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The Circle, April 20, 1972.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 9 No. 23 [24] - April 20, 1972

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stl;mm~r
Emplo'Yfilent,.
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North
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Jests
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fJn
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(1a~1lJ.tS
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)fhe
South
ll
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Many of you.~ay ~
·
pondering
_
Program:
·,
.,-,'
_-r
.
.-.
">·.
·
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:;--·
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cooking:
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.
·By' Kathy
.Jfa~cy
'l
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:
·
the
thought
·or
residing at -Marist
<
.
Some departgients on campus
.
_:ftoon1 ari:artgements no doubt
.
·.

._
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
...
.
,
.
. .
.
. ·
.
.!\
.
f:
.
.
.
during the sUIJllller this-year; and

and
.
mlllly
,
non-profit agencies
in
,,
will be
,
yn a first ~me, f!~t serve·
'
The recent Vi¢tcong offensive
Central., Highlands, <the eve
of
\
t
:
-
.
havelitlleifanyideaonhow togo
.
and around the Mid~Hudscm area
_;_
basis.
,.,
As "js
·the
case during
.
the
·
i,egan in the5ky
.
-
.
with a shat,
·
Easter Sunday) some
10,000
;_:\
r: .
:
: _.
about the basics for both living on
.
:
are i~terested in hiririg
.
Jull-iime
.
~ool

year;
.
:
~a~pus
,
facilities tering
.-
barrage
of
at least
.
i2,00O
North Vietnamese regulars were
'.
l
C
·
...
_ -
campus,
·
as well as being
-
~"
<
work-study students this
Sum~
:
wilLJ~
.available
for
-
students
·:
rounds of
.
rocket mortar and
.
driving straight through the DMZ
<
\
f'
ploy~d. The Financial Aid Office
·
mer.
·
·
:
:
.
_
·
_living
.
on•
._
campus.
·
_.
Room
·
·
artillery
·
fire
across
.
.
:
·
the:
intot~uang Tri proviJ:ic
1
e toio!n
.
'
1
:
..
.
·
.
has·
·
recommended
.
·
·
some
·
_
These employers wi,11•· be in arrange.m~nts should
be
made Demilitarized Zone. Then came
.
.
ano er
20,000
troops area
Y
m
\
\
t
f,
.
.
possibilities,. however,
.
since the
:
contact
.
with the· Financial Aid
.
:
through
the R~idence Director's
·
·
the
.
g~ilDd attack
.
.
Some
25,000 ·
.
~i:[:f"~!:ru~st~i:i~:!rc:~:
'
);.
'1,·.
'
'.
unemployment rate
.
is
high
it is
·
,
Office to specjfy
the
type _of jobs
·
Office
.
.
Th~
Residence Director's North
'
Vietnamese
,
troops
·
with
"keeping• hisoptions open". In
,
·
_
:
:
.
it
(
?
encouraged that you act quickly availal>Ie; r~te
_of
pay, etc. very
'
Office, Campus Center Director's
.
:
Rtissian°buiUtanks and artillery,
·
fact, the options were limited.
;
·
}:::
if
interested.
.

·
·
•·
.
.
,
shortly;'
; :
.
: • '
..'
.

··
.
.
.
·
Office;
.
.
and the
.
Athletic Direc:
.
swept down through Quang
Tri
Nixon ruled out any pause in

.
.
..

Of
·
the
three
programs offered
·
Many students have
·
asked
.
if

tor's O!fice
.
s should re
.
contacted '.province, sending
so,ooo
refugees
.
.
·
''\

.
by the
-
Financial Aid Office
the

th~ycouldlive on campus during as
,
soon as ~ible
.
to
~~ what
_
fleeing south and U. S.
·
adyisers
troop
wi thdrawals; he will ari-
)/
:.;
.
..
·
·
,
first deals
·
•with Jhe Federal
·
th
_
e summer
:
and
.
either be
·
priorities and
.
_
what schedules
·
scurryirig
.
to their helicopters.
nounce the next phase before
:;
I
::

College Work~Study· Program:
.
working on
.:
the work-study have
:,
been.,established
.
at:
this
.
_
There was

no doubt that the ~ay
1,
w~en
.
the troop level in
q;
\c~
..
.
·'
The Work~StudyJ?rogr~js

program or through
,:
regular p<>µtt for the summer .
.
·
•<:
.
North Vietnamese had launched
.
~et~:1
tr
b3.
1
ow~,~t
1~
)
}
?_;_i
,·.
_
fitunand
·
.
citahidhprogramli~bdloffethrs
.
e'lbmployment ~~·the-commS
·
tudn ityts;
'.
'.
· ..
0
Tn}1ee_ r!h!i°d.d pr:ogt
·
hramgof
1
feriilg i~
:
the
196

8
irlH~~ge~t
·
1
orf
.
e
1
nsive sinceki
-
_'Tet'.
.
.
6
;oro
_
1
O, \~
c
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:nfbat
:
troops
.
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...
·
·
s
en5woare egi e
e
·
e
.
answer
·
1s
:
yes .
.
uen
c c ne
w
_
1
_
reuarem-~
.
: ano1c
_
earywassee nga
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.
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._._:
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.,
·
.
_._·_
·
.

opportunidtY.
:to.
wth
·
or~ ohn ~r
_
off~
:
·
Wld'
~l]-ing
toh
·
·
.
remain
on
:
cahmpu
1
·
ds ·
;
pf l~ymthe
.
n~ Seither c:>n or:Aoff Camp_us
<
i:tecuJ~sdiv
00
e
th:nud·!ita
1
ry
·
thvic_tory .t that ~~~~~tZ,t~i:~~t: f~~=
~~r;:
\f


.
.
campus
Q,nng;
·
_e
:
sc
001
year
.
urmg t e summer
.
s
ou
··
.
or
.
e
.
u':1.1"1er: . nyone
.
m-
.
wo
.
.
_Jsp
ay e 1mpo ence defensivepositions
_
around U.
S.
.
.i}
::-;
·
: ~
-.
::
·_
and
_
~llring
·
yaca:tion
~
_
peri~.
_
·
:
,_
·.
~n~c
_
t
~r.
Fred
-
L~m~ert, th~
;
~ ~ ~
-
-
~~
iiJ!orma~
_
on or
__
c
_
on~
or
Thie's regime
_
and
embarrass
.
\
&>
:
.
.
,
To qualify foi: th
,
e prograJn, the
,
rnrector of Residences, to set up
·
~ctsm
,
the M1d-Hudsonarea for Rich~rd Nixon poHtically. One
.
i~tallati~ns at Dana~g and in t~e
\
,,1,
.

student
·
must
.
complete a., arrangements,. The
·
charge for summer
·employment
should startmgly new-aspectof the war Saigon area
.
to aid_ ARV~ s
;
;
-;;~
financial aid application and a
,.
the swnmer would be based on a contact the Placement Office as
_
during this offensiye was the use
<Army
~f
the R~puJ:>hc of Viet
1
.'
:
!
:
·
.
. -
·
Parent's Confidential Statement. daily rate
as
follows:
·
·
soon
as
possible.
.


-
-
of
heavy Soviet weapons in-
N~ml fight agamst the North
·
.I
:;<

.
.
'Ibese
·
forms, as
well
as more
·
·
$3.00
per
_
day for a ropm (paid
~campus
living arrangements eluding tanks and even SA-2
_
v,Tcthnamesc.
.
th t
)
1 ;
.-.
,'
.

.
-
information about the program,
·
by
the week).
. ·
·
can
·
also be _made for students
missiles.

.
.
c
·
one opb_on
. a
was
.
,:,:;--
:.

area':'.ailableintl_leFinancialAid
· ,
$3.50
(approximately)-for food
.
wishi
_
rig
·
to work for business,
·
The Vietnamc;,e were ob-
a~ali
.
a~le was air powe~, and
f
r
·
.
·
·.:_
.
..
·
Office,
·
Room
109
Donnelly.
Hall .
.
per
aay
·
(paid
by
the me.!il>:
-
.
gove~nment ag~
_
ncies, camps,

;
viously
.
poised
·
for ~
.
n
_
un-
Nixo~ mad_e the _most
.
of it. For
..
.
/t
:
.
:
·
.
_
Students are urge~ to complete

$6.50
per
·
day
.
for
..
stude
_
nts \Yho etc:
..
ID
_
_
the ~e~
.
'.1'
.
he
.
&tud~nt
·
pr
.
ec
_
edented ef_fort.
In.
~he
.
past,
·
~
.
~
fu-st b~e _s
_
i_nce
l968,
.
f~ur
'
½t
:,
·
;
.-
. '
. --
·
·
.
·
..
the application
F~~
~
_
s900
as
._
-"1~h.
to.
-
,
~~
-
_
liye_ and
·
.-:
ea~
.
~
;
~h_ould
: .
r~!ld
-_
t~~
_-:
1r:1
,
r~r:~~t!C?"
·,
the
-
J~orth V1etnames~
.-com~
.··
_~r~a~~rca~i~r~
'ri~
·
~rr::-1tth
.
-

.
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;;;,
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,:~
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:.""-:;::
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,
;_
,,·
-atiout
:
the costs
-
m the, proceding
:
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.
mander,
,
·
General
·
Nguyen
·
van,·· m-:d
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div1s1ons
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350,000.
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Operatingif!the.country-or'orithe Oki~~wa, Japan an_d Ko~ea. Th~
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present in
the
provinces· soutJt of- _lion of the unconditional
OO!D~JJ]g
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Region
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tr_ue
·:
there
were perhaps
25,000
in the dtir~bon, wh1cli seemed t~ mean
·:
.
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·
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·.

·
;'-
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.\\'.1th
.
a
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·
-mcre8;8!
,d.
-
maJor or otherwise)
m Rel_1gious
_,:
!nc~dent that occ~!ed
m Berkley
.. :
central Highlands,
:
-
16:
000
in
.
the;
·
unti~
_
the end of the offen
_
s1ve, U .
.
tfi.
.
:·,·.:,_:
-
,-
-:: :
.
_
;-
111.t~r~i
-
·
~I!.
r~hg~ou~
.
-
stu~14:s, _
.
studies,a rece.ntb~urepu~ou~
-
m
.
1?~-
,
The g~up. create~ the hard~pre~ed
·
·
provinces around· S .
.
p1,o~~ would
be
able
,
to attack
f:~
'
·,
,.
~:_: ...
·.
\
,
-\~
:
~ny
,
·
~~uden~
_.
b
,
et_e

-
~~
•,
MarISt
_
.
by
the
_
de~r~e!1t
tells
,us, -gives

·.
~us1~ an~
_
the Jf!Stru~e~ts
.
were
~
Sa
igo~,
,
s,ooo
.
_
i
!'1
,.
the
_
.
.
Delta. any md1~ry targe~~. before ~ey
:'f--:-:;
··
-:;
:.;•:.;!.
~v:~
.
~~~ered?".1iY
-
.
w
.
e l~~
-
.a
-
~
--
the oppo_r:t~ty
_
to
:
1>roa
,
~en
. -
supph~•t by
-
~e
:-
~~1c
-
~~art-
',
Counting Viet Cong soldiers; the co
_
ul~
_
o!!
_
ly ~tage. . Jlr~t~bon
·
<,·
·
--:;-
·_·
·.::<_
.maJ~r
.:·,
10
,-._
R_e~1g1~us~ ~tud1es. our ~er_s~ding
of
~a_n
an~
-
"!ent.
?
.
.
~•_
.
...

·
,
,
.
. ·
.
.
·
_
,
total Communist troop
'
strength
··
r~ction strll~~
-
~n.~tuurcraft
,:::_
.. ,,-
.
·:
.•.<·:·
students aoo
•:
m~
_
~rs
·
.
.
of
,
the
.
ma!l:i
_
r~hg1o~s
:
.trad1tioi:is.

·
,-
.Th_e play was
.written
~nd·
·
in South Vietnam
;
is well over sit~ .
. -
·,
• -.
: .
.
·
r
::
·
.'
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:
.
~
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Depa~~t
oI
·
~liglous
~dies
-
.
~ligi~s
-_
~tiidies-
-
becomes
·
an
:-
directec1
by
,
Ruth Marquez. The
.'
100 OOO
·
men
a.
the
-
highest
total
~
.
µist week,
for;
~.f~st tune
m
~:
:r-
;_·::··
:~--
.
i
.
:
:
~
-
V~
:
~n
.-
!~~~
~--
a~ut
the
·.
''.mter~ratmg
-;
-
part
·
:
.
of
.
~nes
:
CJ:ISt
_
lS)nade
-
up
,
of
.-
some
_
,
fi~
·
·
sin~e
---
the. months before
·
the ~o yea~, t~
5:li~ps
:
th~t have
!.
/,-
·
.'
--- :,.
_
:'..-,'~
.
po~1b1lity
,
of
.
an
:~
~~rmal
.
~uble
_.
~uc
.
ation."
,
Th~
:brc_>!!hlD'e
con-
,
:
yo~g a~tc:,rsa,n!f
_
ac~~es: Th~y
· ·
convulsive
.
·
•Tet'
1968
_
attacks .
.
been daily pounding for
-
~even
._
.
::
·
_.
.
,( ...
,
-: ·
:,. ·.
maJorf~l:'_some
~~~
.
no~
_
;
but
the
.
l!Dues that
.
"religion-IS a fact
of
.
,:are_~~
.,
.·follo~:
:
To~· Ja!!kson,. i\gainst them
·
stand
-
492
,oooSouth · )'._e_arsthe coa~tdrew so~e retll!11
i;-:;:
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p-ogrmp
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: •.
5ylt~r~,-
-
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:
.
..
Ne.vi~e.
--
.
~~~hng,
_
Ef!ciie
.
-
1'tichels,
_
·
·•

Vietnamese
·
regtilars
:
and
,
about
..
f1r~_frornshore ~sed _CoD11;11urust
.
.
fr
:
!'
f
·/}<;'.-
'.{:
:
,:
in
relati~_n ti>Y18
:
0t!i
,
er
,
'1c_a<lenuc
:
~1~ty;-
,,_
eyery
,:,
:
1ridividu!11
!i8S
:
~1?b1e D1llon;
-
~art>µa
·
J?.
-
~~~rQ.
\
sia,OOO
_
militiaJ
troops.
•The
-
U. S, ar~llery.
Onery,~
pi~the
U._S.S'.
~
{(
\'.
,
,,
_;_.
.
·
·: •
.
:[<:.·
pr~~s,Thi~
.-
~~m11g
:.
mterest
;
·
_
reJ.~gion; ~
-
~ r

~rt,
_
as~g IS_a
.
:
,
Ma1r_os
;
:
and
:
~th
_
r.tarquez.
-
'
.
·.
·
<
forces
·

..
.
i.-emaining.
·
in:
>
So~th
·,
Uoyd
·
T.homas, J~lic~ng Illl
.
nor

;:
_:;
•:,
).
:
·
:,
:i\<',
in. RebgiCJt¥S
-.~t
_
µ~~',~oefo
:
not
-~
.
pei:sc?n
f~lgl~US,
ask how ~e. 1S
·
:
'
,
.T~s shO:-VWI~l

i>eJ>E:rfOrmedon
.
Vietnam, are. not directly
~

in.: •-~~111age _and
._
~_
JDJ~rmg
.:three
:-:
.
_
,,.: .:
· :·
.
;
.
-'
:
refiec~~_wµqu~~c;,n ~e~t«;t
.
r~1gious. The-~tudy of
rehgim
__
.
Thursday,April
20t:h,
1972
befo~e
'.
.
volved ..
:
'._
.
.
, ..
,
, .
.•
:,
-
.
.
.
-
.
,
,
_
_
.
_.
TheWhi~. House !s ~o~vinced,
/
;.'
_
··
-
". ,_ :
:,_
::,"
-
/
tile
~ar~st:C'.ollege
·
~uruty ,.it
·
-
·
•·
does
.
then have inany ~~yantaJ~
_
<ll~pa~~t
.~,
Hall
,
~wn.
·:
R
1~
·
,
:
Bf

the
-
time
•·.
the Pentagon
·
_
as
'.
one. off1C1al ~ut 1p~t
.
week,
/:
·,:•
••
:
<:
:
~
<
ista~r
;
a ~~d
,
~ID ~oll~ge
:
~~
des~rves
~
pr?F°e11t place
\
reaJ
_
Jy
:,
,:
a~
·
_:
,!nt~re~t1~g
:
play.
·.-
experts Orealized
,
that
the of-
:
that "1~
~
V1e~ese fight
.
: ·
.
.
·
;,::
caJJ1PUS.~.t~Qut
.
~~ ~b~n-:. m the .~~a~1on- of
the • • ~
.;
..
_:~!~
-
~~~-i_s
~flf~~
t~ atr:e~d'.
.
_
fensive was not going
to 'be well, tins
will hasten the
_
end
of
_
:,,
Already
,,,
}:t~hg~~us
-
,.-
Studit:s

per:so11::
..
-
:,,
Jt
1
s~ ~n attempt
·
l9
_·:0
°
-· ·
::••
·:·
'.
0
· :
. :

-

-
·
:. ·,
_
_
:
. •
.
·
concentrated in the
·
vulnerable
cont~
P
6
·
•.
,
..
·
programs have
,
~ n
,
-
set

up
m
correct
-
the 1mb
_
alances,- to
aaa aa aa a~cn: uaaQcaauaaacs
.
·
.
.
· ·
·
····
·
·
·
·
.
muect on •
..
UCLA
/
Yale, Farleigh
/
Dicken>
_
eliminate
the
miSWlderstandings
·''-'',
.
:.'
'>
·
·,.
.. .

-
-
.
-
-
-
-
~_
.
5n
__
_
.
·
.
_
R
·
IN
.
'
G
'
__
:_
·.
->'
.
.
son,
":
Tulane;-
,:
',i1nd
.
Indiana
.
.
~d to de~ythologii.e
.
the
i
hang-
:
porlt.iruties .. Pres. Richard Nixon
.
.
r'
.

.
i
.
University,
..
along
_
wi_th t~!!
7
_~LIP~
--
Jrom adoles_cence, that a
>
promised
'

at· the
.
NCEA Con~
. .
·
·
~
·
·
.· .
.
·
programs
-.
that helve
.
existed m·
.
-
student can
,
-
h~ve
as
_he-
·
ap-
-
vention atPhiJadelphia this past
,
-.
OFFE
'
N
·
s
·
1v
·
·
.
E .
.
.
-.
~ r colleges for
,
years..
.
.
.. ·
.
.
·.
proaches college.
-
There
_.
1S also a
·-
Easter Week,
·
that there will be
,
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
There
·
has
been
-
no
.
formal great need for ~v~opment
in
.
federal help to private schools.
·
·
.
.·.
·
-
·.
.
·
.
registration for the Marist
.
In:.·
·
our
.
own reUgiwsdevelopment
as
.
These schools are going
to
need
-
.
_
formal Double Major in Religio~
:
a person. A program in Religious teachers with a competence in
..
The Spring Offensive is
an

Studies. Publicity has
been
done
·.
Studies can ~Ip
satisfy
the
in-
·Religious-Studies.
There
··
is a
_
·
attack of social events during two
through the interest
-
of
·
students.
.
teUectua_l needs
o~
a.
·
~<11
.
completely
·
new field of parish
·:
weeks in
April. This attack is to
Many students
·
have- already confrontmg the basic situations Religious Education and CCD

.
providetwostraightweek~ndsof
approached
Dr.
Florence· of
-
life.
It can increase the
.
Coordinators
.
are needed to
events ending with· Spring
Michels, Department
.
Chairman psychological _growth of
.
the conduct the new programs
·
weekend.
·
about working towards an in-
.
person developing a sense of springing
up
all over the country.
.
This weekend
··
-
-is
-
Spring
formaJ major. Dr.
Michels
has. moral responsib_ili_ty to at~in PublicSchoolsarenowseeingthe
Weekend and it wiJl begin with
.
been taking
the
names of those wholeness. Rehg1ous Studies need for some type of Religiou.5
the
Spring concert which
is being
students
.
interested and has set
up
points to social responsibility and Studies in their. schools and so
performed
on
Friday night. 'Ibat
a required

course listing for
awareness
to ~ociety. It is a there are developing many job
Sunday
there
will
be
a free
-
va!iou.5 subject
.
areas in the recognition
of
man as- man
in
,
opportunities in the field
of
outside
concert in the center mall
Religious Studies. field. The community.
.
.
Religious Education. Perhaps a
of
the campus.
The
concert
will
student picks the
area
be
prefers
With a background in Religious background is most importanUy
begin at
2:00
with music
-
by
.
and concentrates in the
courses
Studies a. student
has
opened
needed
for those who
wm
be
stockade,
.
a JocaJ
rock
group.
related to his choice.
before
him
·
·
many career JlQrents. There is a stroni stress
There will be an ice cream social
Participation (informal, double possibilities
·
and
·
job
op-
continued
on
p.
6
aJort2 with the r.:oncert where ice
cream
sundaes
will btf
sold for
25
cents each. Also
m
Sunday, there
will be a
Tug
~f War where
the
wirming team
will
receive a keg
·
of
beer. The
Tug
of War
will
start
-
at
12:30
and
there
will
be
-
no
entrance fee. Details
will be
·
posted,.
Last weekend, therewas a very
successful dance, where
444
people came, and a successful
"Oldies Night in
the
Rat", where
190
people came. Everybody at
these
events had a
good
time and
I
think
aJl social
events
in
the
. future can
be
as
good
if
we
get
the
turn
out as
we
did last
week .
.
;
... t
>~:)~
->
-
-;:;
:.i
_
-:
~
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.
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-
,
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I
t














































































































































































·
PAGE2
.
ntECIRCLE
·
·
APRIJ. 20, 1972
I;:!~:-
~~~f
!:ses
,
C9f
l~g-~
.
_Sc;>s
-
~;~~~
~
f
i
.

.
.
.,
.
·

·
·
i
.
·
·

·
..
-
.
.
..


·
.
_.
.
.
.
,
.
·
. .-
. ·
•.
_
-:.
-
_
..
.-··
.-_
:
..
;
_
_
ne?C~
.-/
··
W~esdaY
.
..
-
,
:
night
·
at
.
:
to
~
-
.
PHILADELPHIA
.
(Cl?S)-
College Hall
.
students also
took
LastThuriiday
;
AprD13~aiiew
· •
Unlike some other telephone o'clock it
-
would meet with
"
all
Tuition and
.
·
·
fee increases
·
at
.
·
over ~eyerson's office for nearly
·
_service was1nitia~ in
-
~
Mid-
.
·
sery~c~;
.
·
besides
'
dealing
with
;
those
~
who
:
liave applied
.
for
·
~he

.
·
several East Coast universities .five
.
hours; and
,
were finally
_
Hudson
ArE!?
for college-aged
·
~pe~ill~ problem~; CoUege S.O.S .
.
SAC for
-
next year. Decisions
.
sparked controversy including evicted by
.
university security
·.
stud~r:its.
-
This is a
.
telephone
<
1s ~

so~eone
~

-
le?
talk
to
for
any
:
concerning the applications will
sit-ins and class
·
boycotts in personnel without incident.
,
,
,
'
service, staffed
·
by trained
·
reason at any time. Very often, most likely be made at-that time.
· .
recent w~~
-
·
.
Mearishile hundreds of Har-
college
.
volunteers
·
and is
.
the college student finds himself
·
The
·
·
Educational
_.
Program
'
.
·
.
A.
sit-in by studen~ at the
·
vard
University
. .
students designe~
;
to help the
:
.
·
¢oUege
.
i!J the situat1.on where he ~ould Proposal
~
-
submitted
.
·
by
.
Deari
_
University
·
of Pennsylvania boycotted classes in protest student
m
a number of areas

".
-
hke to talk to someone
.
outside of Wade was discussed. Methods
of
,
entered its second week April 4 ,against increases in tuition rates
. ·
These
·
include information
.
on
his immediate
-
~nvironment
.
selectiori, registration,
·
job
with
.
participants who have
·
and
.
reduced financial aid
drug
·
problems, birth control
,
Wh~ther he finds himself up late
.
iJescription, supervision, etc.
·
numbered from 5~200 all week, packages for gl"aduate st~dents.
·
marriage
.
counseling, academic
·
_
at•rught with no one to talk to, or were
·
questioned. The
·
SAC
vowing to stay until their
The Harvard
·
controversy
problems, family problems, or caught up in
.
the noise of a dor- reacted strongly against a salary
demands are met:In response to started
.
at a meeting of
.
the
any kinds
.
of information the mit~ry, the n~ed
-
just:to _sit and for most positions.
The
number
of
$250-300 tuition increases, they graduate student union and
,
the
college student would need.
ll
talk o!ten ar15.es. This 1s what cr:edits was questioned:
are
.
demanding
an
·
open demands include,
.
as
·
at Penn
.
,
.
necessary, referrals to the proper College S.O
.
S. 1s for.
.
Teacher Education was briefly
.
uriiversity budget, rollbacks in public disclosure of the
'
univer-
age~cy can

be made
:
The most
.
Our volunteers
:
.
are ready to discussed; but due to the absence
tuition and
.
rent increases and sity budget. Harvard is currently
important aspect
,
of this service answer your ¢alls from 6 p.m. to 6 of' the
.
Evaluating Committee
acceptance "in principle" by the out of session for Spring break,
is that it offers to the student a
a.m
.
, seven nights a week
:
Our Chairman
,
Bill
Haedrich, further
administration of seven student
.
but plans are being made
.
to
confidential and anonymous phone number
.
is 4~1~7500. discussion was nostooned.
rights
.
.
continue the protest when classes
outlet to deal
·
with different
·
·
Remember that your calls will be
·
As the sit-in passed the seven-
resume.
-
matters that roncern him
.
kept strictly
.
confidential.
·
continued on
P• 7
day
mark university President
I~
.
an unrelated case, 2,000
·
·
·
.
Martin
Meyerson
told
a
;
students at Boston University
.
M

t st
d ·
t
llniversitv Council (the student-
voted to strike April 4 and 5 in
·
a
r'
s
u
en s
facul~y
-
administration
.
support of
33
stud~nts arrested at
·
J~islatur~) meeting that he wiU an anti-military recruitment
·
·
h
·
·
·
·
·
offer
·
asetof "specific" proposals demonstration.
.
'
.
T
.
,
-
:
s
·:
.
•·
.
t
'
·
u
·
. .
. '
.
!1~de~e~~~fi1%e~::~:~n~~ o?!~~!:rs~~::dp~~fe~:
n
.
I ;
e
·
·
o v,
·
e
·
·
.
.
n
I
o
·
n
·
·
and promotion decisions
.
He also the presence
.
of a marine
said he will release
·
schQOI and recruiter on campus.
·
:
·
By
Tom Malone
department
.
budgets excluding
After students ignored several
From March 28 to
·
April 13 a
thirteenth century
_
Since then the Leningrad, .
In
order to get
individual faculty
member requests by university
·
ad-
group of 17 people, consisting of
Kremlin has
-
been built and re-
·
around these cities, and to ask
·
·
salaries.
ministrators to leave, university
·
Marist students, a
·
faculty
·
enforced to withstand invasions directions one's knowledge of the
Student input into tenure and president Thomas Silver called in member
.
,
·
Mr.
Casmer
of
the Poles Lithuanians and
.
Ru~ian
.
language was put to
promotion decisions is expected city police. The arrests, and one Norkiluna~, and 3 other people,
·
Germans
.
-
'i'~
one side or'- Red
·
practical test Those of us who
to
be
advisory in nature.
minor injury, resulted,
.
and the joumeyed to the Soviet Union.
Square is the beautiful cathedral
·
did noUmow a word of Russian
At the beginning of the sit
-
in ~tudentsareschcduled
.
tobetried
·
Thetr:ipwasauniqueeducat,orial of St. Basil's
·
built during the sooribegan
,
pickingupwordsand
held in administration building on the day of the strike
,
·
April 4. experience. At first hand, we
.
reign of Ivan IV or "Ivan the phrases to use with the Russians
.
·
.
Deferred Tuition
came into contact with the Soviet J'errible" as he' is known
in
.
Again, this trip served a valuable
.
people
,
seei!lg and experiencing
'
Russian history, during
his
reign educational experience
.
in this
how
.
~ey hve and w~r~, and
·
as
Czar from 15
.
33 to 1584. By
, ·
respect.
·
_
.
.
_
observmg the characteristics_ ~d working
·
.
through
·
the
.
.
Being

Americans, and thus
ALBANY N
.
Y. (CPS) -A bill planning to attend c.ollege or
culture of these peopl~. W
1
t!1m
-
magnificently painted icons, one neverhavinganyknowledgeas to
to allow N~w York students to vocational school in any state
.
the borders of the Sovi
_
et U!J~on
fee~s
·
a
.
sense of history! of ex-
.
wh~t the Russian's were like
,
by
.
.
learn
now and pay later has been would be allowed to borrow
we traveled to the ~ussian cities
_
per1encmg the ceremonies that traveling to the Soviet Union, we
pa~ed by the New York State money which would be available
of M~5<:ow ~nd Lerun~r~d, an~ to once
.
took place in
.
the cathedral
,
soon learned the character of the
.
Senate and sent to
the
Assembly
£rom.t.he
New York State
:
Higher
_
Ukramia, where we
_
visited Kiev
.
attended
-
by Ivan.
.
·
.
Ru~ian people and of Russian
,
.
.

{or action.
-
·
.
.
. _
:
.
-
.
.
.
.

.,,,
.

·
_
_
:
Ed!}cation. Assistance Cor-
--
T~e
.
s~dents
.
~~o
.
all have
While inLeniru!r~d. the history
_
students - a
_
sociological learning
·
_
·
.
.
. ..
_
.
, .
..
,
,>
.
cqmmonly
_
.
·referred
;
Jo
:
.
~-
as
-
:
~rat~
_
on
:-
l~EACl
_.-
:
_
or
·
·
:
~~e
:
:
..
N~.'Y
: ..
,
d;tu
.
~!:,d
.
~~tl!~r
,
l\'-!l?~
.
1~
.
~ang~~g~,
.,
_of Impe~aI
::
:
~~1a
·
(161~
~
~9~7>
... :.
~
-
1!~
.
~~
;..
~e
.
'rons~tly, jn
_
oiµ-
..
,
.
,
1
.
.
.
:
. •
'
,
,
,
,
'
defe
rr
eo
'
i
tuiti"ori
~'
lhe
.
Bill
'
'.\
vould
:
'
~
York
.
-
·
State
\
'
.Mol'.tgagc
~~
·
-
Age11cy
.
\
~•~
1
\e!~
:
0
r
.
~~s~an
.
rus
,
t~ry
-
~d
can
be
.
~per1enced by
..
vis1ting
~Y
'

OWD
.
-
minds
-
-
compared
·
~alid
'
"
.
-
-
·--:--
·
~
~I
·
-
.
·
::·
r
ror
..
the
·
first
time
~
:
make
-
availabl~
-~
_
<SNYfl?A
>
.
:
Out-of
~
~ta,te
.
students
.
their know!e~~e
.
r~-enforc~
.
by
.
such
_
places a
_
s the Pe~r an~ .faw,
/
<
~alyzed wh~t w,e sa~.
_
.
.
·
·
'
low
-
cost loans to students whose
..
attcndmg New )'ork schools
.
can
aplt,lallr vis!ti.
11
g
1_>laces
.
m~n-
·
Fortress,
that
was first ~wlt
by
.
/ ;
Moscow
;
.
and Lerungrad
.
are
..
family
.
incomes
:
exceed
:
$15,000;
;
31lso
:
app)y_f or
t
he Joa
·
ns. The sta~!!
:
ho~ed
m
their s~d1es, or using
Czar
Peter th~ Gr~~ (1~2-1725),
.
verf clean
.
~ities:
:
·
~e
qoesn't
.
·
·
..
·
Under the provisions
-
of
.
the
:
'
guarantees20 percent of the Joan
·
their lang~age skills.
.
...
·
·
;
-
·
over 2.50 years ago
..
lt
was here
·
even
_
.
see a
-
cigarettJ>utt
011
the
;
.
plan,
:
sponsored by se'nate
,
and
.
th~ federal government
.
.
:
For ~hose student!> o
_
f R~s1an
.
that
~
Peter the
,
Great, in his at-

sidewalks or streets .
.
New York
,

Majority Leader Earl Brydges
.
guarantees the
_
rest.
.
..
·
.·.
.

.
hte~ature
:
who
.
~r,yel~
.
to the
.
tempt to wes_ternize Russia,

·•
City or Chicago shoUld
-
be
as
.
·
<R-Niagara> and over 30
-
other
..
.
·
Tile me~s~re woµld lower the
-
Soviet Uruon
;
v1sitingthe houses moved the Cap~tol from Mosce>w

·
pean
/
M~ow's su~w~y ~yst:em
Senators, a
·
student
··
woUld not
·
age of maJ~mty so that a student
,
.
of rolstoy and Dostoevslcy
;
, a~d
·
_
and began to build St. Peter_sburg
·
U
t
a magmf1cent. Building 1t
·
fll'st
have to start repaying
the
loan
_
regardless of age
,
could take
.
out
·
s
_
eemg how tiles~ gr~at authors
·.
<~ow
:
_Leningrad)
:

\
.on
- ::
~3
;..~~
bega~
'
in
"
the 1930's wider Stalin,
until one year after he leftschool
.
a
·
loan
.
and
.
would
.
_
also be
hyed
and wor~ed
_
bemg tol~ the
·
.
tributaries. Toda)"s I.enmgrad 1s
and it
.
was
.
meant to be a show
.
·
·
or
three
m:oriths after he becomes
.
responsible for its
··
repayment
.
history of their hv~
·
and
.
thus
·
'
!mown as the "Northern Venice"
:
·
.
place
·
or Soviet
·
engineering

.
and
.
·
regularly employed, whichever
·
~orm3:lly a person_ under
.
21 must
knowmg ilo~
.
1?-0th
.
Tolstoy's an_d
·
·
Across.lite Neva
-
~ver from t
.
~e
,.
artisti~
.
achieveme~t; th~Ufh
:

.
comes
.
first.
.
Students wnose have his
.
parents sign for
.
as well
·
Do~~oevs~y s hves ef,fected their
·
.
Peter and
.
·
Paul fortress
..
1s
.
manyhves were sacrificed
m
its
familyincomes are above $15
ooo
as
.
be
rcspoi1sible
'.
for. a loan.
wntmg
.
·
.
·
·
.
;-
·
·
·
.
::
f
Dece!Dberist
:
&ji.iare. 'Ibis als~
building
;
Thesubway stations are
.
·
would
:.
only have to pay the' in-
·:.
Last year an almost identical
. _
Those who
.
stud1E:<1 Russian we visited_. There in 18_2.5, dur,ing
buil~
·
o_f ma
,
rble
with
painti~gs
.
·
,
terest during this period
.
.
,
·
.
, ·
.
measure
.

was
.
·
.
•: •
passed
history found tl_te
.
trip to
pe
-
a
.,
_
thecornabonofC7.ar Nicholas 1st

depicting
·
the
. · ·
Be>lshev1ck
·
.
·
. .
-
The interest rate on the loans is . unanimously by both
.
houses
,
but
yaluable educational exper1e')ce
·.•
~
(1825-1~55)
·
revolutionaries
.
Revolution and Soviet
-
Russian
:
;
fixedby
·
_
the'federafgovernment
.
was v~toed by
-
~he ~overnor
.
m
!)le same
_
say.
'.
In shidymg
·
_
kiiow1_1astheDecemberists
;
tr~ed
:
historysin~ethe1917 Revo~utfon
.
·
'.'
.-
at 7 percent
,
and the bill would Accor~m~ to
·
one o
f-
tlus
·
year's
~cient. R~ss1an history - the
.
to over
_
throw
-
the
'
Czar -
_
whi~
.
~e on
the
.
vvalls
:
·
Again,
·
:
the
·
.
.
·
allow
·
~e- state to
·
charge an sponsor~ 1twas
:
ve
_
tre.~
.
.
because

.
.
.
Kievan~enodoner~a~s
-
~boutSL
._
was ~efii::5t
:
attempt ~o do
so m
·
subways
·
:
are
~
verr
-~
clean.
>
:
,
,:-
ad_?itional
'f,<?
ofl
percent in order H~~C had some ()bJect1ons to the
Vlad~m~r. who Chr1
_
sba~1zed
.
the ~~1an
·.·
h1story
.
Outside of. the
.
~gardless

of

s~ch_ frills
-.
as
..
··
.
to defray
;.
the cost of borrowing
.
ongmal measure. but ~ese have
Russian s of
.
St. N
,
u
.
.
'On and St.
·
city mthe.snlal~ to\YD
(t
?-"~arshve
·
marble and pa~ntmgs,
.
one
·

..
.
HEAC.
:
has
,
never charged
.
an now
-
~~n wor~ed out.
'
·
.
.
. ·
Nc
star of the
·
Kievan

:
Ca,ve_s
.
Selo <no~ P,uskm~)
~
vi~1ted the
·
w~nders ~hy· couldn't New
·
·
additional
.
..
interest
..
i:ate.
Th!s
1~
the first such deferred
Monasta,ry
.
the
_
latter be1~~r the
_
:
~
'.Cather1~e J>alace"; which was
.
York's
·,
subway system
·
be
as
-
-
.::
Currently
·
a
:
stuqent ,md his
.
tuition pl;mto
~ in~tiated by a authorof~hePr1maryChromcl~
.
~
.
.
tl_l~
.
summer
-
pal~ce of,the Czars
·
clean. The soviet
'
s.
have
ex-
.
:
parents whose, income
·
·
exceeds state. Yale Un1ver.s!ty last fall
the earliest k~own_ re~orded
·
.
tmtd 1917
.
U
~as expand~ and
c
_
ellen~ forms
.
of public mass
:
$15,000mustobtainabank loan at began
a
~eferred tmbon plan last acc~unt of Russian h1story.
·
.The
·
renovate(j durmg the
reign
of
·
transit
systems
.
-
Moscow,
.
J
5 percent interest
·
·
·
fall and it is reportedly
_
highly
.
reah
_
ty that
_
the~e pe~ple hved
:
· ~therine 2nd or
:
"Catherine !Ile
.
Leningrad ~nd Kiev have
.
sub-
Any
New York State student successful
_
and utfluenced history
-
~ brought 9rea_t" <F62-179~)
_
byth~Jtahan
··
.
ways,
-
t
_
ax1s,
·
busses,
.
trolley
.
home to the student
_
more (or-
architect Rastrelh, usmg the
buses
,
and street cars
:
Traffic
·
1 86 B
:
·
1
·
·
·
counted
for
the major share of
:
c~~ly
_
when h
_
e can visit a~d t~u
.
s
:
Baroque st)'.~e
'.
_ on th
.
e Neva ~ver
.
. ·
noise
.
on the_ str~ts is very quiet;
.
·.
o
·
voluntary gifts· reporting a total l'X~~ence \\hat he
_
has s~udied
.
:
we also
·
v1s1ted

the
.
cruiser
.
·
·
Russian drivers are prohibited
·
~
·
.

·
.
_
of $1.156 billion
.
This. however.
1:'3
1
s 1s
":hat
we did
.
_ This ~as "~urora"
·
famm~ for the p~rt
.
from using their horns ex~ept in
Col le
wp
·
raesv
1
_v
0
usirtuyaela1Yr
.
. no gain over the ,aluable
m
an education outsuie this ship played in the 1917 Great
emergency situations. The
.
o~ ~e class~oom.
_
In Mosco~ we October Socialist Revolution
.
,,
automobile has the right
of
way
aes
Four-year state and municipal
,
.
,1s1~d the Kremlm.
first
bwlt~
.
Thus
·
in
'
Krev. Moscow
·.
ancl
·
over the pedistrian
.
Being
an
I)'
colleges and universities on the
Daruel.s~n of A!exander_Nefski a
Leningrad
.
the
.
various places we
·
American. this can be a litUe
In
,
70
,
other hand reported a 12 percent famous f1~e m
.
th_e h1s_tory of Yi sited
re-enforced
·
one.'s
'
unnerving;not being used
to
a
car
71
,
incre11se. Their share of
the
total
Moscowv1te

Russia.
m
the knowledge
:
and

feelings for . or truck not slowing
down
hitting

·
,
- given to all insti~tions of higher
.
Russian history. Lenin's
·
body.
· ·
someone ci'o~ing the street. But
education has nsen from 17
.
8
Council president Curtiss K
that lies in state. by the Kremlin
in Moscow, the Russians have
(CPS)--Despite
wholesale
dissatisfaction with campus
unrest and a weak economy,
private contributions to colleges
and universities reached
an
all-
.
time high in the academic year
ending June
1971
.
·
A
survey conducted by the
Council for Financial Aid to
F.ducation showed that voluntary
support
produced
contributions
totaling $1.86 billion
-
a 4
.
5
per-
cent increase over
1970.
Mean-
while corporate gifts dropped 5
percent.
According to the survey,
private four-year colleges ac-
percent in
·
1967-68 to
22
percent _Frank. pointed
out
.
however. that
·
Wall. and Stalin ·s grave behind it
built
.
tmderground tunnels under
last year.
·
·
voluntary
.
support in 1971 only
were forceful reminders of the
I
the streets.
_
Unmolested
·
by the
·
For the fifth straight
·
year accounted for 6
.
6 percent of the
past
53
years of Soviet Russian's
free flowing traffic over them
on
Harvard led
the
top ten in total. college and
,
university ex-
history.
,
.
the
.
street. Rarely is there a
voluntary support with
$60.9
pend1tures. compared
with
9.4
For those students studying the
traffic jam. There is a good
.
million. Yale followed with $45.4 percent in 1966 •
.
because in the
Russian language. language
reason for this. The Russian's
do
million; the University of interval enrollments had risen
skilJswerere-enforced when they
.
not

ha\re
much
traffic
.
California
(System>
,
$40.6
43.6
percent and total ex-
were put into pract;-:e
for
.
2
Poughkeepsie. probably has
million; Massachusetts Institute penditures 86.6 percent.
weeks. :Many times we would go
.
·
more cars and trucks than the
. of Technology, $39.6 million;
·
The survey showed that more
out at night: in either Moscow. or
whole city of !\Ioscow. a city of
7
Columbia, $35
.
6 million; Stan- funds were given for current
million people. As a result
.
there
ford, $29.2million; the University expenditures rather than for
are always throngs of people
of Texas (System),
$28
.
3
million; capital_ purposes. Giving for
.
research
.
S200
million: facultv
constantly walking. walking.
th U ·
·ty
r
Chi
-
tmrestri ted
od ed
compensation. S69.5 million
:
and
e
ruvers1
o
cago,
"'"""·2
c
use pr uc
about
walking ... who knows where?
million; Cornell
,
$25.6 million
,
$481
million; giving for physical
other items. S236 million. Ghing
and the University of Michigan
,
plant accounted for
$311
million:
for
facultv
compensation
$21.8
million.
student aid
,
$205 million:
declined
r;
percent.
ed note:
part two \\ill appear next week



















































































































































I
APRIL 20, 1972
Ward's Words
·THE CIRCLE
Around
the
·
.
·.
· "Another
Election·
-
Year'.'
Corner
,
-
,
_
·
.
·
.
.

.
.
.
·
.
·
·
..
·
.
By
Mike Ward
. .
.
.
-
.
_
.
PAGE3
Don't Cop Out
By
Fr. Leo Gallant
"Minis~ry to Homosexuals"
·
1972
~nlit's tim~
t~
~ ~.;e~table
citi~ns
by
supporting
the
·
best
.
·
Mr .
.
Frank_ Eberhard! of
.candidate for:the office of President After all,-in this land ofop-
>
Eberhard Budders
.
Inc., ~as
portunity any~y can be President. Abraham Lincoln was honest
_
and
··
made
·
kn~wn
·
that
~
shoppmg
.
During Easter Week I attended the N_ational Conve!ltion of Co~ege
·
·
he
.
_
worked ha.rd/therefore, he deserved
t.o
be President. This still can center w_ill be
·
b
_
wlt on the
Chaplains in Boston. Among the National Convention Resolutions
be done. Right
_
?
.
. ·
·
,

,,
.
=
.
·
-
·
_
.
.
propert~
JUS
t north
0 ~
the cam-
were the following: the immediate ending of our involvement in the
Thosepeoplewhobelievethatpoliticsisan<ipengamearefalse.
Itis
pus. This _complex will have a
Vietnam war amnesty to those who left the country or were im-
'
controlled by the money ofan
elite
group
of
people who decide which
·
Jarg~ variety of stores ~nd a
prisoned beca~ of their opposition to compulsory military service in
candidatewillreceivethebestadvertisingcampalgn.The~entm movie th~ater. The
.
bui~der-
the Indochina War
,
support for the United Farm Workers in their
scandals exempJigy the power that big business has in

determini~ developer cite
.
d that a
pa
th wdl _be
struggle for union recognition. In this column, I would like to share
who
.
will run the government. The money which is contributed goes constructed for the Ma~ist
with you this
.
important resolut!on which was passed almost
tQward making the candidate more appealing.
Madison
Avenue lmows students between the shopping
unanimously by the college chaplains:
,
too well that the public
will
buy
.
anything as long as it is packaged cente~ and
th~
ca~pus.
.
"WHEREAS the Church's concern for and ministry to homosexuals
nicely
~
Mr
.
Nixon spent a fortune to learn how to be more appealing.
While contributing to the
~x
is invisible and thereby practically non-existent in the United States
.
Now
he has such a way
of
apologizing
for everything that he does.
•·
ro~e of the Tow!1 of Pou~hkeeps1e,
and
·
·
:
.
Even
.
with the help of
Madison
·
this ce_nter
·
will provide added
WHEREAS homosexuals as a minority group are subject to
a
great
Avenue in my opinion
ther~
isn't
convenience for the students that
.
many unjust and oppressive laws, and ~oci~l aro _societal restr~cti~ns
a strong candidate
hi
.
this
:
elec-
·
·

.
i~ the past have h~d to arrange
which serve as obstacles in the Christian hberahon of that mmonty
tion
.
.
The
.
.
fact
that
.
the
rides
-
to go shoppmg at
_
plac~s
group
,
and
Democratic Party is spiintered
throughou~ the Poughkeepsie
WHEREAS
the
Gospel
into almost as many parts as
are~. 1~ . will also ope~ up the
demands that every minister of
there
.
are people 'in it doesn't
availabihty of part-time em-
the Gospel actively work for the
excuse the reason why there is
ployment for those students
liveration of every human person
riot a candidate with a
.
com
~
wo~king th~ir way through ~chool
from oppressive restrictions, and
prehensive, meaningful alter-
or J_ust savmg for Daytona
10
the
WHEREAS individual priests
native to the present
·.
ad
-
sprmg.
and
ministers working with
ministration's
.
policies. Hu~-
.
homosexuals usually encounter
{ilrey, Muskie, and McGovern
R
·

social and psychological stigma
are doing a beautiful Sherlock
'
e
g
I
ste r
as
a result of their work, and this
Holmes job in criticizing Nixon's
.
. .
. .
·
stigma is the single most ef-
programs,but I.have yet to
hear
an
-
fective obstacle to ministers
-
who
earth-shattering solution
to
anything from these major candidates
.
T
v
t
want to work
.
with
homosexuals;
Maybelexpecttoomuch;butitseemsthatnocandidatehasanyidea
,
-
_
.
-
o
·
·
.-
0
.
e
·
BE
IT RESOLVED: That the
of whathewilldoonceheisin office
.
·,
·
.
.
·
CCMAgo
00
record as supporting
_
I must apologize; there is one exception--Wallace. I can't take
ministry
to
homosexuals; that we
seriously the idea of a large percentage of people voting for
·
him
.
It
WiJJiani McCabe, Chairman of
wiJl give such support locally
_
may be true that he is getting a backlash vote from people who
are
the Dutchess County Volunteers
wherever it is needed; and that this resolution be communicated to
the
dissatisfied with the other candidates but the fact remains that he
is
a for voter Registraticm
<
a sub-
National Conference of Catholic Bishcps."
racist
·
The.fact remains
·
that he will vi~ently eliminate Black committee of the Democratic
One priest objected to the sentence "Church's concern for and
idealogy before attempting to understand it; And
the
fact remaim he
·
Party> has announced a drive to
ministry to homosexuals is invisible
.
.
.
"
,
claiming that the Church has
believes in military force to protect
,
his white, Southern; bigoted increase
·
the
number
of
always been concerned for all. Other priests stood
up
and claimed that
_
American pride
:
Among Wallace's supporters are TheodoreRoose\lelt registered voters in the county.
in their years of working with homosexuals they had never seen any
·
·
(the
b
_
ig
stick policy) and Archie Bunker. The Archies don't know any McCabe said,
"I
hope to see as sign of
.
the official Church's interest.
better, Wallace believes in hatred.
·
many eligible voters as possible
There is still
,
on campuses, among students
,
bittEr opposition to any
Nixon
will
win the election
:
.
Why? He bas supposedly lessened our participate in the election
.
kind of ministry to homosexuals {according
to
some chaplains.) Some
involvement in Viet Nam war. He
has
helped
decrease ~employment process, particularly in this .
.
chaplains who allowed the use of their Christian Center for Gay Lib
and stabilized the econoiny. Never mind the details
ci
how
theywere
Spring's primary.'!
: ·
.
.
.
meetings na~rally expe~ted opposition
,
but not from ~he studen~.
.
accomplished,
·
ThemerefactfhatheQasdonesomething
.
will
'
gethim
"Ahighpriorityofthisgroup1s Some chaplam's reputations were hurt because of the1r_work
with
re-elected, The sad part is
.
the ~ericaJ) ~ l e do not de~and better;
_
to encourage
.
the registration
of
homosexuals
.
- ..
·


.
.
·
.
.
. .
....
.
.
,
.
..
.
;-
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:
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·-:,
•:
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:..~-
-
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·

therefore they
.
do"not'deserve
..
better.
·
.

-
,
. · ·
· i
·. .
.
youngvotersbet,ween
the
ages of
.
c
-
:
.
As
llook·ba<:k
·
at
mr
own mirustry at Mar1st
1
am both happy
and
.
_.:.
-
··
,
_
~
_
i

-:;
,
-
:
·
-
_
,.-
,_
.._:
;
·
,
p
·.
·
·
.
·
,
o
·
..
,
..
.
.

,
·
.
t
·
-.
· ,

-C

c
··
·
a
·
1
· -
:
..
.
...
18
and
21."
McCabe stated that ui:ihappy
.
at"my reactions to homosexuals: wihappy at some of my
.
.
anyone who becomes 18 betwe1:11
-
jokes al!d ridicu!e in ~guarded mom~nts; happy bec~u5«:
of
~
m3;11y
Nov 3 19'7land June
;I)
1m
will
·
counselmg sessions with students with homosexual mclmatuins
.
I
ve
be
eligible to vote in
th~
June
.
20
.
tried
fo
be
open and understanding.
Mr
house has always been open
-
-
· ·
primary
if
.
be
. ·
_
registers and for any rap session and liturgy for ~ny group. I ~ave thought often
ci
I
.
-
·
, -
·
,
enrolls in a party before May
20.
·
having a weekly prayer and rap session for any al!eriated
fOUP:
.
· .
.

r
.
0
ny
Registration takes place at the
.
.
I
d~n•t think it
'
s a question of condoning something
I
don t beheye
m,
: .
-
'
.
.
.
·
_
,
.
.
.
_
-

Board of
·
Elections
·
Office
·
.
47
.
-
.
or think wrong
,
I
agree that th
1
e OlurThch haChs n~ beeulndvebery appealmgedto
Cannon St
.
, Poughkeepsie, week-
·
people with homosexual prob ems.
e
urm
co
so concern
· -
·
days between
·
9 ~j1i. and 5 p.m. A

for heter
_
osexuals who • 'use" others, and be
so
closed to ~m.os~uals

-
VVhaf
~
c~nununisin,
how
does
....
Cohi. This way
we
could
·
save the
.
plan for regional registration wh~ pr~l>ably :'1~ver ''used" others
_
but who were so discnmmated
it
Work
for you? For
those
people ,
-
extra
.
labelling
-
arid
-
wotild
.
·
in-
offices around the county may agamst.
·
.•·.
,
wlio

had no foiturie living under crease
·
thefordgn trade and
even
also
be
implemented
.
_
:_.
.
I remember preaching ori this in Kearn~r, New Jersey, six years

communist
·
oontrol,
-
1 would
like
· ·
the home trade.
The
factory fu-es
·
.
"The committee plans to en~ ago and some people walked
.
out and notified the pastor they were
to
:
write
·
about
.
the
'
app0e<t
·
this
worker,
.
however,
late~
they
·
.
:OOurage the
Board
of
Elections to refusing to attend the mi~ion.l fee~ that even this article may make a
corm,nunism
~
-
>
:
,
.
:
..
·:
"
·
turn back
to
the original.name
.
make registration easier for few ref~se to read the C1rc!e agam
.
.
.
.
.
·
.

·
. :
.
For
.
the demonstration
.
of
the
.
Losing his job the worker goes
prospective voters
,
" McCabe
.
._
Asa counselor I don't hesitate
t.o
tell homosexuals
th~t
!
think
ifs
popularity of
:
conununism

I
home.
·
.,
·
.
·
.
.
·
· ·
· ··
said. He has suggested
,
that
·
a
wrongorunfortunate~obe ~at way, though the vast
_
maJOnlY
of
them
·
present a joke. There is a beauty
·
· Honey,
.
you know what's the
:
mobiJe registration vehicle
be
dis~gree
:
I ~eU them 1f l thmk they need psycho~ogical help, though
coinpetition in East
-
Germany.
happs?
.
· ·
·
.
.-
used in addition to setting
up
agam they disagree
.
Most of those whom I dealt WJth are heterosexual
·
_

'ffie
beauty
qu~n is
.
a student
·
·
.
~
??J
..

.
registration in high schools and persons with homosexual tendencies and most shou_Jd not have any
girl
.
Tb~
chairman ~f
the
~tale
.
·
-
_
I kicked myself
out
ci
my
~
o~
colleges.
.
··
· ·.
trouble straightening
_
out. The few who pl'.Obably will become com-
Council,
·
Walter
Ulbr1cbt, factoi:y
.
.
·
.
·.
.
.
·
.
.
· ·
·
Anyone not yet registered may 1>letely homosexual
m
the future arouse my sympathy not
.
con-
congratulates her by
shaking her
-
-
.
Never mind, you'll
·
find
·
do so
·
at the Board of Elections
demnation.
.
·

..
.
·
hand~ and
says
to.her:
.-
-
.
·

another job among your fac
-
Office in order to be eligible
to
·
Asapr
i
est,lwelccme anyonetomyhouseortothe liturgy because I
:
0
Beautifulgirl~ whatev_er your tories.
.
.
vote in the November general want to work actively for the liberation of every human person from
wish,
l
shall fulfillit.
>
·
.
: ..
-
.
-

_
But Honey,
I
w
_
orked for
election.
·
oppressive restrictions.
·
~Open
.
the Brandenburg
-
Gate,
myself I gave my best.
·
.
·
Further
·
information
about------------------------■-.
·
·
only for a
dayt
_
-
she replied.
:
Another main concept is in-
registration or the committee
Ulbricht smiles and
·
takes
_
off
·
dependence, and
·
of

course
·
maybe obtained by calling Mr.
his glasses and replies:
:
·.
.
·
·
equality
:
In
-
·
U1e
~
beginning
·
McCabe at
226-7007.
aaaaauaausouoaaauo•oa,
·_You're cute. Thenpe v.,,uld be
.
everyone was equal: they were
left alone together in
.
tl!~s coun-
·
·
~w~rless an~ P4?0r
.
Later
·
on
try.
· ·
'
:
.
.
•. ·
.
-
.
..
.
with the consolidation process the
.
- I am the c9mmander, and
One of
the .
main ideas
of
party
leaders picked up exactly
,
what I take away with your
communism is that of the
state
the same behavior which had helping from the other, it is mine,
ow
Ii
e r sh i p .
How e v e r , been exercised by
the
former
to
which
hoth
nf vnu have no
nationalization itself is not
·
a
rulers. Inaccessibility and power
-
hiJs1ness.
Thi5
is the ;;
-:
political
prod:ucer
.
·
process.
:
.
With symbolize their character. So, it !fammar isn't.it?
nationalization emerge two is obvious, the-workers can in-
J!;xacUy that happened when
Attention
:
Students, Faculty, Staff and Administration
Order a Marist Yearbook now!! To order fill in the form below and
mail with a
$2.00
deposit to Box 843C Marist.
A bill wilJ
be
sent
to
you for the
$10.00
balance.
Please
make checks
payable to the
1972
Reynard.
N A M E : - - - - - - - - -
(Print)
Box N o . - - - - - - - - - -
If
off campus please print address
S t r e e t - - - - - - - - - -
C i t y - - - - - - - - - - - - -
problems
:
·
the
new naming
of.
dependently
or
freely go to where
Uie
communists promised
:
products and the relations
of
they ha~e -~en ord~red
to
go_.
- Peasants, the-thousand years
production.
. .
·
·
-
Pubhcizrng Communist old patrimony, the land
t.o
whick
For example the new name
ci
buildings,
one
can
see stuck only
YQUr
·
blood, but not
1,.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_.
the
Coco-Cola in a nationalized remarkable things, such as the your property rights, you
will
get
factory would
be
"The Drink
of
Berlin Wall. Electric
and
mined it back. Communist really gave ~ezhnev and Kosygin and soon.
Liberty".
'lbe
Drim of Liberty is borders make pleasurable the
the
landowner~•
-
landthe
to
!he
Moreover, the successor com-
supposedly
the
same quality
·
as
feeling of staying in a big peasants receiving
agrarian
munist leader labels the former
that of Coco-Cola. However, collective jail.
support, however, later
·
on
one as the enemy of conummism
foreign countries would hesitate
What gives communism the communists
took
it back.
to
buy it, They are familiar with power to rule this way? There is
Under these circumstances and
the
nation. The
paS
t is per-
the
Coco~ola, but do not
know
Lenin's formula:
·
some ideologists would expect
petually changing because tbe
what
the
Drink
of
Liberty is. To
• Rest on
the
middle class, development of
a
new
type
ci
history
books
are
the magazines
'-eep
the
trade
it
seems to
be
a make
lasting alliance
with the
consciousness: communist
of biggest
lies in the
communi
st
"'
nd
d
to
tbi
da
countries according
to
a
newer
good
idea
to
use
the
former name
.
lower
class,
a
continue
im-
consciousness.
An up
s
Y
dialectical
p01·nts
ci
view.
It
on
the
bottle. To
simplify
its placable fight against the
no
one knows what commwmm
process,
an
ace-worker
proposes: bourgeoisie.
really is, inchding all
or
the
main
might be that
in
the
Western
- Let's
use only
one name,
the
old
Putting this sentence into party leaders such as Stalin,
Hemisphere some lecturers
know
oneoftbe
Drink
or
Liberty:
Coe~ realistic applicatim:
Khrushchev, Ra,kosi, Gomulka,
bow
to
better
explain
this
word:
communism.
My
simile for the communism:
it
is
like a marriage.
Marriage of
socialism's and capitalism's
disadvantageous sides. However,
this problem is three folded. 1bey
need each other with all their
faults
together. Simply,
what
could
people eat in communist
countries
without
the capitalist
countries'
disadvantageou~
overproduction
of com?
April 11, 1972
I
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I/
I.
I
.
/
.
.
THE CIRCLE
·
· ·
.
·
Pictorial
E.ss
:
a1 •
.-
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r
l


.:.
,



,
,i
Snow.White
..
This Week

























































































































































































































































































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:
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~
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_
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,
;!
t;t;}:
!
~::•i·.
·
· \
<
·
:a,iJ~/.~~r
/ ·
.
·
.,
'.,·
\'
·
·
".'.
.
~ootiion
·
,
·
·
--
A
c1...--
-
.
. >
· ·
.
·.
·
-
11:01ce
_
.
'.,
f'eQp~e telling people what to
'
do
.
with their ~n bodies? Unheard of?
Listening to the press this week
-
a question becomes a statement. The
.•
pefp~tuators ofthe most.archaic laws and canons in the world. have
,
·
....
-taken
.
on a modern challenge. Telling persons

<not of their own faith>
,
;
,
.
. .
how toJive, breath, and think;

.
·
.. -···
.
.. ·
;
·
·
:
,
,
·
·
.
.
·
-
~
.The
'
audl:lcity becomes overwhelming; when they
must
inflict their
.
vie\vs a~out ~orals on a whole country,
:
One Would think Church and
·
·
state do not
go
rand and hand
;
Let's leave it that way,

Abortion niust remain a personal choice between the patient and the
doctor .
.
Not the affairs of the church. Who neither carry (for nine
months) or support the child throughout its life. .
.
.
.

·
With the p,::oblems the
.church
has in keeping its flock together it
should c(?ncerri itself, with itself.
"'
;
"
'
,
:
.
·
_
Gue·st

Editorials
·
.
i
.
Ftesbman
.
E1ectio11s
TIIECIRCLE
PAGES
.
'
..
.
.
B/Ed
:
~yn,cli,
Stcv~ Grif(in,
i.
jim
Na~c;rato
. .
.
.
.
.
·
Just priot
.<
tri
.
the s~ring r~cess, the
.
Freshman ciass held class
elections
:
Out
d.
a class totaling
.
well over
.
400 students less than
_
150
·

..
·
'
/
--
·
turried out to
.
vote ..
:
.
·
.
. .


.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
We
believe
that the reason
-
for this was
a
lack
,
of sufficient publicity
.
for
the election. Weare told that
_
Uiere
'
wefe signs posted aro
·
und the
camptis
;
'
but we
;
saw hone. And we speculate that the number who
·
·
L
tt
·
turned out
was
not necess~rily due to the' 'posters,'' but to the fact that
.
.
e e rs
·
.
votes were
,
taken directly adjacent to
=
the tables for Student Council
.
_
_
.
.
.
.
elections aridyery
.
often it was these students \Yho informed freshmen
.
·

·
·
·
·
·
.
.
of their
'
owhelection:

-
··
.>
:
·
,,:
_•;'<
·._,:,

·
,
·
.
·
.
.. '
.
'
:
.
To The
·
·•
.
\
Buteven gfeaterinimportance
_
than the p
·
ublicity of
the
election is
.
'
. . .
·
·
.
/
the:lack::o!
:
11otification ofriominat~oJi5
·
;
Bf~lections·students

had
no.
. .
·
·,
·
.
.
.

·
.
·•·•
,
...
,
< ·
.

'
..
·;
choice
t
~
/::
theY
-
either·.voted or
:
c
abs
_
tain;ed;'·
.
for<;each-·candidate
''
r
.
an
~
.
Ed
to
·
'
rs
·
'
·
·
,_.
···
.·•
·
·
:
'
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lt
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t
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.
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-
.
_frCIRCLE
Bernie Brogan.
Ed
O'Connell, Kathy Harvey. J
.
Fred Eberlein: Ed
Kisslinl!.
·
Stuart
Gross, Anne 'Trabu\si, Bernie Jcllig, Wally
.Baldascino,
.
Bob
Norman, Bob·Smith,
.and
J,
Tkach.
··
.··
I
.
·
;'.:.
:
>
·:
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/'.'

.
h~ve no
'
c:bjectioils
to
the elec
.
t~dca119idates
;
But in
.
order to form
'
,
.
.
.
· :·
"
.
a
unified
clas;;
it
is
a
necessity
'
tliat.we intist have
our
officers
elected
·
·

·
T'\
.
·
.
.
·
. ·
.,
•-·
.
.
Keep goin' .. .invent it all . you're
,
.
:
_
.
by a
·
mucn
·
gre~ter
:
perc~ntage ~an
:
the
~timber-who
voted in the Jast
.
vance
_
-
:
_
'
.
.
gettin'
jt
..
;
rc-create
that
AD Questioned
· _.

-
.
~lection;
'
And we (eel that this goal

is
,
possible with proper pu~lici
_
ty
.
,
.
"special"
innocent honest feeling
:
·
-
·
·
·
Beginning
:
nex
_
t week, there will be
·
rresµmen in Donnelly and
·
the
··
··
·.
··
.
of
being a child agairi ... a child is
·
Campus Center,
:
as well asin the donris with petitions
.
demanding
.
a
·
· ..
·
rr:11,nnk
'
S
no more powei-ful a word than To the Editors of the Circle:
·:
new election.
,
If yoti feelthat you were
.
riot notified stifficienUy of the
'
J.·I.Ju
pure feeling.
·
A
child does not
It seems that recently, The
electioh,
we
ask
·
youJo take the time aµd
·
sign the petition.
lftl!e

:
.
think
.
or scheme or plan or Circle has taken to advertising
niaj6-r,ityof~e class
,
rC!Spe>nds w.e ar~
.
c~nfiden.t ~ta new election will
.
·
oear Editor:
>
;
know ... a child feels! Confused? for some extra money, which is
·._ •. ·
~e helq
;
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.
·
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·
·
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.
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· .
LastFriday nightthedance put Sec what it's all about when the not bad in itself. But
I
was more
·
.
<
_
T_hese

a~!:! new pett,t~ons. Those s,gned befor~ Easter
.~re
no l~ng~r on by the
c.U.B.
had
·
an
·

ate
Marist College Chorus, under the than
·
mildlyamused to see an ad
val!d;
,
a11d~h~l!ld be ignored. Ho~ever
.
\\'.ereq.uest that if
)'~U
s1
_
~~
.
~
_
tendance of •
450
people
.
To run direction of
,
Brother John for "Research, written, and
petiti~~yous1gnonlyonetomake1tatruly-vabdstatement.
· .-
-
· ·
this dance an enormous amount Sullivan, developes vocal
·
im-
professionally typed" term
, ,
...
-
·
_.
,
.
·
·
·
·
<
·
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St.eph:
~B;t
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of work was ri~eded, and provisations in both jazz and rock
.
F!~r:r°;h~a~~~l~~
~~~P:!~i~~
.--,
.
.
.
.
..
. •
.
....
;
...
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
JimNaccarato
.
;
th~refore I woilld
_
lJke to thank
stylcsalongwithotherselections
.
·
·
.. , ·
·
.
·
·
>
.•
.,
·.
-
.
.
-
.
. .
.
·
.
.
.
·
·
.
.
.
those people who were of such
including
·
music from
'
Gods pell. of work done by some students is

...
.
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...
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·
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L
.
.
k.
_
,
'
.
:_
greatassistance
to
·
ine
,
These
.
The date is T~day, April 25th. any indication such
a
term paper
·
·---
- :·_
. :
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=
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·
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.

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~~~eri~ffi!a1;;:fui ~;~~ar;(j~ See you then!
el~:e:tih~ ~t~d~es!:f
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·
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.
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.
.
r:
.
I
1tary
.
.
0:
.
.
IC ory
·'
,
'
Goonan, Jim
1
McLough1in,' Mike,
J
B;
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Russ
term paper ".researchers" out of


--
✓•
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'
'.- .
'
.
I would also like
to
thank the '
Congradulated
business, and the least we can do
·
•••
_
:
Coritr"aty
~
lis
election promise of bri~ging the Indo-~ine~ War to
,
.
·
Freshman concession
stand
in
is not print their ads.
·
Another
an
early
·end,
·President
Nixon, after three years
,
m
office, has
,
helping
with the sale of tickets. Dear Editor:
factor that should have been
PROI.ONGED,

INTENSIFIED,
and
·
EXPANDED it (Laos, Thailand
;
.
To these people and
to
all the
It
seems the theatre at Marist
taken into account is the faculty
Cambodia).
·
.
,_.
' ·
.
·
,
.
.
.
·
·
· ·
.
.
. :
·
·
·
:
people who came Friday riight,
I
is becoming more important each
reaction to the appearance of
-
.
;
·
.
ThiscombuiedwithhisrefusaJ
to
respond
to
the$even Point
solution
·
am
·
·
-
year.
The
fact that, "J.B.", the
such ;aterial. b
11
~
of
the
·
Provisional Revolutionary Government <July
1, 1971)
.
shows
.
Sincerely yours
·
Theater
Guild'~
spring
An
remem er, a
·
you
:
that
Nixon
i~
still
trying
to
win a military victory in South East Asia.
·
Eric Yergan Production was sold out, in-
students who haven't quite
.
Arid;
.:
THAT,.iswhy:
,
..
. ·
.
·
.
.
.
C.U.B.SocialChairman dicatesadeepinterestonthepart finished your paper for the
,
1:
Bombing
'
raids, equaling two Hin)shimas are flown against
·
of the Marist students.
.
·
5
5
:~~~~~~

fr:~
g~d~;~~::
1
Vietnam weekly.
. .
<
.


B A
The members
of
the Executive
2.
Although troops
are
withdrawing, a projected
10
year
war
against
.
e
Board, as. weH
as
everyone who
Research, Inc. Just
a
phone
call
the Indodlinese people.is planned.
participated in the production away.
BobNelson_
a:
The
troops
a~
not
all home.
·
cthere were over
one
.
hundred
4.
The i>risoile~
are
not home.
.
Ch z·ld
-
students involved)
wish
to
extend - - - - - - - - - - - -..
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
their thanks to the Marist
BEFOREYOUHAVE
students
for
their overwhelrniIW
AN ABORTION
Reflections .on. a
:
Dark Horse
My
brothers
and
·
sisters
You make me
cry.
You
.
sit on
your
sweet ass
While
the
others die.
-
You
say
that
you
feel
.
it_-
.
But
you know
it's
just
·
a lie.
Some peq,Je give their li~
While
you
don't even
try.
You live your lives
Waiting
£or
the
grave.
Think of all the people
.
That you might save!
Including
yourselves.
by,
Manisdead
Be a child! Go on; that's
the
assignment .. .improvise ... with
your right hand in the
position
of
a
Karate chop cthumb up, 5th
finger down, all
fi~ers tightly
together) chop at your
Jett
wrist,
which is
positioned
left, center
or
your body; n~ with your right
root make a kicking motion
<like
punting a football) and stiffly
wiggle your right hand fingers
(palm
down
against
)'OUI'
thumb;
like a sign to create. "Donald
Duck" when
working
with
shadows; and
now with
the
tip
or
your
2nd.
fi,wer
or your
right
hand,
touch
the tip d.
your nose.
response
and
confidence in
the
_
READ THIS
Guild. We look
forward
toservi•
There is
an
alternative
to
you again in
the
fall.-
abortion. BIRTHRIGHT. Bfr-
Again, many
thanks for
your
thright can help you from the
continued
support.
moment you think you're
Sincerely,
pregnant
until wen
after the
birth
George Byrnes
of
your child. We're here
to
give
Executive Board, M.C.T.G.
you confidential help.
GODSPELL
APRIL
25
Fully
equipped •
A-C - Free
Tapes
BmTHRIGHT
(212) 260-2700
A SERvtCE OFFERED
BY
THE
ARCHDIOCESE
OF
NEWYORK
FORALLTHE PEOPLE
OF NEW YORK
..
.
...













































































































































































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PAGE6
111ECIRCLE
APRIL 20,-1971
·
.
Circle Special .....
. ~.And
The
-
Wai
Goes On
.
·
.
T
·
·
·
h
.
A
.

·
W
• I d
.
·
h
-
~
·
.
'
-
·
The Mau Mau,
.
'
Viet
-
Nam
:
.
.
.
e ir
.
ar
in
.
·
n,,
oc •.
ina
and
Other
Things

.
-
''To
See
is
to Destroy
by James McLwghlin
By
Emmett Cooke
.
Once again the

Vietriam war
has
c~me i_nto
~e
f~us of public;ats
.
Last
·
Thursday night, an slogans such as, "You can be bombs which scatter them .all
tention
.
Peopleallovertheglobe,andespec1allymtffi:U.S.areask1~
audience of about 50 students and
sure
-
if it's ... " and "Progress is over
.
the
countryside,
whenandhowitwillend. But have we ever taken the time to ask why 1t
interested adults gathered in Rm our most_important product",
all
camouflaged
-
along paths and
began.
.
_
.
.
_
_
.
.
.
_
249-C
for
a
slide
.
show and cooperate in the effort in Viet-
fields and jungles. Unfortunately,
The political elements on both sides of the war have offered
.
presentation
of
the details of the nam.
·
·
.
these weapons do not distinguish
numerous reasons. The
u
.S. maintains that Vietcong infiltration of the
.
Air War being carried on in
Weapons systems controlled
by
between a VC or
a
farmer's cow,
South is responsible for the conflict. Likewise, North Vie~am ~ailll:5
·
Southeast Asia, funded and computers in the nearby sane-
between a soldier
'
or a small
thatU
.
S
.
imperialisinandaggressionaretobla~e
~
But'ne1therside,1t
:
largely ran by the U.S. Defense tuary of Thailand fight a sterile, child
.
.
And the aim of
-
these
·
would appear, has any basis in fact for such statemen~s. For
_bot;h
the
-
Department.
It
was presented by calculated war without ever devices, as portrayed graphically
u
.S.
and the Vietcong have persued courses of action which they
.
...
!Jack Riley from the Mid-Hudson seeing enemy. U.S. pilots flying in the slides, is not to kill, but to
believe will correct the situation. Yet, up until the present, nothing has
center for Non Violence, and daily missions bombing
N.
explode on
.
contact, blow off an
worked. Why?
·
.
_
·
__
hosted by Mr. Bickley from the Vietriam came back to base in arm or a foot, but not
to
kill.
This
The reason
-
I
believe, is that both sides have
.
to a Jarge extent,
·
Psychology Department.
Thailand, and
by
night enjoy seeming madness is due
to
the U .
. •
ignored the p;oblem, although each most ce~ainly knows it exacts -
·
The slides dealt with the U. S.
shows at one of the nightclubs
.
on S. policy-in the area: first, that
the land distribution.
-··
·
·
·

Corporate involvemerit with the base while sipping his drink, far these devices serve the purpose
South Vietnam is basically an agrarian economy - there is Httle
Defense Department's war from the horror he created over of demoralizing the
"
enemy",
.
industry there. In such societies land is.the chief and sometimes the
games in Indochina, focusing on Indochina. The siides portrayed a causing more mental anguish
only resource &-om which a man and his family can live
.
It
should not
the scope of the involvement and
u
:
S.
force in Indochina which
·
than death, which
.
these people.
be surprising to observe that throughout history, the armed struggles
various aspects
:
of American does far more than merely allow become largely immune to;
in agrarian societies between the g9vemors and the
,
governed have
foreign
policy
during the for the safe withdrawal of second, it keeps the hospital and
centered around the issue of land ownership.
.
_
·
majority of
the
Air
War.
American troops, the original medical authorities of N
.
Viet-
In South Vietnam
10
percent
of
the people own
90
percent of the land
.
Various slides depicted ad-
aim of the Air bombardment
of
nam operating at an overload,
and the remaining
90
percent control a mere one tenth
of
the arable
vertisements or promotional the Ho Chi Minh Trail
in
Loas and imposing another _ burden on
land. Many peasants are forced to pay exorbitant rents to landlords
·
formats
for
the
most Cambodia
.
them. It was mentioned that
.-
either in kind or
·
via .sharecropping
.
This puts them in a
situation
sophisticated of
-
war toys yet
Other
-
groups
of
slides though these weapons, developed
where they
are
forced to live on a subsistance level. They are con-
developed by American industry, described the type of weapons by American industries, are
s_tantly reminded
of
their misery when they contrast their own
welfare
weapons, computer defense used by the air forces of the U
.
S.
forbidden by articles for the

with that
d.
their landlord. This of course can be grounds for revolt-
.
systems, fighter planes, etc. The and the Pentagon strategy behind Hague Conference, -of which the
and that
is
exactly what confronts
us.
_
' _
_
-
:
·
,_
· .
promotional ads were apparently it. The U.
S.
employs the use
of
U.
S
.
.
is
a signer
.
It
is becoming incre
_
asingly clear that ~e U.S. military approach
to
prepared for "seUing" to the various anti-personal weapons
SJi
des at another
.
place
the problem is a failure~
.
n
is such because
the
peasants of the South
Pentagon, and phrases used such which aim not to
kill
its victims described the electronic warfare
believe that lhe Vietcong, not the U.S
.
, offer·the best chance of land
as "killer", "chopper" are but "merely" to cripple or maim. which many people are aware of,
reform. They can point to the fact that the Thieu government is backed
arranged in sensational style, Many hundreds of small ex
0
-
but the narrator poin,ted out the
by the U.S. In 1966 the National Assembly of S. Vietnam ve~d
a
bill
.
-
·
apparently meant
.
to
whet the plosives, with cute names like
·
vital role which the U.
S.
sees this
which would have made drastic
.
Jand reform

by
117-3!
The
·

vested

appetites of the men who play the "pineapples'
·
' and such, are type of warfare playing in the
interests of Thieu and Co., Inc
,
are all
too
evident.
·
· ·
war games. Corporations with dropped from
U.
S
.
plan~s in future conflicts
.
History does not afford one with
a
single example
of
ari
agrarian
_.
_

..
_
·
society that
has
remained politically stable
while
.
a small elite corr
.
---,
,.
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trolled the land .
.
On
the contrary the human process_IS generous
with
,
-
·
.
.
..
:,:
'
:
-
·
·
-
·
·
.
illustrations where revolt
bas
occurred
in
these
circumstances.
-
:
.
,i
.,;
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·}:
_
;<•'
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Frl>iri
Comn,on~calth
.
The notorious Mau Mau which took place in Kenya c:huing t.hefifti~
'
·
M()i-~
;
bo~t
t
tJ
~ivi
.
:
~
.
~en
-
no indi~1iion
:
ofwhen or if
they
.
tcl'~i~x~ept our
O\Yll,
as much
_
~~~s~~e~r:rilinJiet:~~ t:tiii=i::Ov~!:isbu:;v::eri::
<·
'
dropped on
:,
ln~o'.~h_ina
.
since
'
will be resumed
.
• -
.
'
as
eriemy intransigence, tha
t
has
.
their
rule.
They infringed
on
many aspects
of
hunan
dignity and tribal
President Nixon
,,
took
:
office in
Wha('is one to make

or this
.
made
:
the Paris talksa mockery
.
··
customs but the tolerance
·
:
of the people
was
bigh ..
But
in
1952,
the
.
1968thahthetoqiI
:
~oppedduring indefiriitesuspeilsionof thepeace
AUn~er ttoohe
-
Nixbeo
.
6:ng
.
pl~thn:
.
Bri~ish
'
_
rnade~n ~
,
tte!llptto s~1.e the most arable landfroDi
~
World War Ila.hdthe
.
KoreanWar talks? Some
·
wiJl
say there
is
merican r
P5
are
.
1
..
_
WI
_
Africans and g1ve
-
1t
,
to
·
the
_
white settlers .
.
_ . _ .
.
_
_
.
__
_
_
_
-_
.
_
--•.·
_
·
·
'.-': _
.
combined
.'
How
J
#
.
iiy
:)
nore tons ,little
to
be

lost
-
by this
_
develop:-
-
dr~~
.

but
-
only
.
un?e~
.
t~e coy!r
·
·
·-
-_
-
-
The African reaction
was
'
all but imtantaneous
·_
the
result
f1
which
•·

-•
.:-
-
-
of high explosiv~
:
w,ilfl>edropped rnent; and others
_
will argue that.
_
of a
.
~
,
extendedand mtens1ijed ,1r
·
came
.
the first mode
.
rnguerilla war
~
and it was o
.
v~-land,
.
~
_
::
_
.
,
>.
·
<
:
.
·
as our response
_i.
tc>)the
>
curr~nt itisalltotJiegoodtoputanend
to _
\IVar
,
:
For months . U.S. fighter-
·
LeninandStalinhadthesameprobleminthe
.
U~Rduringtbepost
,
incursion by
\
the
?
Nortb Viet-
·
what
·
__
was
a
pointless public -bo~~~rs hc1vec'!~1s~ntly
.
~~1'1Jc~
:
Bolshevik period. In
.
their
·
ghastly attempts
to
c
.
ollectivize
the
laiid,
-
namese across t1ie
·
demilitarized spectacl
,
e in any case. We do not
.
.
acr~s
_
~
.
de~1htanzed
_
zone
:
.
~
.,
-
several million rebellious
,
peasants were killed. In the
_
middle
'east,
_
_

--
.
zone? And in
O:
the·
~
cliiriate of
:
-
agree
.
This is not to say that t
.
he
·
attack targets
.m
Nor:th yietnam .
.
Where Jife"isagrariari
/
the
Arabs
are
consistmtilitheir
hatred
oftbe
·
escalating viole~c~
/
is it hopeless North Vietnamese and Vietcong · Yet \Yhen;,at the.begmmng of the
,
Jews because they
,
believe that the land of Palestire belongs
to
them.
to talk. of
,,
p~ace
·
·
through are easy to deal with; they are
·-
_
c~
_
rrent offensive. the
.
North
-
':·
War is
a
contestfoi-human allegiance-it is
a
struggle betweefrmeri
negotiation?
,
:<:
<
<,·:
/
-
not, pai-tly because they have
:
" 1etnam~s~
:
a.p~
.
~ietc
.
ong
,
'
fortheloyaltyotother
;
men
;
JnthecaseofSouth
'
Vietoamtheprizeis
Heaven knows there has been been flummoxed before,and they
repre~ntativ~
.
_
m
__
Paris
_
ask.ed
.

the allegian~
.
of.the
Jandl•
~~ts.
-
.
.
-
_·-•
.
•:
0
:
-
-
,
.
_


- . •

-
' ,
' •
:

,

little about the Paris peace arewary.-But itis to say thatth~ for a
.
~esumpbon of)he pea~e

-
If
South
-
Vietnam could
-
pacify
~
this
group
by land distributiCll
conference on
Vietnam
to arouse suspension of the Paris talks by
till~
•.
we reJe_<:ted thei.r appeal;
Vietcong effoljs would lose all momentum, for a contented popul1,1~
.•
enthusiasm. After beginning on a
.
the ~nited
States
in~cates on~e
stating ~ t 1he1r offens!v
_
e on the
does
not support
ail
invader
.
_ _
_
.
_
_
>.
_
.:
,
.
_

·-
_
_
_
·
,
_
tragi-comic riote
:
with a debate agam
.
th~
~chizop~renic
·
grou~~ "is .
.
not a display
.
of
·
But under the p~ilt
state
·
or
affairs the
war
will not end
Ii
this
over the shape
of
the
bargaining c~aracter Qf the Nixon pohcy
·
on
·
Ha
11
~i s.?es,re.
_
to find a peacE;ful
. :
nation really desir
.
es peace
in
S.E.
A$ia it would place severe i;ressure

table, the opposing
-
sides have for V1et~m .
.
Pledged
_
when elected . so\ubon ._-unlike_ our
,
,
~n:ibmg
·
· ··
on Saigon to make reform. by withholding any and all aid until
_
it

is
three years berated an~ abused
to
br1pg the w~r to a spe~y en~.
ra1dsJrom the air. ~ t 1s. .
, _
:
accomplished~ And if Americans are really concerned
abo~t
a just and
each other .
.
The
climate .sur-
President N.1xon has
-
instead
-
Quit~. clearly. Pr~ident
N
1
xon
·
.
equitable solution
to
the
war
"
ifJhey are
-
interested in a triwnph
or
-
-.-
·
rounding the
'
'
negotiations
_
has
·
fo~lowed a pohcy_ of gradual troop
·
n~ve_r:
-
mten~ed to wm~ down the human dignity they
will
exert
·
political pressure on Washington
to
.
do
been
,
corrosive
/
and last year's ~thdrawal~ while a~ the sapie air warwhde troop withdrawals so.
.
-
• '
-
·
_ -
-
. -.
-
·
-
·_ ..
·
-
. _
.
-
appointment

of'
_
Ambassador
-
time. pu~swng a
.
pohcy of Viet-
on the g~oun~ proceE:ded. lnd~d .
. :
-
Those of
us
who
advocate
real
peace must be careful.Jo disti~uish
William J. Porter
as
the Nixon narruzatioi:i,
a
pohcy calculated
!O
.
the contmuation of air attacks ~y
,
·
between a pullout
of
American forces and actual peace. 'ffle present
Administration spokesman in pr~serve
m
power
.
our .man
10 ·
U.S.
forces has ~nan ~en!
1
al
.
forms of protest against
the
war all have to do with domestic interests
:earis hurt rather than helped .
.
Saigon, Gener~l Thieu-m .other part of the
,.
V1etnam1zab~n it seems.
A
more~ubstantiveapproach to eming
all
of.the fighti~
The impression is inescapable v.:ords, to. achieve the f~ts.
of
pro~r~m .. and the
,
cutrent 1~-
wouldbetoentertheanxietiesofthepoor.peasa~tinAsia,andfightf<r
.
that Mr. Porter
bas
been acting victory w1t!t<>.ut ac~ually
.
wm~ng t~s1f1cation of
c
thos~ atta~ks
_
1s
government and land reform.
-
--
_
.

-
. _
·
.
under orders to play
to
a gallery
.
the war
.
I~
~ne w_ith this pobcy simply ~nother marufestatt~ of
_
-
If
these changes
are
not
_
made the U
.
S.
can
still leave, but
the
of middle-American voters t~e Ad~m!strabon has con-
~ t basic pohcy. Ove~ the la~t strugglewillcontinue; theonlydifferencebeingthatthevictimswon't
rather than
to
settle down to the
.
s1stently ms1Sted that o~y wh~t five years U.S. effo~ 1n the air have U.S. passports anymore
.
Maybe that's
enough.
Maybe not.
serious
negotiations his
job
calls we want to talk about
m
Paris have killed an estimated
325.000
...._
_
_
·
·
for
.
Recently this already bad constitutes "serious discussions" civilians. wounded countless
·
»oaouc1:1DC1auaa:aaauoanHa1:n11111nuaauo
situation was made even worse, and that
this
-
means first and more
·
and
·
turned six
millioo
with
the
United States and its foremost the prisoner
of
war Vietnamese into refugees. ~at
South
Vietnamese
puppets issue.
Throughout
the we are now witnessing is just
declaring
an indefinite suspen-
negotiations the Administration more of
the
same.
.
sion
of
the peace conference, has shamelesslv played politics
·
·
At this juncture no man can say
There would
be
no further with the P.O.W. issue at home, what
·
the outcome of the current
·
discussion, the American Am-
refusing to concede
how
much upsurge
of
the
battle in Vietnam
·
bassador said, until the
other
side
there is to be said for
the
op-
will
be. Yet it
seems
clear
that
if
showed
willingness fer
"serious position argument that the any political settlement is
to
be
discussions" on concrete issues P.O.W. question is only a
small
arrived at.
the
Administration
defined
in
advance. Translation part
of
an overall political set-
must
recognize
lwo
points, one
.
fOI' "serious discussions": those Uement in Vietnam, important as moral and
the
other pragmatic-
.
items
we
choose
to
talk aboul it is
to
us
Americam, and can both of which, incredibly, it still
The North Vietnamese and hardly be first
on
the agenda.
·
seems
not
to
grasp:
first,
that
the
Vietcong in
tum
charged that Mr.
Gt
anting the very real dif-
war
we
are waging in Vietnam is
Porter
was
Ia~
down
"con. ficulties
of
bargaini~
with a lmjmtand is
now
repudiated
by
a
diticim we can never accept." determined foe, it
is
the Nixon majorityoftbeAmericanpeople;
'lbus
the
weekly
exchanges c.ame
reluctance
to
negotiate a political secondly, that events in
Vietnam
to
abal~
and
at
this
point
there
is
settlement in
Vietnam
oo
any
over
the last
ten
years
have
-
proved conclusively that
the
war
thereisonewecaMotwin. If only
the
Administration would face
these two facts squarely, the
United
States
might
return
to
the
bargaining table in Paris or
to
renewed secret negotiations with
·
some hope
of
success.
-
North vs..
South
from
p.
I
the
war
considerably. In short,
Washington feels optimistic
<maybe a little
too
much> about
the
success
of
Vietnamimtim
and
that
their
lines will
bend
.
but
mt
break duri~
this enemy
offensive.
Religion from p. I
now
being put on the
parents
role
in
.
the· -develODment•
of the
·
religious education of their
children.
.
If
religious studies is then an
important
part
of
life
~
an
important
part in our
total
education, how can those
students
who
are
interested best
concentrate in the study of
Religion?
GQDSPELL
APRIL
25
















































.URJL 20, 1972
STUART
.GROSS . .-.
. ALTERNATIVES
THE PURPOSE OJf- THIS COLU-MN IS TO .... ;
.
, • ' "
.·.·
-
'
·...
'
'
...
,,
'
,,
'"When in the course
of
human events. it becomes necessary for one-
. -people to dissolve the bonds which have ~onnected them with another,
and
to
assume among
the
powers
of
the earth the ,separate and equal
1
station to which the laws of nature and of nature's
god
entitle them, a
. decent respect~ the opinions of mankind requires that they should
declare the causes which impel them 'to separation.
_
\
.-
-.·

.
,
'
We hold these · truths
to
be self
evident; that all meri
are
created
equal; that they are endowed by
their Creator· with inherent and
inalienable rights; that _among
these are life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness; · that - to
secure these rights, governments
·· are instituted · among men,
deriving their_ just powers from
the consent
of
the
governed; that
THE CIRCLE
·Wind·s
Hu
'
r·t
SaiJers
Cornell · was the
scene of the Upstate Regionals
for
both . the
Monotype
Eliminations
and
the Varsity
Eliminations in the Middle
Atlantic Inter-colligiate Sailing
Association <MAISA>. · In two
days of sailing marked by ex-
treme in weather and wind, the
Marist college team was edged
out in both cat~ories.
Varsity Eliminations: Heavy
wi~ds ~nd an unfamiliarity with
the Grumman Flyer class of boat
were the key factors in ths Marist
College showing. John ZOda,
skippering in the "A" division
with
Bill
Sears as crew, had four
fourths in five races under
Coaches
Comments
PAGE7
Excellent job turned in by Tim Murphy in both
the
high and long
jumps for the start of the season! More practice in these events should
make the season end results of these two events even higher and
farther than expected by the coaches. With
good
practice, Tim's
goals
should be
6'8"
in the high jump
and
over
23'
in the long jwnp. He
should also break the school record in the triple jwnp, and with rwi-
ning practice, should run a sub-50
in
the
440.
. when ever
any
form of
govern-
ment
becomes
destructive
of
these ends, it
is
the
right
of
the
people
to
alter er abolish
it,
and
to
institute·
new government, _
laying
ita
foundations on
such
. ·.
principles,
and
organizing
its ..
powers in
such form as to
them
_ ,conditions that can best be
- described as "flookie" - extreme
Good job turned in by Jay Doyle in the distance events.
I
feel his best ·
run of the day was hls half, although we both feel that
he
would.have
won the event with a different strategy. However his time was
ex-
cellent for the season start, especially for the fact that he had already
run a strong mile. He helped the team also by placing third in the two-
mile. Marty ran good races in both tlae mile (breaking 5 minutes) and
the two <breaking 10:50). Hopefully this gives Marty the confidence
re
has lacked during the indoor track season. Now he should be positively
"psyched" for the meet and not negatively "psyched". I feel that
re
also could have won the two-mile with a different strategy of starting
the kick sooner and using a faster pace in the fifth and sixth laps (the
crucial third quarter of a distance run is the most important).
All
distance men work the turns. One strategy is to pass just before the
turn and then sl9w down
to
draw your opponent to the outside
so
he
tries to pass you. Then speed up and never let him pass you on the turn
so he ran all that extra distance with speed.
Plenty of 440 potential from Mike Casserly, Tom Murphy, and Bill
Carey. Bill did an excellent job in nailing down third for us with a
personal record time of
52
s. Others should drop their times with
plenty of hard work.
"'tr:
changes of intensity and direction
STUART GROSS
of· the wind. Joe Mccann, with
Kathy Richard and Chris
Leonard alternating as crew,
- shall seem
moet likely
to
effect
!heir safety and happiness."
_Declaration of Independence 1::6 finished strongly with three 2nds.
It
wasn't enough, however, as we
were eliminated by one point
<Top three schools qualify). \The
Results: (of IO races) Cornell -
15; Lehigh-26; RPl-3.5; Marist-
Fred Krampe did a good job for us
in
the 100 and should run the 220
from now on also. Tom Murphy should be doing better for us in both
sprint events. Pete Rock, Dennis Dubatowka, and Bill Sprague all
need plenty of hard work in running practice and also form work in the
hurdles. But lhe hard running work for them will produce more and
better results than the ,form work.
"It
is
th~ observation of one of the profoundest inquiries into human
affairs that
a
revolution
of
government is the strongest proof that can
· be given by a people, of their virtue and good sense."
-
-
John Adams
. 36; West Point -
41;
the finals will
"As revolutions_ have begun, it is natural to expect that other be held at Kings Point, May 6-7.
revolutions will follow."
The results of the Monotype
We can have a great mile relay team if we get down into good shape
by hard work. Possible quarter milers for us down in Philadelphia
appear to be <in rank order as of now are): Tim Murphy, Bill Carey,
:Mike Cassedy, Tom Murphy, Jay Doyle, Marty McGowan, Pete
Biglin, ... We will be taking five down (1 alternate).
Thomas Paire
(one-man) competition were
You can't just enter a
440
yard relay without plenty of baton passing
drill. We should have been disqualified at the first exchange zone. You
must all be present for practice before the relay team can practice
exchanges.
.
.
.
"Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have the
right
to
rise -itp and shake off the existing government and form a new
one that suits them better. This is a most valuable right· a right we
determined (as far as Marist was
concerned) on Saturday mor-
ning. One race was held in each
division before high winds made
single-handling impossible. In his
hope and believe is to liberate the world."
-Abraham Lincoln
race Joe Mccann was in second,
,, .
_
.
challenging for_ the lead at the
"This country, with ~ts institutions, belongs to the people who-inhabit. first mark, when his rudder
· Fred Krampe should do better in the long jump as the season
progresses and he gets in better shape from running and should help
us more in the sprints. Fred should also triple jump. Our pole vaulters
should be better after iractice and after doing more sprint work.
- - it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government, they/ broke. This meant that his total
• cari _ exercise their, constitutional .. right of-amending
it,
or their scorewoul_d be determined by the
r~yo~11tio.~ry"
right
~ dism(!Itll:>e.r or overthro\V it.(! "'. :
.. ·• . - -avera~eJ~f his r_a.ces 011:~~9ay.
/<-i,··_:_-,,c.·,,:··: _ :,:.-.::""';·: ,,_;•.--.•:• ,.. ..
c-. , · ·.•.
:i ::··•--
AbrahamLmcoln
-
Sunday;was almost non°eXIstent,
Jerry Wildner should
be
entering the 100 and later the 220 to help us
out. Some of our weight men are progressing nicely, while others had a
mediocre performance. I res~rve comments on specifics for Coach
Olson.
.·.
•· ,. . .,,.-;::
·~~-
·
:_,.
·
-
-
· ,.- · · ·· '
· --
from the standpoint of wind. Orily
.
. ,;Wheref~
it
~rit~ri in the ~o~titution, in>whatarticle or sectim is it four races were able to he held
-_ ·contained, that°youmay_take children from theit:
.
parerits,and parents before. a downpour cut the
· .. from their children, and compel them
to
fight the battles of any war,
in
regatta short. Bill Sears, who had
c'<>verall, if was our best showing everagai~f
B.'rooklyn.Coll~e:
one.
of our toughest teams on the schedule.'
If
we get-in shape_ and·'w9rk
hard, you as individuals will excel
in
your time and distances and the
team will. have .its best season ever!!
!
which the Jollie or wickedness of Government may engage it? . ·
- -
difficulty in - Saturday's gale,
Hobart -
11 ;
The
top
three
qualify
·
·
·
Danie1Webster)814
sailed
two fine races
in
the light forthefinalsheld this weekend at
-,'!A.Free Government \vith an uncontrolled power of .military con-
stription is the most ridiculOU§;-and abo~nable contradiction _and
. nonsei;i.se that ever entered the head of man." •
·
Daniel Webster 1814
breezes but was shut out in the Kings Point.
"College isn't the place to- go
f~r
ideas."
scoring. Joe Mccann finished
Coming up on .Saturday and
with a third and a fourth in '.his
Sunday is the only home regatta
two races (almost a drifting of the Spring schedule. Slated to
competition). As a result of the compete are Dowling, Stevens
shortened schedule, Joe got three_ <defending MAISA champs) RPI
and ·a half- points for Saturday's
<winners
of the Marist Frostbite)
Helen Keller 1916
race. The results: Cornell - 6;
and Union.
If
the last two weeks
Army - 9; .RPI : 10; Mari st -
JOlf~ ;·
idfielders. played .by
p_
ternoon at R.P.1. Due
to
the short
A YELL,
S.
LACEY,
R. spring season of our team and
ARRELL, R. LOVELL, M. schedule problems we arc not
ENTILE,. D. HAMPEL,
E.
sure as yet if there will be any
YNCH, AND B. STEELE, went home games, but I would like to
ll out during the entire game in - thank those few students _who
n effort to compensate. At the were . able to come out last
,ndofthegameit became a bit
of
Saturday and I would invite you
relief to have been informed by all to try to make at least one of
he Fairfield . players that this our games and show your sup-
as only their second game <they port.
ost last week by a score of
13
to
) and that they have been
ogether as an organized club for
wo years now.
Well this week the team will be
racticing long and hard on the
ower field to get ready for their
ext game on Thursday af-
SAC
from
p.2
The revision of the J<,aculty
Handbook, drawn up at the last -
meeting will be voted on next
Monday.
If
passed, it will go to
Pres. Foy.
·
Of COffiP,etition are any indication,
it should be a very tight regatta,
down to the last race, We ·are
dedicating this regatta to . the
memory of Bill Hartley, a Marist
junior who , died last January 8th .
Bill had sailed for three years,
and was the · recepient of last
year's Student-Athlete Award for
sailing.
are scoring points in the hurdles
is because the other teams have -
one mari -
WE;?
need to get our
hurdle times down!!!
- We will not al1ow· runners to
show up simply for the 440 Yard
Relay at meets anymore, we are
going to go over this relay and its
most
important
passing
technique· at practice. But it is
only effective if ALL sprinters
are present at practice - if there
is one person missing, the whole
team is missing for all practical
considerations.
Passing
is
everything,
as should
be
evidenced by Saturday's winning
Siena time of 47.6 and our two
showings so far.
Fred Krampe helped us out a
lot in many events Saturday (100,
220, high jump, triple jwnp, long
jump, -fqr a -total of
11
points.
Tom Myrphydida good job in the
100 and 220 as well as his leadoff
leg in the miJe relay for a total of
91/1
points. John Jasinski shows
continued improvement in the
pole vault and should help us
even more as the season
progresses. We would like to use
John in running events (440,
Inl
Hurdles) starting this week.
AU in all, it was a TOTAL
TEAM EFFORT • nmners (who
run by five points in all running
events), weight men (who won by
I - not counting the hammer
throw), and jumpers <who won
by 14). Everyone helped out. 'This
is what we'll need to beat
Oneonta this Wednesday!!!
.
,




















































'
i

,..
):
.
l
,
.
i
:
I
,
.
I
I
..
,
·
~
..
-
·
'
.
:
~.-
~
.
·
·
.
'
.
.
.
"
.
;
t'
-
~
-
·
--
---
--
-
-
North vs. South
.
from
p. I
the
war
considerably. In short,
Washington feels optimistic
(maybe a litUe
too
much> about
the
success
of
Vietnami1.ation
and
that
their
lines will
bend
.but
not
break duri~ this enemy
o(fensive.
Religion from
p.
·
I
now being put on the parents role
in the
·
-develOPlllent·
of the
reiigious education of their
children.
·
If religious studies is thm an
important part
of
life an~ an
important part
in
our total
education, how can those
students
who
are
interested best
concentrate in
the
study of
Religion'?
GODSPELL
APRIL 25


9.24.1
9.24.2
9.24.3
9.24.4
9.24.5
9.24.6
9.24.7
9.24.8