Skip to main content

The Circle, March 25, 1971.pdf

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 8 No. 9 - March 25, 1971

content

\
VOLUME 8, NUMBER. 9
·· M~RIS'f
COLLEGE,-POUGHKEJ!PSIB;NEW-YORK
·12601.
''·MARCH
2S,
·
1971

·
aris:t
.Year
.At
Home
·
Attend Workshop Tomorrow
BY
JUDSON QUIAOIT
BY BERNARD MULLIGAN
' ..
l
· Marist
College is stiJl a young Program would stimulate a .. · Perhaps one of .the most
,
im: would truly have to be ignorant
Classes ·
enough school to have toworry higher level of co·mmunication port.ant events in the history of not to sense the seriousness of
3. Mr. V. Toscano-Discussion
about whether it will "sink or between faculty and . students what we ca11 "educatfon" at these problems· which confront · Groups
swim."
A
group ·of· deeply in- because its very nature demands M~rist College
~vill
occur this_ our community daily in and out of
4.
Dr. M. Michelson-Beyond the
terested ·students are trying to participation on the part of both.
Friday. The Mar1st Workshop on . Donnelly Ha~L It is. imperative . Classroom
see to it that Marist not only Students -would be· more. in- · Education will bring together all that your
.
voice· be heard ·
9:45~11:30
workshop~,
8
groups
swims, but is able- to walk on terested in their education · segments
of
the community -
tomorrow
O
attend the workshop!
of faculty, administration and ·
water! We do,not want to see ·because of their personal in-
stud~nts,
faculty- and ad-
T'!e sch,edule js as follows:
student representatives
·
Marist plod along as an average volvement in it -- i.e. their per-
ministration - to discuss two of .
9:00-9:3!),
Panel Session in large_ .
12:00-1:30,
-Lunch
.
American College. Marist has sonal evolvement of it.
More · the most important issues in . lecture hall in Donnelly.
1 :45-2: 15,
Panel Session in
the potentialto be exceptional but importantly, both students and 'education today -
te~ching ·
Speakers
-1.
Dr. D.A. Drennen-
large lecture hall in Donnelly
only if the Marist Commu_nity faculty would be involved in a techniques and ihe evaluation of Lecture Method .
.
.
Speakers _
1.
Mr. K. Donohue-
becomes involved, and makes process of learning. w_hich classroom· l>erformance. One
2.
Mr. Pat Parcells-Meaningful Meaning of Standards , · ..
full use of ..,the available
.
toN'T P; 3
Col.
s
2.
Mr .. E. O'Neill-Views on
resources.
We think Marist
Evaluation ·
· ·
needs · to revolutionize its at-
3.
Mr.
J.
Kelly-Expectations
titudes toward education. One of
and Results
t~e plans we see as being
4.
Mr. D. Kirk'-Attendance and
valuable is that· one which is
Performance
being referred to as the Marist
2:30-4:00
Workshops,
8
groups
Year at Home Program.
of faculty; administration and
The Marist Year at Home
student representatives
Program involves · a restruc-
Since there is only room for the
luring of the means by which
direct workshop . participants in
knowledge is realized.
· It
the large lecture hall for the half-
demands a conscientious effort,
hour Panel Sessions there will be
on the part of students, faculty,
close circuit television broad-
and administration, to constantly
ca.sfr:ig to niany rooms in Don-
widen their awareness of the
nelly, so that everyone can be
fields which they are studying. It
aware~ of the proceedings. When
is not so much a course, as it is a
the Workshops· are being con-
philosophy _ a way of life which
ducted, questions from other
determines the nature of all
students will be recognized by the
courses.
. Workshop leader. All the student
The philosophy of the• Marist
NII\R\S'T COLLEGE
.
representatives, chosen from
Year at. Home · Progr:am is,
SO\J.\E:t-·U'-'\ON
TOUR
Student · Government ·and. the
b ·
II
t
f
Id
F"
·t ,
·t
''
Student. Academi_ c Committee,
,::,, .
as1ca y,
wo~ o .
irs . -1
r°',· : .
.
emphasizes
inter-disciplinary
TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS B-:,'
hope many other students will
,
,
.
J
·ng
b
me
f
n,
t
O
I th
\N"l'RI\CO.
LTD. ,
.
attend
in
order
to
demonstrate'
f:.}:f
:
")Y/"~.c
,
"ti!amon~l1¢ctiirfs';reliliniland:
· · · . · ,,;
,,i,;i;
t: · · .•
·
.· ·:"
· ·: ·
?~~~ft"~~~~~mml~~~~-'c'}~;~rrri~~
.
so. forth; but also by
.a
personal-
'. student gr_ oups will add ·g· rea· _t·
Iy
to .
involvement in;.and commitment;
to, the subject· being studied. .
'
the Workshop. Much change
at
Second, there is an emphasis on ·
Marist might take place ·because
inter-departmental · study by
of this Workshop - be there, IT'S
which a · course would be ' ap-
YOUR EDUCATION!
.
proached from ·- different per-
spectives;
· .
·The· Marist Year at Home
Interest· Sought For
Fontaine's
Futute
BY BILL.BERMAN
· Students who walk through the another year.
inner doors of Fontaine next Fall '
If
an· extensi~e project is un-
may
Qe entering the Library; the dertaken;. the three leading.
business office, a faculty possibilities seem-to be student
member's office,· or faculty housing, •faculty housing, or the
member's apartment, or . their library. Brother Nilus Donnelly·,
.own dorlllifory room:
All
these The, Planning Director, has been·
possibilities and a few scattered instructed by President Foy. to
. others are being considered by study and draw up tentative
the administration, faculty and plans for all three options. Within
various stupent groups, for the.· the nexttwoweeks, President Foy
future .of Fontaine. A final , plans to call an open meeting for
possibility is, of course, that due all students interested in living in
to · financial
considerations ·Fontaine to meet with himself,.
nothing will be done and the doors Brother Nil us, and -an
ar-
of Fontaine will remain closed for chite.ctural consultant to present
Fontaine Hall - Future Unknown
their ideas and suggestions as to
the best
possible
living
arrangement. Opinions are also
_!>eing solicited_
froin.
faculty
members as to their interest· in
on-campus f~culty housing -
probably apartment style .
.
These
two moves could be done in-
dependently. - that is, without
significant change to other
buildings on campus.·
The third possibility - the use
of Fontaine as a libn1ry
7
would
have a significant impact on the
rest of the_ campus: The gap in
Don9elly would have to be filled-
probably by some alignment of
faculty offices, the business of-.
£ice, and other academic ser-
vices. This would leave room for
an_ expanded Computer Center,
and possibly faculty offices for ·
those involved in the Computer
Science area.
If,
as is entirely possible, no
, major renovation is done to
Fontaine, the options become
provisional faculty offices or a
new business office while existing
faculty offices along the outer
rim of Donnelly are renovated.
REGISTER TO VOTE
Dutchess County Residents
47
Cannon St., Po'keepsie
All
other students -
Please
register over Easter vacation
in home counties.
Field
Trip
lo
Russia Planned·.
BY JANET RILEY
During the . Spring recess of
1969
33
students visited the Soviet
Union for a. fifteen day tour, in-
teracting and exchanging views
with Russian people. The trip
was
a
complete ·success,
Chemist· To
·
Lecture ,
·. BY JOAN HIGGINS
resulting ui · an inc;rease · in
language majors and the in-
stitution of Russian as a major at
Marist.
Intercession of Spring recess
next year wi11 once again afford
Marist student~ . the. opportunity
to
supplement
theoretical
knowledge of ·Russja with an
experience of reality.
Mr.
Casimir Norkeliunas will conduct
a tour and study program in the·
Soviet Union for a minimum of
three weeks, offering first hand •
observation of life-style rather
than
vicarious
classroom
On Tuesday, March
30
at
8:00
analysis. It is hoped that the trip
P.M., Professor Leallyn B. Clapp will promote·. a greater un-
f
B
u ·
·t
·11
derstanding of other peoples and
rom
rown
mversi
Y
wi
their cultures and a confrontation
speak on "Is Conspicuous Con-
sumption
of our
Natural of Soviet society on the personal
Resources Cyclic'?"
level.
A
semina~
will
~ c?n-
Dr. Clapp is the visiting lee-
duct~d. at
a
Soviet Un!vers1ty,
lurer for the American Chemical . cons1.shf!g of for~al Russ1an·and
Society's divison of education.
Enghsh m~tructlon fo~ one t~ two
He
was
chairman of the weeks._TJ11sprogram1savatlable
organization in
1959.
Prof. for. _history? langua~e, a!1d
Clapp recieved a B.Ed. and a
pohhcal. scien~e. m~Jor~
m-
D.Ped' from Eastern Illinois
terested m parltc1patmg
m
an
University and a Ph.D. in independent.learning experience.
chemistry from the University of
It
!S
hoped that one to three
Illinois. He has been affiliated credits
'\\111
be offered_
to
these
\\ith Bro,,.11 .University since
1941.
~tudents. l\lr. Norkeliunas u!ges
During the day, Prof. Clapp mterested students to register
,,.;n
be giving lectures in some next ~emester
fo~
any ?f the
chemistry classes. He '\\ill speak follo~"
1
ng cou~es.
Basic In-
on "The Influence of Geometry tens,1ve _Russian
<everyday
on Chemistry Structure'', and an comcrsallon for elementary and
organic lecture on "Chemistry of
Covalent Halides."
C01'i'T P.
J
Col.
5
. I


















































































































































,
·'
PAGE 6
.
TIIE
,
.
CIRCLE
,
.
·.
MAllOI 18,
;
1971
Interview
_
·
And Viewpoint
_ .
.
_
_
.
.
.
_
.
Urban
Renewal
In The Union
Street' Area
BY L- fflXON
.
M. Richard
·
Crowley
is
·
a
professional architect
•'
who- is
very
.
interested
·
in providing a
better
·
quality
.
of life in
-.
the
.
world. In this vein he has done a
great deal of study of the Queen
City project. in general and the
Union Street area in particular
arid has been very instrumental
in drawing up an alternative to
blanket clearance
.
He
is
a
member of the Board
.
of
Trustees of the Dutchess County
Landmarks 'Association. Mrs.
Opdycke, also a member of the
same
·
board is a Poughkeepsie
resident who
is
very concerned
.
about improving the city. She
is
equally
,
concerned about the
basic human rights of the people
of Union Street to retain their
hqmes in the face of potential
clearance.
R.W .:
Pura has asserted that
this area should be completely
cleared to achieve a suitable
population density for the
maintance of a viable tax base.
Isn't it in fact true that there are
methods other than blanket
clearance to achieve the desired
concentration of population?
Mr
.
Crowley: Well, of course
you can apply them to really
any area
·
at all.
If
you have an
area, as Union Street is where
·
there are large numbers of single
family houses you are not going
to get large density by letting
them down, ·but if you do need
to build up the density there are
{
suitable areas
-
where you can
I
i._,
·
.
build much taller buildings, and
,
taking the whole Union Street
area as a parcel
·
from Main to
(
Church and from Grand down to
\
Clover, the area as a whole can
:
Now thIS
u:
a part of what
,
we
is
really not
·
tnat
.
important .
People can adjust to all kinds of
living and the
.
standards of
middle class suburbia should not
be applied uniformly
·
au over the
country, which is what's
happening here. But to contin
.
ue
with this list
·
of defects, exposed
wood beams over a furnace that
,.
have not been fire
..:
proofed this is
a defect. Some
·
of these defects
.
are more serious
,
than others in
that they contribute in
a
greater
fashion to the safety of the
inhabitants
.
or that they
-
cost
more to fix. In PURA's rating
system each of these defects
is
assigned a point rating
.
Some
defects are worth two points
some are worth five points. You
total up the number of points
for a house and if it
is
over a
certain
·
level it is sub-standard
and worthy of demolition, anci
you may have under this system
one or two major flaws in a
house ie. a badly out of place
brick wall that looks as if
it
;iable
,
alternative to
.
total
.
tell us a little
:
bit
-
about what
people
of
this
u~t,
.
clearance of the Union street transpired at that meeting?
·
..
·
·
.
·.
.
·
Mrs.
-
Opdycke:
I
don't
see

area;
namely selective renewal
Mrs. Opdycke: One of• the
·
how. If
they feel that it has·
·
and rehabilitation as proposed things to say is
.
that
_
two
·
days been,
·
I
:
don't-
0
think that the_
by Landmarks?
.
before that meeting occured one
-
citizens in the area feel that that
·
·
Mr
:
Crowley:Yes. ·
of the men from ·urban
·
has been the
:,
case nor.do
.
the
R.W.
:
Mrs.
Opdycke, aren't. Renewal, Mr. McGuire told me
·
leaders of the area such
a,
John
there numerous individuals who that he thought that there would
·
.
Boyle or Joe Dallio or Clarence
live in this designated clearance be only 25 residents who would
Johnson. It aeerris to all of
us
area
·
who, in fact, have a very attend the meeting
.
rhe night of
.
tba~ they
·
might
have started
strong desire to remain?
·
the meeting (it was if
.
I
y~ars ago in
this
area by
trying __
•.
.. Mrs. Opdycke: Yes. There are remember
_
a very inclement
to
-
discover what the residents.
_people from the top of the hill night) there were over 200
wanted for their own future and
down to the bottom. There are residents who came and they
·
trying
fo
establish
,
a
·
.
plan
_
people scattered throughout were very
_
angry when it was
according to the
wishes
-
of
_
the
:
.
_
who have already declared that finally cleared about what it was
citizens of
·
this community;
they want to stay
.
The house at
·
that Mr
.
Galgaro of Cardib and
They
.
have not done that. They
.,.
the very top
-
of the hill 205 Fliesig had· in mind for their
did make surveys about o"pinion
Union Street is owned by Mr.
&
particular area, indeed they
,
were
..
but they
.
were
·
done
·
much
Mrs. Minet who have lived there so upset that a meeting was
·
1atei:-after it had been apparent
for aproximately 15 years in a impossible to hold, any kind of a
to
·
the ci~izens who lived .there
brick Federal style house and meeting
-
at all and Mr. Crowley
·
_
that their
.
real intention was to
Mr
.
Minet himself has added a and I tried simply at the end of
.
d e mo 1 is h the entire
brick addition on the back it to suggest to them through
·
neighborhood so
.
whatever their
which has their kitchen in it
.
showing slides of houses that we
opinion polf shows it
was
really
And
.
Mrs
.
Minet had declared · think are worthy of being saved
the
'
statement of the community
'
very firmly that she intends to should be saved, that alternatives
that thought they had no hope
f
remain there for the rest of her to clearance do
·
exist and that
·
at all. So the statements at that·
I
time were fairly apathetic. Now
that it has become apparent to
the citizens that there are people
working to
·
save their residences
and that they do have their own
·
community leadership
.
I
think
that they have taken great heart
arid
'
have made the beginning
·
of
a very
-
staunch campaign which
.
will receive I. think greater and
greater support .
.
R.W.:
Doesn't,. in fact a plan
combining renewal and
-
·
rehabilitation provide that these
individuals who
wish
to
,
have
their homes rehabilitated will
not necessarily be displaced,
temporarily or permanently that
vacant buildings can be repaired
and residents can move
·
into
these building while their homes
are
repaired?

.
.
·.
.
:
·
1
._
be made to have
a
density
·
suitable
_
.
fo~
the center of a city
.
I\
_
.
_
..
.
. _
_
(refering to the D~tc?,ess County
_
_
·
'
.
;_
,
.
·
,
.,·,·
.
-
.·.
_
,
.
... >
'.:, -
,
.
.
LandmaJ:ks
,Associatioru
·
want
to
"
,
,.
;
.
Mrs. Opdycke: Yes
.
On almost
every street there are houses
.
that
are . boarded

up
at
the moment
~,;
t
:
'
whicl!,
J
W.O~d
:,
b~
,
,•t~edirst
,
;
t~at.
sh o~ld
,

;
be
,
;:
saly;~ge~
-
;:
l!n~
rehabilitated
-
and
.
those
.
could
~
-•.
--
--!~
~~!/~!-1~a~!:~~!
0
kt~~r
(
..
:
,
our area, but what we would like
~
to encourage.
(
R.W.
:
This would be selective
f~
'
renewal and rehabilitatio~?
Mr. Crowley: Yes
.
This, you
,
see was the original approach of
I;
I
·
PURA for the whole Queen City
project.
It
was to
.
be a
completely selective process; and
.
to suddenly zero
in
as they have
on Union Street for clearance
when every other street except
_
Main i~ going to have as much
rehabilitation as possible seems
to us an
-
absurd thing for the
City of Poughkeepsie. It's taking
really the oldest street of
all
the
streets in the
'
city and just
throwing it away.
R. W .: Being a professional
architect, do you feel that there
are particular houses
.
that
.
PURA
has labeled sub-standard which
in
fact
could be rehabilitated?
Mr. Crowley: Of course. There
are particular houses in the
Union Street
-
areas which are
even with PURA's standards not
sub-standard~ Quite a few.
R.W.: Are you familiar with
the stan_dards employed by
PURA to determine whether a
building is standard or
sub-standard?
Mr. Crowley: Yes. We have
copies of their original rating
sheets. What they do in
determining whether a building
is
·
cleared or not
is
to list the
building's defects one by one
and
assign
to those defects
i
e.
sagging front steps
is
one,
peeling paint
is
another, a
leaning
·
chimney
is
another,
inadequate plumbing
is
another.
Inadequate plumbing may range
from rooming house situations, a
hall bath for a series of rooms
which is an undesirable kind of
thing to the fact that the
bathroom
is
off the--' kitchen
which in v,ry economical
plumbing
is
the way it happened
and now I understand it's below
our standards of
living.
I don't
Jike to use that
.
word Our
standards of living, the standards
that are being applied, meaning
you should
.
not step out from
the bathroom into the kitchen,
tb
-
-
.
N

.
u
~
-
-
"' -:;
::...:~
~;>.~;'.
~
...
~
::
-

·-··
...
.
. .
.
·
-
·

'
~
vvvyyv.v
1-
··
-"' .>i.,,J,
;}
~
.......
.
:
might collapse unless you life. Further down the
·
hill
is
discover that it has stood that Bridge
,
Street and at no.- 4~
way for 100 years already, or
·
Bridge Street
is
Mr.
&
Mrs.
you may find that the reason for Gregor Rowland
·
and their eight
calling it sub-standard is a large children who have just recently
accumulation of very minor purchased their house and
.
Mr.
defects all of which can be easily Rowland
is
working very hard
corrected at very little cost.
It
is
even
,
though he
-
is
recieving
we felt simply not a fair thing t~ public assistance at the moment,
say. The only fair evaluation is for the eleventh week
_
to find
to go in and see how
-
much it enough material
·
and enough
would
·
cost to put this house in money to buy
.
things mch as
shape. How much would it cost
.
electrical cable to that
·
he
·
can
to bring it up to standards of the rehaMinak his own house. It is
housing code
·
of the city of the first ho,1se that he has ever
Poughkeepsie and do it on an owned and
.
he intends to stay.
economic basis and then see
if
Down on ',;outh Clover Street
the owner of the house
is
willing are the fairchoths at number 25
and able to do that and then see and Rev. & Mrs. Beam
_
at
if
a
_.
grant or a loan can be number 35 who
is
the
,
pastor of
proVIded and the owner
will
take the Church of Goo next door
·
that loan to rehabilitate his own . which has had a considerable
house. We f"md that there are amount of renovation done in
owners who are: elderly retirees, the past two years and there are
the usual fixed mcome situation men
.
in
the congregation who
and ther ~e unable to
.
take on have
_
said that they would make
the obligation of a large loan repairs on
.
the outside of the
even at 3%. W~ also find owners Church and the pastor and
rus
who not wanting to take out a wife and family would like very
loan are old and have lived in an much to remain. At number 23
area that they have watched Delano Street
is
Mis$ Carolyn
de!~riorate and have not the
-
Merte whose family has lived in
spmt to stay, would like to that house for 97 years. It
is
a
leave,; retirees being landlords
.
brick house and she had just
for the one or two upper .installed a new kitchen and she
apartments in the building are intends to remain to the point of
too old to do the fixing physically blocking the
t_hell!selyes. This type of bulldozers
if
they ever come to
Situation is very prevelant in the her house. There are others as
area but this type of situation well.
does not mean that we should
R.W
.
: PURA held an
lose the area.
informational meeting during
R.W.: So
just
in summation; February for the citizens of the
you feel that there is definitely a Union Street area. Could you
.
·
.
-
.
serye
:
·'.
as
teirip6raty
~
i'~-lOcat~ODS
-
.-
for those families whose homes
would need· extensive repair
work dorie; that would
necessitate
.
their leaving
temporarily

·
btit
_
they would
.
remain in their
.
own
neighborhood
·
and
-
within
:
the
range of their extended family
unit.
_
There
_
are a
·
great many
houses in the area which
.
need·
the· kind of rehabilitation work
which would
,
not dislocate a
family tempoz:arily. It's a matter
.
of- a
·
new roof put on or
. ·
.
additional wiring inside or
tliere was an association-working ·
·
_
per~aps
a

new bat~oofo but the
to retain these structures
.
family ~ould !emam 11t home for
because the group was deeply
·
the cmt1re
-
p!OJect
:
.
.
·
_
.
.
riled
,
and insensed
:
and it was
.
_
_
Mr. Crowley_ has_ pointed out
obvious that no kind
.
of formal
··
both ~hortcommgs m the system
meeting could really

transpire
.
of ra~g used by PURA an~ that
:
So -the following
_
week there was
there
1s
a workable alternative to
another meeting which was
cle_arenc;e. Mrs. Op~ycke has .
arranged by the Queen ·(;ity
pointed ~ut_ ~hat there
_
,
are
Model City Committee and run
- _
numer~us mdiVIduals who do
by John Boyle who
,
is the
not
~
to leave and that. the
chairman of that committee and
comm~ty
.
has loudly
·
voiced
at this
-
meeting
:
an
even larger
-
oppomtion _to clearan_ce. She
·
has
number of residents appeared
also
-
~?tPl~ed th~
_
·
value ~af
·
and they were just as -angry as
r~habilitation h~ m preventing
they had been the week before.
dISp_lacement. I~ IS personally my
The Mayor
·
attended, most of
feeling that
·
since
.
PU~ does
the common council
.
and a great
have
_
a useable alternative
.
that
number
.
of the business men
they
-,
~ould ,!lot run ro~od
from the down town
.
area
·
and
· -
over the b~Sic human nghts of
·
the staff of the Poughkeepsie
the. people m the ar8!1 !De~ly for .
Planning Board as well. And
.
at
then: _per~nal gratif~cation or
that meeting we did present
,
the
administrative convemence. Mr.
map that we bad drawn up. · Crowley later told !De that
Note-this map
is
an alternative
PURA does not h~ve
_
figures on
to clearance which points out
~ow
manr
p~ple live m the area
numerous rehabilitatable
~ question. They only have
structures in the area)
·
and a
figur_es o~ the n~mber of
great number of slides and made
dwe~g urut~. That
IS
a pretty
as good a presentation of the
~ood illu~tion of where
_
their
:
alternative that Landmarks is
mterest
Ii~.
·
~
,~d
alliance
proposing as
-
we were ~ble to in
or
econoJDically priviledged and
ten minutes time. Urban renewal
oppresse~, young and old, black
at that time presented a series of
and white, male and. fem~le
about
i.tftY.
slides that they had
persons has been y,rorkmg with
taken to prove that the area was
thE: people of Uruon Street to
in their words a "physical slum"
assist them. I w~uld suggest th~t
and that :was th~ entire content
anrone who wishes to work m
of their presentation which only
this ar~ contact Mrs. Buckman
angered the citizens more than
of
·
Science ~00 _on Monday,
ever.
~ednesday or Friday afternoons
R.W.: In your opinion, has
m_ the ~enyard office _and t~Ik
PURA's attitude been one of
w~th her about working with
felicitious concern for the
science 300 students.
-
.

























































:.,..
·
MARCH
:
18, 1971
TIIE CIRCL
.
E
l'AGI
'.
7
.. Good
.
News
,
;
:
BY
FR.
.
LEO
.
GALLANT
.
Up From
Under
.
'
BY
.
MORNA MOORE
,. Afew weeks ago when I wrote a free; that he did n~t wiJ} evil and · things· that'
·
he never
'
wished: .
.
letter to The Circle which I said suffering and death; that he did suifering, sin, death
.
_He con-
that the Circle · was the most
·
not want to see a child suffer tinually
.
inspires in us a love

improved thing at Marist this
·
anymore than we do, but could do
.
capable of overcoming
·
or
.
year,
:
one "adult" greeted me
·
no more than we because of the
remedying evil. But' He only
with ''you've got to be kidding!" freedom he created; that man
·
shows himself as
God
through the
Then
~e
went on to blast soine of has the power to end suffering
if
_
-intermediary of man:
·
the things written in The Circle in he can become more loving and
God suggests how we might use
The human hand can strum a
guitar, wield a·paintbrush, hold
a
steering wheel, slap the bottom of
a new born baby
/
squeeze a
trigger, hold
a
joint, caress a
friend, and dig holes in the sand.
The primary function of the
human hand is to dig holes in the
sand .
.
the last two years
·
:-1 blast
some
of
_
united. Now, continuing to review
events in order to free ourselves
.
the
.
things that
·
appear
,
in The that chapter; I would like to say
from their domination~ He does
Circle, but I don't blast
·
The how
God
intervenes in our lives.
·
not prevent disasters; He is with
The human being is too com-
Circle for printing them. It's
-
very
We are not denying
God
any
us in them. He offers us the grace
·
plex an animal for one to pinpoint
··
im,portant
th·at · a
college
,
intervention in the
_
worl~. We are
to be happier poor than we would a biological factor and thus
newspaper be free.
If
the whole only doubting that his in-
.
have been rich; to be happi~r in describe the nature of the being.
thing
:
were
·
made_ up of
.
"good
terventions are violent
·
Nothing
.
sickness than we would
.
have No-one is stupid enough to say
news,"
·
there would be
.
an
i.m~
.
happens without cause,
.
but in
heen'inhealth;
.
happierwhenwe
·
thatbecausethehumanBODYis
derground paper overnight which
·
keep~ng
·
_with
·
his nature
·
as
_are persecuted than wlien we are capable of urinating, then this is
·
could be quite irresponsible and revealed in Christ, respecting the
flattered; happier in misfortune
.
the role of the human BEING in
harmful.
(If
I
can believe
·
laws he has established and the
than when everything is going our
·
society. No-one is
.
narrow
·
rumors, that is what happened at liberty with which he endowed
us.
well. ,
enough to say that because the
Vassar.)
·
.
God
intervenes
in
the
WE
become like Hini: loving,
.
MALE sperm fertilizes the egg
.
I
.

must'

congratulate the
·
psychological
·
and moral order;
faithful, attentive to others and which will become a human, then
outgoing editors, Joe and Sal, for He talks to us, calls us, proposes
active;
-
·
· ·
this is the role of the MAN in our
putting out a newspaper that had himself
·
to us, but
.
imposes
society
.
Yet not many seem
tone,
'
class arid substance.
·
(Of
·
himself
·
never.
WE
live in
-
an
Summary:
·
.
Eve~ though we perceptive enough to detect the
·
course,
·
:
establishmentarians order of grace,' which is freedom,
cannot explain suffering and evil "phallusy" (incorrect male
won't go along with me.)
I
really not of subjection.
God
constantly
in theworld,Irefuse to give up on supremacist axiom) in saying
hope
'.
the new editors will be as shows Himself, but by signs of
someone who can inspire me to that because the FEMALE is
good; and
.
may .the students love,
·
not acts of power
.
be happy and gain much through capable of bearing the baby, then
cooperate more by writing ar-
Nothing happens without Him.
_
the suffering and evil in the this is the role of WOMAN in our
ticles, even
·
in the form ~f letters, He proposes a remedy for all the
world.
society. Look magazine senior
so
.
that we may
-
get more
·
0
E

-
editor
,
Betty Rollin, describes
viewpoints more things
·
to be
n
e en Ing
this reasoning as the "blame
-
it-
.
bl:::.t:·:::."':': :::~;:
.
.
V
~:~.?;\::::;~t :J:\~'~::;
be very
·
wary
-
of articles,
.
_
of determining the nature of
especially interviews, that are
BY TOM HACKETT
women, and reflectively that of
not accurate and even dishonest.
I
·
believe in freedom, but
_
there
must be complete honesty. I
·
believe in some prudence. I feel
men also, via their biological
attributes is stifling and totally
unrealistic. "Female" and
"male" describes our bodies, not
our selves. Our selves can only be
described as human.
The growing freedom of women
can hardly have any other out-
come than the production of more
realistic and more
·
human
morals
.
-John Dewey
For every limit placed on
women, there is an alternate
limit placed on men. In-
dividuality is swallowed tip by
false concepts of femininity and
masculinity. In reality, that
which is female is feminine; that
which is male is masculine. In
society's eyes, that which is
gentle, soft, and emotional is
feminine; that which is strong,
hard,
and
intellectual
is
masculine
.
Society leaves no
room for gentle men or intelligent
women
.
Surely thi.;; is one of the
saddest aspects of our society -
that these walls are placed
around us
,
forbidding us to delve
into our beings
,
and rejoice the
discovery of self. Instead we are
confined to superficial, socially
dictated roles.
·
Common Sense knocked itself off
the market because it lacked
prudence and therefore did not
achieve its aims
;
I would hate to
see
·
th~t happen to The
·
Circle.
·
After all, The Circle has a large
Windy days in March, clear play, telephone wires, street
·
·
winter skies, crisp autumn af-
lights, front lawns, empty gar-
ternoons ... shining plates and
·
bage
_
pails at curb side, the
coffee steaming hot.. .blonde hair distant sound of a barking dog -
and soft voices, telephone he finished
.
and went into the
·
operators
and
executive house. No one was at home:
secretaries ... sun
·
drenched • He would not tolerate the
beaches and warming camp solitude and went walking again.
fires ... voices singing sorry songs,
He walked into the heart of
Phys. Ed.
·
Curriculum
·
clientele of very decent, upright
readers. (Plus a few uptight ones,
Bing Crosby singing -Silver town and stopped at a strategic
To: All Students
Bells ... the certain way a d09r bell
·
candy store
·
: the
.
.
commut~rs
Due to the change in the curriculum starting in Sept.
1971,
the
·
rings and niany other things - all would be ~omi~g off
··
the tra!ns
·
Physical Education Department has instituted the following changes.
naturally.) .. ;
· . ·
.
In last week's
Good
N~ws
I
r-~viewed
a
chapter fro~ Louis
.
Evely's
'
oook
;
·•our
:
Prayer!'
'
in
·
which
·
I said
·
that
God
curtailed
of these Poochy loved. He hated and stoppm~ for
.
the
.
evening
·
.
1.
All activity courses will meet for
5
weeks,
3
times a week for one
his name; bu~ they gave it to him paper on th~rr \\'ay home; He sat _ credit.
,
·
.
,
;
.
and now everyone knew
Nm
.
by at the cout1te:r
.
.
:
.
~t1<l.o~deted
;
:
,
.
cup.,- -
.c.
.
2/Thfe'e
·
different activities will
be
offered
in
each time slot during
it. There is always
a
certain of coffee. }twas served_ to him by
._
each semester, e.g.:
.
.
·

his
:
omnipotence by making
·
tnan
.
On
>
The
-
Rath
amount of affection associated a baby-faced teenage kid who, he .
Slot
1
-
First Sem. will have Golf, (1st s weeks), Volleyball, (2nd 5
with a
·
nick-name, Poochy thought, must work here every
weeks), and Badminton (3rd 5 weeks) as the activities in that period.
thought, and so he lived with it
,
day after sc~ool. !he commuters
·
3
.
Students may elect one, two or all three activities in a given time
and
;
soon he came to like it
.
started comi~g
_
.
m. Mostly =3ll
slot or they may elect activities in differing time periods providing no
·
He
·_
liked many things and were ru.-essed m Jackets and ~res
schedule conflict develops. Each activity is for one c;redit.
-
·
·
BY MORNA MOORE
sometimes wondered why other and either wore or earned
4. Courses will
be
marked M.for Men only; W for women only; or C
people could not see them as he overcoats.

·
.They
bought
for Coed activity.
·
When
-
you
·
eat
in
·
the did .
.
It
really didn't matter cigarettes o~ cigars, newspapers
5. A woman physical education instructor will be hired on a part-
_
Rathskellar, do you sometimes
.
though; he liked them, came .to and magazmes,. cokes . or egg
.
time basis to teach women activities.
feel that you are paying more but know them and soon loved them
,
creams. The kid be~nd the ·
6.
No one activity course may be repeated.
getting less1 Maybe that's
-
That's all that mattered.
·
·
counter
.was
·
r~nmng
ar:
7.
Normal grading procedure will be given for each
1
credit course
·
beca~se' the Raths~ellar
.
is
Todayhewaswalkingdown the und c).earung up m between
(i.e.) A,B,C,D,
..
:
,F.
spending less but Et8ffiIDg more!
·
side walk and concentrating on
choc9late egg creams an~
s.
The other Phys Ed courses will remain essentially the same
A
.
rt and Paul protest with the
·
hard sound that his shoes packages of Marlboro.
·
(Physiology of Health
,
Principles of Coaching).
statements that their prices
·
have made on the cement. He listened
Poochy wat«:hed th~m as
~~Y
_
9
.
The coaching techniques courses (PE 301
,
302, 303 and 304) will
riot gone up.
-
Don.t
be
fooled by incessantly for
.
the occasional eurc~ased their precmus tr1V1a
.
now
be
1
credit each with no other change in their make-up.
stable prices - surely you are
__
crushing sound when a pebble
.
He sipped the coffee and let the
The Activities available:
awareofthe5centcandybarthat would crumble beneath his step. taste
.
of it li~ger in his mo~th.
Fall Semester _ Slot 1 -
..
Golf
,
Volleyball
;
2, Archery; W
,
shririksinsizeastheyearsgoby
.
He liked that sound. Along the
_
Outs1de_the httle store evening
VolJeyball
;
·
, Conditioning; 3, Conditioning; M
,
Wrestling
,
Gym-
·
.
The
.
Rathskellar works on
--
curbthedirtysnowwasmelting .
.
hadsetmandthetownwastaken
nasties
·
·
somewhat the
·
same basis. For The road was clear except for
_
o~er by a ~eon_ dileri~
.
Cars
Slot
4 -
Conq_itioning, M, Tennis, Volleyball.
i~tance;
.
that dirty white residue along the
·
wizzed by with ht headbghts a~d
Slot6-Tennis,
w,
Dance I,Dance II.
·
·
1) Sandwich ~eat packages curbs.Soon,herealized
;
itwould the streets were crowded With
_ Slot7-Soccer,M,Judo,;8,Conditioning,W,Badminton,Judo.
that used to weigh 4 oz. now all
.
melt-away and winter would h~me-bo~d commuters. All ~e
Slot 9 - Tennis, M, Handball, Fencing.
weigh 2 oz.
.
-
be gone.
As
he marched on he rune to five shops were locking
10
&
13, Rowing,
c,
Sailing, Skiing (tentative).
2) Hamburger patties that used
·
forgot about the cement sidewalk
.
up
.
-
,
Spring Semester
to weigh 4 oz. now w~igh 3 oz.
and
_
began to
think
·
of all the
·
A young girl who work~ in one
Slot
1 -
M - Conditioning, Fencing, Golf; Slot 2 - W, Conditioning,
3) Lettuce on sandWiches other frivolous things that would of the beauty salons came mto the
.
.
Badminton, Archery; Slot
3 -
w,
Fencing
,
Gymnastics, Golf; Slot 4 - M,
than
tuna,
roast beef, tuckey, and
·
happen in the spring. Before he candy store
.
and sat do~ at the
Gymnastics, Badminton
;
Slot 5 - M
,
Badminton, Conditioning, Tennis;
ham, comes with a charge of
5
--
walked another block he had counter. She ordered a cup of tea
Slot 6 - w Dance Volleyball Tennis; Slot 7 - M, VolJeyball, Boxing
,
cents per leaf!
. .
become obsessed with a slightly andlitacigarette
.
~oochylooked
Golf; Slot 9 - M,'wrestling,'Judo, Tennis
;
Slot 10 - C, Skiing (ten-
4( Two slices of tomato costs 10 pre-mature yet incurable case of her over and decided she was
tative( · M Wrestling· Tues. 10 & 13, Rowing; Thurs.
IO
&
13, Sailing
_
cents - expensive tomatoes,
too!
spring fever,
attractive. She talked to the kid
c.
'
'
'
'
5) There is a 3 cent charge for a
-
He thought of girls in two piece about what a bitch the day had
Certain single selections will be opened to Co~d registration such
cup of water. This ~arge is not bathing suits, men in Burmuda been. She left after about fifteen
as: Archery, Dance, Gymnastics.
for the water itself - that's illegal. shorts ... kids playing baseball and minutes, Poochy had another cup
Some changes may be necessary due to scheduling problems but
·
The charge is
_
to cover the cost of trees turning green .. .longer days of coffee.
essentially this will be the Activity program offered.
the cup - I wonder if it covers only and warmer nights, passionate
At six o'clock he left the store
_
the cost?
.
orange sunsets and happy spring and started home again
.
It was a
6) New, smaller 1ce-eream mornings ... amusement parks lot cooler out than it had been
scoops have been bought, and and road side hot dog stand-
before. The sky was clear and the
employees have been instructed
·
s .
..
Poochy's mind wandered and stars were starting to show. All
to give only one instead of the digested many things.
the houses were lit up and every
ATTITUDES OUTRAGEOUS •••
former two scoops.
Now it's time, he reasoned, to one was preparing the evening
Con't from
Page 2
Considering the quality of the be more intensely alive than ever· meal. Poochy strained to catch
food served in the Rathskellar, before. He closed his eyes and the odor of whatever might be
these prices are
truly
outrageo~.
.
walked down the street listening
cooking,, but without success. He
Don't expect the college to curtad to life in all its vibrant fibers. He passed a little church half~way
these unfair practices, ~ough
.
opened his eyes as he reached the home. It had once been a house
The college benefits by this un
-
comer and turned down his but someone bought it and made
fairness to the students - it block. When he reached his house it into a little neighborhood
automatically receives a
per
-
he stopped. Standing on the side church. There was a little neon
centage of the Rathskellar walk he circled around slowly.
sign in front of itthat said "Jesus
profits! Perhaps this is one of the He t~k in his house, those of his Saves." Ppochy thought about it
areas where the president of the neighbors, the
size
and color of a moment and looked up into the
Student Gov't should prove the the black top ,road, the naked sky and thought to himself
sincerity of his platform.
,
trees, the
,
sounds: of children at " ... they need it."
Bryne Residence or wherever there's a party.
ARE YOU WHAT WE'RE LOOKING FOR'? Are you a happening
guy with fashionable ideas on the outside but a middle class square
on the inside? Are you a guy big with anti-establishment jargon but
when you come right down to it a person who will opt for security'?
Are you a guy who swings with the crowd and doesn't rock the boat;
the type of fellow who will fit perfectly
in
a -middle claiS
neighborhood?
If
you answer in the affirmative to all the above
questions then we want you
.
If
you want us contact De De Diner,
Potential Wives of America, Mr. St. Mary's College.
NOTICE: The gay passenger pigeons of the midwest
will
meet in
Butte, Montana at 9:00 P,M. on Saturday. A coffee hour
will
follow.
...































































































































































.\
i
.
!
I
.
I .
.
i
I
,
.
I
·PAGE4
'
,
.
.
.-
THE CIRCLE
.MARCH
25, 1971
Minqrity Report
BY JACK
REIGLE
BY TOM WALSH
•.
i
On March
.
16,
)971
:
millions
·
of after ·that segment of the show "Bill O;Reilly Speaks/'
i
assured
It
has become
.
apparent
-
that
would be significant to note that
·
·
people
·
throughout
.
.
the
·
world
·
(which many people were
·
told to hi
_
m of the originality of. the title
.
the role of Presidential-hopefuls ·
.
we have progressed
-
·
past
·
the
witnessed an unexpected and free \\'.atch by a tan young fellow with anti it was then that he informed
·
upon election defeat has been
tQ
: •
usiioppy,says_. po~ters'
.
', and
appearance by two Marist stars

a typewriter under his arm) I me that.rerun-righ~s had already
·
slip into a ·state of oblivion,~and
·
"Buses to
'
.
Mixers themes."
on
:
a network television show. called, to a frie
_
nd of mine
in
the • been bought up by sponsors for a · _skip
.
nonc!'Jalalitly to sheepskin
TJ:lere does
.
howe_ver remain that
- They were, of course, Joe Rubino employe of NBC, who. was repeat showing sometime in the
acceptance.
_
To assume that
fundamentalfallacy refered to so
and
.
Bill O'Reilly of "Circle" working 6ff-stage
·
during
- .
the near future.
·
ideals arelost in vote tabulations,
readily as th
_
e concept of Student
fame.
.
·
.
.

·
.
show: He reported to me that the
is to suggest defeat. Success has
Government.
_
Defined as an
At the time
I'm
not sure that switchboard was overflowing
Also; some early Wednesday·
.
too often been measured by that
.
"inalienable
right",
it
·
has
·
the
Joey Bis.hop r
'
ealized whose with calls of one nature or morning rumors had circulated
which
.
is little more
than
failure . ..J
·
capabilities
.
of becoming an
company he was in,
.
but as
it
another and autograph 'seekers to the effect that Marist was
do not find myself hesitant to
.
"intangable
·wrong;"
"
·
For-
turned out it really didn't matter
_
- had already packed the lobby.
dropping its re-cycle program
express thoughts of a "so-called
mu1ated on the assumption that H
they got their
_
free dinner
This show is seen in
.
many concerning ecology and was
minority", but rather, find it
.
represents student opinions, it
anyway. Just think of an the kids places where Bill is 'not known,

concentrating on a ''Re-cycle
imperative· that these ideas
be
-
becomes Ilothing more than
who watched the show
,
and have
:
and my friend said
_
that
.
in- BillY'.' program with the purpose
represented. Hopefully, we have
opinionated
·
representation.
'
now incorporated a
.
big college structions
·
had already
_
,
b
_
een of keeping him here and have him
not just returned
,
from
·
a
.
cam-
_
·
Infuriated with. Governmental
word such as&'ripped" into'their
·
given to change
·
the
.title
of. ttie run unopposed for president of
paign---but have begun.one.
political systems, students have
vocabulary; Catchy phrases like program for this night only to: next year's freshman c
_
lass.
If
we were to examine past
asse_rted th~mselves in directive
that spread quickly.
,
,
·
·
Student Government elections, it Jorces toward concrete ac-
It
seemed so appropriate the
·
·
complishments. The relivance
,
of
way Bill raised his hand in order
Good
'_·
.
7\.Te
·
w
'
·
s
·
'
concrete individual relations far
to be called on by the show's host
1
l ,
.
outweigh the~, realization of a
while those prevfous to him had
structural system. The success
·been
chosen
-
in the more con-
of-
'
proj~cts such
·
.as
Marist
ventional- m~nner. His timidity
Ecology Action, and Mid-Hudson
also hit other·
·neights
as he
·
BY FR. LEO GALLANT
.
Coalition for Peace is based on
b
_
luntly askea
_
.
_
to be fed by NBC -
,
·
thefact' that students have tuned
who obliged for Jear
-
of
being
<Professor):
"Th~
·
Ap- -discussion during
-a
meeting in

the gym program.
It
didn't take
_
written about
·
as a corporation palachian
·
Club should
.
forget
·
Fireside Loung~ to discuss long for them
.
-
to see
..
how
with outrageous attitudes.
Kentucky and work right here in poverty in this area; I don't know inadequate it is due to lack of
·
After BiJI· had exhausted- his the Poughkeepsie area where how ~ccurate it is; but Dr. adu)tassistarice. Now what's my
information about what he was to
there is as much p~>Verty as in Michelson threw a challenge at next step? I know that after my
do on st. Patrick's Day, Mr. Appalachia;
·
,

me that I could not resist. That
· -five
weeks at the Center, I'll be
Bishop was introduced to Mr.
(Father): "Why not leave the night I decided to forget
-
Ap-
in
a
better position to move. But
r
Rubino, who
_
drew well deserved Appalachian Club alone. They palachia this suminer
.
.
(though I want a group of Marist students
c~eers up<m announcing his comprise less than 40 students. hope our Appalachian Club to start organizing now so that we
_
·
._ nationality to the others present Let
_them
continue
their
_
continues
·
to grow strong and can get going immediately in the
in the audience. Immediately apostolate to Kentucky. You have develop its apostolate
i
even more fall
.
I want to get involved a bit in
1400 students to choose from for a
_
powerfully to the poor in Ken-· the spring and know what they're
similar
apostolate to this
_
area. tucky); I decided to organize my getting into, so that there will be
(Professor): "I am
.
not
-
at-
-
-
.
Jittle slof.inthe large are~
_:
of no time lost in
.
September. I
Marist
_
tacking the Appalachian
:
'Club:
-
Poughkeepsie.
·
-
realize some Marist students are
.
They
·
are probably the
-
_
·
most
Next morning I went to see Fr. already involved in various ways.
Ecolo
'
gy
.
:
A
1
-

people-conscious students on· Fred Rothlauf, S.J., who is the I
:
.
don't
·
know wha
_
t type
·
of
C
IO D
campus. They would be the best administrator of the Union St. organization is the best.
ones
_
to get something going up Center. I asked himjf he could
.
So I am at a loss right now. I'll
_
Marist J!:cology Action is a here."
·
-
·
· .
.
use me for five weeks this wait for
.
students to come to ine
recently chartered club of the
(
_
Father):
"If
they
did
.
summer. It did nottake him long and give their
'
names.
(l
have
,
Student Government.
_
Although
volunteer
·
to
·
~ork here,
:
what
·
·
to convince me. I will be working
two
already:> As soon as we have
_
conc~rned presently with its own would-they do? What is organized with him
for
that period. I
·wm
a substantial nudeus, we'll
orgatiizaticin,·a number of action
_jn_
,
_this
area'?
.
l_
am going to
Ap
,
also put
_
in a_ c<mple of hours a ~eeL.and move.
,
,
Most of the
projects haye already begun, palachia iriyselffor five
.
weeks
iii
week until then to gefto kriow his ideas will have

fo
come from
such as p!:!titioning to stop
·
the J\llay and
·
June. I would gladly setup.
_
·
·
,
· them.
SST
_
and bailriing
.
phosphates.
cancel that and stay and work in
· .
Next
l
warited to know what
Many, mariy
:
inore though have, Po
,
ughkeepsie .
.
·
·
But
:";
what Marist students could
_
do
if
we
Jesus, Yi>u a~d I are words-
.
or
will,
be beginning with the club
-
guarantee would there be that I
·
organized a club, equivalent to
I know how we are to become
:concentrating
its efforts on would _be put to work? Ldon't the
·
Appalachian Club
.
He gave deeds too
.
campus. The purpose of M.E.A. want to be idle there."
-
·
me tl'iree fields where
_
very much
But I tremble .
.
·
is to work to prevent and amend
<Professor): "I· can't answer assistance is needed: Working
_in.
rn
:
s: Jackson)
the ecologicaldestruction in the that, because really' there !s
--
the supply setup, moving heavy
I see white teeth in a black
-
community,
_
_
.
;
nothing that organized,. as in things like refrigerators from face
.
The club'
?
already
.
boasts a
·
Kentucky
.
There is no dynamic donors to recipients; working in
I see black eyes in a white face.
membership
,
of
,
about seventy personality ~ere
'.
as Fr. Bei
,
ting. the
·
gylll prog:am two 9ights
_
a
·
-
Help us.to s~ persons, Jesus
;
students. The club would also B
_
ut there 1s your challenge. week; work mg
.
among the. not
like to see interested faculty and Organize something yourself. various club
_
groups that use the · a
.
black person, or a white
administrators
-
joining their time Just one slot. Let
_
someone else
.
Center <Dramatics, Social work, person,
,
·
.
an~ resotir~~s
-
~th ours. Maybe takean~th~~slot.Thenthere'.ll be
.
studrskills, et~.)
__
_
_
.
a
red person, but human
takmg
_
off 01Jrsh1rts and working
.
:
som~th!ng.
.
.
, _
-.. _ ,
.
_
The
_
·
followmg evemng
_
I persons.
_
_
tog~t~er on
~n
~rganic farm, or
·
-
This 1s a report of part of the
~
brought two students to look at
<Malcolm
-
Boyd).
roll_mg up our sleeves during
.
'
"
a
·
I
.
'
·
s
sprmg c1ea!1ing, or in an effort to
Ray CI ark
:
_
_
-
u m
.
et
5
-
stop the black
.
soot coming froill
,
·
· ·
,
·
·
,
·
·
·
·
-
Po
0
i::::Crn:
;
~~ri~:d
t~!r~:~
Makes
,
S
.
qua
,
cf
· .
Re
CO
rd
munity, thaCis,
·
a
common
purpose.
•.
,<
·
;
!
me to o
_
ur n
_
e
_
_
xt MEA meeting
.
an remember you
·
breathe thP
sa e air we do.
.
·
-
'
:::
·-
· .
.
.
.
PLAY REVIEW
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
:_::-•;:':
,_
,...;,;
MEDE
-
A
BY BILL O'REILLY
Ray _ Clarke, a junior
~.
from
·
Marist College, has been name
_
d
to theDivision III All-East Squa~
·
of !he Eastern College At_llletic
-
.
Conference
·
for the -
1970·71
basketball
-
.
·
season. The sharp
shooting guard was the second
lead(ng scorer for
.
Marist com-
piling 425 points for the season, a
.
.
Editor•s Roommate: Is
Nepotism Necessary?
.
..
BY STEVE
KOPKI
On Saturday; March 13, Marist
concluded its
1971
indoor track
season· by
_
competing in the
_
College
·
Track
_
,
Conference
Championships
·
at
.
Queens
CommunJty
.
College:
·
.
Iri
·
thE!ir
meet the Foxes went up against
stiff
_
competition from such
schools as· C. W. Post, Adelphi,
Stony
·
Brook
·
and St. Peters
College.
A
·
very impressive
·
per
-
formance was turned in by Henry
Blum, as he set two
.
new. school
records and garnered two medals
CON'T P'. 3 Col.
5
One
·.
otour
. __ .
Paulists calls
it
''home" ...
Home
is
where the heart is
.
Home is also wherever a
Paulist is needed
.
·
.
Whether the Paulist works
in a ghetto
,
a college campus,
a
city parish or

remote
corner of the United .States:
-
he is
serving.
·
·
The Paulist is ministering
with words, deeds and sacra-
ment ..
--:
and zealous care to
the needs of G,od's People
_
everywhere. He is meeting
today's problems with thoughts
of those thaf
will
arise
~
---
toniorow.
.
That is the Paulist way.
It
.
.
isn't easy but the worthwhile
things of life seldom are.
If you ate interested in

,
.•
.
learning more about the Paulist
·
·
priesthood
,
write
·
to:
Rn. Donald
C. Campbell,
c:S.P.
-V~aciou
Director
'Paulist
:
_-
-
_
'J!athe,G
_
Room 113
415 West 59th Street
New York, N.Y. 10019
The weekend of March 20th saw
the Marist College ;rheafre Guild
present
.
Robinson
Jeffer's
.
adaptation of Euripides' Medea
~
.
_
The production was s1ick,
professional and the set was
impressive. Unfortunately the·
play :was excruciatingly dull.
·
15.2 average per
-
·game. During
the season Ray led the Red Foxes
with 175 assists which set a school
record. His offensive prowess is
exemplified
,
by his 48 percent-
shooting
·
from
the
floor
augumented by his 70 percent
·
shooting from the charity stripe. from Flushing, turned in fine
performances during the season
highlighted by a five game out-
put of more than 20 points per
game. His best offensive per-
formance of the season came in
the last regular home game of the
·
year against Southhampton when
Ray netted 28 points:
'
in the process. In the 35 lb.
-
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ .
hammer throw, Hank established
a new Marist standard of 37 feet,
eleven and one-half inches and
.
won
a
third place bronze medal in
_.
the
J.V.
competi~ion. In the shot
put, Hank broke his 9wn school
record of 41 feet, nine inches by
putting the shot 44 feet. For his
effort Henry was awarded a
second place silver medal, as he
.
missed first place by two inches
to a shotputter from C. W. Post.
For the most part the
.
acting
was better than average with
outstanding performances turned
in by Diana
·
Zoccoli as Medea and
Joe
·
Fritterer as Aegius. The
dorection, ·
_
also handled by
Fritterer, was sharp and the
costumes and make up were
excellent.
·
'
-
The performance I attended
was sparsely populated perhaps
IX'l·ause many people feel that
Euripides is no longer where it's
at as far as action is concerned.
Th~ play relied heavily on long
·
The
6'3"
American Studies
major, a Bishop Reilly graduate
·
soliloquies by Medea which, at
one point, put my pencil to sleep.
"It
would
be
good to stand here
for a thousand years," Medea
·
once remarked; and it seemed to
this "wTiter that she just about got
her wish.
The play was well presented
but it's contents were a disad-
vantage. Similar to Jason who
blamed
Medea's
wretched
condition on Venus the god who
makes women fall in love; I
blame the play on Boreus, the god
who makes l)ee?ple fall asleep.
The individual effort of this fine
native Long Islander 3ided
Marist in winning the Central
Atlantic College Conference and
posting a 21-7 overalJ
.
record:
SUPPORT OIILDREN'S 111EA TRE:
See "Peter Pan .. next week
Monday M¥ch 29 ...,.. Sunday Apnl 4
Freshmen Tom Murphy and
Jim Joyce recorded second and
third
place
performances,
respectfully, in the freshman
long jump. Tom jumped a best of
18 feet, five inches, while Jim
legged out an 18 feet, four_ inch
effort. Tom also placed second in
the trials, and fifth in the finals of
the 60 yard dash iri the time of 6.8.
Pete· Rock placed second in the
trials and fifth in thefinals of the
60 yard high hurdles .
.
His best
time here was 9.1.
Strong performances were
turned in by Frank Lasko in the
1,000 yd. run and by John Mulvey
and Steve Kopki in the 600 yard
run. Both the Varsity and Junior
Varsity mile relay teams per-
.
far~ed wen in finishing fourth in
their class finals, while strong
performances were being turned
in by Pete Biglin, Bill Karey Pat
Connelly ,and Peter Gordon:
·


8.9.1
8.9.2
8.9.3
8.9.4