The Circle, November 21, 1974.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 13 No. 9 - November 21, 1974
content
VOLUME 13, NUMBER. 9
·
THE
1
i
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
.
12601
NOVEMBER 21,
·
i974
~
.
tU,dents Rally
·
T.o
·
Protest
'
·
.
Veto
..
·
_
/
.
By Eleanor
Bert
Jr. were mailed petitions signed
.
by
.
New York residents
·
and
,
·
.
Eileen B
_
es!,
·
project director
·
Harrison
•
..
Williams
.
·
and Peter
·
for
the aid
,
to disabled students Rodino were sent those from New
.program funded
:
by
the Depart-
Jersey residents.
.
.
.
.
nient
.
of.Health, Education and
.
' Nancy Martinez and Mil.lie
·
.
\Yelfare,
:
rallied M~rist
.
student,s
Diai
designed
.·
and made posters
to protest
,
President F'or:d's veto
:
proclaiming,
.
"Help us
·
veto
·
.
,
of H:R· 1~2~;
,
.
_
.
·.
.
.
.
·
.
· ·
_
Ford's veto,
.
Marist
.
College
~,
.
.
1;1t1s
.
_
b_lll would extend
-
the students need your help." These
.
_
,
presen~
..
.
.
legislatior,i thril
•~
June
;
posters
.
were
'.
PUt up
'
in
campus
}976, .
.
_
:
~11~
:
trans~er:
• .
.
the
:
:·
buildmgsJo solicit help .
.
..
,
·
_
reJi~biht~tI01:i-
: :,
:
service
,
,
ad-
. Flyers summarizing the bill
1Jl1Jllstrationdirectlytothe Office
,
will
-·
be distributed
.
·this
·
week .
.
.
ofthe Secr,etary of
'
·H:E.W,
:
''We
..
Further actfon will
be
taken after
·
.
·
.
·
.
were
very
jlisappointed by his
·
>
the
'
group receives feedback from
.
. .
· yetot ~~ted
.
Mrs'.
·
Best;
,
/
·
.
·
•
·
.
the petitions serit t~ Washington_.
.
.
·
.
·
E:ar.ly
.
fast
,
wf:lek,
.
disabled
.
·
.
"Disabled
·
students- have an
--
~~der1
_
ts 111~t to discuss
.
the
l>ill
·
employment problem
·
after .their
·
.
.. :
~_nd
,
,\Vays
:
to stimulate
-
Congress
·
graduation;" says
Mrs .
.
Be~;
..
to
,
oyerride_ the veto
,
:
Petiti_ons; "the
:
affi.J:mative actionportiori of
po~~rS
-
a'1~:flye
.
r_s
_
,
'!ere decided
.
the bill would greatly ltelp solve
upon. Petition
··.
signature
·
·
tables this situation." Asked
if she
felt
a
;
were set
·
.
·
up at key
.
!!)Cation~
·
on federal
.
law
.
woul~ really hc1ve
.
an
.
·
·
campus;
·
Mary Ellen
~
Bosnan;
:
effect
'
on
·
-.
the problem, she
JoJm
,
Dowlling and Christopher replyed, ''Bias is
>
expensive.
Dennen
'
manned
.
these
_
posts
·
Employers have proved eager to
·
.
·
along with
<
cJhe_r dis~blecl
:
·
.
comply
:
with
:
tlte law for
'
this
1
·
.
.
students
i·
,
AU passmg
.
students
·
.·
reason!'
.
.
·
,
..
)
r~c
"
+
-;
:!
J.~
l1i~r~~
4
r:
J
,,
til~f
aiiW!t~til.ttti~f~~1~i
i~
i~l~tilf
Jll
~z
ili~~¥i;%~
f,s
___
,
1
-
-
·
· -·
tljat -the
_
prmtmg shop
:
_will
·
close and
-
carmg
d
or
.:
-the
_
_
,.
s1ck,
·
the
·
·
newsletters
.
,
_:.----
:
. "·-:
.
.
:
·
.
-
•
.
.
J},S.
Senator
~
Jacob K
:
Javits .and · of
..
our nation's
..
handicapped
·
1\
•
:
and
-
thathe
·
wiUretireJUJ!e,
--
1975'.
:
printing llltOp .
.
was
·
born
:
a"
;
'
_
-·
,:
:
..
·
:
·
.
:
·
. :
·
•
'
.
:
,
:
· -
;
--
-
_-
·:.
Representative
:"
Hamiltori
·
Fish
.
citizens."
.
·
·
·:
· .
:.
.
:
.
'
··
,
'
·
"
.
.
:
.
. '
'
,
/
;:
Brother Tarcisius; \vho.rtins·the
,·
: ''InMarch,-1937/l'was calleclin
'·
·
.
·
.
.
.
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,
Julyof
·
thatyear.
·
·
·
··.
·
builtm1948,Imovedmand
,
l've
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..
·
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·.
·
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·
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'
'
On
<
August 25,
/
1927,
.I was
.
..
been
.
here ever since
;
''
.
.
_
.
..
-
.
. .
·.
·
: ..
.
·
·
.. .
.
.
·
.
.
.,._
.
.
··
..
.:
'
.
.
. ·
•.
·
.
.
.
.
named
,
assistant
•
chef
·
at the
_
·
'lbe,-printing shop-increased
_in
·
.
.•
·
.
.
·
·
,
·
·
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
solve tlle probleini;fat:
-
hand.
-_
.
purchased warmers to replace
.
.
ffovincia
l'-:
Hoiise;
'
which
:
was
'?
_
output and equipment
imtil
l\fay
·
·
·
.
·
·
..
BY
D~nna
Corrado
The cQnstant changing of hands
_
sternos on.. the counters.
·
Along
·
· then north ofthe
<
~w.imniirig poo_l,
.
of
.
this year,
'
wheri
'
~he possibility
:
.
.
.
and
i?bs
is
one problem the
.
with
'
the problem of tem-
I was
_·
also
,
·
give)J the job of of its closing first came.J9- light
:
-
Recently. the food committee
.
•
committee has to content ~th.
·
peratures, arises dissatisfaction
·
-
,
,-.
0
:
·-
·
--
;
, .
-
•
.--
-
•
•
•
••
·
.
-
.
.
. . •
••
had
'
givenasurveytotheMarist Through'studentfeedbackit·can inthecleanlinessofsilverware.
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
:
.
:
·
·
.
.
.
.
. •
.
·
·
,:
.
)
'
co~munity 'ttu~t _proved
•
more
.
keepa check on the
staff
c:>f Saga
·
.
Thf"
soap company
·
tli~t supplies
·
s
·
~
··
.
·
.
( ]
.
·
··
-,
_.
'Fi
.
.
.
·
•
E
·
·.
:
.
.
.
·
-
.:
·
z ·
·.:
:
.
. .
·
•
.
SllC~~ss{ulth~nmthepaskOµ~9f
_
and seethatthe \VOrkers
,
also
'
Saga has checkedthe machine
<
..
~
.
·
.
: -
.
.
.
·
.·
.
•..
.
·
.
·
•
·
·
·
·
.•.
·
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
·
.
·
.
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·
.·.
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>
.
·
.
. -
.
.
·
·.·
..
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.
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.
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te
·
390
..
·
surv
..
.
e
.
is given
,
·
220
•
stu
.
. d
..
en
.
ts
.·
have~
.
_
onc~r
.
n t .
.
~
kee
.
p
th
.
~
~u
·
d
.
en
.
.
ts
·
_oper
·
a
.
ti~ns
:
an~
.
~he proceedures.
·
.
.
,
.
.
·
•
.
·.
.
··
.
·
·
.
.
resp~nded to
:
:the
·
com~1ttee's
-
·
happy. •
, .
. ·
·
·
.
·
.
.
,
_
-
·
,
-
of w~shmg the SIiverware to see
.
.
-
.
.
,
-
_
.
.
.
~
.
..
·
request:
·
·
· ·
.
:
.·
·
·
·
·
·
After
·
meeting with
·
Mr.
.
that cleanliness
is
insured.
.
·
.
-
·.
·
.
·
.
·
.
.
.
·
.
-
The
.
first survey of the _fall LaDota,. the
·
food committee
.
The present p
·
oint system,
·
f;
·
-
.
·
a
· - ·
•
.
.
•, ..
.
.
R
'
z~
·
·
·
>
•
semester
_
failed when 92 surveys
.
·
learned that there is no
'
change of
which allows students to choose
•
·-
;
·
... 9
-.
.
..
:
·
ng
-
--
o
·
·
l
~
l
es
.
distributed
.
an~ only 21 replied.
:
rneal times
~
sight
:
The
ad~tion
.
'
ti!~
cafeteria or the ratskellar for
I
:
g
·
&;
·
,
b
..
-
_.The complamt
,
.of the
·
-
·-
com- or
.-
subtraction
-
of meal
·
times
·
meals, proves
to
be helpful to
·
·
.
-
-
,
,
.
.
...
,
.
·
·
-
·
· ·
.
.
:
.
.
· '
·
.;'. -
mittee
:
headed.:by Mike.
,
Cam~y :would only cause
_.
a finllllcial Saga managers.
H
there
is
a lull
·
··
·
·
.
...
.
..
,-
.
·
.
'
:Was
:
that
~
the
;
¢0n:unittee
.
ac
_
ts on
.
·
pr.obiem:
:
to
:
:
saga
,
anc( also
/
a
-
iJf:
the ~eats purchased
.
fu
:
the
I~
:
an
:
effor(
to :
evaltiate
·
··
Yes;
7;
.
No, 15
:•
•
·
·
. .
.
,
behalf·
·
(?f
•
the students
·
and
,
can
..
·
problem to the workers
as
far as
,
.
cafeteria,
.
then Saga when
·
.
M~ri~t•s grading
.
policies; Chip
.
:
J
;
-
Are
.
the finargrades maile!l o~ly
.
function
::
wi~h
·
concrete
.
time allotment
is
concerned
:
:
·
.
.
pl~nning ni~als can
.
eliminate the
Erinish;
.
,
reprei,entative
·
to.
the
.
home to
· -
the
:
parents of exaniples
i
pointed
·
out
.
by the
·
_Other questions that have risen
·
·
-
item
.
which has
turned
:
students
·
.student
.
.
Afadelllic
: :
Conunittee;--
:
sophomores?
·
Ye,s, 7;
.
·
Jllo; 15.
< ·
surveys and personal opinions of out
:
of
.
surveys
:
are- under· sur~ away
;'.
·The· Saga
.
ch
·
efs and
·
·
inquired
·
of
:.
Jw~nty~tw
.
~
.
other
·
_
.
8.
Are the
.
final grades rnail~d
.
stµdents.
·
.
<
-
0
,
.-
·
'.
•
veillance;
·
sucli
as
the
·'.
co~plaint
.
-
assistaritmanagers,
'
all share
·
iri
.
colleges
.
as
,
to their grading home·to
.
the uppe.rclassnien
•
.
. ·In
·
helping
.
the committee
to
.
·
bystudentsthattemperaturesof
-
.
< .
·
.
.--
·:·
.
;
_
_.
·
p0licl~s
:
,
C
--
_
.
..
.
·
..
.
.
. .
..
.
.
themselves or
·
to
,
his
par.ents?
·
coll~ct
·
reli~~le
.
data
·:=
on the
f90d
_:::'
aren't
~
wami'
enough
/
To
Contmued on
page
·
5
.
,
~
-
.
;The
. ,
coUeg~s,
.
mostly from
·
.Parent
,"
i;
.
Student; .
.
17;
-
Both;
•
1:
>
students'-~piruon <>L
:
the
:
meals
:
remedv.
Uw;;::Jrlr.
,
LaDota
-::-
has
'
.
·
upperNew·York State ~rid Long·
·
TheresultsofJh~above
:
survey
,
served;
.
Mike
,
~rney· and
.
t~e
·
· ·
rsJand
/
·
responded with
·
th~
:
.
-
provided tne
·
;
ba~is
.
Jor
>
Ennish's
-
co~mi~e
:
have giyen
·
spot
in-
..
)ollowing r~s~ts:,
~
_
,
·
'
:
~
:
)
.
.
·
~
-;
.propo~l}o the
.
S~c
:
·
13slptjgJ~t
.
. ternews wi~
_'
st~~.ents by going
.
_
:
·
·
·
J.
Are m1d
~
term grad~s
:
given
.
we
-
rev1ew
.
·
:
Mar1~t•s
.
gr~dmg
_
.
room
·
to
-
roo~.
·
·
_.
.
· : ·
·
to
··
the. studerits
>
of
:
.the college?
·
·policiesciri the hopes
.
oLinitiating
_
-,
According
·
to
Mike
·
..
_
Carney,
~-
·
·~
·
Yes,15;
'
No,
~.
7.
·
,
·
'.
·
'
.
·
.
:
:
:
a
·
:
ch11rige
;:
_
Tile SAC
i'.
erivisions
cl
<'thfputj>ose oUhe conunittee
!,s
,
.
-
2
:-
Are the gr:ades mailed horn¢'
_
gradirigsystenrwhich
;
w.jll.
_
eriable to yoJimtarily
·
~ome a relay
to the
·
p~re
_
nts
;
of
fr~hm,en?
·
·
·
.
.
::
_ the
'
stud~~t
.
to
~
have
:
,
:
his
)
<>r
h~
t_
·
between
.
.
~U:dei:its
·
an~
:
Saga.
~t
is
Yes,
,:
.
5;
_
l'fo
~
J0
'.
·
•
:·
· ::·
.
:
~
:
·
.
.
,_, .
.
.
:
gi:adesfQrwar.~e
.
dl}omeµpd~i:
.
his
.:.
a}flo
_.
JhE: 1I1tent_
to
·
keep
·
s
.
!~d,el}.ts
,.
··
3
;
Are
·
grades mailed home
·
to
.
.-
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her name
;'
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feels the
.
. ·
con~ent
.
and happy.'
~
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>:
.
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the
,
parents of.
·
sophomores? Yes,
·
· Marist
.
student
,
to
·
be
:
capable
;
ot
.
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·
·
Iil
~
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.
Carney
.-
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No,
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relationship
,
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wi
.
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·
La'Qota,
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itjailed'ho~e
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ager Q~:sa~a, he, said;
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.
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to
,.
the
_:
parents
-
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-
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juniors
·
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year .
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contact
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.
.
credit.for'
:
6emg
•
so involved
with
·
,
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;
:
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chip
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(
PAGE2
Dr.
Sims
Marist To
.
Hold Festival
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER
21, 1974
PoliSci
Pi-ogram Involves
Many Students In Law
aspects of the law.
It
offers on-
As
far as the qualitative sue-
By Earnest A. Royal
the-job training, which serves as cess of the program Dr. Sims
valuable experience as well
.
as feels that many valuable ex-
The Political Science Work
important contacts for its par- periences have been gain~d by
Internslµp Program has been in ticipants.
.
the participants of the progr~m
operation for two years.
It
was
In
the past the program has and the- effect on the outside
first introduced by Dr. Sims a
been offered to seniors
·
and community has greatly sup-
professor in the Political Science
Political Science majors but due ported the good name of Marist
department at Marist College.
to a lack of interest the program College. He feels that there are
.
.
The success of the program has has broadened
its
scope. There is many intelligent stude!'}ts at-
varied since
its
initiation and Dr.
a screening process by which tending
·
Marist and agrees with
Sims feels this is attributed to the
participants are chosen but the Dr.
'
.
Mal
Michelson
that
fact that a large majority of the
major requirement is a
·
genuine education, in order to
~
com-
campus is
.
unaware of its interest in the operations of the plete ·must
·
go further_ tha!1 the
existence:
·
·.
program. Other requirements classroom
_
.
Quantitatively
.
The_mam thrust !)f the progra~
·
are eight
.
through s_ixteen hours speaking Dr. Sims feels that due
lS
to mvolve Mar1St students m
--
per week as a participant
_
ob- to the lack of interest exl?ressed
the ~egal ~spects of the everyday
:
server,
•a
book review, a quiz on
.
by the college commuruty
_
the
woud. Dif~erent _local
.
go_vern.:_ the class text, seminar meetings program
_
has not been as . ef-
me~t !1genc1es ~re mvolyed m the
during the semester _
and an
·
fective as expected: I?r
.
·
Sims
Pohtigal Science p
_
rogram.
analysis
.
and
,
evaluation
.
of the feels that a large ma1or1ty of the
Agen~1es such
~
the office of the
intern office
_
which
:
you
··
are
_
population being u~a~are . have
By Jerry
Profita
·
regional theater guilds who wish
•
Pubhc
..
Defender,
County
assigned. The program offers not been able to part1c1pate m the
The
.
New York State Drama to participate. There is one E_xecutlve,
State
.
Attor
_
ney
.
.
three thru six academic credits PoliticalScience program.
Festival will be held atthe Marist performance beginning at 8:00 General,
.C:ity
Planning
.
Board,
toward a degree: The program The program thus far has
College
·
Theater .this weekend P ;M.
Friday
night.
Per-
Model Cities Agency,
._
County
also
·
offers the
·
opportunity- for spread thto
_
ughout Dutchess
November 22;
.
23, and 24:
-
formances begin at 9:00 A.M. on Youth
·
Bo
·
ard,
.
Green Haven
summer employment. Although
.
County to Kingston as well as the
.
The festival will be sponsored Saturday and runs back to back Correctional Facility, Office of there
.
is no guarantee, many of Highlands, N.Y
.
·
Any
·
students
by the County
-
Players, who are with the last one beginning at the City
.
·
iyianager_;
.
.
Beacon'.s
the
-
agency's do need additional
·
wishing to participate
jn
t~e
ren~ing the l\farist facilities. The 11:00 P.M. On Sunday they begin
.
Mayor Office,
·
:
Police
.•·
Depart-
employees for
:
the
'.
summer Political Science Work ~nternsh1p
festival consists of two days and . at 9:00 A.M. and the last one ment-Commumty
Relations,
months and tge program acts as programai;e urged to contact Dr.
two nights of plays
.
Each play starts at
.12:
10
p
.M.
Legal Services Project and
·
other..
a
.
catapult for qualified persons.
~
·
Sims _.·· in
.
the
.
Political Science
will have fifteen
•
to twenty
·
·
There are eleven different operating
.
agencies. . .
.
Students intt.rt:sted
•
in a~ending Department for further .in-
-
minutes to set uptheir stage and theater guilds participating in the
Already they are af1lbated with
·
Law
·
School might also fmd the
_
formation.
•
.
·
-
·
the
·
saine time to disassemble. festival and each will perform a at least twenty
.
five operating
program asaluable
·
experience
.
•.
· · ·
·
After each performance, critic different play. For any details agendes and the expecta\
;
ons
-
6f
-
·
-- ·
•
·
:r:e a~t;:o~d~~~~tif:iad;: : ~ ~:at~~;~~c6e~t~~yo~~!SJ
1
~9~~ t~~~~~~;~qiafseg:~:d
~~~::ci
.
<;ale/idar Of Events
.
performance.
7521
:
,
orienting students in different
-
The festival is a meeting of the
·
·
Events for the week of 11-21-11-28
M
..
·
·
.
;
ar_
k
_
e
_
tin
..
_
,
g
·
.
·
· .
Le
·
c·t
__
·
..
u
·
re
'
.-
_
.
·
H
.
.
-
:
_
e~
_
:·.
-
1
·.·
..--
a
·•
.. ·
s
i
ro1~:~.c~h~::}irs·••Hogwild"
;,It's
_
a Gift" and "The-Music Box,,,
_
·
Fri. New York State Dra~ festival, Box office opens 6:30 p.m.
·
·
·
·
·
·
. .
:
.
First showing 8 :00
P-Il!.-,
"Dark.9f the Moon" Theatre
By
Frank Schiavi
an ad agency works. After ?,welley_ ~tress_ed t~e pomtthat
·
Nightin~he_Ratskellar,Skitch&Murray"8:00-1:00
..
retiring from a career in radio
.
adverbsmg
.
•
l~
,
no_tl)i~g
.
ff!-Ore
..
Sa~, New York State Drama Festival. Box office opens 8:30 a.m .
.
.
The Marist chapter of the broadcasting six year.s ago,
.
th,_m ,r;ood c~n:imurucati?n
;
•
He :consult New York State Festival Progra~ for listings
of
plays and
American Marketing Association Dwelley and his
.
partne_rs decided sa~d
-.
_·
_
·
advertism~ doesn
t.
~~11
,a
times for the day.
.
·
.
·
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
has gotten off
--
to an important ~o form the agency wit~
8:
total
_
thing.
_
A persQn wit~ monenn his
·
.
·
Beef,and Brew Night in the Ratskellar, Sat, 8
:
00
·
. 1 :00 Limited to
:·
start
'.
,
The
•chapter's
-
first . guest mvest~ent of ~4,000. W,1thi:n
.
the pocl<~t 11_as
·
thE?,
mt~n
_
t19n
.·
Qf
.
·
first
mo
people; for reserya,tic:ms
._.
see JackA~chofield
Rm.
No.L325
·
speaker;
·
.Richard
.
Dwelley ..
·
otllie pa,~t
g:i,:
yg~f:i,
-
P~e)~~Y-.~
.
a~<iJp
,
e
__
sp~n9cmg
_
!LW.e,)Jll9-l?~Y
,;,
~
.
~
-
s~~ge
,,femporary,.
entertainment and
..
beer
-
served
,
with diriher ....
.
_ •.'
:,
;,
.•.
Dwelley
'
& Bolger
.
·
Advertising
·_
agency ~.~s gro~ m~o
_
a suc
0
the m
01
_iey ou
.
t of
,
Jiis
.
_
poc~e~,J'
Sun:New.YorkDrama-Festivjll, Box office opens 8:30 a.m.Consult
Agency, proved to be
•
an-
.
in- cessful
.
s~all,
·
reg10nal
_
ad Ac~oi;_dmg
•
to
.
Dwelley,: if. a New York State Drama
·
Festival :erogram for listings of plays and
formative speaker.
~
-
agency With acc~unts
·
totaling
·
busmess ~ants to advertise its times
,
,
.
·
"
>
.
··
· ..
.
_
_
·
·
.
On
.
November 13, Dwelley over $3,000,000."
~
product;
·
1t should
~
-
~xpect to
.
"Three
•
Musketeers'' Rm. i46D MGFP 7:30 p.m
:
.
.
·
discussed with the chapter how
Throughout the discussion
.
budget _6-8 percent
..
of its a~ual
.
Mon. CUBfilm"The Life An(! Times of Judge Roy Bean'' 8:00 p.m.
~ . . . ; . ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , gross mcome ,for. advert1smg .
.
Theatre
.
·
. ·
·
_·,
;
!his perc~nta_ge' represents _an
.
Tues. CUB Coffee
·
House8:30.p.m
.
New Dining Room
Getextra
six-packs forthe
·
weekend.
_
~$.~~
-l
·
m
'
•t!!A~_I
----
.
d'duutfe/l
when you're having
·
more than one .
..
•·
.
.
'
,
. .
.
.
AVAILABLE
--
IN
-
JHE
·
RATHSKELLER
ALSO: DUTCHES.S BE~R DISTRIBUTORS
84 Dutchess Turnpike
·
Poughkee
·
psie~
.
N. Y. 1260l
~ll
CAI/ HAVE
Col'IFIDEll~E
-WHEN Yt1ilR
et,
/NS"/MANCE
t'oW,J
FAoM MARSHAlL
.
/STERl./~i!
..
--
-MARSHA(I:.::-&
··
srERUNG;
~-
INC.
-\
·
.
·
- ~i~~e-
-
1 ~
-
~t
-:
~
•-i~\
.
:·:
·
1
::\;_\
. )
-
~
·
:
.
:
~ \
.
}
·:
·
/~
:/
_:
·
PROFESSIONAL: INSURANCE CE~TERS
. .
.
:
.• "
pouG~KEEI•s1e
i
-
:
,
WAPPINGERS
FALLS
·:
.
·
1s
W~shingion
'
St
.•
:
.
'-
:;':,
:
\
-
'
1~~e~ia1
Pla;a
··-
--:
454,0800
/
.
.
297-37()1
ideal allocat10n for effective
.
·
·
·
·
·
··
-
,
advertising.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
-
.
Dwelley
.
said an
·
ad agency is
/
Winier Consort
·
TimDeBaun
·
important to any business client
.
...
because it can spend the
_
clients'
money
inteHigently.
MosJ
business management executives
Once again, the C. U .B. Performing Arts Committee is proucHo
he
·said,
ifr~n•t
_
aware of how to present the Paul Winter Consort.
·
.
·
·
·
·
market and
·
advertise their
·
As last year, The Consc;,rtwill perform in the theatreon Dec.4th at 9
businesses
:
Many executives,
·
p.m. A workshop will also be
·
held on that same day in the Gallery
.
Dwelley said, either spend too Lounge at 2 p.m.,
·
no charge.
·
much money
·
on advertising, not
Along
-
wit_h Paul Winter, the Consort inclu~es David Darling, Pa';ll
enough,
·
·
or
.
waste it· on wrong McCandless,_Joel Andr~ws, Russ Hartenbu~ger, and Bob Becke~-1!us
·
kinds of ads;
.
On
the
.
whole ensemble was the subJect of much acclaun last year on their 1m-
Dwelley said that when it
.
come~
•
.
proyisations; ?long with
_
a unique_integration of sol!-lld.
.
.
_
·
to marketing ability; the busines:,
_
.
-.
Tick~~
~~r
the performance m -~he theatre will go on
.
sale
.
after
executive is "not too swift."
·
Thanksg1v
_
mg. An ev_ent not to be m1Sse~ for sure.
.
.
-
.....:
I
I
-
NOVEMBER 21, 1974
.
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Commission To Celebrate Revolution
By Chip Kennard
people must unite and dedicate Revolution was in the minds and their personal papers for the
day care by 1976.
themselves to a new patriotism.' hearts of the people; a change in same tax deductions
the
'
The Peoples Bicentennial
From1974 to 1983, The Peoples
In·
the words of
-·
Ms. Rollins, their religious sentiments, of President, the wealthy,· and the
Commission is made up of
Bicentennial Commission, along "Americans need a patriotism their duties and obligations ... This great corporations received.
average
citizens
who are
with many other concerned that calls 'for allegiance
·
to the radical change in the principles,
In another incident, members
dedicated to making this country
Americans, will be celebrating revolutionary and democratic opinions, sentiments and af-
of the Appalachian PBC held a
live up to its revolutionary
·
the Bicentennial of the American
.
principles that launched this fections of the people was the real demonstration protesting cor-
promise. The PBC would like
Revolt;tion.
· ·
nations first national rebellion to American Revolution
.
"
porate tyranny, comparing the
every American citizen to take
_
The Peoples Bicentennial tyranny.''
In a PBC
.-
newsletter, Page great coal companies of Ken-
part in the 'Peoples' campaign
Commission is a
-_
non-profit
·
Ms. Rollins said, ''For the first
-
Smith, the staff historian of the tucky to the monarch our foun-
for the Bicentennial by joining
foundation located in the nations time in
.
this century, Americans PBCandprize-\vinningauthorfor ding patriots overthrew.
the
PBC
Committee
of
capital Washington, D.C. Ac- can marshall a majority cam-
the biography of John Adams
In another part
of
the country,
Corrospondence.
cording to a recent PBC paign
,
that replaces blind said "The Bicentennial Era is a Sister Joan Baustian, coordinator
Individuals who feel the urgent
publication, "the PBC was allegiance to crooked politicians time when the attention of of the Chicago Peoples Bicen-
necessity to mobilize, can begin
founded in the belief that it is and avaricious corporations with millions of Americans will be tennial office has been speaking
·
organizing and participating
in
time to reaffirm the democratic a renewed committment to the turned to an investigation, to
farmers'
organizations, local PBC efforts. The PBC
principles of the D2claration of democratic principles of
·
the reflection, and commemoration churches, and youth groups
programs and ideas can be easily
Independence
and
of
the Declaration of Independence. of the revolutionary Spirit of throughout the Mid-West for the
integrated into the activities of
American Revolution."
History has given the citizens 1776.''
past 9 months, concerning the
.
existing organizations in the
This anniversary of the this chance.
·
If Americans fail to
Smith said, "The Bicentennial nations crisis and what may be
community.
Thousands
of
Revolution
,
will be a time for
·
seize it, then the advantage will of the
.
American Revolution done to help in the Bicentenn
i
al libraries, churches, fraternal
·
Americans
to
-
--
rededicate fall back into the hands of the provides us with a chance to effort.
clubs, schools, colleges, civic
themselves and their country t~
.
Wall Street crowd."
·
_
move the cliches, misconceptions
The PBC campaign has associations and other groups are
the sacred
-
ideals of thei
According to Ms. Rollins, "The and the outright untruths, into an already reached millions of
currently using materials and
American
.
ancestors who
.
fough
lines are clearly drawn. Either
.
exploration
;
at onc
·
e serious and Americans. Hundreds of radio programs specially developed by
to uphold their own beliefs over the citizens' democratic
.
prin-
enjoyable, of the
'
principles, and television stations are the PBC
.
_
_
200 years ago.
ciples redefine what America
-
opinions, sentiments
·
and af-
currently programming the
The Peoples Bicentennial
The PBC .. recognizes the should. stand for, or they allow fections' of our ancestors. By commissions public service
·
Commissions' Committee of
economic and political crises of Wall Street full reign to mold the better
understanding
the education programs on a daily Corrosponcience can play an
.
1974 as beirig as great as those of attitudes of the nation to suit the America of 1776, we will better basis.
historic role during the Bicen-
1776. Due to several
.
public needs of the corporacy
.
.,
understand the America of our ·
,
The commission offers a tennial years in turning the
revelations of the past year,
The Peoples
·
Bicentennial day:''
--
·
feature film as well as a multi-
present national cynicism into a
~erica is in a most threa~ning
-
.
Commission has already
.
acted
Various PBC sectors around media performance which is positive statement of what
and serious crisis. According to decisively on this
-
challenge
.
The the country are actively working
currently touring the
-
U
.
S
.
The America should stand for .
.
.
PBC
.
leader Shelia Rollins, commission is
·
i
nvolved
.
·
in a
·
towards a
·
new patriotism by
PBC has also produced a wide
In another
.
PBC newsletter,
"
people ~re questioning,
'.
.
'What massive ~amp_aig;n to revi".e the taking direct action on issues of
range of commercial books that
.
Page Smith concluded an article
does America stand for?' During democratic prmciples and ideals local and national importance.. are
being
published
and he wrote concerning the com-
the Bicentennial Era
·
more at
/
that sparked the American
The Massachusetts Peoples distributed by ma1or publishing mission, with a quote from
tention will be focus;d on
,
what Revolution.
Bicent
_
ennial Coalition
.
staged a
houses to bookstores, drug stores Thomas Jefferson. Perhaps these
America should stand fcirthan at
.
Over 200 years ago, John
·
one day citizens tax revolt in
and supermarkets.
words may best conclude this
any period fothe history of this Adams .wrote in a letter
-
to a Boston: Approximately 500
The
PBC
is
developing articleaswell. "The Principles of
nation:"
·
'
friend, "But what do we mean by Bostonians flooded the local Bicentennial
programming, the American Revolution should
It is the commissions firµi the American Reyolution? Do we Internal_ Revenue Service office
cond~<:ting
workshops
and
be
the creed of our political faith,
conviction, that the 'American mean the American War? The demanding that the IRS accept 'providing
speakers
and - the text of civic instruction, the
.
·
·
.
.
.
materials for organizations touchstone by which we try the
Groun
·
To
.
Ce
_
·
.
lebrate
,
Discovery
·.
~~~~~?~g
0
:roc~ur~t:s
~iti~~:~
~~~;;~e~ifw~ri~!r1~o~ut~~r:~~
.
'.I:'
,
.
.
YMCA s.
moments of error or
.
of alarm
,
let
·-
·
·
·
·
The commission helped in the
·
us hasten to retrace our steps and
by Julie Schott
the party is being held in Honduras.
'
'It
was very sue-
organization arid development of to regain the road which alone
celebration of
-
Puerto Rico
·
cessful," said Quintana
.
"We
a 4-year program for the largest leads to peace, liberty and
The Third world Alliance, Discovery Day
.
(November _19)
,
collected ove
_
r $600 and we-
day-care organization in the safety."
.
along with the lack
·
Student bu~ that-it is op~n to all of the gathered clothing and fo?d too.
nation; The National Day Care
Any person seeking to obtain
Union, the Spanish Club, and the
.
chil~ren and-Marist students who
·
. When we
-
held the
_
blood drive, we
and Child Development Council further information may write
:
_
Comimiter'.s.Ui:iion;
_
are
_
.
g\yi!!g
!i
'
_
:
~Ie
m~ere~ted
:_
:
;
.
.
,
..
.
.
•··
·
c~~lected, ~42 pmts
-
of
.
.
!Jloo~. · of America
.-
The PBC aims at' to:
.
()fiice of the
.
Peoples
party
this Friday, Novemb
·
er 22,
-
_
'J'.he :T~ird World
:
·
Alliance;
·
E1ghty
,
;f1ve
·
of
:
the
.
dono;f ha_d
eillisting10 million parents into a Bicentennial Commission, 1346
for the children at Mother which 1s m charge of the
·
party,
-
never given
_
_
blood before.
-
·
day-care lobby to press for Connecticut
Avenue
NW,
Cabrini's
.
-
·
·
plans many other projects
this
otherpro1ects tgat a~e plani:iect
quality
,
community-controlled Washin
·
gton, D.C. 20036 .
.
Raul Quintana, the chairman of
_
se1:1ester,
,
which t!1e
.
chairma!1,
.
for the
.
near futur~, mclude a
r-----------------------------
,,
the Third World Alliance
·
sa
i
d Qumtan;i, hopes that others will part~ with the Spanish club to be
that everyone is invited and ricies participate in
,
.
.
h~ld m the Barn
_
on pecember 6,
~
might be arranged for those who
"W~
·
h!1ve
,
r_estructured our
.
View o_f Maz:ISt
College
!or
need transportation. ·
·
orgaruzation
-
this year so . that e~onomically disadvantaged hi~h
,
The festivities, which
.
are everyone can
fit
into it. TWA is sc}Jool
-
stud
_
ents, wher~ ~here w1H
scheduied to ·begin at 3:00 p.m
.
, open to all people of all cultures be speakers o_n obtammg !unds
wiU last until 9:00, and will in- and nation~lities. W~ hope to do
.
for __
._
educabon,
·
vo<:a_tional
elude
·
cultural foods, slides
.
of more
things
with
other trai~mg, _and opportunities at
Puerto Rico and a film entitled, org~!llzat_ions on campus now
Manst,_bemg held on Det:. 7, and
"Portrait of the South Bronx." too.
.
.
a Famllr Day on Dec. 8 spon-
-
x ·
R
· ·
me
.
mber of the
Their first project was a drive sored with the Black Student
.
ema oss, a
·
.
.
.
.
. .
Union
Black Student Union, said that for
·
the hurricane victims of
.
·
Thanksgiving Ser
_
vice
Scheduled
Marist ID
.
:
,
-
.
.
.
....
I
•
SQUIRES
STEAK HOUSE
FEATURING CHARCOAL BROILED
STEAKS-CHOPS-LOBSTER
/
DINNER FROM 5pm. to
·
llpm.
SUNDAYS- 5pm. to 10pm.
COCKTAIL LOUNGE ...
PROPER ATTIRE REQUESTED
·
NORTH ROAD
.
{"ROUTE 9)
452-7191
FRANK'S
RESTAU.RANl
STOP
BY.
-
AND
HAVE A GOOD TIME
! !
!
·
_1
I
.I
.I
1
I
.
I
I
I
i {:
:
·
I
.
/;
r
PAGE4
•
ne
CIRCLE
/.
,:1-,", .
J ~
~ -
-
,
-
..
...
:.•
vo,uMe13
Marlst College,
'
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
•
.
.
The ~arist College cmcLE
is
the weekly newspaper of the students
of ~arist Colle~e and
_is
published throughout the school year ex..:
clusiv~ of vacation periods by the Southern
Dutchess
News Agency
Wappmgers, New York.
_
--
·
·
'
Co-Editors.
Lyn
Osborne
and
Gregory Conocchioli
-
Associate Editor
Irene Ross
Layout Editor
TimDeBaun
Photography Editor
Dave Pristash
Staff: Jerry Profita,
Rich
_Burke, Maureen Dennigan,
Chip
Kennard, Dave
Kazdan, Julie Schott"Donna Corrado
'
Eleanor
Bert, Gary Norman, Earnest A. Royal, Debbie Nyki;l Cathie
R~~. Karen
~y,
Rich Stevens,
Fr.
Leo
Gallant, Jo~ Tkach,
Iin~
·
Frarlco,
Jllll Kennedy,
Tom McTeman
·
.
Terry Stoutenboro
Jamee Colleran; ~~te Provost, Bob Baulch, Brian Morgan Bob
Ne~on?
Rhoda
Crispell,.Al Adolphi; BillRusso;~and
Frank
Schiavi.
·
-
-
·
-
·
·
·
- -
..
Business Manager
--
·
-
Greg.Welsh
Advertising Manager
Toni McDonald
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER
2J, 1974
Letters To The Editors
Student
Participation?
ministration does things so fast will complain that they were not
that they don't consult them at consulted. Ironically, those who
all. OR students bitch about
how
are the first to complain are the
theS.A.C; does nothing at all.
Yet·
ones wh
_
o never respond to the
this past week, the Circle ran an meetings posted. What more
In previous . issues· of The article on where the meeting was must the Student Gov'tand SAC
.
Circle, I have constantly read going to be held, what day, and do, of which I am a rilember·or
how Marist students are always what time. Posters were put up both, in order
.
to bring aboutmore
participating in some - sort of with the information once
·
again response from the student body?
event or Function· for the bet- where what time, and the topic to I am afraid
-
to
admit
that the
terment of the college or
_
_
the
be
discussed
.
The time chosen
-
problem of Student
·
Gov't com~
-
community that surrounds the was Tuesday at
2:15,
a free slot, a munication
is
not the fault
of
-
the
school. Well,
this
is all
fine and slot used to
_
hold
·
meetings that
_
SAC or Student Gov't themselves; -
good, but wheri it
.
comes down to - students may participate in but lies within
·
the student
·
body·
something that
_
·
involves them without
interference
from due to lack of interest. What I am
·
directly
-
nobody
·
could
_
give
·
a
schoolwork or classes. Still noone asking you to do, is
!o
prove
me
damn, and the students proved it showed up!
wrong by showing some
,
concern
once again
.
this past Tuesday,, ·
·:
A policy board meeting of the in matters brought before you.
when
_
a colloquiUIIi was held on a
.
Student. Government was can-
.
Find out what the SAC
_
is
doing
new
major in
_
Computer celed
·
m
order that its memtiers
·
about the new
·
jnajor
-
and
-
the
:
-
Mathematics. A gra:ndtotal of six attend the colloquitiin. The
-
grading
·
system;
·
In other
·
words
students showed.upJo hear Dean members
·
of _ the
.
Stud~nt
-
get _involved!
·
·
· · ·
Carolan talk on the
·
new proposal
,
Academic C
_
ommittee
_
were
Thank· You,.·
and
.
t~
hear
students complaints
~
strc;,ngly
·
-
-
advised
_
_
to participate,
·
.
:
-
:
·
·
.
Chil)
:
Etmish
··
_
or arguments
-
against the major.
Y
~t no
_
memb~rs of both con:i-
Vice President of The studerit
:
The
..
students are constantly
·
mittees showed up;
-
When_ this Government
·
-
.
complaining about
.
how
.
the a\!- proposal.goes
_
through, stude11ts
_
chapter and activities has been
Treasurer; Maureen ·McC
_
ue
.
-
performed by our students;
in~
.
Secretary.
-:
-- _·
_
..
· eluding public -relations
-
,and
The
·
above
.
. named .·
,
_
students
newspaper rel~ases.
_
_
together with other mem~ers_ of
Complaints
-
M~rketing
--
Association
-
:
Your article was overly
-
AMA are the
.
true motivatmg
·
· _
Complain~ - -expressions
of
discQntent- ~
-
be
heard
.
throughout
,:
To
·
: Editors .of Circle
·
g~t1erCJUs
h
describi_ng . my
·
force behind the group's success.
Maristeveryday.Allanyonehastodoiswalk·acrosscampus
'
andhe is
_
Thank you for your recent personal role
as
faculty advisor.
·
Members
.
of the Marist com-
sure to hear.some complaint ~bout curriculum, teachers, or be>redom -
-
articl~ on
-
the new American Recognition
·
for outstand~ng
-
munity can be very proud of their
to
_name
just
a
.
few. ~ronic~lly?
·
th<
,
>Ugh, whenever the OPP<?~unity
·
Marketing Association c\:llegiate estfufodretntsi~. due
the followmg
achievements.
-
_
-
~ince;~ly,
arises !or ~ople to air then
:
views or when~ver the chance to do chapte~ at Marist. ~t ~s _important
something
_
clifferentcomesup,suddenlynooneISaround.
_
.
·
_
-
_
_
to note
AMA
was
1
rutiated
by
a _ Mary
Ahn
Paradiso .
RichardMcCarty
_
The colloquiumheldlast Tuesday is a good
:
example ofthis. While group of students
.
To date
;
all the president; Tom Walsh
_
~
-
Vice
·
many
·
co:mplain about
the curriculum, only
six
people were interested work of organizing our Marist
·
Presiderit;
Rich
.
Jones
·
-
enough to show upto discuss a possible addition to our curriculum.
'
.
·
·
-
-
The colloquium was held during-the free slot- and realistically con-
. .
_
_
sidering the number of people Who had oµtE!r meetings and those·who
Sports Errors
College in Ne
_
w Jersef
_
is.
m.en
~
..
cording _to the
.
.
ai:ticle
.
K~an
_.
use the free
._
slot to work
oµ
outside class projects
~
we still feelth~t
.
an
-
,
.
-
·
.
ticined three tunes,
·
twice
1n-
,
the
-
College
-
1s located
'
m
_
Newark,
· -
attendance of orily six people"is
a
bit ridiculous.
.
-
• _
_
·
.
-
-
<>
.
-
:
second paragr~ph
of
"Athlete
_
of ~ew ~etsey; it is
·
actuallylocated
,
·
The CIRCLE would also
like to
say a word to th1:>se who are con~
-
_
the week'
'
and once under.
m
Umon
,
-
New Jersey,
.
. ___
-
_
stantly bored and who feelthat "there is nothing to do here.,.Well, Dear Editors
Friday, November 15th of uTfii~
..
_ ram-a
_
trai:isfer student fro.Ill:
/
·
aside from the various clubs, activities, and outside involvement
.
that
.
-
T
would
.
like
.
to call your at-
Week
_
in_ Marist Sports
/
'. TI:ie Kean ( whic
_
h 1s pronounced
_
C-A~
: -
people could getinto (Yes, there
·
really are some thingst9
·
do arourid
-
iention to two errors on the sports
correct name of the college
.
is
.-
N
-
E)
ancl wished
to
inform you
:
of
· ·
here!), we v.:onder why no
o~~
took adva~tage of
_
the
c1CUB
bus trip to page of the November 14th issue
·
Kean CoHege
.
of
_
New Je
'
rsey.
-.
_
_
these
~
e
:
rrors so
.
that thef would
·
New}/ ork City that vvould_ hl:!ve
.
bee11 oijered.a
_
couple of Wedn~sdays
_--
of
_
the CIRCLE.
--
-~ ,
.
·
·
-
.
_
.
The second error is also under
·
_
not be repeated
j
ti the• future;
•
.
·• _- __
_
. _
_
·
ago
·
;
The
trip
·
wasinexperi.~~ye ~il4h~ld ~!i
•
a dayJvllen~~'Y. P~OP.le. have
·-·
·
-
Under:
~
·
.
tl)e
.
''High
-•
on
.
Sp~rts"
·
,
,
Friday
\
;J'I0
Y
el1}p~r 1f
_
:~t
-
_
:
'
_
'~is
-
_
.•
f,
i
.
'.::i
:
.
,··
.
;
~/
,,
_-
;
·
-
_
/:
§i~ce'.i;elf,
.,.
-
_
_
:
.
·
,
_
classes. Yet, the lack
.
oLmterest was
.
5-uch tnat Jhe
,
trip
~
had
}
o
be
colliirin
;
the
.
,
name
.
Kean State
,
.Week
-
m
Marist
-
:
Sports
}
'
-
Ac~
-_
'-
;
-.-
_
.-
,
.
.-
•
,:
·
,·
--:•-·' ·
James McGee
'
'
"'"
-
,
'.
cancelled.
·
·_
.
-
_
---_
-
,
-,._
-
'·
-
.
..
.
·
.-
·
·
:
·
-
_
-
,
,
·:
..
-
-
,
.
..
,
..
-
,
.
-.
---
·
•:
·
.: --
...
··
•·
-
---
--
--
-
-
-
_._
;
_
.-,
,
_.,
- :_
.
:
:
·
. Everyone
is
going to have complaints: However, we feel that
_
-
-
~ny people never take adva:ptage of opportunities when they do
"Friends"
.
.
arise.
.
.
_ -
.
_.
-.
-
-
-
.
.
The
·
CIRCLE hopes that the next time a colloquium, trip, lecture,
·
At
·
M
-
·
• t
-
-
.-
concert arises, more people will take the time outtoI¼ttend them.
-
- _
3r1S _
_
'
..
.
.
.
.
.
,
· your efforts to help Marist
'in
the
.
·
_
May! also
.
avail myself of
.
this
.
crucial area of recruitment were
_
opportunity
_
to
·.:
tharik
_ :
-
Pete
--
·
·
_
,
r~warded by
-·
an enjoyable
.
Wilderotter
:
for
-
his
.
time,
·:
,
,
To the Marist Community'
:
weekend.
·
.
.
-
dedication, and energy:
·
.Pete has
· :
.
- ·
·
I
certainly appreciate, too,
.
the performed a great service to the
contribution thafmembers of the
_
l\1arist community
.
·
Budget Questions
I
would like to take 'this
·
op-
portunity to thank all the
·
students
who participated in
__
"Bring
·
a
Friend
·
to
.-
Marist Day.'.! I hope
faculty made this weekend
;
Many
'
Sincerely,
.
of them jettisoned their normal
_
Brian Morris
· Saturday plans to help us out. We
.
President of Student Gov't.
·
are sincerely grateful'for thi~
,
.
'-
.
_-
_
For once, The CIRCLE may have found itself at a loss for words but
~
im
&
lm'
~ ~
!
!
!
1ml?
~
! t ! ~
-ffli~
ml1
~lW
.Wmimm
,%f.W
RM*%:
'fiw.mmw.
@
{.~ffi
W&.t
~
-ci
.
not witl_lout good reason
,:
!~stead we have a few questions that. we
·
The CIRCLE w~uld lik
·
c ro remind you th:11
,
a
ll letter
s
11aybe edited for reasons of length and/~r
woBuldd likte to ~et off our mmds.
-
-
.
-
_
-
-
-
·
content at the discretion of.the editors. All letters mus
t'
bc TYPED and will be printed
a
s
recci(·cd
•
.
-
u ge hearmgs(rememberthose?)wereheldlongago-oratleast
.
h
·
·
·
-
- •
'
.
-
.
-
.
·
·
the beginning of the semester. Allocations were supposedly completed
-
r at rs
.
:'o co'.recrion
ot
gr
a_
mm~r or ':\'Ordm~ w1l_l bi: done othe_r
t ..
an the spelhng of propi:r names.
then. So, we have a few questions for the Student Gover_nment in the
Please
_
make su
_
r
_
e aH
,
lctter
s
arc s1gnc~
.
We
_
w1H_w1thhold any name uponc.rcquest.
_
but must have it on
person of the Financial Board:
_
_
_ .
.
·
_
_
..
-•
·
chc'
:
original l!!ttcr.
',
_Thank you for your cooperation
.
,
,
·
_
·
·
--.:
~
·
1.
Ar~-.
or were (we
_
're ~ually the last to find o~t) - clubs, ~ctivities,
_
i
~1'1Jli!
i
i[
·
· ·
:
1
11mm
m :
:mM
,
!
!!ii
oiM:!:!Ml'sli:rnm:: ;;
l b & ; s ; # : : ~ ~
etc. notified of the allocations awarded them dunng the hearmgs?
(Or
.
. .
·
-
.
.
·
.
·
are we all spending monies we haven't got?) And,
--
_
·
.
_
.
·
·
·
·
,AA..tR::>
2.
If ~otifications ~ve been rilade,
-
when then ar~
.
the funds
·
going·to
~rrtttm
be
credited to the vanous accounts? Do we only have· money on paper
~ " " " ~
-
and not
'
_
on hand? Will we forever receive
·
monthly printouts
of
ac-
counts reading "overdrawn?'
~
)
.
·
·
- _ _
_
· _
_ ·
_
_
--
·
..
·
Now before anyone
.
gets too upset, let
us
admit that ihe year did get
·
.,
,
off to a
bad
start: budgets
-
had to be cut more
thari
once, vacant
·
positions filled, organizations had
to
get
-
organized. But although we
·
admit to
a certain amount
of
disruptive influence interfering with
a
perhaps smoother channel of operations for the handling of money; we
~
do no_t agree
:
wi~
the obvious
la~k
of
.
attention
_
paid to a rn
·
ore
busmess-like application of government.
·
·
·
.
We remind everyone that these are only questions(not accusations)
-
that have arisen:
.
we have asked a
.
member·of the
-
board
.
about the
transference of
funds
who told
us
if
we
"really
needed it'' it
·
could be
_
done.
·
_
·
.
_
_
-·
_
_
-
.
_
.
·
_ -
-
·
·:
- ·
·
.
That isn't what we had in mind by our questions: rather,
..
we
.
want to
know how and when all
this
will
get done,and thought the student body
might wantJo know
too.
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Editorial
Note:
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Please take note thatthe final fall semester
issue
of tlieCIRCLE will
be
·
that
of
December'.12. Naturally, there
will
be
no issue next week
(Thanksgiving), and due
.
to t~e
-
short
.
~r.eal{there w,ill
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on December
5.
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Anyone
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wanting any
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event covered
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is
.
asked
to
(!()fltact
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the
.
CI_RCLE
·
_
(Box,C-SS7)
·_
iifter Thanksgiving,
-
and_those
whowishto
submit
:
ar:ttcles
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are reminde~ ~ t due
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date fo
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r copy f~r
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wiJl be,
Mo!]day,"
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December
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PAGES
Descriptioris- Vary
_
Of Alcoholics
Anonynious
R~niern~r-
~ n
Wdte_r WdS
'dedn
.dl)(j
sex
WdS
dirty
7
By Bill
Russo
· Alcoholics Anonymous has
been called an organization, a
society,
a
movement,
a
fellowship, a semi-religious
group, and a method of treat-
ment. None of these descriptions
is wholly accurate, some of them
are completely wrong. _
Alcoholics Anonymous is
neither an organization nor a
· society in·
the
accepted sense of
these words. Nor -is it a semi-
religious
group, -. nor
a
"movement". It is both a
fellowship and a method of
treatment, but· it is also many
o......
other
things,
so that neither word
Do,,_"
in itself is descriptive enough.
· - . To its
own
members
AA
is first
a way back to
life, and then a
.;......;.. _ _
...;.....;...;..;. __________________ ...;..,.;.;.. _ _ _
--_.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
......, ____ design for living.
AA
has a single
1/i'ranCe.11_ ..
i
.
·
la Giscard:
Fr~:i::i;i!l~~
.
Alcoholics Anonymous is · a
A
New.
Leaf
..
.
·
{Part 2)
~1:1:~tia.z.t1='.1
themselves and each other to get
sober and to stay sober.
B -
i,
·
· ·
8 G
some--secluded
spot, far away o_bser_ves the approa_ching end of
·AA
espouses no causes, even
---
.Y
r:r~n.coisc . rcgg
. • . .·
.•
from civilization .. The number of an era, Where are the days whe!l causes
designed
to
help
But-as
a
by no means · <'J3ec·ondary residences" has peasant women wearing ,their alcoholics.
It
does not sponsor or
purely symbolic gesture, one of risen_ froni '-500,000 -
in
1954 to Norman coifs could still be seen support hospitals, nursing homes
President Giscard's first: act was - · 1,500,000
in
1974. Trailers have in -the 11th. century romanesque : or sanitariums for alcoholics.
-
to appoint. women to such doubled in the last
10
years. And_ church of my village -
now
It
has only one condition for
government posts as Health, Pre-
even the notoriously centralized suburbia - and when horse and membership and that
is
an honest.
-.· school Education, the Penal govern01ental apparatus !Jas buggy . were still ambling on - desire to stop drinking.-However,
system- as _
welF as the newly · · joined)he movement, wit!less a peac'eful roads on market days as the doors are always open in case
formed- and muc~ publicized recent cabinet .meeting held by in
the
times
of
Emma the alcoholic feels he cannot stop
Those who are seeking help
from
AA
must find it by attending
meetings and _ learning by
listening or from individual
members whom they may know,
and who may
be willing to advise
them.
It
is
not a group function to
help anyone other than an
alcoholic who seeks that help.
The alcoholic who seeks help,
however, will
be
shown the
AA
way to sobriety, that is by con-
vincing him that he too can learn
the way, by seeing about
him
thousands who have successfully
trod the way before
him.
This is perhaps the first great
lesson t~e newcomer is taught -
that it can be done. He sees with
his own eyes numbers of people
who have done it, ·and he hears
with his own ears stories that he
must believe, of past drinking as
bad or worse than
his own. Hope
becomes a living reality to
him,
embodied in the persons of
AA
members he sees, hears and
meets.
AA
has never claimed anything
like 100 percent recoveries
although it does believe that
considerably more than 50
percent of those who have tried it
have recovered. Since it does not
keep records, recovery figures
cannot be verified. But even
if
accurate figures existed, and
even
if
they showed only a 50
percent recovery rate, this would
be an incredibly high record,
considering
that
alcoholism was
regarded until very recently as a
hopeless affliction.
·
Women's Status; The _
so-called the President and his Ministers in
·
Bovary ... On the other hand; we drinking.
·
PrefectoraLService 'and· -~the · Lyons instead of. Pai-k As. a should not forget that "quaint-
L k Wh
w
Inspeciorslup,of F'inances, once. partial resultof. the immensely ness'! is all
too
often a disguised ·
o
O
·at
. e
reserved .exclusively
for
.men; successful
summer
music pseudonym for poverty. ~'Live
.
·
have ceased to be male.bastions. festivals over the last20 years, better"is one of the mottoes of
·
The celebrated ,,Polytechnic the
provinces - . are
tieirtg' the new French Government
H ·
-
·o·
School'.ii1;f!ari~.has,atlastopened. ·redisco.vered:'- :Abandoned .-acutely .,aw~re ot the. French_,_,,,,-
· •.
.
av.
·e- - one
its d()()rs tciworiien;·.and\for the yillages;'abbeys/'and.'\~hateaux ''people's riew desire for material
'T
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.
firsLtinie.in_>the history·_of the .. are. being rebuUt_ through benefits. And
in
this respect, the
( •
_
)
Frenclt diplomatic service, a yolunteer wor_~ of y~~th-teams. French have never lived bett_er-
-·
·J·
USt a C0filffleflt
woman·- has · been named· am-· . These new llberalizmg. trends or more extravagantly.
.•
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bassagor: -Today
a
substantial initiated by Giscard
as
well as the
11le price, however, nee~ not
__ By Maureen Dennigan
number of women hold jobs not new democraUc 'image . he is necessarily
~
the , uglification of.
only , as· lawyers, put 'even as· . trying .. to give . the Presidency. the
country.
:Pompiqou'd ·
At Farah plants in the south-
judges:: More and. more married ·· have not failed to disturb many Government had sheltered_ itself · west, at Oneita plants
in
South
worn~ ai-eOgainfully employed merrtbers. of ~s own
·e~ect?rate
complacent!~, behi~d the facile .Carolina, women -went out on
1
one third -of::the wage-earning
(mostly "centrISt"· or· rightists). slogan that .. the Eiffel tower -
strike, -and out they stayed until
•. population} -
this
in spite of the ,A declaration
like
"We are symbol of French industrial they won the right to unionize.
_ still >§hocking" aiscrepancy' bet-
opening-th~ b_oo~ of a n~w ~ra, a progress - g~ts along well with
Women, like the •wives of Shell
ween their wages and_ the males' ._page which is _ exhlla_rmgly Notre-Dame: . ;And · the result strikers in California, manned
.salaries (one half -of French blank;"-seems to many like the was that Par1S1ans today must picket
lines
for health and safety
- . working women make ,less· than last straw of "Americanization", ·uve _ with the notorious Mont.:
regulations.
-
$260 a·mo11th). The main
.
forum
anall-purposetermofderogation parnasse to"'.er, erected three
Womenhavemarchedforother
for the French ''fem lib" activists used · by . the old guard to years ago, which mars one of the issues related to work, to com-
is the hugely popular -magazine - characterize
the
grom:ng pa~s of m~t '.beau~ul pro~pects of the munity,
and
international
-Elle •-a kind of hybrid blend of the new France. The giant strides capital. This alarmmg trend has struggles:
for
childcare,
Gla:Uor .- the Ladies Home made towards material and· been felt throughout the country. protective · legislation,
for
Journal ' and
Ms : ·
one · whose _ technical prcgress, although But recent gestures of the minimum wage laws, for welfare
leading contributo~s is the New <:o~ducive to r~ghe~ !>1an~ards of··· Govern_ment-
_are · . m~re rights. Women of all nationalities
-Secretary of- State for the . Con- -livmg, also brmg m t!teir wake reassurmg: · Despite _a massive united in one voice to protest the
dition ofWi:>inen Mme Francoise these well known evils of the real estatelobby, a giant vaca~t war in Vietnam.
G:iroiid, · pres~ntly · visiting affluen_t. society: aggr~s~ive · lot
in
the ~eart
of
1;,aris,
c~~~d
These
women of the 1970's were
America. who is also the head competitiveness, . materialism,. by the razmg of the Halles ., will ·upholding a long · tradition of
publishe; of the Express,
a
leftist greed? and . a. deteriora~ing soon be conv~rted into a public militancy and active resistance
-equivalent of Tiine magazin,e. A _
"q~ahty of hfe: . poll~tion, garden. A plan to turn one of the against injustice.
This
tradition
symbolic_ gesture towards the- de~quency, etc. T_he once tl~htly greatest eXl>anses .. ~f F!ance goes back hundreds of years to
· new image· .. of women _ and -krut French faro.Hy s~es. itself- ,forest la'1d (m Aquitame) mto a therebellionsofthefemaleslave.
another departure from the ~preatened
~Y
c~ldren. who -are ~onst~ous · _ . co1!!plex__
-of It was continued by women
Gaullist . era _ is· the new ·im-
grown ups at eighteen and the
orgaruzed -leisure
has been marching time and again against
·porfance_givento the-role of the ·instituti~nofmarriageits~l!may halted. The long celebra~d but factory owners who denied them
First
_
(.ady, the •charming Anne- not survive_ unsc~thed
~
law ,now· _ recent!}:' _ neg!ected skills_ of. a •living wage or decent working
Aymone· Giscard d'Estaing who, under <:onsideration which would French
artls~ns
( ca bmet conditions. The
turn
of the cen-
for _the (irst · time in France, allow ~vorce by mutual consent._· ~kers,. ceranusts, etc.)_ are -tury shirtwaist makers, fed up
parUcipated - activelY in the -The. in:iprovement _. of co_m- be~g stunulated .. ~colo~y
lS
one with intolerable working con-
presidential · campaign _ in the
..
muruca~ons and the mcreas~g of the most Pl;lblicize~ issues of · ditions, -closed . hundreds· of
same;fashion, as an American poI?ularity -~f,..the mass me~a the day. President G1Scard. has garment shops m New York.
political wife·;:
"
_ _ ~hich co~tribute _
to ho1!1ogen~e recently declare~ that _the great Women and men f~ught _police
Another _ · and - .. somewhat information of all kmds, is struggle of ~e fmal third of our and scabs many tunes m the
paradoxical trend .· aniong the alrea~y ref~ected_ in -an in- centu_rr
will concern
the l930's.
. French
these
days - . is creasmg umfor:°uty. -- -some prot~c~ion and the ~e of nature.
-we have seen many an effort to
geographical:
the
move _ away would say vulganty - m ~ought A Ministry of Envrronment has erase women· from the pages of
. from the great urban life centers and expression. «Franglais", a been. f~Wlded. ~ole areas ~f history
books.
When women are
Jo the·country'.andatleastto the term coined ten years ago by an scen~c interest (m the Alps m mentioned, they are veiled in
_ provinces.'Paris, once the center angry Sorbonne professor to_ pa~tcular) have been. declared-· .myths of "womenhood." Women
of attraction·:for all F'renchmen designate an ug~y amal~am- of National Parks. To_unsts, ~ke are defined as helpmates of men
(as all readers of Balzac's novels· French aµ_d English, contmu~ to heart!_ There ar~ still beautiful, th_eircompanionsand supporters.
know) is' now losing out
to
.the taint the language :of Racme; unspoiled spots m t~e Provence
The media,. the schools,
: provinces;-'l'he frustrations.oflife ;·Mor_eover,_ as a partiaLresult_
~!
and_the Auvergne which only;last go_vernment and religion-tools
. ,in
tpe·
city'.and tl:le'.~aclf of:"green>the very "back to the country
Augus~, I vis~~ed, where m a - ·that_the wealthy and owners of
spacf ~
0
leisure, a11d sporting movement; ~ne notes the -small auberge . you can 1!mch on · industry have
been able
to
use to
: grounds;~are such that more and.-.pl'.ogressiv:e disappearance of exc~llent loc~l ~ees~. wme and their
best,
have propagated this
, )norif F;enchmen are- itching·
to ,
provincial_· _
characte_ristic~ _ a~d . -regional specialities g!ilore for ~5 ~idea.
_
- escapefotliecotintry~ide. Nearly l~al idioms-and:cust9~.
It
IS·
fran~s
($
3
.l~O)
and _wh_ere you will
The myth that women are not
every~rie-
seems ..
to _.
dream ,
of a
·!lot
witf!o.ut -a_, ~a~e:.of :melan- , walk the_ little wmding
country_ ·
~
intelligent~ capable, or strong
. Uttle
:-i.\'fermette'!. (fannlet): :: iii- : choly'./imd ;.nostalg_ia_ _ that one -.; roads all- by yourself.
as men
has
kept women out of
··::·:>~~~~:-·:?:_:i·._\'ff..~,./-.,· ._,,-.- : ::•.·,:-.
:.i;::··:.• ·.· .. .
;_ ... ,_-' '•.
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high paying, skilled jobs. Yet,
during war time, industry
depended on women to fill the
jobs vacated by men.
Employers were quick to turn
around the "women at home"
myth when the economy needed a
reserve labor force. But bosses
still had two workers for the price
of one, because women had
primary responsibility for the
home and children whether or not
they put in eight hours of wage
labor. Some women work an
estimated 80-90 hours a week.
Why have employers per-
petuated these myths? Because it
is in their best interest to have a
surplus labor force that can be
bought at the lowest possible
price.
This way of dividing workers
works to the detriment of all
working people because bosses· ·
can threaten the jobs of men with
cheaper female labor, or they can
drive down the wages of white
women with the threat of hiring
minority women for less. It is
clear that t11e system that keeps
women down;· also keeps men
down and minorities down.
As
displayed at the 2nd annual
Berkshire conference for women
at Cambridge, Mass. Oct. 25-27,
but not only the variety of women -
in prominent roles and careers,
but also in the number attending,
today more than ever, women are
on the rise, but the rising of the
women means the rising of us all.
FOOD, Continued from
- page
1
planning a variety of ineals to be
served.
All suggestions may be mailed
to
the Food Committee, ·Box 831
or
to
Mike Carney, Box C-063.
Also
all progress reports between
Saga ilnd the Food 'Committee
will be posted oil the bulletin
board inside 'the c~eteria. ·
....
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PAGE6
.
Code.99
By
Fr.
Leo
Gallant
,
Pleasure is an alluring and
mysterious sensation. It is a
creation of God's. Very tiny, very
sweet, very easy, sympathetic
and convivial, penetrating and
intrusive. God placed it
in
our
.;enses to help them come to
fullness, to express themselves,
to live. Pleasure urges man to do
thin&» which are indispensable
for life.
The pleasure of food and drink
helps man to nourish himself; the
pleasure of sleep helps man to
_ rest; the pleasure of possession
gives
him
a
·
sense
.
of mastery
over the universe; the pleasure of
self-evaluation, the sense of
human dignity; the pleasure of
friendship; the joy of relation-
ships and the unsuppressable
sense of man's sociability ..
Yet pleasure can be man's
most dangerous enemy in life. It
can cause an imbalance in.him, a
disorder,
an exaggeration.
Exaggeration in eating is greed;
in sleep, it's
·
.
laziness; in self-
esteem
·
it's pride; iri feelings it's
envy and jealousy; in love. of
possession it's avarice; in sexual
pleasure it's lust. People drug
themselves when
.
domonated by
aimless pleasure, isolating it·
from the purpose for which it was
created.
The first sign of
this
drugging is
sadness. Nature is relentless and
strikes anyone who acts
·
against
it. "I don't know why, but there's
~omething wrong.
I laugh, but
I'm so sad. I sing in order to
forget but
I
feel as though
I
were
.in
a cave alone: I have everything
I wa~t at home, yet I'm no longer
capable of love
·
and con-
versation."
·
To counteract exaggerated
pleasure which causes sadness
and reinstall the pleasure that
brings true happiness man must
develop
a love of giving. Man is
made for the gift of himself and-
he is happy only when he does
give himself. This liberates,
·
while selfish pleasure exploits,
enslaves. So pleasure, that
alluring and
.
~ysterious sen-
sation, is tremendously iJD~
portant.
(These ideas come from a book
"The God Who Comes" by Carlo
Carretto, Orbis Books)
P.S.
Shirley Booth offers this
poem:
.
Give me a good digestion Lord,
and also something to digest.
_Give me a healthy body, Lord,
GASLIGHT9
.
.
.
~
.
·
Located.
on
Rt.
·
9
Wappinger Falls
Next
to
A
&
P
MONDAY
NIGHT
FOOTBALL NIGHT
Free HotdogsOuring Game
~
·
TUESDAY
MUG NIGHT
Any Mug _Filled For 30c
WEDNESDAY
OLDIES NIGHT .....
,
AARDVARKJAMP~RFORMANCE
Free Champagne To All People In
,
'50 Garb
Get Screwey - - Screwdrivers ... 50c
THURSDAY
.
DRINK TILL YOU DROWN
.
All
The Beer You Can Drink .. ,$2.00
Band - • Open Road
FRIDAY
PITCHl;R NIGHT - -
N
Pitcher Of
.
Beer .• $1:25
•
Pitcher Of Sangria ••
$2.00
~llURDlY
1.0.
NlqHT
'
Show Student
LO:
At The Door
First
Beer
Is On
The
House
.
)
NOVEt,1BER
21, 1974
Comment~ry ·
By
Gregory
Conocebioli
Robert Morley. After
·
the per-
..
·
formance I was the lone
One American holiday
I didn't autograph seeker, whereas
·
in
miss while in London is what we New York there are usually
call Veterans Day and what the throngs of autograph seekers, but
-
English call Rembrance Day, I got the autographs I wanted.
which takes place November
In
spite of the fact that
Joth. The ceremony takes place America and England speak the
at Whitehall, home of the s~e language there are some
government agencies offices and real barriers to get over or you'll
the leading members of Britain's· be in a complete fog. Some of the
political scene are present. The expressions that had me fooled
and the sense to keep itat its
best.
ceremony begins with those were
the
·
following:
loo
Give me a healthy mind, Lord,
members of the Royal Services
·
(bathroom),
.
lorry (truck),
and keep the
-good
and pure in
who served in World War
I
and sweets
( candy),
chemist
sight.
World War
II,
marching th.rough (drugstore), minerals (soft
When seeing sin be not ap-
the street, there a few bands and drinks), first floor (American
palled, but find a way to set it
that sort of ceremony is over. second
.
floor), crisps (potato
right.
·
-Once
the marchers
-
reach the chips), roundabout (road junc-
.
Give nie a mind that is not
Cenotoph, a monument to those tion), straight on (right away).
bored•,
.
that does not whimper,
members of
_
the Roy~l 'Senici:! Formyself·I'.ve managed to pick
whi:1e or sigh.
·
·
·
who have lost their: °lives in the up a few of the expressions but
Don't let
me
worry overmuch
,
service of the British Empire, my favorites are «fancy that"
about this fussy thing called
I.-
there are blessings· and speeches
·.
and "bloody".· Some 0£:
.
the
Give me a sense of You, my
followed by a wreath laying
·
cockney
accents
.
are
·
un-
Lord, give me the grace to see a
·
ceremony. The Queen, her distinguisha,ble; and
·.
they might
joke.
·
.
.
husband Prince Philip; and her
as
well
be
,
speaking a foreign
,
·
To find some happiness in life
son ~rince Charles all laid
·
language
·_
to
'
me,
.
because
·
and pass it on to other folks.
wreaths of Poppies with in sec- sometimes
'
it's so hard to un~
(The
God 'Bit by Joey Adams)
cession of each other. Among the
-
derstand them. However the vast
.
other people who placed wreaths majority is understandable to
at the monumept were the Prime me, and I try my hardest to avoid
Minister Harold-Wilson
·
,
·
leaders any
.
American
·
accents
I
might
.
of the
.
··
opposition
·
·
Ted
•
.
Heath
-
hear. Sometimes meeting other
LOOKING
-·
FOi{
THE
.
BUSINESS OFFICE? You'll find
it in Donnelly hall Room
216,
as
of
Monday, Nov. 18.
Situated
in
Adrian for the past five years, ihe
business office will have
'
more
spacious
quarters in
.
the former
faculty
·
office complex
.
·
t
·arr
moving to Qon
·
nelly inclt.Je
Anthony
.
Campilii. business
.
manai:cr
:
Frank l.aHose, bur-
sar:
Marion
S
.
trickland.
secretary: Gail Bloomer, fiscal
officer for federal financial
-
aid
-
programs; and Carolyn Alfonso.
Kathleen Uarone, and
llarbar,i
Short, clcri_cal staft Tclephoni.
extensions are the
same
:
253
and
231
.
.
.
,
.
/
.
-
~
(conser.vative)
·
and Jeremy Americans is a very em-
Thorpe· · (liberal),
·
foreign
.
·
barrassing situation .
.
···
·
·
dignitaries which Jnclucied our
.
Lhope that all of yoil
.
have a
own ambass~dor
.
ti{
·
Great very Happy Thanksgiving, as for
Britain .
.
Also
·
included' in
_
the myself and a
1
ll
-
the
-
other
.
ceremony were a grim salute and
"foreigners"
from Marist we're
·
a momentofsilertc
_
e, broken only all going to meet
·
atmy
•
flatfor a
·
.
·
by the Tower of Big Ben sounding Thanksgiving meal which should
.
the
.
hour. .
·
·
.
1 .
promise to be an.ordeal. Perhaps
Once · again
.
l'in
.
sure though this Thanksgiving
.
will
I
·
·
distinguished
_
inyself as
.
an give new meaning to the holiday;
Americ;:a11 tourist I
.
went
.
to the
.,....
maybe
·
we'll be-thankfuIJhatwe
theatre last evening
'
to see
-_
"A
·
have
·
each
·
other
.
- -
Ghost
'on
'
Tipto~s" starring
:
.
.
~
·
.
-
·
-
·
- - -
.
RosE
-
VIE-W FARMS
.
EQUESTRIAN
:
CENTER
,,
DUTCHESS HILL ROAD
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.
-
Y.
IOFF EAST DORSEY LANE/
-
914-471-1918
.
.
·-
p ARK
__
DISCOlJNT BEVERAGES
,·
.
,
,
··~
.
OPEN DAILY TILL
9
12
-
-5
~
-
SUNDAY
-
.
.
¼
AND
½
KEGS AVAILABLE
.
.
WITH
·
EQUJPMENT.
¥
pOME~TIC AND IMPORTED BEER
,
._ OCTOBERFEST_·.BIER IS
NOW
AVAILABLE·
'
.,
. . ,
·
..
,
.
~
~
.
·
.
<
'.
,·
·,
.
·_
.
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·
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-
COLD
:
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BEE
.
''.
'
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·
:
·
.
.
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.,
-
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-
~
.
'\"'
i
NOVEEMBER 21, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGE?
World Food· Conference Raises Hopes For Future
byMaryKrebsandLeeNewman .. the - U. S.,
Canada,
New
Zealand, and other deyeloped
international emergency grain
The western countries' stance
American delegates main-
bank to feed those people in then became stubborn: "There's tained the position that the
US
Africa and Asia currently facing where we'll begin. How
will
has done - and
will
do - a lot
(Editor's Note: Krebs
is
from nations made pledges of varying
the Bryn Mawr Haverford News; · amounts of assistance for an
Newman · is from the Amherst
starvation.
others begin doing their share?" more than anyone else.
Student. Both are represen- ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
tatives in a six student press
delegation to the World Food
Conference in Rome:)
.
,(CPS) Rome - amidst . in-
_ternational bickering, the World
Food Conference here has
produced one hopeful sign: the
U.S. and China reached an un-
precedented agreement-. regar-
ding grain distribution. ·
The advent of the .conference
raised hopes that developed
countries would act effectively to
save thousands now dying of
starvation; as well as institute the
· long range. plans to avert such
crises in the future.
·
. Most of the
1250
delegates here,
representing
130
nations,
remained hopeful that positive
action would be taken before the
11-day conference adjourned on
Saturday, November
16.
~
The·conference_acted on many
levels.·
·.
-The real action of the · con-
f eren·ce · skirted the public
plenary sessions and centered in
the secret meetings between
power blocs.
· ·
The big grain nations - the U .S;, ·
Soviet· Union, China, Canada;
and others- agreed on Saturday
to
consider limiting their foreign
sales in an effort to free grain
supplies for emergency aid to
hungry people.
.
.
This decision marked· the first
time the U.S. and China had come
togeth~r on fooq., The break-
through meeting""----was
·
clan-
destine.
.
.
Delegates met each day for
.eight hour plenary sessions. With
the excep~ion of statements .by
people Hke Pope Paul and Henry
Kissinger, the plenary took the
air .of just so much air.:
_' On the second day of the con-
ference, · Kissinger proposed a .·
:comprehensive
·
._ program .of
cooperative world wide action on
five fronts:
.
Increasing · the
production of food exporters;
accelerating. the production in
developing countries; improving
means of food distribution and
· financing; · enhancing __ food
'quality;· and insuri~g security
against food emergencies. .
.
· _
But while Kissinger also urged
the·.gathered nations '.'to resolve.
to
confront the challenge, not ·
'each other," much bickering
between the "halves" and the
"halve-nots" soon emerged:
From the start many of the
Western
·
allies · questioned what
role Russia, China, and the oil
producing and exporting· nations.
( CPEC) would take,. Early on,
THE NUMBER ONE KILLER
OF YOUNG AMERICANS.
.1SYOUNG AMERICANS.
_. You don't mean to be. But
. you are. The numbers are siD).ple.
You march against war.
You fight for clean air and clean
water. You
(..at
natural foods. You
practice
·
yoga. Yo~ are so·much for
life. And you are so much against
killing. ,
It would be unthinkable for
you tg kill another human being on
purpose.
·-so then, why is this
happening?
/
STOP DRIVING DRUNK.
~-- · .. , Latest available figures show
tb;ar§;Q0E) American people_ between ··,
theages·:of15and.25diedin alcohol
STOP KILLING E~CH O'rHER.
0
,
'
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION .
·
NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION
. related crashes. And almost all'the
drunkd~ivers who.caused those
crashes ~ere also under
2,-5.
.c
1,380 died in combat. 3,420
committed.suicide. 2,.731 died o[
cancer.
It's incredible, but one of the
most dangerous things you can do -
is to have a few bottles ·of wine with
. 'friends and drive home.
You can change it. You haveto.
ANDROS DINER
()PEN 24 HOURS
7 DAYS A WEEK
SERVING
BREAKFAST-
·-LUNCHEON
471~7939
DINNER
119 Parker Ave. Pokeepsie, N.Y.
;.
·-
-
Rosaria Barone
PICK 'N
SHOVEL
~.•~----
..
·
•·.
.
..
, . · •
..
,
.
.
.
.
1--9 Ac·ademy
St.
P,ough_k~~.psie,.
i
Wine
Liquor
Acr~ss
F~om
The Derb·y
Closest
L(quor
Stor~
To
AAa.ri~t'
'
•
.
' " i .
97
Main
St
. :_<Po.µ.g_hl<~.ep~i~., N_.Y.
.
.
.
.,.
..
.
.
··•
,.
~
•
..
,
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'.
.
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'
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·-
.I
·,
I
)
i
.
.
1
PAGES
QuarterbaCIC
ha
ISormecc
ana
(.;~acn
n:t111
icvi,,i
THE CIRCLE
.
'NOVEMBER
21, 1974
Vikillgs Host.Bowl Game;
Entertaill Pace
At
Home
By Tom McTernan
the ECCFC championship.
mended for turning this young,
.
",_ ·
The loss left Marist with a 6-2 inexperienced team. into a
·
With hopes to erase some of the record, the other defeat on national contender/
:
·
disappointment of the crucial loss opening
•
day against Livingston-
Saturday's
·
game also marks
to
Westchester Community
.
two
..
·
Rutgers,
.
when
··
the Vikings
the
final chapter in the illustrious
.
weeks ago, the Marist. Vikings fumbled away
..
a
6'-0 decision.
In
careers
of
seniors Ed
·
Bonnett
will
nost the third annual Empire
.
between, however,
:
.
.
were the and Nigel Davis, both of whom
Stattr
~
Bowl
Saturday;
·
facing incredible
.
upsets over Matta.tuck
.
brought the Viking crowd to its
PACE .in what is billed as the
(29~),
and Oswego
state
(25-24)
.·
feet countless
·
tiines over the
.
New ·York,
:
Club
·.
Football
·
thanifted Mai:'ist with the No.J
·
years;
_
·
·
•.
·
.
.
.
·
.
..
.
·
.
Championship
·
.
_
.
·
.
ranking
.
of.the
·
National Club
•
.
J>ace, ranked No._1 JI1ost of the
The
:
.~dreams
•·
of a national Sports Association; Whatev.-er
.
se~on is 8-1. Their only setback
championship were shattered
:
in
.
.,.:
happens
.
Saturday; it was truly a
was
.
a 22-13
.
decision to st; John's
the17-81oss to Westco
·.
in which
.
great
·
season
· ·
and coach
·
Ron
that
.
helped Marist
·
gairi the top
:
Marist
··
committed se~eraLkey
. •
L¢vine and
.
staffareto be
·
coni-
spotiri the rankings.
.
misiak~s
.
·
thaLcut- short their
·
· ,
·
,
~
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·
·
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.
.
offense, except for one
•
drive m
·
.J."
.
:c
U
·
·
the
.
second ha).f when
he
·
guided
.
-
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-
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.
a~cUook
.
.
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.
:·
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· :
.
.
· ..
•
att
es
.
.
,
Marist
,
s
-
_
spot
,•
ll!
·
Jhe Schaefer
.
.
.
..
,.
·
·
•
,
-
·
·
·
•
·
. .
.
:
·
Bo~l lastSattirday
·
t9:deterriilii~
·
.
.
.
..
.
.
. .
·
- .
..
.
·
·
-
.
.
.
. ..
·- Tom
:
McT~rriari
·
0
•
•
•
•
<
sfcieratforis an9 may not be us~d
Scii l in
_
n
_
.-
·-
_
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~
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·
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.
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.
·
.
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. .
-
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..
.
fotirthmqvJ.t1g
.
1:1pto
:
thecoaching
-
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.te&m
.
up
,
front with his reboun-
The
.
Marist College
·
sailing M~rist caine
in
.
s
_
~nd with
20
:
_
_
to take
.
first. place
i~
the
.-
·
"BJ>
.:
~~ff,
.the)~fari~t
ba,~ketb!;lll t~m din
·
g; al~ng
:
m,th sophomore Earl
team
~d
the 12 annual Frostbite
:
points.
.
They '!ere
.
followed by
_
.
division' Frey· was_ th~ low
.
point
'
·
.
}~
.:
: >
Pr~p~~mg
:
·
l?r
:
,
:
the c4n,'.ent
.
Jlolm~s,
.
who posses~s
_
a
,
strong
Regatta, Saturday; Nove~ber 16; Al~n}_'.,
_
~
:
, pomts;
·:
N'.
y
:U~, ..
26
...
skipper in this
•
division; ,
.
\
-
.
-
;
·
-
~
-
e~so~
..
'?th
_
~
str?~g
•
desire to
.
offens1ye game from short range.
There
was
a
.
c:opstant wi11d and
a
,
points;
0
;
and
~;P;J.
,
:
~
:
poiilts.
;
_
·
.
This
:
weekend Marist wi!l"saiF lIIlprove
>
o~ last
·
yea~•s
.
9-rn
~ro~tcourt_
.
dept~ comes from
;st~ong
..
'
~urrent
--'
.thr~ug9~tit:". tµe
.
'.
·
·
•
;BQb
;.
Lenn~}l
\;;.
ski~eered
~
:
and
'..
··.
at
.
~uthainptpji
:\
for
.
'
:
Jhe
:
'
:
firial
·
--:
.,
re.pord, ~owu1t~ef~CC tttle,and
·
JUntOr
-
Jim D1r~cherl
.
.
and
.
r~ce which kept the
.
competition
~~~Qll~
;
J~atiella
·crewed
for the
_
regatta
9
r
the season.
:::
,.,
·
-\
,.
\
,
·
to_. ~e~~rye . a
<
·
.
p1d;for.
0
the
•.
·
NCAA
.
-
sopholJ!or:es. Greg Giles and Walt
..
·
tough<~
•
:
the ~nd, ~utpall_lp~n
:
'
·,
·
A
.
.•
div1sion~
:
·
.
~
Tom
.
:
·
F-rey
.
;
.
s
_
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·
~
.
·
•·
·
·
.
.
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7
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,
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..
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·
Jan~s~ek
,
.
.
.
-:
·
•
P~~ed-firs_t,with 12
<
PQ1:11U(and ~red;;m~
·
P.eggyMadd~nci:'¢wed
·
. ·.
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J(_)1111~g
:
Fa~~1;1rstm the back-
.
-
.
.
·
-
.-
.:
.
.
-
·
.
'l'Jt~
Red F
,
oxes·open then: 1974-. court will l>e 1umor returnee Eric
.
. .
_
.
· ERE
_
Sf
icr
eob.r
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·
SR,
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.
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_
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~~~~s
-
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:--
·
75
;
season at
:
I<m
.
a nexfSaturday;
·
DePerdn
.
and
.
frosh standouts
Nov.
:
0
30:
·
TheJirst g~me
·
.ror.tlle
Glynn
-
Berry
~mer
Paul
.
Kane.
.
Maristfa.nswill be Tuesday ;
.
Dec, , DePerd~
·
and Berry,. have
,.
both
'
.
:
·
3
.
agains~
•
:
.· :
K~~gs
::-_
at
_
,
D~tchess
.
.
·
~
,
en
•
emplored as the poin~ guard
.
':
Commumty
,:
College,
c.:..
,
.wber~ m the .Marist.1-3-l
~
offensive at-
:
i
<:
_
Marist
~Jlpfay
'
all
-
11
ofjts
.
hoin~
~
tack,
while Kane
:
is rioted for his
.
·,
.
·
~aines
'
or(thf26;game
,
sche~11Ie.
-
a~c1:1r.a~
·
s~ooting.
::
6ffthe
:
b
.
ench
.
·
.·
:
Ileturnmg
>
.
from
:'
last
<·
year's
·
·
wiU
:
be Jumor Steye Sullivan and
·
,
star_ting:r~ve arfforwards senfoi:
.
fr~shman Walt Brickowski.
:
·
Joe
\
Cir~~.ena
:'
:
a?d
/
jiinior
;
.
Ray
::
:·
IlonPetro.is
.
reforniilg'.as
'.
head
,.
: Murphy ;:tnd senior
_
·
guard
.
Allen
.
coach, along· witli 'assistant
.
Bob
<
f'.airhurst. Mt,trphy;
.
·
a •
strong HiJdreth; Ed
.
Conl,in, cap~in of
.
·
:.
·
_rebounder.
_
and
·.
Fairhurs.t; a fine la~t year's
.
team,. takes over the
<
playmaker,
:
are both
,
expect~d
,
to
·
Juni
_
or: Varsity
:
squad, which
see
.
plenty of playing
_
tinfe. opens a 15-garrie slate as a
.
Girasella, the team's top scorer a preliminary to the Varsity home
y~ar ago, has been limited in opener with Kings Dec. 3.
·
practice due .to academic
·_
con:
·-
·
-·
· ·
,1
High
t
<)ii
$p!)rts
-
.
.
.
--,
By
John
Tkach
.
.
·
_F.IV~ MAR~ST
P!,AYERS
:
o1
ALL-ST~
TEAM
<
.
.
•
. While Marist
.
didn't
win
the d~ampionship;
.
µte Red .Foxes
-
placed
i
five
pl~yers o~ t~e Centr~I,Atlaµtu:;
,
<;::ollege conference s.occer all-star
~m•
:·
.:
:-.-
·:
·-
.
.
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•
:
·
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.
C.· ..
.'
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<
·
.
<
.
Lineman J
.
ohn McGraw, half~ack~
TiI!}
-
~aiesarid Tir;n
:
Tiottaand
..
{~~f;~e~:\~~~~n
.
ald :nd Jim !l~()ne
:
~epres~nt th~ Red ~oxes in
, ·
.
Co_nfet:ef!c~ champion Nyack also had five
.
men on
thJ
team in-
.
.
• ,
!
:·
~
cludi_ng
.
go.all~
La~.}'.
McClem~ntsi ~ullbacks
.
Terry ~ggef!bach and
.
J~r\'.IS Crosby and 11;11e~en Steye Harr and steve I:.ivirigston. Fullback
.
Wllh~m Brown of Kmg
.
s was the other selection>
, _
.
.
·
,
,
Tius is the se~oJicl,
:
~tr11ightyear
;-
McCiraw;orily.a
:
sophomore, has
·
_
made the t~a~. ~e ~cored seven
·
~oals and
haq.
fi:ve assists in
.
con-
~e,~ence action to tiew1~? Ha
_
rr a11d Livingst~I!
:
for th·e
·
scoring lead .
.
.
.
'
13.9.1
13.9.2
13.9.3
13.9.4
13.9.5
13.9.6
13.9.7
13.9.8
·
THE
1
i
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
.
12601
NOVEMBER 21,
·
i974
~
.
tU,dents Rally
·
T.o
·
Protest
'
·
.
Veto
..
·
_
/
.
By Eleanor
Bert
Jr. were mailed petitions signed
.
by
.
New York residents
·
and
,
·
.
Eileen B
_
es!,
·
project director
·
Harrison
•
..
Williams
.
·
and Peter
·
for
the aid
,
to disabled students Rodino were sent those from New
.program funded
:
by
the Depart-
Jersey residents.
.
.
.
.
nient
.
of.Health, Education and
.
' Nancy Martinez and Mil.lie
·
.
\Yelfare,
:
rallied M~rist
.
student,s
Diai
designed
.·
and made posters
to protest
,
President F'or:d's veto
:
proclaiming,
.
"Help us
·
veto
·
.
,
of H:R· 1~2~;
,
.
_
.
·.
.
.
.
·
.
· ·
_
Ford's veto,
.
Marist
.
College
~,
.
.
1;1t1s
.
_
b_lll would extend
-
the students need your help." These
.
_
,
presen~
..
.
.
legislatior,i thril
•~
June
;
posters
.
were
'.
PUt up
'
in
campus
}976, .
.
_
:
~11~
:
trans~er:
• .
.
the
:
:·
buildmgsJo solicit help .
.
..
,
·
_
reJi~biht~tI01:i-
: :,
:
service
,
,
ad-
. Flyers summarizing the bill
1Jl1Jllstrationdirectlytothe Office
,
will
-·
be distributed
.
·this
·
week .
.
.
ofthe Secr,etary of
'
·H:E.W,
:
''We
..
Further actfon will
be
taken after
·
.
·
.
·
.
were
very
jlisappointed by his
·
>
the
'
group receives feedback from
.
. .
· yetot ~~ted
.
Mrs'.
·
Best;
,
/
·
.
·
•
·
.
the petitions serit t~ Washington_.
.
.
·
.
·
E:ar.ly
.
fast
,
wf:lek,
.
disabled
.
·
.
"Disabled
·
students- have an
--
~~der1
_
ts 111~t to discuss
.
the
l>ill
·
employment problem
·
after .their
·
.
.. :
~_nd
,
,\Vays
:
to stimulate
-
Congress
·
graduation;" says
Mrs .
.
Be~;
..
to
,
oyerride_ the veto
,
:
Petiti_ons; "the
:
affi.J:mative actionportiori of
po~~rS
-
a'1~:flye
.
r_s
_
,
'!ere decided
.
the bill would greatly ltelp solve
upon. Petition
··.
signature
·
·
tables this situation." Asked
if she
felt
a
;
were set
·
.
·
up at key
.
!!)Cation~
·
on federal
.
law
.
woul~ really hc1ve
.
an
.
·
·
campus;
·
Mary Ellen
~
Bosnan;
:
effect
'
on
·
-.
the problem, she
JoJm
,
Dowlling and Christopher replyed, ''Bias is
>
expensive.
Dennen
'
manned
.
these
_
posts
·
Employers have proved eager to
·
.
·
along with
<
cJhe_r dis~blecl
:
·
.
comply
:
with
:
tlte law for
'
this
1
·
.
.
students
i·
,
AU passmg
.
students
·
.·
reason!'
.
.
·
,
..
)
r~c
"
+
-;
:!
J.~
l1i~r~~
4
r:
J
,,
til~f
aiiW!t~til.ttti~f~~1~i
i~
i~l~tilf
Jll
~z
ili~~¥i;%~
f,s
___
,
1
-
-
·
· -·
tljat -the
_
prmtmg shop
:
_will
·
close and
-
carmg
d
or
.:
-the
_
_
,.
s1ck,
·
the
·
·
newsletters
.
,
_:.----
:
. "·-:
.
.
:
·
.
-
•
.
.
J},S.
Senator
~
Jacob K
:
Javits .and · of
..
our nation's
..
handicapped
·
1\
•
:
and
-
thathe
·
wiUretireJUJ!e,
--
1975'.
:
printing llltOp .
.
was
·
born
:
a"
;
'
_
-·
,:
:
..
·
:
·
.
:
·
. :
·
•
'
.
:
,
:
· -
;
--
-
_-
·:.
Representative
:"
Hamiltori
·
Fish
.
citizens."
.
·
·
·:
· .
:.
.
:
.
'
··
,
'
·
"
.
.
:
.
. '
'
,
/
;:
Brother Tarcisius; \vho.rtins·the
,·
: ''InMarch,-1937/l'was calleclin
'·
·
.
·
.
.
.
. .
. .
·
•
'
·
-
.
.
·
·
..
-
~
.
.
.
:
_m:P=\;',.",i~J!:":r"b':W
~
-
~J.:'J
,
!i/.":~!tfJ~;'i:Jiti~
---
ll;/f
·
a~1
:
if
:
~
s
·
·
··
•
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o
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.
·
·
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·
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n
·•
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.
··
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e
·
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·
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·
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·
~:~jynto
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·
a
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r~~ugh~eepsie Jor
·
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-
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:
-
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'
__
:
:
_
··
.
.
-
. .
·
,
C:-
_
9
'
:
__
•
::
.
:·
'.
·
..
·
· .
.
·
·
... ·
.
.
.
..
He
;
.arriyed
.
at
.
SL Arul~s Her
-
·
froin
--
a fellowJn .
.
Rotighkeepsie
~
,
.
,
-
·
·
·
•
·
·
.
·
·
·
•
·
'
..
·
..
.
.
.
,
.
·
·
•
·
.
·
· :·:·
· ··
·
.
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. .
· ·
·
·
.
.
·
.
r
.
~:.rn
.
d~
0
·
ec
·
Vl
·
·
~
.
tf:!ri
.
ih
.
0
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.·
~
.
f;.~a~k
·
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·
~
.
}~~r:i!!1
.
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y
.
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.
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.
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v
.
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.
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·
.
i
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.·
.
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o
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o
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.
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d:
·
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c
~
o
.-
.
. ·
·
m
':
.
.
-
m
·
·
..
·
.
.
·
--
.
1•
·
1
·
··
·
te
.
·
.
·
·
.
·
.
·--
e
.
.
·
·
.
..
-
R
·
.
·
·
e
·
·
·
P
·
·
·
s
·
m
,
Julyof
·
thatyear.
·
·
·
··.
·
builtm1948,Imovedmand
,
l've
:
. U J
~
•
:
·E
..
·
• .
·
·
..
U
·.
·
·
.
·
· ...
.
.· ·
·
·
•
'
'
On
<
August 25,
/
1927,
.I was
.
..
been
.
here ever since
;
''
.
.
_
.
..
-
.
. .
·.
·
: ..
.
·
·
.. .
.
.
·
.
.
.,._
.
.
··
..
.:
'
.
.
. ·
•.
·
.
.
.
.
named
,
assistant
•
chef
·
at the
_
·
'lbe,-printing shop-increased
_in
·
.
.•
·
.
.
·
·
,
·
·
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
solve tlle probleini;fat:
-
hand.
-_
.
purchased warmers to replace
.
.
ffovincia
l'-:
Hoiise;
'
which
:
was
'?
_
output and equipment
imtil
l\fay
·
·
·
.
·
·
..
BY
D~nna
Corrado
The cQnstant changing of hands
_
sternos on.. the counters.
·
Along
·
· then north ofthe
<
~w.imniirig poo_l,
.
of
.
this year,
'
wheri
'
~he possibility
:
.
.
.
and
i?bs
is
one problem the
.
with
'
the problem of tem-
I was
_·
also
,
·
give)J the job of of its closing first came.J9- light
:
-
Recently. the food committee
.
•
committee has to content ~th.
·
peratures, arises dissatisfaction
·
-
,
,-.
0
:
·-
·
--
;
, .
-
•
.--
-
•
•
•
••
·
.
-
.
.
. . •
••
had
'
givenasurveytotheMarist Through'studentfeedbackit·can inthecleanlinessofsilverware.
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
:
.
:
·
·
.
.
.
.
. •
.
·
·
,:
.
)
'
co~munity 'ttu~t _proved
•
more
.
keepa check on the
staff
c:>f Saga
·
.
Thf"
soap company
·
tli~t supplies
·
s
·
~
··
.
·
.
( ]
.
·
··
-,
_.
'Fi
.
.
.
·
•
E
·
·.
:
.
.
.
·
-
.:
·
z ·
·.:
:
.
. .
·
•
.
SllC~~ss{ulth~nmthepaskOµ~9f
_
and seethatthe \VOrkers
,
also
'
Saga has checkedthe machine
<
..
~
.
·
.
: -
.
.
.
·
.·
.
•..
.
·
.
·
•
·
·
·
·
.•.
·
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
·
.
·
.
' .
·
.·.
;
>
.
·
.
. -
.
.
·
·.·
..
·
-
•
.
·
.·.
.
.
•
.
.
.
.
:;
··
·
o
,:c
.
:
·
•·
··
·
·.
.
· ,
·
-
·
v
·
·
·.
·
a
·.
·
~
:
u
·
.
·
"
.·
a
:
·
•
te
·
390
..
·
surv
..
.
e
.
is given
,
·
220
•
stu
.
. d
..
en
.
ts
.·
have~
.
_
onc~r
.
n t .
.
~
kee
.
p
th
.
~
~u
·
d
.
en
.
.
ts
·
_oper
·
a
.
ti~ns
:
an~
.
~he proceedures.
·
.
.
,
.
.
·
•
.
·.
.
··
.
·
·
.
.
resp~nded to
:
:the
·
com~1ttee's
-
·
happy. •
, .
. ·
·
·
.
·
.
.
,
_
-
·
,
-
of w~shmg the SIiverware to see
.
.
-
.
.
,
-
_
.
.
.
~
.
..
·
request:
·
·
· ·
.
:
.·
·
·
·
·
·
After
·
meeting with
·
Mr.
.
that cleanliness
is
insured.
.
·
.
-
·.
·
.
·
.
·
.
.
.
·
.
-
The
.
first survey of the _fall LaDota,. the
·
food committee
.
The present p
·
oint system,
·
f;
·
-
.
·
a
· - ·
•
.
.
•, ..
.
.
R
'
z~
·
·
·
>
•
semester
_
failed when 92 surveys
.
·
learned that there is no
'
change of
which allows students to choose
•
·-
;
·
... 9
-.
.
..
:
·
ng
-
--
o
·
·
l
~
l
es
.
distributed
.
an~ only 21 replied.
:
rneal times
~
sight
:
The
ad~tion
.
'
ti!~
cafeteria or the ratskellar for
I
:
g
·
&;
·
,
b
..
-
_.The complamt
,
.of the
·
-
·-
com- or
.-
subtraction
-
of meal
·
times
·
meals, proves
to
be helpful to
·
·
.
-
-
,
,
.
.
...
,
.
·
·
-
·
· ·
.
.
:
.
.
· '
·
.;'. -
mittee
:
headed.:by Mike.
,
Cam~y :would only cause
_.
a finllllcial Saga managers.
H
there
is
a lull
·
··
·
·
.
...
.
..
,-
.
·
.
'
:Was
:
that
~
the
;
¢0n:unittee
.
ac
_
ts on
.
·
pr.obiem:
:
to
:
:
saga
,
anc( also
/
a
-
iJf:
the ~eats purchased
.
fu
:
the
I~
:
an
:
effor(
to :
evaltiate
·
··
Yes;
7;
.
No, 15
:•
•
·
·
. .
.
,
behalf·
·
(?f
•
the students
·
and
,
can
..
·
problem to the workers
as
far as
,
.
cafeteria,
.
then Saga when
·
.
M~ri~t•s grading
.
policies; Chip
.
:
J
;
-
Are
.
the finargrades maile!l o~ly
.
function
::
wi~h
·
concrete
.
time allotment
is
concerned
:
:
·
.
.
pl~nning ni~als can
.
eliminate the
Erinish;
.
,
reprei,entative
·
to.
the
.
home to
· -
the
:
parents of exaniples
i
pointed
·
out
.
by the
·
_Other questions that have risen
·
·
-
item
.
which has
turned
:
students
·
.student
.
.
Afadelllic
: :
Conunittee;--
:
sophomores?
·
Ye,s, 7;
.
·
Jllo; 15.
< ·
surveys and personal opinions of out
:
of
.
surveys
:
are- under· sur~ away
;'.
·The· Saga
.
ch
·
efs and
·
·
inquired
·
of
:.
Jw~nty~tw
.
~
.
other
·
_
.
8.
Are the
.
final grades rnail~d
.
stµdents.
·
.
<
-
0
,
.-
·
'.
•
veillance;
·
sucli
as
the
·'.
co~plaint
.
-
assistaritmanagers,
'
all share
·
iri
.
colleges
.
as
,
to their grading home·to
.
the uppe.rclassnien
•
.
. ·In
·
helping
.
the committee
to
.
·
bystudentsthattemperaturesof
-
.
< .
·
.
.--
·:·
.
;
_
_.
·
p0licl~s
:
,
C
--
_
.
..
.
·
..
.
.
. .
..
.
.
themselves or
·
to
,
his
par.ents?
·
coll~ct
·
reli~~le
.
data
·:=
on the
f90d
_:::'
aren't
~
wami'
enough
/
To
Contmued on
page
·
5
.
,
~
-
.
;The
. ,
coUeg~s,
.
mostly from
·
.Parent
,"
i;
.
Student; .
.
17;
-
Both;
•
1:
>
students'-~piruon <>L
:
the
:
meals
:
remedv.
Uw;;::Jrlr.
,
LaDota
-::-
has
'
.
·
upperNew·York State ~rid Long·
·
TheresultsofJh~above
:
survey
,
served;
.
Mike
,
~rney· and
.
t~e
·
· ·
rsJand
/
·
responded with
·
th~
:
.
-
provided tne
·
;
ba~is
.
Jor
>
Ennish's
-
co~mi~e
:
have giyen
·
spot
in-
..
)ollowing r~s~ts:,
~
_
,
·
'
:
~
:
)
.
.
·
~
-;
.propo~l}o the
.
S~c
:
·
13slptjgJ~t
.
. ternews wi~
_'
st~~.ents by going
.
_
:
·
·
·
J.
Are m1d
~
term grad~s
:
given
.
we
-
rev1ew
.
·
:
Mar1~t•s
.
gr~dmg
_
.
room
·
to
-
roo~.
·
·
_.
.
· : ·
·
to
··
the. studerits
>
of
:
.the college?
·
·policiesciri the hopes
.
oLinitiating
_
-,
According
·
to
Mike
·
..
_
Carney,
~-
·
·~
·
Yes,15;
'
No,
~.
7.
·
,
·
'.
·
'
.
·
.
:
:
:
a
·
:
ch11rige
;:
_
Tile SAC
i'.
erivisions
cl
<'thfputj>ose oUhe conunittee
!,s
,
.
-
2
:-
Are the gr:ades mailed horn¢'
_
gradirigsystenrwhich
;
w.jll.
_
eriable to yoJimtarily
·
~ome a relay
to the
·
p~re
_
nts
;
of
fr~hm,en?
·
·
·
.
.
::
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'
stud~~t
.
to
~
have
:
,
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his
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h~
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between
.
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,:
.
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gi:adesfQrwar.~e
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dl}omeµpd~i:
.
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to
·
keep
·
s
.
!~d,el}.ts
,.
··
3
;
Are
·
grades mailed home
·
to
.
.-
or
_.
her name
;'
:
The
:
;
SAC
·
feels the
.
. ·
con~ent
.
and happy.'
~
;·
;
:>.
>:
.
',-
~.
the
,
parents of.
·
sophomores? Yes,
·
· Marist
.
student
,
to
·
be
:
capable
;
ot
.
:
:
·
·
Iil
~
questioniog
.
Carney
.-
:
on
:
his
. ·
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·
No,
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informing
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-
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·;ct
h~
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relationship
,
:
wi
.
th
c:.
Jim
·
La'Qota,
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.
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itjailed'ho~e
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outcome
,
of
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:
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ager Q~:sa~a, he, said;
/
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···
.
.
.
_
to
,.
the
_:
parents
-
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-
.
juniors
·
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year .
.
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been
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vecy
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r1_1ed
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s'1ould
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coopera~ye:-_H~
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·
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=
·
_,
,
contact
:
eith~r
'
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Mane
:.
Donovan,
.
.
credit.for'
:
6emg
•
so involved
with
·
,
_
__
;
_
-~
5
;
:
::-
Ate-the
:
ff!iaLgr~des mailed
.
:
also
:.--
of
-
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the
_
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,
at
-
:Gregory
_-:."
students
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,
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.
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House·;
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chip
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·
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(
PAGE2
Dr.
Sims
Marist To
.
Hold Festival
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER
21, 1974
PoliSci
Pi-ogram Involves
Many Students In Law
aspects of the law.
It
offers on-
As
far as the qualitative sue-
By Earnest A. Royal
the-job training, which serves as cess of the program Dr. Sims
valuable experience as well
.
as feels that many valuable ex-
The Political Science Work
important contacts for its par- periences have been gain~d by
Internslµp Program has been in ticipants.
.
the participants of the progr~m
operation for two years.
It
was
In
the past the program has and the- effect on the outside
first introduced by Dr. Sims a
been offered to seniors
·
and community has greatly sup-
professor in the Political Science
Political Science majors but due ported the good name of Marist
department at Marist College.
to a lack of interest the program College. He feels that there are
.
.
The success of the program has has broadened
its
scope. There is many intelligent stude!'}ts at-
varied since
its
initiation and Dr.
a screening process by which tending
·
Marist and agrees with
Sims feels this is attributed to the
participants are chosen but the Dr.
'
.
Mal
Michelson
that
fact that a large majority of the
major requirement is a
·
genuine education, in order to
~
com-
campus is
.
unaware of its interest in the operations of the plete ·must
·
go further_ tha!1 the
existence:
·
·.
program. Other requirements classroom
_
.
Quantitatively
.
The_mam thrust !)f the progra~
·
are eight
.
through s_ixteen hours speaking Dr. Sims feels that due
lS
to mvolve Mar1St students m
--
per week as a participant
_
ob- to the lack of interest exl?ressed
the ~egal ~spects of the everyday
:
server,
•a
book review, a quiz on
.
by the college commuruty
_
the
woud. Dif~erent _local
.
go_vern.:_ the class text, seminar meetings program
_
has not been as . ef-
me~t !1genc1es ~re mvolyed m the
during the semester _
and an
·
fective as expected: I?r
.
·
Sims
Pohtigal Science p
_
rogram.
analysis
.
and
,
evaluation
.
of the feels that a large ma1or1ty of the
Agen~1es such
~
the office of the
intern office
_
which
:
you
··
are
_
population being u~a~are . have
By Jerry
Profita
·
regional theater guilds who wish
•
Pubhc
..
Defender,
County
assigned. The program offers not been able to part1c1pate m the
The
.
New York State Drama to participate. There is one E_xecutlve,
State
.
Attor
_
ney
.
.
three thru six academic credits PoliticalScience program.
Festival will be held atthe Marist performance beginning at 8:00 General,
.C:ity
Planning
.
Board,
toward a degree: The program The program thus far has
College
·
Theater .this weekend P ;M.
Friday
night.
Per-
Model Cities Agency,
._
County
also
·
offers the
·
opportunity- for spread thto
_
ughout Dutchess
November 22;
.
23, and 24:
-
formances begin at 9:00 A.M. on Youth
·
Bo
·
ard,
.
Green Haven
summer employment. Although
.
County to Kingston as well as the
.
The festival will be sponsored Saturday and runs back to back Correctional Facility, Office of there
.
is no guarantee, many of Highlands, N.Y
.
·
Any
·
students
by the County
-
Players, who are with the last one beginning at the City
.
·
iyianager_;
.
.
Beacon'.s
the
-
agency's do need additional
·
wishing to participate
jn
t~e
ren~ing the l\farist facilities. The 11:00 P.M. On Sunday they begin
.
Mayor Office,
·
:
Police
.•·
Depart-
employees for
:
the
'.
summer Political Science Work ~nternsh1p
festival consists of two days and . at 9:00 A.M. and the last one ment-Commumty
Relations,
months and tge program acts as programai;e urged to contact Dr.
two nights of plays
.
Each play starts at
.12:
10
p
.M.
Legal Services Project and
·
other..
a
.
catapult for qualified persons.
~
·
Sims _.·· in
.
the
.
Political Science
will have fifteen
•
to twenty
·
·
There are eleven different operating
.
agencies. . .
.
Students intt.rt:sted
•
in a~ending Department for further .in-
-
minutes to set uptheir stage and theater guilds participating in the
Already they are af1lbated with
·
Law
·
School might also fmd the
_
formation.
•
.
·
-
·
the
·
saine time to disassemble. festival and each will perform a at least twenty
.
five operating
program asaluable
·
experience
.
•.
· · ·
·
After each performance, critic different play. For any details agendes and the expecta\
;
ons
-
6f
-
·
-- ·
•
·
:r:e a~t;:o~d~~~~tif:iad;: : ~ ~:at~~;~~c6e~t~~yo~~!SJ
1
~9~~ t~~~~~~;~qiafseg:~:d
~~~::ci
.
<;ale/idar Of Events
.
performance.
7521
:
,
orienting students in different
-
The festival is a meeting of the
·
·
Events for the week of 11-21-11-28
M
..
·
·
.
;
ar_
k
_
e
_
tin
..
_
,
g
·
.
·
· .
Le
·
c·t
__
·
..
u
·
re
'
.-
_
.
·
H
.
.
-
:
_
e~
_
:·.
-
1
·.·
..--
a
·•
.. ·
s
i
ro1~:~.c~h~::}irs·••Hogwild"
;,It's
_
a Gift" and "The-Music Box,,,
_
·
Fri. New York State Dra~ festival, Box office opens 6:30 p.m.
·
·
·
·
·
·
. .
:
.
First showing 8 :00
P-Il!.-,
"Dark.9f the Moon" Theatre
By
Frank Schiavi
an ad agency works. After ?,welley_ ~tress_ed t~e pomtthat
·
Nightin~he_Ratskellar,Skitch&Murray"8:00-1:00
..
retiring from a career in radio
.
adverbsmg
.
•
l~
,
no_tl)i~g
.
ff!-Ore
..
Sa~, New York State Drama Festival. Box office opens 8:30 a.m .
.
.
The Marist chapter of the broadcasting six year.s ago,
.
th,_m ,r;ood c~n:imurucati?n
;
•
He :consult New York State Festival Progra~ for listings
of
plays and
American Marketing Association Dwelley and his
.
partne_rs decided sa~d
-.
_·
_
·
advertism~ doesn
t.
~~11
,a
times for the day.
.
·
.
·
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
has gotten off
--
to an important ~o form the agency wit~
8:
total
_
thing.
_
A persQn wit~ monenn his
·
.
·
Beef,and Brew Night in the Ratskellar, Sat, 8
:
00
·
. 1 :00 Limited to
:·
start
'.
,
The
•chapter's
-
first . guest mvest~ent of ~4,000. W,1thi:n
.
the pocl<~t 11_as
·
thE?,
mt~n
_
t19n
.·
Qf
.
·
first
mo
people; for reserya,tic:ms
._.
see JackA~chofield
Rm.
No.L325
·
speaker;
·
.Richard
.
Dwelley ..
·
otllie pa,~t
g:i,:
yg~f:i,
-
P~e)~~Y-.~
.
a~<iJp
,
e
__
sp~n9cmg
_
!LW.e,)Jll9-l?~Y
,;,
~
.
~
-
s~~ge
,,femporary,.
entertainment and
..
beer
-
served
,
with diriher ....
.
_ •.'
:,
;,
.•.
Dwelley
'
& Bolger
.
·
Advertising
·_
agency ~.~s gro~ m~o
_
a suc
0
the m
01
_iey ou
.
t of
,
Jiis
.
_
poc~e~,J'
Sun:New.YorkDrama-Festivjll, Box office opens 8:30 a.m.Consult
Agency, proved to be
•
an-
.
in- cessful
.
s~all,
·
reg10nal
_
ad Ac~oi;_dmg
•
to
.
Dwelley,: if. a New York State Drama
·
Festival :erogram for listings of plays and
formative speaker.
~
-
agency With acc~unts
·
totaling
·
busmess ~ants to advertise its times
,
,
.
·
"
>
.
··
· ..
.
_
_
·
·
.
On
.
November 13, Dwelley over $3,000,000."
~
product;
·
1t should
~
-
~xpect to
.
"Three
•
Musketeers'' Rm. i46D MGFP 7:30 p.m
:
.
.
·
discussed with the chapter how
Throughout the discussion
.
budget _6-8 percent
..
of its a~ual
.
Mon. CUBfilm"The Life An(! Times of Judge Roy Bean'' 8:00 p.m.
~ . . . ; . ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , gross mcome ,for. advert1smg .
.
Theatre
.
·
. ·
·
_·,
;
!his perc~nta_ge' represents _an
.
Tues. CUB Coffee
·
House8:30.p.m
.
New Dining Room
Getextra
six-packs forthe
·
weekend.
_
~$.~~
-l
·
m
'
•t!!A~_I
----
.
d'duutfe/l
when you're having
·
more than one .
..
•·
.
.
'
,
. .
.
.
AVAILABLE
--
IN
-
JHE
·
RATHSKELLER
ALSO: DUTCHES.S BE~R DISTRIBUTORS
84 Dutchess Turnpike
·
Poughkee
·
psie~
.
N. Y. 1260l
~ll
CAI/ HAVE
Col'IFIDEll~E
-WHEN Yt1ilR
et,
/NS"/MANCE
t'oW,J
FAoM MARSHAlL
.
/STERl./~i!
..
--
-MARSHA(I:.::-&
··
srERUNG;
~-
INC.
-\
·
.
·
- ~i~~e-
-
1 ~
-
~t
-:
~
•-i~\
.
:·:
·
1
::\;_\
. )
-
~
·
:
.
:
~ \
.
}
·:
·
/~
:/
_:
·
PROFESSIONAL: INSURANCE CE~TERS
. .
.
:
.• "
pouG~KEEI•s1e
i
-
:
,
WAPPINGERS
FALLS
·:
.
·
1s
W~shingion
'
St
.•
:
.
'-
:;':,
:
\
-
'
1~~e~ia1
Pla;a
··-
--:
454,0800
/
.
.
297-37()1
ideal allocat10n for effective
.
·
·
·
·
·
··
-
,
advertising.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
-
.
Dwelley
.
said an
·
ad agency is
/
Winier Consort
·
TimDeBaun
·
important to any business client
.
...
because it can spend the
_
clients'
money
inteHigently.
MosJ
business management executives
Once again, the C. U .B. Performing Arts Committee is proucHo
he
·said,
ifr~n•t
_
aware of how to present the Paul Winter Consort.
·
.
·
·
·
·
market and
·
advertise their
·
As last year, The Consc;,rtwill perform in the theatreon Dec.4th at 9
businesses
:
Many executives,
·
p.m. A workshop will also be
·
held on that same day in the Gallery
.
Dwelley said, either spend too Lounge at 2 p.m.,
·
no charge.
·
much money
·
on advertising, not
Along
-
wit_h Paul Winter, the Consort inclu~es David Darling, Pa';ll
enough,
·
·
or
.
waste it· on wrong McCandless,_Joel Andr~ws, Russ Hartenbu~ger, and Bob Becke~-1!us
·
kinds of ads;
.
On
the
.
whole ensemble was the subJect of much acclaun last year on their 1m-
Dwelley said that when it
.
come~
•
.
proyisations; ?long with
_
a unique_integration of sol!-lld.
.
.
_
·
to marketing ability; the busines:,
_
.
-.
Tick~~
~~r
the performance m -~he theatre will go on
.
sale
.
after
executive is "not too swift."
·
Thanksg1v
_
mg. An ev_ent not to be m1Sse~ for sure.
.
.
-
.....:
I
I
-
NOVEMBER 21, 1974
.
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Commission To Celebrate Revolution
By Chip Kennard
people must unite and dedicate Revolution was in the minds and their personal papers for the
day care by 1976.
themselves to a new patriotism.' hearts of the people; a change in same tax deductions
the
'
The Peoples Bicentennial
From1974 to 1983, The Peoples
In·
the words of
-·
Ms. Rollins, their religious sentiments, of President, the wealthy,· and the
Commission is made up of
Bicentennial Commission, along "Americans need a patriotism their duties and obligations ... This great corporations received.
average
citizens
who are
with many other concerned that calls 'for allegiance
·
to the radical change in the principles,
In another incident, members
dedicated to making this country
Americans, will be celebrating revolutionary and democratic opinions, sentiments and af-
of the Appalachian PBC held a
live up to its revolutionary
·
the Bicentennial of the American
.
principles that launched this fections of the people was the real demonstration protesting cor-
promise. The PBC would like
Revolt;tion.
· ·
nations first national rebellion to American Revolution
.
"
porate tyranny, comparing the
every American citizen to take
_
The Peoples Bicentennial tyranny.''
In a PBC
.-
newsletter, Page great coal companies of Ken-
part in the 'Peoples' campaign
Commission is a
-_
non-profit
·
Ms. Rollins said, ''For the first
-
Smith, the staff historian of the tucky to the monarch our foun-
for the Bicentennial by joining
foundation located in the nations time in
.
this century, Americans PBCandprize-\vinningauthorfor ding patriots overthrew.
the
PBC
Committee
of
capital Washington, D.C. Ac- can marshall a majority cam-
the biography of John Adams
In another part
of
the country,
Corrospondence.
cording to a recent PBC paign
,
that replaces blind said "The Bicentennial Era is a Sister Joan Baustian, coordinator
Individuals who feel the urgent
publication, "the PBC was allegiance to crooked politicians time when the attention of of the Chicago Peoples Bicen-
necessity to mobilize, can begin
founded in the belief that it is and avaricious corporations with millions of Americans will be tennial office has been speaking
·
organizing and participating
in
time to reaffirm the democratic a renewed committment to the turned to an investigation, to
farmers'
organizations, local PBC efforts. The PBC
principles of the D2claration of democratic principles of
·
the reflection, and commemoration churches, and youth groups
programs and ideas can be easily
Independence
and
of
the Declaration of Independence. of the revolutionary Spirit of throughout the Mid-West for the
integrated into the activities of
American Revolution."
History has given the citizens 1776.''
past 9 months, concerning the
.
existing organizations in the
This anniversary of the this chance.
·
If Americans fail to
Smith said, "The Bicentennial nations crisis and what may be
community.
Thousands
of
Revolution
,
will be a time for
·
seize it, then the advantage will of the
.
American Revolution done to help in the Bicentenn
i
al libraries, churches, fraternal
·
Americans
to
-
--
rededicate fall back into the hands of the provides us with a chance to effort.
clubs, schools, colleges, civic
themselves and their country t~
.
Wall Street crowd."
·
_
move the cliches, misconceptions
The PBC campaign has associations and other groups are
the sacred
-
ideals of thei
According to Ms. Rollins, "The and the outright untruths, into an already reached millions of
currently using materials and
American
.
ancestors who
.
fough
lines are clearly drawn. Either
.
exploration
;
at onc
·
e serious and Americans. Hundreds of radio programs specially developed by
to uphold their own beliefs over the citizens' democratic
.
prin-
enjoyable, of the
'
principles, and television stations are the PBC
.
_
_
200 years ago.
ciples redefine what America
-
opinions, sentiments
·
and af-
currently programming the
The Peoples Bicentennial
The PBC .. recognizes the should. stand for, or they allow fections' of our ancestors. By commissions public service
·
Commissions' Committee of
economic and political crises of Wall Street full reign to mold the better
understanding
the education programs on a daily Corrosponcience can play an
.
1974 as beirig as great as those of attitudes of the nation to suit the America of 1776, we will better basis.
historic role during the Bicen-
1776. Due to several
.
public needs of the corporacy
.
.,
understand the America of our ·
,
The commission offers a tennial years in turning the
revelations of the past year,
The Peoples
·
Bicentennial day:''
--
·
feature film as well as a multi-
present national cynicism into a
~erica is in a most threa~ning
-
.
Commission has already
.
acted
Various PBC sectors around media performance which is positive statement of what
and serious crisis. According to decisively on this
-
challenge
.
The the country are actively working
currently touring the
-
U
.
S
.
The America should stand for .
.
.
PBC
.
leader Shelia Rollins, commission is
·
i
nvolved
.
·
in a
·
towards a
·
new patriotism by
PBC has also produced a wide
In another
.
PBC newsletter,
"
people ~re questioning,
'.
.
'What massive ~amp_aig;n to revi".e the taking direct action on issues of
range of commercial books that
.
Page Smith concluded an article
does America stand for?' During democratic prmciples and ideals local and national importance.. are
being
published
and he wrote concerning the com-
the Bicentennial Era
·
more at
/
that sparked the American
The Massachusetts Peoples distributed by ma1or publishing mission, with a quote from
tention will be focus;d on
,
what Revolution.
Bicent
_
ennial Coalition
.
staged a
houses to bookstores, drug stores Thomas Jefferson. Perhaps these
America should stand fcirthan at
.
Over 200 years ago, John
·
one day citizens tax revolt in
and supermarkets.
words may best conclude this
any period fothe history of this Adams .wrote in a letter
-
to a Boston: Approximately 500
The
PBC
is
developing articleaswell. "The Principles of
nation:"
·
'
friend, "But what do we mean by Bostonians flooded the local Bicentennial
programming, the American Revolution should
It is the commissions firµi the American Reyolution? Do we Internal_ Revenue Service office
cond~<:ting
workshops
and
be
the creed of our political faith,
conviction, that the 'American mean the American War? The demanding that the IRS accept 'providing
speakers
and - the text of civic instruction, the
.
·
·
.
.
.
materials for organizations touchstone by which we try the
Groun
·
To
.
Ce
_
·
.
lebrate
,
Discovery
·.
~~~~~?~g
0
:roc~ur~t:s
~iti~~:~
~~~;;~e~ifw~ri~!r1~o~ut~~r:~~
.
'.I:'
,
.
.
YMCA s.
moments of error or
.
of alarm
,
let
·-
·
·
·
·
The commission helped in the
·
us hasten to retrace our steps and
by Julie Schott
the party is being held in Honduras.
'
'It
was very sue-
organization arid development of to regain the road which alone
celebration of
-
Puerto Rico
·
cessful," said Quintana
.
"We
a 4-year program for the largest leads to peace, liberty and
The Third world Alliance, Discovery Day
.
(November _19)
,
collected ove
_
r $600 and we-
day-care organization in the safety."
.
along with the lack
·
Student bu~ that-it is op~n to all of the gathered clothing and fo?d too.
nation; The National Day Care
Any person seeking to obtain
Union, the Spanish Club, and the
.
chil~ren and-Marist students who
·
. When we
-
held the
_
blood drive, we
and Child Development Council further information may write
:
_
Comimiter'.s.Ui:iion;
_
are
_
.
g\yi!!g
!i
'
_
:
~Ie
m~ere~ted
:_
:
;
.
.
,
..
.
.
•··
·
c~~lected, ~42 pmts
-
of
.
.
!Jloo~. · of America
.-
The PBC aims at' to:
.
()fiice of the
.
Peoples
party
this Friday, Novemb
·
er 22,
-
_
'J'.he :T~ird World
:
·
Alliance;
·
E1ghty
,
;f1ve
·
of
:
the
.
dono;f ha_d
eillisting10 million parents into a Bicentennial Commission, 1346
for the children at Mother which 1s m charge of the
·
party,
-
never given
_
_
blood before.
-
·
day-care lobby to press for Connecticut
Avenue
NW,
Cabrini's
.
-
·
·
plans many other projects
this
otherpro1ects tgat a~e plani:iect
quality
,
community-controlled Washin
·
gton, D.C. 20036 .
.
Raul Quintana, the chairman of
_
se1:1ester,
,
which t!1e
.
chairma!1,
.
for the
.
near futur~, mclude a
r-----------------------------
,,
the Third World Alliance
·
sa
i
d Qumtan;i, hopes that others will part~ with the Spanish club to be
that everyone is invited and ricies participate in
,
.
.
h~ld m the Barn
_
on pecember 6,
~
might be arranged for those who
"W~
·
h!1ve
,
r_estructured our
.
View o_f Maz:ISt
College
!or
need transportation. ·
·
orgaruzation
-
this year so . that e~onomically disadvantaged hi~h
,
The festivities, which
.
are everyone can
fit
into it. TWA is sc}Jool
-
stud
_
ents, wher~ ~here w1H
scheduied to ·begin at 3:00 p.m
.
, open to all people of all cultures be speakers o_n obtammg !unds
wiU last until 9:00, and will in- and nation~lities. W~ hope to do
.
for __
._
educabon,
·
vo<:a_tional
elude
·
cultural foods, slides
.
of more
things
with
other trai~mg, _and opportunities at
Puerto Rico and a film entitled, org~!llzat_ions on campus now
Manst,_bemg held on Det:. 7, and
"Portrait of the South Bronx." too.
.
.
a Famllr Day on Dec. 8 spon-
-
x ·
R
· ·
me
.
mber of the
Their first project was a drive sored with the Black Student
.
ema oss, a
·
.
.
.
.
. .
Union
Black Student Union, said that for
·
the hurricane victims of
.
·
Thanksgiving Ser
_
vice
Scheduled
Marist ID
.
:
,
-
.
.
.
....
I
•
SQUIRES
STEAK HOUSE
FEATURING CHARCOAL BROILED
STEAKS-CHOPS-LOBSTER
/
DINNER FROM 5pm. to
·
llpm.
SUNDAYS- 5pm. to 10pm.
COCKTAIL LOUNGE ...
PROPER ATTIRE REQUESTED
·
NORTH ROAD
.
{"ROUTE 9)
452-7191
FRANK'S
RESTAU.RANl
STOP
BY.
-
AND
HAVE A GOOD TIME
! !
!
·
_1
I
.I
.I
1
I
.
I
I
I
i {:
:
·
I
.
/;
r
PAGE4
•
ne
CIRCLE
/.
,:1-,", .
J ~
~ -
-
,
-
..
...
:.•
vo,uMe13
Marlst College,
'
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
•
.
.
The ~arist College cmcLE
is
the weekly newspaper of the students
of ~arist Colle~e and
_is
published throughout the school year ex..:
clusiv~ of vacation periods by the Southern
Dutchess
News Agency
Wappmgers, New York.
_
--
·
·
'
Co-Editors.
Lyn
Osborne
and
Gregory Conocchioli
-
Associate Editor
Irene Ross
Layout Editor
TimDeBaun
Photography Editor
Dave Pristash
Staff: Jerry Profita,
Rich
_Burke, Maureen Dennigan,
Chip
Kennard, Dave
Kazdan, Julie Schott"Donna Corrado
'
Eleanor
Bert, Gary Norman, Earnest A. Royal, Debbie Nyki;l Cathie
R~~. Karen
~y,
Rich Stevens,
Fr.
Leo
Gallant, Jo~ Tkach,
Iin~
·
Frarlco,
Jllll Kennedy,
Tom McTeman
·
.
Terry Stoutenboro
Jamee Colleran; ~~te Provost, Bob Baulch, Brian Morgan Bob
Ne~on?
Rhoda
Crispell,.Al Adolphi; BillRusso;~and
Frank
Schiavi.
·
-
-
·
-
·
·
·
- -
..
Business Manager
--
·
-
Greg.Welsh
Advertising Manager
Toni McDonald
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER
2J, 1974
Letters To The Editors
Student
Participation?
ministration does things so fast will complain that they were not
that they don't consult them at consulted. Ironically, those who
all. OR students bitch about
how
are the first to complain are the
theS.A.C; does nothing at all.
Yet·
ones wh
_
o never respond to the
this past week, the Circle ran an meetings posted. What more
In previous . issues· of The article on where the meeting was must the Student Gov'tand SAC
.
Circle, I have constantly read going to be held, what day, and do, of which I am a rilember·or
how Marist students are always what time. Posters were put up both, in order
.
to bring aboutmore
participating in some - sort of with the information once
·
again response from the student body?
event or Function· for the bet- where what time, and the topic to I am afraid
-
to
admit
that the
terment of the college or
_
_
the
be
discussed
.
The time chosen
-
problem of Student
·
Gov't com~
-
community that surrounds the was Tuesday at
2:15,
a free slot, a munication
is
not the fault
of
-
the
school. Well,
this
is all
fine and slot used to
_
hold
·
meetings that
_
SAC or Student Gov't themselves; -
good, but wheri it
.
comes down to - students may participate in but lies within
·
the student
·
body·
something that
_
·
involves them without
interference
from due to lack of interest. What I am
·
directly
-
nobody
·
could
_
give
·
a
schoolwork or classes. Still noone asking you to do, is
!o
prove
me
damn, and the students proved it showed up!
wrong by showing some
,
concern
once again
.
this past Tuesday,, ·
·:
A policy board meeting of the in matters brought before you.
when
_
a colloquiUIIi was held on a
.
Student. Government was can-
.
Find out what the SAC
_
is
doing
new
major in
_
Computer celed
·
m
order that its memtiers
·
about the new
·
jnajor
-
and
-
the
:
-
Mathematics. A gra:ndtotal of six attend the colloquitiin. The
-
grading
·
system;
·
In other
·
words
students showed.upJo hear Dean members
·
of _ the
.
Stud~nt
-
get _involved!
·
·
· · ·
Carolan talk on the
·
new proposal
,
Academic C
_
ommittee
_
were
Thank· You,.·
and
.
t~
hear
students complaints
~
strc;,ngly
·
-
-
advised
_
_
to participate,
·
.
:
-
:
·
·
.
Chil)
:
Etmish
··
_
or arguments
-
against the major.
Y
~t no
_
memb~rs of both con:i-
Vice President of The studerit
:
The
..
students are constantly
·
mittees showed up;
-
When_ this Government
·
-
.
complaining about
.
how
.
the a\!- proposal.goes
_
through, stude11ts
_
chapter and activities has been
Treasurer; Maureen ·McC
_
ue
.
-
performed by our students;
in~
.
Secretary.
-:
-- _·
_
..
· eluding public -relations
-
,and
The
·
above
.
. named .·
,
_
students
newspaper rel~ases.
_
_
together with other mem~ers_ of
Complaints
-
M~rketing
--
Association
-
:
Your article was overly
-
AMA are the
.
true motivatmg
·
· _
Complain~ - -expressions
of
discQntent- ~
-
be
heard
.
throughout
,:
To
·
: Editors .of Circle
·
g~t1erCJUs
h
describi_ng . my
·
force behind the group's success.
Maristeveryday.Allanyonehastodoiswalk·acrosscampus
'
andhe is
_
Thank you for your recent personal role
as
faculty advisor.
·
Members
.
of the Marist com-
sure to hear.some complaint ~bout curriculum, teachers, or be>redom -
-
articl~ on
-
the new American Recognition
·
for outstand~ng
-
munity can be very proud of their
to
_name
just
a
.
few. ~ronic~lly?
·
th<
,
>Ugh, whenever the OPP<?~unity
·
Marketing Association c\:llegiate estfufodretntsi~. due
the followmg
achievements.
-
_
-
~ince;~ly,
arises !or ~ople to air then
:
views or when~ver the chance to do chapte~ at Marist. ~t ~s _important
something
_
clifferentcomesup,suddenlynooneISaround.
_
.
·
_
-
_
_
to note
AMA
was
1
rutiated
by
a _ Mary
Ahn
Paradiso .
RichardMcCarty
_
The colloquiumheldlast Tuesday is a good
:
example ofthis. While group of students
.
To date
;
all the president; Tom Walsh
_
~
-
Vice
·
many
·
co:mplain about
the curriculum, only
six
people were interested work of organizing our Marist
·
Presiderit;
Rich
.
Jones
·
-
enough to show upto discuss a possible addition to our curriculum.
'
.
·
·
-
-
The colloquium was held during-the free slot- and realistically con-
. .
_
_
sidering the number of people Who had oµtE!r meetings and those·who
Sports Errors
College in Ne
_
w Jersef
_
is.
m.en
~
..
cording _to the
.
.
ai:ticle
.
K~an
_.
use the free
._
slot to work
oµ
outside class projects
~
we still feelth~t
.
an
-
,
.
-
·
.
ticined three tunes,
·
twice
1n-
,
the
-
College
-
1s located
'
m
_
Newark,
· -
attendance of orily six people"is
a
bit ridiculous.
.
-
• _
_
·
.
-
-
<>
.
-
:
second paragr~ph
of
"Athlete
_
of ~ew ~etsey; it is
·
actuallylocated
,
·
The CIRCLE would also
like to
say a word to th1:>se who are con~
-
_
the week'
'
and once under.
m
Umon
,
-
New Jersey,
.
. ___
-
_
stantly bored and who feelthat "there is nothing to do here.,.Well, Dear Editors
Friday, November 15th of uTfii~
..
_ ram-a
_
trai:isfer student fro.Ill:
/
·
aside from the various clubs, activities, and outside involvement
.
that
.
-
T
would
.
like
.
to call your at-
Week
_
in_ Marist Sports
/
'. TI:ie Kean ( whic
_
h 1s pronounced
_
C-A~
: -
people could getinto (Yes, there
·
really are some thingst9
·
do arourid
-
iention to two errors on the sports
correct name of the college
.
is
.-
N
-
E)
ancl wished
to
inform you
:
of
· ·
here!), we v.:onder why no
o~~
took adva~tage of
_
the
c1CUB
bus trip to page of the November 14th issue
·
Kean CoHege
.
of
_
New Je
'
rsey.
-.
_
_
these
~
e
:
rrors so
.
that thef would
·
New}/ ork City that vvould_ hl:!ve
.
bee11 oijered.a
_
couple of Wedn~sdays
_--
of
_
the CIRCLE.
--
-~ ,
.
·
·
-
.
_
.
The second error is also under
·
_
not be repeated
j
ti the• future;
•
.
·• _- __
_
. _
_
·
ago
·
;
The
trip
·
wasinexperi.~~ye ~il4h~ld ~!i
•
a dayJvllen~~'Y. P~OP.le. have
·-·
·
-
Under:
~
·
.
tl)e
.
''High
-•
on
.
Sp~rts"
·
,
,
Friday
\
;J'I0
Y
el1}p~r 1f
_
:~t
-
_
:
'
_
'~is
-
_
.•
f,
i
.
'.::i
:
.
,··
.
;
~/
,,
_-
;
·
-
_
/:
§i~ce'.i;elf,
.,.
-
_
_
:
.
·
,
_
classes. Yet, the lack
.
oLmterest was
.
5-uch tnat Jhe
,
trip
~
had
}
o
be
colliirin
;
the
.
,
name
.
Kean State
,
.Week
-
m
Marist
-
:
Sports
}
'
-
Ac~
-_
'-
;
-.-
_
.-
,
.
.-
•
,:
·
,·
--:•-·' ·
James McGee
'
'
"'"
-
,
'.
cancelled.
·
·_
.
-
_
---_
-
,
-,._
-
'·
-
.
..
.
·
.-
·
·
:
·
-
_
-
,
,
·:
..
-
-
,
.
..
,
..
-
,
.
-.
---
·
•:
·
.: --
...
··
•·
-
---
--
--
-
-
-
_._
;
_
.-,
,
_.,
- :_
.
:
:
·
. Everyone
is
going to have complaints: However, we feel that
_
-
-
~ny people never take adva:ptage of opportunities when they do
"Friends"
.
.
arise.
.
.
_ -
.
_.
-.
-
-
-
.
.
The
·
CIRCLE hopes that the next time a colloquium, trip, lecture,
·
At
·
M
-
·
• t
-
-
.-
concert arises, more people will take the time outtoI¼ttend them.
-
- _
3r1S _
_
'
..
.
.
.
.
.
,
· your efforts to help Marist
'in
the
.
·
_
May! also
.
avail myself of
.
this
.
crucial area of recruitment were
_
opportunity
_
to
·.:
tharik
_ :
-
Pete
--
·
·
_
,
r~warded by
-·
an enjoyable
.
Wilderotter
:
for
-
his
.
time,
·:
,
,
To the Marist Community'
:
weekend.
·
.
.
-
dedication, and energy:
·
.Pete has
· :
.
- ·
·
I
certainly appreciate, too,
.
the performed a great service to the
contribution thafmembers of the
_
l\1arist community
.
·
Budget Questions
I
would like to take 'this
·
op-
portunity to thank all the
·
students
who participated in
__
"Bring
·
a
Friend
·
to
.-
Marist Day.'.! I hope
faculty made this weekend
;
Many
'
Sincerely,
.
of them jettisoned their normal
_
Brian Morris
· Saturday plans to help us out. We
.
President of Student Gov't.
·
are sincerely grateful'for thi~
,
.
'-
.
_-
_
For once, The CIRCLE may have found itself at a loss for words but
~
im
&
lm'
~ ~
!
!
!
1ml?
~
! t ! ~
-ffli~
ml1
~lW
.Wmimm
,%f.W
RM*%:
'fiw.mmw.
@
{.~ffi
W&.t
~
-ci
.
not witl_lout good reason
,:
!~stead we have a few questions that. we
·
The CIRCLE w~uld lik
·
c ro remind you th:11
,
a
ll letter
s
11aybe edited for reasons of length and/~r
woBuldd likte to ~et off our mmds.
-
-
.
-
_
-
-
-
·
content at the discretion of.the editors. All letters mus
t'
bc TYPED and will be printed
a
s
recci(·cd
•
.
-
u ge hearmgs(rememberthose?)wereheldlongago-oratleast
.
h
·
·
·
-
- •
'
.
-
.
-
.
·
·
the beginning of the semester. Allocations were supposedly completed
-
r at rs
.
:'o co'.recrion
ot
gr
a_
mm~r or ':\'Ordm~ w1l_l bi: done othe_r
t ..
an the spelhng of propi:r names.
then. So, we have a few questions for the Student Gover_nment in the
Please
_
make su
_
r
_
e aH
,
lctter
s
arc s1gnc~
.
We
_
w1H_w1thhold any name uponc.rcquest.
_
but must have it on
person of the Financial Board:
_
_
_ .
.
·
_
_
..
-•
·
chc'
:
original l!!ttcr.
',
_Thank you for your cooperation
.
,
,
·
_
·
·
--.:
~
·
1.
Ar~-.
or were (we
_
're ~ually the last to find o~t) - clubs, ~ctivities,
_
i
~1'1Jli!
i
i[
·
· ·
:
1
11mm
m :
:mM
,
!
!!ii
oiM:!:!Ml'sli:rnm:: ;;
l b & ; s ; # : : ~ ~
etc. notified of the allocations awarded them dunng the hearmgs?
(Or
.
. .
·
-
.
.
·
.
·
are we all spending monies we haven't got?) And,
--
_
·
.
_
.
·
·
·
·
,AA..tR::>
2.
If ~otifications ~ve been rilade,
-
when then ar~
.
the funds
·
going·to
~rrtttm
be
credited to the vanous accounts? Do we only have· money on paper
~ " " " ~
-
and not
'
_
on hand? Will we forever receive
·
monthly printouts
of
ac-
counts reading "overdrawn?'
~
)
.
·
·
- _ _
_
· _
_ ·
_
_
--
·
..
·
Now before anyone
.
gets too upset, let
us
admit that ihe year did get
·
.,
,
off to a
bad
start: budgets
-
had to be cut more
thari
once, vacant
·
positions filled, organizations had
to
get
-
organized. But although we
·
admit to
a certain amount
of
disruptive influence interfering with
a
perhaps smoother channel of operations for the handling of money; we
~
do no_t agree
:
wi~
the obvious
la~k
of
.
attention
_
paid to a rn
·
ore
busmess-like application of government.
·
·
·
.
We remind everyone that these are only questions(not accusations)
-
that have arisen:
.
we have asked a
.
member·of the
-
board
.
about the
transference of
funds
who told
us
if
we
"really
needed it'' it
·
could be
_
done.
·
_
·
.
_
_
-·
_
_
-
.
_
.
·
_ -
-
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That isn't what we had in mind by our questions: rather,
..
we
.
want to
know how and when all
this
will
get done,and thought the student body
might wantJo know
too.
·
· _
·
·
.
.
-
.
Editorial
Note:
__
-
.
-
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.
~
,
•
,
.
Please take note thatthe final fall semester
issue
of tlieCIRCLE will
be
·
that
of
December'.12. Naturally, there
will
be
no issue next week
(Thanksgiving), and due
.
to t~e
-
short
.
~r.eal{there w,ill
_
~~4:}_
-
~
j
io
_
issue
·
on December
5.
,
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,
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_-
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.
•
Anyone
·
wanting any
'.
event covered
.
is
.
asked
to
(!()fltact
·
the
.
CI_RCLE
·
_
(Box,C-SS7)
·_
iifter Thanksgiving,
-
and_those
whowishto
submit
:
ar:ttcles
.
are reminde~ ~ t due
·
date fo
_
r copy f~r
~t
~
~~e
wiJl be,
Mo!]day,"
·
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.
December
9,
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PAGES
Descriptioris- Vary
_
Of Alcoholics
Anonynious
R~niern~r-
~ n
Wdte_r WdS
'dedn
.dl)(j
sex
WdS
dirty
7
By Bill
Russo
· Alcoholics Anonymous has
been called an organization, a
society,
a
movement,
a
fellowship, a semi-religious
group, and a method of treat-
ment. None of these descriptions
is wholly accurate, some of them
are completely wrong. _
Alcoholics Anonymous is
neither an organization nor a
· society in·
the
accepted sense of
these words. Nor -is it a semi-
religious
group, -. nor
a
"movement". It is both a
fellowship and a method of
treatment, but· it is also many
o......
other
things,
so that neither word
Do,,_"
in itself is descriptive enough.
· - . To its
own
members
AA
is first
a way back to
life, and then a
.;......;.. _ _
...;.....;...;..;. __________________ ...;..,.;.;.. _ _ _
--_.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
......, ____ design for living.
AA
has a single
1/i'ranCe.11_ ..
i
.
·
la Giscard:
Fr~:i::i;i!l~~
.
Alcoholics Anonymous is · a
A
New.
Leaf
..
.
·
{Part 2)
~1:1:~tia.z.t1='.1
themselves and each other to get
sober and to stay sober.
B -
i,
·
· ·
8 G
some--secluded
spot, far away o_bser_ves the approa_ching end of
·AA
espouses no causes, even
---
.Y
r:r~n.coisc . rcgg
. • . .·
.•
from civilization .. The number of an era, Where are the days whe!l causes
designed
to
help
But-as
a
by no means · <'J3ec·ondary residences" has peasant women wearing ,their alcoholics.
It
does not sponsor or
purely symbolic gesture, one of risen_ froni '-500,000 -
in
1954 to Norman coifs could still be seen support hospitals, nursing homes
President Giscard's first: act was - · 1,500,000
in
1974. Trailers have in -the 11th. century romanesque : or sanitariums for alcoholics.
-
to appoint. women to such doubled in the last
10
years. And_ church of my village -
now
It
has only one condition for
government posts as Health, Pre-
even the notoriously centralized suburbia - and when horse and membership and that
is
an honest.
-.· school Education, the Penal govern01ental apparatus !Jas buggy . were still ambling on - desire to stop drinking.-However,
system- as _
welF as the newly · · joined)he movement, wit!less a peac'eful roads on market days as the doors are always open in case
formed- and muc~ publicized recent cabinet .meeting held by in
the
times
of
Emma the alcoholic feels he cannot stop
Those who are seeking help
from
AA
must find it by attending
meetings and _ learning by
listening or from individual
members whom they may know,
and who may
be willing to advise
them.
It
is
not a group function to
help anyone other than an
alcoholic who seeks that help.
The alcoholic who seeks help,
however, will
be
shown the
AA
way to sobriety, that is by con-
vincing him that he too can learn
the way, by seeing about
him
thousands who have successfully
trod the way before
him.
This is perhaps the first great
lesson t~e newcomer is taught -
that it can be done. He sees with
his own eyes numbers of people
who have done it, ·and he hears
with his own ears stories that he
must believe, of past drinking as
bad or worse than
his own. Hope
becomes a living reality to
him,
embodied in the persons of
AA
members he sees, hears and
meets.
AA
has never claimed anything
like 100 percent recoveries
although it does believe that
considerably more than 50
percent of those who have tried it
have recovered. Since it does not
keep records, recovery figures
cannot be verified. But even
if
accurate figures existed, and
even
if
they showed only a 50
percent recovery rate, this would
be an incredibly high record,
considering
that
alcoholism was
regarded until very recently as a
hopeless affliction.
·
Women's Status; The _
so-called the President and his Ministers in
·
Bovary ... On the other hand; we drinking.
·
PrefectoraLService 'and· -~the · Lyons instead of. Pai-k As. a should not forget that "quaint-
L k Wh
w
Inspeciorslup,of F'inances, once. partial resultof. the immensely ness'! is all
too
often a disguised ·
o
O
·at
. e
reserved .exclusively
for
.men; successful
summer
music pseudonym for poverty. ~'Live
.
·
have ceased to be male.bastions. festivals over the last20 years, better"is one of the mottoes of
·
The celebrated ,,Polytechnic the
provinces - . are
tieirtg' the new French Government
H ·
-
·o·
School'.ii1;f!ari~.has,atlastopened. ·redisco.vered:'- :Abandoned .-acutely .,aw~re ot the. French_,_,,,,-
· •.
.
av.
·e- - one
its d()()rs tciworiien;·.and\for the yillages;'abbeys/'and.'\~hateaux ''people's riew desire for material
'T
·
'
'
··,_
·
-. ---
.
firsLtinie.in_>the history·_of the .. are. being rebuUt_ through benefits. And
in
this respect, the
( •
_
)
Frenclt diplomatic service, a yolunteer wor_~ of y~~th-teams. French have never lived bett_er-
-·
·J·
USt a C0filffleflt
woman·- has · been named· am-· . These new llberalizmg. trends or more extravagantly.
.•
-
bassagor: -Today
a
substantial initiated by Giscard
as
well as the
11le price, however, nee~ not
__ By Maureen Dennigan
number of women hold jobs not new democraUc 'image . he is necessarily
~
the , uglification of.
only , as· lawyers, put 'even as· . trying .. to give . the Presidency. the
country.
:Pompiqou'd ·
At Farah plants in the south-
judges:: More and. more married ·· have not failed to disturb many Government had sheltered_ itself · west, at Oneita plants
in
South
worn~ ai-eOgainfully employed merrtbers. of ~s own
·e~ect?rate
complacent!~, behi~d the facile .Carolina, women -went out on
1
one third -of::the wage-earning
(mostly "centrISt"· or· rightists). slogan that .. the Eiffel tower -
strike, -and out they stayed until
•. population} -
this
in spite of the ,A declaration
like
"We are symbol of French industrial they won the right to unionize.
_ still >§hocking" aiscrepancy' bet-
opening-th~ b_oo~ of a n~w ~ra, a progress - g~ts along well with
Women, like the •wives of Shell
ween their wages and_ the males' ._page which is _ exhlla_rmgly Notre-Dame: . ;And · the result strikers in California, manned
.salaries (one half -of French blank;"-seems to many like the was that Par1S1ans today must picket
lines
for health and safety
- . working women make ,less· than last straw of "Americanization", ·uve _ with the notorious Mont.:
regulations.
-
$260 a·mo11th). The main
.
forum
anall-purposetermofderogation parnasse to"'.er, erected three
Womenhavemarchedforother
for the French ''fem lib" activists used · by . the old guard to years ago, which mars one of the issues related to work, to com-
is the hugely popular -magazine - characterize
the
grom:ng pa~s of m~t '.beau~ul pro~pects of the munity,
and
international
-Elle •-a kind of hybrid blend of the new France. The giant strides capital. This alarmmg trend has struggles:
for
childcare,
Gla:Uor .- the Ladies Home made towards material and· been felt throughout the country. protective · legislation,
for
Journal ' and
Ms : ·
one · whose _ technical prcgress, although But recent gestures of the minimum wage laws, for welfare
leading contributo~s is the New <:o~ducive to r~ghe~ !>1an~ards of··· Govern_ment-
_are · . m~re rights. Women of all nationalities
-Secretary of- State for the . Con- -livmg, also brmg m t!teir wake reassurmg: · Despite _a massive united in one voice to protest the
dition ofWi:>inen Mme Francoise these well known evils of the real estatelobby, a giant vaca~t war in Vietnam.
G:iroiid, · pres~ntly · visiting affluen_t. society: aggr~s~ive · lot
in
the ~eart
of
1;,aris,
c~~~d
These
women of the 1970's were
America. who is also the head competitiveness, . materialism,. by the razmg of the Halles ., will ·upholding a long · tradition of
publishe; of the Express,
a
leftist greed? and . a. deteriora~ing soon be conv~rted into a public militancy and active resistance
-equivalent of Tiine magazin,e. A _
"q~ahty of hfe: . poll~tion, garden. A plan to turn one of the against injustice.
This
tradition
symbolic_ gesture towards the- de~quency, etc. T_he once tl~htly greatest eXl>anses .. ~f F!ance goes back hundreds of years to
· new image· .. of women _ and -krut French faro.Hy s~es. itself- ,forest la'1d (m Aquitame) mto a therebellionsofthefemaleslave.
another departure from the ~preatened
~Y
c~ldren. who -are ~onst~ous · _ . co1!!plex__
-of It was continued by women
Gaullist . era _ is· the new ·im-
grown ups at eighteen and the
orgaruzed -leisure
has been marching time and again against
·porfance_givento the-role of the ·instituti~nofmarriageits~l!may halted. The long celebra~d but factory owners who denied them
First
_
(.ady, the •charming Anne- not survive_ unsc~thed
~
law ,now· _ recent!}:' _ neg!ected skills_ of. a •living wage or decent working
Aymone· Giscard d'Estaing who, under <:onsideration which would French
artls~ns
( ca bmet conditions. The
turn
of the cen-
for _the (irst · time in France, allow ~vorce by mutual consent._· ~kers,. ceranusts, etc.)_ are -tury shirtwaist makers, fed up
parUcipated - activelY in the -The. in:iprovement _. of co_m- be~g stunulated .. ~colo~y
lS
one with intolerable working con-
presidential · campaign _ in the
..
muruca~ons and the mcreas~g of the most Pl;lblicize~ issues of · ditions, -closed . hundreds· of
same;fashion, as an American poI?ularity -~f,..the mass me~a the day. President G1Scard. has garment shops m New York.
political wife·;:
"
_ _ ~hich co~tribute _
to ho1!1ogen~e recently declare~ that _the great Women and men f~ught _police
Another _ · and - .. somewhat information of all kmds, is struggle of ~e fmal third of our and scabs many tunes m the
paradoxical trend .· aniong the alrea~y ref~ected_ in -an in- centu_rr
will concern
the l930's.
. French
these
days - . is creasmg umfor:°uty. -- -some prot~c~ion and the ~e of nature.
-we have seen many an effort to
geographical:
the
move _ away would say vulganty - m ~ought A Ministry of Envrronment has erase women· from the pages of
. from the great urban life centers and expression. «Franglais", a been. f~Wlded. ~ole areas ~f history
books.
When women are
Jo the·country'.andatleastto the term coined ten years ago by an scen~c interest (m the Alps m mentioned, they are veiled in
_ provinces.'Paris, once the center angry Sorbonne professor to_ pa~tcular) have been. declared-· .myths of "womenhood." Women
of attraction·:for all F'renchmen designate an ug~y amal~am- of National Parks. To_unsts, ~ke are defined as helpmates of men
(as all readers of Balzac's novels· French aµ_d English, contmu~ to heart!_ There ar~ still beautiful, th_eircompanionsand supporters.
know) is' now losing out
to
.the taint the language :of Racme; unspoiled spots m t~e Provence
The media,. the schools,
: provinces;-'l'he frustrations.oflife ;·Mor_eover,_ as a partiaLresult_
~!
and_the Auvergne which only;last go_vernment and religion-tools
. ,in
tpe·
city'.and tl:le'.~aclf of:"green>the very "back to the country
Augus~, I vis~~ed, where m a - ·that_the wealthy and owners of
spacf ~
0
leisure, a11d sporting movement; ~ne notes the -small auberge . you can 1!mch on · industry have
been able
to
use to
: grounds;~are such that more and.-.pl'.ogressiv:e disappearance of exc~llent loc~l ~ees~. wme and their
best,
have propagated this
, )norif F;enchmen are- itching·
to ,
provincial_· _
characte_ristic~ _ a~d . -regional specialities g!ilore for ~5 ~idea.
_
- escapefotliecotintry~ide. Nearly l~al idioms-and:cust9~.
It
IS·
fran~s
($
3
.l~O)
and _wh_ere you will
The myth that women are not
every~rie-
seems ..
to _.
dream ,
of a
·!lot
witf!o.ut -a_, ~a~e:.of :melan- , walk the_ little wmding
country_ ·
~
intelligent~ capable, or strong
. Uttle
:-i.\'fermette'!. (fannlet): :: iii- : choly'./imd ;.nostalg_ia_ _ that one -.; roads all- by yourself.
as men
has
kept women out of
··::·:>~~~~:-·:?:_:i·._\'ff..~,./-.,· ._,,-.- : ::•.·,:-.
:.i;::··:.• ·.· .. .
;_ ... ,_-' '•.
. . . --~~-·-:··
. .•
.
high paying, skilled jobs. Yet,
during war time, industry
depended on women to fill the
jobs vacated by men.
Employers were quick to turn
around the "women at home"
myth when the economy needed a
reserve labor force. But bosses
still had two workers for the price
of one, because women had
primary responsibility for the
home and children whether or not
they put in eight hours of wage
labor. Some women work an
estimated 80-90 hours a week.
Why have employers per-
petuated these myths? Because it
is in their best interest to have a
surplus labor force that can be
bought at the lowest possible
price.
This way of dividing workers
works to the detriment of all
working people because bosses· ·
can threaten the jobs of men with
cheaper female labor, or they can
drive down the wages of white
women with the threat of hiring
minority women for less. It is
clear that t11e system that keeps
women down;· also keeps men
down and minorities down.
As
displayed at the 2nd annual
Berkshire conference for women
at Cambridge, Mass. Oct. 25-27,
but not only the variety of women -
in prominent roles and careers,
but also in the number attending,
today more than ever, women are
on the rise, but the rising of the
women means the rising of us all.
FOOD, Continued from
- page
1
planning a variety of ineals to be
served.
All suggestions may be mailed
to
the Food Committee, ·Box 831
or
to
Mike Carney, Box C-063.
Also
all progress reports between
Saga ilnd the Food 'Committee
will be posted oil the bulletin
board inside 'the c~eteria. ·
....
,
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PAGE6
.
Code.99
By
Fr.
Leo
Gallant
,
Pleasure is an alluring and
mysterious sensation. It is a
creation of God's. Very tiny, very
sweet, very easy, sympathetic
and convivial, penetrating and
intrusive. God placed it
in
our
.;enses to help them come to
fullness, to express themselves,
to live. Pleasure urges man to do
thin&» which are indispensable
for life.
The pleasure of food and drink
helps man to nourish himself; the
pleasure of sleep helps man to
_ rest; the pleasure of possession
gives
him
a
·
sense
.
of mastery
over the universe; the pleasure of
self-evaluation, the sense of
human dignity; the pleasure of
friendship; the joy of relation-
ships and the unsuppressable
sense of man's sociability ..
Yet pleasure can be man's
most dangerous enemy in life. It
can cause an imbalance in.him, a
disorder,
an exaggeration.
Exaggeration in eating is greed;
in sleep, it's
·
.
laziness; in self-
esteem
·
it's pride; iri feelings it's
envy and jealousy; in love. of
possession it's avarice; in sexual
pleasure it's lust. People drug
themselves when
.
domonated by
aimless pleasure, isolating it·
from the purpose for which it was
created.
The first sign of
this
drugging is
sadness. Nature is relentless and
strikes anyone who acts
·
against
it. "I don't know why, but there's
~omething wrong.
I laugh, but
I'm so sad. I sing in order to
forget but
I
feel as though
I
were
.in
a cave alone: I have everything
I wa~t at home, yet I'm no longer
capable of love
·
and con-
versation."
·
To counteract exaggerated
pleasure which causes sadness
and reinstall the pleasure that
brings true happiness man must
develop
a love of giving. Man is
made for the gift of himself and-
he is happy only when he does
give himself. This liberates,
·
while selfish pleasure exploits,
enslaves. So pleasure, that
alluring and
.
~ysterious sen-
sation, is tremendously iJD~
portant.
(These ideas come from a book
"The God Who Comes" by Carlo
Carretto, Orbis Books)
P.S.
Shirley Booth offers this
poem:
.
Give me a good digestion Lord,
and also something to digest.
_Give me a healthy body, Lord,
GASLIGHT9
.
.
.
~
.
·
Located.
on
Rt.
·
9
Wappinger Falls
Next
to
A
&
P
MONDAY
NIGHT
FOOTBALL NIGHT
Free HotdogsOuring Game
~
·
TUESDAY
MUG NIGHT
Any Mug _Filled For 30c
WEDNESDAY
OLDIES NIGHT .....
,
AARDVARKJAMP~RFORMANCE
Free Champagne To All People In
,
'50 Garb
Get Screwey - - Screwdrivers ... 50c
THURSDAY
.
DRINK TILL YOU DROWN
.
All
The Beer You Can Drink .. ,$2.00
Band - • Open Road
FRIDAY
PITCHl;R NIGHT - -
N
Pitcher Of
.
Beer .• $1:25
•
Pitcher Of Sangria ••
$2.00
~llURDlY
1.0.
NlqHT
'
Show Student
LO:
At The Door
First
Beer
Is On
The
House
.
)
NOVEt,1BER
21, 1974
Comment~ry ·
By
Gregory
Conocebioli
Robert Morley. After
·
the per-
..
·
formance I was the lone
One American holiday
I didn't autograph seeker, whereas
·
in
miss while in London is what we New York there are usually
call Veterans Day and what the throngs of autograph seekers, but
-
English call Rembrance Day, I got the autographs I wanted.
which takes place November
In
spite of the fact that
Joth. The ceremony takes place America and England speak the
at Whitehall, home of the s~e language there are some
government agencies offices and real barriers to get over or you'll
the leading members of Britain's· be in a complete fog. Some of the
political scene are present. The expressions that had me fooled
and the sense to keep itat its
best.
ceremony begins with those were
the
·
following:
loo
Give me a healthy mind, Lord,
members of the Royal Services
·
(bathroom),
.
lorry (truck),
and keep the
-good
and pure in
who served in World War
I
and sweets
( candy),
chemist
sight.
World War
II,
marching th.rough (drugstore), minerals (soft
When seeing sin be not ap-
the street, there a few bands and drinks), first floor (American
palled, but find a way to set it
that sort of ceremony is over. second
.
floor), crisps (potato
right.
·
-Once
the marchers
-
reach the chips), roundabout (road junc-
.
Give nie a mind that is not
Cenotoph, a monument to those tion), straight on (right away).
bored•,
.
that does not whimper,
members of
_
the Roy~l 'Senici:! Formyself·I'.ve managed to pick
whi:1e or sigh.
·
·
·
who have lost their: °lives in the up a few of the expressions but
Don't let
me
worry overmuch
,
service of the British Empire, my favorites are «fancy that"
about this fussy thing called
I.-
there are blessings· and speeches
·.
and "bloody".· Some 0£:
.
the
Give me a sense of You, my
followed by a wreath laying
·
cockney
accents
.
are
·
un-
Lord, give me the grace to see a
·
ceremony. The Queen, her distinguisha,ble; and
·.
they might
joke.
·
.
.
husband Prince Philip; and her
as
well
be
,
speaking a foreign
,
·
To find some happiness in life
son ~rince Charles all laid
·
language
·_
to
'
me,
.
because
·
and pass it on to other folks.
wreaths of Poppies with in sec- sometimes
'
it's so hard to un~
(The
God 'Bit by Joey Adams)
cession of each other. Among the
-
derstand them. However the vast
.
other people who placed wreaths majority is understandable to
at the monumept were the Prime me, and I try my hardest to avoid
Minister Harold-Wilson
·
,
·
leaders any
.
American
·
accents
I
might
.
of the
.
··
opposition
·
·
Ted
•
.
Heath
-
hear. Sometimes meeting other
LOOKING
-·
FOi{
THE
.
BUSINESS OFFICE? You'll find
it in Donnelly hall Room
216,
as
of
Monday, Nov. 18.
Situated
in
Adrian for the past five years, ihe
business office will have
'
more
spacious
quarters in
.
the former
faculty
·
office complex
.
·
t
·arr
moving to Qon
·
nelly inclt.Je
Anthony
.
Campilii. business
.
manai:cr
:
Frank l.aHose, bur-
sar:
Marion
S
.
trickland.
secretary: Gail Bloomer, fiscal
officer for federal financial
-
aid
-
programs; and Carolyn Alfonso.
Kathleen Uarone, and
llarbar,i
Short, clcri_cal staft Tclephoni.
extensions are the
same
:
253
and
231
.
.
.
,
.
/
.
-
~
(conser.vative)
·
and Jeremy Americans is a very em-
Thorpe· · (liberal),
·
foreign
.
·
barrassing situation .
.
···
·
·
dignitaries which Jnclucied our
.
Lhope that all of yoil
.
have a
own ambass~dor
.
ti{
·
Great very Happy Thanksgiving, as for
Britain .
.
Also
·
included' in
_
the myself and a
1
ll
-
the
-
other
.
ceremony were a grim salute and
"foreigners"
from Marist we're
·
a momentofsilertc
_
e, broken only all going to meet
·
atmy
•
flatfor a
·
.
·
by the Tower of Big Ben sounding Thanksgiving meal which should
.
the
.
hour. .
·
·
.
1 .
promise to be an.ordeal. Perhaps
Once · again
.
l'in
.
sure though this Thanksgiving
.
will
I
·
·
distinguished
_
inyself as
.
an give new meaning to the holiday;
Americ;:a11 tourist I
.
went
.
to the
.,....
maybe
·
we'll be-thankfuIJhatwe
theatre last evening
'
to see
-_
"A
·
have
·
each
·
other
.
- -
Ghost
'on
'
Tipto~s" starring
:
.
.
~
·
.
-
·
-
·
- - -
.
RosE
-
VIE-W FARMS
.
EQUESTRIAN
:
CENTER
,,
DUTCHESS HILL ROAD
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.
-
Y.
IOFF EAST DORSEY LANE/
-
914-471-1918
.
.
·-
p ARK
__
DISCOlJNT BEVERAGES
,·
.
,
,
··~
.
OPEN DAILY TILL
9
12
-
-5
~
-
SUNDAY
-
.
.
¼
AND
½
KEGS AVAILABLE
.
.
WITH
·
EQUJPMENT.
¥
pOME~TIC AND IMPORTED BEER
,
._ OCTOBERFEST_·.BIER IS
NOW
AVAILABLE·
'
.,
. . ,
·
..
,
.
~
~
.
·
.
<
'.
,·
·,
.
·_
.
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-.
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:
~XTR~
CH~RGt
·
•
FQR
-
COLD
:
_
BEE
.
''.
'
·.
·
:
·
.
.
'
,.
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•
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.,
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-
~
.
'\"'
i
NOVEEMBER 21, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGE?
World Food· Conference Raises Hopes For Future
byMaryKrebsandLeeNewman .. the - U. S.,
Canada,
New
Zealand, and other deyeloped
international emergency grain
The western countries' stance
American delegates main-
bank to feed those people in then became stubborn: "There's tained the position that the
US
Africa and Asia currently facing where we'll begin. How
will
has done - and
will
do - a lot
(Editor's Note: Krebs
is
from nations made pledges of varying
the Bryn Mawr Haverford News; · amounts of assistance for an
Newman · is from the Amherst
starvation.
others begin doing their share?" more than anyone else.
Student. Both are represen- ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
tatives in a six student press
delegation to the World Food
Conference in Rome:)
.
,(CPS) Rome - amidst . in-
_ternational bickering, the World
Food Conference here has
produced one hopeful sign: the
U.S. and China reached an un-
precedented agreement-. regar-
ding grain distribution. ·
The advent of the .conference
raised hopes that developed
countries would act effectively to
save thousands now dying of
starvation; as well as institute the
· long range. plans to avert such
crises in the future.
·
. Most of the
1250
delegates here,
representing
130
nations,
remained hopeful that positive
action would be taken before the
11-day conference adjourned on
Saturday, November
16.
~
The·conference_acted on many
levels.·
·.
-The real action of the · con-
f eren·ce · skirted the public
plenary sessions and centered in
the secret meetings between
power blocs.
· ·
The big grain nations - the U .S;, ·
Soviet· Union, China, Canada;
and others- agreed on Saturday
to
consider limiting their foreign
sales in an effort to free grain
supplies for emergency aid to
hungry people.
.
.
This decision marked· the first
time the U.S. and China had come
togeth~r on fooq., The break-
through meeting""----was
·
clan-
destine.
.
.
Delegates met each day for
.eight hour plenary sessions. With
the excep~ion of statements .by
people Hke Pope Paul and Henry
Kissinger, the plenary took the
air .of just so much air.:
_' On the second day of the con-
ference, · Kissinger proposed a .·
:comprehensive
·
._ program .of
cooperative world wide action on
five fronts:
.
Increasing · the
production of food exporters;
accelerating. the production in
developing countries; improving
means of food distribution and
· financing; · enhancing __ food
'quality;· and insuri~g security
against food emergencies. .
.
· _
But while Kissinger also urged
the·.gathered nations '.'to resolve.
to
confront the challenge, not ·
'each other," much bickering
between the "halves" and the
"halve-nots" soon emerged:
From the start many of the
Western
·
allies · questioned what
role Russia, China, and the oil
producing and exporting· nations.
( CPEC) would take,. Early on,
THE NUMBER ONE KILLER
OF YOUNG AMERICANS.
.1SYOUNG AMERICANS.
_. You don't mean to be. But
. you are. The numbers are siD).ple.
You march against war.
You fight for clean air and clean
water. You
(..at
natural foods. You
practice
·
yoga. Yo~ are so·much for
life. And you are so much against
killing. ,
It would be unthinkable for
you tg kill another human being on
purpose.
·-so then, why is this
happening?
/
STOP DRIVING DRUNK.
~-- · .. , Latest available figures show
tb;ar§;Q0E) American people_ between ··,
theages·:of15and.25diedin alcohol
STOP KILLING E~CH O'rHER.
0
,
'
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION .
·
NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION
. related crashes. And almost all'the
drunkd~ivers who.caused those
crashes ~ere also under
2,-5.
.c
1,380 died in combat. 3,420
committed.suicide. 2,.731 died o[
cancer.
It's incredible, but one of the
most dangerous things you can do -
is to have a few bottles ·of wine with
. 'friends and drive home.
You can change it. You haveto.
ANDROS DINER
()PEN 24 HOURS
7 DAYS A WEEK
SERVING
BREAKFAST-
·-LUNCHEON
471~7939
DINNER
119 Parker Ave. Pokeepsie, N.Y.
;.
·-
-
Rosaria Barone
PICK 'N
SHOVEL
~.•~----
..
·
•·.
.
..
, . · •
..
,
.
.
.
.
1--9 Ac·ademy
St.
P,ough_k~~.psie,.
i
Wine
Liquor
Acr~ss
F~om
The Derb·y
Closest
L(quor
Stor~
To
AAa.ri~t'
'
•
.
' " i .
97
Main
St
. :_<Po.µ.g_hl<~.ep~i~., N_.Y.
.
.
.
.,.
..
.
.
··•
,.
~
•
..
,
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.
'.
.
.
.
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'
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·-
.I
·,
I
)
i
.
.
1
PAGES
QuarterbaCIC
ha
ISormecc
ana
(.;~acn
n:t111
icvi,,i
THE CIRCLE
.
'NOVEMBER
21, 1974
Vikillgs Host.Bowl Game;
Entertaill Pace
At
Home
By Tom McTernan
the ECCFC championship.
mended for turning this young,
.
",_ ·
The loss left Marist with a 6-2 inexperienced team. into a
·
With hopes to erase some of the record, the other defeat on national contender/
:
·
disappointment of the crucial loss opening
•
day against Livingston-
Saturday's
·
game also marks
to
Westchester Community
.
two
..
·
Rutgers,
.
when
··
the Vikings
the
final chapter in the illustrious
.
weeks ago, the Marist. Vikings fumbled away
..
a
6'-0 decision.
In
careers
of
seniors Ed
·
Bonnett
will
nost the third annual Empire
.
between, however,
:
.
.
were the and Nigel Davis, both of whom
Stattr
~
Bowl
Saturday;
·
facing incredible
.
upsets over Matta.tuck
.
brought the Viking crowd to its
PACE .in what is billed as the
(29~),
and Oswego
state
(25-24)
.·
feet countless
·
tiines over the
.
New ·York,
:
Club
·.
Football
·
thanifted Mai:'ist with the No.J
·
years;
_
·
·
•.
·
.
.
.
·
.
..
.
·
.
Championship
·
.
_
.
·
.
ranking
.
of.the
·
National Club
•
.
J>ace, ranked No._1 JI1ost of the
The
:
.~dreams
•·
of a national Sports Association; Whatev.-er
.
se~on is 8-1. Their only setback
championship were shattered
:
in
.
.,.:
happens
.
Saturday; it was truly a
was
.
a 22-13
.
decision to st; John's
the17-81oss to Westco
·.
in which
.
great
·
season
· ·
and coach
·
Ron
that
.
helped Marist
·
gairi the top
:
Marist
··
committed se~eraLkey
. •
L¢vine and
.
staffareto be
·
coni-
spotiri the rankings.
.
misiak~s
.
·
thaLcut- short their
·
· ,
·
,
~
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·
·
.
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.
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.
.
offense, except for one
•
drive m
·
.J."
.
:c
U
·
·
the
.
second ha).f when
he
·
guided
.
-
·
-
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.
a~cUook
.
.
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.
:·
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· :
.
.
· ..
•
att
es
.
.
,
Marist
,
s
-
_
spot
,•
ll!
·
Jhe Schaefer
.
.
.
..
,.
·
·
•
,
-
·
·
·
•
·
. .
.
:
·
Bo~l lastSattirday
·
t9:deterriilii~
·
.
.
.
..
.
.
. .
·
- .
..
.
·
·
-
.
.
.
. ..
·- Tom
:
McT~rriari
·
0
•
•
•
•
<
sfcieratforis an9 may not be us~d
Scii l in
_
n
_
.-
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.
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.
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..
.
fotirthmqvJ.t1g
.
1:1pto
:
thecoaching
-
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.
up
,
front with his reboun-
The
.
Marist College
·
sailing M~rist caine
in
.
s
_
~nd with
20
:
_
_
to take
.
first. place
i~
the
.-
·
"BJ>
.:
~~ff,
.the)~fari~t
ba,~ketb!;lll t~m din
·
g; al~ng
:
m,th sophomore Earl
team
~d
the 12 annual Frostbite
:
points.
.
They '!ere
.
followed by
_
.
division' Frey· was_ th~ low
.
point
'
·
.
}~
.:
: >
Pr~p~~mg
:
·
l?r
:
,
:
the c4n,'.ent
.
Jlolm~s,
.
who posses~s
_
a
,
strong
Regatta, Saturday; Nove~ber 16; Al~n}_'.,
_
~
:
, pomts;
·:
N'.
y
:U~, ..
26
...
skipper in this
•
division; ,
.
\
-
.
-
;
·
-
~
-
e~so~
..
'?th
_
~
str?~g
•
desire to
.
offens1ye game from short range.
There
was
a
.
c:opstant wi11d and
a
,
points;
0
;
and
~;P;J.
,
:
~
:
poiilts.
;
_
·
.
This
:
weekend Marist wi!l"saiF lIIlprove
>
o~ last
·
yea~•s
.
9-rn
~ro~tcourt_
.
dept~ comes from
;st~ong
..
'
~urrent
--'
.thr~ug9~tit:". tµe
.
'.
·
·
•
;BQb
;.
Lenn~}l
\;;.
ski~eered
~
:
and
'..
··.
at
.
~uthainptpji
:\
for
.
'
:
Jhe
:
'
:
firial
·
--:
.,
re.pord, ~owu1t~ef~CC tttle,and
·
JUntOr
-
Jim D1r~cherl
.
.
and
.
r~ce which kept the
.
competition
~~~Qll~
;
J~atiella
·crewed
for the
_
regatta
9
r
the season.
:::
,.,
·
-\
,.
\
,
·
to_. ~e~~rye . a
<
·
.
p1d;for.
0
the
•.
·
NCAA
.
-
sopholJ!or:es. Greg Giles and Walt
..
·
tough<~
•
:
the ~nd, ~utpall_lp~n
:
'
·,
·
A
.
.•
div1sion~
:
·
.
~
Tom
.
:
·
F-rey
.
;
.
s
_
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·
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·
·
.
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..
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Jan~s~ek
,
.
.
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•
P~~ed-firs_t,with 12
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·
P.eggyMadd~nci:'¢wed
·
. ·.
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•··
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J(_)1111~g
:
Fa~~1;1rstm the back-
.
-
.
.
·
-
.-
.:
.
.
-
·
.
'l'Jt~
Red F
,
oxes·open then: 1974-. court will l>e 1umor returnee Eric
.
. .
_
.
· ERE
_
Sf
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SR,
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.
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-
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:--
·
75
;
season at
:
I<m
.
a nexfSaturday;
·
DePerdn
.
and
.
frosh standouts
Nov.
:
0
30:
·
TheJirst g~me
·
.ror.tlle
Glynn
-
Berry
~mer
Paul
.
Kane.
.
Maristfa.nswill be Tuesday ;
.
Dec, , DePerd~
·
and Berry,. have
,.
both
'
.
:
·
3
.
agains~
•
:
.· :
K~~gs
::-_
at
_
,
D~tchess
.
.
·
~
,
en
•
emplored as the poin~ guard
.
':
Commumty
,:
College,
c.:..
,
.wber~ m the .Marist.1-3-l
~
offensive at-
:
i
<:
_
Marist
~Jlpfay
'
all
-
11
ofjts
.
hoin~
~
tack,
while Kane
:
is rioted for his
.
·,
.
·
~aines
'
or(thf26;game
,
sche~11Ie.
-
a~c1:1r.a~
·
s~ooting.
::
6ffthe
:
b
.
ench
.
·
.·
:
Ileturnmg
>
.
from
:'
last
<·
year's
·
·
wiU
:
be Jumor Steye Sullivan and
·
,
star_ting:r~ve arfforwards senfoi:
.
fr~shman Walt Brickowski.
:
·
Joe
\
Cir~~.ena
:'
:
a?d
/
jiinior
;
.
Ray
::
:·
IlonPetro.is
.
reforniilg'.as
'.
head
,.
: Murphy ;:tnd senior
_
·
guard
.
Allen
.
coach, along· witli 'assistant
.
Bob
<
f'.airhurst. Mt,trphy;
.
·
a •
strong HiJdreth; Ed
.
Conl,in, cap~in of
.
·
:.
·
_rebounder.
_
and
·.
Fairhurs.t; a fine la~t year's
.
team,. takes over the
<
playmaker,
:
are both
,
expect~d
,
to
·
Juni
_
or: Varsity
:
squad, which
see
.
plenty of playing
_
tinfe. opens a 15-garrie slate as a
.
Girasella, the team's top scorer a preliminary to the Varsity home
y~ar ago, has been limited in opener with Kings Dec. 3.
·
practice due .to academic
·_
con:
·-
·
-·
· ·
,1
High
t
<)ii
$p!)rts
-
.
.
.
--,
By
John
Tkach
.
.
·
_F.IV~ MAR~ST
P!,AYERS
:
o1
ALL-ST~
TEAM
<
.
.
•
. While Marist
.
didn't
win
the d~ampionship;
.
µte Red .Foxes
-
placed
i
five
pl~yers o~ t~e Centr~I,Atlaµtu:;
,
<;::ollege conference s.occer all-star
~m•
:·
.:
:-.-
·:
·-
.
.
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•
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·
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.
- .
..
,
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•
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<
·
.
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.
Lineman J
.
ohn McGraw, half~ack~
TiI!}
-
~aiesarid Tir;n
:
Tiottaand
..
{~~f;~e~:\~~~~n
.
ald :nd Jim !l~()ne
:
~epres~nt th~ Red ~oxes in
, ·
.
Co_nfet:ef!c~ champion Nyack also had five
.
men on
thJ
team in-
.
.
• ,
!
:·
~
cludi_ng
.
go.all~
La~.}'.
McClem~ntsi ~ullbacks
.
Terry ~ggef!bach and
.
J~r\'.IS Crosby and 11;11e~en Steye Harr and steve I:.ivirigston. Fullback
.
Wllh~m Brown of Kmg
.
s was the other selection>
, _
.
.
·
,
,
Tius is the se~oJicl,
:
~tr11ightyear
;-
McCiraw;orily.a
:
sophomore, has
·
_
made the t~a~. ~e ~cored seven
·
~oals and
haq.
fi:ve assists in
.
con-
~e,~ence action to tiew1~? Ha
_
rr a11d Livingst~I!
:
for th·e
·
scoring lead .
.
.
.
'
13.9.1
13.9.2
13.9.3
13.9.4
13.9.5
13.9.6
13.9.7
13.9.8