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Part of The Circle: Vol. 9 No. 19 - March 2, 1972

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· Refere~dum
Vot~ .- ..
p.
2
.
. .
.
.
.
.
-~
.
.•
·•
Black Weekend 'Aftermath· • • • p.1.
·
by Ed
O'Connell
. and
Bernie
Brogan
. . . Facul-ty Aec~pt,s
Cou_ncil
- .. :- In,
1:1
vote of 47~. the faculty disappro':al
of
_student trust. but \
~umerous ·
.faculty- -~o • .'a~ked
abstentions). ___ .
. ..
pounded
upon
the
use
of
models,.-·
_over:whe{mingly accepted · a . rather · visualized
in
a greater .whether _they .should_
subnut
a
. 'Ibe meeting was opened
by:
which was :instrumented
in
the
. Pennanent College Council.' ... ,·'.·: perspective.
· . : . ·
.·.

. doctrine. where loopholes could
four statements. on or ·about the format of~ Council: .
..
. The vote took· place artei<"a . ' Dr: Edward. O"Keefe. thus:
.be
h~mful to the e~i~tence. .Council. · _Mr.
Ted
Prenting
The faculty also waited
on
a
: lengthy discussion on whether. to proposed·
to -
the 60 faculty· · effl'Ctiveness and · effic1encY, of opened by stating thatthe F.P.C.. · revisim of one of ~\' _clauses in
approve the-Council or
to
delay· .members. the question of
the
C'ounciL ..
.
· ' .
~as relatively in f~vor of the the original' docmnent of the
the.decision.where furtherin: whetheradelayofthevoteonthe.
_One factor that all JaculJy 1$ues.
Joe_
Brosnan·felt that _council. The vote was also
_vestigation. · study . and . repait proposal would be harmful or not . argue~ upon. was th~ great stud~nt participa!ion in a time of overwhelmingly passed
53-2
with
. an.d-or removal .of many of the
t<f
the propo~l a~d to _ the •. potential that the_ Co~c1l_ should tension tCambod1al was m~ture
s
abstentions:
The
crux of the
weaker parts of it· thought to_:be · students; The first response _came· h~,•e.. Mr. Tosc~no s~id that there and_ showed_ that . they
·do.
play a
change involved the procedure of
loo~pholes.
. .,
.
· :· .· . from Dr. Howard Goldman. who : were_ no spec1ficat1ons for the maJor role
m
the government of
faculty members being on· the
Pete_r .O'Keefe _opened the cited that the preparation of the C'oun<;il and, a_ske~ · who the the school. Dr.· Foy then talked Cowicil. Originally, the members
discussion with the statement document has been ~oing on for_ - C'ounc1l was re~ponsible to.
·
.
about the scope and respon-
were selected; however, the
explaining that the approval· or too long ai:i~ that the students
_
. .
A
m?tion'}inally closed_ · the - sibiHty· of the Council Jhe fourth revised statement involves the
disapproval of the Council cannot want a decision.
.
discu~1on wit~ a vote _of
47
~or a
speaker. Dr. La Pietra, ex-
election
of
faculty members.
·be vie~ed as an approval or
Further. responses came from· College Council.
S
~!?amst with
5
1HI
VOLUME]
NUMBER19
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
MARCH 2, 1972
Wheelchair Day a Success
by Tom Harrison
.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
wheelchair. since he was in one
out of otir way for such a small
during the interview. The .topics
number of people. The solutions
which were · briefly discussed
tor most of the problems of the
Twelve people, includtng almost sliockfog awareness to the day in the wheelchair between
9
were: architcchtural barriers.
disabled are available but they
students, faculty _ and · ad~ problem. Frank Denara, one of and
10
A.M. They were seen ~oing the attitude of society towards · take time. money. and above all,
· ministration spent ·"a day in a the students who participated, to classes arid the cafeteria and the
disabled
-aitd
the · the willinJ?ness·to correct these
. wheelchair" last Tuesday and said, "I felt very helpless and around the dorms. One. par-
psychological attitude of the
problems. · -,·
,
··
Wednesday. The day's. events wasn't able to do· anything ticipant. Kathy Loffio. felt that disabled individual towards · l>Pnnis ·omcra; a disabled
ocurred through the hard work of routine.'.' Denara also said he felt the day's activities were a great himself.
t•mployec of IBM. was amazed at
Mi_ke _ward, the Committee burdensome, continually asking challange and she felt very in-
Mike Ward. the oriJ?inator ·of
the number of people who par-
;
chairman.
.
;
people to help him, and at times dignarit toward those who treated tbs · program. when asked his
ticipatcd in the program. He
,
. The program had county-wide people had to get out of the her r,s an invalid.
. ·
opinion about· the interview on
hoped that' the program could
be
f
·
recognition
as
members .of. the elevator in order for him to get on
.
i~an
Wade commented on the Hadio
WJ<;OK
replied.
"I
think c.•xpandcdto the community.
I
l
i
!
, •
Poughkeepsie .. Journal . and or off.
· ''little terrors" that anyone else · that Mr. lluJ?hes · summed up
· The organizers of the program
:
WEOKwere on campus taking
Later. Denara added that ·he would take (or granted. He many orthc pfoblems that the
would like to acknowledge. the
j
i:-
_
.
.pic_t~res, getting interviews· ~nd was very confin«:d
in
the _chair
.
noticed that_·a person confi~ed to disa~lcd_ encounter. T~sproblem _ f~Howi ng agenc!es who con-
.
j
[.- ·
wi:1ting, feature .. ~ews . stol'les.
aod ..
\Varited
~ ~e~
put'\-f · ..
-
-~ _,',"h,~l«:~,1r.Hn~~t
J.>18'}
_
·
m_,:
all-_ · __ docsrf_t l!_e h~re
at
~a~1st Co)leg~ •. · tnbuk>d ~hE!elcha1rs;, ... ·. _
.. _··.
-.
I
; .···.··.• .. ·_•_.; __ .. _,_
,
.,.MJ!c
____
e .. _· War_d_. h
__ oo
__ P~ ~s .c:to_
'
hav~•.
-.
,;,;D,e8f!,(~_-·_ a_,d~.
ti•g
__
J_ ~ -
n_g.,the. ,.sam~_-tl_'!_}!~_-_c_~·.·.h
.. i_s_~_·:_e
_
_.v ___ ,e
__
._ry_
-_-..
•:m_,_·'°.
_ve •.
·:._AA
_
"'~.--~-;.>.~~---LJ1t_k~_.
t{ti.
,_f:!Y.C_J:.:Y •••
~.i:r.g•_-_v_
-_~.d.
-~_,J,,1.n;~u,;
__
.
_:_,..,,.0 ......
_:_1µ.il~
•. _·.
~Yan,,:...K.
_
, ....
__ k,_:"._"'!;.u.rgi.
--~_..i_
~-,c:s~·~

:.;e.,,,.,-,c
,
.,,-,,:,=;,,,
,';_0·--:::;;.
,;:,,.,
_
,CQ,y~Jie;~:rti,e~~LD&ily=i1t1pr~1ons::-.-as·->-·peI!_al'a":.~dded,--w1thout.this;~m,shap1qnay:~cur, , community· .who : has- ,no ·-.con_.:•
,
Supphes -;t-:>oughkeeps1e .,_ ~,,.
·,,<
·
·
· ..
~, ·=•~, ..
,:.News in
~
:nea.rfuture. .
·
< -
that "You-kindofface reality in . such as misjudging tbs incline of ception
of
whatitis 'like to
be
.
lfarrc.
Michael a
·
nd Surgical ·
"A Dayin:a Wheelchair''
was
not doing what you want
to
do'';
a.
hHUmd not.1:>e able Jo
:
stop. disabled arid
th~rcfore is
Supplies - Newburg
.
·..
·
s1>9nsored
..
-by C;U.B. and the . After . hearing: the sometime AnQther ~ntei-esting; point noted apathetic
to
the Pl'.oblcm. ·Mike· · American Cancer~ Society of
-· Marist Association
fo.r
.Students· repe_ titious_opinion_ s_,-Yl __ ardadded _by.Jdr_:wadewas-"therealization
-
w_ ent.on tocommcnt.;'.'Pcopleare_' Poughke_ epsie ...
with SpecialNeeds;lt was one
of
that he thought ''Originally, they of those .. who need assistance in becoming more and·morc aware
·St.· l<'raricis
Hospital
the first . times in the
·
United thought it woi.tld
be
easier than_it · one
form
or anotlier'\ , ._ ·•-·.
of the problems arid are finding
Poughkeepsie .
States that such an event was actually was." Ward was very . There-were three fiv¢ minute solutions. Yet. they have to
Cornwall Hospital, ..
undertaken.
. · .
.
pleased that most people took the radio · spots on -Radio -~OK in · acquire the motiyation
to
im-
Hyland Hospital - Beacon
Even though
·the
day was a day seriously.and "lbelieve that which newscaster Larry Hughes
plement them. It is not that we:
Castle Point. V.A. Hospital
- success,
the
reactions. of people they got
a
lot out-Of it".
· _
tried_ to convey to his audience • k11ow the ._ solutions to the
·
Beacon
·
who participated- showed atj
Most·~f the people began their what it-·.was like
to
be in a
problems.we justdon't"care to go
- - - -
Masters
Programs
-Gregc,ry
House
Dep'tsiCoritln_
µe.As ·_Planned
!~::~::~,~ ...
~,!!!ft!9~~
. . . .-·
.
.
_ . . .
.. •
.
by
Ed
O'Connell .
.
. . ,
_ _
_
_ . .
Tuesday of this. wcf,!k. there had
ncsday. with the Council's choice
·
b ·
·
been
no
decision on
the
to be .announced· as originally
On February
22
The New.York likely come into effect Septetn .er also in the sarr,e position
as
the-
disposition· of Gregory House.
planned the following day.
State Board 'of Regents 'did not 197:Z. other information is st
ill
business department. where .its
The committee deJiberated for
It
was obvious from the tone of
vote on the· proposed Marist . pending upon t_he March 22 proposal was not upon the Board
nearly . five
hours,
and
Monday evening's lightly at-
College Masters Programs; .
meeting.
·
of Regents, February
22•
agenda.
deadlocked at
~1-1.
·The groups
tended ·meeting that the choice
The Board · of Regents w~re
. The Business department
a
nd The. depa_rtmef!t has also . applying were asked
if
they . would be a difficult one, for all
waiting for
a
recommendation. Psychology Department Masters received highly favorable ap-. . would accept this vote instead of
the proposals h~d many merits.
from a second major reviewing· chairman Dr. Dani_el Kirk h~ve provals a nd recomen~ations
a unanimous'ballot as had been
The only drawback was the
council. By the
time
thi~ seco~d been m~ting regularl~
Wl
th ~rom the. two state Agencies and
desired. One group did not accept
constant reminder that there
reviewing Agericy gave· their Academic
Dean
Richa rd is following the same course of
thisaltcrnativeandsotheboard,
wouldbebutoneofthefourliving
favorable recommendation, it LaPietra in accordance with the action as the Business depart-
in view of its deadlocked state,
in Gregory House next year.
was
too
late to go on the February major issues involving the two ment. If the final approval comes
_ decided to take the
issue
to
the
See page 6 ••••
agenda. · .
·
-
_Masters Programs,. and their ·t!Ir:ough, which· again is an-
The board meets again around effect upon the remamder of the_ ttc1pated. from the state, · the
the
·
22nd of March _and the College.
·
.
-
Psychology Masters Program
proposals
will
definitely be·ac~ed
The Psychology department is will start in the fall of 1972.
.
upon. As of then, the two maJor
review boards
will
have both
submitted their favorable ap-
praisals; The chances for final
approval
seem
to be excellent.
The
business department and
its chainnan Mr. Jolm Kelly are
anticipating an acceptance and
have not halted their schedule in
which they have prepared
months ago_.
.
Application blanks, catalogs
anctheother necessary literature
and information regarding the
l\t.B.A.
are being printed on
schedule.
yet.
their distribution
and release cannot be held \llltil
the State Board
of
Regents
gives
the final decision.
The
usual
procedure of the Board's decis~on
~~=~n~~ti~~-
two
agenCJes
-~---
~
0
~
.__ .
Mr. Kellv added that
if
the
~
"'
· --.,._ -
program is.accepted it will most
Mr.
John Kelly, MBA Chairman
-
:
:
. Jack -SilTleo.ne
New
C.U.B.
PreSident
The following is the results of the College Union Board elections held
on Friday, February 25th,
between
1oa.m.
and 3
p.m.
_ President:
Pauline,Peart
109votes
Jack
Simeeone
261 votes
Abstain
11
,-otes
Vice
President:
Robert Greene
'ZJ:/wtes
Elaine Quiriconi
132votes
Abstain
Z!votes
Treasurer:
Terry Curtin
171 votes
Barbara Jala
156votes
Abstain
54votes
Secretary:
Ann
Baldassare
142votes
Charleen Jansin
178votes
Abstain
61
wtes










































































































































































































































































PAGEl,
...
:
·
.
·
.
:
ntECIRCLE
Arhit:ratiOn
-
.
vs
:
Due
Process
.
.
.
by
Pat Forsythe
.
. .
.
'
.
·
:
concept wtiich

se~ve~ ~s base f~r .shaU a~prove
the
rostel'of those
:~
portt;m~ty
todo
SC)
.
ill~
informar
.
House: 'The
'
chairman'
is
not
a
.
. .
.
.
·
_
.
.
.
.. ..
~e ~ampa~t J~1c1al process pennitted to attend the hearing in
·
context,-' the ·conte~ offriendly
:
staff'_ member either:·
.
If ar-
.
:'
Oil January 24 of
this
year, the 1s simply arb1trabo!(. -
. .
,
,.
advance of the hearing. ·
The
arl:>ltration.· The. purpose · and bitration fails. or
.
a decision of the . -
..
Greater ChatQ.pagnaLHouse
I_
quot~ ,iere Article
Ill (3.8)
Chai~an may request that only· pr~dure .is not
as
threatening Board is
'
appealed, due process is
...
.
Council
-
:
unanimously .
.
ratified
.
a
:
~h1ch d1Sc~s ~e natur~ of the person involved rerriain in
the
.
as a trial arid all parties are
·
ma4e
.
the next level
of
problem solving,
.
,
new constitution. Included
in_that
Board_ of Arb1trabon
·
hearmgs.
·
chamber if
,
he

deems
.
it
_-
aware that
·
the
--
nature of the
.
but thus far. in the
several
cases
~nstituti(?n
~s;
an artic!e. dealing
.
''.Heanngs shall always be closed beneficial.
If
the_ problem can~ot
·
he8fing is to solv! the conflict as
·
·
heard by
.
the
.
.
Board since
·
its
with the Judic1alfuncbon of the

and INFORMAL. The Boa~d be' solved amicably and
m-
am1~ably and
.
1_nformally as
~
institution
/
arbitration has
.-
been ..
House. For_ years Marist has shal~ try to resolve the problem m · formaHy •. the Board shall possible. For this reaso!), th~
.
most successful and the complex
!a~r~ under
.
a
,
"due process" as s1~ple and humane a way as recommend
.
to
.
the
.
.
G~eater mem~rs of the Board, with the cogs
.
in the machinery of
·
due
.
Judici~ system
~ing
seco~d to possible .
.
There
.
shall
..
be no ~am
.
J>~gnat House Council that exception of the

Housemaster process have been avoided • May
none
m
complextty and mef-
_
lawye~ or council. present.
T!1e
1t pass 1t on to the ''due process" and on~ RC and one
~A
are all they rust in
:
peace
.
Ameri.
-
·
. ,
;
fectiveness. The new Cham-
Board sh~ll question those m-
structure of the College."
·
.·.
elected non-staff memoo.rs of the
··
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
pagnat Constitution has sought to
..
volved directly. Only
.
b?ard.
The
·
Board of Arbitrati~ is a
··
c
·.
.
.
:
.
.
.
'
.
.
, '
ht
.:
'
.
simplify a:ndhum
_
anize the kin~ .m
.
el"'!~rs
.
shal
.
l
.
ask quesb?ns. ''p~e-d~e process" p
.
roe
.
edur
.
e
'.
.
:
am
·
P
.
U
·
S
'
_1n
·
.
.
s
·
..
·1g
·..
·
.
·
.
·
..
.
·
·
.
.
.
s
.
·
.
.
..
: .
.
·
.
of problem
·
. solving that. "due Only persons .who may shed
.
hght which ~1ves any member of the
process'' has failed to
·
deaJ with on the tr~th shall be allo~ed at House who has a
.
complaint or
.
.
.
.
·
·
.
,effectively
in
,
the past.
The
new the hear~g and the Chairman accusation to ma_ke, the
op-
·
·
·
'
·
·
·
·
..
by B:
1
erbo

St
.
d
. -
:
.
1
·
.
. .
A
.,
-
.
;
.
Whethe~ true or not, i~ may never appear to some
'
that Dr, Somm&
.
.
.
u .e
,
n
_
s :
;
P
.
p
·.
rov
.
e
·c
·
.
.

.
.
,'
B
.
.
.
~:ue:::~:c:.~
the faculty voting
~
positively_to
.
~ept a
.
•~erm~~~t
·
·
·
·
· ·

·
·,
After the faculty had finished their oppiniating, faculty
.
Chairman
G
.
o
·
ve
··
-
.
·r
:
n
,
m
·
·

·
.
.
·.
e
·.
·
n
·
t -
.
R
·
e
·
·
.
to
·
'i
r
.
m
·
:.
·
_
.
.
·
..
.
.
'.
;
·
·
.
-

~~~:::~_ht~!:ttg:!k~ei:~~ic:;;~~/:::.e~:~
.
%=~:ift~
:
Jaines Daly talked about sttiderit involyementandits success duri~
the Cambodian situation of
1970"
(spring). Bill Clarke talked
.
about
On Thursday, the student was disappointing, clearly
89
.
relevance. Then Milton Teichman closed the discussion; ·
·
population of the Marist College percent of those who voted
by Jack
c
.
Simeone
.
Milton Teichman turned to the faculty and

asked for a motion.
Dr.
Community was asked to vote in wished a change in
.
the present.
From March
l, 1972
through
..
Sommer raised his hand and asked to hear
·
"the
,
student up in the
a
,
referendum seeking to change Student Government structure
March I,
1973
1 will 00 fulfilling
corner" who has had his hand
up
a
good
portion
of
the meeting.
.
·
.
the present Student
·
Government which
·
has
•.
proven itsetr inef-
the capacity of the Marist College
The student was Robert Smith, ex-editor of the Circle, and two year
·
structure to
·
include represeri~
·
fective
.
over the past several
Union Presidency.
member of the Governance Committee.
·

_
.
.
.
_
.
tatives from other·
·
areas
.
of years. Hopefully, under this new
·.
Smith noted that the text of the 'PermanentCollege Council' was for
student interest, namely, dorms,
.
structure; the Student Govern- . In this initial article,
1
shall
more equivalence
of
students and faculty. Smith added that it couldn't
clubs
·
and organizations com-
ment .
will
be
.
better able to
present and clarify the role of the
be done, since he was not recognized at~ Faculty Plenary session. His
.
muters. College Council, College
.
recognize and., serve student's
Union and its relation to the
emotionalresponsetoasituationthatobviouslybotherednotonlyhim,
Union Board, and Inter-House needs and become
.
recognized as
CoJlege
·
Community
.
.
but
·
every student present at the meeting, added the
.
necessary con-
Councii. Hopefully,
·
this new the centralized student voice at
Hole: <A> The
.
College Union is
clusion to a debate that ended
in
victory for all those interested in
·
.
structure will
.
make the Student Mari st.
.
.
.
the community center for the
.
bringing aboot a
.
more perfect governance structure
.
involving
_
the
,
Government a mote represen-
·
Now that the new structure has
College
;
it is an organization, and
trust and interaction of all segments of the college community.
,
.
tative and centralized student been ·
approved,
election
a program.
CB>
As the "living
·
Whether or not Smith influenced the faculty to vote over a delay of
voice on this campus;
·
procedures for the new Executive
room .. of the College, the Union
the proposal, his speech may have influenced a vote
or
two.

·.
·
The referendum
.
required a CommiUee <President, Vice-
provides services that members
.
' .
Block Voting
.
.
.
favorable two-thirds
.
majority of.
.
.
President, Secretary
.
Treasurer>
of the College need in its daily life
At the same meeting
,
President
-
Linus Foy talked about 'block
.
the voters for passage, as ex-
.
may
-
~gin
..
The Electi"on wiU
be
on the campus and for getting to
voting
;
' I thought he tended to say that 'block voting' can be
·
harmful.
plained in the Student Govern-
.
supervised and rwi by the new
know
·
and understand one
Of the eight votes against the Council, four came .from the history -
ment Constitution
>
The
voting Election
·
.
Commissioner', James
another
.
This is done through
Pol.-Sci. department and two from the Economic department
..
.
·
·
results were as· follows:
.
,
J.
McLoughlin. Mr. McLoughlin
informal ass
.
ociation
·
outsidWhe
.
, CUB Elections
··
·
.
.
.
In Favor -
411
-
··
'
will
be
announcing the election
classroom
.
CC> The Union, is.rt
Remember the names you've voted for, On the C.U.B.
·
council.
·
Opposed-
37
.
,
·
.
··.
proceedings within
.
the next two
of the educational program of the
·
.
President-Jack
·
Simeone, Vice
·
President~Robert Greene,
Abstentions
:
"-
12
:
.
-
\
. ·
·
-
.
.
:
.
~cc,k5..
,Y
l<'ra'nk Denara
·
College
.
Through its
.
various
Secretary.:..Qlarleen Jansen, Treasurer-Terry CUrtin.
··.
·
.,
.
.
,
Although the
:
general turnout
.
--
..
.
-
· .
. ·
·
.
·.
·
.... ·. ..
..
boards and
<
committees,
:
-it
.
'
.-
-
Q;K.
Now
_
fill
in the blanks
.
The past board
,
of C.U
:
B
.
·
was
·.
,o~
~iitfliimol"~,;
~\
ifti
''~~
;;,
,
;
cci
:,;.:
;
C~
c
-,C:~1~1!f
i~•
.
··
·

~e?
·
,
-
'-
t'·:
•·
~
,;k~?~"':
i~
;
.
+,
·~cs~
··
.-•

·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·

factor with study
.:
meducabon;
.
In
.
·
•·
·
Just fourweieks ago, there was a slight panic around the
'
.
ciu:nptis,


·
a
··
.
"
.
.
a
··..
·
.
.
·
s
·
h
.
.
:
·
.
. l
aff
its
"
processes
the
·
Unfon
;
eri-
'
.
according to reliable
sources,
.
dealing with
..
Jeaiuie Dixon
;
The
·
..
.
.
.
-
r.
.:
,
a
,
.
.
.
..
•<
·.
·
c
_
:
.
_.
.
.
··
o
·
·
o
·
··
-
.... .
courages self-directed
·
,
activity
·
;
problemisthathasariyoneactuallyseenoi"readthatprediction.
·
-
.
:
,
.
·
. _
-:,
:-
·
.
.
.
·
.
..
·
.
its goal is the development.of
·;
Ailytimeafiyonewhoknewanythingaboutitwas
.
askedaboutithe
.
.
.
.
,,
·
persons as well as intellec~.
'
replied, "it's ill:
a

book."
.
.
..

·
by
Rich Kohrumel ·
The management and control.
,
&'Did .you rea<;) it?''
'· '
·
·
ofthe affairs and functions of the
'
"No. but whats his name did." .
.
.
This ~rticle serves as
a
follow-
.
Agencies"
~
48
percent.
,
Marist College Union
·
shall be
"Who's what's his name?."
··
,
-
<
· •
.
·
.


.
.
·
·

·
.
.
·
up

to. -
;
the
·
Plac~merlt Office
.
"Federal Careers
J!Yll" .

44
vested iri
'
the Board of Managers
·
,
&'Uh;
uh, I
dunno
,
but can you imagineJlit ever
'
happened."
>
.>
:
.· .
.
survey

distributed
:
January
26
;
-
percent
:
, :
·. ·
.
whi)e the Program Board shall be

o
.
Rumors or stories like
,
these
,
without proof; spread pretty
.
quickly
'
.
which allowed anyone interested
"Planning
_
Your Future
0 .
42.
responsible for
.
all
.
planning and
·
and change
jl,l~
asJast and
can
upset
a
lot ofpeople really soori.
·
, '
_
.
"to
·
conveniently obtiiin one or
·
percent.·
.
·
.
.
.
· ·
administration of its programs.
Predictors such as Jeanne Djxon
'
sh:<mld be silenced
wheii
<;l~ing ...
-.
inore
:
of.thirteeri specific" pam-
·
·
.
:
"Career
·
opportunities" •
42
The Boar,d of Managers
shall
.
with 'tragedy' .
.
X
woman
:
with her popularity, probably has a
.
.
·
phlets
·
-
and-or booklets about
.
percent
.
.
·

.
.
·
.
.··
·
.
consist
_

of the President; Vice"
.
gathei:ingoffoll~wers; of these
,
,
therei~ prob~ly a groupwho\\iant
to
·
.
careers
:
What is described
"
below,

.
"Making the Most
of
Your Job Pr~i<lent. Secretary, Treastn'er
,-
·
·
see
;
her do good. Some of
:
them could be nuts!
Don't
,
putideas into
which we
·
hope wilJ
be
of interest Interview" -
30
percent
.
·
one
.
representative from the
people's heads!.
:'
.- ·
.

.•.
·
·
.
·.
:
·<
:
.
,
,
·
·
·
_
to mariy, is
a
sunuilary of
what:
_,
i•F.ederal Service Entrance Program Board.
·
two faculty
·
.
:
·.

•··
·
,,
:
·
>
'
;,
·
Poo.r ,!\dyerbsmg
·
'
·
.
·
·
..
·
,
students

here tended
:to
hold Exam:'
~
29
percent':
·
members
.
and the Director
·
of the
,
:
,!\
group
_
of Jalented people from th~ area colleges; _Bar~
;
~nnett,
interest towards,
:
either
,
upon
"Gui de
t~
Preparing
a Campus Center: This
.
board will
·
>·
~~W
Paltz. etc,
;
P.
,
~rfoffl}ed on
the
Mar1st Stage
,
_
Sunday
_
afteryioon to a
graduation, or just
:
duririg the Resume''
~
26
percent.
.
·
...
.
actas
~
'
policy board
to
establish
.
s1>arsely
_
populate~ audience. Perha
_
ps _the most popular
,
segi!l!!nt
of
summers
.
·
Although it was
·
.-
-
"1971
Exam for Foreign Ser-
poHcies which will enhance ah<I
.
tqe ~how was the New ~altz
_
Ex~r•~e~tal ThE!a~r Grot1p.
·
The
realized the pamphlets we had
·
vice Officer Careers"
~
22
·
per-
facilitate the functioning
_
of the
·
·
~igh~g~! of the
._
perfonnance m. th~ _opmion of ~nte, w~ when a
.
available
.
for the survey did not
.
_
cent.
.
.
·
.
.
Campus Center
.
At
the present
·
·
Christ ~gure 'Yas accus~d ~f 1nc1ting trouble and commanded to
include all areas of interest, nor
"Are You An Occupational .time:
·
there are policies which
remove _hJS
cl
0
tho:i~-
_After domg ~• he stood
·
on s~e for

~e next
was
·
it
·
a definite indicator of
all
.
Ignoramus?'' -
19
percent;
..
·.
·
must be enacted by the board, for
.
-
three mmutes posmg a_s_a moder~ed statue of David'.
If
t!us group
college students
·
<aithough
"Careers In Business
·
'7 I"~ 16
the former board has received
· .
had usf?(I pro~~ adverbsmg technicr,ie, the theater probably ~uld not
·
likely), we hope it made the
·
percent.
much fee<lback and criticism by
·
,
ha~~ be~ so
_
sparsely
,
populated ·
.
campus more aware of
the
fad
"Volunteer
"
<Peace Corps)
-16
the Marist community due to the
·
that the PlacementOffice is here
·
percent:
·
·
·
lack of policy-makirig. The
to help the student'..
·
·
"College Placement Annual Pro~ram Board shall
.
consist of
·
The reaction as a percentage of
1!172" - 15
percent.
the following Chairmen: Film,
·'
.
c
resident population was only
·
·
"Business
·
World
1971"
·
-
10
Coffee House. Lecture,· Per-
".
.
i
r
at
best
in the numbers sense
··
.
percent;
·
·
·
forminJ:!
Arts.
Fine Arts
.
Concert,
.
·
·
percent)
;
·
but when
·
it
·
is
·
·
Overall. it may be relieving to Social Activities. and Treasurer .
.
·
,
1.
ed that almost 325 pieces of
·
.
see that nearly one
of
every two At the present time
·
applicants for
· ·
,
.
·
were distributed (not to students do not really have a
.
the Program Board are being
mention over
100
additional items definite path already laid out in interviewed; this newly formed
picked up _personally) that
.
front. of them. In fact, it is board shall
be
named in next
otherwise would have been of probable that those who an-
week's issue of the CIRCLE ..
wasted use, the value of such a swered otherwise are not exactly
The College Union has recently
survey becomes immense
.
·
·
sure
.
of even what area interests been more innovative in its
·
ap-
The total response statistically them. Interestingly enough was proach
.
to programming and
conveys as follows:
the interest generated in Federal policy-making. for never in the
-
Juniors
32
percent; careers_ The response
to union's two year ~istence has
Sophomores -
25
percent; Fresh- "Summer Jobs in Federal - the board been senously faced
men -
22
percent; Seniors -
18 Agencies"
reflects more the tight ~nd challenged _with
vi~
and
percent
.
.
.
job
situation that lies ahead still
important questions
.
It
1s my
"I am thinking of a career" - 26 rather than specifically with th~ hoJ>E: that the Col!ege Union shall
.
percent_
-
-
Government - seeing that it was contmually function as an asset
-
.. I
am thinking of continuing theonJybrochureon anysmnmer to the College Commtmity.
my education" - 20 percent.
jobs.
In disappointment was the
"I am thinking
of
a
career
·
poor response from commuters
while continuing my education" -
(3).
despite posting in three key
8
percenL
commuter news stations. A!so
"I
am unsure
of
either alter- disappointing was that the best
native .. -
46
percent.
item offered, The Colh!ge
No response - IO percent.
Placement Annual
1972,
got
Of
the materials sent ...
almost the least response_
··summer Jobs
_
in Federal Perhaps this was because it was
asked
that students personally
pick this up in Donnelly.
Nevertheless, it is stilJ urged that
students obtain a copy,
as
it
contains names and addresses of
nearly all major companies
ConL on
p.
7,
col.
4
Sirneone smiles after
hearing of CUB tally.

••
I
i
..
\
I
t
I
I
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·

































































































.
1
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/
.
.
MAR.t11
2.
1972
TIIECIRCLE
PAGE3 ·
Don
_
't
Co
_
_
_
p
-
_
OU
_
t
.
A
Dublin
Experience
.
_
By John Duane
_
·
·
. J>ol_
i t i
_
-
·~al
_
_
.
_Confrontatio
_
~
:_
.
.
.
-
·
stu.de;tsa~oin:e ~~pthfu E~g~:
.
.
~
.
Well
she
did try to make it up.
No sooner had we put a foot inside
·
-
.
.
_
·
_-
·
.
:
.
;
: -,
_


·
• ·
.
.
·
.
·

'
·

·_•
_
·
·
:
.
durinll the Christmas vacation. I
the dingy room she
sai1J
was ours
I think it to be a very stupid remark when som~one t4:lls me that had a lot
of
fll'eat days in Engl~d
when she asked us if we wanted to
· religion should be non-political. But
this
column is
not
-
going
to be
00
.
but will not forget
the
one day I
.
J!O
to
bed.
1 didn't quite hear the
.
religion but
m
ecology
.
Because some people claim that the ecology
·
was in
·
1reland.
·
_
·
·
·
·
good Mrs. McGrath so I turned
·
movement should be non-political. _This is absurd. ,
·
·
·
· ·
_
·
·
·
·
.
My first step outside the station
.
around to face her. She looked me
·
The following ideas are from R1<;hard Neuhaus la~est_

book,
In
·
to Dublin was followed by a lady
·
straighUn the eye with the most
~fense
·
of People
:
Ecology and the Seduction
of
.
Radicalism
.
<T~ that l will never forget for the
·
sinister Jookin)! face I had ever
book.
was reviewed by Jeffery Elliot in
·.
The National Cat~hc rest of my life. She looked
.
like
seen in my life and repeated her
· Reporter.)
· ·
·
..
_.
.
·
.
.
-
.
·
.
·
someone out of a Otarles Dickens
tat
t "Would
rk t
-
He says that the ecology movement
is
o~ten
-
a distraction from
the novel. Dressed from head to toe
~o i::;e~o~'? She 1:1k:/ato
~~
·
ominous
.
social and po]itical problems 'Vh1_c~ c~lle~e our_ age. The
-
in black. Black hat .
.
black dress.
again and then at the bed. It was
real - riemesis
.
of . the
..
environmental cns1s 1s big b~iness en- black coat. black JZloves. black
_
the most revolting thought I ever
·
yironmentalists ~nd thei~ professionals. 'lbe harsh reahties ~f con~ stockings. black shoes and a
had in my life.
<OH. I forgot. I'm
temporary
·
Amencan politics have
to
be ~nf
_
ronted.
·
:
..
black hand
.
ha)! was her get up. · takinJ? this the clean way.)
·
It
is wrongly assumed that the ecology issue c_a~ serve as a non- However.she did have lrown rim
Well I really don'.t remember
partisan apolitical rallying point {qr concerned citizens." One cannot glasses.
·
·
·
.
· •
what I did say to Mrs. McGrath
'dismiss as unsolvable such tragic problems
-
~s hun~er, povertr,
·
Mrs. McGrath was her name.
but she left the room. As soon as
-
.
racism and disease, while s_uggesting _that .a qua!ity:environme~t Will Jn her seventies. give or take a
she left I walked over and locked
somehow ease man's. suffernig. To delight m ac!rlevmg an o~mcally
·
few years. in-ay-black hair and
.
a
the door
.
1 went back and sat on
pur~ diet is insane_n~ a ~orld tortur~ b:r wi~pread f~mine. To
:
slight til
_
t-to her. But
;
for an old
.
the bed but was so exhausted I
glonfy communal hvmg
-
1s obscene _wh~e 1gnonng, th~ thousands
.
of
·
lady she had quite a
·
brisk walk.
c:ouldn ·t keep awake .
.
A few hours
babies who are eaten alive bJ lead po159run~
<r
rats
10
cit~. tenements.
Before I ~o ariy further I want
later the room was so cold I woke
The battle plan of the
_
env1ro~l!'entahsts 15
-
doomed
to
fatlw-e unless to say now that this story can be
-
.
it
_
gets political (Just like rehg1on;)
We
ha.
ve
b e e
_
n betrayed

by our_ t
·
a
·
ken two
·
ways and I prefer to
up
·
and saw Tom still
·
asleep. I
ha
bl
t
ed
woke him up and asked him if he
leaders, our politicians. And to l?retend
~
t
-
a pro em s~ .seep
m
take it the clean way.
·
wanted to get
the
hell out of here
.
politics can be ~ll~viated by w1thdrawmg from the political arena
Well anyway Mrs.
-
McGrath
.
We sat and talked for a while and
-
bord~rs on the _r1di_ culous: . .
_
. .
.
·
. .
came right up to us and asked us
r
It f
bo t · t I
·
J t
·
While cam_ pa
_
1gnmg, pohhc1ans. trad1tiona
_
lly speak of_ bridging t~
1
-f we needed a place
to
stay. Then
e
unny a u Jus eavmg
.
us
h
el t d
tat
o
then the phone downstairs started
,
·
gap· between· the people and t eir . ec e rep~esen
ives. nee
10
she shoved a card in my hand ringing and ringing about fifteen
office, the gap always develops. The 1Ssues are ignor~ once the men with her name and
_
address on it.
take office. Th_e lobby system takes control and the pubhc s~rvants are She said it was one pound
<$2.50)
times. but no one answered it. We
.
.
no longer faithful to the people. To pretend,~~ many ecolog!sts d~. ~ t for bed and breakfast. I won-
took itfrom there that no one was
the pollution problem transcends the pohti~l process is to invite dered how she knew we needed a
home. We looked at each other
disaster.
·
·
-
·
place to stay but but I guess it
.
As I see the wonderful work done by facult:r ~nd students he~e at was obvious we looked like we
Marist in regards to ecology, I feel that all tins 1s doomed to fail~e didn't know where we were
·
unless~1:
·
getverymuchinvolved politically. Andi sar ~e same
th11
1J
going. Her heavy Irish
.
broizue
for Rehg1on, for any one who professes to be a Christian or a Jew, was ouite amusing when I first
\\'.hether he belongs to an institutional church or mt.
heard· it. 1 guess you could say
Related and unrelated footnotes:
.
she took us by surprise because
For those who believe
.
in spiritual no~rishment as, basic for any we accepted to go with her.
activity, we have t~e following_: 1-:iturgy m chapel daily at noon and
we took a cab to her house
.
On
,
fivep
.
m.; weekends at 6 ~M. m1dn1ght ~nd 11 :15
~.M.;
~h~r~
Prayer the way I was thinking and was
at 9:30 P.M.,
.
Tuesdays 1~ Byrne Residence; D1scuss1on w~th some curious to see who was going to
me~bers of faculty on Life values, Wednesd~ys, 8
P.M.
m Byrne pay the cab fare since she
Residence; YOGA SESSIONS, Wednesdays 10
.
15
P.M.
,
led by Hank suggested taking the cab
;
About
-
Blum. Welcome to all.
_ _ _ _
two blocks from her house she
and had the same thought, lets
get the hell out.
So
like two little
kids we packed our bags as fast
as we could and slowly started
down
is
'ong dark staircase
.
We
. were halfway down and stopped
dead. We thought we heard a door
open from the
'
top floor. We
listened but not a sound.
It was
the type house Alfred
.
Hitchcock
couldn't even dream up. We
quickly walked down the rest of
the stairs and out the front door.
We never looked
behind
us for six
blocks.
.
-
.
By this time it .was dark and
very cold. We stopped and sat on
our bags on a street corner for
twenty minutes without saying a
word. By this time we were really
tired
.
and needed a shave. We
made a few suggestions but
couldn't agree on anything
.
We
sat another ten minutes in silence
then I casually suggested we go
back to London. No sooner had I
·
said it when we were aboard an
Aer Lingus aircraft headed for
London.
·
Although this was kind of an
unusual experience I plan to go
back to Ireland this summer and
see what it is really like. Maybe
I'll even stop off at Dublin??
opens her hand bag and slowly
·
started to
J!O
through it. Just by
j
the way she was fumbling around
:
\
.
I
}~~~:~~F«i1!:~:i
·
r~~~~~l:~s~~e
-
·
.
,
.
,
,
.
.
·
-
·
~\A-m
·
eric
-
an-:P
-
ie~tL
:
~
-
-
j
-
_
_
,
...
,.-.""'
~
'~
~~
~N
.
only
hlitfa
large
·
bll
F
a~d
''
Wou_ld
·
.
.a.a.a
.
·
:,
·
.
, ..
·
.
- :
>
-~
.
make it up
-
to us inside.
.
_
.
·
.
by Mike Smith
During the cou~e of ~ny given· year there appears a song that
presents itself as more than just · an old-fashioned love song or a
medley of mythmy tunes. The song that I speak of is Don McLean's
-
"American Pie", in that. it recalls a period of rock and roJl that has
D
·1rt
·
y
Harry _
long since been bypassed,
.
with one
,
of that era's legendary heroes
by ~ike
Ward

·
·
_ _
_
·
,
emerging as the centric figure of the title tune. In this elaborate
Last Wednesday night,
·
this
:
by Bernie Scibieriski
guessing game. McLean also makes references to many
.
other ar!ists
_
community had the opportunity
of a later period as well
.
·
·
.
_
. ·
-
to view the film on
Willowbrook
-
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
To discover who is the bygone rock 'n'roHstar that
_
McLean refers
and
·
usten
to
the man who un-
-
·
Violence: sickness an~ ~i,se
_
as.e to. all one has to do is observe the reverse side of the "American Pie"
.
stalk the silver scr~en m Dirty
c-
·
album cover
_
and take note that the Lp is dedicated simply to Buddy
covered this grave injustice,
Harr_ y;''
.
At fi
_
rst,,th1_s appe
_
ars to
_
I lolly. JJoUy
·
w
·
as one
.
_
of those giants in rock during the.late f
.
ifties,
Geraldo Rivera
,
The only bright
.
be
t
th
Cl t E t
d
spot that
.
evening was that most
.
.
J~s .~n? er
1

m
as
.
W?O
more or less what G corge Harrison is today. Right away
,
the opening
of the community traded in their
mov,_e. 1~ snot: Dirty Harry is a
lines of "American Pie," McLean begins with Holly:
A
long, long time
· Disneyland attention·for a night
cop m Wt~d. Wicked .. wonderful ago
..
.l•'ebruary made me shiver, with every paper I deliver ... when I
of depression and nausea
.
Itwas San Francisco and he is appalled read about his widowed bride ... ", and depicted how
a5
a newsboy, he
by
.
the red tape and petty was deeply saddened in the February (of 1959) to the news that a plane
:
good
to see thatsome people are
·
procedures needed to arrest a
crash had killed Holly. And the widowed bride, of course, refers to
-
-
not afraid
.
to look at the barest
form
of
reality.
·
criminal.
.
. .
.
Holly's wife. Maria Elena. All this is expounded upon further by the
-
.
The plot 1s s1m1lar to ~e events refrain. "this will be the day that I die." which Holly wrote himself in
-
I've never
~en
a film m~cie in Holl~ood that was grosser than this .of "The Summer of 70, wh~n a
his last hit
31
ng, 'That'll be the Day".
·
one. l can't begin to describe what I saw so I don't think I will, but
_
madm_an ke_pt ~n
.
Franci~co
.
Unquestionably. the mood is set in the fifties
("do you believe in
while the worst scenes in
the
film were supposedly taken without
the
terronzed wtth his notes
.
Chnt rock
'
n
'
roll .
..
do you have faith in God above") and of the trends to
·
knowledge of the authorities, there had to be some lmowledge. What Eastwood po~rays Harry to the dance in the gym. to wear
~
pink carnation and to ride around in a
about thetimeinverval between when Mr. Rivera's crowd crashed
the letter. Despite rather bl~y pick-up truck. But time moves on, as does the years (ten years) in
place and the actual taking of the films? There must have been a scenes it is a we!l-molded movie.
which McLean has been on his own, maintaining the imagery and
fifteen or twenty minute lapse where the authorities could have It manages to brmg to the screen fascination of Buddy Holly and his music. This idea is
best
·
expressed
cleaned-up some things. Even if they didn't, Mr. Rivera could have a serious human p~oblem of in the line of rolling stones gathering moss, fran yet another Holly hit,
been there on a
'
"better day". This is hard to imagine
,
but such con- current s~tus: the rights of a
"Early On the Morning"
..
. This yearning for the music of yesteryear
ditions do get worse.
_
·
.
·
-
criminal. .
becomes vividly clear when McLean seemingly criticizes the groups
It
is funny that Mr. Rivera was afraid to mention on the inedia that
The mov
_
1e developed to show a of the mid-to-late sixties who made it big, starting with the Beatles'
mental retardation is much higher among
the
minority groups
than
policeman tryir:ig to do his "Helter Shelter," the Byrds' "Eight Miles High"
,
and the Rolli~
the white middle-:class. 'Ibis is because
the
poor cannot afford pre-
"Duty" can becol!'e. carrie_d Stones' "Jumping Jack Flash."
·
_
.
n~tal care, but who would think that social prejudice would affect sick away beyond legal hm1ts. Yet it
The "court jester" is Bob Dylan, who McLean now recogruzes,
children. Another example
·of
our societies twisted priorities.
also shows how one
.
could find the unbashly has taken over as the leader of rock music ( "in a coat he
I had a chance
to
mention to Mr; Rivera that Goldwater Memorial intense frustration involved in borrowed from James Dean"-the late actor of the fifties who was
and Byrd S. Coler hospitals
Cl1
Welfare Island are just as bad. These the seemingly illogical protection killed in a mctorcycle crash). And Dylan nearly met his death also in a
institutions are for the physically disabled
_
who have no families
to
gr~n~ed a woul~;f:>e crimi~al.
motorcycle mishap in 1966, which causes McLean
to
muse
("the jester
take care of them. Most of them either have average or above in-
Dirty Harry is a moVIe that on the sideline in a cast.")
tellects and they have no other illnesses except their disabilities, at says something, moves well, and
McLean sees the music of the sixties as a repository of fantastic
least not when they entered the institution. 111ey begin
to
deteriorate hol~ your interest. Most of i~ is energy, a sound that expresses the staccato experienc~ of 1!1ode1;0
both physically and mentally after a while. but what else would you believable except for Chnt America but also its almost limitless rage of violence. This attitude 1s
expect Crom some small place surrounded
by
water and social apathy. E a s t w o o d ' s
a m a z i n g demonst;ated in the lines of Satan and of the fiery flames, which,
Looking at California, one is aware that there are alternatives
to
the
recuperativ~ powers and the fact according to McLean, refers to the Rolling Stones' rock
COl}C~rt at
gross treatment in these institutions
.
Their children are well ir~vi~ that
he
carries a 44 Magnwn
,
the Altamont where one person died and scores of others were tnJUfed.
for in new clean
regional
centers and mast of them are trained even
if most powerful handgun made. No This explains McLean's "fist of rage" and Satan's ''laughing with
it jtmt means
to
take care
d
themselves.
Our
state must revise its police department in America delight."
program for the mentally
retarded
or else the institutiOllS will con-
permits the use of that weapon.
In a return back home (he lives in New Rochelle), McLean hears the
tinue
to
be
a stopover just before death.
It
will take m<re than many to
After you have seen "Dirty music playing no more. The music of yesterday is over, and the three
build a new program. Social awareness, interest, and motivation mt&St Harry", sit back and
think. You men he admired most (the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost") all caught
flI'St
build a consciousness in state legislators.
will have just seen a movie with the "last train for the coast" the day Holly died-to the coast where
Finally, I find
Mr.
Rivera
to be
candid
and highly motivated in
his
hardly any "skin" and no sex. Buddy Holly rests.
.
l
I
efforts
but
there seemed
to
be
s<mething missing. I believe
that be
CToo
bad, heh?> While you are
Indeed Don McLean has written more than
just
a song. It's a
cry
of
smnm~d it
m>
by stating
that
be
was
an
egotist
and maybe
be
is
after
thinking. think
just
who is really love for
good
old rock'n 'roll, and perhaps the question set
forth
by
after somethmg.
The
act
is while it is great that
Mr.
Rivera got
to
Chis sic~-Harrr or Scorpio? You
McLean. mid
-
way through the song, "so do you recall what was
institution how many from this institution "get" to Mr. Rivera?
decide. Is it both?
revealed the day the music died," can now be answered.
I
!































PAGE4
·.
111ECRCLE
-
Pictorial
.
...
The
snow allowed
for r
_
cleasc of many inhibitions.

Siena
Game, and what a game!
MARat
2,
1972
·
Students view Sunday's Art Exhibit.
th
·
ings to
·
d~
places
tQ
go
_
·
and
·
people
.
Jo
·
see
this week at Marist
·-
••
,
and of course, there's always the
.
library.
.
.
Associated Colleges Talent Show
/
•I
'
\
,















































































~
\'
,
.
'
.r
MARCH 2g 1972
DIE CIRCLE
'PACES
Circle Editorials
Wheelchairs
l
Successful
1
·
eo':st ,Tu~sda~, and. Wednesday, ~ike Ward conducted Marist
: .
ege s first. day m
~
w~eelch~r." -During this day. various
·
stud~nts went through their daily routines in a wheeldtair Accordi~
..
to M1k~ Ward, this was to give people a chance to realize th~ situations
Jhat disabled people must handle everyday. Many
-
of these people
enco!Jntered problems that they had never thought of Jreviously
This d~y was a success in the sense that those who rode ·in the
wheelc~a1rs encountered problems and realized what Mike and every
ot~er disabled person must handle everyday. The visable success of
t~•~ day was the bruised hands and the cramped arms of these par-
..
tic1pants
.
For them, the day was not an enjoyable me.
or
course. they
we~e not
_
used to m?ving· with the use of their hands; but this was
not
their ma.1_0r compl~nt.
~ei~
main problem during these two days was
the terra1_n of Mar1st which 1s not easily adapted to while riding in a
wheelchair.
·
.

._
·._.
The ~bjec~ ~f thi~
program
was to make people aware of the over-
. .
whelmmg difficulties tllat disabled people run irito during
a
normal
.
day._1?Je profr~m was
r_un
extr~el>: weU_; with newspaper and radio
·
pubbc1ty. This 1s a step m the right direction toward an awareness of
the prob~ems of the disabled; not only at Marist; but also in the
commumty.
·
·
Think About It
-
Culinary Atrocities
Editor's Note:
. -The editorial below appeared
in
the Belmont Abbey College
newspaper. Think about it! ·
CULINARY ATROCITIES
TI-JIEU
u
-
1.tl
.

.
.
*.
.
.
.
;
.
·
~-
~
,
.
.
::,

.
For reasons that vary somewhat, the cafeteria service at this
\\
DIC\<,
YO
.
U'RE
·
PROBASL.Y
WONDER\NG
.
\.IOW Wf:. EV~Q GOT
college is a dominant topic of student discussion. Yet, regardless of
TMIEU
"TO AGREE '"TO
Tl-IE
PAQT A60UT ~ES\GNlNG Oi::l=lCE
how adamant the verbiage might become, little seems to affect the
ANO
I-IOLO\NG
FREE
E\-ECTtONS
\N _SOtlT\4 V\EiNAM •• ,."
situation.
.
·
.
·
·•
·
-
. .
.

On_e area
>
9f:
,
~~J>!~'P.-~-
i
~noyance, qowey:~r
/
:
.
is
,.
~or~· another
.
.
·
he~mg: the
'
managenient'ifperpetual ooiiclfalarice
·
"fil>out
·
sanitatiorf: • freshman sponsored weekend
·
We're all use to picking foreign matter out ofour food
:
<hafr etc.) but

<Fe~.
25-27)
was open to all
_
the other n_ight a ~tudent pulled a co_ckroach
out of
his spaghetti.
Ma~•st students. The _jwi
._
Jr a~d
We consider flus to
be
gross and mtolerable negligence and demand semor . classes are a~tive m
that measures be adopted to prevent it
in
the future. "We're sorry prepa~mg for graduation
.
The
about that" just isn't suitable.
whole1dea of the new constitution
.
We are reminded of a recent suit brought by a woman against a is to ~orrelate the activities of all ·
.
itatio~ally-k~own drive-in restaurant chain, It seems that a piece of the different groups on campus .
her fr1ed
-
ch1cken turned out to be a breaded, fried rat
!
She won her yet four of the most ~ctive
case
.
·
·
·
·
groups, the class governments,
~ow.
we
don't mean to put ideas into the chef's head, but we cer- are e~cluded from this new
tamly do hope ~e ~anagement of Maurus Hall takes particular note
.
centrahz~
_
system. Clas~ politics
Should another mc1dent of this nature 9ecur, this newspaper
will
notify
has trad1tionally provided an
the county board of health.
·
outlet for student involvement.
Furthermore, the old student
·
··
Letters To.The
·
Editors
_
Student
.
Gv't. Referendum
Quest
.
ion
government encouraged class
identity by providing for class
representatives to embody this
identity. Now. however. there is a
good deal of upcry against class
identity. The Circle article of
February
10
stated that the old
student l,!overnment system "is
no longer an effective way of
truly representing all of the
students." What has changed
that has made the old system so
outmoded? Why are class
governments
suddenly
the
vi1Jains
on
campus?
.
.
.
In referring to the election of
To the Editors of The Circle:
· or through the campus media
.
the different representatives
· Last Thursday, February 24, a But this is all in the past; the fact
·
from the various clubs and
referendum was held on
the
new remains that
.
we have
·
a new associations, the new constitution
student government constitution

constitution. Therefore,
I
would provides
-
that "the election
It
is my
.
opinion that any op- like to ~int out some of t~e procedure would be left
up
to the
positif'n to
the
proposal was not aforementioned pros and
<:OD~
m discretion of the particular
given sufficient chance to ~ehope~at t~e new co~sbtutron
,
group." By not imposing
-
its own
develop
and
express itself. The
_
rs not
so
inflexible that 1t cannot
high
electoral standards
on
all
referendum itself was
not
posted
be
~ended.
.
.
the elected members of the
until Wednesday night, and the
Firstly, the office of class student
government
the
proposition was notdistributed to representative was abolished, ,government
··
encourages' unfair
the student mttil the very
day or except fo~ fresh~an class elections and impugns the
the vote. Even though the r~presentat1ves.
I realize that the reliability of all the represen-
proposal appeared in the d1ff~rent cl~s~':s are merely tatives, whether or not they were
February
10
i$ue of The Circle,
·
arb1tra~y d1y1S1ons used for tmfairly elected. What is to
most students were unaware
of
academic puryoses, and tf?at they prevent
.
a small gathering of
the basic issues involved in the should_ not mte~ere with the members of a particular club
reorgani1.ation of the student oper~bon of Manst as a com-
from appointing their student
government. Evidence of this is mun1ty.
I
commend ~e <!rafte~ government
representative
in the results
of
the referendum - of th~ . new constitution
m without the consent of the rest
of
89
percent were in favor of it.
I
rec~mzmg that ~ther grou~ the members of that particular
find it difficult to believe that besides classes exist, but this organization?
such a large percentage could
be
does not mean that they should_
be
Other than these points, I see
in favor while still recognizing cut
·
off from representation nothing wrong with the new
the issues involved. No effort was altogether. Class governments system. I would like to say that
made by the student government AR~ still active in provi~ng not enough attention has been
to publicize the pros and cons of social events and other ~emces given
to
the
excellent
the new system. either in debate
to
the campus community. The enwneration of the role
of
the •
student government and
,
,ts o{-
..
·

B
.
·
est
M
·
·
o
'
s s
·
.
ficers listed under numbers
II
.
and
HI
.
of the approved proposal. To the editor
.
I
hope that my comments will
be
t k
·
·
r
would like to thank Tom
a
en
m
good
spirit by those who Walsh and his committee from
worked for the passage of the
h
referendum and -that we will be fit
floor Champagnat for,
able to work in Wlison to impr
_
ove probably. one of the best liturgies
.
m
years at Marist
.
·
,t.
r
would like to take this oc-
Bob Nelson casion also to thank H
k
.
an
Math L t
Hammer. Cindy Bodenheimer
ec
LJ
re
Barbara Shaw and Pat Buckley
.
·
who play almost every week at
To the Editors.
our masses
.
They must be
The
Department
of grateful for the two weeks' break
Mathematics of Marist College is
<_last
Saturday and this coming
sponsoring
a
lecture by Dr. John ~turd~y when the Regina Coeli
Gilbert on "The Interactions l<olk Singers
will
lead us.)
between Statistics and Com-
Sincerely,
puling" at
:!::m
P.M. in room
246
Fr.
Leo
Gallant
of Donnelly Hall.
R •
Dr
.
Gilbert is
a
staff
f
ng
statistician of the Harvard
Weeken.d
Computing Center. He received
his doctorate in Mathematical
Statistics from the University of
Chicago in
1962.
During the years
between
1957
and
1965,
he was a
Statistical Consultant at the
Center for Advanced Study in the
Behavioral Sciences in Stanford
California. Until he joined the
Harvard Computing Center in
1966,
he was the L.L
.
Thurstone
Distinl!uished Fellow at the
Psychometric Laboratory at the
University of North Carolina.
Dr. Gilbert's lecture is made
possible by the Program of
Visiting Lecturers
in
Statistics
which is supported by the
American Statistical Association
Biometric Society, Institute of
Mathematical Statistics, and
the
National Science Foundation.
The program is in its ninth year
of promoting the role that
statistics plays in research and
practice in all fields of scientific
endeavor.
On· Thursday, March 9, Dr.
Gilbert will deliver a lecture at
Vassar College at 8:00 P.M. in
Rockefeller Hall room
35.
His
topic is "The Geometry of
Two
by
Two Tables and Computer
Simulation of Kinship and Social
Structures."
T.Rodgers
To the editors:
·
The Junior Class is sponsoring
a 'Junior Ring Weekend'
to
be
held on March
10, 11,
and
12, 1972.
·
The Weekend will consist of a
'Sal's Nite' at the Last Chance on
Friday night for
$10.00
a couple
or
$5.00
single. Included in this price
is beer and
food
for three hours.
Saturday night wi11 feature
a
Semi-Formal Dinner Dance. The
·
price will be approximately
$25.00
per couple and the dress
will be jacket and tie. The
restaurant will
be
announced at a
later date.
On
Sunday, the
.
Ring
Ceremony
will
take place
in
the
Theater at
2:00 P.M.
and will
be
followed by a short reception. In
order to help reduce the cost
or
the_ Weekend the Class is spon-
sonng
.
a
50-50
raffle from which
the profits will
be
split 50 percent
as
prizes and
50
percent for
Junior Ring Weekend.
Much work remains
to
be done
on
Junior Ring Weekend.
U
you
are interested and would like
to
help in any way please contact
John Petraglia, S
82.
and
Joe
Cocopardo S 23. Please show
an
interest
in
attending and helping
this weekend
be
a
success.
Joe Cocopardo

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PAGE6
:
111EORCLE
MAilat
2. 1972
··
.
.
.
,
,
.

..
.
,
Top·
ic
Edu_
Ca_
·
.t.
i
.
o
__ : n
:
by
Tom
Walsh
/
-
,
.
<
,
I see him in· the morning
in
the
cafeteria; usually aro~d
nine
·
.
· Dover Plains is one name
I
have
round the Dover project
.
·citizens
.
·
to' ·
fight
,
:for
(
needed o'clock. He
sits
at the table by the window in the back where
.
the
~w
:
which has been beaten about so n totnl livhl)t
c.,perie1,ce
.'
I cannot facilities, like a
.
teen
.
center.
a
by
·
.
part
.
cf
the cafeteria
·.
starts
:
He doesn't have a whole
·
breakfast; Just
·
much, discussed and disected to
dist.-cl one se~mcnt
or the working for welfare rights, one
,
donoughtsandcofree.Hetakesalongtimeeatingandthumbsthrough
such great length thnt
it
must lll·~r:nn m,d
&ty
that this ls
the
.
becomes aquainted with the
·
·
thebookshemustuse thatday.'lguess
he
has a
9:30.
.
.
·
.
.
·
bore you just to se:c
it
~\Jo?~\in
ii\
Sl$ ..
mtmt l'm
t.~n\htR
nhK!
crroits
.
complexity of the local power
·
I
sometimes~ him in the afternoon
\\iten I
get home.
,
When
I
sit~
print.
But Oovt'r
Plains is
n mm,~
for, th~
~):l)ctt~•~
must
be
·
'
~tructure and the
·
relatedness
'Qf
the couch,
·
I
get- a really good view
or
the campus from my window.
thntdit.>Shnrd.
it
._..._'t.'1,.\S
r('nrit\R
it~
~t·~~ ~ ~
wllOlt
.
'l'tl~ lMt~
the over all rural socia}si~ation .
.
When the classes break, you get
to
see
just about everybody
.
coming
old hory hc~\d
in
l't.'l~'{\k'\i
~t,.
~1l\~U~\ lisclt,
~~
~n
~~rhmmt
-
The Dover experience is the
back-from
·
Donnelly. It's amazi~ how many times
.
you stop on that
.
trmpt~ to
l"i.'IA\,·il'tl~ ~"-\\\
~t ~t
\S \" Hx·h\~,
'-'\)\i~\
~
\\\)\'th
nil~
outside world as it lies outside the
.
walk. He
seems
to be invisible
.
Hejust walks along,
books
down
by his
.
ut
ll':tst
inl\U~
t\) ~"~\\'
~ll~~t,~
,
l
~1tts.
" l ~
~t"e
ci_~t
\)f
us boundries of Marist. ·
.
,
side with that same jacket he wears everyday
.
:
You know
who he is .
.
·
·
sl~\.l\'\1
tl~l
~ 4~~
~~~"lt
'<l.
~,~ ~~
~'ti
~"!~
lat~
~~rt-
This type of a totally inclusive
It's funny,
I
never see
him at the Pie or Last Chance. Someone told
tm'
l'\'lll~-c
~~,w.'mits\
~zti.."il
t'he
:rnent~'tn-p)~x~
\X-c~~~
~ l't.iuc:1tionul
·.
experience,

.
I
me he just stays in
.
and reacb a lot. I've
seen
him a couple
or
times
muj(.,rit~
'
\
~'1.X'<'!
r:~x~
~
irtr-
w'?i~1~
~
~t
~'Mliti~
~nd
bdi~\'\\ is needed desperately to
down the Rat though. He sits
.
at
the
table by the window in the back
by

tt~~~ ~ ~~
r;tit!i!,:.~t.
:muJ
~~
<ool-)~J..-s.
~Ni-rtimt
to
-&~);.1s_~
:Am\
~
l~n~~
the
strict fare of
the trophy case.
.
that
t-a:'\~
t«n1
1#t.
q;~
~,~ ~r~
)
ii\;~~
:a~)~
'.
kn~'l
t~'M'i~

~'lP
~~dl'mks.
Din."Ct involvement
It's really a shame,
I
guess he doesn't
know
what he's missing.
I
f~t
t~"'~~tg!
fli~~-
:Jis
tiN!

nl\<.,.tlitt
!
is
:a
~~
ih6t1r
'
Nh
:
iNt"tio'nal
'e)....
\Xith
i.ll.ttsi~
rrolity
sharpens the
guess he's never had thechanceto liay amateur psychologist over a six
of
fa~
~.sll~
~t-.~ ~,·
ttb
ti~
;fllit
;
iente
<#h-0
t
tne
~~'ns ~n,('d
~~kmics,
·
~hinJ,?
·
it ,-?realer
pack of Maximus
! or
.
experienced that _really sick _feel~g in th~ gut
.
t...wiJi~
,
Qi'[
t.i~
ll:'-Ot~ihb. \.~. tihe :art
1
h-Ot
tu,
l
t-t:
i
f
MM
i
rn ;an.y
~).t
\~~lion
~md
rele,•ance to the
after
a
quart of
cheap
wine,
or
wake
up
m
the mormng
with
nothing
to
P•~®r~ ·wJlm<li~N
-
~ii~ttl!,·
iiti\tbHtNi
~ k
_-!Fht':~iitv~n.)b,-e't
'f'l~~
~h)\~nt-s \'lWn \ifo.
do but go
beck
to deep, or
even
better, remember no_~ng
at
all.
'lbose
ii.?.
tb~J?l~t~otiltfutipt1i.i~1ii1¢!l\.ut
,
:illlifiit.its;J'l'l)p)~
.
ibfii'ldi~.
lhcl'C
·
l'\~ :alw~~
bl-en
impressed
really are the
good
times, aren't they?
.
·
,
·
.
.
'
·
·
l.M•,~1ta11ti..~i&H;tttili%CN~
-
tmiliin
'$
ihk'lliijn~mii
-
~
-iitMti(ln
'O'f
ttliC
with
Anti~ Coll~~
in Ohio
I
wonder what
his
good times are. But,
then
who would know?
_
Ex-
al:ll
lii~l!1~
tfM~·
,
,;,;iil
~Niti1iue
1
,rall.c~•
:Jts(ilf
.
i
is
:a ~b~,
'0Jh1cll
:whkh
-alt~rnates ·
academic
ccpt maybe us.' You know who he is.
·
~
-
w.:~~m
t_
f~l\;o~
:
m~~~t,thl~i~m ~Ni Iii
=~rt>r
~
~xpt!i.~~
~'n
:a ·
~n~~
with
Gn. the
scenework
tit
til(t

nu~t
Q{f
\,1.th1it
~ms
.a
~l~rNim.
~
!f1l{'t
,
(if
:t.lt".A1
tor
1ts~tudc11ts,
tmlon.."d
to
fit
the
som~tim~~
¼tt~uu,11
i
i11diNit~
'
pti,•t>1'-t~·
:
is
l
Jh•t>ll
ldJI.Y
l" ~,
~s
'«~
~~bjcc~ m3ttcr
tht.w're
studying.
the~:
i~
at1
l ~ t
~
~iih11ik>1;s
-~1•
.
with!t.he~®)tw.~
lli,-c
bcre
\\'h:at~,-er ~,cademic
subject the
Iw-!til~
Qut; ii1:
~"\o\-it>r.
l
Jf
: i ~
:.'1Nltt~it-0r:thdit"~.h'J1dr-dn
,
P.-,..;~
~
~udeot
is
im·olved
.
in is thus
Dovet
·
adit.:ttt
<..~lllt
~
IRT~
~
1
rrn~
:t-c
~,;;,-ci~-,
~~
'O.'")C
tc..-stt.'<I
llllt
l,.leriodically
in
the
repat
i
tiiltls
an(iJ
~~I®
.
:
it
:
~
,
Mn
~tn
lD
::unik•..-st:J.n..1 St,
By
oub-ide testinJ? ground.
The
reeause.
tire,
~11...":t
1~1
ti~
-m:-
·wo"N:i~
iiTJ
~
~.x"(8'1
~nim-er
lc..--s."'llns
lt\.•m1ed
there
can
then
be
periecc~
fs-
SQi
dlffjj:.."Jiltt..QK..~ti~1~.
:&inN)'J. ~-
~l'.m-pti~ ~.:,
"-~.anire
~lpplicd
to the normal academic
'

J
8
.
' ,·
;
Sffilester.
I
would hope that the
\
.
·
...
·
_:
administration and faculty
·
..
··
members
who
will
determine
.
ths
o!t~
C'~~e Byrnes
future course of academics at


Marist
will
provide greater op-
portunities for an expanded
concept of education to grow.
Philip Morris
If
you heard that
a ~ -
Kt'\in K ~ play
the
roles
01
inexperienced as a commercial
God
and
Satan.
Their
unusual
playwrij?ht. was planning
to
\\Tite presentation adds new slants and
a play based on the Book of Job. exciting interpretations to the
■----------­
chances are you'd feel sorry for age_ old story
.
Shower
Freak
·
BATESVILLE, Ark. (CPS) -
Carl Farina, an Arkansas College
freshman. stepped out
·
of the
shower at
5
p.m. last Monday
with
a
new , world record for
staying under the shower the
longest.
"Taking showers is a favorite
pastime of mine anyway," he
remarked.
"I
have taken
11
showers in
·
one day and average
around
5
a day
.
"
Farina stayed under the spray
for 72 hours, 9 minutes, beating
the old record as listed by the
.
.
.
Guinness
Book
of World Records
as
72
hours and
8
minutes.
.
··
:
.
"I
could have stayed longer,'' :
Gregory
·
.
.
.
·
·
·
House:
·
has
been
awarded
.
to
LIVING-LEARNING
EXPERIENCE
him. But this idea would
be
a
Make your plans now to witness
misconception as you will see a rather "unique" experience in
when Archibald MacLeish's the theater. As usual, tickets are
Pulitzer prize winner,
"J
.
B." free to Marist students. Ths
·
Box
.
opens at Marist. March
23, 24,
Office hours will be posted s<>Qn
'.
25th at
8:30
P.M; in the theater.
.
Production meetings for
.
the
)
.
.

The
_
plaY,}:p!n~cted i_n ~odern T~c~nical workers ~ill \le he~d
.
~
(
'"
-~~,~ ••
<>i
•"
\\m~-s
-:-.,.
\t
--
,~
;-
an
·•
~xam,~at,on
,
of
·.
th,sweek.-1{
you
are
.
mterested
m
-
~/1
,,
why
man should seemingly
be
working on costumes;
'
props,
..
he said;
,
.
t
but the
>
-
college
was
charging
':r
ne a:oouar
·
.
an
houHor
.-
·
;_
~he watei
{
bvaiMising and all
.:
the
:.
:
·
rrioriefwe
·
couldraise was
$55."
-
·
...
,
.
:/;!/'>
made to suffer without reason. · house. publicity, sets, lights,
or
·
·
Paul Tesoro plays the role o
J.B.
any
··
other phase of the show,
and Nancy Thomas plays her ht~ please see Bro
.
Lanning or Mr.
wife Sarah. Tony Scarrone and Britt
.
'
L
>
r
--:
·:
;:.
1'.
'
;
t
•/
'f
, '
...
,
..
..
..
.
.
5 0 ,
-
0
,
0
O
<:
·
JO
;
S
UMME.R EMPL
·
OYME-N
·
T
c
A
REE
R
.
·
OP
P
,
o
R
-
ru
·
N
.
lT
,
Y
PROG
.
RAMS
....
The National Agen~y Of Student Employment Has Rece~tly
Completed A Nationwide R~search Program Of Jobs Available
To
College Students And Graduates During
1972. Catalogs Which
-
Fully Describe These Employment Positions
/1/v:Jy
Be
Obtained
As
-
Fol lows:
·
·
(
)
(
)
(
)
Catalog of S
_
ummer and Career Positions Avaiiable
Throughout the United States in Resort Areas
.
,
-National Corporations, and Regional Employment
Centers. Price
$3.00.
.
Foreign Job Information Catalog Listing Over
1,000
Employm_ent Positions Availabl~
in
/1/v:Jny Foreign
Countries. Price
$3.00.
SPECIAL: Both of the Above Combined Catalogs With
A Recommended Job Assignment To Be Selected
For
Yoo. Please State Your Interests. Price
$6
1
00.
.
Notional Agency of Student Employment
Student Services Division
#35
Erkenbrecher
Cincinnati,
Ohio 45220
Upon
·
breaking
..
the
_
world's ·
,
.
record,
-
'Farina i~ediately
took ·
a
shower and werit to bed;
WASHINGTON,
:
i>
.
c.
·
<CPS{ -
.
···
s
·
..
·. .
.
·.
' .
TheSeiective Service System has
.
·
.· .
·.·
-
.
..
·
u
· .
.
·
':
m
··
·
.
.
:
.
m
'
·
.
e
·
..

r
·
·
.
.
cancelled outstanding
.
induction
-
notices
that
would soon
g~
to
-
11,000
;
an
_
d placed them
-
.
as
well
•:
·

J
'
·
·
b
.

· ·
·
.
· ··. ·
-
·
·
as
all of the
115,000
members
of
.
·
::
Q
.
·
.
S
~
;

·
~1ecii1l
2 G~:J:11
~efn
.:.ri1:!t~
·
:
There
-
are
<
opportunities
.
for
priority
:
draft
·
group,
. ·
tbtis
.
'
college students to wor~ in
.
justifying Secretary
,
of Defense
Feder
.
al
.
agencies
.
during the
Melvin
.
.
··
Laird's
December
'
Summer of 1972 in New York and . remark that there would be no
.
·
oth~r
cities.
St~deilts may qualify
.
inductions during the first three
.
·
for employment either
011
their
months
-
of-1972'.
·
. .
; .
. ..
_
·:
.
·
cumulative
·
·
index or on
·
the
.
·.·.
Selective

Service Chief Curtis
Summer
.
Employment
W
.
Tarr instructed
local boards
:-
.
Examination;
To
be
able to take · to take the actions on Feb.
8 .
.
.
·
this examination, the student
•.
Affected
.
byJhe order
are
men
must:
.
.
· ·
whme original
:1911-
induction
.
·
File by February 2, 1972
;
'for
·
dates
were postponed
"to
the first
test on March
n,
-.
1972.
• .
..
·
call in 1972," or "until further
Studen~ who have completed
notice." and those
.
whose
in-
·
.
·
at least two years of college and
duction postponements were
wish to compete on the basis of
schedul~ to
.
expire
ori
a specific
their grade point average rather
date prior
·
to April
l.-
Post-
than
,
take the written test, may
ponements scheduled
·
to
_
expire
apply up to March
11, 1972.
later than that are not affected by
More information
on
summer
the
action.
·
employment iri federal agencies
Tarr also
·
announced that
is available in the Career lottery number
.
200
would be the
·
Library. Placement
.
Office,
temporary
,
"administrative
Room·
100.
Donnelly Hall.
.
·
·
ceiling for men facing
.
the draft

.
John Sherlock during the rest of 1972.
.
·Playboy Ad Too?
·
Hopefully,
though;
we'll reach the people
we
want faster this way
.
(actually, we can't afford
the
"Playboy" ad).
·
.
Wedo want
you
to
know about
m ...
Marist Brothers-teaching in Coleman
High
School
Our
Lady
«
Lourdes, Archbishop Molloy, MoWJt Saint
Michael,
Cluist
the
King,
Saint Agnes', Saint Mary's, Bishop Dubois
and
Saint Helena's. We're
also
around
the
USA: Florida, Texas, Georgia New Jersey
Michigan-not
to
mention the 10,000 other Marists scattered about
h
globe.
.
.
.
What
do
we do? You name it!
In
the USA, we're primarily involved
in teaching and cwnseli~
high
school students ... but, we do have
Brothers engaged in other apostolates.
We like
to
think we're keeping pace
with
an ever-changing
world-
open to
new
ideas,
new
apos~tes ... Where are
'Vie
needed? What's
to
be
done?"
·
Interested?
li
you
are,
we're plaMi~ a weekend "get-together''
this April. upstate in Esopus, New York-just
to
sit around and talk
about
the
whole idea .•• and
to
see
how
really interested
}'OU
are .
'..'
I
..
··-
--
··
·
·
t



































































































































-
·-
~
---:,----------~----------------------------
MAllCII 2, 1972
·
111£
CIRCLE
l.atin American Studies
PrQgrarh
i
~pproved
,
·
.,EdKIM•m~
.
Th~
.
program

in
Latin
·
:
pe~Mel
_
of these iwo depart-
Year Abroad to a maximum of
15
American
·
Studies
was
approved
.
· ·
ments
will
<
be
·
involved
.
in hours lstudents
.
will probably
.

by
:
the faculty" last Frida
·
y,
teachinf! the history
.
civilization.
·
take
30.
of which the LASP
will
February
25.
.
..
,
,
·
·
·
literature
.
and ~panish language rec~nize
15)
-
15
hrs
.
.
.
·
Latin American
-
Studies is courses .
.
·
.
· .
.
.
·
·
IV. Electives
.
A total of six ad-
- '
meant as an adjunct
·
or com-
.
Th~ requirements wiU consist ditional hours
_
·
from approved
·
·
panion
<
study
.
.
to a

student's
.
of
the
followinf!:
courses in the Department of
major.In line with the thinlting of
_ ·
})
.
a
.
minimum of thirty-six Foreif!n Lanf!uaJ?es and the
-
the
'.
n
.
ew curriculum. it is an at-
·
credits in c_ourses relating to
-
Department of History and
tempt
-
to
·
coordinate' course
·
of-
.
.
,
Latin Amerjcan studies exclusive Political· Scie:-:ce and such of-
ferings with se~eral areas ofthe
:
'
of;Spanish lan1:?ua,ze courses.
ferinl=!~ as may be developed
·
in
.
curricuhim and to combine these

·
2)
Achievement of fluency in AnthropoloJ.!,y
.
SocioloJ.!,y. etc. In
with off-campus leaming
'
ex
~
Spanish: ·
this categorym~y be included the
'.
perience in a .foreign country.
·
3)
Third year residence in a Special Topics course for
.
'.fhe
.
program is designed to Latin American university
.
students who may
.
want to
broaden
the
,
student
'
s Specific
.
Requisites
'
.
become involved
i
n
·
an off
-
backgroundinthegeneralarea
of )
.
;
l)epartment of
.
Foreign campus program of community
La
.
tin
-
american studies
.
The Languages
·
activity
.
.
-
6
hrs.
living experience in a l..a~in-
.
SPAN
.
838
:.
Latin American
·
TOTAL
·
NUMBER

OF
American country will bring the
.
Literature
3
hrs. and
1
course CREDITS REQUIRED
·
_
36
hrs
.
student into first-hand contact
·
from the following:
_
The existing courses.
·
which
.
,
·
with the people and the culture of
Civilization of Latin America
.
will form the nucleus of the
one specific area of Latin
Civilization of Puerto Rico
·
program have already been
America.
·
In addition, the student
.
Civilization of Spain
3
hrs
.
referred to. other courses will be
will achieve
.
a high degree. of
• . Subtotal : 6 hrs.
.
added to the proJ?ram and these
.
fluency in the Spanish language
,
.
II. Department of History and
.
will be in the areas of J!reater
both through courses taken at Political Science ·
specialization
.
The principal'.
Marist and the daily exposure'"'to
HIST
.
348:
History of Latin question is which method for
the language in a La\in American America I 3 hrs.
teaching specialized courses has
country.
.
_
.
HIST
.
349
:
History of Latin themosttooffer. The approaches
·
The Latin American studies America
U
3
hrs.
.
·
·
chosen have been limited to two
:
program is envisioned as a joint
·
HIST.
8_03 :
·
In
_
ter
-
American geographical studies and topical
operation of the Department of Relations
3
hrs.
studies.
·
History and the Spanish section
·
Subtotal
c
9
hrs.
of Modern Languages. Actual
Ill.
Courses taken during Third
'
Black Weekend:
·
by
Michael Will
_
iams
An Aftermath
'.
The BlackWeekend, whicllwas and beginning a new pr~sence
.
as though the snow was occurring
held February
.
,
18-20
was a
.
The Black W~kend was an in-
as a
"special challenge,"
beautiful display ofBlack'Power
.
.
spiration to
all
those involved
;
necessitating by its
.
presence an
When
I
say Black Power, I-mean the exchange of communications excellence of craft. integrity and
·
power:
:
the
,
pow~rto
accumulate
.
withcommunitypeople()utsideof
_
"knowhow.'-'
.
/
k
n
owledge
.
·;_
(knowhow)
•~·-
and
·
.

Ma
·
rist
·,
was
~
.also
·
"
a
i
refreshirig
·
:
.
·
I,would also like
to
mention the
. ·,
combine it as
:
a workable force .
.
change
.
The students who par
-'
factthattheRS
.
U
,
did not make
·.
The
.:
B.S:U
:
·
_
realized that
.
they

ticipated
.
in
.
.
the
.
various a substantial amount of money
·
.
:
were going against !'tough odds
/'
categories i11 the Talent Show <return> to handle various bills
.
This,thefirstweekeridsinc~
:
196~
,
were very sociable and easy
.
to made payable to B
.
S
:
U
.
'
Many
was seemingly a doubtful success work with.
.
.
people seem
·
to feel that the
-
in niany people's eyes
,
'
But the
The snow was definitely
·
a B.S.U. took in a lot of "cash."
;
integrity of the B
.
S.U: won out
-.
negative aspect of
-
the Black Again I would like to rem
i
nd all
.
and
.
the Black Weekend
.
.
hap- Weekend: itlessened the crowd those concerned about the snow:
.
pened
.
This
.
was definitely
.
and caused many technical It caused problems!! Th.erefore.
positive. The residents of Benoit problems. On Saturday night, for it may be possible that certain
·
,
House were noticably more jolly example, it· was cl,ifficult to get bills will
be
unpaid witil a future
and happy with the knowledge of the bands scheduled
to
play at the date. .
'
the upcoming weekend
. ·
.
·
dance in the campus cafeteria.
I would like to take this op-
.
,.
The display of willingness '.l'hesnow also made it impossible
.
portunity to give special thanks
sho\Vtl during the week preceding
.
for many students to get
to
the to Joseph
.
M. Stokes for his
·
the Black Weekend was very dance
.
However
,
t_he snow did initiation of the Black Weekend
.
.
encouraging .to
·
everyone. The make everyone pull

~gether and and to all other
.
persons who were
.
B.S
.
U
.
\Vas s~ngly reviving exert more "elbow grease." Helt helpful in planning or aiding the
D
.
.

.

.
.

1

·
.
weekend
.
The stude!)ts of the
.
-
-.
1
·
s
· _·
c
-
.
·
1
P
·
.
·
1
n
·
·-
e
rh:i~
·
~;:::i:~~~
a~;o
~~u~1~k
.
.
Weekend
.
Many people sacrificed
·
·
.
Co
c
lllmittee
.
~·~:~;~~~~x~:!
-.·
·
.
.
·.
.
by Mic~aelHamgan
.
_
-
.
.
.
Unknown to most
.
students
,
ouestions as:
-
Where does the
WM CR N
there is
.
a
group
which has been resporisibility for security of
ews
reviewing many different aspects
·
dorms
.
rest .
..
with the PersoMel
ofthe problems of discipJine and staff and-or Security'? arid Is the
student rights
·
on this campus .
.
present system for students only,
Director
·
This committee calls itself -the or is it for everyone on campus?
·
Student-Faculty Discipli
_
ne
·
ror
the futW'e, the group
\\'.ill
WMCR,
Marist College Radio
Committee.
It
is comprised of, at continue to study the various
640AM. has recently appointed
present; the following members: p~oblems ~nd w~ll follow
.
this
up
Jim Naccariato
as
news director
Dean
Thomas Wade, Dr. George
.
wtth a d1scusSJon among the
.
. , .
.
. ·
McAlonie, Dr.
K_.
Desilets,

Bro
.
Hol.L5es, the Commuter Union and
·
Jim s J~b is to gather and write
Patrick Forsyth, Fred Lambert, others, with the understanding
the na~ional,
_
l~al
.
and cam1_>us
Linda Cloer, Thomas
P.
Mc
-
and approval of those
-
who will
news, m addition to sched1;11!ng
-
Donald, and Michael Harrigan .
.
It
·
work and
_
live with it required for the newcasts and adverbsmg
has
·
been meeting weekly since
·
any final proposal.
·
spots_. Last week
WMCR
also
November
.
This Committee has come a o~tamed
a
brand-n
_
ew
At first. the group began
tong
way. but actually it is
jus~ a
microphone, a tremendous 1m-
reviewing the Passport for start
..
With the many and vaned pr~ve~ent over the old one,
possible weaknesses in the changes being undergone on and which fmallyfad~ away for
good
philosophy of discipline and the by this campus, tllere is a definite last Wendesday mght.
procedures of Due
Process.
The need for groups such as this one . In a few weeks,
~CR
<~eally
Committee also met with Town
or
to evaluate different areas of the Just yo~ lru_ly)
1~
plaf!Rmg a
Poughkeepsie Police Lieutenant community from the smallest ra_m~
m
conJtmct~on with the
Richard Hellman, and discussed tmit
up
to the College Cotmcil in Insh famous ~ay
m
March, so
the many
facets
of
the order
to
obtain the full benefit for watch out ~or it.. <Ho";?about a
relationship of the college with which they were intended. It is bo~e of
~~~
w~key
·
· >k .
civil authorities
.
also imperative that everyone
.
e
~
e
s we~
is _a
R
ti
·
reviewing the realire that knowing one's rights htUe mixed up, but basically rs
we:n~
:r°
the
Due
Process
is
an
important
part
of one's th
e
~a~e
a~
last
week's.
Next
S t
th
Committee education
·
\\--e«:k.
I II bnng you the complete
ys em.
e
.
.
·
revised schedule.
developed such interestmg
PAGEJ
Stuart
Gross
Alternatives
The purpose of this column
.
'
,,
.
is to . . . .
·
New feature for this week;
Marist College Hitter Award.
This award
goes
to the person
who best illustrates the in-
fantilism that pervades (un-
fortunately) among a small
element
.
of the Marist Com-
munity. This person has shown
above all his inability to com-
municate in other than a physical
manner his feelin~s or attitudes .
llnlike other awards ~iven by this
l'Olumn • the person needs help
.
Hitter of the week award J?oes
to
:
Student Dave Phillips. (Pip)
From the Preface of: Dealer :
"First
I
must state a bias:
I
believe that illeJ?al drugs should
be
lc,zalized for
·
adults. and
l'Ontrolled • either in the manner
of alcohol. or by doctor's
prescription
as
are
am-
phl•tmnines. barbituates. and the
r<.•st or tht• ·medicines.· or by any
other 1m•thod which is reasonable
:md
appropr
i
ate.
I
do not wish
ht•rt•
to argue the intricacies of
these t'Ontrols. precisely what
tht•y mil!ht
be
for which drug.
how they might be
·
designed and
brought about
:
the aim should be
simply to allow adults to ingest
what they will so long as they
don't hurt anybody else.
We do
this for alcohol - there arc laws
a,zainst drunk driving and so on.
It
should not be beyond our
imagination to do the same for
the other substances. and some of
the illeJ!al one
::
arc probably less
harmful in
all
ways than some
legal ones.
·
.
The point is that the excesses of
violence. criminality. and profit
described in the following pages
meal er
I
derive not from the
drugs th~mselvcs.
'
but
.
from
the
legal prohibition oft.heir
use;
it is
the
·
crime. much more than the
-
'
drugs. which is damaging our
society.
I am not proselytizing for drug
use. nor do I condone the violence
and criminality. I
·
am only
. suggesting
a
pruning
of
hypocrisy so.that our perception
of reality in the matter may
ripen.
.
Rip-Off of The Week:
Goes
to
some unknown students who cost
the Community an additional
$.15.67
to replace a window in a
dormitory
.
We pay - not them.
In the last few years, concern
with the dangers of population
J.!rowth and its interrelation with
environmental destruction has
increased
·
dramatically.
A
pro~ram
POPULATION-
ENVIRONMENT
STATE
GOVERNMENT INTERN
PROGRAM for College Students,
is being made available through
Dr.
Michaelson
.
The program
sponsored by the Population
Institute in Washington
,
D.C.
wishes to
be
made aware of
legislation by the individual
states concerned with for-
mulatinl!
.
explicit population
policies. The student . will
research
population-related
policies in the three branches of
~ovcrnm
e
nt
:
1.
Legislative
branch
.
2.
Executive branch, and
:1
.

Judicial branch
.
Duration of
the prol!ram is one semester
.
Stipends
will
be awarded up
to
$:
mo
.
oo
.
to co
v
er costs of tran
-
sportation etc.
If
interested
please contact me through Box C
m:t
And
1
will arrange for you
·
to
receive
a
complete
·
guideline on
the program.
.
Mr. Richard Bala: Con-
.
vcTSat,ons can never end,
.
if
·
1hcy'vc
·
ncvefbegun
:-
·-
· -
~
-..
.
,
.
·
An
thoughts Welcome.
-
'
·
.
..
M
·
ath
·
·
Lecture
.
.
.
.
.
.
The Environmental S~ience
Department and the Department
of Mathematics at Marist College
is sponsoring a lecture on March
2.
.
1
_
972
by Professor Frank
Hoppensteadt on
·
the "Theory of
Epidemics
.
'' Th
e
lecture will ·be
given at
8:00
P.M.
in room
249
of
the Campus Center
. •
This lecture which is part of th
Environmental Lecture Series is
made poss
i
ble through the
Visiting Lecturer Program of th
Society for Industrial and Ap-
_
plied Mathematics with financial
support from the National
Science Foundation-
.
This is the
thirteenth year for this program
whose purpose is to promote a
deeper
...
understanding
01
Careers from p,
·
2
both group ana geogr
_
apmc
locations.
Of the more specific
·
in-
formation requested were ...
Psychology
-
19
percent;
Business-
13
percent; English -
13
percent;
Math -·
9
percent;
American Studies -
9
percent;
History -
8
percent; Special
<Teachers') Education -
7
·per-
cent; Economics -
5
percent;
Bioloj!y -
5
percent
;
Spanish -
5
percent; Political Science -
2
percent; French -
2
percent;
Pre-
law -
2
percent; and Computer
Science -
2
percent. Medical
school, nursing, copyrighting,
layout and design, veterinary
school,
library
science
chemistry and Jaw e,1forcement
also came up specifically. Ten
percent of
the
responses
requested continuing placement
information. and ten percent
asked for information on
a
possfble student seminar. Those
students \\-ho requested the more
specific information concerning
matnemaucs
.
in
.
tne gene,,u
scientific
·
and industrial com-
munit.v
.
The
inter-relation
of
,mathematics and environmental
-
problems
_
provides
.
the
.~otivation. f~r. this lecture.
_
. Professor Frank Hoppensteadt
received his Ph.D. from the
University of Wisconsin
._
and is
-
presently an Associate
.
Professor
·
of Mathematics in the
_
Elec-
.
-
tromagnetic Research Division
of
the
-
Courant
.
··
Institute.
.
His
research has included in
-
vestigations of various singular
perturbation problems for or-
dinary and partial differential
equations and o mathematical
models
·
of
epidemic
and
population dynamics.
placement were asked to visit the
Placement Office
,
for each
person holds varying interests
and thus can adequately be in-
formed by individual assistance
alone. The response to the
student seminar. just as last
year
'
s response similarly in-
dicated, was not enough to
arrange such a course.
Any group of students who
might be interested in holding an
open forum in any one area (e
.
g
.
-
Psychology) is asked to contact
Mr
.
John Sherlock, and it can
easily be arranged (perhaps with
outside professional speakers).
Anyone wishing to seek any
further placement infonr.ation
(!!,rad schools, careers, financial
aid, etc.)
,
or order the above
materials <except "Planning
Your Future">. can
~Tile
CBox
C
212
campus) or visit the
Placement Office at leisure. All
ideas for improvements in this
field
'";n
be deeply appreciated
.








































l
}
I
.Will
Circle
Speci81 . . .
"You· can't (:all
.
-
.
:
- .John·
Redmond a.Jock".
by Stuart
Gross . ·
,
. ·
.
John Redmond· the recent.
John:. ·wrestling· is
a
good
District N
.A.I.A.
Wrestling equalizer, there are - very· few
Olampion at the 190 poWld class, cheap shots.
It
is also a discipline
doesn't fit the role. . ·. ·
and contrary to thoughts about
The
description
of
a "JOCK" is sports,
much
of
it
is· .
. the du~b . _
athlete,' who is in- psychological ~ith a great deal of
capable · of tying · his own· concentration necessary." .
sneakers,- they probably exist . Circle staff: "What
is
meant by
but, John isn't one of them.
.· ·_puUing weight?" ,
-
John who likes the outdoors and
John: There are numerous
.. ·. 'DIE
CIRCLE'
MARCH2zl97Z
writes, ·is an Environmental · weight classes and for a wrestler
Science major. Besides the to qualify he must weigh a cer-
gr1,1eling aspect of wrestling .tain amount.
I
origina)]y weighed
practice, there is the task of lab 230 lbs. and am down to 190 lbs.
work for.his courses. John has a now. The difference in my two
very pleasant way,and alontwith weights is what
I
have "J)Ulled"
-his , unpretentious · manner or given up in order to wrestle at
Clarke
sh_oots over defense-in
Siena
G~e as
Scott
and Chenery move for rebound.·
created an interest by the Circle
190
lbs."
.
. staff. Circle Staff:
."In
one word . Circle Staff: ','How much can
. how would you describe your- you weight in between mat-
self."
.
ches?"
·
John: "Independent, I like. to
John:
"I
can gain as much as
feel and be as independent as the ten pounds prior to a match and
situation allows. I like to be in lose it by weigh-in time.
coritrol and wrestling gives me
The Circle staff would like to
the opportunity."
· thank you and wish you luck in
Circle Staff: "Why did yo1,1 go the up-coming Nationals in
into wrestling?"
Klamath Falls.
JOHN
REDMOND
Bowling ·League
Begins __
The ·circle
K
Club of Marist
ColleRe began the first of six
weeks of bowling league com-
petition at the Hoe Bowl Lanes
last Tuesday, with Bob Lynch
pacinR the Keglers with a
resounding 245 game. Bob also
added
180
and
--163
to take in-
dividual high series
(588).
· George DiCarluccio posted 201,
. John Berback rolled 199 and
Kevin Butriok hit
191,
while Mike
Smith
(5261
and Pete Sekae (506)
chipped in second and third high
series.
· Three teams are tied for first:
'l'his RiJ?ht Here .. Ball Busters
and Zoo No.
1.
Each have three,
points.
Anyone interested in the league
is welcomed to sign up and one
. more team is ~eeded. Contact
Mike Smith·; room
506
Leo,
or Box
i58L.
-
·
N.A:1.A.
Starts
Monday
by Jim
Voelker
Six Seniors Pray in
Home ,Finals
For the
fourth
year in
a
row the
Red Foxes will participate in the
· N.A.I.A.
District 31 basketball
championships. The tournament
. Ori
Friday night, the Mari~t
.
is
a
sq-ong defensive player. One wiUbe held at Monmouth CQUege
College Basketball team will play attribute which is never inen-
on Monday. ·March .. 6th and
their. last Iiome game of - the tioned on the court is team spirit. Tuesday. March -7th. There will
· season· against Albany. State at In · that -department. Jim is a be four schools including Marist
· Our Lady of Lourdes H.S. For six leader. This has proven
to
be
a . who · wiU · compete for the
Marist seniors: it
will
be their last valuable asset. ·
championship title. The schools
,·home game.
Duri11g
the last four
Brian McGowan- After two are as- follows:
m
Monmouth_,
-
years, these six players have .years ·as a reserve. Brian has _ColleJ!e
·
l2)
Marist College (3)
been the main drivil'llt force in the finally become a starter.
.
An Glassboro State and (4) Rut~ers
Marist Bas.ketball- ·Program._ excellent shooter; Brian is often
They are as follows:
- the. spark whk:h separates vic-
1::.es Chenery-
Les
came to tory · from defeat. Brian's main
Marist by way of Concordia contribution is his ability.
to
react
Junior College last year and has in the clutch;
·
been starting at·guard ever since
Joe·Scott-
joe
is the leader off·
then. Although only 5'11" he•
.
and on the court. Joe has broken
makes up for lack of size by every Marist reboumijng record
· quickness. -··
P.e
has been nam~ ami almost every scoring record.
to
E.C.A.C. all-star
team
this Heis_currentlytheteam leader in
season. Lester's main asset is scormg,
(18.3
ppg;)
and
that of controlling the offense. rebounding
(20)
a
game. He was
Lester.has the-unique ability of selected to the E.C.A.C. weekly
always
being in
control of the team three times this season. He
situation.
.
.
,has been All Conference · twice
.. Ray Clarke- Ray
has
been the and has been· a starter since his
team's starting
guard
for the
last
Freshman year.
three seasons. Last
year
he was
Steve. Shackel- The team's
selected
to
the E.C.A.C. team of most unselfish player. This
the year as wen·as being named season he has been valuable as a
to
All-Conference Team. Ray was "sixth" man. He is a very smart
also named to·the All-Conference ballplayer, who reacts to almost
last
season.
This season Ray has any situation. He has been named
been
holding.
the
offense and to E.C:A.C. weekly team this
defense together by his solid season and
seems
to
be
im-
play. Currently, he is the team's proving with every game.
.
. second leading scorer (14.4).
·
In co11clusion, to say that these .
Jim Corsentina- For the past seniors will be sorely missed
three seasons, Jim has
been
a
would be an understatement.
valuable reserve man. Many With them goes a Marist tradition -
times Jim has
been
called in
to
d,uinnuig.
which
makes
one
hope
play forward.
J~n moved
to
can
be carried on.
·
JZUard and then moved
back
to
Foxes
·
Prepare
For··Tourney
The Marist College basketball
team faces a strong Albany State
quintet. Friday night at Our Lady
of Lc)urdes high school. The Red
Foxes are curre~tly 16-6 overall
and will be competing in the
N.A.I.A. District 31 Cham-
pionship at Monmouth College
March 6th and 7th .
Senior Captain Joe Scott
continues to lead the team in
scoring 08.3) and rebowiding
c20.0> Senior Ray Clarke (14.4)
and Freshman Mike Hart 00.1{
are the team's other double
figure scorers.
The game. against Albany had
originally been scheduled for
Tuesday, Feb.
29,
but due to
scheduling difficulties, had been
changed to Friday. The Danes
come into the game with a 14-5
. record and are led by Senior John
Quatcocchi, with an 18.0 ppg
average. This is the third
meeting of these two teams with
both teams holding a victory.
Last season the Foxes defeated
the Danes at Albany
88-66.
Scott Makes
IE. C.A.
C.
for
Th-ird
-Time
. · .. · Joseph
Sc~tt; Senior
captain
of ..
'23 rebounds to··Jead
Marist
tcHui
thE? .. ·Marist.
CoUege-- Varsity easy 88-63 victory. Joe continued
Basketball .Team, has , been his scoring spree with 25 points
named ,to the Eastern Athletic and_
22
rebotmds in
a
disap-
College Conference's weekly
~11
pointing loss at the hands of Siena
East
Team
for
a
third time this .
71-69. .
On
Saturday • night Joe
season.
capped a .
fruitful
week by con-
- Joe
was selected to the weekly tributing 24 points · and· 22
team on the -basis of his per-
rebounds in leading · Marist to an
formances against Brooklyn,
upset over Southhampton College.
Siena and Southhampton College.
72-68.
·
In those three contests; Joe _ joe is currently the team's
scored 69 points and pulled down
leading . scorer (18.3)
and
67- rebounds.
·
·
·
rebounds (20.0) and is one ofthe
Against Brooklyn College, Joe · main ingredients to Marist's fine
scored210points and pulled down
16-6
season.
at Camden.
-
The Red Foxes were
defeated by Monmouth in
regular
season play by a score . of- 7fHl6.
With the team at its
peak.
the
score of that · game· may be
reversed at the Championships.
Last year's tournament. saw
Marist ·go into the finals, only to
be
defeated by .GJassboro, . who
. will be defending champions at
Monmouth this year. Although
the
Red
Foxes have never won
the championship, this year will,
hopefully change these results.
If
Marist wins the tournament, they
will
go
on to · the National
Championship which will be held
at Kansas City,-Mo.
forward
again.
Jim
has
tremendous
jumping
ability
and
The Seniors: Les Chenery, Ray Clarke, Steve Shackle, Joe Scott, Jim Consentino !i_nd Coach Ron
Pttto
VI
'
..


9.19.1
9.19.2
9.19.3
9.19.4
9.19.5
9.19.6
9.19.7
9.19.8