The Circle, March 9, 1972.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 9 No. 20 - March 9, 1972
content
.
,•,•
..
a;:
j); - {
> . -
.
·• .. ···· •
.
·
.· .· ..
.
···•·.·•··•.·;,l?l~Qcat10n·.··
In the; conti~~iJ;~_~Ji~h
·
\~{"
...
-ruesda)'
.
.
" '.
~
.
Dep~rtmental ·• faculty: and
r ".
more ~ffective}and/Jii~ari!ngftil;:
education. the
Ape
JS
sponsori!l8:
a
college
:
~ convoc:at~on<'}ori"-
Tuesday.· · March
·
-.14. ":: 1972 ·.
regarding·,. the.:··•• prcicess/·oi:
evaluati_on.
It
is
the hope.ofAPC':
thatfrom such an experience wilf'
come camp_tis wicfe analysis .and
i
reflection ·on existingievaluative .
processe_s .
1
··shident~fa·culty~;~
administrative~dialogue ·.on. the··
positive and n·egative features of
present practices · and: .. specific
L
recommendations,to deal··.with ·
what may be'considered the most
crucial· shortcomings in !:the·,·
educational experiences. and ·
practices here at Marist. ·
...
The convocation meetings
will
.
be . org_anized / through_ ,.the
academic : departments . or ·
divisions:- Each- chairman':-has_;,
. .
..
:
been requested:to invite.:student ··
.
.
.
P~rticipants in last October's i·onvocatiori. ·
representatives.· to provide the the purpose of the convocation is - l'Oi1raged to·•. attend orie of the
organization for the reflection of to evaluate the whole academic departmental meetings.
student reaction. However. since
·
·process. all stud_ents are en-
· APC · recommends · that the
JHE.-
Bro. Lanriing
.
.)
Obtains:·Doctorat
·
e
f:':
1;, ,.
..-
:·,<---.--.-'
-~:•.~:<, ~- .
-~~
.· .. .. , , ..
;ii~trt,li{li~f
f
itf
J
Alf If
If
il~!
L:;hF ;; ~:
t'<
i1ihg flllfilled an ~he requirements .. promoted to his preserif'posi,tiori
·
<:
,,rr,,.,~:y.
;>•::this.past February
24,
afCathoHc · asahAssistaritProfessor.Jn1968 .
jr[.)/i )
;<; ·; ,/
,University ;Jn_ Washington·o.
·c:; . ·
Brother Lanning. took a leave. of~·.
,:,,;:;:·:/·,;-::< :
on.·,his, thesis: /'Criticism< in.,
.
. absence from ,Marist
_
College
to.·
~M:._
;
~: /: . :,,
:"A.inerican Periodical~
·
or ,the attenci : the' Marist '.Br'other's: .•
/'.C:/:.,>,~:.(
'
Pr.ose'; ,fictfo11. ,y_of'\,Booth House
·
oLReriewal in Fribourg;
/
/@;Xt.'c~
-
-,,; '
Taflcingt9n froni
<1899
·
to
1~9;" . Switzerland: Dilfjnt his staY, in , : ,
Z!:N:?'
.
.
·
•.·}:,->:Brother. µ;i~niil~ ··r~eivecl •·his •. · .. Fribourg·:Brother taught through :- . ' ..
;?]t. { , , • ,
>·B:i\ .. ,
at•• l\far1st
m-,
1953., Upon -· a '.~rant he had receiv¢d at The , ··.·
il{/(', :)
;
>
cQmpl~t~on .
•
.· of. his
~
stu_<li,es · he
·
Inter11ational: SchooL •· : •. · .
·
·• Department
t{j';{t.L·
-
>
?taugllt·at l\tarist Pr~paratory in•.·,. A.well .. kno\V~_; and,\Yell, liked ·•
.·
Brother Lanning said that the··
J%;:_·,;\c•·• '
Esop~s
J?(:
one.year; .The :•tea,cher;: Brou.ier •Lanping·. h!ls
.
·purpose.in _writing his thesis on.
::· . ·: , ·
· , followmg,s1x ·years> he taught at· been actively involved
m
Mar1st Booth Tarkington was to "trace
Mount :Saint- Michers
_in
the :.since his arrival eight years ago.".the. evolution .of this American
Bron_"· D~ring_tllis time Brother
<
He , is
_
, especia~l~ .
.
• k11o~n
·
. NO\'.elists' reputation during· the
. . . . · Lanning_;was?wQrkmg. towards_, throughouLU1e ~oughkeeps1e• ·first four .. decades of• this cena•
. '.'
·
· ... , .the?compl,t?tio1(of his, Gi::adua_te ·,:·area·'f1:>r )1is tt:¢nie!)dous work . tury. ". He continued. that "this ...
. -~
· •·•··.·· Studies ·at; Saiiit
:.Jo.tm'.s.
Univ¢r~ . ,~ith-theJ\1arist .· C_ollege Theater . study sheds a good deal of light
on
,:-sity.He.coriiplet~itlhis:~tydiesin. ,C.uild;ii(whichheis_Co-I>frec~i:-. · tbe literary· fluctuations of.
·,1960 arid.
::gi:~d1Hited;
0
with,; a.: Brot
.
h.er Lahning
)s ·
also
•
a
.
'literary taste during this time."/
. Masters-Degree i~-~ng1µµi;-J'he:·,member : of: .. the-·• .Teacher Blloth Tarkington
,is· -
a
·
·
little
'following '•.semester
Ii~
eilteied , ,Education· .Coimcit. at· · Marist .. _known noveJist in.· American
· Catholic pniversity
~s
a Doctor.al :;.J,ast May he was h~ri$)red
~Y~
J:lis Literature. ··His writings deal
, Student, where'.he worked on the:~, coHeagues by being elected
.
Corit. on
page
6 .· ·
oo~sag;;;r~Biiieve~"Ii
or Not
· ·
·
· ,
,
.. · ·
·
· .• ... · ·
by PAUL ZAROOGIAN
·High :··level'>o(
<
student-:
dissatisfaction _with .• the. Food ·
Service????? .:., :,,,; • :• :
..
. ·.
Saga's Student 'AttitudeProfiie
<the total results are postC9 on
the cafeteria
,
bulletin
·:-board> :
shows that
76.7
percent oC the
students
ooJJP.d
stated that ·the
Marist
J.
Food
Service,· Program ,
was better than or· equal
to'
the
food
service programs on other
campuses at which they have
eaten.
High
level
of
student
dissatisfaction with the Food ··
Service?????
Only
8.6
percent
of
the students
polled stated that the Marist
College Food Service PProgram
was
Jess
desirable than expected.
Conclusion: ...
'??'??
You may be wondering why
there have been
so
many
changes
in the Food
Service
Program
since the
28th
of
February.
Many
Paul
Zaroogian,
~ t o r
of
Marist Food~
. ~yjt's
because the contract is
up
for
re-negotiaiion. Others think
·.we. are trying to· snow everyone
with · a- last-minute effort .. •· And
·others stilJ . think it's- because
there have beeri ."big~shots".
visiting us. Well, here's the
"Ripley's Beli_eve
It
or Not"
facts--you make the decision!!!
· During
the
last full week in
1t·cbruary .. Ken and. I heard
-_through the grapevine that there
~as a high-level
of
dis.~tisfacti°'1
~ith the
Food
Service Program.
~Ve immediately went
to Joe
Brosnan and then Dean Wade
to
· try and ascertain their feelings
about the_situation.
t
At, ~th informal meetings,
nothing specific could be stated
· but we all agreed that there was a
Jack of communication between
thestudeqts and
the
FoodService.
We got
a
few
good ideas. and
Cont.
ori
page
2
students
··
·· i2:00-1:00 Lunch . .
.
.
. .
. . 1 :~2:30
:Faculty and students
·
1
meet separately to . refine. the
·issues. discussed in·.
the
morning
r
nd: to develop t.ena. t.ive
... rec.om .. -
mendations ·
··
..
2:40-4:00
Combined faculty-
student meetings to integrate
· specific reactions and recom-
. mendations to be forwarded to ·
.. APC via the chairman.
In'order for this Convocation
to
be t~e succe~s that its potential
holds. it is extremely necessary
for the total population of Marist
to. participate. I,ast semester's
Convocation was attended by a
relatively large portion of the
rom11mnity and again we must
!-how that apathy reigns only in a
stn<JII
minority of · Marist
following fo~mat and allocations · Sludents.
of time be followed:
!1:IIIH I :45
ft'ulJ discussion of
' Urotl~c_rl..anning inslrui:ling
class.
"Sfbdenf
-·
- ,
.
:
.
"
.
,
..• i.•Ef~et;·o.ms;
.
-·
~
on Wednesday March 22,,the .. why
'
this .election ha~. been
Student Goverinnentwill hold its· delayed · for two. \vee!{s, . The
elections.
The
voting on this day reason Jor this is that the· ri:lid-
wiU be for the four executive . terms week fell oh: fop of:the
positionsjnchided on the· Coun-, usually schedµled elec_ti9n dates
cil's new format. These include . <thefirst fulhveekin MarchhSo
President: Vice-President, · rather than ·running· the>risk of
. Seci-e~ry. and 'freas~rer :. '
losing a hurriber. of candidates
as ' ,
The~e are_
a .
number ·-~f in- . a resu.It of it interferring · with
terestmg _J)()mts about this• up-
their exam schedule,
I
.asked the
coming event that might merit · Election Commission to delay
some attention. 'fo~ begin with, · them. .
.
· ·
..
thisisthefi_rsttimeinthreeyears. · In addition to this above
_that all executive positions will problem there is one much more
be
filled without having .to ·go complex and before-it
0
develops
through the . pain of · running a . into an issue during the leection
I
"Special" Electi~ _fo( unfilled: have
set
up
a
referendum
on
it.
posts. The second item
JS
the fact The ·situation involves the fact
that all positions
will
be
contested that under the old form of Student
b~
at _least two students. Again,' · Government, the position of
this 1s another first for -the President cannot
be
contested
by
Student Government.
. .
anyone but a student who during
The causes. for this apparent his time in office will
be
a Senior ..
rise · in interest . seems
to be
The argument in defense of this is
coming
from . the
recent that only a• Senior has the ex-
restructuringof
the
Government. perience necessary
to
be
in. the
This is a change hopefully for
the
position of PresidenL After
better.
It
is aimed at:
(1)
cen- serving for a year
in
this position
tralizing the student voice on Heel that anyone 'Mlether he be~
campus·in order that the lines
of sophomore •. junior, senior can
communication
can
be ~nc:ile the job. This position must
broadened among all involved; be offered to anyone who is
and
(2)
localizing the areas
of willing
to
·work; and it should not
representation in order to get the be an exclusive luxury
to
a
maximum from all special in- senior. Therefore, on Monday,
terest groups.
March
13,
there wiU be a
Some of
you may be
wondering
Cont.
on
page
2
,\
.
·,
'
PAGEl.
TIIECJR.CLE
MAR.al
9, 1972
Believe It •..
every Wednesday
from
llto 1:30.
.
waste down
·
to
·
a
.
minimum
.
STUDENT ELECTIONS
r.ont •••
For the breakfast
program,
we therefore enabling us to
do
mor4!
promptly started
to
try
..
and get now have available a hot plate
so
with
·
your
·
food doJ1ar. The
specific comments concerning
·
you may soft-boil your own eggs.
·
present result ,is
.
that we have
the student feelings about
our
In order to serve hot eggs, we are been able to do the following
Food Service.\
cooking very close to order so if "extras"
·
for
·
the
-
resident
·
~ight after our meeting with you are waiting a little longer in students:
.
.
.
!"
'
Referendum
·
in order for the and administration pay
.
par-
student
bodY
to decide whether
·
ticular attention
.
to
ALL
those
· this
posiUon
will be opened to all running
Joi"
a position since this
>
students or
·
just seniors. . .
.
election represents not only
·
new
Joe and Dean Wade, we set up a
the breakfast line, we hope the
1.
Serve Yogurt for lunch Mon-
complaint table on Thursday inconvenience is worth it.
Fri.
·
· ·
.
.
,
Turning again to the elections
-
faces coming into power but also
on Monday March
22,
I would like new duties
•
to be handled by each
to urge that all students, faculty,
_
one of these people.
/
night.
24
Feb., to obtain direct
·
on Wednesday,
1
March, we
·
2.
Implemented a Sunday
feedback. Out of approximately
·
held an Open Forum at which we
·
Brunch Buffet.
.
·
by RALPH CERULU
·
700
students who
·
attended the answered any
·
and all questions
3.
Implement a Wedne~day
C.U.B.
evening meal, orily
32 stopped by concerning the Food
.
Service Luncheon Buffet.
.
,
.
to make a total of 64 comments of Program. We got some real
good
4
.
Served unlimited London
which
30
comments were specific
·
.
ideas from the
11
to
20
people that
Broi
1
.
for
.
the
,
Thanksgiving
.
enough to act upon.
attended. Upon taking an
·
in-
Special.
.
·
On the following day we held a
formal vote. the corisensus of the
5
.
Serving Blue
Cheese
Board
·
Named
summit meeting with Gene group was that there was a low Dressing three times weekly.
Plowman (District Manager), dissatisfaction level concerning
6.
Served wine as an
.
extra at
Ralph
Cerulli
(Student the Food Program
.
the Valentine Day Special.
·
Manager>. Ken and myself. We
Many of the students are
7&8
There's been no cut-back
all felt that the lunch program wondering - "What am I getting on Fresh Fruit
-
and Fresh
Lecture
Adeline Aquilino
Co~cert: all small and
'
large
could be strengthened
.
Ralph in return for showing my
ID Card Produce dur
i
ng
_
the winter,
··
Coffee House
·
Kevin Keenan
·
concerts held in the Theatre
.
or
suggested serving Yogurt
,
Gene every meal and for accepting the regardless of cost:
.
:
-
Performing Arts
·
Pauline Peart
·
.
·
Cafeteria
.
·
suggested cooking Hamburgers portions served each meal?"
After reading this article
,
if you
.
Fine
Arts
·
Carla
Bergold
Social Activities:
dances
,
and Hot Dogs to order
;
therefore, What you are getting is protec-
feel
-
that you have some con-
Concert
.
.
Rich
Rubino
·
Rathskeller activities, creating
a
.
our new lunch program
·
was tion for your food dollar invested
.
tributions to make, please send
·
Social Activities
.
.
·
Eric
·
yergan
calendar of all organizational and
implemented on Monday, 28 Feb. By checking ID Cards we have your name to Mary Ann Baiardi - Film
:
·
dub social events held on
Lunch now consists of the
regular
been able to keep the admittance , Food Committee Chairman)
Business Manager
Jack Barry
campus, that is
.
a
··
coordinator.
three entrees PLUS Yogurt
,
of unauthorized persons to a P.O. Box Cl6, and she will con-
·
Theatre Manager Jim Naccarato
Permission
"
for use of alcoholic
Hamburgers and Hot Dogs minimum therefore preventing
tact
you as to when the next Food
·
Let me clarify briefly the work
·
beverages for any campus event.
cooked to order (between
11
and them from eating into your food committee will meet agairi.
·
entailed for each chairman.
·
Film: Co-Chairmen shall select
1
:
30).
Starting Wed,
s
March, a dollar. By controlling portions,
Ken and I would welcome the
Lecture: majo~ speakers, small
movies for the calendar whereby
Luncheon Buffet will be served we have been able to keep food opportunity
.
to rap informally
lecture series, video-tape series,
the Business M iager is fully
with any individual or any group
panel discussions, symposiums.
·
responsible for • ntracting and
concerning the Food Service or
Coffee House: folk
·
music,
.
any business t1 nsactions for
just anything at all
.
Just stop by
Cabaret, one-act plays, informal
films, and the Theatre Manager
and let us know when and where
.
social cultural activities in-
.
is responsible for
·
·
operations
in
WMCR
by
MIKE SMlnt
&
BOB GREENE
local, and campus scenes. It is
also used as a sounding board for
student opinion
.
These benefits
could be greatly magnified if
Marist Radio goes F.M.
volving central themes.
the Theatre ~s wellas being
in
Perfonning Arts: CUitural events
charge of publicity for each film.
At present, Marist Radio
often falls during high winds and
WMCR
(640
AM> is a closed-
snowstorms. The principle under
circuited cable radio which
which
it
works is that the tran-
scarcely encompasses the area of
smission is run through the walls
the Marist campus
.
Now
,
-
of each building
,
but this causes
however. WMCR is planning to
much static. making it difficult to
specifically associated with the
If
there is any student
_
or
Theatre.
·
Plays, Cooperative
faculty who is interested in
music programs, sponsoring
-
working
·
with
_
one
,
of these
trips to off and on-Broadway
Chairman, please notify him
ot
plays
,
dance.
her as soon as possible. Your
Fine Arts
:
Cultural events, assistance in decision-making
specifically outside the Theatre,
and committee work is most
,
Poets. lectures, workshops,
needed by the College
.
Union
festivals. experimental events.
Board. Thank ,yoti.
·
make a bid to greatly enhance
hear the station
.
How. then, can
The future benefits of an
F.M.
and promote Marist activities
Marist Radio benefit the Marist Marist station are innumerable.
both
.
on the campus and in the
community by going F
.
M.? The Given the power of FF
.
M,, the
immediate area surrounding it -
answer
·
seems quite simple,
·
but station would encompas a radius - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
to go F
.
M
.
In order to do so,
before answering this question of approximately ten
to twenty day out. seven days a week, plus graduates
·
·
in thejr search for
Mari st Radio must have the one must look at Marist Radio miles. grasping not only the allowing them to air their jobs.
·
·
·
support of the Marist community
,
itself
,
campus but also the city and town
opinions on
.
our station
.
Thus, by
.
Marist Radio is not just sitting
.
and are now introducing a
As of this date. Marist Radio of Poughkeepsie and other
·
moving in this direction
,
Marist back ~nd asking that the Student
·
petition to show tl)at they have has had such people as Dean surrounding areas
.
Marist itself would be able to develop a well Government supply the funds
·
the student body backing.
Wade and Assistant Dan Carolan is beginning to take on an activist rounded view or_ its relationship needed
·
without taking tJ]e
·
Cable radio is
a
failure fo
r'
the before its mikes.
to discuss such
.
pa rt
.
10
the
.
future
of
.
to the outside community an~ to
.
initiative themselves. The station
,><
,·
,,
...
.
.
..
,
,
si.
_
tj\\l\~
s-
r
.
easonAhat
.
the
r
e is no topics
.
as the minisemeste~
.
and PoiiJi;hkeepsie
.
,
in
:·
tll¢
.>
form
·
of other
area colleges as well. With has
·
·
.
gone out
..
and solicited ads
t·-·~-
~
...
~.1("
>:
~
t;::s~;;sa~~!~a~~;i:t~ri~~;
·
-
i
\~
~wte:!u:r:~+a~:a
·
:_1g
#
~te1f~~~~!~~~mi
:
~~itii~~i;
~
;~;
:
1ffo~!1i
:~et!i~~s;:
-
!t~i1!tt~~~~ry
·
~
~~n:
,
~~:e
.
1~!!jsr~:~:i:.
_
.
~
~
·.
I
.
accurate transm1ss1on
;
of the
.
future. Added
to
this
:
age~da
JS
<
Manst
fonts
lJelpmth~se areas.
-
gr,ow.
\
Prestige
'
>
brings
'
on' ex-
..
Nearly
-.
two lmndred dollars has
.
!
station
.
Other reasons for its contemporary music
:
and a
By going •F
.
M. Marist would be
·
pandiiJg influence which would be
.
beer
i'
raised
,:
-
accordingly.
••
But
failure are that the cable, that is complete news coverage every
.
able to convey
.
our feelings and a definite
.
benefit
.
to our these patrons of the station will"
hung from building to building, hour. concerning the national,
influence these peopl~
.
day in and graduates
·
.
and
·
·
up-coming
soon loose interest if they fail to
.
·
.
_
Cont. ori page
6
-
G. U.B. Elections
.
A
;
Suitcase
College
'
:-
'-
-
by Bob Greene
·
I have been
..
elected
.
Vice against whom.
was unforgivable.
.
P~esident of
.
the
.
·
College Uni9n
This brings me to another area
As far as the candidates Were
by John Duane
Board, and for this opportunity I ·or concern. regarding the past concerned, itseeined as
though
I
·
It's friday afternoon at
3
:
30,
a
party'?"
.
.
feel grateful. However, one of my elections. and that is, how the was the only candidate that put
few of us are si
_
tting in lobby
.
"I think the fifth floor
is
having campaign pledg~ was to use all organization of the election was out a platform. Pauline Peart, I
.
Everyone fishishecl their classes
·
a floor party.Butit
'
s only for the means
.
·
of
.
·
communication set up.
As
I previously stated, I
·
kriow. made an effort, but she
·
aud now the weekend is here and
•
people on the floor
.
"
·
•
.·
·
.
available to inform the student
,
did not receive notificati011
··
of
.
found it virtually impossible in
.
it's time to have Fun.
"I
·
wonder •what Good News body
00
the dealing of the c.U.R what
-
position I was supposed to
such a short period of time
;
but
.
"How come there are so many
.
docs on friday night?
"
1
would like at this time
-
to ex-
..
run for.
I
was made aware by a
~he did
_
publicize a few of
.
her
people going home?""
"
Who cares."
.
·
press my views on the past friend of mine when he told me views: To me, the position I was
"Oh. I don't know maybe they
.
'.:Well let's do something." .
.
elections. which in my opinion that lie had seen my name oo
.
a
.
.
running for was aii important
havealotofgoodfriendshomeor
_
There has to_be something
.
was disgraceful. Though the
.
poster arid
,
that
;
J was after all
·
position. Whenoneisruririingfor
a girl friend there? Or they could
gomg '?fl
.
here. I th~nk they have.a
•,
C.lLB. is only two
.
years old and. running for
·
the Vice Presidency.
a position that handles $25,000,00,
be
going skiing."
·
band
m
t~e rat.
_
The gym 1s therefore lacks experience in the
It
.
was
.
:with much
·
surprise, or
·
I feel he has a responsibility
:
to
"Yeah. what the hell are we
always open;.,What about the realm of
·
l'Jlnninr
an
el~tion, better yet. with shock that I bad
inform the student
body
how
_
he
•
going to do t~night?''.
.
·
coffee ho?se. .
.
there are a few thmgs that I feel
learned this. l strongly feel that
·
proposes to deal with theii:
'.'I don't know. What do you
·
I
don t thmk they have it should be
·
.
pointed ouf to the the
•
College
_
Utjion Board could
"
money. What this whole thing
w~~t to do?" -
.
_
.
any~~~ecause not enough people student body.
·
.
have had the common decency to
boils down to is: do we
'
elect
. We can always go down
to
fik:
_
w~?t. .
.
.
When candidates applied for inform the candidates, by mail; people on the ~asis oftheir ideas
·
Pie and get loaded."
-
·
.
:
_
Th_1s P.!ace
.
real!Y
.
shits the position they were interested the ~ition they were
'
chosen to
arid our corifide'1cein their ability
.
"
Does anybody want
.
~ go .
_
sometimes
.
·
··
·
.
,
·
in running for they filled out a
run for. Also on
the
.
other hand,
to
carry
out their proposals,
<r
en
bowling?
"
.
·
. .
.
"Hey, I have a good friend at piece of paper' that required for
the
College Union
·
Board failed to
.
a popularity basi~. For, once
"Too much money for the
Siena you guys want to go
.
up
thein to state the two positions inform the candidates when the
again. I stress that $25,000
.
00
is a
.
w~?le night."
.
.
there for the weekend? ~hey
they were interested in running elections were to take place. I
.
large amount of money coming
What about
the
movtC:'
;
the
have~. lot good bars and shit up
for. My personal preference was :was under the assumption that I .froJri
the
student body to
-
be used
dollar one?"
there.
first to run for
·
President
·
and was dealing with an organization
·
for the student body. I am not
"The Movies on friday night?"
"I'm up."
second
·
choice
for 'Vice that would_ have enough sense,
·
saying that tJ:ie other candidat~
·
-
"Oh. I
·
don't know, let's
do
"I'll go."
President. I was oot informed at initiative. and responsibility
to
were not interested in publicizing
someth
_
ing. Is anybody having a
"Yeah. let's go."
all as to
·
which
-
position I was inform me as to when the elec-
their platform. for I personally
·
chosen to run for. Yes,
J
,
.
was tions were to take place. I found
feel that the candidates were
chosen to run for the Vice
.·
out three days before election
very aware of tbe manner in
Presidency. I did not even find
·
<1;ate. when I was talking
to
Jack
which
·
the elections were
being
·
out why I had been denied the
.
Simeone and he mentioned
·
in
run.
.
chance to run for the Presidency.
-
-
~
,assing that elections were on
As a closing note, I do not feel
Iknowortwoother peoplewo had Friday. Fb
.
25
:
As
much as I had
.
that any election in this
school
intended
.
to run
for
the suffered from not being notified
should be run on a Friday
.
It
is a
.
Presidency. but they too were anything; Pauline Peart was the
_
common '!act that not only the
denied a chance without any one who suffered most, from not
-
r~idents but also the
_,.
commuters
·
justification or notice; The being informed o~ the· election
attempt to make their weekends
c.U.B .• thus controlling the date. I was speaking
·
to her on
longer by usually taking Fridays
·
course of
.
this year's elections, Thur~ay. the day pefore: elec-
off. This may very well be the
came out with a statement tions.ataboutl0:!)Op.m. She said
explanation as to why less than
somewhat to the effect that for that she only found Qut about the
half of the student body turned
the first time in C.(T.B.'s history, election date that afternoon, and
out to vote. It would be a very
all positions had two opposing I for sure was taken by surprise.
simple plan to compute when
candidates.
or
course
,
you'll She was running
-
for the
most students
·
are at school
have two candidates for every Presidency. but she didn't
.
even
during the week and hold the
position
if
you sit down, plan it have a dece1_1t _chance to ~o
elections on that day
.
I also feel
out.
and
decide who was running around ca~pa1gnmg. To me this
Cont.
on
page
6
;
.
t
L
·
MARCH 9. 1972
.
THE CIRCLE
.
PAGE~
by
Fr.
Leo
Gallant
."
.
.
-
.
,
Sonie~ing
·
is happening since December in. this· c01D1try an~ no one
knows why. Soine
are
wondering if the "certain"- ending o(th! war is
bringing some stability back
t.o
our.lives. But the new happening is
the
Women's Cent-er
Opens
byJANETEARLY
upsurge .
.
all of a sudden
.
of requests to enter seminaries for the
·
With the opening of
·
the Mid-
priesthood.
._
.
.
.
· ··. -
·
·
.
.
Hudson Women's Center at 96
The Detroit archdiocese vocations office announced a
·
star
.
tli~
Market Street. Poughkeepsie
increase beginning in early December. It is ge
_
tting an unprecedented (across from Adriance Library).
-
one-request-per-day from
.
.
college students and high school seniors
.
the
·
women~s movement in the
desiring info_rll!ation con~rning ente~ing t~e diocese
'
s se~inary.
mid-Hudson valley takes a more
T~e Bened1<:tme Federat1~n of Ame~ica which ha~ approximately
~
·
visible position. The Women ·s
nov!ces ~tu~ymg for the pr1estho4xl
m
the late 60 s 1s now up
to
50 .
center will not only
·
serve
.
as
novtces !n
72. .
.
.
·
· .
·
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
-
·
headquarters for feminist ac-
.
.
News items
•
li~e thes~ are makmg the
.
newsp!lpers and hav~
.
the tivities which are already un-
experts scratch!ng·
.
their h
_
eads
:
Many
-
~_ad believed ~ t until
.
w_e derwayi but will also be
a
place
dropp~ the celibacy rE:<JUI_rement 'Ye might as well write off this where all women can come to
generation; as
-
f~r asthepnesthoochs concern~.
. .
·.
.
r
d
t
bo
t th
•
•
Even my provincial'tells me tha
_
t the Marist pr_1ests.are noticmg this
in
ou
a u
e W(!men s
sudderi
.
new interest among college students.
Although
the percentage mov
_
ement. meet
.
other ~omen
.
.
of
high school seniors is
.
down, way down
,'
that
of
college seniors
aski~
.
aod. work on ongoing pro,tects or
information is almost
300
per~ent higher.
·.
-
· . ·
·
begm
_
new ones
.
.
..
I
have been after the Provincial
t.o
start a lay volunteer
.
program
so
Actu~n /or Women. a c~h_lt
_
on
that college graduates might spend
:-
a year in a community of service of femm1
_
sts. took responsibth~
with Marlst priests in our high
:
schools or other apostolates, evenj~ for_ rentmg the. storefront
m
foreign missions. The MaMst Brothers had a very succ~ssful program which the C~nter 1s located from
going. Some of lhe volunteers, defiI1itely are thinking of the possibility Poughkeepste Urban •
·
Renewal
of joining the Brothers. Others wantto spend a year or two in some Agency. The Women s Center
service to the
poor or unde~ivileged. (The lay voltmteers in
.
Texas, opened on February
1.
R.ent for
Samoa and New York.)
.
I feel that some who might be remotely the Center is
$80
a month. which
leaning toward the priesthood would like a year
of
service with priests. is being paid from
.
several
Related and non-related footnotes:
.
sources: pledges from individual
It might be possible in a century from riow that students at Marist women
.
given
monthly:
will wonder where the name "Marist" comes from. (Like Pace, Kings, honorariums
paid
to
the
·
Harvard, Iona.> Some
-
researchers will then discover that"the name Speakers;
Co11ective
for
·
Marist came from a small congregation of dedicated me~ who began programs they give; income
this college, building every bit
of
it with their hands,
to
train Brothers. from sale of feminist literature;
Then it became a catholic college. Then a non-denominational private and random donations
.
The
college, a great little institution.
.
.
pledges alone do not cover the
~aybe a little more research will show that the
-
Maris!
.
Brothers
·
total rent. telephone and utilities:
were founded in France in the early 1800's to educate the very poor, more money is needed.
the neglected, that within a few years they had grown and spread
The Center is now being staffed
throughout
.
the
.
world
.
·
·
.
•..
.
.
regularly from
10
a.m. to
4
p.m.
projects planned at periodic
meetings of the steering - com-
mittee
.
which is open to all
women. Th
e
next steering
committee meeting will be
Wednesday. March 15 at
8
p.m. at
the Center
.
The Women
'
s Center is now
. acting as a clearinghouse for
women who want to join con-
sci ou sn ess -r
_
a is in
g
groups.
,
Consciousness
-
raising. one of the
cornerstones of the women's
movement. is a way for women to
share their common experiences.
di
s
cover how they have
.
been
l'hanneled and conditioned by
society into positions of weakness
and impotence. and begin to
develop political awareness so
that they c
a
n begin to act with
other women to change the
conditions oppressing them. As
.Juliet Mitchell says in her new
book. Women's Estate. con-
sciousncss-ra ising is "finding
that what you thought was an
individual dilemma is a social
predicaml'nl and
h
e
nce
a
political problem··
.
Through the Women's Center
.
,iroups of ten or so women
get
together. u
s
ually with one or two
women who have had prior ex-
perience
in
consciousness-
raising. to begin a group. Most
groups meet weekly. in mem-
bers· homes.
Various types of counseling
arc. or will
be
a
vailable to women
throut?h the
.
Center
.
The birth
control and abortioo collective 1s
already helping women who
need
abortion
referrals,
tran-
sportation and funds
.
In addition
,
this group is working with women
· from the Woodstock Women
'
s
Health Projects in a joint effort to
make free or low-eost abortions
available locally .
The speakers' collective is
active in visiting schools and
organizations to explain the
activities of the Women's Center.
Action for Women. and local and
general issues of Women
'
s
l,iberation
.
Their programs
usually involve a great deal of
exchange with members of their
audiences
.
and many women
have become involved in the
movement through these con-
tacts.
·
The Center is also trying to
build its literary resources.
There are a number of pamphlets
,ind periodicals available for sale
or browsing
.
and a growing
l
'
Ollection of books and back
issues. Oonations of more books
arc very welcome.
'i
'
he Center needs
:
staffers
;
hook
s
and magazines; furniture.
plants. paint and other creature
comforts
;
n1oney
to
pay rent and
other expenses;
YOU!
If
you
are
interested in participating in any
of the projects
.
or if you need any
help
of
any kind. come down to
the Center. or call during office
hours.
All
sisters are invited to
join the
-
~
truggle!
'
<
.
j
You might talk about the new generation now. But
in the early 1800
'
s Monday through Saturday
.
and
a groul? of twentr seminarians, unsatisfied wi~h the w_ay the Church on Wednesday and Thursday
was gomg, especially after the French Revolution, ~1ded t~ found a evenings from
7
to
9
p
.
m.
m
is
new order to get.to the poor. It
took
many years to realize their dream
.
·
also
·
open sometimes between
4
After they :were
all ordai~ di~san priests, they kept in touch wilh
·
and
6
p.m
.
Check by calling
454-
each other
.
Then at the nght time, they struck. Rome would not ap-
9487
the center number.) It is
prove of priests and _brothers together in a large congre,ation because also· open other nights during
·
r
it w~uld be too tmWieldy to gover-'_l
.
So.
Fr. Claude Cohn founded
~
_
scheduled ~e~tings
.
.
.
D
Pl •
•
:!;
M
.
ar
.
1st Fathers and Fr
.
. ~ar
.
c
.
el
·
l i n
.
Cbamp~gnat f~unde_d
.
the
.
Marist
_
center pohc1es are decided and
over
ain
·
s
,
..
.
Brothers. Both congregations made education their roam apostolate,
.
•
.1
especially education of the poor
.
.·.
.
. .
.
.
.
...
.
. ··
·Some
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.·.
.
.
.\
.
.
lnafewdecadesfromnow
,
rei;ear~ersw;.ll~onder
.
too,
_
who~re:
-
_
_
•
•.· .
:
.•...
.
:W-,
.
. ·
.. . . .
.
.
"'I_
"I>
f l
: ·
..
·
•
.
. ·
..
< ·
.
.
...
.
•
\I
, ..
.
,--·
--
_.
,
Byrn
.
_
e •
.
·
".i
'.A
_
·
-
-
~
.
_
n
.
_
·~n,
•
•
_
i:>c,,
_
n
..
nell
_
Y:
_
:
.-
Foo.tiun.e,
._
Sh
.
ea
_
..
~tj
.
d.#
_
·
;:
,
g
.
..
r
_
_
e g o
.
·
ey
.
•
,;
Be
.
.
no
.
it
.
..
.,
~ J : .
•
re
·---
.
...
_
-
__
.:
.
-'
,.,._
.
·_
·
~
.
;,,,;,,.,,;,
~
,
.-,•.~
·
...
'."'
--
"
··..r--:-erso
.
"
n:a.1.~
·
-.I:'7ei~eC
•
..
,.·o
·
n
·
·•
s
~
-
-~--
--
--
-
,
·
·
'"
'
'"·'
·
"
"·~ .
.... ,
·
.
-
...
,
etc
.'
'
And
•
thosereseai:chers will
be
the new
.
generation
-
that ".Future
~£II,
.
•
·
.;
,
.
,.
•
: .
. . ·
•
-
·
.
.
.
..__._
-
·
i:.
~tto¢~••
;
~11d
"
''~reeni!1gof
_
Ameiica
?.
speakabout!!!
:_
.
.
.
·
_
rrLo
·
.
u-~h
-
·:
t
·
S
.
.
How docs one describe tw~ months of
·
a new experience? An ex-
.·
·
-
·
,.. ·
·
·
.
·
-
-.
-
-..
.
·
,
..
-
-. ·
-
·
._·_
-
·
:L
l
,:
t
·
·
e,
i
pcrienc~ of hope. frustration, joy,
and
sadness. Aren't these the
.·.
,
,'.
,
·
.
W.a
n
·
,
::.
TO
.
Wri-te
.
.
-·
By Jack& JiU
·
cor,~:?~~t~~jofo~~~fi~!!!~people,simple,butbeautiful. The joy
Vecli?
.
E venuto!
lo non
g)i
scendo incontro
·
lo no
.
Mi metto la
· .
Sul
ciglio del colle e aspetto
E
-
aspett(! gran tempo
e non mi pesa
·
La Jun~a att~a.
"By
Tom
Walsh
It was nearly daybreak before she had him. The
sun
was freaking
oo
the Detroit plains, as the sweat broke on he- tiny forehead. I am sure
she suffered with him,
~s
she still suffers with him today. Her legs
.
were arched tight oil the
_
tattered couch
as
she prepared to deliver
.
·
him
.
. Kisses
s,
deep and pure could
.
beno
_
sin; and
it
was
a
good
birth
,
·
as all births are.
·
·
..
·.
.
.
.
·
·
· .
.
Ilwas almost ~ix months before she named him, and then, only after
much difficulty. Ernest, It should have been obvious from the start
that he could neither speak nQr
hear.
He,
of
cwrse, was not aware.
He
always thought that he was speaking, for in his mind the words were
·
formed. But, because he could
not
hear, he never kriew that he said
nothing. He.wanted
to
much for words to crawl up his throat, but, they
lay in the pit of his stomach with
no
where
to
go. And it rained a lot.
.
It was cloudy that
day and I
was
lazy, and so
I
just stayed in
bed
thinking about
it.
For Ernest-it
was an
·
easy
life, he was simple,
and
_
there is no better way
to
J,e
:
His father before him was simple too. He
use to go to the
Jakes
in the winter
and
cut df big
peces
of ice
and
bring them
to
his room and watch them melt. He
would go to the lake
and do the same thing every day witil
-
the
summer
came. In
the
summer he would
go
to
.
the
ocean
and bring home a wave everyday
·
and freeze it
and hang it in the closet. When his father died he left
Ernest a year's supply
of
mirror
paint.
Ernest walked around painting
everyone's face,
and
looked in
the mirrors
to
p:-actice his smile
.
The time came. He had spent
too
much time talking to paper.
I
wanted to tell you only
-
how like yourself you are. Silence
.
And t~e.r killed each other without even knowing why
.
can I return from whence
I came
Maybe touch old friends
Or
remain
.
where lam
With the world in my
·
hands
And yet still have no place
to
go.
I can't
write
anymore.
At
the
present time~
the
full
details are not available.. Keep
reading
the
Circle for
the full,
glorious facts in issues to come.
Right now
the
three
A's
are
heir~
pulled
together
so
keep
watchiflg
tbe
coll8'.lllJS.
.
.
.
I
walk
·
into th
e
cafeteria
everyday about
9
:
OO
.
I
have my
donuts and coffee and usually sit
by myself.
I
often notice tables
•
wherethere are crowds of people
talking and jqking about things.
A
lot of times
I
wish that
I could
be
involved with people like this.
I
guess
I'm
not very sociable,
although
I
wish
.
I
was
.
Maybe
tomorrow
I'll
meet somebody
and we'll-be friends. Or perhaps I
wiU
always be and eat along.
I
walk into the cafeteria
everyday about
9:00
.
I
have my
donuts and coffee and usually sit
by myself.
·
It
is one privilege
I
allow myself. It is good to
be
able
to sit and just be by myself. I
wonder why
so
many people need
constantly to be surrounded by
their groups .
.
I
guess they need
others to feel secure.
Weekends probably are the
worst days
I
have
.
I
simply don't
·know what to
do
.
I really want to
get involved with people but I just
can't bring myself to go to the Pie
or the Last Chance.
My
books,
wen
I
can't hide behind them on
weekends, or can l? I wish as
many people seem to think, that
there was some objective choice
between being involved with
people or being alone
.
Perhaps
someday I'll give myself a
chance.
until then there's a good
movie on the late show tonight?
care to join me?
Weekends are probably my
happiest days
.
At last I can put
my books
down
and relax. I don't
have to go to the Pie or the Last
Chance to
do this
as
so many
people seem to have
to
do. My
frienl:ls and I are going
t.o
go
to
look at a small
town
up
north just
to see what
it
is like. I wonder if
those people who
go
rushing
oCf
to
the
Pie or· Last Chance every
weekend don't get
bored.
Maybe
there're
really lonely.
of seeing young children eager
fo
learn
.
eager to come by
themselves
for tutoring after school. These same people have to struggle with the
welfare office for their weekly budget, and these same children
.
are
being
·
pushed from one grade to the next without the basic tools of
education (math
,
reading etc.)
· I've felt the joy of teaching
High
SchoolEquivelency to people who
are motivated to better their own lives. Some
.
of them,
I
know, will
never pass the High School Equivelency Test
;
it will
be
just too
di
f
-
ficult for them. What will happen to their motivation? Then there are
those days when
I
just don't feel like driving the forty miles to teach
F.ngJish
.
But I've committed myself to do so
.
Sometimes
I
l
ong for
those days of
s
kipping class at will!!
Some other activities have been taking people to doctors offices
,
clinics. welfare and unemployment offices
.
It
'
s a good feeling to know
a friend can go into the Welfare Office and get his business done with
satisfactory speed, and also get his check. Then there is the frustraticn
on another day of sitting iii the Welfare Office for three hours without
assistance from the staff members. We're overloaded, they say, which
may be true. <Right on, Mr. Nixon and
Mr. RockefellEr) I guess this
is
a lesson in patience and frustration at once!
One final example of joy and frustration. It gets me down after
making five phone calls concerning the possibility of an emergency
room. and each person says
to
call someone else.
On
the other hand, I
did have a feeling of accomplishment when
I arranged for a meeting
with the Commissioner of Dutchess County Social Service Department
to
discuss the Welfare problem in general.
I'm not sure if this article has conveyed the feeling
ci
my experience
in Dover
.
I
hope it has!
Concerning credits academically, I feel it is worth 15 credits, not
9.
That way
I
could spend all my time in Dover
.
instead of traveling two
hundred miles a week for my other
6 credits
.
Personally, however,
I
don't care if lhe faculty and administration feel my work is worth
9
er
15 credits. or any at all ..
Dennis Mungo
S.A.C.
by George Byrn~
The
S.A
.
C
.
is
now
accepting
applications from students who
are interested in serving on the
committee for the next academic
year.
This committee is the
student's chief vehicle for
communication between the
faculty and administration of the
college. Students are required to
attend all departmental meetings
of
their major and are respon
-
sible for collecting
opinions and
reactions to the activities
or
their
major's department.
It
is hoped that students will
soon vote on matters of academic
policy, rather than just express
their opinions. For this to hap-
pen; however, it is necessary to
ascertain that the S.A.C.
represents
the
students. Students
accepted on the committee must
make a definite commitment to
the time
and
work is will demand.
Anyone interested should submit
a brief note
to
Mark
Fitzgibbon
(Leo
Hall) or Bill Kargis
(Gregory
House) by March 15.
-
.
..
.
-
.
·.
:
~-•
·:
··
-
.
:
~
-\:
.
'
·
-
<
~
·
MAROl
9,
1972
.
Pictorial
Essay
tii~i0si~
-
:;
:
i_
;·
-
.
. ! .,,
•.
•
·
'.
'
.
,
.
.
.
I
'
Gltcle
.
E
:
ditorials
Put
:
thf)
vatti
:
. .
, .
.. •
·
•
. .
· Where It Collnts
·
.. Ther1:
.
has ~ee~ a bill ~ubmitted by a studer.it.~o~mittee knoWn as
The B1-Partison Committee for a Meaningful Student Vote"
.
which
.
wo~ld enable stu~ents
to
vote in the elect
.
ion districts encompassi~
.
their coJlege residences. rather
.
than
·
in
.
those
•
areas
.'
where their
parents cast
_
their ballots
.
·
. ·
·
. ····
.
•
.
.
_
·
.
·
·
··
.
• .
.
·
•
.
·
.
The Circle
_
beliey~s
.
thi~ to _be a hecessaryand.coristitutional step
.
.
_
toward st
_
udent parbc1pallonm thoseJocal governments affecting us
most. Presently. st
_
udents have no such voice in local affairs and as a
cons_equence. major actions
·
are ta~en. arid officials elected
.
alien
·
to
the m~erests or the student populatio~.
· .
·
·
::
.
· •
· ·
·
-
·
•
.
·
·
·
·
•
-
.
Mar1st has proven itself as a major contributor
to
local projects
arid
needs. the
_
~ecessary financial and political backing to continue its
work m a1dmg t~e community
:
If
this bill. were passed, perhaps the
students at Marist would be able
-
to
.
become at least a considerable
segm~nt of the voting poj>ulas,
·
-
.
.
·
··
.
Anyone interested in helping the "Committee" in
their
.
effort should
contact:
·
.
:.
.
.
·
.
.
MichaelJ. Berg,
18S.
Oakwood Terrace, New Paltz, New York
12561
914-255-8983.
-
. • ·
.
.
.
·
.
·
.
·
·
Guest
Editoria
·
f
..
. ·
·
-
..
Dilemma
·
of
-
-'
James
Robin
-
son
by B.S. U.
Letters TO
The
Editors
.
.
·
,
_
..
.
,
.
·
.
.
·
.
.
<
·
,
GrOsS
>
e1aSted
.
-
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
'
.
.
~
:
.
.
·
This
·
is not a defense of DavP.
Phillips
~
Sometimes; he, as
·
all
.
·
-
of-
-
us do, (let's be
.
honest,
Mr.
.
Gross> may act in
·
a zoo-Jike
mant,er; but who among us is the
:
~rfect saint?
_
. .
.·
.
.
munity"
.
As
a friend of Dave-
Phillips
.
f
find this insulting and a
rather poor example of his
caaracter
.
As
for being infantile. Mr
.
Gross has proven himself most
worthy of the title by
·
using the
paper for his own personal use
.
For someone whose column
I
usually find rather interesting
I
find the defamatin
of-
one
'
s
·
character rather
.
:
cheap and
yellow.
Kevin O'Neil
Also. if Mr
.
Phillips' behavior
-
T~
the Editor:
.
. . .
.
· .
.. _. .
say what he did
.
about
,
without
·
at some mysterious moment
To the Editor
:
·
This is
_
i!J regard
to
tl!e article
:
.
backing
·
it
tip.
Mr. Gross' ac-
which was not mentioned, was
It
seems to me that maturity
by Stuart Gross ~bout Dave
.
cusations are ambigµous and,
in
not
to
Stu Gross' liking
;
why can
'
t
and responsibility are two vir-
.
Phillips (Pip).
·
I
was never so
.
~
my opinion: non-existant.
I
feel or di_dn 't he tell the Community
.
tucs
.
which when found in college
shocked in rriy:life.
I
thought the
.
he should
·
be released from his all
•
the facts
.
concerning that students. speak well
.
for the
Circle
·
.
was a
.
student newspaper job and in future f,!ditions checks
·
isolated incident. if in fact it ever <.-ollege.
If
one was to walk around
to
inform students. When did it
.
should be put on people who occurred.
.
Marist. he could find numerous
·
become
a
slarider. sheet? Where write
.
I
also feel a need for a
It's unfair and really low to use breaches of these virtues. They
does this Mr
.
Gross
get the.idea
.
public apology to Mr
.
Phillips. a media such as the school paper arc not desired, however, they
·
that he can use the paper to air
.
People like Mr
.
Gross are the as a scandal sheet. Was "the can be tolerated. But can we
.
hi~ personal dislike for a person? ones who cause trouble to people
·
purpose of this column" to ruin
a
tolerate
expressions
of
I'ye known Pip for two years now like Pip for no apparent good fellow student's reputation?
irresponsibility and immaturity
and
the
things Mr. Gross said are reason.
Mr. Gross
.
bas every right
to
in the college newspaper
.
untrue
.
Dave has the great ability
·
Sincerely yours, point out all the inconsistancies
Can we aJlow our newspaper to
to
·
communicate with the other
·
Wayne Visalli he can find at Marist, but per-
become a slander and scandal
members on his floor and others
sonal attacks. especially one as sheet
for
individuals
not
in his house. Dave is only human To the Editor:
vague as the one on Dave
·
responsible enough to present
and once in a while loses his
Please allow meto cornment
on
Phillips, are not serving any
worthwhile articles and not
t~per
.
In the two years I've the recent accusation or should I purpo::4:? other than satisfying the mature enough to transcend
known Dave I've only seen him say. defamation of charcter that writer's ego trip, or to satisfy a
name calling. I think not.
get into a fight once. There are Stuart Gross made of Dave (Pip) personal grudge.
I
think Stuart
I
would like to see the paper
many people on this campus who
Phillips in last week's Circle.
Gross owes Dave Phillips a
present interesting; informative
are a lot worse than
·
Pip. Mr.
·
Since his column began ap- public apol<>r?..Y-
.
articles. as many of the articles
Gross stated in the article that pearing in the school paper a few
Thank you,
are. I can't tolerate it becoming a
the Hitter of the Week Award
week's ago. Mr. Gr~ seems
to
Marty McGowan
slanderous voice for
·
oersonal
went to someone so infantile that have taken it upon himself
to
grudges. Let's J(eep Marist and
he can't communicate with expose variQUs "evils" that exist To the F.ditor:
voice or Marist, as mature and
others
.
I believe that Mr. Gross here at Marist.
·
Stuart Gross recently gave an
responsible as possible.
should look at himself first
.
I
Speaking
as
a person who award in his column
.
to
Dave
John P. Whalen
have never seen a more infantile comes into
daily contact 'with Pip Phillips as "hitter of the week".
.
or
-·
underhanded
way
of
<our rooms have been next to He stated "this ward goes to the
destroying a person who is well-
each other for the last three person who best illustrates the
liked on campus. Stuart Gross is semesters) I feel that the attack infantiJism that pervades (un-
the one who needs help
.
No one is on him was injustified and rather fortunately) among a smaJI
perfect but
no one has
the
right
to
infantile.
element
of
the
Marist
Com
-
To the Editors.
Since September
,
·
I
have
noticed a steady improvement in
the Circle. I'm sure this can be
attributed to the hard work of
the
•.
PAGES
·
staff
and the exceptional amount
of time that they devote
to
every
edition of the paper each week.
However.
I
feel there
.
is
something
.
I
must
-
speak
·
out
against
.
which has disturbed me
-
very deeply. I am referring to an
a
rticle by Mr. Stuart Gross which
·
'
i& entitled "AJternatives'
'
. In this
a
rticle Mr. Gross classifies
a
very good friend of mine (Dave
Phillips)
·
as a
"
hitter". Mr.
Gross. I would lik
e
to know what
justification you or anyone else
have in classifying or labeling
a
particular person
?
You have
an
obligation as a \\Titer for the
·
Circle to report to the community
"All
the News that is fit to Print"
Y ct. you know as well as I do that
when you allow personal grudges
and vindictiveness to enter in an
article you are not truly doing a
service for the community.
I
am sure that the response you
will receive with regards to the
article will be cause for a
retraction
.
But
I
would like
to
know what will happen in the
future?
Will
a similar instance
occur again where perhaps a
different writer will feel that he
can accuse anyone of anything he
so desires?
It
is obvious that there has been
a definite violation of
a
student's
rights. I feel that the Circle must
take preventive measures in such
a sensitive area. If the Circle
does not act then the students
must do something! I am not
trying to restrict the writers of
the
Circle in anyway. but I think
they must be made aware of what
has
taken place. Freedom of
the
Press-Yes!
Defamation of
Character
-
No!
Jim Keegan
. ;
"·
.
,
.
PACE6
'DIE CiRCLE
·
-
MARCH 9. 1972
CJJ.S.
·
Elections
Cont
. . . .
Lannhjg
·
Cont •.
··
.
Stuart Gross
.
•.
-
.
.
.
that
the
C.U .B. should have used
more posters; and also more
a
_
rticles in the school newspaper,
to publish the date ofthe election
·
the
time and the place of
voting'.
The purpose of this article is
not
·
to
downgrade
any
organization or person but
to
make a move
toward
the future
·
success
·
of our College Unioo
Board.
In any event, the C
.
U.B. is
not to blame, what has happened
is what has happened. Having
been in existence for only two
years,
it
was only the C.U.B.'s
second election.
As of
March
1•
the new 008rd -mainly with
.
a
reOection
on
the
·
A
·
·
·
:
,
.
,
. ·
·
·
· ·
·
·
t
.
•
:
·
::t~':::!~~;rk
,
sa:.r~f~~ :~~~~:gssh::1~:c==
.
·
•
·
·
.
.
.
. .
·
·
·
e
.
.
·
r-n
·
·.·.
a
-
.
-
·
,
.
ves
.
.
chairmanships for
various · superficiality. Brother Lanning
'
committees,
·
and for this the concluded that at
.
the time of his
C.
U .B. is grateful. However,
·
it death Tarkington was known only
should
be
noted that one does not
.
for
.
a
few
works:
·
"The
·
THE PURPOSE
OF
THIS
_
COLUMN IS
TO ✓
have
to
be
a
chairman of any Magnificent
.
Ambersons,
·
Alice
Alternatives this week wm take on a different composw-e .
.
The
committee
to
be involved
.
As long
.
Ada
.
ms
.
.
Penrod and Seventeen,
.
column depending on one's bent
,
may be considered
to
be
as
you are interested you
can
join
which are only a few of the novels
us
and work with us
.
At present, of his forty-three volumes and
we are debating as to how your
.
over twenty plays
.
"
·
$25,000.00
should be spent, so if
Brother
·
Lanning for
sees
the
,
you have any ideas don't be possibility of
,
Post-Doctoral
afraid to Ief the C.U.B
.
know.
research in the fields of Speech,
Suggestions are always welcome.
Theater. Communication Arts
. and courses
_
in "new approaches
in
.
teaching High
.
School and
College English.''
Brother•s,
concern and enthusiasm for an
1
·
would like
to
retract a statement made by me, in last. week's
column
.
I realize that
I am not ~alified professiooaJJy to have done
so. Retraction "He needs help" about Dave
(Pip)
Phillips.
-
-
·
.
·
For those who read this column the .following statement:
The
choice
of conJent, when dealing with people (regardless of
the
nature> is
not
just an arbitrary decision. These
·
persons (for reasons known only
to
,
them) have created the situations which confront them.
In most
cases
Cthere are exceptions> they are unable
to cope with the consequences.
We are <one hopes) responsible for
our
words and at:tions concerni~
ourselves
'
and others. Without this responsibility we
are
far
from
free
.
·
Letters to the Editors
.
lfat any time an article (of mine or others appears) thatcauses
you
to emote feelings, you have the right to accept or reject that ~idl
.
pertains to you. The facts as a basis, and how you perceive them is
.
Cont.
also
.
your option
.
.
.
·
· .
.
.
.
Because of limited space in the Circle
,
l
will arrange a meeting with
anyone to discuss the facts and information used in my column
.
Just
up-to:ilate English
-
·
curriculum is
seen both
·
in his work in the
classroom
-
and as
·
Department
Chairman. Brother
,
Lanning
commented that ''at
.
Present the
J<~nglish Department is exploring
new
.
possibiHties in the area of
drop
a
,
note
iii' Box
C-613.
·
·
M
.
s
G
·
Creative
.
and Performing Arts,
0
re
.
. .
ross
·
.
.
·
.
which we hope
will compliment
•
.
our existing courses in language
The following Article appeared in the
-
New Republic, Feb.
26, 1972
:
and literature."
<Cartoon. also)
.
BI
■
GRASS
CLIPPINGS
-
,
that. taken together. suggest a new trend in official thinking:
as
.
t
I
n
g
R
,·
p
·
o
ff
s
·
.
Ne
.
wspaper addicts will have noticed three stories about marijuana
.
<
{.:il
·
-T~.e National Institute of Mental Heal~ iil its
~ual
report oo
·
'
To the Editor.
,
named David
'
Phillips (Pip), in
.
Man1uana and Health concludes th~t
pot
1s ~ta ~Jor ~eat
to
.the
During the past few months I
referring to him as the recipient To the Ed•~ors.
. .
.
.
health of the moderate user
.
The Judgment 1s still tentative on the
have observed a change in the of the "Mari st CoJJege Hitter of
~ ce_rtam cc
_
>n_di tion exiSt s,
government's part and it is qualified in sundry ways, rut it is a far
c:ry
Circle which was
I thought for
the Week Award"
.
Now, in my whic~.
m
my opmion, may prove
from the old Narcotics Bureau line that marijuana leads to addiction,
the better. The ~rticle in the opinion, this would be commonly th_e •~maturity of a . small ., violent crime, insanity and death
.
It
is reassuring news considering
column by Stuart Gross regar-
termed a clear case of a
mm~nt;r of our community· To
NIMH's estimate that
15
to
20
million Americans have smoked grass,
ding Dave Phillips was absurd
.
defamation of character, con-
put_ it ~•mPlf • som1 srden:. get
and the Gallup poll finding that
51
percent of surveyed college students
I'm sure
ihat
Mr
.
Gross feel~
he
sidering the
fact
that Mr
.
Gross their kihcks
ro"l
s,ea mg
1
mgs
have tried marijuana. In releasing the report, NIMH Direc;tor Ber-
is doing a good
'
o'\)irl
his column
had no real acquaintance with
fro_~ ot e~ peop es rooms. am
tram Brown said he felt personally that penalties for possession and
and to destroy th1s ego trip of his
,
Mr. Phillips
,
hence
,
he
was out of
writn~g th1.s Jetter because I feel
useofmarijunan were "much
too
severe and much out of keeping with
If
eel that he
is
both irresponsible order to implement a campus t~e situa~ion has become ~r-
knowledge about its harmfulness."
and immature and should not be
newspaper to voice a personal
bcularly intolerable on the fifth
·
-A
presidential commis.5ion, appointed by Richard Nixon, next
allowed to publish anything in the
criticism of someone like
f!oor of Champagnat, where I
month will recommend unanimously that private
use
and possession
Circle again, except a retraction.
Phillips
.
In making his point that
11
(d
1 ~nowbof
~
leaS
t
~e;
0th
hr
.
of smaJJ amounts of marijuana be "decriminalized." By this the
Regardless of his ability oor
there
are people on campus who
s u
en
s.
eSl
es mys • w
O
commission
does not mean "legalize pot
.
" The gist of. the recom-
1
intelligence level, I feel that if he
have shown their is ability "to
.
have_ hard a~ou~ts of ~ogey
mendation is that discreet marijuana users should not be sent to
,
was qualified to judge anyone,
communicate in other than a
~artng
~~~
~n o
:~:~n
r~~:
prison. The President, it will be remembered, said last May that
,
beside himself, he wouldn't be at
physical manner his feelings or
O
J:11.ftli
noo/W' can
'a1
1
laugh
"even if the
.
commission does recommend that it (marijuana) be
~~
.
M.ari
_
s~
_
_
as
.
a student
.
.
.
_
..
.
.
attitudes"; Gross
was
wrong in
on
~ 1
'
e
.
.
·
legalized. I will not follow
.
that recommendation,"
.
~
,;:,;;
.:.:;,
.
:·,;~1/: ·
,:;;
;
_
~-
~~
-"
~n~\~~i~!'
.,
and
::
J;i
_
~t
:
~
._,
V?aste
.
~in(!·
_
the
--
exa~pl~
.-
_
of
~
,
_
sing!e
at
th
e P~~ters
0
!
;
Ral~ ~poff' but
_
.
.
~Until ~is
_
retirem~nfiA !anuary
,
the federal government's number-
~
"{
-·
·-· --
-
·
-
-
anymore
··
\n~·~
'"
tbe
"
subjeet-( or
•
.... '
l)Crson
"."'"'
-~o
-
·
,
-
...
N
ah~ate
.
_..,,
_
,
h,s.;...~~~
-
~.2.~
.
~
-
~
~ ~
~
lt
~ f
P!~~~
-:.._,
·
,
two
~
~ar.coti<:5
,:
ageril.;Johii
,
H.
:
-
F.'irilator.
;
,
ll~e/Lclosely
..
,
to
,
Jbe
,_
offlchil
,,:
..
.
_
~!,•:
.
Mr. Gross). 1f 1t had been m
_
e or g:cn~ral1zabon.
_
espe~1ally
.
o~,the
Y
Certainly
.
we don't make it very
·
position«?~ his
.
agency,
th.e
Bur~au
of
Narcotics and _Dangerous Drugs,
.
•
·
up to me I would have filed suit on basis of tw~ mm?r
.
run-m~ .
he
difficult for these people to just
that mari1uan
_
a laws under w~ch pot smokers are imprisoned
_
should
:
both
Mr. f G
1
~beos
1
s
and the ~,'uarythhacrvme hadtwhe1th
Mr.
Ph1lfhtphs.
go into any room
.
and
take
what
be
enfor
1
c
1
ed. Nowd
·
out_ of the government
,
F_i~ator reveals
·
lh;at he
newspaper or
1
•
r
ore
.
pur'?°se o
e
.
th
fi
d Th
·
re pass keys
persona y oppose pnson sentences for
-
man]Uana smokers but had
[
~
;-:.·
.
Kevin Kehoe campus newspaper 1s not to
.
floea1in; a~oun~~~ch have been
been told sever,) years ago by a high official of the Department of
~
"':
;-
De
d
..
.
.
.
prov!de a battlegr~und for
.
the
,
1
b
·
·
·
t d f
.·
.
0
·
Health. Education, and Welfare (where the Bureau of
Drug Abuse
1
t
}t•.
•
.
'
·
·
ar E itors of the Circle,
settling of personahty confhc
.
ts
ost ut never accou
.
n e or. ur
C t 1th
.
'
d
.
eel)
th
.
t
.
h
sh uld k
h·
.
·
·
t
·
·-
·
.
·
hi
.
·
elf
l
ij
,.
··
I would
·
like to make reference
·
th
.
·
d'
bo
·
d,
security force patrols the campus
.
on ro
en resi
.
a e
O
eep 1s pr1va e yiews to ms ;
r
; ·.
..
.
.
to
Stuart
Gross
'
colum
.
n
-
ofr m bis cadse at
_
soun mg
ar
at larae
..
Jook
.
ing for pa
·
rking
·
he kept quiet fort
.
he rest of the time he was in government. ''lhad a
.
·
or
roa cas mg
personal
" ·
·
-
·
1
·
·
t·
·
·
d I h d
·
f'fi
·
l
·ti
·
d ·
bo
h
·
·
·
·
·
1.
.
''Al!ernatives" in the Circle criticisms of other b
the - v_iolations. but
_
does not w_orry
pe~ona ~s!,1on ~n
. a an o
.
1c1a
·
pos1 on an_ it
t er~ me
It
/
commg off the Press on March 2, news
er columnists
·
Y
about burglary m the dormitory
qmte
,
a ~•t.
said Fmlator. He
.
~~w
works
with
the ~abonal
1
\-
·
1972
.
In his column. Mr
.
Gross
pap
· Ed Rice
halls. I
-
know of anumbei' of
_
~rgamza~1onfor;RVEFORMOF
.
ManJuana.utw~ (NORML),agroup
;
alluded to a certain student
students
:
wo continually leave
financed m l~rge part by the ?layboy Foundation.
.
.-
•
..
··
_
'.
-~
J b
·
A I
their
.
•
.
doors
•
.
unlocked-9
·
r
·
even
._
_
.
So J_oh!) Fml
.
a tor
..
an
.
d the d_1rector of NI
.
MH
.· .
.
and
.
·
th
.
e
.
·
President's
1
~ :
er
O
.
so
wide open-
~
when
_
they are
_
not
,
jn
conumss1~n ~) agre~ that_m~Jwma use shoul
_
d ~"decriminalized:'
.
f;
;,
their rooms
.
.
.
·
,
-
·
.
•
·
-
For the shift m official thmkmg to have any s1gruficance of course
.
it
i
:
·
·
l<'ortunately
;
something is
,
will
have
to
l>e
translated into legislation
.
Finlator maintains that on
~
J It d
.
-
being done
:
_
An investigation of
the fe<jeral level, narcotics agents take Uttleinterest
_.
in small-thne
,:;
0
e
the security force
,
has been
.
drug users
but
concentrate rather on the major pushers. The problem
·
«
-
carried on by the Interim CoUege
.
is_zealous state and1ocal law-enforcementa~tivities. 1n
·
some states it
1;
,
_
_
Curicil. theresults of which will
still happens that a youth of 18 is sentenced to 20 years in prison for
·
t
TO: The Circle
this ch .. .-ge of bloc voting. It's hopefully be, made pub!ic
at
t.heir
.
pQssessio.n of marijuana.
.
.
·
·
-
.·
· .-.
·
.
As a political scientist,
I
feel strange how we champion the
riext meeting .
.
Although the
·
...
..
compeJJed to assist B. Jerbo in right of dissent in far-away
security force would.be helpful if
the analysis of "bloc
CK> voting." places. but feel compelled
to
it also checked up on those who go
While the column calls attention question its use right here at
around trying door knobs, the
.
to one department in which
·
4
out home.
· ·
very attitudes of students must
of 9 full-time faculty voted the
Sincerely yours,
change to significantly aJleviate
same way and another depart-
·
Louis C
.
Zuccarello
the problem
.
Here
.
is
another
ment in which 2 out of 8 full-time
area for community action.
faculty voted
the
same way, it To The F.ditor:
BobNelson
fails to mention that the entire
lalniosthad a relapse from my
Natural Science Division voted
fourth. flu attack upon reading
the
same way as did the Art Campus "Insights" by Bert
Department and
_
the Religious
Jerbo in last weeks Circle
.
It was
Studies Department and the suggested that the
.
statements by
Physical Education Deparbnent student Robert Smith at the
and the Modern
·
Languages
Faculty Meeting on the College
Department and the Math
Cotmcil may have influenced
Department and
.
the English some faculty to vote af-
Department. Only one dissent
firmatively. The
opposite
effect
was registered in the Psychology
might be nearer the truth!
Department and one in the
Whatever legitimate points
Mt
.
Philosophy Department. Fur-
Smith wished to m:ikP. were lost
thermore,
,
all Marist Brothers in his intemperate rhetoric and
and ex-Marist Brothers voted the
insulting remarks.
W.M.C.R.
cont ••••
•
see results - they wiU "not see
results
·
if the student body is
unaware as
,
to whom these
patroiJS _are.
_
.
·
Who else will benefit by WM-
CR-FM? Not only the residents
but
the largely forgotten com-
muters as well.
It is estimated that the cost
of
going F.M. would
be
in the neigh-
borhood of approximately $2~
2500 - a cost that consists greatly
of initial legal fees. Since Marist
employs its
own
lawyer with its
tuition funds
.
the legal fees can
possibly
be
considered as part
~
his job. Nevertheless, the cost is
relatively small - it is an asset
that Marist can no longer put
aside.
Fron,
Da\le
PhiJ/ipS
To the Editors:
I would like to disapprove
of
Stuart Gross' article which a~
·
peared in
·
the March second
edition of "your" Circle.
It is "your'' paper and not
"our" the student paper, due to
conflicting ideas on its present
structure. I highly agree with you
that the paper should be free of
faculty censorship in order that
the paper
be
a
student
.
newspaper. But. are we to go
from one extreme to
.
another?
Since the
.
faculty does not say
what goes in and what stays
out,
are we not capable of knowing
where the limit should
be?
Does
this freedom give us the right
to
slander another person name?
No. it doesn't! No one editor
should have the right
to
single out
a
'
person or persons, for
·
wrong
doing done
to
him,
The
paper also
should not be used to bring out
personal grudges between an
editor of the paper and another
student of the community.
I do not feel the necessity
of
writing about the events
of
my
encounters with Stuart Gross,
because with
his
coming
retraction they would only prove
·
to be more conflicting ideas.
·
I woul~ definitely say that Mr
.
Gross retraction is most ap-
propriate. I mean who is
he
to
say
that I best illustrate infantilism
and that I
need help.
It would also be appreciated if
the editors of
the Circle were
to
print a retraction, the article did
appear in "their'' newspaper.
same way, except one with an
Is it not possible that in-
office on the top floor of Donnelly
dividuals or groups who hold
voted the same
way.
Only three
opposing views on an is.5ue can be
dissenting votes came from the
equally sincere in their beliefs?
bottom floor and not a
·
single
Is it
not
possible for
us
at Marist
dissenting vote came from
to
disagree strongly with each
faculty with
.
offices .in
Cham-
other without having
to
rESort
to
pagnat.
In addition, all women
personal abuse or ridicule? To
faculty present and all full
my knowledge, no individual or
professors present voted the group has a monopoly on truth!
How can the students atMarist
~-"""'-~~"!""'"-~-"!!!!!!"---'!""-'!""~-;.__.....;.
_ _ _
_
help? By signing the petitions to approve of this venture. The
.
and pledge ourselves
in
a con-
that are currently being cir-
benefits of going F
;
M. are
in-
centrated effort to better the
culated by fellow radio cub numerable - it's a need that must
Marist community.
Respectfully,
same way
.
EdwardJ.
O'Keefe
Don't vou think it's time
to bury
Psychology
Department
members
for
the
purpose
o(
be
fulfilled.
Let
us
all
get together
gettine
the
student
Govesnment
MARCH
9.
1972
Ray's Black Raiders
..
·
Intra
.
Basketball
·champions
. by,
MIKE WILLIAMS
F.or the second year successively; Ray's Black Raiders have reaped
victory in the finals of intramural basketball. The all out strength and
hustIE::or the Raiders combined for.some really exciting basketball.
The high scorer for the game was William (Wiggy
>
Thomas; he had a
total of 31 points, Wiggy is a second semester freshman; he played for
!'Ir. To_steri freshma!l team last semester. Roger Potrice was second
m sconng for the Raiders, he pµmped
in
24 points for a fine all around
. game. Freshman Tony Johnson scored 13 points, freshman Larry
Freeman hit for 8 points, Senior Ron Pearson threw in.4 points.and
Sophomore Jerome Cherry hit 2 points. The final score was 99-71. The
Raiders are hoping to continue playing fine basketball.
. . .
-
The main ingredients in the victory was controlling the •Offen~
throughout the game. The Raiders, being such fine shooters and
rebounders, controlled the movement relatively easily. The game was
very enjoyable to watch, the contrast of fans and their reception to
the
game added even more spice to the action. Seemingly, there was about
a 50-50 :tie (approx.)' in people rooting for the Raiders and people
rooting for Kool and the Gang. The crowd was "fired-up" and so were
· the players. On several occasions there was static between certain
players; however; it.was suppressed and the game continued without
any fighting. This should illustrate just how much the championship
· me~nt
to
both si_des. The question now is, can· the Raiders start a
dynasty? Well, I asked Coach Nick Jackson what he thought about
the
Raiders' ability. He replied, "They are ballpl~yers.
Good
shooters,
· rebounders, quick-thinkers and agile. All the ingredients of team
success.!' Asked if he plans further games, "We are ready for any
challenge."
·
·Frosh·Win .Final
by MIKE MILONE
C>
The
Marist
Freshman· points With about four minutes to
Basketball team defeated . the go. Ed Kosinski hit
a
couple of
Albany State frosh last Saturday long jump shots and Joe Cirasella
by the score of 72.68. In the first sank aclutch one and one foul
half the Marist frosh dominated shots and this sealed up the game
the ·game as the broke out to a ·for the little red foxes.
nearly 18 point lead
~
on a tight
The high scorers for Marist
zone defense and some good were Al Fairhurst with 20, Joe
, shooting and teamwork. the score Cirasella with 16 and ·steve
at the· half was Marist 33 and Murphey with 13. High scorers
Albany
14.-
for Albany were George Moore
In the second. half the tide with a game high-24, Bruce Davis
turned for Albany. One .of their with 15 and Jerry Hoffman with
players fouled out with about
10
12. . . .
...
,
mintitesleftarid theyw_ere forced ... The fmal_ reco~d for the fresh-
• .
.
;,,
:
.
..
'.
•to;y,~y-,w.!th: onJy\four--playei's:·':
man ~a_m,1s 8-"'.m~ 1111d~5-h>sses.-
~~y-started
to
put
ori
a rally' in · In addition
to
this fme record the
which they came back from a
23
frosh ~lso w~n the
C.A.C.C.
fresh-
. point deficit to get
as
close as
five
man
title
with a
5
and
o
record.
Frosh News
by
JI~ ELr.IOT '
As ihe end of Freshmen Class
nominations and proceedures
Officers term draws closer upon
will be announced within the next
us,.
we are interested, in some . week by Freshmen Elections
form of evaluation.
of
-our
past Commissioner Maureen Daly.
tenure and recommendations for ·
Within the week of elections for
the future functionaries.
As
an Student Gove~ment (March
15-·
answer to this ·need~ the
Class 22>
the Freshmen Class Student
Officers will hold an informal
Government will hold a question
forum on past functions of the
and · answer period with • the
Class-All Freshmen students,
candidates
for
Executive
both resident and commuters,
positions. In the past years, .The
are asked to attend. This will be
Freshmen Class has set a trend in
the final meeting of
Class
Of- _ the voting pattern of the College.
ficers and an excellent form of
As one of the largest single
expression
for constructive groups on campus, the Freshmen
criticism and recommendations.
Class
has virtually elected the
The meeting will be held in room
officers.
I ask that you attend this
249
in
the
Campus Center, on
meeting which will be announced
. Thursday,- March 16th at 12:30,
next. week and take an active
the free
l)(?riod.
concern with this forth coming
Class elections will be held on
election.
·March 22nd, the same day
as
Student Governmeni Executive
Elections. Information as to self-
Field
·
House
Public Relations
"Hey everybody, according to
the February 24 Circle. 403
signatures have been obtained."
"What for?"
·
"Why. to have the Alumni
Office take an active part in the
September Field House fund
raising. That's what for".
"Gee, that's a Jot of names". ·
"You betcha. And since. ac-
cording to the February 17 Circle,
·student pressure is generally
respected here at Marist'. the
more signatures there are, the
more alumni will help."
"That certainly makes sense."
"Why doesn't someone find out
if
the Alumni Office wants to help
out before we make asses of
ourselves?"
by DONALD
MURPHY
"Oh no. that's no fun. We want Office is concerned. it couldn't
to show what student pressure have begun in a worse way. No
l'an J!Ct at Marist. Maybe we can one inouired of the Alumni
get l'Opies of all the signatures Assot'iat.ion if
we
were interested
and send them
to
each and every in the project before bringing all
alumnus··.
.
that pressure to bear. No onC:
God what pressure.
found out if the annual alumm
Has anything ever been done fund drive could be tied into the
nbout a field house before? The field house drive. Hell no, that
Alumni Asso. has discussed it for rcouires too damn much common
years. . but
realistically
·
·
sense.
acknowled1rnd the economic ·
If
this is the kind of public
limitations of its
25(1(1
young relations and workmanship that
members. When the College was is roing
to
characterize the field
ready to attempt a field house, house campaign. please do not
the Association would be ready
to
l'a ncel our agreements with
do all it could to sec it ac-
llutchcss and Lourdes for
l'Omplishcd.
~mother
HI
or
20
years.
But if now is the time for the
attempt, as far as the Alumni
50,000
JOBS
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
PROGRAMS
The National Agency Of Student Employment Has Recently
Completed A Nationwide Research Program Of Jobs Available To
College Students And Graduates During 1972. Catalogs Which
Fully Describe These Employment Positions /w:Jy Be Obtained
As
Follows:
( )
Catalog of Summer and Career Positions Available
Throughout' the United S_tates in Resort Areas,
National Corporations, and Regional Employment
Centers. Price $3.00.
· ( )
Foreign Job Information -Catalog Listing Over 1,000
Employment Positions Available in Many Foreign
Countries. Prke $3.00.
( )
SPECIAL: Both of the Above Combined Catalogs With
A Recommended Job· Assignment To Be Selected
For
You. Please State Your Interests. Price $6
1
00.
REDMOND
Cont. ••
What happened this year is
over.
But
we ·
hope
that
the
· Athletic Department ha's learned
a lesson and will
set
up
some sort
of fund, because this event was
not an accicent and will happen
again next year.
National Agency of Stucfent Employment
Student Services Division
135
Erkenbrecher
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45220
APPLICATIONS FOR RESIDENCE
WITH
LIVING-LEARNING EXPERIENCE
IN GREGORY HOUSE
CAN
BE
PICKED
UP IN
SHEAHAN ROOMS
205 -
3>6.
DEADLINE: MARCH 16th, 10:00p.m.
-
..
,
..
·
I
i
•
\
l
\.
l '
I:
..
.
'T.?\(tt»f.~7F?:\•t;:·'.::•:~:;,/'-;:,
.}f".
. ·:•}\ .•
; • · .. i ·.'•
-
'. ·., . :-·~--' , ., .
. . ·•wEs:'- ·
... -_. .. :.·
\,~k:~~~~u.,,-_:.:
.
. . . .. . .. · .... ·• ·.
,·
·'~ARat9.1912
:N<a<·•t_'.· ... ,---.•~·:.·:". ·
w
.. ·.•, .
.4_···e··.
-s•o:
.
.
y-
_
c::_·o·
t t - .
-_
-_-
-·~+tl~~:,$
S.f; •.
"EAl}9-ca·-1.1tt?~-<
_ _.
lJ
.
. , ·
tese products_.made in America
..
N ·
.. ·
;'.•i•
·" · .:.
·: .: · "' · ·
.· ·
'"
·
·.
.. · .·. - .:.·· ·.
1 •
:
•
•
•
• • .
a~d: .. else·:·w· h. ~re.
:·'.ii~ ..
fa. ct .•... s
.. u~..
·~
-
~ ·.
.e·
·.·, ~•.
·.7 ·:·.·~.:
i·
..... ,
.... ~~T'II
.:•
.. · •.·.
s. \.
~.f.:·E
.. ~KISSLI .. N. G:.•·
..... st1ttitmg American goods
.
will
.... · •.·. ,
_yy·.
u.,a:~.
, . ·.· .... ·.
, . , ..
: I
~ould
like
to:~all-atteriti·~··~. circu'inst~n~~':
to
j~lriYus . ill:,:~·~-he:~ c~i~;.;ttr:rarn:~g~}~ . .
The ~ari~tC~ll~e S_tude~t G~~~iim~~r m~i M~~ai
ni~t.
~a~·s·· -
ttie community to-an.important '~meari~~gful .pr~~es~::·against. to·s.upport the.b_oyc~t,fif!order._to
at
s.:os
m r09m 270 ca_mpu~. Center: · _, .. •·. ·
.
--
~nt: ·
measure for peace that
began
on
murder and .. oppression by. the·. restore peace, 1ust1ce, and umty
R
Tre.anor'..J. C.CJC~pardo,.S .. ~htte"~nd L: Pont~ll _were a .
.
·--~·.March.-1.
_This.
is
a •nationwide BritishArmyinNorthemlrelarid::to Ireland, . ' .. ' ·. ·
..
,? ·
·
.
The·meeting·also wttnt?S&ed the retum.ofV1ce P,resickmt ~orge,
. boyco'tt,·. planned .:by· the :and'the failureof:ourGovern~·:• .·•: · .·
byNealFentori· :BaJzertoaS.G.·MeetiJJgaftermaJJyabsen~s ... · ·
·
:•·.>.·:·
·,-Americari Committee for Ulster meritto take a stand in the·cause
Vice-President· . • The S.G. awarded
a
charter and appropriated
$220.00
.t~ the ~w
· .. Justice. and supported by ·other · of humanity .and to call upon the,
Gaelic Society
Marist 'coUege Campin~. Assoc_iati~n. New equipment; organization,
Irisli~American groups, on all British Government to end. its
·
and a trip to Florida are aJl on the agenda for th«: new dub..
. ·.
: ·
.Britishgoodssqldin this country. · oppressive policy of ~error arid
••••••::ioc:110C:110C:IOC10C10CIO . .
A
charter. was also_ .. gran~ed :to the, Manst. ~liege, Veter~ns
The purpose of the boycott is discrimination againsta helpless .
Association. ·
a··
•
·
·L
.
· ·:
·
.
· · . · ..
·• · :
·
. ·
··
... · .;
for .Americans
tQ
take-an active minority in Ulster.'' ·.
..
· College sos·;a telephone help program will be set
up
here ):lt Mar1st,
part
in bringing
peace
to Ireland. .. . ,This boycott wiJrbe most ef~ ·
$200.00 was giveri to this endeavor. .
: . .. :
< ·
·
· · · ·
,
Ou.r government· has. rejected '
.
fective because of the support'by
· -
, !1420.00 was given to the V~rsity Club for its. _dinner honoring< :
. pleas by the Irish Government
to
t h e .. I ri t e r n a tio n
a
I
.t
·
athletes. . ·
. . . ..
·
' .
.·
· .
...
·
.
·
. use our influence iri Westrrunister
.
Longshoremen's Association; -Its
.
Last Day
For
·Ring
.
.
The student Government sent a letter of support ~bout the wrestling
. ~o bring about,a'.settlenient. This president, Teddy ·Gleason,. has'
Weektfod Reservations • . .
program and' John Redmond to Dean Wade.
.
• .. ·
.
·c_ '.
:
1s a way for the American people said ~at it will. stop ·unloading
_•.Friday.
·
!150.00 was awarded to the Intramurarprogramfor its trophies and
to show how_th~y feel.
Britishships(rom Halifax, Nova
· equipmenL
. · ::
·
-·
·
., -·
·
.· · .
·•.
Thr orgc3:mze~ of th~ boycott, Scoti~ to Brownsville, Texas. The
. .
A proposal for chartering and financing a
La Crosse team-club was
the Amer1ca_n Committee for hope 1s to stem the flow of the $2
. tabled until Tuesday. · .
. .
..
.
.
. · ·
~Tlster Jusbce, . hav~. caned biHionwo~th of British goods sold
As the meeting came
to
an end, Pres Cerum .spoke about the
up-
'upon-all our fellow c1ti:r.ens of to the Umted Stat~s -~ach year.·
coming elections; about the interest and honesty s~rrounding them.
every race ~nd cree<f. ang~y~ry_ ·_Some_oLtb,e. ma1or:..1moorts to· .
iloooooooooooococoooooocN
The next meeti_ng is tmJ~Jdit. Thursda...x, ·
·More.
Sports
. on
Page 7
John Redmond,
staying
home.
._,J
·
:·:
--
.>:
<
':·.·o':·.:t/· . .
··.:··y.ANCELIBSCOMB&:JlM·LAVERY-
. .
·
, ·
· '
_.
■
■
.•. ·
.>
'..: The. Marist·:'. College Athletic
in
the
N.ALA;
nationai wrestliiig'.' . .
.
. .
.. .. . .
:..
.·
.
.
.
■
' .. :
.
.
'Dcpartmen!ha.sneversetaside·
·
·championship:1n,Klaajath~-Falls,.,·
'A1·1·· ..
s·t"· ·
.
·
... : ._.
T ·
... ·. . . .
any f@dS lobe
US<!~jn
the event· Oregon. The·Athletic Department .
.
. .
,
··a " . . s· ·a m.
·'/:.\:that· a.rj_,clth. l.~t
•... e
... '.be
..
C01!1CS. ·'
e
.. ligible·,··.'w.
a.·
s.caughL\Vith. its. ·p .. ants do'h'.n'. ..
::.
· ,
.
',.
.··
.
. .
_·.
.
.
:
.
·. •.· ·>to -,coi;npete.::
m
national com-. No money!•
As
a result, Mar1st
.·.
· .
• • petition: •Thi_s year. John Red~
wiU
not
be
represented
on
a
. . . . . .· . . . .
. , ·
.
·
. ..
··
--
-· ··
mood
became. eligible to compete nationai level..
Cont.on
page
1C . ·
POlT(}HKEEP~~E •.
:N;
°Y·: -
0
reb~ui:Hk
Tluee
nights. late~ •. he st~~; ~~Iyift. 2 in.
tall.
· ·
.: - Joseph
,
Scott. Semor Captam·of . Ma~stfaced ~Jbany
\VI!~
~~e.
_
-JOE:
s~ows fine _leadership
off
.
·
' , .
··:•.-:.'·<·.·
·,
..
~··•
the .Mari# College Varsity sconng 24
pomls,
and: agau~ ·and
.
on the court ·is one•.of the
· Basketball 'Team h.as be€:n pulling down -16
'
rebounds. Joe . main ingredients in Marist's fine
named. to the Eastern- Athletic was fantastic from. the. line
16-9 reco,rd this season.
. · c .
l(
·
·
College Conferences. weekly All making 14 out of14.free throws in
H.<·r~,
s,
EastTec1m(DevisiopJil)for.tl,le_.•thetwogames. Everi,thtoughtfie.
. ·· ..
t.·······
....... ·
·'·
t ·
.. .
·. '.·.•· .· .. ·.,
.
ON:
.
·.
f~!!h~li:etst!ftrthe wee~ly.· ~=rl~(~~~t~~ita~t~\:.~J-
... :-· .. ·
..
·
···.a
.. ··. ·· ... ..
• s · ·
.. • ...
::
...
. teaJJ1 o_n ttie· b_asis . of his
per-
to
tbs
.opponents : csouthhampton ·
·
·· ·.
V ·.
·
... formances ag~msLSouthhamp,: 76-72; Albany:81-77).: .
·•
··
u· ·.,- .
.
·
Cartoon
by
Lance Liblcomb.
: ton, fol!ege and Albany State. · ;' J~ js currently the team
. .'
. :. ,·
· · e
·
, .
.
. ·
. ·.
Umv~rs1_ty: Iqtosetwo contests, ·• leader in scoring witb-an-
18.0
'
.. ·· ;
> .
.
··a·
·r·
.. ~o
.
l? scf{e«\J,4 pod_iil~ and _puUed) poiril: average· aild_Js · also,, the
,-i . :-
,
.
, · · · _
•'own_·. re .un s.·. ·. '. ··"··~:
.
tea!i}sJeading-rebounder,.witha.•, .' .· ·.·.~·• . . . .
A . .. ·
-~~r~:;:;t-;~;;~.i~~:~ELl:~$~i:~;i
t,
1
e
tt
1[
. '· . ·. • . ._ . . ·• ·
.
.;. . ' . . ... ···
. ·- . ·• . • . ·. .
/·c:
.'by
JIM
CORCORAN
MARIST.COLLEGEl22
gameJ·,sulJsf
··, .:,.-: .. • ·. , · · ·. ·
• •M°ARIST 76
YESHIVA UNIVERSITY
.;i
MA.RIST.
8.5 . :
NY
ACK MISSIONARY ·coLLEGE
MA.RIST
56 ·.
IONA COULEGE · '· . · •.
MARIST.76 · S.U.N.Y. AT NEW PALTZ. . .
..
MARIST 72.
SUSQUEHANNA UNIVERSITY .
- MARIST 77
WILLIAM PATTERSON COLLEGE
' · MARIST
88 ·
KING'S COLLEGE .
. .
MARIST
66
BLOOMFIELD COLLEGE ·
,
-. .
. . . As~ealfkn~w. a fund drfv~ is
57 - · ··••
in.progress for securing lights for
·' .62 :
_.
LeonidoffField. But
how
many
of
. 6.1
·
us
·
really know how to properly
66
pronounce the man's name. I
•· 00
.
have heard about five different
62
ways. Well. to clear the air, here
ffl
·
is the proper way. Take the first
part: LEO as in the Jion; add
MARIST
76
U.S. MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY
:
KNEE
for the
ni; and round
it
au
54
up with DOFF as in the way one
. MARIST.
8.5
DOWLING COLLEGE
.
.
MARIST 78
· NYACK
MISSIONARY COLLEGE
MARIST
66
MONMOUTH COLLEGE
MARIST
68
SACRED HEART UNIVERSITY
MARIST
83
BLOOMFIELD COLLEGE .
MARIST 70 -.. SOUTHAMPTON COLLEGE
MARIST
8.5
DOWLING COLLEGE
MARIST 104
KING'S COLLEGE
l\lARIST
88
STONEHILL COLLEGE
MARIST
83
NEW HA VEN COLLEGE
MARIST
88
BROOKLYN COLLEGE
MARIST
69
SIENA COLLEGE -,.•
MARIST
72
SOUTHAMPTON COLLEGE
l\fARIST 66
SOUTHAMPTON COLLEGE
MARIST
77
S.U.N.Y. AT ALBANY·
MARIST
~
GLA~ORO STATE
WON
16
1.osr 8
.62
would take off a hat. All together
we have LEO-KNEE-DOFF.
78 ·
.
Briefly.
Dr.
Aleksei
A.
:
Leonidoff. the benefactor of the
field.
has
been
in
the
~·
Poughkeepsie area some fifty
years as a specialist in ·Jriternal
~
Medicine. A graduate of Moscow
-!!
University in 1914, he served as a
,.,.
doctor in the U.S. Army in the
63 .
China-India-Burma Theatre in
71
World War
II. He
lives
in
the
city
75
'8
of I_>oughk_eepsie. At the present,
he 1s semi-retired .
81 ·
It
would have been a shame to
M
continue to mis-pronounce this
generous· man's name. I hope it
has been corrected.
. ·i
9.20.1
9.20.2
9.20.3
9.20.4
9.20.5
9.20.6
9.20.7
9.20.8
,•,•
..
a;:
j); - {
> . -
.
·• .. ···· •
.
·
.· .· ..
.
···•·.·•··•.·;,l?l~Qcat10n·.··
In the; conti~~iJ;~_~Ji~h
·
\~{"
...
-ruesda)'
.
.
" '.
~
.
Dep~rtmental ·• faculty: and
r ".
more ~ffective}and/Jii~ari!ngftil;:
education. the
Ape
JS
sponsori!l8:
a
college
:
~ convoc:at~on<'}ori"-
Tuesday.· · March
·
-.14. ":: 1972 ·.
regarding·,. the.:··•• prcicess/·oi:
evaluati_on.
It
is
the hope.ofAPC':
thatfrom such an experience wilf'
come camp_tis wicfe analysis .and
i
reflection ·on existingievaluative .
processe_s .
1
··shident~fa·culty~;~
administrative~dialogue ·.on. the··
positive and n·egative features of
present practices · and: .. specific
L
recommendations,to deal··.with ·
what may be'considered the most
crucial· shortcomings in !:the·,·
educational experiences. and ·
practices here at Marist. ·
...
The convocation meetings
will
.
be . org_anized / through_ ,.the
academic : departments . or ·
divisions:- Each- chairman':-has_;,
. .
..
:
been requested:to invite.:student ··
.
.
.
P~rticipants in last October's i·onvocatiori. ·
representatives.· to provide the the purpose of the convocation is - l'Oi1raged to·•. attend orie of the
organization for the reflection of to evaluate the whole academic departmental meetings.
student reaction. However. since
·
·process. all stud_ents are en-
· APC · recommends · that the
JHE.-
Bro. Lanriing
.
.)
Obtains:·Doctorat
·
e
f:':
1;, ,.
..-
:·,<---.--.-'
-~:•.~:<, ~- .
-~~
.· .. .. , , ..
;ii~trt,li{li~f
f
itf
J
Alf If
If
il~!
L:;hF ;; ~:
t'<
i1ihg flllfilled an ~he requirements .. promoted to his preserif'posi,tiori
·
<:
,,rr,,.,~:y.
;>•::this.past February
24,
afCathoHc · asahAssistaritProfessor.Jn1968 .
jr[.)/i )
;<; ·; ,/
,University ;Jn_ Washington·o.
·c:; . ·
Brother Lanning. took a leave. of~·.
,:,,;:;:·:/·,;-::< :
on.·,his, thesis: /'Criticism< in.,
.
. absence from ,Marist
_
College
to.·
~M:._
;
~: /: . :,,
:"A.inerican Periodical~
·
or ,the attenci : the' Marist '.Br'other's: .•
/'.C:/:.,>,~:.(
'
Pr.ose'; ,fictfo11. ,y_of'\,Booth House
·
oLReriewal in Fribourg;
/
/@;Xt.'c~
-
-,,; '
Taflcingt9n froni
<1899
·
to
1~9;" . Switzerland: Dilfjnt his staY, in , : ,
Z!:N:?'
.
.
·
•.·}:,->:Brother. µ;i~niil~ ··r~eivecl •·his •. · .. Fribourg·:Brother taught through :- . ' ..
;?]t. { , , • ,
>·B:i\ .. ,
at•• l\far1st
m-,
1953., Upon -· a '.~rant he had receiv¢d at The , ··.·
il{/(', :)
;
>
cQmpl~t~on .
•
.· of. his
~
stu_<li,es · he
·
Inter11ational: SchooL •· : •. · .
·
·• Department
t{j';{t.L·
-
>
?taugllt·at l\tarist Pr~paratory in•.·,. A.well .. kno\V~_; and,\Yell, liked ·•
.·
Brother Lanning said that the··
J%;:_·,;\c•·• '
Esop~s
J?(:
one.year; .The :•tea,cher;: Brou.ier •Lanping·. h!ls
.
·purpose.in _writing his thesis on.
::· . ·: , ·
· , followmg,s1x ·years> he taught at· been actively involved
m
Mar1st Booth Tarkington was to "trace
Mount :Saint- Michers
_in
the :.since his arrival eight years ago.".the. evolution .of this American
Bron_"· D~ring_tllis time Brother
<
He , is
_
, especia~l~ .
.
• k11o~n
·
. NO\'.elists' reputation during· the
. . . . · Lanning_;was?wQrkmg. towards_, throughouLU1e ~oughkeeps1e• ·first four .. decades of• this cena•
. '.'
·
· ... , .the?compl,t?tio1(of his, Gi::adua_te ·,:·area·'f1:>r )1is tt:¢nie!)dous work . tury. ". He continued. that "this ...
. -~
· •·•··.·· Studies ·at; Saiiit
:.Jo.tm'.s.
Univ¢r~ . ,~ith-theJ\1arist .· C_ollege Theater . study sheds a good deal of light
on
,:-sity.He.coriiplet~itlhis:~tydiesin. ,C.uild;ii(whichheis_Co-I>frec~i:-. · tbe literary· fluctuations of.
·,1960 arid.
::gi:~d1Hited;
0
with,; a.: Brot
.
h.er Lahning
)s ·
also
•
a
.
'literary taste during this time."/
. Masters-Degree i~-~ng1µµi;-J'he:·,member : of: .. the-·• .Teacher Blloth Tarkington
,is· -
a
·
·
little
'following '•.semester
Ii~
eilteied , ,Education· .Coimcit. at· · Marist .. _known noveJist in.· American
· Catholic pniversity
~s
a Doctor.al :;.J,ast May he was h~ri$)red
~Y~
J:lis Literature. ··His writings deal
, Student, where'.he worked on the:~, coHeagues by being elected
.
Corit. on
page
6 .· ·
oo~sag;;;r~Biiieve~"Ii
or Not
· ·
·
· ,
,
.. · ·
·
· .• ... · ·
by PAUL ZAROOGIAN
·High :··level'>o(
<
student-:
dissatisfaction _with .• the. Food ·
Service????? .:., :,,,; • :• :
..
. ·.
Saga's Student 'AttitudeProfiie
<the total results are postC9 on
the cafeteria
,
bulletin
·:-board> :
shows that
76.7
percent oC the
students
ooJJP.d
stated that ·the
Marist
J.
Food
Service,· Program ,
was better than or· equal
to'
the
food
service programs on other
campuses at which they have
eaten.
High
level
of
student
dissatisfaction with the Food ··
Service?????
Only
8.6
percent
of
the students
polled stated that the Marist
College Food Service PProgram
was
Jess
desirable than expected.
Conclusion: ...
'??'??
You may be wondering why
there have been
so
many
changes
in the Food
Service
Program
since the
28th
of
February.
Many
Paul
Zaroogian,
~ t o r
of
Marist Food~
. ~yjt's
because the contract is
up
for
re-negotiaiion. Others think
·.we. are trying to· snow everyone
with · a- last-minute effort .. •· And
·others stilJ . think it's- because
there have beeri ."big~shots".
visiting us. Well, here's the
"Ripley's Beli_eve
It
or Not"
facts--you make the decision!!!
· During
the
last full week in
1t·cbruary .. Ken and. I heard
-_through the grapevine that there
~as a high-level
of
dis.~tisfacti°'1
~ith the
Food
Service Program.
~Ve immediately went
to Joe
Brosnan and then Dean Wade
to
· try and ascertain their feelings
about the_situation.
t
At, ~th informal meetings,
nothing specific could be stated
· but we all agreed that there was a
Jack of communication between
thestudeqts and
the
FoodService.
We got
a
few
good ideas. and
Cont.
ori
page
2
students
··
·· i2:00-1:00 Lunch . .
.
.
. .
. . 1 :~2:30
:Faculty and students
·
1
meet separately to . refine. the
·issues. discussed in·.
the
morning
r
nd: to develop t.ena. t.ive
... rec.om .. -
mendations ·
··
..
2:40-4:00
Combined faculty-
student meetings to integrate
· specific reactions and recom-
. mendations to be forwarded to ·
.. APC via the chairman.
In'order for this Convocation
to
be t~e succe~s that its potential
holds. it is extremely necessary
for the total population of Marist
to. participate. I,ast semester's
Convocation was attended by a
relatively large portion of the
rom11mnity and again we must
!-how that apathy reigns only in a
stn<JII
minority of · Marist
following fo~mat and allocations · Sludents.
of time be followed:
!1:IIIH I :45
ft'ulJ discussion of
' Urotl~c_rl..anning inslrui:ling
class.
"Sfbdenf
-·
- ,
.
:
.
"
.
,
..• i.•Ef~et;·o.ms;
.
-·
~
on Wednesday March 22,,the .. why
'
this .election ha~. been
Student Goverinnentwill hold its· delayed · for two. \vee!{s, . The
elections.
The
voting on this day reason Jor this is that the· ri:lid-
wiU be for the four executive . terms week fell oh: fop of:the
positionsjnchided on the· Coun-, usually schedµled elec_ti9n dates
cil's new format. These include . <thefirst fulhveekin MarchhSo
President: Vice-President, · rather than ·running· the>risk of
. Seci-e~ry. and 'freas~rer :. '
losing a hurriber. of candidates
as ' ,
The~e are_
a .
number ·-~f in- . a resu.It of it interferring · with
terestmg _J)()mts about this• up-
their exam schedule,
I
.asked the
coming event that might merit · Election Commission to delay
some attention. 'fo~ begin with, · them. .
.
· ·
..
thisisthefi_rsttimeinthreeyears. · In addition to this above
_that all executive positions will problem there is one much more
be
filled without having .to ·go complex and before-it
0
develops
through the . pain of · running a . into an issue during the leection
I
"Special" Electi~ _fo( unfilled: have
set
up
a
referendum
on
it.
posts. The second item
JS
the fact The ·situation involves the fact
that all positions
will
be
contested that under the old form of Student
b~
at _least two students. Again,' · Government, the position of
this 1s another first for -the President cannot
be
contested
by
Student Government.
. .
anyone but a student who during
The causes. for this apparent his time in office will
be
a Senior ..
rise · in interest . seems
to be
The argument in defense of this is
coming
from . the
recent that only a• Senior has the ex-
restructuringof
the
Government. perience necessary
to
be
in. the
This is a change hopefully for
the
position of PresidenL After
better.
It
is aimed at:
(1)
cen- serving for a year
in
this position
tralizing the student voice on Heel that anyone 'Mlether he be~
campus·in order that the lines
of sophomore •. junior, senior can
communication
can
be ~nc:ile the job. This position must
broadened among all involved; be offered to anyone who is
and
(2)
localizing the areas
of willing
to
·work; and it should not
representation in order to get the be an exclusive luxury
to
a
maximum from all special in- senior. Therefore, on Monday,
terest groups.
March
13,
there wiU be a
Some of
you may be
wondering
Cont.
on
page
2
,\
.
·,
'
PAGEl.
TIIECJR.CLE
MAR.al
9, 1972
Believe It •..
every Wednesday
from
llto 1:30.
.
waste down
·
to
·
a
.
minimum
.
STUDENT ELECTIONS
r.ont •••
For the breakfast
program,
we therefore enabling us to
do
mor4!
promptly started
to
try
..
and get now have available a hot plate
so
with
·
your
·
food doJ1ar. The
specific comments concerning
·
you may soft-boil your own eggs.
·
present result ,is
.
that we have
the student feelings about
our
In order to serve hot eggs, we are been able to do the following
Food Service.\
cooking very close to order so if "extras"
·
for
·
the
-
resident
·
~ight after our meeting with you are waiting a little longer in students:
.
.
.
!"
'
Referendum
·
in order for the and administration pay
.
par-
student
bodY
to decide whether
·
ticular attention
.
to
ALL
those
· this
posiUon
will be opened to all running
Joi"
a position since this
>
students or
·
just seniors. . .
.
election represents not only
·
new
Joe and Dean Wade, we set up a
the breakfast line, we hope the
1.
Serve Yogurt for lunch Mon-
complaint table on Thursday inconvenience is worth it.
Fri.
·
· ·
.
.
,
Turning again to the elections
-
faces coming into power but also
on Monday March
22,
I would like new duties
•
to be handled by each
to urge that all students, faculty,
_
one of these people.
/
night.
24
Feb., to obtain direct
·
on Wednesday,
1
March, we
·
2.
Implemented a Sunday
feedback. Out of approximately
·
held an Open Forum at which we
·
Brunch Buffet.
.
·
by RALPH CERULU
·
700
students who
·
attended the answered any
·
and all questions
3.
Implement a Wedne~day
C.U.B.
evening meal, orily
32 stopped by concerning the Food
.
Service Luncheon Buffet.
.
,
.
to make a total of 64 comments of Program. We got some real
good
4
.
Served unlimited London
which
30
comments were specific
·
.
ideas from the
11
to
20
people that
Broi
1
.
for
.
the
,
Thanksgiving
.
enough to act upon.
attended. Upon taking an
·
in-
Special.
.
·
On the following day we held a
formal vote. the corisensus of the
5
.
Serving Blue
Cheese
Board
·
Named
summit meeting with Gene group was that there was a low Dressing three times weekly.
Plowman (District Manager), dissatisfaction level concerning
6.
Served wine as an
.
extra at
Ralph
Cerulli
(Student the Food Program
.
the Valentine Day Special.
·
Manager>. Ken and myself. We
Many of the students are
7&8
There's been no cut-back
all felt that the lunch program wondering - "What am I getting on Fresh Fruit
-
and Fresh
Lecture
Adeline Aquilino
Co~cert: all small and
'
large
could be strengthened
.
Ralph in return for showing my
ID Card Produce dur
i
ng
_
the winter,
··
Coffee House
·
Kevin Keenan
·
concerts held in the Theatre
.
or
suggested serving Yogurt
,
Gene every meal and for accepting the regardless of cost:
.
:
-
Performing Arts
·
Pauline Peart
·
.
·
Cafeteria
.
·
suggested cooking Hamburgers portions served each meal?"
After reading this article
,
if you
.
Fine
Arts
·
Carla
Bergold
Social Activities:
dances
,
and Hot Dogs to order
;
therefore, What you are getting is protec-
feel
-
that you have some con-
Concert
.
.
Rich
Rubino
·
Rathskeller activities, creating
a
.
our new lunch program
·
was tion for your food dollar invested
.
tributions to make, please send
·
Social Activities
.
.
·
Eric
·
yergan
calendar of all organizational and
implemented on Monday, 28 Feb. By checking ID Cards we have your name to Mary Ann Baiardi - Film
:
·
dub social events held on
Lunch now consists of the
regular
been able to keep the admittance , Food Committee Chairman)
Business Manager
Jack Barry
campus, that is
.
a
··
coordinator.
three entrees PLUS Yogurt
,
of unauthorized persons to a P.O. Box Cl6, and she will con-
·
Theatre Manager Jim Naccarato
Permission
"
for use of alcoholic
Hamburgers and Hot Dogs minimum therefore preventing
tact
you as to when the next Food
·
Let me clarify briefly the work
·
beverages for any campus event.
cooked to order (between
11
and them from eating into your food committee will meet agairi.
·
entailed for each chairman.
·
Film: Co-Chairmen shall select
1
:
30).
Starting Wed,
s
March, a dollar. By controlling portions,
Ken and I would welcome the
Lecture: majo~ speakers, small
movies for the calendar whereby
Luncheon Buffet will be served we have been able to keep food opportunity
.
to rap informally
lecture series, video-tape series,
the Business M iager is fully
with any individual or any group
panel discussions, symposiums.
·
responsible for • ntracting and
concerning the Food Service or
Coffee House: folk
·
music,
.
any business t1 nsactions for
just anything at all
.
Just stop by
Cabaret, one-act plays, informal
films, and the Theatre Manager
and let us know when and where
.
social cultural activities in-
.
is responsible for
·
·
operations
in
WMCR
by
MIKE SMlnt
&
BOB GREENE
local, and campus scenes. It is
also used as a sounding board for
student opinion
.
These benefits
could be greatly magnified if
Marist Radio goes F.M.
volving central themes.
the Theatre ~s wellas being
in
Perfonning Arts: CUitural events
charge of publicity for each film.
At present, Marist Radio
often falls during high winds and
WMCR
(640
AM> is a closed-
snowstorms. The principle under
circuited cable radio which
which
it
works is that the tran-
scarcely encompasses the area of
smission is run through the walls
the Marist campus
.
Now
,
-
of each building
,
but this causes
however. WMCR is planning to
much static. making it difficult to
specifically associated with the
If
there is any student
_
or
Theatre.
·
Plays, Cooperative
faculty who is interested in
music programs, sponsoring
-
working
·
with
_
one
,
of these
trips to off and on-Broadway
Chairman, please notify him
ot
plays
,
dance.
her as soon as possible. Your
Fine Arts
:
Cultural events, assistance in decision-making
specifically outside the Theatre,
and committee work is most
,
Poets. lectures, workshops,
needed by the College
.
Union
festivals. experimental events.
Board. Thank ,yoti.
·
make a bid to greatly enhance
hear the station
.
How. then, can
The future benefits of an
F.M.
and promote Marist activities
Marist Radio benefit the Marist Marist station are innumerable.
both
.
on the campus and in the
community by going F
.
M.? The Given the power of FF
.
M,, the
immediate area surrounding it -
answer
·
seems quite simple,
·
but station would encompas a radius - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
to go F
.
M
.
In order to do so,
before answering this question of approximately ten
to twenty day out. seven days a week, plus graduates
·
·
in thejr search for
Mari st Radio must have the one must look at Marist Radio miles. grasping not only the allowing them to air their jobs.
·
·
·
support of the Marist community
,
itself
,
campus but also the city and town
opinions on
.
our station
.
Thus, by
.
Marist Radio is not just sitting
.
and are now introducing a
As of this date. Marist Radio of Poughkeepsie and other
·
moving in this direction
,
Marist back ~nd asking that the Student
·
petition to show tl)at they have has had such people as Dean surrounding areas
.
Marist itself would be able to develop a well Government supply the funds
·
the student body backing.
Wade and Assistant Dan Carolan is beginning to take on an activist rounded view or_ its relationship needed
·
without taking tJ]e
·
Cable radio is
a
failure fo
r'
the before its mikes.
to discuss such
.
pa rt
.
10
the
.
future
of
.
to the outside community an~ to
.
initiative themselves. The station
,><
,·
,,
...
.
.
..
,
,
si.
_
tj\\l\~
s-
r
.
easonAhat
.
the
r
e is no topics
.
as the minisemeste~
.
and PoiiJi;hkeepsie
.
,
in
:·
tll¢
.>
form
·
of other
area colleges as well. With has
·
·
.
gone out
..
and solicited ads
t·-·~-
~
...
~.1("
>:
~
t;::s~;;sa~~!~a~~;i:t~ri~~;
·
-
i
\~
~wte:!u:r:~+a~:a
·
:_1g
#
~te1f~~~~!~~~mi
:
~~itii~~i;
~
;~;
:
1ffo~!1i
:~et!i~~s;:
-
!t~i1!tt~~~~ry
·
~
~~n:
,
~~:e
.
1~!!jsr~:~:i:.
_
.
~
~
·.
I
.
accurate transm1ss1on
;
of the
.
future. Added
to
this
:
age~da
JS
<
Manst
fonts
lJelpmth~se areas.
-
gr,ow.
\
Prestige
'
>
brings
'
on' ex-
..
Nearly
-.
two lmndred dollars has
.
!
station
.
Other reasons for its contemporary music
:
and a
By going •F
.
M. Marist would be
·
pandiiJg influence which would be
.
beer
i'
raised
,:
-
accordingly.
••
But
failure are that the cable, that is complete news coverage every
.
able to convey
.
our feelings and a definite
.
benefit
.
to our these patrons of the station will"
hung from building to building, hour. concerning the national,
influence these peopl~
.
day in and graduates
·
.
and
·
·
up-coming
soon loose interest if they fail to
.
·
.
_
Cont. ori page
6
-
G. U.B. Elections
.
A
;
Suitcase
College
'
:-
'-
-
by Bob Greene
·
I have been
..
elected
.
Vice against whom.
was unforgivable.
.
P~esident of
.
the
.
·
College Uni9n
This brings me to another area
As far as the candidates Were
by John Duane
Board, and for this opportunity I ·or concern. regarding the past concerned, itseeined as
though
I
·
It's friday afternoon at
3
:
30,
a
party'?"
.
.
feel grateful. However, one of my elections. and that is, how the was the only candidate that put
few of us are si
_
tting in lobby
.
"I think the fifth floor
is
having campaign pledg~ was to use all organization of the election was out a platform. Pauline Peart, I
.
Everyone fishishecl their classes
·
a floor party.Butit
'
s only for the means
.
·
of
.
·
communication set up.
As
I previously stated, I
·
kriow. made an effort, but she
·
aud now the weekend is here and
•
people on the floor
.
"
·
•
.·
·
.
available to inform the student
,
did not receive notificati011
··
of
.
found it virtually impossible in
.
it's time to have Fun.
"I
·
wonder •what Good News body
00
the dealing of the c.U.R what
-
position I was supposed to
such a short period of time
;
but
.
"How come there are so many
.
docs on friday night?
"
1
would like at this time
-
to ex-
..
run for.
I
was made aware by a
~he did
_
publicize a few of
.
her
people going home?""
"
Who cares."
.
·
press my views on the past friend of mine when he told me views: To me, the position I was
"Oh. I don't know maybe they
.
'.:Well let's do something." .
.
elections. which in my opinion that lie had seen my name oo
.
a
.
.
running for was aii important
havealotofgoodfriendshomeor
_
There has to_be something
.
was disgraceful. Though the
.
poster arid
,
that
;
J was after all
·
position. Whenoneisruririingfor
a girl friend there? Or they could
gomg '?fl
.
here. I th~nk they have.a
•,
C.lLB. is only two
.
years old and. running for
·
the Vice Presidency.
a position that handles $25,000,00,
be
going skiing."
·
band
m
t~e rat.
_
The gym 1s therefore lacks experience in the
It
.
was
.
:with much
·
surprise, or
·
I feel he has a responsibility
:
to
"Yeah. what the hell are we
always open;.,What about the realm of
·
l'Jlnninr
an
el~tion, better yet. with shock that I bad
inform the student
body
how
_
he
•
going to do t~night?''.
.
·
coffee ho?se. .
.
there are a few thmgs that I feel
learned this. l strongly feel that
·
proposes to deal with theii:
'.'I don't know. What do you
·
I
don t thmk they have it should be
·
.
pointed ouf to the the
•
College
_
Utjion Board could
"
money. What this whole thing
w~~t to do?" -
.
_
.
any~~~ecause not enough people student body.
·
.
have had the common decency to
boils down to is: do we
'
elect
. We can always go down
to
fik:
_
w~?t. .
.
.
When candidates applied for inform the candidates, by mail; people on the ~asis oftheir ideas
·
Pie and get loaded."
-
·
.
:
_
Th_1s P.!ace
.
real!Y
.
shits the position they were interested the ~ition they were
'
chosen to
arid our corifide'1cein their ability
.
"
Does anybody want
.
~ go .
_
sometimes
.
·
··
·
.
,
·
in running for they filled out a
run for. Also on
the
.
other hand,
to
carry
out their proposals,
<r
en
bowling?
"
.
·
. .
.
"Hey, I have a good friend at piece of paper' that required for
the
College Union
·
Board failed to
.
a popularity basi~. For, once
"Too much money for the
Siena you guys want to go
.
up
thein to state the two positions inform the candidates when the
again. I stress that $25,000
.
00
is a
.
w~?le night."
.
.
there for the weekend? ~hey
they were interested in running elections were to take place. I
.
large amount of money coming
What about
the
movtC:'
;
the
have~. lot good bars and shit up
for. My personal preference was :was under the assumption that I .froJri
the
student body to
-
be used
dollar one?"
there.
first to run for
·
President
·
and was dealing with an organization
·
for the student body. I am not
"The Movies on friday night?"
"I'm up."
second
·
choice
for 'Vice that would_ have enough sense,
·
saying that tJ:ie other candidat~
·
-
"Oh. I
·
don't know, let's
do
"I'll go."
President. I was oot informed at initiative. and responsibility
to
were not interested in publicizing
someth
_
ing. Is anybody having a
"Yeah. let's go."
all as to
·
which
-
position I was inform me as to when the elec-
their platform. for I personally
·
chosen to run for. Yes,
J
,
.
was tions were to take place. I found
feel that the candidates were
chosen to run for the Vice
.·
out three days before election
very aware of tbe manner in
Presidency. I did not even find
·
<1;ate. when I was talking
to
Jack
which
·
the elections were
being
·
out why I had been denied the
.
Simeone and he mentioned
·
in
run.
.
chance to run for the Presidency.
-
-
~
,assing that elections were on
As a closing note, I do not feel
Iknowortwoother peoplewo had Friday. Fb
.
25
:
As
much as I had
.
that any election in this
school
intended
.
to run
for
the suffered from not being notified
should be run on a Friday
.
It
is a
.
Presidency. but they too were anything; Pauline Peart was the
_
common '!act that not only the
denied a chance without any one who suffered most, from not
-
r~idents but also the
_,.
commuters
·
justification or notice; The being informed o~ the· election
attempt to make their weekends
c.U.B .• thus controlling the date. I was speaking
·
to her on
longer by usually taking Fridays
·
course of
.
this year's elections, Thur~ay. the day pefore: elec-
off. This may very well be the
came out with a statement tions.ataboutl0:!)Op.m. She said
explanation as to why less than
somewhat to the effect that for that she only found Qut about the
half of the student body turned
the first time in C.(T.B.'s history, election date that afternoon, and
out to vote. It would be a very
all positions had two opposing I for sure was taken by surprise.
simple plan to compute when
candidates.
or
course
,
you'll She was running
-
for the
most students
·
are at school
have two candidates for every Presidency. but she didn't
.
even
during the week and hold the
position
if
you sit down, plan it have a dece1_1t _chance to ~o
elections on that day
.
I also feel
out.
and
decide who was running around ca~pa1gnmg. To me this
Cont.
on
page
6
;
.
t
L
·
MARCH 9. 1972
.
THE CIRCLE
.
PAGE~
by
Fr.
Leo
Gallant
."
.
.
-
.
,
Sonie~ing
·
is happening since December in. this· c01D1try an~ no one
knows why. Soine
are
wondering if the "certain"- ending o(th! war is
bringing some stability back
t.o
our.lives. But the new happening is
the
Women's Cent-er
Opens
byJANETEARLY
upsurge .
.
all of a sudden
.
of requests to enter seminaries for the
·
With the opening of
·
the Mid-
priesthood.
._
.
.
.
· ··. -
·
·
.
.
Hudson Women's Center at 96
The Detroit archdiocese vocations office announced a
·
star
.
tli~
Market Street. Poughkeepsie
increase beginning in early December. It is ge
_
tting an unprecedented (across from Adriance Library).
-
one-request-per-day from
.
.
college students and high school seniors
.
the
·
women~s movement in the
desiring info_rll!ation con~rning ente~ing t~e diocese
'
s se~inary.
mid-Hudson valley takes a more
T~e Bened1<:tme Federat1~n of Ame~ica which ha~ approximately
~
·
visible position. The Women ·s
nov!ces ~tu~ymg for the pr1estho4xl
m
the late 60 s 1s now up
to
50 .
center will not only
·
serve
.
as
novtces !n
72. .
.
.
·
· .
·
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
-
·
headquarters for feminist ac-
.
.
News items
•
li~e thes~ are makmg the
.
newsp!lpers and hav~
.
the tivities which are already un-
experts scratch!ng·
.
their h
_
eads
:
Many
-
~_ad believed ~ t until
.
w_e derwayi but will also be
a
place
dropp~ the celibacy rE:<JUI_rement 'Ye might as well write off this where all women can come to
generation; as
-
f~r asthepnesthoochs concern~.
. .
·.
.
r
d
t
bo
t th
•
•
Even my provincial'tells me tha
_
t the Marist pr_1ests.are noticmg this
in
ou
a u
e W(!men s
sudderi
.
new interest among college students.
Although
the percentage mov
_
ement. meet
.
other ~omen
.
.
of
high school seniors is
.
down, way down
,'
that
of
college seniors
aski~
.
aod. work on ongoing pro,tects or
information is almost
300
per~ent higher.
·.
-
· . ·
·
begm
_
new ones
.
.
..
I
have been after the Provincial
t.o
start a lay volunteer
.
program
so
Actu~n /or Women. a c~h_lt
_
on
that college graduates might spend
:-
a year in a community of service of femm1
_
sts. took responsibth~
with Marlst priests in our high
:
schools or other apostolates, evenj~ for_ rentmg the. storefront
m
foreign missions. The MaMst Brothers had a very succ~ssful program which the C~nter 1s located from
going. Some of lhe volunteers, defiI1itely are thinking of the possibility Poughkeepste Urban •
·
Renewal
of joining the Brothers. Others wantto spend a year or two in some Agency. The Women s Center
service to the
poor or unde~ivileged. (The lay voltmteers in
.
Texas, opened on February
1.
R.ent for
Samoa and New York.)
.
I feel that some who might be remotely the Center is
$80
a month. which
leaning toward the priesthood would like a year
of
service with priests. is being paid from
.
several
Related and non-related footnotes:
.
sources: pledges from individual
It might be possible in a century from riow that students at Marist women
.
given
monthly:
will wonder where the name "Marist" comes from. (Like Pace, Kings, honorariums
paid
to
the
·
Harvard, Iona.> Some
-
researchers will then discover that"the name Speakers;
Co11ective
for
·
Marist came from a small congregation of dedicated me~ who began programs they give; income
this college, building every bit
of
it with their hands,
to
train Brothers. from sale of feminist literature;
Then it became a catholic college. Then a non-denominational private and random donations
.
The
college, a great little institution.
.
.
pledges alone do not cover the
~aybe a little more research will show that the
-
Maris!
.
Brothers
·
total rent. telephone and utilities:
were founded in France in the early 1800's to educate the very poor, more money is needed.
the neglected, that within a few years they had grown and spread
The Center is now being staffed
throughout
.
the
.
world
.
·
·
.
•..
.
.
regularly from
10
a.m. to
4
p.m.
projects planned at periodic
meetings of the steering - com-
mittee
.
which is open to all
women. Th
e
next steering
committee meeting will be
Wednesday. March 15 at
8
p.m. at
the Center
.
The Women
'
s Center is now
. acting as a clearinghouse for
women who want to join con-
sci ou sn ess -r
_
a is in
g
groups.
,
Consciousness
-
raising. one of the
cornerstones of the women's
movement. is a way for women to
share their common experiences.
di
s
cover how they have
.
been
l'hanneled and conditioned by
society into positions of weakness
and impotence. and begin to
develop political awareness so
that they c
a
n begin to act with
other women to change the
conditions oppressing them. As
.Juliet Mitchell says in her new
book. Women's Estate. con-
sciousncss-ra ising is "finding
that what you thought was an
individual dilemma is a social
predicaml'nl and
h
e
nce
a
political problem··
.
Through the Women's Center
.
,iroups of ten or so women
get
together. u
s
ually with one or two
women who have had prior ex-
perience
in
consciousness-
raising. to begin a group. Most
groups meet weekly. in mem-
bers· homes.
Various types of counseling
arc. or will
be
a
vailable to women
throut?h the
.
Center
.
The birth
control and abortioo collective 1s
already helping women who
need
abortion
referrals,
tran-
sportation and funds
.
In addition
,
this group is working with women
· from the Woodstock Women
'
s
Health Projects in a joint effort to
make free or low-eost abortions
available locally .
The speakers' collective is
active in visiting schools and
organizations to explain the
activities of the Women's Center.
Action for Women. and local and
general issues of Women
'
s
l,iberation
.
Their programs
usually involve a great deal of
exchange with members of their
audiences
.
and many women
have become involved in the
movement through these con-
tacts.
·
The Center is also trying to
build its literary resources.
There are a number of pamphlets
,ind periodicals available for sale
or browsing
.
and a growing
l
'
Ollection of books and back
issues. Oonations of more books
arc very welcome.
'i
'
he Center needs
:
staffers
;
hook
s
and magazines; furniture.
plants. paint and other creature
comforts
;
n1oney
to
pay rent and
other expenses;
YOU!
If
you
are
interested in participating in any
of the projects
.
or if you need any
help
of
any kind. come down to
the Center. or call during office
hours.
All
sisters are invited to
join the
-
~
truggle!
'
<
.
j
You might talk about the new generation now. But
in the early 1800
'
s Monday through Saturday
.
and
a groul? of twentr seminarians, unsatisfied wi~h the w_ay the Church on Wednesday and Thursday
was gomg, especially after the French Revolution, ~1ded t~ found a evenings from
7
to
9
p
.
m.
m
is
new order to get.to the poor. It
took
many years to realize their dream
.
·
also
·
open sometimes between
4
After they :were
all ordai~ di~san priests, they kept in touch wilh
·
and
6
p.m
.
Check by calling
454-
each other
.
Then at the nght time, they struck. Rome would not ap-
9487
the center number.) It is
prove of priests and _brothers together in a large congre,ation because also· open other nights during
·
r
it w~uld be too tmWieldy to gover-'_l
.
So.
Fr. Claude Cohn founded
~
_
scheduled ~e~tings
.
.
.
D
Pl •
•
:!;
M
.
ar
.
1st Fathers and Fr
.
. ~ar
.
c
.
el
·
l i n
.
Cbamp~gnat f~unde_d
.
the
.
Marist
_
center pohc1es are decided and
over
ain
·
s
,
..
.
Brothers. Both congregations made education their roam apostolate,
.
•
.1
especially education of the poor
.
.·.
.
. .
.
.
.
...
.
. ··
·Some
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.·.
.
.
.\
.
.
lnafewdecadesfromnow
,
rei;ear~ersw;.ll~onder
.
too,
_
who~re:
-
_
_
•
•.· .
:
.•...
.
:W-,
.
. ·
.. . . .
.
.
"'I_
"I>
f l
: ·
..
·
•
.
. ·
..
< ·
.
.
...
.
•
\I
, ..
.
,--·
--
_.
,
Byrn
.
_
e •
.
·
".i
'.A
_
·
-
-
~
.
_
n
.
_
·~n,
•
•
_
i:>c,,
_
n
..
nell
_
Y:
_
:
.-
Foo.tiun.e,
._
Sh
.
ea
_
..
~tj
.
d.#
_
·
;:
,
g
.
..
r
_
_
e g o
.
·
ey
.
•
,;
Be
.
.
no
.
it
.
..
.,
~ J : .
•
re
·---
.
...
_
-
__
.:
.
-'
,.,._
.
·_
·
~
.
;,,,;,,.,,;,
~
,
.-,•.~
·
...
'."'
--
"
··..r--:-erso
.
"
n:a.1.~
·
-.I:'7ei~eC
•
..
,.·o
·
n
·
·•
s
~
-
-~--
--
--
-
,
·
·
'"
'
'"·'
·
"
"·~ .
.... ,
·
.
-
...
,
etc
.'
'
And
•
thosereseai:chers will
be
the new
.
generation
-
that ".Future
~£II,
.
•
·
.;
,
.
,.
•
: .
. . ·
•
-
·
.
.
.
..__._
-
·
i:.
~tto¢~••
;
~11d
"
''~reeni!1gof
_
Ameiica
?.
speakabout!!!
:_
.
.
.
·
_
rrLo
·
.
u-~h
-
·:
t
·
S
.
.
How docs one describe tw~ months of
·
a new experience? An ex-
.·
·
-
·
,.. ·
·
·
.
·
-
-.
-
-..
.
·
,
..
-
-. ·
-
·
._·_
-
·
:L
l
,:
t
·
·
e,
i
pcrienc~ of hope. frustration, joy,
and
sadness. Aren't these the
.·.
,
,'.
,
·
.
W.a
n
·
,
::.
TO
.
Wri-te
.
.
-·
By Jack& JiU
·
cor,~:?~~t~~jofo~~~fi~!!!~people,simple,butbeautiful. The joy
Vecli?
.
E venuto!
lo non
g)i
scendo incontro
·
lo no
.
Mi metto la
· .
Sul
ciglio del colle e aspetto
E
-
aspett(! gran tempo
e non mi pesa
·
La Jun~a att~a.
"By
Tom
Walsh
It was nearly daybreak before she had him. The
sun
was freaking
oo
the Detroit plains, as the sweat broke on he- tiny forehead. I am sure
she suffered with him,
~s
she still suffers with him today. Her legs
.
were arched tight oil the
_
tattered couch
as
she prepared to deliver
.
·
him
.
. Kisses
s,
deep and pure could
.
beno
_
sin; and
it
was
a
good
birth
,
·
as all births are.
·
·
..
·.
.
.
.
·
·
· .
.
Ilwas almost ~ix months before she named him, and then, only after
much difficulty. Ernest, It should have been obvious from the start
that he could neither speak nQr
hear.
He,
of
cwrse, was not aware.
He
always thought that he was speaking, for in his mind the words were
·
formed. But, because he could
not
hear, he never kriew that he said
nothing. He.wanted
to
much for words to crawl up his throat, but, they
lay in the pit of his stomach with
no
where
to
go. And it rained a lot.
.
It was cloudy that
day and I
was
lazy, and so
I
just stayed in
bed
thinking about
it.
For Ernest-it
was an
·
easy
life, he was simple,
and
_
there is no better way
to
J,e
:
His father before him was simple too. He
use to go to the
Jakes
in the winter
and
cut df big
peces
of ice
and
bring them
to
his room and watch them melt. He
would go to the lake
and do the same thing every day witil
-
the
summer
came. In
the
summer he would
go
to
.
the
ocean
and bring home a wave everyday
·
and freeze it
and hang it in the closet. When his father died he left
Ernest a year's supply
of
mirror
paint.
Ernest walked around painting
everyone's face,
and
looked in
the mirrors
to
p:-actice his smile
.
The time came. He had spent
too
much time talking to paper.
I
wanted to tell you only
-
how like yourself you are. Silence
.
And t~e.r killed each other without even knowing why
.
can I return from whence
I came
Maybe touch old friends
Or
remain
.
where lam
With the world in my
·
hands
And yet still have no place
to
go.
I can't
write
anymore.
At
the
present time~
the
full
details are not available.. Keep
reading
the
Circle for
the full,
glorious facts in issues to come.
Right now
the
three
A's
are
heir~
pulled
together
so
keep
watchiflg
tbe
coll8'.lllJS.
.
.
.
I
walk
·
into th
e
cafeteria
everyday about
9
:
OO
.
I
have my
donuts and coffee and usually sit
by myself.
I
often notice tables
•
wherethere are crowds of people
talking and jqking about things.
A
lot of times
I
wish that
I could
be
involved with people like this.
I
guess
I'm
not very sociable,
although
I
wish
.
I
was
.
Maybe
tomorrow
I'll
meet somebody
and we'll-be friends. Or perhaps I
wiU
always be and eat along.
I
walk into the cafeteria
everyday about
9:00
.
I
have my
donuts and coffee and usually sit
by myself.
·
It
is one privilege
I
allow myself. It is good to
be
able
to sit and just be by myself. I
wonder why
so
many people need
constantly to be surrounded by
their groups .
.
I
guess they need
others to feel secure.
Weekends probably are the
worst days
I
have
.
I
simply don't
·know what to
do
.
I really want to
get involved with people but I just
can't bring myself to go to the Pie
or the Last Chance.
My
books,
wen
I
can't hide behind them on
weekends, or can l? I wish as
many people seem to think, that
there was some objective choice
between being involved with
people or being alone
.
Perhaps
someday I'll give myself a
chance.
until then there's a good
movie on the late show tonight?
care to join me?
Weekends are probably my
happiest days
.
At last I can put
my books
down
and relax. I don't
have to go to the Pie or the Last
Chance to
do this
as
so many
people seem to have
to
do. My
frienl:ls and I are going
t.o
go
to
look at a small
town
up
north just
to see what
it
is like. I wonder if
those people who
go
rushing
oCf
to
the
Pie or· Last Chance every
weekend don't get
bored.
Maybe
there're
really lonely.
of seeing young children eager
fo
learn
.
eager to come by
themselves
for tutoring after school. These same people have to struggle with the
welfare office for their weekly budget, and these same children
.
are
being
·
pushed from one grade to the next without the basic tools of
education (math
,
reading etc.)
· I've felt the joy of teaching
High
SchoolEquivelency to people who
are motivated to better their own lives. Some
.
of them,
I
know, will
never pass the High School Equivelency Test
;
it will
be
just too
di
f
-
ficult for them. What will happen to their motivation? Then there are
those days when
I
just don't feel like driving the forty miles to teach
F.ngJish
.
But I've committed myself to do so
.
Sometimes
I
l
ong for
those days of
s
kipping class at will!!
Some other activities have been taking people to doctors offices
,
clinics. welfare and unemployment offices
.
It
'
s a good feeling to know
a friend can go into the Welfare Office and get his business done with
satisfactory speed, and also get his check. Then there is the frustraticn
on another day of sitting iii the Welfare Office for three hours without
assistance from the staff members. We're overloaded, they say, which
may be true. <Right on, Mr. Nixon and
Mr. RockefellEr) I guess this
is
a lesson in patience and frustration at once!
One final example of joy and frustration. It gets me down after
making five phone calls concerning the possibility of an emergency
room. and each person says
to
call someone else.
On
the other hand, I
did have a feeling of accomplishment when
I arranged for a meeting
with the Commissioner of Dutchess County Social Service Department
to
discuss the Welfare problem in general.
I'm not sure if this article has conveyed the feeling
ci
my experience
in Dover
.
I
hope it has!
Concerning credits academically, I feel it is worth 15 credits, not
9.
That way
I
could spend all my time in Dover
.
instead of traveling two
hundred miles a week for my other
6 credits
.
Personally, however,
I
don't care if lhe faculty and administration feel my work is worth
9
er
15 credits. or any at all ..
Dennis Mungo
S.A.C.
by George Byrn~
The
S.A
.
C
.
is
now
accepting
applications from students who
are interested in serving on the
committee for the next academic
year.
This committee is the
student's chief vehicle for
communication between the
faculty and administration of the
college. Students are required to
attend all departmental meetings
of
their major and are respon
-
sible for collecting
opinions and
reactions to the activities
or
their
major's department.
It
is hoped that students will
soon vote on matters of academic
policy, rather than just express
their opinions. For this to hap-
pen; however, it is necessary to
ascertain that the S.A.C.
represents
the
students. Students
accepted on the committee must
make a definite commitment to
the time
and
work is will demand.
Anyone interested should submit
a brief note
to
Mark
Fitzgibbon
(Leo
Hall) or Bill Kargis
(Gregory
House) by March 15.
-
.
..
.
-
.
·.
:
~-•
·:
··
-
.
:
~
-\:
.
'
·
-
<
~
·
MAROl
9,
1972
.
Pictorial
Essay
tii~i0si~
-
:;
:
i_
;·
-
.
. ! .,,
•.
•
·
'.
'
.
,
.
.
.
I
'
Gltcle
.
E
:
ditorials
Put
:
thf)
vatti
:
. .
, .
.. •
·
•
. .
· Where It Collnts
·
.. Ther1:
.
has ~ee~ a bill ~ubmitted by a studer.it.~o~mittee knoWn as
The B1-Partison Committee for a Meaningful Student Vote"
.
which
.
wo~ld enable stu~ents
to
vote in the elect
.
ion districts encompassi~
.
their coJlege residences. rather
.
than
·
in
.
those
•
areas
.'
where their
parents cast
_
their ballots
.
·
. ·
·
. ····
.
•
.
.
_
·
.
·
·
··
.
• .
.
·
•
.
·
.
The Circle
_
beliey~s
.
thi~ to _be a hecessaryand.coristitutional step
.
.
_
toward st
_
udent parbc1pallonm thoseJocal governments affecting us
most. Presently. st
_
udents have no such voice in local affairs and as a
cons_equence. major actions
·
are ta~en. arid officials elected
.
alien
·
to
the m~erests or the student populatio~.
· .
·
·
::
.
· •
· ·
·
-
·
•
.
·
·
·
·
•
-
.
Mar1st has proven itself as a major contributor
to
local projects
arid
needs. the
_
~ecessary financial and political backing to continue its
work m a1dmg t~e community
:
If
this bill. were passed, perhaps the
students at Marist would be able
-
to
.
become at least a considerable
segm~nt of the voting poj>ulas,
·
-
.
.
·
··
.
Anyone interested in helping the "Committee" in
their
.
effort should
contact:
·
.
:.
.
.
·
.
.
MichaelJ. Berg,
18S.
Oakwood Terrace, New Paltz, New York
12561
914-255-8983.
-
. • ·
.
.
.
·
.
·
.
·
·
Guest
Editoria
·
f
..
. ·
·
-
..
Dilemma
·
of
-
-'
James
Robin
-
son
by B.S. U.
Letters TO
The
Editors
.
.
·
,
_
..
.
,
.
·
.
.
·
.
.
<
·
,
GrOsS
>
e1aSted
.
-
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
'
.
.
~
:
.
.
·
This
·
is not a defense of DavP.
Phillips
~
Sometimes; he, as
·
all
.
·
-
of-
-
us do, (let's be
.
honest,
Mr.
.
Gross> may act in
·
a zoo-Jike
mant,er; but who among us is the
:
~rfect saint?
_
. .
.·
.
.
munity"
.
As
a friend of Dave-
Phillips
.
f
find this insulting and a
rather poor example of his
caaracter
.
As
for being infantile. Mr
.
Gross has proven himself most
worthy of the title by
·
using the
paper for his own personal use
.
For someone whose column
I
usually find rather interesting
I
find the defamatin
of-
one
'
s
·
character rather
.
:
cheap and
yellow.
Kevin O'Neil
Also. if Mr
.
Phillips' behavior
-
T~
the Editor:
.
. . .
.
· .
.. _. .
say what he did
.
about
,
without
·
at some mysterious moment
To the Editor
:
·
This is
_
i!J regard
to
tl!e article
:
.
backing
·
it
tip.
Mr. Gross' ac-
which was not mentioned, was
It
seems to me that maturity
by Stuart Gross ~bout Dave
.
cusations are ambigµous and,
in
not
to
Stu Gross' liking
;
why can
'
t
and responsibility are two vir-
.
Phillips (Pip).
·
I
was never so
.
~
my opinion: non-existant.
I
feel or di_dn 't he tell the Community
.
tucs
.
which when found in college
shocked in rriy:life.
I
thought the
.
he should
·
be released from his all
•
the facts
.
concerning that students. speak well
.
for the
Circle
·
.
was a
.
student newspaper job and in future f,!ditions checks
·
isolated incident. if in fact it ever <.-ollege.
If
one was to walk around
to
inform students. When did it
.
should be put on people who occurred.
.
Marist. he could find numerous
·
become
a
slarider. sheet? Where write
.
I
also feel a need for a
It's unfair and really low to use breaches of these virtues. They
does this Mr
.
Gross
get the.idea
.
public apology to Mr
.
Phillips. a media such as the school paper arc not desired, however, they
·
that he can use the paper to air
.
People like Mr
.
Gross are the as a scandal sheet. Was "the can be tolerated. But can we
.
hi~ personal dislike for a person? ones who cause trouble to people
·
purpose of this column" to ruin
a
tolerate
expressions
of
I'ye known Pip for two years now like Pip for no apparent good fellow student's reputation?
irresponsibility and immaturity
and
the
things Mr. Gross said are reason.
Mr. Gross
.
bas every right
to
in the college newspaper
.
untrue
.
Dave has the great ability
·
Sincerely yours, point out all the inconsistancies
Can we aJlow our newspaper to
to
·
communicate with the other
·
Wayne Visalli he can find at Marist, but per-
become a slander and scandal
members on his floor and others
sonal attacks. especially one as sheet
for
individuals
not
in his house. Dave is only human To the Editor:
vague as the one on Dave
·
responsible enough to present
and once in a while loses his
Please allow meto cornment
on
Phillips, are not serving any
worthwhile articles and not
t~per
.
In the two years I've the recent accusation or should I purpo::4:? other than satisfying the mature enough to transcend
known Dave I've only seen him say. defamation of charcter that writer's ego trip, or to satisfy a
name calling. I think not.
get into a fight once. There are Stuart Gross made of Dave (Pip) personal grudge.
I
think Stuart
I
would like to see the paper
many people on this campus who
Phillips in last week's Circle.
Gross owes Dave Phillips a
present interesting; informative
are a lot worse than
·
Pip. Mr.
·
Since his column began ap- public apol<>r?..Y-
.
articles. as many of the articles
Gross stated in the article that pearing in the school paper a few
Thank you,
are. I can't tolerate it becoming a
the Hitter of the Week Award
week's ago. Mr. Gr~ seems
to
Marty McGowan
slanderous voice for
·
oersonal
went to someone so infantile that have taken it upon himself
to
grudges. Let's J(eep Marist and
he can't communicate with expose variQUs "evils" that exist To the F.ditor:
voice or Marist, as mature and
others
.
I believe that Mr. Gross here at Marist.
·
Stuart Gross recently gave an
responsible as possible.
should look at himself first
.
I
Speaking
as
a person who award in his column
.
to
Dave
John P. Whalen
have never seen a more infantile comes into
daily contact 'with Pip Phillips as "hitter of the week".
.
or
-·
underhanded
way
of
<our rooms have been next to He stated "this ward goes to the
destroying a person who is well-
each other for the last three person who best illustrates the
liked on campus. Stuart Gross is semesters) I feel that the attack infantiJism that pervades (un-
the one who needs help
.
No one is on him was injustified and rather fortunately) among a smaJI
perfect but
no one has
the
right
to
infantile.
element
of
the
Marist
Com
-
To the Editors.
Since September
,
·
I
have
noticed a steady improvement in
the Circle. I'm sure this can be
attributed to the hard work of
the
•.
PAGES
·
staff
and the exceptional amount
of time that they devote
to
every
edition of the paper each week.
However.
I
feel there
.
is
something
.
I
must
-
speak
·
out
against
.
which has disturbed me
-
very deeply. I am referring to an
a
rticle by Mr. Stuart Gross which
·
'
i& entitled "AJternatives'
'
. In this
a
rticle Mr. Gross classifies
a
very good friend of mine (Dave
Phillips)
·
as a
"
hitter". Mr.
Gross. I would lik
e
to know what
justification you or anyone else
have in classifying or labeling
a
particular person
?
You have
an
obligation as a \\Titer for the
·
Circle to report to the community
"All
the News that is fit to Print"
Y ct. you know as well as I do that
when you allow personal grudges
and vindictiveness to enter in an
article you are not truly doing a
service for the community.
I
am sure that the response you
will receive with regards to the
article will be cause for a
retraction
.
But
I
would like
to
know what will happen in the
future?
Will
a similar instance
occur again where perhaps a
different writer will feel that he
can accuse anyone of anything he
so desires?
It
is obvious that there has been
a definite violation of
a
student's
rights. I feel that the Circle must
take preventive measures in such
a sensitive area. If the Circle
does not act then the students
must do something! I am not
trying to restrict the writers of
the
Circle in anyway. but I think
they must be made aware of what
has
taken place. Freedom of
the
Press-Yes!
Defamation of
Character
-
No!
Jim Keegan
. ;
"·
.
,
.
PACE6
'DIE CiRCLE
·
-
MARCH 9. 1972
CJJ.S.
·
Elections
Cont
. . . .
Lannhjg
·
Cont •.
··
.
Stuart Gross
.
•.
-
.
.
.
that
the
C.U .B. should have used
more posters; and also more
a
_
rticles in the school newspaper,
to publish the date ofthe election
·
the
time and the place of
voting'.
The purpose of this article is
not
·
to
downgrade
any
organization or person but
to
make a move
toward
the future
·
success
·
of our College Unioo
Board.
In any event, the C
.
U.B. is
not to blame, what has happened
is what has happened. Having
been in existence for only two
years,
it
was only the C.U.B.'s
second election.
As of
March
1•
the new 008rd -mainly with
.
a
reOection
on
the
·
A
·
·
·
:
,
.
,
. ·
·
·
· ·
·
·
t
.
•
:
·
::t~':::!~~;rk
,
sa:.r~f~~ :~~~~:gssh::1~:c==
.
·
•
·
·
.
.
.
. .
·
·
·
e
.
.
·
r-n
·
·.·.
a
-
.
-
·
,
.
ves
.
.
chairmanships for
various · superficiality. Brother Lanning
'
committees,
·
and for this the concluded that at
.
the time of his
C.
U .B. is grateful. However,
·
it death Tarkington was known only
should
be
noted that one does not
.
for
.
a
few
works:
·
"The
·
THE PURPOSE
OF
THIS
_
COLUMN IS
TO ✓
have
to
be
a
chairman of any Magnificent
.
Ambersons,
·
Alice
Alternatives this week wm take on a different composw-e .
.
The
committee
to
be involved
.
As long
.
Ada
.
ms
.
.
Penrod and Seventeen,
.
column depending on one's bent
,
may be considered
to
be
as
you are interested you
can
join
which are only a few of the novels
us
and work with us
.
At present, of his forty-three volumes and
we are debating as to how your
.
over twenty plays
.
"
·
$25,000.00
should be spent, so if
Brother
·
Lanning for
sees
the
,
you have any ideas don't be possibility of
,
Post-Doctoral
afraid to Ief the C.U.B
.
know.
research in the fields of Speech,
Suggestions are always welcome.
Theater. Communication Arts
. and courses
_
in "new approaches
in
.
teaching High
.
School and
College English.''
Brother•s,
concern and enthusiasm for an
1
·
would like
to
retract a statement made by me, in last. week's
column
.
I realize that
I am not ~alified professiooaJJy to have done
so. Retraction "He needs help" about Dave
(Pip)
Phillips.
-
-
·
.
·
For those who read this column the .following statement:
The
choice
of conJent, when dealing with people (regardless of
the
nature> is
not
just an arbitrary decision. These
·
persons (for reasons known only
to
,
them) have created the situations which confront them.
In most
cases
Cthere are exceptions> they are unable
to cope with the consequences.
We are <one hopes) responsible for
our
words and at:tions concerni~
ourselves
'
and others. Without this responsibility we
are
far
from
free
.
·
Letters to the Editors
.
lfat any time an article (of mine or others appears) thatcauses
you
to emote feelings, you have the right to accept or reject that ~idl
.
pertains to you. The facts as a basis, and how you perceive them is
.
Cont.
also
.
your option
.
.
.
·
· .
.
.
.
Because of limited space in the Circle
,
l
will arrange a meeting with
anyone to discuss the facts and information used in my column
.
Just
up-to:ilate English
-
·
curriculum is
seen both
·
in his work in the
classroom
-
and as
·
Department
Chairman. Brother
,
Lanning
commented that ''at
.
Present the
J<~nglish Department is exploring
new
.
possibiHties in the area of
drop
a
,
note
iii' Box
C-613.
·
·
M
.
s
G
·
Creative
.
and Performing Arts,
0
re
.
. .
ross
·
.
.
·
.
which we hope
will compliment
•
.
our existing courses in language
The following Article appeared in the
-
New Republic, Feb.
26, 1972
:
and literature."
<Cartoon. also)
.
BI
■
GRASS
CLIPPINGS
-
,
that. taken together. suggest a new trend in official thinking:
as
.
t
I
n
g
R
,·
p
·
o
ff
s
·
.
Ne
.
wspaper addicts will have noticed three stories about marijuana
.
<
{.:il
·
-T~.e National Institute of Mental Heal~ iil its
~ual
report oo
·
'
To the Editor.
,
named David
'
Phillips (Pip), in
.
Man1uana and Health concludes th~t
pot
1s ~ta ~Jor ~eat
to
.the
During the past few months I
referring to him as the recipient To the Ed•~ors.
. .
.
.
health of the moderate user
.
The Judgment 1s still tentative on the
have observed a change in the of the "Mari st CoJJege Hitter of
~ ce_rtam cc
_
>n_di tion exiSt s,
government's part and it is qualified in sundry ways, rut it is a far
c:ry
Circle which was
I thought for
the Week Award"
.
Now, in my whic~.
m
my opmion, may prove
from the old Narcotics Bureau line that marijuana leads to addiction,
the better. The ~rticle in the opinion, this would be commonly th_e •~maturity of a . small ., violent crime, insanity and death
.
It
is reassuring news considering
column by Stuart Gross regar-
termed a clear case of a
mm~nt;r of our community· To
NIMH's estimate that
15
to
20
million Americans have smoked grass,
ding Dave Phillips was absurd
.
defamation of character, con-
put_ it ~•mPlf • som1 srden:. get
and the Gallup poll finding that
51
percent of surveyed college students
I'm sure
ihat
Mr
.
Gross feel~
he
sidering the
fact
that Mr
.
Gross their kihcks
ro"l
s,ea mg
1
mgs
have tried marijuana. In releasing the report, NIMH Direc;tor Ber-
is doing a good
'
o'\)irl
his column
had no real acquaintance with
fro_~ ot e~ peop es rooms. am
tram Brown said he felt personally that penalties for possession and
and to destroy th1s ego trip of his
,
Mr. Phillips
,
hence
,
he
was out of
writn~g th1.s Jetter because I feel
useofmarijunan were "much
too
severe and much out of keeping with
If
eel that he
is
both irresponsible order to implement a campus t~e situa~ion has become ~r-
knowledge about its harmfulness."
and immature and should not be
newspaper to voice a personal
bcularly intolerable on the fifth
·
-A
presidential commis.5ion, appointed by Richard Nixon, next
allowed to publish anything in the
criticism of someone like
f!oor of Champagnat, where I
month will recommend unanimously that private
use
and possession
Circle again, except a retraction.
Phillips
.
In making his point that
11
(d
1 ~nowbof
~
leaS
t
~e;
0th
hr
.
of smaJJ amounts of marijuana be "decriminalized." By this the
Regardless of his ability oor
there
are people on campus who
s u
en
s.
eSl
es mys • w
O
commission
does not mean "legalize pot
.
" The gist of. the recom-
1
intelligence level, I feel that if he
have shown their is ability "to
.
have_ hard a~ou~ts of ~ogey
mendation is that discreet marijuana users should not be sent to
,
was qualified to judge anyone,
communicate in other than a
~artng
~~~
~n o
:~:~n
r~~:
prison. The President, it will be remembered, said last May that
,
beside himself, he wouldn't be at
physical manner his feelings or
O
J:11.ftli
noo/W' can
'a1
1
laugh
"even if the
.
commission does recommend that it (marijuana) be
~~
.
M.ari
_
s~
_
_
as
.
a student
.
.
.
_
..
.
.
attitudes"; Gross
was
wrong in
on
~ 1
'
e
.
.
·
legalized. I will not follow
.
that recommendation,"
.
~
,;:,;;
.:.:;,
.
:·,;~1/: ·
,:;;
;
_
~-
~~
-"
~n~\~~i~!'
.,
and
::
J;i
_
~t
:
~
._,
V?aste
.
~in(!·
_
the
--
exa~pl~
.-
_
of
~
,
_
sing!e
at
th
e P~~ters
0
!
;
Ral~ ~poff' but
_
.
.
~Until ~is
_
retirem~nfiA !anuary
,
the federal government's number-
~
"{
-·
·-· --
-
·
-
-
anymore
··
\n~·~
'"
tbe
"
subjeet-( or
•
.... '
l)Crson
"."'"'
-~o
-
·
,
-
...
N
ah~ate
.
_..,,
_
,
h,s.;...~~~
-
~.2.~
.
~
-
~
~ ~
~
lt
~ f
P!~~~
-:.._,
·
,
two
~
~ar.coti<:5
,:
ageril.;Johii
,
H.
:
-
F.'irilator.
;
,
ll~e/Lclosely
..
,
to
,
Jbe
,_
offlchil
,,:
..
.
_
~!,•:
.
Mr. Gross). 1f 1t had been m
_
e or g:cn~ral1zabon.
_
espe~1ally
.
o~,the
Y
Certainly
.
we don't make it very
·
position«?~ his
.
agency,
th.e
Bur~au
of
Narcotics and _Dangerous Drugs,
.
•
·
up to me I would have filed suit on basis of tw~ mm?r
.
run-m~ .
he
difficult for these people to just
that mari1uan
_
a laws under w~ch pot smokers are imprisoned
_
should
:
both
Mr. f G
1
~beos
1
s
and the ~,'uarythhacrvme hadtwhe1th
Mr.
Ph1lfhtphs.
go into any room
.
and
take
what
be
enfor
1
c
1
ed. Nowd
·
out_ of the government
,
F_i~ator reveals
·
lh;at he
newspaper or
1
•
r
ore
.
pur'?°se o
e
.
th
fi
d Th
·
re pass keys
persona y oppose pnson sentences for
-
man]Uana smokers but had
[
~
;-:.·
.
Kevin Kehoe campus newspaper 1s not to
.
floea1in; a~oun~~~ch have been
been told sever,) years ago by a high official of the Department of
~
"':
;-
De
d
..
.
.
.
prov!de a battlegr~und for
.
the
,
1
b
·
·
·
t d f
.·
.
0
·
Health. Education, and Welfare (where the Bureau of
Drug Abuse
1
t
}t•.
•
.
'
·
·
ar E itors of the Circle,
settling of personahty confhc
.
ts
ost ut never accou
.
n e or. ur
C t 1th
.
'
d
.
eel)
th
.
t
.
h
sh uld k
h·
.
·
·
t
·
·-
·
.
·
hi
.
·
elf
l
ij
,.
··
I would
·
like to make reference
·
th
.
·
d'
bo
·
d,
security force patrols the campus
.
on ro
en resi
.
a e
O
eep 1s pr1va e yiews to ms ;
r
; ·.
..
.
.
to
Stuart
Gross
'
colum
.
n
-
ofr m bis cadse at
_
soun mg
ar
at larae
..
Jook
.
ing for pa
·
rking
·
he kept quiet fort
.
he rest of the time he was in government. ''lhad a
.
·
or
roa cas mg
personal
" ·
·
-
·
1
·
·
t·
·
·
d I h d
·
f'fi
·
l
·ti
·
d ·
bo
h
·
·
·
·
·
1.
.
''Al!ernatives" in the Circle criticisms of other b
the - v_iolations. but
_
does not w_orry
pe~ona ~s!,1on ~n
. a an o
.
1c1a
·
pos1 on an_ it
t er~ me
It
/
commg off the Press on March 2, news
er columnists
·
Y
about burglary m the dormitory
qmte
,
a ~•t.
said Fmlator. He
.
~~w
works
with
the ~abonal
1
\-
·
1972
.
In his column. Mr
.
Gross
pap
· Ed Rice
halls. I
-
know of anumbei' of
_
~rgamza~1onfor;RVEFORMOF
.
ManJuana.utw~ (NORML),agroup
;
alluded to a certain student
students
:
wo continually leave
financed m l~rge part by the ?layboy Foundation.
.
.-
•
..
··
_
'.
-~
J b
·
A I
their
.
•
.
doors
•
.
unlocked-9
·
r
·
even
._
_
.
So J_oh!) Fml
.
a tor
..
an
.
d the d_1rector of NI
.
MH
.· .
.
and
.
·
th
.
e
.
·
President's
1
~ :
er
O
.
so
wide open-
~
when
_
they are
_
not
,
jn
conumss1~n ~) agre~ that_m~Jwma use shoul
_
d ~"decriminalized:'
.
f;
;,
their rooms
.
.
.
·
,
-
·
.
•
·
-
For the shift m official thmkmg to have any s1gruficance of course
.
it
i
:
·
·
l<'ortunately
;
something is
,
will
have
to
l>e
translated into legislation
.
Finlator maintains that on
~
J It d
.
-
being done
:
_
An investigation of
the fe<jeral level, narcotics agents take Uttleinterest
_.
in small-thne
,:;
0
e
the security force
,
has been
.
drug users
but
concentrate rather on the major pushers. The problem
·
«
-
carried on by the Interim CoUege
.
is_zealous state and1ocal law-enforcementa~tivities. 1n
·
some states it
1;
,
_
_
Curicil. theresults of which will
still happens that a youth of 18 is sentenced to 20 years in prison for
·
t
TO: The Circle
this ch .. .-ge of bloc voting. It's hopefully be, made pub!ic
at
t.heir
.
pQssessio.n of marijuana.
.
.
·
·
-
.·
· .-.
·
.
As a political scientist,
I
feel strange how we champion the
riext meeting .
.
Although the
·
...
..
compeJJed to assist B. Jerbo in right of dissent in far-away
security force would.be helpful if
the analysis of "bloc
CK> voting." places. but feel compelled
to
it also checked up on those who go
While the column calls attention question its use right here at
around trying door knobs, the
.
to one department in which
·
4
out home.
· ·
very attitudes of students must
of 9 full-time faculty voted the
Sincerely yours,
change to significantly aJleviate
same way and another depart-
·
Louis C
.
Zuccarello
the problem
.
Here
.
is
another
ment in which 2 out of 8 full-time
area for community action.
faculty voted
the
same way, it To The F.ditor:
BobNelson
fails to mention that the entire
lalniosthad a relapse from my
Natural Science Division voted
fourth. flu attack upon reading
the
same way as did the Art Campus "Insights" by Bert
Department and
_
the Religious
Jerbo in last weeks Circle
.
It was
Studies Department and the suggested that the
.
statements by
Physical Education Deparbnent student Robert Smith at the
and the Modern
·
Languages
Faculty Meeting on the College
Department and the Math
Cotmcil may have influenced
Department and
.
the English some faculty to vote af-
Department. Only one dissent
firmatively. The
opposite
effect
was registered in the Psychology
might be nearer the truth!
Department and one in the
Whatever legitimate points
Mt
.
Philosophy Department. Fur-
Smith wished to m:ikP. were lost
thermore,
,
all Marist Brothers in his intemperate rhetoric and
and ex-Marist Brothers voted the
insulting remarks.
W.M.C.R.
cont ••••
•
see results - they wiU "not see
results
·
if the student body is
unaware as
,
to whom these
patroiJS _are.
_
.
·
Who else will benefit by WM-
CR-FM? Not only the residents
but
the largely forgotten com-
muters as well.
It is estimated that the cost
of
going F.M. would
be
in the neigh-
borhood of approximately $2~
2500 - a cost that consists greatly
of initial legal fees. Since Marist
employs its
own
lawyer with its
tuition funds
.
the legal fees can
possibly
be
considered as part
~
his job. Nevertheless, the cost is
relatively small - it is an asset
that Marist can no longer put
aside.
Fron,
Da\le
PhiJ/ipS
To the Editors:
I would like to disapprove
of
Stuart Gross' article which a~
·
peared in
·
the March second
edition of "your" Circle.
It is "your'' paper and not
"our" the student paper, due to
conflicting ideas on its present
structure. I highly agree with you
that the paper should be free of
faculty censorship in order that
the paper
be
a
student
.
newspaper. But. are we to go
from one extreme to
.
another?
Since the
.
faculty does not say
what goes in and what stays
out,
are we not capable of knowing
where the limit should
be?
Does
this freedom give us the right
to
slander another person name?
No. it doesn't! No one editor
should have the right
to
single out
a
'
person or persons, for
·
wrong
doing done
to
him,
The
paper also
should not be used to bring out
personal grudges between an
editor of the paper and another
student of the community.
I do not feel the necessity
of
writing about the events
of
my
encounters with Stuart Gross,
because with
his
coming
retraction they would only prove
·
to be more conflicting ideas.
·
I woul~ definitely say that Mr
.
Gross retraction is most ap-
propriate. I mean who is
he
to
say
that I best illustrate infantilism
and that I
need help.
It would also be appreciated if
the editors of
the Circle were
to
print a retraction, the article did
appear in "their'' newspaper.
same way, except one with an
Is it not possible that in-
office on the top floor of Donnelly
dividuals or groups who hold
voted the same
way.
Only three
opposing views on an is.5ue can be
dissenting votes came from the
equally sincere in their beliefs?
bottom floor and not a
·
single
Is it
not
possible for
us
at Marist
dissenting vote came from
to
disagree strongly with each
faculty with
.
offices .in
Cham-
other without having
to
rESort
to
pagnat.
In addition, all women
personal abuse or ridicule? To
faculty present and all full
my knowledge, no individual or
professors present voted the group has a monopoly on truth!
How can the students atMarist
~-"""'-~~"!""'"-~-"!!!!!!"---'!""-'!""~-;.__.....;.
_ _ _
_
help? By signing the petitions to approve of this venture. The
.
and pledge ourselves
in
a con-
that are currently being cir-
benefits of going F
;
M. are
in-
centrated effort to better the
culated by fellow radio cub numerable - it's a need that must
Marist community.
Respectfully,
same way
.
EdwardJ.
O'Keefe
Don't vou think it's time
to bury
Psychology
Department
members
for
the
purpose
o(
be
fulfilled.
Let
us
all
get together
gettine
the
student
Govesnment
MARCH
9.
1972
Ray's Black Raiders
..
·
Intra
.
Basketball
·champions
. by,
MIKE WILLIAMS
F.or the second year successively; Ray's Black Raiders have reaped
victory in the finals of intramural basketball. The all out strength and
hustIE::or the Raiders combined for.some really exciting basketball.
The high scorer for the game was William (Wiggy
>
Thomas; he had a
total of 31 points, Wiggy is a second semester freshman; he played for
!'Ir. To_steri freshma!l team last semester. Roger Potrice was second
m sconng for the Raiders, he pµmped
in
24 points for a fine all around
. game. Freshman Tony Johnson scored 13 points, freshman Larry
Freeman hit for 8 points, Senior Ron Pearson threw in.4 points.and
Sophomore Jerome Cherry hit 2 points. The final score was 99-71. The
Raiders are hoping to continue playing fine basketball.
. . .
-
The main ingredients in the victory was controlling the •Offen~
throughout the game. The Raiders, being such fine shooters and
rebounders, controlled the movement relatively easily. The game was
very enjoyable to watch, the contrast of fans and their reception to
the
game added even more spice to the action. Seemingly, there was about
a 50-50 :tie (approx.)' in people rooting for the Raiders and people
rooting for Kool and the Gang. The crowd was "fired-up" and so were
· the players. On several occasions there was static between certain
players; however; it.was suppressed and the game continued without
any fighting. This should illustrate just how much the championship
· me~nt
to
both si_des. The question now is, can· the Raiders start a
dynasty? Well, I asked Coach Nick Jackson what he thought about
the
Raiders' ability. He replied, "They are ballpl~yers.
Good
shooters,
· rebounders, quick-thinkers and agile. All the ingredients of team
success.!' Asked if he plans further games, "We are ready for any
challenge."
·
·Frosh·Win .Final
by MIKE MILONE
C>
The
Marist
Freshman· points With about four minutes to
Basketball team defeated . the go. Ed Kosinski hit
a
couple of
Albany State frosh last Saturday long jump shots and Joe Cirasella
by the score of 72.68. In the first sank aclutch one and one foul
half the Marist frosh dominated shots and this sealed up the game
the ·game as the broke out to a ·for the little red foxes.
nearly 18 point lead
~
on a tight
The high scorers for Marist
zone defense and some good were Al Fairhurst with 20, Joe
, shooting and teamwork. the score Cirasella with 16 and ·steve
at the· half was Marist 33 and Murphey with 13. High scorers
Albany
14.-
for Albany were George Moore
In the second. half the tide with a game high-24, Bruce Davis
turned for Albany. One .of their with 15 and Jerry Hoffman with
players fouled out with about
10
12. . . .
...
,
mintitesleftarid theyw_ere forced ... The fmal_ reco~d for the fresh-
• .
.
;,,
:
.
..
'.
•to;y,~y-,w.!th: onJy\four--playei's:·':
man ~a_m,1s 8-"'.m~ 1111d~5-h>sses.-
~~y-started
to
put
ori
a rally' in · In addition
to
this fme record the
which they came back from a
23
frosh ~lso w~n the
C.A.C.C.
fresh-
. point deficit to get
as
close as
five
man
title
with a
5
and
o
record.
Frosh News
by
JI~ ELr.IOT '
As ihe end of Freshmen Class
nominations and proceedures
Officers term draws closer upon
will be announced within the next
us,.
we are interested, in some . week by Freshmen Elections
form of evaluation.
of
-our
past Commissioner Maureen Daly.
tenure and recommendations for ·
Within the week of elections for
the future functionaries.
As
an Student Gove~ment (March
15-·
answer to this ·need~ the
Class 22>
the Freshmen Class Student
Officers will hold an informal
Government will hold a question
forum on past functions of the
and · answer period with • the
Class-All Freshmen students,
candidates
for
Executive
both resident and commuters,
positions. In the past years, .The
are asked to attend. This will be
Freshmen Class has set a trend in
the final meeting of
Class
Of- _ the voting pattern of the College.
ficers and an excellent form of
As one of the largest single
expression
for constructive groups on campus, the Freshmen
criticism and recommendations.
Class
has virtually elected the
The meeting will be held in room
officers.
I ask that you attend this
249
in
the
Campus Center, on
meeting which will be announced
. Thursday,- March 16th at 12:30,
next. week and take an active
the free
l)(?riod.
concern with this forth coming
Class elections will be held on
election.
·March 22nd, the same day
as
Student Governmeni Executive
Elections. Information as to self-
Field
·
House
Public Relations
"Hey everybody, according to
the February 24 Circle. 403
signatures have been obtained."
"What for?"
·
"Why. to have the Alumni
Office take an active part in the
September Field House fund
raising. That's what for".
"Gee, that's a Jot of names". ·
"You betcha. And since. ac-
cording to the February 17 Circle,
·student pressure is generally
respected here at Marist'. the
more signatures there are, the
more alumni will help."
"That certainly makes sense."
"Why doesn't someone find out
if
the Alumni Office wants to help
out before we make asses of
ourselves?"
by DONALD
MURPHY
"Oh no. that's no fun. We want Office is concerned. it couldn't
to show what student pressure have begun in a worse way. No
l'an J!Ct at Marist. Maybe we can one inouired of the Alumni
get l'Opies of all the signatures Assot'iat.ion if
we
were interested
and send them
to
each and every in the project before bringing all
alumnus··.
.
that pressure to bear. No onC:
God what pressure.
found out if the annual alumm
Has anything ever been done fund drive could be tied into the
nbout a field house before? The field house drive. Hell no, that
Alumni Asso. has discussed it for rcouires too damn much common
years. . but
realistically
·
·
sense.
acknowled1rnd the economic ·
If
this is the kind of public
limitations of its
25(1(1
young relations and workmanship that
members. When the College was is roing
to
characterize the field
ready to attempt a field house, house campaign. please do not
the Association would be ready
to
l'a ncel our agreements with
do all it could to sec it ac-
llutchcss and Lourdes for
l'Omplishcd.
~mother
HI
or
20
years.
But if now is the time for the
attempt, as far as the Alumni
50,000
JOBS
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
PROGRAMS
The National Agency Of Student Employment Has Recently
Completed A Nationwide Research Program Of Jobs Available To
College Students And Graduates During 1972. Catalogs Which
Fully Describe These Employment Positions /w:Jy Be Obtained
As
Follows:
( )
Catalog of Summer and Career Positions Available
Throughout' the United S_tates in Resort Areas,
National Corporations, and Regional Employment
Centers. Price $3.00.
· ( )
Foreign Job Information -Catalog Listing Over 1,000
Employment Positions Available in Many Foreign
Countries. Prke $3.00.
( )
SPECIAL: Both of the Above Combined Catalogs With
A Recommended Job· Assignment To Be Selected
For
You. Please State Your Interests. Price $6
1
00.
REDMOND
Cont. ••
What happened this year is
over.
But
we ·
hope
that
the
· Athletic Department ha's learned
a lesson and will
set
up
some sort
of fund, because this event was
not an accicent and will happen
again next year.
National Agency of Stucfent Employment
Student Services Division
135
Erkenbrecher
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45220
APPLICATIONS FOR RESIDENCE
WITH
LIVING-LEARNING EXPERIENCE
IN GREGORY HOUSE
CAN
BE
PICKED
UP IN
SHEAHAN ROOMS
205 -
3>6.
DEADLINE: MARCH 16th, 10:00p.m.
-
..
,
..
·
I
i
•
\
l
\.
l '
I:
..
.
'T.?\(tt»f.~7F?:\•t;:·'.::•:~:;,/'-;:,
.}f".
. ·:•}\ .•
; • · .. i ·.'•
-
'. ·., . :-·~--' , ., .
. . ·•wEs:'- ·
... -_. .. :.·
\,~k:~~~~u.,,-_:.:
.
. . . .. . .. · .... ·• ·.
,·
·'~ARat9.1912
:N<a<·•t_'.· ... ,---.•~·:.·:". ·
w
.. ·.•, .
.4_···e··.
-s•o:
.
.
y-
_
c::_·o·
t t - .
-_
-_-
-·~+tl~~:,$
S.f; •.
"EAl}9-ca·-1.1tt?~-<
_ _.
lJ
.
. , ·
tese products_.made in America
..
N ·
.. ·
;'.•i•
·" · .:.
·: .: · "' · ·
.· ·
'"
·
·.
.. · .·. - .:.·· ·.
1 •
:
•
•
•
• • .
a~d: .. else·:·w· h. ~re.
:·'.ii~ ..
fa. ct .•... s
.. u~..
·~
-
~ ·.
.e·
·.·, ~•.
·.7 ·:·.·~.:
i·
..... ,
.... ~~T'II
.:•
.. · •.·.
s. \.
~.f.:·E
.. ~KISSLI .. N. G:.•·
..... st1ttitmg American goods
.
will
.... · •.·. ,
_yy·.
u.,a:~.
, . ·.· .... ·.
, . , ..
: I
~ould
like
to:~all-atteriti·~··~. circu'inst~n~~':
to
j~lriYus . ill:,:~·~-he:~ c~i~;.;ttr:rarn:~g~}~ . .
The ~ari~tC~ll~e S_tude~t G~~~iim~~r m~i M~~ai
ni~t.
~a~·s·· -
ttie community to-an.important '~meari~~gful .pr~~es~::·against. to·s.upport the.b_oyc~t,fif!order._to
at
s.:os
m r09m 270 ca_mpu~. Center: · _, .. •·. ·
.
--
~nt: ·
measure for peace that
began
on
murder and .. oppression by. the·. restore peace, 1ust1ce, and umty
R
Tre.anor'..J. C.CJC~pardo,.S .. ~htte"~nd L: Pont~ll _were a .
.
·--~·.March.-1.
_This.
is
a •nationwide BritishArmyinNorthemlrelarid::to Ireland, . ' .. ' ·. ·
..
,? ·
·
.
The·meeting·also wttnt?S&ed the retum.ofV1ce P,resickmt ~orge,
. boyco'tt,·. planned .:by· the :and'the failureof:ourGovern~·:• .·•: · .·
byNealFentori· :BaJzertoaS.G.·MeetiJJgaftermaJJyabsen~s ... · ·
·
:•·.>.·:·
·,-Americari Committee for Ulster meritto take a stand in the·cause
Vice-President· . • The S.G. awarded
a
charter and appropriated
$220.00
.t~ the ~w
· .. Justice. and supported by ·other · of humanity .and to call upon the,
Gaelic Society
Marist 'coUege Campin~. Assoc_iati~n. New equipment; organization,
Irisli~American groups, on all British Government to end. its
·
and a trip to Florida are aJl on the agenda for th«: new dub..
. ·.
: ·
.Britishgoodssqldin this country. · oppressive policy of ~error arid
••••••::ioc:110C:110C:IOC10C10CIO . .
A
charter. was also_ .. gran~ed :to the, Manst. ~liege, Veter~ns
The purpose of the boycott is discrimination againsta helpless .
Association. ·
a··
•
·
·L
.
· ·:
·
.
· · . · ..
·• · :
·
. ·
··
... · .;
for .Americans
tQ
take-an active minority in Ulster.'' ·.
..
· College sos·;a telephone help program will be set
up
here ):lt Mar1st,
part
in bringing
peace
to Ireland. .. . ,This boycott wiJrbe most ef~ ·
$200.00 was giveri to this endeavor. .
: . .. :
< ·
·
· · · ·
,
Ou.r government· has. rejected '
.
fective because of the support'by
· -
, !1420.00 was given to the V~rsity Club for its. _dinner honoring< :
. pleas by the Irish Government
to
t h e .. I ri t e r n a tio n
a
I
.t
·
athletes. . ·
. . . ..
·
' .
.·
· .
...
·
.
·
. use our influence iri Westrrunister
.
Longshoremen's Association; -Its
.
Last Day
For
·Ring
.
.
The student Government sent a letter of support ~bout the wrestling
. ~o bring about,a'.settlenient. This president, Teddy ·Gleason,. has'
Weektfod Reservations • . .
program and' John Redmond to Dean Wade.
.
• .. ·
.
·c_ '.
:
1s a way for the American people said ~at it will. stop ·unloading
_•.Friday.
·
!150.00 was awarded to the Intramurarprogramfor its trophies and
to show how_th~y feel.
Britishships(rom Halifax, Nova
· equipmenL
. · ::
·
-·
·
., -·
·
.· · .
·•.
Thr orgc3:mze~ of th~ boycott, Scoti~ to Brownsville, Texas. The
. .
A proposal for chartering and financing a
La Crosse team-club was
the Amer1ca_n Committee for hope 1s to stem the flow of the $2
. tabled until Tuesday. · .
. .
..
.
.
. · ·
~Tlster Jusbce, . hav~. caned biHionwo~th of British goods sold
As the meeting came
to
an end, Pres Cerum .spoke about the
up-
'upon-all our fellow c1ti:r.ens of to the Umted Stat~s -~ach year.·
coming elections; about the interest and honesty s~rrounding them.
every race ~nd cree<f. ang~y~ry_ ·_Some_oLtb,e. ma1or:..1moorts to· .
iloooooooooooococoooooocN
The next meeti_ng is tmJ~Jdit. Thursda...x, ·
·More.
Sports
. on
Page 7
John Redmond,
staying
home.
._,J
·
:·:
--
.>:
<
':·.·o':·.:t/· . .
··.:··y.ANCELIBSCOMB&:JlM·LAVERY-
. .
·
, ·
· '
_.
■
■
.•. ·
.>
'..: The. Marist·:'. College Athletic
in
the
N.ALA;
nationai wrestliiig'.' . .
.
. .
.. .. . .
:..
.·
.
.
.
■
' .. :
.
.
'Dcpartmen!ha.sneversetaside·
·
·championship:1n,Klaajath~-Falls,.,·
'A1·1·· ..
s·t"· ·
.
·
... : ._.
T ·
... ·. . . .
any f@dS lobe
US<!~jn
the event· Oregon. The·Athletic Department .
.
. .
,
··a " . . s· ·a m.
·'/:.\:that· a.rj_,clth. l.~t
•... e
... '.be
..
C01!1CS. ·'
e
.. ligible·,··.'w.
a.·
s.caughL\Vith. its. ·p .. ants do'h'.n'. ..
::.
· ,
.
',.
.··
.
. .
_·.
.
.
:
.
·. •.· ·>to -,coi;npete.::
m
national com-. No money!•
As
a result, Mar1st
.·.
· .
• • petition: •Thi_s year. John Red~
wiU
not
be
represented
on
a
. . . . . .· . . . .
. , ·
.
·
. ..
··
--
-· ··
mood
became. eligible to compete nationai level..
Cont.on
page
1C . ·
POlT(}HKEEP~~E •.
:N;
°Y·: -
0
reb~ui:Hk
Tluee
nights. late~ •. he st~~; ~~Iyift. 2 in.
tall.
· ·
.: - Joseph
,
Scott. Semor Captam·of . Ma~stfaced ~Jbany
\VI!~
~~e.
_
-JOE:
s~ows fine _leadership
off
.
·
' , .
··:•.-:.'·<·.·
·,
..
~··•
the .Mari# College Varsity sconng 24
pomls,
and: agau~ ·and
.
on the court ·is one•.of the
· Basketball 'Team h.as be€:n pulling down -16
'
rebounds. Joe . main ingredients in Marist's fine
named. to the Eastern- Athletic was fantastic from. the. line
16-9 reco,rd this season.
. · c .
l(
·
·
College Conferences. weekly All making 14 out of14.free throws in
H.<·r~,
s,
EastTec1m(DevisiopJil)for.tl,le_.•thetwogames. Everi,thtoughtfie.
. ·· ..
t.·······
....... ·
·'·
t ·
.. .
·. '.·.•· .· .. ·.,
.
ON:
.
·.
f~!!h~li:etst!ftrthe wee~ly.· ~=rl~(~~~t~~ita~t~\:.~J-
... :-· .. ·
..
·
···.a
.. ··. ·· ... ..
• s · ·
.. • ...
::
...
. teaJJ1 o_n ttie· b_asis . of his
per-
to
tbs
.opponents : csouthhampton ·
·
·· ·.
V ·.
·
... formances ag~msLSouthhamp,: 76-72; Albany:81-77).: .
·•
··
u· ·.,- .
.
·
Cartoon
by
Lance Liblcomb.
: ton, fol!ege and Albany State. · ;' J~ js currently the team
. .'
. :. ,·
· · e
·
, .
.
. ·
. ·.
Umv~rs1_ty: Iqtosetwo contests, ·• leader in scoring witb-an-
18.0
'
.. ·· ;
> .
.
··a·
·r·
.. ~o
.
l? scf{e«\J,4 pod_iil~ and _puUed) poiril: average· aild_Js · also,, the
,-i . :-
,
.
, · · · _
•'own_·. re .un s.·. ·. '. ··"··~:
.
tea!i}sJeading-rebounder,.witha.•, .' .· ·.·.~·• . . . .
A . .. ·
-~~r~:;:;t-;~;;~.i~~:~ELl:~$~i:~;i
t,
1
e
tt
1[
. '· . ·. • . ._ . . ·• ·
.
.;. . ' . . ... ···
. ·- . ·• . • . ·. .
/·c:
.'by
JIM
CORCORAN
MARIST.COLLEGEl22
gameJ·,sulJsf
··, .:,.-: .. • ·. , · · ·. ·
• •M°ARIST 76
YESHIVA UNIVERSITY
.;i
MA.RIST.
8.5 . :
NY
ACK MISSIONARY ·coLLEGE
MA.RIST
56 ·.
IONA COULEGE · '· . · •.
MARIST.76 · S.U.N.Y. AT NEW PALTZ. . .
..
MARIST 72.
SUSQUEHANNA UNIVERSITY .
- MARIST 77
WILLIAM PATTERSON COLLEGE
' · MARIST
88 ·
KING'S COLLEGE .
. .
MARIST
66
BLOOMFIELD COLLEGE ·
,
-. .
. . . As~ealfkn~w. a fund drfv~ is
57 - · ··••
in.progress for securing lights for
·' .62 :
_.
LeonidoffField. But
how
many
of
. 6.1
·
us
·
really know how to properly
66
pronounce the man's name. I
•· 00
.
have heard about five different
62
ways. Well. to clear the air, here
ffl
·
is the proper way. Take the first
part: LEO as in the Jion; add
MARIST
76
U.S. MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY
:
KNEE
for the
ni; and round
it
au
54
up with DOFF as in the way one
. MARIST.
8.5
DOWLING COLLEGE
.
.
MARIST 78
· NYACK
MISSIONARY COLLEGE
MARIST
66
MONMOUTH COLLEGE
MARIST
68
SACRED HEART UNIVERSITY
MARIST
83
BLOOMFIELD COLLEGE .
MARIST 70 -.. SOUTHAMPTON COLLEGE
MARIST
8.5
DOWLING COLLEGE
MARIST 104
KING'S COLLEGE
l\lARIST
88
STONEHILL COLLEGE
MARIST
83
NEW HA VEN COLLEGE
MARIST
88
BROOKLYN COLLEGE
MARIST
69
SIENA COLLEGE -,.•
MARIST
72
SOUTHAMPTON COLLEGE
l\fARIST 66
SOUTHAMPTON COLLEGE
MARIST
77
S.U.N.Y. AT ALBANY·
MARIST
~
GLA~ORO STATE
WON
16
1.osr 8
.62
would take off a hat. All together
we have LEO-KNEE-DOFF.
78 ·
.
Briefly.
Dr.
Aleksei
A.
:
Leonidoff. the benefactor of the
field.
has
been
in
the
~·
Poughkeepsie area some fifty
years as a specialist in ·Jriternal
~
Medicine. A graduate of Moscow
-!!
University in 1914, he served as a
,.,.
doctor in the U.S. Army in the
63 .
China-India-Burma Theatre in
71
World War
II. He
lives
in
the
city
75
'8
of I_>oughk_eepsie. At the present,
he 1s semi-retired .
81 ·
It
would have been a shame to
M
continue to mis-pronounce this
generous· man's name. I hope it
has been corrected.
. ·i
9.20.1
9.20.2
9.20.3
9.20.4
9.20.5
9.20.6
9.20.7
9.20.8