The Circle, December 10, 1970
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 7 No. 12 - December 10, 1970
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. THECIRCLE
DECEM~ER'IO, 1970
· .......
IT·JtTU'DES
-:·-:~OUTR
..
l~GEOUS
..
·-
:GQ
99
.N.~Ws
.. , ., · · .. · ..
'.•
· -··. ::
• .
11
·
:Billo._
·
•
'Bilrrittig'Tli~·':Cll1rip~
'.:At
.•· .. by Fr.
Leo
Gallant .
. .
. .
Upon_ investigating all walks·_of ciunpus· life on~ inev~t~bly·; finds
.
Saturday_
in
the locker room._I . academfcally succ~srul; wh~ ha~, minimal stti~ying; nc:,: sense _of
himself talking to that.bouncy, bubbling creature: the cheerleader.. saw.
a,
group of tollgh;' brawny ., •_never d_one anythmg else for,the, . tru,th_ searchi,ng e>r of developmg
·
My. interview with a Marist cheerleader, who-will remain nameless · foqtball players-practii::allY,"
all in . c_ollege: Se> m.any
7
J;i.eJ~.
_wa,_!lt
to
an u~tc,Hec~ual.
~ t!}lo~ph«:r~;.
took place behind the bowli~g machine at the Derby as she wa;
tears-and rtried
to
talkfo them. ·· bebusmess 'leaders, ClVlc
leaders;
, exc~~s1ve
··class;-cutiing •Working
lacing up her left sneaker.
. ·
. .
. .. didil't'.fare
any ;better. All, I . teacliers;· · yef
they; ''wHt· :d_o o'nly•
to
pass; ·copping .. out: 111"$0.•
OR: Hi, how are you?
·
·
·
could say: before choking'
up,
nothing ·"to develop· leadership
·many-. way,s; af •every"_dtop::of :a
Cheer: Win. fight, go, kill; dunk!
was that i'thank God for letting · qualities,
nothing
to ·
help •. a
liat .. ·. · ' -~-.
·.'-: · . ·,:
··
--,;,_
· •,. ··
OR: What?
, . ·. ·.
·..
me know such a great bunch of-
project succeed. · The football -
I recently visited•the girls high
Cheer:. Just keeping in .shapei a cheerleader's work never stops you
guys .. ·
club could· use ten. me>re officers
school· in Lawrence Mass. -~here .•
know. Give me an M. · .
·
.
· · · · ·
_
It was the second time in a • to do a lot of dirty. work-but . I counseled last· year. The gist of.
OR: I'm sorry I don't happen to have an Mon me.
. month that I witnessed a group
work that makes a _real per~on·
TY
~alk to the seniors,wa~ this:
Cheer:Wellhowaboutabeerthen?
. of Marist
students weeping:
develop-wcrkthatbi:ingsrealJoy
_J
highly recommend.Manst.
It
OR~ Okay, listen can you answer some questions while you're·
After the last performance of
and tears at the ·:nd of the
!S on~ of th.e great·small f~lleges
drinking?
.
·,
"How To Succeed in Business",
season. I ~m certain th!',t the
111
this cc:mntry. But don t come
Cheer: Fine as long as they're about the team. T-E-A-M.
Team.
the
cast-
broke
d o.w n
the~tre gmld could use more
to Man st _if you have not
OR:Whatteam?
_
·
backstage-and
the
~haplain
oq1<;er~• and
workers;
tl~e develol_)e_d_
a sens_e
o_f
Cheer: Anyteam-Wedoitforthe'team.
choked up again!
Chd~rens theatre;, the athletic
responsi~1hty.
, .. Manst
1s
OR: Do what?
Both groups wept for the same
team _s, .· _the • many . clubs an~
extremely hberal;· so 1f yot~ -~~ve
Cheer: Cheer, you numbskull.
.
reason:
. community!
Both
orga~1z~tt?ns, the res1dents.~alls_ no_ de~p sense of respons1bil~tY.
OR: Ok, is. that what motivates you to devote so mucli time
groups· had worked 50 hard to_ a ct i v_i tie_ s, · the . ~art o us . you wdl .be _crushed. (And Im
screaming and running around in a short skirt, the team?
form
a:
winning community. The .. org antz_a tions
help mg . the
,already. meeting a lot of c~shed
. Cheer: Yes, plus the fact that I have great legs.
theatre peo.ple worked hard and
surrounding are~s and hospitals,
souls here.)_ Come, only
_if you
OR: What are the benefits of becorr.ing a cheerleader?
long
and
had
become real
tl:e Appalaclaan · grnup, . The
can burn ~. candle, especially at
Cheer: Well, you get to giggle a lot and we always get to go to the
family. The moment that last
Ctrc_le ne~vsp~per
(_all-' you
both e_nds.
. .
party after the game. 9-A-M-E
game.
curtain
came
down,
they
Enghsh maJor_s, Journahsts, idea . Ma~1st Col~eg,e recently. had a
OR: You spell pretty good. .
suddenly
realized it was all
people), etc., etc .. :..
. .
.
~eauti,fu~ ad ma 1!~wspaper and
Cheer:Yeah
andlcanmultiplytoo
watch.2bits4bits'6bits~
over-t-hat
closely
knit
Then
we-have
tho_se who
rt was signed by the Students
a dollar. All
fcj;
Mari st stand up and HOLLER - Yeah.'
·
' ·
c ·
0
~
m u n i t y , w
O
u 1 d n
O
w
won't burn a candle even at one
of Marist": '.'We have a Dream:
OR:Youmustreallybedevotedtotheteam?
·
dlsband-and
it ripped their·
end, _who.don't
l~ave the -'!,'ocreateacommunityavvareof
Cheer: Oh yes, go Billy Spenla, Go Wilkie, G9-Go-Go.
het1rts open.
maturity. t~ ?evelop
~
sef!Se of
!ts~lf and aware o~ th_e w~rld. To
OR: Wait a minute I'm Go Go;
·
The football team likewise
respons1b1hty,
winch 1s so
mvolve ourselves in making our
Cheer: Getlost, yo'u can't be Go Go - he wears a helmet.
built up --3· co'miminity
"i
i1ever n~eded_. in · such
a li1?er~,
~1;1cati<;m relev_a~t ·no_t only ..
to
0
R: Yeal1, I guess you're right.
.
.
saw the likes of. I don'.t.think
progress1yr . se:h?ol_at fv!ar.isf.
1s. ~~hoo.~; b':'_t'
_tb_
bf
e: T~ ~<?~te~
·a
Cheer: Do you want to see ~e do a cartwheel?
any individual play~r cared for
They c~n
Y
hve_ ~1t~:,
~l~~s
n~';V >l~a.lt~t ~rnlog_u~ ~~t~~e!,1,
1~eajs
OR:Idon'tknowifit'sappropriateintheDerby.
himself.
Each
wanted·
the
freedo_m but·ltve·_one
.lo!lg,,
··
· · •.• ··-··
· ·
Cheer:What'deyamean-everyo,neelseisdoingthem.
.
community
to win that last
-unendrng
party
.hfe,. w.1th
Cont. on•7
OR:
Yeah, especially the owner of the place. Look, what do you·· game. They wanted it .for the
-plantodoafteryoufinishcheering?
outgoing.
seniors,
for
the
• Cheer: Get married.
coaches, for _the school. : Their
OR: Anyone in particular?
hearts were also ripped open.
Cheer: I don't know yet but
it
will have to be someone who loves
Both groups will get over this.
the team and loves to win. W-1-N win.
I'm only going to demand
And they will be better persons
one thing from my husband.
for
it.• That
includes·
the
OR:
What's that?
behind-the-scene workers. The
'
.
An--·Old
·
Friend
by
Tom Hackett
Cheer: When I say give me an M - I want an M. Is that asking too · stage hands, the projectionists,
much?
,
. ,
.
~
. _
... :,
.
•· • ·
·
th e. Guild of~ic:rs, th e C!~b
'~Then w!{at happened?" "Well, there I was' in the cross-fire with
OR. I do,n
f.
thinl~_so. · • ·. ·
.
.
officers,
tr~m rs, manag s,
my leg shot-up, I don't really remember it all. They got me out and
,.fh~e~_.\1.-: ... ave a new cheer for the big game with Nyack - want to
cheerleaderf, ticker and prog~tm
the medic shot me up and after that I was fine. They brought me
)J.-an(
.
.
.
.
,
.
s~llers. (T ,10se l~undreds
O
into the field hospital and I was cursing like crazy about that stupid
OR: A neVI'.
c_h~;,;
for the ~1g game with Nyack, I cant wait.
tned to dry t?e field before th e
gook who shot me. They got me in bed and shot me up agin, I really
Cheer. Here it 1s. Nell heres the cheer
Iast season gar~e.).
· re
didn't feel the leg anymore. Then this dumb nurse came in and
We got the beer
All. th ese a~ students who a
wanted to know what all the noise was about. I got up and punched
..... ·.·
. We gotthe coach .. , . ••·•.
.... . •
..
··. . .
_burm~g-: Jhe :·c.antlles .at_ bo th
\1er in the mquth .
.I
don't remember it really but all the medics came
___ ,.
, We~go,ta ~oa,_ch,.,:.,
:· :-·,,_ ·· /:;, _ :;. __
, "·
· ·
.e ~-~-s•,
·,._t
ry.r-~_g
_
_.,
to : SUFS~_e,d
v
in the• next.day:.arid ,thanked me,-they·said that they all hated;her
7,-~r~~y'~imY11n~hg·
~r:~c-":·:'•·"••;ss:··r-;-'.--;··•
~--_\'' /..
(~~;t~em~~;~~~saa\)da tl;;-~iegt~, ~-gl!t~nd wa~te~. to do.that.for a lC?ng·ti~e!'·'. :'~·",·•,;½
h•,c(i'.b::'•°'li..··
:•·"•
·
·
·
· ,, ·
·
·\
r ·
· ·
··"Did you get mto any trouble?", · ··
· ·· • · ·
'
1 ·
r
.,.
•
· ·,
61f
1-~a1•!~!~~tte!:ho
ma~e that up?
ntl·_ma~~ng
~!~J
st }he
_g"re~tei;
t
.
'"No,,sheJusfkepi'lier
mol1th. ~h~t-~fte{thai.;,
;
,. . . • ' ·.•.·'
'
cfi;er Doc Goldman
.
.
. . .
1 We
c?
ege
;1
1
mtrc\
f
'"What else happened to you over there?" .-· ; .••
·,·· .
.
. -,.
. ·
o
R: Well look it's been nice talking to you keep up the good
t /
tia~e ":'
0
TJ° ,_er {pe:
0
.
''.~ell, I had this boy who_ !sort of a_dopted: Wfwere:taking this_
s u en s
1
ere.
10
se w 10. urn
vtllage and when we came in I saw this gook he -nad ·a gun to the
work.
.
•
. ·
.
,
the candle only at one end, and
, .• d
•
· ·
b..
bl
•h· b ·'
· · 1·
·
· ·. ·d ·
Cheer: Thanks alot say do you know any good cheers for golf?
tI· ...
l
d
't
d ti· t I
b?Y
~ nea and was Just a out to ow is rams ~mt. ,welL..I save
•
tOS!,!
w 10 on even
°
,a ·
hrs hfe. After that he. wouldn't leave me alone. We became .good
~onder how successful a person . friends and I took care of him for awhile. Here. Here is a picture of
15 who graduates from her~.
him. I have·plenty of pictures, but I only keep the good.ones. The
gory ones aren't worth it. Here, here I am with the rest of the guys
goofing off. That's George, he was always wrecked. That's ...
Di-sabled
In Action -
by
Mike Ward
It is the
right· of every
programs which often inter.rupts .• ·child ,by restricting him from
American citizen to be educated
a lesson: Then there is a rest or
associating, with o_ther
0
children.
to the limit of-his potential, but · .study period: gym and assembly
Second, it has the same_ef(ec;t on·
the majority _of the.-nation's
making
:lhe
amount
of
riondisabled,-chiJdi:en-.by:
-n9t
school
districts
provide no
instruction·
tlu~t the disabled
allowing. them
fo :
play. :with
educational
programs
for
student receives about an hour a disabled children. It is easier for
disabled children. Less than one
day.
a child to accept· a child with a
half of the nation's disabled are
-· The
B.o ard of Edu cation
disability at an early age than
in the existing prngr::mi: Federal
recently adopted a departmental
later oil.
and state governmenls.have tried
or cluster teaching system. The
The trend many educators see,
. to increase the number of these
teacher specializes in a_ certain
except those in NewYork City,
children, attending· school, _by area and is available to those
is to integrate the· physically
laws,
research
projects and
students
-who need remedial
disabled intO regular classes. This
grants to local school districts to . help. But in many instances the
would provide a stable learning
establish and improve special damage
!S.
alr~ady done. because
level· c_omparable to nondisabled
classes.
.
. .
P?Or trammg m the lower grades--"students and a·betteracceptance
The fact still remams that
did not develop. the necessary _of .the.
dis ab 1 e d by
his
many
disabled
cannot work .skills .. There is also insufficient
generation. A committee is being.
successfully
with vocational
manpower to instruct students.
formed (for the last six months)
rehabilitation because there is a on a·n individual Ieve}; Instead of
in New York· City to determine
f 1 aw
in
the
.base
of
~he old
system.
w-here the
the elimination of these classes
the_ ·educational·
pyramid
students in a gradehad the same
for the disabled on t:1e basis of
namely e~em1:ntary education. _I~ · teacher ·. for_' all subjects, they
the 1954 Supreme 9ourt ruling
N_ew York C_1ty-(or example! tne n~w have differe?t _teachers for
_that "separate but equ:y · is not
disabled chi!~ is placed m a d !f_f ~rent.
su bJ ects.
Better
. equal." Whatever is the solution,
classroom with two to three div1s10n
111
regard
to the
something
must· be done to
other grades. The teacher must student's
rate ·of learning was
insure the physically disabled
divide her time among the three
not made.
.
·
person the amount of quality
grades and also those students
Many
of
this·
system's
education
he deserves
and
who
do not understand
the -graduates are dissatisfied with
requires to· reach his potential.
essential mathematic a·nd reading· the
number
of successful
concepts. Students spend more students who manage to go on
than one half of their school day~ to higher education because they
educating themselves because of are unprepared academically and
the constant diversion of the psychologically. The transition
teacher's attention. The teacher
from a sheltered environment to
does· not have the time to help a ·competitive one is too great
gifted stadents in seeking more for many disabled students to
knowledge.
Either they must cope
with.
Many graduates
advance on their own or learn at believe that the greatest damage
the level of the slowest member done by this program is isolating
in his grade.
the
disabled
from "normal"
The student's learning time is children. First it instills a feeling
again
diminished by therapy
of being different in the disabled
T
POUGHKEEPSIE,_
· - . Q',CENTER
1
$.
J. D'ANOeLO DaUO INC.
373 MAIN
mm
i'OUGHICEEPSlf,
N. Y
tl
Phone GL 4-5520
QUOTE OF TIIE WEEK
"We are the people our
parents warned us about."
"Well that's the way. I feel about it. I just let him talk for awhile
. about long hair and' college kids and riots. I just stood ·there knowing
· he was referring to my long hair and 'bell-bottoms. He began bragging
about how long he spent.in the Navy. Anybody who would spend
that much time in the service· is out of his skull. I disliked the lifers.
When he fi_nally.confronted me I just calmly turn~d and briefly said -
'I· spent eighteen months in Nam, was woi.mded twice and saw more
action than you've ever seen' - he shut up after that.
·
.
"Y9u. see;-.. after. -th.at
;I_
,h,ave · the ~ight. fo_.-~e~_r.
lopg,J\air and .
:, b;::lbbo.tto.ms.
;if:
J
,wa,i.t
JQ;:
and so <;loes
,1:,v~cy_bQdy,1~Jse;
lJ1it's what ·
·· they tp}!f.meil:w&sJightjng:.fQr. Whenever!Jhey:_st~:t~(n;\Oiist listen
and wait; then I tell them how long I was in -. they usually keep quiet
· after that."
. . . .
Ron and I got into the elevator. We were b6th reli~ved that he was
going to be all-right. As we Walked down the corridor
qf
the Hospital
on Thanksgiving eve; a 1;alm setUed :within
nie;,we·
went out the
front door. and walked to ·Ron's cay. It was 'a little chilly out but it
was a, nice November evening and you,coµld clearly see the stars up
above. I looked up and then got into the car. As we drove off to
have a drink for. 10m, I began to recall a conversation I had With him·
a fei.v.months ago when I asked him _what Viet Nam was like. I was
_glad. that ·a friend who had spent too much time in hospitals was
going to be
ok.
I know that there is a little orphan boy somewhere in
Southeast Asia who would pro{?ably be very glad too.
'
~AeiFu1..-
~
c
'. .
'fi-<
lJ
.:.
I.
I
!::,.!•··
I
I
I
I:'
1
·
•'•"•.'~
•:.t·
·,
·-.~;r.~,r~
·
.
DECEMBER
10, 1970
fflECiRCLE
·
larist A.broad
Program
.
-In
PuerlO:--Rico
.
.
/)~
_its
'desir~.
t~i~f(er.·.~
.wid~
oppo~tunitie's to'
sp~llk
Spani$h •. harid can. be a very rewarding
VJlUe t.y
,
0
f.,
ed-u cat io naJ. However, students iJ{otherareas.
educational experience both for
~xperi~n~ei~way.fr.oiiqJi¢.;~ome
should.'realize.that' not only
.is
the s_tudent who may see hjs
.:cainp,'11,.s
;.t~e·,:Ma~i~ ;ABroad
English. widely spoken in'Puerto
life's work as an extension of
..
P~ogram:, ha~, e.xt~iid~d ,.its,-iit~as ·
~ico,
.but
'the.
opportunity dqes
this
.experience
and for . the
to include a semester
·
or
.an
·
exist
to·. follow
·
courses in
student· who· wants to
,become
academic year in Pue.rto- Rico; English~ Theni' are opportunities
more personally· aware. of the
The two large universities in
in Ponce for additional study in great cultural
·heritage
of the
Puerto
Rico,
the
National
many of the major fi.~lds offered
Puerto Rican people. In an age
University at
"Rio
Piedras (San at Marist,
su·ch
.as
history
.
of increased
interest in the
Juan)·
and
.
the
C.atholic
political sdence, economics, and
problems of minority groups this
University
·at
Ponce,
have the ~ciences. In addition'there
can
be
a tremendous
expressed
an interest
in
are fine programs in majors not
opportunity for acquiring first
accepting Marist students for the
offered·
at
.
Marist,
·
such as hand
a more
extensive
· sttidy abroad program. However,
sociology.
knowledge of the problems of
..
because of a severe
.shortage
of
A
·SEMESTER OR
A
YEAR
these American citizens.
available space.at the Natio_rial IN Puerto Rico would offer the
Stu~ents.
who
may
be
University
the possibility
.
of Marist student the possibility of interested in further information
being accepted is more feasible continuing to take courses in his about
·.the
Marist
Abroad
at the University of Ponce.
major field and combine these
Program 'in Puerto Rico should
.
During
_this
past summer Bro.
-
courses with another area
.of
con tact. Bro.,. Weiss. Futur~
Weiss went to Puerto Rico, interest. Living in Puerto Rico
where
he
had
extended
and dealing with the'people first
Cont. on
7
conversations
with
the.
·
administration·· at the University
Aid For Drug
Abusers
Hayward;
Calif.· -
(I.P.) -
Initiation of a new program at
.California
State
College,
Hayward, to aid young drug
abusers was announced recently
by
President Ellis
E.
McCune.
He said a federal contract for
$260,800 has been awarded to
the
Center
for
Drug
Information,
Research
and
Education at the college by the
National·
Institute of Mental
Health.
·
The contract provides
funds for 15 one-and two-week
training cycles planned for the
year's duration.
The training
will vary in
intensity,'
according
to the
category
of
the trainee. The 240
professional
and
para-
professional
personnel to be
trained will get a more intensive
and in depth course, and
will
go
to agencies
for
their field
experience which are in hospital
or clinical settings.
The second
480 trainees,
whom Dr. Sanford J. Feinglass,
· co-director
of the Hayward
Center
and director of the
Center for Drug Information,
Research
and the Study of
Human·· Problems at Stanford
U n i v e r s i
t
y , c a I l's t he
"gatekeepers," don't need such
sophisticated
instruction,
he
says.
"The
gatekeeper
is more
involved in observation, while
the professional trainee will be
-involved
directly
in the
treatment of the drug abuser,"
he explains.
"Gatekeepers"
might be ministers, recreation
directors,
youth
program
directors, police officers, co11ege
deans, teachers, counse11ors - and
even parents.
of Ponce. The outcome was that
.
the university is
·responsive
~o
· Marist's·
interest
-in.
sending
students there
·
to study for• a
·
,semester
or a year; Similarly,
if
Pilrking
Meter
Conspiracy
·
Uncovered
.
.
.
"We don't want judgment or
evaluation from a gatekeeper,"
Dr. Feinglass continues. "He just
recognizes
the
problem,
understands it, and works with
.
it, but
there's no judgment
needed from him. It- does no
good
to send
a kid using
barbituates to a facility treating
narcotics users," Dr. Feinglass
stresses.
•
,financial arrangements can
•
be
.::
,.,
worked out the university would
·
by Joe Rubino and Bill O'Reilly
_:aJ59,'.beirit~r~sted,,inAeyel9pjiiga ..
"J,i'sh~te~.a'few,yea'rs°igbwith
deported°
from Bermuda for
student, exchange program with
·the
CAfONSVIll.E
:
:
9. The
yelling obscenities at a bongo
Marist.
·.Interest·
·was also
fu·ror
inci:easect
with
the
drum.'
-
indicat.ed in. a
.faculty
exchange CHICAGO 7. Panic grew with
. Robert
Haw d ( a 1i as -
whereby
__
Marist could send a the· PANTHER 21. But, now;
Hawkman) a known left-wing
,
faculty member to Ponce for a . yes,
now,
the revolutionary
follower of Daniel Berrigan, it is
year
:in-exchange.
for the services
·movement
in An1erica has
suspected that
-he
was exp.~lled
of
a
teacher··· from
Ponce.
·seemed
to liave
·
hit
a violent
from
a· religious
order for
Incidentally, the Marist faculty
·
crescendo with the trial of the
.
subversive
activity
in the
member would not have to be POUGHKEEPSIE 5.
confessional.
Hawd's record
fluent
in
Spanish and could be
If you haven't read or heard
includes:
I)
drunken
and
from
any department,
since about
this radical subversive
disorderly at a Good Counsel
many courses there are taught in group of longhaired students, we
mixer and at a. bingo game at his
English to the largely bilingual will try to explain briefly:
parish hall. 2) conspiring to
Puerto
Rican.
university
[t
seems that several weeks
increase his height (4'11") by
students.
.
.
.
ago, Jive
violence-orientated,
purchasin·g a pair of Thom McAn
As far as the Marist students
seditious-minded Marist College "together"
shoes with Puerto
are concerned these programs at
students, willfully and with full
Rican Heels, and
3)
harboring a
Ponce
·
would be,· appealing to
consent, conspired to undermine
wanted sparrow in his crop of
.
majors; in., a ~ariety
<?f
areas.
·
the entire public parking system
loosely flowing hair.
-Span_1sh,,.maJ~rs,,m1~ht;pe
·ofthecity:ofPoughkeepsie.
,
.
·
William Rooney (alias Junior,
,,
attract~d
\by,
the
:,e .
.'lCtensive:·v·
;Jhe,detai}s,of.tl1e
incident are :Toons)
-is
.reported to
1
be the
.
·program
·
of-Hisp~ni<_:,,~_tudies~as.<,~blµrred~•
but,the.c~~SH·are·charged
..
~)1i¢'f_plqtte(of, th~".5'\.ar,d
_h!l,s
·
W.
e
l'l
ia
s
0
·t
he
_J1r
st- h~ nd
':\vitli"
cbrispiraliy
=m:•itfie
·fourth
:a·.
picture
'of:··Mao·
Tse Tung
-
·
.
..
·
~-.
··'
.. · .
degree. The'judge reasoned that
fatooed on his:forehead
..
Police
·
·A11nouncement.s.
•'
\::
the culprits had directed their
suspect
that
.Rooney
has a
',Fri.·
Dec.
11
at Mt. St. Mary's
·
·
Class of '73 Marist Co-Sponsors
Roaring 20's Night $2.00 S, and
--
$3.50 cpl..
·
-
'
.
.
3
.bands
fea~uring·-Gas House
··.Kids:
.
.
Free beer and chips
·
$$$Prize for Be·st Costume$$$
·**.*****
·
Military Counsellor
·
Liz Yates
15
Rutherford Place
(212) 533-2350
*******
:
GI Counselling Service
·.
:
339 Lafayette'~treet
· -
.,
·
.. · ...
"
;(212)
533~8920
·
,.
·:·
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
'
.
'
-
~;
.
~·
attack
at every 4th parking. history ofviolent incidents after
meter, thereby hoping to throw
observation of the terrain of his
the city into complete chaos.;
face.
The
charges
against
·
·
The arraigned revolutionaries
Rooney are the most serious of
ar,e as follows:
the "S." Sine~ he.is a resident of·
.
·
Michael McNeely (alias-Major, Connecticut,
he has been
~hubby
Cheeks)
.a
known
charged with crossing state lines
troublemaker,· believed to have
with intent to conspire. When
been part
.
or'
Che, Gueverra's
confronted with the accusation
band of upstarts in the jungles of
Rooney's
comments
were:
Bolivia. McNeely has a long
"Right-On"
·and
"Free Huey."
...
criminal
.record
which inchides
Terren~e Nash .(alias Cotton)
1)
imperso.nating a student at
reputed to be a hippie freak and
Marist Go11ege
.2)
attempting to
part of the Manson clan. Police
·
·
grow a beard
3)
public exposure
have been watching his residence
at the boat house, and 4) making
.
for some time, where it is
fun ofhisrnommate.
·
_·.
reported that he m~tains
an
:.
_McNeely;
the alleged leader of
.
arsenal of we~oons, including 6
the-. ·groµp,.
'has· ·also.
been
tomahawks, a bow and arrow
set, and one very old horse. The
charges against Nash include
1)
failing to hold his liquor, 2)
forearming
his roommate to.
death, and 3) talking to Dean
Gestal.
·
John McDonnell (alias.Jack,
Benjy,
Beaver)
Police
say
McDonnell's case is the hardest
to understand since Jack will not
talk about anything but his date
last Saturday night. Police are.
not fooled by McDonnell's naive
act,
because in the
.
words of
Officer Joe Bolton, "No one
could be that stupid. He is the
cleverest one of the lot."
The charges against McDonnell
are:
l) wearing a striped shirt
with checkered pants 2) parting
his hair on the wrong side of his
head,
3)
failing. to
·
brush his
teeth after eating psychedelic
brownies given·
t9
him· by a
socialistic
cheerleader whose
only
description
is "her
eye-makeup matches her dress,"
and finally 4) for getting his
picture
in the
paper
17
consecutive
days for doing
absolutely nothing.
·
Lawyer David Dellinger' will be
flown in to defend the .. 5" and
the. group
urges
iiH
_.Marist
students
to surr.ound
the
courthouse
and
shout
obscenities. For a list of the
latest obscenities, please contact
Dean Gestal.
"Our gatekeeper has to know
which gate to open - he has to
know who goes where."
·
Other
elements
considered
important to the training of the
gatekeeper inclµde:
Recognition of a drug abuser,
but in a manner which doesn't
threaten him.
Enough involvement with the
drug abuser so t]1ere will be
follow-up through the period of
treatment and rehabilitation and
even beyond that.
Cost or ·the program
.
to the
trainee
is only the $57
.SO
weekly charge for room and
board.
The
program
is an
intensive one, lasting· from
9
.
a.m; to
10
p.tn·.--rcff'tne·seveh'~
o't-~·---
foi.lrteen-day
·
period of the
·
training cycle.
SAC from
7
Teacher's
Workshop.
The
Workshop will involve studying
two
areas
that of teaching
methodology
and
the
performan_ce and evaluation- of
students.
These
topics.
encompass such areas as grading,
independent
study, discussion
classes and attendance. The APC
is
still in the process of setting
up the format of Workshop.
It
is hoped that if you have
any questions or suggestions
relating to any. of the areas
discussed, please contact any
members of the SAC or APC ..
*****
Council
·.formed
o·n
Abortion
Applied·
Topics
In Science
New York City (Dec. 1, 1970)
prQvides
such
information
,-
The
Council on Abortion
without
any charge. or fee
Research
&
Education, Inc. has.· whatsoever, Mr. Roman pointed
been
formed
to
provide
out.
_
·
information
and
assistance
Since
its
formation
-in
regarding legal abortions, it was N ovem her,
the Council has
announced· by Richard Roman,
provided_
information
and
Executive
Director
of the
assistance,
primarily through
Council.
·
.
telephone inquiries,. tp hundreds
According to Mr. Roman, the
of women. The Council is now
Council is the first organization
undertaking to expand its efforts
of its kind
(a non-profit
and. is appealing for· women,
corporation chartered under the
especially those outside New
laws of the State of New Yolk) . York, to work _with the Council.
to be formed since the recent
Any.Joe interested in doing
so
.
(July;
1970)
·
liberalization of on.
a
part or full-time basis,
New York State's
.abortion
law. should contact the Council by
The Council emerged as the
calling_ (212)
682-6856, or
result
of the-
tremendous
writing
to the
Council on
dem~nd by women,
·
especially Abortion Research & Education
those· outside New York, for at 342· Madison Avenue, New
information
about procedures
York, N.Y. 10017. Mr. Roman
employed, availability, cost, and noted
that
no. special
other matters related to legal background
or training
is
abortions
performed without
required.
.
delay
in
hospitals
and
The
Council
is preparing
out-patient
facilities.
in pertinent
informational
compliance
with
medical
literature
and also plans to
standards and practices. Unlike publish a periodical newsletter
other organizations, the Council about legal abortions.
The
following
·
books
.
(all
paperback)
·
constitute
a
preliminary
reading list for
students who have registered and
have been accepted for Science
300 - Applied Topics in Science.
The books are to be read prior
.
to class meetings in January:
-1.
The Population· Bomb -
P.
-Ehrlick
2. Moment in the Sun - R.
Rienow, L. Rienow
3.
·The
Urban Villagers -
H .
Gans
4. The Death and Life of
Great American Cities- J. Jacobs
Additional
texts
will be
announced at the beginning of
next semester.
·
It
is important
that your
spring
class
schedule
be
submitted to Dr.
M.J.
Michelson
(D22SC) before you leave this
semester,
in
order
that
convenient course meeting times
can be established.
Think of programs, tactics,
ideas or methods that are needed
to make Dutchess County -
.
including Marist College - a more
healthful environment in which
to live.
Calendar OJ Events
THE WEEK OF DECEMBER 7- 13, 1970·
Monday, 10:00 a.m.
Marist Associates meeting, Alcoves, Campus Center
8:00 p.m.
Air Force Recruiting, Alcoves, Campus Center
Tuesday, 10:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Air Force Recruiting, Alcoves, Campus Center.
8:00p.m.
Freshmen Party, Rm. 249, Campus Center
Film. "Kinetic Art Series
II,"
Theater
Wednesday, 10:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
New York State
Civil
Service Recruiting. Rm. 248A, Campus
Center
7:30
p.m.
Wrestling - Trenton SL • Home
·
6:00 p.m.
Basketball - New Paltz - Home (Freshman)
Cont.
on
7
PAGE.of·
. ." TIIECIRCLE':
...
•.,'
'.,
,,
Wade,
-AderhOldt,
Studenf:Gov.
· DisCuss
Security
.
Prob1elll~
. . .
·
.. . .
_
-
~y
Joe Rubino.
_. ,:-,
..
_
-''Not enough people on. this
consciousness", Aderholt meant
on. how they want to deal with · .
,campus are security-conscious,"
that too many people leave.their
vandals or looters. To this date,
said Director of Security Ronald
· door~ unlocked, leave money
iri Aderholt has instructed his ·men
D. Aderholt
last Wednesday· the open, and generally pay little
to notify the· the town police
afternoon
in answer
to a
attention
to
securing
their . whenever
they find :-someone
:
question
concerning the theft · personal belongings:
.·
breaking irito campus property.
· and vandalism on campus this
He further·· pointed out that _ -Mr. Wade• however·· feels that
year. -
many people actually witness
the force should
find
out from
The . remark was made at a
~cts of vandalism but ye! stand
the college community how it
__
meeting held in the Campus
idly
by and ~o nothing · to
wants to handle these situations ..
'Center between Aderholt, Dean
prevent
them _from happening.
He feels that perhaps they-wo,uld •
•
1
Thonias Wade,-and the Student
Aderholt
said
that
many
not wishthecallinginofoutside
Government, concerning Marist's
problems could be averted if help, ~ut would rather prefer to
security system.
only· _peopl~ would rei;,ort sue~ . ~and le the problem - entirely
_ Directly
previous
to the
acts 1mtnediately to him or his independent of town or city law
comment Mr. Wade had quoted
staff.
. . _ .
.
enforcement. .
· , :'( _ --
·DECEMBER
10.1970 ..
THOMAS WADE
from an extensive list of losses
M u_ch discu_ssion
in the
Aderholt
totally: ~upported
suffered by. members of the
meetmg
centered around the
Wade iri his thinking for then ·
_
RO.
NALD ADERHOLDT
community so far this semester.
fact that the coinmunity,
as
'
By this
lack of "security
such, has not set up guidelines
C.ont. on 7
'
.
'
TRIBUI'E
from
8
team
could
go. 8-0 under
conditions like these. Criticisms
leveled at players are for the
most part destructive and not
constructive.
Second_ guessing·
and phrases like "You choked"
and "·you· didn't put out" are
common. Tantrums on the field
were in evidence all three years
I
played.
·
It
is my hope that the head
Coach of the Football team will
look into himself. He now J1as a
· team
which
is capable
of
performing superbly under any
conditions.
Why
can't
the
.
conditions be ideal? Why can't
the Coach treat his players
as
people on and off the field. If
this ever happenedi if Coach
Levine ever showed his players.
that he was interested in them as
human
beings,
not just as
football
players, the football
program at Marist would be
complete
and
much
more
rewarding to participate in than
it is now.
SURVIVAL
A posse of vigilantes is taking
Washington's
afr pollution
to the streets in New York City -
ordinance,
passed in·. January
to fight
air
pollution.'
_
1969, was billed as a_ model
They are not exactly taking
ordinance
but Washingtonians
the faw.
into
their own· hands
are. beginning
to
wonder some
since these vigilantes are known
1600 complaints later why their
as "sniokewatchers" and they're
air is getting.worse.
being trained by New York City
The situation in Washington is
to augm~nt.
the surveillance
complicated by the fact that the
activities
of the city's paid
city
is
virtually government-less
inspectors.
and what real power is wielded
I
YOUR
ow_
N PRIVATE
ENVIRONMENT
...
FROM
$322,500 · ·
'HOUSTON, Tex. (APJ -
A perf~t environment home
with a
minimum price tag of
$322,500
is
being
offered for
Christ.mas giving
by
a Hous•
ton department
store.
·
The
individually planned ·
home would liave
an
ecology
p
r o
t e c t
e
d
by
an air-
supported
dome covering the
entire lot-minimum of one·
acre.
The Sakowitz Christmas
Catalogue said
the .
pollu-
tion-free environment de-
s i,g n e d
by
Borg-Warner
would carry a fmal price de-
· 1 termined
by
the size of
the
lot and such factors as the
height of trees.
Forty members of Citizens for
there is wielded by the
.
House
Clean Air are taking the course
and Senate District Committees.
in smokewatching. Once they
Since many of tlie city's worst
complete
it they will report
polluters are federal installations
violations
of the
city
air
such as Anacostia Naval Station,
pqllution· ordinances to regular
the Capitol' }ieating Plant,- D.C.
inspectors who . will write out · General Hospital, St. Elizabeth's
summonses on the basis
'of the
-
Ho_spital, Walter Reed Army
information
supplied
by
Hospital
and the Washington
~
~~-.;:·
·
~
~··, _ --~~er~te·-o~.io~-i~~d or,
u~l~~d~
;·.' ,,-_,
.
· · ·
, -. •
-
_
• ·1
·. -
gasoline-wherever possible. Since
volunteers. The volunteer will . Naval Yard, clean up action may
then appear in court with the · be hard to come by.
inspector as a witness.-
The
problem
is further
In . the past citizen volunteers
complicated by the fact that the
have · not been encouraged to
rest of the city's top 25 polluters
help out in the New York City
are-· such
vital
facilities
as:
fight
against
.air pollution.
hospitals and heating plants. No .
E
• • . •
, -· .
.
the Federal Government
buys
nvrranmenfal
Good
News
'
one-half of on~ perceµt of all '
- . gasoline purchased in the United
States, the order may stimulate
Apparently,
rising
citizen
one wants to shut down the.
The
Vistron
Corp.,
a wallboarl
.
demands for an end to poisons
Georgetown University Hospital,
subsidiary
of
Standard
Oil
The system
was
designed and
in the
air
coupled
with a city
tl1e
George Washington Hospital,
Co mp any
o f O hi o,
has
built by Kobayachi Engineering
financial crisis that makes it Ahe Washington Hospital Center
announced
development
of a of Fuji,· Japan.
It-
combines
impossible to hire new personnel - or' the Universities. • • · .
plastic bottle that could. help
conventiorial•cylinder board and
have forced the city to accept
Washington's
City Council,
solve the
Nation's solid waste
fourdrinier systems.
help from its gasping citizens.
appointed by the President, not
problem.
Known ·as· an ultraformer, the
Meanwhile
in the nation's
elected
by the citizens, has
The .bottle, made of Barex ·, machine will produce 250 tons
capital it was disclosed in early . minimal authority tQ take action
210,
is as transparent as· glass, daily when it
is in operation.
October
that
not
a single
that improves the lives of the
one-fifth as heavy and burns to a
No-lead Gasoline - President
violation
of the
city's air
District's
residents~
It
crumbly
ash when lighted.
Ni"xon
has. ordered
all
pollution
ordinance has been . particularly
lacks the back•up
The combustible bottle burns _governrnent.:owned · vehicles to
the production and marketing
of -
unleaded
gas around
the
country.
-
-
· In praising
the President's
action,·
-
Environmental
Quality
Council Chairman
Russell Train
noted that low-lead fuels reduce
hydrocarbon
emissions by
a:
· range·. of 7 to· 20 percent.
Hydrocarbons.
are
a major
component of ·
air
pollution in
most urban areas of the Nation.
prosecuted in nearly two years.
authority New York City has to
at
1000
degrees _and its smoke
NQbody knows exactly· who's
move.
forcefully
against
does not change the chemical
to blame but accusative fingers
polluters. But the fact that not
nature
of incinerator
smoke,
are ·pointed
most often at - one
soot-belching
apartment
Vistron claims.
.
Mercury
Pollution.
Of Lakes
And
Streams
Malcolm C. Hope, Washington's
building smokestack has been
-- Vistron. says the Food and
environmental
health official.
shuf down or controlled in two
Drug
Administration-
has
Hope says there have been no
years leads to ·the conclusion
approved the use of Barex
210
prosecutions·
because
all
that
concern with "law and
bottles for food-and
beverage
violators have complied with the
order" in_ the nation's capital is
containers.
law once they were notified of
not all it's cracked up to be.
Re-cycling Machine - A-paper
the
comp
1 a int.
Mo st
And
when
the
city~s air
re-cycling machine designed and
Washingtonians who are gassed
pollution administrator
tells a
built by a Japanese engineering
by D.C. Transit buses every day
· newspaper reporter not to print
firm
is being
installed
by
or who
routinely
see black
his name in the paper because ··Georgia-Pacific at its Thorold,
p o i so n s
p our in g from
then he would be bothered with
Ontario paper mill to transform
smokestacks
throughout
town
people calling up to complain, it ·
90,000
tons of waste paper a
are skeptical of Hope's claim.
may not be long before choking
year into a building material.
Washington
City
Council
Washingtonians follow the New
The new material is the highly
chairman, Gilbert Hah'h Jr. put
York example and take to the
specialized paper required for
it bluntly. «That's silly.'
·
streets in their own defense.
the face and back of gypsum
ln
July,
1970,
full impact of
t!te insidious poisoning of lakes
and streams by mercury wastes
was sweeping across America,
with evidence of the dangerous
element found in waterfowl and
fish and other creatures. The
Secretary of the Interior said he
was moving against ten industrial
plants and "we are developing
hard evidence · against a number
of other companies." He said
.tllese
discharges "represent an
intolerable threat to the health
and safety of Americans." Then,
in August,
Alabama officials
reportedly were ready
to
move
to
shut
down
industrie_s
dfschatging . mercury into public
waters.-
Yet,
the
Federal.
Government baffled · Alabamans
by pulling the· rug out from
under. the . State officials _
by
establishing
something of a
temporary
accommodation
tolerence up to half-pound per
day
for mercury dischargers,
giving
them
time to install
clean-up
equipment.
Mercury
can be kept out of public waters
entirely
throu_gh r~_cy.cJing.
*****
DECEMBER.-10;1970
THE CIRCLE
PAGES-
_______
....,.
_________
~~--~--------~----....,.--------
C.IRCLE
EDITORIALS
'
'
.
··:
'
·•.
.
'
· Chavez
Goe~_-T~J-
J~il ·_
. Amid the terror
~f
b~mbiligs andanguishedcries-fot redn{ss of l~ng
... - standing.offenses, ai'.man of, peace has
gone
to jail. The crime is
· non~viole°iit civil disqbtdience.
The man is Cesar Chavez; his crime
· is orgaii.izing:a,str.ilct(of inigi:ant farm worl_cers and engineering an
economic boycott; against the major lettuce· growers in. the· Salinas
·
Valley of California·,·.
. .
Chavez~ along wit_h LaCausa, is the symbol of _struggling chicano
workers for-. the right to live. His followers are not gun- toting;
· r9ck~throwing• militants. But rather, patient, 'non-violent activists.
Not activists.out of academic discussion,,more importantly activists
o,~t of their own desire to1ive. The attack is geared to a means which
is 4ifficult to comprehend in.a country insane with'its_own violence.
- lettuce
might appear. to be an·. ,absurd! issue to the great
· sophisfit:ation and affluence of the northeast.
It is taken for granted
:in
our
overweight section· of the world. However,· Chavez and
LaCausa do not take lettuce· for .granted. It is the source of their
work and thus, their.life.·
_ .
LaCausa., does not ·need well-intentiqned · best wishes .from the.
radlcal chic or the usually inept aid of radical students:.-What is
necessary, however, is a massive boycott of California grown lettuce.
The major companies which are targets of Chavez are Bud.Artie; Inc.
and an old frie~d, Dow Chemical.
·
- X.-mas: Ju.st Anoth~r
_Day
~
::. . . .
:-,
-. ·. : . ..
-·
:,_-~-·
·.. ..
..
-'_.
>·;.
:·, ·..
··-
.. · .. : , .-''
:•· '
. ·.
· .. ,=;'..)~-(this SJ?lendid tin1e · of the::-
y~.µ-
¼:he_~
_all the ·sit}ilin,g
q~ristians_
<
;are:rurui~g·;-around ~ith theit..pfastic wa:.rmth and:plastic goqd .cheer; . .
.
. . : ::.'~
i~tis:rieces'sary:that .we:·pr:es¢rft,:y.ou=with
:a:
mpl'e
sobhing
side
OI
the ·, :~
.
..
.
:_::::-~:f~OJY~f:-:•:IZ{~
-~~:
c:;¥~:
·~~
:~.;~.~·:·~~~_:
;~?
-~-'·•.::~<~:::
-~::
::
~-·:.-~--_::
-~
>~
~-
_
·· ~--
_ _· ·.
·-
-
~
·· . · . _
·
.·.<
:--There
is
no Christfuas. 'There is rio reason to celebrate and sing
_:_
joyful carols in honor of a man long dead. Throughoufthe
world
· December 25 will be no different than any other day.· The
Vietnamese people will still be seeking to evict the white agressor.
The children of Pakistan and India will have no reprieve from their
disease and hunger. South American children will go to bed hungry
once again. The prison doors will close again on the victims of
economics and tyranny.
However, our special thoughts will be with two prisoners of war.
It
will be a longtime before Daniel and Philip will be able to talk and
walk with their friends. But they have chosen where to spend
Christmas this year and our respect and gratitude belongs 'to them.
_
Cops and Robbers?
The most interesting thing to come out of the recent meeting
between Messrs. Wade, Aderholdt, and the Student Government· (see
precedi_!lg page) is that the college has no guidelines on how to deal
with people caught looting or vandalizing on campus.
Although
Mr .. Aderholdt's policy has been to- inform the Town
·Police Department
as soon as his personnel spot an in~ident
occurring,
Mr. Wade brought up the distinct possibility that the
· community at large might not agree wit this procedure.
. · All parties agreed that some means must be set up to·find out the
· community's opinion on this matter in order that future guidelines
may be set up.
.
Despite _the fact that we don't know yet how the people will react
on· this- matter, one thing is for certain: When some procedure
is
set
up, we must all understand it and stick by it.
_ If the community say~ that they want no outside assistance, then
. they should understand that they will have to face any consequences
themselves. If the community says that they are in favor of outside
police assistance, then they should realize that the police will be
asked to give help, and not to be the victims of verbal and other
abuse.
At any rate, this question may cause some Marist students to think
for the first time in their lives.
Sal Piazza, Joe Rubino, Ann Gabriele, Janet Riley,
. Peggy Miner, Frank Baldascino, P.aul Tesoro; John
Tkach, Bernie Brogan.
The above names are those people
who
have contn'buted to
this
week's CIRCLE, and do not appear in a byline.
~i
..
Ltt~;{ic'.i
t1.~1ifflli,~*loijt:f
.
.
,;u·.•P•r•.:<..;:::?,Yiffii'l8'ifd1'j
3
··•·:1.·
..
The purpose
~ft
his letter .w~s that the fetus in the womb. is
•
aware of this and. can hear the
to .correct.some misconceptions
Very .much·
aware
of· his
sound of a pan.lJeing dropped.
>
which·· .regular .reading of the : enviroriment
after :the· ,,J2th · .. He'll react to ifby kicking out .
·. Circle may have provo~ed.
week .. If riot. before. · He is· not
"In essence they are little, tiny
m
=-
Circle-
.
. .
. .
'
'.
lrresponsibl_e_
make" Marist a better 'place,
rather than smuggly sitting. back
carping out a stream of negative
criticism once a week. There are
even people· here who come up,
with concrete suggestions for
·November 20, 1970
improvements rather. than vague
A letter to Those Interested in
gene r a liza tio
i:1
s of doom,
Marist ·But not Presently on
decadence and conspiracy. There
Campus:
· '
a re , st u dents,
faculty,
It
is unfortunate
·that this
administrators
and
staff
letter is necessary, but it is. The
members
who
really~ relate,
-reason
is
that the small group of
cooperate and contribute. There
people thaLcontrols
the Marist
.are
many
segments
of the
paper,
The
Circl-e,
has
community
who·realize
that
estaolished ·
a
-ratlier··unique;
~
acade-tnif-·.fre.eao11:f
_is
kme<l
by_'
journalistic.canon. i.e.-that'since. :,.those
wh_o demand: that all·
they .-woik.,ori·the paper,'-they · .·segm·ents of our community
have no 'tespo.rist'bility .to' try to
conform to one set of ideas or
present a balanced
·
picture of
one style of life. There are those
college. events. and .persons, but
who feel that what is .done on
rather.are·
entHled
to
this
campus
am:ong all its
monopolize a paper paid for by
segments
is a worthy
social
all students in order to ,advance
contribution
ahd is important.
the ideas and interpretations of a
There · are those on this campus
few students. It.is also necessary
who, respecting the rights of
be ca u s_e· the
Student
others to iiame their own heroes,
. Government and other segme11ts . do not demand that we all nod
· ofthiscommunityhavefailedto
like·
docile
sheep
to the
insist that a college paper should
in-rhetoric of the New Left (i.e.
contain both news and opinion.
the present guise of· the old
· It is necessary because the staff
intolerance and tyranny).
· does
not seem to feel any
-: Marist· today is exciting and
: obligation
to get conflicting
dynamic. We have not solved all
points
of view
or varied
our problems; there is need for
dimensions of a story.
If such · improvement.
Yet, there is .
come in they will print them,
effort,
spirit. and dedication
but
usually
let
the reader
here.
All members
of our
beware. ·
·_
· '
community have much to be
The letter has a degree of
proud of and many challenges
anonymity to it, so _that at least .which remain to be met by joint
in part it might conform to the
efforts. These challenges could
general style of the·paper as .be more easily hurdled,
if
·w.e
all
__
printed this year.
- --
began
to
realize
the many
-
- - TII~
STORY ·
common goals which. unite us.
There
ate
many _ positive
The agnewsque tactics of our
features at Marist College. Large
Circle staff could be transfonned
numbers on campus
still know
into _more positive means for the
the . meaning of good taste and
realization of more significant
do
respect
personal privacy.
goals than the simple aim of
Large numbers find repulsive,
polarization. We ask you readers
unwarranted
personal attacks,
to realize that we are in the
name-calling and uncalled for
process
of building
a fine
giggles gained from making fun
educational institution here. We
of people. There are many who · ask you to join us,· as we inqeed
day
in and day out work hard to
hope that the Circle will
YoursinMarist,
always sleeping. He hears the
people
aware
of
their
rumble of his mother's intestinal
surroundings.
They know
if
tract which sounds more like
something is wrong. When a
bubbles in champagne to him
solution that is more than
SO
per
than rumbles; he can hear. her
cent saline is injected into the
voice and respond to loud music.
womb· they drink it and they
Middle-Class, Mortgaged,
Faculty, One-Car, Crab-Grassed,
P.T.A.,
Republican, White,
Member of the Marist Communit:
Editor's note:
The Circle's policy is that it
will
not print any unsigned
letters, however, in this case, the
author has revealed his identity
to · us yet has aksed us to
withhold
it since it is not
necessary to the content of the
letter.
.
However, we would like to
.clear
up
one misconception
which the author obviously has.
The people who are listed in the
staff box· of The Circle are those
people who have done work for
the paper other than the writing
of_ articles, and not people who
seek anonymity for their work.
Abortion's
Other
.Side
To the Editors of the Circle,
I though that since you had
the· other two articles in the _
paper you might be interested in
publishing the other side of the
question.
Mrs. Dolores Gallo
Evening Switchboard
FETUS REACTS TO SOUND
MOVEMENT
According to observers, nurses
are the only medical personnel
that substitutes cannot be found
for
when
they
refuse
to
participate in an abortion team.
A nurse. at Memorial Hospital
said that, while the hospital does
not
do abortions,
she is
constantly struck by the irony
that
"we are . struggling here
against impossible odds to save
lives while across the street they
are slaughtering innocents."
Another nurse in a hospital
where abortions are performed
told an interviewer that, .. the
public needs to be made aware
"He
sucks his thumb.
He
know it's different. They know
drinks
the
amniotic fluid
that
they are dying so to speak;
surrounds and nourishes him. He
"Most of the fetuses I have
can feel the mother's heartbeat
seen aborted are male. Statistics
and feel when she is standing or
will show that most fetuses
walking. When she moves at a
conceived are male. To me it's as
normal rate, he is in a hammock
if we were killing off future
effect.
If
she's rushing to get
generations. I definitely feel that
dinner, the baby is very much·
this is murder."·
.
Chuck
Here
by Chuck Meara
As we approach the holiday season maybe it's a fitting time to
look back over the past year and size up just what kind of year it
was for our country. As the nation begins to rejoice I wonder
if it is
rejoicing out of habit or out of a '.true sense of warmth, a feeling of
love for ones neighbors, friends aiid relatives. l would rather it be the
latter but 1 really can't believe it.
Just where does the country stand today? How is it better off this
Christmas than last Christmas? Well, only½ as many of our oons and
husbands are now being killed in Vietnam as last year. That means
only
SO
mothers a week have to be told that their boys have died in
a useless struggle because facism in Vietnam is better than
communism in Vietnam:That's
cause for rejoicing. We are told that
unemployment has risen in the past two years from
3.5
percent to
5.8 percent. That's almost 6 out of every 100 men who want jobs
can't get them. That makes for a beautiful Christmas for those
families. Yet we are told by our national leaders that it's getting
better. Bombings continue, sometimes daily. The nation's Chief Law
Enforcement Agency is plotting how to seize those who are doing
the plotting or who they think are doing the plotting or in oome
instances who they wish are doing the plotting. Those who bomb
must be brought to justice but we now find ourselves in the frame of
mind where we forget the problems and only think of the bombers.
We are tol(i that
if we stop the bombers the problems will go away.
We do nothing to stop the problem; we only
try
to silence those who
point out the problems. Certainly these are not good times for many
of the American people.
In-some instances the holidays do bring out the best in people.
Sometimes people actually do feel sincere in their greetings.
Sometimes they are happier to give than to receive. But all that
quickly fades into the background as the traditional New Y~ar's
Resolutions are proposed and toasted to with a drink for old times
sake. We quickly go back to our old ways. We quickly forget.
But one of these holidays . America is going to be shook, by
something really big. Maybe the environment will have allow~ us to
breathe our last precious breath before giving up the struggle against
the polluters. Maybe that is what
it will
take, but one of these years
America will be so shook that it just might wake up.
•,•,
PAGE
symbolic
AMERICANite
I stopped and watched the barber
· Doing his daily job
,
And above him was a combination picture
Of the Sacred Heart of Jesus .
Superimposed over a··boy scout.
And he admired the crew cut. ,
That he had just given
,
The fall, thin, gqod looking guy
Dressed in a wurster-texed suit with
An accentuating thin green tie and
Snab-tab shirt.
·
I'm not sure how he could do a good job
Because his one eye was fixed on the Race of the Week
And h~ was talking a-mile-a-minute about the
Horse he had a bet on.
And then the fopic switched to politics
And he was going to vote for ---
"
Because his mother came from that province
In the Old Country and he trusted that type people.
And he wanted to go and play cards at
The Fraternal Order tonight
But his wife insisted on going to bingo.
He thought about going on vacation to
Atlantic City
H~ thought tne kiqs would like that, ·
But then he wanted a new_ Rambler American
And it was a shame about the kid who got killed
In Vietnam, but his parents were kind of "up-ity ,"
All that poetry and sophisticated stuff.
The phone rang and his wife wanted to know·
If
he would take her to the
Green Stamp Reden~ption Center.
by
cornelius
j.
dravcs
DRAFT·
INFORMATION
by
Curtis Tarr
\
...
,
tenure of one year.
contained in instructions issueo
Co pies of the new Youth
to local board personnel by Dr.
Advisory Committee booklet are
Curtis
W:
Tarr, National Directo'i: ·.
available to the press at the
of Sele'ctive
Service. These·. , ·
Public
Information Office in
instructions alter previous policy'
Selective
Service's
National
which stated that the application '
Headquarters,
1724 F Street,
had to be in the hands of local
::.w.
Room 101, Washington,
board
personnel ,prior to a
E i g h t e e. n
ma j or
Federal
Departments
and
concerned about the draft. In
D.C. 20435.
_
December· meedng of the local
recommendations
of the
Agencies
involved
with
this
effort,
we need your
~'****
board.
Selective Service System's Youth
youth-oriented functions.
in val u ab I c h cl p --
your
Registrants wishing to drop
In particular, the instruction
Advisory Committees ;1ave or
Sele
Ct
ive Service . Director
participation."
deferments and be reclassified
to local boards \Vill be of interest
are being implemented due to
Tarr, in his introductory letter,
T :~ e Y o u t
!t
Advisory
into Class I-A status to .take
to men who hold high numbers
what Draft Director Curtis Tarr
urged the young advocates of
Committees
were begun by
advantage of a year-end policy
in the 1970 draft lottery. Should
calls " ... constructive,
youthful
change to " ... always keep in· President Nixon in June 1969, 'anriou1iced las.t •month by the
·a young man hold a number
participation
in the change
mind that dialogue and criticism
with panels now averaging qver a
Selective: Service System, have
higher ·thari that reached by his
··.
mechanism
of the American · gene
ta
te. Pre. ssu re,. but
dozen members attached. to all :b,een,, giyl'!n :,,until
~1iqnighk
local board
~
and No.• 195' has .
L . _, _
_,,,,,.,.:o,:;.dteni9i:~atJ~,pr9cess.'.\>
' - :,
·>,
·Pa
r·t.ic
i
Patio n ,prom
i>
ts
,s
6,(:,Sta.t,~:' S,ehfc;tfr~.-
,_~:1:,ryicr
,
,Decr;:mber;r3J, 1970, to . ."file.for 'oeen
:Jsef
as ·.ttie''liighesfriuniber
.---·-.,,,._-.
'· Tarr's ' comment'
is in an ' pr
O
du 'ct i Ve ·a Ct id n and'. Headquart~rs. The Young pe9ple
J,fe
·crecla,ssif,(~fq:oi1~·:
·s,,i~h
\vHic'I{'any:Jdcaf:'bbaro
lfa\Freach
'
introductory
JeHer·
to
a
meaningful
change. We -are farige·in··agefrortil8to26ariil·
'.requests musLbe:·receivea
:by -~
iLis':l:o':'nis'1a'c:ivJntage'.1:fo .·
twenty-two
, page
booklet;
striving to develop means to ·represent diverse backgrou.nds.
local boards -by that <late or
-voluntarily
give
tip his deferment :
'' Dialogue
+
Action.+·
incorporate participation by all They
are chosen -by their
carry
a:. postmark
dated
·fora
I-A classification. In these
Participation
=
Change!"
elem e,n ts of- our
society,
individual State Selective Service
December 31, 1970 or earlier.
cases, he·. wiU move to a lower
released today as a follow-up
particufarly
youth, who are Directors, gerierall¥ for an initial
T
i1
e· announcement
is
draft priority group on January
'·
(
t
report to an earlier publication
A.
}b
R. •
··
I, 1971 with other members of.
listing
results
of the June
·
U
ffi
evteWS
the 1970 .first priority group
28-July 2 National Conference
with unreached numbers.·
·
t:El~t:.~;.~::vfo:.;:ui~
.
Notes
.On
•··
What's
What
~~~ill:Ii~r1~~~;,.;;f£,~
·
In the report to his Agency's·
.by Michael Klubnik
could
effectively
limit their .
750 Youth Advisors across the
vulnerability to the draft by
· country, Dr. Tarr noted, " ... that
Time passes slowly up here in
'If
i get home before daylight,
to the east do for me? In his new
being classified· into I-A by -the,
of the thirtf-six n:oommenda-
the
Mountains. The sriow is just
might· geL some· sleep
3
album set, it_does·some really
year's end, Dr. Tarr stated .that·
tions subii\iited, ~ighteen have or
filling the void with an illusion ·tonight"
· incredible
things. This new. · "the -la\V-allows young men to
are beini implemented, thanks
of goodness. i am .trapped here_ _ :It's a personal album, good for
album is so well produced, that
e]ect,whether they will apply foL-
to youp,,uggestions and the year
between the maya of the white .- a·moment of relief or solace.
it really merits being heard on an ·
.a
deferment and those young·
long 'Work of our staff." He
wonder
world
which exists· ·. Truckin'· is the Dead on the
exceptional
stereo·
system,
men granted.<,lefer·ments should
· ad..d1, "Six are being studied
without
purpose.
and. the ·r.oad,
.'Yitl}. _n<>s.ta!gic :':5._6::
·pi~ferably ..
thri:m~:h.e~4n.hg~e~:-~,-~e;,~ble ..
,t?idrpp
them if they
· further. Ten were beyond the
objective reality of a world ftill· .. overtones • to.dhe··,mstlllmentaL
,_For
once,
1t
'se~111s
;fllil:_Sepc.toJ>.<
•aesrre:~•,'.~
~,
?•~~
jurisdictional
control of the
of essential horrors that take
track:
. -
·f,"', ., '.··
.''i -..
,. -
-,.has controhed'.'his wifaid"olOz'"' ,·';. b?."T:lir·"sakf·the
new policy
Selective Service System and
tµeir toll in a gorwing cycnicism
"What
in the world ever
meglomania in the dubbing, and· - was issued
because· various
were referred to the Executive
became of.Sweet Jane'
-
the result . is an album -which
boards throughout
the
country
Bra;1ci!·
d
the> C.Jngress for
'·Mama Mama many worlds
She lost he;sparkle, you know
actually opens up new vistas for
were. scheduling
their ·Jast
consideration. Only two ,have . i've
come since i first left ··she isn't the same .
recording.
It
would be pointless .. meetings of the year at different
been
disapproved."
Selective· home." Are the Grateful Dead
Living on reds, vitaJ!lin C and
tryiJig_
to. explaiJl
the
times. By defining a specific
Service_ spokesmen note·. that
What's What? They-are at leasta · coc·aine :· , · ·
, . .
. . spiritualness of this album'. The
·cutoff
date,<the
new policy
many of the plans approved
comfortable ·resting. place : · a · '· All .a friend can say is ain't it a
effectiveness of the repeated
allows
all'
registrants· an equal
were the joint result of Youth .sanctuary in solitude. American
shame...
_
phrase
and the
countless,
amount
of time
to
take
Advisors and already-underway·
Beauty
is a real
vicarious
Truckin down the line." .
flawless
over-dubbing· which
advantage of the reclassification
staff projects.
experience; a trip into some
Ripple is a soothing country
finally breaks down the listeners
offer.
.
0
f
t h e
e i g h t e e n · other realities perhaps not any
tune with a melody not easily
pre;conceived notion of what a
Previous
to changing this
recommendations
adopted, a
better, but at least
a
consolation
forgotten.·
The: -mandolin by
stereophonic recording can be. i
.
policy
on
dropping
of
· sampling include: increasing the
prize presented on the st~eet. _ Da".id. C~~sm~n is effective h~rf;~ have . only g~tten thro~g~ th~ee
·deferments, registrants holding
quality and quantity Qf draft
Ary the Gratefu_l Dead Amenca's
as 1t 1s Friend of. the Devil, _ . of t~e six s1~es, and 1 tmag~ne
deferments
were
generally
information
for
registrants,
ha~dest
'Yorkmg rock. band?
~nd th~ song ends wit~ the vocal
the Jam seSSI~ns on the Jlurd
unable to voluntarily relinquish
schools and counselors;
making.
Quite possibly. Though
1
would
lme bemg sung by a large chorus
album
are m an entirely
· them as long as they continued
local boards more representative· rather draw my own conclusions . which is quite probably the
different vogu~. Therefore, i will
t.o meet
the
criteiia
for
of • today's
young registrants' · than listen to F.M; hpe. This
many friends who so often grace
just · say that in songs like
deferment except at the end of
. bro ad ening the · c:~nscientious album captures the Dead close · the stage at a· live-performanc:e.
''Wah/Wah"
and "My Sweet
the deferrn~
·
period when they
objector
work
· program;
to· their
natural
form. The ,
What's What with the Grateful
Lord" there seems to. be a new · could cancel them simply by not
computerizing
and updating
harmonies are
!}Of
smoothed out · Dead? Nothing at ~ll new on this
consci~usne~ _.evol~in~ out of
submit
ting
the
necessary
operations and data collection;
by over-i:l.ubbmg. They come album to the growmg number of
Georg~ s religious msights, and
documents for an extension.
improving
rules to minimize
across much as they would in Dead Heads who follow their
to listen to this album:carefully
The
types
of deferments
draft
evasion; and providing
concert.
This album merits
concert appearances. Some songs
is to be . sucked
into this
affected by the memorandum
closer supervision of local board
ca~eful liste~~g because t~e. don't
come acr~ss pe£t:ectly: consciousness
alone._ Wheth~r
are
high school
and college
actions. A complete listing is lyncsarealegittmatemessagem
Some sound a httle tnte
(1
one
accepts
or reJects this
deferments,
occupational
foundinthenewbooklet.
themselves,
and ten simple. personally
kept thinking of· mediumisuptothelistener,but
deferments,
agricultural
"Dialogue
+
Action
+ ·
statements of a reality presented
Creedence
Clearwater
and
its good to know its there "if
deferments,
paternity
and
Participation
=
CHANGE!" is without much moralizing, such Johnny Rivers when listening to
you can dig it."
·
hardship deferments. The I-Y
being mailed to all Selective
as Friend of the Devil, a song of "Operator'',
but i thir,k this
Dig.it, dig it. TJ:tat's not what't
classification, unacceptable for
Service
You th Advisors,
the fugitive from prison who has album
will l'stablish for the
what. What can
1
say to breach
military
service
except
in
members
of the Senate and
been caught in theclilemma of listener whal anyone who has
this gap of laying down on a
national
emergency,
is not
H o u s e · Ar m e d
Service
keeping two wives:
seen the Dead do a five hour
horizontal line something which
affected by this new policy. Men
Committees,
the President's
"The first one says she's got concert already knows- in David
i saw unfold all directions. Isn't
classified 1-Y are not able to
Council on Youth Opportunity,
my child, but it don't look like Cro,sby's words - "When those
it a pity?
v o I u n tar i I y drop
th is
the White House Conference on
me.
gusy
are at their best, they're the
dassification.
_
Children and Youth, The•White
· Say
rn
run but
rn
take my best there is."
Dr. Tarr pointed out that all
House and to the heads of
time, friend of the devil is a
What's
What with George
private
organizations
and
friend of mine.
Harrison? What can his turning
O>nt.
on 7
\ DECEMBER
10,1970
TIIECIRCLE
by G«>ige Roarty · ·
. Durfug these
past
·Weeks, .the ·. coordinated .with othe; ~otirses met with the Religious Studies
· ··
. APC-has been·concerning
itself .. ana .areas of ·study: Al~hough Dep'artment··1ast
.week ._and
· · · with··basically three topics:the:
· these possibilities do exist, it was
proposed
··these problems to
future of the Classical Languages · noted that st_udents are rarely
them.·
There
were - several
. ·pept./.the
,propos¢d- major
iir
encouraged to<e·nroll in·· these
inconsistencies
raised between
religious studies, anc;l lastly plans
.
cours:es.
If
✓t]J.e
· offering of
the
APC's: and Religious Dept.
. • for.a teaching workshop v,:hicn'is· classical, languages was dropped
information and because of this
tentatively
scheduled
for·
completely,
it
was pointed out· we
are·
a~aiting
further
Jamiary 23.
,
·
that students who wished these
information
befor.e coming .to
In regard
to the Classical · cou·rses could enroll at Vassar
any decision. • . ·
. : , ·
✓
•
<Language Dept;
the APC has . through cross tegistraticiri .. Not
'The·
most 'recent
topic· of
<;oncluded unanimously that the · being
able
to come to an
discussion
was- that of the
department should be dissolved
a g r-e e men t , the
AP C is
and that the . major in Latin
postponing its decision till next
·· ·cont.
On 3
PAGE7
· Grapplers
·;Erratic
~y
John Redmond
The Marist College Wrestling
Season opened on Dec; 11th
. with
the
Marist
Grapplers
soundly
thrashing
their
opponents. from Yeshiva. · The
final
score
read Marist 40,
Yeshiva 8. Yeshiva's only points
came when their captain edged
out a Marist freshmen in total
points and when Marist forfe.ited
the 190 lb. class. Otherwise,
· every l\farist- wrestler succeeded
in pinning ·his opponent in times
ranging
from
thirty
three
seconds to four minutes and
twenty five seconds.
On Saturday, DEc. 5th, riding
high after t_heir previous victory,
the Marist wrestlers
had the
tables turned on them. Escaping
· only with point victt>ries in the
118 and 167 lb. class and· a pin
by James Lavery in
177, Marist
went down 35 to
l
l.
Marist next
faces the powerful Trenton State
team on· Tuesday, Dec. 9th at
Marist followed
by Drew on
Dec.
I Ith at Drew.
should.
be dr·opped.
These
semes·ter
to
see whethe·r
firidings. will be. brought up at
enrollment and interest in .this
the next· facultf plenary session
area continues
to
decline.
for approval. Enrollment in .tl~e ·. ' The committee then addressed
. area
·
of Classical Languages .has
itself to the proposed . religious
Food Committee Surveys Saga
· been steadily_ declining over the
studies
inaj or. The
major
years and the demand in the
consists
of
five · areas
of
future
is eipected · to drop
concentr_ation:
Jewish
aIJd
further.
rr ·
the department
is
Christian Scriptures, History of
dissolved, offerings in this area .. Christianity,
World Religions,
.. would be made available through
Theology. and Ethics, · Religion
the
Modern
Language
·andPersonality.TheAPCinits
Department.
The
APC did
first discussion of the proposal
consider
the
possibility
or,· saw several
problems arising
dropping
classical languuage
among.
them
being
liprary
offerings completely
from the'. re sources, personnel. available,
curriculum.. Some however felt
demand. for such a . major, and
_that -.ft ·was. 'nec~ssary to have. simple. :ftriiinistrative):p~o.blems.
· these:·courses available for those. .Because of these problems the
. stuMiitt'wlfoiw·antecl
them. In .APC questioned the feasibility
addif!drlj:
4
it•
:was::,
shown ·,:hov/
.of
.offering· such a inajor by
cla ssicaf.· languages'·'could · be· September
J
971. The SAC has
Hung.er-
POW
Three weeks ago, the Food
Committee conducted
a student
survey of the food service. The
iisual response to such a survey
amounts to about· one hundred
but on this year's survey over six
hundred. students responded rind
thus, the delay in tabulating the
results. As can be expected, a ·
few people took the survey as a
joke
and
scribbled
some
incoherent ,remarks across the
page not even fully answering
the
survey.
To
show
our
appreciation
to those people
(who
of
course
remained-
anonyri10us)
we threw their
papers in the basket.
But
to
those who did take the time to
carefully make selec::tions, the
Anonymous
A
gr•oup · at St.
John's
committee
extends its sincere
I was hungry and_yoiiformed
University
has started
an
thanks.
.
by George Byrnes
it
should
be
evidenced
immediately.
Another item of
major importa_ncc is the food
temperature.
When the dining
·hall reopens in January, it is
hoped to have infra-red lights
which will keep the food hot
after it
is
served. There have
been many complaints on the
taste of various items. In this
regard~
different
brands are
being tried to find the one which
is appealing to the most number
of people.
It
seems the ot;icr
items per se are self cxplan11tory.
Part
11
of the survev was in
regard to the Saturday Steak
Dinners. Effective last Saturday
there will be no more steak
-dinners on Saturday.
Instead,
there will be two special dinners
a month where larger steaks
will
be served. This was what about
sixty percent of the students
voted on the survey ..
keeping orange juice machines
on longer, no plastic utensils,
better atmosphere,
and other
items dealing with the serving of
food.
This list is of course
incomplete
for it would be
physically impossible to list all
suggestions. These surveys were
thoroughly
examined
in the
Food Committee meetings and
recommendations
have been
made
to
Mr. Greene who will
direct their institution
in the
Food Service.
a humanities club and discussed
organization called POW which
The
po
11 .
indicated
the
myhungei.Thankyou.
is.dedicated
to letting the
following
results:
Part
I
I was .imprisoned
and you
Democratic
Republic
of
(General) a) Variety of Fodd -
creptoffquietlytoyourchapel
Vietnam
kn·ow
that
the
FAIR.
b)
Cleanliness
- of
in the cellar and prayed for my
Am er i ca n p e o pl
e
and
silverware - POOR. c) Quantity
release.
particularly
the
American
of ,food
- VERY GOOD. d)
I was naked and in your mind
students are dissatisfied with the
Cleanliness of tables - FAIR. e)
you debated the morality of my
'treatment of American prisoners
Temperature of food - FAIR.
f) ·
appearance.
.
of w~. A massive letter writing
Freshness of food - FAIR. g)
, I was sick and you knelt and
campaign has been launched on
Attractiveness
of display ·-
thanked God .for your health. _
the assumption
that Hanoi is
GOOD.
h)
Speed of service -
· Part III of the survey was a
write-in for suggestions. Some of
the printable ones included less
repetitious
menu,
ice· tea,
better
and more cold. cuts,
0
nee again, we invite any
interested students to join the
Food
Committee.
Please see
Steve Moore for information. At
present, the Food Committee is
re-evaluating
its ro.'.c in the
l\·1arist Communit)
and plan
hopefully to re-structure itself
by the beginning of the Spring
semester.
We welcome your
suggestions and help.
Incidentally, this Friday night
there will pe a special dinner
serving steak and lobster and
also wine.
__ ,.I.
was .h·omeless ·and'. you·
sensitive·
to
~.the.
opinions of
GOOD. i) Taste.of
food - FAIR.
•
• ···• ·-h~
ci"
f ,.,;-
.. ··
~
h · · • ·· ··· 1 •Am'erican studeilts>We
a:t
Marist
j)
Food service is FAllt. Now a
;~~~ft~i{of1tl'e)~tf5/c;~af~
1
t.~il
·'•~p;'o'.4}~C
··Ijaft,icip·wff?iif
_·'f_his
·.w6'i-cl':;oc:e"xplaii'afion
-·
an,d
·c
Cwas··lonely and you left me
~urp~mtan_an
_gesture;
It !s, an.
·interpretation/
·
.
.
.
alone to pray for me:-
_
·
,
111d1~~ual a~t, all one need do to,
The Food Committee arid Mr .
. . · You seem ·
50
holy;·
so
close to
part!cipate issend a !etter to t~e
Greene are most willing to. put
God; but, I'.m still very hungry
Pres1d~nt, Dcmocratie: _Repubhc · any suggestions of a student in
_and lonely.and cold.
o~ Vietnam,
H_anoi, North
practice as far a~ adding to _the
··
·
·
Vietnam
requestmg that
th_e variety of food. However, one
' GOOD NEWS.
from 2
Internatio·nal
Red Cross be. must remember
that we are
allowed to inspect prionser of · dealing with over. eight hundred ·
war camps, that theY, isrue. an
people and sometimes it would
official list of all prisoners;that
be impossible to buy or. cook a
they
provide
· facilities
for ·random item for so many.· In
prisoners to correspond regularly
regard to. the problem with the
with their families, and that they
silverware, the silverware is being
prnvide. pro·per medii;al care for
cleaned under a new system and
the sick and wounded. Postage is
and reality:To growwith today
iri preparation for tomorrow. To
experience. life by living it. Do
. you have
a
dream? The Students
of·Marist." ·
·
,. We have
an awful lot of
students here doing . just that,
. and,that is good n:ews.
· twenty five cenJs. DO IT!
FROM 3
8:00 p.m.
Basketball- New Paltz-Home
(Varsity)
·"
· '
·
·
· Thursday, 8:00 p.m.
, Lecture. "Noise Pollution" by Dale Robertson of Tufts University,
Theater
·
.
Friday, 8:30 p.m.
Concert. Don Crawford, Theater $1.50. Coffee House in
Rm. 249
after concert.
-
Saturday,
I
:00 p.m.
. Wrestling - Drew- Away_
6:00
p.m.
Freshmen Basketball - Kings
Pt. -
Home
8:00
p.m.
Varsity Basketball - Kings Pt. - Home
Sunday, I 2:00 -
5
:00 p.m.
Childrens Christmas Party by Faculty Wives, Theater, Fireside and
Rm.
249.
8:00
p.m .
Film. "Help" Theater.
Jhe .forgotten
Men
t
MARISf ABROAD
from
3
articles in the Circle will deal
with the expanding programs
of
foreign study now offered to
Marist students, particularly. in
Africa and Latin America.
.. ·• The ·time has come when the
contributions at alllevels of the
working
people of this college
College machine. These men are
must receive recognition.,
It's
"unskilled" and yet they service
_:time
when
the men who serve as .- all the college's equipment. The
the "fodder" for the machines
college employs mechanics, yet
of . this. college .be pointed out
the ground .crew is commonly
and commendeq.
It has also - found
mainta(ning
the
become
a· time
w]:ten
the . equipment
which supposedly
s!Jackles
which
bind thenito_the
they
possess
no knowledge
.machine be loosed. It is not bad
a bout.
This is
due at times
enough
when
the' administration
because
.the
mechanics
are
is inept-towards we
the students
placed on jobs
they
need not do,
.- for
we are not
bound in. this
but also
because the crew is
system; - but the far reaching explicltly
ordered· to service
damage
that
occurs
when
them. The
administration
admits
incompetency is the
order of
the
the skilled status
of
the crew,
day to the working
man who is
yet
does
not
reward
their
· bound-in
(to
retain his job)
is in
knowledge.
many ways im.measurable. The
·
hi
fact, this sophistication and
colleges
attempt
to_ purify . exploitation
of
the
crew
themselve_s
and yet
Marist officially "unskilled" has set the
; remains',,
u m1ware
of.
the
workers
against
each other. The
: _ex,ploitatJo!1 _qf
_h~m_a':1:
.. ~ei11gs mechanics
are.
angered because
· ,that takes, p!a<:e,~y~r;y
,r_ni,l~te
of
the groundsmen are-doing their
· every Marist wor~ing .gian hour. jobs. The internalized tension
I
wish to point out a group
and at times the externalized
of men - the grounds crew - who
anger between these two sects
occupy
the lowest strata of
have been witnessed. The bosses
employees
on this campus.
have· set the traps and the
Termed "unskilled" and thus · workers have been split because
.. e x p e n d ab
1
e "
by
a n of them. A mild form of spying
administrator, this crew headed
has arisen within the working
by Art
Campell
has made ranks, and although the bo~s
by
Robert Beyer
pay lip-service to the. desire
to
~nd the practice tliey actually
grow stronger and foster it.
They .. continue
to
foster
tension
and degrade.
I
have
witnessed workers berated by
administration
in full view of
their
fellqw ··workers and the
campus community. This can no
longer be allowed to take place.
The college needs the grounds
men; the football and soccer
teams owe them their field, the .
college owes them every blade of
grass on campus, every tree,
every
flower,
the
new
"playground";
these remain
green and alive because they are
part of the blood· vein of the
workei:s who have brought them
into existence.
·
(Promises of reward have been
made to the crew. "Reward" for
· all they have done for the school
- for the first time in two years,
the crew will have heat during
the winter. Heat. As barbaric as
it seems, the administration has,
finally, decided after two years
that heat will be provided for
grounds men. They may seem
untrue - it is worse because it is
true.) This is not reward, it is
·-·-~
.
1
When the grounds crew is
gone, when the blood of Art
t
Campell, Willie Lewis and others
have been spent and we the
students
have ignored their
t
endeavors, it will not be the
bosses who are at fault, but
rather
us,
because
we arc
6
inhuman.
,
REDMEN
from
8
After
the
kickoff·
a Jim
Wilkens to Bill Paccione pass fell
short and was intercepted and
returned for a TD. Kaiser passed
for the
2
extra points and Marist
was behind 30-20. The clock ran
out on the Vikings and their
perfect season.
*****
SECURITY
from 3
everyone would be aware of the
procedure
when crimes are
committed
on
campus. He
emphasized the importance of
this awareness since, in the past
police• who've
been
called
onampus have invariably been.
bothered
in some
way by
students.
FNVlRONMENfAL
from
4
The order requires that as the
government's 600,000 cars come
up for replacement they
will
be
replaced by autos that can run
on non-leaded. fuel eqtirely. By
1974
the
Genera
I -
Services
Administration says the Federal
Government will no longer need
to buy any leaded fuel.
Nixon
appealed
to
the
governors of all 50 states to take
similar actions with regard to
state-owned vehicles.
*****
DRAFf
from
6
deferments are issued for limited
periods of time, generally for
one year, and that it is the
responsibility of the registrant to
submit documentation
for an
extension of his deferment. In
the absence of documentation,
the
new
Local
boards
to
promptly
reclassify registrants
into
I-A.
This
means
that
registrants wishing to continue
their deferments should submit
the supporting
documentation
to their local boards.
*****
..
::~~•
k;~J:Ti~'.~-
•--•~~•«---
,-
•
-
~:•
'.
!
••,•
•
~-:
'
'
~
'
'~
..•
-....·.
'
-•
...
~
..
,.·•:
RAY.CLARKE
LESCHENERY
Cbnl
on
4
,
---------------
•
-
,
.
· PAGE2.
. THECIRCLE
DECEM~ER'IO, 1970
· .......
IT·JtTU'DES
-:·-:~OUTR
..
l~GEOUS
..
·-
:GQ
99
.N.~Ws
.. , ., · · .. · ..
'.•
· -··. ::
• .
11
·
:Billo._
·
•
'Bilrrittig'Tli~·':Cll1rip~
'.:At
.•· .. by Fr.
Leo
Gallant .
. .
. .
Upon_ investigating all walks·_of ciunpus· life on~ inev~t~bly·; finds
.
Saturday_
in
the locker room._I . academfcally succ~srul; wh~ ha~, minimal stti~ying; nc:,: sense _of
himself talking to that.bouncy, bubbling creature: the cheerleader.. saw.
a,
group of tollgh;' brawny ., •_never d_one anythmg else for,the, . tru,th_ searchi,ng e>r of developmg
·
My. interview with a Marist cheerleader, who-will remain nameless · foqtball players-practii::allY,"
all in . c_ollege: Se> m.any
7
J;i.eJ~.
_wa,_!lt
to
an u~tc,Hec~ual.
~ t!}lo~ph«:r~;.
took place behind the bowli~g machine at the Derby as she wa;
tears-and rtried
to
talkfo them. ·· bebusmess 'leaders, ClVlc
leaders;
, exc~~s1ve
··class;-cutiing •Working
lacing up her left sneaker.
. ·
. .
. .. didil't'.fare
any ;better. All, I . teacliers;· · yef
they; ''wHt· :d_o o'nly•
to
pass; ·copping .. out: 111"$0.•
OR: Hi, how are you?
·
·
·
could say: before choking'
up,
nothing ·"to develop· leadership
·many-. way,s; af •every"_dtop::of :a
Cheer: Win. fight, go, kill; dunk!
was that i'thank God for letting · qualities,
nothing
to ·
help •. a
liat .. ·. · ' -~-.
·.'-: · . ·,:
··
--,;,_
· •,. ··
OR: What?
, . ·. ·.
·..
me know such a great bunch of-
project succeed. · The football -
I recently visited•the girls high
Cheer:. Just keeping in .shapei a cheerleader's work never stops you
guys .. ·
club could· use ten. me>re officers
school· in Lawrence Mass. -~here .•
know. Give me an M. · .
·
.
· · · · ·
_
It was the second time in a • to do a lot of dirty. work-but . I counseled last· year. The gist of.
OR: I'm sorry I don't happen to have an Mon me.
. month that I witnessed a group
work that makes a _real per~on·
TY
~alk to the seniors,wa~ this:
Cheer:Wellhowaboutabeerthen?
. of Marist
students weeping:
develop-wcrkthatbi:ingsrealJoy
_J
highly recommend.Manst.
It
OR~ Okay, listen can you answer some questions while you're·
After the last performance of
and tears at the ·:nd of the
!S on~ of th.e great·small f~lleges
drinking?
.
·,
"How To Succeed in Business",
season. I ~m certain th!',t the
111
this cc:mntry. But don t come
Cheer: Fine as long as they're about the team. T-E-A-M.
Team.
the
cast-
broke
d o.w n
the~tre gmld could use more
to Man st _if you have not
OR:Whatteam?
_
·
backstage-and
the
~haplain
oq1<;er~• and
workers;
tl~e develol_)e_d_
a sens_e
o_f
Cheer: Anyteam-Wedoitforthe'team.
choked up again!
Chd~rens theatre;, the athletic
responsi~1hty.
, .. Manst
1s
OR: Do what?
Both groups wept for the same
team _s, .· _the • many . clubs an~
extremely hberal;· so 1f yot~ -~~ve
Cheer: Cheer, you numbskull.
.
reason:
. community!
Both
orga~1z~tt?ns, the res1dents.~alls_ no_ de~p sense of respons1bil~tY.
OR: Ok, is. that what motivates you to devote so mucli time
groups· had worked 50 hard to_ a ct i v_i tie_ s, · the . ~art o us . you wdl .be _crushed. (And Im
screaming and running around in a short skirt, the team?
form
a:
winning community. The .. org antz_a tions
help mg . the
,already. meeting a lot of c~shed
. Cheer: Yes, plus the fact that I have great legs.
theatre peo.ple worked hard and
surrounding are~s and hospitals,
souls here.)_ Come, only
_if you
OR: What are the benefits of becorr.ing a cheerleader?
long
and
had
become real
tl:e Appalaclaan · grnup, . The
can burn ~. candle, especially at
Cheer: Well, you get to giggle a lot and we always get to go to the
family. The moment that last
Ctrc_le ne~vsp~per
(_all-' you
both e_nds.
. .
party after the game. 9-A-M-E
game.
curtain
came
down,
they
Enghsh maJor_s, Journahsts, idea . Ma~1st Col~eg,e recently. had a
OR: You spell pretty good. .
suddenly
realized it was all
people), etc., etc .. :..
. .
.
~eauti,fu~ ad ma 1!~wspaper and
Cheer:Yeah
andlcanmultiplytoo
watch.2bits4bits'6bits~
over-t-hat
closely
knit
Then
we-have
tho_se who
rt was signed by the Students
a dollar. All
fcj;
Mari st stand up and HOLLER - Yeah.'
·
' ·
c ·
0
~
m u n i t y , w
O
u 1 d n
O
w
won't burn a candle even at one
of Marist": '.'We have a Dream:
OR:Youmustreallybedevotedtotheteam?
·
dlsband-and
it ripped their·
end, _who.don't
l~ave the -'!,'ocreateacommunityavvareof
Cheer: Oh yes, go Billy Spenla, Go Wilkie, G9-Go-Go.
het1rts open.
maturity. t~ ?evelop
~
sef!Se of
!ts~lf and aware o~ th_e w~rld. To
OR: Wait a minute I'm Go Go;
·
The football team likewise
respons1b1hty,
winch 1s so
mvolve ourselves in making our
Cheer: Getlost, yo'u can't be Go Go - he wears a helmet.
built up --3· co'miminity
"i
i1ever n~eded_. in · such
a li1?er~,
~1;1cati<;m relev_a~t ·no_t only ..
to
0
R: Yeal1, I guess you're right.
.
.
saw the likes of. I don'.t.think
progress1yr . se:h?ol_at fv!ar.isf.
1s. ~~hoo.~; b':'_t'
_tb_
bf
e: T~ ~<?~te~
·a
Cheer: Do you want to see ~e do a cartwheel?
any individual play~r cared for
They c~n
Y
hve_ ~1t~:,
~l~~s
n~';V >l~a.lt~t ~rnlog_u~ ~~t~~e!,1,
1~eajs
OR:Idon'tknowifit'sappropriateintheDerby.
himself.
Each
wanted·
the
freedo_m but·ltve·_one
.lo!lg,,
··
· · •.• ··-··
· ·
Cheer:What'deyamean-everyo,neelseisdoingthem.
.
community
to win that last
-unendrng
party
.hfe,. w.1th
Cont. on•7
OR:
Yeah, especially the owner of the place. Look, what do you·· game. They wanted it .for the
-plantodoafteryoufinishcheering?
outgoing.
seniors,
for
the
• Cheer: Get married.
coaches, for _the school. : Their
OR: Anyone in particular?
hearts were also ripped open.
Cheer: I don't know yet but
it
will have to be someone who loves
Both groups will get over this.
the team and loves to win. W-1-N win.
I'm only going to demand
And they will be better persons
one thing from my husband.
for
it.• That
includes·
the
OR:
What's that?
behind-the-scene workers. The
'
.
An--·Old
·
Friend
by
Tom Hackett
Cheer: When I say give me an M - I want an M. Is that asking too · stage hands, the projectionists,
much?
,
. ,
.
~
. _
... :,
.
•· • ·
·
th e. Guild of~ic:rs, th e C!~b
'~Then w!{at happened?" "Well, there I was' in the cross-fire with
OR. I do,n
f.
thinl~_so. · • ·. ·
.
.
officers,
tr~m rs, manag s,
my leg shot-up, I don't really remember it all. They got me out and
,.fh~e~_.\1.-: ... ave a new cheer for the big game with Nyack - want to
cheerleaderf, ticker and prog~tm
the medic shot me up and after that I was fine. They brought me
)J.-an(
.
.
.
.
,
.
s~llers. (T ,10se l~undreds
O
into the field hospital and I was cursing like crazy about that stupid
OR: A neVI'.
c_h~;,;
for the ~1g game with Nyack, I cant wait.
tned to dry t?e field before th e
gook who shot me. They got me in bed and shot me up agin, I really
Cheer. Here it 1s. Nell heres the cheer
Iast season gar~e.).
· re
didn't feel the leg anymore. Then this dumb nurse came in and
We got the beer
All. th ese a~ students who a
wanted to know what all the noise was about. I got up and punched
..... ·.·
. We gotthe coach .. , . ••·•.
.... . •
..
··. . .
_burm~g-: Jhe :·c.antlles .at_ bo th
\1er in the mquth .
.I
don't remember it really but all the medics came
___ ,.
, We~go,ta ~oa,_ch,.,:.,
:· :-·,,_ ·· /:;, _ :;. __
, "·
· ·
.e ~-~-s•,
·,._t
ry.r-~_g
_
_.,
to : SUFS~_e,d
v
in the• next.day:.arid ,thanked me,-they·said that they all hated;her
7,-~r~~y'~imY11n~hg·
~r:~c-":·:'•·"••;ss:··r-;-'.--;··•
~--_\'' /..
(~~;t~em~~;~~~saa\)da tl;;-~iegt~, ~-gl!t~nd wa~te~. to do.that.for a lC?ng·ti~e!'·'. :'~·",·•,;½
h•,c(i'.b::'•°'li..··
:•·"•
·
·
·
· ,, ·
·
·\
r ·
· ·
··"Did you get mto any trouble?", · ··
· ·· • · ·
'
1 ·
r
.,.
•
· ·,
61f
1-~a1•!~!~~tte!:ho
ma~e that up?
ntl·_ma~~ng
~!~J
st }he
_g"re~tei;
t
.
'"No,,sheJusfkepi'lier
mol1th. ~h~t-~fte{thai.;,
;
,. . . • ' ·.•.·'
'
cfi;er Doc Goldman
.
.
. . .
1 We
c?
ege
;1
1
mtrc\
f
'"What else happened to you over there?" .-· ; .••
·,·· .
.
. -,.
. ·
o
R: Well look it's been nice talking to you keep up the good
t /
tia~e ":'
0
TJ° ,_er {pe:
0
.
''.~ell, I had this boy who_ !sort of a_dopted: Wfwere:taking this_
s u en s
1
ere.
10
se w 10. urn
vtllage and when we came in I saw this gook he -nad ·a gun to the
work.
.
•
. ·
.
,
the candle only at one end, and
, .• d
•
· ·
b..
bl
•h· b ·'
· · 1·
·
· ·. ·d ·
Cheer: Thanks alot say do you know any good cheers for golf?
tI· ...
l
d
't
d ti· t I
b?Y
~ nea and was Just a out to ow is rams ~mt. ,welL..I save
•
tOS!,!
w 10 on even
°
,a ·
hrs hfe. After that he. wouldn't leave me alone. We became .good
~onder how successful a person . friends and I took care of him for awhile. Here. Here is a picture of
15 who graduates from her~.
him. I have·plenty of pictures, but I only keep the good.ones. The
gory ones aren't worth it. Here, here I am with the rest of the guys
goofing off. That's George, he was always wrecked. That's ...
Di-sabled
In Action -
by
Mike Ward
It is the
right· of every
programs which often inter.rupts .• ·child ,by restricting him from
American citizen to be educated
a lesson: Then there is a rest or
associating, with o_ther
0
children.
to the limit of-his potential, but · .study period: gym and assembly
Second, it has the same_ef(ec;t on·
the majority _of the.-nation's
making
:lhe
amount
of
riondisabled,-chiJdi:en-.by:
-n9t
school
districts
provide no
instruction·
tlu~t the disabled
allowing. them
fo :
play. :with
educational
programs
for
student receives about an hour a disabled children. It is easier for
disabled children. Less than one
day.
a child to accept· a child with a
half of the nation's disabled are
-· The
B.o ard of Edu cation
disability at an early age than
in the existing prngr::mi: Federal
recently adopted a departmental
later oil.
and state governmenls.have tried
or cluster teaching system. The
The trend many educators see,
. to increase the number of these
teacher specializes in a_ certain
except those in NewYork City,
children, attending· school, _by area and is available to those
is to integrate the· physically
laws,
research
projects and
students
-who need remedial
disabled intO regular classes. This
grants to local school districts to . help. But in many instances the
would provide a stable learning
establish and improve special damage
!S.
alr~ady done. because
level· c_omparable to nondisabled
classes.
.
. .
P?Or trammg m the lower grades--"students and a·betteracceptance
The fact still remams that
did not develop. the necessary _of .the.
dis ab 1 e d by
his
many
disabled
cannot work .skills .. There is also insufficient
generation. A committee is being.
successfully
with vocational
manpower to instruct students.
formed (for the last six months)
rehabilitation because there is a on a·n individual Ieve}; Instead of
in New York· City to determine
f 1 aw
in
the
.base
of
~he old
system.
w-here the
the elimination of these classes
the_ ·educational·
pyramid
students in a gradehad the same
for the disabled on t:1e basis of
namely e~em1:ntary education. _I~ · teacher ·. for_' all subjects, they
the 1954 Supreme 9ourt ruling
N_ew York C_1ty-(or example! tne n~w have differe?t _teachers for
_that "separate but equ:y · is not
disabled chi!~ is placed m a d !f_f ~rent.
su bJ ects.
Better
. equal." Whatever is the solution,
classroom with two to three div1s10n
111
regard
to the
something
must· be done to
other grades. The teacher must student's
rate ·of learning was
insure the physically disabled
divide her time among the three
not made.
.
·
person the amount of quality
grades and also those students
Many
of
this·
system's
education
he deserves
and
who
do not understand
the -graduates are dissatisfied with
requires to· reach his potential.
essential mathematic a·nd reading· the
number
of successful
concepts. Students spend more students who manage to go on
than one half of their school day~ to higher education because they
educating themselves because of are unprepared academically and
the constant diversion of the psychologically. The transition
teacher's attention. The teacher
from a sheltered environment to
does· not have the time to help a ·competitive one is too great
gifted stadents in seeking more for many disabled students to
knowledge.
Either they must cope
with.
Many graduates
advance on their own or learn at believe that the greatest damage
the level of the slowest member done by this program is isolating
in his grade.
the
disabled
from "normal"
The student's learning time is children. First it instills a feeling
again
diminished by therapy
of being different in the disabled
T
POUGHKEEPSIE,_
· - . Q',CENTER
1
$.
J. D'ANOeLO DaUO INC.
373 MAIN
mm
i'OUGHICEEPSlf,
N. Y
tl
Phone GL 4-5520
QUOTE OF TIIE WEEK
"We are the people our
parents warned us about."
"Well that's the way. I feel about it. I just let him talk for awhile
. about long hair and' college kids and riots. I just stood ·there knowing
· he was referring to my long hair and 'bell-bottoms. He began bragging
about how long he spent.in the Navy. Anybody who would spend
that much time in the service· is out of his skull. I disliked the lifers.
When he fi_nally.confronted me I just calmly turn~d and briefly said -
'I· spent eighteen months in Nam, was woi.mded twice and saw more
action than you've ever seen' - he shut up after that.
·
.
"Y9u. see;-.. after. -th.at
;I_
,h,ave · the ~ight. fo_.-~e~_r.
lopg,J\air and .
:, b;::lbbo.tto.ms.
;if:
J
,wa,i.t
JQ;:
and so <;loes
,1:,v~cy_bQdy,1~Jse;
lJ1it's what ·
·· they tp}!f.meil:w&sJightjng:.fQr. Whenever!Jhey:_st~:t~(n;\Oiist listen
and wait; then I tell them how long I was in -. they usually keep quiet
· after that."
. . . .
Ron and I got into the elevator. We were b6th reli~ved that he was
going to be all-right. As we Walked down the corridor
qf
the Hospital
on Thanksgiving eve; a 1;alm setUed :within
nie;,we·
went out the
front door. and walked to ·Ron's cay. It was 'a little chilly out but it
was a, nice November evening and you,coµld clearly see the stars up
above. I looked up and then got into the car. As we drove off to
have a drink for. 10m, I began to recall a conversation I had With him·
a fei.v.months ago when I asked him _what Viet Nam was like. I was
_glad. that ·a friend who had spent too much time in hospitals was
going to be
ok.
I know that there is a little orphan boy somewhere in
Southeast Asia who would pro{?ably be very glad too.
'
~AeiFu1..-
~
c
'. .
'fi-<
lJ
.:.
I.
I
!::,.!•··
I
I
I
I:'
1
·
•'•"•.'~
•:.t·
·,
·-.~;r.~,r~
·
.
DECEMBER
10, 1970
fflECiRCLE
·
larist A.broad
Program
.
-In
PuerlO:--Rico
.
.
/)~
_its
'desir~.
t~i~f(er.·.~
.wid~
oppo~tunitie's to'
sp~llk
Spani$h •. harid can. be a very rewarding
VJlUe t.y
,
0
f.,
ed-u cat io naJ. However, students iJ{otherareas.
educational experience both for
~xperi~n~ei~way.fr.oiiqJi¢.;~ome
should.'realize.that' not only
.is
the s_tudent who may see hjs
.:cainp,'11,.s
;.t~e·,:Ma~i~ ;ABroad
English. widely spoken in'Puerto
life's work as an extension of
..
P~ogram:, ha~, e.xt~iid~d ,.its,-iit~as ·
~ico,
.but
'the.
opportunity dqes
this
.experience
and for . the
to include a semester
·
or
.an
·
exist
to·. follow
·
courses in
student· who· wants to
,become
academic year in Pue.rto- Rico; English~ Theni' are opportunities
more personally· aware. of the
The two large universities in
in Ponce for additional study in great cultural
·heritage
of the
Puerto
Rico,
the
National
many of the major fi.~lds offered
Puerto Rican people. In an age
University at
"Rio
Piedras (San at Marist,
su·ch
.as
history
.
of increased
interest in the
Juan)·
and
.
the
C.atholic
political sdence, economics, and
problems of minority groups this
University
·at
Ponce,
have the ~ciences. In addition'there
can
be
a tremendous
expressed
an interest
in
are fine programs in majors not
opportunity for acquiring first
accepting Marist students for the
offered·
at
.
Marist,
·
such as hand
a more
extensive
· sttidy abroad program. However,
sociology.
knowledge of the problems of
..
because of a severe
.shortage
of
A
·SEMESTER OR
A
YEAR
these American citizens.
available space.at the Natio_rial IN Puerto Rico would offer the
Stu~ents.
who
may
be
University
the possibility
.
of Marist student the possibility of interested in further information
being accepted is more feasible continuing to take courses in his about
·.the
Marist
Abroad
at the University of Ponce.
major field and combine these
Program 'in Puerto Rico should
.
During
_this
past summer Bro.
-
courses with another area
.of
con tact. Bro.,. Weiss. Futur~
Weiss went to Puerto Rico, interest. Living in Puerto Rico
where
he
had
extended
and dealing with the'people first
Cont. on
7
conversations
with
the.
·
administration·· at the University
Aid For Drug
Abusers
Hayward;
Calif.· -
(I.P.) -
Initiation of a new program at
.California
State
College,
Hayward, to aid young drug
abusers was announced recently
by
President Ellis
E.
McCune.
He said a federal contract for
$260,800 has been awarded to
the
Center
for
Drug
Information,
Research
and
Education at the college by the
National·
Institute of Mental
Health.
·
The contract provides
funds for 15 one-and two-week
training cycles planned for the
year's duration.
The training
will vary in
intensity,'
according
to the
category
of
the trainee. The 240
professional
and
para-
professional
personnel to be
trained will get a more intensive
and in depth course, and
will
go
to agencies
for
their field
experience which are in hospital
or clinical settings.
The second
480 trainees,
whom Dr. Sanford J. Feinglass,
· co-director
of the Hayward
Center
and director of the
Center for Drug Information,
Research
and the Study of
Human·· Problems at Stanford
U n i v e r s i
t
y , c a I l's t he
"gatekeepers," don't need such
sophisticated
instruction,
he
says.
"The
gatekeeper
is more
involved in observation, while
the professional trainee will be
-involved
directly
in the
treatment of the drug abuser,"
he explains.
"Gatekeepers"
might be ministers, recreation
directors,
youth
program
directors, police officers, co11ege
deans, teachers, counse11ors - and
even parents.
of Ponce. The outcome was that
.
the university is
·responsive
~o
· Marist's·
interest
-in.
sending
students there
·
to study for• a
·
,semester
or a year; Similarly,
if
Pilrking
Meter
Conspiracy
·
Uncovered
.
.
.
"We don't want judgment or
evaluation from a gatekeeper,"
Dr. Feinglass continues. "He just
recognizes
the
problem,
understands it, and works with
.
it, but
there's no judgment
needed from him. It- does no
good
to send
a kid using
barbituates to a facility treating
narcotics users," Dr. Feinglass
stresses.
•
,financial arrangements can
•
be
.::
,.,
worked out the university would
·
by Joe Rubino and Bill O'Reilly
_:aJ59,'.beirit~r~sted,,inAeyel9pjiiga ..
"J,i'sh~te~.a'few,yea'rs°igbwith
deported°
from Bermuda for
student, exchange program with
·the
CAfONSVIll.E
:
:
9. The
yelling obscenities at a bongo
Marist.
·.Interest·
·was also
fu·ror
inci:easect
with
the
drum.'
-
indicat.ed in. a
.faculty
exchange CHICAGO 7. Panic grew with
. Robert
Haw d ( a 1i as -
whereby
__
Marist could send a the· PANTHER 21. But, now;
Hawkman) a known left-wing
,
faculty member to Ponce for a . yes,
now,
the revolutionary
follower of Daniel Berrigan, it is
year
:in-exchange.
for the services
·movement
in An1erica has
suspected that
-he
was exp.~lled
of
a
teacher··· from
Ponce.
·seemed
to liave
·
hit
a violent
from
a· religious
order for
Incidentally, the Marist faculty
·
crescendo with the trial of the
.
subversive
activity
in the
member would not have to be POUGHKEEPSIE 5.
confessional.
Hawd's record
fluent
in
Spanish and could be
If you haven't read or heard
includes:
I)
drunken
and
from
any department,
since about
this radical subversive
disorderly at a Good Counsel
many courses there are taught in group of longhaired students, we
mixer and at a. bingo game at his
English to the largely bilingual will try to explain briefly:
parish hall. 2) conspiring to
Puerto
Rican.
university
[t
seems that several weeks
increase his height (4'11") by
students.
.
.
.
ago, Jive
violence-orientated,
purchasin·g a pair of Thom McAn
As far as the Marist students
seditious-minded Marist College "together"
shoes with Puerto
are concerned these programs at
students, willfully and with full
Rican Heels, and
3)
harboring a
Ponce
·
would be,· appealing to
consent, conspired to undermine
wanted sparrow in his crop of
.
majors; in., a ~ariety
<?f
areas.
·
the entire public parking system
loosely flowing hair.
-Span_1sh,,.maJ~rs,,m1~ht;pe
·ofthecity:ofPoughkeepsie.
,
.
·
William Rooney (alias Junior,
,,
attract~d
\by,
the
:,e .
.'lCtensive:·v·
;Jhe,detai}s,of.tl1e
incident are :Toons)
-is
.reported to
1
be the
.
·program
·
of-Hisp~ni<_:,,~_tudies~as.<,~blµrred~•
but,the.c~~SH·are·charged
..
~)1i¢'f_plqtte(of, th~".5'\.ar,d
_h!l,s
·
W.
e
l'l
ia
s
0
·t
he
_J1r
st- h~ nd
':\vitli"
cbrispiraliy
=m:•itfie
·fourth
:a·.
picture
'of:··Mao·
Tse Tung
-
·
.
..
·
~-.
··'
.. · .
degree. The'judge reasoned that
fatooed on his:forehead
..
Police
·
·A11nouncement.s.
•'
\::
the culprits had directed their
suspect
that
.Rooney
has a
',Fri.·
Dec.
11
at Mt. St. Mary's
·
·
Class of '73 Marist Co-Sponsors
Roaring 20's Night $2.00 S, and
--
$3.50 cpl..
·
-
'
.
.
3
.bands
fea~uring·-Gas House
··.Kids:
.
.
Free beer and chips
·
$$$Prize for Be·st Costume$$$
·**.*****
·
Military Counsellor
·
Liz Yates
15
Rutherford Place
(212) 533-2350
*******
:
GI Counselling Service
·.
:
339 Lafayette'~treet
· -
.,
·
.. · ...
"
;(212)
533~8920
·
,.
·:·
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
'
.
'
-
~;
.
~·
attack
at every 4th parking. history ofviolent incidents after
meter, thereby hoping to throw
observation of the terrain of his
the city into complete chaos.;
face.
The
charges
against
·
·
The arraigned revolutionaries
Rooney are the most serious of
ar,e as follows:
the "S." Sine~ he.is a resident of·
.
·
Michael McNeely (alias-Major, Connecticut,
he has been
~hubby
Cheeks)
.a
known
charged with crossing state lines
troublemaker,· believed to have
with intent to conspire. When
been part
.
or'
Che, Gueverra's
confronted with the accusation
band of upstarts in the jungles of
Rooney's
comments
were:
Bolivia. McNeely has a long
"Right-On"
·and
"Free Huey."
...
criminal
.record
which inchides
Terren~e Nash .(alias Cotton)
1)
imperso.nating a student at
reputed to be a hippie freak and
Marist Go11ege
.2)
attempting to
part of the Manson clan. Police
·
·
grow a beard
3)
public exposure
have been watching his residence
at the boat house, and 4) making
.
for some time, where it is
fun ofhisrnommate.
·
_·.
reported that he m~tains
an
:.
_McNeely;
the alleged leader of
.
arsenal of we~oons, including 6
the-. ·groµp,.
'has· ·also.
been
tomahawks, a bow and arrow
set, and one very old horse. The
charges against Nash include
1)
failing to hold his liquor, 2)
forearming
his roommate to.
death, and 3) talking to Dean
Gestal.
·
John McDonnell (alias.Jack,
Benjy,
Beaver)
Police
say
McDonnell's case is the hardest
to understand since Jack will not
talk about anything but his date
last Saturday night. Police are.
not fooled by McDonnell's naive
act,
because in the
.
words of
Officer Joe Bolton, "No one
could be that stupid. He is the
cleverest one of the lot."
The charges against McDonnell
are:
l) wearing a striped shirt
with checkered pants 2) parting
his hair on the wrong side of his
head,
3)
failing. to
·
brush his
teeth after eating psychedelic
brownies given·
t9
him· by a
socialistic
cheerleader whose
only
description
is "her
eye-makeup matches her dress,"
and finally 4) for getting his
picture
in the
paper
17
consecutive
days for doing
absolutely nothing.
·
Lawyer David Dellinger' will be
flown in to defend the .. 5" and
the. group
urges
iiH
_.Marist
students
to surr.ound
the
courthouse
and
shout
obscenities. For a list of the
latest obscenities, please contact
Dean Gestal.
"Our gatekeeper has to know
which gate to open - he has to
know who goes where."
·
Other
elements
considered
important to the training of the
gatekeeper inclµde:
Recognition of a drug abuser,
but in a manner which doesn't
threaten him.
Enough involvement with the
drug abuser so t]1ere will be
follow-up through the period of
treatment and rehabilitation and
even beyond that.
Cost or ·the program
.
to the
trainee
is only the $57
.SO
weekly charge for room and
board.
The
program
is an
intensive one, lasting· from
9
.
a.m; to
10
p.tn·.--rcff'tne·seveh'~
o't-~·---
foi.lrteen-day
·
period of the
·
training cycle.
SAC from
7
Teacher's
Workshop.
The
Workshop will involve studying
two
areas
that of teaching
methodology
and
the
performan_ce and evaluation- of
students.
These
topics.
encompass such areas as grading,
independent
study, discussion
classes and attendance. The APC
is
still in the process of setting
up the format of Workshop.
It
is hoped that if you have
any questions or suggestions
relating to any. of the areas
discussed, please contact any
members of the SAC or APC ..
*****
Council
·.formed
o·n
Abortion
Applied·
Topics
In Science
New York City (Dec. 1, 1970)
prQvides
such
information
,-
The
Council on Abortion
without
any charge. or fee
Research
&
Education, Inc. has.· whatsoever, Mr. Roman pointed
been
formed
to
provide
out.
_
·
information
and
assistance
Since
its
formation
-in
regarding legal abortions, it was N ovem her,
the Council has
announced· by Richard Roman,
provided_
information
and
Executive
Director
of the
assistance,
primarily through
Council.
·
.
telephone inquiries,. tp hundreds
According to Mr. Roman, the
of women. The Council is now
Council is the first organization
undertaking to expand its efforts
of its kind
(a non-profit
and. is appealing for· women,
corporation chartered under the
especially those outside New
laws of the State of New Yolk) . York, to work _with the Council.
to be formed since the recent
Any.Joe interested in doing
so
.
(July;
1970)
·
liberalization of on.
a
part or full-time basis,
New York State's
.abortion
law. should contact the Council by
The Council emerged as the
calling_ (212)
682-6856, or
result
of the-
tremendous
writing
to the
Council on
dem~nd by women,
·
especially Abortion Research & Education
those· outside New York, for at 342· Madison Avenue, New
information
about procedures
York, N.Y. 10017. Mr. Roman
employed, availability, cost, and noted
that
no. special
other matters related to legal background
or training
is
abortions
performed without
required.
.
delay
in
hospitals
and
The
Council
is preparing
out-patient
facilities.
in pertinent
informational
compliance
with
medical
literature
and also plans to
standards and practices. Unlike publish a periodical newsletter
other organizations, the Council about legal abortions.
The
following
·
books
.
(all
paperback)
·
constitute
a
preliminary
reading list for
students who have registered and
have been accepted for Science
300 - Applied Topics in Science.
The books are to be read prior
.
to class meetings in January:
-1.
The Population· Bomb -
P.
-Ehrlick
2. Moment in the Sun - R.
Rienow, L. Rienow
3.
·The
Urban Villagers -
H .
Gans
4. The Death and Life of
Great American Cities- J. Jacobs
Additional
texts
will be
announced at the beginning of
next semester.
·
It
is important
that your
spring
class
schedule
be
submitted to Dr.
M.J.
Michelson
(D22SC) before you leave this
semester,
in
order
that
convenient course meeting times
can be established.
Think of programs, tactics,
ideas or methods that are needed
to make Dutchess County -
.
including Marist College - a more
healthful environment in which
to live.
Calendar OJ Events
THE WEEK OF DECEMBER 7- 13, 1970·
Monday, 10:00 a.m.
Marist Associates meeting, Alcoves, Campus Center
8:00 p.m.
Air Force Recruiting, Alcoves, Campus Center
Tuesday, 10:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Air Force Recruiting, Alcoves, Campus Center.
8:00p.m.
Freshmen Party, Rm. 249, Campus Center
Film. "Kinetic Art Series
II,"
Theater
Wednesday, 10:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
New York State
Civil
Service Recruiting. Rm. 248A, Campus
Center
7:30
p.m.
Wrestling - Trenton SL • Home
·
6:00 p.m.
Basketball - New Paltz - Home (Freshman)
Cont.
on
7
PAGE.of·
. ." TIIECIRCLE':
...
•.,'
'.,
,,
Wade,
-AderhOldt,
Studenf:Gov.
· DisCuss
Security
.
Prob1elll~
. . .
·
.. . .
_
-
~y
Joe Rubino.
_. ,:-,
..
_
-''Not enough people on. this
consciousness", Aderholt meant
on. how they want to deal with · .
,campus are security-conscious,"
that too many people leave.their
vandals or looters. To this date,
said Director of Security Ronald
· door~ unlocked, leave money
iri Aderholt has instructed his ·men
D. Aderholt
last Wednesday· the open, and generally pay little
to notify the· the town police
afternoon
in answer
to a
attention
to
securing
their . whenever
they find :-someone
:
question
concerning the theft · personal belongings:
.·
breaking irito campus property.
· and vandalism on campus this
He further·· pointed out that _ -Mr. Wade• however·· feels that
year. -
many people actually witness
the force should
find
out from
The . remark was made at a
~cts of vandalism but ye! stand
the college community how it
__
meeting held in the Campus
idly
by and ~o nothing · to
wants to handle these situations ..
'Center between Aderholt, Dean
prevent
them _from happening.
He feels that perhaps they-wo,uld •
•
1
Thonias Wade,-and the Student
Aderholt
said
that
many
not wishthecallinginofoutside
Government, concerning Marist's
problems could be averted if help, ~ut would rather prefer to
security system.
only· _peopl~ would rei;,ort sue~ . ~and le the problem - entirely
_ Directly
previous
to the
acts 1mtnediately to him or his independent of town or city law
comment Mr. Wade had quoted
staff.
. . _ .
.
enforcement. .
· , :'( _ --
·DECEMBER
10.1970 ..
THOMAS WADE
from an extensive list of losses
M u_ch discu_ssion
in the
Aderholt
totally: ~upported
suffered by. members of the
meetmg
centered around the
Wade iri his thinking for then ·
_
RO.
NALD ADERHOLDT
community so far this semester.
fact that the coinmunity,
as
'
By this
lack of "security
such, has not set up guidelines
C.ont. on 7
'
.
'
TRIBUI'E
from
8
team
could
go. 8-0 under
conditions like these. Criticisms
leveled at players are for the
most part destructive and not
constructive.
Second_ guessing·
and phrases like "You choked"
and "·you· didn't put out" are
common. Tantrums on the field
were in evidence all three years
I
played.
·
It
is my hope that the head
Coach of the Football team will
look into himself. He now J1as a
· team
which
is capable
of
performing superbly under any
conditions.
Why
can't
the
.
conditions be ideal? Why can't
the Coach treat his players
as
people on and off the field. If
this ever happenedi if Coach
Levine ever showed his players.
that he was interested in them as
human
beings,
not just as
football
players, the football
program at Marist would be
complete
and
much
more
rewarding to participate in than
it is now.
SURVIVAL
A posse of vigilantes is taking
Washington's
afr pollution
to the streets in New York City -
ordinance,
passed in·. January
to fight
air
pollution.'
_
1969, was billed as a_ model
They are not exactly taking
ordinance
but Washingtonians
the faw.
into
their own· hands
are. beginning
to
wonder some
since these vigilantes are known
1600 complaints later why their
as "sniokewatchers" and they're
air is getting.worse.
being trained by New York City
The situation in Washington is
to augm~nt.
the surveillance
complicated by the fact that the
activities
of the city's paid
city
is
virtually government-less
inspectors.
and what real power is wielded
I
YOUR
ow_
N PRIVATE
ENVIRONMENT
...
FROM
$322,500 · ·
'HOUSTON, Tex. (APJ -
A perf~t environment home
with a
minimum price tag of
$322,500
is
being
offered for
Christ.mas giving
by
a Hous•
ton department
store.
·
The
individually planned ·
home would liave
an
ecology
p
r o
t e c t
e
d
by
an air-
supported
dome covering the
entire lot-minimum of one·
acre.
The Sakowitz Christmas
Catalogue said
the .
pollu-
tion-free environment de-
s i,g n e d
by
Borg-Warner
would carry a fmal price de-
· 1 termined
by
the size of
the
lot and such factors as the
height of trees.
Forty members of Citizens for
there is wielded by the
.
House
Clean Air are taking the course
and Senate District Committees.
in smokewatching. Once they
Since many of tlie city's worst
complete
it they will report
polluters are federal installations
violations
of the
city
air
such as Anacostia Naval Station,
pqllution· ordinances to regular
the Capitol' }ieating Plant,- D.C.
inspectors who . will write out · General Hospital, St. Elizabeth's
summonses on the basis
'of the
-
Ho_spital, Walter Reed Army
information
supplied
by
Hospital
and the Washington
~
~~-.;:·
·
~
~··, _ --~~er~te·-o~.io~-i~~d or,
u~l~~d~
;·.' ,,-_,
.
· · ·
, -. •
-
_
• ·1
·. -
gasoline-wherever possible. Since
volunteers. The volunteer will . Naval Yard, clean up action may
then appear in court with the · be hard to come by.
inspector as a witness.-
The
problem
is further
In . the past citizen volunteers
complicated by the fact that the
have · not been encouraged to
rest of the city's top 25 polluters
help out in the New York City
are-· such
vital
facilities
as:
fight
against
.air pollution.
hospitals and heating plants. No .
E
• • . •
, -· .
.
the Federal Government
buys
nvrranmenfal
Good
News
'
one-half of on~ perceµt of all '
- . gasoline purchased in the United
States, the order may stimulate
Apparently,
rising
citizen
one wants to shut down the.
The
Vistron
Corp.,
a wallboarl
.
demands for an end to poisons
Georgetown University Hospital,
subsidiary
of
Standard
Oil
The system
was
designed and
in the
air
coupled
with a city
tl1e
George Washington Hospital,
Co mp any
o f O hi o,
has
built by Kobayachi Engineering
financial crisis that makes it Ahe Washington Hospital Center
announced
development
of a of Fuji,· Japan.
It-
combines
impossible to hire new personnel - or' the Universities. • • · .
plastic bottle that could. help
conventiorial•cylinder board and
have forced the city to accept
Washington's
City Council,
solve the
Nation's solid waste
fourdrinier systems.
help from its gasping citizens.
appointed by the President, not
problem.
Known ·as· an ultraformer, the
Meanwhile
in the nation's
elected
by the citizens, has
The .bottle, made of Barex ·, machine will produce 250 tons
capital it was disclosed in early . minimal authority tQ take action
210,
is as transparent as· glass, daily when it
is in operation.
October
that
not
a single
that improves the lives of the
one-fifth as heavy and burns to a
No-lead Gasoline - President
violation
of the
city's air
District's
residents~
It
crumbly
ash when lighted.
Ni"xon
has. ordered
all
pollution
ordinance has been . particularly
lacks the back•up
The combustible bottle burns _governrnent.:owned · vehicles to
the production and marketing
of -
unleaded
gas around
the
country.
-
-
· In praising
the President's
action,·
-
Environmental
Quality
Council Chairman
Russell Train
noted that low-lead fuels reduce
hydrocarbon
emissions by
a:
· range·. of 7 to· 20 percent.
Hydrocarbons.
are
a major
component of ·
air
pollution in
most urban areas of the Nation.
prosecuted in nearly two years.
authority New York City has to
at
1000
degrees _and its smoke
NQbody knows exactly· who's
move.
forcefully
against
does not change the chemical
to blame but accusative fingers
polluters. But the fact that not
nature
of incinerator
smoke,
are ·pointed
most often at - one
soot-belching
apartment
Vistron claims.
.
Mercury
Pollution.
Of Lakes
And
Streams
Malcolm C. Hope, Washington's
building smokestack has been
-- Vistron. says the Food and
environmental
health official.
shuf down or controlled in two
Drug
Administration-
has
Hope says there have been no
years leads to ·the conclusion
approved the use of Barex
210
prosecutions·
because
all
that
concern with "law and
bottles for food-and
beverage
violators have complied with the
order" in_ the nation's capital is
containers.
law once they were notified of
not all it's cracked up to be.
Re-cycling Machine - A-paper
the
comp
1 a int.
Mo st
And
when
the
city~s air
re-cycling machine designed and
Washingtonians who are gassed
pollution administrator
tells a
built by a Japanese engineering
by D.C. Transit buses every day
· newspaper reporter not to print
firm
is being
installed
by
or who
routinely
see black
his name in the paper because ··Georgia-Pacific at its Thorold,
p o i so n s
p our in g from
then he would be bothered with
Ontario paper mill to transform
smokestacks
throughout
town
people calling up to complain, it ·
90,000
tons of waste paper a
are skeptical of Hope's claim.
may not be long before choking
year into a building material.
Washington
City
Council
Washingtonians follow the New
The new material is the highly
chairman, Gilbert Hah'h Jr. put
York example and take to the
specialized paper required for
it bluntly. «That's silly.'
·
streets in their own defense.
the face and back of gypsum
ln
July,
1970,
full impact of
t!te insidious poisoning of lakes
and streams by mercury wastes
was sweeping across America,
with evidence of the dangerous
element found in waterfowl and
fish and other creatures. The
Secretary of the Interior said he
was moving against ten industrial
plants and "we are developing
hard evidence · against a number
of other companies." He said
.tllese
discharges "represent an
intolerable threat to the health
and safety of Americans." Then,
in August,
Alabama officials
reportedly were ready
to
move
to
shut
down
industrie_s
dfschatging . mercury into public
waters.-
Yet,
the
Federal.
Government baffled · Alabamans
by pulling the· rug out from
under. the . State officials _
by
establishing
something of a
temporary
accommodation
tolerence up to half-pound per
day
for mercury dischargers,
giving
them
time to install
clean-up
equipment.
Mercury
can be kept out of public waters
entirely
throu_gh r~_cy.cJing.
*****
DECEMBER.-10;1970
THE CIRCLE
PAGES-
_______
....,.
_________
~~--~--------~----....,.--------
C.IRCLE
EDITORIALS
'
'
.
··:
'
·•.
.
'
· Chavez
Goe~_-T~J-
J~il ·_
. Amid the terror
~f
b~mbiligs andanguishedcries-fot redn{ss of l~ng
... - standing.offenses, ai'.man of, peace has
gone
to jail. The crime is
· non~viole°iit civil disqbtdience.
The man is Cesar Chavez; his crime
· is orgaii.izing:a,str.ilct(of inigi:ant farm worl_cers and engineering an
economic boycott; against the major lettuce· growers in. the· Salinas
·
Valley of California·,·.
. .
Chavez~ along wit_h LaCausa, is the symbol of _struggling chicano
workers for-. the right to live. His followers are not gun- toting;
· r9ck~throwing• militants. But rather, patient, 'non-violent activists.
Not activists.out of academic discussion,,more importantly activists
o,~t of their own desire to1ive. The attack is geared to a means which
is 4ifficult to comprehend in.a country insane with'its_own violence.
- lettuce
might appear. to be an·. ,absurd! issue to the great
· sophisfit:ation and affluence of the northeast.
It is taken for granted
:in
our
overweight section· of the world. However,· Chavez and
LaCausa do not take lettuce· for .granted. It is the source of their
work and thus, their.life.·
_ .
LaCausa., does not ·need well-intentiqned · best wishes .from the.
radlcal chic or the usually inept aid of radical students:.-What is
necessary, however, is a massive boycott of California grown lettuce.
The major companies which are targets of Chavez are Bud.Artie; Inc.
and an old frie~d, Dow Chemical.
·
- X.-mas: Ju.st Anoth~r
_Day
~
::. . . .
:-,
-. ·. : . ..
-·
:,_-~-·
·.. ..
..
-'_.
>·;.
:·, ·..
··-
.. · .. : , .-''
:•· '
. ·.
· .. ,=;'..)~-(this SJ?lendid tin1e · of the::-
y~.µ-
¼:he_~
_all the ·sit}ilin,g
q~ristians_
<
;are:rurui~g·;-around ~ith theit..pfastic wa:.rmth and:plastic goqd .cheer; . .
.
. . : ::.'~
i~tis:rieces'sary:that .we:·pr:es¢rft,:y.ou=with
:a:
mpl'e
sobhing
side
OI
the ·, :~
.
..
.
:_::::-~:f~OJY~f:-:•:IZ{~
-~~:
c:;¥~:
·~~
:~.;~.~·:·~~~_:
;~?
-~-'·•.::~<~:::
-~::
::
~-·:.-~--_::
-~
>~
~-
_
·· ~--
_ _· ·.
·-
-
~
·· . · . _
·
.·.<
:--There
is
no Christfuas. 'There is rio reason to celebrate and sing
_:_
joyful carols in honor of a man long dead. Throughoufthe
world
· December 25 will be no different than any other day.· The
Vietnamese people will still be seeking to evict the white agressor.
The children of Pakistan and India will have no reprieve from their
disease and hunger. South American children will go to bed hungry
once again. The prison doors will close again on the victims of
economics and tyranny.
However, our special thoughts will be with two prisoners of war.
It
will be a longtime before Daniel and Philip will be able to talk and
walk with their friends. But they have chosen where to spend
Christmas this year and our respect and gratitude belongs 'to them.
_
Cops and Robbers?
The most interesting thing to come out of the recent meeting
between Messrs. Wade, Aderholdt, and the Student Government· (see
precedi_!lg page) is that the college has no guidelines on how to deal
with people caught looting or vandalizing on campus.
Although
Mr .. Aderholdt's policy has been to- inform the Town
·Police Department
as soon as his personnel spot an in~ident
occurring,
Mr. Wade brought up the distinct possibility that the
· community at large might not agree wit this procedure.
. · All parties agreed that some means must be set up to·find out the
· community's opinion on this matter in order that future guidelines
may be set up.
.
Despite _the fact that we don't know yet how the people will react
on· this- matter, one thing is for certain: When some procedure
is
set
up, we must all understand it and stick by it.
_ If the community say~ that they want no outside assistance, then
. they should understand that they will have to face any consequences
themselves. If the community says that they are in favor of outside
police assistance, then they should realize that the police will be
asked to give help, and not to be the victims of verbal and other
abuse.
At any rate, this question may cause some Marist students to think
for the first time in their lives.
Sal Piazza, Joe Rubino, Ann Gabriele, Janet Riley,
. Peggy Miner, Frank Baldascino, P.aul Tesoro; John
Tkach, Bernie Brogan.
The above names are those people
who
have contn'buted to
this
week's CIRCLE, and do not appear in a byline.
~i
..
Ltt~;{ic'.i
t1.~1ifflli,~*loijt:f
.
.
,;u·.•P•r•.:<..;:::?,Yiffii'l8'ifd1'j
3
··•·:1.·
..
The purpose
~ft
his letter .w~s that the fetus in the womb. is
•
aware of this and. can hear the
to .correct.some misconceptions
Very .much·
aware
of· his
sound of a pan.lJeing dropped.
>
which·· .regular .reading of the : enviroriment
after :the· ,,J2th · .. He'll react to ifby kicking out .
·. Circle may have provo~ed.
week .. If riot. before. · He is· not
"In essence they are little, tiny
m
=-
Circle-
.
. .
. .
'
'.
lrresponsibl_e_
make" Marist a better 'place,
rather than smuggly sitting. back
carping out a stream of negative
criticism once a week. There are
even people· here who come up,
with concrete suggestions for
·November 20, 1970
improvements rather. than vague
A letter to Those Interested in
gene r a liza tio
i:1
s of doom,
Marist ·But not Presently on
decadence and conspiracy. There
Campus:
· '
a re , st u dents,
faculty,
It
is unfortunate
·that this
administrators
and
staff
letter is necessary, but it is. The
members
who
really~ relate,
-reason
is
that the small group of
cooperate and contribute. There
people thaLcontrols
the Marist
.are
many
segments
of the
paper,
The
Circl-e,
has
community
who·realize
that
estaolished ·
a
-ratlier··unique;
~
acade-tnif-·.fre.eao11:f
_is
kme<l
by_'
journalistic.canon. i.e.-that'since. :,.those
wh_o demand: that all·
they .-woik.,ori·the paper,'-they · .·segm·ents of our community
have no 'tespo.rist'bility .to' try to
conform to one set of ideas or
present a balanced
·
picture of
one style of life. There are those
college. events. and .persons, but
who feel that what is .done on
rather.are·
entHled
to
this
campus
am:ong all its
monopolize a paper paid for by
segments
is a worthy
social
all students in order to ,advance
contribution
ahd is important.
the ideas and interpretations of a
There · are those on this campus
few students. It.is also necessary
who, respecting the rights of
be ca u s_e· the
Student
others to iiame their own heroes,
. Government and other segme11ts . do not demand that we all nod
· ofthiscommunityhavefailedto
like·
docile
sheep
to the
insist that a college paper should
in-rhetoric of the New Left (i.e.
contain both news and opinion.
the present guise of· the old
· It is necessary because the staff
intolerance and tyranny).
· does
not seem to feel any
-: Marist· today is exciting and
: obligation
to get conflicting
dynamic. We have not solved all
points
of view
or varied
our problems; there is need for
dimensions of a story.
If such · improvement.
Yet, there is .
come in they will print them,
effort,
spirit. and dedication
but
usually
let
the reader
here.
All members
of our
beware. ·
·_
· '
community have much to be
The letter has a degree of
proud of and many challenges
anonymity to it, so _that at least .which remain to be met by joint
in part it might conform to the
efforts. These challenges could
general style of the·paper as .be more easily hurdled,
if
·w.e
all
__
printed this year.
- --
began
to
realize
the many
-
- - TII~
STORY ·
common goals which. unite us.
There
ate
many _ positive
The agnewsque tactics of our
features at Marist College. Large
Circle staff could be transfonned
numbers on campus
still know
into _more positive means for the
the . meaning of good taste and
realization of more significant
do
respect
personal privacy.
goals than the simple aim of
Large numbers find repulsive,
polarization. We ask you readers
unwarranted
personal attacks,
to realize that we are in the
name-calling and uncalled for
process
of building
a fine
giggles gained from making fun
educational institution here. We
of people. There are many who · ask you to join us,· as we inqeed
day
in and day out work hard to
hope that the Circle will
YoursinMarist,
always sleeping. He hears the
people
aware
of
their
rumble of his mother's intestinal
surroundings.
They know
if
tract which sounds more like
something is wrong. When a
bubbles in champagne to him
solution that is more than
SO
per
than rumbles; he can hear. her
cent saline is injected into the
voice and respond to loud music.
womb· they drink it and they
Middle-Class, Mortgaged,
Faculty, One-Car, Crab-Grassed,
P.T.A.,
Republican, White,
Member of the Marist Communit:
Editor's note:
The Circle's policy is that it
will
not print any unsigned
letters, however, in this case, the
author has revealed his identity
to · us yet has aksed us to
withhold
it since it is not
necessary to the content of the
letter.
.
However, we would like to
.clear
up
one misconception
which the author obviously has.
The people who are listed in the
staff box· of The Circle are those
people who have done work for
the paper other than the writing
of_ articles, and not people who
seek anonymity for their work.
Abortion's
Other
.Side
To the Editors of the Circle,
I though that since you had
the· other two articles in the _
paper you might be interested in
publishing the other side of the
question.
Mrs. Dolores Gallo
Evening Switchboard
FETUS REACTS TO SOUND
MOVEMENT
According to observers, nurses
are the only medical personnel
that substitutes cannot be found
for
when
they
refuse
to
participate in an abortion team.
A nurse. at Memorial Hospital
said that, while the hospital does
not
do abortions,
she is
constantly struck by the irony
that
"we are . struggling here
against impossible odds to save
lives while across the street they
are slaughtering innocents."
Another nurse in a hospital
where abortions are performed
told an interviewer that, .. the
public needs to be made aware
"He
sucks his thumb.
He
know it's different. They know
drinks
the
amniotic fluid
that
they are dying so to speak;
surrounds and nourishes him. He
"Most of the fetuses I have
can feel the mother's heartbeat
seen aborted are male. Statistics
and feel when she is standing or
will show that most fetuses
walking. When she moves at a
conceived are male. To me it's as
normal rate, he is in a hammock
if we were killing off future
effect.
If
she's rushing to get
generations. I definitely feel that
dinner, the baby is very much·
this is murder."·
.
Chuck
Here
by Chuck Meara
As we approach the holiday season maybe it's a fitting time to
look back over the past year and size up just what kind of year it
was for our country. As the nation begins to rejoice I wonder
if it is
rejoicing out of habit or out of a '.true sense of warmth, a feeling of
love for ones neighbors, friends aiid relatives. l would rather it be the
latter but 1 really can't believe it.
Just where does the country stand today? How is it better off this
Christmas than last Christmas? Well, only½ as many of our oons and
husbands are now being killed in Vietnam as last year. That means
only
SO
mothers a week have to be told that their boys have died in
a useless struggle because facism in Vietnam is better than
communism in Vietnam:That's
cause for rejoicing. We are told that
unemployment has risen in the past two years from
3.5
percent to
5.8 percent. That's almost 6 out of every 100 men who want jobs
can't get them. That makes for a beautiful Christmas for those
families. Yet we are told by our national leaders that it's getting
better. Bombings continue, sometimes daily. The nation's Chief Law
Enforcement Agency is plotting how to seize those who are doing
the plotting or who they think are doing the plotting or in oome
instances who they wish are doing the plotting. Those who bomb
must be brought to justice but we now find ourselves in the frame of
mind where we forget the problems and only think of the bombers.
We are tol(i that
if we stop the bombers the problems will go away.
We do nothing to stop the problem; we only
try
to silence those who
point out the problems. Certainly these are not good times for many
of the American people.
In-some instances the holidays do bring out the best in people.
Sometimes people actually do feel sincere in their greetings.
Sometimes they are happier to give than to receive. But all that
quickly fades into the background as the traditional New Y~ar's
Resolutions are proposed and toasted to with a drink for old times
sake. We quickly go back to our old ways. We quickly forget.
But one of these holidays . America is going to be shook, by
something really big. Maybe the environment will have allow~ us to
breathe our last precious breath before giving up the struggle against
the polluters. Maybe that is what
it will
take, but one of these years
America will be so shook that it just might wake up.
•,•,
PAGE
symbolic
AMERICANite
I stopped and watched the barber
· Doing his daily job
,
And above him was a combination picture
Of the Sacred Heart of Jesus .
Superimposed over a··boy scout.
And he admired the crew cut. ,
That he had just given
,
The fall, thin, gqod looking guy
Dressed in a wurster-texed suit with
An accentuating thin green tie and
Snab-tab shirt.
·
I'm not sure how he could do a good job
Because his one eye was fixed on the Race of the Week
And h~ was talking a-mile-a-minute about the
Horse he had a bet on.
And then the fopic switched to politics
And he was going to vote for ---
"
Because his mother came from that province
In the Old Country and he trusted that type people.
And he wanted to go and play cards at
The Fraternal Order tonight
But his wife insisted on going to bingo.
He thought about going on vacation to
Atlantic City
H~ thought tne kiqs would like that, ·
But then he wanted a new_ Rambler American
And it was a shame about the kid who got killed
In Vietnam, but his parents were kind of "up-ity ,"
All that poetry and sophisticated stuff.
The phone rang and his wife wanted to know·
If
he would take her to the
Green Stamp Reden~ption Center.
by
cornelius
j.
dravcs
DRAFT·
INFORMATION
by
Curtis Tarr
\
...
,
tenure of one year.
contained in instructions issueo
Co pies of the new Youth
to local board personnel by Dr.
Advisory Committee booklet are
Curtis
W:
Tarr, National Directo'i: ·.
available to the press at the
of Sele'ctive
Service. These·. , ·
Public
Information Office in
instructions alter previous policy'
Selective
Service's
National
which stated that the application '
Headquarters,
1724 F Street,
had to be in the hands of local
::.w.
Room 101, Washington,
board
personnel ,prior to a
E i g h t e e. n
ma j or
Federal
Departments
and
concerned about the draft. In
D.C. 20435.
_
December· meedng of the local
recommendations
of the
Agencies
involved
with
this
effort,
we need your
~'****
board.
Selective Service System's Youth
youth-oriented functions.
in val u ab I c h cl p --
your
Registrants wishing to drop
In particular, the instruction
Advisory Committees ;1ave or
Sele
Ct
ive Service . Director
participation."
deferments and be reclassified
to local boards \Vill be of interest
are being implemented due to
Tarr, in his introductory letter,
T :~ e Y o u t
!t
Advisory
into Class I-A status to .take
to men who hold high numbers
what Draft Director Curtis Tarr
urged the young advocates of
Committees
were begun by
advantage of a year-end policy
in the 1970 draft lottery. Should
calls " ... constructive,
youthful
change to " ... always keep in· President Nixon in June 1969, 'anriou1iced las.t •month by the
·a young man hold a number
participation
in the change
mind that dialogue and criticism
with panels now averaging qver a
Selective: Service System, have
higher ·thari that reached by his
··.
mechanism
of the American · gene
ta
te. Pre. ssu re,. but
dozen members attached. to all :b,een,, giyl'!n :,,until
~1iqnighk
local board
~
and No.• 195' has .
L . _, _
_,,,,,.,.:o,:;.dteni9i:~atJ~,pr9cess.'.\>
' - :,
·>,
·Pa
r·t.ic
i
Patio n ,prom
i>
ts
,s
6,(:,Sta.t,~:' S,ehfc;tfr~.-
,_~:1:,ryicr
,
,Decr;:mber;r3J, 1970, to . ."file.for 'oeen
:Jsef
as ·.ttie''liighesfriuniber
.---·-.,,,._-.
'· Tarr's ' comment'
is in an ' pr
O
du 'ct i Ve ·a Ct id n and'. Headquart~rs. The Young pe9ple
J,fe
·crecla,ssif,(~fq:oi1~·:
·s,,i~h
\vHic'I{'any:Jdcaf:'bbaro
lfa\Freach
'
introductory
JeHer·
to
a
meaningful
change. We -are farige·in··agefrortil8to26ariil·
'.requests musLbe:·receivea
:by -~
iLis':l:o':'nis'1a'c:ivJntage'.1:fo .·
twenty-two
, page
booklet;
striving to develop means to ·represent diverse backgrou.nds.
local boards -by that <late or
-voluntarily
give
tip his deferment :
'' Dialogue
+
Action.+·
incorporate participation by all They
are chosen -by their
carry
a:. postmark
dated
·fora
I-A classification. In these
Participation
=
Change!"
elem e,n ts of- our
society,
individual State Selective Service
December 31, 1970 or earlier.
cases, he·. wiU move to a lower
released today as a follow-up
particufarly
youth, who are Directors, gerierall¥ for an initial
T
i1
e· announcement
is
draft priority group on January
'·
(
t
report to an earlier publication
A.
}b
R. •
··
I, 1971 with other members of.
listing
results
of the June
·
U
ffi
evteWS
the 1970 .first priority group
28-July 2 National Conference
with unreached numbers.·
·
t:El~t:.~;.~::vfo:.;:ui~
.
Notes
.On
•··
What's
What
~~~ill:Ii~r1~~~;,.;;f£,~
·
In the report to his Agency's·
.by Michael Klubnik
could
effectively
limit their .
750 Youth Advisors across the
vulnerability to the draft by
· country, Dr. Tarr noted, " ... that
Time passes slowly up here in
'If
i get home before daylight,
to the east do for me? In his new
being classified· into I-A by -the,
of the thirtf-six n:oommenda-
the
Mountains. The sriow is just
might· geL some· sleep
3
album set, it_does·some really
year's end, Dr. Tarr stated .that·
tions subii\iited, ~ighteen have or
filling the void with an illusion ·tonight"
· incredible
things. This new. · "the -la\V-allows young men to
are beini implemented, thanks
of goodness. i am .trapped here_ _ :It's a personal album, good for
album is so well produced, that
e]ect,whether they will apply foL-
to youp,,uggestions and the year
between the maya of the white .- a·moment of relief or solace.
it really merits being heard on an ·
.a
deferment and those young·
long 'Work of our staff." He
wonder
world
which exists· ·. Truckin'· is the Dead on the
exceptional
stereo·
system,
men granted.<,lefer·ments should
· ad..d1, "Six are being studied
without
purpose.
and. the ·r.oad,
.'Yitl}. _n<>s.ta!gic :':5._6::
·pi~ferably ..
thri:m~:h.e~4n.hg~e~:-~,-~e;,~ble ..
,t?idrpp
them if they
· further. Ten were beyond the
objective reality of a world ftill· .. overtones • to.dhe··,mstlllmentaL
,_For
once,
1t
'se~111s
;fllil:_Sepc.toJ>.<
•aesrre:~•,'.~
~,
?•~~
jurisdictional
control of the
of essential horrors that take
track:
. -
·f,"', ., '.··
.''i -..
,. -
-,.has controhed'.'his wifaid"olOz'"' ,·';. b?."T:lir·"sakf·the
new policy
Selective Service System and
tµeir toll in a gorwing cycnicism
"What
in the world ever
meglomania in the dubbing, and· - was issued
because· various
were referred to the Executive
became of.Sweet Jane'
-
the result . is an album -which
boards throughout
the
country
Bra;1ci!·
d
the> C.Jngress for
'·Mama Mama many worlds
She lost he;sparkle, you know
actually opens up new vistas for
were. scheduling
their ·Jast
consideration. Only two ,have . i've
come since i first left ··she isn't the same .
recording.
It
would be pointless .. meetings of the year at different
been
disapproved."
Selective· home." Are the Grateful Dead
Living on reds, vitaJ!lin C and
tryiJig_
to. explaiJl
the
times. By defining a specific
Service_ spokesmen note·. that
What's What? They-are at leasta · coc·aine :· , · ·
, . .
. . spiritualness of this album'. The
·cutoff
date,<the
new policy
many of the plans approved
comfortable ·resting. place : · a · '· All .a friend can say is ain't it a
effectiveness of the repeated
allows
all'
registrants· an equal
were the joint result of Youth .sanctuary in solitude. American
shame...
_
phrase
and the
countless,
amount
of time
to
take
Advisors and already-underway·
Beauty
is a real
vicarious
Truckin down the line." .
flawless
over-dubbing· which
advantage of the reclassification
staff projects.
experience; a trip into some
Ripple is a soothing country
finally breaks down the listeners
offer.
.
0
f
t h e
e i g h t e e n · other realities perhaps not any
tune with a melody not easily
pre;conceived notion of what a
Previous
to changing this
recommendations
adopted, a
better, but at least
a
consolation
forgotten.·
The: -mandolin by
stereophonic recording can be. i
.
policy
on
dropping
of
· sampling include: increasing the
prize presented on the st~eet. _ Da".id. C~~sm~n is effective h~rf;~ have . only g~tten thro~g~ th~ee
·deferments, registrants holding
quality and quantity Qf draft
Ary the Gratefu_l Dead Amenca's
as 1t 1s Friend of. the Devil, _ . of t~e six s1~es, and 1 tmag~ne
deferments
were
generally
information
for
registrants,
ha~dest
'Yorkmg rock. band?
~nd th~ song ends wit~ the vocal
the Jam seSSI~ns on the Jlurd
unable to voluntarily relinquish
schools and counselors;
making.
Quite possibly. Though
1
would
lme bemg sung by a large chorus
album
are m an entirely
· them as long as they continued
local boards more representative· rather draw my own conclusions . which is quite probably the
different vogu~. Therefore, i will
t.o meet
the
criteiia
for
of • today's
young registrants' · than listen to F.M; hpe. This
many friends who so often grace
just · say that in songs like
deferment except at the end of
. bro ad ening the · c:~nscientious album captures the Dead close · the stage at a· live-performanc:e.
''Wah/Wah"
and "My Sweet
the deferrn~
·
period when they
objector
work
· program;
to· their
natural
form. The ,
What's What with the Grateful
Lord" there seems to. be a new · could cancel them simply by not
computerizing
and updating
harmonies are
!}Of
smoothed out · Dead? Nothing at ~ll new on this
consci~usne~ _.evol~in~ out of
submit
ting
the
necessary
operations and data collection;
by over-i:l.ubbmg. They come album to the growmg number of
Georg~ s religious msights, and
documents for an extension.
improving
rules to minimize
across much as they would in Dead Heads who follow their
to listen to this album:carefully
The
types
of deferments
draft
evasion; and providing
concert.
This album merits
concert appearances. Some songs
is to be . sucked
into this
affected by the memorandum
closer supervision of local board
ca~eful liste~~g because t~e. don't
come acr~ss pe£t:ectly: consciousness
alone._ Wheth~r
are
high school
and college
actions. A complete listing is lyncsarealegittmatemessagem
Some sound a httle tnte
(1
one
accepts
or reJects this
deferments,
occupational
foundinthenewbooklet.
themselves,
and ten simple. personally
kept thinking of· mediumisuptothelistener,but
deferments,
agricultural
"Dialogue
+
Action
+ ·
statements of a reality presented
Creedence
Clearwater
and
its good to know its there "if
deferments,
paternity
and
Participation
=
CHANGE!" is without much moralizing, such Johnny Rivers when listening to
you can dig it."
·
hardship deferments. The I-Y
being mailed to all Selective
as Friend of the Devil, a song of "Operator'',
but i thir,k this
Dig.it, dig it. TJ:tat's not what't
classification, unacceptable for
Service
You th Advisors,
the fugitive from prison who has album
will l'stablish for the
what. What can
1
say to breach
military
service
except
in
members
of the Senate and
been caught in theclilemma of listener whal anyone who has
this gap of laying down on a
national
emergency,
is not
H o u s e · Ar m e d
Service
keeping two wives:
seen the Dead do a five hour
horizontal line something which
affected by this new policy. Men
Committees,
the President's
"The first one says she's got concert already knows- in David
i saw unfold all directions. Isn't
classified 1-Y are not able to
Council on Youth Opportunity,
my child, but it don't look like Cro,sby's words - "When those
it a pity?
v o I u n tar i I y drop
th is
the White House Conference on
me.
gusy
are at their best, they're the
dassification.
_
Children and Youth, The•White
· Say
rn
run but
rn
take my best there is."
Dr. Tarr pointed out that all
House and to the heads of
time, friend of the devil is a
What's
What with George
private
organizations
and
friend of mine.
Harrison? What can his turning
O>nt.
on 7
\ DECEMBER
10,1970
TIIECIRCLE
by G«>ige Roarty · ·
. Durfug these
past
·Weeks, .the ·. coordinated .with othe; ~otirses met with the Religious Studies
· ··
. APC-has been·concerning
itself .. ana .areas of ·study: Al~hough Dep'artment··1ast
.week ._and
· · · with··basically three topics:the:
· these possibilities do exist, it was
proposed
··these problems to
future of the Classical Languages · noted that st_udents are rarely
them.·
There
were - several
. ·pept./.the
,propos¢d- major
iir
encouraged to<e·nroll in·· these
inconsistencies
raised between
religious studies, anc;l lastly plans
.
cours:es.
If
✓t]J.e
· offering of
the
APC's: and Religious Dept.
. • for.a teaching workshop v,:hicn'is· classical, languages was dropped
information and because of this
tentatively
scheduled
for·
completely,
it
was pointed out· we
are·
a~aiting
further
Jamiary 23.
,
·
that students who wished these
information
befor.e coming .to
In regard
to the Classical · cou·rses could enroll at Vassar
any decision. • . ·
. : , ·
✓
•
<Language Dept;
the APC has . through cross tegistraticiri .. Not
'The·
most 'recent
topic· of
<;oncluded unanimously that the · being
able
to come to an
discussion
was- that of the
department should be dissolved
a g r-e e men t , the
AP C is
and that the . major in Latin
postponing its decision till next
·· ·cont.
On 3
PAGE7
· Grapplers
·;Erratic
~y
John Redmond
The Marist College Wrestling
Season opened on Dec; 11th
. with
the
Marist
Grapplers
soundly
thrashing
their
opponents. from Yeshiva. · The
final
score
read Marist 40,
Yeshiva 8. Yeshiva's only points
came when their captain edged
out a Marist freshmen in total
points and when Marist forfe.ited
the 190 lb. class. Otherwise,
· every l\farist- wrestler succeeded
in pinning ·his opponent in times
ranging
from
thirty
three
seconds to four minutes and
twenty five seconds.
On Saturday, DEc. 5th, riding
high after t_heir previous victory,
the Marist wrestlers
had the
tables turned on them. Escaping
· only with point victt>ries in the
118 and 167 lb. class and· a pin
by James Lavery in
177, Marist
went down 35 to
l
l.
Marist next
faces the powerful Trenton State
team on· Tuesday, Dec. 9th at
Marist followed
by Drew on
Dec.
I Ith at Drew.
should.
be dr·opped.
These
semes·ter
to
see whethe·r
firidings. will be. brought up at
enrollment and interest in .this
the next· facultf plenary session
area continues
to
decline.
for approval. Enrollment in .tl~e ·. ' The committee then addressed
. area
·
of Classical Languages .has
itself to the proposed . religious
Food Committee Surveys Saga
· been steadily_ declining over the
studies
inaj or. The
major
years and the demand in the
consists
of
five · areas
of
future
is eipected · to drop
concentr_ation:
Jewish
aIJd
further.
rr ·
the department
is
Christian Scriptures, History of
dissolved, offerings in this area .. Christianity,
World Religions,
.. would be made available through
Theology. and Ethics, · Religion
the
Modern
Language
·andPersonality.TheAPCinits
Department.
The
APC did
first discussion of the proposal
consider
the
possibility
or,· saw several
problems arising
dropping
classical languuage
among.
them
being
liprary
offerings completely
from the'. re sources, personnel. available,
curriculum.. Some however felt
demand. for such a . major, and
_that -.ft ·was. 'nec~ssary to have. simple. :ftriiinistrative):p~o.blems.
· these:·courses available for those. .Because of these problems the
. stuMiitt'wlfoiw·antecl
them. In .APC questioned the feasibility
addif!drlj:
4
it•
:was::,
shown ·,:hov/
.of
.offering· such a inajor by
cla ssicaf.· languages'·'could · be· September
J
971. The SAC has
Hung.er-
POW
Three weeks ago, the Food
Committee conducted
a student
survey of the food service. The
iisual response to such a survey
amounts to about· one hundred
but on this year's survey over six
hundred. students responded rind
thus, the delay in tabulating the
results. As can be expected, a ·
few people took the survey as a
joke
and
scribbled
some
incoherent ,remarks across the
page not even fully answering
the
survey.
To
show
our
appreciation
to those people
(who
of
course
remained-
anonyri10us)
we threw their
papers in the basket.
But
to
those who did take the time to
carefully make selec::tions, the
Anonymous
A
gr•oup · at St.
John's
committee
extends its sincere
I was hungry and_yoiiformed
University
has started
an
thanks.
.
by George Byrnes
it
should
be
evidenced
immediately.
Another item of
major importa_ncc is the food
temperature.
When the dining
·hall reopens in January, it is
hoped to have infra-red lights
which will keep the food hot
after it
is
served. There have
been many complaints on the
taste of various items. In this
regard~
different
brands are
being tried to find the one which
is appealing to the most number
of people.
It
seems the ot;icr
items per se are self cxplan11tory.
Part
11
of the survev was in
regard to the Saturday Steak
Dinners. Effective last Saturday
there will be no more steak
-dinners on Saturday.
Instead,
there will be two special dinners
a month where larger steaks
will
be served. This was what about
sixty percent of the students
voted on the survey ..
keeping orange juice machines
on longer, no plastic utensils,
better atmosphere,
and other
items dealing with the serving of
food.
This list is of course
incomplete
for it would be
physically impossible to list all
suggestions. These surveys were
thoroughly
examined
in the
Food Committee meetings and
recommendations
have been
made
to
Mr. Greene who will
direct their institution
in the
Food Service.
a humanities club and discussed
organization called POW which
The
po
11 .
indicated
the
myhungei.Thankyou.
is.dedicated
to letting the
following
results:
Part
I
I was .imprisoned
and you
Democratic
Republic
of
(General) a) Variety of Fodd -
creptoffquietlytoyourchapel
Vietnam
kn·ow
that
the
FAIR.
b)
Cleanliness
- of
in the cellar and prayed for my
Am er i ca n p e o pl
e
and
silverware - POOR. c) Quantity
release.
particularly
the
American
of ,food
- VERY GOOD. d)
I was naked and in your mind
students are dissatisfied with the
Cleanliness of tables - FAIR. e)
you debated the morality of my
'treatment of American prisoners
Temperature of food - FAIR.
f) ·
appearance.
.
of w~. A massive letter writing
Freshness of food - FAIR. g)
, I was sick and you knelt and
campaign has been launched on
Attractiveness
of display ·-
thanked God .for your health. _
the assumption
that Hanoi is
GOOD.
h)
Speed of service -
· Part III of the survey was a
write-in for suggestions. Some of
the printable ones included less
repetitious
menu,
ice· tea,
better
and more cold. cuts,
0
nee again, we invite any
interested students to join the
Food
Committee.
Please see
Steve Moore for information. At
present, the Food Committee is
re-evaluating
its ro.'.c in the
l\·1arist Communit)
and plan
hopefully to re-structure itself
by the beginning of the Spring
semester.
We welcome your
suggestions and help.
Incidentally, this Friday night
there will pe a special dinner
serving steak and lobster and
also wine.
__ ,.I.
was .h·omeless ·and'. you·
sensitive·
to
~.the.
opinions of
GOOD. i) Taste.of
food - FAIR.
•
• ···• ·-h~
ci"
f ,.,;-
.. ··
~
h · · • ·· ··· 1 •Am'erican studeilts>We
a:t
Marist
j)
Food service is FAllt. Now a
;~~~ft~i{of1tl'e)~tf5/c;~af~
1
t.~il
·'•~p;'o'.4}~C
··Ijaft,icip·wff?iif
_·'f_his
·.w6'i-cl':;oc:e"xplaii'afion
-·
an,d
·c
Cwas··lonely and you left me
~urp~mtan_an
_gesture;
It !s, an.
·interpretation/
·
.
.
.
alone to pray for me:-
_
·
,
111d1~~ual a~t, all one need do to,
The Food Committee arid Mr .
. . · You seem ·
50
holy;·
so
close to
part!cipate issend a !etter to t~e
Greene are most willing to. put
God; but, I'.m still very hungry
Pres1d~nt, Dcmocratie: _Repubhc · any suggestions of a student in
_and lonely.and cold.
o~ Vietnam,
H_anoi, North
practice as far a~ adding to _the
··
·
·
Vietnam
requestmg that
th_e variety of food. However, one
' GOOD NEWS.
from 2
Internatio·nal
Red Cross be. must remember
that we are
allowed to inspect prionser of · dealing with over. eight hundred ·
war camps, that theY, isrue. an
people and sometimes it would
official list of all prisoners;that
be impossible to buy or. cook a
they
provide
· facilities
for ·random item for so many.· In
prisoners to correspond regularly
regard to. the problem with the
with their families, and that they
silverware, the silverware is being
prnvide. pro·per medii;al care for
cleaned under a new system and
the sick and wounded. Postage is
and reality:To growwith today
iri preparation for tomorrow. To
experience. life by living it. Do
. you have
a
dream? The Students
of·Marist." ·
·
,. We have
an awful lot of
students here doing . just that,
. and,that is good n:ews.
· twenty five cenJs. DO IT!
FROM 3
8:00 p.m.
Basketball- New Paltz-Home
(Varsity)
·"
· '
·
·
· Thursday, 8:00 p.m.
, Lecture. "Noise Pollution" by Dale Robertson of Tufts University,
Theater
·
.
Friday, 8:30 p.m.
Concert. Don Crawford, Theater $1.50. Coffee House in
Rm. 249
after concert.
-
Saturday,
I
:00 p.m.
. Wrestling - Drew- Away_
6:00
p.m.
Freshmen Basketball - Kings
Pt. -
Home
8:00
p.m.
Varsity Basketball - Kings Pt. - Home
Sunday, I 2:00 -
5
:00 p.m.
Childrens Christmas Party by Faculty Wives, Theater, Fireside and
Rm.
249.
8:00
p.m .
Film. "Help" Theater.
Jhe .forgotten
Men
t
MARISf ABROAD
from
3
articles in the Circle will deal
with the expanding programs
of
foreign study now offered to
Marist students, particularly. in
Africa and Latin America.
.. ·• The ·time has come when the
contributions at alllevels of the
working
people of this college
College machine. These men are
must receive recognition.,
It's
"unskilled" and yet they service
_:time
when
the men who serve as .- all the college's equipment. The
the "fodder" for the machines
college employs mechanics, yet
of . this. college .be pointed out
the ground .crew is commonly
and commendeq.
It has also - found
mainta(ning
the
become
a· time
w]:ten
the . equipment
which supposedly
s!Jackles
which
bind thenito_the
they
possess
no knowledge
.machine be loosed. It is not bad
a bout.
This is
due at times
enough
when
the' administration
because
.the
mechanics
are
is inept-towards we
the students
placed on jobs
they
need not do,
.- for
we are not
bound in. this
but also
because the crew is
system; - but the far reaching explicltly
ordered· to service
damage
that
occurs
when
them. The
administration
admits
incompetency is the
order of
the
the skilled status
of
the crew,
day to the working
man who is
yet
does
not
reward
their
· bound-in
(to
retain his job)
is in
knowledge.
many ways im.measurable. The
·
hi
fact, this sophistication and
colleges
attempt
to_ purify . exploitation
of
the
crew
themselve_s
and yet
Marist officially "unskilled" has set the
; remains',,
u m1ware
of.
the
workers
against
each other. The
: _ex,ploitatJo!1 _qf
_h~m_a':1:
.. ~ei11gs mechanics
are.
angered because
· ,that takes, p!a<:e,~y~r;y
,r_ni,l~te
of
the groundsmen are-doing their
· every Marist wor~ing .gian hour. jobs. The internalized tension
I
wish to point out a group
and at times the externalized
of men - the grounds crew - who
anger between these two sects
occupy
the lowest strata of
have been witnessed. The bosses
employees
on this campus.
have· set the traps and the
Termed "unskilled" and thus · workers have been split because
.. e x p e n d ab
1
e "
by
a n of them. A mild form of spying
administrator, this crew headed
has arisen within the working
by Art
Campell
has made ranks, and although the bo~s
by
Robert Beyer
pay lip-service to the. desire
to
~nd the practice tliey actually
grow stronger and foster it.
They .. continue
to
foster
tension
and degrade.
I
have
witnessed workers berated by
administration
in full view of
their
fellqw ··workers and the
campus community. This can no
longer be allowed to take place.
The college needs the grounds
men; the football and soccer
teams owe them their field, the .
college owes them every blade of
grass on campus, every tree,
every
flower,
the
new
"playground";
these remain
green and alive because they are
part of the blood· vein of the
workei:s who have brought them
into existence.
·
(Promises of reward have been
made to the crew. "Reward" for
· all they have done for the school
- for the first time in two years,
the crew will have heat during
the winter. Heat. As barbaric as
it seems, the administration has,
finally, decided after two years
that heat will be provided for
grounds men. They may seem
untrue - it is worse because it is
true.) This is not reward, it is
·-·-~
.
1
When the grounds crew is
gone, when the blood of Art
t
Campell, Willie Lewis and others
have been spent and we the
students
have ignored their
t
endeavors, it will not be the
bosses who are at fault, but
rather
us,
because
we arc
6
inhuman.
,
REDMEN
from
8
After
the
kickoff·
a Jim
Wilkens to Bill Paccione pass fell
short and was intercepted and
returned for a TD. Kaiser passed
for the
2
extra points and Marist
was behind 30-20. The clock ran
out on the Vikings and their
perfect season.
*****
SECURITY
from 3
everyone would be aware of the
procedure
when crimes are
committed
on
campus. He
emphasized the importance of
this awareness since, in the past
police• who've
been
called
onampus have invariably been.
bothered
in some
way by
students.
FNVlRONMENfAL
from
4
The order requires that as the
government's 600,000 cars come
up for replacement they
will
be
replaced by autos that can run
on non-leaded. fuel eqtirely. By
1974
the
Genera
I -
Services
Administration says the Federal
Government will no longer need
to buy any leaded fuel.
Nixon
appealed
to
the
governors of all 50 states to take
similar actions with regard to
state-owned vehicles.
*****
DRAFf
from
6
deferments are issued for limited
periods of time, generally for
one year, and that it is the
responsibility of the registrant to
submit documentation
for an
extension of his deferment. In
the absence of documentation,
the
new
Local
boards
to
promptly
reclassify registrants
into
I-A.
This
means
that
registrants wishing to continue
their deferments should submit
the supporting
documentation
to their local boards.
*****
..
::~~•
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..
,.·•:
RAY.CLARKE
LESCHENERY
Cbnl
on
4