsts" for
the grapplers this week.- Both
John
Finnegan
and
Frank
Attanito stepped onto the mat
for the first time, Finnegan in an
exhibition match
against New
· Paltz and At'tanito filling in for
John Redmond at heavyweight
against Seton Hall.
On Friday the team will travel
to Trenton State in New Jersey
-for
Saturdays
N.A.I.A.
_tournament.· Four ·wrestlers are
currently
entere4:
118 lb.
Johnny Eisenhardt (5-6); 150 lb;
Capt::
Bill
Moody (8-3); 177 lb.
Jim Lavery (7-3-l);·ilnd
190 lb.
co-capt. Bill McGarr
(l
0- l ).
*****·
'
Campus
.
Stuff
BY DON DUFFY
A
temper is an easy thing to ignite when any competitive thing
exists . .Such is the way on the basketball court where a close struggle
can erupt in a brawl.
It
is not right to encourage this ,sort of thing
but. it does happen and it will go right on happening. But it is just
the ball players that are involve9 in the game no one else therefore
there should be no fan involvement in a fight
if
one should start. It
has happened on two occasions this year at the Iona game and just
recently at the Stonehill game. It is a bush move for the stands to
empty out. When it occurs
it not only looks bad for'the-fans but also
for t~e sc~ool they atten_d. It should never happen and I only hope
that 1t will not occur
ui
the future. Leave the game and what
happens at it to the players and leave fan involvement to rah-rahs
l).Ot to swinging fists.
CAMPUS ACTIVITY
Why are different events scheduled at the same time on this
campus? Is it the intention to give the student a choice? Bull! This
school
is'
only going backwards and nothing else.· When -the
·•basketball team play_ed at New Paltz, the Italian society has a pizza
· mixer and when they play Stonehill, probably the best team on the
schedule, Leo house has their skit night. Surely these events could
have been held another time, the question I want to have an answer
.to is Why weren't they. There are always people saying there is not
enough to do yet here is a case where there was too much to do.
Why can't these events be coordinated
so double events don't
happen? Why can't people look at the sports schedule before
planning something on campus? Maybe
if
people started
to think
around· here they would find the experience an exciting thing. Try
it
you might like it.
·
.
BITS-N-PIECES
Congratulations to Joe McMahon (Carrot) for breaking the school
record in the I 000 yard run last Saturday in. the Albany meet. The
record was formerly held by Harriet Wilits; a one legged runner from
Pimp Falls, Alaska. Great job Joe ... .l'd like to say one thing to the
refs at the Stonehill Game but it is unprintable .... To the Stonehill
coach goes similar greetings ... The basketball team has only four
gan:ies left on the schedule and needs to win every one
if they arc to
get a NAIA bid. All the games are at home. They need tremendous
fan-
support so why don't you take a look at the team .... Once again
I'd like to send out my thanks to the great response to the Marist
nickname question by our beloved students. Nobody likes the name
but won't come out and say it. Maybe they are afraid Mother
will
At Albany, Henry Blum, the
no. I man in ,the weight events,
threw the shot 38'9¼" to add 4"
fo
·the school record.
Gerry
Wildner tied Bill Kalish's mark in
the 60 yard dash with a 6.8.
Kalish competed
in the 600,
hitting a I :23.4. Ian Masterson,
in his first attempt at the college
hidt
hurdles.
turned
in a
respectable time of 9.2 seconds.
Joe
McMahon
lowered
the
school b~-st to .:?:.:?8.4 with his
. 4th place finish in the 1000 yard
nm.
Jack Walsh maintains control over his New Paltz opponent in
an exhausting match that Jack won
by
decision.
_. spank them ...
.l
wonder who is mailing me strange cards? Will that
person please come fonvard out of Peyton Place .... Be Good Love
Duff
'