NAZARETH COLLEGE. ROCHESTER.~- Y., MARCH 14. 1947 No.4
Karline Koenen Elected Regional
Secretary of N. S. 0 . Committee
Stw York State Onit of the
l Cr.tholk Musi~ £ducaa
}.u(lriot.ion will hold itt sec·
!Hnnial tonfcrence at St. J,at.
l'othedral and Cathedral
Hirh School in Ne"- York
.llar<h 14 and 16. Tht ooni~
being sponsored by
1'111 Srwlhnan. and is under
rtttion of Sitter Kathletn of
Colltg<>, wbo i• State
JtiTO 8«1"flary of tho A--
Naureth'a ol!kial dtlepto to
tht N. S. 0., Karline Koenen. wn
whisked into the J)OSition oC aec·
rct.ary of the New York StAte •·e·
gion of the National Continuations
Commitue of the N. S. 0 .. •• a
nosult of the ~ional meeting held
at V•s$Ar Cu11tge on February 22.
~t.mn Tllfh Ma .. will bt oeJe.
1ted by CnrdlnRl SJ,ellmn.n on
~ morning, March 14. T he
.;iag JHSion will be pre«idt.-d
Bustling Activity Heralds Annual
Saint Patrick's Day Tea, March 17
In addition to the election or ro-o
glonal officers. t.h~ Const.itutlon of
the N S. 0. wu diseussed •• were
mtans of pubHcizing N. S. 0. and
ol raising funds for the Nt" York
State Re,-ion. Twenty·t·wo eollt«tS
of New York State wert repre·
eented .
Chairman of the region t1 Jac-k
Mlnlc:otr of CorntU who waa tolect·
td to this capacity at the C'htca,co
meeting in 0<-etmber. The other
officers, beJ~lde1 KarJine. elccttd at
the reeen[ regional meetil\g were:
\r the )Jo"' Reverend JamH
itarney, Bhahop of Roe:het~ttr.
l ,ng the 1pcakers from Rocb·
'!r at. vn riooa geu,ions will be:
ntnd Ben(.I(Jid Ehmann, Icc·
11 $D ·•Mu11ic in Divine Wor·
.. Si!itt:r R~ Teresa of Naz..
Academy, demonstratinfe' the
pood Method of voice c-ultu.-.;
• Sister Annn dcl' atll, lceturlu,g
·H11nnody, A Bond of Unity."
Joe)o-ded on the program are
rota:.~ other lectures, demon·
0$ and exhibit&
Miu Cune:tla o r Na.z•re th'•
l~ealty w•• choae a •••t weelr
• W. H. £ . c.·. d tfzen..af.the·
-~ Cona..-atule tiott•, Mi ••
CUlett• l . . .
"''~ttr DeSale1 wa!J t't'WnUy a
•r ol the Jury for RochH~r·a
lly Sd>olutic Art Award10. Th•
an&.winnin.r work "';)J ~ on
lhition At the Sibley. Lind-tmy
~ Curr Store from Ma•·eh 1·15.
!'tf.Ur PauJ~tte. h~ad of thf So.
larJ Dtpartmt:nt, has bfton ap.
at.fd a m~mber of the Educa ..
• Committee of the Ameri~•n
llk"i~totion of Social Wo1·kcr~ lo-
1 and of the aub--committee on
professional p~paration for
.al Senief.'. . .
Huge Raffle Higlrlights
Highlighting the St. PAtrick's
Day tert wl11 be the drnwlng for
thB winner or the huge rnltlc now
b~'ing II)On.Mrtd by the 1•·~n1in
.Minion UnlL The p-riM. a trip to
Kew York City. in(lude. two
round·trip ticket~, hotel rooms.
meals. n four hour sight-seeing
' l'ip. n BroRdwny show and nn
evening"• entt'rtainment at a night
dub. Sin« there are two round
trip tidcet•, the winner m.ay take
one penon with hirn.
''The purpoA<" of the rftR'Ic is to
nugment. tha Chinese Sludent
Fund," announce Rosemarie Lucks
and Jean Marie Kelly, CO<hair·
men of th• projeet. A minor priu
will bot awarded the pereon who
sella the mo11t books OYCI" three.
Members of t.he fhH\nclal c-om·
mittee for the raifle artt: Edith
Golf. Pat Mark!. Al)· .. Madd•n.
Mary Lou lloft'. Elaine Sch"Wendeman.
Joan Lyneh. Marie ColliM.
Paula St>tM·mnn, Joan K~nan.
Ann Jt cR'erm~n. P~ggy Mdnt<lsh,
Laura Vlck, l..uellle Haubner, El·
!en Barry and Margam Friend.
Publieity la being handltd by Muriel
Me)'t'r, ~la_ry Quinlan. Doris
Bergin and Mary Ellen 1'rt>scott.
Four Local Girls
Awarded Scholarships
Four loc.al high ~hoot 'irls are
among the fi<'Ven winners of m:.hol·
ar.ships to Nazareth College, it. wu
announet"d ~enUy. Awards are
Committees Announced
Shu~. an' shamrocks. lri-sh jil'l
and II Utll• bit of old Killorney will
be the ord(!r of th(l dny when lhe
&fi~'lon's annual St Patrick,& Day
Tea ia given here on c:ampus on
Monday. i)fareh 17. anno~e ~
rhairmen Betty Gardner and
Eh\lnc &hwendcmum.
Com~nitteea for lhe event sp:m·
so~ b)' the Fremin Miu:ion Unit.
ha,·e bten •ppoinlfd and their
ht&dtl •~ busy preparing for the
aft~rnoon. lnvltatlont will be nn·
der the 8UJ)E!rvision of Betty Brad·
le)' ArHI Mar.)' CrocinttL while Ue·
kelt and finance wiH be under the
ditwlion of Jeantllt Yoerger and
Elaine Kalb.
Hooding the •nltrtalnmen! rom•
mittee will be Anne )It-Laughlin
and Peggy Filler. nldod by Mar·
garet DePrez and MArjorie Ester ..
htld. Publicity for the: tea is under
Marilyn Metz whitt decoration•
will be su~rvitt'd by Clairt
0' Brl•n and Ailoon O'Dea. The
t:usk ()( dcaJHJ)) hna fa.JICI\ tO
Preahnto.n -Mnrion LePage. Missions Urge
Medicine Collections
Cnmpnigncn for t.he Fremin
M iulon Unit'• M<"dicine Driv~
ha\"t whipped into action and al"fo
bf.-.ltcing all studenu to pfO(Uf"f'
ample medidnea from their doc·
tori and dentiat.l. These sample.
will then bo dlotrlbuted in thll
co\mtry and in fo••cign Mi.ulon
Reid•.
Peg Donnelly or Rusoell Sago. Vloe
Chairman: Lloyd Erikson. U. of R.,
Trt:uurer; Michael KJymko of Si ..
enna Cotlege, editor of the rt>tlon·
nl neWliJJ8JlCr.
AccomJlAUying Karline w.ut del·
egate Eleanor Humphrey.
Tht Sattonal Continuation• Com·
m.itteeo is the preliminary orrani·
ution to the N. S. 0.
N. C. Takes Part in
Model UN Assembly
Repreunting Syria at a Model
Cenerul Aa.scrnbly on the United
Nkticm& to be held nt Swarthmor~
Coll<ge, Pa. on April 3. 4 and 6
will be :olaza,...th College otudent..,
Kitty Lou Btrry and S.tty Card·
ner.
This Model Assembly or the
Middlt" Atlantic- divi&ionR will ~
atk':nded by delegates front other
colleges who will Npresent the
various olhtr nation membt,... of
the U. N. Sin .. the purpooe or the
,:cathering 1111 to acqua.inL 1tudcntl!
more thoroughly with t.he work·
ing~ function• and problem1 of
th• U. N .. the Model Gen•ral A ..
wmbly "·ill bt divided int4 t"Omm(s ..
s1ons which will diS('uU v•rious
probl<'tn! S\ll!h a.a voting, truateethip,
atomi(' ~ncrgy and humon
right&
fWve-rend William Shannon of
Na7Areth Collcg<> faculty condod
the sooond of lbe Cnthollc
rlrine DiKuuion Mries Sunday
raoon, February 16. in the Col·
s Civic Centre.
given on the ba.tis ot a competitive 1------------------------ratht.
r Shnnnon was prompted
<Ontinut! th<' JH'oject by tho cmuragin:
g rcai)Onllle to the lnitia.l
•turo.
All penon• not acquainttd with
Catholic religion and intt~lted
learning mo~ of the doetrJne
J well as non .. Ciltholie wiv<!jj, hu~:
nds or relRtlvcll, were invited to
Utod thit informal di1c:u11ion
p.
scholarthlp txamination held Feb.
15.
Constance Costich or Nazareth
Academy wus awarded o complete
tuition echohuship; Shirley Van
BiUiard of Our Lady ol Mercy
High Srhool "·on a tuition tcbolar·
!hip and Joanne Cerval1 of St.
Agnes High School nnd Anne Ma.s ..
Wn of Eaat Higtl School were
awarded tuition Kholarahlp-. Ot.h·
er winnt,. inc-luded Joan Warth·
ling of Butralo, Marie Prune.r of
Hornell and Margant llO«An
Auburn.
l)uring the Christmas vacation
'i.w-r Gra~ Marie and Slater
'nn<i• Solano att<onded the .....,l· NFCCS to Convene
"ff ol tbo Amui.-an .u-iation At Toledo April 18
, r the Advanetmtont of &itneo in Detegattt to lhe national COD·
. ton. ln addition to the presen· gres~ of the Nntionol Federation
L•on of resenrch pap~rs. t here of Catholic College Students will
ue demon.strallon! of 1mportant ,~nvene at Toledo A ril 18 to 20
\·a~~nll in in.stnai':'M'ntation a(COrding to the P~~ent, Patri~k
)f" 1Jotltn~. Amontr th~ wer~ the O'Meara, of the Unlvtnity of
utotechnr~n, the . multl~le m1c~ Not-re Dame. Nau~th will M.nd
pe, the nucro&eOJX' ~IUippC<( w•.Lt• one delegate. Archbishop ltich&rd
8o~•·e5cence nC«flfJOn es. The O•?·b. Cushing of Boston, t~Pi3topal
ICal. Laboratories or Harvard '"I Moderator, will p.reside.
ambndge and tho Ma&-.. ohuMttl Founded in 1937, lh• N. F. c. c.
lulltute of Ttchoology had re- S. repruenta 107 eoll~ and uni·
(Continued on page 8) venitie$.
Syl.-ia Fe,...a ndu.. Walte-r Sk• lcuj, Pat C..mbl•. J ack C.llina•.
Queen Mary Ma loy a nd Bill Splllan•
Music Dept. Prepares
Origiual Operetta
An orfglnal ope,.tta. "U
Forg<>t," by Libby Murphy ...u1 bo
pt"'et~4'mtN:I by the Mutic Depa rtment.
on March 25 In the college
audit.orium.
The ttory is center1'd ~tround a
oollegt> Cl•• Club and the •trang<>
addition or a new member-. The
cast Includes Mnr'c Amntu~io,
Doris K<>nnedr~ Libby Murphy,
Arline Radic:e, Vircinla Dwyer,
Carolyn Hohensee. Helen O'Arcy.
Jullannt McCarthy. Mary Eliza·
beth Cooney and a ehoru1 made up
of the cntir(' department. The plny
is under the direet.ion ot Rosenurry
Loriu.
Apostolic Committee
Fetes Villa Childreu
The A pol!tolic Committ.et or t.he
Sodality i11 bu.sy the~ day~: plan·
nine- a St. Pat"riek"a Day Part)~ to
be held ot St. Jose11h'o VIlla on
Sunduy, Mnrch 16.
Shamrocks and grMn ribbonrs
will pnodominate at lbe party
along with •ham.roc.k 1ce cream
and cupcake&.
The rollowing committees have
bt..-cn r hor.e: Jean Rclnhnrdl. AI·
thea llelmbold. Belly Quirk and
Hilda DiGiulio. en~-rt.alnment; Lu·
cillto llaubn.er, Mary Ell.-n Mc:Carthy
and Joan Spindl~r. favors:
Bttty Crowley, Joanne Weider,
Sue Tierney, Jonn Reiber, Betty
Messe nnd Mnrguerite McDon.ald.
re.f~hmenta..
Diocesan Sodality Day
Set by Bishop
At a lunf!heon meelil\fJ' or dcle-.
gate~ from parish and aobool SodalitiH
h•Jd at tho Pow•ro Hotel
on February 8. Hlo t:xoollency
Jamea Jo;. Kenrney announced that
Dioee-~nn Sodality Day will ~ ob ..
served on Sunday, May 18. Anne
Brennan and Mary bfarg KeUick
rep~aented Nua.reth at. the meeting.
Th~ c~lebrntion will take the
form of n rally to be held in the
Columbu• Civie Centre. Re,·e:rend
Daniel A. Lord, S. J., National
Oiredor of the Sodality, and Rev·
trend f"rands P. LeBuff~. S. J ..
Eastern Sodality Director, will be
the prlndpnl &peakera on that day.
th~ Bitl,op announced.
No re•n C&r ey ha• ju•t been
eboun diteetor of lhi• year'•
S. R. 0.
Con, ratula lion•, Noreen.~ a.ad
cood luclr, Mad a m• Director !
2
Peggy Ely, Betty Gardner
Ask For Innovations
Studen ts:
THE GLEANER
Bi•bop Kearney generou...l)'
flUid• a ~rift of a beautiful gold
crucifix to Nl!lut'etb College and
ib att•dent.s nt Christmas tlnu~.
Thi• crucifix adorns the altar in
Lhc so•n• when Mass is otTered
th('iro. ll Is u pre<::ious gilt to
tht collt~. having been impor ..
ted !rom Euro)M!.
Are you af•·nld of beb1g- called " ddp? Are you scared
skinny of Jetting YOUI' be~t friends know lhnl you're interested
in thr Ideas Fa ther Keller gave to us in Student's
Hour or that you'1·e interested in the National Student'•
Organization? Does your cJos~•t frit>nd say, "We're onyiL------ - ----...!
kids-what can we do?'' DEAN'S LIST
There should have been 300 red faces when Father
Keller asked at Student's Hour how many of us were praying
for the succe!<S of the U . N.-and not one hand was
raised in an amrmntive response! There was nothing more
than an embnrrn.scd giggle from each of us. But we all
left that •·oom inspired to go out und "love communists"
and to give th em the r ight answet·sl We adjourned to the
bus, to the dot·m itories and to the smoke•·- determined not
to forget what he said! !
Before Father Keller. we bad a report on theN. S. 0.
We found out that communism wMn't so Car away. It was
sweeping into I!Chools all over the country. Communist
student.~ were in Catholic schools. Have you ever considered
the idea that a communist could be enrolled at Nazareth?
No. it's not impossible!
But will n communist need lo come to Nazareth before
"The Communist D-Da.y?" We'•·o in such a state of
complete indiffer ence that communism could sneak up and
stick us in the back-because "il couldn't happen here'' at
l\azareth! !
Where'• the School Spirit that about 20 students are
digging up all alone? Spirit comes from each member or
the student body. If we're going to resurrect the half-dead
school spirit, we'\•e got to have e\·erybody's share!
You don't know what you can do to help? How about
that daily pmyer? We know. you'1·e ti•·ed of being asked
to pray fo1· lhls. thnL and U1e other thing conceming peace.
Result-you don't prny for any of them.
All we nsk i~ one ejaculation whenCYCI' you pray during
each day- "Our Lady. Queen or PeRce. pray for us!"
I! we could. as a ~rroup. concentrate all the prayers possible
on the 14 or 15 members of the Politbureau who control
communi~m. perhaps we could effect a miracle!
I! it's flghtin~r spirit you want. then start a movement
with you•· class. Your classoffi~er8 were elected as leaders:
if you have 1111 idea of your own. then don't keep it to yourself.
Be an ngitnto1·. Let the- t·est of the school know you
a1·e alive I I You know that poor fellow who stnnds on the porch
and yells "Open the door. Richard. and let me in?" Well.
he hasn't got any kick coming at all. Our School Spirit has
had his foot caught in the door for yeal'!l and he can't
yell anymore!
Peggy Ely
Dear Editor:
As the d~aniriJC .ea..,on looms before U"~, I~L u• tAkf- an in,•entOJ'Y
or tha "houfi.C M ('nttrtAinment" and ~<Oe If we cnn tlDt do .., dean·up
job.
1t is lroult but tr u~: the more publicity n bAd 1Uovi(l rec:eivcs lhe
bigg~r the tmwd• it draws. Witne-ss "The Outlaw" and now c.Duel in
the Sun.'' Why Mr. 8<-hmlcl.:- deems it a proud fact that he spent l'C\'•
eral million doJiant on an immoral work I:. rath~r ditricult to 10rder·
stand. But ptorhapl h~ knew it would udraw." that Pf'OPI~ wouM eeeo
it, if only for curlo•ity"a sake.
But. thha lrtnd In entert.ainl'Mllt ha• J)t"rmntecl the litet'&l")" firld
Rarely can Ont> ffftd e bellt·~lltt v.·ithout cominJ away with ttilt>d
fingerA. And the !olr&nJre pan is this: the adnnture or comedy p!,)t.
is U.!ua11y trood. but •t is obsc\lred almo't tOfnJ)Iet.(>ly by pauionate and
SO<alled torrid Jov(l ltet'IU!II and illicit tlfTaJr-.. \VhHe Jt ia true p~ple
~:~ucb as arc dc&e•·lbed In the11e hooks do exist In n dtnnit.e nlinority. they
sho\lld not be held UJ> aa example.s of worth)• modela.
Now what Ia the JlUrJ)Ose of these complaints! Simply this : it is
t-ime for Chrlttianw to wage war on 'I"Uth matters. Over this country
s~h !iiigns of war have begun to ap.Pf;'ar and Naurtth ~hould tak...! part!
How! By retu~Jna abaolutely to see immoral pitturt• and by ref'·•inc
to buy or read ind~nt boob. l t U Mt et~:"~Y: the pr1« may M l:i~h.
but the pri~ la worth \\'hile. A pea~ful world demands Christiana.
a.nd Chri1tian1 denote Chri!it..like ideal~ and morab in all pha.set of lite.
Betty Gardner
Your Inertia May Be Fatal
At the Jll'cscnL lime. old and young alike are suffering
and dying needlessly. These people rot· the most part lack
even the most ot·dinary medical supplies to care for themselves.
In many sections of the earth people are dying because
a minor cut cannot be ad equate~,)· taken care of.
Doctora arc continually getting samples of different
medicines. These ~amples are of little value to the doctor
in his practice HO they accumulate in his office. doing no
particular good. And they could accomplish much. It i~
we who can make these medicines useful by asking our
respective family docto1·s for them for the Medicine Drive
here at Nazareth.
Chl'ist is lriYing ~nch of us an opportunity to show our
love for Him and for His people. In His met·cy He is manifesting
His love for us. Manifest your love for Him-don't
let this opportunity pass!
Seuiors
J\ellitk, Mar)' Afargaret.
Hurn1)h~y. Eleanor
Ennitt, 1:-•·anee1t
Huu·lm,ltcdwit'1l
Antonacci, Ma1·ie
Mul<nhy, Eloin•
Ryan, H•l•n
Quinlan. Mary
Juuiors
Lochr.er, Arley Mae
Collint. .Marie
O'LNtry, Helen
Dwy<.'r, Vlrs;tanin
l.yneh, Jonn
Clntk. Cathel"ine
O'LeAry, Elizabeth
Schwendenun, Ele.into
Smith. Con"litan<re
Whl~. Elizabeth
Etttrh~Jd. )farjorie
KOt-ntn, Karlin~
\'o('r&''-'r, Jeanette
Jne.avo, Uol'ls
Agn('Ho, .roAcphine
<:iardner, B~tty
1\.l')ft~nik, Elaine
O'Sullivan, Mary K.
Coli •lla, Fran~s
Co< linll'. B•tty
Sophomores
Ganttrt, Patricia
0' llerron. l'ranc.,.
f)illon, nnwn
Cntl'ney, Jane
lnt•vo, Anita
M•t>. Marilyn
Manntlla. Madeline
\lonaghan. Jean
Quirk, B<tty
Tarricone, Vin«nu.
Md)onald. Marguerite
Healy, Ruth Anne
Tierney, SuY..anne
Freshmen
F'll~huk, Anna
0' Brl•n. Th•"'""
Ta~kttta, Josephine
llaii•U. Jcu
Hall, Shirl•y
R01- n~y. &tty Ann
VandeVoorde, Marilyn
.Boland, Mar~taret
J>aviR, Vll·ginia
Ca·iincr, L'il\
LaBorit. Yvonne
(..(IVNttt(', J &an
Llttlt, IItten
L<:mblrdo, .1051fphin~
Haubnn. Lucille
Gabi1f11, A trr<da
Schoenherr, Rt1en
Barthclomew. Mary
Bradlf!y, Mary MargAret
DctrlJ", l.oio
Dl•pon••· Dorothy
f:nglert. Miritu11
t..aRow, Elizabeth
Moorhood. Shirley
Sympathy and praren of
tht Faculty and Student
Body are extended to Si•lA'r
Mnry Philippa 0 11 the death
of her brother; Pro!etB<lr
Long 011 the death of hi•
m<~thcr : Jenn Sovie on the
death of her father: Mary
Otdie on the death of her
father. May they "'"t In
Ptftet.
A Drive for Destruction
Did yuu notice the uror in th• !Hmoerat and t:hrt'lnkh f'! I
ruary 161 The obitusry column 8J)I)ear~d on th~ front Jll(t' o1
&oclttY t-eetion! Yes. it will th~ article on the Planned Pnrtonl
Orivl•, Man)• of Roehe!tN'a mo1t. prominent citizen• workt
rt'I\Ch tho Lengue't $30.000 gonl: the money I!: to 'lx' ,, H<l fnr .. ,~ r
fo•· ehlld.apacing. trentmcnt. ot c:hildl":c" eouph~'5, t'duCMtlon for mnr
and parenthood research."
l"n't it about time w~ Catholle• put our ic.lca-lad~n minrl!. to ""--!
Lt thb J:l'OUP ean wi~ld !IoUth powfr fnr tvil. ce.tttlinJy we, armed 1
prineiplH of truth.. ean ex~rt a" cHat an infiUt"I'N fot ::oOO. An 4 iahing t:umple o£ th~ p~~ made by th:\ Grganuation it tht'
th.' tht typical American family includes but two e:nildren-alt
atath•t~ .. say that eath fam11y mUllt have at Jeast ftlur thi1d
J)rtvent a dedine in population! First of aU. Jet'w know our sub
then let.'a be .ready a lway• lo Kive the Catholic: atliturlt. Wf', a1
d(lntll of R«heste.r•s only Catholic college. must be in lh• front
In the ftght against thit truly dendly enemy-Planned Par<tlltht.c)tl.
A Hidden Cross?
On A&h Wedn e:~sday my intentiuns wert good. I re olvtd to
my•elf of a f~w of the pleaturH 1 f'njoy so much. I want~d tu M
at the end of Lent. to place my ~ro!t~ next to Christ'~. But ju...-t
have l done! Perhaps I havt been faithful in tny re$olve. PtTha,.•
intention remained jml an mtention and my c.rou vo:ill be 11mal~
"mall that any Child t:ould urr)· it.. There are !tiU <tiweral wtt
l..cont yet and it is not. too l•tt' to o;tart now. Perhaps if I ret.olve
tomething rathe-r than deny mr•<'H of ~omething J will fUCC~
don'L want to make my ero"• toa heavy, however, for lhe wny it
nnd l might slip :tJld fall. It. it up to me now whether my CI'OM
11mnll it will be hidden in t he ahndow of Christ.' s crO!IIf 0 1· wheth
will he Rturdy and ~trong like Chri11t'1 What will I do 1 The dee'
i11 Jn my hands
What's Your Brand?
What is the ell'ect or a bullet of liaht piereing lh• cloudl on • d I
dark day! Row pleuant to tind n ~talwart prairie ftowtr bravin
dt'!'lo1ate lon1i..,es.fl: of a \\'8tern p'ain!
So what iJ the polnt!
Just as a solitary Ahaft of 1isrh• on a gloom)' da)' t'&n atf~··
lives nt everyone who 1~1 1l, !II() c:an a tffmingJy unimportant
fr iJm Y0\1 chang(" the attitude of people.
It matters nol what h11UHI you uNe. lt.. could be l ht' "Ill, utlgh
l.yJ'H! that ill neeonl}'a.ni ~d wlh n Rick or the eyebrowe, or t he ••
to tl<'i! ya" brand that Ot. ~hes R row af p~arly whites. Bul whAtl\v
i.!l, it co<tts you nothing and unlike 11tocb in Amalgamatt"d. tht r\1~
ar. JUrt' and many. A grin Cn•m ,cu might be just what annu• cir~
ha• bad a light. with her HAt fritnd n~s. Or it. miKht brint .-.tnt
out of the doldrums who·a worritd about the paper t~.ht ha• to tt1'4'P
.. ychology. You MVer kno"- whaL pod it might bfo. doinll', w11
1itt1t" t>ft'orc. on yoo.r p3rt. So I'C'm•·mborr that sonJr. ••Smilet." The ,..
had t~omet h ing there.
There's More Than A Song
Soon you'll bt: heurin.ll lh4' JCOod c,ld Irish balladt--"Whert'
River Shnnnon -Flowe.'' "When TriKh Eyes are Smiling," 01A L(
Bit. of Heaven," "K.Hlnrn<!y" and It'll mean good old Sl. Patr-
Day is toming ar(lund again. 1
But don't let all the ton,_ and (hamror.k~ "'eil the trreat 11ai
wh~ honor we eelebr•te ··,h• wt&rin' of the trw:n:· l"or h.,
Krtoat saint and so th~n'u1hly C"Onv~rwd Ireland from papnlnn
iu. ptOp1e ha\·e n~Yer dtviawel from hi~ teaebin1 and I rtiand i•
utltd the "b1e of Sainu." ~al prom1,~ by love or Chri•
v.hat ht had. ~we check off Marth 17 on the caleodt~.r. let•• th•
rood old St. Patritk and pray for a litUe of his fire.
All Things to All Men
The Church honorl'l him u htocr smtron; workingmen vencrrttf
"" t.h.-ir model: ebildren IOV(' him fflr hiA purity and o~dienei';
dylnsr consider him their apeeiRI proteetor-$t. Jo~pb, one of tilt
bt.oloved "ints whose fea#t we ctltbratt on March U.l. Let u• put li
Hlvu under hir protettion Ju•t "" l\lar1 and the Child Je•ut d~
Nau.rtlh; let os try to mod•l our family hoe~ at Nazareth oa
Holy Family-lben we n.nnot help but gro ... · in love for ono a
and for God.
THE GLEANER
NAZARETH COLLEGE
l>ubHcntion Office : Georg<' 1). Bu,.r.-_na. .P..l 'f!ili!, lne., 49·61 North Wl\tt~ ..
Publl•hed Monthly
By the Studento of Naureth College, Roche•ter, N. Y.
VOL XXIT. l'lllllAY, MAHCR 14. 1947
f!IH1'0R-IN-Clll&l? OU81Nt!SR MANAOF.R
r.t•ln• Kolco. nlk II ,h lnt•"•~
AtU1QCIAT-g F.OTTORS
11U 81NF.~R STAf'P
O·U)' flar.J!\f'r
Jo Art~~llo l'•th•r-•"• C'i•rll Mar-U.ru•• Wlnod..,. J ........ ,_.,..
~&ws EDITOR lit'<JI\TI EOITOR
Mar;~.e C.totrh..W M1 '"' T~~otl
flto\Tl'Rt: £DITOK JJO("tt-:TY BOITOR
t•at Tayk-rt N~· .. ' . , . r nt ..........
IIUMOR EDrTOR AI.VM NA I'! &DITOR D. llbltf'JIU
A.UI Mt'l..a•a·bll• MurM-1 M•r•r- J. f'lllt~,Uf'r • Tl"'"., MUSIC EDrJ'OR AftT t;I)ITOI1. .. " K"lllrk
Mut~ Amatudo M•rr ltflltY R••~t•n v. l .. norltt
l''J,UO £-OITOR C'IRCUI,A•fi()N .WANAOI')R V. f•mnlltllhht
ArJ•)' .... Loc.hn•r u ••• ,. O'l.f'fl.rr v n.,..,
tXCIIANC!I EDfTOR 'I'YIII!i\TS. " Whit•
Jotett .. ln• St.n.rr U.ttr ,;hon ' Ko.t~u
PICTURE EDITOR M•rw• Jhalll.-an .. Wh•d,.,
J•• s._..,,. h•'-" """ w .. - .. ,..,. .. ........ • C.lh•• lktl ...... k
DllA.MATJC ~.DITOR
.IMa P•t"Vk .. ..., .. •• ,h. c.t•kro• Mco...J4 G C"O.Mf'
~._.. ~ INJ.Nt .. y fk .... k $ ............
Miss Smith, Dr. Ford
:1>
.bo Join Naz.areth Faculty
od Ntw members of Nazareth's fa·
U nolty are Dr. Clilrord D. Ford and
:t )Uss Margaret Smith.
I Dr. Ford. psychologist at the
k: S.a.tt' School at Jndustry, N. Y.,
t) ~~~Lnnt in the Department. of
1n. :::~:·~~mo~~a~ a=:;~!~~o:.~d i:~
t.d ttrudor nt. the U niversi~y of RoehR
..t.r Medical School. bas bc•n loc-
! :~~gd~ri~; ;~ni~~:O:!~~:~:t:
·• Juw•nilc Delinquency and will eon&
Jnue this scmestc.r on Psychiatric
Approaches to Soci&l Cnse Work.
~liss Smith from the Rochester
ftJ G11id:mce Center is currently lec)\
1 turing- on Mental Bygie.ne. A gl'ad·
11tfo of Nazareth <Allege., she re·
«'ivt"d her AI. A. froJU Smith Colkogr
S<hool o{ Social Service and
0
Tl . .'l with the Social Security
dl Boerd in Boston. Mnssnehusetts
lw-rnr ... jnil'ling the staft' at tho
GuidAnce Center here.
Nazareth welcomes these tea·
chtrs as valuable additions to our
0 crowing .faculty.
~
D & C City Editor
~ Teaches Journalism
Studentls interested in the Vlll·iou~
pha$e$ of journalism lt·om
taii!Iys to g lueJ)Ots, from edit-or-
~ iaJs to advertising, have signed up
for tht! course in journo.lism to be
r otl't·rerl once a we<~k, Monday at
11 three o'cloek.
Mr. Wilbur Lewis, city editor
o! the Roc:hester Democrat and
C'hroniele. will conduct t he class
which will touch on lhe mnny
01' pllltSt's o! writing- nnd working (or
I n<'WNJl.IIJ~t.
Thi,; course is OJX'-n t.o nil classes
or the- school. Any student. who is
a $tOOd English scholar, has an 85
bl }14't et>nt nverage and hn~ displayed
ll an ·~'"tive intet't"st in the school
<' :~~~.cations is eligible for the
j Si~t4!r Teresa Marie offers !a~
vornble c(lml)lent. j' We're glad to
11J k'f 1hnt so many students nre in,
le~ted ill availing themselves of
t' thi! unul!uaJ opportunity i.n the
ot lin1.1 of journalism."
---!>---
Holiday Tea
~ Benefits College
Ouri11J( tho Christmas holidays
u thto Nazareth girls from Corning
~ !(ave !\ NRl...'lreth B~nefit Tea nt
!!1lhr" K. of C. in Corning under the
t tponwrshi)) of the Nationl:ll Coun-til
of Catholic \Vomen. Spceinl
KUffis were prospective Nnu.reth
~ltult!nt.s and their mothers and
Alumnae of the CGIIeg~.
Among the feature-a of the tea.
Wl'rt· a dlS"JJiny or J)ictures o! Nnz-
:::!1 ardh College and on entertain·
rn~ul in which Mnry CatherinQ Milltr
and Nnncy Dowling rcnd~red
W>tal AAios . .Later in the afternoon
Ut>\'f'n!nd E. A. Rawliuson mnde a
N)ntrihution to Uh~ Na~a reth Col·
leJ::£1 rund.
Committees were a& follows:
l':dilh Golf, General Chairman: 1 ).fary Catherine Miller, Invit.a.:
4 tJ<m~: .Jo~n Purcell, Refreshments;
Dor'" Kennedy, En~rtailtment:
:\fariaone Winder, Publicity; Nan~)'
ll~>wling, Decorations. The com ..
mllta>s were •dvised by Mrs. Fred
DeMuth, an officer of the National
Council of Catholic Women in
Corning. The proceeds were presented
to Sister Te~sa Marie.
She's Not the Ouly One
S.nid a friend to a teacher. ul'm
s.o glad that :You aro pl annin~ to
rontinue your education at the
t' nh·ersity this summer. Are you
working for your M. S. tfegret?11
Replied the teacher, ;'Yee. offici!\
lly tor an 1\1. S. and unofficially
for an M-R-S."
St. nclin«: M•ry Betty KC!e&an, Ma.rl'ie Vae th, Betty La.Row;
Se ated: Karline Koenen and E le:a.noro HumphTey.
Upstate Colleges Respond
Favorably toN. S. 0. Discussion
Climaxing a brilliant day of disc:
ussion at Nazareth, delcga~s
from several upstat-4! coll~ges re-turned
to t heir respective campus·
es favo1·ably impressed with th~ N.
s. o.
On that day, Saturday, Februltry
15, Naz~~ t·eth College nnd the
Newman Club of the Univenity
ot RochP!'tPl t,layed enthusiastic
host t.o delegates from Niagara
University, St. Bonavent\lt(>'.S Rnd
O'Youville And from the Newman
t ~bt-.s ot the Eastman <i<:~t.Ci l of
;\'h+sic, the ~ni\•ersity of Roc::hcs-t<'
r ( Won1cn 1~ t £lmpus an·i River
cam)>u~), the University of Buffs.
lo. Geneseo State Teneh<:r's CoJ ..
lege. SampS<>n. Cornell and Mo·
Oawk.
and international student organi~
at.ions.
In the afternoon se~sion Eleanor
Humphrey reported on t.he Chicago
convention outlining the proposal~
oC the four sessions and the
netion or the plenary sessions.
Kar line Koenen led a diseus.sion on
tho place of the Cntholic student
in the Chieago conference.
The thl'ee underclasses or Naz-.
areth were represented at the
me-cLing by F.ln.ine Kolesnik, Mary
Betty Keeglln, Jo~m Keena n, Ruth
Anne Bealy, Shirley Moorhcnd a nd
Betty LaRow.
The chairmen of the committees
were: Marjorie Vaeth, typing:
Anne McLaughlin. Joan McNally
and Chr is 'Wilson. r eception i .Betty
The !',w vention r•imed tu f.:lwili - Co~ling. Doris Incavo and Jean
:\r i 7~ tbe student~~! with N. S. 0. Sullivan, arrangement$.
and to urge them to send a ropt•e- I ----+--
sentativc delegation to th·• coll•ti- j Upperclassmen
tutional convontior at Chicn~r.> Form Catholic
"':;~~:;n;:;~sa A1arie nnd I•'atht~r Evidence Clubs
Lintz opened Lhc day flt 10:30 A Cntholic Evidence Club, com ..
with shor t we lcoming uddi'CSSt:'S. posed of Junior boarders. wiU rncet.
Wil!red Duquette (uOuke") ot th~ with Father Shannon every Thur~:Enstman
School NewmAn Club day cvcmillg to discuss questions.
then inform1.ld the delegates about fr~uently asked by non-Cntho1ics
the International Union or Stu- 3bout the Catholic rcligiQn.
dents which rormft an important At the t\ra-t meeting: the ~'Basic
baekground for N. S. 0. This was Errors of Protestantism" \vcre disCollow~
d with a r(!view by Mary cutSsed.
Betty Keegan of t he vital national The: Senior DisCutision GToup,
Penn. State Drama
Entertains Collegians
The University of Penn$ylvania
~{ask and Wig Club presented
.. Chth~ Cro~es," a production
about Chl'istopher Columbus, on
the e"vening of December 31, 1946.
Among those who attended were
Elaine Mulcahy, Rosemary Loritz,
Mary Quinlan, Noteen Cnr~y, Mildred
Okolowicz and Belen Ryan.
After the presentation th~ girls,
in the company of other co1lege wo~
men, attended a dinner dance at
the Sheruton and entertained mcm.
her• o{ the cast.
Cinderella's Shoe
Proves Troublesome
H::we you noticed one of Elaine
Mulcahy's suede Rhoes ig s-maller
than the othet! It sh1'unk!
Said calamity occ:ul'rcd when
Elaine was trying to bring UJl the
nAp on her shoes. A new remedy
said to apply stonm to the objects
in que11tion. Dr. Muleahy had one
of her shoes bnlanc.ed over a
steaming kettle, the phone ran~t,
Elaine da.she<l to answer it flnd
when she retU1·ned,- woc is her tber
lovely s.lipper waa aln\os-t submerged.
Elaine retrieved her siz.e
13, applied artificial respiration
and e.ndcd up with a site 5. (Any.
body have a scissors! Elaine's
thinking of having toeless suede
shoes.)
m~ti ng every Tuesday tvening in
Fa.t.her Shannon's study, has. had
for recent topica.: Confession, the
lmmaeuh1te Conception. the R"al
Presence a.nd Birth Control.
The group nirn~ to digtst clear
and effective a.n&werl't to questions
as.ked by non-Ce.tholis about Catholic
doctrine. A volwtteer prepares
a paper each week which is follow ..
cd by pet·tinent questions on the
topics and discussion . .Edith GGff.
Mary Kelly and Sylvia Fernandez
have prcptu.·ed papers recently.
Seniors Entertain
War Brides
S>'lvin Fernandez, Ninina Cam·
pancrit'l, Vicki Contestable nnd
Laurn. Louise Skakuj spent au en·
joynble evening re~entJy at. a tr.'(!:ttogcther
!or t.he Europenn war
b1·ides at the Gene~ Settlement.
House in Rochester.
The war bride'S who are learning
t.o speak English at a local public.
school nrc being givan this enterta
inment ilS n m<'ans of eneourafting
tht¢m t.o speak English and to
associnte with American people.
Held the first Monday of every
month, the!iQ fiO~inl gatherings g·ive
the soldiers' wives on opportunity
to learn American social customs..
Folk dances and games are presented
along with motion pictures
portraying American life in gene-
tat. The meetings are informal
e.JlO\Igh that the war brides make
many new acquaintances Other
peopl~ of foreign nationality a.re
also })te~nt at these get·togethers.
Peg Filler Dares
To Be Dilferet/.l
In Sun. Visitor
Another N. C. authoress bas
crashed lh(! ~vdtin.g raeketl Last
month we opened Tk• To•·ch to
read Georgia Conner's simple and
touchingly beautiful article on un
C()lore.<l girl in a Catholic college.''
This week we turn to page five of
The Stmday Vititor to see Peg Fillcr"
s "'Vare to be Vifferent-And
Save a World!' Peg daTes to be
different, and presents our Jacka ..
daiseal attitude towards the problems
of tbc world in n different
way. She dares us to do something
abota ~ the literature, tltc indecent
movies and radio programs that
a re flooding the minds of the
Amet·ican people today with un·
disguised 'filth.' Peg's article ean
be cited as an example of the inte~
t;t and action we should toke
in forcing ow· opinion!S on the
Awcricuu J'ublic. No voice Is too
small; no pen, too weak. Father
Keller enc:ouragcd us; Peg followed
his sugge~tion a nd. a~ a )•e.
salt, $he and mnny others now see
her ideas on the printed page. Congratulations
to .Peg. Fot one who
is as enthusiastic and a~ deter·
mined as the author of "Dare to b~
Different" we know this is only the
begining.
~
C. P. A. Announces
Short Story Contest
A determination not to •lreave
th@ great moral problems of our
dRy to t he ha ndling of non·Catbolic
writers in or out of fiction" was
expressed recently by lhe Literary
Awards Committee of the Catholic
Press Association in announcing
the CPA's 1947 nation-wide short
story contest for Catholic wTiters.
First prize in the contest is $160
and ther·e are four other prizes
rAnging down to $50, according to
the announce.mut. released by the
Uev. B. L. Garnes, chairman of
the Literary Awards Committee.
Rules of the contest are as follows:
1. The contest i• open to all Cath·
otic writeu. Authors may submit
as many manuscripts aJi they
please.
2. Stories m.ay deal with flny
theme not re.pugtmnt to Ch.ristian
doclrir\e or morals.
3. All mnnusc•·ipts must be submitted
tG: Contett Chairman.
Catholic Pres,a Association, Box
389, Davenport, Iowa.
4. All entries must be po!iilmarked
n(J later t.han midJ~ight of Mnrc.h
31. 1947.
6. The priz~ winning r;tories become
the property of the Catholie
Press Association.
6. All manuscripts must not ex·
ceed 4,000 words, be typewritten,
double--spaced, on sheets 81.S x 11
inches, ltnd be accompanied \\•ith a
sel!·addt"essed stamped envelope.
The Literary Awards Committee
ot CPA wm announce the wmn~rfl
May 22·23, 1947.
Alrmmae Com plete
Newspaper Plans
The AluJlmac A!socintion is
whipping up final plans Cor its
newly-initiated paper to be c-aUed
the N. C. A. (Nazareth Colle!'C
Alwnnac). The ftrst issue to be
published soon will contain the fu.
ture program of the paper and wiiJ
announce all engagements. mar·
ria~$ and births. Mrs. Mary Mor ...
an Foley is the chairman [or N. C.
A. On her •lair we find Mrs. Lillian
Rossenbach Boyce '31, Mrs.
.Mnrcella R<oiche.nberger Enni!i> '2S.
Betty Curry 142, an associate mcm·
ber; Mrs. Harriet Walton \Vegman:
Mrs. Rih\ Doolin :Es~ ~38;
Harriet. H()()Ck '3S; Mary ·Agnes
Doyle '37; Rosemary Welch '45
and Ruth Roy "39.
Duel In the Sun
Violates Movie
Production Code
By JO AGNELLO
Senaational headlines appearing
recently in a Lo.s Angeles newspn·
per startled aU Catholics iuto discussions
over the forthcoming
movie, ''Duel In The Sun." And
what va1·ied attitudes this splurge
o( publicity aroused among them!
Catholic publications have <:on ..
demned the picture a.s h1dicating
"the beginning of a new and dan·
ge.rous trend towards $C'«en real·
ism in which no regaTd is shown
either for reticence or appeals to
reason.'' and as ·ifar worse, in the
moral sense, than Howard Hughu'
'Outlaw.m
We have a general but, _rerh...'\ps,
vague Jlotion of the rt'asons for the
film being ehallengl'd. The following
are the cleor, cold facts :
"Onel in \he Sun" viola te• numcrou•
provi 1i0ns of the Produc.·
tjon Code by ••throwing the sympAthy
of the audicnco on the 1idc of
.. . •in.'' The p rovision that "bro·
tal killings arc not to be shown"
is bru;f:enly defied in the outr ight
murder of both p1·incipal charACters,
complete and prolonged in its
gol'y details. That sed uction and
r ape ghoufrl n~ver be mot~ thRn
suggested is not. to Mr. Selznick.
a rule to be obeyed. but a ehnllenge
which he readih• accepts by
presenting it demoralizing scc.ne
of rape which is far from mer~ly
suggestive. Also Jennifer Jones'
co8tumo, cont.rary to the Code, pc_r ..
mits .. und\te'' if not "indecent"
exposure. Lastly, the code is viola.
ted in the sequence in which pntY·
er is parodied so thnl lnught.-r is
pt-ovoked by a eharac~r who was
seen acting as a minister of religion.
Such charges as these promj)ted
th" CttlitOl'nia brancllea of Catho-Hc,
Prok~lnnt and Jewish Ot'gtlni·
z.ntionl'l, the D. A. R., the American
I.~Cgion Auxiliary. the Girl Scouts
nnd other groups to condCJUn the
movie. Threatened as well with a
possible ban by th• Legion of Decency,
u0uel" rMJ)M the U!:Ual Te•
ward: a 30 per cent r ise at. the box:
office.
This rise is an appalling indicalion.
It. clearly t evcals the abysmal
decline in the l'nornl st.Rndnl"ds of
the day. 'Vho determines the rise
or fall or moral standtn·ds? It is
we. g-irls like you and me, our fam·
Hies 3nd our friends. And whnt
was and is our attitude tow1\rd the
sonsationnl pllblicity that proceded
lhe showing of '•The Outlnw"
nnd that. is now heralding "Duel"!
"rill we bool:ll thut 30 per cent rise
at the box offi~e? Will we aJJow
our curiosity to be nro\lsed-the
,-,action so hoped for hy the promoters
of this so~&.lled enticing
publicity? J hope 0\11" answer is
a unanimous uNo."
U it isn't. then we will be inslrumontal
in the destruction of our:
civUbation.
Vur u1d1vidual attltude tom1s a
wwll but integn\l part or the gen ..
oral attitt1dc of the Pl'Ot>le o{
Amcriea toward morality today.
I<nowing this, we must cultivate a
"taboo'' ftttitude toward these
movies. 'fo counter#attn.ck the producer's
barro.gt of obscenity we
mu~t influence the attitudes ot our
fr1<mds and conta.cts-. U we can
reaeh these, we shall o.t least have
formed a nudt:u$ which will cvenhwlly
grow into the ~neral eonsensus
of opinion. W(' rnust make
this opinion strongly hostile to the
showing of thei::Je movies. Let us
form the vanguard in the army
which fights to preserve high mor·
al etandards in America todny.
(Editor'~ Note: In taS@ you're
wondering: Duet in tke Sun was
nominated for the Ac:ademy A ..
ward, according to $e1·un. Guide,
merely because of the hu{l~ 1 1tm8
cxpemled itt it8 prodt~ction and ad-
vtrlitin{J ctmtpaig~)
4
Don't Read This!
Unless You're a Real Catholic
There is a r~al npostolate in Catholic wrilin,g, and it is impc_ttltive
that Cntholics who have a flair for t.he wl'itten word should tcalize
this. The aJ)OlJtolnte of the written word!
Catholics n~ver seem. to consider this angle o! it nt all. Wdting !or
them is Just a way to let people know their tho\aght, to let an idea
blossom forth in :l JJlot, to let a favorite brain~child gain J)ermanenc:e
nnd popularity on p:\per.
Writing is never thtmght ot tl!l nn npostolate. and if Catholie
writing is thought of nt all, •rswootne&s nnd lift'ht" literatul'e comes
into mind. J oa.n ·mat piclu rc a Catholic J)lot as one with a nice moral·
i~ing sermon just bclore th~ eli max; Sue'$ ideA or Cntholic litemture
may require a morn! drawn at. the end of each !.tory like an Aesop's
fable; and Pat.'s idea of Calholie literature ma)>• be o.n up-in-the-<\it
sweet and go()d story with the het'Oino tlnally }>ersunding her fiance to
beconl<! a Catholic just. like thaL
In the long run, Catholic literature, in the mind of t.he average
Catholic layman, is something up in the clo\ads, divorecd from the
real, vitnl problems of everyday life. There doe...'lll't $tern to be, for
him, any tie-up bc.t·weeu the Cntltolic religion and a mining town strike.
except perhaps that the Catholic faith may be practiced by Jteveral
members of the community. So, Tom's plot for a short story about a
mining town strike is a secular 011c: there i!S no way, rea:son& 'fom,
that he cnn intl'oduce the. Catholic religion without. marring the plan
of his story. But the Catholic religion doesn't have to be introduced a:s
such. What. about the attitude of a group of miners or of a certain
miner and his family toward the strike? Couldn't that ombldy the Ca·
tholie attitude without mentioning the word Cntholic at nil?
A theme SU<'h a.s this iJJ certainly not A "sweetness and l ight1
'
theme. rr Catholic pcaunc.n would realize t hat instead of a mnss of
ju.ast worldly fiction they could develop n. fine body or Catholic literature
by npplying Catholic principles to vital. everyday problems, we would
have an err~tive. weapon to combat the ma.ny Hagrantly non-Catho1ie
writing$ th1\t Rood the book-<:ounters today.
But to I~ e.ff~tive weni)Ons these books must be adeptly handled
h)• Cutholics who can writ@. With writing ability lackin~ all the good
will in the world \vil1 effect very little
And this is why our young Catholic writers who have the teeh·
niques: and t.he idetts mu"t be trained and mov(-<1. to make the hiO!Jt of
their g-ift. The idea of the Catholic apostolate must be mnde uppermost
in the.h- rnhld!S. Th~y must be made to realize that &toric~ and
novels of real people with real probtems, based on Catholic prineiplc:s
nnd buitt up around n Catholic philo~tophy, cnn find ju!lt as ready a
popular market, if WY"itWn w('JI, ns the books we t\nd on s.-.le today. ·rhey
need not picture a Catholic \niter as ~nniless b~atase he is 8 Catholic
writer.
One does not dnre to be a Catholic s.horl !ltoa·y-writer or Catholic
novC!Iist; one is such simply because he iJs a Catholic and because he
~nlize.s that t hi& il; his own way of t...'lking part. in the ·apost.olate of
the chu~h. ln this case. it is the apostola~ of the written word. Row
many people who might never come witbio sound of the Catholic
writer's. voice nre held captive, e.ntranc:ed, aTe moved, inftuen~ed, by
the magic of his writ:~n word! Elov.• many people who would never in
any ot.hcr way oome .in eontnct with the Cat.holic point of view. or. lf
they d id. perhaps would never listen l.o it., imbibe t he Cat.hoHe way of
thinking. are won over to it, without ever realizing it through the
pnges of 8 novel!
As Fnther Conrad Nagle of the Bhu:ktriar's Guild hat urged:
why don't Catholic writers I"Calit..e t.his apo!Jtolate, come to the Core,
and give the people whnt they crave-in the Catholic way? People nre
hungry for new experiences. Catholic writ-ers nl."e missing R great
OPJ,orto..nity if they let. otben wit,h pagan ideas dominate the field of
litel:'ature. They forget they have something to give people which no·
body else can give. They a-ro butying their talent-failing in their
apostolate.
Go Where the Communists Go
We a re th~ most fortunate ones in the world. Wh('r. othea·-s a~k
themselves, uwby am t he-re!" "ts there a God!" j;Eina ~he state Ull·
ending powers?" We know the answers. While tbey try this philosophy,
then that, we are stable and secure-knowing our idenls nrc
true. But is this fair? ft can't. be fair !or us to know and to keep the
truth to ourselves. God does all things for a purpo.se. w·e are being
edoented in a Cat.holie co11ege because He wants: us here to learn and
t hen to spread the treasures we have gathered. It rnust be so. This is
no fnr-away. idealistic. thought, no mote so than Christ's when He
b:1de Hi!!: apostles to tcaeh aJI nations. We must a lso teaeh. And the
worJd is ealHnfl as it never did bdo1·e fot the light we hnve to give
Our mightiest enemy is communism with its nthei.stic t.heodes. To
comb3t it WI! must. use the anme weapons the communists hAve u.sed to
spread their dootrines.-entranee into education, movies. the radio,
the theater. labor, social service, the library, journalism. Work in these
fields reaches the public to the largest degree, so it is logica1 to see why
the eommunist.<i: have invaded them. And as they do. so mu!Jt we One
of the ~oup~. al Jen!il, must intere$t )'ou, as an individual $t\tdent,
so plnn on entering that work. The young communists are burning
with the degire to spread their doctrines. They b~lieve in them with
their hearts and souls: they go where they can do t.he most to further
theit· cause. The young Christians should be burning with an intense
longing to SJ>read their ideal~;; they have placed their hearts and souls
forever with Christ and believe in Him. Because of their faith they
m\l~t go whel"e they c:an do the mot:it t.o further Cod's caul«!.
Now and Forever
We are now preparing our!;elves tor pO!Jitiona in the profes'4ionnl
world but mo~t of us will ('V('J.lt.ually ma.rry: other few wiU become
the brides of Ch1·ist. Let. us keep this in mind and instead of just pre·
paring ourselves for our pro.fession, let us also strive to beeome the
fine.st Catholic women we can. Let us know our Catholic faith and princiJ)
les and be t!ble to express them; let U!l live our Catholie Caith and
be able to influence otheNl by this
No, we wUI not. be stenograt>hers, teachers or lab technicians a.11
the rC:!"t of our lives but we will be Cut holies. Let's remember thi~ and
make nn <:tfort;. to J'Ca1ly know our faith so that we ean be lite-long
workers tor Christ.
THE G L E ANE R
Wheelchair, Crutches,
Angel of Mercy
Earmark N. C.
Nazareth College or ''The ln·
ii.rmary'' ft$ some have nicknamed
our sehool, ia sporting a new tashion
this season. IL $e<!mS one ha.s
to have a whe-elchair. crutehe$ and
a red sock on the end of a cast to
be in atyl~. Alye(! Madde.n, a Se.n.ior
and Anita lncavo, a Soph, as a result
or accidents which happc.ned
one day apart, are being pushed
about school by lheir feJJow elass·
mates. They are oftco,n seen. eaeh
with a gaily adorned foot propped
up on a ehnir. discussing t.he intri·
eacies of wht.oel ehairs and the mn·
neuvers one can make on c rutches.
We also 0\'t'!rheard Alyce vowing
she will ne\'e.r run agtthl to gel into
t\ ear and Anita vowing sb(': nc'lel'
wnnts t<l see another toboggru1.
Bernie Slater, a k-indheat·ted
Soph, i& no\\• called '' Angel ot Met>cy"
of N. C. She "'olu1ltee.red the
service~ ot her brown ''tunbulanee"
in transporting our two invalidi!i
from school eaeh day, so il you
sh()uJd see her waiting patiently
after her last two o'clock class you
know sbe'tr waiting for Alyce and
Anita who finish at four.
Get well soon. Alyce o.nd Anita,
and thanks. Bcnlia, for helping
them to be nmong us while t.hey
are recuperating.
--- :---
Interracial Justice
Contest Beckons
Dollars ar~ flying! Yes, twenty~
five of t hem for the winner of the
lnterr8einl Justice Week contest
•ponoorcd by the N. F. C. C. S.
The contest is open to all
students of the member colleges of
the N. F. C. C. S. EntTnnts may
'Submit a one act play. a twelve
hundred word essay, a lyric poem
or a poster dealing with raee relations.
Nazareth'E entrant!; in the eontest
are Georgia Conner, Madeline
Spiegel, .Marion Jteffer, Marie Col·
lins: and Glorio Connor.
SPECULATION
I often think how awfully dumb
This world of ours is now.
[nstcnd of asking "Who'' it was.
They nsk "What! When? Wher(>?
How?"
"What mnkes grass green? What
phenomc.na
Keep!! day, day and night. night?
When and wh!.'!re did mo.n eomc
from?
And how does the sun giv~ light.'!"
It man would only ask the "Who?''
Then the world would be all right;
Fir!Jt things then would all be first
As sure and well they might.
Hilda DiGiulio, '49
Sodality Squibs
'' Voentions" will be t he theme of
the Sodality Student Hour this
month.
The ltarian Committee, under
Hildegarde Heinrich, has a .s)X'eial
Scdality Jll'ojeet. which will rut
through the remainder of Lent.
Ench week on the lunt.h hours
a tspceiaJ spiritual projeet, suc.h ;u
1 h' Rosary or Stations. will tnkc
place in Chapel. with everyone in
the school invited to participate.
A drive for rosaries and mednls
will aJso be conducted as will u
canned rood driv~ under the iJ)On·
!liOr&hip of the Apostolic Committee
led by Marguerite MeDonnld.
Under th~ editorshii> of B~tty
,-./hite and Anne Daley, Sodality
Sp, t.light.tt. n timely bulletin published
by the Literttry Committe-e
of the SodaJi[y, will keep t~t.uden ta
abte.'\St ol who.t'6 cu.rrent in the
Sodality and in the field ot Cu~ho·
lie litet·ature. The: newssheet mnda
its initial nppetHR1lCe during Fe.brunry,
Catholic .Press Month.
Alumnae Doin's
N . C.Aiumtta
Staffs W. R. N. Y .
I Musical Notes
Glee Cl11b To Perform
At Kleiuhaus Hall
Honey Bauman '46 entertained
Bett)• Cloonan '46 nnd Margaret
McDermott '·16 the weekend of the
22 of February. Kay CuUer '46
1ikewise was the guel!;t or Mary
Ann LAne '46 the same weokc.nd.
Mary Ester Oanehy •4& is having
a "flaY old timeu at the Nation~
nl College School of Social Service.
She has just begun her sec:ond t;emr-
rSter in triple S.
Everyone hns heard about W. R.
N. Y., t.be new radio st.tltion in
Rochester. A.s the motto goes: Dial
GSO for t.he best. music, lateat news
and top$ in sport&. Well, l\tildred
Curtin hu a very :reaponsibl<l: position
with W. R. N. Y.
U. of R.-bound, we find many
Nazarene$ enrolled in the "Social
A$pect3 of Medical Problama''
e1a.s..'- They nre Roney Meisen.znhl
'46, Kay Foley '46, .Margaret
Volpe, Ann St. C!!<>rgc. Honey
Baunum '46, Peggy McSt.ravick
'46, Lucille McMahon '46 and Miss
l.euty.
Vinnie Vasilt! '46 hAS ehnnged
!rom County Welfare t.o Child
P1acemont for the County.
Helen Murrer J...ester '46 has re·
tu1·ned to the city wit,h her huiSbnnd
who received his dischargto
!rom the Arm)'.
A marriage of interest wns thnt
of Helen Rit• '28 to Theodore Zuk
on February 8 in St. Ambro~
Ch11rch.
Mary Wei& '41 &ailed Oecembt.r
9 lor her sec\)nd overseas asf!:
ignment in the Far £astern TheAter
for the Ame .. ican Red Cro~.
She spent. two months in the Pac.it1e
wit.h the Red Crosa previously.
whete shec wa$ eaanp secretary.
actlng field director and hospital
sto.O' auistunt.
Margaret LiUich Els\V~iler '41
exp~ts to sail tor Japan with he,.
daughter. Sharon, in the summer
to join he-r husband. Captain John
Elsweiler, who is stationed there.
''Living Up to Your Dreams''
was Sister Margaret. Teresa's topic
for her tnlk at the recent Alumnae
meeting in the Socinl Room of
John Fisher Hall. A $0Cial hour
and an inrorn1al reunion ol alum~
nae and facult.)• followed the talk.
Eileen O'Reilly w:us general chair·
man of lhe affair.
Mary Foley is in charge ot thC'.
committee planning the Alumnae
newssheet.
Mary lA~mbnl'do i!J now M r$.
Jnmes PitN:IIa. Her wedding took
plnce on December 26.
Plans for the Glee Club co
with Cnnisius College in Bu
~lay 4, have been chnnged slig
lns'tead of being held at Moun
Joseph Academy the concert
take place in the Mary
Room of thC! Kleinhans Music
Tho "In·and·About R<><:h
Music Club'' of which Sister '
lecn is a chtu·tcr mem~r i5
soring two important meetin~
Spring. On March 1
Sarnoff demon.totrated his r
different method of teaching
to beginners. On April 19
\Vilhousky will demonstrate
ods of securing interpretation
fects with o. cborus o( n'
voices. Dues are fifty cents a.
and entitle members to be P
at a.Jl meetings and demo
tions.
The drive is on. Members o
CJC<.' Club are working reve
to obtain ads and patrons for
concert prograrn. Prizes wi
awal"ded to the girl who has
most returns in ads and pat
and to th~ girl who sells the
tickets. Their names will be
lishcd in The Gleaner. Th£!
line for the drive is March 20.
Rosemary Lorib. and Ca
Hohensee, Senior music st\l
have just completed three
of practice tenehing. Rose
worked in East Rochester
Carolyn taught in Salam
New York.
The young direetor, Bob S
a true mu~~; i e i nn and a humblt
will 1ong be remembered b)·
chcri $l~n from Nawreth
sang at t.he mect·ing of the
York State S<:hool Music As.
Uon in early December 1\t
Ea.gtnutn.
The recital scheduled lor
second wtek in OC<lcmber was
January 21 in the Muaic Rail,
program wa3 as follows:
Song of the East---·Mary
EliUlbeth Cooney- Pi
Preghiern _ --- K ·
Teresa l:fylnnd-Violin
Ann MascinrelJi-Piuno
My Sweet Repo1Se Schubert·
Ah·ina Giannini-Piano
Soldiers' Mare.h __ n.. Schu
Arline Radice-Ho.rp
Cradle Song_ Brohms-Gra
Ann Masciaretli.-Piano
Collhvogg's Cakewalk Deb
Arline R3diee--Piano
Rha psody No. 2 -- Doh
Virginia Dwyer-Piano
Concerto in A Minor .. _
Jenn wm
Helen D'Arcy- Piano No.
Marie Ama.tu%io-Piano No,
rMafl
OJ,( K<n<on d S<rialy sw<ot
nuK ia populatity poUs •'
' powe:rhouse driv~. C.pi1ol''
exc•ong. oogu:ul (Om
'huetm~iooR...If"•
r.imcd Rh)·tbm•'
An.lsuy Jumpt'-
~--·A · COl
THE GLEANER
~AS,TO CO"'PLETE..
WE. MU5T COMPETE.
ntERE AI\£ 6001(5
TO&. CM<:~EO
BEFORE WE JUT
THE. .SAC.K.
5
G
Sparklers, Girl-Beau Chit-Chat,
Travel, Keep Gossipbird Chirping
THE GLEANER
I
Catholic Action DriYe
Denounces
Platmed Parenlltood G.,..ipbird folt a little aon-y for
himself ns he was pushed aside
lo-- c::-. -~6, but. Friday flnnHy came
and ht: became (rightfully busy
onee more. He N~port.s tbo.t he
and Cupid b:we had q-uite ll l"ftCC:
and aU because of NRurcncs like
Suf' Krah and J a ne Clea...on who
now J>OU<'S! much coveted dia·
monda
wa·iUntt letters #lS much a.s she does Cntholie- Action lakes the &pot~:~
k:~. Harvard must have what it light at. Nazar-eth this month. in
Pa.t Camhlo WJ'itea too! 1 nitia)$ the form of a well organized S"Oph.
on her schoolbooks. 1'he question omore drive agninst t.he Plannc.-d
is- who !or? Parenthood Movement. .Ro&:lmary
Brides And bl'ide$maids held the
ftpotlhrht tob •.• Rita Oa.-i• chose
Lila Healo to be a brid<.t.smaid at.
her vc.ry chnrminJr wedding. Only
a week lat<lr Kitty Fishe .. chose
Claire O'Brien and El•ie Kiera ..
bildr to be bridesmaids. Congratulation~.
Mns.. Walton ~md Mrs. Dugan.
Could tha~ added apnrkle in
Jeanne Boehm'• eyes be caused b)•
that bejeweled fraternity pin s:he
is wearing! Let us in on it,
JeAJtne.
Announcing new 50ngt'l!
Muy Pro ne•t hns the copyright
to nne of them. She s.aya it's called
.. Jtuni~·Boy"!
"Who is S)'lvia" isn't a favorit~
of Sylviu Fernandez, but '"~lter
is. What we wnnt to kno\V is "Who
is Walter?''
A$ Marian no M~Guir e dives deep
into thoJSC" "6oc" books, her !two•·itt-
tune &ee.n.A t..o be "Back on the
Farm.''
' 'Jt'& "' long, long "'ay'' tsinp
J ean Coldinc when telling about.
that e.xdting cnll from .Jnpan 1
' 'Old flames never die" 01:" so
Betty Mulcahy contends (l$ &hQ
points to Funk a~ Jn'Oof.
Te ... ry Reilly is traveling too.
Thil\i time it's to St. Lawt••.mee UoiVel11ity
to-r th~ famous Winter
Cunival.
A1!5o heading Norlh-.Jean Rei_n.
hardt $pent a weeken(l in Canada
at St. Micboel'a nnd Jlrai.ses highly
a dance with all the t...lmmings.
J oan Keena!') hasn't beeu to all
these places but s.he will soon. She
doesn•t intend to wru;te time. You
wouldn't enh~r . if you bad a 147
convertible.
lf there ~~re uny sci·ew·dtivers,
monkey Wl'enchcg or sledge ham·
m~ra a 1·ound, will someone :please
I'Cfcr them tO J ean Shuh.a who
has been t.t·ying fOI' a year and a
half to fix thal marginal stop on
bor- typewriter.
Even though it isn't C~otbaH
seaRon. E leanor Humphrey h:As become
terribly inter<':sted in t he
,.subjcet,. lately.
No, Van Johnson wm;n't nt the
dOl'tn the othe1• day but Louiu~Trautlcin
eun tell .)'OU who Wil$..
Cossipbil·d ncurJy dan<:ed his
fe~t r ight otT in order to report
t httt: The glitte1· of miri·ors and
the dreamy mulJie found Mary
Coon11.n, Juliann Mc:Carlhy nnd
Bub Lon•bury floating in the
clouds at t he J unior dante.
Th~ Sophs invnded the dunce as
Dorothea Kuc.h, Marilyn M eb
Bowe is eh:airman of the drive and
states that her tommitt~ hat n
threc·fold purpose 1\nd all are
working vigorously Co attain their
g<>al.
Betty Cavanaugh, Rita O'NeilJ.
lfargie SuUivnn and Dorothy Lewis
have been assigned to the first
pu rpo~. Th~y piAn to jnform t.he
students of the Catbolie altitude
toward birth eontrol so lbey in
turn may make this a part of their
Catholie Adlon.
Virginia Rooves. Ruth Anne
Henly and J oan Keenan nre also
active on the committee and plan
to send Jetter~ to t he citizens in
Rochester who have been leaders in
tb(.o movement for Planned Parenthood.
rn tho.. letter• they will
send n summary of the Catholic
viewpoint as well as n protest.
The third purpose of the drive
is to bo hnndled by Peggy Wal•h,
Ann Heffe-rnan and Sue Tierney.
They plan t.o wdte letters to Lhil
editor& of vnriou.s Rochester publications
to proLe.!St :1gninat the
amount of publicity whieb has
been given to such a movement.
"Bernie-ing Up with Love'' is Ma,.y Schumaeher, Jane Bri•banc N . C. Script Writers
Mal'a: Oe.Pre~·· song COilCCrning and Marion Fox formed R tllerry
uthtu.. Bonaventure man.•• eo~~!~~n~t.. intennission wen•_ Holen E uler Radio Contest
"'Vhere oh whel'C ean Lhilt. little Schoenherr, Mau,.ecn McQu.il.k~o Among the members o1 the
name be?" was all that Anne nnd Shirley H11.1J makh\g big ()lncs school to enter the rl\dio script <'OilBre
nnan <:ould wy as she searched (OJ' the Freshman ten dnnce with test spon.!Wred by the Mariology
lrrultii!All}' fo1' n t6gfioMCn on a lhcir eye!! on Saint Bon.avecture. Commi$SiOn or the N. F. c. c. s.
Volentine. 1'h\' wooderful t.ime at the Ju- we.re MariE~ Co1llnl!J', Caroline ris·
"lt'!! the thought behind it thnt nior dance raised high hoJ)e!l r01• citeJio, Kay Temmcrrnan. Suunne
counts'' was the only thing Mur. Anne Voet, Marion LePaae and Tio~ney, Jean SuiHvon, Norma De
iol Meye.r could render in ddNH:e Anne Meiaenu.hl ,.8 they diseus- Pr~t., Dolores Crifl:1n, Libby Mur-of
her 'o-collt!d Valentine. s:ed fo•·mals tor the MeJ·cy .!\..Lum- phy and Peggy Filler
J o&n Li•tmJm•• theme t,ong nae dance. The conte~t. whjch eallet.l !or
seems to be: "Cflrey me back to ''COLGATE" smiles Wl!r~ quite set·iptA t reating some aspect of the
old Michigan State." WhatJa the the vogue for Joan Hartiean and lite or the Blessed . Virgin 'Mary,
I'!!J;t. o( it, Joan? Betty Cava n• ut;b. It's rumot('d Aimed to roster devotion to the
When he- iRn't racing wilh Cu- that they stretch bNween here and Blessed Mother a.s: well as to en·
j)id. Oossipbird flies to all par~ Jlamllton. courage the writing of worthy ra·
of the countl'Y to keep tabs on out· Jord~tn flung open its gnU:.$ the dio-scripta. ~·elve cosh prizes will
cla&$mates. A!tea bearing all the weekend Helen Crotty entm·tained be awarded and, in addition to lhe
plans Betty White ~nd Vi:r-,-inia 1tila O'Neil and Dawn Dillon the twenty.five dollar lint prize, the
Dwyer bad for that Ni<agara week- locnl stores report that the~· nre geript judged ns best wi11 be used
end, he went to see how the)~ nll out of •••·ed j)aint." for a brnadcnst. from AJbany. It
turned out onJy to find Pea Me- Jt wa.s •·eally hard to decide possible, it. will also ~ broad(RSt
lntoa.h~ Lynn D'Arcy and Hclo., whether it waa Ann Hcffer. over a stntivn 10 thl' home to\\1n of
SApie.nu having the time of their- na.n or a tmowma.n coming up th" tho winner.
lives and app~aring at every rtlfnlr. hill ns Ruth Anne Healy, Ro•emary
It. took weeks to henl' aU })bout Bowe and Cerry Schwartz (and
that. Sigma Chi ball and all thl) n tew other important peoplt:o.) anothel'
gajetie!J Ma.ra Snyder en- xiou-sh• awaited hc1· arrival on
joyad while in Nf!w Yol'k t·eeently. their ret'ent excursion at Suicide
Gouipbird left Mnrg up in tho Frill.
clouds and buzzed down to Annap.. Speaking of winter. Phil Bur.
oils to sltotjghten out cel'taio ltlat- ge•• has begun a new fad-the
H·-~ eoncerning train ritles nnd well known ,;now-suit She claim-'
Mary Lou Than•y. that maybe it is:n't a.s eharming a1
On the way ba<:k be met Roac n blt~ck crepe dress but it. ecrt.ainly
Schub~l't, tl n~wcomer to UH! Fresh· i$ wnrm to say the lea.st.
man clus, who trnded the Florida Gos.sipbird haR a long Ust of fu.
Jiun Ior our icy blizzar<la--.bul l'!hu tut•e plan:l which he'~ gathered
Chemistry Beneficial ? ? ?
Many a fledgling chem!•t h•s to
let~;rn tha h&Td way. Fellow 11tu·
dents will never forget the look of
utter horror that <'arne nt:r-oS3 a
Chern. 8 lnb student's face na he
watched a ncatlyooeopied·in~lnk
English tbemtt dissolve in some
spilled hydr<l<'hlori<. Humble title
of the theme: "The BenetiU o!
Chemistry.''
tn
All My Sons, Finian' s Rainbow "''
Add Lustre to Broadway Marquees ::~·,
Hello there. It's good to see Y0\1. ~r
Tbi& i& the season for plays and Helen Hpyea a~; Addie. '-' rnl T
plays nnd more plays. In !net. individual who loses and ftndt·h '
every Jlroadwuy theater iJJ hous- self in the eou~ of the play,,dr
ing a creation of Thespian art. and R eh.a.nte to add a new t}tft cth
there aTe waiting lines of hope!lll Tole to her long list of suecJI ..
writers with st:1·ipt.s in hand ready sto.ge parts., nmong the111 '''"
to grab the tl•·st empty stage. So QU('t!J18 Eli1.abeth and Mn.ry, 'f'th
you see the housing erisis isn't the writel', RnTriet Beecher St:confined
to homes. Say, how would yo\1 like tlVC
How obout o meander along to the theatre to~ther some >ir
Bro..'l.dway? Look, there's the Coro- next week? l have Wednesda.,r
net. 'fhrntro. Let's go over and 4ee tetnoon t-ree-wt could go jltU
what's t.here. I r.nn't l'ead the mar- matinee. There are two wond!:11l''
quee !rom here without my gla~~SC$. new mu$ic.J• in t~wn. 8e1~'
Oo1u;! \Vat.ch out for lhat ca'r. Holiday !rom John Cay't ~~
These New York tu.xi drivers real. Bt ggar's Cpern ot 1728 ia a tt'<t
Jy lake quiW A responsibility for Brondwny 'rheater, and Fi
human lives. upon them. don't Rainbow. at the 4Gth St. Tb(JC~
they? 1 really don't eal'e whtr~ wfl'!tC\(
Oh, it's .4/l M11 Son.-. Isn't. thnt but ... 1 have passes for th~)l
the vJay by Al'thur Miller? I've St. and . .. Yo\1 say you'd lif1·
read whnt &orne of the erit.ies have ue Finian's fl(~i1tbt>tt•? Well, g<•n
1.0 gay about him. Brooks Alkin.son l've h~ard a lot about it: the ~m
says be's very good, "ft g ifted n<'\'1 UHtt I've heard !<() far i!< lyf'
writer" with a ''ape:cial gift. !or and lilting and they say the bJ it
ereoting e:hornete1-s who are really nre something speeinl. \VhJ~tdt•n
people and not merely dramntie about! Well. 1 guess you'd f!lnt:
points of view." 1-lll Mv Sont. a table because it's. about an t-th
which all takes place in the course man who ~teals a tXlt of gold Jan
of a quiet Sunday afternoon. is a depreclw.lln and ptnnts it th
the story of Joe Keller. a small I Americo&, expecting th=-t it ·~:osf
town indu11trinli~t who t~inks there grow • .But th~ authors are ,st.
is nothing in the world b1gge_r than tieed theatre men and the h •
a fnmi1y. Hi& IS:.n Chris tl'ies to never ' lips into the categorf It
tcJJ him that he hns a duly t.o the Saturday aftea·n~n plays for tt I
wot'ld outside their backyard. Our- drcn. The them<>, racial l6le~rit
ing the war Joe had manufactured hol! been used quite ortcn [iJ«u
som~ dcl'ective plnne parts thtll b1.1t not just in thi:> way. The fltn
C!aused th~ death of twenty-one ing ehat ncters, the Irishman rk.
flyers. He doesn't feel the respon· the loprcehaun. never becomc.t"'
dbility ()f theh· deaths on hie intensely serious b1.1t seem to 01•
~houlde.rs; Chri3 points out the outside their parts nnd enjo$\'~
truth to him in the shatt.erinsr JtJight jokeR at politicians. h"
third net. Well, I've enj\lyed t'Jur 111'•
l ht'ar that Hal)Pl/ Birthdav is wnlk. lt'$ jutt crisp enougr
•till at the Broadhurst Theatre. redden the ehoeks. Don't forgo'( 1
The story isn't cspeci3lly good, but date, now. 'Bye.
still kept t.hnt dreamy tan! f1·om our collegians.
Tl1ay're off again-yes. M..-,. Otch Calihan intends to invent N. C. Critic Finds Freshness, Ingenuity of Style
Ellen Tre.cott and El•ine Rinrle. a huter especially to work in con.
•tein nnd this time it's a weekend vel'tible..q while Rosemarie Lucks
at. Syracuse University. plans to get her Mrustor Plumber•s
Speaking of Sya·acu~tc (and they degrel' within lh(• next. few years.
alwfty$ are) Betty Co.Jine, Joao Doria lnca.vo nlso has high ideal"
McNall)' und Helen (Flip) Fera:u· of invention. Her first try is ,going
•on bad quite a weekend not so to be a super delu>:e toboggan
long ago. Just a."k them; U1ey'll tell with a st..<!~J·ing wheel und br ake•!
you! Muie Collin• i& going lo writt'
On the othcf' aide of the fence -she wants solutions for all tho~;e
i.A C~nny Rei~herl who seems to plays thnt get to a c1imax nud then
pr~fer the campllS to h<'t home lcav4." )'OU thet·e. Good luek. Marie.
town, But that's only oi late! We all hope you1· wo1·ks wilJ be
Mary KeUy has <:hanged her publitibcd An;,e Oa.ley wants to
course front Bonaventure to John w1·itc too! She's gelling prncticnl
Cl'n·oll Universit)', MOTE! fun; by en.swering ecrtajn ads in sever-right.
Mtt;ryl al magazines. Any lnck. Anne?
We\•e heard th~t MaFy Barthol· Pre$ident of the- Telephone
emcw went, !lAW and conquer<'d Cotnpan)' jn a (C'W years ia what.
l~ast Rochcsu~•· recently. Let us in Mary M•rg Kcllick is aiming tor.
on your secreta, Ma .. y. And why not? She makes eight
Nancy Oowlina never enjoyed calls to S)•racuse tome weekends.
In White's Charming ''Mistress Masham's Repose"
"Mistress Masham's Repose"
by T. B. White could be called a
sequ~l to Swi1't.1fi f~Gulliver's Tra,v ..
els" it it \\'ere not that the book
had a daintin(>5S and magic of it$
own, a freshness and ins..~ouity or
style T. H. White irnplants in it
from the very first J)&ges.
Maria. the heroine of the story,
i!l ten yUr$ old and nn orphan.
She i; mi:stress of 1i ho\lse Pt Mal·
plaquet in which live her govern·
e!S~. a witch in di~g-uis&. and a
kindly cook. Sut·rounding the hem$:(:>
is a lake enll~ the Quincunx in
which is llTI island. Matia'e refuge
from the tyrant govuness. On
one of ber visits to the island one
day lfaria finds n colony of minia·
ture people who call themselves
Lillipulians. Not obte to "resist. ' there tor the laking nnd the J
th~ rolo or benevolent dietator." lcnt world leaders. would do~
MaTin thinks up ways in wh1eh ~kc it: me•c.siz.e does not gh·tshe
can help the little inhabitants r1ght ta dommate another: ~or
her island. Evcntua!ly she wins is not authorit-y; might i!;
their re-spect and d<·votion nnd se- right, There are othe1· tn
eur<ts to herself the Jll'Omh;e or which nn Qb~rvnnt. read(!r
their 13ve.l'lasting protection. In one find hiding behind '"'mid&UB!
instt&nce Maria iA in~pri.&oned by night's daintiness," ··m_ag-ical
Miss Brown. her governess. The viuejngueu" illld "quaint
Lilliputians swarm to her rescue teonth eentury language."
and not only free hel' but bring The A me-rira says about
Mis!ll: Bro\\-,1 to justice. tress Mafthnm•!li Repose" that
AR '•GulliveT's TraveltL" was a Cor the uyoung of all age~'' tu_,
t:Atire for the people of Swift's day "ancients or all age-s will I'Jot
,;o '1Mbtre!iis Ma$ham'a Repose" lime twa it. 'fhey would not
bud t1. mornl tor the people of all Limo owr c.hildrc.n either." F~
tl.ges. lt is not obtruaivc.; it does cape frolll prc~nt.. dRy troobll_
not totoe its.cl! upon us but it. is teeotnmen1 thi§ no\•eJ.
~ "Catholic Boy Meets Catholic Girl"
l Par ish Youth Clubs Score High with Milady Nazareth;
Dinner Meetings, Entertainment Acquaint Members
The JU'trish is a great thing.
li<ten to what Milndy NaUlrotb
~ to say ubout parish youth
1 dubs:
'"Tbey-"re terrific and the best
~lng in tho wot·ld !or the kid,,"
1
•YK Doris tneavo ttbout. parish
'!lJulh elobs. Ooric1 hers4.11f, is a
""mber of the youth club H. R. Y.
in Boly _ROO:~mer pal"ish. The
1b is ope.n to resident parishiona
gl'O\lP to sponsor various activi-
1
apJ)rOXi!'IH\tely 175 persons. Open
ties. both spiritual and t;.<leinl. It ~ all single f)er-50118 between 19
is an asset for n pariah to have its and 30, tbi.s club has !or its modyoung
)>Cople organized so thal eral(Jr, Fathe1• Colli ns. It ainls to
they may 00 active membors. of acquaint YO\lng Catholic pe_ople:
that parish". with each other through discus-as
well as those outside tbe
ri.!h: young poople !ronl highbool
Freshmen to eolle!te Seniors
t tld. Besides receiving Commu·
The Joyce 1\ilmer Club of Btes- sion~. ping pong, cords, dancing
sed Sacrament parish, n fledgling uud badminton. R(l(reshm<'nts. are
Ullder the moderution o.f Father served at the meeting. Nat.nt"eth
P~nam, held it.s firs-t. dinner meet- partieipants in the fun are ·Mar·
ing on Februnry 1'7 with his Excel- guerit.e McDonald, Betty CrDwley,
le.ncy, Bishop Kearney, as ·guest o! Relen Sweeney, Mary Jan€:' Fl'aw.. ..
honor. The dub, open to those ley, Joan Spindler &nd Helen
s ingle and married persons be· Ryan.
·Jon n1onthly as a group, th(! H . .R. tween 18 and 35, boasts of the
\'.A. e:ponsors dances throughout largest roste1·. by far, of Nazareth
:\t year. Dori~ and her siste1-. eollcgisul~. They i1lCh1de Jean Swee·
nita, are the only N. C. re)>l'C• ney, Joan Keenan, Gloria Connor,
tatatives in the H. R. Y. A. Georginnnc Dailey, Mary Ellen
~owevcr, the tituation is ditfer· Shea, Ginny Reeves. Jane Brady~
in t.he St. Thomas More Club Connie Smith, Jane McLaughl1n,
St. Andrew's parish. 1~he two Ruth Ann ffealy, Noreen Carey.
te.stables, Rita nnd Vicki, Ann Corcou.n, Marion l..ePhge.
• ine Kolersni..k, Maureen McQnil- Mn1·y Quinlan and Dorothy Flor· 1 , Joanne Sehleuter, Joyce Et'cth aek. Monthly dinner m~etings w_ill
l d Frnn McBride, college 11tu- feature young g\lest--speaker s, d 1S·
fits, and alumnae. Virgini.- Sul- cu&siot1;s and ;;odol diVersions.. The
n and E\'<!lyn Contestable, are club was n:l.med niter Joyce Kil·
iv~ members. Run on a different mer b;!'cause he was a fine example
·~.the St. Thomas More Club is or a young Cat.holic laymnn who
l to married couples nnd single exerted 1.1 gtent. influence on the
na betw~n lhe ages of 18 and people around him. The .club aints
Th!:! meetings are combined aL improving the members' own
lh a grou)> dinner followed by knowledge of their t·eligion so they
h ocing. Vicki Conte~tablc says, con talk it and live it in the fac·
e 11 .\ elub ol this type is vct·y worth tory. in the schools, over the cof-
ISf hilt because we need an orga.ni- ~ fee-cups
t tion like it to bring young paople ''The Moni~ns" of St. Monica'~;
u1 ther so thaL they may net ~s Parish 1>ouL of a membcrs.hip of
AU~ntion ! Attention! Five new
meJ. have bten added to our roll
11! Nnu:trcth extend!; 3 big welnH:
to the foJlowing girls:
Gl'Qr~innne Dailey of the Junior
~'l is a Sociology Major and the
v1btu of Roc.ht'ste·r's post-
1 .as~r. Her sistor, Kny. is a Naza-
4n ~th College graduate. Ceorgianne
me~ to U!f from Sargent Schoo)
C•mb,.idge, Moss.
Anne Burke of the F1·eshman
ri is i.n the Liberal Arts Cour~
tlle a.ntl is the daughter of Rochester's
's Frderal Judge, Harold Burke.
\II Annt> oomes to us from St. MaryriFl
f·the--\Voods in Indiana.
Jane Murphy, also a Fl'osh~ is
t 1 lhe Science Course and she
W1 tran~rers to us from Lhe College
Gra.t f St. Catherine in St. Paul, :Miun.
· pln 1t !!o4.'ems that the Frosh class is
y I~ lucky one this time !or our
cbl d two girls are also Freshmen.
l\n~ Clarice Beikirch is n Secretarial
tWI Major end comes from Cnsanovia
lend unior College iJ1 Ca.sanovia, New
al'll l'oTk. Rose SchuOOrt is a Liberal
l r Artc Major £rom B3rry Co11ege in
;ttl lli.ami, Florida. \Ve're glad to
, l hne you, girls. and may N.t'M-rttb's
friendliness make you wcl-
1ittlcom~.
b
•""' TUCKER'S Inc.
--1 300 EAST MAIN
AR'
~~ The Catholic Shop
MoYie Fa'Yorites
Star Otl W. S . A . Y .
Movie·star fnvorites are joining
a Christian effort to bring to lhb
p\•blic the importance oC family
prayer in a nf'w Thurstlay night
show over Mutual's W. S. A. Y.
at 10 P. M., "The Family Theatre.'•
It'& dire-cted by the A pototle of
the Family Rosnt•y, Father Peyton.
S. J .. and features stars like Bing
Crosb)'. Loretta Young, Don Ameche,
Jimmy Stewarl, Gregory Peck.
JosC})h Cotten. Pat O'Brien, Jrene
Dunne nnd Lionel Barrymore. ~:fuJlic
ls directed by Meredith Wilson.
Father Peyton hopes, through
the J)rogram, to bring the idea of
family prayer back into the home
and to sb·frngthen generally the
basic unit of society-the family.
Be urges the su ppo·rt of Catholics
in praying lor the succ:ess of the
prnjed. enC0\1 rag-ing others to tune
in on the program and writing letters
or appreciation to Station W.
S. A. Y .. to Lhtl star! J>Cr;SOnally or
to the Family Rosat•y, Albany S,
New York.
+ +
FAVORS - TROPHIES !
CLUB J EWELRY
SCHOOL and COLLEGE
RINGS
The Metal Arts Co.
Inc.
742 Portland Ave.
Greetiug Cards I Rocheste r, N. Y.
"Our Representative
Will Gladly Call"
Another highly successful young
people's group h; the 11Vicars'' or
Corpus Christi purjsh.
One of' the ·most. active )Huish
Drgani1.ations in Rochester is the.
St. John Fisher Club ot Sacred
Heart Pa rish. l t..ti; members arc
composed of single and married
peopJ~ between the ages of 20 and
30. Their meetings arc informal
supper gathe1·ings. by ~and lt'light.
and oft('n a guest speaker is present.
Father McAniff, the spiritual
director, preaides over lhe MasK
and Wig cntertttinments and "get
ae:quninted'' dances held by the
tlub.
The Nazareth mernbe•·s are
Alyce l1adden, Mtlf"gaTel C•.,·en.
Betty Short, Mnry Elizabeth Cooney
and Nancy Riggs. Just by the
way. this club ha.s a record of more
maninges o/ ucatholic boy meet.A
Catholic girl" lhan any other org~
n i ?.ation in Roehi!St.er.
Edith Goff Directs
Mission Book Sale
By popular demand the Fremin
Mission Unit will sponsor another
book sale. Starting Monday, J."eb·
ruary 17, the Mi:tsion Book Counter
in th<.- Mission Room wt~ s OJ)'en
for business. Although still spon·
sored by Tn\ nl's. the set-up will
be different ft·om thot of the previous
book w le. A grOUJl of sample
books will be d isJ>laycd f rom which
ordet'S may be placed. A week will
be l'equired ror filling each order.
Senior Edith Goff h•• retained hor
dire<:tion of th<! sale. ably &Mii.!>ted
by Mary Ka.y Jo'O$l.cr, Freshman.
The primary aim of the project
is 1~0t to raise mg,ney although the
Miasion:\ rccei\'C 10 per CEnt. on
every book tsold. Rather the .Mis.sion
Board hopes to k .. p Catholic
liter,lture before the st\tdents so
that they n>uy profit by good reading.
The Sodality Literary Committee
under Karline Koenen nnd
Betty White also is sharing in the
respom;ibi1it.y of lhe project.
Religious Articles
·111'---'.l. -----+
BRIGHTON PLACE DAIRY
Div. Of Gen. Ice Cream Corp .
l
By
ANN
PREDMORE
Three Little Fish Freeze
At Canute Snow Outing
"""T""h'-os:;e__w,b..o- -c-ra-vo-d,---m--or-e- ,--br-,--,idguwent
back to the farm house, but
we who were thoroughly exhausted
from the st-re:nous exereir;e beat the
honlcward path.
Kerplop! Splash ... Splash .• .
Sptttsh. Three very soaked tobog·
ganers came to the surface of the
icy waters. These tJtrce Jittle fishes
were, In the order of their Llppear·
ance, Joan Hartigan. PaL t.emm
and Janet Riess. The event Df their
predic:tunent. was their going
through the ice on the toboggan
at tha outing at Canute's a fcw
week$ ago.
'•PI."arl of b('nuty. vision of love.
line~. g-irl or my dreams"-this
was Janet, nnd Pal and Bart
\napped in blankets with hair-a·
rro1.en and ~t1~·a·chatt.ering.
Ot1tside of thls main catastroph~
the event was a ga la ,;uccess. When
we first arrivt'd at. the Canute
Fal'm almost everybody donned
skates and, outside of Sue WJgg's
and Mary Ellen McC• rthy'$ "hot.
f'o<>t:;," lhe whips and pivotting
and figure skating were enjoyed
by all. Such ent.hu!>iasta as Betty
Joneli, Paulo Spearman, Mimi Moge.
nhan and Jean Reinhardt got.
scores Df whip!; going and Anne
Brennan was the only one to get
fro)llt-bitten t.oos.
A!to1· we finished ice-!Skating
and tobogganing, everybody wenl
up to lhe farm house and those
who were lucky enough to find a
deck of cards engaged themselves
in a sporting gnme of bridge, with
the non-inte.ltcetuals resorting to a
hot game of pig in the corner. To-ward
six o•cJock vndou~> sultl'y aromas
filled the I"'Om and $0me
nnive people ()~ Ot mentioning any
names) move<.l their bridge gnme
to the kitchen, ,,•here the $Upper
was to be served. Notl1ing like bll'ing
the firat in line for the buffet
supper!
Alter cveJ·ybody had filled hcr~
elf to eapacity. we do1mcd heavy
sweaters and jackets and went on
a hay ride around the farm. VnrioulS
})Cople, of course, Ce11 ofr the
wagon but we a ll enjoyed ourselves,
singing and throwing hay
at each other (great sport!).
Former Wave
Discovered
Among Frosh
The class of 1950 stntted the
year out right when it learned that
one of its fellow cJass.mn.tes was a
fot·mer WAVE.
Mnry Elizabeth Jones started
her venture on Mny 31, 1.944 when
she report<>d nt New York City for
her first nssignment. Her boot.
training consisted in six weeks. of
schooling at Hunter's Co11eg:e in
New York. From there s he was
sent to W nahiugton, D. C. where
$he spent the re•nainde-r of her
Lime attached to the Chief o! Noval
O~rntions Center nnd l:l.ter
to the Naval Conununicntions Annex.
She resided at. t.he quarters
provided fo.,. the Waves which. she
claim~. we1-e ''ery eomforlllbt~.
Her Jeisu1·c time wa.s always
well spent. Eligh spOt& were: canoeing
on the Potomne River and
camping in the Blue Ridge Mountains
in the Shenandoah Valley.
Some of her weekend 1>asscs were
put to good use in New York City.
The rec.l'ea.tional center in Washington
o.lso 1)1'0ved very entertaining.
Betty says that one of the
nicest spots wa$ the bea\ltiful
swimming pool which wa:s provi·
ded for the Waves' use. Loc!al band
eoncert.s also entertained.
Betty was di$(!htn·ged at Mtm·
hattan Towers in New York City
on Marth 9, 1946. After h~r dischArge
her first actiou was to
"hor' n pJnne'' and head back home.
Pr"ior to her enlistment, Betty
'''as gradttated from Nazareth A·
eodemy i.n 1941. She hs- now a busines!
2 rnnjor her~ at Nnznt"Cth. She
has 11ve bt·others, four of whom
saw action overseas.
8 THE GLEANER
SPORTS
CASTING lG I Faculty Forward
(Continued from page 1)
~ "' . mRrkablC' ('Xhibit.t~, particulttrly
by M !CKEY TRESCOTT notnblo In X-ray difl'rnetlon, Spec-hWhen
I t~ hoot. tl(' bnll dfs way, then you go dnl.. wn)r!" exeluimcd
Ninina trying to explnin her signals to one ot hct• teftmmat.es.
Alter watehlnK Ninina handle the bkll for one minute, we are
convinced thal the Provinctt of Mantanzo.a, Cuba. i.\ minu..~ its star
basketball playerc
Alter .:atehint Jo.aoe; .. Slim•• Schlueter play for one minute,
we an eonvine:ed thal .orne unfortunat~ J>ei'IM)n will undoubtedly end
op with a bJaek tye. Sht urft keep her clbOY.'W to herself, ean lhe.
Lou?
\\Tben Naxarcth Academy invaded Pittdord Jt"ebrul\ty 21, Nazareth
CoJiege ran UJl ngRinst one of the strongest high school teams in
Rochester. 'rhc IJrelimhutry game showed Nnzn1·eth AcAdemy Sopho·
mores ngnin8l the SL. Ag nes Institute SophA..
CO-OPS EDGE 2nd ""d 4lh FLOOR 28-17
Lro8COl>Y. Blo1>hysics, Malariology,
Electron and Phase Mieroscopy.
The Catholic Round Tablo of
Scit':n« devoted the main part of
it. 11e11Jtion to a pnc:tieal and con·
eentratfd toMidcration of tht op.
portunili~ of Catholic inwtitutiona
participating in the advantages of
1101nc future Kilgor-1\lagnuuon
Bill. thould it be brought up at I he
n~xt. Congress.
In Albany, , •
N. C .• Pitt..rord. N. Y.- The Co-opo won a hard-rougbt victory A mteting of the key muoeums
over the 2nd and 4th ftoora eombined on February 12, in the fint or New York and Eas.tern Canada
nme or the evenlnr buketbalJ Jeasrnl!. th.-. llt'nrf'l hf.ing 2R t.A 1 '1 was ht>ld ~ntly in Albany in
Fr•n Kuch waa high for the Co--opa with 16 pOints while Ni..oina conjunction with the F~neh-Ca-was
hig-h for the Dorm with 6 point&. nadian eonferene.!' and exhibition Ninin.a, Fra_n $prlnaer. Mimi Morenh.a.n, Fran Kuch and
The neJtt gftme ahowed the 3rd ftoor plAying St.. Joe"s (Brown In the pll•ry. The purposo of the Marion Morran
Rouse) February 20, followed by a game belw .. n the Sopb day bops meeUntr Wftl I<> establish a -tion 1.-------------------------
and the l<'ro•h dny hops on February 27. or tho Am•riean Asoociation or Nazareth Stars Subdued by Academy
In th~ l"'~cent. anme between t he Mere!y High Senior team and t.he Museun1" fo1· Eastern Canada 11nd 81 HILDA Dl CIULlO
olumnae, Mary Ell~n McC"rthy. Ann Predmore nnd Sue Wigg put up New York nrea. Represent.nUves L-;;;;,;:;;;-c;;;;;:::-;;;;;;;;;-;;,~-;;;-===========:j
a good bnttle buL o11ly lo go down in defePt. of lending museums Cx-prt'88ed Nnzal"'(!th CoHege found glory in
N. C. trnveled to 1 1 M C-tl!)' High on Februnry 10, participating in their need ror sueh a servict' or· defeat. when t hey met up with tho nl played an ext.eplionally ·-~
a basketball J)layday, Amonscst those who attended were Ma.ry Quinn RaniJ.Ation and a conference ~troup mighty basketeers from Naz.rt>th defensive as well •• offeru.
and Terry O'Brien. for an interchange or idtae bt Academy, Februart 21, in the I'Yln· pme).
Here:"a one (or 1he boolu: Down in B.altimort reeentl)• the girb' tween the smaller n'luS~eums par SpectatoN saw a faat-moving. The guards who were nos~
basketball tOAnu of Tov.-11<>n Catholic High and Park School played a ti<ularly. •hilty, skillfully played gan,. and ble for stopping many ace~
l to 1 tie. Neithtr sidt' made a field goal. Tow.on made one of ill Profe-.:sor Long was elected lee' tht)' we:nt away well pleued. It Lhreats and keepin.r tht A~&
:seven s.hots from the foul line good and Park wa1 able to make one of retary of this group to carry on was a g-reat ba~ketba11 nest..a optn~ at its lowe.st ICOI"e of an)' pi
its si.x foul attempt.~. A tot.A1 of 17 girl.J: participated. the bul!ineu of organizing, e.stalr ing with Naz.anth CoiJc.-ge Rnt to this year induded Ann Predmt
Snow! Snow1 Snow1 Ji!hin-.r a quarlerly bulletin, and eplit the meshe-S for two I)Ointl. Mar)• Quinn, Jean Helnhardt ~
Nazal'()th't winter spQrts a1·e coming of nate This year, for the creating a section to convene with The Academy t..rdlicd soon nft~r w Theresa O'Brien, all of w~
first time u rc~rulnr winl.<'r carnival wat held Rt. Cnnute's farmhouse th~ American Association of ?tfu makr it two all. From then on It handed in fine pe..t'ormnnce,_, R~
on Lyons Rotld, Fcbnuu•y 21. le~ ~kating, p,klin~~r. tohogganing and seuma when it meets in Quebec in waa nnybody's game. Excellent de- O'Ne il, Joan l::larUgnn nnd H~
a sleigh ride d~lightcd the outdoo•· enlh uaiaat, with such additional the Spring. Mr. John 0. Hatch.Jr renee aa well a.s otTen8e on the J>Brt DiGiulio pulled on effective ~.
indoor nttraetlonl U A hol rneal, bridge and 1qUa1·e dancing. What of th~ Albany Institute of Art. of both team.s kept the au&l)f'nllf' zone defense on lht Academy (
more could one ••k for! Wft-1 madf' eb•irman and Mr. Paul hisrh a.s the end of the firat half ward:s keeping them prad~
Along the aa.rne tine, another CABIN PARTY was held at. Rainville. director of the Province found th~ Aeade.my aheed to th• scoreless in the la.at quarter.
A:lendon Pond!, Saturday, March S. of Quebtt Museum. was made ,..;e+-- tune of 2:! toll. Final score of the pnw ~~
COLUMBIA SCHOOL-NAZARETH COLLEGE CLASH ehalrman. In addition t<> tht <On The seeond ball found th• Aoad- NaureLh Aoadtn>)' 31: Nau,;l
March G found our Alma Matter's mernutlda meeting Columbia !ertnee v.•ith the Association ot f'n1)' scoring 9 mo~ pointa while College l'i.
School in a awinnninr meet held at the Monroe Pool. MuacumA this group wilJ htwe a the college dunked for 6 more A second thrilling game bel..-.
UN IV. ol ROCHESTER WATER BALLET TO SHOW filii meeting 11<>mowbero in New point•. The Academy hold the lORd St. Agnes High Of Roche•ter ~~
Miu lltlx.t:l Wilbrflhttm , director or the Unlvel'tity of Rochestel' Yo1·k Stnte. . lhroughout the second httlf. thotagh OcSales High of C(lnC'va ttaw 'i
water ballet, hna nnnounccd another ull-gi••l ehow to1· t.he River Cam- mnny ~Storing threat~ by the Cpl- Agnes overJ)Owered by the d\
J)U!S J}()OI on Murch 20, nnd Mi~ Ross, National lJivlng' Chl-mpion, will lege kept the outcome in qu~l!ltion fl'Om Ceneva. a2 to 4.
again be the gue1t performer. <lioc. Con-vention until the final whistle.
Tt is advisable thnt tickets be purch .. ed ••dy •• the demnnd Calls N_ C- Delegates
will be heavy_
KAMMER TRIUMPHS
Jack Btnaon ha.t replac~d EJaine Ringletttin at swimming instrue:~
tor at the Monrot Pool on Thursday eveninp.
Don't be bashful. girl$! Helen Kammer finds hit instruction ,.~r)•
helpful in the perfection of her cr-awl. Helen Limidly swam aeross the
pool to where J nck Wft.l standing. looked UJ> with those Jlleading eyes
nnd asked, " Could you tell me whnL is wrong with my crflwl!'' Fo1·
those who tll"e Interested, Jack Benson is nwr•·led nnd hns a lovely
ehild. Oh w•ll-<> li ttle J"tl in must fall!
MOCENHAN SCORES 120
On Decomber 29, Sis~r Paul
ette a~mpanied by students ·Mary
Kay O'Sulli••an and Betty C081ing
attendtd tht Ameriean Catholic
So<:iolosrY Students' Convention in
Chlc•go. Post-w•r problems ouch
Among those to carry the honors
ror lhe College w•re: rorwarda
Fran Springer (you would 1te
her dead~ye. one-hande-d pu•h
thot!): Mar)' Ellen b!<Carthy, Mimi
Mogenhan, Marilyn Metz,
Fran Kuch and ltary Fraver (who
TOWN TA:;-j
BAKERY, Inc. I
601 Pullman Avenue I
BASTIAN BROS•
co_ :
Official ~
RING u
MANUFACTURERS ~
1
GEORGE 0. KILLIP ~
Diatrict Manaaer
ll
1600 CLINTON AVE. N. 1\
Clonw90d 3380
Bowling got off to a good start Wednesday. February 12, at
Buonomo's BowlinJ llall. High scorer for the afternoon was Mimj
Mo,-eft_ha.n tollow~d by Gerry Swaru and Muy Kay Kle•. Bow about
you eoming out ne.xt Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 p m..!
The '"airl o( the month" is Fra.a Kuc.h who VO\\'td to give up s_mok:ing
&O thal f'ht wou1d be in top-notA:':b condition for the swimming meet
on March G. Hat H1\! Ha! Oid you know ch•t Fran uaed to be t he
fastest. swimmer on J ~on LAke?
as Juvonil~ dtJinquency, the de l cline ot the family and divotcc
J)QVel·ty and racial to1enulce wer(l
dlseueoed. The delegates docid<'<l an
activt ,.t.-.u on Catholic prind t
pi~ and an application of thue 1
princlplea in the individual'• own I lift wtre vital to the solution of
th ... probl•m<.
~~:t~:re:~Rd
' ''-----------.;~ Every Day, We Go
1n closing, I aubnlit t.hia poem which I did nol wdte but one
whieh I believe to be ftJ)J)ropriate.
A CHAMP (?) FUNERAL HOME
You•· Way.
Phone Glenwood 6772
A darin• fa.I!II<':J' diver aM I,
TJ\e beat the world ha.a •eel". 828 JAY STREET •---------+
I arch •n twiat, 'n tuc:lc "n pike.
And cut the water dean.
They talked aboul me o'er the mike
'Bout how the crowd• did roar,
And thon, I wolce from out a dream,
A l7inr on tbe Ooor J
TR~~T'S, Inc. ...,.
Catholic Supply Store
Religious Articles for Church and Home I
96 Clinton. N. liS Franklia St.l
Phone Maia 301
Genesee 300 I
~ ·~-------------·
1 Compliments of
HE'I'ZLER FOUNDRIES. I
1 Inc. I
lc _____ l
+-----+~] Wm. F. Predmore r
Relig iouo Artidea for I Boucher Florist the Family
Prayer Books - Ro .. _rles I I I I' Med•l• and Claa_iu I
M. E. SWEENEY
Asphalt Produeb
612 River Blvd. I r22 Main St. E. Stone 96 L. ·-' ::·::·· <:&rd. I
THE CENTRAL
PHARMACY
9 SOUTH MAIN ST.
PITTSFORD, N. Y.
Telephone Pittoford 294
•
Meet the Gang At The
Dwg Store
A GOOD FRIEND
AND NEIGHBOR
.,.,
••
tl
ROCHESTER CAS It ELE<
TRlC COMPANY h intere..t..._
in the proerou and proaperH:
of this aroa. ll P•.r• larl'• IUdl
in ta.xes to loc.al, 1tate and ht;~
oral eover nmenh, 1t contrll
ute.s aulutantially to commu~
ty projec.ta and both compar
and men aad women work./ 1
1upport CIW"ery acth•it7 that btt!l~
e6t. thia reclon. In ahorl , uf
R, C. &. E. trioa to be a l"'d
(riond a_nd neiahbor o( t\. l
people it acrvo1. I)
" h.
Rochester Gas & Electri.••