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The Circle, September 23, 1971.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 9 No. 3 - September 23, 1971

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: ·:':::\J;iyAnne·:Tra6ulst( ,
, ofCollE?ge.,C(>,uncil isenvisi(?~ed to /Ceru_lli; Robert Smith; :
Ap~·
regard to membership; as well as· ·. ~~~~gn
'
izab]e 'i'dentity,. ·
the'. / . .
·,·f;

r,.
>/
:;;./.:>) "/ .. · .:._:.-,;- .·.
·be ;in ·ope_r~tion 'ht t~e s~ring :,Ga~riele!, Ric~ardo_ Cuev!!S,: ,; ·. other tech~ical details. involving
faculty; the student body,'arid th~~:<,'
.
.
Tile; I.nte~1m ;College Co_uncil, _, ~111ester:,· ~is ·continmty
was
a Josep~
:
;Cocopardo, · .. Thomas · the_ es~bhs~ent of ..
the
per- . administrative staff. The faculty : ·
f :
: has, ~n.·~~bhshed as of Sep- , . more decisive factor than new _WaJsh, Frank Denara, Carolyn . manent ·Councd.-......
. · . · will. treat the proposal according.;::·.
•·· , te~bet~l, :a~cl :will
_
b:e
,
:.effective · blood
,
·,,··or ,)
•.<
proportional __ Jones,. Edward pare,· Stephen_ :-The concep~ ofst1~ha.Council,is
to its' 11ormal.mode
of
operauo·n;
··y .;\,.._
.
unti,lUiee~d <>rthe:f~l!. se~ester.
representational this time;: The: Schlutte, ,' ~arry Lasko, · Dana new to-Manst·~e ~nly- agency,
iri
the✓case of the student
body;. · _
_-: ' '
. Th_e Counc,twin .. utiJ~ze the m~l members are: •Joseph Brosnan, . Dela war~,<_ Thomas Farr~ll,_ !h~~efor~, thabs empowered to
. the President of/ the S~u~e!1t; . '·
developed-'.last,: year, ;operating·. Anthony ;-,
,
CampiHi, Richard· Kathy Brier, ~erome Che~ry, and· 1mtu1~e 1t, on
~
perm~l)ent basis" Governn_1cnt, Ralph Cerulli, w~~l _ ·
· • •'
.throu~h.,~Jhe c~mm1tt.ees · of LaPietr~;·,Frank LaRose; G~rY-, ?ames
~berJm..
. .
·.: , ·.
<par:ti~ularly ~f specific powe1:5 ·

work with the povernment ·
m
\(
. Planmng,. Budget, ,and •.:Gover-:, Mendez Marion Nichols Thomas· / The Interim Council, by means. are shifted to its competency) 1s
order to .establish an .. ad. hoc
·,
: nance; .. and ,it .:wilf-acMse · and ·•~ Wade: ;nd Edward- Waters who . 'opts committees on Govema11ce;: th~.' Board .. of. Trusteei ·The
committee which will discuss and
·
l
·. work ·with the:fr~~dfi!t: fo_r
t~ .
:repre;ent_-,Jhe Admini~tr~tion; , has _the task. of pr:oposihg
0
1:l.li
_ef- me_thod
to
ht:·-fol_l~wed in setting
vote
?n,
the pr?p_osed . College ·
:_·:;
purpose of fllrmshing, leadership Joseph ;: _Belanger, : Donald .rective system for tlie operab?n up the Co_unc1l
WIil
be as follows:
C?un_cd;. the a_dmm1strat1ve st~ff
• and of coping with the problems
Dreiman ·
·
wmiam ·Eidle Howard· of the. permanent Council: the :Interim C~llege Council will
will mstitu~e its own mechanics ....
. which encompass· campus-wide ·
·
Goldma~,' George
iioopJr,
Daniel . Specifically, this entails attentior, dt'a\Y-UP a plan for. the estab)jsh~
of· consid~ration, which wiU, '
scope ..
,,·> .
..:
'.
~
;,. ,: ,· - : .. · .
Kirk Florence Michels . Tea ·.~o· the., actual scope, respon- · meh_t of the·CouncH, vote on it
.along;.with the student ad
hoc .
The':membe~s
o(
,~e··.QmncH /·Prenting, Jpseph. Ro.dgers;-' sibjlit_y; and.<
poW~rs
of. th~· and. 'then submit _-it to' .th~
·orga~ization_! be CQffilpU!ll~ted
were .. chosen _m _an:atte~1>.t. to · George Sommer, Gerard Weiss .counc1~_. -The Counc_il must; also pr.e?1d_e11t. '.fhe Presi~ent, before
to thr· Go~·emance ~omm1ttee.of
preserve the continuity· from last . and Louis .. Zucarello; 'who • ~e~erm111e th~ ma!1ner of ap- takJng action. oi:i. this proposal;
the Interim, Councll before the
year'scorpmission. In.view
of
the_ · repres~rit the . faculty; : and pomti_nent- _or .el~ct~on ~nd t_he will submit it
for
consideration to.
fact that a more permanent type . student representatives.• Ralph· _question of. proportionahty . with, ,the campus groups which ha·ve
Con'.t P. 7
Col.
1
·\.
,'
_THE:·
,
.
VOLUME
.NUMBER3
SEPTEMBER 23. 1971
Record
·Crowd Gt'eets Kunstle-r
by :aob Sullivan
The largest crowd in Marist one guard was .captured and
·
until conditions for pris~ners are ·
College history heard cori-
some damage done·. during the
improved. ·
troversial attorney William takeover but countereci with the
Iri conclusion Mr. Kunstler
· Kunstler state the.facts aboutthe fact that· twelve· guards were. compared the events to wiiat
Attica ·incident last Thursday.
An
released py the prisoners for happened in pre
7
war Nazi· Ger-
estimated
3,000
people packed the . medical ,reasons,,
·
.
. · · ··many .. · There is, he explained, a

.·cafeteria•. to h~ar Kunstler, a . Of the.·d
_
emarids list~ by th·e ·.desperate•· need for . people.· t~ ·, ,.
·F
-
<
.
member
of /the
prisoner pr,iso11ers~
.-,Some ·,
had be·en express their:,rage: o.ver. what,
.
·
·.
1.f
> .
: · .'
ntedi::iUngJeain; '. give :
his
first- ·. droppgd,,i!_!cl,tiding
tlle
trimsfer of ·
.
happened .
.
. Expressing :-}iis'. fem::·:-"~ ;.-:,
lt~~·
1
iiiiitllttfati!flifi~l!l~~liiail!f
!;t:'
<ii?-
::-:
<
,
·
- •
.. ·· :
I)an an? R~tl. ~ei:ngan~H~wever,· ._on. theJ~~t-~e1118:nd,:atl}n~sty·for,:: catnrai~n to.all state off~tials:_He
<-·::>
.::'/';"·'>.,<
·.
;
•,th~, Attica, mctd!'!nt and his close the e~~nts :: takmg place, · had·
:
further,spoke
:
of demonstrabons
· :
:
{~;:
_
fi:%-.' \
·
/
}i1ivo~~~
.
111int,i11.'il'
~~)JS~~ }lim_:to ne:v~r. b¢¢n;~ei'.iou~ly neg()tiateci: ) fo})(\!Jeld ori Oc,t> 2 at Fecler~i. · ,/
i3kit;/ ,.
< ..
chang~'h1sJop1~,
.:c ;''; :· ::,
,,
:....
-::-
In the<~ncl·Kunstler_ talled the ':pr1s~I1sthroughout the country>:>
'i;,ffl',f:,·,
·
·/
i ·
>··
>•.Kunstler's,mainpoint was the. methods -u_sed . to quen · the
:
. l.Jrgmg ·an people to attend
the>>
~t}f':/3.\;,:·
,
: ..
,--\bad .. faith·:-shown ·by - t~e ... ·state-. disfurbaric:e.·a._''coJd.blopded·',demimstr~.tion. :in-,Danbury,
·
,.
_
he,.~~,:
X'Ja}t
.:
/:
..
;;'
.
;,•duriri.g~nd after.the nego~iations.
,
'•n!':'l"c;ler:'.';Thtp~iso?~rshad:IlOt said \th~t
.
. prisop-,officials ,haye·· '._
. ,, : ·o:,\):
,
.
C/ ,:
Perhaps. the m~t ~hockmg fa~t · har111cd:
~!1.Y:
guards,: they _'!Yere
-
already agreed to allow PC?ple
~~
,_ .. t i / · -, , ,·
was that negob~bons. were. m not
.
damagr_ng: property,- and ·. the grou!Jds, Danbury Prison 1s
/z}.f:,
,
\: .• ,
.
progr~s when}he police entered · n(.'gotiatio'.ns
·
'?'efe. proceeding ' located off Exit
5
on. Rt. 84 east
:2'.t!''i_{· ,: ,
·
the prison:\ :
·
~;
·

·
.
: . ··
.
. :-.moothl)".·1t \\las.the_police,·and .
.
_ _
.
..._ .
.·.
··..
·
'Kunsder enters to staJtdingo~ation
·'~_i
i
:••::-~•.•·,:···
-·1,r~ilftftf!z~i~iii~ihl~~~.~::e~ .. ··~h~·•·~:af~l~~n~~s.:who_ .• mur~e~ed ·'·•:_·_
··e•;:.
<· . ·, ..

·c1> ,_ •.· ...
:t·· _.·.·
_E·:.v.,-p· ·
1
a' ·, n
,
s
.
.
F...

_:
·
. n·
';:
cl
·
·,./n
g :_
.,
.
'>een>toi
.
or
'
heard of'.. Attica, . ·. As a result/ Mr. Kunstler'
irla . ' ·.
···r ..
e.s
I .
·en·... ..
~
·;' ,,
Xunstler '.
..
Clllph,atic~lly ·; refuted formed, th~_atidierice of
a
pending •.·· :
·.
·
. ·. . . . . . .
. : ... '.
\U/·'···
'
;,'iove_rrior-,-'RockefeHer.'s .. ac~·· .silitagainstGov. Rockefeller·and
:
.
>;:Usatjcin 'that ·he,.amorig others,.· ..
the
cohin1issiori
on
behalfof the.
by 'Jim
Burke:
. i
ha<l
illSligat~~jhe riot.-- · · . . famjiies 'jll\'Ol\fed.
,
·
·
< . : .
The average resident stud~nt in copfere~ces
and
meetings to
s~hool, i~duding
):)()th
academic
"~-:
·
,. ·•· ·· ,
t
__ "h·
h. ·._ .. · ·
f· ... h
. In. the: questi!:m period that .... ··.M·ar .. ist' 'C· ollege pa· ys· -the· busm·
.. ess _attemp· t · to. ·. cons.id_ er. the
and residential
areas
·or Marist.
>-:Tracing
.
t e
istory
·
o.
J
e
fo ..
llow
__ cd h
__ is
..
·s_·pe··•··
ec. h. M
..
r: ..
·.Kunstl_er.·
.
.
...
b JI ..
·· K ··
ti
1 ··1
·
ed.·
·
' .. ·.o.·
f.f
..
ic_e
.. •·
.
. ap.pr_oxima
__ te __ lY.·. ·_thre·e· · .
.
dis.tr. ibu. tion
pe··
rc_enta_ge_s' of this · 'This ·summer, Dr. Foy_ and a
re e mn,
uns er,
a
so,· ean . ex presse ... d
..•..
~
.. sy m.·. pathy·_ .. for dhe
·
·
·h· · ··1
·· ·th. t
t · ·t g·
-
·
· t.h .. o. us.and_ .dollars·1·n
.. tui·tion,·ro· om·
fee that elich of tis have to work
committee consisting of Joe_.
eav~
y
.on
e rea men .. 1ven plig. ht or. p
_
ri.s._<>.ri. guards .. He w.
erit
th ·· h tag
'd ·. ·g the
t
ur
a
.. 1.1d. boa.rd., .Durin. g th_epa.st fe.w · for; loan out, ,or scrounge up · Brosnan •. Anthony Campilli, and
··•.
e
OS
es· unn . . .
1
.0 . .
on .. to .. sta
__ t_e
.. ,
.. t
__ ha.t
.. :cond .• t.io_ns~t_o.r.·.·
.
·
r .
c· 1
hd
.
d
H
·11· ...
1
_,..;.•ttedth t
-
wc•ek.~_.-·some·concernedstude.nts ·during·_the·summei:.months .. At
Br.Kevin aroan, a fourmam
ays. e
WI
ln&Y awul
a
prison g_uard_ s w.
ill -
n_o
_
t
:m.
pr~ve .
'
.. . .
.
th
..
h:i\i' .
brPn
having,
i
series of ' thes~ meeting~,
a
great· deal· of ·
·
pro3ects to improve
e campus
· ~-
·--
. :,-important questions were ·.asked,
'J
grounds. · The. first project on.
_ by. ~ob Long .
0
The AppaiaJhi~~-r~giori--ofthe United States
Q~S
the qti~tionable
distinction of. being the poorest section of:i:America. Presidents
-, Johnson and Nixon· have defined poverty by listing in a •poverty
category any family earning less than
$3335.00
a year and destitution
.. as any family. earning less than
$2,000.00.
1n·
eastern Kentucky the
. average income is $820.00. ,This means that the typical house has
neither electricity n:or indoor plumbing and ?re of such character that
they might fall or burn down at any moment. ·
.
.
It
is. this area that the Christian Appalachian Project ha·s been
established. The principle aim of the.project is to rid Appalachia of its .
poverty through. the setting of Christian example by zealous efforts.
This is being done by the introduction of novel projects and ideas in an
area which is saturated by a dead past.
. ·.
. In an effort to help the poverty stricken and· destitute people of
eastern Kentucky. a number of Marist Co1lege Students (Appalachian
R~a.ction
l
are combining 'their efforts with those of the Christian
Appalachian Project. This project, under the direction of Rev. Ralph
~iting. has been
in·
existance for eight years and consists of
recruiting volunteers from colleges throughout the nation to work in
Appalachia with and for the native people during the Chris.tmas,
Easter and summer vacations. Although the v.'Ork is volunteer-that is,
it has no academic rating-or monetary reward. and requires the
sacrafice of a vacation-its rewards are ample.
For those interested in this project there will
be
a meeting Tuesday,
Sept. 28 at I0:00 in the Campus Center.
I
and

:
great geal. of questions · hand · was .the _renovation · of ·
were unanswered. The . main _ Fontaine and the building -of
. question being "where exactly
suites
iri
Champagnat. This was
does all the money that we pay,
done, so more resident students
go?"
could'attend: thus more iqcome.
These meetings were held, and
For . instance. Font<;tine cost
yetthese meetings were fruitless
approxfmately
.
$70,000.
to
to quen~h our· curious minds
renovate: There
.
are _now forty
about our~ pocketbooks. Even-. more- openings• in F_ontaine,
tually. · it was. realized that we
which brings in about $120,000.
As
could not get anywh~re without
a
result. with the mortgage and
administrative information, · so · budget for this particular house
we decided to go to President
involved, it should be able to pay
Linus Foy. and.ask him to attend
itself off in three years.
a meeting to inform students
The next project on hand was
l'Xactly what the budget is for the
the campus grounds which put in
school, The meeting was held in
a new playground and eliminated
the theatre.· las_t Wednesday.
the parking lot 'in the front of
. September
13.
·
Champagnat. and also the new
This meeting.' in
which
parking lot. · ~nd the ~eries of
President Foy
·
discussed the
roadways on the grounds. The
money situation in. detail . was
parking Jots all had to be lighted
very informative and answered a
properly. as were the roadways,
great· deal of questions in our
There were also offices put in
minds. .
Donnellv to·
,aid the ever-
The budget for the school in Jhe
increasing ne<.!d for office spa<."<:.
'71-'72 fiscal year is ap- .
As stated before. questions like
proximately four and a half
these were answered. but thcrr:
million dollars. This amount goes
into the total . operation of the
Con•, 1•. 7 Col .• 3
J
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/
PAGE2
111ECIRCLE
.
SEPTEMBER
23~ i971
·
By
Fr. Leo Gallant
,
by Mike
Ward
Last year in
.
a
.
homily
I
said
v
·
.
.
~
:
th. eWiCllhii;c~a
·
gKo
·
u~vtJe~n
-
hahes di
·
s~deendfened
.
that Jesus Christ Superstar was
·
·
.,
.
.,
~
.
.
,
~
,
·

.
:'n~:\:!e
~~;.~;!~f
~~
.
.
~
,
_
-;\
_'.~
.
··
,_i':
.
k,,.;_,_
l
~'t
'!';
;;i
i~i£.a;Ti!:~~
·
rea~.a confirmation of this by
.
-
·
.
.
~"
enough contro
_
versy.fo
_
l'.'.
.
one ma
_
n
·
someone who I never thought
would ever bother. Jistening
to
:
·
to
be hated
.-
for

but . whether
that albuin. John McKenzie
is
one
·
people
·
agree
:
or disagree with
his
of
the top scripture scholars in
ideas,
he
has the right of'freedorµ
0
the world and
.
in his article in 'Ibe
.
of
speech in
a
'democracy.
·
People
·
Critic, Sept
_
.
71,
he says beautiful
also ·have
·
.
the
·-
right 'to assemble
lik
.
and listen
'.'
to a .speaker
.
without
·
:~°r'f!e
~~
~;:e
1
'!vithe y:_sum~:
.
sf{/
?\~
.
. "-\\
.
.
.
.
I •
.
_
:1
~~\~\~:~~rr;t!
:0~!~:
.
SupersUtr
-
isreverentin
the.sense

t,,
{
,
\
:i
;
:L·:f._
,
.
_
.
.
~J
.
.
·
.
.
.
, .
. ,
.
.
can express his
·
mmd, because
·
that
it takes
Jesus seriously
.-
It
has
.
·
·
·
.
:
man has the r,ower to reject Uiose ideas which
·
are anti-social
,
tliu
_
s a
none of the distortions of the devotional Christ; who
is
often
.
so phony
a sP._eaker wi9t no supp
9
rt should die. This
is the foundation ·or a true
with
'
plaster, gilt, tin~el and goo that it is no wonder unbelievers
democracy .
. ·
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
...
·
.. -
·>
,,
.,
.
· .
·
flourish. The devotional Christ is totally incredible. We Christians
We live in a
.
democracy; Thatis why the police foliow
Mr.
KunsUer
have destroyed his historical reality. (Infant Jesus
·
of Prague!>
wherever he speaks
..
The
·
Army takes pictures of everyone who is near
.
,
Whatever the_historical Jesus was, he was not
·
effeminate, and he
a demonstration. The Attorney General can herd peace demon_strators
··
probably looked more like the late President Nasser than like Paul
cnmasse
:
into football fields without specific charges. And, as for the
.
Newman
.
· ·
/
·
·
·
·
·
·
freedom of speech in .the Poughkee~ie area, Joe Brosn~n
-
r~eived
·
.
If
the real Jesus tried to get into some church, the ushers would
one phone call threatenJng Mr. Kunstler
'
s _life along with seventy
heave him across the street. If he entered some apartment buildings,
others expressing
_
disapproyal._ But don't(orgetwe have Jr
_
eedom of
.
·
the management would call the cops. Who ever wanted the historical .,.
·
.
.
,
-
.
Jesus? When he did show up, they.crucified him
.
(Or "we" did?).
.
.
. .
.
sp~:.: did
.
Mr
.
Kunstl~r
-
say ~bo~t o: de~~~ratic system' that
.
would
.
.
The Jesus of Superstar knows pain and fatigue, especially of the
cause such v
·
iolerit reaction? The Attica Prisoii:was in such deplorable
soul, the kind that hurts deep inside. He even
·
knows un~ertainty, the
condition that the inmates had no alternatives but to deman~ im-
kind of uncertainty which the devout are compelled to deny him
;
in
provements
.
These improve~e.nts_werelong overdue a~d would ha~e
-
spite of some rather clear sentences
iri
the Gospel of. Mark
.
Too many
initiated an effective rehabilitation. system
.
The Prison Superm-
.
have interpreted these sentences
as if Jesus had said, "0.K., now I am
tenderit. approved all the demands except for aiunesty. Th!s was
supposed to have
an agony so let's go through with it...
.
·
·
,
.
necessary since all the inmates could have been
.
charg~ with t~e
Jesus also knows the pain of bearing a responsibil~ty ~hich
is
too
.
murder of a prison g'1ard which requires the dealth
·
penalty .
.
This
·
much for
a
person to stand, th~ 1one1iness that
all
of
us
come to know
.
demand could have
beeri
negotiated but
.
the state backed out and
The complaint that Jesus of Superstar
;i
s too human makes
us
ask:
massacred thirty-nine
·
people inc1uding
_
nine
,
of the remaining
·
·
Jbi~tst
,
ho~ is a ma'!
too
human, unless he is pretending
an
_
d
·
overacting a
hostages: Since the prisoners released those hostages that need~d
·
·
medical attention, Mr. Kunstler concludes that'-the State cared less
.
Superstar shows
a
surprising sympathetic understanding of the
about human life than the so-called criminals
.
1
go one step further
_
;
historical'Jesus, an understanding which
.
many believers do not have
since the State
.
would rather shoot prisoners like animals instead of
·
and probably do not want. They cling to their manufactured plaster
talking to
:
them like people, they have little regard-for the whole
.
_
.
Je
s
us who rieither feels pain nor inflicts it. S1:1perstar looks for the real
rehabilitation system.
·
.
.
.
. .
.
.
·
.
-
.
·
Jesus, not for the ido1 created by ChriStians
.
·
· -
.
·
·
·
'
.
I
believe that the worst atrocity
.
that the State committed was in
In its deeply serious reverence it
does
a better job of finding him
.
lying to the public; The official.reports stated that the thr?ats of ths
than those who want a plaster
.
Jesus instead of a real Jesus. Christ
hostages were cut, but they could not buy the pathologist,
_
so the
refuses to be window dressing for cheap religious merchandise, The
Governor eventually had to admit that they died
in
the crossfire. This
l'Omposcrs, in trying to find the real Jesus, not without blunders
,
~re
is also an extension of the truth, sirice the prisoners had no guns,
.
so the
hat
e
d by many Christians for i~.
truth is that everyone was gunned down by the State Troopers. This is
I
.
-=
~
-
)
.r
'
'
.
'
Related and unrelated footnotes:
.
not a crossfire:
.
·
:
.
·
.
. •
·
·
.
·
:
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
lf
we are not going to
be
cop-outs, maybe
,
we
,
h~ve to put.on
_
some of
.
. .• . .
.
.
.
.
,
. .
·
·.
One more tragedy that can be attributed to g~ve~nment Hes,
.
H_ow
..
'
'r
.
.
·
christ'!? qualities~£ kind~~ss
,
t:oughness,
.
cons1~~rateness
~n~
bar-
_
;
.. ::
: .\./
:
::;::
:;,,,',
many ,more My
_
L,_ai's
;
an9-o
,
:J;>entagon
_-
~ape~
:
mc~de~~ ar~ ~
_
emg
,
. ·
.
·
·.
,
'''\>
cllieai:ledriess
:
;
Tliere
is
'
.
s~

much
g~ping
:
ah?Ut t~~
-
·
nt>ise
·
_
m

•the•
?' .

.
,
,
,
,
:
-.:
:
:
;
~
:
.
,
.
,
'
;._~
9j~r~
_
ilpJ
__
W,heµ
,
:mH
;
~PJ
,
e
,:
t¢~ize
.
that
.
.
tll~
,
P,e<>P!e
.
,
d.o
_
~f?t
;
?~~e
.
:~
:~
/
.
,
::
_
:
_._ ..
i
:
_
·_::-
.
..
;,.
_
·
·
·"·
'-;:

.:
.
:
_
;:
_.
·
.
i
.
;
.
:
·
)
'
,
·
~
.-.·
..
:
,_;
_._
~

··
::.
!,:-::;-
residences
·
that
·
it would
"
seem
·
that· the
.
gripers
·
outnumber
··
the
,;t
·•
·
'
·
.. _.,..
'
':

·
.
·
.
·
·
7
·
voice
in the government; but that the government has a
·
voice
,
m
.
the
·..
·
.·.
_
,
~
.
-
:
noisemakers~ to one
;
lthought student::Po~r rested in the majority.
'
:
_

-
·
people
.
Po1iticans, like the Catholic Church, act only to

perpetw,1te
.
·
.
·
·
.
1
· ·
·
Con'tP. 7
C~l
':
l
· ·
:
theirowne?Cistence.Now
:
calltheUnitedStates
_
ademocracy!
,
·
ii,.
;
!
C
,
·
I".
-
di ,
.
ln·.Sea.rch
.OfAn
.
Educ8tiol1
·
...
·
·.
j
.
at-
s
-
1,ra e
Begmnmg
an
,
article:r::illi::::
20
;obsthe
wayilieyire
.
!
·
·

..
.
nature; li!te many other things, is
today you are lucky if you can get
·
by Emmett ~ke
. the
.
most difficult part of , its
·
c,inythitig with a degree never
·· .
.
· .,
.
.
_
.
.
. .
··
.
.
.
- content. Yet
I
imagine the right
I11ind
_
without on~,
j
,
I
pleaded;
,
·
There was a game
in
a recent
.
·
go bac~ ,one.
-
,
.
.
.
·
.
·
·
.
You suffer minor
burns.
Go
back
place
f.<>
sta~tis at the ~ginning
.
.
This
_
was aU to
-
no avail, he was
.
Playboy c~Ued "Heads
>
and
.
_
13
.
Spnng co
.
mes
_
· JOID
crew- go two
·
spaces.
. .
. .
.
.
.
· .
.
_
,
·
·
.
~e rf:Openmg of s~hool t>.ro!_lght
convn;iced and refused to co11<;ede
Feds
'
' which exposed
.
.
many directly
to
~~1th class
,
,
,
28_
Mal
Michaelson writes Joe w!th
•t.
the reu~ty
.
of many
1

anyth•!J~
-
In a fit of
;
des~rab~~•
-
I
·
aspects
:
~f the drug
_
culture and
14
.
~ n rruruature golf co~e ·
:
up
in
Common
Sense. You buy
.,.
friends !lnlt acquaintances. The
.
asked: h1mto explru? his ~s1t1on
societr
m a
humorous way .
.
Mrs.
Fisher rates a 5-handicap
..
one. Right on
·
- two spaces.
. _
onc:e qu1etand peaceful;halls:of
and_~•~reasonfo~b.isabs!i!1li~c~.
,
Dwelling on the past three years Move twf spaces
.
.
.
29_
Commuter Union takes over Dqnne1Iy, now ~re
_
burstmg with
_
,
.
'
Bdly t_umed
,
.
looked str~gnt
,
at Marist and seeing how
the
.
.
.. ·
15.
Fr1Sbee ~reaks - so d~es
.
Donnelly
demanding recognition no•~~ of people m S<;frch of
_
th~t
;
mto myeye~ and
·
proceded
to
~ive
.
wheels turn at
the
top now,
I
..
your heart • gll'l leaves agam. and nobody
does
.
-
Yoti
.
write a
,
,
eluswe goal call~d e~ucatlon
_
.
me the ~~\\'er
:
~
I was seeking
;
thoughtit was time to put do\\111 Bummer. Two sp~ces
back_.
.
letter
to the Circle
.
Jump
one Many
,
1?,00ple are there
for
dif-
M~ny
-.
people ~o. to
_
coU
.
ege he
_
on paper our own campus game
.
.
1~.
Course co~ict necessitates s ace
·
.
.
:
.
.
-"
> ·

·.
-
fer<!p.t
_
an
.
d sundry reasons
,
manr
·
,
s;ud; each_ s~~mg
_
knowledge;
,
of
~ e r ~
~d
weirdµips from V1s1t to~cader
_
mc Dean -Get past

P 30_
UseMariologysectioh¢the
,
of
_
whi~h they themselves dont
-
.
.
yet al} seekmg 1tforaU
th~
wro_ng
the .fll'S
_
t day i~ freshman year.
_
Mts.
Britt· move two spaces,
.
library -
-
your bay fev~r
-
·
runs kno\\:'
.-
.
'
. · .
.
.
.
·
reas~ns: I rose to contradict hi!'1
·
I.Parents bnng you
to ~chool
17.
Dean
left for weekend.
Back
·
rampant for days; Go back
·
two~·- My
.
~
tory
.
is ~ot about one of
.
buthestoppedme
,
P~ple here
m
first day. Mother insists
,
on Tuesday : back two spac~.
·
i
spaces.
'
..
·
.
. ·
.
.
'.
: ·
these ~pie. It i~ ~boµt someon~
the United States come to college
making your
.
bed
in
front
.
of
18.
Spnng dem'?llstr~bons go
·
This shor,t little resume of
the
who cl)ose nott'? r~turn to school.
.
beca~se they know that busi~ess
roommate

Go back one space. great - meet loose chick
-
from life and trials
,,
of the Marist ~~11y people will instantly label
requires them to have
a degree
.
· 2.
_
Meet two girls first week, Yassar. Move ah~d one space. student might give some clue to
,
him a d~opout
,,
~ut before you do,
~
it is that people go to colleges
roommate impressed. Move to
19 ..
Charter
.
three buses
.
to
underclassmen of the
.
dizzy _p)ease hst~n. Blily <we shall call
.
m
s':arch of money, fame;
.
first mixer.
.
.
Wash~gton. ~- _Aderho~dt and
_
feeling
4
years will bring as you
him
that>
chose not t? retumto
prestige, whatever you may
·
.
3.
CJasses begtn and you drop a ~ar~ie Alfano msist
en
go111g • all travel
.
round and round
·
on
the
college late_last
·
sprmg.
I
~ay
choose. but how many
.
come for
course
.
Discover the marvels of
a
tnps cancell~.
.
,
Circle Gatne, but
~
assured, it's
chose ~cause he_ was under no
_
an education, for its own end .
.
modern
.
computer. ~o to in-
.
20.
Go
to
~ver Dar - big
sue-
~
a feeling you'Ii never regret,
a~adem1c hardsh!ps,
,
he ~ad
no
How ma~y see_k knowledge as its
·
·
firmary for heat
.
prostration.
cess -cafetena looks like free
fire
·
·
·
·
smgular
_
personality con~1cts ~t
own satisfaction
.
1
could not
4.
Discover
·
.
something zones. Jump thr~e spa~s.
_
college.
m
f~ct_ he even en Joyed 1t
answer . him, yet my silence
·
relevent. Right on - two spaces.
21:
Work for <?nldren s
Theater
here. but he did not retui:n. You
seems to speak for itself. He
5
.
Join football team secretly. • qwt schoo! •
Jump
one space.
·
'Recycling Resumed ·
~~~
be
·
puzzled by this and
_
continued, "T~e fault of this
Girl friend finds
out and leaves
22.
.
Meeting
.
with Dean
?f
JUSbfyably so, because
I
(who
situation does not lie with faculty
you.
Go
back two spaces.
Students - read
Catch-22 •
gam
Lenny ~avag)ione
knew him well> was
.
Upon first
or administration or even with
6.
Buy
a
frisbee - she comes valuable pointers. Jump one
hearing he wasn
'
t returning
,
.
I
business itself, it lies with
the
back - move one 'Space.
space.
.
.
.
On Wednesday, September
22,
became enraged,
I
·
could not
individual, people
_
dilute their
.
7.
Pants need three patches -
2~.
~alph Cerulh .:barges Marist Ecology Action again understand why some
_
one_wou]d
education b}'. givin~ it goaJs or
~
move
·
three spaces.
apathy m student body : student began
·
a program of recycling throw away an education JUSt_ on-
reasons. while their only goal
8.
Get
drunk
at Derby, trip over body vehemently nod their heads
.
glass, aluminum cans and waste an
_
i~pulse.
I
could not r~t should be knowledge itself
.
some campus art. Go to hospital You agree - move back
__
two paper. Each floor of every dorm behevmg that
_
he was makmg
I
rose and left immediately
,
I
and back three spaces.
spaces. .
·
.
.
will be provided
,
with two sue~ a rash mistake.
.
knew that he had been speaking
9.
Lose
I.D.
card - get stomach
24.
Visit Fontame. Leave with recepticles. Oi:ie
will
be used for
_Finally.
I
confronted ~illy:
I
to
me
and that.I was as guilty
as
cramps • go to Rat.
_
he~d cold.
~l.J!DP
one_ spa~.
aluminum cans and the other foc tried reason at first, showmg him
anybody for this state of-affai~
.
OA
M t
Fred
Lambert _ he
25.
Mao
VISlts
Manst to check glass. Members of MEA will
~ll
the advantages of college, to
One week later
.
Billy
packed his
rkl ·
ee
hang
majo to
on our ten-year plan - sorry he empty the recepticles weekly. 1mporve oneself. to become more
bags threw a sleeping bag on his
i
{:5-
yoSt. die
fi~ out tkre didn
'
t bring his clubs.
PLEASE
USE
THEM!!! learned and so on. When these
back· and left I wished him luck
~
,gious
ubaesk·twt spa
·
es
26
.
You discover Mrs. Fisher's Recycl
i
ng can only work
if
you failed.
I resorted lo the
on his most eiusive goal to seek
lS
none • go
C
o
c ·
f
·1
teel
b
.
d
,..
·
te
.
k
·
h I
f f
"Y

08
A
I
Ci
R A _
inmp
amt y s
usmess an w.1
make 1t wor .
psJc o ogy o
ear.
our
an education.
1
· PP
Y
or an · ·
J-··
an
expose. Jump
two
spaces.
NOTE ..
.
. Please
remove chances of success are slim" I
two.
·
.
. .
'Zl.
Mr. Norton finds Leo in~ aluminum rings from twist cap said. "without a degree no
12. Get mvolv~ - JOln yearbook tolerable to live in and bombs iL bottles!!!
company big or small
\\;U
hire
staff - need rola1ds and eye drops
·
·
·


























































































































































SEPrEMBER.
23, 1971
THE CIRCLE
l'Ac.a•:
.I
Know The
Fa-cts
ChOosillg
A
Contraceptive
.
·
.
·
.
.
.,
.
.

'
,
,:,
When two people indulge
~
in
:
_
goes unnoticed
·during
coitus. A
·
·
into
the
.
vagma. (Applicator can
sexual intercourse appropriate
.
diaphragm should
_
be
·
refitted
be
bought with spermicide and
means of contraception shouldbe annuaJly.
.
.
.
.
.
_
.
should be the same brand; shake
employed if pregnancy is un:
2)
-
Condom: (Also known
as
chemical container before use).
wanted. Many
-
students .. are

rubber and
·
prophylactic) The · Push the plunger to deposit the
afriad to see a doctor or nurse,
·
condom is made of thin rubber
or
chemical
.
container near the

are too embarrassed to
seek
aniinal·gut and
is
slipped over the c~rvix.
The applicator
is
·
practical protection (even
,
at the
:
penis immediately prior to in- removed with the plunger still
local drugstore>, or are
.
unaware
·
tercqurse. Some room should be pushed in. Two applications
.
.
of the accessability of preven~ lefJ at the. tip of the condom before each act
.
of intercourse
tative methods .. There are many (about one half inch>
.,
fQt should be made to insure
forms
9f
contraception available ejaculation and to also prevent. protection. Application should
be
today. Care should be taken Jn
,
bursting. After intercourse, with- made no more than
1
2
to
=1:t
of an
choosing the best suited method
·
drawal,should be complete before hour before intercourse
.
·
The
for
each couple. The source
_
for

·
the man's erection subsides to woman should not bathe or
the following des.criptions of birtli avoid spilled semen. Although douche for
.
at least
6
hours af-
control methods is
.
The
.
Student
.
·
condoms are spot~ecked by the terward.
Committee on Human Sexuality,
·
F.D.A.; approximately one out of
4
>
In.trauterine
Device
' Yale University.
.'
:
every
350
condoms is defective. <I.U.D.): There are about one
1)
.
Diaphragm
.
and Jelly: Most
_
failures, however, can be
·
hundred different
·
types of
Before
.
the pill, the_ diaphragm
·
prevented through careful
.
use. I.U.D.
_
's
in current usage. There
was used by about one fourth of
.
,
Never use
.
Vaseline as a is no definite understanding of
all couples employing cQn-
lubricant, it rots rubber. Con- how they work.
·
traception.
It·
is made of soft doms are readily available in
. Thcories
'.
are:
rubber and is shaped like a bowl drugstores. Some reliable brand
<Al an effect upon the passage
with a spring of
·
flexible steel or names are Trojan, Sheik and of the egg
·
through the uterus
tensile coil at the outer edge. The
.
Ramses costing approximately
·
<B> an altering. of the uterus'
diaphragm is always used with
$1.80
to
$2.24
per dozen. Condoms lining. changing its receptivity to
spermicidal jelly on its surface, can be kept for more th:1n six egg implantation
and serves as a mechanical months without loss of ef-
<Cl a change in the enzyme
barrier to sperm. The spermicide fectiveness, but if kept in a wallet present in the lining of the uterus
kills any sperm that may get past can become porous due to body
·
which allow a
·
fertilized egg to
the rim, The rim is compressed heat.
.
.
.
gr.ow
.
'
The
Pill
·
The pill <or more properly
,
the pilJs, since there are many forms of
oral contraception) has an extensive acceptance among consumers.
In 1\l70. less than a decade after
its
development, clo~e to 9 million U.
S. women were using it to space pregnancies and to limit family size.
The pill, _when taken under the supervision of a physician, is probably
the safest and most effective method ol'-birth control available .
.
·
flow the
Pill
Works
·
·
_
All types of oral contraceptives contain synthetic female sex hor-
mones <estrogens and progestrogens) and ar~ designed to prevent the
release of
an
egg from a woman's ovaries during the cycle in which
pills ar<> taken. making it impossible fot her to become pregnant. At
this time there are two types of pills used
-
coml>ination and
_
sl'quential. Combination pills contain both estrogen and progesterone
in
the
same pill. while sequentialpills are estrogen for the first fifteen
pills and estrogen-progesterone combination for the last five pills.
After
ovulation. progesterone normally instructs the pituitary gland
to stop sccrcating the hormones that cause ovulation. If the released
l'gg
has become fertilized, progesterone is continually produced and
suppn•ss<>s ovulation throughout pregnancy. Thus, taking the syn•
th\•tic prngesterone everyday makes one "pseudo-pregnant" and thus
suppresses ovulation. other ways in which the pill works are the
thickening of the mucus around the cervix, thus, the mucus becomes
unreceptive to the sperm; and the changing of the uterus in such a way
that
a
fertilized egg cannot become implanted in the uterus wall and
start
to grow.
PILL?
<opposite sides together) and the
:
In addition to preventi~g
·
<D> Through hormone
·
effects
diaphragm is inserted into
.
the fertilization, the condom also upon the menstrual cycle, and an
vagina.
It is then released in the serves as protection from the altering of the length of time that
upper portion
·
of the vagina, frailsmission
-
of venereal disease. the corpus luteum is
effective.
fitting securely between
.
the rear
.
31
Vaginal
Spermicides:
None of these have been
wall of the
.
vagina and the upper Vaginal spermicides are the only proved.
yet
the I.U.D. does work.
edge of the public bone
-
here it effective means of female con~ It
is
<as of
1970)
about
98
percent
rovers the cervix
.
completely.

traccption available without a effcdivc. There are, however,
Insertion is usually accomplished
·
prescription at
.
any drugstore. side-effect problems of bleeding
manually, but plastic
.
inserters There are
·
various forms: and "fall-out". For women who
'Anxi<•ly ...
and
the Pi\\
.
are someti~es US!=!fuL. · Th~
creams,
jelli~
_
s
;.
,
,.
a~d
.
;:ie
_
rosal have never been pregnant, the
Advantages and Disadvantages
diaph
_
ragm
_
_
.
:sh
__
_
oul~
.
_
·be
i
_
IlS
_
~r
_
tE!d. n
_
_
·o
_
:
,
_
1_·0~.
-
.
:m
_
_
·s
_
, ·- Le
.
. s
__
s
__
:
_
·.:
_
el'f
_
e
_
C!t_ ive_
;
sp
__
e
_
r-
.
di_scontinua
_
n
_
ce
_
ra_te_ is over
50
The
minor side cfl'ccts
of
the pill are similar to that of a pregnancy.
-
-
d
d
Nausi•a
..
hrcast cn\argcmcnt and a gain or\oss oi
-
weignt are common
;
. :•:
i:
:
·,
.
.
,,
:
-~-
-,
·
~~ff~uiii'\It~?i~tuicirit/~!1~
/
,}~~c~lrig
'
~blet~~RIJ°.~l~~n~~
-
~~
-
·
-
rJ~o'!ta~~f:1Y~(\)~~s~ri~~!f~et;_e ~idc
efl't•cl<;
,
Sonw
won1cn experience irregular bleeding or spotting.
'
than six hours afterwar<L
I(may
:
'
Spermjcides
.
work
.
two. ways.
.
The
'
I.
u
.
D. is inse
_
rted by a
ill('l'('a.S('d vagina I discharge. headache'
dizziness
or backache. Mental
be
.
left
in
place
.
for as long
as
,
There are
·
ehcmicals that
kill
physician
·
during
.,
the woman's
.
dPpression during the first cycle in the pill is fairly common and most
twentyafour. hours, but a sper-
.
sperm.
and
the
bulk
of the mcnstral period (the cervix is
.
women take a while to realize that the pill is the cause of their feelings.
micide ri,ust be reapplied before preparation also blocks
.
the opened). After insertion,
.
she Thi' only other established
fact
in
this
area is that other serious ad-
<>ach ejaculation. A syringesfike

cervix <prevenHng
tqe
entrance llll)St check regularly to see that
verse reactions
may occur in occasional patients. The more common
applicator is used. to inject ad- of, sperm into the uter1,1s>.
the I. U
.D.
has not been expelled arc high blood pressure, headache, depression
,
interference with
d
I
·
d
·
h
·
F
-
'de d
·
h

·
vision
and nervousness
.
Usually, ~ese side effects are reversible and
-
i tioria
spermici e
wit
out
. ,
oams are cons, re
more mto t
e
vagma. Costs vary from
disappear
if
cimtraceptive pills are discontinued promptly. These rare
removing the diapllragm
;
.
'
·
effective than either creams or
.
nothing
to
over
$100.
-
A prescription is required by
.
jellies. Delfem and Emko
.
are
.
5l
Rhythm: Sexual intercourse.
adverse
effects arc well known and
explained
by physicians and ap-
law to buy a cnaphragin.
'lt
m~t reliable· names and are inex- is avoided during the woman's pear on the pills' label.
be fitted
·
by a doctor
so
that if' pensively found in drugstores fertile period each
month
(the
111 contraSl to these unpleasant effects, one may experience some
~ecurely fits ov
_
er the cervix .
.
Thi
_
·
_
s
<about
15
ce
_
nts per application>. days shortly
_
before; during, and positive side effects. Freedom from swelling and
.
relief from menstral
cramps are some of the advantages. When given all the facts, when
·
procedure is painless
..
.
Wnen
·
The
.
plastic applicator is filled
·
c

p
7
c
1 3
the risks of
the
various methods are equated with their effectiveness
properly inserted,
the
diaphragm with the chemical and inserted
·
on
1

0

and with the risks of pregnancy, the patieqt can make an informed
lnform
'
ation
!t
:
:
'._
choice.
.
. .
·
.
·
_
Centers
-
..
T
·
h
e
.
S
·
.
u rv
.

y
.
The Planned
.
Parenthood
.
League of Dutchess Courity
>'.

·
located
.
.
al
85
Market Street,
.
Po1,1ghkeepsie and
is
open·frorr{9
<
to
5,
Monday through Friday.
It
is
there for anyone who feels a need
-
to talk. question or obtain clini~l
assistance. Women can obtain
.
pills. diaphragms, and for those
who h
_
ave already h
_
ad children,
.
an IUD. Referrals are also made
for pregnancy tests,
VD
tests,
and-abortion services.
·
. - -
~
Anyone desiring
·
contraception
. initially speak_s with a nurse who
gives a complete briefing on the
pros and cons
·
of different
methods. A medical and social
history (absolutely confidential)
of
the woman is recorded and her
·
weight and blood pressure are
taken. A:;other visit is arranged
in
:
which
the doctor
(who
is
available on Tuesdays) gives a
pelvic examination, pap smear,
breast check for cancer,
urine
analysis and prescription or
filling. The examination fee
(including the initial and follow
up
visit> for students is
$10.00.
l\lrs. O'Connor is also available
and eager to lend assistance to
anyone. She has information,
·
understanding
·
and v,;ll also
make
referrals - all confidentially.
,c;'
-
J
·
~-
-
<
]~>
.
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t
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~ a i . -
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·
.
. .
Last week The CircJe con-
survey was
8.1
pere:ent.
Of
the
ducted a survey dealing with
1.000
copies that were sent out
questions pertaining to birth
only
81
were
filled
out and
control, venereal disease and
returned. Needless to say the
abortion. The purpose of the
survey is invalid; however, the
survey was
to
find out from the
results did indicate that students
students their feelings about
felt there was a need, at least to
having some kind of clinical
have more information; to in-
..
services on campus as well
as
to
dicate where further and more
determine if there is such a need.
comprehensive information and
In order for a survey to
be
valid,
-
services can be obtained; and to
2S
percent of the copies must
be
editorialize on the attitudes of the
returned. The return on this
administration and studef!f~-
.
___
_
..
.
SEX
·,.
··-
F (45)
~J36!
I.)
Have you ever used any form of contraceptives?
·
Yes
(I 3)
Yes
(Io;
·
·
2.) Have you ever had an abortion?
J.1 llave you ever arranged for someone to have
an
abortion?
4.) Uo you feel 1ha1 1hcre is a need for clinical
~ervit:c,.. on campu,'?
5.)
Would you know who 10 approach if you had
'·,
.
-
No (32)
No (26)
F (2)
:
---·
Yes (3)
No
(42)
Yes (38)
No(?)
·
Yes CO)
No (36)
Ye.,;
<25)
No
(I
IJ
a problem or a quc:.lion regarding any of the above'!
Y
cs
(25)
Yes
(22)
No <14)
6.) Who'!
No
<20J
17
rcplic, were - Planned Parenthood.
16
replies were referred to people on
campus: Residence Pcr.-onncl. Dean of
S1udcn1s.
the chaplain and the nu.r.-c.
13
rcphes wrre doclor. and
.
·or friend,. I reply was parents.
Con't
P. 7
Col. 4
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f.
I
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I
PAGE4
·
111E CIRCLE
·
·
.
. :
SEPTEMBER
23,
1971
.
.
..
The
WOman's
·
;i:!·~7.8~.t-s:S:;
,
.
·
.
·;c
f~!
.
~r~
,
~~th?d!
\
.. , .
.
.
.
·
·
.
:
::::
'-
._
.
.
'
..
,
,
·
,
.
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.. .,
_
.,
: .
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.
.
twenty-four to
.
torty-eight hour
·
~
ci>ntra~~piion
.'
and
:
~oortton procedures exist to_ru1y; a:_io·tor~ is

.
·
.
A
.
·
·

.
:
..
·
b
"
.
o ·
·
.
.
·
r
.

:
·:
.
·_t·1
.
·
.
·
.
.
~
·
.
.
_:.
.
:
·
n
·.
··
,_
.
·
·
p
..
_'
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.
r
·.
o
·
··
.
·
,··e
·
:
c
·
··
.
.
t
. ··

...
·.
:· .
..
·
:
_
·
~:1t:t~:'s~ri~wn:ruo!1ft::
.
_
perfect. Ev~ryone~s·somedrawbacks,chh;theJe:v:to:1c:::
;
-
.
• the
·
ne
-
xt
.•
mens
·
trual period.
·
psychological or. social. Ho~ever, res~r
.
.
or
.
.
.
.
·
t1te ,
.
.···
.
both men and women; is constanUy gomg ~- Right now.
re ar~
.
Another
·.
simple
abortion
many dr
.
ugs bei
.
ng
tested_
by.Jh
.
e
F_ D.
:A.
They will n~t be ay~able
_
until
__
..
·
.
.
.

.
-
.
·


.
'
.
·.
·
.
procedure for a pregnancy ofless.
ben
fit wath mmlDlum con
The Health an~
,
Aborbon .that we can
~k
to women about_
·
than three months
,
is the
.
the
.
governm~nt can
·
ass~emaxamum
,
.e
~
. -
.
,
.
.
.

.
. -
_,
Project was ~ ~ y
.c
(Qimed to
.
any Ptc?ble~
_
or f~rs
tt.aer
1¥tve
·
aspiration
·
or
·
_sµction method ..
.
sequence
;,
.
,
-
..
·
,
:<·
. ·
.
,
.
· : ·:
·

.
.
,
:
•:·
..
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'
·

·
·
.
· .
·
createways
'
to make h~~th and . ~garding the abo~on; 1t
~h~re: ·
Again;
the
cervix is dilated and a
·
.
s~veraldrrig~
~ow
being studied for y;omen_,
.
are those_
which
will
•.
.
aborti
.
C?n

C3!'e informational and that we can explam the abortion . clear plastic tube~
an
~spirator; is induce menstruation whether or not the woman has
_
conceived_ during

.
accessible to
all
women. We are a procedure, and
.
how the
-
bod~
inserted into the uterus. The fetal her prior
.
period of fer,tility .. There ~ould be two
·
ways
·of
us~g
.
the
•.
Women's Liberation
:
collective functions; it
.
is her~ that
.
we
~an,
inateriaLis withdrawn by slow 4tugs; one would
oo,
to pr<Kluce a pe~od
·
at a_ regular and predictable
.
.
providing women throughout the answer any questions on birth suction The doctor then checks
time each month; orto produce
.
a
period
only
m
those months when the
country• · with
inexpensive control. We believe that dhe
·
the ute~ine cavity to assure no
·
woman thought
·
she was missing a
_
period. The drugs would ~lt
..
abortions--abortions that are pr~ence of women
.
fro"?- the material has been left behind.
·
development of an embryo ata very
·
early stage.
.
•··
·
..
·
.

·
.
·
·
medically and
.
,
·
psychologically ProJect makes the abortif?n a
When done under anesthesia
·
it is
Another method being coQsidered is a tampon saturated WJth a drug
~~~llent. We ~e
buildi~g free .
.
warm_, friendly, and educabonal as simple a procedure as the
o
which would be abs
.
orbed from the vagina and cause
.
the uterus to
chrucs, pressunng hospitals to. experience;: ra~er than ~
-
cold and
c.
.
.
.
·
expel the menstrual flow.
.
.
,
..
·
·
·
.
.
respond
.
to commW1ity
·
needs;-
·
and a~enating ~>ne.
·
.
.
·
·
However, ooth techniqu~ may
success has been reached in developmg a p1ll that would work on the
.
i.miiing
.
with
.
oth~r
.
groups
· .
T~ere
.-a~
different methods
be performed without the patient
.
principle
of
the
·
diaphragQt. Taken an hour or two _before intercourse,
• ,
throughout the country
so
that all doctors_ can use to
:
abort
.a
fetus,
.
being asleep.
An
anesthetic agent
·
the
pill
creates a
:change
'
in the cervical mucus
.
m
s~ch a way
,
that
.
of our voices can
.
be heard, all of depending on the_ length
,..
of ~he
.
can be injected alongside the_
sperm
cannot penetrate
,
· ·.
·
·
.
.
·
. .
.
·
;
··
.

-
.
:
·
.
:
·
._
:
our strength can be felt.
.
.
pregnancy
.
Abor
_
bons are bemg cervix, forming a block and the
.
Another method that has longer term
·
effects 1s the implanting of
.
.
Because of
·
our belief in ~be
-
performed
c1:U
over
~
<:ount~ up
procedure can be performed in small capsules containing a contraceptive dr~g,-uil~er the skiri so tha~
.
· right
.
of each woman to control to twenty-six weeks_ gestab?fi.
the same
·
manner.

·
,

·
small a
·
mounts gradually diffuse into the circulab~n.
.
-
.
•·
.
her own body-to control her own There are two techruques which
·
.
After a pregnancy has
.
.
gone
A
hormone injection taken every three. mo
.
nths 1s another future
life..,.we ])ave bee~ very acti~e in are used before a ~regnancy has
past the twelfth week_a inuch 1:onsideraUon._ The irijection_.inhibits monthly ov,ulati_o? as wel! _as
·
the area of abortion. Exorbitant
·
advanced to the third
_
m~nth.
Of
more complicated procedure is causing a cervical change which affects the sperms ab1hty to fert~l1ze
hospital prices and doctor's fees these, a D and C or
.
ddallon and needed to remove the fetus. In eggs:
·
·
·
have made safe abortion an curettage is
·
safe and the mos~

this operation the fetus is aborted
There is now intensive researc~ being conducted to dE:ve!op_a!1_ef-
impossibi1ity . for most wom~n. commonly foJlowed procedu_re.
by cutting through the abd~minal
.
fective pill for ~en. One drug which see1n:ed
.
~uc~essful 11:11nh!b1tmg
We have devised an alternative
A
Dand
C
1s performed l}Smg
.
wan and uterine wan, much in .sperm production had to be dropped because of 1ts
·
startlmg side ef-
that enab~es any woman wanting anest~esia.
It gen_erally takE:5
the same way as a cesear~an
-
Jcct:-it produced a terrible re~ction to alcoh~L
.
.
.
.
an.abortion to have one.
.
les
_
s than
.
twenty rrunutes. and !s section is
.
performed.
.
·
.

Other }'€!Search is being hand1canned for var1ou!i
·
rea~ons.:Sc1enbs~
When women cal,
us,
we refer pamless. After
.
the patient i~
There is now a much
-
simpler
.
are hopmg that an androgen-estrogen tablet
will
be avatlable fo_r:1
them to one of seve~al highly asl~p the d<><:tor causes the
procedure that promises a safe testing
,
in
the near future
:
:
This pill is comparable to the present pill
.
experienced gynecolog1~ts. These cer':'ix (the <?penu~g of the uterus)
abortion without major sw-gery, that women take.
.
.
.
.
.
.
' .
doctors have clinic-type offices in to dilate by msE:rtmg a graduated even
after
three
months
.

As
for abortion; the future seems to hold to more l~berahzed law~
m
•.
the New York City vicinity. Their ~t of_ me~l mstruments. T~e
gestation. This is caned
a
saline obtaining t
.
hem. There is a need, not
so
mu~h to

improve surgical
_.
medical
compe!ence
and first dllato~ 1s very small and 1s
injection.
·
The
.
doctor
.
locally
·
techniques, as to aff?rd a womiln
the
ease
?f.mmd that _1s so necess~ry
· ·
psychological attitudes have replaced with a larger one. Wh~n
anesthetizes a smaU area of skin for a complete physical recovery. The decision for havmg an abortion
been carefully·evaluated by
us
in the largest ~l~tor has b~n
m-
below the navaL
A
needle is used is becoming a singul~rly in~ividuali~tic decision.
_It is th«:refor~,
,1dvance. The
·
doctors are re- serted, all~wmg
~e
opening to
to penetrate the abdominal wall · necessary that a \\'.Oman hav~ ~t h~r disposal all the mft?rmabon, ~1d
l'valuated every time they per- stretch an mch wide, the doctor
into the cavity of the uterus· the and experience of others while gomg through the emobonaly trymg
form an abortion by at least one inserts a surgical instrumei:it needle then withdraws the 'am-
period of deciding whether or notto terminate a pregnanCY.-
.
.
Abortion Project woman who_ is
·
called a curette. The curette is
niotic fluid and replaces it with
a
·
.
The _futu_re of c?ntra~eption and abortion ~n the Un~ted States_ i~
present throughout the entire used to scrape the embryo an~
salt
solution. In most cases the becommg mcreasmgly important as can be Judged by the shockmg
procedure. The functions we placenta off the uterine walls.
uterus starts to contract within
24
statement that "no less than
300.000
illegitimate children were born in
serve at the doctor's offic_es are,
The ?nly after-effects
.
of
.
~he
Con't P.
7
Col.
2
·
the.__United States dunng
1970."
we think, invaluable. It 1s here operation are menstrual-hke


'
.
s~x
.,
.
by
~
: r
G•l~t
,
'
.. ·
.
·
··
·
•·
·
.
.
.
'
Jr/"lz~rG~lt~f:

~:
l:,:~
,:
_,
Apparently
:
in
'
aCirclesurvey·a
_
sul>stantia~numbe~repl~edthatlh~y
.-
.-,
·:
•\
-·.;
-,
·
r~;
~
'.
_
,,.,.., -·
'
•:--~~•
~
~
-
~
··--'.·
·:
•:-:••·
.
..
"
.....
;"
'··
~··~:--
-
,
-,e,,...
'.' ·
'
·
'
·

·:
·
.-
·
·
..
.
·
.
would see the
·
chaplain if tl~ey need help concerning birth
-<:ontrol,
·
·
•.
·
:
·
--
-
·
.
·
.
·
.
y~nereal disease ~nd abortion.
So
the editors asked for my
_
feelm
_
gs o~
· .
-It
.

is
·
time that, . the
:
ad-
.
:
·
I
would
go to my cl~est friend
.
·
·
·
Replies:
.
·
·
·
· •·
·
<
<
/
.
;
these things.

.
.
.

. ·
·
.
.
,
.
·.
·
.
:
.
·
.•
.
'
.
.
ministration
.
recognizes the for advice.
There
is no place on
·
u
Kevin
,
Doherty,l.oilg Island,
1-'irst.
I
am almost a fanatic bebever m freedom_ m the individual "reality" of the Marist
·
Com-
.
campus to go for help.
>
There
·
N.Y,
'.
··
.
..
... ·
·
.
·
.
.
.,
.
·
.
·

·
..
·
.
.
following
his conscience, so mu~h
5?
that_I could not Judge anyone. ~e munity.
It is
quite
evident that
.
should be because so many gir\s
·
I wouldn't know where to go
.
on
guilt or innoce,:ice of the Pt:rson 1s his busmess. .
·
,
,
phrases like "CoUege
.
Ex- would be !ost in such
a
situation
,
·:
campus, consequently
I
·
would
_
Anyone com mg to me with a problem c_oncernmg sex can be c~rtam
·
perience''
-
·
are only
.
•·
·
.
empty
4)
Sally Ryan, Glen Rock, N.J.
.
look off campus.
·
..
that where
I
can help, counsel; re_fer, I
wan
do
so
as a ~umap ~emg to euphemisms expressing the
.
..

.
.
There is no one on this campus
2)
Richard
·
Kubiak, North
another human being. There \\'Ill be complete CO!lfid
_
enbahty and
•isterile
Utopia" they want , who could be of'any medical
·
Haledon, N.J.
.
.
·
.
secrecy and one hundred percept use of m~ en~rgy,
_
tame a nd cop~em. Marist to be. Their value system
·
assistance
.
whatsoever
.
.
I
could
·
·
I
would have no choice but to go
·
:'
&J
whether my o~inions on the wr<;Xlg or right of things seem n~id or is totally divorced from the ideals
·
·
.
_
·
:..-
.
·
.
ARE.
·
TH
.
ERE
.
·
.
-
_
.
·
·
pei'son.
_ :
. ·
· ·,
.
.
· .
·
.
·
.
·
·
,
~ncretely, there is a need.for .
'
·
I
'
AHY
QUES1lONS
different. they will have no beanng on my alJ-out e_ffort to help a of the students.
,.

Undoubtedly. smceJ consider sex sue~ 13_sacredthmg,
I may seem a
.
Birth· Control Center
·
on
.
_..-
·
.' ..
_
·
1
I
: .
!
.
L
.
so
.
FAR?. ·
·
.
rigid
to ~omeone. Sex can become a misuse. or
.
an
_
ab_us
.
e of nature, Campus. Students, because of the
-:-- _
L.:__t
.
.
.
because 1t touches closely upo~
t~e
sacre~ess of h~e. itself. In th~se. administration's stubborn at-
~
·
·
·
days of dr:opou~ and copouts 1t 1s sometbin~ to-re101ce a1>?u~ when titude, are totally ignorant as to ,
('~en
?ne fmds_ himself ~nough
~
talce sex
·
ser1~usly
fo_r_
what 1t
.
1s. Sex, where to go for assistance or
!ove. mvolves 1s ~eep_ly m questions of human !1fe. Sex 1s full of power. counseJlirig
.
By talking
. ,
to
ro reach
.
maturity
.
!s
_t_o
.
~come reaHy senous abo!,lt sex and the students
I
realized the w-gency of
de1!1~11ds of. respo!1s1p1hty it m,akes on p~ple._ Treatm~ sexual love such a center on campus.
I
asked
.:
i;~noustr for theimpartant thmg that it is will take a _man out of soniewomenstudents where they
hu_nselfand beyond h!mself t~ an9_ther, anp together to umversal love. would go
:
on campus
.
for
It
JS
all ?ne seque_nce_ If
a
ma
_
n
JS
faithful to it.
.
'
·
-
·
..
assistance
if
they were pregnant.

That is_why I fmd itve_ry i
_
mmature when l_hear ayoun~person say Of male students
J
asked
,
Where
.
that ~e will never com~1t himself permanently' ~ho won tmake any
.
they would go for assistance on
.
.

promises. That pe
_
rson
-
1s not ready ~nd maybewiU never be ready to campus if they realized they had
.
.
venereal
..
disease. Some
of
the
replies appear below.
If
_
there·
was a counseling center perhaps
no student would
.
ever face this
·
dilemma.
·
-ff
the administration con•
siders the campus as a com~
munity of -people they must take
.
the responsibility
of
fulfilling the
needs of a community.
I.
Ques.: Where would you go.
on
·
campus for assistance if you
realized you were pregnant?
Replies:
.
-
to s,wrifice. to s~ffer, for tomorrow'. Sex with love is
a
promise to lov1
without qualification and reservation, intimately, totally and always.
To allow l'scape is already running away from what is asked of us by
I)
Ursula Koerner, Rochester,
N.Y.
.
I would go to a friend to talk
because
there is no place to go for
help. Seeing a friend would only
only
.
go to a
friend for
.
psychological assistance.
5)
Patricia· Gara, Saddlewood,
N.J.
~;t•x with love.-
.
. .
Pt•rmissivc people have nothing new about sex, because what they
haw
lo
say
we already know: that sex is fun, pleasur~, an experience.
Hnl
God. in
providing sexual love, allows everyone in the most human
way possiblt' to face up to himself and to another and to go on to
:;onwthin~ lx-yond themselves.
It
is necessary for a human being to
ltlok for nwaning beyond himself as
if the very meaning of being
human
,wn• bl'vond the limitations of his human condition: to be like
,;od.
·111o:st• who rannot
see
beyond
the
human condition never really
Con•t P.
7
Col. I
be
of
psychological help.
2)
Cindy Roycroft, Englewood,
N.J.
.
.
My
first
step would be to go to a
friend. Then
I
would go
to
Fr.
Gallant because he is the only one
on
campus with sensitivity
on
such
a
matter.
3)
Roseanne
Avallone,
Hyde
Park, N.Y.
There
is simply no one to go to
on
campus for help.
6)
Joan Keshicki, Staten
Island,
N.Y.
·
·
There
is no where to go to foc
help:
I
could
just
go to a friend
for
comfort.
II
~es.: Where would you go or
campus for assistance
if you
discovered you h;td venereal
disease?
---~
-
home because there is nowhere
on campus
to
go, and
I
am not
too
familiar with the city.
3)
·Thomas
Tobin, Staten
Island,
N. Y.
.
I
would go to my private
physician because there is
nowhere on campus
to
go
for
help.
4)
·
Bill Sprague,
·
Pleasant
Valley,
N.Y.
I would not go on campus.
I
would go to student nurses
I know··
Con•, P.
7
Col.
J































































































I.
SEPl'EMBER
23, 1971
THE CIRCLE
.
I
.
C0rltrac8pti\le AvailabilitY
.
.
.
....
..
.
.
' '
.
.
~
.
.
..
.
.
·
-.
~
.
.
A recent study shows that at least
750,000
children
,
born each y~r
: .
.
·
_
_
were unwanted at the time of their conception.
Figures
lil:te this
.
.
coupled with the need
to
cut down
·
on
the birth rate indicate
'
that people
.
,
aren't aware
or
are not
willing
to
avail themselves of the services that
such
.
groups as Plarined Parenthood
.
offer. The various forms of
contraceptives thatare easily accessible to both men and women can
.
effectively alleviat~ the problem of unwanted childr~. Also they can
.
help reduce the already too high birth rate and eliminate the decision
·
.
of terminating a pregnancy.
:
.
·
,
·
.
·.
As
people are con:iing more and more to the i:ealization that they
·
must govern their own lives, it
is
increasingly apparent that la'Ys will
have to be revised to reflect this mode of opinion. Abortion laws are
·
those
.
which are being refined to m
_
aintain this view
.
It is important
.
that a woman have at her disposal easy access to competent medical
·
facilities rather than to risk her life by having an illegal abortion.
·
Procedures for abortions are cotistaritly being improved_; however, it
is to be hoped that abortion is not seen as a means of birth control. If
·
enough sophisticated birth control programs are effectively im-
plemented, abortions should decrease in number, thus allowing
couples
·
the freedom of only having pregnancies' when they want them.
.
Venereal disease is not the "social stigma" it was once considered to
be. All health officials are concerned with
-
the epidemic proportions
both syphilis and_ gonorrhea have reached among the young :adult
population of the United States. Nothing in the manner of these
professionals js condescending or humiliating in their ways of han-
dling treatment. All examinations, treatments and referrais with
_
contacts are kept confidential, regardless of age.
_
.
It
is to be hoped that students will take advantage of the present
.
·
·
beginnings ofinformation available on campus and for further and
·
more compleie services
.
will use those within
.
the community. That's
-
:
why they are t,here
.
·
·
Th_e
Coll~ge
·
council
,
The establishment of the House Co~nJiI marks the first step
m
·
constructing
a
new governance structure that will be based on com-
munication between all segments of the community. This council is
only an interim council charged with the difficult task of starting the
·
wheels of the machine.
All members of the council will be faced with finding a process to
perpetuate the membership on the council. This is a task of special

import to the student body. How should members of the council be
_
.
selected in
.
the future? The students will have to inauguarate an en-
tirely new system to establish which students are the most suitable
,
or
best capable. General elections give no indication of the credentials of
the person seeking the position.
·
·
·
.
Thl' concept of the council is in an indirect way a test for the student.
A
test he has long needed to prove both to himself and the other
nll'mbers of the community that his expertise is a valid tool for
dPl'ision making. The council is the ultimate voice. The students will
ha\'l' acc<:'ss to all the information and
will
render decisions on all
matters of importance.
1Hf
G-+C/RCLE
Ann Gabriele, Bob sm
·
ith, Janet
.
Riley;
Jim Daly, Chris Pluta, Anne Trabulsi,
Kathy Harvey, Bernie Brogan, Jack
Gordori,
Frank
Baldascino,
_Ed
·
O'Connell, Ed Kissling and Cindy
Roycroft.
i
L
·
t
T
.
reports this We\;!k from the news
et e rs
·
o
media. there is sufficient
l'Vidence to disprove Kunstler's
-
.
·
eharge of deliberate deception of
do not think a professional prison n•mark
a
nd this one
,
and this
administrator would have done
0111'.
l'k
.
l
Dig it.'
.
this.
If
immediate action had
As I
was saying, about
125
l
_
>(

cn taken. ultimately, l
e
ss lives words ago · (this includes con-
would have been lost. The
trm·tions. numbers and ab-
prisoners had no right to demanc
hn•viations) · p
e
ople
.
were
11cgotiutici11s. they lost their righ·
PVPrywhere waiting for the
the day they entered prison
fol'
"
word
.
"
·
·
·
the public by the state, i.e. The
Th
.
Ed ■
·
hostages at one time did have
·
· ··

e
·
... •
ltors
"
~i;~HJ:r:~;~•~E;~«;tE
{;;
r~);
~'c
,
i,,
)
;.i
,c~i~9
.
.
.
.
·
:-c
-:-, ,
:
·
.
'<
>
fatal
chest wounds inflicted by
.
.
·.•
.' .·
.
·
.
:
:
.
.
.
. .
-
.
••. ·
.
.
,
.
. '.
':
.
'.
state p,olice (not aware that they
.
·.,.
·
.
.
prograri( ~as
'
stated
·
as $18,000 w~re shooting~ostages
,
since_ the
rroni
;
the
;
Higher
:
Education prisoners dehberatetr dr~sed
. Opportunity
,
f>rogram.
·
This
_
th~ hostages up
in
yr1son
-
should be
$118 800·
$66
000
of this uniforms and thrust them mto
_
the
.
.
umount goes to fi~anclal aid for· Hne of -fire.! To
.
th~ untrai~ed
committing a violent act aga
i
nst
As
Kunsller entered the people
society.
.
.
.
.
. _
P11g.iged in the physical activity
.
Gov.
·
Rockefeller did par-
.
of hand clapping.
_

.
.
.
ticipate in the Attica situation by
-
Kunstler's talk overwhelmed
'
keeping in close contact with thl'
·
audience. People listened and
state officials at the scene. Why t•hpered. and some ev
e
n yelled
should any governor of a state "Hight On." I don't mean to
accede
to the wishes of sound nasty. but some yelled it to
prisoners?
_
·
s
ound hip
.
<Dig it.~ It i~ eas~ to
Scholars
·
Editors
-,,
:
the King Scholars, the rest is for <>!Jser~er ta~mg part
m
the Attica
the
:
· pre
-
college
,
.
summer s1tuabon. 1t did
_
appear that
program. counseling, remedial hostages throats were
.
slit
;
Thus,
The Circle
-
'
courses. etc.
here was a human error - not a
Marist College
·
·
.
·
.
.
: I was pleased that the edit
.
ors of
the Cirde devoted a large part of
·
deliberate lie!
·
·
To
·
·
Hel 1
.
·
with
·

.
Kunstlerobjected
to
the tactics
of the state
·
in putting down the
revolt . an insurrection of
dangerous
·
men
,
and
-
he
.
also
attacked Gov. Rockefeller forr10t
participating in negotiation~
.
.
last week's issue to the role of the
K
n
st I e
·
r
·
.
Ki11g Scholars at Marist College
.
.
U
·
.
The expressions of student
OPar Editor
;
feelings
,
and
·
the
.
explana
_
tion
_
of
Last week; the C.U.B. of.Marist
.
the ratio'lale for Benoit should
C:ollege , presented
lawyer-
help to
'
alleviate some of the fears .William Kuristler to lecture. He
.
:ind sti~pi_ci'.)ns which

have been
.
was tospeak on the plight of the
.
·
generated
_
in
·
.
the
.
pa
st: ·
.
-
·
-
·
B<'rigan brot.hers
.
He spoke in-
.
·
.
·
'
The
'
King
,
5
ti.idents
_
themselyes
.
stea·d. on the Attica State Prison
1
iii.ist
lie
given
·
:
the
'
_credit for
rebellion.
·
helping
.
to
dispel many of the · Those who attended the lecture
:
myths and fantasies
-
we wrestled
'
~\'OUld know that Mr. Kunstler
.
\\'ith three years ago with such
.
·
dior
_
momi fut
_
ilit'-'
.
AcademicaJ}y,
defended the
"
right
'
' of the
J
ed
prisoners to rebel and take
they llave done well; the
~ ian hostages.
.
and
t9
demand
index for the si;,i:ty seven students
.
uegotiatioiis with state prisori
in the
.
program last year was 2
.
2 :c_officials. He (as expected) at-
with eight students with in_dexes
tacked the actions of the
of
3.0
or better.
· ·
Governor and the State of New
I
.
can only say' that this
IS
"Monday
morning
.
quar-
t<:'rba
~
king." The
_
state police had
Some of. the King students
York
·
.
in
.
dealing with the
organized Benoit with a life style
-
rebellion. Mr
.
Kunstler said that
e
1
1
1
phasizing
· ·
close
hu_man
the prisoners wanted refoni1s, to
assume
_
that
·
prisoner
·
n.•lationships wi th the mutua,l
that they are presently in a
.
resistance would be violent. How
responsibility that entails. Many
medieval institution, whose. ean _vou expect a policeman to not
·have moved into the athletic and
cultural life
of
the community to guards \\ere racist and inflicted use force in putting down
an
·
_ offer assistance to and take part violenceon prisoners. Only a fool insurrection of violent men of a
in total community life.
_ can deny that these charges are maximum security prison? To
With
the
.
increased
.
un-
raise. But this is where I draw the expect a law officer to want to
derstanding of
t
.
he
problems
I)
!
line between legitimate criticism pea
·
cefully
subdue
these
the minorih
.
and-or disad
·
and demagogery.
prisoners. when the prisoners
,·antaged s
_
tiJdent which the
Kunstler is a demagogue, a were holding hostage fellow
Circle has pro\•ided, and will be preacher of anarchy and he is a officers, knowing that there was
provided in the future through dangerous political radical. He a damn good chance that these
other media. it is hoped that trirs to extol the legitimacy of fellow o(ficers that were hostages
relationships between and among priwn revolt. The fact is that would ultimately be killed is
,
I
groups and individuals on the prisonersatAtticahavenorights think. very unrealistic! The
campus will improve to the as citizens. They had sacrificed Corrections Commissioner (who
betterment of all students.
their rights by their crimes is a political appointee, and not a
Sincerelyyours, against citizens of our society. professional correction ad-
.
Edward Waters, Dean They have no right to revolt!
.
ministrator
-
- which is un-
Kunstler said that state of- fortunate) should have taken
P.S.
Special College Programs ficia Is bad intentionally and immediate and forceful action in
Through a slip, I believe, on our
part.
the total funding of the
maliciously hed to the
·
public. dealinl! with the Attica revolt.
This
is
not true! From recent and should not have negotiated! I
So
.
Mr.
.
Kunstler does not know

cheer a
·
man on with his behefs
all there is to know about prisons but to commit oneself into
.
and the moral obligation
to
following or lending a hand, huh.
reform prisons. He
_
said so
,
..
The "Ri~ht Oners
'
' ~ould turn
·
·
himself. His lecture was subtly left and spbt (pun not mtendedl.
vindictive
of
l_egitimate
.
I
don't want to give the idea
authority
;
·
When asked if
·
he
.
that I'm hip and everyone else
believed in "the system"
(to
be
isn't
.
but the ones I'm talking
construed as meaning
.
.
the abo
_
ut know who they are - don't
principles of the American you. Enough of that.
system
of
representative
.
There is another aspect that
government), he replied that he upsets me. That
·
is
,
how come,
did not believe in "the system," with all those cheers, right ons
but only
._
in power,
·
for he· said,
,
and standing ovations
.
we could
power understands power. This is only collect
~112
in donations with
the philosophy of anarchy. So,
I 3.000
people m attendance (that's
say "to hell with Kunstler!"
$
.
03
a
h
e
ad)
:
That
is
·
-Tom Malone discouraging. The
$500
that was
Kunstler
The Leader
"donated
"
by the CUB Lecture
·
Committee did not go to Kunstler
but to the Center for Con-
stitutional Rights.
Here is a man who came here
t
i
red and worn out for absolutely
nothing, described what he ex-
perienced at Attica and someone
William- Kuns tier, defender of
.
had the nerve to ask him if he was
the Chicago
7
,
c~me to Marist
a
publicity se
e
ker
.
This too is
aft<;r an _exhausting
.
~eek at degrading.
It
seems very
Attica Prison. Approximately traditional for the American
:J
.
000
people came to hear the
·
peopl~ to build
a
man up, keep
lawyers "words of truth" about him for a while as their idols and
the political harassments of the then destroy his image with
prisoners at Attica.
fallacious remarks (that is, I
One of the finest displays of believe them to be .fallacious
group involvement was the remarks>. This type of train is
setting up of the cafeteria for seen adequately in buildups of
Kunstler's lecture. About 50 rock groups. Soon the groups are
.
students entered t
_
he cafeteria capitalist pigs. homosexuals or
and cleared out every table and whatever
.
<
·
hair in it. Not only did they clear
A
man
·
as dedicated and
it
out but also set up every chair committed as Kunstler could only
in the courtyard. This was done
in
IX'
a leader of the new revolutions
about
15
minutes. To be there and that arc springing up in A~erica
<'xperience such
a
phenomenal because of social and political
happening was great. It's inju
s
til·es.
beautiful to see a bunch of guys
get enjoyment out of doing shit
work.
Anyway. that's getting off the
topic
(I
always have to add a
little something extra - like that
Pax
Dennis Alwon
·

·
.:.
'\
!
'
.
-
~;~
••:



























































PAGE6
TIIEORCLE
SEPTEMBER
23,
1971
by Salvatore Piazza
/
'
-. ·
The ques:tio~ ~hich arise-from
the
Atti~~
insurr~tion
-are
broad. This
.
article
.
is ·
·
111tended
to
-.
treatment~
_
If.
untreated
"
ihe
Unlike ~yphilis, which
involves
-
and, cut
to
the c~re of the moral bankruptcy
·
of the American nation;
-
_
educate as many people as.
need
germs
_
are still present in

the
.
·
·
the entire
body,
gonorrhea often
-
for those w~o spout
the
simplicity of the "law and order,''. rhetoric this to
_
be
in
·
regards to Venereal
-
body
..

-
and
.
will
damage
-
.
vital
-
remains localized on or near the
is the nakedness arid the reality of their
'.
flight· from responsibili~y.
-
--
.
·
_
·
.
disease: The
.
time_ h"s
_
come
]or
_
or
·
ga
ns
with out the
·
person
reproductive
system
or
_
rectum of
Governor nockefeller
_
's solution to th«fAttica i!l5urrection was at its
·
people to know how
to
det~t and
·
knowing it.
·
During this period
·
-
the person.
It
is
usually caught at
·
..
~~tan abridgement of the legal rights supposedly guaranteed to all cure
v:o.,
which has
become
the.
·
syphilis
-
has no signs· or symp-
:
,
the time
_
of·
intima~ physical
.
-:
~•ltze!15 despite wealth, race and social position.
-
At its cruelest, the rriost commonly
_
reported
.
coma
-
toms and can
be
discoyered
only
·
co,ntact
·
with the
·
sex organs
er
mvas1on by state police and National Guard on the "Correctional" municable disease.
-
·
_
.
··

by bh>od tests,After
_
a few
years,
:
rectum of ari infected
person.
:'
·
:
f~cility was
a
:
brutal exhibiti~n of the excesses of power. The human
.
The two most commC?n types of
·
possibly four
-
or
'more,
the
'
~en gonorrhea invo~ves
the
rights_ of the guards held as_ hostages and the prisoners ~emselves V.D. are gonorrhea and syphihs
beginnings of insantiy, crippling

male's penis, thefirst" symptom
-
-
were ignored
.
and
-once
agam the practice that human hfe is ex- and we
.
will
deal with these two
paralysis, heart disease, blind- .
.
_
is
·
usually_ a burning pain when
pendable in America was held to be true.
-
.
because
.
of
the
epidemic ness, or deafness may develop.
·
-
urinating, accompanied by
.
a
_
_
Th€: demands
_of
the At~ca pri.~ners .were,. in fact, sensible 8:nd proportions which they have

-
discharge of mucus. This occurs
practical remedies
to
the mhuman and barbaric system under which reached
.
in this country.
A
·
-
·
two to six days after contact with
the~ are forced
to
exist. To most Americans freedom from an
irii-.
'
Syphilis is a disease caused by
nnOUnC8fll80f
the infected. person. A female
_
_
per1alist country may seem ~bsurd a_nd
:
stretching the imagination an organism called a spirochete
.
In completing
·
_
The Circle's
~ith ~onorrhea
·
rarely notices
when the country referred to tS America. But to members of a race
:
and can involve every part of the segment
.
on birth
I
control,
anything wrong, she usually does
who w~re b~ou~t here in
_
chains and have sti:tJggl~ for fr~m since body. It is caug~t
at
the time of abortion and
·
.
venereal. disease
not have a burning sensation
·
that firs~. •)!1Prt~onment such a dem_and
·
is neither fnv,olous
.
·nor
_
intimate physical contact
.
and
'
there was to have
been
printed a
when urinating. She may or may
.
~mmum~t ms_p~red b~t rather
~ basic premi~ of_ the "An:erican
.
111ay i~volve the sex organs,
,
joint statement from the offices
not have an increased vaginal
.
_ -
ideology. A nation which they tz:ied to love despite its hate wlll now mouth, or rectum of an infected of the
.
,
infirmary, reside:ice
·
discharge.
-~
Thus, she may'
refuse to allow
·
them to lea~e.
.

.
.
·
person. In some cases, early
.
director and s~rvice programs.
unknowingly spread the infection

Theother~m_ani_ls regar<!fng food, educat!on, adequate health ~are signs
·
and symptoms of the This article was to.have been an
to others-and allow her
own
in-
and the basic digmty of bemg human are m fact recommendations disease are either absent, or so explanation
of
the
ad-
.
fection to progress
into
·
serious
·
made by a New Yor~ State Legislative C.Ommittee four years ago and slight as to go unnoticed by the ministrations' views relative to
_
complications.
It
is
also possible
.
also by a panel at Attica ti:n years ago.
.
.
.
-
.
.
jnfected person. Some people who
.
there being
.
established. some
.
to have gonorrhea of the
_
rectum
·
The meth<>d.5
_
of the pr1~ners, although regrett;ably violent have go through a positive blood test
form
of information
.
and-or
.
.
and not know it, although some
__
Pf(!Ven the pomt once aga1~
?f
the levels of barbarism and cruel_ty to do not remember ever seeing any service center _. on
human
~pie have rectal irritation and
which th?5e who rule are ~ll_mg to go. qur a_nger should not be aimed
·
of the e
_
arly stages .
.
The first sign sexuality here at Marisi.
a discharge.
_
.
. .
·
.
.
at the prisoners who are_ mdirectly responsible for the deaths of the of infection (primary stage)
is-------------
A simple smear test confirms
h~stages an? fe!low prisoners but rath~ to th~e
:
who ha_v~ so
_
iISually a single painless sore
gonorrhea of the penis but may
miserable failed m t~ performance of th~1r constitubo~al positions. where the spirochete has entered
A person with syphilis can be
be
of
little value in determining
.
~hat the s~uden~
I~
Dutchess C.Ounty can do to alle~1ate the con- the body
.
It appears ten to ninety
.
completely cured
if
treated
early
.
the presence of gonorrhea of the
-
dit1ons at ~tbcaarehm1ted. Any act
of
~upport for the pr1sone~ would days (usually 21
.
days) after
.
with proper medicines.
·
Treat~
female sex organs or of the
be ~ym~ohc and
_as
many ~ym~ols are m the long ru!1 ~neff«;ctiv~. ~e
·
exposure to the infected· person.
ment in the later or advanced
rectum. More
,
complicated
_
Attic~ msur~ectron has h1gh-hghted the <iehumamzmg _s!tuabon_ m It maylook like a pimple blister
stages will stop
·
·
.
progress of the
laboratory tests are required in
A~encan J?l"!Sons. In Dut~hess County
J?~Ily
of the conditions ~h1ch or open sore.
·
'
· '
disease, but the parts of the body
these cases. _
·
·
exist at Attica are p~esent m the Coun~Jatl. Dutchess
-
~ounty Ja!J _has
The secondary stage of syphilis already destroyed may not
be
A person can be cured with the
.
11_0
adequate educ~bonal_ J?r_ogr~ for i11mates, the~e
1~
no ~ufftcient may also go unnoticed. The signs
replaced.
·
medicines that are now available
·
~ar? for drug addict~, v,~it_mg ngh~ apd ~om_murucatron ngh~ _are may
.
appear. two
to
six months
,
Syphilis cannot
be
cured by self
with
early treatment
.
un4er
.
!muted, health care is m1mmal: ~. mvestigallon of these conditions after contact with the infected treatment. Up~to-date medical.
.
proper medical supervision,
If
an~
?f
the man who runs tbe Jail
1~
long overdue a nd would be a person. There may be a breaking
·
knowledge is necessary for
..
·
gonorrhea is not adequately
positive sequel to the
.
tragedy of
.
Attica.
-
~utorrash all over or on any part proper diagnosis and adequate
treated it may progress to painful
ofthe body, sor':!S in t}:le mouth,
.
treatment, and it can be caught
complications, including ar-
u •
I
.
d
9 l
sore throat, fallinghair,orfever.
-
more than once.

thritis;sterility, heart problems,
.
_
(pnmar~
.
and
.
~ondary) . go
"clap") is a disease caused by an
·
.
n
·.
,
-
t ,
,
t
.
·
e
_ ·
_
-
-
_
T~e signs of early syphilis
,
Gonorrhea (commonly called
.
or
.
serious pelvic disorders
.
away with or without medical organism called the gonococcus.
Con't P. 7
.Col.
4
.
Corbetta, arrived with a lawyer .
.
·
,
I viewed the'opening day
;
of the
,
in poetic style. - this is allowed
When th~ !awy~r was a!3ked a
pr9.gram
.
~~.~
tri~l.
~at~i~
a ~it_:
,
;
'
a,~~
:
~erh~J>~. e_ncourag~;by
'
the
_.
questioll
-
h~ respond~~· that he
.
,
0Lu~certa~~1ty)?ut: a· l~t
-
<>f
·
en~
:
_'.-
tutor

.
With
.
_tlie
_
o1der
lt1dl;
c
t_h~
:
.
·
-
.
coi.ild
,
notmake a dec1s1on.on.the
,
.tl}
,
us1asm.:
:
Orgamzallon
"
was
_
.
_
newspaper
.:
,
1s
·_used
..
as
-
:
a
.
daily
:
.
-
·
ques'tihn
;
.
.
;
,
However;
<
when
'
Mt
:
'
;.:
.
needed.-lt
:
~as
-
-a
'
little-chaotic:
(
,
..
discussion(:,.co~fomporary
;~
,
- - Spevakwasaskedtoleavesothat
however, al! was taken care of
·
p~oblems and
_
cr1s1s are
.
often
·
the tenants could talk personally
.
and classes
_
began.-C~sses were
.
discusse~ and
·
set forth by the
to some of the students .from
not conducted according to
·
the tutor
.
. .
.
_ ·
_
.
·
.
·
-
Marist that were at the meeting
traditi?nal school system class~.
'
·
In
mo~tevery case I have seen;
_
he got a response from the lawyer
Th~ chtl~en Yfere much_ fr~r ~n
.
th,e . chtldre~ are
..
more . than
to the question that had just been
-
th~ir onenta
_
tion and m their willing
·
to
_
hsten to the tutor
asked. This is known because Mr.
responses to the tutor. The tutor suggestions and opinio
.
ns.
·
The
Spevak entered the meeting latei:_ was
·
~ot l?oked upon as
.
an little. ones ar~ very cont~nt
.on
and said that the lawyer gave
,
-
authonty f1gu~e or a
_
g~ but
·
colo~mg, drawmg
·and
lc)laymg
him an answer. When asked why
rat~er :3s a friend,_~ feeling of
.
outside.

·
. . _
.
.

_
.
the lawyer did not give -the an-
rel:3xabon was ~efm1tely noted.
·
.
I must say that m the begmmng
swer in front of the tenants, he
Th!S relaxed feeh~g can account
.
the older ones y;ere very reluc-
responded that what the lawyer
f?r a more
·
creative and ~nhan-
·-
.
tant to get

involved.
·
So~e
does is not his fault: After trying
·
,
cmg atmo~phere for the children,
.
~<:ommented
that they
,
wer~ gomg
to persuade the parents to send
.
t
.
hus makmg them feet more
_
back to school the next day. But
.
:
their children back to school by ~reative. A
·
chil~
_working_
under.
.
. through
·
th~ ~~tive
impact
of

·
- .
as!ung them to take a collection
.
plea~ant cond1~1ons; with no
.
Ma!:5hall Raucci s teachmg a~d
_
Jrom each family
in
the building

.
stresses '!r
_
tens1o~s! _has ~ny
.
:
c~ncern for thE!m they are
sbU
-
.
to pay for the buses, the paren~
substantial .
.
ab1ht1es
.
-
not
.
·
with
.
us
.
_
today.
·
(AT'f~BOY
·
went il)to an uproar.
·
·
·
represented m the p~ese~t day
:
.
MARSHALL).
_ -
-
. . .
.
.
_
,
The parents
..
were ·angry
··.
~nd
·
,.
school
.
syst~m
··
where he
IS
con-
_,;
.:.
~meof.thepar~ntsof the older
Mr. Spevak knew it._He also knew
stantly
·.
b~mg
·
eval1;1at~d _and
..
ci,uldr~n haye remark~d tha_t they-
that there wasn't any~ing
be
co!1tro11ed.·Once a c!rl~d
IS
_
given·
·
_
h::3ve neyer.,seen their chtlc\ren
cC>uld compromise with _so he left,
this, free(iom ~f actrnty. IJe can - tur,ned on to school be(o~e- At the
.
These parents want action now.
·-
.-
·
be~m a !1ew life • _as: a
.
reborn
-
.
end of the day they don t want
~
Stud~nt teaching
children
from
Rip Van Winkle House
:They do not want to be given a
.
child_- wit~ new path~ays lo the
·
leave.
_
_
.
·
bunch of false information
to
creative process. A child able to
_
When asked if they wanted off
,
calm them down and make them
-
express
·
his
-
{eelings
_
of
·
li~e,
_
on tJle Jewish holidays
,_
Monday
.
As
I sit here now, I am trying to
contemplate some way of star-
ting
this
article: By
.
writing what
I am having trouble doing I have
solved my problem. (Figure that
one out).
·
I guess
·
most articles are
· written as follows:
On
Sept.
13, ...
• and since I
.
don't feel like
changing that, I won't.
On Mon~y;
··
September 13,
John Theiss
-
~ a senior at Marist
- College, along with Dr. Michelson
• professor in Chemistry, went
down to
P.U.R.A.'s
Rip Van
Winkle House to offer assistance
.
· to
the
residents in their boycott of
the Poughkeepsie schools. Some
of the parents have refused
to
send their children
to
school for
the follo'\\<ing reasons:
l) they do not want their child
to walk 2.8 miles· to school
t'Veryday
2l the route they travel is very
dangerous especially during
the
_
.
.
.
_
scared to boycott. They
cari
see
dislik~. hostility, frien~liness,
;
and J'uesday, September
~
and
wintef when they walk home in tjght through these
-
political-Hes
et~- without ~ear of pti_mshment
-
21, the~ responded negatively.
the dark
·
..
-
-
_
· .
and injustices.
.
·
will ~o so. This expression of ~he
-
These kids wanted tog~ to s~ool
3) when the tenants moved in
'.
After accepting Marisfs offer
self_ 1s a healthy and ~nc~ntmg
.
on a day that all their fr1~n~
they entered under the ad-
of assistance, a student froIQ
-
en~•r~ment
.
for. the mdmdual, would have off. To me thtS tS
vertisement that adequate busing M_arist Dennis Alwon (that's-me.
T~ts is espec1al!y
-
true of strange but a healthy outlook on
_
will be given for their children •
·
I love to write about my~m
children.
.
. _ .
·
the future of the progr~m. Now
this was not given to them.
·
organized students
to
go to the
.
I do n';)t wish t~ give the wrong
'
tell
me _ where
m
the
·
Thus'Marist College students· Rip Van Winkle House and tutor
1m_Press10n of this pr~gram. The Po~keeps1e school system
·
do
have volunteered their free time
·
the chil~en. Parents have of-
~hddren are not runrung around you f•?d an 8th or
9th
gr~der that
and class time to
·
tutor the fered their own apartments as
hke
.
~admen but are rather does~ t wa!}t a day off. Nowher~.
children at Rip Van Winkle classrooms. Thus the beginning
explonng ne~ channels that have That s why our program tS
House. The reason bting that
·
of a new school, temporary
-
for
ne-ver been introduced to them beyon~ ~I doubts_ a success._ To
they did not want to
see-'
the the present but most promising
before.
~
tutor usually m~kes A
.
me. tJ:tis 1s_ a beautiful happerung.
children fall behind in their work.
.for
the future. I'd like
to
talk
now
suggestion. ~nd the ch1!dren These. kids are _getting ~n
When John Theiss and
Dr:
.
of
some personal opinions and
re--pond positively or n~abvely. ~ucation and learrung what life
Mich~lson
approached
the experiences about the tutoring
&.me_
o~
-
the
suggestions are 1s about also.
.
parents with this idea they were program. Since I've been there
creabvE: •~eas_such as: A ~thy
I
·
have also gotten many
overwhelmed. Many of ths from the beginning I feel that I
walk
_
~ts1de _m nat_ure with the remarks from the tutors them·
parents felt that the students can do a most appropriate job,
tutor discuss!~g things ~s they selves. about the. progr~m. The
could do a better job of teaching
however. we must llllderstand the
go. poetry wntmg, fi~d !nps, etc.
.
remarks are very positive. TI!e
.
than
the
teachers
at
impossibilities of writing a
11:' some classes music is.used
to
most ~mmon ~mark was "~t 1s
Poughkeepsie school system
personal experience. The ex-
~1ve a more relaxed and en-
~aut1ful. The kids are really mto
could do.
perience is within the individual
Joyable atmosphere. Oth~r 1t and so are we."
At themeeting on Friday night,
and for
each
individual the ex-
daSSE:5 are held at yanderbtlt
_ l\lany of these tutors are cut·
September
10,
Mr. Spevak,
perience
·
is perceived as a unique
.
Mansion a~d the children are tm~ classes. not because they
assistant to the landlord Mr.
one.
asked to wnte about the Hu~,
c .
P 7
nature, etc. Some prefer
to
write
on
1

Col.
4



































t
,
":by Jack: Gordon;
. 111E CIRCLE
WHERE ... lf?
Con•t
from
Pa~ 4
for ·advice
as
to where I could get
expert help. · .
. , .
. 5)
Frank
De
Koskie, New Paltz,
.N.Y.
,
· · ·: ..
.·.·


. · . • • •
:
: . 0
. • .
'
. . •
··
• •





IwouldgotoFredLambertfor
The
to.wn
';'f Dov4!f PlaulS 1s situated approximately 25
miles
east of assistance as
a
friend. For
?o~hkeeps1e; Us i~abitants are spread out into ~e:three trail~r medical aid I:could
go
to
no one
-call)psthat ~re permitted and
a
few houses that one fmds scattered
m
on·
campus .
J,
would probably go
a!' a~sent,m~nded fash~~ around:the main commercial district.
That'
to New Paitz Medical Clinic.· ..
. ~stm;t <:om11sts of_relativelf few stores and a post.office.. ·. .
. .
6)
Michael Carty, Garden City,-
. Th~re-1s_no
~eal _m~stry •~ Dov~: There are.two saw mills butthey. N;Y.
· ·. .· /·. -·
-
· : . - ,
aren t_ very big. Smee tht:re
IS
no industry of any_ ~eat c~nsequenc~, ·..
I
don't know ·where
I
would
go ·
there 1s not much money
m
the
town.
Wh~~ all thts 1s try1~~ to ~ay
!S .
as
there is nowhere on campus. ·
that Dov~r has a great, many
poor:
fa~ulies. Th~e familte~ _live
m .
~The replies speak for. them-
. hovels and probably wtll ,always hve
m
h~vel~. ~me fam1hes are, selves.
I .
would . ask - the . ad- ·
mad~ to tum to welfare at·th~
expense
of their digruty; _The people are ministration three questions ..
Do
suspicious of a system they
are
made to ~eco~e d~pendent on.
It
is a_ · they, feel.
a
friend. is q·ualified
to
~ys~e~ ~ey hardly understand ~nd trust. even less.
It
seems to. them give necessary- advice in such a
an mJust~ce-th~ttakes away ~eir money when they arelucky eno~gh situation? Secondly, does the
to have aJob anij yet <f:oes not
g1
ve them back enough _money to survive administration feel the student
on ~hen therE: are no Jobs
to
be
had. , . . . .
'.,, - -
.
· should be forced off campus for
. . Etgh! M~rist students are now workm~
m
this . area. Six h~ve assistance? Finally, when will .
. b_ecome residents :'l~d two _com.m.u.~ the
25
miles each ~ay, four to five the deans and President of the •
. times _a week. Thts _program mitiated by Dr. Mal Michaelson of_ the _ coUege stop shirking · their
~hem1stry J?ept with_a good.deal of_help from Larry _Lomuto, 1s a responsibility in this matter?
.
fifteen credit course J1sted under vanous and sundry titles (usually
under the student's major.)
· . . .

,_ Almost three weeks have passed since the programs inception.
Much has been learned with very little being implemented. For the
most part; class conscious people do not think like poor people and
PAGI~ 7
FESTIVAL PRESENTS .
J·ESUS CHRIST
SUPERSTAR',
THE ROCK OPERA WITH REVERENCE
AUTHORIZED··c6MPANY
CASTOF40
OCT. 4 - MON ..
at
7&10 P.M.
PALACE.THEATRE - ALBANY
. ALL SEATS RESERVED -
S6, SS, $4
MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED with SELF_-ADORESSED ENVELOPE
ANO.CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO:
SUPERSTAR~ Box l350, Albany, N.Y. 12201
they never will: I have never gone hungry or wanted for a warm place
FUNDING
UNTITLED
·at night.I
do
not feel sorry for these people.
I
cannot. They are human
Con't
from Page' 1
C(!n't
from Page 6
A Plea
beings with th~ same feelings inside that we all have.
.
.
of
G
u·11ty
Anyway, ,feeling . sorry for someone never got anything ac-
were also· questions left· unan-
have to but because they want to.
· complished,.
. ..
.
.
.
swered mainly because there is
it is an enlightening experience
All that has gone before is written to acquaint the Marist College · no d~finite an~wer !or t~em ~et.
for them as well as for the
community:with a program: that was started and is ostensibly working For instance, fmanc1al a~d, which
children.
out of their community. It is a program that will hopefully be one of hasn't been clear
I?'
de!med, but ,
There ha_vc also been incidents
Messrs. Gowdey and Brestler
. many.
A
program that some students might.want to continue next . was b~oken down m this w~y _by · where a child got so attached to a were·
brought
before
the
semester:-.Then maybe a few more middle classAriiericans along with D~. Lmus _-Foy.
Th~
Adm1ss1on
tutor that she cried when the Judiciary
of
the
Student
· the eight this semester will be educated on how ·America rapes and Director has
$30,000
free money
tutor had to leave at the end of the Government on charges of theft
emasculates its
poor,
How "the system" has be,come what it is
f<lJ'
its for Fre_shman scholarships.
day. This is another marvelous involving a
$250.00
rug. Being
own sake and how it perpetuates itself at the expense of the poor and There 1~
al~o
$76,000
for . experience.
·
resi9cnts of Marist for twenty
the disenfranchised. Then, hopefully, destroying "the system" will not sch~larsh1ps over: a. four y~ar .
What can one call a program days, they understood the rules of
be a revolutionary idea. It will merely be a common sense reaction to period, and
$35,000
for. the King
like this except ultimate success. com,imnity'to boil down- to the old
the parasitic whore that sucks the blood of those who can afford it Scholarship fund. Finally, for
This success is attributed
to
the adage. "You can do anything
least.
···
·
upper-dassmen there is a
$40,000
53
children, the
50
or so tutors, until you're caught ... then try
tuition remissions fund which is
Mrs. Smith and her children. lying." They revealed to the
handled by the Dean of Students,
Mrs. Smith
is
responsible for the Judiciary that they felt there
and ·is based on need.
·
organizing of the tenants into the were two alternatives open to
Right now many figures are
boycott. She helps out every day them before the proceedings
floating around in the business
collecting keys and cleaning up. began. Either they could bring
have
very
inuc~
to say to us about the meaning of man and what. is ·office.Every week there is a new
. Since the busing is stHl not forty "friends" before the
· i
niost human about him.
- . .
figure picked up and put on the
· given to these children we are Judiciary to lie and· make a
- .: Loving someone, in the gospel sense of love, depends on deep self- . expense. list.. Realizing this • still tutoring and we
will
continue mockery of the community and
knowledge ancl some _quite un~o.mmon wis~om_. ...
-
. • .. ..
.
. · ·
problem, JohnSherlock has been_- . if it takes eyery-minute
:WC
have: thus beat the system, or they
Sex
fr.
pg.
4
·_· To conclude/your·degre~ ~fself-esteem will.dictate very ~1:l~h your . appointeci to c.o:.ordinate allthe?: ·· · ,Tllere arises one probl~!ll and. cou\d __ throw thl!ll\se!ves · .o~ the·
· : .. sex1.1al life. )\Then ~e read .that''of au
·
the _communi~able dis.eases the ·· figures. This .. · man has a•·
that is· whether or ·
not
thes1.: · m~rcy of the court with a plea of
most set:'iously out
of
co!itri>~ in. ~he:United_States 1s ~onorrhea, that tremendous job ori his hands and
students would want to go,b~ck to guilty•
.
._
.. ,
thereis no:prospectof eradicatiort by currently avadable methods,· a great deal ofci-edit should be
the old school system even 1f the
The}'. chose .to plead gwlty,
that syphilis is also on the upsurge, we wonder what the.whole ou~ook given to him for· attempting this
bysing is given. I can. say that, reveahng that they felt they
is on the dignity of man.
When
we read about the num~r of aborbons enormous task.
they won't want to but will be deserved leniency based on the
we wonder what the outlook is on)ife itself.
,
.
.
It
will.take Mr. Sherlock weeks
forced into it- out of. mere premise that they had not chosen
Really.
I
do have very liberal ideas in the field of the new morality , to figure outc·everything .but by
·
necessity.
. /
the "easy way out" of lying
to
the
l'~nceming sex, but my ideas are based on the dignity of man and the mtd-term.everything should be in
That is
it.
Thanks_ again to Ju_diciary. They awaited the
gospel mess~ge of love. -
.
, · .
order.
everyone and Shalom.
Cop
Out
fi..
pg.
2
And if this campus doesn(t take on an atmosphere of study then· we're
.
all copping out;_
. .
. . .
.
.
·.
CONTRACEl"fIVE
SUllVEY .
..
I
suggested
to
some fello\\'.s
to
invest
$17.50
in
a Superex Headphone,
Con't from Page 3
eon•i from
Pase
3
guaranteed to drown out all outside sounds.
I
know because
I
owned
. .
.
The meager results · o(. this
one atone time5ince I wanted
to
listen to my tape player at full blast. s~ortly. after ovulation). ~b-
survey can be interpreted in
. But I could never headhe phone ringing, the door bell, emergency - ~tmence awhile before ovulation many ways; People are ab-
~alls, invitations to beer·blasts, so I got rid of it.
If
everybody invested is n~':essa~y ~cause sperm can staining from intimate sexual
m
011e; the problem would
be'
solved.
.
· ·, _ .. ·
.
remam ahve
m
the ut~rus and relations; they
are
not awlre of'
But th~t would be copping out even· more. With di~Iogue,. un- falloJ?ian tubes for sev~ral days; the variety of contraceptives
der_standr~1g and tough~ess, ~e students themsel~es can get a right abst1~anc~ for awhile after available (only
2;3
students have
raho of s_llence and no!se, which could m~ke Mar1st not only a good ovulation is necessar,: _because 'used contraceptives but
47
would
pla':e t_o hve at, but an ideal place to grow mto superstars with a drive an e~ can be fert_ihzed for know of some place
to
go if·they
.
·
of lmptless concern, love and r~sponsibility for a better- life ror all sometime after ovulation. .
bad
a problem) · or they are so
mankind.
.
~
_.
.
.
Nev~r attempt rhythm without _ sophisticated that they know
· the gm dance of a doctor. ,Careful everything and couldn't be
:'
Annou.ncement
Students are wanted for the
equivalent of a day or two a week
.in the District Attorney's office
investigating consumer fraud
· and researching criminal . cases.
Any interested students caii call
District
Attorney
Albert
Rosenb]att's office for an in-
terview,
The
phoTJe number is
485-9880.
FOY APPOINT COUNCIL
Con't from Page l
proposals are drafted.
.
Anticipating no major dif-
ficulty, the President hopes
to
fonvard his recommendation to
the Board of Trustees at the
November
4, 1971,
meeting;
together with the actions of the
staff. faculty, and students.
Hopefully, this will allow for
sufficient time to conduct any
elective processes before the end
of the fall semester.
ABORTION
Con't from Page 4 ·
t~
36
hours and expels the fetus
and placenta.
The Woman's Abortion Project
offers a limited amount of help -
for salines. However, the high
price and prolonged time
necessary make this type of
abortion very unpleasant. We
th~refore stress the importance
of
a
woman getting an abortion
under twelve weeks.
For any further information
regarding
abortions,
The
Woman's Abortion Project of the
New
York, City
Women's
Liberation can be
contacted
by
mail or phone. The address is
36
West 22nd
St.,
New York City,
New York
10010.
The phones are
answered every day but Sunday
from
10
a.m.
to
10
p.m.
and the
numbers
are
(212) 691-3396
and
(212) 691-2063. .
records of the womans
m~~- ·
bothered filling out the survey.
strual cycle should ~e kept for ·
It is hop·ed that the following
several months. Either te!D· articles will afford the,students
perature or calendar cal~ulabon with the various· kinds of in-
- can be. employed. A drop
m
body formation they
~eed
and want. To
- temperature· occurs
about those who
will
be
offended by
twentr-four
hour~
before these articles (for there are those
ovula~1on, an elevation for the
who
consider these topics
to
be
remamder of the o~atory cy~e
private)
The Circle apologizes
occurs after ovulation. There 1s
but
maintains its opinion of
no ~ssurance ~f accuracy. necessity.
Physical or emot10nal changes
·
· can disturb the cycle causing
irregularities and even
a
com- -
mori illness can raise one's
LOVE POLLUTION
temperature.
.
Con't from
Page 6
It
is estimated that sperm can
survive for
48
hours and eggs for
24
hours. However, sperm have
been known to live for as long as a
week.
Rhythm is not a very effective
method of contraception and
should not be depended on· to
avoid pregnancy.
0
6)
The Pill: A separate article
is ·devoted to the pill as a form of
contraception, due
to
its
widespread usage among women
today.
If
you think you have come in
contact with either syphilis or
gonorrhea go to the school nurse,
Mrs. O'Connor. She will make
arrangements. for you with the
Dutchess County Board of Health
who will issue you a permission
card to have a
V.D.
check taken
_at St. Francis Hospital.
Only the foolish would risk not
having a problem like this taken
care of. It is done by these people
very discreetly with no scarlet
letters or faces.
penalty
·
of the ·Judiciary
with
mixed emotions.
Had
they
chosen
the -right direction; should they
have lied? Only the penalty would
answer the question .
. They were fined
the cost
of
the
rug and were: ordered
t9
join
a
member of
th.e
counseling service
in probing within themse'lves.·
The judges felt that
·
the two
needed help in untwisting their
view of the. Marist community's
life style.
'
.
· Perhaps Messrs. · Gowdey
and
Brestler now_ have changed
and
are
no longer capable of
theft .
They are to be brought before
the
Judiciary soon · again
for
allegedly threatening to punch-
out Brother Forsythe if
he
initiated
-the
just-past ·
proceedings concerning·
their-
theft of the rug ..
Student Poll
Twenty five students were
polled during the weekend
concerning tomorrow night's
opening game against Assump-
tion,
The results were
23
out of
25
or
92
percent agreed that Marist
woul~ be victorious. The losing
margms were
7-6
and
13-0.
The
biggest winning margin for
l\larist was
49-0
and the smallest
was
13:12.
From the
25
scores the
students had the Vikings scoring
675.
points and giving
up
350,
which
averages out to l\forist
Zl,
As~umption
14.
Bernie says
14
pom!s
!S
a
)ot lo be giver: up by
i\lanst s stmgy defense,
;;o
lcl<;
say i\Iarist 27, Assumption 7.
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SEPTEMBER
23, 1971
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9.3.1
9.3.2
9.3.3
9.3.4
9.3.5
9.3.6
9.3.7
9.3.8