Skip to main content

The Circle, November 19, 1970

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 7 No. 11 - November 19, 1970

content

VOLUME 7 NUMBER 11
\
...
.
.
THE
CIRCLE
MARIST COLLEGE; POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
12601
. NOVEMBER 19, 19'10









































































I
PAGE2
·'
THE CiRCLE
-NOVEMBER.19,
1970
ATTITUDES:··
·.
OUTRAGEUUS
.
by Bill O'Reilly
.
by Mike
Ward
.
',,
Hello Tim, this
is
Eldridge; How are you? Look TimI'rii afraid
. . ·.
To those· of, you who have
cost ,below that of a cab.
.
.
.
of- the non-disab.led. Not only is
.
I've got some heavy news nian: Yeah, like they don'twarit
you to
beeri reading my column, !must
/
It was obvious that whatever
there a hardship on the disabled.·
:}and
in Beruit man. Yeah, man, I told them you had
·a
plane but they · apologize for having to postpone·
we said was ~et by the senators'
·p
e rso·n·
·be
ca u"s e of
t h.e
_didn't
care.

·
·
·
· .
.
.'
.
.
·my
article
·on.
the
_special
apathy, and moreover, they just
limitations, but the non-disabled.
Look, man, don't let· it bug you. Look. at the. bright side. When education classes. This week-is
.
didn't
·
care.· Both presentations
who try to compensate for these
you look at things they are always bright-right Tim?'What's that?
devoted
to
the
disasterous
were memorable but faults were
limitations is often ostracized.
Your no! down too often
~
I
know .that Tim but just because no
shambl~s tha"t fook place_ at the
that they were impersonal. Mr.
Why must we all feel different?
.
country
m
the world:will l~t vou live in it doe~n:t meap you should
•city
hall administfa.tion ..
·..
.
_
.
Senato_r, yo~ ar~ faced w!th the
A question th~t was
=on
my
.
feel bad. Look, hav~ you tned Leonard Bernstem s house? You have
·.
There was a demonstration
following situations:. It 1s near
mind on the way home was what
and,-he told you that you we_ren't underprivileged enough to stay
(asking for action to
..
alleviate the· Christmas
~nd you must do
.
to
be accomplished?··
The
ther~ but he g~ve you one of his alb1:1ms.
That's~ shame Tin!,
·
vansportation
-problems),
even
some ~hopping. After t~at _you
demonstration. failed. The plea.:..
· ··
·.
Tim, I don t want to sound uppity but
I
thmk you should get a though
_the
number of people
_-are
gomg_ to -take your g'!lfnend
for action will obviously
.
be
·
new pa~sport. Yeah, a passort from Saturn doesn't look too.good at
.
totaled
about thirty~five, The
to a movie. Th~ problem i_s: How
forgotten by the commi(tee. The
customs. )\'hat? I know you spend most of' your time
·around
the
..
problem itself was the major , are· yo~
gomg to get_ Y<:>Ur only positive aspect was: the·
planets
-Tim,
but some people don't have their heads together like
prohibiting factor for finding a
whe~lcharr to your destmation
education w~ gave ourselves>
I
you and
I.
.
·
• •
..
: .
.
.
· ·
·

cure

. .
·
.
· · and
if
you get there how are you
would. like to thank
Father
.
By the V!ay Tim, hO\v's your wife, mati?·Last time you sa\V her
, .
The
picketing
was firialiy _going to get in the buildings
Gallante and the seven other
she was domg a half-gainer into the Big Dipper, yeah, that is heavy
abandoned in favor of listening· steps? Mr. Sen~t~r, are these
:students.
who gave-· themselves
·
man.
.
'
.
..
.
.
.
.
·
to
.
a hearing before the State" dreams s~ uru:eahstlc?
_
.
·
the opportunity to become more.
,
What? You have a statement to make to the youth of America?
.
Senate Committee
.
on
·
Mental
I don
t
think so and neither
.
aware
,of
the probleins of. the
O.K.
dTim let's have\it. You urge that the youth-of America become
and
Physical Handicaps. The
do most of tthe ~isahbledd.
An(!. disabled;
*****
.
tur!1e -on r~volutionaries arid band together to overthrow the fascist
·
first witness to testify was a Mr.
bell~
.it or
no ,
neit er
O
some
regune and mst~ Jane Fonda as Premier. Great, Tim I'll rush
it
out
J u l i e
.
S h a w f
_r
o m the
F
J.
to all the papers
m
Algeria.
It
should have a big affect. There's more.
A r c h i t e ct u
r
a
1-
Barriers
'd

·
I
don't know how much morel
can take
Tim.
O.K. shoot - you
Association. He stated that to a-,
or. u
-
y
already have -
I didn't mean it that way Tim. The rest of your· person
iri
·_a
wheelch~ir
an

statement is that you call for. the immediate release of all persons in'
·architectural
barrier would make
:
_
.
.
jail
·
on drug charges especially Miss Fonda who has. done 1;1othing it impossible for the person to
wrong in bringing
2,000
pep pills into the U.S. Furthermore there is
enter a building. Steps are the
·nothing
harmful in drugs and if you want proof look at me. Are you
fence around
.
the freedom of
sure you want to word it like that Tim?
entering
buildings supposedly
Where would I suggest you go? Well where are you now Tim? On
open to all the public. Mr. Shaw
a
raft in the Adriatic Sea. Well can't you stay there Tim?
Yem
would
asked for a law that will require
but you're sick and tired of the giant Sea Serpents attacking the raft.
that all building provide at least
.
Well
I
don't know
if
I
can help you Tim. I'm busy here writing,my
one
entrance
that
will
be
.
new book
''Son
of Soul On Ice" and making
anti-American
accessible to a wheelchair. And
statements to groups of Camels. North Korea?
I
don't think your
even better solution --
DOWN
much of a hero there Tim. In fact the only two places where you're
WITH STEPS!
.
a hero is at Berkeley and, the psycho-ward at Bellevue. I don't think
The next person to testify was
you'd have any trouble getting into either of those two places since
Miss Ronnie Stire who spoke
.
both ofthem
accepted-me. Well, that's about it Tim, have
a
nice
about
the
inadequacy
of
Thanksgiving. What's that? Would
I
like a groovy recipe for some
transportation
for the disabled.
freaky gravy. Sure Tim. That's¼ of a cup of acid and...
.
She included the fact that there
SUPPORT
VIKINGS
IN
THE BOWL
GAME
SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER28
·
was
no
means-
of public
transportation
available to the
disabled. Also the fact tliat five
companies who do transport the
disabled
are
not regulated and
.
can
charge
exhorbitant
fees. She
suggested that a plan developed
by
M.I.T.
be
considered. It
would require that a fleet of cars
be programmed by a computer
to
pick-up
and
deposit
passengers. It would,
1
be open to
.
___
_:aj!..,qL!M,P~UbJic
,a.P:c!.:PPerate
it
a
by
Tom
Hackett
..
· ·Judy came walking in and.
and 'Linda. Lin.da was eating a
pulled out the plug to the radio,
peanut-butter
and· Jelly
then she ran over.and pulled·out
sandwich and Randy had a glass
the plug to the typewriter. Then
-
of Chablis. Joan gav:e everybody.
she turned off George's light and.
a "Hiya
Honey"
arid said
my light.
-She
left.
I
got up and
"Listen, Listen, Listen;::" Then
plugged everything back in and
came
He.sko
(Hesko)
and
sat down and filled my pipe and
Anthony_.
A.
Gatto who gave
lit it. Judy came. back in
..
She
everybody a 'do-eti.' Tom came
went through the whole ritual
out of his room and wanted to
again.
I
got up a11d once again
know i_f anybody wanted to.go
corrected her actions;· I then
to the.'rat'
for
·a
cup of coffee.
walked out' of the room and
Jimmy
·asked
Tom if he
went into Tom's room. Judy,
wanted to go Dog Enumerating
Bill
and Liz came running in
Jomorrow,
They
agreed on
• chasing each other
..
Bill
thre\v
getting up at nine-o'cloclc (But
the pad to me
and
I
ran out of
.
since it was. Monday, Jimmy got
the room.
Liz
ran
after
me -
Bill
up at Three o'clock
(P.M.l'. --
had Judy held down in. Tom's
Tom was up
and
having a cup of
room. I ran past my room, the
coffee (in the rat) by noon.
.
door was open,
I
threw the pad-·
We let Liz out of the room ..
·
.
to George. Liz ran
in.
We held
.
-
Bob-o
__
woke up and.came out
the door from the outside so she
of his room in his underwear and
couldn't get out.
a_bathrqbe and·told Tom to turn
Just then the door of the wing
d<>.wn,
hi~. record. pla)Cer. !-Iis,eyes
:
·• opened: and
,,'in.:
'.walked
;cJimmy. ·•
:
~:
:·:}
,-;,,_:
o,
·'
·•,:-
·
,, ·"·
',\r,,,;;v;
;;',:
.•
,,;

<--<··
., and
Joan
•followed-·
by,
Randy
•,
·

CONT!NP~D}>N
:PAGE,
7
:
· •
..
~~--,.----~~-AJbum·
··-Reviews
New
Morning-Bob
Dylan
Columbia-

__
KC30290.
I

































































































































I
NOVEMBER
19, 1970
1HECIRCLE
PAGE3
Calell1ar
OJ
E~ents
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
...
Bill
Baird
On
Abortion
:CALENDAR
OF.EVENTS FOR
THE
WEEK OF NOVEMBER~
23;.
·
;
by
Goerge
Byrnes
29, 1970

.
L~st Thursday. night· in the
prevalent. Mr. Baird cited oyer
·
'
: · Theater~ -
a
veiy informative
.
population as the number one
,
·
Mond·ay
·
·
·
;
·
-lecture was
,held
with its main
·
social problem in the world
·
·
.
8:00 p.m. -
.
.
, emphasis on the abortion issµe." today and still, the law says only
,FILM,Kinetic·Art
Series. Theater,CampusCenter
·
Mr. Baird•'advocates free use of
married women may practice
_Tuesday

birth control devices and access
birth control and have abortions.
. .
.
r-s
p.m.
·
to abortion clinics to anyone
Otherwise, «we would be a land
·
RECRUITING by Koscof:Kosmetics.
-
Female
&
Male. Gallery
who is in need. Mr. Baird had
of prostitutes and whores."
Loung~ Cainpus Center,
j
u s t
g o t te n
..
out
.
of
a
Mr. Baird further stated the
.
·
·
;
··
8:30 p.m.
:
Massachusetts
prison
after
lack
of concern among the
.
·c.U.B;
TALENT SHOW, Coffee House, Rm. 24~ Campus Center
serving a twenty day-.jail term
youth in the colleges today. He
Wednesday
. f
O
r
p art i c i pat in g in_ a
felt that while we are :very active
Last Class- Va~"ati~n
I
demonstration.urging the people
in the peace movement,_ civil
.
.
.
'·Sunday
of Massachusetts to "teach birth·· righir
·
pollut~on
t~d ot~er
.
:
.
·. .
.
·
8:00 p.m.
. control."·_
.
pro
ems, we
et t is maJor
FILM. "Juliet of the Spirits,'' Theater
.
·
·
At the outset' of his lecture,
problem of over-population lose
Mr. Baird was quite annoyed
precedence. To exemplify the
with the turnout and felt Marist
_
gravity
of the problem,
Mr.
must be
_"very
different" if the
Baird gave some very alarming
need for his lecture was not
statistics such as:
-
'----
..
'·"."j;--.-------------.
-
·----
.. --------
.
ART EXHIBIT
·
"Wetrolls and the Orchestra Exploded" by R. Glass, M. Kenny E.
Stoffel. Gallery
/Lounge,
Campu_s Center. Nov. 22 - Dec .. 20
·.
/
.
by
Curtis W. Tarr; Director o~ Selective Service
·
W.hen I meet with college age
..
Army, -rely
pri~arily
upon
,induct.
·_
young men, among the first
volunteers
.to
carry
.out
their
President Nixon has concurred
things
.they
ask me is how long
missions.- The Marines. arid The
.
with
the
basic
conclusions
do I think the draft will.last.
Na-Vy have
.
used only minor
contained in
-
the Gates report,
The question is,hard to answer
increments of draftees in the·
·but
is reluctant to carry out; the
.
because it is impossible at this
past six years to meet needs for
recommendations
__
while troop·
time to give
_any
exact date or
their roles in Vietnam and the
strength must be maintained in
_
time
period that can expire
·
Air
Force has never drafted.
Vietnam.
·when
-such
a move is possible,
"In all· the armed services the
This country considered an
and that is, of course,'the answer
draftee is very much a min~rity,.
all-volunteer concept in· the
18
they are seeking.
making up only· 12 per cent of
months between late 1~~6 a~d
Congress is the sole authority
all the men in uniform today.
June
_1948._
World: cond1hon_s
m
iil
establishing_ or ending the'
·
The Department of Defense-is
that time dictated to th~ United
draft and any feelings_that I may
·
reluctant
to operate without_ States Congress that 1t must
have as the Dire~tor of Selective
draftees because it knows that
Service,
while .they
ml4y
be
the
'volunteers
have
,been
eager
.co·nsidered,
will not· be the
to enter those services which
.
primary· factor
in
determining if
·
have been traditionally offering
and when the
·
draft will be the good training, the best jobs
eliminated
·or
if it will be
and the best opportunities for a
extended;
.
.
relatively stable career.
.
.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 7
*Iii Harlem, drug addicts will
prostitute to support their habit,
and their baby will be addicted.
New
York
·city
had
one
thousand such cases last year
where the baby was dead within
forty eight hours.
* Last
year, five thousand
babies were born in the U.S. to
girls under
14 years of age.
_
*Many
times,
a poverty
·
stricken family with six or seven
children. will be forced to sleep
in one or two rooms. Seeing
their parents have intercourse,
the children are pre-conditioned.
*The
Battered
Child
Syndrome
is another serious
defect. Mr. Baird suggests that
we go to a City Hospital and see
the Innumerable cases of child
beating where parents just do
not want their children.
*Baird
further asks about the
thousands of people forced out
of schools and into shotgun
weddings to avoid the shanie of
·
being an unwed mother.
*How many suicides (which is
·
:
As mqst ?f you are aware, the
The Army. MUST train_ cert"in
S d
A
·
d
·
C
power of the Selective- Service
__
numbers. of its' men, whether
tu
erit
·-
Ca •
·
Qffiffi.
the 3rd leading cause of death in
the
18-21
age bracket) are
committed
because boys and
girls cannot receive help and
cannot approach their parents to
say they need help?
Mr, Baird asked who has the
right to tell people what to do
on this issue? Is it the states with
-
their laws, or the Church with
the
encyclicals?
Baird says
neither; it is the privilege of the
individual
to form his own
decision without any type of
penalty imposed.
After throwing out these ideas
to the audience,
-Mr.
Baird went
on to describe
the
quack
methods of abortionists to con
the
·poor
into paying.
·
Perhaps
the worst effect of this act is not
that the people lose their money
but often times their life. An
abortion is a very simple process
for a doctor, but an abortion
performed by a con-ma·n or a
scared boyfriend can prove fatal.
Baird continued his talk by
illustrating all the olden and
modern
day
birth
control
devices; stating how they are
used; exactly what they dd and
their
effects
both
psychologically and physically •
This
proved
to be a very
interesting part of the lecture.
Baird concluded the lecture
by asking for assistance. He
urged
anyone
interested
or
needing help to join S.T.O.P.
(Stop Today's Over Population)
which urges birth control to be
practiced on all campuses and
along with helping people
in
trouble, they petition legislators
to have unfair abortion laws
repealed.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 8
System to induct
young men
volunteer or draftee; to place in

_
i·n_cton~
s;e
r
v i'c_e
-
·
m:u· st/· be
its
-fighting
units,
.whether-it-·be
.,
_.,.,;;
0
'./'

~ree~tii~Iishe_d
_on
or b~for~ June,
_infantry,·
armor or
.artmery.
30
·'of
1971.' -Betwe~n:now
.and
.
Figures from
.the
Departnient:_of
-
--then,
Congress must. vote and
Defense show~that up to
·70
per
the President must sign
.info
law,
cent of- the me'n drafted info the
..
~,
...
~·•·
·.~·.•••·),
...
_.
.
.-,
..
,
•'\
.
-·-
·-·
T.he:.
Biird:en·::-L'ies
With
-
Whoiii?-~--
by George Roarty
the: authority to
.
exterid
.
the
service in any given year, end up
. .
.
.
.
.
draft-If n?t, the draft syst~m as
·
in. one
0
of these. basic units.
-
ff.was a little disappointing to·
medium of· the. school paper.
we know 1t now; would die for
·
Volunteers who, under several
.read
some• of the comments
>Howe·ver,
such
means
-of
lack<>f_official-_a~th~r~ty.
··
·.
recruitmet?,t
.pro_grams
a~d. made by T~rry Mooney in
·his
communication_ really ·doesn't
Wo~!d cond1h~ms more_:'.11a!1 because their s!a~
m
the service article last week, "A L~sson
.
allow for much dialogtieto take
.:anyt~g
else will dt:fe!Jn
..
,e if
.
a~ou_nts to a penod from thr~e
-Learned:·
Probably Not.
:The
place;' Granted., if a student was
our country·can consider a zer~- to _sIX yell!s;, ha~e
·.
a certain. ones I make:.refere~!ie
fo
are
the
really.interested,
or objected to
dr~ft call each _mon~h. Events of-- ch<?1~e of Job
.
as1gnment and
following:
·
any
of
the actions taken by the
this_ summer m V 1etnam have training and are often not a~ong
. "Perhpas. now and tragically
·
Student Council, he or she could
·
indic:i,ted
that
the military
those
troops
assigned. to a · so the students 'will realize the
have attended his meetings and
a~ th'oi:i Fie~
feel_ that
. a
.
combat unit;
.
.
.
. .
.
un'portance
of
last week's vote.
voiced his opinions. Yet, how
Vietna1!11zaFi<?n pr?gra~
m
A_ volunte~r
to~ay
1s Studeµt leaders_have been trying
well
publicized
are
these
Southeast Asia1s working with a
motivated by- several things, not. to impress
,the
·
student body._ meetings.._every week? f:Iow can
cert~i.J?,···
degree o! success and
the l~ast am~mg them the fact
-_
with Jhe miportance of this vote
students
,be
expected to be at
that,
m
the. wamng m9nths. of
that if_ he doe~ ~ot volur.teer, he,
.
for over a
_month.
Up
·to
now,
these meetings if they are not
this
year, we y,ere able·. to,
·
very likelY: will be drafted• and
overall' student- response and
reminded arid encouraged to be
substantially reduce draft calls.
end up_ w1th the ~ther 70 ~er
interest has been neutral."·
,
there.- Possibly, several formal
Thisyear'~<ii'aftcallofl63,000-ce~t·ui,:a
combat.umt.
c.
"Don't'point
the accusing
stu.dent
body_meetings
each
_
is !he ~o:west nun.:iber of ~raftees
TJ_i~refor~,
the fact !hat the dra!t· finger at your student lead~rs.
semester
would
better
the
bemg mducted m the SIX years
ex1~ts .
10
..
the first· place is_· They·
have
been
putting
communications
between the.
· since tne buildup in Viet!iam.
moF_1vah_on
for a great number of
themselves on the line for you
Council aitd the students. Also,
·
I am not able to predict what
.
enlistments. If the draft-does not
for awhile and- were sufficiently
if
the meetings ,and/pr monthly
·
wilf
·
happen in the ne·xt · 12 exist, it is a matter of conjecture
embarrassed by your lack of
reports were made available and•
months
as . far· as the world
just how effective
.a
v~lunteer
support last w·eek.''.
· _ distributed-through the mail, the
situation
goes. I do know,
progra_mawould be.·
The
Student
Council had
students could keep abreast of
however,.·
that
·if·
the draft
A !,pecial commission headed
informed
the students about
-
what the Council is doing and
authority is not extended;·, our
by· former Secretary of Defense,
what they are doing through the
planning.
Another suggestion
countrymust
be prepared to
fill
Thom_as
,S. ·
Gate~,
Jr., has
·
our large world-wide manpower
rec_omm.ended
·
that
an
c o m m i t men ts
from
·-
an
-·all-volu1:.1teer
service
-with
higher
--
.
all-volµnteer military service.
_
·pay
ai:id good career· incentive,
·
·
.T
h e c o n c e p t
o
f
a n
replace the draft system as early
all-volunteer service is not new
as July 1, 1971,
·the
day the
to· this country, as all services Selective Service System outlives
with the lone_ exception of
-the
its current legal authority to
. Redi Record say: "'fhe family that bowls together
splits!"
The
BOOK& RECORD
Poughkeep,sle • Wappl_nge~s Falls• ~ew·Paltz
We Feature the Largest Selections of:
• Paperback
Books
, Greeting
Cards
• Hardcover
Books
:
• Novelties & Gifts
.
• Records & Tapes
.
• School Review Books
·
PERSONAL
ATTENTION
._GIVEN
TO.
·SPECIAL
ORDERS!"
u
.,,
'Hf.
~
~~Ctt!.
-~
-
~t~-i-
or~~-
.fil.

I
··;
1·'
.
·-i
j
I
i
~
i
·t
i
.•
'
I
I '
~-···'!-
~
;
l
;
:
·•-
,j,

would be to change the time of
the meetings to-the afternoon or
the mornings.
More
·
students,
especially
commuters,
and
faculty
members are available during
these times and are more apt to
come.
·
'
The Student Council has been
putting themselves on the line a
lot this year,
·
but
how
can
the
students b.e expected to support
·something
which they really
weren't consulted with formally.
To say then, that the burden
of guilt rests with the student is
wrong. Up to now we have all
been stressing the necessity for
better communications between
the students and the faculty._
However it
is
just as important
to· have good communication
and dialogue between students
-and their representatives.
*****
Plaza Stores Open Mon.-Fri.
'til
9, Main St. Thurs. •til 9
Hiroshima? No. Nagasalu"?
No. It's merely the bathroom on
third
Door Sheahan Hall.
Last Sunday aftemoon the ceiling , which had been falling apart
•wlr
for oYer a
week, completely fell apart and spread debm
all
over
_the
showers.
J









































!

'·'-~
.
:,,.,._,
.
THE CIRCL£< ,; .\ '. '
.
· by
John
Kater
..
The
"Crusade-of-the-Year
·
into a job .. covering
'the
World·.
The peace-freaks believed the.
Club'' ought to offer specials for
..
Sei:ies.:.for Life magazine. Was it. President at first -, he must
people whose hobby is causes .. In
really: worth getting your hair
kriow :something, we:don't, ,he ·• ··
the sixties, there were nearly/
cut? ' . •
.
·
.
·
. ·.
.
·.,
.
was elected-as a peace candidate··
·enough
to
go
around:
And the·Mark Rudds,forall
(y~s, Johnson!),
:w_e
cotildn't-
ban-the-bomb,
civil
rights,
·
their poor sense of theater and
.
really .. be bombing orphanages,,·
Stop-Goldwater,
black power,
their
childish rhetoric,
really · setting women and children and
campus revolts, Clean-for-Gene,
in i g h t
·have

b e en
.
o n t o old
.
men
.
on fire, committing
the peace movement, ecology,·· something.: .. maybe the colleges
atrocities we-didn't even expect·
·and
women's
liberation.
It's
arid
universities
really· are
from our enemies. Not us - not
been a good ten years for button
somehow oppressive institutions,
·
us, Lord._But slowly, slowly, the ·
makers, MACE
:
manufacturers,
but we'll never know;· becaus~
.
truth. cam.e out - and yes, it's
radicals-for-a-day, and prophets
·
the thousands of students·who
true, we did reject those'peace
of doom.
.
.
' .
..
were shouting .. Right on Mark!"
feelers. from Ho Chi. Minh, yes,
There's· an ommous pattern
in 1968' werit on to become this . we did defoliate
a
piece· of land
ab o tit
each
stage
in th_e year's Homecoming Queens and
the size of Massachusetts,
.yes,
cause-of-the~year movement: 1t
S_enior · Prize winners
and the
we did destroy Hue to save "it,
begins with a dramatic moment
Mark Rudds are findin'g it lonely · yes, we did bomb those gooks
or a spokesman or two, attracts
out on that limb. And remember
and slopes,yes, we did.let Mi Lai
a lot of attention, makes a. big
Earth Day?- Really?. And
.
the
happen, yes we did, yes we did.
splash (usually a demonstration,
strike for Women's Lib?
·
SO WHAT ARE.YOU GOING
the bigger the better) - and then
.
And
·
then there's· the· Peace
T DO ABO UT IT?
-
In the
it dies, except _for the few w_ho Movement. It
.always
-was an· time-h.onored
.
tactic• of the
have bee1.1 trymg and ~leedmg-
unlikely movement;· a strange
cru_sade~of,the-year
·
club, we·
and
.cursmg
and working for
confusion of Yippies (remember
decided to have a march and tell·
years, and who now go back to
:when Hoffman
and
Rubin
our president what we thought
-
their work without _any more
threatened to put LSD in the
(Nixon now; ifs nofhis war, not'
"_Meet the Press" glamour. _It's Chicago
water·
supply?),
Nixon,althoughtho:Sewhowcre-
been the same for a long time
-students,
senators, clergymen, · around iri the S0's tell us he
now. The northern liberals flew
Martin
Luther
King,. and
doesn't like Commies very much
south in their chartered planes;
housewives who had been in
at all). In Poughkeepsie, it was a
g o r g e d
t h e ms e
1
v es
on
Mothers' Strike for Peace since
great day., October l 5, and God
self-right~ousness and guilt, sang
1919, Anyway,
·
there they all
smiled on us and the sun was
.
"We Shall Overcome"
-
and
..
were
~
lined up against the Other
shining (it rained on Veteran's
went
home,. leaving the. less·. Side - an unholy alliance of
_Day
last year). Eight thousand'·
fortunate
natives. to. face the
Commie-haters,
the
,VFW,
p·eople! And traffic stopped on
mu:;ic of the local rednecks (who
·.
Cardinal Spellman, and southern
Main· Street and Pete Seeger and
W(:rc
definitely not singing "W<: congressmen who just Jove war
Senator
Goodell
(remember-
Shall
Overcome.")
Senator
John. Wayne-style. They were
him?) and· a new song, "Give
McCarthy
fell
out
of the
joined
by assorted businesses
Peace a Chance." And a month
Democratic Convention, where
who make napalm as wen as
later, in case the message hadn't
other.
causes
and
the
-
on. Somewhere between five and
the people who thought he was a Saran wrap, and augment their. gotten through, we went to Mr. · crusade-of~the-year. club would
ten thous11nd. Arperican
-troops
latter-day Messiah were literally
soap powder market with a, few
Nixon's house and stood in his
come, up· with a new selection,
will be k1Ued during
1970 ..
Of
.
bleeding for hinl in the streets,
explosives on the side.
.
·.
back yard and told. him
·again,
and he was right...but the War
,course
:t1ie
suffering .. of the
.
"Give Peace a Chance" (but
goes on.
.
Vietnamese
-people
is
..
many':·
.
unfortunately
there was
.a
big
Where is the Peace Movement
times more intense. '(Oh? Too·
game on TV that day, so he
now? It is angry; it is tired; but
bad for them.)
··
.
.
'
couldn't come o_ut and play with
most of all, it is frustrated'. It has
,
Fact: The United States has-·
us). But we were there all right,
been de-fused. But how? Why?
perpetrated
and· continues· to
_
·
·
,
and
Pete Seeger sang "Give
.
First
of all,· there is the
perpetrate::
one. orthe
most
:_
•.
Peace a Chancf'.· for twenty
·
·psychological
trick that·: Nixon
bi:uta(:
wars ever
-
fought The
·
· ·
minute~.·
· ·:
.,
.'.
:.
.
played on the American public.
·
tonnage
.bf·ooinbs .dropped
on.·
And then we~went home; .. and
,,
By· announcing the withdrawal
...
:
Vietnam: so' far exceeds the total

•·
the Peace Movement folfapart;
of • large · American troops,, he,,··: boi:tjbil}g of
.
the· Second World
·
..
.
-
:,:
and. at a
:
demonstration.
in:•· obscured the truth thateven}~Y-f· :War.,tl:at-it is"a.niirade. that there
.-..
:•:-,:p_ciYigii.ke"ei,sie';iri
ApriLHiefe
were · the·-endi·orl~7.l
/th:e~e'½'ilf'st~ll
i.~
-Js!~ny,;J.i"ft{
lefi"in~efjlam.
;,
·23
~
people .•
:.·!ln~
:
Mr. · N,ixori,.
~r
a_ qua~ter-of a m1lhon troops
,Fa~
t :_
.,_Th_is,
fl.lOnth t~e
smiled. .
.
.
.
.
·
· .. ·
·.
· ·. ._
m
Vietnam
•.
····
,
:
·.
, :
. .
·.
American
.
government
w,ilt
.
But he isn•fas smart as he
-
:
But· most
of all,
Nixon
welc9me
:vice-I>resideht
Ky·;to
:
thought (andwe.thought);
Aftet:
·_•.··
counted ont}?,efickle'attitude of
'Washington
on an ,'unofficial'
,
he had. managed:
io
make t~e
.
'qany.
of t~e marchers. He was
vi~t. giying ho,spitality_ to the-
..
?Peace
Movement go away; he did·
nght
.. Six
months
afJer
manwhowrotemtheNewYork

··
·
a really stupid thing: ,he invaded
:--.Cambodia,
.New
York-· purged
Times that his favorite figure of
.
: ·Cambodia,·
fod tp.e campuses
·:
Senator Goodell (''.Give Peace a
wester11 history_is Hitler.
.
·.
exploded
.
and, students. were
':.
Chance»and
Gore of Tennessee·
.
Fact: Nixon counts on .the
killed (whitestudents!)and
then
and
defeate_d
Duffy·
in
apathyoftheAmericailpeople-
black_ students '(but then black
-
Connecticut-
but the,re are new
and. particularly students
~
to
students have always been killed;
causes and new songs to sing.
continueVietnamization,with
a
America seems to be. able to live· Meanwhile, the War goes on.
force of
a
quarter of a miUiolf-,
with that)·and·
there: we were
.
Fact:
_.Thi>
American
Americans
in-· Vietnam
again, back at th.e same. p~rk, · strategy (?f: Vietnamization
on
·
indefinitely.
_
'
.
_
.
.
down 'the same Main Sfre~t, and
which Nixon is 1.,ettihg his troop
.
.
Fact: The chemical warfare
even singing· that same da!1in
-•
wi.thdrawal
· .is
based
.on
support .. used
_
by the
_American
forces
.
sorig
.
"Give Peace a Chance.''
··
of
_one•:
of the
)riost
repre~ive
violates. the spirit, and probably:.
_Ancl how angry we were~ This)s
governments it(_recertt-history.
the
Jei'teI,.
of th'e G~neva
.
Nixon's last chance. Peac~ now!
Support
:·of'the
..
Thieu-Ky
..
Converitro·ns.
The· w_hole-
Oh yeah'? Nixon
·.·knew.
the
_:governmerihnakes
a mockery
of· ecologicar balance.of-southeast
reace Movement bettercthail we
_
"fighti~g: ·fgr freedot_ri."- Thieu
.
Asia has beeQ altered
_by
the.
1-:,new
.
ourselv~s.
·.
Last spring
receh'.ed '35%
of.
the
.vote
in tlle
defoliation· of field; jungles and.
ev~ryone. \vas
_organizing
peace
·'.'free''--· ~lec.tion
.
in · w.hich
river delta. Wildlife is nearly
campaigns, writing congressmen,
advocating
.peace
was a cI"ime. - .
.
extinct in South Vietnam; ·Farm -
taking
off
for;Washington,
·Fact:
Althougli'
American
animals·have
been repeatedly_
promising a change now. But
casualti'es
·have·
declined
· ·
·
Nixori k_new there would be _ drasSicaUy, the killing sti)l goes
CONTINUED
ON PAGE
9
I
l
i
I
I

I
'
l
/
.
'
I










































































NOVEMBER
19, 1970" '· ,;_
·:
THE CIRCLE•
PAGES.
,
..
';-·
·.
CIRCLE
EDITORIALS
Colleg;et
Faculties':
.
;
':
..
.
.
;
.
_'
~.
__
,..
.:..
',_
.
•,:
;
,.
Bastion Of . .'
Th·e -
Trust · Fund and
.Billboard Pollution
,•1·.•,
·,.·.-.
;Afu_etican· Radicilism?.
L~gislation authorizing the expenditure of Highway Trust Fund
money for a· non-concrete and asphalt project has been approved by
the Senate in the 1970 Federal Aid Highway Act.
The bill, which also extends authorization
for the Interstate
:- r:iunng·the re~ent elections, Vice President Sp~o Agnew attacked
the American colleges and universities for being the great stronghold
."'of radicalism and left:wing terrorism in this country .. These
. . inst~tutions, and particulai:Iy their faculties, were accused of being
pe_rm!ssive·to the· students and even encouraging therii with Ma.rxist
·, j_
_ideology.
If
Marist College can be taken as a microcosm of th,e
· university:system, the. Vice Fresident'ir statements· are at worst scare
'.tactics: at besUll informed., Unfortunately, the Marist faculty. must
- Highway Trust · Fund to pay for the acquisition and removal of all
illegal but stHl standing billboards along Interstate highways. Over
$1.8 million is authorized for billboard removal during the first year
. of the legislation.
A similar bill under consideration in the House authorizes money
for· billboard removal but does not take it from the Trust Fund.
If
the House bill is passed as it now stands the issue of billboards will
: be. "defended'.'_against these statements;
-
_
' iThe,. Marist ,faculty
'is' predominantly "(hit~. tlius eliminating t'he
''spectre" of·Black militancy:_ an important, if not motivating factor
. for<inuch raoical activity ·in this country. Generally, the economic
Stl!tus of our faculty is ,middle class, rio prolet_arian uprising here.
.-There are no· Chicanos, Young Lords, and rio draft bait among the
. have to be reconciled in a conference committee. Passage of the
House·
bill
is considered
unlikely before the mid-October
congressional recess so it
will
probably, be approved by the Lame
Duck session that returns to Washington after the November
elections.
Passage of the bill in some form is virtually guaranteed, however,
since it contains an extension of the sacred Interstate Highway
System and the Highway Trust Fund. Whether or not the billboards
will come down at last remains to·be seen .
: ;.faculty.
.
.
1HE
..
folitically,
the Marist. faculty fits well into ·the mainstream of
· American thought. There is one maybe two avowed Marxists. Three.
or. four social reformers who · may be classified radical; a iarger
nuinb,er of "limousine liberals" who. will have you read Marcuse then
. jgnoi:e 'it .. The natural sciences are infested with the Comniunist
•CIRCLE
:' vermin who are irivolved in, that stronghold .of dissent commonly
· . known as the Ecology inovement.
There wiH seldom be an
· - outspoken critic; 'but often comfortable folks with lip-service to
·refor, two cars, summer vacations, green lawns, mortgage ori the
house, PT A and .Republican party.
·
No Angela Davis here; no bearded Trotsky hiding in St. Peter's.
Sal. Piazza-;-Joe Rubino, Ann Gabdele, Janet Riley;
Terry Mooney, Richard Brummett, Peggy Miner,
Philip Glennon, Dave DeRosa, Frank Baldas_cino, Paul
Tesoro, John Tkach, Bernie Brogan.
You will have.to look elsewhere for a scapegoat these an! generally
your kind of-folks. Proud that they. can be exploited.
The above names arc tl10sc people who have contributed to this
week's CIRCLE, and do not appear in a byline.
-t•·e·
.,·
te·
.·.·
.r.
s·.
-To'•'
ch·,
'
;r~t11~r;'.W~l~:~tu~~~~t:~i~:
··a·'•'
nge'S
free to. pursue his interests an
outmoded
marking system that
--

·
.
_
.·.
_
, . ,
-,'
· _ .. ·. __
, . encourages striving for marks .at
Th.·
Ed•t · · ·.
the expense, of really learning
......
:
,
___
'.
-:
. _.
,~;:
'. e.
-:._
I
o·rs
,,
:_

. ·.
''.;
. '
;i
the. mat~riii:I
_
has, nq 'pl~ce. The,
,b~
J?~ri
~!nnc . '':
:
school has come a.long way with
'·•:·-.
,, :, ~' •::
>:.
/
'
' '
- '.
. .
.
'." .
. .
; .
,,;
·,
'its Pass/No Credit' policies btit it
M
• d
. ,
screws in the wall. Wha_t Gives
Marist
seems to have , the
h
Id
. . d ti·
t
b
ISUD
erstand1"ng
propensity for changing to_ adapt . s
OU
'
expa_n
iese
O
e
. .
Here?
to the realities of conte_mporary
consistent
with
the
new
James
Cosentino
curricu_
lum change.
higher. education. This adaptaion
Res
.
olved
can be illustrated by looking·at
The relia!lce on meaningless
·.
. Love
' In
some signific_
ant changes that'
mid•term
and final exams to
J
'udge academic knowledge and
To th
.. e:~-
Edi.·t_or·.
have occuried over the past few
N
I ·
h'
progress has no plate at Marist
· ·1
.w·
r·ote a letter blast1·ng T·he
years.
ot too ong ago t is was
C II
ti
t
h
·
f
Tb 70,
?
d
1· ·
·
·
·
o ege;.
1a ·
as come • rom
Cl·rcle and·I dt'd -talk about the
.
e· .
_$·.
considere
a re ig1ous mst1iutioh
th .
.
h
I .
·
and · the rules affecting student
ese pnor c anges.
n many
letter topeople on cagi.pus'._Now
life reflected this consideration.
courses, students can· earn three
jf.
they -don't
see the•, letter
Dear Sir:
. Enforced
study
and curfew
credits by going only to the
. they'll think the editors omitted
O n N o v e·m be r .
4'
the
regulations and even mandatory
mid-term and final. This kind of
- system encourages the student
: to cut classes and encourages
teacliing to pass the final rather
than
teaching
to
impart
know ledge·. The abolition
of
mid-term and firtal exams should
-.-be'_
tli~-~11ext:_ change·
"fo<~Rc'ep.·_
.·•.
· Marist iri touch ,vith reality.
, it.
·1 wouldn't want
to
put. the
D . t
t f R
1· .
St d.
chapel attendance-
o_
n .Sunday,
editors in. a bad light:
I .
took
epar men .o
e 1g1ous u tes
.
f h
d
W
JI
back the_ letter after-
a:
le_ngthy sponsored a le~ture by Dr. James
was the order o t e ay.
e ,
·
M
Mahon This lecture explored
the school realized ·that it could
discussio11 when
I,
was convinced _-,, c ·· . · ·
· • ··. - ,,
.
not sur· vi·ve as a vital educational
thaf · there
was a .niisunder- ·
Love m the Seventies.• Judgmg
·
from the response
I
received
institution
under
these
Chuck
Here
,_
,_standing and misinterpretation.
.
th --
-
1 -
d t
b
· co··n'di'ti·ons
so 1
·1
ch. anged to allow
·I,:.would like to hold on to one
Smce
er, 1 prove .
0
e 'a
. minor'point. I really feel that an
rewarding··experience
for many
a greater degree of ,individual·
ad
!;)I_l
c_ont_raceptives_
.by.mail_ in· a who participated in the talk and
freedom.
Over the years this
·
·
in
the'
discussion
which
personal
freedom
has been
reputable .newspaper cheapens
followed..
_ _ -expanded to allow students
to
·tJiE,papera
ndth ecollege. •.
-Dr.
McMahon's·
train was· conduct
.their
personal lives
.
.
..
. Sincerely,
delayed
thaf
night an_
d _his without
interferen.ce from the
Rev. Leo Gallant,_
.
Cha
1
in
lect,µr~ began an hour later than
college.
Pa
originally scheduled. ·I wo.uld , While
this
process
was
What·
Giv•es_:
• like to take this oppo_rtimity .to
continhing the school. realized
thank
those who _.waite~; so · also th~t - a vital' aspect was
·
patiently.
.
· _
· missing from the institution ·in
Dear
Sir,·
I would like 'to voice a gripe .
for myself and prob~bly about
5 00 resident·· students.
How
come -it takes the Maintenance
.• Dept. so . long to fix anything
around here? My window broke
about-a month and a half ago.
I
reported
this to my Resident
Co-ordinator
who assured me
· that maintenance would get on
it right away. Well, needless to.
say, their idea of what "right ·
away,,_ is and mine differ. With
all the heat that we get during
the winter months; Mrs. O'Coner
,will probably have two cases of
frostbite cc:>ming
up.
_
Another
··exam pie;
in
September
I
come in to find my
roommate's
buJletin
board·
• hanging off the wall. Again, a
report was submitted and again
no
result. I fixed it
myself
but
I
· will probably
be charged for
damaging the roo,!11
~Y.
putting
There were reporters from the
the
exclusion . of. women.
It
Circle present'•· and_
~
I thought
therefore . changed its policies to
perhaps there might be som_e permit
women
to
make a
reference
to . "Love
in-• the
contribution
in the economic.
Seventies"· in last·week's.issue.
academic
and social life
of
It would have been a worthwhile
Marist. Again it realized that it
service for those who were not
could not survive without the
able to be. present. .
change.
· I wish that the space devoted
A few weeks ago Marist made
to - the ad· for contraceptives·
another
change
that
was
and/or abortion could have been
definitely needed for the survival
dedicated to a statement about
of the college. It adopted a
love;
·
sorely
needed
curriculum
Thank you,
revision which gives the student
Laurence Sullivan
gre~fer
freedom
in selecting
Class of '56
courses.
But more important
Aderholt
Alright
To the student government:
To the student body,
During
my
two and one half
months at· Marist this year.,.
I
-have received over
SSO
worth of
_ parking tickets. Last week,
I had
a
very
cynical
and
uncomplimentary letter ready to
CONTINUED
ON PAGE 9
coupled with the change was the
rea Iiza
t
ion
that
the present
governance structure was also in
need of · definite overhaul and
the college began work on that
problem.
It seems that in all these
changes a high priority has been
placed on student freedom and
responsibility and a desire to
keep Marist a vital educational
complex.
Following
these
priorities
I would support a
complete
overhaul
of the
by
Chuck Meara
Now that we are nearing the
.end
of the
first
semester
(amazing)
I
felt.
it might be a
good
time
to
look at the
progress that
the
college has
made since those long gone days
of early September. Has'the-year
been fruitful for the college and
its .students· or has it been a
period of stagnation?
We have seen the Student
Government take the initiative
on the problem of governance at
M
arist.
The
students
are
struggling to create a meaningful
voice
for the · student
body
through work on the Presidential
Advisory Council and because of
the problems involved with the
curriculum revision plans. The
.Council
has
set
up
new
Budgetary procedures that have
·enabled it to concentrate
on
Governance.
The
new
procedures on the Budgets have
proven very successful for clubs
and the Council. The problem of
communication is still very real
but efforts are being made and
suggestions are appreciated.
With
the
creation
of the
College Union Board we have
seen a wider diversity of social
and cultural events than ever
before. The Board is composed
of
students,
faculty
and
administrators and has proven to
be a productive
forum. The
Board has helped to take over
many
of
the past responsibilities
of the Council and has given the
Council the opportunity
to get
into different areas ..
In sports the college has seen
the football team go through its
first undefeated season, by far
the
most
successful
in its
history, the basketball team is
looking
forward
to another
successful
season
and
a
post•season tourney.
The
faculty have added a
major
contribution
with the
approval
of the 60/60
plan.
Students were responsible for a
great deal of the input in this
area but in many areas it was
faculty initiative.- Now when the
real revision starts to take place
it will be a joint student-faculty
effcrt that will be needed.
There are still many problems
facing us here at Marist. Some
will be solved this year, others
will
take longer. Students are
talking about the problems and
now we must make our feelings
known
to
faculty
and
administrators.
Many problems
will
be solved
through
a
continuing
dialogue.
The
opportunity
is now here and
if
the students are prepared to take
advantage of the opportunities
avaifable Marist will evolve into
the outstanding community that
it has the potential to reach.
*****
.1
I
,
I





















































/
PAGE6
by
Richard Bru~mett
.
. .
. :-· · ·
""
.
••
I
. -
. ·, ~..

.
.
-
. .·
/,
• ,
It was a dark night indeed
solely to lceep behind. the figure
with no moon and only the glow
of my ·too
fast friend. We -
from the few stars that managed
proceeded on in this manner for
. · to
slip · their .. · light past the
a · while,-with_ difficulty, but at_ -
screening clouds. For me it was
least not· held up again to pull
· somewhat darker than for the
my lanky, .collapsible 'body out.
others since I had broken my
of . another ditch. And then,
glasses that morning and had
jerking
my· head
suddenly
only prescription· sunglasses to
upward, I saw him just in time
s ·e e w i
t
h . · T h
i
s f a c t . to see and hear his rifle blast
notwithstanding, a job had to be. into
my
face. ·
done in the forest that night and.
so the nine of us set out towards
thy southwest, our goal some
point
about
two' thousand
meters along the trail we were
. following. A trail? Well, you
could call it . that, mostly we ·
called it
a
number of other
names as we stumbled along.
At one time · it might have
-been an easy path to traverse,
back
in
the
days
when
woodsmen· would often come·
into the forest to hew a bit of
wood, drag it out with _their·
· oxen to the main road and
"Boy am I scared.-Wonder·,if
he will shoot again. Got . to · get .
up, fire back, can't lay here like
a coward, got to make-an effort,
got to show Guzik, got to, got
to ... "
"Don't bother with that one,
Dave, just his muscles twitching.
Can't you see the big hole in th_e .
back of his head where a bullet
came out?",
·
"So that's
J.t:
Guess it's- all
right if
I
just lie here now. Guess
it's all over."
-
thence by cart to the village. But
that was long ago and in, the
time since· growths of vines and
saplings and the snialJ but deep
I
awoke in a kind of resigned
·gullies that erosion had cut into
terror only to find myself in a
the
soil had
made
it
an
strange college dormitory room,
unpleasanJ
traiL_to
trod,
filled with books and the heavy
especially at night. And though
irregular
-.breathing
of my
in the dim light our.burdens may roommate.
Was he dying or
have made us appear to be sleeping on guard? No, it took
woodsmen, we were not.
but a moment to gather myself
I
was second in the line of
up to the reality of the present
men that·set out from the camp as the fear.slipped_ away.
and shortly I fell with a clatter
Sitting
·up,
I thought back,
into the very · first ditch. The back to the reality of the past, a
dark glasses you know· Quickly I past which had included the
was picked up, pointed at the possibility of the dream coming
lead man and stumbled off. true. I thought of it and of
Using his faint outline as a guide another . day when
I.
advised a
was all th at_ kept me from f.riend not. to go out. He listened
wandering
right out of the
Dissenter
Farm
:Worke-rs
Union
.
'
column So there I went, looking and another filled a body bag in
down to avoid-. tripping on the· his place.
I
thought of brave and
creeper vines or falling into foolish friends, of horrible acts,
a11:othei ditcµ, or looking ahead of ·laughing faces, of shredded
cw•
.• ,,, .••
.,
l:>~dies, o_f.a mad col~age _of good
-!!.,~t~~~!~
Strikes·
Again
MOSCOW (AP)
-· And rei
The United Farm Workers'
excluded from the benefits of
Ama_lrik,
author
of the_
OrganizingCommittee'.is<calling
legislation that is supposed to
anti~onimunist
book "Will "the
for, a nation•wide boycott of
all

protc::ct most other workers. . •
Soviet
Union
.
Survive Until . ''Purex" products;.:
.'·.'c:,</.-<· :
,,,:;._Purex;?W.~S!J?0re
_than let,tuce·
i984?''.'
has· been;sentericed
·fo '
Purex;-

a.·
conglomerate
~
fxelds,·J!lakmg
1t
e1u~1er
tc,
mount
three yearsin a labor,·camp; - .
,:,.!.
company·•.tjiat_·
ownl ~etttice
_.·a.
m~re·
0
--qnte_11'se boyc_?tt
~11·1~1;~:!~i~~~t~!:~~
Informants said --the . sentence,. - . fields . in several western: states; _· campaign. Purex ., bleach,.· Brillo'
on
a charge
of uttering
·. ·arid refuses to negotiate with the.
soap· pads; ._Brillo. detergent,
"falsehoods derogatory to the
uniori, led •,by Cesar ·chavez.
Dut,ch Cleanser, Beads-o•Blea_c!t,
Soviet state and social.system,'.'
Chavez
:1e
d. Ari".iona, .,arid_.·. Sweetheart.soap" Trend, Bnon
.
.
If
_you.care
-
_-
_-
·en,ougb,--maybe
-you
can.·meet
-•
the
Paulist
-_
·
.
challenge
..
~
.
It
isn't easy, being a Paulist.
Bridg·i~g
gaps between young
and old, ·black and white,
past and future. But it
is
a
challenge. ·. . '
The Paulist mission is to
people ...
individually .
. and in
all
the socic.ties
in .
which they
live
.
... to discover Christ
wh~rever
he
is acting
· ; .. to be attu~ed to the needs
of the present, yet to form
a vision of to!Jlorrow's
world.
If
you are interested in
· finding out more about the
Paulist priestly challenge,
write to:
ReY.DonalclC.Carapbell,C.S.P.
Vocation Dirtct9"
'Paulistth
:n'
'Pa e~.
Room 111-
415 West S9tla
SCrttt
New York, N.Y. 10019
played either well or
ill,
but
nevermind, in the long run we
are all dead.
·
was handed down in Sverdlovsk
Califo"riiia ::grape •pickers to
Enzyme 'fre•Soak, Fresh -~ict
Thursday.
victory over the growers due
ip
produce, Cuticora, Doan's.Pills, .
Barnett
loSpeak;_,At
Population
Meetipg.
large ___
part · to an extremely
Vano starch, ~•i~-1 Fab,ri~finish,
effective consumer boycott.
.
. A-y s ... app_ehtxe
i:f_epi;:essant
,~-
...
Farm·'
.w.oi-kers:Ciit
,,.America;:- P.tirsettes,
~
ei;ry:::.Mot~e; s_eeds;;
predominantly
s·p-anish--·
Sheei;Magic.Make-:up and :Magic ·.
American
(Chicano, Mexican,
Touch
,are.aJI
consumer products, .
Mexican-American and Puerto
manufactured by Purex.
·
·
Rican),
are· categorically
***** · ..
-O!i
December l ,,at 7:30 p.m., ,·.the Departments of Biology an_d . _ .
the Poughkeepsie Mid-Hudson
Political
Science
at V.assar .
· Chapter
of Zero Population· College. and Zero Population;
Growth
will
have a public
...
Growth. High school and college .
meeting
ii!
Blodgett Auditorium
stu·den:ts , are: encouraged to.
·· on the Vassar· College Campus. attend ... For. -more· inform.ation,
Professor Richard Barnett, of . write
'fo
ZPG - Cramer Road
the
Biology'
Dep~ment
of · Po·ughkeepsi~,
N.ew · York:
Dutchess Community College, • 12603.
will
speak on the problems· of
population and ·.pollution. His
talk, "Numbers Don't Count -·,
Ari Optimistic
View .of
Overpopulation"
will be
followed 'by ,questions from the
audience.
The talk is co•sponsored by ·
~!QUGHKEEPSIE
. .
.
· f · ·.
8
CENTER.
S:
j,•
o'ANGELO oitw ~NC.
373 MAIN STREET POUGHKEEPSII,
N.Y,
.
8
PhOM
Gl .C-"20
.
January
Study-Travel
.
.
Course
In
·tondon
·_ During the.month of January,
from
Jan.
3-30th a group of
Marist students, accompanied by
Mr. Robert Lewis of the English
Dept.
will
be in England ·
studying the English theater and
English
Literature.
Those
participating
will receive
academic
credit
for the
experience,
the iectures and
excursions
involved, and the
allied readings and follow-up
projects. Trav~I and academic
arrangements
have been
negotiated -by the International
Travel
Council, with whom the
Marist group
is.
affiliating. The
cost
of
the
trip ( exclusive of
cost.
of Marist tuition for the credits)
is
$475. Thai-fee covers, in brief,
·transportation,
accomodations,
two meals per day, lectures,
excursions,
and
academic
materials for the course.
Those interested may register
for the course as Eng 389:
Seminar: Study-Travel Tour to
London -
(3
credits). However,
please
see
the
course
coordinator, Mr. Lewis, before
doing so (office D203,
ext; 228).
A deposit of $100 must be
submitted no later than Dec.
·is,
but
preferably
as
soon
as
possibJe.
Dr.
Amo M~er
delivered
a
lecture
entitled "Counter-revolution"
Th.unday
November 12 .. The lecture dealt with the
period
1870-1956.
Despite
its
sd!olatfy
orientation the lecture
was
well
received
by
the Marist
Community.



















































••••
0- .• , .. -~
...
N
....
O_V_E
__
M_,B.,..E_.R_1_9
....
1_9...,70
__
• -:---:----:--":"'"'""--:-~---------;;,__---.:.TH.::.:::,E~C~IR~C:=:L~E:....;.._,.__
______________________
_:P~A:.::G~E::...:."
7
Fur~dFDRAFT.;....FROM3-
. · .
. ,
·\s·
t··
c-oi·
'... .
L·'•''
,,,·~-t--
",,

.,,
~
.•\\


t•
... •
1 .••
. '
..::,,,
,.·
... , '
.
•!
,,
'
,.


'
..
~
__
,;
___
,,·,·~:;~~e;.~hi~i~~lf:;1::~:
~-:'
~
. ,,
·T·H·
.· _EA.
___
._T·

n'.·
·~II:;-
.·Q·.
_-. _.·_'
.whe11 this
country·
shed
.
·
P
~-~ ~
, completely
Hs--forni-er.·
. isolationist
attitudes
and
,
Campus
Stuff
by
_Don Duffy
· ARE YOU KIDDING!!!!!!!
emJ)arked upon, ,·a: period'· of
n_·.
·u-I·
·_.'L"
·D.,

. . .
--~
: · heavy internationalism. You
will
U
recall ·that these .were'·_the years·
. when. -we were formiqg a.nd
· ' -·
-.' shaping· the. policy of the
lJ
nited
·'. Nations and a strong Western
. Europe. We . became committed
to
programs
of military,
God bless those Httle people with the pointed ball. They have gone
right out and done something I never thought would happen last
year. By defeating Fairleigh Dickinson. They became 8-0 and earned
·
. the cheers of the entire campus. Don Hinchey opened up the scoring
'PRESENTS
..
·' by literally roblJing the ball from the F.D. quarterback and running
it into the end zone. Gestal then ran a kick back about 60 yards so
senior Bob Durso could score from the 2 yard line. Hasbrouck got
the Vikings going in the second quarter running it in from the two.
Then Mr. Wilkens did his. thing completing a 40 yard touchdown
pass to Chuck Browne who decided that there was no way he was
going to be tackled and there wasn't.
:t.echn'ical
and
economic·-
assistance to nations · in Europe; ..
·the Middle East and the .Far "
East'.
These
nations • were
attempting
to.· rehabilitate
themselves from a horrible war.
and ·at,Jhe
same time. needed

.. protection
from an aggressive
. communist Russia.
.
, .
At this time~ there . was a
. . strong d~sire on the part · of
. Congress
and the -people
m
. ·general,
to
.end
forced
. conscription.
Selective Service .
did not induct ·men. after April ·
J
946 and the . most expensive
·and
appealing
recruiting
campaign this country had ever
Thurs,
-Fri'.
Nov.19~
8
30
' ' 20. 8
30
' '
,
.been witness to was undertaken.
. The campaign· wa~- received
enthusiastically
by everyone
sat,.
Sun,
,. ' 21·~
230 &830
. except the. young- man wh9 was
to consider the Army for his .
' ·career. In spite of new uniforms,
' ' 22-· 2
30
· and promises to_ do away with
.time · worn
and_ meaningless
·traditions,_ in spite of financial.
. benefits
for
former
service
people; · the Army found that it
Admission to these performances if free to Marist students and
$2,00 for other students. To obtain your ticket, simply show your
ID card at the box
.office prior to t:1c show. Tl,e box office i:ours
will be posted •
could not maintain its desired
· peacetime manpower quota of
1.5 . million, and the· Selective
Service function was put back .
into use in 1949. . .
·
This is not to say that today's
plan for an all~volunteer service
cannot · be successful. Certainly
the people of our country would
be required to pay 'a great price
for
this. project--something-
between
2
billion and 2.7 billion
annually--and
the
Gates
commission
recommends
specifically that a "standby"
conscription
be ·maintained
in case of a~y sudden manpower
needs.
An .allsvolunteer force,
I
think,
would • not differ significantly
from the current forces we have.
I
don't see an elite corps nor do
I
see a corps of mercenaries. Men
who volunteer for these forces
will be very much like the
250,000
men who volunteer
today. They will be interested in
good pay, good jobs and a good
living. They will be patriotic and
will
have a certain amount of
pride in ·the decision they have
- made to serve their country.
I am hopeful that events
in
the
next several months will be such
that
I will be without a job in
Selective Service. But until the
incentive to our young people is
directed to a career in the service
and until our country's role as a
world leader can be maintained
by a draft free volunteer service,
I
believ:e this country's
best
interests are served by a fair and
equitable draft system. -
.- .t,:-):~:.·"1
.
.,.~
~-i--·
..
/
.led•raE
..
Stu.de.nt·
.Financial
Aid
Programs
· At _·
Marist
by
Herchel Mortensen, Registrar
·Along
with the confusion
contribution of $625 or less. (A
about
other
things,
many
student
must
meet
both
students are very confused about
qualifications)
our
financial
aid . programs.
2. Renewal Grants
Perhaps an. explanation beyond
. Present Freshmen - same as
that in· the catalog will save· a · · initial granti;.
·
.
few ,clearly ineligible students
a
Present Sophomores
&
Juniors
$3.00 PCS fee and enable more
An
expected
parental
eligible · students
to receive
contribution of $625 or less
funds,
_
.
. , .
._
NOTE:. ·since
the
family
· . · Our federal
.programs
consist
contrib~tion ,depends up<:>n,
the
of·: educationa:I
opportunity
number
··or:
children:
·in
the
grants.(iicholarships) .from $200
family, ··nllmber
in• college,
to :-$1000 . per year, national
unusual medical expenses, etc. it
. defense student loans of up to
is hard to say what gross income
$ 1000 per 'year, jobs under, the
makes a student ineligible. In .
work-study _program, and. n_ew general, if you now have an.EOG
this
year,
grants of $300 per
and are a sophomore or junior it
semester
to
full-time
law
might be well to re-apply.
If
you
enforcement
or correctional
are a freshman and your parents
workei:s
under· the L.E.E.P.
make over $9000 save the $3.00
program .. Although government
PCS fee. We receive our EOG·
programs, · and the government
money in two categroes, initial
has all kinds of money, Marist year and renewal. We must give
receives
only, limited funds
incoming freshmen priority for
under each of these. We have the
initial
year money. We
never had enough to cover more
cannot give these initial funds to
than half the funds necessary for
upper classmen unless freshmen
the needs o[ eligible students.
do not use all of it. It is .very
· ~orse, the amount we receive difficult for an upper classman
each year changes as Congress to secure an initial grant.
It
is
appropriates
more
or less worth a'$3.00 chance for a PCS
money, usually less. This means' application
though
if
your
that -we may have to cut · a income is less than S9000.
students allqcation from year to
.
NATIONAL
DEFENSE
year.
.
STUDENT LOANS
A 'brief
out-line
of
each
Amount
-
up to
$1000
program is given below:·
depending
upon
need
as'
EDUCATIONAL
determined by the PCS
OPPORTUNITY GRANTS
Eligibility - financial
need
only
Arriount - $200 to $1000
-
in
general a student
qualifies
if
The amount depends upon the
his
families income is up to
reasonably
expected
family
$12,000 and he
comes from
a
contribution as detennined by
the P .C.S. The EOG must be
matched hy other financial aid,
state
or local scholarships,
Marist
reasonably large family.
NOTE:
National
Defense
_Loans bear no interest while you
are in school. They are to be
repaid over a
10
year period.at
3% simple interest. (Better than
the bank loans at 7%.)
WORK-,-STUDY
,JOBS
Amount - generally $300
of
earnings a semester
Eligibility - . financial need as
. determined by the P.C.S.
<NOTE:
Unfortunately
1971-72 regulations will require
us to give 80% of work-study
funds to students with a family
income of $7500 or less. This
will
leave very few jobs for
students
with incomes above
these
figures who previously
qualified for them.
The allocation of work-study
jobs is handled differently from
the other two programs. We
merely inform a student that he
is eligible for work-study and
give him a list of the job
openings.
If
he can qualify for a
: certain- job and the supervisor
hires him . he has ·an allocation,
otherwise not. Most campusjobs
are filled within a week after
notification. This year 50 jobs
were available for 175 eligible
students.
All federal programs require a
new Marist application and a
new
parents
confidential
statement
each year. These
applications and
P.C.S. will
be
CONTINUED
ON PAGE 8
· . Wikly then ~omplcted a picture pass to end Bill Paccionne for the
· last Marist score. It capped the end to a very perfect regular season
game with an outside chance of getting a bowl bid seeing that we are
the NUMBER
I club football team whether anybody likes it pr·not.
It also was. another fine job by .our two announcers. l forgot their
' names but it ·really doesn't matter. Bill O'Reilly had another fine
- game again considering they made him pay at the gate.
Bill had one
real fine punt. the only thing Coach Levine had to explain to him
that it was best to kick the ball 50 yards forward and not 50 yards
behind,
oh
really. Benjy McDonnell made an excellent play in the
last quarter saving a t.d. when he got a hand on a ball that was
headed righ_t for the other side. Great play Ben!!!
. .
.
So on· a happy note I'd like congratulate Coaches Ron Levine,
Tom Levine Tom Mellet. Mike. Towers, J Conroy;
Bill
Dourdis and
Tom Grangenburg for the excellent job they did and for bringing
home the winner, .God Bless Their Little Hearts. Be Good, Love
Duff.
.
FO~
JUDY." .................................... ~~•••!"•FROM
2
were
b I ood-shot
and
his
mustache was in need of an
expert trim.
Bob-o and Liz's freind, who .
lives next door half of the time,
did a rendition of "Frank-a-back
Circle Hero' While they were
singing Bengie -
I want to be a
football hero - came out his
room
in his underwear, His
roommate
came out · of the
room also, he was carrying his
thing and went into the shower.
Donna came
up
looking for
'Murr .who was in Neil's room
playing cards with Mark and
Danny,
\Ve got
everybody
together and went into my room
to watch George study. Then we
agreed that we would take up a
collection and buy Jamie some
cheese. But instead Tom went
down to the rat for a cup of
coffee and he brought Jimmy
back a large milk.
Randy and Linda went to the
game room.
I went back to my typewriter
and
Judy
came
in
and
un-plugged everything and shut
off everything. She left. I got up
and turned the room back on
and shut the door and locked it
because -I needed some· privacy
and
George
was attentively
stairing at the wall in front of his
desk. He was upset because his
mother hadn't cal.led lately .
Somebody told me once that
they didn't want to be here, nor
did they want to be home.
I
agreed. "We all hate home and
having to be there.
I
detest my
room its specially choosen junk._
The good books. The good bed.
And my
life
in perfect order."
(Philip Larkin)
I heard a voice
call in the back of my mind -
"don
't
be anywhere, • be in
love."
WRESTLING
by
John Redmond
grants, National Defense Loans,
work-study
wages, etc. Bank
loans
do not match EOG's.
Eligibility - (Subject to change
· as new regulations are issued).
1. Initial year grants (first
time) {all students) A family
' Travel earn money as campus rep for Garber Travel, 1406 Beacon
Street, Brookline, Mass.; interested students write or call
(617)
734-2100 collect for David Trook.
The
l
970-71 wrestling season
definitely
will
not be a repeat of
last year's performances. The
cheers for Moody and McGarr
will no longer be heard, neither
will the
words
of Coach Patrick.
Along
with the
new coach
Mr.
Larry Heineman,
eight of ten
positions
will be filled
by new
wrestlers. The team, despite its
conspicuous lack of experienced
uppermen looks
promising
in its
desire and toughness. Vying for
starting positions are, Dennis
Hurley, Lance Lipscomb, Rick
Carnrike,
Ken Ousey, Jack
Micena, Pat Lavelle, Mark, Bratz,
Dan Foley, Craig Vogel, James,
.. APP LES"
Lavery,
John
Redmond and Gerry Abitello.
The first test for the Marist
grapplers
will
be a home match
with
Yeshiva,
preceded by
scrimmages
with Ulster and
Dutchess Community Coll:gcs.
income
S9000 or less {before
taxes) and an expected family
I
-
I
I









































































i.
\.

I
I
I
'
I
!
i
1:
{
I
t'
:;-,,'.
1'
...
~
'i
I
,f
I
~
I
!
i
j
~
~;-~
<
PAGES
...
•.···
..
:
'
. :<·
-..
No;tM'sE~
19:
i910·
·:.:
._
..
_.:
, - , FoOtballersr
·F-i~ish>El~Wl~s·~1y,{;.c,:'·
. Par1~1gntb1~R.IQ*~-n,\:F~l1~?.:~ea~i
..

•••.··
·
· · •·
·
·
· -·by Kevm Donnelly :
-
· ·
• .: . '·.
: · · · -
',
~-
'/

-The Vikings:. finished their
did the job when calied' upon.· ·punt'-the Vik'ings begarf to· move
·· most . successful
season· last . V~ing fans will be sure to miss~ once. more. SoJJle fine running
Saturday by;·defeating Fairleigh
Scott and Paccione; For. two by . Hasbrouck
· ant: Milligan
- . Dicki_nson ·university by· the ·. seasons -they have been the
brought the· •.ball· into: enemy·
·-score 'of 334, It was the first .communications
between the
territory· .where·. a Wilkens· to
.. time that any Marist. team- has 'coach
and : quarterback. •.The· . Rowinskt pasi brpught the ball
· gone unbeaten throughout their
kicking ofBill O'Reilly, ga,veithe '
fo .
th~ Fairleigh .; Dicki_nson
5
- season;
·Fairleigh Dickinson's
Vikings·: good •.field· position., yard line: From thet~ Hasbr9uck
mar~
fell
to 3-3:
!
.
.
througho~t the season: O'Reilly ·. took it_,
the resf of the way
for
For eleven seniors _it was their · was a big f~ctor in the Viking·_ the touchdo~n. The PAT ·v,:as
l_ast _time in. a Viking uniform.
win .. over . Albany·• State ... His'·. missed making'the si::or.e
20-0; . •-
Co-captains Jack McDonJ\ell and tremendous punts kept the team .
·
The Viking~ kept
moving· in
Dean Gestal;. along• with Bob · from -'Albany--deep inside their
the second period. With the ball .
. · Scott,Bill Paccione,~tc~y Cahill; · own territory · throughout the
on the Fairleigh Dickinson 40 .
. Bill. O'Reilly, Bill Rooney, Mark
.
game; , . · .' . ·
~
,
yard line Jim Wilke'ns connected
. · Ro\Yinski, Don Hinchey;
C9tton
•As.for this week's ga·me, it.was with_ Chuck , Browne. Brown·e . ·.
~ash
and· Bob Durso
·will·
•no. conte~t. The Vikings.opened·· showing s_ome fine open .field ·
· graduate in the spring and will up the scoring early in the first . running,. raced 40 yards. for the
be missed. ·
·
quarter.
Fairleigh Dickinson score. Jack McDonnell added the
The hardest hit-by graduation ·University had theball on their
extra ·point.
as the Vikings
· will
be. the defensive backfield.
own 35'.yard '.tine. Attempting to . continued to roll.alo.ng 2-7-0. In
Neither· team was able
to
score
McDonnell, Rooney, and Gestal · pass the ball-was thrown into the
the. same period the Vikings
in the third quarter. Half way ..
gav~ · the. _•Vikings three good hands of defensive enµ ·Don were able to score again. Getting . through the fourth quarter with
seasons and developed into the
Hinchey, who took it 35 yards good field. position thanks to· . the Vikings deep in. their own ·
best.pass defe~sive unit in club f.or the
touchdo_wn.
Jack·
punt
r~turns ·by Gestal and
territory they- were forced to
football. Hinchey and Nash
will _
McDonnell
added d1,e • extra
McDonnell the Viking offensive
punt.
Fairleigh
.Dickinson
·. also be leaying the· defensive unit. point as the Vikings jumped. to
moved .downfield on the fine
blocked it and the ball rolled out
~makingit:the'hardest hit unit of an early 7-0 lead .. Later in the
running
of Milligan-
and
of bounds behind the goal post
The Vikings are the only club
team in New York to end their
season undefeated and desire the
number one ranking in the State.
Next : season should be· another
good one for the Vikings. Many
starters are returning. The entire
Viking ba·ckfield will return to
'
,
the Vikings. . . ._;.
· ·Jirst quarter Fairleigh Dickinson
Hasbrouck, From the 19 yard
for a safety. After taking the
: . ·The· offensive unit -will ·be was forced .to-punt: Dean Gestal · line Wilkens found .Paccione in
kickoff
Fairleigh
Dickinson
without the serv_ice~ of· Micky took the punt on·· his· own 44. the end zone _for the last Viking
began to move. They-moved to
·. Cahill 'nexfseason. Cahill's play .. yard .line and returned it
51.
score of the day. The PAT was
the 5 before the Viking defense·
at· ·offensive tackle has never . yards to the Fairleigh Dickinson
missed as the score became 33-0 ··stopped
them from scoring.
t?een Jacking. Mark ~owinski .5 yard line.
A
few plays later
-a~
the half ended.
Taking over the ball on the 5 the
and Bob Durso, who ·played· Bob Durso took
it
3
yards for
Wilkens, who was hurt b~fore Vikings
attempted
·
to ·
pass.-
behind Hasbrouck· and Milligan the score. Jack McDorinell again'. tire end' of the "first haif, was Coppolino, who dropped back
this. seaso"i1,
gave the ·vikings the . added the exha point making it
unable to play· in the secona
into his end zone, 'was trapped
depth 'they
needed
at the · a 14-0 ball game. .
-~
. half. Don Coppolino. took over,
there for another safety. With
running .back positions. Both
Fairleigh-
Dickinson
.. was ·-but
the
Fairleigh
the score 33-4 the game came to
saw
plenty of action and always · unable to get moving. Forced to
Dickinson
defen~e tightened.
a close.
''give
the. Vikings
the best
offep.sive.
rurining. threat in
Hasbrouck
and
Milligan.
Defensively, the Vikings should
be just as strong; Dan Faison,
DOC GOLDMAN watching action of his
team
as Rich_ Rubino
<N?•
J)
and others look_ on.
._Hai-riers
·complete-Season
At N.A.I.A.
RegionaIS
by Bob
Mayerhofei
On Satm:day, Nov. 7, the cross return, however,' along with Greg
country team travelled to Van
H
o
w e · t o
1
e ad·
t he
CortlandParktocompeteinthe
indoor-outdoor
team
this.
N .A.I.A.
regionals. This was coming winter and spring:
their last meet of the season and
Joe
No Ian had never run
the Harriers finished 9th in·
a
cross-country until he came out
field of 14 schools. Paterson
to - try and help the team in
State- won the event anJ thus
September. As it turned out Joe
earned a position in the
N.A.I:A.
helped the team immensely as he
nationals to be held in Kansas filled · in the necessary 5th
later in the month. Marist was .. position on the squad. Possibly
paced
. by
captain
- Bob
the brightest reflection on the
Mayerhofer,
29th, and frosh entire
~eason
was
the
Don Gillaspie, 36th. They were performance of freshman Don
. followed t,y seniors Mark Des Gillaspie.
Don adjusteo very
Jardins and Greg Howe and Joe
early from the 2.5 mile high
Nolan, a junior. The team thus
school courses to the 5.0 mile
finished their season with a 5-13 varsity
race.
H~
managed to
record. -
finish first for Marist in 4 races
For Greg, Mark and Bob this and was second in the rest.
was their last season
as
cross Presently · Don has the 4th best
country runners. Mark had an
time ever for a Marist runner on
especially f"me season as he came our course (28:03) and seems to
back from a two year lay-off to . be a fine prospect for the next 3
consistently ru~ 3rd man fot: the
years.
team • . Steve
Kopki,
the fourth
Probably
the
best
team
senior
011
the sq11ad, was
also
performance
this
year was
looking
for a good season until
turned in . against Quinnipiac
Harriers
took
the
first
4
positions and missed a shoutout
by one man. The overall team
ti_me ranked this ,year's squad as
the second best Marist team ever
· on its home.course.
*****
he was tine:xpect~Iy sidelined
College of
Mass.
The
~farist
:~:i!~.:a
foot injury_;·
Steve
will
cou~:~cord-was
brokena_sthe:;·:,:
· Lee Gestal, and Jim Murphy saw
plenty of action in the defensive
backfield and did not give up
much to McDonnell, Rooney
and
Dean
Gestal
who are
graduating. ~o we'll see you next
season.
-.
Booters-:
.Lose·
-;
:To-·
Gr:adlation
·
;•,
'
.
> :.
,-, - ...
_ :: ,,__ ,:'.
· ..
:
·.:,·:_. :.;: ·._
. '..
,', ·,,' : .. -·• . ·~
·. by ~n:Dtiffy
·:·,::.'
)"he. Mari;t ·College'_ Sbc_cei
··-,t~o
:~~,~~s:
The teams defense
team. ended_a very lorig season- wm again :be. solid next year
on a winning·note Ja·stweek.with
when .-defensive
backs
Jim
a · 1-0. victory
o:ver Dowling
Heilmann
and Chief Bergin
College; The victory gave the. return. The Red Foxes were
2-2
Red_Foxes a 4,9~I·record with
in conference
play finishing
victories over :West .Conn. St., . third in the league (CACC). ·
Lehman, Nyack and Dowling.
With . the last game it marked the
.
FEDERAL STUDENT FINANCIAL
last appearances for seniors Ray
AID ...... FROM
7
Asaph,
Gerry
Kramer, Pete
Lasher, John Murphy and Duke . -avaHabl~ in my off.ice
in
Adrian
Snyder, Murphy, co-captain with
Hall . right after Thanksgiving.
Pete Walaszek will be sorely
Please get yours in as early as
missed next year,_ Wafaszek was · . possible;
·
the leading scorer again with ,
Unless the.application and the
seven goals and will return next
P.c.s:
report from Princeton are
year for:his third year. The most
in ·
my office by J.t{ay 1st a
improved player was goalie Pat·
student
has no · chance of
Parcells. In
the
beginning of the
-receiving aid: The P.C.S. form
year, Pat was very inexperience
should be mailed to Princeton as
.
and developed .. with· each-:game
soon ·after Jan. 1st as possible,
earning two shutouts in the last · by March 15th at the latest. ·
BILL'BAIRD
...... FR_OM
3
For about an hour -after· the
lecture, a question and answer
period was . held where many
opinions for and against Baird·
were
presented
by parer,ts,
f acuity, students, clergy, and
other.
interested·
people.
H9wever, it appeared that just as
Baird was definitely set in his
w_ays,
so
too
were
his
opposition~ As the people filed
out. of the theater, it seemed
· many still had doubts but all
were deeply affected. ·
If
tliis article hasn't cleared up
your confusion please feel free
to cqnsult me at any time about
firiancial aid.
Announcements
~
BREATH OR DEATH
YOU CAN STOP
AIR
POLLUTION
A PANEL DISCUSSION
Speakers will be:
Ronald B. Friedman of the
Dutchess
County
Health
Department on wrhe l'roblem in
General"
Arthur Motzkin of Hudson
Valley
Oil Heat Council ori ·
.. Space Heating" ·
EverettM. Johnson of Texaco
Inc. on "Internal Combustio~
Engine"
.
Stanley
C. Millspaugh ·o(
Central Hudson Qas and Electric
Corp.
on
••Generating
Electricity"
·
Thursday, November 19 1970 -
¾t,
Arlington Junior H.S. at 8:00
p.m.
*****
MA.~UST COLLEGE GLEE
CLUB "REHEARSALS - TUES
AND THURS.
.
9-10 p.m. Room 268
,
Cha~pagnat. - New Members ','.
t..•
r
Welebine;,·
,
, · -:·




















WAR ••• FROM4
SURVIVAL
encourage
voluntary
b'irth
control
poisoned. The rate of birth of
hideously deformed babies has
support legalized and available
skyrocketed.
·
abortion
Fact: . .We live with these facts.
. · In approaching the problem
: of ecological· destruction ,it is
·generally. acqipted · that the most
. effective · and important
action
'.Vill necessitate sweeping reform
· of industry .. Included
in the
· price of every ·new factory, of
~very new road and every power
plant
must be the price of
ecology. No longer can it be
ignored as in the past. However
each individual must become
:fuvolved in move
to
rescue ·the ·
environment. What · foiiows are
-~ggestions that each person can
incorporate
into his daily life.
Some require sacrifice, others·
·may fit in very well with your
present life style. In considering
the cost to the environmental
destruction these sacrifices are
:·l}'linimal:
·~,Water
:;ut bricks in toilet tank
--
·~

..
don't use colored toilet tissue
Jg.ye treatment
is
resistant to
:~~composition)
-'i.(on',t use
detergents
with
:P.liosphates ,
· ·
·
.•.
.
Jpycott
enzymes
-~~~-
r . . .
,
/J~
leaky faucets
·;~pn't use garbage disposals
Air
don't drive
:u~e public transport~tion
-·,··
.
.
:~i:rl!nge
car pools
walk
bicycle
~~.,:
'.
..
g~t
a smaller car with a smaller
tingine
tl~
less electricity
~ii~
few electric gadgets
. don't burn leaves; composte
don't smoke
Food.
grow your own
· garden organically
recycle organic garbage
don't use persistant pesticides
(DDT,
dieldrin,
aldrin,
chlordane, lindane)
avoid harmful additives
Solid
Waste
.
,
. ADERHOLT ... FROM 5
hand in, the prime subject being
our
security
system and its
director, 'Mr. Aderholt. Before I
turned the· letter in, however,
I
decided to talk directly to Dean .
Wade and Mr .. Aderholt. While
my talk with Dean Wade was
just that, a talk, my talk with
Mr. Aderholt proved to be very
enlightening.
l
found
Mr.
Aderholt, , to my surprise, to be
open minded and community
minded towards Marist. As
I
sat
there talking to him I found out
a few things not to'o many
people have heard of before.
While
I
wa~ there, Mr. Aderholt,
upon heanng of a break and
entry into a car, put an extra
guard .on the lower lot from l
O
P .M. to
7 A.M.,
irregardless of ·
his budget. While not agreeing
Most of us have been able to
come
to
terms
with
this
country's· policy of murdecand
, devastation.
We make
the
appropriate
responses. when
forced; put. peace signs on our
cars;
flash
'V's'
when
its
appropriate.
But by and. large;
we have learned to live with the
War.
As long as that is. true - as
long as those who oppose the'
American
fovolvement
in
Vietnam sit quietly and let the
War go on, then the Nixon
administration.will interpret that
silence as approval, and ten years:
from now ·south Vietnam will
still be a garrison state arid
a\
whole generation of Americans
and
Vietnamese
will
have
forgotten what peace is like.
' on
all
points with him,
I
felt that
he was ·at least concerned. He
agreed with my petitioning the
· re.use paper bags and plastic bags Student Government to· form a
· commission
to go. into the
don't use Styrofoam cups, plates
se_curity system and come up
bowls
with new and better ideas. He is
willing to tear down every rule
don't use plastic wrap
reuse aluminum foil
avoid paper towels
collect and sell newspapers
But what can we do? That'is
the question on which the Peace
Movement founders. Marches
are
out of date; petitions a waste of
time;
elections don't
happen
very often, and besides we lose,
What is left?
No one knows. The . Peace
Movement. needs new ideas,
]t
needs the commitment of those
who
ha.ve dropped
out
in
frustration.
The
War is
intolerable, yet we tolerate it;
We need to remind ourselves
that it isn't over.
It
isn't over
fot
the·men who carry draft cards in
their wallets, and for those who
refuse them.
It
isn't over for the
read 'newspapers
in libraries
and come up with something we
can all agree upon.
I
am asking
buy second hand
the Student Government to take
action on this problem and form
a commission to come up with
new
ideas.
I, myself,
am
volunteering.
If
the Student
Life Style
·
reduce consumption
borrow and lend
rely . on yourself,
make your
· o~n, grow your own repair your
own
economize
Population
limit yourself to two 'children
adopt
· Government passes over this, not
o~ly would they be making a
mistake but they would also be
neglecting their duty to do as ·
they were elected to do, that is
to govern this school and its
policies.
I
also learned that before· one ·
criticizes. he should realize both
sides of what _he is criticizing
before making an accusation.
The Security System .... ? needs
improvement. How?
It is up to
the student body how.
· Sincerely,
James M. Heilmann .
Class of '73
*
* * *
*
' -
• men who will go to Vietnam or
who are in Vietnam; or for those
they leave behind. It isn't over
for the people of Vietnam, for
whom· the slogan "Yankee· go
home!"
must burn in their
hearts and their guts. It won't._be
over
until
the
masses who
organized the . one-day marchbs
and
t.he
excursions
'to
Washington sign up forthe long
haul. Only the people can .stop
the war.
.
·
It's time. Now.
.
-John Kater
Lecturer, Dept;
of
Religious Studies
Chairman, Mid-Hudson
Committee to End
the War in Vietnam
*****'
'
.
.
VIKINGS
TO
FACE
ST.
JOHN'S
IN BOWL
GAME