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The Circle, October 1, 1970.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 7 No. 4 - October 1, 1970

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. ·ocroBER 1,·1910.
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laff
iltia,.
luccarello,
Waters
D·iscuss
··
:c~
Curti
ci1lllm
vote With
>student
··Government·_
ill
•. • <·:\v/e
.the.
Stud.ent
·fo~onow;whet;·,~«:;~1d.
it go?. Presidenftakeitto?.
.. -
.
:. students.
having a '~~ice, a
is
th~ most ~ppropriate ~~hicle .. ·:.- ,
d
. Government. of Marist College· . · ··LaPietra: tcan ·tell .you some·
..
LaPietra: Well, I think ·the
significant
voice,
·
not merely.
for , expre·ssioh
of student
~
call for an· equal vote of facidty
of the places it'.would~'t.reside .. President would seek advice and · discussions on matters such as
opinion ... ! find
it a little
,1
and students ··oil the ·current
It.
wouldn't- reside!·:with
A.P.C
.
.>counsel
from
the ·v.arious · curriculum and other. matters. I
difficult
to understand your
:~
proposal .and' those to follow."
and· to ·• a certain.· exterit it elements in the <:ommuriity tl_lat don~t know.what is the best plan
position. You say on one hand
,;j
The following are excerpts . wouldn'freside with F.P.C. · ·
are concerned with the question
for it at this moment.
.
you are interested in.the overall·
1~
from the Student Government
Glennon: What I would like to -... ultimately it . would be the
Glennon: Would you say a
problem of governance and then
·?t:
meeting
on. Monday
night
know right now, what we would
dedsion of the_ Boar.d. . .
.
significant voice woµld mean a · you refer to..
··l;
· .September·
28,
1970. -The· .
all
like to kn9w,.is
if
perchance.
.Mr. Waters: ; ••
The President
15
vote?
·
· ·
· Glennon:
Well, we are
-;~
. meeting concerned itself with
the proposal has . already been
not, going to recommend it to ... Zuccarello:- · Yes,
if
you•think
interested
in
the overall problem
\~
the
statement issued . by · the
drawn up and we wanted to take
!he Board unless the groups are .: · that
is
significant.,
Y,
es
.I
would
of governance· to the extenr12,.f
\\!i
Student
Government
at its
it to somebody.tommorrow
to
in
general agreement· to the .say;butl'dcin'tseethatwehave.
how
it
will
effect
th~
t
previous
meeting. Present. to
get. some action on it, where
proposal.·•·
. .
.
anything·
right-
now
to
·.community. I'm JJlOSt interested
·.~.
answer the questions of the
would we·go?:·
·
· ·
Glennon: I would like to ask accommodate it.
.
in student participation in the
1
f
. Student
Government
were
. LaPietra:
i
would. say. you
Dr. Zuccarello, Brother Richard .
Glennon: As far as,structure'?.
overall problem of governance. I
h
Brot.· her
Richard
LaPietra,
could take.· it to the President, · and ·
Mr.
Waters to comment
Zuccarello:
Yes as far as
am interested
in
solving the
5'-.
Academic
Dean;
Dr. Louis · but the President would riot act
personally on this prelimi~ary · structure. - ·
'
.
immediate problem of the lack
·
·\f
Zuccarello
of the Academic
unilaterally ori it-Jain sure.
proposal.
.
-
. · •· . ' ·· · LaPietra: I question whether a • of student participation now in
t,
Policy
Coinmittee
and Mr.
M ea·ra:
Who would
the
Dr.
Zuccarello:
I· favor · student vote at a faculty meeting
· governance. When the Planning
Ji
Edward Waters of the Faculty
Commission
eventually gets
t\
· Policy·Committee.
··
--------------------------------------
together:
and makes
their
)¥.
*****·
recommendations which might
. ,
1
(
Charles:Meara:··we'.would like·
· be a year from now, a year and a
..
\t
to· know
who
would
be
half
from now...
.
,.
·f
responsible for this decision? . ·
· LaPietra: You're guessing on
.,>
..
Brother LaPietra: Well,
I
think
·
·
·
·
·
·
tho·se terms, that~s the problem.
·
ii·
to a certain extent
if
you want
'.
The student
·nove;'tnment of . Marist College
The President, through a board

J
to trace back, it will ultimately .
rec.o·
.g·
mz·.·
es
th
..
·. e·.
·
:nn·
.:.
por'
.tan..
t p'
·ar·•
.t· p·
layed·.
· · b·y·
bo·th·


c-ulty.
CO n
fl
Sting
Of
fa
CU
lt Y,
,\'
··reside
with
the
Board
of ·
.
. .
. .
.administration and students has
·
i,
Trustees, an~ then.
to
.bring -it
·
·
·
. set
.in
motion machinery dealing
· }:
1 ·•·.·\
,
,
down · to
certain levels; the .
.
and-students
in
the study of ~e curriculu~
in
theJast
·
with the problem. 1t is in motion
/,
·
President would certainly have
·
·
h · ·
· ' ·
..;.l
.••
·
b .
right now, but you want to
\'
i:'
0
•.
some _sort of say inten.ns of the
tWO
yelJ,t~, t e ~·struCturiU
reVJSlO~
·. now
emg
di:vise a ~~lution before the f~ct
.
t
,-,, .
·
recommendation to the Board of .
d•
~~-.:11
·
d
th
k
• . · · • 1
t
th
and that s the part I don't
·

~\
, Trustees· but right·now-it
is
not
.:
lSCU~,
-an

WOr
.
On
CUfflCU Um
3
·
e
understand.
. .
.
<,;,,:.
·.
a' decision that· falls· in• any
~
-
·ta}
1· ·
I
. · .. ·
. . ·. _ _ • ·
- , .
Glennon:
But it's not
in
· · ,
, ..
~.
·~ ,
.
.
~
-
• -
uepartmen
., eve · · - .. -
-
· ., ~·

~
·
~
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~
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ti
--~t
·
th
u
~
, ·
-
-:-7:,.
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particularlap.lnotherwords,it
,
.
, ..
---;,, ..
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.. e!~t.~a-J~.:-,,.,:,~:-.;?'-"'.'..-
,,:~· ,l•,f":sf..l(\•<.-,,.js''not•Up•tp
•the.facult)'..:.aJOJte'tO·\
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.
·"~'"•;
1.-·,~i
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.,:'ljr
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,',;1'\co:•"•"t'
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~•O•:~~~of•,•·•,:
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~;~
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.
,.\,i..~l<,o,~.,... ;.,;,
een..,DO~stU .ents,i,appOJJlte
.;..tO{ft\-"•=-~•·.\f\!
,;,a:~ii1;1:~:;~~yJk,:i{ot-iip•to'1:lie-'midents'a1o'rie;.;
·:::;(;'.~:~tir
n:;1::i;:re"c.ogpi.
lOR~;to.1.s:··-~u1JS~?JOm
..
::t'Batucipau. _.
... , .::,:
~-·" _,.,
...
·:;,
;"jt;'.':.'-,:,
:;,~.;•<''::,'
<~'~:-;:::<-:•'
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'fo ...
_s·~·Y,
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:c
JO. th
e'~·.
:·:--
.....
~ma::i:;g··
'.'.m"-"•~~·a·
··e
1
'•'-o'i'f,•;;:i:..:e•'';.r·•:evisiort
·andr.
the
'effects
it will
have:·: - :
LaPietra: 1:here Iiav~ been no '
.
i1
''i . ;'·. ',. •
-
·
admtmstration· to say.
-
=
·
. . .·. . ..
1.u'.
. ";
.
. . ·
UI . .. .
. .
..
~
. . .
.
. .. . ..
. .
.
.
,
faculty appomted to it and no
,
\i ' .
.·•.
·. , .
Meara· ·what would be the
·t1t· ., .
t ..
th ' ' ··:. f~. .:.;;-. .
ill . . .
.-gh
<.
·..
..
t'
h . . .
n ' . .
tit'
administrators
·. ·.
.
\
;-ft(:
::;
;• : :.'.:
--;:~r:c,cessc°for
going/through with
.
~
/
~-
::
e :1~c._.,·
...
w . : wet . mos : eay y . on . . . ~'
. .
M~¥a: We have been up for a .
Xt
f)·\·;·/:'-.''
>:~.::.th.ei
...
•·.·.~r.o·'·p·osal
...
-.;>w.)io.
wo·.··tild_.•.•we.··.......
:''st
..
u.·.d
..
e. n
....
ts.···.···
w
...
e ... can
....
·.•
..
··.·.f
...
o
...
· r.
:.<'an.·
..
eq·
· ..
u.·a1
...
' ....
v.
o.
i.
ce
in
the.·.,
:month .... and nobody·.· has .been
.t,.I•
1 :.: ,. .
·· ..
~take, it: to, what- would be the,
. . .
.
.. '-
. ,
. . .
.
..
:. .
.
.
. .....
, .
.
•.
. .
.
.
.. contacted. Mr. Waters have you.
.~l
r.)'}.:i·:.•.-'.
.first··.·.
st
_ep, ,··•
.. '-
:. ·_
. .
·.·
imp-·lemeritation
o.f
.'the.'.
cu.
rre
..
nt proposal.
and th.
ose to
been co.
ntacted'? 1
.. haven't'been
~tr
A"~·;,;
' ·· .-:
LaP1etra: Well m terms of the
-
·

.
..
•· · . ·
· · . • ·
.
. ·
· ·
· · · ·
.
·
contacted.
.
.
.
,,;;
·t;.i}t;::
stru,c~re ..
~at was y.r~r~ed on by
, .
follow.
... .
'
LaPietra: Well d,_id you' take
it
"<i;
/
.,
the
Plari.rung Co!Dnuttee
this
·
.
_
• . .
.
.
. .· -, . •
,
.
.
c
_
. .
.
.
. .
the trouble to ask the President
},-
~•'."c
:: .
..:.summer;IwouldexpecLthata
,That ts· more precisely.
,we the Student
!'hatsortofschedule!1ehadfor
·H·
..
,. ' ·
· proposal iOf that sort woul!,l be .
· . -
. · ; · . .
J. ··• · . : , : , . · . · • ·- . '· . . . . · · , · . . · . . . . .
1t'? I~ seems
~O·
me mstead of ·
.
i\
~;{/;)>;
register~d withthatco_m~ittee...
G:ovennnent.of
.Manst
College
call for an.equal vote
guessing th at its a y1:ar, a year
)}
ff,.:.:;; .
.• _.:
Meara: .Well, the pqmt
JS
thaL
.·. · . ·.···:
··
· ··
.· .
• . . . .

.
. •
.. · .
.
·· ·
. . •
.
.··
.
and a_ half off, you ~t
check . .
,.
1
r/;:j{~.:
-:·>:.that
cofu.!)littee; hasn't
i
bee!1
of both. faculty and students on the current proposal .·.
thaGtfir.st. . . L
k"'
.
.
;--.
l~.•
..
i.):.)(\,:.irc ..
···.formed y:e.
t .. Who
i:10,
we take it<
.· .• ..
·.:d·
.•th•.'
- . ' .
f
...
n··
·
..
'
.
' , --.
.
. - .
-
_lep.non. .
<?O.
mg at it
r
-~;,z-:;
·o , " · '
to?.
. ·
..
·
.
. ··
an . ·.. .
O8e
to
O OW.
realisti~ally, look1!1S:,at
w~en the
'i;
·.~
.. :~-~-·:::'.,;·•.::.'
•.
:,.'·;·:··,.·.=.:
.•.•...•
;:.·.;·•.:
•.
i•...
..
~o~8!i~~~!~
isw~n, ie -~~e~h~}
,.
. .
.
M. . 'p• . .
·w·..
illi'.
·am·
..

p·e·.·
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...
1a . ,
..
:
f
~::m;g
th~o=~;~e
ot!i!i/1t
.l
..
;.:
.
being
formed,-
1 ... think
the•.
Cbarles . eara:,
res.":_:
Ill
takes, ~spe7iallY this, t~e nature
;'-~r~sident'isworkingpnthatnow
.
··.P.
·.~ili_.··p·
..
·.G
...
·1·_·.e·_·~·
n·on
..
, ...
·v
..
··
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_.Pr
.. e·
..
s.·.··.
Rober·t··
·sm··
1·t·h,'
of ~~ich
15
so large, 1t would.
'as·'orie of the most,urgent tasks:
.. realist1c~lly take at leas! a Yt:ar
..
. this.year:
I
don) know exactly
'J . . , ...
·c· .
t· .
.
·.
·R·
.....
·aymo·n·
d.·
···c.·1a
..
rke..
We are interested now_ mfilling
·· what sort ofa deadline he'has on:
, .. ·.···.
atneS • ·· Ost'll filO
.
.the gap between that time. Once
. it. - . ·. . . .
·... . • . . . •,
: ' '
h. .
Ch
....
. .. '
--,~• . . . '
J
h . p· ' .. ·.
u·.
we get th_at gap filled w.e can
· Phil
Gienii'o'n:
·We; :a-re.
·.~
Ric .
ard ·
eccia · -
. __
· ;~
0
n. ettag . a
start lookmg at.governance on .
interested'in getting the proposal
. .
_._·T·.
_··

·rr:
:e·
.. n·.·
c
..
e._"'.·M
..
·•.o·
•:•_·o··
..
-n.•
·e_·y.
· ..
Pa·.
·.tr.ir-.
·k·
...

...

Nam.~
.. a·
the larger scale...
.
through as.soon as_pos~ible.Now·.
.
..,
· if
we· presented; this •;propc,sal
·
Jc,~ph
Gebbi~ :
·
·
-
.....
~:
;
,;_,.:
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r
r
,
r-
PAGE2
ntE CIRCLE
OCTOBER., 1970
The Anllto~
of
a Pig
OUTRAGEO,US
..
_
...
,
.
_ .
_
.
___
-
·.
By 8W
O'Reilly
__
-
.
_
_
__
_
By
Tom
Hackett
:~.Jn
r¢cent years,: some
of·
the besi known stude!lts
:on
colleg~
My father· reached the age of
· -catastrophy
and°-now; whenever
ab~ut two weeks after· thaLlt'·
campus• throughout the country have been·student militants:.One of
eighteen in October.of 1941; in
there is a radical change in the
_was
quite a sickening experience .- these
_militants
is Lonnie Greenbaum; oow entering his senior >:ear at
·December
the United States
weather, he.gets painful attacks-
for. anyone
_and
he was
·no
Kingman Brewstei-Comniunity-Colleg~."l.interviewed·Lonme_la~
entered the second world war
of.the gout.
_
·.
- ·
.
-
exception.
-
·
_
...
_.
Thursday as he· was studying furiously-for a test in
his
Dem~crattc
·
and my old· man joined the
·
·
After that. he stuck
-
to- patrol
·.
There·~
are a million arid
·one
CoirVentio·n.-ct>urse~-
·:
·.
_
·
_
_.
·•.
-
..
_.:_:
:
..
~-
.

...
·
·
Navy .. During the war he worked
-_-
cars.
-
Since my little sister came
stories from the naked city and I

O'R:
Lonnie, '.throughout
:your.'
college career,- you-_ have
.bee~
-
in Washingto11 as a· telegraph
a_long, things were getting tight., suppose he was involved in many
·
involved iJi"many notable projects.
Can
you mention just afew that,.
operator. He married my mother
Moonlighting became a facet of
of them. He never talks about it.
·
stand out in youimind?
·
. ·'

·
·
·..
_
-_
.-·
-
_:
···
··_
'•
·•
right after the war broke out.
life; For awhile niom went to
When his twenty years were .
.
Lonnie: Oh, heavy; ~an.
r~i
done
josi
abo~t ~verything
~
can you.
I've heard so many times that
:work.
Life went on.
up he retired and werit into,
dig it! Butthe other day, l really pulled a good one.
l
phoned home

life goes on and so I guess its the·
I don't know of any of the
a not her
trade.:
No
_
more ·. and talked to Mom for a half-hour and then I chargt:9 the call to the
case because, even though the
specific
instances
that
he
midnight shifts and bar-room
.
fascist Dean of the college. Can you dig that?:Oh, wow ..
·
, - •
.
_
globe was blistering with war,
encountered
in his everyday
·
fights._ and traffic jams• and
._
O'R:
!hat is-something, Lonnie._
·
-
_
·
-
__
:
-

·•
-
-
1
b
-·_-•·ed.
my
·parents
still brought two
work as a police officer, - he
•hurricanes
and. plane crashes. He.
.
Lonnie: Yeah, but last year I did something even better;
um
_
children into the world. And so never
talked about·
it.
Once
could
begin to live a
·
more
my.I.D. card because the college would-not sponsor a rock. concert
dear old dad was spared the hell however, when I was ten years
normal life.
on
·campus.
Man, we were goirig to have all'the·heavies. In Heat, The
..
of war, thank God.
old, I was really proud of him, It
I am the fourth out of five
What, Hoboken and Fred Lambert and the Residence Directors. We
.
·
After Germany was defeated
was during a hurricane and my
children.
Three of us have_ were going to camp out and hike and
swill!
in the nude and staY_UP
and we dropped our Atomic
father
was assigned- to help
,
graduated from college, I will
late and get sick and thtow frisbees and hang around and everythmg.
-_
message on Japan and all those· evacuate people from the beach
gradu-ate
this year, and my
.
O'R: Moving right along, Lonnie, what do
_you
plan to:do after·
.
-
peace papers were signed, they
areas in the. Rockaways. The
younger sister is in her second
you graduate from ,Kingman Brewster_?
.
-
·
-
.
didn't
need daddy anymore.
storm got pretty bad -but my
year. My father was spared the
Lonnie:
-
Well, there isn't rri_uch
.you
can do with a degree
in·
Since he never finished high father wouldn't
give up until
riots at Columbia or similar . hanging around but my father is going to help me out. -
school, and good post-war jobs
every
o n e w as
6 uf.
A experiences. Thank Gd that he
O'R: How?·
· ·
...
:
,'"
-
>
;
·
_
/ :· '.
,
.
. .
·
were a little difficult to find, my
photographefrom the New York
never had to don riot_ gear and
Lonnie:
-Well,
my father
..
ts
buymg me a
_
~ham of mibtant
father worked at a number
-of
Daily Mirror took a picture of
conflict with students. Although
hamburger stands - 3 million.to be
_exact.
It's g~mg t~be 20_cents
odd jobs
- bowling
alleys, my father helping
_a
little· kid
there are pigs, there are just as·
__
for a regular militant, 45 cents for
.a
double·niili~~t; an~
_3().ce!1ts
parking lots, etc. That was how into a truck. The picture was on
_many
decent police• officers.
for·a cheese militant. We are.also going to have militantf.renc~_fn,es,
he managed to feed my mother
,
the front page the next day.
Why many
.of
them became cops
militant~malts and militant apple pie •. By_ the way~_
my father. is a
and my older brother and oldest
If anyone
remembers the
is hard to say. I only hope that
capitalistic dog ..
_,
.
.
.'.'·.
· _ ·-
··
-
·
sister.
Somewhere
around
plane crash
_over
Brooklyn about
we remember the non-pigs as
O'~: The idea sounds great, Lonnie, you should make a lot. of
nineteen forty-six my mother_ 1958· or 1959,.then
you will-
people and not just uniformed
money._
.
__
'
_
.
.-
_
_
-
was with child again and so my
·
recall
how· long it took to
savages
who~ like
to b·eat
· Lonnie: Money! Listen man, I hate money. Why should I try to
father figured he better get his recover
•all
the· bodies out
·or
commie-pinko-radicals over the
mak·e money when my father gives nie all I want.I'm not going into
ass into something secure that
.Jamaica
Bay. Daddy was there
..
head with their dubs.
the hamburger. business for money - I'm going into it for the
had a future. He joined the New You couldn't talk to him for
personal satisfaction that selling hamburgers gives a person! Just
York City Police Department.
think of how many upset stomachs my hamburgers will give
'.the
Now that he was one of New
,
'Th
k
y
L ,-
fascists who, even at this very moment, are listening to every word_
York's finest, he tried to make
.

n
OU
or
we say,
.
.
.
.
the best. of
it.
1 think that they
_
, .
.
-
_
_
I
O'R: lwasn't aware of that.
.
paid.
t hose
men
on the
,
Lonnie: Oh, man, I forgot to tell you what
rm
going to do at the
motorcycles more than the guys
-
"
graduation ceremony. Oh, wow. There should be seven of us
on horses or in cars, so that must
f
Or -
1
·e·
.
co·
un·
t~y,,
_
...
graduating this year including two sparrows and a duck. 1
-
am going
be why he decided to chase
_up
to get my diploma in the nude with track shoes tied around my
people
on
the parkway for a
neck and black mittens on my hands and feet;
-
couple of years. The fact that I
By
Jose:,h Ahearn
·
O'R: That should make your parents very proud.
_
.
was on tlie way, his fourth child,
Lonnie: Yeah, and dig this. They may have Ario Guthrie speak' at
might have something to do with
·
Many people who live in the
..
escape
-
the de-humanizing city at
-
-
the ceremony, that·is if they can pay the $3,000 peace and love fee
it. I can remember when l was rural
communities
do not
the end ofeachday.Continuo.us
that he charges.
·
_
.
.
_
..
_
.
,
about three or four
.that,
he
appreciate
their location and· taxation upon life expectancy.
·
.O'R:
Well, it's a state school, so they should be able to afford it.
would come ripping down the
therefore
do
·
not take the
-
by ai~ pollution, water_pollutio_n,
Well, Lonnie, its been_ a pleasure
..
talking to you and watching you
__
block on his monstrous.machine
initiative to ana_ln,e city life.
and.
·m
gene_ral, the dying nature
.
throw
cherry bombs
,at
little kids. Do you have any partirig
.
..;.
.
.::_,
.- :and·-come,~whil)pingi:-into_our··-.c,.Let's
start":.-with·-~communes, o~-_.thi:.~1ty
leav~
_me,
!lo
-_.commei:its?
>
·:.
·_ ..
,_-,
,
,>
-
_.
_,
..
-

_
._
"·
___
_
·
_
·•·. -::,-
d;ive":ay.···[t--wu_f!_
·-·a--,t-lzrill_
to-s~c
--
~hichf
taken.
symb-olically,.Je:i.d alte,rna~iv_~
)>u_.
t
_to
d-~fm
__
e
,the
c_~ty
_.
·_:
,.,Lof\me_;
1.W
__
ell,:
.Ii
Just_
·\ya_
n!:
t~:._
say-,that.t
__
·
h_ope_
•.
~veryb_ody,_ge_r_
s_
:h_
is
___
,
-
-
....
-·_
-_~:~
him m his umform
.
with his
·
us to the
conciusion
·
tha.f
-
as afunct10.nal trap
..
-
·
<
:
--:.

head together,,
.•..
can you dig 1t. And; that we·will:-_so_omall!bedree.
,
-.
,
.-,
helmet and goggles:-
.Dad
was
industrial techn.ology offers no
·_
<?n th~ other _hand, are
,some:
cau~e the revolution is coming·~ my father said.
:

,
·.
/ ,,:;'.·.,
;.-:,:
-
.:,:'.'.
l
prettycoolinhisownway.
escape
but
to bypass
it satisfied m thec1ty~ecausethey
OR:)Vhat?oesyourfatherdo,Lonnie?
·
·
·
·
But as time went. on fate
-
completely. City life itself is have repressed their sense of
Lonnie: Hes a lawyer at I.B.M;
_
.
:
caught up with him and one day
de-huma~i:zing. But why? Cities. space? Do museums satisfy the
-
O'R: Oh.
·
·
he
--
had
an accident.
Some
function economically on the nature· requirement of the city?
bastard
_was
-
doing eighty-five
basis of a Progress Myth. This- Absence of purpose and absence
down the Cross-Island parkway,
·
means
·simply
that: what_ is of roots
are the theme· Qf
my father was. hiding b~hind a
bigger is better. or ,vhat the all urban articles for the past ten
billboard or something;
.he
took
future brtngs is definitely better
.years.
Noni birth, city children
off after him. My .father weaved· or on a day-to-day basis "if it are alienated from
-nature
:
and
in and out of traffic trying to
goes, it goes well."
seek
identity
·
in
·
structures
catch up with the speed-freak,
Where
.are
we going? Is it ot surrounding them. Identity but
·
be. b°ef~re cities self.:Jestru~t by
-
keeping in step\viththe Progress
Myth
and finally and most
important can people fully. li_ve
a
life· in seclusion from nature and
-
the other things people in the
_
country
_take
for granted?
.
I.
-
-
never love. They identify
_with
ball parks,· highways,
·
apartment
·
houses, and.-even street.signs but
for how
·
long can they alienate
themselves
-
from true natui:al
visions before frustration
and
violence
_set
in? How long will it
CONTI~UED ON 7
Just before he caught up to him
only the commuter who dislikes
the guy cut somebody off .who
the city? Most residents have
ccnsequently cut daddy off and
this hidden hatred· that remains
my'old man'wentwhizzingof(
masked
by
economic
on to the side of the road. The
dependence.
"These
residents
motorcycle
flipped,
dad
dislike commuters and accuse
tumbled-amid
the chaos and
them of draining. the, city of
dust lay a Iiice guy with a bum money but in truth, do they not
·
.
GOOD
NEWS=#2
,
/
By Fr: Leo
Gallante
.
leg. He loused
-
it up in the
idolize
-
him and his ability to_
:COL[EGE
-COMMUNITY:~
This week I wrote to the
There is definitely a trend, in
For years-.
we
relied
'on
pious
president
of North Vietnam
.
this country and throughout the
·
devotions to make us devout
·
(Ton. Due Thang, President,
Christian world, toward a more.
Christ_i.;ins
... Religion.
is
going to
Democratic
•Republic
of
Christ-like
fire-setting
be much tqtigher. challenging,
Vi e_t n am , Hanoi,
North
Christianity, which could mean a
excitin1i:f~r .you college students
Vietnam.)
It
was my little
smaller church, fewer Christians;
because
..
full Christianity
·
will
-
By
Linda
Cloer
contribution in the letter-writing
Those who stay with it are going
involve
you
-
iri
.'so"ciiil ·-and
.
campa,ign
to help American
to be more united, more afire;
politicalorders
as Apostles· of
The word .. community;.• being rather fashionable at this time, has prisoners. An
·estimated
1,500
and they are going to set the
Christ. You' won't join the Holy
.
. evoked a myriad of definitions. I
_would
like to offer mine because I letters have been written since
world on fire-toward
·more
love
Name Society; you'll join·
__
a
·
feel that the essence of-community
is
blatantly absent here. A the Pen Push began. I alsowrote
and peace.
_
-group
in which there
·are.
nq__
college community
is
concerned
not
only with things academic, but a. letter to
.
Msgr. Beiting in
·
The Church will no longer be a
·
Christians.
.
.
also with a
-
sharing of its problems. The· integral need of any true Kentucky
·
volunteering to
·
work
ghettoed institution, but will be
Many of yciu who.·-are
.
riot
community is to feel itsel( work and solve together. Rather than a in Appalachia
during
the
involved
in·
a.
new diaspora,
1
involved in anything at Maristto
sharing of each new problem· there it seems that factions cling vacation.
·
·
·
almost an underground church, · make life better for all won't
parasitically to each new issue, shouting their views as a means of
I mention this at the beginning-
w.here. so~e will experience a
make it. You'll discover that-
attention (Look Ma, I'm from th~ Concerned Generation) regardless of this article because last week I· real poverty. for the
·
1ove
·
of.
Christianity
is
simply hard· work;
of whether these views are valid, or even sincere._·
·
.
wrote_ about
the
thrill
of
Christ
and
neighbor, where
it is sharing Christ's apostolate,·
The desperate need for
·this
sense of community arises from
.this
becoming chaplain at Marist._ I
young men and ~omen will be
carrying His cross. You'll flop,
undeniable reality: The campus society is not isolated from the called it my personal good news.
recognized, not by halos, bufby
and tum back to your.TV, your
society in which it thrives. Let us not be guilty of that McCari:hyistic I already feel that after· only a
a fiery spirit illuminating their
picture magazines, your style of
paranoia of screaming horrified at the evils we see around us, and few weeks: here I am already
features. Laymen will work side
-life
that do~sn't differ from your
· finding not it in ourselves.
-
becoming._inore
and· more
by side with· priests as they did.
pagan
neighbors .. Then
:Pope
Yet I do not mean to polarize the view while we are not the sensitive to the needs of my with St.·Paul; and many bishops
Jo~•s_picture <;>f
sl~eping giants
,
~
peace-loving intellectuals striving against a totally bellicose and brothers• throughout the world.
-
may have to live in hovels. The
begmmng to._ stir will
·fade
away
mili_taristic society, ne~ther
is
this co_untry a crude oligarchy,
-
For years I have been most
Church will be.·come like the
like a
-
,TV
·
picture. :when:
•the"
~
dcd;cated to the extension of power
-and
rights of a few, with the
_
concerned about many things,
Gospels: radical!_;·.·
·
_ picture tube breaks down:/
.
.-.
C'.nipus an essential organ of the system. We simply need to but it seems that rubbing elbows
The Church has to get out of
_ ·
Yet, my first month at M:irist
t,;mcmber that the elements we find in society are present within
with the new college generation
its own ghetto. It has to bring
.
tells me differently. (Again, I'm'
0
··.:
l."1;•t~s.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
is g~ing to make this concern
Christ and- His good news to
probably
meeting· the
·
right
,n,,
1
eac!i issue looming m our honzon I fmd, basically, two ·more active. There is something 'every creature, abandoning the
people.) There are students here
dc;1~cd tactl~: thosew~owishtotalrepressio_n,andt_hosewhowish
vibrant
about
this· campus-
Old Testament conception of_a
,ready
to do a real job in the·
!
0
-r
11
concess1~>n. E?'penence p~ves that neither will ~?rk, they
(maybe I'm. meeting the right
chosen people,
for the·
,New
world. And my job is not to be
~:'.:-'c
only to mtensify the conflict. I'd settle fo_r a defimtion of the
-
people) that is revitalizing in me
T~s~amen t conc~ption
of a
the organizer, the leader,
_
but
..,.,.1
problem fJrS!. As for the _cam_pus
and society, before we can
-
a prayer I used to say- often:
m1ss10nary church. The faith of
maybe the sustainer, supplying
r1:so,lve any_ conflicts ~ore_ b~1c disagreements await us. Just what
.. Lord, comfort the distrubed;
mo~em Christians
will
depend
the spiritual, diet needed. And
krnci
~f
society do we live m? ~ow much a part of it is our Campus?
disturb
the comfortable."
I
radically
upon the personal
you can be sure that livi_ng
in the
An;
either
capable of change without_ demolitio~.
·
rather feel that my association
commitment of. the individual
same Marist Community is going
One<~
we answer ~hese we can decide on tactics and-we ~n move with Marist people is going to
under
grace
than
·upon
to make me grow. That
is
Good
towa_r..: a commu!llty. !Jut we ought to start now. Our present
end m·y comfortable days as a
the external
support
of the
News!
r--

~I
ball game is gettmg us nowhere fast.
priest.
institutions and social pressures._
I
























































































I.
'
,~
:•
...
·..
.
,.-
....
.-
~.
,'
....
'
OCTOBER
1; i970
'
.
.
Shown here
is
Andy Robinson, a performer in the coffee house
circuit, who played and sang in the college theatre last Saturday
.
evening.
:. •.
••I.\
·•.
I
'
•.
♦.,
ntE CIRCLE
.
Campus
·Governance
·
·
There
aie.
some members of
·
:the
Student Council who (eel
that
students,
specifically
members
of- the
Student
Academic
.
·committee
and the
Student Council, be. allowed to
vote
.
with the faculty on the
upcoming curriculum proposal.
. ,
To push for the vote witb the
faculty
in November on the
proposal would ·not only
-
be a
inistake'.biit would also be a very
shallow and possibly temporary
·
step towar9
a much needed
study
and revamping
_of·
tbe
pres_enf
campus
governance
-:
structure.
'Campus
.
governance
By·
~rge
Roarty
.
\
can't be decided and initiated in
such a piece-meal manner. It is
an
issue
which
concerns
·everyone;
students, faculty, and
administration
and should be
resolved with all participating in·
the resolving of it. Even
if
the
students were able
-to
vote on
·
this curriculum proposal. the
role-of the student in the aTfairs
of the college would still not be
defined not to mention that of
the administrations. The issue
will be continually coming up.
The wgency of the problem was
well exhibited at the colloquium
last
week
during
a "buck
s·abicas
to
Perform
Saturday
On Saturday,
Oct.· 3, and
.
Sunday, Oct. 4, the Cult~ral
Committee of the College Uruon
Board will sponsor the first true
cultural event to take place on
this campus in a few years.
Sabicas
the world renowned
classicai guitarist, will appear in
concert. in the College Theatre as,
·
part· of the
faH
weekend.
Sabicas' style
is
not one of the
stuffy,
high-brow
type that
typifies most classical guitarists;
but rather, his programs are a
blending
of
his
own
arrangements
.of
exotic gypsy
melodies with authentic
folk.
songs from Spain, Cuba, Peru,
and
other
Latin
American
countries.
Prior
to becoming a solo
concert
artist,
Sabicas
accompanied some of the most
famous of Spain's singers and
dancers, including the legendary
Carmen Amaya. Some of his
more
recent accomplishments
have been performing as guest
guitarist
in
the
recent
off-Broadway
musical, "Joy,"
and collaborating on an album
with
Joe Beck. Sabicas has
·
recorded a number of albums on
his own, and
is
considered by
passing" incident involving Dr.
Zuccarello and Dean La Pietra
after Mr. Prenting had asked a
question concerning a particular
policy of the college. However,
the writer reporting the incident
made a mistake in reducing the
whole curriculum· revision to
.
"politics." Another point which
is
disturbing and which comes
up every now and then
is
that
some students are afraid that the
faculty
might
try
to
put
something over on the students
and the only way to really insure
that the students'
opinion be
heard and felt is to have a vote.
The vote won't insure anything
if
there·
isn't
an active
participation by the students on
a departmental
basis.
The
decisions
are made on the
departmental level and not when
the vote is taken.
The
Planning
Committee,
composed
of faculty
and
students, met in late August. It
addressed itself to several issues,
one of them
being campus
govern;mce. All agreed that no
radical revamping of the present
structure would be initiated this
semester but the issue would be
studied thoroughly and intensely
in the meantime. Some people
including myself were under the
impression
that
a separate
committee was set up to handle
the problem, however, this is not.
the
case.
The
Planning
Committee
_should
begin to
tackle this problem immediat~ly
if
they haven't already begun.
If
they feel they can't handle it
right now they should set up a
subcommittee that could.
.ELECTION
'70:
JOHN
DOW
the music critics of today_ to
rank
with
the
outstanding
exponents of the classical guitar ..
Sabicas
performed
in our
theatre about
5
years ago, and
was
·
so well enjoyed by the
SABICAS-SATURDA
Y
8:00
pm
By Sal Piazza
.
CONTINUED ON
"J
\.,-
..
,.....
.
...
:
....
:~.'.;.Th~~D~niocratic;carididat~·\for{.
0
pat~iotism•::~quii"edhatwe;
not:c,:appro•~inrntely-:•30~()00·
:~te~;-•.
;_/
-·. __
;_
.......
,
- ..

...
--
~
..
:--
'~---
..
._ ..
,.>,:·
0
:·cY:r'ngr-eis"i;,fio'in'
'the::!27th.C
questfon-Viet'Nam'Polfoy;
·-··..:
,• Dow'_s
opponent',
Martin
Announcements
I
i'.
.
Congressional District
·
is John
Mr. , Dow
·
a _d
v o ca~ e ~. a
McKneally,_ is a strong_ s~ppo~ter
Dow.
Mr. Dow
served
as
'reordenng
of national pnonties
of the Nixon Admm1strat!on
congressman from the 27th C.D.
·in
orde"t to· ~or_k towards
policies.
_
If· off-year electmn
from 1964,to
·
1968. His first

stabilization of the economy and
._
trends hold ~rue to form. and
victory is largely attributed fo
full employment through use_ of
McKneally remain~ a pai4-_iil-full
·
the Johnson landslide of 1964 the government. as an employer
member of the Silent MaJonty,
and his defeat
iri
1968by6,000
as a last resort. He·contends,
Dow's· election prospects· are
,votes
was due to the large.Nixon
however,
.
that the problem of
optimistic.
·
plurality in this area. Dudng the
inflation will not be solved until
1968
·
.Democratic
Convention
the war is ended and.we stop the
Do\v. supporte~
a stronger
.
arms race.
.
NEXT WEEK:
version of th·e Minority Plank on,
·
In a recent speech, Dow made
Viet Nam which was defeated by
the
following
observation,
the convention delegates.
.
.. Conservative·
thinking
is·-
MARTIN McKNEALLY
In May 1965,
·
four
.
months
America's
greatest danger.· It
after entering the Congress, Mr.'
·
could lead us to more Viet
There has. ·been a change in
Student Personnel Services· for
·the.1970
academic year.
There are plans to- assess the
.
testing and counseling needs of
students
as well as
'initiate
various programs geared to meet

particular
needs of students.
Presently, counseling services are
·
available to students and will be
handled by the members of the
Psychology
Department.
The
extension is 297.
If you have anyquestions or
suggestions, please contact the
secretary, Miss· Linda Scorza, in
Room 109 in lower Donnelly.
On Wednesday, October 7, at
3
:30
p.m.;
in the Fireside
Lounge,
Professor Wegner of
Brown University will speak on
"Computer
Education
in the
70's," a nontechnical discussion
of the role of the computer in
general education.
Dow delivered an address calling
Nams, more repressive violence
for
the
defeat
of a war
here and abroad, and finally set
appropriations bill which proved
us against all men overseas. I see
to be the beginning of a massive
a great world war in which
U.S. escalation in Viet Nam. In
destruction~wm be universal, all
Champagnat
.
Sponsors
Drug Symposium
.
speaking. against
·the.
bill,
·
Dow
because American conservatives
·
·
said
•,•Our action is fateful
·
cannot see that change is part of
because. it reveals our cine n~tion
nature and has to be permitted."
•·
..
~tt!!~P tii}_g,Jo
_say, 'lam the law'
T h e
2 7 t h
C . D .
i s
·.
-'-attempting to be.theJtidge·and
predominantly
a conservative,
. ·-executioner
of
another nation;"
suburban and rural area. Despite
:Dow: has remained a vocal critic
.
_this.
fact,_ Dow did extremely
'.i,C:tlie
war. in 'Viet.Nam and h11s well
in
196 8 · while
the
dis.counted
the idea
that
-
Hurilp!!fey-Muskie ticket lost by,
Last" Thursday, Champagnat
House
sponsored
a arug
education symposium for house
residents. Mr. Joseph Zanatchet,
a psychologist participating in a
pilote drug program at Mattawan
State Hospital, gave an overview
of the
·
addiction
·problem
and
stereotype
of
addicted
personality.
,•
.
Mr. Jerry Goodman, a clinical
psychologist
at St: Francis
Hospital and co-director of the
.-Methadone Treatment Program
in Dutchess
County, gave a
history
of the
Methodone
Program
and
.
explained
his
philosophy.
"The Program is
designed
for
the
entire
rehabilitation
of the addict
through
group
therapy,
individual
counseling
and
vocational training." He hopes
that this program will be used as
a pilote project by the State.
Dutchess
County
District
Attorney, Al Rosenblatt, spoke
about the legal effects of drug
abuse. He explained that the
biggest
problem•
~
Dutchess
County was with marijuana and
the hallucigens. He cautioned
·that
mere
possession
of
marijuana carries penalties of up
to one year in jail. Regatding
searches, he said the the New
York State Constitution forbids
the invasion of the privacy of
persons, premises or automobiles
·
By
John Wynne
without
a
·
valid warrant.
He
estimated that many cases are
dismissed in this County because
of the impropriety of the search'
in spite of the fact that drugs are
found.
.i






























































TIIECIR.CLE
'f.
·,,
••

••••
AN[)_
THE
WAR
DRAGS
ON
-
····•··
Circle

PftotOg,rapfte{,
,
Spend$
·
Su111llle1;.
·
·
..
··
In
·viet11alll.
-..
'.
Richard Brummett, Circle photo
·editor,
spent. the summer
in
..
Vietnam as a-free lance photographer. He arrived in Saigon on
May
31
·with
a Circle. press card,· but for. some reason this. was
unacceptable
.
to the Military Assistance Command. To get accredited
·
he had to get two letters from recognized newspapers or magazines.
He accomplished this
_on
the first day there and went out into. the
.
field with the unit he served with two years
·
ago in Nam, an
armoured cavalry troop.
. .
.
He found a much different attitude there now. "Externally peace
·symbols,
longer hair,
-
beads and hippie-type head
:bands
are
·everywhere
in
the ranks. There
is
no concept of winning- the war,
everyone is just talking of g9ing home."
.
·
During this summer one of his pictures, of a• tank with a peace
symbol painted on it, was printed in the New York Times. His
pictures appeared in Newsweek and other magazines.
His impression of the war now is that it has become more orderly.
·
·
"We are still burning villages pretty regular but it is the Rough Puffs
or Regional Forces of the Vietnamese, attached to the :p'.S. units,
·
who are lightin_g the fires. The strategy seems to be to get the people
out of the countryside: and into the refugee camps where they can
be watched more c1osely. Everything
is
so
barren out there now.,
Farms and rice paddies have been abandoned. and the pe9ple are
waiting for the war to end so they can go back home."
·
f
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DJ§QR£LE
.c11:1e:,yJ,~r
-•Of
~Vents
WEEKLY CALENDAR OF
EVENTS
FOR
_ THE WEBK OF OCTOBER 5.-11.
·
:···
Dear Sir;·:_.;:';,.:
..
,,'._
:
·
.,)
..
:;
·
' :
·.
Tlwi-'letter
is
in,
~ference Jo
Tuesday
.

. ,the<:'!Outtageo~s·
Attitude"·
..
,
·
·.
.
..
Oct..6
·
·
·
\
ai'ticle''in Sept •. 24. edition of
the
..
3:30 p:.m. Cross-Country• New Paltz,Paterson St. -NP
Circle. I would'ilike
·to
inforiri
.
·
10
_;.•5
pm~
Recniit~,
US
Navy ROC, Alcoyes, ~ampus Center
;people;~or·
the/µuth:,not
the
··.·

-
.
.
:
.
c-
.
Wednesday
.
.
.
_
·
·::
·outrageous.
Bill>tbat
'·'Bull"
·
..
•·
.
·
·
·---
·
·
·
.
·
Oct. 7

·
·;o•Reillywrote.,·.:'.
'<'<'
·:·.
'3:00pm.Soccer~H.H.Lehman-Home
.. ~/-/First i~.of~: ail
..
' there

was
.

.
3:30 pm. Lecture. frof •. Peter .Wagner on "Computer Education in
. '.
mentio1L.that~tlila person might
.
the '70's" Fireside Lounge Campus Center
. . .
-
never
.:fultY:·-recover
•.
Well. all;
I
· ·
8:00 pm. Films. "The Wild One": and '.'On
:the .Waterfront'\
have
:·to;·say'·.to
·that.
,is.
he
is
·
College_Theater
·
·
·
·
·
.. walking
around .:campus right
Thursday
·:rfow.
and he.
is
the·same person
.
.
Oct.
8
..
,he
was
a
week·or-so before.··
.
··
8:00 p.m. Lecture.
Dr.
E. Buckley on "Ecological Zoning" College
)
:
s·econd1y, l;':would
like
.
to
·
Theater
.:
·
:
·
·
·
..
--
.
--·
·
.
-
..
now
how
.
the hell you know:
·
·
Saturday
·
that a student at Marist sold'the
.
·.·•
Oct. 10
·
LSD:· to
.this
pei-59n. Your·
9 - 5.
p.m. Fall Meeting of the College Theology Society. Fireside
statements
aie
making.the Marist
Lounge, Gallery Lounge Theater.
Coilege
;'
Sfudeilts
liable to
2:00 p.ni. Cros.,-Country-Fairfield -Home
criticism/ of drug. abuse. You..
2:00-pm. Soccer - Fairfield -Home
don't.know· who sold. it to
hiin:
.
2:00 p.m. Football.: Assumption -Away
because
.
you
·
were
asking
·
Saturday &
everybody ''whafls he using" or
.
Sunday
don't:
you:J.'emember?.
Bull,
Sailing.:Team.Champs-Navy
PAGES
EDITORIAL
TO
LIVE
Now is time to sit quietly. W_atch
dying leaves and winter .coming.
Listen (or a time to the death knell. of nature's life.
·
·
We run, _denying tJte
~~e
to walk.
Missing
_-mo~t
of. what is ours .
Never seeing
those who live with us. Yelling at. eaeh other with no
one listening.
. Bartering the worth
.of
our lives. Trad~g off pieces of ourselves
like
so
much territory. Denying our value as creators. Selling self for
.
snatches of someone e}ses time.
-Refusing the time to love, we gratefully embrace many false
realities.
Afraid to cry, afraid to feel. Afrai~ to live.
Please\: ~Oii!t•":.
..
•give
·~•-:th~;-
t.farist·
----=------------------...:... _____
....;.
___________
_
Community• a bad impression
·current
Art Exh.tbit in Gallery Lounge "Flats
&
Folds" by Degan 1- .....
;....-----------------------t
.
·th
li -
·
E.
vans.
· -· ·
·.
-.
"ft'.1
_
.
.
Y.~-~r es.~
.·,
..
_:
.
.
.-
__
.
You
said.
"Last·
'year
drugs..,..-.--------------------------
PERSONAL
R EV O L U T I O
N.'
remember correctly you
were
in
·

d
w,ere-· sold
openly.'':Ifl
·:.C··,·h···u·
C
..
k··
.H··.·.
ere
-England_
'.'Bull,"
-
0
_
r did
.
you
"It
seems to be the fashion, to say you_ re right
an
they are
wrong." - John Mayall
- -·
-
coine to Marist on weekends to
To say "Right on" is fashionable. To say .. Peace" is fashionable.
make• sur~.
everything. ,.,as OK.
By
Chuck
Meara
To walk around with your fist or spread fingers in the
air
is
,
,
You ·meniioned
.that
pushers
This past weekend I attended the Second Annual President to

fashionable. Yet again, to mock on someone who does any of these
.
are·considered
."regular
guys
and·
]>resident Conference
_in
Washington D.C. The meeting was attended
things is just as fashionable.
-
girls.".
I
.
say that they are
as
by close to 1,000 people, including many Student Government
These are all rallying cries. Everyone who participates in a rally is
human
as
you are only you-feel

Presidents and college and University Presidents. The conference was
fashionable. A rally
is
for someone who needs to be rallied. And if
that they hurt other people ~y
sponsored by the Associated. Student . Governments in hopes of
someone needs to be rallied for a cause, then he probably will never
introducing them·· to the
.
drug,
opening. !!()me· sort of dialogue between the campuses and the
sincerely fight for that cause since he didn't
·believe
in it in the .first.
·-
scene
•where.
there are "drug
national administration of Richard Nixon. For some· members of the
place.
.
·
oriented . people." '9'ell by your
national administration the meetings were a dialogue; for others the
.
Rallying people for a revolution is ridiculous. The only histori ,l
cute
.article
you may. have hurt
session was more in the the form of a monologue, a· sort of let's all
revolutions that ever worked were ories where the people really
the
.whole
Marist Community
.
vote for
Dick
session.
,
wanted it. People don't' really want Jerry Rubin's revolution. Hi<'.
is
·but
that doesn't matter to you,
Schools
were
represented from close to thirty states. This was
·
one of fashion.
does it?You don't
care
if
people. perhaps the most· important aspect of the conference. The contact
Real people· make their own revolutions. A revolution within
are
thrown· in
jail
•like
animals· with·· different people, with different backgrounds proved very
oneself. To· revolutionize one's own mind. This
is
the only true
and treated worse, cio you?
!'lo,
I
interesting. Spending a weekend with educators and students who
revolution.
_
.don't:
.think
you do,. however,
basically have the same problems as us inevitably·
.proves
to be an
·
To return to the original point, it is ludicrous to walk around
you'll do ilothing:about alcohol.
educatio~al :XP~rience, We
.invariably
make comparisons _be~een
selling one's beliefs by means of symbols, banners or slogans. And it
That's .oK: because it's legal and
.
our own ~~titution and th~se of other delegates. The questioning of
is just as ludicrous to ...yalk around cutting up the other side of the
,
·'.
.
;-·socially;.,accepte(f,:
ItC
·doesn't.
:
other policies and pro_ble~s and: l?rocedure helps a person to grasp a
..
coin. Both means are fashionable, easy and very cheap. And both a
I
_::..\:
: .
.,.,
hamtiailyone does:it?.'Of ~urse.
>·.~ette,r
~no~ledge of~
?'Yn policie,s, p_row~~~ an~
_pro~dure.
· ·;
.·.·.
,
complete waste of time.
.
.
···
:
.
.
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~~=~~=~-se-~~e~~~~~-~~~hl~
<u·•':t>·:
·_:s
i!),Y
;-:<:a·:
c
c·.q'i
a:tn:'1f:''t:9
,:::M.Id
wii;en ~e.
_qu~sti~n<and
anS\Yer pe_riod got
.a
little. to~gh he 11;1st
·
·•
··:~
·
· ·
,,.
''huriui.Jiitariariism~•
·
'.view::
that
_p1ckt::~·
up· his thin~s and le.ft; He·...yo~ld only concern. himself with
you.should-'.never offer anyone a
:,stopp~g
Co1D111umsm'-andstuderit v10lence and not with the fact,.
druik. or
foflhat
matter; drink iri
:.
tltat
his
Department perpetrates more violence in a day than the
•.
front
.
of:
people who}baven•t_
:;campuses
have seen in tens of_ye,llrs; !ohn Mitchell, t_be Attorney .
.
beeif addicte<l yet. you
.wouldn't
General, prov~d to be_ another mterest!Dg speaker. He Just couldn't
,-.
want them· to get caught up in
.
sense the feeling of the students that his Department has apparently
the
;"alcohol
.
scene,,
:
with
taken repressive· steps against many groups of people. Presidential
/'alcohol
oriented·.
people,"
,
youth ad.visor. ~tephen Hess seemed
_to
be more
~
touch with the

woulli' you? By the way mosto~
~ocal_S~mor
Citizens Club than the youth of.th<:
.c_ount1:Y
·
_
perhaps all
.oft.he
vandalism-on
.
They were,. ho~ever, ~em~ers of the _admimstration ~ho were

:
campus;
is·.
done by "alcohol
:.
VfPIY
open. Selective Service. Drre~to_r
_Curtis
T~rr_ showed
-~unself
t?
· ·orien~ed
.people."
They are the
be
1
a very.~pen honest man .who
is
in a very difficult pos1!ion. He is
·
ones that leave beef cans in the
domg the Joij.because he feels.he can do a better, fairer.Job for all
-lobby, on the eleyator, etc. I've
·
concern~d. Dr. Tarr answered nume~ou~ q~~~tions and remained f~r
_
heard
of people••· complaining
a lo~g tune after
-~e
talk to ~peak_
with indi~id~al students and th~ir
~.about-
liquor bottles and beer·. problems. S_ecretary oqntenor
Hickel provide~ the conference with
.
tiottles being
thrown
out
.
the
its mo_st w~dely pub_lished story when he_ sa.td we must not only
windows but I've never heai'd of
condem_n violence
::,n
the- campus but we must also condemn the
;
anyone who complained about
_
•~rhet?nc 9f polariza~on." It was obvious . to
-
all, including
_the
·• /:'-'.
getting hit by a "roach."
.
·.
Washington paper~ \Vh_1ch
gave the statement-first page coverage,Just

You.:. also said
:that
if.
people .. who he \\las ~efemng to.
.. .
.
.•
·
..
.
must
use.
drugs then use them
The
.
ex~~nence of attending the confere!lce was rewardmg to me
.
out of the dormitories. Well in as
a~
m_d~vidual. Hopefu~y_: the name Manst-was mad~ known to a
your first sentence you
said
the
few mdi':duals who pr~vio~sly had. no ]cnowledge of it. Hopefully
·
·
erson' experiencing LSD w.as
·
~ore M~t
$!dents 'Yill be
·ab~e
to ~tte_n~
.confere_nces
of
this
sort
P.behind" Champagnat. Hall,
·so..
m the future, be.cause not o!11y
lS
the mdmdual rewarded, but in the
what
a:te you· complaining
long run Martst ts rewarded.
.
·
about?
·
·
.
Dear Sir:
.
Gentlemen:
'
My
la~
comment will entail
.
Re: Plattitudes Contagious·.
·
The "new"editorial policy as
your great ability to'judge the
I think
Bill
-O'Reilly·
has
described in the last issue of the
mature
-person
from. the
-
overlooked a vast portion of,us
·.
Circle
is an· extremely
immature one. I don't feelthat
here at Marist.'He and the Circle
·
unfortunate one for the college
you are in. any position to judge
seem to be discriminating against
.
.
community. .The policy
.
is
of
·
one's:maturity
..
--.
·.
-
_
the
stiff sane beer drinking
~ourse. not new, as the editors
·
·
·
·
Dennis Alw-on members of Moth. After all we- admit, since it really has been in
,Dear
Sir:·
· ..
. ·
·
_
·
too are p~ o_f the educational
effect for some time,
It
simply
·
'.

Mr. Alwon's
.
above .letter
scene at -Marist. and
-
demand
has taken about a semester for a
speaks
fodtselhnd
is
riot worth
equal
_time.
A lot has been said. "spade'-' to be called a "spade,"
· .··.·replying
to. However;
-
I feel I
·
·
about drugs; why not give booze
but such an admission makes the
,
must defend
.
my lies. In my
some space too?
.
·
policy no more palatable. The
article of last week,lmentioned
We,
·contrary
to the hippies, justification
offered
by the
that there was a "chance" that
-
have been craving notoriety ..
On
¢itors· strike me
as
reflectfng a
the
.
student who took· LSD the same night that a life was rather peculiar sort of logic, as
might never fully recover. I had
.
ruined
because of the
·
drug
evidenced
by the following
in
mind re-occuring flash-backs pusher, We broke a
gl~
window
statement: "Since we are a small
which are very common when
a
_in
Champagnat
lobby
and
college community, plus the fact
.
person has a bad reaction to
created a lot of noise in Leo. too.
that the paper
is
printed several
LSD; As far as
Mr.
Alwon telling And-on Thursday we got a lot of
days after an event's occurrence,
me what I know and what I do
people excited about aardvark
it seemed fruitless to try to
not know - well, I didn't know
hunting season. And what about
report
on something
that
E.S.P. was that common.
all. the· •screaming out_ in the
everyone already knew about."
Finally,
iny
column did
·
not
parking lots? No one ever writes
Such a• rationale for relegating
mention alcohol - well,
I'm
sorry
about that.
·
pbjective news coverage to a
if I offended. I do not condone
How are we supposed to get minuscule role implies that word
the abuse. of alcohol nor do I
chippies into the rack without
of mouth
·
adds objectivity and
consume
it.
It's
just the same old
the same
social
prestige afforded
veracity
to news
·
events. It
story - the only thing right with
the irresponSI"ble
potheads. Since further implies that because we
drugs. is what's wrong with
the freaks are getting spaced we are "small"
(approximately
alcohol.
demand space.
1,700 voices), that everyone will
Thank you,
Jackson Turner
Bill O'Reilly ·
Class of •72
CONTINUED
0111
7
Ceremo.nial
·Words
· •
By
Tenance
Mooney
.
Some members of the faculty
have seemingly been given the.
wrong impression by articles
appearing recently in this paper
and
.
from
conversation with
student leader5. Student opinion
as expressed, for instance, in the
new
activist
government
philosophy and by the proposal
passed
by
the
student
government on September 21, is
not a call to fix bayonets or
draw
battle
lines with the
faculty.
The
·
motion which
passed· 6-1-1
last
week
is.
seen
as
an
attempt
to
draw
the
governance question out into the
open.
It
asks for an equal vote of
students with faculty members
on
all
·
matters. The first test of
this· proposal· as seen by most
student leaders will be the vote
on· the new curriculum which
will take place in mid-November.
The students realize that the
SaJ
Piazza
faculty members themselves are
in an amorphous,
undefined
position in so
far
as
their right to
participate
.
in•• governance is
concerned. We also realize that
the individual members of the
faculty are vulilerable insofar as
certain sanctions
.
are concerned.
However, there is plenty of
room fo~ cooperation between
these two campus interests. It
should be remembered, though,
that cooperation
is
just a nice
word unless accompanied by a
willingness to implement the
student proposals. The student
government
is taking
·the
initiative to help the community
define
what
has been left
undefined
by the
school.
planning co~ittee.
Hope f u 11
y;
the
entire
community will grasp at this
opportunity
to participate in
true community governance.
Joe Rubino
Editors in Chief
Rich
Brummett--·--·-·-·--·-
..... , .... -- .. -· Photo Editor
Terry Mooney -----·-·--
.......
,.-·-·---News
Editor
Gerald GeoffrOY-•-· .. -·---·--
.. --··
..
--Man.
Editor
J.
Tkach _______
, ........... - .........
...Sports Editor
Peggy Miner-
..........................
~
......................... Secretary
Paul Tesoro ............ -
.................... -,
... _ .... Cartoonist
Dave DeRosa ...... : ..................................................
Circulation
AM Gabriele
Janet
Riley------·-----·-----
Typists
Frank Baldascino
Dennis
Quadrini
Photognphers
·
.
___
__,

















































































































































































































I_
.
~
~
PAGE6
'I
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.-




La· Frontera
Book
.Re1?ieiv
By Paul Browne
·
When
·a
Latin author is published in the United States he has
if
only economic terms, made it. The trials and tribulations common
to the· image
·
of the
·
traditional writer are very real indeed
.
to the
author in Latin America. Especially if his native country has few,
if
any, reputable publishers.
.
.
.
Gabriel Garcia Marquez is one who has made
.it.
His English
edition of Cien Anos de Soledad (One Hundred Years of Solitude}
cemented
a
·growing
international·
reputation.
Although a
Colombian, Gabriel Garcia · sought publication in Latin America's
biggest publishin·g city - Buenas Aires. The first edition appeared
in
.
1967, and two years later its 14th edition was printed. This year
Cien Anos .de Soledad is available in English (Harper
&
Row,
$7 .95,
422
pp.)
.
·
·
.
The novel centers around the Buendia family who establish a
mythical town, Macondo, in northwest Colombia. The story is a
surrealistic voyage that combines the mysticism common to
-
Colombian religious life with the harsh realities of-poverty and pain
that permeate the extraordinarily optimistic town of Macondo.
Carcia captures the incredible zest in Latin life through his main
antagonists: Jose Arcadio Buendia, his wife, and their family. Garcia
is capable of penetrating the yankee ethic which usually blocks any
insight into Latin sot.ii. The translation of this work is the excellent
accomplishment of
J
.S. Bernstein.
.
Instead of yawning through another. boring lecture or sleeping
through an early morning session, journey through a- mystical
surrealistic voyage rarely found in print - escape with One Hundred
Years of Solitude!·
·

..
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111E CIRCLE
OCTOBER
1:
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970.
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LONLINESS
By
Linda
Ann Cloer
is a
,great
void
within
your
being
,.
,
..
where.
the
·emptiness
...
_.
·
~
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.
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....
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is
filled
only.
by
the-aching;·
3.upe,e
.~
!Oa6Ae"ff
15
.A~adem·y
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The Valley's
H·ead Rec()~d-Shop·
,
<·
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On The
w-ay
SUPER
--SPECIAL·
--
By
Tom Walsh
As
I
sit this rain-filled Friday
nigl1t many thoughts arc within
me.
1
can feel two. years of
growth turning behind, and· it
stops
me for a moment- of
commitment.
would
find it impossible to
explain
the-
closeness
that
surrounds this relationship; but
it constantly asserts its presence.
It often
a pp ears as if this
consciousness
controls
the
extent to which
I live. Now is
the time in our plateaus of
1 am a part of Marist; only as
much as, Marist
is
a
part of me. I
i
The Ladder.
By
Marty Keely
.
I find it a ladder
as much as one tries not to
the rungs are.
You grab them,
carefree, at first
then if your rung breaks early
you're safer,
conditioned to secure for
fall.
But
if your ladder.
has many strong base rungs,
as
mine did,
the first broken rung
stays forever.
This rung
was so
high from the one below
I
had·to leap to it.
(I
wasn't very big)
Dangling on innocence and ignorance
Blind, with happiness
I
broke my rung.
NowJ climb not
for a while;
Then proceed with great caution trying
trying not to use the rungs
trying to build up faith and trust
not in the rungs
but in myself.
I
am climbing the rungs now
slowly, then
a series of close easy ones.
Developed lightness.
faster now through the snaps. Faster
Never carefree again.
The
recollection
of
till·
hn:-ak
.
returns at every little
snap.
existence,
when
our
only
expectations
are
-those
of
growth. Each thought brings its
own change; and all our changes
deem thought.
_
.
Marist's change cim be judged,
only by our expansion. The
atmosphere present here today,
is not the same as that of two
years
ago.
An ihdlvidtial
awareness contains itself within:
the
people
of Marist.
It
is
evident that ours is a generation
of social concern, perpetuated
by· gross poverty,
a
wrongful
political
prosperity
and the
ever-present conditions, of
war
slaughter. I witness at Marist, a
climate
that condemns these
·
conditions, executed tl!rough a
manner
of self-identity
and
exhibition.
l feel these are good
changes,
for
-it
takes.
an
expression
of
human
truthfulness to show yourself
as
the things of which you believe.
Tomorrow I will leave to find
a part of the destiny of Manst.
I
- am filled with wonderment as to
who the high school senior
is
today, surely not the one
I
remember.
I
will search to
·
explain things here, which
I
take
so easily for. granted. I will
convey an image of you, which
only
I
can feel, as having known
you. And if
I don't convince
them to be a part of
it,
I
most
probably won't understand. But
then,
I
imagine only us who have
become
a
part of it can.
-
LET
-•IT:BE.
by.the··
__
-Beatles
-$2.99
11n:ui:im1~12num11nri,u:i1111
·.
Complete selectjon of
·.
posters~· pipes, peons,.· incense
...
beads , candles, you-name-it
~
.
.
•.
Q
.
.
-
_
....
P_.
S. ".''No one in the' valley~ can
· ·
·
,beat_-
our
prices on
records
·






































OCTOBER
I, 1970
Andfs
Gang
'IHECIRCLE
LETTERS
Cont.
from
5
be
infonned accurately within a
couple of days via rumor
and
By
Andre
~bert
.
hearsay.· lri truth we
.all
know
PAGE7
Campus
Stuff
.
By Don
Duffy
-
what happens through. such an
·
How many of:you would. like a job at Marist when you graduate?
,
approach to news dissemination
Usually, I spend my writing time on sp6rting events here at the oid
.
You get free board but
,you
pay for meals. And you get. paid nil •.
~
unfounded
rumors abound,
U. But something has h
t
at home which effects every resident·
· What.
is
the job? (,radu11te Assistant
is
the title; The job is general all people are not informed; or even
student here at Marist. I'm talking about the food situation and Mr:
.
purpose handy dandy troub!eshooter~
.
·.
·
.
·
..
·
.
·•
·
,
worse niisinform_ed,. and thus
~
Greene. Lately,
I
hear typical comments about the food beq
.
>
Th~
Graduate Assistant position
is
new to Marist.this year; There
communication,
instead
of
blah or the menu so common that it just became so much a part
<If
are
_only 3G.A.'s on· campus, one in each dorm •. Their jobs include
leading to greater understanding
·
~Y
cafete_ria li;ngo that it became acceptable. Well,
I
for one am very
"assisting.
inthe
.operation
:of,
the
.house
administration, acting
:as
and. confusion. How can the.
tll'ed of listerun_g. Someone· started a petition against' Saga and Mr.
counselo~s,
·and
doing any odd Jobs the housemaster can think pf.
.
different segments of the college
Greene concerning the food. Well, I have an easier wasy and
.
that is
.
·
>The
G.A.
·
in Sheahan· House is Joe DeTura. As a student here Joe
community
possibly
reason
go tell Art Greene your problems and he'll straighten you right out
..
founded Children's Theatre.- Last year as a senior- he directed "The
.
together
to solve· the many
Art Greene told me that all he needs is for someone to tell him and
·.Wizard
of
Oz"
which won Children's Theatre the '.'Club of the Year"
.
problems confronting us,
if
the
·
he'd make the necessary changes. He has a tough job. It's not easy to
Award. Joewon the Alumni Award last year at .Graduation for··his Cir c 1 e disc
1 alms
any
pl~~s~ 90~ people every day, three times a day. He is open for
w.ork

in
·
the theatre and in appalachia. Presently Mr. DeTura
is
responsibility for uncovering and
cnbc1Sm,
if
you d only go tell
him.
He wants to please. Mr. Greene
teaching. in St. George Elementary School. This, plus his work as a
reporting the facts?
has_ brought a lot of new ~novations to Marist and too many people
G.A, tend
.to
fill his time up but Joe
is
planning•an active role in
As a further attempt tojustify
easily forget these. Maybe if you thought it out a little more then it
camp tis activities for the year.
. .
·
·
..
.
·.
.
the new policy, the editors state
would_ be easy
to
realize that we have it pretty good.·

·The.
role of Graduate Assistant to. Leo Hall is presently being filled
that "nowhere· in our masthead
. Be good ...
tiy the,fQrmer President of the Class-of
'70 Mr. Mike Towers. Mike, a
does it say,· 'The' Marist College
·
former gridiron star here at Marist· is teaching at St. Mary's Jr. High
·Newspaper,'."
which of course is
School
-in
Poughkeepsie. Mr. Towers is also working with our
·
no more than a legalistic ploy.
:
football team as a line coach.
·
.
.
·
.
Such a statement is on a par
.
Champagnat Hall's Graduate Assisiant is Vin Begley. Presently Vin
with
Vice
President
Agnew
what Dr. Michelson suggests, but

is
working two jobs in addition to his position as G
.A.
Mi:. Begley
is
saying that the United States is
t h e c o
11
e
g
e d o es have
an Administrative A~istant_,to the Admissions
-Office
(Mr. l<lynn),· not at war in Vietnam because
~ommunity-:0riented
programs

the Dean of Academic Affatrs (Mr.Cox), and the DeanofStudents
war has never been formally
via
independent
study,
(Mr. Wade) and he.
is-in
charge Qf the volunteer services at Hillcrest-
declared. Ah, come on guys!
internships,
work-
study
Children's H~me and ~udson State Hospital.
·
.
.
The negative results of the
(psychology majors do spend
Since this
is.
the_ first time the
·campus
has ever had Graduate
new policy were immediately in
full
semester
working
for
Assistants the job is not-yet.been defined. So far
all
three G.A;s have
evidence
in Mr. Mooney's
agencies in the community),
found· themselves- involved in helping the housemasters of their
column, "Reform or Politics,"
student
projects
on prison
respective
·
houses,, counseling and. general ·campus work.
If
·
the
which · at best was inaccurate, at
reform, the criminally insane,
.
position ofG.A. is successfulthe housemasters expect to be getting
.
worst , willful
distortion
and
integration, ecology, etc ... Could
some volunteers each year from the senior class for
this
job. I guess
propaganda. The general tone of
it be that Mr. Mooney neglected
.
if
you really want to stay at Marist this would be one way of doing
the article was that the faculty is
to report these facts (and others)
it.
·
·opposed
to curriculum reform
because such objective reporting
whether that be in terms of the·
would lessen the impact of his
60-60
or
Dr. Michelson's
blast
at the
faculty
and
proposal.
Nothing could be
administration?
Perhaps when
.
further
from
the truth, as
one "shoots from the hip," the
-
anyone
engaged in objective
.
truth only gets in the way.
·
reporting (fact finding) would
It was further implied in the
know.
If Mr. Mooney had
article
that the "wisdom of
.(Jii;';;
reported facts, h~ would have
ages"
has somehow
been
stated that no more than four.
invested in the students alone,
( 4) faculty members questioned
and that the faculty is really
whether
the
_students
would . incapable of understanding the
properly use their new freedom.
nature
and
function
of
Four,
out~ of approximately
education.
I wholeheartedly
forty(40)
faculty
members
agree that thy faculty does not
present
at the
colloquium,
have all of the answers, but most
sounds a lot less impressive than,
decidedly
neither
do the
·••a
particular
segment
of
students. The faculty only asks
. ,
..
faculty," as stated in the article.
that th,e same respect accorded
·
,:
Jf~r .. Moon~y had_r,eported the
stud¢p.ts,..be.;accord_ed.them."v
,,,
·
-
facts, he. would have stated that
In
suin; it appears to me that
'
·
Dr. Michelson (for whom I have
the Circle
is
now guilty of the
the
utmost
affection
and - same error as that of other
respect) apologized to the group
elements of the news media in
for making his recommendations
this country which have been
at the
meeting, rather than
accused of
,
slanting the news.
during the deliberations on these
The fact that
·
it occurs on a
matters
which have been in
college campus makes it no less
progress since last spring. If Mr.
reprehensible and irresponsible.
Mooney was interested in being
Please reconsider your ~ecision.
objective and fair, he would have
Sincerely,
pointed out that much of what
.
Edward
J. O'Keefe
Dr. Michelson
proposed
is
Department of Psychology
possible
within
the present
·
SABICAS from 3
Love,
Duff
audience at that performance,
that during intermission, people
brought back their friends,. and
.
Sabicas played to an enthralled
crowd that filled the theatre's
aisles.
Anyone
at
that
performance can tell you what a
gifted craftsman Sabicas is.
Sabicas'
Saturday
evening
performance will be at
8
p.m.,
and
he will give a Sunday
afternoon concert at
3
p.m.
SOCCER TEAM from
8
came off the bench in the last
period. Manhattan took
42
shots
that kept the Marist goalie busy
with 20 saves. Marist's offense
took
only
10
shots
and
Manhattan goalie Mike Doherty
gained seven saves.
RUNNERS
from
8
Jardins· rounded out the Marist
scoring. Mark was hampered by
a foot· injury but •showed he
fully
recovered in time for the
next race this Saturday at Drew
University.
Other harriers who didn't see
action were Greg Nolan and
Steve Kopkt·Greg will be ready
for Saturday; however, Steve
is
lost for the season with a severe
heel injury. Steve is a senior and
his consistent performances will
surely be missed:
COU~TRY
from
2
be before cities self-destruct by
keeping in step with the Progress
Myth
and finally and most
important can people folly live a
life in seclusion from nature and
the other things people in the
. country take for granted?
curriculum,
and thus all the
mo re so within·
the
new
curriculum.
Present programs
may not
.be
as comprehensive as
The
Saga.
of
Saga
Equal
Voting
By. Georse Byrnes
. .
Many people feel that they are
long lines waiting for their food.
!1-
~~captive audi_etice" w_hen
_it
·
The
Mari st
-cafeteria
was
·
comes
to
patronizing Saga Food
designed to accommodate 450
Service, They may )mt approve
·
students and now accommodates
or understand the operation but
850, and so it stands to reason
sipce they do not
-
have the
that. at times, the lines will be
money to go elsewhere, they
long. At the present time, steps
return-
night· after
night,
.are.
being taken to improve
disgruntled and very much ready
conditions in the dining room
to complain.
These people.
and
more
importantly
the
honestly feel tjJ.at they have no
·
kitchen
area.
As these
·power
or cannot·
voice ap
·
improvements
are completed,
opinion
·
to the F09d Service
·
·
they will be reported
in
the
Manager, ~t
Greene. To show
...
Circle.
These
.are
only two
.
the fallacy in this thinking, let us
·
examples; there are many more.
·
consider
·a
situation that evolved
·.
If a student is sincere in his
two weeks ago.
·.
.
·
. .
·
efforts, action can and will be
.
A group of students. decided
'taken
to improve standards.
that they wanted to see changes
Most people, when dissatisfied
·
in the food service. This group
with a meal, discuss it with
was
willing to spend long hours
their
friends.
This
will
preparing
statements
and
accomplish
.nothing.
Speak to
collecting
signatures to show
someone who
can
do something
.
student
support.
Before the
about it.
petitions
were circulated, this
There are many other facets
committee· met with Art Greene,
in the operation of Saga which
presented their complaints, and·
should be discussed. Menus are
within
·a
week action was taken.
prepared
and· sent
from
One of the basic complaints was
California to each campus. This
that cold cuts were no longer menu in essence, tells what food
being served in addition to the
is to be served and when it is to
hot lunches provided. Two days
be served. In most schools, no
later, cold· cuts and salads were
seconds
are allowed at any
seJVed and the problem was
meals. This plan was innovated
resolved. Another example is
by Art Greene and the Food
that people complain about thr.
Committee.
When a student misses meals
due to oversleeping or going
home for the weekend, this
does not entitle
him
to have
extra meafs at a later date.
Surveys· conducted each year
indicate average absenteeism at
·
meals.
This
is taken into
consideration before the price
for room and board
is
affixed.
This absenteeism deducts from
the total cost per semester.
Also, it has been estimated that
two hundred dollars worth of
-
food is thrown out each day. A
student
makes
up three
sandwiches,
eats
two and
throws the rest out. Thus, more
money is spent to keep the
sandwich meats available and
rates increase. It
is
important to
realize these facts in order to
understand
the food service
·
operation:
·
Finally, sometime this week
the Food Committee will be
organized
and
the
names
published. Voice your opinions
to. these people who will act as
your
representatives.
If
you
don't trust them to relate your
feeling accurately, talk to Art
Greene
personally.
Do not
allow
yourself
to become
apathetic
towards something
which affects you daily.
By John Wynne
There seems to be a problem
of interpretation of how much
influence a faculty vote has on
the implementation
of certain
proposals. Some students feel
-that a i:ecommendation of the
faculty, after a vote taken
in
the
legalized structure of a plenary.
session, carries more weight and
is therefore
more important,
than a recommendation of the
students after a vote taken in the
informal
framework
of a
referend.um
election. In-• my
opinion
past experience has
shown that this
is
not true. I
agree that faculty plenary vote,
because of its formality, does
look more impressive. But I do
not
think
that
their
recommendation
wouid
be
. fo
II owed
if there
is any
substantial student opposition.
What this school needs is a
new government structure where
administration,
faculty and
students are on an· equal par
legally as well as in reality. This
is a matter for the Planning
Com mission, so those people
who want this new structure
should be pressing for more
action by the commission.
Right now, as a measure to fill
the gap until
this
governance
structure can be put into effect,
I think that the students should
set up a legal structure of their
own to vote on
this
curriculum
revision
proposal and make
recommendations
in the same
way
as the
faculty plenary
session does. We, the students,
have the equality in reality now
but with this legal structure our
recommendations will be on the
same
level as those of the
faculty.
Every student should have the
right to vote on this important
.
proposal but every student has
the responsibility to familiarize
themselves with the proposal
before
voting._
I
would
recommend this procedure f.Q!
students to exercise the power
that is rightfully theirs until a
new governance structure can be
put into effect.
·
·
The
Dark
Hope
Of Light
By Marty Keely
Overcast
above the dark haze
looking down
I saw an obvious yet obscure
truth.
Deceivingly
a discovery,
distasteful
deep with scarl~t sorrow
I felt for all and me;
I came down.
l
had to,
I
was scared.
-------
..
..









































































.,.
.
·',

r>
I).
;
I_
,.
,. PAGE 8
,
• J-.
.·-
.TIIE
CIRCLE.-·'··
OCTOBER
I;
1970'·;;
,
Vikings
-Vanquish
Visiting
\li_etims
..
·•
}.:
. BooterS
·
..
··
Boijted,
, Harriers_·
·Harrild
··.vi~l~9-~·••···.•D~f~~t!~tts6urg·
•·.-~14~t·
The' Vikings ·orMaiist College
t~ain··
W~S
atile to get
.on
the ' Lacombe came up with' a bjg
opened
up
:•.theit
season
1
last scoreboard although both teams : p lai · on fourth . down' by
Satur.ctay •b·y· squeezing
bY·<threaten.'ed.
"The
Vikings'
stopping ·a Plattsburg reverse
Plattsburg State·; by a. score of marched. deep. info. Plattsburg·
before
it
could :tum the corner .
_14-7.
It was the first ti,ne that a ·territory twice in the second half
The Vikings took over with only
Viking te!lJll has VfOh their home_ onJy
'to.: ·
hav:e both
dr'ive_s
.
four minutes to go. Staying on
opener on Leonid
off
~ield. . • · · stopped.: A fumble stopped the . the ground they._ ran out the ·
Once again it was the strong .. first
' drive . and ·
a .
pass · · clock for 'their first win of the
defensive unitthat saved the day · interception stopped the second;·. season.
.
. .
for the Vikings: They stopped.· Late in the fourth quarter the '
CharlieVan Nostrom·and Tom
the Plattsburg offense .time and Plattsburg
offense· began· to. . Cardinale did a fine job
of
time
again thfaugh out. the move. The passing of DiDoitato
opening holes ori the left side:of
game. Dori Hinchey, Cotton, · brought' the ball down to the · the·. Viking.· line.
Both are
Nash,· ·Mile~ Erts, ··Henry. Blum, Viking 8 : yardline. From there· . · newcomers: to. the -team. Chuck_
and Paul La~omb.e·turn~~ in· fine the Plattsburg team· ran · seven
Brown, the Vikings halfback, .
performancesforthe
Vikmgs. ·
plays with the help of a ,pass _' showed :great form in running
. The Vikings were the first to 'interference call." It 'was to no .: and also in catching the baU as,
. ~core ~fter a;tough first quarter avail
as the famous Viking .. he lead the club·in rec~ptions. ".
m which there was ·no score. defense held·' time· after time.
The Vikings.go on the road for
Henry
-,Blum
'blocked
.a. With 3 .down and 8 to go for a
three
weeks
and return. to
.. Plattsburg . punt . _early .. in the touchdown Don Jiinchey along
Leonidoff Field against Catliolic
sec~nd. quarter
to give the with. Cotton
Nash
caught
- University.
Next .week the
Vikmg offense ,the ball on the DiDonato · behind the line of . Vikings- travel
to
Rhode Island .
Plattsburg 40 yardline .. Some scrimmage for a big loss. Paul
to take on Providence.
fine tunning by Dick· Hasbrouck
·
and Chuck Browne brought the
s -•. ·
1
. · ·
0
f
·t!~dt°n':~
-~~i~
1
?:!t!bum~r. .
occer
eam
·.
f -
Hasbrouck went in for the first-
- · ' · · :
·
-
·
~t:~~w:ick°fd,tl~:
~~:~'. a?t~:
To-
Slow·Start
attempt. The score was
7-0
in
Javor of the Vikings.
By J.T •
. The Vikings did not hold the
lead
long
as_ ,a Plattsburg
.The Soccer team started off its
· This is the first, time that
.· interception gave them the ball
season,
last
Wednesday.
Sacred Heart -has beaten Marist
deep in Viking territory. Peter
afternoon against Sacred. Heart
in five years. According to·
DiD9nato, the quarterback for. University,
in Bridgeport,
Muist
coach
Dr. Howard
Plattsburg, hit'.Chris Cringle with
Connecticut.
Goldman:
"We
knew
that
a 30 yard pass
for-
a
_touchdown
The Mi:Guigan brothers, .Pat
McGuigan was on the team and
half way through 'the second
.
and
Joe,
.
scored
five times we've played against him before,
q1farter .. The PAT was good as - between
them~ ·Jo lead the
but he never exploded on us like
Plattsburg . .tied~the score at
7
alt
Sacred/Heart
University • soccer
-
t.his before. It was a clpse .game
..
Quarterback-
Jim
.Willcens releases _P~.
in
_dire~on
• of Chuck
· ·After re¢eiyiiig\the kickoffth¢
foam
-;to

54 · ·
victory/ over . · only
as
far as he · was involved.
Browne
ear1y;in-4th
qrt. of Vikings--Plattsbu:rg
gim.ie
Sa~ . : •· ..
.
, Yikiriif::offer,iie·. m_oved _.down MarisL:::,'.
::.,i;i>.-:;:.._"::::·>·:·,
,:i»'.'-·'
-,,,.,We/missed
:at/least
·:eight
:times:
. _-:
·
•·:-,
...
-,
;,,
·>> .··, ,, .. _
_,.,,·,
·•c:./.',,
.;>,
<-<<·
,'.,,'t->·;c·:: . ··
··•
tf
i~til&i~~·ffi
·.••.·~i;:r~t~~ftti!~
-~£r:t:~·=:~'.f
Jli•?:
·•
···•.··,;:tJ·tc1u1i'iitrs;·:,,ose.·
Dick· Hasbfoi.ick moved the ball
almost. ,\V1thout hinderance as he Marist was Pete Walaszek, an
'
, --. · . _· . .•
.
, · ·,-• ·
on the groundtc{the Plattsburg. literally dribble~· thrc,ug~ four .· outsi~e left, on a cross.by Tom
-.':l·n·· ..
:··.···_.'
....
·-.:.,··.·.o
..
·.·.·p···•:
....
:.'.e·
..
·
...
·'
..
,·.•·.·n·.
·····.·,,-···.··r·.·.···
..
J,
7y a rdliriif;
.:.
From,'-there
. dt:fenders eachtime to
..
$oot at. Rabbitt. Walaszek_then re~rned
• , Hasbrouck
went_ in
for:
his · w1lL ••Three_ goab
we.re 'on
the favor l>y cro~smg Rabbitt for
· .· ,second touchdown of the' day, · bre*w~rs and' one was on a set . th~ secot!d Manst sc~:)l;e.
In :the
By-Bob Mayerhofer
··o•Reilly. again ,made the ·Pat as
shot_;
:
: -
.
._
..

third penod John Scully scor~d
the -Vikings took a 14 to
7.
lead
.
HIS
brother; Pat; opened the
on a cross by_ Walaszek and
tn
..
1,.ast Saturday
Southern;
failed ~to finish the race as a
atthe half.
game in the first period by
the• fourth penod Gary Westfall Connecticut
University
and · result of the heat and high
In the second half -neither· scoring on a bi:eak away.
sc?red on a 35 foot .shot that
Kings College from New York
humidity;
-..
.
·
sailed over the head of Sacred
traveled. here to_ ineet Marist in · · Bot? Mayerhofer finished 8th
. Heart goalie Mike Murray_ and
its first meet. of the year. The
in _the race and Don Gillaspie (a
. 'into th~ upper left corner ofthe
harriers lost to· both schools;
freshman)
come
,in,
next for
goal.
--
. ·.
'
.
· •
falling. to SCS 15-50 and to
-M arist, finishing -·l 2tll, , Good
.,In
their, home opener last. •Kings17-4-4. ':
.
performances·wer~ turned in by
Defenseman
·Jim
Heilman comes up
wi~
big
play
in
front
of
goal _
mouth. Action
occurred
in Foxes Joss to
1~
of
Manhattan,
SaL
Saturday afternoon· Marist was
The :o:utstaniling performance
Greg Hp\\re .in ltjs:4th }'ear
foe

-
defeated by ~ahhattan College, of the day,was, turned in by Bob
Marist,· an4 Joe Nolan
as
they
6-3;
Heavens of SCS -as he covered
both: managed to improve their
.
·-1ack Shrimpt proved to be too · our ..,4.9 mil~ gptirse in 25:24 to
times by over a minute despite
· .·much ..-for Marist goalie Pat
break
the· pr~vious·
record
-.theverypoorweather.-:
:
Parcells.·as .he scored'four
of .(26:41~. set lastyeat.by
Jqhn
·_-Joe_;··putHng
,ouf·an
· Manhattan's six goals. ·
·
"•
· Flemmmg of Paterson State.
exceptional
, effprt;'' collapsed
· High scorer. for Marist was
The meet was one of the larger
after the firiish was taken to St.
Pete Walaszek with tw_o goals. races held here:a~ Marist a~ some_ Francis lfospitii and_tr~ated.for
Don Sobenko got one when .he · 35 runners competed m 92 ·:·heat prostration;
Mark 'De~
CONTINUED. ON
7
degree ·hea_t. Some 10 runners
CONTINUEI>ON

Kic~g specialist Bill O'Reilly
Booms
2~
quarter punt
deep
into
enemy
territoty ••
,
.