THEGLEANER
VOL. 57 NO. 3 OCT. 30. 1981 NAZARETH COLLEGE OF ROCHESTER
Reagan Budget Cuts Jeopardize Guaranteed Student Loans
l'hf Re/Ii91lIl ac\IrUrOstflllion', second
round of budget cur. ~ virtually
~Ie the Gu.arlll'lIeed Student Loon
Progr"", fGSt), actor<fug 10 MicMei
CBruso. executive director of the Inde·
pendenT Srudt!f11 CoaliTion (ISC).
The amendmeot would drop 245,000
New York students in 1962..83 from the
OSl progt/IrTI, according to ligura
rel<i'ased Sepr. 29th by the SllIle Educ","
rO:In Department in AJbanv. New York
students, who reccille 20 peour>l 01 all
lederaly guarllOteed benI, would lose
$56\.9 million.
"Oiwn !he la.rge number of bans
Issued in 1981 lind the concurromldebr
service, ;1 is likely no new Jo" ... could be
issl>I!d in 1982." SlIId New York State
Education Department Cornrnissione1"
Gordon Arnba<;h, spuking$epl. 29at II
meuing of high., e ducation
represer1l"tiYes in AIlMy.
This year'. IIppib1ricn lor ~
!ftC! loans oulnumber last year's by
Nazareth College Presents
100,000. ~w.s an incru.se 01
UnoII 50 po!rCI!:rn, according to • reo
em! report by the New York Stille
HigIwr Education Servius Corpora.
tion. The corporation aUributa It..
sharp inc.uN to the publicity given to
prOpOSotd cuts in lhe progr...", which,
untU recently, ""mlo.d any 5I\lCknt to II """. President Reagan's pI"(IpOMI:Il2per.
oem acrou·the·board cuI in domaric
p<ogn"", would COI'IStilure • V per.
unt ,eduction in fiscal year 1982 au·
Ihoriz.Iorion levels, which were reached
through the congressional .«oneiia·
tion procea
The Pell Grant prOgram (formerly
B.E.O.G.) and Social Security SUM·
..on' Benefit. would also boo cut drasti.
caII!I. under the While Hous.q)rOpOoiill.
About 85.000 6ludents woukl becomt
inorli9iM lor a PeD Grant and the
_ ~ would r«eiuoe unaIIer
_cII. lhe 10(1,1 loss in Pel Grants lor
"Dr. Faustus"
by Marc llIVlcchio>
The Naureth Cokgc Theatre Dep<
u"lment and Drama Club are proud to
presem Mr. RKhan:I Wor~h and
Mr. Frederic 0"Br1l4' in ChrisI<>J!lwr
Marbow's "Or. F ..... n .. " The JJIo!,o will
boo diI...::'ed 1)oJ Jowph Bar","""",",;.
Mr. WOfdsworth wiI boo portraying
the 1 ~1e role and Mr. O"Brady will play
the pari of MephistOPhili1. Na.:carell'is
indeed wry !",tUnlltl to haw such
tale-nted men taking PIIrt in su<:h a
difficult play.
The play can. for an eoorrnoos ~
...t.ich """""" urtain acton and ac·
Iresses will haw toJX>rtr"Y IwOdifferenl
roles. II _ broughI 10 ..,.,.. attenrion
just recently thaI btcaute Ihe <:komand
lor actors and aclr_ illO $lrang.
Mr. 8ar~i has TUrned tOlheHigh
Scl>ool for lite Performing Arts in
Rochesler in Iocaling young students
inlerested in acting. to take part in lhis
ma;or production.
'0
The play will lake pIac~ in lhe Main
Auditorium at m., Arts Center on N0-
vember II .. t tOLm..N"". 12."110a.m.
and 8 p.m., N"",. 13 .. t 8 p.m.. and
NcMmber 14 at 8 p.m. Tockets are
$3.SO. adults; S2 5tudentS; $1 IeJIior
citizem. 1hey are av~il1>bIe at the Nou .. ·
rech Box Office. 586-2420.
S.uckn. p .... ~rn for Na ..... et h·. n.....1 .... o.p.n ..... nt·. lirat major prOduclion of
,"" ye;or.
New York studenls would boo $8S mil· ""'. Under the PfOI)OHl 10 CUI Social
Security Survivor' Benditl. close to
19.000 r«ipient • .....:!Uk! be dropped,
1\,200 of whom receNt: benefits boo·
c:au ... of .. decused PIIrenl. Another
57,000 wouk! get las. thereby cutting
anoIher $ISO million from the program.
Undoor President Rugan's second
round of budget. o;ull. 340.000 lIl\ldents
would be dropped from ~ aid
~, amouming to .. combined
lou in aid of $706.9 million lor New
York St\ldenl •.
"The Reagan prOpc)Ial& would effec·
lively eliminllle Ihe abilily of m/lny atu·
dents 10 cont""'" II their present
IChooI:s, ~ said [SC Ex«utiw Driector
Mid\aeI Caruso. Caruso, .. !Pduale of
New York lJrWenity and NMSaU
Comrtu1ity Cokgc, said he fears tho!
o;uts will cause dramatic t.hifts in
InI"OImInt from r.depelldent coIt5JK
and univeniria to Stale and City
univcr1itin. thereby placing an t:vfn
IMger burden on New York Stall
laxpa~".
StudenlS should immedialely caU and
wrile their congressmen and t,U lhem
they "aren·1 going 10 stand lor theM iI·
tilou!tot-outo;ul •. ~he added. '"The point
!hal must bf communicated to New
YorkSlate·,congoessionaldrl.garion ..
tlwoo toUCh .. c~ blow tolll""tS in
;",;kp, .. ,;I'''1 coIege:s and uniwn:itin
will rnult in a major increase in 11111
laxn if New York is lomaintan pr..,1
lewiol of coflegilile access," said Harl'
wick College sl\lo:lent leader JYOIl
M<*I, chairman of the boord of ISC .
Of thoH ,l\Io:Ients ......., would be·
comt Q&gbIe lor a ~Ieed loan
under ,,,- Re*" proposal, aboul 80
perCent come from irdepmdenl col·
logeIand .. ~
Mr. F_"" O"Brady """ Mr. RlcMrd W~ e_ .... hknta in tilt: 1otadIn!I
.-ok_ 01 Mariowe·, "'Or. F . ......... " _"" __
Parent's Weekend:
A Super Success!
by IU" II O .. v., Ch llirman
Sludent Commillee for P .. ~nl"
Weekend
Planning for Parm!"s Waokend boo·
gIIn last year when .. rrMgen"lents were
made with the Mapledale Parly House.
Since that time. Ihe Parenl', Counc~
and .. newly developed .tudenl commit·
lee ol"gllll.ized lhe _nlS that took pIac~
for this )/Car'. Parenl', Weekend. Sister
Annunciata, Cy and Chl-il PIaoschaert
(Chairmen of thI! Paren!", Council, thI!
Parent's Counr;:iI .. nd the rlludml c0mmitte<'
~ rigr;)rousIy logother to
pUt an ~abIc wed<md into acllon.
Fric\.>ly. Oclober 16, was the OklObertest
futuring the German Band,
"SlIuerkraut ," from Eden, N.Y. Eve<yone
joined in on the varied entertain.
ment thaI included polkas. a yodeling
contest. tOM". ainging. and the bfillll~
lui sound of the alp hor ..... Tho! G=nan
Club ildded ~Iy to the atmas-phere
by dreuing in German COItume,
HIVing rcfrfthments. and der:<!raling
the Cab.m room ... conjunction with
1"- .tudent committee lor Parent',
WecI<end.
After the Okloberiesl, SlIturday
morning began wilh ooff"1! and donull
avai41ble lor all prior 10 luncheon in lhe
Cabliretroom where 51U<klnts and Iheir
Pllrenll could meet faculty. On 10 ..
IODCcer game .. t RrT and then to the
Mapledale lor • deliciout dinner. lhe
entertainment for thedinnet"_.band
ent~1ed "Request" from 5yracuN, NY.
From thet>l.inJ.Ie this band"¥led~
ing, dance floor space was JCamO.
On Sunday, SAGA catered anotlwr
delicious meal. After Catholic or Prolestanl
Service. the """,kend elmo! 10
an end. There have Men many srUI
commentS on this Par",t', W .... kt-nd.
TharOc.I to aD ......., made ~ IUCh I
super succetI.
EDITORIALS the Gleanel'
The Gleaner ~ op;,ions /rom 1"~
I body, toe .. !)!; and ~<>ljon.
1.4.11_ 10 /"'" ..:/i/o.- .......,. bo pbud .., OUr
........n,pe OIl the door of the Undetsrod
Acrivirieo Room, or rTriIed to The
G"~r. Mlzar#lh CoIIegoo, P.O. Box
ifIX1l, Rochester, N.Y. 146/(),
In the insular world of the coUege
student, awareness 01 events happen·
ing OIJtside coIJe9ate life is somewhat
limited. In at "","I one Cas'!. however.
the "outside wodd" is making decisions
that wiD directly lIffee! our ability to
/ina""" college. r am referring to Presi·
dent Reagan'. proposed budget cuts,
which will drastically reduce and limit
the Guaranteed Student Loan Pro.
gram. The r«Iuctions would also affect
P .. U Grants (formerly B.E.O.G,), and
Social Security SufVivor's Benefit •. AcCQ.
ding to sources, these bills place
many 5uxlents in a deep financial bind
and may force them to withdraw from
the college 01 their c~.
Students have been organizing to
OPpOSe these measures, chielly in New
York State throu!tl the Independent
Student Coalition (lSC). The ISC is "a
statewide nonprofit organillation rep.
resenting Ike interest 01 more than
th"", hundrlld thousand students en·
rolled at New York's independent 001-
leges and universities." The group is
under the national parent o~tion
of COPUS, the Coalition 01 Private
Colleges and University Students. The
COil~!ion _ it. function as the ~
cation 01 policies lhalwill allow students
freedom of ..rucational choice. Two
fundamo.>ntal principles .... e outlined in
their philosophy. One: the ahlity to
learn should be the criteria used in
det~nnirling eduClitionlll OppOrtunities,
nol ~ ~ 10 pooy. ''''''''' .tudent.
should particip.)te in !he making 01
decisions that aIIect them and therr
schools. Primarily, !he ISC deals with
the availability of financial aid 10 inde·
pendent sector stUdents. toallow1hem
to continue tn..;. ed\lClltions at private
institutions, rather than state schools.
[n the PMt. the ISC has been SUCCe5$ful
at lobbying for increased TAP (Tui.
tion AssistMlCe PrOgram) benefits. AI·
though these incr_ ""v~ seemed
generous. they do not C(M!r the eslima.
led average t u~ion incre;ue of $600,
~t independent scMols. Smte univer·
sity students receiving TAP, """'-ever.
will hav6 their complete SISO tuition
increase cove-red by these awards. With
the reduction in ~deral aid, it is evident
that students ~t private schools are
hardest hit and may be fon:ed to attend
,the more affordOOle state schools.
As students at a private college, it is
imperative that wesupport the ISC in its
efforts. Presently Nazareth College is
an active member of the ISC. To support
the continuance 01 this nonprofit
orgilnization, Nazareth contributes fifty
cents per lull time student, paX! for in
part by the student government, also in
part by the college lIdministration. Currently,
Nazareth Undergrad Association
President Jim Stephania!< sits on
the ExecutiVe Board 01 the ISC. The
ISC exists to promote student ;>ware·
r.e:ss and participation in probiem$lac·
ins us, and Nazareth has played a role
in this. But the strength 01 the ISC
lies ultimately with us, as student
members. Therefore we, the students
at an independent college, must supJ>
Ort the Independent Student Coalition
and delend our right to anend a non·
public: schooL I strongly urge aU Naza·
reth students, especially those receiving
lederal aid or having G ..... ranteed Stu·
dent Loans. to write to their senators,
urging them not to support these dras·
tic cuts in their upcoming vote On tt-..
measures. Take a stand onan "outsideH
issue lhat will affect JIOC'I
Kathy Kehoe, editor
Dear Editor:
I am a commuting Naz .... eth Student
Although I am a junior, this is my first
year at N&Z3reth CoDege. My purpose
of writ'ng is toga;.. somein$;ght pertain·
ing to the conduct 01 the Nazareth
Security. It is not my intent to ridicule
this organization. however. I do believe
an e~planation is in order.
Due to the llIet that there are more
automobiles on campus than facilities in
which to pari<, ! have "",cumulated my
share of "tickets.~ Now [ ask, when
there are 00 vacant parking spaces,
whal harm d.-..s it do to park partially on
the road that runs through campus and
partially on the grass? Certainly 00
harm is done to any per$OI"IS, oor is
there any property damage done. Why
is it then, that the security personnel
insist upon badgering students with
threatso/ towingand $5.00 fines?Sure!y
these eminent figures of the Nazareth
campus have more im]XIrtant functions
-to take up their valuable time.
I should mention that oot all the
security officers are to blame. It would
be unfair tocondemn the whole force by
the conduct 01 B few. We students do,
however, pay a large sum 01 money to
attend thi!! school,"" why does Nallareth
CoIIego! spend our money to employ
a handful of civilians to harrass
students by fulfilling their fantasies of
becoming real ]XIlice officers? It should
be noted that IO!TIE: people were never
meant to have any authority, 00 matter
how ~ttle. An answer to any Or all of
these questions would begreatly appre·
ciated.
Editor·in-chiel ..• Kathy Kehoe
............. . .... Skeeter Harris
...... Joel Odell
.. Marc laVecchia
......... Art Smith
Ad riwtager .. .
Business ma.nager.
News editor .
Photography ednor ..•..
Sports editor •. . .. .. ............ ......... Joseph Crumb
Staff:
Amy Davis, Michele Fos"'r, Rosee Floss, Kevin Gough, Barbara Kelley,
Barrington Mclean, Bernie Misiora, Ruth Oprean, Liz Poda, Margafllt Rush,
Dotty Sheldon. Sue Werle.
Tho """'"""" __ .. u.;. _ ... "'" noc ..... ~ t",- 01 tho ,tudont body.
_~"". '" 1ocuIty. Tho Glocnor .. pubOohtd b;~ by tho ._to 01 N.u.t .....
~,4245E., A"""",. _, .. N.Y. t4610~ H716)-38t.991'.
At the risk 01 further harrassment. I
will print my r\iIIYIe_ To facilitate are·
sponse, should the Na=eth Security
prefer a private answer.! will also pri'"
my <>ddr0!5S. I would however, like to
encourage a respOnse in the school
newspaper due to the fact that there are
probably other. who would also like to
hear an answer to these question\t.
Dear Editor.
Respectfully Yours,
Anthony J. CaschetUl
10 Estern;oy lane
Pinsford, N.Y. 14!034
Early Monday morning I found the
strength to get out of bed and go to
breaklast. Upon my arrival in the Sa·
gateria I quickly reatized that my stom·
ach would not be able tohaoole much of
their delicious food, so I decided to
make ~ a light breakfast.] noticed that
they Md bagels and quickly grabbed
one, marked it with a tear, and popped it
into the ""'9"toaster.1 proceeded tOgel
MUCH
TO DO
ABOUT
"""essential three g!assesof whole milk.
00,...\ of SugarPops and a cup of coffee.
WeD. I made it back to the crowd 01
bIood·thirsty bagelmongers in onepiece
when a quite large, angry·looking girl
exclaimed, "I'm p ..... ed 'off! Someone
stole ~ bagel!
On that note, my bagel fell. Well, Miss
Ame-rica decided she had the right to
take it. I mumbled $OfM words in my
defense, oot they Wl.'re in vain. I did not
ar!J.Ie. In.tead Itumed to gel another.
realized they were aD gof'H!, and shed a
f<!\V tears.
What Clm we. the honest bagel·lovers
01 this school do?There must be a bagel
reform. Yesl A new system of toasting
our loved one and sprellding cream
cheese on them. I leave the solution to
SAGA ""d you. Thiswililead toa better
tomorrow /or aU of U$! 111 ask now that
the readers 01 this letter stand up and
sing one chorus of the National An·
""'" Thank \lOY,
Ralph A. Ford
have a cigarette, why do they ha..,., to
say. "Let's light up a few?"
I mean. these prepp;';" have terms for
II!\te'Ything. ll>ey II!\ten have their own
Bible called The Officiol Pt-eppy H<Jnd-
"""" I have noticed a couple of things
NOTHING
about preppies though. They come in
different categories. I wasn't even aware
01 it UnT~ recently.
First, there isyourbasic"[ WasSom
A Preppie~ preppie. These are the 0",,"
that ......n"e born wearing penny loafers.
These aTe the real preppies and there is
no w&)l of reforming them. by marc la vecchia
Love a Preppie-Kiss My Alligator
I don't know about you, oot I have
had it. Irnean, l amledupwith"""'YQne
and their uncle making crude and face·
tious COltUYlllftts about preppies. We all
know who they are. how they dress. and
what they say. It "'as funny while it
lasted, but the joke is over. alright? Let
them be. I refuse to listen to any more
remarks.
OK Maybe one more
Would someCIf'H!pjease tell mewhat it
is with tt-.. preWies that they are so
infatuated with the colors green, blue,
yellow. aoo red? They look like walking
Christmas trees. Hey, I love theChristmas
5<!a5On just like the next writer, but
I like to see it...not wear it.
That's aU, no more about preppies. l
almost feel guilty about what ] just
wrote.
On the other hand, it was kind of fun.
One more.
This guy Izod. He takes an alligator.
stick. it (M!r JIOC'r left breast and makes
millions. How do you figure? One.
stupid. slimy, "green" creature on the
front 0/ ~ nice shirt and instantly you
have thousar<ls U]XIn thousands of
cloned Guidos running around every
ClImpu5 in the United States in their
cute chemise LaCoste shirts. plaid
skirtsor plaid pants, andGucci loafers. I
still can'l figureout why theywear those
LL Bean No.wegian sweaters tied
arouoo their preppie necks_ Why no!
Wl.'ar them over their silly laCoste
shirts? At least it would hide that alliga,~
Aoo what about collars? Why do
preppies insist on wearing their collars
up aU the time? What are they doing?
Hiding hickies or something?! wonder ij
Preppies Clm give a hick", in the shape
of the alligator? Now Illere is something
worth looking into.
Enough about clothes. though. Let uS
think about the fancy lingo that every
preppie can use. The best place to catch
reol preppio! talk is at a preppie party.
Youll overhear the foUowing remarks
usually,
"Rosee! Alfonso had too many Pink
Squirreb to drink and now he is inside
ensaging in tl'dmicolor yawns."
Why can't lhey just say that "he is
gening sick?" When they are going to
Then there is your ~..,.,.age, stereotypic
Pseudo·Preppie. This type of ge.
neric preppie tries as hard as h~she
can, oot can not po$Sibly be a preppie.
They own everything from a laCoste
shirt to LaCoste shoelaces. but always
end up looking like a reprocessed chili·
dog. They just can~ ·cut the gravy."
Finally, there is the most frequently
found type of pre-ppie found anywhere.
This i!! the dreaded "Pseudo$loppy·l.
Gol·n-e-Clothes-For-Chri!!tfMS·
Preppie. H H~she does not want to be a
preppie. They don't even know what a
p...pp;e is. All they do know is that their
Mom and Pop burned every piece of
Their clothing on ChristfMS eve and
bought Imv'her nothing but pre-ppie
clothes for ChristfMS. He/she has a
LaCOISte Christmas stocking hanging
over the fireplace with ClIre. compli·
ments of Mom and DlId, and they use
their Official Preppy HarldbooJ< to level
off their s ixty·watt s tereo system. 'T 15
pity that some people have to live this
way. but you Ciln only bLvr.e that rPt
[:od_ He and his alligator should hang.
I leave you now feeling totally reo
~ieved:!'l0.:.l~'t leel ~ilty: I feel kinda
upskt ... ktnda super ... ktnda ..
Hey. I can't hangoutrazzin' on preppies
an day. I !IOtta put on my brothel
.Iippers. fox my /ruitioop. and practice
my parallel parking. Let's just say I'm
history, alright? I'm golden. I'm oulta
here. I'm cruisin'. I'm boltin'.
Actually. what I'd like to S<ly is. "Later
(to the) ga.tor!H
Mr_ Richard Wordoworth: "'l"h&Graoee of . True Pt'oIno.io ........
Surprise Party Celebrates Publication
by Marc La Vecchia
II was supposed 10 be an a""rage,
every day Engish Departmenl meeling.
bot lhen agIIin, I am sure thai Dr. John
Joyce would never be overheard saying
that he was ~dumbfoundedM and "very
pleasedM to be Bltending a meeling. But
suP\X)Se lhal il was nol reaDy B meeting.
Suppose that il wllS really B surprise
part9. • ""', The party WM being held in honor 0(
Dr. John J. Joyce and his IBtesl pub);';a·
tion entilled Studies in Browning and
His Circle: A Journal 01 Criticism, History,
Bibiiography. I am sure that very
few srudents areaware lhal Dr. Joyce is
not iust lhe English professor that their
roommale had IMt .'II!meSter. It ~
that he is more.
He is much, much more.
You see, ! WM actually surprised
myself, Not by the party, mind you, but
by the fact Ihllt Nazareth is tru..ty Iortu·
na.le to have such a distinguished au·
thor as part of its facuky. This is not Dr.
Joyce's first publication, however. As
far as ! am aware. he hII. threeother.IO
boast about, each CQ\Iering a different
area in literature. They "'" as follows:
Cm"IARA - EssaY" in ,he JudcHoo.
Christian Tradition, VICtorian Poetry
- A Critical Journal of VlClorian lirer ..
ature. and TSll - Texas Srud~ in
Literature and ~; A JoumaJ of
the Humanities.
The party took place in Carroll Han
during the afternoon, and consisted 0(
cake, cider, and Dr. Joyce's four books
IBving next to the cake.
[ was abk< to get a quick word out of
Dr. Joyce as he graciously explained:
"We have B good English Depart ..
mem. Thesearegood teache!"$commit·
led 10 the welfare of the school and
studems. It's a creative department. I
am only one of manywho.are llU.blishins
or 11"""9 ('O'II",r. "" ronnmg ~r ron·
fer<m<:l'S. It', just a hell of a good depart.
ment.~ He finished by staling that he
"appredatl'S lhe support of theadminis·
tration in forms of granls and status in
some of the complete criticism al Roberl
Browning.'
Dr. Joyce wasjoined at the party by
the loIIowing friends: President Robert
Kielera, Mrs. Suzette Graham, Dr.
Da,vid Pollard, Dr. Debra Dooley, Mr.
Marion fol5om, Dr. Barbara Rubin, Dr.
Richard DelVecchio, Dr. Patricia Piv·
nick, and Miss Rol"\ll Pass.
Tl)e staff 0( the Gleaner would per.
roonaDy like 10 congratulate Dr. Joyce
on his publicalion. We wish him the best
of luck in all 0( his future endeavors.
Nazareth Receives Approval of
New Masters Degree Program
by Barrington Mclean
To some, it is not news, but for most
of the .hKjent. in the Nazareth community,
~ wi!! be_news that Nazareth
has requested and received app1"<l'>'ili
from thestateofNewY",k to"set upa
C(lfIOOtltration in Religious Studies in
the M.S., in education, program. Those
benefitting will be prospective teachers
heading for Religious Schools, where
religioos, sludies are a part of the currie· ""m
According 10 M$9". William Shan·
non, Chairman 01 the Religious Studies
d<!"partrnent,;-"the program was innovated
alter "exlensive study al the edu·
cational needs 0( lhe axis". It is ex·
pected that students win come from
Protestant Sunday schools, CathOOc:
schoo15 .. and Hebrew day schools .. thU5,
lhe prO'jram will be"broadly multi .. faith
in tTU"t.~ ,
Mr,Joseph Kelly, as.sociate professor
of Religious Studies, is and wiD be reo
sponsibk< for developing newCourses al
the graduale level, in conjunction with
the Conlinuing Education office. Some
themes that will get special attention
are, "MooernJewish Thought," "Roots
of Catholic Rochester" and "Changing
Theology, Changing Church."
The faculty responsible for leaching
!otal. about nine PI!OPk<. including
Rabbi Shamai Kanter of the Tempel
Beth EI.
"Quote" of the Week
"Soap Operes OFe conlliufod .tories,
on about immalu .... people
tl")ling to stab each Q/he-r in the
boch .•
A~.
WORDSWORTH:
A Lamb
by Sue Werle
In lhe course 01 a college career, o.-.e
is occasionally treated TO an experience
lhal is delightful, rewarding. exciting,
and if one is lucky, fun.
Such an evening occurred here at
Nazareth Arls Center on October 14.
The artisl: R;,;hard Wordsworlh.
With the grace 0( the true proles·
sional al work and The joy 01 achild with
a favoriet tay. the great-great-granc:\$on
of poet William Wo.-dsworth presented
"A Little I...amb" toanaudierlce that was
obviously appreciative.
Wordsworth shared not only the
words of Charles lamb, but also the
essence of this nineteenth century au·
thor. The vetnn British actor exhibited
a genuine knowledge of lamb's work
and B deep interest in lhe man himself.
Wordsworlh. who has performeO in B
variety of roles in English classical
theater, deli!ined his audience with
essays, lett ...... and anecdotes using a
delicate balanceof wit and humor, occa·
sionBlly imitating I...amb's slammer with
exquisite timing.
From lamb's""lf-writtenobiluary,to
a bachelor's complaint aboul beingwith
married couples, to B letTer to Coleridge
.. to a "Dissertation Upon Roast
Pit", Wordsworth altemaTed between
reading passages and discoursing from
. memory, continual)y holding the aud·
ience captive.
It is certain thaI noone left the auditorium
without feeling they had lruly
spenl an evening with Charles I...amb.
Other opportunilies to experience the
talent of Richard Wordsworth are soon
to present themselves.
On November 11 through 15, Words ..
worth wiD perform in the title role 01
Marlowe', "Or. Fauslus". He wiD also
present dramatic readings during the
Shakespeare Conference, which wiD be
taking place November 13 and 14.
1'he experience al Richard Word$.
worth in performance is one to be
encourllged, remembered, and shared.
_bo""_
P ..... I""nl Rolwrt Kiokno c_tuIola Dr. JolIn Joyce 011 ... _ .-.cenl
publicoolitm on Robert Brownins-
PsycholO!JY
Center Opens
On Tuesday, October 6, the Naza·
reth comm.,.,ity was cordially invited to
an Open house at the new Psvcl>o\om!
Center.
The Psvchology [)epartment's offices
have formerly been housed in Carron
Hall, bul this year they have fortunately
acquired their own private building.
The open house 9""" studenls and
lellow faculty lhe opportunity to see
wlu.t actual)y goes on al lhe cenler.
Besides offices lor the Psychology De·
partment, rooms such as the condition ..
ing room where IBborBtory animals are
kept, are- available for Psycholog,l.rudenl$
to conduct experimenl$ dealing
with their sludies.
Nazareth is fortuna.te 10 have such
facili ties available. and the PsydloIogy
Center is JUSt one example oIlhe coo·
tinuing expansion of educationaloppor·
tunities in the school.
Faculty House
Reception Welcomes
Parents and Student~
On Friday, October 16. 1981. the
Sisters al Saint Joseph hosted B reception
in celebration 01 their Founder',
Day. Plentiful cider and donut holes
were ..........d to numerous 51U<1enIS,
some ~ied by parents, who
came!o visit. Tours were given 01 the
chapel off of thecommuni!y room in lhe
house. Entering the chapel, Sr. Mag·
daIen LaRow's 14Stations of lheCrass
catch the eye. These Stations were her
Master's thesis and are duplicated in'
Ihis chBpel with the original pieces
housed in the Inlinnary ChBpel.
This reception was a lenilic idea and
was weU received by the studenl popu.
IBtion. All "'" in hopes that another
such reception will take place in lhe
near future. Thank \IOU, Sisters!
r .. ge ..
R.A. Profiles
by Joel Odo!tI
This is the first in aacriesol profiles
on thoM people who talle the time to
lislen and help when they can, !IOlIr
R.A .•. This is a longue in cheek 100II81
the people: ..... ho IalI, the brunt ol the
residents' '''-'0l"I01 joka. Those ..... ho
shouldn the problemI 01 ~ liie
in the dorms. and usually do ~ with a
smile (or " smirlI). You ITIIIY consideothis
my rrb.Ite to !hoM who '-'e .....
wIfd me contin\lally lor breaking
visitation. cfllOllkir1g my hefty stereo
system. or gelling thoroughly juiced at
my sponlaneouS Pl'rties. (Nor to men·
tion tossing a few gallo .... of water now
and then.) '
J im ~ J.W." Ockendcn
Heigh, : 6 1,..,1 (,.t;..,..t~ )
Wrist,,: aWlrag'
Eyn: blue
Oorm: Kea.yACY MCOnd floor
SlM'aker ,ize: Who car ..
Conunent., T ruly o..dic .. t~
10 info d .. k
Jimmy Ockenden is one of Kear'
ney's finat RA. •. He is a manage.
ment Scilmc:e rnIIjor in his Junior year.
He admira the bw;ulty and practica
accounting in his lPMe time. He was
born in Penfield on Ma.,o twenty·third,
nineteen si>cty.One (an WWYenlfuI day).
He M! two "'t<l1"$, ON! 01 which,
Mary, an ....... Nali_th. ~ oUwr is
a Freshman 01.1 Geneseo Stale. When
iIIked why he choM Na:tareth, Jim
tokl me he preferred the slTl1lll size,
admired the upanding Business de·
Pl'rtment, and appealing atmosphere.
A5 a quote, "rd rather be in RochESter"
was all he could como! up with.
Jim plays piano and _ on Naza.
~h's GoIden·FJyer. lOCCer leam 1M! "".
W hy An R.A .?
Jim sal" hi. e xperience as a R.A.
M! been quile enio-,lable. It M! given
him lhe opportunity 10 become more
responsible: and he \IlIIue:s the exper'
ience. By the~, this isJim's~
year as an R.A.lI!'d says he1 keep on
since he', wei compensated (How?
He wouldn't 1a\I). He .. his floor has
a real good !mi. "They'"" good guyS",
saysJ.O.
Jim's plarnlior lhe luture are up in
the air. He pIaru to wunt, number
and package &oudi ArabMn .......:I.
"Don't ask why" he 1lIY'. Eccentric.
What's
Happe ning?
Do you know where you can get
inlormation llbout what', happomingon
campus: the lectura, bands, local con·
certs and p..ys? You Clln buy newspap.
ers and 51l'1l\"\I» lhere, rnd OUI phone
numbers, get change, It"Iai<e """""a·
lions, and the Iiil !Pft on. You can
find aI lhis OUr II the newly revised
st.iliz .eer.ter Inlonnation Desk. ~
expanded desk 100I"I w'lI '-'e even
more se-rvical '
Three year. ago we wrote an article
about !he infOfl"flalion desk from the
outside looking in. Now we are on tne
inside looking oot. WI wondered why.
lit limes, we cooldn't get change or
slImpS or write checks. but at that time
"",didn't knowwhat ~ _like to seMI!
!he needs 01 II c:ampuI M wei ill a
conwnJnity.
The A"niIing Inlonnation Desk attend",,
15 are morl than happy to help .,..0-
vi;Ie you with a .... info \IOU request, lind
~ they don't know IhI: answer they life
always glad 10 hl:lp find it. Use lne
information desk ..• ~'. lhere for you.
We do run OUI 01 change, we do JeU
001 01 S1~ and our conference do
boo!< up, however, .... ~ do our
besl wt.ich ;. III uou r.,.u., ....... ....1< nI,,",
He also plans to open a bikini conceslion
Daylona Beach (free fill.). AI
in ai, I'd NY JWn needs some Ixc;t·
menl in his life. Somebody hetp him
for tne we 01 his floor.
Barba.a "B~ Sc .. la
Height: .honer t han us ulIl
Eye., s .... n, gold r~ puffy
(o..pendingon time
. nd mood)
Oorm: Kearney, aecond floor
Clos . ize: immeillurably Anan
Allitu~: magnetic,shining,
adorable, aubliminally
authoritalive
COmme nl1: A,.., you kidding?
Barb Scala is aITlIIling. ~ most
dedicated and loyal personality I"Wlever
mit. She', in her senior yea: and w'.
... education major. She IivoIf in Au·
bI.tm. N.Y., horneolthe /amouII5eward
HouM and State Penitent;.,y. She has
two ... t ...... one married, one engaged,
and one brother.
Why Nazarelh?
~It', the only school 1 applied 10:' She
didn'I.,.it beforehand, hul lM'ither did
I. She doesn't really know why she
chose this place. but lhenagK.. neither
do I.
Whom Mbd """" she liked about
Nazareth. she alrrw:>51 Id 011 the chair.
Then she came up with a be./luty 0111
quote: ~Uh. 'C/lUS<! ~'III per50nill kind-a
piau. Yil know.~ Her special interests
include aquatic aports. B· ball, lind cof·
IH.
This is B's third year ... an R.A.,.nd
she', still going st.ong. She has an
incredble rapport wilh her floor. She
lows 10 meet newpeople(lOeverybody
fnIII<I a poinl 01 going 0I0IeI" to Kearney
10 IIiIit her). Whom asked, ~How'. \lOUt
I\oor?", Ihe r~: Excelent,l loV« it~.
What more could you as.k lor?
1-1 .... pIM. fo< tho! ",""~ inr~><ko....,.·
uring an aPl'rtment with her inseparable
buddy. Martha «01' Blue Eyes" Sprague
(nee·nee. nee·nee), O'Conn., I.
~ IIoorR.A.
To ... m it up, Barb is ",","h going out
01 \lOUt ~ to meet. Ulrmallly, she',
"gont"III live happily eV«r after in this
grot city" (emlxDished wilh Italian
hand emphasis). A IruI American. A
true R.A. A IruI frimcI.
Commuter'
Corner
by lee And. O!H, Commuter Boa. d
CIW ...... n
The Board member, would Iika 10
exlend their appreciation lor aD the;
enthutl.m and """'9Y that WlIIglfler'
ated the; night ollhe Commuter Din·
nII1" ••• ~ was truly a greal IUcclllft! The
""XI Fisher/Naz Commuter Dinner will
be IOfIletime nut oemesler on the
Fisher campus ... ~ will definitely prCl\l'e
to be an inlet"esting experitnc:l.
The CB" in lheproceuol ~
•• affIe 01 an 8--track C_lIt, AMfFM
radio. If !IOU are interll'Sted in becoming
more active in pIannWtg lhe .1IlIIe or in
any other activity of your interat,
piellH Iftl hee to bring them up at lhe
rnee1ings. You. inpul .. greatly appre·
eiat«l. and ~ will be an excillent 0PP0r'
lunity for you to meet lellow studornlt,
and make new frien& along the ..... ay.
The meetings .... e """'Y Thurtd.y at
12:45 p.m. in the Undergrad Offic, •..
we hope 10 see you all there with
many ideas!
•• F'Ie-_ be sure to find out you.
~x oomber at the Shults Center
Info Dal<, there is a large: amounl of
mail in these boxes and will be dispo5ed
of if no one cillima it! Y 00. numblr rTIlIY
also be obtained b." attmding the meet·
ings and asking one 01 !he ChIirpe..·
l0I"II. AU !he CB member, art more
thanglad to helpyou. ~youiust ask. 5ft
.......... v'n...-In
A Favor From France
by Ruth A. Op,..,lIn
"BorP>r". a his smile and many
times a hug life the elementS toasreel·
log from "Nic:.- "Nic:" is also known ill
RegineC.war. thenewestculturaladdi·
lion to the Naza.eth campus.
Regine comes hom Re1IfIeS, France.
She is the ("51 F rerlCh Itudenl here ..... ho
will not be staying for just a year. but
who inlends 10 gradu"te from Nazareth!
She has entered the Freshman
class ill a BusineIs major and is cur·
rently living lit the French House. Reo
!line hopes to bring as much 01 her
culh.D"~ to the house M she can and
learn about American cultU<l herMIf.
Pan 01 the cultu"" ..... hill already
eMily MSomilllted mto her lite .. our
ITl1Iny "Americanisms". Our overused
adages such ... "Wow, that's great," "I
really mean it" and "Corne on- IOlu>d
airno;,.t noo.'Il when Regine sprinkles
them Ihr~t her speech. Her rill-
1M French acClfll is QUite chMming
and this "charm" is ~ed by her
IIrWnated pnSOnaIity.
H .... impr~ .0 far, 01 America.
has b0en limited to IMng in the Pittsford
area and 01.1 Nuare1h. She M! been to
'lisil Niagara Falls. Le1chworth State
Park and other ... rrounding areas, alIof
which """ItC -just great-. She is planning
on backpacking in the Adirondacks
wilh the Khooi iII1d when as.ked where
else she would Iik~ 10 93. she replies,
wilh II sweep 01 her hand. ~every.
where"! Ont 01 her ...... interests is, in
facl. trawling and .... tir1gnew people.
The second of which. I ........ t add, .....
does extremely wdl.
In commenting on her general ;"' . .
pressions of Americllns she notices 81'1
obviou$ difference between them and
her natiV« French people. She says that
the French a.e much more pOlitically
_e and lhat they speak more often
about rnor"IfY.
Two new thinp Regjnc has C(lITII
lICl"06S here are, corn on the cob and
-.,.""-
I0Il> Operas. She likes the com, hulas
for the I0Il> operas. she canotM
5Iand why people are .0 addicted 10
them. A further reflection on oo.rr food
_ that milk cheese, teas and good
bread are a ~1I1e bit harder 10 find here.
She added lhal cookies here 1If0i "tOO -,' Nazareth hasbeenRegine',home lor
the ilIst 5ix weeks and she M! been
IICtively making friends and lellrning to
play the role of an American Iludent.
She b.oes all of her daIHI and her
toehe .... "'Ieek, lin! ~ Ont
thirog lhat impresses her a great daI is
that people are willing to be and ha ....
been VCry helpful.
In compar;ng the St..,o" habit. 01 the
French and Amencan 6t!>dent, the
French. she thinks. 5Iudy II bit more due
to thl: more rigid educalionaisyst.....,.
She his one wry delinite OPinion, lhat
.t\Kknt. walch 100 much I~
She has not como! under the I!)eII of
General HospiraI yet andcannot under·
Iland whII ~ is .0 "hooked".
But, Regine knows exact .... what lime
' Happj.o Days' and 'Starsky and Hutch'
III1.t """'Y day.
One of the things Regine particularly
enjoys is music. Sne delights ;n and
lIPJ)feciates lhe availability olIO much
1iV« entertainlTlent. She IoY\!t; aD kinds 01
music and with lne help of some ~1oN
lIudents is learning 10 pIooy the dru ......
In general. Regine -... 10 be
.lIing wei to her new lilt II N~
r~h. She is energetic, IiV«Iy and
optimistic: aboul her /o.n"elrudia here.
Beyond that. she has plans t0930n lor
an MBA in International Bulinesl.
I could nor ruist ilSking whal she
thought ol the Rochester weather. Her
response was that. the FaD ..... as much
like winter in Brittainia; IU...,.... here
_ grellt, hut sheis moal excited aboul
the winter. She exclaim. lhat """ wi!
'l.-l.W'e.-l.t. ....i.s. ..p..r,o.b haabwly "m""o"r e. .t mrue ulhdanI ._..'
.Socia/ Work Program Re-Accredited
l.orlS, hard u.oxk and plenty of patience
paid 011 ~ite niclly just recenlly
when Mrs. Helen Guthrie, coordinator
of lhe Social Work Program. and her
cdIe~reclrived notic:ellia·Mailgram
thaI Nazareth·, Social Work Program
has been ao;rtdited lor another four
yeal"$. The Social Work members cer·
tainly worked VCry hard all summer
~dding new things to Ihe re o
accred~ation. This will now give the 120
Social Work majon an accelerated
masters PfOgJ"IIITt which be-uer their
chanca oIlinding II job.
Mrs. Guthrie woukllike 10 thank !he
IoIIowing people for their helpin maIWIs
this ",,-accreditation PGAi>Ie; M .... Shir·
ley Sharp. Mrs. VII'ginia David, Or.
Eltln. EVllns-a IM'W IOC~I work
member, Alumna Becky Prabll-MSW
who worked ~ II week during
the summer doing clerical work. lind
ronal1yDr. M"'YBush deserveshonora·
ble mention lor her Iwlp wilh lut minute
details and packaging the 12 heavy
lolde ... that had to be sent 10 the Counc~
QfI Social Work Education.
Octolwr 30, 1981 THE GLEANER p.,.,
A G lance at Vegetarianism
by Barrington McLfoan
Onewhoeats nomeal ;'conside-reda
legelarian. thUll, I\u"","" anirnllls and
tome insects are vegelarians. There are
:hree known Iypes 0/ vegetarians:
...KIO)-(M)-vegetllriarol., who eat dairy
:>mduc15 and C9!JI in 1hn'.15 (but no
rinaI Bah); pure ~ who
~ no proO.>cts or9natin9 from
rinaIo for health .. -. and finaII,I
tho V~ whoeal neilher I .... animal's
IIesh nor the products originaling from
it They also II'X>i:J I ......... 01 olher
animal prodUClS aucl\ as leathers ard
COi'I~it requirn lhe killing 01 lhe
anim.lJo.h 1M rernIlinlll'l/ll VegonsMe
not 1IegE1MiaA$ to mucl\ because 01
health ( ........ I~ it is a factor). but
because o/the principle or the philo"""'"
behind i:.
VegI!taIianiIm ..... bHn. practicefor
em",""" and prcd o/ihil is in lhe Ei!51
where it is pracriced by tM Hebrews.
lhe Hindus and !hot! BocIdI\iots among
others. Currenlly in the Uniled Stales
lhe'e are sorr>eo four grWI» or advoca.
les 01 Yl!9'!larianism. There Me the
T r~t Mookl who loIIow a simple
dirt, lhosewhojo.ost becQfl'Oll~arians
for various .......,..... ITItfT\ber$ 01 a
"YOUII\ Cwnler Cultu .. : and finally.
the Severoth Day A6Jenlilt Church (0/
which [am. mmlber). Ex~ I\esh.
from his diet hal and is lhe cI\oice 0/
each Adventisl. bul ~arianism •
o/ficially recammono;!.,d by I"" Church.
A large portion of ill members are
vegetarians, and a IIA\aller portion are
not. but lhey eat very UI1!e meat.
Becauseol their healll\ praclices-no
1ImOItirlg, drioking, SlayirQ up til 1M
..- ho::oJrs 01 It.. morning and their
being vegelariani or pro.wgefaNns.
AdYentist (flaristict show tl'l/lt) .....,.-,
g the heaithinl and most long.
lived people in 11\;' counlry (_ Sept~
s iMur;of lhe Reoder" . Digest on
How Heallhy ill 0 VegolOrian Diel).
Vegetarianism is menlioned in t ....
Holy Bible. 1t "'III owecifocaDy outlined 10
the Hebrews-farther back. ~ _ specifically
given 10 Adam and EYe. In tM
Book 01 Gmail 1:29 ~ is stated as
IUCh. "behold. [ Nue giYen ~ every
hnf>.Mamg teed which • upon the
Iac~ o/the eartI\. and ewf)ItTM in In..
woridwhich.IMIruit oIa Irce~
teed: to you it .tWIll be lor meal.· When
Adam and EYe wen! forced to leave the
G~rden 0/ Eden. there _ an addition
10 lhe original diet 01 fru~" nUll and
grains-t .... ",hole planl, not just it5
produ<:u _ ;>dded. to Ihort, wgelahies
were ;>dded to man', diet_"and
Iho::oJ .hal eal lhe herb 0/ lhe fftl."
Genesis 3: 18.
UnfortUMtely aft .... the flood 01 tM
time 01 Nooh. everyIhingwas deslroyed
and mankind was t~mporarily ~il .
ted 10 181 "evErY """""'s thing Ih/ll
!Meth ... : even as tM green heTb have J
given yotJ aD things." Genesis 9:3, and
Deulm:ono:m,o 14:3-2(1. The animaII
fIesh.nould be drllined 01 all blood, and
that unnec:a.ary ~ 01 anirnM
ohouId be (_ 10 be) aYDided. Geneoio .. Mriind loday conIn- 10 c0nsume
meat abundan~. but theoriginlll
plan was 10 rc1um 10 vegetarianiam.
N ........ tM!nt. it is not rnand.atOl}llhat
"",nl<ind return to wgelarillnism, bul
M would be belter 0/1 ~ M dca. S'at;'·
IIcsshow tn.1 the Io:$$rnealycoJNI, 1M
belter oIf you are-d course juaI bmg
a uegetarian won't lTIIIke]lOU healthy;
you need 10 follow olMr hu11h
.pn.c.r.ic.e.s- -adequale rESt, exen:_ Havot you ever noticed th/lllOlTle to-called
~ arc extrerndy rneag.
Rr and tftITl a bit <idlydrated? One 01
lhe rtalOnl torbecomingaveyetariMl;'
to mair>lain or 10 10M weight, bul nol
RXC~~. If this is your reason for
~ • _larian, you could be
~ your health. SocII I*JPIc
are~oIaseamgpure~
and/or grou. gOOky stuff_ TlwM might
oexpIMI ......... they look d~aled,
extra mogtr, and have dried up Iokinyou
...... 1 pianyotJrdiet,and noljusl eal
any wgetabIc. Mo.t uegetarians 1 know,
are anyt~ bul me"9'" and scr ..........
hokms·
Vegelarian food. when prepared
proper~, is t.asier lhan tMr~larlood
_ eal (1 ~I to know---l eat ~ ewf)I
Sabbatt>. in IN01y CIaIe5 not one ~aI 01
""9"~ ""'"' R:Iuded). He is crazy,
yotJ mighl 1a!I. Whoever heard 01 a
wgetaOan mNI witl\ no ~?
lMpoint.ll'l/lla~ty~MNl -dott-n·, .ne c:euari1y have 10 be 1(1()'\ Already in yotJr I\each yotJ have
dr......, i/OUr own conclu$Oon$ as 10 wl'l/ll
are..,..,. 01 tho ~IS 01 becoming a
""9"larial'\. HaYe you ......". woncIered
about 1M causa 01 hear! anacb? lM
""""' meat consumed. the more poai.
bilitv 01 the ......... haomg har-derq 01
tho arteriee, Ywdon'Iwant your /WIer·
in to harden, do i/OU??? ThoM foodt
(diets) tMI contain mucl\ arWnal lat and
cholesterol are amoog 1M rnair1 ca.uses
o/I\igh blood cholesterol. To decre_
ones ritlt. lhe Inter-Society Commis·
sion lor Hurt Disease Resources urge.
tMI people ..... less than l ea. calories
dtrivir1g from animal lals. When onl
you buy any ~ed goocb. look at 1M
(Conlinu~ on PI'9" 8)
Photo of the Week
,,1.-........ -
Brighten a Soldier's Holiday
At many poIl5 and bales ac .... lhe
U.S. and around tho world, Chrislrnios
will He many of OUr military personnel
on duty, in <!dense oI lhe U.S. and tn..
Free World. For many 0/ these young
people. it will be their ra''' Chris_
......... from home. Many 011"- young
mer! and """""'" will .ecm litt~or no
mail; lor other •. ,iIw bmg away from
home will be an oextrenW,t depretSing
expmmce.
This is "'Mre ARMED FORCES
MAll. CALl. comeo in. MAIl CALl.
receives ChrislmM cardl IilIed witl'l
"""'II and friendly nolel and letters.
fr<)m indMduall and grOUI» aU over lhe
rountry. n-Chrislmlll grl!e1ing$ are
in lurn sent 10 _iOUI facilities o/the
Drpanment 0/ Dei ....... wd '"' independent
<'gO!nCin (USO'I. Anned Mr·
vicet Ys. miilary hotpitllil, ~
"'c.). ~ lhey are ~ to U.s.
The Sigillum:
miitary pertonnel. "On bet.aIf 0/ •
50Idien in 1M ... Com~, lhank you
tor lhe Chrislmas cardo you """t . n-card, 9'W" additional inspiration
for IIIoM 1Oidler. who could not be
home witl\ IhIir Ioucd 001'$ .... read one
letter .ec:eiYed by MAn. CALl. in rCo
sponMt 10 .... 1 ~'s Christmilos mail
For monnalion on how you or your
~may~teinthe7t1'1Annua1
CHRISTMAS MAIl CALL, pIe_
.se.n.d • stamped, self-addressed -..e. ~
ARMED FORCES MAIL CALl.
Bo~ 6210
Fort BUst, Te~III79906.(l2iO
P.S." No mail • not """' only 10
SOlDIERS-_ to Marw-, &aiIon
and airmenl ll i/OU would li<e tome mail
directed to .. indMduaI in the nWwv
HMee. send "'""- _and.nitarv
~ addreSII to MAIl CAlL
A Yearbook for Everyone
by liz Pod.o.
A yearbook thai pIeasa 1M ~
S1uo:1ent bodtI and faculty,especiaIIy", a
coIego is a difficult, if no! impouiJIe t"'" to accompIiII\. However, al Nazareth
lhis year it may iust happen.
Janel Austin, this 1'lIOr'. S;g;a,m
Edit"'·in-ChieI ...... a wry pa.;livo! au~
tude ~boul lhe book and leels it isgOing
10 he a great 5UCC.,... She feelsll'l/lliMl
year'. boo!< w1l6 an improvemenl from
prevW:IuA boo!<s, bul due tOtorlll impor.
lanl cl\angeo _ can lo0Io; forward 10
$fting an evm hellto' book in 1982.
To produce a pod yearbook. the
ttaIf....:.king on ~ • 1M major lactor.
This lI'"ar's staff is entt..osiastic, IIIways
"""iIabIe for ass9"rnenI', and large in
oumber: aDc~ lromlast!/I!M. The
stall 0/ tl\ir1\1"1ive 'ncluda I .... ~
mentioned Edilor·jn.Chief JaMt Austin,
AMistant 10 tho Editor, Mary Ock·
enden. Photogr~ Editon Kathy
Briets and BriM Liable. and Art Editor
-"'- The goIIII o/the $Iliff is to produce •
oophiolicated ond int .... estng book
whicl\ can be relaled to by ~
from lIIudenlt 10 facuhv. To do to
mucl\. 0/ COtIrsI!. I .... es money. This
year'. contract. for $13.950. bulll'l/ll ;.
only for Ihe basic book witl\ ~;g,1 pIlgeI
of cob!'. To Comoo.l expenses. patroot
are bmg~. A gold ""Iron can be
purclwed lor $100: silver lor $50:
~ lor $35: and a Donor lor $10-
$25. II $2,000 can be rHied, .. addi·
tionaI color _lion will be indudcd in .. ...,..
A grol amount 0/ lime and dIort ;.
beinge><t1led by the S9bn sWf, and
tkey alII amays looking for photographers
and advice from 1M IIudenli.
lM upcoming 1982 book is sure 10 be
an exceUenI ",ay 10.emember this!ll!4r
al Nu . '
Nazareth Shakespeare Conference
lM first conference on the Iif. and
works 01 WiDiamShakelpear ....... been
orgMIized by NUMe1h College: 10 pr0-
vide 0011\ a IChoIar~ and pOpular forum
for discussion 01 our language'. fOffmool
aulhor.
Wilh its conmilmenl not only to
iIClIderrWc IChoIIIrship. bul to thevariety
01"""",,, in dlich Shakeopeare • a !lYing
preJenCe in our culture. the Nazareth
conIerence is da.9'ocd 10 teflec:1 .-.d
1p.m,'m, ot:e the gr~al Elizabethan drama- broad appeal.
DID YOU KNOW ...
by Am)' D~vil
To continue from the !M1"Did'Yw
Know._~. the Spanish House, Frendo
H""",, and c... [taIIaN e.eoch have an
inlem.~ b.)ckground.
lM Spanish Houte was Iocaled behind
1M French Houte. 11 W,", broNn in
color and eonseqo.>l'rlt~, named the
Brown House. Nazareth purchased lhe
Brown Hwse in 1946 as a Irelhman
dormilOl}l. 11 "'as tnOYO!d 10 it. pres.ent
location at IMI I ..... lM houIe _
painted grey and the _changed to
aoxomnodat .. the non·brown .hade 10
St. Jooeph·s. tho PIItron Saint 01 1M
Sisle>'$ ofSI. Jowvh. 1n 1971.the house
becarnea Frencl\dormiIOoylocusingon
French culture and 1an9.III9I. 1n 1972. it
became the Spanish HouM, hwsing
resdents in"'rnted in I .... Spanish Ian~
and cu~ure. Fwr yean ago, lhe
Spanish dormilOl}l was renovaled lor
c.l,a.s.s es and cultural event. 0/ lhe col· lM French HOUM _ known .. the
Martin Hou ... unti the IIUfIVI'otI' 011949
The conference director is Dr. David
Pollard 01 1M Nazareth faculty, who
prellntly l ucl\cs Sl\akupeare
couna. Some o/Ihe leatu.ed .pe .... era
include O.B. Hordison, Jr., Direcl'" 01
1M Folger st.aknpeare Lhary, Wash.
ington, D.C., and Susan Srr,der 0/
Swarttmore CoIIego!, two 0/ our C(IUft<
1,y.Ior_ st.akespeare IIChoIm.
lM conIercnc .. wiI take place N0-
vember [3 and [4. in the Main Auditorium
01 the Nautw. Art$ Cenler. For
further informalion. caD 586-2525.
when NlWlretl\ purchased lhe houIe
!Tom 1M Martins'. In the Fall 0/ '1949,
four 8enIon (one being Sr_ Magdalen
laRow) frtm lhe class 011950 and Sr.
louiN Weber tnOYO!d inlO whal _
then known 116 I.e P\ry. [1_namedLc
Puy lor t .... cily in France where the
Sisterao/SaintJoeephwere Iounded. 1n
1972, ~ became lhe Frmch Housemore
commonly known 10 thoR who 1M!!
lhere as La Maison Francaist. Th.
dormilory became specifically for lhoM
studornt. interetted in the French Ian·
guII9O! ar.d culture.
The CallI halianllo is the most recent
addition to It..forlignlludiabuidingl
on ~ It ""116 dor>/Iled by tt..
ltalian.American CorrwmniIy 01 Roc:hat
... in 1978. It is the Cmt .... for Italian
Cullural Sludies and 00uses Italian
cl.>s$et and eYeI1t ••
St .... tuned for lhe nexi ~Did You
Know.,,"
Compiled In cooperalion with:
Sr. Magdalen laRow
Dr. Virginia OtIO
SPORTS-----------------------
,soccer Team Corrals Cornell
By MicheLe F .... !u and
JO!M!ph Crumb
The N~zareth SOCCer team whipped
the Cornell B squad 3·} la.st Saturday
in the final home game for the Golden
""Jo"hn latyko scored twice; the first
tally coming on a direct penalty lUck in
the first half to knot the scan! at one
golIl ~pi<ece. Tony O'Aiulo /lew up 10
the leI! wing from deep in Nazareth
territory aIllhe way to the Cornell gOal
boll where he WlIS tackled by II delen·
seman. The Flyers ........ then awarded
the free kick by z"tyko.
In the first half tempers llare<! several
limes as both , .... "'" experienced
difficulty ~n,aining ball control.
Oaye Synder was sho.<m II yellow card
and there were lSeVl!fal altercahons
betwe",; oppoSing playe.s as /I resuk
of hotly disputeoi calls by the referees.
Although most 01 the calls were
asainsl Nazareth, they ~ only to
psych the leam up. Nazareth controlled
the tempo of the game from the
outset of the second half as the in·
spired FJyen kepi CorneU pinned
down in their own end for 1YIO$1 IiMI
session.
John Kane was give"lli Y<ililow card
in the S«Ond half and he began to
play u,;th unJ"t'lenting hlry. He frm·
traled lho! Co~U offerw.' lime and
lime again. Kane also assisted on the
winning goal when he dribbled from
midfield through the Cornell defense.
As the Opposing players surrour.:led
""",,,bo-\~_
Many Robe". on hlo way 10 1C0..;"g _ head -' 119"ln.' Cornell. John Kant:
.... iol«d on the pla~,
Gleaner Sports Update
by Joseph Crumb
SOCCER
The$OCcer tearn's record went to 4.5-
1 aller they trounced Daemon~1.IosI a
,ough gam<! to unbeaten Geneseo 2·1.
and were defeated at R.n . 4·2 on
Sa'urday October 17th in a Paren"s
Weekend clash.
WOMEN'S TENNIS
The WOI1'Ien'S tennis team finished
their season wilh a record of four wins
and six losses. The learn Iosl R.n. 3-2
and Oswego 3·2. The Flyers defealed
Buffab State 4·1, and were awarded a
forfeit win against Keuka College. Chris
Cataldo finished with nine wins and just
one bss to qualify for the state tOUrTI/I·
~,.
VOllEYBALL
Nazareth's highly successful volley.
ball team whipped Canisuis 15-3, 15-6
and Alfred 15-1-, IS.s in a 'ri'MlItch on
Oclober 6. Nazareth also topped Pots·
dam 15-7, 2G-18, 15-7 and sienl"l/J 15-3,
13·15; IS·7 in dual MlItches. N ... w",
finaJy cooled off by BrockpOrt State IS-
13, 15-11, 11-15, 5·IS, 13-15 as the
team's record droppro to 12 wins
aglIinst just two losses.
CROSS COUNTRY
In the cross country team's final meet
at Monroe Community Cotlege Cindy
Hahn placed 6th (21:49), Maureen Flan·
"!)11l ran 7th (21:11), and J ulie Heath
finished 12th (24 :02). Cindy Hahn and
Maureen Flanagan improued tremend·
ously OV<!r the course of lhe ""ason.
Maureen ~ her lme for 3.1 miles
more than five minutes. Cindy sMved
more than three minutes off her time
since the beginning of the season. Julie
Heath also improo..<ed.,lowerins her best
time lor 3.1 miles (23:18) by nearly two
minutes_
GOLF
The Nazareth golf learn wound up its
season by participating in lhe R.A.C.
Tour_nt al Deerfield Counlry Club
on October 13th. Lo;s Judd placed 2nd
in the WOI1'Ien's division and John
Gruber fired an 82 to finish in 7th ploce
in the men's division.
him he pushed a perfecl pass at-d to
Marty Roberts. Roberts drifted in
alone on lbe CorneU gOal .. who came
out of the nets ;n an at!empt to knock
lhe ball away. Roberls eluded the
diving Redman and drove the ball into
tbe goal for the go ahead score.
The Flyers--outshooting CorneU 17·
11 scored twice lOO'e only 10 have the
'allies nullified by oll$ide calls. On one
such play, the eomeU goal .. saved,
but could not control ~ blast by Ed
Schuler and a Golden Flyer rebounded,
putting ;1 in the net Schu"'r's sleady
baII-handl;ng helped him break fr""
twice for one on one shots, bul fine
saves by lhe Cornen gool .. prevenled
tbe scores.
Naz Winter Athletes
Warming Up for Season
By Joseph Crumb
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Coach Gigliotti has threeslarters ~nd
six other lettermen returning;n his final
season as N ... ",eth's baskelballcoach.
J uniorsDave Adams, Mike Dianel1; and
St....... Perkins aU performed weD '"
slarl"", for last year's successful team.
Also relurning this year ~re: Ken Lewis,
rim O'Gonnan, Mark Pam20. Paul
Cummings, Dino Aimino, and Bob
Newton. Coach Gigliotti has three
freshman prosepecl5on this year'svar·
sity including two local products-Mike
Schmidt from Greece Arcadia and Al
DiSanIO from lyons. FreshMlln Ken
D.1vis also joir'l6 the varsity Squad. Naza·
reth is coming off its best season 0X!f
08-7), bul they will have to fill the holes
left byJohnDansier (Nazareth's all time
leading rebouncieT) and Tom Vetter,
who have graduated. The team will
warm up for ils 26 game schedu'" with
an alumni gam<!on NoYember 13th. The
regular season opens with the McMaster
Tournament in Hamilton, Ontario,
on N"""mber 27th and 28th. Nazareth
will play the firsl round in the lincoln
FITSI Tournament at home on Tuesday
De<;ember 1st al 8:00 p.m. last ""ason's
18-7 mark will be hard 10 top '"
this yea,'s so;:hedule is a grueling one
featQring _1II highly ranked teams
including Potsdam sl~te, slony Brook.
Buffab State and lhe University 01
Rochester. So be SUre to corne out and
suppor' our basketball team and help
the players continue to build a winning
tradilion at Nazarelh.
Despite these temporary setbacks,
the hungry Fi;ers continued to pOUr
the pressure 'on the Cornell defeTlS<!.
Finally, Jon Zatyko blase.:! a 20 yard
kick OV<!r the head 01 the "'aping
ComeD goolie for his second tally of
the contesl, icing lhe game for Na ....
reth 3·1. The defense for N .... w",
super, with Tony O'Aruto ~nd John
Kane _playing brilliant aggressNe
soccer_ The oIfeTlS<!. led by Zatyko,
Roberts ~nd Schuler. also ~ weU
and was unstoppil.~ in the second ""'. It "","s a team effort for Nazareth
and they upped their record to 5-6-1.
The Flyers will wrap their season at
SI. Bonaventure On Saturday.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
The u.tOmI!n's basketbaD team opens
its season at Utica College on November
21st The fin;1 home gam<! will
be played on November 30, ~16:oop.m.
aglIinst Sienna. Cua<::h Margie Gornez
has six rP-tuming players: Tracy Van·
derwall, Maureen Haley, Nancy Drum,
Karen McGowen, loraine MuD, and
M.J. Penian. New Players include
Heidi Higgins, Sue Snow, Carol Duke,
Marian Geraiity, Stephanie Cook, and
Sue Dempsy.
MEN'S SWIMMING
Coao:::h Tom Ralph lists fourl"" ..
swimmers on this year's roster. There
are lour senior" Rick Carvotla (back.
stroke), Peter sru<e (sprint), Greg Vick
(distance) and Ron Waterbury (diver).
The two juniors are: Dave Bergman
(diver) and Jim Cheney (breastslroke).
Dave Hartman (sprint) is the Only 5QPh.
more. Seven freshmen are oul for lhe
team this year: Nick Charles (sprint),
Steve Dugan (breaststroke), Joe Farelo
(fly), Brian liable (diver), Dave Newber·
ry (back$trolle), John O'Gorman
(breaststrolle) ~nd Jud Spear (dis·
tance). Managers for the team are: Don
Marx. Sue lk.an, Meg Conniff. AI
Philippone, and Al CapazzeilL The
swim team will warm up lor the regular
season by parlic~ling in the frolicking
Toi"'t Bowl Relays v.ti1h RJ.T .. U.R.,
and Geneseo. The regular season
begin. with Jhe Harvest Relays--a
fourteen team meet at Geneseo. Na·
zareth will try to improve on last
year's fourth place finish. The first
dual meet will be at Fredonia on De·
cember 5. The fITst home meet will be
against R.l.T. on December 12 at 2:00
p.m.
ktober 30, 1981 THEGlLANER Page 1 ,
Volleyball Team Succumbs To Brockport Rally
'Y Jouph C rumb
The Nazareth voIleybaII team $Ilf.
e.ed its second setback losing to
lrockport last Tuesday at home 15·13.
[5-11,11·15,5-15,13·15.
In the fit"$t game Patti Quigly served
""" waight poinl$ to stake Naurdh to
, 7.J wad. The Fly .... stretched their
ead to 14-6 with MSc.apper" Maza·
OW$ki lofting perfect sets to liz Alhart
.no:! Patti QuisIY. Naz SUlViYed a late
ally by Brockport and held on for a
.5-13win.
Liz Alhan served foo •• traight point.
OS the FIyer$ jumped O\.It to 5·1 wad in
he _ond game. Brockport .tormed
back to take a l(]..8edge, but Nazarelh
cam<! back as Alita Gerber served lou.
straighl poinl. and Liz AIN.t and
Jackie Canut slammed home several
k"Y points on sets from Meionie
Golden. A Patti Quigly block provided
the winning point in the 15-11 victory.
Paui QuisIY served nine Straight
points and liz Ahart was UMtOPPi'lbIe
in the center front line as the Flyer.
bolted to a 9·] \ead in the third game.
Then the TOOl caved in as lhe momen·
tum switched to Brockport. The opponems
.""red back with inspffi play al
the net to win 15-11.
In the fourth game the bdy Flyers
never got ""tracked as Brockport
Liz Alh.ort ......... for Naz. II __ the final home _ for the ~ior hille •.•
Winter Athletes Continued
WOMEN'S SWIMMING
Coach Debbie Lawrence'. swimmers
NiII also tUIII! up for the upcoming sea·
IOn with the Toilm Bowl Relays on
October 31st. There are twenty
swinvners on the rQ6t ... iro:;luding .....
niors Jennifer J""""" (free style) and
PetQo Sullivan (individual medley).
The.e aN lour juniors on the squad:
Diane Ga.ssner (diver), Jacquie Marci·
ano (diver), lisa RoIhweU (br""5t.
stroke), Vicki Weiland (indiv'odual med·
ley), live sophmores will compete this
year: Tammy Flamik (free style),
6ridgeue Hobart (freestyle), Sheik>
O'Hara (individual medley), lynn
Tremblay (backstroke). and linda Van
Auken (backstroke). Coach Uwr<!1lCe
also has 'a \arge turnout of fr ...... men
swirnr'neT1. th'" year. They are: Lori
Board (breaststrOke), Crista Ctwnber.
lain (diver), laura Dd...isIe (fly), K .........
Grahe1 (diver and b;>.ckstroke), Ke-rry
Ann Hultgren (breast.troke), Donna
Johnson (indMduai medley), Kelly
McGowBn (free .tyle), MBu.een
McGuiness (b'''''51Stroke and free
6tyW). and Stephanie Vickers (free
style).
The flTst regular season meet will be
against Ithaca College at home on De·
cember 3rd.
Career Placement Aid
ALEXANDRIA, VA- Concemed
about finding a job alter graduation?
Now there's a new campus service that
e<>n put ;roor resUm<! in the hand. 01
over 10.000 ernplayers both here and
obrood.
Career ~t Registryis the new
service's name and it is being introduced
this S0"1K!$ter on oo.oer 1.200 col·
lege and university campuses across
the Coontry.
CAREER PLACEMENT REGISTRY
gives students the opportunity to reo
cord their personal and ""ademic cre·
dentials in an international direcl ·
aocess data base. Potential employ ... s
.... e !>ble to sean:h theon·line aystem lor
""1/ or all o! the following prospectiw
employee criteria: college. degree. rna·
jor/ minor, grades. occupalional and
geographical preference, citizenship
. taluS, Nlevant experience, language
proficiency, and .pecial skills.
The data .tudenls enter intO lhe CPR
S\lStem, is searchable via the Dialog
tnfom"o/l!ion $eMce. 0.... 10.000 com·
panies in 44 coomries currently use
Dialog for inIom\ation Nhieval. CPR
enables thew employen 10 match the
best '1ualifiedcandidate toany job open·
ing. liberal Art.· graduates. for exam·
ple, may easily be ecreened by person·
nel direcl0t"$ for lrainee programs
through lhe use 01 the 5'j$lern.
F"" a lee of $8.00. $!udentsrnayent ...
the CPR data base for a pe-riod 01 six
months. All data ent ... ed inlo the com·
puter will be returned to the student 10.
verification.
lat ... this year, CPR will be expanded
to iro:;!ude college alumni and execu·
tives who an) or have been in the wo.k
/occ". This wiD allow all individuals to
enter their cotIege credentials, work
experience. and desires lor employ·
ment. It will further er0ble present
students to continue and up-dale their
CPR entry aft ... graduation lor as long
as they desire.
Inilial respOnSe to CPR from SIU·
took B 9·2 lead and never looked block
lor a 15·5 win.
In game live. Brockport continued ils
brillianl play, npedally in returning
slams Irom the Nazareth Iront line.
However. liz Alhart, Alita G ... ber and
Pani QuisIY poonded enough poinl$
through 10 the keep tt\e Flyers clos<!.
It W3$ the toughest game of the match
as the two t ........ traded ...,-".es and
matched point 10. point until Brock.
port came OIIt on top 15·13 to win the
deciding game and the match.
It was the final home game for Naza·
reth and the las! time senirm Liz Alhar!
and Palli QuisIY will pia." in the friendly
conlir.es of the Shults Center gym. Both
Pall; and liz are sta rteTS, strong
servers, powerful /Ioatrrs and supe.·
tough in lhe front line. The two seniors
"'"'" presented Rowers as a token 01
friendship and good service. Coach
T erie V~lardi praised Liz and Patti say.
ing: "The tearn is going to mOss them,
theYN good peQPle and we'N glad
theYre here."
Senior. are an important Pi'I.t 01 the
game and ~ will be difficult to repi.ace
Patti Quigly and liz Alhart. Both Liz
and Paui enjoy the sport and would like
to go larther in volleyball. We at The
Gleoner wish them the best 01 h.Jck in
this and all their luture plans.
Career
Seminars
Spollsored by placemellt and career planning
AI! s!udenl$ .... e irr.Iited to Bttend lin\! or all o! the following career seminars, to be
held in Corlffirence Room A, Otto A. Shults Community Center:
Tue .. November 3,1981,4:30 PM:
'"Writing Eff""tive Resumes and ec..... Letters.
Tue., November 3, 1981, 7:00 PM:
"Writing Eff""tive Resumes and C"" ... letters.
Wed, Noo.oember 4. 1981. 4:30 PM:
' Writing E(f""tm Resumes and Cov~ Let trrs.~
Tue .. November 10, 1981,4:30 PM:
"Preparing for the Employment Interview.~
Tue., NOYI!fIlber 17, 1981. 4:30 PM:
"Employment 100erviewrog for Business and lndustry,- with guest presenters, M$.
Gayle GianninV, Personal Trust Administrator, lincoln Fint Bank, and Mr. Richa.d
PQPI>'>'ic, B.anch Manager-Service. Xerox Corp.
Tue .. D""ember I. 1981. 4:30 PM:
MEmpIoytnent Interviewing for Teacher., Social Worket$. and Others in Human
Services," with guest presenters. Ms. Iris NU$baum. Staff Development Coordina·
tor, Monroe County Department 01 Social5eMces, and M •. Ed Delaney, Director.
Teacher PrrsonneI, City School District.
Wed., December 2, 1981. 4:30 PM:
"WrH;,.,g Effective Resumes and Cover leners."
TUIl .. December 8. 1981,4:30 PM:
"DfI!S5ing for Succ",,",- ","th guest presenters Ms. Deborah Gardella, Business
Mar\IIge', Channel21·WXXI, and Mr. Brian ~r, Operations Offo::e., lirocoln
Fint Bank.
' Seminars wiD nol be 1"<!peated du.ing lhe spring semester.
dentS, college placement oIflC<'l"s. and
corpo.ate .""ruit ... s around the cOUn·
try has been extremely favorabw. "At
last," $<lid on<', Mthe career field has
found the technology to handle p.oIes·
oionally the e xchange of information."
Declared a student, "TIle $8.00 fee is
less than the poStage l"dspend sending
OIIt resumes!"
To obtain \IOIJI" CPR dala entry form,
stop by the campus job placement cen·
I ... or write dire<:tIy 10 Ca.eer Place·
ment Registry.lnc., 302Swartn AvenuI:',
Alexandria. Virginia 22301.
G[ED ALL I EV[R DO
15 STUD'!'.I SPE.ND
SONoOCH TIME ANDI GET
NOTHING COMPLETED
I~ "TlIGH
ORGAN· \ZED
I Naz Art Center Events I
November I
SUNDAY AFTERNOONS AT NAZA·
RETH: Madrigalia, a siKteen voice
<;hoir acclaimed for its treatment of
Renaissance and Baroque music. Main
ftuditorium. Free admissOO.
ART EXHIBIT: Facul ty art u hibit
through Nov. 29 includes sculpture.
photOgraphy. prints, cerarrUcs. metal
work, jewelry.Lobby.Art Ce nter.
November 2:
MUSIC: Nazareth College Jazz Ensemble,
se<:tion 02, under the direction
of Timothy SuUivan, associate profes·
sor o f music. Art Center, A.l3, 7:30
PM. Free lWimission.
NOl.'E'mber 7
EXHIBIT PREVIEW: Armanda Bal·
duni opens her eKhi!:>it of modern
'-"OOcI and. day Kulptllrei. Casa It alia,
5-6 PM. Fret'. Sherry reception to
follow. Show continues thfOllgh Nov.
20.
NOl.'E'mbe r 8
MUSIC Nazareth College Chamber
Sinsers under the direction of Edward
Schell,lecturer in music. Arts Center,
A·1 4. 4 PM. Tocket" adults, $2, stu·
dents, $1.
No~ember II
THEATER: The Nazareth College
Theater [).,.partment and 0....,... Club
present Chri$topher Marlowe's uo..
Faustus' with Richard Wordsworth
and Frederic O "Brady. di.-e<:ted by
.lMcph Bar~nowcki. Mai" auditorium,
Arts Center. 10 AM. Tockets adults,
$3.50; students. $2; senior citizens, $1.
Available at Nazareth Sox Offi<:e, 586-
2420.
November 12
THEATER: "0.. Faustus", 10 AM and
8 PM.
No~ember 13, 14
SHAKESPEARE CONFERENCE:
TIMJ day conference on the life and
works of William Shakespeare to pr0-
vide both a scllolarly and a popular
forum lor discussion of our language's
foremost autl1or. Main Auditorium,
Arts Center. 9:]5 AM. Free.
LET'S SEE. .. I"U STAAl" WI1l/ A
~E[)IJl[ . I Nm 1a!OO15 f'£R
\I,n~ roR Cl.A.\S[5,1' nl $J\lP'i,
Xl fil~ RESEARCII ~ TYPIN~, If "Ill
UT,B ~ Ul£5 AND CI/IJi';(JI,
2& ~ QARLNET AIIDVOON,
20FQR SOClAuzmG, ~ FoII
Sl£EPlN3. . .. AlJDg R:fI
()[1)'"tIG PREFJ'EO. liM ..
THAn 1'l8 I1OVR5 TnTAL
Vegetarianism Cont'd.
(Co ntinued from page 4)
ingre(Iients and you"U notice there is a
tendency tOolJards use of vegetable
sI1orten~ over animal fat.
In about two pounds of steak. there is
enough benzapynene (acancer prochx·
ing agent) as in the sm:lke of some 600
cigarettes. In .teak you eat it. in cigarettes
you inhale it.
How about methyicholanthrene
(another cancer producing stimulant?)
When cool<ing meat, tbis agent is
formed, and it is tlrus formed by the high
heat necessary to prepare the meat.
Although trichinosis comes mostly
from pork, ~ you a re a plain meat eater.
it can be contracted. In short, ~ B sick
animal is killed and eaten, ! would as·
sume the sickness can be transferred. t
Naz Gets
Chem Grant
don't recall any concrete proof tMt the
eating 01 animal. with cancer causes
cancer, but scientific evidence tends to
point to such a conckl.ion, thus backing
the statement made by Eu..n G. Wltite
in 1905 that "people aruating flesh that
is filled with tuberculo$is andcancerous
germs. TB. cancer and other fa tal dis·
eases are thus communicated."" (Minis·
try 01 Healing. 1'9. 313) In her testimonies
to the Church. volume 9, 1'9. 159,
M!"$. White also writes: "If meat eating
WlIS ever healthy, it is not safe !"ION.
Cance!"$, tumor •. and pulmonary dis·
eases are largely caused by meat eat·
ing." She made these s tatement. back
then with very little scientific proof.
but today Kientist. are more Of less
tel~ng uS tile same thing.
Now that you have had a glance at
vegetarianism, it is up toyou to make an
intelligent decision-either stop eating
meat, or reduce the amount you Con·
~~.
Norr~Ark
10 STATE STREET
PITTSFORD, NEW YORK 14534
381·8079 - Mo n - Thur . IIAM_ II PM
F.t_Sat IlAM " t 2. PM
"""''-
-- ~-.. ~--... ~ -.
De liv e ry 10 NAZ campus
Av ailabl e: Mo n ._Sat.
e v e n in g f, om 8:00pm On .
The Nazareth College chemistry de·
])i'Irtment has been ilWarded a $10.800
granl for new equipment by the Na·
tional Science Foundation. Sr. Therese
lang. PhD .. chairman 01 the chemistry
department announced October 14. NOTICE The grant. """ich has been matched
by an appropriation from Nazareth. will
enable the col!egeto purchase a nuclear
magnetic resonanCe ( NMR)
~trometer-an instrument used to
determine nuclear structure and. ob·
serve molecular dynamics.
According to Sr. Therese, the <¥Idi'
tion 01 the new equipment will allow the
chemistI}' department to e~pand. its
curricutum by addinginstrumental ana!·
ysis and ad ..... nced laboratory courses
and will be of great ~alue to students
and faculty working on research pr0-
jects.
NaO!areth's grant was one of 235
awards made from among 1.399 proposals
from public and private universi.
ties. fOllf·year liberal arts colleges and
two-year colleges in 45 states and the
District of Columbia. Support of individ·
ual projects ranged from $868 to tile
maKirnum allowance of $20.000 under
t his year's NSF's Instructional Scientific
Equipment PrOgram.
ACADEMIC ADVISEMENT
and
COURSE SELECTION PERIOD
for
SPRING SEMESTER 1982
REGISTRAR'S OFFICE
Smyth Hall, Room 1
ALL FULL-TIME AND PART"TIME
MATRICULATED STUDENTS:
Andrew Young at Brockport
Pick up moterials .... Tu esday, Navember 10
and Wednesday, Navember 11
ALL FULL" TIME MATRICULATED STUDENTS:
SUNY at Brockport will have tile
good fortune of presenting Andrew
Young. United States R€presentative to
the United Nations under the Carter
Administration. This is your chance to
see Mr. Young in person, team tile
contrQ\/l.lr5Y behind him and. why he Jeft
such an important po6~ion in the Uni.
ted States government.
Mr. Young is a former Congressman
and leader of the civil rights movement.
He was the first black Congressman
from Georgia to be elected to tile Uni.
ted States House of Representatille$ in
10l years. This truly promises to be an
informative, and yet enjoyable euenil"lQ.
Mr. Young will appear in the Tuttle
North GymnMium on November la,
1981 at 8:00 p.m. T ocketsareavaUabIe at
the Brockport Union Box Office for
$2.00.
Great Cuts!
Great Prices!
$5,00 off - shampoo, cut & style
No Appointment Necess8ry
TUE._ SAT.
9 :30_5:30
THUR S. TILL 8
Off" , g oo d u nti l Dec. 10 1981
The Hair Barn
7 SCHOEN PL ACE
Pittsford
586-7870
Consultation w ith Academic Advis ors ....
Thurs., November 12, and Fri ., November 13
COURSE SELECTION VERIFlCA TlON ....
Smyth Hall, Room I
SENIORS, MONOAY, NOVEMBER 16 , 9 :00 o .m. · 12:00 nOOn
J UNIORS, MONOAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1,00 p.m.· 4,00 p.m.
SOPHOMORH, TUESOA Y, NOVEMBER 17. 9:00 0 . 00. _ 12;00 noon
FRES HMEN, TU ESOAY , NOVEMB ER 17 , 1:00 p.m._ 4,00 p.m.
ALL PART" TIME 'MATRICULA TED STUDENTS:
Con. uhalion .... ith A.od e m;. Advi. ofl ..
T h~fI. , Nove mber 12 th,u Tu .... Novembe, 17
COURSE SELECTION VERIFICATION ...
Smyth Hall, Raom I
Wedn .. doy, Nov. mb. , 18. 9,00 0 .00. _ 4,00 p.m.
FALL SEMESTER 1981 NOTICE:
ALL STUDENTS: LAST DAY TO CHANGE TO
" AUDIT" OR TO " DROP"
A COURSE WITHOUT
GRADE OF " F" "
NOVEMBER 18, 1981