e
~ 69 NO 10 8 JANUARY 25, 1988.
Computer Services
Almost Complete
on Nazareth Campus
When Pamel.o Buckholtz .. riv·
ed .t N"""feth College of
Rochester as di.~lOr of <:Omputer
.servicu in February 01
1980. there was no rompuler
center on campus. Thert Wt"'
no terminal!. The,e was no
DOmpIItrr.
When Ito$o; fount lk&Ion ...
in .... sur.ltd '5 N.zareth's
poe!.ident Nov. 9, the computer
OI:nlcr in Smyth H.n', Room Z3
was hummi", .long. f our centnl
proceMing unit. (CPUs)
poerforming task. for the four
oomputer sysleD1$ on <;ampUl -
Ihral ""'nuf.ctu,ed by Digil.ll
Equipment eo.po...tlon [DEq. -= by Data General. 1.\ lhal
point, 1M number of termin.ls
and rnicrncomp<Ilen on coompus
was 84 and C'O'lRli",.
Whcn this yoea(1 freshman
class ""dWlles In 1988, tile
N.zareth compute. oomple~ is
el<J)etted 10 incorpor.te, COmpletely
automated library .nd
an ~ comp"li", p-oaram
and l&ciIities the ~ual 01
any similar omalI. Liberal '!U
~c. ADd the II1Id .... te5 .11
will be ccmpuler liler.lc.
N ...... rl.h .. U<kn<h .lreMIy
h.lve ..:cess to lcrmin.all con·
n~ed to the college'. new
DEC VAX lIn50 ~.demic
computer, in<;ludina z,t·hour
.COlaS in the Kumey H.lI dor·
mitory's computer I.b.
They ~y can writ<! their
Inm pipers on AppLe II<! ...:I
Macintosh microcomputen ill
Smyth HaD and in liwc Lamie
Wilmol Library. They llrudy
cln find blblio,raphie
.efuel'lCes fo. Ihole lerm
popen in I n on·line COm·
puterized SYSlem connected 10
.6..o.o.:.ll.i.bn ries in lhe U.S. and "The uldemic computer
IyIIetII and !be 0.1& General
rysIem in !be library "e only
Iw<> 01 !be fourlysteml on t:ampul-
Administrltive offlca con·
&""'10 do their computi"ll on I
DEC PDP lino syllem. The
old -.:\emic sySlem, I OEC
PDP HIM. now is uJed IS an
..:IminWratlve word procusing
ryllem. All four of Nazareth'.
computer systems are linked 10
that they can be ruched from
... y luminal on campuI.
And no end ia in lighl.
Here', 1 chronolOliul
brukdown of pall
\kvelopme:nts and some fUlure
u~tions:
1980, On·line bibJiOS .. ph!c
""arching inlroduced In lhe
Lorette Wilmot Librlry. with
.co;:ess 10 tho: On·Line Compuler
Library Center. Total 01 485
.J,U..r,C.b eI conducted durin. first
19St·S2: Mlth/Computer
Cemer ,enovatcd and upand·
cd 10 two classroom. In Smyth
Hall. It had six tennin_11 Linked
to the DEC PDP 11/34 com·
pUl er and seven Apple
microcomputers.
Kearney Hall compuler lab
opened with II lerminals and
six video display terminals.
open 24 bou" I day.
Lib ... y medii cenler·.
microcompuler lab Op"ned
with righl Appiea.
Judy Wilmot Linehu.
William B. wilmot. J.mCl W.
Wilmot and Thomas C. Wilmot.
daughler and ..... of James p,
.nd Lorene Wilmot, con·
tributed $250,000 for start·up
cost. on library .ulom.tion projed.
1983: Bo.rd of Trustees
al\oeIlcd SZSO.OOO 10 ClIpIInd
computer Clpocily.
fall 1983: UndCfJ'..:IUllema·
;or in computer and loforma.
lion science inilialed.
1983-84: New dall [lI'~ng
cenler opened on firsl noor of
Smyth Hall.
Sally Atkinson nome<! project
director for libnry IUlomalion.
Summer 1934: New DEC
VA}( 111750 academic com·
puter lostalled.
Annual fltCUlty Assembly
o.y spotli&hta! compulers..
fall 1984: Computo:r Uteracy
1"4:quirtmenl ,nltlated IOf in·
coming frr..hm!:n. They must
complete. t2-l ..... , w .... Uhvp
.nd lake al least one cour.se. lo
any departmenl, \I~ng com·
puters in I signiflc"'l w.y.
Macintosh lab opened in
Smyth Hilt with nine new
Macintosh microcompulers..
I'rcrjected:
I~: four Apple lie and
t.,l.cinlosh microc:ompulen 10
be ..Jdcd 10 lhe library medi.
cenler, aUowi"ll "~-aa:cU'
microcomputeff, Ivail.ble
even when a ellA il using the
microcomputer lab.
Muter's concentrlllon in
leaching math Ind computer
aluaolion p"ndl", approval by
!be >&ale Eduaolion ~.
menl.
Spring 1982: Total of 184
lIudcnts enrolled lo compuler
courses. up from 101 in 1""!pI"
ink of 1981.
1982·83: Math deportmenl
redetignated department of
mlthem"ics Ind computer
Eicnce.
DIhl Schul" appoinla! to
Dew positioa of coordinltor of
--'ernie compuw.,.
Sprin. 19S$: Libnry'S
LS2000 system IChedula!lo 10
inlO operation, wilh lOme
70.000 of the 210,000 volumu
CltalOSed OII·liM.
Spring 1986: Library'aon·line
catsloging should be complete,
with information on holdings
Iva.i.lahle at 32 terminaLs across
campus. Library uaen wiD be
able 10 ten whether I bonk .
periodical Of video or ·audio
.~ is ..... lI.ble or on
rC$Crve, and where il illocola!
in lhe library. The computer
wiu ""nd OUI overdue OOIitel
Ind compute the .mounl of
fines.
NAZARETH COLLEGE OF ROCHESTER
Giovanni Spadolini
to Receive
Honorary Degree
Giovanni Spldolini, l"ly's
minister of defen.., ... d former
prime: minister, wi!! receive In
honorary doctor 01 law. dcgrco:
flom Nazareth College of
Rod>e$ler in I apeciol convoca·
tion Salurday, J.n. 2(;, .1
N ...... retb·. OUO A. Shults Com·
munity Cenler,
Or. Spodolini will corne 10
Na.llfelh on I U,S. Air Force
plane from Washington, D.C.,
following talk. wilh U.S.
governmenl official •. He win
be .ccomplnied by Rinaldo
Petri....,u. Italy. ambasslodor
10 tiwc United StaIrs: Giulio C.
di Lnrmm. tiwc alUnsul K"ncrai
in New York, and Mali<> F. Plni,
lhe deputy CO\IJIoeI
For the flrst lime in
N ...... relh·. (j().year history. lhe
college wililward an hollOTary
d"1lret: at a time other than duro
loS cornme:l>C!':ln('nl exercises..
"., special convocalion is
$Cheduled 10 begin al """" lo
the Shults Cenler Forum. A
rccep!ion is 10 follow II 12:30
p.m In Ihe Shult_ ('-"'I .....
Cabo.et Room ~'rom 2:30 10 3
p.m .. Dr. SpadoLini will tour
Nazarelh. Caso Iiallana with
luders of RochCliler's Halian·
American communlty hefore
returning 10 the Rochester·
Monroe Counly Airport.
The hofIorary degree was 10
have been .w.rdcd in the fall of
1982 duri"lll symposium spon_
ed by the c.. ItlIllana
martins the tOOth annive ... ary
of the dellh of lI.lian pltriot
GiuOC'pf>e C.ribaldi. The c"sa unlfic"ion. Dr. Spadolini h.s
Italiana'. purpose is to prom~e Ihown plrticular inlerell in
In understanding and apprecia· G.riboldi and other 19th·
lion of the Italian cultural cenluryfoundenofmodern ll&'
heritage. Jy.
The Casa 11&1lana',Academic He wu the finl prime
Commiltee recommended Dr. minister in 36 yean of the
Sp.doI.ini 10 Nuarcth's Board It.lian repub6c wbo wasn't I
of Trustl/Cl II I wortby degree member 01 the Ch.illian
.ecipient~u ... hisamsolida· Democral Party. He claNiflCd
lion 01 polilia.l, secular and the COIlition among hi. 'nllli
religious factions was in the Republicln Party .nd four
spirit of Caribaldi'. unification others ... the "first secular
of Italy. cenlury earlier. Dr: governmenl in the history of
Sp.dolini WII forced to the Republic" and said. " II illn
p<lAlpone lhat Ippeoran«, and Mlloric evenl benuK il
ball b«n unable 10 come to estab6shed. for !he first timo! tiwc
Rochester sin« IMI time:. Pf'ICtice of rotation of tM prime:
Appellale OivisionJudge Em· mlniltenhip between the
mell J Schnepp. lhe chairman secular and lhe c"lboIlc r_
of Nuarelh·. Board 01 in the counlry:'
TruIICCl, and Dr. Role Marie Asp.ime: minister, he concen·
BClIlon, Ihe college president, trala! much of hi. efforl On lhe
will award lhe degree and will country'. economic problems,
spe.k duri", the convocation. .nd a!templal 10 de-velop I
Dr. Marion Hoctor, S.S.J., IOcial contract between labor
Nuareth·. pJOVO$I .nd vi« union •• nd manaseme:nI. He
praidc:nl fOf.:.demic .ff.irs.. WOIIcabinellpprov.lfOf.I982
will ~ad tM citation. bu<JseI lhal provided for new
Or 5c>0!d0Jinl will ~$pODd tun and cut more I"'" U
Ilcer ;KCo:Pt,ns the degree. Am biUion from federal lOVern.
ballldor Petrignani wlll Ulcnd ment spending on Mllth I('r·
S.N,i..... v ..... , oociaI ...,.,.i,y .n<! Ioooal
Dr. Sapdolini, 59 was fUlmed lIQV('.nments,
mlnistcr of d.,(ensc in 1983. He In August 1982, Dr. Sp.dolinl
was prime minister from June 'POr\lOred an .usterity pl.n
21. 1981. to Nov. 13. 1982. designed 10 boost lodustrial
Asa young man, he ... rve<! u production. red...,. I botlance.
the firl! profCSllOr of conlern- of-plyme:nts deflCil, curb inn,..
porlry history al tho: University lion.nd increase IU revenue
of 1'1ounce, from which he had from liwc oil industry. 0pp0Ii.
r~ived hi$ law degree. He tion 10 the plan brousht I
laler WN [lI'esidcnt of 5Icred parll.menlary c r i.i. that
Heart Unlversity in Milan, and .esultal in tbe.govelnmenl·,
editor of Corriere della Sera, ruign.lion. However, Dr .
haly, largelt newspap"r. with Spadolini succeeded In fQtm!ng
• circulation of half. million. a new government.
from 1968 10 19n. He wu HI. governmenl lurvived
elected • .senatOf in 1972 and leVerll YOIes of con fidence in
leader ofliwc Republican Party p.,Liamenl, but he resigned ...
lo 1919. He IICfVed aschairmall prime: mmister Nov. 13, 1982,
of lhe Committee on Education six dip . fter he was to have
and president of tiwc Republican received his ""'-ary dep"ft
group in ltalYI Senate. from N ... rc\h .
He .... written more lhan a Hia Republican Party wilieft
doun .c holarly booka, OUt of the coalition forma! by
speci.oHung In Ihe relationship succeed ins prime minister
between the Italian stale.nd Amlntore F ... f.ni, • Christi ...
1M Roman c"lholicchurch. the . Democrat. But when SociaLiaI
history of the Rioorgimenlo Bellino Crui bKame prime:
(rebirth 0/ Italian nationalism) minister Aug. 4, 1983, he added
and the major IIOcial problems tho: RepublicanllO hi$ coalilion
VId political unrest that have IfO"CTMIC'II and appointed Dr.
beleasuered Italy since ill SpIdoLini minister of de(elllC.
Table of Contents
Clubs and .. ...... , .................. . .. . .Pg. 6
comics. . .. ............... .... Pg. 12
Edrtorials ........................ .. ...... Pg. 2
1 __ ................................... Pg.4
On campus .............................. Pg. 7
Opportunilies .............. " ..•••••• Pg. 9, 10
Ou, and About.... ............. . •. " ... Pg. B
PoLiTics ..... . ... . ....... . ,' .... .... ..... .. Pg. 3
Sporls ..••. .... •.••••.. , •••. .. , ....... .. Pg. T'
, GLEANER Jan 25, 1985
Editorially Speaking. • •
Parking Problem
Continues
By Thorn .. Rubeo
It is clearly evident WI the
PUkina t.ciIitiei on uu. cam·
pus are Insulfimnl. Every
ochooI doy 1M campul ill
over~ with ell .... It iJ "",
Ifemely (ruse,.tln, not only for
student •. 1)",\ for faculty. 5\.off.
• nd vif,itou as .... ell. And I .."
$Ure mainlenaooe doesn't enjoy
roona .11 the: ripped up gr ...
whffl:.;:an mlW Iw! parked.
After ,oi", throu,h the
frustratioa 01 not finc!in& •
opIICC .U dri~ have 10 ri>k
gettina:. ticket for parki", In inappropriIle
ven The people
at the Security orr"", have
auured me that no tickel. are
written when the ampus ill
toUlIy fuU . However, what
about \h. student who il uMble
\0 get 10 hiI car ... t,me wben
~$ be,io openilll up?
H.-Jw shouldn" have 10 deal
with thaI: II', not our fault \twit
the tehooI doan'\ w .... \0 sp<ing
for • DeW ptlrkin& aru.
Oen' , penalUc \1$1
So, ;1 an)'llll", bel", done?
Well, Security is doing its pari
by periodically- conducting
survey. u, use I. evid.""" of •
definite problem. But, there i.
litlloe ebe !hey Cln do. ~ of·
fiotr commenled, "Wf!re just
.. fNStrticd .. the Jtudenl1"
The dcd$on b up 10 the od·
mini$tnltion.
Everybody il ",.ki", aU
kin<U of suggestions. A popular
one il to not allow freilhman 10
MVC (>Ir' on campus. Do
fr"'5hman agree with Ihal one?
I'm lu'e you don'l since
roughly 15 percenl 01 you have
cars here. No. I c\orI'llhinJr. it is
ri&hl 10 po.Wah _ UOUp f(W •
problem that theadmi.nistratioa
doesn'l "",,,IO~,
The only lOIulion is to build a
new lot. The best place....,rm 10
be Ihe north Iidi of Smyth
w~re I~re I. a Hny lot now.
An cxlensive lot could be built
lhe,e. and could be lItrictly
,cserwd f(W commulcn. 'Ibis
would free up • lot 01 Sf*"""
near the donN which residcnlS
ooukI utilize. It would abo open
up the Shull:r; 101 f(W use by
fAcully ... ff •• nd vUilotS.
Some people have .. id the
school would 1>01 pul • lot there
becauoe il would destroy the
pretty nature there. Tell me
how .... ny time you look at the
nature on lhat Iidc of Smyth.
~ wMlaboulall thepm·
ty ""tun: brine ripped by ~
that have 10 be pa.ka! along the
.I'1.).O.od.wa y7 Somcthine "'" 10 be Maybe Commute' Boon:! and
Reside".,. Council can form a
pelition 10 be gI.."n 10 Ihe ad·
ministration. Or. if thai doe$n'!
work. maybe .n orpnUed .,...
blockage would make them
think. WI let's hope it docon'l
comedown lothat.lfyou ",the
admlniat.alion a,e pIa""",g
somcItIine. rm IIUtc il would
give \III all veal ~ion 10
hal it, Even if you are just.
thinking about il. let Wi know. (
think we have the right tD hear
sinccwe havcalotmo.ecarson
campus than you do.
Women Graduates
Receive Fewer Job
Offers
NEWARK, NJ (CPSI - Despite
a thr~.;:Iecade uptu,n in the
number of women eooming
Pho... a new SCudy showl men
with docto<aI degree. stin far
outnumber women to most
"".
Women PlIo., mor~,.
Mve.1Oup;I>er lime rll>dinc,iobs
and ~ ptOmOtIont.
The .esearcbefl Itudied
academic hiri", patterns, and
even submitted two ven>omof
• I'CSUme - one with ..... n·s
n.mc. the olhe. with •
woman's •• for I college
1.,.,hin3 p<Wi1ion.
.'1be male wu cv.IUlted Q
~ an UIOCiale prof~
p:' reporII I'kwcncc
Gels. • University 01 Delaware
~ who aHlulhcnd
the study. "1be female WQ
evaluated f ..... only an asoi.tanl
profcsaonhip:'
" If sa subtle dlscriminatiOfl,"
she sa)'l. "Women are not Ittn
as inleLliFnt~ '
There are more women wilh
doctonoles IfOU.tId who sufler
~,IOO.
In 1971. women earned only
1 •. 3 pnomI 01 aU doaonI
dqreeI, the N.tioNol Cmtcr for
EducaliDn Statlstlcl (NCBS]
says. 1be number jumped 10
24.3 percenl in 19T1.
This year. the NCBS upe<:U
WOffiCII will~ ..... 37 po:o=I, or
IZ,400 01 the 3$,600 PhDs
granted llltionwide.
One ._ for the .... le
domin.aJ>CC is "IOU selection:·
Gei. upl.lns. "Unlil a few
yearsaao. many n'IOfC"",n than
won>cn d""" to go \0 1'"..:1
..,hooI."
Even now, wom~n grad
lIudenU tend 10 opt lor certain
diociplines.
While women now gel I
oJi&ht .... jorily 01 t~ doctanle:l
.... rded in English. frencb and
Gennan. lhey al$o arc " gelling
a higher and higher p,oportion
of the! dcg,ea in other social
ociences," Slys Judy Touchton
01 the ~rkan Council on
Educallon', Off .... 01 Womm
in Hip;bcr Education.
" We can ccrlainly say 1M'
percentage 01 women PbDs in
t~ bK>Iot;lool and physical
.II.C.i.e.n ceI it png up, too." ohe 1bc incrasi"ll pe=ntag~ •
• ,e encouragi ng. ,e""archer
Gcil admit., but wom~n PhDs
SCiUare rare In most t,aditional·
ly male dilCipiina.
Dnpite a 100 pcrccsIl enroll·
momt increaseolwornenin Law,
oaly two pet=Il 01 aU law
PlIo. are umcd by women,
r.be poInlll out.
"Uninlent ...... 1 discrimina.
lion" by univerlity OIdmis$ioos
office .. oIten dlminish"5 the
ranks of women doctoral can·
didates. Gel, notn.
cont'd on p, 4
Anti-Apartheid Demonstrations
. on Campuses
by DoW! GaaIc
ICPSI - "Notbi". bappc ... in
the winter," Lamented
Duml .. n1 Kum. Lo of the
Arnerian Conunittce on Africa
(ACAI. «,Iening to I~ $C&r<:ity
of lIudcnt protett .gain$! Sooth
Aflicln racial aegregalion duro
lng the bc$innin& monlhs of ''''. But now, in the dead of
wiDte •. the student .nti.
partheKI lnO¥ement "'" IUd·
doenIy haled up, surprising
even lnO¥emf'nt leader$.
f""LecI by Jesse J.d' ..... '.
0fI30i"l .nt'-apartheid crusade,
Soulh African Bishop Deamond
Tulu'S recent winning of the
Nobel Pe."" Prize. numerous
marches on U,S.-bAsed South
African diplomatie Dff>CCS. and
the ..... esu 01 ....., ZOO p""
ICI\OQ ....... lIle November,
1984,1he ampusSouth African
~ment is .... "11 llrong .
laders «!pOrt.
"A lot mo,e students.
becauoe 01 the media attention
South Africa has been getling
among the general pub~c, a,e
luddently becoming aware and
interetted in stopping .par.
!held:. notcI Josh.... Nesoen.
ACA lIudent coon:linalOl.
Nellen. who to the pal ....
tried 10 sp«!8d the word by
IlMOci&tL"II it with m(I<C highly.
pubUei~ cauttS Lilt .. the anli·
nuckar movement. think., he
may bave turned. come •.
" You know the campUi
movemenl is gaining momen·
tum w~n, in the midst of
Chriwnao vacation .1 Bckdey,
you bave 1,000 lIudcnts ......
ching on the admlnisUation
buidLina:, locking arms, and
demandi... divestitun:," he
.~.
Indeed. in just the Ia$I """eral
weelts studenll of dDuns of
c.mpuses .cross the COIInlry
hove protested the plight of Ihe
bLack .... jo'ity in South Africa.
drmandi ... tMt their ooIleJes
lIop In_ina: in U.s. com·
po.nles whM;h do busineu with
the white oupremicist petn'
mentt ........
During the Deaember 7th
march 1\ &rkcley. for instance,
38 lIudenll were arretted as
over 1,000 protetton encircled
t~ admlnillr.lion building 10'
th,ee hours.
'!'be day before, severl hun·
dred UnI~ty 01 Maryland·
~ Park lIudenll. locked
QUI 01. planned AI·in II thead·
ministration buio:Uini. hoarded
buaet and marched OIl system
I"residenl }DIm Toirs off"", 10
p.otut the IYltem', $6.3
milUon In South African·lied in,
vellment •.
LikewjllC. a group of Univ .... ·
lity of T_ students chanling
"Boord 01 Rqents, y"" eon't
hide. we charge you with
genocide," protested outside a
recent board 01 resents meetina
drmandina the UT system .. U
ilS estimated 5600 million in
SoUlh African·linked ,lOCk
holdings.
And in • oomewbat more
radical tactic. t2 members 01
Oberlin College'l Student
Coalition Apinll Aparth";d
tried unsua:essfuUy to Mul
down the campus computer
syst .... and hold it boItqe until
the IChooI SDkI off its no
million in South African-tied
companies.
~tomed to • .egular,
orpn1J.ed series of student p ....
tesu during the warmer. sp.ing
monlhs, this winler'1 opon.
IllIlCOUf uprisings hove caught
even ""ti~d activltjsu
by Ill",""".
" I don't IhinJr. ""y 01 us cx·
ptCIed (the campus protCIIIl1O
be Ws big .tlhis time," Netted
reveals. " [ don<1 know WMt
would have h.ppened al
&rkcley, for instance. withoul
the nation" focus given the
iuue by people Lilte Tutu and
JacUon."
"We lhou&bt il would be
""iv<: on our part, becauoe 01
lhe currml interest. not 10
eapitali2e on ii," admilll fonne.
Maryland BLack Student Union
Preside~1 Charles Bell, who
helped orzanize the recenl Col,
ttge Park demonWation.
Ruled by • mino,ity of five
million whitcs, South AfriO;:OO'1
22 million blacks are loraod to
~ve, work. play, and attend
ICboo1 only with other bLacu.
Campus .nti·ap.rtheid
leaden want to f~ coUeaes 10
leU off their billions 01 doLlars
in endowmenl stock hokfin&::s to
$lime 350 U.S. companies
which do business with Soulh
Africa.
Such " di vestiture:' they say,
wUl I~ U.s. oompaniel 10
prcsou«' the government to
,mend LIll racist poLicies: (W Iote
Ameriaut business.
" It', 100 -.. 10 tell if (Ihis
winter's campus protCltl1 '"'
actualLy ,esulting in more col,
leSu divesling of South
Afrlc.n·tied slock." lIyl
Knight.
"Bul they are going 10 find It
M,der and harder 10 5IIl! ..
lon& .. the«, is C(I<Itinued lIu·
dent protClt and II more "Ies
and Ioc:aijties e....a divestilure
Legislation:·
In the last few ~rs, Brown,
Nortbcm IlliDOis, Wesleyan.
and the City UniVCf'$ity of New
Yo.k, .mooS OIbe .. , Mve
eitbcr partially or lully divested
of South African·tied stock to
the face 01 mounli ... scudenl
p,essure and divesliture lep;iILa.
tion.
Others. such II MinnetOt ••
Yal~ and the entire Michigan
higher ed system. have told
lIock in companIes which
refuood 10 honor the Sumvan
Principlu, a let of ,iK
,uidelincs businCUCI must
follow to guarantcc equal hUI,
menl 01 bLacI< workers.
BUI while $III"RC achooll ha""
divested, most ,"mlinue either
to avoid the issuc entlrely. Of
condem divestilurc as an l~·
fectlve and unfai' method of
opposing apartheid.
Soutbern CaLifomir.. Ulinob,
PittandStanford, to_I few
consiIIently bave rcfUlCd to
~. sH1ing their IIIOCIt in
IBM, Motorola, Blaclt .nd
Decker. Ncwmon! Mining,
ford. Cob, Mobil Oil, .nd
ot,"" flnns in South Africa.
Even after hostina' visit last
month by Nobel Peace Pri ...
winner IIiY>op Tutu. Harv.rd
llearfastly rrl ...... to consider
divestit"'" ·01 miUlonl in South
African IIock hold"", to llll en'
downIcnt fund.
Hatvatd Prcsidt!nl Derek Bok
haa publicly charged Ibll
"dlvatiture will not ~
and will cost the unl",,";ty
money:'
"Ira a controversial illlUe on
campus," confesses H.rvard
opokesman DoW! Rosen. "an
illUC on wtuclt lIucienlll and
faculty are deeply divided."
" With publicity .1 • hish
level, it will be vital 10 follow up
with protests and dt!",.,... ...
liona on ampuses thlo 'Prins,"
ACA'. NHSCII explain&.
" With an utenslve camp'"
network already ,n pLaoe." he!
predicts. "we'n: plaMi"ll a
rea>rd yar oIliudent protesu
.nd civil ~ 00 am·
puses ""tioawide" dunn, lhe
rnovemenl's Much 21·ApriI 6
"Wccuol Actioon:'
Editor ............. " .... ,"""" ... ..... Kristin ~
Adwrtising Manager ......... , .......•. KarunVol<mann
Art Diredor ............................. Duncan Crawford
Bo.Islness Manager ...................... 8ettyioBn C8JIon
News Editor .............. "".. . ....... AnroeSluntter
Cef1OOl\ists ...... .. Michael Amory, Duncan Crawford
Graphic Artist ............ ..... " ....... , .... ChrisSCttwab
I.ayoot ......................................... Anna BLuntzer
Typ;u ........ .......................... .. Sue Maxey
,
POLITICS
National Demonstration
at Inauguration
JANUARY 6-FOI'Cft 0JIIl'*d to
P,w(knt Ronald Rea,.,,',
ruc600ary prosram mounted
the /i •• , major nlUon.1
demonlt.alion .,.Inl\ his
policies at ~ ...:I abrood
since the ~1eCtiOnJ at the in·
auguration ccremoniu in
Washington. O.C .. on JI"""ry ". n.e protest t'rgeltd the new
round of .:ba.,ti", bo.odgeI
CUll in .ociaI prosramI that t~
~ AdminUtration is pr0-
posing while it protects t~
1300 biUion"'rc-r military
build up. Demonstrators
abo opposed U.S- tie. 10 the
racist .po.rth~id regilM in South
Mrica and the U.s. military in·
t~rvention in Central AlMrica.
SCrong opposition abo was
e.pr~ to the t....-ailt bombinp
of .bortion c1iniel that the
Rea, .. , Admini".ation has
belittled ...:I _np:t with
-i\$ mmJ'*i&n .... abonioo ILachrs of Ihi. counte.·
inaugural action include Ihe
Rev. Jesse JICkton. lIep. JoM
Conyers (I).M]I, Rep. George
Crockdt (I).MI(, lhe Southern
Chri.tian Le.denhlp Con·
ference ISCLC], .nd tbe
American Federalion of
Government Employeu.
Capital Net> Council. wlo:looe
mcmbcn f..:e deep \¥lise cuts
in lie.,.,,'. bodsct propouls.
Tho: protest has *n Initialed
by the All·1'«IpIes ~
IApc) &tid the Peopia Ami·
Wu MobiliUItion (PAM).
APe spokape.-- Momca
Moorchad IIOlm lO<IIoy that,
"Scues '" 1fOU~ throughout
the country ud in tho D.C. area
who ~ con~med .bout more
cut. in food, health, bou$ing.
education .nd ;ot.. programs
are orpni%inl their constituencies
10 pIIrtlc!pIIlt in the
JanUiry 21 de:..-r.t;"n in
the c.pitfol.
" We t..vt found that people
evnywhere. whether they be
students, the u~~, the
reti~. the poor. are jlut people
who think IMi. money should
be spent on _ing to po!Qpl«
needs in.lud of making
bomb<, are eager 10 $how
Relgan .nd Congresa W I they
havtc II<) -..date to continue
their pro_w •••• nti·people
policies. The DDWlt~ ...... upral
protest wiD be the first cllnUly
IClion$ thai will fon:e the
gowrnnw:nt 10 rfl:kon with tluIt
facl."
The APe has b«n in the
forefront of the m<>v<:menl
against Reagan'. policies over
the past four yean and has
oopniud lOme: 01 the Iarg<:st
national 0UId local demoruIl'II'
tioOI .opinsl unemployment,
...... budJel CUll! .. _n as
-sainst racism, oaism, and
bigotry ""'nat lesbians and &lY
~.
Low SAT Scores
Due to Variety
of Factors
by Suwn SkOl"Upoo
ICPSl -Larxe I_mili ... , workl"8
mothers and bad high IChoois
• re to blame for the decline in
toIlqe entronce cum IICOI" ....
two _ Itudi ... a_n.
Studies over Ihe y .... ,
boweIoer. have t.-.oed the IonS
dedine in lVCl"'F .-ora -
Sc:hoIastic Aptilude Test (SA11
....... fell yearly .tina: 196.3
before bqinni"110 level off in
1982 .. 10 li¥ties 10ci.1
upbet"al, telev;.tion. tducalion
budget CUll, In ,chool
di.cipline .nd even .t·
mospheric nuclcar IQlina.
But people would cIo bette, 10
bl.me the ]arse f.milies
popullr in the fIfties fOf lhe
dropi in SAT ud ACT
IAmerican CoIleSe T ... linRl
acores. Loyol. Colltse of
Baltimore ruca",her RIchard
F,anke COnlended In a report
.... leued ewtt Ihe holidays.
"Small children learn betler
f.om their """,nil. not from
oibJi"8l:' he explains. ., Loci of
kids in • f.mily dilute the effect
of the $limulalion by tM
pII .... nts. ..
Franke claims SAT KOral of
siblings in large familia. where
children .eorive lew individ",,1
poersonal'Utnlion, OIn drop an
.v ..... ge of 20 points poer child.
While Educatin, Tesllng Ser·
vice lETS( re$el",h~r William
Fellers o.gn:es Franke', sludy
prob.bly is accurate, I new ETS
survey pins the low IICJOI"a on
decreased emphui. On
academia I"""" high IIChool
senio, ..
High d,opoul fi le. and
slulknls" disple.s ...... wllh thei.
JChooIs" academic q""llly" "".
gest !hal the major factor a)Otributing
10 test IDOr"e decline
was I dectused lCIIdemic em·
pbam in the educatton.l proCCSI."
lhe Ihody 1Iys..
Franke', sludy is an ofllihool
of Univer.slty of Michigan Proft$
SOr Robtrl Zajooc'l 1976
.cpon, ..... hich lied Ihe disappointing
test ICOfU 10 f.mily
size. Zajonl: predicted lIOOfes
would .ubiliu-, then rile in the
early eijhliu when childr ... of
the 196O"s _l~ families hit
college ",e.
When Zajor>e'l ex~'ed 25
poinl rise in 19$.t lest """' ...
lurnfd OIIt to be only fOIl •
points. Franke began exomin·
ing the minlm. l inc ..... sc.
" I cast .round lor Ihings th.ol
.... ·ould If/oct test 1COfCI." he
" yI. " I went t-ck 10 lz..;onc.j
th-r 10 1<1 e/ftcts, and last
su"""". look..:! 1\ the impIICI
betWttn pII,en".nd kids:'
Franke found lhe prc;ect...:!
rise in I .. t lICOres caused by
.moller fam!lles .......
<ounteracled by dec.eued
parent-<hild conlact II more
worntn enlered the wOfk for«.
" WOfking mOlhe .. lltel
JeOD<Id.ory f.aot"l In dctermin-
G<£ANER 3
Abortion Battle Rages
Across Campuses
lIATON flOUGR. u. fCP$l -
Cha"llll vloboliotl of firll
amendment "",IS, the Loui·
siaM Stale Universily studenl
newspaper. The Da;~ /fr.Iei/Ir.
is I"ing !.SU fOf banni"8 . n
lbortion .nd p.egnancy·.mt..:!
advertis ln . from 5c bool
publication •.
n.e cha<le is t~ most ..,riouf;
of • number of rettlll incidenll
as ~ and antl .. bortion fotco,s
sq-e off on campuses nolion-wide.
.
AI. VdlartovJ, University in
Pennlylv.n'" Ibe C.t bolic
university', .dminis"alors
order..:! til<: camp .... newspaper
edilOr 10 pull . n ad offering
birth controllnlorffiltion.
At California's Omard Com·
munity CoIlete, the c..mp..s
Obomoor Itaff and laculty ....
vi$or were bombarded with
pmlOSU from "uOenl$ and
f8CIIlly fOl" acccptin& a pro-6f.
political .elvertioemell1 in the
w~b before lhe Nov. 6 elec·
tion.
And EUI~r n Washington
University sludent. were
unpleasantly surprilcd recently
when "n.ppeli~ing . nti.
abortion nycrs appeared on
cafC1eria ubles.
Tho: LSU ban st<1nS from •
busineu officer's que.lion
. b o .. 1 Ihe 1 .. ;lability of
"presn.ancy·.el"...t·, adve.·
liscrntnll contr.cted by an in·
dependenl .eI .g~no:y 10 .ppear
in a stulknt diroctory.
"The COmplainl ,.;!Cd the
queation. '00 we Wlnt toadver·
~ for abortion?'" es:pIairu
LSU Viee Chall«11or fOl" SCu.
denl Affairs 1..1.. FQson.
"We talked to the student
health di,octOf and determiDCd
the ods were not in the best in·
terest. of lhe $ludenl,," he $ay •.
"The diroctOl" felt II best tosend
stulknts to lhe clinic lim fOf
advice .nd help. then if
nec<!$Slry, poinl them in the
ing It$! 1COt ...... Franh a)O.
lends.. .. It opLainl .1mo6t a.ll
fisht <Iir«tiorI for an abortioa
clinic."
Bul Rtwille editor Dane
SCrother .. gua inclooi"ll the
newspooper in the co.mP"'"wide
ban vIolales the paper's fIrst
lmendlMnl righlslo determine
its OWn adverti.ing policy.
"The edilOf and ad man.ager
$hould be .esponoible fOf all
advcnisilll:' he $aYS. " ]I's not.
pro-life or pro-dtoice issue.. The
administralion is limit"" I~
studcnlS' "",I 10 information:·
" The adminlstr"ll;"" should
allow SUl'h flftdom of apr_
sion:' IgfceI Vi/lallo<wt ediiOf
joseph Marusak.
- The wee k fo llowlns
Villanova" ban. Ma",""k wrote
an ..:!itoriol accusi"8 lhe ad."
miniatration of oeruorsItip and of
~"1 "opposina; vicwo
be(.",* it feds i\l own .... y in
..... fonlloltical way be d.o ......
..:!:'
Vil~~ facully advillOr
June Lyld counlerfd the ac·
cllstllions in the same ..:!;tion
$ayinS. " I knew the ad w ...
.g.lnSI Ihe lcachings of
Vill.""" •• nd the C.lholic
Chu.ch, and] knew the lrouble
il would causc if II ran:'
Vm.nova students ....... \In'
OOf!ce'n...t .boul Ihe bon.
""'-'~~
Tho: poIper reorival lwo Iec·
ter. IIIpporting the cditOf'I
posilion, and two wpponing
the ban.
AI Oxnard College. however.
too much 'et>ction 10. gr.phic
p.o-life ad In Ihe ComP'<'
ObIt"",,. prompt..:! faculty ad·
n- Gary Morpn'. Mitorial
ddendin& the polper'. respon.
Ilibi61y to upbold the pro-Iif ....
f"/H ~h "",I.
Students Ind faculty
memhers labeled the ad "in
poor !lIsle" Ind "factually inac·
(ur.le'·. and question..:! Ihe
st.frs Judgement in .ccepti"8 ".
Morpn admitted thc ad w ..
" dof"mitdy ~' and the
poopet did ftOt endo<"se it. bul the
c..mp... Qfw,.,.,. does " believe
in the precq>lll of the First
Amendment ...:I cannot d~ny
_ 10 long all advertiscfl
ao:!hl"e 10 ill.elverti'i", code:'
Rute, n Washinglon U.
"udenla ~ed as wen when
sr1phlc pro-Life nycrs appeared
on cafderioo labies last m:lnth.
Tho: nyers advcrHsed In
anti-ebottiorl fIlm scheduled fOf
Clmpwlahowingand~
by Klomp .... Sonhinc Miniltria.
Dlnin, sc rvice mlnl ser
Li.ne Smith has no! Ipproved
Ihe ny ..... a1lhough $he had ap·
proved previous ministry
le.fle1leri"8'
While the Oxnard ...:I HWU
advertisclMnu $lirrfd little
lasti"l oont~, the LSU
and Villa_ ~ JliU
fQler.
LSU and the III!wi& wlH
meel in ffderal COIIrt on
D«cmbe.5th.
And. while ..:!ilOf SCrothe.
ttope, to ..-tIle OIIt of COlI"
bef_ lhen. LSU'I P.-on .. ys,
··the Univeroity has no incH ... ·
tion 10 Idlle out of court:'
" We don' l _ it as • fIrsc
Imendmenl question," he
adds. "WC!'d like to delerminc
lhe conatihotionality of the
question. We as ... me Ihe
university has tM righl \Q ac·
Ct'pl Of reject ads. ,.
At ViII. """". I sch..:!"l..:!
hearing on Mitor M •• usak·,
refusal to pull lhe birth conlrol
.eI has yet 10 materialize.
Muusak says the "'miniltra·
tion probably prefers to let t~
mall« "!do,.
Tho: ~ staff probIbIy
will tnrounter the ...... od·
miniscrallve ban fOl" any fulure
eonl,oversial adverti""m~nl ,
Marusok predicts
,. But." ""add .. "iflhailldcaml:
acrose mydcsk loday, I'd run It:·
variance in the decI .... and in I,-,=;o--=,---=--,-,,,,,,,=---,-=,---=-===-,
'"~::''k'..':'~'!:.'~, '''~'I A«o~aLI·TY QUI" Z ofseparallon.nddivorceon lhe 1 "J~
"""re. b«. ~se "re,""rriage
.110 has riscn:'
BUI as lhe pl'tce1tIll" of
wo<ki"ll mochers obot from 10
P"'""'"nl in 1968 10 natly 40
perunt in 19801, more child ......
rcmved only miniml] .odulllllent;"",
he not ....
" Children wllh Iwo worki"8
parenti f.ce the $ame problems
all child.en from larv familiel.
and wIth Ihe .. me results;
Low.. coJICJ~ test scores:'
Franke ay •.
ONe oF Ttle~ i~ ~D
6'1' 1J!(.ioufl 1eR!<oRi~ni
WHo Ha'Je /"fO ReGaRD
FoR HUMaNiTY To
SLOW uP PoLiTICal
TaR6en.
tHe dTt-leR i'h u~eD BY
SoD-FeaRiNG CiTiZeN&
10 DeMON&TRaTe
TtleiR BeLiQF 1.1.1 TIle
i~cTiTV of LiFe
6't SlOWiNG uP
aBoRnOH CUNiC.i. I
I
n.., ETS study. based on Na·
tional Cen'er fOf Education
StatistiQ research begun in
1972 which lracked high school
$ludenl" curriculum choioc ..
.nd achievement lest scor .. ,
r""",","end. school. Iry to
raise tesl scor .. by improving
academic $landord., but not al
the upi''''''' of progr.m. for
WHiCH is WHiCH? --.";..'."-..."-... I
cont'd on p. 4
•
•
GLEANER J8n2!i. 1965
ISSUES
Out of the Classroom: A Chilly
Campus Climate for Women
Students Have
More Aid Dollars
But Less Aid Women college lIudmts are
often lrealed differently !haD
mm by '-:ulty. MIminiIIr.lon
and peen -1tYm when they ".
tend lhe ume institution,.
ohare tile urne dawooms,
work with the Uone ~
\IX the ........ tt"",",,1 Iet\'Icc$
and live in the u nle reaidence
hills, -dioa to • new ttudy
by the Pra;ed: on Ibe Slal",.nd
Educallon of Women of the
A$$oci.llon of Arn~iCIR Col.
leges. o..t 0{ IIw 0Gs:sr00m: A
C~jj/)l Clmptol CII"",'. I",
W_~"Weknow that '-lly
often Ire.1 women differently
In Ibe classroom." Aid IIernlc:e
R. s...dIer. eK«UUve di.ector
of Ille Pra;ed:, "but WI', Just
the lip 01 the i~'l' Oulf;lde
of claM - in confe~ Lab
work, campus employment. a·
lracurricular actIvities and •
host 01 other settings _ WOOlen
are evetI man: likely to be.tngl.
ed out •• voided. or othcrwi5e
trealed it tl>ey're inlerlope" on
·m.le Lurf." O~t 01 Ih. a.....-. \be --.:l in • pr0-
jected aeries .boul \be di""'te
for women on camp.... was
written by RobeIU M. HIll
assoc;"le director for f"OVI' .....
and Soondl~.
" In our elflier ,tudy. Tho!
aa-CJimtl/f: A ChiUy Or..
/w Woorwn7 we idenrifoed for
the flQllime over l5 w')'I Wt
f.culty, often lnadvenenlly.
diIoou"'iC women in the 001·
leKe elauroolll." npt.'ne<:!
H.ll. "Pmfesson 'JnI.y, for u·
amplc. lnlerru~ women more
.olten !haD men: .... qutltions
folIowcd by ~ contact with
men lIudenls only. u if only
men Ire cxpcc!ed to r~;
use 'maIc' eumpla. especially
wben talking .boul \be pro(alions;
or engage in • v.m:ly of
more oven behavion _ auch .s
uling oeWt humor In clu6 _
lhM~wornenand make
lbem feel unwdcome:'
"We've di_ered, though."
HIll conlinued, " Ihat the cam·
pus clim.le oulslde Ihe
duaroom _y be even WOfJI!
for women. For eumple,
.cadcmk adYiJon and career
~lIiIlmrnctimnsubt·
Iy .nd overtly dilCOuraae
WOlnCn from pursuing many
fields .nd ""'jon. Women may
f.equently be Irealed .. 'aoteI.
ke,... or 'potenti,1 dateo'
.. th~ than ., co-lurners by
male: lab or focldwork part.
....... They are often macIo!! the
object 01 dilptlrgin& lelIuaI .1·
Itntion by fr.ternity lOctivilica
and other campus evenll $\ICh
.. ~ hunll and wet
T·~n conles!l."
" Women on campus Ite IlOl
only .Jnl led oUI." .dded
Slndler. " Ihey .. e often
ovulooked, For in$lan~~.
women tend toget leas limeand
.!tentian from faculty and -.I.
"';lIiIIralon in informal tet·
tina' and IeIII encouraaemtnl
.nd IUpport aeekin& Ie.dership
p,.;tion$on eampuI, Frequeru·
Iy. wnmen ~ their 'e·
complishment. in athletlcs and
other arUS lJr.ipped ow. by
campus nwdi.II:'
Osot 0{11oc C1assm>m identiflea
_ny kimb of diffe~nliallreat.
menl Ih.ol an lead women
~tll denl s 10 lower their
ItCJdemic IiKbIl and limit th.eir
areor ~ls. II offers almost
100 specific but .d.ptable
rtcOrnmeDdations for ct..an&e.
and .1", includes In Instilu·
tiona! self .. valU11tion checklisl
.. weU .. • list 01 ranuroe
publiaooo... and O<pniAtiona.
s.,:.rlle ""CIlons discuss lhe
"Scores" from p. 3
-disa-dva-ntaged It.....w,nu, reJUr· 'Bullhe study lanored 1984's
improved """ .... lthough FeI·
t .... ")"I a currenl BTS draft
prop<>SIIl " .. ,dill, " little IIplum
in lhe .mount of homework"
for the llighl oc:ore lnaCIICI.
~Ie Fetl ..... and Franke'.
rcseareh. many ~ns remain
unamvin~ by Sludy o::>nch •.
lions .bout either lest JCO<e
d«li1>Cl or the 1984 revival.
"We don' l .bsollllely know
why SCOres h • ..., risen," com·
menU Geooge H. Hanford.
praidmt 01 the College brd.
which admiDi$! .... the SAT.
" 11's nlive 10 conc:J.....w, in the
COI\IelIl 01 the decline." he
.dda. "WI nallonal.Uention to
the q ... lity of education ;s no
Jon&er ncceuary."
But Fran« "fIUCS ed_Ion
ahould loolt . 1 the lest score:
decline in " tbe bro.der
pe1'trpecti"" 01 illte~1LIIl in·
eli ..... "
"'!'be U.S. hilllory ofthla cen·
tury is a blstory 01 OIIb1unu.l
inteUectUIII pins." he Idds.
"The decline of college en:
trance enm JCO<1:5 is only. blip
in the perspective 01 the twen·
tieth a.ntury."
"Women" from p. 2
A Stanford Unlvenily ttudy
'"Utlll eolleKCI eombat
dillCrimillllion by lnfenning
female Sludents when Ihey
ICOre hiKher On Gradu.le
Record Bums lhan m.lt
gr.duate SludenIS.
Such information coukl in.
creue women'lttlf<Onfidcnce
'M .... niveneas, the lIudy
doims.
After puation. bowever.
Gcis's study .... ea1J worroen
FhDs 're fl"" timQ more likely
than men 10 be unemployed.
PromotiON and pIIy ralses. ..
well. are oIfCTCd more oileD 10
men.
"If II perceptual hi ... " Gm
_\'I. " Whal mast peoopItoexpect
is whit they 1ft."
But th~ perception, .. e
changing slowly u the number
01 highly plated female role
models incl'Ullel, Gels .ffitml.
" WII.en you du,,,,,, the frequency
01 hJKh-sUlI... role
model.. you change ftpcctl.
tio~," she II.teo.
problems faced by women from
speci.1 grouPS. such u minorily
women, older women .nd
diubled _ II. 'The rq>orl ell·
pLores how women .re lreated
in Idmlulonund flnanc;'! ,id;
Kademic adviaJ.ltt: and career
_tins; ~ with other
Sludenll ond with f..,wly; Lob
and field work: work study and
campIII employment; health
care; Afery; .elideDt;'1 and
lIOCial climale; .lhJeti<:l; .nd
$Iudenl government and leader·
ship.
In relcuh>g the rq>orl, Moork
H. CUl1i .. president 01 lhe
AMoclItion 01 A .... ncan Col·
leges. ald. "k:Ioe.Uy. aU aapec:ts
01 campus life $IoouId compIemenl
whal studenlilutn Inside
the ~Iusroom. but coIIegQ ADd
unIvcnitiea too oIten fail to
meet WI ebaU~e _ especiIlly
in the ca .. of women studen(s.
The very camp ... envil'OllJlHtllt
Wt sbouId be ... pporIive f« aU
lIudenll may have lhe opposite
effeet on half of the campua
populIIion." o..t o{!Ioc Chsvnom: .4 OriUy
Qompw Oinu>t./w W"",,~?hu
bcero dlSlributed 10 key ad·
ministnotors.nd '-hy DIllon·
wide .. 1*11 01 \be pr<ljc!ct 00
Women'l FaD 1984 mailins. U
weU .. the college presldenll
and student ~. SiJI3Ie
oopia are .""llable for 11.00,
prepoid. from AACIFSEW.
1818 R St. NW. Wuhlnaton,
DC 20009. BuJi ratQ are tbo
Ivailable. rn>e elfli ... pllper.
TM Clawoo", CJj",alt: A Ooi//)I
Ott. for w.""""l, Islvailabie for
3.00. A pllper describin&
campus-based JIfOJ ...... to 1m.
prove lhe cLusroom eli_Ie.
Stk,«I Acfivi/in UIi", "The
CborooIn C1imt>I" A 0111/)1 o..e
for w_r iI .vailable for
U.OO.)
What do
you think?
Write your
opinion to the
Gleaner.
WASHINGTON, D.C. ICPS) -
Studenll WI yur have more
fllWlCial aid dolJa", to use for
coIJqe. th.on ""y time .......
1981-82 school YU', but. after
weighing Inflalion', effects. the
IO\Il actually woruoul 10.15
percmt drop in rwoncill .Id
since the Reagan ..munistt •.
lion look ofroce. two new
lIudies rcporI.
Students .nd their families
aI'IOlrtllhouldcring more of Ihe
fin.nci.l burden for their
ed_lions because muc:h 01 the
aid money available must be
p.id back evenlually. the
studenll found.
lnaU, ... udentswil!JCI ..... ly
$II billion in federal, alale and
inSlitution.1 aid thiI yut, aboul
the ..... e u in 1981·82 and up
11.6 billion from ilS 1982-&3
low. accordin& to. new studenl
.Id trend report by lhe College
Board's Waahington ofrooe.
With I....... funcil, mo.l
Ameriaon college $Iudcnu have
no trouble financing their
ed~ another IIIrvey 01
over 1700 ~oJleS" by
Pclcnon', Guides ~Iudes.
Over 97 percent of this year'.
fruhman .re settin& ........ kind
of aid money. and they're using
il to <>:we •• n .ve .... e of 85 per.
otnl of lheir financial needs. the
Peteraoo's OIIrver 1Ihow •.
Aboul 6S percenl 01 ,II
undergradUIIIQ get 50nle fonn
01 fllUlflci.l.id •• signlr.wt in·
creax ove. Jut year in light of
--'IlK coIIfSe costs.nd luition
level,. lIOIea Peter Hegene •.
Pelerson's preaident.
Whilc most of the liS billion
in aid lhis year will $0 10
Sludenll wilh den>llDStrated
flnancial needs. onr 1113
mlUion wiU $0 iOwlOrd IO<OIIIed
merit aid programs hued on
slud~nls' .c.demic . Ia nding
and pc:rforltUll1Ct. the ... rvey
abo points out.
The over .. e meril . w,rd in·
creued ltu than eight percent
over the pili! year - to 11.112 -
while · Ibe .vu •• e
"nced-baKd" .ward grew by
SURE ... WI FIlT
SAFE 'N' SECURE. , .. UNTIL
TIlEY TOlII US IT'~
fOOLPROOF if
.!moot II percent - 10 11.3nthe
survey found.
"These alalisti<:l""liClt wt
meril .wards are not beina
Kiven II the n:pc:noc 01 needy
studentl. IS mooy h.ve
fured," Hesentr A)'I.
But the statittic:l do OIIagest
.11 students. rcprdlesll 01 need.
have .uffered from lhe
repelted federal 5tudent aid
""IS in '"""'" yean.
Allowing for Inflation. fl ..... ·
cial .id funding this year is
down IS per«nl fra:ro ;1, pnk
1980-81 level. while college
costs have grown more in the
Lost th"'e ytors than !n the 17
YUrl btt_ 1963 and 1980,
the College Board study fll"''''
Feder.:J .id, in pIIrticu!ar. bu
failed 10 keep po.ce with ino.· ""'.
In constant dollors. federal
Sludent ,id has f.U~n nurty 2<1
percent ;n \be Lott four yeora.
the $Iudy lhowa. and dropped
as. proportion of aU .id from
83 10 78 pe1'cent.
Even more aLonnin& to Col·
lege brd officials _ .. well as
many OIher.id elIpertl -Is Ihe
shifi ffO<I'l pnlS.nod other non·
~y.bIe forrN 01 D:llo Iom>$
and work·study .warda.
Gunl. now make up only 45
percent of aU flnandal aid
...... rds. the ttudy reports. com·
pared \0 aver 80 percenl in
1975-76,
The IIre31ter emphasil on
loins not only mc&nlI students
incur liuble debt .. but " way
down lhe road loans could abo
~ up costina; jibe IO""m'
menl) more than V'nll,"
elaims IIwrence GLodicux. u;.
ecutive direclor of CoIlfSe
Boud'. Washln&loa offICe.
If In terCiI rales rise
,ill nifi ca nt!y , the fede . al
1I0ve.nmenl could 10M: ,
" sigDif'>ean1 .mounl 01 moaey
financing 1ow<Olll. 1ow·in!etC$I
Loan .. he war ... , rorucquenUy
spendi"ll more !haD if the
money had bcero _warded as
a;ranll and scholarships.
'bring your books to:
r--- - V
- I
Nazareth college
Bookstore BAAN~
I\.I.'.O...l.l. ,. E...
WE BUY USED BOOKS
ALL DAY EVERY DAY
•
• GL.£ANEA Jan2!5,I985
Clubs and. • •
Women, Violence and
the Abuse of Alcohol
By Anne Bluntur out of MOIltOe County. Thex
women are or h.ve been af·
fililted with : Park RidSe
Chemk.l O<:pendency, Na_
tional Council on AlcoholiJm,
Finpr L.oJr.es Alcohol Council
RdernJ ~ncy. and AIt ... ·
natl"cs for S.Ue,td Women.
There will be an oppol'Iunlty
for open discussion and q_
non. followi,.,. the ~.
lion. This PI'08T'm il open 10 aU
Sludent., facuily. staff, and to
the public.
lnduded in wo.-~ this
spring. FItCIII\y Associlolel in
conjunction with Camp"s
Ministry wiU oponsor • panel
dllcussion on women, vioknce,
and the .buw of alcohol. On
Thursday, February 28, . 1 1:3(/
pm in the Lourdes Lounie .•
ptberi", 01 drua: and alcohol
counseLors wiU speak OIl their
Involvement as profestionals
working in both detoxification
and r.n..bilil.llion units in and
VERITY FAIRE •
Nazareth Literary Magazine
is now
ACCEPTING SUBMISSIONS!
We accept
works of POETRY, PROSE,.
MUSIC. PHOTOGRAPHY.
and/or
ART,
These can be dropped off in the
Undergrad File, on the Verity
Desk or in the envelopes at the
library and info, desk. Written
submissions must be typed. Art
work must be in BL&WH.
Name and address please!
Food Group
An ongoing IrouP for thole
people: who have IlUljor concm
wilh food, wei&Ju, body imq:e.
and/or uUng p"tlems. Join the
group to feel beUe. and find
ncw ways to oomfort and take
care of youracLf.
£Yffy Mon<by ltarti,. ,Ian.
ZI , in the PotthoIe Lou~
ShullS Center, 12;3().1:30. You
"",y enter the group.t ..,y time
in the semester.
Dr. Frederin Amlley.
Counlelor. Ext. 603.
Exhibit
Mary Pat O'Brien, a 1979
Nazareth College gradUlte, will
pre.ent a I0Io exhibition of her
acryUc paintinp from WccIne$day,
Jan. 16, to Wednesday,
f eb. 6.
O'Brien', subject matter ....
beellnfluer>eed by abatrld n·
pressionist artisu and tbou&ht
,~
The Little Gallery is open
weekdays from 9"m. to 5 p.m.
O'BrIen, who li .... es on Cedlr
Place In East Rochester. earned
• master of fine aru degree in
""inting from Rochester In,
stitute of Technology after
re«ivina her bacheloo's degree
in "wio az1 from Nazareth.
H .... work has been represented
in Ihow. at the Ward Galtery
and Dtema.n Collqe. She o.I.Jo
""- _Ito in "o"p" ... te coI~
lions in Rochester and Buff.lo.
CAREER SEMINARS
- SPRING SEMESTER -
All SCudenlS are Inviled to attend any of the folJowi r13 prog .. ms, to
be held on the dates .nd times indialed in the Porthole Lounge.
jConferencc Room AI, Shu]IS Cenler. They are off .... e<! to help you
move into the job market intelligently and lucteSSfullyl
Tue., Feb. S, 1985, 4:30 PM:
The., feb. 12, 198.5. 4:30 I'M:
The., feb. 19. 1985. 4:30 PM:
Tue., Feb. 26. 1985.4:30 I'M:
Tue .• Mar. S, 1985. 4:30 PM:
Deciding On _ Career
Skills Aaessment
Job SIoarch Strategies
Writing Effective ResunlC$ and
Cover Letters
!'Teparin. fo< the IlmpLoymtnt
Interview
Fellowship Group
Presents Film Series
by uulie A. Come
This temetter N.zareth Christian
Fellowship Is spcuuori,,&
"Out 01 the SaltsN.ker as>d.lnto
the World," a four·""rt rtlm
terieo bated on Becky l'i'pperfs
book .nd seminar by the same
title. In nrder to JVoid "media
blitz." the movies ha .... e been
ocheduled throuahout the fi,SC
half 01. the semester. with stu·
dent as>d. f.culty Ie<! discwsions
on the fUms p!.onned for alter·
""te~kI.
f ilm One Jtnuary 23
" E"""'rlism as a Way of Life:
f acing Our fear,"
FUm 'I'wo february 6 "Get·
tina the StOC'y Straight: Mini a
New Looll .t Jes""
film Three february 27
"Learning to Love, following
Christ's Eumple"
Film four Marcb 20" Sharin&
the Mes&IIS~: Developing Com·
muniation Skill5"
Topic. to be covered indude
]earning 10 be a ., rWler 01.
men," acltnowltdgi.n& Jesu$ lIS
Lord 01. OUr U... .e s. Jlvi"ll and
~""in&. .nd talkillll wilh
others abolll our faith.
All meetings wiD be hdd
from 7:OO-8:IS p.m. Wednesday
~np in the Living
Room beginning January 16. All
are invited. COme ... aI\d bring a
friend.
The Undergraduate Association
(student government)
Students Working for Students
STOP IN
V,A . Office in Shultz Center
(across from Placement Office)
hours are posted
Tue., Apr. 2. 1985. 4:30 PM:
Tue., Apr. 9.1985. a:30 PM:
o..cidin. 01>. C.reer
Skilb Assessment
~.
Tue .. Apr. 16, 1985. 4:30 PM:
Tue .. Apr. 23. 1985. 4:30 P,:
Tue., Apr. 30, 1985. 4:30 PM:
Job Search St .. tegies
Wril;ng Effective Resumes and
COv .... Letters -
Preparing for the Employment
Interview
NOTE: a apcc;.1 Career Seminar. lnterview;"l! for Teacbing, will be
held on Thursday, february 7, ]985.3:30 PM. Int .... ""tional Room
IConference Room 81. Shulls Center. with guest pre.enlers from the
Diocete of Rochester Di .... ision of General Education. and the Greece
Ce"tral School DiStrict.
Sponl()JM by the f!.ocement and Career P1.nning Office.
MQUIIofII'S _ .
!IO,....,;"", ........
"""'V ..... .. VlOllU
... Ili\It
• ... ,.t<u .... 'n .... __ ... ,-._...v..-.." -"""_u". .. -•... a. .".,.. . .."..,..'.."n.c ._ -_. _ _-._.n .. , _.._..... .-
W ..... ,1.ii!6h
9
On Camp:..u.::=s=----________
Famous People Players
" "
i·
troupe. by
Dupuy. has perfonned over thf:
pA$I ,"" yea .. on professional
..., ... fran La Vqas to Pek·
In&. at R8dio aty Music HaU
and in • multitude of theat""
throughout the U.S. and
c..n.da. Thi$ rnnaruble com·
ptlny will brirI3 you ~w.Y,
Uber.cc dancinc on hlJ piano
key&. Kenny ~ N the
"Cambler", SupmNn ducki:\i
flarth Vader. MichHl Jackson
and .. SWy J~", • carnivd of
an.imat. Slewing in time to
Sainl·s.cns and dowu of eyep;
IpPing dfedS 10 t..vc you
ri'lde<! to your _ waitillJl foc
mo.e.
What malt... uu. 81'OOJP 10
rem.ruble, bnidea 1!Iei. incredible
talenl and showmanship.
is thai ten of its petforme
.. .,.., mentally handic.p-p<
d.
The Playerund their un .... ua1
" \w;st" was the subJ«c of. reUnl
madc-for-televiaion movie
.,nl;1l1!<! "Special People". starr·
ing Brooke Adami.
The following ;. an ucerpl
from the New York Times.
Mondor, September 10. 1984,
the day prior to tIM: .irilli of
" Special PeopLe". .. Everyone
.. id it was a ridiculous idea and
would never work, and Ih<:re
were times when [)Woe Dupuy
~I'<!d if they _n: right.
Nler all, the noIian thai an un·
trlined Z4-year<Old who hid
railed al everyllllng that nod
ever been important to her
could take. IrouP of rct.Irded
adoIe5O"nts and tum them into
• top-notched profeNional
thater troupe teemed wililtely
in the extreme. But Mi. Dupuy
wu a woman poaea.scd, both
by goal and by her own
ferocious dei:enni""tion, and
she was ~ about to pve up. " I
1"$ the I1>OU times people
tokl me it WLVI't SOina to work.
the more determined I was to
"""ke il work:' she retolU •.
Dupuy was workina as a
ICcretary for a Canadiao
orpni.r.otion aidina the marded
WMa she goIthe ida of fann·
inll I puppet troupe. Sbe hod
"dorM: puppetry sincoe the "&" of
","ven .n<! ... ~ hod particular
sympllthy for the bandicapped.
But when she auentbJed the
group that was to become the
flmOUS People Pllyen. she
II,.... despaired. "One hod.t>lOIutely
00 coordin.tion. one
wls.;luf and couldn't hear the
music, one had a violent
temper:' ohe JIld. " They an
came runnin& lDto the rehearsal
hall yeIIins and tcr ..... in&, and
Memorial Service for
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
by Wanda n ail
On January 15. 1985 approlI'
irnately thirty pothered for I
memorial servi« to honor Dr.
MarcIn Luther King Jr.'s blt\h.
day. This is the firat time in six
)'Urs that I ""Itb .. tion such as
this bas bttn pven. The oervicc
Was held in the Vasil Alma
Miter O>ape!.
The ilervi« opened with the
l in,ing of the Afrikan·
American NllioNol Anthem.
" Lift Every Voice and Sins'·.
fol~ by a very harc stirr·
ing reading of Scripcure. I Cor·
inthians 13, by President Rose
Marie Beston. The Reverend
Dwighl Webster of Colpte
University presented an inspir.
ina aermon entitled " WitMA."
In hi. xrmon, Rev. Webster
pointed out that the Greek root
for wilness and nutrtyr i. the
.. me. He ltated th.t in order to
be • witness for justice, for
eq .... lity, for freedom or for
OIriSi. one must be wiDing to
be. marcry. There is an implicit
understanding of marcyrdom in
Ihe idea of wilneR. He colled
for the pvina of energiu to
ClUJe& that wiD progt"a.s the
well·being of mankind. He all
ed for theactionl ~1hI.1
will chall~ the balls of in·
Justice to become just. The prln.
ciple:l of equ.o.Jily .nd freedom
fo rm the very found.lion. of
our mety. yet people such as
Dr. Martin Lulher King Jr. hod
10 slve his lifc ., that aU men
-1 share in the "Sifr ' this
lOCieIy calls freedom . ~.
Webster pointed OUI that the
givill3 of one's life for. cau..e i.
~ just the duty of such llS Dr. IG"" but it is evel)"OllC'l OIristian
responsibility to wholly
sive of one's xII to principles
that wiD benefit all people.
Members of the Black
Awareness Cultural Association
~ad uoo:rpu from the
~ and wrltinp of Dr.
Kina. "l"1loe XfVioe ended with
the tr..tilioruol IOft3I at "We
Shall Over Come".
The Bl ack Awareness
Cultu,,1 Association would tike
10 slve thanks 10 all tho6e who
participllted and .tte~ this
~.utiful evenl. A speci.l
thank. to F.ther Leo Waligorr.
who orpnized and inspired this
event. The B,A.C.A. organization
11 looking fOlWlrd to this
Ip«iaI occasion becoming an
a..n.n.. . ... ! event It N.zareth Col·
here 1 1m. this !tid who's got
thO. dream of pullina together.
thuter rompany, and Ihey
don'teven listen to me.! picked
up. chair and 'hrew il and aid
"'Sit down aoo shul upf'
The first few monlhs brought
more frustr.rion th.n en·
oourogement. '"I wu scorcd."'
she admitted. "'I didn't know
whether [ could do it. But !
didn'l want to fall, becI"",, I
hid failed all my ute:' A major
bre.klhrough came in the per.
IOD of Liher""",. one of the
fall"lOU$ people on whom the
troupe had b.ued • puppet and
uetch. "'I had been hounding
tum to oome and lee US per·
form, but I didn't teU him that
the group was handicapped
becI"",, [ f<'lt he would either
rome out of sympllihy or it
would tum him off. I didn' t
w.nl him to come and 5Ce •
freak show; ! w.nted tum to
_ and see it II I pmfessIon.
tl theater comJ*'y.
He finalJydid. findinaout on·
ly after thc &how thai the: per.
formers were handicapped.
Liberaooe liked the show 10
mucll that he .... ed the g:roup 10
_ke its American debut opening
ILia .ct in Las Vegas. The
performance was • sutcas!
In the years sln«, the
I'.mou.s People Players have
toured widely and have evoIv.
ed inlo as big an underiUing as
• touring openI company with
life·si ... puppets .nd el.borate
propolnd ""U. The players will
have six perfornutncea at the
Art. Center; Prlday, J.n .... ry lS,
I • 3 pm and 8 pm and Satur·
day. J-nuary 26, I. 3pm and 8
pm. The matmee showsare one
hour perfann.nca ."" the
evcnill3 shows Ire two hours.
Nuareth $Iudem. may u..e
their free ticll:eu for.U show •.
Morris Saves
Student
(8 slight alteration
of fa ct)
By Thom .. Ruben
II was the firat day !»cit. .00
ProfC$lOf Paul Morris was look·
in. forw.rd to I simple quiet
semcaler when he was called
upon to perform. heroic d"Cd_
II Was .ppro.rinuttely \1;23
A.M.on Monday the 14th. Mor·
ris Was huded to his off"", for a
very important medin& with
the Ruosian rcprQCntative of
the Soviet Hi.tory Instructor's
Tcam. On the w'y, he was ,
notina the similarities in the
icicles han&ini from tho: roof of
C.rrol Hall to.,."., he hid 5CeII
in Siberia durinslLia recent trip
10 RuWi. All of the sudden he
~iced o~e begin 10 loosen
right above the head of one of
the studcnu he: had in his last
~Iin Amr:tican History clasI.
M it began to fall he threw ILia
boob aside .nd tICkled the girl
to push her OUI of the w.y. Our
hero .. ved the helple.u girl
from the deadly Icicle;
however, !he IlUIained multi·
pIe head injuries and • bro.ken
arm from the tackle .
Concert to Benefit
WGMC at Nazareth
OnSunday. February 10. Z:OO
pm, at Nuareth Arts Cenler.
wcsiem New York St.te'. !WO
~ins Irish music erucmbIes
INNISPREI! .nd the
BLACKTHORN CBILtDH
BAND will prescnt a benefit
~oncert for vocII and in·
IIrumental musk: for public
radio ltation WGMC, 90.1 FM.
Senior membcn of RochcsIn's
Butler Academy of Irish Dance,
inlernalional champi""'" wiU
perform traditional dar><:a with
lhe Irish ensembles.
for ten yel.. the
BLACKTHORN CB ILlDH
BAND bas performed Irdand"s
Ir..titional aonp and dance
music for ooncertsand festiv.ls
Ihroughout Upstate New York.
Their e~uberant music i.
played on accordi.n. fiddle,
t.njo, Irish hoorp. pennywhistle
and piano. and joined with \.heir
quick and ready humor.
INNISFRBB'. tremendous
popularity .. attributed to their
energetic performancn,
original instrumental.nd vocal
• "angemen". .nd unique
xn"" of 51yle. They delight au·
dience. at cona:rcs, festivals
and Uvc radio per!Onnancel.
INNISfRBE'1 in.wumeDt&tioo
Includes violin, mandolin, hammeT'Cd
dulcimer. accordian,
banjo·mandolin, suit .. and
bodhran.
The Butler Academy of
Dancers have excelJed in loc:al
.nd intemation.ol competitions
and concert$. They recenlly
won the N.B.Unlted States
championship. CombininJ
their talents with lhesc m""·
ci.ns, the af!~ f.mily pr0-
gram presents aD ever·
-ct..nglng ter.ture at "",t and Proceeds will be donated to
WGMC, 90.1 PM, Gree«.
N.Y .• supportina folk music
programs such II "The Irish
Party ~", " Golden LinII
Polk fest'· .nd "RoseviDe
falr'· . Tickets are .vailable at
Nazareth Arcs Cenler bon ofilOC
.nd WGMC. Donation $4.00. -
Adv.nce group rate. are
.v..,lab\f-.
A Crisis in Smyth 329
(an almost true story)
by Thomas Rubeo
11 was December 13th, 11,30
A.M. Dr. Ev.ns" ',,<1.1 WQ< ~
elaH filed into the inf.mous
room 3Z9 (the one that slopes
upl. After they ~ _ed,
Evans hoonded OUI the tesl$ and
then attempCed to dose the
door. J.]owever ... we.ll know,
that door ~ not ltay closed.
10 she il1l">OCently Io<;bd it. A
few minutes later, • tardy 51u·
dent knocked 1\ lhe door.
When she tried to open it. Dr.
Evans found that the lock was
J-mnled. We were trapped. The
inllruClor immediately inform·
ed '" that everything w .. all
rJa.ht and that th.cne was DO need
to panic. She xnt tbe student on
the outside to let Security.
After teUing uS how much (.ilh
she had in N.zareth Security.
an officer arrived. lie sprlD3 in·
to action by shoulin& to Dr.
EVInI to open the lock. It was
then that we knew we were
doomed. He tried the key many
lImes, but to 110 Ivail. While Dr.
Evans sUpped. test under the
door for lhe locked OUI student,
\be people inMdc bepn to
pIInic. Someone susgested we
so out the window and make.
human ladder to cllmbdownto
... fely.
After awhile three men from
maintenanoe came oyer to try 10
open the door. There was talk
at using either • blow torch or •
chain saw. or even dynamite.
Meanwhile, the hysteria inside
Was growina. Fight .. broke out
as the dyina.,.,t. cluna to the
open window for air. Mt:SSa3es
were lenl out 10 families to let
them know we were still .olive.
Girl. were ocreaming; deslts
were being broken up for fi~
wood: somebody fainted. To
make up for the Lac:k of food
CltUlibalism was the only alter
... live. It was chaof;.
After an hour at hard work. · the
bold maintenance men saw·
ed the lock off. and we we~
free. Everyone pulled
themsel ...... together and ther~
was mucll huggina and hand
s.haking. The room was cleaned
up, .nd everyone fmished the
exam and went home. A& sht
Was leaving, Dr. EvalllcouJd be
heard sayin" .. I k new
maintenance Ind security
would come throu",."'
Jan. 31, 7 & 10 pm Arts Center
Out and About
Black History
Month Celebration
Rod>$e-r, N.Y. - StorytelUns,
• ""'Hlel play. aDd • Ii~ jaD:
ooacert oeIebr_ 8I.ck History
Month a' the R~huter
MuteUm • SeIenoe Center on
,~... , rebruary3from2101
Openin, tht PO'OVlm it
Almet. Whitl., wlIo ... se.
.tories, dl.na:. poetry. and
lOOp 10 iUumm.te tbe relatiotl·
ship belween llpiritual a)m.
municelion. celebration and
history. In her preaentlltion
"Stories From Black Worlds,"
Whiti, draw, on. rcpertoinl: of
folk tales from African, Caribbean
and Black ArMric.on tr.w·
'iom .., well as her experience
AI • principal dance. willi tile
Buckel ~ Company.
The worb of !.an,IIO"
H~ provide the basil for •
tribute 10 the poet aDd author
by the Village ~ Com·
pIUly in the ...cond f*rI of the
RMSC'I program. Entilled
"ynp«>n:' the performance
!e.lura the writ"". OIle-«t
pIIoy. " Sou! Gone Home,"
All • ,",lid finale to the pr0-
gram Lennie 'PO'[ and the
Ita$tman Jazz Masten perform
• musical, historical overview
of the bIac.k;au. ezperience.
All prognIml .rc beld in the
Rochester Museum', Bausch
Hall Auditorium and arc free
with ~eral Museum admission
of $1.50 for adults, 5' for
senior citizens and $.50 for
lIudeml through grade 12.
RMSC membe rs and
preschoolers are admitted fr.,.,
at aU limn.
Brighton Beach Memoirs
at Eastman
&i&h/Oll &.>cit Mtmoin. the
21st comedy hit of America',
pl.ywr ilht-Iaurute, Neil
Simon, will "" perlormed .t the
EIstmIn The-tre on Sund8y,
Febr\Iaty 3 " e pm. Thi$ pr0-
duction II preaented by the
Rochester Philharmonic Or·
chest.. .nd the Rochester
Bn»dw.y Tbeltre ~ in
U,ociliion whh 8.rry
MendellOlt and AI NocdoIino.
The comedy-dr.m. won
Ihree of lhe Iwtre" _
pr~ . wards: the New
York DrIlM Criticl' Cirde and
the Outer Crilic.' Circle
Award., and a Tony Aw. rd for
direaor Gene 5.lk., BrighlM
&cd MtmOirs fe.lures an .U·
l iar cut ineLudine lin
alphabetical order): Syke
Ba ssett, Pat rick Dempuy,
Brian Drill inger , Richard
Grune, Lynn Mllgrlm, Rocky
p.,ker, and UN W.lt~,
BrighlOll /kQch Mrmoirs tu flls
the calendar back to 1937, duro
inll tbe ~restion Cra when
moll people hid to hold two
jobt to make ends meet,
Simon', protlJOllisl Is fifteen '
year.old BUlellt Morris jel'Ol'M,
a would,"" writer or member of
the New York Yankee. who
keq» a journal 01 the activities
of hi. eecentric IIowehokl. The
Jerome family consists of bil
mother and flther, IUs older
brother, IUs mother'. w~
lUter and her lwodauglller&, "n
Uvina; in ctIOmped quarter& In "
boo.ch If" of 8rooIti)'ft. New
York. eonce .. tn.ling on IWO CO<I.
IleCUtivc WedneWy evenings,
Simon bas c:orutruded the play
II " teries of YiJlltlIes, all in·
lerJod:ed with the wderlying
theme of .survival d..nn, the
deprellion. The various pr0.blems
co .. fro .. ted by Ihe
Jtromc family are thwarted am·
bltio .. , l.te·blooming i .. ·
dependence, physical illness.
and penonaI dishonor - small
everyday i!llWel that ultimalely
chanJc Ihcir liy6.
1JriIItl .... &t>clt Mtmcin bu
won critielll acclaim on both
Ihe West and the &051 Coasts
. nd it still plsying to capKity
a udiences in Ihe recently
",named Neil Simon The.1U in
New York Daily N. w",
.. Bright .... 8toc1t Mtmoirs il Neil
Simon's richest pJ.y, Thi. disar·
mingly ramblillJl family com·
edy iullo in m ... y "'spec\I the
funniest and truest, and cort$<!.
quently tile I\'lO$l aff..ctillJl, of
aU the author's workl."
Tickets for Brighto Bm<:h
M,moi .. I re priced II SI9.50,
U7.5O, and Si5.50. They may
be purchased from the RPO
iIoI. OffL«, 14 Gibbs Street,
Rochultr , "lIr from .ny
T\ckelron oullet. Visa, t.1a3ur.
card, and Amrrican Eq>r~
phone orders ...., ..upted .t
17161454-1091. Group di5cowlt
rales .re ..... iIabIe by CO<Itacting
I .... Group Servitts OffICe
IIj71616S4-9S85.
Comedy Thriller at Slripping Dock
Murder Among Friends
benefits Society
The Shlpplng Dock Theal re is
pI",,1td 10 .nnounce • boond't
performarlO! of Mwrdn "IIIOIU"
PrnNb. a comedy,thriller by
Bob B.orry, on behalf of the
Friends of tile Humane Society
of Rochester.nd Monroe Coun·
Iy. The performance will be on
Thurldloy. February 21. 19M.1
8:15p,m,
Ticket prices for the bendit
are SI2.00 per penon and m.y
be obIaiMd by , caIli .. g eilher
Sharon Y'!es .t 3n·2366 or
Calhy Weigandl II 654-8551.
Some Jkketl may be .v.ilable
.1 the door on the evening of the
performance. Ticket. 10 the
benefi! performance include
admlssio .. \a. pre·.how receplion,
For further i .. farmalion
pleqe contact Francis C. Sickly
.t 271..4320, aleruion 405.
Film at Dryden
FIlmmaker Mark Rance wiU
present IUs film c.allt and 1M
Si'Wi'V TtIe,.-- (1983} .t the
Dryden Theater Febr\Iaty 911 e
pm.
Rance sboI: and edited hil film
over an eisbt '{eM period. The
documentary bas been ac:dIlim.
ed 1$ one of the _ striking
reoar<b of the Amrriean family
prodooed itt r=t ~. U.u.c
~gbtwei&bt equipment the film·
maker u;pIored his mother',
reJ.tionship with each member
af M' family. AI ..... retUrl\l to
West VilJinia to vilit her dyina;
mother, and e2periences the in·
evitable rcwlions wi cousins and
IibliDgS this moment produoea,
Rancc records limple evenll
and CO<IvcnaliOlll not accestlble
10 family out.siders.
Voted " Besl Document.ry"
al the 1984 Chicago f'ilm
Festival, Death and lIIe Sirtgi",
r,kgrom bas bee .. admired for
ill hones! , tomcIime:s painful,
portray.1 of family life. The
film WII produced with funda
from the N.liona.l Endowmenl
for the Att.s. the New York and
M..-chUlcllS Arts Council and
the Jerome F .... ndation, Mr,
Rance' , pruentation .t
Ba.stman Ho<ae Is made poNi.
bIe with funds from the N.·
tional Endowment for the AtU
and the New York State AtU
Council. Admissio.. II by
Dryden Series Ticket or 12.00.
Bucket Dancers to
Perform at
U. of R.
OIrlh Fapn'. Bucket Donee
1l>eItre, • Rochesler·based
troupe that hal earned I'lllIionaJ
acdaim from triticl and lu·
diences .liie, will dal>CC! itt a
too'ICert on s.tutday, Feb. 2, II
the Univerllity of Rochester.
The Bucket will a:i~ one per.
formance only .t 8 p.m. in
Stronl Auditorium on the
Univerlily'l River Campus.
T\cket.will be S4 for U .. iver·
.ity Sludenlt with an lD, SS for
Un!vcrsity f.culty and iliff
membtn with In lD, and $6 for
the general public. They will be
I Ylilable begi .. nillJl j . ... 16.t
the Wilton Common. Common
M.rket 1275-2841 .nd the
Eastman The.lre Bo~ OfflCC!
127.5-311 II .• nd I t the door the
ni&hl of the CO<I.:t:rt,
Fagan, • prof_ . tl .... State
Uniyerlity of New York al
Brockport, founded The Bucket
in 1970 with . handful of un·
trained dancen. Since lhen tbe
group hal wowed audiences
with ita combil'llltion of hi&h
entJfY and tlIotic: lheatricality.
The }amliCln'bom Fapn bas
blended Afro-Clribbun and
modem danoe eleme .. ts to
achieve a ~ and individual
.bltra~ t d.nc~ I l yle.
~o,razi'" bas ~ed him
" \be Stevie Wonder of dance;'
and TM N_ Yori: Timu
describes his cboreogrllphy II
"unf'illnaIy ~."
The Bucket dancrs havc been
praised for their commitment,
dildpli .. e, and ... turalDeSll. The
Walhill8fO>1 Frut said, "Kac.b of
the performel"$ <Ianoes with an
immediacy and presence tMt
go fir beyond tncre lechnical
skill: they draw us deeply into
their ecstalic I""... and hypnotic:
freezell and let US know
lhal they're people as well as
beautiful bodie ....
The company bas appeared
frcquenllyitt New YorkOty, as
well as Chicago, Boston, Santa
Fe, and the islands of jllMia
and Berm...w..
The Feb. 2 cooa:r\ ill !!pOll'
oored by the Human Relations
Commitl« of the Assistant ProYOSt,
the Student Activities Of·
flCC!, the 8Ieck Studenti' Union,
the Association of Bleck Drama
aDd AtU, the Outside ~"'ers
Commillee, and the Quality of
Student Life Commitl«,
REFUNDS!
Our Unrestricted Refund Policy
Ends, Monday, Jan. 28, 1985
rlRJl--'
Nazareth College
l Bookstore I ' ~,e , , MRNES
j&1\CIll£
Op-p-ortunities
Skiers Needed
Cross-country skiers of . 11
qes and .bilitlu will w.nt 10
bokI Sunday. February 3, open
for the third annual "Kidney
SkI" .t st..dow L.b on Five
Mile Line Ro.d in Penfield.
Skiers u.. .sked 10 lOlicil
pI~ in adv.nce baaed on
per Icil_er donation. with all
proceeds 10 benefit the Kidney
Foundation 01 UpsI.te New
York. The twol is hel", iIPO'"
IOrcd by Champion Product.,
My·T.,. Muffler Srue, .nd
WMJQRadio.
l'he OOUrIC II Sh..dow Lake is
5 kilometerl. C'O$$-C(MIntry
skiers a"" en<:ouraged to com·
plete •• many kilometers as
they can, up 10 • maximum 01
50. n.o.e I*rticipo.ntl who tum
in 525 or ...ore in coIJec;ted
pledges wiu ,,,,,,,lve I Long.
~ed hooded .. Kidney Skl"
shirt. Top fund raiKn wiu
r«eive ~l prizes, inc1udilll
• wa:kcnd • Bristol Bed and
areakful. &ift ~flCllt"3 from
Snow Country . .re.
restauranl$, and many other •.
Dick Osur. President of Snow
Country .nd Bob French, Y\Ce
Pruident of H .t~ h .
Leonard/Markin·Shaw, codwrmen
of the event. h'''",n·
no:>unced WIthe S\artinH time is
open between ] I '.m. and I
p .• n. in CUI! 01 iDc:~nt
w .. thet"or ..0_. tlw: Kidney
Ski will be held on the flu, Sun·
day th.1 100w conditions per.
mit. The Iwo hope to lee entire
f~. loki clubt, .nd w
I ...... show up lor the ~t.
RegiWatiOOl forms lNIy be
picked up at Champion I'r1>
ducts Outlet slores. WMJQ.9Z
Radio, My·Teo: Muffler Brake,
aDd Snow Country. They lIUIy
abo be p;d:ed up from the
Y.M.C.A., a rea bi3h IIChooi
coacbes, Rite ·Ald and
WeglNln" stores. the Jewish
Community Center, and the
Kidney Foundation on East
Avenue. Ski rent.aband inSiruc.
tion ... wen as bot chocolate,
will be Ivailable to all par·
ticipona. Food and drinks lIUIy
be purcbased at the Shadow
Lake Restaurant. Participanu
are eroo:outaged to regiloler early
by INIII this Yellr to become
eUgible 10<' a special dnwing lor
a portable stereo component
$)'sI"'" aDd an AMII'M SI~
CNSeIte plIo~.
The Kidney FOUIIdation of
Ups1ate New York i. In M·
filiate 01 the NaUon.:l Kidney
Foundation, the ""'jor voIun·
tary ~ltb orpniution in the
nation wboae purp(*is to fight
kidney di~.iIe. The local Foun·
dation prov~ ilervic:es to po.
tionts Ind their families. in·
creases public Ind prolesaioNll
edUClotion and supports Iocol
and ... tiona! melreb.
Computer Estimated
Aid Packages
The New York State Higher
&llICIItion Services Corpoootion
bas ",Iea$cd , new computer
I'f'IlS"at'\ that lUoWll b.igb IIChooI
studenU to aa;urltely estillUlte
the 'mounl of State tuition
.sa.istance \bey wiU rcecive if
tbey SO to college. In announcing
the new program, Dr.
IJoIoou E. ero.. f'ruident 01
the Corporltion, &lid. "One 01
tile /TI08t difficult things lbout
planning for college is knowing
bow mud! .Id is available and
bow mud! ~ will re.lly
COSI. Witb the new program,
lCudenU and pa",nu wiUNIve I
better idu of tbe financial lid
that i5 IVlilabie and can plan
aocordin&IY:'
The CDI'ponItion' s aim is to
IIUIke tile computer pf'Oll'am
avallable to New York Stlte
bi&h schools and Ubr.riel 110
that junion.. lenion., aDd OIben
interested in furthering their
education wiD Nlve I _
definite idea of tbe flfllJlci.al lid
they would be eligible fDr.
$\oo.:nll Ind parcnl5 wiD be
able to use tbe prosram witb
computers tblt Ire now
IVlilable II IIUIny schools and
IIbrlries. The new program
.Ib I series of questions, then
cakulates the State grant IWard
that I pulicular student would
rfCeive. Student, using this
new program will be given I
prinlout ~Iting the dati tbey
enter.-d aDd tllelwl rd that wit
calculated from that dall. To
~ive the State IfIlIt pay.
ment. stud=n" mUSt complete
and m~ tbe Ippropriate applicl'
tion lonn. "B«au"" computer
tfCbnoiogy is rU'lding wider ap'
plications in the hi&h xhool en·
vimnmenC," Dr. CrON pointed
out, "thl, Ipproa<:h will be us.
ing e>:isting resources to meet •
srowing public need for infor·
IIUItion about student aid. Com·
bined witb counseling and the
.id IIteralure generally
Ivailable. Ihl$ 'hands on' 'p'
proach Ibould prove valuable
in encour.,u.. earlier and bet·
ler piannlng for ~ry
educliton. This pro;e.:t I, One of
the ... veral steps we Ire liking
to support Governor Cuomo's
pi 01 providing student r .......
ciaI aid information to the
young people of our Stile:'
The computer PI'Oll .. m Cur·
rently IVlillble delb with the
New York State Tuition
....... ist.nce Progr.m tTAP).
Components Ire being
developed lor tbe Guaranleed
Student Loion Progr.m tGSL)
aDd the PeU Grant Program.
Thex wiD be available It I later
date. The TAP provam pr0-
vides tuition grants \0 lun·time
undergraduate and grlduate
students 10 belp pay for their
post_dary .-duCfltion in
New York. The grlnts I", 00·
ed on tui!lon. family income
and the number of ocber f.mily
membe .. enrol1.-d In college.
The JlfOIrlm is the ... tion·s on·
ly \rue entitlement program.
providing funds to all who meet
the quaHflcIlions.
The New York St.ce Higher
&luation Servi"CsCorporlilon
is tile State l18ency r"POO";b!e
for admlnistmng the Stile
grlnt Ind scbol.o .. hlp progr.
ms, .. well as tbe lederal
Guarlnleed Student Loan Pro.
granu .nd lase year provided
5],3 blltion to roarly \ltJ'ee.
quarten oil million students.
Employment in
the Arts
The Center for ArII Infomuo·
tion is pleated to ......... na! the
publication 01 the fourth edition
Of JabJ ;" lira Arts olld 1\111 Ad·
miN~/r(Itio>t, I IZ·page infc>rml'
tlon booklet listing IOUrcq for
finding employmeol in the Irt •.
lnilially publitbed in t980 In
'"I'OfIiIe to one 01 the most
frequentlY'lSked questiO/lJ It
tbe Center. Job. in the Am oNd
Arts A.dminiorralio/! identifies
national and "'8iofIIl ~
fM c:areer ~ling, job pIaa:.
ment, .nd job referral. I. well
IS newsletters Ind other
periodicals tNit regularly arry
arll·related employment
listings. The booklet bas been
completely revisoed aDd up'
dated. and consequently baa
doubled in size, now in!cuding
enlries for over 100 orgIni .. ·
tion. that ofler =>plo)'11l"nt
lervices.
}obf iN 1M Art. lind MI Ad·
miniorra/i"" i. I resource for
employment for .rtist. Ind for
.ftS.reisled poIilions sucb ..
tncbing. mlnlgement.
tfCbnica.I, aDd design positions.
ArII disciplines represented in·
clude crafts. dance. history.
IIteralure lincluding jour·
nali=I, medii (film , video,
radio, Ind televi,ion),
museulll$, m~, pbotosr.pby,
theatre, visual arts lindudln&
graphIc .rtl) .•• well .. Irts ad·
ministration.
}obf .... I" Art. rmd Am Ad·
millislrano.. is .vailable for
54.00 from the Center lor ArII
Information, 625 Broadwly,
New York, NY 10012. Bulk
rales . re IVliisble. AU orders
must he prepaid.
The Center for ArII lnfomuo·
tion. I cluringbou.se of infor·
mation for and lboutthelrts in
New York State and tile ... tlon,
is • prosrlm of tile Qear.
inghousc Ie. Am Information.
Inc .•• nd is $Upported with
public funda from lile New
York SUte Council on the Arts
and the Nltional Endowment
for the ArII, as ""ell as by con·
tributions from private founda·
lions Ind corporltion$. This
edition of job. i~ lIN Am (lnd
Artl AdminiSlm/i"" was made
po6Sible by I grlllt from Euon
Corporation" Community
Summer Jobs Program .nd Wl$
printed by Chemical Blnk. /I.
complete list of Center pub!iCfl'
tions is Ivailable 011 request.
Needed: Teacher
Applicants
The Foreipl and Domestic
Telcben Orpnlz.atlon needs
teacber appliClnts in all field.
from Kinderprten through Col·
lege 10 fill over silt hundred
teaching vaeanciQ bolb I.
home aDd .broad.
Since 1968, ""r organitation
baa been finding v_ncies Ind
lOCAting tuchers bolh in
foreign countries aDd in all fifty
lUtes. We pouess bundreds of
current openings aDd Nlve IU
the inforllUltion It to scholar.
ships, grants. and fellowships.
",., principle problem witb
fi ... yut teacb~ is WHERB
TO f IND T HEJOBS!
Our infMmation is free and
comes It .n """""t~I'" Ii",,,
when there I", more teachers
than te.cblng positions.
Should you wish additional
infonnalion aboul our otgIrUza'
lion, you lnIy write The Na·
tional Te.cher's Pllcement
Agency. Univer .. 1 Teachers,
BoK 5231, Ponland, Oregon """. We do not promise every
graduate in the field of educa·
tion a definite pO'ilion,
however, we do promise to pro·
vKIe tbem with I wide rlnge of
hundreds 01 c .. rrent vacancy'
notices bOIh .t home aDd
.bro.td.
Art Competition
/I.rU for G""'ter Rocbeoter
announces the Roc:hester River·
";de Convention Center Banner
and other ouspended fMma
competition. n.e competilion is
open to all Irtists in the Monroe.
Genesee, Livingscon, Ontario,
Orlea .... and W.yne County
.rea!. The competicion will be
juried by lenore DIvis, fiber
artist; Beverly Hafner. interior
<ies4ner. H.fner /I.$soci.oled:
.nd • repre ... ntative from
J'IllCS Slewa" PolMlek .nd
Partn.ers, the Center's arcbitfC·
lural finn_
Application for the competi·
tion will be lvailable through
JlUluaT'j 31, t9a5. Entries mUSt
he submitted by Febru.ry 28,
1985. The winner(l) wiD be
notifi.-d by March 15 and tbe
comple'\ed work will he due on
Augu.C I, .985.
For Ipplications and f",,1>cr
information. please conlld the
Rochester Riverside Con~tion
Center. Public Salety Building.
Meu.anlne IA:vel. Rocbester.
.N,e.w" ""Y.o rk 14614. 17161
Retreat
Buly7 .. .. .Invnlv.-d1 ..•.. Trying
to juggle 5ev"",1 '"I'OfIsibilitie$
lIonce1Or isitthe winter blabs
tNit hive you down?
Come, join tbe crowd . • t tbe
R .. """",y Wu~,nd Rd...,/ fer
women. On February 1·3, 1985,
II the CefllCle Give yourself
the aif. ollime; It..,.. \(I VI _k
in toucb with you"",ll; tIme for
prayer .. ... reflection . ... .listen.
ing ..... sh .. inl· .... celebrlling.
The offering is 150.
For furtber inlorllUlhOOl 100
ruervatlon, contlct the
ee....,le Ministry Office, 693
East Avenue. Rochester, N.Y.
14607 or p/'Ic:Ine 711).27108755.
Make Today
Count Speaker
Deborah Larr'neII! Ph.D., I
psycbolosis< and clinical hyp.
noti l t speel,li.inS ;11
psychollOmr.tic health, will he
the guesI speaker II Make Today
Count on Mondoly. jan ... "
28, 1985. Make Tod.y Count i.
• support group for canoer pa'
tienlJ. Ibcir families. and CO&.
ce.r.n.ed. b..-Ith e. .e profe. Dr. Larranc:e will talk on !be
use of our creative unconscious
in strengthening posilive .suI'
sestions of physical and e ......
tional comfort Ind _D~.
nme wiD be .. Yed for 8I'O"P
membe.. to ""peOence ""me
techniques Dr. Lar .. nce has if\.
t.,.lIed lrom her work in
psychology. h)'l>tlO'il, _ern
praclices , Ind .pplied
kinesiology, lor tbese purpoaes.
Dr. Larrance is in privlte
practice in Rochester speciali ..
;ng In lIdult psychotherapy and
dinial hypnosis Ind h ..
publ;shed in 1IUI;or professional
jour ... ls.
The Make Today Count even·
in8 group meet. the Ic>urth
Mondoy ol each montb, 7;00
p.m. II Friends Meeting. HOUle,
4t Westminister RoIId lolf East
Avenuel Rocheller. For furtber
information. all the United
c.ncer Council It 473-3230.
Retreat
A special retreat for ItI.oK
who I", letiousIy inlerest.-d in
deepening tbeir PRAYER OF
RIU .... T10NSHIP WITH THE
LORD. in an atmosphere of
]n}'CIful quin. with. rhythm
01 oonferetlCel. perllOnll reflec.
tlon .nd faith .tIaring will be
held II tbe CenICle Renewal
Center on February 8 thru 10,
'''' Fr. William J. Connolly. 5).
will be directing this .ettelt. A
noted retreal director. luthor
and spiritual dirfCtor. Pr. Con·
nolly i. presendy at lhe Cam·
bridge Center for ReligiOUI
Development .
For ""'"' information and
reservltions, contlct the
Cenacle MiniSlry Office, 693
East Avenue. Roch('lter. N.Y.
14607 M phone 71&'271.s75S.
Hospice
Volunteers
Need ed
Hoapice volunteer Ire needed
to work as membe .. of a
HO&pice team scrvioa Hospice
patier!" aDd flmilies in their
""""" Training ..... ions will be held
twO eveninss • we..k It the
United Cancer Council. 1'"1
East A~u.e. for. period 01 five
weeks. Tmning ICUiona begin
on Mondoy. Mlrch 4. 1965.
For furthu infnrm.lion,
plea.se conUlct; Allie. B. Sears.
Hospice Volunteer Coor·
dinator; 4n.82JO.
--
Opportunities
Study at Oxford for the Summer
saU."<SCROVE [1'I..f- lntemtl·
Iional European ! • .vel bas Ion&;
been considered an important
~ of • wmplete eduation.
One of tbe most unusual
sludyltr.vel programs ..... it.ble
to coLlcse student. and interested
adults i. "Swquchan·
na at Odord," • summer _OOy
program 5pOI1SOI"ed by Squehanna
Unive rsity a' Orlord
Unlveraity in Eng'-nd.
The program providu •
cbcice of about nine oounel too""" by Briti5b profltSlOf&,
IOUQ 01 London. Paris. and
Edlnbwgh. and • seriQ of
cultural activities that includoes
SbookJpearun pboys and trip. 10
~tOlical sites.
" Swqueh.lnn.o a, Oxford was r,,1t started in 1966 by the
deIIn of &luclents," says Dr.
Robo:rt Bradford, coordinator of
the program and profcSllOl" of
political science a' Susquehan.
na. " A lac of i5cl>ool5 were stat·
tllll! Iludy·.b~d programl
from .:notch then.
" We c"",,", En&Land boaUR
01 the familiarity of Ian,...,..
and Odord University boaux
of its prutigc. mou~ and
the fact 'ha' few other I TOUp'
~ p"& at the time:'
The ~est number of Ox·
ford porti.cipantl was 16 and the
program has continued to increue
in popularity. Enrollment
bas included upwartb; of
SO people and in 1982 S ...
quehan .... t Oxford became an
.nnual event.
Dr. Bradford uses • tr.vel
IjCnl only for 'nlns-AtJ.ntic
lruupor1atlOR, and he makes
.u the <:XCUCSion, room and
boNd, and Iicl<et ~
h1maelf. Thi' res\lIU ill a
..... ntial lllvinp on -aency
oornm\ssionlI and lowers the
OOIU fw _ .... u.
The coorle &el~ for
"udenu and ad\lIU !liking the
dallel for credit or auditing
coors ... haye abo incuascd.
"'1& year'1 participants can
chooee from .1I&t that incl\ldes
COUI'IeI in British literat ...... ,
hiItory. archaeology. economic
1Wtory, manasemcot. a!tlCa·
tion, pOlitics, and music and .,(
hitect\lre. All the QIItlneI
relate to British history and
cu.lture and. aoept is ran: in·
stanca. are taught by British
~hoWo.
"Studenu have aid, over the
~a .. , that they appreciate the
unus"..l iMighll tluot a British
n.lional cln bring to the
elaw-oom," Mid Dr. Bradford.
"They have specific knowledge
we Just don't h.ve-like stories
aoo...t Churchill and personal
upericn~.··
"SeeIn& the place whe .... the
..:lion takes place has an impact
no American coIlqe classroom
can eq .... ," he addaI. " Each
d iM had an a<;W'Sion or lUes!
lpellker u well. The British in·
ttfllCl<)n bring in ooIlegu.es 10
~\lre on speciroc apects 01
the topic: w the clus goes to the
act .... l area stooi<"d. It add.
n.vor and varies tbe d ...
routine."
Su$Quchann •• t Oxford is not
I t.ictly form al . cademic
enduvo, however, according
to Or, I$tadlord. ""'" fiye week.
01 CWaH . .... ~ by a
wffit ill London. four day. in
Edinburgh. and five days ill
Puis. This, Or. Bradford ")'$,
""""ft to Kq .... int lItudents
with eKh other and become Iecustom<"
dto the group.
"The Pl'OVam has alway.
been open to non·Su$Quehanna
Univeralty people . nd . oo...t
half are, Indeed. not S.U.
lCudentl:' he said. "We don't
Insill, but -ron&ly rea:xnmend
sludenta \lie the _ plane
wbm !bey 10 to Bnp.od. This,
too. is an Md in creating ,ood
FO"P dynamic&."
" ~nu have said that they
like their lCudenu to 10 with I
groop, eapeclally pllUnu of
girls who are very concerned
abotIt .. fety ," Or. Bradford
.said. "U'S l;(Imfoning to parents
to know the group is there. It·.
not th" we tuck them into bed,
but there is I IeC1Jrity in the
.e1Ue thai reserv.tions are
made In adv'l1C'e.nd the e>:ctIr·
siotu Ire plann.-d ahead.
"The time Is not completely
programmed like: the little old
~ prden club and. yet.
they' .... not toI&Ily left ... their
t:fWn," Or. Btadford ItAt<"d.
" International travel of any
kind Jivu people a new
perspective both of themselves
Ind their own COtIntry," Mid
Dr. Bradford, continuing to u pllin
hinSe benefits to
. t\ldent,. "Like undp"per. this
sometim.,. Un he • rough a·
pe.ience. The English lICe
America in . diff~rent light and
Ii"' olten crttlcal.
" Experiencins cMlle~ t'!
}'OW" own v>ewpoinU is put Of
srowins and mat\lri", and is an
aid in .elf analysis. Irs I*" oIa
liberal education to sharpen
yO\ll" ability to think crltic:tlly.
If! useM to p"t on other
people.' sboet and let the
world the way they ICe it, to
learn to sh ..... tife on this planet
and understand map- globIl
iss1.lCS: the Irms ~, world
bunger, and n\lclur war.
Studmta pin iniightl into all
tbe:te thin", from contact. with
another nationality.
" England Is especially good
for thIs," rqoortcd Or. Brad·
ford, " beo;ause ;\ is a small na·
tion, 55 miUiom people. that
once ruled the world- had the
innuena: we have now- and
has had 10 ac:cq>t • diminished
. oIe."
Among the pl aces SUI '
q\lehannl 1\ Oxford ICOOenll.
who range in age from 19 to 15,
II'\CCt people giving them a dif·
ferent view 01 their wo.ld are
Str.lford, North Wales, and
OJntwall when three special
excu.BionI will be taken for
weekend. dtlfing the fi ve-week
class J<'SIion in HISS.
In Stratford lCudenta haye a
full weekend plann<"d: The
Shakespe. .... Birthplaoe Trust
pre ... nt. two ltemina.s on
Shakespeare'. life and timn
and to\l,. of Shakespeare
'"sites ." Ann Hathaw'Y- t
house. Shakespeare'. mother's
home. and his hurlal place in
Trinity Cburch ..... included.
They .l ~v . !l end two
Shakespea .... playa p.od~ by
the Royal !mkespeare Com·
pany and bave diMe' In
Shak~. daughter Suaan·
na', home. Hall" Croft.
The weekend in North Wales
is more tOl,lristy. with pebble
beaches, mountain lakes.
castles. and woolen mitte", being
the main attraC'lions. The
same can be said for Cornwall.
whose rugged ODIIlltline. cliff.,
and seasic:Ie cay.,. ..... world
famous.. Both 01 tbe:te tril¥ are a
slightly added COlI , \ll\like: the
Stratford wffitend whieh is in·
clOOoed in the pacbJe prioe.
No K1ivitie:s ..... planned for
the other weekends because
IClldenill eitber have class work
to complete or ..... given an 0pportunity
10 travel on tbeir
own. But students do have a
number of activities to keep
them . way from weekend
lCudies, Punting on the TIuomes
l.s the dasaic pastime, but
rowboats ..... also .v.ilable.
Studento may .... nl bicycles and
travel around the countryside,
. tt';nd , .. mmer Itock
theatricals. and .ttend _ 111
that ..... part of the Oxford Sum·
mer Music Pestival. Many frequent
locaI~: "The Head 01
the River," with a court yard
opening directly onto the
Thames. is alw.ys. favorite.
Enrollment ilSwq""hann.o at
Oxford 1985 is now \lnderway.
Detoiled price, tr. vel, tour, and
course information i •• v.ilsble
from Or. Robert Btadford. Suaquehanna
Univeriity. S.U. IJoJ:
121. Selinsgrove, Pa. 11810 or
by ~ 0... Ihdiord at 1717)
314.-0101.
If~won't
read these
7signals
ofcancer ...
THE ARMY MCi
You JIlObablY bave
the SUi.
1. Olange It! bowel (If -,""",
I. It. oore thai. does!lOl.
hMI.
3. UIlI&I&I ~ (If
dischargt.
4.Tlucke~ or lump
in breast 01' elsewhere
8 .lndigestion or dlf1I
culty in swalIowin4,
6.0bvirus cha.nge m
wart or mole.
7. N~ COJDIw
"""'~.
8. A f/lal' of carur that
can prevent yw from
detec:Wlg cancer at an
early stage. It. stage
when it ill bighIy cur·
able. Evl!ryone's afraid
of catk;er. DJ. 00n1 let lit scare j'1lJ 10 dealh.
,. Americao C&ocer Soolety
You've \\urked hard getting
your degree, hard enough that
you'd like to continue the chal~
lenge. That's what Army Nursing
off"". The <haIIenge of professional
practice, new study opportunities,
continuing education and travel
are all part of Anny Nursing. And
you 11 have the respect and dignity
accorded an officer in the United
States Anny.
If you're working on your
BSN or if you already have a BSN
and are registered CO practice in the
United States or Pueno Rico, talk
coour Anny Nurse Corps Recruiter.
Staff SOl. KevIn O. O'LHry
2&3-31111i!\7B1
319 US Fed .... l Bldg.
Rochell ...
ARMY NURSE CORPS.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
Sports
Kama Grattet Still
Scoring in Diving
~ sinc<: ahe wu old cnoUih
to no.t, It _mi. K&m.o OUliet
hu been .. winner in water.
First il WU"II"grouplwimm'
ing .nd divinl "mo<l3 \be
~bood kida . 1 the local
' Y' . Iller in hi&" ..,boot meet.
while MiU in clm'lmury JehooI
and now, In he, aenlor yu.r.1
N ..... reth CoJltie of Rochest ....
NY, Grllt<Oli. honing her uiU.
to defend two notional titlfos In
S1:lrinRboArd divin&.
C..-tee, .. 2L'yw' old ...we
ofRocheoter, NY, wbooc ramily
now livea in V&II<lOUver. WA
(father It city ~er). alrudy
has '1u,oUlifd to de/end her title
in 1M one'meter evan\ . 1 the
NCAA DiviJion III championship
MIIrch 14-16. 1985 •• 1
Emory UnlvcrJily in Allan",.
and is.u..o.t =tain 10 odd the
t.bJce.met... £Yent bdore !he
teaIOn 10 oYer as _0.
GUllet WOO tbe one ....:I
three-meter titles .1 Emory last
spri"8. becoming the lim na'
tional champion from Nourclh
College, and by doing 10 to::l«d
........ IWffP in All·"""'rican
• O«tiou.
By winning"nd .... bsequently
bdng ... med to the All·
American team br .he National
Collegiate fltldc tic AJsocialion.
GraUel a n cI.im honors from
three dllle",n\ organirationl.
N .. lratun.n, aIM! was ~
to W AMociation of IntercoIJqi.
otc Athletic:l for (AlA WI
teaJn. and .... .ap/>omo<c w ..
hOBOred by lhe Na tional
AsIociIlion 01 InlMCOllegi.llc
Athlclict (NAlAI.
She fully .ccpct. th . 1
repeatina won't be .-..sy. 10
undcrlundably she workshard
10 a<kIlO he. ~ of diva
10 e~ he. ~ in both
the one and Ihree.meter evenU.
From lho: Ihr ... ·.....w boArd,
lobe iJ workin. on • hoock one·
..,doQlU'.hlJl IOmenoult wilh.
IWIHnd-one.JWf twi$!: that U r·
ne.. 2.8 devceof dillkulty. It
;. the louaJ>eoI dive """,I eY<!f
Ittemptt:d and il confl<knl il
will be \here . 1 championohip
lime, •
From \he onH,wete. booon:l,
G.ltt.., ;. workina on • luU
_rsIIult with. -ro-oae.
bolf twi3t that corrle&. hefty 2..7
degree of dlff>CUlty.
So lilt this ... son, oI>e is
ulldefelled in both tM OM.nd
Ihree·meler evenIJ.
SIll' fully .~_ thaI il
wiII take ouutandi"l divinll to
repeal in lhe ""tionols. I.IlSt
year. on the thr ... ·<neIer boord,
G .... llers winni", margilI was
5.25 polnll with • tot.l of
418.90, _nd. mile more COOl·
fort_ble 30.45 1409.751 In onemeter.
Bvery year divi ng h ..
become more competitive, with
the perfo..........:es more '1>«'
tIcular and lODrea that ,""",b in·
10 the wltospMre.
But ..... "" .t that, G .... ".., hu
n ..... e. received. pe-rlect . 10' 10'
any of he. dive •.• lthough she
has I number of '!W from the
",uaUy tOUJh clivi", ju<i,a.
SaysG .... II.." " [don't_how
I can o:xpect 10 lODre. tm. That
mealll r m c1iviaC II ~U .... 5Iy
Grta Louganis 100ymp;e roId
medoIisl). That', just not 10. I
went to the INCAA) nationals
.nd 5Iw • lot of JiHond .. ·halves
lor tome e~""Uent dives. While
the _immi",team in .-eraJ
and diving in particular lakes •
l1""'t ~ of her free tUne .1
N ... relb, she il . ealislic
enough 10 accq>C it wIll have to
end aft ... graduatIon. NoOlym·
p\Q. no inlemall_1 competi.
tions. She admill that' .. whole
different world .••• world
beyond her competitive~.
Now she's busy hllli", the
books and ..... on&i"I interviews
10 make ux of h ... alr.llb pined
II.., l<XOUOli.oj .mojo<.
In ber competitive diving
d .... however, she re .... in. on
lOp of tl>e world. and hu been
ever ~ she learnoed to make
• Ji.mple flip off the Monroe
YMCA _met... bo,o.rd in
Rocl>ester, NY. She w.s .bout
10 yea .. old when ..... WII
.llowed in with \he b:>ys lor tIM!
first time.
" 1 aJ~ envied my brothc!Q
for beifII .ble to $win> 1\ the
' Y', bec.use il w.. 10
handy ... "",t down lhe street
from whnf; we lived," Gri llet
explil ns.
Getting . chance, she 1110
became .n oll .. round fine
$Winunto' in !he blclutrob.
f r eestyle, bullerfly Ind
1weastsIn>ke. but di";,,, WOIIId
become her pl Ind ~.
OocaslOllllly. Mr ooaeh, [)eO.
hie Lawrence, enlers her into I
swimming event. Grallet hu
done 1:08,00 in the !()().meter
butterl1y and 58.9 ~ In
the I()().meter freestyle.
" I low<! 10 lwim once in •
whlle." G .. llet ...,;.tes, "lIS Ion&
IS I don't ha"" to work OtIt."
She btgIon wiMing in City of
RoclM!lIer high school ch.m·
plon~ipe while still • teYenlh
grader. SIll' w .. eligible under.
modified. program thaI p"'"
OtIlJUondi",.thletes tIM! oppor .
tunity 10 perform on tM;r Level
of competition.
Since 7Ih grade:. G .. ".., never
loIt I high ochool championshIp
she enl~red.
In IM!r first Iry in • coUCJf;
ctwnpionsbip. oI>e fmished No.
I! II' f~o competrn, in
the AIWA ctwnplooshipe. and
....... third in _meter and fifth
in th .... ·meter II • aophomore
in the NAIA clwopionships.
Grltlet o\tended Monroe
High School in Rochester, then
moved with he. parenlJ, Paul
M. and Jeon R. G .. tlel, 10 Von·
oo..ver. Wash. She g.-d ... lt:d
fro... H..daon',J!,oy Hilb SebooI
in V_""r before retumlnf;
to Rocheate< to I\lend
No""reth.
She has oot decided whert
she will Sdlle afler gro.dultlon.
" All depends;' !he MY', "on
job opportunities.."
"Dumb Jock" Image
Not Accurate
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS! -
The "dumb jock" ~ just
iln't .ccurate. Fruh""'n
.thle\el .1 .:hooIs with major
sportS procr.ms do .. well
acadentlcolly IS freohman who
don'! pilrtldpilte in athletico. I
new study claims.
The ,h.dy of ovu 4000
fruhman . t 57 different col·
leges nationwide sbowl
studoents IChieved. GPA of 2.5
reptdlesI 01 whether thI!y lOOk
pori in thelt schools' Ilhletic
programs, .eports Douglas Con·
ner. executi"" dir<'CIor of tM
American Auociotial 01 Col·
teg;lte Rcpllr ... and Adm;'
$lon, Office.. !AACRAOI.
which ac--ed the .o:udy.
" Each athlete was matcbe<d
with • """,·.thlete who had
comparl~ Kademic prepar.·
tion 101" enlering col!"8e," Cnn·
n..,. MYS, .llowins the restf.r·
chen to better compare the n·
fccu 01 .thletlc- involvement on
freah..,... lCIdemlc pe,for ~.
Mony ooII.goe ptUidents and
oth.. o:xperII arre lIudents
should not he .l\owed 10 par.
tldpilte in opnrIJ their fi,st year
of collegt! beaux It d, ives down
their grades.
A"""'Il OCher thinp, the u·
perIJ c:horse, "..dents have
eDOII3h trOOJbIe odaptinc to col·
lege life withoul the added time
.re.q.u.i.re ments .nd pl"CIIUJ"eS 01. Despi te the new study.
there's stiU evidence that sports
do hurt cLoss wnrk.
Eighly percent 01 Ariz.onI.
State'. looet.ll player., for in·
.. nee. ha"" reoeived pwIe
WIciency notIca this Icnn. Kcording
10'" .rticle In the Stole
Press, the camP'" poper.
At 1M same time University
of Arizona . thletto' I rades have
rlIen slightly ttU. IICmtller, of·
IieiIJs \here rep:lrt, mainly due
\0 • _ emphosi$ on .thletto'
academic- perf".."...,.,..
In responx to such con·
troverIIry. the NationoJ Col·
1"Bi.te Athletic As.soci.tion
INCA A) pl.ns to m.ke
buhmen athletes meet lougher
grade requiremC<lI. beginning
in 1986.
The l"Sjuiremenu. known II
Rule 48. will require freshman
to ha~ • minimum 2.0 bi&b
11;I>00I GPA IJId at I""", • 700
lCCII'e on the SthoIastie Aptitude
Teal (SAT) before they can ploy
sport •.
But R\IJIy coIl"8e spolI. 01·
i>ci&ls oppote Rule 43. uyi", il
will do little to Improve
freshmen IIhJdto' g:radea .
Moreover. m.ny black
le.deru'1ue it will u .. f.irly af·
feet black I nd ocher minority
5tudenu. who tend to IICOre
lower on stond"rdi.ed \ell.
beaouoe of cult1ll"lll bi.uet in·
..:IverIently built inlO !he teats.
Jan 25, l Q8S GLEANER "
Women Win Wilkes
College Letterwomen Holiday
Basketball Tournament
The holid"ybre.k IpplrenUy i.
just whal the doctor ordered for
the Nu • • elh College of
.Ro-c.he ster womf/tl'. bastdhooU The Golden Flyer .. who had
been IlruQU", with. 3-2 of·
rw;:i.ol u.:ord IJId )'3ov~ (!he
\oss 10 Bn:ck Universily of
ant.. Cano.da i. oot con,;d~red
in NCAA $~(latiell. exploded
with Z35 point. In thr« gamtI
to asily cap!Uf1! the silr __ m
WlIlres College LetICl"WOmen
Holiday Suket'-U Tourn.·
ment in WUkes·J!,orre, P •..
january 4-6, 19&5.
The women defelted former
nationa! ch.omplon North Ceo·
!nil ColI"8e of lIlinai. in the first
round. ~.!hen romped over
Old Westbury. U-3!l, io the
llemifio.l Ind eo·6O over
Cabrini College fex Ihe cham·
pionsIUp Jln ... ry 6, !98S.
In the op<'nl", pme against
North Cenill. aophomore co-c.~
l n [)enioe Hickey of Troy
ICatholic Cent .... l) I ndjunior coelpUin
jean Rasey of Oleon
!Portville) led the w.y with I.
poIncl each. while IICnlor coeapUln
Hrid! Higin, (Sprina
V.lleyl added 12 II the Golden
Flyen Jbot 6!1 peroent from lhe
.fl.o.o,r. collectiw:Jy in the first
In the aemlfina) l8ainsl Old
Weslbury, Kri. SmI th .
fresh .... n from Sidney, lODred
l'pofnts!8lor 13 from thefloor
.nd 2 for 2 from the foul line).
IWey had 15 points and abe
wll 7 for 10 from the floor.
The ch. mpiomhip belongt:d
to Higs"" ond Hickey, combin.
i", lex 37 points, 17 ... bounds
and 16 ........
Higi ... had the but of the
JC'Orina , .. ilb Z3 points, 12 ~
boondl Ind t"'o ....w •. whlle
Hickey had 14points. l.usIst.
.nd 5 rcb<>und<.
Men's Basketball
For 11M! men'. ba ... ..,booU telm.
it was I c • .e of holiday
jilters_
The 7·1 Golden Flyers. who
have been ranked fifth a"""'3
the SlIte'1 Divition JlI oolJeses.
rIftded O¥Crlime \0 oulLost
SUNY Brockport. 95·85
J.nuary 5, 1915 II Bn:ckport.
Bn:ckporl had I.ken. 4 1.,J{l
halftime Iud fin fact led by ~x
on sevenl occuIom during the
first hall]. before N ..... reth got
its s"me tosetber .nd toOk •
77·70 lead with lcsI Ihln two
minutes 10 play.
The Golden EogI'" puUed
even. 79·79, on Eddie Green',
Jumper 1\ the buner. In Over·
lime, howev .. , it WIIS all
Golden Flyers.
Todd CaIman. sophomore
forwlrd from Conandoigua. led
the way with 22 poinl" 16 in
the IIC<:Ond hald. He . Iso includ·
ed Itven big.usi5\$ in the effort.
Congratulations to the Nazareth
Men's BasketbaH Team for
winning the Chase Lincoln
Tournament for the second
consecutive year!!
A new Unlversily of
Michig.n study does concludoe
SAT SC<Ires ".re virtually
unrelated to.n athlete'. coJl"8e
grade: point .ver.,es. especially
when • 1I<On& Kldl!mic pro.......
i1; Involved."
or the.3 UM Ireohmen who
would ha"" been di.tqualifit:d
under Rule 43, 31 were bllek.
the <CKIrchers note. Only font
of lhe 43 .ctually failed 10
freshm.n year, while non· ___
Ithle1es ..:ored u.etly the
grodeo they were pro;ected 10
r«eive.
One of the reason. lor Ihe
unupecledly bi&b lODres of the
athIetea ""'y have been "the
academic- oupport ICfViceI such
II counseli", and MOOns pr0-
vided for the athletes," Conne.
specul.otes.
graduale. In o.ddition. " the Ithleles
ThenewAACRAOlludysuf'" rniJht not haw: Loken II 11,·
ports such _'1umenu. Conner ingent .""..,.. IS the non·
Slid by wtteri", "\he con· .thletes.".,.,.;'" hi&hI!r pades:
venlio n.J wi.dom th ai by LokinaCl4ierclMoel.
freshman athletea don" do II Conn .. alto notes "III of 11M!
well ac.demically 15 non· .thletes in the.o:udy we ... I lIen·
alhletes." d;.., ICI>ooI 0.. ochol.onhipe.
In lact, Conner poinIJOtIt the Ind therefore didn't have 10
study found oIudent I thletes worry about porI·time jabs 10
conaistC<ltly ohowod """" per. pey IheItWl)' Ihrnugh coIlep!."
~ and better Kldl!mic Still, collegiate sporU officiaJa
.swx!in& II the end of \heir continue to debit<!: \he meritI of
f.uhma.. ye.t than non· fresh .... n .thletic eligibility.
.Ihletes. and NCAA offICials upect \he
At the Ame time, bhaed on current Rule 43 requirtrnenu
their SAT IODrCs .nd high m.y be Jigniflcontly reviaed
achooI grade •. athletes lCluaUy before they go into efl<'CI in
ICOfed better groda \han they 1986 .• Y' Eric Zempe-r. NCAA
wert supposed 10 durin& \heir , rtlCflrc.II coordinator.
b'veryone's A Comeazan . • •
- ,------=-----, .--:A-: I--,------, ,-----,.""--=-=-=- r--,------, ,-------------, Beauty nps ways remember fur deep.
that beauty is
only skin deep.
GARFIELD®
by Jim Davis
The Apartment Dwellers
... (:,.tc~ "*' ~ :let>
1I.~~01'l> ~tol
~ 1'0( 1Q8S.
~WoI_G.,"~
~~. """T~c.~
1OIe. ~ R>ol",",-'"
tJ>JVlP\DI'IU lC1ll<tS "UO
t.IIfO f\IIl»f.V '''' "TU.~
(ZDLU t7- WTtI ~"" UTO.
PEANUTS® by
Charles Schultz