e {jLEGAGNE/{:j
VOL 60 NO. 14 0 MARCH 7, 1985
Students Fight
Proposed Budget
Cuts
N~'elh College students
held • congressional leiterwritinll
mar.thon on Tuesday,
Mart'h 26, 1985 to express thelr
<:Ot>Cem about the Rel.g.ln .d·
ministration', propooscd 12.5
billion cut in programs thai now
help ptlrenu and students I»Y
the CCI&tI 01., coIlqc education.
The actiQo, organized by the
Student Commillee on L.gisla.
lion, w it held in the 00110 A.
Shults Community c.,oler.
If the Rapn administration
proposIIls Ire ~ul;
• Stuoientl from familica with
incomQ &relIef than S32 . .500
w(MIid not be eligible for
Cuaranteed Sludent t.o.n,.
regardlc .. of the family'. n«ds
or number 01 chlld.en in col·
", ..
• No on-c:am.pus federal .Id
would he Ii~ to stOOmu
from f.milies with incomQ
~SZ5.000.
• No .. udeol could rec:eiw
more Uuon S4,OOO ann .... lIy in
federal loans or pnts. induding
work·study.
The impact of t~ propoocd
cuts on Nazarctlll\ ucknt. could
be quite $eVe"" Nearly 500
students would no longer be
eligible for approaimaltly Si
million in Guaranteed Sl:udtnl
LoanI. On-a.mpus jobt. Na·
tional Direct Student t.o.ns and
Supplcmcnluy Educltional
Opponunily Granu would be
cut by mOle than 50 percent.
More ,ho" 70 percent of
Nazareth's student. _Id be af·
fected in some w.y.
The CUrmlt propoMols. if
..:\opted, will not affect most
student aid progr&ml until the
f.llol 19&6, buldecWonson the
matter will be made this opring.
J'~ Cult .... , chairman of
lbe Student t.ep ..... tivc Com-min",.
encourages aU Nazaretb
Sludcnts to contact thrir con~
if !hey h.lve not
a1tudy done .10. s.mplc !etters
Ire Ivailable from Cultra .. or
Dr. Robert McCambridge, vice
p,esident for PlannillJl and
IHvelopment, who Issisted
Siudent. in developing the
letter·writing .... r.thon.
Nu.auth students are brillJl
join«! In lheir dfo:rts by many
O(he, ~",,"nts dtbe NUlleth
Community. Some of the
groul" now planning .trat~
10 oombe.t the administration'.
proposal. are tbe N.u,elh
faClllty , administration I nd
1I"I1II«1, pa",nts 01 cu~nt
.cudents.. 0(00 Rochester .,UI
colle,n, .nd fluden l '
lh""'a"""1 the state.
President fIoee Marit Balon,
Dr, McCambridge, Dr. Jlldith
ROIt, the e<><hairpersons oI lhe
N .... reth Parent. AMO(:iation
IMary Ann and Jim Fitulm·
mons and Tony and ROIt Ann
fIoMc:a) and Jim CuLtrara have
been particularly active in in·
formillJl key groups about the
dange" 01 the legjsUotion Ind
urgin, them lofight the propoo.ed
cuts.
NAZARETH COLLEGE OF ROCHESTER
Study Finds Aid Gets
to Neediest Students
Nmrly 90 percent of all Sludent
fi ... ncial .id goes 10
students who do n.-i Ihe
money. 5>lYS . new study which
chalLenges the Rugan ad·
minislration's claims that many
$Iudellls do,,', reI lly n~ their
aid money.
Tbe study. underlaken well
before J'Tesident Reapn unvciJed
his proposal to lIuh Sludent
aid, conlradku Secretary ol
Ed ...... tion William B..nncll"
cha~ that 100 much aid money
goes I<> students whooe famil ies
don" nttd iI, NY' Un iv~rsity 0{
Wi..,onsin Professor Jacob
SIam""n, who coroduct~ IJw,
st.,dy.
In defending the proposed
cuts at a recent pru.s con'
r~"'II«, ~nn~11 said the CUll
" might r~qu ir~ Istud~nt$'1
.t~"'" divestiture. automobile
diyestitur~ and three-w~ ks-a t.
the·J:>each divestitur~." but
oth~rwi.e wouldn't hurl
students.
Stam""" dismisses IlennHt's
""""""nlS • " ,hetoric large'!'
I~ at the middle caa •. "
The sr.,dy shows very Jiule
ayid, .m oney i. wut~, Stam""n
things." Miller adds. ··tirst. the
~ soes 10 the people who
need ,I. and second, the pro.
gr.ams work:'
" Without student aid, loll of
these J>MPI~ wouldn't be in
school:' he says.
Sut. echoinS the repeal~
criticism. of campu •• id directors
arollnd the country,
SUn,,,,,n warns It.. aid syst~m
is d .. ngillJl ew-n withoul mor~
~~
The ,t.&$Ofl i. IIw more a id
money is heillJllo.ned in.st~ad
of gr.nt~. leaving students
deep in debt UlXln leaving cam·
",L
Poorer students Je' moat 01
tbe ,rants.. he aplains. ~ fami.
Iy inoome rUes. more money is
aw.rded .. 10. ....
Yet, oompar~ to the ,esults
of Stam""n·. 1981·82 fillllrw:ial
. id study, the amounl of money
awarded on the botsi. 01 need
this yeor has plJ,teau~.
··There'. • drop in the
number 01 PeU recipients from
gl-il 10 83-&4, .nd a drop in
SEOO," he ,eport,. "The
Work-Study p.og,am i. up, but
GUlI,.ntee<! Student t.o.ns are
down." Nazareth Receives
Gift From Kodak
,. __________ , " 1£ you run lhe admini$lra.
tion rc<:ommendotions through
,he "'...:Iy dolt. base." he add.,
Consequent y. Stlmpen
pr~iC\$ Iow·incomt students
will be hardest hit if ~
.pprOOles the Ioleslround 01 aid
~ .. Nlll:Vdh CoIl~ has receiv.
ed 150,000 In financt.l supporl
from the EQlman Kodak Com·
pany. Kodak', gift is bting u.ed
for sc h o lu.hip l id 10
uocleWJd .... tes P' U'Iieip"tin& in
the Kodak SehoIa:rs Program
and for sencraJ openotins £x.
penaa. .a:ordina to N_h
CoIJese I'rnKknt Dr. Rose
Marie &JIon.
Kodlok developed the Kodek
Scholata Prosmn to recogniu
• Dd I lIppOrt lcademic ex·
oelleDce at pubIlc ~ and
ulliv., ... iti" throughout the
United Statel. Kodak SchoIan
receive meril IChoL .. ship.s
cov~ring 15 pel'CUll 01 the col·
lqe's tuition COlI for .. mu·
Lmum of three ye ....
NUlleth'l current Kodak
Scholars Ire: Anne Louise
MiDer, 144 Drumo,e Rd.,
Rochester, a It1Uor 1CCOUOtin&
llllljor; Doris Doatb, 94 Randolph
St., Rochater, senior
biochemistry llllljor; Debor .. h
Shepha , d, Ward ROld ,
Mohawk , N.Y .. jun ior
biochemistry .... jor; Ind Donno
Herman. 126 PI"" KooU ~
Endicott N.Y., IOphomore
IIIIIthematia .... jor.
Ouotes of
the Week
" Wherll therll iJ much
delire to learn, thllre of
neCtlSilJl will be much
arguing .. "
John Milton
Teacher: "/ want)'Ou to
work on your morphemtl."
A.S.
Student: "I don't do
~
I drug,." L.K.
, .~, "Weareallabnormalin
OIIe WQ)I or another: we Mo sayS Nazareth students -,' all carry around a lillie
are apathetic?!! 25% of the stu- pa~"age . of PJ)lc ho.
logIcal qurrb."
dent body tumed out 320 letters name withheld
at the Letter Writing Marathon,
Tues., March 26, 1985.
Armed with pens, creative
rhetoric, and SAGA brownies
these students showed their op··
position to Reoge'\'s proposed
budget cuts to higher education.
We congratulate you and thank
you for your support.
The Undergraduate Association,
Student Legislative Liason Committee
"Oh, J thought
pa/achia was
Africa. "
AI'"
i ,
Student
" Repetition is t he
mother of learn ing."
Cath)l Lindstrom's 11th
grade EngliJh teacher
"It's amazing the things
)IOU can do, if you dOlt"
realiu the thing, )IOU
can't do."
Garfield
"it shows how Iow·i~ aid
,ecipients a,~ hil by lhe cuts.··
"W~ took an indepmd~nl
OJUnl of the rec:ipi~nlS and can
aClually r~pre"" n t a mo' e
precisoe impKt on the .id p ....
posals." SUmpen noll!$. "The
SO""rnmea>' can·l. 'They take
aid esti .... 'es,"
"Stampen did tt.. study.~ ...
nett talks oIf lhe cuff." says
Scotl Miller 01 the Atm'nc.n
Courw:iJ On Educalion (ACE).
The study show. nearly 30
""roml '" .11 c:oIl~ student.
reoei..., oome type 01 f.-deral.
stat~, iMtilulior\lll or private
financial aid.
And only aboul 10 ""romt 01
fi n.ncial a id award~d in
t98J.84 came from . uch "non·
need" progr.ms .. Ve\era .....
Administ ralion fund.nd "",ril
IIChoiarship&.
About :u petC'enl 01 aid
money students sot """"" from
Pell grant Work.study and
Supplement.l Educational ap.
IXlrlunity Granl (SEOG] p ....
grams.
Students who sot lhe grants
usually we'e the neediest
students. the study notes.
To &et moll O(her g<Wenl'
",,"nt grants and ~ students
had 10 pus stri'W'nl needs
. na ly""s, which keep Ihe
money from students whodon' t
need ii, SUmpen sayL
"Each time experb look at
these Prosramt. they 1ft two
" Wilh a $32.500 limi' on
fa mily income. 8r.duat~
students and s tudents from
famili.,. with II'>I>I"e than one
child in col1elt will be
affect~:' he......nL
TIM: $.t.ooo per studenla yeo.
aid c.p "depends on ineome,
bul al a very low .v~ family
income. say $ZS.ooo or less. il
wO\lld be devllsl.ring to cut •
studenl back 10 lesa lhan $.t,ooo
""r yeor," St.I.mpen insists .
''''''1'. noll the middle d .. a:'
Slam""" say. Reqln ..s.
ministration has yet 10 ruct to
his da ....
" It we ate JOiIlJl to subject
thes.e programs to the political
p, OCt:$II, w~ need 10 lulV~
rtliable informltion fo ,
poIilicol advocacy lI"0II1'' 10 \lst
.a programs can be ~ ... ted
on thei, true merits.. noI on the
.t , en,th o f e motional
aflUments from e.c:h side:' he
.rJlles.
" People should deal with
f~ rather than myths," ACE',
MiUer "V<':ft. " If tJw, facts Ny
t~'. a problem In .cudent
ald, ew-n those of US in flVOf 01
the programs would work to
rorrect it."
"A ..... 11 amounl of thoee
~ivin, l id don', need it," he
admit •. " Sui thai', noreason 10
kill the progr.m. Ifllike throw_
illJl OIIt the baby with the botth
wlte, ."
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Classlfleds ... ... .. , , .. . ... ..... p.2
Clubs8nd . ... , ....... , " , . .... . p.e
Comics . .. ... ... .. " .. "., . ... p. 12
Creative Corner ...... , . _ ......... p. e
Editorially Speaking. • •
An Active Choice - Let's Start Getting Involved!
p hoto by John Carroll
will and Our free choice
whether we want to be an active
participant or 1>01.
One maindifferenoe between
an exciting classand ��� medioc..,
class is tbe participation of the
.tudents. The classroom is an
active cnvirolllm"llt that invites
studen'"'to :search, to learn, and
to grow. The theory of "no
pain. 00 pin" em be cotTelated
with education. In eduClltion,
this principle is ... relevant as it
is on the eocoer field. in tbe
swimming pool. and on the
basketball court. U students of
N ....... eth College lICe truly in·
terested in developing their
minds. they must put forth p.oper
effort to obLain their goo. It
is easential for uS to take an ac·
tive part in our learning.
Interesting classes OCcur
when the student. I.e active
participants. When someone
has something good happen to
them in their lives they want to
share it with people. the SlIme
thought can be corrclated with
learning. The ve.ba1 sharing of
information is an enlightening
experi~. I conjecture that
the classes in which students
"ke an active part in ideas.
discussions. and learning a.e
the ciasses that people wiU
remember when they leave this
institution.
.a.n,d 1'0; '~;~::::::::;',::'~:;:::
tive
'00",
Student
Concern
Dear Edito r,
I would like to up.eM a com·
mon view held by some of WI
hcterosuuala on this campus. It
is about the newly emerged
homooexual group. I personally
am against homosuualily;
however, I do nor have the right
to teU other people what to do. I
am oblipted, though, to speak
up for the rights of myself and
those sharins my view. If thi$
group were to be rerogni~ of·
ficially On this campus, it would
be the administration's approval
of the e5Senlial dif·
fercnce between gay relationshipsand
basic frien<Wtips- the
sexual parI. [ronically,
homo$exualsare aUowed to live
together and sleep together on
this camp ..... If the administration
allows this sroup to exi5t,
then we hetcrose:ruaLs will $l8.rt
screaming diSCri mination! If
they accept this group. they
L._ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ J cmaunsdt oal lito, ww choy- ecda rno'to wmes?l lf they
The Heterosexual Support
To ibe Editor:
I write to congratulate and
thank t~ N ...... reth student.
who participated in the Con·
g. euional Lette . W.iting
Marathon on March 26th. The
continuing availability of stu·
dent aid programs i. viLaI not
just to m,",y individWlLs but 10
American society as • whole.
Members of Cong.ess pay
close. ,"ention to info.med
mail o' calls from "tile people'.
than they do prof~$$iona.l •.
their aosociations and lobbies.
So you count, far mo.e than
you may hav~ realized. If you
have not yet OOIltacted you.
representat,ve in Congr"" let
him or he. know what you
think of the Reapn administra·
tion. J>lOI>05ed cuts in student
lid prograJm. Silenu means
you think they·..., quite accept.
ble.
Watchfulness of propooed
changes i. not alarm, however.
The major ClIps, Iintits and .... btractio""
f.om today' •• ",dent
sid PWSrams propoxd to take
effect for the 1986-87 year are
not reality. just proposals. And
they have many powerful 0pponents.
Se .... tor Claioourne
PeU [D.·R.I .), ranking minority
member of the Senate Educa·
tion, Art$ and Humanities Subcommittee
said cut. in the
budget fo. higher eduClltion are
"unrealistic. unfair and just
plain wrong. How Can we build
an 'opportunity society' if we
})rIA\\
deny $0 many young people
educational opportunity?"'
Some changes in federal prograJm
of financial aid are in·
evitable as all of these programs
including the g.ants named in
honor of Se .... tor Pell came up
for reauthorization in 1986. Bul
change can streamline and im·
prove.s well u chop and hack.
If ~'"'" hears from YOU.
your families and friends about
the imports""" of reaching
educatiooaigools and the need
fo. financial .... lp along the
way, other proposala . OOtS
favo.able 10 your needs and am·
bitions . will become the .eali·
'y.
Sincerely you.s,
Bruce C. Woolley
Director of financial Aid
G~p
Classifieds
W ANTill: 50 people to lose
weight aM make money. Please
phone after4 pm. 334-6388.
TYPlNGIWORD PROCI!SSINti
Term Papers .• esumes.
theses. correspondence. Professional
quality. 109\> discount
with copy of ad for new
customef$. Call 223·4223 ViOl
BUSINESS SERVICES.
WIM. 30. locked down behind
cold, 8"'Y walls aceks cor·
respondence/friendship from
warm hearts..lntc.eslM in liner
things in liIe like enjoying the
Ufe given me and having a good
ti""l doing it. Will anSwer all
but letters with pictu.es get first
preference. Send to Rick Main·
prize. 84C434. Box 149. AlliCII,
NY. 14011.
GLEANER DEADLINES:
March 30 for April 14
April 11 for April 17
Get those stories in!
~e {jLE0fflER,..
Editor . .... . K.islin Kirsch
Advertising Manager. .... .... . . Karen Volkmann
Art Director . ......... . .... Duncan Crawlord
Business Manager . Beltyiean calion
Assislanl Editor ...... .......... Anne Bluntzer
Cart{X)lliSIS. . .......... DuncanC.awlord
Michael Amory, David Beaskly
GraphiC Artist . ...... .. .. . ...... Chris Schwab
PholOgraphyEditor . .. . ....... JohnCarroll
Layout Beltyiean calion
Copy Editor .. . . . . . . . . . . . Mary Elkin &czasniak
n,roo.d 1 .;.1.. <">, .., i ••n orpniulioll C"o1i.oUy fun6ed %!h. N_h u_,. A$o<><"',ion. Ed"".", or. wriU.n b-t' EdilOr.;n-ch;"f.nd
...... ".nt Ed".,.... A<\v'''isins poI.i.:y <10<> "'" Re<aMrily _
odil<>riat potq. """ ... '0 ,h. «Ii'oo _ "ric1Jy ,I>< opinion <>l'1>< oub-miner.
nd do "'" r<fIr<1 «Iitoriol opinion.
POLITICS
The U.S. Is the
Greatest Country
in the World, But ...
8y Thomas Rubeo n.e u.s. illite sre-1est .::oun·
try in the world, bul il does
hi"", lOme rlulls. Currently,
one of the bigest is its policy
towards Genu.1 A~. It is
pu.mpins mlllions 01 dolan 01
military .;d Into Ibis rtJion.
Why? They leU"" it is 10 proteCI
democracy. If you lIill belive
lhal Une, let me leU you
...,me thin,. Democrlcy hu
DOtIling 10 do wilh il. B.lm-lly.
what it «>mel down to it
money. Everything the U.S.
does In Central Amerlc.ls done
10 prOlect it economic IntcretU.
Let me tell you .bout an inci·
dent lhat cx:o;ured while we
were "protecting demoxracy"
in Viel N.m. [n 1970. ~Ji51
S.lvldor Allende wu
legiti .... lcly elected ~nl
d. the democratic M!ion 01
Chile. Once in ofrlOl', A1~
t..d the pernment take f1.lil
control of the copper ind\lStfy
[Chile'. main IOUrCI: 01 hw:omel
which ... IS La""ly _ned .nd
run by Ammc.n com~nles.
~y, u.e. COfpCnUonJ
did DOt like thit. toO u.q.
pressured the U.s. ~I
to do ~ .ooul h. The
CtA. weDf 10 work. Inc! in
\973 Allende wuki.llcd by the
U.s. blc:Ud military coup that
virtually destroyul th.t coun·
Iry'lpmuncnt. Now, and <lOppoeMi"",
miUtary dictator is in
control but U.s. investments
are .. rei """Uniled SUItes
undermined • ~u demoeney
just 10 protect its ~ic interests!
TodIy, Ihe leftist Pernmetlt
run by the Sondinims in
NitanogUi does not 1.\'Of our
economic intereJtJ there, 10 our
JOvernment il blocking 1M
~V(llutionaric, who .~ Iryill3
lOovcrthrow it. In £1 Solv.dor,
the domoc:r.tie bitt oppr~~
pemmcnt does protect our
econontic ;nkres\l. 10 we send
them military .id to fight off the
revoiutlc ... "iea,
So you _, it all comes down
10 money, Sut, if the people 01.
this counlry fully understood
that. they wouldn'l 'pprove,
So, whcn we overthrow. communist
JOVcrnmc:nt 10 prote<:C
out intC1'esb (Niaro.guo), we
uy we Ire protecting
democr.cy, SUI, when _over·
throw • democr. lic governmcnt
(Chile), we do it se<:~tly,
aoo then we <kny any involve·
ment.
Some1hing inlereslill3 that I
ju.at read .bout is that many
Solv.dori.ns Ire trying to
eaclpc: their pli&ht bycoming to
thi. eountry, but when they ...
rive they fioo that lhe door is
doted. The U.s. polley tow.rds
reluaees isthat if they are being
oppressed by tbel! pernment,
they .re .llowed to come here,
How~, the U.s. is panting
uylum to very few
Solv.oonan.. and is XDdin& the
rest bo<;k. It'J abo II'UStina
~'" who try 10 help
them. Why7 I1'leuy, lf the U.s.
were to g"nl uylum to
Solvl<lorianJ. it would be ad·
mini", wt the U.s.·bo<;ked
covemment there was 0!lIlfC$&I",
them, So. i" order 10 keep
lhe ... meriCltl people convinced
tlllt wlllt we .re doing down
there is rW>t, they must prove
llult no """ is being opprcs$Cd.
Pre1ly ocrewy, eh?
The Uniled Slates is , very
powerful nalion, bul llOnle1imes
It u.aes its power in , destructive
w.y. If I didn't carc .bout thi.s
country, I wouldn' t bother
wriling this .rtide. I'd ju"
move \0 Canada. But, I dOG&re.
.nd ! hope you do 100.
Colleges Indicted in Study
WASHINGTON, D.C. ICPS!
··Poor .nd minority hilh
IChooI studen .. do noI know
• boul college financial aid, .. '"
many .re noI c"rollina In col·
lege as. resull, lhc .uthor. 01.
rece"t study (OOClude.
In • broad indictment of col·
lqa. .. '" f~ and sr.te
fonanclal .id oIf.a.1s. . utbon
of the N.tlonal Student ... id
Coalition INSA.q report .. y lhe
Curren I ' YJlem for
diosemiNotina: financial .id in·
formation i.s woefully inadequate.
"There are all kind 01 pil!Cel
missing from. comprehensive
information system," Nyl
NS ... C spokeswoman Lindl
Berkshire.
The 37·page NSAC report,
reluoed Fcb. 2Sth, Slys the
diSldv. ntaaed studcnts who
need financial lid the moll
don't have I<XCSI 10 informa·
tion .boul .id program,
beause oollea:es do I10C recruIt
inner city sluden ...
Bven more damnln&. the
report .Y' available relerence
guidea to.id frequently are OUI·
d.oted, inIo::unole or dlmeult to
undeQWld .
The 'yllem, for te liing
students about the 0I.1-<:1uInain&
ruln and fundi", lewis for
miRY pnlgnlmI a n'! keep up
with .11 the chllnaes. the: report .,. The report idds nontnodi·
lioftr,l students. ""ch u adulb
who w.nt tocontinue their for·
mal edUoCllion. face simiUor
obsllCles bec:a\LIC lhe ..,.,.,rn·
ment COUntS on high tchools to
1(11 , tudentl ,bout .id,
..... Ithough tkesc nontraditional
students are tke large$!
growln. co mponent of
poatllecondlty enrollme nt.,
they oft~n do not re.li~ their
opportunities for financi.1 .id,
prlnclpllily beeause they Ite 1\01
in high ICboola where the infor·
mation i. molt .v.'lable," the:
report warn •.
The report f. ults the federal
Deportment of Eduaolion for
concentrating On telli"g
Sludcnts how not to ge1 federal
aid.
nThey put out posters saYina:
things like the best way noI 10
act fmancial aid i.s noI to
register for the draft and not
.re,p.ay stOOenlMnI, ,. Berkshire
"The information thcy' re
putti"8 out i6.l1 neptiv<!."
Slates spend less than onehill!
of one percenl 01 the lid
funds dU.scminating informa·
tion on whlll'S .vailable, the
reprn1 noIes.
Leaders of NS",C'I 37
member organiDlions .. y they
need new ways 01 giving
stu<knts the word.
Berkshire sayl lhat although
the report docs 001 identify
potenli.oJ ways to pay for such
advertisi ng, NS"'C may h~ lp
orga niu: a fuoo d rive.
... master calendar 10 coor·
dinale the timing of financi.l
. id programs, and a guidc
",,,ed to high school juniors
. nd sophomores abo would
""Ip, the report', .uthor1. ".y.
University Lobby to End the Arms Race
College students, flCUlty .nd
staff from acrou the: oountry
will ptber in Wuhinatoo on
Thursday. "'pril lBlh for the
1985 University Lobby 10 End
the Arms RIoI:. They will _
wilh Memben of CocIIfCM 10
inform them 01. widespreMI
""rnptH ,..,ppnrt ftw poIicio:o
that would haJl the nudar
.rms race.
P. rticipa"ts in lhe Lobby Day
will discuss four legislative
priorities with \heir Iqp$latorll:
restri<:ting funds for nuclear u·
plosives telling .nd resuming
negotiations for a comprehen·
';ve lest ban treaty; Slopping
awropriation. for e~tremely
accurate, potentially first·strike
weapons .uch u Ihe MX, Tri·
dent 0 ·5 and Per.hins U
mi ss ile5; co ntinuing a
moratorium on lesting of .nti·
satellite weapons, supporting
effort. to red uce funding for
Stratea:ie Defcnse Initiative
IStar W.n) research and supporting
efforts 10 maintain the
existing ... SM trealy in force;
and finally. supporting lea:isJa·
lion for a comprehen.ive
hilatc-ral freeze on lhe lesti..,.
production .nd deployment of
nuclear weapons. The lobby
o:Ioy will feoturc bricfinas by
Wuhinat"" .rms control lob-byisU.
_illp with lqisbtors
and • dIance to share "".
perlenoes wilh umpus deIep.
tions from around the country.
The national sporuor 01. L0bby
o.y is United Campuses \0
Prevent N~r War (UCAM),
an orpnIution founded in
1982, UCAM pre5Cnlly Iw 60
Clmpll5 chapters .nd contactl
on 700 ampusea in all 50 states
.nd Canada. Stud(nts for
Nuclelt Disarmament, v.1e
Univer';ty, will lead the field
organizing effort to cnoounoge
participation in Lobby Day.
V,le and national UC ... M will
be uslsted in Ihei. efforts by
UCAM chapters and indepen.
d~nl tampu. groupa throughout
the cou ntry.
l.ut year, 700 participants
from 6S umpusea p thered lor
the first Lobby Day. Students
spoIle with their Members 01
CongreM In<! WC1'e addressed
by national arms control ex·
perts, Michael Wishnie, • key
Lobby Day organiu:r II V. le
Uni~';ty .ummari .... the ob;
ectivt'S of the lobby d.oy: "We
hope 10 spark a renewed effort
to curb the spiraling nuclear
competition by dcmonstnoti"8
the prescnc.. of a well·Wormed
.nd acti~ ampus movement
for .rmt conlrol." UCAM's
Field Director Phil Antwciler
saYl lhlll he "eq>eCU lhis year's
event to be much larger. In·
tC1'CSled sludenl grou~ have
been caIli"8 from around thc
country .,'" the orpnizina ef·
fort is well ahead oflut year's
pece."
Lobby o.y orpniu:n Ire
currenUy sooki", contact with
persons or groups interested in
Learning more . bout lhe event
Even campu.aes unable 10 send
deleplions 10 w ashington,
D.C. a.e urged to support the:
aims of Lobby Day by collecling
';gned prosy stalements
which will be delivered by par.
ticipants to Members of Con·
~=
For more information, con·
taCI either of the organi .. ti,,""
listed below:
Students for Nuda' Disarms·
ment.
v. le Universily
Eric Celeste
ao~ 6198, V.le Station
New Havcn, cr 0652(\
12001 ·36-1480
UCAM
Phil Antwa!cr
I~ Co""ecticut A~. NW
Suite ?06
Washington, DC 20036
(2021 Z23-6206
• March 29, 1985
On Campus
Nazareth's Very OwnJazz Ensemble
by Robby K~11e1t
The Nuo.retb J .... Enxmbio:
bLut.-d It. w,y into the Sprl",
Concert Seo.son Lu' Febr""ry
28th in the Cabore! Room with
fir., pourl", from its t.om:. .nd
rhythms booming from It
dru ..... The LI'l';'c repertoire 01
diffICUlt and ~ sel«tions
pboycd by the group rdleo;led
the ~me alIDpelena! .nd
enthusiam ollhe group and It.
conductor, Prof~ Kristen
Shiner. Music Deportment
faculty-penon in charge '" 1>",.
cu"';on. Th";r p"rform,,,,c:c
W&5 dr ... mic. refrahi .... and
drdiaolfdly loft&. ,oUter the f«.
INl conom mdM . , .ppn:tlI_
iml.ldy 10:30 P.M., • ~
impromptu nudeus of the
goth.crcd musi<:ians oonHnued
photo by John Carroll
10 ..,..,nade jan lovers until
mMinighl, and ProfeMoo' SIIi .....
herself 1001< over lhe drumael
dulie! durinll the ~ sqmenl.
Earlier in 1M main roncert
.• vocal . rr'nscn>mt was
plolyed, and with IUCh IIUOC1eSJ
thaI mote voeali ... tions will boe
included in the nul NazarffiI
Jn~ Enlemble concert.
.:heduled forThu.lday. March
ZSth, " Pub Night" , in the
Cobue1 Room beginning . t
9:30 P.M. As with previous appearances
01 the inMrumenl.1
group, the Nazo..,th (:(Immuni·
ty and their ~ arc cordially
invited 10 .!lend.
l.i.ke other m ..... enxmbles
on campus, the .Jan En$emblo:
i. currently 1OIIn::1lin& for new
mcmben. !It ;. noI nl!CCMllry to
u.s. Refugee Policy
RdUJft reM'ttlement wiU ~
the topic cI tile ne:.t N ... reth
College Lecture Committee of·
ferina. Wednadly. April 3 •• t
1:lO p.m. '" the Forum cI the
Ouo A. Shun. Celie...
Dr. Peter Roo.. cI Smith Col·
Iqe will spak on ·'Car..w:era,
Glte~ ... G~ Ind eo.
Betw~: Implementina U.S.
Rd'UJft Policy in Southe.st
Asia and America." The I~ure
will be free .00 open to the ""D'r'.' 'I to« Is Sophia Smith Pro-fc.>
l" .00 di_ <II the
Mlerah Sc~ Diplc:Jrr.- Pro-
8J1'm " Smith. He w .. chair·
man of the departmenl 01
socioIotrf .nd I nthropology "
Smith from 1967 to 1914 Ind
from 1979 to 1980. He hu been
I f\tlbright lecturer .t the
Unlve .. lty of Leict:lter
IEn&Iand1. the K)"ltO American
Studiel Summer In ltitute
Ulpanl and Flinders University
IAustralial .• nd • visiting profe-.
It V.Ie, Harvard and
CIork uni""rsiti",.
He hu written or ediled more
!.han • do:Jo,en ..aoIagicaI boob
and _ con&\lIling edilor in
oocioIocY for RanOOcn HOU3eKnopf
from 1965 to 1980. Dr.
Rose w .. lenenol editor 01 Ran·
dom Houae'l leven·volume
aeries. Elhnic Groupo in Com·
paralfw Pmpectiuc, and w ..
le~er.1 editor for the
'4--voiume Time·Life aeri",.
Hu""m BtMvicw. Ii" cunent in·
terest Is in retell rching the
makers and implemeol5 01.
-American refult'l re.elliement Or. Ro.e w., bon' in
Rochesler. He received •
botchelor cI &rtI doesree from
Syr&c\Ue Univeroity .nd hi.
ma$t~ 01 .rt. Ind doctoral
.d,.~ from Cornell Uni""rsi.
Blood
Red
Roses
N ..... reth CoIIqe lenlor Sieve
Andtr30n p<Qm1l III oripnal
play written by Andenon.
" Blood Red Rosa," Friday.
March 29 II 3 " 8 p.m .• and
Saturday. M.r<:h30at8p.m., in
the Art. Ce nl er Smlll
Auditorium.
Anderson jolnl veteran
Voutltcatre Company me<nber
hgy Nat;. in the two-person
play which he 1110 directs.
Steve Is. f'itlllonl ... live and
the SOfI 01 Donald and Pat
Anderson.
Admiuion il lree.nd the per·
formance iI open to the publle:.
be a mUJic major. and an a·
perienc:ed jatz pi&ni$t who Cltn
read m~c Is ",pecl.olly needed
" th is time. Interuted
NllUreth penons are mcou..,.
ed 10 oontacC Professor Shl .....
in Room ASS. N .... eth Arts
Center.1 Me:mbero.hlp in the
ensemble IS educ:ational and
hokb many advanlllitt
I,) Members ~ to ploy their
own composilions before ' u·
die_.
2.1 "The enxmble expc:~
providoelll'lCfnber mu&ic:ians an
o..p.p.o.n uniry to solo with 1 biJ 3.J Members learn various
performance styles 01 jatz .. I
le,itimlle an form.
4,1 M~mbers gain vat ... hle
u~rience in pllyinS and
lillenl", to each other in
enxmble perf<:>rrnlJ>Ce. whicb
is copeciaJIy importanl in the
ju~ practice of " improv·
i .. lion." whereby both formal
. nd informal techniques of
musie milking are combined
spontaneoullly before Ii"" au·
diences.
S.I Members gain potential
for oommen::iaI perfonNlMa
in their respecti"" futures.
6.J Allhough • discipline, Jan
is senerally fun. and eruemble
prao;Iic:e 8eS$Ions .re happy <»
atsion •.
Over. lI, Prolessor Shiner
viewl the enaemble aperienoe
at • cI enjoymenl and abar·
illl ........., ita member-. New
instrwnents may -wear from
time 10 time. .nd the la=
ensemble .. .., atn be ffIIIdo !'Ia.
ible to coincide with member·
ship inlerest .nd ntber perf ......
m&f\Cf: parameter&.
Pro/euor Shiner hn
demonstrated keen dedication
to music and te.ching at
Nazareth. w~sbc in.uructIl
two lerm ""IuenD< in percut......
and in addition. directl the
N .... eth Pemossion Ensemble.
Incidentally. lbe Nuareth Per_
o;:u$$ion Enaemble wiU be giving
its own Spring ConC<!n on Fri·
day. AprU 19th. It " P_M. in
Wilrnol Redial H. U. Nnareth
AnI Q,n\et. AU N .... eth 0Dm_
muniry members .nd their
guests Ire cordially ",vited 10
.ttend .• nd IIdmlaaion is free.
Profeunr Shiner i. very
talented,lnd II I vinuooo per·
former herself. On March 4th.
the <lay of one 01 the big bliz.
zard$ which closed down
Nazareth·, evenin& school. the
Profesoor performed an .,...
<ampUl rtcital In Wdmot Han
whicb captured ludi.....,. and
f.culty .ccllim. Included
lmotlJl the concert selections
was one: 01 her OWn composi.
tions. "Color, of Earth and Sea
for Solo Marimb.." In addition
to OII<ampUS performances.
Professor Shlner Is • VOt&ii5I
and drummer for the group
'The New Connection." I local
lop 40 bond. AllO. ohc has aerv·
ed IS • free·lon.oe musician in
the Rochester Area, . wtciated
with such evcnll .. the Icc
C..ap.o.td.c.o.... l.h.e. Sh rine C\n;us. and In conclusion. ProfestOr
Shiner would .in like 10 remind
the NI .. reth community
that lhe JIZZ Ensemble is cur·
photo by John Carroll
.ently searchiol for new
members of .11 different
.biUties. The J= Ensemble is
for everyone, wilh tile only prerequl,;
te being the ability to
read music.nd the pouession 01
• conoept 01 jazz. The Ensemb!
t., Iirt.al ~ will ~
performed 011 April 21tt 1111:31)
P.M. in the AnI Center. Room
A·13. Ind 01. 00UfIIe. aU Nnamh
Is invited.
College Teachers Scores Lower
on Grad. School Entrance Exams
WASHINGTON. D.C. (CPS[
-Students hopin& to become
coIlep tacbe:rs are tICOri"ll
lower on their srIId sehool. entra
nce eums Ih. n olher
studen ... a _ otudy Ibow ..
"The doctoral dqree pro-
Vi rna are not att"":ling lbe best
Ind the brightest Inymore,"
oorocludes CUfford Adelman.
who w~~ the repor1 on the test
ICOrCi for the NltionaIlnititute
01. BdUClltion.
Hislludy found srIId tehooI
entrana: CIIIm scorn """"
dedlned nationwide since
1982, particul. rly I mong
liberal .rts studenll Hkely to
become leachers.
Adelman believes the ded\Jw:
lndiea~CI undctyadualn in
disciplines IUd! _ history and
poIitlctJ ~ are more likely
to Rip srIId""te $ChooI .nd 10
dir«lly into the job mIIrk~ or
profc4lio ... 1 programll ... ~h .. .w.
" S~udenll perceive thaI
~mle Iif~ iI not ... ltfKlive
.. other lives.·· he say ..
Although Graduate Reconl
Rumination IGR£I lest ICOfCl
ho"" declined.., a whole oin.oe
1962. the d~line vlrin widely
'1l\OOi dilciplines. Adelman
"Y' PolitiCltI lCience majo .. •
$COres ""v~ dropped ..... rply,
while lhoK 01 malhematics.
eeonomin. c hemi$lry .nd
CfI8lnecrilll majors """" he1d
steady or mer. lIi&Jttly.
Most grad JChooII use the
GRE .., In o.dmiSlions test. The
exam foculeo on cert . in
thought patterns - such ..
deducti"" reatonina: . nd the
use 01 symbolk: ryJt~ _ that
are ..-e ~ Ul some
disciptinea than Olhcrs.
BUI Adel m.n believes
.noIher factor is thai ~he
briahlest political $Cien.oe mil'
jou are not ev~ n takin8 the
GRE t61 bet;auoe they're not
going on 10 "lid ochool.
11 1nIe. the quality 01. teacbi"l
in many a.atdemic: diocipl;nes Is
in~y, Adelman .. ys.
" If we' re not putting the
quality sludenll Into the
pi~li n~ of ICldemia now.
we're going to face a di.mllt
,sit.Ul.tio-tl in the 1990s." he
Adelman', report &howl lest
$COrCi declined precipilously
from 1962 to 1910. only to
resume f.lIing at • more
moderate clip around 1976,
Changes in lest quest;onsand
scoring methods may htlp u·
plain the d~llnes. Adelman ",.
But chang", '" demoaraphlc
variablCl ouch ....... race or
~ • which are cited frequently
touplain the decline 01
teol oc:ora in hi&b ochool.
lIudento · don't inOucn.oe GRB
test 1COfCI. Adelman .. yl.
"Only in combl"'lion with
und~duIIC majors do th .....
vlriablCl begin to off~ plausi·
bIe hypothcwei 01 influence on
test ocore W1IIb." he says.
Help
friends
and
families .+ ( 'nilnl \\a\
Ikd (:r""
(:ampaigll
the United Way.
More On Campus
Poet to Read in NYC Impressions of
Joan Baez
by Anne BlunlU1"
Reaidenl ~t , fr. nceKl.
Guli' , wlll rcad for Ille
pu:slilioul Poelry Society 01
AmcricI 011 WedncWy even·
ing April 10th 1.1 the NI.tional
Arts aub in New York aty.
Miss Guli' will read selections
from lIer book·in,pfOlJt$I N_
and SclKrfd IW>ru and from
UlHeno: ni.r /. My Cil)l.
publlslled lut yur fo.
Rocllcsler's Soesquicenlenntal.
SoeIecOons from the former will
iDdude the priz-winnlnJ poem
1'IIr.sr...... Hor.
On last ~'cll 151h, Mia
Guli' pve I. presentation for the
G.eece Ccnlra.l 5c1>OOl Oistricc
ProfC$lional Developmenl OIly
.t Olympia High. ScI>OOl. Her
subj«l wi. 71tc ArT 0( P/)f11y:
The Creotioe LI(. ,"rd /11
Rtlcwa,," 10 £dUNlion, il·
luslnllinf: her IIoIlr with perti.
nent c .. mple. of student
wriling. A question·period from
the .lI·l~r audience follow.
cd. an I.udimc:e !he ~~
as " nKI6\ interested and en·
tllu5iutic" who upruocd
speci.o.llnte,est in N ... rdh Col·
lese. MiIIIGuli' plamtOI15C the
.... terial III • focal point for a
pmjecIed proolC work 0<\ the
crutive upcricncc.
On her rdum from New
York City, Ml5s GuIi' will join
.... eraI authors for Rochester
Aulhors Oay spoMOred by the
Priwdsof The: Rochester Public
Libnry. Guest l«lure< for the
event, tcl>eduled for April 20th
at the Runde! Memorial
Library. will be PuIitJ;er Prize.
winnillJl poet Anthony Hecht.
AI I. ='Cpt1Oll following !be
Pros:ram the public will have ...
ClppXlwUty 10 meet with the
author. whose various books
will be on dispt..y.
Mi.s.s GuU' presently INC"'"
Creative WriliDl!; OI)UlIU and
Dante Studies .t Naureth, and
her l;>ool<s are I.vo.l.Loble at the
Bookstore.
Meet the
Candidates
A discuulon wiU take place
0<\ Wednaday. April IOth.I 8
p.rn. in the cat:.rct room. "l"bocM
wlll be .n informal fonom in
wlliell protp«live candidates
will <fucuA tlleir q .... Hfocations
for the upcomi"ll elections.. AU
prospective aondidatet runnins
for positions in the &ludent
government, executive board,
cII... offi(u and bo. rd
dw<pCf3OCIS will be preJml 10
diKu.s.s tllei. ~n~clivn,
qualifications and ide ... for intplemenlltion.
AU .t~nts "e
wU:ome .nd _,~ to
corne. So _ rr>eeI you. an·
didatn. beaouae they represent
you! Be an informed voter.
Puzzle Answer
from p. 12
by R. Damrod
II', 8:10 p.rn" Saturdfly
"'-reb tnd. The N~h Col·
Leae "'uditoriuml"I'beat,~ iI rill·
ed to Cllpleity. On $!qt •• n .rny
of f1owet'S covers the floor.
The crowd iI plliently wliting.
The lights dim, I'OIIrs 01 chens
.nd .pplauae. echo throuah lhe
thealre as Joan Ban makes h".
pilant ~Iran<:e. It was I first
~rienoe for many, ~r,
the imP"d was universal. He.
message was dor and pois'
nlnt. It Was. me$Sllg" of love,
peace and feUowlbip.
Joan played for .lmost two
hours despite 1M fact IMt ohe
had . concert the prevMlus night
.nd wu off to Boston to play
the follow''''~' He. willy
cbann and e2pu:ssiv" musioc
lightened the IIeIort 01 her 'udience.
SI>e played boIh requested
old JOngS induding
everyone" f. vorite "P~
YOU"ll" and new songs...cb as
"Children oIlhe '80's."
After the concert. Joan It'yed
and talked with. few .tmainIna:
1trqgLen. Sbe spoke to lhe
crOwd eloquently; uth
..,nlena was pIIcbd with
~eti5m. When uked to
mIke I st.tement to the
students heft .t Nuarelh. ./OlIn
up,eucd much 0DDCItfJI for the
~lICntion 01 the '80' •. Powe.fully
she 01.\..,;1 thai there i$
much more 10 Ule than f~lin8
good I.bout yoursdf. T ..... y,
y<lWI& poopIe .re IIIoIl« in·
terated in ",.king rrooney, being
succusful. beautiful and
",ining f.me . Thla, she feell, i.
purely selfISh and ~ry.
Furthermore, the UiUlllltd this
.ttitude towI.rds life. She aid
IhIollludents 01 today will have
10 do • lot to 4efy the state!m'nl
that Illis is. " !m'''sencratiorl.
When talkinl l.bout the peaoc
movement, . nd the situation in
Central ........ rlca. Joan abo took
• bell...,. stend. She firmly supporu
the .. nduary IIKIVl!1nCIlt,
as ..... n throush the gift to the
Rodriluez family from BI
S.lv..tor. The RodriguCl f.mily
it ~ by Corpus Christi •
.... anduary in Rochester. When
asked to commenl on lilt pre.
acnt II.Ite of na!ionaJ aff";ll,
JOIn .. id: " I &Ive up on coun·
lries. I don't live up 0<\
people." Her oonccm for pe0-
ple of this world is genuine . nd
untaInted:.
The concert w.,. ... enJ.i&htcn·
i"ll exp"rit~. as I'm sure
thoR who I.uended am 'vee.
JOIn Ban has touched the lives
of mIllions. young and old .oliIr.e.
~y her mnlqe oontlnue 10
bum brisht in this ag: 01 c"and
may milliona more heat
Ihis message with open ears.
c ....... ~:.
.stu.ff<J.. d.wdls
I
6u..:-nit.$
E .. .t ... E".
EQ*r C.nd~
~TC .
COLLEGE
SPRING
BRfLOllID~
$9goo
PlUS $20 TAX & SERVIce
ROUND TRIP MOTORCOACH TRANSPORTATION
Eve~bunn~
is hOpp\OlOier to
the. Bookstore
9 Days. 7 Nights
DAYI'ONA
BEACH
~ TRIP DAT£S •
"'.0«" 2 . "'-i ......... ........ '. .-..." . ...-r.I
_r.l · _ 30
._..1..., ,3,0,·, .'.3.. 8
FORT LAUDfRDAU.
BeOK EARLY!
-,~. . -..-----.. TOUR RATE
INCWOES:
~---''--'''---for
9ifi: ideas!
-IOUI!
-'--"
.-_-
___ .LAo-. _ _ .,_
~"'\'"~ ;:1n~ = ~=-
Clubs and. • •
Drama Club Presents
Night Must Fall
Honor Society Induction Need
Help?
By rnane O'Brien
and Peler Doyle
The N ..... reth Drama and
1'IiaoIJe Dept.rtmenl PfeKn'
N'1I1tt Mwst Fg/J by Emyllt
Williams. It i .. story 0( broken
promiaa and broken bodies.
Ther., is. nil<! line between life
and death and this play d/'llws
WI line. Weak 01. ..... rt need
not attend. If you are IOII&h
el>OlOJ.&h tolland il. then N there
April 19th and 20th" 8,00 p.m.
and ApriL 2bt I' 3:00 p.m.
Danny. the man with llI«fCl
is played by !'der Doyle. M~
Bn.n'I$on, the inv~d with •
" heart 0( btlSS," is p~yed by
Diane O'Brien. He. niea
OU .... , "the dark hone," is
played by ~.-ry McArdle.
Hubert lhe boring but dependable
friend is played by Scot!
Rankins. The f.ithf"l f.mily tetainom
lthal'. servants. folks)
are played by Mlrybeth O>noi~
and Attne-/'.iArie Schickler. And
las! OUr joe Plidooy [he was. 'IV
cop kidsI. Insp«tor Belsize. is
played by o.vM! Murnrnery.
The play is directed by Dr.
DoYid Pf:1'Tell the New Theatre
nep.rtmenl OWrman. It is his
fiQt production at Nazarelh
Colles.,. Sl!-t desi",.,. and
technical dir«lor is Richard
Kictb, whom N ... ~h College
1bea,,," goers remember as
havin& ~ the beluti!ul
set for the Importance 0( Being
EIo.nesi . .st.ge ~ and aU
arourKI right hand person i.
Beth Jacobson.
Ti~ket. ue free to .U
Nuueth """"nl$. $ooomeand
ICe if IIrI)OIII' goD ~ .w.y with
murder.
by Heidi Lw<
On W~y, M.rch 7,
twenty-eight lIudenta w~ In·
ducted into Nuardh's PsI Rho
cbapter ci Sigma Tlou Delta.
Robin Allilon, Qw-lotte Baker,
S .... n Beall, June Bnub, l.aIie
ct.rk, t.urie Coene, John
Blliott, Joune Gerlock,
Mic:Mcne HobNln, N.ncy Hut·
chinson, SUII&nn. JKObton,
M.ry Ke-=nln, St ..... e Klumpp.
Chl rles Lockwood, 8etty
Michalko, BarNr. Morley.
Marci. Osmerl, Cbristine
Perri, Melind. Sanderson,
Su.n Schlenker, &laim'Smlth,
Carrie Stevena, M .. lene
T.mucdo, Theresa T'ylor,
LornineTiberlo, Bvelyn Ward,
Mi<;McI CoUins. and Robin
Bolser be<:ame members in •
short ceremony conducted by
Sigma T.u Delta', president,
Michael Lombardo; ill
wcreUlry, JOIn Grote; and
f.culty director, Dr. Richard
Loomis.
Sigma T.u Delta III Nltiooal
EnSlllh honor 10dety.
Memben must be I!RJI.i.sb. mao
jon ~ have • oonoentreno..·in
writina, T1>ey mull Cilny an
English grade point .verage ci
3.0 (81 or higher and be in the
top 35 p"rcent 01 their dass
""""' Sigma T.u Delta promotes
the ideoot. of "mastery of writ·
ten expr~ion," "worthwhile
reading" .nd "a .spirit of good
fellowlhip .mona lIudenta ci
tbe En,lish lan,ua,e and
literature."
Guest speaker al the indue·
tion ""...,mony was Dr, Ann
Colley, .uociate prciessor ci
EnJlW> II o.emen College. Dr.
Colley" addrell on Edward
Lear, the 19th century il·
lustrator and writer of nonsense
ve!"1e, was supplemented by
.slides ci his work.
A rec:epcion weloomina new
members followed Dr. Colley'. .,.
HOW TO GBT MOTIVATED
Thlloo..y, M.rch 23 6:30·7:30
BKk from vacation. you don't
feci like setfu>c bKk to work.
"Can we talk?!" Motivation is
the key to aucceas. Come .nd
get lOme pointers.
SAYGOODBYB T'OSTRESS
1'IIesday, April 2 6:30·7:30
School work, relationship"
f. mlly pressure, Uving sit ....
tlon. job. are you sid: oilt .U1
Come and talk. Take • ItreJI
tat. See whoere you • ..., with
llteSS. Learn tome simple w.".
to deal with It,
Warning Signs for Suicide
11ME IS ON YOUR SlOB
1'IIestt.y, April 9 6:30·7:30
Do you need lIOme help !NIMi'
ins your time? Do you wish you
OI)IIld .keep ''TIme in • bottle,"
or is ''TIme .,.,.m, you by",
STOP! Tloke.we time tocome
to this I hour JfOUp. 11Iat'. not
too much time, II it?
P,A.I,R.S,
Peers with Alcohol Information and Referral
lor Students
Doyou ever have days when it all goes wrong? You've failed
your thi rd test , been late with your fou rth paper forthe same
class, argued with your roommate, lost an important relationship,
hassled with your parents?
Do those days sometimes stretch into weeks -- or months?
Are you uneasy about the number of times "8 few too
many" become your release from the pressures of home or
school?
Is drinking your only entertainment?
Are you confused about when use becomes abuse?
Do you want to tatk to someone who can do more than just
sympathize?
P.A.I.R.S. isa group 01 students who have volunteered our
time because we are interested in helping students or
others that you care about. We have a variety 01 skitts as
listeners, and we are concerned not only to hear and
recognize needs, buttorespond. Aboveall, weare aware of
a wealth of resources, both on campus and off, to whom
students can be referred.
We wiJIlisten confidentially, and we will refer conlldentially.
And we will be present to support you in your effort to grow
and change.
Some 01 you may have met us at the information table during
Alcohol Awareness Wee!<. If not, please note here who
we are, and know that we are available to you. Give us a
ring, drop us a note, stop us in the halt, chat with us in the
pub, We'd like to meet you , We hope you'd like to meet us,
too. The Info Desk in Shults has our names and a way to
contact us.
Sincerely,
Sandra Brown, Nancy Delaney, Mary Nichols.
Kathy Donoghue, Karen Fennessy, Grella Schaeffer,
Amy Spitzer
ing weight
• withdrawal from friend. and
f.mily o. other major
behav;.;...l d>anJea
• changes in IChool perfor·
mance • lowered ".ad ... , mlssing
ctallleS, dropping out of • .,.
tiviti""
• ~lity c:hanaa, $Uch ..
nervousnel5, olltbUTIIS of
~', or apo.llIy about appearance
.nd health
• use of drugs or . lcohol
• recent suicide of. {MOO ~
relative
• previoul suicide .\tempts
As Kathleen McCoy u'les in
Copf", With T~ ~
.;on; A I'bmtt-' c;w,w, also be
a~ oJ. the fact thai the prime
danler point for suickle is not
ne«ssarily when the victim of
depression is consumed and
relatively immobilized by his
feclinp. A p"1"SOfI t. at the
".ellat ris.k of. takina his life
after Ihe depreWOR liftaand the
victim regains SOme ~ergy.
If you or • f""nd sufferlll
from. c:ombination oJ. the war·
ning li8"l, :s.eek professional
help immediately.
r
LET'S RRI.AX
1'IIetd.oy, April 16 6:30·7:30
Do you find yourself t"UShina:: 10
~ assigamentJ done, to .ttend
your classes in time, to help
your friends? !..earn lOme relu_
Ilion technique&. Ten us aomc "'-
TESTS ARI! SCARY
1'IIesday, Aprll13 6:30·7:30
Ever SORe In to t.ke • test and
felt skk to your .tomaclt.
wuJdn't thinJr. ol.n answer and
OOdy COI.Ild write your name?
1.eft give each other !Orne 1IIpport
before exams.
RAP GROUP
Thuoo..y, M.y 2 6:30·7:30
Go! • question, or concern or
jUlt want to pb?
JOIN US
GROUPS PACILITATED BY
VICKI CUMMINGS
AND
IiElD IN SHULTS CEI\'TBR
COUNSBUNG oma:
ISTUDBNT APl'AIRS
Sl!crJONl
The History Club would like Monroe Avenlle
to th.nk the followinS F.ntuy. Records . · 3400
businuses and people w}lo$e Monroe Avenue
generous contributiona made Vigren and O'Shaughnessy .
The History Clllb Raffle a sue- Main Street Pittaford
eeaa. Burdett's- Pittsford
The Camera"Cutle' Win-Jeff Clover La.nea . 2750 Monroe
PIua.nd Barn Bulat • Avenlle
Sbadowlake Country Club Body Woru . 3800 Monroe
Main Street Bqs . Main Avenue
sum Pltl5ford Zlbl8acky.rd Hots
The Heathe.- Shoppe - Main Sun""nt T.Mina ' · 2900
Street Pittsford Monroe Avenue
Ameriun Video Center· Clnterbury Chocolate
2900 Monroe Avenue Sboppe. Schoen Place
Un.lvuul ComP\lter . 50 The Golf Covnoe Superinten·
Stlu Stred. Pittsford denl" .o.s.oe. ci the J'in&<:r
Y~er F1oIUI: • 7 Scboen Lakes Regioo
Place An Anonymoua: Bike' Racer
Shear Ego . Pittsford Place Waite', Gift Shop
Man So-Pro P.briCi . Pittsford
Ann Dell Coiffure - 2900 Plaza
FEATURES
Dear Bubbles
o..r Bubbles.
I'm In I tremendous jam. I
IJ>ou&ht I reilly t..d my life in
onSet IIntil l ~ on aompua.
I 1m p.eMotly • seoond
~er f.eaIurwu\. Without
png Into \en ~ges 01 det.oil,
I'm lllvins man problems. pro.
blems with lime. girlfriend pro~
room·mate problems,
and to top it . 11 off, problems
with grades which was no! •
prob~m when I iiI'$! got here.
My boyfriend it driving m<: into
• looney·bin. I don'te'Vfii know
who my lrue I.i.,ndt , 'e
any"",", wben 1 U>o<.ght I wU
brinJ • friend, f.IId my room·
mak it • complete fool details
~ry. I CIIn', ko:q> my
.... ity and I hive 10 worry
,.b.o.u t ~bly lailin& oul of 001· LOST fRESHMAN
"'" "'". Your problem is 001 an
IInlll\lll OM!. Many freshmen
llpot> enlering coil"",. e~l·
Iy thoee that choose to ~v~ on
campus. I", on their Own now
.nd try to fit in with new
friend. as best they ClI ... U's
ell)' to get deeply involved in
allliw: !leW and ociting people
and ait\loltions lhat you In: now
Uving with. T.. fact. bec:a\l2
neryone liva together. it's
Nord to .void.. While ~
is adj...nn, 10 e.ch other, you
are !ami, about e.ch other and
yOI.U'Jdf thfOUlh others, and
the combi""tioo of. !he many
COInpootib/e and c;lashina perJCIlIIIilia
aon c:o.\IIe many emo.
lionl .nd time'conillming
thinking or Klian. First and
mo.! imporllnt, .emember
what you "e in college fQt.
Your gr.des are tbe only duns
yOII ColIn .ct .... Uy oonlrol and
ch_ whelM' Or not you will
reACh satlsf.ctlon with.
Next. you can only do ..,
much '<II )'UU' friendo If they
won" hdp lhemtelva Of if !hey
.,e dillrat'ting your peraooaI
life and ruponsibilities. 11'.
quite all riJht 10 give 01 y<>W'Xlf
.. you obv;ousIy ha"", It'. an
admirable quality 10 hive. but
_ 10. point wh~ you .re liS.
ed, hurt, or 100 conguted 10
ClIr~ for your OWn beads. So gel
you priorilies Ilraighl and
",member thai your ",lationIhipt
wi!! work out for Ihe best
a, long.., you be yourself. and
do wh.t you ClIn Ind would like
to. Lf.1I 01 aU. your o:>na:m
shows me thai you I>oM$tly
don't wanllO give uP. so hang
in ~. Things wiU smooth OUI
~vent\lllly when you really
rec:ognIle your aoW and II" for
them.
Innovation 352
by Kathleen Au&hey
If you happen by Smyth Hall
Z34 I ny Monday. W..a~y
or Friday Irqund lWl(:htirne.
you might hur whale IIOngs.
You might even hur borkingor
mooing in j.panese. Ar,bic:.
Hebrew or Chlnete. Peenn,
through tM ~ you could find
the leache. on Ihe floor.
cro"I~IIi~d. d~monllrati ...
body lang\llie or perha",
readlrqj Shakespeare in BIaoc:k
English. You'~ found English
"T"e lching this course in
linguistics is Dr. Ann Sen (pronounced
Shenl. Here Engli&h
speaking natives learn about
the Engli sh la"ll".g~. Its objec·
tive is to develop Ippr<:ci.olion
oltbe role 01 culture in deler·
mining English u"ge Ind the
Ibility to .n.lyze modern
English structure&.
The focus 01 the cou_ is on
IInglish as a spoken lallg\l&Je
with writing COIUidered as ..
seooo>dary form 01 IanaUIFDr.
Sen's main pJ iI. ''Tn
make Itudents aware 01 the
grellt variety 01 Lang.... we
have IVlilable to UI.nd the fact
that there Is no particular form
a writer should u... - thai
depends on your goal and au·
diellCf!."
Or. Sen believes the more
stlldents participate in Ihe lao.·
ning process the more they wi!!
",t out 01 il. lIu innovati ve. enthusiastic.
0111':11 h~ Ipproach
10 ianguoP' stlldy makes
das$es~ntertaini", and well at·
tended. " You 80 to ItO! what's
pnglO happen <lOt," ""ysane
fl3cinated stlldent.
Actively r«fUited II Director
ol the Grad""te Prog<.m in
TESOL [Teachlllj Eng1ish II I
Second LoIlg\l&p'I. Or. Sen
came to N .... reth lall yur, Sh~
hUlIughllt New York Unlver·
s;ty. Columbll Univu.i1y.
PrincetOl1 University. Middle
East Techn;cal Univ~"ily in
Ank .... Turkey •• nd The
University of Roo;hwe,.
Hurrying clown lhe hall. ever
present tope player in hand.
I'rofessor Sen .. ys ber inte:r$
in linguistica oritIinated from a
course in Anlhn:>pOlogy. She
pa\l2ll 10 ~member thaI as a
little girl she had kepi I diary ol
every new word her baby
brother IIUe~ • the Interest
must have always been then:.
Hurrying has been a wlY of life
since lhe con'pieted her
undergrad .... le degree In G~r.
man at th~ Unlversily of
Michigan in OI1ly 3 yu rs.
The following yur she
r ...... ived her M.A. in Englilh.t
Ann Sen (photo by John Carroll)
\be University 01 Michlpn.
than an M.A. in Linguistics at
Prinoetcm University and her
Ph.D. in Li"",isti.,., abo II
Prinocton. She took a position"
Columbia Uni~"ty fUll II
Pro.>ounciation Editor 01 Tho
CoJ~",bio Elfcyclo".<lio Ind
"""';ved a Fulbright Granl 10
teach in Turkey for IWO Yell",
Or. Sen is flllent in Turkish
and German . she ha, mUllht
both . and among her many
olher Iinguigu she off .
handedly adm;ts to know1ed&e
01 MODj!OIiAn. In I..". ohc wrote
" lI rintnn M e.g~n: The
Mangoli.an N.tional llpic:" for
ThI ~ SxWty Pu/:.6alfiort
in 1981. Her impreMive Ii3t 01
publications and diMerutions
incllld~" " Teaching
Vocabuloory Through Riddl"","
" English in th.e Big Apple."
"Attitlldes TOWlrd Grammer."
and "Dialect Variations In Ear·
ly American English."
She doesn't wule I minlltel
When her cat brOke down In
Trenton. New jer ... y tome
years ago. she filled lhe five
hours w. iling for repairs by
wandering Ihrough the State
Library. Her Ph.D. Dis.seTtl·
lion, Theli1tguistio Gqtt>pIry 01
£lghl«tllll Cm/III)' N~ J~"":
~. w.., conc:cived right
there. Work,,,, 011 that prno!'nillion
allowed her the It·hometime
10 be with her two young
children lnow ages 10 Ind 121.
Her cou",,,s in Culture Ind
Langllige are ext remely
poPlllar. While studying •
cultu re. the students prepare
the nat;v~ foods Ind cn;ay the
meal together while listening 10
the nat;ve mu$le. Stlldying the
J.ong ... ~ is ~nhanced by study·
ing Ihe CUltlln:.
tn lO(\dition to \be fulbriJbI
Grant, Ann Sen has ......,;ved.
New jersey HistoricaJ Society
Grant, A NDIIA fellowship 1\
PrinoeIon Univenity and a
Prince ton Uni versi ty
Fellowship. This gifted teecher
il active in linguistic Ind
language 1lMOCi.lions, th~ Na·
tionel Council of Teachers 01
IInglish and th~ American
Dialect Sociely.
Acknowledgingtbat students
m"" write Standard EngBsh.
" This il why they II'"
EJlgH~h," the te."lLj,,~ uf
lanJUllge is Ilso \be teaching 01
toler""", and appteciatlon ""rOr.
Sen. Everyone spelJr.,
~ dialectsaa:ordm, tnthe
lit\lltion they find tbenuelves
in: in cla$s. wilb fritnda. It
church. on the job and wilb
",ren!$. Teachers m"" l~ltn to
tole rite and appreciate
Itudents' h.ome l.ngu'BeI
ISout he.ndrawl. Black Englilh.
New England twang) lIId not
...,00 I student for speech
therapy when he says "spoeed"
instaod 01 "supposed."
''The ""llllral .nd IWIorlcal
.ppro.ch 10 lang .... is really
interesting and Professor Sen is
great." $llt~ • student ol
Engli.o.h 352. " but. wa;t IIntiltiw:
seoond half 01 the coune. " 11M:
hlf referred to by thi,
pragmatic ""holar is grammar
and phonetics, the niuy gritty 01
I ny lang\lllp'_ Learning the
wrillen symbols for :opeer:h
IOIInds and juggling preposi.
tions and pronouns may not
~Iectrify many sludents. Wbal
doyou bet Ihal Or. Sen wi!! find
a way to make it not only In·
teresting but truly excitinl7
Any u.kers?
The 12:15 pm worship service complete with special
liturgical dancers on Palm Sunday (March 3 1) is for
All the campus •• Catholic AND Protestant. Everyone
Is welcome at this ecumenical liturgy.
For Easter Sunday CApril 7J Chaplain Sally Gilbert will
gladly drive any Interested students to the 11:00 am
service of worship at the First Presbyterian Church In
the Village of Pittsford. Please sign up on my office
door before April 51 Happy Easter to all of Nazarethl
More ...
SUJnIDerlnternPr~a~
in Washington Tafelmusik to Appear
Wuhington - Congressman , at Nazareth Arts Center
Pr«\ J. Eckert (30th Dist.1 an·
nounced • ' UJnme' student in·
te rn program for his
Washlngton office open to
undergradUjlle coUcge .'udents
{rom the JOth Congressional
District. The intern .selected
will work on Congresunan
!!eken's Wa..runglon staff and
be able \0 attend Congress.ionil
meetings and • special intern
speakers program.
"The student intern Prosran'
gives young people intere.!oled
in government . 11 opponunity
10 ~ Congr= in """notion
and I<> work with gcM'rnmenl
agencies and officials:' Congressman
Eckert pointed out
"The studen'" ","ve 10 perform
many routine chores lOll a staff
member in lKidilion to nlQre intereSling
matters, but the program
Is app .. ently very
popular with students, nevcr·
thele$S."
CongreS$ll'llln Eckert listed
these req\liremM," of the program:
applica nts must be
undergraduates and residents
of the lOth Cong.ellSion.l
District. tho\Igh nwl not aHen<!
college there; the internship
will be for 10 weeuduring the
$Ummel" 8\ • salary of $84(J •
month and participants must
obtain their own living quarters
in the Washington 81ta; a pplications
ean beobtained from
the Con~'s offices and
mU$! be ra!urned by April 11.
AppliClltion.s are available
from Congtessm.an &kert's of·
fices at 421 Cannon House Of·
ficeBuilding. Washington, D.C_
20515. ud 3tl federa!
Building, 100 State Street,
Rochester. New York ]4ti14.
The 30th Congressional Diatnet
ind~ part of the City of
Rochester. 14towJU in Monroe
County, aU of Genesee County,
four towns in Northern Liv.
ingston County and . ix in nor·
them Ontario County.
The Arts Cente. of N ...... eth
College present. Tafelmusik.
C.onada's only permanentlyhued
Baroque orchewa of in·
tern.ltional acclaim. on Sunday,
March 31 al3 p.m.
Company members wi!! peT'
form an all·Bach progT1Im in
honor of the Icroentenary of
Bac h's birth in \685 .
For the aU·Bach program the
company has choaen the "Dou·
ble Violin CoDCCrto," the " Fifth
Brandenburg Concerto;' the
Andanle from the "Second
B"'~burg Corocerto" and
the "Concerto for Oboe and
Violin."
The Company is dedicated to
authentic 11th and 18tb century
performance practices. It is this
revival or reappro.isol (from the
mOre popular. "romantic"
playing practices) of early
music that gives Tafelmusik its
reason for being. Tafdmusik
prides itself on the use of
original instruments and on its
philosophy of the interprelation
of baroque music. Its name
literally means "table" or "ban·
queting" music.
Jean Lamon, violinist and
music director comments: ''The
philosophy behind early music
i. very important. It is IlOI just •
matter of the music having
been compo6ed during a certain
period ,nd performed on a par·
ticular instrument, but an at·
titude to performance with the
key question being, Wh.at was
the composer'. intention? In
order 10 rmd the answer. early
music requires that all mus!·
ci ans be compo.ers and
historians as well as per·
forme,.,:'
In February of this year.
Tafdnnwk performed io New
York City at the Goodman
House. The New YOl'~ TImes
wrote this about their concert.
"The group proved that Bach'.
'Concerto in 0 Minor' can
aound wonderful when played
by jU$! eight instrumentaliststhe
two soloists plus an or·
chestra of five strings and harp.
ico rd. Neither puny nor
academic,the vib .. nt II<IIl<>rities
and supple interpretation made
the familiar work seem Iresh
ag<lln. and one had the feeling
that this mu.t have been close
to the kind of performance
Bach himself knew."
TIckets for the single perfor·
manoe are U2 for adults and
no for students and groups of
10 or more, and av. ilable at the
bor:office, 4245 F..oist Aye .. orby
calling 586-2420.
Cal, Appearing at Little Theatre
"Mom and Dad's Night Out"
Rochester psychothe rapist
Or. Dennis Boike will discuss
topics of iruerest 10 parents of
young children during. "Mom
and Dad'. Night Oui"' on Tuesday,
April 2 at Nazareth College.
Hi. talk " RllisingChildren
in the Young Years - How to
Survive," will ~ at 1:30
p,m. in Medaille Hall \.Qunge.
The "N,&,>' Out," oponaorcd
that parenting brings to • mar·
riage.
by Carol ConnelJy
There is destruction and evil
in Ireland; fierce fighting bet·
ween the North and the South.
The movie g<lvc an accurate
reprcsenlation of the cold,
hauh reality that exists in
lreIand today. The political
wan ... " between the NCH1h and
the South i. brutal.
The Iri~ people are con·
fronted with daily hardships
that we may never face in •
lifetime. Their lives are
threatened daily. The threats
stem from the bitler revenge of
anti·semitism. Throughout the
yean, the rdigious war has
turned into a political war in
memoriam for many people.
In the movie, 0>/, a y<II1ng
man'sstruggles. fears, and pain
is depicted through a touching
love story. Cal'. unconditional
love l or his fath er is
represented with deep aym·
bolism. The movie is very rcal
and it requires" 101 of COncen·
tralion to und e .~t"nd Ih.
messages that are being con·
Yeyed. There are vivid ex·
e mplifi""tions of commitlrMnt
and trust betw~n people. The
people bond together in order to
lessen the burdens of the suffer·
ina: Ih.at is going on.
Cal i. a tender y<II1ng man,
and his sensitivity is seen
through ~ actionsand the ""y
thai he treats people. Through
. 11 of the hardships and struggl'
ing he woounten. Cal remaiJU
true 10 thooe whom he loves. He
is courageous and beautiful
The movie, CDl, is a foreign
film, and il was very different
from many of our "Ameri""n"'
movi .... The HIm focuoed in On
har$h realities thai are OOI;Uring
in Ireland today.! found it very
enlightening to view a movie
that touched on profound
lruth •. that provoked thought.
Many of the HIms that are
shown at the Little Theater are
offered 8t U. of R.11Iey preceed
the Little's.chedule by awrox·
imately two-three weeks. Keep
your eyes open.
by the Nazareth College Alum·
ni Association, is open to the
public. Re/.eshmenl$ and
di$cussion will follow the hour·
long talk.
Or. &;ke will examine a
wide range of iMu,," including
stayins bome with children
after h.aving a career, coping
with the ""bin fever syndrome
and dealin& with the stresset
Or. Boike, who offers mar·
risge, lamily and individual
counseling services in Penfield,
has taught at Nazareth College,
University of Rochester,
Monroe Community College
and CoIg<lte Rocl>est~r Divinity
S<::hooI. He abo has conducted
........... '" on "",rita] enrichment,
child·rearing and lamily
communications throughout
the United Stat"" and Canada.
Cost of the "Night Out" is
13.50 per penon or IS per cou·
pte. Reservations can be made
by writing 10 the Alumni Of·
fiee, Nazareth College, 4245
East Avenue, Rochester. NY,
14610.
Creative Corner
And All
When I see the sun shine
I feel the warmth
of a friendahip 10 fine.
When I """ the sun sci:
f"or" "th'e" tGimOOe we met.
When I hear the rain fall
I think of the
love, frimdship and all.
When I """ the sun rise
!took to every day
and to the love in yOln eyes.
Wbo::n I think about tomorrow
I am -""" a friend who'll
be with me in joy and IOITOW.
Tonight The Crickets Cry
Dear You,
It is late evening. My eyes will not close. I am, 6$ always
these days. thinking. dreaming 01 you.
look" me. See my pain. See my desire to love. I will wait.
I can be as pure.s the .utumn wind, the iIOUnd of the oce.n·.
fury , the ..... ile of the innocent babe.
I am naked now. There i. no pomp.
Jt grieves me. It tears my very soul into minute particles,
this Ion.
I want 10 sciu: you.
I h.ave loot my bein& . .1 am desperate, needing to begin,
again, my search.
Today, as you passed. I felt the eanh tremble. If I My
hello, my dream i ..... ttered.
I think you are to be loved from far . way.
"","y-
By Lorna Dan
UnUomed is the child that danced in the night
Still shining in the morning of first streamed light.
A dis!inl:'l impression of undoubted beauty-
A living: being SO incomplete
You' ll cry in all purity
To forget the child of lOng.
1be world was interpreted in restless impression
From the ey"" of the. child; • stoic expreosion.
The child th.at dreamed-poet of the mom!
11111 the world could be moved
By the aights and the sounds
Of only One serene ethereal heart.
But the child had vani.shed; replaced $lIent tean
Perhaps from a longing. a tum in the years.
So dance one last time upon the pavement
For the crickets are weeping
Behind the house bear them cry
Battling the subway and .tarless night.
Where now it the child, the dream does endure
Despite prossessed victory; innocense no more
Crying still au- the crickets
Hal'111OflUing sea5OJl's end
A streetlight in a window
Will never be again.
· .. ANDMUKh " 7 Li'
Must Read Books From Local Profs.
by Ch ll,1"" Beno it
U's about thi. time of year
that m~ students begin to hate
their textbooks. While they
may to. """"Dendy written wilh '
just the right numb<!. of
diagrams and chan., Ihey are
.till <mlytntbooks. We begin to
look forward to a time. hopefully
this .urnrner. where we can
read something that's not require<
1. that's not gaing to be
te.ted. and that', nol a "textbook_"
Bul what 10 read? There ~re
literally milJioru; of book5 OUt
there and without some
8uidanco:. you could spend your
vcry valuable time O/f reading
trash.
But where to tum for this
8uidan",,] [turned to a gmupof
people whom (for the 1TlO6!
part) [ admire and wttoe.. opi·
nions I find (most of the time)
quile valuable. [ turned to the
faculty and admini.lrsHon of
Nazareth College. The
usponscs IgO\, while not overwhelming
in numbo. (~article
belowl. were varied and in·
teresting.
What surprised me the most,
as I compiled the list from the
15 rep~es I received, was lhal
no one book was r=>mmended
more than once. The book I
lhought I'd !ICe r=>mmended
rnost often was the Bible. One
anonymous r~dent rcoom·
mended il for "'the belIuty and
richness of th" Ianguag"; the
fascinating hl$torical narrative;
the wisdom and knowledge
contained there'''; .U tru. and •
thousand times more is to bo!
found in the inspired pag'" of
Ihe Bible. If . man had noother,
this one book would be suffi·
cient for. lifetime."
Jam", BrlIdley recommended
Mm Cllristit:lni/y by C.S. Lewis
because "In • clear and "nter'
tIIining style, Lewis aouwered
for me most of my i"teUec1uai
questions about the Christian
faith:' n... Gmu Con"""",1i<m
by Robert Maynard Hutchins
was recommended by Sister
Marie AUgu5line who.,...,. this
book as ...... key leading you to
insightsi"to human ~rience.
10 comprehending ideas rele·
vant 10 basic problems. and giv.
ing you a chance to acquire
wisdom:'
In anolher vein of
Religious/Philosophic. l in·
quiry, Dr. Ann Sen rcoom·
mends Dant"'. Infcrno, in
which "Dante presents u. with
• fascinating vision; if you were
going t"aeate a hell, what .uf·
fering and punishmenl w"uld
occur there and which sinners
would you place there .. :'
Dante . lan writes of the fate
that awaits moSI of \ill wh"
"stray from the righteous path"
but his "complete . llegory
leaves us with the comf<>rling
knowledge that divin e
forgiveness and redemplion i.
indeed possible."'
Dr. Mary Bush, chair <If the
Hist,,'Y Departmenl, lhought
that mOSI elf her co[leagues
would recommend "heavy"
reading so she recommended
"something on the lighter
side"; Mark Sullivan's TM
1\w1I1iu from his 6 volume
series Our Times. "I have
found that OUr Sludent. are n~
""'Y acquainted wilh lhe 20th
Cenlury America ... My hope is
that when students finish
reading the book, they will
want to go back and read the
other five volumes in the
seri.,.I"
Dr. Frank Balog says that
Alesis DeT"cqueville's
Dt"""""'Yin A ..... rim .. ". muOl
for every citizen elf •
Democracy. It is The most in·
sigbtful accOunt of the
character of life in democra tic
weC;es. and the social/pol·
itical problems we are en·
countering today." Dr. Bruce
Woolley, part time professor
and full time direc10r elf finan·
cial aid reoommends Margaret
Mitch<:U's Go ... Wirh r~ Wind
beca""" ii's a "good read" and
it's the basis f"r every
ster<"Olype of the Civil War.
Since ".... good college
education prepares "ne for •
future of change and uncertain·
ty:' Dr. Barhra Smullen recom'
mends Toffler's Tlte Third W.....,
which "suggests what the
future might be." For Ihe same
reason she alao recommend.
M~gatrend$ by Nesbit.
Si.ler Pa1ricia Schoelle.
recommended Tlte Con!M!io~ of
Sr. AI/gli.dinc and offers a rather
long. but she stresses an impor·
tant, reason for her choice:
'"This work represents one per.
son's e ffort 10 makesense"f his.
life. Thi. !uk which I trunk
human existence is: the making
elf a life which makes sense or
which means something. We
are all up to the busine .. of
"writi", a life story"' composing
a me, cual;ng something.
Ithi., tomy way of thinking. ila
fairly neglected notion today).
Then, .. Augustine alao shows,
the life thai we arecrealingand
which hu to make sense, has to
make sense to.. well. to
oneself, for sure. but also tel
Another. Not an abstracl ~her
jllke "hunutnity"'J, not even. ]
think. to the "significant
others" who love uS and whelm
we love. Rather ... Augustine
indicates. our lives have to
make sense to our.dves and
our God."'
After much thought. artiill
Lynn Duggan "lfers ~ CckJ,
Pl;rple by A~ce Walker. Duggan
says that Walker's charaClers
"reach out totouch the spirit of
universal human experience
whil~ givinS u' i"si&hts int" the
often harsh realities <If life as a
black female in America.
Above all, this boolt is impor·
tIInt because it gives us the
courage to seek dignity .nd
spirilual growth in our personal
h"':'
Education professor Dr. Piv·
nick recommends TIle Bro/~~ ""'",,,,,,nov by Dostoevski '"
~ Triol by K<>fker as they
'"Help uS f«1 depths elf cruelty
in life" and the "p_ibiUties
for freedom and survival:'
Dr. Estella I!vans<lfthe Social
Science Department recom·
mends "A literary master·
piece'" which "provides a rich
account of not only the.Black
American experience, but of
the Slrength, integrity and en·
durancoe of the Human Spirit!"
She r«"mmends Song of
Solomon by Toni Mouison_
Another anonymou. reply
recommended "any 01 the
small monographs by Dr. Lewis
11>omas" Ie> include Lives of r~
0:/1, ~ MedllSQ ond rhe SIIoil
and Lale Nighl Tltough.. on
Lislt Ning 10 Moh{u', Ninlh Sym.
pho,,},.
Helen Guthrie, director of the
social work program, recommended
a long time favorite.
"One spring semeSler at Qxf"rd
University in England I read
E.M. Forster's A Room Wirh A
V",,,, I", Ihe first time and I
have reread it many .pr·
ingtimes since then. This is an
especially good book to read at
college as the theme ;s self
discovery and the pursuit of
truth and it i. a refreshment tel
both head and heart. It i. char·
mingly wrilten and very enter·
Ulining. but it is a lan profound
enough to bring about a ".,...,n
change" in the reader:'
A third anonymous reply
completes the list of rewm'
mended books: Ho", 10Shidy In
O>Ikgo j3rd editionl by Walter
Paulk ..... t" uSC study time ef·
fec1ively and efficiently."
Oefming "Greatnes.s" in a
book ii, oi "0.,,,,,,. ~ highly obtective
process; what is "great" '
10 one is trash 10 another. All I
hoped to del by chis survey and
thiS article was to gather some
suggestions. This liill of 18
boolt. "nly touches the .urface
of all the "great" books Ie> read.
It does however give usa direction
to start in. (I'd like to thank
tbooc who took the time to respond,
your recommendations
were m".t si ncerely '1"
preciated.)
Faculty
Lecture
Series
for Spring
Na.areth College laculty wil
offer a springtime series d.
noontime lectures Dr! tapies
ranging lrom Bach to lasers and
life .
Eight "No"nt;me at
Na .. reth" le-ctures will be held
at N.12lreth onTuesdays, bepnning
Mar. 5, from t2;30-1;3O
p.m. The series. 5polUOl"ed by
the Continuing Education Office
and The Ce nter FQt
Lifelong Learning at Nazareth.
is. open to Ihe public:.
Fees f", thc persona] enrichment
scries are 532 for the eight
lectures, 525 { ... six lec1ures and
SIS f ... three. Anyoine may
register by calling the Contim>ing
Education Office .t
Nazareth College, 58&2525.
u\. 400.
The class datea, topics. faculty
presenlers and room 1ocations
are'
Apr. 2· "'Memory and AgJn&;
Surpri.ing New F'"tndings," Dr.
Thomas Walsh. usoclate profeS$
Or elf education, Medii
Room E, L"retle Wilmoll
Library;
Apr. 9 • "'TeD Mt: • RKIdlo!
and the Life Cycll: olWomen.Dr.
Barbara Rubin. adjunct pi<>
fessor of Ilnglisb. Confert;D<Z
Room C, Shults Center;
Apr. 16· "I.Q~ HerediCy .....
1Uo~' l"'c'l'...ting ,ty, 1hU.Dr.
David Page, assoa.te pi<>
fessor of f'$}'<'hology. eo...
ference Room B. Shull$ Center;
Apr. 23 . "'Majo< UviD&
Women N""e!iots in £n&lisb:
Margaret Laurence." Dr. Johlt
BeSton. <esc"ar<:b' scholar ...
literature. Conference Room B.
Shult. Center;
Apr. 30· "Lasers and life."
Dr. William LamlJld.. assistaa.
professor of chemistry. 0.
ference Room B, Shults Centco-.
Are Teachers Apathetic?
by Charles BenoIt
Several w«ks 880 I scnl the
following note to everyone with
a "",ilbel< in the Smyth Hall
mailroom;
Hello,
1 am "'riling an artid~ {or lite
«1tOOI ~, n... GIMn~'.
mid lllNd )'OU' help.
O>Ikge $lud£ms spend Q good
deal of rim" reading Nqwiud
I>ook5 ""I lillie h'me reading /:oooJ!s
lhor could Ito"" wK'N1 on impacl
(dart I $Q)' 'g'Mr., '?! OIl II>eiT
lives.
Wltal one book do >"'" f«1 aI/
college .Iudenll should r«Jd?
AND
Can )'OU . xploin in Q rtw
senrencu or SQ, "'hy >"'" beli¥
thu booJt ro be SQ ;m"",tonl?
I willltll"" Q~ en~IOpt for )'011'
rtspo!1US in t~ fltCwl~ "",il room
in rhe basement of SntJlrh Hall.
{Don't fOrs<Jt lo..;,n t~m.!
TIl. dMd/irn< is FebnJory 28rh.
PI(JQgrol!~Ii_/o~ I~
mot!! ~ 1 reai~. lhe bet·
leT lite arrick.
TIton1!5 for YOU' lime,
C/u1rlu Benoir
A w«k later I sent a se<:lOfld
nOle, a reminder that the
deadline was last approaching.
In the l.te afternoon of
February 28th I gathered up the
responses. Out of the Z40 facul·
Iy and administr.live staff. I
received IS replies.
Needless Ie> say. I was a bit
disappointed. I had hoped 10
receive SO many response!! that
I could run a lleries of articles,
breaking the response!! down
by department "r by sub}ects of
books recommended. Instead,
the list of replies fit rather com·
fortably in One medium length
article.
Why did SO few respond? I
r~ived many . uggestions on
why this was an. One student
said that it was proof that the
faculty and administration real·
ly don't care about Ihe students.
While this student convinced
lleveral others that this was the
reason. lcan't believe that to bo!
true.
Having been a studenl here
f", 2 years .nd a staff membo!r
for about 5, I know that Ihere
are too many faculty and ad·
ministration personnel, many
more than IS, who have taken a
personal int e rest in the
students. While there are ex·
ception. tel every rule. faculty
and administration at Na .. reth
are very concerned with u. a.
students and .. hurnan beings.
ings.
An~her reason given. thi$
time by. faculty member. wu
that instruClQrll are very busy
with mid-term. and didn't have
the time 10 reply. With this ex·
cuse. however. ] can not agr«.
If the lacully are busy. the
student. are more so. Granted,
faculty have 10 make up and
correc1 exams. but Sludents
have 10 .tudy lot and pass
them. And how long does it
take to j~ down the title of one
book and give a short uplana·
tion of the choice?
An interesting reason f", the
lack of responses wa. given by a
graduate student. She suggested
that the facul(y were e ither ern·
barrassed tel admit thaI their
favorite book waS. 'best seller'
or that the book they would
choose would bo: snickered al
by their p«rs for its unscholar·
ly wriling. Interesting, yes, but
I d"n't think this. is the reason
either. The faculty and ad·
ministrat",. I kn"w are all too
willing to give their opinions on
a variety of topics; and most
have the self-confideflOl: tel
.Ulnd behind their opinions
despite criticism.
Perhaps the problem was in
the question itself. As Helen
Guthrie pointed oul "This was
an impossible assignment! Only
on" book Ih"y all should
reacl? .. You shlll1ld have asked
us to recommend Q book that
we all enjoyed in college or that
we think an especially __
thwhile book to read d llringoollege
years."' for this reascm. I
will accept the bulk or tk
blame for low numl:>er d
respon..".. ! know how muclo I
hate ambiguous II$si,gruuelllO
and test questiolLl. I should:
have given as much curt.ide",
tion to the teathers as I apa1
from them; clear direc\lons .... d
clear question$.
But ! will n"t be lbescapeg,*
for all the blame. Some or Ilr
responsibility for lbe I",,'
number of responses musl reli
on the faculty and administr.a
tion themsclves. Irsuptothcn
to decide why they did not reipond.
They must nl
themselves if they were indN:d
apathetic, too busy. emhanaued
or confuSftl by my q~
But I bet I koow the .....
reason why an many failed ..,
respond, irs Ihe same""" _
iIIudents usc; "I just pbU
lorg~."·
Op-p-ortunities
Sunrise Tours
Needs Students
A "Golden Opportunity" for
ambitious students th.Il w.nl to
EARN MONEY. TRAVBL and
BUILD saUD BUSINESS EXPERIENCE
for the future :
Sunrise Tours. a young Irlvel
WIl'Ipoony. is sed<ing student
~p'e$f;nl'li~ with • mIIlure
.nd re$pOnSiblc .ttitude 10 be:
put of their "owing <;ampul
"""keti", network.
Tripi 10 Hawaii, Mairo. Ibf:
C.ri~ and PortupJ are
amona the ("" destinations be-
1111 cIevc\opcd for the upcoml",
1eQOn. A variety ol .. ~ty"
or " theme" lours will abo be
offered and include: the c.LifOf·
ru. wine country, scuba for aD
J£vcll.lkiing. dude ranches-lid
more.
Sunrise Tours will provide
the guidelines. procedures, and
promoclonal material nccu.sary
to aaW students in milking •
IUCOQS of the particular I<>u.
they elect 10 ~I. AU
~nUltiveo are enooursged
to get involved in 11M: overall
maJ;.kding effort and wiU Mve
the opporhmity to pin valuable
work uperience thai can be
CIIrried Into the business world
after gt.cluatlon.
The prcwam is now open to
over 450 <;ampuleS throughout
the Northeastern U.S.A. with
pianilO ~ 10 the mid·_
in the M*f future. Any student
is _Ic:ome 10 apply bul enrollment
mU$l be limited to IhoK
who un demonstrate the
mo!;,I"1on and I"nuine desire
to lake fuU ..:Ivanugc 01 this os>p<)
I'1unlty.
Applicolions aoo complete
det.ill of how the program
work. con be obtained by sen·
ding . self·.ddressed, st.mped
envelope to: S ... nrise TOIlrs
31·10 23rd Avenue Aston..
New York 11105 Attention:
Marken", [)irector.
"Spring" Into Health
Now is the time to ""sprin,"
Into better bahh by kicking the
amoking habit forever. United
Cancer Cwncil is staJtillJl I
SmoJ.ing Withdrawal Clinic
Apnl 16. at 7:30 p.m. The si>:.
week program is b..sed on
8'OIIp ... pport.oo the life style
cbanses necessary to berome •
non·amoker are stressed. -rue.dooy
cvcni"ll mocIinv ... ill \.like
place from 1:30 untiL 9:00 p.m.
at the Rochester Acadc:my of
Medici~. 1441 I!ut Avenue. A
UO.OO doo>IItioo is uquested at
the time of rqistration. but
thoN unable to 5»Y will 00\ bII:
turned .way. Main·in rqistlll'
tion de..:iline i. Apnl 12. 1985.
TO obI.in • registr. tion form.
""U United Cancer Council .t
413·&230.
Rcgistllltion is limited. oo""U
now! United Cancer Council
Inc. ;. • United Way Agency
KrvinJ the community throuJh
prop.rTI& of education. servICe
.nd te8Utc:h.
Successful
Paralegal Careers
Begin at Adelphi
The OMest & ~t Ame rican Bar
Association·approved progtam in New York,
• ~ in Garden City, t lunti"lton and
"'anhlnan.
• l-Momh Day, 6-Month E.-mint procnm.
• "'!.ore than 7SO Now York-'~ .... ~ hI~
IWN OI.U JIlIdUites.
• Adc:lphi paduates"'~ IOund .... pIo::,-mtnt in 31
'Ules and in"""r 14Scilics from roul 10COUl.
• Emplo::,-mtnt Assimnc:c proYiIkd.
·Internihipopportunities.
• NYS G .... ranleed Studtn' \...oIInsl",llable.
A recruiter will be on campus
Thunday. April 18
Contact the Career Placement Office _______ ~~~:n appointm~ A._
Free BooIdcl on Paralcp.l Careers 601U'Nt
~~~.:::-~ (516) 663·1004
1c0 .... C_iQ'. .U... N_Y0IIS:. -.. _,_ .. --------~------------ -,-------
- ----- ~ --- -- --
ArtWork
Solicited
Arc. •• HII. Ire encounged 10
submit worb to II>e 200 An·
nunl Cenesee UghthoullC Att
Show lhat will be held On
Rcdisc:over the Riyer [).oy. J .......
16. 1985 on the Ua;hthouse -. AI bcfou. the three
calqor>es include pen and ink
dnwin&- pholOJlllPh. and oil
and w.terc:oIor painlilli. The
sub;«! " I nautical thcmt: of
the port and its environs.
AWlrds in cadi aolep)r will be
Jiven and the woru will be
displayed on the grounds the
entire day.
Futther details Ire Ivailoble
by c.lling the Cenesee
Ugllthousc . 621-6119 after
Apri! 15. 1985.
Volunteers
Needed
Thiuwnmtr ROTARY SUN·
SHINE CAMF wiU q,ain pr0-
vide wholelome recreation free
01 charge to phyaiaoUy disoobled
~ .ged _n to 11.
This will bII: ROTARY SUN·
SHINE CAMP'S 63rd year of
servia: to the comm ... nity. of·
fennS kitb with special needs.
place in the SUn. It Is one of Ihe
oldnt summer recrution
campa 101' di .. bled youngsters
in New York Stlte.
ROTARY SUNSHINE CAMP
is currently ac:o;epti"l applica·
lions for Clmpen and Camp
Counxkn. All YOUlliste1t who
luended Rotuy Sun.blne
Clmp IasI year are invited 10
return. However • • ppliaotions
shou kl be submitted nght
..... y 10 become one 01 the 300
campers at RoI.ry Sunohine
Camp 1985! There .re only len
openin,s left for C.mp
Counllelo ..... thole Interested
sho ... 1d .pply q ... ickly.
If you wo ... 1d like to be I
camper or camp counselor .1
ROTARY SUNSHINE CAMF
1965. get in toueh with
ROCH£STBR ROTARY CLUB
55 St. 1'1 ... 1 Street
Rochestn-. NY 14604
Telephone 116 546-1435
Shipping
Dock
Theatre
A. 8nc%C From ~ Gul(
Aprlt 19-MllY 12
In this " memory play" we
.. e tI~ on • ;ourney bKk
'0 • Mi$li$aippi town to watch.
boy work IhfOUJh adnIcsccnt:>e
to adulthood .nd $UCCCS& IS •
wnln-. This is. work !hI1 com·
bUIes humor .nd tenckrncss
with. telnng expoIUre 01 the
conflicts 01 f.mily life. The
,r.e,s.u.l.t. .i •• drama of compel1in8
"One of Ihe most personal.
COUr.geoul and electrifying
plays I've I«n In the past few
yUrI ... Scenu boil Ind
hiss ... The dialogue goes straight
tothe heart." Ru Reed. Sunday
News.
Work Abroad Program
'"My su.mmcr ... ork ill Lon·
don w.s the most .. tlofyins u·
penence of my life. Immersed
as part of the lO(:iety, lmong the
work force, facing the Arne
problems of Inn.tion and
bureaucracy. om: cannot help
b ... t come to Wldcrst.nd how a
cuJt ... re •• people. can dilfer - in
.ttitudes. outlooita and _mptinns.
••
This was the IlUCMIDCnl 01
one student who 5»rtlci5»ted in
the Work Atm:.ti frosram
sporoo-red by the Council on In·
le rnational Edllcational III·
change IOEE). the .. "est stll·
""nt tr.vel orpnlzalion in the
Uniled States.
Now in ils fifteenth year. the
Work Abroad Progr.m i. the:
only one of il' kind ,vlllable in
the U.S. It CUIJ through ,he red
tal'" to help thoUlanda oJ.
stucie:rtll obiItln permi"""" for
lemporary work in Britlin.
IrcIa.nd. Frana:. New Zealand
and Germ.ny. With Ihe
assistance oJ. the Council'.
"""'PC .. tina ltudent ~.
tions in each 00IIDlry and
helpflll pre-depatture .... Ierial.
participants diso::ovcf thai finding
• job .brOMI ia roo n>Ofli dlf·
flCUlt' ...... t home,
Apeti from. modest program
fee of $72 ($SO for Ge ..... nyl.
the only algnificant c:o&I to the
stlldenl is lhe li rflre _.nd even
that upemc .... y be reduoed
by special student and youlh
fa"", available thfOUJh any
Cwncil Tr.vel offICe.
..... work .broad is. Iremen·
do ..... luming experience; one i.
enriclled with rel.tionshipt
with fellow workers Ind the
.dvent ... re of .... pporting
oneself:' reported anothtr stu·
""nt who worked in • Faria
boutique.
Although joba found are
primarily unskilled .. in
rcs\au .... ts. stores aDd hoIeLlaIaria
generally rroo:>re I .....
a:wer the c:o&I of room and
boord. Often .-rticipanll Ave
enou&h mooey OIIt of their ear·
ninp to treat them..elves to •
va<;a.tion 0Il0t' they stop work,
ina·
IImployment fOllnd by par.
ticipants in lhe plSt Indudcjt
work as chambermaids or
~ in l.ondoo's west 1100.
IS. farm helper on • sheep sta,
tion in New Zealand •• 00 ...
banking tralr..ec in • pn>mi~nt
Parisian financial Institulion.
TbI! program " !United 10 fWl·
,ime colIele Or university
students IS years of .. 01'
older, FOI' ......... information
.nd application forms. write or
phone: OEE. PR·WA, 2051!ut
42nd Street, New York. NY
10011. (212) 66l-l414; or 312
Sutle-< Street. Soon Francisco. CA
94108. (4151421·3473.
Volunteer Service
Work Overseas
The Council on Internalional
EdllCltionaL bc\v.nge IORIiI.
the largnl st .. dent travel
oopniution in the U.s. ia olfu·
ins youngl>dulilihe opportuni.
ty to work avel'KII Illi. 111m·
mn- as vol ... ntee .. on llervice
projects .imed II helping local
communities. free room .00
boArd help to keep p"tticipation
costs minimal.
"It met and IIIrpUIed . U my
ccpcctationl.·· WII the reaction
of one 5»rtic:ipant in IasI year"
program. Although W<IO'k comps
have been operating in many
patUoi the world for rroo:>re thin
30 years. they .re Ilill •
relatively new c:oncept In the
United StItes. They ItlllICI
YOUIIJI people from.ll OWTthe
... orld, providing lhem with the
chi nee to live .nd work
logether on .... ide range of projects.
"We had no plumbing or
electncity .nd &lepl ill • bam.
b ... t I think lhal malk "' bener
as • S""'P beea ... 1Ie we really
had to work together and help
uch otller ," repor ted a
volunteer who helped conven
an old bam lntn • community
room in Denmark.
Otber projectl included
ptden work .nd reslonotion .1
• tutle in VelulllY.
Czechos!oYakia; hou$eo;lcanina
at the Tec:hnic.tll Ins,itule It
by sp-ciaI student and youth
f."", .vailable through any
Cwncil Travel offICe.
Woru campa. IlSWIlly two.
three or fOllr weeki in d .... tion.
are .v.ilabe in Czechos\ov1lkia,
Denmark. France. Germany.
Poland, Spain .nd Canada. A
working kllOwledge of German
i. recomm~nded (or
pl.cemenu in Cerm.ny;
language requirements .pply in
France and Spin. VoLunlHfS
need 00\ be studenlJ but must
be.1 Inst 18 years old (except
in Ge-rmany. which ac:oepU
t6.yur·olds). Application
deadline 1$ May I. 1985.
1'01' ......... information ,bout
tbe program. wrile or phone:
CIER, FR·IWC. 205 East 4200
Street. New York, NY 10017 •
(212) 661·1414: or 312 Sutter
Street. San Francisco. CA
94108.1415) 421·3413.
MCAT.LSAY:CMAT ~'
SA, .T. _ ' ACT0 .:O-0A0 T ·GRE·CPA
..""--,",. ...,s...o...' , .....,..". . .....
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w' ...". ' ''l'O T. ,,U,, .,..,.....,. .".." " , ..... ~-
Gdansk. PoI.nd: Ind reb ... ilding
lle<!w.lb on . n island in Cer. I many. ~.j\
Except for. modest prosram .~_ ... ~'!. "=.=.:."
fee of SIOO. there i. no COlt _ ...
other Ihln the airfare· .nd even II!~!..:-=-=-"'~-'---""'"'-"':""J
l!utt a;pense may be reduoed
Women Flyers
ECAC Champions
They hid • MW COIIch, oome
new players b\lt, in lhe end. the
reswt w.s the SlIme.
The Naurelh CoIlelle of
Rochetter Golden Plyers
women's buJr.etbolltU/l1 is the
Bulern College Alhletlc
Aaoo;;,.tion Division 1lI Upstale
champion for thesccond year in
.~.
They aoptllred the £CAC title
March 3 in Alboony by defeatin&
Renssel.er Polytechnic I,,·
Mitute, 77-63, in the flJ'St round
and SUNY Albany,66-57. in the
championship .t the Albany
State 1)'1T1.
Naureth ended the ~Q(II1
with • ~ of 16-7 under
fint·year CoIoch Milt. Deeill;,.
In 1983·84, the Golden Flyers
We«!! 1<4-9.
Among tho$e new players
who helped make it happen
was 5-S freshman guard Kn.
SmitJo <Ii Sidney. who led the
KOrinc in the championship
pme with 15 points and ended
the..,.-. as the team's No ...
_ with 8.6 .ve..,e.
Albany State hid entered as
the winner of 23 of its 26
pma, but Naureth broke out
10. lI·point halftitne lead and
never looked back. In that
game. four N ... reth players hit
dOllble figllres Bnd n.ni~
Hit;~", continued her assault on
the record books in the ... i.t
depl.rtment,
Hickey, the 5-7 oopl>omore
""""')ltIIln hom Troy c"n'nol
Catholic, ~ 10 points in the
ehampion$hip game and 13 in
lhe temifinal and had 19 assist.
in the two pmes, 8 ag£insI RPI
Ind II n. Albany. ThaI
brou&ht her Nuareth College
Ii",je...,.-. high to 171 .ssists
for Vl .ve..,e of 7." per pme.
In two aeuons, she now has 263
•• ists. movi", into third place
on the.ll·limo! liaubehind HM'
'" Drwn (438 in 1!I19-83) .nd
M(Juretl" Hrmy(409 in 1980-&4).
Haley I, cu rrenlly • No..r.areth
u.&istant oor.ch.
Grsdll.t1na senIor oo-aoptlin
Heidi Hiu;1tI, the 6-0 forward
from Spring VaUey. led the
.corinj in the RPI pme with 17
poInu and ei&bt rebound&.
jllnior co-aptain }«l" Rmq,
5- 10 from Oleoul hid 14 points
.nd nine rebOllnd •• nd
IOpbomore EiIH" Bowa. 6-0
from New Hlrtford, b.d 12 in.
game in which N .... eth led by
as IIIIIny as 21 points as Decillis
.w,.as .ble 10 clear the beneh ear·
Higgins ended her playing
car~r with 839 points, putting
her In fO\lrth pt.a: on th~
N .... eth Ill'lime list. And her
195 rebounds 18.5 ""r pille)
moved ~r into s.ec:ond ~
with 736, Kor." MeCo ... "
(1980-84) lu.cb with 942.
Ituey', Z5-poinl weekend (14
VI. RPI aDd II apinst AIbonyt
brought her _IOUJ to 361
poinll .nd her 1"7 rebounds
broutht her tJu-ee...,ason IoUJ
to 385 17th on the aU·lime Uat).
Junior gu.rd '""" ~ 15-5
from AmltyviU~) who CIJIle out
for the team this oeason after
sitting O\It in 1983-84, WI! the
' " rprise of the IOUl'll4fl'\ent
championship pme wh~n she
.Imost doubled her entire
IW!ISOn scoring output with I
l3-poIn' ",me, She wound up
the aeuon with 31 points. Her
~OUI high in the 10 ~
Ihe played was "'" points V$.
the University of auffalo.
The N.urelh', women's
team loeeI only two pllycn
from W. year'. oquad by
arad .... tiOQ: Higgins.nd delen.
live IIIOdout Lori welge, 5-5
from o.y, NY .
Men's Swimming
Finishes Season Strongly
L.ible, senior from
I'w&hkerpaie. NY. will be P
Ina to the men'. NCAA Division
III championship 1\ Emory,
March 21·23. He finished 9th
ovenll ItId third IJOO<tg Divi·
sion III divers in the one-meter
in the Upper New York State
championshi~.1 the Universi·
ty of Rochester. He was IlIh
over.1I in the three-meier.
Another N ... reth diver, Do"
W"1IOfL of Plattsburgh. was 19th
breQlS\rolLe and 11th in the SO
and 100 breaot.
lMdm Soc/wli eI Middleae ••
NY, was 18th In the 100 fly in
.:5..5...3 . which was his personal
The relly tearns .lao did •
respecl.ble job to help give
N .... re1h 309 points, good for.
10th finiSh .mo", the 151""m.
competing. Host Rocheater wOn
with 1,393.5 poinll.
In one-meter and 17th;n three. Slcbeli, Karl. p.,leo.nds,.~
In the swimming events, K/u"'PP Ullnior from Lockport.
'lCnlor )0. flIr/to lPortYiUe). NY), were 10th In the 8()().yard
finilhed sinh in the l(JO.y.rd freatyle relay in 7:29.82 ItId
fly In :53.3 and eoIlect61 two IIIh in the .ao free relay in
ninth·place finilh ..... in the SO 3:20.28.
fly in :24.5 .nd the 200 fly in Karl, OIIpn, Parleo Vld
2:00.57. Klumpp alan finished 9th in the
)wbott :sr-r. s..nior from 400 medley relly with. time of
Brighton, NY. was 24th in the 3:43,67.
1650 In 19:01.67. joIvI Karl of n.c men', team, IInder rLf'$\
Pittsford lPittsford Sutherland). 't year co.eh PWe Sa:a, • former
W1LS 16th In the SO back in N.ureth Iwimmer, finUhcd
:27.26 and 181h in the 400 in· thc: regllllrseuonwilh .~
dlvidUlI medley in 4:30.44. of &'3,
s,.""" o..,c." of Pittsford. The women', t.,..m, COIIched
NY, WI' 10th in the ZOO by o..~ LiJwrmc.. wu 4-6.
"pUCl~
Kama Captors National Championship
K.omI Gr.Ud tdded m«c
JOId to her trophy cue over lbe
we.ekcnd and now ii', off to
competition .plnst the bW in
the world.
The Nazareth Col lege of
Rocbcstcr diver, • four.tlme
AU-American, captured her
third national cMmp;onship
March thl the NCAA Division
III cMmpionship .t Emory
Univerlity in Atlanl.l., GA, by
....cceWuHy doefendinc her title
in the ~'me1er event. She
imW>ed xcond in the thr=meter.
which she hid won in
1984 in the .. me Emory pool.
By winoi", the onc-meter
cl>ampion&hip. the ~nior from
Vancouver. WA. ':IUllified to
compete in the OivLlion I meet
.t Ihe University of Alabama,
Orauel. who began com·
petitive diving and Iwimmi",
II the Monroe YMCA in
Rccbeskr. NY, .t>d .ttended
Monroe High School before her
family moved to V_vcr,
outdueled I f.miliar Idve......,.
Lynn Achtcrbc:'l eI. KaIamQoo
Collqe, for the onc-meter
chlmpions.hip by recordi", her
perwoal best \QUII foe I I di ......
429.10, AclIIerbefa, who IIu
lost to Graud in both ev.:nts I
YCOO' .go, had 405.4S.
The KaLamHQO senior WQ
able to fin.olJy tum the !abies in
the three-meter event, aeoring
424.80 poi nt l \0 Gr.Uel',
4 \0.70.
Their ~1'3Ofta1 duel bepn
almost from the firll splash of
the water lu, weekend.
Acbtcrl>ers tooI<. t ().point Lad
afk< the fU'Sl fiye qualifyina
dives in the one-meter. only to
lee Gr.Uet nlly for a
14.35-point margin.
And .fter the first five divea
in the three-meIer, Aehterber.
held. 1.40 margin, which she
Increased to 14.80 going into
the fillll three dive. SlturdlY
night.
With the championship and
the seo;ond pllce finish In the
19S5 national ehampionship.
GraUel" record. in oddilion to
the three NCAA lilies .nd one
s.ec:ond place finish. includes
oeven New York State eham·
pion$hi~ (lour in Of>e-mder
.nd threo: 011 the three-meter
board). for AU-Amerlao se~
lions. itIcludina 1985 .• nd •
dual record that wiU be tough to
match: 77·1. She won 77
straight one-meter and threemeIer
events after losina the
Clpenins one-meter event as •
fll'shttWI agaill$l Ithaca Col·
lege. In flet, lite finished fourth
in that meet, Sina: then,
how~, it's been largely •
GnUeI shaw <XI the divi", """'. Ser performance .t Atlan~
emobled Naureth to finish in tie
for No. 20 &mOnlI the sa col·
~ thot $COred with 37 poinu
120 for fit$! place.nd 17 for se·
cond). Nu.reth tied with
KalamlZOO, whooc only point·
lOOrer w .. Achterile'll, . nd the
United St.t ... Mel'<'hant t.brine
AClIdemy.
Kenyon CoIlelle of Ohio won
the Division III teamch.mpion·
ship with 496 poinu. Amon&
other Rochester .. rea college"
the University eI Rochester wq
17th with .s plinl5, Roch$er
Institute eI. TechnoIosY wq No.
S! with "'" poilllS and William
Smith of Genevl finished 55th
with 2.
Van Gundy Named To All-East
Jeff Van Gundy. the senior
c'pt ain . nd point guard
pllymaker for the Naureth
College men'l buJr.etbollteam.
bu received hi. first major
pooI·selson honor.
VVl Gllndy. the two-year
veteran who I. generally
eredited with leading Ihe
Golden Flyer. to their third
otrai&hI 2O-pme _ (20-5 n
I984-3SJ and buo IILia IeUOn'S
ECAC tOUminlent, is one eI
five Division 111 plAyerl Irom
the EaR Region JNew York
StIle) ""med by the N.tional_
Associ.tion of Buketb.1l
CoIoches for ronoidention for
AII·AmeriQl honon.
The other four pllyers named
by the NABC Imons the 42
p1aY"rs on the natlona! ballot
are: 8lalne Harri. of SI.
Lawr~nce. Chris Hllghey of
f"redonil State. Larry Koiillth eI
H.omilton .nd Trenton Tile eI
ElmiL"l..
VIII Gundy. who tran.ferred
from Brockport State for lhe
1983-84 ~'IDn. bu been pIn of
two post·s...""" tournlment
tUnt5. La" SC'QOJI. Ihe 5-9
lWtory eduaotion major wIth I
3.b lCIdemoc point averlSC.
WI! the point guard when the
Golden Flyers won U Ind I0Il6
prMS on their w.y 10 the
NCAA Division III Rut Repon
championship.
This s..aoon. VVl Gllndy
a ve~ ~.8 points In 25
relllliar sellOn l"mes .nd
cstabli.hcd • new NlUrelh
one-~ason IS$Ut lUIn<brd with
127 0< 5.1 ""r glOme. He is II..,
among the nation', most prol'l.
dint foul shooters with 83.2
""rccnt.
aliI his most Im~ot ron·
tribution to tbe 'LlCCII!SI of tbe
tum, soy his COKhes .. well as
opponents, u his leldership. In·
tensity.nd <ietermi""tion from
the opening tap 10 the final
bu=r - no matter what the
-<.
V.n Oundy is the third
N ..... re1h player in two seQOn,J
10 be .... med 10 the East Region
team by the NAIIC. P.ul Cum·
mings Ind Lawreno. Maroney.
the high.XlOL'i", palr from the
£I" Region championship
tum in I~. weu on the
regioo:W all"lIr . oqll.d lI'"
~.
And Nuaroth CoIoeb Sill
Nelson. whose eredits now in·
clude 42 victories in IWO
~.sons.t Nazareth. was ""m·
ed the East Region Coe.tb of the
Yel< by the NASC and the
sponsoring Eastman Kod.k
Compony for the 1983·84 cam·
pLLign.
The NABC is expected to
n.me three five·m.n All.
America turns for Division III
Spring Sports Schedule
MEN'S TENNIS
DATE 0" OPPONENT SITE TIME
March 29 " RAC T oornam'nt U 01 A 'SA 3D S .. RAC Toornament U 01 A 'SA
April 3 W .. "CO "~ 3:00 p.m. " s," Utica Tech "~ 1:00 p.m. " " ~, ,~, 3:30 p.m.
23 000 Elmira Away 3:00 p.m.
25 ,.... $1. John Fisher ,~, 3:30 p.m.
HEAO COACH: Rob searl. 61b spring season 17·19)
GOU' om DA' OPPONENT ~TE TIME
April IS 000 Roo ... ", """" . 1:00 p.m. " " """'" ,~, 1:00 p.m.
,2.3 '00 Elmira ,~, 3:00 p.m.
" Utica Tech Homo • 1:00 p.m.
' Home matches pleyed allrondequoit ce.
HEAOCOACH: Cabbie Lawtence. 81h season (1 0·15)
Everyone's A Comeazan
J\~ THfSPfLL
o~"w s OUT TN.
· (.ITIU "lNI"IMrTA"'U ...
GARFIELD®
by Jim Davis
~-
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.su,0I1ruiI
answers on p. 5
• • •