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Part of The Circle: Vol. 12 No. 3 - February 14, 1974

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_MARIST COLLEGE, POUG$J!EPSIE, NEW
YORK
12601
FEBRUARY
14, 1974
i
!
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\
II
Evaluation
Received
:
Warinly -
.
·
:
By
H
. ij
.
. f
·· HouSe Members
.
-II
-.ij
'
)
.,
By Bri~
~orris
JI~
·
··

r:ecommendatioo. of a two year . _ , . ·"'
.
~
1
}
J
' Both Gx'egory'- and' Benoit limitation on residence .. In

·
aa::
'
..
_Houses• were.recently evaluated · dition; they suggested
·a ·
clearer
and the filiished reportbas been . statement of criteria for ac-
·
1
. for the . most P!ti't warmly
ceptance
into
Gregory and an
received· by members . and expansion of the Free.University
l~ders of the respective houses.
program. :.
. : _-
. . .·
Orie ·of the more notable
asser- -. ·
The ·recommendation that , a
·_ tions contained in.Jhe report is clearer statement of criteria
be
:·-that there
is
a
'.'ram~rit racism''. developed was the result
in
part
on the
0
Marist_ campus.' __ ·-·
.
·_
·, of the .commi~e•s 'inding that
Beno_itahd.trre
_
_gory_,- are __
i
__
hey_. re.ally so f~r. removed?__
. The evaluation com'mfttee, Gregory has a->.reputation for
·
-
- -
.
· ·
compose~ of :meinbera
..
·.of the · ·«eliteness" -and .''cliquish.Dess."
.
ll . ·. tJ -' , __
.·c
i.. .
l
-
··:
Int~r-House: Council, The committee- ~dmonished
.
·_.
·:
__ ·
__
0 ·_.·:
e··
-~---~e-··_·:,.
·=
·
· ..
~.°';~
__
:~_·:_s·. _
=·_·_fl.,.
_·.·1·_
...,._
·
19 __
.·_·· .-..
c1cknowlt!_dge~intht?irreportthat. G_re~o_ryHouse residents
to
be.
.
. _
.
· " ·
~
f.?:
. .
__
I/ U
~
011e
,of ·their prime :goa,ls. was to _. .~ens1tive
_to
Jhe c~rge that they:
·::::de-mythologize the reputations of form an maccessible cnque. .
... _.
. . _
_
.
_._ _ _ ._
-
'- .. _ _ . :>. . . . •
.
__ , ·- . . _/ ·. . __ .. · -•
.
. .-. _
.
_.
Gregory and Benoit; The com_. • The acknowledgement of
t,
by
~reg9ry Co11:oc~i_olt.
o-
. ·•-·
~students:>a'nd : · is :
~
the',"
:"riio~t ~'-
a~e :social~ securityttaxes':
·and:·
mit~~:repoi:tEid, }or
examp~e;,
its .. '"rampant raci~"
_
on the Marist
·
'/
>
:< _.· · ;'. ·•· '. •
.. • ··· _
p·essimi:Stic·tnodjl:of.:l,h,eT,thr
_
ee, ::~ti!itiessticha~:gEis,)>µ,electric; "s~oµgf~el10g
1
•~atthe:<;arnpus _campus came on page 6 of~e
10
2\
:
·
.
._On" .J~11Uary- · _31~, ·-~h~. Marist ·--:__ :i;:>resently; ~arist_ operates.
Q.O
a· · __ tel~ph~ne;· and. p~tagej .~ost of -
!1.t.
larg~
lS
·
~~~~
,the;nustaken _ page _r~port. -_The committee
, :. .
. :
.
work_ forc~·:-of admiriistrat(?rs, budget~- of . six-· million
:doµars
"'.hich w~·ar.~ f(!eling· at pr~ent, iIIlp~~~o~n. -!hat·, .'all' . o_f ~e ::-sta~ed. Ther~
lS
also a-ramp~t
,-·.
· •· ,. .faculty; ,.and. st~ff ·gathered. yearly .. Out of that budget,-'25 smce price"·.mcreases
.in.
these· colleges black students hve· m -racISm_o~
thi~
.camp~_ that
-
it·
~;·
.
togeµter -~d.'$et, with President>. million .. is spent'· oo
'non:salaried
areas. are· already taking- place. ,.Benoit :Ho_use('l;he: .truth .of the . would.
be
unfair er ~1v~ of the
< · -
~
. .
~~us
ro:r t<t~i-~~
.ti!~~
spif~~-; it~~:?;_2'_mi_~~n:i~· ~ivi~d: into-::::· _
. .I!J;.th~~~-9.~,~i.<f.:D?<><!et -
~~~~rt
the r~po~'
:~~~~I)q~
~_ii;.
co~~~~.
~ot Jo r_ecogmze."
,~·"" -· ·
-. , co~-of-.~~~c!tiO_p·h~r~:at .-M~r;st-~;;-,s.alar.tes,-::,;Joz:•":½·:faculty;-:\·l."-:a'd.;:_ .. (No;:3)_:we ~e
.. o~ra~mg. w1tl;l>.:t=. th~! only:-~:peo~Ie
!!,';~
0
m_
~~-~1~----. .
;'!:h~ reast.ion.aroo,11d campus _to
-~;"':_",,_,,.':'.; :.-,':"_Th~.gi:!?.~P-~,:~t:~~-:~~-'~~-~::~~~~f~tio~,: and' ~~J;~witli .~he :·,:
$,~,_(l{)Q
,,:q~!e!:,~:~I_uch,~ !>r.cµ,nar.UY..!:'
,-.:i1!1e:
_o;v.~~8:1}:~121_~ck: _pop_iil_stjo~
~
on .: :I, th~E:-·~v~uap,?J!~!{~S. mostl_y
_'Yarnl• .. '
.
. .. ·-·
.;
·
·
.. , -.:~n\µ?n¥)~1Jl~HP~~1!1:;)i~l;ip.~~es·5;-;;_: r~q_i-•g,1:fa_!ancif(tp.H3mullioh:.?!Vo.uld:;-l;>e~il:!'=a.iµible},-_for:;1S{llaey) :_c~p-~,1s_
9:ve~,
100.--~!!1-:~~!~--to -· _Comnu~ee .. m~ber.-
!301>,-,
~~-
-· ··· ·
:_ . . . . . . m~ager,iyli~;pr(!~ent~Jo:,that·: g9_i!1g __ ~y;:~d~llfooerally,f~d~·-•: u~creses. Iri~~9(l_ern~!>er:.~wo;
0
}li,e,.;1>9.1;Dt,J~e?_~omnu~e.~;;.:~ted ·. mon -~e1:!l~d- the.-report -m~re
~
• ·
. _assemblY::. ~.:schemat~c. of_
.the·
;programs. The 2:5·million~dolJ.ar;.- we no longer operate:m-tlie red statist1cal-_ey.idence:.to-$how tha~ __ th~ ;fair .. _ . He made special
·
''. Mar~t fun9s:for_t~e_-,co~~iq974\ ·•discretioriai"Y;". fund. "covers'•~~ : ~it~. $~;QQ°-;ci,V~ilapl~ifor.;_slllarY /B~oit;}s ·vie"!ed
~
'~'
7
'Black ~-- mentio_n,:: ~f "the .. co~~it~e~•s .
:75
_
a~adenu!!xear.: In this,sc~~ma-.. are~'<# -the college· whe~e· ~-:., mcrea~E:.s;:-~.9.ll!}I1.odel·number·:,H~~~·'· .-~e--co~ttee--_stat~- -deterffill?ationt~,be pos1tivem·1ts
M1.\
CampilU-.pres_~nt~
.
to :the _:pans1on must <take~ place: ,Ac- .:.-1 ~ur·most,optimist1c·,model, we
.
that there.1s_a d~1re
to
end t_his
evaluation . . . We
took
a
· group_ three.budget·models;·the_ •. ccirdingtoMr. campilii,:••wefeel. find $130,000 available for.:salary · and the. fact_:thaL only .black ?eve~opmental, rather than a
first_beingtpemost·~ptiinistic yet
we
have to·g9 from a zero position · in~reases; w,hicli meiins
~ac- ·.
·stud_ents itpply to . live· there.....
·J
udge~ental approach, at-
att;amable·mco~e;sources.
if
the of inflation
to
perhaP.s
a
1 -1½ corAAtg_ to·Mr. Campilli "We go may. be more the fault: of the ~emptmgto see w~t-~ould make
student enr.ollment: reaches an percent position of inflation. The from-a zero salary increase at campus at large, than the fault of · ·. ea~h house . better,
Sammon
avetage)jf._152~ fullt~e ·students i~flationary '.factor:• regarding. ~.our: most pessimistic model
to
the black students."•·
.
· ·
Sal~.
. .
. , .,
. .
. ;
fcu::the 1_1ext·academic
y~.
The . costs
is
._l?etw'een ~10 percent. per~ps
a
6 percent increase
in
In
~he c~e _of Benoit the .
~Im
Keegan, RC of .. Greg~ry, ·
· second,.bu~get, .. tlie most ·at:- Presently
.
wecanafford 1 percent. salanes across the board, based comnntteerecommended that no sa1d that the report certainly
· :
~
tairi'ble,. ~sµI!l_~~ the:~~tinle \ Ill.aximum, which .
~
our on. ~e operating budget of 2.2 student be allowed
to
.live in the exposed the myths that have be~
· ·..- ~tudent, population Joi!~ch: an , budg~~ must be reduced;?' Areas mllhon dollars, allocated for Holl!'e more ~an two years. They l?uilt up about .the. two houses.
average of14,46>The•third ~odel that must be:considered arid of · - . . .
_· _, ··.
advJSed Benoit to do more to end Keegan expressed hope
th~~
the
estiniates the :~ollnient:at 1423 which:the college
has
110 . control ' · ·
~ont!nued on
page
6
the myths that have been _built up houses can be ~emythologized.
· ·
· · ' · ' ·
·
·
·
· •
·
-
·
·
··
about the House and suggested
. '!,'he RC of Be1!01t,
~rry Hooks,
IE~~6ffi1@'.0!
2
~diliment. -..
·~S~!~5
~~~
Eii.~17-@!E
'Oli'J\~id~miC
Pr~blems~:o~~:G;;:~;~~ ..
~§:Et;i::~~=
Staff Named
"··
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.
PAQE2
_
Students ReaCt
To New Schedule
byDebbyNyktel
FEBRUARY 14, 1974
·
.
Meeting
_
Held
With LaPietra
Steakless
.
Sundays For
·
sAGA
·
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,/
FEBRUARY 14, 1974
THE CIRCLE
Black History Observed
ACTION
.~egins
ReCruitment
Marist's University Year for
revitalizing the Poughkeepsie
Action program (UY A) will
begin
downtown area. Utilizing city
recruiting volunteers on March
1,
agencies
and
business
1974. Volunteers who complete
associations, Action volunteers
the year-long program will
will endeavor through teaching
receive·thir1y credits which will
and advisement to aid existing
be distributed through existing businesses and set up minority-
departments such
as
Criminal
owned businesses as well. UY
A
Justice, Business, Education and
will attempt, in addition, to tap
Sociology.
the resources of retired business
Students will work full-time in
people in the area.
by
Lennard Inniss
one
of
three ·areas: urban
Establishment of a youth
education,
urban
business ·center will be one of the im-
management
and
juvenile
mediate goals of Action students
delinquency prevention. City
working with urban youth
agencies such as the City of
problems.
Participating
Poughkeepsie school system,
volunteers will aid in organizing
Police Community Relations cultural and recreational ac-
Board, Chamber of Commerce,
tivities,
as ·
we1l as
.,+J:P.mot to
Model
City
Agency
and improve relations between
Chris Harris, a Marist fresh-_ historical research and writing, Poughkeepsie Urban- Renewal
youthful offenders and co1Tec-
man, is such a young -man. He publish books on Negro life and Agency will provide a vehicle for
tions officers.
Do you believe that crime, spent some time at Greenhaven history, encourage the collection volunteer participation.
In addition to actual volunteer
immorality, riots, and an inferior and:in spite of the mental and of historical manuscripts and
The urban education program service, Action students
will
mentality are synonymous with . physical_ strain of prison life he materials relating to black will focus on the Poughkeepsie
attend project seminars and in-
black people?
If so, the pictorial still managed to acquire a taste people throughout the ,world. It primary and secondary schools._ service training under the Marist
exhibition of black historical for painting. Several of the glass also seeks -to bring about
bar-
Duties will range frcm teaching-
faculty and participating com-
figures, lirt, and culture should paintings on exhibition are mony between peoples and -ac-
learning, tutoring and small munity agencies.
As
a part of the
be of·gr.eat help
to
you. This donated by
him.
The exhibition is ceptance by. interpreting the ~roup interactions to organizing program, UY A volunteers will
exhibition will not only enlighten sponsored by the B.S.U. arid is history of one to the other.
extra-curricular activities. In receive a basic living allowance
and enrich your ·perspective 'of located in front of the library.
Make a careful study of the addition, volunteers
will attempt . and medical and life insurance
black people but. will also· give · Black· History Week g9t its exhibition, it could . well
be
a
to
upgrade students' reading for the duration of the University
you the unique opportunity to inspiration
: from
"The catalyst for a change
in
attitude levels and try to stem the tide of Year for Action.
·
view the artistic qualities of Association for the study of or your first lesson in h_o:w to cope Poughkeepsie · High School
Accepted students will
begin
several young· black meri who Negro life ~nd History," an with
an
ever-increasing dropouts.
training in June. Selection will
· liyed through the ordeal
of
being organization founded by Carter cosmopo_litan world.
Students involved with urban depend on
a
variety of factors.
black
iri
a
correctional in- G; Woodson in Chicago, during
businesses
will · aim
at Volunteers
will
be
chosen on the
stitution. ·
1915.
Its
purposes are to promote
basis - of prior experience in
Cablevision
To
Present "Civil Religion"
t~S:~~~fvo1~3
.
.
.
.,. .
,_
work. Applicants must also
"Civil Religion in -America" unrecognized since the nation's · Prayer Breakfasf
in
February American religious phenomenon
demonstrate a total commitment
will
be
the topic for discussicri ·by
.
beginnings. Dr .-Best agrees with
1973.
Se~. H:atfield_
said:
"Let us may be collapsing. Charles H.
to the task of understanding and
. Marist
student
Kenneth · them that there actually exists beware of the real danger of Long, black history professor at
helping to solve Poughkeepsie's
Muckenhaupt
and
faculty alongside of and rather clearly misplaced allegiance,. if not the University of Chicago,
problems.
. .
.
. _members Dr. Eugene -Best and, differentiated from the church~., o~tright i~9~atry_, to .the_exter_1t we writing_ . in' _ ~he ·._.· Anglican_
The_ Uni"t:rsity
Xear
for Action
.: ··:Jd:s;, :,,
;Ca~iglyr(°'':'La:ii.ftau''-',
•on<· :a~ ,'/:t:Ja]?~~ate: ,-_a1:1d-'7 ;we~l-:-~~.:-,,Jaji•;.to--;~~',Ilg~~
,
:~~~~\:~e :;~eo~b_gi~~t:1\ey~ey,-;
a~~~-_tbat,
:
~
program·.
>1s
funded. J~hro~gh
;'_~o·ughk eepsi e :. Cablevision · stitutt.onalized c~vil~ religio.rt
m
god of an ~encan·
civil
n:lig1on ·
the
·
Ame!"lcan _
civil_ re_lig1on ·
pas
ACTJON, the F~deral
ag:ency for
(¢1uuuiel
12)
Thursday at
8:00 .
,A~enca;_ •. It has ..
it~
/natio~al ~nd the
God
who ~veals I;limsf:lf been . usei:f by
whit.e
_America,
volunteer services,
which
also·
p'.m. The program part of the samts · m · Presidents hke
ID
the Holy Scriptures and m consciously or unconsciously, to
funds VISTA and the Peace
· series "Building 'the
Earth" Washing~on and _Lincoln, its Jesu_s Chris~." And the _Senator kee~ blacks, In~ans and the
C~rps. Directe~ by
Dr.
Malvin J.
hosted byDr. Best and sponsored martyrs
m
IJ?,en like the ,Ken- continued_w1~ words _which ~ve Je~ish communities from. the
M1chE:lson, assIStant professor of
- by the , Dutchess Interfaith ~edys! and its feast-days or somber s1gniflcance
ID
the lijPlt ma_1i:istre~m
of
American
ChE:nustry, UY
A
hopes to attract
Council asks: "ls America's a liturgies on Thanksgiving and of the scandals surroundmg political life.
Ms.
Landau fears
a diverse group of students.
civil.
0 ~
Biblical ·religion?"
Fr.
Memorial Day, July Fourth.and Watergate:
"If
we. a_s le~~ers · that a_ mispl8:c~ alle~a.nce to the-
Mi~~elson says, "We want non-
'John.
Kater,
paster
of La~r __ Day .. But scholars and- appeal.to ~e JJod
of
CIVil
rel1gun, Am_encan c1_vil religion could
trad1h?nal stu_dents, such_ as
Poughkeepsie's episcopal Christ politicians disagree whether this our faith IS
ID
a small · and ex- easily lead this country along the
housewives, ex-mmates, retired
Church
will
discuss
with other civil religion is good or_ bad, a elusive diety, a loyal spiritual path .taken by Nazi Germany
business people, in addition to the
panelists tnemeaning extent and worship of a transcendent God or Advisor to power and prestige, a toward state fascism and
usual
18-22
~ge group. We are
political implications of this a worship 9f the absolute state. Defender of only the American tot a
1
it aria n ism .
Ken
looking for dedicated people who
·American civil religion.
Sen. Mark Hatfield (R-Ore) nation,
~h~
object ?f a national ~uckenhaupt worries ~ t _a!}
wa~t to c?mbine 1_>ractical ex-
, Scholars have only recently drew national a~ntion · to the
folk religion . devoid of moral ido!a~rous form of thIS clVll
penence w1_th leam1:llg."
begun to analyze the phenomenon probl~m of interpreting the c~nt~nt. But 1f we _prar to the religion led person~. ac~used ?f
F~rther information may. be
of American civil religion,
which mE:a!lmg of ~merican civil B_1bhcal God of Justice and _Wa~ergat~ cranes to Justify their
obtamed _from the UYA office,
they say has been present but religion at Washington's National righteousness, we fall under actions with the plea that they
located m Room
114
Cham-
.
-
God's judgement for calling upon were just "loyal members of a
pagnat.
An·
explanatory booklet
His name, but failing to obey His team."
.
entitled "Thirty Credits for a
commands."
"To see and understand the
Slice of Life" will be released in
Hy~ePark ·
Army - Navy Store
· (At
the
Beverage Center on
Rt. 9)
·10%
'OFFONANYPURCHASES!
University . of
California American civil religion," says
the near future.
sociologist Robert Bellah has Dr. Best, uyou have to think - - - - - - - - - - - -
raised the question whether there about relig'ion in broad und
ATTENTION!!!
still is a -criterion of right and perhaps non-graditional term-
wrong,
higher
than
the s." Dr. Best attended a three-
President's will or the will of the day seminar on the topic at
Drew
people, by which men
will un-
University
last
February.
JUST BRING TH!S AD WITH YOU
timately
be
judged .. Father Kater
.
a....---~-~-AN_-_o_c_o_M_E_IN_B_v
___
FE_B_._2_3.;..' 1_9_7_4 _ _ _ _ _
~
questions whether the. -whole
Contmuecl on page 6
Those people who· ''ripped-off''
the University Year For Action
linoleum-painted sign from near
r------------------------•
the cafeteria, please return it to
Pick .'n Shovel
;,/
19 Academy
~t~
.. - "HAPPY NITE" HOURS·
·>
SUni,Mon,
Tues,
W~d 9PM QDSING
· - Barliquors .
·.:._. ;Sha~e
Liquors· __ ,
M .. - ·.
. . ugs
60t
$1.00 ·
.. ,?.st.
'.'Pitchers
. . .
__ ·
>$r_5~.. ' ".;.· ,-, _
:_:( · : MICHELOB
$2.0,Cf
DA
_
RK ·
$_1~15
o'TH
,
u'RSDAY
NITE ~.BEER NITE:•,·,.
'
'.·_f·'_:_/$2;00
AfDOOR ..
- ,_. ,
~.
.~
.
.
·.:
The -Rathskellar
Presents:
.
.
.
.
, . ... Mon. &Tues; Nites:. Draft Beer-
20c
,· :>><. , ,/· .
(with
this
ad) · .. · -
(·):<-·p:· -·
Wed.-Beer&PizmNite
·
· ·
:
'
>?,::: ·
<...
·' ·
Thurs.-BeerNight
·
·,
.
---~
.:.•
..•
·
. .
·•·
..
·
-
..
'
..
'
.
~
....
·
....
'..
-
me - no questions asked.
M. Michaelson
.......................
IMPORTANT
BULLETIN!
STUDENT
CQLIPQUIUM
·TODAY
Thur. Feb.
14
aU:00P.M .
,
In the
Theatre
.
To discuss Computer
Science,
Religion studies Majors
and
. the. Ne'W Schedule
-~
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in■•••~•••■i■1in■1■11
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PAGE4
•CIRCLE
_\!OLVME 12.-
Marfst
Collage, Poughkeepsie, N.V.
NUMBER:'3
C~Edit.ors
LayootEdlt<r
News Edit.or
Photography Editor
Jim Keegan and Anne Trabulst
Lyn
Osborne
Greg Connochioli.
Dave Pristash •
D
S~ff-:
Tim_
~Baun, Paul
Pifferi,
K a r _
en·Tully, Brian Mom_;
tane Petress,
Mare
Monsaret, Bob Creedon, Ray
Barger,
:rendan Boyle, Irene Ro&<J, E!iz$eth Spiro, Wayne Brio, Bill
pra~e. John T. Clancy, Debby Nykiel, Charles DePercin
C!J,~
Rus~. James Burke, Joan McDermott'
'
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,
-
Business Managers
Jack Reigle, Mark Fitzgibbon
THE.CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 14, 1974
Letters
Io
The Editor
Racl·sm
And Culture
to
deal and identify with those . because of their race, I realize
who have not widergone the mind
that they · find in.· their culture
liberating
experience
of
relief, let this become a human
To the Editor: ,
education. He
seems
to state· that
problem not black or .white ..
Ithasmuchsurprisedmetosee segregation achieves for those
Those who
insist
that they m~t
many places which are supposed - who
are
segregated an identity
retain • identity · with ~fore
to
generate a liberal educaticri, which is fwidamental
to
skin
described
cultures . · are
segregated · ·according
to _
mce. color_. It is specifically these - isolationists insisting on holding
-More upsetting ·- to me.- is the assertions (the assertion · of
on
to
that about_ whi$ they
apathy that
all
in general seein to - segregatioo) which I
will address
protest. -
.
have in regard to integration,
as
now~:
~
_
_
·
I
am
not
asking
any
man.
to
risky .. as t,he proposition may
Black, white and yellow etc.
identify with the black culture or
seem.
- -
-
0
are physical atributes.
All who
white culture, but
I
am
imploring
My own _ backgrowid. is one · identify with these are suffering
people_
to
cross. the bridges and
oriented toward: "Human" from an inhuman reificatiori
of
transcend our-stinking existence
qualities, - thus, not
-
·basic to spirit. We · are -living in a-
and relate ._to each- .either as
atributeswhichreifiesthehuman materialistic
society.
In
people~
·
spirit.
It is J>asically human; I , everyday life .we · are used to
- It is a horrible happening today
feel, . to deal with humanly deajing not humanly in
un- ,
that in our world walls have beef
creative aspects
cf
our lives and measui:ed
values
but : _ in
constructed t.o keep people
from
-
-·---
.......
,--·
, to shun that which reduces
us.
It measured ones. We _ therefore
each other. I speak now not.of'the
was therefore with great surprise own · a reified culture._· Sadly
geographical problem such as:an
and disappoil)tinent that I read exploitation , occurs> racially. A almost all white . or · black
an article
this
past November by mark is made culturally between
residence,. but of a - deeper
I
.
I
I_
I .
)
- Richard . Green
·
in:
·· our-
black and whi~.
All
who find · problem wher_e few prople c~
newspaper, the Circle. It has - their human identity in these ,deal with- each other.and simply
gone W1answered
till
riow.
-
cultures, letting _
theni restrict
enjoy anothers being. · _
_ _ -
..
.
··Richard -Green feels tllat them · in any manner _
are suf-

·
John
Carberry
- segregation is nec~ry t.o "his" fering. I know that historically ·
·
people's d_evelopment. and ~~ility -- some peoples have had hardships ·
Did·
You Know.· ..
th
Where· emthuster wbe·eanagreed_
or
disagr_
ee
Wl_
"th _the present«e-·c· o·noinI·c cr-lSl.-'s"
Th•- . N. - _.
·. . ---_ -_ .
un e
tandin
b
C
discouraged the ecologically
porations which have. produced
not only Americais c:fronte9
~t~
~erihans that th~ ~orld and
·.
e __ ,xon. _
fl SIS
· -·
minded forces in this cowitry.
~
the «energy crisis'' in order to
mostAmericaris sit back
d - -~ . a reac erous condition. While
-.
·
· ._
·
-
The «energy ·crisis" would ._ blackmai_l the puplic into thinking ..
country, the rest of_ the· anrl~O!llP am abou! the PrQblems f~cing this·To. the •Efii:tor:. ·
__
repr.esent no better cue for Nixon -•· alongtheuownlineof.thought: In
suffering can be attribute~ · th is left sufferm_g and many· tinies
this
In cons1dermg · the present
to resign his term of office. More
meeting the

practicalities of the
nation by our people.
-0. e selfishness displayed throughout our confrontation· of our soc!e~y with
importantly, there would_ be._ no
"energy crisis" it is important
· During the ·1ast year (l9'la) Am .
-
--
·:'
.
·
the s~alled '.'energy cr1S1S'' one
better cue for Congress, t.o,·once · that the people get t.og~ther and -
sums on the items listed below· encans have spent the following
must
say that there M.S never
_
again, assum~ its ·pr.oper powers,
not
be
"fue,lish/' However, it
fa.
· $141,980 000- on diet"
h · th --
·
_
_ . _ been a· greater need to unpeach
including its _responsibility to
equally im·portant that the
. weight
0
r{·
.
mg
w
en e rest of ~e world can't even get the the b!Wlt-h_e~ded President Nixon
check the President's power and, , members of Congress : get
$100 -million dollars on c

books
h _
. _ _
~ho_
IS
0Qliv1ous
to
hum.~ ne~ds
wider the present circumstances,
together
. bf - ·impeaching
are illiterate. -
.--
omzc
w
en great numbers of people m favor of corporate _mterests.
commi;nce· impeachment • Preside~t Nixon to help
us
meet
$2 - billion dollars on the to . d
t - _
--·
· ·
·
Aside, fr~ni poor ~nagement proceedings at fulr speed ..
n
one of the important realities
$75 -
million dollars
--
dv
Y
1!1.
us
ry ·
and foresight on the issue of the · would now .- be better
.
for the · _ brought- forth •-by the
.
"energy
.
$¾_-:~on
dollars
g~
foot:ii~~~~oys.
fue~ ~hortage and J?OSsible
members of Congress to believe :_crj.sistl-:the rieedfonfrespected,
$3 - .billion dollars on toil
t . -
ratlonmg, he has ultimately that there is. no place in this __ trustworthy and .. concerned. ad-
$500 -
~on dollars on
3
0
;
1~~-
resp~nde~ to corporate power-
nation for corrupt politicians
:
or ' ministrat,ion.
< -_. · :~ .
$800 -
million dollars on no -£ d ·te
f
_
.
· -
profit
mterests
and
has
for
immorally minded cor~ -
AntllonyM.Wilger-
blankets, boxes, etc.
n oo
I
ms or dogs - i.e;, doggy boots,
.
. -
- --
-
.
-:;
,
_
_
~e.~verageA~eric,an
ea~
18;4pounds
of
~ndy
per
r~:;, ·
,.
-.
,
,
.
..
,"-:;.,
_
.S.egr,agation
-j),oi.;
-
,:.:,::.::/
·
.~-
-
-
bel_ieve~ ·· .
.
segr~,ted;:•- · ~ormt
·
; I --- p~o~eSSOI'S,. as
;i.:w~fr.:
llr:;i1d~---.
. --1·
-
-· - __ ---· :_·-' - ,.,, .

,,,, •.••.
-,,_,,.,i,ltlf,, ·•
would
1
liketo,,openly-;disp,11te.:not . ~istra~ors•who,felt .there,is·a
H
· h C --.· -. -
Carn puses.' ;; ' ,·:
<
.
'
~~:;~i~bifntris~~nl~h~u\1·:~~
~i~:~~:~r~rr:a~~~'.!:tidtt2
. I
g . . . .
a
Ii be r? .
.
registering ·here at Marist'
I Benoit, and others whofeeUhat
To the Editor,
__
suppose
I
myself was confrmted - the very presence - of Blackc.-::::
R,ecent ruling passed "down _by
with identical . myths arid students_ is. a threat to their well
It seems singularly. peculiar that at this time
bf
the history of the, Albany's Regents .Scholarship
falsehoods such as.the ones many ·being. _ Hopefully as
'
Black
hwn3!1 I"ace, the Marist student is beginningto question the "caliber" Board warranting segregation.on
of you have•. encoW1tered. The '. students existing .within the
of those aroum;Ihim-ignoring, of course, that of his
own. _ ·
private college campuses
.
has
time has been µiade appropriate - American society
we
have come
For some of
us
who attended the meeting Monday night with Dean been assigned to a
Mr.
Nyquist of
to state -that Benoit is not and to Marist to achieve the same
LaPietra, the voiced opinions of a number of students concerning the . the· regents board for further •actually never has been -_ a
g~alas all others have, academic
fact that
foi:
us to attend school with "a lot of ho~sewives" and people examination.
It
has
been-decided
segregated
dormitory;.
In achievement as.well as a place in
who had been out of school for a period of year$ would be seriously that the segregatioii of students
revieY(ing a copy of the Benoit By society among tomorrow's
compromising the "quality" of our education as gleaned fr<lll this doesn't support the concepts of a
Laws"it is plainly.stated that any professionals.
-. _ '
· ··
institution was little more than irresponsible, as well as ignorant.
college atinosphere and has been
member of the _ college· com-
Open invitation. has been vir-
One of our most important educational resour~es is that of our en- deemed· unlawful.•. According to -muni~y ·who. is·
willing
to· uphold tually hollered. by the voice1f of
vironment; andthemorediversi.fied,thebetter.Itwasi:iotbadenough the regents reports on the
the ideology of this house is . BenoitHouse.residents .. for some
that there appeared in many universities (not only at: Marist) a segregation process; it has been
w_elcome.
It is not stated that one form of _ rapport with its
commuter.-resident spUt- but it seems that in closing the gap (such as declared that the majority of
m1;15t
~
Black-tfl do,so. Benoit- .surroundin_g, comm unity.
it was), students of a certain general age are rejecting integration colleges. and universities · have
e:nsts
m
part- as · an institution · Whether ;the voices _
have · been
with
persons that for_ some reason are not considered· "student'' complied· with - the ruling on· _ ~ithin an institutioo whereas the unheard or ignored· is' a ·question
material. Would the caliber _of these students actually compromise the desegregation. However· certain . ideology -. and concepb · of -
·the
.
of another sort; the invitation has
education of, "college ldds~'?
..
-
.
institutions through the state are
f ~ are· portrayed· in' our been offered and rut doors ~en. ·
· It is seriously doubtful that any student anywhere 'would be pei:mi~tin~ se~regation_wit~in _ev~ryday experiences. Benoit ,Itissaidthatinordertoacttialize
"compromised" by the presence of other "different" students (Marist then- dornutor1es~ A ~onfiden~ial
~xists
as
a cultural center where o~es fullest potentjal ones en~ · -. : __
.can
boast
quite a few
of
them now): and
·if.
he does, then it is report from the
_
state
Education··
m
our search t.o better wi- - VIrOnment ,must ,play--an im-
questionable whether or not he wants an· education or membership in Dept.
states
"the phenomenon
of
derstand ourselves
we.
must
open
PQrtant role: The environment of>· -
- an elitist club.
·
· · ·
1 •
-
-
·

the . s_egreJated facility . is . our dQOrs to other. lifestyles ·and B_enoit--provid~ merely, a step-
declm1~g .
ID
ilnportance · on - cultures.
.•
_ .• - __ -- _ ··
pmg st.one from which students
c~llege • campuses,· · as_ the
. '.l'he opinions of administrators
/
academically
as
well
as socially •·
minority students· seek broader -·through·the state
of
New 'York .prepared, emerge
to
face the ·
contac~.••
.. _
.
. . ~ave been in agreement
as
w~ challenge oftomorrow.-
.·::
. .
.
_Spea~ga_s a ~tudent of
~~t
.
. as ~ g r ~ n t
wipi
the Albany
. ·- ·.·E~stA.
Royal
Anyone interested injoining the new CffiCLE
staff
should come to Colleg!l ,and also. as a resident ruling; ·Here at Marist ~inions _
·
· ·
Please-Note -
the CIRCLE office
on
either Monday or Tuesday night between_ the ·.student·. of Benoit House:
(a·
also vary~ I have spoken with·.
hours of
7:00
p.m~
and
10:00 p.m.
· ·
_
. .
. · __ -
.
·
· ·
·
. · -There
are
openings in
all
areas cont!ibuting to the total output
and
production ,of the.- paper .including: news, features,
sports,
photography, cartoons, typing, lay-out and circulation.
. . · _
If for some reason you are unable to come to the office at this time
then please contact either
Lyn
Osborne
·c
618 or·Greg Conocchioli,
Gregory House. The office·is Jocated downstairs
in
the· campus Center
in room 168.
·
··
···
· -
- ..

- --
.
..
- .·. ·. __
-;_
·'.-, :-•
The Marist College CffiCLE
~
the weekly newspaper. of the students
of ·Marist College. and. is. published: throughout -the, school, year ·_ex-•
-elusive .of v~c~tion periodcJ. by the Sputhem Dutclless. ~ews. Agency~
Wappingers_Falls,
·
New:York;'\
,t -•·· · ·" ' · ·· .
>i< ··
<•
·· ·

· •. ·., ·_ .• : The~4J~ ~olicy
oi~~
cIRdE
is' dete~ed \;~
the::~J~rity
. . vote of
~e
editoi'~
.and
is
in,
:~o
·way
subject ~,.the
:
:~ttatiori'or
·· ,.~t;ii,~~i.:qov.~~~
-
?fi~.,f~~~~·:-:--L~:,:
,
.;(\·->-':
.-
._:;:·•,-t.·>\:/'.'-..:-
-,
._. ____ .L

























































































































































































































































































FEBRUARY 14, 1974
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THE CIRCLE
PAGES
More Letters
_
To The Editor
Academics And
changed.
. with his-her
.faculty
a~viser. .
Based oo my interview with
I do not
think
that
this
letter
lS
Freshmen
Ms
Ross and on the content of the appropriate place for
hez= article I believe
that
she discussing
the
variety of factors
clearly
~
understood
·
the which ~elp to explain the
un-
Dear Sir:
requirements established for the derachievement
_of
these
I want to
thank
the
staff
of the freshmen whose indices
_
were s~dents. !3ut I do
wish
to
by to
Circle for its interest in and· belowl.35.However,theeditorial dispeltheideathattbesestude~s
concern for the
.
freshmen who writer seems not to have had are less ca~able than their
receivedpoorgradesattheendof complete informatim. I would contemporaries on camp!15,
their first semester.
Both Ms.
like to review what has been done College Board scores and high
Ross' article
("Freshmen
Ex-
to
.
underscore the accuracy of school r~c~rds place these
·
perience Problems") and the . Ms. Ross' report. •
students
within
the norm~ range
editorial ("Academic Review") ·
The
fifty students with these
-~four
student
body. Advisement
.
whichappearedinthe7
.
February e~emely: low ~ndice~ were · is a factor but the examples of
1974
issue of the paper illustrate contacted by mail dunng
the
poor advisement from faculty are
the · sensitivity of

responsible intercession. In brief, they were r~e, especially
when
compared
journalists in an academic set-
told
(1)
they were in serious wi~ the co~equences
~
peer
ting.Inadditiontoexpressingmy academictroubleandadvised
(2)
advJ.Sement m the selection of
thanks I would like to add em~ not to return unless they were courses.
·
rted b
d to
k · th sprmg· to
In closing I want to commend
phasis to what was repo
·
Y
rea
Y
wor
10
·
e
·
.
.
the
·
officers of the freshman class
·
clarifying a few points.
·
demonstrate the quality of
.
[f
_
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In the editorial the statement
. ·
academic work of which they are for initiating
this
semester a
was made "For mme freshmen capable. They were informed (3)
tutorial system to help freshmen.
students
·
a
2.0
·
cumulative that
if
they returned, the decision
The
notion of using
up-
average after next semester
is an on continuance next rear wo~d perclassmen who are.doing well
impossible dream;"
It
would
'
be be based. on the qu.allty of their
rre!t~e:Sl~r e~~:tie~t ~ :
difficult to disagree. The
...
facts work durmg the sprmg semester ..
are that no freshman is required Ea~h return.ee :was to see !Ile
program is for all freshmen, not
to have a
2.0 cumulative index
.
durmg the first week of sprmg
just those with low indices, and it
after two semesters and the classes
(1)
to discuss problems of
.
.
has gotten off to a good
start.
freshmen who had low indices the first semester, and
(2)
to
Contact
Joe Aiello, Bob Morley,
·
·
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afterthefirstsemesterhav,e been review course selections for the
Frances Fulling, or Rodney

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asked to try to achieve a "C" spring semester
.
.
.
.
·
Lemon
if
!'OU wish to help or need
' 1
0
·
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lu
.
.
·
n
.·.
tary
·
·
·
·
.· .
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Plan•Find
.
s:;:~:rin~~
.
e~e~~~eM':°t~~~~ to~~:n
_
e~~::.!:~~~;t~!~~ help.
Sincerelyyours,
.
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.
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. .
perclassmen will
.
recall that at many cases
~
. work~d w~th
Assoc1·ate
De~~~if
ud~
-
·
·

.
·
·
.
·
·
·
, ·
the
.
end of their freshman year, students on reV1Smg their sprmg
C
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·college
policy required them to ~election of courses. I tried to
AcademicAffairs
0
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in·in·ute
·
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r
·
S
···
·~-
·
op·e·
.
:
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havea_cum. ul~tivei~dex not less ~press upon each ~tudent the


·
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than
1.7; this pobcy has not unportance of working clasely
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B)'
Elizabeth
_
Xpiro
·
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·
,
··
Checking Big Banks
be purchased on
'
even-numbered
.
calendar days by drivers whose
.
,
commuting
·
students
_
are
:
license plates end in even
hopeful that the enactment of
.
the
numbers; on odd-numbered
ByRalphNa.der
.
inflict on consumers, taxpayers,
directors with their large cor-
voluntary plan for purchasing
·
.calendar days, those with
.
plates
home buyers in search of mor-
porate customers, Citibank is
-
-gasoline
·
will ease the difficulty'
'
ending
·
_
in odd n
.
umbers
-
will
,
be
WASHINGTON
~
It's called tgages and smaller businesses.
luring deposits away
from
these
-
·
u~ey had
·
had recently in ob: ser:v
.
ed.
:
.
.
·
·
.
.
"The Bank Book."
It
is an
ex-
Irving tries to show consumers
smaller banks.
·
faining this essential item .
.
··.•·
<·. ·
·
While
·commuters
realiz_e that posure of banks by a bank insider how to
_
avoid the more flagrant
Now with the ble~~g of the
·
-
The
sighificantpercentages <if
this
.
plan will not solve the using the pseudonym of. Morgan - bank traps. Mincing no words,
Federa! Reserve, Citib~ and
students who commute

·
··
between 'f>roblein<.oL short
:
supply
.
.
com~. Irv_ing. Thi~
_
book
-
is
.
only
.
.
f?ne this
.
whistle blowing
~
, Q~!ll_c~r-.
_gth~~
g1c:u~t
.
ba!}ks a~,
movmg
to
;
MarisV
i
and~
0
thefr,; homes
\'
have
pletely,they seeit·primarily
,
,
as
a

indication
-'that
·
the
-;
c
c~nsw:ner asserts:
.
"Simple-incompetence
acqwre under the recent
bank
··
··.
been plagued
in
'recent
weeks
.
by

-
j
m.,e~ns
,,-•
()~' I?ro~iding
:::
.
:
~o,:e movement
is
fi.r)ally
catching up . vies
.
with
·
·shortsightedness,
hol~ing
company ~ct other
.,,
·
:
·
•·'
thetmavailabHity

of gas
andfong ·
·
:
eqwtable
·
distr1bution
.
of
·
the
,
_
gas
.
with the banking industry:
.
· -
bigotry and just plain
.
'let's fleece
busmesses
.
such as m.s~ance,
·
1me~
.;
~t

-
many
·
s~tions:
-
·
The
.,
thafis available. The J?lan should
At about
the same time later the consumer'
.
" at many banks
leasing and travel. '.,!'radit1onally,
·
prospect
.
of
.
-
missing
·
ctasses or
.
.
.
prevent
·
motorists who have this fall another booklength including the large bank where
our laws have
·
restricted our
being imable to make the return
·.
turned their
-
cars
into
.
·
rolling critique
·
on banking will be he works.
banks to banking business so that
trip home was frequently
.
a
very
storage fanks from stopping
·
published under the title "The
It
is true that bankers have
they don't become like octopi
real possibility.
.
.
whenever needed
-
merely to "top Dollar
·BaronsP'
by Christopher surrounded 'themselves with a
controlling the economy
.
This
However,
.
the disclosure last
off' their tanks with a few
.
gallons Elias; This volwne concentrates mystique that says only they can
tradition
·
is
now
rapidly
week by Governor
.
Malcolm
of gas. As responsible and on the fifty giant' banks which
understand
banking.
This
changing.
Wilson
·
of the formulation of the
directly-affected members of the
.
hold half of all the deposits in the mystique has been their greatest
The deepening concentration of
'
voluntary
.
plan appeared to
community,
students
who
-
nation's
13,500 commercial camouflage against public
bank. power
~ a fe~ cor~
commuters
.
as the first
·
.
step
.
commute daily to class are eager banks.
.
scrutiny and has infected the
porations, conflicts of mterest
towards bringing some sem-
for
this
plan to have a definite
Both books take the mumbo
federal and state bank regulatory
between trust and commercial
.
blance t)f
·
order into
·
an
·
ever-
beneficial
·
effect on their tran-
jumbo out of banking and clearly
_
agencies which are more ser-
deparµnents of banks and the
,
increasing chaotic situation.
-
The
sportation needs.
describe the abuses which banks
van ts of banks than their
move in~o non-banking business
·
plan proposes tha~ gasoline may
·
·
regulators. Throughout his
45
are all contributing to the
ls
,
ThlJt
All There
ls?
. .
By Joanne
McCullough
-
years in Congress, House pros1>1:ct ?f the gr~tes~ public
-
Banking and Currency Com-
mvestig~tion of banking smce the
mittee Chairman Wright Patman
Depression ye~s.
.
.
has been documenting this
·
in-
Already Chairman Patman is
tense coziness between the banks
-
holding hearings on
reform
of the
and their regulatory agencies.
country's financial institutions.
·
Three years ago when a group Segments of the insurance in-
course they are; but where do
-
forward .to two days of partying. of young lawyers and graduate dustry are battling to keep banks
you place them? DoMelly Hall?
So, for a bit of a different students started, our study of the
out oft.heir business. Small banks
·
-.'
It
,
seems like· only
,.
yesterday Not
too
likely!
·
. •
.
image; you
might
leave your First National. City
Bank led by the banker's son
of
Wen-
whenlwasborrowitigrQysister's
·
You might recall those
.
faces
,
jeansintheclosetfor
-
anight,and
(Citibank
in
New York), we
dell Wilkie are renewing
t!teir
l_icense
.
for proof, tryi~~
:
to
from
last Monday night at
.
The attend those
.
class cocktail called upon Citibank's chairman-
stru~le to
~urb.
the vora~ous
remember that l was
.
born m •~ Derby, when you found it hard to
·
·
parti~. Or maype you'll.hit Beer haughty
-
Walter Wriston. Sitting-
appetite of the
.
big metropolitan
instead of '55,
in
case the bar-
resist that
·
special on beer, and arid Pizza night at
the
Rat; (It's astride more than
$22
billioo in
_
banks.
A
Federal
·
Reserve Board
tender's brother was at the door pJ,7%~. Or could it have been too
-.
col~
1 1
to walk
.
to
·.
!<'.~ks assets, he could
:
not understand
g!)ve~or
.
has
called
for the
-
checking

l'D.'s .
.'
'lllose were the TuesdayatFranks, when for two
·
a~yway ..
~
)_And
of co~, you whyanybodywouldwanttostudy
divestiture of
trust
departments
-
days!
_
\Vhile
-
rushing
'
home at do~,youdrankuntilyourtime
·
might have your ba~c room his
bank_
the nation's second
fromcommercialdepartmentsof
:
12:45tobeinbycurfew;
·
youwere
·;_
was up?
-
You
.
remember those
.
party':' always consisting
fl.~
·
largest with offices all over the
banks. The Civil Aeronautics
·
throwing those cherry:-flav!)i'ed
·
faces
.
at the bar
-
doing the same
.
excess amount
of
.
people, six-
world.
·Board is investigating possible
..
.
Ce$
in
your mouths~ as_
J!Qt
~o
.
thing you W!!J'e - greedily getting pack~
.of
~eer,
_
and other
The completed report on
violations in sizeable bank
smell
·
.like
_
a brewery when .you
.
.
t~o
.
extra
pitchers of beer,
thr~
_
miscellaneo~ apparatus.
Citibank, which wjll be published
ownership of the airlines ..
c81Il~mJl,1e fro~t dom:. (lw~nder
:
_-
.-
ipmutes bef~r~
~
las~ call
_
is
By
,
the time ~~day i:~lls later this year, provides many
Th~e ~vents together with ~he
<
-DOW.,iflilY
.
m~the~r_eallyf?e~e:v~ aMounced. .
,
.
-
. .
_
around,youwantaqmetrel.~mg answers to Mr.
Wriston's
publlcation. of several m-
·
:
1w._en~tothe
_
lllOV:Ies ~the~e)~
·
Or·maybe 1t was Wednesday at day, where yo~ ca_n rem1D1Sce questions. Citibank is using the
vestigative boo~s, high interest
.
Drinking
:::
then,
.
w~s
.a;
,
~g
:
re
.
.
the Bache_lors, that you ran mto
:
aboutthedynanutew~ek-endyou money of small depositors and
rates and the tight home mor-
.
casiori;
<
and
:
if
.
you
,,
-
di~ t
~
get ~ t certam face, -where the deal had;But inste11~ th~t
$1
_
5.00
text-
trust accounts to make the rich
tgage market are likely to
·
·
.
.
caught by your
.
pai:en¥J...: it
·
w~
~
:
_
_
is even
·
.
better
-
at a
.
mere
.
dol?81'
.
.
b~k kOO.J?S
gla~~

down
.
at you richer. A handful of
-
financiers
prod~ce a chain ruiction that will
..
_
evenJ~Jgger
_
occasio{l:
.
· "
.,.;.,
:
:
_
and a half:
:
Al_ldJOU know you ve
.
because

it .
.
hasn t '?ee!l
:
OP:eDed
invest billions in a handful
_
of spotlight as never before the
·.
Now,
at
0
,
the.age
,
of
etpteen,
_.
seen·a lotof
.
tliese faces at the yet!·So,you
:
turnaw.ayand
_
_
digup
giant corporations, prcrnoting
power o~ ban~ to ~buse their
•·
things
are
_
a
,
bitdlffer.ent. A
;
llight l>ick
_
on Thursday, while
waJkilig

yow.,-wallet, only
to
discov~r that monopolistic pracUces_. and
_
trust, This reaction
'!ill
extepd ~o
.
doesn't
:
start
;.
until
',
Y~
-
'v~
_
J~
_
ad baclc
_
~nd f~rth from the b~ to the
.,
you
-
have to
·
borrow
:
,
a· ~ e to mergers as well as whirling funds
"two-hatter" legisla~ors m
.
·
.
_
those feW-
.
beers
:
before
:
Y~ll go
.
bathI'oom;, all
!
0
r
-
bvo
:
!lo~rs.
·.
make
_
a collect
_
.
allL
.
Then
you
·
in the private world of
.
in-
Congress and state legislatures
.
-
·
·
out.:.to
.
drinld loften
:
,onder if I
·
And
_
what_ s a
·
'!'hursday
,,.
rught
_
:
..
glanc~ -· at
,lour
.
~~cbedule,
·
ternational
financial
and who push laws favorable to banks
.
:.
might
;:,-,
))e
,
:
bn.,:t.he,
yerg~
:
of
·
:
u
.
nle~youstopattheC~boo~e for
,.
dreading.the,
;
nannll
.-
five
day currency machinations; But ~ck at the same time
that
they are
.
.
.
·· 'becoming
an al~l¥>lj.c:-~otto
.
th~
·
.
aJew:J~t ~rs. b4a~~!
-
r?P
-
~e!d · w~k,to
come,
and
-
~
those
in New York City
-many
in-
holding directorships or in-
.-

.,.
·::
e~nt
,'.
of
.-_
co~r:,ot~S!l~
-
a
~e>rn8;!:
-:.,
y·,· .. --:~_
.
.-
>-
,·.'·
.
<:•:,
,/
-
8:30, ..
~:~o
and
~be
even
2:15
·
v~ent n ~ that would help -v~ents
j.n
banks or receiving
__
.
.
· •\
d!ink
,
fir~JhinJ_mJhe
ffll:)l'tlll,l8,
-
~
.
At
\
~
-Fp.~y
,
has
~rriyEld.
, .
.
·-<
classes ::You.
.
~
_
.
Jut
:
w~
tl_le people are ig~ored.
low.~terest loans on e~y tenns.
·
-y
buHt cannot~ c~s.sifl~
_
as jU.1t
,
•;
After.a lo~g
.
h8f~ workin~
week,
:
beca~_your alarm c,l~
didn
t
··
·
Growing
·
at
.
the expense of
.
C~tizens-may '!{ant to·
~sk
their
::::·
socµ~F
\
drinkillg
.
:
:
e1~er.
·r
::.
~
:
.
:
of,
_
~~~
-
YO~
.
;
deserve
·
.
a
..
(ew
::
~<>
.
.
off again
.
!1!11
DollJyou
ever
,
many smaller banks around the ~eg1s~ators about such· dual
_
;>
'
abo~ti~you,rself •
.
J~tak~
.
.
~look
.
bet!rs.Sorou~hthat~you f ~
:
Y~~~lng,
:
II
that
all
_.
country who can't
·
mutually
·.allegumces
to legisJaUve du~es
around
'
you;
:
FainlliarJaces?
:,
Of
were,
sent from home
and
-
look
,
there
18.•
·
·
backscratch and
'
interlock and
'
to
the banking industry.
·
..
.
..
~_.
_

:::
:
'.:·
~
..
-':
_
_
;
·".'
··
-
·:
. ~
-
.,
-
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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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J
I
. 1





































l )
i
PAGE6
FEBRUARY 14, 1974
Shout It Softly
Third
Year View
-ByFr.
Leo
Gallant
This
article is about me, a high,
school dropout. I humbly share it ·
with you at the insistence of a
Marist teacher who heard this
story. .
·
·
.
If
I can be considered as having
done something. with my life, I
give
-thanks
to books. (It's one
thing I have
in
c<l!lmoo with
Malcolm
X.)
I have no high school diploma
because I hated school and quit in
my junior year. Yet today, I have
a Master's degree
in
education
and need ooly a few more credits
for a Master's in English and a
Master's in
Art.
I
was a high school teacher for
17
years, during which·· time
(summers and evenings) . I
earned graduate credits from the
University of Maine, Boston
. University, Boston College,
· Catholic University, Fordham,
Manhattan College, Wayne
University, Mercy College,
University of Detroit, and
st.
Thomas College, Minn. .
Nothing in my early life pointed
toward such a life.
I
was.
sue-
by
Bob Nelson
_ Europeans.
One of the·main__reasons why I ·· Exactly .how do Europeans
cessful in grade school, but
I
came abroad was that
I
had view American tourists? Aside
flunked religion every year
for
never been to Europe, and from the envy or contempt that
eight years because religion
was
wanted to do a bit of sightseeing, would seem logically obvious, ·
taught in French (we belonged
to
which I managed to accomplish one might derive another view
a French parish), and I did
not
over the Christmas· vacatioo. from the generally ~ereotypical
understand French. I was
Rather than detailing everything image that Europeans have of
completely turned off by
high
were in a quandary, ·but
after
Isawanddid,ataskwhichwould Americans.
The
widely
school;and quit at the beginning much deliberation they ·allowed produce a rather boring travel disseminate.d idea is· that
of my junior year. I worked in a me to continue.
commentary, I wi,ll simply list Americans are rich, -more
grocery story, in woolen
mills,
'Having had no Latin in high the cities I.visited; a list that is materialist-
than
idealist, se1f~
and joined Roosevelt's CCC.
I
school,
I
had a bitter struggle
in
perhaps itself indicative of what
I
centered,, ethnocentric, and
was drifting.
philosophy and theology; which
was able to observe._ From motivated more by the profit
Then something happened. _ were taught ·in Latin.
But
since
Geneva, I visited Lyons, Cologne, ~otiyethah by any humanitarian
Books
came into my life. I books had come into my life I did
Munich, . Salzburg, Vienna and . mter~st. Concrete examples may
became a voracious reader.
I
had not know the word "quit" .. Even , Venice, returning then to Geneva be cited both to prove and to
no money to buy books but there today I, don't know loneliness
and my classes. I must say that dispr!>ve . this
theory.
If
was the public library, 15 minutes because every free moment is
this trip was one of the most Amencans are so interested in
away.
Books
became everything taken up with books.
educational experiences of my themselves, \Vhy do they support
· in my life.
I
developed a
When students tell me how
life - not because
I
toured some Israel, an action·, manifestly
tremendous desire, through bored they are, how much T .V.
of the great art museums (The ~ontrary t~ the profit.to beJo~d
books, to do something for
theywatch,howtheydriftherein
Alte Pinakothek',in Munich and
m
Arab oil?-Howevert there 1s
people. I. suddenly wanted. to college, I silently pray to God to
the Kunsthistorisches Museum in certainly
. a
lack
of
become a priest, something
·I
inspire them to pick up a book
Vienna), operas,· palaces and hum~~ani:nn !ls ~egards the
never at any time had a desire that ,
v.:_ill
be the · first. step ·to
other cultural sights, but because PalestiruaI1 mmonty
m,
Israel or
for; At the age of twenty-one I hundreds of more books. .
. I had the experience of_µianaging t~ black minoritr in South Africa,
entered the seminary.
Books mad~ it possible for a·· on my.own in unfamiliar places; smce the Amencan government
The administration took it for. school dropout, a drifter, to find a
because I saw, after. a fashion, - supports the oppressor in both
. granted that
I
was, a high
school
whole new direction in life; a life
what it means to be German· or cases; in thelatter case, because
graduate so I started right into t~t has been , so full and so
Austrian or European; and of rich deposits of South African
college. Two years later when . happy. That dropout hopes and
because_ of the impressions lgot gol_d._ But leaving' aside the
they discovered I had only two hopes for a stomi of books tofall
oftheAmericantouristinEurope validity ?fthe theory, there is the
.,_
high school years completed they. like rain at l\jarist.
-- and how he is viewed ·by the comp~tible .
_
not!on
- that: --
.
.. ··
.
·
.
Amencans, bem so nch and
well-
,,,.
COLLEGE COSTS,- Continuedfr_om page
1
off, have
'
)oth the time
~d
-
·Two
_
-Generations -
al · · " This
ban ·
. .
· . .
money to see the world at their
s . anes. .· .
more . t . one . retam the number of, residence leisure,_ caring little for the
third of the budget
1S .
broken students that we now have. The
/ 1 . . of
th
ti
·
·down in
the
following mariner, 51 concrete· effort
can
w~ll result in
f;f~.
onli'
ii.r
th:'
~:er~.
percent belongs to the faculty, 24
a
Fall enrollment J)lcture even inanifestatfons of· ·the glorious
pe_r~ent . · belongs . to . ·•• ad- better than predicted in the first- European (Indian · Cambodian
mmistrative and pr.Qfessional model." : .
.
• .:
.. · p
· · .
E
· '
1
.
'
staff,
I~
percent to secretaries . According
to
~es~dent J{oy .''it
6ri:S:gaiti,gyJ!t~a;:·~e~!
and clencal st_!lff, ~nd 14. percent · 1s the council s mtentioJl to - aspects,
this
stereotype has its
to our se~v:1ce an_d. s~pport . recommend
1'?
the _trust;ees, that accurate elements ... The greater ·
syst~~- ~d according to
Mr..
the non-salaried
ij.ne -
item~ be part of-American
tourists
visiting
Of Brubeck
ByJohnTaylorClancy
gap is visible or audible. The Campµii _we ~ve.a total of
}71
held_ to
the
amoUQts describ~. another country d~>'~t-speak the
.
. .
_
Brube~ks are one of the best pop full tune: employeE!B to :which .. (Which actually means. a cut m .local languag(l,'. the grossest
Back
in
the 1950's and early music shows on the. road.
these bo~m .. figures must be · real ,I?urchase power. Th~t demonstration of tourist . in-
1960's college students-would no
.
Their program
i&
essentially a ~
,
ddf~~d ..... ·, . -•. · .·
o ;
esse~t~aUy new pr~g_ra.ms,
m
soucianceforthepeoplearidtheir
. more ·•nave.· been .. witbout
their -.
.
·
series ,of -casual• entrances·•• and
RegIStra~ion for
_
spring
)~4•
1s. , acbni;5s1~~• fund .· J:'llil!lng, ,_ an.d . ·culture.lmilst admitthatl speak
. LPs of pianist Dave Brubeck
than
exits
in·
which· each Brubeck has · l44.6--full.;m.11e
.
~\u~.~••
.Yfl:\11. -.~.
~
_contin~~pg ... ,: :.~e,,dµ~a~1011:. : -, be ;riefther'German riof,Jtalian · and
we are today
witJf
the Beatles his moment alone in the spotlight. budget_ gap of.
m ~-
Selll~ter · aut~~rized,: but '·that-'

oth~r tht1S' fall'Jriio' the •categoty/of
albums. But in 1007 Brubeck Afterwards the Brubeck& get reve~ue of $37,000 from t~e dec1S1ons be . defe~red _
_
until. insouciant·American tourists.
suddenly disbanded _ what was together and combine talent.-This predicted
1472
enrollment.: Tpis · Septembert,registration fagures What
I
·
fourid. · myself -doing,
probably the most popular jazz includes Dave, who now fronts a
$
37
,ooo
can be made up accorchng are known. · ·
.
.
however was speaking French
quartet of the post World War
II
replica of. the old Dave Brubeck. t~ President Foy out of con-
. Currently t~e · a~in~rative as much as possible:and giving
era. One reason for· disbanding ., Quartet. Darius, age twenty-five, tmgency funds· af!-d ~he . budget . council . has auPionzation . for • Geneva.· as my home. address -
was that he had been playing as aJ!d·
~
auartet_ offer mnr~ of a cuts that were . mstituted _
last perso~nel and expeI)ditures that is, 'trying not to appear an
many •as 750 on~nighters per thin~g man's
Jazz.
then fmally September at_
~
2. percent assW)llllg_an enrollment l~vel of Americ'an,andtryingtomeltinto.
year on the road and he wanted to ChrlS, age twenty, along with
his
!~luntary reduction m every 1600 f':111 tune stude~ts_, while ~he the background as
a
European so ·
spend more time with his b8J!d New Heavenly Blue, display
ea.
.
. ·
"
coun~il
also
de~s it ~peratlve as.better to observe the people of
children. He did that - and now
a fme rock style as they blend . Accoromg
to
President Foy It that
it
prepare operatmg .models the countries
I
visited. But
I
themusicalpublicisbeginningto country, pop and
jll72:,
is the conseJ!SUS of .staff most for the co~ege of 1500, 1400, and really felt I was insulting the
spend more time with his
It will
be a golden opportunity Cl?5e~y associated with the ad-
1300 full time studwts as Fall people
I
met when
I
had-to ask
children
too.
forthosewhofindpopmusictobe mis_sions that next year's registrationindicatesthatMarist "Do you speak English?" or
This
Valentine's Day evening stagnant as well as those who re_g~Strat_ion."
. The
. ad-
will stabilize at ol!e. of_ these "Parlex-vous le francais?'; since
at eight Q'clock, Lourdes high
only listen to rock music. I have mmistrat1ve council accordm& to levels. Once the stabilization has it was apparent that, I did not
school will be presenting the ain:ady been privileged to see Dr. Foy m8!ces _the followmg o~curredplanstogettothemodel esteem their language enough to
Brubecks in action. When the then- show.
An
enjoyable evwing recommend~bons._
. .
will be enac~ed over a· me and take any pains to learn it.
family gets together to perform wijl
be
had by all
those
who at-
_The council pelieves it
15
un-
two year period. To J>l'.eP.are s~ch
Perhaps it
is
the American
they are billed as Two tend.
WlSe and. un!an- to rely on the mode~s the ad~mstratlve students who are the most con-
<;;eneratiO!}S of Brubeck, but no
same_proJec?figmethods as were council has to review every spicuous tourists ·wearing a pair
used~ pr~yious years. ThE:re are aspect of the college's operation, of Levis and a knapsack, often
Marist Travels
a~ ~1gniflcant change_s m ap-
each area of personnel will be with one of those vin
1
arkas
plicati~n~n~enrollmentpatte~ reV!ewed, and alo~g wi~ these withafur:linedhood.IiilefaNew
~nd thlS mdicates we are going reviews the council "·will seek Yorker in Munich who like
mto a new pattern. E:G.
~ix
years and inyite the advi.ce of. the · myself, wants to ;,,
0
rk
in the
ago the average appµcations sent respective staff groups, both as American Foreign Service the
out y,ere between 6-10 while today individuals and to the ap- · diplomatic corps Deternrlned
.
~e!iles_onetotwo_applications, so propriate committees of the , not
to
be a visible tourist he was
7J
S
· ,
'L
l • , ,
it
lS
difficult to use the same council."
1
1
d
,
.
0
·
methods
of
projection that were
.
-
_____
, _ a way~ we
1-
re_ssed, lo~ki~g
-ee
Ore el
used last year or
the
year before.
,
~
--
.
more like a; foreign- spy,
lD
his
·
·
The council als
f
ls
that
"C" .1 R 1. . ,, C .
eel
trench coat and fur hat than an
.
-~
ee .
1v1
e 1g1on , ont1_nu
American . student But
I
was
.
,
,
-
enrollment
lS
the smgle greatest
· -
· ·
f
·
·
·
By Cathie
Russo
music is re-incarnated along with
unknown item in the 74•75 budget.
. .
. .
.
rom ~age 3
p@rtict:113rly concerned about
~Y
.
.
.
afewne:wsongsbyBettyComden
"We believe in the conce t of· "Religion is defmed·.by many conspicuousness. ~s a touri~t
On
Fnday everung March
1st,
and AdolP.h Gre~. Anita
Loos'
b~nce budget, we considi it scholars today as a cultural when "!e were n~g the tram
students ~t
Marist
will have the and F,e1lds' original book,
unwise at this time
to
conunit a ·system of
beliefs
and practices, from Vie~a _to Venice togeth_er.
oppo~umty.~ see t¥, Broad'!ay "Gentl~en Prefer Blondes" has significant block
c1,
expenditures by means
ct
which ·people in· At the Ita~an
-
border,
an
Italian
~usical,
_Lorelei
starring been revitalized by Kenny Solms when the revenues are unknown
groups try to cq>e with" their
_
gentleman came aro~d to check
~arol Channing. The theater trip and
Gail
Parent ( of Shella
Leving
in past years
we
were
willing·
t~ ultimate problems," . -adds
.
Dr.
our passp~ts-: but did not ~thfr
1s
being sponsored by ~e C.U.B. Is Dead and
Living~
New York' gamble be,cause we were in an B8:9t.
Wh~
~eric~s
tak~
the to check x_mne: ~?lY my fne~d s.
Perfo~
Arts
Committee, and fame).
. -
.
exp~ding :: situatio~ , and one point of view, "My country, right
.
He exp~~ed. ,When tl}e con-
the
cost
will:
be
$7.00:
,After touring the country for year's mistake could
be
icked or wrong'.', or "America~love it d~ctor, ~aw your Levis and
. "Lorelei"
l S ~
reVISed versi°!! the pa.st
eleven
months, . up the next year.
This
is no fon er .. or '_leave· .. : it," \ are
they
.
cmi:era case, he knew right_ awar,
of "µentlemen Prefer Blo?des
''Lorelei" recently dazzeled true; we are in a static· or sll~t equivalently .making:. a .god _of that _you were an American.
which first opened
on
Broadway Broadway on January
'J:1,
1974. ·decreasing stage
It-
is' the· their
:
nation or of their chosen !Jer~ 1 ~ad been-.trying to·melt
in 1949;, _and starr~d · Carol Once
again_
doing her celebra~ council's judgeme~t' ·that ;•the · leader? .
.:carr
the concept -of·
J,Il~
the~ba~~~und, to observe
Channing! Playing_:the ~ - of, performance: of
the song actual enrollnieiit;for·Fall l975- ·America's
'tcivil
religion~• shed, ·r'i-~~\~~i:bsel'\;=-~anvid
1
·
Lorelei
·
-Lee,
Ms.
Channing en-_ -"Diamonds
·m
_A Girl's_ Best willfallbetween'1522and1567'full _.,,_~light'onthelum9filleg~and ·Tmh
,
t
d tenq~ed
ous.
·=
chanted theatergoers and gained Friend", Channing
is
back·
as·
time'
students
We
also
b ll
. _unmoral 'behavior
now
typified
,
us,,. am e_ennm
to
CO!l·
,
tnstant-,.stardom: as the· ~lor_1de - ''Lorelei" at the' Palace __ Theat~,; .tllat e{lch. empioyee ·can do-~!~:· · ~Y the
:
:w9td_
·
Waterg~te_?
!lbese , s~t_e._my sp~g yacati':'1 .f~r. a
from Little
Rockt
Arkansas who
Tickets for '.'Lorelei" will
be
on , to improve our coinpetitlve are . some·,
ci ,•
the
•·issues.
-
and' ·
~~t ~
France, working o~ my
captures the.' heart ,_ of, a_ sale
in
front
of the-_
cafeteri, -
position by_hfs'or her:attJtude'of questions·.to
·
be i:Usc~d ·on ~e.
_
,Al;'
1
enca~uccent enou~ so that_
.milllonaire .. while abo.~~d_ ,_ ~n, .- during the dinner hour
beginning.- ·
service, and:· perhaps
~
most - Dutchess · Interfaith <Council'-,·: it
J4
=htall,·
~
as~
-~issbe -
oceanllrier.~ .·:· ,.-: :.•.<''··,Fe~18.-
,
· -·. ,c·rucilil;attractiveprograms,:'by''P~;thls•'lllursd~y·at~a:oo-.. a ~ . , r
, ow
sto
The
Julia
Styne_.·,·
Leo•-~lin
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FEBRUARY 14, 1274
. THECIRCLE
Affairs Committee Examines,
· R epori On Athletic Future
By Brendan Boyle
& Robert Creedon
entirely
for
women•s
in• appropriate facilities. It is the
tramurals.
.
opinion_ of the athletic depart•
Concerning definite goals for ment and the Middle states
Spo~
plays
an important pm:t advancement, Dr. Goldman Report on Marist that
if there is
on every college campus. Marist would like
to
change the policy to be a · substantial
growth
of
is trying to develop and advance regarding not granting athletic sports at Marist then new
its · present teams, initiate scholarships. He feels that facilities are needed.
women•s sports, and increase its granting . tuition · scholarships
In regards
to
new facilities
intramural programs.
Un- · would benefit the teams and in there have been studies done
on
fortunately, the lack of.facilities .. turn the image of the
school.
At building a new field house.
An
prevents all plaris from being present there are two basketball
architect
has
already
come
this
enacted. but still pmitive · plans players .
to
whom the athletic year to make a study and give
are being made for the -future.
department would. like to. offer ·suggestions.Earlier this year Dr.
Athletics do make
up
a sub•· scholarships. The. Board of · Goldman,
Mr.
Petro and Mr.
stantial part of the Marist Trustees and the President have Austin visited new complexes at
Community. Last• year
241 ·
the say on this.
seven
·
Northeastern schools.
students participated on the
Some practical areas that can However, the major roadblock is
· varsity or club sports and
1331 develop with the facilities now at money. Besides the initial cost of
students took part in · the in-
Marist•s
disposal
are men's and building
the
complex there would
tramural program:·
.
women's volleyball.
Also
greater. be a twenty-five to thirty
As
for
the
rate of•grc,wth of the particjpation in the areas of golf thousand dollar a. year upkeep
teams, Athletic Director Dr. and tennis and . a rebirth of the bill to cope with .. The frustrating
Goldman describes
Marist
as
in . wrestling team. The
wrestling
part
of
the whole
thing
according
between
levels of achievement. coachhiredforthisyearisstillon to the three coaches was that
The teams
are
slowly
.
but surely salary and is travelling around when they made th:eir tour of new
, getting better and moving into a trying
to
recruit new wrestlers to · complexes six out of seven were
higher more competitive level. rebuild wrestling at.Marist.
virtually unused except by the
·
He stresses the point that one
When
dealing with the question teams. At Marist
on
the other · ·
team.· isn't getting . preferential . of athletic growth at Marist there hand with poorer facilities
is
treatment over another
since
he is a major roadblock -the lack of hardly ever not in full use.
considers the
most
important
An_
.. .
ll_O·_
·un·
Ce· ·m·· e·
.. DtS
aspect of athletics the number of
- ·students-who participate rather
than
tb.e
superior quality of one
team or another. ·_
Women are
beginning
to
take
a
more active role in sports on
campus. ,There · is a women's
, basketball
team
with four games
WE'VEMOVED!
. The Office of Counseling Services
isriowlocatedin
.
·
Champagnat
111, Ext. 286 . ·
_already scheduled f<r
_this
year.
·
·
-
.
·
·
Dr. Goldman says that ·he. would
Somebody
Bai?:
'.'\llhen
good
AillericaJis die, they go
to
Paris/•
like .. to
see
the creation of. a
.-

women's-volleyball
team
and to·
WHYWAITSOi.oNG?
.
see more women participating in
GO NOW!
GO
WITH US!
the golf and tennis
teams. ·

.
.
• .
- ,
· -.
.
· · .
.
Another. area---of increased, Dates: Sp,;-mg
Rece&.,
(March
15
to March
25).
·
_ -
sports activity is the intramural . Price: $5~, including round trip New York-Pari& through
KLM
Royal .
program
headed by John Tkach. Dutch Airlines and, a
JO .
day guided tour thr,ough INTRACO __
(in-.
--:~~i~t:=:~J1JrJl:~~-
-
s
1
:~~:~~-s:l~:r~~:~1~ee~-triorto'tiiedepii~ure.:._:.
·c•~,s-
race and a -girl's turkey
,
trot.
Dr~ .
•·.You don t have_~ be a French maJor
to
enjoy.the trip. Everybody is
ACROSS
1 Prefix: father
6 Out of breath
11
College subject
{abbl".)
·
12 ."captain Queeg"
14
Main
15 Warehouse workers
17
Fannhouse
19 Wreath
·20 Group character-
istics
21 Suffix: science of
23 Scenic view
24
Comed1an
Errol
25 Human remains
27 And others
28
C01111lercia1s
29 Forward and
disrespectful
31 Kingston -· -
32 A11 -
33 Great period in art
.37 Taker of business
. complaints (abbr~)-
40 Epochs .
41 Swing pianist -
Wilson
·
PAGE7
ar~
C
42 Mfrth
10 -
a check
43 Motion picture
11 Please be -
studio
13 Mfne-boring tool
45 The Gods.•
14 Crab's claw
46 To the back
16 Troutlike fish
47 Japanese city
18
Pain
.
(poss.)
22 Aptitude for making
49 Most.like a.
discoveries
backbone
.
25 "In - " , (Befder-
51 Planned progress
becke tunel
53 Thorough .
26 Benny Goodman's
54 Railroad cars
pianist
55
German city
· 29 Biblical name
56 French infinitives 30 Wrath
57 Expressed assent:
31 Russian city _
-var.
·
33 'Put
fn
fresh son
DOWN
1 Raincoats
2 legal proceeding
3 Wearies
·
4 Horse-colored
5 Bad-natured
6 College degrees ·
7 ''I've -
lot of
11vfn' to· do"
8 Dramatic conflicts
9 Crusaders' enemies
34 Expunged
35 - .
Wood
.
36 Soft drinks
37 Censored
38Anima1s
.
39 Upper -
42
Make
sad
-
44 Mitigator
_46 Mountain range
48 ..,Your M,Jesty"
50 concernfng
52 Qraft organization
. (abbr.)
Goldman says that
if
it could bei welco~e!
.
.
·
_.
·
.
scheduled, he would ·like to
see
For ~formation, contact Mrs. Francoise Gregg, Donnelly
209, .
HIGH ON SPORTS,
Continued from page
8
the
gym
be used one night a weel( Extens~on
209;
· .
thaf
the
following issues are vital ·
tt
t
u ·
·
·t· . .
.
to any discussion of the· future of a empt
O
e .
Cl
a respon~ from
athletics at Marist Colleg
the commuruty on these. issues.
D
· ·
th,
·
~-
1.
Women•s programmmg.
COMMITTEE,· Continued
from
page
8
Marist.
The
committee has determined
urm~
e open
forums
we will .
2.
Increased recreational and
.--lellll--------------------,
intramural programming for the
OLD
O
·o
entire college community.
·
·
i
A
T
3.
Financial aid and recruit-
-t-1..
ment of athletes and resulting
':AWINE& CHEESE RESTAURANT
OPEN EVERY EVENING
LIVE MUSIC ON WEEKENDS
&
WED. NIGHTS
. AQUIETPLACEFORMUSIC,ART .
&RELAXATION...
·
·
51 Market
St. ·
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
impact
.
on schedule of Varsity
Teams and image of College.
· 4.
Should fees be charged to use
a new athletic~recreational
facilities .
5. Future direction of club
football.
PARK
·01.scouNT
BEVERAGE, INC.
· / (R,T.9) AUJANY
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cagers ran down the Marist College hoopsters
88-41.
Later
in
the week
de~itea slightfirsthalflead, Coach Tom Wade•s cagers went·down
~
another defeat at the hands of Bloomfield
96-93.
·
Five years ago - The Marist College Wrestling team boosted
its
record to 3-5 with a 33-10 win over Drew University. Later in the week
they lost
to
Seton Hall, 21-20.
·

Southampton College took advantage of Marist fouls and ended the
Red Foxes eight-game winning streak with a
106-!17 · non-conference
basketball victory at Our Lady of Lourdes High School. Later in the
week the_Foxes connected on a blistering
71
percent of its shots from
the floor
m
the second half to roar from behind for a
98-o7
victory over
Brooklyn College.
,
Terry McMackin scored
34
points to lead the Marist College fresh-
man basketball team to a
100-09
victory over Southampton's frosh.
One year ago-Ron Petro picked up
his l0oth
career win
witlfa
83-78
victory over New Haven. Later in the week Siena College pulled away
in the final
17
minutes and defeated the Foxes
88-57
in a non-
co~erence basketball game.
The· Marist College wrestlers won three titles in the 18th annual
Nation~ As~ociation of Intercollegiate Athletics (N.A.I.A.) District
31
· champ1onslups at Monmouth College. Winning for Marist were John
Redmond, Bob Farrell and Jim Lavery. Earlier in the week Albany
downed Marist 46-3.
Skip Gilman's 2~ points spar~ed
the
Ne~ Haven junior varsity to a
88-84 basketball
win
over MarJSt. Later m the week Tim Welchons
scored
20
points in leading five men in double figures· as Siena
College's Junior. Varsity drubbed Marist 89-65.
·
The Rathskellar Presents:
.
~
I/J
I
,i'
~ .
.
LUNCHEON SPECIALS
MONDAY
TUESDAY
Superburgers-2hamburgers
Dellclws Minute Steak•
w.
Fried Onions
· ·Cookedtoorder-onatriple
· ·OnHardRoll-W.Fr.Frles&Sm.Soda
deckerroll-GardenFresh·~--
,,
0

On19'$1.29
. Lettuce &Tomato-Golden Brown
~
··· ··:--.
·
Fr.Frles:&Sm.Soda-Only$1,29
. . ..
· · · (Superburger-Only$.99)
•~:.;:·
'.
WEDNESDAY
.
i,,
pound hamburger• Lettuce & Tomato
· OnaFreshHardrollW;Fr.F_ries&
. '
Sm.Soda-Only$1,99 .
(lh
Pounder-Only$1.35)
. THURSDAY
MarlstBurger
(forthosewhodon'tknow)
1s liamburg
cooked
to order, crisp bacon,
. , American cheese, an on a
fresh
roll ·
Only$.99-.W.
Fr.Frles&Sm. Soda·Only$1.39
FRIDAY
· Sm. Soda or Coffee FREE W.
Purchase
of any
d.
our
,ubs (made to
order) Ham& Cheese,
Roast
Beef,
Turkey
' Italia.ii
or White Bread- Lettuce & Tomato
on
all
Subs;
. "Don't
forget''lb~. FREE
~pe
refill'! 8:1! a~."-
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r:--- - - - - - - -
---
- - - -
-
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.
..

.
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THECIRCLE
-
-
PAGES
Marist
Sunk
By
Stonehill
Marist
dropped another close
.
The 1~ plus the
loss
to
Foxes
will
play at home again
on
one
to
stonebill
on
Saturday, by a Bloomfield on Wednesday
brings
Saturdav when they meet Sienna
closing score of 49-47. With only the Marist record
to
8-11.
':('he Red at DCC "on Saturday at 8:00 p.m
.three
.
seconds left to
·
play,
Stonehill's
.
Chris Civale hit to
score
·
the winning basket.
'
The
play was
.
set tip when Stonehill
·
fouled Marist
twice
in the.closing
seconds
of
the
.
game .
.
.
Marist
failed
to
·
gain
·
anything from tlle
two
..
1-1 attempts, but Stonehill
·
lligh
On
Sports
by.Jobn:Tkach
·
scored
.
after both misses.
-
.
INDOOR
TOURNEY
·
.
.
·
.
.
.
·
. .
.
The low score of
the ·game was
__
Marist College tried th~ir • hand at indoor soccer last Sunday
·
due
.
·
to
the tempo set
by
Marist.
.
(li'e~ruary 10th) at a Invitational Tournam~~ at. DutchE:5S (?om-
Cast
in
the underdog
.
role
·
again, m_uruty ~liege. The
.
tourney
:
'!as a double elimination affair with a
Coach Petro
,
employed his slight differ~~ froII!- the ordinary soccer rules
.
.
.
·
·
d.eliberate patterned offense with
·
Two of the bigg~ differences betwe~n the two forIJ?,S of soccer were
.
.
Marist

. only
_
taking
·
the
per-
the number o~ part1ci~ants ~d the s11.e of the playin~
area.
Indoor
.
.
centage shoots and crashing. the soccer
.
uses
six
players
as
_
~
oppos~
.
~ .eleven players m _the outdoor
board to prevent
.
the
·
fast break.
.
form.
As
.
·
far
as
µte
.
·
.
playing
·
area

IS
.
concerned the
.
difference in
In
the first half,·Stonehill had dimensionisl20yar~longand75yardswidefor outdoor
as
compared
troq_ble adj~ingto the
pace
of
.
~o110fe~~l~ngby70feetwide_forindoor'.
.
:-_
.
-:
•·
.
.
<
:
.
.
·
.
..
MARIST
.
BOOTERS
·
SHOWS
..
·
soME
ENCOURAGING SIGNS
IN
·
the
_
game ·
_
and
·
Marist
·
c
·
artied a
·
·
In
thell'
fir-~
game the

~nst boolers registered a 3-0 victory over a
five
:
point lead into the second
.
teamcomprised
-
of
:
several
:
junior
.
college:All-Americans. The win
·
half
;
In the second half, StonehiU

.
advanc:ed~arist
.to
the w.i$ers bracket but somehow forced them to
Stoneblll's
Chris
Civale
m;.,enta
before
gam~wimung
~ket.
.
made the necessary adjustments
:
.
wait_~me 90 IDinut~ before ~eir
·
next game
;
·.
.
,
.
.
.
·
·

.
·
..
·
·
-·'
··
·
·
·
· ·

•.·
·
·
and
t.be
contest
.
turned into

a see-
·
:
Their neJCt encounterwas agamst
·
thesame group of Junior College
C
.
·
.
.
·
..
·
o '

..
.
·
'.
·
···
, n
'

..
·
.
·
r n
--.
·
..
.
-
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·
·
· u
·
·
·
e
·
,
e
···.
·.·.
·
·
·

··
L
. .
:·· .
.
o
:
·.
·

o
·
.
.
.
·k
·
··
.
·
.
s
·
.. .
..
··
_
·.
-.
·
..
·
. A ·
·._
-
:
·
·
t
·:
.
·
sa_w. battle
·
wJth
-
_
rieithe
(
team
'
AUSJ,ars
·
who had r~led of(four
wins
while Marist
,
was
.
waiting to
willing to relinquish·theJead.
:
play: Tlle
·
game
:
was simply- a case
·
of one·team being ready and
Allan
,
Fairhurst
.
.
and
:
Joe
_
another not; Unfortunately·Marist wasn't and they lost 1-0.
.
·
·.
·
·
·
· ·
'
..
·
· .
.
.
.
·
·
-
-
·
·
.
.
~i,rasella
,
ledJhe
'.
Marist
:
aitack,
.
·:
.
li'acirig

a pos1;ible

eliminatio11, the ~arist:strikers played a team
111a
·
.
·
-
.
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of
his
pomts m the
,
second half. had more
_
c9~er kicks, they were credited with a victory .
.
.
.
.
C
.
.

'
.
·
- : ·
:
.

.

:
;-
·
,
.:
:
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.:
Maristmo:vedmto
.
the bounc
.
e
·
.
:
·
:
.
'~Uhoughtt~at
:
wepufm.
an
outstan
.
~g showing,!! said coach Dr.
The Student Affairs Committee
·
:
ta1ce time to analyze our position,
·
situation at theJine with 7
:41
·
to

·
Howard
.
Goldman; '
.
'consiqering the fact that
this
·
was the first
.
time
at
.
the request .
:
~f _the
.
.
De~
..
of
··

.
ourgoals;a~d our future iJ(ordElr __ go
··
salvaging
·
4
.
:
poin~
.
in
-
si;_ 1~1-
·
:
}lla,t many
·
of o~
·
players~d
-
experie~~d real.competition
.
in indoor
.
.
Stu~ents _ha~ been
.
revie\.TIIlg
·
a
.
.
.
to
.
d':terrn_me
::
tht role
.
t~?t; shots: Overall,
.
MarISt vvas
·
JiyEl
.·.
·
soccer pJay, This t(>Umey. will most def1D1tely help
us
next season when
..
substantial report from-
.
the
·

athlet1CS"
.
will
play m our com- for twelve
:-
at
.-
the line in ·the
'
we g(tbadt outdoors.".
.· ·
·
·
.
<<
,. .
.
·
·
·
·.
Athletics Department concerning
·
muriity,
,
Any action, program
;
or secondJialf
·
or
"
41
percefit
,:
wiiile

•. ·
·
At }astlhave
·
fowid aJiositive sign of things to come,
-
_
.
· future ~i~ecti~ns
.
of Col~ege
,
major
.
chapge
m
·
.
our
.
athle~c ~~n~hill
;
shot:76 per.cent fJ1?I_n
_
the
·
REI)
:
~(!~S
:
TO H~T SIE~~ A'.f
_DUTSIIESS
SAT~DAY
.
prog~a1mnm~
.
~
.
_
the area . of
.
program
.
now _vvill
:
hav_e

it~ lme. A.,ll other departments \Vere
·.
.
M~rist <?>liege plays
.
host to arch-nv~ Siena College m abasketball
physical r~reation and athletics
;~
:
greate~t: unpact
.
mJu,ture
"
years;- a bout ev~~-
: :(
.
.
. ,
·:.
. .

~
.•·
:,
~on~~t
.
tllis_ ~~~ay_ (February
.
16)
at
8: 00
p.m. There will be no
A
.
~opy o~ the f~
'
report· is
·
Thus
,
we
-
m~:Jo11llul~tEl
·
.
our
·
With3~secoh~leftinthegam1(
·
·1unu~r_va~i,tr J>reli.~nary
/
:
·
.
·· .
·,,
.,>
·
-
.
·.·
.
available
~
µte M.iddle
,
S.tlites
·
.
pre~~t
,
athletl~ prograJ.!)S
.
and
_
the score
:
was 47-4LWhen Enc
.
·
.
.
Nlar~
~
S:U
·
pr1or to games witlt
.
~_cred
_
Heart on Wednesday
.
Report, copies ofwhich are m the

facilities to fulfill future needs of DePercin failed to

hit
.
the

1-1
>
C,oach~on Petro's team dropped a pall" of heartbreakers last
week
libracy.
·
_-
· ·
..
·,
~.:.. ':
·
:
·
>·_
the
,
Mari:Sf_c_ommwiitr-

.
:
>
Storiehill rel>Qunde(and called
.
lo~ing't~ !3loo~field
71~3
~~d Sto~ehil}4~7; Sophomore guard Eric
.
The d,eveloprnent ~:
~e
reeor:~
.
:
:
,
'
F~r,
.
a
,>
large
;
~rtum
.
of
..
J~e
,
_
time
·
o~t. With
26
~econds to go de_Per?D <:~~tllluesJo §how
·
yast unprovem~nt

as he contributed
13
.
grew
.
o:ut~
~
recogrut~on that
.
the
~
Nlarist ~ommllD_lty,
.
th~
·
;
~thletic
,
Stonehill
.
moved
.
the ball across
·,
.
P~~ts lllJl!e ~\Vo games; while helpmg
·.
to
,
clli'.ect the Marist offense.
athletic
'.
pro~~
.
.
had

~ttained
/
·
progrc.am
:;;
;
.
a11d- t~e
.
,
f.u\lire
:
·
0L_cot1r,t~~ waited for
:
~ se
.
con~t~
::.
JUJUOf
:
Joe
·
(?ira~eµ
.
a
:
ai!d
'.
S
.
~ho~ore
_
Ray _Murphy,
.
.
both
.
forwards,
·
..
goals
,
~a~µshed appro~ately
.
·'
athletics
·
15
.
·
an
-
IS~~
:
•·
.
ot
:
.
µt~e r~
.
~;
;
·
.
p~fo
.
r.e
'
shooting~ their
•,
0
,
co~blll~dJ1.?r
~
pom~, while1i.puor
.
g1!_8I'd:Alrairhurst pruppedinl4
.
ten ye~s
·
ag_<>
•.
(~am,ely
;
·•
soµpd
.
_
co1:.1c:_~rn
;-
.-
Who
:
_ cares?
What
.
dif".'
.-..
\V1:fllllilg
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l)()
.
mtiJ
i
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· ,· · ·
·
·•··
.
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,

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.
S
.
tQn
.
~ill:M!i!PS.V:S9!ll~r
.
·gtµl~
,:
~
_
d
,
~J11"-,1,·fir~d upten•poiilts
-
.
educaho11al
·.
phllosophy
:.
arid
..
:
:
feren
.
~e d~s
,
it make?
.
9ir
f
the
, _-
~
: ~
.;.;:,,_
'
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.
.
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,
J
~g~t
;
Blooinfi~ld
.
::
._
:,·
_
·•
..
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.

.
.
·
·
.
..
.
: ::
..
.
'
·
.
·

,'. ·
· ··

:
values
_
for the
_
program,
:
a
·:
high
·
athleti~ program r,eally have:thaL
·
'
·
·
.
•,
.
'.
-
. ·
·
··.
·· ;
·
...
·
C1rase_lla
:-
cont~ues
·
t~
:
11:8?
.:
~e
!?ox~
.
in
:

s~m:ing
.
(11.9)
:
and
degree of competancy in
per~
.
.
much unpact
.
u~
the Marist
,
; .
..
. .
8
.
·
· :
.
.
1
.
reboun~ng
(8m ~
:
followmg
him
u1tpe scor1Dg
.
column are Murphy
-
-
~.
fonnance
.
byvarsityteamsanda
.
COJDIIlimity? To answer these
.
,
...
.
·
.·•
.
e
.
p
· ·
·.
·
(8.8),0sik~(7.2t;and_s.opho~o,reguardJoeNebbia(6.5) .
...
.
.
.. •·
.
sound intramural
-
program).
:
qu¢ions,
·
to inform the com-
·.
·
.
·
,
·
.
.
__
··
·
TheManst-Sienarival11\isunquestionablyoneofthehottestinthe
Also, addition~ !,;tcili_ge~ were ~unity
_
of
,
the
.
aqvcU1tages
_
and.
-
sta~.
Last
:
~eaS()n,
_
the Indians beat the foxes
'
88-57,-andleads the
nearing
the
p()mt of reality PJld
.
disadvantages of
.
.
the . vanous
.
w
~
:
.
··
1
.
.
d
·

series
6-3.
Sfena,
.
o~e of Ne
,
w york State•~ top
Small
College teams,
the
.
q~~tio11
·
.
of what kind of policies,
.
and to, in general,

.
.
:
.
.!
afi e
·
.
.
began
_
the week with ~·
11::6
record. with games this week against
programming
.
should
be
housed develop wide spread Community
·
. ·
.,
.
Co~land and St. FrancIS. Three
ci
Siena's losses have come
against
in such facilities and to whom interest in the athletic p_rogram,
The CIRCLE
·
editori~l
staff
is
,
gia1or college
_
ba~etball
-
~earns in the likes of Iona, Seton Hall and
these
-
facilities would be made
·
will be the goal of the Student
in
need of someone to
fill
the
e_o~eto~. Steve Walters_ and Rod Brooks, both averaging close to 20
availa~le was
~ise~.
Sources of Affai_rs Co~ttee
.
.
.
. position of' sports editor for the po~ a game? lead the high scoring at~ck, which totals ne~ly
90
.
operational fmanc1al
·
su
·
ppQrt
~
co~ttee will
.
hold
·
a
1974_75 academic

year. This po~: per outin~. Brooks des~oyed !tfarIS~ last season, sconng
22
must.
~
d~termined and
!Ill
senes of opt;n forums ~o
-
inform
·
person must have
_
the ability to p_om
°J1
a 9-10 n~ght
_
from the field. Siena
wil
have a decided edge in
adm101strative structure and the_ ~ommuruty of the issues and coordinate the sports section
in
a t~E~~AMED
-
-
management procedures must
be
to provide
an
opportunity for manner that
will
represent all
.
..
.
. . A'I'.HLETE OF THE WEEK
deve~~_prior to operating
any
_
open
_
.
discussi~n of the pros and areas of athletic involvement on M Jo~ fc8n8lla; a Jumor from Eastchester, New Yor~ has been named
such facilities
.
_
-
.
cons of each issue. We
will
then
-
this cam
us
The erson(s)
will
ar~ .
o ege_Athlete of the Week fro the week ending February 9th.
· The college ~mmunity
·
must attempt to's'urvey the (!ommun1ty be expefted. to k!p
-
in contact
This
18
the
third
consecutive week tJ:iat ~irasella
_
has won this award.
~ow address itself to the future of
·
to determine its
:
opinions, with the-athletic director and his
_
~ ~
~keA~
P=~•
~ored
38
pomts an4 p~ed down
35
rebounds
__
athle~cs. Just how much em-
_
thoughtsanddesire~inreg~to
·
staff, along with the sports in- !pHISe"iE~K~aMARISossestoBently,Bloo~eldandStonehill .
.
phasIS should be placed
upon
the future of
athletics at
·
Marist. formation director and
those
T
SPO~TS
_
athle~cs? National trends
seem
·,
T~
is
not a trivial
.
undertaking. involved
with
.
the
.
intra-mural M Te_n
?tf
ago
-
~F
collectmg two straight wrestling wins, the
to indicate. that coll~e stud8l}tS ·
It
IS
your _opportunity to
~r~
porgram .
..
·
F
.
or (urther in-
..
t0:r!
_
19~10
e~~~~ff[ e~ went down to ~~fea
.
t when Hunter ~llege
are not
as
m~rested
m
athletics your opini9ns and greatly md
-
m
.-
formation
-
please inquire at the
·
• ·
·
·
· ·
·
..
as
,
they
·
~nee
.
·
we~·

·
·
-Natio113l

,
the ·decision
~
µiaking
·
.
Pf:"OCess
'.
at CffiCLE
-
office
.
ori
·
Monday
.
and .
_
Hitt~g fro~
all
over tlie court, Philad~lphia Textile's highly rated
·
~~ends, however, do not apply to
.
·
.
·
·
·• ·
.
·
.
:
·.· ·
, ·
·:
:
.
.
Tuesday
from
7:10
p
.
m.
:::-,~
·
'
>
-'--
·
·
·
all
cases; We. at
Marist,
must
Cor:i~•nuedon page}
.
·
·
·
·

·
ContinlJ~ on
·
page
7
. . llQUQRAMA
·
OISCOU~T:,.
..
The M:~;x~:~h~~~i~:t Pa~k
{
LIQUQ,s
,
..
. .
·
:
._
,.·
.
.
.
;
,VisitourWin~Cellar
..
.
.
•.
·.
·
.
·
_.
.For'the
l.;;i1
rges
_
($
,
e,lectt.~n
'.
otJty
.
ine.• in
·
1:>utch
_
ess
.
Co1fnt
'
yi
1
.. ·.·
.
F,REl;
,
.
QELiYEltY
.::
:
229-817(($10
:
rnininium)
.
.
..
:
:

.
.
.
.
·
~
>
. ,
•.
.
.
·.
:
;
:
-
·

.
.
.
.
. .
i
fmportect
:
ita1ian
..
· ;:·
//Last
'Neek
:'
AfThi~

Pric•'-~
..
..
>
•~;;;.;;;:.~
S>"•
·
.
·

.,
..
·
.
.
..
-
.
.
Februa·
···
cHEN
.
LEv
,
~
ffe
!
1
~:¼
i
Meet
.
..
Your
Friends
:
AtThe
.
.
.
-
.
.
.

,.
.•
.
_:
·
CHEESE
:
N'
WINE
SHOP
.
·
~
.
,'
.
.
-
.
.
.
'
.
·

.
.
;
~.
.
,,.
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
The
new
Mall
in
Hyde
Park
.
(Route~ - Next
_
to ~oo~velt Ho~e)
Largest
Selection
oi
F~sh
. ·
:
International'
Cheeses •..
·
.
Wine Accessories •..
.
.
,
.
.
Epicurean Foods
&
Spices ;, •
·
.
Fresh
.
Ethfilc

Breads ~.;
<
.
.
-
:
_
.-
·(··:
.
_
.
··
vouri1rst
.
cbeese
purc&
.
ase
·
.
: ·
,
W~b
this
Coupon,
· :
'~
<
Off.e.i: Expir~
.
Febl'.llary'28; 1974
.·•
, - -
..
.
' .
.-...
·,
.
:
.
·
: /
. ·
·
.
.
.
.,·
.
:
. ,
:
.
:
.
':·
>.:
·
::
.,
)
.
.
,
,
..

..
,
·


12.3.1
12.3.2
12.3.3
12.3.4
12.3.5
12.3.6
12.3.7
12.3.8