The Circle, February 7, 1074.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 12 No. 2 - February 7, 1974
content
.
VOLUME
12, NUMBER
_
2
.
1HE
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
12601
FEBRUARY 7, 1974
48
Arrested ·
'
.
.
.
On
Drug Charges
.
by
Brian Morris
-
.
·
~The arrest last Friday morning anticipated now that the state's
·
of over.
.
40 persons
.
for drug of-
,
new drug law isin effect. District
ferises represents
a
niajor move Attorney
·
Allen Rosenblatt,
.
. _ towards strict enfor
_
cemenfofthe contacted by the Circle, stated:
state's tough new drug law, The
·
"The state has made certain
police and
.
those
.
arrested were projections as
to
what is needed
pitted in a notunfamiliar contest, ·
to
accommodate drug related
but
,
there
.
was
.
no doubt that the cases."
Mr. Rosenblatt took note
-
~ Rockefeller
.
~ inspired drug
.
law of the state's plan for creatioo of
· has
·
escal~ted the
.
suikes for all new courts to handle drug
·
cases.
concerned;
:
.
.
.
_ .
. .
.
·
Police were
~
extra cautious as
·
·
·
"
,
-
·
·
.
~-
.
The
.
48
:
pecions were nabbed they made the arrests. During
·
The !ecen
.
t i
~
ncle.ment weath
.
erb~ough
't_
out Marist's plows
_
.
.
:
from
:C
all
·
over
.
Dutchess and the Thursday briefing police
Marist
tl'o.
Efnffitf.k
..
t.r:tti$:~;'%.·~~ffi
·
~~~::;'!:.!:=-~::
__
.
·
.
.
· .
..
•
·.
·
·
·• .
·
•
., .
,.
·. .
·
···
•
,
·
~-
.
·
·
.·.
··
·
charged
_;_
with Class
·
:
A offenses .
•
~at when
.
faced with a possible
.
On
-
Nelli
Ma$te'r-
I'liln
'--
,
[:£~'.i/I~!;~~:::E·
~ts~:-;~::~~
·
···
·
·
-·
and\vill face trial as
·
such. Large ture
:
This
'
was not the case in
.
:
."
In
.
an
'
~ttempt to
.
i
irlcrease
gasbline sh~rtag~
'.
per$ist
~-
:
or
a
later date.
·
: .
•
;
;
. _:,
.
•
:
'
quantities
'
of h~oin;
·
marijuana, Friday's
·
raids.· 'I'1)ose put in
;__
;
.
L
7
the
,
dimirushing .
enrollment
.
at
.
become w,orse
:
the
potential
,
fof
,
·
,
Prelimirnlry
_:
evaluation of the opium, cocaine.; and
:
assorted custody were described as not
.
. ;
Marist.Collegealong
'
with
,
efforts
:
~~rea~linin'g
.
. '~
c
.
om
·
muting new ~c~eduie
·
wilJ
:
be carried
·
out pills
·>
:
were
;
confiscated. The
·
.
overly
:
upset
'
as they
-.
·
:
were·
.
.
•·
b¢4ig
:'
made
,:
to'
with~arid
'.
.
the
..
arran
·
ge~ent~
.
may
:
be
_'
·:
of
.
..
~ugli the
·.
f:,tll
_
sem~~ter,
·
t:o
_.
be
_,:
troopers, BCl
;
men
~
and police
.
..
brought
:
. to
.
Troop
.
K
'
for
·
·
:
9ifslaughk of
._-
~
;
unpi:edictable
-:
.
-;:
:-
sigitificant
-
Jlilpor~~
~
·
.
.
.
:
.
:
-
.
>
followe_d
_
by
an mtens1-ve
:
·
review _
:
fr.om §everaL
'.
of the
,
towns
in~
.
processing
.
-
.__ .•
.
-
- .
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. _
·
.
.
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cti,si5.
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_p:u(
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Qffice
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~L~~
:
..
·
:•··.
;_
The
..
detjsion
·:
to
... ·
~
. :
t~e
:
n~w
.
at
·
the end
.
of
<
~he ~cadenuc_ year •
.
·
.
_volv~
.
e:xperienced
.
no
•
tro~ble in
-••·.
·
.. ::.:_
At
.:
Yassar,
~
police
.
with
.
.
ben~
.
--
t
.
.
··
_.
Academtc
·,
Dean
,
has
:
announced
- .
formatfollowed co!!5µltat~<m w.1th
.
·
.
The . master sch~~e
·
\Vi_ll
,
~
.
:
making
.
the
.
arrests despite the warrants entered
,
3 dorms as whll
..
;;
.
. ..
. :
~
that
.
Niar~
C«;iµt?ge
wl1:1
_.-
0J)&a~
'.:'
th~Ja¢ulo/
'
-"::~~uclept~~ups
.
and
;
.
c_onsid1:red
>
~ ~
,
un~tal
,.
m
,
Jts
_fact_
!h.~t
·::
weaf)'.)ns;
:·
µicluding
,;
_~
"· ·
as
\
th~
C
teqace ~partmt?ntS
:
:
a,nd
,;
•·
.
.
·
·,
under
.;
.
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tlme
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:;~p,ot
:
gw.iajl~ P,IB.~ols; w.ereJak"'!!
.
. J'?~~~~Jo
,
p11t)he_8
·
~ude~ts
·
.
.
.
,
.
,
·
·
-•
schedule for the
1974-75 academic
,
::,L,:
qfµc~s.:,\TJ!~:f
'
opµu~
.-
~
i
~f
,;,,
~ese:
:
,
a. r~~;
-
!>~erJll~
:r11~t!~
.
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;
W!il
i
-,mto,P.()lic
_
e hanM
>
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'fbe i::a1ds were_
:_c,:r
in
ctistQdy
,
Allwere charg~ with
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a;l1tt1
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•---
•-
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···•
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·:·
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time
\,·
part~um~
.
.'.,
;
(!6Jntn11ting
~"-:'
the
:
propo~l
'
~ayEl
:
•
Ye
t
to
,
~
-
~
.:
~-
·
aboutthe
.
new ~ucture upon the_
>
derc"Qyer
-
actiy1ty;
_
,
>
.
.<
,
:
of
the
i
CoUeg~ Admlh~tration's
·
.
1
.
·.
_:. ·:
students;
'.
a,
i
'
populatfo~
;
whicp
)
(
.
~werec.f •
.
' : · _
,
;
,
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.
·
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:-.!.
:<
.
·
...
·
..
_
cor:i~entof courses &Ild abo':!tJh~
.
,·
·
:
Tp.e
'.-
r~ids
\
de~o11st~te a
.
.:
.
:
r~spoiise to the raid
-
and
-
oft~
·
}
·
·
.
-.
ass'Ulajng greater
.
impotta,il~
_
m
•
·
.,
·
-:
J:>i:ce:iently;
~
_tµe van~µs
,_
stud~nt
·
a~ility· of
.
s
_
t~~ents
•
to
,
cope ~~tJi
.
:
:
b
_
e
,
ef e~~up
,
:
pol~c~ 'capacity to
:
overall campus mood
:
Kent'said
:
.
higher
:
educa~on
_
,
,
planning j111d
i:epr_~se11tabv
.
e
,
~qdies
:
wh~co the longer peri~s. Jhe
,
pro:;p~~t
,~
haridl~ drug cases
,
Fully
150
state
>-
V~ssar students are ''for once
..
.
. :
which Marist hopes to attract
·
in
consJSt
·
of
·
the
:
•
Student
_
Po}!cy
.
th~t
.,
the
.
_new
·
5?11~tllres
,
.
.
'Yill
·
and municipal police, carrying
.·
.
please
_
d with the Administration''
·
.. ,
the
: ·.
near fut'Ul'e.
CU:J."i:e!}t
_
Board
_
(Student Govt),
'
Studenr
.
stllllulate
_
mnovation
_
m
·
teaching warrants for
·
searches and
.
since they apparently played no
.
predictive
. ;
indicators
show
·
Academic _C~mitt~, t~e
,
Iilter- ~ethods h
_
a~
_.
also
-
been
,
m~n-
arrests,
mov~
in co11cert 9:gainst part in setting up the arre~ts,
·
·
greatest growth
.-in
the
.,,
~ext
.
:
·
•
Ho~e Council; U~e ~ommu~er
.
t~one~; Certain types ~fJeach~ . the 48, described by
.
police
.
as
.
Kent_ noted that
.
the V~ce
.
decade
.
to be among parHime
Umon,
.
and the Junior
.
Class ~1tuation~ \\'Ould appear to flt . dealers of the drugs.
.
.
President of Student· Affairs
:
woman students, the majority of
Executive Board, have all
-
shown· ideal_ly i11to the onc~-a~week ·.·
Captain Joseph Leary, Troop K spent the whole day · in court
·
·
·
·
.
.
whoin will want to attend
·
classes
disfavor towar.d the new measure
.
..
~ee~_g str!].cture, while · other · · B_CI
·
chief;
.
!ook note
.
of the rai.9' s
arranging
.
bail for: the· 8. Said
..
during the day.
Itis
also
.
:
hoped
.
.
for
·
many d~fferent
·
reason,~ .
.
disc1plme_s may have to adapt
to
effect on drug trafficking;
''It
will . Kent of
.
the campus mood:
·
:-.
that the revised schedule
will
.
Thesegroupsarenowuriitingand
·
thenewtl!Jleplan,
/
I'!tese factors
.
make .them look
.
over their "Everyone's
a
little scared.
•,
help commuting studerits
:_
to
·
~gto9fferacompr~misethat ~d mM.y-oth~swill
.
~
_
e,
:
~e.11
.>
shoulder," ~ry
·
said'.
.
There are some who think the
.
streamline-travel at.'i"angements;
nught
-
appease
all
·
who are
at~
'
mto consid~rat
,
ion
.
wpen 1t:1s ~e
-
"
0
.
Th,e District Attorney's office
police are coming back and-some
.
:
ar:id that ifw_ill
be
of ~sistail~
to
.
.
fected by it. The final acti~
.
to
f?e
to evaluate t!te
·
su~~s o!.
:
fa~ure
:
also
·
claiJ;ned to
·
be
prepared
·.
for
. .
who ~ k they won't."
.
., .
.
working stu
.
dents in~~ng class
,
taken. by
,
these
.
groups
·
IS
:
still of the
,
experllllent.
:
:
,
·
the~hervo.lume
_
ofdrug
_
arrests
·
.
··
.
. .
.
. -
.
and
,
,
work schedules. Should
.
undecided but \Vlll be repor~~ at
-
.
·
,
, .
·
·
•
-
•
·
·
9:55-
.
11:10
..
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·
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'}Ijo,
12:3
.
5
.
12:45-
.
·
,
2:00
MON.
,
TUES.
~Efi ..
• TH~R~:
2
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l"esh.lii~nExper!en.ce
-
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~blems
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Marist
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PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 7, 1974
CIRCLE Interview:·
Maintenance Function Explored
On
Monday, January
28th,
I made a personal visit to the Housemaster knows what and then the Sheahan lot.
The
Monday school started?
met with Mr. Andrew Pavelko, Champagnat and found. all he'sdoing(thenhecanadjustit). students are really
good
about
Mr. Pavelko: Well,·you're not
Director of Maintenance, to boilers were working and the
Circle:
Do
the Housemasters this. And
if they need help from· the area, are you?
.
· ~USS
certain aspects of the t~e~osta~_ were set. However,. I know what they're doing?
· plowing out their cars, we help
Answer: No, Long Islan~.
Maintenance Department. The • did fmd · the_. north pump (this
Mr.
Pavelko: Gerry Kelly and them. .
Mr. Pavelko: We bad a snow of
following are not quotes, except pump flows water
to
the section Joe Norton know· what they're ·
Circle:
1s
·
the path to Donnelly six inches followed by-1hree in-
where noted, but rather what was of the building facing the campus doing. Don Honeman, because done the same time as the
fire ches of freezing rain.
If
that rain
· said to the best of my knowledge.
center) was off. I then turned it he's new, should know what he's lanes?
had
been
snow we would have
~cle: What
is_ the role of bac!t on.
·
.
_
doing. In order to adjust the
Mr.
Pavelko: Yes, we
try to get had about
30
inch~ of snow. The
MarISt College maintenance?
Cu-cle: Whoc9uldhav~don~ 1t? temperature properly, you need· .that done with the fire lanes. But grounds crew 1s too · busy
, Mt.
Pavelko: Maintenance, at
Mr.
Pavelko:· I don't know w~o to have someone living
in
the - _we only have five machines, ren_ioving the ice and snow from
Marist College is
a
"service. did it. But let me explain what building to understand the three big tractors and two small the . fire lanes. And we also
oriented" department. We try to happened. The pump had been situation.
.
ones:
.
depleted our calcium and salt
service the entire community. off, possibly all w~kend. This
Circle: And they can adjust the
Circle:
Is
this
done by the supply~· And the sand was frozen
Circle: How is
this
effecting the .. causes the pipes to freeze and temperature, they have keys to grounds crew?
·-·
~olid. You really had to be here to
campus?
Is maintenance doing when water reaches 5 F, the ice the boiler room?
·
Mr. Pavelko: Yes. And we
hire appreciate it; we had no man
theirjob?
begins to expand.
This
causes the
.Mr. Pavelko: Yes.
students
to
help~ However, since power.
.
..
Mr. Pavelko: I believe we are pipes to crack. Knowing this
Ch:cle: What is the procedure ,.students were on vacation .we
Circle: .When did it rain'i--
doing our job efficiently. We wouldhappen,Iaskedthecrewto for snow removal?
could not. I'd like
to
set up a
Mr. Pavelko: The ·Friday·
attempt
to
service the entire come and check and drain the
Mr. Pavelko: Fh:sLwe clean system of two students
in
every
before students returned to
community, faculty, staff; ad-
system.
.
the roads. The_ entrances and dorm
to
clear the snow
in front of
school. You also have to realize
ministrators and students. I
Circle: How many br~ks were roads are done first. arourid the the building. There would be two
that the crew was• _also . pre-
believe we are doing a good job. there?
.
c~pus.
people who live
in
tnat dorm who
occupi_ed with· other projects.
We do most of the work we can
Mr. Pavelko: There were about
Circle:
You · mean
the would get snow shovels at
8:00
However, we keep the cost down
with the personnel on campus. forty.
firelanes? .
.·
a.m. and clear the walks. -·
of these projects with inside
This, therefore, cuts the costs,
Question: What was the cost? · Mr. Pavelko: Yes. Next we do
Circle:
This
would.then set
up
workers.
which is ultimately paid by
Mr. Pavelko:
It was.
~00
for the Donnelly lot and ask that all · new jobs?
Circle: I think that~- all. Thank
student fees.
·
.
,
parts plus labor and overtune for ·cars be moved
to
the Sheahan lot.
Mr.
Pavelko: Yes.
..
you.
Circle: How is vandalism af-
the cle,ming crews.
·
'Then we plow the North lot
Circle: Well, then why was the
\.
James Elliott
. fecting maintenance?
_ Circle: Who had the keys to the (Champa~at - Campus Center) snow not removed until. the
Mr.
Pavelko: For the past room?
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . ; - - - - - - - - - - - - -
three years, the occtirrences of
.
Mr.
Pavelko: There are th_ree
s·.
ur;p·
e·
-..~t·rir·.
B-.
an_.
,
ne·a.·
.. ... :
,vandalism have dropped. There keys_ - our plumber, the boiler
• .:,
a
· has been decreasing vandalism. repa~men and the emergency
All except the ninth floor repaU"men ..
Chanipagnat where you can find
Circle: And security? .
.
Allow me to introduce myself.
would never
be
seen
in
Buenos
a hole
in
just about every door. I
Mr. Pavelko: Yes, se~ur1ty,·_ My name is Bro. G~rardWeiss,.I
Aires. Their ·contention was-that-
think _it's primarily due
to
a · too..
.
teach Spanish at M.arist College,
the. picture portrayed the
· raising of the consciousness that
Cu-cle: Woµld you say 1t was and this year lain on sabbatical character of Jes~
Christ
in an
· the student is ultimately paying sabotage?
..
leave to study in Latin America.
irreverent mariner~
.
One must ·
the bill.
.. . .. · . .
Mr. Payelko: No, I really can't At the present time I · am in
naturally ask th~ question: What
.· Circle: How does the
_
new say tha~;-
.
.
,.
. .
Argentina dQing some research.
was the source • "- their in-·
. computer system work?· · , · _ . Quest1~n3 How m.uch ,une did it, Rece~tly something quite
_u:i-
fonl!~tion, since obviously they
Mr. Pavelko: Anyone who , take to flrush the Job?_
. •.
terestmg happened here which
had not seen the fihn them-
w_antsmaintenance to do a repair
·Mr.' Pavelko: ·~t'.famten
'
ance promptedmetowrite an article.
selves?'But
perhaps fanaticism
wiUwrite the req\iest on a blue _.worked all day (24 hours) I am forwarding _it to you for carried tothe extreme-does not·
maintenance ·slip. This slip is ,Mo~day_ and Thursday.
. .
consideration to _use it some time ~othedo~availitself off~ hand
then received by my secretary,
Circle:
Monday
through in the CIRCLE. The article is as mformation · before making a
.
Mrs. J:>latania, and is punched Th11!sday?
.. _
follows: , ,.. . ,
..
·
.
_ jud~ent and acting on_it;. .
sationafist c~racter iitthe film.
__ into
acomputeri,Th~so~puter
.
·Circle:.· Monday 'through·
JESUS.GHRIST.SUPER,&TAR
-This~me~~pbadp~ceda·Theeducational campaign did
. will_give us
a
read ~ut o~ a11
·
: '.l'hursday"?
. . . . _;,,,,,;
·
~.WlLL
-
:No:r"\
,
.BEc:;SEEN:;-dN
•.,~mb
,
Jn
_a.tJurd._th~~--·tbat ,_nota,~hieyetlledesiredef~ects,as
reqmred work. We assign this to.·
_Mr.
Pavelko: Tuesday, al_ld
BUENOS
AIRES:
. ·.
, ·
..
mght, but lt faµed t~ go 9ff ..
Also,
,-th~. events
'·of''.-the,~i:i1ght''
'
'Of ·
our workers .• After they ac- _ Wec1?es~ay we wo~~ed on pre-
On,thenight of December
30,
I , on that same mght, · sev~ral --· December
30
proved;'
, ·
,.
: . ·\ .
complish. the job, they report. fabr1catmg the system, By that I was rocketed -from a deep sleep members of the group had gamed
. All of ;the events surrounding
back with the slips illustrating mean we had to· ~ait for•. parts .. by two loud explosions here.· in . e~tra.nce. into the ?ffices 'of the this whole episode pr~vide food:
the time required. Anoth~r from ~ew York_ City and-m·the· ·'Buenos Aires, the capital city of d1str1buto~ of_the f1hn a~ w:ere for much ~hou~!it.
Th!s
was the ... _
printout from the computer 1s meantune we circumvented the Argentina. Given the· tense <!bout to set fire
.to
th~ buildi,ng, work of one terrorist. group,
received by this office and the system and worked with what we . nature of the political situation at when they were apprehended by oriented tothe extreme right, and
person requesting the.job, This ha~. _In this way we k~pt the the ·present moment, naturally--- the ~olice.
. .. . .._
.
.
its_ ~rget-. was a fihn with
way, we show what we have done, bwl~g warm a_nd we. fixed- all·
-
ther;e,.. crossed my mind all sorts
This ~ole~c has bt:en ragmg reli_g101.1:5 overton1:5 . .Yet, equally
when and by whom. .
the _Pieces t~at we had be_f ore -of •ide.as as to what was hap-
fo_r some tune here m Bue_nos act~~e m ,Ar~entma. are grQups
Circle: Who sent a niajor~ty of puttmg them.m place. By ~nday 'pening. The next morning . I Aires. Last Mar a theatriml polit1~ally ?nen~edm the ex~ct
the slips?
we had the system working all discovered· that two local group waspreparmgto put on the oppoSite direction, and which
· Mr. Pavelko: We try to catch except the covers placed on_. But theaters had been bombed:· Both . stage version of "Je~s Christ -also pose a serious threat to the
our own -mistakes. . .
· then there. was· a rupture before
_
theaters were scheduled to begin ~uperstar" in _one of the theaters norm.al·
.
process of orderly
-Circle: What.percent?
.. Saturday (January 19th) but we · showing the movie "Jesus Christ m. downtown Buenos _Aires. government. Every day there are
Mr. Pavelko:. (turning.
to
Mrs. fixe_d it qui~kly. •
.·
-. . . ~, Sup~rstar" the followirig day. I Seve~al . hours. before . the· accounUf
~~
the_papers of assaults
Platania) What percentage of the
Circle: Will stude_nts be abl~Jo weritto in_spect the scene and was prerruere w~
~
take place t_he of a_ pohtical nature and . kid-
. blue slips are sent from this of-
coll;ect for. t_he ~~age d~ne to utterly amazed at .the extent 'of Sam(? ter~orist group, armed with nappmg~ of. gove_rrunent officials
tice?.
. their _belongmgs - l1ke rugs? ·.
the damage
inflicted
on
the
two subm~chme guns,. entered the or foreign ·businessmen. Last
Mrs. Platania: I don't know of
Mr. Pavelko: Well, that they buildings. The entirefront as well theater, compelled the actors and yearalone there were close to
200
a
percentage, but they're mostly will_'have·:-t? take up with the astheoverheadmarqueeswerea stage hands to leave, and then such kidnapping~. Argentina has
from this office. Secondly, frpm busmess office, but most of the total shamble· .. A huge gaping procee~ed . to thr~w · ~olC?tov suffered much m the past few
the residence office.
.
. water ran· out the ~racks of the · hole. was evident in the solid cockta1_ls .about the budding. years, and its citizenry has been
· Circle: How
is
this working _-building.Some steam could have concrete wall of one of the Result:
$800,000
in.
damage torn apart by differences in
out?
·
·_.
·
·
possibly ruined books.
· . theaters. Across the street in a ~aused by fire and l!i() peopl~ out political ideology, giving rise to
Mr. Pavelko: It's wo~ing very . (;ircle: ·What has maintenance · tall office building about a dozen of work.. - · · . .
-- ' . .. ' · _,. . . per~~ic oqtb!1r5ts of terrori~m,
satisfactorily.
· · .
.
. · done to conserve energy?
. .
large plate· glass windows had
Fo~o_wmg
this
~·.intensive gueITilla ~_ctics c1Ad oppression.
Mrs. Platania: It's not working
Mr,
Pavelko: In DonnellY!.;we been smashed by the force of the pubhc1ty
. campaign · was_ I~ October Juan Peron returned
as smoothly. There's a lot of bugs. cut back the heat and one warm e~plosion.
Two
'p_olicemen maugurated m order_~ edu<:~te . t? · power after. an. exile of
in
it. '
· . ·
day we can turn off_ the system. assigned to guard the . theaters .the people
to
th~ positive merits . e1ghte~n years. HIS popularity is
Mr. i>avelko: Well, ,computers We· can do· that
~
Donnelly were injured by th~ blasts.· -
~f
t_he film·yers10~ fi._Su~rstar. veryh1~ at themom~nt,and the
. can't do the work. That'sJeft
up . because we operate with a steam
. The extreme. right-wing group . Jesus .Cfn:~ Super.star. .
Ey~
people·, tired of the disturbances
· to
the crew
itself. So ·what'we· do sistem.
.
that claimed ctedif for the · _the word.· 1'~11perstar'.\ was that have rocked their country in
is take_ urgent
calls
in for major . Circle:, And the residence I>?mbings had vo~ed that the ,suppressed from.the title in an the ~ecent .~st, look.
to
h4Jt to
' jobs; These~calls are looked after. halls?
-
.
.
. .
• picture '.'Jesus Christ Superstar-'' · ~ffort
to
play . down
any·
~en- :reurute a ~vided nation.
first, Jhen the compg_ter cards..
Mr. Pav~lko: In-the residence
.
. .
.
.· --
..
.
·
.·
· ·._•
·.':-. . .
. . , .
. , . , ,.Circle: How often are the cards. -· halls , the pumps are . on
Co~~-
l· . · ·
V · · ·
-
•G· • . Sh •·
11· ·
-d~edt~t~~r~~iJf:s· h:~~~ti~o~ a t : th:
:~1!:!
. . .
-!-..
~~
.. ~-
~rs.
-~~
a~~- . ' '
.
'.~s "·: : ·: ::' ..
.
!? ....
.
-~~
with
the .. ainounf:·set; in~'~If,. can:, freezmg. a~am. We lowered the
·
.
'.•
:
·
.· .. ··
cases,
if yo~,attempt to purchase . ·
cUridWils
involved to give it some-
tak~ upto once ev.ery third week. :•rh~ostat
~
Champ~gnat and
· Byl;>ian_ePetrus "·
·
···
·
·
..
gaso~~attheeiic;t<ithemonth serious'thought and'·in t'tifn act
.· C~cle: How lon_f before they., we r~ : b ~ l~ss oil
tµan last
.
:· · : ... · · .
.
.
Y,OU c_ould be~ confi'o~ed-
with
upon'ifacc<irdingly. . ... · ·
are done? · ·
._ ·
.
.
Y~•
Also,· they re less ~ouble. _ With the. threat of the un-
empty tanks.
..
.
·
· ·
,
··Mr·
Pavelko: That·depends:~·y.
·:
G~~Je:
CanyouJowertpeheat?. pending .. gas shortage; many.
:.In:this immediate ·area there
.>'
·ruz.zi.'.E:·.~·.t_A __
N_
..
SWE_
,R_ S.·:
;.._.·
the number of cards received: , _Mr. Paveµco_:.We have
to
keep commuting students. :could· be are· no-
·
·forms
<i mass
tran-.
_..:-r:.,.,..~-::- -...,.-.,..-... ·------ ·.,··
before that orie. W~ place
th~ in • the. pumps
.
gomg or else they'U f~c;e~twith,_.a, serious prob~em. s_portation· which could provide
~.;+;;f.;.~:.;.
s
T R E N G T H
the order we r~e1ve ~em; __ . . . fr~ze. _We
also
need all th~ heat Smee•~· good number of Manst's : an adequate alternate means of
i-.,:+~~~:,:.
c
R 1 T E R 1 A
Mrs. Platania: "lt~s. "usually:_ we
!!8D
get on the North suie.. . commuters· ,Iive-'a·'-reasonable . travel. ,.The· limited bus service
_t-,,,,,tf-::+;,,;...,
.:,:+;;~;.:;;.
N T
done before-a 1.::oup~e·:of weeks,_ . Circle: can .the Housema~~rs · distance ·-·from' the ·school~ /the·. would
be
helpfulto
an
extent but
~.,-:;,,1,,::-fl!I
~,+.,,;+:,-+;;;;.
c
T
unless we
,
don't have the item lower,the ~rature?
:
·
: · . effec_ts:of this.and the possibility . couldn't· be, ·considered . as - - - -
..,.+,,,+-,j~
T E
needed for the· repai,r."
.
.
~r •
· Pavelko:_ .
If_ t.~~e · o! f!ltioning coll:1d create a: major. aliog~ther sufficient.One possible
R E
O
E F
I
N E 5
u
R
Circle:· Could you explain the Housemaster controls it,_ . its difficulty
.
on thi,s segment of the solution
to
tllis
problem would be . ·
F L
O
G
s
.
R A
·Chainpagna:t · anc;l' Leo boil¢r ,- goC>d, but there's probl~s,m ~he _school's population.:
, . .
to form
car
pools·.
This would not- -
A
c
T.
u
A T E
T H. E A. Y E 8
·incidents?·'
.·
•·
.·-:. . · sm,all. houses, _Benoit _and; ·Gas:prices:are constantly'in" onlysaveeachindividualgas,but ·
N °Es
1
s
LE ARN
Mr;
Pav~llto·:"0n·~~ lyfonday GregOf}'.:•.;:It see~s t?~t ,tije ·creasingto:011tqiJeQUS~owits_- ._iL·would ·also decrease ... the .
~ ~
t
ER
O
J
O
HNY
O
u
NG ·
. before everyone.
~~ed from.· , stud~nts . keep.- adj~~mg the : Many
_
of the
sta_tion~r
are _closed· . arnowit· of--~on~y __ spent on : it .. ·
R
s
T
s s
I
~
t
i
~
R
~ ~
~-
vacation_ (January 7th)_ .. ·Fr,~ _Jherm.ostats
.s9
thar:1t_s _w~m .. Just: ~hen.you n ~ them.·.They Instead> of wa1tmg !or-- th_e
A L A
c
A R T E·
1 M
p
u
T- E
-Lam~rt said
thatthere
W~
no __
;This;
causes_:problems,iW1th;~e_,cJ.'.~Ct,the4".
sales:
to a.
£~rtain ,.
p_roblem
to catch
UP.::Wlth us_1t. MAL
I NG E R
L E E R E D
. heat m the. resi~nce office.-, I
-It~~~-
Bµtin_t,heotherdo~,
if · amountotgallcm~ and m
_
many ·. would
be beneficial:to -
.
~ ..
m- . s
w
E.
A T E R
s
A M A
s s
• ' ., ..
. '..;_ > ... ·._ -· ... ~-:' .... • •,,·- --~
; ·-,• :
_
.
'. .. ; '. ·, -.
• <"
,·
•'._··-;:.i'.
I
,
• ' ' ' ' • I ' • • • •
' ' ' • ' • ,
•
, • •
o •
•
._
,,
,.
,.;-
FEBRUARY 7, 1974
THE
CIRCLE
PAGE3
Committre Reports
On
Athletic Future
By Ray
Barger
this office tries to be helpful. work-study program, a program
These preaITanged interviews· in which a studwt can work at an
Are you graduating this year follow a recruiting schedule
-
set on-campus job while he goes go
and wondering where to find up
.
by Mr. Sherlock. This school, is a functioo
of
this office.
work after getting your B.A. or schedule may be fowid posted
in
So,
too, is an updated listing of
B.S.?
Maybe you're interested
in
his office which is located on the part-time off-camp~
_
jobs that
_
a part-time job on or off
camp~.
first floor of
Champagnat
Hall.
are
available.
1'.he
·
career
Development
Office
However, Sherlock
-
cautions,
The C.D. Office began
this
year
·
can .help
.
you in your
·
search.
"resumes must be on file
in
this to
use
some new ways to serve
·
_
"We try to respond to student's office
so
thatthe
interviewer has the student. · One was the
needs by attempting
·
to fill the something to
talk
about with distribution of a
·
monthly
void between· what they would
-·
you."
.
_
·
publication, News and Notes.
like in a job and ·what jobs are
A
·
second way
that
the C.D. This newsletter
·
tells
of
current
avaJlable."
This
is ,
_
John Office can help you
-
find
a job is trends
jJl
the job market and also
Sherlock's philosophy
as
head
·
of
through the
use of
the
~
literature of various other points of interest,
for
_
example,
information
received from other colleges
across the country
pertaining
to
jobs and education.
A second new technique
devised is
a
Directory of
Co-
operating
Alumni.
This listing
will be
a qUick and easy source of
reference of
those
Alumni who
will be actively cooperating with
the C.D. and Alurrui Offices as
contacts to
M::nist
graduates.
Mr.
Sherlock, thinking of the
future, is striving toward a full
off.:Campus recruiting program
in which students at Marist could
tap the resources of ·
all
the
colleges in ACHMA, or the
Associated
_
Colleges of the Mid-
Hudson Area.
A
second
future prospect he
sees
would be that of a N. Y. State
.
file on campus. Microfiche is a
daily updated recording of all full
time jobs, and details on them.
This information available would
not be limited to this area, but
would cover all New York State.
the Career Development Office. available there.
.
.
R
·
d
An
.
Heis assisted by Peter Dalmer,
Anotherservicethatthisoffice
.
ey
/
na
·
r
11•
c1•
t
an alumni of Marist
.
College.
.
.
provides is an aluinili file. This
_ _
_
-
_
pa es
This office, as a source for file
lists
nearly eight-hundred
career
.
counseling, attempts
.
in
·
Marist graduates and the job.5 in
Good
~
various ways to help the student which
.
they are now employed.
.
ear·
not only decide, butfind a job that These alumni are
.
invaluable
·
he would be happy with.
·
.
resources as contacts in looking
Personal , interviews with for a job.
.
r.:_epresentatives
.
. froni large and
-Part-time work can also be
small companies, is one way that found through this office; The
.
;
By Brendan Boyle
Organization and a good hard-
working staff are the two main
reasons for the 1974 Revnard
HEOP
-
Program
·
Aids
-
Disadvantaged Students
promising to be the best yearbook
in quite some time. According to
Gary Traube, this year's Editor-
in-Chief, the text of the book is
almost completed. The price of
the book is reduced from last
year, and if sales go
as
well as
they have so far, there is a good
chance that deficits created from
previous years might begin
to
be
paid off.
.
•
Traube has many reasons for
being so optimistic. Unlike
- previous editors
·
who were often
left the monstrous task of almost
ll
Y
ears of age, and a quarter of the on larger Joans to make up the single-handedly producing.Jhe
More
.
than 5,000 eco
_
nomica y
b
k
h h
taff
of
about
and educationally ciisadvan
__
ta
_
"
ged
students are 25, attests
'
to the difference their families cannot . year
00
,
e as as
um
.
··
·que 'sec·ond chance•
·
nature of
.
d
t
.
. . th
sixty people. This large, in-
students were able to continue
cporvo_gerra' mm_.~r er o
_
r
__
emam m
e dustrious staff is what Traube
their college studies
_
last year
·
this college opportunity for many
.
.
individuals," adds
De
Giulio.
The typical cost to
_
a HEOP mainly attributes the hopeful
because of the Higher Education
s of th '74 e book to be
·
According
_
to
-
the HEOP annual
'
student, according to the
-
annual succes
e
Y
ar
·
·
Opportunity Program, accordina
A
f
th f
'
·
1
Uook so
-'t:>
.
report, many
·
New York State report, has risen
_
over
$400
in
_
the
s or
e mancia ou
to
_
th
_
e
·
progra
_
m
_
's annual
_
report
far th1
·
stoo ·1s optum·
·
·st1·c Only 51·x
P
.
riv ate colleges and universities,
.
last year, so that the
·
"
_
fiscal gap"
•
·
'
recently
.
released by the State
hund ed bo
k
are gom· g to be
already·fisc
_
ally hardp
.
ressed, are now between all ava1·1able
r
O
s
Education Dtpartment
· t dthis
·
1·
ofth low
finding it impossible to "make up sources of aid - including
HEOP,
-
prm e
year m ieu
e
The five-year-old program is
·
umber of books sold 1·n previ·ous
·
the difference'.' between in- student loans, State and Federal n
-
-
designed
to
stimulate
Pubrsh·
g
cost for these
.
academically-talented students
creased · program costs and programs, and college costs - is y~ars.
1
m .
·
h
·
'
amounts' ava_ilable
__
from
_·
State ·approximate
_
ly 4'950
_
f.
Tru·
__
s means·_Six
_
hundr
_
ed books
__
1
s
$8,~.
The
:
, .
who
.
might not
othermse- ave
.
the
,p
st
f
a bo
k
has been red ced
opportunity'to continue with their
·
·
and Federal sources.
· ·
·
that the
·
·
costs
·
of
·
screening, -
fi-
o
-
·
t
$10 00
·
·
:i
t
been sold. The student govern-
ment's aUotment for the year-
book is $1600 and there is a
possibility that another $400
might be adqed to this amount.
The advertising department
headed by Bruce Cappio, has sold
$800
worth of ads to date and
hopes to reach their goal of $1800
before the publishing deadline in
two weeks
.
If
all goes according
to plan, the yearbook will make
money this year which according
to Traube is the first time in a
number of years that it will do so,
and the debts amassed from
previous years will begin to be
paid off.
Yearbooks should be ready for
distribution starting the first
week of May. Since yearbook
sales are going along at a fairly
good rate thus far, the staff of the
Reynard suggests that orders be
placed as soon as possible
preferrably before April
1,
since
there is
only
a
limited number of
_
books
.
to
be
printed. The: prices
are $10
.
00 for a 1974 yearbook,
$8.00 for a 1973 yearbook
.
and
$16
.
00 for both a 1973 and a 1974
yearbook.
college careers. In addition to
'.J;'he
.
lack of funds for
.
the testing, counseling, guidance
15
year,
0
.
.
•
as oppos
-
0
financial support paid dir~tly
to
educationally. _and economically services, developmental courses,
last year s price
of
$12.50 and so
participating private colleges in
disadvantaged, the annual report and other supportive aid far far half of the books have already
the State, the program offers
indicates, has held the 1973-74
·
exceed the $1,400 allocation . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - -...
students testing, counseling, and
HEOP enrollment of 5,300 provided each HEOP student.
remedial work to help ~eep them
.
students at 62 campuses to ap-
Although program funding
·
11
·
-
proximately the same as the 1972- continues to present a problem
m
:ie
e;!port
.
notes that 1,000
73 enrollment. "While many for all Higher Education Op-
students have already achieved
institutions were holding the
line
portunity Program participants,
degrees through HEOP. More
or, in some cases, raising their new and more flexible ad-
significantly, only 20_ percent of
contributions during the 1972-73 missions criteria have enabled
the students that enroll in the
academic year," says
-
the report, institutions to select
a
broader
program drop out,
_
ana of this
"the pressures of inflation, along
mix
of HEOP students, states the
figure,
_
only one in five is
with other fiscal demands, report.
dismissed'for academic reasons,
c~us~d 20 participating
!h-
The results of the HEOP
corroborating the effectivene5;5
sbtutio!ls to reduce
'
program eval~tion prove the program's
of supportive services in helping
comm1tmef!t~ by a
_
total of effectiveness,
·
and the Regents
to
overcome .
academic
$957,488, casting the increased therefore
.
strongly support
ex-
deficiencies.
A
large majority of
~urden on !IEOP students to take pansion
·
of the program.
the students begin with reduced
course loads and relatively low
grades,
.
but nearly
~11
-
have .
achieved
.
parity with other
students by the senior year, with
120
.
credits and an acceptable
.
·
ac~demic
_
performance ranging
from mfeting minimum stan-
dards
to
honors levels. Only a
small number of students require
a fifth year to complete their
work.
·
·
.
·
·
''.The impact 9f opportun1ty
programs
_·
like HEOP, while not
easily
_
quantified,
are
.
significant," concludes
.
the
·
an-
.
riualrep<>rt; Cited as examples of
benefits
·
derived from such
•
·
ef-
forts are new approaches
to
·
teaching,, •improv~
·
d
hiring
practices for
.
instructors,
im~
proved curriculum,
.
growth of
programs Jor )1um.ari services
paraprofessionals
and
development
•
of
:
new
_
'types
_
:
of
.
professional positions
.
-
-
.
·
.
.
.
_
.
.
'
:
'Approximately,
_
two-thirds of
the
.
-·-
students enrolled
.
in
·.
the
·
.
program are
.
black arid
a
,
total of
severi-e}ghilis:
·a:re · n'ori~white;
·
which
0
demonstrates:
~e
slice~
.-
Hyde Park
Army
·
-
- Navy Store
(At
the
Beverage Center on Rt. 9)
10 Pct. OFF ON ANY PURCHASES!
JUST
BRING THIS
AD
WITH
YOU
AND COME
IN
BY FEB. 16,
1974
R'ATHSKELLAR LUNCHEON
.
·
'
1
SPECIALS:
MONDAY
TUESDAY
½
Pound Hamburger
Small Soda
or
Coffee FREE
.
·
Lettuce
&
Tomato on
a
With Purchase of any of
FreshHardroll W. Fr.Fries&
OurSubs(Made to Order)
·
SmaUSoda
'
.:
_
Orily $1.99
·
Ham
&
Cheese; Roast Beef,
(1/.fPounder Orily$t35
.
·
'
Turkey
·
·
:: WEDNESDAY
. •
'
·
·
Italianor.WhiteBread
Superburgers"'2Hamburg~s
.
'
·
Letttice&TomatoonallSubs
·
:
CookedtoOrder-Ona Tripi~
,
THURSDAY
.
Decker
Roll-Garden Fresh
·
•
. Delicious Minute Steak
Lettuce&Tomato- Golden Brown
·
i
.W;
Fried Onions On Hard Roll
Fr._Fries&Sm.ColdSoda-Only$U!9 . W.Fr. Fries &Sm;ColdSoda.
·
:
-· (Superburger-Wnl)'. 99c)
.
·
. ·
Only$1.29
-
.
_
of program .. efforts· to provide
higher.education (or minorities,•~
·:: ··
·
FRIDAY
·
.
·
.
says
'
:
AµanD~ qi@.o; chief
¢
.
.
the
·
F
·
·ed
·
Cl
· · · ·
Hot· .., ·
·
ted.
·
Educaµon Department's Bureau
.
· .,,,
~
.-
·
-
n
ams
on
-.1.oas
Roll
·
·
·
f H
'
h Ed
r
·
o
·
rturuty
Tartar Sauce-. Cole
.
Slaw-
.·
.
,
·
ROSE VIEW FARM'i
ENGLISH RIDING LESSONS: $7 PER HOUR
BEST FACILITIES AVAILABLE
225 FT. INDOOR RIDING RINK
INQUIRE ABOUT STUDENT GROUP
RATES FOR REDUCTIONS!
CALL 471-1918
FOR APPOINTMENTS
LOCATED
8-10
MIN, FROM CAMPUS
DUTCHESS ,J:IILL RD., OFF
EAST DORSEY LANE IN POUGHKEEPSIE
Pick 'n Shove
·
1
19 Academy St.
"HAPPY NITE" HOURS
Sun, Mon, Tues, Wed 9PM D.OSING
Ba
_
r
•
liquors
Shake Liquors
Mugs
~ot
$1.00
25t
Pitchers
$·1
.50
MICHELOB
$2.00
DARK
.
WED~ N
ITE
~
LEN NELSON
$1.75
-
-:
O
-
1g
~r
,
.
uca
um
-
.
PP
0
.
.
Fr. Fri
_
e1 &
_
Sm.
_
s
_
rida-
_-
_
Only $1.29
_
·
i>rograms~:-''The fa~t that half of
.
-theprograin
'
populatiol'i
is
over
.
21
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PAGE4
VOLUME 12
Marfst College,
_
Poughkeepsie,
N.V.
·
NUMBER
2
.
Co-Editors
LaywtEditcr
News Editor
.
PhotographyEdito
_
r
Jim
Keegan
and
Aime
Trabulsi.
1
LynOsbome\
Greg ConnQChioli:
Dave Pristash
.
.
.
.
Sf:aff: Tim DeBawt, Paul Pifferi, Karen Tully, Brian Morris,
Dume Petress, Mare Monsar~t, Bob Creedon, Ray Barger,
Brendan Boyle, Irene Ross;
.
Elizabeth Spiro Wayne Brio
Bill
Spra~e, John
T.
·
Clancy, Debby Nykiel, Charles DeP~cin,
Cathie Russo, James Burke, Joan McDermott.
Business Managers
·
Jack Reigle, Mark Fitzgibbon
.
.
Editorials
THE
CIRCLE
FEBRUARY?, 1974
Letters To The Editor
Racism
.
In
America
It
is a system of white
propagation
of
"Jensenism" is to
supremacism in which whites
perpetuate a system which is
.
have greater opportunities, have
daily
·
denying
·
rights
·
to
~
·
nm-.
To the Editor:
greater
·
life expectancies, earn
whites,
that
is,
denying people
Jim Elliott has raised
~
more money, have higher status~ freedom. Therefore, to argue that
number of questions which the and have access to better the
First
Amendment allows one
soon-to-be-formed
Marist housing, food; health services,
the freedom to advocate a doc-
Committee
Against
Racism will and education. Such a system
·
trine which
·
denies others their
be
.
examining in depth
.
At this
.
growtded in racial inequality
freedom is
:
a.
cootradictfon, a
·
time I would like to make
.
the generates racis
_
t ideas like
contradiction which would be
following point in reply
.
"Jensenism" and gives them life.
absurd were
.
it not for its terrible
Racism in North America is not These ideas are then used to consequences.
, .
•
just an idea. It is
.
first and justify
·
the privileged position of
foremost a system whereby non-
those benefitting from white
whites are considered to be and supremacism.
_
Hence, one very
.
are treated as inferior to whites.
-
important
effect
of
·
the
Sincerely,
Richard Bickley
HEOP Reexamined
because of the
·
facts that lie
other students, but
I
question
before them .. Most of the black other_ students accepting
:
them.
,
·
student population at
.
.
Marist
The H.E.O.P. has organized the
To the Editor:
.
. .
.
College live in Benoit. Rarely do I
Big Br:other program,' not only to
.
.
In
~he past few months I've see the cafeteria integrated.
help their students academically,
expE:nenced a l~t
~
pe~ple of Whenever I walk there, I always
·
~lso so
·
.
that interpersonal
Manst College. I fmd it sur- see the black students in their
relationships
··
can develope
!?rising how little kn~wledge ma.t corner. When will the day come,
among students.
If
you are
a
non
of the
_
stu~ent body is aware_of or if
_
separation
.
is to
.
fall behind us,
-
·
H.E.O.P. student anda:recurious
properly informed on the Higher thatwe look at each and feel free
.
about the prog1
:a
m, or want to be
0
1\6
d
E duca tiona l
,
Opportunity to change the conditional pattern
a Big Broth
.
er or
-
Big Sister, come
·
.
n,.,..on ay (February
4)
an amendment to the Education Law
was
Program, (H.E.O.P.). I've and sit beside each other? Black
a be a part
;
The office is located
p~c~dontheflooroft~elegis~atureinAlb~y_.
_
.
-
spoken to students, who see the
·
students who live in Benoit; live
in Room C
no.
Speak to Mrs.
Tuition
·
Assistance
his a~e!ldment
wtll
provxde for t~e Ttut10n ,:tss1stance Pf!>gram program
as
something for bla
_
ck there through their own choice.
Gomez and Richard
""
Green
·
or
(TAP) devise~ by th_e Select Comnut_!ee on Higher Education.
If
-
students, therefore, they cannot Th
.
ey
·
are not there t
.
0
separa
.
te
h ·
·
d
·
·
d
·
·
pas54a!d, TAP
w~
provide_more mo~ey for students. When fully funded, be a part. However, this js not themse
_
Ives from the rest of the anyone w
O
is aroun an you
.TAP could provide maxunum asststa~ce
_
of $17()0
,
(TAP would sup- true. O~e
_
of the major factors Marist community but
'
for the
.
will get fact~ and information on
plant ~r ph~e o
_
ll~ the Scholar Incentive progra~ now currently
111
that brought
_
about the program
.
sake of
self
awaren~ss that is best
.
what you
.
,
want
_
to
.
know; you Illay
operation:)
-
. .
_,
.
.
·
·
-was to
open the doors of higher broughtoutthroughtheirspiritof
·
;~:~
-
~
-
~ake
·.
a
_·
new
'
e~erla5ting
·
. The &oals of TAP
_
are to maxuruze oppQrtu_mtl~s for all students to
_
learll!ng
.
possible for financially an extended
·•
family.
_
Knowin
·
·
th
enter higher ~ducatlon _and to foster and mamtam a healtlly bal
_
ance han~cappe~ people not their_ most of the · students in Benof
...
.
-
~~lie
:r~~::
.
between public an~ private sch?ols
.
.
.
-
.
.
-
ethnic background.
_
.
ersonall !find most of them to
__
_
The plans for the unplementatl~m of ~AP are many. The plan_which
I guess the
.
m~jority of
_
the be opent"experienced and in-
H;E.O
.
P .
. was pla~ed on
.
the floo_r
of
the legIBlat!ll"e
-
on Monday. will
-
not students make their assumptions telligent. I know they
.
accep
·
t'
necess
.
arily be
.
the operational plan of TAP
if
and when TAP becomes
c
·
·
t
...
&
..
·
:,
·-
·'
·
.
.
JaW;
I
.
·
.
.··
·
.
.
ommu ers
.
The particular plan of implementation is secondary at
_
this moment
. ·
·
·
·
classes on both students and
·
time
.. -
.
commuters,
.
as Dean
.-
to the more important problem of getting the concept or goals of TAP
The Sch ed
u
I e
pro~~sors, willbEl detrimentalto
Carolan damied, the
:
eonunuter
accepted bythe legislature.
_
.
•
-
,
·
·
.
.
_
·
.
· .
·
.
-
our education.
'
The full-time
.
Union
'
shoW.d have
-
been
·
con-
Once the goals of TAP would
be
accepted, thP.11 energiesfoust be To
-
the Editor:
_
.
.
..
_
commuter, likethe resident
/
has
sulted. We werenot;fo•fact
;
tbis
spent in getting a pa~icular plan of implementation accepted.
·
·•-
·
lam
writing as President of the
·
.·
a
:
right
to
expect full value for his
·
schedule
IS
being implemented
to
.
..
·
Thus there are two distinct aspects inthe possible passage of TAP: CoIDilluter
,
Union,to express
t
for
tuition and not
-
appeals
..
to
.,
.'
.
'ad-
.
:
make
_
the
'
cgllege more attractive
_
~) the a
_
ccep~nce of the goals of TAP
.
;
·
:and
1
2) the partiimai:
.
Plan
;
o! Jh~
.
~~co_:~4,
•,
'
,
o~'r)>ppositi
_
o~
'._
to
~
tl:!.e
\
iu~y•
.:_
to a sit~ti<>n
:-
~lli®
_
:
Jhe
·
;
to
_
par~
::
ti:r:n~,
..
tuition
~
paying
unplementation of TAP. ·
_
,
·
. •
· .
.
•
.
, . ".
· .
· ·
·
:,
i
·.·
new class
.'.
scned_ule
•
approved ;on
>
s~u~ent,body
:
9o~s
~ot support.
':
•
.
stude~ts
-
~ijo
,:
are not
.
even
~
here
..
While this paper will continue to keep the Resident Students of New February
J
.1
'>
·
'
.
·
·
·
i
.
,
·
··
·_.
Lastly, l would like
to
'express
:.··
'
yet! Ahd we
•
·
studepts'
'.
wliif
]
iave
York State advisedof the status of the Amendment, it
·
would also like
·
...
We,
,·
along .with the Student my disappointment with the
.
way
.
invest:e(\ time and mori~y':'
in
our
to
remind students of their responsibilities and individual reactions
to
Government
0:
President,
·
Student
·
in
which the conuputirlg students'
.
education
,
here,
·
·
resident
:
:
.
and
·
the proposed program, and that it will promote appropriate action to Policy BoarcL~d the SAC, feel
. _
iniljge has been used tQjustify
·
commuter alike, will suffer
·
the
be taken by its readers.
·
·
·
·
thafthis type of schedule
;
with
.
this schedtile.
,
Had the schedule
consequences.
·
·,.
- - - -
·
·
-
the
,
Pressure >of 75-jli0 minute
·
been designed for present
part-.
:
·
·
·
--
-CluisWise
.
.
,
Commuter
-
Union
Aca
o
dem
·
·1
·
c
;
··
R
.
e
·
.
.
v
.
·
:
·,e
·
W
.
Carolan
Challenged
: -
commutersthetrouble
·
ofconiing
.:
most students were totally
into school five days a
week,
and , unaware
of
the
·
proposal until
.
the
'--
I have never been good at reduce this to three
_
_
or foin: days.
CIRCLE covered it in it_s January
A"
signific~t number _of Marist freshm~n
-
compieted the Fall \
973
·
discussing issues with that great Yet, the Commuter
-
Union was at 31 issu
_
e
.
Ironically, January 31
semes~er ';"'1th grade pomt ~vera~es of
_
less than L3.5. Although none American modicum of. "fat talk" no
:
time consulted about how
·
was also the deadline for written
were dism~ssed, an Acadenuc Review will take action at the
.
end of the ..: which means
,
the use of commuters themselves
·
felt.
reactions to the proposal, as
semester if the ~tudents' marks do not improve;
.
.
monosyllabic words for the sheer Why?
_
stated by Dean Carolan .in his
In ord~rto achieve the necessary 2.0, these students will be required purpose of
_
obfuscating meanings
•
The reason
to
this question is
Dec. 12 rriaJling,
0
•
•
..
to at least double their performance
of
last semester. Is this possible of and intentions.
simple: the members of the
_
C.U.
3
:
)
·
None of the
'
student
studentswhomaybeuncertainaboutbeingincollege?
.
On that note, I wciuld like to see
.
an extremely strange con~
organizations asked gave
·
their
,
.
It
ha~ beer:i a1:}ege~
_
that pooradvisement, as well as unreadiness, request that Kevin Carolan;
·
the tradictionpresentedwhen,onone
acceptance
.
to the schedule
has led to thIB sttua~1on, _and the presen~e of freshmen in upper level Associate Dean for Academic
,
hand, Dean
·
earolan wants to
change. The Student
-·
·
Govem-
course~ ~oes not belie t~s. Has our advxsement deteriorated so much Services, put the real
·
cards
nn
save the commuters some money
ment, and its Policy
,
Board,
that this
1S
the result or 1s it that in the crunch for students, Marist is the table and explain
,-
the real while the administration plans to
which heard Dean
·
Carolan's -
accepting students who cannot do the work?
,
motives for instituting the new
·
~ncrease the tuition by
$4
·
per
·
point of view
-
cin that key date of
,
The Circle would like
to
suggest
·
that the Academic Review be time schedul_e._As
h~
and the
.
rest credit hour next year. Let's face the 31st, voted against
-
the plan's
tempered so that merit and improvement will be rewarded. For sonie
I
of
t_h~
a~istration _h11v~
ef-
it squarely, and admit ths.rtimes
.
approval
.
At
that meeting,
;
Dean
~reshm~ students, a 2.0 cumulative average after next semester
is
an · fectlvely railroaded this hiijhlY are
·
bad, and the
-
Marist ad-
Carolan
.
indicated that he
·
·
had
'
1J?P'?~1ble
.
dream .
.
We
:
would· hq>e that those students who show
.
unpop~a~
:
class . s~ema mto ministration is Pl'.eparing for the faculty support which this writer
:
significant improvement and maturity
will
be allowed to continue.
operation
·
~egmnmg . next
·
worst economically. Thi~ is why
has not seen, and then he went on
We _are not advocating the
_
.
carrying
..
of large numbers of
·
semeste~, I
,
thmk he o.wes
us
·
.
an
new schedules and increases
·
in
.
to say that the current schedule
p~obatioi:iar}'. students, but we believe that these freshmen ought to be explanation of the _motives
_
which
·
-
tuition
·
:
have
.
been
.
summarily
,,
hadn't been approv~d by students
·
··
given a fighting chance. Otherwise they are just
.
wasting time _ theirs are blatantly obvious to me
.
as whisked
·
through with breath
-
or incoming
,
freshnien;
·
implying
·
and everyone
.
else's.
.·
..
·
·
-
•.
.
·
·
·
,
·
·
well as most other students and talting fil)eed.
,
·
·
-
that student
.
·
support
·
was not
·
-----'-
faculty members.
Although the new schedule has · really needed now either .
.
·
, ·
·
-
·
'
I've been involved in the been
·
·
raHroaded into effect
4.)
The schedule was approyed
Commute
_
~ Union for two
·
years,
·
starting next fall,
:
I
-·
wish to
on January 31, when the Office of
and from the difficulty
·
C.U. publicly expose the
·
methods
the
·
Academic Dean made its
-
.
. mem~rs have ~perienced in employed
·
to_ assure
,
Jts
, ·
enact-
..
\
decision. In a meeting
.'
of various
·.
creating progressive change on ment.
l
publicly challenge Deari
student Jeaders .
.
with
.
-·
ad-
·
_
·
On Friday February 8,
.
eight Vassar College students were among behalf <>f commuting students, I Carolan to defend these methods,
ministratiort in Dean LaPietca's -
those
41
Dutchess Cowtty residents arrested
.
in what has been have built up a suspicious n
.
ature
· ·
and to support them
'
as fair and
,
office that
.
same t;lftenioon
·
.
the
.
classified
as
_
the largest !lrug r~d in
·
the state since the riew drug lavt which reacts violently ~hen I see orthodox. H
_
ere isJlC>w the new
·
students
>
-
.
for the most 'part
.
became effective last Septembet. Under
this
new statute.
,
both users and hear peop_le ~1ke Dean cl~s schedul~
:
became a
,
reality
unhappy with the decision.:.. were
and sellers of drugs are treated with
the
same
-
ferocity, which could
.
Carolan
·
expressing
.
_ . grave
)
which ~ou, all o! the students and
_
-
ask~d
·
to
•:
rally
:
the
·
campus
·
·
.
orugs?
. result in prison terms of as much$ 15 years to life. This premise conce
_
rn
~bout .
,
pan-ume faculty of M;an.st,
-
ar~
going
:
tQ
·
c.ommunity behind
'
the newclass
along with the question of interpretation that tlie
courts
will give the students
~
•. It.1s.n?~ 1.Qacc~~te to havetofac~
_
n.ext seJI1ester:;
.
_schedule
;
·,
·.
,
:·
,
·
-
:
.
new law are more than enough to raise our consciousness in this area .
.
.
comI?are
·
my ,mi~al
.
fee~g at
,
1
.
)
The_ origmal proposal f?r
.
a·
·
· Dean Carolan, I defy you to find
.
.
Until those unexpected arrests occur~d; the reality of the new law
-
re~ding a~d h~nng
.
o.f bis. ~on~
..
master
:
tune schedul~ co.n~~ned
·
any ·untruths
~
in the above· the
·
had shown
very
little irlfluence, if
_
any,
·
on stude~ts and their
.
~
of
.
c~_rn
f~~
·
_
savmg
.'.
'part-time fow:teen
.
slots,. an~ was mailedto
_ :
a1?9ve se,q~ence
_
of
.
eve
11
ts
:
'.
•
con-
·.
drugs. But now, stud
.
en ts must realize the cormo~tions that such a law
·
_
st~dents
.
·.
so
_
megaso.liil~ ancl a~o
.
various
;
orgammtlons ~n
ca
_
inpus
.
stitutes
_
r~lr~ading
m
··
my mind,
•.
,,
refiec~ and how it affects tQeir desire to possess or
.
traffic drugs
iri
expen~es to t~e
_
teac~1on
.
which
·
,
0
n
.
Pecember)2i
·
Please
,
n.ote that
·
and
:
a c~~plete
,
disregard
,
of
·
any way~ It must
be
clearly wtderstood
.
that
~
.
.
law treats the users that
_·
fl!'St
·
~lack Panther-:
·
~!-15t
:
·
this
.
was
,
durmg_
_
exam wee~;
·
,
as
studen~ opmions or ideas
,
'.
I doubt
.
and _sellers of
.
co~ine, and ev
.
en marijuana,
:
with
·
the
.
same severe , hav;e e~e.r1en~e~ upo~ rec~ivmg the
CIRCLE
.
~
~a~
11ot published
,
.
:
seriously
~·:
that
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:;
th~. •
·
punishment
.
that
·
IS
·
given: to
.
the
'
~llers
.
of the
,
even
_
more addictive
.
an _invitation
.
to
~
~
LE!()ri
,
ard
.
Bern-.
,
·
that ;week, ~e proposa,l cou!d
.
not
.
·
.
st11dents
:·
llere Jmow
·
·
about
.··
the
..
dnigs sucll
as
heroiJi.:Also, we triust
:
be.
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even
_
mcire aware
:
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.
the fact
-
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poSSibly
.
be
:
brought to
.
-
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.
_
at
~
appr~val
:
':
of
<
the new
:
schedule
_
:
.
.
that it
nils
now
taken
.
the
state
almost
f<Kir
.
niooths
to
"accumulate'
t11e·
:".
·
De.!ln
:.
Carolail
:
.
wrot~,
-
~
:
m.
-
:
his.
:
:
t~tion
>
_
of
.
·
_
the
<
campus
,
com
-
:
_
:
_
even now, let
'
alone the
'
methods
_
.
__
·._
.
machineey' .... that
is
.
necessaryhienforcirig such
'
a law
'
and that the feplY.
-
to
~
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,~
7
-
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:
rejection
•,
-
.
.
tnunj.ty;
-
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CIRCLE
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·,CIRCLE;January
.
31
,
,
1974),that have been•published
·
duiing
tfie
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.
_\
.
_
_
FEBRUARY
7, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
More Letters To The Editor
.
The
Gulag
Challenge
attending real colleges and
universities
for
academic
reasons are mature enough to
breakneck speed with which it accept a five-day week; and a
was made cannot be
·
excused
·
as system which allows students to
an "emergency energy
crisis
take
all
their classes in fewer
action". Also,
if
you really had
an
days is-not an
asset
as far
as
interest in
.
student feelings uplifting academic performance.
regarding your proposal, you
Another reason you give
is
''to
certainly would have seen to it provide regularly scheduled time
that more time was given
to
the slots for workshops, demon-
campus community
to
express strations, labs, multi-media
their opinions. This letter is my lectures and cultural activities."
equivalent of the "written Dean Carolan, this above quote
comment which
I
couldn't submit represents an exercise in
before January 31.
meaningless rehetoric. From
.
Having
·
discussed the actual previous experience, I know that
approval of the proposal, I'd like Marist College isn't exceptionally
to turn now to your reasons, as well-equipped to provide
all
of
stated in
.
the initial enclosure these new academic services on a
mailed on December
·
12. While prolific, regular basis. Some
facilities may be used more ef- classes aren't even
of
the nature
ficiently and energy may be of the above; cultural activities
conserve$!. in a truly minimal aren't exactly
.
integral parts of a
scale,
·
I
disagree with
.
your math class, !or example. T~e new
statement that one POint in favor. sc~edule will do away with
50-
of the proposal was
"to
make it minute classes
,
and replace them
easier for students to arrange with either 75-minute or even
150-
their schedules
.
" To my way of ~ut~
.
periods which will be an
thinking, real students who are unbearable strain on
,
the at-
Affair
.·
By
Cathie Russo
thorough investigation to seek out
-
Soviet lampoon sent abroad by
schema;
not dubious
ex-
planations which look substantial
until one actually explores them.
As
far
as
the approval
is
concerned, it looks like students
will have
to
a ccept
this
decision
next semester and face extended
classes. Hopefully, some good
will be forthcoming; perhaps
Marist students will become
aroused by this to start
demanding that they
be
con-
sidered as people with voices in
campus affairs. Greatly disap-
pointing was the inadequacy of
·
the student organizations (i.e.,
the Student Government) in
effectively expressing its disdain
for the new schedule. This
failure, I feel
,
is not attributable
.
to the students
.
who are active in
these organizations. The real
weaknesses are inherent in the
disorganized, confusing mass of
committees,
boards,
and
organizations which seem unable
to coordinate themselves ef-
fectively on a major issue.
Perhaps this episode in the
an-
nals of Marist bureaucratic
conquest could have been
'
avoided
if
student power had
been more centralized.
Unless you are fortunate
enough to be transferring or
graduating at the close of this
semester, however, you've got
two treats awaiting you in the
fall: increased tuition and
.
ex-
tended classes. Enjoy?
Russian
·
author Alexander the· manuscript. - After
.
a brutal M
_
r. Solzhenitsyn in the guise of a
Solzhenitsyn is presently amid a KGB interrogation which
·
took New Year gift
.
"
tention spans of students, and
quite likely; faculty. I feel you are
undermining the quality of the
educational experience which
Marist students will receive.
Classes of such extended
duration are real impositions
when they become the rule, and
not the exception - as a student's
three-hour night class is now.
Dean Carolan, I am asking for
the real reasons for the new
Rick
Whitesell
vast Kremlin controversy due to place
··
1ast fall, a
._
·
friend of
Gulag Archipelago did · not
t~e publication of his_most recent Solzhenitsyn'irgav~
·
upa copy of. bring
.
with it the first trains
bookTheqJJiagArchipalago. The the manuscript then committed between Solzhitsyn and the
Nobel~prize-w!~ning
·
author's
·
suicide. Once the Soviet Union Russian government. Referring
,
latest
.
book is
. _
.
a
600
_
.
'
·
page go_thold of the manuscript within to A Day in the Life of Ivan
docuinentl:iry based on the Soviet
·
the country and
.
the
·
names arid
'.
.
Denisovich, Nikita Khrushchev
srst~m fro~ 1918
to
1956,
h'1-
details coritairied within it,
:
commented
to
his fellow party
clu~mg
.
_his _eleven~year
·
e~~
Solzhenitsyn
'"'
_
saw no further leaders, "Take my ,word for it,
.
pe~ie:nce
_
m
.
prison camps an~
_
,
m reason
.
to ~elay
_
publishing.
·
T_he this
·
is a very dangerous theme.
.
ex,ile
,
._
as well
;
~
.
Ie~e~
J
.hat
.
he
,:
plans kept
-
secret by the author's It's a kind
.
of stew that will attract
Employees
Beware!
;~
.
.
:~~c~i.y:~ci,Ji.ofn.
/
e~j>nso;i
_
ers
..
~!Jd
·
)fiw'ye(
;
·in
i.'
Switzerlari
•
d
,
-
were fUes like
,
a carcaSB;
·
au sorts
·
,
of.
·
·
.
.
mtervie
_
ws th~t he conducted with announced. In
_.,
the United States, bougeois scum from abr~d will
the 227
.
surVIvors of the slave- publication by Harper
•
and Row come
-
crawling all over
it."
/
lapor ~airiP~:
.
.
·
-:
.
will begin in the Spring
.
Four
·
Since 1966, the name Alexander
WASHINGTON - Around many
.
The Commission's own records
petty or
.
industry
~
indentured in the
·
case contradict this
bureaucracies in Washington, the
evasion
.
and
.
support
the
best civil seryants are in a disclosure of the overrun as the
conflict of allegiances. By motivation for Fitzgerald's
Gula~
.
Archipalago
·
st~tes European countries will also Solzhenitsyn is
-
no longer men-
Solzhemtsyn's rejection of
·
the begin
,
publishing.
·
tioned in articles of literary
~remlin's af{irIIlati~D: that Stalin
Within the Soviet Union an criticism
.
The secret police have
was s
_
olely
·
respon~ible
_
for the announcement was
.
made by in the past confiscated his per-
terroris~ of his_ time
.
Instead, Boris Pankin, head of the newly sonal papers and records along
• ~olzh~mtsyn attributes the mass organized Soviet copywrite with the typescript of his novel
imprisonment and executions organization,
:
that citizens who The First Circle. He found
· under Stalin to Lenin:s establish- send manuscripts out of the
·
evidence that
art
electronic bug
Jllent
.
. of
a
·
.
po_hce
st~ te. country· would be
·
arrested and was installed in
.
his house. He
Professio~al byp~otists recrll;lted charged. with smuggling . .for this
·
accepted speaking dates for
.
under
Lemn
acquired confesSions Solzhenitsyn could spend as long various professional and cultural
·
f~om gover~e~t leaders
·
at_ the as ten years in
.
prison and five groups, often in confidence, and
.
time of_ Stalm s purge
·
tnals
.
years in exne. Soviet news then found that everyone of them
Other disc~osures of G~lag are agency TASS postponed
-
calling had been mysteriously cancelled,
thesugge
_
st1onsthatStalinwas
an
for the arrest of Solzhenitsyn. sometimes hours before the
undercover agent of the
.
Czarist The Kremlin's indecision about event.
secret
.
~lice in t~e disguise of a dealing with the author is due to
In a Nobel lecture for One
·
Day
Bol~heVIkrevolutionary,andthat the sensitivity of S
_
Qviet-Westem in the Life
_
of Ivan Denisovich,
·
.
Stalin had
_
planned a large scale relationships. Protest from
-
which he could not deliver for
massa~re of
·
Je~s in 1953 which abroad
.
brings with it the fear
of
becoming
exiled,
was-foile~ by his
·
~eath.
.
possibility
.
of
.
disturbing Soviet Solshenitsyn
described
his
.
..c
:
Solzhen
_
itsyn estimat~ that
m
hopes for Western economic aid .
.
feelings for the significance of
~~Y
_on~year of the St~lin ~ra, 12 At the same t~e Solzhenitsyn
'
s free expression
:
when he wrote
·
million
.
peop!e were
_
imprisoned plea
_
for
_
punishment
_
of those "Woe
·
betide the nation whose
..
. or ell:ecut~ m ll~sia. In Gulag guilty of crime in that ~ra
is
in
·
literature is interpreted by force.
>
Archipelago, he firmly calls for-
.
defiance of Socialist authority.
A
It
is the .incarceration of the
the- punishment of_ those who January 14, 1974 .issue of Time
·
nation's heart, the amputation of
.
composed
the
"machine" quoteda government spokesman the nation's meinory."
·
responsible for such devastating as saying "The book is an anit-
·
afflictions
·
against
.
the Soviet
· ,,
·
people.
M k S
T M
•
.
Research for
.
Gulag began
iri
0C
enate
O
eet
1958.
It
was
·
not until 1964, that
•
Solzhenitsyn began :writing. The
.
1962 publication of One Day in the
By
Mary Monsaert
representative and Kathie.Russo
· Life of Ivan· Denisovich, which
sophomore representative. The
.
won Solzhenitsyn the Nobel FTize
The
24th annual meeting
.
of the fac~ty advisor is Mr. Sims.
for Literature,
_
prompted hun- New York State Intercollegiate
The Mock Senate is an actual·
dJ:eds
•
~t
..
fonner prisoners
·
to Mock Senate will
_
be held
on
April corporation.
It
has been in
.
.
.
write
·
·to the author describing 17th
to
.
~
1st
m_
-~e Senate existence for
24
years. For four
.
their own exp
_
eriences
.
linpeUed
_
Chambers urAlbany, New
_
Yo~.· da.ys the delegation actually
·
by
t~e
corres~on_denc~s, Tile purpose of
.
these
.
m~etmgs
lS
·
reenacts the entire legfslative
Solzhenitsyn worked m isolation to ~nhan~ t_he ~ucc1tional ~- · procedure. Bills are proposed
un
_
til completion of Gulag in 1968
;
p~rience
m
.
.
·
the · l~w
·
.~mg and written by the
.
delegation
.
Unwilling
.
to
_.
ri,sk jeopardizing
..
process. The
.
delegation
15
made prior to the
.
attending of the
.
.
any oLhlil
.
cor:respondents or u~ of colleges from the New York
.
.
session.
._ .
,
.
.
.
.
interviewees- by pe~itting the ~tate ~re
.
a. ~ t y~r, ~4. colleges
•
.
.
.
.
: :
'
publi~atioh of Gulag Archipela~o m~luding
M~ist,
__
parti
_
~tpated
fn
'
·
.
Anyone who might
be
- m
tht?
,W~st;
_
he gave p~ts
of
,
his thishis
.
~µcat
.
ionaldeelxperi~nce. ·
.-
interested
.
in attending
:
this
.
,
.
:
.
manuscr!pt
.
.
to
clqse fnends for
.
_
.
1'
_
.
.
~~
_
rs
·
. ega
_
tion
,
fr.om
program
is
asked to contact
Joe .
.
s~ekeepll.}g; Later, l>y.
_
unkno~
:Ma~~
st
.
mc~ude the. fol~owmg Mirrione delegation leader or
·
-:_
~
· ·
m ~
-
.
he
sen.t the
,
~nuscrJpt
,~
P~litical Sci~~ l!~Jors .
.
Tom Mr.
s~.
..
-
.
·
.
'
--~~i:oad
;
~earing
.
~at
parts
of the Kelly.
J~
.
-
Mimone, and frank
·
·
·
obeying unjust or corrupt orders, forced departure. So calculated
•
they are violating their
.
personal was
the
enmity of his superiors
obligation of public trust in
.
their
that
the Air Force Office of
public office. By disobeying such Special Investigations destroyed
orders, they run the risk
of
being all favorable reports returned on
fired or isolated into an empty Fitzgerald as a
.
result
of
their
office with empty duties. ·
investigations. In a memo from
It
is not easy from many White House aide, Alexander
conscientious government em-
Butterfield to H.R. Haldeman on
ployees to learn that the way to January
20,
1970,
But-
lose your job is to do your job.
terfield said: "Fitzgerald is no
Ernest Fitzgerald, the former doubt a top-notched cost expert,
cost reduction expert for the but he must be given very low
Pentagon, learned the hard way marks in loyalty; and after all
when he fought against waste as loyalty is the name of the game.,:
a way of doing business in
Loyalty to whom and for what?
defense contracting. In 1968, he The Code of Ethics for Govern-
"committed truth" (as he put it) ment Servic-?
·
- a little read
by
.
testifying before Senator ~ocument - states: "Any person
William Proxmire's committee
m
Governmental service should
about a $2 billion overrun on the put loyalty to the highest moral
Lockheed C5A cargo plane principles and to country above
contract. Although supported by loyalty
to
person, party
,
or
several members of· Congress Government department."
and newspaper editorials, Fit-
The CSC avoided a proper
zgerald lost his job.
It
took over
a
opportunity to ascribe respon-
year for
,
top Pentagon and White sibility to Fitzgerald's superiors
House officials
to
effect his who escaped all accountability
separation from the Department
•
for their collusive and illegal
by abolishing his position,
as
a
behavior
.
It failed to order the
Pentagon "economy move" no Air Force to include· reasonable
·
less!
-
legal expenses as
a
part of the
Fitzgerald, unlike many heroic retroactive pay due Fitzgerald.
civil servants who suffer -their Had he been required to pay for
expulsion or demotim in silence, the ACLU's legal services, his
decided to fight back
.
Assisted by legal expenses would have more
the American Civil Liberties than absorbed his back pay of
Uni~n•s lawyers, Fitzgerald $100,000
.
·
.
obtained last month an order
So the
·
Fitzgerald case,
from the Civil Service Com-
however it may cast credit on one
mission (CSC) to reinstate him at man's stamina and accuracy, is
the Pentagon with $100,000 -back not likely
to
help other civil
pay.
.
servants who are daily ordered or
·
It
was not a satisfactory vie-
expected
'
to cover-up, violate
tory and Fitzgerald may decide their department's own rules
to appeal. For one thing, the CSC expose the citizen
·
to un:
did not conclude that ·he was conscionable abuse or waste the
·
dismissed because he blew
·
the taxpayer's money.
· ·.
m~uscript
were
·
m
.
the
·
country,
.
~
M ~ ,
_all
~f
.
wh~ are
~ruo:-1:
.
the KGB, Soviet police/ begari a
·
Jean for~siaL ls
-
the 1umor
·
,
whistle on the
C5A waste before
.
Few people outside Washington
the Joint Economic Committee of realize how important it
is
to
Congres,g.
,
It
stated,
incredibly, reform the Civil Service
_
Com-
enough, that the Pentagon fired mission
so
that it supports the
h~ because the
·
Department compete~t and law-abiding civil
believed he
·
was
the
.
cause
.
of servant instead of shielding the
·
•'•~just.
publicity~' in the
·
press. corrupt,
partisan,
lazy
or
well-:
...
'
.
COMected officials
.
.
· ·
·-:
-~
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4!.
PAGE6
FEBRUARY 7, 1974
-
:
.
.
·
..
Shout It Softly
by
Fr. Leo Gallant
students. And it'll take a few
more ·days , for this
·
old sen-
I have one
thing
to say this timental slob
of
a priest· to get
week:
Thanks.
Thanks to all who over it.
.
made my anniversary, 25th as a
Special thanks to the Campus
priest, so pleasurable, so great. Ministry
team,
to Saga, to Bro.
.
So many were involved in
,
John Sullivan's choral grwp and
planning and carrying out the to Maggie.
.
.
·
·
dinner
.
and the Mass that I
God cannot be defined or
en•
wouldn't be able to mention all
by
.
tombed in words but
he
can be
'
.
name. There was such secrecy made visible in people. Through chaplain who's trying to
.
do his
that I still don't know who all the
.
the prisms of Iov~ pe~ple I ~an job as well as he can, a job that is
culprits were.
.
glimpse his radiant
light, ~ -
s~ ~uctured, so un~fin~,
·
.
Iammostgratefultothosewho self, presen~ in ~en:s h~es,
~
w~t~ a lot of hit and nnss, m-
got my mother to c01ne.
It
was their ideals, m then- lives, m th1:1-r
I
twtlon, gamble and gambol). So I
like a scene from Going My Way,
dignity as individuals,
(10
guess I can ~y I have_ truly se~
.
when she appeared from behind
.
students who are so co!lcerned, so God and that s one thing I don t
.
the group of happy, singing
affectionate, so car.mg for a shout softly.
'I'hird
Y
e,ar.
View
.
by
Bob Nelson
One of
·
the letters recently
printed on
.
the editorial page
.
of
·
the Circle gives me a chance to
rebut some of its writer's notions
,
while
stating my own position,
and
to
analyze, though in
.
a
superficial
way,...
the
.
unwritten
assumptions behind his ideas.
_
I
refer the reader to the November
·
8 issue of the Circle page four, the
letter signed by James B,
Browning
,
Class
-
of.
.
'75,
University
of
_
York, England. having
.
been
capable
of
·
Although I have
,
never met the Watergate, or praised for
,
person in question, his letter is a reacting against
.
Watergate; the
good example of the inner con-
United States is criticized for her
flict
an
American
·
plight
·
_
feel imperialist foreign po~cy ~r (or
when living abroad
;
Should
Mr.
harboring the mul~matlonal
Browning read
'
this
;
_
column, I
corporations; but the
u.s.
is not
urge him to criticize
it,
saying criticized
_
because of Nixon's
whether or not it reflects the crimes _;, foreign oooervers are
.
feelings
he
a
·
ctually experienced. intelligent enough to
_
discern
For, unlike
.
the natural
·
sciences, between the man and the system.
· the subject of the social sciences-
.
But the quotation
_
dted
·
above
.
·
- man - is
a
living being with his further shows the cultural con-
own will and ~e
·
ab~ty
_
to flict
·
experiencedby its
,
_
author,
.
respond_ to the studies earned, out who y.ras presenterl with a nevy
~~
abo~t
him._
_
.
.
.
of facts (the views
of
~e Bntish
_
It~ posSl~le
_
to mfer ~rom
_
this. press on Watergate) which did
~etter t~at
·
i~ ~uthor is eit~er
·
not agree \Yith the old theories he
apathetic, that is, 1¥1concer!1,ed
had formed on what foreigners
with poHtics; ~r
-
conservative. would think of the United States.
Note some of his phrases: ."~
'
m
It
is
perhaps a sign
_
of ~rowning's
n~t on~, t~
,
expre~ my pol
_
ibCcll
malaise
,
_
.
springmg from
views__.
I behev:e that the
.
nationalist feelings that are being
·
government works for the_ good
_
9f
derided that his
.
· very political
the peopl~,'~ _and ''I have stood up
socia~tion is put in question, as ·
for the prm~iples !fat my country
,
·
shown by the questions he poses
:
was
.
founde~ ~n
. _
The last two
-
_
"Has the country
·
gone com-
statements, m _particu!ar, reflect
pletely crazy?" and
.-
"Have we
two
.
of the basic prenuses of our
,
any morals?" and "Who has the
common cult~e,and atte~ to the right to say what is and what isn't
fact_ t~at their author IS ~ully
.
the law?" These are basic
sociahzed
.
to the. ~meric~n quesiions indeed, questions
.
t~at
cul~~e, and,
.
specifically, its Mr. Browning's acculturati~n
political aspec~ .
.
_
..
.
_
.
should have answeted
_
.for bun
.
F~rther eyid~nce
_
of
:
~
.
s
.
long ago; But- d~e
_
to the ,_new
possibl~ co~seryatism IS foun!l
10
situatiQn ir:i,
,
.w_hich he fmds
Br~'!mng s r~fer
_
e~ce to the
_
himself, thingif no longer ~ake
English press, unpl~g
.
that_ the
·
_
sense; the
'
answers are no longer
,
.
r~p~~t ·due to
.
t~e
_
_
Amenc~
.
quite so clear. Due !o
,
t~e unex-
:
Bi\\
()'.
,
Reil\Y
/
Ma:Iist gra?uat:
;
poses
\\
'}
th Lind
a
_
l;ovela
:
c
,
e.
•
;
•
i
politl<;a\ sy~tem.,,
,
o! its yiad~~
-
-:-
:
pected factsJhtust o_n
.
hun b~ a
.
.
.
t~e
·
distit1ction IS qe"{er c:~anf~ed <foreign',culture;
·
Mr.-
',
BI'()wntng
T
"\"iel
·
ace
·
·
1n·
.
t
-
·
e
·
_
·
r
·
·
v
·-
1·
_
·
ew
·
'
.
e
-'-
d
·
i)'.l
the lett~r - was lacking
.
,
,
!11
findsitdifficulttocopewiththese
1...1.J.-,
ciompa~u:ig whap
-
have read
_
m
facts
;
and
with their implications
.
t~e
-
British
_
pa11.ers (fhe
Guar-
_
a change in
his
notions of "'.hat
By Bill O'Reilly
Throat' II, soon to be released?" replied
:
"why, it never
_
happened d1an, 1he
_
TlDles, ~nd
.
The Ob-
foreigners think about America.
There she was, l
~
t1daLovelace,
Linda smiling: "I don't know
/
' before
.
"
.
.
serv~r) with the. editorials of the
It is
not for the American people
every mari's
·
ultiI:rate sexual
"Do you feel you're being
·
Everyone in
.
the conference New Y
_
ork Times a~9 the
to answer the questions posed by
fantasy, sitting, shivering, for exploited?"
.
·
.
seemed extremely sell-conscious washingto!I Post (which
.
are Browning, as he suggests, but for
nearly thirty minutes in . the
-
Linda, nof smiling as much as and
-
unsure of themselves and reprinted m
.
the lnterna_tional
Browning himself, since he is the
penetratingly cold Cambndge before "what?"
·
this suited the sharks fine
.
From Herald. Tribun~) I
_
can ~seem
one who no longer understands
·
wind. Without once ceasing to
Suddenly a shark, dressoo in the beginning when Linda g~ve very little .
.
difference
_
m
,
the
_
the system.
_
smile Linda graciously accepted blue
.
denim, interrupts saying: her acceptance speech (which
-
-
coverage given
.
the Watergate
·
·
·
Before finishin&, 1 would like to
the Harvard Lampoon Award for "Is there any line of reasoning to was neatly written on an index affair, if one will allow ~uc~ a
add soine of my own ideas on
''artistic
.
. fulfillment,''
and that question?"
card)
,
to the final curtain, when subject~ve,
non-9uant~tative
what
foreigners
think
' _
of
assured
.
everyone .that she was
He
_
didn't wait around for an
_
.
she responded t
_
o an any
_
last comparison of
.
qm~
different
America. As Americans
think
of
"so glad to be here."·
.
answer.
comments questmn by saying:
.
phenomena. The 11Dpi;>~8;"t fact
other
natiollalities
in
'
Linda, dressed in a virginal
The rest of the questioning,
'
"just hello to everybody, giggle is, however, that~~ Br~tISh and
stereotypical ways _ the Irish
white lace gowri and ap- done by various reporters, was giggle,'' I had the dislinct feeling
·
American papers- that 1s_to say,
drink too much,the Germans are
..
propriately wearing no uil- trite beyond belief but Linda that this was the Hollywood the more liberal: papers m
_
~ch
warmongers, etc. _ so also do
derwear,
displayed
much showed exuberant enthusiasm in starlet scene that we have
•,
al!
.
c~u~t~y --
di_d
,
not differ foreigners have a stereotype of
·
patience and cleavage in fielding giving answers like these:
·
read about.
· ·.
significantly
m
Wat~rgate Americans
.
-
The
average
reporter's
·
questions after the
Q.
uWhat do you think about
But the more I observed Llnda coverage, from what I can American
.
is well-to-do; with
.
a
presentation. B
_
ut despite the those who criticize you?"
·
Lovelace the more I
·
felt an
_af-
determine.
,
.
color television set
,
and a large,
alleged
'
lightness of the occasion
A. "Live and let live."
finitytowardsher , Her natural
.
In the context of thlS coh,unn,
late model car;
.
h!!
'
is ethnocen-
there was something very wrong.
Q
.
"Are you a feminist?
"
beauty is marred only by
.
a slight this· means that
,
what Mr.
·
tric
·
not understanding other
Although lasciviously attired
A. "In some respects I am and scar across her chin and her Browning per_ceived as an atta<:Jc . peoples and
.
their
.
value
·
systems
and consistently grinning at the In some respects I'm not...t'
.
patience is seemingly endless.
·
by the _foreign press on his
and not much caring to either; he
numerous double :entendres
Q.
"Did your parents see 'Deep Yet the fonder I became of Llnda homeland, was ac~ua.ny no more
competes in a ~a~y rat ~ce,
throwri her way, .µnda Lovelace Throat.' "·
the more I dispised the parasites than the recounting of
_
events
trying to make
.
a livmg and climb
appeared more like a blushing
A. "I ~on't know."
·
·
who seemingly control her every ~with a liber~l ~ant, to
be
_sure)
-
-
the social ladder
-
at the 5a:me
ho:tnecoming
queen
than
,
Q.
"Did you ever read the statement, action, and, possibly, m
~
m~ner snrula!
1?
tha~ m the time; finally,
:
he has ideological
America's newest
-
sexual sen- 'Harvard Lampoon?' " -
thought.
.
~Jn1ted States. It
:
is posS1b~e to
blinders whe~ it c!)mes to.~ny
_
of
.
.
sation
;
Smillpg innocently
.
she
· .
A
.
''Honestly? No."
.
_
. .
_ ·
·
The sharks stayed
_
m the mfer, .
.
from
here,
'_
e1th~r
the socialist or Marxist vi~ws of
mechanically answered all the
Q.
"What do you thmk of our
·
background, looking hke four Brownmg's conser":atism (he
.
the world. With the Watergate
,
banal questions
·
concerni~g government?"
·
.
.
·
quickie div~rce lawye~s from
.
was shocked by the hl,>eral slant affair
.
we maf add the concept of
censorship,
_
_
poUtics, and ,he1
!
·
A: "I think it sp~ks for itself." Tijuana, then- eyes ~rtmg fi:om
'
of the British newspaper he_ held
_
.
corru'ption
.
in
-
go~ernment,
background ~at
-
she has heard,
q
,
"Are yo~ gomg to run for bo~~ to bod¥ and therr ears Just read) orthathewasunderg~m~a
-
though
_
this
·
~spect
-
1s
,
,
not as
and commented on, a thousand _office?"
,
,
_
.
._.
,
waitmg to pick up the sound ~fan form of culture sh,ock, of fmdmg
· :
widely accepted as a
:
part of the
times before,
.
..
.
·
A.
,,
"Maybe, at least Im
.
unfamiliar query. Here's Lmda something completely unex-
American national character, if
Nearby, circl)ngJike.a pack of honest."
_
.
. .
Lovelace age 22,-being told wh_at
.
pe~~ed whi?h 'd}d
·
not ;!it in
_
such a thing exists. For the_m~t
.
hungry sharks about to
'.
dis:man~e
.
Perhaps
.
you; are Linda
;
but to say, what to do, where to stand,
·
anY;Where with
·
hlS precon
_
ceived
_
politicized
'
elements,. Amer!ca
.
1s
some weakened prey,
;
:Was Lm- there is something very ~ubio1_1S
ho'Y to look, how. to act, when to
;
·
notions of
.
t~e wo~ld;
_
It 1s ~s
,
the
:.
bastion of
·
1
mper1al_ist
.
-
da's entourage;
<
A
our
'
rapidly about
_
the whole
.
operation
.
m sn:1;1le, wh_en
.
to giggle...
· _
second !nterpr_e~ati~~ that! f~d
domination, with an empire
aging men who, eveµ behind their which you are involved.
.
Attent10n,
Ms
Lovelace has\~
,.
most_ 11_1te\e~tin
,
g
_,
and
_
:;
m9st
stretching fr~ ~outheast ASla to
tinted
.
sunglasses,
•
had ·the un-
Later on Shark ·number one
·
catch a plane to New York, now,. .
. -
challengmg
;
.
:
.
.
·
_
. , -
.
Latin
·
America and
:
pa~t of
mistakable glint of dollar signs in informed this writer
-
tha~ ~or
_
e one of th~ Lampoonites shou~~•
·
·
Let
.
us tak~
_
one of )ilrowrung ~
- .
Europe
;
l have met students at
their eyes.• Linda f!Dllled,
.
posed, tact
-
is
need~ in my
_
questio~g.
( aft~r being
_
cued by a shark)
.·
so
.
phrases, agtµn,
·
as
an
examp~e •
·_
-
the University of Geneva who had
smiled, giggled,
'
~ile~ and He also informed
'
~e that Lin~ I
-
wish
:::_
eveFro~e
-
would leave.1'
-1
•1ttears my insides out,
~~~mg
·
'
a distinct
-
prejudice
·
against
carefully
arti~ulated
h_er
i:S
c~nging_ her JIDage. She ~s
~ell you didn t have to a~k me
·i::riy
c<>~~ry_
:
laugh~ ~t,
·
J~ked
Americans··
.
and an things
_
.
.
memorized answers.-~ut; despite going to
_
do live th~~e, (a nudi,~
twice. I had had enough.
As
-
!.
._.
about; criticizt;d ~~use
·
of
~~e
·
American;
.
prejudice,
.
un
-
.
her
lack
,
of
_
C!indor,
·
litt!e by
_
play call~d
:
"
Pa1ama. Tops
,_
walked.~~
-
~h~k num~r
-
one
.
I ~~ti~m o!
-
~n
-
~
_
l}l~·
. :
!)Ile noti~
.
fortunately, which is df!ficult to
.
boring little. a coocrete
,
1:fillige al?Ou~
\
pe'!Ple who
I
run aroun~
_
asked~lll;·,, ~ou the brams of tbe
,
,
that musi-be clarifl~ is
tha~
.
~e
-
overcome, and always leaves a
started
·
to emerge. · .
jumpmg mto tanks ~f wate~.) o~ration ·
·
,,
:
·
; -
·
,
u:s:
is
·
criticized abroad because bad taste in ~e mouth
;:
No:w
-
I
.
"Did you ·write
,
your
.
best some·Jashion m_odeli~,
.
(vvitb
-
•
No c~mment, ~e replied.
of Nixon
·
which
-
simply~ false.
--_
kriowwhatsooieoftheoppressed
selling book?'
~•
. ·
·
.
,
-
clothes)
,
and
.
s~
ts
~omg
_
on
_
~e
I con~ued walking and, as 1
·.
Nixon '.is
.
.
,
.
cr~tic1zed;
.
,-
the ·
-
-
minorities, in whatever coun~ry, .
·
.
·
Llnda
•
smiling: "I don'~ want to college
_
lect~ cirewt.
'
.
.
.- ·
t~ed for ,one 1~st glance, 1
-
~w
.
:,
Watergate
:-
. conspirato~
,-
are_ musUeel like'-:- -there is always
.
. comment
.
on
-
the
:·
oook,'.'. (She
.
Whe11.
_
I asked
,
~da ifedsheb Li~-Jrghelt~bd g~i1~ss h
0
!
.
c
"
riticized; the ~~ricanpolitical-. that prejQdice; sometim~s a~ing•
didn't
.
write it!)
.
.
·
.
·
.
·
·
.
thought she .
.
i::riay
.
be
•
!,l~riq
.,
hy_.
_.
sd~
,
.
,
to.
--.
ealk '
·
t ofng
W
.
~
.
·
system'
·
-is
·
.
either
-
ctjtic~d f<>r
.
even as a
.
)van·betw~en
.
people.
,.
"
-
Is
your new picture,
_
,'
Deep
.
some'
.
of ·the
~
colleg1an._:1
_.
!I
e
.
oor_
.
w
_
ou : • -
,
_. -
·
·
, _
·
•,
_
.,
. ·
.:;
,
-
• , ·
--
·
-
_
--
·
•
-
.
.
.:.' •
.
'.
'
..
_
.
.
.
- .
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
•
.
.
..
'
.
. .
.
..
~.
'.
_
.
.
·
·
..,
-.
:
.
.
.
_
·
.
.
,:
:
:
.
-
.
.
,;.
_
,
.
.
'
.
,
•
~
.
.
.
.
..
'
.
. .
.
.
..
)·
.
·
•
·
·
,
·
.
·
·
.
"
(
•
' .
1 '
'
·
.
·
•
.
•
,
·
, . '
.
.
..
...
'
·
.
.
'
' '
,,,
.
'
'
.
.
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·
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:
·
•.'
t
r
ij
~
1fl
~~
-~
;¼
.
.
,
,.
,
1r~1
-
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~
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,;r.
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kl
t
;i
..
-
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t.''
t1i:
'
w\ .,.
'
.
FEBRUARY 7, 1974
THE CIRCLE
·
PAGE?
BASKETBALL,
continued
from
page
8.
stopped.· While at the offensive
end of the court Marist worked
the ball well getting
·
it
into
Joe
Cirasella who had the hot hand.
.
Soccer Tourney
Sunday
At
DCC
by
Charles de Percin
--
Al Fairhurst, Number 14 for Marist
,
arrempts to
.
outreach
-
p}ayer
from
St. Joseph's in recent contest.
With Cirasella playing both
ends of the court Marist pulled to
a
9 point lead at one time before
St. Joseph's started to come
back. Led by Jim Hayden their
high
scorer, they came down the
court trailing by only
3
points
with
a
minute
to
go they turned
the ball over and Marist gained
possession
.
The closing minute
was marked by the ballhandling.
of Eric de Percin and clutch
·
baskets by Cirasella, who had 19
points and 14 rebounds for the
game. At the closing buzzer
Marist had a 64-59 victory.
W~ile the victory brought
Mar1St's recor-d to
8-8
it was not a
very impressive showing
.
Marist
shot only 35 percent (rom the field
and suffered from lack of con-
sistency.
Marist will play on Saturday at
home against Stonehill.
·
The
starting time
is
at 8:00 at D.C.C.
gym.
.
Ten members of the varsity
soccer team will be selected to
represent Marist College in its
first indoor soccer tournament
Sunday at Dutchess County
Community College. Opponents
will vary from
a
Germania
soccer club, local coaches from
high schools and colleges en-
tering as a team, and
a
junior
college team
of
All-Americans.
The tournament
will
be
double
elimination. Marist will play at
Falcon Hall at
1
p.m. Admission
will be $2.00 for adults, $1.00 for
students and free admission for
children under twelve.
·
Indoor soccer rules differ from
outdoor soccer. There are no off-
side calls in indoor soccer. The
ball cannot go directly over the
mid-court line. Contact must
be
_
made in the offensive zone before
the ball crosses mid-<::ourt. Each
team consists of six players, and
periods are seven and
,
one
·
half
.
minutes long
;
Direct kick, in-
direct kick, free kick, corner ktck
and penalty kick remain
·
the
same as
iri
outdoor soccer.
-
·
The dimensions of indoor
soccer vary, depending on the
facilities available. The width of
the field
is
approximately the size
of a basketball court and the
length varies
.
The goal area has
dimensions of six by eight feet.
Players must be aware of the
limited space available, for
change of direction is frequent.
The goalie sees more action than
in an outdoor game
.
There are no
fixed player positions, and
players must be able to cover the
open spot. Total floor control is
more advantageous than volley
type passes.
·
Indoor soccer
is
played at a
faster pace than outdoor soccer,
.
resulting in less body contact.
In the past, tournaments were
open only to club soccer teams
.
M~rist was invited to participate
this year
;
but extra expenditures
and lack of facilities have limited
Marist's indoor practicing.
In-
door soccer is, in Coach Doc
Goldman's words, a fast-moving
sport with a.similarity between
soccer and hockey
.
"
.Announcements
HIGH ON SPORTS, continued from page 8 .
starters for Saturday night will be sophomores Ron Glackin at center,
The
-
thl .. d """Ual Do
·
n
-
M
Le
·
--
-
Ray Murphy along with Cirasella at the forwards and guards Joe
.
.
. . •
•
.cum
•
<;
an
Youngsters of all ages. are in-
·
·
·
concert ~ill be ~eld this week. vited. For· further information u~. by the constitutional com-
Nebbia and Eric de Percin.
McLean 1s an activ~ supporter of call 4
5
~
936
..13
Benoit House
.
or
·
471
_ m
13
1ttfee
_
on Wednes~ay,
_
Februa~
Stonehill is 12-4 with three losses coming to University Division
th
_
e
Hu~s
.
on
River
_
·
·
Sloop
3240
Leo
Hall.
, .
•
.
-
ro~
9-_4
o~tside
·
the swit-
schools St. Peter
'
s, Rutgers, and Holy Cross. Howard Bain, a 6-4
Res~oration,
Inc.
a
.
nd
·
all
-
Ask for· !'Harold
J
.
chboard off_ice m Donnelly Hall. senior forward, is leading the Chieftains in scoring (17.8). Other
proceeds from t ~ c
_
oncert
:
will Charles ·Ailman
3
_ac~,
~
The constitution will es~blish the probable starters will be 6-3 sen
i
or guard Roland Hollins (17.4), 6-7
·
go to that non-profit membership Miller (known
·
•
"H
i~
;
_
ar
·
-
Class of 1977 as an active part of
-
freshman center Steve Dennis (9.7),
~11
senior guard Chris Civale
corporation. The
.
Restoration' Victor Olivera
·
as
·
orse ),
4.
·
Madst Coll~ge student govern-
(9.1)
.
and 6-6 junior forward Mark Gunderman
.
The top reserve is 6-0
owns and operates
.
the sloop
.
·
·
·
ment, and will serve as the basis sophomore guard
Joe
Cullinan (6
.
3).
·
Clearwater, a replica of a 1860s
The third i
.
.
-~ for its policy and conduct for the
·.
Stonehillleads theseries_5-3 and won last year atStonehill
90-77.
pac~et ~loop
.
Clearw~ter is the
_
lectures cente~u'1g
~~r~!
t~~lX
·
next four rea_rs. To be ratifi~, CIRASELLA NAMED ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
focal pomt for an_e_nvironme1_1tal "Criinu{a1 Justice_
In
Service
f~
t~e constitution m~t receive
··
Joe Cirasella, a junior forward from Eastchester, New York
;
has
_movement
by
c1tJZens maµuy Sqciety• • sponsored
by
the approval fi:om a plurahty of _votes
.
been named Marist College Athlete
of
the Week for the .week ending
concentrate~mtheH~dson
_
River .De)fartmerit of
·
Hisfory
· '
and caSl.
.
.
-
.
·
.
February 2nd.
_
-
.
v~~ey. The R
_
estorat~o'!, m ad-
'_
Political
-
Science
will
be
Copif:S of the
:
C?nstitution
will
This
is
the second consecutive week that <:;irasella has won this
dit!~n to the daily operation of the presented in the Theater at the b: ayailable s~i:tmg Monday at award. J ~. a basketball player
,
scored
19
points and pulled down 14
Clearwater, . sponsors
_
school
.
College at
8:00 p
.
m. on February t e hbr~ry desk, m the co~uter. rebounds in leading Marist to a 64-59 victory over St. Joseph's College
programs ~es1gned. to brmg on- 13, 1974 .
.
The speaker will be State lounge
10
Donne_lly, outs_1de t~e (Me
.
) snapping a fou_r-ga_me ~ari&t losing strealc Cirasella also made
board marme studies to seco!l• Senator John Dunne
.
His topic Commuter Union_ office m some positive, contnbut1ons
m
losses to King's College (N
.
Y.) and
dary and college age students
m
·-
will be "Politics and the Criminal Champagnat, and
m
freshman S
.
U
.
N
.
Y. at Stonybrook
.
·
the area.
,
Justice System."
.
mai~boxes. CI~ss officers will
~
THIS WEEK IN MARIST COLLEGE SPORTS
For more information on how
-
_
·
.
available to discuss the proposed
you can_ support environmental
On Saturday, Februar
16
the cons~tution outside the cafeteria
ONE YEARAGO--Heavyweight Richard
·
Beaney of Marist gave up
re_stor~tion, contact the Hudson Marist College Gaelic
Y
So~iety at 12
.
00 to 1 :30 and
5:
00 to 6: 30
77
pounds to Eric Booth but worrthe match 7-fJ to give the Red Foxes a
River Sloop Restoration, 88 will present their Sixth Annual p
.
m. on Tuesday.
33-30 collegiate wrestling
.
victory over C.C
.
N.Y. Later in the week
Market
,
Street, Poughkeepsie.
Spring Dinner Dance in the
Freshm~n ~re asked to read Hunter swept
to
a 34-9 win dealing the Red Foxes their seventh loss in
.
cafeteria
•
As in the past we will the_ constitution carefully, and
eight matches.
.
.
Sadie Hawkins Night · th Rat
·
'
notice particularly Article 10
an
Sophomore forward Mike Hart scored 25 points and pulled down 14
.
m
e
have a Buffet Dinner starting at
dm
·
'
rebounds as the North Road School cha
'
sed Bloomfield 88-72 in~ a
February 8
- Fnday • S
:
30 p
.
m.
-
~
9:00 p.m. with ari open bar all amen l ent calhDff for a fresh-
Central Atlantic College Confer
·
ence game at Our Lady of Lourdes
a.m.
Sponsored
by
the during the evening, with live man c ass ~enate to serve_ a~ a
Sophomore Class.
.
.
entertainment. This Dance
.
~epresentat~v~ wo~p
.
.. assistmg
High School. Later in the week, Hart scored six of his sixteen points in
Sophomore Senate Meeting promises to be
an
even better
m
class activities.
the last minute and forty seconds
as
Marist College held off Monmouth
February 7 - Thursqay, 1 :00 p.m .
.
time than last semester so why
The outcome of the vote will
be
91-83 in a non-conference basketball game
·
at Dut~ess Community
C-270
.
.
_
don't you join us? Total' cost for posted Thursday in both Donnelly
College
.
.
.
.
--::
.
.
-
-
the evening
will be
-
$12.00 per
-
and Champagnat Halls.
r-------------------------
One po~ition is
,
no_w ava1lah!,e
.
couple. Tickets may be bought all
IN THE NEW MALL IN HYDE PARK:
for a ~,fanst
_
student mterested
,
m this week and
.
next up
.
until
WO R
LO Of JEANS
working with rural _Dutchess
_
Thursday the 14 in front of the
_
The
,
Candy Shop is now located
A~~
:~
-:
~ 0
1
u_nty Nyoung people
·
m Dover cafeteria. Rese~ations can also
_
behind the information desk in
ONE DAY SALE
:
SAT. FEB.
9
_
ams,
·
ew York.
;.be made at that time.
the Campus Center.
It
is open
UNISEXP NTS&J AN
-
·
A
.
grant. from the Dutchess
· _
·
-
1 :00-4 :00- p.m. Monday thru
A
E
8
County You~ B!Jard
.
allows one
.
FRESHMAN
.
CONSTITUTION Friday and 7:00-12:00 every
A
wg~::a1~~1it~AD
stu~ent to hve m
.
Dover Plains READY FOR RATIFICATION night.
ALLSALESFINAL
~u_r1;[lg the Suffi:IDer
of
·-
1974 to
The freshman class will be able
WEEKDAYS JO
-
8
ALL OTHER SELECTIONS
$6.99
...
initiate,
.
co~rdm~te an<i run to
-
vote on the constitution
drawn
SATURDAYS 10 - 6
(Br•"
.
'
bed Cotton, Cords, Etc.)
·
summer activities with
.
teen-
·
·
·
· ··
·
·
·
·
·
·
...,
agers. These activities
,
couldr-----~-~------.... ---_.;.;.. ________
,.;:=====:::::::::.:===--============~
include spor1:5 eyents, swimming;
theatre producUon,
·
social events
-
and
_
summer tutoring
-.
progr~.
SAGA PRESENTS:
-
·
;...
-
-_
• •
.
.
·
.
~\
.
'
'
...
C?ur~ credit
_
(3
'
credits)
in
-
~ ~ ~
0
~~1£~~ai:~r:ti;= '
:
*~
'GBAND
·
::
OBENIN
.
G
,
?-'
-*
of
$400..
The
approximate starting
,
-
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
.
·-
·
·
.
date is
'
June 1, 1974
.
until Sep~
tember-1,1974.
·
.
-
--,
·_
.·.
·
·.
.
·
Applications
._
fr~m
·
sincere,
·
-
innovative
.
and
·
dedicated
students should
·
be sent to Dr.
·
'
·
.
M.J. Michelson, Universi~ Year
for
-
ACTION,
. ,
Box
,
C746.
·
.
The
·
deadline is March
'
!,
1!174.
-
.
.
.
.
.
-
·
.
.
'MARIST SHO
.
PPINGCENTER
.
:·
.
..
.
-
.....
.
'
.
•
.
-·
Open
,:-o:
M
_
@rist
faculty,
Staff
&
Stude
.
nts
. .
..
: _
Order:
-
Mon.;Tues.,
Wed
.
A WINE
·
&
CHEESE
RESTAURANT
.
·
-
.
~
·
oPEN
EVERY.EVENING
·
•
·,
'
.
.
-
~✓
:-:-
• •
•
.
~
• .
t·
.'
.
. ·.
.
.
-
·.:.
~
·::
•
'
;
_
_
,
.
.
.
.
· Community , Action
°
Group
:
is
sponsoring
,
a party for
.
.
young
·
people
.
onSaturday February 9;
:_
1974 from
·
12
-
noon
'
untiL 3::rl.
»~cingi
~Qvies; Rap
.
Sessions,
-.
,
,
Aft
Exhibits, Refreshments.
·
-·
. ·
.
F.or
<
children
,
with
·
ncv
trari-
:
·
spo~~on ·
-
~re
-
will
be
_
pick-up
-·
vehicles
.
at
:
Smith
_
Street
·
Center.
•
I
,..
,
Pick
'
.;up{Fri. Between
12:6
P.M.
.
-_·
:
='
·,
'.
,,
~a~lt47
:
l-4
.
340orExt.126
..
'
.
~ook·for
weekly specials
in
,
..
.
.
.
-.
.
'
.
.
.
•
.
. .
,,
_
· :
>
Vou
.
r
:
Mail
·
Boxl
.
1
·
....
------~---;.;.._,_,.;.....;.
..... _ _ _
....;.,....,J
.
' '
.
.
'
.
,
.
.
.
.
,
LIVE
MUSIC
.
ON WEEKENDS
&
WED
;
NIGHTS
A
QUIET PLACE FOR MUSIC, ART
·.
·
&
RELAXATION. • .
·,
-
51 Market
St.
Poughkeepsie, N.Y •
•
•
I
•
·
• •
•
,
l
j
I
1
I
l
I
-
I
I
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i
...,
I
.
J
I
J
i
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l
I
I
\
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'.
\
I
,
.
..
:
-..
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~.~
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'!'
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l
\
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 7
1
1974
Marist_ Trackmen
-show
Well
In
CTC Relays
-
·-
The Marist indoor
·
track team triangular meet and later in
·
the
Last year Murphy placed second
notched
their
best
showing
ever evening some of the
team
in the state, missing fir~ place to
in th~ Collegiate Track Con-
members
will
be participating in
Oswego's Steve Buso by only five
ference Indoor Relay Carnival at the
.
Capitol Track
.·
Club AAU
points. Murphy scored 3000 points
Queens College on Saturday.
It
Meet. Then on Sunday, February
in
the five-event champiombips
was Marist's first year in par-
24 Tim Murphy arid possibly
.
one
which include the·
200
meter run,
ticipation
in
the varsity division or
.
two other members
·will
.-.
be
··
the long jump, the high jwnp, the
of the carnival.
In
the past the
·
competing in the New York State shot put, and the 1500 meter run·
Red Foxes had appeared in the Indoor
·
·
-
Pentathlon
·
Cham-
·
.
(metric mile).
_
.
.
·
JV
·
Division only;
pionships at Syracuse University.
The best perfonnance of the
.
.
.
.
-
.
,
.
.
.
.
:!n~~=e~~:~~~~l
·
H
·
1·
g
·
h
0
·
·
·
n
Sp
··
o· rts
·
_
~~:
.
J=~•
~:e~3!°t~='.
·
·
-
:
.·
· .
.
_
·
.
.
_
__
·
.
.
.
.
<
·
..
..
The
:
team
set. a Marist school
·
.
.
.
By John Tkach
.
.
.
record by clocking a 3:57 ,6.
Duffy
,
·
.who ran the anchor
.
half-mile leg WHAT GO~S ON HERE?
•
..
also
..
chalked up a
·
new school
record for the· besttime
in
a half-
·
.
Afthough they will not travel to
·
Florida f~r
-
~ week, nor p
-
l~Y: a
25
.
.
mile
·
leg
·
of
a
·'
relay
..
..;-
2:09.2.
.
game schedule~ nor go
·
to a post-s~on tournamen~, the 1_974 ~tio1;1 of
: Schools ran the quarter
~
mile in the Marist .College W9men's basketballteam will begm thell'
,
fir~
56.3 while Saintomas and Murphy
·
·
collegiate season; as announced
.
by Dr. Howar
.
d
·
Goldman, athletic
turned
in
220s of 27.0 and 25.0
·
director:
·
.
·
'.
-:
·
·
·
··
.
·
.
·
respectively.
.
·
.
••
. The Red Foxes; as they .will be called for lack of a better name, will
Marist's other. good showing in
.
start their
·
season
\
with
.
a
.
modest. three game schedule with a
the DistaJ:ice
•
Medley Rel!i~ ~as possibility ·ota
'
fourth game:
.
·
·
.
•
· .
.
.
.
·
·
..
.-
.
.
-.
Marist runner TonyjVilger
is an:iorig
'
the members of the _
·
stymie.d
.
PY
~me poor officia~rng
.
·
.
~rrain~ Conkliri/awomen's physi~al edu~ti~n'teacher he~e
·
at
Track tea
in
·
warmirig
·
up
for
the
•
Spring season;
·
~
atthe
.
~eet
~~e
team wasac-
,...
Manst,
.
will coaclithe team; ~hich will op~ thell' season on
-
either
...
..
.
·.
•
.
.
'
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·
•··
·
•.
•
•
. . .
c-:-.
.
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•
.. ·.
·
. •
.
tually disqualified-when an of-
Feb.21or22atVassarCollegemPoughkeeps1e.
.
·
·
-
M
••"'
a
···
·
r1·s
·::-
1
·
/
il'lf1•
:·
s
<
·s
·:'>
.';
e,
: ··
s··
·-
B
·
· ...
•
y
·
-
'
,~£L.e
·
··:t:ia!:shod~~,~l~e::;~hci=:.
wlih:/rii~~;e~~o!;:t:J!tel!~\~ruo;~~:~=~~~perience and
,
.
.
.
·
,
1r1
.· .
·
,·
.
·
·.
·
..
·
.
:'--'~I
.
·
Fred Kolthay that he couldn't
Other games on,the schedule
m.µ
incl~de a
·
home and away s~ies
·
..
·
by'IJob
c
·
reedofr
-
·
'.
·
.·.·
-
·
~
.
:.:
,
·
· ·
·
·
-
-
,
·
·•
· ··
>-:
r_eceive the baton when
:
he
W.~
.
-
\Vith
'
Mount~irit Mary's CoJlege of
.
Newburgh, N.Y. and a posSlble
·
·
•
;
.
·
·
.
·
:
.
·
,,,c
.
.
.
•
·-
·
·
··
·
·
actually
.
suppo~~~
.
-
to
_
take tJle
,
·
encounterw1thBardCollegeofAnnadaleonHudson,N.Y.
.
,
~arist_ basket~all tea~
.
(8,9)
_
spotted Ray
~urphy
operi under
.
baton
·
·
.
from
-,
-Mike Duffy. The · ThedatesfortheMountSaintMary's games will
be
March 5 (away)
IDJSsed
.
v_1ctory by on~
_pomt.
(39~
.
•
.
the basket
,
under pressure
·
he officia}had counted Marfa't's laps
·
and M:ar. 12 (home)
:
Starting times will be made available as soon as
I
38)
.
agamst tile
.
nUII1ber one tr~ea' to get: the
·
ball to· M~rphy. wrong and thoughtJve had 9one receive more information.
ranked co~ege of
_
Mass.,
_Bently,
··
With three seconds lef~
-
t!J.e p~s
·
one less
•
iap than the
<
Red Foxes
·
.
.·
·
,
.
•
.·
..
·
,.
.
. .
.
Monday rugh~.
.
. ·:
.
.
<
.
<
-
~
went
.
a\Vlj'
.
_
and -
so
_,
did
:
MarJSt had
-
.
actually ac~omplished;
.
:
iNTRAMURAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
,
Marist
:
came out with a game
·
·
·
hopes for
.
yictory .
.
'
· ·
.
: · ·
. ·;
.
Because of this
'
'
Duffy ran
:
mi
·
.
.
- .
· .
>
-
,.
·
•
-
.
. .
.
pla~
.
that
•
called
.
_
fo,;
:
_a
.
disciplined
.
..
:
,.
:•
Any: pme
.
:
~
:
:
~~h
.
to
.
:
lose,
:
:'
extra lap
··
and
:
~oltha~
·
r_an
·,
·
one
. .
With
:
the arriv~Lof the intramur~
·
basketball playoffs,
.
it
is
time for
·
offeD:5e
.
and a tigh~
,
l[ltrong 1~~2
,
w~en its ~y
.
o~e
:
pomt. T~s one .Jess)ap, thus
~
disqua~ifymg the us toJook·ahead to
.upcoming
events
:
of the second semest~ con-
zo11e def~nse. !3.~tly
,
t!)o~ .the le~g
.
•
wa:i _especially
_
tough
~~e
JC>
.
the '.
.·•
tea111
c:
a
.
nd
.
·
·
also
:
hurting .·•
Us
·
,
.
cerriing. the
·
intramural progr~in. Below
is
·
a listing of the upcoming
but
·
Mar-ist,never stray~d·from
.
cali~er of the competlt10!1;~and chan,ce~
'
9f breaking
.
the ,school events for the morith
<i
February:· ·
.
their gam~- pl~.
-
Ma~~
:
~on~
·
th~~meteam
.
effr-ct
,
C>fMa~shvho
·
record
:
and
;
placing Wt;!ll
"
in the
_
·
··
··
··•..
.
.
.
:
·- .
·•
·
.
tin~ally tned Jo work the baU shqt_53 percent
_·
tre>m the
.
~1eld ~d , everit. Dave Schools led off in this SPORT
ENTRIES DUE
.
PLAY
.
BEGINS
•
inside
·
to Ray
.
M11rphy ._or Joe
.
;;
9utrel>oµndEid
,
)he
.
11_1uch
·
better
a-:
relay
.
doing a
-
2:1
_
0 half~µli.le'.
,
Tim
,
.
_,
.-
·:
.
,
..
_
CiraseUa.
AUe11
.
F,'a1rhui:st
)3e~.tley
.
~eam
<
>·:
.,
·
o:
·
::~
Murphythen'ranthe
'
quarter mile
'.
. Basketball
•
·
·.
w~
'"'
F~b
:
27
··
h~dl~~
.
the
.
i"
ball
i;
-
well
.
~bile
:.:.
,·.
·
..
·
...
>_</
.:;..,
...
·
:
.
.
·
·
..
:
·
:
;
~
_-
·
.
..
·
·
,
in
_
56:~,an~Q,ti,!fy.!s.~~Koltha,y!s
·
:
Fret! Throw
,
.
.
.
.
·
l>Ji.·fo~p.~~
·
,_
,'.
du-ectmg the offen_se and,dnvirig
.
··
.
• •
~
.- ·
·
:
•
·
1
·
:
·times
_
did
.
nof_represent the
¾
•
Contest (M)
'
Thursday Feb. 28
·
at
7:00
p~m;
._
.·
in for lay ups;
,
Atthe end c:>f the
.
.
·
...
On
.
Saturd;:iy, F:'4:lb. 2, MarJSL,mile
''
and mile times that they
·
'.,•
•.··
·
half
..
Marist trailed
•'
.
py seven
:
'.
basketball
,
.
te~nf defeated
>
St.
:,
sbould
:
have
1
fl
run
>
:
The
'
team
·
·
·
,
_
.
-·
-
points,
:
butwas
_-
still,
,
_
in the ball
.:::..:
Josepll'~ pLMaine
·:
54-59 to
..
end a docked an
'
fr
:
33
,
eight seconds Basketball
-
>,
Wed.
:
March 6
·
·
.
ganie.
..
, ..
/
,
•
..
.
:
~·
::
.
.
.
.
.
four
g!ifilelosing ~tre~]f
;
"
\'
·
:
:
·
"
offtheMarist~~~rd. Without the
.
·:
one:.ori-One
by
6:00 p:m.
·
·
Inthesecond
-_
halfMaristca~e
,
Martstscore~ first, ~ut
.
t!t~r officiating
:
flub
.
theJeain co~d
,
Contest (M)
·
.-
·
·.
·
·
_
outwiththesamegameplanasm le
_
ad-w,assho~
_
~ved:S~.
·
Jose()~s ·have;
_
~nd perhaps W.Q!J}d !Jave,
~Thursd
.
ay Feb.
28
. the first half. Ray Murphy, Joe
_
came out runrung: while MarJSt broken the
·
old mark
of
11:25.2.
Volleyball'
,·:
.
organization
.
Cirasella and
A
0
llen
.
Fairhurst appeared
'
sluggish
_
.
and a
·
·
step
-
.
Maristalsofielded teams in.the
(M), (C}
:
playedaggres~it~_ly
_
at_both
en~
,:
behllld the f~st br~aking-Monks
.
twi>
:
mile
.
relay
.
an~ the mile
.
.Meeting
at 6:15
of
.
the
.
court, with Jim
,:
Oseka (!f St..Joseph ~'.
..
.
.
·
:,
.
.
·
relay._In the two mile
·
relay the
·
Thurs .
. -
Feb.
28
•-
.
.
playing
,
t~mgh defense and
.
.
~~~ch
~etro subsbtute~ fre~ly, times
.
for
.
each man's l\alf-mile
fJ
:1c
.
:ip
·
~ Center
__
_
.-
.•
Thursday March 7
·
__
at
1:00
p.m
>
Monday March·4
'
·
rebounding well. Marist slowly
.
utilizing~ whole bench
m.
trymg clockings
,
were:
·
Jim Gillen -
fought back and tied the·game on
t9
neu1;r3lize_ the a~re~ve
,
_St 2:29.4, BillKrempel-
,
2:20.7, Tony
Congratulatioos go out to Jay Metzger for winning the first annual
~a
layup by Fa,irh~~t\\'.~t~
~:QB
to JC?5eph s. F~ally
,.
af~r
~
bemg
~
Wilg~r
.
- 2:29.9,
.
and
'•
J~ Mc-
Intr.amural P_ool Tourn~ent Co-Sponsored by the _Intramural Office
·
ge>.
.
.
-,
.
·
.
·
.
.
,
_
.
down _by
,
seven
.
Martst
,
fought Casland-2:21.0.~thexrulerel~y
•·
and~eCampusCenter~iththeCampusCenterdomgallofthework.
·
·
Bentley never relinql;llshed the back
·.
mto
·
thE:
.
lead
·
3~32
,
forty the quarter-mile times were:
·
Jun
·
Kevm Sweeney and Kevm
-
Scmar should
s_tan~
up and take a bow for
lead." After coming
'.
within one, s~COJlds OO.f~re the close of ~e Gillen -
.
1 :03
;
7, Pete VanAken - . getting the tourney off the ground and making 1t
run
smoothly
;
Marist missed alayup with 2" 53 first half w1th
·
a. layup by
·
Rich 59.5, Jim
-
McCasland
.
-1:
.
00.7, and
·
·•
. ·
·
.
.
· ·
·
:
.
·· ·
.
,
•
·
.
.
··
.
·
·
to go and Bentley immediately
.
~~hanz; but St. Joseph's scored Mike Sainfomas - 1:02.6.
·
.
~ED FOXES
,
TO-HOST STO~EHILLAT
.
QUTCHESS
·
SATURDAY
went into a stall. With
12
seconds with se:ven seconds to go to hold a
Marist has been working out
·
. -
-
"
-
·
.
·
remaining Marist
.
fo~ed
·
Brian slim halftime
;lead
of
34:33.
· •
.
for ohly a w~k and half
.
before
· .
.
Marist Colleg~ p~ays host to Stonehil~ College of North Easton,
Hammel~ Bentley's high
·
scorer;
.
In
thesecond ha_lf ~ar1st CSJ?e the relay canuval and thaie
_
who
Massachusetts;
111:
a basketb~l cont~t
this
~~rday (February 9) at
Hammel missed
:
the foul
.·
shot.
·
.
.
out
,
more
,
autho11tatively .
.
With
·did
_
well were the
·
runners who 8
:00
p
.
m, There will
be
no Juruor V~rs1ty preliminary.
·
0
·
•
·
Marist rebounded and called
.
,
aggressive
· ·
rebounding"
·
by had worked out on
.
their own
·.
Marist is 8-S
'
prior ui"j~ames with Bentley on Monday and Bloomfield
time out.
-.
-
·
·
·
.
·
....
·
.
.
·
Cirasella, MurphY:-and
.
Glackin,
·
during the vacation .
.
:
The team's
··
on Wednesd~y. Junior forw~
_
d Joe Cirasella con~inues
·
to lead the
With nine seconds left Marist thl;l St. Joseph fast brea.k
·
was next
.
outing is
:
Sa
.
turday; "activelJplayersin bothscormg (1].;8) and rebounding (8.1). Probable
inbo~ded the ~ ;
..
:
~ric
_
de
: .:.
'.
conti
'
nued on page
'
7
·
,'
February
23
when
in
the mo~ing
·
_:
.
.
.
, .·
•
.
.
• ·
.
.
continued on
page
7
_
·
·
.
·
·
.
Pencm crossed xrud-court and
. .
_
.
.
·
.
,
:
:
,
c
.
··
_
:
they meet Queens and Iona m a
·
·
-
·
·
·
·
·
S1:,opJ S~ve At
·
oot
.
chessc~unty's
·
Large~t
·
_
Liquo~rS~re
-
The-Mail.
R~~~~~~e~~~
-
0
~,~~~~~T➔
--
-.
-
-
.
·
··
cNextto Shop'rite)
_."
:
-
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.
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..
.
·
"'
· _
.
:
>
·-::
;
:;. :
.
·
·
·
··
:,-,_?
:
·
-<
·
.
'
'-'Visit
ou'r
Wine
c:e1.1a
·
r
'°'·
·.
·.
Fo
·
r.the L
'
afrgest Selection o_f Wines in Dut~hess Cqunty~'"
·
..
.
>)\'.:\
F
rt'E
E
D
1s
i.1
VE RY
<
·
~ 229~81
.
77:t
$10
min
irn um
l
-
.
,
.
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.··:
..
•.
,.
.'_:_
.
:
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..
.
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.
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-
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·
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·
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14RO
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s_c;o
';-:
'..
!!!~{~~•'l.!;tt,,·
··•
·
..
·
....:.
"'
_
·
.
..
February
-
Special
.
.
::
skyiark-
~
Whiskey,;
·
'
,
·
.
..
•
.
,
_
.
·
·
·,
<
~y
:,
·:::-/_;>
·: .
:·;,
.
·:
F
.
LEISCHMANNS
"\
·
und,r
.
_
$3.
99
_
f
u"U:
q~ar(
~.: ·.
•
.
-:r
·
<.
·
.
>
-
.
:~
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.:- -·
·
.
...
-
-
~
~-
·_:>
.
.-,~>.:~
-
~
~
. .-:
<
-:
.
.
·;·
:
Me~ivour' Fr:iencls
_
At
The
.
CHEEsE
··
N
1
:·
w1NE
:
.
s110P
·
,
,,,
•
•
,I'
•
.
·
.
:
-
.
The new
.
Mallin Hyde Park
(Route
!! -
Next to Roosevelt
.
Hom,e)
-
'..
·
.
'
.
.,
.
'
.
·
- . - -
·
• • '
_ i
.
,
_
.-.
•
• •
•
Larg~st Selection of
F~sh .
.
hiternational Cheeses ...
Wine Accessories ...
.
.
.
.
:
Epicurea11
·.
foods
&
Spices
.
•• ;
Fresb
:
Etbnic
~~,ds ··~
CTORY
:
OF
_
.
--
:
::i:
-~
1~ro
..
o_F,=F·
·>
·:
·
: _·
-<
...
..
..
'·
.....
Yourfii'st
cheese
purci.ase
:
·
p,iJ
{
~;:;~~~;;
:
~}~4
·.'.
. ;
...
12.2.1
12.2.2
12.2.3
12.2.4
12.2.5
12.2.6
12.2.7
12.2.8
VOLUME
12, NUMBER
_
2
.
1HE
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
12601
FEBRUARY 7, 1974
48
Arrested ·
'
.
.
.
On
Drug Charges
.
by
Brian Morris
-
.
·
~The arrest last Friday morning anticipated now that the state's
·
of over.
.
40 persons
.
for drug of-
,
new drug law isin effect. District
ferises represents
a
niajor move Attorney
·
Allen Rosenblatt,
.
. _ towards strict enfor
_
cemenfofthe contacted by the Circle, stated:
state's tough new drug law, The
·
"The state has made certain
police and
.
those
.
arrested were projections as
to
what is needed
pitted in a notunfamiliar contest, ·
to
accommodate drug related
but
,
there
.
was
.
no doubt that the cases."
Mr. Rosenblatt took note
-
~ Rockefeller
.
~ inspired drug
.
law of the state's plan for creatioo of
· has
·
escal~ted the
.
suikes for all new courts to handle drug
·
cases.
concerned;
:
.
.
.
_ .
. .
.
·
Police were
~
extra cautious as
·
·
·
"
,
-
·
·
.
~-
.
The
.
48
:
pecions were nabbed they made the arrests. During
·
The !ecen
.
t i
~
ncle.ment weath
.
erb~ough
't_
out Marist's plows
_
.
.
:
from
:C
all
·
over
.
Dutchess and the Thursday briefing police
Marist
tl'o.
Efnffitf.k
..
t.r:tti$:~;'%.·~~ffi
·
~~~::;'!:.!:=-~::
__
.
·
.
.
· .
..
•
·.
·
·
·• .
·
•
., .
,.
·. .
·
···
•
,
·
~-
.
·
·
.·.
··
·
charged
_;_
with Class
·
:
A offenses .
•
~at when
.
faced with a possible
.
On
-
Nelli
Ma$te'r-
I'liln
'--
,
[:£~'.i/I~!;~~:::E·
~ts~:-;~::~~
·
···
·
·
-·
and\vill face trial as
·
such. Large ture
:
This
'
was not the case in
.
:
."
In
.
an
'
~ttempt to
.
i
irlcrease
gasbline sh~rtag~
'.
per$ist
~-
:
or
a
later date.
·
: .
•
;
;
. _:,
.
•
:
'
quantities
'
of h~oin;
·
marijuana, Friday's
·
raids.· 'I'1)ose put in
;__
;
.
L
7
the
,
dimirushing .
enrollment
.
at
.
become w,orse
:
the
potential
,
fof
,
·
,
Prelimirnlry
_:
evaluation of the opium, cocaine.; and
:
assorted custody were described as not
.
. ;
Marist.Collegealong
'
with
,
efforts
:
~~rea~linin'g
.
. '~
c
.
om
·
muting new ~c~eduie
·
wilJ
:
be carried
·
out pills
·>
:
were
;
confiscated. The
·
.
overly
:
upset
'
as they
-.
·
:
were·
.
.
•·
b¢4ig
:'
made
,:
to'
with~arid
'.
.
the
..
arran
·
ge~ent~
.
may
:
be
_'
·:
of
.
..
~ugli the
·.
f:,tll
_
sem~~ter,
·
t:o
_.
be
_,:
troopers, BCl
;
men
~
and police
.
..
brought
:
. to
.
Troop
.
K
'
for
·
·
:
9ifslaughk of
._-
~
;
unpi:edictable
-:
.
-;:
:-
sigitificant
-
Jlilpor~~
~
·
.
.
.
:
.
:
-
.
>
followe_d
_
by
an mtens1-ve
:
·
review _
:
fr.om §everaL
'.
of the
,
towns
in~
.
processing
.
-
.__ .•
.
-
- .
•
. _
·
.
.
.
:
·
'
'.
'
eIIE!fgt.
:
cti,si5.
;'i
_p:u(
~
Qffice
·.
~L~~
:
..
·
:•··.
;_
The
..
detjsion
·:
to
... ·
~
. :
t~e
:
n~w
.
at
·
the end
.
of
<
~he ~cadenuc_ year •
.
·
.
_volv~
.
e:xperienced
.
no
•
tro~ble in
-••·.
·
.. ::.:_
At
.:
Yassar,
~
police
.
with
.
.
ben~
.
--
t
.
.
··
_.
Academtc
·,
Dean
,
has
:
announced
- .
formatfollowed co!!5µltat~<m w.1th
.
·
.
The . master sch~~e
·
\Vi_ll
,
~
.
:
making
.
the
.
arrests despite the warrants entered
,
3 dorms as whll
..
;;
.
. ..
. :
~
that
.
Niar~
C«;iµt?ge
wl1:1
_.-
0J)&a~
'.:'
th~Ja¢ulo/
'
-"::~~uclept~~ups
.
and
;
.
c_onsid1:red
>
~ ~
,
un~tal
,.
m
,
Jts
_fact_
!h.~t
·::
weaf)'.)ns;
:·
µicluding
,;
_~
"· ·
as
\
th~
C
teqace ~partmt?ntS
:
:
a,nd
,;
•·
.
.
·
·,
under
.;
.
~
/
;
!}~\V;
,mas!eI"
_
•,:
tlme
; .
l~~~~,,mn.m,i~x:,
.
~~Y~
.;
~~
..
~~f:Jir~t.:v.~i:.
8.:1:l~Jt~
:
~
.
9;1}~1!1~
.,
~.'~
'
:;~p,ot
:
gw.iajl~ P,IB.~ols; w.ereJak"'!!
.
. J'?~~~~Jo
,
p11t)he_8
·
~ude~ts
·
.
.
.
,
.
,
·
·
-•
schedule for the
1974-75 academic
,
::,L,:
qfµc~s.:,\TJ!~:f
'
opµu~
.-
~
i
~f
,;,,
~ese:
:
,
a. r~~;
-
!>~erJll~
:r11~t!~
.
E:
;
W!il
i
-,mto,P.()lic
_
e hanM
>
>
'fbe i::a1ds were_
:_c,:r
in
ctistQdy
,
Allwere charg~ with
:
:.
.
··-
;:
'..:
,
.
~
.
·
i
:,-;:
:,
,:':
1~~,=1f.f
t
tt::
~,~~1,11
r
~J:i.,~!ii~-'tra
i
a;l1tt1
t
~,,,;1t~ii?ij
-.-_
·
·
•--
.
•---
•-
,
···•
-
. .
·:·
.',,
time
\,·
part~um~
.
.'.,
;
(!6Jntn11ting
~"-:'
the
:
propo~l
'
~ayEl
:
•
Ye
t
to
,
~
-
~
.:
~-
·
aboutthe
.
new ~ucture upon the_
>
derc"Qyer
-
actiy1ty;
_
,
>
.
.<
,
:
of
the
i
CoUeg~ Admlh~tration's
·
.
1
.
·.
_:. ·:
students;
'.
a,
i
'
populatfo~
;
whicp
)
(
.
~werec.f •
.
' : · _
,
;
,
:
••
·.,
.
·
·
:-.!.
:<
.
·
...
·
..
_
cor:i~entof courses &Ild abo':!tJh~
.
,·
·
:
Tp.e
'.-
r~ids
\
de~o11st~te a
.
.:
.
:
r~spoiise to the raid
-
and
-
oft~
·
}
·
·
.
-.
ass'Ulajng greater
.
impotta,il~
_
m
•
·
.,
·
-:
J:>i:ce:iently;
~
_tµe van~µs
,_
stud~nt
·
a~ility· of
.
s
_
t~~ents
•
to
,
cope ~~tJi
.
:
:
b
_
e
,
ef e~~up
,
:
pol~c~ 'capacity to
:
overall campus mood
:
Kent'said
:
.
higher
:
educa~on
_
,
,
planning j111d
i:epr_~se11tabv
.
e
,
~qdies
:
wh~co the longer peri~s. Jhe
,
pro:;p~~t
,~
haridl~ drug cases
,
Fully
150
state
>-
V~ssar students are ''for once
..
.
. :
which Marist hopes to attract
·
in
consJSt
·
of
·
the
:
•
Student
_
Po}!cy
.
th~t
.,
the
.
_new
·
5?11~tllres
,
.
.
'Yill
·
and municipal police, carrying
.·
.
please
_
d with the Administration''
·
.. ,
the
: ·.
near fut'Ul'e.
CU:J."i:e!}t
_
Board
_
(Student Govt),
'
Studenr
.
stllllulate
_
mnovation
_
m
·
teaching warrants for
·
searches and
.
since they apparently played no
.
predictive
. ;
indicators
show
·
Academic _C~mitt~, t~e
,
Iilter- ~ethods h
_
a~
_.
also
-
been
,
m~n-
arrests,
mov~
in co11cert 9:gainst part in setting up the arre~ts,
·
·
greatest growth
.-in
the
.,,
~ext
.
:
·
•
Ho~e Council; U~e ~ommu~er
.
t~one~; Certain types ~fJeach~ . the 48, described by
.
police
.
as
.
Kent_ noted that
.
the V~ce
.
decade
.
to be among parHime
Umon,
.
and the Junior
.
Class ~1tuation~ \\'Ould appear to flt . dealers of the drugs.
.
.
President of Student· Affairs
:
woman students, the majority of
Executive Board, have all
-
shown· ideal_ly i11to the onc~-a~week ·.·
Captain Joseph Leary, Troop K spent the whole day · in court
·
·
·
·
.
.
whoin will want to attend
·
classes
disfavor towar.d the new measure
.
..
~ee~_g str!].cture, while · other · · B_CI
·
chief;
.
!ook note
.
of the rai.9' s
arranging
.
bail for: the· 8. Said
..
during the day.
Itis
also
.
:
hoped
.
.
for
·
many d~fferent
·
reason,~ .
.
disc1plme_s may have to adapt
to
effect on drug trafficking;
''It
will . Kent of
.
the campus mood:
·
:-.
that the revised schedule
will
.
Thesegroupsarenowuriitingand
·
thenewtl!Jleplan,
/
I'!tese factors
.
make .them look
.
over their "Everyone's
a
little scared.
•,
help commuting studerits
:_
to
·
~gto9fferacompr~misethat ~d mM.y-oth~swill
.
~
_
e,
:
~e.11
.>
shoulder," ~ry
·
said'.
.
There are some who think the
.
streamline-travel at.'i"angements;
nught
-
appease
all
·
who are
at~
'
mto consid~rat
,
ion
.
wpen 1t:1s ~e
-
"
0
.
Th,e District Attorney's office
police are coming back and-some
.
:
ar:id that ifw_ill
be
of ~sistail~
to
.
.
fected by it. The final acti~
.
to
f?e
to evaluate t!te
·
su~~s o!.
:
fa~ure
:
also
·
claiJ;ned to
·
be
prepared
·.
for
. .
who ~ k they won't."
.
., .
.
working stu
.
dents in~~ng class
,
taken. by
,
these
.
groups
·
IS
:
still of the
,
experllllent.
:
:
,
·
the~hervo.lume
_
ofdrug
_
arrests
·
.
··
.
. .
.
. -
.
and
,
,
work schedules. Should
.
undecided but \Vlll be repor~~ at
-
.
·
,
, .
·
·
•
-
•
·
·
9:55-
.
11:10
..
:
·
:
'}Ijo,
12:3
.
5
.
12:45-
.
·
,
2:00
MON.
,
TUES.
~Efi ..
• TH~R~:
2
~~1.
>
·f
l"esh.lii~nExper!en.ce
-
P ..
~blems
..
.
-
.
.
.
..
-
.
.
.
·
,
.,·
,,
.
.
.
.
~
11
1
·
·
fu
:
A.cadentlcs
--
At-
Marist
-
·
i
'
~
'
-
--·
.
'
:
:.
..
~
'
'
.
,
.•.
:
.·.;);:r:\
½.~;\\
}:;_
;/):
)i:
j
~
PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 7, 1974
CIRCLE Interview:·
Maintenance Function Explored
On
Monday, January
28th,
I made a personal visit to the Housemaster knows what and then the Sheahan lot.
The
Monday school started?
met with Mr. Andrew Pavelko, Champagnat and found. all he'sdoing(thenhecanadjustit). students are really
good
about
Mr. Pavelko: Well,·you're not
Director of Maintenance, to boilers were working and the
Circle:
Do
the Housemasters this. And
if they need help from· the area, are you?
.
· ~USS
certain aspects of the t~e~osta~_ were set. However,. I know what they're doing?
· plowing out their cars, we help
Answer: No, Long Islan~.
Maintenance Department. The • did fmd · the_. north pump (this
Mr.
Pavelko: Gerry Kelly and them. .
Mr. Pavelko: We bad a snow of
following are not quotes, except pump flows water
to
the section Joe Norton know· what they're ·
Circle:
1s
·
the path to Donnelly six inches followed by-1hree in-
where noted, but rather what was of the building facing the campus doing. Don Honeman, because done the same time as the
fire ches of freezing rain.
If
that rain
· said to the best of my knowledge.
center) was off. I then turned it he's new, should know what he's lanes?
had
been
snow we would have
~cle: What
is_ the role of bac!t on.
·
.
_
doing. In order to adjust the
Mr.
Pavelko: Yes, we
try to get had about
30
inch~ of snow. The
MarISt College maintenance?
Cu-cle: Whoc9uldhav~don~ 1t? temperature properly, you need· .that done with the fire lanes. But grounds crew 1s too · busy
, Mt.
Pavelko: Maintenance, at
Mr.
Pavelko:· I don't know w~o to have someone living
in
the - _we only have five machines, ren_ioving the ice and snow from
Marist College is
a
"service. did it. But let me explain what building to understand the three big tractors and two small the . fire lanes. And we also
oriented" department. We try to happened. The pump had been situation.
.
ones:
.
depleted our calcium and salt
service the entire community. off, possibly all w~kend. This
Circle: And they can adjust the
Circle:
Is
this
done by the supply~· And the sand was frozen
Circle: How is
this
effecting the .. causes the pipes to freeze and temperature, they have keys to grounds crew?
·-·
~olid. You really had to be here to
campus?
Is maintenance doing when water reaches 5 F, the ice the boiler room?
·
Mr. Pavelko: Yes. And we
hire appreciate it; we had no man
theirjob?
begins to expand.
This
causes the
.Mr. Pavelko: Yes.
students
to
help~ However, since power.
.
..
Mr. Pavelko: I believe we are pipes to crack. Knowing this
Ch:cle: What is the procedure ,.students were on vacation .we
Circle: .When did it rain'i--
doing our job efficiently. We wouldhappen,Iaskedthecrewto for snow removal?
could not. I'd like
to
set up a
Mr. Pavelko: The ·Friday·
attempt
to
service the entire come and check and drain the
Mr. Pavelko: Fh:sLwe clean system of two students
in
every
before students returned to
community, faculty, staff; ad-
system.
.
the roads. The_ entrances and dorm
to
clear the snow
in front of
school. You also have to realize
ministrators and students. I
Circle: How many br~ks were roads are done first. arourid the the building. There would be two
that the crew was• _also . pre-
believe we are doing a good job. there?
.
c~pus.
people who live
in
tnat dorm who
occupi_ed with· other projects.
We do most of the work we can
Mr. Pavelko: There were about
Circle:
You · mean
the would get snow shovels at
8:00
However, we keep the cost down
with the personnel on campus. forty.
firelanes? .
.·
a.m. and clear the walks. -·
of these projects with inside
This, therefore, cuts the costs,
Question: What was the cost? · Mr. Pavelko: Yes. Next we do
Circle:
This
would.then set
up
workers.
which is ultimately paid by
Mr. Pavelko:
It was.
~00
for the Donnelly lot and ask that all · new jobs?
Circle: I think that~- all. Thank
student fees.
·
.
,
parts plus labor and overtune for ·cars be moved
to
the Sheahan lot.
Mr.
Pavelko: Yes.
..
you.
Circle: How is vandalism af-
the cle,ming crews.
·
'Then we plow the North lot
Circle: Well, then why was the
\.
James Elliott
. fecting maintenance?
_ Circle: Who had the keys to the (Champa~at - Campus Center) snow not removed until. the
Mr.
Pavelko: For the past room?
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . ; - - - - - - - - - - - - -
three years, the occtirrences of
.
Mr.
Pavelko: There are th_ree
s·.
ur;p·
e·
-..~t·rir·.
B-.
an_.
,
ne·a.·
.. ... :
,vandalism have dropped. There keys_ - our plumber, the boiler
• .:,
a
· has been decreasing vandalism. repa~men and the emergency
All except the ninth floor repaU"men ..
Chanipagnat where you can find
Circle: And security? .
.
Allow me to introduce myself.
would never
be
seen
in
Buenos
a hole
in
just about every door. I
Mr. Pavelko: Yes, se~ur1ty,·_ My name is Bro. G~rardWeiss,.I
Aires. Their ·contention was-that-
think _it's primarily due
to
a · too..
.
teach Spanish at M.arist College,
the. picture portrayed the
· raising of the consciousness that
Cu-cle: Woµld you say 1t was and this year lain on sabbatical character of Jes~
Christ
in an
· the student is ultimately paying sabotage?
..
leave to study in Latin America.
irreverent mariner~
.
One must ·
the bill.
.. . .. · . .
Mr. Payelko: No, I really can't At the present time I · am in
naturally ask th~ question: What
.· Circle: How does the
_
new say tha~;-
.
.
,.
. .
Argentina dQing some research.
was the source • "- their in-·
. computer system work?· · , · _ . Quest1~n3 How m.uch ,une did it, Rece~tly something quite
_u:i-
fonl!~tion, since obviously they
Mr. Pavelko: Anyone who , take to flrush the Job?_
. •.
terestmg happened here which
had not seen the fihn them-
w_antsmaintenance to do a repair
·Mr.' Pavelko: ·~t'.famten
'
ance promptedmetowrite an article.
selves?'But
perhaps fanaticism
wiUwrite the req\iest on a blue _.worked all day (24 hours) I am forwarding _it to you for carried tothe extreme-does not·
maintenance ·slip. This slip is ,Mo~day_ and Thursday.
. .
consideration to _use it some time ~othedo~availitself off~ hand
then received by my secretary,
Circle:
Monday
through in the CIRCLE. The article is as mformation · before making a
.
Mrs. J:>latania, and is punched Th11!sday?
.. _
follows: , ,.. . ,
..
·
.
_ jud~ent and acting on_it;. .
sationafist c~racter iitthe film.
__ into
acomputeri,Th~so~puter
.
·Circle:.· Monday 'through·
JESUS.GHRIST.SUPER,&TAR
-This~me~~pbadp~ceda·Theeducational campaign did
. will_give us
a
read ~ut o~ a11
·
: '.l'hursday"?
. . . . _;,,,,,;
·
~.WlLL
-
:No:r"\
,
.BEc:;SEEN:;-dN
•.,~mb
,
Jn
_a.tJurd._th~~--·tbat ,_nota,~hieyetlledesiredef~ects,as
reqmred work. We assign this to.·
_Mr.
Pavelko: Tuesday, al_ld
BUENOS
AIRES:
. ·.
, ·
..
mght, but lt faµed t~ go 9ff ..
Also,
,-th~. events
'·of''.-the,~i:i1ght''
'
'Of ·
our workers .• After they ac- _ Wec1?es~ay we wo~~ed on pre-
On,thenight of December
30,
I , on that same mght, · sev~ral --· December
30
proved;'
, ·
,.
: . ·\ .
complish. the job, they report. fabr1catmg the system, By that I was rocketed -from a deep sleep members of the group had gamed
. All of ;the events surrounding
back with the slips illustrating mean we had to· ~ait for•. parts .. by two loud explosions here.· in . e~tra.nce. into the ?ffices 'of the this whole episode pr~vide food:
the time required. Anoth~r from ~ew York_ City and-m·the· ·'Buenos Aires, the capital city of d1str1buto~ of_the f1hn a~ w:ere for much ~hou~!it.
Th!s
was the ... _
printout from the computer 1s meantune we circumvented the Argentina. Given the· tense <!bout to set fire
.to
th~ buildi,ng, work of one terrorist. group,
received by this office and the system and worked with what we . nature of the political situation at when they were apprehended by oriented tothe extreme right, and
person requesting the.job, This ha~. _In this way we k~pt the the ·present moment, naturally--- the ~olice.
. .. . .._
.
.
its_ ~rget-. was a fihn with
way, we show what we have done, bwl~g warm a_nd we. fixed- all·
-
ther;e,.. crossed my mind all sorts
This ~ole~c has bt:en ragmg reli_g101.1:5 overton1:5 . .Yet, equally
when and by whom. .
the _Pieces t~at we had be_f ore -of •ide.as as to what was hap-
fo_r some tune here m Bue_nos act~~e m ,Ar~entma. are grQups
Circle: Who sent a niajor~ty of puttmg them.m place. By ~nday 'pening. The next morning . I Aires. Last Mar a theatriml polit1~ally ?nen~edm the ex~ct
the slips?
we had the system working all discovered· that two local group waspreparmgto put on the oppoSite direction, and which
· Mr. Pavelko: We try to catch except the covers placed on_. But theaters had been bombed:· Both . stage version of "Je~s Christ -also pose a serious threat to the
our own -mistakes. . .
· then there. was· a rupture before
_
theaters were scheduled to begin ~uperstar" in _one of the theaters norm.al·
.
process of orderly
-Circle: What.percent?
.. Saturday (January 19th) but we · showing the movie "Jesus Christ m. downtown Buenos _Aires. government. Every day there are
Mr. Pavelko:. (turning.
to
Mrs. fixe_d it qui~kly. •
.·
-. . . ~, Sup~rstar" the followirig day. I Seve~al . hours. before . the· accounUf
~~
the_papers of assaults
Platania) What percentage of the
Circle: Will stude_nts be abl~Jo weritto in_spect the scene and was prerruere w~
~
take place t_he of a_ pohtical nature and . kid-
. blue slips are sent from this of-
coll;ect for. t_he ~~age d~ne to utterly amazed at .the extent 'of Sam(? ter~orist group, armed with nappmg~ of. gove_rrunent officials
tice?.
. their _belongmgs - l1ke rugs? ·.
the damage
inflicted
on
the
two subm~chme guns,. entered the or foreign ·businessmen. Last
Mrs. Platania: I don't know of
Mr. Pavelko: Well, that they buildings. The entirefront as well theater, compelled the actors and yearalone there were close to
200
a
percentage, but they're mostly will_'have·:-t? take up with the astheoverheadmarqueeswerea stage hands to leave, and then such kidnapping~. Argentina has
from this office. Secondly, frpm busmess office, but most of the total shamble· .. A huge gaping procee~ed . to thr~w · ~olC?tov suffered much m the past few
the residence office.
.
. water ran· out the ~racks of the · hole. was evident in the solid cockta1_ls .about the budding. years, and its citizenry has been
· Circle: How
is
this working _-building.Some steam could have concrete wall of one of the Result:
$800,000
in.
damage torn apart by differences in
out?
·
·_.
·
·
possibly ruined books.
· . theaters. Across the street in a ~aused by fire and l!i() peopl~ out political ideology, giving rise to
Mr. Pavelko: It's wo~ing very . (;ircle: ·What has maintenance · tall office building about a dozen of work.. - · · . .
-- ' . .. ' · _,. . . per~~ic oqtb!1r5ts of terrori~m,
satisfactorily.
· · .
.
. · done to conserve energy?
. .
large plate· glass windows had
Fo~o_wmg
this
~·.intensive gueITilla ~_ctics c1Ad oppression.
Mrs. Platania: It's not working
Mr,
Pavelko: In DonnellY!.;we been smashed by the force of the pubhc1ty
. campaign · was_ I~ October Juan Peron returned
as smoothly. There's a lot of bugs. cut back the heat and one warm e~plosion.
Two
'p_olicemen maugurated m order_~ edu<:~te . t? · power after. an. exile of
in
it. '
· . ·
day we can turn off_ the system. assigned to guard the . theaters .the people
to
th~ positive merits . e1ghte~n years. HIS popularity is
Mr. i>avelko: Well, ,computers We· can do· that
~
Donnelly were injured by th~ blasts.· -
~f
t_he film·yers10~ fi._Su~rstar. veryh1~ at themom~nt,and the
. can't do the work. That'sJeft
up . because we operate with a steam
. The extreme. right-wing group . Jesus .Cfn:~ Super.star. .
Ey~
people·, tired of the disturbances
· to
the crew
itself. So ·what'we· do sistem.
.
that claimed ctedif for the · _the word.· 1'~11perstar'.\ was that have rocked their country in
is take_ urgent
calls
in for major . Circle:, And the residence I>?mbings had vo~ed that the ,suppressed from.the title in an the ~ecent .~st, look.
to
h4Jt to
' jobs; These~calls are looked after. halls?
-
.
.
. .
• picture '.'Jesus Christ Superstar-'' · ~ffort
to
play . down
any·
~en- :reurute a ~vided nation.
first, Jhen the compg_ter cards..
Mr. Pav~lko: In-the residence
.
. .
.
.· --
..
.
·
.·
· ·._•
·.':-. . .
. . , .
. , . , ,.Circle: How often are the cards. -· halls , the pumps are . on
Co~~-
l· . · ·
V · · ·
-
•G· • . Sh •·
11· ·
-d~edt~t~~r~~iJf:s· h:~~~ti~o~ a t : th:
:~1!:!
. . .
-!-..
~~
.. ~-
~rs.
-~~
a~~- . ' '
.
'.~s "·: : ·: ::' ..
.
!? ....
.
-~~
with
the .. ainounf:·set; in~'~If,. can:, freezmg. a~am. We lowered the
·
.
'.•
:
·
.· .. ··
cases,
if yo~,attempt to purchase . ·
cUridWils
involved to give it some-
tak~ upto once ev.ery third week. :•rh~ostat
~
Champ~gnat and
· Byl;>ian_ePetrus "·
·
···
·
·
..
gaso~~attheeiic;t<ithemonth serious'thought and'·in t'tifn act
.· C~cle: How lon_f before they., we r~ : b ~ l~ss oil
tµan last
.
:· · : ... · · .
.
.
Y,OU c_ould be~ confi'o~ed-
with
upon'ifacc<irdingly. . ... · ·
are done? · ·
._ ·
.
.
Y~•
Also,· they re less ~ouble. _ With the. threat of the un-
empty tanks.
..
.
·
· ·
,
··Mr·
Pavelko: That·depends:~·y.
·:
G~~Je:
CanyouJowertpeheat?. pending .. gas shortage; many.
:.In:this immediate ·area there
.>'
·ruz.zi.'.E:·.~·.t_A __
N_
..
SWE_
,R_ S.·:
;.._.·
the number of cards received: , _Mr. Paveµco_:.We have
to
keep commuting students. :could· be are· no-
·
·forms
<i mass
tran-.
_..:-r:.,.,..~-::- -...,.-.,..-... ·------ ·.,··
before that orie. W~ place
th~ in • the. pumps
.
gomg or else they'U f~c;e~twith,_.a, serious prob~em. s_portation· which could provide
~.;+;;f.;.~:.;.
s
T R E N G T H
the order we r~e1ve ~em; __ . . . fr~ze. _We
also
need all th~ heat Smee•~· good number of Manst's : an adequate alternate means of
i-.,:+~~~:,:.
c
R 1 T E R 1 A
Mrs. Platania: "lt~s. "usually:_ we
!!8D
get on the North suie.. . commuters· ,Iive-'a·'-reasonable . travel. ,.The· limited bus service
_t-,,,,,tf-::+;,,;...,
.:,:+;;~;.:;;.
N T
done before-a 1.::oup~e·:of weeks,_ . Circle: can .the Housema~~rs · distance ·-·from' the ·school~ /the·. would
be
helpfulto
an
extent but
~.,-:;,,1,,::-fl!I
~,+.,,;+:,-+;;;;.
c
T
unless we
,
don't have the item lower,the ~rature?
:
·
: · . effec_ts:of this.and the possibility . couldn't· be, ·considered . as - - - -
..,.+,,,+-,j~
T E
needed for the· repai,r."
.
.
~r •
· Pavelko:_ .
If_ t.~~e · o! f!ltioning coll:1d create a: major. aliog~ther sufficient.One possible
R E
O
E F
I
N E 5
u
R
Circle:· Could you explain the Housemaster controls it,_ . its difficulty
.
on thi,s segment of the solution
to
tllis
problem would be . ·
F L
O
G
s
.
R A
·Chainpagna:t · anc;l' Leo boil¢r ,- goC>d, but there's probl~s,m ~he _school's population.:
, . .
to form
car
pools·.
This would not- -
A
c
T.
u
A T E
T H. E A. Y E 8
·incidents?·'
.·
•·
.·-:. . · sm,all. houses, _Benoit _and; ·Gas:prices:are constantly'in" onlysaveeachindividualgas,but ·
N °Es
1
s
LE ARN
Mr;
Pav~llto·:"0n·~~ lyfonday GregOf}'.:•.;:It see~s t?~t ,tije ·creasingto:011tqiJeQUS~owits_- ._iL·would ·also decrease ... the .
~ ~
t
ER
O
J
O
HNY
O
u
NG ·
. before everyone.
~~ed from.· , stud~nts . keep.- adj~~mg the : Many
_
of the
sta_tion~r
are _closed· . arnowit· of--~on~y __ spent on : it .. ·
R
s
T
s s
I
~
t
i
~
R
~ ~
~-
vacation_ (January 7th)_ .. ·Fr,~ _Jherm.ostats
.s9
thar:1t_s _w~m .. Just: ~hen.you n ~ them.·.They Instead> of wa1tmg !or-- th_e
A L A
c
A R T E·
1 M
p
u
T- E
-Lam~rt said
thatthere
W~
no __
;This;
causes_:problems,iW1th;~e_,cJ.'.~Ct,the4".
sales:
to a.
£~rtain ,.
p_roblem
to catch
UP.::Wlth us_1t. MAL
I NG E R
L E E R E D
. heat m the. resi~nce office.-, I
-It~~~-
Bµtin_t,heotherdo~,
if · amountotgallcm~ and m
_
many ·. would
be beneficial:to -
.
~ ..
m- . s
w
E.
A T E R
s
A M A
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,.;-
FEBRUARY 7, 1974
THE
CIRCLE
PAGE3
Committre Reports
On
Athletic Future
By Ray
Barger
this office tries to be helpful. work-study program, a program
These preaITanged interviews· in which a studwt can work at an
Are you graduating this year follow a recruiting schedule
-
set on-campus job while he goes go
and wondering where to find up
.
by Mr. Sherlock. This school, is a functioo
of
this office.
work after getting your B.A. or schedule may be fowid posted
in
So,
too, is an updated listing of
B.S.?
Maybe you're interested
in
his office which is located on the part-time off-camp~
_
jobs that
_
a part-time job on or off
camp~.
first floor of
Champagnat
Hall.
are
available.
1'.he
·
career
Development
Office
However, Sherlock
-
cautions,
The C.D. Office began
this
year
·
can .help
.
you in your
·
search.
"resumes must be on file
in
this to
use
some new ways to serve
·
_
"We try to respond to student's office
so
thatthe
interviewer has the student. · One was the
needs by attempting
·
to fill the something to
talk
about with distribution of a
·
monthly
void between· what they would
-·
you."
.
_
·
publication, News and Notes.
like in a job and ·what jobs are
A
·
second way
that
the C.D. This newsletter
·
tells
of
current
avaJlable."
This
is ,
_
John Office can help you
-
find
a job is trends
jJl
the job market and also
Sherlock's philosophy
as
head
·
of
through the
use of
the
~
literature of various other points of interest,
for
_
example,
information
received from other colleges
across the country
pertaining
to
jobs and education.
A second new technique
devised is
a
Directory of
Co-
operating
Alumni.
This listing
will be
a qUick and easy source of
reference of
those
Alumni who
will be actively cooperating with
the C.D. and Alurrui Offices as
contacts to
M::nist
graduates.
Mr.
Sherlock, thinking of the
future, is striving toward a full
off.:Campus recruiting program
in which students at Marist could
tap the resources of ·
all
the
colleges in ACHMA, or the
Associated
_
Colleges of the Mid-
Hudson Area.
A
second
future prospect he
sees
would be that of a N. Y. State
.
file on campus. Microfiche is a
daily updated recording of all full
time jobs, and details on them.
This information available would
not be limited to this area, but
would cover all New York State.
the Career Development Office. available there.
.
.
R
·
d
An
.
Heis assisted by Peter Dalmer,
Anotherservicethatthisoffice
.
ey
/
na
·
r
11•
c1•
t
an alumni of Marist
.
College.
.
.
provides is an aluinili file. This
_ _
_
-
_
pa es
This office, as a source for file
lists
nearly eight-hundred
career
.
counseling, attempts
.
in
·
Marist graduates and the job.5 in
Good
~
various ways to help the student which
.
they are now employed.
.
ear·
not only decide, butfind a job that These alumni are
.
invaluable
·
he would be happy with.
·
.
resources as contacts in looking
Personal , interviews with for a job.
.
r.:_epresentatives
.
. froni large and
-Part-time work can also be
small companies, is one way that found through this office; The
.
;
By Brendan Boyle
Organization and a good hard-
working staff are the two main
reasons for the 1974 Revnard
HEOP
-
Program
·
Aids
-
Disadvantaged Students
promising to be the best yearbook
in quite some time. According to
Gary Traube, this year's Editor-
in-Chief, the text of the book is
almost completed. The price of
the book is reduced from last
year, and if sales go
as
well as
they have so far, there is a good
chance that deficits created from
previous years might begin
to
be
paid off.
.
•
Traube has many reasons for
being so optimistic. Unlike
- previous editors
·
who were often
left the monstrous task of almost
ll
Y
ears of age, and a quarter of the on larger Joans to make up the single-handedly producing.Jhe
More
.
than 5,000 eco
_
nomica y
b
k
h h
taff
of
about
and educationally ciisadvan
__
ta
_
"
ged
students are 25, attests
'
to the difference their families cannot . year
00
,
e as as
um
.
··
·que 'sec·ond chance•
·
nature of
.
d
t
.
. . th
sixty people. This large, in-
students were able to continue
cporvo_gerra' mm_.~r er o
_
r
__
emam m
e dustrious staff is what Traube
their college studies
_
last year
·
this college opportunity for many
.
.
individuals," adds
De
Giulio.
The typical cost to
_
a HEOP mainly attributes the hopeful
because of the Higher Education
s of th '74 e book to be
·
According
_
to
-
the HEOP annual
'
student, according to the
-
annual succes
e
Y
ar
·
·
Opportunity Program, accordina
A
f
th f
'
·
1
Uook so
-'t:>
.
report, many
·
New York State report, has risen
_
over
$400
in
_
the
s or
e mancia ou
to
_
th
_
e
·
progra
_
m
_
's annual
_
report
far th1
·
stoo ·1s optum·
·
·st1·c Only 51·x
P
.
riv ate colleges and universities,
.
last year, so that the
·
"
_
fiscal gap"
•
·
'
recently
.
released by the State
hund ed bo
k
are gom· g to be
already·fisc
_
ally hardp
.
ressed, are now between all ava1·1able
r
O
s
Education Dtpartment
· t dthis
·
1·
ofth low
finding it impossible to "make up sources of aid - including
HEOP,
-
prm e
year m ieu
e
The five-year-old program is
·
umber of books sold 1·n previ·ous
·
the difference'.' between in- student loans, State and Federal n
-
-
designed
to
stimulate
Pubrsh·
g
cost for these
.
academically-talented students
creased · program costs and programs, and college costs - is y~ars.
1
m .
·
h
·
'
amounts' ava_ilable
__
from
_·
State ·approximate
_
ly 4'950
_
f.
Tru·
__
s means·_Six
_
hundr
_
ed books
__
1
s
$8,~.
The
:
, .
who
.
might not
othermse- ave
.
the
,p
st
f
a bo
k
has been red ced
opportunity'to continue with their
·
·
and Federal sources.
· ·
·
that the
·
·
costs
·
of
·
screening, -
fi-
o
-
·
t
$10 00
·
·
:i
t
been sold. The student govern-
ment's aUotment for the year-
book is $1600 and there is a
possibility that another $400
might be adqed to this amount.
The advertising department
headed by Bruce Cappio, has sold
$800
worth of ads to date and
hopes to reach their goal of $1800
before the publishing deadline in
two weeks
.
If
all goes according
to plan, the yearbook will make
money this year which according
to Traube is the first time in a
number of years that it will do so,
and the debts amassed from
previous years will begin to be
paid off.
Yearbooks should be ready for
distribution starting the first
week of May. Since yearbook
sales are going along at a fairly
good rate thus far, the staff of the
Reynard suggests that orders be
placed as soon as possible
preferrably before April
1,
since
there is
only
a
limited number of
_
books
.
to
be
printed. The: prices
are $10
.
00 for a 1974 yearbook,
$8.00 for a 1973 yearbook
.
and
$16
.
00 for both a 1973 and a 1974
yearbook.
college careers. In addition to
'.J;'he
.
lack of funds for
.
the testing, counseling, guidance
15
year,
0
.
.
•
as oppos
-
0
financial support paid dir~tly
to
educationally. _and economically services, developmental courses,
last year s price
of
$12.50 and so
participating private colleges in
disadvantaged, the annual report and other supportive aid far far half of the books have already
the State, the program offers
indicates, has held the 1973-74
·
exceed the $1,400 allocation . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - -...
students testing, counseling, and
HEOP enrollment of 5,300 provided each HEOP student.
remedial work to help ~eep them
.
students at 62 campuses to ap-
Although program funding
·
11
·
-
proximately the same as the 1972- continues to present a problem
m
:ie
e;!port
.
notes that 1,000
73 enrollment. "While many for all Higher Education Op-
students have already achieved
institutions were holding the
line
portunity Program participants,
degrees through HEOP. More
or, in some cases, raising their new and more flexible ad-
significantly, only 20_ percent of
contributions during the 1972-73 missions criteria have enabled
the students that enroll in the
academic year," says
-
the report, institutions to select
a
broader
program drop out,
_
ana of this
"the pressures of inflation, along
mix
of HEOP students, states the
figure,
_
only one in five is
with other fiscal demands, report.
dismissed'for academic reasons,
c~us~d 20 participating
!h-
The results of the HEOP
corroborating the effectivene5;5
sbtutio!ls to reduce
'
program eval~tion prove the program's
of supportive services in helping
comm1tmef!t~ by a
_
total of effectiveness,
·
and the Regents
to
overcome .
academic
$957,488, casting the increased therefore
.
strongly support
ex-
deficiencies.
A
large majority of
~urden on !IEOP students to take pansion
·
of the program.
the students begin with reduced
course loads and relatively low
grades,
.
but nearly
~11
-
have .
achieved
.
parity with other
students by the senior year, with
120
.
credits and an acceptable
.
·
ac~demic
_
performance ranging
from mfeting minimum stan-
dards
to
honors levels. Only a
small number of students require
a fifth year to complete their
work.
·
·
.
·
·
''.The impact 9f opportun1ty
programs
_·
like HEOP, while not
easily
_
quantified,
are
.
significant," concludes
.
the
·
an-
.
riualrep<>rt; Cited as examples of
benefits
·
derived from such
•
·
ef-
forts are new approaches
to
·
teaching,, •improv~
·
d
hiring
practices for
.
instructors,
im~
proved curriculum,
.
growth of
programs Jor )1um.ari services
paraprofessionals
and
development
•
of
:
new
_
'types
_
:
of
.
professional positions
.
-
-
.
·
.
.
.
_
.
.
'
:
'Approximately,
_
two-thirds of
the
.
-·-
students enrolled
.
in
·.
the
·
.
program are
.
black arid
a
,
total of
severi-e}ghilis:
·a:re · n'ori~white;
·
which
0
demonstrates:
~e
slice~
.-
Hyde Park
Army
·
-
- Navy Store
(At
the
Beverage Center on Rt. 9)
10 Pct. OFF ON ANY PURCHASES!
JUST
BRING THIS
AD
WITH
YOU
AND COME
IN
BY FEB. 16,
1974
R'ATHSKELLAR LUNCHEON
.
·
'
1
SPECIALS:
MONDAY
TUESDAY
½
Pound Hamburger
Small Soda
or
Coffee FREE
.
·
Lettuce
&
Tomato on
a
With Purchase of any of
FreshHardroll W. Fr.Fries&
OurSubs(Made to Order)
·
SmaUSoda
'
.:
_
Orily $1.99
·
Ham
&
Cheese; Roast Beef,
(1/.fPounder Orily$t35
.
·
'
Turkey
·
·
:: WEDNESDAY
. •
'
·
·
Italianor.WhiteBread
Superburgers"'2Hamburg~s
.
'
·
Letttice&TomatoonallSubs
·
:
CookedtoOrder-Ona Tripi~
,
THURSDAY
.
Decker
Roll-Garden Fresh
·
•
. Delicious Minute Steak
Lettuce&Tomato- Golden Brown
·
i
.W;
Fried Onions On Hard Roll
Fr._Fries&Sm.ColdSoda-Only$U!9 . W.Fr. Fries &Sm;ColdSoda.
·
:
-· (Superburger-Wnl)'. 99c)
.
·
. ·
Only$1.29
-
.
_
of program .. efforts· to provide
higher.education (or minorities,•~
·:: ··
·
FRIDAY
·
.
·
.
says
'
:
AµanD~ qi@.o; chief
¢
.
.
the
·
F
·
·ed
·
Cl
· · · ·
Hot· .., ·
·
ted.
·
Educaµon Department's Bureau
.
· .,,,
~
.-
·
-
n
ams
on
-.1.oas
Roll
·
·
·
f H
'
h Ed
r
·
o
·
rturuty
Tartar Sauce-. Cole
.
Slaw-
.·
.
,
·
ROSE VIEW FARM'i
ENGLISH RIDING LESSONS: $7 PER HOUR
BEST FACILITIES AVAILABLE
225 FT. INDOOR RIDING RINK
INQUIRE ABOUT STUDENT GROUP
RATES FOR REDUCTIONS!
CALL 471-1918
FOR APPOINTMENTS
LOCATED
8-10
MIN, FROM CAMPUS
DUTCHESS ,J:IILL RD., OFF
EAST DORSEY LANE IN POUGHKEEPSIE
Pick 'n Shove
·
1
19 Academy St.
"HAPPY NITE" HOURS
Sun, Mon, Tues, Wed 9PM D.OSING
Ba
_
r
•
liquors
Shake Liquors
Mugs
~ot
$1.00
25t
Pitchers
$·1
.50
MICHELOB
$2.00
DARK
.
WED~ N
ITE
~
LEN NELSON
$1.75
-
-:
O
-
1g
~r
,
.
uca
um
-
.
PP
0
.
.
Fr. Fri
_
e1 &
_
Sm.
_
s
_
rida-
_-
_
Only $1.29
_
·
i>rograms~:-''The fa~t that half of
.
-theprograin
'
populatiol'i
is
over
.
21
--~-----"'!'"!1 ____
1111111111
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ .
•~~~~.-~.-~~~~------~~~il'lllil'lllrllllrllllrllllrllll~
,
,
.
'
.
_
·
_
.
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_
.
·
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:
.
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;
.
.
.
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•
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·
.
:
,
.
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'
•
'
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•
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PAGE4
VOLUME 12
Marfst College,
_
Poughkeepsie,
N.V.
·
NUMBER
2
.
Co-Editors
LaywtEditcr
News Editor
.
PhotographyEdito
_
r
Jim
Keegan
and
Aime
Trabulsi.
1
LynOsbome\
Greg ConnQChioli:
Dave Pristash
.
.
.
.
Sf:aff: Tim DeBawt, Paul Pifferi, Karen Tully, Brian Morris,
Dume Petress, Mare Monsar~t, Bob Creedon, Ray Barger,
Brendan Boyle, Irene Ross;
.
Elizabeth Spiro Wayne Brio
Bill
Spra~e, John
T.
·
Clancy, Debby Nykiel, Charles DeP~cin,
Cathie Russo, James Burke, Joan McDermott.
Business Managers
·
Jack Reigle, Mark Fitzgibbon
.
.
Editorials
THE
CIRCLE
FEBRUARY?, 1974
Letters To The Editor
Racism
.
In
America
It
is a system of white
propagation
of
"Jensenism" is to
supremacism in which whites
perpetuate a system which is
.
have greater opportunities, have
daily
·
denying
·
rights
·
to
~
·
nm-.
To the Editor:
greater
·
life expectancies, earn
whites,
that
is,
denying people
Jim Elliott has raised
~
more money, have higher status~ freedom. Therefore, to argue that
number of questions which the and have access to better the
First
Amendment allows one
soon-to-be-formed
Marist housing, food; health services,
the freedom to advocate a doc-
Committee
Against
Racism will and education. Such a system
·
trine which
·
denies others their
be
.
examining in depth
.
At this
.
growtded in racial inequality
freedom is
:
a.
cootradictfon, a
·
time I would like to make
.
the generates racis
_
t ideas like
contradiction which would be
following point in reply
.
"Jensenism" and gives them life.
absurd were
.
it not for its terrible
Racism in North America is not These ideas are then used to consequences.
, .
•
just an idea. It is
.
first and justify
·
the privileged position of
foremost a system whereby non-
those benefitting from white
whites are considered to be and supremacism.
_
Hence, one very
.
are treated as inferior to whites.
-
important
effect
of
·
the
Sincerely,
Richard Bickley
HEOP Reexamined
because of the
·
facts that lie
other students, but
I
question
before them .. Most of the black other_ students accepting
:
them.
,
·
student population at
.
.
Marist
The H.E.O.P. has organized the
To the Editor:
.
. .
.
College live in Benoit. Rarely do I
Big Br:other program,' not only to
.
.
In
~he past few months I've see the cafeteria integrated.
help their students academically,
expE:nenced a l~t
~
pe~ple of Whenever I walk there, I always
·
~lso so
·
.
that interpersonal
Manst College. I fmd it sur- see the black students in their
relationships
··
can develope
!?rising how little kn~wledge ma.t corner. When will the day come,
among students.
If
you are
a
non
of the
_
stu~ent body is aware_of or if
_
separation
.
is to
.
fall behind us,
-
·
H.E.O.P. student anda:recurious
properly informed on the Higher thatwe look at each and feel free
.
about the prog1
:a
m, or want to be
0
1\6
d
E duca tiona l
,
Opportunity to change the conditional pattern
a Big Broth
.
er or
-
Big Sister, come
·
.
n,.,..on ay (February
4)
an amendment to the Education Law
was
Program, (H.E.O.P.). I've and sit beside each other? Black
a be a part
;
The office is located
p~c~dontheflooroft~elegis~atureinAlb~y_.
_
.
-
spoken to students, who see the
·
students who live in Benoit; live
in Room C
no.
Speak to Mrs.
Tuition
·
Assistance
his a~e!ldment
wtll
provxde for t~e Ttut10n ,:tss1stance Pf!>gram program
as
something for bla
_
ck there through their own choice.
Gomez and Richard
""
Green
·
or
(TAP) devise~ by th_e Select Comnut_!ee on Higher Education.
If
-
students, therefore, they cannot Th
.
ey
·
are not there t
.
0
separa
.
te
h ·
·
d
·
·
d
·
·
pas54a!d, TAP
w~
provide_more mo~ey for students. When fully funded, be a part. However, this js not themse
_
Ives from the rest of the anyone w
O
is aroun an you
.TAP could provide maxunum asststa~ce
_
of $17()0
,
(TAP would sup- true. O~e
_
of the major factors Marist community but
'
for the
.
will get fact~ and information on
plant ~r ph~e o
_
ll~ the Scholar Incentive progra~ now currently
111
that brought
_
about the program
.
sake of
self
awaren~ss that is best
.
what you
.
,
want
_
to
.
know; you Illay
operation:)
-
. .
_,
.
.
·
·
-was to
open the doors of higher broughtoutthroughtheirspiritof
·
;~:~
-
~
-
~ake
·.
a
_·
new
'
e~erla5ting
·
. The &oals of TAP
_
are to maxuruze oppQrtu_mtl~s for all students to
_
learll!ng
.
possible for financially an extended
·•
family.
_
Knowin
·
·
th
enter higher ~ducatlon _and to foster and mamtam a healtlly bal
_
ance han~cappe~ people not their_ most of the · students in Benof
...
.
-
~~lie
:r~~::
.
between public an~ private sch?ols
.
.
.
-
.
.
-
ethnic background.
_
.
ersonall !find most of them to
__
_
The plans for the unplementatl~m of ~AP are many. The plan_which
I guess the
.
m~jority of
_
the be opent"experienced and in-
H;E.O
.
P .
. was pla~ed on
.
the floo_r
of
the legIBlat!ll"e
-
on Monday. will
-
not students make their assumptions telligent. I know they
.
accep
·
t'
necess
.
arily be
.
the operational plan of TAP
if
and when TAP becomes
c
·
·
t
...
&
..
·
:,
·-
·'
·
.
.
JaW;
I
.
·
.
.··
·
.
.
ommu ers
.
The particular plan of implementation is secondary at
_
this moment
. ·
·
·
·
classes on both students and
·
time
.. -
.
commuters,
.
as Dean
.-
to the more important problem of getting the concept or goals of TAP
The Sch ed
u
I e
pro~~sors, willbEl detrimentalto
Carolan damied, the
:
eonunuter
accepted bythe legislature.
_
.
•
-
,
·
·
.
.
_
·
.
· .
·
.
-
our education.
'
The full-time
.
Union
'
shoW.d have
-
been
·
con-
Once the goals of TAP would
be
accepted, thP.11 energiesfoust be To
-
the Editor:
_
.
.
..
_
commuter, likethe resident
/
has
sulted. We werenot;fo•fact
;
tbis
spent in getting a pa~icular plan of implementation accepted.
·
·•-
·
lam
writing as President of the
·
.·
a
:
right
to
expect full value for his
·
schedule
IS
being implemented
to
.
..
·
Thus there are two distinct aspects inthe possible passage of TAP: CoIDilluter
,
Union,to express
t
for
tuition and not
-
appeals
..
to
.,
.'
.
'ad-
.
:
make
_
the
'
cgllege more attractive
_
~) the a
_
ccep~nce of the goals of TAP
.
;
·
:and
1
2) the partiimai:
.
Plan
;
o! Jh~
.
~~co_:~4,
•,
'
,
o~'r)>ppositi
_
o~
'._
to
~
tl:!.e
\
iu~y•
.:_
to a sit~ti<>n
:-
~lli®
_
:
Jhe
·
;
to
_
par~
::
ti:r:n~,
..
tuition
~
paying
unplementation of TAP. ·
_
,
·
. •
· .
.
•
.
, . ".
· .
· ·
·
:,
i
·.·
new class
.'.
scned_ule
•
approved ;on
>
s~u~ent,body
:
9o~s
~ot support.
':
•
.
stude~ts
-
~ijo
,:
are not
.
even
~
here
..
While this paper will continue to keep the Resident Students of New February
J
.1
'>
·
'
.
·
·
·
i
.
,
·
··
·_.
Lastly, l would like
to
'express
:.··
'
yet! Ahd we
•
·
studepts'
'.
wliif
]
iave
York State advisedof the status of the Amendment, it
·
would also like
·
...
We,
,·
along .with the Student my disappointment with the
.
way
.
invest:e(\ time and mori~y':'
in
our
to
remind students of their responsibilities and individual reactions
to
Government
0:
President,
·
Student
·
in
which the conuputirlg students'
.
education
,
here,
·
·
resident
:
:
.
and
·
the proposed program, and that it will promote appropriate action to Policy BoarcL~d the SAC, feel
. _
iniljge has been used tQjustify
·
commuter alike, will suffer
·
the
be taken by its readers.
·
·
·
·
thafthis type of schedule
;
with
.
this schedtile.
,
Had the schedule
consequences.
·
·,.
- - - -
·
·
-
the
,
Pressure >of 75-jli0 minute
·
been designed for present
part-.
:
·
·
·
--
-CluisWise
.
.
,
Commuter
-
Union
Aca
o
dem
·
·1
·
c
;
··
R
.
e
·
.
.
v
.
·
:
·,e
·
W
.
Carolan
Challenged
: -
commutersthetrouble
·
ofconiing
.:
most students were totally
into school five days a
week,
and , unaware
of
the
·
proposal until
.
the
'--
I have never been good at reduce this to three
_
_
or foin: days.
CIRCLE covered it in it_s January
A"
signific~t number _of Marist freshm~n
-
compieted the Fall \
973
·
discussing issues with that great Yet, the Commuter
-
Union was at 31 issu
_
e
.
Ironically, January 31
semes~er ';"'1th grade pomt ~vera~es of
_
less than L3.5. Although none American modicum of. "fat talk" no
:
time consulted about how
·
was also the deadline for written
were dism~ssed, an Acadenuc Review will take action at the
.
end of the ..: which means
,
the use of commuters themselves
·
felt.
reactions to the proposal, as
semester if the ~tudents' marks do not improve;
.
.
monosyllabic words for the sheer Why?
_
stated by Dean Carolan .in his
In ord~rto achieve the necessary 2.0, these students will be required purpose of
_
obfuscating meanings
•
The reason
to
this question is
Dec. 12 rriaJling,
0
•
•
..
to at least double their performance
of
last semester. Is this possible of and intentions.
simple: the members of the
_
C.U.
3
:
)
·
None of the
'
student
studentswhomaybeuncertainaboutbeingincollege?
.
On that note, I wciuld like to see
.
an extremely strange con~
organizations asked gave
·
their
,
.
It
ha~ beer:i a1:}ege~
_
that pooradvisement, as well as unreadiness, request that Kevin Carolan;
·
the tradictionpresentedwhen,onone
acceptance
.
to the schedule
has led to thIB sttua~1on, _and the presen~e of freshmen in upper level Associate Dean for Academic
,
hand, Dean
·
earolan wants to
change. The Student
-·
·
Govem-
course~ ~oes not belie t~s. Has our advxsement deteriorated so much Services, put the real
·
cards
nn
save the commuters some money
ment, and its Policy
,
Board,
that this
1S
the result or 1s it that in the crunch for students, Marist is the table and explain
,-
the real while the administration plans to
which heard Dean
·
Carolan's -
accepting students who cannot do the work?
,
motives for instituting the new
·
~ncrease the tuition by
$4
·
per
·
point of view
-
cin that key date of
,
The Circle would like
to
suggest
·
that the Academic Review be time schedul_e._As
h~
and the
.
rest credit hour next year. Let's face the 31st, voted against
-
the plan's
tempered so that merit and improvement will be rewarded. For sonie
I
of
t_h~
a~istration _h11v~
ef-
it squarely, and admit ths.rtimes
.
approval
.
At
that meeting,
;
Dean
~reshm~ students, a 2.0 cumulative average after next semester
is
an · fectlvely railroaded this hiijhlY are
·
bad, and the
-
Marist ad-
Carolan
.
indicated that he
·
·
had
'
1J?P'?~1ble
.
dream .
.
We
:
would· hq>e that those students who show
.
unpop~a~
:
class . s~ema mto ministration is Pl'.eparing for the faculty support which this writer
:
significant improvement and maturity
will
be allowed to continue.
operation
·
~egmnmg . next
·
worst economically. Thi~ is why
has not seen, and then he went on
We _are not advocating the
_
.
carrying
..
of large numbers of
·
semeste~, I
,
thmk he o.wes
us
·
.
an
new schedules and increases
·
in
.
to say that the current schedule
p~obatioi:iar}'. students, but we believe that these freshmen ought to be explanation of the _motives
_
which
·
-
tuition
·
:
have
.
been
.
summarily
,,
hadn't been approv~d by students
·
··
given a fighting chance. Otherwise they are just
.
wasting time _ theirs are blatantly obvious to me
.
as whisked
·
through with breath
-
or incoming
,
freshnien;
·
implying
·
and everyone
.
else's.
.·
..
·
·
-
•.
.
·
·
·
,
·
·
well as most other students and talting fil)eed.
,
·
·
-
that student
.
·
support
·
was not
·
-----'-
faculty members.
Although the new schedule has · really needed now either .
.
·
, ·
·
-
·
'
I've been involved in the been
·
·
raHroaded into effect
4.)
The schedule was approyed
Commute
_
~ Union for two
·
years,
·
starting next fall,
:
I
-·
wish to
on January 31, when the Office of
and from the difficulty
·
C.U. publicly expose the
·
methods
the
·
Academic Dean made its
-
.
. mem~rs have ~perienced in employed
·
to_ assure
,
Jts
, ·
enact-
..
\
decision. In a meeting
.'
of various
·.
creating progressive change on ment.
l
publicly challenge Deari
student Jeaders .
.
with
.
-·
ad-
·
_
·
On Friday February 8,
.
eight Vassar College students were among behalf <>f commuting students, I Carolan to defend these methods,
ministratiort in Dean LaPietca's -
those
41
Dutchess Cowtty residents arrested
.
in what has been have built up a suspicious n
.
ature
· ·
and to support them
'
as fair and
,
office that
.
same t;lftenioon
·
.
the
.
classified
as
_
the largest !lrug r~d in
·
the state since the riew drug lavt which reacts violently ~hen I see orthodox. H
_
ere isJlC>w the new
·
students
>
-
.
for the most 'part
.
became effective last Septembet. Under
this
new statute.
,
both users and hear peop_le ~1ke Dean cl~s schedul~
:
became a
,
reality
unhappy with the decision.:.. were
and sellers of drugs are treated with
the
same
-
ferocity, which could
.
Carolan
·
expressing
.
_ . grave
)
which ~ou, all o! the students and
_
-
ask~d
·
to
•:
rally
:
the
·
campus
·
·
.
orugs?
. result in prison terms of as much$ 15 years to life. This premise conce
_
rn
~bout .
,
pan-ume faculty of M;an.st,
-
ar~
going
:
tQ
·
c.ommunity behind
'
the newclass
along with the question of interpretation that tlie
courts
will give the students
~
•. It.1s.n?~ 1.Qacc~~te to havetofac~
_
n.ext seJI1ester:;
.
_schedule
;
·,
·.
,
:·
,
·
-
:
.
new law are more than enough to raise our consciousness in this area .
.
.
comI?are
·
my ,mi~al
.
fee~g at
,
1
.
)
The_ origmal proposal f?r
.
a·
·
· Dean Carolan, I defy you to find
.
.
Until those unexpected arrests occur~d; the reality of the new law
-
re~ding a~d h~nng
.
o.f bis. ~on~
..
master
:
tune schedul~ co.n~~ned
·
any ·untruths
~
in the above· the
·
had shown
very
little irlfluence, if
_
any,
·
on stude~ts and their
.
~
of
.
c~_rn
f~~
·
_
savmg
.'.
'part-time fow:teen
.
slots,. an~ was mailedto
_ :
a1?9ve se,q~ence
_
of
.
eve
11
ts
:
'.
•
con-
·.
drugs. But now, stud
.
en ts must realize the cormo~tions that such a law
·
_
st~dents
.
·.
so
_
megaso.liil~ ancl a~o
.
various
;
orgammtlons ~n
ca
_
inpus
.
stitutes
_
r~lr~ading
m
··
my mind,
•.
,,
refiec~ and how it affects tQeir desire to possess or
.
traffic drugs
iri
expen~es to t~e
_
teac~1on
.
which
·
,
0
n
.
Pecember)2i
·
Please
,
n.ote that
·
and
:
a c~~plete
,
disregard
,
of
·
any way~ It must
be
clearly wtderstood
.
that
~
.
.
law treats the users that
_·
fl!'St
·
~lack Panther-:
·
~!-15t
:
·
this
.
was
,
durmg_
_
exam wee~;
·
,
as
studen~ opmions or ideas
,
'.
I doubt
.
and _sellers of
.
co~ine, and ev
.
en marijuana,
:
with
·
the
.
same severe , hav;e e~e.r1en~e~ upo~ rec~ivmg the
CIRCLE
.
~
~a~
11ot published
,
.
:
seriously
~·:
that
:
~a11y
;J
,f
:;
th~. •
·
punishment
.
that
·
IS
·
given: to
.
the
'
~llers
.
of the
,
even
_
more addictive
.
an _invitation
.
to
~
~
LE!()ri
,
ard
.
Bern-.
,
·
that ;week, ~e proposa,l cou!d
.
not
.
·
.
st11dents
:·
llere Jmow
·
·
about
.··
the
..
dnigs sucll
as
heroiJi.:Also, we triust
:
be.
·
even
_
mcire aware
:
of
.
the fact
-
_
~tem
_
party;
>
--
.
,:
;
·
:
·
..
,
;': ·
.
,
poSSibly
.
be
:
brought to
.
-
~e.
.
_
at
~
appr~val
:
':
of
<
the new
:
schedule
_
:
.
.
that it
nils
now
taken
.
the
state
almost
f<Kir
.
niooths
to
"accumulate'
t11e·
:".
·
De.!ln
:.
Carolail
:
.
wrot~,
-
~
:
m.
-
:
his.
:
:
t~tion
>
_
of
.
·
_
the
<
campus
,
com
-
:
_
:
_
even now, let
'
alone the
'
methods
_
.
__
·._
.
machineey' .... that
is
.
necessaryhienforcirig such
'
a law
'
and that the feplY.
-
to
~
~~of
,~
7
-
~
:
rejection
•,
-
.
.
tnunj.ty;
-
.
..
.. ·
•
':
·
:
-
~
-:
:
.
:
·
:
-
•,
us¥
·
to
''.'
insure
.
•
'
and
'
hasteri
'.··
it.,
_.
~
event.<foflastFriday aremel'.elyasigii
<ithings to
come.
)
:
\
\
,
<
:_:-
,
r
•
·
..
_
oftheproposecinew
,
schedule (the.
;
-;__
.
:
~
;
):
•
~
-
the
.
,
CIRCLE
·
c~ul
_
d
:
n~
_
~
:
:-.
approyal:
'.,l'JJis
'
decisiofr
•
and
.
the
·:
..
•
.·
..
·
·
·
·
· ,
_·
.·
· <.
,<. ,
,·
.
·
·
·
·
·.
··
..
"··
··::::,>
' -·
, ,:--,
·
. ·
·
·,CIRCLE;January
.
31
,
,
1974),that have been•published
·
duiing
tfie
--,·
•
· '
: ;-. ·::
C
•• ·_
i••
;
•--;
:,
:•:
,c
:
,
:::
,
·
.
,
.
~
.
·
.
.
.
.
:
'.,
,
.
,
:
·
~
.
:
.
ne~
'-
scnediile
:
will
,
'~ve·
'
•
first
:·
wee~'
ba~~
:_,
fi~
\
-~8~':I
:
: .
.
.
CONTfi;lU
:
El>ONt..\G~S
.-
>
~.
,
'
·
.
:
.
'
'
·
...
' : ·
~
,
:
,, .
•
~
•••
•
•
,
.
•
.;
.
,
•
'·
••
·
'
.
, ·
.,
..
. . . . ,
' ;,,
f
.
·
' '
•
.
,
,
.
I
•
'
.
'
·1 ..
;
L
.
_\
.
_
_
FEBRUARY
7, 1974
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
More Letters To The Editor
.
The
Gulag
Challenge
attending real colleges and
universities
for
academic
reasons are mature enough to
breakneck speed with which it accept a five-day week; and a
was made cannot be
·
excused
·
as system which allows students to
an "emergency energy
crisis
take
all
their classes in fewer
action". Also,
if
you really had
an
days is-not an
asset
as far
as
interest in
.
student feelings uplifting academic performance.
regarding your proposal, you
Another reason you give
is
''to
certainly would have seen to it provide regularly scheduled time
that more time was given
to
the slots for workshops, demon-
campus community
to
express strations, labs, multi-media
their opinions. This letter is my lectures and cultural activities."
equivalent of the "written Dean Carolan, this above quote
comment which
I
couldn't submit represents an exercise in
before January 31.
meaningless rehetoric. From
.
Having
·
discussed the actual previous experience, I know that
approval of the proposal, I'd like Marist College isn't exceptionally
to turn now to your reasons, as well-equipped to provide
all
of
stated in
.
the initial enclosure these new academic services on a
mailed on December
·
12. While prolific, regular basis. Some
facilities may be used more ef- classes aren't even
of
the nature
ficiently and energy may be of the above; cultural activities
conserve$!. in a truly minimal aren't exactly
.
integral parts of a
scale,
·
I
disagree with
.
your math class, !or example. T~e new
statement that one POint in favor. sc~edule will do away with
50-
of the proposal was
"to
make it minute classes
,
and replace them
easier for students to arrange with either 75-minute or even
150-
their schedules
.
" To my way of ~ut~
.
periods which will be an
thinking, real students who are unbearable strain on
,
the at-
Affair
.·
By
Cathie Russo
thorough investigation to seek out
-
Soviet lampoon sent abroad by
schema;
not dubious
ex-
planations which look substantial
until one actually explores them.
As
far
as
the approval
is
concerned, it looks like students
will have
to
a ccept
this
decision
next semester and face extended
classes. Hopefully, some good
will be forthcoming; perhaps
Marist students will become
aroused by this to start
demanding that they
be
con-
sidered as people with voices in
campus affairs. Greatly disap-
pointing was the inadequacy of
·
the student organizations (i.e.,
the Student Government) in
effectively expressing its disdain
for the new schedule. This
failure, I feel
,
is not attributable
.
to the students
.
who are active in
these organizations. The real
weaknesses are inherent in the
disorganized, confusing mass of
committees,
boards,
and
organizations which seem unable
to coordinate themselves ef-
fectively on a major issue.
Perhaps this episode in the
an-
nals of Marist bureaucratic
conquest could have been
'
avoided
if
student power had
been more centralized.
Unless you are fortunate
enough to be transferring or
graduating at the close of this
semester, however, you've got
two treats awaiting you in the
fall: increased tuition and
.
ex-
tended classes. Enjoy?
Russian
·
author Alexander the· manuscript. - After
.
a brutal M
_
r. Solzhenitsyn in the guise of a
Solzhenitsyn is presently amid a KGB interrogation which
·
took New Year gift
.
"
tention spans of students, and
quite likely; faculty. I feel you are
undermining the quality of the
educational experience which
Marist students will receive.
Classes of such extended
duration are real impositions
when they become the rule, and
not the exception - as a student's
three-hour night class is now.
Dean Carolan, I am asking for
the real reasons for the new
Rick
Whitesell
vast Kremlin controversy due to place
··
1ast fall, a
._
·
friend of
Gulag Archipelago did · not
t~e publication of his_most recent Solzhenitsyn'irgav~
·
upa copy of. bring
.
with it the first trains
bookTheqJJiagArchipalago. The the manuscript then committed between Solzhitsyn and the
Nobel~prize-w!~ning
·
author's
·
suicide. Once the Soviet Union Russian government. Referring
,
latest
.
book is
. _
.
a
600
_
.
'
·
page go_thold of the manuscript within to A Day in the Life of Ivan
docuinentl:iry based on the Soviet
·
the country and
.
the
·
names arid
'.
.
Denisovich, Nikita Khrushchev
srst~m fro~ 1918
to
1956,
h'1-
details coritairied within it,
:
commented
to
his fellow party
clu~mg
.
_his _eleven~year
·
e~~
Solzhenitsyn
'"'
_
saw no further leaders, "Take my ,word for it,
.
pe~ie:nce
_
m
.
prison camps an~
_
,
m reason
.
to ~elay
_
publishing.
·
T_he this
·
is a very dangerous theme.
.
ex,ile
,
._
as well
;
~
.
Ie~e~
J
.hat
.
he
,:
plans kept
-
secret by the author's It's a kind
.
of stew that will attract
Employees
Beware!
;~
.
.
:~~c~i.y:~ci,Ji.ofn.
/
e~j>nso;i
_
ers
..
~!Jd
·
)fiw'ye(
;
·in
i.'
Switzerlari
•
d
,
-
were fUes like
,
a carcaSB;
·
au sorts
·
,
of.
·
·
.
.
mtervie
_
ws th~t he conducted with announced. In
_.,
the United States, bougeois scum from abr~d will
the 227
.
surVIvors of the slave- publication by Harper
•
and Row come
-
crawling all over
it."
/
lapor ~airiP~:
.
.
·
-:
.
will begin in the Spring
.
Four
·
Since 1966, the name Alexander
WASHINGTON - Around many
.
The Commission's own records
petty or
.
industry
~
indentured in the
·
case contradict this
bureaucracies in Washington, the
evasion
.
and
.
support
the
best civil seryants are in a disclosure of the overrun as the
conflict of allegiances. By motivation for Fitzgerald's
Gula~
.
Archipalago
·
st~tes European countries will also Solzhenitsyn is
-
no longer men-
Solzhemtsyn's rejection of
·
the begin
,
publishing.
·
tioned in articles of literary
~remlin's af{irIIlati~D: that Stalin
Within the Soviet Union an criticism
.
The secret police have
was s
_
olely
·
respon~ible
_
for the announcement was
.
made by in the past confiscated his per-
terroris~ of his_ time
.
Instead, Boris Pankin, head of the newly sonal papers and records along
• ~olzh~mtsyn attributes the mass organized Soviet copywrite with the typescript of his novel
imprisonment and executions organization,
:
that citizens who The First Circle. He found
· under Stalin to Lenin:s establish- send manuscripts out of the
·
evidence that
art
electronic bug
Jllent
.
. of
a
·
.
po_hce
st~ te. country· would be
·
arrested and was installed in
.
his house. He
Professio~al byp~otists recrll;lted charged. with smuggling . .for this
·
accepted speaking dates for
.
under
Lemn
acquired confesSions Solzhenitsyn could spend as long various professional and cultural
·
f~om gover~e~t leaders
·
at_ the as ten years in
.
prison and five groups, often in confidence, and
.
time of_ Stalm s purge
·
tnals
.
years in exne. Soviet news then found that everyone of them
Other disc~osures of G~lag are agency TASS postponed
-
calling had been mysteriously cancelled,
thesugge
_
st1onsthatStalinwas
an
for the arrest of Solzhenitsyn. sometimes hours before the
undercover agent of the
.
Czarist The Kremlin's indecision about event.
secret
.
~lice in t~e disguise of a dealing with the author is due to
In a Nobel lecture for One
·
Day
Bol~heVIkrevolutionary,andthat the sensitivity of S
_
Qviet-Westem in the Life
_
of Ivan Denisovich,
·
.
Stalin had
_
planned a large scale relationships. Protest from
-
which he could not deliver for
massa~re of
·
Je~s in 1953 which abroad
.
brings with it the fear
of
becoming
exiled,
was-foile~ by his
·
~eath.
.
possibility
.
of
.
disturbing Soviet Solshenitsyn
described
his
.
..c
:
Solzhen
_
itsyn estimat~ that
m
hopes for Western economic aid .
.
feelings for the significance of
~~Y
_on~year of the St~lin ~ra, 12 At the same t~e Solzhenitsyn
'
s free expression
:
when he wrote
·
million
.
peop!e were
_
imprisoned plea
_
for
_
punishment
_
of those "Woe
·
betide the nation whose
..
. or ell:ecut~ m ll~sia. In Gulag guilty of crime in that ~ra
is
in
·
literature is interpreted by force.
>
Archipelago, he firmly calls for-
.
defiance of Socialist authority.
A
It
is the .incarceration of the
the- punishment of_ those who January 14, 1974 .issue of Time
·
nation's heart, the amputation of
.
composed
the
"machine" quoteda government spokesman the nation's meinory."
·
responsible for such devastating as saying "The book is an anit-
·
afflictions
·
against
.
the Soviet
· ,,
·
people.
M k S
T M
•
.
Research for
.
Gulag began
iri
0C
enate
O
eet
1958.
It
was
·
not until 1964, that
•
Solzhenitsyn began :writing. The
.
1962 publication of One Day in the
By
Mary Monsaert
representative and Kathie.Russo
· Life of Ivan· Denisovich, which
sophomore representative. The
.
won Solzhenitsyn the Nobel FTize
The
24th annual meeting
.
of the fac~ty advisor is Mr. Sims.
for Literature,
_
prompted hun- New York State Intercollegiate
The Mock Senate is an actual·
dJ:eds
•
~t
..
fonner prisoners
·
to Mock Senate will
_
be held
on
April corporation.
It
has been in
.
.
.
write
·
·to the author describing 17th
to
.
~
1st
m_
-~e Senate existence for
24
years. For four
.
their own exp
_
eriences
.
linpeUed
_
Chambers urAlbany, New
_
Yo~.· da.ys the delegation actually
·
by
t~e
corres~on_denc~s, Tile purpose of
.
these
.
m~etmgs
lS
·
reenacts the entire legfslative
Solzhenitsyn worked m isolation to ~nhan~ t_he ~ucc1tional ~- · procedure. Bills are proposed
un
_
til completion of Gulag in 1968
;
p~rience
m
.
.
·
the · l~w
·
.~mg and written by the
.
delegation
.
Unwilling
.
to
_.
ri,sk jeopardizing
..
process. The
.
delegation
15
made prior to the
.
attending of the
.
.
any oLhlil
.
cor:respondents or u~ of colleges from the New York
.
.
session.
._ .
,
.
.
.
.
interviewees- by pe~itting the ~tate ~re
.
a. ~ t y~r, ~4. colleges
•
.
.
.
.
: :
'
publi~atioh of Gulag Archipela~o m~luding
M~ist,
__
parti
_
~tpated
fn
'
·
.
Anyone who might
be
- m
tht?
,W~st;
_
he gave p~ts
of
,
his thishis
.
~µcat
.
ionaldeelxperi~nce. ·
.-
interested
.
in attending
:
this
.
,
.
:
.
manuscr!pt
.
.
to
clqse fnends for
.
_
.
1'
_
.
.
~~
_
rs
·
. ega
_
tion
,
fr.om
program
is
asked to contact
Joe .
.
s~ekeepll.}g; Later, l>y.
_
unkno~
:Ma~~
st
.
mc~ude the. fol~owmg Mirrione delegation leader or
·
-:_
~
· ·
m ~
-
.
he
sen.t the
,
~nuscrJpt
,~
P~litical Sci~~ l!~Jors .
.
Tom Mr.
s~.
..
-
.
·
.
'
--~~i:oad
;
~earing
.
~at
parts
of the Kelly.
J~
.
-
Mimone, and frank
·
·
·
obeying unjust or corrupt orders, forced departure. So calculated
•
they are violating their
.
personal was
the
enmity of his superiors
obligation of public trust in
.
their
that
the Air Force Office of
public office. By disobeying such Special Investigations destroyed
orders, they run the risk
of
being all favorable reports returned on
fired or isolated into an empty Fitzgerald as a
.
result
of
their
office with empty duties. ·
investigations. In a memo from
It
is not easy from many White House aide, Alexander
conscientious government em-
Butterfield to H.R. Haldeman on
ployees to learn that the way to January
20,
1970,
But-
lose your job is to do your job.
terfield said: "Fitzgerald is no
Ernest Fitzgerald, the former doubt a top-notched cost expert,
cost reduction expert for the but he must be given very low
Pentagon, learned the hard way marks in loyalty; and after all
when he fought against waste as loyalty is the name of the game.,:
a way of doing business in
Loyalty to whom and for what?
defense contracting. In 1968, he The Code of Ethics for Govern-
"committed truth" (as he put it) ment Servic-?
·
- a little read
by
.
testifying before Senator ~ocument - states: "Any person
William Proxmire's committee
m
Governmental service should
about a $2 billion overrun on the put loyalty to the highest moral
Lockheed C5A cargo plane principles and to country above
contract. Although supported by loyalty
to
person, party
,
or
several members of· Congress Government department."
and newspaper editorials, Fit-
The CSC avoided a proper
zgerald lost his job.
It
took over
a
opportunity to ascribe respon-
year for
,
top Pentagon and White sibility to Fitzgerald's superiors
House officials
to
effect his who escaped all accountability
separation from the Department
•
for their collusive and illegal
by abolishing his position,
as
a
behavior
.
It failed to order the
Pentagon "economy move" no Air Force to include· reasonable
·
less!
-
legal expenses as
a
part of the
Fitzgerald, unlike many heroic retroactive pay due Fitzgerald.
civil servants who suffer -their Had he been required to pay for
expulsion or demotim in silence, the ACLU's legal services, his
decided to fight back
.
Assisted by legal expenses would have more
the American Civil Liberties than absorbed his back pay of
Uni~n•s lawyers, Fitzgerald $100,000
.
·
.
obtained last month an order
So the
·
Fitzgerald case,
from the Civil Service Com-
however it may cast credit on one
mission (CSC) to reinstate him at man's stamina and accuracy, is
the Pentagon with $100,000 -back not likely
to
help other civil
pay.
.
servants who are daily ordered or
·
It
was not a satisfactory vie-
expected
'
to cover-up, violate
tory and Fitzgerald may decide their department's own rules
to appeal. For one thing, the CSC expose the citizen
·
to un:
did not conclude that ·he was conscionable abuse or waste the
·
dismissed because he blew
·
the taxpayer's money.
· ·.
m~uscript
were
·
m
.
the
·
country,
.
~
M ~ ,
_all
~f
.
wh~ are
~ruo:-1:
.
the KGB, Soviet police/ begari a
·
Jean for~siaL ls
-
the 1umor
·
,
whistle on the
C5A waste before
.
Few people outside Washington
the Joint Economic Committee of realize how important it
is
to
Congres,g.
,
It
stated,
incredibly, reform the Civil Service
_
Com-
enough, that the Pentagon fired mission
so
that it supports the
h~ because the
·
Department compete~t and law-abiding civil
believed he
·
was
the
.
cause
.
of servant instead of shielding the
·
•'•~just.
publicity~' in the
·
press. corrupt,
partisan,
lazy
or
well-:
...
'
.
COMected officials
.
.
· ·
·-:
-~
;
-
··
;·
.
:-~•
.,
;
_
..
~
.
:
:
:·
·
:
··
•
•
.
·•
•
·:·
. ·
-
,_
·
-
.
· •
.
·
.
-·
'
•
.
•
•
-~
-
-
-
•
''_1_
.
':.•
.
.
.
......
.
,
'
,t'
'
.
,
.
·
• '
.
..
·-
·
- - · · - -
-
'
.
f
' :
'
' ;
' .
.
•
• •
.'
.
'
-,
'
I
• ,
I
-
....
;
'
..
:.
.
:
:
.
:
.
'
..
.
'
-
-
~
..
.
'.
....
~
--
'
"
',.
,
-
-
.
4!.
PAGE6
FEBRUARY 7, 1974
-
:
.
.
·
..
Shout It Softly
by
Fr. Leo Gallant
students. And it'll take a few
more ·days , for this
·
old sen-
I have one
thing
to say this timental slob
of
a priest· to get
week:
Thanks.
Thanks to all who over it.
.
made my anniversary, 25th as a
Special thanks to the Campus
priest, so pleasurable, so great. Ministry
team,
to Saga, to Bro.
.
So many were involved in
,
John Sullivan's choral grwp and
planning and carrying out the to Maggie.
.
.
·
·
dinner
.
and the Mass that I
God cannot be defined or
en•
wouldn't be able to mention all
by
.
tombed in words but
he
can be
'
.
name. There was such secrecy made visible in people. Through chaplain who's trying to
.
do his
that I still don't know who all the
.
the prisms of Iov~ pe~ple I ~an job as well as he can, a job that is
culprits were.
.
glimpse his radiant
light, ~ -
s~ ~uctured, so un~fin~,
·
.
Iammostgratefultothosewho self, presen~ in ~en:s h~es,
~
w~t~ a lot of hit and nnss, m-
got my mother to c01ne.
It
was their ideals, m then- lives, m th1:1-r
I
twtlon, gamble and gambol). So I
like a scene from Going My Way,
dignity as individuals,
(10
guess I can ~y I have_ truly se~
.
when she appeared from behind
.
students who are so co!lcerned, so God and that s one thing I don t
.
the group of happy, singing
affectionate, so car.mg for a shout softly.
'I'hird
Y
e,ar.
View
.
by
Bob Nelson
One of
·
the letters recently
printed on
.
the editorial page
.
of
·
the Circle gives me a chance to
rebut some of its writer's notions
,
while
stating my own position,
and
to
analyze, though in
.
a
superficial
way,...
the
.
unwritten
assumptions behind his ideas.
_
I
refer the reader to the November
·
8 issue of the Circle page four, the
letter signed by James B,
Browning
,
Class
-
of.
.
'75,
University
of
_
York, England. having
.
been
capable
of
·
Although I have
,
never met the Watergate, or praised for
,
person in question, his letter is a reacting against
.
Watergate; the
good example of the inner con-
United States is criticized for her
flict
an
American
·
plight
·
_
feel imperialist foreign po~cy ~r (or
when living abroad
;
Should
Mr.
harboring the mul~matlonal
Browning read
'
this
;
_
column, I
corporations; but the
u.s.
is not
urge him to criticize
it,
saying criticized
_
because of Nixon's
whether or not it reflects the crimes _;, foreign oooervers are
.
feelings
he
a
·
ctually experienced. intelligent enough to
_
discern
For, unlike
.
the natural
·
sciences, between the man and the system.
· the subject of the social sciences-
.
But the quotation
_
dted
·
above
.
·
- man - is
a
living being with his further shows the cultural con-
own will and ~e
·
ab~ty
_
to flict
·
experiencedby its
,
_
author,
.
respond_ to the studies earned, out who y.ras presenterl with a nevy
~~
abo~t
him._
_
.
.
.
of facts (the views
of
~e Bntish
_
It~ posSl~le
_
to mfer ~rom
_
this. press on Watergate) which did
~etter t~at
·
i~ ~uthor is eit~er
·
not agree \Yith the old theories he
apathetic, that is, 1¥1concer!1,ed
had formed on what foreigners
with poHtics; ~r
-
conservative. would think of the United States.
Note some of his phrases: ."~
'
m
It
is
perhaps a sign
_
of ~rowning's
n~t on~, t~
,
expre~ my pol
_
ibCcll
malaise
,
_
.
springmg from
views__.
I behev:e that the
.
nationalist feelings that are being
·
government works for the_ good
_
9f
derided that his
.
· very political
the peopl~,'~ _and ''I have stood up
socia~tion is put in question, as ·
for the prm~iples !fat my country
,
·
shown by the questions he poses
:
was
.
founde~ ~n
. _
The last two
-
_
"Has the country
·
gone com-
statements, m _particu!ar, reflect
pletely crazy?" and
.-
"Have we
two
.
of the basic prenuses of our
,
any morals?" and "Who has the
common cult~e,and atte~ to the right to say what is and what isn't
fact_ t~at their author IS ~ully
.
the law?" These are basic
sociahzed
.
to the. ~meric~n quesiions indeed, questions
.
t~at
cul~~e, and,
.
specifically, its Mr. Browning's acculturati~n
political aspec~ .
.
_
..
.
_
.
should have answeted
_
.for bun
.
F~rther eyid~nce
_
of
:
~
.
s
.
long ago; But- d~e
_
to the ,_new
possibl~ co~seryatism IS foun!l
10
situatiQn ir:i,
,
.w_hich he fmds
Br~'!mng s r~fer
_
e~ce to the
_
himself, thingif no longer ~ake
English press, unpl~g
.
that_ the
·
_
sense; the
'
answers are no longer
,
.
r~p~~t ·due to
.
t~e
_
_
Amenc~
.
quite so clear. Due !o
,
t~e unex-
:
Bi\\
()'.
,
Reil\Y
/
Ma:Iist gra?uat:
;
poses
\\
'}
th Lind
a
_
l;ovela
:
c
,
e.
•
;
•
i
politl<;a\ sy~tem.,,
,
o! its yiad~~
-
-:-
:
pected factsJhtust o_n
.
hun b~ a
.
.
.
t~e
·
distit1ction IS qe"{er c:~anf~ed <foreign',culture;
·
Mr.-
',
BI'()wntng
T
"\"iel
·
ace
·
·
1n·
.
t
-
·
e
·
_
·
r
·
·
v
·-
1·
_
·
ew
·
'
.
e
-'-
d
·
i)'.l
the lett~r - was lacking
.
,
,
!11
findsitdifficulttocopewiththese
1...1.J.-,
ciompa~u:ig whap
-
have read
_
m
facts
;
and
with their implications
.
t~e
-
British
_
pa11.ers (fhe
Guar-
_
a change in
his
notions of "'.hat
By Bill O'Reilly
Throat' II, soon to be released?" replied
:
"why, it never
_
happened d1an, 1he
_
TlDles, ~nd
.
The Ob-
foreigners think about America.
There she was, l
~
t1daLovelace,
Linda smiling: "I don't know
/
' before
.
"
.
.
serv~r) with the. editorials of the
It is
not for the American people
every mari's
·
ultiI:rate sexual
"Do you feel you're being
·
Everyone in
.
the conference New Y
_
ork Times a~9 the
to answer the questions posed by
fantasy, sitting, shivering, for exploited?"
.
·
.
seemed extremely sell-conscious washingto!I Post (which
.
are Browning, as he suggests, but for
nearly thirty minutes in . the
-
Linda, nof smiling as much as and
-
unsure of themselves and reprinted m
.
the lnterna_tional
Browning himself, since he is the
penetratingly cold Cambndge before "what?"
·
this suited the sharks fine
.
From Herald. Tribun~) I
_
can ~seem
one who no longer understands
·
wind. Without once ceasing to
Suddenly a shark, dressoo in the beginning when Linda g~ve very little .
.
difference
_
m
,
the
_
the system.
_
smile Linda graciously accepted blue
.
denim, interrupts saying: her acceptance speech (which
-
-
coverage given
.
the Watergate
·
·
·
Before finishin&, 1 would like to
the Harvard Lampoon Award for "Is there any line of reasoning to was neatly written on an index affair, if one will allow ~uc~ a
add soine of my own ideas on
''artistic
.
. fulfillment,''
and that question?"
card)
,
to the final curtain, when subject~ve,
non-9uant~tative
what
foreigners
think
' _
of
assured
.
everyone .that she was
He
_
didn't wait around for an
_
.
she responded t
_
o an any
_
last comparison of
.
qm~
different
America. As Americans
think
of
"so glad to be here."·
.
answer.
comments questmn by saying:
.
phenomena. The 11Dpi;>~8;"t fact
other
natiollalities
in
'
Linda, dressed in a virginal
The rest of the questioning,
'
"just hello to everybody, giggle is, however, that~~ Br~tISh and
stereotypical ways _ the Irish
white lace gowri and ap- done by various reporters, was giggle,'' I had the dislinct feeling
·
American papers- that 1s_to say,
drink too much,the Germans are
..
propriately wearing no uil- trite beyond belief but Linda that this was the Hollywood the more liberal: papers m
_
~ch
warmongers, etc. _ so also do
derwear,
displayed
much showed exuberant enthusiasm in starlet scene that we have
•,
al!
.
c~u~t~y --
di_d
,
not differ foreigners have a stereotype of
·
patience and cleavage in fielding giving answers like these:
·
read about.
· ·.
significantly
m
Wat~rgate Americans
.
-
The
average
reporter's
·
questions after the
Q.
uWhat do you think about
But the more I observed Llnda coverage, from what I can American
.
is well-to-do; with
.
a
presentation. B
_
ut despite the those who criticize you?"
·
Lovelace the more I
·
felt an
_af-
determine.
,
.
color television set
,
and a large,
alleged
'
lightness of the occasion
A. "Live and let live."
finitytowardsher , Her natural
.
In the context of thlS coh,unn,
late model car;
.
h!!
'
is ethnocen-
there was something very wrong.
Q
.
"Are you a feminist?
"
beauty is marred only by
.
a slight this· means that
,
what Mr.
·
tric
·
not understanding other
Although lasciviously attired
A. "In some respects I am and scar across her chin and her Browning per_ceived as an atta<:Jc . peoples and
.
their
.
value
·
systems
and consistently grinning at the In some respects I'm not...t'
.
patience is seemingly endless.
·
by the _foreign press on his
and not much caring to either; he
numerous double :entendres
Q.
"Did your parents see 'Deep Yet the fonder I became of Llnda homeland, was ac~ua.ny no more
competes in a ~a~y rat ~ce,
throwri her way, .µnda Lovelace Throat.' "·
the more I dispised the parasites than the recounting of
_
events
trying to make
.
a livmg and climb
appeared more like a blushing
A. "I ~on't know."
·
·
who seemingly control her every ~with a liber~l ~ant, to
be
_sure)
-
-
the social ladder
-
at the 5a:me
ho:tnecoming
queen
than
,
Q.
"Did you ever read the statement, action, and, possibly, m
~
m~ner snrula!
1?
tha~ m the time; finally,
:
he has ideological
America's newest
-
sexual sen- 'Harvard Lampoon?' " -
thought.
.
~Jn1ted States. It
:
is posS1b~e to
blinders whe~ it c!)mes to.~ny
_
of
.
.
sation
;
Smillpg innocently
.
she
· .
A
.
''Honestly? No."
.
_
. .
_ ·
·
The sharks stayed
_
m the mfer, .
.
from
here,
'_
e1th~r
the socialist or Marxist vi~ws of
mechanically answered all the
Q.
"What do you thmk of our
·
background, looking hke four Brownmg's conser":atism (he
.
the world. With the Watergate
,
banal questions
·
concerni~g government?"
·
.
.
·
quickie div~rce lawye~s from
.
was shocked by the hl,>eral slant affair
.
we maf add the concept of
censorship,
_
_
poUtics, and ,he1
!
·
A: "I think it sp~ks for itself." Tijuana, then- eyes ~rtmg fi:om
'
of the British newspaper he_ held
_
.
corru'ption
.
in
-
go~ernment,
background ~at
-
she has heard,
q
,
"Are yo~ gomg to run for bo~~ to bod¥ and therr ears Just read) orthathewasunderg~m~a
-
though
_
this
·
~spect
-
1s
,
,
not as
and commented on, a thousand _office?"
,
,
_
.
._.
,
waitmg to pick up the sound ~fan form of culture sh,ock, of fmdmg
· :
widely accepted as a
:
part of the
times before,
.
..
.
·
A.
,,
"Maybe, at least Im
.
unfamiliar query. Here's Lmda something completely unex-
American national character, if
Nearby, circl)ngJike.a pack of honest."
_
.
. .
Lovelace age 22,-being told wh_at
.
pe~~ed whi?h 'd}d
·
not ;!it in
_
such a thing exists. For the_m~t
.
hungry sharks about to
'.
dis:man~e
.
Perhaps
.
you; are Linda
;
but to say, what to do, where to stand,
·
anY;Where with
·
hlS precon
_
ceived
_
politicized
'
elements,. Amer!ca
.
1s
some weakened prey,
;
:Was Lm- there is something very ~ubio1_1S
ho'Y to look, how. to act, when to
;
·
notions of
.
t~e wo~ld;
_
It 1s ~s
,
the
:.
bastion of
·
1
mper1al_ist
.
-
da's entourage;
<
A
our
'
rapidly about
_
the whole
.
operation
.
m sn:1;1le, wh_en
.
to giggle...
· _
second !nterpr_e~ati~~ that! f~d
domination, with an empire
aging men who, eveµ behind their which you are involved.
.
Attent10n,
Ms
Lovelace has\~
,.
most_ 11_1te\e~tin
,
g
_,
and
_
:;
m9st
stretching fr~ ~outheast ASla to
tinted
.
sunglasses,
•
had ·the un-
Later on Shark ·number one
·
catch a plane to New York, now,. .
. -
challengmg
;
.
:
.
.
·
_
. , -
.
Latin
·
America and
:
pa~t of
mistakable glint of dollar signs in informed this writer
-
tha~ ~or
_
e one of th~ Lampoonites shou~~•
·
·
Let
.
us tak~
_
one of )ilrowrung ~
- .
Europe
;
l have met students at
their eyes.• Linda f!Dllled,
.
posed, tact
-
is
need~ in my
_
questio~g.
( aft~r being
_
cued by a shark)
.·
so
.
phrases, agtµn,
·
as
an
examp~e •
·_
-
the University of Geneva who had
smiled, giggled,
'
~ile~ and He also informed
'
~e that Lin~ I
-
wish
:::_
eveFro~e
-
would leave.1'
-1
•1ttears my insides out,
~~~mg
·
'
a distinct
-
prejudice
·
against
carefully
arti~ulated
h_er
i:S
c~nging_ her JIDage. She ~s
~ell you didn t have to a~k me
·i::riy
c<>~~ry_
:
laugh~ ~t,
·
J~ked
Americans··
.
and an things
_
.
.
memorized answers.-~ut; despite going to
_
do live th~~e, (a nudi,~
twice. I had had enough.
As
-
!.
._.
about; criticizt;d ~~use
·
of
~~e
·
American;
.
prejudice,
.
un
-
.
her
lack
,
of
_
C!indor,
·
litt!e by
_
play call~d
:
"
Pa1ama. Tops
,_
walked.~~
-
~h~k num~r
-
one
.
I ~~ti~m o!
-
~n
-
~
_
l}l~·
. :
!)Ile noti~
.
fortunately, which is df!ficult to
.
boring little. a coocrete
,
1:fillige al?Ou~
\
pe'!Ple who
I
run aroun~
_
asked~lll;·,, ~ou the brams of tbe
,
,
that musi-be clarifl~ is
tha~
.
~e
-
overcome, and always leaves a
started
·
to emerge. · .
jumpmg mto tanks ~f wate~.) o~ration ·
·
,,
:
·
; -
·
,
u:s:
is
·
criticized abroad because bad taste in ~e mouth
;:
No:w
-
I
.
"Did you ·write
,
your
.
best some·Jashion m_odeli~,
.
(vvitb
-
•
No c~mment, ~e replied.
of Nixon
·
which
-
simply~ false.
--_
kriowwhatsooieoftheoppressed
selling book?'
~•
. ·
·
.
,
-
clothes)
,
and
.
s~
ts
~omg
_
on
_
~e
I con~ued walking and, as 1
·.
Nixon '.is
.
.
,
.
cr~tic1zed;
.
,-
the ·
-
-
minorities, in whatever coun~ry, .
·
.
·
Llnda
•
smiling: "I don'~ want to college
_
lect~ cirewt.
'
.
.
.- ·
t~ed for ,one 1~st glance, 1
-
~w
.
:,
Watergate
:-
. conspirato~
,-
are_ musUeel like'-:- -there is always
.
. comment
.
on
-
the
:·
oook,'.'. (She
.
Whe11.
_
I asked
,
~da ifedsheb Li~-Jrghelt~bd g~i1~ss h
0
!
.
c
"
riticized; the ~~ricanpolitical-. that prejQdice; sometim~s a~ing•
didn't
.
write it!)
.
.
·
.
·
.
·
·
.
thought she .
.
i::riay
.
be
•
!,l~riq
.,
hy_.
_.
sd~
,
.
,
to.
--.
ealk '
·
t ofng
W
.
~
.
·
system'
·
-is
·
.
either
-
ctjtic~d f<>r
.
even as a
.
)van·betw~en
.
people.
,.
"
-
Is
your new picture,
_
,'
Deep
.
some'
.
of ·the
~
colleg1an._:1
_.
!I
e
.
oor_
.
w
_
ou : • -
,
_. -
·
·
, _
·
•,
_
.,
. ·
.:;
,
-
• , ·
--
·
-
_
--
·
•
-
.
.
.:.' •
.
'.
'
..
_
.
.
.
- .
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
•
.
.
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'
.
. .
.
..
~.
'.
_
.
.
·
·
..,
-.
:
.
.
.
_
·
.
.
,:
:
:
.
-
.
.
,;.
_
,
.
.
'
.
,
•
~
.
.
.
.
..
'
.
. .
.
.
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)·
.
·
•
·
·
,
·
.
·
·
.
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(
•
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1 '
'
·
.
·
•
.
•
,
·
, . '
.
.
..
...
'
·
.
.
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,,,
.
'
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.
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t
r
ij
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.
.
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-
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t
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..
-
•
t.''
t1i:
'
w\ .,.
'
.
FEBRUARY 7, 1974
THE CIRCLE
·
PAGE?
BASKETBALL,
continued
from
page
8.
stopped.· While at the offensive
end of the court Marist worked
the ball well getting
·
it
into
Joe
Cirasella who had the hot hand.
.
Soccer Tourney
Sunday
At
DCC
by
Charles de Percin
--
Al Fairhurst, Number 14 for Marist
,
arrempts to
.
outreach
-
p}ayer
from
St. Joseph's in recent contest.
With Cirasella playing both
ends of the court Marist pulled to
a
9 point lead at one time before
St. Joseph's started to come
back. Led by Jim Hayden their
high
scorer, they came down the
court trailing by only
3
points
with
a
minute
to
go they turned
the ball over and Marist gained
possession
.
The closing minute
was marked by the ballhandling.
of Eric de Percin and clutch
·
baskets by Cirasella, who had 19
points and 14 rebounds for the
game. At the closing buzzer
Marist had a 64-59 victory.
W~ile the victory brought
Mar1St's recor-d to
8-8
it was not a
very impressive showing
.
Marist
shot only 35 percent (rom the field
and suffered from lack of con-
sistency.
Marist will play on Saturday at
home against Stonehill.
·
The
starting time
is
at 8:00 at D.C.C.
gym.
.
Ten members of the varsity
soccer team will be selected to
represent Marist College in its
first indoor soccer tournament
Sunday at Dutchess County
Community College. Opponents
will vary from
a
Germania
soccer club, local coaches from
high schools and colleges en-
tering as a team, and
a
junior
college team
of
All-Americans.
The tournament
will
be
double
elimination. Marist will play at
Falcon Hall at
1
p.m. Admission
will be $2.00 for adults, $1.00 for
students and free admission for
children under twelve.
·
Indoor soccer rules differ from
outdoor soccer. There are no off-
side calls in indoor soccer. The
ball cannot go directly over the
mid-court line. Contact must
be
_
made in the offensive zone before
the ball crosses mid-<::ourt. Each
team consists of six players, and
periods are seven and
,
one
·
half
.
minutes long
;
Direct kick, in-
direct kick, free kick, corner ktck
and penalty kick remain
·
the
same as
iri
outdoor soccer.
-
·
The dimensions of indoor
soccer vary, depending on the
facilities available. The width of
the field
is
approximately the size
of a basketball court and the
length varies
.
The goal area has
dimensions of six by eight feet.
Players must be aware of the
limited space available, for
change of direction is frequent.
The goalie sees more action than
in an outdoor game
.
There are no
fixed player positions, and
players must be able to cover the
open spot. Total floor control is
more advantageous than volley
type passes.
·
Indoor soccer
is
played at a
faster pace than outdoor soccer,
.
resulting in less body contact.
In the past, tournaments were
open only to club soccer teams
.
M~rist was invited to participate
this year
;
but extra expenditures
and lack of facilities have limited
Marist's indoor practicing.
In-
door soccer is, in Coach Doc
Goldman's words, a fast-moving
sport with a.similarity between
soccer and hockey
.
"
.Announcements
HIGH ON SPORTS, continued from page 8 .
starters for Saturday night will be sophomores Ron Glackin at center,
The
-
thl .. d """Ual Do
·
n
-
M
Le
·
--
-
Ray Murphy along with Cirasella at the forwards and guards Joe
.
.
. . •
•
.cum
•
<;
an
Youngsters of all ages. are in-
·
·
·
concert ~ill be ~eld this week. vited. For· further information u~. by the constitutional com-
Nebbia and Eric de Percin.
McLean 1s an activ~ supporter of call 4
5
~
936
..13
Benoit House
.
or
·
471
_ m
13
1ttfee
_
on Wednes~ay,
_
Februa~
Stonehill is 12-4 with three losses coming to University Division
th
_
e
Hu~s
.
on
River
_
·
·
Sloop
3240
Leo
Hall.
, .
•
.
-
ro~
9-_4
o~tside
·
the swit-
schools St. Peter
'
s, Rutgers, and Holy Cross. Howard Bain, a 6-4
Res~oration,
Inc.
a
.
nd
·
all
-
Ask for· !'Harold
J
.
chboard off_ice m Donnelly Hall. senior forward, is leading the Chieftains in scoring (17.8). Other
proceeds from t ~ c
_
oncert
:
will Charles ·Ailman
3
_ac~,
~
The constitution will es~blish the probable starters will be 6-3 sen
i
or guard Roland Hollins (17.4), 6-7
·
go to that non-profit membership Miller (known
·
•
"H
i~
;
_
ar
·
-
Class of 1977 as an active part of
-
freshman center Steve Dennis (9.7),
~11
senior guard Chris Civale
corporation. The
.
Restoration' Victor Olivera
·
as
·
orse ),
4.
·
Madst Coll~ge student govern-
(9.1)
.
and 6-6 junior forward Mark Gunderman
.
The top reserve is 6-0
owns and operates
.
the sloop
.
·
·
·
ment, and will serve as the basis sophomore guard
Joe
Cullinan (6
.
3).
·
Clearwater, a replica of a 1860s
The third i
.
.
-~ for its policy and conduct for the
·.
Stonehillleads theseries_5-3 and won last year atStonehill
90-77.
pac~et ~loop
.
Clearw~ter is the
_
lectures cente~u'1g
~~r~!
t~~lX
·
next four rea_rs. To be ratifi~, CIRASELLA NAMED ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
focal pomt for an_e_nvironme1_1tal "Criinu{a1 Justice_
In
Service
f~
t~e constitution m~t receive
··
Joe Cirasella, a junior forward from Eastchester, New York
;
has
_movement
by
c1tJZens maµuy Sqciety• • sponsored
by
the approval fi:om a plurahty of _votes
.
been named Marist College Athlete
of
the Week for the .week ending
concentrate~mtheH~dson
_
River .De)fartmerit of
·
Hisfory
· '
and caSl.
.
.
-
.
·
.
February 2nd.
_
-
.
v~~ey. The R
_
estorat~o'!, m ad-
'_
Political
-
Science
will
be
Copif:S of the
:
C?nstitution
will
This
is
the second consecutive week that <:;irasella has won this
dit!~n to the daily operation of the presented in the Theater at the b: ayailable s~i:tmg Monday at award. J ~. a basketball player
,
scored
19
points and pulled down 14
Clearwater, . sponsors
_
school
.
College at
8:00 p
.
m. on February t e hbr~ry desk, m the co~uter. rebounds in leading Marist to a 64-59 victory over St. Joseph's College
programs ~es1gned. to brmg on- 13, 1974 .
.
The speaker will be State lounge
10
Donne_lly, outs_1de t~e (Me
.
) snapping a fou_r-ga_me ~ari&t losing strealc Cirasella also made
board marme studies to seco!l• Senator John Dunne
.
His topic Commuter Union_ office m some positive, contnbut1ons
m
losses to King's College (N
.
Y.) and
dary and college age students
m
·-
will be "Politics and the Criminal Champagnat, and
m
freshman S
.
U
.
N
.
Y. at Stonybrook
.
·
the area.
,
Justice System."
.
mai~boxes. CI~ss officers will
~
THIS WEEK IN MARIST COLLEGE SPORTS
For more information on how
-
_
·
.
available to discuss the proposed
you can_ support environmental
On Saturday, Februar
16
the cons~tution outside the cafeteria
ONE YEARAGO--Heavyweight Richard
·
Beaney of Marist gave up
re_stor~tion, contact the Hudson Marist College Gaelic
Y
So~iety at 12
.
00 to 1 :30 and
5:
00 to 6: 30
77
pounds to Eric Booth but worrthe match 7-fJ to give the Red Foxes a
River Sloop Restoration, 88 will present their Sixth Annual p
.
m. on Tuesday.
33-30 collegiate wrestling
.
victory over C.C
.
N.Y. Later in the week
Market
,
Street, Poughkeepsie.
Spring Dinner Dance in the
Freshm~n ~re asked to read Hunter swept
to
a 34-9 win dealing the Red Foxes their seventh loss in
.
cafeteria
•
As in the past we will the_ constitution carefully, and
eight matches.
.
.
Sadie Hawkins Night · th Rat
·
'
notice particularly Article 10
an
Sophomore forward Mike Hart scored 25 points and pulled down 14
.
m
e
have a Buffet Dinner starting at
dm
·
'
rebounds as the North Road School cha
'
sed Bloomfield 88-72 in~ a
February 8
- Fnday • S
:
30 p
.
m.
-
~
9:00 p.m. with ari open bar all amen l ent calhDff for a fresh-
Central Atlantic College Confer
·
ence game at Our Lady of Lourdes
a.m.
Sponsored
by
the during the evening, with live man c ass ~enate to serve_ a~ a
Sophomore Class.
.
.
entertainment. This Dance
.
~epresentat~v~ wo~p
.
.. assistmg
High School. Later in the week, Hart scored six of his sixteen points in
Sophomore Senate Meeting promises to be
an
even better
m
class activities.
the last minute and forty seconds
as
Marist College held off Monmouth
February 7 - Thursqay, 1 :00 p.m .
.
time than last semester so why
The outcome of the vote will
be
91-83 in a non-conference basketball game
·
at Dut~ess Community
C-270
.
.
_
don't you join us? Total' cost for posted Thursday in both Donnelly
College
.
.
.
.
--::
.
.
-
-
the evening
will be
-
$12.00 per
-
and Champagnat Halls.
r-------------------------
One po~ition is
,
no_w ava1lah!,e
.
couple. Tickets may be bought all
IN THE NEW MALL IN HYDE PARK:
for a ~,fanst
_
student mterested
,
m this week and
.
next up
.
until
WO R
LO Of JEANS
working with rural _Dutchess
_
Thursday the 14 in front of the
_
The
,
Candy Shop is now located
A~~
:~
-:
~ 0
1
u_nty Nyoung people
·
m Dover cafeteria. Rese~ations can also
_
behind the information desk in
ONE DAY SALE
:
SAT. FEB.
9
_
ams,
·
ew York.
;.be made at that time.
the Campus Center.
It
is open
UNISEXP NTS&J AN
-
·
A
.
grant. from the Dutchess
· _
·
-
1 :00-4 :00- p.m. Monday thru
A
E
8
County You~ B!Jard
.
allows one
.
FRESHMAN
.
CONSTITUTION Friday and 7:00-12:00 every
A
wg~::a1~~1it~AD
stu~ent to hve m
.
Dover Plains READY FOR RATIFICATION night.
ALLSALESFINAL
~u_r1;[lg the Suffi:IDer
of
·-
1974 to
The freshman class will be able
WEEKDAYS JO
-
8
ALL OTHER SELECTIONS
$6.99
...
initiate,
.
co~rdm~te an<i run to
-
vote on the constitution
drawn
SATURDAYS 10 - 6
(Br•"
.
'
bed Cotton, Cords, Etc.)
·
summer activities with
.
teen-
·
·
·
· ··
·
·
·
·
·
·
...,
agers. These activities
,
couldr-----~-~------.... ---_.;.;.. ________
,.;:=====:::::::::.:===--============~
include spor1:5 eyents, swimming;
theatre producUon,
·
social events
-
and
_
summer tutoring
-.
progr~.
SAGA PRESENTS:
-
·
;...
-
-_
• •
.
.
·
.
~\
.
'
'
...
C?ur~ credit
_
(3
'
credits)
in
-
~ ~ ~
0
~~1£~~ai:~r:ti;= '
:
*~
'GBAND
·
::
OBENIN
.
G
,
?-'
-*
of
$400..
The
approximate starting
,
-
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
.
·-
·
·
.
date is
'
June 1, 1974
.
until Sep~
tember-1,1974.
·
.
-
--,
·_
.·.
·
·.
.
·
Applications
._
fr~m
·
sincere,
·
-
innovative
.
and
·
dedicated
students should
·
be sent to Dr.
·
'
·
.
M.J. Michelson, Universi~ Year
for
-
ACTION,
. ,
Box
,
C746.
·
.
The
·
deadline is March
'
!,
1!174.
-
.
.
.
.
.
-
·
.
.
'MARIST SHO
.
PPINGCENTER
.
:·
.
..
.
-
.....
.
'
.
•
.
-·
Open
,:-o:
M
_
@rist
faculty,
Staff
&
Stude
.
nts
. .
..
: _
Order:
-
Mon.;Tues.,
Wed
.
A WINE
·
&
CHEESE
RESTAURANT
.
·
-
.
~
·
oPEN
EVERY.EVENING
·
•
·,
'
.
.
-
~✓
:-:-
• •
•
.
~
• .
t·
.'
.
. ·.
.
.
-
·.:.
~
·::
•
'
;
_
_
,
.
.
.
.
· Community , Action
°
Group
:
is
sponsoring
,
a party for
.
.
young
·
people
.
onSaturday February 9;
:_
1974 from
·
12
-
noon
'
untiL 3::rl.
»~cingi
~Qvies; Rap
.
Sessions,
-.
,
,
Aft
Exhibits, Refreshments.
·
-·
. ·
.
F.or
<
children
,
with
·
ncv
trari-
:
·
spo~~on ·
-
~re
-
will
be
_
pick-up
-·
vehicles
.
at
:
Smith
_
Street
·
Center.
•
I
,..
,
Pick
'
.;up{Fri. Between
12:6
P.M.
.
-_·
:
='
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.
340orExt.126
..
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,
LIVE
MUSIC
.
ON WEEKENDS
&
WED
;
NIGHTS
A
QUIET PLACE FOR MUSIC, ART
·.
·
&
RELAXATION. • .
·,
-
51 Market
St.
Poughkeepsie, N.Y •
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PAGES
THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 7
1
1974
Marist_ Trackmen
-show
Well
In
CTC Relays
-
·-
The Marist indoor
·
track team triangular meet and later in
·
the
Last year Murphy placed second
notched
their
best
showing
ever evening some of the
team
in the state, missing fir~ place to
in th~ Collegiate Track Con-
members
will
be participating in
Oswego's Steve Buso by only five
ference Indoor Relay Carnival at the
.
Capitol Track
.·
Club AAU
points. Murphy scored 3000 points
Queens College on Saturday.
It
Meet. Then on Sunday, February
in
the five-event champiombips
was Marist's first year in par-
24 Tim Murphy arid possibly
.
one
which include the·
200
meter run,
ticipation
in
the varsity division or
.
two other members
·will
.-.
be
··
the long jump, the high jwnp, the
of the carnival.
In
the past the
·
competing in the New York State shot put, and the 1500 meter run·
Red Foxes had appeared in the Indoor
·
·
-
Pentathlon
·
Cham-
·
.
(metric mile).
_
.
.
·
JV
·
Division only;
pionships at Syracuse University.
The best perfonnance of the
.
.
.
.
-
.
,
.
.
.
.
:!n~~=e~~:~~~~l
·
H
·
1·
g
·
h
0
·
·
·
n
Sp
··
o· rts
·
_
~~:
.
J=~•
~:e~3!°t~='.
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The
:
team
set. a Marist school
·
.
.
.
By John Tkach
.
.
.
record by clocking a 3:57 ,6.
Duffy
,
·
.who ran the anchor
.
half-mile leg WHAT GO~S ON HERE?
•
..
also
..
chalked up a
·
new school
record for the· besttime
in
a half-
·
.
Afthough they will not travel to
·
Florida f~r
-
~ week, nor p
-
l~Y: a
25
.
.
mile
·
leg
·
of
a
·'
relay
..
..;-
2:09.2.
.
game schedule~ nor go
·
to a post-s~on tournamen~, the 1_974 ~tio1;1 of
: Schools ran the quarter
~
mile in the Marist .College W9men's basketballteam will begm thell'
,
fir~
56.3 while Saintomas and Murphy
·
·
collegiate season; as announced
.
by Dr. Howar
.
d
·
Goldman, athletic
turned
in
220s of 27.0 and 25.0
·
director:
·
.
·
'.
-:
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·
·
··
.
·
.
·
respectively.
.
·
.
••
. The Red Foxes; as they .will be called for lack of a better name, will
Marist's other. good showing in
.
start their
·
season
\
with
.
a
.
modest. three game schedule with a
the DistaJ:ice
•
Medley Rel!i~ ~as possibility ·ota
'
fourth game:
.
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•
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Marist runner TonyjVilger
is an:iorig
'
the members of the _
·
stymie.d
.
PY
~me poor officia~rng
.
·
.
~rrain~ Conkliri/awomen's physi~al edu~ti~n'teacher he~e
·
at
Track tea
in
·
warmirig
·
up
for
the
•
Spring season;
·
~
atthe
.
~eet
~~e
team wasac-
,...
Manst,
.
will coaclithe team; ~hich will op~ thell' season on
-
either
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•··
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tually disqualified-when an of-
Feb.21or22atVassarCollegemPoughkeeps1e.
.
·
·
-
M
••"'
a
···
·
r1·s
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·-
B
·
· ...
•
y
·
-
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,~£L.e
·
··:t:ia!:shod~~,~l~e::;~hci=:.
wlih:/rii~~;e~~o!;:t:J!tel!~\~ruo;~~:~=~~~perience and
,
.
.
.
·
,
1r1
.· .
·
,·
.
·
·.
·
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·
.
:'--'~I
.
·
Fred Kolthay that he couldn't
Other games on,the schedule
m.µ
incl~de a
·
home and away s~ies
·
..
·
by'IJob
c
·
reedofr
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.·.·
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.
:.:
,
·
· ·
·
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,
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·•
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>-:
r_eceive the baton when
:
he
W.~
.
-
\Vith
'
Mount~irit Mary's CoJlege of
.
Newburgh, N.Y. and a posSlble
·
·
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,,,c
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.
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•
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··
·
·
actually
.
suppo~~~
.
-
to
_
take tJle
,
·
encounterw1thBardCollegeofAnnadaleonHudson,N.Y.
.
,
~arist_ basket~all tea~
.
(8,9)
_
spotted Ray
~urphy
operi under
.
baton
·
·
.
from
-,
-Mike Duffy. The · ThedatesfortheMountSaintMary's games will
be
March 5 (away)
IDJSsed
.
v_1ctory by on~
_pomt.
(39~
.
•
.
the basket
,
under pressure
·
he officia}had counted Marfa't's laps
·
and M:ar. 12 (home)
:
Starting times will be made available as soon as
I
38)
.
agamst tile
.
nUII1ber one tr~ea' to get: the
·
ball to· M~rphy. wrong and thoughtJve had 9one receive more information.
ranked co~ege of
_
Mass.,
_Bently,
··
With three seconds lef~
-
t!J.e p~s
·
one less
•
iap than the
<
Red Foxes
·
.
.·
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Monday rugh~.
.
. ·:
.
.
<
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<
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went
.
a\Vlj'
.
_
and -
so
_,
did
:
MarJSt had
-
.
actually ac~omplished;
.
:
iNTRAMURAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
,
Marist
:
came out with a game
·
·
·
hopes for
.
yictory .
.
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: · ·
. ·;
.
Because of this
'
'
Duffy ran
:
mi
·
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>
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,.
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•
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.
. .
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pla~
.
that
•
called
.
_
fo,;
:
_a
.
disciplined
.
..
:
,.
:•
Any: pme
.
:
~
:
:
~~h
.
to
.
:
lose,
:
:'
extra lap
··
and
:
~oltha~
·
r_an
·,
·
one
. .
With
:
the arriv~Lof the intramur~
·
basketball playoffs,
.
it
is
time for
·
offeD:5e
.
and a tigh~
,
l[ltrong 1~~2
,
w~en its ~y
.
o~e
:
pomt. T~s one .Jess)ap, thus
~
disqua~ifymg the us toJook·ahead to
.upcoming
events
:
of the second semest~ con-
zo11e def~nse. !3.~tly
,
t!)o~ .the le~g
.
•
wa:i _especially
_
tough
~~e
JC>
.
the '.
.·•
tea111
c:
a
.
nd
.
·
·
also
:
hurting .·•
Us
·
,
.
cerriing. the
·
intramural progr~in. Below
is
·
a listing of the upcoming
but
·
Mar-ist,never stray~d·from
.
cali~er of the competlt10!1;~and chan,ce~
'
9f breaking
.
the ,school events for the morith
<i
February:· ·
.
their gam~- pl~.
-
Ma~~
:
~on~
·
th~~meteam
.
effr-ct
,
C>fMa~shvho
·
record
:
and
;
placing Wt;!ll
"
in the
_
·
··
··
··•..
.
.
.
:
·- .
·•
·
.
tin~ally tned Jo work the baU shqt_53 percent
_·
tre>m the
.
~1eld ~d , everit. Dave Schools led off in this SPORT
ENTRIES DUE
.
PLAY
.
BEGINS
•
inside
·
to Ray
.
M11rphy ._or Joe
.
;;
9utrel>oµndEid
,
)he
.
11_1uch
·
better
a-:
relay
.
doing a
-
2:1
_
0 half~µli.le'.
,
Tim
,
.
_,
.-
·:
.
,
..
_
CiraseUa.
AUe11
.
F,'a1rhui:st
)3e~.tley
.
~eam
<
>·:
.,
·
o:
·
::~
Murphythen'ranthe
'
quarter mile
'.
. Basketball
•
·
·.
w~
'"'
F~b
:
27
··
h~dl~~
.
the
.
i"
ball
i;
-
well
.
~bile
:.:.
,·.
·
..
·
...
>_</
.:;..,
...
·
:
.
.
·
·
..
:
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:
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_-
·
.
..
·
·
,
in
_
56:~,an~Q,ti,!fy.!s.~~Koltha,y!s
·
:
Fret! Throw
,
.
.
.
.
·
l>Ji.·fo~p.~~
·
,_
,'.
du-ectmg the offen_se and,dnvirig
.
··
.
• •
~
.- ·
·
:
•
·
1
·
:
·times
_
did
.
nof_represent the
¾
•
Contest (M)
'
Thursday Feb. 28
·
at
7:00
p~m;
._
.·
in for lay ups;
,
Atthe end c:>f the
.
.
·
...
On
.
Saturd;:iy, F:'4:lb. 2, MarJSL,mile
''
and mile times that they
·
'.,•
•.··
·
half
..
Marist trailed
•'
.
py seven
:
'.
basketball
,
.
te~nf defeated
>
St.
:,
sbould
:
have
1
fl
run
>
:
The
'
team
·
·
·
,
_
.
-·
-
points,
:
butwas
_-
still,
,
_
in the ball
.:::..:
Josepll'~ pLMaine
·:
54-59 to
..
end a docked an
'
fr
:
33
,
eight seconds Basketball
-
>,
Wed.
:
March 6
·
·
.
ganie.
..
, ..
/
,
•
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:
~·
::
.
.
.
.
.
four
g!ifilelosing ~tre~]f
;
"
\'
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:
:
·
"
offtheMarist~~~rd. Without the
.
·:
one:.ori-One
by
6:00 p:m.
·
·
Inthesecond
-_
halfMaristca~e
,
Martstscore~ first, ~ut
.
t!t~r officiating
:
flub
.
theJeain co~d
,
Contest (M)
·
.-
·
·.
·
·
_
outwiththesamegameplanasm le
_
ad-w,assho~
_
~ved:S~.
·
Jose()~s ·have;
_
~nd perhaps W.Q!J}d !Jave,
~Thursd
.
ay Feb.
28
. the first half. Ray Murphy, Joe
_
came out runrung: while MarJSt broken the
·
old mark
of
11:25.2.
Volleyball'
,·:
.
organization
.
Cirasella and
A
0
llen
.
Fairhurst appeared
'
sluggish
_
.
and a
·
·
step
-
.
Maristalsofielded teams in.the
(M), (C}
:
playedaggres~it~_ly
_
at_both
en~
,:
behllld the f~st br~aking-Monks
.
twi>
:
mile
.
relay
.
an~ the mile
.
.Meeting
at 6:15
of
.
the
.
court, with Jim
,:
Oseka (!f St..Joseph ~'.
..
.
.
·
:,
.
.
·
relay._In the two mile
·
relay the
·
Thurs .
. -
Feb.
28
•-
.
.
playing
,
t~mgh defense and
.
.
~~~ch
~etro subsbtute~ fre~ly, times
.
for
.
each man's l\alf-mile
fJ
:1c
.
:ip
·
~ Center
__
_
.-
.•
Thursday March 7
·
__
at
1:00
p.m
>
Monday March·4
'
·
rebounding well. Marist slowly
.
utilizing~ whole bench
m.
trymg clockings
,
were:
·
Jim Gillen -
fought back and tied the·game on
t9
neu1;r3lize_ the a~re~ve
,
_St 2:29.4, BillKrempel-
,
2:20.7, Tony
Congratulatioos go out to Jay Metzger for winning the first annual
~a
layup by Fa,irh~~t\\'.~t~
~:QB
to JC?5eph s. F~ally
,.
af~r
~
bemg
~
Wilg~r
.
- 2:29.9,
.
and
'•
J~ Mc-
Intr.amural P_ool Tourn~ent Co-Sponsored by the _Intramural Office
·
ge>.
.
.
-,
.
·
.
·
.
.
,
_
.
down _by
,
seven
.
Martst
,
fought Casland-2:21.0.~thexrulerel~y
•·
and~eCampusCenter~iththeCampusCenterdomgallofthework.
·
·
Bentley never relinql;llshed the back
·.
mto
·
thE:
.
lead
·
3~32
,
forty the quarter-mile times were:
·
Jun
·
Kevm Sweeney and Kevm
-
Scmar should
s_tan~
up and take a bow for
lead." After coming
'.
within one, s~COJlds OO.f~re the close of ~e Gillen -
.
1 :03
;
7, Pete VanAken - . getting the tourney off the ground and making 1t
run
smoothly
;
Marist missed alayup with 2" 53 first half w1th
·
a. layup by
·
Rich 59.5, Jim
-
McCasland
.
-1:
.
00.7, and
·
·•
. ·
·
.
.
· ·
·
:
.
·· ·
.
,
•
·
.
.
··
.
·
·
to go and Bentley immediately
.
~~hanz; but St. Joseph's scored Mike Sainfomas - 1:02.6.
·
.
~ED FOXES
,
TO-HOST STO~EHILLAT
.
QUTCHESS
·
SATURDAY
went into a stall. With
12
seconds with se:ven seconds to go to hold a
Marist has been working out
·
. -
-
"
-
·
.
·
remaining Marist
.
fo~ed
·
Brian slim halftime
;lead
of
34:33.
· •
.
for ohly a w~k and half
.
before
· .
.
Marist Colleg~ p~ays host to Stonehil~ College of North Easton,
Hammel~ Bentley's high
·
scorer;
.
In
thesecond ha_lf ~ar1st CSJ?e the relay canuval and thaie
_
who
Massachusetts;
111:
a basketb~l cont~t
this
~~rday (February 9) at
Hammel missed
:
the foul
.·
shot.
·
.
.
out
,
more
,
autho11tatively .
.
With
·did
_
well were the
·
runners who 8
:00
p
.
m, There will
be
no Juruor V~rs1ty preliminary.
·
0
·
•
·
Marist rebounded and called
.
,
aggressive
· ·
rebounding"
·
by had worked out on
.
their own
·.
Marist is 8-S
'
prior ui"j~ames with Bentley on Monday and Bloomfield
time out.
-.
-
·
·
·
.
·
....
·
.
.
·
Cirasella, MurphY:-and
.
Glackin,
·
during the vacation .
.
:
The team's
··
on Wednesd~y. Junior forw~
_
d Joe Cirasella con~inues
·
to lead the
With nine seconds left Marist thl;l St. Joseph fast brea.k
·
was next
.
outing is
:
Sa
.
turday; "activelJplayersin bothscormg (1].;8) and rebounding (8.1). Probable
inbo~ded the ~ ;
..
:
~ric
_
de
: .:.
'.
conti
'
nued on page
'
7
·
,'
February
23
when
in
the mo~ing
·
_:
.
.
.
, .·
•
.
.
• ·
.
.
continued on
page
7
_
·
·
.
·
·
.
Pencm crossed xrud-court and
. .
_
.
.
·
.
,
:
:
,
c
.
··
_
:
they meet Queens and Iona m a
·
·
-
·
·
·
·
·
S1:,opJ S~ve At
·
oot
.
chessc~unty's
·
Large~t
·
_
Liquo~rS~re
-
The-Mail.
R~~~~~~e~~~
-
0
~,~~~~~T➔
--
-.
-
-
.
·
··
cNextto Shop'rite)
_."
:
-
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.
·
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.
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;
:;. :
.
·
·
·
··
:,-,_?
:
·
-<
·
.
'
'-'Visit
ou'r
Wine
c:e1.1a
·
r
'°'·
·.
·.
Fo
·
r.the L
'
afrgest Selection o_f Wines in Dut~hess Cqunty~'"
·
..
.
>)\'.:\
F
rt'E
E
D
1s
i.1
VE RY
<
·
~ 229~81
.
77:t
$10
min
irn um
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!!!~{~~•'l.!;tt,,·
··•
·
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·
.
..
February
-
Special
.
.
::
skyiark-
~
Whiskey,;
·
'
,
·
.
..
•
.
,
_
.
·
·
·,
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12.2.1
12.2.2
12.2.3
12.2.4
12.2.5
12.2.6
12.2.7
12.2.8