The Circle, November 10, 1966.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol.3 No. 2 - November 10, 1966
content
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meandering aroWld this . vast piece
.
of real
·
estate we so presilmP.'"
·
·
ti.lously inhabit, that_oiie would be faced with few,
if any, ~r~b_lem~
.
co~-•
cerning
.
things moral; ethical, or legal. The only possibility
.of
an~-·
thing
.
close to either sin, wrongdoing, or lawlessness would be
Sill".'"
cide; and Wlder such morbid con~itions even that would be under-
.
·
standable.
·
But such is not the case.
There are other people,
and
their very existance ·makes for the·
possibilities . ,
;
and probabilities ..• and inevitabilities of human
error .
.
We can hastily define Jiu~an error, then, as that whi.cheffects
other human beings unfavorably, that which inflicts unnecessary
pain, causes grief,
·offends,
frustrates, etc:, etc., etc. What cuases
this is one person's momentarilyforgetting mat these other
.
persons
exist.
Admittediy, because there is s~ch a gr~at numbifr of othe~ pers~ns,
a voiding
all
wrongdoing is virtually
impossible.
But, on the other hand,
some of it can be avoided, certainly more than has been in the past.
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that·what I have e~
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penenced m the past few weeks
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is
very nii.lchthe same
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.ventures
cif
all .tourists~
,
world
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uWE'RifNUMBER·QNE
.
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·
Residence
BcJarcL
' .··
C
·.
.
travellers{diploniat~,
.
~nd
,
I'(?ving
.-
.
'
.
.
.
.Presidents
(and/or tneir
-
w1ves) .
.
;:
·
·
over
•
thei'
>
centuries;
·
,
'
I'm
~
sure
:
· ..
~
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.
:
-
.
. •
<J
gl~~~~~~ft:t!El~J1sP6trit~~
\··
·
·
'\
t
::)
-
.
Egypt'lhaifthe pyramids. Corn;.;
< .
·
..
..
wallis
·
foilild more
·
aL.Yorktown
"
.
·
than Southel'
.
Comfortand
Ho
Chi
·•
·
·
.Minh
is giyijlgHenryC~bc>lLodge
.
.
·· ,
.
a
,·
grand tour for
_
l1is
·
Am~rican
·
.
.
dollar. What I mean to say 1s that
:
,
.
.
·.
we builcl up
·
certain.suticonscfo~
·prejudices
·
aoou_t other"i:ieopleand
·
other countries only to discover
·
at one
-
time or. ati.other
·
that they
are false to
·
a:
degi:'~
0
e.
· ·
·
·
On the college campus, whei'e a large number of individuals are
almost forcibly entombed in what has become known as the "dormi-
·
tor'y situation," the
,vord
.
.
might
be
"consideration" (in higher circles
than that which we are about to discuss, the word i~
II
love," but
try to throw that out onto a collegecampus). Implied by "consider-
ation'' is "coricern," taken from the oft said but rarely practised
·
platitutde, ''concern for fellow man.'' .
·
.. Discusses
.
Pro
blenis
··
.-·
Lond~n is ~o(the'.
t;
swinging"
•j•
:,_
..
city of
·
the
.
Sixties
·
_
that
.
.
Time
·
•
.
magazine portrays it. Oh, for,a
',
,
few jet.;.setters it is~
·
but for the
·
average
Londoner,
-~·
ror
the
·
Ainericari student here, it
.
isvery
,
The
·
Re;idents Board
·
helt its
·
problemr
·
or
·
criticis1n slid~ by
·
much like New York or Boston or
Teichnian
.
has a point. Teichman has a number of points
~--niore
first
.
meeting
.
this semester on
__
without discussicin.cotisideration
··
any other Amerip
_
an
·
city.
:
:>.
than we as students
:
care to adinit. And, although we would rather not
·
Wednesday, Sept.
14~
During the
.
and actio.~:
•
t
·
:
·/
'
.
.
.
.
~
, .
.
'
·
.
.
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.
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.-
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talk, or even think anymore about it, we do have to concede that this
first few weeks of
·
school, the
. ·
,
·
..
•·
:/i
· .
.
·
-
·
. · -...._
'
Mods are as unusual (and
·
·.
year's sophomore class exhibited more inhuman traits thanhas ever
membets
·
ofthe Board met;twice
·;.
The controver
.
si~l topic in the
ghastly) here as
·in
NeY{ York --
:
been seen or experienced at Marist.
·
·
··with
·
.
the freshmen on a floor-to-
·
.
·
dorms at the present is the inter
_
-
·
· ·
(I've seen more in Pe>ughkeepsie.)
.
.
.
.
•
flo~r basis.- The purpose C!f the
..
.
..
gration of the _f~oor~•
.
! •
Th.eBo~d
_
·
.
I
.did
see one,
.though.
It Y{as the
.
Originally, there .was a valid reason for establishing the tradi-
·
·
.•
first meeting was to explam the
.
has alreadr. met w1~ ~r
~
Br~an
.
·
,
other day as Lrolinded a corner
·
..
tional practice
kn
won as hazing. There was something behind it and,
·
functions
.
and procedures
·
of the
and the floor proctors, discussing
>
oil
Osford Street on
my
way to the
difficult as it is to recall, that something was somehow
-
related to
Board
to
·
the new students~ The
aUength this topic, buUt is
•
stilL
.
London School
•
of Economics.
·
"concern for fellow man." Whether the purpose gr_ad~ally lost itse~f
second
:
group of meetings. con-:-
·
~
.
to
early to piak~·coil.c'rete
'
s~te..:
There it stood
.
. dangling on the
·.
~.
,
..
'
;
..
over .a period of years, or whether
_
the sadistic mdividuals of
.
this
cerned
·
academic problems of ments, .. conclllinons or· adJust-
·
·
corner
.
.
.
Iike a,ChineseJantern --•
,
.
.
.
.
.
y~ar'steam, lost
it
~emselves
i~
rio _lon~er the
.
question. We must . fre~hme~ at M~rist
'
The B.o~r
.
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admit t11at there 1s Ill?, purpose; and s~mply forget it.
,
.
,:
,
.
.
.
:·
t·
/
;>';
cuslllg
·
other
.
topics
:
concermng
:
;\
B03,fq
· :·
h~
y
.
15~e~
.,-
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0
operatle>
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the
.
P,aptist
and Marie
Antoinette
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Many,Judiciaryyrecedents have
.
Its reeri
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<
'••.:·<
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on~ Imni~diate question to dis~uss, assuming there will be Mzing_
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be
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en
·
s~t which
·
s~o~!d ~onttibi.lte
;'
re/E'dwaidfan jacket
/
giving
it
;:
.
:.-:::::
it ;
1
.
I
·
.
;,.
.
·•
·
_
next
·.
year,· rs whether
.
or no~
.
this year's
•
_freshman class
.
should be. - .·
A
house _comm1tteeco_n~1~tmg
•:
to
··
.
.
_
better. self.
,·
d1s?1plmg
.
·
lll
•
the
·•
·
all
.
the
..
•
.
appearances
';
of
;
a
•
man/::
\
.
/.,'.
permitted to
.
take care of 1t
.
wh
_
en
.
the.
,time
comes'. After all,: tl1e
of four
::
sen_1ors
.
has been m1tl~ted
.
~orn_is.: T~e Boar!J.
.
i~ pleased ~at
;
:This
i111,1Sicrn was quic~lydispeU.;.
.
.
·
:\
>,
class was ex{!osed
to
01:1ly the worst practices, the mo~t unorgamzed
by the ,R.es1der1ts _Board
to
,
h~d!e
·
its
,
JUd1c1ary h_as not
.
yet
.
bee
_
n
ed
by its
tight
(yello
,
w) bell
~bot
_
-,
,
<'
_
;:_
.
:
_
.
team
·
(refernng es{lecially
.
to the Kangaroo
· .
Court fru:-ce),
.
ru:id pro-
..
any pro
_
blems;wh1ch
.
may
_
arlSJ 1n-
:
.
called to
.
act th1
_
s semesteL Th~
,;
toms
,
and
sequined slippers (thei'Et
:
:-.::,::,
:.,.
.
;
b;tblf: the most
·
unsu~cf:ssful class ever
to
gothroug~ hazmg (noUo
·
sh~eh~ Halk
· ,
.
.
.
····
·. ·
.'
.:
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'
.
,
.
·
_
.
,
:
·
:·
Jeaves·!Ilore
time for the Boar
_
dto
\
_
are n</other words)
:
.>
":
c.
~
·:
,
,r
-
tt·
:<
.·::
,
·
mentwn the most d1sllked class as a result of hazmg) .
.
Soiµehow,
-
.
..
,
,
.
.
;
..
·
·
..
• ,
'.,
:
,
·
·
meetwith
·
the students, theproc-
:
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·
·
7
.
.
.
,
.
,
,
.
'.:
>
· ,.,_
, , .
>
the !Den
·
of' 70, though, e~erged, not only llilscayi~d, but all the better . .
.
Busines( meetings ofth~ Board
(
tors anq th~ admi11istra~rs
,
of the
·
·
J
.
left hurriedly;,
i
didn't' want'.
_..
> \}
.
.
for 1t.
·
hav~ alwaysbeen open
>
to
all
.
'.
dorms. In this war_llfe
>
m
_
.
~e
":.
to
.
stare
.'.
tooJong
:
".'- rteyer.
_
can
;
·
.
-
.
8
-
..
h d
h
.·
t
---
t
·
·
?
res1denLstudents, 4Ulessother-,
,
·
,
dorm for the
·.
resid~.mttiat our
:
:tell?
:
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./'
.
.
c
;'\
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o, w o oes w a nex year.
.W'.ise
aimoim~ed
~
'1:'herefore,- any
:.
:
·
collegewm
:
benefit
.
grea
.
y~
<
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.
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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
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.
.
.
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,
ot
;
do we just go
Off
ignoring
it
and direcfall our attentioii to
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important things, such as bus rides
to
mixers?
'
.
board
.
has
··
never lef
:
anyOidea,
..
You
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.
lr h1gh-mmde~ o_pJective~
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in
fa~t,
_
the_Sum~~r Budget Meetmg
.
seems
to
have
.
hurpe
.
<!_ly
~-
ap:-
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· ·.
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proved allocations m ~e heat of the moment and the
d?,Y
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~ch
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manner that the
.
budget
·
coi.lli:Lnot possiblyA:>alance. In ~onseque1,1~e
·
.
.
~/:,
·
··
·
· .
·. ·
>
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;
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.
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...,
.
.
the Council, has set up a BudgetRe-Evaluation Committee~
·
consisting
, /:;,
. :
whaUs truth? What is wisdom? \\'hafis is? Whafis? What?The~e; .
.
.
·
.
of
:
Messr;S
We
.
fr
:
-
'fl9, Matarazzo,
:
!67,
_Halllrnond.-'67,
:•
Bisll~e
}69/
,
i
:
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·
.
are
·
questions! (two semesters of a
.
kigi
.
C: course would· help
you
dis.:
·
..
"
·
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.
and
-
Alwan
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This committee is to re-examine theJmdgest of;indi~
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·
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Fo~t~h\i
t:;Ji~i~;i~~!;s:.~i~Tut
if
•.
::;;;;.~.~0~~¥~~
•·•
:t~1~z~:z1sz:~t:f
r!
4
l~1!Ii!l
i
f
1
·
three factors not normally admitted by the
'
nouveau riche of the in-
cards, hazing. Iiow
:
aboiit me?
l
.
not
be
rubber.:.~-~~.()~ by ~E!
.
~oun~1i. s1mpl,y
i
because
·~e
:
C<ll)l~~t,(E;!~
/i
:.:f:;/;
:
{
tellectual life who love objective, spontaneous inspiration and se-
am
..
the
.
•
caged
.
canary so rudely
.\
h~s
.
IIlembE!~Shl.()
;.
~n,
,·
lflld
.
1s
:
appo
,
inted
:
PY
:
fl!e CoU11c~!· ~her.e ar~
)·;t:t
,
,;;:
cur ity.
,
.
.
·
.
-
.
-
·
,
.-
_ .
attacked in the article, , 'Marist
;:
,
:
E!~g_ht
:
_
_()t_ller
<,
m~
_
mbers_
,
of
.
the
_
, Stu~ert ~o,Y~rnment
•
Wh<l
:.
aJe
,
equal!,y:,
t-·
,:::
\~'
.
.
·
,:.
BIii
is
il-lhe
job of
a cOUege i,aper
to
;;k
quOstions? Sbotild
we
leitye
..••
:it~::.:;•
to~1..t~
io~l ~
;
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of
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b!t~te4i~\?gifi h~~
S
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>-1
¥ii~(.-,;t;ip£ili.i://µ
.
nqt
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·
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·
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·
·
.
.
·.
:
.
·
···.
•
·
·
.. ;
·
•
·
resentderi
•ore
icisfu
and dis.;-
,
,
-
:
F}~Qtball,
{?ll!b;- JVh1ch
.
,
.. ~eems to
-
be domg
.
.
b~tter 9?th
.
o,n
~~
,
off.to,e
:\x
,,
.r;::
.
,
:
A big
;
POint of. the Convo~ation was: as~ -,,,"- chal_l!:!
_
nge -- pr?b~l Do
..
•
fuusionrilent?
HJI'-me
to
·
etbad
f
:.,
J1
.
e
_
w~
.
!111s
<
ye~;;Jt,,cseem~
}hat
,
,
the SuI)lmE!r Ses5-1on
.
ofJ~I~
t
~!~ctw.t
,?~))
.
,,
·
•:
,
·
,
~e co
_
nsider ourselves as involved stude
_
nt,l, see~mg deep~r 1US~ghts
_
fo
'
Woohvo
·r
th's
.
wfere i:W:sdi:fect
:
"'
,.
9
.
oll!ICil had
.
granted Q}e :Y~mgs
$1topo
and t!tat. on
·
th~;!?~!s
\
qh~~
-
}:
)
/
/ :\
mto l~fe, man, goals,;-
_God
(pard?n
_
my
_melo!}ra~~
,.
and "llberal arts
·-
for daily
:
sick
'.
or
t
well·
;
:wtiere
·
:
-
•:
gsant, the Club proce
7
~ed
to
m~e its co_mm1ttme~t§
.
for
:
_
th~J3~~R!1:!
/
f ./:·
.
·
J
experience" tone of
.
voice, but this too 1sa
_
qu~s~1?n)~
.
.
.
•
.
• .•
.
'
.
night
·:
wa_s
'i;'irivate
:
'and.
i!uiW
for
i
'
Sudd_enly, from
.
left fi~ld. comes_
.
the
.
B_udg~! c
.
0I"?_m1tte1?
'
\vJth ~e
:
$~g3
'.'.':::'{/
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,
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·
.
·
.··
.
,
:
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·
>
;·
:
:
.
·
..
·
sleep;
..
and. day full
"
of
,
cunous
•
:_
.\
g~stion that!}le GQunc1l,m all ~iberahty, loan_
.
the_Club
yi~
_,
t119.ll:5
>
,.,.
·.--~.
'.
I f~el Mar~s_t
.
Co~l
.
ege . (the
U)
_
ls
·
.
a_t
.
a
c;~bc~
-
po~t m its develo~- . smiling people;
.·
i>Ieai;e/M'.r .,Eoil ·
,·
:-
and .
.
doll~rs
.
rath~r:·
·than.
grantJt, The mannE!r
Ill
:which
;
~e
.
SQ,~11_11,t;:
,,,t
_
}
. ·
ment (not cr_1bcal m the.senseo,fsmkorsw1m),
c"
•• (bytbeway,1f
tor?
'
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·
·
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·
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Continued
011
•:
Page:.t
) i
."
-'.
,
•
these excessive parentheses annoy you, that's too bad.)
·
~:
' •
·
'
;
1
:.
~-
.
•
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
•
r
--
..
u
we at Marist can s
.
·
tep ba.c~
:
~om th
.
e
.
minor
<i:i
~tu
_
rban
.
ce
.
s of pe
.
tty
•. ·
'
Incidentally,
·
.
dcni't'
.
~dm!}ili:5h
.
,
.
.
. · ,
.
·
~
-
.
_
THE
·
CIRCLE
'>
:·'
·
my
'
fresh-freshman
.
.
roqmmate
.
officials (student and Qtherwise) we see a vibrant example of growth
too inuch. Just tell hini
to
·
cheer
·
THE CIRCLE,
the
o
·
fficial newspaper
..
:
of Maris(
:
.
CQllege,
·•
and liberality not normally associated with Catholic education; we
up
·
•
and smile; and
as
the re;;
Poughkeepsie camp~, is edited and published bi-weeklybyand in
couldn't even comp~re M.C. of 1956fo·M.C. of 1966, Only if we,"the
.
maining coUege_ years pass, his
the interest o~ the students of Marist College, Pot1ghkeepsie,
student body, develop our spirit of questioning, wiU the college (and
.
smile wiffturn to song and
it
will
New York 12601. THECIRCLE is a member of Collegiate Press
ou=selves) continue to grow. Only ifwe're interested enough
to
push!!
be the sweet melody of •uccess
Servi·ce
·
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
· -·
·
Willing to try to make sometfiing
·
better out of scill'_lething that isn't
-
·
·
·
·
:s
•
too 11ot!
·
··
..
.
.
.
.
· .
.
·
.
·
Last year I recall a general theme of "Stu
.
dent Apathy'' articles
always popping up; these could have heen copled
·from
the Notre
Dame
.
Paper --
..
there is always a segment of any student body
•
which is worthless. The cir
.
.
,
.
.
.
which
is
worthless.
-
The Circle is trying to take
.
a step forward (a
.
..
.
sign of the times?)
.
and could very easily fall on its face; well, woe
to the wicked man wbp fear judo chop
to
stuck out neck;
·
.
.
I don't think it's normal for an article to "compliment" the
•
college -- so I apologize and promise never to ,let it happen again.-
.
.
_,
.
:
·
'
'
Oh, yes,
my
birdnanie is Jim
·
Britt.
Editor's Note:
~
·
assume
.
you are referring
fu
the article
.
written
by
Bob Jakobs,
whose roommate is Burt
·
Koza.
·
:
Incidentally; Burt' has a real
canary for which Bob has no great
·
affection,
Thanks
anyway.
.
.
·
.
·
..
El>ITORIA°LSTAFF
·
--:.-
,
.
Editors~in-Chief • •••••••
-·
••
:ed
Lowe,- Georg
·
f
.
Men
.
endez
M~naging
•
Editor •• ••••
·
•••••••
·
••• •
.
• Ray, He
-
~lin,
FMS
Hews
Editor • • ." •••• .- ••
.
~
••• · •••
·
~ ••• D~ve
Healy;
.
FMS
.
..
Feature
E4itor • ••• •
:·
• ••
~
••
:
••
~
;
••••
·
•• Tiin $.latt•ry
,.
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$ports Ecfoor .
-
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.
Copy
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·
••••
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••••••••• :
.
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a~k
.
Roch~,
.
:
,
.
Business 1"anager ••••••• •• ••
·
••
~
••• ;
Marty
_.
~agg~rty
.
Circ•lation),tanager · .
-
~
•••• ·•
,' •• : ••
-.
•
·•
Mik•
E•p
,
o;itcf
Fon1ty
Advisor : ••
.
•••••••
.
••
·
•
~
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.
Or.
~~orge
•
Son,m~i
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THE CljtCLE
_
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f'ii~
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f¥ijp'4y
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I[11ie<
•
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j;_
Glftor9e
.
Sk0~
·
·
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PSI Delt!l
,;({i:,,,;
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£itfi~Ntr~i=,i
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_:
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.
".
·.·
·
:
; ·
>
bad
.
worn down the
·
batteries.
. ·.
chological Development Associ-
·
:
:
-
":
:
,:,:
;'
:
'.
,
_
;
:
what
<
'
uie
':
ile
·
ck!
.
It's
:
a
four
-:-
:_
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
. . -
.
.
'.IA-
teacher has first
.
of all a annual underraduate publication
ation (Psi Delta), formerly the
•
·.·, :
:.
da1t"'.
·
weekend/and
;
I want to
:
get
:
•·
Af~r a Jew short remarks to
de~p interest in his subject;
this
initiated
las
spring,
-
has
Mr.
.
,Psychology Club~ is showing
<':
:
·
b~rn~~
-'.
So
I'll
cut my tw~ afte_r"".
·.
my
,
sister. answered mostly b~
is complemented by a desire to Skau as !ts fac_ultyadvisor. ''The
-
great prospects for the coming
··
·:
.·
·
·
noon
:_
classes
·
and
.
get: a ride with
·
,
tears,
I left the house to. pur-
communicate with others -- hop. Journal is designed to encourage
year. At its meeting on
Oct.
5
\
'
a
,
-r~iend:
i
But
·
mid.;.t~~ms
·-:
are
:,:
chase a
,
nE;W set of batteries. L
_
ing
to
shed some light, share ~rsonal rese3.Fc~ in the field_ of
plans were made for a trip ,.
J
:·
coming up; }'.
.
d
·
better
:
brmg-some
;·
.
:_
,
took
mr
time
·
to
_
ancJ from
:
the
•
some reflections •.
.1:
•. :
l
history by publishmg outstanding
. -
its members
·
to Mattewan state
·
· •
books; At least it'lhnake
a
good
·
s\ore, and when I finally arrived
. .
,
- ;
..
•
.
-
.
•
.
.
papers written by undergraduates
Hospital under the leadership of
•:-:
.
·•
impression
.
on mom and dad.''
:_
ho~e
mr
father started a long
Above:
some of the motiva-:-
for their courses. It is published
Mr. Schmitz, who is presently
·
·
· :
·
·
..
· ·
,
.
:
·
·
·
·
.
·'.'discussion"
on w~y I sho~dn't tion for seven years of chalk and each spring.
affiliated with the hospital. Fol-
'.
; :
·
Well.
that's how
1t
started,
a
.
have the car that night. I fmaJ.ly
lectern work on the part of Mr.
lowing the meeting, the first of
.
.
_;: ·
great
·
weekend. I-:only
.
had two
·
won
·
o~t,_ thoug;~, and
I arrived George Skau. He has taught at
. Mr. Skau feelsthatMarist.like
the Psi Delta film series was
.
.
.
·
·
reports due (which
I
hadn't start;.
a~~t fifteen minutes late at my
st. John's
·
University for three any institution, has many advan-
presented, The Key, a movie
".:.
_
,
:
ed
yet) and t~o tests the follow-
girls house. (Thank God supper
years and is now in his fourth tages and problem spots in its
much reminiscent of The Snake
.
.
.-
·
:
irig week~ Iwas
'
bound to get some
.
wasn't re~y; "!at's
_
a most
·
.
year
at
Marist.
structure. But he believes that
Pit, dealing with conditions in the
···
•
.
:W.C?
.
rk
~
done/and beside~, it would
_
·.
feamthbaerr'ass
__
asttmi.gtudsei~tuoawbarond, mane ddi
·
dnh~rt
the school's biggest advantage at
"modern" mental institution .
.
give me
·
the opportunny
to
use
Mr. Skau
.
received his Bache-
the moment is its youth. Marist
the facilities of the locallibrary.
help the situation).
lor's degree at Manhattan Col-
is capable of shaping its own
I
· · ·
-·
;_.
·
·
lege. his
M
.
A.
atNiagaia Univer-
futur~, unencumbered by the rigi-
:
_
·
:
.
_'
·
.
in
the
words of some
-
American
The party that night was great.
sity, and is presently completing dity mat exists at some older
philos<>pher,
'
f'~IGHTliW'
_
i
·
· •
.
.It broke
-
up about l: 3
o.
Neither
his doctoral work at
st.
John's.
·
institutions.
I
;
· .
.
:: •
.
'·
·
·
·
·
.
·. ·
·
·
• ·
·
~
.
·
·
·
one
·
Qf ils felt like
.
going home,
His
,
Master's thesis dealt with
i
·,
'
: '
.
:I
.
M;
we~k~nd was well planned
'
so w~
-.
st0PPed for a
.
.
drink ana
"The Far East Question at
Projected plans of the Associ-
ation include the inauguration of
its
lecture series on Nov.
2
when Dr. Hodgkinson will discuss
the
current trends on
the
American college campus. Other
lecturerers in the series will
include Dr. Patten, speaking on
alcoholism, and Dr. Louria, who
will deal With the problem of
narcotics addiction.
,
·
th
.
h
•
·
·
d
·
t
·
·
·
1
ts
.
then proceeded down to the beach
It
t
,
·
·
. ·
·
.
. .
oug ,
.
m
or er
?
give m
_
e
o
#or
.
a li"ttle submari·ne
·
race wat-
Ya a," and for his doctora e he
1c ·
• ·
·
· ·••
of Ume to see family and friends.
·
•
is writing on Woodrow Wilson and
In that future, Marist will owe
a great deal to the many faculty
members who, like
Mr.
George
Skau; are
·
presently giving so
much of their time and energy
for the good of the ~ollege.
! . :
_-
Friday night would be
.
spent with
·
·
ching.
,
·
the American presidency.
'
the
-
boys.
,
We'd hit-a few of the
.
·
.
focai
·
bars, and
·
-
maybe
_
have
·
a
·
·
I forget what time
:
I
got home
:
few
:
racks of poold wouldn't get that
·
night but
·
I
do know that
I
.
home too late. That way I'd get just barely made it out of bed for
, .
·
some studying
_,-
done Saturday
·
th
.
~ 1:15 Mass.
·
Chief among his extracurri-
..
·
·
d
·
d th
t fth
cular activities is his position
as
.
morn~g
_
an spen
·
_
e
:
res
O
e
Arr~gemaits bad been made
moderator of the History Club.
day with
.'
my girl. And I wanted
.
to hit that
·.
par.ty
-
Saturday night.
·
the previous
·
night for my
.
girl
Speaking in this capacity, be
..
-:
·
.
:
"
··
·
·
·
·
and myself to double
·
with an-
remarked that "this year, the
;
Believe
-
it
or
not/my kind arid other
~
couple on the Sundayafter-'
club, especially its officers, has
[
·
:
·
.
.
Students Involved
.
In CCD Program
_ ·
understanding friends were sym-
noon; we'd go
to
the movies. It
really taken the initiative. They
.
.
.
·.
pathetic to my ca~se, ~d I
-
was
.
was
·
fairly good• as far as_ movie
don't hesitate
_
to go ~ut ~n th~ir
'. 'Involvem_ent" is a
·
word used
.
duces the total attendance. From
'
home by
-·
11:30 Friday mght •
.
_
Of ~~tes go,
_but
not as great as tt.e
.
own _to orgamze som~thmg. Im
quite often,
m
our contemporary
all
'
of the teachers' reports it's
·
·
.
.
.
.
~ourse;rw~ very:grateful to the mght befor~; Well, anrway, she
lookmg foward
t?,
an excellent
parlance. If it'me~s b
_
eing con-
been found that their small groups
..
.
.
.
.' .
.
/
guys
·
foi: n:qt-pres_sin_g me to
_
stay
-:
h~d to be m early b~cause
.
she
year for the club.
cerned about a situ_abon, con-
of young Christians are respon-
.
,
--
._. ·_.:
_
:_,
_
:.
o
.
ut
;
l~t¥,
,
~d
t
~nv1tedJhem in
.
had a
_
test the followm~ day an,~
cerned enou~h to pitch m and
sive {Class numbers range from
;.__:
_.
,
J~
c:!!,,.~r,-
f~r
}
o
.
~~
:~
~~
t~
~b,~
~
-'J>efe>re
_
they
:
,
b_ecause her f~
_
~er ~a
_
d •asked
.
ifuheaclub s~te\
.
th.e year
!)ff
help,
_
then th1S year's CCD pr~-
,
5-2.5).
_
.
·~
-
-
•
·
:;::;::,
·
:
·
~
·:
.
"litt
,
tlie
;<
road:·
·
.
·
,~-:
--
f-
:
•
~
-
-
-:.,-
':',
•
•
..
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.
-
.
:""
.
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""."':::·
he
_
r,
,
,!o
·
,
~
-
h..9
,
~~
~
-
~Y
.
ll~
_
e.
-
~~
-
was.
a
;.,,
.-
o
W
-
_
_
.,
_
_
\>Jl!:~Lo
L
~~
-
1
xity._h~~g
-
•
gram
•
sponso1:ed
·
by
·
the College
15
-
-
·
.
-
·-
·
· ..
-~
-
•·
·
- ·
- .
.
·
--·
~
.:;J
·
:
:
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,;
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:
·
_
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·:.
:;:;
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"
1.fJµe
_;;:
~it
toucliy
-
wh
_
e~ I took
-
her
..
.
·
orga~u~ed a ~series of le
_
ctures to
an area
··.
of such
·
involvement.
other factors in program im-
t
.
.
_
:_:::
•
: / t ?
:
A
f
f~o
:-
Pie
·
·
_
'follo~ing'moining
;:·
h_qme~ We had.b.een d~layed_ get-
-.
_·.
be ~ven, for the most
_
part, by
Already underway for the past
provement include teaching aids.
::~
--
~-
.
~'
.-
::
/
,'
my
n
ather
·.
c;ime
:~•
into
:
the
:
i:oorn
.
-~
tmg
_
out of the restaurant parking
-
.
M?-fist faculty members. Several
several weeks, the prospects look
Texts, films. and periodicals are
<~
-
·
, ·
:
'
,
;
·
·
.
'
a.Jid
.'
deriiandetf th
'
at
·we
·
·
end
..
tlie
·
·-
lot
_
ana
.
h~r father
-
was impatient-
.
:
people f!om outside
,
the college good that the
1
66-
1
67
CCD situ.;.
.
· ..
-
'.
. .. ·
.:.
.
.
:
..
c,irc
i:
·
~e .
.'
I
:
reiuctantly
."
said
··-
ly
,
waiting at tlie door·
·
.
·
com~wuty (for example, peace
ation will be the best on record
~~~ ~:i~od~~~
~~~tftfiJar~
.
,
:
"
-
:
·
·
.
·
.
:
gobd
.
-niglit
,
mainly because they
·
·
•
·
.
. ,. .
·
.
·
.
·
.
.
·,
candi9at~ Lrdr lof m) have
-
also
thinking. It's a rarity if science,
.
c
•
•
were
.
·
walkmf' out tlie door
·
with
..
l
,c
tol~
,
her_ to
>
meet me
at
the
.
.
-
been mvi ed o ec ure.
Presently there are thirty-two
.
evolution, or theor_ies on the ori-
.
:, · .-
.
..
five dollars and some odd cents
·
µmversity llbrary after her last
·
·
people working
.
in six parishes
gin of the wiiverse, do not enter
·
.
·
:
.
·
wtiich for"merly belonged
,
-
~ me. cla~
_
s ~e following day.
·
·
.
.
of the Poughkeepsie area. Among
the classroom iri some form.
>
1
,:
:
realize
,
d
•
too,
'
that
111y
'
.''well-
.·
· •
·
,
·
.
·
'
1
•
.
•
-
one of the club's most notable
the teachers
·
there are twenty-
.
The "gap" between religion and
.
:
plaru:ied
',,
weekend'.'
/
·,
had
:'
been
-<
•
-
Sunday_mght
1
sat down
-
with a
·
contributions to Marist
is
pro-
seven student brothers and five
the world is being closed. This
.
..
•
·.
s\jgbUy
:
cieraii.ged
/
B
·
ut.
;
t
could
·
_·
beer and
:
the
TV
.
set. After a_n,
•
bably the assistance
it
renders
lay students.
_
The parish assign-
•
is
what the CCD program hopes
,·,
,.'.
)
tiake
.
alli:>wances
:"
f6i that-"-1 still
-
.
who
.
~tnd1es onSunday night with
Jn
the organization of the annual
ments include: St. Augustine's
to
.
demonstrate to the
young
:· .
.
:_
·
::'<
had
·
·
mreetric>redays.'-
.'.
'.
,
.
·.
> · .
.
tw?
~
~ore days
_
of vacation left7
·
Roosevelt Symposium. The cost
-·
(Highlana), St. Mary's (Pough.)
Chirstians
:
theinter-relationbe-
':{;;;f
%t
f
~
f
{itE~f
:ii
~.~~
F
i
.
IB~~~~x
i"ci~~~g
1
e:Vfi~r ~:
·.
~Th1~[~t" Far~"~l~;gri!;
.
~~iiitr~[:~£tJ:.tri~ii~1
.
.
tw:;,~·:,::~::;m::::~~~
:: '.:'
::
.:.<
ffierid'stelephone calE
I was iri-
•
hbrary_ until a
_
fter lunch. I sat
.
History Club to anticipate. The
tion (Bangall).
·
and the amount of involvement
t:,(-/
:./.
:
;}
viteci
:
tocJihilerathe{tiouse
·
and
·
.
d
_
own ma quiet come~ of the success
,
ofthis
.
year'sendeavor
admirable, these are not the
;
~_.,;,;?
;
,:;:
_::
atter
.
tha(we'd
,
go to 9le~party.
)i
_
brary all_~et for a soh~ three
was wiquestionable.
·
Mr. Skau
One factor which hasmadethis
ingredients of success. some-
'\:
.)'.
c,
:.:..-
-
ThaFwas
'.
OKby me
·
and so an
.
hours W?rk.;
I
started_
Wl
th
.
th
e
felt the
.
response
··
·
excellent:
year's structure
a
better one is
thing will only be accomplished
·
.
:
:
_
; :
'
:{
\(\
hb'ur
:
:1atEi"f
/
wlie1rshes'toppe
·
dtalk-
·
normal Ju~pmg off pomt -
.
'-
the
'.
·
" . • • people came from a six
the introduction
.
of
night
classes
if the teacher has something to
~f
:::
/
/
1
C.:/
iri.g
;'l
safd(}\\111 to do some study-
encyclo~edia..
•
state area, some travelling as
for junior
and
senior high school
give. While there is
a
certain
>
~;:
:
'::
'
/
'-
'.
·.<
J
ng
.
I flipped on the radio for some
,
.
.
.
. ·. ·
Continued oti P ag~ 7
far as 250 miles in order to
students. Three of the four par-
glamour in being where the action
.
·
make the sympos1um. Teachers
.
ishes
where high s_chooler•~ are
is,
it is
_
still the teacher himself
·
·
·
..
':
·
.:
:
~,
~
•· ·
from
·
more than 200 colleges and
taught have ~ese mght sessions.
.-
who has to sweat it out, trying
·
-
100 high schools were invited this
·
.•
These classes_ are conducted on a
.·
to gain insight and knowledge
year • . . The fact of Marist's
yol~tary b:LSis,
.
thereby result-
.
from !)is College and personal
being a small college was no
mg m a high mterest present
studies in order that others
.
deterrentto such noted speakers
a~ong the ~tudents. Naturally,
might receive something worth-
,
._
..
_.
·
,
,_
-,,,~,:o
:
:
·
:.
·
.
_<:
;Y
:
)3.~r
_
ry
_
Keayeny~
_
Fwf
such as Arthur Schlesinger, Jr..
this nqn-obllgatory system re-
while.
··
·
. "
·
.
,
•
··
·
·
Frank Friedel, Jam~s
·
Mac-
Gregor Burns, Adolph Berle.
As
·.
_
;;-
)::/
'/(h
'
:
blefo
for
:
a
.
paper and the Marist. help~ som~ guys out
_
this way.'
a matter of
fact,
no one invited
/:
/it
->::
·
<
:
college
·
ciRCLE' just
-
_
inight''fit
.
•
~
Joe'
.
I. ~mpl1ed,
.
1
·
·
you
.
waste.d
to speak at the
symposium
either
f
,>
,
.
:;_
:
;: ·
:
irito
this c~tegory. ButtlJ.is article your hfe, and you rj;! a no good
. -
last year or this year has re-
::
·:.<":::
·:
:
·
)::
fos•t
·;
an
·
_
atterript
-_-
at self.;.justi-
·_
bum,,,
_
and
..
you're two columns
,
.
fused.'
·
·
: ,
:
,,-<·,/
,'
ficatfon
~
-
: A
t'sabo
_
utasickness,
~
l
.
ong.
:
.
•
.
,
. ·
.· . .
-
.
·
'
but
:
:{ sickness that only happens
'
.
·
,
;
tq
other
;
peoJ?le~ not
io
us.
•
. ·
:;
Sorry
._
about
that . .
:
;
-
·
~
-.
.
.
Like so inany
'
oilier p~ople in
.
:
,,.
.
.
.
•
..
..
.
. .
.
.
~
.
.
'
our lives Joe_ tm:ilecl into a thing;
.
J.•'
Joe
X
·
was
supposed
to
write he was
an
eight year sober, he
-
.
·
this artfole
-
.
·
•
·
• but Joe
·
x
got
·:
was smart,
,
he w~ tall, he was
··
;
.
sick~ Joe
:X
is
an
alcoholic; a
.
sh9rt
-
, lje was thin~ he
·
was fat.
major
-
in jour,nalism at Fordham He was
_a
bunch_ o~ thi_ngs
I_
tagged.
University, he had
all
the re-
on to him
_
t<? hm1t his existence
.
:·
·
.,,
:
,:
quirements· Joe
X
-·
was a sick and make him harmless, so he
writer.
· ·
'
·
·.
···
.
wouldn't penetrate.
-
,
·
·
·,
S~rry about ~at •.•
:
·
Sorry ~bout that •••
.
.
.
Joe would hav~ serv~d
a
pur-
·
Joe
~ust
h_ave beeµ th~ing
.
pose;
·
:
he would have ,med up
,
.
about this 3-!h~le, about bimsell,
~
some space onthispaperandplus and abouth1S hfe. Joe got drWlk.
·
· .
he migtit have wised some guys
.
up •
.
•
-:
•
but he probably would
.
Sorry about that. /.
> ·
·
ha
,
ve
.
~l,led
.
up
space better.
·
.
.
Sorry
about
that • • •
I
would
like
h>
write
more, this
is only one column.
.
·
Another addition to
Marist
·
is
the prospective formation at the
.college of a chapter of Phi Alpha
.
Del~ the national HistoryHonor
Society. About a dozen student's
-
have
.
already asked
.
to apply for
membership to Phi Alpha Delta,
· which Mr. Skau would like to see
·
embrace '•an intellectual elite
among the history majors at
Marist."
·
·
"To meet the requirements
of the society,"
·
he explained,
11
accreditation
.
from the Middle
·
·
Atlantic States
.
was necessary.
Now that this is a reality we are
applying to the national head-
quarters of the society for
a
charter needed to set up a formal
chapter.'
.
~
'
?
.
::
.
.
,>
"Joe"
l
sa,id/
11
you
know
what
:
Sorry
about
that. .
:
.
'-
·
.:
· .
.
The
"Journal
of
·
History," an
.
'
,
.
'>
-rn,.,ir ,,:
.
ltf4«"1
()Of'!~~E_li°
,,,
CoJ>"~l"<,-
'1HE
·
11u,,,,,u,.
~,: .,-HE
-..,0111.0.
,L
011
ey
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v-1A'I'
"1fls
.
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M'{ ,1A.1C€."i'eS '{
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ot-J
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.
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.
·
:
·
·
.
.
.
.
,
.
~·
.
·
:
·
·
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..
...
.
~
-
·
.
.
.
~
...
:
,..
.:
.
'
·.
,;
,··
..
mor1es __ of the
.·
sib1ation
.
and
_
~ach
:,
~1ghte()usly,
_
albe1t
i
5-lande~o~ly,
· ::
thro.ugh
.
the
'
·
eff6rts of Bro. F;elix
>
.
·
·
se!
<
o~
;
-
.
ten f!lms
\
1~te11~tle~Jhe'
\
m
.
el!l
_
beFS
;
,
~s
;
.
:'V~H
·"
~~
;
-,
~fyd~~~d
/!
:,
~;
.
:
.
.
:
,
,
,
refer~r~
:
t
th
~
,;
~tb~r
~?
-~r~
-- : -
:
.
·
•
·
.
:
_
.
.
.
·
_
..
:
~
·
.
.
.
:·
_::
"y;
:
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:Ii~f?
1
;~~~f!!1~rxtr~~~;g:~~
->
?:
;iii
.
~
_
tjf:tifi{iy~~~~t
?
~:;f;~~r~rtit~~;1ttYl~~A
i.f{:t
The )footb~l_ Club; !ealiz1!1g
·
_
the implications of m_volvm~ the~-
,
moral
?
·
development
- _:
bec~e
.
:. '
.
sµndry probl~
.
111~
:
w~~qh'
_
conf~<;>n~
·
.:
_;
tl.14:!Jer pases
"
1~ ~
.,.
.
y1r.t~
.
~~-3:
'::
'.
~
_;
'.:
.
:.
·
. selves
.
m def1c1t spend~g while still ?n a shakr fin'.311~Ial basis, g1r_d
_
·
available
·
to the
·
student body· of
.
.
.
:
modern
m,~.
.
i:
'
.
< ._·
/
.
'.
:
.
,;:
:=:
:
,:
:
~~-
-
~~~".',Wt~P,
.
~ptualt,~~
rt:
~
J:r::.;:
V,
:?
~:,::
,.
them?elves ~d set out to do battl
_
e w1
.
~ the
_
Ph1l~tm~s. The Co~_c1l - Marist C9llege.
:.:.
·
:
·
.
.
:-.C
::
//~
. ·
:
/·
·
,
._
-
::·:
·
·
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.
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?.-
\
.
:
-
\
meetm~ con
.
?1ste
.
. d o.f th
.
e sort of b1ckermg, n~me-callmg, back-bJ:!mg
.
'· ·
·
-
; ·
.
.
·
· ,
:
.<
~;'°
,
'"'·
·
:·,.
.
.
After
/
·
'.·
.
eac~
=-
_
-
prE!
_
sentati
.
on;
·
s._th~
/
i'
.
.;
.
~
.
g
.
ng
3.
!h_e
.
/
.
:-
UPC,B~~ng;
?
Jo
.
p1~s
._
t:
.
rt
.
1
·>.
s~~anhc quibbling expec~
.
e~ of
a Max
Senn~~~OVIE.OR
9NE
:
OF
.
_
Tele-
:
·
_.-
:
Every Tuesday
.
evening at eight
•
_
.:·
.
Vle!fer~
·
ad_1o~rn
·
:·:
to.
:
:
a
.
:
:
••i:;~f-"
.
.:Jor.
:
·
~1c
_
uss10_1:1
_:.:,
::t;e
;;
~UCJ
h
co1,11r,q:-
,
:_=:
;
i?,·
:·
,
:·
v1s1o
_
n's
.
m
.
ore
.·
.
hea_rt-rendm
.
.
g melodram
.
at
·
•
·
c
.
attempts. Pat <;:ullum
.
. ,
.
o'clock
·
.
a
.
half-hour
-,
movie
:·
is
<
fee
_
·
h
.
ou
_
r'
'.
-
:
m
.
.
room
.
·
J0~
i
--
!o
:
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v
.
~.rs
.
.
~
.
.
1
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a
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~an
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:rac
·
ti
·
~al),.1s
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.
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¥
: .
.
:'
.
·
.
:
·
:.:;::.:a:,
·
,
,
.
.
_·
..
Treasurer and ch1e_f
·
spokesman for the Football
.
Club, presenteu
,.
shown in the student center
'
the
·
.;
.
.
·
foi:mally
_.
-
d1scuss
.
tl,l.e
:
Parhc~ar
.:
•
a~o~tic1sm;
:
~org~y~~e~s,
,:
.
~E!~~
:
):/
.
:<
,
his organization's case. He was ably assisted by Mr. Hammond, ater. The work
.-
of the
·
,
paulist
.
:_
topic under consideratfon
:
<
Toese
.
-
:
pa1r;
-:
ail~th~
·
,
,
lli?~all~y
,
}
>
f
~v
-
~r
(
i
,:
·
:
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:-
who; enduring vindivictive personal affr.ont,s, eloquenUy pointed
_
to
·
·
-
:
·
·•
'
·
-
· ·
·
'
·
·
·
·
·-
··
··
·
·
·
· ·
:
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· ·
·
·
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·
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·
.
~Jt
,
9~T§
\
!I~g-.-,A~~~~~
}t{!:slk,
•
;
,;
.
Mr~ Hammond further alitictect" to lliefact
'
that the Vikings, unlike
.
.
.
/.::":
,
.
many other campus organizations, had coinrriittments which had to be
·
.
·
,
··,
·
.
. .
. .
.
.
.
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- .
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Bi.it
all
.
is not weU tfiat ends well! Thef$
are
other facts to be con-'-
.
• .
. "
,
•"•
.
;
'> ·
, ••
r~>
sidered: the FootballClubdidnotsolicitthegrantfro
.
i:ri
:
theCouncil
' .
_,
-
-.
·-·,l;'\<
.\lJ
.
-
.
.
-
.
the platfi
.
~rms of bot
.
h p
·
a
.
ities
.
.
-.
in ~e las
·
·
..
.
ts
..
tude
·
n
.
TGcive
•·
·
rnirten
.
t elec""
'
.
•
.
.
.
,,
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~_
\\:
.'_
:}i\:>':
tions promised money
to
the gridders and the
:
money was freely
,
;.
, ·
.·
'
.
\k. ·,h
granted i~ ~e CouncWs
.
ofiginarbudget;
-
!he
notio11 of
¥r:
~
Alwan
:
. , ·
,.
:
.
,:
',\~;·
:
l\ ·
.
•
.,
thatth_e V1kmg? support ther_ns.elvesby hold_mg car
-
washes and bake
.
·
·,
..
·,.
·
.
·
r~
:
.
· sales 1s as ludicrous as askmg me
b:,
contribute money to Ed Lowe,
.
·
our editor, in order
_
that there might b!:! a newspaper for
_
which I
.
might write; an organization which performs
a
furtction such
.
as the
. ..
·,
.
_
_
Marist,College Football Club should never be forced
,
to
;
go on bended
.
;
\'~:-
• .
.. .
~e_e before
_
a Stud en~
·
Council (liiiiety p~rcent of which
was
wiop~osed
.
¥
:
J7'
m its election) beggmg for money which had been freely promised!
.
'
iil
;'+,~;
.
:';
-
~·J.G.
'
O'Corinelf.
.
.i:lf.t
lr
+,
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!lisp~tch
_
eci the cruiser
0
:Ir_iciiaria,;,
-
.
inlfof -the
'
·
Dominica.n tev~lll~ton
:-;
·
·
polis to
·
Montevideo on a
·
"good-
.
in
1965.
He note\:tthat, h;i.dwenot
wm
·:
_
c~ui§>e." The admiral in
-
acted, the
.
probability of a Com-
charge was instructed to place
:.
murtist take-:over.would have be-
_
>-
his
'
vessel at
·
the disposal of the
:
·
come a certainty
:
:.
~
.-
_·
Urugiia.yari.
O
goyei-iunenL
·
:
.
There
•: -.,
.
.
,
, ·
-
:;:-;
··,,
.~
,
-
·
•.
::
.,·
·
:
·
· ·
.
was no
Nazi
revolution in Urugu-
,
·
'.
.
The Alliance for Progres~ had
.
.
ff.
<-
...
ay
;
,
'··
.
·:
•
,
_
.
·
"
·
.
·
been stymied in the past
·
by
,
the
·
·
>
_,..
·
·
·
..
•
··
'
Commurtists
·· -'
who
·
used
:
terror
,
,
,
.
...
:
.
.
•
:
:
,
.
'
,
.
·.
"
.
.
..
,
.
.
.
:
:
.
.
.
.
,
'
'
.
. .
.
.
-
·
,
.
-•
!
:,
,
.;.:,.
.
<
•
· Professor Berle cliticized the
:\'
tactics
·
to blot out
its
.:
positive
,
/
/:.
,
,,
~
';''.<.'.
):
·
nianagemerifof Latin
'
American
.
econoI_nic
·
·
effeds
_;;:
J>i'.o(essor
)
.
__
,
,.
, .
\
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,,
·
.
:
·-·
_.•
financial
--
resources
after
World
Berleh6pedthatthiswasending',
·
>
,-"'
-
. _
.-:..--
.
..
,
.
--
.-
-
-,
.
.
...
_- .
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
---
.
..
.
-
_
.
-
-
----
'--"
·
·"'"
_.
•
..
,
_
,
-
.·
t::>'
•-'.
-~
-·
·
·.
War
II
,
Th~ir favor~ble balance
-
"•
3.!1-d that the Alliancejvould func
:.
·
-
~
ocro
'
sER
~
29
"
:,:_
M~~l
~t·
~~,,
-
~~de
~
:;
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,;
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ful
.
lfi
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iffr
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·
ss~C~~~hy
·
c~~a
-
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ti
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·
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-
ofpayments.was
.
qu1ckly
.
erased
.
tionmor_esrn9othlym
-
thefufure.
,
••
-
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-.
-
.·
·
,
.
·
.
.
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·
.
:
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·
·
.:•/J
'-!'
:
.
•
bec~use instead of sin.king their
'
He strongly
.
supported tlie
·
.
Alli-
J1ctions, (The Ci
_
rcle, Qct.- 25.)_,
.
~u~ted
_
1ts_.
..
way
_
to
another
.
v1ctory
:
at Van C~rtla
_
ndt
~
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~
~,
t
~
·
~
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~o,-..,-
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.
plete, it appears
_
that this gentle.:.
,, '
.void:of
~y."
0
positive,
·
'practic.aI ·
·-
Y
}f
1
ft
t.
· man set up an organizatiori'ofpro.:.
·.
'.
plans for
,
action
.-
This, in Be
_
rle
'.
s
-
-·
(C
t%,~
:;::;
=c:
,
,>
.
.
-
fessioi:tal
_.
re~olutionari~s
_
with the
:
~-
-
opinion
';~_
was e~sential1f
_
reform
,·_
'<:
\
fj/
·.
idea of taldng over
;
as many
-::·
-
was to
,
progress.
-
·
~
.-
.
. .
-8
s~
:~
:
,
countries as possible.
..
·
This
.:
.-.
.
::
.
: .
.
.
.
·
,
<
·
-
-
-
_
,.,,:--
·
:
:
,,,
.
-
organization
.
move
_
d
/
)_
ts head-
:
;
:··
In conclusion,
C:
Prof.
.
Berle
-
·
_
~uarters from Mex1c.
.
o
:
to Havana
·
· .. ·
stressed
-
the importance of
_
indi..;
,
m
1959.
.
:
\:.
...
>
vidµal rights
;
H4:! noted the
.
dan-
.
.
.
.
.
:
·
:
,
.
.
.
.
gers
.
inherent in
·
both extreme
·
.
Berle gave Milton Eisenllower
:
•
·
·
right
and left wirig positions, and
.
credit
·
for
_
pushing the
_
idea of an
·
·
applauded
.·
·
moderates like Fry
0
in
.
•
inter-American
-
bank.
·
However,
:
·:.
Chile
;
_
He
,
saw manf
-
difficulijes
•
·
.
he said that
the
idea had its
.
in-
<
ahead,
_
·
but
_:
·
viewed
•
the
.
Good
_
ception in Roosevelt's
;
time, in
.
Neighbor Policy and the
·
Am.::
1939-1940.
Funds
·
for this bank
-
•
'a.nee for Progress as "the best
· were never appropriated until
·
h9pe
for civilization iri this tarigl-
·
.
President Kerineyd
.
did so as
·
one
.
-
ed hemisphere
.
and this very
of the
.
first acts of his admini-
tangled world.
''
'::··
.
·.
. ·•
.
.
stration.
·
·
_
,
·
·
, .
.
_
_
_.
·
:
:
•
.·
<
_
.
·
•
.
·
:_
·
:
.
·
The Symposium reconvened at
··
·
The presence ofRussian troops
about
2:30
after
·
the
.
luncheon
•
_in
Cuba added,-in }!erle's esUma.:
_
break; After a
·
few
.
prefatory re-
.
tion,
·
a new dimension
·
to
the pro.:.
marks by
·
Bro
>
.
'
Cashin,
.
Mr •
.
·
.
-
blem of non-intervention
·
~ Hostile
Arthur Schlesinger delivered the
:
.rorces from
:·
outsil:fe the henii-
'
__
aftel'.noon's a~dress.
-
·
·
·
·
shpere now posed a serious threat
'. -
,
<
•
·
·
to
:
inter.:. American
security:
~.
·
The. differ~nces betwe<>n the
CommunisJ conspiracies flour-
Good Neighbor policy a,1d
·
the
ished,
·
especially
·
in Venezuela.
·
.· ·
·
•
..
7
"Indirect wars"
.
sprang up and
.
COHTIHU
_
~D
on
pg
·
•
'
,
,
-
'
'
.
.
-
.
.
. .
..
;
• , '
.
...
' ·
.
· .
~
~-
·
..
,:-:
.
...
_-
·,
•
JOH~
.
FORBES breaks
.
the
tape
and
.
tops
th•
old
.
course record
of
25:53 with
_
on
overwhel111ili9
,
24:3(
<
.
.
fir~t~
·
p
_
lace finish
.
at Van
,
Co~lo.ndt. If th~ teands succe,ssful
_
thl s weekend,'
it
111ay be ()11aha
·
:
-
bo11nd~
'.
{
,
,,
>
,
.
.
.
_
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
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·
....
i:~tiiiiJi;~~;;·
THE CIRCLE
,-
· A
ONE-ON-ONE
situation developes as Bill Holmes breaks away off tackle for a substantial gain
-
-
.
,
.
late in the
second
quarter of Saturdoy-s game.
'
.
~
-
. -~-·-- - - - - -----..---~~--·----·-~--
-
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Por'
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.
.
,
. .
.
. .
·
.
~·
.
.
::
be
-
cashe~:t'i11theB~kStoreatall,
Father Wilfred Dully,
S.M.,
.
·
; ·
· ..
·.
:
__
·:
.
·
,
-.'.
·,
·.;.
_
·,
.
.
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.
On_ Tuesday_, October 1
8
,
19
~
6
•
.
but because
Mi.
D' AngeJo feels
.
~::i~er~~~l~~:ge~~ n ~
,
.
/.
A
.
iiew
:
~11~ih~ ~isen on
:
the
:·
Re~ard
'.
than_'
.
to l~t
)t
s!owly
\
·
-:
:'
·
:
.
:'
_
.{
aM
·
jomt me:,:g
w~m~~m
~~
..
that the
.
Book store is thereh~
.
a
.
been
named
an
'
Assistant Pro-
·· .
Marist
··
campus .
..
The yearbook
.
die
_
away. Tthhis cebrltaillllfyth1s
·
~o
..
·,
.·
·
essers.
..
e,
.
.
service
·
to the students,
.
e
is
.
fessor
:
in
.
the
E
.
.
nglish
.
Depart-
wilHiow be sold on
:
a subscrip-
solution
,.
to
,
e pro em;
.·
.
.
ere
•
>::'
·
,
·
,
·
D
.
'
Ange_lo
·
conce~m~ two import-
·
being
allowed
to
.
cahs
..
.
the
$5
·
tion basis
'
:'-to
aii
.
students~
·
The
is no other
,
alternative,
.
~d ~e
·
·
1
k
anttop1cs:thecashmgofchecks, checks with the permission of ~ent~
·
,
:
-
''.'
·
·
_
. ·
basic charge is.$7.50 --
.
and an
book
·
must be.sold, then sell:1~
.
,
\,
·
both school and ~rs~~a.l, on
the Business Office.
·
But he is
:-
Born on August
.
31~ 1915,
.
10
·
additional
.
charge
.
of$Z.50 will be
Btit; if you have to reverUothis;
,
J
; ·
campus
~~
the
.
possibility of not as adept to picking o~tfor-_
.
Accrin~n
..
L~
.
~s
•
.
·
I?:n_gland,
..
levied
,
if
-
a bookis not purchased
.
then make
.
sure
·
_tbaLeveryon~
:
:
.
t.
:
.
,
:::
..
,
~e-thestaBoobliskhSmt g ae
.
charge_ account
.
geries
.
or any problems wiµi
.
thFaethseroc
.
w1'easty oorfdaMmaer
.
dy
·
a1_ nprM1earstcoht
.
.
by Novemoer
:;,,
l
.
.
.
knows why.
:
This cafjllltno~
,
betab
.
dolne
·
:.
·
m
e
or
!
checks as the women in the B})St-,
· ..
.
-
.
.
•
.
•
.
·
,
,
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
·
by
·
sittlilg
,
at~
.
c
.
e eri_a
;
. e.
< .
,
\:
·
·
· ·
·
ness Office are. For this reason
.
·
1941
;
Betw_een 193~ and 1937, ~e
.
:
.
'.
This policy is immediately dis.:.
·
Ndt:
can
.
it
be done
.
by v1s1ting a
:
.
1
\··
We
have a set-up on campus
also checks are not being cashed studied Philo~ophy
~t
th~ ~ar
15
t
_ ·
turbing because the student Go-
student
.
only once. Any l)ll}es01an
,
.
,
:
_~
,
in
·
the Business Office whereby
in the Ra~kell~r.
·
~ouse of Studies, Milltown, Dub.,
.
·
.
vernment
'
hru.
,
always ·picked
'·
up
knows
.
that you have t~.~aturate
:.
1
;/-
students may deposit there money
lin,
Ireland, and f
.
rQm 19~.7
°:Dtil
,
the tab. They claim' that this is
.
·. ~e public
_
before
,.
tby
wi]J
·
re;.
•
J.
\
.
.
into personal checking accounts.
·
.
Therefor~, itis highly suggest'-
1941_, Father pursue~ Theological
.
.. ·
now
.
impossible to do because of spond or
_
even I_ook at yo
_
u_r pro:-
.
,
This particular segment of the
ed by the Business, Office and the
stud~es at f:be Marist House of
the increased
.
expenditures on
.
duct.
It
.
IS no different
:with
.
the
'.
:'
.
':
'.
·
Business Office is run on just Student Council that the students studies
.
P:ugnton, Devon,
.
En-
. .
.
.
.
b
.
..
.
·
t
·
M
.
·
Waite
.
Reynard
.
·
•
·
about same schedule as a bank.
·
.
gland
.
he
·
received his B.A. from
movies, use~, e c.
r ·
·
.
.
r
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
:
;.:
.
.
.
be
take fulladvantageoftheircheck-
wni
.
·
c
11
.
.
C
b 'd
_
Maxwell Busmess Manager of
·
.
. .
. .
.
•
.
...
,
.
.
_
..
\
I
~y
amount of money may
.
ing accounts at the Business Do
.
.
ng
:
. o ege,
all! r1 ge,
the Re~ard, indicates that "wi-
.
. .. •
.
This ye~r, it must be admitted,
.
.
~
,
\
!'
1
~drawn, as longas
th
atamount
Office and that they exhibit the England
10
1.9~7, and bis M.A.
less 750 copies are sold,
.
Marist
,
P!esented a greatel'problemthan
.
_
.
[
.,
is
,
ID
your PE;rsonal account.
_
The
responsibility levied upon them (Can~urbury)
10
1956•
will not have
·
-
a
.
yearbook as ~e
.
either the yea~book _st;afi
,
<?r
:
:
,
~e
>,
~
:
women working there are trained
I
to get. their money in time for
In
addition
to
his pastoral care
have
.
bad in the past.'! At this
.
Student Council anticipated.
>
:
..
.
i
\/
.
bank tellers and
th
e~efore are · the_ weekend before the
_
Business in parishes· in England,
..
Fath~i:,
time
·
only 170
.
Reynar~ have
Th~re was
an
abrupt ch~~
10
L
':
very adapted at handlmg ~one
_
y.
Office close~ on working day~ •. Duffy. has preached missions
m
been purchased
:--
by Semors and
poll~Y
.
:i!ld ~e!e was no boqk
.
,
,
·
You are remmded that the Busi-
England and
·
Ireland,
:
and
·
has
·
·
Undercl~~men together.
•
How-
fr9m ~e pr~vwus year to use~
·
':
i
·
At
th
is Ume
th
e Book
st
ore
·
ness Office hours are 9:00 A.M.
also
.
gained a wide range
_
of
•
ever, within the _n~xt_ two weeks
a sellmg pomt. In s~ort, the.Rey
\
cashes
.
personal checks uptoand
·
to. Z-30 PM
Monday through . experience in Youth Club work.
Mr. Maxwell ~hc1p_ates that at
nard w~ saddled witbtbtheproblem
including $5. Last year checks up
Friday.
· _-,
. .
.
.
.
.
..
. .
leasL
zoo
copies will be sold.
of selling words, and.
.
.
ere _was
:':'-
.
to $30
.
could be
·
cashed there.
..
. •. ·
.•
·
.
. ·.
.
.
for
..
a
to be run
.
properly more
·
.
· ·
l:
nothing
.
to back them
·
up
'WI~.
:
l.:.:
This meant that Mr.D'Angelo,as
.
As
·
-
stated in thelastrepoJ.".t the
,:
people would have
.
to be hiX:ed
.
in
.
This
_
situation c~not
be
blamed
· .
·
,_
:
i'.
manager of the BookSt~re, would
charge account in the Book Store
.
the B
.
ook Store and the,Busmess
·
Putting two and two together
on
.
the staff of the 196_7 ~eynar~.
>
.
have to keep large sum,,. of money
.
was exterminated because many to ~andle the extra cleric~ work.
.
it looks as if :we may not have a
.
.
.
,
.
,
.
.
t
.
·
on hand. But because of s
·
everal
·
of . the studen~•s paren_ts com-
·
si~ce the Bils~e~s Office 1s oper-
yearbook at all. But, if
500
stu-
Practically 90% of the
.
Senior
1
·.
cases of theft, this practice had to
plamed that th~ir sons were rwin-
ating
.
on a llm1te~ budget,
..
the
.
.
dents do not
.
want a yearbook,
ciass wants a yearbook~ They
•
:.
:
be
.
cut off.
It
was suggested by
.
ing up large bills. A second i:ea-
.
money to
.
pay
.
_
this extra h~lP
._.,'
which they
.
.indicate by n
.
ot pur ... want something to enjoy
.
f~ve
.
or
•
the
·
BusinessOffice thatnochecks
son was that ~anys_tudentsfailed
·
~ould
•
~ave to come
.
fro~ a raise
.
'
chasin
one should we
.
worry
ten years
,
fr,om now.
In
fac~ a
.
>
'.
,
~
·
·
·
·
to pay their bills, either because m the Boo~ Store prices. B~t
'
·
aboutif?
·
'
.
·
.
.
. .
.
.·.
yearl)!)ok ~oes not become 1
_
m-
·
r
CONVOCATION...
they failed out, or transferred sinc_e this lS_
,_
what eyeryQ!le
IS
.
.,
.
.
·
'
•.
.
.
por,-tant until you are well ~yond
_
.
....
.
:
l
Continued
from
Poge 1
.
from Marist.
.
.
.
.
·
y~lling about, 1t w
_
ould_ be mu:ea...
>
The StudentGovernmentstates
your
.
~clergraduate :rears.
:
~e
.
:; _
.
/;-
'
·
"boarding house" and the student
.
.
_
.
s1ble to re-~stabbsh 1t. In s1m-:
•
.
'.flatly that it does not have enough
fir:st time you· have a cl~s _re-
~ .
r ·
becomes·indifferent to all at>Qut
However, the primary reason pier words, 1t wouldactuallycost-
;
money to
•
subsidize the Reynard •
..
UD!O~.and you want to
.
rem101Sce
_
,r
.
.
.
him.
·
Dr. Drennen stated that the why a ch~rge a~count
_
will not be the
·
students
.
more to have _a
~.
If
the activity fee is_ Jo be usea
·.
~r fm~
~~t
whom you
.
were
talk-
:
._•
:
··
.·
·
f·
.
liberal arts education should be
,·
.
re
-
established
m
t!Ie Bo_ok Store cha~ge
,
ac
.
countb~cause of
_
t ~
:-
•:
:
·
for
.
activities throughout the year,
,
.
·:.
mg
,.
·to,
:
1s whe~ a
.
}'.~~r~
.
o~
~
...
:,:..
·
.
·:
:
·.
:~
..
,.
;,
.
..
·
.
. ·
an
.
'
.'
assimilation by
-.
the.mind of
.:
is because
,
o
L
the
.
mcreas~
ex
-:
1.
:
cal
,
~xpe
_
nse~,eyen~h,qughit~o~d
,-,,,
::
then
~
the
,
counci
L.
caniiot
,
affcii:d
'
·
..
:.
-
<;9.~~
-
-
§
~
~IDJ!RX:!aj}E;
£
~1;
f~t;;;A~~l
,;,'._zir-
,;~~
·
,~)-;ic,;
;
,
..
'>
;:•:
:
,
:
·
_.,,
,
· ..
_
,,
-➔
:,.,;!\•
livµig
;
;;
rather.::
~
µi~
~
id~as;~
~
He
.:~
,
pens~s.
:
i~
;t.
!O,uldj~~~~_li
~
!f.l
~
O
.
~~~
-
r
'i'.,
~
·
~t,woi,lld
;,
\le:
.
a:.c_o~y.,E!n~~!lC
.
~
.
•
~
=-..
:,;.,;<'t;:,;~
t?~ailooat~•$
;
'7~
i
inofie·l~~
·
~~
~i;,t:~""C:::"~·;:_::;~:~"'.'Z'..;.
,
,,_~~:.::<
t
~
T
?:·
i~f=rttf-
~J:'
:
:
:..::
..,,,.'IJ,j
!
.
·
·
·
challengedth~
.
st~d
.
eJ!tto_,~m:-
..
:
..
·
. .
.
,·
.
.
.
_.
.
,
, :
.
•
.,•
.
_·
,:,- ;:·:":·
_
.
, ..
--·
..
·
.
_
:
at:~e
='
begm~g
-·
of ~e
•:
,
year~
,
.
.
~obev~rY,prac1ca~
~
e.
"
\.::.
•
:
.-:·
,.
. tellectual encounter
-
bycomment;.
_.-
AUT~Q~J)~CLARU.
_
..
.
-
·
.
,
.
: · ..
·
.
;·
lii
•:
answer·to a question abo11t
.
>-
·
· . .
. :
. _,
. :
• ..
:· ·
.
~·
.·
·
:.
-:-,
•
whole
..
thing, the
_
Semor
.
,C~~~
,
.'
>': .
r
,
·
.
:.:
.
inf
.
that,
"YO)li
learn_irig in use-
.
Conji
.
nu~~
-
f~!inP.ag_e
_
l
::/>
'
> _:
the
·
.·.'•
significanc
_
e
·
of
·.
Pre~ident
.
,
·
.'
Derurls
_
qooh~, E;dit~r
\
of the
<:
c~!lo~ support tllethRe}pard_!~~
.;
:·:
:
·
,
.
.
·:
:
!
;
..
·:_
le
_
ss
:
.
to
'
you
.
unless
.
it
becomes
..
:
The
'.
Saturday''Ev!'!nmg Post and
,-
-
·
Johnson's
.
Far
.
.
Eastern
·
tour,
..
Reynard, stated m his open
_
~etter-
-- ,
anc1ally •
.
It needs
e
SUP1:'9
_
~
.-
~
~
-,:'''
·
,.
:
t
, '
::,
:
yo~1:)~arniilg.'
\
~ ::
..
.
;_
)/
.
-~,</<
>
·;,
'
:.·•·
coJ.l
.
ier
i
s. )Ji
•
the
;;J
aQ
<>f
!~17,
~e
•
Prof
;
.
Schlesinger
i
'
f
hoi>:
.
d tha!)t
:
that:,it would
.
be better to klll
·
the
.
the
.
entil'e student body .
.
.
•
.c.
·
<
.-
.
·
.
. ,
· :.-:
>:
,·
'
·-.,:,C.:
j
S
O.,•(:
·.-<;,•·:
·
;
·:
•
,
;
:
;:>
:,.
·
·:_
/
>
.
'.·
·
returried·t~ ll
_
arv~d as
_
ass~l-
<~.
would helpfor
,
ap
,
eac
,
e~m
,
~ol~~on
,,
,
,'.·
.
:
.
·
,
·.
'
'.,.
,,
"'-''
... ,
/
·<
F
.
oTI.:o'\Vlng !)~. Drenne.
,
was
~ct
.
:
.
·
·
ate professor of h1~tor~; F~~ling
·_
for Vietnam.''
,
However; he ~d
·
·
·
·
,,
,
.
...
·
Hammond,SemorReprese.ntative
;
the need for
,
an
·
,organ1zation of
his doubts aboutthe
:
effect oUlie
·
and
;
Attorney General
.
of the Stu.:
·
,:
.
:
.
American
.
liberals· which, while
Manila
.
·
.
Conference.
.
since only
..
dent
·•
Ge>vernment. Mr; Ha:mm~nd
·
:
recognizing
>
the
.
true
.
na!ure of
three
·
·
nations
-
:
}r6m
>
·
mainland
.
.
challenged the
.
faculty
,
by ,..ask~g
.
'
t
omrnunism
.
would contm)le to
Asia would be represented tl,l~re~
.
·
..
if' the professor is playmg his
•.
figbt
,
Jot
-
social
:
progress; he
.
·
·
·
·
·
'
·
·
,.
part
.
in improvement of the faculty
_
'
helped found
'
Americans for De:-
·
With referencEdo theVietnain
.
student
<
relationship; _ does
..
the
mo era.tic Action and has served - war, Prof. Schlesinger beHeved
·.
·.
professor s~mulat
.
e his students
.
.
s1nce as national vice.::chairman. .. that
•
there would be increased
<
'.
with an "intellectual
·
battle'':?
In· order
,
to further
.
explain
,
the
••unhappiness''
·
in
.
j
he . United
·
·
He
a,Isif
rioted that
:
" campus pro-
..
importance of an anti-Communist
.
states over it because "more and
·
blems are
,
ttieir,- (tlie
•.
faculty's)
:
·
:
Uberal
c
,
position~
Schl
_
e
.
singer
more
/
famili~s
·
.
have somebody
·
.
problems as
·
'W~ltas st~dE:nt pro
~
:
.
·
·
wrote
,
The Vital Center in 1949.
·
who
;
s over 'there or know some-
.
·
.
.
.
.
,'
.
'
blems/'
.
The SeniorHepresenta~
C
:;:<>
'
.
'
,': .· .
.
:,
;
.
'
'
·
.
.
,
.
'
body .who's over
.
there
:
,, Heim~
,
.·
·
'
.
...
,
tive
>
then'reviewe
.
dtbepartspt,af-
'
··
·During the 50's, whilestill at
plied
•
a: viewpoint ctifferent.fr:om
·
.•,;
<
,,..
·
ed
'.
both
:.
student ;ind faculty
m
Harvard he was primarily oc;.
the
administration's by quoting
.
A
<
>.
-
.
th~ soc~~' athleti~, ,a11d
_
re1:igi~1JS
:·
cupie~ i~ researcb~ng ~d writing
Douglas
_
MacArthur --
11
Ameri-
.
.
·.·
·
.·.
,
.
··
.
\
... ·
...
~
.
--
.:
~
.
.
-."
.
.
'
.
,\.:
:
.
:
.
.
•
'
.
·
.
::
.··
~'
..
·•.
•
ar~as
.
of campus
·
h
_
fe;
. ·
.
',;
,.
:
--
.
·
:
his ,trilogy on the '
:
Age of Roose-
.
can soldiers have no place on the
·
·
.
-
:.
\
:
-
:
;;
.
:>:_
:
-'
.
_
? .
·
)
:
· :
.
,
velt.'
;
'.
The Crisis
,
of
.
the
:
Old
·
Asiarimaiilfalid~"
·
c
_·
Milli-
<
·,
<
,
.. ,
, :'
Brother
:
stephenLarmmg of the
:•:
Order
'
(1957); The
.
Coining or!he
·""
'
·
~.
·
'
'
·'··
·
'
·
.
English Department co~foi:n~ed
·
<
New Deal (1958)~ and The Pohtics
Commentint on the New: York
, . ·.
·
s·
"
ToN
·
E
· ,
GAT
'
E
,
H
OU
.
SE_
:·
on. Rout;
9_
,ha~
:
~ ~o~
·
~inc
.
e
'
the
_
t
'
u
.
tn
-
.
:
~
-
'
f
·
th,!
~
>·
..
::
·~
~:~
·.
=
.
>
facµlty. and
·
~tude~tf?
>
alike w1
.
th
:'
of Upheaval (1960),
,
were
'
the
gubernatorial race
.'
Prof. Schle-
a
-:.
t
.
ii:n~ly
.,
que
.,
shon~
,
•
.
B~othe
.
r
...
~d
;:
::
fru
.
its of
.
hislab~rs •
.
H
.
e
_
also;work-
singer noted that '.
!
(Fr~lin D.
.:
cent,ny, a~d is n
_
ow being reitovaled for
.
foture
.
us~ as Press
_
.
•
0
.t
,-
~
.
-=- ·
-
<->
,
dres}ed the students by as~ng
edonGov.Adla1Stevenso~ss~
.
Roosevelt Jr.'s)
,
eniry
_
mto the
-
··
house.
-~-.
·
,.
, ,,-
.
.
.
. ·
,.
·.
•
.
.
/
:
,
·
·
'
-'
•
\
-
<
·
·• .
.
·o-
,
•
'-:
,
.
~it.:~rfJ.:~iVtri:~:;,
·
ii:!jr:~~\~;ift!1
-
f:;i!J~:2r~?.Taitfi~;
.
·
.
·
_
Gatehouse
l,Jn(jijr'
,
.,A
:
r
;a;
:
,~¥
ii;!~t];~~1~~i
ifl~iJ~~~~:r1t1;
·
~:r:: :~:~:::
:
::::
,
x
-
·
~ep3i
(~O
I'
~ro~~
,
ijf ~
.
1"IS\
i
[~
I
ther
.
Lanning cited these
\.
ex-
·
dealt with
.
.
th
.
_e effe_d: of th
.
~IIWhi!e
>/
:
.
T
.
he ·
.
ga
·
• teh
.
ouse
.
Qn
.
Rout_e
.
9, at
. .
sen
.
t,
..
·
t~e
.
.
in
·
·
..
•.·
.
t
.
~ri
.
·.
o
.
r
·
·
.
·
. ·.
·
·
i
·
s
..... :
co
.
ID
.
p
.··
l
·
e
··:
~Jy
·/
·>
}:
.
:
\
.
..
'
·
,
,;'f
.
amples to point out that
all
too
At
'
the close of the afternoon
backlash" m
•
this Novembers
.
the
mam entrance to Mar1stCol".'
.
·
gutted.
.
. ,
,
.
.
.
,
..
,
•
•
•
J
often the student leaves
his
edu.:.
session, Prof.
-
Schlesinger an.;
congressional and guberna~o_rial
..
lege i_s
.
presently undergoing
ex-
.
·
<
. •
>
'
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·:
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·
t
1
·
cation behind
·
him
·
in
·
the
·
class-
swered several q1,1estions posed
e,lections.
·
Prof. Schlesmger
·
.
tensive repairs and modifica.; - ,
·
In the future, pl3.l)s ~eJor ~e
/:
,
·
room; he does not make it a part
,
to him by a Circle reporter in an
thought that. the backlash was a
, :
tions: The building, which is stru9ture ;to be us
_
ed
~
a ;.res1
.
-,
x
·.
:
.
of himself. -
·
exclusive interview.
"local
·
thing"; as regards New
.
very
_
similar in construction to
..
d~nti:t,1
".'
V1ce Pr
_
es1dential
·
:man-,
:
·
;~
·:' .
·
·
· ·
·
:
.
..
Asked
what
he though of Sen.
York,
.
.
he
.
.
ha
·
d
·
"n
.
o knowl
.
ed ~e of a
.·
the
.
stone ])4)rUon
·
·
·
·
ofS
.
t .
.
.
Pe
.
.
ter's
. ·.
-,
sio
.
n.
.
.
Th~re will be fou5Jooms•
.
.
.
•
·
·
1
·
Questioning the faculty~ Bro-
·
Robert
.
Kennedy as
.
a possible
.·
backlash'.' b11t thought thatifsuch faculty residence
·
served
.
as a
two
.
upstairs bedroom,,., and
"
,
.
a
,-
_
•
.,
ther asked the individualinsti'uc
::.
·
·
Presidential candidate,
·
Prof.
.
a factor was p~esent "it would
_
gatehouse at the beginning
of
the
p~rlor
·
~d
-
~est room below.
_It
·.:
.
-
tors to wonder
·
'' Ain I keeping
·
·
Schlesinger said that he consid-
affect
.
all
.
c. _and1date
.
s.
_equal. ly.•
.
•
.
ce
.
ntury when
th
..
··
e c
.
am
.
pus
gr
..
ounds
w.1~ _be a_ f1~ pl~ce to entertam
.
·
I
-
faith to a life of scholarship?"
ered the senator- to be "a great
Prof.Schlesmger mentioned th~t
were part of the Beck estate~
v1s1tmg d1~1tar1es. All nec~s-
--
,
.
He also spoke of acuity involve-
leader of the Democratic Pary."
he had just returned from a trip
If
bas since
'.
been ·used as a
S3!Y refurmshment_s are bemg
:
.
.
ment with studentaffairs and cit-
·
Recognizing the fact that "an
to Illinois, where he had observed
faculty house. The gatehouse was
paid /or. by the Manst Brothers,
·
ed the "hidden work' of the
incumbent President usually gets
.
n<>ticeable evidences of ('bad
unoccupied for
·
the
.
first time
not N1ar1st College •
.
Campus Life Committee and the
re-elected,'
.
he
neverth~bss
backlash." In response to a fur-
during the 1965-66 school year.
There is
110
fcmndation to ijle
Academic Policy Committee.
·
went on to affirm that he
·
would
ther query
·
as to the effect of
·
rumor that this project has been
..
<:
support and work
for
the Sena-
"balck power' on the civil rights
undertaken so that, when (and Ht
>
ertt ~:u;~i1~~i~dofJ:t~~~:
tor's Presidential· nomination.
movement, Prof. Schlesinger
•
The entire interior of the build-
Route 9
.
is widened, the College
•:
·
Moreover Mr.
·
Schlesinger de-
·
po_inted o~t that "S!okely Car~• in
.
is in abadstateofrepair
~
The
will
.
receive a large sum
.·
of
:
.
quent informal table discussions,
.
clared, "I
_
will cast my vote (or
m1chael and the ,Klan walk s~~ul
.
..
.
w:llis
.
which had been covered
.
money
.
because of the necessary
Mr• Johnson announced
that
a
·
senator Kennedy in 1972.'' When
.
der to shoulder·
·
'
with 'cracked
_
plaster and old
,_,...
demolition' of the new Presiden~
·
-;
·
·
·
time
•
·
would be arranged
·
in
th
e
asked
·
what
he thought of Senator
·
·
-
·
· ·
·
·
·
,
·
·
h
·
·
t
·
k have been stripped
·
tial suite. The fremwr,:k of the
.
future for another meeting of this
Kennedy's
. ·
political philosophy as
The
interview ended with Prot
.
·
s ee -roe ,
.
.
.
.
.
Datu
.
re.
.
The ent1·re
.
·
·
mornm· g's
s
hl •
·
·
hak'
hands
all
·
down to the bare, one-foot thick
· building is quite solid,
· .
and- it
Com
. pared
.
.
•
wi·th
.
that of the late
c esmger s
mg
.
.
.
·
·
·
d'
· ht
·1 be
·
ting
stone The heating plumbing and
could easily be
.
m
.
o
..
v
.
ed
.
ollt of
.
the
procee
mgs
m1g eas1 Y sum-
Pre
·
si·de
·
nt•s,
·
.
Prof.
·
Schlesinger aro
.
und
and grac1ouslyconsen
•. .
.
'
-
·
Ued
nstruc
ed
· ...
d
f B
·
th
·
·
th
· 1
electr1c1ty
will
all
be
dISman
.
path of ;my proposed
·
co
.
.
_
_ ....
·· ,
·
'i
·
>"
m
up m Ille wor so
.
ro er
.
.
said that ''their purpose
.
and
to gi~~te
.
hisautograp~to
.
eCirc e
and new systems putin. At pre-
tion.
.
.
.
.
>
<
.
c
Lanning
i
1
There has to
,
bejnter-
.
philosophy are identi~
.
u .
!epor
,
r.
·
.
action.''
.
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•Concert
·
..
·
~A.
.
.
.
·
.
Sniasli
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~i.
f
(
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.
.
.
.
·
.
·.·
·
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'·
For
·.
those
::
Marist students -too
·
·
.
.
busf
'
or.
:
too
.
uninvolved to attend
:
,(
the conc
_
erf
cm
.
Oct: 27; an
ex"'.'
..
?perience was missed. The stud!IDt
Lack
,()f
Funds
-
End
_
s
:
Eaj,ployment Program
'
·
· Brothers ·
,
, played to -a standing
?
-
-
.
room only crowd in the c:impus
·
·
.
--
theater; Their performance
-
was
_
1
,
-
•.·
aniazilig
·
as
tltey profession~y ; . . - •
-executed ·. a
.
repitoire of thirty
·numbers
:
.
ranging
.
-
·
from
•
·
,
·
..
rock
·
:
~
Jhrough
·
folk~
·
gosepl, and blues to
classical guitar.
,
· ·
.
-
\
·
'
-tr6~
'
the
-
()pening instru~ent.:
·
.
.
·
-
.
al,
·
"One Mint Julip'-', th_rougl!out
Tuesday, Nov. 2, proved to be
the Waterloo for many a Marist
College
.
student.
The Economic Opportunity Act
of 1965, commonly known as EOA
provided employment for some 90
students on campus through the
use of federal funds. These stu-
,
dents were employed in various
!
fields such as lab technology,
photography, public relations,
and maintainance;
'Mr.
Mortensen further ex-
plained that he provided employ-
.
inent for as many individuals as
possible because of the l~~ge
number of students who quahfied
for positions. It was his opinion
that each student should be given
the opportunity to earn his share
of the funds before the reserves
became "broke' .
.
>.
the entire
.
show, the aug.1ence
.
sat
·.
· -
in complete silence, save for the
.
·
··
ovations after each number and
·
the three- encores that ended the
pedormarice.
·
·
·
0:
'/-one
..
song,
one
performer
.
_
:
cannot
.
be singled out;
..
•
for
_
.
the
_
,
entire
,
concert was superlative
.
J3ro
;
John Lee, singing the lead
-
in ''Sounds of Silence" and •'That
·
· Bo'y''
.
arid Bro; Ray Armstong's
rendihon of ''California Dream-
·
Because of this development,
the program has been suspended
The system had worked well
i
until the Spring Semester,
.
at
throughout the summer months
I
which time it will be reinstated
and the beginning of the 1966 Fall under funds allocated for that
Semester. A difficulty arose last purpose. Both Mr. Mort~nsen
week when Mr. Herschel Mor-
and Mr. Campili of the Business
tens en
.
Registrar, discovered
·
Office are presently looking in~o
that the monies available for
the possibility of acquiring ad~i-
salaries had been exhausted. In
.
tional funds to remedy t~e situ-
a public letter to all EOA sup~r-
ation for this semester.
visors,
Mr.
_Mortensen explained
-
ing" surpas~ed,
.
in our OP¥1~on
1
the arrangement of the ongma.J.
artists.
-
"&ROS. Jack Lee, Tom Holan and Al Sene~ rendering 'Midnight
Hour:"
i~g blues is a difficult form be.;
The technical details, lighting
cause it is such an exposed
and staging, directed by Bro
;
medium, and Bro. Al deserves
Br'endan Kenny, were superb and
much credit.
went b~yond anything expected
.
that he had· expected the govern-
ment allocation to deplete itself
before the end of. this semester,
but that the present situation was
sudden in occurrence.
Until some solution can be
found, all those invo
_
lved a~e
faced with the unattractive predi-
cament of unemployment.
..
Throughout the performance,
.
;
.
.
.
_
. .
The imagination in al these
-
~s-
·. ·
audience reaction was tr.emend-:
switching to the popular fte!d
pee ts showed car~ful planning,
otis
_
~
-
When called upon to Join in
of rock music, t_h~ group again
much rehearsal, and much at-
on
.
'
·
,If
I Had A Hammer" and
showed its versatthty. In a parody
tention to detail.
Assistant Chaplain Named
"Greenback
-
Dollar" it became of pop music, with Bro. Tom _
:
:
difficult tOdistinguish
.
the per-
.·
Nolan singing_lead
_
_
in a medl_ey
Nothing b
_
ut
congratulations
M
..
·
·
·
th
ct·
Th
The Reverend John W
;
agan
formers from
.
e au 1ence.
e
of "Midnight Hour",-
"Wild
could be heard after the perfor-
has been named assistant to the
:greatest reaction of the eveni~g Thing", '
.
'Li'l Red
_
RidingHood'.',
mance and many students want
chaplain or Marist College. Fa-
-
vias
to Bro;
·
Alex Senes' rednt-
and "Valerie,,, _they had th_e audi-
anothe~ concert
.
-- possibly dur-
"
'
.
.
/
ti9~
:
\
>kr
~
'rMt afal~enad
·
'
.
'
df raistii11n15.
!~
:
~rice
-;
'
ir
_
olling
,
-
in - ~he
,:'
aisles.
~>
ing one ·of
.
the
. ,
big
"
wee~ends.
_
It
.
;
~GimMpaagng~{J!~t~ a!fd ~oeo~i111
:e
.
.
,: .
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a
,
,
pea
-
a er ns e ic
.
o
.
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.
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,
.
-
.·,
.
,
is
-
hoped that,
·
before disbanding available for consultation at any
·
,his
)
pareii~;
<::.
·
.
·:
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,
,,
.,:
.;-;
.
·
·
to practice teach, thebrothers
·
.
·
• ht
.
.
. ;-
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·
-·...
_.
._
.
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.
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11
Kis~es~V1eeter
.
.ThanWine''.,.
••
Will consent to such a
_
concert. time,dayormg .
_
.
:
?~r--
>1\.
13
if
ioe)-Iagel:,
)Yhf sran?T~
."
sung
,
by Bro. Ed
-
JE!imings~
W'!5
·
.
.
,·
-
A native of New Yor
,
k city,
I
·<
'
.
·
;-
excellfthen
0
:,
arf
_
.
-
Nrange~enpl~y;~ th:
:
also well received.
>
More sen-
· ·
These ten men proved that a
Father Magan was ordained to
-,:--:-
,
0:
,
Twe
•··
·
.
-•
··
e_ver ,
. ·.
·.
_
··
i
ously, the. Beatles' "Nowhere
.
night of'entertainment ne_ed ~ot the priesthood in
.
1947 and in the
:
)}O:
.
.
orgatnoJnf·Hthe ja.~z
.
ytehrsionh
,
fp\l
.
'
Man" arid "Help" weceverywell bodcon1~eissts
_
to1
_
mf aul
·
aflteoodr
_
byoar
_
_
lsoqnug1_rh~
_
~'nrg-.
following
year
received h
_
is
-
-'
.
.
,
·
•
.Tas e
. .
oney
,
wi
-
su<!
·
-- -
.,.
done
.
The drummer, Bro. V:incent
=
d
to
k
<
·>?
·
·
:
Jessfonalqualitythatthislistener
B
_
.
1
d sm thly
ed combo dressed in the latest S.T.L
.
degree from Woos c
· \
} \·.
was
:
<1isappointe~ when he wasn't
.
_
:
th~iu~gr
,
\i~i~~\loopy~and
-
mod fashion; In their
.
robes
.
~~~l!g!
94
:'t6°1~~1~~e!'1~rcit~i~
l'i
'(c,
f
~i
;i;r
1,~~t?i~At~r
O
~~:!::::t::::::::
~t:~~:~ljJ~~~:I{ff#.!
re~
,~~
J;~~~~r";~~;;~~~~tions
>/:
,fine choice for th~ part,hewasm Bro. JamesCargerplayingrythm
_
MAHANA ...
·
complete control
.
all evening.His
gui
_
tar, and B
_
ro. John RUchdo
.
rf.
May, the Beau Brummels re-
Continued f.rom
Page 3
·.:
--.
'
renditiori
•
of"Talking' CaildyBar
·
th b
d
d
:
.
main forever in California.
·
However I became involved
\
'
r /
Blu¢s"
·
was
J
aultless
.
The talk-
~
playing
e
.
ass an accor tan.
and instead of doing a report on
?
<<-
}
GOQD NE
l~HBOR
fm
·
p~
·
{
..
.
'
is deeply involved in the making of
is for "social overhead capital," Robert Bridges, I began a criti-
:::
:
.
,
.·
·
•
·
-
-
•
.
•.
.
.
·
:
this decision. "Change is coming.
not private investment. Roads, cal analysis on the str~ctu~e of
·
,
t
:·::•
Alhanc
_
e for !3rogr~ss
·
reflected
.
The
·
only question is
-
·
under what
schools, housing ~- these ~e bridges in general. The time Just
2r,<
::
tllt
changes ffiatthe ~or~d under
~
·
·
·
auspices and
;-
in whatstyle Latin
essential,
·
·
ruid private capital flew as I grabbed other encylo~e-
,
-.
"·
,
-;
_w';nt aJter Roosevelt s maugur-
.
:
America
.
will proceed along the
cannot or will not supply them. dias iii order to compare the p1c-
/{·
d
a
__ ~ion.t
·
dThet cthangefs h~ve
.
?;thef!.
·
'.•
road to modernization.· This
.is
a
_
.
1
tures
·
of different bridges, both
'
·-;'-
\
.
.
1
rec
,
e
_
a
__
,
rans or~ing
•
.
.
e
particular
.
task of the
_
.
.
United
-
Using Brazil as
an
examp e, famous and unknown.
:.:-/
:
,
rE!l3:ho
_
n
•
_
.
~etween_theUnitedStatE:s
_
-
-
States because Latin America is
Mr. Schlesinger emphasized that
.
/{.:/
{
~~
.
Latm
0
~enc
,
a from one_.11!
_
the
·
imly large underdeveloped
·
techical progress has to be co-
When my girl showed up
·
1
}
{;
-:?i:
,
wp1ch
;
the Umte,d States ~as
m-
·
_,
part of the Westertuvorld and the
extensive with social and cul-
realized that I had again lost an
tr{:i{
\
~1sted
:
·
on_
th~
_righ
_
t of u
_
mlate~al
:
only large
-
western area iil the
tural change. What is called
opprotunity for some solid learn-
-
?::>\,::_
1ntervenhon
}
~to
.
one
·
·
m which
underdeveloped world.''
.
for
·
.
is external assistance and
ing What the hell
-
was my En-
-;!t
~
)
r
:·
,
~l!tical P.qualJ
,
ty was
.-
accepted
·
·
internal reform; since capital gli~h teacher going to do ~ith a
:
//,
:,:-;-
arn911g
'
alLthe
:
·
republic_as
-
of the
The United states,wllich
~
liad
·
investmentbyitselfwillnotcause bunch of drawings of bridges?
<?:--
-
hemisphere on the bast~ of non-
been
-
aware of the need for.moder ... · modernization, both public and
Again my schedule was botched.
':;
~;;
,~::.
:
Jht~i:_yeption." •
,
:
..
;
-:
·
_
.
n1zation in most
·
areas
·
of.the
·
private
investment are ne:-
y:;
_
:
'fr
T11~
:
].h3:'1ge in the
_
toli~
f
of the
:
world, was ''blind to it in Latin
:
cessa!'Y·
My girl ate dinner at my house
:(
·
J
··,,
relationship
:
that
began withJhe
:
_
.
Am
_
enca." From
_
1935 through
_
.
-
·
this time. I got her home early
'
;::°:f.•
·
-Gooci
-
Neighbor
·
printarily hinged
i ·
1960~ the United _States
·
gave.·,
·
•
with reference to the Domini-
though, both because of her father
>;?
·
,".'
oii
:
United
C
States accepta!}ce of •Yugoslavia more
'
•
economic as.,.
,
can Republic, Schlesinger enu-
and because I wanted to get up
:•::::•
<
:,
iion-iriterventio1_1,
>
al}
.
acceptan~e
.
·
sistance than it gave
.
to the whole
merated two points; first, that
·
early and go down to the local
::\
:
::
·
which
:
had
· :
heretofqre
·
· not
·_
been of Latin America. In any case,
there was
.
no
.
clear evidence of town library and once more at-
r
,
·,;
/
,
for
,
thcoming: ~•The ess~rice oftt:ie
:
i
1
the mc;idernization
.
process is
communist intervention; second,
tempt a report.
·
,
_ ·
·
..
· Good
·
Neighbor
·
policy, at least
\
under
.
way in
-
Latin
_
America, and
that even if such intervention ex:--
.
·
·
·
the start. of the Good Neighbor
•
it will not be stopped."
isted the matterwasnotsourgent
When I got home I went right
·'·
·
policy/
was :ts
'.
a
·
redefinition of
·
· ·
·
-
·
' ·
that President Johnson could not
to bed
.
I got up early, went !o
.
legaJ
.
and juridial relations amo~g
·
:=
:
In
·
the
efil'ly
50;sli'nited States-
.
have called upon the services of Mass (thanks to my mother s
the states of the hemisphere with
·
policy
,-
tow.
_
ards
·
L~tin Amer~ca
the OAS.
It
would be better,. in his
memory that it was All Saint's
·
.
·
juridical·
.
equality and
.
general
involved
'
encouraging extensive
opinion, to sponsor a ~hey of
Day) and headed straight for the
· ·
Conimittment to non-interven
e.
·
private investment.Itwasbeliev-:-
'
collective rather than unilateral
lit>:-0:
:
y.
I called my friend from
·
.
. ·
tion
~
This • ;
·
• was a striking
·
ed at that time that this was the
intervention.
M.C. and told him to pick me
change." ,
. ·
besfway
to
modernize the region.
.
...
up there. He said he would but that
.
.....
At its outset, the Good Neigh-
·
In order to
.
ensure the security
In
his concluding remarks,
he was leaving two hours ahead
_
bor poiicy had
.
i•a very limited
that would make this investment
Prof. Schlesinger repeated th:3-t
of schedulebecausesomethinghad
·
.
economic dimension." Non-in-:-
possible, the
·
United States sup-
••reform and development m
come
·
up. I was just getting my
-
tervention meant having "ami-
.
P?rted
,
entren~hed dictatorial,
Latin America are going to
ideas straightened out and my
,
able relations with people like
nght-wmg regimes that kept the
go
·
hand in hand.'' He quoted
sources arranged when he show-
Triuji
_
llo in the Dominican R
_
e-
.
peace but did little for the people.
President Kennedy's remarks
ed up and half and hour early
public."
·
Political contacts be-
For example; '!the Vice Presi
-
that "those who make peaceful
no le~s. so I said hang it, and
tween the United states
-
and the
dent of the United States in that
revolution impossible make vio-
left.
Latin--
·
American nations were
period, Mr. Nixon, paid a visit
lent
.
revolution inevitable." He
-
·
·
to Havana to congratulate Ba-
credited Roosevelt and Kennedy
min
_
ima.
tista on the competence
.
and sta-
as being the progenitor and im-
bility
.
of his government. Like
plementer, respectively, of a vi-
many of
·
Mr. Nix<m's judgments
tal and dynamic Latin American
·
}
:
However, World War II brought
modernization to Latin America
wUh a
.
rush.
It
also brought cor-
responding problems,
·
namely,
.
how
·
t<;,
go about itJ Schlesinger
_pointed out that
_
the
·
United States
'
·
·
··
·
pqlicy which, in the long run,
would enable that area to make
its "distinctive contribution to'"
the civilization of the world."
.
The great need
in
Latin Ameri-
ca, according'toMr.Schlesinger,
.
\-
,
:
.
.
What can I tell you? Academi-
cally, last weekend was totally
shot. I can tell you this though,
the next similar situation, say
Thanksgiving, is not to end up
.
the same. Never again. Nope,
never!
Father Magan is perhaps best
known as the founder of the
Gonzaga Retreat House in Mon-
roe, New York
.
Opened in 19~1,
this was the first retreat house
-
in
·
America designed exclusively
for youth
_
He served as director
of Gonzaga until 1963.
continuing his work with youth,
Father Magan opened the St.
Ignatius Retreat House in Man-
.
llasset, L
.
L,. a
_
nd served as_ its
director until his present assign-
ment to Marist College.
A~rd Winning
Movie
-
s
Scheduled
_.
Brother Joseph Belanger, Dir-
ector of the Marist College Film
Program;
·
has announced the ~e-
ginning of the 6th Annual Film
-
::'estival. The 1966-67 program,
initiated with the presentation of
Federico Fellini's "Nights of
Cabiria" is comprosied of eight
motion pictures, six of which
are award winners.
·
In choosing films for the cam-
pus and mid-Hudson population,
the program directors are guided
by three considerations: the
fil!115
must be of high esthehc or his-
torical
.
interest, they must center
around a
·
major theme selected
for the year, and they mu?t n?t
be readily available otherw1~e m
the area
.
This year's ma1or
theme is The Spiritual Dimen-
sion: God on Celluloid.
The next showing will take
place Nov. 13 with Anselmo Du-
arte's "The Given Word". The
films are shown at 8:00 p.m.
Sunday evenings in the ~ha!Upa~-
nat Theater and adm1ss1on 1s
free. Coffee and discussion fol-
low each showing.
The remaining films in the
order of presentation are:
.
)
Ingman Bergman's "Winter
Light" - Dec. 11.
-
Robert Bresson's "The
Diary of a Country Priest"
Jan. 8.
earl Dreyer's "Day of
Wrath" - Feb. 12.
earl Dryer's "Ordet" -
March 12.
serger Eisenstein's '' ~lex-
ander Nevsky" - April 2·
March conelly
'
s ''Green
.
/Pastures' - April 30
·:
,
...
.Student
3.2.1
3.2.2
3.2.3
3.2.4
3.2.5
3.2.6
3.2.7
3.2.8
f : .. •.
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iling
i
.
'
~
meandering aroWld this . vast piece
.
of real
·
estate we so presilmP.'"
·
·
ti.lously inhabit, that_oiie would be faced with few,
if any, ~r~b_lem~
.
co~-•
cerning
.
things moral; ethical, or legal. The only possibility
.of
an~-·
thing
.
close to either sin, wrongdoing, or lawlessness would be
Sill".'"
cide; and Wlder such morbid con~itions even that would be under-
.
·
standable.
·
But such is not the case.
There are other people,
and
their very existance ·makes for the·
possibilities . ,
;
and probabilities ..• and inevitabilities of human
error .
.
We can hastily define Jiu~an error, then, as that whi.cheffects
other human beings unfavorably, that which inflicts unnecessary
pain, causes grief,
·offends,
frustrates, etc:, etc., etc. What cuases
this is one person's momentarilyforgetting mat these other
.
persons
exist.
Admittediy, because there is s~ch a gr~at numbifr of othe~ pers~ns,
a voiding
all
wrongdoing is virtually
impossible.
But, on the other hand,
some of it can be avoided, certainly more than has been in the past.
'
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that·what I have e~
.
.:.
.:
..
.
;
-
·:.
·
?:
·;
penenced m the past few weeks
:
: .. ·-·'
--
,
:
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is
very nii.lchthe same
'..
asthe·ad~
·
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<
,
,
:
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.ventures
cif
all .tourists~
,
world
i :
·.\:\:
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:
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i·
. _
_,.
.
·.
·
-::(
,~r,w,-,
•
:.
·
·
/
.
_
uWE'RifNUMBER·QNE
.
''
·:
·
Residence
BcJarcL
' .··
C
·.
.
travellers{diploniat~,
.
~nd
,
I'(?ving
.-
.
'
.
.
.
.Presidents
(and/or tneir
-
w1ves) .
.
;:
·
·
over
•
thei'
>
centuries;
·
,
'
I'm
~
sure
:
· ..
~
·:
·:
.
:
-
.
. •
<J
gl~~~~~~ft:t!El~J1sP6trit~~
\··
·
·
'\
t
::)
-
.
Egypt'lhaifthe pyramids. Corn;.;
< .
·
..
..
wallis
·
foilild more
·
aL.Yorktown
"
.
·
than Southel'
.
Comfortand
Ho
Chi
·•
·
·
.Minh
is giyijlgHenryC~bc>lLodge
.
.
·· ,
.
a
,·
grand tour for
_
l1is
·
Am~rican
·
.
.
dollar. What I mean to say 1s that
:
,
.
.
·.
we builcl up
·
certain.suticonscfo~
·prejudices
·
aoou_t other"i:ieopleand
·
other countries only to discover
·
at one
-
time or. ati.other
·
that they
are false to
·
a:
degi:'~
0
e.
· ·
·
·
On the college campus, whei'e a large number of individuals are
almost forcibly entombed in what has become known as the "dormi-
·
tor'y situation," the
,vord
.
.
might
be
"consideration" (in higher circles
than that which we are about to discuss, the word i~
II
love," but
try to throw that out onto a collegecampus). Implied by "consider-
ation'' is "coricern," taken from the oft said but rarely practised
·
platitutde, ''concern for fellow man.'' .
·
.. Discusses
.
Pro
blenis
··
.-·
Lond~n is ~o(the'.
t;
swinging"
•j•
:,_
..
city of
·
the
.
Sixties
·
_
that
.
.
Time
·
•
.
magazine portrays it. Oh, for,a
',
,
few jet.;.setters it is~
·
but for the
·
average
Londoner,
-~·
ror
the
·
Ainericari student here, it
.
isvery
,
The
·
Re;idents Board
·
helt its
·
problemr
·
or
·
criticis1n slid~ by
·
much like New York or Boston or
Teichnian
.
has a point. Teichman has a number of points
~--niore
first
.
meeting
.
this semester on
__
without discussicin.cotisideration
··
any other Amerip
_
an
·
city.
:
:>.
than we as students
:
care to adinit. And, although we would rather not
·
Wednesday, Sept.
14~
During the
.
and actio.~:
•
t
·
:
·/
'
.
.
.
.
~
, .
.
'
·
.
.
_ .
.
':'
.-
•0°
talk, or even think anymore about it, we do have to concede that this
first few weeks of
·
school, the
. ·
,
·
..
•·
:/i
· .
.
·
-
·
. · -...._
'
Mods are as unusual (and
·
·.
year's sophomore class exhibited more inhuman traits thanhas ever
membets
·
ofthe Board met;twice
·;.
The controver
.
si~l topic in the
ghastly) here as
·in
NeY{ York --
:
been seen or experienced at Marist.
·
·
··with
·
.
the freshmen on a floor-to-
·
.
·
dorms at the present is the inter
_
-
·
· ·
(I've seen more in Pe>ughkeepsie.)
.
.
.
.
•
flo~r basis.- The purpose C!f the
..
.
..
gration of the _f~oor~•
.
! •
Th.eBo~d
_
·
.
I
.did
see one,
.though.
It Y{as the
.
Originally, there .was a valid reason for establishing the tradi-
·
·
.•
first meeting was to explam the
.
has alreadr. met w1~ ~r
~
Br~an
.
·
,
other day as Lrolinded a corner
·
..
tional practice
kn
won as hazing. There was something behind it and,
·
functions
.
and procedures
·
of the
and the floor proctors, discussing
>
oil
Osford Street on
my
way to the
difficult as it is to recall, that something was somehow
-
related to
Board
to
·
the new students~ The
aUength this topic, buUt is
•
stilL
.
London School
•
of Economics.
·
"concern for fellow man." Whether the purpose gr_ad~ally lost itse~f
second
:
group of meetings. con-:-
·
~
.
to
early to piak~·coil.c'rete
'
s~te..:
There it stood
.
. dangling on the
·.
~.
,
..
'
;
..
over .a period of years, or whether
_
the sadistic mdividuals of
.
this
cerned
·
academic problems of ments, .. conclllinons or· adJust-
·
·
corner
.
.
.
Iike a,ChineseJantern --•
,
.
.
.
.
.
y~ar'steam, lost
it
~emselves
i~
rio _lon~er the
.
question. We must . fre~hme~ at M~rist
'
The B.o~r
.
d
.
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,·
,.
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.
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\· ; <
admit t11at there 1s Ill?, purpose; and s~mply forget it.
,
.
,:
,
.
.
.
:·
t·
/
;>';
cuslllg
·
other
.
topics
:
concermng
:
;\
B03,fq
· :·
h~
y
.
15~e~
.,-
;:.
lll
0
operatle>
_
n~
>,:
the
.
P,aptist
and Marie
Antoinette
r
,:',;
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.
.
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·
life;
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Many,Judiciaryyrecedents have
.
Its reeri
>
capelangilishedOverifs
<
'••.:·<
·
-~
:
on~ Imni~diate question to dis~uss, assuming there will be Mzing_
..
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·
·
.
··•• ·'
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.
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be
.
en
·
s~t which
·
s~o~!d ~onttibi.lte
;'
re/E'dwaidfan jacket
/
giving
it
;:
.
:.-:::::
it ;
1
.
I
·
.
;,.
.
·•
·
_
next
·.
year,· rs whether
.
or no~
.
this year's
•
_freshman class
.
should be. - .·
A
house _comm1tteeco_n~1~tmg
•:
to
··
.
.
_
better. self.
,·
d1s?1plmg
.
·
lll
•
the
·•
·
all
.
the
..
•
.
appearances
';
of
;
a
•
man/::
\
.
/.,'.
permitted to
.
take care of 1t
.
wh
_
en
.
the.
,time
comes'. After all,: tl1e
of four
::
sen_1ors
.
has been m1tl~ted
.
~orn_is.: T~e Boar!J.
.
i~ pleased ~at
;
:This
i111,1Sicrn was quic~lydispeU.;.
.
.
·
:\
>,
class was ex{!osed
to
01:1ly the worst practices, the mo~t unorgamzed
by the ,R.es1der1ts _Board
to
,
h~d!e
·
its
,
JUd1c1ary h_as not
.
yet
.
bee
_
n
ed
by its
tight
(yello
,
w) bell
~bot
_
-,
,
<'
_
;:_
.
:
_
.
team
·
(refernng es{lecially
.
to the Kangaroo
· .
Court fru:-ce),
.
ru:id pro-
..
any pro
_
blems;wh1ch
.
may
_
arlSJ 1n-
:
.
called to
.
act th1
_
s semesteL Th~
,;
toms
,
and
sequined slippers (thei'Et
:
:-.::,::,
:.,.
.
;
b;tblf: the most
·
unsu~cf:ssful class ever
to
gothroug~ hazmg (noUo
·
sh~eh~ Halk
· ,
.
.
.
····
·. ·
.'
.:
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'
.
,
.
·
_
.
,
:
·
:·
Jeaves·!Ilore
time for the Boar
_
dto
\
_
are n</other words)
:
.>
":
c.
~
·:
,
,r
-
tt·
:<
.·::
,
·
mentwn the most d1sllked class as a result of hazmg) .
.
Soiµehow,
-
.
..
,
,
.
.
;
..
·
·
..
• ,
'.,
:
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the !Den
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.
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(
tors anq th~ admi11istra~rs
,
of the
·
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left hurriedly;,
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of
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fr
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_Halllrnond.-'67,
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are
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This committee is to re-examine theJmdgest of;indi~
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three factors not normally admitted by the
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nouveau riche of the in-
cards, hazing. Iiow
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aboiit me?
l
.
not
be
rubber.:.~-~~.()~ by ~E!
.
~oun~1i. s1mpl,y
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because
·~e
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tellectual life who love objective, spontaneous inspiration and se-
am
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the
.
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caged
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canary so rudely
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cur ity.
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attacked in the article, , 'Marist
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m~
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of
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the
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equal!,y:,
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is
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job of
a cOUege i,aper
to
;;k
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we
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to
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fo
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wfere i:W:sdi:fect
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granted Q}e :Y~mgs
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and t!tat. on
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th~;!?~!s
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mto l~fe, man, goals,;-
_God
(pard?n
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my
_melo!}ra~~
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and "llberal arts
·-
for daily
:
sick
'.
or
t
well·
;
:wtiere
·
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-
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gsant, the Club proce
7
~ed
to
m~e its co_mm1ttme~t§
.
for
:
_
th~J3~~R!1:!
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experience" tone of
.
voice, but this too 1sa
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qu~s~1?n)~
.
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.
•
.
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night
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wa_s
'i;'irivate
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sleep;
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and. day full
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of
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cunous
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g~stion that!}le GQunc1l,m all ~iberahty, loan_
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the_Club
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Co~l
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a_t
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a
c;~bc~
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po~t m its develo~- . smiling people;
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and .
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doll~rs
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rath~r:·
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grantJt, The mannE!r
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Continued
011
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Page:.t
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,
•
these excessive parentheses annoy you, that's too bad.)
·
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we at Marist can s
.
·
tep ba.c~
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~om th
.
e
.
minor
<i:i
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.
ce
.
s of pe
.
tty
•. ·
'
Incidentally,
·
.
dcni't'
.
~dm!}ili:5h
.
,
.
.
. · ,
.
·
~
-
.
_
THE
·
CIRCLE
'>
:·'
·
my
'
fresh-freshman
.
.
roqmmate
.
officials (student and Qtherwise) we see a vibrant example of growth
too inuch. Just tell hini
to
·
cheer
·
THE CIRCLE,
the
o
·
fficial newspaper
..
:
of Maris(
:
.
CQllege,
·•
and liberality not normally associated with Catholic education; we
up
·
•
and smile; and
as
the re;;
Poughkeepsie camp~, is edited and published bi-weeklybyand in
couldn't even comp~re M.C. of 1956fo·M.C. of 1966, Only if we,"the
.
maining coUege_ years pass, his
the interest o~ the students of Marist College, Pot1ghkeepsie,
student body, develop our spirit of questioning, wiU the college (and
.
smile wiffturn to song and
it
will
New York 12601. THECIRCLE is a member of Collegiate Press
ou=selves) continue to grow. Only ifwe're interested enough
to
push!!
be the sweet melody of •uccess
Servi·ce
·
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
· -·
·
Willing to try to make sometfiing
·
better out of scill'_lething that isn't
-
·
·
·
·
:s
•
too 11ot!
·
··
..
.
.
.
.
· .
.
·
.
·
Last year I recall a general theme of "Stu
.
dent Apathy'' articles
always popping up; these could have heen copled
·from
the Notre
Dame
.
Paper --
..
there is always a segment of any student body
•
which is worthless. The cir
.
.
,
.
.
.
which
is
worthless.
-
The Circle is trying to take
.
a step forward (a
.
..
.
sign of the times?)
.
and could very easily fall on its face; well, woe
to the wicked man wbp fear judo chop
to
stuck out neck;
·
.
.
I don't think it's normal for an article to "compliment" the
•
college -- so I apologize and promise never to ,let it happen again.-
.
.
_,
.
:
·
'
'
Oh, yes,
my
birdnanie is Jim
·
Britt.
Editor's Note:
~
·
assume
.
you are referring
fu
the article
.
written
by
Bob Jakobs,
whose roommate is Burt
·
Koza.
·
:
Incidentally; Burt' has a real
canary for which Bob has no great
·
affection,
Thanks
anyway.
.
.
·
.
·
..
El>ITORIA°LSTAFF
·
--:.-
,
.
Editors~in-Chief • •••••••
-·
••
:ed
Lowe,- Georg
·
f
.
Men
.
endez
M~naging
•
Editor •• ••••
·
•••••••
·
••• •
.
• Ray, He
-
~lin,
FMS
Hews
Editor • • ." •••• .- ••
.
~
••• · •••
·
~ ••• D~ve
Healy;
.
FMS
.
..
Feature
E4itor • ••• •
:·
• ••
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$ports Ecfoor .
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Copy
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a~k
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Roch~,
.
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Business 1"anager ••••••• •• ••
·
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Marty
_.
~agg~rty
.
Circ•lation),tanager · .
-
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Mik•
E•p
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o;itcf
Fon1ty
Advisor : ••
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•••••••
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Or.
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bad
.
worn down the
·
batteries.
. ·.
chological Development Associ-
·
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-
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,
_
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what
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It's
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a
four
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.
.
.
.
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.
.
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teacher has first
.
of all a annual underraduate publication
ation (Psi Delta), formerly the
•
·.·, :
:.
da1t"'.
·
weekend/and
;
I want to
:
get
:
•·
Af~r a Jew short remarks to
de~p interest in his subject;
this
initiated
las
spring,
-
has
Mr.
.
,Psychology Club~ is showing
<':
:
·
b~rn~~
-'.
So
I'll
cut my tw~ afte_r"".
·.
my
,
sister. answered mostly b~
is complemented by a desire to Skau as !ts fac_ultyadvisor. ''The
-
great prospects for the coming
··
·:
.·
·
·
noon
:_
classes
·
and
.
get: a ride with
·
,
tears,
I left the house to. pur-
communicate with others -- hop. Journal is designed to encourage
year. At its meeting on
Oct.
5
\
'
a
,
-r~iend:
i
But
·
mid.;.t~~ms
·-:
are
:,:
chase a
,
nE;W set of batteries. L
_
ing
to
shed some light, share ~rsonal rese3.Fc~ in the field_ of
plans were made for a trip ,.
J
:·
coming up; }'.
.
d
·
better
:
brmg-some
;·
.
:_
,
took
mr
time
·
to
_
ancJ from
:
the
•
some reflections •.
.1:
•. :
l
history by publishmg outstanding
. -
its members
·
to Mattewan state
·
· •
books; At least it'lhnake
a
good
·
s\ore, and when I finally arrived
. .
,
- ;
..
•
.
-
.
•
.
.
papers written by undergraduates
Hospital under the leadership of
•:-:
.
·•
impression
.
on mom and dad.''
:_
ho~e
mr
father started a long
Above:
some of the motiva-:-
for their courses. It is published
Mr. Schmitz, who is presently
·
·
· :
·
·
..
· ·
,
.
:
·
·
·
·
.
·'.'discussion"
on w~y I sho~dn't tion for seven years of chalk and each spring.
affiliated with the hospital. Fol-
'.
; :
·
Well.
that's how
1t
started,
a
.
have the car that night. I fmaJ.ly
lectern work on the part of Mr.
lowing the meeting, the first of
.
.
_;: ·
great
·
weekend. I-:only
.
had two
·
won
·
o~t,_ thoug;~, and
I arrived George Skau. He has taught at
. Mr. Skau feelsthatMarist.like
the Psi Delta film series was
.
.
.
·
·
reports due (which
I
hadn't start;.
a~~t fifteen minutes late at my
st. John's
·
University for three any institution, has many advan-
presented, The Key, a movie
".:.
_
,
:
ed
yet) and t~o tests the follow-
girls house. (Thank God supper
years and is now in his fourth tages and problem spots in its
much reminiscent of The Snake
.
.
.-
·
:
irig week~ Iwas
'
bound to get some
.
wasn't re~y; "!at's
_
a most
·
.
year
at
Marist.
structure. But he believes that
Pit, dealing with conditions in the
···
•
.
:W.C?
.
rk
~
done/and beside~, it would
_
·.
feamthbaerr'ass
__
asttmi.gtudsei~tuoawbarond, mane ddi
·
dnh~rt
the school's biggest advantage at
"modern" mental institution .
.
give me
·
the opportunny
to
use
Mr. Skau
.
received his Bache-
the moment is its youth. Marist
the facilities of the locallibrary.
help the situation).
lor's degree at Manhattan Col-
is capable of shaping its own
I
· · ·
-·
;_.
·
·
lege. his
M
.
A.
atNiagaia Univer-
futur~, unencumbered by the rigi-
:
_
·
:
.
_'
·
.
in
the
words of some
-
American
The party that night was great.
sity, and is presently completing dity mat exists at some older
philos<>pher,
'
f'~IGHTliW'
_
i
·
· •
.
.It broke
-
up about l: 3
o.
Neither
his doctoral work at
st.
John's.
·
institutions.
I
;
· .
.
:: •
.
'·
·
·
·
·
.
·. ·
·
·
• ·
·
~
.
·
·
·
one
·
Qf ils felt like
.
going home,
His
,
Master's thesis dealt with
i
·,
'
: '
.
:I
.
M;
we~k~nd was well planned
'
so w~
-.
st0PPed for a
.
.
drink ana
"The Far East Question at
Projected plans of the Associ-
ation include the inauguration of
its
lecture series on Nov.
2
when Dr. Hodgkinson will discuss
the
current trends on
the
American college campus. Other
lecturerers in the series will
include Dr. Patten, speaking on
alcoholism, and Dr. Louria, who
will deal With the problem of
narcotics addiction.
,
·
th
.
h
•
·
·
d
·
t
·
·
·
1
ts
.
then proceeded down to the beach
It
t
,
·
·
. ·
·
.
. .
oug ,
.
m
or er
?
give m
_
e
o
#or
.
a li"ttle submari·ne
·
race wat-
Ya a," and for his doctora e he
1c ·
• ·
·
· ·••
of Ume to see family and friends.
·
•
is writing on Woodrow Wilson and
In that future, Marist will owe
a great deal to the many faculty
members who, like
Mr.
George
Skau; are
·
presently giving so
much of their time and energy
for the good of the ~ollege.
! . :
_-
Friday night would be
.
spent with
·
·
ching.
,
·
the American presidency.
'
the
-
boys.
,
We'd hit-a few of the
.
·
.
focai
·
bars, and
·
-
maybe
_
have
·
a
·
·
I forget what time
:
I
got home
:
few
:
racks of poold wouldn't get that
·
night but
·
I
do know that
I
.
home too late. That way I'd get just barely made it out of bed for
, .
·
some studying
_,-
done Saturday
·
th
.
~ 1:15 Mass.
·
Chief among his extracurri-
..
·
·
d
·
d th
t fth
cular activities is his position
as
.
morn~g
_
an spen
·
_
e
:
res
O
e
Arr~gemaits bad been made
moderator of the History Club.
day with
.'
my girl. And I wanted
.
to hit that
·.
par.ty
-
Saturday night.
·
the previous
·
night for my
.
girl
Speaking in this capacity, be
..
-:
·
.
:
"
··
·
·
·
·
and myself to double
·
with an-
remarked that "this year, the
;
Believe
-
it
or
not/my kind arid other
~
couple on the Sundayafter-'
club, especially its officers, has
[
·
:
·
.
.
Students Involved
.
In CCD Program
_ ·
understanding friends were sym-
noon; we'd go
to
the movies. It
really taken the initiative. They
.
.
.
·.
pathetic to my ca~se, ~d I
-
was
.
was
·
fairly good• as far as_ movie
don't hesitate
_
to go ~ut ~n th~ir
'. 'Involvem_ent" is a
·
word used
.
duces the total attendance. From
'
home by
-·
11:30 Friday mght •
.
_
Of ~~tes go,
_but
not as great as tt.e
.
own _to orgamze som~thmg. Im
quite often,
m
our contemporary
all
'
of the teachers' reports it's
·
·
.
.
.
.
~ourse;rw~ very:grateful to the mght befor~; Well, anrway, she
lookmg foward
t?,
an excellent
parlance. If it'me~s b
_
eing con-
been found that their small groups
..
.
.
.
.' .
.
/
guys
·
foi: n:qt-pres_sin_g me to
_
stay
-:
h~d to be m early b~cause
.
she
year for the club.
cerned about a situ_abon, con-
of young Christians are respon-
.
,
--
._. ·_.:
_
:_,
_
:.
o
.
ut
;
l~t¥,
,
~d
t
~nv1tedJhem in
.
had a
_
test the followm~ day an,~
cerned enou~h to pitch m and
sive {Class numbers range from
;.__:
_.
,
J~
c:!!,,.~r,-
f~r
}
o
.
~~
:~
~~
t~
~b,~
~
-'J>efe>re
_
they
:
,
b_ecause her f~
_
~er ~a
_
d •asked
.
ifuheaclub s~te\
.
th.e year
!)ff
help,
_
then th1S year's CCD pr~-
,
5-2.5).
_
.
·~
-
-
•
·
:;::;::,
·
:
·
~
·:
.
"litt
,
tlie
;<
road:·
·
.
·
,~-:
--
f-
:
•
~
-
-
-:.,-
':',
•
•
..
••
.
-
.
:""
.
!
~
""."':::·
he
_
r,
,
,!o
·
,
~
-
h..9
,
~~
~
-
~Y
.
ll~
_
e.
-
~~
-
was.
a
;.,,
.-
o
W
-
_
_
.,
_
_
\>Jl!:~Lo
L
~~
-
1
xity._h~~g
-
•
gram
•
sponso1:ed
·
by
·
the College
15
-
-
·
.
-
·-
·
· ..
-~
-
•·
·
- ·
- .
.
·
--·
~
.:;J
·
:
:
.::
,;
>·
~:
:
·
_
:
'.;\
·
1,:~·::::J'f
.:::\
-;:
:
:?
<
?:~:.'.:.:_::·
-:
-
·:.
:;:;
:
-
~
·,,---:··
"
1.fJµe
_;;:
~it
toucliy
-
wh
_
e~ I took
-
her
..
.
·
orga~u~ed a ~series of le
_
ctures to
an area
··.
of such
·
involvement.
other factors in program im-
t
.
.
_
:_:::
•
: / t ?
:
A
f
f~o
:-
Pie
·
·
_
'follo~ing'moining
;:·
h_qme~ We had.b.een d~layed_ get-
-.
_·.
be ~ven, for the most
_
part, by
Already underway for the past
provement include teaching aids.
::~
--
~-
.
~'
.-
::
/
,'
my
n
ather
·.
c;ime
:~•
into
:
the
:
i:oorn
.
-~
tmg
_
out of the restaurant parking
-
.
M?-fist faculty members. Several
several weeks, the prospects look
Texts, films. and periodicals are
<~
-
·
, ·
:
'
,
;
·
·
.
'
a.Jid
.'
deriiandetf th
'
at
·we
·
·
end
..
tlie
·
·-
lot
_
ana
.
h~r father
-
was impatient-
.
:
people f!om outside
,
the college good that the
1
66-
1
67
CCD situ.;.
.
· ..
-
'.
. .. ·
.:.
.
.
:
..
c,irc
i:
·
~e .
.'
I
:
reiuctantly
."
said
··-
ly
,
waiting at tlie door·
·
.
·
com~wuty (for example, peace
ation will be the best on record
~~~ ~:i~od~~~
~~~tftfiJar~
.
,
:
"
-
:
·
·
.
·
.
:
gobd
.
-niglit
,
mainly because they
·
·
•
·
.
. ,. .
·
.
·
.
·
.
.
·,
candi9at~ Lrdr lof m) have
-
also
thinking. It's a rarity if science,
.
c
•
•
were
.
·
walkmf' out tlie door
·
with
..
l
,c
tol~
,
her_ to
>
meet me
at
the
.
.
-
been mvi ed o ec ure.
Presently there are thirty-two
.
evolution, or theor_ies on the ori-
.
:, · .-
.
..
five dollars and some odd cents
·
µmversity llbrary after her last
·
·
people working
.
in six parishes
gin of the wiiverse, do not enter
·
.
·
:
.
·
wtiich for"merly belonged
,
-
~ me. cla~
_
s ~e following day.
·
·
.
.
of the Poughkeepsie area. Among
the classroom iri some form.
>
1
,:
:
realize
,
d
•
too,
'
that
111y
'
.''well-
.·
· •
·
,
·
.
·
'
1
•
.
•
-
one of the club's most notable
the teachers
·
there are twenty-
.
The "gap" between religion and
.
:
plaru:ied
',,
weekend'.'
/
·,
had
:'
been
-<
•
-
Sunday_mght
1
sat down
-
with a
·
contributions to Marist
is
pro-
seven student brothers and five
the world is being closed. This
.
..
•
·.
s\jgbUy
:
cieraii.ged
/
B
·
ut.
;
t
could
·
_·
beer and
:
the
TV
.
set. After a_n,
•
bably the assistance
it
renders
lay students.
_
The parish assign-
•
is
what the CCD program hopes
,·,
,.'.
)
tiake
.
alli:>wances
:"
f6i that-"-1 still
-
.
who
.
~tnd1es onSunday night with
Jn
the organization of the annual
ments include: St. Augustine's
to
.
demonstrate to the
young
:· .
.
:_
·
::'<
had
·
·
mreetric>redays.'-
.'.
'.
,
.
·.
> · .
.
tw?
~
~ore days
_
of vacation left7
·
Roosevelt Symposium. The cost
-·
(Highlana), St. Mary's (Pough.)
Chirstians
:
theinter-relationbe-
':{;;;f
%t
f
~
f
{itE~f
:ii
~.~~
F
i
.
IB~~~~x
i"ci~~~g
1
e:Vfi~r ~:
·.
~Th1~[~t" Far~"~l~;gri!;
.
~~iiitr~[:~£tJ:.tri~ii~1
.
.
tw:;,~·:,::~::;m::::~~~
:: '.:'
::
.:.<
ffierid'stelephone calE
I was iri-
•
hbrary_ until a
_
fter lunch. I sat
.
History Club to anticipate. The
tion (Bangall).
·
and the amount of involvement
t:,(-/
:./.
:
;}
viteci
:
tocJihilerathe{tiouse
·
and
·
.
d
_
own ma quiet come~ of the success
,
ofthis
.
year'sendeavor
admirable, these are not the
;
~_.,;,;?
;
,:;:
_::
atter
.
tha(we'd
,
go to 9le~party.
)i
_
brary all_~et for a soh~ three
was wiquestionable.
·
Mr. Skau
One factor which hasmadethis
ingredients of success. some-
'\:
.)'.
c,
:.:..-
-
ThaFwas
'.
OKby me
·
and so an
.
hours W?rk.;
I
started_
Wl
th
.
th
e
felt the
.
response
··
·
excellent:
year's structure
a
better one is
thing will only be accomplished
·
.
:
:
_
; :
'
:{
\(\
hb'ur
:
:1atEi"f
/
wlie1rshes'toppe
·
dtalk-
·
normal Ju~pmg off pomt -
.
'-
the
'.
·
" . • • people came from a six
the introduction
.
of
night
classes
if the teacher has something to
~f
:::
/
/
1
C.:/
iri.g
;'l
safd(}\\111 to do some study-
encyclo~edia..
•
state area, some travelling as
for junior
and
senior high school
give. While there is
a
certain
>
~;:
:
'::
'
/
'-
'.
·.<
J
ng
.
I flipped on the radio for some
,
.
.
.
. ·. ·
Continued oti P ag~ 7
far as 250 miles in order to
students. Three of the four par-
glamour in being where the action
.
·
make the sympos1um. Teachers
.
ishes
where high s_chooler•~ are
is,
it is
_
still the teacher himself
·
·
·
..
':
·
.:
:
~,
~
•· ·
from
·
more than 200 colleges and
taught have ~ese mght sessions.
.-
who has to sweat it out, trying
·
-
100 high schools were invited this
·
.•
These classes_ are conducted on a
.·
to gain insight and knowledge
year • . . The fact of Marist's
yol~tary b:LSis,
.
thereby result-
.
from !)is College and personal
being a small college was no
mg m a high mterest present
studies in order that others
.
deterrentto such noted speakers
a~ong the ~tudents. Naturally,
might receive something worth-
,
._
..
_.
·
,
,_
-,,,~,:o
:
:
·
:.
·
.
_<:
;Y
:
)3.~r
_
ry
_
Keayeny~
_
Fwf
such as Arthur Schlesinger, Jr..
this nqn-obllgatory system re-
while.
··
·
. "
·
.
,
•
··
·
·
Frank Friedel, Jam~s
·
Mac-
Gregor Burns, Adolph Berle.
As
·.
_
;;-
)::/
'/(h
'
:
blefo
for
:
a
.
paper and the Marist. help~ som~ guys out
_
this way.'
a matter of
fact,
no one invited
/:
/it
->::
·
<
:
college
·
ciRCLE' just
-
_
inight''fit
.
•
~
Joe'
.
I. ~mpl1ed,
.
1
·
·
you
.
waste.d
to speak at the
symposium
either
f
,>
,
.
:;_
:
;: ·
:
irito
this c~tegory. ButtlJ.is article your hfe, and you rj;! a no good
. -
last year or this year has re-
::
·:.<":::
·:
:
·
)::
fos•t
·;
an
·
_
atterript
-_-
at self.;.justi-
·_
bum,,,
_
and
..
you're two columns
,
.
fused.'
·
·
: ,
:
,,-<·,/
,'
ficatfon
~
-
: A
t'sabo
_
utasickness,
~
l
.
ong.
:
.
•
.
,
. ·
.· . .
-
.
·
'
but
:
:{ sickness that only happens
'
.
·
,
;
tq
other
;
peoJ?le~ not
io
us.
•
. ·
:;
Sorry
._
about
that . .
:
;
-
·
~
-.
.
.
Like so inany
'
oilier p~ople in
.
:
,,.
.
.
.
•
..
..
.
. .
.
.
~
.
.
'
our lives Joe_ tm:ilecl into a thing;
.
J.•'
Joe
X
·
was
supposed
to
write he was
an
eight year sober, he
-
.
·
this artfole
-
.
·
•
·
• but Joe
·
x
got
·:
was smart,
,
he w~ tall, he was
··
;
.
sick~ Joe
:X
is
an
alcoholic; a
.
sh9rt
-
, lje was thin~ he
·
was fat.
major
-
in jour,nalism at Fordham He was
_a
bunch_ o~ thi_ngs
I_
tagged.
University, he had
all
the re-
on to him
_
t<? hm1t his existence
.
:·
·
.,,
:
,:
quirements· Joe
X
-·
was a sick and make him harmless, so he
writer.
· ·
'
·
·.
···
.
wouldn't penetrate.
-
,
·
·
·,
S~rry about ~at •.•
:
·
Sorry ~bout that •••
.
.
.
Joe would hav~ serv~d
a
pur-
·
Joe
~ust
h_ave beeµ th~ing
.
pose;
·
:
he would have ,med up
,
.
about this 3-!h~le, about bimsell,
~
some space onthispaperandplus and abouth1S hfe. Joe got drWlk.
·
· .
he migtit have wised some guys
.
up •
.
•
-:
•
but he probably would
.
Sorry about that. /.
> ·
·
ha
,
ve
.
~l,led
.
up
space better.
·
.
.
Sorry
about
that • • •
I
would
like
h>
write
more, this
is only one column.
.
·
Another addition to
Marist
·
is
the prospective formation at the
.college of a chapter of Phi Alpha
.
Del~ the national HistoryHonor
Society. About a dozen student's
-
have
.
already asked
.
to apply for
membership to Phi Alpha Delta,
· which Mr. Skau would like to see
·
embrace '•an intellectual elite
among the history majors at
Marist."
·
·
"To meet the requirements
of the society,"
·
he explained,
11
accreditation
.
from the Middle
·
·
Atlantic States
.
was necessary.
Now that this is a reality we are
applying to the national head-
quarters of the society for
a
charter needed to set up a formal
chapter.'
.
~
'
?
.
::
.
.
,>
"Joe"
l
sa,id/
11
you
know
what
:
Sorry
about
that. .
:
.
'-
·
.:
· .
.
The
"Journal
of
·
History," an
.
'
,
.
'>
-rn,.,ir ,,:
.
ltf4«"1
()Of'!~~E_li°
,,,
CoJ>"~l"<,-
'1HE
·
11u,,,,,u,.
~,: .,-HE
-..,0111.0.
,L
011
ey
-r1tE:-
v-1A'I'
"1fls
.
~ll.1'1PLf-
•••
M'{ ,1A.1C€."i'eS '{
JflM,Rt-T
ot-J
1'1fl
Q~~Ttl-c~
yo.,i:
Ur.SB)!»~ •••
...._
i
4
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j
j
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·
.-
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.
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.
.
i~
~-
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mor1es __ of the
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sib1ation
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and
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:,
~1ghte()usly,
_
albe1t
i
5-lande~o~ly,
· ::
thro.ugh
.
the
'
·
eff6rts of Bro. F;elix
>
.
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ten f!lms
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The )footb~l_ Club; !ealiz1!1g
·
_
the implications of m_volvm~ the~-
,
moral
?
·
development
- _:
bec~e
.
:. '
.
sµndry probl~
.
111~
:
w~~qh'
_
conf~<;>n~
·
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tl.14:!Jer pases
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·
. selves
.
m def1c1t spend~g while still ?n a shakr fin'.311~Ial basis, g1r_d
_
·
available
·
to the
·
student body· of
.
.
.
:
modern
m,~.
.
i:
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.
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them?elves ~d set out to do battl
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e w1
.
~ the
_
Ph1l~tm~s. The Co~_c1l - Marist C9llege.
:.:.
·
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·
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e sort of b1ckermg, n~me-callmg, back-bJ:!mg
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'· ·
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Jo
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rt
.
1
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s~~anhc quibbling expec~
.
e~ of
a Max
Senn~~~OVIE.OR
9NE
:
OF
.
_
Tele-
:
·
_.-
:
Every Tuesday
.
evening at eight
•
_
.:·
.
Vle!fer~
·
ad_1o~rn
·
:·:
to.
:
:
a
.
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ore
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hea_rt-rendm
.
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g melodram
.
at
·
•
·
c
.
attempts. Pat <;:ullum
.
. ,
.
o'clock
·
.
a
.
half-hour
-,
movie
:·
is
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fee
_
·
h
.
ou
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room
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Treasurer and ch1e_f
·
spokesman for the Football
.
Club, presenteu
,.
shown in the student center
'
the
·
.;
.
.
·
foi:mally
_.
-
d1scuss
.
tl,l.e
:
Parhc~ar
.:
•
a~o~tic1sm;
:
~org~y~~e~s,
,:
.
~E!~~
:
):/
.
:<
,
his organization's case. He was ably assisted by Mr. Hammond, ater. The work
.-
of the
·
,
paulist
.
:_
topic under consideratfon
:
<
Toese
.
-
:
pa1r;
-:
ail~th~
·
,
,
lli?~all~y
,
}
>
f
~v
-
~r
(
i
,:
·
:
'(·
:-
who; enduring vindivictive personal affr.ont,s, eloquenUy pointed
_
to
·
·
-
:
·
·•
'
·
-
· ·
·
'
·
·
·
·
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·
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•
;
,;
.
Mr~ Hammond further alitictect" to lliefact
'
that the Vikings, unlike
.
.
.
/.::":
,
.
many other campus organizations, had coinrriittments which had to be
·
.
·
,
··,
·
.
. .
. .
.
.
.
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Bi.it
all
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is not weU tfiat ends well! Thef$
are
other facts to be con-'-
.
• .
. "
,
•"•
.
;
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, ••
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sidered: the FootballClubdidnotsolicitthegrantfro
.
i:ri
:
theCouncil
' .
_,
-
-.
·-·,l;'\<
.\lJ
.
-
.
.
-
.
the platfi
.
~rms of bot
.
h p
·
a
.
ities
.
.
-.
in ~e las
·
·
..
.
ts
..
tude
·
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TGcive
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rnirten
.
t elec""
'
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.
.
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:}i\:>':
tions promised money
to
the gridders and the
:
money was freely
,
;.
, ·
.·
'
.
\k. ·,h
granted i~ ~e CouncWs
.
ofiginarbudget;
-
!he
notio11 of
¥r:
~
Alwan
:
. , ·
,.
:
.
,:
',\~;·
:
l\ ·
.
•
.,
thatth_e V1kmg? support ther_ns.elvesby hold_mg car
-
washes and bake
.
·
·,
..
·,.
·
.
·
r~
:
.
· sales 1s as ludicrous as askmg me
b:,
contribute money to Ed Lowe,
.
·
our editor, in order
_
that there might b!:! a newspaper for
_
which I
.
might write; an organization which performs
a
furtction such
.
as the
. ..
·,
.
_
_
Marist,College Football Club should never be forced
,
to
;
go on bended
.
;
\'~:-
• .
.. .
~e_e before
_
a Stud en~
·
Council (liiiiety p~rcent of which
was
wiop~osed
.
¥
:
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m its election) beggmg for money which had been freely promised!
.
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.
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O'Corinelf.
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!lisp~tch
_
eci the cruiser
0
:Ir_iciiaria,;,
-
.
inlfof -the
'
·
Dominica.n tev~lll~ton
:-;
·
·
polis to
·
Montevideo on a
·
"good-
.
in
1965.
He note\:tthat, h;i.dwenot
wm
·:
_
c~ui§>e." The admiral in
-
acted, the
.
probability of a Com-
charge was instructed to place
:.
murtist take-:over.would have be-
_
>-
his
'
vessel at
·
the disposal of the
:
·
come a certainty
:
:.
~
.-
_·
Urugiia.yari.
O
goyei-iunenL
·
:
.
There
•: -.,
.
.
,
, ·
-
:;:-;
··,,
.~
,
-
·
•.
::
.,·
·
:
·
· ·
.
was no
Nazi
revolution in Urugu-
,
·
'.
.
The Alliance for Progres~ had
.
.
ff.
<-
...
ay
;
,
'··
.
·:
•
,
_
.
·
"
·
.
·
been stymied in the past
·
by
,
the
·
·
>
_,..
·
·
·
..
•
··
'
Commurtists
·· -'
who
·
used
:
terror
,
,
,
.
...
:
.
.
•
:
:
,
.
'
,
.
·.
"
.
.
..
,
.
.
.
:
:
.
.
.
.
,
'
'
.
. .
.
.
-
·
,
.
-•
!
:,
,
.;.:,.
.
<
•
· Professor Berle cliticized the
:\'
tactics
·
to blot out
its
.:
positive
,
/
/:.
,
,,
~
';''.<.'.
):
·
nianagemerifof Latin
'
American
.
econoI_nic
·
·
effeds
_;;:
J>i'.o(essor
)
.
__
,
,.
, .
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·
.
:
·-·
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financial
--
resources
after
World
Berleh6pedthatthiswasending',
·
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,-"'
-
. _
.-:..--
.
..
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.
--
.-
-
-,
.
.
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_- .
.
.
.
.
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.
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---
.
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.
-
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-
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t::>'
•-'.
-~
-·
·
·.
War
II
,
Th~ir favor~ble balance
-
"•
3.!1-d that the Alliancejvould func
:.
·
-
~
ocro
'
sER
~
29
"
:,:_
M~~l
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~~,,
-
~~de
~
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ful
.
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iffr
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-
ofpayments.was
.
qu1ckly
.
erased
.
tionmor_esrn9othlym
-
thefufure.
,
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-
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-.
-
.·
·
,
.
·
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·
.
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·
·
.:•/J
'-!'
:
.
•
bec~use instead of sin.king their
'
He strongly
.
supported tlie
·
.
Alli-
J1ctions, (The Ci
_
rcle, Qct.- 25.)_,
.
~u~ted
_
1ts_.
..
way
_
to
another
.
v1ctory
:
at Van C~rtla
_
ndt
~
~-arlt,
~
~,
t
~
·
~
.
.
~o,-..,-
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.
plete, it appears
_
that this gentle.:.
,, '
.void:of
~y."
0
positive,
·
'practic.aI ·
·-
Y
}f
1
ft
t.
· man set up an organizatiori'ofpro.:.
·.
'.
plans for
,
action
.-
This, in Be
_
rle
'.
s
-
-·
(C
t%,~
:;::;
=c:
,
,>
.
.
-
fessioi:tal
_.
re~olutionari~s
_
with the
:
~-
-
opinion
';~_
was e~sential1f
_
reform
,·_
'<:
\
fj/
·.
idea of taldng over
;
as many
-::·
-
was to
,
progress.
-
·
~
.-
.
. .
-8
s~
:~
:
,
countries as possible.
..
·
This
.:
.-.
.
::
.
: .
.
.
.
·
,
<
·
-
-
-
_
,.,,:--
·
:
:
,,,
.
-
organization
.
move
_
d
/
)_
ts head-
:
;
:··
In conclusion,
C:
Prof.
.
Berle
-
·
_
~uarters from Mex1c.
.
o
:
to Havana
·
· .. ·
stressed
-
the importance of
_
indi..;
,
m
1959.
.
:
\:.
...
>
vidµal rights
;
H4:! noted the
.
dan-
.
.
.
.
.
:
·
:
,
.
.
.
.
gers
.
inherent in
·
both extreme
·
.
Berle gave Milton Eisenllower
:
•
·
·
right
and left wirig positions, and
.
credit
·
for
_
pushing the
_
idea of an
·
·
applauded
.·
·
moderates like Fry
0
in
.
•
inter-American
-
bank.
·
However,
:
·:.
Chile
;
_
He
,
saw manf
-
difficulijes
•
·
.
he said that
the
idea had its
.
in-
<
ahead,
_
·
but
_:
·
viewed
•
the
.
Good
_
ception in Roosevelt's
;
time, in
.
Neighbor Policy and the
·
Am.::
1939-1940.
Funds
·
for this bank
-
•
'a.nee for Progress as "the best
· were never appropriated until
·
h9pe
for civilization iri this tarigl-
·
.
President Kerineyd
.
did so as
·
one
.
-
ed hemisphere
.
and this very
of the
.
first acts of his admini-
tangled world.
''
'::··
.
·.
. ·•
.
.
stration.
·
·
_
,
·
·
, .
.
_
_
_.
·
:
:
•
.·
<
_
.
·
•
.
·
:_
·
:
.
·
The Symposium reconvened at
··
·
The presence ofRussian troops
about
2:30
after
·
the
.
luncheon
•
_in
Cuba added,-in }!erle's esUma.:
_
break; After a
·
few
.
prefatory re-
.
tion,
·
a new dimension
·
to
the pro.:.
marks by
·
Bro
>
.
'
Cashin,
.
Mr •
.
·
.
-
blem of non-intervention
·
~ Hostile
Arthur Schlesinger delivered the
:
.rorces from
:·
outsil:fe the henii-
'
__
aftel'.noon's a~dress.
-
·
·
·
·
shpere now posed a serious threat
'. -
,
<
•
·
·
to
:
inter.:. American
security:
~.
·
The. differ~nces betwe<>n the
CommunisJ conspiracies flour-
Good Neighbor policy a,1d
·
the
ished,
·
especially
·
in Venezuela.
·
.· ·
·
•
..
7
"Indirect wars"
.
sprang up and
.
COHTIHU
_
~D
on
pg
·
•
'
,
,
-
'
'
.
.
-
.
.
. .
..
;
• , '
.
...
' ·
.
· .
~
~-
·
..
,:-:
.
...
_-
·,
•
JOH~
.
FORBES breaks
.
the
tape
and
.
tops
th•
old
.
course record
of
25:53 with
_
on
overwhel111ili9
,
24:3(
<
.
.
fir~t~
·
p
_
lace finish
.
at Van
,
Co~lo.ndt. If th~ teands succe,ssful
_
thl s weekend,'
it
111ay be ()11aha
·
:
-
bo11nd~
'.
{
,
,,
>
,
.
.
.
_
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
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·
....
i:~tiiiiJi;~~;;·
THE CIRCLE
,-
· A
ONE-ON-ONE
situation developes as Bill Holmes breaks away off tackle for a substantial gain
-
-
.
,
.
late in the
second
quarter of Saturdoy-s game.
'
.
~
-
. -~-·-- - - - - -----..---~~--·----·-~--
-
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Por'
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,
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·
.
~·
.
.
::
be
-
cashe~:t'i11theB~kStoreatall,
Father Wilfred Dully,
S.M.,
.
·
; ·
· ..
·.
:
__
·:
.
·
,
-.'.
·,
·.;.
_
·,
.
.
.-
.
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.
On_ Tuesday_, October 1
8
,
19
~
6
•
.
but because
Mi.
D' AngeJo feels
.
~::i~er~~~l~~:ge~~ n ~
,
.
/.
A
.
iiew
:
~11~ih~ ~isen on
:
the
:·
Re~ard
'.
than_'
.
to l~t
)t
s!owly
\
·
-:
:'
·
:
.
:'
_
.{
aM
·
jomt me:,:g
w~m~~m
~~
..
that the
.
Book store is thereh~
.
a
.
been
named
an
'
Assistant Pro-
·· .
Marist
··
campus .
..
The yearbook
.
die
_
away. Tthhis cebrltaillllfyth1s
·
~o
..
·,
.·
·
essers.
..
e,
.
.
service
·
to the students,
.
e
is
.
fessor
:
in
.
the
E
.
.
nglish
.
Depart-
wilHiow be sold on
:
a subscrip-
solution
,.
to
,
e pro em;
.·
.
.
ere
•
>::'
·
,
·
,
·
D
.
'
Ange_lo
·
conce~m~ two import-
·
being
allowed
to
.
cahs
..
.
the
$5
·
tion basis
'
:'-to
aii
.
students~
·
The
is no other
,
alternative,
.
~d ~e
·
·
1
k
anttop1cs:thecashmgofchecks, checks with the permission of ~ent~
·
,
:
-
''.'
·
·
_
. ·
basic charge is.$7.50 --
.
and an
book
·
must be.sold, then sell:1~
.
,
\,
·
both school and ~rs~~a.l, on
the Business Office.
·
But he is
:-
Born on August
.
31~ 1915,
.
10
·
additional
.
charge
.
of$Z.50 will be
Btit; if you have to reverUothis;
,
J
; ·
campus
~~
the
.
possibility of not as adept to picking o~tfor-_
.
Accrin~n
..
L~
.
~s
•
.
·
I?:n_gland,
..
levied
,
if
-
a bookis not purchased
.
then make
.
sure
·
_tbaLeveryon~
:
:
.
t.
:
.
,
:::
..
,
~e-thestaBoobliskhSmt g ae
.
charge_ account
.
geries
.
or any problems wiµi
.
thFaethseroc
.
w1'easty oorfdaMmaer
.
dy
·
a1_ nprM1earstcoht
.
.
by Novemoer
:;,,
l
.
.
.
knows why.
:
This cafjllltno~
,
betab
.
dolne
·
:.
·
m
e
or
!
checks as the women in the B})St-,
· ..
.
-
.
.
•
.
•
.
·
,
,
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
·
by
·
sittlilg
,
at~
.
c
.
e eri_a
;
. e.
< .
,
\:
·
·
· ·
·
ness Office are. For this reason
.
·
1941
;
Betw_een 193~ and 1937, ~e
.
:
.
'.
This policy is immediately dis.:.
·
Ndt:
can
.
it
be done
.
by v1s1ting a
:
.
1
\··
We
have a set-up on campus
also checks are not being cashed studied Philo~ophy
~t
th~ ~ar
15
t
_ ·
turbing because the student Go-
student
.
only once. Any l)ll}es01an
,
.
,
:
_~
,
in
·
the Business Office whereby
in the Ra~kell~r.
·
~ouse of Studies, Milltown, Dub.,
.
·
.
vernment
'
hru.
,
always ·picked
'·
up
knows
.
that you have t~.~aturate
:.
1
;/-
students may deposit there money
lin,
Ireland, and f
.
rQm 19~.7
°:Dtil
,
the tab. They claim' that this is
.
·. ~e public
_
before
,.
tby
wi]J
·
re;.
•
J.
\
.
.
into personal checking accounts.
·
.
Therefor~, itis highly suggest'-
1941_, Father pursue~ Theological
.
.. ·
now
.
impossible to do because of spond or
_
even I_ook at yo
_
u_r pro:-
.
,
This particular segment of the
ed by the Business, Office and the
stud~es at f:be Marist House of
the increased
.
expenditures on
.
duct.
It
.
IS no different
:with
.
the
'.
:'
.
':
'.
·
Business Office is run on just Student Council that the students studies
.
P:ugnton, Devon,
.
En-
. .
.
.
.
b
.
..
.
·
t
·
M
.
·
Waite
.
Reynard
.
·
•
·
about same schedule as a bank.
·
.
gland
.
he
·
received his B.A. from
movies, use~, e c.
r ·
·
.
.
r
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
:
;.:
.
.
.
be
take fulladvantageoftheircheck-
wni
.
·
c
11
.
.
C
b 'd
_
Maxwell Busmess Manager of
·
.
. .
. .
.
•
.
...
,
.
.
_
..
\
I
~y
amount of money may
.
ing accounts at the Business Do
.
.
ng
:
. o ege,
all! r1 ge,
the Re~ard, indicates that "wi-
.
. .. •
.
This ye~r, it must be admitted,
.
.
~
,
\
!'
1
~drawn, as longas
th
atamount
Office and that they exhibit the England
10
1.9~7, and bis M.A.
less 750 copies are sold,
.
Marist
,
P!esented a greatel'problemthan
.
_
.
[
.,
is
,
ID
your PE;rsonal account.
_
The
responsibility levied upon them (Can~urbury)
10
1956•
will not have
·
-
a
.
yearbook as ~e
.
either the yea~book _st;afi
,
<?r
:
:
,
~e
>,
~
:
women working there are trained
I
to get. their money in time for
In
addition
to
his pastoral care
have
.
bad in the past.'! At this
.
Student Council anticipated.
>
:
..
.
i
\/
.
bank tellers and
th
e~efore are · the_ weekend before the
_
Business in parishes· in England,
..
Fath~i:,
time
·
only 170
.
Reynar~ have
Th~re was
an
abrupt ch~~
10
L
':
very adapted at handlmg ~one
_
y.
Office close~ on working day~ •. Duffy. has preached missions
m
been purchased
:--
by Semors and
poll~Y
.
:i!ld ~e!e was no boqk
.
,
,
·
You are remmded that the Busi-
England and
·
Ireland,
:
and
·
has
·
·
Undercl~~men together.
•
How-
fr9m ~e pr~vwus year to use~
·
':
i
·
At
th
is Ume
th
e Book
st
ore
·
ness Office hours are 9:00 A.M.
also
.
gained a wide range
_
of
•
ever, within the _n~xt_ two weeks
a sellmg pomt. In s~ort, the.Rey
\
cashes
.
personal checks uptoand
·
to. Z-30 PM
Monday through . experience in Youth Club work.
Mr. Maxwell ~hc1p_ates that at
nard w~ saddled witbtbtheproblem
including $5. Last year checks up
Friday.
· _-,
. .
.
.
.
.
..
. .
leasL
zoo
copies will be sold.
of selling words, and.
.
.
ere _was
:':'-
.
to $30
.
could be
·
cashed there.
..
. •. ·
.•
·
.
. ·.
.
.
for
..
a
to be run
.
properly more
·
.
· ·
l:
nothing
.
to back them
·
up
'WI~.
:
l.:.:
This meant that Mr.D'Angelo,as
.
As
·
-
stated in thelastrepoJ.".t the
,:
people would have
.
to be hiX:ed
.
in
.
This
_
situation c~not
be
blamed
· .
·
,_
:
i'.
manager of the BookSt~re, would
charge account in the Book Store
.
the B
.
ook Store and the,Busmess
·
Putting two and two together
on
.
the staff of the 196_7 ~eynar~.
>
.
have to keep large sum,,. of money
.
was exterminated because many to ~andle the extra cleric~ work.
.
it looks as if :we may not have a
.
.
.
,
.
,
.
.
t
.
·
on hand. But because of s
·
everal
·
of . the studen~•s paren_ts com-
·
si~ce the Bils~e~s Office 1s oper-
yearbook at all. But, if
500
stu-
Practically 90% of the
.
Senior
1
·.
cases of theft, this practice had to
plamed that th~ir sons were rwin-
ating
.
on a llm1te~ budget,
..
the
.
.
dents do not
.
want a yearbook,
ciass wants a yearbook~ They
•
:.
:
be
.
cut off.
It
was suggested by
.
ing up large bills. A second i:ea-
.
money to
.
pay
.
_
this extra h~lP
._.,'
which they
.
.indicate by n
.
ot pur ... want something to enjoy
.
f~ve
.
or
•
the
·
BusinessOffice thatnochecks
son was that ~anys_tudentsfailed
·
~ould
•
~ave to come
.
fro~ a raise
.
'
chasin
one should we
.
worry
ten years
,
fr,om now.
In
fac~ a
.
>
'.
,
~
·
·
·
·
to pay their bills, either because m the Boo~ Store prices. B~t
'
·
aboutif?
·
'
.
·
.
.
. .
.
.·.
yearl)!)ok ~oes not become 1
_
m-
·
r
CONVOCATION...
they failed out, or transferred sinc_e this lS_
,_
what eyeryQ!le
IS
.
.,
.
.
·
'
•.
.
.
por,-tant until you are well ~yond
_
.
....
.
:
l
Continued
from
Poge 1
.
from Marist.
.
.
.
.
·
y~lling about, 1t w
_
ould_ be mu:ea...
>
The StudentGovernmentstates
your
.
~clergraduate :rears.
:
~e
.
:; _
.
/;-
'
·
"boarding house" and the student
.
.
_
.
s1ble to re-~stabbsh 1t. In s1m-:
•
.
'.flatly that it does not have enough
fir:st time you· have a cl~s _re-
~ .
r ·
becomes·indifferent to all at>Qut
However, the primary reason pier words, 1t wouldactuallycost-
;
money to
•
subsidize the Reynard •
..
UD!O~.and you want to
.
rem101Sce
_
,r
.
.
.
him.
·
Dr. Drennen stated that the why a ch~rge a~count
_
will not be the
·
students
.
more to have _a
~.
If
the activity fee is_ Jo be usea
·.
~r fm~
~~t
whom you
.
were
talk-
:
._•
:
··
.·
·
f·
.
liberal arts education should be
,·
.
re
-
established
m
t!Ie Bo_ok Store cha~ge
,
ac
.
countb~cause of
_
t ~
:-
•:
:
·
for
.
activities throughout the year,
,
.
·:.
mg
,.
·to,
:
1s whe~ a
.
}'.~~r~
.
o~
~
...
:,:..
·
.
·:
:
·.
:~
..
,.
;,
.
..
·
.
. ·
an
.
'
.'
assimilation by
-.
the.mind of
.:
is because
,
o
L
the
.
mcreas~
ex
-:
1.
:
cal
,
~xpe
_
nse~,eyen~h,qughit~o~d
,-,,,
::
then
~
the
,
counci
L.
caniiot
,
affcii:d
'
·
..
:.
-
<;9.~~
-
-
§
~
~IDJ!RX:!aj}E;
£
~1;
f~t;;;A~~l
,;,'._zir-
,;~~
·
,~)-;ic,;
;
,
..
'>
;:•:
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:,.,;!\•
livµig
;
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rather.::
~
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id~as;~
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He
.:~
,
pens~s.
:
i~
;t.
!O,uldj~~~~_li
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~
O
.
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~t,woi,lld
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.
a:.c_o~y.,E!n~~!lC
.
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=-..
:,;.,;<'t;:,;~
t?~ailooat~•$
;
'7~
i
inofie·l~~
·
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i~f=rttf-
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.
·
·
·
challengedth~
.
st~d
.
eJ!tto_,~m:-
..
:
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·
. .
.
,·
.
.
.
_.
.
,
, :
.
•
.,•
.
_·
,:,- ;:·:":·
_
.
, ..
--·
..
·
.
_
:
at:~e
='
begm~g
-·
of ~e
•:
,
year~
,
.
.
~obev~rY,prac1ca~
~
e.
"
\.::.
•
:
.-:·
,.
. tellectual encounter
-
bycomment;.
_.-
AUT~Q~J)~CLARU.
_
..
.
-
·
.
,
.
: · ..
·
.
;·
lii
•:
answer·to a question abo11t
.
>-
·
· . .
. :
. _,
. :
• ..
:· ·
.
~·
.·
·
:.
-:-,
•
whole
..
thing, the
_
Semor
.
,C~~~
,
.'
>': .
r
,
·
.
:.:
.
inf
.
that,
"YO)li
learn_irig in use-
.
Conji
.
nu~~
-
f~!inP.ag_e
_
l
::/>
'
> _:
the
·
.·.'•
significanc
_
e
·
of
·.
Pre~ident
.
,
·
.'
Derurls
_
qooh~, E;dit~r
\
of the
<:
c~!lo~ support tllethRe}pard_!~~
.;
:·:
:
·
,
.
.
·:
:
!
;
..
·:_
le
_
ss
:
.
to
'
you
.
unless
.
it
becomes
..
:
The
'.
Saturday''Ev!'!nmg Post and
,-
-
·
Johnson's
.
Far
.
.
Eastern
·
tour,
..
Reynard, stated m his open
_
~etter-
-- ,
anc1ally •
.
It needs
e
SUP1:'9
_
~
.-
~
~
-,:'''
·
,.
:
t
, '
::,
:
yo~1:)~arniilg.'
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;_
)/
.
-~,</<
>
·;,
'
:.·•·
coJ.l
.
ier
i
s. )Ji
•
the
;;J
aQ
<>f
!~17,
~e
•
Prof
;
.
Schlesinger
i
'
f
hoi>:
.
d tha!)t
:
that:,it would
.
be better to klll
·
the
.
the
.
entil'e student body .
.
.
•
.c.
·
<
.-
.
·
.
. ,
· :.-:
>:
,·
'
·-.,:,C.:
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S
O.,•(:
·.-<;,•·:
·
;
·:
•
,
;
:
;:>
:,.
·
·:_
/
>
.
'.·
·
returried·t~ ll
_
arv~d as
_
ass~l-
<~.
would helpfor
,
ap
,
eac
,
e~m
,
~ol~~on
,,
,
,'.·
.
:
.
·
,
·.
'
'.,.
,,
"'-''
... ,
/
·<
F
.
oTI.:o'\Vlng !)~. Drenne.
,
was
~ct
.
:
.
·
·
ate professor of h1~tor~; F~~ling
·_
for Vietnam.''
,
However; he ~d
·
·
·
·
,,
,
.
...
·
Hammond,SemorReprese.ntative
;
the need for
,
an
·
,organ1zation of
his doubts aboutthe
:
effect oUlie
·
and
;
Attorney General
.
of the Stu.:
·
,:
.
:
.
American
.
liberals· which, while
Manila
.
·
.
Conference.
.
since only
..
dent
·•
Ge>vernment. Mr; Ha:mm~nd
·
:
recognizing
>
the
.
true
.
na!ure of
three
·
·
nations
-
:
}r6m
>
·
mainland
.
.
challenged the
.
faculty
,
by ,..ask~g
.
'
t
omrnunism
.
would contm)le to
Asia would be represented tl,l~re~
.
·
..
if' the professor is playmg his
•.
figbt
,
Jot
-
social
:
progress; he
.
·
·
·
·
·
'
·
·
,.
part
.
in improvement of the faculty
_
'
helped found
'
Americans for De:-
·
With referencEdo theVietnain
.
student
<
relationship; _ does
..
the
mo era.tic Action and has served - war, Prof. Schlesinger beHeved
·.
·.
professor s~mulat
.
e his students
.
.
s1nce as national vice.::chairman. .. that
•
there would be increased
<
'.
with an "intellectual
·
battle'':?
In· order
,
to further
.
explain
,
the
••unhappiness''
·
in
.
j
he . United
·
·
He
a,Isif
rioted that
:
" campus pro-
..
importance of an anti-Communist
.
states over it because "more and
·
blems are
,
ttieir,- (tlie
•.
faculty's)
:
·
:
Uberal
c
,
position~
Schl
_
e
.
singer
more
/
famili~s
·
.
have somebody
·
.
problems as
·
'W~ltas st~dE:nt pro
~
:
.
·
·
wrote
,
The Vital Center in 1949.
·
who
;
s over 'there or know some-
.
·
.
.
.
.
,'
.
'
blems/'
.
The SeniorHepresenta~
C
:;:<>
'
.
'
,': .· .
.
:,
;
.
'
'
·
.
.
,
.
'
body .who's over
.
there
:
,, Heim~
,
.·
·
'
.
...
,
tive
>
then'reviewe
.
dtbepartspt,af-
'
··
·During the 50's, whilestill at
plied
•
a: viewpoint ctifferent.fr:om
·
.•,;
<
,,..
·
ed
'.
both
:.
student ;ind faculty
m
Harvard he was primarily oc;.
the
administration's by quoting
.
A
<
>.
-
.
th~ soc~~' athleti~, ,a11d
_
re1:igi~1JS
:·
cupie~ i~ researcb~ng ~d writing
Douglas
_
MacArthur --
11
Ameri-
.
.
·.·
·
.·.
,
.
··
.
\
... ·
...
~
.
--
.:
~
.
.
-."
.
.
'
.
,\.:
:
.
:
.
.
•
'
.
·
.
::
.··
~'
..
·•.
•
ar~as
.
of campus
·
h
_
fe;
. ·
.
',;
,.
:
--
.
·
:
his ,trilogy on the '
:
Age of Roose-
.
can soldiers have no place on the
·
·
.
-
:.
\
:
-
:
;;
.
:>:_
:
-'
.
_
? .
·
)
:
· :
.
,
velt.'
;
'.
The Crisis
,
of
.
the
:
Old
·
Asiarimaiilfalid~"
·
c
_·
Milli-
<
·,
<
,
.. ,
, :'
Brother
:
stephenLarmmg of the
:•:
Order
'
(1957); The
.
Coining or!he
·""
'
·
~.
·
'
'
·'··
·
'
·
.
English Department co~foi:n~ed
·
<
New Deal (1958)~ and The Pohtics
Commentint on the New: York
, . ·.
·
s·
"
ToN
·
E
· ,
GAT
'
E
,
H
OU
.
SE_
:·
on. Rout;
9_
,ha~
:
~ ~o~
·
~inc
.
e
'
the
_
t
'
u
.
tn
-
.
:
~
-
'
f
·
th,!
~
>·
..
::
·~
~:~
·.
=
.
>
facµlty. and
·
~tude~tf?
>
alike w1
.
th
:'
of Upheaval (1960),
,
were
'
the
gubernatorial race
.'
Prof. Schle-
a
-:.
t
.
ii:n~ly
.,
que
.,
shon~
,
•
.
B~othe
.
r
...
~d
;:
::
fru
.
its of
.
hislab~rs •
.
H
.
e
_
also;work-
singer noted that '.
!
(Fr~lin D.
.:
cent,ny, a~d is n
_
ow being reitovaled for
.
foture
.
us~ as Press
_
.
•
0
.t
,-
~
.
-=- ·
-
<->
,
dres}ed the students by as~ng
edonGov.Adla1Stevenso~ss~
.
Roosevelt Jr.'s)
,
eniry
_
mto the
-
··
house.
-~-.
·
,.
, ,,-
.
.
.
. ·
,.
·.
•
.
.
/
:
,
·
·
'
-'
•
\
-
<
·
·• .
.
·o-
,
•
'-:
,
.
~it.:~rfJ.:~iVtri:~:;,
·
ii:!jr:~~\~;ift!1
-
f:;i!J~:2r~?.Taitfi~;
.
·
.
·
_
Gatehouse
l,Jn(jijr'
,
.,A
:
r
;a;
:
,~¥
ii;!~t];~~1~~i
ifl~iJ~~~~:r1t1;
·
~:r:: :~:~:::
:
::::
,
x
-
·
~ep3i
(~O
I'
~ro~~
,
ijf ~
.
1"IS\
i
[~
I
ther
.
Lanning cited these
\.
ex-
·
dealt with
.
.
th
.
_e effe_d: of th
.
~IIWhi!e
>/
:
.
T
.
he ·
.
ga
·
• teh
.
ouse
.
Qn
.
Rout_e
.
9, at
. .
sen
.
t,
..
·
t~e
.
.
in
·
·
..
•.·
.
t
.
~ri
.
·.
o
.
r
·
·
.
·
. ·.
·
·
i
·
s
..... :
co
.
ID
.
p
.··
l
·
e
··:
~Jy
·/
·>
}:
.
:
\
.
..
'
·
,
,;'f
.
amples to point out that
all
too
At
'
the close of the afternoon
backlash" m
•
this Novembers
.
the
mam entrance to Mar1stCol".'
.
·
gutted.
.
. ,
,
.
.
.
,
..
,
•
•
•
J
often the student leaves
his
edu.:.
session, Prof.
-
Schlesinger an.;
congressional and guberna~o_rial
..
lege i_s
.
presently undergoing
ex-
.
·
<
. •
>
'
•
<
·:
·
.
: ,;
.
~
·
··"
:;
:: :'
·
·:.G':
<
<
·
t
1
·
cation behind
·
him
·
in
·
the
·
class-
swered several q1,1estions posed
e,lections.
·
Prof. Schlesmger
·
.
tensive repairs and modifica.; - ,
·
In the future, pl3.l)s ~eJor ~e
/:
,
·
room; he does not make it a part
,
to him by a Circle reporter in an
thought that. the backlash was a
, :
tions: The building, which is stru9ture ;to be us
_
ed
~
a ;.res1
.
-,
x
·.
:
.
of himself. -
·
exclusive interview.
"local
·
thing"; as regards New
.
very
_
similar in construction to
..
d~nti:t,1
".'
V1ce Pr
_
es1dential
·
:man-,
:
·
;~
·:' .
·
·
· ·
·
:
.
..
Asked
what
he though of Sen.
York,
.
.
he
.
.
ha
·
d
·
"n
.
o knowl
.
ed ~e of a
.·
the
.
stone ])4)rUon
·
·
·
·
ofS
.
t .
.
.
Pe
.
.
ter's
. ·.
-,
sio
.
n.
.
.
Th~re will be fou5Jooms•
.
.
.
•
·
·
1
·
Questioning the faculty~ Bro-
·
Robert
.
Kennedy as
.
a possible
.·
backlash'.' b11t thought thatifsuch faculty residence
·
served
.
as a
two
.
upstairs bedroom,,., and
"
,
.
a
,-
_
•
.,
ther asked the individualinsti'uc
::.
·
·
Presidential candidate,
·
Prof.
.
a factor was p~esent "it would
_
gatehouse at the beginning
of
the
p~rlor
·
~d
-
~est room below.
_It
·.:
.
-
tors to wonder
·
'' Ain I keeping
·
·
Schlesinger said that he consid-
affect
.
all
.
c. _and1date
.
s.
_equal. ly.•
.
•
.
ce
.
ntury when
th
..
··
e c
.
am
.
pus
gr
..
ounds
w.1~ _be a_ f1~ pl~ce to entertam
.
·
I
-
faith to a life of scholarship?"
ered the senator- to be "a great
Prof.Schlesmger mentioned th~t
were part of the Beck estate~
v1s1tmg d1~1tar1es. All nec~s-
--
,
.
He also spoke of acuity involve-
leader of the Democratic Pary."
he had just returned from a trip
If
bas since
'.
been ·used as a
S3!Y refurmshment_s are bemg
:
.
.
ment with studentaffairs and cit-
·
Recognizing the fact that "an
to Illinois, where he had observed
faculty house. The gatehouse was
paid /or. by the Manst Brothers,
·
ed the "hidden work' of the
incumbent President usually gets
.
n<>ticeable evidences of ('bad
unoccupied for
·
the
.
first time
not N1ar1st College •
.
Campus Life Committee and the
re-elected,'
.
he
neverth~bss
backlash." In response to a fur-
during the 1965-66 school year.
There is
110
fcmndation to ijle
Academic Policy Committee.
·
went on to affirm that he
·
would
ther query
·
as to the effect of
·
rumor that this project has been
..
<:
support and work
for
the Sena-
"balck power' on the civil rights
undertaken so that, when (and Ht
>
ertt ~:u;~i1~~i~dofJ:t~~~:
tor's Presidential· nomination.
movement, Prof. Schlesinger
•
The entire interior of the build-
Route 9
.
is widened, the College
•:
·
Moreover Mr.
·
Schlesinger de-
·
po_inted o~t that "S!okely Car~• in
.
is in abadstateofrepair
~
The
will
.
receive a large sum
.·
of
:
.
quent informal table discussions,
.
clared, "I
_
will cast my vote (or
m1chael and the ,Klan walk s~~ul
.
..
.
w:llis
.
which had been covered
.
money
.
because of the necessary
Mr• Johnson announced
that
a
·
senator Kennedy in 1972.'' When
.
der to shoulder·
·
'
with 'cracked
_
plaster and old
,_,...
demolition' of the new Presiden~
·
-;
·
·
·
time
•
·
would be arranged
·
in
th
e
asked
·
what
he thought of Senator
·
·
-
·
· ·
·
·
·
,
·
·
h
·
·
t
·
k have been stripped
·
tial suite. The fremwr,:k of the
.
future for another meeting of this
Kennedy's
. ·
political philosophy as
The
interview ended with Prot
.
·
s ee -roe ,
.
.
.
.
.
Datu
.
re.
.
The ent1·re
.
·
·
mornm· g's
s
hl •
·
·
hak'
hands
all
·
down to the bare, one-foot thick
· building is quite solid,
· .
and- it
Com
. pared
.
.
•
wi·th
.
that of the late
c esmger s
mg
.
.
.
·
·
·
d'
· ht
·1 be
·
ting
stone The heating plumbing and
could easily be
.
m
.
o
..
v
.
ed
.
ollt of
.
the
procee
mgs
m1g eas1 Y sum-
Pre
·
si·de
·
nt•s,
·
.
Prof.
·
Schlesinger aro
.
und
and grac1ouslyconsen
•. .
.
'
-
·
Ued
nstruc
ed
· ...
d
f B
·
th
·
·
th
· 1
electr1c1ty
will
all
be
dISman
.
path of ;my proposed
·
co
.
.
_
_ ....
·· ,
·
'i
·
>"
m
up m Ille wor so
.
ro er
.
.
said that ''their purpose
.
and
to gi~~te
.
hisautograp~to
.
eCirc e
and new systems putin. At pre-
tion.
.
.
.
.
>
<
.
c
Lanning
i
1
There has to
,
bejnter-
.
philosophy are identi~
.
u .
!epor
,
r.
·
.
action.''
.
:
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.
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.
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.
.
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.
.
.
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--------
-
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,
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.
/
•Concert
·
..
·
~A.
.
.
.
·
.
Sniasli
,;
:
i
;
Ji~i
~i.
f
(
;~b
''
;
,:~
y
·•
•
.,·...
"
'
<
.
.
.
.
·
.
·.·
·
-
:':'•
'·
For
·.
those
::
Marist students -too
·
·
.
.
busf
'
or.
:
too
.
uninvolved to attend
:
,(
the conc
_
erf
cm
.
Oct: 27; an
ex"'.'
..
?perience was missed. The stud!IDt
Lack
,()f
Funds
-
End
_
s
:
Eaj,ployment Program
'
·
· Brothers ·
,
, played to -a standing
?
-
-
.
room only crowd in the c:impus
·
·
.
--
theater; Their performance
-
was
_
1
,
-
•.·
aniazilig
·
as
tltey profession~y ; . . - •
-executed ·. a
.
repitoire of thirty
·numbers
:
.
ranging
.
-
·
from
•
·
,
·
..
rock
·
:
~
Jhrough
·
folk~
·
gosepl, and blues to
classical guitar.
,
· ·
.
-
\
·
'
-tr6~
'
the
-
()pening instru~ent.:
·
.
.
·
-
.
al,
·
"One Mint Julip'-', th_rougl!out
Tuesday, Nov. 2, proved to be
the Waterloo for many a Marist
College
.
student.
The Economic Opportunity Act
of 1965, commonly known as EOA
provided employment for some 90
students on campus through the
use of federal funds. These stu-
,
dents were employed in various
!
fields such as lab technology,
photography, public relations,
and maintainance;
'Mr.
Mortensen further ex-
plained that he provided employ-
.
inent for as many individuals as
possible because of the l~~ge
number of students who quahfied
for positions. It was his opinion
that each student should be given
the opportunity to earn his share
of the funds before the reserves
became "broke' .
.
>.
the entire
.
show, the aug.1ence
.
sat
·.
· -
in complete silence, save for the
.
·
··
ovations after each number and
·
the three- encores that ended the
pedormarice.
·
·
·
0:
'/-one
..
song,
one
performer
.
_
:
cannot
.
be singled out;
..
•
for
_
.
the
_
,
entire
,
concert was superlative
.
J3ro
;
John Lee, singing the lead
-
in ''Sounds of Silence" and •'That
·
· Bo'y''
.
arid Bro; Ray Armstong's
rendihon of ''California Dream-
·
Because of this development,
the program has been suspended
The system had worked well
i
until the Spring Semester,
.
at
throughout the summer months
I
which time it will be reinstated
and the beginning of the 1966 Fall under funds allocated for that
Semester. A difficulty arose last purpose. Both Mr. Mort~nsen
week when Mr. Herschel Mor-
and Mr. Campili of the Business
tens en
.
Registrar, discovered
·
Office are presently looking in~o
that the monies available for
the possibility of acquiring ad~i-
salaries had been exhausted. In
.
tional funds to remedy t~e situ-
a public letter to all EOA sup~r-
ation for this semester.
visors,
Mr.
_Mortensen explained
-
ing" surpas~ed,
.
in our OP¥1~on
1
the arrangement of the ongma.J.
artists.
-
"&ROS. Jack Lee, Tom Holan and Al Sene~ rendering 'Midnight
Hour:"
i~g blues is a difficult form be.;
The technical details, lighting
cause it is such an exposed
and staging, directed by Bro
;
medium, and Bro. Al deserves
Br'endan Kenny, were superb and
much credit.
went b~yond anything expected
.
that he had· expected the govern-
ment allocation to deplete itself
before the end of. this semester,
but that the present situation was
sudden in occurrence.
Until some solution can be
found, all those invo
_
lved a~e
faced with the unattractive predi-
cament of unemployment.
..
Throughout the performance,
.
;
.
.
.
_
. .
The imagination in al these
-
~s-
·. ·
audience reaction was tr.emend-:
switching to the popular fte!d
pee ts showed car~ful planning,
otis
_
~
-
When called upon to Join in
of rock music, t_h~ group again
much rehearsal, and much at-
on
.
'
·
,If
I Had A Hammer" and
showed its versatthty. In a parody
tention to detail.
Assistant Chaplain Named
"Greenback
-
Dollar" it became of pop music, with Bro. Tom _
:
:
difficult tOdistinguish
.
the per-
.·
Nolan singing_lead
_
_
in a medl_ey
Nothing b
_
ut
congratulations
M
..
·
·
·
th
ct·
Th
The Reverend John W
;
agan
formers from
.
e au 1ence.
e
of "Midnight Hour",-
"Wild
could be heard after the perfor-
has been named assistant to the
:greatest reaction of the eveni~g Thing", '
.
'Li'l Red
_
RidingHood'.',
mance and many students want
chaplain or Marist College. Fa-
-
vias
to Bro;
·
Alex Senes' rednt-
and "Valerie,,, _they had th_e audi-
anothe~ concert
.
-- possibly dur-
"
'
.
.
/
ti9~
:
\
>kr
~
'rMt afal~enad
·
'
.
'
df raistii11n15.
!~
:
~rice
-;
'
ir
_
olling
,
-
in - ~he
,:'
aisles.
~>
ing one ·of
.
the
. ,
big
"
wee~ends.
_
It
.
;
~GimMpaagng~{J!~t~ a!fd ~oeo~i111
:e
.
.
,: .
>
a
,
,
pea
-
a er ns e ic
.
o
.
"."
·
.
.
,,
:
,
1
,,
.,:
·:
•
:·
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-:::
·.- , .
"
'
.
•
,
.
-
.·,
.
,
is
-
hoped that,
·
before disbanding available for consultation at any
·
,his
)
pareii~;
<::.
·
.
·:
..:•
,
,,
.,:
.;-;
.
·
·
to practice teach, thebrothers
·
.
·
• ht
.
.
. ;-
;
.;.,
,,
,i
·
-·...
_.
._
.
:·:
t:-
.
:\
11
Kis~es~V1eeter
.
.ThanWine''.,.
••
Will consent to such a
_
concert. time,dayormg .
_
.
:
?~r--
>1\.
13
if
ioe)-Iagel:,
)Yhf sran?T~
."
sung
,
by Bro. Ed
-
JE!imings~
W'!5
·
.
.
,·
-
A native of New Yor
,
k city,
I
·<
'
.
·
;-
excellfthen
0
:,
arf
_
.
-
Nrange~enpl~y;~ th:
:
also well received.
>
More sen-
· ·
These ten men proved that a
Father Magan was ordained to
-,:--:-
,
0:
,
Twe
•··
·
.
-•
··
e_ver ,
. ·.
·.
_
··
i
ously, the. Beatles' "Nowhere
.
night of'entertainment ne_ed ~ot the priesthood in
.
1947 and in the
:
)}O:
.
.
orgatnoJnf·Hthe ja.~z
.
ytehrsionh
,
fp\l
.
'
Man" arid "Help" weceverywell bodcon1~eissts
_
to1
_
mf aul
·
aflteoodr
_
byoar
_
_
lsoqnug1_rh~
_
~'nrg-.
following
year
received h
_
is
-
-'
.
.
,
·
•
.Tas e
. .
oney
,
wi
-
su<!
·
-- -
.,.
done
.
The drummer, Bro. V:incent
=
d
to
k
<
·>?
·
·
:
Jessfonalqualitythatthislistener
B
_
.
1
d sm thly
ed combo dressed in the latest S.T.L
.
degree from Woos c
· \
} \·.
was
:
<1isappointe~ when he wasn't
.
_
:
th~iu~gr
,
\i~i~~\loopy~and
-
mod fashion; In their
.
robes
.
~~~l!g!
94
:'t6°1~~1~~e!'1~rcit~i~
l'i
'(c,
f
~i
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,fine choice for th~ part,hewasm Bro. JamesCargerplayingrythm
_
MAHANA ...
·
complete control
.
all evening.His
gui
_
tar, and B
_
ro. John RUchdo
.
rf.
May, the Beau Brummels re-
Continued f.rom
Page 3
·.:
--.
'
renditiori
•
of"Talking' CaildyBar
·
th b
d
d
:
.
main forever in California.
·
However I became involved
\
'
r /
Blu¢s"
·
was
J
aultless
.
The talk-
~
playing
e
.
ass an accor tan.
and instead of doing a report on
?
<<-
}
GOQD NE
l~HBOR
fm
·
p~
·
{
..
.
'
is deeply involved in the making of
is for "social overhead capital," Robert Bridges, I began a criti-
:::
:
.
,
.·
·
•
·
-
-
•
.
•.
.
.
·
:
this decision. "Change is coming.
not private investment. Roads, cal analysis on the str~ctu~e of
·
,
t
:·::•
Alhanc
_
e for !3rogr~ss
·
reflected
.
The
·
only question is
-
·
under what
schools, housing ~- these ~e bridges in general. The time Just
2r,<
::
tllt
changes ffiatthe ~or~d under
~
·
·
·
auspices and
;-
in whatstyle Latin
essential,
·
·
ruid private capital flew as I grabbed other encylo~e-
,
-.
"·
,
-;
_w';nt aJter Roosevelt s maugur-
.
:
America
.
will proceed along the
cannot or will not supply them. dias iii order to compare the p1c-
/{·
d
a
__ ~ion.t
·
dThet cthangefs h~ve
.
?;thef!.
·
'.•
road to modernization.· This
.is
a
_
.
1
tures
·
of different bridges, both
'
·-;'-
\
.
.
1
rec
,
e
_
a
__
,
rans or~ing
•
.
.
e
particular
.
task of the
_
.
.
United
-
Using Brazil as
an
examp e, famous and unknown.
:.:-/
:
,
rE!l3:ho
_
n
•
_
.
~etween_theUnitedStatE:s
_
-
-
States because Latin America is
Mr. Schlesinger emphasized that
.
/{.:/
{
~~
.
Latm
0
~enc
,
a from one_.11!
_
the
·
imly large underdeveloped
·
techical progress has to be co-
When my girl showed up
·
1
}
{;
-:?i:
,
wp1ch
;
the Umte,d States ~as
m-
·
_,
part of the Westertuvorld and the
extensive with social and cul-
realized that I had again lost an
tr{:i{
\
~1sted
:
·
on_
th~
_righ
_
t of u
_
mlate~al
:
only large
-
western area iil the
tural change. What is called
opprotunity for some solid learn-
-
?::>\,::_
1ntervenhon
}
~to
.
one
·
·
m which
underdeveloped world.''
.
for
·
.
is external assistance and
ing What the hell
-
was my En-
-;!t
~
)
r
:·
,
~l!tical P.qualJ
,
ty was
.-
accepted
·
·
internal reform; since capital gli~h teacher going to do ~ith a
:
//,
:,:-;-
arn911g
'
alLthe
:
·
republic_as
-
of the
The United states,wllich
~
liad
·
investmentbyitselfwillnotcause bunch of drawings of bridges?
<?:--
-
hemisphere on the bast~ of non-
been
-
aware of the need for.moder ... · modernization, both public and
Again my schedule was botched.
':;
~;;
,~::.
:
Jht~i:_yeption." •
,
:
..
;
-:
·
_
.
n1zation in most
·
areas
·
of.the
·
private
investment are ne:-
y:;
_
:
'fr
T11~
:
].h3:'1ge in the
_
toli~
f
of the
:
world, was ''blind to it in Latin
:
cessa!'Y·
My girl ate dinner at my house
:(
·
J
··,,
relationship
:
that
began withJhe
:
_
.
Am
_
enca." From
_
1935 through
_
.
-
·
this time. I got her home early
'
;::°:f.•
·
-Gooci
-
Neighbor
·
printarily hinged
i ·
1960~ the United _States
·
gave.·,
·
•
with reference to the Domini-
though, both because of her father
>;?
·
,".'
oii
:
United
C
States accepta!}ce of •Yugoslavia more
'
•
economic as.,.
,
can Republic, Schlesinger enu-
and because I wanted to get up
:•::::•
<
:,
iion-iriterventio1_1,
>
al}
.
acceptan~e
.
·
sistance than it gave
.
to the whole
merated two points; first, that
·
early and go down to the local
::\
:
::
·
which
:
had
· :
heretofqre
·
· not
·_
been of Latin America. In any case,
there was
.
no
.
clear evidence of town library and once more at-
r
,
·,;
/
,
for
,
thcoming: ~•The ess~rice oftt:ie
:
i
1
the mc;idernization
.
process is
communist intervention; second,
tempt a report.
·
,
_ ·
·
..
· Good
·
Neighbor
·
policy, at least
\
under
.
way in
-
Latin
_
America, and
that even if such intervention ex:--
.
·
·
·
the start. of the Good Neighbor
•
it will not be stopped."
isted the matterwasnotsourgent
When I got home I went right
·'·
·
policy/
was :ts
'.
a
·
redefinition of
·
· ·
·
-
·
' ·
that President Johnson could not
to bed
.
I got up early, went !o
.
legaJ
.
and juridial relations amo~g
·
:=
:
In
·
the
efil'ly
50;sli'nited States-
.
have called upon the services of Mass (thanks to my mother s
the states of the hemisphere with
·
policy
,-
tow.
_
ards
·
L~tin Amer~ca
the OAS.
It
would be better,. in his
memory that it was All Saint's
·
.
·
juridical·
.
equality and
.
general
involved
'
encouraging extensive
opinion, to sponsor a ~hey of
Day) and headed straight for the
· ·
Conimittment to non-interven
e.
·
private investment.Itwasbeliev-:-
'
collective rather than unilateral
lit>:-0:
:
y.
I called my friend from
·
.
. ·
tion
~
This • ;
·
• was a striking
·
ed at that time that this was the
intervention.
M.C. and told him to pick me
change." ,
. ·
besfway
to
modernize the region.
.
...
up there. He said he would but that
.
.....
At its outset, the Good Neigh-
·
In order to
.
ensure the security
In
his concluding remarks,
he was leaving two hours ahead
_
bor poiicy had
.
i•a very limited
that would make this investment
Prof. Schlesinger repeated th:3-t
of schedulebecausesomethinghad
·
.
economic dimension." Non-in-:-
possible, the
·
United States sup-
••reform and development m
come
·
up. I was just getting my
-
tervention meant having "ami-
.
P?rted
,
entren~hed dictatorial,
Latin America are going to
ideas straightened out and my
,
able relations with people like
nght-wmg regimes that kept the
go
·
hand in hand.'' He quoted
sources arranged when he show-
Triuji
_
llo in the Dominican R
_
e-
.
peace but did little for the people.
President Kennedy's remarks
ed up and half and hour early
public."
·
Political contacts be-
For example; '!the Vice Presi
-
that "those who make peaceful
no le~s. so I said hang it, and
tween the United states
-
and the
dent of the United States in that
revolution impossible make vio-
left.
Latin--
·
American nations were
period, Mr. Nixon, paid a visit
lent
.
revolution inevitable." He
-
·
·
to Havana to congratulate Ba-
credited Roosevelt and Kennedy
min
_
ima.
tista on the competence
.
and sta-
as being the progenitor and im-
bility
.
of his government. Like
plementer, respectively, of a vi-
many of
·
Mr. Nix<m's judgments
tal and dynamic Latin American
·
}
:
However, World War II brought
modernization to Latin America
wUh a
.
rush.
It
also brought cor-
responding problems,
·
namely,
.
how
·
t<;,
go about itJ Schlesinger
_pointed out that
_
the
·
United States
'
·
·
··
·
pqlicy which, in the long run,
would enable that area to make
its "distinctive contribution to'"
the civilization of the world."
.
The great need
in
Latin Ameri-
ca, according'toMr.Schlesinger,
.
\-
,
:
.
.
What can I tell you? Academi-
cally, last weekend was totally
shot. I can tell you this though,
the next similar situation, say
Thanksgiving, is not to end up
.
the same. Never again. Nope,
never!
Father Magan is perhaps best
known as the founder of the
Gonzaga Retreat House in Mon-
roe, New York
.
Opened in 19~1,
this was the first retreat house
-
in
·
America designed exclusively
for youth
_
He served as director
of Gonzaga until 1963.
continuing his work with youth,
Father Magan opened the St.
Ignatius Retreat House in Man-
.
llasset, L
.
L,. a
_
nd served as_ its
director until his present assign-
ment to Marist College.
A~rd Winning
Movie
-
s
Scheduled
_.
Brother Joseph Belanger, Dir-
ector of the Marist College Film
Program;
·
has announced the ~e-
ginning of the 6th Annual Film
-
::'estival. The 1966-67 program,
initiated with the presentation of
Federico Fellini's "Nights of
Cabiria" is comprosied of eight
motion pictures, six of which
are award winners.
·
In choosing films for the cam-
pus and mid-Hudson population,
the program directors are guided
by three considerations: the
fil!115
must be of high esthehc or his-
torical
.
interest, they must center
around a
·
major theme selected
for the year, and they mu?t n?t
be readily available otherw1~e m
the area
.
This year's ma1or
theme is The Spiritual Dimen-
sion: God on Celluloid.
The next showing will take
place Nov. 13 with Anselmo Du-
arte's "The Given Word". The
films are shown at 8:00 p.m.
Sunday evenings in the ~ha!Upa~-
nat Theater and adm1ss1on 1s
free. Coffee and discussion fol-
low each showing.
The remaining films in the
order of presentation are:
.
)
Ingman Bergman's "Winter
Light" - Dec. 11.
-
Robert Bresson's "The
Diary of a Country Priest"
Jan. 8.
earl Dreyer's "Day of
Wrath" - Feb. 12.
earl Dryer's "Ordet" -
March 12.
serger Eisenstein's '' ~lex-
ander Nevsky" - April 2·
March conelly
'
s ''Green
.
/Pastures' - April 30
·:
,
...
.Student
3.2.1
3.2.2
3.2.3
3.2.4
3.2.5
3.2.6
3.2.7
3.2.8