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Part of The Circle: Vol. 7 No. 8 - October 29, 1970

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··
VOLUME 7, NUMBER

MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEE~IE, N_EW
YORK 12601
.
_QCTOJ!ER
~9, i970
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,
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Student
Representation:
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A
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Myth
Of Community






































































































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2
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111E CIRCLE
ATTITUDES:
OUTRAGEOUS
.....
··
Grt>O'Ve
ByB~lO'~eilly'
'·;
··.·
.. _._
-~:Tube
..
One of the strangest exp,fri:.mces one cari encounter is havirig a
cir
·
·
at Marist. Sunday evening
I
drove back >to the bampus
··and;.
- By Rich
Bala
...
immediately started looking for a parking space. After two hours·I
· The
Marist
community ~is
finally found· one. Suddenly,
.as
I emerged from my car,
a
strange
-about
to experience orie of. the ·
young man wearing an army jacket and carrying a bazooka leaped
most satirical, controversial and.
-
out from behind a tree.
0
Ah ha, you can't park there,''.
he
said.
.
experimental
events
·
that
·
has
'
"Why not,"
I
replied
......
-
.
· .
.
·:_
_
-_
·
· .
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·
ever
been
held' on campus:
"Because that space is reserved for the lady who dishes out french-
Between Tuesday, November
3
fries in the cafeteria," he cou·ntered.
·
·
and
-
Sunday,
•November
.8,-
"Well how about that space over there," l shot back.
.

. ·
-
.. Groove.
Tube," . a
.
satirical,
"Nope, that one's reserved for the guy who cleans up the
closed-circuit television review
boathouse. And you can't park where that guy
is
pulUng out either,"
· of television, will be presented.
he said.
.
.
"Groove Tube'' is the brain
"Why not," I asked.
·
child of two Bard graduates,
"Because that spot
is
reserved for the townies who come to the
·Kenneth
·Shapiro
and Lane
campus late at night to plunder and break things up;'' he explained.
s
a rso h n, who· have
been
"Oh, well
is
there any place where the people who attend this
tinkering
underground
with
college can park," I questioned. ·
-
,
video shows for three years: In
:
·
OCTOBER
29-.}970
CALENDAR
PE BYBNtS
E6i
tRfi
wfiEK
Of. Sd_V
2
-8
1910
M~ridaj; Nov.'2·
>
.
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,_.
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·•·,, 8:00P.M;_~;
'.;
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Lecture
&
Slides. "Visual PollutioriJJby'John Stram, Theater
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Tuesday; Nov.
3
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3_:.~_-_o
P.M._
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Soccer - Hu~t~r
~
Home
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>_
3:30
P.M.
--<-.
·
·,.-
Cross-Cou.nt_ry
:
Hun~~r ~Jlome
,
> '.
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:'
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~Wednesday;
No.v,;4
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7:30P.M:
· -
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·
Lecture .. "Love in the Seventies" by James M.
-McMahon,
Ph;D.
Room 249,QlmpusCenter
·
"
8:30
P~M.
C.U.B, Beer and Chips Night, Rathskeller, Campus Center
·Thursday, Nov. 5. •
_
_.
_
..
. l0c2
. -_
Recruiting, U.S. Marines Officer Selection' Team, Gallery Lounge,
C~mpus Center.
·
·
·-
8:00
P.M.-
"Uh; uh, wait a minute, I know there is somewhere. Let's see, oh
this, their- latest project, these
yeah, they just made a new parking lot behind Sheahan for you
two
cynics
attack the two
slobs. Yeah, park down there. Your car will be okay. Just
,watch
out
aspects of television that today·
Lecture. "Food
for the Copperheads as you walk through the woods to your room.
strips'
it
of its
staggering
Center
Additives~'.
-
.
by Lois. Merer, Theater, Campus
Is there anything else," he asked.
potential
and
leaves it an
.
"No, thanks anyway, I replied.
.
impotent
and
insignificant
As soon as I had parked my car l headed for one of the most
media: the commercials, 'that
interesting spots on campus: the library. As I approached the
establish
and
-
represent
the
librarian's desk I noticed a funny little man sleeping behind it,
A m e r
i
c
a. n
h a b.i
t
·
o f
"Excuse me sir,"
I said.
·
.
stand a rd iza tion,
and
the
"They're all overdue, all of them," he mumbled.
abundance of its worn television ;
"Uh, excuse me," I said louder:
conventions.
"Huh, oh, well what do you want," he said.
For instance, have you- ever
"Well, I was wondering if you might have some of these books I'm
noticed .the terrifyingly empty_
looking for,"
I
questioned.
.
expertise-full_
of their own,
"Books, Books, that's all anyone ever wants from me-is books," he
w e
11-
h o n e d'
·
t e c, h
·n
i cal
shrieked. "I hate books."
j a rgon~employed by television
"Are you okay?"
I asked.
sports commentators,
so. that
"I'm okay. What did you want again, oh yeah books, well wejust
-
they can spuriously-explain the
got a new one in today by Salvatore Piazza; it's called "The.\Vorks of· very
'thing
we are seeing with our
Chairman Sal." It's one of those books where you color by numbers.,
own
eyes?
·
.. Gropve· Tube"
You know."
·
·
·
.
·
·
handles situations like these and
"Well, that wasn't exactly what
I was looking for.
.I
need
most of the others one can
somethingdealingwithmodernhistory."
·
encounter
while
traveling
"Well we.have the
life
and history of Mother Cabrini."
through
television's
wasteland
"No, I need something a little more current. What magazines do
with such· biting wit
.and
clear
Friday, Nov. 6_.
.
8:30P.M.
.
Coffee House, Room 249, Campus Center
·
Saturday, Nov;
7
Cross-Country - NAIA Championships
_
._
.
2:00 P.M.
·
Soccer - Dowling - A,way
2:00 P:M.
_
Football - Pace - Away.:
·
Fall Crew - Class Day Race - Home
.
.
·
8:00
P.M.
:
.
,
'
. ·
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Senior Glass Mixer, Dining Hall
·
_
_
·
8:30 p.m ..
Coffee House; Room 249; Campus Center
·
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__
Sat.
&
Sun:, Nov. 7
&
8
·
Sailing -
.
Monotype Champs - Navy Qua-drangulai
Freshman Championships - Kings
Pt;
·
Sunday, Nov.
8
8
P.M.
,Film. "Marat/Sade" Theater
8:30 P.M.
-
Coffee House, Room 249, Campus Center
.
' *****
- Albany:
you have on.microfilm."
insight that one has_ no other
"Well, we have all the back issues of Monthly Missalettc
-
from
choice than to laugh out in
ART EXHIBIT
1932 and last year's editions of Secret Romance."
.
mockery
of that
part
of
_
"Now
and Then"
by area artists of. Dutchess County Art
"No that's no help, would. you mind
if I glanced at the card
American life that. has become
Association, Gallery Lounge, Campus Center. Oct. .18-Nov. 15.
catalog."
.
so dear and so
.gratifying
.to
its
_.
"The card what'?''
staunch supporters,
·
"The
Card Catalog, you know where the na!Ties of the books are
If Spiro Agnew were to see
Untitled 102
all written down."
.
·
·
''Groove Tube,''· he· no doubt
"I have the names of the books written on the back of my tie.
would accuse it of peing another
.
Maybe life is all wrong. M~ybe p~ople.areil;t supposed to be free,
-
by Dennis Alwon
·
Here, look."
_

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attempt on the part of immature
·
t? be humai:i
'and
mo~t of all be the~selves. I ca_n ta~ of all the
,
;
,
''.That's :very· nic~;_but ~n•~;th~_library_ d1v1ded ';1P ~11to
~~ct19_~~?_"
.
upstarts, wlto
,
gain
..
pleasure
,by
.. ~opouts of l~fe that exists but then agam maybe everythmg one does
. ·
·-«ohy~s~
that ~helf over-ther~ 1s·t~e _H1stoxy.section·;-,that_one
_t~e.!e;
>
cla
wHtii
-'a-t
· ,
0 ·
n·e
:.rof
·:}he:··
1s· a copout. Did · anyone ·ever. think~.or. the... question "ls there
..
a
.
the English section, the book Im s1ttmg on 1s th, psychology section,
foundations
that.:_ this
...
nahon's
reality'?" For everything
,we
can ever. do:can-.be. i~terpre(ed. ~s
a:
·
t?
the left
is
the ~lassie comic ~oo~ section a!1d to the-r!ght is ~he
society is builtori:
H_e
w-ould be. copout: so·what
is right and what is wrong·m·aybe the-next question·
nsque book section. Downstairs
_
1s the Mano logy section which
right,
though he would be more
to ask.
.. ..
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numbers 32,000 volumes, 42,000 if you count the dust."·
accurate·
if
he· des·cribed· its
· ..
But to nie something maybe right arid to.another it inay be wrong.·
·
"Well, lgues you can't help me then."
•creators
as. being
·two
cynics,
.Who:'.1s
right,
-
me or you? eerhaps there is no answers, perhap~
"Hey, weren't you the guy that took my wallet last year ...
"
.
criticizing, making fun
.at,
arid
.
nothing exists as it is or should be.
..
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.
·_ _
--
----•
"__
.
·
stripping bare all. the
,.bullshit
·
So whatdoes all this mean? Well it's hard to say but I can say this:
·
television throwns off its scrreri
I
have in me. a true feeling to. do righfto iny own consci_ence. My
·
Student.
Acad ..
Comm.
by George Roarty
._
At the faculty colloquium last
requirement in the curriculum.
Friday,
-
the faculty discussed the
The reasons for not· requiring it
.
departmental reports coriceming
were
presented
basically as
their
respective:
.major
field
follows:
1)
By requiring One
requirements
and
also the. would
be going against the
··
p~ysical education requirement.
philosophy underlying the riew
There was no opposition to any
curriculum
proposal which is
of the major field requirements
that
no. specific
academic
.
and
the
discussion
centered
discipline be taken by a student
-
mainly
.
on· the· question pf
to insure that he or she
receive
a
whether
or not
physical-
"liberai
arts education."
2)
.
e du cat i o n sh o u Id· b e a Certain areas of the curriculum
Andy's
Gang
to conceal its hollow core.
··
_·_
.
conscience
··reveals
to me that what
is
right is that which can do no
·
-
.
' ..
harm td ariyone.
'.Well
tell me then what_ i~ wrong.with a bunch of
risk. the·
-possibility.
of being. ·beautiful people.getting together
with
_beautiful
intentions to have a
ignored· by certain students and
beautiful time exposing
a
beautiful feeling in
_
them
--
which was
physical education sfl,ciuld not be
cheated· by
:lbeautiful
happening in the lobby
·or
Champagnat Hall
an exception;
3)'
'.There,
is·
no
on a beautifutSurtday morning at one o'clock. People just happened
__
_
justification_·
fo.r; requiring
all over the place:People who niay have never before found a way of
...
physical educatio_n. since
··
most ·. expressing t~emselves clearly have_done so..
·
s t u d e n
t 8
/
h ave
<
already
-
They exposed themselves because there was no interference with:
experienced, it during their high · anything. Everyone was concerned about what was happening: and
sch
O
61
yeai:s;
.not
safing
_
they let it happen. Dancing; singing, joking, drinking~- OOPS that did
·
anything of their elementary arid

it! There.lies the core. to
·an
the social injustices. Note: (My purpose
·
-
junior high school days:. This
here
is
·Iiotto
mock d~ing.)'.,:.
·
·
.
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_-_
_
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.
""
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:
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..
statement
cannot be niade_ in
-
Yes,
·someone
amongst our beautiful brothers and sisters (for we
-
some other
·areas
of.the college
·all
were ~rothers andsiste~s at \hose ~oinents)
~a~
a ~eer can arid.:_
curriculum.
4) Thf
physical
·
thats agilmsU_h.e mles. Alright~
11
admit
_tha_t
dnilkmg
m
thelob_by
.
:
_education
department,
being
may b~ consid_ered a wr_ong if you consider a wrong as, being
.
freed
froni
_
their~obligation
·
o_f "something t!tat
15
done a~amst the ~des.
-_-
•·_
_
. ,
_ ·
. _.
.
_ ....
having to pi:ovide courses- for all -.·
·
Whatever: the matter is of the n~ht and wrong of dnnkmg m the,
students,
coul.d. expand dts·:,_lobby-that 1S,J1?tof my purpose either. OK. The beer ~as put away.·
0
fferings,
providing·
more
and all
o!
us wished_ to.cqntinue our spontaneous_ sensations b~t this
.
electives and possibly
a
major.

was forbid.den of us. w__e
were tol~ that a lob~y
JS
not a place for a
·.
.
-
_
_ _
by Andre Albert
.
The
reasons
for requiring
party.
-

,
·
.
-_-.
_
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·
·

physical
education
are the
..
But "'.ho, can come ~Y ,and sa)'. t~at a lobby is not th~ place to let
This week's column
is
not on a person.
It is on
·a
place. It is one of
-
following:
1)
physical education
life
fulfillltself. We didn t plan it, it happened. It wasn t as though
the focal points of Jhe Marist community. Everyone has at one time
-
is
a unique· 1earning experience; - we ~ot
·
toge th er .
tq
,break
a: rule
..
Ho~ can anyone ~e_stroy
_
or another passed through here.
It is at its busiest before and after that
is,
it
is
more concerned with
·
hap~mess-yes happiness
..
1 ~xpenenced
JOY
m
everyone elses
JOY
c!nd
·c1a:s~es
but at
its
best around midnight. I am talking about the lobby.
the physical development of the
th ats_ th e s~cret_ of ~appmess. How can ~omeone tell us not to send
..
Champagnat Hall has the privilege of containing the campus center
-
b o d y
r. a t her
than
the
-
..
beautiful VJbrahon am_ongs~ e;ch ot~er. How can anyone destro7
.
and so, sooner
-
or later, everyone must 'iisit it. Those who do so intellectual. 2) Along with
-
this
the orily h<?pe for h?mamty. Tha~ is _to say - destroy someon~ s
usually pass through the lobby. This makes it one of the most fact,
physical
education
is . beauty, feelings, happiness, commu~ication and warm th • - and you
11
traveled places on campus and one of the most interesting.
neither a major field nor is it·
deSlroy th at_per~<?n
s_Iove. _
.
.
The lobby
is
also one of the most used places around. You can go related to any other ar~s
~ the
_
~he <?nly JUStificatton for th~
0
!1tlawmg of our be~g was a matter

there to meet someone or to meet anyone.You can go there to talk
·school.
By
-
not. making it a . of spatial and tem~oral contmu1tr, Someone outside supposedly
to people or to just sit. Loitering there is legal and no one bothers
requirement,
-
a student would
threw a be!r botJle mto somebody_ s ro9m
(I
learned l~ter that this
you. On Thursday nights you cari watch the parade returning from not likely engage
in
the unique
~meb<?dY Just kicked th~ beer against the wall) and t~s was related
Sal's and the Derby. Frisbee flying is.the big lobby sport
if
you can activities associated with_ phys.
unmediately _to th e beer m the lobby. There a~ two pomts I have to
find anyone energetic enough to play. Yes, the lobby can be a very
ed.
3) A variety of· approaches
say here. First th e person ~ho t~ew or kicked. the bo~tle_ w~s
interesting place to hang out in.
.
_
should
be developed
which-
probably not amongst our existence, (and therefore no contiguity
15
I enjoy lobbying (the activity of sitting in the lobby observing could be utilized as fulfilling the
reasonable). Seco nd , the fact t~at so~eoi:i,e shot a ~n a! a coed
what
is
happening around you) immensely It brings me into contact
requirement. 4). To develop this
(w~o was a!'longst us) earlier t~ everung has no relationship to our
with many people I would otherwise m:.-.,r see. It has also become a of approaches,
the phys. ed.
eXJStence eith er. What
!
m~n to say - many so ~ll_ed wrongs can
common rendezvous point for just about everyone. If you have lost requirement
could be fulfilled
happen but you cannot Justifiably relate them as contiguous.
someone,just go to the lobby. Sooner or later, they'll show up.
by
those
participating
in
And I can't forget to mention how interesting the lobby
is
on a intra-murals and inter-collegiate
weekend like Homecoming. Watching the people struggle up the activities.
As facilities
are
stairs
and through_ the lobby while being just the slightest bit· expanded
other
approaches
intoxicated
is
funny to say the least. It often brings rewards. could be developed •.
Saturday night one girl from Leo almost got afreebottleofScotch
The
student
academic
from one friendly intoxicated alumni. His wife didn't appreciate it_ committee
believes that the
t!tough, and retrieved it.
.
.
_
phys. ed. requirement
should
So
if
you have nothing to do tonight
(this
bei,,g Thursday)
try
not
be required
·
for reasons
sitting in the lobby from about 12 til 2 and see who you meet. It's stated previously with however
fun!
·
one reservation. Most areas in
curriculum are well established
and developed.
Being well
established and developed they
can run the risk of possibly
being
ignored
by students
because they can easily change
their
approach
and poSSI'bly
revamp their department to cure
their deficiencies. However, the
phys.
ed. department leaves a lot
to be desired as
far
as equipment
and facilities go and
is
not well
established in our opinion at
Marist because of
this. Orily so
much can be done with what
they have. Presently we feel they
can of fer a few more activities
and change their approach
giving
students
a choice
in what
-
Cont. on 3


























































·'.OCTOBER.
29,
i'ino
·
.
.
.
•...
·,
TIIECIRCLE
I PAGEJ
'•CIRCLE
EDITORIALS
E'tectiotis
-~10
·,
..
Th~:
ti~-
ha~: ~m~' aga~
·.
for the . electicui·.
of
.~~ew" people ~o
-.-:-·
represerit'us
iidhe
halls of government. Time to cast a meaningless
·
·
ballot for or_ against those y,ho in representing vested interests will
..
·
·
attempt to represent the people. Although it•~ generally ineffective
·
.
·
in determining the course which the country takes there is no sense
·
·
·
in
giving up.on electoral.politics. At least we can
say
we fried.
·
-
David Lenefsky be elected to the State:. Senate.
Mr.
Rolison has
offered nothing. to warrant -re-election while Lenefsky represents
some progressive representation.
·
· ·
Talk To Us ·Not .At Us
··:
Go,ern·o'r
-
.
.
: /
I~
New York Sb!.te the gubernatorial race; has_ been between the
polit_ician
·
super-rich and the d_ignified super-rich. Neither candidate
..
'
On Thursday afternoon, November S, at 4:00 p.m.
in
Fireside
· Lounge, an informal forum-type information session will be held
betwee~ the
'editors
of THE CIRCLE and hopefully anyone with
-something
to say about the way the paper is operated.
_

offers any hope
·in
the reordering_ of American
.society.
Therefore,
-
:
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.
just _as
a
measure of saying "not, to the major parties we urge you to
·
vote for C:lifton DeBerry, Socialist Workers Party.
It seems that many people complain about THE CIRCLE without
.
letting their complaints be heard by someone who can do something
about them.
·
U.S
.. Senate
As you may have_ noted controversy has stemmed from our
statement of editorial policy (issue No. 3), to which Dr. Edward
O'Ke~fe and Mr. John Zebatto have replied so effectively. We are
certain that more people have opinions concerning our policy, and
we wish to discu~ these matters with them.
·
.
The .Senate
:race
offers a
·danger:
The distinct possibility that
.
James Buckley will represent New York State in the Senate. After
Charles Goodell's cheap, bullshit. political antics of Sunday night a
Buckley victory_seems da~gerously possible. We feel it nece~ry that
Richard Ottinger be elected, b1tsically because he is the least of three
_evils
.. Ottinger
is
no.t as progressive as he
.would
like people to
believe, but in a race where the Neanderthal approach to social
problems·of James Buckley
_exists
it is necessary that Ottinger go to
the Senate .
If there is a poor attendance by the community at this meeting,
we will assume that the character of those making the complaints is
.
as weak as their zeal
in
letting their voice be heard. Opinions of such
.
!)eople are not
-~orth_
hearing.
_
O.K~ Corral Revisited
.
21th
-c.o.
Marth\ M~Kneally
·
has
been labeled by the Movement for a New.
. Item: Member of crew team shot at while running on Water Works
Road. Weapon: BB gun.
.
Item: Car windshield broken while cat was parked behind Campus
Center. Weapon:
BB
gun.
_
Congress as one of. the most important men to beat. We agree.
_
McKneally's only· cla1m to fame
is
two years of pro-war verbiage and
Item: Co-ed shot at while walking
in
front of Champagnat Hall.
Weapon:
BB
gun.
.
a term as _American Legion Commander; neither of which are
-
cteden.tials for·sanity in domestic and foreign policy.
.
The three different incidents may or may not be related.
John Dow spoke against Viet Nam a long time ago. He is a man
who has exhibited foresight and compassion in dealing with
America's problems. He was defeated by McKneally two years ago
.
and_ should now be returr).ed to Congress.
Regardless of this, the fact is that the aggressors in all the instances
have done something very sick that has caused someone else a lot of
grief.
·
State:
·Senator
With a firm belief
in
reform at the grassroots level we f~ ' that
The person or persons responsible have either little control over
themselves or little concern for the well-being of others. The
CIRCLE hopes that anyone involved with such people can help
them, in order to prevent them from doing again such an act of
injustice.
·
letters·
To
.
Th'e
Editors
·•·•s;uld'tn'an··?'o',,.·,·
..
st-d'·•nts·•
•:~1ie:!:i:ii~eih~:b~~!ir··i~~t·

,
deserve· the authority. to utilize
·.
,.Ari
open letter to the students
·the,
freedom
.
of_ choice arid
··
of Marist College
·
_
..
·
, .
maturity they expound upon· so
..
During
,the
last
.week
of· sanctimoniously
·and
so
September
.and.the.first
week of
continually. You have not yet
·.
·october
this: year,
faculty·
learned to "put you_i::.
rrioney
evaluation forms were mailed to
where your IDOl!th is."
473 students with a.return date
For the C.F.C.
·of
October 9. As of October
21
·
.
Howard Goldman
45forms had been returned.
:
<
These
·
forms are concerned
with the student evaluation of
the faculty member.relative
to
.
_Fa-cts
On
Marijuana_.
also
perceived th_emselves as
sexually, expert more often than
non-users.· They
.
suggest that.
chronic
smokers
were
unquestionably
more likely to
try other drugs; however they
found no addictions in the group
studied.
They
suggest that
curiosity rather than a_"casual"
--1-ink;
induces
smokers .. to.
experiment with other
·
drugs.
T.he- suggestion
that chronic
marijuana
-
use
leads
to
alcoholism
is
fallacious
according to Hochman and
Brill.
Of the
2%
of the
·
2400
studied
found to be alcohol abusers,
70% were chronic marijuana
users. They suggest that for
t
h
e
_s
e
i
n
d
iv
i
d
u a
l
s , t
h
e
psychological reasons leading to
alcohol abuse were the same for
marijuana.
Sincerely,
T .S. Sullivan
._
his promotion and/or tenure.
._
The Committ~e on. Faculty
Soc1·a1
Psycholo•y
.

Development taking· students at To the editor
~
·
their word
·
assumed they were
Dear Sir:
:..
·
Students,
·
·vita
11 y interested
in the
.·In
a recent issue of the Circle,
-
On Oct. 2, the members of the
.
improvement of teaching and of
in a. letter to the
.editor,
Dr.· Social
Psychology.
class
··.having
a voice
_in
faculty
·
Franz
Wink for
g'av~ his
attempted
to
procure
ISO
. ·.
promotions.
This assumption
conclusions based on his studies
signatures
on a petition
_
.
was made on the basis of present
·
of marijuana use. I feel obliged
requesting that Marist officials
student· desires· for more equai
.
to write
.
this letter· as I have
place lights on the Greystone
participation as
_well
as a letter
recently
read· sorrie other
building to beautify the campus
fo the faculty and the C.F.D
..
at
e
vi d enc e s
p
e c if i ca II y
at night. This probe was of an ·
the
close
of last
semester
contradicting the• thesis of Dr.
experimental nature and was not
.. ·
indicating student desire and
...
Winkler, point for point. The
originally
designed· to be a
"right" to l?e equal members of article was a letter to the editor
sounding
board
of campus
C.F.D. along with faculty.
of Modern· Medicine magazine.
opinion. The
.
context of this
When one sends out
a
survey The authors were Ors.Hochman
survey
.demanded
that the
or a form to t.>e filled
·
in
and
arid
_
Brill of the ~rug resear.ch individual be unaware of his role
returned
the usual return js center
of UCLA. The three
as subject when asked to sign the
generally around
35
per cent.
·
propositions
given
1..,~
nr.
n<>titinn.
It
was our purpose to
-Even
soap survey~ get
·better
Winkler in his letter a
.
..
_
the effects of status
returns on their evaluations.than
two others given in MM June
15,
(faculty
·
names)
an_d size
we
are getting
from
our-
though not
in
the Circle, were
(number of signatures) alrea_dy
.. concerned"
citizens here at
refuted by these researchers.
on the petition the person was
Marist. Y
011
say you don't like
Denying that use causes loss of
asked to sign.
the. form ~- design a better one.
motivation and
·a
-
decrease. in
We expected that, as status
What is most dismaying is that
·
·
activity,
the two
'researchers
and size increased, the number
·
students still press for. equal. indicate that
.
those studied who
of persons willing to sign the
voting rights and an equal say in used
marijuana were
.
slightly
petition
would. also increase.
governing the college. Here is a higher
in grade index than
·
Th is hypothesis
was not
chance for each student to be
non:-11sers. In addition, twice as
.
confirmed. However, since 142
heard in perhaps the most-vital
many
users
as
.non-users
of a possible
ISO
signatures were
a r e a
·
i
n c o
11
e g e -
the
intended to go
·
on to graduate
obtained,
.
we concluded that a
teaching-leanµng
process and
school. They said that they met
definite interest was expressed
they do nothing.
.
dozens of students who were
for
lights
to be placed on
The work of the CFD, the
highly
motivated
in various
G reystone.
We have
thus
secretaries
and the students
endeavors. As far as athletic
addressed letters to appropriate
involved
in designing
and
prowe~s
is
concerned,
they
college
officials relating our
sending these forms out was found that 20% of the· athletes
results
and
requesting
that
quite extensive, and somewhat
at UCLA use marijuana without
outside
lights be placed on
expensive. That time could have an appreciable effect on her. Greystone
to
enhance
the
been utilized for other projects
record. With regards to sex, tq
beauty of the campus at night.
hadwebutknowntheresults.
thecontrarytowhatDr.Winkler
Our
thanks
to all who
To
want
authority
is
·
postulates; instead of impotence
·
participated in this endeavor.
understandable but it
is
first
and frigidity, users of marijuana
Sincerely,
necessary
to demonstrate
had sexual intercourse earlier
·
The Social Psych.
respo_nsibility.
When Marist and with more partners. They
Class
Doctoral
Fellowships
To the Editor:
We are pleased to announce
three
Doctoral
Fellowship
p r o·g rams
for
t he
y e a r
1971-1972:
Doctoral
Fellowships
for l) American
Indian'
·Stud_ents,
-2}-Black-.
Students,
and
3) Mexican
·American
and Puerto Rican
Students.
.Eac;h
Fellowship
program
will
support full-time
graduate study for up to five
years
if thyFellow
maintains
satisfactory progress toward the
Ph.D.
-
.
Applicants must act quickly to
meet deadlines. Instructions and
application forms can be secured
from· The Ford Foundation, 320
East ~3rd Street, New York,
.
New York 10017. The applicant
is
responsible for arranging to
take
the
Graduate
Record
E x am in a ti o n
,
i nit i a t ing
admission into graduate school,
arranging for recommendations,
and forwarding certified copies
of his undergraduate transcript.
The applicant's file must be
.complete.by.January
31, 1971.
We would,
therefore,
appreciate
your
announcing
these_
programs
in your
~
newspaper
so that we may
inform
the seniors of. your
..
institution
..
about the available
·
fellowships and encourage those
who are eligible to apply.
If
you
need
additional
·
information,
we
will
be glad to
1
provide It.
.
Mark C. Ebersole
Program Advisor
·
The Greatest
Show On Earth
By Sal Piazza
The circus opened once again.
.
only to
.
watch." He was
ill
at
It
is
the longest running circus
ease.
His nervousness
was
known
·
to Western Man. The
·
evident despite the mask he
most illustrious clowns come
wore.
He couldn't
be sure;
from all over to perform. The
knowing
children one could
tight-rope
walker
balances
never be sure. Don't eat too
herself and walks with the agility
many peanuts; not so much
and grace of a pririia ballerina.
cotton candy.
The jugglers practice their art;
Before the show began the
throwing lives instead of objects.
owner of the circus walked in.
-
The man at the door took our
You could tell he owned the
tickets after we told
him
we paid
·show.
He was confident and the
our dues. We entered boldly . presence of the children didn't
because as children we feared
bother
him.
He found a seat in
.
nothing. Some of the performers
the back and quietly watched .
were
aghast: why
·
did these
"A sucker is born every minute"
children come? How mariy ye.us
was
reflected
from
his
had they practiced? Did they
self-assured countenance.
want to join the circus? We
A drum roll. The children
_ have performed
in-
some of the
quieted
down and anxiously
greatest circuses of the world.
watched. The lights went down.
We've earned our ratings at the
A nervous hush fell over the
·
greatest shows on earth. And
crowd, not one of fear but of
these apprentice showmen want
anticipation. The man at the
to join us!
door stepped to the center of
The man at the door held out
the
ring. And in a slightly
a fatherly hand and defended us.
excited
voice:
"At
th•is
·
.. They don't want to perform
:
colloquium we will discuss .... "
From 2
activities they wish to develop
more fully. Such a program
should
be utilized
and if
necessary
requited until the
phys.
ed.
department
could
generate a self sustaining elective
program. We view this revised
program
as a minima) and
temporary
change. We also
believe that such a program
·should
be evaluated each year.
We fee) nothing should be done
to jeopardize the existence of
the department and that is why
we realize that the program
might have to be required for a
couple of years in order for
them
to adjust
to such a
1
program.
....
..






















































I
1 ·
I
I
....
..

. PAGE4 ,
'DIE
CIRCLE
OCTOBER
29, 1970
VIKINGS
BAPTIZE
C:ATHOLIC
U.
'25·6

r
, •
,.
,

-
,.

RAIN-SOAKED
TERRAIN
TAMES
GAME-
·lilken·s,
··
Gestal
Spark
Squad
.
.;
.
.
.
.
..
·•--Winning
Skein
At 5~0
-
by Kevin 'p; Don~-~lly
: The Vikings retur,ned home
extra point giving the Vikings ·a.
last. Saturday after three weeks
commanding 19 to 0 lead as the
on·· the . road
and
defeated
fourth quarter began. . . ·
Catholic University by a score of · The Vikings kept rolling along
25-'6 in front of a :Homecoming ·in the
fo_urth quarter when
crowd of 2,000. The Vikings Wilkens hit Bill Paccione with a
have· now won five games in

40 yard touchdown pass.to put·
row without
a defeat, while
the game out of reach. _J~hn
Catholic
University's
season
Yacoboskimissed the conversion
mark slipped
to
2-3.
attempt. • With the Vikings on
. Field conditions did not seem top by
a
25 to 0 score, Catholic
. to ...
bother the-, Vikings as they · University began to move. Rich
were never in a·ny serious trouble
La ma n.t a g n e,
the · C. U.
throughout
the, game. The
quarterback,
started
them
defensive unit had another fine
mo~ing. A. pa~s. interference call •
day allowing c.U. to gain less agamst_ the_ Vikm~s. brough:t the
than 100 yards. The offensive ·· ball deep mto Vikmg temtor~.
unit continued where it left off . From
there_ Lamantagne. hit.
against Iona. Jim Wilkens' two
Kenneth
Digs for 15 yards
touchdown
passes and one
before he was. t_a~en out of
to·uchdown
run sparked the · ~ounds on t~e Vik_mg 12 yar~
offensive unit of the Vikings.
lme .. Dan D Agost~o t~ok it
· The scoring started in the first · !rom there by powermg hts way .
quarter. After an exchange of
m for; the .touchdown. _The
punts
the Vikings began to
conversion a~tempt was missed
move. Hasbrouch .and Rowinski
a~d the g~~e came to a close
brought
the - ball deep _into with the Vik':11~s
on top
25-:6·.
Catholic'
University territory ...
Murray Milligan, the Vikmgs
From the 20 yard line Wilkens· top runner, was u~able to play
spotted .. Chuck Browne open
last Saturday. He will _re.turn thIS
over the middle and hit him for
Saturday when the Vik_mgs take
the first Viking touchdown of
O
n a powe~ful ~lbany
St_ate
the day. Bill O'Reilly missed the
club. Game time will be at 2.00
extra point as the Vikings took
p.m.
an
.early 6-0 iead; The first half·
turried into a defensive battle as
neither club was able
to
get on.
the
scoreboai-cl
_again. The
~Vikings
.came: close
in
the second -·,.
quarter.,.Forcedt,to
punt from ..
. their end zone;· .. C.U. gave the
Vikings the ball on their own 35
yard . line. The .Viking offense
moved down. t<>l
~.U.'s
8
yard
line where their drive failed. A
field .goal . attempt by . O'Reilly
was barely wide as the_ second
quarter· came to a close.
. The
Vikings
showed how
devastating·· they' ~uld be early
in the third quarter; Henry Blum
started · things
by
blocking a
Cathplic UnivetsiJy punt d_eep in
Catholic·
University territory;
From the 17 .yard line Wilkens
rolled to the rigl\f"and went in
for the score behind the block of
Browne.
The
two
point
conversion
was>: missed. The
score', 12-0 in favor of the
•Vikings. .
··.
Captain Linebacker and All-American Candidate DEAN GESTAL comes up with a big play against
'
'
.
.
'
Catholic
U.,
as Kevin Dwyer (No,
33)
moves in to help,out.
.
.
, .
·
Harriers
D.ef
eat Terriers
-~
\
.
Lose
To Others
The
Cross-country
team·
defeated
St. Francis (N.Y.)
byJ.T.
15-50,
Saturday afternoon after
losing to a host of other schools
on Wednesday and ·saturday.
On: Wednesday, the._Harriers
travelled. to. 'Nyack,. New York,
where they;,were '.scheduled. to
• race Nyack •Missionary-·College.
· They _were'defeated by-Nyack as
· well as Barrington College, a last
minute entry. Nyack won by •a
19-41 score and Barrington by a
23~37
score. Marist's .two top
scorers
were Freshmen Don
Gillaspie who finished 'fourth
with a time of
.t.
1:52
and senior
Captain
Bob
Mayerhoffer
(seventh place in 28:39).
.
The ·Harriers. then travelled to
the very tough Van Cortlandt-
Park course in the Bronx.
It was
·here that . they competed_
in
a
·quadrangular meet with Farleigh
Dickinson,·
Scranton and . St ..
. Fra1_1cis (N.Y.). Marist lost to_
F.D.U.,. 19-36, and Scranto~, ·
20-39, but defeated St. Francts
(N.Y.) 15-50. _Bob Mayerhoffer
was the highest man to place
overall, seventh, with a time of
29:49. Other scorers were Don
Gillaspie (ninth, 30:30), senior-
Mark
Des Jardiils (eleventh,
32:11),
junior
Joe
Nol~n
prepare
themselves
for the·
C .
K.
C. C . co n fer e n·c e
championship
this Saturday
afternoon
at King's College
(Briarcliff Manor, New York).
ANNOUNCEMENTS
In the Coffee House
this Friday
-Robin Walsh-
opens 8:30 p.m .
Admission: $.25 .
Appearing Saturday:
Sandy Levy
* * * * *
Marist College Glee Club
Rehearsals-Tues. and Thurs.
9-10
P.M.
Room
268
Champagnat
New members welcomed
*****
Children's Theater
Dance Classes
Wednesday 10 p.m.
Saturday mornings
In the Camp4s Th.eater
All Welcome ·
Late in the third quarter C.U.
was again
forced
to punt.
co.:captain Dean Gestal took the_
punt on his: ovvn
25 yard line
and· tip-toed down the sideline
behind_ the wall:set up ·by. the
Viking
return/unit
for the
touchdown. O'Reilly added the
MIKE
ERTS brings
down Cardinal runner in Satwday's victory over
Catholic·u.
·
·
, (sixteenth,
36:45) and , senior
Steve
Kopki
(seventeenth,
38:35).
.
•·• •··•·*··
November2 -
Mr.
John Stram on
"Visual Pollution"
.
8: 30 Theatre
.
,.·'
.
,··.-,.-
- Against
Newark St. on
Saturday,
in
game
lost by
FoxesJ-0, FRANK GERBES
dribbles~
the
~
u
Jiln
Heilman
and Pde Waluzek -nde tOW21d
the
action.
.
The
Harriers
now
must
Booters
Split
By
1-0-Scores
by
J.T.
The Soccer team completed a
w~ek of both satisfaction and
frustration
last week as they
posted both victory and defeat
by identical 1-0 scores.
The Soccer team travelled last
Wednesday afternoon to Nyack,
New York, to engage in an
important conference game with
Nyack
Missionary
College.
Freshmen
Joe Kamouzou (a
transfer
student
from West
·Africa) scored the game's only
goal at 14:00 of the first period.
Pete Walazek was credited with
· the assist. Goalie Pat Parcells
very·
strong -Newark State team .. ·
Newark
State's
Ivo . Lekich
slipped a shot past goalie Pat
Parcells with three minutes gone
in
the second overtime period.
Once
again
Parcells
was
tremendous.
Pat was credited
with
19
saves
while
his
counterpart Joe Barca had 15.
. Both teams had
24
shots on
goal
. The split decision brought the
hooters record to 3-7. Their
record
in
conference play
is
2-1.
sparkled·
in
the nets with
23
No story on the Crew team
saves.
Many of
his
saves
came on
appears
in
this
week's
Circle
almost unbelievable plays_
Marist
since
i.o ihforcation
was
took only
18
shots, while Nyack
provided by the Director of'
was credited with 26.
Sports Information, the Athletic
The Red Foxes returned home
Department, or t~e
Crew
team.
last Saturday af,~n
to face
a. ______
.;... __
""'!- __
.J