The Circle, January 21, 1971.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 8 No. 1 - January 21, 1971
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THE
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VOLUME 8 . NUMBER 1
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NCW YORK l 260!.
JANUARY 21, 1971
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PAGE2
'
THE CIRCLE
'
'
JANUARY 21, 197l
.·
,
·
Disahled.
·
·-
I-i1
_
.
Actioll
-
·
by
MIKE WARD
..
by
FR.LEO GALLANT
.
The education of disabled
·
to the active competitive life in a
··
ask the Board ot.Educatioli to
-
These are
'
the thinp that were
·· ·
direction
:
..
·
.
.
·
.
. .
. · .
.
children
in the City
··
of New busy high school, is very
-
restudy the situation
.
of'these
really good
·
news for
)
ne during
·
I
was
most impressed by
the
: .
.
York
is
far
below what it should difficult for the disabled
.
students.
·· .
:
.
·
.
:
the first
·
semester. Honestly;
many college kids-who spent
be
.
On January 13th, 1971
·
"We recommend inclusion of
-
Dr. Scribner seemed impressed
,.
:
almost even, day was a highlight.
.
their
·
vacations
·
-
there .
.
They
·
.
·
various
.
organizations such
.
as
·
these students wherever possible,
·
.
by
a
presentation made
.
by
.
This
is
a Iiew
.
way of life for me
;
travele
·
d m~y hours in crowded
DIA and other parent
·
and
with non-disabled students in
·
·
Ronald
.
Pagano, of
.
the
·•
it's
,
completely different from
·
cars
to get there from
·
New
student
·
groups had the intermediate or junior high
·
Han
.
di capped Students anything
.
I have experienced
in
.
York, Ohio, Minnesota, Illinois,
opportunity to appeal
·
to the
.
school -to promote fuller Organization. liJr. Pagano, a
.
my
·
priestly career
.
Each day
was
Massachusetts
,
or traveled
;
by
,
·
Budget Committee of the Board
'
integration into normal school senior at
_
Grover Cleveland
High
·
new refreshing. Each day
-
was
plane at their own
•
expense.
of Education in order to get the life, malting them better socially School
'in
queens, made _a pl~a
imp~rtant; ther~fore a highlight.
They
•·
·
then worked hard
.
at
necessary funds for new and
adjusted to high school. We note
.
·
for all the disabled. He said that
I tried
.
to live
•
up
.
to one very
unpleasant jobs and even
·
paid
better programs. The following
that while most school
.
programs a lack o~facilities was preventing -· important resolution that I ma~e
board.It wasn't comfortable or
is
part of the speech
.J made
have progressively advanced, many_disabled youngst~rsfrom _whenlstepped~:m
.
this_Man~t
fancy
·
. But the ~pirH
·
of
representing DIA .. (Disabled
in
bussing for the disabled has not. recemng a full education_., ~e
Campus: I was going to live this
-
community was incredible and
Action).
·
Long l:!us rides, .waits on cold
.
asked also for two-w~y radios m
new
.
life fully, developing a thick
the friendships made were solid
"The budget that has been
.
corners, late arrivals
,
are still
_
the
.
sch~ o 1 bus ~
-
s
for
-the
skin to
.
problems that could
and true.
.
·
.
.
·
·
proposed
.
for all children with
rule rather than the exception. handicapped, ~eat belts a1;1,d
crush
a sensitive chaplain and
.There were eight
.
students
disabilities,
.
must be kept and
C'!fi~
school students
.
losing blo:ks for k~e~mg wh
_
eelchaus
not try to impo
·
se my
from Marist. Two
·
.othershad
.
to
not one thought can be given to
~heir f~ or second penod
·
?f
.
stationary
w~~
in transl!-
.
philosophy of life on anyone.
tum back when their car
-
broke
cutting comers at the expense of ins~rucbon . suffer severely
m
Mrs. C:ciha
·
Bezviner of.
.
This has made life on campus a
down
.
The Appalachian Club at
.
the disabled
.
·
their educat!onal progre~; May
.
PRIDE which _st~nds _for People
_
thrilling experience. But since
Marist paid their fares and it
is
"Education in our city has
.
for
we hope forimprovement.
·
for Re ha b ih tat
1
on and
some things stood out.more than
the aim of. tlie Club to continue
too long
·
been a privilege rather
The reaction from the Integration of the Disabled
.
·
others
Jet
me
list my
doing this in the
·
fut~. The
than a right. Dr. Scribner
members of the committee were Through Education,
.
sa
i
d 696
''Highiights o
·
f the first
.
Club also wants to help to send
appears to be taking a step in the
·
surprising to me. Dr. Scribner children with brain damage
.
were
semester."
Peter Pan in the spring to delight
right direction to eradicate this
.
remarked, "if I am on any side, on the waiting list for ciasses.
1)
My Two Weeks
·
Stay
.
in
.
the ~hildren there. (T_hey are still
·
injustice. It is not enough : an
it is yours." The article in the
Although it remains to be seen
Appalachia. This and all that led
"
!alkmg about the Wizard of Oz
individual has a right to an
next day's New York Times, what improvements will be
to it (The Christian Appalachian
m Berea, ·Lancaster, Mt._ Vernon
education but must have the
which probably went to press made, the mere recognition of
Project at Marist, its meetings,
and McKee.)
.
.
best possible education to fulfill
before rr,y speech
,
indicated that the inferior education
.
of the
the enthusiasm of the members)
-
I urge that more students
-
Join
his potential. Any plan with
a
Dr. Scribner would act on the disabled is a big step. But there
really shook me up.
I even gave
the
·
Marist CAP or
_
support
·
its
·
lesser philosophy will only
.
reco
·
mmendations.
·
are more
·
steps which are just as
up,
·
on January 1st, a small
activities finan<:ially ?r actively
.
provide a token program
SCRIBNER INTENDS TO big and if the
,
Board of
pleasure
I enjoy
,
smoking
Ithasagoodthinggomg
.
.
des
i
gned to ease
_
our societal
REVIEW BUDGET
Education is so receptive to the
Tiparillo
's
;
This is
·
not
2)
Thi: FootbaU Season. N?t
consc
i
ence. Indeed, rather than
,
Says He May Have Slighted problems of the disabled even to
earthshaking but I just couldn't
b
.
ecause it was so Sl!ccessful
m
·
keep the present level of special
Services for
.
Handicapped
the extent of publicly stating
see myself wasting money on
the won-lost
.
column: But
classroom instruction ...
·
'
School -Chancellor Harvey B
.
that they will hire teachers with
·
that after what I saw in
because it was
,
a symbol of what
Scribner said yesterday, "Maybe disabilities, \YhY are they holding
Kentucky
.
I feel that the
.
life can
.
be
·
when you try
:
"1 - It is most necessary to
expand and improve these
services.
"2 -
Reduce the numbers of
children still
'
on home
instruction. -
"3 - Enlarge the opportunities
for all disabled children.
"4 - Let them participate in
a
classroom situation in this great
-
school system and on to high
school and, where merited,
I did not give that area sufficient
.
the license
.
of a
·
woman who
compass needle in my life is
.
thrilling. I happened to be very
.
study," adding t
_
hat he would applied last September?
going
. t
o take on another
close to .the whole scene so I
probably got more thrills than
S
·-
D ·
0
-
,
.
.
G
many: getting to know the
-
··
e Ven
.
0
w
n:
'
n e . 0
.
0
~~;~:~. t~~~t~s~he~:1~~~~~;
seeing them going on the field
by TOM
HACKEIT
with the determination "ain't
college!
After three and one half years,
·
·
scene. It concerns itself
_
with
·
and falling
in
love with Elairie
.
gonna let nobody
.
turn me
driving onto the Marist
·
College
.
neither buildings no
_
r rivers, with
·
The w,orld, as it exists now, will
around," game after game; the
campus is no extraordinary
neither parking
_
lots
·
-
nor
·
stillhave
'
to
.
waitfora
.
fewmore
bowlgamewheretheyprovedto
experienc~. The potholes
·
were
pot-holes. Above
.
it all a tone of inont
_
hs before it begins
-
to
·
all
·
that they were
·
great (I've
.
still there, the parking lot
nostalgia stood salierit
·
·
.
.
.
swallow arid digest the class of
h
_
ated the fiel~ _goal rule ever
· · ·
.
·
·
· ·
remained · poorly plowed, the
.
Yc>U
·.
s~e you can
'
:
walk
;
the : n i n
·
e teen
'
-
h und
.
te'd and
smce); my recemng a game b~ll;
'
"Our group: Disabled
.
in dorms stood' tall-imd lonely on
'
emp_ty,,corrido~
'.
and ride
,
the. seventy~he;
:''
-
'·
.
'C'
. '
;
the
,
hundre~s of stud,.ents trymg
Action; · feels; ,•from
.
th~tr
·
.
the eve. oLano~her
(
seiriesfor's
:
. ·
unusecr:
·
elev
i
rtora
,:'
filid
: l
never" · The
:
'time
.
·
has
·
conie
'
then to ·
·
to-~ ~he field; the real support
:
experience ,that the
·
transition
..
start, and tlle riverwasfrozen
~
realize that somethihg was being, begin
-
,t.o
.
.
:
seriously
_:
think·about
.
from
.
~9 many.
:;··
''
·
··.·
;
··· ·
·
from
·
a
.
sheltered nori-cpmpeti
~
·:
as
it alw~ys
_
.
is
•
in
-
January.
said,: perh,aps
.,
something
/
that
·. · ..
those
·
·,
delicate
.
dishes
:
we
.
will
·
·•
Th~
-
J!)otb~
.
-
club also
..
has
.
a
tive envir(lnment of multi-graded
.
Ho"".ever,
.
I
_
allow myself one
.
never before occurred to
,
your,
-
become a part of.We are faced,
.
good thing goU1g. It needs more
.
.
classrooms in elementary school more addition to this common
.
busied mind; that a time would
.
still,
as was
.
the graduating class members,
·
officers,
_
workers to
come when you dr
.
ove down that
,
of
my
freshman year, with the
keep
..
that
. _
team gomg
.
(all
.
the
.
short winding road t.o the
·
undei;lared war in Asia; we
.
are
way next
,
year).
~
_these ~~bs
beginning of your last semester
.'
fa~ed with
-
a recession; and the
develop the
·
leadenhi~ qualibes
.
·
That
.
time
..
has
come for this
-
·
s
O
c i a
.
I
·
c
·
0
n
a
·
t a n
t
8
.
0
f
that ar~ so. valuable
m
_college
.
'
.
.
.
.
undergraduate
;
·
..
·
. .
.
<
unemployment, poverty, crime~
·
students. Join Coach Levme and
But at
.
least I cari res
e
rve the strikes ... (need
·
Ilist furthe~). So
Zaccpaeus and Barney_
n~w:,
_
.
·
rig h
t
to
be
.
cal 1 e d
•.
an .. you pick
a copy of Hamlet and
3)
:
The T~eatre ~uild,~
.
H~w
Good morning class welcome the
F.a.L
always hounding your
.
undergraduate for
·
a
few more read ',To be
.
or not to be?' Or
to
.
Succe~d in Bu~mess. Here
_
I
to
·
Political· Science 203;
·
My
.
parents?
months
•
arid can procrastinate you canjust
-
fay back.and finish
.
w~uld ~e
.
.
~o
:
11;1-cl~de. many
.
name is Mrs. Landleft and
.
all
l
.
Nbt really Mrs. Landlef( you my affair with Mrs
>
Robinson
,
this month's
.
Playboy.
thing., mthis highlight. The
.
.
have to say
is;
"Pow~r
-
to
.
the see Jgrew up in
•
Hyde Park and
·
·
·
·
·
tremendous
.
stage 5Uccess; the
.
People
.
"
my father
is
a detective .
.
·
spirit of the cast, stage workers;
.
.
This semester's work will be
.
,
Oh
;
well you can be sure
projectioriists, coaches; the real
'
'·
·
very interesting provided
·
you you
'
ll
:
be treated equally in this
.
fun
they had together(atypeof
have the right attitude
.
l
know
.
class.
_
In fact you get an A
.
joy that is
.
often missing in a
-
there
·
is some talk
·
around
:
Well class, let's get back to the
O
J(
,
.t
LL
world that God created for
the
campus to
.
the effect that I do
·
subject .
.
What
.
is
.
it
·
ag
a
in
·
- oh
.
ADM
I
T
.
Y
O
·
happiness of men
.
)
.·.
,
·
.
·
.
.
. 1
not give ari objective
_
course. yeah
·
, Political
.
Sci~nce
.
As you
,
·
· .
·
·
·
·
·
I like to include here
..
the
·
This talk was obviously
:
started all know.:Spiro and the C.I.A. are
,,/
•
·
,,
, .
·
·
·
i,,
Children's Theatre
-
group
:
with
by soine disturbed fascists and it all around us and closing in fast
.
that fantastic thing they puf on
.
definitely has racjst
.
overtones as
~erhap~ we
,
should take
.
to the
:
for the faculty children.
·
Maybe
.
I'zr
.
sure you all can see.
jungle like· Regis Debray. That's
·
one
•
day I'll
:
write a ~complete
,
,
·
Well; to dispelall.of my
.
critics.
an
idea! The next class
·
will be
,
.
·
article on that because there waS
. ·
I
.
have decided t.o ass
_
ign readings
: ·
held
_
behind· Sheahan
·
Hall in the
·
.
something -
maybe
·
too
·•:
·
concerning both the
.
left and the
.
forest. Everyone wear old army
.
intangible
.
or
.
difficult to pin
.
.
.
ridiculous right. The
·
first
·
two
'
jackets arid berets and we'll rwi
.
point
·
- about
·
that ~fternoon
·
books, which
..
will
·
be
.
- read
.
by
. -
around
.
and• practice guerrilla
which would make me list it
.
as
tomorrow, are the "Agony of
.
tactics
.
We
.
might even ~ptui'e
the "most
_
moving event of
c
th~
<
.
the New Left" by Fidel Castro the new parking lot and blow up
.
semester.
'
'
·
.
-
.
,.'..
·:
·
:.
.
.
.
and "The Dariger on the Right"
Bro
.
Donelly's tractor.
:
·
4)
The SaturdafNigh
l
Masses
~
.
_
·:
15y Gore
,
yidal.l_light class? Of
Mrs
.
·
tandleft,
Mrs. Landleft
.
I list this event becaustH>f whaL
·
course l'm
'
right.
·
--
.
.
What, What!
it has done for Ille personally;-t
?
·
::;
.
.
Hey, I.just thought of a joke.
Isn't. this supposed
.
to be a
-
__
have
·
many-of
,
tile frustra
.
tions;
.
·
This will liven things up. If Fidel
Political Science course?
doubts
.
and
·
hangups:
.
·oL. your
;
•·
..
Castro married Gore Vidal he'd
Yes. .
.
generation when
it-comes
to
·-_··
•
.
·
:
,
.
be
·
-
Fid~l Vidal. Fairly
Well, .
I
have a question
.
religion.
I
have been·a priest (or
hurr.orous, _nght, class? Of course
concerning Political_ Science
.
twenty-two years (on Feb. 2); I
.
.
:
I'm ?ght.
·
_ ·
, .
Oh my God~ Well, go ahead.
.
·
have
,
said over 8500
Masses;
I
'
I
Just noticed that a few of th,e
·
Why is it that all Communistic
now a
v
erage
14
Masses a week at
•
·
slower ones~ the class did not
.~
regimes always wind
-
up as
.
Marist .
.
I have never lost my love
:
laugh at that Joke .
.
Well,
I
have repressive states?
for the sacrificial banquet.
I
•
your names
,
you
can
be sure of
That question is not relevant
believe the sharing
-
of the body
that. Don't misunde~an? me,
it is the kind of question that
and blood of Christ is going to
•
you are under no obligation to only a neo-nazi would
.
ask
.
And
change the face
-
of this world. As
Iau~ a~
·
my jokes or say yes to besides it's off the topic and we
·
N'
in the book "A
.
Str
_
anger in a
everything
l say. You are all free
must always stay on the topic.
·
•
··
.
.
c
·-
-.
·
:
·
'
z~
·.
-
·
c
-.
z
-
£
.
·
.
·
Strange Land" where Smith
to dissent - no matter how
Mrs.
-
Landleft
-
I
think that
•
offered the water to the people
immature and misguided
.
that
that question pertains to the
-
which would bring peace, love
dissent may be. I like people to topic.
.
and trust, we have something .
·
dissent, as you know I'm a
Foolish Boy,
r
decide what
that can do just that: the meal at
revolutionary myself.
·
But keep
pertains to the topic around
Sal Piazza, Joe Rubino, Ann Gabriele, Janet Riley,
Mass.
.
in rr.ind who has the power here
.
here. My
class
is
liberal but
I
Peggy
Miner,
Frank Baldascino, P.aul Tesoro, John
But the Midnight
Masses
have
The people, right, Mrs.
must ha,•e some control,
right?
Tk h
given me a lift. They are almost
Landleft.
Of course
I'm
right. Let
me
ac •
Bernie Brogan.
completely planned
by the
Er,
yes
;
who said that? Oh, the
throw this out for discussion. We
students; and what is not
black lad,
very good, very good.
all know that here in RACIST
The above names are those people who have
contributed to this
p
I
a n n e
d
j
us t c
O
m es
I
bet
you had a hard time
wedt'sCIRCL
_
E, and do not
appear
in
3
byline.
spontar,ieously from the very
growing up
in
the ghetto with
cowr.P.4-CoLS
.
CON'T.P.4-Col.l
ATTITUDES: OUTRAGEOUS
·
.
by BILL O'REILLY
,IANUARY 21.1~71
., THE CIRCLE.
PAGEJ
CIRCLE EDITORIALS
· . O!lce
agairi
th~ pipe dreams oU. Ed~~ Hoov~r have become tragic · ·
reality. The· witch-hunt. tactics of Hoover's super-sleuths have
I
.
be_comt: totally unbelievable. From within the confines of the federal
pnson m _Danbury, Philip Berrigan has engineered a sinister plot to
kidnap Henry Kissinger'and tum off the heat at Murder Inc.
.
: Perhaps .the fact that Daniel had caused
•
the FBI such
embarrassment by eluding its long arm for so long caused the
1vengeance against Philip and
his
friends. Besides being' an excellent
,exa~ple of distorting the tactics and philosophy of the Brothers
jBemgan and their sympathizers; the recent indictments are the
execution of the agnewian rhetoric and hard-hat political solutions;
1
~~hough this
!5
not.an isolated incident in recent developments of
P.olitical repreSS1on, 1t once again underscores the necessity to
·remove. Hoover and revamp the entire Federal Bureau of
Investigation.
Bullets: Buffet Sfyle
A couple of years ago someone set up a FOOD FOR PEACE fund
whereby all contributions would be used to buy food for the
imp_overished people-of South Vietnam and Kor~a.
Recently released government figures show that 96 percent of the
money donated did not go to buy food. The money was, in fact,
used by those countri~s• respective governments to buy guns and
other military materials.
The journalist
is
told to be very wary of statistical evidence for it
can be misleading, and we do not claim that we definitely believe
that 96 percent
of the food money did indeed go to the
military.
It
could be more,
it could be much less.
But one thing we do· believe
is
that the governments
of South ·
Vietnam and Korea have made· complete fools of
our government
over
this issue, not to mention· the fact that they have ~ompletely
defrauded
all
those American people who contributed
to
what they .
thought ·was a fund to help starving people.
'.
We are
sorry to tell those who do not already know it that their
·. money intended for
FOOD FOR PEACE has
bought a bullet that
may wind up in someone's stomach.
George McGover~
For President?
On January 19, Senator George McGovern of South Dakota
became the first to declare himself as a candidate for the Presidency
in 1972. The declaration may be seen in two. lights. First that
McGovern is serious and intends to be a candidate. In that case he
would be formidable opposition to Richard Nixon. His credentials as
a liberal in the Senate ar.e strong. As an advocate of re-establishing
American priorities, McGovern has been outstanding. His stand in
opposition to the war in Indo-China and in protection of our civil
liberties has been strong and consistent.
Secondly, McGovern may also be seen as an instrument to bring
together the many factions of liberal and radical American voters.
Hopefully, the stature of McGovern will be enough to-draw the left
together and avoid the disaster of a second term for Richard Nixon.
Letters· To
include: African ·History,
~ill brook, New York on
- Modern Russian History with a· Tuesday, January 26, 1971, at
two week tour in Leningrad
7:30 p.m. ·
for environmental activities
sponsored and planned by
existing action groups and
organizations. Through the
exchange of information a great
deal of duplication of effect can
be avoided.
-The Edi-tors·
included, All World Seminar,
A program dealing with the
and Individual Tutorial, in
environmental effects of the
history, politics, or some aspect
snowmobile will be presented.
of Danish social or political life.
The speakers will represent the
In the summer o( 1971 ICC
various areas of interest, i.e.
Irate Nun
will offer a· Summer Tour. of environmental effects of the
and to make a dramatic Northern and Eastern Europe, a
snowmobile, enforcement of the
manifestation of our repudiation two month opportunity to
recently enacted law which
of'terrorism both by the Left explore life in the Scandinavian
requires registration and
2. To provide sources of
information and advice on
scientific and technical matters.
While not in a position to
undertake original research, the
DCEA is studying available
information.
Rosemary Ruether and by the government. Finally welfare states, the socialist · regulates the use of the
1438 Montague Street NW we wish to show our countries of Eastern Europe, the snowmobile. Following the
Washington,D.C.20011 determination to·\vork.for USSR, Poland, Romania, programwillbetheelectionofa
Dear Friend:
'
change through persuasion and H\lllf,ilIY, Czechoslovakia, and the
permanent Board of Directors as
Dating se,vice
On November- 27, J. Edgar· reasoned confrontation w.ithth~ . divi_ded city: of Berlin., A shorter. well as a Chairman and
. ·
-
Hoover;
0
Dir~ctor .. of the Federal· 'issu.es, .. Nothing Jess .. th.an
::a:
tour-~ ,av~jl~:t,l~JQ~ Jh_o_se_ )VJ!o .... Vice-Chairman_ .. : ___
:
,.. ·. ..
...
.
Person or. group interested in
Bureau .oflnve~ti~ation,:~estified:-,-transfofination
·
!)f:_cons:ious~ess. :wish: -to' ·see. :the•: highlights_ -of
· The
-
DCEA was organized in . running a· branch of the School
befo!~·the._.S,en/lte and
0
-a-
·
reded1cat1on· to Northern' Europ~·outs1de April of 1970 following the ·Pool.non~computerized dating
Appropnabons . Committee .. that. constitutional ideals. and human· Copenhagen.· And · fmally, for
environmental conference held
service write to
a •~conspiracy of Catholic nun~: · values can save· this country those .. in~ere~ted in learning at Dutchess Community College.
SCHOOL POOL
,priests and lay .. people,
from a very dangerous tum about. Darush life, we offer the The intended functions of the
Sage Hall
masterminded by Philip and toward total destruction of Summer Session in Denmark.
DCEA are:
Cornell University
-Daniel Berrigan; were· planning liberty and hope both at home
The Fall Semester of 1971 will
I.
To serve as a clearing house
Ithaca,
N.Y.,
14850
actions such as kidnapping and around tlie world..
,·
offer All World Seminar, a
government officials and
We call on ·you to respond to · course in World Revolutionary
bombing· power facilities to· the. this .and arouse your friends and Movements, and the Individual
WANTED
Capitol. Mr. Hoover's testimony colleagues
-to
do likewise. As a-
Seminar. Danish Studies will give
suggested ·that, all the persons service ·of national rededication, an introduction to Danish life
associated with ariti-war draft we plan to hold a 24 hour and culture. Discussions about
actions were a.single fast-vigilirifrontoftheJustice India will be arranged in
conspiratorial group; led by the Department, December 18-19. preparation for an . optional
I
.
,
Berrigan . brothers . and all We- will assemble at
a
near-by Study Tour of India planned for
identified with the group kriown church (10th and G St. NW) at 4 the seven-week perio.d between
The present editors ·of -the
CIRCLE have ·decided to vacate
. as the "East Coast Conspiracy to p.m. Friday and march from Fall and Spring semesters. The
_SaveLives.'' -
.
.
.
there in solemn procession to Dan·ish Seminar.includes
. Those of us who know the ad the Justice
.
Department where intensive instruction in the
- hoc and nonviolent character of we will commission the fasters Danish language and a stay in a
the Catholic -. resist en ce with
.
laying on of hands. At 3 Danish F olkschool where only
movement in these, areas feel p.m. the following day there will · Danish is spoken. Danish
that these charges represent a be a concluding celebration of language courses are available in
very serious -escalation·· of the Eucharist, led by a broad both the Fall and Spring
government repressionof dissent spectrum of church and- civic Semesters and during the
a:nd . political·• opposition. ·leaders.We 9all on you to come Summer Session and are open to
Needless to say; the -many, andbringothersto.participatein all interested students.
people associated with the some or all of these. events .and .. Variations on· these · programs,
various actions are not a single to join us in this rededicatio'n·to including a farm stay, are
group;· are. not led by the solidarity, resistence to describedin the
.
brochure.
B.errigan· brothers in any oppression and-commitment to
ICC combines .. lectures,
.. organizational sense and totally authentic social values._. . _
seminars and discussions, field
' · · reject the kind of actions which.
David Kirk, Director, Emmaus trips and excursions with the
Mr. · Hoover describes.. Such - House
.
opportunity of gathering socially
testimony is an obvious effort to
R
o s e m a r y · R
u
e
t
Ii
e r , · with · students from Denmark
instill panic in the main body of . Theologian, Howan:l l,Jniversity and other foreign countries, all
the citizens by conjuring up an
-Richard Mcsorley, S.J. in an effort to accomplish the
image· of desperadoes who are Georgetown University · -
d es ired go a 1 s of ' ICC: ·
planning to put together in one
Submitted py International knowledge,
package all the various tactics of
Fr; Gallant · understanding, and friendship.
third _
world
O
revolutionaries in
ICC uses the informal approach
Cuba, Vietnam, French Canada
in or~er to create a more
and Palestine.
. . .
·c
11
g
I
stimulating atmosphere.
If
the FBI can make such
O 8 8 0
Inte'rested students are
charges totally without evidence, ·
encouraged to write for further
without any',actual crimes
Cope'nbagen
information to: ICC,
committed and potentially bring
. . . .
Henningsens Alle 68, 2900
down serious indictments based
,....
.Hellerup; Copenhagen~
, solely on their 'secret evidence' Dear Sir,
Denmark.
of •conspiracies' and 'plots,' no ,
Plans are now con_1plete for
citizen is safe and our civil rights the 1971 program of the
will quickly disappear.
INTERNATIONAL
COLLEGE
Yours sincerely,
We feel that it is time for the IN COPENHAGEN, and the
broadest possible coalition of course. of~erings available have
concerned citizens in all walks of been fmaUzed. The program has
life, but especially those been divide~ . up into t~ee
connected with the church, to separate entities, the Spnng
register a very strong protest
m
Semester, tht, Summer Sessions,
Washington against such political and the Fall_Semester • .
· and repressive use of the
F~ll credit co_urses
?Jl
World
investigative power of the FBI, Affarrs at ICC m Spnng 197l
_
Henning Berthelsen
Ed. Note - Contact Sal Piazza
for further information.
OCEA Meeting .-
The· Dutchess County
Environment Association will
hold a meeting at the Farm and
Home Center on Route 44 in
their
positions .
in
the. first week
of. March. ·-:This·· deci~ion was·
made _so that· the change in
student government -officers
· would be accompanied by · a
change
in
th·e. editorial staff.
Therefore:
·
Afl editorial and staff
-positions will have to be filled.
These include the three-member
editorial board ( co-editors and
news . editor), ·managing editor,
business editor and news writers.
Anyone interested in filling
these · positions please co·ntact
the . editors either by campus
mail {C857) or in person for an
interview. Selections will be
made after the interviews which
will
end February 18.
....
I
I
I
:
I
I
I
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PAGE4
.
TIIECIRCLE
JANUARY 21, 1971
, FOXES FRISK
FIVE
·
FOES FOR
8-3
MARK
CQP
·
aut
.
NTIC(l CHRISIM
·
AS
:
CONSOLATION
•
,
• ,
,l,
•
•
"
•
•
•
•
•
'
.
•
.•
'
•
'
,.·.·
·
·
:..
··
"'
·
:
Kings
-
Polni
L~test
TQ
'.
Fall
...
;:
.
,
.
'
,
.
. .
C
-
_
ta
·
:
·
rk
·
·
.
_
-
e
··
_· ....
·
'.
a
:·:':
n
·
·
.
i
;
d
:.··~
:
_.'.
s
'°,
-
·
h
·.:
.
..
:
a
:
/
~
·
k· e
·
_
·
,
•
_
:
:
s
'
l.
·
a
:
r
'
~
';
:-?
-
-i
-::
.
. .
. . . .
'
.
I.
.
_
;
Matist.College
.
recently
':
Tlie
·
'
iecdri.d
:
'hkir
'
saw Mari~t "nien
' ..
in
.
:'
doubie
.'
fig~re~
-.
i~d by
traveleq_
·
fo
.
·
Quaritico.
_
Virginia
.-
increase
·
its
'
lead · to 12
·
points - Forward Chtjs Crawford with 19
and
·
participated in
a
Christmas
_
5947
:
with If :04
'
remaining in
poin.ts
.
_
.
.
. .
.
.
.
._ .
-
·
Tournament
·
ho~ted by
.
the the· game .
.
Wi1k .time
.
~lapsing
The
'
•
Red Foxes were
·
led by
Quantico Marines from Maristheld
_
in.8or9
_
pc:>intlead
Captain Bill'Speilla
·
With 22
December 17 through December until Ed Reilly hit
'
an outside points
·
and 14 rebounds,
· 19. Marjst placed fifth in the shot with 4:56 left making the followed by For_ward Joe Scott
Tournament
.
by
'
winning two scene 6
-
8-59. Grove City with
·
21 points and finally
games while)os~ng only
._
one. At
,,
dominated the
·
remainder of the Cent~r Ray Manning
-
with
_
13
present tl_!e_,:J!e~
<
f~x~s
:
h
_
ave
.
game and
_
corriplet'ely shut out points.
_
·
:·
already ·•teSJllD~4
•\
t~~ir
,
r~gul~r
Marist ·offensively.
-
The final
··
The
·
final game
,
of
_
_
the
se:hedule.:sanc:I
:
0
<te.fe~t_~d :Ont;~nta score was Marist 68, Grove City Tournament ·saw
-
Marisf ·pitted
.
-State_ 8~-7,.:7.-
·
·lt
,
aPIJ_ear~·'.-~V,~dent
7J. The winners had a well against New York
_
·
Tech' for ·a
~t this tim
_
~Jh~t MlJ-nS~)S
_
well o!1
balanced attack as five men hit Fifth Place Championship:'
its way to
._
~"-1p!9,v~%l!st
;.
year s double figures with a high of 19
The Marist quintet played
15-9 seaso11 .
. :-,
>"
<
,:
, · -
: .
.
points
for:
.
Forward Randy
_
steady basketball in the first half
I
!1
~ecapp~g
'
.
the CTmstm
_
a
_
s
Cai pen.
·
.
,
., _
_
_
and lead at the
-
buzzer 48-36.
_
lnvitat10nal::1.'<;>U~~ment. Ma~ist
Ray Manning led·'Marist with This primarily was accounted for
,:
QPellt:_d, ~g!ii'!:s
.
!
, •
,Grove
~
City
17 _ points
.
and Guard Les by Ce,nter Ray Maririing who
_
_ €01le_$e>9.n::r.nl,!rsday. :at
_,
7:00
Clie'nery had
-
16 points
·
while scored 14 points while, Guard
.
:P
~
M.::
:
~ncl led
~
a,t
.
half-tim·e4440
Forward
·
Joe Scott netted 15
Ray Clarke netted 11
.
points.
:
o'
;
<m:tne:s~o2t
_
iii~
.
:OfJlinior Guard
points
mdst
oJ wliibh
'
canie in The second half saw Marist give
;
:
1:-e~-
-
.
Ql
_
~~n~rr
~
wit_!-t
~
total o~ I~
the secona half .
.
Cai:>tain
.
Bill
-
the Bears of New York more of
.
.
·
·
.
.
·
.
·
.
STEVE SHACKEL
_
- .
,
..
pqm
_
ts,
.
,
,
Ray-
.
~anmng,
_
Manst s
Spenla and Guard Ray Clarke
:
the same as th
.
e final buzzer
-
RA
y
CLARKE
. '.
· • ,
-•
-
··
-
ac~
· -
Center,
·
,
hi~
-
8
·
of_·
·
10 free
turned in un
·
der par performance sounded
.
with Marist winning
thrpws along_with
-
3 field goals
due to illness and injury 97~80. The losers were led by
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - , fo~
_
a· half-time spurt of 14
respectively.
Guard Pat Dalton with- 16
GOOD NEWS -
from
2
I
points.
Due to their first game loss,
points. The victors were led
_
by
ATTITUDES -
from
2
.
Marist stepped into the Center Ray Manning with 25
consolation bracket
.
and next points ari
•
d 14 rebounds,
AMERIKA, notice I spell
·
much alive people of God in that the
:
basketball team's big, big played against
_
the
-
_
Quantico Forward Joe Scott gathered in
America with a K instead of a C.
chapel.
showing at The Quantico Marines,-the
.
Tournament
·
host.
26
·
points ang Forward ·Bill
Isn't that Right
.
On? Of course it
Tournament;
-
the freshman In. this game Marist led all the Spenla netted l4 points.
-
is.
These
.
are "my highlights." mixer, and many of the parties way and compiled
.
a
.
27•13
In winning two of its three
Getting back to the question,
Other things that are
·
:very much held in the residences; the Italian margin with
'1
o
minutes left in
games Marist
_
was given the Fifth
what do you think can be done
impressed in the memory part of Club Dinner Dance· some of the the half. The undaunted Marines Place Trophy as winner
.
of the
to overthrow the present
my brain are: The
'
Reaching 9ut things
.
written in The Circle;
.
etc. fought
.
back though and were Consolation Bracket.
.
government? Yes, that boy.
Weekend in my residence; the
· '.
'
_
_
·
_
·
.
.
- .
_
·
.
_
:
.
:
losirig 44
~
38
,
atthe half. The first
Marist ci"efeated
-
the U.S.
I don't think we ought to
sitting in for ~r. Benin's
:
,
If .Jweie
-
to write an ~rticle on
·
half stats showed' Forward
;
Joe Merchant ;Marine
_
·
Academy
-
of
·
overthrow the government, Mrs.
F_res~m~n Seminar tor
a
__
the "lowlights
_
?''.
:
·
_
offlops
.
o
_
fth
_
e Scott
·
with
:
:
16::'l>oilits;
'
8
i'
of
q -
Kings
,,·
Point:
<
on
~
.Saturday,
La
nd1eft.
·
.
-
di~c~ssion on God
.
(Dr; Rhys
,,
first semes
_
ter
;
it wouli:l be very
from
the
floor:
Tlie i:-ecoveriiig January 16; .. After a close
-
:
Wrong:
·
Sotrieon'~' else?'Yes,
~illiams, my co-Chapl~,
:
was brief:
-
the
.-
Bill
:
Baird discussion Captain
' '
Bill
"
-SpeiiliCaddea l
.
O
.
!>allgame
_
_
the
-
Red
·
,
F?xes pulled
_
the
·
long-haired youth with the
Ju~t g_reat th
_
at
·
n_ight, period (not
'
·
histalk);t4es~upid points, 3
-
ffom the
,
ffold
',
and
'
4
.
away
.
·
to
-
an 84-68 victory
..
Ray
"Put th e pigs in the Pen"
.
enlightenmg _us so much), some television
_
pro
.
gram in the theatre from
·
the foul line
;
_ ;,
,
; -- ,,
Clarke with 26 points ahd Steve
.
button.
-
.
.
of the ~vrestling ml!_tc~es \A:pples (I'm
.
glad
·
1 can't remeinb
.
er the
-
·
·
Shakel (20 Points) )ed
-
Marist to
·
.
Uh, I really
'
didn't hear the
aggressiveness, especi~lly), t~e title); no pep rallies. for ~he
Th~ s~
-
c~~d half saw
'
Marist
its eighth win against three
question Mrs. Landleft,
,
I wasn't
· Fa_ll ~-rew_ ma~ing __ l?ig football-games; some articles in coast to al4 point lead 63-49
losses.
_
,
_
listening.
·
Um~ersities sit up and fake the Circle· and no "etc." That is
·
with 5 minutes remaining in the
Leading Scores for the Season:
Exactly,
·
that boy has great
notice; the Soccer team's it
-
'
-
game. The Marines were not to
·
Ray Manning-17.0 average; Ray
·
insight.The whole class ought.to
"never-stop
-
trying" attitude
·
be trampled though as they
Clarke - 13.7 average; BillSpenla
pattern themselves after
.
that
every minute of the game,
I am anxious for a semester of
-
came on strong and ended the
-
- 12.4 average;
·
Joe, Scott - 13
.
8
boy
,
Well,.l'll see you tomorrow
despite a disappointing record; more good news.
·
game 76-7LThe losers had three
average.
,
class, right? Of course I'm right.
\
h
(
'
~
4,
.
·
/
d
!
,
fill~
...
'
Dirixtor of Security. RONALD D. ADERHOLDT,
poses
for picture
sporting
X-m~
pft
from JOSEPH
BROSNAN, Director?~ Ca~pus CC;fltcr.
.
.
..
-
Pol
.
ice.
Rap
Sessions And
Police
·
car
·
lolJrs
-
lo Continue
-
Mr.
·_
Ronald Aderholdt,
Director of Campus Security,
recently announced that the
Town of Poughkeepsie Police
-
Dept.
·
will
coi:itinue
·
their
program of student-tours for the
,
second semester.
·
·
Chief Charles Schade has said
.
that the first tours will be given
4uring the wee~end of Jan
.
28-30 with any two nights being
available for two
'
students each
night. The tours will then be
-
repeated every three weeks
:
with
four more
.
people each time.
·
-
· The tours, under the direction
of
_
Lt. Rcrbert Hornick,
originated last October when Mr.
Robert N:orman of the English
Department gave one
_
of his
students an assignment which
consisted of riding in a police car
for an 8-hour shift and doing a
·
report on what he observed and
encountered.
Toe
·
student, Joseph Rubino,
had this to say: "I found the
evening to be extraordinarily
interesting and profitable,
mainly because of the
cooperation of
Lt.
Hornick.
After arriving at the scene of an
incident I would observe how
the officers handled the
"When I ·thought
·.
that the
'It's an
.
odd
·
job. It's a
investigating officer was
·
·
too
.
controversial
·
job.
·
Sometimes
harsh
·
and hadn't
.
used
-
good
.
..
you feel yo
_
u
'
re wrong no matter
discretion, Hornick listened to
what you do.' "
.-
me
_
and often completely agreed
·
Mr. Aderholdt also announced
with
·
me~
-
that the P91ice Rap Sessions on
'
·
'I learned much from
Lt.
campus will
·
continue this
Hornick that night and I think
.
semester, with the first one
he learned some things from me
taking
'
place on Wednesday
too. He readily welcomes
_.
_
night, Feb. 3
~
at 7:30 in room
opinions
-
and suggestions from
249 Campus Center. The first
observers
·-
and
·
he wishes more
meeting held
_
.last fall athacted
people would take an interest in
over 100 interested members of
·
.
the behind-the-scenes work of the community.
the PoHce Dept'.
Representing the Town
.
Police
"He
.
~aid to me something very
Department will be Officers
.
interesting which I'll never
Robert Boyce and Joseph Callo.
forget
.
When I asked him about
The
·
City Poli~e representatives
the difficulty of his job he said,
will be named at a later date.
·
•
f,alendar of ·Eve
.
nts
·
·
:
Thursday
-
-
·
8:00 p.m., C.U.B. Film "EAST OF EDEN"/"REBEL WITHOUT
A CAUSE," 8:00 p.m., Theater
.
Friday
-
.
8:30 p.m., C.U.B. Night at the Rat, featuring SKITCH AND THE
RUBINOS, Rathskeller, Campus Center.
Saturday
6:30 p.m., Basketball-Albany St. -Away (F)
8:30 p.m., Basketball -Albany St. -Away
(V)
2:00 p.m., Wrestling - CCNY - Home
• * *
*
*
situation, whereupon I would
ART EXHIBIT
make my impressions known to
Artist: Si Lewen, Title: The Millipede. January 18 - February 28.
the Lieutenant.
·
Reception 2-5 p.m., Gallery Lounge, January 31, 1971.
1
/
PAGES
· . THE CIRCLE
:
You the taxpayer! You the
'people! Let's. get together.
·I..___
S_U ____
RV..........,____1
V_Al___,I
.
Organize your community. Write
to your representatives. Call
them at city hall, at the county
office buildings, at home or at
Recycling:
f{om Common Sense·
Yes, there is our solution and
it really is the only common
sense solution: You know why?
Well, because the U.S.
is
not
self-sufficient in many of the
resources we presently throw
Solid waste, garbage, trash ... or away. Aluminum, for example.
urban ore. Depends on how you We; as a nation; iri 1970, threw
look at it.
'
away' 4,000,000,000 (that's 4
Recent public meetings seem. billion) aluminum beer cans.
to indicate that Dutchess (That doesn't count the poisons
County Officials look at solid like soda pop, in aluminum
wastes as something to get rid of , cans.)
.
.
·
-:: to dispose of. - to bury in.
That number is predicted to
work.
·
·
BOOKS
The User's Guide to the
Protection of the Environment,
by Paul Swatek, A Friends of
'the Earth/Ballantine Book.
Paperback
$1.25.
The Voter's Guide to
Environmental Politics, Garrett
DeBell, Ed., A Friends of the
Earth /Ballan tine Book.·
Paperback $.95 ·
landfill sites or to find new more go up to
9
billion .beer -cans in
These guide books published
efficient incineration methods. 1 9 7
5.
And ·.we are not by Friends of the Earth bring a
For example, it was disclosed on self-sufficient ,in· aluminum.
new and needed skepticism to
Nov.
24 that Dutchess County Look it up! And take both _consumerism and politics.
received a whopping
$137,785 newspapers. The U.S. is not They are particularly valuable
· -grant. For what? To carry out a . self-sufficient in W?Od pulp, We · because they bring together in
comprehensive solid ·waste.·· careless~y throw: it awa~! We
one pla.ce much. formerly
study. (It was emphasized that import it. (We will not comment
scattered material on living
the grant was
100% STATE on what we. have done to our
environmentally and how The
FUNDED
as if this were once magnificent forests.)
_System works.
somebody 'else's money - like
The solution is quite simple.
The User's Guide tackles every
. N.Y. State taxpayers are. ·not In fact, there is a Pr:oposal
aspect of living from home.
.. Dutchess County .taxpayers!) before the Common Council_ of-
heating to detergents. Its thesis
Actually the county did not get . the City of Poughkeepsie. It is a
is "Every consumer decision you
the money but rather Trautman: plan recommended by the
inake has an environmental
Associates (Buffalo, .New York)! Science Advisory Council to impact. Evezy time you
visit
the
Interestingly enough, the separate the urban ore at home
supermarket,. buy a ticket to
Dutchess County Planning Board into 3. categories:
1 -
paper; 2 -
travel, choose a place to live
(4
7- .
C an no n · Street, bottles, cans -and plastics;
3 -
your choices have an effect ... on
· Poughkeepsie) is seJling a refuse organic wastes. These would be
the"· quality of the air you
disposal report prepared under a collected separately - paper;
breathe and the water you·
HUD ( Housing
&
Urban twice a month, for example, and . drink."
Development)grant(seems to be a schedule worked out for the
. The User's Guide shows the
plenty· of grant money around - ·rest. The City can th"n sell the
consumer how he can say "no"
that's taxpayers' money) which valuable, recoverable mat_erials.
to certain environmental insults
·was issued in August,
1969.
So The food wastes with leayes,. can
and that he can make better
we are; getting just what we · be: com_posted
for·
·use .as · decisions ·than the so~called'
need, right folks _.anotheueport fertilizer._.·.• . .
· ·.
. .... ··
•
· ·•
experts. The book _fails,
(and More Solid Waste); :. ....
· Simple isn't it!' Other' places ,however, to point out forcefully
The length of the -Trautman · ·are . beginning to · move in this
enough that the consumer
is
Study is-io be, are'yoti ready, 1 direction. Why ·not ·• Dutchess
rea.lly . prevented from making
year.
Opel
year to study what has County! Our local ·offi_cials--do · environmentally sound decisions
. already Ueen_ studied,. whaLis not, seem to. have the·.Yankee
most of the time because
. already: !/known. Fantastic! ingenuity we are
all proud of;
environmentally sound
Almost,
1
/makes one angry, No siree! They look the other
alternatives don't exist.
doesn't jt? We, of. Common w. a y . -
and s e n't the
The Voter's Guide exposes a
Sense, think that we can save reco~mendatio!l
.
to the <;ity purposefully murky subject. the
much ,noney ... and m_uch . Plan~g Comnuttee, whe~e.~t,1$. workings of government • and
valuable time. We can save_tu!}e, g,ettlng ~ogged. do,fn·
·m ·
presents guidelines ·-for those
effort and money b_y_ pomt,mg '.eco~omtc ·st~d1es • . The who would work within the
. out to
/~11
our offtcials._ .. c.ity, ·approximate cost
t9
the city for , system for environmental sanity.
state, national an_d to you, the th1srecycleplanmay)>ear~und
lt
-prov-ides practical,
rrader, the people, the taxpay_er,
$15,000 a .YE:ar; Not bad. _We steP,:.by-step instructions on how
tl~at we
!
can: do only one thmg could· r~n this recycle proJ~ct .. to .. influence congressmen . and
Wlth th~ sohd waste generat~d, countywide for so~e years.
?!l .
federal agencies.• I
tis
remarkable
ont•
thmg ·on!}' _and that _is:
that
$137,785 rep~rt grant. .
· because
it
emphasizes the
REC' Y ~LE! !
! ( and while . I
!1
the f
~ ~ ~ ~ f · the, difficulty of being effective with
r~·9•ding.· start cutting dpwn on envrronm~nt~l ~~s, it ., seems • Congre.ss and · the downright
sohd. wa,ste by demandm~ and that our city o(ficials are not .too i m P
O
s s i b il it y of getting
J.!l.'_tt111g
~e.turnable con_tamers, co~~erned. and ·_our .cou~~ anywhere with a federal agency_ •.
th~ end
ot
~xcess packaging and officials are. mo~e mtereste~ m · Toget4er these volumes are as
-
l~~
changing
our wasteful reports and studies than. action. comprehensive as any already on
ht.·~tyk .)
.
What about you? You the voter!
• I
•
JANUARY 21,
i97l
the environmental ·bookshelf.
Although they assume a working
knowledge of the environmental
calamities confronting us the
User's Guide contains a
bibliography for those who
would read further and the
Voter's Guide contains a list of
organizations which provide
information and action on
environment_al p~oblems.
Environmental
Awareness
Handbook·
Earth Recovery Action's
(ERA) .
Educational_ Committee
has published an Enviromr.ental
Awareness . Program. Although
structured for use by teachers of
students . in grades K-6, the
handbook contains much useful
i·nformation for concerned
citizens in other areas, 'such as
scouting, service organizations,
boards of education, and school
administrators.
It
contains
suggestions and ideas that
involve constructive action.
It
is
in . no way a complete
program. It is meant to be a
springboard of ideas,· with
enough variation, so that you
may select those ideas ·which
seem most appropriate and
exciting to you·.
ERA
believes that real change
can only come through
education. That is why they
wrote this Program. That is why
we hope you will use this
Program. The handbook is
·
free,
but to defray cost we ask a
$1.00 contribution.
If
you want
a copy of the Program, write to
Earth Recovezy Action, P.O .
Box
3195, Poughkeepsie, New
York
.
.
____
..
Announcements
Anyone interested in working
ST A GE CREW for the
Children's Theatre production of
"Peter Pan" please contact
Emmett Cooke (C402).
· · "Lead Pollution in Plants from
Automobiles" Lecture by Dr.
Motto; January
28, . Theatre,
Clmpus Center.
8.1.1
8.1.2
8.1.3
8.1.4
8.1.5
.
THE
Cz
--R
:
O
:
:··--~--;: -~---
.
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, .. ' :·:-~
>·_. ~,..
~
, _
·
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·
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_· ·_ . . ·. i' .· .:' .. .._·
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,
VOLUME 8 . NUMBER 1
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NCW YORK l 260!.
JANUARY 21, 1971
\
•
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PAGE2
'
THE CIRCLE
'
'
JANUARY 21, 197l
.·
,
·
Disahled.
·
·-
I-i1
_
.
Actioll
-
·
by
MIKE WARD
..
by
FR.LEO GALLANT
.
The education of disabled
·
to the active competitive life in a
··
ask the Board ot.Educatioli to
-
These are
'
the thinp that were
·· ·
direction
:
..
·
.
.
·
.
. .
. · .
.
children
in the City
··
of New busy high school, is very
-
restudy the situation
.
of'these
really good
·
news for
)
ne during
·
I
was
most impressed by
the
: .
.
York
is
far
below what it should difficult for the disabled
.
students.
·· .
:
.
·
.
:
the first
·
semester. Honestly;
many college kids-who spent
be
.
On January 13th, 1971
·
"We recommend inclusion of
-
Dr. Scribner seemed impressed
,.
:
almost even, day was a highlight.
.
their
·
vacations
·
-
there .
.
They
·
.
·
various
.
organizations such
.
as
·
these students wherever possible,
·
.
by
a
presentation made
.
by
.
This
is
a Iiew
.
way of life for me
;
travele
·
d m~y hours in crowded
DIA and other parent
·
and
with non-disabled students in
·
·
Ronald
.
Pagano, of
.
the
·•
it's
,
completely different from
·
cars
to get there from
·
New
student
·
groups had the intermediate or junior high
·
Han
.
di capped Students anything
.
I have experienced
in
.
York, Ohio, Minnesota, Illinois,
opportunity to appeal
·
to the
.
school -to promote fuller Organization. liJr. Pagano, a
.
my
·
priestly career
.
Each day
was
Massachusetts
,
or traveled
;
by
,
·
Budget Committee of the Board
'
integration into normal school senior at
_
Grover Cleveland
High
·
new refreshing. Each day
-
was
plane at their own
•
expense.
of Education in order to get the life, malting them better socially School
'in
queens, made _a pl~a
imp~rtant; ther~fore a highlight.
They
•·
·
then worked hard
.
at
necessary funds for new and
adjusted to high school. We note
.
·
for all the disabled. He said that
I tried
.
to live
•
up
.
to one very
unpleasant jobs and even
·
paid
better programs. The following
that while most school
.
programs a lack o~facilities was preventing -· important resolution that I ma~e
board.It wasn't comfortable or
is
part of the speech
.J made
have progressively advanced, many_disabled youngst~rsfrom _whenlstepped~:m
.
this_Man~t
fancy
·
. But the ~pirH
·
of
representing DIA .. (Disabled
in
bussing for the disabled has not. recemng a full education_., ~e
Campus: I was going to live this
-
community was incredible and
Action).
·
Long l:!us rides, .waits on cold
.
asked also for two-w~y radios m
new
.
life fully, developing a thick
the friendships made were solid
"The budget that has been
.
corners, late arrivals
,
are still
_
the
.
sch~ o 1 bus ~
-
s
for
-the
skin to
.
problems that could
and true.
.
·
.
.
·
·
proposed
.
for all children with
rule rather than the exception. handicapped, ~eat belts a1;1,d
crush
a sensitive chaplain and
.There were eight
.
students
disabilities,
.
must be kept and
C'!fi~
school students
.
losing blo:ks for k~e~mg wh
_
eelchaus
not try to impo
·
se my
from Marist. Two
·
.othershad
.
to
not one thought can be given to
~heir f~ or second penod
·
?f
.
stationary
w~~
in transl!-
.
philosophy of life on anyone.
tum back when their car
-
broke
cutting comers at the expense of ins~rucbon . suffer severely
m
Mrs. C:ciha
·
Bezviner of.
.
This has made life on campus a
down
.
The Appalachian Club at
.
the disabled
.
·
their educat!onal progre~; May
.
PRIDE which _st~nds _for People
_
thrilling experience. But since
Marist paid their fares and it
is
"Education in our city has
.
for
we hope forimprovement.
·
for Re ha b ih tat
1
on and
some things stood out.more than
the aim of. tlie Club to continue
too long
·
been a privilege rather
The reaction from the Integration of the Disabled
.
·
others
Jet
me
list my
doing this in the
·
fut~. The
than a right. Dr. Scribner
members of the committee were Through Education,
.
sa
i
d 696
''Highiights o
·
f the first
.
Club also wants to help to send
appears to be taking a step in the
·
surprising to me. Dr. Scribner children with brain damage
.
were
semester."
Peter Pan in the spring to delight
right direction to eradicate this
.
remarked, "if I am on any side, on the waiting list for ciasses.
1)
My Two Weeks
·
Stay
.
in
.
the ~hildren there. (T_hey are still
·
injustice. It is not enough : an
it is yours." The article in the
Although it remains to be seen
Appalachia. This and all that led
"
!alkmg about the Wizard of Oz
individual has a right to an
next day's New York Times, what improvements will be
to it (The Christian Appalachian
m Berea, ·Lancaster, Mt._ Vernon
education but must have the
which probably went to press made, the mere recognition of
Project at Marist, its meetings,
and McKee.)
.
.
best possible education to fulfill
before rr,y speech
,
indicated that the inferior education
.
of the
the enthusiasm of the members)
-
I urge that more students
-
Join
his potential. Any plan with
a
Dr. Scribner would act on the disabled is a big step. But there
really shook me up.
I even gave
the
·
Marist CAP or
_
support
·
its
·
lesser philosophy will only
.
reco
·
mmendations.
·
are more
·
steps which are just as
up,
·
on January 1st, a small
activities finan<:ially ?r actively
.
provide a token program
SCRIBNER INTENDS TO big and if the
,
Board of
pleasure
I enjoy
,
smoking
Ithasagoodthinggomg
.
.
des
i
gned to ease
_
our societal
REVIEW BUDGET
Education is so receptive to the
Tiparillo
's
;
This is
·
not
2)
Thi: FootbaU Season. N?t
consc
i
ence. Indeed, rather than
,
Says He May Have Slighted problems of the disabled even to
earthshaking but I just couldn't
b
.
ecause it was so Sl!ccessful
m
·
keep the present level of special
Services for
.
Handicapped
the extent of publicly stating
see myself wasting money on
the won-lost
.
column: But
classroom instruction ...
·
'
School -Chancellor Harvey B
.
that they will hire teachers with
·
that after what I saw in
because it was
,
a symbol of what
Scribner said yesterday, "Maybe disabilities, \YhY are they holding
Kentucky
.
I feel that the
.
life can
.
be
·
when you try
:
"1 - It is most necessary to
expand and improve these
services.
"2 -
Reduce the numbers of
children still
'
on home
instruction. -
"3 - Enlarge the opportunities
for all disabled children.
"4 - Let them participate in
a
classroom situation in this great
-
school system and on to high
school and, where merited,
I did not give that area sufficient
.
the license
.
of a
·
woman who
compass needle in my life is
.
thrilling. I happened to be very
.
study," adding t
_
hat he would applied last September?
going
. t
o take on another
close to .the whole scene so I
probably got more thrills than
S
·-
D ·
0
-
,
.
.
G
many: getting to know the
-
··
e Ven
.
0
w
n:
'
n e . 0
.
0
~~;~:~. t~~~t~s~he~:1~~~~~;
seeing them going on the field
by TOM
HACKEIT
with the determination "ain't
college!
After three and one half years,
·
·
scene. It concerns itself
_
with
·
and falling
in
love with Elairie
.
gonna let nobody
.
turn me
driving onto the Marist
·
College
.
neither buildings no
_
r rivers, with
·
The w,orld, as it exists now, will
around," game after game; the
campus is no extraordinary
neither parking
_
lots
·
-
nor
·
stillhave
'
to
.
waitfora
.
fewmore
bowlgamewheretheyprovedto
experienc~. The potholes
·
were
pot-holes. Above
.
it all a tone of inont
_
hs before it begins
-
to
·
all
·
that they were
·
great (I've
.
still there, the parking lot
nostalgia stood salierit
·
·
.
.
.
swallow arid digest the class of
h
_
ated the fiel~ _goal rule ever
· · ·
.
·
·
· ·
remained · poorly plowed, the
.
Yc>U
·.
s~e you can
'
:
walk
;
the : n i n
·
e teen
'
-
h und
.
te'd and
smce); my recemng a game b~ll;
'
"Our group: Disabled
.
in dorms stood' tall-imd lonely on
'
emp_ty,,corrido~
'.
and ride
,
the. seventy~he;
:''
-
'·
.
'C'
. '
;
the
,
hundre~s of stud,.ents trymg
Action; · feels; ,•from
.
th~tr
·
.
the eve. oLano~her
(
seiriesfor's
:
. ·
unusecr:
·
elev
i
rtora
,:'
filid
: l
never" · The
:
'time
.
·
has
·
conie
'
then to ·
·
to-~ ~he field; the real support
:
experience ,that the
·
transition
..
start, and tlle riverwasfrozen
~
realize that somethihg was being, begin
-
,t.o
.
.
:
seriously
_:
think·about
.
from
.
~9 many.
:;··
''
·
··.·
;
··· ·
·
from
·
a
.
sheltered nori-cpmpeti
~
·:
as
it alw~ys
_
.
is
•
in
-
January.
said,: perh,aps
.,
something
/
that
·. · ..
those
·
·,
delicate
.
dishes
:
we
.
will
·
·•
Th~
-
J!)otb~
.
-
club also
..
has
.
a
tive envir(lnment of multi-graded
.
Ho"".ever,
.
I
_
allow myself one
.
never before occurred to
,
your,
-
become a part of.We are faced,
.
good thing goU1g. It needs more
.
.
classrooms in elementary school more addition to this common
.
busied mind; that a time would
.
still,
as was
.
the graduating class members,
·
officers,
_
workers to
come when you dr
.
ove down that
,
of
my
freshman year, with the
keep
..
that
. _
team gomg
.
(all
.
the
.
short winding road t.o the
·
undei;lared war in Asia; we
.
are
way next
,
year).
~
_these ~~bs
beginning of your last semester
.'
fa~ed with
-
a recession; and the
develop the
·
leadenhi~ qualibes
.
·
That
.
time
..
has
come for this
-
·
s
O
c i a
.
I
·
c
·
0
n
a
·
t a n
t
8
.
0
f
that ar~ so. valuable
m
_college
.
'
.
.
.
.
undergraduate
;
·
..
·
. .
.
<
unemployment, poverty, crime~
·
students. Join Coach Levme and
But at
.
least I cari res
e
rve the strikes ... (need
·
Ilist furthe~). So
Zaccpaeus and Barney_
n~w:,
_
.
·
rig h
t
to
be
.
cal 1 e d
•.
an .. you pick
a copy of Hamlet and
3)
:
The T~eatre ~uild,~
.
H~w
Good morning class welcome the
F.a.L
always hounding your
.
undergraduate for
·
a
few more read ',To be
.
or not to be?' Or
to
.
Succe~d in Bu~mess. Here
_
I
to
·
Political· Science 203;
·
My
.
parents?
months
•
arid can procrastinate you canjust
-
fay back.and finish
.
w~uld ~e
.
.
~o
:
11;1-cl~de. many
.
name is Mrs. Landleft and
.
all
l
.
Nbt really Mrs. Landlef( you my affair with Mrs
>
Robinson
,
this month's
.
Playboy.
thing., mthis highlight. The
.
.
have to say
is;
"Pow~r
-
to
.
the see Jgrew up in
•
Hyde Park and
·
·
·
·
·
tremendous
.
stage 5Uccess; the
.
People
.
"
my father
is
a detective .
.
·
spirit of the cast, stage workers;
.
.
This semester's work will be
.
,
Oh
;
well you can be sure
projectioriists, coaches; the real
'
'·
·
very interesting provided
·
you you
'
ll
:
be treated equally in this
.
fun
they had together(atypeof
have the right attitude
.
l
know
.
class.
_
In fact you get an A
.
joy that is
.
often missing in a
-
there
·
is some talk
·
around
:
Well class, let's get back to the
O
J(
,
.t
LL
world that God created for
the
campus to
.
the effect that I do
·
subject .
.
What
.
is
.
it
·
ag
a
in
·
- oh
.
ADM
I
T
.
Y
O
·
happiness of men
.
)
.·.
,
·
.
·
.
.
. 1
not give ari objective
_
course. yeah
·
, Political
.
Sci~nce
.
As you
,
·
· .
·
·
·
·
·
I like to include here
..
the
·
This talk was obviously
:
started all know.:Spiro and the C.I.A. are
,,/
•
·
,,
, .
·
·
·
i,,
Children's Theatre
-
group
:
with
by soine disturbed fascists and it all around us and closing in fast
.
that fantastic thing they puf on
.
definitely has racjst
.
overtones as
~erhap~ we
,
should take
.
to the
:
for the faculty children.
·
Maybe
.
I'zr
.
sure you all can see.
jungle like· Regis Debray. That's
·
one
•
day I'll
:
write a ~complete
,
,
·
Well; to dispelall.of my
.
critics.
an
idea! The next class
·
will be
,
.
·
article on that because there waS
. ·
I
.
have decided t.o ass
_
ign readings
: ·
held
_
behind· Sheahan
·
Hall in the
·
.
something -
maybe
·
too
·•:
·
concerning both the
.
left and the
.
forest. Everyone wear old army
.
intangible
.
or
.
difficult to pin
.
.
.
ridiculous right. The
·
first
·
two
'
jackets arid berets and we'll rwi
.
point
·
- about
·
that ~fternoon
·
books, which
..
will
·
be
.
- read
.
by
. -
around
.
and• practice guerrilla
which would make me list it
.
as
tomorrow, are the "Agony of
.
tactics
.
We
.
might even ~ptui'e
the "most
_
moving event of
c
th~
<
.
the New Left" by Fidel Castro the new parking lot and blow up
.
semester.
'
'
·
.
-
.
,.'..
·:
·
:.
.
.
.
and "The Dariger on the Right"
Bro
.
Donelly's tractor.
:
·
4)
The SaturdafNigh
l
Masses
~
.
_
·:
15y Gore
,
yidal.l_light class? Of
Mrs
.
·
tandleft,
Mrs. Landleft
.
I list this event becaustH>f whaL
·
course l'm
'
right.
·
--
.
.
What, What!
it has done for Ille personally;-t
?
·
::;
.
.
Hey, I.just thought of a joke.
Isn't. this supposed
.
to be a
-
__
have
·
many-of
,
tile frustra
.
tions;
.
·
This will liven things up. If Fidel
Political Science course?
doubts
.
and
·
hangups:
.
·oL. your
;
•·
..
Castro married Gore Vidal he'd
Yes. .
.
generation when
it-comes
to
·-_··
•
.
·
:
,
.
be
·
-
Fid~l Vidal. Fairly
Well, .
I
have a question
.
religion.
I
have been·a priest (or
hurr.orous, _nght, class? Of course
concerning Political_ Science
.
twenty-two years (on Feb. 2); I
.
.
:
I'm ?ght.
·
_ ·
, .
Oh my God~ Well, go ahead.
.
·
have
,
said over 8500
Masses;
I
'
I
Just noticed that a few of th,e
·
Why is it that all Communistic
now a
v
erage
14
Masses a week at
•
·
slower ones~ the class did not
.~
regimes always wind
-
up as
.
Marist .
.
I have never lost my love
:
laugh at that Joke .
.
Well,
I
have repressive states?
for the sacrificial banquet.
I
•
your names
,
you
can
be sure of
That question is not relevant
believe the sharing
-
of the body
that. Don't misunde~an? me,
it is the kind of question that
and blood of Christ is going to
•
you are under no obligation to only a neo-nazi would
.
ask
.
And
change the face
-
of this world. As
Iau~ a~
·
my jokes or say yes to besides it's off the topic and we
·
N'
in the book "A
.
Str
_
anger in a
everything
l say. You are all free
must always stay on the topic.
·
•
··
.
.
c
·-
-.
·
:
·
'
z~
·.
-
·
c
-.
z
-
£
.
·
.
·
Strange Land" where Smith
to dissent - no matter how
Mrs.
-
Landleft
-
I
think that
•
offered the water to the people
immature and misguided
.
that
that question pertains to the
-
which would bring peace, love
dissent may be. I like people to topic.
.
and trust, we have something .
·
dissent, as you know I'm a
Foolish Boy,
r
decide what
that can do just that: the meal at
revolutionary myself.
·
But keep
pertains to the topic around
Sal Piazza, Joe Rubino, Ann Gabriele, Janet Riley,
Mass.
.
in rr.ind who has the power here
.
here. My
class
is
liberal but
I
Peggy
Miner,
Frank Baldascino, P.aul Tesoro, John
But the Midnight
Masses
have
The people, right, Mrs.
must ha,•e some control,
right?
Tk h
given me a lift. They are almost
Landleft.
Of course
I'm
right. Let
me
ac •
Bernie Brogan.
completely planned
by the
Er,
yes
;
who said that? Oh, the
throw this out for discussion. We
students; and what is not
black lad,
very good, very good.
all know that here in RACIST
The above names are those people who have
contributed to this
p
I
a n n e
d
j
us t c
O
m es
I
bet
you had a hard time
wedt'sCIRCL
_
E, and do not
appear
in
3
byline.
spontar,ieously from the very
growing up
in
the ghetto with
cowr.P.4-CoLS
.
CON'T.P.4-Col.l
ATTITUDES: OUTRAGEOUS
·
.
by BILL O'REILLY
,IANUARY 21.1~71
., THE CIRCLE.
PAGEJ
CIRCLE EDITORIALS
· . O!lce
agairi
th~ pipe dreams oU. Ed~~ Hoov~r have become tragic · ·
reality. The· witch-hunt. tactics of Hoover's super-sleuths have
I
.
be_comt: totally unbelievable. From within the confines of the federal
pnson m _Danbury, Philip Berrigan has engineered a sinister plot to
kidnap Henry Kissinger'and tum off the heat at Murder Inc.
.
: Perhaps .the fact that Daniel had caused
•
the FBI such
embarrassment by eluding its long arm for so long caused the
1vengeance against Philip and
his
friends. Besides being' an excellent
,exa~ple of distorting the tactics and philosophy of the Brothers
jBemgan and their sympathizers; the recent indictments are the
execution of the agnewian rhetoric and hard-hat political solutions;
1
~~hough this
!5
not.an isolated incident in recent developments of
P.olitical repreSS1on, 1t once again underscores the necessity to
·remove. Hoover and revamp the entire Federal Bureau of
Investigation.
Bullets: Buffet Sfyle
A couple of years ago someone set up a FOOD FOR PEACE fund
whereby all contributions would be used to buy food for the
imp_overished people-of South Vietnam and Kor~a.
Recently released government figures show that 96 percent of the
money donated did not go to buy food. The money was, in fact,
used by those countri~s• respective governments to buy guns and
other military materials.
The journalist
is
told to be very wary of statistical evidence for it
can be misleading, and we do not claim that we definitely believe
that 96 percent
of the food money did indeed go to the
military.
It
could be more,
it could be much less.
But one thing we do· believe
is
that the governments
of South ·
Vietnam and Korea have made· complete fools of
our government
over
this issue, not to mention· the fact that they have ~ompletely
defrauded
all
those American people who contributed
to
what they .
thought ·was a fund to help starving people.
'.
We are
sorry to tell those who do not already know it that their
·. money intended for
FOOD FOR PEACE has
bought a bullet that
may wind up in someone's stomach.
George McGover~
For President?
On January 19, Senator George McGovern of South Dakota
became the first to declare himself as a candidate for the Presidency
in 1972. The declaration may be seen in two. lights. First that
McGovern is serious and intends to be a candidate. In that case he
would be formidable opposition to Richard Nixon. His credentials as
a liberal in the Senate ar.e strong. As an advocate of re-establishing
American priorities, McGovern has been outstanding. His stand in
opposition to the war in Indo-China and in protection of our civil
liberties has been strong and consistent.
Secondly, McGovern may also be seen as an instrument to bring
together the many factions of liberal and radical American voters.
Hopefully, the stature of McGovern will be enough to-draw the left
together and avoid the disaster of a second term for Richard Nixon.
Letters· To
include: African ·History,
~ill brook, New York on
- Modern Russian History with a· Tuesday, January 26, 1971, at
two week tour in Leningrad
7:30 p.m. ·
for environmental activities
sponsored and planned by
existing action groups and
organizations. Through the
exchange of information a great
deal of duplication of effect can
be avoided.
-The Edi-tors·
included, All World Seminar,
A program dealing with the
and Individual Tutorial, in
environmental effects of the
history, politics, or some aspect
snowmobile will be presented.
of Danish social or political life.
The speakers will represent the
In the summer o( 1971 ICC
various areas of interest, i.e.
Irate Nun
will offer a· Summer Tour. of environmental effects of the
and to make a dramatic Northern and Eastern Europe, a
snowmobile, enforcement of the
manifestation of our repudiation two month opportunity to
recently enacted law which
of'terrorism both by the Left explore life in the Scandinavian
requires registration and
2. To provide sources of
information and advice on
scientific and technical matters.
While not in a position to
undertake original research, the
DCEA is studying available
information.
Rosemary Ruether and by the government. Finally welfare states, the socialist · regulates the use of the
1438 Montague Street NW we wish to show our countries of Eastern Europe, the snowmobile. Following the
Washington,D.C.20011 determination to·\vork.for USSR, Poland, Romania, programwillbetheelectionofa
Dear Friend:
'
change through persuasion and H\lllf,ilIY, Czechoslovakia, and the
permanent Board of Directors as
Dating se,vice
On November- 27, J. Edgar· reasoned confrontation w.ithth~ . divi_ded city: of Berlin., A shorter. well as a Chairman and
. ·
-
Hoover;
0
Dir~ctor .. of the Federal· 'issu.es, .. Nothing Jess .. th.an
::a:
tour-~ ,av~jl~:t,l~JQ~ Jh_o_se_ )VJ!o .... Vice-Chairman_ .. : ___
:
,.. ·. ..
...
.
Person or. group interested in
Bureau .oflnve~ti~ation,:~estified:-,-transfofination
·
!)f:_cons:ious~ess. :wish: -to' ·see. :the•: highlights_ -of
· The
-
DCEA was organized in . running a· branch of the School
befo!~·the._.S,en/lte and
0
-a-
·
reded1cat1on· to Northern' Europ~·outs1de April of 1970 following the ·Pool.non~computerized dating
Appropnabons . Committee .. that. constitutional ideals. and human· Copenhagen.· And · fmally, for
environmental conference held
service write to
a •~conspiracy of Catholic nun~: · values can save· this country those .. in~ere~ted in learning at Dutchess Community College.
SCHOOL POOL
,priests and lay .. people,
from a very dangerous tum about. Darush life, we offer the The intended functions of the
Sage Hall
masterminded by Philip and toward total destruction of Summer Session in Denmark.
DCEA are:
Cornell University
-Daniel Berrigan; were· planning liberty and hope both at home
The Fall Semester of 1971 will
I.
To serve as a clearing house
Ithaca,
N.Y.,
14850
actions such as kidnapping and around tlie world..
,·
offer All World Seminar, a
government officials and
We call on ·you to respond to · course in World Revolutionary
bombing· power facilities to· the. this .and arouse your friends and Movements, and the Individual
WANTED
Capitol. Mr. Hoover's testimony colleagues
-to
do likewise. As a-
Seminar. Danish Studies will give
suggested ·that, all the persons service ·of national rededication, an introduction to Danish life
associated with ariti-war draft we plan to hold a 24 hour and culture. Discussions about
actions were a.single fast-vigilirifrontoftheJustice India will be arranged in
conspiratorial group; led by the Department, December 18-19. preparation for an . optional
I
.
,
Berrigan . brothers . and all We- will assemble at
a
near-by Study Tour of India planned for
identified with the group kriown church (10th and G St. NW) at 4 the seven-week perio.d between
The present editors ·of -the
CIRCLE have ·decided to vacate
. as the "East Coast Conspiracy to p.m. Friday and march from Fall and Spring semesters. The
_SaveLives.'' -
.
.
.
there in solemn procession to Dan·ish Seminar.includes
. Those of us who know the ad the Justice
.
Department where intensive instruction in the
- hoc and nonviolent character of we will commission the fasters Danish language and a stay in a
the Catholic -. resist en ce with
.
laying on of hands. At 3 Danish F olkschool where only
movement in these, areas feel p.m. the following day there will · Danish is spoken. Danish
that these charges represent a be a concluding celebration of language courses are available in
very serious -escalation·· of the Eucharist, led by a broad both the Fall and Spring
government repressionof dissent spectrum of church and- civic Semesters and during the
a:nd . political·• opposition. ·leaders.We 9all on you to come Summer Session and are open to
Needless to say; the -many, andbringothersto.participatein all interested students.
people associated with the some or all of these. events .and .. Variations on· these · programs,
various actions are not a single to join us in this rededicatio'n·to including a farm stay, are
group;· are. not led by the solidarity, resistence to describedin the
.
brochure.
B.errigan· brothers in any oppression and-commitment to
ICC combines .. lectures,
.. organizational sense and totally authentic social values._. . _
seminars and discussions, field
' · · reject the kind of actions which.
David Kirk, Director, Emmaus trips and excursions with the
Mr. · Hoover describes.. Such - House
.
opportunity of gathering socially
testimony is an obvious effort to
R
o s e m a r y · R
u
e
t
Ii
e r , · with · students from Denmark
instill panic in the main body of . Theologian, Howan:l l,Jniversity and other foreign countries, all
the citizens by conjuring up an
-Richard Mcsorley, S.J. in an effort to accomplish the
image· of desperadoes who are Georgetown University · -
d es ired go a 1 s of ' ICC: ·
planning to put together in one
Submitted py International knowledge,
package all the various tactics of
Fr; Gallant · understanding, and friendship.
third _
world
O
revolutionaries in
ICC uses the informal approach
Cuba, Vietnam, French Canada
in or~er to create a more
and Palestine.
. . .
·c
11
g
I
stimulating atmosphere.
If
the FBI can make such
O 8 8 0
Inte'rested students are
charges totally without evidence, ·
encouraged to write for further
without any',actual crimes
Cope'nbagen
information to: ICC,
committed and potentially bring
. . . .
Henningsens Alle 68, 2900
down serious indictments based
,....
.Hellerup; Copenhagen~
, solely on their 'secret evidence' Dear Sir,
Denmark.
of •conspiracies' and 'plots,' no ,
Plans are now con_1plete for
citizen is safe and our civil rights the 1971 program of the
will quickly disappear.
INTERNATIONAL
COLLEGE
Yours sincerely,
We feel that it is time for the IN COPENHAGEN, and the
broadest possible coalition of course. of~erings available have
concerned citizens in all walks of been fmaUzed. The program has
life, but especially those been divide~ . up into t~ee
connected with the church, to separate entities, the Spnng
register a very strong protest
m
Semester, tht, Summer Sessions,
Washington against such political and the Fall_Semester • .
· and repressive use of the
F~ll credit co_urses
?Jl
World
investigative power of the FBI, Affarrs at ICC m Spnng 197l
_
Henning Berthelsen
Ed. Note - Contact Sal Piazza
for further information.
OCEA Meeting .-
The· Dutchess County
Environment Association will
hold a meeting at the Farm and
Home Center on Route 44 in
their
positions .
in
the. first week
of. March. ·-:This·· deci~ion was·
made _so that· the change in
student government -officers
· would be accompanied by · a
change
in
th·e. editorial staff.
Therefore:
·
Afl editorial and staff
-positions will have to be filled.
These include the three-member
editorial board ( co-editors and
news . editor), ·managing editor,
business editor and news writers.
Anyone interested in filling
these · positions please co·ntact
the . editors either by campus
mail {C857) or in person for an
interview. Selections will be
made after the interviews which
will
end February 18.
....
I
I
I
:
I
I
I
.
I
I
I
I
I
·
I
I
I
·
-
I
.
,.
.·.
•
-
·
-
PAGE4
.
TIIECIRCLE
JANUARY 21, 1971
, FOXES FRISK
FIVE
·
FOES FOR
8-3
MARK
CQP
·
aut
.
NTIC(l CHRISIM
·
AS
:
CONSOLATION
•
,
• ,
,l,
•
•
"
•
•
•
•
•
'
.
•
.•
'
•
'
,.·.·
·
·
:..
··
"'
·
:
Kings
-
Polni
L~test
TQ
'.
Fall
...
;:
.
,
.
'
,
.
. .
C
-
_
ta
·
:
·
rk
·
·
.
_
-
e
··
_· ....
·
'.
a
:·:':
n
·
·
.
i
;
d
:.··~
:
_.'.
s
'°,
-
·
h
·.:
.
..
:
a
:
/
~
·
k· e
·
_
·
,
•
_
:
:
s
'
l.
·
a
:
r
'
~
';
:-?
-
-i
-::
.
. .
. . . .
'
.
I.
.
_
;
Matist.College
.
recently
':
Tlie
·
'
iecdri.d
:
'hkir
'
saw Mari~t "nien
' ..
in
.
:'
doubie
.'
fig~re~
-.
i~d by
traveleq_
·
fo
.
·
Quaritico.
_
Virginia
.-
increase
·
its
'
lead · to 12
·
points - Forward Chtjs Crawford with 19
and
·
participated in
a
Christmas
_
5947
:
with If :04
'
remaining in
poin.ts
.
_
.
.
. .
.
.
.
._ .
-
·
Tournament
·
ho~ted by
.
the the· game .
.
Wi1k .time
.
~lapsing
The
'
•
Red Foxes were
·
led by
Quantico Marines from Maristheld
_
in.8or9
_
pc:>intlead
Captain Bill'Speilla
·
With 22
December 17 through December until Ed Reilly hit
'
an outside points
·
and 14 rebounds,
· 19. Marjst placed fifth in the shot with 4:56 left making the followed by For_ward Joe Scott
Tournament
.
by
'
winning two scene 6
-
8-59. Grove City with
·
21 points and finally
games while)os~ng only
._
one. At
,,
dominated the
·
remainder of the Cent~r Ray Manning
-
with
_
13
present tl_!e_,:J!e~
<
f~x~s
:
h
_
ave
.
game and
_
corriplet'ely shut out points.
_
·
:·
already ·•teSJllD~4
•\
t~~ir
,
r~gul~r
Marist ·offensively.
-
The final
··
The
·
final game
,
of
_
_
the
se:hedule.:sanc:I
:
0
<te.fe~t_~d :Ont;~nta score was Marist 68, Grove City Tournament ·saw
-
Marisf ·pitted
.
-State_ 8~-7,.:7.-
·
·lt
,
aPIJ_ear~·'.-~V,~dent
7J. The winners had a well against New York
_
·
Tech' for ·a
~t this tim
_
~Jh~t MlJ-nS~)S
_
well o!1
balanced attack as five men hit Fifth Place Championship:'
its way to
._
~"-1p!9,v~%l!st
;.
year s double figures with a high of 19
The Marist quintet played
15-9 seaso11 .
. :-,
>"
<
,:
, · -
: .
.
points
for:
.
Forward Randy
_
steady basketball in the first half
I
!1
~ecapp~g
'
.
the CTmstm
_
a
_
s
Cai pen.
·
.
,
., _
_
_
and lead at the
-
buzzer 48-36.
_
lnvitat10nal::1.'<;>U~~ment. Ma~ist
Ray Manning led·'Marist with This primarily was accounted for
,:
QPellt:_d, ~g!ii'!:s
.
!
, •
,Grove
~
City
17 _ points
.
and Guard Les by Ce,nter Ray Maririing who
_
_ €01le_$e>9.n::r.nl,!rsday. :at
_,
7:00
Clie'nery had
-
16 points
·
while scored 14 points while, Guard
.
:P
~
M.::
:
~ncl led
~
a,t
.
half-tim·e4440
Forward
·
Joe Scott netted 15
Ray Clarke netted 11
.
points.
:
o'
;
<m:tne:s~o2t
_
iii~
.
:OfJlinior Guard
points
mdst
oJ wliibh
'
canie in The second half saw Marist give
;
:
1:-e~-
-
.
Ql
_
~~n~rr
~
wit_!-t
~
total o~ I~
the secona half .
.
Cai:>tain
.
Bill
-
the Bears of New York more of
.
.
·
·
.
.
·
.
·
.
STEVE SHACKEL
_
- .
,
..
pqm
_
ts,
.
,
,
Ray-
.
~anmng,
_
Manst s
Spenla and Guard Ray Clarke
:
the same as th
.
e final buzzer
-
RA
y
CLARKE
. '.
· • ,
-•
-
··
-
ac~
· -
Center,
·
,
hi~
-
8
·
of_·
·
10 free
turned in un
·
der par performance sounded
.
with Marist winning
thrpws along_with
-
3 field goals
due to illness and injury 97~80. The losers were led by
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - , fo~
_
a· half-time spurt of 14
respectively.
Guard Pat Dalton with- 16
GOOD NEWS -
from
2
I
points.
Due to their first game loss,
points. The victors were led
_
by
ATTITUDES -
from
2
.
Marist stepped into the Center Ray Manning with 25
consolation bracket
.
and next points ari
•
d 14 rebounds,
AMERIKA, notice I spell
·
much alive people of God in that the
:
basketball team's big, big played against
_
the
-
_
Quantico Forward Joe Scott gathered in
America with a K instead of a C.
chapel.
showing at The Quantico Marines,-the
.
Tournament
·
host.
26
·
points ang Forward ·Bill
Isn't that Right
.
On? Of course it
Tournament;
-
the freshman In. this game Marist led all the Spenla netted l4 points.
-
is.
These
.
are "my highlights." mixer, and many of the parties way and compiled
.
a
.
27•13
In winning two of its three
Getting back to the question,
Other things that are
·
:very much held in the residences; the Italian margin with
'1
o
minutes left in
games Marist
_
was given the Fifth
what do you think can be done
impressed in the memory part of Club Dinner Dance· some of the the half. The undaunted Marines Place Trophy as winner
.
of the
to overthrow the present
my brain are: The
'
Reaching 9ut things
.
written in The Circle;
.
etc. fought
.
back though and were Consolation Bracket.
.
government? Yes, that boy.
Weekend in my residence; the
· '.
'
_
_
·
_
·
.
.
- .
_
·
.
_
:
.
:
losirig 44
~
38
,
atthe half. The first
Marist ci"efeated
-
the U.S.
I don't think we ought to
sitting in for ~r. Benin's
:
,
If .Jweie
-
to write an ~rticle on
·
half stats showed' Forward
;
Joe Merchant ;Marine
_
·
Academy
-
of
·
overthrow the government, Mrs.
F_res~m~n Seminar tor
a
__
the "lowlights
_
?''.
:
·
_
offlops
.
o
_
fth
_
e Scott
·
with
:
:
16::'l>oilits;
'
8
i'
of
q -
Kings
,,·
Point:
<
on
~
.Saturday,
La
nd1eft.
·
.
-
di~c~ssion on God
.
(Dr; Rhys
,,
first semes
_
ter
;
it wouli:l be very
from
the
floor:
Tlie i:-ecoveriiig January 16; .. After a close
-
:
Wrong:
·
Sotrieon'~' else?'Yes,
~illiams, my co-Chapl~,
:
was brief:
-
the
.-
Bill
:
Baird discussion Captain
' '
Bill
"
-SpeiiliCaddea l
.
O
.
!>allgame
_
_
the
-
Red
·
,
F?xes pulled
_
the
·
long-haired youth with the
Ju~t g_reat th
_
at
·
n_ight, period (not
'
·
histalk);t4es~upid points, 3
-
ffom the
,
ffold
',
and
'
4
.
away
.
·
to
-
an 84-68 victory
..
Ray
"Put th e pigs in the Pen"
.
enlightenmg _us so much), some television
_
pro
.
gram in the theatre from
·
the foul line
;
_ ;,
,
; -- ,,
Clarke with 26 points ahd Steve
.
button.
-
.
.
of the ~vrestling ml!_tc~es \A:pples (I'm
.
glad
·
1 can't remeinb
.
er the
-
·
·
Shakel (20 Points) )ed
-
Marist to
·
.
Uh, I really
'
didn't hear the
aggressiveness, especi~lly), t~e title); no pep rallies. for ~he
Th~ s~
-
c~~d half saw
'
Marist
its eighth win against three
question Mrs. Landleft,
,
I wasn't
· Fa_ll ~-rew_ ma~ing __ l?ig football-games; some articles in coast to al4 point lead 63-49
losses.
_
,
_
listening.
·
Um~ersities sit up and fake the Circle· and no "etc." That is
·
with 5 minutes remaining in the
Leading Scores for the Season:
Exactly,
·
that boy has great
notice; the Soccer team's it
-
'
-
game. The Marines were not to
·
Ray Manning-17.0 average; Ray
·
insight.The whole class ought.to
"never-stop
-
trying" attitude
·
be trampled though as they
Clarke - 13.7 average; BillSpenla
pattern themselves after
.
that
every minute of the game,
I am anxious for a semester of
-
came on strong and ended the
-
- 12.4 average;
·
Joe, Scott - 13
.
8
boy
,
Well,.l'll see you tomorrow
despite a disappointing record; more good news.
·
game 76-7LThe losers had three
average.
,
class, right? Of course I'm right.
\
h
(
'
~
4,
.
·
/
d
!
,
fill~
...
'
Dirixtor of Security. RONALD D. ADERHOLDT,
poses
for picture
sporting
X-m~
pft
from JOSEPH
BROSNAN, Director?~ Ca~pus CC;fltcr.
.
.
..
-
Pol
.
ice.
Rap
Sessions And
Police
·
car
·
lolJrs
-
lo Continue
-
Mr.
·_
Ronald Aderholdt,
Director of Campus Security,
recently announced that the
Town of Poughkeepsie Police
-
Dept.
·
will
coi:itinue
·
their
program of student-tours for the
,
second semester.
·
·
Chief Charles Schade has said
.
that the first tours will be given
4uring the wee~end of Jan
.
28-30 with any two nights being
available for two
'
students each
night. The tours will then be
-
repeated every three weeks
:
with
four more
.
people each time.
·
-
· The tours, under the direction
of
_
Lt. Rcrbert Hornick,
originated last October when Mr.
Robert N:orman of the English
Department gave one
_
of his
students an assignment which
consisted of riding in a police car
for an 8-hour shift and doing a
·
report on what he observed and
encountered.
Toe
·
student, Joseph Rubino,
had this to say: "I found the
evening to be extraordinarily
interesting and profitable,
mainly because of the
cooperation of
Lt.
Hornick.
After arriving at the scene of an
incident I would observe how
the officers handled the
"When I ·thought
·.
that the
'It's an
.
odd
·
job. It's a
investigating officer was
·
·
too
.
controversial
·
job.
·
Sometimes
harsh
·
and hadn't
.
used
-
good
.
..
you feel yo
_
u
'
re wrong no matter
discretion, Hornick listened to
what you do.' "
.-
me
_
and often completely agreed
·
Mr. Aderholdt also announced
with
·
me~
-
that the P91ice Rap Sessions on
'
·
'I learned much from
Lt.
campus will
·
continue this
Hornick that night and I think
.
semester, with the first one
he learned some things from me
taking
'
place on Wednesday
too. He readily welcomes
_.
_
night, Feb. 3
~
at 7:30 in room
opinions
-
and suggestions from
249 Campus Center. The first
observers
·-
and
·
he wishes more
meeting held
_
.last fall athacted
people would take an interest in
over 100 interested members of
·
.
the behind-the-scenes work of the community.
the PoHce Dept'.
Representing the Town
.
Police
"He
.
~aid to me something very
Department will be Officers
.
interesting which I'll never
Robert Boyce and Joseph Callo.
forget
.
When I asked him about
The
·
City Poli~e representatives
the difficulty of his job he said,
will be named at a later date.
·
•
f,alendar of ·Eve
.
nts
·
·
:
Thursday
-
-
·
8:00 p.m., C.U.B. Film "EAST OF EDEN"/"REBEL WITHOUT
A CAUSE," 8:00 p.m., Theater
.
Friday
-
.
8:30 p.m., C.U.B. Night at the Rat, featuring SKITCH AND THE
RUBINOS, Rathskeller, Campus Center.
Saturday
6:30 p.m., Basketball-Albany St. -Away (F)
8:30 p.m., Basketball -Albany St. -Away
(V)
2:00 p.m., Wrestling - CCNY - Home
• * *
*
*
situation, whereupon I would
ART EXHIBIT
make my impressions known to
Artist: Si Lewen, Title: The Millipede. January 18 - February 28.
the Lieutenant.
·
Reception 2-5 p.m., Gallery Lounge, January 31, 1971.
1
/
PAGES
· . THE CIRCLE
:
You the taxpayer! You the
'people! Let's. get together.
·I..___
S_U ____
RV..........,____1
V_Al___,I
.
Organize your community. Write
to your representatives. Call
them at city hall, at the county
office buildings, at home or at
Recycling:
f{om Common Sense·
Yes, there is our solution and
it really is the only common
sense solution: You know why?
Well, because the U.S.
is
not
self-sufficient in many of the
resources we presently throw
Solid waste, garbage, trash ... or away. Aluminum, for example.
urban ore. Depends on how you We; as a nation; iri 1970, threw
look at it.
'
away' 4,000,000,000 (that's 4
Recent public meetings seem. billion) aluminum beer cans.
to indicate that Dutchess (That doesn't count the poisons
County Officials look at solid like soda pop, in aluminum
wastes as something to get rid of , cans.)
.
.
·
-:: to dispose of. - to bury in.
That number is predicted to
work.
·
·
BOOKS
The User's Guide to the
Protection of the Environment,
by Paul Swatek, A Friends of
'the Earth/Ballantine Book.
Paperback
$1.25.
The Voter's Guide to
Environmental Politics, Garrett
DeBell, Ed., A Friends of the
Earth /Ballan tine Book.·
Paperback $.95 ·
landfill sites or to find new more go up to
9
billion .beer -cans in
These guide books published
efficient incineration methods. 1 9 7
5.
And ·.we are not by Friends of the Earth bring a
For example, it was disclosed on self-sufficient ,in· aluminum.
new and needed skepticism to
Nov.
24 that Dutchess County Look it up! And take both _consumerism and politics.
received a whopping
$137,785 newspapers. The U.S. is not They are particularly valuable
· -grant. For what? To carry out a . self-sufficient in W?Od pulp, We · because they bring together in
comprehensive solid ·waste.·· careless~y throw: it awa~! We
one pla.ce much. formerly
study. (It was emphasized that import it. (We will not comment
scattered material on living
the grant was
100% STATE on what we. have done to our
environmentally and how The
FUNDED
as if this were once magnificent forests.)
_System works.
somebody 'else's money - like
The solution is quite simple.
The User's Guide tackles every
. N.Y. State taxpayers are. ·not In fact, there is a Pr:oposal
aspect of living from home.
.. Dutchess County .taxpayers!) before the Common Council_ of-
heating to detergents. Its thesis
Actually the county did not get . the City of Poughkeepsie. It is a
is "Every consumer decision you
the money but rather Trautman: plan recommended by the
inake has an environmental
Associates (Buffalo, .New York)! Science Advisory Council to impact. Evezy time you
visit
the
Interestingly enough, the separate the urban ore at home
supermarket,. buy a ticket to
Dutchess County Planning Board into 3. categories:
1 -
paper; 2 -
travel, choose a place to live
(4
7- .
C an no n · Street, bottles, cans -and plastics;
3 -
your choices have an effect ... on
· Poughkeepsie) is seJling a refuse organic wastes. These would be
the"· quality of the air you
disposal report prepared under a collected separately - paper;
breathe and the water you·
HUD ( Housing
&
Urban twice a month, for example, and . drink."
Development)grant(seems to be a schedule worked out for the
. The User's Guide shows the
plenty· of grant money around - ·rest. The City can th"n sell the
consumer how he can say "no"
that's taxpayers' money) which valuable, recoverable mat_erials.
to certain environmental insults
·was issued in August,
1969.
So The food wastes with leayes,. can
and that he can make better
we are; getting just what we · be: com_posted
for·
·use .as · decisions ·than the so~called'
need, right folks _.anotheueport fertilizer._.·.• . .
· ·.
. .... ··
•
· ·•
experts. The book _fails,
(and More Solid Waste); :. ....
· Simple isn't it!' Other' places ,however, to point out forcefully
The length of the -Trautman · ·are . beginning to · move in this
enough that the consumer
is
Study is-io be, are'yoti ready, 1 direction. Why ·not ·• Dutchess
rea.lly . prevented from making
year.
Opel
year to study what has County! Our local ·offi_cials--do · environmentally sound decisions
. already Ueen_ studied,. whaLis not, seem to. have the·.Yankee
most of the time because
. already: !/known. Fantastic! ingenuity we are
all proud of;
environmentally sound
Almost,
1
/makes one angry, No siree! They look the other
alternatives don't exist.
doesn't jt? We, of. Common w. a y . -
and s e n't the
The Voter's Guide exposes a
Sense, think that we can save reco~mendatio!l
.
to the <;ity purposefully murky subject. the
much ,noney ... and m_uch . Plan~g Comnuttee, whe~e.~t,1$. workings of government • and
valuable time. We can save_tu!}e, g,ettlng ~ogged. do,fn·
·m ·
presents guidelines ·-for those
effort and money b_y_ pomt,mg '.eco~omtc ·st~d1es • . The who would work within the
. out to
/~11
our offtcials._ .. c.ity, ·approximate cost
t9
the city for , system for environmental sanity.
state, national an_d to you, the th1srecycleplanmay)>ear~und
lt
-prov-ides practical,
rrader, the people, the taxpay_er,
$15,000 a .YE:ar; Not bad. _We steP,:.by-step instructions on how
tl~at we
!
can: do only one thmg could· r~n this recycle proJ~ct .. to .. influence congressmen . and
Wlth th~ sohd waste generat~d, countywide for so~e years.
?!l .
federal agencies.• I
tis
remarkable
ont•
thmg ·on!}' _and that _is:
that
$137,785 rep~rt grant. .
· because
it
emphasizes the
REC' Y ~LE! !
! ( and while . I
!1
the f
~ ~ ~ ~ f · the, difficulty of being effective with
r~·9•ding.· start cutting dpwn on envrronm~nt~l ~~s, it ., seems • Congre.ss and · the downright
sohd. wa,ste by demandm~ and that our city o(ficials are not .too i m P
O
s s i b il it y of getting
J.!l.'_tt111g
~e.turnable con_tamers, co~~erned. and ·_our .cou~~ anywhere with a federal agency_ •.
th~ end
ot
~xcess packaging and officials are. mo~e mtereste~ m · Toget4er these volumes are as
-
l~~
changing
our wasteful reports and studies than. action. comprehensive as any already on
ht.·~tyk .)
.
What about you? You the voter!
• I
•
JANUARY 21,
i97l
the environmental ·bookshelf.
Although they assume a working
knowledge of the environmental
calamities confronting us the
User's Guide contains a
bibliography for those who
would read further and the
Voter's Guide contains a list of
organizations which provide
information and action on
environment_al p~oblems.
Environmental
Awareness
Handbook·
Earth Recovery Action's
(ERA) .
Educational_ Committee
has published an Enviromr.ental
Awareness . Program. Although
structured for use by teachers of
students . in grades K-6, the
handbook contains much useful
i·nformation for concerned
citizens in other areas, 'such as
scouting, service organizations,
boards of education, and school
administrators.
It
contains
suggestions and ideas that
involve constructive action.
It
is
in . no way a complete
program. It is meant to be a
springboard of ideas,· with
enough variation, so that you
may select those ideas ·which
seem most appropriate and
exciting to you·.
ERA
believes that real change
can only come through
education. That is why they
wrote this Program. That is why
we hope you will use this
Program. The handbook is
·
free,
but to defray cost we ask a
$1.00 contribution.
If
you want
a copy of the Program, write to
Earth Recovezy Action, P.O .
Box
3195, Poughkeepsie, New
York
.
.
____
..
Announcements
Anyone interested in working
ST A GE CREW for the
Children's Theatre production of
"Peter Pan" please contact
Emmett Cooke (C402).
· · "Lead Pollution in Plants from
Automobiles" Lecture by Dr.
Motto; January
28, . Theatre,
Clmpus Center.
8.1.1
8.1.2
8.1.3
8.1.4
8.1.5