e
VOL 60 NO 8 0 NOVEMBER 7, 1984
The Importance of Being Earnest
The N.ta~h College TM.tre
Departm~t and Dramo. Club
will p~1 Oscar Wilde', ".,
Imponil_ 0{ &iJv Eanoal.
Sublilled .. trival comedy for
Ierious people" this play Is
KkMw1cd&W tn be Wilde',
Mu'e rpie«-. It is .bout • man
who discovers "what. terrible
thins it is to find \hit he', hew
JPUkilllllhe truth alibis tife:
Perin, mInces will be
pramted oa Flidoy and S.I ... •
day, Noyemoo 9 and 10.t 8
p.m •• nd Sunday. November L I
1\3p.m. I t the AmCenl .... ~
cast of 9, though primarily
Rochweri.ans. come f,om 4
OIhe. eastern cities.
".., title role 01 I!amesI is
pI.oyt.<l by FrittStafford. of New
Hampshire. His friend, Alger.
non Moreneff. ia ployed by
Pelcr Doyle of Fairport. the
lovely ladies· Gwendolen fai,.
fu and O:cily Qo.<kw . are
play", by Alke J. Parker of
Roche5ler and Mary Anne
Noonan of Albany.
Gwendolen" domineering
notMr, Lady B,aclr.""n, is
playM by Diane: O'Brien from
ReadingM8$II.
Other call membc1-. include
Mr. Malinak Wins
Outstanding Teacher Award
Dr. Malinak
N ... reth College faculty
member Or. Edward Malinak
wq recently honored as the
..,tstandlna te«her 01 Spo.niah
ill New York Stal~ .tthunn .... l
mectina oIt'- New York Strole
Associ.lion of Foreign
~ Texhers lithe Con·
oord HOIel in Kiamesha LAke.
Malin.ok, associate prol~$IOr
of Spmli'" al N .... r~th CoJ]e~.
remyed the -sp.nish Heritq;~
Award: pruented by the
SpWsh Heritq;c AwriIlion.
H~ wiU uc.eive .n .ll upcnoe
paid four·week trip 10 Spain in
the SUrnrn~r of 198.5.
Malinak, who abo IeTYCS as
pr~nt of the Rochester
Chapter of the Am~ric.n
AAociation of Teac:hers 0(
Spo.niah and Pon\lgeae. is !be
first Spanish tucher from
WesteTn New York to win the
preoligiou •• w. rd.
Malinak hu aerved '" •
member 01 the Nazareth Col·
lese faculty since 197 • •
Diane Dugan. SCOII D.
Rankllu, Michael Amory (aU of
RoIhesteTJ and Burri! Wdlt
from Syrxus.o.
'rile production is directed by
Joseph B.ranowski .nd
Technkal Ditecto<· is IU(:bard
K~ith . both members of the
N.ureth Theatre Department
f.culty.
l'IcketJ are u.00 for adults
and lloo.,nts tickel$ are $l.OO
and Smior CItizens ricets .'"
12.00. for further information
call 586-2420.
Because ae&ting is limited it is
recommended to call .hud for
rescrvaitontl. 586-20420.
Quotes of
the Week
"'Opo" )lOW' ")'01!5 101M 1&'()f'/d
and 10« in all JIO" tI:In 8ft.
F", (1M d2y, )10/'11 w.:Ih up
and 0/1 )10/'1/ ha"" kft off
.. ~I
Julie A. Pietreaak
-n.m.'s /IO.....,h Ih;"g all
oI>jectn.of _liry.·
'Doe 'Mm' 1;0 t!i,«'/y to
.0,. .. .b.r ai"' I" .",.. of '" i'
"Hey. wM"'''''' I $top, I
It!nor 0 boolmarlI.·
Michael lodiee
"Yow Q>II' survive",.
Sldi", IJ.. jIlioI {mm " ""',
millin."
Charles Schulz
NAZARETH COLLEGE OF RCX!HESTER
Mrs. Mondale
Visits Rochester
By AndraeJames E .... ""
Fridly. October 26 .• t the a·
ty Hall of Rochester . joan Mon·
dale sp<>ke to 'lfO"p of ~nthUled
r.lIiers I\.pporting the
MondaLe·PenatO ticket. The
musical theme was 'Re&gIIn
Busters.' The rallie ... over;oyed
with the roncept of one dly
bavina the White House free of
Bonzo. joined in cheers and
rhythmlc: Ippl.ouae III the Soda
Pops. • Rochester brNi. dineing
grouP. "broke" on marbLe
flOOTS for the l'inl·Lady
"h~·to-be."
Mondale. with her elegulCC!.
carresacd the .udiences' con· "'''fIJI .nd .u~ntively they
listened and responded.
Ippurance of thOle in
Roch6ler who dire to uercise
tbeit righu and fr-som.. The
major ~t was the unity now
.tw'ed in the Democr.tic plrIy
by .u ezpressing their COIICJems
and Interest in the politieal "'.
tions of this ,..tioo. One unined
voioc docs mUe I differenoc.
AnOlhu m.jor e ... ent
however w., • _-event.
When I entered the aty Hall
and was led up the It&ircue to
!be lobby floor, I ... ticipated the
faces of • grut many more
students than were present.
Looking around. I expected to
_ the f.a:s of many hopeful
lIucLeDU-stoo.,ntl w ... tina to
upress their COI>CCrnI. pro or
ron. to the iuues that f.ce this
'TIre C.I.A. Manllal IIIaI surfaced in
Nicaragua represented a serious secilrity
leak. (Reagor'} fOlmd out wllat his own
people were doing."
"We ha ... e one thins to thank
Ronald Reapn for ... unitina uS
together to rid the White Houae
of Ronald Reagan .... Through·
out her opeeo;h was the confi·
dence 01 unity and throughout
the hall her word. were
ae.npliflCd III women, ""'D,
ERA supporten. 8/IY.rightest,
Afrik.n·Americ.nl, Whitu.
Hispanica, Jewl, Muolims •• nd
CatholiC\! .n rallied tog~her in
support.
Mr •. Mondale w ill quick
witted and delicately pounoed
ora the indfldency of govern·
ment organ4ationl under the
ReagIn administration. ,..mely
the CIA.
"I'It~ CIA man .... ] that sur·
faced iD Nicaragua represented
• aerious aecurity leak: she
stated. "He (RoNald Ragan)
round out what his own peopLe
wou!loin&.'
The r.ny didn~ lerv~ to per·
suade or con ... ince border·line
vote .. to bop off the junked
train ... d join One thats reany
mavina. It did leTYe to show th~
varied perspecti ... es and people
affected by the .:aciaI. political
and <=nOmic policies for lack
0( such policies) 01 the ReagIn
.!ministration.
The major event howeve-r
wu not the Ippelrance of JOlIn
Mondlle In Rochester. but the
... tion and the issues IhII face
them. Students as • whole,
reg.rdless of financial.lability.
arc .11 .ffected by the cuts in
education . .:aciaI orpniutiontl.
and foreign aff .....
In the sinics and levent, ....
the ... tk>n's poUcIQ and the ....
tion's forei&n policies were
greatly affected by lloo.,nl aclion
.nd opinion. Reiltiv~ly
few died in the era of Viet Nam.
The threat of di_er was
l"",,"ted Now Ihe threat .. DO
longer sectioned but wide~.
Now it im, jUII in OPe
nation where people will die
but in aU natiorll 01 tile world.
a"u right protetts .... ti·w.r
matches, rallies. and ,sit·intI
were.ll organized .nd .ttended
by students w.nlina change
and tIIeir voices heard-.nd
their voices were heard. III far
.w.y III Soutbcllt Alia and 8$
-.or as the dinner "'ble. 1be
voices of the Rudenl$. pro and
con. we'" b~rd . acted on. and
p.ogress accomplished.
Mondale spoke 01 change. of
p-owth. and of PfOSre5f. w ... t·
ina faces lOO:ned to the hoopla
and pTOllli$es. Even the marble,
smllina effigies on the walls 01
aty Hall seemed to undentand
tile need for and the call for
ch.nge that Mrs. Mondale
•• llIed to ItCOOfllpli"'.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Clubs and .............................................. 8
Comics ................................................. 12
Creative Comer .................. .................... 7
Editorials ... .. ' ..................... ..................... 2
Features ................................................... 7
Issues ........... ............................................ 4
NazNew$ ................................................. 6
OnCampus ............................................ 5
Opportunities .......................................... 10
Out and About .............................. ........... 9
Politics ..................................................... 3
Sports ..................................................... 11
, Ho'lMl'lbotr 7, 1 i84
Editorially Speaking. • •
Don't Atrophy Before· You've Lived
The appareot IKk 01 conoem
for human LntetaU U. this eleclim
is 01 Felt ~ 10 me..
".. student. who ... ppo:n
I\onald Raogan are doing il for
KOIIOmk '_-Iold lban·
~lves ahead. I think thai iI •
sad reflection of wh" is
bapponing in our lime. People
are more CO/IOI!med with 8<'1-
ti"$ ahead Ih.n with helping
-.h other. It IIhouLd 001 be
~ to keeJI_
dowD in <>rd<!, 10 further _"$
own intncstL I'm DOl ayid3
that dea.iri..,. sood 6ft lor 0neself
is t.I. onlr aleppin& on
..u-. to obtain II ;S,
The r.te 01 OIIr neighbor
should be of COIIC1!!.n toall of u,.
The fundomcntal purpose of
the Corutitution is 10 JUOU.nlee
the rigllts 01 all o;!tlWlI of this
Deu Editor,
! an' sil "-ek and reslr.tin
myself any~ ll've read wilh
Interest and "'opec! aboul the
development and beginning
SUcotSl 01 the S.G.C I've read
Io:tten 01 bate .00 MnOyIInoe,
letters from the .. y eommunity
suPJlO<tinl them and """" from
Ihe "norm.l" helerose:rual
population ~ Ihis group
01 ""ry delertnlnftl studenls.
Frankly. I con't see anything
wrong with the! formal;on of
lhisgroup. Peoplewhoare forc·
ed 10 be treated .. a minority
1\.1"" .o.U the nghll we do;
indudinf: the ability to SlIther
tocetJ>er and......,ua: .. a..a.J
group. AI f« the I~ 01
N ..... eth College. I would hope
they t.cbd Ihis orpnization
alnnB with .o.U the other .udml
organialiona he'e on ampw.
They .re prof-. and lKluU.
with e>:lensi"" educatlOr'll and I
would hope INol Ihe knowledge
they Nove obtained hat ~fl<d
the burien 0I1&nor...,. whlch
become the basil for .u pre",.....
When il oornes to the q~
lion 01 God and ill homoIe:r;.
uality a sin-wbocan .y1Wbo
is freoe of . 11 sin INol they can
judge lhe! actlon$ let alone the
low other people Share? I wu
ove:rjoyed when I read Robin
Damrad"s Ielte. to Ilw: edilor. II
.y. .u thai I beUev.! in and.
country. It 1I what OUr country
was founded for and what
many win haft beon lOIJ&bt 10
~Iee.
Rishtl and human interaU
(all be lied dim:tly to our daily
6~. Human Lnteruts a.c how
we treat OIl' f\ootmalet. cla$s.
mates.nIl the people we pus in
the Noll •. Rights a.e everything
that eduaotioo repreoenl •. It il
our ri&hl 10 hiaher edU(:O;tion,
our 'ishl to freedom of ~
Aon. our ""', 10 freedom 01
retipoua e~preuion. our "",I
10 plher in public, and OUr
riJII1 10 live IOSt'ther .. carl,.".
OD:IICf:.ned hurna'" in this
mk""""", 01 tociety.
Don' let apathy strip you of
you. hurn.on dlsnity Or allow
you tOt!rlpothenof tho:ir digni·
ty. Don~ lei apothy deny you
hold to be true. Robi" hat been
given a beauliful insighl to the
$IruggJetoi. people in a $Oclely
thai P'''se<:utelthose who don'
oonform to lhe moojority. We
must Iry and be careful .boul
this reu,;ou. upoct. All recall.
J_ dldn, ami his ......age oJ.
Jove, ~. Wth and hope in
the form oJ. the Dtcl.oration 01
Independence with amend·
menl. attachedl jesw loid w to
"love Ihy n.cighbor: He dido'
make a J«O<>Wory dau"" 51aling
'but DOl if they .re bornoRJluai,
black. Ind;"", women oarch·
ing f« equaliTy, etc: .•. :
In the end we are .u afr.tid of
what we don' know« w>o:\et.
II.lnd. Stereotypes. rumors,
political and.1OCial biues creale
a fear and ~e. in a ..acty iz·
"""",I 01 the ~yu 01 ill minor·
ities. This group isn\ j~ for
lhose who struggle .with ~r
sexu&lity or Ihe ho"""",xuai
populalion, .. thcr it i. lhe!", for
tw~ in order to promote
1I1Id=i""""". I pray 10 God WI He will
help w remember W I in this
..".",ingly ehaotic world 01 nun
there Is oothing 10 be lea wheo
we ~h out and try 10 under·
stand OUt fellow being5. AI a
mattcr o(fact It ..... y be Ihe only
thing thai keepa u, from killing
each other.
your riJhl 10 ~rci5e 'fO\Jl
righlS. Dan'I let aplthy .. llrip
you 01 your hu""' ..... IIW you
will 5Ulnd Jilently by while ....
other ill Jlrippm 01 his dipiry.
Dan't let aplthy "" ..... you to be
~ for the fale oJ.
othe .. in Ihis country .00 lhe
world. Don' lei a""thy lum you
InlO a robot who meekly doct
his duty.oo nothing el$e.
u. Ihi, ""free" time in college
to ~ and SU..,gtt>en "fO'UI
hUlMn poIenti.ol. Explore your
inlerestJ .00 become inY'DIved.
Don' at apotbelically by and
let yout Ufe pUS withoul par.
lidplli",. Don' IOIrophy before
you 1\.1"" even ~ved. Gi"" life a
cIuonc:e- LIVE ITI
Kristin Kirsch "'M
"The __ ,
..... _...,.tlUm. You
out""'cipm ....
Tbio "mple ....... rr io
Lbo_aj way ,a ... ,·.
)'CUlromlu".,........
Ar<I til< American
Co"" •• Socifly will II<lp
you porfa .... il.
W"bncf_dina
ta II<lp ,,,.. quil
~ .... So. bolou
,......_ • .-bor r'te_ , .Q..\.I )L'CboU A. .c.s.
A""_''''''''<>II. T_ IM 1.o.o..o.t Lp)b'CoU"" ~""", i.
.... t UI)'CU.
Classifieds
W. nled: 8c:hind the! walls 001·
lele Sludcnt seeking cor'
espondon<::e from people INoI
,,"re, I am Irish.. 24, bmwn
hair. blueeyes, 6'1" 1IIO!hI. I enJoy
'campi"l. swimml"l.
motorcydi.ng. and meeti ... new
people, .tMVinI! 3 YNrt for
burllery, Oul in 86. All
fUpOn,U welcome and
an,wer...:!. Your photo gets
mine. Send 10: Chuck Nichol,.
No. 19-1>- 16 10. Box 149. Allicl.
N.Y. 14011.
PriIOner. 29. wiese <duelled
from N.V.C .. seeu visilors aod
oorrespoadellCe. Ronald 0Ivid,
on, Alliea P,hon, No.
16A1I66, Attica, NY, 14011.
IIdp Wa n l e d : SludeQl,
housework, Mrs. Barone,
377·2521, S Meclinghou"" Rd ..
F.tirport. 14450.
Wanled: SO people 10 lose
we;"hl and nuke money.
Please phone afler 4 pm.
"..,...
Nexl Gleaner Deadline
Nov. 11 al5 P.M.
Get those stories in!
~e {jL£GHNE
edilor ................. . ....................... Kristin Kirteh
~Manager ..........•.•. KarenVoIbn.nn
AnDiRctor... . ....................... DunconCrawfoni
Bwi ..... Mafl&8Cl" .................... 1IettyjwI C.1lon
New:sEditor ....................................... AnncBlun\lCr
SI.ff Reporters .................. Diane Degan. CIa", Dodnelly,
Gillette lc;Vau. Li1S. .. m;I, David Sld.nlsk
Liu Z.w.lski
CIortOO<'lisu ................ Mickael Amory. Duncan CnowlOftt
Grtphic Artist ................................. : ........ Chris Schwab
ayoul" ..................... Lorraine Ha.ss
Slev.; Dugpn, Amy Scaramuzzino
J>boIop.pbc' $ .......... ....... John Kittner. Mark MlddaIina,
Amy Sca.tamUDino
Typist.. .. Lanh NguyflI
POLITICS
Students Support Reagan in Election
Northridge CA ICPSI·· Outside
the SI"dcnl Union.t QoJifomi.
Stote University" Norlhrid,ge,
Katrl"" Parter. a 22-year-old
student. handa out a<b for •
speed .eading <;O\lr$e. She
wears an 8qUl a.nd pink '1»\Iefed
(-$bin, part of ber own
IiDe <Jl tpOttSWe&r. wbich she
abo sells. She IIOpQ 10 . tart an
offICe de.ning IIC'rvioe I00I\.
All thou enterprise.,
however, meet only parI of he,
tuition expenses. For the .....
mai!>Ckr, P.rker, whQ comes
from • bl.ck. 1X_.lic,
middI~ ~kgroutld. relics
00 I~ral Sludenl ald.
And this prctorypio;:al Walter
Mondale supporter pl.onI to
vote for Ronald Rugln.
'"There's no way I could vote
for MondaJe:' P. rke. MyS.
"He', Uke . little wimp to me."
The frcsident, on the other
hand, is 'of good eilarad .... : •
'llrOngleider: and ·si~",.·
P .. tcr is p'" of •
pbeoomenon tlvIl has emerged
uoneolthc major ltOIiQoftbe
'M campaisn - the tidal WIve of
popularity the 73·year-old
Reagan is ridinl .monS )'OIIng
voters, especially thole under
Z5 years okI.
Virtually .11 the rnIIjor polls
ahow Reagan with ,"ro"8 lad
over Mondale .mong 18·to-~
yur...!<l VOIen..
The President's advantage
swells to overwhelming propor'
tions in surveys ol under.25-
yelr-old VOle ... In lOme of the
poils. they give Reapn his
largest rn&rKin 01. support.
"The Democ"." don' offer
hope for the fu ture like
Reagan: upLoina Jlmes Boza·
jtan, 18, I UCLA student. "My
p&rents loved lIobol Kenoedy. I
think Kennedy \rupired young
people much the lime way
Rugan dOCltoday:
Rel 81n "h.. 10 much
charisma, he ronvinces me,"
IIYS Sharon Kiroc:.ide, Ibn an
l8-year.okl UCLA studenl.
Linda Weber . ... l8-yelr-okl
Northridge student, likes 'his
f'Shting spirit, Uke ... ben he ... as
ohot (in the March. 1961,
assassination a ttempll:
DalUly Hill, 20, ' LosAr\xeles
aty College student, dc3cribes
himself as 'from .iIC<:O<ld-class
t.ckground, trying to make it
into flJ"Sl c ...... • He thinks his
cl>ancea ol IK'COmpitahing that
Ife better under Reagan than """"" •. In just the Lost few ... eaa,
luch sentimenll hI~ helped
Reagan win student prefe rence
polLs.l Port Hly' State, Kin ...
Stlte, Tun, Oklahoma,
Georgia, Florida State, Peno
State, Virginll., Ind New Hampshire.
among many other cam·
Financial Assistance
to EmI.>loyees
Sen"o. Dan,,,1 P, \""k provisIon II.. he lped
Moynihan 10 .·N.Y.1 urged complete the re\raining of
President Relgln to . ign thouu nds of Industrill
Iegi.tJltion tNt restore. the Low worker-. II bQ .!so helped prounder
which employe.-. provid. vide our Nltion'. leathers with
ed apanded, Wt-elCempc fililn' new opportunities for inteUeetill
.ossistanoe to h.elp their tual growth. 1\ Is • ...orthy
employees further their educo. 1DeUU~. Con~ ~. I
lion. hope the Prai<lent ... ;n, too.
In passing H.R. 2568 Los\ H.R. 2568 ... ouJd utend See.
... eek. Con~ss approved a lion 127 until o.o.mher 31.
revival and two-yelr utension 1985, Ind would waive !he
g/ Section 127 of the lntemll p"naltie. for employers who
Revenue Code 01 1954. Thill fliled to withhold income for
IOection eneourqecl employer. educational benefill provided
to underwrite educational pro. after the te<:tion', 1983 e:zpirl'
pm! for employeel who wish tion.
to OOfItinue !heir edUCItlon for The: Low 100 _ I SS.OOO
.ny rCll!On.
Under Sectioo t27, ... hkh u·
pre<! on December 3t, 1983,
employees ... ho re.:eived ... y
fmancial .ssi$tlnce from lheir
employers lor the purpose ol
furt h.enng their education did
not have to d~l .. e that
assiJunce .. tauble Income.
Aloo, employers _rc .ble to
deduct the ...o.w.ce .. I
business expense.
In the Ibsence ol Seetion 127,
the 10. ... allow. the emp~·
uemption . nd employer.
deduction only for COUrllCS and
II"lining that Ite job reLoted.
The fitwlCW assisI.nce p~
oidcd under eectiOll 127 his
bclped IS mlny .. ""ven
IIIillion Americans pursue their
«I_lions while continuing to
wuk. Section 127 II-. been .. r·
Iiculary helpful in enoc<IU'agin8
the ret";ning ol IndUltNI
,.",.ken Ind in to pursue their
Iwning.
Senator MoyniNn WlS ...
OIiiPnaI co-spomor of S. 0'.49.
!be Educational AssWanoe E>:.
ttnsion Act, legislation similar
10 H.R. 2568. He said: ''This
limit On the amount oil.u·f~
empbyer·prorided edUCItional
usislance Ivailable to ... in·
dividual. and it makes door that
graduate ,tudenll employed by
universities quaUfy lor \IJC.free
tuition Iulstlnee.
According 10 the EdUCItion
Research Service. UI per<:ent 01
III puhlic school districts
D.ltionwidc provideeducotionlll
.as.s.i.s.t&n ce to their teo.c:hing Nearly all member. 01 the
Conference 01. Smail Private
Collegu provide this
assistance. SelUlto( Moynihan
ssid. He abo noted that lbout
70 percent of the graduate Ind
te.ching assistantut New York
Univcnity ha~ r«eived JOme
form oituiti(m QSistanoe under
Section 127.
In New York, the Mobile 0;1
Corporltion hIS provided
education assiltance 10 2.953
employees. The American
Telephone and Telegraph Com·
pany IAT&T! spent lbout S16
million 'Mually to l>elp ill
e.m..p.l oyeeJ further their cd"",,·
pusu
Such IUpport is aU the more
startling in view 01. Reapn's
beNvior as 80vem0r of Califor·
nia, wben he tried to flU cam·
PUI .dminiuutou who
~eed with him. ruthlessly
pul down ClmpUi protests. Iml
police to .ttacJ. wounded proteslon.
t Berkeley's iof'lr......."
and once told a press con'
ference that "If studen", wlnt
.b.l.o.o dshed. they'll get blooclsh·
And since 1990, Reagan his
lbolished tludeni Social Security
benefits, prop<:>Std cutting
ath.er tludcnt aid programs by
.. much .. 50 perunt, tried 10
eliminate the US Department ol
Education. supported In
brelU for ""8regationiol c:ol.
leses, presided over a 20 ~r·
cent decline in student lid
budget .. IOOgbt to limit law.
prohibitin8 di.crimination
&pinst camp... women, and
drastit:llly reduced aid to col,
lege Ii"riel and bLocl; c:oIleges..
Ncverthelea, 'there has been
I ste.dy lnaeue in the vllues
ol p"rsonal luOCCSS I. against
w.nting to contribute to social
CI,,",,',o noted Leonard Preed·
man, • UCLA poUt;cal .scienc<!!
profctlOl' and deln ol tl>e
ochoot. Uleosion program.
Aleunder Astin·oi UCLA',
Higher Education Resowc:e In,
sti tute lIyl hisllUlua]lUrvey of
Incominl ""Uese freshman eon·
firms Preedman's analysis.
TIM: IUrvey. for example, asks
lIudoonll wbat importance they
.tllch 10 'dev~1oping I mean·
iJlsful pIilloeophy of life:
Dunng the heighl ol the
counterculture, this value rank·
ed .. the moet·popuLor .mong
fre$hm .... At OIIe point, it .....
rated Important by 8.5 pe=nl
olthe respondents .
Since the early seventies, the
number 01. studenll ClUing
"pbiloeophy 01. life" an impor·
lint goal bQ decliocd steadily,
Astin lIid.
10 the most recent IUrvey. 011·
ly 45 perceot considered It an
Importlnl ""lue. while 'bel".
very well off filllncially' WI.
ranked as the top ",,]ue by 70
per<:enl.
·M.king money hili become I
philoeophy ollife in itxll for •
lot 01. people: Astin ob5ervea.
'Ir, ~ people'. flult for be-
1"8 poor: NorIhri<Ige's Parke-r
lIya before insisting. 'I do hav~
a heart:
Re'pn's devotion to the en·
trepreneurial .spirit fits ncally
with lhe luitude $hilt .mon8
young vOien. freedman IIYS.
'Reagan doesn\ tell people ... e
Ire in ... Cf1I oilimi"'. He aarthe
Republican Party is the p&r'
aRe 'YoU
To Be?
,-_ ... ,_-_-._..._... ---__..
.- ............ . -- ____ 0".. ... --..... -
""---_ ..... e ...... oo ... .. _ --. _ .. _..- --_ .. - ..... _-'" -."."0 'u, ...._..". ._'. ....
1 101.-
ty ol opportunity. and )'OIIng
people arc respondIng to that:
he .. ys.
Preedm. n notes that.
especially U1>OIli ~ 100
)'OWI8 \0 ba~ anyone besides
Jimmy Cuter to compare to
Ru.pn. Carter is ~ as •
~ president" while R~
is seen"l0 'effective president
who bas gotten lOItIe things
done. They respect that:
"Thing. arc &<>iog pretty good .
right nnw, 1101 hetter than they
were four years liD: 1Ir- Eric
Krogi.... I 24-year-old Ucu.
grad who now """""SCI the
campus tennis shQp. 'Ir, not
MondaIe. It', more ... hIII happened
with Carte-r·Mondalc
that I dOll' w ... t to _ happen
again:
It remains to be aten if the
President's popuLorily ''''o''g
young voters will translate to
long·lerm gl;n l for Ihe
Repuhlicao puty.
On one liand, I recenl Gallup
POll """"ed 27 percenl 01 the
.... Iion's uno:\er·30 VOicn now
ClIl themxlves Rcpublicaos.
up from 18 per<:ent in 1980.
But UCLA's Astin believes
student:!' support ol Reagan i.
less I shifl to conservatism, and
mOre • .hift IW'y from
Iiheral.i$ll\.
After Rugl n. lIudenll'
political loyalties likely will be
Inyone', priz:1e, he "r--
More Quotes
'Now let's talk about
IOmeth,ng happler .. , like
maybe bombs 0(
mmetbing:
'To rltof,e ",/00 know, ,.,
upWrlQlion is I>fCCIlICIry, ro
rlto« ",110 do "01. ""'" is
pouible. '
of the Da
for Nuclear War . Religion and Public Education
Pn:widenoe. Rl [CPSj-Attempu
by lIudenta " Brown Unl""ni·
tt and more recently II the
Uni""rsity of Colorado 10 stor;k
cyanide pm, for use after I
nucleI" wilt may be dong the
fMiln. campus freeze move·
"",nt more harm than SOOd.
.orne activists warn.
Last weell- in \be 1aflU!1t\l'
dent vote turnout in six yeats
-Brown students voted 1044 to
681 in fa....,. of. measure aski",
coll'lc offlcab 'to stockpile
llUicide pills lor oplion.oJ lIudent
use exclusively in the event of I
nuclear war:
At the ...... time. Colorado
SludeRt leader. voted to hold a
similar referendum on ttwot
campus in latc Odobe •.
Offic.ls.t both schooll pOinl
out Itwot lbe 5Iudenl rderenda
arc not bindin& and 5Ieadflllltly
... fuse to consKIer stocklll3
IHhal pills,
One Brown administrator
declared the referendum would
be enforced '""", my dead
body:
~ students. of course .• d·
m!t they're after headlines u
m..ch .1 tbey are an usy out
from doornxIay.
'Our notlvllion ill pu ... ly
ed\ll;&lional: says CU lIudent
Grauman. co-diredOr of
f~ •
lIy. This " .....
ing to accompIWI: she .ods.
Brown au.dents. 100. Wml!
t<yin, to convey "\he f«1in& of
fear" of nuclear war. says Juon
Salzman, I junior who original·
Iy got 100 Iludenil tosign a peli·
tiOn calling for lhe .uicide pills.
1'he ... ·1 been • tremendous
increase Indilcussions on disar·
mament." Sahman says. "Peopie
two"" been able to personaJWe
\be l$!.ue by thinking about
their oplio",:
But thinkill3 lbout .ulcide
IXIULd fasler a defe.llliot .ttitude
ud actually drive $Iudent.
.way from the Qlmpus f _
movemelll, warnl Sanford Got·
tlieb, executive director of
United Campu$ef to Prevent
Nuclear W., IUCAM[.
"l think [stockpiling ,uieide
pills) in very poor idea becaulIC:
it doesn1 offer hope: GoIIUcb
~,..
lnslead, he arg~, studenta
$houJd work 10 educote NCh
other about lhe horron of •
nuclelr confrontalion .nd
"discuos lOlutions 10 the arm.
buildup:
While Brown studenl$ "were
sincere in wlll'lling to ra'" con·
lICiousnes&" 0( the inuninent
dangc:rsof nucka , wlr. be 5II}"S.
"'they mlJcal<;ulaled whit effed
it would twove: II ..... kes people
feel more hopeless:
"!Iut nuclear war i •• uieide:
counlers Brown', Sohman. ' [f
['m not dead, I Wlll'ltto be .ble
to kill myself, Life a fter nucltar
_ a .... '.11 IMo t .... n ..... th ..
[CPS! - A .-iea of incio:k-nta in
recent weeks hi"" lurned 001·
lese campuses into "a hit·
U'lround" for forca t«kin& 10
separale _ or merge - religion
Ind puhlie education.
Univer$isty of Colorado,
r'lenta will vote nut month
whether to allow prayers "
nexl Iprin,·' , .. dual ion
ceremonies. a praeta dropped
yUrt ago 10 shorten Ihe
ceremonies and avoid religious
entanglements.
AI Men'phill Stale. football
CJl;*:h Ray DemI*'Y it in bot
water with pa rents and
st\ldenta oyer charges he fOl'ce$
players to attend mandalory
prayer meeti"". impoM'l hill
religious beliefs on students and
staff. and "tempts to CUre
playeri' injuries throu", faith
heall",.
Southern Boptist-wntrolled
Besides, Sahman -.dds, 1'm
mOre optimistic .boul the
future now just by lCCing
everyone's growing <:oncern
and Iwarene,,· .ince the
referendum wlS introduced,
"W~... I1)'in& to use the
momentum W(!ve started to get
other campuses involVl!d/ he
lIIyl. "We're sendina out info.·
mation to campuses 10 hold
rallies on November 2 against
nuclear war. W. eomina up fllllt.
bul we Wl1i'il it to he before the
INI)Y~mhf.< "r<"";dH,tl.l] "lee:.
lion ..
A
l1atv"est
of
Poetry
~tu.ri."S
Frat\,ce$C4 Gult
t"e,adlrs p.""" ~ bx:t<.
lIooylor m:enUy threatened to
revoke the chuleno of all nQIlSaptW.
campus religious gtOIIpt
- including • campuswlde
nondenominational fdlowlhip
,roup - . ncr an ulUl.Imed
,..,Iigioul 'fringe STOUp' applied
for ~Iion there.
And perhaps to duck lIwc
",jigious ooafllets aJ1osetJ>er.
University of Florida student ·
8O"emment offlci.ols temporari·
ly have Il.Ilted funding for .u
student ...,Iigious groups.
'ReliJIon and education lorm
• contInuing dilemma In
American churchls~t e relations,"
notes J-mcs Wood, •
spec:ialis4 In the study 01 church
and lUte al Baylor.
Wood tays campus religious
conflictl hIve incrcued
drarruotlcaUy In the last several
yurs si~ the ritie of tile "New
Righl'in 1980. .
Moreover, "these c:onflicu
hive ~ the result of pe ....
lent and _Ious efforts aimed
" Chrialianlziog the public
aclloo!, and eliminating tile
secuUoT chatacter guaranteed by
the First Amendment: 1M! adell.
Wood .YI web efforts abo
pit f.itha Ipinst one aOOCher
and fo.kr rcJi&lcus intolc ... _.
Indeed, even parochial ool·
leges I re IIINgg/ing wilh que&lions
of J~ how much rengion
and edUCItion should be mixed.
AI Wood',OWD Baylor, for in·
~,ofrLNbr=Uy~ed
down from thrir ~t. to
~e the cho,,1e .. of aU non·
Baptist student .....,.."" will ..
ContioI.>Id on page 6
'We!t\£sda\l,}JovC1Y>ber' 1.ot ,1"l81
lIs...are.tn Co\l"S'-1\ooI<stot<2.
4'00 ~ 5:00 r""
nut poet ..... 11 ~gt-4p1.. cq'es 09 hOI'
I::cdc. (~ a. ,,(ce. Silt f)
Nazareth college
Bookstore ' iii'<J
~
•• ••
On Campus
Dr. Mary Bush - Administrator and Teacher
Dr .... ryBilsh
8y GUlcH", A. LeV.u
U you've ev.o. wandered
through the haUs of Smyth,
.-!ing signs in _reh at Sisler
Annunda,a" office or Dr.
Balog's office. you've noticed
the sign "Asa!.stanl to the Provost:
Maybe you hi"" ew:n
wondered ..... "", the PJOYO$I is
and wbat the ..w.nl would
0;10. '""' 1"rovoII. SUte. Marion
Hoctor, is the V~Praidmt
for tu:.demlc Allain on campus.
Her usistant , ..... beI it Or.
Mary T. Bush, handln Initi.lly
lOme student a<:Iodemic pr0-
blems. She has ~ 01: the
,,"!&log, ~linJ materials ready
for publication; the visiting sludent
prosram; and the probo.
lion lisI. She .00 works with
the Registru and Departments
;" plf.nning the faU and spring
.adoemic calendar. In addition
to all uu.. • it IllJo O>aicman
01 the Hillary DepIlrtment,
which ~ the has cb&rse of
depll.tment scheduling of
cou..el by ... metter, planning
the HiaIQry Prot.am, meetin&
faculty, .cting a$ the Iluon be·
tween the f.culty in her department
and various colle,e
admini,'ntioll, eniu.tinl
f.culty memben f.,.. pmmoIi<m
in the HistoryfPolitical Scienoe
depl.rtment. and dealill3 wilh
Hiltory lItudents. On the Jide,
~e #ill IIWl.Ig" to keep up
wilh her !lobb;e, 01 garden!1\i
and reading.
Dr. BlUh has ~ with
N.,..~ Ioince 1952 and has
leen many 01 the changes on
campus. and with !be faeulty
D'YU the ~ Initi&lly, Dr.
Buah '«e;~ her B.A. from
Nautelh. she received he,
Miller. from Georgetown
Univeuity in Wuhington D.C.,
and her Doctonte f.om the
University of OU.w. in
Canada. When she first S\.Irted
.t Nazareth it w.. • amoIl
women'. collqe. ""'re _re
<lreu ~ dorm studen\.l had
specifle Slwdy houri, and qWet
hourL Since th .... , Nazardh bas
gone c:o«Iu.c:ational and dorm
life has been complelely tran ..
fOlmed. But. she says. "'!he
"pint hun' ~hanged much, we
had dedkr.ted faculty th ..... and
we hive dedicated f.culty
_: When she was . Sludent
.t Nua.eth. there was ,
C:~MT column "Pocu. on
PINky:
"Teachi". students in the '50"1
WU , challen~: she con·
tinued, 'and teoch.ing: students
In the "80', is a chaUen~: At
Nu.reth there have been
'changes in form, but DOt in
content. things have cballjed
aU over, and NlUrCth has to
keep up with the challjeo. be
f1WbIe. and be williIIj to adapt
to new clrcums\.lroccs: In com·
po.i". Nuareth to other small
L.ibenol Arts colleges she add.
thllt ...... e n.nd \.Ill in com·
p.rllon. with f.cHltlea.
IMiministraton, l.culty. .nd
f;UJ"riculum: Dr. Bush has been
on evIl\laUon teomI to lee what
other IChooIs hIIve. ""we !wove
many options here: W con·
firms. "'Nazardh: !he MY',
"prcpfores students lor the work.
lng world. It has profesalonal
program •• and is trying to give
student •• well rounded liberal
Ittl oriented education:
About tbe History Depart.
ment. Dr. Bush SlY'"from the
point of view of , Uberai Arts
mljor, lfutory i ... valid.MY
other Liberal Arts major. !..ike
any 01 the humanities. it hdpt
US think and .eason. compre·
hend the put and understand
the praent, and plan fO'i the
(uture: The main .Ut..:tlon of
the Hillory Department. Dr.
Bush told me. 'U we offer
counes that provide • major in
History and Political So;icrw;>e.
and we abo provide servke to
other dqMrtmenU in the col·
It,e." To understand Our
ciYlliUltion and our culture as
important· is the pl of •
lfutory mljor. MOlt Political
Science studentll \.Ike advan·
lIKe of the lntetnlblp oppor.
hmilies provided In the IqaI
and political areas.
Dr. Bush decided to teach
beaolJJC she Uke ~Ie and
likes idcu. She choee History
beao~ !he developed an in·
terest in History and Politic&,
going back to high IICbooI ~
"The study of ~Ie.nd eventll
are fucinating.' she $mi.lingly
reiterlles. He. pl. '"" •
teocl>er are conlinuing pis. 10
be • good teacbcr. respected by
ftudenl5 aDd faculty. 'You cmI'
be Sltisrled wilh .t one period
hiving achieved. you hive to
continue, the contribution to
the academic community i • •
continuing proceN:
, hive contributed tomethi".
but DOt enou.g.h.·w adds.
As ..Mc:e to Itudentll she
$I)'$. 'lhey should make IJJC of
every opportunity to ~. the
Arts Center. boou in the
Ubr.ry, lecture aeoo. ,pd
filln$. Learning is not Just in tbe
classroom. malr.e U$C of every
opportunity to learn.' In cu.rent
events. she think. studenl5
should he conccmed aboul
whit is goi". on in Latin
Amenc.. the M;Qdle East, aod
the FrcsidenIiaI Ctmpa!1P\. She
thinks too.1" students Ire
interested in m.any oIlhe lsI\Ies
01 the day.
Halloween Madness at Naz
By MDt Blulltzu
Vampirts, witcbe:s, gobIinI.
ghosts aod &bostbuSlen.
Halloween 1\ the Nazaretb
Cltwel. is tradition with. few
rcmrulOts 01 the ancient Ce]tic
ritual. Cigarette boxes dancing
with cocktsil ho,ltcua; elves
and thieves rollicking with
Egyptian mummies .nd IIYP"
lies. ]n England aod Ireland
twcnty·rtve·hundred yean "&0,
the purpose 01 Hallow was to
pIdfy the powers 01 the super·
... tural.
",., hod&ePodie of tbe mask·
ed .nd wunuked, ..,onsored
by SociaIIIoard, wu celebrated
last SIoturday ni&ht. October
twenty-seven , A' OK perform·
ed lOme of the latest greats.
None other than the Transyl.
vani.n Count Or.culo sang
Je.d. CreoturQ aod O>aracte ..
ov~ from the Cabaret
into the Sebulta Center Hall
where they could rod to the
music: 01. jailbird dia: jockey.
Artist5 and mad .xntists eoD'
jured up refreshinf; potionL
Awuda _re made for belt
costume.. A hi].rious team of
powdered. wigged, and .tuffed
cheerleaders won $100. Bridgit
SeRif won SSO for her own
h.ndm.de pu rple Genie
costWTIC. Various door prizes
wrre ,warded.
'_bysr-,,-
• November 1,1984
NAZNEWS
Reception Given Inaugural Events
for Nazareth Scholars
• • •
By Krbt1n Kir""h
On Sunday. Oct. 28 •• reception
and dinner were given to
honor the """oomore. junior
and senior Nazareth Scl>olars.
The event was held in Medaille
FOrTTUIl Lounge and Dining
Hall. Pr""ident ROIIC Marie
Heston and Sr. Marion Hoctor
sponsored this first·time event
to reoogni:oe the efforts of tbe
scholars.
Faculty d"P"rtmenl chair·
persons as well as admini$tralO<$
and staff attended and
miKed with the .tudent •.
A short spc:ech w .... given by
Paul Kenyon, Director of
Admissions, to explain the
~lection process fo< Nazaretll
Scholars.
NUare!h Scholars are
selected by the student's
performance in high ",boo!.
Students who graduated in Ihe
top ten of their class. had a good
G.P.A .. good SAT. kOr"" and
were leaders are seleeled as
Scholars. It is. way to acknow·
ledge the aCidemic e.:cellence
of students and aha to keep the
standards of the college high
and to promole scholarship.
Dr. Beston gave a speech
explaining that she conceived
the idea of the dinner when an
alumnae exhorted her to remind
the students of tbe impor'
tan"" of learning and ICholar·
ship in eduCiition.
Sr. Marion commented on the
importance of a liberal arts
education and til<: preparation
that Na ... reth offers for the
future. She said the goal of
Na7 ... reth is to have young
and old learning and exploring
together. each gaining know.
ledge from the other. The din·
ner closed with an enthUlliaslic
rendition of the Alma Mater.
A dinner will be given in the
,pring fo r the freshmen
Scholars.
Wednesday, Noven.ber 7:
Informal reception with Dr.
Beston open to all N ...... reth Col·
lege students. Event will begin
at 2:30 p.m. in tbe Cabarec
Room of the Otto A. Shults
Community Center. free pius..
punch. cllicken wings.
Friday, :"Iovember 9
-Concert and formal in·
duction ""remony. The program
begins at 2:30 p.m. in the
main auditorium of the
Naza«,tll Arts Center. By in·
vitation only.
FrIday. November 9:
Con""rt and formal induction
ceremony. Dr. Rose Marie
Beston will be installed .... the
se~nth president of Nazareth
College at 3 p.m. in tl>e main
auditorium of the Nazareth Arts
Center. Music featuring work
for brass and organ will be per.
formed from 2:30 p.m.·3 p.m.
Faculty
Art
Musical Salute Exhibit
Honored Dr. Beston Works of art created by the
faculty 01 Nazareth College art
The Na ... reth College music 'rrio for Oboe. Ba$son, and department will be on dl$play
faculty honored Dr. Rose Marie Piano. by Francis Poulenc.. from Friday. Oct. 26. ll1rough
Beston with a musical salute Priscilla Brown. oboe; Kathleen Friday, Nov. 9, in the Foyer
Sunday. November 4 at 7;30 ReynoJ<u, ba:s.aon. and Louies Gallery of the Nazareth Arts
p.m. in the Gerald G. W,)mot Morrice. piano. Cen.er.
Hall of Music .t the Na;r.oteth Intermission. The Faculty Art Show opend
Arts Center. Der Hirt auf dem Fel~n. with a reception at the Arts
The concert was the rlfst in a Sonata for Flute Alone. Move. Center Friday, Oct. 26, from
series of special inauguration ment I. by Virgil Thomann _ 1:30 to 9:30 p.m. Thereafter,
events. including Dr. Beston·. Glennda Dove. flute. tbe oours will be from 9 a.m. to
inauguration as Natareth's Concerto in D for Harp· 5 p.m. on Sundays.
seventh president on Friday. sicbord. Flute. Oboe. Oarinet. On display will be paintings.
Novem""r9. Violin. CeUo. by Manuel De lithog ra plls. calligrap hy,
Featured in the concert WIS FaUa - Dr. 8arbara Harbach. ceramics. drawings. jewelry,
Fram: Scllubert's "Der Hirt auf harp$lcbord; Glennda Dove. sculpture. photograph. and te.:·
dem Felsin. Op. 129" ISbepherd flute; Pri"'illa Brown, oboe; Dr. mes.
on the Rockl . tequested Stanley Gaulke. clarient; Hal The exhibitors will be Dr.
specically by Dr. Beston. It will Groe.sman. Violin. and Kathleen Roger Adams. rlgUre drawings;
feature Or. 8arbara StaropoIi, Murphy·Kemp, ""llo. Kathy Calderwood, paintings
S.S.J.. """r.no; Dr. Stsnley The concert was free and and drawings; Lynn Duggan,
Gaulke. clarinet, and Kathryn open to tile public, .... are a ll in· jewelry; Mary Jane Edwards.
Serio. piano. .ugurationevents. The inaugra· mixed media; EJiU!beth Forster,
The program; Premiere rap' tion it..,1f will begin at 2:30 wate rcolors; J.mes Hi ll.
sodie for Oarinet (1909·19101. p.m .• Friday. November 9. at $Culpture; Ellen Horovi tz,
by Claude Debussy _ Cr. the Art s Ce nter'. main ceramics; Or. Magda len
Stanley Gaulke. Clarient. and auditOrium. Tic kets are LaRow. S.S.J .. calligraplly;
Kathryn Serio, pia!">!). available by calling the in· Lawrence Merrill.
:;v~.:';;~.~';~o~"~.~o~"~~.~'~m~';';;'~.:.~.~"~';"~';":.;"~;O;';";";'::;";';·;';":;"-:~~~~~l;i"~"l';";;:NetSky, 118911. by Chari"" ives .. Dr. ex\. 380. Rowley. tex·
~rbara Harbach. organ. • paint. ..
Admission by tic~r "'''y. Student
tickets available free at the In·
fOrTTUItion Desk in the Shults
Center.
Two programs complement.
ing Na ... reth·s reflections on its.
p<lSt and future at a time when
the college i. celebrating its
60th birthday .... well as in·
augurating a new pr""ident.
The programs also are designed
to help commemorate the city's
Se5quicentennial ob~!Van"".
Both events are open to the
public and without chargt:'
Monday. November 12:
Sesqui Futur",,-Lec\ures by
futurist. Dr. Michael Marien.
editor of "Future Survey: and
Dr. 8arb..ra Braverman of the
Genesee Valley Psychological
AS5Ocialion. Marien will speak
On "Hope. Fear and TechnolosY:
Yesterday, Today and Tomor·
row." Braverman will di""" ..
'Psychologyrre::hnology Int.,.,.·
face, The future:The program
will begin at 1:30 p.m. in the
Nazareth Arts Cente r.
Tuesday. November 13: Sesqui
Dialogue-"19J4.2034: A
Perspective from 1984." Cur.
rent Na ... eth $Iudents wiUgive
their perspective on important
Sludent iMues of the 193(15 and
Nuareth alumni who
graduated in the 1930's wi!! give
their views on important issues
facing students today. The audience
is invited to participate.
Dr. Phyllis Ladrigan. associlIle
prof""""r of psycllology. will
moderate. The program will be
lIe1d from 9:55 a.m. to t 1:10
a.m. in the 1924 Room at the
Shults Center.
Rave Reviews for
Tokyo String Quartet
8y Anne 81unlur
Sunday afternoon. Oct. 28.
four talented musicians per·
formed in the Art. Center. The
Tokyo String Quartet- two violinists.
a violist and a cdJ·
iat -put tbeir bows to string and
fiddled througll the notes and
measureso! Mozart, Beethoven
and Ravel Quartets.
The four men were all Slu·
dent. at ]uU ... rd. Pete< Oundjian
of Toronto and Kikuei
Ikeda of Tokyo were the violin·
ists. Kazuhide lsomura. violist,
and Sodav Harada. cellist, were
foundi ng members of tile
Tokyo String Quartet.
Quartet in 0 Major. K. 499
Lbe Hoffmeister' WlIS played
first. Thi5 piece. with a flutt~
allegretto. is • Motart classic.
Quarter Number II in F Minor.
0pus95 "'Serioso" was played as
deliberate and sympathetic as
any of Beethoven'S string pie<:a
could be expressed. The bow.
swept powerfully aero ... the str·
ing. in the Ravel piece. The
Qu.rtet in F Majo< had a pi ... ·
ClIO interlude that had the and·
ie""" on the edge of their
..... ts. The musicians were call·
ed bad: three times with the ac·
claim of the audience.
"Religion" (from page 4)
the law. says · spokesman
Charles Holmes.
But "in Florida, no one's
waiting for proof.
'"This year alone hundreds of
st udents have complained
about funding «'ligious dubs:
report. student treasurer Brian
8al!ard, who has frozen all fun·
ding for campus religious
organizations.
Of 160 student group:!! funded
by the student pcmment.
Ballard .... ys. 30 have re ~g;ous
affiliations.
Student officals will withhold
funds for them until the officals
decide if they're promoting
religious views with $late
money .
"'We are nol anti·reUgiO<ls at
all: Ballard contends. "'We jUllt
want to abide by the constitu·
tion:
But Ballard "may beopeningl
can of wOrms he really doesn'
want to open,' warns ACLU It·
torney Rich LeFave. The US
Supreme Court ruled several
ye.rs .go that rcl igiOUll group:!!
have a right to campus r~tion
and to apply for fu nding.
he points O<It.
. Whatever happens at Florida
or elsewhere. ,notes Baylor's
Wood. battles over religion and
IChools will likely continue un·
til new Supreme court decisions
a«' handed down.
The nation'. ",hool. and 001·
leges "have become a bot·
tleground" for church·state
issues. he charges. "the resolu·
tion of which i. crucial not only
to the ",hoot.. and to society,
but also to the nation'S future a.
a free and pluralistic society."
AU willi" /:11m. (;fI",,..,., rkllt"OW
Your JoeoIcIooip <=on bo Cld>eoI ! ... ___ "',,-
Dot MIItrb initial on monitor, $2.50
IIdrIttIotW ~ lteJn IP"=- specify Initial)
Business Card Case .. ..... ' 12
Cigarette Pa.:k Holder ................... ..... .... '12
Flat Cigare tte Pack (3" K 41 . . ............ $12
Sic Lighter
Coo~
385-4599
CREATIVE GIFTS
. Box 25185
,.,
t • N.Y. 14625
The ori2inal family haircutters.
FEATURES
Trials and Tribulations of Naz Gossip - Tell Me About It!
,,,.
.... a Vlrus
to pe1"1IOfl throo&h
filled with . ""
FOd 10< you! Bu.1IoOOI'er 0< !.te.
'""e" your ""me is d~ed
through the muck. Many 11\1_
denl., .. specially fulden!l ,
ho"" to make .,. eel • .,,,,,, ..,.,..
IdouI effort to OI:nICIf what is
bring said 10 protect themael~
and their """"""",
Irs ;nluestins 10 wItch
friends become memiea, 1ft
reloltionships go up and down.
,""e" to ~'Ien tou-N., •• \ldenlS
live their tal .. of lll.e teruion
eau.ed when they Wffi! I.II\&If:<I
ill the: "apevine. and cili", this
problem .. OI>C of their ""'jar
__ £0< """-....... ooIlese. One
of the biQlest ~ of the
SONip on this campus is in not
knowing the ultenor motive of
the individual wilh 1M latest
newsfluh. 'I'hm! aNld be •
miUioo and one 'euont why he
or .tie wallla you 10 know 0<
believe mmethU!a about them·
Jelva or .....- e_ or
maybe he or ohe is 'babbIi"l"
for the fun 01 de~""ri"i tho:
newl right off the preMo The
other big danger is wring on ythl
n, lbo,n yourseU. Thl, can
be: • devastali", mistake. !"""
to confode in you. Ilftminglyl
best frie>d (2R CUllte proble
....... abe or he ""'., beI,.,.y I"'" oonfulf:DOl!. later living
you fCUOIlI for the ..:tion. They
wl1lllOmehow try 10 and usually
.ucceed in convincing you that
DO hann was intended. In most
aqn it probdlly ",.un' but
rcmiP IIC'CIDS to be IIlc basia of
Intenction and oommuniCllico
around he.e lor ..... ywhe.., for
that "",tlerl thaI ~tJ up •
tIOOvenolion. You know how it
il. you're puJlina an . ll·nighler
with. friend Or two .nd the
conver .. tion _bow sots
deep. and you ..... mostinclined
to SIly thinp you know you
shouldn'. trulling those you' ....
suddenly Wring 50 much w!!h.
We don' realilo:' that theJc
indlviduall .... y pull ." .oJ1·
nighter tommorow n ight
o:xperiffl:ina the same incli ... ·
tion$ with othom. ~rt?c the
odrenalin is runnins high one
night " the pub. Again __ tend
to pull OIIt. pitch of grapes for
an to pb" and doevour. with
no ham> intended. of OOUlR.
No .... tter how you Wee it,.
cycle .oJw.ys taUs place and
comco bKk to t .... instigator or
the poor instiptcc.
With . world"" unlimited in
knowledge .nd only One life·
time to live··who cares to pon.
dcr 0<1 petty gofoSip whether i\
be true 01. untrue, diff .... ent or
typical? If <:Kh 01. us as colIqe
$Iud"n" somehow with
stamina .nd moti""tion diJd·
pline ou,.lvcs to sraduate with
degrees .nd . .... p .... plrcd for
careers, then not givina into
lemptalion of the juicy Ppc!'
vine .sbouIdn, be 50 diffICUlt.
Wby do we .... ke Gossip 101 •
requ ired oouIW11rs.olot of ell·
Ira workl We"'" ctrtainIy IlOl
plyir18 for it. .nd .n we gel are
ht-adaches.nd heart-acheo.
It·s Ironic [ fiOO thaI with 10
many little grapes.-okin, pI ts.
juice .• 00 .U, tr.veJina from
that fOfbidden vine. the bigesl
ClUM: of "" mud> turmoil is the
IIdI of communleolioll ill every
.xial cIaIa on this camput
&mO"Il friend. .00 more 10
among d.shes of ''''lu.in·
lance •. Why It honesty such •
difflcull thina 10 do .round
TIVECORNER
In The Dark
."
"Love thy neighbor
as thyself."
By T.mara KIrch
Thy~11'1
Perfect?
f.llible.
. prone 10 hide thy mistake.
behind the waU of ju.clJrnenl;
looIr.i"ll at thy I>C'i&hbon mistake.
Ihrough lhe eyes in • fun house mirror.
Spllntering
Frlend~lps
·We walk the
Forgive
Gently , .. - 'T,"h. .). '.R lf ~
Commit.
"'"
, ,
A
N,
Thy nci&hbor
As Ihyoelf.
ben!1 Of ()()O,IIW certain factors
ha"" to be consider«I in every
disaatrous situation due I<> g0ssip
, 00 almQSI every lo:>e1Iiper
wiU a:iv~ you a logka y con·
vinci~ argument 10 support his
or her innoc:ena! and/or ItOOd
intmtions. But <eprdIeM ol the """""'" ......... ....., completes the pi. comet right
to the point, deC,nately .. ves
time, .nd .void. unDCCeSllllry
involvement of och~r peopl~
who are often innottnl Jnd
don' ha~ the time or tolerance
10 play with peopIn minds or
feclin3s. So • friend ""'y gel
anvt .1 you for beins honest.
.... ybe that friend wun' worth
havlnjj 0.- maybe as in mosl
calleS that friend will under·
lUnd, trust and rupect you
more. The important Ihing
tl>ou&h. is that psip can ~
avoided and no chain of ,,"pes
could leak OUl, diltOr1i»c the
valUCI and pen:eptioN in the
eyes of thoR left boIdlnjj \he
gripes.
However, there', no w.y to
eecape the grapevine completely.
You ..... either COlI'
fronted eventually when the cy.
cIe oomplele.u. twig between
IWO Supu or you are
diocovercd to be the root of the
entire nwM. (You roots out
there know who you orel) The
worst way of . 11 for the cycle 10
end i. fo.- you to cJ"., off the
circle aft.... diIc:overi", you
were rCCOillstructe<! in the
.,.pcvine behind you. boer.. M
you ~1nICe thoR with grapejuice
OIl their handl (You're
ready 10 strangle somtone-tbey
can' hide from yo\Il) inve. li·
p iing "who dunnit ,' you dis-
<:OYCt each .,.pe beconUna:
more arod more juicy wilh ad6-
ed preservative. and eDUer·
.tion that makes for lnlercatl..,
tIOO"" ... tion.
Above It all. or .... ybe below
it aU, we' ..... small. friendlJ,
.nd can", P'O"P of people. No
one reaUy w."u 10 hur1 ."yone
elte but psip ClUIIeS to mueb
rrUsundenlanding .nd disttwc.
tut we forget this f.d and
deprive our~lves of the IUOIlj
poIentiai ItOUIId he .... for dooo!
and lrum,.. relationlhipa. So
ler. to J*IpIe. Were. small
campul and we ha"" to li~
t",other. Let people into ywr
Ilvel, not into your con·
ver .. tion. Take adv.". of
this bond. It doesnl crist In bit
crowded cities wbe .... masses of
unknowno are \00 oompetlti~
wilh their poeoesions. in their
pe.--..J and prolcaaional live;
to really be conoemed about
Ildythlna thaI doesn' involve
the","",l~ So keep an opeD
mind not ." open mouth.
Rememher, it takes two togi""
.tun .nd w.ler 10 the ppevioe
kuping it lempting witb
healthy. f.t juicy gnpeI thaI .....
100 i~bIc to pus up.
So the nu:t time you meeI •
modem-day "Eve"" \ryi"IJ In
tempt you into In Over indulge"""
tllrou3h the PI»
vine. don', be " rnodem-day
"Adam," Qt~wilh half anRr if
Eve is 10 hysterical you ha"" no
ehoiee but to he.or it. and hNd
OIl ove. to the . pple trcc. I
guarantee you life ~ N .... reth
.nd on esrth will be ]eM complicf.
ted .
To Dr. Malinak: Wby I wan'
bei",.ttenlive In d.M
vibe from spain 101
coIorina life jazz
bluina the melodie. of KCenl5
.w.I.t.h. j.i.v.e living entrapped in walls with
reoponsibilitie:s bIIUshil
break frcc .ndjom witb the ivy picker
picltin' OWly ot b1uina mclodOei which
u_ nt ... t~ tile aocent in fpIIin 101
with jam
MAlE
PEANUTS®
I"'-=-=-~
.-
•
8 November 7, ,9&4 n. GIMMf
Clubs and. • •
WhatisNBO?
b., J~DIllf~r Gould
Everyday s tuden.s walk
thl'OOJih the halt. to be bom·
barded by the many po5Iers
Ihat express meetings .nd IlC'
ivilies m this club called 1'1110.
What is thisclub, many ~udenl
uk, DOt knowing what tbe
three initials IIIatId for. 1'1110
IIlnds for .h~ NUI. elh
Buslnc$s Ong.mi2.lltion and ii,
very active. fun and mUOl·
lional club opened 10 all
business majors and minon.
So mI.II., !Iud"" .. toda., 10
peraona!ity, your level 01 en·
th .... ..,... and )'OIIl variaua ..:-tiviliel.
The employer is goins
to look for dubs .bal you were
in wbile attending <OUege. and
if you .... a ~ major. the
Nuare\b a .... ness Organiza.
tion illbe dub for you to join.
NBC wants 10 gel atu<knts in·
voIved uu. y.- more than
ever. TJipilO Widmer Wlnery
and Kod.ok arc beinJI !Cheduled
and 'flD"""""'I by NBC. Al50
ledu .... will be si~ from top
bu5ineumen in tbe oommunity
to .... Ip students grasp an insight
01 the business activiM$ out·
aide this college. BeJides trips
Update on
In eue you didn, know, Psy.
chology Cub hu been organ·
Wng tOlM new and innovative
activitiel. This put Friday, Oct.
26, lOme members took. trip 10
the Genesee Valley Psychological
~i.tlon Mini-Con.
fere.- at the Marriotl in W.
Henriettl. n.o.e who .ttended
reprelented Nuareth College
in a vet'( I.vor.tlle luhion. Out
01 all the .. IN colleges. ours wu
tbe onl., one with students I t
the conference.
tllrou&b their freshmen and Our _activity. Nov. 9, will
IIOphomore years Ibinking .hat
they wiU ge. invOlved when
they .... a junior of ...,nior:
wben they ..... 11 oraganized
.nd have the time. 1\ is tbese
studen .. that are miuins OUI.
They never do get involved.
never firnI the lime and never
get tbe 10 be in • dub. especiaUy
the Nazaretb BUline"
Orpnizalioo. Sl:udents do DOt
realise bow importanl il is to set
involved. Do students actually
think that when they .... In an
interview. all the~11O'
ins 10 uk are about you~?
NO··NBYERI! Employers,
upeei.ly in tbc Uti of
BU$iI>C5S. wanl 10 know your
.nd lectures, NBC bu various IP'"--------'" fund .. isers thaI go toward. I
1Ch0l5nhip for • bu5ineM $lU·
dent It Nazareth College.
So nexl time: you· ... pIISling
tbrough tbe haI.l and ...., •
po5Iet wilb NIIO on it, will you
lIop7 - Will you actually \aJl.e
the lime to <XJIIIC to • meeting?
Don' just $IY you will p-CO!l
The benefi15 are .oIl yours.. II is
you that will be mi.ssing out, or
it will be you that gets involved.
hu luo and has an answer
wben the ~m~ m. 'What
activities did you get invOlved
in while . ttending coll~7'"
Council for Exceptional
Children
Learning Disabilities by
Ann Leech
Film: You're Not Listening
Simulation Activities
Nov. 15, 1984
NEED HELP
IN
CHEMISTRY
OR
BIOLOGY?
Welcome to the
Science Tutoring
Center!
The Science Center
is now open every
Tuesday Night from
.7pm-?
In Smyth 205
- Abbe Wilson,
Biology Tutor
- Nancy Malone,
Chemistry tutor
Support Your Local Musician
E.K. and the Floy Floys
at the Lost and Found Tavern
Nov. 9,10, and 16
8:30·12:30 No Cover.
E,K. Zuroski, vocals
Tom Tosti (Naz alumni), piano
Dave Comtois INaz staff}, bass guitar
Gene LaLoggia tNaz studentl, percussion
Main Auditorium '
~CHRISTINE " ".
J_t ~nollg" com'"
e ne",), to can}' tit ••
JaW. to Ir.
c .... "-bam
co"cI_Io" .
-DavidAnHQ,
NEWSWEEK
"Ja"" Carpenter'.
bat....,.,.e •• "U
"HalloWfll"" ... U
m,,~ ..,'111 . Iuk
50'. Fine. "lid"
..... )' tol/·fl"/lip al
tile e"d."
- fUcllard CorlJ .. ,
TIME MAGAZINE
Psych Club
be 10 take I field trip 10 lbe
Rochester PI.,.:hiatric Center. A
tour af the buildi", will be
given .nd many professionals
will speak on v.rioua oppor.
tunitieo .v.ilable.
So come join ",I We meet
every other 'l'ueacUoy at 12:35
p.m. in the Psych buildifl8. Our
Secrdary and TreQurer Karen
Carlson will f.i.bfully be
th~ ... -IO 'fO'U Ibould coone tool
Acti"" memben will be the fll"St
...." 10 .... Iicipllte in OUr
events.
The Gradua
Nov.S
A·14
7 and 10 p,
Having problems
with mathematics?
Come to the MATH CENTER
ISD1yth 323)
for FREE one-on-one tutoring
in:
General Mathematics
Statistics
Calculus
Open every afternoon
M 2:30·4:30
TRF, 1·4, W 12·3
If you would like evening ho,",
please let us know.
We like solving problems!
Let us help you!
ACADEMIC ADVISEMENT
.nd
COURSE SELECI'ION PERIOD
fo'
SPRING SEMESTER 1985
ALL FUL .... T IME and PART·TIME MATRICUU
STUDIiNTS
PIcJ< up materiab. .. Monday, November oS and
dly. November 6. Rcgistrar'1 OffICI!: Smyth HaJL -" ALL PUU,TIMI! MATRICUlATED STUDEl'n"$:
Consultation with Academic A<tvi-.. .. WecinadI!
Nov. 7thru Frida.,. Nov. 9
-"MKB APPOINTMENTS MRLr
COURSE SELECTION YERIF ICATION ...
The R~.d lnll Lounltc, Shults Ce"ter
Current cl5S1l!anding u pcr paclw la~1 dete
earliest time period for. slu<!ent lO submi ••
selection cord to the Regis" ... Students may lu
course selection cards wilh any later group.
Senior.· Monday, November 12, 9:00 l.m.·121OO
~,
Juniors· Mantb.,< November 12. 3:00 p.m •. S:OO
Sopbomoc-es . l'ue$dIy. November 11, 3:00 p.m.
p.m.
Fresh.men. W<ednesda.,. N~ber 14. 3:00 p •
p.m.
t-t NameA·L
Frnhmen · Thur$d.oy. Novcmbo:r 15, 12:~ p.m.,
p.m.
.....tN.rmM·Z
PART·TIME MATRICULATED STUDENTS
Consul tation with Academic Advisors
Begln! Wedn~lday. November 7
COURSE SELECTION VERIFICATION ...
Thursday. November 15. 3:00-5:00
Readina LoWlSC. Shults Cenler
l"ridIy. November 16. 9:00-5:00
Regilt ..... orrla'. Smytb I
Out and About
Spyro Gyra in Concert
Membera 01 Spyro Gyra.
, ",.
fusion
ext •• -
many
... a lotn!
,n.x,.-
, bluQ,
Access Ail Auas,. new twO"
record live album Ilheir eigh.th)
is currently the best·""mngj ...
LP in the country.
Spyro Gyra enjoys a lars"
European following. fettntly
completed • concert tour of
Japan, and has been featu~ at
major festivals including Kool
.nd MontreaUJI.
Spyro Gyra will appear in
concert 8 p.m., Saturday ,
De<:embM I, at the Auditorium
Theatre. downtown Rochest .....
Tickets 1511.75 and $12.75) are
available at the Auditorium
Theatre box office (phone
454·n431 and at all T'lcketron
outlets.
Led by jay Bodenstein', . Ito
and 5OJlrano sax, Spyro Gyra in·
• eluded Tom Schuman on
~;£:~~:::~::,~: keyboards, percu ssionisl
'tl GerardI Velez on timbals, rongas
and cymbals, Kim Stone on
bass, guitarist julio Fernandez.
drumm", Richie Morales. and
[)av" Soomuels on vihrapllone
and marimba.
"Pru:ables" at NTID
En ... mble ~'ounderlDirector
Nico le Drd ske says:
'PARABLES is not only a new
direction in theat .... improvisa·
tion, but a sharing of .... vela·
tiona betwen the audience and
the actors-. sharing 01 the proat
cess of theat ..... PARABLES
of discovers new truth$and mean·
ings in the audience's . tories. It
brinS$ the idea of dis.:::overy and
integrity back into the theaw."
Dre iske wa!'IU audiences
will be
Perfor·
h ..
" What you ..... about 10 ~ and
experience you have never seen
or experienced before. This is a
new and drastically diffe rent
theatre. Leave aU preoon~
lions behind when you enter."
TIckds for t~ performance
a .... 13 and are available at the
NTID Theatre Box Office,
which is open weekdays from
10 • . m.-4 p.m. For further in-formation,
call 4 75·6254
(VoicelITYl.
All NTID Theat .... and gues!
.lII\.ist perfor\l1llllCes are for both
hearing and dW audiences,
Final Dryden
Series for 1984
Rochester, N.Y., October ]8,
1984 - FTom BolshoI 10
Broadway, the final Dryden
series for t9M, i. ""hedu]ed
from November 3 ,
December 31, Tuesday through
Friday and selected Saturdays
atSp.m.
The series features films
noted for their mu';cal and
dance performances. They in·
clude Cabom (]972), '11M &d
ShoQ 11948), "'" Magic F7ul~
119751, A Hard Days Night
119641, Swing TIme 119361 and
many more. 1\ will.lso include
two live orchestral perfor.
mar>oe$ by the Eastman·Dryden
Orches(ra with Josef von Stern·
berg's sHent film, 'I1M!ns1 Com-
"",lid (19281, .tarring Emil Jann·
ings, on November 9 and 10.
PresentlliDllS by independent
filmmakers are ~ pari of this
series of 33 programs. F"tIm·
makers Eagle Pennel, Emile de
Antonio and George Griffin
will appear in the Dryden
Thestre with the ir work on
November 3, 17 and December
tr~vely.
A holiday New Year's Eve
progrllll\ featurill3 everyone's
favorite film, CasabiollC(l, will
close the series
From Bolshoi 10 Broadway
series lickds are SlS.OO. In·
dividual admin ioM are
available al 12,00.
Gracie Mansion Exhibit
~d ArU Center, Inc"
421 University Ave nue ,.
Rochester, New York 14607,
and Gracie Mansion will give
Rochester one of it.. higges!
shocks since it husted out as one
of America's first boom towns.
And irs not the Gracie Man';on
Ithe Governor'sl that comes
readily to mind, b"t one of THE
holies( new galleries in the East
Village of New York City.
The erl>ibilion of 11 Gracie
Mansion affiliat ed arti.h,
selected by cohort Eve Zimmerman,
will open with a puhlic
reception on Friday, November
2 from 8·10 p.m. and wiD con·
tinue to De<:ember 2.
It aU statled when a WOman
named Gracie Mansion d~ded
to e~hibit promi.ing new artists
in her studio apartment
bathroom.
Details on Gracie's amazing
rise to fame in the art world,
publi.hed in the Sununer 1984
edition of ART IN AMERICA in
an article wrillen by' Walter
Robinson and Carlo McCor·
mick, tilled "Report on the EasI
Village,' are ... follows:
experience and its identity
through the J>"'5"ntation of self.
portraiture and portraitu .... of
it.. artist. and residents. Its
popularity wllS SO great that
considerable media attention
followed, thus propelling her
Gallery and the East Village
pheoomeoon into national prominence.
Now located at 167 Avenue
A, New York; New York,
10009, the Gracie Mansion con·
tinues to act as a leading in·
dicator of the directions and
trend.5 brought about by this
most fllS(:inating art. IIIOve·
ment, whlch, for many rea50ns,
is similar 10 the HIists' space
movement of the late 60's and
""P yramid and Gracie Mansion
have enough ;n common to
make this event an interesting
interaction.
The partidpalill3 artists from
Grade Mansion are: Guy
Augeri, Buster Cle ve land,
Claudio de Monte, Jonathon
Ellis, E.F. Higgins, Steve
Gia nakol . Rodney Allen
Greenola!. Jaques Halbert,
Kathy Halbower, Steven Lack,
Bill Muller, Bc:\ly Tompki~,
David Sandlin, Carolyn Louise
Newhouse, Ted Rosenthal,
David Wes!, Rhonda 2willinger.
Some of the artists were at
the opening reception for the
public to meet on Friday,
November 2, from 8-]0 p.m_
Regular houn: Tuesday
through Saturday, 12 noon to 4
p.m., phone (1161461.2222.
Eating
Disorders
Rochester Eating Di .... der.!
OrganiUltion IRBDOI will bold
it.. next public forum entitled.,
'Bating Ifuorders: F"tnding Your
Way Back: on l hursday,
November IS, 19M. at 1:30
p,m. at the Baptist Temple lcorner
of Clover and Highland!The
meeting will feature !be
presenllltion of an inspiril\8
film, '] Don~ Have to Hide:
describing a woman's valiant
recovery from bulimia and
anorexi.o. After the film there
will be a pa ne! discussion by
individuals who hav""
recove red from a nore xia,
bulimis, and obesity.
Since it.. inception. yeu and
half ago, RBDO has been active
in providing education, peer
support, a nd. professional refer·
ral for those in the Roches!er
area who suffer from esting dis-orders.
AdmiS$ion to the November
15 meeting is free. Donations
welcome. An inlerpreterfor!be
hearing'impaired is available
For more informaHon on the
meeting, membership. or
volunteering, please call Erika
Culer, 385-3823.
Opera
Opera Theat .... of Rochester
will present THE WOMAN
WHO DARED ("A FINE
AGITATION1 on November 11
and 18 as part of Roches!ef'5
Sesquicentennial C<-lebra tion.
It ia .. onc ... c. ~ .... with four
scenes which dramati= tbat
YeM, 1872, in which Susan B.
Anthony was brought to trW
for having dared to assetl her
right as a citi:oen of this great
country: the right to "vote." 'flUs
original ~rical) opera WIIS
commissionw by the Sea·
quicentennis1, Inc. with a fur·
ther grant from Merrill Lynch..
Ruth Rosenberg, Artis.ic
Director, decided to make the
production in essence, a 'family
affair," ';net: it concel1lll happenings
in Rochester. The en·
tire cast is local.
The opera will be J>"'5"nted
at the Xerox Auditorium l1li
November 11 at 8 p.m. There
will ,,100 be a matinee on Sunday,
November IS at 2:30 p.IllTickets
a re available thf'OU8ll
the Opera Theatre of Rocl>ester
office for 14.00 each. CaD
325-6290. TIckds will also be
available .t the door for eacb
performance.
"Hot on the heels of n~
expression ism and gra ffiti
comes Easl Vi/I"&,, Art, complete
with its own galleries,
bohemian IUIIbieoce, social
controversies, and • mix of
painterly, political, conceptua!
and cartoony styles' ... 'Gracie
Mansion with partner Sur
Rod ney Sur, opened in the the
spring of 1982 and quickly
became the embo::liment of tho:
spirit of the East VilJage· .. .'subtitled
the Lao Divi.ion, the
gallery doubled as the
bathroom in Gracie's tenement
a""rtment' ... 1he Lao division
estahlished some of the East
Village ..,.,ne's hallmarks: self·
parody; small works that renect
a rejection of machismo;.
bargain basement pricing."
Friends and Influences
A year later, in an interim
space, Gracie mounted "The
Famous Show: featurill3 the
works of over 100 artists,
solidifying the East Village
Only three
weeks left
of classes!
Pyramid Arts Center will
show works by Mollie Wolfand
Kathryn Gaspar at the Lillie
Theatre and Sweet Pastry
Shoppe, 240 East Avenue, from
October 28 through December • Tit led "Friends and In·
nuences,' the exhibit showcases
two friends' atlworks which are
innovative in both concept and
in approach to medio. Ali
neighbors, studio patlnera, an
educators, and mothers, Ms.
Wolf and Ms. Gasper influence
each other in the processes of
stimulation, reftnemenl. editing,
and presentation of their
m.
The public is invited 10 a.
openi"3 reception On Sunday,
November 4, from 11 a.m. until
I p.m. Come meet the artists
and enjoy rd ",shments while
listeni"3 to live m"";c by Bruce
Mclellan, then feel free to s!8f
for Utile's bal}lain matinee,
The Pyramid Shows at the
Little series is an ongo;'"
regional outreach exhibiti""
program coordina ted by
Pyramid Am Center, Inc., •
oonprofit exhibition and perfor·
mance center supported by
grants from the New York Stale
Council On the Arts and the N.
tional Endowment for the ArIL
Why Women Fear Their Own Sexuality
Contest
'Word"" .....
Carol ea-U, Ph.D, author of
Swfpl AWl»': WIly W~II FfGr
n..ir Own Soxwlity, writel th.t
ill !pile of the so-called ael ... l
UvolUlion. women continue to
deny responsibility for their
JeXUllity and ~ 10. copIna
mecbanWn she identifies as the
"swqlt .way" syndrome. $,oyin,
W I wttY., beom 'swept off our
feet: "liDded by Ion" Of'
·driven oul of control: allows
wornm 10 be ,.."ua1 in a lIOcidy
WI is still ambivalent about
fcmale suuelity. uoys Dr.
Cassell. 'Swept Aw.y is •
COUDtmeil emotion. I fl'llud, •
disguise of our true, eroIic f~~
logs which we've been !IOCi. liz·
cd to dc!Cribe •• romance:
Dr. Cauell will ,hare her
rcaoean:h into why women confuse
sex with Love as keynote
spelIkcr of "Cro6seo:\ Wires &:
Mixed Messages: The Lovcl'Sex
Dilemma" presented by the
Women's He.lth LedutcSeries:
TIle lecture will be presmted on
Tuesday, Novenbet 13. from
7:»9:00 p.rn. in the ~r
s.wins auditorium of Strona
Memorial H""I*tal. 1be lecture
is fl'l!'e and open to !be public.
The ... thor will examine the
differcl'l«S bet~n bow men
and women reptd "'"" and
loYe, the Good Girl/Bad Girl!
."ndard. and d6Clibc new
wlyl for WODIen and men to
look at thcmRlves and their
rel.UQnlhips.
Or. Cassell il pr~dent of the
Write to Achieve
Worldwide Peace
New York, NY - In .n
IInU5Ullluxl,~,eslu~. a
New York wriler and anomer
hasdon.aled S 10.000, in order to
atirnuUote widespread dd.teon
how wnrldwide pea~ .nd
j...wa. ..... y be aclIieved in OUr
ti~.
St .... rt M. Speiser il the
.uthor of more than Iwent~
OOob. the late$! of which i.
How 10 E~d th' Nwe/,a'
Ni, htmare. publis hed in
Seplember by New Rive ... ~
• n" di.tribute<! by Dodd.
Meod. In th.ot I>00I<. he ~\opI
one approKh to reducing lhe
connie! berween the United
SI.tes uxI the Soviet Union.
Eager to find other .p.
pn»eiles. Mr. Speiser oon<:eiv.
ltd the idea of the ye.orloo>g ron·
tat. which is administered by
the Council on Internation.al
lJ\d Puhlic Aff.irs. in New
York. The pri ... money will &0
to the writer of • 5.000 word
eMay on the following topic:
How we can. without adop.
ting !IOcialism Dr giving up our
treasured freedoms. modify
American capi\.lolism to make it
more equitable. and to reduce
the level of ideoIogieIl eonflid
with the Soviet Union, $0 " to.
make poMible an end 10 tho:
nuclar nishlmare.
Anyone anywbc~ in the
world _ ucept officers.
tru5tees • • nd employas of the
Council on International uxI
Pu blic Aff.ir. - is eligible to
enter, Essays must be po$I'
marked by December 31 . 1985.
It is not r>eoessary to buy or
read Mr. Speiser's book tuenter
the contest. Essays may be
devoted '0 .,,~on> fOO" im
pro";", or changing tho: plan
prelenled by Mr. Speiser. or
they ..... y ..:tvoc.le fundamen·
tIolly new ideas re t..led to the
topic ol ending the nuclear
nightmare.
1'Ite Council on InterNIliorwol
• nd Public Affairs is mlcly
responsible IDr adminislering
lhe oonlest. For more detailt.
contest rules .• nd the required
enlry forms. send • stamped.
..,11·.ddres$Cd envelope tu:
Speiler &s.y Contest. Council
on Intem"ional ' nd Public Af·
f.irl. m United Nations J>Iu.a.
New York. NY 10017.
Guest Speaker for HUGS
Roselle Fine, Ceriifoed Sell
1'Ite .. plst. will be the guest
spe.ker ,t Uniled Cancer
Councr. HUGS (Hysleredomy:
Understanding "" Group Sup'
port) meeting Mondly .
November [2. 7 p.m. in the Red
Brick building" Asbury Fi"t
Methodist Church 1010 e.st
Avmue. Rochester.
Fine will discI1$I5eXU&l function.
dysfunction and treatment
raources .fter bystereccomy.
1'he discussion will be followed
by I queation uxI answer _ .
sinn. ,nd -" group di!C\lS"
~".
HUGS il • lelf·help support
group which cater. to the needs
of women who have had orwill
h.~ hyslere<:tomies. Or rela ted
types of surgery. All interested
persons. including $p:ruse5 •• nd
friends an invited 10 '!lend the
lI>«1i",. For more infDr ..... lion.
rontlct the United Cancer
Council.
Voyage of Columbus
FUmmaker Robin Wolliams
wiD nanated his "Voy.ge Of
Columbus" roIor motion picture
• t 2 p.m., Sundi.y. November
II. Eisenhart Auditorium.
Rochester Museum and Science
Center.
Follow the lifeol Chrislopher
Columbus from his binhp~
in Genoo. 10 Cordoba.. uxllhen
to Granada, where we w.lk lhe
corritIors of the Alhambr. in
Ferdinand and Isabella une·
Iion.ed lhe VO)'>Ige of discovery.
From Palos de Uo Fronte ..
when! Columbus sc<:ured his
thip:l . nd SAilors. we proceed to
the Canary Islands and acr"",,
the Atlantic to his landfall in the
Bahamas. where we encounter
lod.YI West Indies befDre
returning to Spain .nd Seville to
visit the AKhiws of the Indies
uxI the CatbednJ housing the
... .. ..1 ...... , .. '-••
American Asaociation of Sell:
Educ.to... Counselors .nd
The .. pisl •. lhe nation's Uorgest
profeuional organiuotion in this
field. Ind • winner of the
prestigiu... Margaret Sanger
Award. Or. Cussell WItS also
the first dir_of the ~
P.re nthood Feder.tion of
Ame:rica'i EdllCllion [)eput.
menl. She hokb . doctonotc in
community health education.
Her re$afCh .... been publish·
ed in ~h profe.sional journals
as lhe Journal 01 Sell Education
and Therapy. theJoumalofSell:
Research and the OBJGYN An·
nual Edition. SWEPT AWAY:
WI!)' Womt ll FtfJ' T/wir Own
S.xlUJlily waS published by
Simon" Schuster in lite spring
of L984.
She spe.ks regul.rly onlopiCi
related to lexuality •• nd hu.p'
peered on NBC'I Sixty Millwtu
and • r~1 Home Box Office
Special. "'I_I", to Kidl Aboul
Su. Dr. Cas5e1l resides with her
f.mily in Alb"'lllCJque, New
Merico.
1be Women', Health Lecture
Series is ~ed by Planned
Parenthood 01 Rochester "
Monroe County. the Depart.
ment 01 Preventive. f .... ily ""
Rehabilitation Medici ... 01 the
University of Rochnler. the
Daisy M.rqult JODe. Founda·
tion •• nd the Woman's EdUCII'
tian.l.nd Induslri,1 Union. teaser
Voyage to French Polynesia
... ,",
"'"'"
ARC seA ADVENTURE
SERIES 1934-1985
Film t.eetll'" No. 2
Monday, November 12. 1984
Filmmaker Philip Wa lk,.r,
btthbury. Connecticut will
....... t,. his 'Voyqe to French
Polynesia" motion pict.".., .1 7
p.m .• Monday. November 12.
Illsenh .. t Audito rium.
Rochester MUleum "" Science:
Center. For tickets. c.ll
716-586-8729.
Voylge tu f/rc"",h Polynesia
(Mon" Nov. 12. 1984): ph.iJ
Walu. MI Ail from koopulco.
Merico with Cole Weston uxI
his family bound for the Tahi·
tian bIanda. SIorm damage put
• 's,,1dit., •• their 5().fooI stce11<etcb
in for rcpmr ,t Salina Cruz.
w~ they ,ioined !he --png
Pa)'lO" f.mily. Down c".nlra!
America and 'lilt 10 the
Gal • ...,.. they lUffed. fIShed •
uxI explored. Apan during the
westw. rd pu n ge. they
reunited in Tahiti to enjoy,
Show Off
Your Bod
at Empire
The Yerku·Cuuehman·
Ketlell Pol! Nu. 99 01. the
American Lesion.nd s""""", .•
Gym. 1630 Dewey Avenue.
~~. ~~ .~the
1984 Empire Physique Cham·
piun.hipa wiu be: held a\
Monroe High Schuol.
November 10. 7 p,m.
Trophies wiU be . wa rded in
si~ buls categories: Men's Em·
pire . Tun.ge Empire.
Women', Empire. Novice E ....
pi~. Master's Empire .• nd Mil:·
ed P.irs. Judgina will be b&5ed
On Itnenl 'ppearance,
mUIlC\lUority. Iymmetry .nd
muxle definition.
Rules and enlry iniomtlltion
.'" ,,,,,iboble by writina to Mr.
James Rockell. Physique Chair·
.....n. New York west District.
1630 Dewey Avenue .
Rochester. NY 14615 or calling
17161458.7220.
The competition is .... ction·
ed by the N,lian.i Physique
Committee. U.S.A.
I'rocftds from the event wiD
be donated for the ho$ptab
care of vete ..... I' the Veteran's
UA_ '''' .. ~~ • • ,_ .. V~
Butille Weo:k. Splendid auisiDJ-~
Raiateoo. and Bono ""' ..
Retreat
1bc Cenacle invita you to .1·
lend F.ther ScbQti. n F.Icone',
SCRI PT URIl RETREAT
scheduled November 30 to
December 2. 1984. Father
Falcone is profeSlOr of New
Testame nl Siudies . nd
....... Mnil'DMn .1 St. 1N.nard' •
lnstitule.
His theme is "The Prayer 11>:.
perienoe of Jesus' with ~I
emphasis on the IlClti"" in·
aighlS .nd impUcalions 01 The
Lord'i Prayer. Jaus' Pntyer 01
1'hanJusivina for the Mission 01
the Disciplel. the Priestly
Praye r . The C elhlem.ne
i'nIyer. uxI the Prayer Words
on the Cross.
Por further information and
"." .... lions. cont.ct The
ecnlcl" Mi nislry Offi~. 693
East A~nue. Rochester. N.Y.
14607: Or phone 716-27J.t17SS.
."R.o."d.i.
k.in. .
"V'u'l'p"«'u'l'a''t'e'd' W""
Ca",pu~ Paperback Besls.eller~
New G Recommended ---,,_._.... .. -..- _..., ._--_.. ... - .-.. ~_ ._.. - .-.. .. -..,.-- _.. - ,- _ ........ ,_--~ -_-.. _- -----__ .. _ ...- - - ... _-"
Have A Happy Day!
Season Summary
CocUgIio'. IS.
Men'.Soccer
The meJ!'11OCOer team. meanwlliL!,
hod totettle fora 4-Zw;n
out OVer Clni!llul in Buf{f.lo and •
R~" ~., ,m!' ~H~~, S""<h: hearlbreaking. "·3, loss to St.
Bonaventure a' home Saturd.y,
afler leading the visltors from
Olun by two so-aIl in Ihe HUI
Wf.
G.-erne TOiSh wu the biJI
tc'On'f forthew~k, He hod two
pl. againtl CaniliUl and two
in the St. IIonIvVllure SlIme.
givinl; h1m 12 pis for the
_. He alIo bQ live IlSSi5ls
for. I0I&l d. Ioom-loo;", Z9
poinr..
The Cokkn Flye.. 16-8-2)
ended their __ .",ins! the
Unive"';\y of Rochester in •
two pIs against night pme WedneWy. 0<:.
in the William loher 31 at UR'. Fauver
. ""·.CC.'--' Stlldium.
'~:r:;~:'.'~:;~,,!!','i:::: The V<)l1eyb&ll team. which
: Ii i alIo expe<:U 10 ,et. tournament '':' ,~t.:;';::;;:;l~ bid, brought III regular $e""'" ~_ record \0 Z4-9with. ~1 victory
over LeMOYM in Syracuse.
All fans should wear gold to
the basketball games to
present a solid, visual
message to our opponents.
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12 November 7, 1884 The ~Mr
Eve ...... " ne's A Comedian ...