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The Circle, November 5, 1970

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 7 No. 9 - November 5, 1970

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VOU~E 7 NUMBER.9
,. , 'MAR.l~TCOLLEGE,POU.GHKEE~IE,NEWYORK12601:
· N0'1=MBE~S, 1970
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:curriculum
.Vote··
Proposal
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PAGE2
111ECIRCLE
·
NOVEMBERS, 1970
AJTITUOES::
: OUTRAGEOUS·-·
by . Bill Oh, Really!
· · by
Mike
Waid
·Featu·re
Pag·_e
'Now that it is November the department stores throughout the
On Sunday, October 2Sth,-about
eighty p~ople, most of them
country are stocking up on toys for. the coining holiday seasons.
physically· 'disabled, met
a:t
the Brooklyn· Center of Long Island
Toys are big business today and shopping for them has changed
·
d · ·
.

University_ to discuss the problems they shared in common.
radically,,With this in lnind
I
set out, fearlessly' to find the right toy
Goo·.
News·.
.
Representatives from -the gubernatorial; senatorial candidates were
for my nephew.
· ·
·
.
invited to speak - only qoodell's people attended. They talked about
"Good afternoon sir my name is Felix Rooney. I hold a masters
what their candidate has done•,for _the disabled in the past and what .
degree in child psychology and I am the father of
six
kids, nine if
by
Fr. Leo Gallant .
he hopes to accomplish in the future.
,
·
you count the three in reform school, I'm.your official toy advisor.
The
V_
ikings'
devastating
The fact that only Goodell
sent
_representatives
is
significant in
Can I help you?"
_
. ·
two ways. First,
is
that :he is the only candidate who believes that
"I'm looking for a toy for my 3-year old nephew." .
/
triumph over Iona was probably
the problems of the disabled are important eriough to deserve public
"Well what are this child's political attitudes?"
·
th e moSt exciting event. of th e attention. The• other --candidates cannot be bothered witli the
"He thinks Captain Kangaroo is a fascist. Listen; chief, the kid is ~a~co~c~a~l Ji:f·vi!~te
!~aU:!
problems,. and
;"if
they don~tlook, it will go away."_ The second is
. only three."
,
,
. .
that the meeting was mostly concerned. with Goodell's political
"It's very important that
I
know what his attitudes are if
I
am to
team, th0 ugh unseen by 0th ers.
rhetoric which _didn't offer· any alternatives~
-I
personallv R0t tiLed of
sell you the right toy. For example if the child is right wing we have Marist doesn't have a dog or goat
hearing the usual verbaF_diarrhea as a1;1swers
to unusual pr9blems
all kinds of dolls for
·him:
G.I. Joe, _Green Beret Bruce, Marine
or any animal: It has Zacchaeus.
whicl:µnean basic survival for thousands 6f people."· ... ·
··
.
Monty,- Air Force Fred, R.O_.T.C. Mike; Merchant .Marine Mark,.
Zacchaeus is a
1
character out_ ohf . What ·are the problems? Education, housing ..
.! don't' have this ·
F.B.I.
Ira and C.I.A. Ed. For the girls we have W.A.V.E. Barbi and
Luke, C
11
hapter
9•
He was alincl
whole paper to fill. Butthis meeting mostly.dealt with the problem
W.A.C. Shelley. All dolls come equipped with uniforms and F.B.I.
tax co ector, a curious
tt e
of transp~~t~tion. There
~ no public conveyancef9i:.a person in a
Ira even has his own wire tap set. We also have many games for right
fellow who wanted to see Jesus
wheelchair smce both subways and buses have steps. The only other
wing children; look at these: Hard Hat, The Governor Maddox Game
passing by. Btit he was too short · way a disabled person can travel is by private trimsportation which
I
.
.
and
couldn't
see above the
$14
h
I

f
·
·
compete with a chicken recipe and the William
F.
Buckley game crowd. So he ran ahead and
averages
an our. t isnt
inancially feasible that a physically
which includes a½ inch poster of Charles Goodell.
.
.
·
• disabled person become :employed since his salary is dimiilshed by
On the other hand if your child is of. the leftist opinion we also climbed a sycamore tree. When· ·about $50 a week for transportation. This is why many of them
have_ .c;lolls _for him: Vietcong Keil, Black ?anther Paul and
Ivy
Jesus came- to th at place, he
don't work ... but where do they go for jobs. .
··
·
··
Leaguelf\l{m, All of these dolls come with Bell.Bohom trousers and looked up and said: "Zaci:haeus,
· Goodell proposed that the. subway should be renovated with
Right On buttons. There are also many left wing games: There's
hurry down, for I muSt stay in
ramps and elevators. This plan is ideal since the disabled -person·
Conspiracy Trial which comes with a complete list of obscenities and
your house today." Zacchaeus
could fit in and ride with other taxpayers. Bur,this idea will take
th L gh t S ·
d th Eld ·d
Cl
I t
hurried down
a
nd welcomed him years of planning and moreyearsof constructi·on. How broadmm· ded
e au
a
piro game an
e
n
ge
eaver game comp e e with great joy. A _ tremendous
with fake passports and here's one of my favorites the Mayor
transformation
suddenly took
do these politicians have to be to realize. that it would be quicker
Lindsay game - its never played the same way twice.".
and less expensive to subsidize existing transportation?
· . ·
"Look Felix how about a _bike or a wagon, kids still like them
pla
0
ceu.r tough
h rd 'h"ttm·.
· Last year
I
passed around a petition for a woman who was denied
don't they?"
.
-
·
·
.
.
' . a
. i
g
a teaching license on ·the grounds that she had polio. She was finally
- "Sple11did, spendid choice sir, we have· a whole line of bikes. Here , :~t~f
hz~e ::en
hear;gw!~:
granted it, after court procedures were begui;i, but this year· a girl
is
popular mode! the Peter Fon~a bike, it ~as everything; high handle
during
th~c Me::s e::lebrated
with almost the same physical condition was again denied. Why
is
bars, low seat, i~ even has_
~
little grass- m the gas t~nk_. And over
before each. game _ and they
New York
City
being inconsistent? This is only one. of the bastardly
~ere, look _at this w!igon, it s called the War Wagon _and ~s complete . have been climbing trees and
attitudes taken by the adnunistration iof "fun city."
_
with matching machine guns and a rocket launcher Just like the one
· . .
. .
·
What can you do? On Thursday, November 12, there will be a
John Wayne uses in
his
latest picture:
"I
Blow Up Chinese
uni_tmg
t~emselves
· mto .a · _demonstration at New York City Hall to make Mayor -~indsay more
Laundries."
c
O
m mun it
Y
.Under
their
aware of the problem. We need your support. Anyone who believes
"I'm afraid that's no help."
Z acch~eus-si~eQ_
coa~h,
that_ all people are entitled 'to human dignity must ·attend. For
"Well what.do.es this child like to
do
sir.-"
Ron Levine. No thin g
15
st0 PPlllg further information please contact me in Room C402.
,
"He likes dirt, he always gets dirty."
·
.
them.
_
.
.
"I
have just the thing for him sir, look at this game. Lauglrwith
Mayb~, ten ye~
from
ll~W,
1·c·
. . '
Lenny Bruce,
if
he likes dirt hfll love this."
.
.
th ey _will, be sle_epily atte nd~g . .
·
o
ul
d
·.
lov·
··::.
"Not_ that kind of dirt you clod; regular dirt. Let's. see he is also mass m so11?,e
church ~nd they
11
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·
interested in making things, he's good with-his hands."
su_ddenJy
comt: alive. Spm_e
·
·
.
,
.
"Already, why that little devil."
pnest w~,be talking about their.
· ··
·
·
"What!"
.
.
masc«;>t! All the_ pe«;>ple
,wh~
·.
·-·.A·'
'.·_·
__
·.Go·
··1·.dt.·1sh;
"Just a little humor sir, oh look at this, its perfect for
him.
It's the
saw- it started gru~bling,
ThlS
Assemble an 'Anti-Ballistic Missile Game. It's great sir, he can man has gone -as a ,piest to the
\ ,.
assemble this •rocket right in your own home and
if a Russian ever home of a sin:r~er'.
.. Zacchaeus
.
\
comes to your door the rocket will intercept
him. It's better then a. sto~d up .'.1fid sa~d
t?
the· Lord,.
.
by Tom Hackett · ·
· ·
·
.
do ·· .
·
·
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·
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"Listen, sir. I will give half• my
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,!H·
ow b
t
L"
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d
ha.

f th
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belongings to the poor- and if
I
Carson McCullers wrote a magnificently simple yet profound short
a ou
mco n ogs, o you
ve any o
em.
h
- h
d -
1' ill
story called "A Tree
A
Rock A Cloud " It · - b
t th t
·
sa1
"Sureiy,you jest·su: -look here here's an interesting toy'•it's·called · ~".~,
,c eate . ~nyone,
w_ pay - .
· ·

-·-··
'. ·
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lS a
?U
a umver
--~.--"'the-:'"Wb<5dstoclt-Game:--R~ht""in-:.your~o\itn..:ba~'kc•
...
j'ii.rc'i-you£
can;::
hitit:~~c~. fO.~:.:.t~e~;aS.\~:Uch.',
:: ·
~
_t_opic~
,t~_at never~nd~_-
~!,SC_l;lSSl~n,
tJ!_at co~us~g
philosop~cal
.
,
·
,11
···st
' d 80 000
·h
'
-~
,
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1
·

·
d
Tlien.
tliere;-,
zmght \be·,:a .. new·· •
question_ - _LqYE~·t'l'.h~-scene.1S.a.61.f_e,m~the·-:very.early.,~orning;;,A
..

,
assemu e a
age_ an .. ,
te_
nts, t_ e game_ even m
__
c udes mu , •t· ·-,, ·. •· t· •. • _.· .•
• ,
.... .,,,
·r
paper boy _ente_rs·_to
ha~_e_a
cup··of __
cof"e·e to· ·warm
_his· ...
··b- d' •
P
ortable t il t ·, · d. b · ·d · ,.d · · · · •Jf
b ·•
•t
,<
· · •
,
11
· , rans1onna ton, ·a· new. -11.le o
·
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·weary o y.

. o es an_ . a an _o~e · cars.
~C>:U
·._
~Y
1
:now we Wt. concern, ofgivin .
.. :_
. -An older.man_is sitting ~t the, couhter;;he. calls tlie·bo)' over and
mclu~e_ at no_. addi~ional charge Freddy Cannon sl Golden Hubcap .
W ·
_ .
• g .. ·
·
·h 1 .k -· srmply states_ to th_e youngster tha_t he Jove_ s him , The b y
is
utte ly
Stealing Favontes;
his
new album."
, . .
. e. are
very
m_uc . t e
nfd
· · ·
. ·
.
.
·• ·
.
·. .. · . -,
0
-
_ r
"L ·
k F lix !think I'll · t b ·
- h
1
.
b k ,,
Zacchaeus. We are nch m our·
co use naturally -.and s_o
the man begins t_o explam. . .
.
.
" oo , e
,
. .
Jus_ uy my nep ew a co onng oo .
.
greediness
small
in our
He explains how. at dne time he.loved
a
woman very much.
Great, a great ~dea. Now
if
Y~1;1
step. over here we have Pop art
selfishness.
,'But,
if
we keep
However, life being what it, is, the wc,mari,teft.
hirn.
~'For the better
books and Progressive books and...
·.
climbing trees; someone is going
part of, two. years
I: chased around the. country trying to lay hold of
to tell us to come down and
-het." he tells tµe boy. He finally.gives up th~ _search and de'cides that
FrOm
·
Ezechiel
·
..
to·.
·McCartney
by James McCabe
t h e n
t h e r e '
11
b e
a , there~ nothing left
in
his
life.
.
·
. , ·:_'. ; . .,.
transformation.
In
·his
despair however, a beautiful insight·came tc,him. He was·
Marist College is helping us
laying in his room . which was. probably ·the most gloomy~place on
climb trees. It imparts to the
ell;r1:h at that ~oment. It wa~ evetiing,. ~ark , and. Jonely, he was
students
intellectual,
spiritual
w1thou~ love;,w1!hout -hop~ -
his
que~ had e!idt:d· Then, as
if
he had
and·
social
culture
.· which
known 1t all
his
life, he realized what
1S
_wrong with us.
·.
·
prepares them effectuallyfor the
. · You see ".Yhen a .~an falls in love ~odhe first-~ime what.does he
actual work . or·. development.
usually fall mJove.with - a woman. Without a11ything to go by a
man
This_ progressive little .· college,
.
undertakes the f!l0St "sacred. experience in G_od's earth.'~. Then man
however, must m_ore and
1
'more
_goes on to explam morespecificaUy.
:
--
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0:
· ·
·
,
prov_ide a moraJ, climate sincerely
· "They start l!t
~h~
wro~ enp-of}ove. They begin at-the climax.
oriented towards a policy of aid
Can you wonder 1t lS so miserable? Do youJcnow how men should
to the disadvantaged involved in . love?"
,
. • . . - .
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I write this to the faculty, mindful of the possibility that many of • the great issues of . our times.
"A Tree. A Rock.·A Cloud."_

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them don't feel it and ~on't believe it, And to the students, mindful
There .. must
be, a. common - . rhe inan developed a techniqu.e,. he got so he loved a goldfish!
.that most of them already know what I'm saying; ·
, ..
.
Pl!!P.P~
:of person~ .and social
This
~Y
actually .. w~nt o~t a11d
_boti~t a gqlclfish .~nd sat for hours
I
think
of the
groundlings, knowing plays by heart in values and of hope in the human
w~tching that damn_ goldf~ll ~lllJ~g
arolll.l:d.and,aroundthat tiny
Shakespeare's England, and jumping up onto tlie stage to play a part
condition.
· ·
bowl. When he had sfud1ed
1t
long enough he. concluded that he
being done poorly.
I
think of standing room only concerts-t_housands
· ·
CONT ON 5
loved it! Soon his technique· was·
so
polished that~ he ·could love
singing to theiµselves. I think of.
s9.
~any other. much smaller
· ·
·.
almost anything in sight. But, a~ he told the.boy, he had not reached
concerts where \persons from the audience have sat and played with
. the pre-cJ.4nax yet; he was not quite ready_ to love-~ woman. :
• .
the performers.
_
· ·
NOVEMBER
5
__
Right no:w I'm_ sitting at iny desk with this·'.typewriter in front
of_
· I think of the refusal to accept the novel as a valid
an
form
me. I'm still thinking ·about that' story and
~l feel as
if
I am the
becaulle of its popular lower class origins.
I
think of the social
Miss Lois Meyer
,.pap_er boy.
I
can look out my w_iildow ana see the river, the trees m
struggle in the east and the west over the acceptance of the venacular
Food and Drug Administration
their autumn glory, and the ·soft blue sky.
I
don't know .which one
I

art
as opposed to the classical language of the country.
8 00
p
M Th
tr ·
should fall in love wit~ .first. But·
if
sometime-I pass you walking
There
is
some validity in the historical comparisons I've cited to
:
· ·
ea e
!1cross campus and stop. and tell you I love you, don't be surprised,
educator's present refusal. ·or inability to see the importance of

ON FOOD ADDITIVES
Just go back-to Y'?ur :room and fall in love with a goldfish:
·
·
_
·
contemporary music and act accordingly in adjusting curriculum.
Now, for its importance:
.
I.
Contemporary
music is the art form most central to our
· student's everyday life. Consider the identification when any art
becomes that central to a lifestyle.
.
, 2. The bulk of youth seeking expression in art, who
in
the past
would. have taken up "serious" music, or theatre or the novelist's
craft now get into the folk's music~
3. There are many who, through their music,
gain
something
conceptual and emotional attitudes
~
they need to live, which is what
. the Eng.-Phil.-Rest. sector of the curriculum aims toward.
Now,
most of this music has the extra dimension of lyrics. Despite the
structural fact that songs cannot sustain the development of themes
that r;iy a novel
can,
exalnining a year on two of an artist's work
can
provide the same complexity and significance, in terms of matter
and craft.
.
Two last things, concerning the treatment of popular music. ·
Attempting integration by bringing recordings into classes other than
music always denies treatment of the piece as a work of
art
in itself.
It is
alway~
'.!.sed
only to illustrate some point. Secondly, it should be
dearfroJJ)mypreviotis!remarks that I don't envision a standard course.
in music, with it's credits having the prestige (centricity
to
curriculum)
that standard music courses have. I do
envision
replacing some of the Eng.-Phil.-Rest. courses with music courses as
core alternatives.
Book
Review
Goliath
by
_·.Dave·-
Harris-
.
by
Kathy
McCarty
·
The
experience
of David
unbounded life forces wash·over
is death
to man •. ,a bloody,
Harris
could·
only
be
us unmercifully,
then David
agoni-zing,
-sometimes
circumscnl>ed by labelling him
Harris
is
tbe baptized witness of.
com,fort~ble
pursuit of
no;
as the "author of Goliath.':
This
that
oJislaught. _
Wet and _dripping,
thingness.'' There
is
a chapter on
is not
his
foremost claim to
he is tellirig us of the
sea
at
fear
which'
supersedes
any
relevance with life, this activity
midday, bereft of life guards and
a_uthor's description of fear that
of writing. He has just broken
KEEP OUT!
signs
and once we
I have ever read. "Our fear is a
into unstoppable song and it has
have listened, cement swimming
natural fear. Constantly subject
overflowed to paper and pen.
pools are out of the question.
to a reality which we receive
When one touches and
soars
Goliath
does not espouse.
rather
than
mold. we dangle over
with and sees and reads and
non-violence, or condemn the
the edge of nothing.
If
is
the fear
hears Goliath what occurs is not
Nixon
Administration,
or
that makes out titles blaze in
acquisition
of matter from a
decimate Middle America.
It is
neon and polished brass, Jocks
printed
page, but rather an
not a political manifesto, or even
our doors, arms our soldiers and
orgasm
of all our
senses,
a social statement. It
is
only one
sets us -aside to glorify and
including the oft left out lnind
man's telling
a
story of the
pursue our emasculation. It is
senses. If all of us are in the
glorified
reaction
of hate,
the fear that reaps bushels of
throes of unknotting our fingers
vacant-eyed people, and a giant
and toes
in an attempt to let the
called America. «Doing America
CONT.ON7
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·'
!\!<'
.~
t:
_,:,~·.i~{':~--/·t:~_--,·
NOVEMBER-5.1970
Baird
To
Spelk
On
,
.
.•.
.
.
AbortiOn·.·•nd"
Birth
·Contrlll
·
I
On Tuesday.November
lO;·~t
:
pharmaceuticaf
manufa~turer
8· p.m •. William R. Baird· will
which
manufactures
· birth
speak on
·
abortion·. and
.
birth
control pills and devices.
control.
.
·
·.
·
Mr; -Baird
is presently
a
.

Bill Baird is the Director and
consultant
to the New York
foun_der·of
.the
New York Parent
·-
State Senate Sub-Committee on
Aid Society, a ·non-profit birth
Health and Mental Health as well
cont~ol,
·
abortion, and narcotic
· ..
as an advisor on birth control to
ci:_nter; He
is
the former clinical,
.
t h e N e w Jersey
St ate
director of Emko, a national
,Legislature.
1
"ZANY
AND
HilARious..,.
,'
FULFIUS
AU OUR
MEANEST
.
FANT_ASIES
ABOUT
THE
TUBE!"
-John
Crui n
"THE
RAUNCHIERTHUPPROACH,
THE'
MORE
DEMOLISH-
'' '
·.
'
''
'
I;
T~E SATIRE.;..,DUT~AGEDUSLY
FUNNY!;'
-Md111·,11
Stasio. Cue Mag.
·
~..sT~llEi1:ThcATtE
../.7.S Aclm,u,oAI
.
1,/
o'i.
~ ~
7_
.
_,:.
1
.
_3
S
holf.s
SAT
..
.
7,0t>AAfO.
q
.90
~ho
'KS
·
·
'DIE
CIRCLE
·
·
He
is
nationally known for
his
crusading_
efforts to remi;,ve
·
restrictions on birth control. He
was arrested
in
New York
in
1966--for
distributing
.birth
.
control infomiation
and as a
·
result, effected a.change•in New
York laws benefiting the poor.
He
·
was also. arrested in New
Jersey
'·in
1967, where he served
a 20 day prison term. This anest
also changed New Jersey law
concerning birth control. In the
same year;
'he
was arrested -in
·
Massachusetts
fcir showing a
birth control pill and for giving a
package of foam to a 23 year old
.
woman. Mr. Baird did these two
things as a deliberate test case on
constitutionality.
For these two
offenses he faced a prison term
·of
10 years -
5
years for.each
offense. Mr. Baird's latest arrest
has resulted in a three month
prison term for giving a birth
control
device to a
·
Boston
University coed, in violation of
the
"Crimes against Chastity
-Laws."
This case was appealed
to the Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court, where it failed. It
is now pending before the U.S.
Supreme Cc:,urt. Mr. Baird wishes
to
see
these
"ar-chaic"
Massachusetts
laws declared
unconstitutionaL
Mr. Baird is also responsible
for bringing the nation's first
mobile clinic, the Plan Van,
which assists mothers in poverty
stricken areas, into Harlem and
Bedford-Stuyvesant.
He also set up the nation's
,first and only abortion referral
clinic in New York, which last
year helped_.over
3,oqo
women.
CONT.ON
8
Food·
·
Co■inittee
Surveys
Saga
by
George
Byrnes
PAGE3
Next Tuesday, November 10,
freshness, temperature and taste.
the resident students will have
You
will
also be asked to
their chance to survey Saga.
comment on the cleanliness of
During the lunch and dinner
dishes,
silverware,
speed 'Of
hours,
Food
Committee
service
and attractiveness
of
members will be
in the cafeteria
display. It is important to have a
handing out the survey.
good atmosphere in the dining
Studets will be given the
hall as well as good food.
survey as they enter for lunch or
The last part of the survey will
dinner and are asked to drop it
be for
you
to make your
off on the way out.
comments,
suggestions,
and
T h is
ye a r,
the
Food
complaints. The entire survey
Committee is operating under a
will
take no more than five
' new philosophy. The students
minutes to complete. Its
·effects
on
the
committee
have
may prove very advantageous as
volunteered their time to meet
it is not taken as a joke. Lack of
with
A rt Greene to discuss
response
in
the survey will be
improvements which they would
considered indicative of the
fact
like to see innovated.
that you are satisfied with all
·
Each resident is asked to take
aspects of the Food Service and
a survey
next
week
and
that the need for improvement is
complete it seriously. It is a very
non-existent.
short form
and
a very easy way
The Chairman of the 1970
to show your feelings for
•the
Food Committee is Steve Moore.
food you eat twenty-one times
a
Other
members include Tom
.week.
From
all the forms
Adams,
Mary
Ann
Baiardi,
submitted, all serious coinplaints
George Byrn!!s, Rich Cairns, and
~will' be evaluated
by the
Cindy Maser. These people meet
committee
and
recommen-
with Art Greene once a week to
dations will be made to Art
discuss different aspects of the
Greene. We need your help
if
operation
of the dining hall.
thlngs are to change.
Anyone who has any complaints
The survey will be broken into
is asked to go directly to the
parts. For the first section you
manager
on duty·
at
that
will be asked to evaluate Saga on
particular meal. If you are the
a Very Good, Good, Fair, and
bashful type, you are asked to
Poor
basis. Included in this
section will be food variety,
CONT. ON 5
"
....
Arno
>Mayer
:
_
·
·
·
.
Dir!ctor of S_ecuri~ Ron Aderholt leads a discussion between students and representatives of local law enforcement
.
agenCJes. '.fhe dJSCumon lasted
_about
three ~ours and generally yielded m<>re
heat than
light.
·
·Counter.
R8volution
·
_,
by
~aul
Browne
.
"Counter-revolution»
will
be
D_ipfomacy,
··
1917-1918
•~
the topic of a lecture.to be given
"Politics
and ~:Diplomacy
·
~f.
·
by Amo J. Mayer of Ptjµceton
Peacerµaking: Containment and
University,-November 12
in
the
Counter-Revolution
·at
Faculty Senate
.
At
Stanford
Overhaul. Grading System
Marist theatre. The
·lecture
is
Versailles,
1918-1919,"
and:
Palo
Alto,
Calif.
(I.P.)
-
co-sponsored
by
·the
-College
•~-Dynamics
,of
:co·unter-
Starting
this
fall, the sole
-
U n
i o n
.
B
o a r·d
..
and
the
'
~evolution" which
is
cunently
penalty for failure to complete
Department
of History
,and
m press-
and scheduled for
an
undergraduate
course
Political Sci_ence.
publication
J>y
_Harper
&
Row.
satisfactorily
at Stanford
..
Dr.
Mayer
is. author
of
·
Jn addition to
his
three books
University will be loss of credit
·
·''Political
Origins of the New
Dr~ Mayer
,.has
authored
towarg
graduation.
Following
numerous articles two of which more than three years of study, ·
have appear~ in The Nation and ~he Faculty_ Senate has approved
Critique.
.
.
a comprehensive overhaul of the
·
Mayer received his Ph.D. and University's grading system for
'M.i\♦
-Ttom-Yale
after completing
undergraduates.
his undergraduate studies at City
The only grades recorded will
College
in
New York. He has be
.. A"
for
exceptional
also
studied
at Graduate
performance, "B" for. superior
Institute
for
International
performance,
«c"
for
Studies in Geneva and the New satisfactory
performance, and
··
School in New York~
"pass,,
-for
non-letter-graded
The
American
Historical
work equivalent to a ."C" or
Society
has
·
recognized
Dr.
·
better.
Mayer with their Hebert Baxter
In addition to eliminating "E"
Adams
Prize
in
1968, ~nd and
"F" grades, "plus" and
honorable mention· for another
"minus"
designations,
grade
award in 1959.
point averages, and class grading
In I 962 Mayer won a research
"curves," the new system will
award from the Social Science
provide special incentives for
Research Council. Since 1961 he students
who want to delve
has been a professor of history
deeply into a particular. subject
at Princeton University. During or are
recognized
by
·
their
CONT. ON
8
:i~rctors
for truly outstanding
The
charges
were
first
proposed
·
by the three-year
Study of Education at Stanford
(SES) which The New York
Times said "may well be the
most· basic attempt to come to
grips with (the problems of)
alienated campuses ofany
in
the
nation."
They were reviewed in detail,
modified, and proposed as the
initial
part of a broad new
Charter
for, Undergraduate
Education by the Committee on
Undergraduate
Studies, which
has been studying the grading
system
and
other
academic
matters since September, 1969.
As
the
SES
report
on
undergraduate education noted,
during the past
IO years at
Stanford,
''There
has been a
significant upward shift in the
average
grades
given
·undergraduates.
This probably
reflects improvements within the
secondary
schools and, more
certainly,
the unusually high
caliber of our undergraduates.
••Almost
all those entering
Stanford come from the top two
or three percent of the nation's
high school graduates, and more
than four out of five complete
their
baccalaureate
work on
schedule, a rate nearly twice the
national average.
"Grades
are
intended
to
provide
the
student
with
feedback,
reward,
and
motivation,"
the committee
noted. "More importantly they
are supposed to infonn others of
a student's ability and potential,
thus
influencing
entry into
graduate
school
and future
employment.
"Practices differ, but it is rare
for
a graduate
school
or
department
to
rely
predominantly
on grade-point
averages
in the selection of
students. We therefore see no
justification
in clinging to a
system
which
leads to the
computation
of deceptively
refined grade-point averages on
the ground that it serves as a
useful device."
As approved by the Faculty
CONT.ON8









































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~,~:~;::t:{;?l:.;-
.::.;\,.;.-;._\
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'. /-.-, .. -.-.-.-...... "~- ;"
~
•. , : ....... •.• •• ·. _
,ma..a..iL.·
..
1.
. WhBt
Is.
Pover~y?
1
· • ·. ·.
What follows
is
not fiction, no m~tter how hard.
we
wish
.it would
. be ..
It
is.
reality (or Jo Good\\'.in
P~ker
and her children •.
It
wes
· subJD!tt~ _by Thomas
Walsh<
w1~h-p1cture!
courtesy
.~f )tev.,Mon.
· RalphBeitmg.
· · ...
·
. ...
.. . · ·
.
.
.
·······
.
· WHAT
IS
POVERTY

.
.
.
.
.
You
ask
~e what
is
pove~y? Listen
~9
)ne:
Here
I
am,
dirty,
smelly 1md with no proper
underwear.
on.and with the s,tench of my
rotting teeth near.
·1
~ill
tt:11
you.:Listen to me. ~isten withou_t_pity;
I
cimnot use your pity. Listen with understanding; Put yourself m
my dirty, worn out, ill fitting shoes, and hear_ me.
. . . . .
Poverty
is
getting
up.
every ·morning from a dirt and illness stained
. mattress.· The sheets have. long since been used for diapers. Poverty is
living in a smell that never leaves. This
is
a smell of urine, sour milk,
and spoiling food sometimes joined with the strong smell of
long-cooked onions. Onions are cheap.
If
you . have smelled this
smell, you did not know how it came. It is the sinell of the outdoor ·
'privy.
It
is
the smell of young children who cannot walk,the lorig
dark way in the. night.
It is the smell of the ma tresses where years of
"accidents" have happned.
It
is tlie smell of the.milk which has gone
sour because the refrigerator long has not worked, and it costs
money to get it fixed. It is-the smell of rotting garbage.
I
could bury ·
it, but where
is
the.shovel? Shovels cost money.
Poverty
is
being tired. I have always been tired. They told me at
the hospital when tl_le_last baby came, that I had chro!lic anem_ia
caused
from
-
poor diet, a bad case of worms, ·arid that I need a
corrective·opeiatfon. I listenea p"olitely • the poor are'always polite.
The poor always listen. They don't say that there
is
no money for
iron pills, or better food, or worm medicine. The idea": of an
· operation
is
frightening and cost so much that,
if
I had dared; I
would have laughed. Who takes care of my children? Recovery from
an operation take!> a· long "time; I have three chiidren. _When
i
left
them with ''Granny"·the
last time, I-had a job, I came home to find
the baby covered with fly specks, imd a diaper that had not been
chimged
since
I left. When the dried diaper came off, bits of- my
baby's flesh· came with it. My other child was playing with'·a sharp
bit of broken glass, and my oldest w:as playing alone at the edg~,of a
lake. I made $22 a week imd a good nursery school costs $20 a week
for three children. I quit my job.
.
·
Poyerty is dirt: You say in your clean clothes coming from your
clean house, "anybody
can· be cleim." Let me explain about
housekeeping with no money. For breakfast I give my children grits
with no oleo or c.ornbread without eggs or oleo. This <J,oes
not use up
many dishes. What dishes there are, I wash in cold water and with no
soap. Even the · cheapest soap .has to be saved_
for the baby's diapers.
Look at my hands, so cracked and red: Once 1·saved for two months
to buy a jar of vaseline for my. hands and the baby's diaper rash.
When I had saved enough,
I went to buy it and the price had gone up
. two ce~ts. The baby and •I suffeted·on. I have to decide evezy day
if
l.
can
bear to put my cracked, sore himds into the cold water and
.strong soap. But'you ask why not hot water? Fuel costs money.
If
,you have a wood fire
'it
c<>sts
money.
If
your burn electricity, it costs
money~ Hot water
is
a luxury. I do not have luxuries. l know you
will be. surprised· when
_I
tell. you hc,,w young I am.
I
look
so.
much
older. My back
Jias
been bent-over wash tubs every_day for so long,
I
·cannot ·remember when I ever did anything else. Every nigllt I wash
every stitch my school
age
child has on and just,hope her.clothes
dry
by morning. · • ·
. .
.
. _
.
··
.
. _. .
Poverty
is
staying
up
all night· on cold nights to watch the fire ·
knowing one· spark on the newspaper. covering the walls means yoµr
sleeping children die in flames. In summer, poverty
is
watching gnats
and flies devour your baby's tears when he. cries. The screens are
tc;,rn and you ,pay-so little rent you know they will never be fixed._
Poverty means·insects in your food, in your nose, in your eyes, imd· ·
crawling over you· when you sleep. Poverty is hoping it never rains
because diapers won't dry when ·it rains and soon you are using
newspapers. ~overty
is
seeing your children forever with runny
noses. Paper handkerchiefs co'st money -and.all
your
rap .
you need for
other things. Even more costly are imtihi«amines. Poverty is cooking
without food and cleaning without soap.
·
Poverty
is
asking for help~ Have you ever had to ask for help,
knowing your _children
will
suffer unless you get it? Think about
asJcing
for a Ioim from a relative,
i(
this.
is
the only way you
can
imagm!· asking foi lielp. I will
tell
·you how it feels. You find out
where the office
is
that .you are
.supposed
to visit. You circle that'
block four _or f1Ve ,times.;'f!iink:ing of your children, you go in.
Erery~ne
is
very
hllSl:.Xmally
someon~~-~w.es put.and.you tell l.ler
you need h~lp. That never
is
the person you need to
*-·)'ou·,go
see
another person and, after spilling the whole shame,of your poverty
all
over the desk between you, you fmd that
this
isn't the right
office after
all -
y_ou must repeat the whole process. And it never
is
any easier at the next place.
You have asked for help and,after
all
it has cost you, you are·
again'
tolc;l to wait.
You
are told why, but you don't really ~ear·
because of the
red
cloud of shame and the
rising
black cloud· of
despair.
. ..
.
Poverty
is
remembering.
It
is
remembering quitting school in
junior
high
because .. nice" children had been so cruel about my
clothes and my smell. The attendance officer came. My mother told
him
that I was pregnimt. I wasn't but she thought that I could get a
job and help out. I had jobs off and on, but never long enough to
learn imything. Mostly I remember being married. I was so young
then. I am still young. For a time, we had all the things you have.
There was a littie house in imother town, with hot water and


'
'

I
~
....
',.
everything. Tlien·my husband lost his job. There was unempioyment
insurance for awhile and what fewjobs I could get. Soon all ournice

things were repossessed and·~e moved back here; I was pregnant
then:. This house "didn'Uook so bad when we first moved
in.
Every
week it gets worse. ~othing i,s-eyer fixed. We Ii.ow had no money.
There were few odd jobs
foi
my
husband, but everything went for
• food then, as it does now.
I
don't know how we lived through three
years and three babies, but we did. I'll tell you something. After the.
last baby I destroyed my marriage.
It
had: been a good one but coul_cl
you keep on bringing children into this dirt? Did. yoll. ever think how
· much it costs for any kind of birth control? I knew m)·husband was_.
leaving the day he left, but there were no good-bys ·betweet_1
us.
I·,
hope he .has been able to climb out of tltjs mess somewhere. He
nevei: could hope to ~ith us to drag him down.
. . _ . • · ..
That's when
I
asked for help. When
I
got it, you know how much
it was? It was, and is, $78
a
month for the four of us; that is all I
ever can.get. Now you know why there is no .soap, no needles:and
thread,
nd
hot water, no aspirin, no worm medicine, no ha'nd crea~,
no·shamp00. J~orie of these.things foreverand ever and ever. So that
. yoiican
see.clearly;_.
r
pay $20 a month rent, and most of the rest goes
. for fo<>d.
_ _For grjts and cornmeal, and rice and milk and ~~,itµs. ltry
my be~t _to, use. only the minim.!im. electricity
dfI
use mo!e; there is·
.:that much less-for fo·od~·: · ...
·i.
,·,,;:,',
-:,.,
. . ·:-~
.. :•: ;.-. ·
· ..
c ,' -: , : : ' ., ·
.
:- .:
.. ': Poverty;.·is
lookiiJg,into.a black·future . .Yo\ll' children,~on't play·
' with_
my·
boys;
·They.
will-
tu.itr
fo-:otlier-
boys 'who"-will<'stealtto
·get-\
~
(rf:,'.i
·
·" what they want;:
Icari
already,.:see the~ behind the-bars of,.their.·
- - priso1finstead of.behind the bars ofmy poverty. Or ..
they
wilHuril
to
: the freedom of alcohol or drugs, and·(ind themselves enslaved.And
my daughter? .. ; . _ . . · " _·
·. • ·_.
. ,: _-.·:
_.
. .. .
.
'.-Afleast:
ther" is for her
a
life like mine. It would be· sensible of me'
to wish her dead;
. •.
,. _
• ·
.
.
. .
. · .
· But you say ,to
me,
there are schools: Yes, there are schools. My
. children have no· extra books, no magazines, or extra pencils, or
- crayons, or paper and most important of _
all, t}!ey . do not have:;
·
.. ,
health. They have womis, they liave infections, they have pink-eye
all
summer,They do not sleep weUon the floor, or with me in my .·
one bed. They do not sufferfrgm hunger, my $78 keeps us alive, bµt
they do ~fe_r from ~alnutrition. _Qh, · yes,
I
do remebei: · that
I
was:
taught about health· in scllool..
It
doesn't do much good. In some
places there
is a
surplus -commodities oroaram. Not here. The county
-

'.
..·
:·.
'.:--.--
::
.
..:.


.
-
·'
said
it cost too much. There is
a
school lunch program but I
havi
two. child!Cn who-will already be damaged by the time they·get to
school. :· ·
· ·
. · , .
_B~t yoµ say to me, there_ are health clinics.
Yes,
ther~
are-
health
clinics and they are_ in the towris. I live out 1J.ere eigli.t miles from ·
t?wn.· I can walk that _far-(ewenifit~ 16 miles.both w_a_ys)but
can my
little .children? M~ neighbor will take me in when he goes; but he
expects to be paid,- one way or-. another. I bet you know ·my·
neighbor.- He
is
that· large man who spends
his
time at the
gas
station,
the barber shop, and the comer store complaining about the
government spending money on the immoral mothers of illegitimate
children.
· ·
·
.
·
Povertr is an _acid that d~ps on pride until~
pride
is
worn away.
~overty
lS
a chisel. that chips on honor until honor
is
worn away~
Some: of you say that you would do:sometbiJm in my situation, and
maybe -you would -for the first week or the
f"ust
month, but for year
after year after year?
..
Even the poor_ can
d_ream~
A dream of a time when there
is
money.
Mon~y for the right kinds of food, for worm medicine, for iron pills,
CONT.ON?
I

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· CIRCLE
EDITORIALS
··.·.
•'
·.
·•..
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Faculties
by
and large· are notoriously liberal bodies, bastions of
· hoeralism . as. the cliche goes. Perhaps . it is more than coincidence,
however,. tliat the political sentiments· of such bodies are somewhat
left/if no~ more so, of the middle of the road. They are certainly
among, by matter of definition and necessity, the educated elite of
this country_. '.
. .
·
.
·
.
They study their• philosophy . and dialectics for years while
concerning· themselves with · pressing academic questions such · as
fa~ulty, rights,. tenure and promotion. "Rome js Burning," they yell
as the. national. administration continues the war in Vietnam; racial
strife brings the country to the border of civil war and the campuses
become a J>attlefield for guerilla war, But the behavioristic faculties
_have done their job. They were there when Watts was burning saying
·.· <'I told' you_~•-• aild reminding us that 67 percent of black students
. that to* the Selective Service Mental Test failed in 1964.
·
/ They have certainly done their job as they've produced study after
study telling tis that the pot is boiling, in a sense, a sort of "now that
·.,the pot
is
boiling, what do we do about it" attitude.
It
is no wonder
· why they . are so worried about their academic freedom, and
possessed with' a fear that the academic community is becoming a
suppressed minority.
.
·
.
God, all they have succeeded in doing.is to manufacture studies
criticizing public. policies, bureaucracy. and modern mass America.
Wake up! The fellow in the gas station across .the street doesn't
know who Henry David Thoreau is but he does believe that "those
,te~ch,ers on those college campuses" are perverting the youth of our
country.,
.
.
.
.- .
How correct he is is irrelevant but why he says that has meaning.
You see throwing rocks and then.living in a glass house at the same
time is not safe·. You can throw your catalog philosophies ·out the
window now· because if you've read one, you've- read them all.
Philosophy it seems becomes irrelevant in the face•_of inconsistency
and hyprocrisy. Yell •~Right On" and "Why.Not?" when it comes to
demanding withdrawal from Vietnam and the right of a Mexican
American to work for decent wages but don't let thos~ students
invade
faculty territory •
. Have
you ever tried to amend· a faculty rule? Don't, it
is
almost
procedurally impossible and it
is
definitely exhaustingly frustratinB,
The students have b'een trying to develop a mechanism for voting
, with the faculty on the new curriculum and their future since we
'. arrived in September. They've criticized our proposal while not
coming up with one of their own, "a characteristic attribute of those
'campus radicals." They have succeeded in destroying the faith of
some student leaders in them. They complain about the national
bureaucracy and procedures while not realizing they've cushioned
,,, , themselves
within
the same bed of procedural due process, except
that this time the disenfranchised happened to be 90% of the
community population. "Right on"
is
right as you vote on the
curriculum -and as your conscience and pay roll dictates. That is your ·
right. There will be other battles and we've learned our lesson.
Sal Piazza, Joe
Rubino, Ann Gabriele, Janet
Riley,
· Terry Mooney, Richard Brummitt, Peggy Miner, Philip
Glennon,
Dave DeRosa, Frank Baldascino, Paul
Tesoro.
The above names are those people who have contributed to this week's
CIRCLE, and do not appear
in
a byline.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
·
Letters
To
The
Editors
MARIST COLLEGE GLEE CLUB
Rehearsals-Tues.• and Thurs.
9-10 P.M. Room 268
Champagnat
Any Student having a copy of
the Political Science survey of
William
Mayeran would you
please complete it and return it
to Rm. C-112 or Box C-361 by
the end of the week. It is very
important to me. Thanks.
and well here at Marist. Really!!
Want to contribute your poems,
essays, short stories and mood
pieces for possible publication in
the Mosaic? Feel free to drop
them off at Rm. 907-C or box
336-C
within the next two
0 K · ·
C 1·
R •
•t
d
the form
iii
the first place.'
. •. orra
IYISI
e .
I would like·, to suggest that
. Dr. Goldman, and· .any othe1 ·
TO:
Security
. of Marist
interested fa~ulty member check
College, c/o Editor of The Circle
to see exactly what happened to
RE:
-.0.K:
Corral Revisite_d these
forms
.which-·he
New Members Welcome
*****
TODAY
Forum on The Circle
. 4:00 - Fireside Lounge
. Talk To Us - Not At Us
. .
-*****
.
.
*****
PUT YOUR MIND HERE!
Literary endeavors are alive
weeks .
Scott McKenna
*****
- (Circle, <;)ct, 2~)
·_ ._ .. · . ·.
continually mentions.'! hope· Dr.
Last ·wee~ a person.was firing ·Goldman,
:is.
able to. put, his
., .
:
.·,;.
, ..
B.]!J..:s
.,at,,ya,rl<>liS~,ol>je~titJ
i,()!11~;/~Qney,:WA~re'
~- mi>'1th is~•and •.:
:bemg:·people
and,,.som~?,bemg >take· the" advice:_which he. so
i::ars. :. I.: happen·. t<>. be
'vic:tim
•··
readily hands.the students. . .··
number f(?ur and lam the prou~
~-•
Siifoerely
by P~
Glennon ·
owner of.a car :with a hole in the ~..
Bill Karge~
The· Presidential
·Advisory.
windshield. .
·
wl1?t~~
1:~:!d
t::
0
::ilt
]U11·.
Ca■■itiee
.
:~~=is~~
0
~ 0 ::::,
J~~e!iti
La Rose
Eidle
Gebbis
Gnffin
tracing this person. I d~ubtfrom
, . .
.
..
__
2.-The ·meeting was called by a
what
I hear. of out expert,
Gentlemen:
·steering Committee appointed
pi""";"n
security that much;if anything,
Would you please make the
by the President, composed of
....
-=-'6
has been done.
,
following announcement to the
Paul· Browne, John Griffin and . MIGr~klligan
·
"· · to
s
cam·pus· The
Marist Community,
in
the next
Gerard Weiss. The agenda/set by
- - n...s
car on
·
· edition of the Circle: . • ,,
.
the St~ering Committee prior to
Lambert
catalog states under automobiles
THE
M.
ARTIN.
·L•.· KING
th
tin
Nichols
on campus that· the college will
e mee
g was:
assume
no responstoility for
COMMITTEE
OF
MARIST ...
1) Discussion of the Role of
Drennen
T
· t
-
st
COLLEGE
IS
SEEKING
the Commission
Hooper
cars;
0
regis er a car, one mu
INFORMATION
.. ON· THE-
2)
Orga_ nization
to the
Zuccarello
pay
tv(O
dollars to park in a Jot
·
Prenting
·where there
is
no real _protection
VOLUNTEER ACTIVITIES OF
Commission
against vandalism. If. I want to
INDIVIDUALS
OR GROUPS .
- a). Permanent steerin~
Roarty
-park my car nextto my dorm o_r FUNCTIONING ON· CAMPUS. committee (alternate-chairman)
Michels
ii1
a safer location, I will ·be
ANY SUCH INDIVIDUALS OR
~
b)
Establishment.
of
Weiss
ticketed
·to the amount of
GROUPS
ARR ASKED TO
Committees
fif
·
d.
11ars
y
t th · ·
·still·.
·SUBMIT
A BRIEF OUTLINE
·I-Planning
Governance
teen
o · ' e '
ere
18
·
. ·
OF THEIRACTIVIT. IESTO·. .
2-Budget
Ceruli
· no protection. As of·now, I have
Gabriele
to pay seventy-two dollars for
Dr. Edward.O'Keefe
3-Governance
my. win(\shield to be properly.
Cha.innan - King Comm.
3) Criticism of October· '70
Piazza
repaired..
-
.
c/o Psychology Dept.
long range plan
Glennon
I Certal
·n1·y , hope
that
Thank you for.your attention
4) Critique of Appendix One:
Meara
t this
tt
·
- Governance ·
Brosnan
. som_
ebod_
y
is
looking for cl_ue_
s to
O
ma er ..
·
s'
1
A lengthy discussion on the
Smith
. fiimre
out. the_ Joaic behin_d the_
mcere y'
--
.,.
Ed
d
J
O'K
~
Role of the Commission ensued
Waters
· idea of pay.in.
g ,
tw_
o
do_
ll_ars.~
fi_
or
.
war-

ee.e
in --which
the
desire
was
Mooney
the privilege (?) of a 'resident
expressed that the commission
Browne
I
'.
~ student to park a car on campus
GOOD NEWS from 2
members, although representing
·by·· a person who is virtually
A M.arist.
· b. ·
· ·

1ar
t
f th
A debate then ensued as to
supporting
Marist's_. ability to_
s
egms·to realize the
a par 1cu
segmen
o
e
sub-committees could effectiyely
accomplish their tasks,being over
represented by a specific group
(e.g. Planning), whether it might
not be more beneficial to have a
greater cross section to allow for
a greater nwµber of different
"inputs."
The pc;>int
· was then
made that the people working in
the
area
they chose would
possibly do more work and that
any
solution'
which
a
sub-committee submits will have
to take into consideration the
other areas of the community to
be 'even
considered
for
acceptance.
A motion was then made that
the committees stand as they are
now constituted,
but
any
individual who
wishes
to switch
his or her
membership
be
allowed to do so. The motion
carried,
18-for,
8-against,
I -abstention.
It was then decided that the
remaining two points on the
agenda would be better covered
by the sub-committees than the
commission
could
in the
remaining seven minutes.
harsh
reality
of .a so-called
college, should not look upon
w h e t h e r o r n o t · · t h e
operate.·
--··- .: ·
rev.olu_ t_ion_ of expectations
the'
Commission
as an------------------------------
~
you Security for this
WASHINGTON
WATCH
from 6
protection . beyond the . call of
among the world's poor and
opportunity
to strengthen th~t
. duty and to you Mr. Editor, for
becomesinvolyed in the study of
group's position, bu~ rather to
combat
troops.
The
Post
P
rinting this com-plaint. It is my
human development, it will
be
strength~n
the entrre college
interprets
this to mean that
.
good, good, news: (And our - community.
..about 150,000 combat soldiers
sincere hope th at some action
Mascot will
be
shouting:• Go!
·Addressing itself to the seco~
could be left in Vietnam after
willbetakenimmediately.
Go!Go!)
·
·
- . topic
on
the
agen:da,
May
1 to
protect
an
:• Yours truly•
. Organization of the Commission,
approximately equal number of
Tom Mannell
FOOD
COMMITTEE
from 3
general group sentiment seemed
logistics, artillery and Air Force
Sb.
allll' OI.
~,1.--■ II
to
favor
that
the
steering
personnel."
In other words

g

find
one
of the committee
committee
be perement,
also
300~000 U.S. troops will stay.
inemJ:,ers to voice the complaint
that it work out the specific
LARGE
U.S.
PRESENCE
for you. The worse thing one
structure
in
which
the
BAR TO PEACE - "Thieu Ky
Editor of the Circle,
As a member of the Student
Academic Committee, I feel that .
Dr.
Goldman's
recent letter
should be answered.
I have checked with several
students who recently received
follow-up letters from the CFD
concerning why they failed to
'fe$Pond to the evaluation form.
Out of the
f'.ast
seven students I
spoke to, five had not received'
~
do is to remain silent or just
commission
will ol)erate and·
are not likely to compromise as
discuss
the
complaint
with
thaf
sub-committees
be
long as they. are assured of a
friends.
No action
can be
appointed
to the areas of
continuing
U.S.
military
instituted
unless
a specific
P 1 an n in g , Budget
and
presence in the absence of a
problem
is
reported._
Governance at once.
settlement," Halperin and Gelb
You probably has noticed that ·
A poll of the Commission was
say. They argue that the enemy
the dining hall
is
closed from
then taken to detennine where
will not take part in elections
3: 15 to 3:45 p.m. each day. This
the commission members would
"as
long
as the
Thieu-Ky
if
to allow the dining room to be
like to work. The result of. the
Government remains in power.
cleaned and the tables to be set
poll was:
The
Communists
are highly
up for dinner.
Budget
unlikely to
risk
their
lives
by
coming out in the open and
campaigning.
Two other reasons make the
plan unacceptable to the enemy,
the experts write:
"White House sources made
plain that the main reason for
making
this
proposal
(a
· stand-still cease trre)
is
their
belief
that U.S. and Saigon
forces now control almost all of
South Vietnam.
This
means we
would support Saigon's claim to
just
about
every
piece of
territory in Vietnam."
An agreed
time table for
mutual withdrawals "could be
read as a hardening of the old
position,"
Halperin and Gelb
state.
This
because "Hanoi's
acceptance of the cease-tire is a
· new condition."













































































































.
'
,.
~'\:)fit!
.........

.
.
'
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"'
.
.
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..
.. ..
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PAGE6
Ca-lendQ,r-
OJ-Events
CALENDAR OF EVENTS FOR THE WEEK OF-NOV. 9-15, 1970
·
Monday,
9-5
p.ni.
·
.
·
.
·
Peace Corps Recruiting, Alcoves, Campus Center.
-
Tuesday,
8
p.m.
.
.
Lecture. "Abortion" by Bill Baird, Theater, Campus Center.
·
.
Thtusday,
8
p.m..
·
.
.
Lecture. "Counter-Revolution"
by Prof. Amo J. Mayer, Theater;
Campus Center:
/
.
·-
.
Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 8':30 p.m.
Coffee House, Room 249, Campus Center.
.
.
. Saturday,
2
p.m.
Football; Farleigh-Dickinson - Home
·
Fall Crew - Alumni Race - Home
Saturday/Sunday
.Sailing
- War Memorial Trophy-
N.Y.
Maritime
Current Art Exhibit
"Now and Then" by artists of Dutchess County Art Association.
-
Gallery Lounge, Campus Center.
Washington·
Watch
The following are excerpts
_
from
..
"Washington
Watch" a
private newsletter circulated by
Tristam Coffin.
PRESIDENT
- Halperin and
Ge lb in a report
to
the
Washington Post say the options
·
open to the President are:
"l.
Commit ourselves to a
-
VIETNAM, THE CHANCES
firm withdrawal date, securing
FOR t'EACE -
"If
the President"
the release of our prisoners and
means what he says;we wiU have
whatever other terms we can get,
American
forces,
perhaps
thereby creating:the
conditions
50,000,
perhaps 200,000
in
for a political settlement among
Vietnam indefinitely, propping
the
Vietnamese.
If
these
u p the
cur r e,n t Saigon
negotiations fail, we
will
have
rcgime ... The
fighting
will
left
behind
a large,
well
continue
and Americans wm
equipped
South·
Vietnamese
continue to
die
and be wounded.
army
which
coulg get our
The destruction of Vietnam will·. continuing
economic aid and
continue. Americans will remain
military
support,
but• which
·
in Hanoi's prisons.
.
·
might not be abl~ to defend
·
"However, Hanoi. might well
itself.
·-
step up the level of fighting to
"2. Keep a residual American
put pressure on the U.S. to
force
indefinitely
in South
.
11IE CIRCLE
.
.
NOVEMBER
5, 1970
_,,
withdraw.
The President
has
Vietnam, assuring the survival of_
warned that he would respond
an anti-Communist
regime but
by escalating the war, As long as
with
continuing
American
any American forces. remain
in
causalties
in Vietnam,
the
Vietnam,
the
danger
of
.
holding
of our prisoners by
escalation and counter escalation
Hanoi, dissension at home and
will be present."
-
.
the danger of escalation .,
..
The
:
Youth
C3n
·.
·
End
Defennel1t
The
-authors
of these_ words,
President's
position
(is) •..
that
Morton· H. Halperin and. Leslie
·
the
.U.S.
will withdraw_ only to
This article appeared in-\he
college stude~ts, especially those
·.•safe,
he can drop the student.
H;
.Gelb,
are probably the most
the extent that Saigon can
fill
New York Times on October 27.
~ho have lottery numbers above
deferment.
If however,
Jt·
knowledgeable,
experts'.
on·_the
,the·gap:'·_:
-
....
>
'._
"'.'
··••
,,
.
'.
..
"i,
__
Wa'shiilg~~n, Oct:·26 ~Dr;
_Curtis
l95_.
.
.
.
.
. ...
··:•.
__
;,
,
.•...
_
·-•
.. ·.
:c'
·•
...
',
appe~r,s}hat hisnu~ber.is_going
·
w
a"r
:
outside
th:e g9vermnerit.
·.·
-.
This alternative,
is
boosted:by
w:
Tarr,' the" dif:ector of.Selective
, .
,;_
In·:
the·
·past;:::'
once; a,. man:;; tc:>-•
b_e
.reacl}edA>Y
his l,oar~, he
· -
."Both·
·worked/for
the National
.:_
Secretary
of_
Defense··
Laird
1
s
-
Service,
_
ordered
·local-·.
draft
o~t~rned

defer91ent · he
.was_·.
can keep. the de~t:rment_ and
.
Security Council,-which sets top
.
statement that between 40
-and
boards
today·· to withd_raw·
_
require~ ~o ~,eep 1t as long_as he
·.
hope that the_ ceilmg
_will
b_e
.
war
.
policy;
Hafperin
·
was
60%
of the GI's remaining
in
deferments immediately from all·. wa_s, eligible.
'A
man. with a_
_
lower next }'.ear.
-
,
_ .
.
_-
regarded
.as·
Dr. Henry
A ..
Vietnam
next spring will
_be.
ineil who request_. that their
stu_denr defe:me_nt,
fo~
mstance;
·.•·
A
Selectlv~. Service System
·Kissinger's
most gifted aide.

deferments be cancelled.
has to retam 1t until·. he left
-
spokesman. said that
all
a man
·
lfowever,
·"_!fenator
Barry
CONT. ON
5
The order primarily benefits
school or;reached the age of 24.
who
Wllnts to
cane~!
his
Goldwater
predicts
.that
the
,
·
Under the lottery system, men
deferm~nt must do now
IS
make
fighting will. end in Vietnam
-
with numbers above the highest
..
,
the request in writing to his local
within
a
wee~
;or
ten days,"
CONF~-.
I.
CT.o··-

number reached by·their boards-. board.
·:-
.
'.·,
.
.
.
.
United Press International, Oct.
f'
are.free from the drafr,forever,·
.
-Dr.
Tart said· that the new
9.
·
This reflects White House
unless.
there
is a national
-

order
_had
been
issued_
.
to
.
optimism, based on two factors:
mobilizatiori,i as long as they
'
"achieve
fairness
to all
(1) The enemy cannot continue
·
by Joe Ahearn
were
classified'
1-A that is,
registrants."
to withstand
the ·heavy air
·
eligible
to
be drafted.
_,
·
•.
.___
·
·'
bombardment
promised if they
"We don't
want any. flags• devefopment
to. forty hour
,
.Men
with deferments, on the
--
..
·
~}
do
-
not
.accept.
-
Columnist
flodwn at half-mdast ,when we dhie wm·
elif:kes,_,
statistics and o_bject_
ives. ?titer hand; ent~r the
dr.
af.t po'?l
.
,.
:
.,,
"'
Marquis
Childs
says:. "The. an
we sure
on t want t e
m the· year
t~e
their
_
-
people
not
alone of
_
South
goddamn President coming to
·
Don't ge.t
me·
aµnoyed sori!
·
deferments.
If. their· original
.
...;;:
_______
: _
_
r
Vietnam,
b\lt
·
Cambodia
·.
and
our funeral.
If
;my flags are to be
·
My
-great;.grandfather
was
a
lottery number is reached by
-
405
will
~us
continue. to be flown, they will be the new flagf
federalist and so
I'in
a
federalist.
their boards that year, they will
subjected to the hell of bombing
we'll fly over their corpses. Ancf
I'm
an American
.
and· I
_
always
be drafted.
_
_
·
_
·
.
.
that day after day shatters the
they'll be no funerals to attend.
will be because I believe in
Dr. Tarr has announced that
. .
·o
. .
p f
.
d.
.
lives
of men,. women
and Only victory festivals." (Julius.
"freedom;
equality
and the
-
men with-numbers-above
195
·_
·
e ro un
IS
children, destroys villages and Lester)
American way. I· believe in the
will not be taken this year. Thus,
·
"
·
·
·
farms.
and
.
drive"s ever-new
Mighty.
·powerful
words
.
son
colors of my flag and what they
the. thousands
of men with:
-,-;

..
-_---
·N'
au·,
se:
a>
-m··
.
.
thousands of refugees into the·· but. don't. you think you're
·
symbolize but nio st of all I
deferments who have numbers·
Cl
·ti·es and pi"tifully
'made
refugee pushing things to far.
I
mean
believe
in an establislied
·b·
this
ilin"
b.
f"t b
f
.
·Y
d"d , figh
.
.
h
a ove
ce
g
ene
1
y
camps." He estimates civilian_
.a
tt:r all, what do rou reallr, ha'!e
Amenca.
.
ou 1
n
t
t
~
t e
giving up- their deferments so
casualties
·-of
the·' bombs since
,.
agamst our established society
m
war and
F
0
to ~ther countries~
-'
they will be classified 1-A during
1965 as· over a million. with
America today?
you don t realize how good this · the year.
300,000
deaths. (2) Statistics on
~h ~ow! You'1:e a b_!,1.ilch
of
country has been ~o you. Where
:
Colleg_e
-
students
·with
the success of "pacificationt
pre1ud1ced, l~ctu_nng pigs th~t
~o you get_ tl_J.e idea you can
-
borderline
numbers will also
.
which
a New
York
Times
.
keep procrastmating the peoples
insult
.
me ~ike . th at when
,
benefit'
in
years to come. If a
correspondent
from
Saigon
·
real
probl~ms
by shield~g
everybod>: ~hinks like. I do and
student
is
not certain whether
warns, "the accuracy of which yo~~self
wi_th structures
like
behv~s
10
th e t}J.ings th at
his number will be reached he
has sometimes been challenged political parties and due process
Amenca·stands for?·

can hold his deferment until late
by
critics."
of law. Man, you're materialistic
Do
they,
D!11..
in the year.
·
,
_
OPTIONS. OPEN TO THE Pim P s confining
our
·
-
If it appears that
his
number
is
Would that what I have read in
these illustrious pages
-
·
·'
Were.
equal
.
to that of ihe
arici~nt sages.
-_
.
·To
be,
I a~, We share.
_are
.
•~sa._g~
~out~"
_profoyn<t
phfclses,
H
o
w
e-v er ; n e bu 1 o u s
..
excfe·sce'nce of essence can go to
blazes!
by T. S.
~ulliml































































































l ·
i
The~
hvo
players
·
perfonned
in
the• Regional Theatre Festival and
Competition held in the Campus Theatre on
·saturday,
October 31. They
are
·· Jack and Graciela
Hill
from
New
Paltz in Pantomime
l.
·
·
J>y
Kevin Kehoe
,
It's election time again,.both
revisions along with their effects
on
·campus
and off. Since we're
on the freshman, not on sophs
students both concern us but
.
or seniors but on freshman.
·It's
only one involves us and our up
.to
you to become involved
lives here at Marist. The offices with the direction
in
which your
are basically the same as in high life goes at Marist. So ffnd· out
school but the jobs are more
·who
the candidates are, come to
.
important and involve more. The
the debate on Monday, Nov. 9,
game ended.
Bill O'Reilly did a fine job
punting last weekend. O'Reilly
had four punts for 200 yards on
a
SO
yarder average. His longest
was a 58 yarder in the second
quarter.
The defensive unit
forced Albany· State to fumble
5
times
throughout
the game.
Four of these fumbles coming in
the third quarter. Russ Humes
and Don Hinchey played a fine
defensive
game catching the
·
· .·freshmi:ln
president should be
.
and vote on the 12 of Nov.
capable
of answering
such Don't
be. the victim of the
.-questions
a~: Who runs Marist?,
prevalent apathy. VOTE!_
and explain
:the
new curriculum·
*.****
Need
.Ai
National
-
Albany State quarterback four
times attempting
to_
pass. Dick
Hasbrouck,
who
has been
hampered by injuries throughout
the year, gained 36 yards in only
-
8 carries. Hashouck missed the
second half as his injured. leg
began to act up.
·
·
D .
~-t .
,_
..
··L.·
?
_.
eJ.'3~~1J.:
·
o~n~-.
:'
,_-;·
··.
-_:
·;
..
.,
..
:
.
.
..,
.,.
_,.
.
.
'
,.
Thanks to Congress,/ which
for
~bis
pr
nexfsem;ster, fiU out'
·
passed an
.
increased
..
~ational.
a
.
short reapplication. Students
Defense
Student·
Loan
who d_id.riot apply· last Spring_
appropriation
in August and
must
furnish
a
:parents
then i'epassed· this over President
·
confidential statement.
.
··
·
·
Nixon's veto; we have received a
The National Defense Student
.supplemental
allocation of Joan
.
Loans
are
·
those
given
to
funds~ The Financial Aid Office· students who qualify financially
is
now ready to make loans from
(usually a family income of not
,
this extra allocation.
over $12,000 will qualify one).
·
-
We expect to give first priority-
No interest
is charged until
·
to
...
those
students
whose
graduation.
Three per cent
·
applications were
in
by the May
·
simple interest'is charged during
1st deadline.
If
funds.:- are
the ten year repayment period.
.
sufficient
we will help new
•·,
.
If
you qualified and were
/
applicants'. Since some qualified
rej~ctt:d
.
or cut. last Sprin~
·students,
have
-
made
other
J,ecause of lack of. funds,
.er
if
arrangements·
for
_necessary:
yt>u·
are
in
-dire
need/please see
·
·
funds
we. are-
asking
that
Mr. Mortensen in Adrian as soon
stude_nts who still need
.
money
.
aii possible.
·
'

,·'LANDED iMMIGRANTSTATUS".
'·•'
from·9
the telati~e
·lives,
~r 3 UNITS
if
Jtis ~estina.tion·
is
not the city
'in
which that relatiye lives. (See amendments to Section 11-D-3 for a list
.of
th!nelationships that count here.)
..
.
.
.
(i)·
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. IN THE AREA OF
DESTINATION: A MAXIMUM OF
5
UNITS
if
the applicant iritends
·
to go to. an ?Iea
·in
Canada where there is a :very strong general
demand
·for
labor,' fewer
if the demand is less strong, and zero if•
there is an oversupply of labor in the area. (Vancouver gives 2
points.)
ALBANY ST. AMBUSHED
from
8
a lateral pass from Wilkins into
m
i d d le
f
o r h is s e c o n d
the end zone where Albany
·
touchdown. Bill O'Reilly added
State fell on the ball. The PAT
the
extra
point
giving the
was blocked. as the score became
·
Vikings
a commanding 33-6
20-6. Taking the kickoff the
lead.

Vikings again moved downfield.
The· defense lead by Jack
A 2S yard run by Milligan being McDonnell would not permit
the big play. Moving down to Albany
State
past t_he 50
the 7
yard line Wilkins took it in throughout the fourth quarter.
for --the touchdown untouched. Albany. State had the ball off a
The conversion attempt was lateral pass and took it 35 yards
missed as the score changed for his
.
first
touchdown of the
again. The Vikings 26, Albany_. year. The conversion attempt
State 6. The Viking defense kept was missed giving the Vikings a
the pressure op apd forced
39-6 lead.
As the fourth quarter
Albany State to punt from deep was coming to a close Don
inside its
OWJJ
territory, A poor Copolino
lead the Vikings.
punt gave the Vikings good field downfield. The running of Bob
position.
Fine inside running by Durso and Mark Rowinski
·
Hasbrouck and Durso, and a pass brought the ball to the one yard
to Paul Valli gave the Vikings a line where Bob Durso scored.
f"IISt
and goal to go. Murray This ended the scoring with the
Milligan took it through
·
the V~ings on top 4S to 6
.
as the
·
BOOK
REVIEW from 2
screams in the night and fills the
day with lips tight
'in
silence."
The· entire book. is like this.
P.~rceJ?Jion. brµ~~t
.. -P'?rce.R~\~!1•-
and the up· ofre_ality filtenng m
to attest to the
.validity
of.that
perception.
It
is
significant that
only one chapter in the book
deals with David Harris versus
the state.-
This,
after all,
is
not
Goliath's
business.
Goliath's
busin'ess
is to raise
every·
question that has. made a home
in·
the human consciousness. for
so much as an instant. Goliath's
business
is
to rip us open and
leave us bleeding in the face of a.
hot
three
o'clock. sun. Our
business is· to· let that happen.
Burrowing away or accepting
Goliath is only the first layer of
our mind
is
impossible; it just
won't
work.
The
ultimate
measure of our humanity, says
David Harris is the blows we
don't· blunt, the shades we don't
use.• He has been exposed for
·quite
a whU~ no~.
l'he
obvious
question
does
not
require
articulation.
.,.J!
'.
-
-~
..
":'.
µ··
:},:,#&
.-.--.
: 14
·.r

.~ ~-
......
-~
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,. .
-
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.
. .
' ..
5..
·.
'-:-'.l
.
~.
PAGE7
Campus
Stuff
·
by Don Duffy
WHAT GOES ON HERE
Will someone please explain to those foolish boys that play with
the pointed ball that no team from Marist is supposed to be 6-0 and
then run down to the river and explain to those boys with the funny
boats that
.
they are not to beat teams like Harvard Yale or
Columbia. Don't those people know that a Marist man' shouldn't
even be able to spell Harvard let alone beat them. 0, how things have
changed. Why it was only a few years ago that Helen Keller could
have started on any varsity-sport, now she'd have to be 2nd string.
So if you h~ppen to see a football player or a crew man around the
old
U explam to him that it'sjust not right to win that way. Tell him
he's breaking tradition.
.
·
. ALBANY STATE, HA!!!!!
Score 45-6. The funny thing about them is that they weren't that
bad, it's just that we are damn good,-damn good. Guys like Cotton
Nash showing off
in
front of his family. Someone told me that
Cotton had a party of 12 at the game which would mean that the
entire town of Little Falls,
N.Y.
would have to close for the day.
Dino Gestal playing his typical great game that just excites the fans
to
~
point of me!1tal i11c~ptivity. Benjy McDonnell running around
telling everyone his name 1s Jack and that he has a date in the stands.
Ai:t~ to add_ a serio_us n~te to t~e column, Chuck Browne and Murry
Milligan domg their thmg makmg fools of the defensive units they
face. ~et us l}Ot forget how littl_e frosh Jack Condron tells everyone
that his family came to see him walk off the field with a clean
·uniform.
It really was some game (as Dizzy Dean would say) and
there are so many people that play so outstanding a game it was hard
to believe. Guys like Don Hinchey, Henry Blum, Emmett Cooke
Mike Erts, Paul DeCabia, Sicky Faison and a host of others. On;
other little fellow I left to last is our little quarterback Jim Wilkens.
Jim did another outstanding job considering he has a wooden arm
and his right leg is a foot and a half shorter than his left leg. One hell
of a limp. So that wraps it up from Lake Leonidoff. One major
disappointment is that the clubs little Manager Judy Schaudeneckei-
didn't run out
,for
a time out, but it was real nice to see Susie find
Bill Rooney's mouthpiece. Be Good, Love Duff.
Patented
Peace
SyIDhol
?

WASHINGTON (CPS)
-
The
U.S. Patent Office has given the
go-ahead to a competition for
commercial trademark rights to
the
peace
symbol.
Two
companied, the Intercontinent
Shoe Corp. of New York and
LUV,
Inc.
ar.e bidding for
exclusive
rights·
to the
internationally used symbol, the
'1PSide-down "Y» in
a
circle with
a bar extending'through the fork
of the
"Y."
The sign originated
from the semaphore code for
Nuclear Disarmament - ND - and
was firsf used in Britain during
. t
h
.e
b
a· n -
t
h
e -
b
o m
b
demonstrations
in the late
fifties.
The sign is now widely used as
an anti-war protest
here and
abroad, and has been attacked as
the "anti-Christ" by right-wing
fundamentalists.
Intercontinent
·
Shoe Corp. manufactures leather
goods
with
the
peace sign
inscribed. LUV, Inc., which has
already officially co-opted "luv"
in_ its
corporate
name,
manufach1res
-"boutique-type
high-fashion
clothmg· ·
for
·
the
junior customer," according to a
company spokesman ..
The
trademark
would not
prohibit use of the peace sign,
except
in a brandname
for
marketable goods.
•• *. *
WHAT IS POVERTY? from
4
for toothbru.shes, for hand cream, for a hammer and nails and a bit
of screening, for a shovel, for a bit of paint, for some sheeting, for
needles and thread.
·
Money to pay in money for a trip to town. And oh, money for hot
water and more for soap. A dream of when asking for help does not
eat away the last bit of pride. When the office visit is as nice as the
offices
·of
other governmental agencies, when there are enough
workers to help you quickly, when workers do not quit in defeat
and despair. When you have to tell your story to only one person,
and that person can send
.you
for other help and you don't have to
prove your poverty over and over and over again.
·
I have come out of my despair to tell you this. Remember I did
not· come from another place or another time. Others like me are all
around you. Look at us with an angry heart, anger that will help you
·
help me. Ariger that will let you tell of me. The poor are always
.
silent. Can you be silent too?
-
⇒tJ.r:~;;
s~~:J;-+s,
..
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PAGE
a ·
>. •
'nm
CIRCLE : ;
i· '. · ...
· ······.
.Al&a■y
St. ::lllltiushed
. 15~6
'.
-;
'',,.,.,
f '
:
Yi(~Jlls
IP1elr
QnstOpp.;bl,.
.·.
/::,
2
':. ·-·
:
The ~ikm;uhow;~
what class _ late~-iz:~V::n;;;ard~
-for. in ~l~~riy .',tate: tenitory; ;rom
'..,
! '";•
1-,
!
\
they we~-
in
last· Saturdar as~ .the sccir_e.
Henry Blum and Dean. inside the ten Milligan·wa_s
called.
they easily· defeated a bi3ger · · - · · •
•-·
- - · -
·. -·
a•·
-

d d.d
his ·
b
·
Albany State-teani-4S-6. It wa • _._Ges~al gav~, Albaily
.Stat~'-
upon· an_
1
JO going
. the sixth straight win for th!· _ n~thing thro~gh the{ J1?iddle as '. around . right. end for th~ score.
Vikings, while the
Alban _·
State
Jun ..
·
Fantuzz1 :and, M!Jce
O
_Erts , The _co~verS1on
was Jru~d as
season mark-fell to 3-2 ..
Y
_ _
stopped eve~hing outS1d~._Tom
'. t~e _first qu~er ended with the
The offensive unit of the
~urphy, ~laymg.f_or tliemJured- . Vikmgs_le~dm~13-0... · .• _ ·:
Vikings,
<
~ept
rolling along Bill Ro~n~y, looked very w~U.
. ln the second_ qu~er ·. t~e , _ .
putting
together the -largest
.Th;e Vikmgs began the sc.onng Albany Stat4: defense tighten~d - ·
point total in ·Vildng ·history. : midway
through
the. first
and ~o!lg \Vith costly penalties
Paul
DeCabia .replacing the
quarter. The_ first.touchdown;
theViking~wereunableto.move
injured Tom ~Cardinale, did a
_was called back afte_r_
a clipping·. ~e b~. With Al~any State _deep
fine job. alorig with -the rest of · p~n:tlty was called against the
m
their own territory an~ forced ·
the Viking line. Jiin Wilkens the
Vikings;
After an exchange of _ to punt· Steve Scalzi broke
· Viking- · quarterback, has • not
punts tlie Vikings began to move - t11:f~ugh
to deflect the _ball.
:The
been dropped behind the line
with: the ball near mid-field Jim .. ".'ikm~s !~ok over _with good
attempting to pass in the.·last
Wilkens: _spotted Chuck Browne • field pos1t!on and a :few plays
two games. Murray Milligan, deep and hit
him
with a pass. :later t~eW~ens t~ Browne p~ss ;
_who. missed last week's game, . Browt?-e.didn't break stride ~s.he combtnatton
cJ1cked_ agam ..
showed great form as he ran for
took it :all the way for a•Vikmg Browne caught the ball on the
4
18S yards.
_ _
.
touchdown. Bill O'Reillf added . yard line and carried two Albany.
Defensively
the Vikings
the. extra p'oint as the ~ikings
St;3te _defender~ into the ~oal.
remain one of the·top in Club . took an early 7-0 lead •. -
: _
.9.
R_eilly_
:~PJ-tL
t~.e upnghJs
football. Cotton Nash played a·
Late in the first quarter the ___
makmg the score 20-0 as the half
'fine game. Playing de~ensive end,
V ~kings ~tarted thefr s~c~nd · ended. .
.
, .
.
.
Nash :put_ tremendous pressure . dn'f'.e, Mo~
!r~m ,deep .ms!de :
E8!1Y
m the t~d _quar!er with
on the Albany State quarterback·
their. _own temtory on th_e fme
Ma~1st dee1> m their. own
and scored late in the game
running·
of Hasbrouck
and· temtory,_Albany State deflected
picking .off. an Albany State -. Millig8.J!
the Viking~ moved deep
CONT. ON 7 ·
/
.
.
.
BOB
DURSO
breaks
awai for-long . gain
as~st
Albany St. Durso
hH
. provided
Vikings with
f"me
depthJn
offensive
backf'aeld
all
year.
·
.
.,.
:
.
'
-
..
..
'
Mayerhoffer
· Breaks
Record·
-Harri·er_s>-~
·-successful-
Week-:··-
- byJ,T. ·
Bob' .·Mayerhoffer,
senior.
Coach Len Olsen felt that his.
captain 9f the Cross · Country
team could . fare better
in
the
team-finished· first
as -
the harriers ·conference_ championShips. Once
defeated Quiilllipiac, 19-36.
last -
again the Harriers were led by
.
.
Wednesday .aftern~n'
on our .. the
combination·
of Don
....,,.: , •· ,. -
home course. Mayerhoffer's time
Gillaspie (nint!J. place in 27~15)
-~---~
__
!:_
~~,§-~_:
__
._J_._·
-
,
- .•
fif/1~9~!~~~:~~!:8ii!it
-
.i:::i~-f!
0
l1::tt~irr::c;-,~~::-
-----~-:~---.
recont:-The
·old
mai-k:was 27:40 . 'by: the strength of
this
one-two
< :};'"·•
by Phil;-'Cappio, who graduated . combination finished third
in
a ·
· ·
· last year;
.
Other scorers were --field, o_f. _
five teams. _ Nyack
freshmen Doii Gillaspie, second .
_
Missionary College finished first
. in 28:20;
seniors Mark Des· :with 20 points while host school
' ·"
Jardin,-third
·in 29:27 ·and Greg
King's 'College· finished :second
· How·e; fourth
in .
30:0S and
with 39 points. The Red Foxes'
junior
Joe Nolan; ninth in
73 points were not only ·good
32:32.
·
·
·
. '
~nough
for third place but_ g()cid ·
The Harriers then travelled to
enough to defeat Bloomfield-
Briarcliff
Manor,
N,Y.,
to
C_ollege and Dowling College.
compete
in the C.A.C.C.
·The Harriers complete their
ch~mpionships.
The Harriers
season this Saturday afternoon·
were originally scheduled to
with. the N .A.LA.
District
compete
in the
Albany
ChainpionShips at Van Cortlandt
Invitational_ Championship, but· Parkin the-Bronx.
·
··by J. T.
__ On Sunday, October
25,
the . Torreir (No. 4), a Junior, Stev~ only· Senior,
Joe
Schi:o.iz
crew team won the junior eight
McDermott (No. S), a Soph,
(Stroke)
a Soph, . and _ Hany
ch amp ions h·i p
i ti
the · Matt O'Brien (No. 6), a Junior,
Manley (Coxswain)
also
a Soph.
Head-Of-The-CbarlesRegatta on. Captain Steve Sepe (No. 7); the · .-
· · • • • • •
·
the Charles River "in Boston, ·
__
·
·
·
Massachusetts~ Coach Bill Austin
MAYER ti
3 ---------/-•·_.
-----------------
stated that'
our.
boat not only
_ rom .
: ·won ~e ra~
against
32 otl~er. that .tune he was a· visiting. places by students
wm· be
boats (mcluding a second Marist -professor
at Columbia, and eliminated. In its place, a letter
· boat) but set ·a ,record for -the previously
an
assistant professor grade indi~tor (LGI)
will
be
three-mile race. The winnil)g of history at Harvard. _
.
·
· computed for · ~ch student to - -
tinle was 16 minutes even, which.
·
R~ch
accomplished by Dr. one decimal point only, to -
broke the old mark of 17:24
M~yer, _has been assisted with
suggest the general cah"ber of
a
which was set back in -1967 by .. funding from the· Guggenheim- student's performance.
It
will
be
the
Syracuse
Rowing
and· · Rockefeller foundations,
released only on· written request
Association.
and the American Council of
of· the .s.t_udent for use · in
In the Head-Of-The-Charles,- Learned.Societies. · ---
applications
for.: scholarships, ·
all boats line up · across the
·
fellowships; entrance
fo graduate.
starting
line and one
starts
every BAIRD TO SPEAK from
3
atid-profess:ional-schools, etc;
ten· seconds racing against the
-
'~l'he~option of-·taking counef
clock, not each other. Times are
Mr.' Baird
has.
appeared on
on a""pass-.; no credit'!-liasis'will --
tabJllated and rechecked, plus international -radio and T~"Iri".
_b~·--ext~nded to· any· course,
protests have to
be
ruled upon. West Germany· a special was. subject only to the consent of.
Because
of this the official presented
on· his crusading · the
instructor
-and
the·
results of the race
were not efforts.
He has also had
de{iartment concerned~--:
. .:
known·
to
Coach Austin -until extensive coverage
in
newspapers
· · Commenting: on this tlie CUS · - ,
Monday.· '
.
·
.
. and mag~inezs in the U.S.,
repc,tt'said: •~e •p~ option is,
-•· 1tmong tne
other schools Canad_a, and Europe. Recently,
intended to relieve the pressure·
competing were Syracuse, Yale, he appeared
on the Mike· on students for achievement in·
R u t g er s, · University
of Douglas Show an~ on an NBC
grades in order to enable them
Mass a ch use t fs,
Harvard,.
Frank McGee special.
to · concentrate their energies ..
Georgetown Columbia Brown
more effectively on their main·
and Rhode I~d.

' FACULTY SENATE from 3
counes o{
study. -
The winning' boat was made
'
'The 'pass' option in no way
·=c..
up of nine ,nen performing not · Senate, the new system will implies
less
or <;lifferent
course
as individuals but rather as one eliminate .. plus" and .. minus"
requirements
than
those
unit. They · ·were Mike Reilly additions to letter grades.
required
of students who elect·
(Bow),
a Junior,
John
Wilson
The well known Grade Point
evaluation of their work in a·
(No. 2), · a:
89P~C?m~re,_
B1!4n Average
(GPA) ·
sometimes
given
'course
in term of the
Weaver
(No. 3), a.Soph,
"!arty
known,to three and four decimal standard
grading
structure."
t-7~tt?t~-:."tb--~
•,
PETE
W~EX,
who has
prorided
one of. the ·few bright
spots
for the
90CCet
squad
tJm
year.
·












'I
SURVIVAL
..
---\
.~,
Survival will be a weekly
. column
devoted.
to. news.
concerning tlie destruction and
attempts at saving our ecology.
INDUSTRIAL
WASTE
. produce one barrelof oil.
'
. FROM
THE
POI.,LUTER'S
Mines Pittsburgh •Coal Research
· Bureau of Mines researchers . DICTIONARY.
Center are turning garbage into
also ·have· developed a garbage - .
,
crude oil. ·
.
removal
method
known as
con-ser•va-tion-ist/ n: one who .
. .This
magic·
is
performed by . pyrolysis. 'In pyrolysis, garbage _is · advocates conservation · esp. of.
subjecting
organic garbage __ ,heatedtoveryhightemperatures
natural
-resources/ synonym;
· - d
d
~
d
t ·
in .the absence of
air
to prevent
anti-capita.list
. . . . .
i
paper pro ucts an
100
was e..
c· o·m··bus·tt•on. Under the heat
,
RECYCLING
to carbon monoxide ,and steam·
···
·
.
· · ·· ·
1
at 250 degrees
c
under pressure
pressure the · materials in _the
JS ANYBODY OUT -THERE
(Conservation News)
of 1500 pounds per square inch. ' garbag~ br~ak do_wn che!111cally . LISTENING? . ·. ,
··
_·,
A,
The resulting crude oil' 'has all ·and. turn mto gases. which are
·
·
f
theiirecovered and recondensed.
"Th~
estimated· 21
million
-. American industries withdraw
th~ properties
and there ore
Ma·
ny u·sef'·'. chemi·c-.'". as·w_e_
ll as_-.·
. f art· ul t ... '
tter
that
over 17 trillion gallons of water
utility
of naturally ·occurring
w
I.WI
hi
toils o P
ic_ a e n:i,a .

·
f
d
d
crude, according to a Bureau of · ~ailshi~oanve_
.... b
___
ee,
n
p_r_oµ_
uced_ in,
t
·s
will pour into _the
air
over th~
per year
rot_n groun
an . M"
k
Th
il.
al .
1,
U.S. this year·could be cut down
surface sources bu,t_ treat less.
1J1es.
spo esman.
e o
ts
so,
Altha· u...:t, both systems: of
all
13
milli"
t
than· 5 trillion gallons to remove
low in sulfur which would make
&
11
dramatic
Y'
to ·
on ons
Pollutants before discharging it
it accep~able
in areas now_ - garbage· removal
are
still in th e· by 1980
if
currently available-
.
If
f 1
laboratory
stage. Buteau of·
control devices were installed on
into the public's waters. The 17 requiring
low-su ur
ue s to
Mines personnel so far see no
all sources;'' (emphasis-added) ··,
trillion
. gallons is about
SO
meet
air pollution
control
problems in implementing these
.
-FORTUNE
percent of the Nation's total
regulations.
systems on_a city-wide scale.
OCTOBER-'70
water use. , ·
One ton
of garbage
can
Sixteen projects to find ways
of creating
closed recycling
systems for industrial wastes and
water
reuse
are
currently
underway via grants from the
Interior
Department's
Federal
Water Quality Administration.
The
projects
are jointly
financed
by FWQA ($4.23
million)
and industry
($11
million). Interior spokesmen feel
the · closed system holds promise
of
·an
"ultimate solution" to
·abolish
industrial
waste
discharges which are the biggest·
source
of
the
Nation's
continually
increasing water
pollution problems,
FWQA
estimates that by the
end of 1972 . techniques, will be
available to remove. 85 percent
of industrial contaminants and·
meet
municipal pretreatinent
requirements for muncipalities
- that treat industrial wastes. By
1980, it should be possible for,
industry to remove 95 percent
of the
goodies
from their· ·
effluents and by 1985, closed
loop treatment systems or their
equivalents
could effectively
eliminate water ·pollution from
many industries. .
. ·
Then comes the hard part: .
getting industry
t9
used: the new
techniques. As a general rule,
industries are· refusing to . use .
existing t~chniques to mifl.in$e
their pollution. The American
public has learned the hard way
that
merely
having
the
technological capabµity is. an
"ultimate solution" to · nothing
when the polluters refuse to use
it.
REDEFINING GARBAGE
Scientists at the Bureau of
"Landed
_Immigrant
·Status"
In c·anada
.
,.
.
The following is inforniation published _by the Cen~ral Committ~e,
for Conscientious Objectors regarding "_lande_d
~migrant status".~
Canada. It is necessary that a candidate for 1mmigrant status attain.
SO
or more units. After five years he
is
eligible for citizenship.
(a) EDUCATION AND TRAINING_: 1 unit.for each successfully
completed
year of formal education a~f for. each y_ear _of
· professional, vocational and formal trades trammg or apprenticeship,
· up to a MAXIMUM OF 20.
-· -
.
· (b) PERSONAL
ASSESSMENI:: _Adapta~ipty, motivation,
initiative resourcefulne~ and othe,r s1milar . qualities to. be assessed
: during an interview with the applicant by an immigration officer; th~
possible MAXIMUM IS 15...
·
·
·

.
(c) OCCUPATIONAL-D'f:.MAND: U~ts ·to ~e assessed_
acco~dmg , ...
to demand for the occupation the applicant will follow·
tn
Canada, .. ·
from a MAXIMUM OF 15 when the demand
is
strong to 0 when--
there is an oversupply. in Canada of workers having the particular
occupation of the applicant.
.
.
~,
(d) OCCUPATIONAL SKILL:
Tq
be assessed according to the .
highest skill possessed by the applicant, ranging from a
MAXIMUM
OF 10 units for the professional to ,one unit for the unskilled,.
irrespective of the occupation.the applicant will follow in Canada.
··
(e) AGE: 10 units
if
the applicant
is
between 18 and 35 years of
age; one unit to ,be deducted for each year of age over 3S, to a
maximum ofl0 deducted •.
·
· .
·..
.. ·
.· .
.
(f)
ARRANGED, EMPLOYMENT: 10 UNITS
if
the applicant ·has.-
arranged employment in Canada which offers reasonable prospects
of continuity. .
.
_ ,
·.
.: .
:
.
(g)
KNOWLEDGE OF ENGqsa
AND FRENCH: A MAXIMUM
OF
10
:UNITS
if
the applicant reads, writes and speaks fluently both
English and French. An American should automatically get S iinits
for fluency
in
English. If he knows some Fr~J)ch, he may pick up
'1
unit more for reading with· difficulty, and/or
1.
unit for speaking.
. with difficulty.
If
he · reads or speaks French well, he can get
2
units
for each facility.
.
. ·
.
.
.
·
(h) RELATIVES IN CANADA: Where the applicant has a relative
in
Canada ·.willing. to assist-
him
in becoming established who
is •·
eligi'ble to .sponsor or nominate him but
is
unwilling or unable to do .
so,· he gets·s UNITS
if
the applicant's d~ation
is
the city in which
- CONT~ON7
-