The Circle, April 9, 1970.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 18 - April 9, 1970
content
''VIETNAM
.MORATORIUM
APRtt·13'-15"
Keynotes
Jo
Be
TClx
Resistance
-.And
·.Fast.
·.' ihe
Vietnam.
M'6ratoriuJn,.:·reason'is
directly-~elated to the
to.
iro';~~ve the q~ali~;· of. o·ur ·
·
.. The. M~r;fo·riurn
- is also.
Mr;. Brow~
underscored
the
Committee
has
announced
·.April· 15thTax
Payer ·Rallies.,· common life and: to .. alleviate
organizing'the Tax Payer Rallies
primary focus ohhe activities
iri
endorsements of a Peace Fast on .. ·Becatis~ the goveritmenfspends
• huma11 · suffering."
Mr:. Hawk
O,Jl
April .15 in more than 30
:
a . discussio.n of· the strike of
· April
J
3-15 which will be largely :
$io
l
million a ·c1ay on w·ar .and - indicated that the.fast
will
focus
cities· across the nation.· .. Sain ·. postal ·employees .. •'While , the
focused.
0 n . college
and
the
.weapons·
of war, we. are· · on campuses and among'.groups,
·
Brown, a co-coordinator of the . government finds it possible and
university
: campuses .. 'rhe
·asking peop
0
fo
not to eat.
for
of religious people. He expla~ed . committee'
discussed·
the
necessary· to allocate .. millions
endorsements include more than . three
days and ·. to · send the . that many students were making . Committee's ·pt.iris: · '.'.0.n
April
each week
to
Vietnam, it finds ·
:212 . study. l)ody ·presidents: and, ... money saved while not eating t.o . arrangements
· with . university.
15th ·a(;ross the.country ,·people
•itself.
unable· . to. consider. a•
.-c~_mptis
newspaper editors ·along·:> aid the victims. ·or. the ·. war. ,
·
food servi~es to turn _ovenifoney
will .once ·agairi•.halt' 'business .as : significant and meaningful pay
with prominent -Americans such. Proceeds from the Peace _Fast . saved
by not eatmg to .the
·us u a'l' C;to: speak:' to
their
increase
for these and . other
·as Julian Bond, Ramsey Clark,
Fu?d wiU g.o
t?,
the American
Morat<?rium for_distribution
to
countrymen'
arid
:to·
.th.eir
government
employees.
The
Jane<Fonda, Rabbi Abraham J. : Fnends
~erv1ce. Committee
the. Vietnam. rehef agency and
President.·:rhey
will talk· about
spending for the war in Vietnam
· .. H~schel, Senator Harold Hughes,
Vie~!lam.
Relief
Progra;_ the. p·ov~rty.
groups:·· He. also .. Vietnam about the broadening·
intensifies
t.he· problem. of
·•·~ayor
John
Lindsay.
and. Natrnn.al
Welfare
Rights
ment10ned that fasting students
involvement in. Southeast:Asia;•
inflation and consumes billions
Senator Eugene McCarthy.' . , ·
Orgariization, ·. and the. United
in some places intended to come . and about the economic· crisis of dollars that are needed and
--·
. David Hawk, a c~coordinator
Farm Workers of.-Amer_ica. The · to .. dining halls at m~al time~ to
brought about by the spending
deserved
for
domestic
of
the
Vietnam
Moratorium
Fast reoresents our commitment
·
dramatize .the Fast.
.'
• ·
· -· •
for the war and the Pentagon."
purposes," he said.
·
;;r;o~t~tefh/F~!t~•~e
·~~~
. ·_Th; ~o~a.torium _activities at .Marist are _still in th~yro_i£s~· ofbeing formulated. ~onday night the fast April ist~e
10
h:it/~,e~:.gl~
th: ·
fast for.peace during April 13-15· w!ll. be m1~1~te~ \V1th a ~ommuna} I_lleal
ot
the participants ~ollowed
by
a candle-hg~1t march. !uesday
American
public
that
th~
for two reasons. The first is'.to
will be petit1onmg
for.
w1thdrawal from Vietnam. Tuesday. mght a documentary film, "Who Invited Us" . economic
dislocation
which
· · demonstrate
our
moral
will be shown. The film isa historical record of American-imperialisni . .The plans
for
Wednesday are still punishes n:early everyone will
·
oppositi~n to the continuing and
sketchy, buf there. is . a possibility of a rally on campus, featuring speakers on draft resistance and not · subside until . the war is-
exp and mg war. The second
American involvement in Vietnam.
·.
·
ended."
·.·THE
VOLUME
6 NUMBER
is)
MARIST
COLLEGE;POUGffK.EEPSIE,
NEW YORK 12601
APRiL 9, 1970
/
.
.
.
.
.
.
Environmental.
Teaih~ln;
.Af
Vassar
C
urricllluni ':Revision
Consider·ed·
.
Save The Planet
BY'ED O'NEILL
toward. presenting.· a meaningful
·• by Terry Mooney .
. ·. ·
· , ,
·
.
set of directives, however; there
.
. . .
.
. .
purpose. First it
will .
serve to
own teach-in on environment.
A
proposal
concerning
are others in whom such'faith'
Today at
4:30
p.m., m room
protest
the pollution
of. our
Dr.Rehwoidt
will·be kept quite
~utricuhim revision has _begun on . ·could .not he posited. Finally; it
_15
9
.
of:
Don !lel~y
I:Iall
an
e~vironment and_ second E-Day
busy· on April
22
not. only
,
~ts. way towarq adoph~:m. Jn .a ,.was felt · that. perhaps ,wliat. .1mportantmeetmg _1s
go!ng to_be, will act as.a_ podium _to educate
speaking here at Marist but a'lso
.:i,, __
, ___
:._.,"."
..
,J
9.1..11.L
P.
..
:.~-~'!
~~- wi_th: t~e:
•WO
u
l d ; be .. v frt u al, co/.e
::held .. _T_he me~hn~ _1s
_ bemg
m,,i;
popu)allon. Then
.are
feo/·
atVassar
College, Our Lady of
·>+·:'."'.~·:~·~,':"."'~:-g
ep.aJ~r1~ntalT-~c-~a1r1;j-e!li,ir:';Iequirements':'
co'uicl'.'''.
he~
~subtly
,oR.
rg:amzed '"by: Dr.> Ro_bert •·~•wno would
deny
-n1at- much ··1s ··.····LoutJes··High
·sc11uoi
itn<l
other
"
, ·
· °c?
o~nc . e
on ues_ ay,
a~c :•:presen(ifr'tIHs·plan
:and so, not . eh\\'qldt.
o,f the Chemistry
ne~ded
:to
pro.tect
our
educational
institutions.
The
. .2 4,:
t_he .. Academic
P?~19Y-.! really· any basic change from the
Department
and· pr?ponent _of env1rnnment because already too
Student ·Government as well as
Com!111ttee sought . the 1mt~at
present structure.
..
our ne~ ~a~ural Science maJor
!11uch has b~en done !o destroy
this paper and the-Division of
reactions .of· the college to its·
Not to be .overly pessimistic
a~d Mr. W1ll1~m Perrotte of the
.
1t. O~r cn~!ronm~nt is· a me~s.
Natural Sciences arc encouraging
p_rop_osal. _The .proposal _was. the:curriculum
proposal
wa~
B1~logy":Department ·.and the
The
mess. consists of a daily_ wholc-hearted
.. support
and
· outhn~d
.. 1_n a ~e<;~nt Ctrcle_ definitatel : felt.to·be
a:
ossible
subJect 1s E-pay. What is E-Day?
load
(!f
some
360,000
ton~ of
participation in the activities of
. colum~. B~s1cally, 1t1nv~lves_the. format
foi
the .future d1rectiori
_It refers to the Environmental
gasenus wastes ·that pour mto
.April
22,
they are too important
determination by_the maJo~ field
·.
of the· college·
·The
distinct
Day to be held on April
22
from
tlle
nation!s atmosphere
and
to ignore.
departmen.t of sixty credits yf
O
b s ·t r u c
't
i
~
n.s
to
i.t
s
coast to coast. ThJs nation~wide
collect in palls of murk over
; Remember
E - Day
and
the·
120
~egree requtrement ~1th. implementation would certainly
demonstration
has -a . two fold
some·
?
,300
con~mu_nities. As
remember
protect
you.r
the rem~m~e~ to be dete!ffimed
have to be dealt with. At the·
populat10~, urbamzatt<?n, l?Ower - environment.
(PYE)-
. by the ~d1V1dual stu.dent, The
meeting itself, possible means of
¥enera
t10_n, and
rnd_ustry
only required course would .be a · .. b .. f
th
.. crffi
It·: .. · . ·.
mexorably mcrease so
will
the
six credit.freshman seminar.
· • o ;ia
~n~
1
;se .. 1·
1
~u
~esd~:ret.
mess
for only
90
of these
:::
.
It
was the first. time. that
,pr_::n
_e • twa.s sugges -~ ·· t· a
co min unities have substantial.
·.students had participated
iri a
b:t
egr,~~ erd_co~mun:ca
10
3
IJOllution con.trol'programs. The
Chairill.~ri's
Co_uncil meetin~. ·
. whe.h.n
· .. e _epa_r men~· an ,
order of the day then on .the
Those
·present
were:
Phil.
wit
t e. co? rd matmg action of
22
d
·11
t· k · th · f ·
·r
•
· · ·
• .
· ..
· . · · · the Academic Dean· some of the
n ·· WI
~
e
e
orm
0
Glenn. on, V1ce-Pres1dent of the
. e· t·· •f • t'.
-' -. , ld b
environmental
teach.-ins on
S d t C
il.
1·
R
b'
·
curr n
'
nc ions· cou
e
_ .
. tu en . ounc. ,
oe
u mo, , wo ked
t
F
· th . t d t'
many
campuses
across
the
·. Co-editor of the Circle; Edward
··
F ·
.ou_ · rnm ·. e
~
u
CI\
s
country.
.
.
O'Neill and Gei>rge Roarty of
pomt ?f view, _the_ formulation
O
th
·
d·
f
t d:· '
·
· ·.
of maJor requirements
would
11
e agen a . o.r o ay
s
the
_StJ,1dent
Acad-em1c
•havet
·take· p·l•e·'
d.· 1· ·
meeting
sponsored
by the
Committee
O
·
ac · ·
m
la ogue
·..
.·
· ·
o· · ·
·f
N
l
S ·
· ·11
.
bet
W
eeri·. the>faculty
. ·and
'·or.
lfobert Rehwoldt
lVISIO~
0 · .
atura
c1e_nces
Wl '
~h~re
were.
h?
~erious-
students· of that 'department
in
be a d1scuss1on
t?
decide what
obJ~ctlons to the pnnc1ples on . order to have any validit. ·And
L--------------.
we here~ at Manst can do to
.
wh~ch th e P~
0
P?Sal w_as based:
so, the meeting concluded in the \ Committee
will shortly
hold · de_monSlrate our concern. Tii_ne
Senous queStionmg o~ it !~ough,
.
feeling that the current proposal - discussions
on this proposal.
.will also be alloted for an
~once!11e~ _the pract_icahties <?f does
contain
the ideas and·
Student
consideration
and
~xchang_e
of
ideas,
a nd
1.~s ii_nphmentaJion._T~lS
direction which Marist College
participationinthedevelopmerit
tnformatIOn.
All
th e Club
o1scuss1on. dealt direc!lY with
should
take
and: that
its
of
this curriculum revision are.a
Presidents
_or one of their
.; some oft.he present at titudes_ of · objectives could be·achieved; but
necessity so that
if
doesn't just·
!e .presentatives
have
been
segments_ of .th e college which
obviously·
there
-
are definite ·,become.
another'
slightly
mvited.
· would hind er and· perhaps e".en difficienci;s· which have to· be
different list of 't~ngs I have to
Th~re~re already plans in .t~e
defeat, the purpo~es for which _ faced and eliminated.
take'.
,
making 1~ so far a_s what this ,
the . new_ curriculum
,w_as
The
Student
Academic·
~amp~s wdl be do~n~. on E-Day .•
formulated.
mcludmg the poss1b1hty of. our
, • In a curriculum geared toward
·
designing
individual· student
programs, the. · present · lack of
cooper
at i o n· . b et w .e en
departments
concerning -related
cou·rse
offerings
and· the
non-existence· of an effective
advisory system were viewed as
definite
impediments
toward
·achieving
the goals of this
proposal. Phil Glennon voiced
what was considered
by the
students present to be the major
difficiencies of this plan.
It
does
not provide for any revision of
the content of present course
offerings. The placing of the
authority
of
determining
-requirements in t,ie hands of the
departments does not guarantee
to · the students that the best
possible
program
will
be
developed.
He
observed
that
some departments would work
Miguel Regna·ptayed at a benefit
marathon,
Babalacchia, at Marist before Easter.
Marist
Associates
. Who
Are
They
The
Marist
Associates,
although
little
of whom is
known
to
the
Marist
. community,
could
prpve
· extremely
beneficial
to the
student body
if
utilized more
fully.
· Made
up of parents
of
students
and
alumni,
the
organization was formed
6
years
ago when
it
was found that
many
students
couldn't· raise
enough money to support their
clubs
or organizations
. .
By
sponsoring such events as card
'parties and_ dinner dances, the
M.A.
began to help the football
. club, the Appalachian Reaction,
the
Children's
Theater,
and ·
. many ·other groups who came
• Seeking
aid.
All
remaining ·
money was presented to Bro.
Linus Foy for him to distribute
·to
areas which needed financial
aid.
. · Most recently, this group is
. responsible for the publishing of
·· this issue of this paper, since the
present CIRCLE staff had run
out of funds.
Although most of the involved ··
members of the Associates live
in the general area, many parents,
who live a distance from the ·
college belong to the group by
sending
donations.
The
organization sincerely hopes that
more · parents
will
become
involved more directly ·. in the
near future_ A good attendance
at their dinner dance (see ad.,
p_
3)
would greatly help the
M.A.
accomplish its goals.
i
\
\
;
. PAGE 2
.
·
.
.Through
A
/Broken
.Window·
,_
.
.
.
·-·
.·
..
-
CaseTwo:
accent,
dirty blue dungarees;
.
This is a middle-aged couple
beads,
Cochise·
headband,
Throughout
my stay
in.-. traveling.
around
.England
Spartacus
·sandals
and-brown
England
L:have
become
··becausethepeoplewholivenext
teddy bear. Dialogue can·_be
increasingly
aware:. of' the
·
to them went to Bermuda. At
practised at hoine and pcrfecte~l
..
abundant
.
amount
·_·of·
tourists
•
home
-
they· have. two teenagers
·
before the trip, standard phrases.
everywhere._-~
especially
(boy and girl) who :ire miridirig are: Yeah man, this is freedom,
Americans.
There are many
the dog, Muffin;
If
you are this
freedom
man,. and Jet's
·
get
different kinds of tourists and
-
kirid of tourist you will probably
ourselves together, man; arid we
here, in this supplement to the ·
·
spend most of· your time in got places to go, man and what's
"Broken
Window
Tourist.
clothingstoresshopping"forthe
it all about
_man
and I'm
Guide," I will examine four of
.
kids". or else in
·the
hotel bar.
·
homesick man. The noun
·
man
BY BILL O'REILLY
.
my favorites.
·
·
Pick out an exclusive men's store
can
.
be· used on conversation
Case One:
and go in. Let the wife do the
with
both. men and women
This is a young married couple
talking.
. .
since, on occasion, it is difficult
with
a five
·
year
old kid,
Wife: Excuse me,
I'm looking
to distinguish
among these
preferably named. Marvin. It is
for something in leather for my
tourists
- man alleviates the
imperative
that. Marvin be
son, Alan.
_
_
.
hassel.
·
super-loud
and
every
five
Salesman: How
about
a whip
..
Case Four:
.
.
minutes· shriek out:
·
"Gimmee,
.
Wife:· Oh• that's funny, that's
This is a family of five on the
·
take me, buy me."
If
you
·
are
funny, didja hear that Harry,
economy plan~
If
you are this
;
.
_
this kind of tourist.be sure to go
that's
funny.
Look· I want
kind of tourist each member of
to a very English restaurant and
something different in leather
the family is required to have a
order English food
,for
Marvin ... for my
.son.
camera. From Dad,.who has the
Marvin,
upori
sampling the
·
-Salesman:
Well; we have vests,
·
Polaroid special down to little
cuisine,
will then promptly·
jacket~,glovesand socks.
,
•
.
Shelley who has a baby Brownie:
bellow, "I hate tliis slop - let's go
.
Wife: Well. what are the kids
Sample tour with these tourists
home."
After
this he will
wearing these days?
goes like
.this:
"Look; look, a
immediately throw his plate at
·
Salesman:
Usually clothes
mailbox
anp
a lampost,
the· waiter.
Following your·
these days, madame.·
click-click-click.
There's
a
dinner take the wife and Marvin
·
Wife: Oh Harry, he's a scream,
grocery· store and a post office,
to a museum and let Marvin
isn'theascream,Harry?
click-click-click.
Mommy,
loose,
preferably
on roller
.
.,
Harry: Yeah,
a
scream.
_
Daddy, Stariley; Sidney a little
skates, to screain tear around,
Wife: Well, loo~_ what's the
boy
-
a. real
little
boy-.
and generally liven-up the place.
most. expensive thing you have? Click-click-click. Look children
From the museuni proceed to a
Salesman: This $400 full cqat
there's the famous Big Ben - get
• local gift shop where Marvin will
with matching underwear.
a picture now. We can't Daddy;
scan the merchandise·
and
pick
·
Wife: Well, wrap it up - if Alan
.
we're out of film."·
_
. .
out a solid. gold sword which
won't wear it we'll give it to the.
_
One tip for you.future tourists
·
costs
$150.
"I want that,"
dog. Pay hiin Harry.
- it's_ good to do your own thing
Marvin
·
will
holler.
Quietly
Case Three:
·
abroad. so stock up on those
·
explain to Marvin that Daddy
Yo~ng students or ex-students
yellow socks, Hawaiian shirts
and Mommy still love him but
disenchanted
with_ America.
with the palm trees on therri and
the sword is too expensive, then
Usually these tourists travel
_in
especially for you over S0's.- red
try to buy hftn off with an $80
packs
with
.
knapsacks
and
Bermuda shorts with high purple
Captain Hook dagger. After this
travelers
cheques. They are
socks and penny loafers - always
quickly
·
stand back as Marvin
usually found in the happening
.
in the best of taste.
.
t brows a tantrum
screaming:
part of town trying· to "blend.
This will be my last column
"Robert Silverman has a sword,
in."
If
you want to be this kind
for a·while as vacation time once
why can't I have a sword, I hate
of tourist
some mandatory
again beckons. But I'm sure the
_you."
.
characteristics are: Easy Rider
loss won't be too great with such
·ADMINISTRA-TIVE
dyno columns
·
by Luv Duff,
Japanese Joe Rubino and Qrp
McMahon.
coming your way
•
every week. Finally
my
vote for
...
school
name ~goes to·
-
Kaola
Bears .. The_ Marist College Kaola.
-.TRAINING-
PROGRAMS--·
Bears - it has a nice ring to it.
.
·*-*·*
**
.
.
••• t'vE • .,
OEVOTIN~-MUCII
--~6HT
..
ANn-:t<£st.Rii~u.it,·J11i-
,u~.111
_of.:
OU~
·
SIIVAGE
IIJPIRJI
:"$1Uff/lE;tS_
•• •
-for
An·
1gnoranf
Begillninll
RISK-
MANAGER
.
,·
.
Exercise individual judgement. and decision making on
diversified insurance risks.
-
CLAIMS
REPRESENTATIVE
Investigates_ and· a~sembles facts and develop narrative
,
histories or
.various
'claims. Examines and evaluates
evidence, determines causes and negotiates settlements.
These are administrative positions and do not involve
selling.
Profession.al
training - formal-
·classroom
instructor implement~d
by
on-the-job and field business
exposure. B.A. in Business Administration or Liberal
. Arts required. Salary and fringe benefits co_mpare most.
probably to the industry.
You_ are invited to explore employment opportuniti~
on campus.
Recruiting On Campus
April 15,
1970
Placement Office
BY
DENNIS
ALWON
'.'
As I walked lackadaisically
again," ''.Get-fifty
this time/'·.
definite
direction/
with
down the. street I
felt
a cool
"Kill
_'em.".
"Don't )et 'em get
·
tranquiliJy
·
written all over iL
November wind whistle through
away'."
'We're
winning."
Sµddenly, ou_t of the t!ninders
of
my hair. The clear·day.showed
"WE'.REWINNING."
·
.the
sky,,
there
was
an
the. trees· gleaming bright_ly-with.
.
Those
sou
rids·• reverberated
in·
:
approaching
_object
coining
·
up
their
'multi-colored
leaves
.my.
ears ov~r and•over:again. I
_behind·
the
__
wh_itedoud. I could·
.
hanging by the hundreds
from
-
tried to tum
if
off
btit
it was no
·
not make
.it
out at first; it
.was
·
each branch. A more beautiful
·use.They
got l_ouder-arid louder;
,
not yet cJear. lt; soon cameinto
spot
was
not
seen
_in·
this • The
roars
of the victorious.
vision and showed up as a gray.·
populated city.Ail that could. be . soldiers were overcome by the
cloud bursting- with anger with·
heard, except for
·the
whirling
· -
guns blasting in the pattle field;
.
the
·wind
as its guide.
.
.
:
_
wind, was. the. sounds
.of
some
And• asJ
,htlar
:all
of
'.this
I
_ask
.
I
._was·
definite.
It was so:· I
__
_
Ii
t tie
.
'.')
O
Ve l y"
,
children
my_self
_and-I
ask You "Who wins
star!edtreinbling
all over. l was
screaming and: yelling as they
.
a war?" "Is there. a winner or are
.
afraid: Scared.
.
.
.
.
...
played joyously in the street.
there two losers?".
-
.
._.
.
.
Then with one- sweeping gl.!IP;
.
What? Did I hear correctly?
·
Petey was ninriirig around the
.·
the
_
gray cloud devoured~ the
Yes,_ I think]
dii:L Johnny was
streets· smiling with
(a:-
smile a
-
white one, but
I.
could still see
telling Petey to say ... Oh! God,
It. mile wide.
It
must have been a
the white clo_ud lying motionless
.
was
·.so
sad. The words kept
mile.
-
The
beauty
in him
..
in its center.
·1t.
wiis now a part
.·
ringing in niy ears. I didn't want
sud d
~
n
1
Y exposed
itself.
.oftheiray
cloud yet it
.was
still
to
-
hear them. I kept telling
Meanwhile, he_ was still chanting
··
separate:
·
·
myself
that
I was hearing
.
the same verses. Thesounds·kept-
·
Oh my God. Petey, 1- had··
something else, but I wasn't.
It
echoirig. "Kill 'em; let '.em have
forgotten about-Petey. I had
to
was true. Johnny told
-Petey
to
it." What could I do; the pain:
..
get back to him. With sweat
say that he was retarded. He· was becomirig
tremendously
dripping down my· forehead I
suddenly started to scream out
intensified. It'll kill
me·;
It felt as
·
ran vigourously
•
to
the street
all over the street, "Petey is
though I were
~
victim of the
where. I saw Petey· yesterday. I
retarded,
Petey is· r~tarded."
voodoo doll. Fear, it had to be
turned the cc;>rner
and came to a
Soon all of Pete's friends joined
fear.
.
·
·
screeching halt.
·
I had
·
caught
in. "Petey is retarded, Petey
is
I couldn't re_member·anything.
sight
of a group of lovely
_retarded."
But P'etey didn't
I wante~ to recall the incident
children
- with their savage
know any better, and soon he
but ... No, it has gone blank. My
instincts
- leaning over one
joined the choir. "I'm retarded,
memor_y
has
failed
to
another as they.looked excitedly·
I'm retarded."
.
communicate a!'}y
·
messages to
at the situation. I got a little
Yes, he was retarded. He was
.
me.
·
closer for a better look~ There in
born with a ·deformed brain, but
I had
finally reached my
the midst of all those children
that wasn't his fault. He didn't
destination - home: I couldn't
lies Petey's body. He was shot
ask to be born this way.
remember how I got there for
by the others while playing
I just kept on walking, but it
my mind was on the brink. I was
"War." They all screamed out
EMPLOYERS
COM
11
(RCIAL
UNION
COMPANIES
-
wsha
00
snt't
1
th~e
0
usagmh
em.
YPa1b·n
0
sdsyta_rt
1
tedwtaos still unconscious of everything
"We got 'em." "Get 'em again."
1W
,
until the· next· morning· after I
"Kill 'em." "Let's get another.".
as though I were in a trance and
had apparently fallen into a deep
It was all my fault. Petey was
soon
became
delirious. Yes,
sleep directly after dinner. Then
dead, never again to take a
feverish
all over.
I was
that same piercing, penetrating
breath of air and it was all my
Paul
J.
McDonough, Personnel Manager
110 William Street
New York,
N.Y.
10038
(212) 349-7000
unconscious the rest of the way
noise
reoccum:d.
That's it.
-
fault. I killed him.
.
home. Thoughts kept coming, all
_
Remembrance had finally· come
As I walked away I looked up
that could be heard were the
to
.
mind again, particularly the·
at the
-trees.
The leaves were all
sounds
of ignorant
annies
dream
that
tormented
me
blurred.
It
was not
clear
fighting at night. "Nice shot,"
throughout the night.
anymore. I just kept walking and
«Twenty-two
Congs with one
Tl1e white cloud,
·so
soft and
asked myself "WHY?"
shot,"
.. Fantastic,"
"Do it
pure,
drifted
perfectly in a
• • • •
*
'THE CIRCLE
.•.
Letters
Balendar ·
Of
.Events
De~r
Sirs:
. · Where, bllLin
America, _can
one ,
print -
a · peace . symbol· on .
Page One and. inside the .paper
encourage
violent. revolution,
FOR THE WEEK OF APRIL 10-19, 1970
·· < ·· .
. .
Fl~IDAY, April 10
.
7,
8,
9:00 f,,M. Mov.ie - "BLACK.HISTORY-
LOST·,STOLEN_OR
STRA-rED , Room
249, Campus Center, Presented by King
Committee
. ·.
·
· sedition,
and
overthrow of
elected authority without a hint .
of any alternative. •·
7:
30 P.M.~ Evening. Division Dinner Dance
DINING HALL
CAMPUS GENTER
'
.
'
, . Mr; Robert C. Norman
Editor's Note: The only montion·
of· revolution
in
the March 19
CIRCLE to which Mr.- Norman
refers
is· in John Zebatto's'
"What's Left?", If.Mr. Norman
will carefully re-read that issue
he ·will find no encouragement
of violent revolution, sedition or_
.
.
SATURDAY -April 11
8:00 .P.M. Alumni Association Buffet and Beer Dance DINING
· HALL, CAMPUS. CENTER
SAIUNG Freshman Eliminati~ns at Cornell
11
:00 A.M Crew - Holy Cross, HOME
· SUNDAY - April
12
SAILING - Freshman Eliminations at Cornell
.
-overthrow of elected authority.
.
-
MONDAY - April 13
To the Editor:
In light of a current ~opular
song, I think your March 19-
article. ;"Dick Gregory Raps _at
·
Bennett'' . was · most a propos.
3:30 P.M. American Studies Senior Seminar, Dr. Richard Harmond
of St. John's University. Topic: "OBSERVATIONS OF ASPECTS
OF THE
TECHNOLOGICAL
IMPACT·
ON AMERICAN
CULTURE'~. Fireside Lounge, Campus Center.
·
.
··
-
TUESOA Y - April
'14
You know what he's after.
.
8:00 P.M. Movie - "DONA BARBARA" Presented by Spanish Club
Room
249, Camp.us Center
·
.
'
·
. .> . ·
·
WEDNESDAY -April 15
.
·
Thank you,
Don.aid Murphy
.·
.
. Class of
'64
8:00 P.M. Lecture
~
Herbert Apthekcr, Institute of Marxist Studies
Title: "NEGRO MOVEMENT -
REFORM OR REVOLT" Roon{
Another
Place,
249, Campus Center.
·
·
·
: .
THURSDAY~ April 16
.
.
Another
Way
by M. Philip Forbes
8:30
P.M. Lecture.- "DEVELOPMENT IN THE CELLULAR SLIME
MOLDS"· by Dr.· John Tyler Bonner, Chairman of the Dept. of
Biology, Princeton· University Presented by Division of Natural
Science_s Don~elly Hall
..
I was treated to the. gentle
pleasure of seeing the work of
Mr. Henry
L.
Rittenhouse, at the
Marist. College- Gallery exactly
one week ago today. The events
of the last week have shown me
7, 8,
9:00
.p},L _:
Movie - "PORTRAIT IN BLACK
&
WHITE"
Presented by King Committee, Room
249, Campus Center.
_
8:30 P.M.: Play··op·~ning - Neil
Simon's "COME BLOW YOUR
HORN" College Theatre, Campus Center
· . ·
.
·
FRIDAY -April
17
.
' how much· real value the vision
of the world, which .this highly .
skilled painter truly possesses.
I
have been engaged in meetings
of religious educators and in
some very unusual .business
in
8:30 P:M:. Play - "COME BLOW YOUR HORN" College Theatre
c.c.
. .
.
. ' .
'
.
-
-· . SATURDAY ~April
18
~~~~
P:M. Play • ''COME BLOW YOUR HORN," College Theatre,
my publishipg house. · I have
SAILING Quadrangular - Stevens, Columbia, Fordham and Marist -
watched the rankest indignity
HOME
-
·
·
'
perpetrated
upon
an
2:00P.M.Crcw-Amherst-HOME
unsuspecting body of students
SUNDAY, April
I 9
by those who believe that reality
C2:.C30
.. P.M, Play • "COME _BLOW YOUR HORN'_', College Theatre,
.: does not carry its own valuative
warranty, portrayed literally or
.. abstractly.
.
8:00
P.M. Movie - "IVAN THE TERRIBLE",
Part IL College
In the last show, which it was· Theatr~, Campus Center, Coffee and Discussion to follow, presented
-my
good fortune
t()_ review,
by ManstCollcge Film Program Series.
.:reality was . .allo,wed to speak...for.-. .
a
.
. ·
·•.
·
·
.
·
· 'itself in µiedia' which were,_
to
"·-::'.'~:
::
-·.::t·i\',;
t
0 ~;.
A'Iff EXHIBIT - thru April
26
~
-. . ·
-
.. say the least, not literal. There: Henry
L. Rittenhouse; "TWENTY SIX ACRES FOR FUN", Gallery
was,
.however,
clear
and
Lounge,C.C.
·
·
meaningful
stateineht
about
* * * * *
reality, in a more literal medium; -..... ~---:----~--:----------
......
-------..J
The show consists
of
oils arid
who produces a · lot . of pretty.
more present in this work than
water colors which depicta
view.
pictures.
Pretty_ would be a .skill. There is.vision.
of a _reality quite imlike the last
terrible
understatement
about
The work on view currently
group of yourig artists. Instead
tl:le profound
beauty
of the
can be treated
in
roughly two
- of an urban and mechanized
o· ks
hi h 'f
·
l
.
w r , w c ·
1
my ·memory
c asses.
.
_
·
re;ility
Rittenhouse
makes · serves me correctly, span at least
These are not by year since
statements
·ab9ut a. tranquil,
the
last
five
or six years.
the work displays a slow patient
rather contemplative rural life.
· Although the drafting ability of
continuity which would make an
.He makes statements. He is not
this
artist
is. immediately
account
of
t cm po r a I
simply an expert in graphics,
apparent, there is a great deal
growth . too
complex
for
THE.
MORAL·
MANIFESTO
BY JOHN ZEB.A.TIO
A
specter is haunting· America_~ the specter of Liberation. All the .
powers of the Estab_lishment have entered· into an unholy alliance to
exorcise this specter - police and politicians, church and state. right
and middle class liberal.
•
·
·
'
-The class of the status quo will be the fir~t to be cleansed.
It is the
class of the businessman, the general,· the political leader .. This is the
class of co-option founded on imperialism and-kept in power by the
middle class soldiery .. The class
is
symbolized in the cocktail the
martini, and emb_odied in the hypocritical.state of marriage.
'
·
The class <;>f
the !11ate~ialists is next to be cleansed. The corruption
of the class 1s_
mamfest
m
the second auto, the stereo, and the pills
and drugs of its desperate attempt at so.othing its alienation. It.is the
class of the fad, and the fashionable. The young of the middle class
are symbol~ed in the joint. Borrowed from the military's alienation
to the establishment,
pot has become institutionalized
by the
bourgeoisie. Within the class a struggle occurs between the . beer
drinker and pot smoker and their destruction is inevitable.
The enslaved class, the lowest economically, is the victim of the
Establishment;
It is kept in chains by the hyperdermic needle. It is
the pawn of the materialist. It is hopelessly alienated.
An inevitable struggle occurs between all classes and within all
classes until there rises to the fore a.new vanguard from the three.
Emerging from the heap of.broken-bottles of cheap whiskey, coming
forth from the stench of the burnt leaf, and smashing the polished
glasses of the drunken elite stand a new revolutionary class based on
unity and brotherhood.
The arsenal of _the new class includes the ideas of humanity· and
communalism, freedom and liberation. The class
is
patient for they
~no~ that destru~tfon of the classes of the morally d~prave, is
meVJtable though
1t
can be speeded up by revolutionary activity.
This activity is apparent in the destruction of the nicotine infecting
cigarette as a symbol, inspite of the capitalists and politicians
attempt at co-option .of the movement.
Let the corrupters
of society tremble at the sight of the
Movement. The youth have nothing to lose but societies jails and
they have
a
world to liberate!
*****
this short space. The divisions
are rather on the basis of.media,
that is, the oils and the waters.
In his
waters,
Rittenhouse
displays
a special
·and
immediately
obvious,
and
entirely pleasing freedom. Here
he has let himself go and has
dreamed
delicate and joyous
dreams
about
flowers
and
horses.
In the case of the
flowers,
the· delicacy
and
simplicity
and pure emotion
show themselves more forcefully
than in any of his other works.
The water color treatment
of
horses gives strict attention to
grace of line and subtle play of
sunlight on the colors of living
things. In a number of these
paintings
there
is a real
demonstration
of a sense of
plastic . values, especially in a
· very
pleasing
treatment
of
agricultural buildings.
In
his ·oils
Rittenhouse
displays
a
much more delicate
grasp of overall compositional
- sense. The oil paintings are much
more carefully composed and
seem almost photographii. They
are right in step with the the
neo-realist
painters.
However,
there is here, again no simple
representation but a very special
statement.
The two special
qualities
that
mark these
paintings
are the movement,
almost totally ·abstracted, in the
horses and the gentle subtlety,
achieved
espcially in a very
skillful
and sensitive use of
colors.
It
is
work .that invites the
deepest sharing in the realities
portrayed.
It
is
the role of every artist to
state what he has to state as only
EDITORIAL
-
-ouR
GRE,\TNESS AS,\ N/1.TION
tV.S
&EN
OIJR
CAP"-CITY TO 00 WHM
HI\S
TO BE
· OONE WHEN WE KNEW OUR CJ\IJSE Wf,S RIGHT."
0
RICHAAD h\. NIJ<.ON, NOV-3, 1969
~rivilege; Or Right?
PAGE 3
"Y
'?u sho~1~d be 1:roud that you have the 'privilege' of being an
Ame'.1can citizen.
'I:
ou should he thankful that you don't live in
Russia,,or someplace where you wouldn't be nearly as free as you are
. here ...
How often have w~ heard that line or something similar to
it?
And
yet why arc people still fooled by that ridiculous pie~e of
propaganda?
It
i~ ohvi_o~s that far_ too many people have a sad hang-up
~~g~r~mg ~~1v1lcgcs jtnd nghts. As American citizens we don't have
pnvileges,
regardless of what your ubiquitous politician will try to
tell you. ~athcr we h~~c :i~hts; !?natc,. ~nalicnable human rights.
We don t have the
pnvtleges of hvmg where we please, working
where we Pl:asc, etc. We have the RIGHTS to do these things. Read
the Declaration ·of Independence~
0
Nobl<Y
Patiiot,'in
case you've·
forgotten.
But_ then we· get drafted. What happened to our right to be free,
our nght to be our own master? Now we must not only give our
government the money. to buy the guns, we must also carry them.
~he!her we_ want to or not. But we should still be glad that we don't
hve m Russrn because.... .
Soz:ry sir, it d?,esn't wo~k any m<?rc. Don't try
·t?
placate us by
show1_ng us how well off we arc.
1 he only companson we want to
d~·aw
IS,
"what we have" and "what we ·should have."
_
We're angry.,Thc Chicago Seven is angry. The Panthers arc angry.
The Weathermen are angry. We're all angry.
It
reminds one of a line
from the play, "Marat-.Sade": "We want our rights, and we don't
care how ... "
Thank You
"The
CIRCLE
editorial board. offers its sincerest thanks to the
Mari~t Associates for its kindness in sponsoring the paper for the
remamder of the year. We appreciate their generosity and are
indebted to them._
1'HE
•CIRCLE
Sal Piazza
Terry Mooney
News Editor
Editors-in-Chief
Joe Rubino
Editorial Board
Bob Sullivan
Sports Editor
Terry Mooney, Sal Piazza,
Joe Rubino
News Writers
.
Phil Glennon, Tom McDonald, Frank Denara, Bill Deucher
Feature Writers
Dennis Alwon, Paul Browne, Ed O'Neill, Bill O'Reilly, Vince Begley,
Rich
Bala
Photography
Editor-Vin Winsch
Dick Davis
Artist
Paul Tesoro
Sports Writers
Kevin Donnelly, John Petraglia
Circulation
Manager-Jack Barby
Business Manager
Joe Rubino
Advisory
Staff
John Rogener, John Zebatto, Steve Harrison, Joe McMahon
he can state it. Marist is used to
a markedly different kind of
statement, abstract rather than
literal, urban rather than rural
yet Rittenhouse
fits
here. He ha;
something
to say about his
world and says it superbly. The
show will be hanging until "April
19. It
is worth the time and will
afford
an
opportunity for a very
pleasing contemplation
of very
fine work.
Remember Dinner
Dance
Saturday,
May
2; 8:00
Cafeteria
• sponsored
by
Marist Associates
Music by
LaFalcc Bros.
For info. Contact;,
Mr. and
~frs.
Dean
William,;,
or Mr. and Mrs.. Salv:itorc
Rubino
/.
PAGE 4
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 9, 1970
OARSMEN
SWAMP_NOTRE_--DAME
--
FOXES
CAP"l'URE
,,ILL
-
EVENTS
-
___
_Var~jty_
Conij~~r~-
Ele~!11,ts
__
_
--9,?
-
-
-
-
-
-
:
·:
Stronlf winds
·and
high waves;: Marisf boat,:."rowiniFclosest
to·, S {ro~ed by·, Joe, McC1.1e
-,~rid
~'
·
•
provided
Othe
stiffest opposition:
·,
shore~ into the.
:dead
..
water by
·
coxswained_' by
..
Joe. Bt:vilaqu;1/'
.
for Madst's
.
varsity and jayvee
. ;:
the barik while Notre Dame was
the jayvees rowed
:a
steady race ·
·
shells as
.
they
·
outraced
.
their. iible to
.
stay with the current.
with no sprints a!'}d 111anaged
to
couriterparts
.from
_Notre
Dame
:,
However; by• quickly
.
righting
win by·ovcrJ7 seconds.
>:=-·
;
.·
.last
Friday afternoon..
·<·
.:
'.
their course· and
•
upping. their.
·
Theja·yvel:S
_covered
the course.
The river was so rough, the.· stroke slightly,
..
the'· varsity· was · in 6:J8 a~ainst the Irish's. 6:35.
races were run across the river in-
.
able to cross the finish
-line
with . The· margm
·
would have been .
slight shelter of the west shore,
a six-second adv.antage over the
much, greater· had not the boat.'
\ the Regatta Row course beingaU
lrish;.Marist negotiated the 2000
beei;i·stalled when the port side
,but
non~negotiable.
·
-,.
meter course in.
-6·02
Notre
caught· a:Ccrab. At. no time did'
In the:varsity
.race,
Marist):-,'Damein6:08.2.,·~.:::-'
.
the 1.dsh_;shell. come qlose t<:>
with Pete: Masterson at coxswain};'
·
Seatings in<the
:varsity
boat
Maris(s:
·:..
..
.
.
.
.· .. .
. .
··
and Joe Ryan-at stroke, opened,; had
.Pete
Masterson at cox Joe
._·
Engmeermg the victory were
:
at 40 ~tro~es per minute'"and<Ryan·
at stroke_'follo~ed
.by
.
Coxswain,Joe Bevilaqua;··sfroke·
.took
a:_quick. boat and a:h.ilf:, Capt.-
Mike~ Arteaga',
Matt
.
Joe M~(;ue, M_arty Torre,
·J?an.
lead. Both boats settled to a rat~
.
O'Brien Bernie.McGovern· Steve
'
Capp
10,
·.
P au
I O lcn ,. M 1ke
·
of 33,~5 strokes per minutc.f?r
·
:
Sepe,· J~e_ Ritz/Steve:Palcnscar
,
Camardi; Bill Car~y, Bill Staudle
the_ b~d¥'< of~he
race, Mar~st and Greg Nestr()ke. Except for
and bow Joh~ Weis.
.·_··•:
··
mau~tammg their lead.
.
,
. •
·, soph O'.Brien, all
~~e
seniors:
Com~en t_in
9
on ~he : ~~ce,
With the race three-quarters.·
.The Jayvees race pr()ved to be
Coach BdlAustm surmised,. We
over;
a
gust of wind pushed the
a complete and
•utter
mismatch.
rowed a very good race;; .• we
·
·
·
·
made a·
few
mistakes but will try
:_!.
.•
·7M~ri~ti ere~ t~Jrii
b{~~Jred
t'~r last w6ek's
'~at
.· · .
.
against Notre Dame ori river in Beac_ort
..
Wlig)'.~ares?.~·
\}?:- .
.
.·
.. _
·
·-.A{tg·,,-ment,:.Jl.,f.--The
::Jeard
•··~... .•
-·-:~;:,-
.
,,·
..
This:·t~liwinter
a·tre!:U:~!t
9
t~~!t:,s
coacit,
Arr/:steinberg,
controversy- was raised over the\ stated that he was
•hoping
a few
way
t_he< N .C ;A;A,
··
and the
t·coHeges
would.· fileo formal
E.C.A!C:'L,rules
committe~s),:co~plaints
· with
th·e State
.
'controf
2
coll~ge .ithletes. The,;,13ureau of Human·~ights:
·
highly
.
pul,licized Langer_ case(\'
.Now
the point behind all this
revolvecp,:amund
the athletes'.;\is not to complain
;about
one
right
to,>:compete when. aridttjile;
.but
to poirit out a case
.
where h~-:wants to, assuming h¢
/:where
the
·
N-: C
.A.
A .
is
.
mairitainsJiis amateur status.
:·./,/overstepping
·its·
·boi.nids.
·
Since
.
A ri'~~,/_controversy
:
..
js
ithe
·
N;C;A.A.
acts
as
..
the
dev~lopJrig;()v~r: the rig_ht of the
~/·e.g
u
I
at·i
ng
b
o
..
d
y
f o.r
vanou~:~ rules: committees
·
t<?
.-:/intercollegi_are
;athletics,
it
govern tbe look~ of.an athlete: A.:shoudl, be encouraging gre_ater
,
current:,wrestlmg_
rule
.
states:Xparticipation
in al[sports.'If
so,
.. Contestants
shall be
.
cleajl
;why
do they institute rules to
shaven,
free
of moustaches,/eliminate
certaiq ''types"
and
sidebums·-:trimmed, at-earlobe<control
those·
who
do
level
and Chair trimmed and,
/~•conform."
.·
·
. .
~ell-grooni~d .. This i~, in the
·;
Looking
at
·
last Satu.rday's
mterestof good health.
.•
local newspaper, it would seem
As a
·,result
of this rule,'..that
Pete
Masterson
was
C.C.N
.Y ..
forfeited
·individual-.
enjoying the preparations for the
matches·
to Columbia
aiid_':Notre Dame race.Twoi:tderwhy
·
.
Fairleigh~Dickinson. The forfeits
•
he didn't tell someone: that he
developed· when two wrestlers. wasn't coxing thejayvee shell.
refused
to. shave
their_=~
If
you're wondering what that
moustaches;, both stating
·that:
.
was all about,
Notre· Dame's
the
rule
is unconstitutional.
jayvee
cox
was a 105
·
lb.
While
I question their priorities, sophomore
named ·· Barbara
I
do feel they raised_a significant
.
Walker. Actually,
if
a
girl
is
at all
question.
.
athletically
inclined, coxswain
The ruling , affected our team would be a natural position for
this year when, at Kings College,
··
her; girls usually being lighter
half the team had to get haircuts-
·
than men of comparable height
before being allowed on the and
certainly
capable
of.
mats.
_
··
·
communicating.
with
eight
What
is
the purpose behind
oarsmen
for
six
to seven
the rule?
C.C.N.Y.
coach Henry
.minutes
.. Notre Dame is not the
Wittenberg contends
that ~he only school using girl coxswains
.
ru~e. has no effect on wresth~
this year, William's varsity eight
ab1hty and that good health
is
is
being steered by
.
a
·
girl this
not a valid reason. Indeed, when year also.
Wittenberg
checked on the
Before parting one last item.
rationale behind the rule with a What
ever happened to the
member of the rules committee,
baseball
club
everyone was
the member spoke of. .. the kind rapping
about
last fall? If
of person we want to keep out,"
interest
is
so
great, why can't a
and
added,.
«we' re only
club wopc, and,
if
interest
is
so
interested
1n clean-cut
strong, why doesn't someone
wrestlers."
.
REALLY work on it? Peace.
In
dis cussing
the
rule,'
•on
to jron them· oufbefore meeting
Holy Cross next week. The boys
did a fine job."
·
·
·
Holy Cross and Storiy Brook
will invade Regatta Row. next
Saturday at
11
:00.
*****
Jack McDonnell
·arid
Dean Gestal upon being elected football
·
•
··
c:<rcaptains
at chib dinner last December.
Frosh
Frustrate
First.
Foes
OUtstr0ke
Irish.
A.C.C.
BY BOB SULLIVAN
·
i(
the
.performances
of
this
·
past weekend are any indication,
the
·
freshmen
crew team
possesses
_not
one, but two boats
capable·of
beating
the
•
opposition.
.
.
Atlantic rowing ori
.
the inside,
·.
·.·
There were few problems for
both.
freshmen
shells broke
·the
freshmen, although.the team
quickly. and easily knocked off
will
switch
from a German
. the Atlantic crew. The first boat
,
rigging to
a
standard rigging in
crossed the line·
iri
6:09,''the
·
an attempt to counteract a slight
second shell.in 6:20 and Atlantic
·
balance problem in setting" up
in 6:32.
•
the boat.
On. Friday
afternoon
the
fr~shme11
met Notre Dame, both
F
.. •·
·.,
..
b··
·11
D···.
•1·1
o
·
'
fr1:~~
T~Jit~f1~!'t~~:rir!/g;
.
0
0
a
:
.
r
I
s
.
'.
pen
Joe s·chrotz with Harry Manley
•
·
.
·
it;lt1fi~~t;;:~11i~ci
Target:·
St-.
Francis
boat, stroked by Dennis Stuaffer
·
and coxed by Mike Hawd, rowed
,
BY
iCEyiN
DONNELLY
•
triple-option offense of Texas
at the same pace;
The Madst Football_ Vikings University.
Both boats' established quick. opened spring practice this week
.
Defensively the team appears
leads
of a
length over the Notre
with many. new. faces trying to
·
set, allowing the new coach Tom
Dame shell. after
·the
first ·ten
win the fourteen positions hit by
.
Levipe,
.formerly
at Penn State,
strokes. The. first boat was Very graduation.
: ·.·.
·
.
·.
.
.
.
to drill the defense used by
_the
impressive in gajning this lead
Most of the positions opened
Nittany
Lions. The starting
·
since they missed the first stroke
by graduation· were. from the · secondary
.will
consist
of
and had
Jo
restart.·
offensive squad; leaving Coach
Co-capL
·
Jack McDonnell, Bill
The two Marist shells stayed
.
Levine a tremendous rebuilding
Rooney,
and
,Danny
Faison.
.
even over the first 1000 meters,
·job.
The only starting linemen·. Backing- them up are: John
·
when the first boat began to pull
returning are Emmett Cooke and Courtney, Lee Gestal and Mike
away. The second boat, fowing
Mik~ CahilL
'Battling
for the
,
Dis1glio. Fighting for linebacking
inth_e,outside
lane, used:the
:remaining,positioris
are: Frarik-· positions
are· Marty Keely,
strong current to good advantage-, Vanacore,· Bryan. Wynrie, Tom
Co-capt. Dean Gestal, Dennis
in. stayjng weU ahead of. the
Cardinale,. George Finn; Steve Claire,
.·
Bill Owens and Ken
Irish. Although- the firsf boat
.Van
.Buren
and Patil DeCabia.
··Vitale.·
The
toughest
fight
won easily, they encountered a
Fighting fortl).e quarterback ~lot
·
appears to be at the tackle slots
problem
_
s~Har
.·
to
.
the varsity,
·
are Jiin
Wilk
eris; Rafael Polo and
as veterans Harik Blum,
. ·
Bob
the wind blowing.them into the
.
Bpb
Brown.
-Fighting
to
Sullivan, Pau,l Lacombe and Bob
dead water.· Winning time was
complete the backfield ·are Jim·
·Kelly
are all returning. Cotton
6:04, the second boat foiling in
Lavery, Mark Rowinski, John
Nash and Don Hinchey will
6 ;) 5,
·
with
N9tre
Dame
McCarthy, and John Finnegan.
move in at defensive ends.
·
_ straggling in at 6:34.
.
.
.
Veteran Bill Pacdone wiU stay at·
Practice will conclude on April
Saturday saw the freshmen
·
split end while Bob
.sc·ott
and
19
with a scrimmage against St.
give similar,
·
though slower,
Bob Geisel go after the tight end Francis College (Brooklyn) .
performances
against Atlantic
slot. Emphasis is on learning
·
*
*
* * *
·
Community
College.
With
Dar~ell
Royal's
complicated
·
,.
._.-;;~f~.:
Vamty oarsmen break to an early half length lead over Notre
Dame
in
race last
I
Friday.
:· '."'-•£.'
J
~
...
;.,~
...
-.c::t
.MORATORIUM
APRtt·13'-15"
Keynotes
Jo
Be
TClx
Resistance
-.And
·.Fast.
·.' ihe
Vietnam.
M'6ratoriuJn,.:·reason'is
directly-~elated to the
to.
iro';~~ve the q~ali~;· of. o·ur ·
·
.. The. M~r;fo·riurn
- is also.
Mr;. Brow~
underscored
the
Committee
has
announced
·.April· 15thTax
Payer ·Rallies.,· common life and: to .. alleviate
organizing'the Tax Payer Rallies
primary focus ohhe activities
iri
endorsements of a Peace Fast on .. ·Becatis~ the goveritmenfspends
• huma11 · suffering."
Mr:. Hawk
O,Jl
April .15 in more than 30
:
a . discussio.n of· the strike of
· April
J
3-15 which will be largely :
$io
l
million a ·c1ay on w·ar .and - indicated that the.fast
will
focus
cities· across the nation.· .. Sain ·. postal ·employees .. •'While , the
focused.
0 n . college
and
the
.weapons·
of war, we. are· · on campuses and among'.groups,
·
Brown, a co-coordinator of the . government finds it possible and
university
: campuses .. 'rhe
·asking peop
0
fo
not to eat.
for
of religious people. He expla~ed . committee'
discussed·
the
necessary· to allocate .. millions
endorsements include more than . three
days and ·. to · send the . that many students were making . Committee's ·pt.iris: · '.'.0.n
April
each week
to
Vietnam, it finds ·
:212 . study. l)ody ·presidents: and, ... money saved while not eating t.o . arrangements
· with . university.
15th ·a(;ross the.country ,·people
•itself.
unable· . to. consider. a•
.-c~_mptis
newspaper editors ·along·:> aid the victims. ·or. the ·. war. ,
·
food servi~es to turn _ovenifoney
will .once ·agairi•.halt' 'business .as : significant and meaningful pay
with prominent -Americans such. Proceeds from the Peace _Fast . saved
by not eatmg to .the
·us u a'l' C;to: speak:' to
their
increase
for these and . other
·as Julian Bond, Ramsey Clark,
Fu?d wiU g.o
t?,
the American
Morat<?rium for_distribution
to
countrymen'
arid
:to·
.th.eir
government
employees.
The
Jane<Fonda, Rabbi Abraham J. : Fnends
~erv1ce. Committee
the. Vietnam. rehef agency and
President.·:rhey
will talk· about
spending for the war in Vietnam
· .. H~schel, Senator Harold Hughes,
Vie~!lam.
Relief
Progra;_ the. p·ov~rty.
groups:·· He. also .. Vietnam about the broadening·
intensifies
t.he· problem. of
·•·~ayor
John
Lindsay.
and. Natrnn.al
Welfare
Rights
ment10ned that fasting students
involvement in. Southeast:Asia;•
inflation and consumes billions
Senator Eugene McCarthy.' . , ·
Orgariization, ·. and the. United
in some places intended to come . and about the economic· crisis of dollars that are needed and
--·
. David Hawk, a c~coordinator
Farm Workers of.-Amer_ica. The · to .. dining halls at m~al time~ to
brought about by the spending
deserved
for
domestic
of
the
Vietnam
Moratorium
Fast reoresents our commitment
·
dramatize .the Fast.
.'
• ·
· -· •
for the war and the Pentagon."
purposes," he said.
·
;;r;o~t~tefh/F~!t~•~e
·~~~
. ·_Th; ~o~a.torium _activities at .Marist are _still in th~yro_i£s~· ofbeing formulated. ~onday night the fast April ist~e
10
h:it/~,e~:.gl~
th: ·
fast for.peace during April 13-15· w!ll. be m1~1~te~ \V1th a ~ommuna} I_lleal
ot
the participants ~ollowed
by
a candle-hg~1t march. !uesday
American
public
that
th~
for two reasons. The first is'.to
will be petit1onmg
for.
w1thdrawal from Vietnam. Tuesday. mght a documentary film, "Who Invited Us" . economic
dislocation
which
· · demonstrate
our
moral
will be shown. The film isa historical record of American-imperialisni . .The plans
for
Wednesday are still punishes n:early everyone will
·
oppositi~n to the continuing and
sketchy, buf there. is . a possibility of a rally on campus, featuring speakers on draft resistance and not · subside until . the war is-
exp and mg war. The second
American involvement in Vietnam.
·.
·
ended."
·.·THE
VOLUME
6 NUMBER
is)
MARIST
COLLEGE;POUGffK.EEPSIE,
NEW YORK 12601
APRiL 9, 1970
/
.
.
.
.
.
.
Environmental.
Teaih~ln;
.Af
Vassar
C
urricllluni ':Revision
Consider·ed·
.
Save The Planet
BY'ED O'NEILL
toward. presenting.· a meaningful
·• by Terry Mooney .
. ·. ·
· , ,
·
.
set of directives, however; there
.
. . .
.
. .
purpose. First it
will .
serve to
own teach-in on environment.
A
proposal
concerning
are others in whom such'faith'
Today at
4:30
p.m., m room
protest
the pollution
of. our
Dr.Rehwoidt
will·be kept quite
~utricuhim revision has _begun on . ·could .not he posited. Finally; it
_15
9
.
of:
Don !lel~y
I:Iall
an
e~vironment and_ second E-Day
busy· on April
22
not. only
,
~ts. way towarq adoph~:m. Jn .a ,.was felt · that. perhaps ,wliat. .1mportantmeetmg _1s
go!ng to_be, will act as.a_ podium _to educate
speaking here at Marist but a'lso
.:i,, __
, ___
:._.,"."
..
,J
9.1..11.L
P.
..
:.~-~'!
~~- wi_th: t~e:
•WO
u
l d ; be .. v frt u al, co/.e
::held .. _T_he me~hn~ _1s
_ bemg
m,,i;
popu)allon. Then
.are
feo/·
atVassar
College, Our Lady of
·>+·:'."'.~·:~·~,':"."'~:-g
ep.aJ~r1~ntalT-~c-~a1r1;j-e!li,ir:';Iequirements':'
co'uicl'.'''.
he~
~subtly
,oR.
rg:amzed '"by: Dr.> Ro_bert •·~•wno would
deny
-n1at- much ··1s ··.····LoutJes··High
·sc11uoi
itn<l
other
"
, ·
· °c?
o~nc . e
on ues_ ay,
a~c :•:presen(ifr'tIHs·plan
:and so, not . eh\\'qldt.
o,f the Chemistry
ne~ded
:to
pro.tect
our
educational
institutions.
The
. .2 4,:
t_he .. Academic
P?~19Y-.! really· any basic change from the
Department
and· pr?ponent _of env1rnnment because already too
Student ·Government as well as
Com!111ttee sought . the 1mt~at
present structure.
..
our ne~ ~a~ural Science maJor
!11uch has b~en done !o destroy
this paper and the-Division of
reactions .of· the college to its·
Not to be .overly pessimistic
a~d Mr. W1ll1~m Perrotte of the
.
1t. O~r cn~!ronm~nt is· a me~s.
Natural Sciences arc encouraging
p_rop_osal. _The .proposal _was. the:curriculum
proposal
wa~
B1~logy":Department ·.and the
The
mess. consists of a daily_ wholc-hearted
.. support
and
· outhn~d
.. 1_n a ~e<;~nt Ctrcle_ definitatel : felt.to·be
a:
ossible
subJect 1s E-pay. What is E-Day?
load
(!f
some
360,000
ton~ of
participation in the activities of
. colum~. B~s1cally, 1t1nv~lves_the. format
foi
the .future d1rectiori
_It refers to the Environmental
gasenus wastes ·that pour mto
.April
22,
they are too important
determination by_the maJo~ field
·.
of the· college·
·The
distinct
Day to be held on April
22
from
tlle
nation!s atmosphere
and
to ignore.
departmen.t of sixty credits yf
O
b s ·t r u c
't
i
~
n.s
to
i.t
s
coast to coast. ThJs nation~wide
collect in palls of murk over
; Remember
E - Day
and
the·
120
~egree requtrement ~1th. implementation would certainly
demonstration
has -a . two fold
some·
?
,300
con~mu_nities. As
remember
protect
you.r
the rem~m~e~ to be dete!ffimed
have to be dealt with. At the·
populat10~, urbamzatt<?n, l?Ower - environment.
(PYE)-
. by the ~d1V1dual stu.dent, The
meeting itself, possible means of
¥enera
t10_n, and
rnd_ustry
only required course would .be a · .. b .. f
th
.. crffi
It·: .. · . ·.
mexorably mcrease so
will
the
six credit.freshman seminar.
· • o ;ia
~n~
1
;se .. 1·
1
~u
~esd~:ret.
mess
for only
90
of these
:::
.
It
was the first. time. that
,pr_::n
_e • twa.s sugges -~ ·· t· a
co min unities have substantial.
·.students had participated
iri a
b:t
egr,~~ erd_co~mun:ca
10
3
IJOllution con.trol'programs. The
Chairill.~ri's
Co_uncil meetin~. ·
. whe.h.n
· .. e _epa_r men~· an ,
order of the day then on .the
Those
·present
were:
Phil.
wit
t e. co? rd matmg action of
22
d
·11
t· k · th · f ·
·r
•
· · ·
• .
· ..
· . · · · the Academic Dean· some of the
n ·· WI
~
e
e
orm
0
Glenn. on, V1ce-Pres1dent of the
. e· t·· •f • t'.
-' -. , ld b
environmental
teach.-ins on
S d t C
il.
1·
R
b'
·
curr n
'
nc ions· cou
e
_ .
. tu en . ounc. ,
oe
u mo, , wo ked
t
F
· th . t d t'
many
campuses
across
the
·. Co-editor of the Circle; Edward
··
F ·
.ou_ · rnm ·. e
~
u
CI\
s
country.
.
.
O'Neill and Gei>rge Roarty of
pomt ?f view, _the_ formulation
O
th
·
d·
f
t d:· '
·
· ·.
of maJor requirements
would
11
e agen a . o.r o ay
s
the
_StJ,1dent
Acad-em1c
•havet
·take· p·l•e·'
d.· 1· ·
meeting
sponsored
by the
Committee
O
·
ac · ·
m
la ogue
·..
.·
· ·
o· · ·
·f
N
l
S ·
· ·11
.
bet
W
eeri·. the>faculty
. ·and
'·or.
lfobert Rehwoldt
lVISIO~
0 · .
atura
c1e_nces
Wl '
~h~re
were.
h?
~erious-
students· of that 'department
in
be a d1scuss1on
t?
decide what
obJ~ctlons to the pnnc1ples on . order to have any validit. ·And
L--------------.
we here~ at Manst can do to
.
wh~ch th e P~
0
P?Sal w_as based:
so, the meeting concluded in the \ Committee
will shortly
hold · de_monSlrate our concern. Tii_ne
Senous queStionmg o~ it !~ough,
.
feeling that the current proposal - discussions
on this proposal.
.will also be alloted for an
~once!11e~ _the pract_icahties <?f does
contain
the ideas and·
Student
consideration
and
~xchang_e
of
ideas,
a nd
1.~s ii_nphmentaJion._T~lS
direction which Marist College
participationinthedevelopmerit
tnformatIOn.
All
th e Club
o1scuss1on. dealt direc!lY with
should
take
and: that
its
of
this curriculum revision are.a
Presidents
_or one of their
.; some oft.he present at titudes_ of · objectives could be·achieved; but
necessity so that
if
doesn't just·
!e .presentatives
have
been
segments_ of .th e college which
obviously·
there
-
are definite ·,become.
another'
slightly
mvited.
· would hind er and· perhaps e".en difficienci;s· which have to· be
different list of 't~ngs I have to
Th~re~re already plans in .t~e
defeat, the purpo~es for which _ faced and eliminated.
take'.
,
making 1~ so far a_s what this ,
the . new_ curriculum
,w_as
The
Student
Academic·
~amp~s wdl be do~n~. on E-Day .•
formulated.
mcludmg the poss1b1hty of. our
, • In a curriculum geared toward
·
designing
individual· student
programs, the. · present · lack of
cooper
at i o n· . b et w .e en
departments
concerning -related
cou·rse
offerings
and· the
non-existence· of an effective
advisory system were viewed as
definite
impediments
toward
·achieving
the goals of this
proposal. Phil Glennon voiced
what was considered
by the
students present to be the major
difficiencies of this plan.
It
does
not provide for any revision of
the content of present course
offerings. The placing of the
authority
of
determining
-requirements in t,ie hands of the
departments does not guarantee
to · the students that the best
possible
program
will
be
developed.
He
observed
that
some departments would work
Miguel Regna·ptayed at a benefit
marathon,
Babalacchia, at Marist before Easter.
Marist
Associates
. Who
Are
They
The
Marist
Associates,
although
little
of whom is
known
to
the
Marist
. community,
could
prpve
· extremely
beneficial
to the
student body
if
utilized more
fully.
· Made
up of parents
of
students
and
alumni,
the
organization was formed
6
years
ago when
it
was found that
many
students
couldn't· raise
enough money to support their
clubs
or organizations
. .
By
sponsoring such events as card
'parties and_ dinner dances, the
M.A.
began to help the football
. club, the Appalachian Reaction,
the
Children's
Theater,
and ·
. many ·other groups who came
• Seeking
aid.
All
remaining ·
money was presented to Bro.
Linus Foy for him to distribute
·to
areas which needed financial
aid.
. · Most recently, this group is
. responsible for the publishing of
·· this issue of this paper, since the
present CIRCLE staff had run
out of funds.
Although most of the involved ··
members of the Associates live
in the general area, many parents,
who live a distance from the ·
college belong to the group by
sending
donations.
The
organization sincerely hopes that
more · parents
will
become
involved more directly ·. in the
near future_ A good attendance
at their dinner dance (see ad.,
p_
3)
would greatly help the
M.A.
accomplish its goals.
i
\
\
;
. PAGE 2
.
·
.
.Through
A
/Broken
.Window·
,_
.
.
.
·-·
.·
..
-
CaseTwo:
accent,
dirty blue dungarees;
.
This is a middle-aged couple
beads,
Cochise·
headband,
Throughout
my stay
in.-. traveling.
around
.England
Spartacus
·sandals
and-brown
England
L:have
become
··becausethepeoplewholivenext
teddy bear. Dialogue can·_be
increasingly
aware:. of' the
·
to them went to Bermuda. At
practised at hoine and pcrfecte~l
..
abundant
.
amount
·_·of·
tourists
•
home
-
they· have. two teenagers
·
before the trip, standard phrases.
everywhere._-~
especially
(boy and girl) who :ire miridirig are: Yeah man, this is freedom,
Americans.
There are many
the dog, Muffin;
If
you are this
freedom
man,. and Jet's
·
get
different kinds of tourists and
-
kirid of tourist you will probably
ourselves together, man; arid we
here, in this supplement to the ·
·
spend most of· your time in got places to go, man and what's
"Broken
Window
Tourist.
clothingstoresshopping"forthe
it all about
_man
and I'm
Guide," I will examine four of
.
kids". or else in
·the
hotel bar.
·
homesick man. The noun
·
man
BY BILL O'REILLY
.
my favorites.
·
·
Pick out an exclusive men's store
can
.
be· used on conversation
Case One:
and go in. Let the wife do the
with
both. men and women
This is a young married couple
talking.
. .
since, on occasion, it is difficult
with
a five
·
year
old kid,
Wife: Excuse me,
I'm looking
to distinguish
among these
preferably named. Marvin. It is
for something in leather for my
tourists
- man alleviates the
imperative
that. Marvin be
son, Alan.
_
_
.
hassel.
·
super-loud
and
every
five
Salesman: How
about
a whip
..
Case Four:
.
.
minutes· shriek out:
·
"Gimmee,
.
Wife:· Oh• that's funny, that's
This is a family of five on the
·
take me, buy me."
If
you
·
are
funny, didja hear that Harry,
economy plan~
If
you are this
;
.
_
this kind of tourist.be sure to go
that's
funny.
Look· I want
kind of tourist each member of
to a very English restaurant and
something different in leather
the family is required to have a
order English food
,for
Marvin ... for my
.son.
camera. From Dad,.who has the
Marvin,
upori
sampling the
·
-Salesman:
Well; we have vests,
·
Polaroid special down to little
cuisine,
will then promptly·
jacket~,glovesand socks.
,
•
.
Shelley who has a baby Brownie:
bellow, "I hate tliis slop - let's go
.
Wife: Well. what are the kids
Sample tour with these tourists
home."
After
this he will
wearing these days?
goes like
.this:
"Look; look, a
immediately throw his plate at
·
Salesman:
Usually clothes
mailbox
anp
a lampost,
the· waiter.
Following your·
these days, madame.·
click-click-click.
There's
a
dinner take the wife and Marvin
·
Wife: Oh Harry, he's a scream,
grocery· store and a post office,
to a museum and let Marvin
isn'theascream,Harry?
click-click-click.
Mommy,
loose,
preferably
on roller
.
.,
Harry: Yeah,
a
scream.
_
Daddy, Stariley; Sidney a little
skates, to screain tear around,
Wife: Well, loo~_ what's the
boy
-
a. real
little
boy-.
and generally liven-up the place.
most. expensive thing you have? Click-click-click. Look children
From the museuni proceed to a
Salesman: This $400 full cqat
there's the famous Big Ben - get
• local gift shop where Marvin will
with matching underwear.
a picture now. We can't Daddy;
scan the merchandise·
and
pick
·
Wife: Well, wrap it up - if Alan
.
we're out of film."·
_
. .
out a solid. gold sword which
won't wear it we'll give it to the.
_
One tip for you.future tourists
·
costs
$150.
"I want that,"
dog. Pay hiin Harry.
- it's_ good to do your own thing
Marvin
·
will
holler.
Quietly
Case Three:
·
abroad. so stock up on those
·
explain to Marvin that Daddy
Yo~ng students or ex-students
yellow socks, Hawaiian shirts
and Mommy still love him but
disenchanted
with_ America.
with the palm trees on therri and
the sword is too expensive, then
Usually these tourists travel
_in
especially for you over S0's.- red
try to buy hftn off with an $80
packs
with
.
knapsacks
and
Bermuda shorts with high purple
Captain Hook dagger. After this
travelers
cheques. They are
socks and penny loafers - always
quickly
·
stand back as Marvin
usually found in the happening
.
in the best of taste.
.
t brows a tantrum
screaming:
part of town trying· to "blend.
This will be my last column
"Robert Silverman has a sword,
in."
If
you want to be this kind
for a·while as vacation time once
why can't I have a sword, I hate
of tourist
some mandatory
again beckons. But I'm sure the
_you."
.
characteristics are: Easy Rider
loss won't be too great with such
·ADMINISTRA-TIVE
dyno columns
·
by Luv Duff,
Japanese Joe Rubino and Qrp
McMahon.
coming your way
•
every week. Finally
my
vote for
...
school
name ~goes to·
-
Kaola
Bears .. The_ Marist College Kaola.
-.TRAINING-
PROGRAMS--·
Bears - it has a nice ring to it.
.
·*-*·*
**
.
.
••• t'vE • .,
OEVOTIN~-MUCII
--~6HT
..
ANn-:t<£st.Rii~u.it,·J11i-
,u~.111
_of.:
OU~
·
SIIVAGE
IIJPIRJI
:"$1Uff/lE;tS_
•• •
-for
An·
1gnoranf
Begillninll
RISK-
MANAGER
.
,·
.
Exercise individual judgement. and decision making on
diversified insurance risks.
-
CLAIMS
REPRESENTATIVE
Investigates_ and· a~sembles facts and develop narrative
,
histories or
.various
'claims. Examines and evaluates
evidence, determines causes and negotiates settlements.
These are administrative positions and do not involve
selling.
Profession.al
training - formal-
·classroom
instructor implement~d
by
on-the-job and field business
exposure. B.A. in Business Administration or Liberal
. Arts required. Salary and fringe benefits co_mpare most.
probably to the industry.
You_ are invited to explore employment opportuniti~
on campus.
Recruiting On Campus
April 15,
1970
Placement Office
BY
DENNIS
ALWON
'.'
As I walked lackadaisically
again," ''.Get-fifty
this time/'·.
definite
direction/
with
down the. street I
felt
a cool
"Kill
_'em.".
"Don't )et 'em get
·
tranquiliJy
·
written all over iL
November wind whistle through
away'."
'We're
winning."
Sµddenly, ou_t of the t!ninders
of
my hair. The clear·day.showed
"WE'.REWINNING."
·
.the
sky,,
there
was
an
the. trees· gleaming bright_ly-with.
.
Those
sou
rids·• reverberated
in·
:
approaching
_object
coining
·
up
their
'multi-colored
leaves
.my.
ears ov~r and•over:again. I
_behind·
the
__
wh_itedoud. I could·
.
hanging by the hundreds
from
-
tried to tum
if
off
btit
it was no
·
not make
.it
out at first; it
.was
·
each branch. A more beautiful
·use.They
got l_ouder-arid louder;
,
not yet cJear. lt; soon cameinto
spot
was
not
seen
_in·
this • The
roars
of the victorious.
vision and showed up as a gray.·
populated city.Ail that could. be . soldiers were overcome by the
cloud bursting- with anger with·
heard, except for
·the
whirling
· -
guns blasting in the pattle field;
.
the
·wind
as its guide.
.
.
:
_
wind, was. the. sounds
.of
some
And• asJ
,htlar
:all
of
'.this
I
_ask
.
I
._was·
definite.
It was so:· I
__
_
Ii
t tie
.
'.')
O
Ve l y"
,
children
my_self
_and-I
ask You "Who wins
star!edtreinbling
all over. l was
screaming and: yelling as they
.
a war?" "Is there. a winner or are
.
afraid: Scared.
.
.
.
.
...
played joyously in the street.
there two losers?".
-
.
._.
.
.
Then with one- sweeping gl.!IP;
.
What? Did I hear correctly?
·
Petey was ninriirig around the
.·
the
_
gray cloud devoured~ the
Yes,_ I think]
dii:L Johnny was
streets· smiling with
(a:-
smile a
-
white one, but
I.
could still see
telling Petey to say ... Oh! God,
It. mile wide.
It
must have been a
the white clo_ud lying motionless
.
was
·.so
sad. The words kept
mile.
-
The
beauty
in him
..
in its center.
·1t.
wiis now a part
.·
ringing in niy ears. I didn't want
sud d
~
n
1
Y exposed
itself.
.oftheiray
cloud yet it
.was
still
to
-
hear them. I kept telling
Meanwhile, he_ was still chanting
··
separate:
·
·
myself
that
I was hearing
.
the same verses. Thesounds·kept-
·
Oh my God. Petey, 1- had··
something else, but I wasn't.
It
echoirig. "Kill 'em; let '.em have
forgotten about-Petey. I had
to
was true. Johnny told
-Petey
to
it." What could I do; the pain:
..
get back to him. With sweat
say that he was retarded. He· was becomirig
tremendously
dripping down my· forehead I
suddenly started to scream out
intensified. It'll kill
me·;
It felt as
·
ran vigourously
•
to
the street
all over the street, "Petey is
though I were
~
victim of the
where. I saw Petey· yesterday. I
retarded,
Petey is· r~tarded."
voodoo doll. Fear, it had to be
turned the cc;>rner
and came to a
Soon all of Pete's friends joined
fear.
.
·
·
screeching halt.
·
I had
·
caught
in. "Petey is retarded, Petey
is
I couldn't re_member·anything.
sight
of a group of lovely
_retarded."
But P'etey didn't
I wante~ to recall the incident
children
- with their savage
know any better, and soon he
but ... No, it has gone blank. My
instincts
- leaning over one
joined the choir. "I'm retarded,
memor_y
has
failed
to
another as they.looked excitedly·
I'm retarded."
.
communicate a!'}y
·
messages to
at the situation. I got a little
Yes, he was retarded. He was
.
me.
·
closer for a better look~ There in
born with a ·deformed brain, but
I had
finally reached my
the midst of all those children
that wasn't his fault. He didn't
destination - home: I couldn't
lies Petey's body. He was shot
ask to be born this way.
remember how I got there for
by the others while playing
I just kept on walking, but it
my mind was on the brink. I was
"War." They all screamed out
EMPLOYERS
COM
11
(RCIAL
UNION
COMPANIES
-
wsha
00
snt't
1
th~e
0
usagmh
em.
YPa1b·n
0
sdsyta_rt
1
tedwtaos still unconscious of everything
"We got 'em." "Get 'em again."
1W
,
until the· next· morning· after I
"Kill 'em." "Let's get another.".
as though I were in a trance and
had apparently fallen into a deep
It was all my fault. Petey was
soon
became
delirious. Yes,
sleep directly after dinner. Then
dead, never again to take a
feverish
all over.
I was
that same piercing, penetrating
breath of air and it was all my
Paul
J.
McDonough, Personnel Manager
110 William Street
New York,
N.Y.
10038
(212) 349-7000
unconscious the rest of the way
noise
reoccum:d.
That's it.
-
fault. I killed him.
.
home. Thoughts kept coming, all
_
Remembrance had finally· come
As I walked away I looked up
that could be heard were the
to
.
mind again, particularly the·
at the
-trees.
The leaves were all
sounds
of ignorant
annies
dream
that
tormented
me
blurred.
It
was not
clear
fighting at night. "Nice shot,"
throughout the night.
anymore. I just kept walking and
«Twenty-two
Congs with one
Tl1e white cloud,
·so
soft and
asked myself "WHY?"
shot,"
.. Fantastic,"
"Do it
pure,
drifted
perfectly in a
• • • •
*
'THE CIRCLE
.•.
Letters
Balendar ·
Of
.Events
De~r
Sirs:
. · Where, bllLin
America, _can
one ,
print -
a · peace . symbol· on .
Page One and. inside the .paper
encourage
violent. revolution,
FOR THE WEEK OF APRIL 10-19, 1970
·· < ·· .
. .
Fl~IDAY, April 10
.
7,
8,
9:00 f,,M. Mov.ie - "BLACK.HISTORY-
LOST·,STOLEN_OR
STRA-rED , Room
249, Campus Center, Presented by King
Committee
. ·.
·
· sedition,
and
overthrow of
elected authority without a hint .
of any alternative. •·
7:
30 P.M.~ Evening. Division Dinner Dance
DINING HALL
CAMPUS GENTER
'
.
'
, . Mr; Robert C. Norman
Editor's Note: The only montion·
of· revolution
in
the March 19
CIRCLE to which Mr.- Norman
refers
is· in John Zebatto's'
"What's Left?", If.Mr. Norman
will carefully re-read that issue
he ·will find no encouragement
of violent revolution, sedition or_
.
.
SATURDAY -April 11
8:00 .P.M. Alumni Association Buffet and Beer Dance DINING
· HALL, CAMPUS. CENTER
SAIUNG Freshman Eliminati~ns at Cornell
11
:00 A.M Crew - Holy Cross, HOME
· SUNDAY - April
12
SAILING - Freshman Eliminations at Cornell
.
-overthrow of elected authority.
.
-
MONDAY - April 13
To the Editor:
In light of a current ~opular
song, I think your March 19-
article. ;"Dick Gregory Raps _at
·
Bennett'' . was · most a propos.
3:30 P.M. American Studies Senior Seminar, Dr. Richard Harmond
of St. John's University. Topic: "OBSERVATIONS OF ASPECTS
OF THE
TECHNOLOGICAL
IMPACT·
ON AMERICAN
CULTURE'~. Fireside Lounge, Campus Center.
·
.
··
-
TUESOA Y - April
'14
You know what he's after.
.
8:00 P.M. Movie - "DONA BARBARA" Presented by Spanish Club
Room
249, Camp.us Center
·
.
'
·
. .> . ·
·
WEDNESDAY -April 15
.
·
Thank you,
Don.aid Murphy
.·
.
. Class of
'64
8:00 P.M. Lecture
~
Herbert Apthekcr, Institute of Marxist Studies
Title: "NEGRO MOVEMENT -
REFORM OR REVOLT" Roon{
Another
Place,
249, Campus Center.
·
·
·
: .
THURSDAY~ April 16
.
.
Another
Way
by M. Philip Forbes
8:30
P.M. Lecture.- "DEVELOPMENT IN THE CELLULAR SLIME
MOLDS"· by Dr.· John Tyler Bonner, Chairman of the Dept. of
Biology, Princeton· University Presented by Division of Natural
Science_s Don~elly Hall
..
I was treated to the. gentle
pleasure of seeing the work of
Mr. Henry
L.
Rittenhouse, at the
Marist. College- Gallery exactly
one week ago today. The events
of the last week have shown me
7, 8,
9:00
.p},L _:
Movie - "PORTRAIT IN BLACK
&
WHITE"
Presented by King Committee, Room
249, Campus Center.
_
8:30 P.M.: Play··op·~ning - Neil
Simon's "COME BLOW YOUR
HORN" College Theatre, Campus Center
· . ·
.
·
FRIDAY -April
17
.
' how much· real value the vision
of the world, which .this highly .
skilled painter truly possesses.
I
have been engaged in meetings
of religious educators and in
some very unusual .business
in
8:30 P:M:. Play - "COME BLOW YOUR HORN" College Theatre
c.c.
. .
.
. ' .
'
.
-
-· . SATURDAY ~April
18
~~~~
P:M. Play • ''COME BLOW YOUR HORN," College Theatre,
my publishipg house. · I have
SAILING Quadrangular - Stevens, Columbia, Fordham and Marist -
watched the rankest indignity
HOME
-
·
·
'
perpetrated
upon
an
2:00P.M.Crcw-Amherst-HOME
unsuspecting body of students
SUNDAY, April
I 9
by those who believe that reality
C2:.C30
.. P.M, Play • "COME _BLOW YOUR HORN'_', College Theatre,
.: does not carry its own valuative
warranty, portrayed literally or
.. abstractly.
.
8:00
P.M. Movie - "IVAN THE TERRIBLE",
Part IL College
In the last show, which it was· Theatr~, Campus Center, Coffee and Discussion to follow, presented
-my
good fortune
t()_ review,
by ManstCollcge Film Program Series.
.:reality was . .allo,wed to speak...for.-. .
a
.
. ·
·•.
·
·
.
·
· 'itself in µiedia' which were,_
to
"·-::'.'~:
::
-·.::t·i\',;
t
0 ~;.
A'Iff EXHIBIT - thru April
26
~
-. . ·
-
.. say the least, not literal. There: Henry
L. Rittenhouse; "TWENTY SIX ACRES FOR FUN", Gallery
was,
.however,
clear
and
Lounge,C.C.
·
·
meaningful
stateineht
about
* * * * *
reality, in a more literal medium; -..... ~---:----~--:----------
......
-------..J
The show consists
of
oils arid
who produces a · lot . of pretty.
more present in this work than
water colors which depicta
view.
pictures.
Pretty_ would be a .skill. There is.vision.
of a _reality quite imlike the last
terrible
understatement
about
The work on view currently
group of yourig artists. Instead
tl:le profound
beauty
of the
can be treated
in
roughly two
- of an urban and mechanized
o· ks
hi h 'f
·
l
.
w r , w c ·
1
my ·memory
c asses.
.
_
·
re;ility
Rittenhouse
makes · serves me correctly, span at least
These are not by year since
statements
·ab9ut a. tranquil,
the
last
five
or six years.
the work displays a slow patient
rather contemplative rural life.
· Although the drafting ability of
continuity which would make an
.He makes statements. He is not
this
artist
is. immediately
account
of
t cm po r a I
simply an expert in graphics,
apparent, there is a great deal
growth . too
complex
for
THE.
MORAL·
MANIFESTO
BY JOHN ZEB.A.TIO
A
specter is haunting· America_~ the specter of Liberation. All the .
powers of the Estab_lishment have entered· into an unholy alliance to
exorcise this specter - police and politicians, church and state. right
and middle class liberal.
•
·
·
'
-The class of the status quo will be the fir~t to be cleansed.
It is the
class of the businessman, the general,· the political leader .. This is the
class of co-option founded on imperialism and-kept in power by the
middle class soldiery .. The class
is
symbolized in the cocktail the
martini, and emb_odied in the hypocritical.state of marriage.
'
·
The class <;>f
the !11ate~ialists is next to be cleansed. The corruption
of the class 1s_
mamfest
m
the second auto, the stereo, and the pills
and drugs of its desperate attempt at so.othing its alienation. It.is the
class of the fad, and the fashionable. The young of the middle class
are symbol~ed in the joint. Borrowed from the military's alienation
to the establishment,
pot has become institutionalized
by the
bourgeoisie. Within the class a struggle occurs between the . beer
drinker and pot smoker and their destruction is inevitable.
The enslaved class, the lowest economically, is the victim of the
Establishment;
It is kept in chains by the hyperdermic needle. It is
the pawn of the materialist. It is hopelessly alienated.
An inevitable struggle occurs between all classes and within all
classes until there rises to the fore a.new vanguard from the three.
Emerging from the heap of.broken-bottles of cheap whiskey, coming
forth from the stench of the burnt leaf, and smashing the polished
glasses of the drunken elite stand a new revolutionary class based on
unity and brotherhood.
The arsenal of _the new class includes the ideas of humanity· and
communalism, freedom and liberation. The class
is
patient for they
~no~ that destru~tfon of the classes of the morally d~prave, is
meVJtable though
1t
can be speeded up by revolutionary activity.
This activity is apparent in the destruction of the nicotine infecting
cigarette as a symbol, inspite of the capitalists and politicians
attempt at co-option .of the movement.
Let the corrupters
of society tremble at the sight of the
Movement. The youth have nothing to lose but societies jails and
they have
a
world to liberate!
*****
this short space. The divisions
are rather on the basis of.media,
that is, the oils and the waters.
In his
waters,
Rittenhouse
displays
a special
·and
immediately
obvious,
and
entirely pleasing freedom. Here
he has let himself go and has
dreamed
delicate and joyous
dreams
about
flowers
and
horses.
In the case of the
flowers,
the· delicacy
and
simplicity
and pure emotion
show themselves more forcefully
than in any of his other works.
The water color treatment
of
horses gives strict attention to
grace of line and subtle play of
sunlight on the colors of living
things. In a number of these
paintings
there
is a real
demonstration
of a sense of
plastic . values, especially in a
· very
pleasing
treatment
of
agricultural buildings.
In
his ·oils
Rittenhouse
displays
a
much more delicate
grasp of overall compositional
- sense. The oil paintings are much
more carefully composed and
seem almost photographii. They
are right in step with the the
neo-realist
painters.
However,
there is here, again no simple
representation but a very special
statement.
The two special
qualities
that
mark these
paintings
are the movement,
almost totally ·abstracted, in the
horses and the gentle subtlety,
achieved
espcially in a very
skillful
and sensitive use of
colors.
It
is
work .that invites the
deepest sharing in the realities
portrayed.
It
is
the role of every artist to
state what he has to state as only
EDITORIAL
-
-ouR
GRE,\TNESS AS,\ N/1.TION
tV.S
&EN
OIJR
CAP"-CITY TO 00 WHM
HI\S
TO BE
· OONE WHEN WE KNEW OUR CJ\IJSE Wf,S RIGHT."
0
RICHAAD h\. NIJ<.ON, NOV-3, 1969
~rivilege; Or Right?
PAGE 3
"Y
'?u sho~1~d be 1:roud that you have the 'privilege' of being an
Ame'.1can citizen.
'I:
ou should he thankful that you don't live in
Russia,,or someplace where you wouldn't be nearly as free as you are
. here ...
How often have w~ heard that line or something similar to
it?
And
yet why arc people still fooled by that ridiculous pie~e of
propaganda?
It
i~ ohvi_o~s that far_ too many people have a sad hang-up
~~g~r~mg ~~1v1lcgcs jtnd nghts. As American citizens we don't have
pnvileges,
regardless of what your ubiquitous politician will try to
tell you. ~athcr we h~~c :i~hts; !?natc,. ~nalicnable human rights.
We don t have the
pnvtleges of hvmg where we please, working
where we Pl:asc, etc. We have the RIGHTS to do these things. Read
the Declaration ·of Independence~
0
Nobl<Y
Patiiot,'in
case you've·
forgotten.
But_ then we· get drafted. What happened to our right to be free,
our nght to be our own master? Now we must not only give our
government the money. to buy the guns, we must also carry them.
~he!her we_ want to or not. But we should still be glad that we don't
hve m Russrn because.... .
Soz:ry sir, it d?,esn't wo~k any m<?rc. Don't try
·t?
placate us by
show1_ng us how well off we arc.
1 he only companson we want to
d~·aw
IS,
"what we have" and "what we ·should have."
_
We're angry.,Thc Chicago Seven is angry. The Panthers arc angry.
The Weathermen are angry. We're all angry.
It
reminds one of a line
from the play, "Marat-.Sade": "We want our rights, and we don't
care how ... "
Thank You
"The
CIRCLE
editorial board. offers its sincerest thanks to the
Mari~t Associates for its kindness in sponsoring the paper for the
remamder of the year. We appreciate their generosity and are
indebted to them._
1'HE
•CIRCLE
Sal Piazza
Terry Mooney
News Editor
Editors-in-Chief
Joe Rubino
Editorial Board
Bob Sullivan
Sports Editor
Terry Mooney, Sal Piazza,
Joe Rubino
News Writers
.
Phil Glennon, Tom McDonald, Frank Denara, Bill Deucher
Feature Writers
Dennis Alwon, Paul Browne, Ed O'Neill, Bill O'Reilly, Vince Begley,
Rich
Bala
Photography
Editor-Vin Winsch
Dick Davis
Artist
Paul Tesoro
Sports Writers
Kevin Donnelly, John Petraglia
Circulation
Manager-Jack Barby
Business Manager
Joe Rubino
Advisory
Staff
John Rogener, John Zebatto, Steve Harrison, Joe McMahon
he can state it. Marist is used to
a markedly different kind of
statement, abstract rather than
literal, urban rather than rural
yet Rittenhouse
fits
here. He ha;
something
to say about his
world and says it superbly. The
show will be hanging until "April
19. It
is worth the time and will
afford
an
opportunity for a very
pleasing contemplation
of very
fine work.
Remember Dinner
Dance
Saturday,
May
2; 8:00
Cafeteria
• sponsored
by
Marist Associates
Music by
LaFalcc Bros.
For info. Contact;,
Mr. and
~frs.
Dean
William,;,
or Mr. and Mrs.. Salv:itorc
Rubino
/.
PAGE 4
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 9, 1970
OARSMEN
SWAMP_NOTRE_--DAME
--
FOXES
CAP"l'URE
,,ILL
-
EVENTS
-
___
_Var~jty_
Conij~~r~-
Ele~!11,ts
__
_
--9,?
-
-
-
-
-
-
:
·:
Stronlf winds
·and
high waves;: Marisf boat,:."rowiniFclosest
to·, S {ro~ed by·, Joe, McC1.1e
-,~rid
~'
·
•
provided
Othe
stiffest opposition:
·,
shore~ into the.
:dead
..
water by
·
coxswained_' by
..
Joe. Bt:vilaqu;1/'
.
for Madst's
.
varsity and jayvee
. ;:
the barik while Notre Dame was
the jayvees rowed
:a
steady race ·
·
shells as
.
they
·
outraced
.
their. iible to
.
stay with the current.
with no sprints a!'}d 111anaged
to
couriterparts
.from
_Notre
Dame
:,
However; by• quickly
.
righting
win by·ovcrJ7 seconds.
>:=-·
;
.·
.last
Friday afternoon..
·<·
.:
'.
their course· and
•
upping. their.
·
Theja·yvel:S
_covered
the course.
The river was so rough, the.· stroke slightly,
..
the'· varsity· was · in 6:J8 a~ainst the Irish's. 6:35.
races were run across the river in-
.
able to cross the finish
-line
with . The· margm
·
would have been .
slight shelter of the west shore,
a six-second adv.antage over the
much, greater· had not the boat.'
\ the Regatta Row course beingaU
lrish;.Marist negotiated the 2000
beei;i·stalled when the port side
,but
non~negotiable.
·
-,.
meter course in.
-6·02
Notre
caught· a:Ccrab. At. no time did'
In the:varsity
.race,
Marist):-,'Damein6:08.2.,·~.:::-'
.
the 1.dsh_;shell. come qlose t<:>
with Pete: Masterson at coxswain};'
·
Seatings in<the
:varsity
boat
Maris(s:
·:..
..
.
.
.
.· .. .
. .
··
and Joe Ryan-at stroke, opened,; had
.Pete
Masterson at cox Joe
._·
Engmeermg the victory were
:
at 40 ~tro~es per minute'"and<Ryan·
at stroke_'follo~ed
.by
.
Coxswain,Joe Bevilaqua;··sfroke·
.took
a:_quick. boat and a:h.ilf:, Capt.-
Mike~ Arteaga',
Matt
.
Joe M~(;ue, M_arty Torre,
·J?an.
lead. Both boats settled to a rat~
.
O'Brien Bernie.McGovern· Steve
'
Capp
10,
·.
P au
I O lcn ,. M 1ke
·
of 33,~5 strokes per minutc.f?r
·
:
Sepe,· J~e_ Ritz/Steve:Palcnscar
,
Camardi; Bill Car~y, Bill Staudle
the_ b~d¥'< of~he
race, Mar~st and Greg Nestr()ke. Except for
and bow Joh~ Weis.
.·_··•:
··
mau~tammg their lead.
.
,
. •
·, soph O'.Brien, all
~~e
seniors:
Com~en t_in
9
on ~he : ~~ce,
With the race three-quarters.·
.The Jayvees race pr()ved to be
Coach BdlAustm surmised,. We
over;
a
gust of wind pushed the
a complete and
•utter
mismatch.
rowed a very good race;; .• we
·
·
·
·
made a·
few
mistakes but will try
:_!.
.•
·7M~ri~ti ere~ t~Jrii
b{~~Jred
t'~r last w6ek's
'~at
.· · .
.
against Notre Dame ori river in Beac_ort
..
Wlig)'.~ares?.~·
\}?:- .
.
.·
.. _
·
·-.A{tg·,,-ment,:.Jl.,f.--The
::Jeard
•··~... .•
-·-:~;:,-
.
,,·
..
This:·t~liwinter
a·tre!:U:~!t
9
t~~!t:,s
coacit,
Arr/:steinberg,
controversy- was raised over the\ stated that he was
•hoping
a few
way
t_he< N .C ;A;A,
··
and the
t·coHeges
would.· fileo formal
E.C.A!C:'L,rules
committe~s),:co~plaints
· with
th·e State
.
'controf
2
coll~ge .ithletes. The,;,13ureau of Human·~ights:
·
highly
.
pul,licized Langer_ case(\'
.Now
the point behind all this
revolvecp,:amund
the athletes'.;\is not to complain
;about
one
right
to,>:compete when. aridttjile;
.but
to poirit out a case
.
where h~-:wants to, assuming h¢
/:where
the
·
N-: C
.A.
A .
is
.
mairitainsJiis amateur status.
:·./,/overstepping
·its·
·boi.nids.
·
Since
.
A ri'~~,/_controversy
:
..
js
ithe
·
N;C;A.A.
acts
as
..
the
dev~lopJrig;()v~r: the rig_ht of the
~/·e.g
u
I
at·i
ng
b
o
..
d
y
f o.r
vanou~:~ rules: committees
·
t<?
.-:/intercollegi_are
;athletics,
it
govern tbe look~ of.an athlete: A.:shoudl, be encouraging gre_ater
,
current:,wrestlmg_
rule
.
states:Xparticipation
in al[sports.'If
so,
.. Contestants
shall be
.
cleajl
;why
do they institute rules to
shaven,
free
of moustaches,/eliminate
certaiq ''types"
and
sidebums·-:trimmed, at-earlobe<control
those·
who
do
level
and Chair trimmed and,
/~•conform."
.·
·
. .
~ell-grooni~d .. This i~, in the
·;
Looking
at
·
last Satu.rday's
mterestof good health.
.•
local newspaper, it would seem
As a
·,result
of this rule,'..that
Pete
Masterson
was
C.C.N
.Y ..
forfeited
·individual-.
enjoying the preparations for the
matches·
to Columbia
aiid_':Notre Dame race.Twoi:tderwhy
·
.
Fairleigh~Dickinson. The forfeits
•
he didn't tell someone: that he
developed· when two wrestlers. wasn't coxing thejayvee shell.
refused
to. shave
their_=~
If
you're wondering what that
moustaches;, both stating
·that:
.
was all about,
Notre· Dame's
the
rule
is unconstitutional.
jayvee
cox
was a 105
·
lb.
While
I question their priorities, sophomore
named ·· Barbara
I
do feel they raised_a significant
.
Walker. Actually,
if
a
girl
is
at all
question.
.
athletically
inclined, coxswain
The ruling , affected our team would be a natural position for
this year when, at Kings College,
··
her; girls usually being lighter
half the team had to get haircuts-
·
than men of comparable height
before being allowed on the and
certainly
capable
of.
mats.
_
··
·
communicating.
with
eight
What
is
the purpose behind
oarsmen
for
six
to seven
the rule?
C.C.N.Y.
coach Henry
.minutes
.. Notre Dame is not the
Wittenberg contends
that ~he only school using girl coxswains
.
ru~e. has no effect on wresth~
this year, William's varsity eight
ab1hty and that good health
is
is
being steered by
.
a
·
girl this
not a valid reason. Indeed, when year also.
Wittenberg
checked on the
Before parting one last item.
rationale behind the rule with a What
ever happened to the
member of the rules committee,
baseball
club
everyone was
the member spoke of. .. the kind rapping
about
last fall? If
of person we want to keep out,"
interest
is
so
great, why can't a
and
added,.
«we' re only
club wopc, and,
if
interest
is
so
interested
1n clean-cut
strong, why doesn't someone
wrestlers."
.
REALLY work on it? Peace.
In
dis cussing
the
rule,'
•on
to jron them· oufbefore meeting
Holy Cross next week. The boys
did a fine job."
·
·
·
Holy Cross and Storiy Brook
will invade Regatta Row. next
Saturday at
11
:00.
*****
Jack McDonnell
·arid
Dean Gestal upon being elected football
·
•
··
c:<rcaptains
at chib dinner last December.
Frosh
Frustrate
First.
Foes
OUtstr0ke
Irish.
A.C.C.
BY BOB SULLIVAN
·
i(
the
.performances
of
this
·
past weekend are any indication,
the
·
freshmen
crew team
possesses
_not
one, but two boats
capable·of
beating
the
•
opposition.
.
.
Atlantic rowing ori
.
the inside,
·.
·.·
There were few problems for
both.
freshmen
shells broke
·the
freshmen, although.the team
quickly. and easily knocked off
will
switch
from a German
. the Atlantic crew. The first boat
,
rigging to
a
standard rigging in
crossed the line·
iri
6:09,''the
·
an attempt to counteract a slight
second shell.in 6:20 and Atlantic
·
balance problem in setting" up
in 6:32.
•
the boat.
On. Friday
afternoon
the
fr~shme11
met Notre Dame, both
F
.. •·
·.,
..
b··
·11
D···.
•1·1
o
·
'
fr1:~~
T~Jit~f1~!'t~~:rir!/g;
.
0
0
a
:
.
r
I
s
.
'.
pen
Joe s·chrotz with Harry Manley
•
·
.
·
it;lt1fi~~t;;:~11i~ci
Target:·
St-.
Francis
boat, stroked by Dennis Stuaffer
·
and coxed by Mike Hawd, rowed
,
BY
iCEyiN
DONNELLY
•
triple-option offense of Texas
at the same pace;
The Madst Football_ Vikings University.
Both boats' established quick. opened spring practice this week
.
Defensively the team appears
leads
of a
length over the Notre
with many. new. faces trying to
·
set, allowing the new coach Tom
Dame shell. after
·the
first ·ten
win the fourteen positions hit by
.
Levipe,
.formerly
at Penn State,
strokes. The. first boat was Very graduation.
: ·.·.
·
.
·.
.
.
.
to drill the defense used by
_the
impressive in gajning this lead
Most of the positions opened
Nittany
Lions. The starting
·
since they missed the first stroke
by graduation· were. from the · secondary
.will
consist
of
and had
Jo
restart.·
offensive squad; leaving Coach
Co-capL
·
Jack McDonnell, Bill
The two Marist shells stayed
.
Levine a tremendous rebuilding
Rooney,
and
,Danny
Faison.
.
even over the first 1000 meters,
·job.
The only starting linemen·. Backing- them up are: John
·
when the first boat began to pull
returning are Emmett Cooke and Courtney, Lee Gestal and Mike
away. The second boat, fowing
Mik~ CahilL
'Battling
for the
,
Dis1glio. Fighting for linebacking
inth_e,outside
lane, used:the
:remaining,positioris
are: Frarik-· positions
are· Marty Keely,
strong current to good advantage-, Vanacore,· Bryan. Wynrie, Tom
Co-capt. Dean Gestal, Dennis
in. stayjng weU ahead of. the
Cardinale,. George Finn; Steve Claire,
.·
Bill Owens and Ken
Irish. Although- the firsf boat
.Van
.Buren
and Patil DeCabia.
··Vitale.·
The
toughest
fight
won easily, they encountered a
Fighting fortl).e quarterback ~lot
·
appears to be at the tackle slots
problem
_
s~Har
.·
to
.
the varsity,
·
are Jiin
Wilk
eris; Rafael Polo and
as veterans Harik Blum,
. ·
Bob
the wind blowing.them into the
.
Bpb
Brown.
-Fighting
to
Sullivan, Pau,l Lacombe and Bob
dead water.· Winning time was
complete the backfield ·are Jim·
·Kelly
are all returning. Cotton
6:04, the second boat foiling in
Lavery, Mark Rowinski, John
Nash and Don Hinchey will
6 ;) 5,
·
with
N9tre
Dame
McCarthy, and John Finnegan.
move in at defensive ends.
·
_ straggling in at 6:34.
.
.
.
Veteran Bill Pacdone wiU stay at·
Practice will conclude on April
Saturday saw the freshmen
·
split end while Bob
.sc·ott
and
19
with a scrimmage against St.
give similar,
·
though slower,
Bob Geisel go after the tight end Francis College (Brooklyn) .
performances
against Atlantic
slot. Emphasis is on learning
·
*
*
* * *
·
Community
College.
With
Dar~ell
Royal's
complicated
·
,.
._.-;;~f~.:
Vamty oarsmen break to an early half length lead over Notre
Dame
in
race last
I
Friday.
:· '."'-•£.'
J
~
...
;.,~
...
-.c::t