theGLEANER
VOL. 57, NO. 5 NAZARETH COLLEGE OF ROCHESTER DEC. 4, 1981
Nazareth bids adieu to the Doctor By Sue Werle
line portraya] of Benvolio by Chris.
top/>er Whi",*, particularly in tlw
50ene where he and his t....., friends,
Martino (Marlin D. Santomenno Jr.,)
and Frederick, (ChrislOllher WilIcin),
attack Faustus after he humilio.lOlS Be".
Valio at lhe Emperor's court.
Recent"",. Na2are!h'$ drama department
hooted a prodoction 01 Chris·
tophe, Marlo:)o.w's "Dr. Faustus," Very
simply, the story is that of ~ brilliant man
who is Mlermin<:<l to do, know. andbe
more than he is_and to "!lain this. he
oell$ his soul to the devil. He lives (ac.
cording 10 the contract) few twmty·four
years in ease and luxury. enjoying fame,
""",Itll and _. Finally, having des·
pair~ of God's mercy, Faustus con·
cede.ludf ...... victory and is pa.ckedoll
to hen by the devil's trusted fill'll!""",,!,
Mep/!istophilis.
In Na ... reth's producOOn, Dr. Faus.
IUS wM po.-trllye(l by Richard Wordsworth.
whose talent and experience lent
a tou<;h of dignity to what migln other.
wi$e have prov<!(I to be a merely medjo.
ere prodUCTion, Particularly in the last
scene, Wordsworth built and held the
pathos of Faustus' final damr'>/lhon aod
de$pair. II was a Il1O'Jing performance
andwen_h~.
Word$worth's per/ormance was en·
.... nced and ~fecdy cornplemmt..d by
frederick O'Br..dy. whose MophistophilO.
was devilisIV,o exquisite aoo oorr;'
bly ~abIe. His praence on Sl;>ge
added the pE'rlect touch to this production;
his expertise brought Mophislo.
philis a cll.ss that a devil shouldn't. by
rights. MOJ<!.
Good ~rlormaoc:es .....ere ~Iso del~
VO!red by some membersoltl\.e suP\Xl<t,
ins casl.
RicMrd Jarvie, (~ control and
delivery were delightful in cofllrast to
some of the other characters) was one
01 thevery lew whose presence on slage
was not d~ by the power of
Wordsworth and O'Brady.Jarvie'. por.
trayal of Faustus' servanl, Wagner, was
to ""II the least, cMrming-1O say the
_, his was easily lhe best perlor,
mance beside the t....., $tarring roles. In
lIdd~ion 10 Wagner, Jarvie also por.
t"'yed Charlts V, Emperor of. Ger,
Pollard Views
Conference a Success
By Rut" A. Oprean
WhE'o contemplalins lhe Iype of reo
view 1 would write for the $hakespure
lesli\l~11 lhou!il to "'IS'lH how prel",,·
t>:;.us and insignifo:ant my c~nts
would be concerning the cont",,1 and
amount of. koowledge pn!sented al lhe
lestival. Making one $haDow stat"""",t
5UCh as ~his leclu", was interesling~
se<m>ed to me a waste 01 time. I chose
rather 10 present the opinion of oome
$ludents who attended andcon«ntrate
the rest of the article on 0.. Pollard',
view 01 the symposium.
The general opinioo of the .tud""lsl
questioned was tMt the lestival was
"good"; howINer, their answers.....ere
nol emphatically positive, but rather
were reactions of mixed responses.
This was beca~ many studenlS had
difficulty understanding much of the
material; students relt the conference
was !>Vel" their heads.
But Dr. PoIIatdexpected this.] had"
very ""Iight""ing discU5o/lion with him
aboullhe conference and he explaiMd
what he lelt were the purposes 01 the
conlerences. But we also talked about
the world of the intellectual, and what
he had to say about this as ~ applies to
lhe conference .. very interestins.
Dr. Pollard told "'" a . tory about
when he was an undergraduate at Holy
Cf05S. The ""hoo! was sponsoring a
I<o<;tu,... featuring" lamous modern phi.
io6ophe. dlscusoing SI. Thomas Aqu~
nas. He was there with lellow students
and he said,"1 only understood 1/10 of
what the lectu,e, was saying! But 0..
PoIIa.d rell tMt there were peOple there
who did understand; peOple who could
share and enjoy this man', knowledge.
This he found really e~c~ing; it was an
incentive 10 strive for knowledge on
another level; it sa"" him a notionof the
"intellectual 6re" and he 10000nd ~ very
exciting.
ThiS is the t\l!l'l! of s.ituahon hewished
l<> present. Al lhese lectu,es he 0bviously
understood much more 01 whal
the IectureT5 were !laying; he was not
the only one ",*,,"119 lhe oIharing of
ideas. The conl .... ."."e was not aiming
10 instruct the popular audien«; ~
was intended to give people ' uch as
the student population II chance to
"eavadrop" on the Kho!a.Iy world
and to have an opportunity to 5« how
exciling and fun the intellecl ual world
can be.
Caven" $how. When we hea! a lamous
personality discussing a movie they
made, the discussion somet;"- get5
very technical; bul we have had the
O\l9OI1un~y to share some of tMI per.
scm's experience.
This was not the sole purpose of the
conl .... ."."e; it was a chance lor the
erudite to sather with their peer, to
share intellectual thoughts; ~ was an
opportunity for Nouareth to neate a
oen5e 01 rellowship with oIher institu,
tioll$ and it was a chance for Dr. Pollard
and Nazareth to make "contnbution to
the cultu,e of upstate New Y o<k.
For Dr. Pollard, this was a W"ll 10
actua\iu an intense intellectual interest
01 his own; II Wily to bring together his
peers; a Wily IOcreate a _ of"yood
will" with colleagues lrom other c(ll.
leges. He wM pleased that President
Kide:a had allowed him the opportunity
"to make a commitme,1I 10 his peers.~lt
was aCMn<:e to bring together others to
share ideas and MVO! aome fun.
The future SMkespeare coni .... ......,.,.
are already in the idea s!age.lt tool< Dr.
Pollard ]4 monlhs 10 organize this one;
scholar. had to becontacted.and agree.
"",nts made M to the time. place and
agenda for the symposium. Tho next
conference will be held in appro";'
mately IWO years and may possibly deal
with Shak£spea",', comodiea in liIm$.
Dr. Pollard has a d.eam todoa.'fll'IIIO"
slum specml1y on music.
Those wonderful moments of inteJ.
lectual exhiliration are a joy 10 be cher·
ished. ll>ese time5 are e.;perienced
when sharing ideas. No man .... what
level of lhought a person is at, theycan
still exchange ideas. The Shakespeare
COf"lI .... ence was an evenl which ai,
forded peOple this opportunity.
many,.and in this tOIe,too, weD used the
opportunity to show off his talenl .
T....., CM.acters ",ho drew quite a lew
Iau!t>s were Robin (J. Carleton Stone)
and Dick (Daniel McFildden). Their
performance added " "cule" touch to
th .. baslcalIy tragic play. althougl>
Dick's incessant, high,pitche<l giggle
occasionally gr~ted the nerves. A11·in·
aU, ~r, the part, wereweD played,
and went over quite weD.
Another K_ which seemed to be
much appreciated by the audience was
the Kene with the Pope, (the Oper'Iins
'lCene of the second hall). Andrew
Eichne. turned in a good performance
as the »Ol1'"pOUS, conceited. and rather
ridiculous Pope. ]t was a favorite Kefle
according to most comments.
Mention should also be made of the
Good words also 10 Susan Ellinghausen
(the Good Angel) and Victoria
VlSik.,.Knox (the Bad Angel) for an
interesting set 01 per/orrnar.::es. Vo:t.,.
ria's nicely nasty performance was in
perfect contrast to Susan·s righteous
contribution.
Considmng the quality 01 the drama
department. the play was a Intle disap.
pointing. H"""""", ~ wasnotaUbad(as
noted in the preceding paragraphs) and,
hope/uDy, there is more to look lorward
to in the ""ry near future.
-... _GuUI
Spewr O.B. H. rdioon _AI!. 81 N ...... " h SIwo~.'" Conl~rm< •.
WNAZ: A Good
Possibility
By Marc La Vecchia
We'"" got the ideas. We've got lhe
, incentive. II would delinate!y be a major
plus 10< Nazareth without a douhl.
Imagine O<.Ir own .adio slation. playing
songs by reque$t, covering basketball
9"mes tMt were oIherwise soId-out,
and interviewing faculty $0 YO" could
caU in and ask them questions "on the
air." You Mve to admit, it oounds like a
great idea. So "'Mt'S the problem?
We',e not .....,rried about funds. We
""""" Mve a few place$ to locate the
station. What we need is help. We need
input ... from tlw students.
A radio station here al Nazarelh has
many benefits. this is t~. ~ in
the field 01 journalis.m, communiatioll$.
management. music, or even speech
has much to gain from this. But suchan
operation can not possi:>ly be Mndled
by three or four individuals. We need
the cooperation from ot ...... interested
students.
At this point we MVO! visited Rrr.
radio station (WrrR) for !l"idance and
are in the process of talking with the
Federal Communiclltiosn Commission
(FCC) regarding requirements for a
license and other technical matters. A
decision hasbeenmadetOStarl out ""';lh
a "carrier cummt frequency~ which
meMlS the station would only be aired
within the campus dorms and. aca·
demic buildings
Thus far, the only interested parties
consist of Joel Odell (conc .... ned ""';th
business organization) Arthur Smith
(concerned ""';th management) run
GU<nBne (conc01"l'M!d with neative _
peets) and myself (conc:emed with man.
agement and creative aspects). 11 \IOU
are the least bit in! .... estw and lIIant to
take parl in giving birth to such an
imporTant ,tep foI' !he col\ege, get in
touch with one 01 the alorementioned
people at any time. Oneolus Brealways
avai1able. The way 1 figure it, ~ Fisher
can have a radio station, there is no
reason why Nuareth can~ ha .... one.
EDITORIALS the Gleaner
n... G _ r ~ """",,,"from IIw
otudont ~,jocuIry, <nf acmnistroricn.
Utrc<J to rho ediror may be pGad .. our
~ OIl til. door 01 II. Undougrad
Acrivi,;,o Room, 0<' rnoiIod 10 The
Glune" N~oreIh ~. P.D. Box
«X1l. R<>Ci'.tsIor, N.\'. 1461(1
The end if near. Now that "",'w
~ fJom a much·needed n-ksgMng
1AICation. "'" can _ ,.. speed
ahead inlO fniIIs, and then (haIIe/u.iMI)
to the winter brNk. We've rl'IIIdi: iI
through. the:......,..., part of the semester.
Only t"'" ChristMilS fomvJ, last minute
cram sess;o"" and lweliling finlIls
stand between IIOJoP and a month of ""T"h"o 'G" leaner. 100, it rouring the end
01 a q.o::lo. II will t.. •• did 10 break lhe
cycle 01 long, ~.smoIUng IaIyout
oessionI, franlic: Thunday AM copy
ICrambIn, whirN.;nd tripllO the pm.
Ie., and ~~ Monday
,.q,t ~ Somthow, """IIO! mao·
aged to publi$h , ~pcr. An incredible
accomp1i5hment, conlidering Iha!
"",,'w staned 'rom the beginning with
an all-new, relat"'ly inel<perienced
staff. But "","'w done iI. And will keep
on doing it Ihroo,dl .... 'U Hme$ler.
St~ ,*=k, ] IIWIk Iliac the Sli\If
......,..jd ._ with ..... in saying thiIt
_'"" .. grown. Writing on demand iI
no! ~ usy, and ......-iIing for a Laige
aOOience an be c:\ou.rnriglllCary. Writ·
ing is no! the only aspect of a newspaper,
however. I 11m eX«'J)lionalIy
proud of the quality 01 piclUmo Ire/_
print. Advenising it a vital job. Our
typists are ind~. J would Iikf; to
publicl"J ~ the . taft no! only lor
pr<>eIumg, but for ~ ~ to
keepon~ .
l.ocking ahead 10 nvte ~I!t. I
~ 10 _ In. quality 01 our __
rontinue 10 riM. W~haw lots i::.I new
.iiIe.v, 001 .. ........, numot>er 01 peopk <0
"x«utc" 'Mm. To cxpw><! our covu·
"9". we fIftd a L"rger 11af( """IlI'Y bit as
mthusiaslic !II/he preMn! one. Work·
ing on a school _papel" increases
\lOUT ~. allows you 10 meet
""'" people. Ioob SJQ.I on a resume.
heIp$ deueIop ~ akibI in an area, and
_~pIain 1un.If~oIlhcl\bol.loe~_
mund good 10 YOU. I urgII you 10 seriously
o;onsicIer ;.:.IrW1s UI .... ,ot ~
,~.
Kalhy Kehoe. Edilor
Why Not
24 Hour Nursing?
By Liz Poda and R_ FIou
In an inleWiew with Judy EtnanueI,
VICt! Presidenl 01 51udml Affairs, lhe
i$$ue oIlWmty·ioor hour nursing her~
on caJnpull \11/15 discussed.
I! seemIIltwol, Ih_semesler, lhere hal
no! been twenl~·toor hour nursingl\lJail.
able on weekends. It _ not lhe fad that
lhe adminillralion does nol \IIant
twenty·four hour health GIlle; bul ~ _
not conwnient lor 1M fulun! nigh!
nu:rw:s. Tht 1\1.0 !"lUna hired ......., not
ready 10 fill the poIition ""iii .... "1
M'!"I"IeSter.
In the EUCmI 01 an enWrgmcy. who!n
health GIlle _ nol lWallable, .tudent.
shoold go first to lheir R.A.'I. If the
R.A.'s not lI\Iailable, their A.O:. aN!
also qLllliiflod. 1/ necesIiII"JI. the A.O:.
.....;II call ....,urily. If HCWiIy feels ~ is
nec:essary, tMy will then call either the
day nur30I or doctor. or euoen an ambulance,
it needed.. AI partin mentioned
___ ...... ntru<;wd in first aid.
To milke students more aware oflirst
aid. Campo. Ministry will hold II work·
shop on health ClOre in the near fuMe.
~"'" students are fortunate t ..... 1
they hew I«ftI to health care on
c.ampus. 1bere _ no 1,,\/1. at present.
tIwot reqoira colleges to J)I"O'Jide he.aIIh
care HlVice.
Delli" Editor.
Sooltm ...... aslwman be;ngi. tend to
take advantage 01 lhose who laue UI
"-I. We,lIS social work stodents. have
four 01 the most genuinely COIlIidnate
f/leulty members at Naureth College.
1be time and effort they devote to tho
social won. program is ~;
each and EVerY OlIo:' 01 them uniquely
c:ontribut", 10 the indiW:IuaI growth of
lhe IOcitJ won. student. They poMMM
mcouragement and hopelor the rut ......
prOYiding their studentl \IIith the
Itrmgth 10 grow and kMt,
Some 01 us social work ma.iort 1"",1
ttwot lit this lime there iI a need 10
"'prell out utmost gratitude to lhem
fox cuing, for teaching. and, molt imporlantly.
1or ~ all oIthemiellla lor
lho benefit 01 the Social work ~t ..
Thank you Mrs, SIwp, MH. David,
Dr. E....,...., and Mra. Guthrie lor aI
you'\/!! done for us!!!
Thankful Social Work Student.
Edilor·in-dtief ••••. .• .••.
ArlIl\lll\ll9ll1 ..•..•.. • •.
KathyKeho.
. ....... Skeeler HaTTit
Business Il'l/lnagI1 • • • • • • • ............ . . ............ JOeI Odell
NI\IJ$ e<:titor •••••••••••
Photography editor.
Sports edilor ........... ... .. .
Staff:
. ...... Marc laVecchia
.. . .• Art Smith
. ..••......•••• Joseph Crumb
Deborah Bartlttt. Amy !)avis. Michele FO$ler. ROM!!! Floss, Kevin GousiI,
DeniM! l..i«gey. Barbara KeB.y, Barmgton Mcuan, Tarrrny Macko, Berrie
Mlsiorll. RUlh ()prcan., liz Poda. Margaret R ....... Dolty Sheldon. SUe Werle.
Photo of the Week I
Lion on the Loose
KEARNEY HAll..; Noll. 17. a large lion
111M _n 51alking the "swamp." relidenll
rq>OI"ted. Tho! animal, appllrlrl>tly
a rdugot from Lourda Hall. \II ... allegedly
"IooImg for some action." Alter
a brief altl!rCllbon with security .. a
.--.It 01 brealmg visitation, the rinaI
emerged from tho! room wearing "tour·
ill" lltir~ and a .... gm. 1be ......
_ eteorted back to L..ourdee u ....
prolnt. AI lasl rqx>rI. Lourda resident
... arl continuing rotlnd lho clock
.... ~~ to avoid rep'!I~ion 01
further nighttm.. prowls. T erm IM'per1l lake IMir toll on TIUIUnV. -.. -..-.
MUCH
TO DO
ABOUT
I rrWIde _laat allm.pllO puf him to
1IHp. I/igorc I can)go.....,.,gainginga ''''''''- • AI-oo-et .•.. .john.tay.aI-oo-et ~
AI-Of)-t!t~ ... jo/In.llIy.pIoo-m:>-~ •.. "
So far. 10 good.
NOTHING
"John. tay·pIoo-m:>-!ay·III·tct
iohn·tay·pIoo-m:>-~·Ia·tct ... •
"Marc?"
"Yuhr
"It'. a nice eong, but whal does ~
~r
by marc la vecchia
MOlliER GOOSE 15 LOOSE
By Marc La Vecchis
I'm appalled.
Vn. that's wbat I am. -. My roornate couldn't sleep Lut wee!<.
He Md an Ecoronia lat arrMng lOon
and ...... a nervous wruk. Ao:roN lhe
room I hear:
"Man:,.....:.uld you sing 11M! a ..... bylO
help 11M! 1Ieep?"
No problem. Then ..... I ha .... n~
hoard a lullaby in yea ... J de(;ded to
Ihrow an oldy at him. This \II ... pretty
rooch the raul! 01 my a!temp.
"Rock~·bye baby on·the 11ft top ..• "
"_r
"Ynr
"What _ a baby.x:...gon a!Tft top?"
"Chid iIbuH. Go to IIIetp.
" ... who!n ,he wind blows
the cradle will rock ... •
-rl-.ere ·, a cradle up there, loo?"
"'YNh. Go 10 sleep.
" ... if the bow breaks
lhe cradle wiD faD
and down will come baby
cradle and aI."
"Mate?"
"Whal?"
'""(Me. disgusting."
Think about il.1! really is disgusting. h
makesyoothinkolhow~t""nytiny
tOI$ have nightll'l/lra 01 babies falling
out oIlrft tos»..
My roornn"IIIIe becar.... resrlEss. l Md
10 stay !/Way from morbid LIIabies.
"How aboul nune.y rt..Imes?"
~."
He', 10 easy to please,
""There Will an old woman
who lived in a lhoe ... "
"Marc?"
"Y.."r
"Whal kind 0I1hoe \II ... it?"
"Dockaide!-I. Go 10 1IIftp .•
" ... whoMdIO~~
she didn't know what to do."
To this dir"t IIIiI can't "" ...... roomll'l/
lte to ..... ar his Docksidera. HecJ..ims
thaI the lasl time he put them on, Iony
children and an old woman with athlete's
feet lIarled ICreaming and biting
his toes.
And to think thaI mothers and "'tMrS
all owr the country are IIin9n9 these
IIOfI9S to thrir Iilt-month-old "bundle 01
joy."
My roornrnate handled it well. but
howcanyou tela third ~ 1 ..... 1 he or
ahe iI Iingjog a song about p/l.>c:king
leather. out 0/ ~ bird'a head? You can·t.
thaI'. how. You really can't "nle .. you
\/IiInt your kid growing up thinking that
the b<rds II'I/Iy retaliate ~~ and
.II.a.r.t. pU:king the hairs out 011"- /<id's I thri< this _ whal aD the problemtl
01 the world revalue around. Chi1dren
from all -a.s 01 • become menu.
IIy diIcrio!ntaf from <isreapectfuly
morbid lOngS. They grow up and ewntually
live the rest of lheir lives with
intoonnia in fear of dreaming 01 babies
dropping out of Ir"" top$. or barefoot in
fear of lqJ/I5hing (1""1. 5quasNng) a
bunch 01 smelly little IUds and their
-mo.th"er., "or, ju.s.t plain pefTitied 01 hair· Voudon' beIio:III!me.huh?WeI,how
iIboul _ pmo/? Did you eIII!f nola
the \WIll the ,w..tollah .......... , towel
\/IfiIpped ~round his head.. Under his
poncho iI a tee·shirt t ..... t proclllin\$,
"OEM BIRDSli NEVER GET ME
AtlVEI" The ""t;re Russian army lIill
\/IOII't ..... ar Docks.iders. no l1'l/I11 .. how
preppe they feel. And Ronald Reagan·
..• God bless him. II he didn~ apply hil
own mIIke-up 10 WEll, you could tel he
han'~aiepI i1 months. And ther.isnh
11ft lop with ~ cradle in it for miIeJ.
My good Irimds. my ",*,1 _ (\1ft,
lhere _ a ",*,t to this story) lhat v.t.m
you are aI married and hIoue kidl 01
your own, don't recite old nlJrMfy
rhymes and lullabies. Just ten lhe kid
lhat if he'. no! lISleep in I"" minutes.
you'l'i! going to hang IWlVher from the
nearest Irft top. next 10. bird', ... t,
with Docksiden. cradle and aI.
u<!C~m oe r 4, I~ !j l
Security: Ext. 225
By Li" Poda
A campus security department is a
servic~ organization devised 10 aid lhe
student. lOe presenl department al
Nala~th is doing il' best to provide
dependable S<mlice.
In an informal intw.Oew with tile
Director of Security. RoccoJ. Maddal·
il'\ll. many n'SjXlnsibililies and problems
of security were brought to my aUen· "". Mr. Maddalil'\ll has been tile director
al Nazareth for a year, and during that
lime has instituted many imPQl'tant
changes. He feel. lhal a rather pool'
departmenl has been upgraded
through added training of its
memOOrs, and increased awareness 01
the student body. There has been a
greater percentage of arrests due to
these changes.
In order for Security to be Ilelplul
students must be aware 01 ~s existence
and purpose. Constant complaints are
made try students among themselves.
bul for security 10 be of """'"ce, lhey
must be made aware 01 the sludents'
needs. In other words. you must help
them in order lor them to help you .•
One example ~ the OCcurrance of
obscene or annoyanee calls. If you
receive """, report il to Security and
help establish a pal1m\ in their occur·
ranee in order 10 apprehend the caller.
Simp", complaining to a friend will oot
end the calls. Notifying Security of lhe
problem will. 'Thorn: have been arrests
made this year due to student cooper·
ation.
Aoolher complaint among students,
is residence hall entrance..exil doors
being found unlocked after Ille time
which they a~ supposed 10 be locked.
Security conducted a survey one ev'
ening try ha"';f19 a guard continll<llly
check specmc doors. During thaI ev·
ening the guard closed Ihr .... doors,
which we~ cnnlinunu<ly he;ng
J>f<l!'P"d open seventeen limes.
Though it may be a convenience 10
prop open fire exit doors Or s;cIe
entrances, it is a breach of security.
There are 001 mough secufity guards
to check aU the doors constanlly
through lhe night. A.D.'. and R.A.'s
are urged to enlorc~ the mIes pertain.
ing to the u.e 01 these doors for
unlawful purposes. lOere has been an
increased amount 01 trespassing inci·
cjents lhis year, so it would be to the
students' advantage to use the CQl"ri!d
entrances and exits 10 the dorms and
to avoid propping Open doors.
Besides trespassing, vandahsm has
also increased. There have been many
afrftlS dealing wilh lhese crimes, so
students ",e enco\lr;>ged to continue to
reporl any suSpicio<J. activities. To
help recoVer stolen mer<:1wx!ise il is
advisabk! for students 10 register valu·
ables through Security'. "Operation:
[0" program. Applic~1ions for lhis,
along with bicycle and motorcycle
registration forms. are located outside
of the security offICe in the Shults
Center. All students are urged 10
register their valuables in case of thelt.
[n addition, Mr. Maddalil'\ll stre..sed
aoother thefl problem: stolen or lost
creelit cards. Whether it is a student's
personal card or his!her parent's card,
lhe loss should be reported imme·
diately. It seems I~t sludenls are
ashamed and embarrassed whom they
rltld the credit card missing and do oot
report it until. in some cases. it is too
~te Be reminded that you, the c~rd
owne-r, are respOnsible for all charges
made on lhe card until it is r~ed
missing. Lisled below are some Oil
Companies who issue credit cards.
along with the .. lelephone numbers. to
call in case 011oS5. •
To continue improving Nazareth's
security system, Mr. Madda!ina is con·
sidering the jXIS5;bilily of initiattog a
Sludent Campus Safety Task Force.
He has previously been in~ in an
organization of this kind and found ~
worlhwhile. Illormed, the Task Force
would increase the security of N~arelh
Ihrough the greater amount of people
involved in the department. Arr,J inter·
est in this organization should be di·
rected to Mr. Maddalina.
A final aspecl 01 Na.zareth Security
should be brought 10 the student body's
al1ention though for many it may have
already bee,,; 100 many times. Ii is the
subject of parktog.
One should be awarelhal all stude"ts,
laculty. and stalf muSI have parking
pomnits 10 park on campu$. During
lhe winler monlhs there is 00 over·
night parking in the ArtsCenter Or the
large Shults Center 101. II a car break,
down occurs, Security is 10 be ooti.
tied, and 00 disabled vehicle may
stand Ioriger than seven days in a lot..
11 your c~, is towed, call SecurilY and
they will ink>rm you wf,.,..., your c .. r ;.
Iocaled. A pamphlet on parking regu·
lations is available outside of lhe Se·
curity Department's 011icti in the
Shults Center.
Rl!11'I('Jt1.ber, 'the Nazareth Security
De-parlment is designed to help you, the
.ludeII1. ll>eir exterlSion number is 225
~nd lhere are people on duty twentylour
hours eve-ry day to assist you. Their
... rvice begirlS with your awa~ne5S.
lOe IoIklwing is a list of the maiOr oil
companies that issue credit c",ds and
many of the smaller ones.
The single asterisk (- ) deoot<!S a 24-
hour hotline number, with personnelon
hand round·the-clock lOe<loubieasle.
risk ( •• ) denotes companies that main·
tain 24-hour .ervice, but after hours
only offer message,taking machines.
lOe toll·free aoo numbers are lisled
first.
(Continued On p<t!If 8)
-..... -
.... '
R",ky MadaUl'\lI, Diretlo' of ~"rity
Who Was That Masked Man?
By Ma ~arel Rush
lOe questions are mounting. lOe
name is heard more and more oIlen in
the lunchroom and Ihe Pub. Who is
the real Art Monk? This reporter set
out to d~ this elusive campus
character.
Aclually. he seems a ralher contra·
dictory SOO1 of chap. To lhe outsidl!
world, he is lhe infamous Art Monk,
.. ,nownod womanize. and drunkard.
But to his roommate, who should know
him better than anvoneefseon campus,
he is quio!l, even 10 the paint 01 shy, and
studiou.. '
Mall Graham. who has lhe privilege
0/ living with Arthur Monk, says thaI
Anie is actually a wry mellow person.
H~ spends much 0/ his time in the
library and/or in the Art. Center stud·
ying to keep up his better·than·
average grades. He is an art maiOr
from Victor, N.Y. and Matt says he
milintains his small'l""'" alli!\ldes.
~He has a horne-town honey and,goes
home 10 her eve-ry weekend." In his
$pare lime, Art swims~· works out in
the exercise room. He also works at
nighl.
Art likes 10 be alone most 01 the lime,
lislening to classical or mellow music.
He reads a lot, especially Shakes·
pea~. lOe only time he w~tches tele·
vision is Saturday morning cartoons
and football. He _ misses a game,
especially ~ his favorite team, the
Washifl9\on Red5kins, are playing.
So, with this background, how did he
gel his infamous r.-potalion? Nobody
seems to know, feast of aU Arl Monk
himself. And yet, he has a Ian club on
camPUS tI),>.l is steadily growing., he has
a drink bearing his name in the Pub
('-<Idka, OJ, and tonic) and his name isa
rallying cry among the members of the
fan club. Mati ~ys thai occasiooal
bouts with lhe bollie are behind his wild
I::Jeh>,vior. To quote Mati, "He loses it
when drinking," This is the only tlerne
the rest 01 the world .ees Arl Monk.
~He's elusive, always ul'\llvailable. We
can never find him when we need him,
but somehow he's always there. Art has
been caustog all kinds of havoc on our
fIoor.~
According 10 0.."", Art's favorile
lOng is Talk Tq You Loter try the
Tubes (II I", cry from Manilow!). It
seems to be his theme song because
he's never around to talk now. You'~
oot kidding Dave!
-senior Ed Damr~th, a good friend
and member o/the fan club. says he's
"quite an individual, though he gelS 10
be a bil much when il comes to floor.
parties. he has an annoying habit 01
locking himself in other peOple'. ba·
throoms for several hoursalter he's had
a few drinks." John Vincent, another
member of lhe fan club agrees that Art
"can't handle his liquor.~
"The biggesl mystery is Art's way with
women, or ,alher, his ~tation for
""""IoO"izing. While he isn'l ugly {alleast
to some 0/ U$J, he is ",Iher ordinary in
apoearance. He jw;t has a certain ... ne
$Ois quai that charms most of lhe
women he meets. If he is such a loner, ~
seems strange that hecould want 10 find
lhe lime 10 et.m date wilh his hectic
schedule. Also, Matt says he's "sorta
engaged." When [ rmally got hold 0/ Art,
he expiained the "unOurS this way:
"One nioght in One of my terrible slates of
drunkenness, J passed aul somewhere
in Kearney, I believe on lSI center, in
some girl's room. A girl walI<ecI in, [said
'Thank ~' (for letting me pass OUI in
her room) as I fiew.by herout the door.
I'd hoped no one saw me coming OUta
lhere, but it seems some of her friends
caught me in Ihis mosl embarr .... ~
moment. J said oothing as I went try
them but one can see how such bizarr~
",moors can be starled.~
Matt says lhat since lhen. girls have
been hounding Art lor dates and more.
And yet, he says. "Art is /I man 01 high
moral starx:lards. Knowing him like I do,
lhe ",moors can hardly be t",e.~
Art admit. 001 knowing why he
drinks 10 excess on occasion; he even
admits being unaware 01 his actions
during these binges. J im Cheney
found him once, lying on the floor in
O'Connor I. When Jim tried to wake
him up, he raised both IIm\$ in the
.ignal for toochdown and mumbled
something like ~Let's Go 'Skinsl" To
this day, Art remembers nolhing of
this incident.
Alas, Art wiD be sorely missed try his
fan chJb when he transfers to another
school """I semester. he originally
turned down a fooIbaU scholarhsip to
Penn SllIle and is now reconsidering his
choice. He likes Nazare:!> but wants to
try somelhing d~fere-nt tor a while,
though ~bly not Penn St~t~.
The Art Monk Fan ClubwiD continue
to idoIiz~ the fun·1ouing drunkard even
though Art would prefer to be remembered
in his sober stale. lOe drinks wiD
conlinue to be sold in the Pub and a
carreD wiD be dedicated to him in the
library. Will lhe real Art Monk pIea.e
stand up?!
R.A. Profiles
By Joel Odell
Name: Christopher Joseph Ford
Date of Birth: 7/ 16,161
Height: Average
Weigh!: Average
EyU: Average
F~vorite 6ftr: Any one that's cold
Attitude: That of a Bronx Cabby
Wen Na~. you're about to be treated
to aJlOther exciting and intriguing look
at one of those strange peopIe....t>o have
be<en chosen to be your ResXIenl Assis·
rant. One may ask why ~ woukl
want to lake on weh a heavy bu,c\('n.
Well, I g\>e'S$ it lakes a special breed,
and that is """ere Chris Ford comes in.
Chris, or Father Ford as his floor calls
him. was bam in St . louis. Mo. (amber
~of grain). He then moved toNew
York (New Rochelle 10 be "><aet. Yoo
know, Chryskr Imperials, sculpt...:!
hedges and U'l"amic $<luirrels on the
lawns). WeU,heBppilremlyliked;uhe,e
since he appears 10 be wen adjusted
(Just look al this photograph). He is
pictured Mre with two guys from his
floor. On the left is Jim W., portrait 01"
teenage hallucinogenic. On the right is
Dino A. engaging in his Srewery Science
internship
As you can sao. Father Ford has a
wonderful rapport wilh his IIoor and has
had great SUCCE'SS in ove1\y steering
thei, lives.
WHY ANR.A.?
Wen, Father Ford candidly replied
that he really relished the authority
which ;\ 9"ve him, and the girls love it
when he tells them ..... 's an RA
S PECIAL INTERESTS
Fat ..... r Ford kwe5 to crank his stereo
to one of Rochester's many trash·rock
stations. Ford also mjoys reading Harlequin
Romances. He is a dedicated
Yank"" fan. having sacrificed h;. bed
linens to make a praiseworthy banner.
Fat ..... r Ford has no plans for the
future, but he says he wiD keep practic·
ing communions with Tliscu~s and
Hawaiian Punch tm he gets ~ right.
Thoughts of a
Theatre Major
By Sue Werle
On Wednesdioy ewning, the 18th' of
November. r had an oppOrtunity tochat
lIJIth RlchlIrd Jarvie, $E1tlor at Nazareth,
theater major, and cast member
01 Nazareth'. produ<;tion oI"Dr. Faus'
tus." Our discussion centered On the
play and his perspective w,," an inter·
estingone.
When asked what he saw as some 01
the difficultiesof presenting this pMticu.
lar production, Jarvie said t ..... major
problem wa. that there were not
enough men to cast a play from this
period. This created a d ifr.cuky with
casting for director Joseph Baranowski
and resulted in several performers play.
ing two parts.
Another problem Jarvie pointed out
was t ..... t t ......... were a ~5Ub5t ant;"1
number 01 \dlt and sound cues, which
can make it """Y diffICult. The lighting
and sound crews had their hands full.~
There weren't any major gOOfs in that
atea, however, and from a technical
aspect things _med to go rather
WIOOthly.
I asJ<ed Jarvie how he felt about
working with ac\or$ like O'Srlldy and
Wordsworth. He told me that during
the summer between his freshman and
$Ophomore year ..... had asked O'Br""",,
to ..... Ip him with his acting, adding t ..... t
he couldn't afford to pay for acting
\essons. O'Brady told him t ..... t was all
right_ if ..... really wanted to learn, that
was enough. This summer, O'Brady
asked Jarvie to help him learn the lines
tor the pMt of Mephistophilis for this
production. This Jarvie d;d gladly. ~It
w,," t..... least I could do," he said.
"There's no way I can payhim back for
u.rn..t he d;d for me." (Obviously he dida
lot!) .
A$ a freshman, Jarvie had the 0J>P01"tunity
to work with Richard Words·
worth in Nazareth's production of "The
T"""","t.~ "It was a great learning
experience,~ Jarvie said. Mh's too bad
we won't see him after Friday. I hope he
comes back here again SO that others
can ha ..... the opporl unity to learn from
him.~
A$ for working with Wordsworth and
O'Brady in ~Faustus,~ Jarvie com-mented
that ~th"Y're p, o/.essionals, and
sometimes they _ a litt le intolerant
of some of the student • . When ~
were talking when th"Y shouldn t ha .....
been, Wordsworth would, Jus,ifIa,bly,
get angry.~ (I had to agree with thaI
ffl('ling, sioc~ it would have made me a
little angry. too!)
'"Artt disadvantages in having proles·
sionals in this production?" [asked_
"Not really: Jarvie said. " In lact. the
part (01 Faustus) demands age. MO<St
collEge stuo::knts can't do that. ~
I then asked him about his own two
pMts, (Wagner, and Charles V, the
Emperor). He told me that the part he
had r~ally wanted was tMt of the CMrus.
'"!I's singular, self-contained; you're
alone on stage and there's no """ to
mess up your lines .. " After he had boon
ca. t. however. Wordsworth toldhimhe
was beller off with Wagner and Chao
rles. 5ince tt-.es.e paTts were more impOr'
tant, more 01 a challenge, and a better
opportunity for him. (Jarvie ..aid he
wasn't sure how well he had done with
t ..... m, but there's 00 Question in my
mind that he responded weU to the
challenge.)
At this pmnt, I invited him to com·
men! on anything else he wished. He
responded QUickly with Iotsof praise for
Word.worth. O'Brady and Bara·
nowski
"I was glad for the opportunity to
work with Wordsworth again . We got to
be better hiends this time "round," he
said. There'. II lot to be learned from
him, he added, because Wordsworth
"oIfers a different 6tyl~ than we normally
_."
About O'Brady he ..aid, "Normally
we'VOl worked with O'Brady in a direc·
torial capacity. Thi. (play) was II good
experieoce.~
And for Ba,anowski, ..... said. "He's
good at making stuff ~njoyable, under·
standable, accessible--especially the
funny stuff. He brings out a legitimate
appreciation in an actor. He can bring a
lifeless text to lile."
With three such people lote.acn him.
and an obvious determination to suc·
ceed, Richard Jarvie is sure to do well.
We wish you luck, Rick. and hope tosee
another sample 01 !/OUr work SOOn.
A 'e,,;'-. Father Ford with ' '';''MI'rom floo r.
FA Committee
Presents Human Senate Update
Sexuality Workshops By Rose~ Floss, Senator
A$ we starled growing UP. we al·
ways had parents to guide US along and
giv<! us the answers to a lot of Questions
an otherwise naive child would ask. We
are 00 longer as nai ..... as we once
were but i. il no! true that many
Questions pertaining to many subjects
still linger in our minds? QuesTions
concerning relationships and sexuality,
for example? Our parents aren't here
any more, so where can a p"rson turn
for answers? We all have set morals,
but do we re..lly understand them to
the fu llest extent? Maybe the best
answer we can gel is from someone
who has good insight to These ideas.
This is .....here the oemin<lrS b<.oed on
human relationships and sexuality can
become rather useful and informative.
Workshops held in the past included
such topics for discussion as SexuoJ
Morals 000 Values and Incest ond
Rape. Although the overall turnout for
the seminars was not totally astOtlnding,
the comfortable number that d;d
attend left these seminars Quite informed
and much mor~aware 01 them.
selves and other people as weU. As far
as the future is concerned, the following
seminan are in the making:
Health Care
Homosexllality
Premarital se~
Sex",,1 Infidelity
L~
Courtship and Mal"liago!
Dates and locations will be pOSted
conspicuously all over campus. The
sessions usually run from an hour to
two noun, but they become virtually
priceless. The workshops are here lor
you - the students, for your sake. You
need as much awareness as you can
possibly receive to help ]IOU deal with
these unavoidable facts 0I1~~. Her~ is
a c hance to express your ideas and
belief. or just sit back, relax, and learn
what is 50 needed to be understood.
Father Norm Tanck heads the com·
mittee and is joined by Dr. David Halla·
han. Dr. Elizabeth Hayes. Dr. David
Page. Dr. Catherine Valentine, Doug
Johnson. Mary Hosey, and ~If
The Residence Hall 'Courl is now
in session. Any residrmt student
may request hearing of any case by
the Residence Hall COUrl .
Hearing requests may be submit·
ted to the secretary of the Courl at
any Residence Hall Court meeting.
M..etinss are held on Thursday
evenings at 6:00 p.m., or, ' equests
may be submitted through mailbox
"26at any time.
President Stefaniak reported t ..... t
the Rochester Area Colleges are spansoring
a New Year's E ..... Formal on
Januaoy 30 f,om 9-1 AM. TICkets are
$7 a person and $12.50 a couple. The
price includes an open bar, band (to
be announced later). and thi tradi·
tional noisemakers. The formal will be
held in the ballroom of the Rochester
Chamber of Commerce.
While rewriting the Constitution,
the committ..e found a discrepancy;
the Unde-rgrad officers were misreading
Article VII. The article describes
the Student COUrl. This court differs
from the Dorm Court in that it shall
hear and decide cases 01 N""areth
students invo\vins:
A. Infringement of the Constitution
"nd regulations of the Undergrad
AssociaTion_
B. Any violaTion 01 the college'. s<>cial
regulations as oot dealt with
by ResidrmT Hall Court.
As of Novemb<>r 16th. t ..... student
court has boon reinsta1ed, with Janet
Austin, chairperson.
In the Senate meeting held No......-
nber 9. hi OdeU was dismissed
from hi. duties as a ... ""tor.1t isstated
in the ConsTitution that a senator can·
not have more than two unexcused
absences. Joel had four unexplained
absences. The senate yoted that ~
would be unconstitutional to reinstate
Jo.1.
Residence Council
Program Committee
Update
By Peggy Jones: C hairman
The programming committee of res~
dence council is sponsoring a floor
decoraTing contest on Sund;!.y, £k.
c~mber 6th. Judging starts at 7:00 p.m.
The theme is Christmas Carols with
each Hoor centering around a chosen
Christmas carol'
A proposal was givoIn to the Resident",
1 Ufe office to change the status of the
recreat'o:>,yrug room in Kearney to a
party room. This would be a place
where floors could hold parties and
special floor activities. Suggestions on
how to change the room and alter ..... ·
tiVOli were also submitted wit" the pro"""
I.
Coming ne~t semester programming
hopes to ipon$Of an ice·skaTing trip to
RIT and a sledding get·together.
Dtt~I>e. 4. 1981
;"If Po •• ""i. ",i.h S.ilL Life
FACULTY
ART
SHOW
All photos by
Bernie Misiora
'ol1ra i. of an A •• i ••
THE GlEANER Page 5
By Ca ..... 1 O'Toole
Percu""ion By C ~'haI O'Toole
. ... 0
SPORTS--------------------------~
Golden Flyers Outlast Alumni Squad
By Samso ... Delaney
n.e Golden Flyers tuned up for the
regular season with a 62..51 vic:tory.,.,.,.,.
former Flyers in an alumni contest on
.N.o,v ember 13th in the ShlJl!s Center
Steve Perkins scoroo twelve POint.
UK:! worked the boards for six rebounds,
as the Flyers took ~ narrow 24·
23 edge ftt the Mlf.
In the secQnd IWI, guards Mike Dia·
nett; and Al DiSanto utilized the back.
door play repeatedly, seuing up Paul
Cummings and Dave Adams lor easy
layups. Wilh Sob Newton and Cum.
ming$ cOfl1rolling the ;,clion unde-roo!at h
the basket, and Adams scoring on
layups 8M baseline jump &hots, II",
Ftyo.rs started. to pull ;,way midway
throujl the second hall. Adams and
Cummings were boIh rec!.hqr in the
fnal session. Adams finished with 18
points on 8 lor 12 shooling from the
floor. Cummings Tickled the twine for
six''''''''' points. 51"""" Perkins taDied 14
points to go with his l'ight rebounds.
Bob "F"g~ Newlon scored four points
and haouled down _ rebounds.
For tho! Alumni, Larry laM hit lor
'-Ne points on six 01 ten shooting
from the floor. Jim Bowen added ten
points, John Dansler chipped in with
nine, and J.V. coach Dave Eve'ell
danled the crowd with a variety 01
moves to the hoop and tallied rim.,
point. in limited playing time.
larry lane, a former Nazare1h standout,
likes the talent on this y<lar's
squad: "They're real .trong at an pos'i,
tions, t!tey' ..... got some sound playet$."
When llSked WMT IISP<<lS of the
team's game need sharpening, Steve
Perkins replied "Just execution. We· .....
got to get it. Hopefully The Thanksgiv.
ing break woo't hurt u •. "
Mike DiaOOlli also feels lhe leam's
e xecution is r><>t yet up to par: "WeWETe
a little sloppy, if we can get oor execu'
tion down Il'oJeI" fortyminulf':$. well Slay
in every game. Our OUISide game has to
complemmt oor inside game_"
The experience in the front ~ne is
good and this is a big pius lICCording to
Ken Lewis. But, "'1/5 Ken. "we ...... still
got to work on oor offens.e. we· ..... got to
get uwd to each other and work it
(otfeJ1S<!) up."
Coach.l<l,l Gigliotti feels the guards
need more experience. and he echoes
the importance of the team executing
the plays well: "Execution Mkes a lot of
discipline. " lot of sacriroce. even the kid
who doesn't play: he', practicing. he's
sacrifICing, and ;t's tough when you
Volleyball Team Brings
Home RAC Championship
By Jason Cc>unteriorr
Nazareth's volleyball team travelled
to Brockport on November 8th and
came home RAC champions. Terie
Ve!ard;'s l'Jo,lo!rs swept through lhe field
without needing to play a deciding third
game all day. Nazareth whipped the
U. of R. in the opermg round 15-6. 15-
II. In the second 'oond, the f&ers
topped R.n. 15-2, 15·10_ In round
three Nazareth romped Il'oJeI" toomey
M$T Brockport State 154. 15·11. The
Flyers 1"I"I('t foTn"ler nemesis St. John
Fisher in the quarterfinals. grounding
the Lady Cardinals in straight games
15·9. 15-8. Against the U. of R. in the
semifinals. Nazareth faced its toughest
match. holding off the Yellowjackets
15·12, 18-16. In the championship
game. Nazareth ripped Fisher _in
15-3, 15-7. The victory over FISher
marked the foorth time in five games
this season tha.t the Golden Flyers
have defe./lted their East Avoenue ri-
"'"N' azareth placed three ptay.e-rs on the
six member tQUmlIment aII·star team:
hitters li<: Alhart and Alita Gerber and
setter Janine Mazurowski.
The RAC tiTle helped assure the team
the top seed in the state toornamenl at
Wf':$t Point on November 15 and 16.
Coach Vel..rdi commented on the toor_
ney triumph: '"The kids played well, they
played hard, they played as a !eam."
During the week between the RAC
and the state toomaments. the Lady
(Continued on page 7)
work all week and don't get in the
game.» Adds Gigliotti "We're working,
hopefully we'D win some games."
Ac<:ording to coach and pta ........ execution
is the key to 'uCcessful basket·
ball. Let', hope The Golden FIyer,,.,m
execute mosT of their opponeTlts.
Note: Team traveled to Hamilton,
Ont~rio for the McMaster Toomll.
ment on November 27th and 28th.
winning both of their CQntf':$ts. The
Flyers edged Guelph 73-72 and topped
McMaster 82-66. Lincoln First T 00m.l·
ment winds up Friday and Saturday at
the War Memorial.
-... -~
Coach Rob Searl Guides
Soccer Program at Naz
By Joseph Crumb
Two yearS ago, when Rob Searl be·
gan building a soccer program at Naza·
reth. he faced many obstacles. It Wi>!!
late in The recruiting season. There Wi>!!
r><> soccer tradition at Nazareth. Coach
Searl coold r><>t offur athkt\ic scholar·
shipS. Opponents kad to be scheduled,
equipment purcha.sed. and the rosTer
had to be filled. Searl got the balholling
by sending oot 350 letters to athletes
listed in The New York Slate Cooching
Directory. Akt-.:.ugh he received some
replies. Coach Searl utilized his Roch·
""ter co~tions. and so the team was
STocked targely with local talent.
However, Coach Searl did ha .....
many benefits to offer prospective
soccer players. He cites the exc~lIent
curriculum at Nazareth. especially the
liberal arts program. as the top motivation.
The team also plays on one of the
bf':St natural SOCCer fields he's seen.
Ar><>!1>er prime motivator for soccer
pros pects i, the qualiTy 01 the
schedule-rival colleges have "openl'd
up the door for us" -and as a result,
N,,:tllreth has the bf':St schedule in the
area. Several of the top ,taTe un ....... sity
schools and some of the fonest privaTe
institutions in upStateNI':W York tear up
the turf with the Gokien Fly<lrs. Next
year the GoId<!n Flyers will have an
excellent opportunity to tune·up by
participating ina preseason toornament
in Columbus, Ohio.
Nazareth is lucky to have sueh a
dedicaTed. resourceful and knowledge·
able coach. Coach Searl was a two time
All-Coonty soccer player at Pittsford
High' School. He went on to earn four
v..rs;ty letters in soccer at Ohio Wes·
leyan University. Searl is certified by the
NotionolSoccer Federo,;on. and he has
c.oached Tearns al Fairport, Greece,
Arcadia and DenorMlIe Junior High
School in Penr .. k:I. In Naza,reth's first
season, the team posted a 64·1 mark.
playing a combination of varsity. jumor
varsity, and community college 0ppOnents.
Perhaps. most important of all. Rob
Searl has Ifemenc\ou$ confidence in his
ability as a coach: ~[haveagood knowl ·
edge of the game. I listen to my pia ........ '
ideas, and most 01 my criricism is COn·
strucTive. If roy players aren't pulling
OOT lOOpercent. [let them know. either
talking quietly Or shouting, both method$
work."
In addition. Searl's philosophy of
sports is geared toward team cohesivenes.
s: "If you can get along with """"'.
one you don't like. and use their talents
for a team effort. you will have a sue·
(Continued on page 7)
Du~m ber 4, 1981 lliE GLEANER ,.,.,
Swimmers Take Second
In Harvest Relays
By Skip Cloxlen
In lheopening meel of lheS<!3SOfl, lhe
""",', swimming le"m caplured second
place ;n The HaNesl ReIay:s on N".
........ber 14 al Geneseo_ Na.arerh took
rourth pIo.ce LuI yeM and Coach Tom
Ra/ph wanled lhe lea.m to r",i$h al IeM!
'ourth o{ bener lhis time around. But
JJilh high caliber OppOno?nlS ouch as SI.
3onaYelllure, lhe U. of R.,andCort ·
and State (the fourth ranked division
II leam in !he countrY LuI year) all
:ompering in the lwe"'" leam meet, a
pod finish WM 001 easily assured.
Naz.i>rerh WOO lhe 300 yard bre..sl.
moke relay, as r~shman Steve Dugan
",t a record in lhe fint 100 yard legwith
;;I~ 1~05i~o~~¥::~:'::~
IIlChored al 1:08.7. The Flo..ren ..........
!Iso v;clorious in the 500 yard cres·
:o:ndo relay. Rick Cruvolta ...... am lhe
:.pening 50 yards in 23.2 oeconds; Joe
~arelodockeda52 ,8 in !he looyard leg;
?ere saxe swam lhe 150 yard leg in
1:21.8; Gr~ V.ck an::N:>red lhe race
>nd r",ished lhe 200 yard leg in 1;53.1.
With strong ~ in aU lhe
events, Nazareth w..s lied with Cor-
Naz Swim"", .. tal< •• brut .... r.
tland State going into the final relaylhe
400 yard medley. BychanC<!, Naza.
reth ad Conlan<! were in lhe same heat
in the fifth and sixth lanes. IT was announeed
that either leam ""OU1d win the
rrK!e1 if victorious in lhe 400 medley.
After Rick Ca.-votta swam lhe back·
.troke, Steve Du&>n lhe bre&tstroke,
and Joe Farelo the butterfly, lhe race
WilS ewn. Pele Saxe ...... am lhe ancho!(
freestyle) asa;nst lhe An-American
from Cortland Slale , T he two
swimrnen matched slroke lor stroke
and Saxe's vali;tnl riort appeared suc·
cessful as the race in an apparent til!,
However, lhe ele<:lronic SCore clock
showed Cortland State lhe winner by a
scant eight hundrerhs of a """",nd.
The tea.m standing were as follows:
Cortland State 198, Naureth 194, U.
of R. 172, 51. BonaYelllure 154,
M.C.C. 142, R.LT. 140, Geneseo 122,
Oswego 82, Morrisville 76, AlIr<'<l
Tech 70, Canisius 48, Alfred Uniwr·
.;tyO.
The first dual meel 01 the year will
be at Fredonia on Do!cember 51h. The
opening home meel will be against
R.l.T. on [)ec"",ber.
-... -......
Searl Guides Program
(Continued from p"-gfl6)
:asful tea.m." This applies to bolh
:>layer and coach, and iI's Ihis type 01
mitude lhal seems to be mMins on
"TWIY teams on aU levelsol competition
5ea.rI believes lhe discipline and inlegrity
!J&ined through participation in int""
coIlegiate sports carries """" into
~Iher aspects 01 tile and become5 ~
...J..able resource.
The "~ year plan" and its goal 01
Naza .... lh ... lhe lop leam in the Nea, is
prOCeeding .moolhly. Searl wanlS his
teams to demonstrale a 101 of class and
in!<'9rity on lhe fil!1d <"-' .... learning
thaI"). 01 course, the ultimate goal is
poot season participalion and !he recognition
lhal il brings. Coach Searl w""ts
his lea= to play to lhe best 01 lheir
ability, and if they do this,.....w.ing will
come nalurally.
Coach Sea.iI's aim /(>( !hill yeN'S
squad """" 10 playa good tactical game
and 10 be a realchaUenge to OppOnerIts,
Fb;ing lheir Iir$I all·vM$ity se;wm, the
Flyersposteda respeetable 5·1·1 record
and with the exce-plion ollhe Fredonia
game, every contest was close. CoI.ch
Searl oees vasl improvement in the
10lilm SO far. This ~ the players were
in be""" shape, increasing in both
speed and endurance. The technique
and skiD level "-jumped 100 percenl,
and !he leam's tactics havoe improwd
even more. "We think much better out
on the fil!1d. we are a smar' baD dub."
Thus far, the optimism isjuslified. "fm
very pleased with it (soccer program)
because in just two years, Starling from
oothing, "",'voe gone from aJ.v. Team to
a conlender among schools whose
leams ha ..... been logether fo-r years."
I-\owew-r. there remain warns to
mend and bramble!; to r .... e for Coach
Searl. Although the team is \'DUns.
several key players will graduale this
year. Senion who will 001 return- high
scoring Marty Roberts. "the bat player
we'D ever have," 0. ..... Snyder, a lal·
ented /orv.>iord and the most enthusiastic
player onthe leam, and (;ee Attarian.
the Golden f)yers' mosl improved
player_ The triggesl obstacle on lhe
track 10 conlinUedSUCCe5S is not ooccer
relale.d. The federal budget cuts
threa.ten many oj the oocrer players
who are on financial aid. FOrTUnalely,
Nazar01h's Dr. Woolley is highly capa·
bIe and wilI .... isl not only athletes, hul
all studenl6 with this problem,
If the recent pasl is any indication,
lhese difficulties will be ;alleviated.
Coach Searl pia .... 10 extend recruiting
to Buffalo, Syracu"", ind long Island,
and lhe fWll ~I budget cuts is not
over yet. Nazareth socc"" is on il6 way
to the top.
-... - ......
Volleyball Team RAC Champs
(Continued from page 6)
Flyers seemed to ha ..... suffered a let·
down. They defeated R_n. 15-5. 15-3
and Gene5l!O 15--8, 15.11, 001 they WIl1"e
beaten by both tile U_ of R. II .IS, IS-
3,9-15 and Ithaca 15-7, 14-16. 13-15.
In lhe flale lOUrney al West Point,
Nazareth won their pool easily, defeat·
ing St. lawrence 15-8. 15��8; Brooklyn
15-5, 15-11; and Pace 15-<1, 15-12.11 ......
in the quarterfinals that the lady Flo..ren
were derailed on lhe mad 10 lhe title
defense in lhe aingle el;mination tournament.
They were oufled by the Uruwr.
s;ty of Buffalo 12·15, 15-10. It).15,
The leam riIon, so vital in lhe RAC
lournament, WilS lacking against Uf)la
Coach VeJardi dismissed !he notion
thaI the leam was 100 cocky ;" the
states: "We were confidenl, bulweren'l
~t.lhere was pressure. but
we pul pressure on ourselve$; "'" did
oo! piaywell..sa team. ldearlythinkwe
"-'He 1M finest !~MI !here.·
Despite reaching only- the quarterfinals,
RAC an-stars Janine Ma.urowsk;.
Alita Gerl>er and Li~ AIhart were aU
sele<:!<'<llo the a1tl!11lale lournamenl all·
alar leam.
Naureth, now33-6, is!Weded fifth /(>(
the .o!gional tournament at W<!$t Point.
The Lady Flyer. finished fourth in the
ffi3ionaIs last year. Coach Velardi views
tMr~asawhoienewseason;lhe
regional champion !jolins I 6pOI in the
national lournamenl nexl spring, but
Velard; insists ·Well u.ke ~ ..s ~
comes."
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AN Ea)MENICIfl. Si;eVICe. of
.$Z:eil'T~o ~tJ% AN/) G0lI.6
Christmas Concerts
in the Making
By Deborah Barlleu
The music department wiU be pulling
1000ther _al conc<!Tts during the
Christmas ..... son at NlUareth. AU the
per/omling arts students wil l pultheir
talents tOgether for a tri>ute to the
holidays. Each group has ils own
theme 10 express the talents' of their
musicians.
December 10th, 1981 aU the performing
choirs win e xpress their holiday
spirit through a v.me1.y of tradilional and
IlOn·lradihonai ChristlYl/l$ songs. They
will perform in the main auditorium at
7:30 p.m. in the Art Cent<!T. A fewof the
pieces being sung are: WOIT\efl's
Choir: Carol of the Bells, r W<>n<l<eT as
I Wander. Pat·A·Pan. Chamber Choir.
four ~lections: A for Dancing;occom.
panied by Hute, oboe, bassoon, and
peTcussion. Concert Choir: Two Chrisymas
MotelS, The Holly and The Ivy,
A Song of Hannukah. Alion Gay, Gay,
Gay, 8ergeres. The whole petfor.
mance consists ot lishl music and is
I'I1tiTI<'d ~ChristlYl/l$ with the Nazareth
Choil"$.~
December 13th, 1981 will be the OJ>"
erung performance ot the Naza.eth
Wind Ensemble. They will be appea.·
ing in Ihe main auditorium at 3:00
McCullough Wins
Commuter Raffle
Yes, it was a happy day for David
McCullough and his family as they
learned the news That he Ilad jusl won
(now get this) a General Elect.ic
AM/FM Stereo·RadOo-Cassette Re·
(O.der raflled otl by the Commuter
Board on Thur.sd/l.y, NoYember 19th
at \:00 p.m. in the Undergrad offICe in
the Shults Cente.. The tension
mounted as an unidenTified "r.,.idmt"
pulled David'. name out 01 a monThold
~ jar. When Daoo
heard the news he jumped joyously.
When asked whaT he planned on do·
ing wilh the recorder, David ex·
claimed, ~I plan on recording aU of the
Commuter meeting. and join the L"",
Andrese Fan Club and listen To aU her
speeches on the cassette recorder and
listen to her Sing on FM and preach on
AM and ... l'm just ""'Yexcited."
The Gleaner staff congraTulaTes
David on his good fortune and Thank.
the CommuTer Board lor making a
young man ""'Y, wry happy.
Norr~Ark
fl Pizza fl Subs fl
\0 STATE STREET
PITTSFORD. NEW YORK 14534
381-8079 - Mon_Th ... . ..... , llAM_ ll PM
F.l_ S., ... ..... . 11 AM- J2 PM ---_.,.._..""-""_' ..... _.
Oe livery to NA2 complIS
Avoilobl.: Mon.-Sol.
eve nin" from 8:00pm On.
p.m .. It will be a formal concert with
Classical music being peTformed. They
will be playing ~ varie1y of music from
the Classic:aI period. Their ChristlYl/l$
pjece is 0""'" .... lect;,;,n from the Nut·
cracker Suite ~R«d Pipe Dance". The
Wind Ensemble will also play: The
New Colonial March, A Festival Pre·
lude, V",i/ltions on a Korean Folk·
song, Ba..wr of Seville overl u.e. The
people in the Wind Ensemble are wry
spiriTed and talented music0ns.
The premier of The Concert Orches·
tra is December 6th, 1981 at 7:30in the
main auditorium. The orchestra will be
perlomling a variety of pieces from The
Classkal period. Prelude to Carmen,
Ov.!rtu.e ~La Dame Blanche," TiTUS
Owrtu.e, are a few .... lections The Qt.
chestra will be performing. The Naza·
reth Orchestra is under the direction 01
Dr. Gruber, who is wry pleawd with
the talent and the enthUS"'-sm of the
people contri>uting their time to the
orchestra.
CIRCLE K:
The Coming Y ear
By Ruth A. Oprean
The Circle K club 01 Nazar\!th has
STarted the ~ar off ~U and hopes to
continue Their success with many
more exciting activities. The calendar
of events the dub has schedul<'d and
the various projects they have under-
13k"" should k~ the club active and
prove to be a very rewarding ye..r for '
'h<m .
WhaT exacTly is Circle K? It is a
combined community and ~oIIege or·
ganization whose purposes a~ to pr0-
vide services of aU kinds on campus.
to promote dances and other social
events as fund .alsing """"t$ for na·
Tional CMnties, and to sponsor things
such as hav rides an<! zoo trips foo-, ....
menially and physically handicapped.
For the club members Cird" K is a
way to 1"1"I0OI new people, a way to
have an ""io'Jab\e e xperience and a
way !O do someThing good for some·
one else!
The Circle K dub is part of the
Circle K lnternatioN.l. If you are famil·
iar at aU with the Key clubs at the hish
school lewl and The Kiwanis clubs at
the community lewl then you haw
been a pari of Circle K International. It
is a tri.J>il1"ty organization which in.
volves aU ages of people.
The Circle K clubs (which are the
collegiate part ot the /fi·party system)
are usuaDy sponsored by the Kiwanis
club of a nearby community_ The
Circle K club 01 Nazareth is spon·
sored by the East Ridge Kiwanis Club.
The Nazareth dub;" being organized
this I""'r by The PtesidentJohanne
Myel"$. the Vice·PtesidentKim
Klazc~o, the Sec.etary-Gina
Hallasinki. and the treasu.er- Lir.dII
Braun. The dub has 31 membel"$.
The NlUafe1h club's forst major Con·
tribution was made this year !o the
Marathon Men. The club SpOnSOred a
dance to raise money lor Their contri·
bution. They earned an impressive
$0100.00 which the Marathon Men in
turn donated to Camp Good D1Iy5.
The group also makes contributions
to such things as UNICEF and the
Muscula. Dystrophy drive. They haw
a speCial goal in mind this yea. which
is to earn ellOugh money to be able to
tr'aver to Alb<>ny lor the NYS Districl
Convention.
The club wiU be sponsoring a Mixer
and a Happy 1>00. on December 4 as II
lund raiser_ H~r, I can say that
they definitely have some OTher int<!T'
esting ""I'I1ts in store this year lor The
Naza~th c9<'\ffiunity.
The group meets every MOJ'I<.b;
nighl at 6: 15 in The lounge ac.oss from
the information cmter. They invite
and encourage everyone to drOp in
and see whal ii's all about.