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Part of The Circle: Vol. 11 No. 5 - October 11, 1973

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THE-.·

l
VOLUME 11/NUMBERs·
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MARfST,
COLLEGE. POUGHKEEPSIE.
NEW
YORK
.

.
•·
--
.
:-_
OCTOBER ~1. 1973.
•·.•P6li.cy.1Joc1rll:AGCtfpfs)•··'

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/
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PAGE2·
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__
TIIECIRCLE
OCfOBERll,1973
BlaCk Students ReaCt

To ·Marist Attitlldes
By Mitchell WOllams
&

• Deborah Turner·
responsible.· So now. the trend in from
.
the Business Office is
recruiting
has gone to the , received that there is an unpaid
younger
.
people
.
getting out of balance of his or her tuition. Now
• high school. People whose minds the black student must come up
Canvassing the black students were made up of getting a formal with the money or get in contact
ot
Marist College brought to· education away::froni home. In. with the
.King
or HEOP
surface
attitudes

of these
other words, not too experienced
,
repres~ntatives to find
·out
what·
.
students toward Marist College. in dealing with rights.
.

they intend to do or what w~ the

They told what it was like to.be

There were promises made,· holdup. When the student goes to
black on the Marist College but
.
never quite fulfilled. For the Business Office himself to see

campus.
instance, a commuter informed Mr. Camoilii or Mr. LaRose, they
The black
:
students
feel me of. her problem when first are usually blocked by Mrs.
powerless to influence any type of entering Marist College. <II came Strickland, the Business Office's
policy on Marist College campus. to Marist on
a
Model Cities • interrogation· committee.
. _.
.
Power in the way of innovating a
scholarship·. The first year I was


"Before I came to Mat.ist
curriculum related toward their· promised
.
(ull tuition,·
.
plus College,

the counselor
.
infoqned
interest, such as
_more
black transportation
..
money.
for methatMaristhadmore.tooffer
--
studies and using it as a major gasoline which
·-was
.
9 cents a

in its curriculum than most
instead of an elective .. The one mile, li.uich expense
:ar
$5 p·er colleges. Aft~r.enrolling,-1 found
course relative to black studies is week.· The only thing. I
.
received

out it wasn't true," says a student

J
..
.'.'Black
America" and is. taught. for.my firsnwo semesters was JrorirGreenhaven.
.
. . .
. .
.
.

:by
Mr:
Coleman who· commutes $95 each'. semester; accounted

In·
the·
past,.
bl_ack· students de,!lingwith unpleasantries, they still remained here.if they were
from New York City. Most of the·
.
towa:rd my gasoline expenditure. would confide or confrontHEOP ignore you instead of meeting disconbmted. The·answer was "I
_.
blac,k students have· enrolled in. I was- fold, there· wasn't
any
.
with any probl~m.s·they·~ad
been ~ituations headon." .
.
...
have already established myself
.the
course~ but it. startds
..
alone. in • m:oney left.. The next year.I had to
.
expeiie11cing
in hopes they wouJ.d,

Another

·problem
which: the.,·: here
·
in.
·
the way of needing
·•c.omparlsori.
to Vassar College's contribute··
$500
which
.
I ,·. was....,
reme~y: the·,
.situation:
;When
:black
students feel isa very valid·

financial aid and a major study.•!
-
.
·
black·. studies ·:program .. The·
·.
aware of. After'. two· weeks in : ne>thing.
hai;>pened<the,...students
one· in seeing µiost. oUhe white don't feel·like. going through_Jhe
·,
Black_Am~rica course.: is oilly
a
.s,chool,
lJiriajly contacted the • investigated cin\their own and students getting work.:.study
jobs:'' pre>cess
of re::establishing myself

.CCne~cJ!~;_ina
hay~a.<!k/':,
.•
• .•
.. ··
::ModeLCitie~
Agehcy·a..rid asked fo:u,nq out--~ho
:man~ge?
what 'file maj()rity
·of.
blacks
:c~~e
• oelsewhere·
and. }()se credits::by

.T~e
..
new;.black'.
studen~
·which
..
·why ,I

hadn't received funds for
.
deparµnent.
.Vpon
,
seeking.· out from poor·orlo\\'.•income
families


tra~erring. Atleasthere I know
.
.
enter:'.:Ma.r~:,:·eyefy::·.
~eitjester
.books:·They
told me there wasn't, the inilividuals, the students still
.
where
a
car
.would
be
.a·-Iuxury.
.
who
:ahd
where'I'm going to get
:a
.
:
·seer.n~9t;ie.youngerandrounger. • ,any·
money
-for·
books.·
iit
the
.
encountered
.frustrations
and.
·There
isiio't-enoughjobs created.
·nasse1;.
sometimes it·--maY.
·be


Their-: concept>of~:·ca.¢pus
.life--.-.budget.
'I
had: to get my own• hassels.·.''I
~ve':ehco~tered
on:campus
·for
th~m and:most
,
..
fromthesameones/but
you can
seems:(oQe·socializiggbut
:soon-
bc;>oks.
No notice of any kind was hostiliti~s when it came to find it.,difficult tn'Wg-.to

get
..
Oe-:·sure
.the· ·hassel
is
~Jy~g
. ·.
lea_rn;fro~ tliEfj~ltJ>f:;Iil!$H.el'.Ill
.eyer· sent
;
to::
JiiY

house,
--
~o I·

respons_ib~it!es·
after- confronti~g money.;·
t_o
.'
get baclc h9me on
:
· .
somewhere
·else
for· Y~ll.'.'

• . .

.
gre.qes_tl,tat_thert'l·IS
muchmoretoi
.borrowed
mon.eY:
from relatives. s9me
,
mdiv1duals
•,
about' their.· certain weekends or holi~ys;.:
:. :
Through. ~ese dealiJigs, black
..
.
.
l\1aI:,isf~J:ieif}otiali;i~g:
~:Af:9ifo'.
;This~
why! b~·came so skeptjcal,, inability· to handle my problem,":;
:
Several,.· black students "!ere
·'
students. have •built up·defenses ..
.
tlll!e, ..
W~::
~e:w:
;
!res}µnen:
'.wer~
.
:
of.@ytltjn(Mcµ-ist had
to
offer. says one of the black student.~. "A·
..

asked
•if.•
they

would
i
coDS1der
•.
:.
After.

a"
while/ these•· defenses

.
old~r,~t!t.er
;.~~ ~~if:.ou~
ill:
Jlie::::
There's::
'.ilQ,;'
c9mm.unicat!on • or
••
new tactic
..
is b,eing ~Pl~~ent~,
·.
attending
.another
coll.ege
.if they
i
~egin,'
to
errupt~' ~In
.UJ!,ison

they
stre.~t:!o!'-·l:l;•while::•$o'th~t.when
.:yiviclil!Struc;tions
on what
is
to be , cut~ff of.the fmanc1al md,wh1ch.··•ha:d·
access· to'• money.····.T11e_.,..•.
say;.''Weared~lingw1tha bl11ck
theyt<ljch,!'.tJt~~;:
tij~,:;.~gs/tgey:~i
_d«;>ne;Jui~
..
qi.my
.,:pr9mi~s
are
,
hair beeq
.
a hassel. for a11 of-
~
::r~spol)se
:
:was
:
a
.•.
defini~
.
fes:
.
,
·pl'!rspective
but after.graduati~h;, •
sa\V~a~penl.P:g.,~t~B:1'.~
!?r:~~El:9;;:.r~neg~<I,~on?
• , ·\:.
.
_
. .
.
~lack·. stude,nts,:• say~ an.other: '.rhos~ ~tu~ents wh<, were 1uruor~1. we· have: to, deal 'Y1th a
·white
.•
.
th~Y-:.~~~t:: r~~.~1v~.
-:;,P:.~t<:w.~s
>.r
..._T~~
·:.~greemep.t
•.
of full -t111!1on


stud~nt,
·~
.older
blac~ s!udentof ox: sen~ors.
were aslced why, they
•.
,
.
world!"·
... •.

•.

• ••
.
PfOg11S~<:{:~~Jh_eII1;-•1;~;,;~~c~l]-;durigg::o~E!!sfr~J:un~
year 1s a
·~aris~s9:1d;'!~~rest•emstobf:.a.

,
_-
••
__ •
·:·
:"

.< -
·
.
a1<,l,c;b,ooks;;:,.~~c~,
Jh~Y.}fcll~eQ;:Jl·.::::f~ce;:-:,.The:student..1s-accepted
kmd of mvisib1lity t.hat Marist.

.
.
.

.
• ·rU~~us·:~'!'heY::~.a.g~:,.d~~cls.\'Oif;into.th,e'l{ir_ig'of~.Ofprogr~
..
<;ollege_.a~~~--:Tl1ey:_have,;a..·
_.
..
,.-·.
.·.·J;
..
u-.·
.··N·
•••
....
·I.·
...
o··.
-.R\.:
...
·.·.t·-··E.'A·.
:G.·
:.u·
.E·
..••.
. .
the
;
;facillty2;'.Qr::.
w;J:io~yer
._.:;was,;;
and beforeJhe year. ends;· a notice

way of ign_onng
students: In their
..

_itflftY-~if?JJ.~:r
·rpfi~
·M~~ch
''
•.
··BARGAINfeox.
·~'~tt.ti~tit:?i~~ii'~t,Pcl~;~.f
tfll:-

,.
~4f
M~ii~lre;r.
The
.
annals
.
of history will' blueprmt<the
:
pl~i1':
of- ultimate
.
proof,
.
_..
.·-

,


·
..
•.··


·
·
.

••
• •

(/'

••
• • •



··
·
pr9bab)y: depict'.the: era of·the~i•li~r~tiori:arid_Jo
p\ace a primary
.
,
10·
the following ~eries,of'ar-
.•.•
:,i.-(.acrOSS'
fro.m
Mid-H1i'dsor1
Chevrolet).
sixties as the decade in whicMhe
.:::emphasis':'<,
tiiE•.;,;,education.
~tides,
working. froiri.;the
•aoove
.
.
-


-
2-
0
--_
.
••

.,

• •••
.
Black ~9phro(Airit?rica
.became>
Traditionally'.white America h~d
_
p.rerriise,
Bfacf
studen~
.
o(piis
•.
,
·G
R
l:'AJ.
us
ED
·ctOTH
E·S
·
·
a
:~iaple:'•a~Jive.-·
f~t!!e.::'in·
0
the:,Ji~!ted
:::,
the:.:> opJ?ortunit,ies
..
c~lle~,ewill
·a~tempfto'clarify
the
:
_
~.
·1:,.
"
,.
·
. •
-
soc1~tY.
.
.;:~eginning
.
with the
-
ava~ble.:to Blacks m order to

new m~s"
th.a~.
haye ~volved .
_.

.
_.
_


,!
.~-:>-·
-,
~
·
.
.
·
~
-
primer• activities of, the· fifties;::continue:
:t.he
..
philosophy of
.
over the:pas_t
t-:.11
years regarding
' •
.
_.
·



•.
·,
.
.
·
•••
f:!futi~~!~~:~w:~:4J~~io
m:
:.
;~~;¼f~::~ra1;ii~~~,~~rh::.
:ei:.
·:~1in~ritr-~:~e.
0
J~~ftj~:·


·<:
AT:>
LOW·
-·P
.RICES:
-
a~ive:deQiariqs::This decade also the only• gnesJocenter the white perience,
Marist: ~ollege will

• •
·
• ,
·
~
• • .

,
.chariged;';'.tQ.Ef):C!)il£8P.ts-::~f;:_civj.l
learhi~g:-·•:.i11'~tft~Ho11s.
This .}pt~vide t~e:settingforanaiyzmg
·.
••

.•
,.-fo.(ga.ls
a.
nd .g·
uy·
s
rigl;l~.:)!~or,1cally-.the-que·stfor;.',
p9pµlar;~ti~o.ry
..
permeated· the ·"these_pei:tinen~areas;.~he abOVE:
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
th9s.e '·\inalie[!a~l~.
r~hts;"
w~~
a . SQciety:.~or..:.~W-1Y
..
Y.~rs.
,Blacks.·
,s~mary
.
~hc_>uld.,
s~rve. as·, the.
sl(!:W;
b~tt~r
:Pr!>cy5$.'.9f:'.
deception. were:f~e.r
remoyed'. from _.the
'-.b~s~:f~r:
t~is_
~tta~ysIS.
Hop~fully
·
..
•Open
J
9.-fJ~es.~Frj.,.
11 ~3·
:Sats.

•;
and degradation/However, once educational'· structures by the the results will be

a· •:fruitful
.



••

.
;

. ·
. : . : _
,
: .
.
....
i
the· Black_.
l~a~~r.:slJil?_-~a\'.e:
J~e
..
dPllb!-5.
p4lce~
,.in,.
their
..•
minds; ·• ~9ntr:t~utic_>I?,
_;
t,~: J~o~h::::
faces r'
~==-============z==============:=================~
masses

"of
·Black
: people a

these doubts promulgated by. the
..
enat?ling ci:1tic;al.
a~entIQnas well·
:.. :<Jefµtitivepi:ogr~m
to fo.llow;
theY. myths
.
of their in~ellectuat.as
.~~Wcism
..
where:rieeded.,m~e::
.
.
--
..
.
.
.
.•.
.
.

suddenly, became
,.coriscious,".of·
deficie11cies! F.'orAour hundred, f.utur.e-.. <>f,
·.our·,
educa_tionaL'ei-
.,.'.
The:'111£a5Ure,
·
..
contrib~tl<>h--:-grea.ra~d-sm.al.L:
their potenti~I:,
'"power:'..'.
.In ihei_. years; Blacks were told-that tlley
.P~rience
~e-~
i!_lJhe abj.lity_to,side
.
.
.
.
.
-
·.
·
.

,_
.
.·.· , ; ,
·. ·,
Wl:iethe~
the Pauhst
·keeps
p~~t, B!acks relied on ambiguous were _psycholo~cally as well
~
.step
·
'?~
,
i>r~v10~;
;Eli;-rors,.,
.irll-:: •
,
•..

,Of
an
Ol'def'
·.
·.•
.
boys off city streets by rest or-

civil .rights la.ws and amend- physically

different •• This
:p}ementmg
.nec~ry
;,,_changes
·:
·•......,;
..
·.·~
......
·.•·
&e·
'n· --·.•.::
...
'.··.i·."·.,-g
..
·•
a
..
nd r.e
...
~pla.
nti.ng·•
a
....
c
..
i
..
t
..
y P.
a.·r,.k
.
. inents. The· pyrrhic'
·victories
of "damning"· of tlie-.'
race slowly -~h~nev.~r)~
ij.de¢iii~
hece~sazy.
■ ■.
~•
a,n::;
LUIR
.
-
the menibe
.····f
th'·'
"gu·rd

••
·.·••
-

·· ··
•· .....
,
• ·
••
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..
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?rwmsawardsforaremark-.
::sticlrasthel:tir~·M!rtin"tuttier:
·' .,·;;
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·
·
·
i11t11e·rne-~:
a~l~J~s:ries-he'is r~sppnding
··'l(ing ·-Jr.-, Jdalcolni(··x;··:H:Rap·
• •
~ay~
8
,{)robl~rn?;:
,

<
Just
W 8
":~J
0
,~alk?>·
~
'
,
::.· .:
of
it!fnt'i
:<
:~;'
;.·t<?
the. n~e?s·ash~ sees. them·.
·,
Brown and numerable others-laid· ·•··"''"
-
·.:::--, .-' •

·,.
~':,
,,:.
"'-
.. ·
.
,
.
,
..
·.·.
. ·
..
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,·.
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..
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,

,Wherever,
h·~ servesc.:..fn
a
·.·th.efoundati.'ord.o.
rB1a.·c1c.·pe·~
...
o<p·_1e•s:
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1.n'the b~··g·•.·,n.ning,.·tlfe.re
w.a·s.e:_.·,·.·.
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..
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...
'.s
......
o.r.an.
·,.n
..
·.n.er.·.c
..
i.ty·.sch.
o.
01.·
....
-.
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.
,
future·success-in,Arrierica':'··
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..
·,
..
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::oJi·fouf~cpiiriciples:l)·~laclc
:.
·
.·.-

· ..
__
,Need1n.fo~.cmatio.n?.-·.
: .. •
"
"
b
,.peopJe"reallzecLthat-they.
must
•;;~\.,;,
.
.-.>

"·:
·
..

·
·· •
-•
·
..

·
c·~
have
thtfsiibstantiaf
sliare .ui'the'
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;
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{m
C>rder
of
pries-ts
.~M:»-~u!~.:
:';;;S,~n.i.qr,
ci,iiz~nsj~r?upior
in:·
.
••
··formulation
of
·po·•·
uc1es aif~; .. ,., ..•
,
...
~,
..
,
...• ,;
. .
•:. -
.
.
. .
'
<<be.
·abl~to
..
·me.eflh.'e.··rie_eds'of
:;
radio, televi~i()_n):>r
publis,hing.
·,.-
..
-.
: th~ welfa~~(2)
~~y
~ho~~~i:· :,:·
'...'
":.,;.-'
'~';-'·}.:';; ··.:}
.· .
. ,. CA.~:~~
..
·>
.·:
,. '.. ·\ .•.
, "· '
.
· the
.r-J:o;i~
A~erican peo'pl~_~s
... ·
t.rye/~uHst•
ismakiryg.ris
own
'.'.°\:
..
' .the
.sole,:dewmunants

of~ their
.:}•'::'.>'_:-
..•
:·.:co.-:,,·
••
- -
,\, •.
,-. • • .
-...
• •
,~
..
,..
.

\hey aro~e-iri·~ac!l
era:-'each·,
,
~ontn~uti9nian~J¢eping alive
..
,

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PAGE3
Davis' Fifth Play
'' -·-Metanoia
'-'·
.
,
I'
..
ByPaulDarragb
six characters in the play, says
" ... whil~ you are making an
·Bill C. Davis, a senior English appearance on· earth, something
major, has written another play. can happen which .will convince
It will be presented . by Gerry you, that you are the magician.
Cox'sTheatre class. This will be Youarethestrange, phenomenal
. his fifth piece to be performed by combination of magic and
. the -people· of_ Mari.st· College. magician." H~ is speaking to
Everyman Revisited· in the Ray, a young man who invests
.._chapel;·
Dominus, Demon, Dogs, very strongly in Larry's. wisdom.
and Dad in Room 246, ~non- Ray, through Larry's direction,
nelly; ... but not just everyman; at visits a tavern in
'which
an em-
·Vassar
Instituter.
and bittered woman,. Rita, is em-
Celebrating · the First • Few ployed. During her lwich hour,
Months
at
Vassar Institute and· Ray tries to reach her, to touch
• Academy theatre in New Paltz. some remnant area • of tenp
'His most recent.work, Metanoia,· derness. He
is
never really sure'·
will.
be
pe~ormed in the Marist ·_·
why he is doing,this, but he trusts
. ·Theatre on·Noveinber l; 2, 3 at :Larry's
moral• sensibilities
8:30 and November. 4th at 2:30. enough to make an act of faith in
.Walter Borawski, in
his
review his-:-friend:. During these en-
/of Celebratlng_.the First Few counters with Rita he becomes
·Months
said,-j'Davis is"an
ex.,;-
endeared
bf
her 12 year old
tremely poetic young man, and. daughter, Tillie, who, in turn, is
his work at thispo~t in his career
-
desired by. her
.father,
William.
is stamped with the occasiortally Needless to say, tensioµs arise•
brutal naivete • of early. Eugene from ~11 ends.
• .
THE CIRCLE
O'Neill." .
,
.
• .• The '.play. will be directed by
..
:,. Metanoia is a word which Kevin Keenan. The •
parts--
are·
Play~ght Bill Davis
means•a-rebirth, a reordering•of played by Donna Corrado; Bill··
priorities. (It is what St.. Francis Dunlevy, John Lyons; bill c davis, _
• •
experienced after his return frQm Debbie Nykiel· and· •.
Sue Mcin-
the Crusades.) Larry, one of the crow:
.

:
___
E_e.deral.-·civil.Redress
Against State Violations •
By Curtis White
,
one of· the. several• Amendments remedy.-The basid'requisites.are .
OCTOBER
11, 1973
SUC
Constructive
For All Students
By Jeanne Caligiuri
IBM was in need of facilities
.
.
.
and so approached Marist
IB!vf has arnved 10cogmto at , College with their problem.
Manst College but constructively Marist College agreed to grant
foi: all. Syracuse University these facilities to IBM to which
Center is not only a service for Mr. Pettengill seemed pleased
IBM_ .
employees
but also with these facilities and very
quahf1ed students at Marist enthused with the anticipation of
~~llege.Mr.Fr~Pettengill, w~o the year.
.
. 1s _10
charge of
t_his
Poughkeepsie-
Classes are held· five days . a
Km,ston resident Center at week from 2 p.m; to 5 p.m. and
!darISt ~ollege, provided the are open to. qualified students
inf?rma~1on about-the Syracuse who are seeking higher education
Umvers1ty Center.
., •
in the fields of engineering and
It· seems that IBM
has
been the science.
flfi:~g p~ofessors from Syrac~e
Mr. Pettengill is quoted to have
• University down to PoughkeepSJ.e said "We would never want to
to educate their employees to • com~ down here and be com._
obtain· their masters and doc- petitive." This is only a slight
tora~s. In previous years since indication of how appreciative
_
1953, .classes ~ere held at _the Mr. Pettengill is to,be using
~
Boardman Road Complex. There facilities at Marist College. ,He
was also a center constructed on • also expressed great optimism in
the_ Vass_ar College campus working in conjunction with
- dur10g the years of 1971-1972. Marist College co-operatively.
, The. reason
f
qr the prohibition.• of the federal Constitution must the facts _that the police .officers .
~gainsti!le~alsearch angseizure be violated in 'relation to the in11-aded
• a citizen "person,
. Is that it IS th~: only._
effective· individual. (i.e. such as is hj>uses,t papers and effects"
..
d~terrent Jo police rmsconduct. presented here underthe 4th-14th without wamint in law. The facts

.
Linkletter y. W.~er, 381 U.S. 618, .,,
Amendments, U.S. Const.).
~-surrounding
the incident niust be
6~35. By thIS IS ~eantthat iil_ . Jurisdiction means that a clearly set forth. Also, that the ..
su~h •
~

procedure, ..
mnocence·~
or ..
written statute must read that the. • police· acted. ''under • color of. the
guilt IS neve~ th~ q11~tion b_ut, , ri~t to
SU~
in:the federal courts . statute, ordinances, regulations,
..
r~_t_her
'Yheth,ei:-
tl!e_
p<>lic:e
action e.~~--~or_tlie
y1ola~ol!
prl:!Sent~. · custollls -~d. usages,'' of New
• .w~ Iega,
in
~xecuting the ~earch .
,··.IJ!·;
a_ _Fourth•··•.
Amendment
··:York·.cll]:d.
of,~e:pmic:@lr,,slJ;>-'/ .,.,, .~.
and se~ure'. . ~"'· -.. _ · .. •
question federal jurisdiction' to • town or village wh~re the. search" • -
. Today, and s10ce June.I, 1961, sue must be asserted under 42 or seizure occurred. • .•..
.

·
. the . ; ~O.Ufth_ . _Ainendment U.S~C;,
S~ction1983, which is set
Section 1983 of '.fitle 42, for-·
• prohib!tion agamst illegal sear~ out above; and also added are
2.8
merly Section 1979 has a lor,g •
and seIZure has been enforced 10 . U.S.C.;_
Section 1334,
2.8

U.S.C., history beginning ·April 20~
• 1871
..
• the states by reason of the Due Section• 1331;_
They provide, . in However, in chief, • it means •
Process Clause of the Fourteenth material part:· "The district
whereby Congress exercised the •
Amen~enttotheConstitution_of ~o'!rt~ _shall· have . original power vested
in
it by Section (5)
• the United States. Mapp v. ·Obi~,· JurISdict1on of-....any
civil action . of the Fourteenth Amendment to
367. l!·S· 643. The rules of this authorized by law to. be com~ enforce the provisions of that
.dec1S1~n
dictates r~~easeJrom :menced by any person: . •. :-, Amendment's "Due Process
~etentlon of ~Y citizen if the.
• ''.Toredressthedeprivation, Clause
1
'
and "Equal Protection
search. and. seizure, ._no matter under- color of any state law Clause , of. the· law." Senator
• what 1t discovered, was . not statute, . ordinance, regulation, Edmonds, Chairman qf the
reasonable lll!de~ the vanous custom or usage; of any right • Senate , Committee
on • the
. r~les- . estabhsh!n_g . probable privileg~ or immunity secured by _Judiciary, said concerning this
cause. Ker v. Califom1a 374 U.S.< the Constitution of the United section:
· •
.
23:·.
~-·•
· ·.:.
_ _
Sta~ ..
or by·any act-of Congress • "~Th~
f~ section ~s one that I
Th

_
... •

• Many c1t~ens are so releas~: provid10g the equal rights of believe nobody objects ~. as
. e new Syr~cuse University_Center at Marist.
Katz v.·Umted S~tes,
389
U.S.. ~iti~el'!
or
all'perso~ within the def~gt_herightssectired_bythe

sh·
· ·. · · · ·
347; Henry
V;
United States, 361 JurISdiction
of the Umted States." Constitution of the United States
Out
Lt',,

ofl'
·1
U.S.·18; Wong Sun v. Uni~-
-~c~mp~int~gainstcitypolice
wheritheyar~aS$8fied·bystate_·
• __
.,--
,.
_.· _· • .. · _
• :._._._.-_· . __
.-._-•
.. ·
·Y.-:_
Sta_tes;
371-U;S
. .471; Johnson v. offic~r • •. for ... ·., , allegedly ,law-~oi:
under color-·of any state
.
. .
·
· .. ·
Uru~~~tes, 333 U.S. IO; Kery unreasonablesearchand'seizure,
law,anditisnierelycareyingout


-
-
·

Califorrua, 374 U.S. 24; Mapp .v. or for deprivation or _other . the-principles of the civil rights.
By Father Leo Ga}Jant..
little consideration. •
Ohio, 367.
U.S. 643 ~d a host of Constin.ttional
rights, is sufficient . bill. which . lias' since becm:ne

~ - • .. - •
.• This'. la~t item reminds me. of
oi,ters .. lJl these msW!,ces th~ 'to·state a cause of·action under-.: part of.the Constitution,''.
vjz.,
the
Things I wouldn'.t have. known .. my cowardly silence and inaction
Supreme • Court observed that federal statute. : Because such , Fourteenth :Amentnient.

. if T hadn't read the Long"
Island CQricerning a vecy real social
· su,chla~l~ssp~lice action are not. police action, must be performed - • Its purpose _is plain from the Newsday la~ week: The,Severith. injustice •.. !_.
haven't ·_backed the
petty • mdig~ties but
·_
outrages. under· color of state statute (state.•· title of the'legislati!>n, "an act to- Day ~dventists~ who don t smoke· -l~t\uce 1;>oy~9tt,
a~-I di~ ~.he.
gra~
Terry v. Ohio, 392 U;S .. 1. , .
__
. arrest
statute)
within the· enforce the provisions, of the · or;drink, rarely -co~ume meat, boyc~tt-~ti!tg the,9elie1,o~.
µ,.µt
. ~erefqre; for such. outrage a--meaning: of - federal statute • Fourteenth Amendment to the • spicy foods, coffee, ~nd ~. are•· of_ the. -vm.e 0:111,Y
.. o~~e
m:
four
citizen h~ the _legal
_nght to sue making every person who, imder Constitution of the United States, much below the national ~ance.r . .Y~rs._ ·· .. '. :· .. •·... .. . : . • . • ,
any police, or;:P4?liceman for.color
of
a~y-state statute, or-
and_ for
_other
purposes.'·'.-~~··:-;
.
~ ·-.-~s~rted-a-letter~t_he,.~cle
. p~rs~nal .damag~ 10 the ,federal·. dinance,. /•, :regulation,
etc.,·· • Allegation of facts constituting a
. Durmg
I
the
depression, Jast Y.ear, !:>~t
.never, fµus~9 1t.-I
dISti:iCt court;, Ti~le . 42_
·U.S.C;, deprives -any United States •. deprivation wider color of state
su~rmarket
shop~rs pushed .. kn~w-
~~~ -~r~
a.
-f~w:-.~~!}ts
, Section t983, which •· reads ·, as citizen of his Constitutional rights authority of a right guaranteed,, -~h~ll'.
carts past 800 items. Today qµi~tly }>oyc~~g l~tt.uce.
µ1
_the
,,~ follows: .· "Every person _who, .Iia_ble to
tlie·
party injured.
See:
by the Fourteenth• Amendment.- it is 14,000; part_ of th~ super~ -.ca.fetena an~. -they _put, ~e ...
to
und_er c~lor of· ~-statute,
or- Section~:
'140;10,
>:
Crimir;ial. satis!!es to that extent the· m~ket strategy IS designed !O--~~e.
'111Ellr
_small.-n~bers.
dinance, regulation,. custom,. or.· Procedure Law, NewYork State._·
, reqwrement
of the •· section. . take a larger
P~
of tne pe~~le.s ·'!OD
t Jtaye
,ll)}lch
of an effe~. rd
; . usage, of any state- or-territory . Title 42
u
.s~c., Section:1003
--4th-.. , Douglas v Jeannette 3l9 u.s:- 157
~-- budget •••
Com~
~tu. Gillimp .)iJt~ to sho~t 1t softly no!l,: there.
; . , _sµbjects, .,or·causes to.
be
:sub-
H~
·.Mt~dments;, U.S. Const.; j.161-162,
63S.Ct. 877, 880, B7.L.Ed. : attacked a mmtre ,d with an ax.,must __
.pe_ $l~~t .-~d ..
, !a~uJ:ty .
;

j~,
any citizenof_the United .Monroe v._ Pape, 365,
U.$.·167
.. __
!_•·
_1324;
Here, a petitioner would be _because he couldn t get a table,,l~de.rs. who_
c~~enUgh~~-~l
• . States or.other pe~~n
within
the _ The reason
~by.:
tt.ie--police, .. on somF ground; )for.: t~e .. right away •••
AJ?:~~-~r,.
pame f~I\_by ~hecl¢ig
~i~
.$.!\GA.~
-~-if
_jurisdict!on thereof . to .. the
.
officers. must alone
be
named· as_.
, guarantee.:against unreasonable : , Watergate
is
~
Rosemary ,_s.
:.we,_ai:e.
tisµlg !10n-1llli9n
:l~ttucie,
d_epr;iva!!on; .of
1
any ,,rights,,, defendents . -llre .. because> searches and ·seizures contained Babx. •• ';l'he campesinos. i_n-.tlius crushing -~v~z. and_ ~e
.. privileges, .. _or- h_nm_unities
. Municipal CoTT>Oniticins,
are,
not
in
tne Fourth . Amendment . has
Califorrua have to use a cortita,.a_:
.,P:~f:
W,:.;
-~'!--
the'!.; ~le-
J~r
. s_ecur~ ·by the. Co~itution and within ~bit • of statute'
~g
beenpi{ld~ ap~li~~le. ~.the ~te • short 16 in~ hoe, causing them
to·:
J~ce-~
~_u.fVlV~
.It
s9, _we
i!aw~, s~all -be ~ble. to the pa~·· every ''person'.' who .unqer color·_·
..
·. by . reaso~ ;-of,
. the-. Due· •Process·· . •.
be • bent•, over • almost !1~ety _~
sl!oJJld.-
~eJ!d . a , petition . through
mju~m_an action 11t
law; suit 10 of any state· sta~te; ordinm,ce,:-_
Cla,use· . of·_ .the Fourteenth
degrees. It is 9nly in -Gallf~.a-- ~very-f!oor
.an4
P~
.a-~~plete
equity,_,. or;,., o,t~er , proper_ regu]ation,•etc., deprives7"any·: .Amendment. Mapp v. Ohio 367. that the . growers have not· _!:>oyc9tt.
, • : , ' < ·· -:· .. -,.. .
~
_ proc~g
for r~~·",.
,.·;.::·.\ .United states- citlieri ·~of any',:.U.S/643.
-;:...
, :\.., . .. , , ._replac~_~eco':il~ wi~~e long-::: ,In.:o~.
~ruggl(l·
(9r s~
_in-
, .·: • · \: : :W:
oi:~~r,
for ll •
..
~1~en, to, COD?,·.
CollStitutional
right. liable. to the • • -1Jtere can b,e •no. doubt at least' : , handled~oe.
It
!5
a ~e.r1ous
_health _
Justice.
-:~e . .
~9t
choose:.
only
;mt1nc~
'. -~~de_r,1 ,a~tion ,':two~ party.injured. 42 u.s.c., Section. since Ex·ParteVirgiriia; 100 U;S; • h,zar~· • causmg . permaneQt: ,causes·.
tJlat
·
ap~
to. -~. 9r
,
.. :req~1~~ ai:e::required.,{lt.a::1983.:;
.;,./· _-' > .\
;,
· ·.
.
.. 339/346:-347,
25 LJl~d.-.6~6,
tliat ·.disabling_bac~ problems due ~o .~enuµi~_liWe.Ofus.Ifone.!)rother
.f~e!'3l,questie>n,·p)Jlllisdiction·.;Jf the
,.complaint'.alleges.'.the·
.. CongI"esshas:power-to:enforce
this,prjmitive and barbaric tool _1s.~xplo1te:1,
~~_we are..a,11
ex-
te>
federal court •. ·:·. ·:

... , l".equired' requisites, •itJs·
un-
:.:
,
Continued on
Page
g.
. whicb . ~as -developed. whe1;1-
ploiteg. _Id like to
~e.
some
, ::\:.A:fe~e~~:qu~o~_means that··necessary:Jo pursue•'_any.
state·
•• ·, •
· •
••
humanhealthanddignitywereof
shouting here. and not too s~.
•·'"''. ....
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•.
PAGE4"
,
.
111ECIR.CLE
Letters
To The Editor
I --
··EditorlalS










































.
:-
PAGES
TIIECIRCLE
OCfOBERll,1973
Marist ·Begins_ Smith Street· Tutoring
_
-.J>rogram In Poughkeepsie
,
.....
In -the basement of one of the
buildings, within the rows·-of
identical buildings of_ the Smith
St~eet :_ Proje~ts, __
groQps of
children gather every afternoon.
They are hoping for their time to •
be £µled .with more than ·just·
street· gam_es • or. ··playground
hours in a little square o( asphalt
• · CQvered
with broken glass. From
',. 3:30
to
5
p.m. they wander bet-
..
ween rooms and· ·oooks and
basketballs in--the. basement
community ceriter ·under the·
,
.direction of Mr: Harold Brilliant.
The Youngest children,._
ranging
from two to six:' years old; sit at
round tables holding books they

. cannot read waiting for an over-
.. worked· staff member to_·spend
one '. of his" scattered attentive
."'·momen.ts"".ith
them.
A few volunteers from Marist 1>oughkeepsie community. For
have been reading stories and most of the volunteers it is their
directing simple art projects with first contact _with black children
this youngest group on Friday
and has become one of those few
afternoons. The room in which li~g and learning experiences
they work soon fills as • other which ever·_ materialize beyond
children notice the activity and the realm of college jargon.
slowly filter into the group. By
If
you have some free af-
the end of the afternoon both ternoonsandwouldliketotoucha
Marist students and the children. segment -of • the community
finish the qay together in the gym· usually ignored by. this ·campus,
sharing snacks provided by the : • contact Chris Liska or Jim
center.
Keegan at Gregory House. The
The college community· has children range in age from two to
~ra~tionally, an.cl usually . with twelve and th~ activities· vary
3•1stice, been criticized
for from reading to basketball.
.·detaching itself from· the com~ ·•
_There
is a need for any interested
munity at large. The work with person, if even·it is just to provide
the Smith Street children is a transportation for those with the
perfect outlet for the energies time to offer.
Marist students who are capable
of
contributing
to
the
fJoVer }£.xperience Extended
'.
·,
.
--
iTO ,lnclude Summer· Work
·-·:'.
·•._.·
::·
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. • ,.,
•-·
. •
·.
• .· ·'.
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Smitb Street School students take advantage of tutoring/program :,.
-


_ > "
.
_.·
.. :·
• ••. • •
• ••. • •
•• •
ByJaniesMackin·
mosphere there bore traces of growntoo,andformetomeasure
-.
.. .... ·. . . . . . . . . . ·· .
. -
.. . -• ···.
... . .
_•... _
, _·
. . . ._ .
• resemblence to an overstaffed the success • of the • project in
,
.•..

_, ~."E'
_·_
...
fl
__
}
,.·:.p·
· ..

..
-.·-
__
·,H'
.: --·a··
·1·.1···•·e
..
a·-...,
. , ,
For those of you Who'.'are
un-
cattle-car,
hell-bent 'for -the
terms of what ·effect I've had
V
••
famiUar_with the '.l)f.)ver:
Pl:;iins., s~aughterhouse and. filled with· would seem to be rather con-
• "" c _•· •• • · • • -
• : .




._ . •
Project,this article:will sElr:ve
as. ,cows.
too immature to have much ceite.d:.
l
more· clearly see the
_
. . ~y-Ruth Marquez • ,.· .
.
Modern Language Department Jn an in~rodu~tion _to.the. q'4~lity,
~t::
meat on the!f, bones. . .

ef~ect this P.lace ana: tp.ese people
·• __ :·: ...
:
>-
. . '.'::.::~"
,'.:..::,"Spanish
and the History of.Puerto -E!xpenence
~ffered_
by ~king this >In re~e~t1011,
·I found m~ny have had.on me, and if this view
The<~ · H.E .o·.P. ~::;;{Higher~:t.,Ric;o,
which
15
a
bilingual course: course. (SeEl,Dr, Mal Mj:chaelson
. _.
g_ood
. friends,. .though I must
of the situation would seem to be
Educ~ tfonal . ~ppofti,;~i.tt:::·;Tiii~'i.s Mrs. Ho!}za1es'
first
yeair for details). Fo~those 'Yho ,are confess to. b_e1!1g
}1. s~range':" to • slightly myopic then.
i
must
.~rogram) of MarISt.CollE!ge_;_ha,s
:-:,teaching:,.in
an iinstitution{ of alr:eadr, ..
acqua~nt_e~
.with.
~he_ mos~. After livmg !n D_over
smce • ·-admit to such an in~bility. If the
. four.: new -agmi!1ist':"ative
.. me~-:',, ~ig!J.el"
lear.nmg,'and already ·she: ':happe_nmgs
of this hVIDg~l~af;llmg
·.,May,_ I am exper1encmg
• .a con- . college· <:onsiders this project to
.
bers
.
~dded to. ,then:.;.
staff :thi,s 1~. ~--m-~at,asset to : our corii~
...
expe~ent, I h~pe you.will re~d version pr~cE:ss (Mal please . ~e a -"right-on" gesture to the
·.y~r,
'A:
body. oCqtiallfie<L
s~.
-~unity.O:Her
awareness will be a al;xmt •~Y-exper1enc~ here with .. e}!'.cuse
my ~1ted _knowl_ed~e
o_f' httle guy ( conci~vedto be a back-
,portiye : personet. T!J.e\ Marist:~j;u,Itura} adyant_ag~ to .. Latin: an at~tl,!d~, that. ~11 .. ~1:1_!1;her
Chem terms)
_m which_
I vacillate
"'.'ai:ds f!lnller s~~ding in his
.
-
., < (;ollElge. ~mmllll!tY. should,~
be .. Amencan students: at Marist . concretize _your app!ec1ation for between feelings of ~tellectual
fields with a hoe m one hand and
: , . __ .. ,;.aware::-ot'what's ,,going, on '..fu.v.College::-,\.
>:
-i ·•
//:,.<:•·- · .. _.-:
. the value mherent ma_ venture·-· ''loftyness" to the C'natives" and _
his plump wife ..
in the other) it is
f
-L~
:":)J;E:q}P;,"~
)1c~n'.t>V!1e<:1ge,l#stifr~:¥r5:~~pniei,cfs'.a•new,fuR~imef.~~c~_.~s.~~~::;
:'.~
.
.:·.'.~::;-:-~t-,
, ...
:":~;
,:~:,.a<µ,n_ira!wn-
...
~or, .\\le~,.,
.!i:~~~
.. :. sa~~Y,_
.. ~s~k~Jl· .Y,~th , all due
,
.;-.purpose:~andwhy we>are.hei:e;'''
0
:c·ounselor:'of:the H.KO.P.:,Mis('.:·:I came- -to-wliere:."I'••am-by.,_•anahonesty,/f.liesoc~al-pressures ·:,resp·ect·•to :th"e hahd·,that feeds
l{noy,1iig}
about_ otfr.:selves·.
·::an~t:,
C
Gomez is ayaila_ble
·nye \days : a : c~ance, , ?r perhaps .~ome '.'.set- are lower here (I'!ll. sometimes _me;· Doyer Plains people ~o not
others):mngs us closer to achieve week for, academic, petsonaLarid tling-out process. With thoughts bored by the less u~tens~ pace)
welcome self-servmg . attitudes
_intellectual:gratification, unity,·
0
c·areer: couriseµrig,ar(d ca~,:.be o~factory work and ~ot summer. but.· the. countrys~d~ --_1s ~he
.
'andif.presented with them would
<
and l!nderstandirig;_:
These new: .coritacted.throtigh:Mr. Fleeks'.;,:Clo/ d~ys
~
talked with Mal and mellow~stI have_
seen ma whd~. ··much prefer to be left alone.
peoplear~he.re; ready
to
help:our· office.: '> : \ ..
• .•• • • _ .• _ _ this ·situation ~as arranged. At_ TherE: 1s a qm~t pleasure. m
Dov~r is n~t re~d_r for B!g
cause;~and y9urs, :only th_rougllc
:· In the past;,rnanY' people of.the least the apartment and money standi~g on the ndge and seel!lg Busmess, Big Pohtics or Big
:coope_rati~m·
and op_enness to ,Marist .. ·c~rnmwiity • have -had were arranged.-The rest was left the whole valley and I: had. q!"te
Edu<:ation. ~-hope it never is.
· allow the -~levati<!_n
to. a higher .. :questions~·concernirie:.
H.E,O.P ... most to me.
· _ . .
forgotten the smell of fresh a1':".
I
. This town 1s small and humble,
plane:·_
.
-
.
_,<·
·
__ ·
¥1.
order_
to clarifY.:
our ~xistence On c_ampus humans. f1g~re h~ves~ent a sll!llmer contendmg m _size; but large and fierce. in
. Mr.>Donald Fleeks 1s the _new
.. ,·and keep the community posted greatly meach others estllll~b~n ~1th !hes and 1t ~eems that the. pnde. The ·roots run deep and
Assistant Director.of H.E:Q;p; A : in. the:neaduture this office wm'of themsel~es although thIS 1s mtelligent ones die last. .
.
people talk proudly of their
"Shaft" ~an, w~oiritends to pull
-
: be •distributing copies
o(
·
the }!ardly_
admitte~ from f~ar of loss .. I. do not pretend ,!o w~te this su~cesses and _ dre~ms. The
·the Mar~t College H.E.O.P. out H.E.O.P .. :,. Guidelines Policies
.
of social standing. This affects a~1cle aboutall the help I have· children are everywhere (as
ofits coritiriuous deficits; witli the and Procedures;: . . '
· · ' •• ev_e11
~e most severely stoned given to ~e people I have had
children usually· are) and the
... help
ol
the FiriancfalAid-Office _· •
;;,
,.,, .
__ ..;;.____;__

and disenchanted.
The at-
contact with, because I have dogs run frees Cruising is the
·-·and the Business Office. He has ...
·.
-
biggest. "sport" -for those un-
1
,--- > established ::a counseling . and
D
T.T
u
.
· · V
d
·
--N-. ·
· ·
married and with cars (the size of •
• ~:tt~ir::,a~iiti
~~i;~i1:~:
.• , •
--c. ,·
._·
~)· . _,·
. _ ·.·.
rge
S • · _
j _
.•
eo :
·
ew
S
~~:
e~!°ec:i~tJ:~
-~1!1r~
~~!
• ning : of re~tic
buagets and
, .
_.
three bars in town, one of which I
proposals fcir H;E:O;P. He and
, •
•••
•..


frequent infrequently,. and two
. his sta_
ff
0
ha_
v_e·
alfe_
·_a_dy_
;orgaru_
·zed_.
..By.).JI1Brady -• .
'also to be found within our own·, their. responsible,
reckless
:tµat. I- avoid. Country music
.a-.
,Cpni~orf .Year Program,
:.
--:·
- --:- •

Marist ~ociety.
rhetor1~ of perso~ who do ~ot naturally moves the people,
geared to help new~tudents in the
The Commuter Union of Marist
The Commuter Union is in the recognize the Mar1st community -. though the young people have
program, help· thE!Ill
adjusfto the _College
has_ long b.een cogniz~nt

process • of establishing
a as a su1?-system of the 9utside • (for my ~ste):more variety.
·general college environment, and of the .~ver_-mcreasmg
J?rc;,pol't!on
creative! objective ~ews syst~m • community.
.
. Scotty m the -I.G.A. thought
help :·those .. indec;isive {of.: their: of commuting _stud_Emts
mre~atlon for the ·m~ernal society we fmd . • -. _ The_ fact ~at Mari~t•s social. Watkins Glen -was immoral and
course, _of study. ::Mr. Fleeks'. to ~e total of st_)ldents,-.
~p- our_s<:lV:~s
!n. Our newly-cr_eated c~ns~1ence 1s. a movmg for<:e· tothesounds_ofmyprotests went
office is located iri. Room no., proX1IDately
47-percent of-~farJSt Au.~1o~V1sual
committee
• w1thm the Mid~Hudson area· is on to askmeiflhad ever read the
_
Champagnat, Ext:' 204. His office students • are . commu~rs; Un- . proposes. that c.yideo
• tap~- . of totally due to the w_illingness
of •. ~ible; Sinc.-e
the house I live in is
.. hours ::.'are ;Monday'':,through
fortun!tely, the.~ ,se~gly;
en- ;S~t1dent GovefD?lent activities many ~t~dents ~o g!ve of them-
situate~ acro_ss the. street from
· .Friday froffi9:00-
5:QO
p.m. Call dless· gal) . between; the . com- (1.e., open meetmgs) as well as selves m te~s of tlllle;_energy; the_ tram station I ani a.walking
:QC
come and .. make ~n ap- m_uters
~~-
t~e -r~1~1mts gets
__
;:o_ther ~e~sworthy .eyents be and
sacr1f1ce . of personal
ti:~m schE:dule and have learned
pointment to seE! him:-•.•· _
...
·wider due ~g-._:~e 1,c~,,-o_f a_· f~edo11_v14eO:~Pe'Yhich.would prefer~nces; these same_peop~e to recogmze e~ch conductor by·
_ · ·\ Mr:·
Sid :Ayers: is also· with dependable ·_-
~0II1~~n1c~t1~r,t!>_
be :~how11.
on momtor_s. at a are ~~11 ~b)e to. tr~srmt their . the way they rmg the departure
H;E.O:P. He was Guidance sys~m.
. . . . . . .~ ...

.. _ Pfev~ously-announced; tlllle for own md1v1duahst1c form- of bell.
Coordinator_ in Roosevelt .. High . Lifesf.lrles.
a~e, .. often •'_!Solated
• .v1e'Ymg_byanyone
intended. The personal conscience. --~ . • •• ," The, social activities in this
schooffofsixteen years .prior to .
fr~~-~~
• prorrune~t ._
social
c<m~
··
-
obvious advantage woul!1
be that_ . , Manr. • group~ , g~ . witho~t area ar~ wid~l~ scatt_ered. I did a
.
his_comingtoMarisfCollege:,Not .SC}e,n?e~~d social·.awar~~ess,: .. Anrone. ~ould be ?C~ve par-
re~ogn1t1on,. wlJich isn't their - lot
of
hitchhikmg ~1th many __
of
. . _. .. only is he involvedwith H.E.0.P;, a!ld • fu.is _·
caµses, -~Rathy: a11d_,_,:!ic1pants,_mcampus
spc1ety ev_en prllllary. ob1ect1ve.
anyway, but the ndes from frumlies, farD1ers,
. • . · :-.-,-·
.
but . he~; is· also••.
the . Assistant. _
d1S~e~s1on
.· ~n • ::the'; ....
comm~I-
if t1!_ey
~J.S_Se.g
a meeting because yet they allude to themselves as firemen, and off-duty policemen.
· · '. . :.\ . · : Diredor· of•-Upward Botina;'and : . le.vet• •at ,w,mcJl_'~e,all
profess to ...
_.
of. confµcting • ~chedul~s.
part of • the minority • tha~ gets··· • With the teen-club, at . present
·"
·the CoordiniitorAdmiilistrati:ir:offWa~~tofuriction;-;The
C<>!icept_of.a:
, The~•~ollege_grap~vme"
would concerned, .I
.
believe this- i~ ___
without a location if its own (my
_·•A91Ilissions:
_He '.strorigly:.Jeels ,s~1al framew~rk• which, ~unc- _not have• ~o·-be, r~lied,upon -by_ contraryto_wh~t should~ going• ap~rtment serves temporarily),
:.tnat Marist C<>llege
~asJ,( great. •}ions. perf~c.tlY;'
llas ;t?e. .~m,g
-of_ stu,?entc;,as
.far as past or. future on'. The obJectives of thlS. ~e:,vs
~
fmd the exubera?ce so common
·,.•-··
commitment to the :people and .-_1deali~m;'-and,:m
re~1tr,, it does events would __
be con<:erned. system 'Yill· not be to pohti<:ize m ~he youth of thlS area and am
• •the community, and he'.s.hefo to • not ~~sttM~y theories of._gro_uP:.'fhese._
tape~ would proy1de t_he. , ~my part1cular_g~oup at M~r1st;· qwte often sch?cked out of my
_-·•
help -co·ntribute,/.his •,part\ in -~
t,,~hav1or
and systems_
~y_parrucs
:yvhoI,e.
MarISt ,.Comm~1ty w1~ • its. sole _purpose IS to proy1d~ a lethargy by ~heir honesty. Each
:
_
whatever
w~y/hf
c·ari/He finds / are,; ,expounded· _up~11
: w1t9 ;the • cw:rent • news on -.a dally •·
b9:S1s
• relia~le means of commurucatI~n .. ?ne_ ~emanding respect as an
. Jhe~genei-al::attitude of. ,working.,. :ri.farISt;
academic ... community;~• while at ~he ~e
~ime promotmg: , to bndge the. gaps between_ life .• 1~dividual, (please reaq: _ per- •
• withsfudents ,aridi staff·a warin •:re~,
.wN}e
w~ e.xpect an!1:~~rnand
_ r.e~~9_ns1~le
P,ro1ects :· ~nd a_c-
.-styles
of
stude?ts,. and to promote son) they a;1 welcome praise and
:.::·and clialle1igfug:one;:and,is'open. ac;syster,9of-aC:fOW!~~i11ty.'to
be,;,_~.t_ivi~.~s
'!ltll_:a~_collllta_bility
••
,
• ·,.somet~gwhich IS sor~lyneeded understanding. We have had a
·<
fr(sei-ve
all of: us{· Mr)Ayers is• • present. m·th~•outs1de ~orld, -we,• ;''. I_t _:
do~sn!t. require . much at MarJSt: unde':"standing.
' cou~le: of .dances,· a few rap-
·':cfocated'inRoom.42-Cliainpagnat;
: don't,s~emJQ
expec,t,~~
:;a,ID~
for
,-_~rna~~~on
: to'. see; that : the -. • If you would like to become.a • session-parties, and a lot of
: ;:Ext.: 284/"•;/<:.,c:;:,.·~::•
•:iX:>Lo<'·./{OJ,l_r~_elv~_s:,·
Oll':(~''';Pe~5;c;,,~~-lJZ~d.
p_()SSib1lit1~s
·o.n~
progr~ are: ·:part of_ the ~earn producing TV.: laughter t~gether., . . . ,
,'.'.'//;Mrs: ,~America"-'Goniales?.is :~~IS~,.SirnilarJyi
..
~Ve.ff,SOC!al-ill.
_numeroru,;:·and\that:
th~ g~n~ral. tapes~,see Jim Brady ~r.)eave •
,_
When !1rst entering my ad-
_... . "::
teacliirig::.four::\coilrses'
tin ,::the ,?~-Whicli-,F,~
.~cr11~1Ze;
as )>emg ,.a ::
g~~
can be, prOm(?ted.;
Thi:i
_
IS a, 'Yor.d.
In
the Commute1 J'mon, . •
.
Continued on Page g
, .i ..























































































I
(
. PAGE6_
111ECJR.CLE
OCTOIIER
11,
19J3
High On Sports. -.. The Other Guys

-


the Intramural ___
(?ff!ce (D-216).
B~ John ~ch_
Jay has set out
to
encourage the
_
Sien~ and Brooklyn.
· Deadline for sJgiling up will_ be
THEOTHERGUYS
rest of the
team
by giving that
TlllSWEEK~MARIST
Quarterback Ed Bonnett ran MondayOctoberl~. Theracewill
Th •
--=--
•• •
tbl-
--t· -
h
• extra added effort in practices
SPORTS
for three touch~owns and ~ed
_ be held on Thursday October 18 at
ere are some a_ e es w ose • -
"
chin ,,
th

_ for ·another and setback· Nigel .
Startin _
point of the
names are always m the papers and
psy
g
~P
e team
TEN YEARS AGO - Ray-- Davis iled u 100 ards rushing: 3.30 P·~·
. _ g
for either leading the team in ~efore each race. Jim McCasland Blanco of Brooklyn .Poly nosed .
Map• t ecfue / handed New race . will be m front ~f
Cham--
scoring or finishing first in a race is th~ t"o_tl}ehl_'
guy"· J1f came to out Al Ginsberg of Marist Colle~e ~~ven
~
34.7 gEastern • Club pagna~ '1:1~ ~tinw:1
fo~ :1_
e
and.then there are those who do _Mans
wit
~o prev ous_ cross as the
Red
Foxes dropped_their Football Conference loss.
_o!g~
0 .
M da
' just their basic jobs in a quiet country experien~,- but m two first cross country meet of the
. ___
. _·.five mile ~ike race on _on
Tl{
steady manner and often go years_ he has g~ed
valua~le seasoo. _
,. _
-
_ October 15 m R90m
~
A m
e
unnoticed. '.l'hese are who
I
refer expenenc~ and his. coach Ri~
Dean Adem booted two goals
I
N T R A M U R A L · A N - Campus Center. at 7.00 p.m.
.
• to as ''the other guys".
Stev~ns feels that this season will and Ron Franks connected with
-
NOUNCEMENT
_
.
Take soccer for· example. b~
his best y~ar evei:
• A Dean's one; but it wasn't enough as
~~ • Anyone .. _ interested
1~
c~i:n- ,_
co-captains, One is Ken Hayes, he· L1St
stu~ent, ~f there
U!
one wor_d visiting Marist -College soccer , peting_ in the- in~ural
~ed
·
R~LING
ON
istheteam'sleadings<;0rer, gets to d~cnbe Jim then it _must be players fell, before Monmouth basketball1eague should sign up
Pete Rozelle arid the National
his name in the )leadlines,-etc. • ll~oDSIStent•;,.Alr~dy~,season College.
.
-in the Intram~l Qffi~e-(D::216). Football ·League seenr bent on
etc. Then there is the "other guy'' •
f
im
_h~ _C0!15istently been
• FIVE YEARS AGO - Marist · Deadline· for sigrung up will be making pro football a mightier
Tom McDonald. Tom is a junior improvmg_ with ea~h . meet.
College's cross-country team led Thursday, October 11 (today). holy cow than.it already is ,. in
• and has been a • member of the Afthough nght now. Jim
1S
only by Phil Cappio beat Monmouth . Mixed basketball
teams
are t.o · terms of dollar signs. _
Marist
i
soccer . team since his the team's number
S1X
m~ coach . and lost to Farleigh Dickinson at be com~rised of on~ ~e
and one.'; ·First, the sport was threatened
freshman year, when he
~~E:d .
Stevens fee~ tha~ b_y
.the end of • Van 9ortlandt Park. •
. .
female ... There will·
!Je.
league, with over-coverage which leaves· _
atthe center fullback position m __
the season he will _be ready to ., ·MaristandNev;:Y~rkMantime play. Ha~-co~ 15 pomt games. -mariy football fails_ gridiron-
the fall of 1971.
Last season, Tom 'challenge for the top spot . _ battled to
a
2-2 tie m soccer.
League play will
~
followed by a ,. drunk· come . Monday morning· ·
was one of the team's tri-captains
'-----
. , •
. Skip . Ml!czaga scrambled playoff_
to detemune _the school attd ·calliilg sign~ and rea~g
although
he was only a
around right end for 36 yards and _ champion .. There ~ill be an for· passes in their· sleep.
_.
sophomore, atrue indication of COSTINE NAMED MARIST six points•as King's College of organizational meeting for. the - The N.F.L. wants to be able to
hisleadership ability._
.
- ATHLETE OF THE WEEK -
Wil~es Barre, _Pa. ed~ed Marist mixed basketball league ~n_ televise games at its will whether
Tom came to Marist with a


-7-6 ma club football gnd contest. Thursday, October
U
{t~y)
10
:.they: are sold out or not. Next
soccer tradition and his tradition f Bnai c:me,
. a_ Jr,;si,an
Marist CoUege's._
sailing team : Room 248 A in the Campus ~enter_ . comes talk of'going to a game-of-
is that of a winner;
This
is what
rom _oug eep
51
e~ • ·• as 'finish~d third:in
_the:,Mi~~e at7:0Op.m: .-
_
.
th~weekformattoshowfootball
Tom tries to instill
"in_
the rest of been ---named Mari st - Colle~. Atlan~ic _ In~~coµeg~a~e·
Sailirig. __
~nyo!le . mterested. m ._
c~m~ ·-.-.·hungry
legislators thatitJiasthat
his teammates. Althoug~ Tom _ Atb!ete of the Week for the, we . • ~Association
e~ations
at U.S. pe_ting.
m .the_ Intramm:al; Fiv~ : · 0 tion in: spite of the recent
did. come . to Marist with
e:c-
encµnksg
thOct:
7
• Fdor Costmet_lt Merchant Marm~ Academy. .

Mile-Bike-Race
should
S1gn
up
111.,
blackout bill. _ _
perience his progress has still mar
e secon_ consecu ive _ ONE >YEAR AGO ,_
-: Mike
· -· · -·
·
been very substantial. TOin has a week he ~as achieved • such an_ 'Kar:ipididias scored t:vo go!lls
i155!R!~~
tremendous dedication to _the • honor.. ••
• - • -
· - _ and Howard,Brown
one m leading
sport I can't remember a time in:
Costme, a ~ross countqr r_un- King's College past·Marist
3-0
in
the three years that! haveknown n~r, l~d Marist
t_o
~ s_tring : of ·,.a _ Central . _Atlantic College .
Tom when he wasn't working as victories oyer ~-gs
9Gllege, Conference soccer game.:I..ater •

hardashecould;eveninasimple
Dr~w .University , and ~he -intheweek.TiniTrottarammeda_
.-·day to day practice. ·
Uruver~ityofScranton.,Th~wms . penalty .kick· past_ goalie Jim.·
. Cross-c.ountry
is
another go~ ---were his ~econd and thir
-d
~ of the . Rogan to. pace Marist to a 3-2
wiii
<<
example, Here again we have two· re~r and
ll}
ea<:11
rac,e-he t~ed.
over Fairfield- and--Bob·_
Bergin
co-captains. One
is
Jay Doyle. •
10
unpressive times: ;
shutout Bloomfield
3-0
in his first:
For the-past two years Jay has
_ Led
by
Costi';}e s
p~r- •
game
as a goalie. _ -. __
. ··•- .,_.
been. Maris.t's number one cr~ss formances, The Ma~st Runnmg •. Jay Doyle won his thirdrace in
countryttiru):~r.
Up to this season R~d Foxes_ added three. more· four outings as the M.arist College -
he held ev:~ry:record
imaginable. wl!ls to their undefeat~d • seas~n ·cross country team
romped
~ver, ..
ThiOeason'"Jayhashadtotakea
· this past week puttmg th81r King'sCollege19~;Later.inthe,
• back --~at

to :'two,.-freshmen
record to
8-0.
.
-. -
week Doyle ser a schootrec:org
as_:<
phenonµ;,Brian Costin~)md Fred .
the Running Red Foxes)yllipped-;:';
Kolthay,,;Instead·:§.f
·complaini!tg, _ -- ----•
~-~
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--
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if
.'':::~:::~:ding·
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over activities which:_ai-e 'not -
_FEATURING
I;
student controlled since John _
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Tkach is a Marist graduate paid
by the college. This budget was
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The . Policy - Board next ac-

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"th 8 b L · h
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This
was a
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ync -
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cut of
$600
from their request
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I.
PAGE7
111ECIRCLE
OCTOBER
11, 1973
Whel'I
this 25-year-.old
res~arch~r .\ , ...
•·
··•···
.·•··••

• •·
.w~nted,to
investigate
clp0S!;i61¢
~.~ncert~iJ,trrae!.trt,

.
_
_..we,gave:_hiffl:the'.gQ:~·a'tjtad.
we-~1~0
ga;e:,hi~
th~
right to
tail
. .•
••
•'

...
,
•h
.. :,, ·_·.
'
··At Kodak, it'!fnotunusti;i:ro~:-~25~ye~r:old
likeJjri{.
..
nology, and gave him th~-go-ahead. He builttwo:h~i!-bi~lfori.
-Carroll to win the title of senior:research physidst. Like any , _ watt laser·systems, one of which Kodak has donated
to.
the .-
~
. :.; .·:· -
';' < - company involved irui lot of basic research, Kodak-has·felt
National Institute.of Health.
:
. . • -•..
. c , the pressure'. 'of mpdern tec;h!}ology;
and._
ihe·needJor. young,
. , .. · ••
-: - The lasers'proved·unsuccessful in treating cancer; but·
·

,: ·,,. fr~sh thinkil)g. So we hire th_e ~t "talept.-we pos..,;ibly
~~n,. . we'd make the same decision all over again. We entered-lase.i: ..
.
...:and then give them as mu~h responsibility.,a.s.they can-'han- ·-·technology because we have a stake in business. We let a
:/•·
dle. Whatever their age~C
... ••
. • . '•· •,;
_
•. • ·'
t • , ••
••
'
young researcher help the medical community look for a· · •.
•· -:·,we ha.ve departments and divisions, Iikeariy company.=-., .means ·of.'cancer· treatment because we have a stake-in the •.
- Wha.t:we·don'fhave are\preconceived··ideas·about,hov/aii'-
• futureofmankind.

__ . ·/
_
.
expert scientist's time s}tould·lle SJ?ent. So whei:i w~/~ceived • . :
,To put it another way, we're in business to make a .•
. :a
request fro111
the medi~l. cqmmunity; for a.ssistan~e in ex-· pr9fit: l3ut in fur.thering our own needs, we have often fur.:.
• ·perimenting with lasers as ·a possible. cancer treatJ11ent; we ' thered soci~ty's .. Afte,r all, our business depends on our soci-

.. turned to 2~;.yearsold Jim.Carroll,· who i~.d~eP,_in
lasez:,tech-.•. ·ety. So we care what happens to ft.'
.:
;·._.
-~-
......
• .. _· .•

.. •.: .,,.
. ., ·'- .
.,..:,: :\)~:,/ __
'i.
...
_
..... :--:·:
·: .,;.•.••' • •• • •• -·~--.
:..
_·.
·: •. "

:.- .• _.
.•
Kodak
_
More
than
a-business
..
--~------------~---------------------------------~
.-.
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I








PAGES
THE CIRCLE
....
OCTQBER
11, 1973
.
.
...
Viking~ Down N()rwalk 20-6