The Circle, September 17, 1970.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 7 No. 2 - September 17, 1970
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• VOLUME 7.
NUMBER
2 ·.. .
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MARISr
COLLEGE~POUGHICEEPSIE,
NEW
YORK12601.
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SEPI'EMBER.
17, 1970
R8HWOIH-t:
~ubl11its;
,W~ste·.•M,nagement
,
--_--Plan-for
·Poug~Reeps1e·
.··. ·. SUBMITl'ED
BY
11IE
ENVIROMENTAL
ADVISO~Y
COMM. :
CHAIRMAN
llOBEllT REHWOLDT
•
, · nie problem of solid waste disposal
is
an extremely~diffic~t ~d.I~e
problem for any urban area;
· Any of the standard methods such as land rill, comp0S1ting or mcmeration really are nqt adequate unle~
some •separation techniques are used prior to disposal! These ~xtra steps. can prove to
be
cpstly and •
therefore are not usually. done.
'
. .
·
· . - - · · •. · · . .
.· .
.
·
_ .·
·
. The• City of Poughkeepsie
has
adopted land fill as its method of waste disposal. Although there is some
question about.the suitability of·the site and even.the operation itself,
this
report will .~ot deal with
. these problems. -
· . . · . - .
. ·· . ·
· · .
. . -
.
• ·.. . ·
·
·
.
·
The difficulty in all of these methods
is
that they are ~eared to solid w~e disposal rather than solid
·waste management. Many so called,wastes are:~~tually quite valuable. Aluminum for example can retµm
up to $200/tpn
lit
the scrap mar~et and paper anywhere from $2~$10/ton. A wast_e managem~nt_
program should take these economic facts into accoun~. The proposaj. does n.ot suggest that the
city
· become. involved in any research· or development techniques .for waste 'management but rather· that
it
simply adopt a few procedures.
-
·
·
PROPOSALS
the collection. Therefore if no recycling- firm and the actual
There
is
no way to estimate . be
estimated.
The
daily
1.
The Common Council pass
extra
pick ups;··or at the. most metho.d
would
have , to be
the
number
of aluminum
· circulation ·of the Poughkeepsie -
an ordinance requiring the home
orie or two. a month,
this
part of explored · This particularly true
·products"" that are discarded, - Journal
is
approximately 38,000
owners separate his. wastes into
the·costs.will be minimized.
in. the case .of aluminum .. The
therefore it woulc;l be impossiole
An
experimentally determined
. three
different
categories:
There
will
be some cost in paper however· can be sold to a
to arrive at a figure.
two week average daily paper
papers, trash and garbage.
.
. transporting the material to the local
firm
right here
m
the city.
Paper on the other hand can
weight
is 0.5 lbs. for each
Papers
shall be defined as any
· Monday through Saturday paper
paper or cardboard 1.1181:erial
such
·oi:
57 tons/ week.
as
tea ding
m aterfal
and
· The Sunday paper which has a
con tain•ers
that·
may
be
circulation
of approximately
conveniently.
stacked
and
40,000 and an-average weight of
bundled for collection:
·
3. pounds, would add another 57
Trash shall be defmed as glass,.
tons/wk., bringing the average
metal, plastic and ·other non
up to 114 tons/wk.
This
figure
paper
products
with ·the.·,
could most
likely be doubled
exception of food wastes.
when New· York· papers and
Garbage shall be defined as
magazines are added, ·however,
food wastes.
·
·
let us assume a weekly average
· 2. The Sanitation Department
of 140 tons/wk or 20 tons per
adjusts its schedule . such that
j
ciay.
·
. _ they designate certain days as
I
·
It now becomes obvious that
;; , ~ .. ··
··paper, trash and garbage pickup
I
approximately
¼
of all material
; , <
days.:,If.·.probably:
woulq
·be:
i
..
dumped
in· the
land
fill
./>: •· /
slifdficiet·
tit ·:ht<>
:.·bc?llec~
·•tthhle
.. paThispe~
bplefratinlon
is
paper.re.·
c'y ..
lin·
•. ',.
.
·.• ·an
·, ras
· 1mon
y-.
•.
-< .. '
_.o y ...
,paper.- , c .g .. were•i ,._.;'··,.
~
fi~i:~t!tf
!\~ti~~iW;h¾\~l1
'·~2E,it;::;J'.;;tlicl;t't~~1i;t
,<--·•
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,
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3}
These,iestrictions would be·.
1)
Increase dump
life ..
.
1
•
:/.m.odiffed'/for
· comntl':.rcial •
2(
The
cost of pick up would
,.
.
,~.
'
'
_-.
·es~abHs.hments
that ·:·Produce.;
·be. offset by the sale of paper,.
large• yohirrtes of.
wastes
which.
even if it became necessary to
may.be of a particular kind ... ~-· ·
run an extra pick up. .
·
CURRENT SANITATION
> - ·
·. --
Cost· of pick ·up, labor and
STATISTICS
.
equipment- $984
•·
:· . Dump_ Characteristics - Load-;
Income from a bimonthly pick
'-Ci,t.y
· of
Pou·gh:keepsie,
up 280 tons·x $5/ton
=
$1#00
. ·approximat~ly· 7 trucks/day or
CONCLUSIONS
. _ ·approximately
80 tons/qay.
While this proposal does not
· Tow-n 'of
Poughkeepsie,
.,·
f
suggest. that. waste management,
.
approxiniatelYc,8 trucks/day or
;-',
·Will positively make money for
approximately
100 tons/day;
··
the City it will however, have a
.Projected: Life time
of dump·- 5
number· of desirable effects. It
y_eais; .
·
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.
_
should at least be a no cost
'Qptn·aH.onat
Costs
--
operation for the City.
It
will
Dump"'Laboi
- . $180/day;
·. ·
also extend .the.
life
of the land
-.Equipmenti--
$113/day;."'
fill site by ·a number of years.
Pick-up~Labor
.;.: ·$600/day;
Finally, it
is
good practice to
Equipment:-.
$384/day. Total
recycle
wastes, which could.
$1277/day. • .-•
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•
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•
reS!Jlt in lower· product costs
' Since -the homeowner
will
be
.
than it·
is
to throw -them away.
- asked to separate-the wastes;this
.
·~·.
BB
Undoubtedly
this proposal
part
of the
costs • will be .
,
.
~
.
will not be popular in all areas,
circumvented.
About::8%.
of..
· _ .· .·
'
- .
however,. the benefits should
sanitation costs •.
·are incurred· in
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___
'"'!"""
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__, _____________________________________
-"-,-·-,.:_
·------·
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out-weigh the opposition.
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>
•
,··
•
. petition
each ward · for the
-.-
u·rba·
·n'
·.·-.
_
...
o·RE
approval· of. Rehwoldt's
plan.
The
teams
·will·
educate the
·- residents· of the ·wards as to the
·
·
·
·
·..
. -
·, immediate , dangers of p'ollution
·,··.·n·d.
_·
······.•a'.
-,--
·1s·1·
.·_:-
-
and-the ·benefits·ofRehwoldt's,
plan. When enough signatures
···
..
·.ate · gathered
·. they
-will be
BYSALPIAZ_.zA:
.
submitted
to the Common
Council and action
will
be taken
Dr. Malvin Michelson is an
• "Michelson is teaching a course
on the proposal.
_
as.5istant profe~or of-Chemistry
in Chemistry for · non-science, -. In talking ·abc:>ut attitudes.
at Marist. He has·been involved majors: this semester and has·
towards
the
entire
ecology
in many anti~war · and radical ·. incorporated .
his .
philosophy of · "movement" Michelson regarded .
reform
activities
in the
education into the course .. He
it as ha,ving a· great deal of
Mid-Hudson
area· and .is stated thaf the course
is
being
significance
if carried to its
p resenOy
the
chief .draft
taught
. as _ an education
in
potential. He said it would fail
if
counselor at Marist.
. ecology •. He plans _ to discuss
people considered it a large scale
Dr.
Michelson
started our
population
control,
~nd ·.anti-litter
campaign. Industry
conversation with a brief outline
pollution in its _·various fonns.
must be held culpable for their
of
his
philosophy of education.
However, he has established as
failure
to make ·adequate
He feels that it is necessary that
the class project the adoption of·
provisions
for environmental
the
colleg~
go beyond the
Dr. Robert Rehwold.t's plan for
protection. -Automobile owners
con fines
of·· a -campus and -waste ;management· by the city
are not responsible for· auto
become actively involved in the
of Poughkeepsie. (Reprinted in
pollution, the manufacturei:s are.
politics of its surrounding·
area.
.its
entirety.)
The plan was
If the industries are forced to
He regards hims,elf
as_
activist submitted
to
the Common
control pollution the movement
first
pedagogue.
second.
~ouncil this past summer and
will be a success: Michelson
sees
Although
he grants
that
received
the
beaureaucratic
educating the general public as
sociological
studies
are
run-around
of
1municipal
to who
is
responsible for the
important
he
feels
that
government.
rape of the environment as a
educational
institutions
have
The city of Poughkeepsie
is
matter of primary concern.
failed
by
not
persuading
divi!fed
into
eight
wards.
.
Dr.
Michelson
regards the
municipal
state
and federal
Michelson plans to divide
his, waste
management
plan
ag~ocies to adopt them into. the cl~es
(about eighty students)
workings of government.
into teams of two which
will
.
/
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CONTINUED
ON PAGE 4
Security
At Marist:
-Mission
Impossible/
BY GEORGE
BYRNES
It
is
quite obvious from the incident
that happened last
happenings of the last few weeks.·· week: A sizeable amount
of
that "security" at Marist College money was robbed from a room
leaves much to be desired.
It
was •in· one· of the houses.
It
was
stated in. a recent interview with
reported to the floor proctor.
Mr~ Ronald Aderholdt that the . Next,
the
Housemaster was
basic
.aim
or .philosophy of the informed of the incident, and he
Security
Department
is to in tum, notified the Director of
. supervise
and
protecfrom
Security. The next step is for the
vandalism the buildings per se Security Director to speak to the
and the equipment therein. Also, students involved and see if they
to
provide
safety
for the · want the matter reported to the
students as far as their needs police. If it
is
to be reported, a
reqajre ... Meanwhile, televisions, fonnal statement is taken and
money, rugs, pictures, paintings,
submitted
to the authorities
stereos, albums, and anything
with the probability of no action
else that is not nailed down are being taken. There is a small
disappearing
faster than the ·possibility that the thieves will
security officers can write up talk of their actions and be
their reports.
Last
year alone, reported
to the
Security
over five thousand dollars in Director... If so, the matter is
paintings, and pictures were stol referred to Dean Wade who will
from the gallery. Thus, further
take appropriate measures to see
proving the point that closer the money returned.
If
not, the
scrutiny of our security system
thieves plan their next. move to
is not
only
necessary
but help
bolster
their «get rich
inevitable.
To illustrate, let us consider an
CONTINUED
ON
PAGE 7
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PAGE"l
. 111.E
CIRCLE-·•
·,;
SEPTEMBER.
17, ·1970
'.,••
.Once Again:·_
No
Policy_·
·I.sAmericagreatenou!Yt:.s:::~~~~DoesAtri~ricaknow
,-.-ATTITUDE-S.
·.:
,,()IJT.
RAGEO.
~.
U
...
s ·.:.
where. it's going? These. are questions that haunt. many ·concerned
~
Americans, and many foreigners as well.
·These
topics were·the ones
BY BILJ,.O'REILLY
ili~:!.-~!w~~:
h~p~~~~:;~~~!i:;~_~r:~~
\vh8!;~he
1
n~~.
.
• "Good afte~cjon br~thers and·. · · "\Vhat.
is
the tone .of the social
. Father Gallante
is
a special· kind
invasion going to be?" my Spanish friend~ would constantly·ask. At · sis_tcrs .of the ·~ood Lord
.Loves
. affairs?,. -'
_
of priest · so catch his ac::Loil
rust,
.(
was amazed 'that~· these
people·
were so ~terested· and His Sheep High School,
my
...
"Let me
niake this
perfec~ly
Saturday ·it :six .. and 'midnight
'"•-'
informed about what was happening back in my country, when the
name· is Harvey Sprigmore, you - clear, every social affair at Manst · · -and · Sunday; · l think you'll
be
· majority of the time they were completely ignorant, or-· appe-ared can. call me Spriggy,. and
rm.
is
rated X."
. .. .
. .
. impressed.
·
· ·
. ·
·
totally uninterested as to what was happening in-their own country. · here to talk to you about Marist , : •~yes another question, okay
Last and'·certainly least
is
the
The fact that the Spanish Government was in the midst of its biggest
College. ·
. · ·
. . •. ·
, the girl in the· tight swea!er who: • big trip sponsored by the Italian ·
scandal since Frarico came to power; and the American envoy had
Marist is a Liberal.Arts College ·-I'· have
b·een.
lookrng
at
Society to Italy .. The trip costs · ·
just arrived
in
Madrid to work out the final arrangements for
in
Poughkeepsie, New York_. The · throughout my talk."
..
· $429, and breaks down thi:h '
. American military bases in Spain didn't ·seem to phase them as much . emphasis .here· is .on · the word
.. What about the drug problem
, way: $200 for round-trip·. flight
as the campus unrest
in
America, the Vietnam War, orthe trouble on
Liberal. I mean Marist is really
atMaiist?":. '· ·
· · , .. _:
.
on
Air.
Spumoni, $10 if you·
Wall Street.
.
.
.
together. If
you
go there I can
· "There
'is ..
no problem getting
want to ,use the toilet, $19 for
Then I began to realize why they seemed so interested. It's -not· personally guarantee you at least
drugs at Marist."
.
taxi fare f"rom where your Air
that they were really interested or concerned about the United
two sit-ins, three false fire alarms
"I didn't' meari that, isn't' it
Spumoni plane crashes to your
States, they were just plain scared. As one professor put it to a group
and maybe even a takeover of
true · that _there are a lot of
hotel - on the
ridge of Mt.
of American students last year, "What happens in New York or
the boatho_use. _
..
.
people geUmg ~re~y mes_sed up
Vesuvius, $20 to remove, the
Washington affects the average Spaniard more than any decree from
The Social Life at Manst 1s a
on drugs at Manst.
·-
grease stains from- your clothes
Madrid could."
·
gas. We now h_ave girls living on
"Yeah, but we have a new
gotten on the flight, over $50
There are many Spaniards who are concerned about American war
the campus and you know.what
game room up there."
for an oil painting of Mussolini
planes on their soil, and especially one of the biggest nuclear
that
means ·guys. You don:t
"Oh/'
. . . ·
.
sharing· a piece of pizza with
submarine. bases in the world riizht in their back vard. But the
know what that means? Well it_
For those of you who think
Chuck
Lobosco's grandfather,,·
Government has been doing a great job of keeping the issue in the
means that uh, uh, well it means. the Marist College Chaplin is
$50 for pills to revive you after•
background by playing up Spain's right to the rock at Gibraltar.
that there are. fewer bathrooms
alive and hiding
in Paraguay you
you• drink the water and $80 to
Stories about Spain's efforts to regain the _Rock through diplomatic
for the boys.
.
are partially right. He
is
alive and . sit in the ·colosseum and watch
channels are found daily in the Spanish-press, but the factthat Spain
At Marist there is also plenty
his name
is
Father Leo Gallante .. Sal Piazza
and Joe. Rubino
could be vulnerable to an attack by anyone who may be at variance
of,Academic freedom. T!lere are
He coulddn't get a visa to go to,
devoured by a pack of killer
with the United States because of the stationing of American war
many new courses. There are so
Paraguay so he resides in his· dachshunds.
materials on Spanish soil, is rarely discussed and not writt~n about. _ many lndia·ns .on campus that
mansion
behind Champagnat.
Government
ownership
and
control
of the mediums. of. next semester their will be a
communication (TV, radio, press) and the strong position of the
course
in the . cu., • .:>ms and
Catholic Church have thus far served the Franco regime quite well.
mating habits of the Shoshones.
They have given Spain the appearance of being a peaceful, culturally
In addition there will soon• be
rich nation, making its way in the nuclear age at its own speed under
courses in camping out, burning
a benevolent dictator. But this is not necessarily the case. Although
incense, heavy expressions and
the Spaniard respects the histpry and customs of his country to a
plan hijacking given by Abdul
great• degree, ·much more so than any American can imagine, he
is
Ho-Tep of Syria.
.
·
becoming more and more impatient with the way his country is
The rules and regulations at ·
being run. Spanish stud_ents · especially are looking with a jealous eye
Marist are. not very s~ringent.
at their American counterparts and beginning to ask questions that
The only dress regulations are
they wouldn't have dared to ask a few years·ago.
that . you
must . wear dirty -
The recent strike by construction workers in Granada, and subway
dungarees at least three times a
workers in Madrid are bold examples of discontent in a country
week,
Indian head-bands are
where strikes of any kind ar illegal, and subject to courtmartial.
mandatory at the evening meal
Whether these reform forces will ever be permitted to become
and there are no shoes permitted·
organized, and the attitude that the landed aristocracy and Catholic
in · the
classroom.
The . only
Church take toward them will have a lasting effect on how fast Spain
curfew rule is, that if you are
catches up to the rest of Europe and the World: The desire is"there,
caught. in your room between 8
but the resources aren't. And as is often the case, the U.S. has the
p.m.
and·
4 ·
a.m.
you are
capabilities, but no policy to implement them.
considered
a . social outcast.
.
unless your wacked-out.
The
Syst
em•
.
·Well th.at's aboutit-ex~.e. p.t· f_or. ·
..
,
•
our new•. schedule which, has
g,.,1.
..
. .··
"lit¥½$,
'T1 •
·
.
£
~
·
d.
t··
fl
schooLstarting-July
4
but
YOU'..·,.,..
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1r~c,
:ll) .
get:<>utJa~~aryJ7
and;you get
-.~,· •·
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.
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.
•
.
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.
.
dif?:..:H~~,
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which· they approach _politics. They_ are primarily concerned. with
th e boy with the funny-cigarette
who
looks
like a wounded
BY DENNIS ALWON
getting
a
"good" job, settling down and making money .. The
mongoose." .
·
. problems of·tl~e society in which we live interest the~ but do not.
.
.
The most:·sensitive
and t}:i.e ·· ·:different methods,. Perhaps by.
really concern them. As they get older a_nd progress they become
'.
·.. •
.· . '
·
- most · real people in . the_ .world
indulging their. time
in
social
more and more interested in maintaining the status quo. They find
s
·.d
. . .
·s
. . ..
.
.have. experienced
loneliness
activities, being BMOC, etc ... ,
that they have some influence in legislative government because
theyu
n...
a
Y· ".
o·n
g . •.
th~oughout. ;_their. lives. ·Peopl.e
"Experiencing a solitary state
have the resources to pressure bureaucrats, legislators and executives.
.
.
>
•
·.
.
·
think of bemg lonely as a bad
gives
the ·. individual·
the
They use
this
influence to their own particular group's advantage
·
·
.
.
·
and unacceptable
trait. in
our
opportunity_
to draw upon
and take the attitude of the «survival of the fittest."
• · - BY TO~
HACKETT ·
society, but I look at it froin a
untouched
capacities
and
There
is
a gro~ing number. of students, however, who are really
The_ boats _crrcled ~acefully as • totally different point of view. I
resources and to realize himself
concerned beyond the point of mere interest with the state of affairs · the wmd whispered its orders to
believe that most. people are · ,in ·an entirely unique manner."
in this country .. They seek to solve the problems of war, racism,
their. sails, .. and sporadically a
really lonely .and cannot fact this
.This. experience may not . be a
poverty and injustice.
·miniature_
yacht;. like, t~ose
fact thus compensating:by trying
. pleasant experience for it may
Some of these people work on an individual basis, such as helping
found _at rm~dle-class m9on!1gs, • to be "one
-of
the guys." Their
bring a new type of self to the
to paint a house so that an oppressed family will have a home or
would push its way up or. down
fear of being alone will force
pel'Son being involved in it.•
working to build a park so that the kids in a ghetto will have a place
tht:
sun drench~d _riv.er.· As I
them to do and be something..
How many people can _really .
to play or traveling to Appalachia to help a priest working with the
shif~ed . my . at!ention ·. t~ the · they are not
They overcome. . admit to themselves that they
oppressed in Kentucky. They realize that they will only help
a
parking lot, which was slightly . this loneliness by very many ·
are _alive and that they are real
handfull of people but they feel thaphey
are doing.something to
stuffed
with motley> shining
·
·
and true to. themselves; People
solve the problem.
·
inetalic machines, I would see a
of their. choosing. some decide
believe _that they -know what
But more and more students today are coming to understand that
loner or two making his or her
to choose not at
all.
But why
they warit
in: life :but p~ha~s
if_
one well developed, well executed government program in the field
w a'y: • through
the afternoon
. Sunday aµd why choose and . they were introduced into'a new ·
of poverty, for instance, would reach more people than they could
·sunshine . without any obvious
why. do the boats rip at - the · more ·sens.hive
and ·creative
in a lifetime; that 11 ,more peace senators could do more to end the
direction.· And of course, since it · · river's surfac~? We are all on our
world
their.··· ideas ·would ·be
war than a million people marching on Washington. They are
was Sunday. afternoon,
there
boats sailing the riveroflif~ and
radically different The trouble
demanding, in short, a most basic reading of priorities in the life of
were coupl!;!S an~ groups and all
perhaps· nqf really reading the
is
·to .
get
people . to allow ·
this country. Maybe feeding starving babies is mo.re important than
sorts of gatherings about .the.
compass correctly as ·we might
themselves to let their inner
self
going to the moon according to the student.
·
campus. Leisure was the order of · like to think: And who the hell
be seen. This
can
be done by ·
But once this reordering of priorities is agreed upon how does one · the day.
.
. ·really knows?
• ·
t
f
(Y
)
t
go about doing it. Some students think that the answer lies in
Below
me open
windows
There are ... some ··pe.
ople. ·who
mere concen ra
10
n
oga ·
0
.
experience a seµse of life (that
destroying this government.and establishing a new one. Even if this· a
11
owed·.
the
escape>
of
are • divorced for a _time from. •.may ;,seem ridiculous. at first)
were a viable solution it would take much too long.
.
Woodstock recordings and other,-
Sunday afternoons as we know,
that" they
never before had
The answer lies, I think, in working within the system to change it.
various· melodies whatever the · them. They used to ·know ttiem
experienced.·
To . be able· to .·
Those people who are interested in maintaining the status quo and
l!steners
J?le~re.
Across.· ~he - b_ut because _thei;-e
are those who . control their minds· and bodies _
pressuring government to see that it is maintained would be greatly
nver( the md~fferent moun~ns
. h~e. to_
0
.d1ct~te;
they _have. as·one
organism or separately."
out.numbered by
a
coalition of groups seeking the reordering of
a~a1ted · therr· transfo~ation;.
dict~ted.
t,o · take . aw:ay . t!1e ,. To let the' mind function as it
priorities. The success of such a venture lies in organizing these
with casual acceptani;:e, since the
serenity of Sunday for. awhile
never . has before • Creation _
groups of people to work within the political system.
flux. of· nature could not .lie
and dress them in authoritative
Sensation
_
•
Concentration
_.
It seems that the route with the best chance of success would be
d~med. Soon the healt!tY hills• . green
and
le_t them.
crawl
Discipline. One must. be able to
for this coalition to work to gain control of. the Democratic Party
will become a panoranuc array - throu~h
: the Jungl~ with _an . discipline
their
bodily. and
and thereby be in a position to take on the government and reorder
of yellow and brown and shades . authon!ative
gu!1.
,s 1t the faith
mental. control. ·once this is
priorities legislatively. Toward that end thousands of college · of both. Then, if the world
of .therr choosing that allows_ done he is to become sensitiveto
students are working for candidates who are acceptable to the
doesn't end, or,
if
nature doesn't . them to. practice the right,.
~
life
in general. To be ~ble to feel
coalition across the country, A Democratic Party composed of the · change her mind, or if G_od . do~f!lahcall_y,
to ·make the .. the emotions he really
has he
New Left does have a realistic probability of-influencing policy
doesn't decide- to order me to
decision of ~!e or. death? How
may .be shocked to,see :himself
immediately and in establishing policy in the near future if it wins a· another reality - . I will se~ th~· · sol~mnly ·reli~ou! 1t must be ~o
Joying_
anopter,. ~an· or. ·4eeply
p;esidential election.
This
it seems to me
is
the only realistic way to · mo.untains grow thin and -lank
belie~e that yo!1
~
correct m
involved with nature (life). . .. ·· :
go about changing the fundamental problems·facing the country.
and then snow will be ushered in . ordenng people_s lives, t!J.at you
Perhaps these are the.hardest
Institutionalized racism, an uncontrolled war machine and aggressive to take those places left v3:cant h3lve the
unIVersal right to
,.things
in _life· but·
if
we are
foreign policy can only be successfully overcome by dealing with · by ·
th~ •
departing. leav~ WmJer
dictate th~ course of human
looking forward to a world of
themfromwithintheestablishedorder.
will
VISit us agam until spnng
eve!1ts beca~·
some•·warpe_!l
trueness
and humaneness we
It is much easier for those in control of power to deal with
decid~ it's time to come again.
log_i~ tells you that war
JS
must try to discover ourselves
.. trashing in the streets" or mass demonstrations. Those participating
And every week there
will
be a politically sound.
.
· and relate them to others by
in
such activities are.easily grouped into a "lunatic fringe" and no
Sunday afternoon.
_And so there are many w~o
means
of communications
matter how real their motives, are
cast
into a disreputable group.
If.
As dictated. by those. who
will never see tl!e mountains
whether it be.in art, poetry or
these sincerely interested in achieving a reordering of priorities
usurp ; th_e nght
to dictate,
slowly and - poetically ch:mge
whatever. We must destroy the
redirected
their activities into campaigning for representatiye
Sunday
1s
.that
day
when
from summer green to winter
hostilities and aggressiveness that
candidates, a great deal more would be achieved. Such work removes
every one
is sul?posed
_to
COi'fllNUEDON 8
we have and create a feeling of
«ego trips" and Yippie theatrics but results in def""mite
progress.
contemplate or practice the faith
peace
in
our minds.
·
.
~--·~•
..
i.:.
:_--:·_;
--~~~-
..
,_:.
/~')
~::
.
.
.
~
-
·
......
-...
...
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..
..
.
. .
.
.
.
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.........
'
.....
~
.·
.
..
..
..
'
.
,-
...
·,c;..-
~-
--··~.,.
..
,·~-~
Politics·
And--
-
Curriculum
Reform
·
BY TERRENCE
MOONEY
•
·"::.-·
.•
~
::
·;~
·i•
>
.
.
...
...
~
..
.
.....
1HEORCLE
PAGE3
Curriculum
·1·evision
Approximately two years ago,
be expected to submit their
·
the requirements
of the old
the faculty requested that. the
requirements for t.'1.eir majors. cu rri cu lum
and
the
new
Academic
Policy
,Committee
These will be discussed at a arrangement will have problems
initiate a study of the present·
-
colloquium on Oct. 23.
resolved in their favor. Such
curriculum
with the aim of
The plenary session for voting difficulties will be considered on,
revising
the curriculum. The
on the proposal
is
tentatively
an individual basis.
college community agreed that
scheduled
for Nov. 20. The
·
Since the tentative approval of
such proposals should be shaped
session will not vote on each this idea by the
A.P.C.
and later
by a thorough
discussion of
department's requirements, but by the Council of Departmental
curriculum ideas by all segments
rather on the general proposal. Ch a i r m e n ,
A. P. C.
has
of the college community. The
The
reason
for
publishing
encouraged
community
A.P.C.
heeded this mandate. In. department
requirements is to comment on the proposal. As
the course of the past two years,
insure that
all understand how the process of revision reaches
w or ks ho p-s we re
held;·
~he general
-J?ropo~al
will be the point of d_ecision, the A.~.C.
departmental
self-studies were
unplemented, if it
is
approved.
feels that it has responsibly
conducted;
faculty-student
_
If the proposal is approved, it adhered to the mandate given it
discussions were arranged on a
will take effect in September,
two years ago.
floor-by-floor
basis
in the
1971.
Students caught between
·
* * *
*
*
dormitories.
The dialogue has
·
-
not ended; it continues today
among
all
segments of t)le
community. In November, the
A.P.C. will ask the faculty to
appro:ve
a new
curriculum·
arrangement for the college.
· The new arrangement would
allow a student's
major field
department to allocate the first
half of the student's graduation
requirements.
The
·-
department.
will
.specify
the courses required
for the major and those related
areas which it feels are necessary
or desirable for its majors.
There will probably be two
-
requir.ed
experiences,
a
two-semester Freshman Seminar
and a ·two-semester sequence in
. physical education.
The remaining half of the
grad.uation.
requirement
will
consist of courses selected by
Higher education
is
in the
tallied; However, to the others,
.
the student in consultation with
throes
of
·
conflict and crisis
to the others, to the student
,,
_
his
adviser. These courses should
: :brought :
on, partially, · by the
activist, let me warn and hearten·
be chosen primarily outside the
agonizing problems of growth
them· on._ Technology
and
student's special area and should
and diversity. Greater numbers,
professional guilds are arranging
provide
a more
general
a greater bed- ofknowl~dge and
·,
their world
and
their education
educational experience.
· -;greater
diversity of population
so- that_ they won't have to
Consideration of this proposal
·•
,
.
(mass
production- won't work
experience
i~ ..
Devise
-
.
and
will take place at a faculty
.
-_- _
.
>anymore)
have
brought
implement
specific programs.
colloquium.on Friday; Sept.18.-
;,):i,
.
-·
·
' ·
educators. to the· point of asking_
,
Let your decisions indicate your
·
Students,
~•through
the_ Student
~:\t:'~C}}:If~~-lt~?J'r~kribii!di~~
~ijMf?~tfftJ!~1::
9
JI:
J\t'~o~.mt,
·.
··tn1~";f
~~~:C~!!~t~~~~i~
-:
:/>
:
,,
,
:e.\'eryone
-·should·
expenence:.
of'
the politfoal.'realities of the
The· A.P.C.
stands ready to
,':._
;',/.,;
::;,Higher
learning
is
being'tiirned
·
formula
Hon_ of"-academic.
discuss· the proposal with all
,;/
.
i'.-:
<
·
·<tip
side-· down. to develop'. its
.
policies.· Other .interests besides
interested groups on campus
.
.
·-·-';•·:<{-Y,curriculuin
and perhaps-just as
their own are .involved behind
Faculty-student
dialogue
' ,
, ·;.
_
'important,_
a rational for such
.the
rhetorical
-
gwie- of concern
should
be occuring
at. the
:
:_'.
development.
·
_ ·
,
for
the
individual
·
students.
departmental
level
also
.
.
,..·
Our.educational institutionsit
Some
professors
are,
for.
September is a crucial month in
.:seemed;
hesitated .in the. 60's to
.instance, concerned primarily in
the· shaping of more specific
co~ft:ont the treme~dous
but·
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
elements of the curriculum; By
anticipated problems of the ?O's.
.
-
-
-
October 15, all departments
will
Steven
Muller. compares
·the
situaticfa facing higher education
arid the
.
.approval taken, by the
Student
Acad.
Comm.
----------,
I
-
.
THE
I
-
powers to be in
his
paper titled;
S om e
-
Th o ugh ts
,
in
'_
the
R~structuririg of Universities
~
. -
Or Now that the Pot
is
Boiling,
_
What's in it?
-Faculty
Colloquium
I
AMERICAN
I
STUDIES
PROGRAM
II
I
PRESENTS:
I
NATURE AND CITY:
I
.
AN AMERICAN DILEMMA
I
I
September 17,8:00P.M.
I
,\
_
What then
is·
the role of the
,
.
student·
in this_
•educational
_
This Friday, September
·
18,
•
planning?
Ct:rtainly
some_·thefirst_among
three faculty
'.
students
will , not. realize· the colloquia on curriculum revision
._imp_oitanc~
9f
:the,:
plans
bei,ng
wfil
take place;
·Although
it
.is
a
made or-their right
fo
participat_e faculty colloquium, students,
as
:m
sl,lch plannfug-imtil it is too in. the past, will be allowed to
late_ and _the votes. have ~een 8:ttend.
The
·
discussion
will
,A
S.tatement
·
of
Philosophy
BY GEORGE ROARTY
_
'Su:t>mitted
by
.
Terrence
·
·
Mooney With Respect To The
Student Government of Marist
College
-
-
·
·
·
center
basically
around the
departmental structuring of the
major fields and their related
course segments. In addition the
A.P.C. will seek out the general
faculty feeling concerning the
curriculum proposal which is in
-
the process of being finalized.
When the faculty have entered
and
·have
been
seated,- the
students
will be allowed
in.
Their
questions
will
be
entertained
only
after
the
government calls . for a wider
-
faculties' have been attended to.
democratization
of rulemaking
·
Because
of the
extent
of
and
enforcement.
Student
business to be covered and the
representation
at the· very· importance of covering it within
highest governing levels
is
also
the
colloquium,
students
are
·.
If
-
to govern_
is
to administer,
necessary (as the committee on
asked to cooperate
with the
then the function of student
the student .in higher education
above guidelines. Students, as
government
is·
to administer
recommends) to
·prevent
student
wbat by De Facto definition
victimization by the professional
was stated last week, will have
relates
to the student.
The g u i l d s
a n-d
c
O
11 e g e
an opportunity
to raise any
questions
they
may
have
strangely
co-optive
and_ administrators.
(In budgetary
concerning
the
curriculum
charitable tone of past student
and
governance
_
matters, for
revision at the student-faculty
government
philosophies have, .instance.)
·
colloquia
which
will
be
·
-
interpreted
what· relates
·
to
_
Tlie
time
has past where
operating
on a departmental
students as what does not relate
-
:to·-the"administration
of their
administration
-
dealings with
basis. In case any student will be
essentiai•services.
·
·
.
students
.
were lilcened to:, an
·
unable to attend these meetings
elite-adolescent relationship. We and
.would
.like to learn more
·
·
Since all essential seivices on
·are
now completely aware of the
about what
is
involved .in the
the campus are or should be political
intrigue_ involved in
curriculum proposal and what
directed toward th e service of even previously assumed chaste
your department is do.ing, a list
the
individual
st udent,
his·
matters as academic policy and
of the
S.A.C~
department
student government should be
curriculum reform..
representatives
and
their
· his
·
protective
agent.
·such
Tiie philoso_
phy then, of
this
respective box numbers follows
services
(security, placement,
b
library,
financial
_aid,
etc.)
student government
~ political.
elow.
It
is
hoped that you
will
We are a political entity and
seek them oµt if you have any
should also be subject to review
should
be dealt
with
in
questions,
problems,
or
and
reform
by authorized·
student representatives.
governance matters as such. The suggestions
concern.ing
the
protection
and promotion
of
curriculum revision.
While still admitting to th e
student interests
is
our sincere
English
-
Bernie Mulligan
political
realities of campus
d~.
S117; Tom Rabbitt S-37; Paul
governance,
this
student
-
*****
Novak;
Hist.
and
Political
Science:
Jim
Snyder L291;
Dallas
Benedict
S-11; Terry
Mooney
_
L2 I 8;
Psychology:
Gerry
Wildner
C-717; Jane
Pancheri
L250;
Math: Jerry
Della Rocca L-36, Bill Haidrich
CONTINUED
ON PAGES
I
(N TIIE THEATRE
IA
lecture
by:
I
I
JOHN
J •
McDERMOTT
-
I
l
[)irector of Interdisciplinary
Studiet
Queens
College
,
·----------
SUNY at BinghamtOn
Institutes Governance.
-Binghamton,
N.Y. - (I.P.)
A
new university governance
system for State University of
New York
·
at Binghamton will
begin implementation this year.
The new plan provides for a
University Assembly seating 55
faculty,
32 students,
and
13
administrators.
The Assembly
replaces the Faculty Senate as
the major, policy-making body
_on
this campus.·
"This
system· allows for a
'governance,' not a government
.in the traditional sense of the
word. Governance is a fresh
approach
and
denotes
a
decision-making
process
involving
all constituencies
rather than the (now) apparent
widespread
displeasure
that
these constituencies tend to have
because
·
of their perception of
the
traditional
governmental
process on the national, state
and university levels."
Committees reporting to the
Assembly
will
be established
having differing ratios of faculty,
students,
and administrators,
ranging
from
large
faculty
majorities on some committees
through to those having large
student majorities.
These committees
will deal
with
all aspects of university
concern,
including
academic
planning, budget requests, and
student social regulations. Each
constituency
is
expected
to
arrange for the election of its
representatives to the university
Assembly.
_
President
Dearing said that
-
adoption
of the new system
represents a "big hurdle cleared"
in efforts to create an "adaptive
and
contemporary"
form of
university governance. He felt
that
the
new Assembly,
representing
all
campus
constituencies, will involve more
aware
participants.
Hopefully
this
will lead to a more effective
:iecision-making process.
* * * * *
\I
I
-
I
·,
·•
•;·-..
·~
PAGE:4 ·,,,. ,.':
,.,
.. _
... , •:·.'.;'
,;, • •'.'• ·' .. :
;>,:._
·. :;\:.,·.
··<,,::
__
,:_,\_,<
... :,
'DIEciRCLE:.::
.. '.:: .. · .
.c
..
;,_~:i'??;;~;~;/:::::,·-:::·:·-~·;···.
SEP'lmlBER
11:
1970;\,';;
''.',.
\
Johd:.::DOY/~·on·•
Thi '
lnexPedienCy
·.
Of.
YiO.legc{!-
.
. _,•,:,,!
'
·..
:,_"'..
•·-.~
'·. ,·~--:/~·
...
-
~
. BY ROBERT
ULLRICH ·
.
. -:''.'-\ _:.
:<'.
The ,following are excerpts
interfering
with a. revolt of
colonialistn oack by means.of
,·
·
· · .•
·
·
. · ·· ... '.:"'··,-:-,.,.._,_
.. , ··
from a speech delivered on the
people against oppression. For,
atomic :weapons,.· which . they.
· I feel that·l am compelled to write. this articl~ simplfbecause,-_,lJ
floor
of . the
Ho use
of
if
we do this too often, it will be
hate with a bitter hate/'
.
.
feel-violence and
use'
of violen! tactics ·to. fore~ change is wroµgand,,:::
.. Representatives by John Dow on known
all
over the globe that
"In this tragic moment we are
immoral. Our country is becoming polarized.(or
is
alread~)
an,~
ea~:·
May
s·;.
1965.
Mr. Dow is,· the common people cannot right _to brush aside the. countless
side '(those who want quick change and thos~ _who believe
m.
~e
presently
a candidate·
for
their
wrongs 'without. United . _questions· and· anxieties· of our
status ,quo) tend to see. their •"ehemies" in their ex!J'eme
fo~.Jf
·
Congi:ess.
from
the .28th
States
opposition.
And (he
own peciple, tellµtg them they
·your
goals include peace and
-creation
of a .Vibrant ·h~man
Congressional
.District.
The. people will, say that the United
don't know ·the facts. It's true
community then
can
y~u ~ustify_ violent me.ans to a ~o~btf~
s Pee c
~
t-~ on cb~
1
r
1
_nfe d tahn States doesn't go to the courts; · nobody knows
all
the facts, and : .. Pt
eaceh
ful enhd.?
tc
1
annt?tt Pti~ach a~ouxt md~ralst
!<>t11?J
8
let
0
bucthlanwgille·
.thistry
'.--.·:'
appropna
10n
1
·
or
e shedoesn'tsitdownand·parley;·
.mostof_usknowonly~few.So
. os_oww
YVIoen
a_c csare-me pe
1
er m_ • .,_"':'
.
.
._
... ,-:
Vietnam war;
·
, she doesn't go· to the United
let us.read the signs. Let us take.
c~untry.
Unless_ you feel ~at, ev,entually only:a VJol~nt ,evolution . );
"I submit that this warfare
Nations;Men: will- say that-the
note' that -our tr~ditional allies . will be the solut10;11
to Amenca s prob~el!l_th~n-tt.ie
realization ~ho~d_ ;
.
that our nation carries on in
United States imposes its own
are. not joining
us
in Vietnam.
occur that the violent· and destructive mcide_n_ts
only_ polanze (as
Vietnam has-little support in the
justice by force."
. .
·
Let' us take note that our side in
well, as our ~unt!f's
leader's tende~c~ to repre~ion) the c?,u;11try · ,. ,
opinion of the world. None of
"If,
now; this nation is
in
the
Vietnam.has-been losing battles · the!e~y_ ;-~aking mtemal . chang~ ··difficult.· (W1tn_ess
.th~
silent
our
historic allies, the, great
Vietnam conflict to right some
and territory in the country.in
maJonty s. backlash to campus VJole-nce and bombmg mcidents by.·
nations like England, France,
wrongs done by one group of
spite of the heavier arms we give· voting ~gainst candidates who~
support~d by s_tudents.)
>
• ..
Italy,
or Canada, have sent · people
to another group. of
.
them."
.
. :r~e- un~ortance ~f educ~,tJ?lg (ch3!1~g ,peopl~ _to 1:Ieip ,~em
troops to aid us as they did in
p e op 1 e , the
purpose
is
"Let . us ,take note that all
realize therr humaruty) the silent maJonty,
tpe nght wmg and
three
wars of this century.
commendable, But the wrongs
through the years of Vietnam.
(Yes!) the "left wing" should be of primary concern.·But can this
l>~
Certainly
nobody
can s~ow
of Vietnam are not ail the
fighting, it has never. been clear
done· when
all
the "silent majority" observes is hundred~ of bombing
where our actions are popular
in
wrongs of this .world, There are· whether
the . Vietnam· people
incidents, violent confJrinations (Yes,· the n~ws media is also at fault)
· · Ksia, among the millions of . wrongs arid cruelties
in
South
wanted to be· saved more from
and
all
it hears~ inflammatory rhetoric.
•·.
:
. . . . · · . '· •··.
people there."
.
· Africa,
in
West Africa,
in
Burma, .
communism than they did from ·
If you've ever argued your case or even discussed rationally with
"Our action is fateful because
in Bolivia, in Brazil,
in
Russia w:ar. Let us take, note that · anyone about America's plight then you've· undoubtedly had to
·
it
reveals
our
one
nation
and
in
China even in the United ·Vietnam recently ejected one
justify
9r
explain-th.e use of violence by others who plead the same
attempting to say, 'L am the
States. · Why shall ·we. swoop
nation of white · men from its
case as you. It's v_efy hard to present acceptable. alternatives to such
law.' - attempting
to be the
down with all our might on this . shores. Why should they like us· a person when. the outward. manifestation of those alternatives are
judge
and
executioner
of
one particular. place that we ·any better?"
.
contradictory to its principles or goals. The possibility of educating_
another nation."
hardly know, so far away, asking
"In this tragic moment we will
that person
is
much more difficult
if
not impossible.
' ; · · . .
· . _ .
"While we hold that the Viet for no_ judge except o_ur own
proceed to delude ourselves that
The actions of the Weathennen are thereby hindering achievement
Cong uprising is a Communist
strength."
·
unanimity on the floor of this
of progress toward your goals even though you aren't sympathetic.to , ·
plot, they hold that it
is
a
·ustill
th~
final argument
body
means
unanimity· the
tli_eirmethods.
·
·
.
_•. .
-,·:
rebellion of the people against remains:. It is said we must stop
world over - for it doesn't. In
I agree that ROTC buildings do not belong on a co}lege campti~ (or
the rulers. Now there may be Communism. I hope we can, but
this
tragic moment we surrender
anyw~ere else)_ but by blowing one up, many people are going to be.
places in this world where we can we stop it by fighting the
our individuality as legislators,
that much more deterinined to maintain its (ROTC) existence and
should oppose Communism -
people we want to :win for our
capitulate to a mechanism and
the
continued
existence of our country's
institutions .. Our .
perhaps in Russia or China. But
side? Can we stop it amongst the
close our eyes to the possibility
institutions help· to establish security and order which. are highly
let us not attempt to do it
in
billions of Asiatics when they
that we may be committing a
prized in our country above· freedom, justice or individual liberty.
those areas where we may be · th i n
~
we
are
bringing
crime upon other men." :
Whr should they sacrifice their security for a doubtful free and just
House
Races
Shift
War
Spending
society.
.
To quote Herbert Apthecker, "The object of a true revolutionary
is to patiently explain!'
·
· · •
·.'
Oc,an
Dumping
.
Nol
Unusual
A po~ibility exists that voters
will be chosen in January; There
· The mid-August furor
ovei
h~d been dumping its sludge was
lead (151 . ppm), copper· (60
can force a major shift on the
is
a possibility of electing
a
dumping several hundred tons of
dead .. Dead ... Not dying; dead.
ppm) and chromium (40 ppm), .
war. This is seen by political
Speake_r and
:1·
·
_Democr3:tic nerve gas off the Florida coast. Scientists studying·the
content
not·-to
mention
everyone's
scie~tist Garrison Nelson
in
a
leadership. comnuttt:d to e_n_dmg ovt:rlooked the fact th~t the
of. bottom sediment in the area
favorite-
pesticide DDT (150 .
detailed stu_dy of t~e .Ho?se of
the ~ar _and cuttmg nuhtary
Uruted States has_been
usmg
the .were horrified:
A
bottoJnsample · pl}m).
These
figures
: were,;.
Represe1:1tatives pu~lished m The
spendmg.
.-.·
··
. ·
oceans Jor ye~s·
~
a trash _<:an from., one: station:
inclpded· • recorded ,at. Station 59 ·in ·tlie/·.
ft~greSS1ve. He p~unts
OU~
t~at ..
a ••
·.··.
-.Th~. llouse,
~e~a\1S~ ~f •. a .•.
,for n~_XlOUSW~te~,
' .:--
·
..
/ :, '·: : :, ce.lhtlo~t~are.ue_;
f_il~~l\:
ti~s, '~dumping,. are~_,<Jn
:t1ie
ope#'' / ' ,. '
'
~s1ten_~, )1-~-wk:~!h.
rna.~?l'l~r.···
•
.cchange_.ofn,i!es,.\Vill11,<>t
~~-.~~~e,,., · ./:r~.:J~~t,-was,~t~~lil~er;,,,:bap.d,;.,ll;l<;l_!j·:,~_d,:;Af~~µi,,[g~.
0
<.o.cean:·.10
1
;.miles }'south
•of
:;-.:,,.c
>:
1
~n~bles, President . Nixon to_· get·-:. to·· _evade •
1
ro11·· call· : vote.s ·:ne.~
t ,
,
th11t
~rne ·
rne>~~
"'1,>.e~:the\Navy
/
~~
sarJii~~J~~~•Jj,ave
,~~~n
$~~p.~"'-·>
R~citaw:~y
Irilef
9diuie,Lcbie
eistL
, .
::t·;,:,,;.•;:,.;..
.
I
what lie ~ants '-· .and s?rnetim~s
session .. _·
If. mem_bers know t~err ·.
·. dumped sevc:riil ·tons" of sUIP,lus,
'ii
!D
~e· stp~~hs· <>f
itsfu
-~xygt?n. of Smdy
·Ho'ok:.' _::
11 •: :
:Y' :.--
' ..
=:,..-:,,
,
...
··
<>
;,!<j
more• : m tht: purs~t · of.
his
votes·• on key 1Ssues are • bemg . ~T:
off t1!,e 'Maryland:· coast. \ m tlie water-'tn the dumpmg area ·_ _•·._·What.
is most,distur!)ing''aboiif' ..
·>.·
· :'
. a~ss1ve
foreign policy.'' He
closely, watched b_y_
alert voter
Ongmally;; 1t.,.'Y'as planned to
:..,-v:as
found_. to be !ess; th~ one· · the., extent·
and .variety'of
:-::·: : .; ·
discovered
that 48 of these · groups as, ammunition. for the
drop the expl.osive off.the coast · p a·rt
p_e r m,11
lt on:• :
,!--:
dumping
is that
so
little
is
yet -, ... • '''
ha.wks_were
vul_nerable
next election, they
Will
be less
ofNewJerseyatthespotwhere
concentration
of 2.5 pJ:)m
ts
.known
ab.out.theeffectiof
·
po!it!qally,
their
elec~o!al
likely
to blind!~ follow· the.
mustard gas had been dumped_ ~~Y,
~onsid,ered essen~
!or~ · sludge, chemicals, poisons/and<· , .. ,,·: ··
maJonttes have been dechnmg
recommendat1on·.of
the
three years before. When that
mannelife;lnfact,nothinglive
junkonthemarineenvironment·.
,,
and each won last time by less
Chairman of the Armed Services
fact became public knowledge . was found;
•..
There is some . evidence ,that•- .. -
than 40,000 v:otes. Twenty-three
Committee. .
, _
the dumping site was shifted. - .. And · even a clam with a
materials
break
down
· · ·
of these hawks belong to the . The loss . of a key hawk, a· Good thing, too, since ships five
snorkeLwould have. to contend
. House leadership, as committee
Committee chairman or member
miles away felt the explosion , with excessive concentrations of
.
c:orhiNUED
ON 8 ·
,
.
chairmen, and members of such
o f t h e App r op r i at ions
when the TNT hit bottom.
.
•··•_·
..
power'ful
committees
as · Committee,'
would have an . But surplus military weapons ..
Appropriations, Armed Services, · unusual· effect _upon the Hou.::e, an~ .. exple>sives aren't ·
the
-only.·
Foreign Affairs, Rules and Ways
even if 'his opponent is also
things the U.S. has been pouring
and Means. ·
_
.
hawkish.
_ .
.
· ·
into the sea at the rate of
48
.
Sources in . the House suggest
In Nelson's list of "vulnerable
million tons per year. Included
that campaigns against 20 of the . hawks" are 28 Democrats, ,and
in that
ghastly
disposal. are
strategically-placed hawks could
19 are· in . key sfots;
and
20
s u I f uric
acid,
•arsenic,
•.
result
in. a swing away from the •Republicans,
4 in important · napthenates, cyanides, mercury ·
!-
militant stand of the House, for
posts.
·
and
other
heavy
metals, ,•_
these reasons:
. ·
The Washington Post says the
pesticides,
refuse
· - from
With some pressure, hawks in _ Democratic primary victory in
municipal sewage to plastics and
tight races
will
adapt to local · the Conne1::ticut Senate race of
cannery
w~stes;
radioactive
thinking
on war and peace
Joseph D,
·
Duffey "represents
wastes, chemical warfare agents,
issues.
'the
biggest · break-through of
constructjon
and demolition
Most
members
follow the
1970 for the 'peace forces' and
debris and variow; rejected or
. · H o u s e I e a d
e
rs h i p o n
advocates of 'new politics.' "
contaminated products - from
military-foreign
policy . votes,
This was ·a multi-issue campaign.
foodstuffs to appliances.
and for years that leadership has
Duffey plugged not only peace,
The ocean off the East Coast
been even more aggressive than
but
equal
rights
for black
and the Gulf of Mexico are
Presidents Johnson and Nixon.
citizens
and
unemployment
dotted with dumping sites where
Speaker McCormack is leaving compensation for union strikers.
the throw-away society has cast
the House, and a new line-up
poisons and problems ·in· the.
belief that out of sight is truly
out of mind.·
·
··
·
revision last winter when it was ~·
· ~·
·
This attitude underwent brief ~:~-
discovered that the ocean off
<~\L ,. \)~~\,-; ,
New Y
otk
harbor where the
city _ '
\
,
·,t'l,it
··
'
'
'-.
(
~
~"~~,._1
URBAN
~~~it~
'
~"'r,
ORE
'6~\f-
from·page
I
submitted
by
Rehwoldt
necessary. There has to be a ·
re-str'ucturing
of attitudes
· toward
garbage.
It must be
regarded as "urban
ore" not
waste.
America
is not
self-sufficient in raw materials.
It
is
necessary
to
recycle waste in_
order . to preserve
natural
resources.
•
~
• • • -, --1·
11
,,,If.--•-" .•
~
; ..,
t
I
•
•
,
~ •
•
•
•
•
.
.,
_.•;'•
;,:·<>),>::.~,·.
.
~~
--~':-.-
..
: ..
·-;-·
.
.
,-SEP'l'EMBER.j7,·i970
'.; ·
..
ntE CIRCLE;.
)Ctllenddr'
OJ ]JVeiits
~
.
·.•
.
'.
··WEEKLY.CALENDAR
FOR SEPTEMBER, 2(},27
.1970
·
·---
.
.
.
.
·.
.
-·
.
,
~-----~-
......
----~
.
Dear
Sir:\·?·
:" :
x.
:·
:
:;
~
·
·
·
-It
w.ss:
certainly
,disappointing
.to
·note some or·cominents and
.
:
advice'
·offered:
in
...
the
..
editorial,
·
.·•
"Druisat·Manstr.'.·•·
:<:
·.-.·:
-.·
-·
•
:
:
"The
·oru.y
people
who
can
-(prevent
a
bust)
are· those who
indulge in the<use of drugs .. .''
There·
follows
.elementary
strategy. for preventing a "bust."
· ·
"When you µse
-
drugs you
must· unclerstand
.
that• you face
the
·
chance of
·
being busted ..
American
law ds not
as
enlightened
as one. might
prefer.,.
·
. ·
.
·
.
"We are not endorsing the use
_
of drugs. In many cases it
is
a
·.
middle-cla~- cop·-out ...
·
But if
you- insist
·on
usiri'g drugs don't
.
allow yourself to get caught."
.
.
·
·sunday
.
.
,
-
•.
·
· "
'
.
:
:
: ·
· >
September 20
1-5
p.m:
Junior Clambake at Poolside
.
8:30 p.n_i. Coffee_House, Room 249, Campus Cent~r
,.·
.
_.
, >
..
_,.
:,·
·,
We~esday
.
· ·
·.
··
.
·
~-<
• ·.
.
September 23
·
.
.
8:0.0;p.m; Filin
.-
"In
Cold Blood" in the Theatre, Campus Center
-Thursday.
.
. .
September 24
8:00
·
p.m .. Lecture - Environmental Series.
Mr. Ken Walker on
.
~•Es~blishing Water.,Quality Standards" ·
'.
.
.
.
Friday
'
..
·
·
·
·
;
September 25
.
~
8:30 p.m. · Coffee House Concert Series,. Room. 249, Campus
Center
,
.
Saturday
.
.
. ·
·
· •·:
September 26 ·
.
.
.
8:30 p.m. Coffee House, Room 249, Campus Center
.
.
.
.
.
·
Sunday
· .
•
·
.
.
.·
·._
.
·
·
. .
.
.
September 27
·
.
,8:00
P·!11~
Film_~ "~ 13onh.e.ur" pre~ente~ by ~arist.College Film
Program
m
Theatre Film Program D1scuss1on
m
Gallery Lounge,
. Campus Center
. ·
.
.
. . .
·
·
· ,
.
8:_30 p.m. Coffee House in Roofi?-.
249, Campus Center
Is. the extent 'of our· concern
about people getting hooked on
drugs
-
liniited
.
simply.
to
concern
about
tJ\eir being caught or
busted?
.,
.
. ·
.
fulfilled." One may say I love
time, concern for the well-being
Why
was
there no call for,a
.
you by saying I wish your good.·
.of
those hooked on drugs, those
more. extensive.
program of
If love me.ans concern for others,. experimenting with drugs and
-
e d u_cation, and_ counseling_
it goes deeper.tb.an the wish not
·
those exposed to drugs must also
d
•
·
to· see another-arrested when he· claim the attention of sensitive
·
,,-
irected at
.aiding.
drug-users and has a pr_obleni
•.
_
For many, drugs
and sincere people.
·
those
who
:
are tempted or
pressured·· to
..
:experiment
.
with
..
represen( an attempt to escape
It
seems tragically conformist
drugs'?
·. .
, .
.
.
.
from a problem. Very often, it
and morally irresponsible for a
"''
·
b
..
li
·
th
d
·
simply
.
means running away
college editorial to express the
·
ne niust
.
e eve
at you
.
0
:from
one set of problems irit_
o
shallow neutral admonition -
not endorse the use of drugs,
.
because you say
.
so explicitly.
atio.ther vicious problem - drug
·
.. But if you insist on using drugs
Do you endorse programs ~d · use.
·
· . .
at least don't allow yourself to
efforts directed at preventing the
·
Your concern for· the people
'
get · ca1W,It.,. There does not
...
use. of
drugs? If you do not
involved in the Vietnam conflict,
seem to be much love in that.
·
endoISe the
use of drugs, do you for
·
victims of brutality, for
Sincerely
yours,
f
h
-
.
abuses of power, must be the
Louis
C.
Zuccarello
eel t at
··
appropnate
means concern
of all sensitive· and
Dept. of History and
should be adopted to prevent sincere · people.
·
At the same
Polit1·cal sci·ence
the sale and/or· spread of drugs
on campus'?
,oo
y~u feel that
.
s· .
.d···
. .
D
d
..
~e::~:::t;'!:::::!~il~~
.··
t~
·.
ent·
DU_.
ge_tin_
..
·g·_'
·
inhumane act which may even
-
be • considered
criminal
in many
.
C
'
.,
_.
.
.
-•
--~es~e.
Viith· Dennis Alwon
· ..
o_·D)Dlt
ttee
.
(pg .. 2) when he says that: .. The
.
.
.
.
_
,BY
JOE
GEBBIA
trouble
is
that
maif
is
afraid to
,
The Stti<lent Govenurient has
It
will
allocate funds to any
,_
".
.
···
·
show ·an emotion fre.ely. He feels recently
created
a Student",· organizations or interested group
,.._.,,-
tliat he J!iustnot'do_those things
-Budgeting
Committee
to·.· of students who would like to
/
. ,
:. :-?
.·
that·. ~,~elf.
.
~ys
is
__
a_
)l.~~o_;
.f.
·.
coordin,,te
.
various aspe~s of
-:·
~
chedule lectures or trips of .
,,:
•.
/':,
,::,<m~t_.'l?n!'?~·
:.Bu~
1.
~':ro:u..;. charted ~lul;)s
and
.comuuttees./t·
mterest.
It
.will
also
try
to foster
;i;\\'/:':s,:_.:;,f•,Wfuit-fQt?.;,:Alid;
Y<>~·'.,vn,11,~,say:~;
•
·_,This:budgeting-coiilmittee'·wm
·
.a
,
closer·, rela'tionship between
/;?,;,-.:
,;-
.
·,-B~~useJJ1ave
t<>,!'.This:ca
be
as
_
seIVe·a·dual purpose: first·kwill
clubs, hoping that ·they in
turn
W}?<':'./~;,==~ttf~:~::;;ci~~e~·:,~i:Cs.ian~~J~~~~.
':ru~--
ra°rlil~::~::~r i~:::~edt~ve;:
<·/ :-
,
of which
_Alwon
speaks.
·.
·
.
bave-i'eceivedr.an allocation from
student body.·
..
;;
,
_·~.I
also.
llgiee
wit~:Alwo.n that:
·
the S,~deilt Goveminent, trying
.
This Budgeting . Committee
.
.
.
.
.
.
Love
IS
the baSlS of life, for to avoid any possible deficits
.
·
will
be headed by Joe Gebbia
..
,
·
'~;,
.:::-
without Jo~~•- life cannot be which they might incur; sec<>nd,
•
and_
will
consist of Bill Spenla,
,John
Petraglia and any future
· The
American
Challenge
BY PAUL BROWNE
.
...
] .J.
Servan
.
Schreiker made struggling to survive as we enjoy
_
some
PO'!Verful
predictions
in
his
the advancements achieved in a
book, The American Challenge: technologxcal society.
. .
.
·
"In·
30
years
America will be a
We. have seeri the dilemmas
post-industrial
·
society
•
with
a
per
that fa~ the economic growth
.
capita.income of $7,500: There
will
and development
-
in
Latin
.
be
'only
four work days
a
week of
·
America.
Some ate vicious
seven
hoiin per
day.
The year
will
be
·
circles
to, be broken. only. in the
.
comprised
of
39 work
weeks
and
I
3
most radical of ways. Tradition
·.
weeks·-of
vacation. With·
weekends
itself•.stifles the imagination·• of
,
...
·
this
makes 147 work days a year and
anyone
who dares
think
118
free
dayi
All
this
within a single
independently eriotigh to initiate
generation.''
·
.
change in the established order.
Meanwhile nearly all of
Latin
The social orderis rooted. in the
A m e r i
.c
a w i 11 r
e
m
a
i n
·
debilitating culture Spain forced
''pre-industrial" or $50 to $200 upon. the Americas. Politically,
in per capita income, Compare
.
Latin
America
has suffered
.
that with -Ametjca's $7,500 and historic turmoil and chaos - an
one can begin
to. see
.·
the atmosphere
totally alien to·
s e
r
i o· u s n e s s o f s u c h economic growth.
discrepancies. While Americans
On the· other hand the United
•
will
be devoting most of their
States, which has profited froin
energies to service industries, its investment in Latin America
research, education, or simply faces a future with expectations
leisure,
Latins will still be of unprecedented progress.
·
laboring in the primary activity
Latin
America faces crisis.
·
of agriculture.
And
as
.Turmoil
results
in
strong-arm
·
communications become almost moves which
has brought
·
instantaneous with "time· and dictators to power
:md
continues
space no longer a problem" in to bring them to power today,
the United States, Latins will where Latin America
faces
the
still
carry
produce over unpaved reality of becoming a continent
roads
to
small
rural
markets.
of nations ruled by military
It is clear that economic men. The challenge to America
success in any and
a11
·
of the
is
clear. The
crisis
is
economic in
La.tin· American
nations
is
nature. That
is,
the poor want
dependent upon the degree of what the rich have, and the rich
independence Latins develop in refuse
to
y i e Id • In
an
their
fiscal
planning,
international scope
this
puts the
entrepreneurship,
savin~,
and
United States right
on target,
investment.
However, 'it is The
question
is, will we
certain that the United States respond?
cannot
ignore
its neighbors
.
appointments.
If
anyone has any
.
questions please feel free
·
to
c_ori
tact any member
·
of the
committee.
·
•.Student·
Government's
Allocation. for 1970-
71
School
.
year:
.·
..
;
Football Club - $2,000.
.
Childrens Theater - $1,100.
Booster Club- $210.
·
History Club - $100. •
.
·
Sailing Club - $300.
Gaelic Society - $150.
W .M.C,R. - $1,300.-
-
Appalachian
Reaction
-
$2,500 •..
Biology Clqb - $50 .
Varsity Club - $1,150.
Circle - $5,400.
Year Book - $6,500.
Spike Shoe Club - $200.
Ski Club - $25.
Theater Guild - $2,400.
..
Student
Union
Board
-
$21,000.
Budgeting
Committee
.
$1,500.
.
POLITICS&
CURR. REFORM
.
from page
3
bettering
themselves in their
discipline, prestig~, salary etc.
This
dilemma of professionalism
is
just
one political ingredient. In
a recent survey of 500 college
deans the majority opinion was
that the strongest opposition to
student participation in such
planning
is
to be found among
the faculty, certainly one of the
primary vested interest groups in
academic reform.
In conclusion, I would suggest
to any student participant in
such planning to
be
an activist
and to devise your own specific
programs suitable to student
development and cognizant of
the other participants in the
development procedure.
_PAGES
Erl'ITORIAL
8ehold
m~
magnificent
new theory,
Gort! ...
So! "
highly
complex
theory
st.ated
in
the simplest or·
wms!
€ven
'j()U
cannot
oo
more
succinct!
Let
• ,C-
The world
is
not
flat,
but
sphencal .
.
"14-It is
but
an
infinitesimal
speck
in a -1ast,
curwd
wiiverse.
z-This
universe
is
dominated
by
a
Spiritual
J:orce,
who
has
chosen
Man
to
make His
Truth
manif'est
t.o
all
this
uniW!rse.
.. :The
wortd is a
roll-on applicator
in a celestial
bottle
oP
spiritual
deodorant.
Liberals
&
the Mid-East
With. the increasing violence and terrorism. occuring in the Midddle
East, it
is
necessary to watch candidates for the Congress and the
Senate in their approach to
a
solution. Most significant are the
statements of the self-acclaimed "doves" on Vietnam.
The consexvative supporters of the Vietnam War have remained
consistent in their explanation of both Vietnam and the Middle East.
•
"The ,11cts
of Communist aggression against the Vietnamese (Israelis);
the freedom loving, democratic people of Veitnam (Israel)." Despite
the fact of
_applying
distinctly Western concepts to a non-Western
. culture, American policy
·
makers are spreading
an
institutionalized
.
paranoia of communism which simply doesn't hold water in other
countries,
Liberals use the same logic in support of Israel
as the conservatives
1
use in support of U.S. aggression in Vietnam. The same people who
were saying we must stop using force to solve political problems are
very
willing
to
·
"sell" bombers and other armaments to Israel: This
seems
.to
be
a
strangely political inconsistency on their part.
If.we
are.
to seek-
a
true world peace it
is
necessary to remove the
elements of-war frqm:political situations. The reasoning employed
in
.
opposition to the war in Vietnani must be used in
an
analysis of the
Middle East. The recent speeches by liberals and conseIVatives
regarding Israel are providing a rhetorical foundation for U.S.
imperialism in still another part of the
world.
Petty
~olitics
· One of the more laughable canipus occurrences
in
the past week
has been the election of members to the House Councils. The House
System
is
something to be taken seriously. The House Council
is
not .
The House Council
is
simply a board which
will
determine policy
and issue legislation no sooner or later than it would no matter who
makes up the board. The only major moves yet to be made are
complete 24-hour open house and no curfew for freshmen. These
will
happen inevitably anyway, ahd they will only happen when "the
people" want it.
If
the residents want it bad enough, it will happen,
no matter what personalities make up the board.
Yet, the Resident Advisors- in Champagnat House thought the
elections serious enough to
call
for a second vote after three people
were already decided upon. These peopl~, above
all
others, should at
least realize that they are merely dealing in petty politics.
We remind you again that we do consider the Houses important.
Yet the members of the House Council are simply iigureheads
unlucky enough to have to go to meetings to decide on the
inevitable.
. lNE'
.
9-+C/RCLE
e
Sal Piazza
Joe Rubino
Editors
in Chief
Rich Brummett ..................................................
Photo Editor
Terry Mooney ............................ - .......................
News
Editor
Gerard Geoffroy ... _ ............................................. Man. Editor
J.
Tkach ...........................................................
..Sports Editor
Peggy Miner ........ - ... - ............... - ............................ Secretary
Paul Tesoro ............................................................ Cartoonist
Dave DeRosa ......................................................
, •• Circulation
Ann
Gabriele
Janet Riley .................................................................. Typists
H
":
f
r
.ht
.Ad.Copy
,BY
BEN REIVERS
We wait out the night that could be our last
just wanting to have a glass
of beer or soda or maybe wine
to hear sweet music and thankfully find
that no guns are on our back tonight
tomorrow the plans fly low
straining with
a
heavy load
of fearing men who want. to fish and dance and hang around
on a street comer or on the farm
without the guns on our backs tonight
· across the sea is
another
crowd
of homesick boys who remember aloud
of early days and funny fared girls,
sights and sounds that make them unsure
of the guns on our backs tonight
·
upstairs in
a
room ke'eping warm
are the men who hold all the arms
things gone by don't make them budge
from honor and pride and all that crud
that put their guns on our ba_cks tonight
what if all the boats and plans did stop
and no one came to hurt and fight
I hope we would turn to our thoughts so new
of little joys that would make us do
without the guns on our backs tonight
with this in mind an ad I'd enter
into every paper - left, right and center
All
you who wish for family and friends
don't venture to the docks again
hail your brothers on the earth
don't listen to the dirt
of our elected ones who somehow say
my gun is on your back today:
Movie Review
l.:
l·
l
I
I
r
~·,
~,
1-
Which.Way
To:
Th.e-:.Front
(.·,1/<_/BY.MRS.
JACKS~_N_,.;·.'.l'URN~~
:.
.
FACULTY
c
.
COLLOQUIUM'
.✓i
Last Thursday
i
night while
J
.
_was
walking home .from
.
my
night at Bingo. I
was kidnapped
by three juvenile delinquents·
and forced
fo
see "Which Way
F~ailklin ~nd other biggies/Any
•.:.·.
fr·
0
.
·m·
...
_··_p·.
3
._·g·
·
e·
.
3
.·
..
· ··\,
>c
BurJr,.Ilie,
811111oz~,,,.:::·''
.
:·
~
··
.·_)'-::_:·.;Y:i~~:~~its,,.i.
'<--\·
··:
._·.:
·:
1
~·_::·'.·,.
·:
· To The Front." The· film stars
Jerry
Lewis, was written
by
-
Jerry Lewis produced by Jerry·
and also directed by him. Jerry
also
sweeps
up after the show
and pours the melted butter on
the popcorn ..
The
film deals with Jerry
getting rejected by- the Ariny
(after they had seen some of his
earlier epics) and starting his
own Army which defeats the
unknowing Germans. The film
also stars Jan Murray, Dock
Rambo,
Kaye
.
Ballard, Steven
resemblance
to
Holly
..
wood
.
Squares
--i;,
purely coincidental,
·L-110;
DeptbfNafl
Sci~nces:
.
·Jerry
loses control
of
the
·
John Ryan L~277, Rick Micali
picture about half way through
-
C369 and Joan Higgin S-560;
when he has a sc·ene where he Bus. and Econ: F. Gerbers L-98,
dances with Adolf Hitler (played
Steve Kopki; Rest. Bill Karges
by
Can.dice
Bergen)
and
D-912, Frank Kellf; Languages:
everyone
runs onto the
·set
Yadira
Bizardi
S13, Lenny
jumping ~ild singing. After about
··
Terrible.
·
·
·
fifteen
minutes
of. this
·the
people. in the·· theater started.·
singing hymnals.
·
Summing
•.
up it seems safe to
say that World War H could have
been considerably shortened by
showing Jerry Lewis movies in
Nazi occupied- territories, which '
would have caused the Germans
·
to withdraw faster than anything
the allies could have d,one:
.
.
Andy'·s
.
Gang
BY ANDRE ALBERT
By now I'm sure that everyone on campus has seen the
Playground. But how many of you know who is responsible for it?
I feel that a real vote of thanks should go to Mrs. Fisher, the Artist
in Residence, here at Marist
for
her work over the summer. Mrs.
F.isher spent
4
weeks of her own time this summer in constructing,
arranging and painting our newes! attraction. When the maintenance
staff removed the refuse from the old brick storehouse, Mrs. Fisher.·
walked off with many odd pieces of it. She arranged for three
cement columns
tp
be poured and salvaged the large sewer pipe from
a junkyard. With the help of a member of her own staff and a
maintenance man she positioned the various objects around the'area.
Then she started to paint.
Mrs.
Fisher really got-into her painting. She spent most of2 weeks
in
getting the· wall painted.
A
week of her time was spent in setting
·
up the
forms and a week in painting them. She did this so that we
the student body~ would become more aware of what is around us.
We all know what a great place the Playground
is
but how many of
you know what it.really means'? To Mrs. Fisher it is a park of
art. In
her work she sees movement and form. Her object in building it
was
to awaken us to the fullness of life. She
is
trying in her way to help
us have
a good time y,hile we are here.
This
is why
I
9bject to the formation of organized sports events in
there. While
I was peacefully
sitting
in the park some of our sports
freaks decided to have a football game over me. I don't·. mind
football but
I
do object to it in the Playground.
I
think that our park
should be a
place
y,here one can go and relax
in
peace. A
quiet game
or two like ring-around-the rosie or follow the leader seem to fit into
the atmosphere.
•Anything
rougher should be confined to the Chapel
field.
rm sure-
that
Mrs.
Fisher agrees. The Playground
is
definitely a
kiddie place and not a sports
arena.
.
·
And so in dosing I am glad to welcome the:•"kesident Artist of
Marist, Mrs. Fisher, into Andy's
Gang.
It
is
a pleasure to know this
sensitive and thoughtful woman, who
is
really into teaching her
students not only of art but of life.
.
P.S. - Thank you for the Playground,
Mrs.
r1Sher.
Look
out
Y<>U-engfueers
that
.
Bulldozer
gone
wild/
.:
:
-
.
He's
knocking
down
everything;
.
Evenifit smiles.
, .·.·.··-
.
Drop your yardsticks and
Fotget them old·plaits
·
That big bad bulldozer
.
Is
leveling.the land
.·
_.
·He
w~rking steady and straight,
,
Dori't stop, don'hvait.
,
·.·
·•
..
•
No profit shares or guarantee
· ·
·
Notiirie andahaltno.double,
no free
Hear that old dozer
_
_:· ..
.
. ..
.
His
grinding and them awful shouts
·
Of those that fall before
him·
u
1
prepared' for
his
clout
.
It
ain't
ho
pretty sound
:
.
So you'lllook
t~e other way
It's only
a'
bulldozer
· -:
;
·
'
.
:~:
.
·Don't
lent get'in:-your,way;
::.··.{~:
:;:.·=
~
.
.
.·,
,
;
·
''Hey
Min"
BY BALTIMORE
BEEBE
.
."Hey
man: That's the way it is!
That's what I'm all about. Tough!"
·
:
So yelled our plaintiff hero .. -
He yelled it so loud, and
He yelled it so much
That everyone believed him even himself.
But he was still a little lovable
·
And lots of laughs at times;
..
··•··
He had plenty of potential qualities
And some even thought
him
beautiful!
Anyway he
was
ok every now and ihen ..
·
Yet he
was rough and· carefree·
Wise cracking and cool
·
_
_
And he hurt a lot of people playing this fool.
.
The trouble was, no· one would see through
him.
Not even himself: And
his
inside
was
different
Much different.
·
.
·
·
·
Then (?ne day
'someone
with white hair
Told him what a cover up
artist
he
was.
That he w·as really a sensitive and wami sap,
~t
he really wanted to sing
But was afraid his voice was lousy.
Pride you know.
·
The
real
self suddenly discovered
Our hero, in
l!is
impulsive manner, dramatically
Tried out for
an opera.
·
But he couldn't handle
lt.alian.
Undaunted he blindly stumbled over to acid rock
But
his
aspirin bill got pretty
higli.
Finally he pensively picked up
a
guitar
And soon he
was
the best flamingo guitar player
in the world -
At least to the girl he married
.
Who kind
of liked off beat musicians.
·
..
·--1
1
I
'
l
1
l
j
j
l
I
i :-
.. :
__
1HEciRCLE
:W,here
·
-:we·:re:At
BY JACK WAWRZONEK
..
.
This
year
·
as chairman of the
lecture committee of the College
_
Union
Board,
I
am
attempting to
·
draw
together
a
dynamic, timely
and
educational• series. Much of
my
time and other peoples' time
and
energy,- and much.~ of your
money
is
involved in such
an
attempt.
Much
can·
be gained
from
..
such a series for
as
we
.
should
all
know,
if
we limit the
educational proc~ss to those few
hours spent in the classroom -
we're coming out on the short
side of what an education can
be.·
.
I -would
especially like
.to
make that point to the freshman
class in hopes that they will not
pass through many semesters
before realizing this.
The majority of this campus
has already missed the first
SE
CURITYAT
MA.RIST
from page_
1
opportunity
presented by the
Lecture Committee and it is our
·qui~k;,
:fund
and the cycle_~
~ention
the defects of the
·
hope that such speakers as Helen
repeated;
..
·
.
-
system. Securi_ty does provide
N olis, Russ Burgess and
·
Bill
·Each.
securrty
• officer
for the safety of students by
Baird,
.as
well as our tentatively
investigates
all buildings. on
periodically checking· the
.
fire
planned local College Presidents
campus
..
at certain suggested
extinguishers in .the dorms to be
Symposium will be met by a
· times but it
is
impossible for him
sure they would function in tJie
greater
thirst for knowledge
to
·cover
all
buildings
case
·of
-a
fire: Also broken
outside the classroom.
simultaneously
and
also
:Windows
and other.hazards are
.The
lecture committee would
impossible to
"pay
more men
reported;
.
Parking
for
the
·
like to expand to include you if
with the present budget .. As a handicapped student is provide,d
·
you have something to offer and
result,
.-every9ne
must suffer.
closer to the academic buildings
would
like
to give some
These circumstances suggest that
to make it easier for
him
to
assistance.
If
interested please let
the
administration
of Marist
reach classes. Too, the plan for
me know
by
campus
·
mail
should seriously ·consider the
re-routing the campus traffic has
.
(655-C)
or by leaving your name
_,issue
and
:plan
some definite
been abandoned
for the time
with
the
Campus
Center.
·
action to remedy it .. At most,
being.
Also,
many attempts to
Directors (lfice
..
This picture serves as a prelude to a feature story
which will appear next week about
Rich Brummrnett
's trip to Viet Nam
PAGE7
the
p r o
s
p e
ct
s of
any
break into the cafeteria and
·Rat
improvement in the near future
have
been
stopped
because
are
pathetic.
_
.
Security was there at the right
Each· individual
·
resident
time.
It should be noted too,
should make a special effort to
that
narcotics
is
not at
all
·
protect
his
own valuables from
mentioned in the responsibilities
Martin
McKneally
,on
Isreal
vandalism and theft. We will
,
of the. security force. They
are
Th
.e
re c e n t
wave
O
f
sweltering ai.t:"crafts, some for
.
·never
be- one hundred percent
not instructed to be part-time
.
international hi-jackings by the
over 3 and 4· days, is shocking
.
,
sure that our rooms and lounges
narcos.
It
was very· unfortunate
Palestinian guerrillas is an act of
brutality
that transcends the
are·· safe. However, be: advised
that last year's incident was set
insufferable cruelty. That
-
over
bounds of human decency.
I
feel
that our
cars,
(especially those
off by someone related to the
300
men, women and children
deeply
for
those
innocent
··
parked
µi
front of Champ!lgnat)
security
force. The Sec?rlty
have. been
held
captive in
·
.victims
of Arab terror. My most
are
constantly observed and too
Director nor the college
itself
.
---------------------~----
:
ofteri. ticketed with
ten:
dollar
had/any previous knowledge of
fin.es.
And;
for"tJtQse,,;Y{lio:likejl ~~;:_,b_~t_.:t1!-~tiY.:-~L.t~ ~ollegt}
·
..
·,Se·."*·
.•
--_
l.··.'g;
challenge,·1t~:.a1so'"fwi~,.fo--rigure"
·
~o!1'1~unity
ma paruc:-Howeve~,
1
out how to get_ off and on the
..
It JS·unportant to note that_
un~
:
camp tis
without· being stopped
a be~er sys1;em. of pi:otecti~n
is
and-fold you are on
a
one way
devued1.
_1t
1s
·a
physical
street;
·
Well,
;you
can't. have
·
imp~ssibility. for o~
present
;
eve_rythu.ig;
·
_
·
secunty force _to attam success
It
Tn
bTtico~
··parent1;~·;;:?•
BY JOHN WYNNE
·
Marist College
is
a school
policemen or parents. Advisors
based
.
on· the
principle
of
·
are supposed.· to
..
be there for
individual student responsibility.
advise. The principle of in loco
Students are no longer told how- parentis
should
have been
.
to dress, or how many classes to
discarded
many. years. ago.
miss
or when and
·
where to
Irre5Ponsible behavior should be
·
drink.
-The
school doesn't
.plan .
dealt with by community not be
the students entire class schedule
an
·
authority. figure. Too many
. for
him·
anymore. The
_individual
a dvisor_s are
invading
the
is
expected to use common sense individual's privacy in the name
and act as a mature adult. For
of·Iooking after
his
benefit/ We
'the
most part he. has lived up to
cann_ot tolerate
.
this kind
.·
of
t1us
expectation.
·
_
·
·
·
abuse on a college campus. The
Yet
this
attitude has not been
·
students here are simply asking
..
carried over effectively
·into
the
to be· treated with
.
the dignity
house system · of
canipus
.
living. and respect· befitting the Marist
. Some of. the houses
.still
have College. philosophy of student
rigidly enforced parie~al
.
rules
responsibility.
imposed on the student
.
from
above without his consent.
This
will be changed in the very riear
-
future but just the fact_ of having
these
rules
this long
is
an
indictment
of
student
responsibility.
·.
·
The
fact
that
'freshman
students
·
are still required
··
to
submit· to an enforced curfew
is
· another example of the flaunting·
of
this
principle. If it
is
decided
-
that'
some freshmen need a
curfew to develop responsibility
then let the student advisor set a
curfew for these few. students,
0
off
.
ti\.
·...s~~
..
s
~l\..
~erl,
iq
·
ttic'X
'\1
~l\i
gpct\...
l
AA
~
i
r-"'·
-\
A.M.
I
pin.
-
ll
rm,
All Bell
· Bollom
·Pants·
PEA
COAT;s-
· after observing their J>ehavioi
during the beginning of school.
·The
·
vast majority of
.
college
freshmen should not be required
to·
undergo
this
~egrading
experience for any amount of
time.
-ARMY-■NAYY
·
STORE
But it appears ~at the most.
basic change that has to be made
in the house system
to
conform
to principles of responsibility is
the attitude
of housemasters,
-student
coordinators
and
advisors. They have to realize
that they are not there to act as
·
460
·
Main
.·
st.
Poughkeepsie.
·452-5220
Open
Daily
8
A.M.-9 P .M.
_·
Offer
E~pires
Sa~rday
9/26/7Q
heartfelt sympathies go out to
their
families who anxiously
.
await their safe return .
The
significance
of the
hi-jackings however, is not that a
group
of power-crazed Arab
guerrillas can hold the world at
bay
.
with
their
desperate
·
ultimatums;
dir~ct
'_importance
of the hi-jackings is riot reflected
·
in the power politics of Arab
·
policy.
Rather,
what is of
greatest
consequence,
is the
evident
inability, or perhaps
unwillingness,
of the Arab
governments
to control
their
guerrilla
organizations
within
their own borders.· While the
UAR
and
Jordan
have
considered to meet with Dr.
Gunnar Yaring in negotiating the
peaceful
·
settlement with Israel,
they condone, by their inaction,
the
cruel
terrorism
of the
·
sercalled popular front for the
•
liberation of Palestine. Surely
the Arab State's commitment to
peace in the Middleast is suspect
to serious misgivings. As they
pursue an ostensible· policy of
conciliation, the Arab leaders
take no significant action against
international policy perpetrated
by their own nationals.
_
· It
is
necessary to act now to
halt further hi-jackings. As our
Government, together with the
Governments of Britain, West
Germany and Switzerland work
fervently
to secure the safe
release of the more than 300
hostages
being held in the
Jordanian desert, steps must be
taken to prevent similar macabre
tragedies. The airline industries
must act immediately on the
several suggestions before them
to protect the safety of their
crew and passengers. Among
these are placing armed guards
on all international flights and
imposing heavy
·
security checks
at international terminals.
But what
is
perhaps most
necessary now
is
for the United
States
to strengthen
her
commitment
to Israel with
concrete assurances. In light of
tlils
renewed out terrorism, it is
imperative that the President
reaffirm
our
Government's
support of Israel. I am pleased
with the Administration's recent
decisjon to send Israel additional
fighter jets, in the coming weeks
ahead. Only by fulfii!ing our
commitments
to thwart the
violence of aggression
will
peace
ever
be
achieved
in the
Middleast.
I
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PAGES
, THE
ditcLE : . ·
a
· BOoters
ReCeiYe
Education
Face
Sacred/,
Heart
Wed.
BY NICK SQUICCIARINI
.
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On Saturday. Septem'ber 12,
·. The next opponenfof the long
determination·
of Marist left
the
soccer. team: traveled . to
afternoon was Colgate; The class
notliing to be desired and except
Albany,·
New Yor!{,
for a
of the Red Raiders was shown
for. a few mental lapses; the
quadrangular
scrimmage with
from the opening kick-off as · defense turned in.a fairly decent
Albany
State,
Colgate and
they co~pletelydominated
·play
aft~rnoo,n.
Wit_h two more
Williams Colleges. Each team
for
both
periods giving the
scrimmages. to rron out the
played three games, each game
Marist goalies quite a :workout .. · .. pro~lems which came to surfa.ce
consisting .of two, twenty-two
Thei.r
passing, dribbling .arid
during
these . games; Manst ·
minute-halves. . · .
ballhandlirig
in geri~ral was· should be more than _ready for
. Th~ Red Foxes opened the
excellent and they •moved the
th~ ope~er·
at
~ndgeport,.
afternoon
against· the Great . ball very _well offensively. The
Con~ectlcut.
against
Sacred
Danes of Albany State. This was
Marist offense forced· them to
Heart on September 23.
a very closely fought. affair with
play a defensive brand of soccer.
neither team taking a . decided
The final
in
this game was
3~0 · .
· edge in the frrst half of play. The
Colgate.
·
·
offensive play· of Marist in this
The final game of the day was
period was the best they were
against another
fine team in
able to produce
all
4ay, bringing
Williams College. Not having the
the ball u9field nicely on several
depth and numbers of the other
occasions,· yet failing to cash in
teams, it was clear that many of
·on any scoring .opportunities
the first stririg Marist players
they had; ·
·
were either hurt or,-dead-tired at
, The~ second
hai(
was a
this point. This.fact, combined
comp1etely
different
story, .. with .the speed and overallfine.
-
however,. ;a~ Albany contrpUed :, play ··,
of . WHliams led Jo
a
4-0
· -th~teinpo and.flow· of the game'<
1
Ma:ristd.efeat. ·,·. -_· .. '.: ,'..\/;: .
'·<.
;,.and kept th.e :-.ball -in Marist's·
:'In:;the·
final
analysis, the
day ·
de,(~nsive. side"
~f the fie}d. · was hopefully one oflalxpeiierice -
.. Unfol'tunately, · thlS _ type ,play
for
t.he young
Red Foxes.
. · was toforeshadow'the
nexttwo • AHhough·
losing
all three
· games. Albany', took the lead . contests, it,should be rioted two
about,
midway
thtough
·
the ..
of:
the
teams,
Cotgate and
... second period on·a mixture of a . WiHiams,
were
bY.
far
the
· f!ne shot· by the Albany inside .. toughest opp_ohents Marist will
nght and a defensivelapse in the
probably
face
all _year. The
Red Fox backfield.
·grittiness,
h us.tie
and
J)CEAN DUMPING from
4
_'SUNDAY SONG fro111'
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.:<sEPTDtBER
17,
197() .·
.
.Vikiqg·oefense
-~~ooms
. 'Impressive
BY KEVIN DONNELLY
The
Vikings; : ·preparing :for
the
defensive coach for, the
their opener against Plattsburg
Vikings,
is responsible. for the
:_Sept.
26,
had
their
first·
move.·
·
intra-squad
scrimmage
last·
Henry .Blum .and Dean Gestal
Saturday on the. lower soccer have been moved from their
field; It was the first time
this
regular. positions on defense to
season
-that
the
·
team
has the inside linebacker spots. The
scrimmaged
under
game ,change.has been made in order
conditi~n~. It was a
~ig
test for to take advantage of the speed
, the .. Vikmgs ~efens1ve squa~. which. Blum has displayed at
They, have, shifted from therr defensive tackle for the past two
regular
5 ,-2 . d_efense to the 4-4 · years .. Dean Gestal was shifted to
used. at Penn State. Tom Levine, the new spot because of
his
·
aggressive play and "leadership
capabilities.
Both Gestal and
Blum seem to liave made the
shift
with · rio trouble. Jack
McDonnell will remain at the
defensive
halfback
position
alorig with Bill Rooney. Dan
Faison will take over at Safety
·. replacing Gestal. .Don Hinchey
and Terry Nash will be at the
•defensive .e,!,ld positions with
. Russ Humes and Paul Lacombe
at the tackle spots; At .outside
linebacker Owens,. Vitale,- and
. Fantauzzi .. are·.f'ighting: for 'the·
· starting . ·positions;·, Erts,: Scalzi,·
Lee Gestal, Freccia, .~and Egan·
. .will
be seeing a lot of action:
011 ·
··
.
· defense as the season progresses.
·
· The
'defensive
unit_ held up
.
well last Saturday as -they. gave ·
· . . the second-string offense a long
• afternoon.
It
looks like another
tough yeador Viking opponents ,
~d. another great year . for the
Viking defensive uhit; · ·
·
Next
week:
the
Viking
offense .
. ··slowly .. on
tlie_
..
ocea~ bottom. • :white. Many
will.
never'
~i)
on
.
. There is considerable evidence
· d d l
c·
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C '\ ..
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that
maiine".organisms
.· cari '-:td
dJ;~~i:!s
Y/i~~~r·t~
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·s_
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concentrate,• . .resticides,- poisons
middle-class Sunday afternoons.
or radioactive .wastes in their
Their leisure is the sleep of death
sy5tem~ to a point th at can kill
a..
and their record players allow
·
·· ··
BY STEVE KOPKI
,
·
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~
~an
d
he. eats them. But
only
the
drone
of funeral .. · To
talk
about teain members,
must come from the community
ad
ndn
i
sj
ratio
Jl: •the
ign °!3;nse
?f · effects
and
hymns. They have·been,rpbbed
-.t_eam .. goals
or returning
in the form ofinore runners and,
cross-country
team just two
. con~1trnp,s
,is
so ~rea! _that ,'of-- the right to mis-read. their
.lettermen
would be a very· mor_e support for the· team.
· years ago had been the best teain
-cautwn,_ p¥ficularly._m light- of · comP.asses as they sail to.the.sea
. foolish venture at
this
point. To These •needs
must. be me'tt· · on campus.
It
had, in the space
of two years.placed 2nd arid 3rd
-·
sue~ evidence
_as
tpat ,found at
of natural death. Amen.
·
· . talk about the pending deinise of immediately.
_
_
·
. Station 59, ought·to be the rule
* * *
* *
the cross~couritry teamwowd be
I
There · are. those ,who ,\vill
atthe moment, ·
·
·
·· ·
·
more appropriate.
As of two accuse the team and myself for
weeks prior to the beginning of living in the- past and using
this ·
s~ason,· the,. cross-country. team paper
as
a .. crying towel." But
lias
seven members .. (Note: a Just
a re.minder
to the
minimum:
of
7
runners are community
and
·the
needed;
5
scorers, 2 ·runners to
-
- displace.) Of these 7, there are 4
·• seniors, l junior,, 1 sophomore
and
1 , freshman. Among the
seniors, 2 have missed portions
of previous ·seasons because of
recurring injuries.
'
J"he prospects for this year are
dim and a team next year
will
not exist. The team realizes that ·
cross-country
is
a .. non.glory"
sport and personal satisfaction
is
an important
part of the
cross-country runner. Toe team
also realizes that there has been·
a change of attitudes, goals, and
desires.
It acknowledges the fact
. that there ·
are
other goals · to
achieve
and other. roads to
follow, not
only
for .the athlete,
b.ut also for the student.
.
-- I feel it safe to assume that the
Marist College community has
expressed
Hs interest
in
cross-country.
From that
interest,- one
can·
conclude that
cross-country
will
soon lose its
place
as a
Varsity sport at Marist
Co1lege. However,. after four
years as.a member of the team,
I
cannot
let
the ·death
of
cross-country
happen without
making one more appeal to the
community.
We need your
support _and we need it now.
It
. in
NAI.~ district championships
and
2nd and 1st in CACC
championships.
To
the
community and administration:
help us n<>w, before it is too
· late!
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~:~>~-~-~-~_<_>';·,·
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• VOLUME 7.
NUMBER
2 ·.. .
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MARISr
COLLEGE~POUGHICEEPSIE,
NEW
YORK12601.
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SEPI'EMBER.
17, 1970
R8HWOIH-t:
~ubl11its;
,W~ste·.•M,nagement
,
--_--Plan-for
·Poug~Reeps1e·
.··. ·. SUBMITl'ED
BY
11IE
ENVIROMENTAL
ADVISO~Y
COMM. :
CHAIRMAN
llOBEllT REHWOLDT
•
, · nie problem of solid waste disposal
is
an extremely~diffic~t ~d.I~e
problem for any urban area;
· Any of the standard methods such as land rill, comp0S1ting or mcmeration really are nqt adequate unle~
some •separation techniques are used prior to disposal! These ~xtra steps. can prove to
be
cpstly and •
therefore are not usually. done.
'
. .
·
· . - - · · •. · · . .
.· .
.
·
_ .·
·
. The• City of Poughkeepsie
has
adopted land fill as its method of waste disposal. Although there is some
question about.the suitability of·the site and even.the operation itself,
this
report will .~ot deal with
. these problems. -
· . . · . - .
. ·· . ·
· · .
. . -
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• ·.. . ·
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The difficulty in all of these methods
is
that they are ~eared to solid w~e disposal rather than solid
·waste management. Many so called,wastes are:~~tually quite valuable. Aluminum for example can retµm
up to $200/tpn
lit
the scrap mar~et and paper anywhere from $2~$10/ton. A wast_e managem~nt_
program should take these economic facts into accoun~. The proposaj. does n.ot suggest that the
city
· become. involved in any research· or development techniques .for waste 'management but rather· that
it
simply adopt a few procedures.
-
·
·
PROPOSALS
the collection. Therefore if no recycling- firm and the actual
There
is
no way to estimate . be
estimated.
The
daily
1.
The Common Council pass
extra
pick ups;··or at the. most metho.d
would
have , to be
the
number
of aluminum
· circulation ·of the Poughkeepsie -
an ordinance requiring the home
orie or two. a month,
this
part of explored · This particularly true
·products"" that are discarded, - Journal
is
approximately 38,000
owners separate his. wastes into
the·costs.will be minimized.
in. the case .of aluminum .. The
therefore it woulc;l be impossiole
An
experimentally determined
. three
different
categories:
There
will
be some cost in paper however· can be sold to a
to arrive at a figure.
two week average daily paper
papers, trash and garbage.
.
. transporting the material to the local
firm
right here
m
the city.
Paper on the other hand can
weight
is 0.5 lbs. for each
Papers
shall be defined as any
· Monday through Saturday paper
paper or cardboard 1.1181:erial
such
·oi:
57 tons/ week.
as
tea ding
m aterfal
and
· The Sunday paper which has a
con tain•ers
that·
may
be
circulation
of approximately
conveniently.
stacked
and
40,000 and an-average weight of
bundled for collection:
·
3. pounds, would add another 57
Trash shall be defmed as glass,.
tons/wk., bringing the average
metal, plastic and ·other non
up to 114 tons/wk.
This
figure
paper
products
with ·the.·,
could most
likely be doubled
exception of food wastes.
when New· York· papers and
Garbage shall be defined as
magazines are added, ·however,
food wastes.
·
·
let us assume a weekly average
· 2. The Sanitation Department
of 140 tons/wk or 20 tons per
adjusts its schedule . such that
j
ciay.
·
. _ they designate certain days as
I
·
It now becomes obvious that
;; , ~ .. ··
··paper, trash and garbage pickup
I
approximately
¼
of all material
; , <
days.:,If.·.probably:
woulq
·be:
i
..
dumped
in· the
land
fill
./>: •· /
slifdficiet·
tit ·:ht<>
:.·bc?llec~
·•tthhle
.. paThispe~
bplefratinlon
is
paper.re.·
c'y ..
lin·
•. ',.
.
·.• ·an
·, ras
· 1mon
y-.
•.
-< .. '
_.o y ...
,paper.- , c .g .. were•i ,._.;'··,.
~
fi~i:~t!tf
!\~ti~~iW;h¾\~l1
'·~2E,it;::;J'.;;tlicl;t't~~1i;t
,<--·•
·•·-•
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3}
These,iestrictions would be·.
1)
Increase dump
life ..
.
1
•
:/.m.odiffed'/for
· comntl':.rcial •
2(
The
cost of pick up would
,.
.
,~.
'
'
_-.
·es~abHs.hments
that ·:·Produce.;
·be. offset by the sale of paper,.
large• yohirrtes of.
wastes
which.
even if it became necessary to
may.be of a particular kind ... ~-· ·
run an extra pick up. .
·
CURRENT SANITATION
> - ·
·. --
Cost· of pick ·up, labor and
STATISTICS
.
equipment- $984
•·
:· . Dump_ Characteristics - Load-;
Income from a bimonthly pick
'-Ci,t.y
· of
Pou·gh:keepsie,
up 280 tons·x $5/ton
=
$1#00
. ·approximat~ly· 7 trucks/day or
CONCLUSIONS
. _ ·approximately
80 tons/qay.
While this proposal does not
· Tow-n 'of
Poughkeepsie,
.,·
f
suggest. that. waste management,
.
approxiniatelYc,8 trucks/day or
;-',
·Will positively make money for
approximately
100 tons/day;
··
the City it will however, have a
.Projected: Life time
of dump·- 5
number· of desirable effects. It
y_eais; .
·
. .
..
.
.
_
should at least be a no cost
'Qptn·aH.onat
Costs
--
operation for the City.
It
will
Dump"'Laboi
- . $180/day;
·. ·
also extend .the.
life
of the land
-.Equipmenti--
$113/day;."'
fill site by ·a number of years.
Pick-up~Labor
.;.: ·$600/day;
Finally, it
is
good practice to
Equipment:-.
$384/day. Total
recycle
wastes, which could.
$1277/day. • .-•
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•
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•
reS!Jlt in lower· product costs
' Since -the homeowner
will
be
.
than it·
is
to throw -them away.
- asked to separate-the wastes;this
.
·~·.
BB
Undoubtedly
this proposal
part
of the
costs • will be .
,
.
~
.
will not be popular in all areas,
circumvented.
About::8%.
of..
· _ .· .·
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however,. the benefits should
sanitation costs •.
·are incurred· in
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out-weigh the opposition.
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. petition
each ward · for the
-.-
u·rba·
·n'
·.·-.
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...
o·RE
approval· of. Rehwoldt's
plan.
The
teams
·will·
educate the
·- residents· of the ·wards as to the
·
·
·
·
·..
. -
·, immediate , dangers of p'ollution
·,··.·n·d.
_·
······.•a'.
-,--
·1s·1·
.·_:-
-
and-the ·benefits·ofRehwoldt's,
plan. When enough signatures
···
..
·.ate · gathered
·. they
-will be
BYSALPIAZ_.zA:
.
submitted
to the Common
Council and action
will
be taken
Dr. Malvin Michelson is an
• "Michelson is teaching a course
on the proposal.
_
as.5istant profe~or of-Chemistry
in Chemistry for · non-science, -. In talking ·abc:>ut attitudes.
at Marist. He has·been involved majors: this semester and has·
towards
the
entire
ecology
in many anti~war · and radical ·. incorporated .
his .
philosophy of · "movement" Michelson regarded .
reform
activities
in the
education into the course .. He
it as ha,ving a· great deal of
Mid-Hudson
area· and .is stated thaf the course
is
being
significance
if carried to its
p resenOy
the
chief .draft
taught
. as _ an education
in
potential. He said it would fail
if
counselor at Marist.
. ecology •. He plans _ to discuss
people considered it a large scale
Dr.
Michelson
started our
population
control,
~nd ·.anti-litter
campaign. Industry
conversation with a brief outline
pollution in its _·various fonns.
must be held culpable for their
of
his
philosophy of education.
However, he has established as
failure
to make ·adequate
He feels that it is necessary that
the class project the adoption of·
provisions
for environmental
the
colleg~
go beyond the
Dr. Robert Rehwold.t's plan for
protection. -Automobile owners
con fines
of·· a -campus and -waste ;management· by the city
are not responsible for· auto
become actively involved in the
of Poughkeepsie. (Reprinted in
pollution, the manufacturei:s are.
politics of its surrounding·
area.
.its
entirety.)
The plan was
If the industries are forced to
He regards hims,elf
as_
activist submitted
to
the Common
control pollution the movement
first
pedagogue.
second.
~ouncil this past summer and
will be a success: Michelson
sees
Although
he grants
that
received
the
beaureaucratic
educating the general public as
sociological
studies
are
run-around
of
1municipal
to who
is
responsible for the
important
he
feels
that
government.
rape of the environment as a
educational
institutions
have
The city of Poughkeepsie
is
matter of primary concern.
failed
by
not
persuading
divi!fed
into
eight
wards.
.
Dr.
Michelson
regards the
municipal
state
and federal
Michelson plans to divide
his, waste
management
plan
ag~ocies to adopt them into. the cl~es
(about eighty students)
workings of government.
into teams of two which
will
.
/
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CONTINUED
ON PAGE 4
Security
At Marist:
-Mission
Impossible/
BY GEORGE
BYRNES
It
is
quite obvious from the incident
that happened last
happenings of the last few weeks.·· week: A sizeable amount
of
that "security" at Marist College money was robbed from a room
leaves much to be desired.
It
was •in· one· of the houses.
It
was
stated in. a recent interview with
reported to the floor proctor.
Mr~ Ronald Aderholdt that the . Next,
the
Housemaster was
basic
.aim
or .philosophy of the informed of the incident, and he
Security
Department
is to in tum, notified the Director of
. supervise
and
protecfrom
Security. The next step is for the
vandalism the buildings per se Security Director to speak to the
and the equipment therein. Also, students involved and see if they
to
provide
safety
for the · want the matter reported to the
students as far as their needs police. If it
is
to be reported, a
reqajre ... Meanwhile, televisions, fonnal statement is taken and
money, rugs, pictures, paintings,
submitted
to the authorities
stereos, albums, and anything
with the probability of no action
else that is not nailed down are being taken. There is a small
disappearing
faster than the ·possibility that the thieves will
security officers can write up talk of their actions and be
their reports.
Last
year alone, reported
to the
Security
over five thousand dollars in Director... If so, the matter is
paintings, and pictures were stol referred to Dean Wade who will
from the gallery. Thus, further
take appropriate measures to see
proving the point that closer the money returned.
If
not, the
scrutiny of our security system
thieves plan their next. move to
is not
only
necessary
but help
bolster
their «get rich
inevitable.
To illustrate, let us consider an
CONTINUED
ON
PAGE 7
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PAGE"l
. 111.E
CIRCLE-·•
·,;
SEPTEMBER.
17, ·1970
'.,••
.Once Again:·_
No
Policy_·
·I.sAmericagreatenou!Yt:.s:::~~~~DoesAtri~ricaknow
,-.-ATTITUDE-S.
·.:
,,()IJT.
RAGEO.
~.
U
...
s ·.:.
where. it's going? These. are questions that haunt. many ·concerned
~
Americans, and many foreigners as well.
·These
topics were·the ones
BY BILJ,.O'REILLY
ili~:!.-~!w~~:
h~p~~~~:;~~~!i:;~_~r:~~
\vh8!;~he
1
n~~.
.
• "Good afte~cjon br~thers and·. · · "\Vhat.
is
the tone .of the social
. Father Gallante
is
a special· kind
invasion going to be?" my Spanish friend~ would constantly·ask. At · sis_tcrs .of the ·~ood Lord
.Loves
. affairs?,. -'
_
of priest · so catch his ac::Loil
rust,
.(
was amazed 'that~· these
people·
were so ~terested· and His Sheep High School,
my
...
"Let me
niake this
perfec~ly
Saturday ·it :six .. and 'midnight
'"•-'
informed about what was happening back in my country, when the
name· is Harvey Sprigmore, you - clear, every social affair at Manst · · -and · Sunday; · l think you'll
be
· majority of the time they were completely ignorant, or-· appe-ared can. call me Spriggy,. and
rm.
is
rated X."
. .. .
. .
. impressed.
·
· ·
. ·
·
totally uninterested as to what was happening in-their own country. · here to talk to you about Marist , : •~yes another question, okay
Last and'·certainly least
is
the
The fact that the Spanish Government was in the midst of its biggest
College. ·
. · ·
. . •. ·
, the girl in the· tight swea!er who: • big trip sponsored by the Italian ·
scandal since Frarico came to power; and the American envoy had
Marist is a Liberal.Arts College ·-I'· have
b·een.
lookrng
at
Society to Italy .. The trip costs · ·
just arrived
in
Madrid to work out the final arrangements for
in
Poughkeepsie, New York_. The · throughout my talk."
..
· $429, and breaks down thi:h '
. American military bases in Spain didn't ·seem to phase them as much . emphasis .here· is .on · the word
.. What about the drug problem
, way: $200 for round-trip·. flight
as the campus unrest
in
America, the Vietnam War, orthe trouble on
Liberal. I mean Marist is really
atMaiist?":. '· ·
· · , .. _:
.
on
Air.
Spumoni, $10 if you·
Wall Street.
.
.
.
together. If
you
go there I can
· "There
'is ..
no problem getting
want to ,use the toilet, $19 for
Then I began to realize why they seemed so interested. It's -not· personally guarantee you at least
drugs at Marist."
.
taxi fare f"rom where your Air
that they were really interested or concerned about the United
two sit-ins, three false fire alarms
"I didn't' meari that, isn't' it
Spumoni plane crashes to your
States, they were just plain scared. As one professor put it to a group
and maybe even a takeover of
true · that _there are a lot of
hotel - on the
ridge of Mt.
of American students last year, "What happens in New York or
the boatho_use. _
..
.
people geUmg ~re~y mes_sed up
Vesuvius, $20 to remove, the
Washington affects the average Spaniard more than any decree from
The Social Life at Manst 1s a
on drugs at Manst.
·-
grease stains from- your clothes
Madrid could."
·
gas. We now h_ave girls living on
"Yeah, but we have a new
gotten on the flight, over $50
There are many Spaniards who are concerned about American war
the campus and you know.what
game room up there."
for an oil painting of Mussolini
planes on their soil, and especially one of the biggest nuclear
that
means ·guys. You don:t
"Oh/'
. . . ·
.
sharing· a piece of pizza with
submarine. bases in the world riizht in their back vard. But the
know what that means? Well it_
For those of you who think
Chuck
Lobosco's grandfather,,·
Government has been doing a great job of keeping the issue in the
means that uh, uh, well it means. the Marist College Chaplin is
$50 for pills to revive you after•
background by playing up Spain's right to the rock at Gibraltar.
that there are. fewer bathrooms
alive and hiding
in Paraguay you
you• drink the water and $80 to
Stories about Spain's efforts to regain the _Rock through diplomatic
for the boys.
.
are partially right. He
is
alive and . sit in the ·colosseum and watch
channels are found daily in the Spanish-press, but the factthat Spain
At Marist there is also plenty
his name
is
Father Leo Gallante .. Sal Piazza
and Joe. Rubino
could be vulnerable to an attack by anyone who may be at variance
of,Academic freedom. T!lere are
He coulddn't get a visa to go to,
devoured by a pack of killer
with the United States because of the stationing of American war
many new courses. There are so
Paraguay so he resides in his· dachshunds.
materials on Spanish soil, is rarely discussed and not writt~n about. _ many lndia·ns .on campus that
mansion
behind Champagnat.
Government
ownership
and
control
of the mediums. of. next semester their will be a
communication (TV, radio, press) and the strong position of the
course
in the . cu., • .:>ms and
Catholic Church have thus far served the Franco regime quite well.
mating habits of the Shoshones.
They have given Spain the appearance of being a peaceful, culturally
In addition there will soon• be
rich nation, making its way in the nuclear age at its own speed under
courses in camping out, burning
a benevolent dictator. But this is not necessarily the case. Although
incense, heavy expressions and
the Spaniard respects the histpry and customs of his country to a
plan hijacking given by Abdul
great• degree, ·much more so than any American can imagine, he
is
Ho-Tep of Syria.
.
·
becoming more and more impatient with the way his country is
The rules and regulations at ·
being run. Spanish stud_ents · especially are looking with a jealous eye
Marist are. not very s~ringent.
at their American counterparts and beginning to ask questions that
The only dress regulations are
they wouldn't have dared to ask a few years·ago.
that . you
must . wear dirty -
The recent strike by construction workers in Granada, and subway
dungarees at least three times a
workers in Madrid are bold examples of discontent in a country
week,
Indian head-bands are
where strikes of any kind ar illegal, and subject to courtmartial.
mandatory at the evening meal
Whether these reform forces will ever be permitted to become
and there are no shoes permitted·
organized, and the attitude that the landed aristocracy and Catholic
in · the
classroom.
The . only
Church take toward them will have a lasting effect on how fast Spain
curfew rule is, that if you are
catches up to the rest of Europe and the World: The desire is"there,
caught. in your room between 8
but the resources aren't. And as is often the case, the U.S. has the
p.m.
and·
4 ·
a.m.
you are
capabilities, but no policy to implement them.
considered
a . social outcast.
.
unless your wacked-out.
The
Syst
em•
.
·Well th.at's aboutit-ex~.e. p.t· f_or. ·
..
,
•
our new•. schedule which, has
g,.,1.
..
. .··
"lit¥½$,
'T1 •
·
.
£
~
·
d.
t··
fl
schooLstarting-July
4
but
YOU'..·,.,..
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-
{.l: __
-1me.:.
:i9r ;•, .. e
1r~c,
:ll) .
get:<>utJa~~aryJ7
and;you get
-.~,· •·
•
.. ;, .. ,:;
;
,<
.
. .
.
•
.
. .
.
.
dif?:..:H~~,
••
~i.::'Jl;;;[;n~~f
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.'k'i;:,jf
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•-·•
····••·
,.; :;
,.;;;:o';'-tDfiilin8;lS'tt'(I,
..
;.,i;i
";;,;.:
,.,
which· they approach _politics. They_ are primarily concerned. with
th e boy with the funny-cigarette
who
looks
like a wounded
BY DENNIS ALWON
getting
a
"good" job, settling down and making money .. The
mongoose." .
·
. problems of·tl~e society in which we live interest the~ but do not.
.
.
The most:·sensitive
and t}:i.e ·· ·:different methods,. Perhaps by.
really concern them. As they get older a_nd progress they become
'.
·.. •
.· . '
·
- most · real people in . the_ .world
indulging their. time
in
social
more and more interested in maintaining the status quo. They find
s
·.d
. . .
·s
. . ..
.
.have. experienced
loneliness
activities, being BMOC, etc ... ,
that they have some influence in legislative government because
theyu
n...
a
Y· ".
o·n
g . •.
th~oughout. ;_their. lives. ·Peopl.e
"Experiencing a solitary state
have the resources to pressure bureaucrats, legislators and executives.
.
.
>
•
·.
.
·
think of bemg lonely as a bad
gives
the ·. individual·
the
They use
this
influence to their own particular group's advantage
·
·
.
.
·
and unacceptable
trait. in
our
opportunity_
to draw upon
and take the attitude of the «survival of the fittest."
• · - BY TO~
HACKETT ·
society, but I look at it froin a
untouched
capacities
and
There
is
a gro~ing number. of students, however, who are really
The_ boats _crrcled ~acefully as • totally different point of view. I
resources and to realize himself
concerned beyond the point of mere interest with the state of affairs · the wmd whispered its orders to
believe that most. people are · ,in ·an entirely unique manner."
in this country .. They seek to solve the problems of war, racism,
their. sails, .. and sporadically a
really lonely .and cannot fact this
.This. experience may not . be a
poverty and injustice.
·miniature_
yacht;. like, t~ose
fact thus compensating:by trying
. pleasant experience for it may
Some of these people work on an individual basis, such as helping
found _at rm~dle-class m9on!1gs, • to be "one
-of
the guys." Their
bring a new type of self to the
to paint a house so that an oppressed family will have a home or
would push its way up or. down
fear of being alone will force
pel'Son being involved in it.•
working to build a park so that the kids in a ghetto will have a place
tht:
sun drench~d _riv.er.· As I
them to do and be something..
How many people can _really .
to play or traveling to Appalachia to help a priest working with the
shif~ed . my . at!ention ·. t~ the · they are not
They overcome. . admit to themselves that they
oppressed in Kentucky. They realize that they will only help
a
parking lot, which was slightly . this loneliness by very many ·
are _alive and that they are real
handfull of people but they feel thaphey
are doing.something to
stuffed
with motley> shining
·
·
and true to. themselves; People
solve the problem.
·
inetalic machines, I would see a
of their. choosing. some decide
believe _that they -know what
But more and more students today are coming to understand that
loner or two making his or her
to choose not at
all.
But why
they warit
in: life :but p~ha~s
if_
one well developed, well executed government program in the field
w a'y: • through
the afternoon
. Sunday aµd why choose and . they were introduced into'a new ·
of poverty, for instance, would reach more people than they could
·sunshine . without any obvious
why. do the boats rip at - the · more ·sens.hive
and ·creative
in a lifetime; that 11 ,more peace senators could do more to end the
direction.· And of course, since it · · river's surfac~? We are all on our
world
their.··· ideas ·would ·be
war than a million people marching on Washington. They are
was Sunday. afternoon,
there
boats sailing the riveroflif~ and
radically different The trouble
demanding, in short, a most basic reading of priorities in the life of
were coupl!;!S an~ groups and all
perhaps· nqf really reading the
is
·to .
get
people . to allow ·
this country. Maybe feeding starving babies is mo.re important than
sorts of gatherings about .the.
compass correctly as ·we might
themselves to let their inner
self
going to the moon according to the student.
·
campus. Leisure was the order of · like to think: And who the hell
be seen. This
can
be done by ·
But once this reordering of priorities is agreed upon how does one · the day.
.
. ·really knows?
• ·
t
f
(Y
)
t
go about doing it. Some students think that the answer lies in
Below
me open
windows
There are ... some ··pe.
ople. ·who
mere concen ra
10
n
oga ·
0
.
experience a seµse of life (that
destroying this government.and establishing a new one. Even if this· a
11
owed·.
the
escape>
of
are • divorced for a _time from. •.may ;,seem ridiculous. at first)
were a viable solution it would take much too long.
.
Woodstock recordings and other,-
Sunday afternoons as we know,
that" they
never before had
The answer lies, I think, in working within the system to change it.
various· melodies whatever the · them. They used to ·know ttiem
experienced.·
To . be able· to .·
Those people who are interested in maintaining the status quo and
l!steners
J?le~re.
Across.· ~he - b_ut because _thei;-e
are those who . control their minds· and bodies _
pressuring government to see that it is maintained would be greatly
nver( the md~fferent moun~ns
. h~e. to_
0
.d1ct~te;
they _have. as·one
organism or separately."
out.numbered by
a
coalition of groups seeking the reordering of
a~a1ted · therr· transfo~ation;.
dict~ted.
t,o · take . aw:ay . t!1e ,. To let the' mind function as it
priorities. The success of such a venture lies in organizing these
with casual acceptani;:e, since the
serenity of Sunday for. awhile
never . has before • Creation _
groups of people to work within the political system.
flux. of· nature could not .lie
and dress them in authoritative
Sensation
_
•
Concentration
_.
It seems that the route with the best chance of success would be
d~med. Soon the healt!tY hills• . green
and
le_t them.
crawl
Discipline. One must. be able to
for this coalition to work to gain control of. the Democratic Party
will become a panoranuc array - throu~h
: the Jungl~ with _an . discipline
their
bodily. and
and thereby be in a position to take on the government and reorder
of yellow and brown and shades . authon!ative
gu!1.
,s 1t the faith
mental. control. ·once this is
priorities legislatively. Toward that end thousands of college · of both. Then, if the world
of .therr choosing that allows_ done he is to become sensitiveto
students are working for candidates who are acceptable to the
doesn't end, or,
if
nature doesn't . them to. practice the right,.
~
life
in general. To be ~ble to feel
coalition across the country, A Democratic Party composed of the · change her mind, or if G_od . do~f!lahcall_y,
to ·make the .. the emotions he really
has he
New Left does have a realistic probability of-influencing policy
doesn't decide- to order me to
decision of ~!e or. death? How
may .be shocked to,see :himself
immediately and in establishing policy in the near future if it wins a· another reality - . I will se~ th~· · sol~mnly ·reli~ou! 1t must be ~o
Joying_
anopter,. ~an· or. ·4eeply
p;esidential election.
This
it seems to me
is
the only realistic way to · mo.untains grow thin and -lank
belie~e that yo!1
~
correct m
involved with nature (life). . .. ·· :
go about changing the fundamental problems·facing the country.
and then snow will be ushered in . ordenng people_s lives, t!J.at you
Perhaps these are the.hardest
Institutionalized racism, an uncontrolled war machine and aggressive to take those places left v3:cant h3lve the
unIVersal right to
,.things
in _life· but·
if
we are
foreign policy can only be successfully overcome by dealing with · by ·
th~ •
departing. leav~ WmJer
dictate th~ course of human
looking forward to a world of
themfromwithintheestablishedorder.
will
VISit us agam until spnng
eve!1ts beca~·
some•·warpe_!l
trueness
and humaneness we
It is much easier for those in control of power to deal with
decid~ it's time to come again.
log_i~ tells you that war
JS
must try to discover ourselves
.. trashing in the streets" or mass demonstrations. Those participating
And every week there
will
be a politically sound.
.
· and relate them to others by
in
such activities are.easily grouped into a "lunatic fringe" and no
Sunday afternoon.
_And so there are many w~o
means
of communications
matter how real their motives, are
cast
into a disreputable group.
If.
As dictated. by those. who
will never see tl!e mountains
whether it be.in art, poetry or
these sincerely interested in achieving a reordering of priorities
usurp ; th_e nght
to dictate,
slowly and - poetically ch:mge
whatever. We must destroy the
redirected
their activities into campaigning for representatiye
Sunday
1s
.that
day
when
from summer green to winter
hostilities and aggressiveness that
candidates, a great deal more would be achieved. Such work removes
every one
is sul?posed
_to
COi'fllNUEDON 8
we have and create a feeling of
«ego trips" and Yippie theatrics but results in def""mite
progress.
contemplate or practice the faith
peace
in
our minds.
·
.
~--·~•
..
i.:.
:_--:·_;
--~~~-
..
,_:.
/~')
~::
.
.
.
~
-
·
......
-...
...
·~-
..
..
.
. .
.
.
.
'
.........
'
.....
~
.·
.
..
..
..
'
.
,-
...
·,c;..-
~-
--··~.,.
..
,·~-~
Politics·
And--
-
Curriculum
Reform
·
BY TERRENCE
MOONEY
•
·"::.-·
.•
~
::
·;~
·i•
>
.
.
...
...
~
..
.
.....
1HEORCLE
PAGE3
Curriculum
·1·evision
Approximately two years ago,
be expected to submit their
·
the requirements
of the old
the faculty requested that. the
requirements for t.'1.eir majors. cu rri cu lum
and
the
new
Academic
Policy
,Committee
These will be discussed at a arrangement will have problems
initiate a study of the present·
-
colloquium on Oct. 23.
resolved in their favor. Such
curriculum
with the aim of
The plenary session for voting difficulties will be considered on,
revising
the curriculum. The
on the proposal
is
tentatively
an individual basis.
college community agreed that
scheduled
for Nov. 20. The
·
Since the tentative approval of
such proposals should be shaped
session will not vote on each this idea by the
A.P.C.
and later
by a thorough
discussion of
department's requirements, but by the Council of Departmental
curriculum ideas by all segments
rather on the general proposal. Ch a i r m e n ,
A. P. C.
has
of the college community. The
The
reason
for
publishing
encouraged
community
A.P.C.
heeded this mandate. In. department
requirements is to comment on the proposal. As
the course of the past two years,
insure that
all understand how the process of revision reaches
w or ks ho p-s we re
held;·
~he general
-J?ropo~al
will be the point of d_ecision, the A.~.C.
departmental
self-studies were
unplemented, if it
is
approved.
feels that it has responsibly
conducted;
faculty-student
_
If the proposal is approved, it adhered to the mandate given it
discussions were arranged on a
will take effect in September,
two years ago.
floor-by-floor
basis
in the
1971.
Students caught between
·
* * *
*
*
dormitories.
The dialogue has
·
-
not ended; it continues today
among
all
segments of t)le
community. In November, the
A.P.C. will ask the faculty to
appro:ve
a new
curriculum·
arrangement for the college.
· The new arrangement would
allow a student's
major field
department to allocate the first
half of the student's graduation
requirements.
The
·-
department.
will
.specify
the courses required
for the major and those related
areas which it feels are necessary
or desirable for its majors.
There will probably be two
-
requir.ed
experiences,
a
two-semester Freshman Seminar
and a ·two-semester sequence in
. physical education.
The remaining half of the
grad.uation.
requirement
will
consist of courses selected by
Higher education
is
in the
tallied; However, to the others,
.
the student in consultation with
throes
of
·
conflict and crisis
to the others, to the student
,,
_
his
adviser. These courses should
: :brought :
on, partially, · by the
activist, let me warn and hearten·
be chosen primarily outside the
agonizing problems of growth
them· on._ Technology
and
student's special area and should
and diversity. Greater numbers,
professional guilds are arranging
provide
a more
general
a greater bed- ofknowl~dge and
·,
their world
and
their education
educational experience.
· -;greater
diversity of population
so- that_ they won't have to
Consideration of this proposal
·•
,
.
(mass
production- won't work
experience
i~ ..
Devise
-
.
and
will take place at a faculty
.
-_- _
.
>anymore)
have
brought
implement
specific programs.
colloquium.on Friday; Sept.18.-
;,):i,
.
-·
·
' ·
educators. to the· point of asking_
,
Let your decisions indicate your
·
Students,
~•through
the_ Student
~:\t:'~C}}:If~~-lt~?J'r~kribii!di~~
~ijMf?~tfftJ!~1::
9
JI:
J\t'~o~.mt,
·.
··tn1~";f
~~~:C~!!~t~~~~i~
-:
:/>
:
,,
,
:e.\'eryone
-·should·
expenence:.
of'
the politfoal.'realities of the
The· A.P.C.
stands ready to
,':._
;',/.,;
::;,Higher
learning
is
being'tiirned
·
formula
Hon_ of"-academic.
discuss· the proposal with all
,;/
.
i'.-:
<
·
·<tip
side-· down. to develop'. its
.
policies.· Other .interests besides
interested groups on campus
.
.
·-·-';•·:<{-Y,curriculuin
and perhaps-just as
their own are .involved behind
Faculty-student
dialogue
' ,
, ·;.
_
'important,_
a rational for such
.the
rhetorical
-
gwie- of concern
should
be occuring
at. the
:
:_'.
development.
·
_ ·
,
for
the
individual
·
students.
departmental
level
also
.
.
,..·
Our.educational institutionsit
Some
professors
are,
for.
September is a crucial month in
.:seemed;
hesitated .in the. 60's to
.instance, concerned primarily in
the· shaping of more specific
co~ft:ont the treme~dous
but·
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
elements of the curriculum; By
anticipated problems of the ?O's.
.
-
-
-
October 15, all departments
will
Steven
Muller. compares
·the
situaticfa facing higher education
arid the
.
.approval taken, by the
Student
Acad.
Comm.
----------,
I
-
.
THE
I
-
powers to be in
his
paper titled;
S om e
-
Th o ugh ts
,
in
'_
the
R~structuririg of Universities
~
. -
Or Now that the Pot
is
Boiling,
_
What's in it?
-Faculty
Colloquium
I
AMERICAN
I
STUDIES
PROGRAM
II
I
PRESENTS:
I
NATURE AND CITY:
I
.
AN AMERICAN DILEMMA
I
I
September 17,8:00P.M.
I
,\
_
What then
is·
the role of the
,
.
student·
in this_
•educational
_
This Friday, September
·
18,
•
planning?
Ct:rtainly
some_·thefirst_among
three faculty
'.
students
will , not. realize· the colloquia on curriculum revision
._imp_oitanc~
9f
:the,:
plans
bei,ng
wfil
take place;
·Although
it
.is
a
made or-their right
fo
participat_e faculty colloquium, students,
as
:m
sl,lch plannfug-imtil it is too in. the past, will be allowed to
late_ and _the votes. have ~een 8:ttend.
The
·
discussion
will
,A
S.tatement
·
of
Philosophy
BY GEORGE ROARTY
_
'Su:t>mitted
by
.
Terrence
·
·
Mooney With Respect To The
Student Government of Marist
College
-
-
·
·
·
center
basically
around the
departmental structuring of the
major fields and their related
course segments. In addition the
A.P.C. will seek out the general
faculty feeling concerning the
curriculum proposal which is in
-
the process of being finalized.
When the faculty have entered
and
·have
been
seated,- the
students
will be allowed
in.
Their
questions
will
be
entertained
only
after
the
government calls . for a wider
-
faculties' have been attended to.
democratization
of rulemaking
·
Because
of the
extent
of
and
enforcement.
Student
business to be covered and the
representation
at the· very· importance of covering it within
highest governing levels
is
also
the
colloquium,
students
are
·.
If
-
to govern_
is
to administer,
necessary (as the committee on
asked to cooperate
with the
then the function of student
the student .in higher education
above guidelines. Students, as
government
is·
to administer
recommends) to
·prevent
student
wbat by De Facto definition
victimization by the professional
was stated last week, will have
relates
to the student.
The g u i l d s
a n-d
c
O
11 e g e
an opportunity
to raise any
questions
they
may
have
strangely
co-optive
and_ administrators.
(In budgetary
concerning
the
curriculum
charitable tone of past student
and
governance
_
matters, for
revision at the student-faculty
government
philosophies have, .instance.)
·
colloquia
which
will
be
·
-
interpreted
what· relates
·
to
_
Tlie
time
has past where
operating
on a departmental
students as what does not relate
-
:to·-the"administration
of their
administration
-
dealings with
basis. In case any student will be
essentiai•services.
·
·
.
students
.
were lilcened to:, an
·
unable to attend these meetings
elite-adolescent relationship. We and
.would
.like to learn more
·
·
Since all essential seivices on
·are
now completely aware of the
about what
is
involved .in the
the campus are or should be political
intrigue_ involved in
curriculum proposal and what
directed toward th e service of even previously assumed chaste
your department is do.ing, a list
the
individual
st udent,
his·
matters as academic policy and
of the
S.A.C~
department
student government should be
curriculum reform..
representatives
and
their
· his
·
protective
agent.
·such
Tiie philoso_
phy then, of
this
respective box numbers follows
services
(security, placement,
b
library,
financial
_aid,
etc.)
student government
~ political.
elow.
It
is
hoped that you
will
We are a political entity and
seek them oµt if you have any
should also be subject to review
should
be dealt
with
in
questions,
problems,
or
and
reform
by authorized·
student representatives.
governance matters as such. The suggestions
concern.ing
the
protection
and promotion
of
curriculum revision.
While still admitting to th e
student interests
is
our sincere
English
-
Bernie Mulligan
political
realities of campus
d~.
S117; Tom Rabbitt S-37; Paul
governance,
this
student
-
*****
Novak;
Hist.
and
Political
Science:
Jim
Snyder L291;
Dallas
Benedict
S-11; Terry
Mooney
_
L2 I 8;
Psychology:
Gerry
Wildner
C-717; Jane
Pancheri
L250;
Math: Jerry
Della Rocca L-36, Bill Haidrich
CONTINUED
ON PAGES
I
(N TIIE THEATRE
IA
lecture
by:
I
I
JOHN
J •
McDERMOTT
-
I
l
[)irector of Interdisciplinary
Studiet
Queens
College
,
·----------
SUNY at BinghamtOn
Institutes Governance.
-Binghamton,
N.Y. - (I.P.)
A
new university governance
system for State University of
New York
·
at Binghamton will
begin implementation this year.
The new plan provides for a
University Assembly seating 55
faculty,
32 students,
and
13
administrators.
The Assembly
replaces the Faculty Senate as
the major, policy-making body
_on
this campus.·
"This
system· allows for a
'governance,' not a government
.in the traditional sense of the
word. Governance is a fresh
approach
and
denotes
a
decision-making
process
involving
all constituencies
rather than the (now) apparent
widespread
displeasure
that
these constituencies tend to have
because
·
of their perception of
the
traditional
governmental
process on the national, state
and university levels."
Committees reporting to the
Assembly
will
be established
having differing ratios of faculty,
students,
and administrators,
ranging
from
large
faculty
majorities on some committees
through to those having large
student majorities.
These committees
will deal
with
all aspects of university
concern,
including
academic
planning, budget requests, and
student social regulations. Each
constituency
is
expected
to
arrange for the election of its
representatives to the university
Assembly.
_
President
Dearing said that
-
adoption
of the new system
represents a "big hurdle cleared"
in efforts to create an "adaptive
and
contemporary"
form of
university governance. He felt
that
the
new Assembly,
representing
all
campus
constituencies, will involve more
aware
participants.
Hopefully
this
will lead to a more effective
:iecision-making process.
* * * * *
\I
I
-
I
·,
·•
•;·-..
·~
PAGE:4 ·,,,. ,.':
,.,
.. _
... , •:·.'.;'
,;, • •'.'• ·' .. :
;>,:._
·. :;\:.,·.
··<,,::
__
,:_,\_,<
... :,
'DIEciRCLE:.::
.. '.:: .. · .
.c
..
;,_~:i'??;;~;~;/:::::,·-:::·:·-~·;···.
SEP'lmlBER
11:
1970;\,';;
''.',.
\
Johd:.::DOY/~·on·•
Thi '
lnexPedienCy
·.
Of.
YiO.legc{!-
.
. _,•,:,,!
'
·..
:,_"'..
•·-.~
'·. ,·~--:/~·
...
-
~
. BY ROBERT
ULLRICH ·
.
. -:''.'-\ _:.
:<'.
The ,following are excerpts
interfering
with a. revolt of
colonialistn oack by means.of
,·
·
· · .•
·
·
. · ·· ... '.:"'··,-:-,.,.._,_
.. , ··
from a speech delivered on the
people against oppression. For,
atomic :weapons,.· which . they.
· I feel that·l am compelled to write. this articl~ simplfbecause,-_,lJ
floor
of . the
Ho use
of
if
we do this too often, it will be
hate with a bitter hate/'
.
.
feel-violence and
use'
of violen! tactics ·to. fore~ change is wroµgand,,:::
.. Representatives by John Dow on known
all
over the globe that
"In this tragic moment we are
immoral. Our country is becoming polarized.(or
is
alread~)
an,~
ea~:·
May
s·;.
1965.
Mr. Dow is,· the common people cannot right _to brush aside the. countless
side '(those who want quick change and thos~ _who believe
m.
~e
presently
a candidate·
for
their
wrongs 'without. United . _questions· and· anxieties· of our
status ,quo) tend to see. their •"ehemies" in their ex!J'eme
fo~.Jf
·
Congi:ess.
from
the .28th
States
opposition.
And (he
own peciple, tellµtg them they
·your
goals include peace and
-creation
of a .Vibrant ·h~man
Congressional
.District.
The. people will, say that the United
don't know ·the facts. It's true
community then
can
y~u ~ustify_ violent me.ans to a ~o~btf~
s Pee c
~
t-~ on cb~
1
r
1
_nfe d tahn States doesn't go to the courts; · nobody knows
all
the facts, and : .. Pt
eaceh
ful enhd.?
tc
1
annt?tt Pti~ach a~ouxt md~ralst
!<>t11?J
8
let
0
bucthlanwgille·
.thistry
'.--.·:'
appropna
10n
1
·
or
e shedoesn'tsitdownand·parley;·
.mostof_usknowonly~few.So
. os_oww
YVIoen
a_c csare-me pe
1
er m_ • .,_"':'
.
.
._
... ,-:
Vietnam war;
·
, she doesn't go· to the United
let us.read the signs. Let us take.
c~untry.
Unless_ you feel ~at, ev,entually only:a VJol~nt ,evolution . );
"I submit that this warfare
Nations;Men: will- say that-the
note' that -our tr~ditional allies . will be the solut10;11
to Amenca s prob~el!l_th~n-tt.ie
realization ~ho~d_ ;
.
that our nation carries on in
United States imposes its own
are. not joining
us
in Vietnam.
occur that the violent· and destructive mcide_n_ts
only_ polanze (as
Vietnam has-little support in the
justice by force."
. .
·
Let' us take note that our side in
well, as our ~unt!f's
leader's tende~c~ to repre~ion) the c?,u;11try · ,. ,
opinion of the world. None of
"If,
now; this nation is
in
the
Vietnam.has-been losing battles · the!e~y_ ;-~aking mtemal . chang~ ··difficult.· (W1tn_ess
.th~
silent
our
historic allies, the, great
Vietnam conflict to right some
and territory in the country.in
maJonty s. backlash to campus VJole-nce and bombmg mcidents by.·
nations like England, France,
wrongs done by one group of
spite of the heavier arms we give· voting ~gainst candidates who~
support~d by s_tudents.)
>
• ..
Italy,
or Canada, have sent · people
to another group. of
.
them."
.
. :r~e- un~ortance ~f educ~,tJ?lg (ch3!1~g ,peopl~ _to 1:Ieip ,~em
troops to aid us as they did in
p e op 1 e , the
purpose
is
"Let . us ,take note that all
realize therr humaruty) the silent maJonty,
tpe nght wmg and
three
wars of this century.
commendable, But the wrongs
through the years of Vietnam.
(Yes!) the "left wing" should be of primary concern.·But can this
l>~
Certainly
nobody
can s~ow
of Vietnam are not ail the
fighting, it has never. been clear
done· when
all
the "silent majority" observes is hundred~ of bombing
where our actions are popular
in
wrongs of this .world, There are· whether
the . Vietnam· people
incidents, violent confJrinations (Yes,· the n~ws media is also at fault)
· · Ksia, among the millions of . wrongs arid cruelties
in
South
wanted to be· saved more from
and
all
it hears~ inflammatory rhetoric.
•·.
:
. . . . · · . '· •··.
people there."
.
· Africa,
in
West Africa,
in
Burma, .
communism than they did from ·
If you've ever argued your case or even discussed rationally with
"Our action is fateful because
in Bolivia, in Brazil,
in
Russia w:ar. Let us take, note that · anyone about America's plight then you've· undoubtedly had to
·
it
reveals
our
one
nation
and
in
China even in the United ·Vietnam recently ejected one
justify
9r
explain-th.e use of violence by others who plead the same
attempting to say, 'L am the
States. · Why shall ·we. swoop
nation of white · men from its
case as you. It's v_efy hard to present acceptable. alternatives to such
law.' - attempting
to be the
down with all our might on this . shores. Why should they like us· a person when. the outward. manifestation of those alternatives are
judge
and
executioner
of
one particular. place that we ·any better?"
.
contradictory to its principles or goals. The possibility of educating_
another nation."
hardly know, so far away, asking
"In this tragic moment we will
that person
is
much more difficult
if
not impossible.
' ; · · . .
· . _ .
"While we hold that the Viet for no_ judge except o_ur own
proceed to delude ourselves that
The actions of the Weathennen are thereby hindering achievement
Cong uprising is a Communist
strength."
·
unanimity on the floor of this
of progress toward your goals even though you aren't sympathetic.to , ·
plot, they hold that it
is
a
·ustill
th~
final argument
body
means
unanimity· the
tli_eirmethods.
·
·
.
_•. .
-,·:
rebellion of the people against remains:. It is said we must stop
world over - for it doesn't. In
I agree that ROTC buildings do not belong on a co}lege campti~ (or
the rulers. Now there may be Communism. I hope we can, but
this
tragic moment we surrender
anyw~ere else)_ but by blowing one up, many people are going to be.
places in this world where we can we stop it by fighting the
our individuality as legislators,
that much more deterinined to maintain its (ROTC) existence and
should oppose Communism -
people we want to :win for our
capitulate to a mechanism and
the
continued
existence of our country's
institutions .. Our .
perhaps in Russia or China. But
side? Can we stop it amongst the
close our eyes to the possibility
institutions help· to establish security and order which. are highly
let us not attempt to do it
in
billions of Asiatics when they
that we may be committing a
prized in our country above· freedom, justice or individual liberty.
those areas where we may be · th i n
~
we
are
bringing
crime upon other men." :
Whr should they sacrifice their security for a doubtful free and just
House
Races
Shift
War
Spending
society.
.
To quote Herbert Apthecker, "The object of a true revolutionary
is to patiently explain!'
·
· · •
·.'
Oc,an
Dumping
.
Nol
Unusual
A po~ibility exists that voters
will be chosen in January; There
· The mid-August furor
ovei
h~d been dumping its sludge was
lead (151 . ppm), copper· (60
can force a major shift on the
is
a possibility of electing
a
dumping several hundred tons of
dead .. Dead ... Not dying; dead.
ppm) and chromium (40 ppm), .
war. This is seen by political
Speake_r and
:1·
·
_Democr3:tic nerve gas off the Florida coast. Scientists studying·the
content
not·-to
mention
everyone's
scie~tist Garrison Nelson
in
a
leadership. comnuttt:d to e_n_dmg ovt:rlooked the fact th~t the
of. bottom sediment in the area
favorite-
pesticide DDT (150 .
detailed stu_dy of t~e .Ho?se of
the ~ar _and cuttmg nuhtary
Uruted States has_been
usmg
the .were horrified:
A
bottoJnsample · pl}m).
These
figures
: were,;.
Represe1:1tatives pu~lished m The
spendmg.
.-.·
··
. ·
oceans Jor ye~s·
~
a trash _<:an from., one: station:
inclpded· • recorded ,at. Station 59 ·in ·tlie/·.
ft~greSS1ve. He p~unts
OU~
t~at ..
a ••
·.··.
-.Th~. llouse,
~e~a\1S~ ~f •. a .•.
,for n~_XlOUSW~te~,
' .:--
·
..
/ :, '·: : :, ce.lhtlo~t~are.ue_;
f_il~~l\:
ti~s, '~dumping,. are~_,<Jn
:t1ie
ope#'' / ' ,. '
'
~s1ten_~, )1-~-wk:~!h.
rna.~?l'l~r.···
•
.cchange_.ofn,i!es,.\Vill11,<>t
~~-.~~~e,,., · ./:r~.:J~~t,-was,~t~~lil~er;,,,:bap.d,;.,ll;l<;l_!j·:,~_d,:;Af~~µi,,[g~.
0
<.o.cean:·.10
1
;.miles }'south
•of
:;-.:,,.c
>:
1
~n~bles, President . Nixon to_· get·-:. to·· _evade •
1
ro11·· call· : vote.s ·:ne.~
t ,
,
th11t
~rne ·
rne>~~
"'1,>.e~:the\Navy
/
~~
sarJii~~J~~~•Jj,ave
,~~~n
$~~p.~"'-·>
R~citaw:~y
Irilef
9diuie,Lcbie
eistL
, .
::t·;,:,,;.•;:,.;..
.
I
what lie ~ants '-· .and s?rnetim~s
session .. _·
If. mem_bers know t~err ·.
·. dumped sevc:riil ·tons" of sUIP,lus,
'ii
!D
~e· stp~~hs· <>f
itsfu
-~xygt?n. of Smdy
·Ho'ok:.' _::
11 •: :
:Y' :.--
' ..
=:,..-:,,
,
...
··
<>
;,!<j
more• : m tht: purs~t · of.
his
votes·• on key 1Ssues are • bemg . ~T:
off t1!,e 'Maryland:· coast. \ m tlie water-'tn the dumpmg area ·_ _•·._·What.
is most,distur!)ing''aboiif' ..
·>.·
· :'
. a~ss1ve
foreign policy.'' He
closely, watched b_y_
alert voter
Ongmally;; 1t.,.'Y'as planned to
:..,-v:as
found_. to be !ess; th~ one· · the., extent·
and .variety'of
:-::·: : .; ·
discovered
that 48 of these · groups as, ammunition. for the
drop the expl.osive off.the coast · p a·rt
p_e r m,11
lt on:• :
,!--:
dumping
is that
so
little
is
yet -, ... • '''
ha.wks_were
vul_nerable
next election, they
Will
be less
ofNewJerseyatthespotwhere
concentration
of 2.5 pJ:)m
ts
.known
ab.out.theeffectiof
·
po!it!qally,
their
elec~o!al
likely
to blind!~ follow· the.
mustard gas had been dumped_ ~~Y,
~onsid,ered essen~
!or~ · sludge, chemicals, poisons/and<· , .. ,,·: ··
maJonttes have been dechnmg
recommendat1on·.of
the
three years before. When that
mannelife;lnfact,nothinglive
junkonthemarineenvironment·.
,,
and each won last time by less
Chairman of the Armed Services
fact became public knowledge . was found;
•..
There is some . evidence ,that•- .. -
than 40,000 v:otes. Twenty-three
Committee. .
, _
the dumping site was shifted. - .. And · even a clam with a
materials
break
down
· · ·
of these hawks belong to the . The loss . of a key hawk, a· Good thing, too, since ships five
snorkeLwould have. to contend
. House leadership, as committee
Committee chairman or member
miles away felt the explosion , with excessive concentrations of
.
c:orhiNUED
ON 8 ·
,
.
chairmen, and members of such
o f t h e App r op r i at ions
when the TNT hit bottom.
.
•··•_·
..
power'ful
committees
as · Committee,'
would have an . But surplus military weapons ..
Appropriations, Armed Services, · unusual· effect _upon the Hou.::e, an~ .. exple>sives aren't ·
the
-only.·
Foreign Affairs, Rules and Ways
even if 'his opponent is also
things the U.S. has been pouring
and Means. ·
_
.
hawkish.
_ .
.
· ·
into the sea at the rate of
48
.
Sources in . the House suggest
In Nelson's list of "vulnerable
million tons per year. Included
that campaigns against 20 of the . hawks" are 28 Democrats, ,and
in that
ghastly
disposal. are
strategically-placed hawks could
19 are· in . key sfots;
and
20
s u I f uric
acid,
•arsenic,
•.
result
in. a swing away from the •Republicans,
4 in important · napthenates, cyanides, mercury ·
!-
militant stand of the House, for
posts.
·
and
other
heavy
metals, ,•_
these reasons:
. ·
The Washington Post says the
pesticides,
refuse
· - from
With some pressure, hawks in _ Democratic primary victory in
municipal sewage to plastics and
tight races
will
adapt to local · the Conne1::ticut Senate race of
cannery
w~stes;
radioactive
thinking
on war and peace
Joseph D,
·
Duffey "represents
wastes, chemical warfare agents,
issues.
'the
biggest · break-through of
constructjon
and demolition
Most
members
follow the
1970 for the 'peace forces' and
debris and variow; rejected or
. · H o u s e I e a d
e
rs h i p o n
advocates of 'new politics.' "
contaminated products - from
military-foreign
policy . votes,
This was ·a multi-issue campaign.
foodstuffs to appliances.
and for years that leadership has
Duffey plugged not only peace,
The ocean off the East Coast
been even more aggressive than
but
equal
rights
for black
and the Gulf of Mexico are
Presidents Johnson and Nixon.
citizens
and
unemployment
dotted with dumping sites where
Speaker McCormack is leaving compensation for union strikers.
the throw-away society has cast
the House, and a new line-up
poisons and problems ·in· the.
belief that out of sight is truly
out of mind.·
·
··
·
revision last winter when it was ~·
· ~·
·
This attitude underwent brief ~:~-
discovered that the ocean off
<~\L ,. \)~~\,-; ,
New Y
otk
harbor where the
city _ '
\
,
·,t'l,it
··
'
'
'-.
(
~
~"~~,._1
URBAN
~~~it~
'
~"'r,
ORE
'6~\f-
from·page
I
submitted
by
Rehwoldt
necessary. There has to be a ·
re-str'ucturing
of attitudes
· toward
garbage.
It must be
regarded as "urban
ore" not
waste.
America
is not
self-sufficient in raw materials.
It
is
necessary
to
recycle waste in_
order . to preserve
natural
resources.
•
~
• • • -, --1·
11
,,,If.--•-" .•
~
; ..,
t
I
•
•
,
~ •
•
•
•
•
.
.,
_.•;'•
;,:·<>),>::.~,·.
.
~~
--~':-.-
..
: ..
·-;-·
.
.
,-SEP'l'EMBER.j7,·i970
'.; ·
..
ntE CIRCLE;.
)Ctllenddr'
OJ ]JVeiits
~
.
·.•
.
'.
··WEEKLY.CALENDAR
FOR SEPTEMBER, 2(},27
.1970
·
·---
.
.
.
.
·.
.
-·
.
,
~-----~-
......
----~
.
Dear
Sir:\·?·
:" :
x.
:·
:
:;
~
·
·
·
-It
w.ss:
certainly
,disappointing
.to
·note some or·cominents and
.
:
advice'
·offered:
in
...
the
..
editorial,
·
.·•
"Druisat·Manstr.'.·•·
:<:
·.-.·:
-.·
-·
•
:
:
"The
·oru.y
people
who
can
-(prevent
a
bust)
are· those who
indulge in the<use of drugs .. .''
There·
follows
.elementary
strategy. for preventing a "bust."
· ·
"When you µse
-
drugs you
must· unclerstand
.
that• you face
the
·
chance of
·
being busted ..
American
law ds not
as
enlightened
as one. might
prefer.,.
·
. ·
.
·
.
"We are not endorsing the use
_
of drugs. In many cases it
is
a
·.
middle-cla~- cop·-out ...
·
But if
you- insist
·on
usiri'g drugs don't
.
allow yourself to get caught."
.
.
·
·sunday
.
.
,
-
•.
·
· "
'
.
:
:
: ·
· >
September 20
1-5
p.m:
Junior Clambake at Poolside
.
8:30 p.n_i. Coffee_House, Room 249, Campus Cent~r
,.·
.
_.
, >
..
_,.
:,·
·,
We~esday
.
· ·
·.
··
.
·
~-<
• ·.
.
September 23
·
.
.
8:0.0;p.m; Filin
.-
"In
Cold Blood" in the Theatre, Campus Center
-Thursday.
.
. .
September 24
8:00
·
p.m .. Lecture - Environmental Series.
Mr. Ken Walker on
.
~•Es~blishing Water.,Quality Standards" ·
'.
.
.
.
Friday
'
..
·
·
·
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;
September 25
.
~
8:30 p.m. · Coffee House Concert Series,. Room. 249, Campus
Center
,
.
Saturday
.
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. ·
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· •·:
September 26 ·
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.
8:30 p.m. Coffee House, Room 249, Campus Center
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·
Sunday
· .
•
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.·
·._
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·
. .
.
.
September 27
·
.
,8:00
P·!11~
Film_~ "~ 13onh.e.ur" pre~ente~ by ~arist.College Film
Program
m
Theatre Film Program D1scuss1on
m
Gallery Lounge,
. Campus Center
. ·
.
.
. . .
·
·
· ,
.
8:_30 p.m. Coffee House in Roofi?-.
249, Campus Center
Is. the extent 'of our· concern
about people getting hooked on
drugs
-
liniited
.
simply.
to
concern
about
tJ\eir being caught or
busted?
.,
.
. ·
.
fulfilled." One may say I love
time, concern for the well-being
Why
was
there no call for,a
.
you by saying I wish your good.·
.of
those hooked on drugs, those
more. extensive.
program of
If love me.ans concern for others,. experimenting with drugs and
-
e d u_cation, and_ counseling_
it goes deeper.tb.an the wish not
·
those exposed to drugs must also
d
•
·
to· see another-arrested when he· claim the attention of sensitive
·
,,-
irected at
.aiding.
drug-users and has a pr_obleni
•.
_
For many, drugs
and sincere people.
·
those
who
:
are tempted or
pressured·· to
..
:experiment
.
with
..
represen( an attempt to escape
It
seems tragically conformist
drugs'?
·. .
, .
.
.
.
from a problem. Very often, it
and morally irresponsible for a
"''
·
b
..
li
·
th
d
·
simply
.
means running away
college editorial to express the
·
ne niust
.
e eve
at you
.
0
:from
one set of problems irit_
o
shallow neutral admonition -
not endorse the use of drugs,
.
because you say
.
so explicitly.
atio.ther vicious problem - drug
·
.. But if you insist on using drugs
Do you endorse programs ~d · use.
·
· . .
at least don't allow yourself to
efforts directed at preventing the
·
Your concern for· the people
'
get · ca1W,It.,. There does not
...
use. of
drugs? If you do not
involved in the Vietnam conflict,
seem to be much love in that.
·
endoISe the
use of drugs, do you for
·
victims of brutality, for
Sincerely
yours,
f
h
-
.
abuses of power, must be the
Louis
C.
Zuccarello
eel t at
··
appropnate
means concern
of all sensitive· and
Dept. of History and
should be adopted to prevent sincere · people.
·
At the same
Polit1·cal sci·ence
the sale and/or· spread of drugs
on campus'?
,oo
y~u feel that
.
s· .
.d···
. .
D
d
..
~e::~:::t;'!:::::!~il~~
.··
t~
·.
ent·
DU_.
ge_tin_
..
·g·_'
·
inhumane act which may even
-
be • considered
criminal
in many
.
C
'
.,
_.
.
.
-•
--~es~e.
Viith· Dennis Alwon
· ..
o_·D)Dlt
ttee
.
(pg .. 2) when he says that: .. The
.
.
.
.
_
,BY
JOE
GEBBIA
trouble
is
that
maif
is
afraid to
,
The Stti<lent Govenurient has
It
will
allocate funds to any
,_
".
.
···
·
show ·an emotion fre.ely. He feels recently
created
a Student",· organizations or interested group
,.._.,,-
tliat he J!iustnot'do_those things
-Budgeting
Committee
to·.· of students who would like to
/
. ,
:. :-?
.·
that·. ~,~elf.
.
~ys
is
__
a_
)l.~~o_;
.f.
·.
coordin,,te
.
various aspe~s of
-:·
~
chedule lectures or trips of .
,,:
•.
/':,
,::,<m~t_.'l?n!'?~·
:.Bu~
1.
~':ro:u..;. charted ~lul;)s
and
.comuuttees./t·
mterest.
It
.will
also
try
to foster
;i;\\'/:':s,:_.:;,f•,Wfuit-fQt?.;,:Alid;
Y<>~·'.,vn,11,~,say:~;
•
·_,This:budgeting-coiilmittee'·wm
·
.a
,
closer·, rela'tionship between
/;?,;,-.:
,;-
.
·,-B~~useJJ1ave
t<>,!'.This:ca
be
as
_
seIVe·a·dual purpose: first·kwill
clubs, hoping that ·they in
turn
W}?<':'./~;,==~ttf~:~::;;ci~~e~·:,~i:Cs.ian~~J~~~~.
':ru~--
ra°rlil~::~::~r i~:::~edt~ve;:
<·/ :-
,
of which
_Alwon
speaks.
·.
·
.
bave-i'eceivedr.an allocation from
student body.·
..
;;
,
_·~.I
also.
llgiee
wit~:Alwo.n that:
·
the S,~deilt Goveminent, trying
.
This Budgeting . Committee
.
.
.
.
.
.
Love
IS
the baSlS of life, for to avoid any possible deficits
.
·
will
be headed by Joe Gebbia
..
,
·
'~;,
.:::-
without Jo~~•- life cannot be which they might incur; sec<>nd,
•
and_
will
consist of Bill Spenla,
,John
Petraglia and any future
· The
American
Challenge
BY PAUL BROWNE
.
...
] .J.
Servan
.
Schreiker made struggling to survive as we enjoy
_
some
PO'!Verful
predictions
in
his
the advancements achieved in a
book, The American Challenge: technologxcal society.
. .
.
·
"In·
30
years
America will be a
We. have seeri the dilemmas
post-industrial
·
society
•
with
a
per
that fa~ the economic growth
.
capita.income of $7,500: There
will
and development
-
in
Latin
.
be
'only
four work days
a
week of
·
America.
Some ate vicious
seven
hoiin per
day.
The year
will
be
·
circles
to, be broken. only. in the
.
comprised
of
39 work
weeks
and
I
3
most radical of ways. Tradition
·.
weeks·-of
vacation. With·
weekends
itself•.stifles the imagination·• of
,
...
·
this
makes 147 work days a year and
anyone
who dares
think
118
free
dayi
All
this
within a single
independently eriotigh to initiate
generation.''
·
.
change in the established order.
Meanwhile nearly all of
Latin
The social orderis rooted. in the
A m e r i
.c
a w i 11 r
e
m
a
i n
·
debilitating culture Spain forced
''pre-industrial" or $50 to $200 upon. the Americas. Politically,
in per capita income, Compare
.
Latin
America
has suffered
.
that with -Ametjca's $7,500 and historic turmoil and chaos - an
one can begin
to. see
.·
the atmosphere
totally alien to·
s e
r
i o· u s n e s s o f s u c h economic growth.
discrepancies. While Americans
On the· other hand the United
•
will
be devoting most of their
States, which has profited froin
energies to service industries, its investment in Latin America
research, education, or simply faces a future with expectations
leisure,
Latins will still be of unprecedented progress.
·
laboring in the primary activity
Latin
America faces crisis.
·
of agriculture.
And
as
.Turmoil
results
in
strong-arm
·
communications become almost moves which
has brought
·
instantaneous with "time· and dictators to power
:md
continues
space no longer a problem" in to bring them to power today,
the United States, Latins will where Latin America
faces
the
still
carry
produce over unpaved reality of becoming a continent
roads
to
small
rural
markets.
of nations ruled by military
It is clear that economic men. The challenge to America
success in any and
a11
·
of the
is
clear. The
crisis
is
economic in
La.tin· American
nations
is
nature. That
is,
the poor want
dependent upon the degree of what the rich have, and the rich
independence Latins develop in refuse
to
y i e Id • In
an
their
fiscal
planning,
international scope
this
puts the
entrepreneurship,
savin~,
and
United States right
on target,
investment.
However, 'it is The
question
is, will we
certain that the United States respond?
cannot
ignore
its neighbors
.
appointments.
If
anyone has any
.
questions please feel free
·
to
c_ori
tact any member
·
of the
committee.
·
•.Student·
Government's
Allocation. for 1970-
71
School
.
year:
.·
..
;
Football Club - $2,000.
.
Childrens Theater - $1,100.
Booster Club- $210.
·
History Club - $100. •
.
·
Sailing Club - $300.
Gaelic Society - $150.
W .M.C,R. - $1,300.-
-
Appalachian
Reaction
-
$2,500 •..
Biology Clqb - $50 .
Varsity Club - $1,150.
Circle - $5,400.
Year Book - $6,500.
Spike Shoe Club - $200.
Ski Club - $25.
Theater Guild - $2,400.
..
Student
Union
Board
-
$21,000.
Budgeting
Committee
.
$1,500.
.
POLITICS&
CURR. REFORM
.
from page
3
bettering
themselves in their
discipline, prestig~, salary etc.
This
dilemma of professionalism
is
just
one political ingredient. In
a recent survey of 500 college
deans the majority opinion was
that the strongest opposition to
student participation in such
planning
is
to be found among
the faculty, certainly one of the
primary vested interest groups in
academic reform.
In conclusion, I would suggest
to any student participant in
such planning to
be
an activist
and to devise your own specific
programs suitable to student
development and cognizant of
the other participants in the
development procedure.
_PAGES
Erl'ITORIAL
8ehold
m~
magnificent
new theory,
Gort! ...
So! "
highly
complex
theory
st.ated
in
the simplest or·
wms!
€ven
'j()U
cannot
oo
more
succinct!
Let
• ,C-
The world
is
not
flat,
but
sphencal .
.
"14-It is
but
an
infinitesimal
speck
in a -1ast,
curwd
wiiverse.
z-This
universe
is
dominated
by
a
Spiritual
J:orce,
who
has
chosen
Man
to
make His
Truth
manif'est
t.o
all
this
uniW!rse.
.. :The
wortd is a
roll-on applicator
in a celestial
bottle
oP
spiritual
deodorant.
Liberals
&
the Mid-East
With. the increasing violence and terrorism. occuring in the Midddle
East, it
is
necessary to watch candidates for the Congress and the
Senate in their approach to
a
solution. Most significant are the
statements of the self-acclaimed "doves" on Vietnam.
The consexvative supporters of the Vietnam War have remained
consistent in their explanation of both Vietnam and the Middle East.
•
"The ,11cts
of Communist aggression against the Vietnamese (Israelis);
the freedom loving, democratic people of Veitnam (Israel)." Despite
the fact of
_applying
distinctly Western concepts to a non-Western
. culture, American policy
·
makers are spreading
an
institutionalized
.
paranoia of communism which simply doesn't hold water in other
countries,
Liberals use the same logic in support of Israel
as the conservatives
1
use in support of U.S. aggression in Vietnam. The same people who
were saying we must stop using force to solve political problems are
very
willing
to
·
"sell" bombers and other armaments to Israel: This
seems
.to
be
a
strangely political inconsistency on their part.
If.we
are.
to seek-
a
true world peace it
is
necessary to remove the
elements of-war frqm:political situations. The reasoning employed
in
.
opposition to the war in Vietnani must be used in
an
analysis of the
Middle East. The recent speeches by liberals and conseIVatives
regarding Israel are providing a rhetorical foundation for U.S.
imperialism in still another part of the
world.
Petty
~olitics
· One of the more laughable canipus occurrences
in
the past week
has been the election of members to the House Councils. The House
System
is
something to be taken seriously. The House Council
is
not .
The House Council
is
simply a board which
will
determine policy
and issue legislation no sooner or later than it would no matter who
makes up the board. The only major moves yet to be made are
complete 24-hour open house and no curfew for freshmen. These
will
happen inevitably anyway, ahd they will only happen when "the
people" want it.
If
the residents want it bad enough, it will happen,
no matter what personalities make up the board.
Yet, the Resident Advisors- in Champagnat House thought the
elections serious enough to
call
for a second vote after three people
were already decided upon. These peopl~, above
all
others, should at
least realize that they are merely dealing in petty politics.
We remind you again that we do consider the Houses important.
Yet the members of the House Council are simply iigureheads
unlucky enough to have to go to meetings to decide on the
inevitable.
. lNE'
.
9-+C/RCLE
e
Sal Piazza
Joe Rubino
Editors
in Chief
Rich Brummett ..................................................
Photo Editor
Terry Mooney ............................ - .......................
News
Editor
Gerard Geoffroy ... _ ............................................. Man. Editor
J.
Tkach ...........................................................
..Sports Editor
Peggy Miner ........ - ... - ............... - ............................ Secretary
Paul Tesoro ............................................................ Cartoonist
Dave DeRosa ......................................................
, •• Circulation
Ann
Gabriele
Janet Riley .................................................................. Typists
H
":
f
r
.ht
.Ad.Copy
,BY
BEN REIVERS
We wait out the night that could be our last
just wanting to have a glass
of beer or soda or maybe wine
to hear sweet music and thankfully find
that no guns are on our back tonight
tomorrow the plans fly low
straining with
a
heavy load
of fearing men who want. to fish and dance and hang around
on a street comer or on the farm
without the guns on our backs tonight
· across the sea is
another
crowd
of homesick boys who remember aloud
of early days and funny fared girls,
sights and sounds that make them unsure
of the guns on our backs tonight
·
upstairs in
a
room ke'eping warm
are the men who hold all the arms
things gone by don't make them budge
from honor and pride and all that crud
that put their guns on our ba_cks tonight
what if all the boats and plans did stop
and no one came to hurt and fight
I hope we would turn to our thoughts so new
of little joys that would make us do
without the guns on our backs tonight
with this in mind an ad I'd enter
into every paper - left, right and center
All
you who wish for family and friends
don't venture to the docks again
hail your brothers on the earth
don't listen to the dirt
of our elected ones who somehow say
my gun is on your back today:
Movie Review
l.:
l·
l
I
I
r
~·,
~,
1-
Which.Way
To:
Th.e-:.Front
(.·,1/<_/BY.MRS.
JACKS~_N_,.;·.'.l'URN~~
:.
.
FACULTY
c
.
COLLOQUIUM'
.✓i
Last Thursday
i
night while
J
.
_was
walking home .from
.
my
night at Bingo. I
was kidnapped
by three juvenile delinquents·
and forced
fo
see "Which Way
F~ailklin ~nd other biggies/Any
•.:.·.
fr·
0
.
·m·
...
_··_p·.
3
._·g·
·
e·
.
3
.·
..
· ··\,
>c
BurJr,.Ilie,
811111oz~,,,.:::·''
.
:·
~
··
.·_)'-::_:·.;Y:i~~:~~its,,.i.
'<--\·
··:
._·.:
·:
1
~·_::·'.·,.
·:
· To The Front." The· film stars
Jerry
Lewis, was written
by
-
Jerry Lewis produced by Jerry·
and also directed by him. Jerry
also
sweeps
up after the show
and pours the melted butter on
the popcorn ..
The
film deals with Jerry
getting rejected by- the Ariny
(after they had seen some of his
earlier epics) and starting his
own Army which defeats the
unknowing Germans. The film
also stars Jan Murray, Dock
Rambo,
Kaye
.
Ballard, Steven
resemblance
to
Holly
..
wood
.
Squares
--i;,
purely coincidental,
·L-110;
DeptbfNafl
Sci~nces:
.
·Jerry
loses control
of
the
·
John Ryan L~277, Rick Micali
picture about half way through
-
C369 and Joan Higgin S-560;
when he has a sc·ene where he Bus. and Econ: F. Gerbers L-98,
dances with Adolf Hitler (played
Steve Kopki; Rest. Bill Karges
by
Can.dice
Bergen)
and
D-912, Frank Kellf; Languages:
everyone
runs onto the
·set
Yadira
Bizardi
S13, Lenny
jumping ~ild singing. After about
··
Terrible.
·
·
·
fifteen
minutes
of. this
·the
people. in the·· theater started.·
singing hymnals.
·
Summing
•.
up it seems safe to
say that World War H could have
been considerably shortened by
showing Jerry Lewis movies in
Nazi occupied- territories, which '
would have caused the Germans
·
to withdraw faster than anything
the allies could have d,one:
.
.
Andy'·s
.
Gang
BY ANDRE ALBERT
By now I'm sure that everyone on campus has seen the
Playground. But how many of you know who is responsible for it?
I feel that a real vote of thanks should go to Mrs. Fisher, the Artist
in Residence, here at Marist
for
her work over the summer. Mrs.
F.isher spent
4
weeks of her own time this summer in constructing,
arranging and painting our newes! attraction. When the maintenance
staff removed the refuse from the old brick storehouse, Mrs. Fisher.·
walked off with many odd pieces of it. She arranged for three
cement columns
tp
be poured and salvaged the large sewer pipe from
a junkyard. With the help of a member of her own staff and a
maintenance man she positioned the various objects around the'area.
Then she started to paint.
Mrs.
Fisher really got-into her painting. She spent most of2 weeks
in
getting the· wall painted.
A
week of her time was spent in setting
·
up the
forms and a week in painting them. She did this so that we
the student body~ would become more aware of what is around us.
We all know what a great place the Playground
is
but how many of
you know what it.really means'? To Mrs. Fisher it is a park of
art. In
her work she sees movement and form. Her object in building it
was
to awaken us to the fullness of life. She
is
trying in her way to help
us have
a good time y,hile we are here.
This
is why
I
9bject to the formation of organized sports events in
there. While
I was peacefully
sitting
in the park some of our sports
freaks decided to have a football game over me. I don't·. mind
football but
I
do object to it in the Playground.
I
think that our park
should be a
place
y,here one can go and relax
in
peace. A
quiet game
or two like ring-around-the rosie or follow the leader seem to fit into
the atmosphere.
•Anything
rougher should be confined to the Chapel
field.
rm sure-
that
Mrs.
Fisher agrees. The Playground
is
definitely a
kiddie place and not a sports
arena.
.
·
And so in dosing I am glad to welcome the:•"kesident Artist of
Marist, Mrs. Fisher, into Andy's
Gang.
It
is
a pleasure to know this
sensitive and thoughtful woman, who
is
really into teaching her
students not only of art but of life.
.
P.S. - Thank you for the Playground,
Mrs.
r1Sher.
Look
out
Y<>U-engfueers
that
.
Bulldozer
gone
wild/
.:
:
-
.
He's
knocking
down
everything;
.
Evenifit smiles.
, .·.·.··-
.
Drop your yardsticks and
Fotget them old·plaits
·
That big bad bulldozer
.
Is
leveling.the land
.·
_.
·He
w~rking steady and straight,
,
Dori't stop, don'hvait.
,
·.·
·•
..
•
No profit shares or guarantee
· ·
·
Notiirie andahaltno.double,
no free
Hear that old dozer
_
_:· ..
.
. ..
.
His
grinding and them awful shouts
·
Of those that fall before
him·
u
1
prepared' for
his
clout
.
It
ain't
ho
pretty sound
:
.
So you'lllook
t~e other way
It's only
a'
bulldozer
· -:
;
·
'
.
:~:
.
·Don't
lent get'in:-your,way;
::.··.{~:
:;:.·=
~
.
.
.·,
,
;
·
''Hey
Min"
BY BALTIMORE
BEEBE
.
."Hey
man: That's the way it is!
That's what I'm all about. Tough!"
·
:
So yelled our plaintiff hero .. -
He yelled it so loud, and
He yelled it so much
That everyone believed him even himself.
But he was still a little lovable
·
And lots of laughs at times;
..
··•··
He had plenty of potential qualities
And some even thought
him
beautiful!
Anyway he
was
ok every now and ihen ..
·
Yet he
was rough and· carefree·
Wise cracking and cool
·
_
_
And he hurt a lot of people playing this fool.
.
The trouble was, no· one would see through
him.
Not even himself: And
his
inside
was
different
Much different.
·
.
·
·
·
Then (?ne day
'someone
with white hair
Told him what a cover up
artist
he
was.
That he w·as really a sensitive and wami sap,
~t
he really wanted to sing
But was afraid his voice was lousy.
Pride you know.
·
The
real
self suddenly discovered
Our hero, in
l!is
impulsive manner, dramatically
Tried out for
an opera.
·
But he couldn't handle
lt.alian.
Undaunted he blindly stumbled over to acid rock
But
his
aspirin bill got pretty
higli.
Finally he pensively picked up
a
guitar
And soon he
was
the best flamingo guitar player
in the world -
At least to the girl he married
.
Who kind
of liked off beat musicians.
·
..
·--1
1
I
'
l
1
l
j
j
l
I
i :-
.. :
__
1HEciRCLE
:W,here
·
-:we·:re:At
BY JACK WAWRZONEK
..
.
This
year
·
as chairman of the
lecture committee of the College
_
Union
Board,
I
am
attempting to
·
draw
together
a
dynamic, timely
and
educational• series. Much of
my
time and other peoples' time
and
energy,- and much.~ of your
money
is
involved in such
an
attempt.
Much
can·
be gained
from
..
such a series for
as
we
.
should
all
know,
if
we limit the
educational proc~ss to those few
hours spent in the classroom -
we're coming out on the short
side of what an education can
be.·
.
I -would
especially like
.to
make that point to the freshman
class in hopes that they will not
pass through many semesters
before realizing this.
The majority of this campus
has already missed the first
SE
CURITYAT
MA.RIST
from page_
1
opportunity
presented by the
Lecture Committee and it is our
·qui~k;,
:fund
and the cycle_~
~ention
the defects of the
·
hope that such speakers as Helen
repeated;
..
·
.
-
system. Securi_ty does provide
N olis, Russ Burgess and
·
Bill
·Each.
securrty
• officer
for the safety of students by
Baird,
.as
well as our tentatively
investigates
all buildings. on
periodically checking· the
.
fire
planned local College Presidents
campus
..
at certain suggested
extinguishers in .the dorms to be
Symposium will be met by a
· times but it
is
impossible for him
sure they would function in tJie
greater
thirst for knowledge
to
·cover
all
buildings
case
·of
-a
fire: Also broken
outside the classroom.
simultaneously
and
also
:Windows
and other.hazards are
.The
lecture committee would
impossible to
"pay
more men
reported;
.
Parking
for
the
·
like to expand to include you if
with the present budget .. As a handicapped student is provide,d
·
you have something to offer and
result,
.-every9ne
must suffer.
closer to the academic buildings
would
like
to give some
These circumstances suggest that
to make it easier for
him
to
assistance.
If
interested please let
the
administration
of Marist
reach classes. Too, the plan for
me know
by
campus
·
should seriously ·consider the
re-routing the campus traffic has
.
(655-C)
or by leaving your name
_,issue
and
:plan
some definite
been abandoned
for the time
with
the
Campus
Center.
·
action to remedy it .. At most,
being.
Also,
many attempts to
Directors (lfice
..
This picture serves as a prelude to a feature story
which will appear next week about
Rich Brummrnett
's trip to Viet Nam
PAGE7
the
p r o
s
p e
ct
s of
any
break into the cafeteria and
·Rat
improvement in the near future
have
been
stopped
because
are
pathetic.
_
.
Security was there at the right
Each· individual
·
resident
time.
It should be noted too,
should make a special effort to
that
narcotics
is
not at
all
·
protect
his
own valuables from
mentioned in the responsibilities
Martin
McKneally
,on
Isreal
vandalism and theft. We will
,
of the. security force. They
are
Th
.e
re c e n t
wave
O
f
sweltering ai.t:"crafts, some for
.
·never
be- one hundred percent
not instructed to be part-time
.
international hi-jackings by the
over 3 and 4· days, is shocking
.
,
sure that our rooms and lounges
narcos.
It
was very· unfortunate
Palestinian guerrillas is an act of
brutality
that transcends the
are·· safe. However, be: advised
that last year's incident was set
insufferable cruelty. That
-
over
bounds of human decency.
I
feel
that our
cars,
(especially those
off by someone related to the
300
men, women and children
deeply
for
those
innocent
··
parked
µi
front of Champ!lgnat)
security
force. The Sec?rlty
have. been
held
captive in
·
.victims
of Arab terror. My most
are
constantly observed and too
Director nor the college
itself
.
---------------------~----
:
ofteri. ticketed with
ten:
dollar
had/any previous knowledge of
fin.es.
And;
for"tJtQse,,;Y{lio:likejl ~~;:_,b_~t_.:t1!-~tiY.:-~L.t~ ~ollegt}
·
..
·,Se·."*·
.•
--_
l.··.'g;
challenge,·1t~:.a1so'"fwi~,.fo--rigure"
·
~o!1'1~unity
ma paruc:-Howeve~,
1
out how to get_ off and on the
..
It JS·unportant to note that_
un~
:
camp tis
without· being stopped
a be~er sys1;em. of pi:otecti~n
is
and-fold you are on
a
one way
devued1.
_1t
1s
·a
physical
street;
·
Well,
;you
can't. have
·
imp~ssibility. for o~
present
;
eve_rythu.ig;
·
_
·
secunty force _to attam success
It
Tn
bTtico~
··parent1;~·;;:?•
BY JOHN WYNNE
·
Marist College
is
a school
policemen or parents. Advisors
based
.
on· the
principle
of
·
are supposed.· to
..
be there for
individual student responsibility.
advise. The principle of in loco
Students are no longer told how- parentis
should
have been
.
to dress, or how many classes to
discarded
many. years. ago.
miss
or when and
·
where to
Irre5Ponsible behavior should be
·
drink.
-The
school doesn't
.plan .
dealt with by community not be
the students entire class schedule
an
·
authority. figure. Too many
. for
him·
anymore. The
_individual
a dvisor_s are
invading
the
is
expected to use common sense individual's privacy in the name
and act as a mature adult. For
of·Iooking after
his
benefit/ We
'the
most part he. has lived up to
cann_ot tolerate
.
this kind
.·
of
t1us
expectation.
·
_
·
·
·
abuse on a college campus. The
Yet
this
attitude has not been
·
students here are simply asking
..
carried over effectively
·into
the
to be· treated with
.
the dignity
house system · of
canipus
.
living. and respect· befitting the Marist
. Some of. the houses
.still
have College. philosophy of student
rigidly enforced parie~al
.
rules
responsibility.
imposed on the student
.
from
above without his consent.
This
will be changed in the very riear
-
future but just the fact_ of having
these
rules
this long
is
an
indictment
of
student
responsibility.
·.
·
The
fact
that
'freshman
students
·
are still required
··
to
submit· to an enforced curfew
is
· another example of the flaunting·
of
this
principle. If it
is
decided
-
that'
some freshmen need a
curfew to develop responsibility
then let the student advisor set a
curfew for these few. students,
0
off
.
ti\.
·...s~~
..
s
~l\..
~erl,
iq
·
ttic'X
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gpct\...
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A.M.
I
pin.
-
ll
rm,
All Bell
· Bollom
·Pants·
PEA
COAT;s-
· after observing their J>ehavioi
during the beginning of school.
·The
·
vast majority of
.
college
freshmen should not be required
to·
undergo
this
~egrading
experience for any amount of
time.
-ARMY-■NAYY
·
STORE
But it appears ~at the most.
basic change that has to be made
in the house system
to
conform
to principles of responsibility is
the attitude
of housemasters,
-student
coordinators
and
advisors. They have to realize
that they are not there to act as
·
460
·
Main
.·
st.
Poughkeepsie.
·452-5220
Open
Daily
8
A.M.-9 P .M.
_·
Offer
E~pires
Sa~rday
9/26/7Q
heartfelt sympathies go out to
their
families who anxiously
.
await their safe return .
The
significance
of the
hi-jackings however, is not that a
group
of power-crazed Arab
guerrillas can hold the world at
bay
.
with
their
desperate
·
ultimatums;
dir~ct
'_importance
of the hi-jackings is riot reflected
·
in the power politics of Arab
·
policy.
Rather,
what is of
greatest
consequence,
is the
evident
inability, or perhaps
unwillingness,
of the Arab
governments
to control
their
guerrilla
organizations
within
their own borders.· While the
UAR
and
Jordan
have
considered to meet with Dr.
Gunnar Yaring in negotiating the
peaceful
·
settlement with Israel,
they condone, by their inaction,
the
cruel
terrorism
of the
·
sercalled popular front for the
•
liberation of Palestine. Surely
the Arab State's commitment to
peace in the Middleast is suspect
to serious misgivings. As they
pursue an ostensible· policy of
conciliation, the Arab leaders
take no significant action against
international policy perpetrated
by their own nationals.
_
· It
is
necessary to act now to
halt further hi-jackings. As our
Government, together with the
Governments of Britain, West
Germany and Switzerland work
fervently
to secure the safe
release of the more than 300
hostages
being held in the
Jordanian desert, steps must be
taken to prevent similar macabre
tragedies. The airline industries
must act immediately on the
several suggestions before them
to protect the safety of their
crew and passengers. Among
these are placing armed guards
on all international flights and
imposing heavy
·
security checks
at international terminals.
But what
is
perhaps most
necessary now
is
for the United
States
to strengthen
her
commitment
to Israel with
concrete assurances. In light of
tlils
renewed out terrorism, it is
imperative that the President
reaffirm
our
Government's
support of Israel. I am pleased
with the Administration's recent
decisjon to send Israel additional
fighter jets, in the coming weeks
ahead. Only by fulfii!ing our
commitments
to thwart the
violence of aggression
will
peace
ever
be
achieved
in the
Middleast.
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·'·
PAGES
, THE
ditcLE : . ·
a
· BOoters
ReCeiYe
Education
Face
Sacred/,
Heart
Wed.
BY NICK SQUICCIARINI
.
'
'
On Saturday. Septem'ber 12,
·. The next opponenfof the long
determination·
of Marist left
the
soccer. team: traveled . to
afternoon was Colgate; The class
notliing to be desired and except
Albany,·
New Yor!{,
for a
of the Red Raiders was shown
for. a few mental lapses; the
quadrangular
scrimmage with
from the opening kick-off as · defense turned in.a fairly decent
Albany
State,
Colgate and
they co~pletelydominated
·play
aft~rnoo,n.
Wit_h two more
Williams Colleges. Each team
for
both
periods giving the
scrimmages. to rron out the
played three games, each game
Marist goalies quite a :workout .. · .. pro~lems which came to surfa.ce
consisting .of two, twenty-two
Thei.r
passing, dribbling .arid
during
these . games; Manst ·
minute-halves. . · .
ballhandlirig
in geri~ral was· should be more than _ready for
. Th~ Red Foxes opened the
excellent and they •moved the
th~ ope~er·
at
~ndgeport,.
afternoon
against· the Great . ball very _well offensively. The
Con~ectlcut.
against
Sacred
Danes of Albany State. This was
Marist offense forced· them to
Heart on September 23.
a very closely fought. affair with
play a defensive brand of soccer.
neither team taking a . decided
The final
in
this game was
3~0 · .
· edge in the frrst half of play. The
Colgate.
·
·
offensive play· of Marist in this
The final game of the day was
period was the best they were
against another
fine team in
able to produce
all
4ay, bringing
Williams College. Not having the
the ball u9field nicely on several
depth and numbers of the other
occasions,· yet failing to cash in
teams, it was clear that many of
·on any scoring .opportunities
the first stririg Marist players
they had; ·
·
were either hurt or,-dead-tired at
, The~ second
hai(
was a
this point. This.fact, combined
comp1etely
different
story, .. with .the speed and overallfine.
-
however,. ;a~ Albany contrpUed :, play ··,
of . WHliams led Jo
a
4-0
· -th~teinpo and.flow· of the game'<
1
Ma:ristd.efeat. ·,·. -_· .. '.: ,'..\/;: .
'·<.
;,.and kept th.e :-.ball -in Marist's·
:'In:;the·
final
analysis, the
day ·
de,(~nsive. side"
~f the fie}d. · was hopefully one oflalxpeiierice -
.. Unfol'tunately, · thlS _ type ,play
for
t.he young
Red Foxes.
. · was toforeshadow'the
nexttwo • AHhough·
losing
all three
· games. Albany', took the lead . contests, it,should be rioted two
about,
midway
thtough
·
the ..
of:
the
teams,
Cotgate and
... second period on·a mixture of a . WiHiams,
were
bY.
far
the
· f!ne shot· by the Albany inside .. toughest opp_ohents Marist will
nght and a defensivelapse in the
probably
face
all _year. The
Red Fox backfield.
·grittiness,
h us.tie
and
J)CEAN DUMPING from
4
_'SUNDAY SONG fro111'
i
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~
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:;
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..
·:' ··:
.:<sEPTDtBER
17,
197() .·
.
.Vikiqg·oefense
-~~ooms
. 'Impressive
BY KEVIN DONNELLY
The
Vikings; : ·preparing :for
the
defensive coach for, the
their opener against Plattsburg
Vikings,
is responsible. for the
:_Sept.
26,
had
their
first·
move.·
·
intra-squad
scrimmage
last·
Henry .Blum .and Dean Gestal
Saturday on the. lower soccer have been moved from their
field; It was the first time
this
regular. positions on defense to
season
-that
the
·
team
has the inside linebacker spots. The
scrimmaged
under
game ,change.has been made in order
conditi~n~. It was a
~ig
test for to take advantage of the speed
, the .. Vikmgs ~efens1ve squa~. which. Blum has displayed at
They, have, shifted from therr defensive tackle for the past two
regular
5 ,-2 . d_efense to the 4-4 · years .. Dean Gestal was shifted to
used. at Penn State. Tom Levine, the new spot because of
his
·
aggressive play and "leadership
capabilities.
Both Gestal and
Blum seem to liave made the
shift
with · rio trouble. Jack
McDonnell will remain at the
defensive
halfback
position
alorig with Bill Rooney. Dan
Faison will take over at Safety
·. replacing Gestal. .Don Hinchey
and Terry Nash will be at the
•defensive .e,!,ld positions with
. Russ Humes and Paul Lacombe
at the tackle spots; At .outside
linebacker Owens,. Vitale,- and
. Fantauzzi .. are·.f'ighting: for 'the·
· starting . ·positions;·, Erts,: Scalzi,·
Lee Gestal, Freccia, .~and Egan·
. .will
be seeing a lot of action:
011 ·
··
.
· defense as the season progresses.
·
· The
'defensive
unit_ held up
.
well last Saturday as -they. gave ·
· . . the second-string offense a long
• afternoon.
It
looks like another
tough yeador Viking opponents ,
~d. another great year . for the
Viking defensive uhit; · ·
·
Next
week:
the
Viking
offense .
. ··slowly .. on
tlie_
..
ocea~ bottom. • :white. Many
will.
never'
~i)
on
.
. There is considerable evidence
· d d l
c·
·
·
·
·
.
·
C '\ ..
',
· ·
???
'
that
maiine".organisms
.· cari '-:td
dJ;~~i:!s
Y/i~~~r·t~
.·
..
··r_·O_
·s_
s·. . . ·.·.·o
....
·_u
..
·.nt
.. ·.r
__
.·y.'
.·
..
· ....
_
·_._·.
____
··.
concentrate,• . .resticides,- poisons
middle-class Sunday afternoons.
or radioactive .wastes in their
Their leisure is the sleep of death
sy5tem~ to a point th at can kill
a..
and their record players allow
·
·· ··
BY STEVE KOPKI
,
·
·
~
~an
d
he. eats them. But
only
the
drone
of funeral .. · To
talk
about teain members,
must come from the community
ad
ndn
i
sj
ratio
Jl: •the
ign °!3;nse
?f · effects
and
hymns. They have·been,rpbbed
-.t_eam .. goals
or returning
in the form ofinore runners and,
cross-country
team just two
. con~1trnp,s
,is
so ~rea! _that ,'of-- the right to mis-read. their
.lettermen
would be a very· mor_e support for the· team.
· years ago had been the best teain
-cautwn,_ p¥ficularly._m light- of · comP.asses as they sail to.the.sea
. foolish venture at
this
point. To These •needs
must. be me'tt· · on campus.
It
had, in the space
of two years.placed 2nd arid 3rd
-·
sue~ evidence
_as
tpat ,found at
of natural death. Amen.
·
· . talk about the pending deinise of immediately.
_
_
·
. Station 59, ought·to be the rule
* * *
* *
the cross~couritry teamwowd be
I
There · are. those ,who ,\vill
atthe moment, ·
·
·
·· ·
·
more appropriate.
As of two accuse the team and myself for
weeks prior to the beginning of living in the- past and using
this ·
s~ason,· the,. cross-country. team paper
as
a .. crying towel." But
lias
seven members .. (Note: a Just
a re.minder
to the
minimum:
of
7
runners are community
and
·the
needed;
5
scorers, 2 ·runners to
-
- displace.) Of these 7, there are 4
·• seniors, l junior,, 1 sophomore
and
1 , freshman. Among the
seniors, 2 have missed portions
of previous ·seasons because of
recurring injuries.
'
J"he prospects for this year are
dim and a team next year
will
not exist. The team realizes that ·
cross-country
is
a .. non.glory"
sport and personal satisfaction
is
an important
part of the
cross-country runner. Toe team
also realizes that there has been·
a change of attitudes, goals, and
desires.
It acknowledges the fact
. that there ·
are
other goals · to
achieve
and other. roads to
follow, not
only
for .the athlete,
b.ut also for the student.
.
-- I feel it safe to assume that the
Marist College community has
expressed
Hs interest
in
cross-country.
From that
interest,- one
can·
conclude that
cross-country
will
soon lose its
place
as a
Varsity sport at Marist
Co1lege. However,. after four
years as.a member of the team,
I
cannot
let
the ·death
of
cross-country
happen without
making one more appeal to the
community.
We need your
support _and we need it now.
It
. in
NAI.~ district championships
and
2nd and 1st in CACC
championships.
To
the
community and administration:
help us n<>w, before it is too
· late!