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Part of The Circle: Vol. 8 No. 2 - January 28, 1971

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THE
CIRCLE
.
VOLUME
8
NUMBER
.
2
·
Joe-:
.
.
.
.
Sorry I haven't written in so
long but mostly I've just
,
been
trying to keep my head together
·
through this whole hassle. After
·
four months; my
.
discharge is
finally starting to move. I've got
,
a physical Monday and Tµesday
.
I see Mental Hygien
·
discharge is being
.
pus
Colonel Okiwachi
·
of
·
Command.
I should. rec
212 discharge as being u
:
the military in about
fouj
weeks. At present only
· ·
of confinement remain.
The
.
paradox
.
of
A
society
is
exemplified he
.
Post Correctional Facilit
again we see the black,
,.
and poor white man
(
q1;1intescence of his bij
,,
,
Fust there are
-
the s{I
walls, opening up
to
t
:
.
prison of the military
,
.

MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 1260i
.
Notes From
A
.
Stockade
·
.
.
·
w
esirables are
lled, and replaced by the
acht, who. somehow
,
j\lso cry
.
"We
.
were just
;
ollowi'iig orders:''

·
-~•:i:-;;.·
.
Much h'as
;
been done,
.
but
it
is
:s
only
.
·
a
.
beginning. The exploited
base
..
has
.
Jo get iLtogethe
.
stop iri'fighting.
·
The
.

· ·
,
study
·
.
is
,
:
o~
"'-
-
the
"".
t
·
·
.
.
teaching upon us
:
°'nc:1
·
the
· ·
acJfori imnlirient
:
:!!
S,>ihas
_
ee
.
said
.
that when
the
revolutionary
act·
has b~ffie
;
""
'
the
:
ten
years
:
'
before
,.
tli'.ii
:
revoliitiori shall seem
A
-
.
·
·
as ot
J
t
aay,
·:•arid
·
t11e
·
~~Y
:;
of'.
the
.
action shaUbe as-tenyears
.
. ·
·
,
,,,
,.,
Once
.
l
reach
-:
tlie East
.
Coast
again,
.
·
I hope to express
my
·
views
"'
j1f' greater detail. Perhaps
,
,ygu'
'"c
ould show this letter to
Ed
,.
,,..,
~ircle· and see iFhe can guess
·
who wrote it.
·
Peace
and
·
Freedom




















































































































































PAGEl
.
·: ,
,
...
·: Go·od·-~/News-
··
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
by
FR. LEO
'ri'.ilLANT
>
..
-
.
.
t.
'
. "
.
.
.
Last Saturday three Marist students painted an empty ram~hackle
store at 443 Main Street in Poughkeepsie. They spent the. entire day,
first cleaning
it
of barrels of de~iis,. wa~hing
.
tl\e walls/ pa~t~g the
·
entire
·
store, arid finally decorating 1t with semi-psychedelic figures.
All this was for Head Start who will soon move in to help the po?r.
-
Toward the middle of the day, the four donated gallons of pamt
were running out. Pai Armida and Ed Benisz left Ed Murphy and me
.
in the· store .with some of the Head Start people and begged
merchants for paint; The two "modern Francis of Assisi" returned
lugging
·almost
a dozen gallons of paint. This astonished the workers
in the store who had begged so unsuccessfully for days_ The _store,
which looked like a pig pen owned by a_n absentee_ landlord
m
the
morning was almost ready for occupancy
m
the evening.
.
.
·
But the floor was still a mess, broken tiles, irremovable dirt. The
two stalwarts went back abegging. They returned
·
with a mercha1:1t's
.
promise of comp let~ covering of the floor, some cash and promises
of drapes and other things.
.
· ·
.
,,.
.
·
.
I never was so damned pleased about Marist students!
·
·
The irony of it all, the volunteer woman in charge of g~tting the
.
store ready (with no remuneration) got an okay from a.policeman to
park her station wagon in front of the st<;>r!! so tha! we could more
easily take out ladders. Another cop came by· and ticketed her. And
wouldn't listen to her explanatio
·
n: Then two cops scolded us for the
boxes of dirt that we had in front of the store, irl nobody's way
;
Boy try to do something for the poor! Give me the Marist kids over
the ~ops any time!
(I
think the next Police Rap session is Feb. 3.)
Another very Christian incident that highlighted the first week of
·
the second semester was a home Mass at the
·
home of a commuter.
This Marist student planned the entire affair,the readirlgs, the music.
His brother also·a Marist student, cooked an Italian dinner to follow
the liturgy.' Home made bread was used
.
in the
.
communion service.
Wine was supplied by one of the Marist faculty. Twenty-one people
attended, mostly commuters to Marist. No need to_ mention nam_es.
Just more impressive Christia~s at Marist who. believe, t~at sharing
the Body and Blood
of
Christ
IS
the
.
answer t<;>·tlie world
~
ills.
.

Time for a commercial: the
·
students who like to drop
m
the Byrne
Residence to relax for a while enjoy the heart warming fire place.
But the chaplairl is running out of fire wood.
·
And a few announcements: Fr. Rhys Williams, our Episcopalian
chaplain, is available du~ng

the. day for c~mnseling, . bo~h for
Catholics and Protestants m
his
office m Fontaine. My office
IS
now
in Byrne Residence and I hope to be available 24 hou_rs a day.
.
There are daily Masses in the chapel: 12:30, a quiet, rather qmck
liturgy, for
·
the staff, faculty, secretaries, students who wa_nt to get
away for a few minutes and partake of the meal; at
5: 15
wit~ a new
setup, chairs around the altar with the celebrant seated with the
commune.
·
Watch for Feb.
6. Midnight Mass will be a jazz Mass put on by
members
·
of the Mid Hudson Philharmonic Orchestra and Ed
Summerlin and his jazz group. More delails later.
111ECIRCLE
I

. JANUARY 28
3
1971
,
.
.
:
.
·
.
.
. :- . .
.
by MIKE WARD
:'
.
,.
.
.
.
. .
i
want to leave· the
'
problem of echu:ation and
jU!DP.
to the se~or
year of high 'school ~heri the d~~le~ student be8ll!s tc;> wor~ with
·
..
the Division of .Vocational Rehabilitation
(DVR). This agency
is
p~
.
of the State Education.Department and its purpose is to provide the
.
necessary funds for the
trainirl!;
needed
;
by
a
disa~led pe!s?n to find:
.
-
employment eit~er t~ough ~ollege, or on~the::1ob~tra1IUng. ~ven
.
though the following dialogue
IS
humorous, 1~ will ~e~ome obvious
..
that this agency has some dictatorial powers
m decidmg the future
,
of a disabled individual.
·
·
.
.. ·
·
.
·
·
·
.,.
·
·
0
Good Mornirlg. I'm your friendly Rehabilitation Counselor who
will try to solve all your problems."
_
.
.
·
.
.
.
·
-.
·.
.
·
.
..
"Could you fix
the
parking ticket I just got for_parking
m
a
·
bus
.
·
-
stop because your building is located in an area whi~h does not hav.e
.
.
available parking."
:
•.
·
.
.
.
•. .
.
·
·
t
"What do I look like-Ood? Anyway· wh_y didn't · you use the
''.'.
st1bway ... ? Oh, I...er
:
.. didn't
.
notice the
.
~heekhair, }"hey_ are
so
.
·
common around here and we tend
·
to ignor the
·
disability and
·
concentrate on the
-
abilities that-the

individual can offer and that all
men are created.equal and endowed by their creator .... " .
"Amen. RIGHT ON."
·
·
.
.
_
"Now,
I
have studied your case fully and
I
think you could be
trained for this position.'
·
'
·
.
, .
·

·
.
.
"Oh wow, sounds exciting. What is it?"
.
.
·
.
·
.
·
.
:
"Putting together ball-point pens at 20 cents. an hour and 1t will
·
only take six weeks to be trained."
.
.
.
. .
.
.,
"And
I
need training because I'm about to go on your floor.
"Well,'you can always sit at ham~ on
.
Welf~~e."
~
"Have you examined my academic record?
.
.
.
.
"I examined your
.
record thoroughly," he 5'.ltd as he picked up a
sheet and
.
his jaws dropped, "and
I
see that with a
94%
average you
might
.
make college."
.
.
-
·
"Thank you, your grace."
_
"Now what do you want to study?"
·
"I was always good in math."
"But cari you write?"
·
.
.
"No, but
I
thought it was the ability arid
I
know
I
will find a
w~r.Ah"b~t
I
have to ~rotect the ~ta~e's ~oney and we wouidn't
want t~ waste the State's money on an unrealistic vocation;''
.
"But all
·
of
·
my teachers
·
told me that
I would be
.
a
good

mathematician!'
·
·
'
·
,
·
·
.
"Who knows better than I what you can do? Why don't you go in
to law? Its a nice safe field witlt. a lot of crippled people ... err .. .l
mean disabled people in that field. You wouldn't have to ~et any
precedents and get me in trouble with my superior and cost me my .
job.''
.
.
.
.
"Yeah,
I
guess so."
.
.
..
. _
.
"Well, good-by. Don't forget- I'm your friendly rehabihta_tion
counselor."
·
·
·
.

·
.
·
·
·
·
.
. ...
.
·
· ·.
No
.
Room
.
·
.ForRainbows
Our subject lost interest in pre-law and
is
now head ball point pen
assembler with two years of college. Believe it or not the above story
is a composite of true incidents and its not
:
furiny;. T
.
his
is
not a
.
.
·
typical occurerice,
;
but it happen~ often en,ough
..
to

tnent exposure.
·
.
..
,.
<
.·, ..
.
:,,i:
,
:__
::
}
s/
\,.
,
·
.,
..
:.·
.·-
;'
h
:
.
· ..
..
~Y.!f~~c,i~~,· ...
·•·
.
;

,
.
1
'
rff'
·
,

;
..
'.
.,\··h
"·

,
...
.
..
·
:·.
,,
: /
'
.
:,
::
_
_-_
:
'.
i
:
.
.
/:.
;
AJ
;
JlI

UDE:s
-
:1
:)
:
:
f-X
tO
'.
UJR
·
A
~
G
:
E:OU
'
S;
:;{'.;
\
;{
?
>:
:
.
.
·
.:--:.
·.~
./ .,··
·
/·'.
L::a=---""'"'
·
..._
.,,..~
,;.;;;_.,.,
~~
a~~f
1~~f!t!!~ltt~tf~~ttr
•f':)
1
'~
"'''
X
\:
f
e:J~~~
i
~od~;!:.o;'~tf~i:~Jf~i!f,
;
.
,
' .
. '
'.
~
·
·•
..
.
'
i
are seniors in college.
At
one pqint thefema!e cli
.
aracter disct1~es. 1,ier
.
Organizations such as the "E,,;eryb.ody
.
Must Get Stoned Club," the
:
·
beliefs
wtih
her
·
partne(s par~nt; She
.
explams that they have ideals,
"Carnal Lust Club"
·
and the "Super Zoo
·
Man Club-,''· have attracted
.
.
~
-
·
perhaps naive, about changing the world. In her anxiety she stresse~
,
.
much attention. In order to
·
be more informed about their activities I
;
·
.
1
their need.to believe that it
.
~
possible to ~etter the wo!ld, that'it is
.
attended a meeting of the.zoo man club.l~st evening.
,
. ·
.
.
·
.
· .
' ·
'
'.
,
...
.
1
irlherently necessary to chensh those ~eliefs_ so that life does not
·
As
I
entered the roomthe

president ofthe club called the meeting
·
\
become stale and moldy
~
that youth
IS
baS1cally nght when they
to order.
. .
.

.
.
,
.
.
,
seek the impossible drea~;
··
•.
.
.
·
-
.
.. ·
.
.
"The second meeting of the Super.Zoo.Man Club
will
now. come
In
his
reply the father stresses the point that he does understand,
.
to order. The first order of business
will
be the reading of
.
the
.
that ht?toofelt the way these two Y?ung adults did ab?ut dedicating
minutes from the)ast meeting. Wherfis the secretary."
'
·
.

one's life to the bett
_
erment of mankmd, He melonchohcally reflects
,-
"Last time
I
·saw
him
he
·
,
was liitchhiking to Tucson Arizona,"
a
·.
however,
·
a
tone of disappointment. There
,
he stands beyond
·
member called out .
.
,
.
.
'
.

·
·
middle-age sadly realizing
.
that he
·
has l~st-that love of life needed tc
·
·
"What did he do thaffor?'' the
.
pfosidentasked.
.
.
.
,
.
cultivate the sweeter dreams. But, he sJill can understand and respec1
"He
.
got so wacked out.at Frank's h~ wanted to see a cactus - so he

their need
.
to believe,
,
.
. ..
.
.
.
-
.
·.
left for Tucson-"
·
the member
.
answered. Just than a big roar went up
.
I_n ·
Puisu
·
it ·of Happiness is a controv:ersial piece_ since it ~oncludt?f
from the memb'ership;
.
,
;
C
,
.
, .. ·
-
.. ·
.
..
·
.
.
that the y~:mng may
:
h~ve to l~ave this cou~try_ m pursuit oftheu
"What a zoo king, whata guy;" they yeUed
.
own happmess. That right which the co~sh~ution has supposedly
"Order, order,•• tµe
·
presiden(shouted
'.. ,:
·
guaranteed somehow does
.
not seem to exist
m
some
·cases.
No one
..
«Two beers" a witty student.yelled
. .
·
·:.
,
.
could e~er define the pursuit of happiness excep~ ~nto themselves.
I

''Come on group,let's get
.
the;~eeting pver
,
with so we
.
can go and
.
.
can: only argue that each has his dream and that m the land 9f
_
the
do some serious drinking:' the pr~sident said
.
....
,
:
.
·
·
.
·
·
-
.
brave and the free we should
.
have the right to pursue· ourra4lbow.
·.
,
'We~h,
'
.
lets
go
my six
:
is
:
gettin wami," a disgruntled member
·
.
'
·
yelled/'
;
· ·
~
·'
·.
·
.
·.

·
·
·
.
.
..
.
·
.
.
.
No room for rainbows
no time for dreams-
.
·
in a world to cold to know
·
what love really means.
There's no time for laughter
only room for tears
·
.
,
.
in a universe without friendship
in a house full of fear)
-
··
,
-
. :·
And there's no summer for loving
no spring for birth.
When the world's a weary winter
since love has left the earth.
.
.
There's no·room for rainbows;
There's no time for dreams,
, ·
:
·
-
since Christ went away from you-
.
at least that's howit seems.
·
Cafeteria
·
Story
. by JACK GORDON
Through careful
.
architectural plannirlg and painstaking
.
interior
·
design coupled with many man hours of skilled labor Marist Colleg.; _
was able, over the semester break, to reduce
·
its cafeteria to two
thirds of its original size.
Mr. Art Green, the cafeteria manager, explained
this
remarkable
feat.
·
The newly redesigned .oJJe third
·
or the cafeteria has beeri left
furnitureless, said Mr. Green,
.
because of a mistake .in shipping:
Although the furniture for the new section of the dining hall is now
somewhere in New Jersey the cafeteria head seemed hopeful that all
difficulties will soon be cleared up and that the chairs and tables will
find their way into the
.
cafeteria sometime in February.
·
The new section once furnished will be divided from the rest of
the
hall
by an accordion wall. The wall will be closed for meeting
· and private parties ~ut ~ill o
.
therwise remain open to the rest of the
·
·
room. Mr. Green s t r ~ the fact that the purpose of the room
was
.
not to cater to private affairs or club meeting but
is
rather to benefit
the
college community as a. whoJe.

·
·
.
.
'
Mr; Green placed much
of
the credit for the renovations with
·
~ n Wade:
It
was Mr. Wad~· who originally saw the students
CON'T.P.5-Col.4
"I'll
read the minutes," the
.
president said.
.
"First

the
'last
meeting
.
.
started and attendance was taken:·
Evei'yon'e
·
waS
'
·
·
in
the room but thr~e
_
members were unconscious
·
...
.
.
:
"Yeah and 'I vi
.
as one
·of
e~."j(guy yelled.

.
. .
:

'
·
"Quiet"
said
the president. Second, the vice president suggested
that we rent a bus for two hours, get wack~d out and then have the
:
bus driver let us out at.the nearest all-girls school. The motion was
,
carri~d
arid;
listen
to this; .we're getting the sa~e bus that we zooed
.
out
oil
:
,- on
the
·
way down to Iona."
·
·
·
.
·
_
.
..
_
·
A,
roar went up from the crowd. ''That's the one you got $ick on six
.
.
times Pres,•~ one of them shouted.
·
.
·
"Yeah,
·
that
.
'
was a great night:• the president ~id. •~One more
·
·
.
thing in the minutes. Sidney Shipley
.
was elec
.
ted zoo man of the
-
week for throwing a gross show ~t the
.
Magic Wand Laundermat."
"What a perv. what a gross guy," the crowd chanted. "Say a
few
words Sidney."
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
"Well
all
I got t~ say is "Gimme another beer." Sidney bellowed.
.
"What a zoogo_d, what a guy," the crowd raved.
.
"Shut up you guys, now its new business," the president yelled:
·
"We got two things on the agenda. First we picked Miss Pop Top
.
1970 2nd she is Moria Maloney from
·
Franks. Now look, we are going.
to present her with her prize, a gallon of Tango at our next meeting
and
I
don't want any of you guys grossin her out."
.
A murmur went up from the crowd. "Not even Sidney," a voice
yelled.
_
·
.
.
~•No," the president said, "not even gross Sidney • .,Okay now here
is the last order of business. There's been talk of letting some new
members into the dub. Well we don't let just anybody in. They have
to be qualified. Alright
·
here
are
the requirements for new members:
·
f"ust, the applicant
must
spend sixteen consecutive hours at the
Derby,
four of them must be spent
iri
a e9ma. Second,
.
the ~pplie:ant
must journey to a nearby college, wacked out of course, run around
shouting obscenities and
steal
th;"tgS like toasters, door knobs and
other people's. jackets •
.
Fourth,
.
the appJicant must
be t~tally
CO!M'.P. 3-Cd. l
,





































































JANUARY 28, 1971
.mE CIRCLE
PAGEJ
.
.
C·hil:dre·n·'s-··•T-h·e:at
:
re·?·· ,:;
.
'-·
.
.
.
'
, ·
··-
:
.·.
·::
FUnd .
Raisill
.
.
--
;
, On Mo~day eve~~g the Marist surrotind1
?~
grammar_ and ~h
C ll 'e Children's Theatre held a schools givmg dramatic readmgs
0
te~ . th t f - used both on of selected poems
·
and other
rnee.
mg .
a_ . o~ ,
. .
writing.
.
.
.

- .
the organization s_ artist~c
The subject of financing took
e?deav_ors and _their gen~r .. l up· most of·the meetings time.
fmancin.:g for. t~e commg The officers of· the club
sem_ester; It wa~pres1ded ov~rbr delivered a pro grain of
the dub _s_president, Pet~ Pie~;; · fund-raising which they had
In ad~ttton to the clubs maJ
previously prepared .. Among
production, Peter Pan, there are others were the. following
·no".V other facets of the theat_re programs and events:
. .
..
which ~a:ve drawn_ the ":1emb~J ·
l)
The ·club will_ ask
.to·
be_
.. att~ntton~ and energies a
allowed to set up a box in local
-
.
which were· spoken · of· at
U •
·
d"

length ·at the meeting: A Little· . Grand mons to collect tr_a mg
People's . Theatre is held .every _stam~s from those w~o wish to
Saturday afternoon from· 12 · contribute.
. . .
o'clock to two. During this time ' 2) ~oth _fo~!)-dattons_ and
." Joe DeTura, the innovator of the prof~s~tonal 1nd1vid uals will · be
workshop, along with other sollcitt:d by phone for
members of Children's Theatre supportattve funds.
.
work in theatrical exercises with
3)
0~
Feb. _ 12th a dmner
g r a m
ni
a r s c h
O O
1
a n d dance _will be ~eld by both the
pre-grammar school youths. The G3:ehc, Society and t_he
intention of these exercises is to Children s th~atre fr~m which
give young people an· the theatre will .obtam 40% of
· appreciation of. and a liking for the proce
7
~s.
.
things that are removed from
In _addition . to . the previously
every day pragmatism.
me;1t10ned programs, the clu):>
·-
hopes to be able to send their
A Puppet Theatre has also production of Peter Pan to high
been formed where the children schools throughout the
not only supply but also· make Mid-Hudson Valley. However,
. the puppets which they . use cost of busing the·production to
PICTURED HERE ARE SOME OF THE CAST FOR THE CHILDREN'S
THEATRE PRODUCTION OF PETER PAN
Vista Workers Unionize
by STEVE
COHN
themselves to create skits and the schools or the children to
WASHINGTON D.C. (CPS) -
over 1700 union authorizations
Uni
i1
tent ion a
11
y,
past
plays.
the campus-theatre·haveproven ·For some t·ime VISTA which, being more than 30 per
statements of VISTA',
too costly in the paSt . Mr.Pierri
Volunteers around the country ·cent of the 4,200 volt1nteers,
recently-departed acting
·-
Another ·endeavor undertaken voiced the hope. that .the club's
have been dissatisfied with the enables them to call for. a union
director, Robert Lane, lend
·by this cirgani+ation of campus financial programs will be
Nixon Administration's poverty electioninthenearfuture.
support of volunteers in
thesbians .. is the .. Reader's sufficiently successful
·
_·to -111ake: prograni~·or lacJ.(of one. Based
The Alliance was established
community organizing will be
Theatre. This part of the ·club, the bring of the ·club's major · on their experience in the field,
last July at a Washington
reduced to five per cent, with
headed ·up .by Brian Doyle, a production to• the· children -characterized by the frequent
meeting attended by 400
official discouragement given to -
sophoII?_ore here, travels to possible.
absence ·of the Office of Volunteers bearing proxies from
confrontation tactics. A
· · ·. ·
· u ·
Economic Opportunity support
another 800. Donald Rumsfeld,
c·atalytic role involving such
H I T
DI•
g . p·
·
when organizing efforts who recently resigned as
OEO-
-activities as rent strikes,
.
·
.
. · .. ~. . _ e _
p
O . __ ·.
. . . . . _ . · · .
challenge local power structures,
chief, was invited to appear at
economic boycotts and peaceful
they claimthatthe.needsofthe the meeting but declined.
demonstra:tions, would
E
I-
·d.' · ·
p · ·
poor ·are being sacrificed to Rumsfeld's office has refused to
apparently be considered outside
. -·ng
·
· an ·-s
a s·t
policical expediency.
.
-
recognize officially and' w_o_l'k· the new ··v1STNs assignment.
.
.
: .· .•. _ . · ... ·, · ... ·. O · •. : .. : : · · .
. _.
.
In response, tfie volunteers wi-th the Alliance; instea'd, . Lane commented: "We hope,
· ,
-

. have formed the National admitting a .possible. "lack
0
of. predict and ar~ striv.ing for a new .
<
$i~d6/:its· --are".
\irge~tiy]:•fuvj.ted·;._
,,E.:
iiglish
u
v:ed ..
~
x
P
erie~,ced . -VISTA Alliance ·(NVA) and ar.e .. · _
C()lil
mu nications". in . Vl$T
A., ·
type_ of ,Volun~eer ... .'~ Perhaps to _
..
. ,
-• . to -,l}elp'-:i~-,;·ilr~hae1ifogic~I·.c'

:h~'.Pers
-"Ym ·
~ece1v~ "f~ee boar~ ··seeking ·tounioilize,in·otder: to-:.::Rum~feld· cfstabli~he~:a
0
NationaL··:this·' ·end,O'_Getieral~ecrric;~--a-•-"'--:--~
· e:x'.cavat_ions in Englan4 this for· helpmg ·m this 1mp~rtant ·give the organization morecfout ,Advisory .. council of VISTAs.
recent target of the student left
·· _ su
m·m
e·r,. • De a.di in e f o.r -· work.
··when dealing with .OEO.- Their The Alliance -termed· the effort
with its image of war contractors
· applicatfonsisMa.rchL

_Ot!ier stu_de_nts w_it_hou_t. efforts received a significant ·an· attempt to co-opt the
and attempted strike-breaking,
-
-.
City center redevelopment, expenetice are mvited toJotn the . boo.st when. the American volunteers and to creat a
has been awarded the $1.2
new road-building programs and British Archaeology Seminar at Federation of ·State, County and company union. They noted the
million contract
to
recruit future
rapidly changi11g land use are L i_n c_o In College, P~ford, -municipal Employees committed group would have only advisory.
VISTAs.
_
.
threateningthedisappearanceof organised bytheAss?ciattonf?r themselves-to-aid the Alliance powers and would in fact be
The NVA argues that
prehistoric graves, · Iron-age Cultu_ral Exchange. Six academic
and promised financial assistance appointed by the regional staff
recruitment· and training should
settlements
Roman villas
credits can be earned from
in the area, of $10,000 for the and not elected by the
be handled more directly by the
fascinating r~Iics of medieval participating_ in this low-cost
next 12 months. $2,500 has volunteers. Indicatfr;i;1s are that · communities involved.
The
tow:qs,alloverBritain.
progra,m _wl:t~h ~nds by _thr~e
already been given by the Frank Carlucci,R..l!.msfeld's
concern for community
American students free from weeks· participation on digs m
Steelworkers of America. The successor at OEO, will cont1nue
mid-ly).
~Y,
and with previous different parts of _Engla_nd or NV
A
also has presently received the anti-NV A stance.
CON'T. PG. 6-Col. 2
archaecbgical experien_ce,. are Scotland. Cost_, mclusive of
invited to join an international. Trans-A_tla_nt1c travel by
team on the .final season's dig of scheduled Jet, is $750.
_ .
the important Anglo-Saxon· site
Writ~ now for further details
.
· at North Elmham, Norfo.Ik, The to Professor. Ian Lowson, 5
39
excavation is expected to_ throw West 112 Street, New York, ·
important new light .on how the·
N.Y.
10025.
Anglo-Saxon forefathers· of the
*****
WANTED
The present editors of . the
CIRCLE
have decided to vacate
their positions
in
the ·first week
of· March. This deciSion was
made so that th_e . change in
student government officers
would _ be accompanieq ·. by a
· . , change in the editorial staff.
Therefore: -
·
· All·
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 contact
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.
NIXON -
from
7
plays to show that he is though he had freed Angela
respected by the students of Davis.
America. His alJusion to the fact
that eighteen year olds now have
No, Mr. Nixon, we can't buy
th~ right _to vote came off as it.
It
is too little, too late.
ArnTIJDES -
from
2
irresponsible and, when drunk as repulsive as possible."
· "One more thing felJas," the president said. "How many of you
want to order the 8 by 10 glossy photo of the whole club passed out
in front of Sal's.
It
would make a great gift for the family."
"No one? Well, meeting adjourned,"
.· Friday Night:
John· Bassette
This Friday night in the Marist
College Theater a fine artist of
strength and sensitivity will
perform.
It
is
the first time that
John Bassette
is
performing at
Marist but from the reviews
recieved from other Colleges
• and Universities the Social
Committee guarantees Friday
night
to be 'one of the finer
nights of the semester.
In the words of people who
have heard John in person, "he
is a performer with an
enlightened awareness of what is
relevant to the mainstream of
American Pop, he turns about,
chooses his material and projects
his style to best express what he
alone has to say. What results is
a performance which
!f!Oves,
touches and entertams,_1!,n
ASSOCIATES -
from
7
Trainor, Mr. Charles Ulrich, Mr.
E.W. Upton, Mr.
and
Mrs.
Joseph Vanischok, Mr. Frank
Vanacore, Dr.
and
Mrs. Robert
Whalen, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
White, Mr.
Michael
Wixon, Mr.
James Ward, Mr. W.R. Whitney,
Mr. and Mrs. Dean A. Williams,
Mr. F.E. Williams, Mr. J.T. Ward,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael M.
Yablonsky, Mr. Joseph Zarrelli,
Mrs. M. Zogursky.
*****
audience - any audience - for
John is a confident and
accomplisl}ed musician, a warm
\
\
)
truly compassionate and very
very human singer.
Jan. 29 - Theater - 8:30
P.M.


































































































































i
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;;_y
.1971
..
ntE CIRCLE
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This year's book will be one
:
of th~ finest publications
·
in the
.
history of the Reynard. Under the managemenfof Richard Davis,.a
veteran of many yearbooks, the Reynard has attempted to captµre
the
.
texture of life at Marist. Nothing has been ignored. The literary
styles have been balanced and varied to
.
tell the stories of Marist
from several points of
.
view
:
'John Kavanagh
~
and Thomas Hackett
·
are
.
.
.
the backbone of the literary staff. They have committed themselves
.
. REi
·
N
·
l
· ·
·
RD
. ,
...
'.
):l?~ej~ra
r
rsr~~~!tft!J~~~t'!k;e}Jt>~~;~i~lJi.;:e~iti~'a~rl~h
.
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...
i:
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,;\
:
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Brummett
whose picturesbririg
'
iife'to
·
the
pages
of
,
t!le
.
book:
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SaJe
s
'
drive
will-
begin
'.
shortly under the
·
direction
of
·
Kevin'
'
,
~\
Dohn~lly.
,
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-r
THE CIRCLE
·
·
·
·
.
···
·
·
·
,
·
·
··
CIRCLE EDITORIALS
'
Tenure
··
.
·
.
·
,
;
.
:
R~
:
~
-
e~tlr~a~?studeni~ have been asked to evaluate teachers as to
·
qualifications
foi:
tenure. Tenure
·
has often been a strained issue and
.
· ;>:
afthis time it
is
no less important.
. .
.
.
.
·
.
.
. . .
.
.
We
.
feel thaHhe
,
concept of tenure provides a securityfor a faculty
•·
.
member, perhaps
:.
a false security. Although Marist has not yet, in ·
.
our
a
memory:;
·
faced
.
·
any· serious difficulty with tenured faculty
,
.
·
members, tenure allows
'
the possibility
.
for serious prevention of
-
·
.
growth
.
for the college; the students and the faculty.
.
.
··
-
:'
·
Perhaps
n,idividu~ faculty members might not see a certain degree
·
,
:
of job security
.
as
.
a problem~ Bilt it is possible that a tenured faculty
.
·
member. can
·
allow
.
himself to become isolated
.
from his students and
the college if he is not forced to reevaluate himself periodically.
·
-
.
·
It
.
'is
:
_urifor~u.nate that job-security
:
should be a prod to good
performan~e
:
m
·
the
-
quest
;
for truth. But
·
tenure
·
has been abused in
___
.
.
some
:
instittitfons and we do not
-
see the importance of allowing that
type ofsittiation to develop at Marist.
._
.
· ·
.
.
.
.
·
.
·


Good faculty members have
·
rio rieed to
·
worry about job-security

and Mitrist has no rieedfor the others. Although it might sound trite,
thereis a ·great dealof truth in that statement.
'
••
We would recommend that no further faculty members be tenured
until merits and demerits of tenure have been discussed. For now,
·
the CIRCLE is opp_osed to
.
the concept of tenure; Perhaps we will
change
·
our mind
if
it
can be justified through some means other
than status or money.
·
Prisoners
.
.
~rom
all
over America
cries are coming for f~eedom for
American
prisoners
of war. How cruel for the North Vietnamese
·
government
.
to keep those
·
pilots captive! How can they expect us to negotiate
:
seriously
if they insist upon holding American soldiers!
.
The American arguments for releasing those men range
,
from the
sincerely humanitarian to the ridiculous. Americans from both major
political parties decry th~ plight of those men. But very few realize
that
·
the status
·
of those men
is
a little different than prisoners of
.
war. We should try to assign the label used at Nuremburg: war
criminal. These men have been captured in the act of waging war; in
the act of destroying human life .
Although we
·
would wish to have these men returned home, we
have little reason to expect it and absolutely no grounds to use it as
·
-
leverage in the attempts at a negotiated peace. The only means to
obtain the release of the prisoners is the immediate withdrawal of all
Y~W.C.l.
·.
American troops.
·
·
H
.
ow many
.lists
of prisoners of war were released to the German
and
-
Japanese people during World War II? What leniency was
•.
granted to the Nazis who operated the con~cntration camps and
crematoria of the Hitler Era. Some of the crimes of the American
government against the Vietnamese people (My Lai) are parallel to
-
the crimes of the Nazi government against Jews in Europe.
Rather than demanding release of these war criminals from North
Vietnam, the American people should summon any moral courage
they have for a higher goal. The American people should ask the
United Nations to reconvene the Nuremburg trials and bring the
officials of their government before that world council to be tried
for their crimes against mankind. We helped to create the justice of
Nuremburg, now it is our turn to be subjected to that justice.
RICHARD GRAY
MA YO LOISEAU
in
Letters To
The
.
·
Editors
.
Oppa'rtunity
E:~p-ensive

'
,,
.
..
.
:
.
'
·
Satire
the CIRCLE · as a sanctuary to
avoid personal confrontation
seems to
·
be a deffinate (sic) lack
.
o
_
f honesty on the part of Mr.
O'Reilly.
-
Dear Sir;
Mrs. Richard L. Rutz, who
spent Wednesday, January 20, at
Marist, as a recruiter for the
National Y.W.C.A., would like
Sincerely, to remind any interested young
James E. Daly women that they can get further
:
>

information from, Mr .
.
.
John
.
,
·-
-
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.T.
1.
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t
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11
··
Ed"t "·
'•
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:
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.
.
.
•·
Sherlock
in
>
the
/.P-laceinent
i
-
A
Dramatization
of the lives and wit of
Oscar -
and G.B.S.
.
Co-dir~cted
py '
_
:
.
PAGES
.
Th
t tt
--
t at'satire
ar·
,
o
,
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.
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:,
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·r:,
e recen a emp
As
.
a former shident
·
of
:
'
Mrs;
,•,
ice.
·

·
'"t
tt
..
,·:;-
_
.:::,
>
the
·
expense
'
of
-
one of
'
my
'
Landau's,
I
feel compelled t<>
. '
~mI?Joy~ent
',
_
opportumtles
·
colleagues;
·
represents another reply
·.
to
.
the sick perverted exISt m this
.
·
country, and to
·
,:
-
CEDRIC HARDWICKE
&
RICHARD GRAY
·

step backwards .in our attempts accusations leveled against her some extent ar~und the worl~,
·
..
fo build a spirit.of community
by Bill O'Reilly.
for gra~uates wit~ a
-
b_achelor s
on this campus. When oh when
O'Reilly, maybe to you and degree m the social scien<:_es ?r
will those
·
who have the your·racist kind, allowing Black arts,. plus volu~t\!er or paid
·
opportunity to
.
write in our students to participate in class is
expenence
as adVISers for youth
college
_
paper learn that attacks giving them special privileges but programs,
~ umm~r camp
·
_
-
on people are

inconsistent with we normal people feel that
·
they programs, tutorials, etc.
.
our hopes for a truly progressive have just as much rightto speak
.
U
n_dergraduatt: women
_who
and mature community.
.
·
as we do. 1 suppose if
·
you had are mte!este<l
m
professio~al
-
The artichrireaddid little to
your way we
·
would have careers m :,. voluntary _so~ial
describe a person who has bee.f! a segregated classrooms. Secondly agency, w 1th a Ch~i_stian
leader
-
in the quest for due
.
you criticize Mrs. Landau's purpose, are urged to v1S1t the
process for an members of oµr
books. Well maybe if ypu had local
Y.W.<;,.A., and to_ serve_ as
.
:
community.
(Ask
the students

read them, you would realize vo!unteers
1~
programs mvolvmg
-
imd teachers she has assisted.)
that the readings

cover the children an~ y.o~ng people from
The article did little to portray a whole political spectrum. The Poughkeepsie s mner c~ty area.
·
person who
·
has given unselfishly book "Communism, Fascism
Sincerely,
·
of herself to assist foreign and
.
Democracy" contains
John F. Sherlock
students in solvmg their real writings by advocates of
Placement
pi:qblems.
It
did not speak of the Communism, fascism, liberalism
,
.
students now in graduate; schools

conservatism etc. Could it be
·
_
as a result
.
of
.
her guidance and that like Spiro Agnew
·
and you
_ encouragement. It neglected her object to books that don't agree
success in
·
motivating a good . with your views? Thirdly you
· ·

number of students to major in seem to imply that Mrs. Landau
.
·
.
the fieid 'which she teaches. It' is un-American
-
because she
·.
-
ieaves
.
unsaid the words
.
of opposes the war in Vietnam and
students who found arid find her believes in our Constitution and
classes stimulating and exciting. Bill of Rights. In case you have
The article does a real injilStice never heard of them; our Bill of
to a gracious lady and also
'
to
the Rights
.
are ten amendments
·
to
community which she
se
rves so our
-
Constitution which protect
well:
our
.
liberties. These rights
·
are
.-
Sincerely, being violated every day by the
Louis C. Zuccarello Nixon
.
regime. Criticizing the
To the Editor:
·
After reading certain articles ·
printed in
·
the CIRCLE written
by Bill O'Reilly I find a certain
lack of fairness in his attitude
·
towards
·
certain members of the
Marist Community. Two
instances which stand out in
mind deal with character
assassination of Mr. Ronald
Levine, and more recently Mrs.
Carolyn L;m,dau. The mere fact
·
that Mr. O'Reilly waited for the
end of the football season to
indict Coach Levine showed
.
a
.
deffinate· (sic) lack _of true
conviction. Similarly he waited
until the course he was enrolled
in with Mrs. Landau to be
completed to attack her. Using
Nixon regime for trouncing the
Bill of. Rights is not
un-American,
·
rather supporting
these violations
.
as you do is
un-American.
If you have so
many complaints about our
school, teachers, students, etc.,
why don't you transfer
someplace else?
. .
Manfred Holl '71
Editor's Note: Since the
content of this letter
·
is
slanderous, it was printed only
after receiving the permission of
.
Mr. O'Reilly.
Financfal Aid
'71-
-
'72
D.:ar Sir,
.
All students
.
who expect to
need financial aid for the
·
next
school year are adyised
_
to get
their applications in as soon as
·
possible.
_
,
All Fede·ral programs:
Educational Opportunity
Grants, National Defense Loans
and Work-Study, require an
application and a parent's
confidential statement each
year. Since the PCS must be
back from Princeton by May I st
at the latest, March 15th should
be the deadline for its
submission.
Students should realize that all
available funds for the whole
·
t
971-72 school
·
year will be
allocated on May 1st.
It will be
useless to apply for aid next
September or January. No funds
will be available .
Applications and PC~'s are
available at the Registrar's office
in Adrian.
.
Herchel Mortensen, Registrar
Devised
by
Gray and Loiseau
FEB.
s:
1971, THEATRE, MARIST COLLEGE
CAFETERIA -
from
2
_
becoming dissatisfied with their surroundings during the many hours
they spend in the dining hall. This led to the contracting of different
architects and finally the changes that are evident in the cafeteria
today.
Mr. Green seemed hopeful that someday the rest of the cafeteria
might be done in the same manner but suggested he might purchase
the furniture from a local arts and crafts store.
Calendar· of Events
_
CALENDAR OF EVENTS FOR THE WEEK OF FEBRUARY 1-7,
1971 - Page
5 -
No. 6
·
Tuesday, Feb.
2
6:30 p.m. - Basketball - Bloomfield - Away
8:30 p.m.
Wednesday
7: 30 p.m. - Wrestling - Albany St. - Away
7:30 p.m.
-
Police-Student Rap Session, Rm.
249,
Campus Center
Thursday
10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. - Recruiting for Federal Agencies (Social
Security) Alcoves, Campus Center.
Friday
8:30 p
:
m. - Readings.
"Wilde
Evening with Shaw" Theater.
Saturday
9:30 a.m. - Federal Service Entrance Exams, Rm. 248, Campus
Center
.
6:00 p.m. - Basketball - Dowling - Home
8:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m. Wrestling- Kings - Home
Sunday
.
8:00 p.m. - C.U.B. Film "Man for All Seasons" Theater
1Nr
&+CIRCLE
Sal Piazza, Joe Rubino, Ann Gabriele, Janet Riley,
Peggy
.
Miner, Frank Baldascino, Paul Tesoro, John
Tkach, Bernie Brogan, Sheila Languth.
The
above
names are those people who have contributed to this
week's ORCLE, and do not
appear
in a byline.
,
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PAGE6
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111E CIRCLE
·
,
JANUARY 28, 1971
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1111111
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II
OIi .
.
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.........
I
no
rs- ■■■
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■ 1.1.i1nr.~1u:u;~i~- ■.i11)i"11li ■
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~'Th.is Ois my life: There· are its .
w~~ness~
its
'
strength;
'
its
/
'
_
many like it but
.
th.is one
is
mine. parts, its accessories; .its sights, .
My rifle
is
my best friend
;
It
is and its barr~l. .I will keep my
.
_
-
my life.
l
must master it as
I
rifle clean and
·
ready; We will·
master my life.
·
.
·
:
. ·
.
become_ part
·
of ea~h
·
ot1
_
1er.
My rifle without
·
me is useless.
·
·
We wj.11.:.;.
,
.
·
.
.
.
Without my
.
rifle
I
am useless.
I
·Before God ·!'swear this creed. ·
must fire my rifle true;
I
must Mf
·
rifle. and
·
.
myself ·are the
·_shoot straighter
.
than my enemy
·
-defenders of
my
-
country .
.
We ·are
who is
.
trying to kill rn:e
;.
I
must the inastei:s
.
of our· eriemy; We
shoot him before
·
he shoots me I are the saviors·of
iny
life;
.
·
will....
·
·
_
. .
.
.
.
·
So b'e
·
it, until .victory is
·
. My rifle and myself know that America's and there is no
·
·
what counts in
.
this
·
\\'.ai"
.
is not enemy, but Peace!"
the
·
rounds
.
we fire, the noise of
The above is a pledge repeated
· our
1
burst, nor the smoke we by· the Members of
_
the U
.
S.
·
make.We know that it is the hits Marine Corps during their basic
that count. We will hit....
training.
·
My rifle is human, even
.
as I,
because it is my life. Thus I will
learn it as a brother. I will learn
·
Oper
·
ation
Challenge
.
Submitted by
Dennis Alwon
-
·
.
..
.
·
The
·
American Civil Liberties He
·
needs $4,000 to pa
·
y his
Union has begun "Operation medical bills. Bill Schroeder was
Challenge," a program of one of- the students shot and
lawsuits and legal defenses killed at Kent. $2,000 is needed
intended to aid faculty and to pay for his funeral expenses.
students of Kent State who Insurance companies are not
under indictment . by the Ohio paying
·
these bills

at
·
Kent
Of
Grand Jury. The pto blem Jackson State. At Jackson State
resµlting from this humanitarian there is $5
;ooo
in medical• bills
move is a Jack of funds needed s~ill as yet unpayed. Insurance
for defense costs. The Legal companies refused
·
to·pay;-these
·.
Defense Fund of Kent State· · bills because they do not cover
needs $200,000 to pay for
·
court "riotous situations."
.
~OH aaaaaClaDODOD a CICICIDDC:IIIIDHCIDD.CIOO.CIDC:U:ICIOCICI
.
CIDDDDC111::iaaaai:IDDDDDCID:cl
=
Cl a D OCIDDOi
costs
'
and appeals for the
You can help relieve the
twent-five people indicted.
financial strain on the
_
Kent and
In addition to
the
problems of Jackson students by sending a
raising defense funds there is the contribution to
:
Kent Student
problem of paying medical costs Medical Fund, Inc
.
, Kent City
for the victims of Kent State and Bank

Account number 35075
Jackson State. Dean Cabler is Kent, Ohio 44240. The address
still paralyzed from
.
the waist for the Kent Defense Fund is
i
down as a result of National P
.
O. Box 116 Kent Ohio 44240.
·
;
; .
·
.
· Guard
.
bullet at Kent last May 4.
*****
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.:.-;·
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-,
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,-~--
.
Credit -
No
Entry
Option Tried
Oberlin, Ohio - (LP.) - The
Entry basis.
.
·
College of Arts and Sciences
3
:
Effective Spring 1971, drop
faculty at Oberlin College
the· present Satisfactory/
'
recently adopted a two:.Option
Unsatisfactory option from the
·
grading system
.
that will permit
grading system.
.
.
_
students to choose letter gr~des
4. Maintain, as the alternative
or simply a "Credit" entry for
grading· option
,
the traditional
:
their work
;
and wilr do away
grading system, including +'sand
:
with recording any grades below
-'s I?ut excluding D's and F's'as
· C-minus.
·
recorded grades (that is
,
A+
to
;
The action was recommended
C-/No Entry).
~
by
_
a faculty-student committee
.
5, Except as indicated in point
(
formed
·
more than a year ago to
3 above, the changes will operate
~
,
study ways of improving through the academic year
.
~,
methods of evaluating a
-
1971-72. The faculty also
·
student's course work. During
requests
·
the Educational
·
.
that
-
time a one-semester Commission to bring
·
experiment
.
with a Credit/No
recommendations by the Spring
::Entryoptionwastri~d.
of
·
·
.
1972 concerning future
·
.
The two-option system in the
directions in grading
·
and
College
of
Arts and Sciences will
evaluation procedures.
operate
·
through 1971-72. The
.
The Satisfactory-Unsatis-
Academic Standing Committee
factory option has been in effect
will continue to hav~jurisdiction
since 1966-67. Students could
over minimum
·
requirements for
select o·he course each semester
·
good standing.
on an ungraded basis. They·
By the spring of 1972, the
could not exercise the option in
division is likely to have
their major department during
recommendations on future
their junior and senior years;
grading and evaluation however.
procedures from an Educational
Commission, which is now being
*****
formed to reexamine the goals
and
.
content of Oberlin's
educational program.
The full recommendation of
the Committee to Study ~rading
and Evaluation consisted of
these fiv.e points:
l. Drop D's and F's as
permanently recorded grades.
2
.
Institute a Credit/No Entry
option as follows:
Any student may, for any
semester, elect to take all his
courses on a Credit/No Entry
basis. Credit will be considered
equivalent
to
C- or better.
·
·
-
However, any faculty member
may,
at
his option, offer a
~--ourse entirely on a Credit/No
VISTA WORKERS UNIONIZE
-from
3
·
p a r t i c i p a t i o n and
self-determination was
incorporated
into
the Alliance's
own structure which seeks to
have a majority of
its
steering
committee composed of
volunteers who originally were
recruited from poor
communities.
*****
No matter
how
you
J
eel ah
hut
th~
,
war in
Vietnam,
,
the fate· of
.
this
:
prisoner <>f
_:
war
.
·
_
··
.
is
'
a .big
deaL To
.
his
:wife
and chil_dreii.
·
ro
·
·
his parents. To the signatories of the G~neva
..
'
Coilve
·
ntions. To all rational people in the
-
·
world.
The Red Cr~ss
·
is asking yoU: to consider the
..
·
matter
·
of
.
prisoners
·
of . war
·
and those who ·
-
are missing ~n action in Asia ..
_
..
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_
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'
.
.
.
.
it
is n~t asking you
.
to take,~ stand on the
war itself. Jt is asking yo11 to ask Hanoi to
observe the humanitarian provisions of the
Geneva
·
Conventions.
·
-
Ask Hanoi to ielease the na~es of. ~en it
holds prh1oner . .Ask them to allow prisone~s
to communicate regularly
.
with their fam-
ilies; Ask them
.
to repatriate seriously
ill
and wounded prisoners. Ask them to allow
.
a
-
neutral intermediary to inspect places of
detention.
.
·
·
:
-
Ask
:
them this
j~
-
a letter
·
mailed to
:
THE
IMEIICIN
NITIOIIL REO
·
CIOSS
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JANUARY28;•1971
·· ·
Marisf'
<
Ass·odates Hold
·Mtmb8rship Drive
.
-.
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,•
:. :'.
-M~stissociates recently·had
.
Coppia Jr.,
Mi.
and Mrs
.
James
·
:
a:
membership drive
.
They asked·
·
.
L.
·
Clark,
_
Mr.
and
.
Mrs
. ·
John
·_
.
,
each of the 1700 families having Corliss,
q
~
Col. Paul Curtin, Mr.
:
·
.
students attending Marist
.
to James
L
Carniaux, Mr;
·
J.M ..
join.
Caliguire, Mr. Donald
E .
.
, Less
.
t h
·
an
.
ten percent Cunningham, Mr. arid Mrs.-
.
responded to the request.~
· ·
·
Edward Clare· Sr., Mr .
.
and Mrs.
If all families did join it would Thomas Carfora, Mrs. E.A. Di
not
·
be necessary to
_
have any Roberts, Mr. M. Devaney, Mr.
·
other
·
fund
·
raising affairs during . and Mrs. Felix Deerhoska, Mr.
the year;
-
ln the past, Marist and Mrs. William
H.
Di Giacoma,
Ass9ciates rari card parties and Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick Draiss,
·
·
sold raffle
'
tickets.
It was a lot of Mr. and Mrs. Johri J. Delaney,
work for a handful of parents Mr;
R. Donowski, Mr
.
and Mrs .
.
and riot much money would
.
be James Early,
_
Mr. Joseph Emken.
realized.
·
·
·
.
·
Mr. and
·
Mrs. Edward
.
I.
With a one hundred percent
·
·
Emery, Mr. E.J. Fox, Mr. J.L.
response to
.
the membership . Furtnett, Mrs. Bren~a Fasula,
drive, eno\lgh
·
money
.
could be. Mr .. Ga spare Garrilono,. Mr.

raised to help all
.
the student Damel Gregory, Mr. Joh
_
n Gillen,
organizations that need funds to Mr. and· Mrs. Donald Gillispie,
function,
set
.
up
·
scholarships,
Mr_.
·
and Mrs. Joseph Gajdas, Mr.
etc.
·
and Mrs. Joseph Gorkowski, Mr.
'
.. 111E
ORCLE -
PAGE7
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The following naines are the and Mrs. R.W. Greene, Mr.
families that have joined to date. Sherwood .W. Greiner, Mr.
It is hoped that student$ check Charles Gurski, Mr. J. Gabriele,
the
.
list so that they may see
.
Mr. and Mrs. John Gallagher; Mr.
which_ families are
.
responsible and Mrs. Gregory L. Howe, Mr.
for any
_
money their Joseph Holt, Mr. W.J. Horney,
organizatiqn gets.
Mr'. Arnold House, Mrs.
_
Louise
Mr. John Metcalfe, Mr. and Mrs.
Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. John
.
Rozychi, Mrs. Charles Reilly,
.
Mr. and.Mrs. Martin A'Hearn, Heinrick, Mrs. Earline
Thomas Murphy, Mr. and Mrs.
Nugent, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Judge and Mrs. Edwar~ D. Re,
.Mrs.EmmaAlbino,Mr.andMrs. Hollingsworth, Mr. and Mrs.
,Jerome Miller,
Mr. and Mrs.
Noonan, Mrs. GladysNovarino, ·Mr. Antho_ny Radzevich, Mr .
.
Alw.on,-Mr. Thomas Adams
.
Jr.: William Hammill, Mr
.
Robert
Frank P. Mirrione, Mr. and Mrs
.
Mr. and Mrs. Irving Nerrie, Mr .. James E. Riordan, Mr. and Mrs.
·
Mr.andMrs.JohnBubenkoSr., Howd, Mr. T.J. Jalo, Mr. A.
-Walter Mooney, Mr. D.M.
andMrs.Chas
.
O'Brien,Mr.S.M. Edg_ar Royce, Mr. Thomas
Mr.
L.C.
Brogan, Mr
.
William Kloche, Mr. and Mrs
.
John
McCann, Mr. Michall Moffai, Mr
.
.
Ogden, Mr
.
and Mrs
.
William J.
;
Sulhvan, Mr. Sol J
.
Sant?, Mr.
Becker;- Mrs.
_
Alice Brounstein, Kenny, Mr .. and Mrs. Joseph J.
and Mrs. John McCann, Mr. and
O'Reilly, Mr. and Mrs. William
:
Jo~ph A. Sloney, Emily
B.
Mr. James Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Kristofik,
·
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Mrs. Henry McArdle, Mr. and
v.
Paccione, Mrs. S.P. Pecorara, - Smith,_ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shay,
Dallas Benedict, Mr. and Mrs. F.King, Mr. Peter
L.
Keane, Mr.
Mrs
.
Alfred Montalto, Mr. and
Mrs. M.S. Procino.
Mr. Vincent Smythe, Mr. Peter
.Andrew Biglin, Mr. and "Mrs.
·
T.J. Kelly.
·
Mrs. Robert Magill, Mr. and Mrs
.
Mrs. Theresa Pfluger, Mrs.
J. Sekoc, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
RichardBecket,Mr.JosephBala,
Mr. Peter Kaiser Sr., Mr.
J.E
.
Maroney,Mr.andMrs.John
E.A. Piersa, Mr. Harold A. Sy~on,
_
IIJr. and Mrs. Frank
Mr.· Winford Ilowden,
Mr.
and Edmund Kisicki, Mr. and Mrs.
Momrosh, Mr
.
and Mrs. Joseph
Paulson
,
Mr. Henry Pasuit, Mr.
Squ1ccanm, Mr. W.F
.
Sam~on,

Mrs. B.W.
·
·
Bentley; Mr. J.P
.
John Kleinhous, Mr. and Mrs.
D. ~cCann, Mr. and Mrs. V.A.
Joseph Pancheri, Mr. Gino Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Sulhvan
.Baiardi, Mr. and -Mrs .
.
James
P. Edward
_
Kane, Mr
;
and
·
Mrs.
Meehan, Mr
.
and Mrs. James F.
Quiriconi, Mrs.
J.
Quadrino, Mr. Jr., M~. and Mrs. Harold L.
·
. Butrick,Mr.James Cookley
_
,Mr.
_
Christqpher Liska, Mr. C.E;
McKenna, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
and Mrs. James Riley, Mr. and Schmidt,
Mr. ~
nd Mrs.
_
E.W. Conelly, Dr. and Mrs. Luzon, Mr. Jose Llorena, Mr.
Masterson, Mr. J.P. Maggio, Mr.
Mrs. Ralph Della-Rocco, Mr. and Alexander Turowski, Mr. J.J.
Jaines Cassaro, Mr .
.
Frank Patrick Lovelle, Mr. Edward
and Mrs. Richard W. McNeeley,
Mrs. Sal
J.
Rubino, Mrs. Rita
·
0 ,
·
Cerchio, Mi:
:
-
a,n~ ,~1rs.
·
Peter
_
Lac~mbe, Mr; Henry McDonnell~
Mr. T,W. McKeon, Mr. John
.
E.
Rogue, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley M.
_
C NT. P.
3
·
Col.
3
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J.'lliWJUt
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61£
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On
January
14
,"
1971
_
Richard .
.
address co
'
ncerned the adeptnfss
·
.
:
di~~h~s-~rl"ini~~d
-
f~otball with
I
·
.
I
·
'
.
M .
.
N
.
i.xon
·
sp9k
.
e
·
to th~ stu
_
dents of Nebra~a's
.
footb~I
·
!
·
. teai:n
~
-
~tudents in Wa
.
~hington to
I
by
Igor Stravmsky
I
.
·_
a
·
n
·
d.,facultyof
·
t
·
h.eUn.1ve
·
r
·
s1tyof theOrangeBowlgamem
..
Miami. protest Cambodia-and the
I

I
Nebraska
.
.
. _
The remar
.
ks 'Wh
.
ich This brings to mind
w
.
hat a fan killings at Kent and Jackson
I
I
.
lasted thirty-one minuted were of football Mr. Nixon
·
has always State.
.
·
.
~
~
:
:
r~ceive~ wa_r!'filY
br
this nota~ly b_een . .If you rem_ember h_e_took
Froin football_Mr. N_ixon w~nt
I
I
nght-wmg
,
mst1tution. The first
time out last spring to v1S1t the
on to embelhsh his
·
captive
I
SPONSORED BY C U B
I
-
five minutes qf Mr.
·
.
Nixon's
.
Lincoln Memorial at
6
a.m. to audience with the worn out
§
.
• • •
I
rhetoric of the American Dream.
§
~
Acallwasputouttotheyouth
~
CULTURAL COMMITTEE
I
·
of America to pick up the
I
.
.
.
I
standard and carry it to new
I
I
heights of glory.
It was with this
I
_______
I
thought in mind that the
~
I
DINNER DANCE
president
·
announced the
I
~
_
consolidation of Vista. and the
I
SAT. JAN• 30th
I
sponsored
by
P
.
ea~e Corps into
·
a n~w agency
~
I
.
designed to do the same things
§
~
they did before under a new
§
I
:
GAELIC
SOCIETY.
-
title.
~
s ·
3
o
.
p
M -
~
It
is notable that Mr
.
Nixon
I



I
chose to
-
speak at Nebraska, a
I
I
midwesterri school, and not
·
at
I
I
Friday 'February 12,
9-:P.M
r
:<_:
_
f~!
0
~!!1:.
i~n~::1:~tiits~:
I
FIRESIDE LOUNGE
I
another one
·
of his grand stand
!!i
·
·
.
~
CON'T. P. 3 -Col~ 1
L , _ , . , . , , 1 # # . l l ' I I I I I . I I I I I I I I I I I . J
.
•The
·
.
.
·
Absurdity
.
.
.
··.
of
··
.
Freedom
by ROBERT REHAK
.
Freedom as a political goal is- my ~ho ice of
·
·voc~tions:
There
is no freedom for the
ab·surd.
It is absurd simply educ.ltional opportunities; etc.
'
dissenter. To dissent is to make
because freedom as a concept ·
aut
.
to be free (or freed) is
ar.
yourself unfree even
if
you
makes
·
no sense within the absolute.
-
It means to be free of considered yourself free before.
political continuum. And this is al
_
l fett~rs: political, social, It is to acknowledge that the
what our radical youth are
·
economic, arid psychic: Freedom polity still plays a role in your
beginning to realize. At the very
is not the choice between social
·
life. Freedom exists only outside
heart. of political philosophy is. necessities, but rather the ability the po
Ii t ical continuum.
the determination of the proper to determine'the code by which Freedom is the complete
.
balance between freedom
.
and one will live. Freedom for youth negation of recognition of the
law arid order which will result. is the freedom to become polity. The only free person is
in the
-
optimum good for both themselves. It is thus intimately one who lifts himself outside the
theindividualandsociety .
.
·
tied
·
to -the notion of politicalsphere.Forhimpolitics
-I would submit, though,. that individualism.
does not exist. Only apolitical
freedom when considered from
The
,
very nature of politics, man is free.
this viewpoint
·
is
a myth,
·
an however, is coercion
.
The polity
Thoreau once said,· "The
illusion propagated to diminish imposes restraints on the government does not concern
consciousness _of repression.
marginal elements of society for me much and I shall bestow the
There are different degrees <>f
the benefit of the vast middle. fewest possible thoughts on it."
being
.
unfree in
·
the sense that People
·
are thus «free" only to
.
·
Only be being conscious of the
·
additional restrictions may be -the
.
extent that their hopes, polity's existence and the way it
placed upon my physical fears, aspirations, and manias impinges on one's freedom and
movement, the
reading material coincide with those of the yet ignoring
it
at the same time
to which I am allowed access,
polity.
can one
be totally free.
Political Goal
Unfreedom exists in
·
direct
proportion to the amount of
energy which one devotes
.
to the
polity. Freedom exists only
when one devotes no energy to
its maintenance or destruction.
It should be apparent that
freedom as youth perceives it
today, with its corollary,
individualism, carried to their
logical outcomes would mean
the dissolution of the state. This
returns us to the al,sunfity. Why
then should· political man
enshrine freedom as one of his
goals'? Why pay homage to it in
y
o u r
D
e
_
c
l
a r a
t
i
o n o
f
Independence and your
Constitution'? Freedom cannot
-
exist within the polity, but only
outside it. To vaunt freedom as a
goal of the polity then, is to tear
it
apart, confound it; and do it a
disssevice.
Individualism or freedom
carried to its logical extension
negates the polity and hence it is
absurd to discuss the concept of
political liberty. Note also that
freedom carried to its logical
extension negates itself. To put
it
simply, there must be
something to be free from.
In
a
state of complete individuation
( p
re
s
u
p p
o s
i
n
g
u
n
i
v e r
sa I
tolerance which would have
been necessary to get there),
there would exist no coercion.
But the notion of freedom
make .. sense only in opposition
to the notion of coercion.
Hence, freedom would negate
itself through its universal
attainment.
-
-
-
..


















-
/ '
'THE CIR.CLE .
·. 'JANUARY
28; 1971
JOE SCOTI drives·aroU;nd Albany St. defender fo~ an
easy
deuce.
..
•·•.
RAY MANNING ~ars above the ~o~d for a short jumper. ·



•••

Clarke Conti·nues To Click
The Varsity Basketball Te~· Joe Scott (13 points); : and · remaining .. Les Chenery hit on ·
continued its;winning ways and ·Guards,
:
' Ray. Clarke and· Les
foil~
sti;aightjump shots to _break
·'. stretched ·.their.victory.streak
to.
Ch:enery v.r,ith:·I0·~rid.;JS'points., the,>game
"wide•
open~ .. with. a
.
··seven_::games,,with.·. wins•._over•,: respectively,}'.:.,,,,.;,
,
:,5
,,:,.~?/·i>'',
0
·,{,Maristwfotory::'88:§6~0:.l'Jie:.~Red:,,,,.:.
Difwliilg~
."AHianY . S~ate_ , arid: ' ,·Bob Keckler led Jhe Dowling
Foxes were led · by· ·a balanced .· ·
·
·Nyack-(Dowling and Nyack were
scorers with, 22 ( points/and :was
attack.;..: Ray Manning_~ ·14 points;
· ·
ConferenceWins).,
:· · . . _
... foHowed:-by Center,'Parriell
Bill"Spenla'-"16 pomtsand 15
<·The ,Red Foxes•,began
·
the
Campbell
:.(16
pofuts); Tony ·. rebounds;
·
Joe Scott<: 15 points
, ,week by· travelirig
t9
Oaki;lale,
Fiorentino·
(12 ·
points); Ralph
and.
J
lrebounds;
Les
Chenery' -
N.Yi tomeet Dowling College. • Thoma~· (12 .points);
.
and .Ed
18 points and RayClarke ·
0.
25
This:. rnarked a return match
Ehman(l0 points). This win left. points _and .· 10_ . rebounds,
9,
between tliese two teamsdLast . the -, R~d '. Foxes· with ·a· 3-0 ·. assists: Albany:_State \vas led by
year· however ·Dowling defeated .·. coriference;rriark; . .
. .
.. ·. __ Jack Jorden :·
·
'l7
points; John
. M_arist to go 6n' to win fhe league ·
T h e Basket b a 11 T ea·m·- Quattiichi - 11 points; and Jim .
Championship). The Hoopsters · continued traveling by going to ' Masterson -14 points.
· ..
-
jumped out to an early lead arid
Albany,
·N._Y. to' face an eighth
Because. of his fine play
were ahead at halftime 44-31.
ranked Albany State. Team.·-. against Dowling~- 20 points- and
The Red Foxes were ·lead. by (Last year Albany State defeated
·
AlbaQy State - 25 points,
n
_ Guard;- Lester Chenery, who: _Marist 64-62 on 'a last second ,rebo1:1nds, and 9 assists~ Ray_
scored IO points on
5
for ·9. shot).
.
. .
. . .
_ Clarke: 'was selected to. the'--
.· shooting; Thelead remained 11
The garn,e started out~ see-saw
weedy.
E.C,A,C. Team,· as a -
<point~ all. throughoutthe second 'tiattlewith a late
spurt
by.Marist.
.
guard.· He
is•
·only;Jhe
-
fourth
. halL The Hoopsters broke th_e
_
· giving them- a 35-28' half-tllJle
F
player in Marist College·
·
game wide open primarily
·
on the
·
lead. Bill Spenla arid:
L~s
·.Bask ~tbalL liistory · to·, be
strength">e>f .. Bob Ulh:ich Chenery both had 9p6ints'to :honored, Bill Speil}a 40.poinfs
(Forward)who~cored I,I-i>oints,
spark the_ attack. The secorid'·_and 24 ieb<>t.inds·:wa~given ari.
and. went on . to . win 103083; half saw·the Red Foxes build tip_-~honorable II),e:htion. _ . · •·· :· .· .·
Captain'Bill Spenla·Jed'the 'asafomargin 6447 with-8:5L
.. *****··
attackwith24points:Othertop remaining. Albany .State•·
scorers were- Center, Ray · however fought back-and cut the
Manning (11 points); Forward, lead to just five points with ~:20'
RAY CLARKE ahead
of the
rie1c1
for
a breakaway
layup • .
C~ACH RON PETRO
urging
on his squad.
- LESTER
CHENERY

































































PAGE9
THE CIRCLE
JANUARY
28, 1971
·
·
Nat'I.
E11vir.
Policy
Act
·
_____
I
S_U ___
RV_I\/_At___,I
.
While the 91st Congress was
.
Quality.
·
grappling with a
_
nearfy
·
Dingell was equally insistent
.•
A·,
r
p
O
11
u
·
t
·1
On
·
.
mortoxid~, nitrogen oxides; and unprecedented case of the last
that t
.
his position was
a
direct
.
particles pf soot, :lead, chloring, minute
.
crazies (which could be
misinterpretation of NEPA's
1
bromine and phosphorus from good or
·
bad; whether you view
explicit
·
provision that AEC
Air pollution may
.
well be the
.
the
·
tailpipe; hydrocarbons from it
-
as
a:
year:-end organizational
.
could set more stringent
cause of your h1gh golfscore
...
or
the
:
crankcase; and hydrocarbons
.
debacle or a y
_
ear-erid
pollution control standards
if
the fact that
\
your house is still
·
fr.om
·
the fuel
.
tank and determination to do whatever's ,n
·
ecessary to protect the
on the market, or that the leaves
carburetor. Diesel engines, jet don.e right) the House environment. He asked the AEC
of your
,
favorite tree are a-
-
aircraft,trains,conventionaland Subcommittee on Fisheries and
to prpvide its reasoning to the
different color this year.
.
.
rnuclear powered
.
ships all add
-
Wildlife
.
Conservation
.
was
contrary in writing.
·
According to a recen
.
t s~udy. of
eniission-causing pollution.
doggediy
.
pursuing
·
Federal.
Although
.
it is far too early in
the League
.
of Women
.
Votei:s
·
* INDUSTRIES -
pulp
.
arid
agencies dedication to the intent
the
-
game
·
to do more than
E d u c a t i o n
·
·.
·
F u n d
,
A
paper mills, iron and steel mills, of
.
the National Enviommental speculate whether
·
it's good or
Congreg~tiori of Vapors, air
petroleum refineries, smelters Policy Act of-1969.
bad, the
·
cross-examination
pollution
is
making each breath
an~
.
inorganic and organic
NEPA explicitly
.
requires each
revealed a most interesting
.
a personal affront.
.
.
.
.
chemical · plants contribute the

Federal agency
·
to carefully and
s i.d e
·
1 i g h t
:
T h e A EC' s
It m:ay be the villain behind
greatest amounts of the
·
five
fully consider the environmental
environmental statements
stockings
!hat
tun, faded dress
;
major air pollutants.
·
,
impact of activities under its
required
'
by the
·
National
colors, crull)bling book pages,
·
*POWER
PLANTS FIRED jurisdiction BEFORE it digs the
Environmental Policy Act will
and red, irritated eyes. ff can
WiTH
.
FOSSIL FUELS - coal,
hole, builds the dam, liceµses the
no
.
t be made available to the
make you
.
dizzy, slow down
oil and
.
natural ga( are powerplant,sellstheoiHeaseor Congress, Council on
your thinking
·and
if the
.
.
"air"
is
-
resp
'
onsible for about.one half of what have you.
·
Environmental
·
Quality
.or
the
wrong, it can kill you.
.
.
the
-
sulfur oxides and one fourth
.
Subcommittee Chairman John
public until the projects in
·
" 0 n e a mo ng many air
of the particulate matter in total DingeU of Michigan ramrodded
question and
·
their respective
episodes was the New York City
·
U.S. emissions.
.
.
·
. ·
.
the NEPA through the House
environmental statements have
inversion of 1963-which took
·
· .
*FURNACES
-:- Furnaces for
and therefore has a particularly
both b
_
een cleared by the Office
.
the lives of
.
400 people, "
,
the
,
homes and
·
businesses emit large keen interest in the agerici~::•
of Management and Budget.
study explains. "The
.
young
;
·
the
·
amou
·
nts
·
of sulfur oxides and
.
p e r f o r m a n c e
a
·
n d
Dingell noted that as author of
.
aged and
tile
infirm arelikely to
lesser amounts of
all
q~eF
major
'
con se
rva tionists'
·
growing NEPA be couldn't recall where it
experience niore
·
severe
.·.
effects
pollutants, often from short
complaints of rion-corripliance
said environmental statements
from contaminated air
:
than the
chimneys· whose con.tents
·
fall
with the intent of the Act.

were to
'
be

cleared with 0MB.
generaipopi.ilarice~.
:
Animalsmay
iffim€:'diately on
·
the
When the final hearing And
·
Jurther,that" ... asarnatter
.
also sicken and die
·
..
.
and
it
can
surroundings.
·
transcript comes off
.
the press, it
·
of fact, by the time you folks
al~o diminish
'
thilk production,

.
.
:
*WASTE-' Over ten
·
pounds will make some :very interesting submit your budget to the
fertility; arid size of offspring."
of household, commerical and
-
reading. And is certain to stir. up
Congress,
··
it occurs to
.
me you
It
isgettingsoapersoncannot
-
.
industrial. wastes accumulate
·
considerable controversy when have pretty well
·
made up your
walk
·
down the city
·
street
daily
-
for each U.S .
.
man, woman
·
the 92nd Congress convenes on mind ... " to go ahead with the
without choking on pollut~on
;
It
.
and child. Agricultural wastes January 2L
·
. · ·
.
.
.
·
·.
·
project in question. Which
is
not
_
hits the 1
.
ungs;
.
the heart, the
skin
.
mount up
·
p from livestock and
·
In the interim, however, iteins exactly the sequence of events
.
and the pocketbook
:
-
·
.
·
.
;
.
:~
.
.
,
croP.
.
production,
·
.
and several
·
from two particular pieces of con~ervaHonists
.
thought the
.
"Agricul'tural yields
·'
-.
are
· ·
million cars are junked annually
,
·
testimony b e
-
fo re the NEP.A dictated.
.
·
diminished; fi:orit yard planting
·
.
When these materials are burned
Subcommittee deserve advance
-
withers .
.
Belongings need more
.
or incinerated Without emission
airing:
-
--~.
.
.
. :
·
.
. .
,'
. ·
. .
frequent
,:.
cleaning, steel control,pollutionresuits
;
, ·
.
·
.
·
.
On ·t>ec~mber 8
.
James T .
.
corrosion occurs at a
·
rate
·
oftwo
.
·
:
-
*GOVERNME
_
NT - each level
0
Ramey, Commissioner of the
.
tQ four times faster in
,
heavily
: .
,
o,f goveinmenf pollutes the
.
air-
':
Atomic Energy Commission,
.
sjl_lfur-bearing air. Air
.
filters
.
by its o~n activities ofg~>Ver.itiilg
.
··,>
presented a compreh
'
ensive
-'-
-;'
must be installed
.to
protect
·
-- trav
.
eHing,- ma
.
nufacturing,
.
review of theAEC's
'
approach to
museum pieces and
:~
high
powergenerating,discardinganq
:
NEPA. The SubcQmmittee's
precision telecoromtir#cat,ions
space heat!Jtg.
·
. .
,
. ..
.
.
subsequent cross-examination
equipment:
>:
·
·
..
:
.
_
X
• •
)'
Growing
.
numbers of.

men
brought out some
:
interesting
·
·
.. Government studies
·.
show
,.
ai;id
·.
greater
·
sophistication of
<
information in addition to
.
that property vaiues may
dfo;1
iii
·
t~clmology
have
.increased
the
.
essentially conf'uming

AEC's
acutely air-polluted
-
·
'.
ireas.
<
airborne
.
'
wastes_" The report
:
.
intent
.
as questioned in
Residents of such areas may not
.
·
..
·
continues,
·
"Man must educate
·
"Conservationists Dispute AEC's
have the m
_
oney to pay
'.
for
·
·
hi~_self t_o· the
.
relationship
Environmental
.
Regulations"
seve
.
re or
·
extentied sickness
between
,-
hts numbers and the (following article).
inore frequent clcaitin1(0;
·
quantity
:
of.natural
.
resources;he
.
A p"articular point of
moving
_
elsewhere,
.
"the
::
study
·
mt1st
.
use
·
-
technology to solve,
.
controversy
,
was the AEC's
·
revealed.
,
, ..
·
..
·
l. ·
·.
·
-
.

·
·:
·
c.
/
instead c>f'create, the problems
.
insistence that it had no
·
The
.
·
study
·
·
1ooks into
.
.
the
·
of
,
pollt1t:ion."
.
.
.
_
:
·.
.
·
responsibility
:
to set.:Or
.
even
national picture of the sources
- .
(A Coitgregat~on of Vapors,
.
consider-stricter pollution
of pollution, although
'
the'
.
·
P~1blication No. 393, is

a.,.ailable
·
.
control standards than those set
.
proportion
of;
chemicals
.
causing
·
from
,
'the
League
.
of Women
·
by State or Federal regulatory
·
pollution in areas may differ:
·. ·
·
Voters;
J 730
M
Street, N.W.,
agencies. A position AEC
··
*AUTO EMISSION - a car
Washington, D.C. 20036 .
.
spokesman said was confirmed
..
.
idling at
a
_
stoplight will e
.
xude
·
Individual
.
copies
.
are 35 cerits
.
and·supi:!orted
,
by the President's
hydro" a r
:
b on s. c a·rb on
·
··
and
_
all order:s must be prepaid.)
Counci1
ori
environmental
1
··
..
Lecture
'
·
'Lead
·
P
.
ollution
in
Plants
-
from
··
Automobiles"
l:30
Theatre,
Campus Ce
_
nter


8.2.1
8.2.2
8.2.3
8.2.4
8.2.5
8.2.6
8.2.7
8.2.8
8.2.9