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The Circle, October 24, 1986.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol.5 No. 2 - October 24, 1968

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.'>CTOBER
2( 1968
Jtt:.•:~-<·::-::_·\·-
Sf·u-·de·nt·:··ct,Linci·l<·To·
S:i'fl'l:l'}O:·siUm
_to·
·Exa

-.E.l!(R
..
As···c:ampaign~.r.··•··
...•
mine
it::,'·•··
Poll·
~adi·d'
POplJlariiY
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:i?'.w~~J/Jit~iJ_~~e:··_ra~!\~~J~/~~~t~i'.ie:~~~:
~~~irig-
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s_µlts·
·or
a' s<:noobvide
poll·
lo.
be.
taken: by the Sttiderit Govern merit~'.
:
1;{:1;'.;
'>
.-:-::
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:
:
:Thi~::liop _•
according
!9.
F~ank

Figilia,
.the
At:toriley
~neral,.
will
be
.


!/.;:U~>-<
:
.;·

conducted;'
'!t~
_firid_otj_tw~at
music and discussions the student
body
-· •
<:-W,·:
,'
<
·-;:
wan,q~e station
~
C~FYt.
Mr;
riglia'.fliJ:!her
stated;
·~The
stat!<>n
~f{"f
·
·.
•·
:-~as
:.a,
dual purpose.
r
It.
1s a
·cl_ub_
with
1ts•independent
executive
:"
:
.,_
•.
:· ..
;·board;,:.but
it
also
functiciris as
a
.service'to
the stui:lentbody arid
t!:fY>:.
-;
,·,
:·;sholilii·:serve
the..interests
_and
desires·ofthem."·


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~:Ji~:;-t'i~~-:~r~·i~oc~~~,$5~~:-~;-~~c
Stud~~t-Governiil~nt
f~;
the school
year;
tliis·being-less
th~ri
the club has r~eived
in
subse-.
·~•'""
.




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, October 24, 1968
EDITORIA,LS
,
LetiCJl~f
{itij;JH)~t;'Edit~f-
::f
\
Sir
.::.
.. .we are all too likely,'
'•,,;be~'o~e
~voived in;
i
deffuate'ly
to apol~giz~
:for.
~th the
:Dfs

when a word sounds familiar.to
. ,valid:·:,endeavor,
what:happens?. absence
and
,·the.
station going
assume •
..
that we understand it
Nuff
said!




off the air.




'
.
'
Re·sponding,_::t_o
TAC

.
.
..
-

.
\
even when
.we
• do not . .
In this
: •.
-.:
·
·
·'
1
way we read into peoples' re-
Perhaps the preceding
'para;. ~-
My reaction to: the pr~c~:
marks meanings that were never
.
graph seems
a bit
bitter;-well was
one
of total astonishmenL:
intended.
·
Then we waste energy it was
meant
to
be-and
if
people What does this club take us for.? •
in angrily; . accusing people of do not like it, tough •.• rump_com·-. We pay
.for
tli~m
to ~roadcast,
intellectual dishonest;y
.~r
abuse mittee_.

;,~e~
ap.:icademic.
dean
.a~d
expect_ some~ing
~
re~n~-
of words wheri their only sin is• can (ind 1t· m himself
-
to call
.
Iil return, what we get is a_ group
that they use, words>unlike
.our .
students adole_scents
•. flagwavers of misdirected and Diisinterested
own."
••
•.. undemocratic etc., before they hobbyists.
•.
At least; they· cllUld
.•
.
.
·
/
,
have materialized
;anything
then be "professional" enough to'give
The above quote from
S~ 1:
we think the: situation is pretty me a station
I:
cah listen to~
Hayakawa•s
book,
"Language in
:

bad.
.

.

.
Thought and Action", we think,
In. ~egard
fu
progt~ms
pre-
is the explanation to Brother
'
~
We would like to_ . close this sented over WMCR, I'd like to
John's reaction to our open letter
letter
-with
two thot®1ts:" first a say· that· I
.am
•a'
jazz··
fan',·
but
to the conimunicy, which was quote:
·
"The intellectually per-
hear no jazz on WMCR. Grant-•
posted ),'ecent]y
•• In your article
snickecy
•.•
often tell
.us.
that, we ed
I'
don•t. mind listening to Top
you stated that Br. John felt that

ought to say ~hat we mean and 40 Rock when I
·
can get it (I
the letter. would be misinterpret-
mean what we_
say, and talk only hear that Champagnatand Shea-:-
ed
..
be'cause of the use of such
when we have something to talk ban have trouble'hearing also),
ter-nis a's ''viscious rumors".
a'\)out.''. Second; our
1
thoughts on but a majority of
.the
time·they
We said
.to
·Br.
John at the time. the above quote: Let's get.in-
are on the air? I think a survey
of our meeting and we write now
volved guys
••.•
just don't broach should be donetoaskwhatevery-·

that we do not·believe that the
any new areas of involvement that one would like to hear.

use of such terminology, when
have not been previously'· dis•

• •
read in conte:,c4 connoted any-
cussed and approvecll
_. • •
Finally, I"don't askthatWMCR
thing otherthan"wicked~•,a \\'ord
go:"professional" as WABC, but.
which Br. John • said would have

Sincerely, and with all due re-
on]y

that they present something
.
been a· good substitute, '.fhein-
spect,
,
'1:'he College Life Com- I CAN• hear
and something.
I
ference that Br. John arrived at

mittee, alias "rump committeen
.
would. LJKE to
.
listen to ..

Once
was not intended nor was it pre-
Humanities h o u
s e.
Edward· they do this,
1
then;
l
can say,
sent. However, we felt that we
Roche~ Warren Sweeney, Richard my . money
..
and
.
that
.
or other
owed Br. John an apology in case
Rizzielo, Danie.I
_Raffaele,
Walter activities fee payers is being well
anyone
did,
(through means-un-

Sales, Paul Novak, John Kaley, spent.
1
'
known to thecommonman)arrive
Joseph ~ubino, Steve
·Garger,
Sincerely,
.
at such a conclusion and'. the

Ernest lncitti, Bob Geisel and Otto N. Unger
day
after our meeting with him
Bob Trahan.
Class of
'70

we. sent·
him
one expressing our
---------
discomfort at
-having,.been
tile
.
WM.CR

HER'
E,AR'E YOU
9•.
G'er'a
...
·rd1·a
Ex·h,.bi't'.
catalysts in such a reaction;
.
·
\
,/.._,
Br. John also expressed the
Sir
~
As a serious-minded

t,'
Mart's·t·,
Colleue
1.--••llllliL,.j"---i•••• .. --••------
..
iiiMfeeling,
in your article, thathe
activitiesfeepayer,anda·mem-·


·.

.

-

..
~

I
thought we would
be
prejudiced. ber

of the Marist

College Radio
~
,,
. R'
'
.
.
,.
(agreed ) and thatthe concealing
Club, I ask the Radio Club -
Helen
'
Gerardia, painter amr
·C_·O.

..
'
SC.·
I
o.·.·u
s
'
e,'
s_p_o_.
·"-
s,
e
of the names of the authors of
'
"What has happened to WMCR
'
printmaker, is now exhibiting her
_

any letters received wasahindr-
RADIO." "ls itstillontheair?'•
works at Marist College, Pough-
Daniel Berrigan and the. others

it:i the "Catonsville Nine" h~ve ~c!a~.
a~fr :I!e~:eJ\:;:h~

It has been a long two weeks keepsie.
the moral support or The Circle.


are shocked!:First of all if
orie
since·. the-last program poster
Miss
.
Gerardia- studied at the.
-(

) .
.
.. is "accused"of anything by any-
proudly announced the existence
Ar_ts Students League,Hans Hoff;.
Wben Thought, Action, Communication TAC_ circulated ~.peti- one and. if ·one wishes to
state
·of·
a radio station, o:i campus. man
and: Brooklyn
_Museum
tion recently,
it
called upon the stu~ents of Mari st Colleg_e
to len~ a deferise, why is the name of At that time,
.a
caption promis.;. School.
·
She is the recipient of
(their? moI'al suppor~ to Father Berriga_n a!ld the.re st of his gr~up •. -the accusor necessary tothisde-
·
ed a program schedule to be' four fellowships· and the Put- ·
In doing so. TAC had, challe~ged the conscience ?f oui: comm.unity to fense?
However,
·for·
one
··to •
delivered thatweek. This prom-
chase· Awards Boston Society·of
respond t_o a call - a ,ca_Uwhich~sks us bluntly ~1ther to suppo~ mo'."' accuse ancr hide his name, from
ise has never been fulfilled.
lndel)endent Artists, the Present.;
rally or to refute Dan.iel Be~rig~n and the, actions ~ken ~y hi~ and the.
-
accused is undemocratic
·
ation
·
Show Woodstock·· Artists·
.
his group,- How~v~r,m lend~ng its mor,l SUJ?port~
The C_i
r cle muSt therefore we, d~ing.thetwohoU:
Wondering whether or not the Association,
~faganini Award;
make_ clear tha~ it is responding to
f!l!
sincerity o(comnn~ent
that session withBr.John,agreedthat
station still broadcasted, I
tiii.-n.;,
Natiorial Association
·of
Women,
Berrigan
.a':1d
~is folJowers exemplified, and not necessarily to_the we would, if he wanted us·
to,
ed my radio ori this

·
W.ed-
Artists,Awards~. Medal of Honor
.
.form of_
ClVll
disobedience that they demonStr ated.
furnish him with any 'letters we nesday
at
9:30.
pm-but could not iri
.
Graphics
••
and the Isabella
'•
Ob

ly
'
th.
.·:
d
•.
•.
f the ucatonv'Ile_Nm'e". the destruction. receiv~,
wait unt~l ~e. w_r<>te
a
..
receive the station,
At 10. pm•· Banks Markell Prize .• She. has
vious , _m e ~m s_
0
. 1
.

.

.
defense and then-publish 1t,_We. on the same night,
I
tried to also
received
the
National
?f the ~elective Sez:v1c_e
files -iyas not .at issu~ when they faced trial did stipulate, however, that the
.
listen again.
T'nis time
I
was
'Sodecy -of
Painters in Casein·
~n Baltim?re.

_The~ felt that
.it_
was impo~sible to allow a
_sy
st em,. letters would be shown to no one successful, for a voice told
.me.
1

Award the New-Jersey Painters

immoral
m,
th_eir mmds, to continue operating unhampered
lll
order else· what is wrorig with. that?·
..
that~ he had _just

come into the
.··•.
and sc'uiptors Society Award and
•. ·
to serve - again what t!ley felt was an_imm~ral war.

;
'
.
' -

.
>
• • .
.
.•



-
studio for his 10 pm sh~w and the American Society of
-Con-

,

-·'.

• •
th "C

"II
N'"' ,,


·
Another focal point' of your
no one was
there . .
H~:COl)tiniled
·-temporary
Artists Award.

.
To. determine whethe~ or n?t e
atonv1. e _.Llle
.
we~e respon_- article. was that Br.-• John_ felt
·
·•
·
·
·
·
•''
·
·
·
_
~hng to a cor!ect consc1_ence
is not the task or_
this .edi~ri:11, even if
··that
we should have come to him·

1t was c_once1vable
to·d1sc,?ver that. _What this ed1t1mal_1s
r~spon-
first.for the facts

We disagree
:
ding to 1s_the moral commitment of mne people who felt it.their ob- Obvio l
·t
•.
a
b
h
r
ligation to take concreie ~ction when their consci_enc~s
~i~tated. them eti.que:/
0 ; 0
;a:~rts
.
~:\
0 ;
0_

to do· so'.-
_We
are
_lendpig
moral support.to nmE: 1ridmduals who. to Brother
..
first-:TO. INFORM
could not, no matter what the personal repercussions; aU~w them-
him of our-intentions. However,
selves the luxury of c~H~placency or compliance.
\.·
for
:us
.to
go to him for the facts
In continuing to think, act,
·and
communicate - TAC has
trus
year'
'prior
fo
the reception of an,y·
asked us to make a conscious response' regarding Daniel B:errigan. letters would have been ridicul-,.
-
We are hoping T.AC will make the same conscious efforttc>'arouse ous.

We had; a::id we told Br.
students to think throughout the year. Floyd:Alwori; in takirig on un-
.John
,
this· during the meeting,_·

official leaker.ship of TAC, has a "hard act to follow". _Bill Heap,
.
planned to go to him after we had

who
•directed
TAC last year, certainly'contributed to the stimulating receive_d some letters
for
a.•
atmosphere on campus which seems dormant these first few months statement, not necessarily a d•:?~
"
into the semester.





· •

fense~.
.
This· was. not
·enough?.
-ileav:ing
the Campus
I

.

.
.
.
.
L~st edition a "Choice :Of Directio~•~ for the Circle was out-lined,
We /sl)Oke·
.of
~provinc_~_ali1Y,
in reporti~~- a~d that it we>uld
be avoi-
ded ....• but how.
.
.
,
.
.
. .
Brother John, it seems, men:.
••
,
tioned to your reporter
.that
he
did not doubt our sincerity. He·
·
also mEsntioned
this to us. Never
the
.
less this did

not stop him
from
name
callµig, by implica-
tion as·· well as, outright names,
'
during our meeting. The same
crime that he insists that we have
committed ....
·Tonight
at M~untSaint Mary College in Newburgh an Intercollegi-
ate
.Council
meeting wm take place,
.am:l
present at the meeting will
be editors from all the college newspapers
'in
the Mid-Hudson Area.
Now let us digress; from the
The Mount's editor-in-chief Mary Anne McEnery has proposed the first day of orientation to com-·
initiation of a press service among the ICC-Colleges. Through this
·
men cement exercises tour years
service the Circle could obtain news releases that are important on and some. days later the ad-
an individual campus, but reflect issues on consequence for any cam- min_istration and.~ the facult;y
pus.
..

.
. .
. ..
~
.
.
.
_
(which
.has
more right to do so)
..
.
.



.
.
.
.
.
.
·

•.
.
-
·.
push the concept or "INVOLVE-
.
For the same goal;: the editors of this years staff will implement • ME~T"-downourthroats. (Hypo-
extensively information provided by C~ (College Press Service) th~si~:
.
Perhaps the reas.~~ for
and JP (Intercollegiate Press).
-

.
.
this 1s that the lack of mtel-
'
..
;'.,.
,·'




lectual ferment•• and every other
--
.
type: of. ferment, makes the con-
·•
..
''
.-
.
'.
·•.
,,
.....
'.
..
'·'···

• cepf-
awfu11y

har_
d ·to swallow).
-
WJ:ten, finally (?) a group or s~--
• dents, or a
·
single student does


-.THE
cIRci..E
1.·•_.'

.
Patrick McM6tfoW
.fins
·
'
.-
.•
Managing Editor
.
•:

_
-
.·•
'::,
...
••.•
...
Paul Browne
·
Jose_ph Mc Mahon Editor,;.in-chief
Art N;rmdn

Sports Editor


.
Feati.Iri/Editor
.
John LaMr.~sa fms
..
,
·
'.
Photo. Editor
••
·,
.l
News Reporters: An~e Berinato,
.Tom
Bucklei;·Nick
.
BuffardkLeo Canale, Charles Clarke~ Philip Coyle,
• •
Richar~ Dutka, Paul Forti,· Philip Glennon, Jerem~ah.
Hayes, Roger St,!llivan, Otto Unger;
·.
O
'Feature
·-Writers: Timothy Brie~, .Vinceht Buonora~
·•
Vincent Begley, Richard Dutka, James Parker, Peter.
Walsh, James Morrison, Joseph, Thorsen.
Sports Reporters: William Bakei:, Joseph. Gebbia,

Joseph Nolan, Joseph Rubino, Robert Sullivan, Roger
Sullivan, Joseph Thorsen. George Bas·si
.

Copy and Layout: Robert B·i.:klc.j; Timothy Bri~r,
Raymond DelMaestro, Dave DeRosa, Art- Norman,
Raymond Norton, Paul Leone, William Potenza, John
Rogener fms, Thomas Tiitghitella fms.
Typists: I.awrence Basirico and Bob r,·~rsi.i,
Photograph€rs:
Fred
Haus, • _vin Buckl~y fms,
Thomas Tinghitella
·
rms; Daniel Waters fms, John
Pinna fms.





Management: Athony Barker, Dave DnRosa.
.Carto~ist:
Richard Dutka
.
Advisor:, Dr. ~rge
Summer







































































































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,>.·.•
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·THEC:mCLE·,.
<-~·-
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Oc~ber24,1968.
3
\{':;:·t-~':
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...
_,J:~h.tr-·IVl;ari·st.-:~:M
ov·ement.
-
, ·.
:-~
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·.

...
·::·_'.·.·:
:b·y··
,·a·t·r-ick-.'McMorro~,
·.F.M.S.
_·.
Cy.nic in
-~esid·eric'.e·~
'
i.
.
.

.
,.·.
.•
.
.
.•••
:
·As
_the~e::is
~- progr~ssio1f
in
••
a
man
who per~~iv~~- his talents

:-·
'
tlme, there is also:aprogre·ssion
·
.and
tries to utWze them; a man·
•.
(Hey Slattery, I'm sorry, I
the blissful
accord of marital
.·.
by
J~mes
•Morrison
.in
.thought;
:
for

any
feelliig

ot
·who
knows how to give, These are
.
put you on "the. mailing list for
llfe (believe that and I'll
'tell
'•.':
.:'

awareness:ofothers
to continue,
·the
·qualltles:
that shoUld
·
make
this· rag; but I figured that you you another one. , ,like, . ,I
.
••

it'· too·. must
-~
.
subjected to

a
.
a religious discernible,
needed a little gloom to pierce
like Andy).
.

movement of thought,
OUr
con-:-
.
____________
Remember how, a few times
.
te_inpoJ:'.ary_world is riioving,and




last year, when there was almost

movil)gfaster,
each_year. For a
-
A.
:.·Pro:
p'
he·
·t'
Re'·J·
e· cte·
d
7
nothing to write
about? Well,
'
dynamic
··belle!:,
to survive, it too
:
'."
_ .
.
_
. .
.
.

Baldy, this ls one of those times.

must be.constantly evolving with
However, it's either this column

the world~ The
.Marist
Brothers
by
Vincent
B u on or a
or a giant "Chez Padres" ad, so,
are no exception to this pheno-
t th di may of all you dver

menon.
:·.-
,
.
,
.
·
:
-·"·Th·e·.
·government
which ls. the. individual.
"But a government
tf

e
t
sf·
1•11
think /
-

,

111·
which. them
'a3·ority
rule
_ln_
semen ans,
o some-
.
'
The Marists

originated
152
.
only mode which. the peaple have

thin"' to bitch about
maybe
·years
ago tinder the guidance of
.chosen
to execute their wW, is
all.• cases cannot be based on

so nm,
continue ~r~sing
thi;
a youngFrenchpriestbythename
equally liable to
·be
..
perverted
justice.'~
He continues, "Mu st
magnificent epistle and enlighten

of

Marcellin

Champagnat. He
and abused before the people the citizen ever for
-~
moment,
yourself with a warped view of
.•
founded.his order to help educate
.
can act through it."
This cit.a-
resign his conscience to a legis-
contemporary
MOTH (or am I
the y·oung children in
La
.Valla,
ti.on. is from CIVIL DISOBED-
lator?"
·•
·
i ht
d
t
MOTH
If
the State assumes absolute
r g
an
con emporary
.
France: The order grew to the
IENCE by Henry David Thoreau.
WARP ED?)
..
point
·_where
it
became
·an
Inter-
It echoes the Jeffersonian prin-
power as Mussolini
and Hiller
*
*
*
national cirder. The nuin~rs
in
.
ciple that the government is best

sought will the result
be
health-
In

this issue of the Appala.:
the cirder'vary, butits momentum
when it governs least. To sum-
.
ful? Will. such a state st andard -
chian News, we're going to talk
remains constant.
,
,,,
marize
·one
idea
.in
Thoreau -
ize and destroy th e individual?
about something unimportant, an
Marists
are
men of the twen-
the individual is the mostimpor-
Ortega
writes:
Spontaneous everyday, common, occurrence,
Ueth century. They have built on· tant element in society, not "the
social action will be broken up
something youdowithoutasecond
·fradltion;

but' they
are not
government or any other mass by state intervention. Society will

thought. • .let's. talk about drink-

residing
there. To be men of.
structure."
.
have to llve ror the state,namely.
ing in the dorms. Withduedefer-
this century,,.they must act and
.,
The' brilliant
~anish poUtlcal
for
the government
machine
ence to all you WCTU members
assume the responsibilities
of. philosapher,
.
Jose
Ortega y

whose vitalltydepends ontbevltal
out.· there,
we touch on
·the
the, modern· man. They must be· Gasset also saw the state· as supports
around it. The state-· absurdity of that rule (yes, Vir-
.
aware of· the rieeds of mankind·
a great• danger to the freedom
after sucking the very marrow
ginia, there 1s a rule) and show

and
.act
accordingly. They must
of the individual. Power, which
of 1sochiaevtye
• h•
;d the
.
pleasure of

why the facade should be dropped.

be
men of.THOUGHT AND DEED.
according to Lord Acton, cor-
There are many people who
This is the
goal
of the modern
rupts, must be·monopoltzed ne1• meeting Daniel Berrigan, Unfor-
think that one of the most ex-
Marist,

ther by the individual nor the. lunately I did not have a private
treme instances of an attempt
Changes have taken place

al-
state. The
,
spirit of. nationalism,
conversation
wi th him s1nce I
to legislate morality wa~our own
ready to gear the younger Marists

which tends to monopolize power
was with two 0thers. Judging
American
.
Prohibition
- often
towards this. goal. The student. in the name·or the state can spur
from my two hours with him,
sarcastically dubbed "The Nob~e
-
brothers and their coordinators

the masses to acts of violence,
I

see him

as a peaceful and Experiment"
- and that ended ~n
have been given the challenge to
But the masses don't know why!
pleasant man, He is not obnoxi-
1933
with the repeal of the Vo,1-
gear their. formation
program
As I watched the movie EL CID
ously arrogant in his expression
stead Act. No so! Carrie Nation's
accordingly •. The major theme
I. saw the Castillians
shouting,
and he emanates a calm serenity
armyts "soul goes·marchingon"
is personalresponsib111tytotheir
''For Spain, kill the infidel, kill
in his manner. He does not seem right here on the Pavelko Pon-
community, their apostolate, and
the enemy of Christ!"
·They

like the fanatical ''true believer"
derosa. And now, armed with our
to themselves.
marched into battle blindly mes-
described by Eric
-
Hoffer in his
trusty "CC" bottle, a pitcher of
.
With the implementationofthis
merized

by the
,
nationalistic
book of the same title. His mes- . water; and maybe even a glass,
new phllosophy, many Peripheral
figure of El Cid. They sacrificed.
sage may be of "one crying out we wiil proceed to show how hard
matters have been changed such
personal pleasures
.to
do battle
in the wil derness."
He has a up we are for news by discussing
as dress, -variety.
in
apostolic·
for the state, for
·christ
or any
religious conviction and is act-
this junk.
_
·
work and style of living, These
other mass ideology. It is pre-
ing upon his
Chri st ian con-
There are many things about
changes are the

most obvious
.
cisely this type of blind surren-
science.• In Daniel Berrigan' s dorm life that drive you to drink .
.
changes to the
·average
layman.
der that Thoreau,

Ortega and
.
defen.se, his lawyer st ated that his
It
comes in handy in the winter-
.... :
.'
Change for.change sake isirra-
other independentthinkers sought· clients were making tbe same time.
.
.mainly to keep warm.
'
tional and irresponsible, Change
to
avoid. The monopolization of
kind of prote st that should have Andy's menagerie is enough to
for the sake of improvement
and
thooght-power. can force the in-
been made in Germany
1n 1931•
inspire a lifelong hatred of the
benefit is vital to any institu..:
dividual to self-Immolating
sac-
I admire his belief and cour-
automotive industry; much less

lion's survival.

rWces.
,
in
the
nanie
of
age· to stake all on that belief.
d
#
od



I ha·
ve not arrived at complete
to create a nee 10r a few go
On campus especially; there
abstractions. Mariy glve blindly.
b It
H
r
th
th·
that
Pacifism. -· not the P.seudo
·type
e s.
oweve •
e
mg
could be
:a
physical problem in· Perhaps the state - the U, S.
.
could really set off a life-long

determining who is anci.
_who
is
government - ls coercing such
voiced by Pl~titudinous person-
binge is the fact that, for all the
nof a brother,· but· this ls not

men as Daniel Berrigan to blindly
ages who deal with .such banal;.
t·t d
d
d
1t
1•
es. "Of_. coor._se l'm for peace pious pla 1 u es sprea
aroun



really
an essential factor. The
surrender
themselves.
in the

about that useless term "res-

brother is a dynamic and radical
.name
or·
an
abstraction which
.
but, • •" Anyone can equivocate
ponsibilltyu,
nobody trusts you.
Christian. ills life- is his striking
Father Berrlgan believes to be
to that position.
In
regard to
·d
h
·
point, and no1 the garb h~
wears
.. an
immoral
action.
the complete.pacifist
principle,
If something like rinking int e
.
1 am not in ac·
·tual
livm· g accord,• dorms or an expanded open house
•.
He is a· man who can
5ee
.that
Thoreau writes that power can
·
II
d
II h II'd

I even have·
.
been criticized
as program were a owe , a
e
there .is a need for: him
:and
he be manipulated· by the majority
.
break loose ...
so we're told .


fulf11ls
:
that need, wherever it
and the mere strength of this

"petty bourgeosie'' for my pro-
A wonderful vote of confidence
.
may,_
be. The modern broth~r is
power·
·1s:
overwhelming
to
the

tective attitude concerning pro-
·

t
·t
i
't
·t? If
'.,;
.... .,.._ .... _____ ..... _. ___ ...._...,,;;·;;.·'~;....;.'..:.
.....
·
..:...
..... ...;..;.~·-·-------
·perty
rights.
·However,
l
have
1n
your ma un
Y,.
sn
.
1 •

this were truiy to be the case-
.
r·.
h
',
ht
..
:
.t
.
·s
A M
;
.
great. admirs.tion. for this man that everybody'd go birdshit over;.
.
.
o· u·
g
a
.
,
.•
.
an·d I hope that some day· his
a little·
extension
of privilege,'
.
,
• .
.
.

_



vision will
be realized.
Pre-
-
sently, violence ·seems to'
be
then who t~e hell Ie_t these kind
•.
.
:-,:
by
pet e r W
Cl IS
h
.
only_ the result of mounting
_fac.;.
,
of peiple., m _here m ~he first



tors
·
of the past, His method place· Us·: Think about it.
.
..

He
·was
neveri'onely, that
i~
in
ther give nor receive,bt:itinerely

was obviously destructive, Des~
..

Now fans, our national exper-
the
·meditative.
sense. His time
pass the time till sleep dutifully

pite this very mild form of pro-
1~nce has show? that the Iegisla-
was spent in the center oftbebar
_
callsI,
..
_· .
..
.
•.
.
.
·,
• ..
test against the atrocities
in
!ion of. ~orallt_y_ never works,
'talking·
with
'the
usual friends.

'Ibe obvious has become inter;.
·war,
I· sympathize with him and 1~ fact, 1t mten,s1f1es the prob~e,m
.
Quartei.-s were sp~nt pl:i.ying re-
esting and the trivial i~portant.
wish him
.the
lightest. sentence. (1f there wa_sn t o~; before, 1t II
cords. to hear· sounds of Lennon
••
We·· become
_petty'_
bureaucrats
,Possibly .
Daniel Berrigan is
help create 1t). In The ,;dan Who

and .Taplin~ who were
·by
~ow his

sitting
on

coun<lil, seats made aJi·ead of his time and therefore
Corrupt~
Hadleyburg , Markf

companions. 'Ibey vocalized• the. important by the· lack of impor-
has been rejected as any prophet
Twain gives. a good example o
• •
only words that·prtmed his ml.rid.
:_tarice.
The fa()tilty: becomes
·dis:-
is rejected tn ''his own country.''
what ha_ppens to the untested
Their·.
:'drinking
-
and

smoking . enchanted not f_iri~~ the dedica-

·
virtue:
it's the worst one, be-
habits"were faD)illar to him; for
Uon
to _th~ir
,~eatre
nor recognl-
cause it doesn't enhance. onets
he: studied their lives closely
lion for their. life accumulate,
personality,
it
controls it; ital:;;o
and when they would, he listened

• :J~st.as
the grocery clerk-their
can't
.react
to a contrary cir-
,
and lived~




.
tom at~s are not selling and the
_
EVENTS THIS WEEKEND
.
ctimstance.
Shielding someone
.
,
_..,.
,.
·
,_.

••.
The jukebox, stereo
arid
ra~Uo
. •
brea~ is_
bec~mtng
stale..
.
supposedly "mature"
( the quota-
.
were his confldents for they told


But
_when
you are hungry, old
·
tion marks seem to be the official
.
,
·,
him more than his
-usual
frlen· ds.
·-
bread and-
..
rotten. tomatoes can
· •

..

MOTH view) from
an "evil"
. ·Friday:
3 p.m. "Curriculum
••
The gathering in· the. bar was

_taste.
good, or•· aneast be eaten,
Evaluation". (Discussion in Donn-
only intensifies the evil; in
fact,
the
.•
committee of confirmation
And when. they are, bet~r deli-
,.
aliy Lecture Hall) 8 P,M.Hallo-
anathematizing
a certain thing
and inquisition.-

To whom he
cacies may and

should be. ex-
•.
ween Party (Sheahan residents only makes people want to find
-
owed his existence no matter
pected.
only)
.

·

out why.
how loud the music played.

The coffee pot we drink from
And so, drinking in the slum
•.
The college womb is warm
.
stinks of
an
acid tast~.
-Each
of
••
Saturday: 9:45 a.m. FDR Sym- area has become the forbidden
-.
'and
we are dei>ply burrowed by

us must brew his own cleansing
posium
.
8 _p.m. Mixer (Gaelic ffuit ( with all due apologies to
·'
our attachment. Sympathizingly,
it- when necessary.· We shoold
Society).·
:
.
'the
Mattachine SOeieiy) but fin-
we are contained
in
a slmlllar
.drink
alone in isolation~ inbibing
,
ally, some people,'. as evidenced
situation. Our time is short mix-
at our particular moment,enjoy-
Sunday: 8 p.m. Film "The by Tim Brier's article last week
ing

at mixers,· discussing
at
tng
.
fully '1{hile developing our.
Pro.fes_sionals" (ln the Theater). and a certain grumbling in the
discussions
·and·
all. too often
palate.
ranks of MOTH, are getting sick
pouring over problems so distant

Later we may invite those of
.
and tired of the sham. That stupid
·
.
that
.
they lack. relevance·
and
trust to drink and talk creating
rule (which may have been per-
therefore meaning..
.
• .

that harmony of dissonance; a
The
Fourth· Annual Franklin
feet when this place was a kinder-
.
•.
'rangled in the
·company
synd-
..
music
:
of·
-
intimacy

alive
and
.D.
Roose"'..elt Symposium is to
-
garten)
is
·
a direct affront to
·,rome,
we lose independence and

vibrant.
.
.
•.
be held at Marist Collegtl Camp-
everything
that
this
place
person!llity
until the total
self
Better food will
be
served for
••
tis Center, Saturday, October 26, supposedly stands for. It's not
is merely· a community echo~
the fatter specimen. Right· now,
.
from 10.A.M. until 5 P.M.

•• •
only drinking in the dorms; the
.
Laughing with skeptics we nei-
•.
1 can't find my instant coffee. • •
main issue is
to
put some teeth

-
'
-

'
into that empty cllche "respon-
stbillty.,,
If the powers that be
firmly
believe that MOTIi has
matured,
that
the caliber of
MOTH
men is of the highest
order, and all that other bull. . •
feathers, let them prove
tt.
.
Now you are going tohaveguys
who go off the· deep end
.-
guys
who, if dormitory
imbibing is
OK'd, will
try to
.
make up for
lost time on the first night. But
whose fault is all that lost time?
If it
doesn't work - if the deni-
ziens of MOTH proceed to show
that
they're
only
neo-Teeny
boppers - then Ws our fault -
we blew it. However, if after the
initial flurry of excitement (again
akin to the reaction of the country
when prohibition
was repealed)
MOTH men prove that they can
treat bOo'ze in a mature fashion,
then it's not only a tribute to
them but also to the admissions
and administrative policies of the
higher-ups at Hudson River High
Rise. sure, it's
a
gamble, but
.
only to those who are afraid of
the answers. It's fine to be a
forcaster
of doom, but it's
another
thing
to see what'll
·
happen.
'I'.hls brings to mind the

old
Yugoslavian phrase first spoken
by an old Yugoslavian when some-
one mocked his liking for peanut
brittle
and mayomi.ise sand-
wiches: -
"Don't knock it if you
haven't tried it."
,. *
*
First the passenger pigeon, anr:
now the cleaning lady seems to be
headed toward extinction (there
ain't as many as there used to
be). Why? Were they sacrificed
to buy ANOTHER truck!?
-
SPELL IT RIGHT!: Brosnan,
not Grosnan. OK Joe?
GIVE THE
UNITED WAY
by
Choice·
68' ???
Jim
Morrison
Note: Even though the FJedg-
ling Facists (Y AF - rhyll\t!s with
laugh) love Dick and Spiro (but
only because H. L, Hunt and Gen-
eral Walker wouldn't r,un) and
light votive candles beneath the
shrine of st. Joe McCarthy to
pray for their election. Can even
they be serious about Spiro? His
main qualification seems to have
been strom Thurmond (which also
isn't a handicap when trying to
join your friendly neighborHOOD
clavern).
SO Pm supporting
Muskie for VP. I know about
the other guy with him, but I
still can't see praying for Rich-
ard Nixon's good health for four
years.
There's not much difference
in the presidential
candidates
(except for the 'Barna Bigot),
so, at least as far as I'm con-
cerned, the disparity between the
VP standard bearers clinches it.
BE RESPONSIBLE
VOTE
NOVEMBER
5

•,
'
.,,·.•























































































':\_:·.
,.;,
_,>·;
j
::•'..·
'..~~·-f/·
·~
Terry Mooney• and. Johri Wynn keep their Appalachian Club spirit
·
in high gear by doing volunteer .work in Highland.

· ·•
• •
An Open
\
Letter
To The
Faculty
[
by
Tim Brier
-
I
• ·':
i
~
·'
:
:
_'·
..
.
.
.
.
I
What is the
goal
of education? relation
to his total academic in most tests these students are
In a recent questionaire circti-
process. He is not concerned not given the opportunity to pre-
lated by
.
Dean Wade's office,
With facts as facts, but is seek-
sent their conception of the ma"'.'
aimed

at
evaluating
-
student
ing
to utilize these· facts as a· terlal studied. Therefore,· whe-
thought on particular topics, one part of his overall scholastic
ther the· teacher distinguishes
question was on the line of: study. This is. the student who between the

repetitive:· student
.what
result are you (the student)
..
does not study lllstory
only to and the introspective student or
looking

Cc=-in your educational :Ieaz:n historical
data, or who· not; his testing methods are di-
process? The choi<:e in answers
'studies
Philosophy only to learn
rected only at repetitive know.:
·1
,.
have; fallen into the_ rut
..
of
procrastination~

Any
hope
of ever
catcbing<up With an that has to·be done is now Just.-a
dream.
I am


resigned fo the factthat I Will be:Pl~g
more than.itctually doing:
Classes;
••
or· rather lectures,
_
have statle<L
~t:
:
Oxford.-
.
I st1ll
haven't
:
ac:IJusted to the English system of higher educaU.on, but in
time
it
Will come..

-.
.


,
.
. :,·.
;•
~--

At the
'beglnning
of each terin a Lecture i..ist
is
pubirshed. Tlie
:_'70
page booklet list
.over
two tl\oilsand lectures; topics range from
"An Introduction
to•. Sandskrit'•'
aria·
"The
..
Problems
.of
·oreek
Coiriage in the· 6th. and· 5th. centuries· B.C." tip to ~•'lbe:Technlques.
of. Medieval
:AstJ,onqmy
·and
their Historical, Applications".
and
''Relative
Quantum· Mechanics and Elementary>Pai'ticle
Theory."
SUbjeds of thaf sort· are over my head, so.l'lH>e
sticking
with·
Shakespeare and . T.s.
,
Eliot~
1
guess. there: .aJ'e some people who
attend those lectures,
.but·
I: really can't understand what
if person:-
could do_ with· a. degree. in Medieval Astronomy; unless he wanted
·
to perpetrate ·this art. and teach it to other people, A
guy
like thaf
~ould probably find it hard to even get a job through
THE
NEW YORK
TIMES,
.
.:
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.. . ·.. •
..
_
-
Lectures, however, are not the• main importance in
·getting
an
education at Oxford. Each student has one·or two tutors who take
.
'
charge of setting up
.
the
'
curricuium
to be followed,' r~fore time is
.
·spent
in getting the be.st tutor than
-Iii
attending lectures.
·
:



•••••
:
:As
in Marist,
Oxford has·.=
extra;.;c1rr1cu1ar
~
activities; ·these
are
also published in a book by-. the. nii:n,e_
of V ADE MECUM; or

.WHAT'S
ON
THIS TERM IN.
OXFOJID •. Again, as in lectures; they_

have some

,.Winners.JI The one that

lei;lv~s me wondering is
_the

Choolant Society. It
is
described as follows:: "This society meets
termly for·. the purpc,se of eating Choolants.
It
is the Society's belief
that
-
this activity
constitutes one of Oxford's rare educational

deUghts.
0

,


• .
·.,,..
·•

.

Some of the other big ones are: P.G. Wodehouse Society - ;'The'
society extsts

for the sole purp0$e of entertaining its members.";

Wtne and
Food
Society - "To further the knowledge and apprecia-
tion of
good
food and wine."
(Now that's more likeJtl)jCharon
Club.• "To defend the noble·and ancient-art of punting and clearing
the Cherwell of
.transistor
radios
ai1d undesireabie characters.";
and last, of just a few· is the. Society of Change (Bell) Ringers -
"To
·prom9te
the art of change ringing in the university and to ring
for. SUriday Services,,,



.
.
.•
•. .
·• ·•
...••
A
dub
fair
will be held in the· near future,· it
Will
give mEi a·
chance· to investigate
some
of these clubs,~ If
_nothing
else, they'
mal!;e good conversation pieces.
• ·
.
·
.··
.
.
·• •

.
.
'


• •
Anyorie interested in these and other· "choice clubs", feel free
to write for anf details. In fact, anyone who has any quesUons or

would. lil~e to investigate something, educationally or Just socially,·
drop a line to this address ;. Vincent Begley, Manchester' College,
.
Oxford/ England;
<
.


,




.
P.
~
Anyone know
what
a
choolant is?

included: an appreciation of
lit-
'Philosophical
thought; rather,
ledge. Secondly,, and again being
erature and art; lear~ng to Uve this
:is
the student who seeks realistic,
such• a testing system
With your fellow man; a prepar-·
to make these subjects a channel depletes
;the
eriergies of the in-
ation for
·one's
~ocation ln llfe;
.
of thought. He is not content trospecttve student •. There. are
.
M.
·
,~d
..
·w:'
·e·.
st

·c·
·.·~·
,·1
..
e··a··e·

:.
_:
,.

a formulation of goals.and ideas. to parrot textbook answers but more a_spects
to college life than·
·-' "
The studenfwas dlre.cted to pick aims
at
developlrig relative
just study and no.'matter
how
·
-
·

·
·
·

·

• ·

..

two answers~ It therefore appears

ideas. 'The two students may be demanding one
may
be
on
.
the

s·.
·e·· ·-m·: .
e
.• ·.·s.t·
e·· r·.
·_.·.
__
:E·
:_n·. :

'S'
····.,-.
that
.
the author(s) of the qu'es-
distinguished as the former be-
study aspect;
a
student can only
tion, themselves educators,
'felt
ing t<repetitive"
and
the latter
devote
$0
much time
tq
a parti-•
,

••


•••

• •




~~er:~~~e~y~%1ri~trg~:~
.as_bei::.g~:nr~=~~~v:;;e,
isto·
:::s~e~~~~~:~~:i~:;-
:-.Befo':r•e
::Ch'ristrll
as·
education?
.'And
what can be the
'say
that I am doing nothing more of obJecttve· tacts for the deter-
·
.
.-:·
·• · •
only answer;
:
. • .
but discerning between
'the
C minat!on of marks~ th~bitro~c-
..
••
New Conc~rd, Ohio· - (I,P.)-

~r)~inati~,.
1:>era're
:
ciiristnias
Education
.is
relative to. the student and the A student. Most ttve
orlentec!
:
student wilL be

Muskingu~ College
J.ias
·adopted·
and _th~ sec(?n_d.
,se.rnester
be~ofe
.
individual student and although every teacher would hold that. f~rced to conform
to
the applf".'

a m~ified semester.plan;
eff~c-.
June;,·.:'
; ·:
-:
/
.
·/
.
·
·•.,''
:
it.
inay be shaped·
'and
directed,
the student who g~s beyond the-· cation
.of-the·
repetitive
.·student,-
tive
·:
tfus year,
.•·IeI>Oits'
Dr.
:··.•.·.·•(2}
an·'tptert,m_
.Period
of.}our
••.

the. final goal of ipdividual study required· material is the student The erid result. is that the aca-
Howard
v.
·
Evans, vice president
,
w~ek~, prlmaz:lly
.
in J~uary,:
is individually determined. Whe-
wh_o. excells.
H<;iwevet, I feel

demlc
.system·.· discriminates

for academic affairs.··.
:,::
•·.


durlnit which.~d,entsWil,lpursue
,
.
ther the student rums his educa-
there ts a. distiilctlon to be made:

against Jhe goal
of
this student.·

,

Essential features of'
the
plan
,
one pr<>Jector progra!n, in depth;
_ ,
>
.
tion at attaining skills needed This student is not
.a·
requisite
.•
One

more point should be
.
consist of:


.,
.

.
,-
.
:
(3) 11•revis_ion°-fthecurri~~l;lID
for his vocational clioo_sing or for excellence; he is actually brought out before
any:
recom-

.·.,.·
(1)
an academic
··calendar
_of w.hich will e~ress .all co~rse.i,;
.
.
whe.ther he alms toward a grasp:. discriminating
between the form
mendations are offered. 'The ed.,..
two lS-weeksemesters(l
4 weeks
-i~·.three
.or,four
semester er~".'
lng of overall intellectrual stim:-

tits education should take. He
.

·

·

'

~..
•·

.
of classes and one week of exam-
d1ts{excepttons
.ln
~pplled music, _
ulation - this is the student's
.feels
that he .should not be held
Continued on Page
5
_inations)
-with the:firs(semester
and. physical
·education
_servtce.
·right.
• -
.
_·.
_,
1
responsible_for mere-repeti.ti9n_
~
··-::.
'_
-
-.c~u_rse_s);.:
_._:
__
._-,,.·
..
-
·:.· ;;
__


Now,·I am talking about under-
of stylized
facts,' but that
.he
.
.
-.,
.
_. .
.
_.,..
.
.
:
.
·-
.
.
.
••

(4),arequirement
that an.:stu.;.
:_
.
graduate study, for
it
is pre-
should only sho\Vthat.he
has
Core Requirements::to.be
Changed
dents.-c.o,mp~ete;al'l~.as.LUiree
..


sumed that graduate studies are
ari
understanding of the parti~
;
.
.
·

.

·

.
• -
,

_


.


•·
of the
·1_nterilll
·
programs o_n
.
a
aimed at a specialized
.study
of
cular subject by using-,SELEC-

. •
··


. •


·
.



pass-fall basis• ·


.
••
a particular
subject. and thus TIVE facts in a general pre-
.
The
.
Academic' Polic_y Commi.~tee ls_ presently. con~dering-'. a

'(5)
a dlvisiori of lab6r among •
shouid be geared to ail· 1ntensi-
sentatioil.

••
complet_e

transposition
:.O,f
..
th~.•·
present core requirement sy~tem
_;
the.
faculty;:~
that approximately:

••
fied knowledge of that subject. \
.
Whether you agree with my
•.
at Mapst.
The two mpst·._prominent propos:us;. n~mely-Ah~se of
two-thirds
·ot:'the·
facjuty
Jiill
However, what
r
have fo say, may distinction or hold to the
A
and
Mr. Vivona
·and
Mr;· Zucarello, are the first step:;;toward achieve-
be involved
1n·
teaching interim·
certainly pertain to the graduate
:
C concept, I now_ turn to the
ment
·
of a more morough, general educ,ation program •• Both these
courses and one:.'third inprepar..;
student as well~
realism of academic study. Here,
-
·
progralJ?S are divisional in approach,. each
.allowing
core require-:-
ing :ftiture interim courses or in
At Mari st College, the purpose I am dealing with the objectiv~ •
.ments
to be fulfilled during freshman and maybe sophomore years.
research~
•..
.
• •
.•
:· '';' :
..
of its educational process is to norms with which the. studept's
A, major
expectation of either or

Jll~
J>i:ograms is to insti~te

Of all the major re_risions)n
involve the student with a Liberal
achievement is determined
7
and
a well rounded presentation of. all ma3or field studies at an earlier.
·:
.educational
programs reyiewed
.
.
Arts education. The
.curriculum
thus must be directed· toward,
level of college life.
. ·
·
_
-
.

·
. •
·
.
.
• •
.
·
..
by Muskinguin's. General Poll-
·

does not deal;with a specialized
Again,
I
must m~e
·a
discrirn-
In· content, this new offering would divide the freshman studies
..
cies

Committee,~ the. calendar
.

syllabus, but rather it hopes,to
ination. Such courses as science,
into three areas: the flrst·be_ing a mat~-natural science<iiyision
.with
the
'interim·
January plan,·_
roster an intellectual stimulation
mathematic~~ economics,
etc.
incompassing a history of· science, its impact, physic~·,sc1ence,
promises to 1:>e·
the most excit-
of overall academic resource.:.
•.
ha".e

yes: or no concepts. The
life, man ancl math, and
-
possibly an introduction. .. to
.compu!ers; .
ing Dean Evans explained.
,
fullness. Returning to my·open-

objective norms of achievement
.
secom;Uy, an introductory
course entitled social. and behavioral



ing commentconcerningthefunc-
·must
be similarly directed. An-
.
man accomodatlng
man and the past, political man; man and society,
tion of the student' to determine
swers can only be right or wrong
man -~.d behavior; thirdly,
and probably,• the.: newest_ innovation,
his own academic. goal, let me
and
there is not much room for
would be the humanities branch, dealing,'Nith art; music, literature,
try
·to
relate this concept to deviation. Turning to the liberal
and· man and God. 'The
·,overall
program'. would
_stress
discussion
SPORTS· SCHEDULE
such

a·· Liberal Arts study as art
·
subjects this is not the case;
and lectures with determination toward self-study..
.

typified at Marist.
These are the courses toward
.
"At a meeting held on Tuesday, -October
1.5,
the student council
.
ll
a.m.

Soccer: Marist
vs.
-
Take the case of two students which I turn my argument~
members, resident board

representatives,
and

club presidents

Fairfield· H.:
Trac·k: CAC X-
studying a particµlar
.course.
one
Re~stically,
most teachers
met to discu·ss this
·submitted
renovation. The questioning included
:country
Championship at
Van
.
may seek to absorb
·the
material
_
impose. tests on students £hat
the effects on teacher. e~ucation,- on transfer students, the necessity.
Cortlaoo Park
Sailing: Penta-
of the course for the sake of force them to give the answers

of a major, and the,,overall effects on the upperclassmen. A.most
gonal H.




learning facts that will be bene-
.
they are taught. And in some
signlf(cant aspect of· the meeting ~oncerned the me>re significant
flcial to him in ,later life, while cases these.answ.ers are nothing. role of the faculty advisor in aiding the incoming freshmen in the
2
p.m.
Football:
Vikings vs.
the other student· 1s concerned more but repetitions of textbook
selecti,O!l of.. their
future courses. In- this case; each freshman
Niagra.
with using the material of
.the
remarks
or facts. This method
would advance at the level agreed upon by.both he and his advisor.
course 'to develop an understand-
presents
two problems
to
_the

Next
-we.~k
the
·faculty
-Will probably discuss. and consider the
ing
·of·
the })articular subject in "introspective"
student, First,

pros and cons of such an· alteration •

'•!·•·
'·.·'
•••••••
'
•••••
'-
••••..


.
.'•,,.




















































































































r
if
~i:{1!Ji(i1'.f
C
•.
.,


.
• THE CIRCLE·
,.
.
•.·'
October 24, 1968
·••',_1:·.
':'
··.•
..
;''
5
.•
;:._
!_'::;.;_'
:'


...
~
•••
'
'
L••


•..


·•
"
:':t1·'.;':
;ab
:
• ··•..
.
.~.
··
...
0
~w:~~!~!
1
;:,:,
;{
.
Cultural
Exchange
:
Pla·nned
'
..
; ..
;
;_~.,~.>r~·
~.
·-·
<-.~~~~;
..
_·...
·--._·:_
/
.:.


=

---

.
lfiY<>~\cari understand, ldldn't
up. and announced that be bad
type
~--
police

state
regulated
buy
·the·
tickets:
and
.therefore

pretty lights to show them to-
beachesi-and sit, crowded by the
·
.,,
didn't feelresponslble
for them. night
in< addition to our' maln
-
milUons,
~jamm~,
covered wlth

But· since'
·I
would
have
to pay attraction
"arid
here they are,
oil and pretending to enjoy the

--anyway,.
I decided to
go
and the JEFFERSON AIRPLANEII!".
coast, theoccaslonalsandkicked
leave some glassy eventngwaves

.As
soori
·as·
Grace walked out
ln·tlie face, or the sunburn. There
·
·,-crashiritt.-rlder.less
on the.sands applause·
started.
But
it
soon
to:
frantically
.wait
for a future
.
~fBay·Head,
New
Jersey.
.
died. 'Ibey
·set
up With' a rapper
spouse to sweep them upand!ree
•·.
:~.,
Convention Hall
was
surprls-

of
·,·YOU

CAN
TRY
from
them,froni.themselves.
••
.;
iitg.
,It._
was a lot· smaller· than
I
BAXTERS'l'

I
naturally was up·.

Well, the crowd lefLthe audi-
.:
•.
had·.' expected. "Graffittt"
was.
arid•·
going. However,· when the_.

torlum in that same quiet Wild-·
-
on
·.stage
when
we arrived rapping
sounds ended,
I
realized that I
erness_ of

insensitivity
that
,.,
out>-some
sloppy psychedelia.

was
.the·
only one in the entire.
naturally· gener?,tes a mist
...
of
.·•
·,After
getting inside, I nervously
audience out of hls. seat and
impersonal
coldness.
It· was
'.JOOked
forsomeindlcationofwhat
moving~ Someone grabbed me and.
truly
an
American crowd. The
.
th~ rilght wouid be like.
.
ptilled me down by the neck
-~
• •
air was. filled with "don't touch
:-.First
off, there seemed to
be.
"uh. dat
·cops
gunna ·trow you
me'* politeness.
,
:

about cine
4
'usher" for every!ive
oilt k1d, "•
~
.Hey-look out,
l
can't
Eventually it was dissipated
...
·. :
'
i
people. These people
'didn't
look
see.•· •• "Come on, act mature!>'
into

the paranoia of boardwalk
: ,·:
• .
.tO!)
:bad;
I
mean. to
look
at me
.
(don't ask what tor). It was then
.amusements.

·
••
· .

,
(With

all
·."my
hair
.
cut off for
that
I
saw
the armed guard glar-
I
slowly beat-
lt
.back
to Bay
•.•
doniestlc tranquillty)
I could
be

tng at me with those big, "there's
Head, New ,!ersey whlc~ls really
cta.s"sified as an all American
one
:
in. every crowd,"
eyes.
I
,
beautiful at night,
_and
peaceful.


~tral~bt cat.
I
did manage though,. slumped back into my seat_ and
I
took my board.down to the sand
..
to·wear my work shlrfand plastic
reallzed. the ~ragic truth. Emily
and darkened sur~~

.
coated jams.
.
.. •
Post applause resounded in my
There, these wild thoughts
:
,

SUrprising
was
thefactthatthe
head, while Grace Slick walked
.
passed through my mind.
·hallwas
not filled with
a
mob of
to the back ofthestageindlsgtist.
There- below that friendly
music. hungry. maniacs. Dig:
in
••
It's my guess that she was nau-

yellow sphere. And there
I
.
:
were
.
seated with their- dates

seaus: Maybe, she was thinking
sat_ ilntil dawn.
••
-
(I
dare.
say
that
ALL
were heter-
of the zillions

of albums she
The beach ls an excellent vantage
..
osextials) and
all
were acUng like
thought
were
communicating
P0int from which to contem-
ladies
'and
·gentlemen
of whom
something

to
the
youth of
plate the un1verse.(JIM EARL)
mother
.and
-dad
could be very
America.
P.S, I didn't go to Asbury Park
proud_ -- many even smoked good

Perhaps
.
the saddest part of
on August 22nd. I hear the Doors
"shit"
(from American Tobacco

all was the fact that the audience
••
were playing the1;e.
Co.)~ Now, Asbury Park radiates
.
·had
no idea
of
what was goingon,
* BAXTERS·-
a cut from the
and intrinsic state of mind. such
.
being oblivious of what they had
album titled "After
Bathing at
as "KEEP. OFF THE GRASS"
done,
Baxters."
or "if.•you're
not
_retired,
Act
Well, "THE.SHOW M;UST.GO_ ~------------
1t1":
So
believe me when I say
.
ON.", and it did; for 30 minutes,
Work-
Study
that
:there
isn't any in that town.
which is minimum by
__
contract.
Thlrigs_'_started to look. bad
During that time,
i
kept my joys
planned
.
(dig?) and
·that
psycho-semantic
to myself. And the audience SAT,

1umi> in my throat began to
·act.
and LISTENED (did not hear)
This January the English De-
up
__
again, Just then;
_by
golly,
_a .
and applauded in dainty little
partment will initiate a course
Bert Parks type in a baby blue
;
snaps as they had always been
1n Journalism. Thls Work-study
..
tux
.skipped_
to the podium like a
..
taught, Wlth the exception of one
course will begivenincollabora-
..
·
.
Hollywood queer: "Guess what,
-•
Joker

in

!ront who stood up,
tion with the POUGHKEEPSIE

·:.
(KIDDIES hriplied and they were
.
screamed "play
'Wild Time'!.,
.
JOURNAL. Mr. Robert Norman
eati~g
it'
whole) next week we're
(and upan his realization walked
of the English Department envi-
.
Marist College has inaugurated
.
a student-Faculty exchange pro-
gram with predominately Negro
Paine·
College
of
·Augusta,
Georgia. A project initiated in
part by Bro. Edward Cashin and
Mr. Louis Zucareilo
is due to
begin ln the spring. The program
calls
for
·an
exchang~ of five
students from each campus, pre-
ferrably
Juniors
and Sopho-
mores,
and faculty
members
• from
both

campi
for
one
semester.
In the words of Bro. Daniel

Kirk,
Marist students involved
in this program Will be offered
the chance to develop their social

awareness 1n·
the ''interaction
of

sevel''.'ll cultures."Bro.Klrkalso

stated that representatives from
Paine will visit MOTH later in
the semester to view the campus

and speak to exchange applicants.
The deadline for

prospective
applicants is December 15, 1968.
~
T .A .C ..
~
..
Continued Fro111
Page
l
continue in the vein of the "Ber-
iggan
.
petition° by fostering new
ideas
.and
developments within the
college· community.. Included in
some of
its
goals is the esta-
blishment of a "Free University"
to istructstudents in matters re-
garding the Vietnam War and La-
tin American Affairs,
and the
assisting in the campaign of Li-
beral Party Candidate Peter
De-
fault.
Also on TAC's agenda is
the support
of
the
Cali-
fornia
Grape Growers
strike.
TAC members plan to pamphlet
local supermarkets that sell the
grapes.
To counter-balance
military
recruitment on campus, TAC has
established a "free"
table in the
cafeteria that presents "another
side of the story"·when recrui-
ters are at Marist.
Also in the
making is plans to have a draft
counselor available to the student
body on specific dates throughout
the academic year.

Need Summer
Employment?
According to Floyd Alwon, who
has been a motivating force
be-
hind TA C's activities;
"An an-
gry
arts· festival will be held,
possibly in conjunction with Hu-
,-
manities House,
to present pro-

students living ln theNewYork test µ:trough art form."
Alwon
City area who have no jobs lined stated that this project was still
up for next summer are advised in a planning stage,
to see Mr. Mortensen, Registrar,
!
about
an
"Urban Corps" position.
Finding its origin in S.D.S. of
These jobs, under the Federal two years ago, Bill Heap founded
"Work - study" Program,
are TAC last year. Under his lead-
with the CityofNewYork.Fresh-
ership, and laterbyRayAnello's,
men Will earn $2.25 per hour, TAC sponsored a "Faculty
0-
Sophomores and Juniors $2.75 pinion Poll" on Vietnam",
a
pre-
per hour. Seniors are not eligi-
sentation of a play called "The
ble. Work
is
available in all Living Newspaper'', which dealt
areas:
Business,· Science and with the injustice of the war.•
Technology, Public Administra-
---------------
tion, Social work, Radio and T.
v.,
Education etc,
A
job can be
found
.
to fit in anyones Major
field of interest.
He has also edited an essay
"F
.D.R."
in Great American-
Liberals
.
·,·:•.

ha.virig GLEN Campbell!" Mas-. out), no one in the
'entire-hoard
sions the program as a
·three
ses:
,;YAYI".
"And. the. next
.
showed any signs of understand-
credit course that wlll be open
.
week,.
-.the.•.
Foux:·_. Seasons.I"
·1rig
of what
-had
happened, The
to only 15 students in January •.
Marist must apply for federal
funds for \his program on Novem-
ber 15th, We must know by that
time how many students will be
·
interested ln the Urban Corps.
If
you "might"
be interested
David Burner, Associate Pro-
fessor of History at the State
University or New York at Stony
.
Brook, is the author of the re-
cently· published book The Poli..:
tics
of
Provincialism:

The
Democratic Party in Transition,
1918-1932. He is presently writ-
ing an essay on the electionof
1924 for a forthcoming volume on
the history of American presi-
dential elections which will be
edited
by
Arthur M, Schlesinger,
Jr.
~:·
..
_Masses: •
''YAYt'~.
It
wai; sadly
real result was that three thou-..
The program will afford the


·•·
·:r.9minescent •
of
the· Dick Clark
.
sarid
••
people

riow think
the
.
students the
.
opportunity to re-
.. ·•
jd:tys.
•·Finally,·_
thls. babo an-
.
Jefferson Airplane stink.
.
ceive not. only the. ~lassroom
...
,!nounced,

"And

Yessirree,
.
on
.
They· all would go home to
theory of Journalism,
\but
also

:August.
'22nd·
we're
having the
mom and dad, (after a few frus-
the chance to rece1ve practical
•nooRSll"-This
.time
the. crowd-
tratlng
moments
:10
an
empty
experience in the field.
such
.
'weht
wild • .I
:wondered •
if
they
·car'
lot) and tell

of the lousy
divisions as advertising, political
:
'had·
ati
read.about the Jiir) Mor-

time they
·had
had; and of how
journalism and the intricate in-

'rtsonubust''
in Ufe
'or-.Cheatah.
'.
they
·had.
wasted
,$4.50.
of their
volvement of news·-.and ~ditorial
.•
Somehow
:I
managed to glve them

hard earned upper, middle class
writing will be covered. As things
;the •
~nefit
.
of. ignorance on: my


1ncome. They all would go home,

stand now, Mr. Norman will. be
..
piri:t. Maybe they had minds
..
of
.
or back .to
·ttta.t
swinging Jersey
meeting with representatives of
.;.,:·..-:their·
own
,behind,
those beards-'- shore SCENE' to
,-awalt.:
another
_
the JOURNAL. in· the near future


.•

and. pretty dresses..
.
.
.
.

.
.
.

'day,
.
when they could crowd the
·
to finalize
.the
ilecessau points.


N~vi
_the
MC:11iously shut,them
$1.25; life guarded, Mussolini
.
'
Faculty.
Eva
I
uat ion ...
.•
please contact Mr. Mortensen
before that date. There is no
obligation.
Symposfum
Continued
f_r om page 1
}An\0'.pe'n<·:.L:eife'r.··~
··•·
Continued from Page·1
Richard Polenberg, Associate
Professor of History at Cornell
University", is the author of Re-
organizing Roosevelt's Govern-
ment, 1936-1939. He has also
edited America
at
War: The Home
Front, 194~~1945.
·
·
·

·


of students. It considers student
.
·,
,

:(:o,nt
i
nu
ed
._Fr
e>m

P<ige:
4

'


·
,
opinion
to be vitally important in
Willis

H.
Raff, Professor of
.
. •
,


-
.
-
..•
-

,
,response
rests entirely Witb tbe· the
-~ormati·on
0
·r
a complete
.-.fo-
• ;:
ucattonal,
system
should riot be
·te • •
h.
H
h ld
al
J.'
~
Political
Science at the State
:: ·
standardized or dictatorial. It is
ac er'
e s ou
rev tie his tu.re of the quality of instruction
University of New
.
York at New
:
.hard,
to·. fathom. that
.a:
teacher
~iwn ideas on the goals of educa-
al
M'lrist.
In the.final analysis
Paltz, has written
articles
on

should,have the authority to say.

onalland
efve1
n
itbf
he does not per-
students
theni;;elves have the American
government and his-
,
·
thi
'
i
h
·
-
·t·
i
·
t.
·,
son y
ee
at th e goals of
mo,,t to
·
gafu

from any improve-
h
·'
.
·s s

ow
1

s gomg o be. • •
particular,
students agree. with
Th
.
.
tory.
A few years ago e was

and to make all judgements on
hls own h
h uld be
. d-
ment in this picture.. . e1r m-
the Director
of the Mid-H11d-
·\··
that-norm •. 'This
.carried
over to
,
d
d
'~:i-
0


~fn.mm
_
terest
and concern wdl be re- son Institute forCltizenshipEdu-

the grading system. ins fine to
· ·
e an re .
lC:
enou~.
O
mcoo-
fl
e Ct Cd in
the
respanse to the
cation.
niake
.
a .standarlzed norm
'for
·
..
parate the
1
r values m his o~
more thanseven-hundredandfif-
iridividual. t
t
but.


h
-
it
:
Pr?Cedure. He
_should
liberalize
ty invitations
to help that have
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
es s,
.
.
w
_en
hls. teaching methods and evaluate
Richard
Rovere,
Political
.

-~o_mes. .
to
_determ1~~g

the
•.
pi:ocedures to encompass the in-
been extended.
students
-
course evaluation, the

trospecttve
.
student. The

repe-
-------------
.
teacher should
_not.l>e
held to a
titive student would stlll be free·
VIK.ING
RALLY
Commentator for The New York-
er, is the author of many books
including The American Estab-.
Jishment and Senator Joe Mc-
Carthy·.
·staridarized
check· list.
'·In
o_ther

to follow bis own methods and
~ord.s:;
I a:13
advocatlngtndlVldUal
goals -for
.the
academic process
.
To· N" IGHT!
considerations. True,certain ob-.
would
.not
be turned from one
, Bernard Bellush, Professor of
jective requirements
shoµld
~
.
extreme to· the. other, but only

I

History at the City University of
.
met!

but J_:>er~ps a student s
~xpanded to include every aspect
10
00
PM
.
subJec:Uv~ achievement far ot1t-
of academic. achievement. Fin..:.

:
.
New York, is the author of F.
•. _
ways his objective showing. Un-
ally, the teacher should treat· ;============:..:D:.:·.:.:R;,·..:a:s:...:Go:v,:.:e:rn:.:.:.::o.:.r..;o::f~N.:::e:w..;Y:.:o:r;k:,:·
..
.
fortunately, ~owever, this again
.
students as individuals and not
rests
on
}lie
interpretatJ~.n of

be hampered by standarizedeval-
S
p" e c •• a
I
s
.
o
n
W
M
C
R
Just ~hat,_}he academic goals-
uations and procedures; but be
should be.
.
-
- _
.
.

-
·
· · •.
fiexibie
enough to treat
each·
Similarly 1 the teach~r should
student as an individual intel-
MON.
not
._be
a dictator. in his class-.
lectual entity.
. _r_oom;
for. although· the student.
. such an academic procedure
:
may not

be academicall;Y-

his
·

is entirely realistic,
especially
equal,
·.he.·
deserves the_ respect
in such a small academic com-
,
of his teacher, and_ the teacher
munity as Marist._Not to lmple-
WED.
9:30-10:00
10:00-11:00
8:15-10:08
FR. GUILMETTE
STUDENT
GOVERNMENT
MR. JOHN WHITE
CLASSICAL MUSIC·

• •
sl).oul~, be receptive
to the stu-
ment such changes where changes
dents own· th olights and not
to
should be made. or at least not
lndiscr~mlnately
.
put him: down.

to rev.aluate present procedures
.
:·,
What then can be imple~ented
.is
only serving to defeat the
• .
_in:
the academic. process to fos-.
academic process and
·the
tea-
ter the concepts presented?. 'The_ cher
as
a teacher.
THURS.
10:00-11:00
Floyd Alwon

"OUTRAGEOUS
OPINIONS"
Harold F. Gosnell, Professor
of Political
Science Emeritus,
Howard University, has written
Champion Campaigner: F .D.R.
and The American PartySystem.
He worked for the Roosevelt Ad~

ministration in the Bureau of the
Budget and the Office of Price
Administration.
The Planning Co1!1_iyittee for
the Fourth Annual yranklin D.
Roosevelt Symposium is com -
posed of Bro. Edward L. Cashin
Academic
Vice-President
of
Marist
C o l e g e; Elizabeth
Drewry, Director of theFranldin
D. Roosevelt Library;
Charles
C. Griffin, Trustee Orin Leh-
man, Trustee,
and George
H •
Skau, Director ofRooseveltStud~
ies.
The public is cordially invited
to at.tend the symposium and re-
servations
can be made with
George H. Skau or Carol Deyo,
Marist College,
MSU
MULTIPLE
SCLEROSIS










































































































!
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i.
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8
October 24~ 1_968
t
-:.-
.
I
..

I
\

·,
•••
•"•\
'\
~
'·,\
.....
:;
_..
\
'
...
: •
....
• ~::
...
_; .·'
:◄
·;
'
:church-Rel-tid.
Colleges
- ·
:Are;
__
ec;om_ing
sironger_···:·
THE CIRCLE;:
__
::_;/_\:./\>;
••.
/\ '.'
L'oaft,,~€iHS
,iBii:f
t:StU.den~s
·}C(?,;r>))t
'
WASHINGTON·'(CPS).' ~- Col-
.
there wowcf be no·money:a:vail-
summer; a continwng:resoltition..
.'
;<
leges and universities requested. able for NDEA· loans next sum-
gt"anting.
•.
the
$184
million
was
.
- Nashville, Tenn •• .,; (t.P.) - Universities~
colleges related to
$247
mllllontorNatlonalDefense
mer.ses~on.
And,
~cause money
passed.
·In
August; OE, notlfied_·
The Methodist Church are stronger than at anytime in t~~ir'history,
Education Act (NDEA) loans tbls. ls being used for small university·.
schools that the regular
..
alloca"."
•.
according- to Dr.-Myr~n F. Wicke, general secretary of the Division
..
year, but federal budget-:makers. loan funds to partly make up fol'.·
tion would be that lower_ figure.
:
of Higher· Education,
.·111ethodist'.
Church· Bo~d -of Education·. The would only let
·them
have $190 the cut, adver.se effects might be
Will Holllngsworth
clilefofthe


. •
following are excerpts, from a statement issued by Dr. Wicke in bis
million.

fell next year~
'


NDEA program manacemerit sec-
••
:
rePort.to the. Division.of Higher Education:
.
. .
•.
.
·

Financial aid omcers at some
.
The

University
·of
Kentucky
.tion.
a:t the Office of. Education/
.
''It _is imPortant to note again that in education as in all other·
schools approved students' re-
probably wtll not be. able to ap-
says· the cut is "so.minor"
that
0

areas of our common Ufe, serious questions a.re being raised about

quests based on the· smaller
fi-
.
prove new applications !or NDEA.·
.
there
.
is· riot "much' impact,,,
the full meaning of church-related
education. They are questlons
gure, only to find out later .that loans next semester, and 1t may

ApparenUy.riotmanyschoolshave
which merit the most careful consideration..
.
the final allocation would
be
only

not be able: to
,meet·
all present
had toJ:ut off• any students•· en-
"In· 1966 the first
,meeting
of the Council of the Church-Related\
,$1~6
million - nearly $5·milUon
commitments. sttiderit aid dtrec-
tire NDEA 'loans.,But the· money
College was held in Chicago. This is a council named by the division
less than·Jast year•

.
·
tor James
'.E,
1
Ingle says lt ~e-
being used to. make
up
for the cut
to carry on a continuing study of the nature and meaning of the church
·
That's all Congress would ap.
pends on c_ollections from loans
might have gone fo
·others~

•.

related coll~ge, including such questions as whether there should
prove, despite the earlier pro-
due tor repayment.
·,..
·Under·
provisions
of the-:Na.:.
be. such institutions, what the vital relationships of church and
·college
mise
from
the
Office
of
The Office
'of
Education lets
.
tlonal. Defense Edu~auon Act, a


can be in a· secularized age, and what peculiar contributions such
Education.
schools use a· portion of. money
.
student may borrow up to $1,000
institutions may provide.
,

.
.

The shortage of NDEA funds
they collect on payable loans for
each academic year to maxii:num.
"The council is made up of college presidents, deans, faculty
has_ resulted in some students'
new. loans.· That policy has kept
of $5,000. Graduate and prof es-

members, churchmen, and lay-men. Tuis distinguished group of men losing
loans they thought they
the University
of
South Dakota
sional students may horr<>vi
as

have agreed to work together for terms ofat least three years under
would have. Others found their
from having to
·deny
ne:w NDEA
much as· $2,500 a year up to
the guidance of Richard N. Bender.

loans cut when they returned to
loans
this
semester.

Nearly

$10·,ooo
•. The repayment period·

"I believe the time
.has
come to creat'e a representative national
school this
.year.
Financial aid
$5,000 was cut from its original
·and
interest do
·not.
begin until·
commlssion
to be 11nked wlth this division, whose task wlll be to pr~grams elsewhere are being
,
allocation,. but a1d director Doug
nine months after the student
develop during thenextquadrenniumanationalstatementon
the future
crimped.
• •

•.

....
·
•·
Steckler avoided problems
by
ends his studies,Interestisthree
role and function~ of colleges and
.universities-related
to The United
At Vanderbunt University in..
"not making any promises I might
percent on the:
.unpaid.
balance;
..
:
.
~Iethodlst Church."

~
Nashville, for example, the stu-
not be able to keep."
with repayment· spread
·over"'i(r·.··--·
·• ..
···,.
The appropriate naming of such a commission should it seems to dent aid Offi<:e absorbed the gen,;.
Schools
-
in
.
45. states wer.e
.
years.
:.me;
be. a· resporislbillty
of
·the-new
Division of Higher
·Education
to eral allocat1oncutbywhackingoff
affected by the federal·cut~ Cali-
The_ act's
·uforgtveness".prci"'.',·-.
, ,-
...
·•"'
be organized in September·or this year, Dr. Wicke continued. "Mean-
about teJ?,
percent from each loan
fornla, Hawaii, Maryland, Texas,

vision allows cancellation·of
up

time
the
work !)f the Council on the Church-Related College will
go!ng,

to about 15.~o
.
students.
and Utah weren't hit because re-

to one-half the loan· if
·the·
bor-'
• •
continue and
will
be able to suppy many insights useful to a national
'It s a very l;>indlng situation,"
quests
from. schools in those
.
rower becomes a full-time
tea;.
commission.
\
·•.

,
..
says Vanderbilt's loan dire~tor·
states were,under the limits set' cher
·at·the
_rate
of 10 pex-cent;
"I hope also that as a result of these efforts a renewe<f national
Cannon Maye~. "The cutls caus-

in the Office of Education's for-
tor each year of service;
.
B<ir"-
ernphasts on higher education can b_e projected for the quadrennium, ing us, students, and p~ents to
mula for assistance.
rowers
·who·
teach handicapped
1968-72.
if
the findings of the proposed commission suggest such do a g~
bit of scrambling."
The director of student aid at
children or In certain areas may
action.
Mayes said because of the cut·
the
··
University
or New- Mexico,
qualify for further fori,veness.
"I have e.:-.-pres~d earlier
my. personal views ·on some of the
-
Charles Sheeinan, said he ex-
Repayment is delayed· if the
problems of higher education. today. Here I reassert my strong
Graduate
pected it would be a "tough
student resumes study, or serves
com·ictiori that the colleges and universities relatedtoThe Methodist
year" and alerted students that
in the Armed Forces, VISTA,
Church offer the church a.tremendous OPPortun1ty tobe meaningfully
Receives
.
less NDEA moneywouldbeavail-
or the Peace Corps:
invoh·ed in the shaping of the future.
able, He relied ·on an. "insured

Eligibility
is. based primarily
''Each: of these institutions
has Potentially a greater service
Fu_/b_-r_
igbi
loan" program through private
on need; with thecollegedec_iding·
to· render than ever before if a number of problems can be solved.
banks· that the state just imple-
the merits of individual cases.
There
will
need to be some mergers, some redefinition of relation-
Brother
Alexander
Senes,
mented.



A student is asked to list his
ships. and some new priorities
esfablished both by· church and insti-
Class of ,68, received a Ful-
-In March, the,Office of Educa-
expected income for the_ semes-
tution.
So
far:
as the division is concerned the coming quadrennium
bright Scholarship for the study
lion notified financial aid officers
ter with. his costs. All or. a·
will prove the most crucial of all."
·

at the 1800 schools in the NDEA
portio'(l of· the deficit may then
of Spanish language and litera-
program that the tentative 1968-

be granted.

ture at the University of Cord o-
69 allocation would be $190 mil-

Since the loan prograi:n
-was···
ba, Argentina. ile has been at


The Trend Is
Liberal
lion. But Congress stalled· on ap-
authorized in
.1958,
rriore than a
the university Since July.

provfog the leglslationconfa.inlng
million
students have borrowed
Alex Senes was horn in Italy;
the appropriation.
Finally last
·over
$1 billion.
he moved.Jo this. country
.at .the
age of eleven. In 1963;
·uPon •
graduation from Cardinal Hayes
High School,
.
New York
.
City,

Corvallis.
Ore. - (I.P,) -
Dean Crist cited examples of
he entered the Marist Novitiate
Oregon
State
University
0
is
liberalism

in
the California
-
in Tyngsboro, Mass .. Two years
considered by Janet Crist, asis-
schools also. UCLA has lowered
later he came to-the Maiist Col-
tant dean of women, to be as
the age for no closing· to the
lege campus. Here he majored
liberal
as most other schools
,
sophomore level 'as has the Un-
in Spanish, in which he achieved
throughout the. country concern-
lversity
of Southern California.
high honors. UPon completion
-
.ing
women's closing hours; "Of
.
Even private
_colleges
in Ore-
of the Professional Semester in

course, out"Pollcy mustbeview-

gon have weekend closing set at
Teacher Education, tie attended
ed in proper perspective,"
she
2 a.in., LeWis
,and
Clark Col-
the University
of
.
Mexico in
added~


lege and Llnfield
College. for
Mexico City.

. .-
.. _
.
.
.
\
:Vlidwest universities have gen-
example. The Uiµversity ofOre-
Alex:
,.Senes
was
·
known • on
eral policies that coincide with
gon

nas adopted· no closing re-
campus partictilar,y
for his out-
tli6!!e no,v iri effect at OSU. Oregon
·
gul~tions beginnl
1
ng this fall. OSU
'
standing· musical talent, as
_lead
State can be considered con--


·has
extended the privilege of no
guitarist
for the Student Bro-
serv;itive when policies are com-·
.
dosing to juhlors. According to
·thers'
group. Senes has also
pared·. to universities
in the
'Dean
Crist, there has been very
retained
total
fluency. in his
..
• ·
Pacific
·-.;
Athledc
Confer~nce.

little
complaint
from staff or
native Italian.


Washington schools are·very lt-
parents and the. experiment is
Peter Petroceili
was named
beral.
·Tller~
arenoclosinghours
considered very effective.
.
alternate to Germany~-However,
at the sophomore level at Wash-
Besides extending no closing.
he ls currently studying at the

ington State
·•University
and no
to sophomores there are other
Johns Hopkins School of Inter-
closing for anyone at the Unfver-
regulations that can be changed
national Diplomacy ln Bologn:1,
.
sity of Washingtc,>n.

to blend.in with liberalism. '.'The
Italy.


UniversUy of
·0regon
has consi-
-------------·
dered having a no closing dorm

·
in which women students of any
••
level can live with parental per.:
..
••
mission,"
Dean Crist revaled.
New. Trends.;
Started tn
·-shea,h2in·.
It is definitely evident that a
Under this system there would
be no closing residence halls

arid some which enforce.closing

hours for those parerit~objecting.
.
M,. Hulett now c·alls
the
Student
Gove,n•
m·ent_,meetings_
to
~,d~, with a gavel

••
true spirit ofcommunityinterest
._
Recrui·ters
Refuse·
Debate··
._.
and
·pride
is growing in the Hu-.
manities. House,

Sheahan Hall

·
• - •
·
,..


.


.
this year
•.
For, the\first
time
,.
SAN
·FRANCISCO
(CPS) -- Military recruiters
refused l() come to
students-
.
are· taking
'.an
active
·san

Francisco

State College this
··week
when they: were asked to
part in the house's appearance.
share space with antiwar groups....
,


0
••
·:
-.
The members. will be proud of·.

The plan, thought up by placement director -Vernon· Wallace in
their· new rennovations, proud to

the wake of several demonstrations against recruiters-
last year,
bring friends and visitors to their
.•.
called for a "military
informa~h>n day"· at which both the military
home with its new respectable
·
and war opponents would be allowed to· make their-case.
.
.
.
- •
appearance.. The·
.work
will be
··
,
But. the m1lltary refused.'
0
'I\Ve're
'.not·
out to get into a·debating

.
done by the members themselves.
society.- We're out to recruit students," said one military spokesman.
·
Special commendation
·goes
·to.·
The recruiters
may also have been influenced by the plan of about·
.
Tom Voelker and Roger "Fri-
150 students to dump the recruiters'
tables into the street.
_volous
Sal" Fay :ind the other

.
When the recruiters
failed to show, about 500 students marched
co.:.workers who initiated the pro-
to the office of President· Robert Smith to demand that he state
ject. Work·wm be done on Shea-, his deciSiora on Air Force RO"l'C within a:w~ek. Unlike his predeces-
.han
Lounge and the recreation·· sor, John Summerskill, who wastrappedlnhisoffice
last year during
room. The enthusiasm is high
a demonstration, Smith met the marchers halfway to his office and
among the members withorgani-
told them, amid jeers and boos, that ROTC would stay on the campus
zation
.
help from
the House's
as long as a majority of students wanted
it.
champion. Brother Joseph Bel-
Smith also saidheplanstoreview.campusrecruitlng
arrangements,
anguer. Funds are being provid-

which he said were "not too successful for many or tllose-wishing
ed by the members·themselves.
to disseminate-or.. receive information."

The
Cultural.
Committee
of

Marist
College

·.
Praeab
ZOOT_
SIMS
.. ,
,.-·
aad
Hu.
Jazz·
Suaplaoae
~:
HUDSON
VALLEY
.
,

.CHAMBER
PLAYERS
-
friay,
.Oct:,25
_;

...
·•·
'
AT 8:31·P
11
1'
••

Marilt
~e
Tlaeater
••
,

J,•
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r
I/
<·
!:-.:
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...
·,TtIE.~IR.CI;E.
Oc1i>ber
24, 1968
•I\\'\'•
'•.'It'•'
•II
I
I
1

-
7
--),s~ilo·r~-
..
/F.ake:::ttirth.:
..
_
·_
..
:_H~.a
rrlers-
'•.,•

'.: 't

,
..
• At Paterson State on Oct. 9,.
In th~ second ho~e rneet ofthe

and quite
a
few runners
took

___
a
....

..
K_
1·.
·ng.~
.. p·~.··•·.
n' 1·..
Marist':ran.
into a· co_mbination year, on Wed. Oct. 16,-Marist wrong turns andwoundupretrac•
of an· excellently recruited team· narrowly edged Kings College
-
ing their steps. In spite of the
and a nightmarish course, both 26•29. The race took place on unfamiliarity with the course,
;-.
Th.e'Maiist Coilege· safiina
team
is off and·-runrung·.
'again
this.ye";.
·of
which cont,;ibuted tp a sound on 11fternoon of unusual heat,
and
Cappio and Andrews managed to
~-o
"'" thrashing by the tune of 18-43. this hampered mostofthetimes.
take one and two. Howe and Ma-
with: Mr~
-Jerome
RemenickY at the helm. The captains and their
Bloomfield was also in the race,
Once a~inPhil
Cappio led the yerhofer finished fourth and fifth,
cr_ews.
_of
-
the varsity have alreaey had two.· meets this season arid but Marist easily downed them,
.
pack by a wide margin in 27 :40. and Pu r car o placed eighth to
.
stµl have a full schedule of rac~
~
comP.h_ment
the remainder of 15-50. PhiICappioledthe,-ayfor
Bob Andrews took third and in complete the scoring.
th~ -~e~r;

_
.
_
.
.
Mari st with a time
.
of 25:35,
·
the fight for positions at' the fin-

:
-
·- • •
: • •
.

•.
·
••

.



·;

•.
.
·
·
·
-
but this. was
good
for only fourth ish, it was Joe Purcaro, Greg
With the tough opening strug-
..
m,.
their _fll'st meet of. !,he cam~ign, Mar1st finished sixth
0 ~
of
-
place overall. Bob Andrews took
.
Howe, and Bob Mayerhofer who gle behind them the Marist Har-

the eleven teams cornpetmg • This particular
.meet,
held at Ki_ngs sixth place with 26:33, and the provided the· necessary scoring riers
.
now are starting to click.
>P.~int,_
wa_s
for the W_ar
Memorial Ti:ophy 'Yhich was _won
by
Maritime
other scorers were Greg Howe, punch.
Though many thought this would
.
C.!Jllt:ge with_·
a
_low
score of_ only :r.t. points.: Man~t was edged out_ 27:27, Bob Mayerhofer 28:20,
After this meet, Mike Andrew, be a long season without Forbes
.
for fifth place by N:Y.U, when one of our i?<>a.ts
capsized. It.was not and Joe Purcaro 28:54,
out for the season with illness, and Goegel, they have actually
,
µalf so dumsy as_
1t
m~y_
sound
t.o
the maJ()nty ?f_ the readers. The
was appointed Freshman coach, turned in
.
better performances
uns~blenes_s of _this particul.ar boat was the mam reason the more·-
To say that this team was diff-
and, giving them more work, he than
any
past
Cross-Country
. or·less
.
inexperienced-captain and crew •~st ~e helm. It was ~t
erent from the Paterson State has them coming along well. team in Marist history.
Still
.
last Sunday,· October 13, ~at the team. was again
·edged
out of a wm. squad that was almost shut out
there is room for improvement
•.
The ·setting was Maritime, the opponent was Webb. The officials de-
at Maris t last year would be
On Sat,, Oct. 19, Marist invaded
.
and the peak of the season is yet
·tected:Marist
making ail illegal maneuver, something else attribu-
quite an understatement. Infact, New Jersey and trounced-Drew to come, with the C.A.C. Con-
..
table to the
.lack-of
experience on the varsity squad.· The penaliza-
four of their current top five are University 20-39 in the rain. It ference Campionship on Oct. 26,
tis,n poin~ caused Marist to go down.to defeat 10-12,
,
Freshmen, and twoofthe·sewere
was
difficult to follow the di-
and the N.A.I.A. Eastern Cham-

Som~thing must be s~id at this time of the members ~{this year's
team .
.'There
are a·ctually only three ~aptains who have had any sail-
.
ing, experience previous to this season. All the other boys have
.
come into the, sport with little or no knowledge of what was really
happening on the boats when a race was in process~ Mr. Remenicky
••commented
to your reporter that, ''it's· the little mistakes that have

hlJl'.t;

We're a young team, we lack finesse but I can say that we are

learning."
-,-By
keeping this fact in mind, it is much easier to take
the losses. handed to Marist by the more experienced sailing teams
of our opponents.


••.

·
De.finite notice shouid be taken of the frosh team headed by skipper
.Tom
Z;lrigle. His boat has.swept to victory in six out or seven prac ..
tice races staged for the freshmen.
_Mr.
Remenicky seems very
high

on this boy to put Marist in the front at the Freshman Eliminations
at Maritime.

.
Even with th~ problem of inexpe~ience !ooming in front of the
_team,
.
Mr. Remenicky was more than optimistic. ''W,":?should
be able to hold
.
_ i
our own.
-
I'm hoping to have at least a .500 year .. If we could just
.·•

get some
wind
to help us practice, our showing would improve great-
.
·_
Jy.'.'...
••

.•
.
:
FRO~( THE
,
BOATHOUSE:
.
Wha~ s this a~ut a freshman girl on the
-

sailing team?
.
It has· been understood by· this reporter that orte of
the freshman girls
is
trying to make
it
on the sailing squad. This

would

make our fair miss (name being withheld) the first
gir
I to com -
.
:
pete in inter -collegiate sports at Mari st ..
: -The
nerl home
_meet
for the sailing team ~ill be on the weekend of
Octol:>er 26-27.
'It
will be.
a
pentagonal meet with R.P.I., Queens,
Cooper Union and probably Fordham~
.

.
··~


.
,varsity.
Club.
on
the
Move
New Jersey State High School verse paths in the woods because pionship at Princeton University
Champions as Seniors. Paterson
they were covered with leaves
on Nov. 9.
had a definite advantage in know-
ing• the course. It looked like a
breeding ground for mountain-
goats in. that it ran uphill through
the woods formostoftheway;and
.
it was
-
completely covered with
rocks for 4

1/2 miles which
made good footing and a flowing
stride just about impossible.
One Studentrs OpiJO,nion
by Joe
Thorsen
Have you ever seen ;~ wtikentified athlete o~ Campus? I'm sure
we all have without ever having really known it. They aren't new to
the scene of unrequited attention. For years their complaints have
.
been unheeded, their protests lost. and
the
little progress that has
-
The followingSaturday~ Oct, 12,. been made has been just that - little. But "so-what'' you may in-
saw Marist put forth at Van appropriately bother your friend with (oh wow! Was he on basketball
Cortlandt.
Park its strongest last year?) I can't see why sports has it any worse than us (me).
showing of the season to date. The
result was an honorable defeat
Ask any ballplayer, he will tell you its such a treat to play in our
at the hands of a powerful Fair-
~thletic building. There are_n•t holes in the floor l~e last yea_r, and
leigh
'Dickinson
team which in-
its as soft as ever. Sometimes the guys wear their sweatshirts at
eludes Manhattan Coliege among prac_tice_ when the heavy-du1;Y
he~ting syste,m is malfunctioning,but
others on its schedule and a close nothing 1s perfect. When you re tlursty there s the washbowl. It may
victory
·over.
Monmo~th College• be soiled, but it forces more water out than any foW1tain. Its a
good
27-'30. This race saw Phil Cap-
thing the athletic ~epartment didn't move new lockers in - they just
pio, finishing second, set a new ~on•t make them hke they use ~•
The pl_ayers even have a
,bench
school.record
28:00 shattering if they neoo. a rest. Everyone will tell you its small but cozy. Yes,
the mark of28:l5 whi~h was held in some respects it has its drawbacks but it's the only one around.
by' John Forbes. Bob Andrews

became the second man under 30
Two years ago the Varsity Club proposed a training table for ath-
this

year
'with
a 29:54. He was letes.
Listing among. their reasons were-" specialized areas" and
backed up by Greg Howe 30:39, being "aware of the team as a whole and the individuals." They
Steve Sowicki 30:45, Bob Mayer-
wanted it to last only the length of the athlete's season and it would

hofer 31:54, Joe Purcaro 31:57, only be for supper. Their argumentisquite absurd - however, since
Mike Bell 33:05, Jim Ambury everyone realizes the deliciousness and nutritiousness of ~e cafe-
.
33:33, Mike Moran 34:11, Steve teria food. And if one'spalateisn•tpleased
by such delicacies as at-
Kopki 36:00, Bill Kalish
·37:52,
tempted potatoes or close meat there's always the"'rat"
to
turn too •
and Jerry Wildner 37:53 .. Jack As or now a limited experimental program in diets for competitors
Martin, having an injury, and Joe
is underway.
-
. <
Action is the byword of Ma- vices
of
Marist Athletics along
Mc Ma hon, because of the flu,
r_ist•s ,V.arsity Club this: y_ear.
_
with team profiles: Also on the
...
could not compete in this race,
Lets take a look at a composite interview with the administration

..
Spurred
·
by president Bob An-
agenda to open soon
is
a
weight-
In comparison to the rfrst race
..
drews,_the athletes are planni,ng lifting room being set up in Leo
at Van Cortlandt, the conditions STUDE~~=-In your opinion i~ there any way we can provide better
;
,
·,a,
score
of soci~l and athletic e-
Hall.


were ideal; the ground was
·m(l.ch
gym fac1llties for our students and athletes.

.
vents geared to tackle the dor-
better for running, having
·been

.
••
. ,niant-attitudes
towards Marist•s

On the lighter side of sports.·. packed down by the many high ~D~INISTRATlON: There's just no money this year.

.
:'
athletics~
.
·,

.
the
."fun
game of the year", the
school races.

••

'

·
·:
·
:,.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Faculty vs. the
.
.Varsity Club.
STUDENT: Do you think a positive attempt should be made to pro·
..
:J
Football
:
iittramufals., are al-
.
game is scheduled for ear
1y
De-
vide an' effective hi-protein diet for those participating in vigorous
.
"ready
_underway.
_The
other res-
cember •.
\
Socially speaking Sa-
.
.
_
.
.
sporting events.
·'pe~tive_
intramural sports-have
turciay night of Fall
Weekend
Crew Has

9rgariized comrnittees-ofVarsi~
.
(Nov; 16)
will
be sponsoredbythe
.
Athletes
:
directing them.
The
-c
club,
Also a social. hour
·for.
·
'Varsity.
Club bulletin board out-
.athletics
and their coaches will
••
New·.
c'·
o·ach·
.
:
.:side
thecafet~rfa_is_for the sole be held onNovemberl9alongwith
.

.

purpose or introducing and pro.; a general discussion of the fu-
--
moting: all·. athletic everitst var-

ture or Athletics at Marist.
_
or
.
.
Taking the helm as coach of
sityaridintrainural,~portsto~e
·course,the·varsityClub.A-
the Madst College Crew Team
-student
-b()dy.

Any information wards Banquet, our one night
is William
H. Austin,former
.
conceI'ning, this

board
-
may. be tribute to Marist's athletes. is
.crew
and swimming coach or
.
>
brought to
F.d
.Walzer
,(c..:223) •
also on the roster.
··Poughkeepsie.
High School~ For
for iininediate
.attention.
-
Like•

.
.
.
Mr. Austint coaching the Marist
• .wise~
using the media of"'news· On the last note the Varsity
oar~men. !"ill be his first
f:X-
_··.
'to-·arpuse.
interests in athle.tics
•.
C_lub
in conjunction with the Foot-

\P~r1e~ce
m the college rowing

a? Athl_etic
,Journa!
will_
be pub-
:
J>aU
Club
'-has
opened~ concess-
-·;CU-CUlt,

hshed m Dec~~er.
~ighhght-

ion stand at home football games.
·
.
ing these pubhcations will beup-
Don't forget to support the Vik-
Fo_r the past two years Mr.
to~ate stories.on·thevirtuesand
ings- :ind. enjoy their victories .. Austm !'ad
_had
_succesi,ful
sea-
~...---~--
--


sons with his. hjgh school team.
ADMINISTRATION:
There's just no money allocated for this pro-
posal .
STUDENT: What about grants to second year varsity men .
ADMINSTRATION: Therets n/2oney
granted by the federal gov-
ernment. for that this year. It all goes....

STUDENT:· (scratching his head while walking away from admini-

strations

office) There'.s no money, there's no money, there's no
money.
Did you ever imagine the utter frankness in the administration's
·
responses.


'
;r.
-

·
The Poughkeepsieteanihecciach:.
.ed
attained a

record of eleven
-

wins and three losses· in dual
,meets;
In regattas, according
to Mr. Austin, "we usually plac-
The champion of athlete's rights, the Varsity Club, has made de-
finite strides
.to.
improve the situation. They succeeded in com-
mandeering the bulletin board via the cafeteria and pasting their
portraits all
·.over·
..
it,
_'
No longer can you fill-up without a check-
up of who's really who. Under track there's a picture of the track
team, under crew there's a picture of the crew team. In effect,
the student body is becoming aware of their smiling faces. The
question I raise is whether such nice publicity confronts the student
body
with the real issues?
Does Marist have an outlined, detailed
plan to manage athletics?
Greg Howe Finishing_ Up Strong
ed second or third/'
As a graduate or Trenton State
College, William Austin attend-
ed Indiana University where he
received his master's in physi-
cal education. His close asso-
ciation with crew is not only
evident in his past coaching ex•
perience, but also in his mem-
berships in the Mid-Hudson Row-
ing Association and the National
Rowing Coaches or America. He
also
·
holds me·mbership in the
.
National Association of Swim•
ming Coaches and the American
Association of Health, Ph.Ysical
Education, and Recreation.
The football club knows the
:
whole game perfectly. Its agents
scamper through the dormitory halls at night seeking contributions
for programs, for lotteries, for anything. They tap the sap of the
student support to the limit.
If other teams or clubs want more
notoriety let them borrow football's P.R. men. Yet the football team
has a special advantage, it has nothing to do with the administration.
One couldn't be so blatant as tosuggestdealing with the establishment
since it may lead
to
certain hang-ups. But the possibility of getting a
.
clear-cut policy with regard to the administration's treatment of
athletes should be entertained.
Perhaps what is needed is a new look at old problems by the ad-
ministration and a more developed "Development office" for extra
exposure in the press media for Marist College Sports. I don't
know? Do you?
-.


































































































































i
1.
·•.~·
\
\
~;
•.
i,.·
i1

·1
;.

\_·
'
'
,.
'
l'
\'·
i;
':
'
I
.
.:~
.....
.:-.); •• ••.
:
:
•.
~
..•••
·••·"•
...
=··•·.•·.•·\'''";•·
.
..,._•_~.-,.
:~':
'
.
.
'
..
'
..
.
,•
i
•.
,·•'r',
THE'cmciti

\Soc·ce'r
-:Wlns~
.

:.:-\"O.ne/-··01:·::,Foti•r·<
-·1
.-,
..

• •
1
,
••
,

,

·: The :\laris
t' ]¼:jters chalk~. up their: secorn:fvictory of the
·s~son


.
on
.
Wed; Oct.' 9/ by. defeating, Paterson· State, 2-0~ T~:game was
·•••
hard-,-fo~ght. but,
:stra'rigely
enough, ·exceptfor a f~w bright spots by/
:\laris4 Paterson ~eemed to be controlling the play. They took many·
·more
shots. than
,the
Red Foxes and only· an outstanding effort
by:

goaHe Bo'b;Krenn:kept them from r~ihg
up
a
score. '.l'wo·orthe:
bright spots
·ror
Marisfwere goals by the left and rightwings;-Den-
nie Vernoia and Richie Mease!,. and
-
with these came the margin of.
victory.





On Oct.' 12 11tartst and <Maritime battled it out on ;the opporientsc_
turf.
-
·Gordy.Walton
and Rkhie Measel supplied the scoring punchC
for :\Iarist.
-
The team showed a lot of hustle all the way, but
urifor.:.'
tunate]J· had to settle for a 2-2 tie. '·
.


••
~-


.
_·.
On Oct.19 the Red Foxes met the.always formidable Nyack squ~.-
The team played as well as can
be
expected~ but they wound up on·
the losing end
2-:o;
.-·




bn Wednesday, Octob~~; 16,. af home, Marist suffered a tough de:;
feat, at the hands of Kings College.· Marist showed
good'
spirit and
hustle in the first quarter,· The,offense was continuously iJi·Kmgs
territory on the attack,
·and
it
took several good saves by the Kings
goalie to prevent
·scores.
Gordy
Walton and Bill Kawina did out-
standing
jobs
_of
keeping the pressure on the Kings defense.


· _·
In the_ second quarter, however, things were tu-rned
·arowid."Kings
.
became the aggressor.
·
They attacked
the
Marist goal several times

without ~uccess. Isadore ~abetaandDanny McCleary, who had played
good
defense (or Marist }n the first quarter; continued their ,style.
Vikings "suicide squad'' sets iteUfor "combat
11 ••
Bob Krenn, the :\Iarist goalie made some outstanding saves. How~
.
Mt--e""'r"""'":thr-,-e_e....,..c-o-ns"."e_c_u_ti-:_v_e
__ l_=o=s:!.:,;~-m~e;.;.;;.to:..._.:...m=en.:...ti...:.o::...n_i.=ng..:..::o:...nly=.::=-:so::m:.=....e_o:::f=s=c~o~r-e~d---19_p_o_i_n_t-s_;_1_e_s_.s_th_an-it
e,·er,
Krenn·
just couldn't get
·up
high enough on a
high
kick to tlie
.
ses, manyMaristinenarealrea-

them.
But that is the crux of sc<>red.
µ1
the. first game alone.
center of the net by King's Winslow .. The ball just made it over his
.dy
saying; "Wait until
next
the problem.
.
How can a team

outstretched hands; under the bifr, and into the net.
·

.-

,..
Year." After the opening loss to

expect· to win when half of its

Iona;-the•Vikings·have.proceeded
.
·personnel
·are
walking wounded?
Tw~ weeks ago, against
Kings,
Marist sustained. only one drive
·
Another major
-
. problem has in the entire game. This. was the
been the offensive unit, or the Vikings longest drive of the sea-
lack of
it.
True, injuries have son as Conroy tookthem63yards
But. why have we lost' three • played a big part, but, how can a in_ 6 plays. The series star_ted
games in a-row? - What has hap-
team, whose offense is keyed to with a_ 27 yard pass to Tyne over
.
.
'
.
.
Kings continued to dominate the action in the third and-fourth
quarters.

· :\lost of the pli;iy took place around the Mc.rist'goal.
Fantastic saves by Krenn c,lnd outstanding defense by Sabeta~ Mc-
Cleary
c,irid·
the other_ .Marist. defenders prevented the score from
going any.higher until the fourth quarter.

to drop their first two ·home
games; 7-6 to Kings, and 26 -
13
to Seina,

::
The final score was 2-0, although Kings had many scoring op- . pened to the ."greatest' team in
just a few players, expect to win· the middle •. Jerryca~httheball.
portunities ruined by wide or ,high kicks..
A
lot of credit. however,

Viking_ history?'•
_·Granted,·
·our - when the opposing defense does · at the
50
m -the midst of f!)Ul'
must
go
to Marist•s fine goalie. Bop Krenn. For the last three quar-
.
first. three games were against·
nothing but key on these few play-
would-be . tacklers. • Two fakes
ters, ,-Kings kept the pressure on him. _He made several saves, '. no doubt~·ou'rthreestrongestop-
ers?
.
._·

.
later, the unbelievable T.vne was
often· coming out ofthe·net to stop an opponents shot. His outstand-
·
pcjnents, but . this' was to be the
racing down the sideline, only to
ing plays kept:Marist in the game.
-

greatest team in
Viking
history.
.
Last year, our top offensive
be finally corralled at the•Kings

.
. .
. .
_
.-
.
.
.
.
·There are
1
mahy reasons why weapons were Dourdis on the
33.. ~ourdis, . on
.a
pitch from -
.
.
.
.
• ··_
·

:
·.
.
_
.
·_.
,
_
_
·:'
·.
we have
lost;
Injuries, bad. ground and.MacNamara through
Conroy, WE!!lt
29 yards down the-
. •
_Isadore Sabeta,also played a strong defens~ve_game. He made ~a-.- breaks, injufies;-_mentanapses,
·the air.
This year, forget it.
sideline· before big Jim finally•
·.
n~ good .st;ops and stole the_ ball a number. ofhmes to thwart Kings:: injuries/ cruci~l referee deci-
Dourdis •. doesn•t. have a chance· capped the drive with an 8 yard
·'-
.
chances._for g?als .. The Kings coach was prompted to say, "He's
sions; and ;more
·irijuries
have to break loose. . The defense toss: to John. Huriy in the end •
the b~st defensive player I•ve seen a~l year."
••

played a major role in the Vi:. keys on him. so much that he is
zone.


-Bob
..
K· l
-.
.-
.
. .
. . .

.
.
. '
..
·
kings
dowmall this: season~. We t{lckled

on almost every play• • ,La·
st we·
.ek.-again·
st si·en·
a, th·e··
·
'
.
.
..
.
e tos also did a
..
good defensive job •. He made a fine diving have not beein:iverpowered at a11
• whether he has. the ball or not!


bl_ock
ofa shot near the end of the firs.t half to save a possible sc~re·.
:
this year ..
No
team has run over
_
_ •

.

_
_
_
_
_.
.
offense
s cored twice, both on
•·•
.
•·<:·
.
.
.
. .
.
.
.

·.
.
.
·.
.
.
US;
Btif wlie n'the chips were,
.
MacNamara's plight is )ike-
short drives set up by the defen-
. •.
:\fanst~s_·record_now stands at.t~o ~ins, four_ losses, one tie. The
._
down,
~t seemsthatitwas alw;iys
.
wise," for he. is always double•
sive play of Joe Ritz. Ritz block-'
·
sea_so!!. is
j~~~·
about palf_ov_er. However, iyith a
_strong
sur~e·the
,.
the othei-,gi.iy who caine'up with
.
t~amed.
•.
Exc~pt for on occa-
ed a punt, setting up an eventual
.
.
_
_ .
t_f!a,m.
couldfmish with
.a
wmrung record.: Thell' record doesn't show

the big play
• :
:
.
_.
s10nal
big,
gain by
,
Conroy or

Conroy sneak, and later recover-

·
"
how. we1i these men have been playing •. ·.;

·
'



•.·
'

• • •
·•
-
••
__
••
·:

t
, .
• __
..

;.
, :
___
Dourdis Marist's chief offensive
ed a fumble which led to Dourdis
•.·
·-·
••


•.•


~~
.............
=---:-------.
:-'fhe-V'ik~'are~~r~~un,?:~hjeathas.beetjJerryTyne.Tyne.•.
7yat:dT.D._scaniper.
·
der terrible circumstartces· this: is Such
·a:fine
receiver, that one
.
·
,
•·
.·_ _
.
_
_
.·.
,_
_
,_

.
year., Andy Herzing, Frank At-' wonders
..
why his
·number.
isn•t_,;

~ut except
for these f~-.v
.
_
''":,<.
tori.ito, Johri
·Finnegan/J:ohn
Hur'." _·
caU~d

fot
,
~o:re
_
<?ften. He.
m-'
dr1v~s;
_the.
offense
h,a~
·not
J>een
· -~
Jy;.and Art, Ci:miiolly~justtoname
..
variably is
.open,
and w~en
,he
able to mo':e~
..
MapY_
t~es they_

:a.
few, have·beensidelinedfora·
catches 1he ~all,
·there•s
not a·. hav~beenp!11Jledw1tlithe1rbacks
_.
·-
f:•
.
.
'time_•
this s~son
'with
injuries~
...
finer
·.·open-•
field run~er_ on 1he

.
against the ~a!l; ~nd on!Ythetr~-.
BilLDoui'dis, Tom Dowd,
_Jim_
tea~.,

•.
,

__


..
_


.
_
meildous punting ofBill O'Re~I-::
.
_
Coriroy,
·Bill_·
Jacol>ellis,
.
Chris -
:
; , :·
•.

_
i
_
.
,
_ ly ~as. saved them from dis-
MacNamara
.
Mike· Towers'' and ..
·
·Another Pl'.Oblemm theoffense ._· a~ter, ·-_._
In the past two g~mes,
._-,Heywood'Sinith'ha:ve.all
1
been
_is_-its:lack
or variation._ Some Bill.has ~veraged_almost·f9i-ty
~~msisten~ : playing
!:with
,}nju-
\h~:v~
_said that this yea_r:s.
offeri..;
: •
yards a . kick and. his_ punts have
r1es.
·
I. haven't· even mentioned sive plays. ai;'e as exciting as a

been returned for· httle or no
all of the injured players; not,by : chess game.·


Y~rdage.
a long shot; since sw.ce limits
, • _.
.
_
.

·
.
,.
.
• • . •
.
_
_
___ ,
_
.
<
Tlie Siena clash saw the first • • _weµ., with the easier'' part of.
·
C
r ew•·
.
Bo·
.
. s" ·
new, Wl'inkle of the year, a half':'.
.
011!7

SCl!edule y~t rerriai!1ing, :th~
. _ ··.: _
;i
-
W . .
back option pass~ with Douidis
~
bestwe: _can hope for_ is a4-3.
lo
;S'yrlCus:,~
w:::f!i
~~
~i~t
,:;:;~!e·r.::tl~~¼~It
Ji/tii6a~i~~·;a~;.
•.
·
· ··
·
·
·
--·.··
··
the longest gain of the day. More . . Yikings appli~~ toafargr_eat-
,·.

.
Ori.
Oct, 19, the MaristVariscy
new _plays like these are needed.
er number than·
JUSJ
somefiff;y-
_,_;,..;:;;:;::.::;;:;:::=:;.:::.:::;=;..;:;::..=::;:..-:;;:~;;;:.~:;:..~;_;;,;;..~;:.:-.--------:
_Crew was defeated by Syracuse,. How about anend-aroundtoinake
odd_ guys on the team/Ir you
,
.
~one of the top ten teains
0
iri the use·of the speed
of oitr re-: w~re on campus last Th_ursd_ay
Th
I•
n gs
.
Ar'

.
H ·o·
pp··,
·n·
g
.
_,.
nation and a memberofthel;R.A.
ceivers? Anything to restorethe
mght, youknowwhapmeap.f'his

·
.
_
·
_
_
.

_
.
.
··..
.
••
competition. The Varsit;y;lostby
··element
.of
surprise to our side.

year; more tha11
any other year,
·b
J
M M
-
h
•· .·
-·...
.
.
..
..
·
approxiniateiy:'four boat lengths
\.Ve
have the personn~l, so where • th~ whole_ s~h?Ol is. ca~t
,uP
_
_
_
••••
_.Y
,.~e
.-
c
,
0 0
.~
.:
·:-
>.
:>
:
,
.:
.
-:
.
with
:the_.times
being 6:17 and
•.
is our imagination?
with the spmt of the Vikmgs.
By the.time.this hitsthE!pr:ess,' improved, b4t theimportantthing
:
~:3~: respecti'le}y.
i:
The J~V,,
• .-
..

.-



'.
.
_,
..

It's a shame that
·things
haven't
the newest b,reakthough'_for the Js.:th~(-~is
is: a~.s~rt.and-it's

h~f!!~red l?r.,rairzy w_eather.con-'
.

The one big' bright· spot this
turned out well (or us.
- •

\ ••
.

Marist athlete
-should
:be
in
.full)l
step.::-in< the· righ(,directiori.
d1bons,: ~s~, meLJlefeaf by the year has been the Vikingdefense.

,
-
-
-

-


swing .• No longer will. he have:,.:.
, •

:<·.:./!:':
-~,>:;~:<:
.-·;"-:-/:,,,·.
;

·:, Syr~cu~e.<tea~;:
•·
Their
_respect:-
In everygametheyhaveperform•
.
Yes,.· we are the Vikings, we
to eat in:sloppr
_
surroundings~
·s':
Thin~
:pave
~en:getµng·ii lot
•.
iv~

ti,tnes
•:ivere'.
~:27.,'a~
-7:0'.7
•. ed trerilendouslY. The line, lea
all are; and lfeel perfectly jus-

or gulp
down·
his food in order better for the Maristathleteover
.·•
• -.:
,;_
<~:
"
;


·
.
·_..,
.
by Joe. Ritz, John Calabrese,
tified in saying so.

We support
_·;
to
,get
seconds.
-
Now there's the·recerit yea_rs;'but the.thing he
·
_
·fl:~e·
V~sicy cr~w
_<;onsfsts
·or
Hank Blum, Mike Towers and Bill

this
·team,
and we shouldbepret-:,
something ditferent~ •.. a training
·appr~ciates
most. is spirit, and·· «:,oxie
.Pete·Mast_ers_on,
an~
,oars-
••
Mc Garr have
.
consistently
been-
ty damned proud of_: it.
This

table has been set up~ and for the
.
if you were there last.Thursday··
:::men
Bill RQwley, ~el'.tlieMcQov'."
.
outstanding. Perhaps the bright-
••
weekend we play Niagara.

I'm
first (ew weeks it
will.
be guided. night_Jn the
gym
or outside Fri-':
;\~J:'ll,-
Greg Nesteroke~
:Mike
~r-

est
'spots
on the platoon have been
tire of losing. Damn it, we're
by
._Mr. -Petro
'and.
Mr.
Austin.
·day_night
about three. y01(caught :Jeaga, Steve Sepe, Rick·Reuschle

defensive. bacl<s·JackMcDorinell gonria
win!

• •
It•s not inte_nded·
to be, anything .a glimpse_.or the psyche that pert
'.a~
:Jim
Wa~sh;,
On
the J~V. the. and Dean Gestal. Between them,.·
exquisite, bµt it will insure,the y~des the Big _u.~:.These
thirtgs ~oxsw~hl: is Jim Leary and. the they have intercepted four pass•
player of a decent meal ata clean
:
ar~ not.
_as
.
spontaneous as· one oari;r,nen are ,John· _Clan~y, Mike es,' and have been responsible for

table, and that means a. lot. 'may .think
·-
there· are a bunch Cam!l~i, J.ohn G~llagher, Steve three others. Dean has also been


.
. •
.


.
_
_
of, guys on this campus who hav~ Palenscar. Jim McLaughlin, An-
a key part of the· rush that has
.
·
It gives the athletes som_ething . been doing a lot of work
to
bring dy Santulli,
foe
McDermott, ~nd already blocked fou~ kicKs this
to look. forward to after a tough things to a pitch every week;
and
Tom Ulasew1tz.
.:ar.
practice.
You might say it adds they deserv_e agreatdealofcre-


_
.
.
.
.

a Httle class, too, getting the dit -:-theytre doing a helluva
job!'·'
Tile
.Freshman
race,
...1.ch
guys to eat together-. as a llllit.
·
Now

if they could on}y hold off took place under extreme.iy poor
EvenruaHy,
if this

plan
works midterms
till
the end
of
the
sea-
conditions,
-
also. brought defeat
out. the system
will
be further son....
to the eager freshman oarsmen.
B• • no matter how strong your
.
dt!~ense is, you can't win the game
without points. On the
last
two
games,.
the Viking attack has
·-1/·
_--_.·
_CHECK
.
.
· -.YOUR
. :
·"
FAIR ~HARE
The UNITED Way
1_',~.-
::,.:.
'
::·.>
....
·

-·-
.
.
.......
' ...
#l.
~-•-·_::_.