The Circle, January 27, 1972.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 9 No. 14 - January 27, 1972
content
.
-
.
<
Induction
.
Noti.Ces Given to
'
Students
·.
~ i : f u l ~ : J : t ~ ~ : = ~ = : : t 1 ~ ' 1 : f
:~:~~ ~~i~
:
·
.
/
··
·
.
·
.
th:
new
:
proc•~1 nghts 1eg1s1~ied b/congress.' Therefore,
\re
.
will
.
~everal key sections for furtbef rev,ew.
'
11ie new regulations
.
which
.
:
:
.
: continue
:
the. suspension of these
actions
until the
'
new regulations '
,
1mplemenLthe rec~nt·
'.
amendments to
the
draft law
..
were
.·
first
,.
:
·
'
governing
tllese
-p,;oce~es are form~ly issued."
.
'
.
. .. _'
,
.
.
.
.
· .
published in propose(I forlli
in
the
Federal Register
of
November
3, 4
'
Tarr noted
-
however, that local boards
are continliihg to·register
·
.
and
s .
..
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•·
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,
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•
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,
.
,
·
.•
•
·
· · .
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·
·.
classify and examine yotirig men
and
when
·
requested by the Depart
.:
·
.
.
Selective
Service
Director Curtis
w.
Tarr said that
.
he
has
decided
to
:
ment
of
·
Defense they also will issue inductim
notices to
young men
reevaluate in their entirety those provisions which deal with the
who
are
no longer eligib~e for personal appearances
or
appeals.
•
..
.
; proced~res for appearances before local boards, the
·
guidelines
·
Tarr said that he plans
.
to publish
the provisions under review in
.
the
govermng re-opening of classifications, and the procedures for
ap-
Federal
,
Register
·
for
.
further public comment probably in
.
late
peals
.
to appeal
.
boar~ other than the
_
Pr~idential appeal
board ·
December. The provisions cannot be
.
formally issued until
30 days
(sec!1on 162512 and
parts
1624 ~d 1626 of
.
the proposed reguJatjoris
·
haveelaps~since their publishing in the Federal Register.
·
published on November
3).
.
·
.
. .
.
.
The regulations fo'rrilally issued today cmtain many significant
Public response to the proposed regulations focusea on
·
several
.
-
changes in draft policies, including the end of undergraduate student
•
issues contained in the sections being withheld "'lbe depth
of
thought
deferments for those who were not
.
eligible fer deferments during the
•
.
tllat went
in
to
the suggestions
we
received from the general public and
last quarter or semester of the 1970-71 regular academic year,
.
the
·
/
Members of Congress warrants our careful reevaluation of these
~tablishment of a Uniform National Call system for issuing draft
·
policies
,!'.
Tarr said. "Until the
·
regulations on these policies are final"
calls
so
that all men with the same Jottery
·
mnnbers will receive in-
.
Tarr
·
added
,
"our
.
local boards will not conduct any personal ap-
duction notices at approximately the same time,
and
the establish
-
·
pea,rances nor
-
will the appeal boards,
·
other than the Presidential
.
·
ment of classification
l~H
as a "holding
"
category for those
·
appeal ~ard.
_
hear appeals
:
We do not want
~
deprive registrants of
registrants not currently subject
to
active processing for
.
induction.
THE
VOL(}ME
.,
·•
.·
. .
NUMBERI4
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW'YORK 12601
JANUARY 27, 1972
Ea,cUlty on
·
·College Col!,ncil
Cast
·
fin~lized
·
For
Play
A faculty colloquium
to
deal
by
Ann
Gabriele
The aim of Children's Theatre Fitzgibbons - peddler woman
,
with the question
.
of whether
·
or
is to gain an entrance into the Frank De Koskie
-
Berthold, and
not to
.
accept the
·:
recom-
world of childhood fantasy and Jack Ledwith - the mirror. The
mehdatioriofthelnterim
.
College
innocence
.
In
·
.
the past, •
:
cin- dwarfs are as foilows:
'
Cindy
'.:
.
..
·
...
.
Council
,,_
that}t:be
::
rnade
:
_per-
derella
,
"
.
"The Wizard of
Oi
,
"
.
Bodenheimer - Sneezy
,'
Bob
,
,.
,,
manent
·
was held on Friday
.·
·
.
·.·.
.
and •
.
•p~ter
.
Pan
'.'
:
have achiev
.
ed
.
Dressel - Grurripy, John
.
De
.
~
_'.
..
~
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.
.
:
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-
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·
·
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·
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:
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~~~rui:
.
µ~i~
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~()~~~~py~
.
_
.,
,
ag€:,
,
to share
m
trus experience.
·
Barbara.
-·
Jala ·
,
,
Sleepy,
,
John
'
_:.:
.
:
·
"
thra
·
ec
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plli-powi
·
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tb
.
n
..
·
·
.
de
.
•
.
.
·
·
Ch1
.
ldren
'
s
.
Theatre
.
has now
.
Petraglia
··
_
.
Doc
:
·
The
·
maids
'
in
j
.
wty
.
.
entered its
~
fourth year of waiting
·
are
:
Rosanne Avalone
·
clarification ..on the resolution
)
·
·
production with thE
f:
begi!1fiing of
.
B
_
arbara
.
Han~a, Mary
·
M~
· thafa pemianerit
·
College Councif
rehearsals for CCSn~w
Wlnte" last Grellis,
·•
Betty
.
.
Greene; Kathy
be estabHshed in the Spring of72
:
Tut>,sday
.
under the ~:r;ection of -
.
Phillips,. Janet Riley, and Lucy
·
Members
:
.
·
of.
·
the
.
•
Governance
·
c'
9lennCasale and the
.
assistance
··
Squiccarini. The
,
animals are
:
Committee presented statements
of
.
Stan Bojarski. The play is
.
Kevin
-
Keenan
,
Tony &:arrone,
on
the composition
,
scope and
.
·
.
bemg produced by
·
Paul T~ro
.
· Dave Sheehan
,
.
Tom Sales
responsibilities of the
.
proposed
.
.
and the choreogr~phy is handled
.
Emmett Cooke, Kathy Blank and
.
Council
;
which the •
.
faculty
by Mary
.
McGrelhs
,
The week
of
,
Andre Albert.
. :.
.
- reacted to with both pro and con
.
production at Marist
will
begin
on
"Know you what it is
.
to
be
.
a
responses.
_
. .
.
...-
.
.
,
.
-
April.
17;
the cast will also travel childTit is to be something very
The
.
faculty raised questio~
.
·
to Kt!}gston and Dover Plains, different froip. the man of today .
.
regardirig the ratioruile for
the
and hopefully to Kentucky
,
.
ltistohaveaspirityetstreaining
.
stated
.
compositiorio!theColleg~
1
:
or lack
.
of sailiethat
.
wolild or that
_the
··
proposaI
·
is
not
an
..
Maryann Nally as Snow White
.
from
the waters of Baptism;
to
-
Council, the connection
·
between shotild
be piaced on the Council. ultimatum
·
and can
be modified
·
and Tom Checchia
as
the prince believe
.·
in belief ... " this
·
is
ihe various affairs
.
committees
Without definite
-
assurance
of
or discarded upon
witness
of its will head the cast. other mem-
·
Children's Theatre.
·
· and
Jh~
Council, and the
rol~
the
·
what the implications and results
_
failure. The only
thing
that . bers are: Stan Bojarski - queen
·
,
. .
Anyone wishing to help in any
-
Coupc1l woul~
·
~ e !1s either
"
~uld
.
or_ c~uld_
be
;
_of a Council
committee
'wishes fer pr~ently, Joanne Giardino -
•
witc}J • Ji~ way may contact Children's
adv1sory
·
or mediative
m
case
of without brrutations
m
scope; the
·
is
an
acceptance oflhe
proposal
Quirilan - Sir
_
Dandiprat', Midge
·
nieatre. Box C 767.
..
·
.
·
.
·
.
confr~ntations among the various
·
.
·
fac~ty
·
is hesitanUil wanting
·
to
·
.
by
the
Plenary Faclilty
Sessicm
groups
_
and factors represented. i,-abfy
·
such a
,
proposal.
-
The and the ·student ratification
The
•
:
aspe!!t
f:ru.iL
created
,-
the
.
Governance
··
Committee
··
main-
.
group;
to
be
heid soon,
.
for
the
·
great~t discussions be~~n the tains that it
-~ul~
be imJM?SS~le
·
P\ll'POS8
of t,estiilg out some
·
of
the
facuUr
·
and the Goyerna_nce
·
to_ fo!etell
·
JUSt
~at the
un-
q11estions in practice
rather
'
than·
.
·
~
.
-
.
-
.Easter
·
1n
Ireland
Comnnttee w~s on the hm1tations ph~tions can or will
be. but
adds i~
-
rhetoric:
·
· ·
·
Tuesday
,
,
February
1,
the
Gaelic Society
will have
an
Irish
Nite in conjunction with its ail
-.
nual Easter in Ireland
tour.
The
Irisli
nite will take place in room
249 iri
'.
the Campus Center, at
.
8
p
.
m.
'
A representative from the
.
·
EcOlogy
.
Study
Hon
.
ored
..
•
.
by Robert Rehwol~t
-
A
Marist College student,
Denise
'
AlessandreJlo and a
Professor
.
.
·
Emeritus,
·
Dr.
·
Madeline Pierce coauthored a
·
paper entitled· "A Cooperative
Study of the Aquative Life in tlie
Hudson River
·
at Danskammer -
point and Howland." The paper
which compares the variety and
abundance of plant and animal
life in the heat outfaJI at the
Danskammer Point generating
plant to that
,
in an unheated
section of the river was awarded
the "best paper" award at 'the
National Conference in New
York.
The research was carried out
tmder the auspices of Marist's
Environmental ~ience Program
and funded
,
in part, by Central
Hudson Corporation.
Dr. Reh-
woldt, Director
or
the Marist
Program,
was
extremely
gratified by the award. He
viewed it as an example of
the
.
.
by Ed Kwling
Irish
Tourist Board
'
will be
on
Th
Fr
-
·
es1un
·
CJ
. ·
E
'
uti"
.
·
hand to ~ow
a
film
and answer
e . .
en . ass x~
.
ve any questions.
•
Board1smvolved~the~ti~of-
-
The tour is scheduled to leave
_the class of 1975 s c_onsbtutiC?_n. ~Marctr28th and retum
·
April 5th.
~eaded by P~es1dent Jim rhe eight-day guided tour,
Elb~t, the Execub~e Board met highlighted
.
by visits to Blarney
to_ di~uss and review the con- castle
,
.
the Ring of
Kerry,
the
sbtubon on Jan.
·
19th and Jan.
Rock
of Cashel, Trinity College,
24th.
.
Ute Lakes of KilJamey, Guinness
On Wed., J3!1.
26th
the f~al Brewery, Abbey Tavern, and
.
a
·
copy was_ pu~hshed
.
and ~ies Medieval Banquet at Bunratty
were
d1strib!)ted.
Tomght, Castleareonlysomeofthethi g
Thursday, copies of the con- th
will
n s
· stitution
will be available in the
e group .
see..
.
haJls. on Monday, Jan. 31, a
The P!Jc~, which includes
Constitutional Convention wilJ be round tnp Jet far~,
.
all hotels,
held at 8.00 p m for all freshm
breakf~st and dinner, tral!-
.
·
, ·
en sportabon and all other fees 1s
m the Campus Center. All class three hundred and fifteen dollars
quality of research that can be mem!Jers are
urg~
l'?
attend and ($315.00).
undertaken when area personnel - to brmg forth the1~
V I ~
on tbe
In past years the
groups
were
. pool their talents
En .
taI
proposed constitution. And made
up of students from Marist
.
.
•
vironmen
finallyonthesecondofFebruary,
d M
'
M
,
issues are ~reme)y complex the Class Execuf ·e Board
·n
an.
ount St.
ary s p~us
and only yield to cooperative
1Y
WI •
residents from
the commumty.
efforts whether they be scientific
~te . for 9r
·
against tbe con- For information see Pat BrOQks,
political. or economic.
'
stitution.
Room
804-C.
·
by
Pat Brooks
l
l
I
l
PA(;I
'
. 2
.
Tom
.
·
Walsh
.
by
Tom
Walsh
'
'
..,.
We were all frightened
.
It was a time for te.ar, and
1t
was most
im~
portant that we
.be
scared from the very beginning. We were in
the
land of the Giants, and that fact alone was frightening. We would have
to look up at
-
everyone, as we would have to for years; Only some
of
them that had
to
line up-with
us
were shorter, and
·
even that
Jact
·
wasn't very comforting;We were new-and
everything
before
\B
would
be new. While others around
us
were secure,
we
were awkward. Only
la\er wo\Jld we learn the growth'of newn_ess, and the pl~asure of_dif-
ference, but for
·
now, we clutched our brown bags and
looked
strmght
at the head in front ofus.
·
The electric eye was watchirtg
us,
as it
watched
us
constantly.
It peered from that
·
waµ
menacing. our every
movement, disallowing any break fromregimentation; Only after,
would we find out that the "electric eye" was really a plain old ther~
mostat.
.
I can remember those first days more so than'the others. It's funny
how people remember the
,
beginnings and·ends ~f things, and often
forget the middles.
It
would
be some time before
I
would realize how
importaJ!t the
.
middles were, probably, the m~t iml)ortant · of all.
If
you live the middles, you don't always have
to
filid the ends.
Those firstfew days
-
were filled with fibs,
<r
rather lies, but then it
was always hard for me to distinguish. At any rate, they
were
lies
I
would learn to accept and cherish for years, lies which
I would turn to
truths, lies which are still being turned into truths. I can't help but
wonder whether or not these people knew they were teaching wrongs
or actually thought that they were right. People have the tendency to
believe only that which they
·
want to, and only
•
that which
will
be
of
benefit
to
them. People can live lies so long that.they
d>n't
realize that
they are living them. There's no need for them any more
to
~rch for
the truth. But
we
had no choice then. Our values were dictated. Our
minds were
so
open then; we possessed all
the
'
capabilities.· But they
were closed so easily; all
the
alternatives shut off, some forever.
·
Some philosophers have ch~en to view life mly
as
living and dying.
THE
CIRCLE
'
1
·
,
By doing so, they enter tile worst field of fatalism. Their decisions
and directives are no longer based on choices but rather serve
as
proofs for definites.
·
If
it's true that we
·
can
never know about the
·
days
_ -
·
to come; then why does man base·his future on
his
past? There is a
definite fear in living in the "now" for in doing
so,
we neither base
_
our
li\'.es on the past not the future
·
but; rather; on the person:
.
Such
decision making is flagrant
.
in our ,ivorld, for our' experiences are
relevant only as.long as they relate to
:
others. But for
·
those who
,
choose:
_·_.
·
.
,
.
· ..
\
.
"Leo, July 24-August
Zi.
Y~~
~If-confidence
and
now
of
energy'~
underlined by four planets
iii
Fire Sagittaritis, giving you · the
op-
portunity to·advailce many ideas yoti have been
holding;
waiting'for
an
appropriate time
:
to introduce:them
;
To publicize, communicate,
to
sell ideas would be most suitable,at the new moon and
·
would
bring
suitable buyers. Move fast;
-
as'the month ends;
so
do
the opportunities; .
You excel at a job in
'which
sympathy and understanding are needed. ·
You can sense a need and cater
to
the situation.·
H
you take.initiative
now
.....
"
_
·.
.
,
.
.
.
.
-~
_
.
_
·
. . ..
,
· _
_
_
Last November a Marist student, who knows
-my
birthday falls in
August, came
to
me, somewhat exdted and said "You don't believe in
astrology? Look how true
:
this is
'
!"
·
.
·
·
.
-
IJriust admit I was flatterro when a studeht identifies the chaplain
with the·qualities: "Yoµr self"<!OnfideQce and flow ot energy; you
:
excel at
a
job in which sympathy,
·
etc/' Isurely pray and hope that
thos~ would be my -qualities. But,
at
the same time,
J
would rather
hope that this would be due to niy Christian
·
commitment
and not
.
.
because
of
four planets
in
a certain position
:
! b
_
ate to
·
thtnk that
I work
hard because the Moon in Pisces and Pluto
in Cancer are in harmo
·
ny,
or tl_lat the mutable signs Gemini,,Yirgo, Sagittaritis and
,
Pisces; form
a cross; or that Mars is in transit from Aquarius
to
Pis~.
·
Instead
I would like to believe that my drive comes from the living
words of Christ that come to me
.
through the Spirit:
:
"A man
can
have
to
gr~ter love than to lay down
his
life for hisfriends" (John
15, 13).
For me these words summarize the
.
meaning
of
·
all Christian
ministry.
I believe that a
·
nyone (students; faculty, staff), anyone who
tries to live with or for someone
is
a
Christian minister. Henri
Nouwen
in his
book
"Creative Ministry'; says: "There are many people who,
through long training, have reached a high level of competence
in
terms of the understanding of human behavior, but few who are
willing
to
lay down their own lives for others
·
and make their weakness
a source of creativity
;
,
For many individUals, professional training
'
means power. But the minister ,
•
who takes off his clothes to wash the
·
feet of his friends, is powerless, and his training and formation are
.
meant
to
enable him to face
his
own
weakness without
fear
and make
it available to others.
It
is
exactly tllis
~ea
live weakness that gives th-:.
·
e ministry its momenti,un: '
:
.
"Ministry
·
means the ongoing attenipUo put one's own search for
.
God, ~th all the moments of pain and joy,
·
despair
and hope, at the
·
·
disposal of those who want to
join
this
sear
.
ch but do
'
not- knovthow:
....
Therefore, miJlistryJn no
_
\Vay
_
~
:
a privUege. Instead iUs the ccre of
.
_
;
.
.•• .
. _.
.
_
to
do so, t'heir;wor)d if lacking
;
the
!'.If only
I could
;
hav~ .. /'. and ~- ...
,
: ..
,, ..
·
.
: :: !
'.'.S~r-r:~~i;Jifti{i~oJfrit~~/ai:~'l~~til:~
·
:
Jiii
)~:
/.
-
~.:
·
.
;
.
:
;
-
~.
,,
years.
In
finding moments'
.
time
·
is
:
neither
'.
long nor sh~rt. In'
filliii~
·
.
·
.
these moments, time is
-
of.no
.
essence, for it is the tnonients,
-
not
the·
time, that holds the importance. You see
as
we
·
were orice first:
graders; we are now all first graders
to
the
world. We ~ave all
been
.
frightened by newness, and have often compared our s
_
1ze
·
to that
_of
·
-
'?1~lrt#~
-
u:~~:.#~~,
.
~;~;i::::::&~h~~i~=r~;
c1,i}
'.;
~:\
,,'.iL~
-
._
-
·
.
_
:
.
;
;
-
us
graw together
as
Ghtjsti
_
a~ nurusters,
:
mobvated
by themessage
:
or
·
· ,
.
·
·,.
'
.
..
<.:
·
·
Christi not
:
bfVerius m~vm,g
·
n;i~
_
ijie lucky zone
·
or Jupiter at
.
home
'
·
with
Sagittarius.··
·
<\
'-C.
-·
· .
,
· . :
:
·:, ·
<
>
.
''
others. We are watched constantly, and are taught
Ues
which only we
can turn into truths. And we all hold the capabilities;
·
which only we
I hope it's 11ot Mercury
bolstered
by Jupiter
;
Neptune·and Venus, but
mt
Christian
:·
coml'nitnient
;
_
that
·
~ade me atten~ a workshop for
chaphµns where, thrinigh
.
inuch
;"
hard
work,
new insights were
·
de~eloped. Butrm_willirtg Wgive credit
to
anysun,
_
s~
(r
planet, that·
it took
.
place
in sunny.FloriAA, wher
_
e in January
-
the temperature·
hovered ~
-
the low eigh~ies/\Ybere after the convention I
.
was able
to
stay with the MaristBrC)thers
'
in MiainLI enjoyed.Miaini
_
Beacll;the
·.
Parrot Jtirigl
_
e, The ~quar_iwn,, Jamaica Inn arid Flipper himself
.
in
•
·
can leave open.
·
--
•
'
.
.
_
·
. '
-•
.
.
-
.
It is the living
·
of life that
is
important;
arid
not
the ."hows
0
~nd
"whys". For if the ''hows" and ''whys" were the reason for living,
then we would not know that we had lived until
we
die.
. .
the flesh
. ,
_
· .
:
.
·_
·
.
·
•
-··
.
- -
. ·.
,
·
·
'.
·
·
.
.
.
~
oid
Joe
Rubino aiid
Bili
O'Reilly tookrne out
~
diim~
at
The
Steak and Brew; then
we
went to
a
rri.unmy
drinking
place where
ttiey
practically threw
tm
out because all
-
we
.
wanted was
·
ooe drink (coke for
. Bill); we
·
just wanted to look-see;
.
then:haw their
_
clieap apartineitF-
.surrolttlded
.
by palni
trees,
.
with their_-'private,
swimming
pool.-
It's.
· .
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
diffi~iilf
to
describe
Joe
and
Bill; except
to
miy they
·
are
as
crazy
as
.
>;
·
:.
·
.
-
:
·
_
_
-
·
_
-
_,
__
-
. .-
..
.
_-
-
.
·
.
-_
everandasseri~~ever.TwOMrthY
,_
alumnt
·
:_·
_
_
/
:
_
_
_
~
-
-
. ··
'T
I
,
.
,
t
,
·
.
p
.
: .
,
.
Anyway, I'm
·
willing to
give.
credit:to.the
'
~tars for nice
little ~ .
,
·
"
.0
,
un ~er
_
..
rogralll
:?J!8g:~1:;~:!:~fst:}'
,
a~t~P-t_~~~8<:Cf~g~tll~~iflit_
·
by
Brendan M~ney
.
·
·
·
·
·
· ,
·
·
·
..
·
·
·
•
Compared to
existent
volunteer
assistance programs, the lay
volunteer scheme
is
but
an
infant
amongst giants
·
. The idea for the
program oddly enough
.
came not
.
from the lay ;tpostolate but from
the
religious community in the
person of Br. John Cherry f.m.s.
Fired up with the
zeal
9f the post
Vatican
II era, Br. John of the
Esopus
Province of New York set
about to challenge the Christian
laity with the gauntlet of social
involvement.
The goal of the program
is
to
.:
offer lay men the
opportunity
for
service in conformity with ooe's
particular skills or training in or
without side
the
Marist Brothers
Schools.
This
role
is
meant to·
assist the brothers
in their
apostolate
through
educati~
but
it is by
no
means meant to unply
one's restrictim to
the
brother's
·
schools.
In
the
second year of operation
and in consideration
of the
very
limited resources of the volun-
teers it appears, to
the
credit
of
alt
concerned, that
the
laity have
accepted
·
the
gauntlet
of
Christian
witness.
Today the
program
bas volun~ who've
taken
up
the
challenge
throughout the world.
4
~te
.
serving in Pago
.
Pago,
·
.
The volunteer p~gram here
·
in
. ,
•
~
'
c
American
Samoa
Pago -Pago has been/from the
· .
:
·
.
.
,
_
.
•
·
·
.
, .
·.
<
. .
..
·
.
_
.
. . -
..
·
..
_
1
Kobe, Japan
·
point·of view
.
of both voltmteer
·
. a diyersity
in
1mnityles
by'no
:
the
'
parbes
·
are ~mm~y en-
·
3
BrownesviUe, Texas
,
_.
and
·
brother;
.
a great
_
success.
:
means detracts from
··
our
--
com-
·
·.
dless.Generally
_
everyFriday~
:
4
Laredo, Texas
From the day we
.
arrivecl in munity' life;
·
if
·
anything . it. co~u,nitr assembl~ _for a
~
1
~
3 New York City, Inner City
Augusttillthepresentwe'vebeen favorably complicates it with a ·fia fra or
.
8aJ!toanfiesta
_
and
Schools
·
·
completely
·
accepted ·by• the
.
.
new dimension in Christian living
Sun_da)'s_ are the
_
most enjoyabl
_
e
.
3
opa Locka, Florida
Marist Community. Despite
om·
,
and a
dash of humor .
.
You
can
.
feasts with always pl~nty of food
1
Scotch, Plains, New Jersey
lroad differences such
.
as
·
•iri
~
imagine approaching the Br'. Pri-
.
.
.
and even dessert;
·
.
...
.
.
.
.
1
Brooklyn,
New York working
dress styles, n~tionality,
·and
nci~ asking him for the keys to
.
·
·
The house we Jive
m
w_as built
at the
N.
Y. Thetaputic Center
,
political and religious points of the
comn11.1~ty
car
to
go
out on
a
for
us
by the b~others.
It
1s
a five
For the volunteer
himself
there
.
view (if
.
in fact
they·
are
dif-
date!! Such
an
encounter
can
be
..
bedroom
·
h~can~
·
_house. con~
is
little to expect in
·
financial
ferences at all) both btother
·
anc1
quite typical here exposing both
structed
~ withs~d 200 ~- per
gain.Heisgivenastipendof$50a
volunteer
·
share in the
·same
brother
and
volunteer·alike
to
hour winds. With \ls_ four
month for his
.
necessary ex-
communal life.
new experien@S.
.
.
·
volunteers lives one of the
penses. Also
he is
provided
round
··
Probably
the
greatest asset to·
Our daily
·
schedule
.....
generally
yuunger
Kiwie brothers (a New_
trip transportatio1f by the our work is
the community with coincides with
that
of.· the
7.ealander)
called Br.
Godfrey.
brother's commlttlity
with
whom
which we live.
From
it we
·
deri've brothers' except for
.
getting
up;·
.
.
We jmt
~
hi~God
for ~t._
·
he normally lives
_but
outside of
strength in-our common goals, which is for us instead·
of
5:30
.
•
Our
home
-'
JS
qwte nice
~th
a
this
he
lives
to
serve without
assurance in our friendships, and AM.,
8:00.
Teaching
begins at
T.
V.,
record player, kitchen
illusion
of profits.
.
love
in
mutual
•
sacrifice. For all
8:00
_
with Paul. Browne
.
in-
appliances, community
r<>om,
Currently
the
Lay Volunteer
these
treasures we give our
structing
English
·
or Language
and
all ~ .
hmuies
we
are un-
Office is
iri
New York from
.
where
dedication
·
to
the
friends we've
Arts,
·
Philip
Glennon
on
foctunately accustomed. to ex-·
Br.
J ~
is planning for
the
next
made
and students we
teach:
.
American
History·
and Social
pect:
·
.
·
year
expansion
into
Appalachia
Although
we
share commwiity Studies, ·and myself,
Brendan
To
·
us,
the
·
Lay Volunteer
and into
the
field of
drug
abuse.
life
there are
differences
in life
Mooney
sharing
Social Studies
Program is
an
exceptional op-
To
the volunteers who make up styles. These also are
worth
with Phil in
grades
9
&
n
and
·
portunity to begin our post .
theprogramthereisnomoontain
oommenttng·upon
for
they
.
too·
teaching
World
History
to grade
collegecareerbyleamingwbatit
high enough that can't
be.
clim-
make up
our
life
as
.
a· volunteer
9.
Brian
Mcintee,
·
the
fourth
is
to give for
a
cbang~ Now, that
bed.
Because
o(
this
·
idealism
and help, from
our
point of view, volunteer from Notre Dame
we've graduated Marist
and
a
there are
no obstacles
preventing
to rocmd
it
out.
'lbe
Marist
tea~ES
Math and Science. All
d
f ~
year interim
of
$15 a week .
a
limiUess
expansion
of
the Brothers live
as
a
religious
order
us
also take
after
school
ac-
from Mom
and
Dad, loam, and ·
irogram.
Wherever
there
are dedicated
to
the
celibate life. We tivities
·
such
as
student
council,
just
iri
general exploiting
life
it
is
areas of human
deprivation
there are
four
·
not
so
celibate
hay
football,
basketball, ••.•
etc.
,
~
to
know
that
the
ava-
lies
the
potential
·
of
the
Lay
'lolunteers
·
who are
.
quite
Our
meals are all CogefJJer and
ilability
d
this experience
is just
Volunteer.
available
young
bachelors.
SUch
·
ayes away.
·
.'
.
.
JANUARY 27
·
1972
·
TIIECJRCLE
ClRCl.E
>
EDITORIALS
·
.
.
·
~ll~8e
<
~Qu1Jlci1
·
·
.
·
•
"-~~~1~?i;.!::~~~~
.I
.
•
•
Th~ concept for
·
establisbiniJ
~
Cc>llege Council
has
been in effect for·
who have been brought to Marist during the past year. First, let me
ovel".
:
a year and a half now, having originll~ fro~ the President's
state the assumptions under which I am operating:
.
Summer Planning Committee.-Numerous meetings
with
regard
to
_
this
.
.
1.
The
speakers are paid rather sizeable amounts from fWlds ad-
proposal have been held, opinions have been exchanged, votes have
·
ministered by the College Union Board. These funds are obtained from
been taken, and a long list
of
"revisions
.
have been made:
Yet,
the·
student fees, collected from all students.
longed for Council is stilLtinder consideration.
·
'.·
· · ·
·
·
·
2.
.
The purpose of these lectures is educational, i.e. to expose
This proposal was
·approved
in early December by the Interim
students to important personalities; new or prominent ideas; to
College Council
on
a vote of23-3; however; before the.
,
CouncUcan be
s~imulate discussion or criticalthought. The lecture series is not a
implemented approval is needed fr~m
-
the faculty;
-
·
the
·
staff
·
and
political
·
instrument
to
advance the views of any group of students or
students.
If
approved by all, the Council,
acccr~
to
proposed
plans
.
·
any group of faculty.
·
.
willgointoeffecttolaterthanAprill,ofthisyear.
.
.
.
3.
The ideal aim
of
a lecture program should be to assemble a
·
It is the Circle's desire and thatof
a
number
of
concerned studehts
schedule of varied speakers, of various persuasions and from a
that
this
proposal
-
be initiated. Such
a
College Council is a must
if
variety of fields.
·
Marist
•
students
ate
to become involved in academic
and
policy
4.
Prominent speakers who may not share a radical or "anti-
making aspects.
·rt
is felt that such a Council would act as
·a
liason
establishmentarian" point of view could also be obtained within the
among students, faculty and staff. Though all the evidence is not
in
a,
budgetary limitations of the C.U.B.
to what would be the results andimplicatioos of this Council, it is felt
Operating under these assumptions, I question whether
·
or not the
that some beginning is better than
no
beginni~ at
all:
·
lecture series has
been
truly educational. It seems that the major
Letters To
.
.
the
Editors
·
Gradu
-
ation
Dear Editor,
ceremony,"the
Jee
must be
tw.d .
.
Remember someone has
to
wnte
··
up, print and send out transc~pts
_
·
at your request after gr~du~bon.
In
.
conclusion we rrught add
.
Ladies arid gentiemen- of the
.
that
·
"Senior Week" is being
Senior class, especially those who
.
·
worked out, and also th
.
e guest
are graduating in May of
.
1972;
speaker for graduation
·
i_s
!1ot
.
with
the spring semester upon
us,
final. It is also worth menborung
we as
·
seniors have
·
only one
that any senior unsure of his
semester
,to
go_ here at Marist.
academic
requirements
to
The senior class executive board
complete the year for his
or
her
has
been
·
preparing
for
degree.
to
check with Brother
graduation in May. Although it
King at the Registrar's office.
may sound fwmy to start
,
this
Daniel Cappio
.
·
earlyinthesemesteritis
_
th~way
•
·
,
•
Pres.Classof'72
· ·
of-producing a
_
m
_
ore mearungful
.
•·
·
•
_.
_
.
·
..
_
.
·
.
:
·
·.
.
. '.
·
·
: •
·
speakers have been remarkably similar in experiences and in point of
view. These views certainly deserve expression on our campus, but
so
too do opposing viewpoints or more moderate approaches to the
problems under discussion.
Perhaps one factor contributing to the limited range of expres~ion
found in the series is the lack
of
adequate consulatation by the lecture
sponsors with a broad enough section of the Marist community.
It
seems that a more concerted effort to recognize
the
variety of in-
.
terests· and beliefs of those who ultimately "foot the bill"
.
for the
program would result in a more di verse schedule of speakers.
Perhaps, the lecture committee could note the progress made by
THE CIRCLE which has made a serious effort to
expose
its readers to
a variety of viewpoints on the issues upon which it
has
chosen
lo
focus.
I am sure that the lecture committee has expended a great deal of
time and effort in constructing its program.
Its
results could have
been even more significant if it had chosen to ex:pand its perspective
lo
include in its program a more diverse collection of presentations.
After Groppi, McAllister, and Kunstler, was Dellinger really
necessary, except to drive home the message of "the cause."
Please, in answering do not distort what is said.
Cl)
It does not say
that their cause(s) is either good or bad. (2)
It
does not say that any
one of them should not have been invited to speak here.
IN
THE
INTEREST
OF
Science lab hope to perform urine
SCIENCE
analyses. Your help is needed. If
Urine samples needed:
·
you feel you can spare it, only a
PAGEJ
.
graduatio11._
.
W~
.
'
.·
lecenUy
.•
· ,
-
·
rn
·
h
".
·
.
'
D
··
.
·
.·
·.
.·
-·•
.
·
.
_.distributed_aqu~~1ona1reJo~he
;>
-
·
·
;.,
.
.
:;
_
.
·
·-
e-
.
,c.
e
-
--
an
,,-:
With the growing concern over
small sample of your urin~ : is_
pollution and the environment;
needed.
·
Please
·
plac~
·
yout
:
.
. ,
.
we should and
mustc,
..
whenever
·
·
sample-in•an
.
unmarked
·
1ar
'
and _..··:_--·
···
-
.
s~nJ~rs. bo~\day
.
,-~d:,-ev~ng
'.
'
~.;,,'.
'~?;·:
:-
:-
:
,
c
:·
-
...
<
.
;
.
,
-
.
:
>
;
:
\ _
.
·
~v1s
_
1on
;·
'l'he
·
tssJ!!S
·
ID
•
question
..
·_ /
Foriris dated 13 Dec~mber
,
1971
.
.
were
,.
caps_
-
and. goWI)s
:
at
,
the
:
·.
were'circulated to all'seniors '!Vho
.
,',
graau
:
atton
.
-
ceremony,
.
.
.
·
are
.
potential graduates
·
in
,
.
suggestions for
_
a g_ue~t speaker,
·
_
·
January; May_ and August 197?-
.
and
.
th~ determmants of
•
a
.
,
The completion of these forms 1s
graduatt
,
on fee. The resul~
.
were
· ·
necessary ·for the effective ·ad-
-
~
-
follows:
-1~2
.
students di<l not
.
ministrative processing of detai}s
·._
wish
to wear a cap and gown at
.
:
· .
connected
.
with commencement
-
·
gra
_
duatio11 an(l
43
an_sw~red yes.
exercises,
.
diploma
·
preparation
.
·
·
.
(20
stud~nts were mdi!ferent).
·
and other concluding aspects of
·
a
Un~er· this _assumption,
111 .
or~er
graduate's college career. . .
to crea~e some sort of f_prmality,
.
If.you are a potential graduate
the senior c~ass execubve board
in January, :r.fay or August of
.
1972
·
·
recommends
.-
that y~u DO NOT
·
•
and
you have not
received
one of
·
.
ordel_' a. cap and
_
gown for the
these
-
fomi.s, please stop at the
·
graduation,ce~mony. Howe".er,
Office of the Academic
Dean as
1?ecause
.
we could. not prohibit
-
· soon
!lS
.
·
possible to
·
pick
·
up and
anyone from weanng
.
one, they
•
·
complete one of
these
forms.
may
be
ordered at a later date.
.
·
.
-
<Notice·
will
.
be
.
_
posted
:
by
academic dean).
.
.
._ .
.
.
.
.
.
·
The
:.
senior
·
.
.
class
·
_.
executive
'.
·
board
suggested
the
·
possibility
or
,
·
·
having
.the
graduation· an-
nouncements printed on recycled
paper.
.
This procesi. was
·
:in-
vestigated, but due to varying
.
:- ·
circumstances,
suc:h
as
·
price aild
·
. .
quality; the idea
'
.
has been can-
-
celled.
It
is
noteworthy however,
even though the pr~t company
.
being used does not use
·
reclaimed
paper, · their
_ production
··
plants
·
are very
ecol!)gy minded.
·
.
We are also aware of
an ISSue
concerning
·
the graduation
:
fee
that is employed here at
Marist
to
·
those
seniors
·
wishing
to
graduate.
Last
year's fee
was
$25.00
and
_
a fe:w students
.
disputed
·
the
payment because
they weren't going to
wear
a
cap
and gown.
As
one administrator
put
it,
this.
fee
should
be
called
a
"getting--OUt fee", because
of.
bow
the money is
used.
-
.
The fact
of
the
matter is, that
our
graduation fee covers about
one half of
the
actual
cost.
'Ibis
cost
includes processing marks,
·
printing of diplomas and an-
nouncements;
·
maintenance
before and
after
the graduation
ceremony,
and
an
extra
expense
this
year is rental
of.
a
tent
in
case
of
rain. Regardless
of
whether or
not a senior
does attend
the
·
Dear
-
Editor,
· As
usual
:an
imbroglio has
resulted over
·
relevance. One
course
I
feel woµld be very
.
relevant (because of recent
-.
trends toward legalization)
· would be a course concerning
gambling.
-
It
could
_
be
.
~l!tled
Introduction , To The Prmc1ples
Of Gambling
·
711.
(It
would
probably be best as a
·
night
course.>
I
believe that
any
young
.
adult, taking his place in the
world, should know how
to
play
the standard games of society
if
he is to be well adjusted and fit
in.
There-fore · I
propose
a
curriculum including
poker,
stud
(5,6,7,
and
8
card
.
varieties)',
black-jack, craps, roulette, and
slap jack.
other skills
which
might come
in
handy would be a
mastery
of contract bridge, cut
throat pinochle, and especially
handicapping. The textbook
would of
course
by ACCORDING
TO HOYLE,
with
,
supplementary·
readings in
books
on probability
and card
tricks.
Field trips could
be taken to Aqueduct and longer
ones
to
Las
Vegas
·
or Reno. 'Ibis
course
could be
subsumed under
tbe
gym
curriculmn or
perhaps
even
be offered
as an elective
in -
humanities.
the chance arises,
.
take action to
deliver it to the Environmental
·
-
..
.
aid in bettering our environment
Science lab in Donnelly Hall
.
No
and man's knowledge of it.
·
questions will be asked. This is
·
In an effort to
·
become more
your. chance to better your
.
en-
aware of the effect of en-
vironment,
so
please help and
vironmental
_
elements
on
the
_
contribute
'
your uri_ne sample a~
human
body
-,
Dr. Rehwoldt and
soon as possible.
students
of
the Environmental
Special Announcement
The Residence Office has been informed by Dr. Gerald Weiss,
FMS.,
Coordinator of
the
Marist Brothers
.
Communicyr
of
Gregory House, that
as
of September, 1972 the Marist Brothers will no longer have need
of
Gregory House as living quarters.
To this end we are inviting groups to form themselves and make
formal request
to
the Residence Director for the
use
cf
the House as a
residence hall.
·
.
Formal requests must be qiade
no
later than February
11,
1972. Such
requests should state clearly and concretely the plans each group has
for the house and its
use,
and
a
definite list of people involved. The
House can accomodate 32 residents. Any group applying must
guarantee full capacity and it should be co~, in keeping with our
ovei:-all residence haJl policy concerning co-ed living. Each group
should, if possible, also have a faculty
_
or administrative sponsor who
would
be
willing to work with the group
.
The final decision and awarding of the Hoose will be made early
February by the Inter-House Council after public hearings to screen
each group.
If there are any specific questions please direct them
to
Mr.
Fred Lambert any day in the Residence Office
.
Draft Counselli_ng
Hours
_
Announced
Local assistance
to
young men
seeking help. with Selective
•
Service will
soon
be available
from the "peaCEnter"
·
in the
Friends meetinghouse,
249
Hooker
Ave., Poughkeepsie. The
Draft Counselling and In-
formation Service of Dutchess
ColBlty
annotmces that the
center
will be staffed by qualified
counsellors every Tuesday and
Thursday evening from
7:30
p.m.
lBltil
at least
9:30
p.m. Anyone
wishing
knowledge
·
about their
status with
the
·
draft is en-
couraged to come
in
during
those
hours.
•
Local draft
counsellors
have
answered more
than
2,500
calls
for
their
service..c; since the
--
--
program was launched in
February 1969. Although their
headquarters
·
are
in
i;>oughkeepsie, counsellors come
from
throughout
Dutchess
County. Therefore, they can
assist young men anywhere in the
.
county. Personal appointments
are
made when the draft coun-
selling telephone number is
called; and that number is
471-
9616.
Those just wishing to
drop
il:l
to
the "peaCEnter" for help may do
so
any Tuesday or Thursday
evening after
February
1.
The
''peaCEnter" is also open for
study
from
9:00a.m. tmtil
at
least
5:00 p.m. ev~ day.
I
I
I
I
I·
•.r
l'AGI". 4
'THE CIRCLE
JANUARY 2711972 .
. Red·
:Fo,tes-:Jo'. Face ,N1ackf:
·
Monmo.uth>:·and···Sacred·
Heart
. The Red Foxes· take on three .
is
~ext with 12.0 an~· anoth«;r:: Uleir home c ~ ~ -
. .
".antage: M~st ·defeated -the·,...
third
.leading scorer. with a
33
opponents this week
as
the season
semor,
~Y
Clarke_; 1~ _also
m ·· -
<>,n Sa~day,. mgbt the · Red
Hawks . last
season
in point. average and 1s
also_
the
rounds into full swing. The Red. · double figures _with. a~ 11.9 Foxes will travel to W~t Long
Poughkeepsie 91-85. _ · .
..
team's leading rebounder with a
Foxes will play at home tonight,
averag~. F~osh Mike ,!:{art 1s ~so Branch; N.,J. to take on . the
On Monda • night the · Red
21 point
per
game avera~e.
January 27th against Nyack
_aver~gtn~ m double figures with Haw~
of
.Monmouth College
m
a
Foxes return fume
to
face Sacred Roun~ng out t11e·f~nt court with
Missionary College· in an im-
a
11.4
pomt average.
.
non-conference. enc~unter.
Heart This will
be
the biggest· OLernota
are
a
pair
of 6'6"ers,
portant Central Atlantic College. · Marist's defensive ::iverag~ Monmouth comes mto ll:ie g~e ,_ test or·the season for the Red
MikeEiririgandKevinKelly. The
Conference game. T_he Red Foxes
was ~6th in the nation l)nor to !he · with an _8-~ record after-~
~!:rf
Foxes as. Sacred Heart comes
probable backcourt starters
·will
will then travel to West Long
Dc;>whng gam!. In the Dowling
road. trip .. Monmouth. IS
.
Y
into the game with
aJi
impressive
be Joe Blacker and
Bob
Gers.
Branch. N.J .. to- face N.A.I.A. , .game the M~ISt defense allow~ N.A.I.~.
AllAl!lertcan · ~:
l6-l
record.
The
Pioneers are led . 'Ibis game will mark the fourth
powerhouse Monmouth . College·
only 54 pomts to lower
~eil'
~lecki, a 6-7_ Semo~ Center..
.
by
All-American · candidate Ed enco~ter 'with · Sacred ~eart
on Saturday night.The Foxes will
average to 63.6
p(!f
game .. ·.. .
. IS currently averagmg 18 pomts
Czerriota, :their 6'9" ~enior· . holding a 3-0 ec,ge. Last
year
~he
complete the, week at home with
on
Thursday mgbt,
the
Red • and 15. rebounds per game._
center · Czernoia
is
the
nation's
Red Foxes were defeated at
an
encounter with Sacred Heart · Foxes.will entertain the Fighting· . Helping.out in the front court are -
·
·
Bridgeport
by
the Pioneers 86-78.
on
Mon. Jan. 31st.
Parsons of Nyack Missionary
a pair of 6'5" forwardsebo,
Mardsk ··
·
·
·
Marist is 8-2 after defeating
College. The Parsons · came into . Kelly, (10 points artd 13 r . un
Dowling College 8.5·54. This was
the·game with a 3-9 record, and
0-
per gaine) and Paul Pozik (10
an important C.A.C.C: game.
5inconferenceplay.
'!be
Parsons
points and 10 reb?unds dper
Marist is tied for first place with · are led by Senior Forward Chuck
game.) The team s lea e~,
Dowling with identical
H
league
Cardia
who · is :currently - howevet, is 6'4" guard Charlie
records.
averaging 17 points
pej
game.
West. ~est is ~urrently the
team
Senior captain Joe Scott, who
This
will
mark the ·. eighth ,leader
m
sconng 18.6_ per game
passed ·the 1,000 point mark . meeting for these two dubs with
average a1_1d re~unding 18_ per
against Dowling, leads the team ·Marist holding a 7-0 advantage:. ·
gamf:.
This will
be .
the l~th
in scoring with a 17.4 · point
Earlier in the season the Red
meetmg for these two clubs with
average. Senior Brian McGowan
Foxes· defeated the Parsons on· Monmouth · holding a 10-3 ad-
•• Frosh
.Defe~t
Dowling
Last Saturday night the fresh-
man basketball team defeated
the Dowling College yearlings 85-
71 in a conference game.
Most of· the first half was
m~rred by sloppy play on the
by
the
M,S.I,
· ·part of both teams. Late in the
half Coach Bill Foster began to
substitute freely giving thestart,
ers a rest while wearing the
· Dowling team down. Subs Bruce
White and Steve Murphy hit key
baskets in leading the little foxes
to a 31-24 first-half lead.
. Scott Nets l,OOOth. Point
..
The second half was all·Marist,
as the little red foxes utilized a ·
devastating full court press
which broke th~ game open,
When,Dowling tried to full court
·on Saturday night, January 22,
Marist
College
Basketball
Joe. Scott, Senior Captain · of the History · to reach· the 1,000 point
Marist College Varsity Team plateau anq nee~ only 98 points
scored . his . 1,000 point of his in his remaining 13 games to
career; Joe scored his 1,oooth- place him as the top scorer
in
point with just 6:43 remaining
in
Marist · College · Basketball
the game when he hit two foul
History.
.
..... pressAhe:good.team· play: of-the--~-
, frosli 'enabled-them·to·score
on
a
.
. number·t>f easy baskets,.
shots to· put Marist ahead and
· Joe is currently the team
Jead them to an easy 85-54 victory leader in scoring with a 18.4 point
over-'Dowling College.
,!oe
who average and is also the· team's
was hampered ·throughout .. most .. · 1eading rebounder_ with a ·13.4
' of. the game with four personal average.· Joe Scott's ··fine
.,
The high-scorers for ·Marist
were Tim Murphy_ with 17 and.
Steve . M,urphy with 15.
Joe·: ·
Cirasella added 13, Al Fairhurst
added 11 · and Bruce White
whipped in with 10. High scorers
for- Dowling were Larry Heine
with 24; Steve· Ramsey with
12,and Tom Blaire with 11.
fouls ended the evening with just leadership off ·and on· the court is
eight points, well below his 17 one of the main ingredients
iii
point season average. · ·
_ Marist's fine 8-2 record so far this
.
.
. Joe is only the sixth player in season.
Marist Gets· 5 Berths on All-Conference Squad
· The next game ·for· the
team
will
be
Thursday at U>urdes
against Nyack College,
lit
their
first meeting · of the season,
Marist won 74-53 ..
Five members of the . Marist says, "continuous hustle
iS
the the freshman members of the All
College Soccer T~m have .been mark of .. Charlie's game, . he's C.A.C.C. Squad. During the 1971
,named
to
the , All Conference always moving and atticipating ., season Tom started for the Red
Squad of ~e Cehtral·· ,Atlantic ,extremely well on _ the ··field .. Foxes in the ·center full ,back
College Conference. .
Although he didn'tplayJaslyear -position." In evaluating· Tom's
Peter Walaszck;
a
senior
b-
whilestlidying in France; Charlie tenure a:t
<·
Marist so far Dr .
... w.
r·
..
e·. s.
t
I.•,
n
g
.
usiness major'. is a .. former didn't loose any of the speed he Goldman feels, "he was tough,
Roosevelt High graduate. and All . posseSsed as • a 'freshman. I'm strong and aggressive throughout
, County Soccer Player. This
is
:really. looking · forward to the season. His excellent heading
by
John
Redmond
Pete's second year, on the .All qtarlie's return. next year an~ ,playing in the.· swee)?E!r
I.
nJ·u·
r·,e· s Plag· ue Team
C;A.C.C. ,roster. Head coach.Dr. ' because he's one of the :most . position anchored the defensive
·
· .· .
~
. ; ·•·· . · .
.
·Howard·
Goldman rates Pete,as, ·. consistent and · dependable linefor
1:15.
Tom really adjusted to
:sure 2-4 s.ounds like_ a poor ... ''the dominant figure on offense.• players on the team." Charles is the college game very well ~d
r~ord, but ~c1cts not excuses t~
His · outstanding-
·dribbling a resident · of the Bronx but should do great things for the
the story ~1;>out . the Marist - coupled •· with his
speed
and originally moved from the West squad i!l, his next three years
of
,gra~plers
this ~so~.
. .
agressive play helped to set up· lndjes.
soccer play."··
Right after ~wmng powerful
shots for his teammates. During . Thomas . . McDonald,
a · Timothy Tortta,
'ii
freshman
· Southhamp~on,. the_ ~restlers . theseasonPeteprimarilyplayed. Rochester, N.Y. native ls one
of and final selectee ·to the ·All
suff~~ed their first mJUIY ·loss.
center forwardbut·at times was· ·
·
Conference Roster from· Marist is
a native of Deer Park, N.J.When
the season began, Tim was
starting in the wing position but
was then moved to center half-
back after the second game.
Coach Goldman elaborates,
"after moving
Tim
he became
the central figure in our mid-field
game. Tim is a very fast, ex-
cellent dribbler and possesses an
exceptionally strong foot. As a .
result he scored 8 goals during
the . season · (tied the 'existing · - ·
record> and was 5 for;; m penalty .
kicks. As Tim learns the short
pass game ·more thoroughly he
will
be
an outstartding player."
1'!e
Jmx
started when tmdefeated
needed as a · wing or. halfback.
M •
·
f
c
I[
B k
f
b. ·
II Sf ,·
■
.
1
.
■
y
■,
:~:~:;_=n~~~~t:::
.-:«rl
1
:
0
~~~:!yn~t::s: ·. -. -·
ar1s
O
1ege
as
e
a : a
IS ICS·
ars1
y
as tho~gh the whole team wanted
adequate replacement." -
to g~t i_nto the act.
..
· .. Patrick Parcells, another
.:..N;.:..AME==---.;___::G:.:.AM=:::E.:::.S_:F;_G:;__---=F;_G~A;;.;;..:P:...CT~-
:;___:Ff:....::.___:FT:-=:.;A:.::_:P:...CT=-.::;..;__;;·RE__;;.;B;:....:.A_V--'G
__
PT_S_A_V_G
In3unes ra~ged from broken
senior selection to the squad was
bones~spramedn~.ByJan.
the
starting·goalie and captain
·JOE SCOTT_
, ·
10
71
127 .559
32 50 .640
132 13.2
15,!-fanstwa~forfeitingasmany
fortheRedFoxesduringthe1971
-RAY CLARKE.
8
36
110 .327 . 23' 33 .697
34 4.3
weigh~ classes as
th
ey were_ campaign. Statistically, Pat is-
BRIAN McGOWAN 6
25
57 .439
22 35
1
.629
65
10.8
wresUmg.
In
the Albany State · credited with 170 saves during his
·
·
·
match last weekr _only _Lance
12 game performance. Coach
MIKE HART
10
41
102 .402
32 40 .800
71
7.1
Lobscomb? . George_ Balzer,
Goldman.feels, position last year
JIM MARTELL
8
28
80 .350
18 29 .620
53 6.6
WadynJeKhezinRanedmanddTtmLave~
forthefirsttime:Hemadeupfor
NICKJACKSON
8
25
47 · .532
8
19 .421
22 2.8
an .
0
n
on
saw ma
his lack
of background in the
JIM BELCHER
7
11 ·
24 .458
4
10
400
17 2.4
action.
. position · by sheer desire and
8
.
·
NewSemester
determination to succeed. His
JIM COSENTINO
7
19
38 .500
16 .500
40 5.7 ·
brings new Wrestlers
quick hands and sharp _reflexes
LES CHENERY
4
9
35 .206
4
6
.667
13 3.3
Since then, however•· the
greatly aided Pat
in
being chosen
JOHN
DILLON
8
7
21
.333
1
2
500
20 2 5
pendulum seems to be swinging
tile
All Con£
Goal·e · the
·
7
·
..._
·
the other way, even to the extent
erence •
1
m •
JOE JOHNSON
· 4
14 .500
9
11
.888 • 15 3.8
league.
It
~oes
Wl
th0
ut saying_
STEVE SHACK.EL
5
16
44 .250
4
20 4.0
that magn~umous man man
that Pat will be very hard to
4
1,000
•~fini hif!awk:gh<tMiketoHfiaghwdt > hthas
replace, next year." Pat is· a
JIM OSIKA
3
2
3
.667
O
1
.000
8
2.7
given
5
wei
up
i
on e
native of Passaic, N .J • and plans
BILL ROSS
3
0
2
.000
0
0
0
mat.
to
go on to Medical School after
.0 0
1
0. 7
In the future, the wrestling graduation.
.
picture will still be clouded with
Charles DePercin, a junior half
MARIST
the loss of Pat Lavelle and otliers.
back selectee to All C.A.C.C.
OPPONENTS
However. the student support Squad is one
of
the
members who
always forshadows the doubts
d
will
be
returning to the squad n-
yesterday
with
the hopes for ext year. In summing up
RECORD
8-2
tomorrow.
Oiarlie's ability
Dr.
Goldman
10
10
297
236
704 .422
<,68
353
'
165 256 .645
163 248 .657
CONFERENCE RECORD
3-1
511
51.1·
414 41.4
174 17.4
95 11.9
72 12.0
.·114 11.4
74. 9.3
58 7.3
26 3.7
46 6.6
22, 5.5 ·
15 1.9
23
5.8
36 7.2.
4
0.8
0
0.0
759 75.9
636 63.6
9.14.1
9.14.2
9.14.3
9.14.4
-
.
<
Induction
.
Noti.Ces Given to
'
Students
·.
~ i : f u l ~ : J : t ~ ~ : = ~ = : : t 1 ~ ' 1 : f
:~:~~ ~~i~
:
·
.
/
··
·
.
·
.
th:
new
:
proc•~1 nghts 1eg1s1~ied b/congress.' Therefore,
\re
.
will
.
~everal key sections for furtbef rev,ew.
'
11ie new regulations
.
which
.
:
:
.
: continue
:
the. suspension of these
actions
until the
'
new regulations '
,
1mplemenLthe rec~nt·
'.
amendments to
the
draft law
..
were
.·
first
,.
:
·
'
governing
tllese
-p,;oce~es are form~ly issued."
.
'
.
. .. _'
,
.
.
.
.
· .
published in propose(I forlli
in
the
Federal Register
of
November
3, 4
'
Tarr noted
-
however, that local boards
are continliihg to·register
·
.
and
s .
..
.
•·
. . .
,
.
.
.
.
.
•
.
,
.
,
·
.•
•
·
· · .
.
.
.
.
.
~
·
.
·
·.
classify and examine yotirig men
and
when
·
requested by the Depart
.:
·
.
.
Selective
Service
Director Curtis
w.
Tarr said that
.
he
has
decided
to
:
ment
of
·
Defense they also will issue inductim
notices to
young men
reevaluate in their entirety those provisions which deal with the
who
are
no longer eligib~e for personal appearances
or
appeals.
•
..
.
; proced~res for appearances before local boards, the
·
guidelines
·
Tarr said that he plans
.
to publish
the provisions under review in
.
the
govermng re-opening of classifications, and the procedures for
ap-
Federal
,
Register
·
for
.
further public comment probably in
.
late
peals
.
to appeal
.
boar~ other than the
_
Pr~idential appeal
board ·
December. The provisions cannot be
.
formally issued until
30 days
(sec!1on 162512 and
parts
1624 ~d 1626 of
.
the proposed reguJatjoris
·
haveelaps~since their publishing in the Federal Register.
·
published on November
3).
.
·
.
. .
.
.
The regulations fo'rrilally issued today cmtain many significant
Public response to the proposed regulations focusea on
·
several
.
-
changes in draft policies, including the end of undergraduate student
•
issues contained in the sections being withheld "'lbe depth
of
thought
deferments for those who were not
.
eligible fer deferments during the
•
.
tllat went
in
to
the suggestions
we
received from the general public and
last quarter or semester of the 1970-71 regular academic year,
.
the
·
/
Members of Congress warrants our careful reevaluation of these
~tablishment of a Uniform National Call system for issuing draft
·
policies
,!'.
Tarr said. "Until the
·
regulations on these policies are final"
calls
so
that all men with the same Jottery
·
mnnbers will receive in-
.
Tarr
·
added
,
"our
.
local boards will not conduct any personal ap-
duction notices at approximately the same time,
and
the establish
-
·
pea,rances nor
-
will the appeal boards,
·
other than the Presidential
.
·
ment of classification
l~H
as a "holding
"
category for those
·
appeal ~ard.
_
hear appeals
:
We do not want
~
deprive registrants of
registrants not currently subject
to
active processing for
.
induction.
THE
VOL(}ME
.,
·•
.·
. .
NUMBERI4
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW'YORK 12601
JANUARY 27, 1972
Ea,cUlty on
·
·College Col!,ncil
Cast
·
fin~lized
·
For
Play
A faculty colloquium
to
deal
by
Ann
Gabriele
The aim of Children's Theatre Fitzgibbons - peddler woman
,
with the question
.
of whether
·
or
is to gain an entrance into the Frank De Koskie
-
Berthold, and
not to
.
accept the
·:
recom-
world of childhood fantasy and Jack Ledwith - the mirror. The
mehdatioriofthelnterim
.
College
innocence
.
In
·
.
the past, •
:
cin- dwarfs are as foilows:
'
Cindy
'.:
.
..
·
...
.
Council
,,_
that}t:be
::
rnade
:
_per-
derella
,
"
.
"The Wizard of
Oi
,
"
.
Bodenheimer - Sneezy
,'
Bob
,
,.
,,
manent
·
was held on Friday
.·
·
.
·.·.
.
and •
.
•p~ter
.
Pan
'.'
:
have achiev
.
ed
.
Dressel - Grurripy, John
.
De
.
~
_'.
..
~
.
.
.
:
.
-
.
·
·
.
·
.
:
.
-
_·
·.·
•
.
·.•··•
.
, : : \ •
.
·
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7
.
·
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.
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..
·
·
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-
...
-
.
~th~
.
.
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.
a
.-
.
e
·
JJ
·
s
·•
Fu
.
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·•
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c~
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ytil
l
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t
.
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.
'
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.
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.
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11~
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f 1
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om-3arm
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ifc
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.
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e
.
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.
.
:
.
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fb
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o
·
·
·
.
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I
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~~~rui:
.
µ~i~
~
~()~~~~py~
.
_
.,
,
ag€:,
,
to share
m
trus experience.
·
Barbara.
-·
Jala ·
,
,
Sleepy,
,
John
'
_:.:
.
:
·
"
thra
·
ec
j
plli-powi
·
~the
.··.
;
·:··
.
·.
o
.
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·
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1
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0
prrmov
8
itdi
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0
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...
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8
.
. ·
.
.
.
:
;
a
·
tb
.
n
..
·
·
.
de
.
•
.
.
·
·
Ch1
.
ldren
'
s
.
Theatre
.
has now
.
Petraglia
··
_
.
Doc
:
·
The
·
maids
'
in
j
.
wty
.
.
entered its
~
fourth year of waiting
·
are
:
Rosanne Avalone
·
clarification ..on the resolution
)
·
·
production with thE
f:
begi!1fiing of
.
B
_
arbara
.
Han~a, Mary
·
M~
· thafa pemianerit
·
College Councif
rehearsals for CCSn~w
Wlnte" last Grellis,
·•
Betty
.
.
Greene; Kathy
be estabHshed in the Spring of72
:
Tut>,sday
.
under the ~:r;ection of -
.
Phillips,. Janet Riley, and Lucy
·
Members
:
.
·
of.
·
the
.
•
Governance
·
c'
9lennCasale and the
.
assistance
··
Squiccarini. The
,
animals are
:
Committee presented statements
of
.
Stan Bojarski. The play is
.
Kevin
-
Keenan
,
Tony &:arrone,
on
the composition
,
scope and
.
·
.
bemg produced by
·
Paul T~ro
.
· Dave Sheehan
,
.
Tom Sales
responsibilities of the
.
proposed
.
.
and the choreogr~phy is handled
.
Emmett Cooke, Kathy Blank and
.
Council
;
which the •
.
faculty
by Mary
.
McGrelhs
,
The week
of
,
Andre Albert.
. :.
.
- reacted to with both pro and con
.
production at Marist
will
begin
on
"Know you what it is
.
to
be
.
a
responses.
_
. .
.
...-
.
.
,
.
-
April.
17;
the cast will also travel childTit is to be something very
The
.
faculty raised questio~
.
·
to Kt!}gston and Dover Plains, different froip. the man of today .
.
regardirig the ratioruile for
the
and hopefully to Kentucky
,
.
ltistohaveaspirityetstreaining
.
stated
.
compositiorio!theColleg~
1
:
or lack
.
of sailiethat
.
wolild or that
_the
··
proposaI
·
is
not
an
..
Maryann Nally as Snow White
.
from
the waters of Baptism;
to
-
Council, the connection
·
between shotild
be piaced on the Council. ultimatum
·
and can
be modified
·
and Tom Checchia
as
the prince believe
.·
in belief ... " this
·
is
ihe various affairs
.
committees
Without definite
-
assurance
of
or discarded upon
witness
of its will head the cast. other mem-
·
Children's Theatre.
·
· and
Jh~
Council, and the
rol~
the
·
what the implications and results
_
failure. The only
thing
that . bers are: Stan Bojarski - queen
·
,
. .
Anyone wishing to help in any
-
Coupc1l woul~
·
~ e !1s either
"
~uld
.
or_ c~uld_
be
;
_of a Council
committee
'wishes fer pr~ently, Joanne Giardino -
•
witc}J • Ji~ way may contact Children's
adv1sory
·
or mediative
m
case
of without brrutations
m
scope; the
·
is
an
acceptance oflhe
proposal
Quirilan - Sir
_
Dandiprat', Midge
·
nieatre. Box C 767.
..
·
.
·
.
·
.
confr~ntations among the various
·
.
·
fac~ty
·
is hesitanUil wanting
·
to
·
.
by
the
Plenary Faclilty
Sessicm
groups
_
and factors represented. i,-abfy
·
such a
,
proposal.
-
The and the ·student ratification
The
•
:
aspe!!t
f:ru.iL
created
,-
the
.
Governance
··
Committee
··
main-
.
group;
to
be
heid soon,
.
for
the
·
great~t discussions be~~n the tains that it
-~ul~
be imJM?SS~le
·
P\ll'POS8
of t,estiilg out some
·
of
the
facuUr
·
and the Goyerna_nce
·
to_ fo!etell
·
JUSt
~at the
un-
q11estions in practice
rather
'
than·
.
·
~
.
-
.
-
.Easter
·
1n
Ireland
Comnnttee w~s on the hm1tations ph~tions can or will
be. but
adds i~
-
rhetoric:
·
· ·
·
Tuesday
,
,
February
1,
the
Gaelic Society
will have
an
Irish
Nite in conjunction with its ail
-.
nual Easter in Ireland
tour.
The
Irisli
nite will take place in room
249 iri
'.
the Campus Center, at
.
8
p
.
m.
'
A representative from the
.
·
EcOlogy
.
Study
Hon
.
ored
..
•
.
by Robert Rehwol~t
-
A
Marist College student,
Denise
'
AlessandreJlo and a
Professor
.
.
·
Emeritus,
·
Dr.
·
Madeline Pierce coauthored a
·
paper entitled· "A Cooperative
Study of the Aquative Life in tlie
Hudson River
·
at Danskammer -
point and Howland." The paper
which compares the variety and
abundance of plant and animal
life in the heat outfaJI at the
Danskammer Point generating
plant to that
,
in an unheated
section of the river was awarded
the "best paper" award at 'the
National Conference in New
York.
The research was carried out
tmder the auspices of Marist's
Environmental ~ience Program
and funded
,
in part, by Central
Hudson Corporation.
Dr. Reh-
woldt, Director
or
the Marist
Program,
was
extremely
gratified by the award. He
viewed it as an example of
the
.
.
by Ed Kwling
Irish
Tourist Board
'
will be
on
Th
Fr
-
·
es1un
·
CJ
. ·
E
'
uti"
.
·
hand to ~ow
a
film
and answer
e . .
en . ass x~
.
ve any questions.
•
Board1smvolved~the~ti~of-
-
The tour is scheduled to leave
_the class of 1975 s c_onsbtutiC?_n. ~Marctr28th and retum
·
April 5th.
~eaded by P~es1dent Jim rhe eight-day guided tour,
Elb~t, the Execub~e Board met highlighted
.
by visits to Blarney
to_ di~uss and review the con- castle
,
.
the Ring of
Kerry,
the
sbtubon on Jan.
·
19th and Jan.
Rock
of Cashel, Trinity College,
24th.
.
Ute Lakes of KilJamey, Guinness
On Wed., J3!1.
26th
the f~al Brewery, Abbey Tavern, and
.
a
·
copy was_ pu~hshed
.
and ~ies Medieval Banquet at Bunratty
were
d1strib!)ted.
Tomght, Castleareonlysomeofthethi g
Thursday, copies of the con- th
will
n s
· stitution
will be available in the
e group .
see..
.
haJls. on Monday, Jan. 31, a
The P!Jc~, which includes
Constitutional Convention wilJ be round tnp Jet far~,
.
all hotels,
held at 8.00 p m for all freshm
breakf~st and dinner, tral!-
.
·
, ·
en sportabon and all other fees 1s
m the Campus Center. All class three hundred and fifteen dollars
quality of research that can be mem!Jers are
urg~
l'?
attend and ($315.00).
undertaken when area personnel - to brmg forth the1~
V I ~
on tbe
In past years the
groups
were
. pool their talents
En .
taI
proposed constitution. And made
up of students from Marist
.
.
•
vironmen
finallyonthesecondofFebruary,
d M
'
M
,
issues are ~reme)y complex the Class Execuf ·e Board
·n
an.
ount St.
ary s p~us
and only yield to cooperative
1Y
WI •
residents from
the commumty.
efforts whether they be scientific
~te . for 9r
·
against tbe con- For information see Pat BrOQks,
political. or economic.
'
stitution.
Room
804-C.
·
by
Pat Brooks
l
l
I
l
PA(;I
'
. 2
.
Tom
.
·
Walsh
.
by
Tom
Walsh
'
'
..,.
We were all frightened
.
It was a time for te.ar, and
1t
was most
im~
portant that we
.be
scared from the very beginning. We were in
the
land of the Giants, and that fact alone was frightening. We would have
to look up at
-
everyone, as we would have to for years; Only some
of
them that had
to
line up-with
us
were shorter, and
·
even that
Jact
·
wasn't very comforting;We were new-and
everything
before
\B
would
be new. While others around
us
were secure,
we
were awkward. Only
la\er wo\Jld we learn the growth'of newn_ess, and the pl~asure of_dif-
ference, but for
·
now, we clutched our brown bags and
looked
strmght
at the head in front ofus.
·
The electric eye was watchirtg
us,
as it
watched
us
constantly.
It peered from that
·
waµ
menacing. our every
movement, disallowing any break fromregimentation; Only after,
would we find out that the "electric eye" was really a plain old ther~
mostat.
.
I can remember those first days more so than'the others. It's funny
how people remember the
,
beginnings and·ends ~f things, and often
forget the middles.
It
would
be some time before
I
would realize how
importaJ!t the
.
middles were, probably, the m~t iml)ortant · of all.
If
you live the middles, you don't always have
to
filid the ends.
Those firstfew days
-
were filled with fibs,
<r
rather lies, but then it
was always hard for me to distinguish. At any rate, they
were
lies
I
would learn to accept and cherish for years, lies which
I would turn to
truths, lies which are still being turned into truths. I can't help but
wonder whether or not these people knew they were teaching wrongs
or actually thought that they were right. People have the tendency to
believe only that which they
·
want to, and only
•
that which
will
be
of
benefit
to
them. People can live lies so long that.they
d>n't
realize that
they are living them. There's no need for them any more
to
~rch for
the truth. But
we
had no choice then. Our values were dictated. Our
minds were
so
open then; we possessed all
the
'
capabilities.· But they
were closed so easily; all
the
alternatives shut off, some forever.
·
Some philosophers have ch~en to view life mly
as
living and dying.
THE
CIRCLE
'
1
·
,
By doing so, they enter tile worst field of fatalism. Their decisions
and directives are no longer based on choices but rather serve
as
proofs for definites.
·
If
it's true that we
·
can
never know about the
·
days
_ -
·
to come; then why does man base·his future on
his
past? There is a
definite fear in living in the "now" for in doing
so,
we neither base
_
our
li\'.es on the past not the future
·
but; rather; on the person:
.
Such
decision making is flagrant
.
in our ,ivorld, for our' experiences are
relevant only as.long as they relate to
:
others. But for
·
those who
,
choose:
_·_.
·
.
,
.
· ..
\
.
"Leo, July 24-August
Zi.
Y~~
~If-confidence
and
now
of
energy'~
underlined by four planets
iii
Fire Sagittaritis, giving you · the
op-
portunity to·advailce many ideas yoti have been
holding;
waiting'for
an
appropriate time
:
to introduce:them
;
To publicize, communicate,
to
sell ideas would be most suitable,at the new moon and
·
would
bring
suitable buyers. Move fast;
-
as'the month ends;
so
do
the opportunities; .
You excel at a job in
'which
sympathy and understanding are needed. ·
You can sense a need and cater
to
the situation.·
H
you take.initiative
now
.....
"
_
·.
.
,
.
.
.
.
-~
_
.
_
·
. . ..
,
· _
_
_
Last November a Marist student, who knows
-my
birthday falls in
August, came
to
me, somewhat exdted and said "You don't believe in
astrology? Look how true
:
this is
'
!"
·
.
·
·
.
-
IJriust admit I was flatterro when a studeht identifies the chaplain
with the·qualities: "Yoµr self"<!OnfideQce and flow ot energy; you
:
excel at
a
job in which sympathy,
·
etc/' Isurely pray and hope that
thos~ would be my -qualities. But,
at
the same time,
J
would rather
hope that this would be due to niy Christian
·
commitment
and not
.
.
because
of
four planets
in
a certain position
:
! b
_
ate to
·
thtnk that
I work
hard because the Moon in Pisces and Pluto
in Cancer are in harmo
·
ny,
or tl_lat the mutable signs Gemini,,Yirgo, Sagittaritis and
,
Pisces; form
a cross; or that Mars is in transit from Aquarius
to
Pis~.
·
Instead
I would like to believe that my drive comes from the living
words of Christ that come to me
.
through the Spirit:
:
"A man
can
have
to
gr~ter love than to lay down
his
life for hisfriends" (John
15, 13).
For me these words summarize the
.
meaning
of
·
all Christian
ministry.
I believe that a
·
nyone (students; faculty, staff), anyone who
tries to live with or for someone
is
a
Christian minister. Henri
Nouwen
in his
book
"Creative Ministry'; says: "There are many people who,
through long training, have reached a high level of competence
in
terms of the understanding of human behavior, but few who are
willing
to
lay down their own lives for others
·
and make their weakness
a source of creativity
;
,
For many individUals, professional training
'
means power. But the minister ,
•
who takes off his clothes to wash the
·
feet of his friends, is powerless, and his training and formation are
.
meant
to
enable him to face
his
own
weakness without
fear
and make
it available to others.
It
is
exactly tllis
~ea
live weakness that gives th-:.
·
e ministry its momenti,un: '
:
.
"Ministry
·
means the ongoing attenipUo put one's own search for
.
God, ~th all the moments of pain and joy,
·
despair
and hope, at the
·
·
disposal of those who want to
join
this
sear
.
ch but do
'
not- knovthow:
....
Therefore, miJlistryJn no
_
\Vay
_
~
:
a privUege. Instead iUs the ccre of
.
_
;
.
.•• .
. _.
.
_
to
do so, t'heir;wor)d if lacking
;
the
!'.If only
I could
;
hav~ .. /'. and ~- ...
,
: ..
,, ..
·
.
: :: !
'.'.S~r-r:~~i;Jifti{i~oJfrit~~/ai:~'l~~til:~
·
:
Jiii
)~:
/.
-
~.:
·
.
;
.
:
;
-
~.
,,
years.
In
finding moments'
.
time
·
is
:
neither
'.
long nor sh~rt. In'
filliii~
·
.
·
.
these moments, time is
-
of.no
.
essence, for it is the tnonients,
-
not
the·
time, that holds the importance. You see
as
we
·
were orice first:
graders; we are now all first graders
to
the
world. We ~ave all
been
.
frightened by newness, and have often compared our s
_
1ze
·
to that
_of
·
-
'?1~lrt#~
-
u:~~:.#~~,
.
~;~;i::::::&~h~~i~=r~;
c1,i}
'.;
~:\
,,'.iL~
-
._
-
·
.
_
:
.
;
;
-
us
graw together
as
Ghtjsti
_
a~ nurusters,
:
mobvated
by themessage
:
or
·
· ,
.
·
·,.
'
.
..
<.:
·
·
Christi not
:
bfVerius m~vm,g
·
n;i~
_
ijie lucky zone
·
or Jupiter at
.
home
'
·
with
Sagittarius.··
·
<\
'-C.
-·
· .
,
· . :
:
·:, ·
<
>
.
''
others. We are watched constantly, and are taught
Ues
which only we
can turn into truths. And we all hold the capabilities;
·
which only we
I hope it's 11ot Mercury
bolstered
by Jupiter
;
Neptune·and Venus, but
mt
Christian
:·
coml'nitnient
;
_
that
·
~ade me atten~ a workshop for
chaphµns where, thrinigh
.
inuch
;"
hard
work,
new insights were
·
de~eloped. Butrm_willirtg Wgive credit
to
anysun,
_
s~
(r
planet, that·
it took
.
place
in sunny.FloriAA, wher
_
e in January
-
the temperature·
hovered ~
-
the low eigh~ies/\Ybere after the convention I
.
was able
to
stay with the MaristBrC)thers
'
in MiainLI enjoyed.Miaini
_
Beacll;the
·.
Parrot Jtirigl
_
e, The ~quar_iwn,, Jamaica Inn arid Flipper himself
.
in
•
·
can leave open.
·
--
•
'
.
.
_
·
. '
-•
.
.
-
.
It is the living
·
of life that
is
important;
arid
not
the ."hows
0
~nd
"whys". For if the ''hows" and ''whys" were the reason for living,
then we would not know that we had lived until
we
die.
. .
the flesh
. ,
_
· .
:
.
·_
·
.
·
•
-··
.
- -
. ·.
,
·
·
'.
·
·
.
.
.
~
oid
Joe
Rubino aiid
Bili
O'Reilly tookrne out
~
diim~
at
The
Steak and Brew; then
we
went to
a
rri.unmy
drinking
place where
ttiey
practically threw
tm
out because all
-
we
.
wanted was
·
ooe drink (coke for
. Bill); we
·
just wanted to look-see;
.
then:haw their
_
clieap apartineitF-
.surrolttlded
.
by palni
trees,
.
with their_-'private,
swimming
pool.-
It's.
· .
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
diffi~iilf
to
describe
Joe
and
Bill; except
to
miy they
·
are
as
crazy
as
.
>;
·
:.
·
.
-
:
·
_
_
-
·
_
-
_,
__
-
. .-
..
.
_-
-
.
·
.
-_
everandasseri~~ever.TwOMrthY
,_
alumnt
·
:_·
_
_
/
:
_
_
_
~
-
-
. ··
'T
I
,
.
,
t
,
·
.
p
.
: .
,
.
Anyway, I'm
·
willing to
give.
credit:to.the
'
~tars for nice
little ~ .
,
·
"
.0
,
un ~er
_
..
rogralll
:?J!8g:~1:;~:!:~fst:}'
,
a~t~P-t_~~~8<:Cf~g~tll~~iflit_
·
by
Brendan M~ney
.
·
·
·
·
·
· ,
·
·
·
..
·
·
·
•
Compared to
existent
volunteer
assistance programs, the lay
volunteer scheme
is
but
an
infant
amongst giants
·
. The idea for the
program oddly enough
.
came not
.
from the lay ;tpostolate but from
the
religious community in the
person of Br. John Cherry f.m.s.
Fired up with the
zeal
9f the post
Vatican
II era, Br. John of the
Esopus
Province of New York set
about to challenge the Christian
laity with the gauntlet of social
involvement.
The goal of the program
is
to
.:
offer lay men the
opportunity
for
service in conformity with ooe's
particular skills or training in or
without side
the
Marist Brothers
Schools.
This
role
is
meant to·
assist the brothers
in their
apostolate
through
educati~
but
it is by
no
means meant to unply
one's restrictim to
the
brother's
·
schools.
In
the
second year of operation
and in consideration
of the
very
limited resources of the volun-
teers it appears, to
the
credit
of
alt
concerned, that
the
laity have
accepted
·
the
gauntlet
of
Christian
witness.
Today the
program
bas volun~ who've
taken
up
the
challenge
throughout the world.
4
~te
.
serving in Pago
.
Pago,
·
.
The volunteer p~gram here
·
in
. ,
•
~
'
c
American
Samoa
Pago -Pago has been/from the
· .
:
·
.
.
,
_
.
•
·
·
.
, .
·.
<
. .
..
·
.
_
.
. . -
..
·
..
_
1
Kobe, Japan
·
point·of view
.
of both voltmteer
·
. a diyersity
in
1mnityles
by'no
:
the
'
parbes
·
are ~mm~y en-
·
3
BrownesviUe, Texas
,
_.
and
·
brother;
.
a great
_
success.
:
means detracts from
··
our
--
com-
·
·.
dless.Generally
_
everyFriday~
:
4
Laredo, Texas
From the day we
.
arrivecl in munity' life;
·
if
·
anything . it. co~u,nitr assembl~ _for a
~
1
~
3 New York City, Inner City
Augusttillthepresentwe'vebeen favorably complicates it with a ·fia fra or
.
8aJ!toanfiesta
_
and
Schools
·
·
completely
·
accepted ·by• the
.
.
new dimension in Christian living
Sun_da)'s_ are the
_
most enjoyabl
_
e
.
3
opa Locka, Florida
Marist Community. Despite
om·
,
and a
dash of humor .
.
You
can
.
feasts with always pl~nty of food
1
Scotch, Plains, New Jersey
lroad differences such
.
as
·
•iri
~
imagine approaching the Br'. Pri-
.
.
.
and even dessert;
·
.
...
.
.
.
.
1
Brooklyn,
New York working
dress styles, n~tionality,
·and
nci~ asking him for the keys to
.
·
·
The house we Jive
m
w_as built
at the
N.
Y. Thetaputic Center
,
political and religious points of the
comn11.1~ty
car
to
go
out on
a
for
us
by the b~others.
It
1s
a five
For the volunteer
himself
there
.
view (if
.
in fact
they·
are
dif-
date!! Such
an
encounter
can
be
..
bedroom
·
h~can~
·
_house. con~
is
little to expect in
·
financial
ferences at all) both btother
·
anc1
quite typical here exposing both
structed
~ withs~d 200 ~- per
gain.Heisgivenastipendof$50a
volunteer
·
share in the
·same
brother
and
volunteer·alike
to
hour winds. With \ls_ four
month for his
.
necessary ex-
communal life.
new experien@S.
.
.
·
volunteers lives one of the
penses. Also
he is
provided
round
··
Probably
the
greatest asset to·
Our daily
·
schedule
.....
generally
yuunger
Kiwie brothers (a New_
trip transportatio1f by the our work is
the community with coincides with
that
of.· the
7.ealander)
called Br.
Godfrey.
brother's commlttlity
with
whom
which we live.
From
it we
·
deri've brothers' except for
.
getting
up;·
.
.
We jmt
~
hi~God
for ~t._
·
he normally lives
_but
outside of
strength in-our common goals, which is for us instead·
of
5:30
.
•
Our
home
-'
JS
qwte nice
~th
a
this
he
lives
to
serve without
assurance in our friendships, and AM.,
8:00.
Teaching
begins at
T.
V.,
record player, kitchen
illusion
of profits.
.
love
in
mutual
•
sacrifice. For all
8:00
_
with Paul. Browne
.
in-
appliances, community
r<>om,
Currently
the
Lay Volunteer
these
treasures we give our
structing
English
·
or Language
and
all ~ .
hmuies
we
are un-
Office is
iri
New York from
.
where
dedication
·
to
the
friends we've
Arts,
·
Philip
Glennon
on
foctunately accustomed. to ex-·
Br.
J ~
is planning for
the
next
made
and students we
teach:
.
American
History·
and Social
pect:
·
.
·
year
expansion
into
Appalachia
Although
we
share commwiity Studies, ·and myself,
Brendan
To
·
us,
the
·
Lay Volunteer
and into
the
field of
drug
abuse.
life
there are
differences
in life
Mooney
sharing
Social Studies
Program is
an
exceptional op-
To
the volunteers who make up styles. These also are
worth
with Phil in
grades
9
&
n
and
·
portunity to begin our post .
theprogramthereisnomoontain
oommenttng·upon
for
they
.
too·
teaching
World
History
to grade
collegecareerbyleamingwbatit
high enough that can't
be.
clim-
make up
our
life
as
.
a· volunteer
9.
Brian
Mcintee,
·
the
fourth
is
to give for
a
cbang~ Now, that
bed.
Because
o(
this
·
idealism
and help, from
our
point of view, volunteer from Notre Dame
we've graduated Marist
and
a
there are
no obstacles
preventing
to rocmd
it
out.
'lbe
Marist
tea~ES
Math and Science. All
d
f ~
year interim
of
$15 a week .
a
limiUess
expansion
of
the Brothers live
as
a
religious
order
us
also take
after
school
ac-
from Mom
and
Dad, loam, and ·
irogram.
Wherever
there
are dedicated
to
the
celibate life. We tivities
·
such
as
student
council,
just
iri
general exploiting
life
it
is
areas of human
deprivation
there are
four
·
not
so
celibate
hay
football,
basketball, ••.•
etc.
,
~
to
know
that
the
ava-
lies
the
potential
·
of
the
Lay
'lolunteers
·
who are
.
quite
Our
meals are all CogefJJer and
ilability
d
this experience
is just
Volunteer.
available
young
bachelors.
SUch
·
ayes away.
·
.'
.
.
JANUARY 27
·
1972
·
TIIECJRCLE
ClRCl.E
>
EDITORIALS
·
.
.
·
~ll~8e
<
~Qu1Jlci1
·
·
.
·
•
"-~~~1~?i;.!::~~~~
.I
.
•
•
Th~ concept for
·
establisbiniJ
~
Cc>llege Council
has
been in effect for·
who have been brought to Marist during the past year. First, let me
ovel".
:
a year and a half now, having originll~ fro~ the President's
state the assumptions under which I am operating:
.
Summer Planning Committee.-Numerous meetings
with
regard
to
_
this
.
.
1.
The
speakers are paid rather sizeable amounts from fWlds ad-
proposal have been held, opinions have been exchanged, votes have
·
ministered by the College Union Board. These funds are obtained from
been taken, and a long list
of
"revisions
.
have been made:
Yet,
the·
student fees, collected from all students.
longed for Council is stilLtinder consideration.
·
'.·
· · ·
·
·
·
2.
.
The purpose of these lectures is educational, i.e. to expose
This proposal was
·approved
in early December by the Interim
students to important personalities; new or prominent ideas; to
College Council
on
a vote of23-3; however; before the.
,
CouncUcan be
s~imulate discussion or criticalthought. The lecture series is not a
implemented approval is needed fr~m
-
the faculty;
-
·
the
·
staff
·
and
political
·
instrument
to
advance the views of any group of students or
students.
If
approved by all, the Council,
acccr~
to
proposed
plans
.
·
any group of faculty.
·
.
willgointoeffecttolaterthanAprill,ofthisyear.
.
.
.
3.
The ideal aim
of
a lecture program should be to assemble a
·
It is the Circle's desire and thatof
a
number
of
concerned studehts
schedule of varied speakers, of various persuasions and from a
that
this
proposal
-
be initiated. Such
a
College Council is a must
if
variety of fields.
·
Marist
•
students
ate
to become involved in academic
and
policy
4.
Prominent speakers who may not share a radical or "anti-
making aspects.
·rt
is felt that such a Council would act as
·a
liason
establishmentarian" point of view could also be obtained within the
among students, faculty and staff. Though all the evidence is not
in
a,
budgetary limitations of the C.U.B.
to what would be the results andimplicatioos of this Council, it is felt
Operating under these assumptions, I question whether
·
or not the
that some beginning is better than
no
beginni~ at
all:
·
lecture series has
been
truly educational. It seems that the major
Letters To
.
.
the
Editors
·
Gradu
-
ation
Dear Editor,
ceremony,"the
Jee
must be
tw.d .
.
Remember someone has
to
wnte
··
up, print and send out transc~pts
_
·
at your request after gr~du~bon.
In
.
conclusion we rrught add
.
Ladies arid gentiemen- of the
.
that
·
"Senior Week" is being
Senior class, especially those who
.
·
worked out, and also th
.
e guest
are graduating in May of
.
1972;
speaker for graduation
·
i_s
!1ot
.
with
the spring semester upon
us,
final. It is also worth menborung
we as
·
seniors have
·
only one
that any senior unsure of his
semester
,to
go_ here at Marist.
academic
requirements
to
The senior class executive board
complete the year for his
or
her
has
been
·
preparing
for
degree.
to
check with Brother
graduation in May. Although it
King at the Registrar's office.
may sound fwmy to start
,
this
Daniel Cappio
.
·
earlyinthesemesteritis
_
th~way
•
·
,
•
Pres.Classof'72
· ·
of-producing a
_
m
_
ore mearungful
.
•·
·
•
_.
_
.
·
..
_
.
·
.
:
·
·.
.
. '.
·
·
: •
·
speakers have been remarkably similar in experiences and in point of
view. These views certainly deserve expression on our campus, but
so
too do opposing viewpoints or more moderate approaches to the
problems under discussion.
Perhaps one factor contributing to the limited range of expres~ion
found in the series is the lack
of
adequate consulatation by the lecture
sponsors with a broad enough section of the Marist community.
It
seems that a more concerted effort to recognize
the
variety of in-
.
terests· and beliefs of those who ultimately "foot the bill"
.
for the
program would result in a more di verse schedule of speakers.
Perhaps, the lecture committee could note the progress made by
THE CIRCLE which has made a serious effort to
expose
its readers to
a variety of viewpoints on the issues upon which it
has
chosen
lo
focus.
I am sure that the lecture committee has expended a great deal of
time and effort in constructing its program.
Its
results could have
been even more significant if it had chosen to ex:pand its perspective
lo
include in its program a more diverse collection of presentations.
After Groppi, McAllister, and Kunstler, was Dellinger really
necessary, except to drive home the message of "the cause."
Please, in answering do not distort what is said.
Cl)
It does not say
that their cause(s) is either good or bad. (2)
It
does not say that any
one of them should not have been invited to speak here.
IN
THE
INTEREST
OF
Science lab hope to perform urine
SCIENCE
analyses. Your help is needed. If
Urine samples needed:
·
you feel you can spare it, only a
PAGEJ
.
graduatio11._
.
W~
.
'
.·
lecenUy
.•
· ,
-
·
rn
·
h
".
·
.
'
D
··
.
·
.·
·.
.·
-·•
.
·
.
_.distributed_aqu~~1ona1reJo~he
;>
-
·
·
;.,
.
.
:;
_
.
·
·-
e-
.
,c.
e
-
--
an
,,-:
With the growing concern over
small sample of your urin~ : is_
pollution and the environment;
needed.
·
Please
·
plac~
·
yout
:
.
. ,
.
we should and
mustc,
..
whenever
·
·
sample-in•an
.
unmarked
·
1ar
'
and _..··:_--·
···
-
.
s~nJ~rs. bo~\day
.
,-~d:,-ev~ng
'.
'
~.;,,'.
'~?;·:
:-
:-
:
,
c
:·
-
...
<
.
;
.
,
-
.
:
>
;
:
\ _
.
·
~v1s
_
1on
;·
'l'he
·
tssJ!!S
·
ID
•
question
..
·_ /
Foriris dated 13 Dec~mber
,
1971
.
.
were
,.
caps_
-
and. goWI)s
:
at
,
the
:
·.
were'circulated to all'seniors '!Vho
.
,',
graau
:
atton
.
-
ceremony,
.
.
.
·
are
.
potential graduates
·
in
,
.
suggestions for
_
a g_ue~t speaker,
·
_
·
January; May_ and August 197?-
.
and
.
th~ determmants of
•
a
.
,
The completion of these forms 1s
graduatt
,
on fee. The resul~
.
were
· ·
necessary ·for the effective ·ad-
-
~
-
follows:
-1~2
.
students di<l not
.
ministrative processing of detai}s
·._
wish
to wear a cap and gown at
.
:
· .
connected
.
with commencement
-
·
gra
_
duatio11 an(l
43
an_sw~red yes.
exercises,
.
diploma
·
preparation
.
·
·
.
(20
stud~nts were mdi!ferent).
·
and other concluding aspects of
·
a
Un~er· this _assumption,
111 .
or~er
graduate's college career. . .
to crea~e some sort of f_prmality,
.
If.you are a potential graduate
the senior c~ass execubve board
in January, :r.fay or August of
.
1972
·
·
recommends
.-
that y~u DO NOT
·
•
and
you have not
received
one of
·
.
ordel_' a. cap and
_
gown for the
these
-
fomi.s, please stop at the
·
graduation,ce~mony. Howe".er,
Office of the Academic
Dean as
1?ecause
.
we could. not prohibit
-
· soon
!lS
.
·
possible to
·
pick
·
up and
anyone from weanng
.
one, they
•
·
complete one of
these
forms.
may
be
ordered at a later date.
.
·
.
-
<Notice·
will
.
be
.
_
posted
:
by
academic dean).
.
.
._ .
.
.
.
.
.
·
The
:.
senior
·
.
.
class
·
_.
executive
'.
·
board
suggested
the
·
possibility
or
,
·
·
having
.the
graduation· an-
nouncements printed on recycled
paper.
.
This procesi. was
·
:in-
vestigated, but due to varying
.
:- ·
circumstances,
suc:h
as
·
price aild
·
. .
quality; the idea
'
.
has been can-
-
celled.
It
is
noteworthy however,
even though the pr~t company
.
being used does not use
·
reclaimed
paper, · their
_ production
··
plants
·
are very
ecol!)gy minded.
·
.
We are also aware of
an ISSue
concerning
·
the graduation
:
fee
that is employed here at
Marist
to
·
those
seniors
·
wishing
to
graduate.
Last
year's fee
was
$25.00
and
_
a fe:w students
.
disputed
·
the
payment because
they weren't going to
wear
a
cap
and gown.
As
one administrator
put
it,
this.
fee
should
be
called
a
"getting--OUt fee", because
of.
bow
the money is
used.
-
.
The fact
of
the
matter is, that
our
graduation fee covers about
one half of
the
actual
cost.
'Ibis
cost
includes processing marks,
·
printing of diplomas and an-
nouncements;
·
maintenance
before and
after
the graduation
ceremony,
and
an
extra
expense
this
year is rental
of.
a
tent
in
case
of
rain. Regardless
of
whether or
not a senior
does attend
the
·
Dear
-
Editor,
· As
usual
:an
imbroglio has
resulted over
·
relevance. One
course
I
feel woµld be very
.
relevant (because of recent
-.
trends toward legalization)
· would be a course concerning
gambling.
-
It
could
_
be
.
~l!tled
Introduction , To The Prmc1ples
Of Gambling
·
711.
(It
would
probably be best as a
·
night
course.>
I
believe that
any
young
.
adult, taking his place in the
world, should know how
to
play
the standard games of society
if
he is to be well adjusted and fit
in.
There-fore · I
propose
a
curriculum including
poker,
stud
(5,6,7,
and
8
card
.
varieties)',
black-jack, craps, roulette, and
slap jack.
other skills
which
might come
in
handy would be a
mastery
of contract bridge, cut
throat pinochle, and especially
handicapping. The textbook
would of
course
by ACCORDING
TO HOYLE,
with
,
supplementary·
readings in
books
on probability
and card
tricks.
Field trips could
be taken to Aqueduct and longer
ones
to
Las
Vegas
·
or Reno. 'Ibis
course
could be
subsumed under
tbe
gym
curriculmn or
perhaps
even
be offered
as an elective
in -
humanities.
the chance arises,
.
take action to
deliver it to the Environmental
·
-
..
.
aid in bettering our environment
Science lab in Donnelly Hall
.
No
and man's knowledge of it.
·
questions will be asked. This is
·
In an effort to
·
become more
your. chance to better your
.
en-
aware of the effect of en-
vironment,
so
please help and
vironmental
_
elements
on
the
_
contribute
'
your uri_ne sample a~
human
body
-,
Dr. Rehwoldt and
soon as possible.
students
of
the Environmental
Special Announcement
The Residence Office has been informed by Dr. Gerald Weiss,
FMS.,
Coordinator of
the
Marist Brothers
.
Communicyr
of
Gregory House, that
as
of September, 1972 the Marist Brothers will no longer have need
of
Gregory House as living quarters.
To this end we are inviting groups to form themselves and make
formal request
to
the Residence Director for the
use
cf
the House as a
residence hall.
·
.
Formal requests must be qiade
no
later than February
11,
1972. Such
requests should state clearly and concretely the plans each group has
for the house and its
use,
and
a
definite list of people involved. The
House can accomodate 32 residents. Any group applying must
guarantee full capacity and it should be co~, in keeping with our
ovei:-all residence haJl policy concerning co-ed living. Each group
should, if possible, also have a faculty
_
or administrative sponsor who
would
be
willing to work with the group
.
The final decision and awarding of the Hoose will be made early
February by the Inter-House Council after public hearings to screen
each group.
If there are any specific questions please direct them
to
Mr.
Fred Lambert any day in the Residence Office
.
Draft Counselli_ng
Hours
_
Announced
Local assistance
to
young men
seeking help. with Selective
•
Service will
soon
be available
from the "peaCEnter"
·
in the
Friends meetinghouse,
249
Hooker
Ave., Poughkeepsie. The
Draft Counselling and In-
formation Service of Dutchess
ColBlty
annotmces that the
center
will be staffed by qualified
counsellors every Tuesday and
Thursday evening from
7:30
p.m.
lBltil
at least
9:30
p.m. Anyone
wishing
knowledge
·
about their
status with
the
·
draft is en-
couraged to come
in
during
those
hours.
•
Local draft
counsellors
have
answered more
than
2,500
calls
for
their
service..c; since the
--
--
program was launched in
February 1969. Although their
headquarters
·
are
in
i;>oughkeepsie, counsellors come
from
throughout
Dutchess
County. Therefore, they can
assist young men anywhere in the
.
county. Personal appointments
are
made when the draft coun-
selling telephone number is
called; and that number is
471-
9616.
Those just wishing to
drop
il:l
to
the "peaCEnter" for help may do
so
any Tuesday or Thursday
evening after
February
1.
The
''peaCEnter" is also open for
study
from
9:00a.m. tmtil
at
least
5:00 p.m. ev~ day.
I
I
I
I
I·
•.r
l'AGI". 4
'THE CIRCLE
JANUARY 2711972 .
. Red·
:Fo,tes-:Jo'. Face ,N1ackf:
·
Monmo.uth>:·and···Sacred·
Heart
. The Red Foxes· take on three .
is
~ext with 12.0 an~· anoth«;r:: Uleir home c ~ ~ -
. .
".antage: M~st ·defeated -the·,...
third
.leading scorer. with a
33
opponents this week
as
the season
semor,
~Y
Clarke_; 1~ _also
m ·· -
<>,n Sa~day,. mgbt the · Red
Hawks . last
season
in point. average and 1s
also_
the
rounds into full swing. The Red. · double figures _with. a~ 11.9 Foxes will travel to W~t Long
Poughkeepsie 91-85. _ · .
..
team's leading rebounder with a
Foxes will play at home tonight,
averag~. F~osh Mike ,!:{art 1s ~so Branch; N.,J. to take on . the
On Monda • night the · Red
21 point
per
game avera~e.
January 27th against Nyack
_aver~gtn~ m double figures with Haw~
of
.Monmouth College
m
a
Foxes return fume
to
face Sacred Roun~ng out t11e·f~nt court with
Missionary College· in an im-
a
11.4
pomt average.
.
non-conference. enc~unter.
Heart This will
be
the biggest· OLernota
are
a
pair
of 6'6"ers,
portant Central Atlantic College. · Marist's defensive ::iverag~ Monmouth comes mto ll:ie g~e ,_ test or·the season for the Red
MikeEiririgandKevinKelly. The
Conference game. T_he Red Foxes
was ~6th in the nation l)nor to !he · with an _8-~ record after-~
~!:rf
Foxes as. Sacred Heart comes
probable backcourt starters
·will
will then travel to West Long
Dc;>whng gam!. In the Dowling
road. trip .. Monmouth. IS
.
Y
into the game with
aJi
impressive
be Joe Blacker and
Bob
Gers.
Branch. N.J .. to- face N.A.I.A. , .game the M~ISt defense allow~ N.A.I.~.
AllAl!lertcan · ~:
l6-l
record.
The
Pioneers are led . 'Ibis game will mark the fourth
powerhouse Monmouth . College·
only 54 pomts to lower
~eil'
~lecki, a 6-7_ Semo~ Center..
.
by
All-American · candidate Ed enco~ter 'with · Sacred ~eart
on Saturday night.The Foxes will
average to 63.6
p(!f
game .. ·.. .
. IS currently averagmg 18 pomts
Czerriota, :their 6'9" ~enior· . holding a 3-0 ec,ge. Last
year
~he
complete the, week at home with
on
Thursday mgbt,
the
Red • and 15. rebounds per game._
center · Czernoia
is
the
nation's
Red Foxes were defeated at
an
encounter with Sacred Heart · Foxes.will entertain the Fighting· . Helping.out in the front court are -
·
·
Bridgeport
by
the Pioneers 86-78.
on
Mon. Jan. 31st.
Parsons of Nyack Missionary
a pair of 6'5" forwardsebo,
Mardsk ··
·
·
·
Marist is 8-2 after defeating
College. The Parsons · came into . Kelly, (10 points artd 13 r . un
Dowling College 8.5·54. This was
the·game with a 3-9 record, and
0-
per gaine) and Paul Pozik (10
an important C.A.C.C: game.
5inconferenceplay.
'!be
Parsons
points and 10 reb?unds dper
Marist is tied for first place with · are led by Senior Forward Chuck
game.) The team s lea e~,
Dowling with identical
H
league
Cardia
who · is :currently - howevet, is 6'4" guard Charlie
records.
averaging 17 points
pej
game.
West. ~est is ~urrently the
team
Senior captain Joe Scott, who
This
will
mark the ·. eighth ,leader
m
sconng 18.6_ per game
passed ·the 1,000 point mark . meeting for these two dubs with
average a1_1d re~unding 18_ per
against Dowling, leads the team ·Marist holding a 7-0 advantage:. ·
gamf:.
This will
be .
the l~th
in scoring with a 17.4 · point
Earlier in the season the Red
meetmg for these two clubs with
average. Senior Brian McGowan
Foxes· defeated the Parsons on· Monmouth · holding a 10-3 ad-
•• Frosh
.Defe~t
Dowling
Last Saturday night the fresh-
man basketball team defeated
the Dowling College yearlings 85-
71 in a conference game.
Most of· the first half was
m~rred by sloppy play on the
by
the
M,S.I,
· ·part of both teams. Late in the
half Coach Bill Foster began to
substitute freely giving thestart,
ers a rest while wearing the
· Dowling team down. Subs Bruce
White and Steve Murphy hit key
baskets in leading the little foxes
to a 31-24 first-half lead.
. Scott Nets l,OOOth. Point
..
The second half was all·Marist,
as the little red foxes utilized a ·
devastating full court press
which broke th~ game open,
When,Dowling tried to full court
·on Saturday night, January 22,
Marist
College
Basketball
Joe. Scott, Senior Captain · of the History · to reach· the 1,000 point
Marist College Varsity Team plateau anq nee~ only 98 points
scored . his . 1,000 point of his in his remaining 13 games to
career; Joe scored his 1,oooth- place him as the top scorer
in
point with just 6:43 remaining
in
Marist · College · Basketball
the game when he hit two foul
History.
.
..... pressAhe:good.team· play: of-the--~-
, frosli 'enabled-them·to·score
on
a
.
. number·t>f easy baskets,.
shots to· put Marist ahead and
· Joe is currently the team
Jead them to an easy 85-54 victory leader in scoring with a 18.4 point
over-'Dowling College.
,!oe
who average and is also the· team's
was hampered ·throughout .. most .. · 1eading rebounder_ with a ·13.4
' of. the game with four personal average.· Joe Scott's ··fine
.,
The high-scorers for ·Marist
were Tim Murphy_ with 17 and.
Steve . M,urphy with 15.
Joe·: ·
Cirasella added 13, Al Fairhurst
added 11 · and Bruce White
whipped in with 10. High scorers
for- Dowling were Larry Heine
with 24; Steve· Ramsey with
12,and Tom Blaire with 11.
fouls ended the evening with just leadership off ·and on· the court is
eight points, well below his 17 one of the main ingredients
iii
point season average. · ·
_ Marist's fine 8-2 record so far this
.
.
. Joe is only the sixth player in season.
Marist Gets· 5 Berths on All-Conference Squad
· The next game ·for· the
team
will
be
Thursday at U>urdes
against Nyack College,
lit
their
first meeting · of the season,
Marist won 74-53 ..
Five members of the . Marist says, "continuous hustle
iS
the the freshman members of the All
College Soccer T~m have .been mark of .. Charlie's game, . he's C.A.C.C. Squad. During the 1971
,named
to
the , All Conference always moving and atticipating ., season Tom started for the Red
Squad of ~e Cehtral·· ,Atlantic ,extremely well on _ the ··field .. Foxes in the ·center full ,back
College Conference. .
Although he didn'tplayJaslyear -position." In evaluating· Tom's
Peter Walaszck;
a
senior
b-
whilestlidying in France; Charlie tenure a:t
<·
Marist so far Dr .
... w.
r·
..
e·. s.
t
I.•,
n
g
.
usiness major'. is a .. former didn't loose any of the speed he Goldman feels, "he was tough,
Roosevelt High graduate. and All . posseSsed as • a 'freshman. I'm strong and aggressive throughout
, County Soccer Player. This
is
:really. looking · forward to the season. His excellent heading
by
John
Redmond
Pete's second year, on the .All qtarlie's return. next year an~ ,playing in the.· swee)?E!r
I.
nJ·u·
r·,e· s Plag· ue Team
C;A.C.C. ,roster. Head coach.Dr. ' because he's one of the :most . position anchored the defensive
·
· .· .
~
. ; ·•·· . · .
.
·Howard·
Goldman rates Pete,as, ·. consistent and · dependable linefor
1:15.
Tom really adjusted to
:sure 2-4 s.ounds like_ a poor ... ''the dominant figure on offense.• players on the team." Charles is the college game very well ~d
r~ord, but ~c1cts not excuses t~
His · outstanding-
·dribbling a resident · of the Bronx but should do great things for the
the story ~1;>out . the Marist - coupled •· with his
speed
and originally moved from the West squad i!l, his next three years
of
,gra~plers
this ~so~.
. .
agressive play helped to set up· lndjes.
soccer play."··
Right after ~wmng powerful
shots for his teammates. During . Thomas . . McDonald,
a · Timothy Tortta,
'ii
freshman
· Southhamp~on,. the_ ~restlers . theseasonPeteprimarilyplayed. Rochester, N.Y. native ls one
of and final selectee ·to the ·All
suff~~ed their first mJUIY ·loss.
center forwardbut·at times was· ·
·
Conference Roster from· Marist is
a native of Deer Park, N.J.When
the season began, Tim was
starting in the wing position but
was then moved to center half-
back after the second game.
Coach Goldman elaborates,
"after moving
Tim
he became
the central figure in our mid-field
game. Tim is a very fast, ex-
cellent dribbler and possesses an
exceptionally strong foot. As a .
result he scored 8 goals during
the . season · (tied the 'existing · - ·
record> and was 5 for;; m penalty .
kicks. As Tim learns the short
pass game ·more thoroughly he
will
be
an outstartding player."
1'!e
Jmx
started when tmdefeated
needed as a · wing or. halfback.
M •
·
f
c
I[
B k
f
b. ·
II Sf ,·
■
.
1
.
■
y
■,
:~:~:;_=n~~~~t:::
.-:«rl
1
:
0
~~~:!yn~t::s: ·. -. -·
ar1s
O
1ege
as
e
a : a
IS ICS·
ars1
y
as tho~gh the whole team wanted
adequate replacement." -
to g~t i_nto the act.
..
· .. Patrick Parcells, another
.:..N;.:..AME==---.;___::G:.:.AM=:::E.:::.S_:F;_G:;__---=F;_G~A;;.;;..:P:...CT~-
:;___:Ff:....::.___:FT:-=:.;A:.::_:P:...CT=-.::;..;__;;·RE__;;.;B;:....:.A_V--'G
__
PT_S_A_V_G
In3unes ra~ged from broken
senior selection to the squad was
bones~spramedn~.ByJan.
the
starting·goalie and captain
·JOE SCOTT_
, ·
10
71
127 .559
32 50 .640
132 13.2
15,!-fanstwa~forfeitingasmany
fortheRedFoxesduringthe1971
-RAY CLARKE.
8
36
110 .327 . 23' 33 .697
34 4.3
weigh~ classes as
th
ey were_ campaign. Statistically, Pat is-
BRIAN McGOWAN 6
25
57 .439
22 35
1
.629
65
10.8
wresUmg.
In
the Albany State · credited with 170 saves during his
·
·
·
match last weekr _only _Lance
12 game performance. Coach
MIKE HART
10
41
102 .402
32 40 .800
71
7.1
Lobscomb? . George_ Balzer,
Goldman.feels, position last year
JIM MARTELL
8
28
80 .350
18 29 .620
53 6.6
WadynJeKhezinRanedmanddTtmLave~
forthefirsttime:Hemadeupfor
NICKJACKSON
8
25
47 · .532
8
19 .421
22 2.8
an .
0
n
on
saw ma
his lack
of background in the
JIM BELCHER
7
11 ·
24 .458
4
10
400
17 2.4
action.
. position · by sheer desire and
8
.
·
NewSemester
determination to succeed. His
JIM COSENTINO
7
19
38 .500
16 .500
40 5.7 ·
brings new Wrestlers
quick hands and sharp _reflexes
LES CHENERY
4
9
35 .206
4
6
.667
13 3.3
Since then, however•· the
greatly aided Pat
in
being chosen
JOHN
DILLON
8
7
21
.333
1
2
500
20 2 5
pendulum seems to be swinging
tile
All Con£
Goal·e · the
·
7
·
..._
·
the other way, even to the extent
erence •
1
m •
JOE JOHNSON
· 4
14 .500
9
11
.888 • 15 3.8
league.
It
~oes
Wl
th0
ut saying_
STEVE SHACK.EL
5
16
44 .250
4
20 4.0
that magn~umous man man
that Pat will be very hard to
4
1,000
•~fini hif!awk:gh<tMiketoHfiaghwdt > hthas
replace, next year." Pat is· a
JIM OSIKA
3
2
3
.667
O
1
.000
8
2.7
given
5
wei
up
i
on e
native of Passaic, N .J • and plans
BILL ROSS
3
0
2
.000
0
0
0
mat.
to
go on to Medical School after
.0 0
1
0. 7
In the future, the wrestling graduation.
.
picture will still be clouded with
Charles DePercin, a junior half
MARIST
the loss of Pat Lavelle and otliers.
back selectee to All C.A.C.C.
OPPONENTS
However. the student support Squad is one
of
the
members who
always forshadows the doubts
d
will
be
returning to the squad n-
yesterday
with
the hopes for ext year. In summing up
RECORD
8-2
tomorrow.
Oiarlie's ability
Dr.
Goldman
10
10
297
236
704 .422
<,68
353
'
165 256 .645
163 248 .657
CONFERENCE RECORD
3-1
511
51.1·
414 41.4
174 17.4
95 11.9
72 12.0
.·114 11.4
74. 9.3
58 7.3
26 3.7
46 6.6
22, 5.5 ·
15 1.9
23
5.8
36 7.2.
4
0.8
0
0.0
759 75.9
636 63.6
9.14.1
9.14.2
9.14.3
9.14.4