The Record, October 2, 1963.pdf
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RECORD
MARI ST
COLLEGE
Vol. IV
No.
1
Poughkeepsie, Ne~
York
October 2, 1965
'!6
3 Enrollment ReaChes 1,130
Boil dings,
The Keynote To
Growth
....
Leo Hall. The n~- dormitory among the
st£tely old
tre,;,s,
long
a
prrt
of
h'
the !i&E:rist C.ampus
photo by Mel Fein
1, 130
students! This number repre-
sents a college, Marist College, 750
in the day division,
380
in the night
division.
The development of Marist,
however, is contained in more than
just numbers.
The buildings on the
campus, the newestofwhichisLeo, are
of the finest architecture and provide
for the most modern intellectual, ath-
letic, and recreational facilities
as
well as providing living quarters for
many students. The increased parking
facilities indicates the increase inlocal
area students now attending the college.
In the near future we can expect to ·see
the completion of the new boathouse and
the new Chaplains' quarters.
Let's
look behind the scenes and see where
and how this growth is proceeding.
Leo Hall, a towering six·story resi-
dence hall, known among the resident
students as the Leo Hilton, is located
on the western end of the campus. This
building with its balconies, recreation
halls, and lounges provides for the in-
tellectual, recreational, and general
residential needs of approximately
290
students. Its location next to the Hud-
:aon River affords the residents an ex-
cellent view of the beautiful Hudson
Valley.
The boathouse, soon to be com-
pleted, will serve multiple purposes.
During the winter months the upper
floor will be used as an auxiliary gym-
nasium for wrestling, weightlifting,
and gymnastics. In addition
to
its use
for the rowing machines and as a dor-
mitory for visiting crew teams, it may
also be used for social functions.
Within view ofLeoHall construction
is continuing on a new Chaplains' quar-
ters.
This building will house four
priests and will contain in addition to a
lounge, a private chapel.
The
increase of the faculty this
year by
15
new teachers brings the
number of full time teachers to
47.
Working this out on astudenttoteaeher
basis we can boast a
16
to
1
ratio.
We are all sure that as the future
becomes the present the growth of
Marist will never cease. In the future
we can see a fieldhouse, a theatre, a
student union. As a well-known news-
paper put it, "Maristwillbethecollege
to be·reckoned with academically, ath-
letically, and socially within the next
ten years."
Father James
V
111phel
I
Assistant To Vbapl1iu
One of the many additions to Marist
this year has come in the person of the
Reverend
James Campbell,
0. P.
Father Campbell is originally a resi-
dent of Philadelphia -where he studied
at St. Joseph's Preparatory School.
With the coming of the Second World
War, Father Campbell served his coun-
try as a navigator in the
2oth Air
Force
and saw action in the South Pacific.
The close of the war also meant an
opening of a new chapter in Father
Campbell's life. This chapter alone is
indeed noteworthy for any man.
It
saw
the furthering of his education at Har-
vard where he received an A. B. in His-
tory. After this came work with an
American oil company in Hong Kong and
Shanghai. From there Father went to
Brazil where he worked with an invest-
ment banking firm of Rio de Janero.
While in Rio, Father Campbeli be-
lievedthat a new chapter in his life was
being written and he returned to the
United States to enter the Trappist
Monastery at Gethsemani. It was here
that Father Campbell came to know St.
Thomas and after a year of prayer, he·
entered the Order of Preachers in
which he was ordained a priest in
June
1962.
('{>nt.
on
p.
5
...
___
.,
____
...
.
__________
__
_
The
RECORD
Editor:
George
Hallam
Asst. Editor:
Gerry
Marmion
Mod
erat
or: Dr. Georg,e Sommer
G£.nes.is:
2.illh .. C
e nJu_r
_
y
"
...
To find
the unnatur
al,
Gradually ahsorh
the
industry
or
ten o'clock
:
the embryo
pig
slit through
With the
proper instruments by embryos;
/\nd Sophocles cut,
for
speed, with a
blu
e
pE:!n
ci
l.
l'r
chensilc
sophomor
es
in the
tr
ee
of learning
Stare at the exiled
blossoming t
rees,
vaguely puzzled,
..
.
"
-----
John
Malcolm Drinnin
Another
poet,
on another
topic,
once referred
to
Spring as
that
tim
e
or year "when a young man's fancy
turns lightly
to
thoughts
of
love", hut he totally neglected to
mention
the transformation that
the Third
Season
brings
upon youth. For
indeed,
it
is
in
the Fall that
the
college
man is led
again
to cast
aside
the mundane tools of summer
and
pick
up anew
tllc
fine
instruments of
learning. /\nd yet, whil
e
the
transition from
"living to
life"
might
well
be termed "trying" for
the
college
man, there
is yet
another
class
of men for
whom such
a
transition may
be
well
nigh
impossible
.
The
species
to
which
I am
referring arc
called quite
innocuously, yet
very
appropriately, Frosh.
In spite
of such
a seemingly
disparaging introductory phrase, it
must
be
admitted
immediately
_
that these
are
the "lifeblood of any
co
lleg
e.
" Indeed, while the initial impression is
hardly
of
a
laudatory
n
at
ure, th
ese
rather
"r
are
anfmals" are known, within a few short
weeks, to undergo a radical change.
It
is
almost
as
if they, having
a
pproached the terminus
or climax
of
an
18-year
gestation, await
only
the touch of
a
"magic wand" to fre
e
them
from
their deadly
carcinoma
- a
cancer
of youth. Casting
aside
for the last time the
toys or
their
childhood,
they
are
led
for
the first time into a typ
e
of
"enchanted
forest"
w
_
h
ere
knowledge is
the
password. Happily, many
make
the
transition very
rapidly - others
take
long
er
-
some
regrettably
are
de
s
tin
e
d to be
intellectual
babies
and
fall
swiftly
by the
wayside
.
In
_
the latt
er case
th
e
seed
was
good,
but the
soil
was rocky.
T
•:
njoying thi
s
rather blat~nt
"indo'ctrination into the ranks of men"
are a
group of men, prematu
re
ly ancient with the knowledge of the
ce
nturi
es.
They
have
seen it
before
- indeed
been part of it,
and
like
Hemingway's
old
Spaniard
need
say
no mo
re
than,
"l\h
Yes,"
in
order
to
make
their presence
felt.
Some
could
look back to the days wh
e
n
Donnelly Hall was
only a seed
of thought, impregnated into the hearts
of the "builders
of
Marist." Others
could
remember the days
in
Grey-
stone
when
studying was almost
impos
s
ible
amid
the clatter
and clank of
neglected pipes
and
the odor of
a
thoroughly "un-housebroken" cat
,
Yes, today th
e
y, as we, are witnessing a Genesis - a 20th century
Genesis, vital, vibrant, smacking of the forces of
change
and growth -
and yet,
a
genesis
as surely guided
by
the
same hand that led
Moses out of Egypt
and
into
the
Promised Land!
Features:
Gerry Marmion
,
l
·
:ditor; Joseph
Sendra; Edward
Douglas;
Peter
Maronge; William Meagher
;
Ted Flynn; Ed
Parr; William Treanor; Hodger Colao; Daniel Meges; Gus
DeFlorio; Joe Cavano; Tom Duffy; John Falcone.
GUEST EDITORIAL
Sports: John Barry, Editor; Dennis O'Brien; Brian Johnson.
Make-up: Jim
Sullivan
&
Gerry
Johannsen, Editors; Dick
Freer; David Donoghue
Circulation: John Guiliano,
Editor;
Thomas Troland; Chris
Hynes; Paul
Keister
Photography: Paul Keister
The first indication
of
fall is here
again,
the
mustering
of the annual
Evening
Division
"Challenge Crew."
To our newer
students,
this informa-
tion may be surprising,
and,
perhaps
to
some
or our older
students as
well,
for
the
members
of the
_
"Challenge
Crew"
arc rather
a modest lot.
· ·
·
By
now
,
the
Ev
e
ning Division Crew has
become
a
part of
our
school's tradition,
ha
v
ing
gathered for
the
last
four years.
Unfortunately, in
each of
those years
something
has
come
up to prevent the
group
from
actually
presenting
a
chal-
lenge to the Varsity Crew.
Last year, if
I remember
correctly,
our "Stroke
Oar"
developed
gout.
The
year
before
, a
t the last
minute,
our
Cox' un
and two
other members of the
crew
were incapacitated with arthritis.
In point of
fact,
the closest that ouf
•
"Ch
a
llenge
Crew"
has come to the
water
was last year when we had two
scouts out
spying
on Varsity Crew prac-
tice
and one
of
them
fell into the water.
What
brings
this subject to mind
is
a scene .that
met my
eyes,
in a local
park, last Saturday morning. Led by
a
Brother
(whose name I daren't mention
for fear of creating antagonism b
e
tween
him and
Coach
Murphy), a motley as-
sortment
of our
Evening
Division
fellows came panting down the trail.
Their costumes ranged from the sub-
lime to the bizarre. The Broth
er
was
dressed, "comme
il
faut" in
a
black
sweat suit with the customary vertical
white
pencil line on the front
of
his
collar.
·
As for the rest, I'm almost
certain
that
a couple
of members
were
attempting
to
pawn off "long johns"
as
genuine
sweat
suits
.
The buttoned
flap at the
rear
was a dead
giveaway
.
The
group always
jump to
an early
start in their vigorous
athletic
program.
As a matter of fact, som
e
very
authori-
tative sources believe that the
reason
they have never actually pres
e
nted
a
challenge is due to the
fact
that they
arc
overtrained
.
And, while w
e
are on the
subject,
I
would lik
e
to
dispel that\
vicious rumor
about
some of our
mem-l
bers
being
too
broad
across
the
beam
'
to fit into a
shell
right here
and
now.
It's
an
outright
fabrication. True, the
seating arrangement of
a
few of the men
had to be rearranged, placing the most
ample bottomed members in the widest
part of the shell, but all of them did fit.
Perhaps it's just as well that we have
never reached the point where we were
actually
ready
to present the challenge,
for, as you
are
aware, the niceties of
challenging involve all
sorts
of pro-
blems.
It
has been a matter of bitter
division within the "Challenge Crew"
it-
self,
There are two primary factions.
The first wants to appear suddenly on
the river during Varsity practice, out-
pull the Varsity Crew with anticipated
cont. on p. 4
l
t
i
I
t
l
I
October
.2,
1965
. New Faculty Members
As the academic year of 1963-64
gets underway, the most notable addi-
tion is that of the new personalities, in
particular the new members ·of the facu-
lty.
One of the new instructors is Mr.
Dennis Curtin, a native of Queens, New
York.
After completing his secondary
education, he attended Iona College,
where he majored in Physics. He was
President of the Da Vinci Society, a
campus science organization. He was
also Head of the Board of Electors for
the service organization "Taca".
After
graduation from Iona he accepted a
teaching fellowship at
the Catholic
University of America. He success-
fully completed work for his M. A. in
Nuclear Physics.
During the next two semesters Mr.
Curtin will be conducting classes in
General Physics, Oi:>tics, and Atomic
Physics. At the end of this 'academic
year he plans to return to C. U. to ob-
tain his Ph.D. in Physics. After re-
ceiving this degree Mr. Curtin would
like to return to Marist.
Mr. Casey, who is originally from
LeSueur, Minnesota, the home of the
Jolly Green Giant, has a mid-western
background and preference. His early
education was obtained at Lesueur Pub-
lic School, After graduation from high
. school he attended St. John's University
in College Ville, Minnesota. Mr. Casey
obtained his M.A. from Fordham Uni-
cont. on p. 4
The Record'
/
Pagel':
Hazing· We·ek
A Splashing Success
The mud has been washed
off;
clothes have been dried; freshmen have
tipped their beanies for the last time;
Hazing Week is ended.
'
For five days previous to Hazing
Week, the_ freshmen were strangers
both to the campus and the upperclass-
men. However, th,e inevitable arrived.
Monday, September 16th, initiated the
Hazing Program. The sophomores at-
tempted to learn the freshman identi-
ties by having -them recite their names
backwards. They wished to find out if
he was well groomed and therefore
made· him
tip
his beany. Reciting
nursery rhymes or interpreting the
murals in Donnelly Hall tested . his
mental capacity.
His mathematical
ability was realized whenever he was
asked to measure various objects with
a toothpick.
Innovations such as the
.~r_es~man ju~IJ and clearing the field
of rocks added to the enjoyment of the
week, especially that of the sophomores.
The freshmen refused to take this
treatment lying down.
With the aid of
an "unknown" person or persons, they
removed the fox from the bookstore .
Sheahan Hall retaliated with their
famous (or is it infamous} chant of
"Sophomores are Rat-finks". On Wed-
nesday, Tom Corrado awakened the
south side of Leo Hall at 5: 30 A. M.
with the cacophonous sound of Reveille.
Tom got his.
The sophomores felt the sting of in-
sult when Brother Paul ended their
participation in the hazing program on
Wednesday afternoon.
The freshmen
however,
signed petitions
and the
sophomores were reinstated.
Saturday came early for the fresh-
men.
The surprise move of the day
was the kidnapping of the four freshmen
floor captains at 7: 15 A. M. by the
Hazing Committee.
The abduction
spoiled the plans of the Frosh and
that same "unknown" person.
Rumor
has it that they intended to spirit away
a member of the committee and deposit
him in the city jail.
At the Mixer, Saturday evening, the
floor captains, dressed in rags and
bound with ropes around their necks
were exchanged for the fox. With this
tr:1de the freshmen also received the
fox tail and Hazing Week was officially
. closed for another year.
May we congratulate the Hazing Com-
mittee and the upperclassmen on their
fine job and urge the freshmen on to an
enlightening and productive year here
at Marist.
9!:'~;:- -
Pe.p;e
,t
,
,-
.
FACULTY.·cont,
versity and is presently taking courses
at the same university for his Doctor• s
·
degree in Philosophy.
Mr. Casey, in reference to Marist
said, "It seems
fo
me that there are
two obvious signs of lj!ialth here at
Marist
.
1. The intellectual curiosity
of the students, and 2. the general de-
sire of the faculty to insure continued
progress. He also made the statement
that "Progre,ss seems to be the p·ass-
word at Maz,ist. While progress-made
at Marist, in its brief history, is cer-
tainly impressive by any standards,
both the students and the faculty appear
to be more
concerned
with
improving
existing
conditions than acquiescing in
self-congratulations."
Mr. George Doran, whose weekly
schedule accounts
for
a total of four
.
courses including evening
classes,
is also a faculty proctor in Sheahan
Hall.
After graduating from St. Vincent's
C-ollege
in
L
abrobe, Pa. , with a Bache-
lor of Science degree in mathematics,
Mr. Doran received a research as-·
.
sistantship for an M. B. A. from Du-
quesne University in Pittsburgh. While
.
studying at Duquesne he was awarded
'
membership in Omicron Delta Epsilon,
·
an honorary economics society, com-
parable to Phi Beta Kappa, the national
·
honor society in Liberal Arts.
Mr.
Doran was invited by the American
Risk Insurance Association to d
·
eliver
a paper at the annual American Econo-
mic Association Convention to be held
this year in Boston, December 27th.
It is a monologue from his graduate
thesis and is entitled "Unemployment
and Out-of-the-Labor Force Relation-
ships: Static and Dynamic Analyses".
His further academic endeavors will in-
chide work toward a doctorate from
New York University with research in
Business and Economics.
Mr. Doran feels quite strongly that·
athletics play an integral part in the
·
total development of the college student.
He maintains that competition and per-
severance which are so necessary in
sports, are of equal value in connection
with studies.
This carry
-
over can
prove to be a valuable asset in striving
towardyour goal whether it be the touch-
down or the sheepskin.
Tbe·Record
Student Council Initiates
f.ilm Program
The Marist College Student Council
initiated its Fall Semester film pro-
gram on Wednesday evening, Septem-
ber 25th, at 7: 30 P. M.
The firs
_
t of
seven full length features which will be
shown in the gym at no charge, was en-
titled A RAISIN IN TH
.
E SUN.
A
super-
ior dramatic achievement sprinkled with
amusing bits of humor, A RAISIN IN
THE SUN portrayed Sidney Poitier,
Claudia McNeil, and Ruby Dee as mem-
bers of a poor negro family which had
just been awardedalargesumofmoney.
The conflict that
ensues
over how to
spend the fortune, provided the viewers
with an enjoyable evening.
Donald Rolleri, Student Council
President, made
it
known that each
film was carefully selected by a com-
mittee of students under
.
the direction
of Paul Maher, Movie Commissioner
of the Student Council, in an attempt
to provide the best possible film enter-
tainment for the entire student body.
The schedule, which provides a film
every other week of the Fall semester,
concludes January 8th.
MARIST COLLEGE LECTURE SERIES
Oct.
9
David McKay,
Professor of
Law, New York University, "The Four-
teenth
Amendment"
(Civil
Rights}
(This is part of a series of lectures
·
and panels, given under the joint aus-
pices of Marist, Vassar, and Dutchess
Community Colleges.
The other lec-
tures will be given at Vassar on Octo~
her 7 and Dutchess Community College
on October 11).
·
Panelists who will discuss the Civil
Rights issue with Professor McKay in-
clude Brother Edward Cashin of Marist
College and Professor Carl Degler of
Vassar College
Place:
Gym
Oct. 28 Charles J. Walsh, Chairman
of the Department of Economics, Ford-
ham University.
Topic: "The Balance of Payments:
Where Is Our Gold Going?"
Place: Adrian Lounge
Nov. 15 The Alffiirtus -:Magnus Lecture
Rev. William A. Wallace, 0. P., Ph.D.
S. T. D., Staff Editor in the area of
Philosophy for the New World Catholic
Encyclopedia
Topic: The Philosophy of Science
Dec. 4 Rev. John L
.
McKenzie, S. J.
Professor of Scripture at Loyola Uni-
versity, Chicago and author of The Two-
sdged Sword.
·
Topic:
The Old Testament
The courses Mr. Doran is teaching
at Marist are Principles of Economics,
Personnel Management and Industrial
Relations, Marketing Management, and
Statistics.
Dr.Howard Goldman
Athletic Di
rector
Dr. Howard Goldman will be the new
Athletic Director of Marist, taking over
the post from
.
Brother William Murphy
who has handled it since Marist started
competing in Intercollegiate sports.
Brother William will devote all his
energies,
presently to teaching.
Dr
.
Goldman is a graduate of Cort-
land State College (N. Y. }.
He earned
his M
.
A. and Doctorate in Physical
Education at Indiana University.
For
the past six years Dr. Goldman has
been on the staff of Plymouth State
College as
an
instructor in Physical
Education and as coach of Soccer and
FreshmanBasketball. Here at Marist,
his first post as an athletic director,
Dr. Goldman is also coaching the new-
ly formed Soccer team and proposed
Freshman Basketball squad
.
NOCTUfillE
cont.
ease, then sit back in smug satisfac-
tion and wait for the Varsity Crew to
present the challenge. The other fac-
tion is more tradition-minded, believ-
ing that our Cox'un should leave his
gauntlet
in
the face of the Varsity Crew
Cox'un. The great danger in this ap-
proach is that the. Varsity Cox•unmight
not be thoroughly acquainted with
chivalric tradition, and permanently
incapacitate our Cox• un. For this rea-
son our Cox• un is
·
a strong adherent of
the first faction.
But, all things considered, the
group this year seems to be the best
ever, and may well reach the point of
readiness where they will be able to
take to the river. One thing is certain,
for the next four weeks great effort
will be made by the "Challenge Crew"
to fulfill the tradition that they are des~
perately trying to create.
October
t,
196~
.
Bro. Cashin
Avademiv Wice President
Brother Linus R. Foy, F. M
.
S.,
President of Marist College, has made
known the appointment of Brother Ed-
ward Lawrence Cashin as Academic
Vice-President of Marist.
Brother
Edward's major responsibility in his
new position has to do with curriculum
development. He will also act as co-or-
dinator between the academic depart-
ments in matters concerning the long
range development of the college. The
newly-named Academic .Vice-President
is a member of theHistoryDepartnient.
at Marist and will continue teaching.
Brother
.
Edward was born July 22,
1927 at Augusta, Georgia.
He was
graduated from Marist Brothers
·
High
School in Augusta in 1945 and from
Marist College
in
1952. He later re-
ceived an M. A. and a Ph.D. from
Fordham University in American His-
tory.
Brother Edward taught for ten
years at Mount St. Michael in the
Bronx andforthreeyears
·
at Christopher
Columbus High School in Miami, Fla•
He has also served as President of
both the Catliolic Forensic League of
New York and· the Catholic Forensic
League of Miami._
Before coming to Marist, Brother
Cashin studied for six months
in
Frie-
burg, Switzerland.
.
FR. CAMPBELL C::ont.
Asked his impressions of Marist,
Father Campbell replied that one of the
most amazing points was ttie enthusiasm
that is found on campus. The college
is alive with youth and it is a pleasure
to asso1,iate with such youth
,
"You
can attend a big university but you know
that it lias been there for years and will
be there for years to come. However,
when you come to a small college and
especially one that
.
is growing there is
a dynamism which one can feel and
wants to be part of.
II
At Marist, Father Campbell will
serve as the Assistant to
.
the Chaplain
while fulfilling a full time teaching
schedule which includes classes in
Metaphysics, Philosophical Psychology
and Theology.
.
The Record
l
'
MPRESSIONS
Dateline: Paris
by Michael Perry
Since I am a first time visitor here
in France, I naturally have many im-
pressions. In what I hope to make a
regular column, I am going to try to
let you in on some of the high-lights
and some of the low points of what I've
found here. In the future; I'll hit more
specific points for discussion, but for
now, just a quick look at what the
French have here
in"
The City of Lights".
What is it that Paris, or fur that
matter any other French city, has to
offer?
To be completely French a city
musthave at least one Catholic Church.
Then,
if
it is of any sizi, it will have a
museum.
One real good restaurant,
which nobody ever goes to because the
prices are too high, and several cafes
(the word bistro is seldom used) are
also an important part of the landscape.
There must be too, a bakery to buy
bread and pastry, and a shop to buy the
other staple, wine.
Another essential
is the book store
.
As for things which
they can live without, but which they
have anyway, add a park with benches,
a fountain, and
..
millions of pigeon to
mess
1-IP
the benches
.
and fountain.
Throw in a few people, some on bikes,
others in little cars which don't know
how to stop, and you have the skeleton
of a French city.
I hope to hit a lot of these things,
some more serious than others in the
future. But for now, we will have to
leave it here.
And,
by
the way, Paris is
·
all
they
say it is.
Theater Gui Id
Chooses Comedy
The Executive Committee of the
Theatre Guild has
_
selected My Three
Angels by Sam and Bella Spewack as
the play to be produced by the Guild
this fall. It is to be presented on Thurs-
day, Friday, and Saturday evenings,
November 21st, 22nd, and 23rd, and
on Sunday afternoon, November 24th,
•in
the college auditorium.
_.
The selection is a light comedy
about an old, kind-hearted shop keeper
in French Guiana, the problems he en-
counters with his uncle from France,
and his daughter's love affair with her
cousin.
The three a,ngels, inmates of
the local prison, solve the old man's
problems in a series of highly a,musing
incidents.
Last week auditions were held by
the director, Mr
.
James Britt, at
Dr .Schroeder to Hold
Speed Reading
Workshops
Dr. John Schroeder, Dean of the
Evening Division, will hold two work-
shops in speed reading at the annual
convention of The New York State
Association of Educational Secretaries
in Poughkeepsie on October 18th and
19th
.
There will be. a series of fourteen
workshops for members of the associa-
tion
whose headquarters will be the
Poughkeepsie Inn.
On Friday, Octo-
ber 18th
~
Dr. Schroeder will hold two
workshops in Speed Reading from 2:00
to
.
4: 30 in the afternoon at Poughkeepsie
High School.
Dr. Schroeder, who is also profes-
sor of English in the Day Division of
Marist College, developed the first
remedial program in Dutchess County
as early as 1940 when he became Head
of the English Department at Arlington
High School. This program continued
with increasing success until Dr.
Schroeder
took a sabbatical leave in
1945 to complete the dissertation for
his Doctor's
..
Degree.
Trained
in
techniques of teaching reading at all
levels from first grade to adulthood;
Dr. Schroeder inaugurated the speed
reading courses that have been so
successful at Marist College during the
past seven years.
·
Dr. Schroeder has also conducted
developmental reading classes at the
Hyde Park summer program for the
past two years.
which time the following cast was
selected: Alex Areno, CarolDzuiban,
Mike Lorenzo, Bruce Magner, Paul
Maher, Bob Matthews, Joe Nicastri,
Paul Nigra, Ronnie Pesavento, and
Cathy Shields.
Bill Morrissey
was
named assistant director.
_Page 6.-
New
l{.Qderator:
Dr. George Somer
Editor:
George Halla•
r1et1T
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,
Poolside
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1963
Clams, Corn, Heroes, Soda(?),
Band, Games, Swimming
.
.
Qcte>ber 2,. l96S
tAL
$1.so
4.1.1
4.1.2
4.1.3
4.1.4
4.1.5
4.1.6
MARI ST
COLLEGE
Vol. IV
No.
1
Poughkeepsie, Ne~
York
October 2, 1965
'!6
3 Enrollment ReaChes 1,130
Boil dings,
The Keynote To
Growth
....
Leo Hall. The n~- dormitory among the
st£tely old
tre,;,s,
long
a
prrt
of
h'
the !i&E:rist C.ampus
photo by Mel Fein
1, 130
students! This number repre-
sents a college, Marist College, 750
in the day division,
380
in the night
division.
The development of Marist,
however, is contained in more than
just numbers.
The buildings on the
campus, the newestofwhichisLeo, are
of the finest architecture and provide
for the most modern intellectual, ath-
letic, and recreational facilities
as
well as providing living quarters for
many students. The increased parking
facilities indicates the increase inlocal
area students now attending the college.
In the near future we can expect to ·see
the completion of the new boathouse and
the new Chaplains' quarters.
Let's
look behind the scenes and see where
and how this growth is proceeding.
Leo Hall, a towering six·story resi-
dence hall, known among the resident
students as the Leo Hilton, is located
on the western end of the campus. This
building with its balconies, recreation
halls, and lounges provides for the in-
tellectual, recreational, and general
residential needs of approximately
290
students. Its location next to the Hud-
:aon River affords the residents an ex-
cellent view of the beautiful Hudson
Valley.
The boathouse, soon to be com-
pleted, will serve multiple purposes.
During the winter months the upper
floor will be used as an auxiliary gym-
nasium for wrestling, weightlifting,
and gymnastics. In addition
to
its use
for the rowing machines and as a dor-
mitory for visiting crew teams, it may
also be used for social functions.
Within view ofLeoHall construction
is continuing on a new Chaplains' quar-
ters.
This building will house four
priests and will contain in addition to a
lounge, a private chapel.
The
increase of the faculty this
year by
15
new teachers brings the
number of full time teachers to
47.
Working this out on astudenttoteaeher
basis we can boast a
16
to
1
ratio.
We are all sure that as the future
becomes the present the growth of
Marist will never cease. In the future
we can see a fieldhouse, a theatre, a
student union. As a well-known news-
paper put it, "Maristwillbethecollege
to be·reckoned with academically, ath-
letically, and socially within the next
ten years."
Father James
V
111phel
I
Assistant To Vbapl1iu
One of the many additions to Marist
this year has come in the person of the
Reverend
James Campbell,
0. P.
Father Campbell is originally a resi-
dent of Philadelphia -where he studied
at St. Joseph's Preparatory School.
With the coming of the Second World
War, Father Campbell served his coun-
try as a navigator in the
2oth Air
Force
and saw action in the South Pacific.
The close of the war also meant an
opening of a new chapter in Father
Campbell's life. This chapter alone is
indeed noteworthy for any man.
It
saw
the furthering of his education at Har-
vard where he received an A. B. in His-
tory. After this came work with an
American oil company in Hong Kong and
Shanghai. From there Father went to
Brazil where he worked with an invest-
ment banking firm of Rio de Janero.
While in Rio, Father Campbeli be-
lievedthat a new chapter in his life was
being written and he returned to the
United States to enter the Trappist
Monastery at Gethsemani. It was here
that Father Campbell came to know St.
Thomas and after a year of prayer, he·
entered the Order of Preachers in
which he was ordained a priest in
June
1962.
('{>nt.
on
p.
5
...
___
.,
____
...
.
__________
__
_
The
RECORD
Editor:
George
Hallam
Asst. Editor:
Gerry
Marmion
Mod
erat
or: Dr. Georg,e Sommer
G£.nes.is:
2.illh .. C
e nJu_r
_
y
"
...
To find
the unnatur
al,
Gradually ahsorh
the
industry
or
ten o'clock
:
the embryo
pig
slit through
With the
proper instruments by embryos;
/\nd Sophocles cut,
for
speed, with a
blu
e
pE:!n
ci
l.
l'r
chensilc
sophomor
es
in the
tr
ee
of learning
Stare at the exiled
blossoming t
rees,
vaguely puzzled,
..
.
"
-----
John
Malcolm Drinnin
Another
poet,
on another
topic,
once referred
to
Spring as
that
tim
e
or year "when a young man's fancy
turns lightly
to
thoughts
of
love", hut he totally neglected to
mention
the transformation that
the Third
Season
brings
upon youth. For
indeed,
it
is
in
the Fall that
the
college
man is led
again
to cast
aside
the mundane tools of summer
and
pick
up anew
tllc
fine
instruments of
learning. /\nd yet, whil
e
the
transition from
"living to
life"
might
well
be termed "trying" for
the
college
man, there
is yet
another
class
of men for
whom such
a
transition may
be
well
nigh
impossible
.
The
species
to
which
I am
referring arc
called quite
innocuously, yet
very
appropriately, Frosh.
In spite
of such
a seemingly
disparaging introductory phrase, it
must
be
admitted
immediately
_
that these
are
the "lifeblood of any
co
lleg
e.
" Indeed, while the initial impression is
hardly
of
a
laudatory
n
at
ure, th
ese
rather
"r
are
anfmals" are known, within a few short
weeks, to undergo a radical change.
It
is
almost
as
if they, having
a
pproached the terminus
or climax
of
an
18-year
gestation, await
only
the touch of
a
"magic wand" to fre
e
them
from
their deadly
carcinoma
- a
cancer
of youth. Casting
aside
for the last time the
toys or
their
childhood,
they
are
led
for
the first time into a typ
e
of
"enchanted
forest"
w
_
h
ere
knowledge is
the
password. Happily, many
make
the
transition very
rapidly - others
take
long
er
-
some
regrettably
are
de
s
tin
e
d to be
intellectual
babies
and
fall
swiftly
by the
wayside
.
In
_
the latt
er case
th
e
seed
was
good,
but the
soil
was rocky.
T
•:
njoying thi
s
rather blat~nt
"indo'ctrination into the ranks of men"
are a
group of men, prematu
re
ly ancient with the knowledge of the
ce
nturi
es.
They
have
seen it
before
- indeed
been part of it,
and
like
Hemingway's
old
Spaniard
need
say
no mo
re
than,
"l\h
Yes,"
in
order
to
make
their presence
felt.
Some
could
look back to the days wh
e
n
Donnelly Hall was
only a seed
of thought, impregnated into the hearts
of the "builders
of
Marist." Others
could
remember the days
in
Grey-
stone
when
studying was almost
impos
s
ible
amid
the clatter
and clank of
neglected pipes
and
the odor of
a
thoroughly "un-housebroken" cat
,
Yes, today th
e
y, as we, are witnessing a Genesis - a 20th century
Genesis, vital, vibrant, smacking of the forces of
change
and growth -
and yet,
a
genesis
as surely guided
by
the
same hand that led
Moses out of Egypt
and
into
the
Promised Land!
Features:
Gerry Marmion
,
l
·
:ditor; Joseph
Sendra; Edward
Douglas;
Peter
Maronge; William Meagher
;
Ted Flynn; Ed
Parr; William Treanor; Hodger Colao; Daniel Meges; Gus
DeFlorio; Joe Cavano; Tom Duffy; John Falcone.
GUEST EDITORIAL
Sports: John Barry, Editor; Dennis O'Brien; Brian Johnson.
Make-up: Jim
Sullivan
&
Gerry
Johannsen, Editors; Dick
Freer; David Donoghue
Circulation: John Guiliano,
Editor;
Thomas Troland; Chris
Hynes; Paul
Keister
Photography: Paul Keister
The first indication
of
fall is here
again,
the
mustering
of the annual
Evening
Division
"Challenge Crew."
To our newer
students,
this informa-
tion may be surprising,
and,
perhaps
to
some
or our older
students as
well,
for
the
members
of the
_
"Challenge
Crew"
arc rather
a modest lot.
· ·
·
By
now
,
the
Ev
e
ning Division Crew has
become
a
part of
our
school's tradition,
ha
v
ing
gathered for
the
last
four years.
Unfortunately, in
each of
those years
something
has
come
up to prevent the
group
from
actually
presenting
a
chal-
lenge to the Varsity Crew.
Last year, if
I remember
correctly,
our "Stroke
Oar"
developed
gout.
The
year
before
, a
t the last
minute,
our
Cox' un
and two
other members of the
crew
were incapacitated with arthritis.
In point of
fact,
the closest that ouf
•
"Ch
a
llenge
Crew"
has come to the
water
was last year when we had two
scouts out
spying
on Varsity Crew prac-
tice
and one
of
them
fell into the water.
What
brings
this subject to mind
is
a scene .that
met my
eyes,
in a local
park, last Saturday morning. Led by
a
Brother
(whose name I daren't mention
for fear of creating antagonism b
e
tween
him and
Coach
Murphy), a motley as-
sortment
of our
Evening
Division
fellows came panting down the trail.
Their costumes ranged from the sub-
lime to the bizarre. The Broth
er
was
dressed, "comme
il
faut" in
a
black
sweat suit with the customary vertical
white
pencil line on the front
of
his
collar.
·
As for the rest, I'm almost
certain
that
a couple
of members
were
attempting
to
pawn off "long johns"
as
genuine
sweat
suits
.
The buttoned
flap at the
rear
was a dead
giveaway
.
The
group always
jump to
an early
start in their vigorous
athletic
program.
As a matter of fact, som
e
very
authori-
tative sources believe that the
reason
they have never actually pres
e
nted
a
challenge is due to the
fact
that they
arc
overtrained
.
And, while w
e
are on the
subject,
I
would lik
e
to
dispel that\
vicious rumor
about
some of our
mem-l
bers
being
too
broad
across
the
beam
'
to fit into a
shell
right here
and
now.
It's
an
outright
fabrication. True, the
seating arrangement of
a
few of the men
had to be rearranged, placing the most
ample bottomed members in the widest
part of the shell, but all of them did fit.
Perhaps it's just as well that we have
never reached the point where we were
actually
ready
to present the challenge,
for, as you
are
aware, the niceties of
challenging involve all
sorts
of pro-
blems.
It
has been a matter of bitter
division within the "Challenge Crew"
it-
self,
There are two primary factions.
The first wants to appear suddenly on
the river during Varsity practice, out-
pull the Varsity Crew with anticipated
cont. on p. 4
l
t
i
I
t
l
I
October
.2,
1965
. New Faculty Members
As the academic year of 1963-64
gets underway, the most notable addi-
tion is that of the new personalities, in
particular the new members ·of the facu-
lty.
One of the new instructors is Mr.
Dennis Curtin, a native of Queens, New
York.
After completing his secondary
education, he attended Iona College,
where he majored in Physics. He was
President of the Da Vinci Society, a
campus science organization. He was
also Head of the Board of Electors for
the service organization "Taca".
After
graduation from Iona he accepted a
teaching fellowship at
the Catholic
University of America. He success-
fully completed work for his M. A. in
Nuclear Physics.
During the next two semesters Mr.
Curtin will be conducting classes in
General Physics, Oi:>tics, and Atomic
Physics. At the end of this 'academic
year he plans to return to C. U. to ob-
tain his Ph.D. in Physics. After re-
ceiving this degree Mr. Curtin would
like to return to Marist.
Mr. Casey, who is originally from
LeSueur, Minnesota, the home of the
Jolly Green Giant, has a mid-western
background and preference. His early
education was obtained at Lesueur Pub-
lic School, After graduation from high
. school he attended St. John's University
in College Ville, Minnesota. Mr. Casey
obtained his M.A. from Fordham Uni-
cont. on p. 4
The Record'
/
Pagel':
Hazing· We·ek
A Splashing Success
The mud has been washed
off;
clothes have been dried; freshmen have
tipped their beanies for the last time;
Hazing Week is ended.
'
For five days previous to Hazing
Week, the_ freshmen were strangers
both to the campus and the upperclass-
men. However, th,e inevitable arrived.
Monday, September 16th, initiated the
Hazing Program. The sophomores at-
tempted to learn the freshman identi-
ties by having -them recite their names
backwards. They wished to find out if
he was well groomed and therefore
made· him
tip
his beany. Reciting
nursery rhymes or interpreting the
murals in Donnelly Hall tested . his
mental capacity.
His mathematical
ability was realized whenever he was
asked to measure various objects with
a toothpick.
Innovations such as the
.~r_es~man ju~IJ and clearing the field
of rocks added to the enjoyment of the
week, especially that of the sophomores.
The freshmen refused to take this
treatment lying down.
With the aid of
an "unknown" person or persons, they
removed the fox from the bookstore .
Sheahan Hall retaliated with their
famous (or is it infamous} chant of
"Sophomores are Rat-finks". On Wed-
nesday, Tom Corrado awakened the
south side of Leo Hall at 5: 30 A. M.
with the cacophonous sound of Reveille.
Tom got his.
The sophomores felt the sting of in-
sult when Brother Paul ended their
participation in the hazing program on
Wednesday afternoon.
The freshmen
however,
signed petitions
and the
sophomores were reinstated.
Saturday came early for the fresh-
men.
The surprise move of the day
was the kidnapping of the four freshmen
floor captains at 7: 15 A. M. by the
Hazing Committee.
The abduction
spoiled the plans of the Frosh and
that same "unknown" person.
Rumor
has it that they intended to spirit away
a member of the committee and deposit
him in the city jail.
At the Mixer, Saturday evening, the
floor captains, dressed in rags and
bound with ropes around their necks
were exchanged for the fox. With this
tr:1de the freshmen also received the
fox tail and Hazing Week was officially
. closed for another year.
May we congratulate the Hazing Com-
mittee and the upperclassmen on their
fine job and urge the freshmen on to an
enlightening and productive year here
at Marist.
9!:'~;:- -
Pe.p;e
,t
,
,-
.
FACULTY.·cont,
versity and is presently taking courses
at the same university for his Doctor• s
·
degree in Philosophy.
Mr. Casey, in reference to Marist
said, "It seems
fo
me that there are
two obvious signs of lj!ialth here at
Marist
.
1. The intellectual curiosity
of the students, and 2. the general de-
sire of the faculty to insure continued
progress. He also made the statement
that "Progre,ss seems to be the p·ass-
word at Maz,ist. While progress-made
at Marist, in its brief history, is cer-
tainly impressive by any standards,
both the students and the faculty appear
to be more
concerned
with
improving
existing
conditions than acquiescing in
self-congratulations."
Mr. George Doran, whose weekly
schedule accounts
for
a total of four
.
courses including evening
classes,
is also a faculty proctor in Sheahan
Hall.
After graduating from St. Vincent's
C-ollege
in
L
abrobe, Pa. , with a Bache-
lor of Science degree in mathematics,
Mr. Doran received a research as-·
.
sistantship for an M. B. A. from Du-
quesne University in Pittsburgh. While
.
studying at Duquesne he was awarded
'
membership in Omicron Delta Epsilon,
·
an honorary economics society, com-
parable to Phi Beta Kappa, the national
·
honor society in Liberal Arts.
Mr.
Doran was invited by the American
Risk Insurance Association to d
·
eliver
a paper at the annual American Econo-
mic Association Convention to be held
this year in Boston, December 27th.
It is a monologue from his graduate
thesis and is entitled "Unemployment
and Out-of-the-Labor Force Relation-
ships: Static and Dynamic Analyses".
His further academic endeavors will in-
chide work toward a doctorate from
New York University with research in
Business and Economics.
Mr. Doran feels quite strongly that·
athletics play an integral part in the
·
total development of the college student.
He maintains that competition and per-
severance which are so necessary in
sports, are of equal value in connection
with studies.
This carry
-
over can
prove to be a valuable asset in striving
towardyour goal whether it be the touch-
down or the sheepskin.
Tbe·Record
Student Council Initiates
f.ilm Program
The Marist College Student Council
initiated its Fall Semester film pro-
gram on Wednesday evening, Septem-
ber 25th, at 7: 30 P. M.
The firs
_
t of
seven full length features which will be
shown in the gym at no charge, was en-
titled A RAISIN IN TH
.
E SUN.
A
super-
ior dramatic achievement sprinkled with
amusing bits of humor, A RAISIN IN
THE SUN portrayed Sidney Poitier,
Claudia McNeil, and Ruby Dee as mem-
bers of a poor negro family which had
just been awardedalargesumofmoney.
The conflict that
ensues
over how to
spend the fortune, provided the viewers
with an enjoyable evening.
Donald Rolleri, Student Council
President, made
it
known that each
film was carefully selected by a com-
mittee of students under
.
the direction
of Paul Maher, Movie Commissioner
of the Student Council, in an attempt
to provide the best possible film enter-
tainment for the entire student body.
The schedule, which provides a film
every other week of the Fall semester,
concludes January 8th.
MARIST COLLEGE LECTURE SERIES
Oct.
9
David McKay,
Professor of
Law, New York University, "The Four-
teenth
Amendment"
(Civil
Rights}
(This is part of a series of lectures
·
and panels, given under the joint aus-
pices of Marist, Vassar, and Dutchess
Community Colleges.
The other lec-
tures will be given at Vassar on Octo~
her 7 and Dutchess Community College
on October 11).
·
Panelists who will discuss the Civil
Rights issue with Professor McKay in-
clude Brother Edward Cashin of Marist
College and Professor Carl Degler of
Vassar College
Place:
Gym
Oct. 28 Charles J. Walsh, Chairman
of the Department of Economics, Ford-
ham University.
Topic: "The Balance of Payments:
Where Is Our Gold Going?"
Place: Adrian Lounge
Nov. 15 The Alffiirtus -:Magnus Lecture
Rev. William A. Wallace, 0. P., Ph.D.
S. T. D., Staff Editor in the area of
Philosophy for the New World Catholic
Encyclopedia
Topic: The Philosophy of Science
Dec. 4 Rev. John L
.
McKenzie, S. J.
Professor of Scripture at Loyola Uni-
versity, Chicago and author of The Two-
sdged Sword.
·
Topic:
The Old Testament
The courses Mr. Doran is teaching
at Marist are Principles of Economics,
Personnel Management and Industrial
Relations, Marketing Management, and
Statistics.
Dr.Howard Goldman
Athletic Di
rector
Dr. Howard Goldman will be the new
Athletic Director of Marist, taking over
the post from
.
Brother William Murphy
who has handled it since Marist started
competing in Intercollegiate sports.
Brother William will devote all his
energies,
presently to teaching.
Dr
.
Goldman is a graduate of Cort-
land State College (N. Y. }.
He earned
his M
.
A. and Doctorate in Physical
Education at Indiana University.
For
the past six years Dr. Goldman has
been on the staff of Plymouth State
College as
an
instructor in Physical
Education and as coach of Soccer and
FreshmanBasketball. Here at Marist,
his first post as an athletic director,
Dr. Goldman is also coaching the new-
ly formed Soccer team and proposed
Freshman Basketball squad
.
NOCTUfillE
cont.
ease, then sit back in smug satisfac-
tion and wait for the Varsity Crew to
present the challenge. The other fac-
tion is more tradition-minded, believ-
ing that our Cox'un should leave his
gauntlet
in
the face of the Varsity Crew
Cox'un. The great danger in this ap-
proach is that the. Varsity Cox•unmight
not be thoroughly acquainted with
chivalric tradition, and permanently
incapacitate our Cox• un. For this rea-
son our Cox• un is
·
a strong adherent of
the first faction.
But, all things considered, the
group this year seems to be the best
ever, and may well reach the point of
readiness where they will be able to
take to the river. One thing is certain,
for the next four weeks great effort
will be made by the "Challenge Crew"
to fulfill the tradition that they are des~
perately trying to create.
October
t,
196~
.
Bro. Cashin
Avademiv Wice President
Brother Linus R. Foy, F. M
.
S.,
President of Marist College, has made
known the appointment of Brother Ed-
ward Lawrence Cashin as Academic
Vice-President of Marist.
Brother
Edward's major responsibility in his
new position has to do with curriculum
development. He will also act as co-or-
dinator between the academic depart-
ments in matters concerning the long
range development of the college. The
newly-named Academic .Vice-President
is a member of theHistoryDepartnient.
at Marist and will continue teaching.
Brother
.
Edward was born July 22,
1927 at Augusta, Georgia.
He was
graduated from Marist Brothers
·
High
School in Augusta in 1945 and from
Marist College
in
1952. He later re-
ceived an M. A. and a Ph.D. from
Fordham University in American His-
tory.
Brother Edward taught for ten
years at Mount St. Michael in the
Bronx andforthreeyears
·
at Christopher
Columbus High School in Miami, Fla•
He has also served as President of
both the Catliolic Forensic League of
New York and· the Catholic Forensic
League of Miami._
Before coming to Marist, Brother
Cashin studied for six months
in
Frie-
burg, Switzerland.
.
FR. CAMPBELL C::ont.
Asked his impressions of Marist,
Father Campbell replied that one of the
most amazing points was ttie enthusiasm
that is found on campus. The college
is alive with youth and it is a pleasure
to asso1,iate with such youth
,
"You
can attend a big university but you know
that it lias been there for years and will
be there for years to come. However,
when you come to a small college and
especially one that
.
is growing there is
a dynamism which one can feel and
wants to be part of.
II
At Marist, Father Campbell will
serve as the Assistant to
.
the Chaplain
while fulfilling a full time teaching
schedule which includes classes in
Metaphysics, Philosophical Psychology
and Theology.
.
The Record
l
'
MPRESSIONS
Dateline: Paris
by Michael Perry
Since I am a first time visitor here
in France, I naturally have many im-
pressions. In what I hope to make a
regular column, I am going to try to
let you in on some of the high-lights
and some of the low points of what I've
found here. In the future; I'll hit more
specific points for discussion, but for
now, just a quick look at what the
French have here
in"
The City of Lights".
What is it that Paris, or fur that
matter any other French city, has to
offer?
To be completely French a city
musthave at least one Catholic Church.
Then,
if
it is of any sizi, it will have a
museum.
One real good restaurant,
which nobody ever goes to because the
prices are too high, and several cafes
(the word bistro is seldom used) are
also an important part of the landscape.
There must be too, a bakery to buy
bread and pastry, and a shop to buy the
other staple, wine.
Another essential
is the book store
.
As for things which
they can live without, but which they
have anyway, add a park with benches,
a fountain, and
..
millions of pigeon to
mess
1-IP
the benches
.
and fountain.
Throw in a few people, some on bikes,
others in little cars which don't know
how to stop, and you have the skeleton
of a French city.
I hope to hit a lot of these things,
some more serious than others in the
future. But for now, we will have to
leave it here.
And,
by
the way, Paris is
·
all
they
say it is.
Theater Gui Id
Chooses Comedy
The Executive Committee of the
Theatre Guild has
_
selected My Three
Angels by Sam and Bella Spewack as
the play to be produced by the Guild
this fall. It is to be presented on Thurs-
day, Friday, and Saturday evenings,
November 21st, 22nd, and 23rd, and
on Sunday afternoon, November 24th,
•in
the college auditorium.
_.
The selection is a light comedy
about an old, kind-hearted shop keeper
in French Guiana, the problems he en-
counters with his uncle from France,
and his daughter's love affair with her
cousin.
The three a,ngels, inmates of
the local prison, solve the old man's
problems in a series of highly a,musing
incidents.
Last week auditions were held by
the director, Mr
.
James Britt, at
Dr .Schroeder to Hold
Speed Reading
Workshops
Dr. John Schroeder, Dean of the
Evening Division, will hold two work-
shops in speed reading at the annual
convention of The New York State
Association of Educational Secretaries
in Poughkeepsie on October 18th and
19th
.
There will be. a series of fourteen
workshops for members of the associa-
tion
whose headquarters will be the
Poughkeepsie Inn.
On Friday, Octo-
ber 18th
~
Dr. Schroeder will hold two
workshops in Speed Reading from 2:00
to
.
4: 30 in the afternoon at Poughkeepsie
High School.
Dr. Schroeder, who is also profes-
sor of English in the Day Division of
Marist College, developed the first
remedial program in Dutchess County
as early as 1940 when he became Head
of the English Department at Arlington
High School. This program continued
with increasing success until Dr.
Schroeder
took a sabbatical leave in
1945 to complete the dissertation for
his Doctor's
..
Degree.
Trained
in
techniques of teaching reading at all
levels from first grade to adulthood;
Dr. Schroeder inaugurated the speed
reading courses that have been so
successful at Marist College during the
past seven years.
·
Dr. Schroeder has also conducted
developmental reading classes at the
Hyde Park summer program for the
past two years.
which time the following cast was
selected: Alex Areno, CarolDzuiban,
Mike Lorenzo, Bruce Magner, Paul
Maher, Bob Matthews, Joe Nicastri,
Paul Nigra, Ronnie Pesavento, and
Cathy Shields.
Bill Morrissey
was
named assistant director.
_Page 6.-
New
l{.Qderator:
Dr. George Somer
Editor:
George Halla•
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Poolside
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1963
Clams, Corn, Heroes, Soda(?),
Band, Games, Swimming
.
.
Qcte>ber 2,. l96S
tAL
$1.so
4.1.1
4.1.2
4.1.3
4.1.4
4.1.5
4.1.6