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Part of The Circle: Vol. 6 No. 19 - April 23, 1970

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I.
VOLUME
6
:NlJMBER-J9'.:
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.
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;
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',
•.·'
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APRIL·23, 1970
_41pth,eket=
RefO~IJl_-
Or
Revolution·
•'
~·-
...
..
...
.
...
~
·.By·
Sal
Piazza , '
.
. .
movem~nt as' one of libe!ation_ · rendered. insignificant, Aptheker
, ., Ori Wedilesday,·April .IS, the · paralleling the fightfor fr~edom
said that no matter whojoined
Stud:ent
Government Lecture
of the National Liberation Front
the movement it was·significant ..
'.:Series culminated itsl969-1970
of
Vietnam.
The
Black
In
relation to Vietnam,.he felt
piogram:with
Dr. _Herb.ert ·:movement today, he said, is 'that
his
most
important
Aptheker,. speaking
0
on ...
'~The . definitely revolutionary because
contribution was in helping to
·:,Black' Movement:: Refonri or. 'it
is
a:
departure from·'the past in "bring about a cessation of the
C
RevoluffoiL''.
Dr.' Aptheker,·' its demands and .methods.'"It
is
bombing of Hanoi. .
.
.
educated
af
CoiumbfaUniversity .. •
ail·
assertion of manhood, a
Dr. Aptheker made it. very
(B.A;
M.A~ ·
Ph'.D.), _has 1,een at
desire to exist ·as Blacks · not
clear during his lecture that he.
the forefront of radical, socialist,
calling
for · assimilation into
was not a pacifist. However, he
anti-war, · and · black -liberation
white society.
" said that random violence serves
movements.
since
1935. He has'
Dr. Aptheker
called
for
no ·purpose except to. increase
· authored arid co-authored more.· solidarity
among Black and
repression. He warned radicals to.
than
twenty ,.volumes ·dealing· White-
radicals
in· order to
be -acutely aware of who they
·with U.S. history American
liberate American society. He
are working with as well - as
Foreign Policy, · A&o-American ~aid. that. it 'Y.a~_necessary that · against.
history, .. socia,lc t)le_ory and
these groups Jom _togethe~ and
· In himself, Aptheker is an
· ·
·
·
·
·
· -.
·
philosophy. Presently; as literary
!Uove t_ogether t<? pd !',~enca of
inspiration to radical youth. He
T
.. .
..
·
.h·:.·.
1· .· .,H-
•·."'.h.
'.,·
~-. h.. ·
-executor.ofthepapersofW.E.B.
~ts racISt and mihtanstxc.power
isinhislatesixties,and·hashad
.. 8-_a.··
..
c
~
n ..
·_
.
1g· .·_
·_
1:g·..
'· _·S
·
...
_p.~~o~s~
r~t~~i~got:fgf~~~
st
~~t~r:~rni_ng
the.· peace
f~~~r~uJ!!tftet~~!~t~/:r/~r.
·
documents of the black .leader, moveme_nt
_10 ·
Amenca, Dr.
the early 1950's he was called
'
· h D
the firstvolume·tobe·released
Aptheket's
attitude
was
before·
a-Senate
hearing
. a rt '
ay
..
sometime in 1971.
In
i966, Dr.
optimistic
.. H"e sees the.
committee. But Dr. Aptheker
.
.Aptheker
.was the Peace,. and .· movemerit .as sprel!-ding into all
has not
quit.
He remains
· · · · :.
·
· ' ·
-
:
· · -. ·
Freedom · Party candidate . for · · groups 'of American -society. He. involved and totally committed.
: · '' By
John
Tarranta
· · remedying it. · The . committee ·Congress· from Brooklyn/
N.Y: .
attributed the progress to the
In his closing statements he said
.
Earth,
Environment~
and
hoped that a group of concerned
During. his lecture, Aptheker
·
vitality and id~alism of young
thatthe radical must possess two
· Ecology stim up the themes of
students
would
form
a related many of his experiences· Americans. When. asked if the
qualities: passion and patience.
Apri1•22
aria
the efforts made
permanent committee to look
in
social·
movements.
He-. peace. movement
had been
Dr.
Herbert
Aptheker
is
yesterday to-save ourselves from
CONTINUEDON6
characterized_
the
Black
_co-opted by politicans and ~hu_s definitely a man of passion and
unnecessary,
uncontrolled
·
his patience
is
evidenced by his
pollution. It seems up to · now
optimistic view of the future.
only· a very _ few people have
* * * * *
realized· the· seriousness of the
problem· facing not only the.
American _people but all who
: inhabit ,this
-,pla,net,Eaith;
, _The ·
£_·-,12,~-};i
;,}efxf~~;.:Ji'if
~t;}~tr_·,;f
l.~JJ~:~_>Sli:~i{S
~
t:·-
·
· ·· ·.
e orts ~f'sucn.{e-..y·
0
people·tq;
c · · . , ·
'C
.,
correct','. an,f•. con troFif
are , ·.
.
:~;;
.waisted~ This wasthe purpose of
i}\ ·
.
E-Day;
fo
inform' arid educate •
:_,_:;f
_
..
'
the general public ori tlfe critical
·
· • situation of our-; environment
·
in .
t,Ke_ hoP"e·'s
(hat.
the.
''unconcerned''
would realize
>
: the•. problems and· face'
up
to·
thein, oyer~poptilation · arid the
•loss
:of.<iiaturaJ
•~sources. ·Mr.
P,errotie
of<the
Biology
_ Department points· out that.we
··
. live·_·
fu, a closed system, that.
is .
nothing · leaves . the•·. earth · or -.is
befug added to
it;
yet mor~ and ..
more.people use
it;
It
is
hoped ·
that ..
a
·,
maj orHy·;or.:
the: ..
popu}atiori would begm to takcf .
•effective· meitsui~s
.
in-Jheir _local·.
communities to begin to remedy·.
the_ situation: We·must also urge
for. stronger government control ·•
on· boththe national and state
levels..
. .. .. ..
.
. -Supported and ..
encouraged by
the Student Government and the

. ·Division; of· Natural. Sciences,
concerned.· students pllrticipated··
in the program ,of the d~y .. The ·
· teach~in · included.· talks . given· by
two
faculty· -members,
Dr. ,
Robert
Rehwoldt, 'Associate··
Professor of Chemistry;· and Mr~
William ·Perrotte·,
Assistant
Professor. of Biology: Talks_
were-
also - given by local _citizens
CfD
_
Ignores
,•
..
:··-
.
.
.-
.
•,·-.
including Mi.:Michael Mo~ and .
Mr. Bernard Veit Dutchess from
the county Board of Health '.and
Mr. Peter McGuiness; a member
of the law firm ·of O'Donnell and·
O'Donnell who spoke on the
.
legal.implications of combatting
pollution. For _those interested
in. seeing what was talked about,
the movie .. Silent Spring" .was
shown. · 1n addition students
solicited
signatures here on.
campus and . in Poughkeepsie.
The. petition
called on the
communication media (T .V. and
radio) to devote an entire week
to further inform t'1,e public of
the pollution crisis. ·
It
was
realized
by the
committee organizing the events
of E-Day that if the day was _to
have been effective then the
spirit
of the day must be
continued.
The purpose of.
E-Day was to inform the public
·of the situation and encouraging.
them
to
seek
means
of
Student-
-·Petitions·_
.. By Thomas S11llivan
· · ·
·
Because,· of strong student
protest on· the Committee on ·
. Faculty Development's decision
not to recommend the renewal
of
Mr. - Jerome
Relllenicky's
contract,
th_e CFD
has
recently reviewed this decision
Despite,· however, the presence
of nearly 600· signatures of
students objecting to the ruling,
the CFD has chosen to adhere to
· i~s original
decision.
The
committee, as a w~ole, feels that
the petitions did not add enough
new information to . what the
members
were· aware
of
originally.
Although- a large
number
of· students
have
demonstrated support for Mr.
Remenicky, the CFD has ruled
that
not
enough
evidence
.
-
.
attesting to · Mr .. Remenicky's
teaching' COJI_lpetence
had- been
presente~.
Many
past and
presen·t
students
of
Mr .
Remeriicky, however, signed the
petitions..
• · · • · ·
.
· ~-
The stu"dents who organized
the -recent . movement · for a
review of the decision now plan
to appeal to Brother L4tus Foy,
with whom the ultimate ·decision
rests. As they feel that this is a
critical·
issue for the Marist
community
in general," these
students urge all those who wish
Mr. Remenicky to remain as an
instructor at Marist to make
their feelings known to Brother
Foy.
This
should be done as
soon as possible, as the semester
will soon be concluded.
••••••
HODGKINSON
. ··:SPEAKS:::·'.
By Terry M~oney : .
Pr~fe~sor Harold Hodgkinson
author, lecturer, and specialist in
curriculum
reform
returned
· Wednesday, April 15, to Marist
to speak to the community on·
"Curriculum-
Change
• A
Challenge· to the Humanities.','
· Professor· Hodgkinson .who
is
currently
ieachi_ng
at the.
Berkeley campus of the Univ. of
California, · also -works with the
· University's Center for Research
and
Development
iJ!
Higher
Education •.. The Professor last
spoke at Marist when he was
Dean . of Students
at Bard·
.· College · in Rhinebeck, New
York. He pointed out in his
lecture that he . had noticed/
:,since
his ·
1ast visit; a certain
·growth and change in the Marist
student• as- indicated by the. ·
improved
caliber
of the
questions which hewas asked .
• Professor • Hodgkinson called
for in
his
talk a redefining of the
humanities
from a content
definition to that certain core of
.ex.periences
which
can be
· .. acqtlire4 in a variety of settings
that
·
are ·not·
necessarily
academic. He then
went-
on to
point out that .technology, that
is
the. act of arranging the world
. so we don't have to experience -
it,
has influenced the decline of
CONTINUED
ON 4
Students demonstnte
at
Poaghkeep!ie
Com11toue during recent Moratorium.
.i
{·,
\<'I
··•
!
': ,!
I
·., I





























































































.
-
...
,.
.
.

. A Community's
Tragedy-
-';:·.-·
,
By
Jim McLoughlin -
.
uncompromising m:·his·honesty~·:
It
h·as. now ·.been. several · Unfortunately this
is
not
true
of
months since the Committee on
many other faculty
·members.
F:
a c u l t y
D e v e l o p m
e
n
t,
They pre~end to be your best
recommend'ed'
'that
,.Mr
•...
friend in the classroom but out
..
.
.
Rcmenicky be relieved
-
of
his
::
iti'-tlie
halls they don't seem to
·
.
...
-..
·:duties
here at Marist. Despite the
_know
·you quite as-~ell.
J
am·:

-.
·
·
:efforts
:of
some very serious
·:
glad to say that
I haye never_
'
'students·
toward the rehiring of
known
.Mr.
Remenicky
·
,to
·
Mr.
Remenicky the C.F.D. to
··.
partake in such divine·arrogarice ..
·
date, has failed to
.
take any
.
The. _C.F:J?·'s
..
action on M.r.
·
.
significant action;•
.
·
·
~ememcky :is_ httl~
.
short of a·
Mr.
Remenicky
is an
disgrace. It·1s·not)~St
the CFD.:·.
invaluable·
asset
to
Marist
that I condef!1n;
.1t
s the whole
:
students.
I
had ·. him for two
·
system . of Faculty· evaluation ..
semesters last year and
I
found
The· present
method
-
simply·
himtobeexcellent;notonlyas
doe·~n•t
~ive-
eno·ugh
a teacher but as a person. To say
· ·Con
s1d erat!on
·to
student
that he was lax with his students
.
o Pinions.
·
And
·
after all,
.
this
is doing him an.injustice; honest
~
instit_ution exists primarily
-
to
would. be a better way of saying· serve
·.th~
students, not the
it. Mr. Remenicky
· ·understands
faculty or anybody else .
.
that the relevance of his subject
Dr~wing judgements on others·
·
..
'DIECRCLE
·
.
APRIL23.
1970.·
.
Nick
Buffaidi arid
"so~••
Lou Miressi
in
scene
from;COME BLOW YOUR
HORN\
in todays' world is questionable
is
..
Perhaps .the one area where
and as a result he does not force
man is still most unsure of
theology· on
·
the students
he
himself. Yet we so often take
merely
exposes them t~
.
it:
tJlis liberty. without realizing.
C.
.
·,
,
..
·'
n· ,.
.
.
y
.
. .
ll
Neither
does
he force his
that.the
dignity of another
.. ·

ome·
...
.
ow
·: ·our.
·Orn,:
students to attend classes. This is
person is at stake.


.
.
!tt:;Jlnc~
0
i!it~~etiot~g~n:~:~
id::rrrar:
0
!~
~~~g ~~
!:~ua~~
.
.-
·v.
er.·
y·'
-.
E·.··•.n'<-:'
._·-t·

..
·.e·._·_<r:.
·ta.ill
iri:g·

...
be·sure that the students who do
entrusted
to make Judgements
attend
are
interested
thus
on others consult the college
.
.
.
-
.
making the class worthwhile.
catalogue. There they will find -
By Tom Hackett
again.
.
everybody'~
·
problem - Carole
As far as the subject matter is
quite in order the purpose of the
Neil
Simon's
hit comedy·.·
She was· played·. by Carole gets a wedding ring, Alla·n,gets
·
concerned, Mr. Remenicky does
school..
It hopes to achieve'.
..
the , ·"Come Blow Your Horn" was
.
Spina. Carole th,rouw.out th~ the woman of his
.
dreams, the
..
not aUempt to have his students
development of the supema!ural
recently·
performed
by the' play confronted Allan with the father gets grandchildren,.
·,md
study
.the
bible· from cover to
!11an and woman wJ:to. thmk_s, Marist
.
_College
..
Theater
Guild. question of· marriage and never Buddy.his.independence:
.
··.
cover.
Instead he stimulates
1udg"'s and a~ts cons!stently m The play,
··which
was first on got the answer she wanted. She
Patricia
Jameson portrared
.
meaningful discussions on many
~ccor~ance with the nght reason
Broadway
·and
was, then made leaves and
.isn't
heard from.
·
the
dumb blonde who hves"'
·
topics; the least of which is not
il_lummed by the supernatural
into
3 . movie starring Frarik Then· she walks irito Allan's upstairs; she bounces in and out,:
..
•theology.
hg_ht_ and the ~xaP,tples and .Sinatra,
deals with
·a.
Jewish chaotic·
fiving room and . •in, adding.to thelaughs. JeanB.ellin
·.

Outside the classroom,
Mr. teach_ings of <::hn_st. l would
I
bachelor of thirty who is living a between the. yelling; the fighting ends the play by bringing on the
Reme·nicky
is
a uniqt1e
hestitat_e
to th~nk _th~t the
playboy's life until.-his world and
the
phone
calls,-Allan
stage the
.much
talked about
individual. He
is
a sincere and
C.F .D., violated this pru~c1ple.
caves in·
.around
him .. Andrew
Proposes
·.
~o her. This solves
CONTINUED
ON
.3
extroverted
person;
quite
**-·***
Zoccolirdidafinejobpq_t;"traying
·
.
.
·
·
·;.·1.·
H
..
:o·u.G·.H·T.
·.··s-.··oF:
us!~t~n~i~l11f~!:;1ff
The<Classic·.ROck
Albunr
.
·
·
.
wedding TL.". To make.matters·
·
By Richard Bala
·
·
more comp.ex Allan's younger
·
,
.
·
.
:
..
,
·
.
·
•.
_
.
_
. •
·
.
-
·
brother Buddy, played by· Louis
Just as in literature, where w·e have certain
'.classical
pieces which
Miressi, decideds to declar~ his
manage to' capture the essential essences,of'human n;1ture,
;iS
too are,•
·•··.
.
By A. Pig
seen the soot flowing out of the independence
from
Jewish-
there such classical "pieces" in rock music. ~'The B.eatles"·aJbunt is
-
By the
:i
time you read
.t~is
chimney of Champagnat or Leo parental\ domination-
arid
,live-
one such piece;
-
The outside view· may be:' Sllllple;
>white,
an!!;
;article
~•E-Day'~-·-will
have come
:Rall.
. .
. ... ,.:,·•··"'
·,-
..
with-Allen~ Within
'thi:ee'weeks
unpretentious~ butthe insideis•oilly ~'simpleu
iri'the
sense thatJt has.
:
land
gone,. it is with. this thought
Do y.ou ·. care
if
SAGA
·Food
Buddy.
is
:,transfonneil
from a managed
,to
capture, and isolate~· th,e bllstc·:etemerits that
forih''rock_
-
.
:in
mind
th.at
I.am -writing you. I
Service uses paper plates and timid virgin, who eats milk and
music today;.Jt not-only gives you all the colors of the r~inbow (all
·
think we are all, if not distressed
·
plastic utensils that only add to cake over the kitchen sink, to a the facets of the
'rock
musi~al spectrum), but at· the
.
same time
,over.
pollution
are
.at
:least. the problem of waste disposal. fig newton thief who does the
manages to analyze the root make-up of each color (of each aspect
·.
knowledgeable of the problem.
Why
··~im't
washable dishes and
.
cha-cha.
·
.
of rock).
· '·· -' •
·
·
·
.
··
·
·
•.
·
_
.
• ·
.

·
·
...
·.
·
·
· . - ·.
The problem as
.
most people
silverwate be used: at
-all.
times
.
Their father owns an artificial-
If
you- \;Vanted to locate this album geographically on some kind of.,
view it seems to· find no one
even in•· tfie
"Rathskellar,
Mr. iruit
business and,
.
typically,
"map,'' you would probably find it somewhere. between Russia arid

individual
at fault. On the
Greene?
_
·
both
boys
work
for
him.
·
Prudence. The.se two songs se~ up th.e frame (boundaries) withi,n
.contrary,.
we are all at. fault
Another
proplem
.on
this Nicholas Buffardi played the
which the Beatles
will
work. 1'.heJirstsong ("Back in the U.S.S.R/')
·
individually and collectively, i.e.
campus is the beer cans· and father. His acting was more than
is a take-off on the old Chuck Berry "Back in
__
the·U.S.A.'' - Berry
we are all pigs.
.
non-returnable
bottles. Take,,a satisfactory but he either stood
being one··of the fathers pf rock'n'roll; The Beatles throw in a little•
It is:
,
not my intention
to
walk down the river some sunny to near to the footlights or had
segment dedicated to the Beach Boys· probably the most popular
expose the dire statistics of the
or smoggy day and notice all the·. to much make-up on. The father
group here, and. in England, · back before. the '60's, and· before the
day of our doom:- It
is
my
beer cans; then
,walk
on
,this
becomes v~ry upset to find.that
"English
Invasion;''
Wheteas "U.S.S;R."
is
·a
heavy~hitting,
intention, however, to. call upon
campus and find many more in his · second
·
sari has decided to
hard-driving rock'n'roll tune,- "Dear frudence"
·
is a very deQcate,
·
e.v er y
member
of

th is
:
tlle. pit along the south side of
-
become a "bum''.
fragile song
·about
a very delicate, fragile girl, as one would expect a
community
to
look
at.
Champagnat; Yes, we are all:
ThetypicalJewishmotherwas
girl·na~ed
"Prudence" to_be. Forthis.song,
the·bookC'Beatles
themselves and this insUtution.
pigs, not just the residents of the
·
played by Susan Balasko. Mrs.
Illustrated'~ has a picture of a young girl dressed in lace arid a cameo
to stop fouling the environment
South
.side
ofChampagnat Hall.
·
Baker decides to run away
.from
.
on the· neck of her
djess, gazing nostalgically through a:rain-stre~ed
Do you own a. car?
If
so have
.
I am signing this article with a
·
home
·
·
too since
.
her husband
window;
,
·.
· .
.
·
·
.
.
.
·
·
..
you
..
had a pollution_.·contr<;>l fictitious
but
•fitting
name becomes unbearable to_ live wi~h
·
..
If
the first two
'son.gs·
give the::aibum its length (how far it can go)
.
~evice put on your exhaust
·
because it
is
not 9ne. person's because·
both son~ are now
the next cut gives you some idea of.its depth (how <Ccieep" the-'-·
system?
If
not, why not? Don't
~
struggle,but
all
of ours.
_
·
·
.
playboys, and neither one cares
albtint can.get). Even if, in, the final analysis, you.conclude that the··
·.
cry about air pollution
·if
your
1
-
We can bitch about
.pollution
about~.the
"busi,ness'.'. Allen's
references ar~meaningless; at least the Beatles·have had you thmking
·
·.
automobile is fouling the air.
·:
·
·
all day and point our fingers at apartment be~omes a madhouse,
about.~what it means."
Here,
theBeatles(asin"Cfy
Baby," "Savoy
....
D o .you
know
if. the
everyone
excepting
,
ours~lves, in the· third and· final act when . Trnffle;» ~•Revoh,1tion," et~.) show that the~e is more to rock music
-
incinerators in the buildings on
but until we clean up our own Buddy is
-doing
the
£ha
cha, his
than just
;i
"good sound,''
·
.
.
.
··
.
..
· ·· . .
I
campµs have adequate pollution
campus we are still pigs.
'!People.
mother comes to live, and
_his::
ln
most of-
the
songs in the album, the BeaUes
·
have created a
.
control_ devices?
If
not, why. who
'liv.e in.· glass
houses
father comes to scream. All ends
_
tightly-woven· structure betweenJhe mood generated by the music,
·
11ot? Have you ever walked on
shouldn't
.throw
stones.'~
·
·
well, however, when Allans only
and the feelings contained within words.
I think
if
you try to find
.
this
_campus
in the morning and.
* * * * *
·
~ove
_come::s
upon the scene once
·
out what the words mean
in
these songs you are on the wrong track.
Like the song in
"John
Wesley Harding"- The Bea:tl_es
have chosen
.
words more for the"feelirigs (emotions) they generate than for their·
·meaniogs. :
.
.
·
·
.
_
.
·
Certainly there is no meaning
in
the phrase_ uwhy
.don't
we do it in·
.
the road?'\ if it
is
just. read; but, when done. with Paul's raunchy,
crude, bluesy, gutsy voice with the pounding; driVIng, primitive
'
sound of the music, waves,of feelings are issued forth. The
sanie
hoids true. for "Ob-La-Di,'~ "Bungalow Bill," "Guitar Gently Weeps"··
.and "Piggies.". There are no .. stories" contained
41·
these songs, just
emotions given off by· the fusion of the moods of music and. the
. feeling of words.
.
.
·
.
·
.
·,.
· Tltere are songs in this album that touch upon the folk influence
..
in music ("Rocky Raccoon"), the blues influence (Yer Blues) and
the predecessors of acid-rock ("Helter-Skelter~). There are songs
included on the album just· for their .. fun Quality" ("Honey· Pie,"
...
Don't Pass Me.By"),-and songs included on the album for.the sake
of their beauty ("Blackbird,"
"Julia," "I Will,'' "Mother Natures
Son,'' "Long, Long, Long,,) There
is
the.
highly
progressive and
.
experimental "Revolution" whose impact won't be fully realized or
,
appreciated until at least after Paul's death. And then there is the
last song: "Good Night" - what a song to end the show. It rounds
out the program. It makes the album complete. The first time I
heard the album, after "Good Night" went off, I felt that putting
the album on
again
would be meaningless; that I wouldn't be able to
get any more out of the album playing it
again.
That-song
is to the·
album, as death
is
to life. If you have any doubts as to the validity of
.
the title of this article, I would
ask
you to merely run down th~ list
of all those great, great songs (30 in all), look at the consistent
quality of all of them, and look at the wide, diversified "types" of
songs they cover, and then ask yourself what other group would
have the audacity to even think of such a feat!
•••••
,l
















































.'I'
. · . APRIL
23, 1970
DIEORCLE
PAGE3
Freshman
Seminar
Proposed
._.
The-
Academic
Policy
.
'
·committee
has recommended to
.
the faculty of Wabash College
that the College inaugurate a
program .of Freshman Seminars
beginning in the fall ~emester of
the 1970-71 academic year. The
suggestion
,
for this came
in
a
.
me·morandum:
.
.
..
The aim of the Freshman
Seminar program is to engage
interested freshman quickly in
scholarship and the intellectual
life of the college. It should
involve (a) the exploration of a
topic
indepth and (b) close
interaction among students and
between students and teacher in
a manner
res em b ling
a
community of scholars.
The content of the seminar
·should·
not resemble the survey
or fundamental
course. The
general principle will be that
these seminars will replace other
11\ird
~ear' abroad students
po~
with Br. Lanning ~n the latters recent trip to Spain.
course work temporarily. Also,
they should not be regarded as
the introduction of an honors
program.
Siu'dents
·Burn.·Own
Yearbook
·
A
.
student yearbook. with
six
pages
.
of peace
symbols, a
cariacature of President Nixon
·
and a picture of two plump nude
girls
is stirring
a flap at
Jacksonville University.
After the book,· "The· 1970
Riparian"
was published last
·:week;
about 100 students at the
once quiet private school staged
a• "book burning" of their copies
of the student publication.
The
publications
board
is
considering
,
action against the
·
editor,
Robyn.
Moses,
of
inadequate in the
.selection
of
.
·
are inaccuracies and omissions in
materials and often· offensive."
-the
book's content - such as
Some~ objections
·are
based on
using a picture of the wrong
the tone of the book, set in the
crew,- a picture. of the
.baseball
first
six·
pages .with pi~tures of
team of two years ago and
the peace symbol~ a white dove,
omitting mention of the school's
·_.
the words "All we are saying is
unbeaten soccer team.
give peace a
.
chance," and an
Miss Moses doesn't understand
unflattering caricature of Nixon.
why;all the fuss.
The. nude picture, the center
.
"I think it's the most mature
of most complaints, is a· rear
yearbook
.we've
ever had," she
.
view of two plump girls; nude
says. "It's too mature for this
except for. boots and a leather
campus,
I
now realize, My
belt on o~e.
opinion hasn't changed.
I
like
So~e students also say there
it."
If
considerable written work is
-to
be a requirement, it has been
..
recommended that a procedure
be developed
whereby
the
written work may be submitted
as evidence of proficiency
in
English.·
Any
freshman
(and only
freshmen) is eligible to apply for
any
seminar
of his choice.
Individual instructors may set
.
conditions for admiss_ions, but it
i:,
recommended that these be
.kept at a minimum.
A
student
may take only one designated
freshman seminar each semester
of his freshman year.
·
There should be no. sanctions
against· having a seminar
.
count
toward
meeting
an area
requirement.
·
No seminar may
serve
as the
only available
prerequisite for another course
.
or other courses. These
·seminars
should. be graded. on· the same
basis as other courses.
Successful completion
of a
.:
seminar
carries
three hours
credit; a seminar may be offered
either
semester.
Normally
a
seminar will meet once or·.twice
a week for longer rather than
shorter periods of
'time.
The
number
of
s'tudents
recommended for each seminar
is
IO
to
15,
with a minimum of
5
and a maximum of 15.
The
.
program will depend for
its
continued existence on the
willingness of the faculty to
offer the seminars as well as on .
student enrollment. Any seminar
offered by a faculty member
should consider a topic he is
excited about.
Departmental
approval, and
not action by the APC, will be
necessary
for each particular
Freshman Seminar.
It is not the
intent of the program to let the
seminars
become
so much
involved in the structure of the
curriculum
that inventiveness
would be stifled.
B.C. Stops
Student
Paper
;~g;~~~:~~r·~rt~~ie_:i~~t~:
Gaelic Societv Vists Ol_d Sod
Students
are
circulating
J
Boston
-
(NC)
-
The
administration
of
Jesuit-op~rated
Boston College
has withdrawn. official support
of the student newspaper, The
Heights. College officials cut
off
money to finance its operation.
The action follows the latest
in a series
of controversies
concerning
the
weekly
publication.
The most recent
was a satirical article aimed at
two political figures which the
college
officials
say
"was
extremely
offensive and had
indeed raised the question of
criminal libel."
petitions accusing the girl editor
• By Tom Hoffay
.
of "con_duct~g herself with a
After
.
two weeks of cultural
.
lack of mtegnt}'. a1;1d
·
goo~ taste
..
pilgrimage to the "Old Sod" the
that
re~lects;
<!1.~cr~<!_1t.
on,
}--Gaelic.
Society . has returned
. Jacks?nvill~ Un1v~rs1ty
... •. _·•··
.· .,/homrdull
ofblarney and tales
of
.. -,-c,••';U.
n1vers1
tr•:~
Pre~1d ent--,,,.pr.
.
.
Easter m•Irelarid~ The'.firsf
w~e,C,
Robert
H.
Spm?, said. ~e fou~d
which
was:
a guid_ed four, led
th~
a_~nual
;
de~icie~t
m
from Shannon to
·the
Lakes of
intellectual quality,. unfau and.
Kilarney,
Dublin,
Galway
~d
-:-.--.
Addict.·
Burn$:>Hims81f
:
.
To.<De.ath
Submitted by Dr. Louis Zuccarello
Andy Anderson wrote a poem
·
me.
.
.
about.
his drug
.experiences -
.
tI.
have tried. to straighten
.
saying; "My mind
is
no longer
mys~lf out, b~t things are· only
.my· friend. Jt
·
won't leave me·- getting worse.
alone."
·.
.
.
.
,
_
.
Ande:i:son did not direct the
Then. he burned himself to· note to anyone, but in it he
death.
adttressed his parents, Mr. and
-County
Judge John L. Connell
Mrs. K.C. Anderson of Lakeland.
made public·Tuesday the poem
0

"Please forgive me parents for
. and
a note·
in
which Andy
quitting. after you have raised
wrote: "The drug experience has
-me,
but I cannot live with·
filled me with
fear and doubts of
myself any longer," he said.
myself.
I
cannot go· on. Please
••You were good parents and
I
try to remember my good points
love you both, don't let
·my
and · excuse. this final act of\
.
dow~fall be yours - you have
desperation."
..
. -
nothing to,_ be ashamed of. I
.-
The 20-year-old University of
·
made the ~stake - not you .
.
Florida junior,
his
body and his
"There
is
n~thing but misery
car doused with gasoline, burned
for all
of us should I
-allow
.
to death Feb. 19 about 100· myself to deteriorate further;
._
yards
from. his apartment
.
~'To those ?f my friends w_ho
· building. A coroner's
jury
ruled_ rmght also think about learning
the death suicide ...
·.
.
about
themselves
.with
mind
.
"This Christmas
I
had a very
·
expanding drugs - don't.
·.
bad. experience with a drug-·
.
~•Learn about yoursel_f as you
called mescaline.
I have smoked
.
live your life - do~'ttry· to know
a little·pot before - as:many my·
·every!hing_
at
once
by,-
age - but
I tried- meJcaline only, swall()wmg a pill.: It could be too
once," Anderson wrote.
·.
. -

.
much for your mmd to handle at
.
·
"Since then I have not been
iri
one time.
It could blow out all
..
control
·
of my mind.
I have the circuits as it
did
with me.
killed myself
-because
I
can no
"I
am too '!eak to fight - too
longer run my own affairs, and I proud
to hve
forever
on
can only be trouble and worry
~ymp~thy
of others:
Love,
to those who love and care for
Andy.
·
___________
.. -----~-e...,..fle,c-ti"""'·o-ns_O.,,,..n
__ _
·
BLOW
YOUR HORN FROM 2
•Aunt Gussey'.
Special mention
·goes
to set design and directing,
and the credit· goes to
Phil
De Gran dis.
A 11 things
considered, the
play
can be
considered another success for
The Theater Guild and the
·guiding hand of James Britt.
*****
Dick Gregory
'Neat._~ Jack Wawrzonek ue
Stands the cold, hungry naked
reality of the all Black Body
Cryin out no more
in
words
that spoke of
givin
Demanding now
in
sounds
Not music to the tea-dubs ears.
•••••
Limerick. One of the highlights
of that week was a stop at the
_Blarney
-Castle
with its famous
stone. of
•.
eloquence. P,at Tracey
was seen kissing the stone' more
than once. At a stop on the ring
of
K eri:y,
historians
Bob
Donaldson
and Tom Hoffay
discovered a four centuries old
.
castle built
in
1567.
·
Easter
Sunday'.
started in
Galway:a:,.with a tour of the
famotis·
0
-Cournerware
landscape.
Passing from the Cliffs of Maher
.
through
Lahinch;
ancestral
house of Dennis Clare,
·Burralty
Castle was the destination for
Easter dinner. There one of the
groups was recognized as Lord
of Thousand for the evening,
and at least one "clean
_cut
American boy" ended up in the
castle dungeon. The tour ended
early the next morning
,and
the
group split up to spend the
second week with relatives or
friends.
·
England,
Holland
and
Northern Ireland were some of
the· countries that
were
"visited"
the second week. Joe Nolan
. spent
.
a memorable nigl:lt locked
in a London hotel bathroom.
Most of the group stayed
in
Dublin
.
for the second week,
.
while
Ed Fogarty and Neal
Fenton went visiting relatives .
Bob Donaldson found out that
he was
a
·cousin
to
Sean
MacDerrnott one. of the signers
of the 1916 Proclamation· of
Independence.
Saturday found many of the
group returning to Dublin for
the last few days, There was a
.•
party
given by Paul Go,uld's
brother John· O'Sullivan Gould.
Many
of the fabulous pubs
frequented by the Gaelic Society
were Dirty Nellies, Abbey Taver,
the most famous of the "singing
pubs" and the Bailey, hangout
of Trinity College students. Ed
Fogarty
and Terry McGowan
presented
Eaman
DeValera,
president of Ireland,
·
with the
seal of Marist College _on behalf
of Linus Foy and the key to the
city of Poughkeepsie. The visit
to the presidential mansion was
arranged by Mr. Patrick Sheridan
·
of Emerald
Rermovators
in
Poughkeepsie.
.
·
The general consensus on the
return was a great" time had by
all. The Gaelic Society plans to
return to Ireland next year.
The administration said it will
have no further connection with
the undergraduate
publication
"as it is presently constituted
and edited." Certain four-letter
words appearing in the paper are
known
to have incurred
the
administration disfavor.
The Heights was founded in
1919, has a current press
ruri
of
10,000 and is distributed free
among the students. For the
current
fiscal
year
the
administration
contributed
$27,000 from the general fund
and this will now be withdrawn.
The administration
said the
staff can use quarters in the
Student
Building but ordered
removed from the paper the
statement:
"The Heights is the university
newspaper of Boston College,
supported
by efforts of the
students;
faculty
and
administration
and funded by
the university."
Ed Fogarty
and
Teny McGowan
meet with the President
of
the
Republic
of
lrdand























































































·~
.,
~
;.r:::A:GE::4·:::·
===='=·
·=·
=·=
1
=-
=========·:::·
==::;:;::;::;::=:-~111E:,;C~RC;,:LE~-"-·:-
...
.--~~---...,;.--:--~,.;_-~~-
7 ..........
~'--'.-·AP._Rl~li-2.-:a~•-;-·~9'.'.""
..
~~~·;>;-/.
:c°.
.C_alendar
()J
E:ve,it~
SPRINCf WEEKEND.
.
,
'
.
, .". .
.· FRID~
Y;
April 24
·
·
.< .
.
8:00
\P.M.
Coffee House Circuit .;. Don Crawford Gallery Lounge,
. , Campus Center
. : ·; •.
.
~.
'
;_

·--
SATURDAY,Apri125-
·: ✓-
10:30-A.M. Crew - President Cup - St. Joseph, Iona, Marist, Temple,
~
orcester Poly. HOME·. _
.
.

·
· ,
, . , · Sailing - Mono type Champs at Kings Point
·
Sailing .. Freshmen Champs - Navy
·. Track - Penn. Relays - A WAY
8:00
P.M.
Italian Society Dinner Qailce - Diriing _Hall, _Campus
Center.
SUNDAY, April 26 ·
1 :00
P.M.
Open Clambake· Poolside
Sailing - Monotype Champs at King Point
Sailing - Freshmen Champs - Navy
..
8:00
P.M.
Movie - "Ivan the Terrible," Part I, Room 249, Campus
Center, Presented by Marist College Film Program.
. ..
, .
3:00 - 5:00
P.M.
Art Exhibit - Opening Reception, Artist: Malcom
Knapp, Title: "Relationships" - Photography Show, Gallery Lounge,
Campus Center
·
thru May 1970 ·
TUESDAY, April 28
6:30
.P.M.
Lecture - Dr. Roald Hoffman, Topic: "The Stereo
Chemical Consequences ofCycloaddition"
- Presented by American
Chemical Society, Room 249, Campus Center
WEDNESDAY, April 29.
8:30
P.M.
Lecture - _Dr. Albeit Silver, Ph.D. Topic: "Relating Group
Dynamic Therapeutic and Psychodynamic Concepts." Room 249,
Campus Center, Presented by Mid Hudson Psychological Assoc.
1:00 P.M. Golf-New York Maritime HOME
10:00 A.M. Childrens' .Theatre Production of "The Wizard of Oz"
College Theatre, Campus Center
l:00P.M. Tennis, Manhattan; AWAY
.
. THURSDAY, April 30
.
10: 00
A.M.
Play - Childrens' · Theatre :..'roduction of "The Wizard of
Oz" College Theatre, Campus Center.
·
* * * * *
CHUCK
·HERE_-.-·
Fi.nal/
Exam
. · by
·Chuck
Mean
;Item:
.
Student Government -
-.News : .
.
,
· The new Student Government
has started operations.
and
·has ..
• begun work on budgets for the
next
school year.. Hopefully.,
allocations
to clubs
and
_ publications will be able -)o _be
made by the end.of the semester
so we will be able to begin work
immediately in September on
A cad em ic ·issues,
campus
governance, the judicial process
and other polj_q decisions that
affect the college. Clubs will be
submitting tentative budgets in .a .
. few weeks and the Council will
study all requests to
gain a
total
perspective before allocating any
funds.
·
The Council has made some
appointments
for next year.
John
J.T.
Tkach
has been
appointed
Chairman of the
Athletic
Committee,
Steve.
Moore,
Food
Committee
Chairman and George Roarty
Chairman
of the Academic
Committee.
The
CIRCLE
Editors
Joe Rubino and Sal
Piazza and the · new Yearbook
Editor
Dickie
Davis
were
approved
unanimously.
The
Council allocated $300 to the
CIRCLE'
for an extra issue
because an .increase in prices
caught
the
CIRCLE
in a
financial bind.
·
·
Vice-President Phil· Glennon
• has done a great deal of work on
Earth Day. Four Speakers and
an excellent film . were some of
·.
.
-
~
.
..
':
.
.
·~
.
.
-_:·Schedf1te:~
-~
·: 't,··-~; ·,
.
..
,...
·.•
, .... • .• ,.·,
··,._.:.,,,r',·-·,.:,,
DAY DIVISION~SPRING"
SEMESTER-1970
.--
,:...;.·,
..
'·.
--.'
•.
.
. Exaniin~tion
W~ek:~·:, ·
.
,
.
. .. Sat. May
9th to Sat~
1
May
16th
·. ·.,. ..
With the exception of the Meaning'of Man -classes scheduled
for
Saturday May 9th, all exaJ!}s will be held in the regular _classroom at
the day 'and hour stated below,, If any indi~dual ·1;~ges are
necessary students will be notified·by Instructor ...
. .
· .
. SCHEDULE• ·_.• )·
Section
Saturday May 9th 9:00AM:

All Religious Studies· 111 Classes .
A&D
B
C
E
'F&K,
·o

I
J
. Monday
9P.M.
. 1:30 P.M.
Tuesday
. -9A.M.
1:30 P.M.
Wednesday
· 9A.M.
l:30P.M.
"Michels · ·'
· Flanagan •·· '
· · Guilmette
Malich
'.
Remenicky
Kater
Flanagan
Williams .
Lambert
,
May
_11th
. Rooin 2010·
Room 207D
•Room 204D
Room 220D
Room 158D
Room_206D
Room208D
Room 166D
Room 165D
All 1st Slot Classes ·
All 8th Slot' Classes
May 12th.
All 2nd Slot Classes-
All 9th
&
12th Slot Classes
May 13th
All 3rd Slot Classes
All 4th Slot Classes
--------------..-------------
the
hig-hlights
of
a
very
educational
day. Hopefully,
Thursday
9A.M.
.1:30 P.M.
May 14th
HODGKINSON.FROM
1
The"jayvee race was also a race
the
liberal
arts.
Higher
for second between Holy Cross
education,
he believes, must
and Stony Brook. With Pete
develop the whole student by· Masterson at cox, there was
these set of experiences which
never
a race as the jayvees
would integrate both cognitive
opened at 38 and dropped to 32
and
affective components
of
until the finish. Marist's time
education.
Thus,
any new
was 6:31 • followed by Holy
curriculum must be defined
in
Cross in
6:56 and Stony Brook
t
f
h
d
close bel).ind in 6:59.
er ms
O
t es e st u en t
Nex·
t week
the
crews will host
experiences.
Professor Hodgkinson in the
the
annual
President's
Cup
discussion
that· was held
Regatta.
Competing
schools

afterwards in Fireside LC>unge include . defending .. champs . St.
: criticized .some. college,faculty
J
o·seph's,
Temple, .Iona an_d
for interpreting
and confining ·. Worchester Poly.
education to the classroom .. He
*
~
* *
*
agrees
with
m'any· other · ·
curriculum reformists when he ·
·. says that college students have
been over-taught and points out
'that 90% <;>f
all college students
felt . that the most significant
experiences of their college year
occured outside the classroom;
In conclusion,
, Professor
. Hodgkinson noted that any. new
curriculum must consider riew
· ways of organizing knowledge, ..
_ and must reconstruct a concept
of tiine in relation to process,
change, duration and l4leality.
Techniques such as role-playing,_
experiences such. as internships
. and work-study programs and
equipment
such as video tape
.machines all should be part and
parcel of any riew curriculum.
*****
.
Crew from 8
E-Day will lead· towards new
solutions
to
the problem that
plagues the country because of
the Government's refusal to take .
measures against Big -Business'.
refusal to act for people.
Item:
-~ixon
Votes
for
Humanity
Well,
we're
withdrawing
another
150,000 troops· - by
next spring - that's good news -
at this rate maybe -we can have
all our troops out by 1972 - Oh,
. that's Election Year - but that· ·'
:,·
..
;
. CONTINUED ON,7
Friday
9A.M.
l:30P.M.
Saturday ·
9A.M.
1:30
P.M.
the ·body of.the race. Bevilaqua
called for a sprint at 38 over the
last 300 meters and the shell ·
crossed the line in 6:00, four
lengths ahead of Holy Cross- at
6:24;· Stony Brook brought up
the rear in 6:3_5. ·
Joe J>l?Tma
( ·kneeling ':Cnter)
with
cast of Childrens'
Thea~
's
"Wizard
of
Oz.''
DEMONSTRATE
~-
.
/
'
.
.
AGAINST
IBM's
WAR
BUSINESS
at their Route.
9 Plant
Saturday
April
-25
at
11:-00
REMEMBER
-
.
Dinner Dance
Sponsored
by
Marist Associates
Sat1rday,
llaJ 2
8:00
Cafeteria
MUSIC BY
laf.alce
Bro
For Info. Contact:
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dean
Willimm
or Mr.
and
Mrs.
Salvatore
Rubino ·
.
-
.
'
.
. .
All 5th Slot Classes ,
All 7th
&
7 A Slot Classes
May l.5th
.
All 6th Slot Classes
All 6A SlciJ.
Classes
May 16th
All 10th Slot Classes
. All 11th Slot Classes
S_tudents
De.man~d
\Financial·
:Voice
A state:wide
coordinating
. --agency,
the
Stu dent Audit
. Committee,- has been organized
"to enlarge_ the student campaign
for
a voice in the consideration
of the financial crisis on state
college and . university campuses,
according
to Laurence
B.
Labovitz, Associated· Students
president
at San Fernando
. Valley
State.
College,
and
-. chairman of the committee.•
, ''A widespread and unified
e.ffo_rt". by
·college
students ·
throughout
the . state on · the
problems of budget and tuition
will · be the only way to bring
about
constructive,
effective
change, the committee· believes.
· The committee has requested.
that·Gov. Ronald Reagan set up .
· a_ student
advisory . board to
make
available the. following
information: .
.
· ~.The total amount
of
money
authorized for all state colleges
and universities.
·
· •
L\ne
item -·,reports on the_.
budget as requested from, each
campus.
.
\
Programmed space utilization
standards.
and
actual· ~ace
·utilization for each campus.
Student-teacher ratio and the
number
of faculty-student
· contact hours on each campus. -
The amount · of faculty time
being
used
for non-teaching
duties on each campus.
The augmentation
items in
priority listing drawn by each
campus administration.
A list of those who
make
decisions
regarding
student
cut-backs on each campus.
Gov. Reagan said the students
had
put
forth
10 "good
suggestions. I would like to see
this
student; input become a
prominent
fixture. We want
their views as to what might
be
. augmented as well as what might
be
cut."
•••••





























































·
APR.ll:'U
3
19iO:J..••
/
..
'·'
.•
..
,
..
,
·
.
THECIRCLE.
lette·rs
to
.
the
-
·
Editor$
To the ~ditor:
/
·.
'
..
blame·our na.tion ro{the crimes of Russia.
.
'I
I
PAGES··
EDITORIAL
:.:
It
is one· thing to· inform
'the
·
of a few We did not kill John F
· ·.
Now
·
as far as the rights put
,
pol_ic~;of anotlter person's.illegal:· l(ennedy;
. .
: :
·
· forth
by the Declaration of ;;:::;~;;,;;;;;;;~;~:;;;;;;~,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::;;:::;
-· ·
~ct1~~hes when you are directly.
·
· We did not kill Martin Luther Independence•
are.r
concerned, I,
in:·_J~OP;8f~Y
be,cau~e: :of
King; ..
.
.,
.
being a "Noble Patriot,» have
participating m those actmhes.
We 'did
not
kill
Robert
re~read the document and, for
.
_·_But
a
very. diffe_ren! thing' to

Kennedy;
·.
·
·
.
··.
'··
the life of me, can't find the
·
pqnoke·.1n1tiahvely
.th~.
Wedidnotkillthepeasantsof
section
titled:
Working,and
·
.
proset:ut1.on
·
o_f .P.e_rsons
·
Song My; neither did the armies· Living Where One·
·chos~s.
J
·
.•.
conducting. ille_gal actmhes for
or the government of the United found an admission that men are
·
personal gam either monetary or
.
States of America .. Let the North equa_l and endowed with the
prestigial ~he~ the very lcgal_ity Vietnamese.and Viet Cong
try
to unalienable rights to. life, liberty
and morabty of. Jhe ~anct~on,. make such a claim, and they will and the pursuit of happiness but
used Jor pr?sccuhon
1s b~mg be cut down by their own hand. no explanation as to what these
questioned m the courts and
Radio
·
H an o i b o as ts
of very general words mean.
.
.
already . consi~e.red w:r:on~ by
annihilations and speaks· of the
I am also curious to know who
twenty-five mil!1on Americans.
impending
as though blood is the "sir" and who is the "us"
Unde~ t_hese circumstances
_the
satisfied
more than victory. in the second to last paragraph
, undermmmg. of the future hves Unless the editors of the Circle and what is it "we should have"?
of,:certain people on 1::ampus,'the can
find
in themselves the
Finally, while it is true that
creatio~ of an incident that may
c_ollective sickness that
·they
say
the Declaration condones the
resound
t~rou~hout
these
is America, I question their right o v e·r th row · of a despotic
peop_les entire hves; a!ld t~e
to profess such a belief through government I'd like to remind
physical, mental and financial
a
.healthy
medium such as a the author t9-at it also begs for
hardships
already placed on
school newspaper.
·
caution
saying,
"Prudence,
these-peoplebecause?faperson
JohnRedmond
indeed,
will
dictate
that
that
may
be acting
as an
Governments
long established
informer,
on campus,
is Dear Sir:
.
should not be changed for light
unjustifiable
and diametrically
Congratulations
on your
and
transient
causes;
and
opposed to my .ideas of right and
magnificent cryptogram
-
..
of April accordingly all experience hath
wrong.
It
violates the
.very
9, 1970. You know, the one shewn that mankind are more
essence of a close knit college depicting
Sgt.
Rock
as a disposed to'suffer, while evils are
community's
faith
in each blood-crazed
pyromaniac
who su fferable,
than
to right
member.
·
has an abnormal fascination on themselves
by abolishing the
Sincerely,
his mother (you must be joking).
forms
to which
they
are
Scott McKenna
While I'm at the typewriter I'd accustomed."
Dear Sirs:
also like
..
to comment on the
Sincerely,
Throughout
my academi~ editorial, "Privilege; or Right'?".
Terrance p; McGowan
career at Marist I've read the The author quoted someone as
·
Dear Sirs:
CIRCLE. In the past few years
·
saying, "You should be thankful
In regards to the editorial
the. quality of the material has you don't
live in Russia or cartoon, depicting an American
greatly increased. However, I someplace where you wouldn't-
soldier sadistically shooting an
view with distaste the editorial
be nearly as free as you are innocent Vietnamese child, in
·
picture of G.I. Joe (is he really a here ... " He then went on to ask, the April 9, issue of the Circle,
st~reotype'?) killing a child. To " ... why are people still fooled by let
us not forget
the
,
mass
the best of my knowledge there
that
ridiculous
piece· of
atrocities
committed
by the
has been a minimum of criticism
propaganda?" I can't help but
North
Vietnamese
.-in
their
levied against the actions of think he means Russian people
attempt to win control in South
North
Vietnamese
and
·
Viet
are
more
free
(I use the Vietnam. In the past years, the
Cong terrorists. Why doesn't the
colloquial definition of freedom
Viet Cong never hesitated
in
CIRCLE support the Cambodian
.
meaning the absence of arbitrary
eliminating civilian opposition,
students attempts to rid their
restraints)
than Americans.
If
.
and there are men, women and
country of communist venom?
this
is
.so,
I'd like to know on children who will vouch for me
Or
am
f
to assume the V.C.,
..
in what he bases his conclusion.
If
·
in their graves. So,
if we are to
· ,
the light of Ho's· dream, desire to
that's not what he's saying I'd. be humanitarian in our outlook
"liberate"
their "brothers"
in like to know what his complaint
on this war, let us condemn both
Cambodia?
'
·
is. The
quote
,
doesn't
say sides before we condemn one
The
picture
does
depict,
Americans are perfectly
free, side alone.
Thank you,
.however,
tha~;life .. is_precious to,. merely more free than residents
.
Robert D,o~aldson
which
,
I agree. Bu_t you quote
.
"Marat-Sade":
·•we
-want.-.
our

rights and we don't care how
..
.''
Bomb radicals don't care either.
They view killing as a result of
an
.explosion
as "an accideilt;·a
_grievous
.
accident"
(Life;
3/27 /70,_p. 30). Is that a right?
a,~-,
Commitment
.
·
..
llnd

Gray Hair
·
By Sal Piazza
Do the Weathermen have the
·>
·
_''right"
to
run rampant
and
.

Whe_n Herbert Aptheker spoke at Marist on April 15, it was an
.destroy
the
possessions
'of
interesting opportunity to observe the composition of the audience
others?
·
that listened. Despite the fact that the lecture started more than an
Y oti're
angry?
I'm-
even
llour late, the room was filled.The majority of the people there were
angrier. Not as much at the
.
students; very few faculty thought that Dr. Aptheker would be
,
s h o r t - c o m i n g s· o f
.
t he
wo~hwhile enough to. interrupt their schedule .. In fact, I remember
establishment but rather at the
·
seemg only two members of the history-political science department
inconsistencies ofthose trying
to
.
in attendance .. An interesting
reflection on the department
tear it• down. I still have much
considering the credentials of Dr.Aptheker.
.
·
.
confidence, however,
-that
this
I
couldn't help but notice a large number of faces that I hadn't
country_ will not embark upon
seen here before. Old; wrinkled faces topped with gray hair. People
any massive irrationality.
who listened
.
to Aptheker
-with
obvious respect and. deference.
·
·
.
Sincerely,
_Perhaps
people who
:had
been involved in the same issues and
:rony Lofaro '70_ struggles
the professor had. Their faces reflected
first-hand

-

·
knowledge of what
.
he was relating, perhaps remembering a cold
·
Guerrilla Theatre and Page Three
-windy
day in New York or the dust and heat of Alabama. Thes~
:
Editorials;
.
·
were pe~ple
·
in their sixties, people who had• not yet given up hope.
A look from the other side.
People; like Apth~ker, who saw hope and knew a solution was still a
·
Murder-of civilians committed
long time coming. But still had not quit.
_
by.
a
few war ·maddened men, in
·
There were many faces I Qave known for a while_. Faces still saved
total
·violation
of their aimy's· from wrinkles and
.rio
sign of graying hair. People committed either
code
is
very different from th e intellectually or politically
·
or both to what Aptheker was saying.
-.
planned
murder and
·
torture
Some still confused as to.what length their committment would go,
·
committed from a preset list by
confused as
·
to methods. They were the ones who. worked for
soldiers
meeting
execution
McCarthy, were radicalized by Chicago and were still looking for
·a
quotas orjJ.ered by their highest
means to act out their commitment. They"were frightened by S.D.S.
·
level of command. The latter
because it was violent (seemingly forgetting about the state violence
represents the strategy· of the
which now exists). They have:romanticized visions of Gandhi and
North Vietnamese and their left
non-violence. And
.even
after Chicago, forgetting that non-viole_nce
arm the Viet Corig.
will
be welcomed by MACE, clubs and the heels of a cop's boot .
· America entered Vietnam with
At times during the lecture I thought about many who had not
one goal:--to bring· Peace with
been there. What was their reason'! Was the co·mmittment of the
Freedom. to the people of South
October 15 Moratorium gone'! No, the war did not end October 16.
Vietnam. Our strategy in battle
But how deep can the committment
be
if
after one.march, one
has consistently been limited by simple walk in the sun past the cops, not even through them, the
our consideration
for human
·

life. No such
·
at._rocity couid
·.
dnve was gone. The instant gratification desired by the TV oriented,
.
white middle-class "rebels" did not come through. The Westchester-
_lbere~ore
even
be
tolerated by Long Island· "revolutionaires" decided it wasn't y.-orth it, no one
is
A~encans, ~o less planned
.
and
going to listen. Let's wait for the Blacks to do it, wow Cleaver is cool
willfully earned out by them. To and Bobby Seale really told Hoffman. Let's be part of the cultural
say so 'Yould be an unfounde~
revolution instead, grass is much easier than politics.
hypocnsy
· W_hen John
.F ·
Perhaps a lecture by Dr. Herbert Aptheker
is
a poor place to
Kennedy, Martm Luther Kmg measure the politics of Marist College. Maybe .... but l don't want to
and
_Robert
K~nnedy
were wait until it
is
too late. We have to know who we can depend on
assassmated, certain elements of when the time comes. We can't wait for the Blacks, they hve too
the P~.
trotted
out freaky
much reason not to trust us already. I'm not sure what it is going to
psyc':uatnsts
to_ tell us as take to radicalize students here. Maybe when your brother comes
Amencans, how
51
ck "!'e were.
home. under a flag or a friend goes to jail or exile because of the
They a~empted to
~
to ~s draft. What I do know, however,
is
that whatever it takes
it
better
as Amen~
the collectwe guilt
happen soon because some morning we
will
wake up to the knock of
of th_e actions o~ a few
_madmen.
the man on the door. And it will be too late.
I reject the sick mmds that
·
**** *
1984

IS
1970
'

·There
are- a lot of things shooting (no pun intended) through the
~inds of all of us as we discuss or read this editorial, things, for
instance, which we really want to say, and probably can't are
confused by things which we can say but really don't want to. We
can talk over dinner about the paranoia that has been with us (and
for good reason) for the past few weeks but damn it if we do more
than that! The same morality and legality that had our friends
arrested last' week .is the same morality that prevents this staff from
writing the truth about the pigs on campus. But let us remind you
pigs, and again no pun intended, where there is smoke 1Jtere is fire.
Yes, we've even allowed ourselves to be co-opted and supressed by
this "moral code." Odd and paradoxical it seems, doesn't it, to be
supressed by morality.
Our point
here is don't ignore your
supression and
say
it doesn't exist. People right now are legislating
your morality, making your decisions, narrowing your alternatives
and thus killing your freedom - not to mention your brothers.
Thoreau in
ltls
Civil
.Disobedience
reminds us constantly that the
government; cannot give you anything unless it has first taken it
away: The absurdity of it
all.
in the past has been our appealing to a
·
government
for moral determination
and ignoring our own
conscience .. Let us stop now because the very act of appealing to a
government legitimizes its authority over individual perrogative. It is
not a matter of government giving us anything, it
is
a matter of
saying we already have it.
.
And so while we. continue to write and to debate.we are all being
scrutinized, investigated, intimidated and some even arrested by Big
Brother. The calendar has been pushed ahead and we realize that we
are actually living in 1984.
0
yes, the mechanical bugs have been
declared unconstitutional
but that doesn't seem to be our problem
today.
It
has been replaced by a human pest.
If
we are going to play
with the law let us be perfect gentlemen and use the constitution as
our building blocks. The Supreme Court
in
the last few years has
declared it unconstitutional and an invasion of privacy to "bug" an
individual's rooms. We hold that there is no difference between a
mec_hanical spy and a human one. Furthermore,
we suggest to
anyone '(possibly friends of the defendents) to contact the American
Civil Liberty Union and ask them to help
.t.o
find out whether or not
these people's constitutional rights have been violated.
If
so, charges
against the pigs are in order for they are the real defendents. Let us
students have some law and order!!
.
Finally, to bring us up to the here and now we would like to
suggest to the Academic Policy Committee to consider the offering
of an inter-dsicipliriary, team taught course on "Drug Use-Abuse."
J>rofessor Hodgkinson last week spoke about a relevant curriculum
and a meaningful education. To ignore or deny the relevance of such
a course would be to deny your own relevance. All the segments of.
the
·community
could benefit. The Political Scientist would be
concerned with the politics and groups behind the drug traffic, the
economist would be interested in the economics of the problem, and
the
biologist would be concerned
with the bio-chemical or
bio-psychological effects of drug use. The Editorial Board of the
Circle would appreciate an answer from the A.P
.C.
on our
suggestion.
·
*****
.
.,.
.
e-.C/RCLE
Sal Piazza
Terry Mooney
News Editor
Editors-in-Chief
Genrcl
Geoffroy
Managing
Editor
Editorial
Board
Terry
Mooney,
Sal Piazza,
Joe Rubino
News Writers
Phil
Glennon, Tom lilcDonald, Frank Denan, Bill Deucher
Feature Writers
Joe Rubino
Bob Sullivan
Sports Editor
Dennis
Ah!on, Paul Browne, Ed O'Neill, Bill O'Reilly, Vince Begley, Rich
Bala
,A.Pig
Photography
Editor-Vin Winsch
Dick
Davis
Sports Writers
Kevin
Donnelly, John
Petraglia
Circulation
Manager-Jack Barby
Artist
Business Man~er
Paul Tesoro .
Joe Rubmo
AdrisotySt2ff
John Rogener, John ZebaHo, Steve Harrison, Joe McMahon
::I
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;
'
~~r,-c-.-.;.
r
PAGE6
1HECIRCLE
Perspectiv_e
. APRIL
23i 1970
leYy To Spe'ak
·,,
-01'DisS8:11t-",
,
·}?t!':..r..::.-
:O.t---~f
;J
Xi;.
.
Steve neve~ participated
in
an·
this
week Steve was inoved
to
-
,
·
organized athletic progr'~ uritil the jayvee boat. The move
is
a
Civil
rights
·and'
anti-war·
U
n-
t i
i
:.
c o

1
n:
g
t
<>
·
sop~omore
y~u
·.
when Paul result of Coach Austin's striving
activist Howard Levy joined the
HE Ai TH-PAC,·
Dr.
-
Levy's
:
·.
Arold talked
him·
into rowing to get the two strongest shells_·_
·HEALTH-PAC
-
staff :in early
primary -
_
in_terest has
-been
·
in
crew.
Working · all fall and possible . .In
,practice·
this
week,
·
September,; 1969, immediately
organizing -against • the war- in
winter; he caught on to the sport
the jayvees-_ did extremely
.~ell
.
following his
-
release from the
Vietnam. He
is
on
the:b'oard of -
very. quickly and won- a seat in against the vaISity shell.
: •
;
-
·
.
F e de ra 1
.
P
en
it en t iary
in
_
the United· Servicemen's·. Fund,
_
.
the jayvee,boat
that
spfirtg.-
,
Talking: about this year, Steve-
Lewisburg, Pa.

Dr. Levy
·has
·
which .funds and helps
.initiate
·
Junior year Steve continued_ to
is
very optiinistic . .:.He feels that
served two and a half years of a__ anit-war coffee shops
..
•for.
Grs-
·
push and remained in thejayvee
the
team's
-
showing· in the
.three-year
court martial sentence - near Southern military.bases. He
.
boat,
rowing
in
the
-number
President's
Cup
•and
Rusty
for
_refusing
to
instruct
-
will-continue
to participate in·
·
seven seat. It was this boat that Callow- Regatta will determine
Vietnam-bound
-
Special Forces
GI-organizing·
projects at. a
won thejayvee race in last year's
how they will
.do
in
the Dad
·
trainees at Fort Jackson in 1967. - number of Army bases.·
·
...
Steve
Palenscar
came to·· President's Cup regatta.
·
Vail. He looks to Temple and St.
Dr. Levy brings
a
wide range
In addition to his anti-war and
Marist-on-the-Hudson
in his
Steve opened this year
in the Joseph's
to give them very-• of organizing
experience to
civ.ilrights experience,,Dr; Levy
_
sophomore year, and has been
_
.varsity
shell. Last
-
fall'
against str_o~g competiti?~
Sa~rday.
··
H~ALTH·P~C.At Fort J~ckson,
:has
.deep
personal experience
rowing
ever since. A 1966 Syracuse,
_
the number one boat · Trinity.
and U n1vers1ty
of
pnor
.to
his court martial,
-
he-
with urban
.health
problems. He
graduate
of New Hyde Park
performed well. _This year Steve ·Massachusetts loom- very tough
worked
intensively with · the
earned his. M.D. at Downstate
Memorial
Steve
spent
his rowed in the first shell that beat two
·weeks
from
now
in
Southern Christian Leadership
University in New York City,
freshman'.year
at St. Leo's
Notre Dame, Holy Cross, Stony
Worchester.
-'
Council,_CORE- and other civil
interned._
at New York's
College in Florida.
Brook· and Amherst. However
* *
* •
*
·
rights
groups
on-
:voter
·
Maimonides Medical Center, and
registration.
He worked
-
with
completed
his residency in
students
at a ,number
of
dermatology
at New York-
VIKINGS FROM 8
ball on St. Francis'
7
yard line:
On the next play, Rowinsky
followed a beautiful block by
Frank
·v
anacore and romped in
untouched
.
for the first score.
Dean Gestal ran it in for_ a
2
point conversion, making· it
8-0.
Again in the first quarter St.
·
Francis was forced to punt from
its own territory as the
Viking
defense
.
allowed the opponents
-
nothing.· Another bad kick put
the
Vikings
in St. Francis
territory. Some pretty running
by
Jim
Wilkens and
a
fine
reception by Bob Scott put the
Vikings
deep in St. Francis
territory. Dick Hasbrouck took
it over making the score
14-0.
Jack McDonald added the
P
.A.T.
-
as the quarter ended with the
score
15-0
in favor
of
the
Vikings.
The
Viking
offense
kept
rolling
along in the second
quarter. Dick· Hasbrouck scored
two more touchdowns as the
triple option overpowered the
St. Francis team. Late in the
second
'quarter.
St. Francis got
·
.on·
the score
"board:··
A
pass··-··-
" Students1
sleep in
for heat
in
first-
floor
Champasn~t lobby
·
interference
-
penalty gave them_
.
the ball deep_ in Viking territory
and on the·> next play Ricky
Neldon went around end for the
score. The two point conversi9n:.
was good and the half ended
with the score
28-8
in favor of
the Vikings.
.
Second half started
.
with the
Vikings receiving the kickoff.
Again
the
Vikings
moved down
field and ended a beautiful drive
as Rowinsky scored his second
.touchdown-
for_ the day. The
P.A.T.:was
missed and the score
remained
34-8
as the third
quarter came to a close ..
.
The fourth quarter was played
Capalone~ Lavery
.
and,·. Hrower
by many of the reserves as the Viking ended the scoring as
Coach Levine gave everyone a Brower went.through the middle
chance
to see action.
Jim
from
2
yards out. Gestal scored
Wilkens showing fine running
the two point conversiofl and
form,
scored from three yards
.
the game ended with the Vikings
'.
·
out early in the fourth quarter.
well ahead 48-14.
·
Tlie conversion was
.missed
and
This game ended football at
the score became 40-8.
Marist uritil next season when
St.
Francis came back after
the
Vikings.
open at home
the kickoff to score as Dave against Plattsburg.
-
It
·
looks
like
·
Jomes went through the middle
another good year for football at
to make it a 40-14 game. The
Marist next season. _
Vikings came back as Capalino
*****
mov~d the
Vikings
downfield.
With
some fine running by
EARn-1 DAY FROM 1
American
Drug
Violators
Arrested··
Overseas
into the possibilities of what
could be done by the Marist
College
community to. fight
pollution in this area.
· ·
·
You ~ay wonder what you
as··
a student can· do. The Protect
Your
Environµient;·
"PYE,"
Organization began as a group of
-students
in
Connecticut
who
·
.
became
concerned about_ the
filling of
a
marsh. Through their
-
efforts the marsh was saved and
.
a movement" was begu~ Groups
have since grown . up
·
across the
country. The club
is
dedicated
to infonninf .the publi~ of
-the
Southern colleges on civil riglits
U n i v e r s i
.t
y
M
e d i c a
1
·and anti-war issues. In 1967 he
Center/Belleyue
Hospital. At
.
served as the co-organizer of an
.
HEALTH.PAC
he. will work ·
0
E O,. fund e d
-
com mu nity
closely
with student and young
·.
development project -
in
Black
professional
groups, and will
BQttom,
a black
_
community
participate
in research.
on.
near Columbia, South Carolina ..
-
environmental and hospital care:
He is one of the founders of the
problems.
·
. --· -
·
·
South Carolina ACLU Chapter. -
*****
,.,.
r
monday

april
i7 •
s:lspm
vassar_
college
students.·
bldg;
_
.
-
donation
S"l,
(students
I
:1)
_
_
.


.
,
..
,
.
· ·
,
:
61X)n5ored
~-
.
_
_
_
mid-hudsonc,vn·tnxrtics
union
.
.
.
.
..;._...a_
...
·
·-.
.
.
.
·
; vassar
cottooc,icltttCdl
~cnce
deft.·
j
·
-
---
.for
'tnforniaUon
call 'tSl:-1383_
'
.

.
.
seriousness .of our envirorunental
problems,
seeking social and
political
action_
-
and reaching
other students to
_inform
them
of. the' crisis: The· club has
adopted the Blue, Green and
Yellow b_utton as their symbol.
·
"It is more thanjust a.case of
life and death," Mr. Perrottee
urges, "it
is a·
moral issue._ We
cannot in good conscience
pass
on to another generation the
.
necessity of-solving this problem
while we had a chance
-to
do
it
·
with a-choice - they will have-no
-
choice."
·
·
The· Department
of State
they are arrested overseas. Some
wishes to bring to the attention
of the dupes of
drug·
peddlers
of Americans traveling abroad,
who subsequently
inform on
and
·particularly_
of yourig thein to the authorities.
American·s,
the
serious·
.
J'he. penalties for. narcotics
consequences. which may result
.
violations in most countries are
from their._ arrest by foreign
severe.
-
The charge - whether
govern men ts_
-ion
charge_s of possession
or, more serious,
possessing,
trafficking· in, or trafficking
-
is usually
smuggling
·
illegal drugs. This determined on the basis of the·
announcement
.is
made in view quantity of narcotics- involved.
of a marked increase in such Possession of more than
500
arrests reported by the United
grams
(about one pound) results
States consular officers.
in
a minimum of six years in jail
Per_spective
.
There were, 142 Americans
·
plus
a heavy fine in some ·
under detention on drug charg~s countries, one to three years in a
in 20
·
foreign
countries in "detoxification
asylum"
-
February 1969 but by February
usually a
.mental
hospital -
in
1970 the total had risen to 404 -
others.
Trafficking
in drugs
the larg~st number of Americans. evokes a penalty of ten years to
held
for narcotics violations
life
in
others.
since records have been kept by
In some
countries
prison
the Department of State.·
conditions· are primitive (e.g.,
Young Americans (under
30),
damp, underground
locations;
who are now traveling widely
rats
and -vermin; insufficient
and in larger numbers than ever light, heat, and food; absence of
before,
represent the greater
sanitary facilities; abuse by other
number
of U.S.
nationals
prisoners). Pretrial confinement
,
arrested
abroad for narcotics
of
those
charged
·
can be
vioJations. Most of them are - prolonged
in
some countries up
unaware of the grave potential
to- I year without bail. Some of
consequencesofofviolatingthe
it
is spent
in
solitary
laws of a foreign country, and of con fin em en
t.
Language
the limited capability of their
difficulties
compound
the
government to assist them if. tragedy.
Rick
.
Reuschle
One of the sure signs· of ability
in athletics
is
versatility.
If.
any
work describes Rick Reuschle's
athletic strength, it is versatility.
Rick's
penchant for sports
began back in St. Anthony's
High,
in
Smithtown. While at St.
Anthony's,
Rick
ran
cross-country
and
indoor,
outdoor track for four years.
On coming to Marist, Reuschle
decided to
row
crew.
-
It was'
quite a decision. That spring,
under Bill Zabicki, it was the
freshman shell that
gave
Marist
its best f"Ulish yet in the Dad
Vail, a third against experience4
oarsmen.·
His sophomore
and· junior
years,
Rick
rowed in the jayvee
shell. In
his
junior year,-
Rick
·
mo.ved from the bow to
2
to
3
and finally, number four seat.
Rick was
in
.
the four seat when
his shell won the President's Cup
jayvee race.
·
This spring,
Rick
went back to
running track. llick found
it
hard to express his reasons for
switching sports. Primarily, he
realized that, at
160
lbs., he
would be too light for the shells
this year, arid, he felt he could
do more to help the track
team.
He wasn't too far from wrong.
So far Rick has competed in the
100, 220, 440 relay and broad
j!Jmp. Against Fairfield, Rick
fa!?
a
I 0.3 in
the
100,
and placed
second in the longjump.
·
Vice-President of the
-
Varsity
Club, Rick
is
a. biology major
who hopes to enter Brooklyn
Medical School next fall.



















. APRIL"2l, 1970
PAGE7
In Perspective
·Neimell-
Knock·
off
Newtlrk··S1.··••···
Bill
Kalish
L.a st · Sa't u r ifay,
. an·
promise. although dropping. il.
Currently running better than
:ineX:perierictd
ten11is team
2-6, ~-6·_.decision. Bill Haenrich ·. he's ever done before, Bill Kalish
travelled to. Newark: S.tate .and
adjusted to competition· iniore
is
b
I
o s so ming · into
an
·walked.off
with.

surprisingly . ·easily by, taking. his match
6~1,
outstanding quarter-miler. In the
. easy 8-l victory.T~e team,-with ·_,
6~L · · . ·..•. . . .
first two meets of this season,
only_. one· ·returning• starter ~md .
In ·
doubles competition, Jim
Bill anchored both-the 440 relay.
only. two· others, with· college··
ii
caney': and. ·Brian· N er.rie
and the mile relay. to a string of.
experience,·-now ·holds
a
1-l . co.mbiiled>to. take a .disputed
four consecutive victories. In
record,
. after dropping their __ match 8-6, 6-3. Qella Rocca and
.both cases, the mHe relay was at
opener to Quinnipfac:- . .
. . Machado . then took a 6-4, 6-0, a crucial stage of.the meet when
· .. In. the' first match, number orie _ decision· .. Inexperience. was no
a second place · finish would
man.Jim Heaney swept_ to aJwo
obs_tacle in the last match, as
mean defeat, and both times,
set
victory,', 6-2,. 6-0. La~t year;
first. year men . Lacombe and
Bill took the baton about l
O
to
Heaney alternated between the 3
Haenrich. combined. to truce the -15 yards behind and came h9me
clocking. Tomorrow, Bill will be
. going for the first 50 flat quarter
. at Marist as he anchors the mile
relay at. the world famous-Penn
Relays. Before the end of the
season, if he gets to run it, Bill
has a very good chance of hitting
the 22 range for a 220.
A native of Kew Gardens, Bill
is a graduate of Christ the. King·
High School
where he ·ran
cross-country and track for three.
years.
At· Marist,
Bill ran
cross-country for his first three
and.
-_4 ,
positions. Jerry Della
last match of the day, 6-r,4~6,
in front.
.
Rocca, starting for the first time,
6~0.
. __
.
On Tuesday at New Paltz, Bill
took his match by a similar 6-2,
Today the . team will meet · recorded his fas_t_est
t~e ever as
6-0
score.
Sienna, on the New Paltz courts.
.he sped the 440m51.5. He then
John· Machado a freshman
Next Wednesday, Coach Petro·, came. back in the mile relay to
with
impressiv'e
credentials,
will
lead
his- charges'
to. ·!1-ln an i~entical 51.5 anchor leg
proved his ·worth by posting a· Manhattan for a 2:00 match. .
m-the ram on_ ·a tea11_1
that broke
6-3, 6~1 win .. Brian Nerrie started
**·***
the school record with a 3:34.0
· years, and has been a. mainstay
of the
track
team since it
originated

years
ago.
Although never a distance star,
Bill-
always
kept
the
cross-country team alive with his
constant wit and this year's team
sorely felt his absence. Indoors
at the Garden Invitational, Bill
ran a good 54 quarter on the
anchor leg of the mile relay. He
also holds the record in the 60
yard-dash with a 6.8 although he
only· ran the event once.
his first full season at Marist on a
high· note, posting a 6-0; 6-0 win.
Fifth mail Pete Lacombe,'.in his
first competitive match, -sh?wed
--
-li'nksmen
Und·efeated
. Under the able guidance· of
Coagh- Vin Toscano; the varsity
golf squad has moved off to a
great start winning all three of ·
· its matches. The squad has three .
Ietterm~n .. returning from last'
year'·if,•;'.team,
seniors
Brian
·.Corco'fa-ii and Joe Iamascia;
playing for ~their_ ·fourth . and ·
third
years respectively, and
sophomore John _Foley, playing
for his _second year. Rounding
out the starting squad are four
' first year men, senior Frank
Liantonio,
junior Dave Ri\T~,
soph . Mike Smith. _and. frosh
Dallas Benedict.
Before the current outdoor
season,·
Bill
was elected
co-captain of the team and thus · .,
far has proven to be the team
leader. In his junior year,
Bill
served as an equally capable
Presi_dent of the Spiked Shoe
Club.
Soon to graduate as a history
· major, Bill will be entering the
U.S. Marine Corps in September.
* * * * *
FROSHFROMB
continuously pressured by the
second boat over the remainder
of
the 2000 meter course. After
dropping to 31 beats per' minute
for-
the body of the race, each
boat upped the stroke to 34.
The first boat finished in 6:40,
five lengths ahead of Cross, the
second boat a length behind in
·
6:44. Holy Cross straggled in at
6:59.
.
·
The teain opened the season
against Bloomfield, a ·particular ... ·
r~val becaus~ .. -~f,)ast ;;Y~ar's-e-.~
disputed , sud.de~.""tleatfr'playof:C,·~
victory; ana:cariie
back 'from. · .. ·
New Jeisey\vith a well deserved · .
12-6:wiil; Big winners were Brian
Jimmy Wilkens ,
trailed by
Jack McDonnell, rims
the
option play
for
a score. ·
Both frosh boats are awaiting
their biggest test
of
the season
when
they face St. Joseph,
Villanova, and
W .P
.I.
in the
President's Cup Regatta which
will
be held on the Hudson River
Saturday morning.
*'·* * * *
. Corcoran and Mike Smith,.who •· of.tlie 'day _was John Foley·with
·won:
3 pts. each and Dave Riva
a sc·orching 73 · followed by Joe
and-·Frank Liant<mi9, who won
Iarnasda with
79.
-
2 pts. each. The medalist.for the
Against a surprisingly tough
day was Brian Corcoran, with a
Newark State . team, Marist was
79, folloowed by
Joe
Iamascia; · once- again the victor, by the
80,andMikeSmith,82.
.
score·
of
I l½-6½.
Key
The team also won its home
performances were turned in by
opener against Iona, 11 ½ - 6½ at
Smith;. Riva and Bene!}ict,_
who
the Beekman Co'!mtry Club. Joe · came in with 3 pts.
,
each, and .
lamascia and John Foley led the
Corcoran with I½. Corcoran was
way with 3 pts: each and Dallas . the low ma11 with 76, followed
i3enedict and Dave Riva chipped
by Smith, lamascia, Riva·· and
in
with 2
a
piece. The low scorer
Bene~ict with 82. _
_
· Perspective..
CONT~FROM8
Of
course,
many .. key
contributions have been made in
other
events ... At Bridgeport
Jerry Wildn~r and Rick Reuschle
took 1-2 in the 100 and 220,
while at Fairfield, Wildner hit
10.4 for the 100 and 23.4 for
the 220: Greg Howe garnered a
first- in the 880.with a 2:06 at
Bridgeport and-took sec_ond at
· Fairfield. Ron Palumbo set a
new school record with a 4 I '5''
toss
for
first place in the shot
put at Fairfiel~. Bob
·
Mangiardi
has high juinped
5'
8½" for 2
Paul Blum
Being the closest· thing Marist
has ever seen to a decathlon star,
-Paul Blum is certainly a unique
tfackman. At 165 lbs., he
is
to
the weight events,what a
150
lb.
fullback would be to football.
•Paul's best event, if he were
' ever to coriceritrate on one
instead of eight or ,nine, would
be the pole vault. Consistently in
the 12 foot range, he expects to
clear 13 feet by the end of the
season;
In the throwing. events, a
. year-round
.weight
training
program has been . the key to
Paul's steady improvement. His
versatility includes . the discus,.
· 125'3", jav.elin, 159'3", shot,.
37'6", and the hammer, which'
he is just learning, 95' . .When the
-indoo1 team needed another
. high
jumper at Queens, Paul gave
it a try, cleared 5'3" and took
third place. With all· this,.he has
still found time for running. On
numerous
occasions he .has
competed in the . 2~mile,. and,
once, when an -injury left three
people in the mile relay, he
stepped in and ran
a
quick 440. -
. When '-asked about his track
career;
Paul ·replied that he
enjoys, "participation far more
than competition."
Paul. is from a family of 15-
children and lives in the small
town of Tivoli, about 30 miles
north·
of Marist. Laughingly
referred to as a "day~hop in
residence,"
Paul says "I've
probably had more roommates
than anyone else on campus."
Paul came to Marist hoping to
play football, and he made the
team
as the · deep
safety.
However, his hopes were short
lived as he suffered a broken leg
in the 3rd game against Siena
as
a freshman. This proved to be a
major setback
as
he wasn't able
to run hard or pole-vault until
his junior year.
Paul, a history major with an
· enthusiastic minor in Phys. Ed.,
has put his experience to good
use, serving as an offensive and
defensive line coach in the fall at
Lourdes
High School from
which
he
graduated
and
presently he also coaches .
all
field events at Coleman High
. School in Kingston. Paul, in his
typical
light-hearted manner,
'said he wanted to go
fo
grad
school' for Phys. Ed. but he
never got around to applying.
Paul's main ambition; aside
from
being
a professional
athlete, is to be a liberal-minded
coach..
.
I could end this feature here
but no story about Paul Blum is
complete without mention of
his
cars, usually 55 Buicks, which he
remodels and then sells for S
dollars. Right now Paul
is
in the
market for 3 tires
so
anyone
with
size IS tires, you can
probably
contact
him
somewhere on the 6th floor
Champagnat, 2nd floor Leo, 5th
floor Leo, the weight room in
Leo, or just running up and
down the stairs in Champagnat
with a 15 lb. weighted vest and
10 · lb. weights around each
ankle.
second places and, at Fairfield,
he won the triple jump covering
38 feet. fan Masterson has won
the 440 intermediate hurdles
twice and the 120 highs once.
CHUCK HERE FROM 4
doesn't matter.
If
we can have
them out by 1972, maybe by
I
973 we can have them in Laos,
or maybe Cambodia, or maybe
Guatemala, or maybe Israel or
maybe even the moon! . ' ·.
Let It Be.
*****
Campus
Stuff
Subject: Crew
By Don Duffy
Row, Row your boat gently down the stream is something that
the 1970 Marist Crew shells have not strictly adhered too as the
mighty Red Foxes have rowed over every crew they have faced so
far. Marist has completed sweeps against the likes of Notre Dame,
Holy Cross and Stony Brook with. the most recent triumph against
Amherst last Saturday afternoon. Nothing strong enough has been
thrown in their ·path until this Saturday when they take the river
against. Temple, St. Joe's and three other varsity- shells in the
President's cup. Captain Mike Arteaga feels very confident that the
Marist Varsity can win their first President's Cup and I share his
confidence. The Varsity led by Stroke Ryan and Coxswain
Masterson have completed sweeps over Notre Dame, Holy Cross and
Amherst by
5,4,
and 7 lengths respectively. In the boat is Nesteroke,
McGovern, Sepe, O'Brien, Sal's Staudle and McHugh. The J.V. has
been just as impressive
if
not more so in their three sweeps over the
same schools. They won by 5 ,7 • and
5
lengths respectively and were
looking forward to the cup this Saturday. A Marist victqry would
make it two--straight for the,J.V. in Cup Competition. The J.V. shell
is lead by Coxswain Joe Bevilaqua with stroke John Weiss, Plenscar,
Cappio, Olen, Carnardi, Ritz, farmer Torrey and Jamie Mcloughlin.
The Freshmen boats line up as the best teams that Marist has had.
The second boat lead by Stroke Dennis Stauffer and Coxswain Mini
Hawk Hawd has only one problem in that they have an easy time in
beating other freshmen shells but can't beat the Freshmen number
one shell which is lead by Coxswain Harry Manley and Joe Schrotz.
Good Luck to all the shells this Saturday at the Cup ....
Bits-N-Pieces
Their seemed to
be
a big worry over the quarterbacking problem
for the football club for next year. They seem to be
all
over with the
excellent job Jimmy Wilkens did in Marist's big 48-14 victory over
St. Francis .. -.. The entire crew team still can't understand why Bill
Staudle would actually want
to
go for a swim in the Hudson.
Ask
Bill how the water is when you see him. . . . With the Dad
Vail
only
two weeks away I understand that Mike McNeely might get a bus to
do down to Philly with fond memories of Freshmen Year. Anybody
for box lunches ...•
Congratulations to the Bugmen for their victory in the Volleyball
intramurals. Led by M.V.P. Joe Scott and fast J. Kiesel they
defeated the Original Pressure Points in the finals. My thanks goes
out
to
Bob Mayerhoffer and Frank Gerdes for the excellent ref job
they did ...•
Ask
Jimmy Elliott what he is doing May
7 .... Be
Good, Love Duff.
*****
......
-------------------------------------------------------~---
·-
--·-
-
-
-











































































































































































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'
PAGES.
'DIEaRCi.£
·
·.
APRIL i3; 1970
CREW:TEA,M\lEA-DS
VICTORY
PARADE
_.FOOTBALL,''
TENNls·,
.TRACK,TRIUMPH.
'•Vikings
SUry
Sf.
Frands
_()'a~slltens
Rec9~d
,Unb}elllished
.·.·
BehilldHasbrou.ck,Wilken·s.
. ..
!'!s~~
8ti
flf~!m'!!~Lu~,~~~~1?!.,
...
,h,
··
-
·
·
.
.---
.
;
.. :And·
it
goes on· and_ on and
River course.
·
I"·.

-
·•
:


ahead
·-of
Amherst:
The_ Lord
By Kevin Donnelly
forced the St. Francis punter to: on. The Marist varsity andjayvee
The varsity, opening· at" 38
,
Jeffs negotiated the course in
The. Vikings finished spring
get off a poor kick· which gave boats continue to roll to victory
strokes per minute~ took a one
8 :40 ..
·
.
,
·
..
practice,
last
·weekend
by
the Vikings. possession deep
,in
regardless <>(the boatings ... ·.
.
_length lead·
'in
.
the first 500
The. Jay_vee coxswain was Joe
· defeating St. Francis College of
·
enemy
territory .. Hasbrouck
. On Saturday afternoon, both·
,
meters,· After settling to
..
33. Bevilaqua, John Weis moved up
Brooklyn
by.
a
lop-sided score
0

went through the
..
middle on the
teams rowed to. exceptionally
strokes per min:Ute for the
body.
.
to
replace
Mc.Hugh in the stroke·
48--14oifLeonidoff Field.
first play for 30 yards to·put the
easy wins ov~r Amherst, despite
of the race, the varsity began
to
..
position,
followed
by Bill
The Vikings new offense was
·
CONTINUED
ON
6.
~
very strong current, on the
pull
steadily away. Sprinting.·· Staudle,
Danny Cappio,
·
Paul
impressive as it rolled
up
the
over the· last 200 meters at' 36
..
Olen, Mike Camardi, Joe Ritz,
highest. poirit total ever scored
~,·
the·.v'arsity viori
iri
7:56 with
~
Marty
Torrey-
and
Jim
by
.a
Viking
.
team.
·
A fine
·
Six length lead over the Amherst
McLaughlin.
, .
. .
performance was given by
Jim
shell which crossed
'the
line
in
Both the varsity and jayvee
·
Wilkens
as he
.
took over a
8:32.
·
·
·

··
.
.
·
races had added significance
in
quarterback in
his
first starting
·
The
yarsity
boating
.was
relation to the Rusty Callow and
role. The
·
st.
Francis defense
different from· the past races as
Dad Vail Regattas. Last year
could not cope with the Darrell
.
C_oach
·
Austin
continues
to

Trinity College won the Rusty
Royal's triple-option offense as
search. for, the right. combination
Ca).low and finished in the top
Dick Hasbrouck broke through·
fo"r the
·upcoming
regattas.

.
three in the Dad Vail. Recently
. ·
time and• again for long gains and
Senior
P~fo
·
Masterson regained.
.
Amherst" rowed Trinity and' our
·
.thfee
t
ouchde>:wns.
·
..
Mark·.
._.
.ltj$
0
,cox~.afu
positiori, ..
Jo~,:_Ry~
·,-:)n
!I
r~ihs,.
of "victory:
wer~..
.
,
1
..
.
-~
.RowHsky
also; iri
,·his
.·first
,,._
rowed stroke followed by Mike•.·· considerably.
greater
th.an
...
,
!~:::~:
.,
.'.
starting
:role:"
m
tlie

Yiking.
.
.
Arteaga; Greg Nestroke; Bernie .. Trinity?s,
thus
raising
our_.
I
'
ba kfield
l
.
d
"
d
t
tb ll
M cGoveril,
Steve Sepe,
.
Matt
·.:
prospects of victory,
"
.
.
·.•
.
. ;.
.-
._·
..
:;--
..
c.
•.
;
..
pay·e
.•
goo.oo
~
·
O'Brien;" Steve.,Palerisear
..
and.:.•Two
...
weeks ago.·both
b
..
oats
;._
-
_.sconng
two T.D. s.
.
-
.
.
·
..
.
.
..
1
j
. : ··
..
-
The Viking def\;nse; whi<.h has,
·
bowman
·Joe
McHugh.-This was
.\:posted.·
equally.
·easy.
wins ov~r
'f;
···
alieady.inadc(anameforitselfin
_
the.Philly flash's firsfraceirithe
:_.Holy
Cfoss
.an'diStony
Brook.
I·;·
·

club football'raiiks, played great
.
varsity sheU:-
.~•-
: ·
.
<
,
Th~ varsity,
with
<'Mia~i•:,
foe
~f
·
,ball
::as>th~y:;
allowed the
.St.
..
The
Jayvee i:ace
·was.
very
Bevilaqua· gettirig'his. first s)iot
1:.'
i

·
Francis team only 69 yards ~otal
similar to the varsity duet With·
guiding>'.-the number
on·e
,
shell,
[.':J;;··.
:.•·
offense.
.
The ··defense
·was-.fo
a
Marist opening
-
.
at a ;41
.
and
.
opened at a
41
and settled to
a
·
\
:


<
new aligiu:neriflast ~aturday, but
dropping down
.to
32
·
fol
the
fast 35 strokes per. minute for
1
-
.
itlooks as though it was made to.
.
body of the
.race, .Amherst
was
.
C.O.NT.
ON_··.
4
.
1\
,
.o£der.·
Using·speed
and·
-.never~eally.init.Mi!istcrQssed
-
I~'
..
·
penetration;
,:
they stopped S.t.
.
i{
_
Francfa time: and again;twhile.
1·t
/set~irig/U:p
-th~
:,Yiking. o(ferise
r,.,•
..
four times.throughout the game.
1
;};-
>
The scgring, started
:
early
_in
;','
the first quartet, St. Francis was
·
::,_'..-;.:
·forced
to P-imflrom deep
"inside:
-
its owri territory'. A strong
rush
.
.
-
...
---~:-;~~:·

_..:
.
.
. .
.,
~ck
Hubiouck !Justing
over
~~r
a
~re.
·.
-i/ftDSh·
Crews.
CruiSe.<
ii,~·BOth
-·.·
Boats
Pirf eel
,.
r.-·
:Tracknlen-
·.Foil.:
Fairfi·eld
..
·.··•.Bov/To;·••
..
Brid.geporl
,
.
,
...
.
..
-··
.
-.
~ese men ue battling for
"fmity
seats
in Saturday's President's
Cup
Resst12.