Farewell, Good Luck
Seniors On Exams!
Vol. XXXIII-No. 7 NAZA!tETII COLI, EGJ.:. ltOCUEST.En. N. Y. Friday, May 9, 1958
May Day to Commemorate Lourdes;
Crowning of Queen to Climax Format
Naza•·eth will present her thirty-fourth annual l\Iay
Day on Thursday, llfay 15. Because of the centenary
year celebration. Our Lady of Lourdes will be especially
honored.
"All generations shall call me bles:~ed." A mol'ning of
devotion to Ou•· Lady and her Immaculate Conception
will commemomte the Lourdes Centennial on Nazareth's
May Day program.
1'ho ncLivilies spons~red by honey, sophomon!g; Nuncy J\och
Sodnlily, aud under the eo-c.hair- nnd Pnuln S mi l h. lt1t.l§hmen.
mnnshlp of o'1nry Agnes Lynch Scenes ft·om o newly published
and Lenh Wehluge, wiiJ include a play will be presented in honor
l>rc>ce•~ion (based on the actual of the Mny Queen. After honor
Lourdes procc~sion). and :1 series ha.s been given to the queen, she
of tnblraux pteturing the signi- then will pny homage to Our
fo""nee of Mm y through histcry. Lndy of Lourdes by crowning bet·
The tnbleaux will fel\\un the Queen of Nunreth.
Speech Choir, appropriate hymns, General chairman of the day is
•• welt os •citing• designed by Mar;e Argana.
the Art Det>at·tment.
May 15 Dc!ltes Annual
Sister Class Banquets
~l ay Day, M ~y 15th. also dates
the day of the annual Bil[-Little
Sister BanqueUI. ~l ory c .. s,ro•·e
::and l larcia Bt>echfr. chairmen.
have announced that the sophs
will fete the class of '68 at
Hedges Nine Mile Point Hotel.
Fro~h Felt~ Juniors
At six p. m. the Mme day the
irosh will entertnin the class of
'59 at Lo1·cnzo's. Gcnerul chaiL'·
man Mary Anaw Enni!ll is tdded
by:
Invitations, Dot'Othy 1't·ybulski;
Flowet'!l, Cnrol Cummings: Programs,
Mary Elizabeth Cmwley;
Entea·tainment, 1\uy 8atTctt; A.t1.,
Paul:ne Basamani::a, Con n i e
0 o d g e ; Transporution. Judy
Finn, Camille Morris; Reservat
ionh, Rosemnt·y Salerno.
In the uftcrnoon there will be
the long-awaited uppeur:tnee of
the May Queen ond hor court.
Identity or the Mt~y Queen and
Senior nllcndanb is unknawn un·
til theit· RI>Jlc&runce. Other attendants
ure Elizabeth Ma rsh and
Lortlla Uenner. juniors; Mary
.t\nne t.anck nnd Suz.anne I\1a-
Vacation Plans Include Study
At Oxford for English Maior
When school t'c·OIJen• next Scplembea
·, nil will have memories of
the !'IUmm«.w past. Some wi11 even
huve :HOuvl•nirs ~1nd stories or a
EurOJlCnn trtr>. On~ such will Uc
Juniors Anticipate Yearly
Prom Tonight at Brooklea
The Junior Prom. always long awaited and long remembered
by Nazarenes, is in the immediate offing for
the Cll1~s of '5!l. Today, May !l marks the big day this
yea1·. Gene Zacher will provide the music at Brooklea
Country Club from 10 to 1.
1'rmit:ht rlimt~H~Jl ,,.,..,.k_ o/ ltnr,l •rork /ur (lt>/r IH ri~ht) } otm Tur, er.
l..tmrtt l'ollu. IJe~#t rr;, ,~,... (:r~lt'l;f'n 0 .Jtf•r. ht~tt..•· II i;:.;:.
Following the precedent set by the Class of '58, the
dance will be preceded by a buffet suppe•· for the Juniors
and thci1· escorts.
According to Cathy Wigg and Gretchen Oster, co-chairmen
of the event, a Japanese theme will be carried out in
the decorations for the dance.
Assist.ing Cathy and Gretchen are Peggy Winters,
chait·man of decorations; Joan Turner, tickets and programs:
and Laura Polla, publicity.
Betty Boyle, English nwjor and
member of the Clns• of 1959, who
is sailing on June 7 fo•· f:ngland
und a hHJ)J)V summ~r abJ·oad.
Stud)• at Oxford
Because Betty feel• that a combination
of study and travel will
benefit h~r more, sh• has applied
to and been
accepted f 0 r
study at St.
Hilda's Cotlege,
Oxford.
She will tnke
a six weeks'
co u r~e o_f study
~taJ'ting July
7th and ending
August 15th.
The gene•·al Urn~ Ut.•> lc
title of the
course is "A Survey of 17th Century
England" and includes history,
lilernture. und art - a
course designed Cor sonlc 150
graduate and under~traduate students
from nil over the world.
Betty hns nlu re!Ci•tcred fot· a
s pecinl seminaa· r(lnting to her
mnjol'. In the tsmnllea· +~after
school" group, John Donne and
the '"etnphyKicnl Jlocl.o! will be
discussed.
Phm~ Tour~
NccdleKt to oay, UeUy is tookjng
ftn·w~u-d to hct· t.ri1> with a
great deal of anticipation and cnthusinsm.
In the free time she
has befot-e classes begin and after
the coui"Se is completed. she plans
to see us much or Engl3"d and
Scotland as •he can, und is also
hoping to join a lou• of France.
In her OW II wot·de, Uctly reels
that thi• i• "n great OJ)portunlty
lo learn how other students live
nnd whnt they think on matters
vital to all of us." Bon voyage!
Commencement Calendar
Msgr. LeBlanc to Address Graduates
The annual baccalaureate Mass wiU be celebrated on Sunday, June
I, at 11 A.M. Th• s•niON! will march in proees•ion to th~ Motherhouse
Chapel, starling from the auditorium at 10:46 A.M. Ills Excellency
Bishop Kenrney will offer the Mass and lllso deliver the
baccal:lut·eate set·mon. The hil[h Mass, especially pt·epared 1.0 be aung
by the seniors. i~ the Mass .. Regina Pttcisu by Bntgers. Part o! the
ceremony includes a presentation of flowel"s to Our Lady by the president
of the Undeqp·nduate association and the pt·esident o! the
senior class.
Foll~wi ng the MusA, u luncheon will be held fot· His Excellency nnd
the officers in the college dining room. A new feature to be introduced
on this occasion is the t•eturn of the silver jubilat·ian class (1933).
The members of this class, whose forme~· presidenL is lliss Virginia
Kirch, will be present for Mass and will be luncheon guests of th•
Bishop. The college plans to make this annual event an alumna
tradition.
Commencement wilt tnke place on the following day, June I, at
~ :00 P.M., and will be h•ld on the campus if weather perm ita. The
spe:>ker this yenr will be the Itt. ne••. ~lsgr. ln·inJ: .\ , l)eUianc.
The lot"! numbet· of gt·aduate• is 92. Of these, 38 students had
their major field in liberal m1.s, 4 in science, 4 in m·t, 4 in medical
leehnolc.gy, 4 in mutsic, 9 in busine.s~, and 1 ln speech.
'l'he exercises wiJI be preceded by a pt.u-ent-senioJ· Juncheon n.t noon.
Prior to these two cu lminating events of the year arc n number o.f
important dntcs:
May 18- Resident s tudt•nt•' dinnct•.
May 21-Study Ony.
May 22 to 29-Exnnll. (Exams on the 29th scheduled fot· !t·eshmen
and sophomores only.)
llay 28-Gt"t\duates to be received into Alumnae Assoeiation at evening
meeting in the !;Oeial room of Medaille Hall.
)lay 29.-Junior·senior luncheon.
Class Day at 2:30 P.M.
Senior Ball.
May 30-Memorial Day.
May 31-Seniot· D11y or Recollection, conducted by
Hev. George S. Wood.
Dean's Dnnquct for ga~tdu:1tcs.
State Approves Loans
For College Students
The New York li igher Education
Assistance Corporation .. a
non-profit corporation, eretlted for
the purpose ot lending funds t.o
students who at·e r~sidents of
l\ew York State to ussis~ ~hem in
meeting their expenses ot higher
education at colleges in this state
or elsewhet-e, has •-ecently been
authorized t.o gunrnntce toan8 Ktu.
dents obta ined from ptivate
SOUI'CC$.
Eli~ribi l it y
Under lhis hw.•, students may
apply fot· an educationul lonn to
a bank and, if apJtroved, the t-epayn>
enL of the loan will be guarleed
by the New York Higher
Education Assistsnce Corporation.
Students under t went:y·one
years of age nrc eligible for such
lo;tn5.
A loan may not be guarun·
teed ror an amount in cxeegs or
$1,COO for any school year.
Furthet• detuiled info•·molion
will be avuil:tble in Sister Gabriella's
Office, Room IJ3, front corridoJ".
10 Seniors Plan
European Tours
The summer of 1958 wtll be remembered
by ten 1958 gmduat.es
ol NaUU'eth as the •ummet th~y
went to Europe.
Anne LaPalm nnd Mar> Ann
McGrath sail Ju•y lOth on the
Italian Line, and will return to
the States August 29th. !Ughi[
ghting their trip will be a private
audience with the Holy
l"nther. Mary Mall er will tout·
E:ut·ope with u gmup of college
s.udents called the Crunc Collegiate
Singe•·•· The cho•·us will
give five concerts all ovel' Europe
and also sing at the A merle an
Pavilion of the World's Fair.
.N I<" Tours
Sue O'Oay, Flelen Calnan, Jane
Donnelly, Effie Hanchett, Jackie
Gabe l, Virginia ll nmill, and Joyce
i\lo-oney are touring- Europe with
the NFCCS tour. They leove ,June
23rd Irom New York nnd will sec
Get'n>any, France, Italy, Holland,
Austria, Switzerlnnd, Englund,
and Belgium. Helen is plm>ning
nn extended fout· weekR' Lou•· of
Ireland.
2
The
Chaplain's
Corner
by Rev. Wm. 1-1. )ihonnon
Auyonc who has been to Lotll'·
des has •U Sl>ecial feel ing for this
ycttr of centenary. It has been rny
happy privilege to have Spent sev·
eral days there on two ditfet'enl
occasions. The last t ime was in
195<1. I ~ wa. mid August, just
niter the feast of t he Assumptio11.
I was not aJone. Over 100.000
people had crowded into this little
village. They came from different
CQunlries throughout the world:
they spoke many diffel'ent lungunge.
s. One of the mos t irnpi'CS·
seve events ilt Lolll·des is the
nigh tly procession by candlelight.
As the procession winds its way
in s1ow und orderly fashion thru
lhe immense shr·ine ground~. thousands
or pilgrims t•nise their
voices ir\ the wo)·ds of the famous
Lolll·des hymn. Each pcr·son s ings
in his own Jang-aa~re : yet the diffctence
of language
is scarcely
n o t i ced.
Though the
wot·ds are di!·
fcrent, t bey
arc ull saying
the same thing.
They are honor
ing the
Mother of God
iII 8 pI ace Fnther Shronnon
where she
asked to be honored. They are
adding lheir bit to the fu lfillment
o.f her confident prediction: uBehold,
all genet·ations shall c:oU me
blessed." Then at the end of the
procession the pilgrim~ g11ther in
the famous square before the
huge Rosary Chapel: :md for "
few moments differences of language
and nationality d.isappea1·,
as all join together in s inging the
L1otiu words of the Credo rf the
Mass. They are Catholic• and
they are Mary's children: this
unity of the spirit cuts throuj!'n
the differences of national ity and
s peech~ making them aU one.
Devotion to M:u-y and CnthoJi.
cism-these two you will find al·
ways to~ether. You can no more
separate the Catholic Churcb
which is the Mystical Body of
Christ from our Blessed Lady
tlu•n you cnn separt~te the Ma·
donna from the Child s he holds in
he•· arms. Tt is ever thus. The
mcasul'e of our love Io1· Jesus is
the devotion we sl1ow to His
Mother. This basic tnoth of the
spiritual life is g iven concrete ex:J>
l'C~sion nt Lo\1rdes.
Gleaner has been a dream
come true. \Ve have held
out· brculh as each cri sis
lho·C£otened und prossed; we
have worked and prayed
and prayed ~l nd worked; we
have felt a thrill each time
the presses r olled to a s top
and another edition was
finished.
'{'hanks ore in ordet· to
Sister Margutet Teresa, our
moderato•·; Sister Rose Angela;
the faculty; Mr. Hiekey
and his patience; and
most of all to you, the student
body.
Now we en l rust. the
dream to the ca pable hands
of Vicki Waters and her
stnft'- hot>ing they will also
mnke it come true.
THE GLEANER
Mary's Month
A 'Thank You' From Senior Officers
Dear Nuzareth,
It's the time of year for recalling
all that has transpired between
September ~and June. Manv
m·e responsible for anothe1· men;.
Ol':lblc and t1'easured ye:'l l' within
your welcoming arms.
. To those who &'liard YOIIf
slnndard.s, the administra·
lion, a hcmtfeiL thank you.
. .. To those who teach your
standat·ds, the faculty, n sin.
cere thank you.
. To those who lea1'n nnd tt·y
to live your standards, the
students, a fond thank you.
Look back. Nnzat·cth, on p lcasz:
mt and satisfying memories but
look nhead, dear Nazareth, to new
:~nd greate•· things.
Candy
Dear N aztu·eth.
1 would like to take this oppoJ-
tunity to thank evc1·yonc who
helped me this year with the
Missions. 1t h:os been a wonderful
experience, but one which cAlled
for much help f•·om the Mission
Roard, Sister Paulette, Fathet·
Shannon, and ~tll the gii·Js. May
1 also add that [ hope M:u·y
Spnulding, next year's prefect,
will find the samf' wiJlingness to
help, and that her year will be
as S~Tand us mine has been.
Mnry.Jo
Dear Nazareth Sodnlists,
During our lnst 010nth on cam.
pus, we look back ovel' the yea~·
to size up our work and to won·
det· "where will the Sodality go
f 1·om het·c ?" What have been our
truly lasting accomplishments, be·
How Come?
neath the mnny mn.jo•· and minor
l}l'Ojects nnd activities?
We have endeavo•·ed from the
beginning to emphasize the Sodality'•
role as a Catholic action
group, using Pope Pius XII's
Apostolic Constitution of the Sodality,
lli~ Saeculnri. fo1· out·
basis. In line with developing a
sincere and active lny tlJ>ostola.te,
we took a majo1· re·organitat.ional
step. By increasing the size of
the Spiritual - Apostolic Conferences
und l·educing their numbel',
we hoped to form mo1·e effective
apostles.
I have had n very interesting.
enlightening (I think every Soda
li<t should be JH·efecl for :<
month), and enjoyable yca1· as
pre.feet. fro the council members
1 am p:n·liculn rly !('rnteful for
their unflagging zeal. Rosa lie and
Marily11, \Vi11ie and Joanne, have
admirably fulfilled their duties.
'Mnny, tn~llly thanks u·re due to
Sr. Raphael for her helpful pr<!s·
ence, and to Father Shannon for
his constant inspiraHon nnd direc.
Icon. There hns been a goodly
numbet· of truly sincel'c Sodalists
who have whole-hem·tedly given
themselves to Mary in ull t hat
thch· Act of Consecration implies.
You have in Kenise and her officers
a fine g roup of ]enders for
the next year. May 1 urge everyone
of you to think and to :oct
"rith them in order to enrich not
only yom· own spiritual and npostolic
life, but that of the organization
nnd of the Nazareth campus.
Sincerely,
Marty
. . The r,eoJ>lc who think the chemises arc "hideous'' arc we:lring
them?
.. S pring Wt'nthcr squashes good study intentions?
. The i>COple who complain loudest about the condition of the
smoke1· and mission 1'00111 are the ones who no longe1· bother to
use ash trays?
. 'fhe ··runn ies" nrc becoming more gruesome and less amusing?
Frida y, May 9, 1958
'Make No Little Plans'
"Student Government is Your .Business." Student government is
your 1·esponsibility. You cannot delegate that obligation or pass it on
to others. The future holds grea~ hope if enough individuals like you,
who believe in your own power for good, under God, make it your
business to see that. government on e ve•·>· leve l is you1· servant .. .
and not your master.
You as a student of Nazareth College must re·:.•wakcn your sense
of importance ns nn individuaiJ and your consequent responsjbilitie$
Lo your school, and t.o c..1.ch othe1·. T1·y to think m<u·e in t.e1·ms of what
you owe you school and less about what it owes you. Keep constant!~~
in mind thut your interest in student government s hould be n neve•·ending
job. It demands continuing attention and therefore continuing:
responsibility. Student government will be good or bad in proportion
to the intct·est of its students. Do you r bit, present your ideas, even
at the risk of being cri ticized because of luck o·f ability or expcl'ience.
As John Henry Newman once "aid: "Nothing would be done at a ll if
a m:>n waited till he could do it so well thnt no one could find fault
with it."
Bold, constructive action in the are-a or governmer\l is needed now·
as never befOl'C in our history. To repeat: the words or Emerson:
"This eountt·y was founded by the bold nnd cannot be maintained by·
the timid." Here nt Nazareth, you are molding lhe voice which you
will Cake in local, counly, state and national government. ·Make rhat
voice one which w-i ll be recog nized for its sound 1,rinciples and Chri.stiom
idNdS. one which wilt be 8 true voice of your training,
uMake no little plan s : they have no magic to stir men's btood, and
probably themselves will not be realized. Make big 1>lans, a ir high
in hope :1nd wol·k, remembering that a noble, logical dingram once
r·eeorded will never die, but long aftea· we nre gone will be n living·
lhing, assel'ting itsPlf with evel' gr-owing insistency."
Stephanie Sullivan
Understand-Then Act
One of the basic eonstitutiomt1 r·ights guaranteed to evel"y Amcricm1
citizen is the freedom of speech. As college st11dents we have never
been known to ignore this prerogative. On this campus, in particular,
it is widely observed, and seeming ly. just as wide ly c l'iticized. The
situation too often ari!lie-s thal the words, in n gtipe session, flow
abundantly, but never produce any beneficial consequences . . Eleanoa•
doesn't l ike a particular •·ule. Hazel backs her up. Suddenly Gloria
realizes the injustice of another rule. And so it goes until someone
l>roclnims her- e.xistence entirely hopeless and they disband tempot·arily
to nurse their grievances in p.-ivate, but not in s ilence.
The •·ight of f reedom necessitates the duty of action. If a conscientious
Mathilda would point out to her mistreated classmates thut
words must be followed by ac tion, gripe sessions and poor spirit could
be reduced or elimin ated. Rules, lifter a ll , were made for par ticular
citeums:tanees. Occasionally they a·emnin aft.e.r their usefulness hns
ended, but us ually they are only half understood.
Being of Sound Mind-?
\Ve, the seniors, in this, our last will and testament, bequeath to
the undergraduates these items:
To Steph Sullivan, Candy Pilla's "The Powe1· of Positive Thinking-."
To Elda Clasing, Bette Gantert's rolle1· skates.
To llln•·y Spaulding, Joey Gleason's jungle drums.
To Carol Russo, Kathy Hanlon's pitch pipes .
To 'Barb Alvaro, Kny Morphy's unit plan s.
To Kelly PIMJb, Sue O'Day's bunties.
1'o Elaine McAvoy, Kathy Reardon's 1.-ish jig.
To Janie Knopf, Arlene Brent's poetic muse.
To Marie Me·nnd·My-Committee Argnna, Mary Doyle's Jo~nglish lit
book.
To ?tfiekie Vunderbrook, 'Moya NevilJe's a l:,rm clock.
To F ran Ce~'to, Bunn)' Cm·t·oH's nicotine hut.
To Noreen F'onte, P'rudy C:>stich's nnd Joanne Brown's spac£1 f'hip.
THE GLF.ANER
ST UDENT l'UBI.TCATION OF
NAZ,\I!ETR COLLEGE, ROCRESTEn. N. Y.
Friday, May 9, 1958
Editor· in·Chid ....... .......... ..... ....... , ... , . Virginia Rohrer
Asscciate Editors ...... . ........ . .. . Mary ·Barnum, Victoria Water$
New" Edito•·s ... . .... • . • .. ..•. ..... M:ll·y Kay Smead, Leah Wehlage
FealUI'C F.dit.or . .............. .. , . . . . . . . . EJinOl' Wurz.
Proofreader ....... .. .. . .. ... .. ..... . ............... . Sheila Tehan
Reporte-rs ........... Marie At·gann, Marcia Beecher, Eliz.abcth Boyle
Joyce Budinski. E ldn Clasing, Lorett<• Denne•·, Ann Ouyssen
Ann Gilbert, Mary Joan GJe,.son, H'elen Kennedy, Elizabeth
Marsh, Kenise Murphy, Camille Morris, .Joan Murray
Judy Nicmtimp, Gretchen Oster, t.au ra P olla
Nanette Riester, Mary Spaulding
Business Man;~ger .... .. .. .. .. ....... .. ......... . .• Josephine Alongi
Photograt>hers ... . ..... .. • .......... .. Ma1·y Walsh, Elaine JllcAvoy
Advisor ................ • ....•..... .... .. ... Sister Margaret Teresa
Friday, May 9, 1958 THE GLEANE R 3
VERDANT FROSH TO GRAVE OLD SENIORS: '54 '58
DATllLINE: Septcml>c•· 1954. One hundred and forty freshmen
invaded Nazat·eth. Green, they wet·e, but optimisticnlly they hoped
that the next four yeut·s would season them to tho ~tntus of "vets"
by the time that June or 1958 rolled around.
Get Acquainted \Veek found Gerry Zicari, uve1·dunt. freshman," tag·
ged as u Miss X; Marty Sui linn os frosh chairman ot ticket sales !or
the Thoams More lecture serie;s; the nut"Ses becoming urquainted. with
one Or. Robert }!iller nnd philosophy. But at the end or the month,
the freshies were still lookhtg for a se<:ret tunncl leading to Fisher.
Thursday, November 4, marked
lnvcstitu•·e Day !ot· the eh•s• of
'58; There;;e (The Chemise) headed
11 committee !ot· Mission Ony;
Ann Wagaman had chtu·gc o:f
General Order !or the fathet··
Oaughtet· Banquet, Nov. 20th,
which featured a !our-piece band
"" ~ntPrtainm~nt: Si~tt-r F'to..,.n~~
joined the Xazareth !acuity as
medical and surgical instructor
for the nurses in Elmir:_t. This
wa& the month that an all frosh
plus one soph team "outs1>iked"
Geneseo in volleybulll Remember,
Misses Ph\te, .Mallei·', Hogan,
Ctnrk, Morphy, and De•sel t
Socially the galo wet·e on the
~uti. Mary Ann McCrnth, Arline
Teschner, a.nd Joan Pfeiffer were
at Fall Weekends while Moya,
llelen Cal.nan, Shirley Sc:uteri,
Joyce Mooney, and Rose Marie
Scherer traveled to S.U. !or the
11 oly Cross g<~me.
Winter blew hi~ chill nnd
8 1\0\V neri)~S campus ond when the
view cleared, Nt\ Z::rrcth 8UW three
ot her l'osh, Ca.ndy Pilla. Mary
Doyle, and Betty Canttrt in the
Christma.~ Nativity pageant. Januory
9th J>•ggy Furino kept her
fingers crossed as the fir•t omcinl
function o! the das&, Open House
for parents and !acuity, went off'
without a hitch-including l(athy
llnnlon's humorous monologue
" Mrs. Condel's Umbrella l,ec-tu
rc."
Mat'y Grace, Therese, u n d
Moya, aceompanied by .\nn En.
ni•. debuted as the lrosh trio
at the Valentine dance February
4th. Prudie and Joanne Brown
attended a science confab at
Seton Hall and en route they
•plurged in NYC with u five
course meal at ''Mama Leone'$."
Still s uffe:1·ing from indigestion!
March 17th cume and with il
un historical event! .. For lhe Hl':;l
time in tour )ears'' the lrosh
ctn .. wor the St. Pal'a Day skit
prize. Maureen McLoughlin directed
t.he winnt'rs in "The Oi·
vine O'Comedy." Shortly after
Moyn wss elected socrela1·y of
Undcrgn:td; Barb FlanuJ(nn, eln$8
lll'os idenl; .Jan Egan, socrCUII'Y of
M iR:tions; Judy Lnng, :sccrcta1·y
of Soda lity; Ann Pnlet·mo, pt·exy
of the A :hie tic A""ociation; nnd
Jennette Martino, junior NF del·
eg11te. Aller llunny Carrull at·
tended the St. 1-~w•·ence •pring
we<:kend, Joan Ketchum and
)!arty at;endcd lhc May Queen,
and on May 15th twenty-five
smiling nurses r<eeivcd th~ white
cnp- bndge of their vocn tion.
when J\lauret'n prayed over il in
an Irish brogue, it dl onppeared!
Mary Malt e r • til l loved Bermudas:
"I think lhcy'rc cute :1nd
we should be allowed to wea1·
thent to school."
DATELINE: Se11tembcr 1955.
Ar-lene Br~nt, Karen Bove, Gerri
Lombardo, Mnry Sue McCoy,
liarge Merkel, and Aurelie Vail
joined the class ot '58. The gay
young sophs btut·ted the year
with a bang by 1>lnnning SubFrosh
Day. While they were torturing
ft·osh during Get-Acquainted
\Veek, their nut'ses were
becoming aequuinted with n t•eai
live hospiUtl in Elmira! There,
Kathy Reardon's house was a
second home for them; Jac-kie experimented
with ope1·a glasses
and Ellen with diets; l'at Celso
had an interesting OXJ)Crienee
with some dividing eurt.nins.
·'Red Ox lnn", the ::wniot· tal·
cut show, snw Cnndy winning
fit-st pl"i1.e; Morly oo-choirn•aned
the Ming Fling nnd ~bt·ina
helped with deeomtion:;. At
Christmas the oopha had a dass
party-Pat Walker, Aurelie, and
llary Ann Woodward as committee
membel',;; Mury Anne Finnegan
pedormcd the duties ol
toastmistr•ess at the Dean's Ban·
quet.
Lut)' Tomcyck':; poem, ''OisiJ.
Jusion'', wns published in the
annual anthology of College Poetry;
Arlene had n story included
in an edition o( the Queen's Work
and was first pt·i,~ winner in the
local 1956 eont~•t ol the Catholic
Daughters of Americu.
Second semester found Kay
Morphy assumiug the duty of
cJass tHcsidcnt. 'fhc gHicty of
\Vintcr \Veekcnd, when soph Jean
Preitfer reigned OM Queen, was
followed by those onnual soph
tests on March 1. February 21
Candy had debuted with the
Trenton Symphony. Lois Maloney,
Mary Ann Lovas, Joey,
and Marina organized Sodality
•·ceeption. SRO iucludcd the sopb
contt;bution- un ~r iginal J>lay by
Adene . . . the gcnernl opinion
was thut the :;ophs were aua·c to
do n R no job because they hud
S·S·S•S•SI>iril!
Once nguin the class of "58 won
the St. Pat's Day competition
with "Grent Day !or the Russians"'
and their \.-Jetory wa& ne·
claimed in the sophomore edition
o! GLEANER e<lited by Kathy
llnnlon.
In May 1956, Willie Mertson
and Ann Wng.aman attended the
Mny Queen nnd later that month,
the end of nnother year at N:tznreth,
the! sophs ussumed their
new office• nt Moving-up DayMarge
Merkle, cia."'! president;
Curol Noh1on. treaeu~r of Undt:r
~trad; Marina Pang. llissions
tn~a.surer: Marty Sullivan, So·
dality u-easurcr; Gin• · Hamill,
Gleaner edit.or; Joan -orn, NF
senior delegate.
'!'his had boon the ye<tt Murty
received Onvc's class t·ing; Evle
;.md Aurelic '"''ent to f lorida; the
soph trio e'Maritones") sang
with the Fiilher band, and Gracie
lo.t bet· cookie <utter.
OATRI, INE: S..ptember 1956.
·'Hope juniors abandoning immaturity
to mak<• room for little
sit!. tea-"."'
1'he MMtians landed. Orientation
rm· the c:l~t~s of 'GO, their
litUe tlistci'K, wns chuirmaned by
Mnry Ann Woodward. Summer·
time had mennt m<tny diffet-ent
thing~ loa· the juniol"$-worriet
about btginning major eo~s,
Euro1>can trips for ~lary Doyle
and Kun•n llovc, postulant drel4.s
for Ann \\fugamnn and MarJcne
White.
Octobct· 27th marked the nnnuul
Fnthet·-Dnughtcr banquetthat
ycnr hruded by Kay Morphy.
Top CcnlUJ'C wns a Giveawaytia
·$l prize, n n~w Buick.
At the end of the fl•·•t yen •·
llnrl> Flanagan probably didn't
even recall the time she !elt"
like a n1othcr leaving her child
nt a ho•p tal when I left nty dog
to have its ears cropped at the
vet's." Elie had probably eaten
the canned fruit. cake some J)nl
hnd rolle<l down lhe hall to her
doo1·; Ann \Yagaman had purthascd
a new bathrobc-bccuu3e
ltosemnry Dessct had poured vnn·
ishing ink on her old one und
The ,•wph uiU#'" 111 K11thy Utwrtlou"s. l .mct••r M11plt•
Nme f_£11c, 'l'urm•r'fi 1',\'IJrt•J~iou-('mllfy / tlr " IJi/t. 11wl $lie IC'Wt .,, ,
tlfet ! J"lt•s Furino u!tl8 kt~ittiug the, , too.
The trio had evolved into a
<OmJ)act g•·oup comi>Osed of Mnry
Gmcc, Moya, and Lovcy. Soon
new harmony in moden'l ar•·nnge·
menhs was heard on the campus.
Numlu•r t)tiP. pri:c fll tlte PMIH•f'·
nflfiJ:Itt,.,. BauquPI. 1956 - l .ucy
1'mncyt'k ita$p t>ctiug thP ICm'f>l.
Directed by Mat y Grace, her
' 'VOICES OF GRACE" J>ertormed
llt parties, lnfomwl gettogethers,
jn~t concerts.
Helen Caln:tn went to the
Army-Nav7 A'ame; Pot Walker
and Shirley Sc:utierc were hostesses
at tbe lnternntional Deb:.ting
Tourney at thc U o! R.
In ~larch .Nuzn•·cth held its
bt'cath-but the class of '58 lost
skit competition thaL year. SRO
wns filled with junio1 Rtiu·s and
Put Gabel •·cigncd us Winte1·
Weekend Quc~n victory to '58
lhe second yeur in a row!
Pat Gabtl, Lois Malone). :md
Arline Te.schntr hnd dinrnonds.
April ~th the junio,.,. received
their long-aw&ited (')ass rings.
Ann Reed ond Jane Donnelly
helped organize the day. April
25th Aljeon L-emke and Amt Palermo
traveled to AlbllliY lor the
unnual Mock Senate.
May 10th Moya and (leni Lombardo
prayed !or good weather
Ffll/;f>r-l)au~htPr llauquN. 19.56. From le/t: Kureu /Jm·e, l\t1y Murphy.
uml Ntmcy 1\lotmtm ("60 ).
SUO. 1956. Jim Mt>ml 11~,-.,, I IJ l<flthy. Jirlcm,-, mttl Cmuly-whila
Maureen Smith look• dream-y.
TH E GL EAN ER
• • • • • • • • • • Grave Old Seniors
for the Junk r Prom and two
dilys latta· chni1·man Jan Egan
viewed the suece&.S or the Mo therDaughter
1'ea.
J unio1· at!endnnts Cor the May
Queen were Knren Bove nnd l(ay
Morphy. Candy was elected Unrlergmd
p1·esident; Mnrty, Sodality
pl'efeet: Joe)•, Missions
proreet: Je:mette, resident president;
nnd Ca 1'ol Nelson bec~tmc
Mndum2 President lot· senior
ycM: Karen Bove, editor o! Ve•··
ity: Betty Ganw-t. edito•· or
Sigillum.
Sen iObl - do ycHI t·cmcm.bcr?
'l'hat year Jca1H:tte h:Hl u mnrti''
for the colo1· l't"d; Aljeo.n won
thl'ee collectors' items as n prlz.e
in a disc jockey show; Cuddy
and Dorothy Krenzer had a ean.
dy concession in the dorm;
Maureen received he•· Christml\S
gift e a •·ly - Tom's pin; E11en
'l'urner broke hcl' ankle: Ginny
liamill and Jnne Lynch got
rf'iuter Jf7Pf'keml. 1951. (lue.tm 1~(11 uml fian ce.
Soff<,litt letrfft>rJ;. 1957·8. f -.r(UJI left, Fttllter Shruwcm. Kutht Mttyrl
("59). IJ'Iillie. mul Mnrl)'.
Moriull. dN•-pr~>/I!Cl ,j MiJC$iQtr, help.~ with $Mfl,iug for n St. Atmes
lligh School pluy.
locked in t.he pressroom: and
.Joan Korn and Gerri Lombardo
wet e. ptannh1g ~u nun e r weddings.
Ot\TELIN£: September 1957.
,.\Vhcre oh whcl't:- :ll'e the grave
old seniors?"
In less tl1:1n ten months they
were to be out in the cold, cold
world.
What u whirl - this business
ol being a senior. So much pn!s·
tige, so much respons ibility altnchcd
to the title. Tempus fugil.
11 A pt~tctiee teaehet is a unique
sort of person." Those g•·uel ling
three weeks were over fot·
the aspiring t('nchers and soc
workers. Soddenly it was
ativc to do everything J>OSSibletake
ptu·t. in the J>ttgeunt.; enjoy
Novelli's mus ic at the Christmas
Formal headed by Mary Ann Me.
Grath; Hsten more closely to the
lecturers; ieel a little sad that
these were to be the las t JHnu:
u·y exams; ·work ~ide b~f !iide
with Cathy and l' nl to make Winter
Weekend a s uccess; laugh
when the fellows we1·e stranded
by heavy snows ... take advan.
tagc or the days off to do " little
study-ing, gabbing, 0 1· playing;
take some snaps nt the Hundred
Nights Party at Dottie Kl'cnze.r's
house.
Ma •·eh 17th N"za•·eth held its
breath as the inimicable cla~s of
'58 won again! The inh·epid Irish
in Maureen directed the senio1·s
tfl victory in HQ'HagiogJ·aphy."
Back after Easte1· vacation the
senio1·s WOJ'J;ed about eomps
while their nurses s udd.,nly became
aware thttt it was only two
months B.S.B. (Bcfo1·e State
Boards). Graduate Reeot·ds, Moving-
Up Day passed, and May
Day will follow close on thei l'
heels.
This was the year thut Peg
go't her diamond on Valentine's
Day: Ma1·lna was c1·owned Queen
o! Winte•· Weekend: Ann Reed
nnd Pat Gabel became Mrs.; and
the 20 year old seniors chuckled
lor seven weeks ~\t those of voting
age!
Jtme 2 it will all be ovet, bu t
in a sense it won't. The class of
'58 wiJI always be very much n
part of Naza1·cth; and Nazareth,
very much n PlU't. of them.
a k HAMilton 6~8 587
ANTHONY -KLEE
CORPORATION
Oieti nclive Printina
115 ST. I'AUL ST.
ROCHESTER • • H. Y.
Friday. May '1, 1'158
Friendship's Faces
"New Faces !" Four years ago to t he Class or '58 they
were. Now, they are familiar and loved; ten year!\ from
now they will be par t of a li ving memory o{ a fow· year
sojourn at Nazareth .
One of the most friend ly faces is that of Bishop Kearney.
On formal occasions he is present at Nazareth-for
Investitu re, fot· Commencement. But the times the seniot·s
will most remember are the informal hours when he
"dropped in" for dinner, or because he "missed us."
fltSBOI' K£AilNEY
ll ow many of lhe ~eniOJ1S will ever fot·get hi:;. l>l'e:;ence at all
the Fathet··Daughtel' banquet~? his participation in our Ch,·istnH\~
festivit it!s? his enjoyment at the St. Patt·ick'St Day pat·tiC's?
And the Dean of Nazareth. f'crhaps a quotation f rom the yea rbook
of the Class oi '58 will sum UJ) the seniors' sentiments. "Guardian
of the essence of Nat.a1·eth, model Qf the ideHl of Christiarl woman·
Sis ter Hose An ~elu
hood. tlll'ough these Siste1· Rose
Angela un ites the diversity of the
college liie into the s imple oneness
of the search foJ' Tn Llh:''
Their class advisors will be rcme•
nbc•·cd as models of Patience!
S is ter Joseph ine Louise and hel'
endless juggling of schedules;
Sis•cr Agnett Patridu and her
words: 1•J e vous ecoutez'•; Sister
J)o1·othea ~'lnd her t·eading~ of t.hP
class minutes.
Memory·s Lane
And t heio· two other deansSister
Saint Catherine. Dean of
Studies, concerned with first their
choice and then theil" progress in
their major fie lds; Sister Leom1.
Dean of R ~s idcnts.-.clucking ovet'
their health, enjoying their run.
How many of the Class of '58 will f orget Father Shnnnon's and
Fathe1' Lintz's classes? Theil' majoa· professor~1 Si~ter Eva Mnl'ic's
Placement Office? The Lay Fneulty? The Librarians?
Time passes and men are rnortul, but the f1'icndshiv or. Nnzn1'eth
is eternal.
Friday, Moy 9, 1958
Future Holds Varied Careers
For Members of Senior Class
Undoubtedly the members of
the class of 1958 are keeping
close track or the time remaining
before Monday, June 2. Con>·
mencemenl mark a a biJ( day in
their lives, the culmination of
f~:>r impOrtant college yenrs.
l'erhnps most •igniflcant Is the
facl that it is the beginning or
an enti...,ly new wuy o! life whic'h
will take them to various positions
all over the world.
Four years or livinK 11nd working
with the same people i •
bound to make an impression on
a person. Marlho S ullh•an. who
will soon be Moos. David Young or
Urbann, Illinois, expressel' the
uniVCI'$UI feeling of her claSS·
mutes: "Pve had u very hni>PY
four years at Nur.uJ•Qth. and hope
we will ncvco· lose it~ friendly
sph·it.''
'!'he on ly •·ccently- rNurncd Senior
nm·Hes wi lt soon be off ngnin .
~uncy Harner, F:lnine Uell. Ann
HnniJot, Jlo"emnt)' l>ei'Cteel, Molly
Moak. Mary Wynne. nnd J•nt
Milne plan to rut their t raining
to use in the RocheKter orea.
Mary Ann McGrath nnd Annl!
LaPalm "'"' postponing t>rof ...
sional plans until aJter u aumme•·
leur ol Europe. l'at Celso plans
to make her •toy more pernuonent
through Foreign Service, and
l'at Hickey will KO into nursing
in Hawaii alter her marriuge.
Europe moy we another Nazareth
nurse if Jo•ephine llino
joins the Navy Nu"e corps.
Jn<kie Plate is going into J>ublic
Health work in Schuyler County.
Elfie l:lanchelt hn3 the snme
plans for the New York area, a><
does Peggy Furino in Binghamton.
~larilyn lliGirol nnd Ellen
Turner ~n count on ~he Nationn I
Institute of Henlth in Bethe1dn
in their co .... secable futures. Joan
Ketchu111 is heading for Chicngo
by way of New England. Arteo·
mnrringe, HOHtmarie SchC'rer will
be u school nurs.e in the llhuca
system, ond Arline TeBthuer In
Florida. Either Wushington or
Boston wiJt gain u new stuff
nurse in Mollie Cole. 1\~tt h y llettr·
don is su1·e of just one thing, thal
~he's going to be in nursing.
Keyboard Artisls
The better purl of the Business
mnjot·s - Marr Ann Finnegan.
Dolores Onona to. J:atkie Gabel.
J oy<e ~lasters, IJonnie 1' rnbold.
and Jeanne Hug;m - will be in
Rochester in cit~fr a secretarial
o1· teaching capacity. ~l ttf)' i\nn
L•n•as is considering the S)•racuse
:u-ea and )lary Malter tan'l make
up her mind bel ween government
and teaching.
The teaching proCeuion i~
well-represented in Naza~th'~
class of l958. Jeann~ llryant.
History, will be in New York:
Aljean L~mk e, Art, and J ane
Uonnelly, Math, in Syracuse: E•··
•lyn Savage. Math, in Boston:
)lory Gardner, English, Jane
Lrnch. HiRtory, und Shirley Scu·
t iere. History, in Rochesl~r; Mary
Graet Cericola. Music, in Batnvia;
history Jnajors Ann Palermo
and Virginia Hamill in lhuJhHenrietta;
Carol S rokrose. Art, in
Irondequoit: Aurelie Vall, HI•·
too·y, in Pitll<ford; ond Molly
Hartnell, Hi stoo·y, in Long Is land.
1\u thy ll anlon, Music, und .l en n·
nette Martino, E:nglish, will uc·
quire the mnrklng pencil nnd
chalk duRt characteristic of their
profession nlter graduate work.
Beth Raetz, History; Gerry Zi·
cari. Sociology; Joan Pfeifer,
English; F. s t elle d'Agostino,
English; and Wilhelmina M~rt·
.on, English, hnve as yet only
general. but not specifie, details,
'" to where they will teaeh. ,\nn~
lteed S ut er will take the post
of history teacher at Wheeler Air
Foree Bnse in Tripoli, Libya .. Alter
a year at the Univer;Jity of
London, )Iarina Pang wHl also
don the professorial garb.
Cmduate work in Library Sci·
once will find ~l ary Doyle at Syr:
l.cuse University. ..\rlene Brent
pions on 1.1 sc:hool of jou1,1alism
and J•rudence Cosl itch, on furthe•
· study in Chemistry.
Covtwnnlent work has a strong
uttt·!lcUon Cor Na1.ao·eth student•.
ll elen Cnlnan, Hist.ot·y; Sue
O'Day, En~rli•h; h ni<e E,..an,
l!:nrclish; l'ut Walker, History:
nnd (: inny FoubiHter. Bisto1·y;
h11vc theio· eye on Uncle Sam as
tl rutul'e employer.
Appao·ently nn equally strong
n1agnetisn> is exerted by the varIous
phu~es of industry and science.
Moth students, Nan<y
Shairtr, Carol :-l~lson, and Bette
C;'"rert, and Chemistry m:\jOJ""S,
Juanne Drown and Mary .Anne
Woodward are all of the mind
that it olfer;J a good futu...,,
Representing Nazareth in the
"beaux.arts" will be Music major
C'andy J>illa. who is a lready well
on her way toward a successful
eareer.
Pat Ca~M>I. Bunny Carroll,
Mary Ann Stanton. l 1ary Jo
Gleason, ~l id.:e S heehan, and
Dorothy Krenzer will give proof
of the standards and qualit)• of
the Soc i o I o g y Department
throu~rh their social work throughout
the SUi te. Marj Merkel, Histot
·y, and Kay Morphy, Math,
hnve plans which haven't crystallized
'" yet.
Oifl'erent people will remember
their coJiege yem~ in va1·ious
wnys; the nurses mny have night mut
·e ~ of 3Uitcase pack ing. the
doy-hOJ>s, o! unending bus rides.
A II will o·emember the !l'iendshiJ>
S that they mnde. Lest anyone
think that the four years
we t·e completely idyll ic and without
complaint. we'll t lose on a
revealing note:
"Delighted with sll my courses
except marriage. It is anti-eli ..
mntic. I spent two thousand dolJan
to reach this pOint and then
Father Shannon doesn't even
tell us whe..., we can lind themmen.
that is!•
Dorm Meets Need
Fo r Increased Room
While Natareth College students
were enjoying their Easter
vacation, eonstruetion was beg-un
on the new dormitory which will
provide facilities Cor 134 additional
•tudent.s, and is expected to
be ready !or oecupnncy around
January l, 1959. Dormitory No.
2 will be connected by a pass agewny
to Medaille Hall. The dining
room will sent 270 students bes
ides which rect·eation raciHties
will be provided on the ground
flnoo·. The present boarder enrollment
of 185 will be increased to
276 in t958 and is exJ>Ccled to
l'lse to 500 by 1965.
THE GLEA N ER
A FACUL1'Y FOil ~'UN
The professor. n sworn enem)'
or coedtH:a.tion, ns.serted: "lt•s im.
possible to leach a boy mathe·
matics it there's a girl in lhe
elass." "Oh, come,'' object~ !"Omtone.
"surely there might be an
exception to th:t.t.'• ·~There mighl
be/' snapped the professor. "'But
he wouldn't be worth teaching!"
(The Readers Digest)
Just before Christnu•• a college
professor read the following on
an exnminntion paper: HCod only
knows the an~wer to this queAtio
·n. Merty Christmas.'' Att'OitA
the paper the professor wrote:
"God gets an A; you gel nn F.
Happy New Year."
('I' he Tlcnder's Digest)
• •
Among the Jlllpils in n high
sehool chemistry clus:-c wns a lud
who hnd a tendency to monopoll•e
discussion!'. The tt~le h er· decidt•d
that such a troubleaome habit
should be called to the nllention
of his parents. On his repoo'l cnrd
she wrote: "Allan is a good stu·
dent but he talks too much." s~veral
days later the report was ...,.
turned. Underneath the comment
the boy"s !ather hnd added: "You
should meet hi• mother."
(The Renders' Dig~sl \
•
MAID'S EYE VIEW
A maid bein~ interviewed explained
that she lert her last position
betause she couldn't stand
the way the master and mist...,.,
were always quarl'('ling. "That
must have been unnleastml." r"·
marked the ])rost>edivc emplo)•co·.
·~es, sir/' the .rirl dechu-ed. 41they
wa.• at it all the time. When It
wasn't me and him. it wus nlc and
her!"
(The Rcnder't nige•t)
CLASSTFrED CI,AS~TCS
From the A bilcne, Texas. Tie·
uorter-News: u$10 rcwn1·d (nr
south sidP o,uu·tmcnt. t.nr«•
enou~h to kePu youn~r wife :ft-(1111
I<Oing home to mothc•·· Smnll
enough ln keep mother from coming
here."
(The Tleade1Js Di~ee•t)
From a Vermont Development
Commis.sifln a.dvfl!rtisement of n
loealfarm !or sale: "tr purcha .. <l
bef()Te the n4)xt h('avy wind_,;;;tnrm
a bam is included."
(The R•ader'o Dig•st)
From the Anderson, Ind .. Daily
Bulletin: "Will the party who
picked up the black cocker spaniel
I'D'PPY Saturday on Wendell Road
either return him or come back
•·d .. et three-year-old bov he ~longs
to!"
(Th• R•nder'~ Oiqest)
TRANT'S Inc.
Catholic Supply Slore
Rellqious Articles for
Church and Home
tl Clinton N. 115 Tronklln St.
Phone BAler 5·562l
5
Summer Wedding Bells to Ring
For 9 Following Graduation
Spo·ing is the time or year when
a young mnn·~ rnney tum.s to
thoughts or love and Na~areth's
cngnged senion are busily pre·
paring !or post l(t':lduate work
weddings.
June 14th will prove to be n
bu•y day for our senior;J for
Martha Sullivan, )laur~n McLou~
hlin, and Loi• Malonty plan
to marry David Young, Tom Doeblln,
nnd Bob Tonzi, respectively.
Dnvid. u Rochesterion, was g-raduuted
Cum Laude from St. John
Fisher College and I$ now studying
nt the UniveJ-sity o( Il linois
Coo· • DC)(:too· of Phii<>Sophy in
Or·gonic Chcmistt·y. Following the
weddi ng, Mo·. nnd Mrs. Young
will reside In Urbona, Illinois, !or
a lew yeat·s. Maur·ecn's fiance
Tom is n Ynlc ~<•·nduote of '55
and wi ll be u i'enior medical stu ..
dent at the University or ButTalo
next ycru·. i\·fuut·een and Tom will
l ive in Bufl'u lo nrter the wedding
tuul hove been rorlunute in locatlnl(
n thit·d floor 11Jllrrtment with
suu deck. A not very easy but u
ver·y economicul way of fut·nish ..
ing one's npnrtn1ent is by •·efinishing
old furniture. ?tlauo·een's and
Tom's apnre moments find them
exploring gamges and attics in
oeal't'h or anythin~r usable and
re!umishnble.
The following week of June 21st
I• the dale Cor the wedding of
Arline Tes<hner and Jnck Mason.
Jack will be a June graduate of
Annnpolia Naval Acndemy. This
)f r. and l\1 rs. will live 3l Barlou
Air Foree Base in Florida. Estelle
D'Aro~tino nnd Fran Guardino
will also be wed the 21st Other
plano are still in the making, but
the wedding date is certain.
Ro~e Marie S<herer and her
fiance Bill Burke of ButTnlo will
be monied some time this sun\mer
ond plnn to live in Ifhaea
where Rose Murie will be a school
nu rse·teucheo· Coo· the Ithaca public
ochool•. 'Bill is po'Csently attending
Cot·ncll Univco·sity fol· •
MaoJ.eo·s Degt'CC in Bu•iness Administrntion.
f'ollowinl( their wedding on
A \II(Usl 2Srd, Pa I Uickey and her
husbond Lt. Rt1•1k Skehan will
retu 1·n to Hnw11ii whel'e he is presently
stationed Arter 15 month•
or heavenly Hawaii they are
scheduled to ,...tum to the U.S.
Mnry Ann Woodward and her
Aanee Charl•s Mudl('e have set
their all-ll"'o~rtant date for the
month of .1''"·· Chnrles attended
<;t, John Fish~r CollelCe and is
now s~rvini( with the ?lfarines in
Okinawa.
The S.•t"r<l:w nrter Thanks~tivinor.
Nov. 29•h is the date E•••lyn
Sov"te h•~ ~~t for her marringe
t.n Philin Temullo. Natives of
~Jed!ord lll• .. achuselts, Evie and
Philip olan to live there after t.he
wnddinor. Philip Is presently emnlnved
•t th• Commonwealth of
Ma•sachusetls Un~mployment Se~
tn-itv Divitsion.
Volentine's Day, 1958. will nl.
wnvs be very spe-cial to PeeFurinn
and 'Boh G<>lden for it
wns then thnt lhey oocnme enlCoored.
Boh. u s•ninr Bnorlish
mnior nl 'R'oly Cross College.
nl nt>s tn CulRII hi• mnitno·v duty
twevlouR to n ~tll'in~ weddin,:t n
v~>Ji t' f J•om now. Durin~ this t ime
Pe" will be n Jlnblic health nurse
in 'Binghamton. Boh nnd Peg hnve
nuln)· interests in common. <'SPt'·
cially that of appreciating nurse:nnd
:-<a~a...,th College. They mt•t
in Elmira while Peg was on otlllin.
lion there.
Plans Cor a wedding h3 •r not
yet been made b).,. Mary Cordner
8nd ber fiance, Richard Met7.·
inger. Richard sen·~d with th~
Marine Corps for 3 ye.•rs and i•
presently attending St. John
Fi•her College.
July 26lb is the wedding dal•·
f or Runny Carroll and Bruce WRrren.
Brue:e is an assistnnt manager
with the J. J. Newbcrt·y
ComJ>any. Bunny and BrucC' hnve
found an apartment. H unter'~
Lodge, ln Newport, Ven1101tt.
where they will reside nrter lht•
ceremony.
These arc some tentative J>lnu~
of our engaged sen ion;:. whirh will
maternlize after graduntion. Success
and hal)pinc!;~ is uut· deRil·ed
wish for them.
WHERE OLD
FRIENDS MEET
McConnell's
* ICE CREAM
and
LUNCHES
*
60 N. Main Street
Pittsford, N. Y.
Prescription
Specialists
The
Centra l
Pharmacy
9 SOUTH MAIN ST.
PITTSFORD. N. Y.
Phooe
Pittslord 260
JUST TAKE ME TO
PITTSFORD INN
Pittsford, New York
or
Pink Elephant Inn
at Conesus Lake
BILL LISI, Prop.
~----"·~-.,•._.u~ a• •• •• u....,
b
Junior Sociology Majors
Announce Survey Results
by Nan lties l e.r
Do you temcmbcr the c,auestionnail'e you fill<!d out. in Dean's Hour
last February? The fifteen Jw1io1· Sociology majors, unde1· the guidnnce
of Miss Bogenmillcr, have s pt.!nl approximately 820 man hours
working on their Scrninnr project.
lt has constituted constructing this questionnaire and tabulating it
by tneans of ;.1 code system (which was enough to make anyone eon·
tract ch1·onic "blood •hot eye," and detest alphabet sou]l). Of the 27
questions in the questionnaire, the first. 19 wore concerned with background
of the students: the remaining 8 t•·eated their attitudes contenting
such t hings as dating, drinking, collt:ge rules, social life, u.nd
prejudice. When al1 of the st.udents' answers were transfcncd to
maslet' sheets by means of code letters, lmckg~;ounds were eorrelnted
wiLh attitudes. J:lenee iL was pos·
si~le Lo deLe1·minc on a ]lercentage
l.msis, if there were a diffel'c.
ncc in altitudes accot·ding to
age, class, major, und so on down
the line.
1-'ro or Con
The mujor hypothesis at Lh~
l..lcginn ing o( thn; study WHS that.
tber~ '" a d1trcrence of attitude~
and \}ucliground \1/hieh distinguish
those studen ls who have had a
Cuthvuc ~ehool education ft·om
U10Se who have not. This hypothesis
wu~ proved con·ect. 'l'ho::;e
with all Catholic education definitely
are m01·e in aceot·d with
the mind of the Church in the att
itudinal study, than arc those
with no previ ... us Catholic training.
However, l.h(! group that has
hU<l some Jll'e•cotlegc Catholic
education is 1·ather bewildering.
ll illiS seell>Cd that or this group,
those with very little Catholic
edueatlon nte more with the mind
of the chUJ•ch-thc direct opposite
of what would be expected. At
this point., it cannot be explained.
J t was cdi!ying to note that
the Senio1·~ were less J)l'ejudieed
towa1·d the Negro than the lower
classes. This hel)>S substantiate
the theory that "the disciplined
mind is l'e1uetant.. to tnakc con·
elusions on the basis of emotion:.' 1
reactions."
A fund of ~tatistical informn·
tion has been discovered. Eightysix
l>ereent o! the students >Ire
J'rom families where both !"<rents
are Catholic. Only 49~~ of the student
population hus had aiiC3tholie
education and 22'1<- have
had none. Could this be a trend
towat'<l a. growing uwarcness of
the imp01tanee or Catholic education
or is it that Catholic higbCI'
education i~ eonsidel'cd more
hnport.anl than CnthoJie second·
ary ot· clerncut;t ry schooling 1 At
this )>oint il might be noted that
on reasons for choosing Nazareth,
the fact thnl it was a Catholic
college, topped the list.
Dating?
On lhe item o.f dating non·
Catholic•, G7 ~ s aid that they
would dntc them. Over % have nt
least some dates with non-Catholics
and 'h date them f requently.
Eighty-six percent did not a]lprove
of going steady in high
schooJ, with no plan !or marriage
in the forsecable ruture. At the
college level 75% did not approve.
Sixty-two percent of the students
responded tht1t they did ap.
prove of drinking on dates. It
should be noted that this item
was expressed as an attitude, not
as a matter of prnctice.
'fhcre is a wealth of informut.
ion in this survey- nlueh of
which has not been co,-,·elated. In
fnct, it would be impossible to
print all of the present resu lts
hcl'c . . Future plans include a complete
p•·cscntation of the results
to the student body. The Junior
Soc majors a l'C proud o! their
accomplishment. Pea·haps someday
their names will be in print
with their famous study- the
dream or a seminar!
Med Techs Complete
Year At St. Mary's
Nazareth's Seniot· ''med-techs''
ure devoting much of their time
to job prospecting, since theh·
year of p1'ofessional experience at
SL Mary's Hospital will be completed
on May 15th. On .July 18th
they will take their National
Doard exams for cedHication a.s
medical technologists: nnd mem·
ber• of the American Society of
Gru..:e Florin-Senior Med-tceh .
Clinical Patbologists. Concerning
individual plans for the future:
Grace Florin is undecided at pres ..
cnt ns to a position; Mary A1\n
Cuddy is seeking a Washington
job, Lucille Tomczyk plans to
work in Rochester, and Lois .Mn·
lone" in Auburn (after her wedding
on June 14th.) The "medtechs"
have not lorgotten Nazm
·eth during their off-campus
training, and they will cel'tninly
be ]>resent fo1· all tho forthcoming
graduation activities.
N.F.C.C.S. PLANS
FUTURE ACTIVITIES
Activities of the N.F .C.C.S. include
a practice meeting foJ· new
delegutes to be held enl'ly in May.
Latest announcements: Sue Ma ..
honey has been appoint-ed Chait··
man of the C>1tholic Action Study
Commission; Betty Hoyle is the
Senio1· Delegate to the regional
Council and .Joanne Smith is the
Junio1· Detegat..e. Joanne plnns to
att.end a five-day conference in
San Francisco in ScJ)tcmbel'.
WEEKENDS DANCE
TO THE MUSIC OF
RED HAUSS-at
CI LENTO ' S
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
108 E. COMMERCIAL ST.
EAST ROCHESTER, N. Y.
Phone: LUdlow 6-9889
TH E GLEANER
Organizational Elections Decide
Student Leaders for 1958-1959
The 195S-59 roster o! N aznrctb
College student leaders lists the
following:
Stephanie. Sullivan, s peech correction
majol', .President of Undergradua
le Association- during
he.r sophomore year served as
class ptesident aud was student
council representative !tosh yeat·.
A gntduate of Windham Centml,
she was elected ]JI·e•ident of her
class sophomore and junio1· years
and was student council president.
Mary Agnes Lynch, sociology
major, Vice-President of Undergraduate
Association- was sophomoJ•
e elnss parlinmental'ian and
junior class president; May Day·
attendant f •·osh yem·; chairman or
Mariology Commission 1957 -'68.
While at St. Joseph's Academy,
f~ ubl ieu tio n.s edi10r~ :
Eldu Clusing and Vicky \Vute•·s.
Lockport, served as ::souatily 5-!C·
t•cuu·y and Vice 1·re..rcet.
Ann Guben, ,b;ngusn major,
:secretat·y of unoe:rgraauate i\.~socuuion.
AG .ithaca .tllgh o:>c.hOOJ
was co~eduor ot the 1att.1er, a
nu.1mocl· of Nattonal J:a.ono1· ::>ocle"
y, LegiSlative Assembly, pre.:;aucn
~ of Ltte.rary Caub.
''"an Guido, math maj<n·J TreasUI'Cf
of Unde1·graduat.e Associatton-
sruden t. counc1J rcpl'cscntative
!rosh year, ~ect·eta.ry of Un<.!
crgrad. tiradunted from W bites·
ooro Central School and se1·ved
as treasurer of !-rosh class, vicepresident
scniot· year nnd seet·ct.
ary in junior ycat• o! State Student
Council, student council vice·
president.
Grace Cos t ic.h, hist.ory mnj<n·,
Senior ClasN fH'esident-tJ·easurcr
of Undergrad. Graduate of Wayne
Central and pres ident of student
government and o! ftosh class.
Palricia DonoYan. chemistry
n1ajor, Junioi· Class president.
Graduate of St. Gertrude's High
School, .Richmond, Va.-pre•ideul
of jWlior class, pa·esident o! student
council.
Alice H:anlon, liberal arb; major,
Sophomol'e Class president-<:ouncil
representative for Class of '61,
member o! Mission Board. Graduated
from East High, Auburnuews
editor o( paper, vice prefect.
of Sodality.
Kenisc Murphy, hi.::;to1·y majol',
P1·efeet o! Sodalily-sccrct.ary of
Sodality. Graduated from 'Moll>lstery
School of the Sem-ed Hea1·t
and sc1-ved there as Sodality ]JI·e·
feet.
Ma('y Spaulding, speech conection
major, Prefect of Missions-secretary
and tl'easm·er of M issions.
At ~hrcellus Centml
worked on school publications.
Elelen Kennedy. sociology ma, ..
jor, Resident Pl'esident. A grndu·
ate of St. Pat,·ick's High School
and •erved as Sodality Prefect.
Vicky ' Vaters, l•~rench majol',
F;ditor of GLEANER-associate
editor of Cleane1·. At Pot.~dam
Cen\J·al :se1·ved on •chool publications.
Shena 'l'chnn,
Engli~I}._J11ajo1·,
Editor of Verity
Fair - junior
editor of.
Verity, sopholl'IOl
·e c I a s s.
treasm·er. Graduate
or N'otre •·
D a m e High. Sheila Tchun
.Batavia, whc.re Verily Etlito •·
she worked onschool publications
Elda Clasing, English major,
Editor ol Sig i llum.....:..junior editor
of Sigillum. Graduate of Phelps
Central wbet·e: she edited the
paper.
Faculty Outlines
Summer· Schedule
Members of the !acuity, as well
as the students, have variou.s
plnns for the sununer vac.at.ion.
1\tiss jju_sb wilt be taJdng courses
in history at Ot.tawu University.
J)r. Guinn is going to teach a
graduate class in American foreign
Policy here at the college;
Ur. ~!.i ll er also will be teaching at
Naz;:u·eth. Sisler Cbrii)Lme Francis
]llans to l•ttend the Uucknoll
Lmve.J.'stty \V ol'k::thop !Ol' co a lege
J)h~t::;iology teachers in August in
Lewisbu1·g, .Pennsylvnnia, which
has sueh mms as aiding te:\chel's
to discuss common proole.ms; to
l.lora-ow and adapt new methodSj
und to see hi~ own wo•·k in per•
s pechve-Sister will also lu\Ve a
Botany clnss at Nazareth. Miss
White hhs ';a ticket to Liverj>ooP'
and is going to spend some time
with friends in England. Sister
Uarbara Ann will spend her swn-
11\el' at Notre Dnmc Universit.y
at the Summer Institute !o1· SecGodai'Y
School Teachers of Math
sponsored by the National Science
Foundation. Sif'tcr Magdalen expects
to be spending her time at
Not1·e D<une also, in the Arl Devnrtment,
taking tOllrses in scuJpLure.
Seniors To Celebrate
With Dinner and Ball
lrondeqoui~ Country Club, right
m·ound the corner from Nazareth,
will be the scone of the Senior
Ball, May 29th, f'""' 10 to 2. The
seniot·s have extended i nvitation~
to the classes of 1956 and 1960,
big and little sister ch1sscs. Previous
to the. dance a d.inner fm·
lhc senior:; and their escorts will
be held. .
Co-chairmen of this year's ball
are Pat Celso nnd Jane Donnelly.
Commiltee heads a1·e: Kathy Hanlon.
band: l<ay Morr,hy, invitations;
l<~,·ie s ·avage. bids; Molly
~loa)\, favors ; Peg Furino, dinner;
Carol S•·okose and Pal Walke•·.
decorationSi .Jan Egan, publicity.
Senior Biologist
Presents Paper
Nine ::;eicnce majors from N~zurcth
attended the Annual East.e,
·n Colleges Science Conference
ln Wilkes.Barl-e, Pa. on April
18· 19: Noreen Fonte. Amelin
Uet.ek, Gail )·lu lar:r... chemistry
m3jors: ~Iarina J'ung. Frieda
.Janssen,. ~lt\ureen Quinn, Mary
June \ rrooman. Jean Corneau,
Friday, May 9, 1958
, lioveiiJy lioin
meons low fores
... no cores!
GROUP ECONOMY FARES*
save you and two o r' more of
your friends 25% on round -trip
coach tic&cets. (*Except for local
ttips that ol'igino te and termi·
note between N ew York a nd
Wa.shington and points east of
Lancaster, Po.)
COACH PARTY FARES
save each person in your group
of 25 or MOr'e 28% of regular
roond·trip fore.
i.- ---------------------------, Special lor Married Students :
: Use The family Fete Pion- l
1 wivos ride one woy free. : !.-------------------- ---1
WONDERFUL FUN
FOR EVERYONE
Hove o " par ty" while you
lrov e ll Enjoy fine food •••
d eligh tful refreshments .• .
happy talk. Avoid worr-y about
traffic congestion, hi g hway
hazards, ond weather conditions.
Ask your loca l llckot or ttovel
ogent NOW obout thou gr•ot
mo n ey~savi n g plans.
EASTERN
RAILROADS
and Carol Vogt, I iology n1<1jors.
Student l'esearch p;q)eU in the
field~ nf hiolog.v, ehcmi~tl·~·, phys
ics, and ma themati<:s were pl'cscntcd,
including one by N az.
m'eth's Marina Pang. Other highlights
or the weekend we•·e totn·~
to scientific and i ndusta·ial centers
of intel'est, and a Saturday
night dance.
Friday, May 9, 1958
Veterans Sparkle in Anouilh's
Drama; Ingenue, Disappointing
by Jl rl<ne flrenl
It is 8 :40 M the llfo•·oxco 'rhoull·e, ~5th St., lhondwoy. The cm'lnin
pnrl• to reveal a lush selling with elnbomte props. A slondCJ· g il'l in
H hox s uit is sitting, profi le to lhc audience. This it~ Su~o~nn Strnsberg,
who I'Cceives a hearty rQund of .applause. Enter- a vibt·nnt woman
with grf"y-white hair, wearing a shimmering costume of pinkisbO>
nnge, This is Helen Hayes, who also reeeives a similar, if slightly
mo>e noble, acknowledgment oC reputation. The r>lay io Jean Anouilh's
"Time Remembered'' and all thi• npplnuse anticipated a single word
of dialogue.
A lhert )farre's III'Oduetion of
'
1Time n..emembered" c.an be sttid
to be outstanding. The co•tumex
~ lth,'l l'll (' l ' und g litter: lh&:l nclOt'A
(fo>· the most part) glow: the •ets
ddCt on and off stajl'e with the
n>ngienl ease of n musical comedy.
The background music i• appropriately
sad and fairy-tale-like.
The dialogue, while not part.iru ..
Judy over-sparkling, offe1·s vnst
pos•ibilities fm· the comedy oC
intenu·ctation.
Mi~3 llayes, b·ue to rcputntion,
wmc her hrillinnt, wiUy KCll. She
I'UditHed, she g lowed, to commnnd
full house attention every onMinge
momenL 1t wns well worth
the price o( admiS!'ion merely to
•ee the "pro" utilize trirks rrom
her bng of experience. Richard
Burton. similarly, was melancholy
and romantic. Minor chn1··
The big diStlJ>I)Ointmcnt of the
('ven ing was Miss Sln_tsberg, who
fnHed to live ll ll to CXJlC:ctntion.
She neither looked like u mlllincr,
nlUCh lCSS U double (Or Hlhe divine
Leoendia." She ••end her lines
well, but without depth nnd timing;
it would se;,m that the little
daughter of the fumed head of
Actors Studio needs •ome school -
ing herself. Of course it must be
nck11owledged difficult lor anyone
to hold his O>' her own ngainst the
Creut Lady of the Th~ntre, much
less n hulf-tl'ied udolesccnt. A
solution would b~ not. to cusl a
young girl in a role demanding a
certain amount or maturity.
All in all. however, "Time Re·
membered" will be ju.t that.
C'n"l SIIOI'I'· In Stln Bernadino,
ncte>·• such as The Butler, The Cal., ea•·ds s tuck in the windHcud
Waiter, and a Taxi Driver s hield of nn iii<J.l'll lly pl11'ked ea•·
who looked surprisingly like ~'e•·· hore the•e messnges: ''Dear Offidlnond
and uttered such lines ""' ce>·. 1 •·an ou~ of gas nnd money,
"Of cour1s;e l'm free. I'm Fa-ench!''
und "\Vhy shouldn't I keep rob·
~its here! It's my cab!'' stood
out like stars in the gala.xiu.
too.'' answered by "D<!ar Clt.iz.en.
I'll give you an hour to earn some
money and buy some ~as.t•
u.s.
AIR FORCE
THE G LEANER
SOPHS EYE THE
GRAVE OLD SENIORS
With the udv~nt of g>·aduntion
for Lhe eiBS• of '58 looming
ncar, we nskcd the sophomot·cs
to g ive u~ u 1illle "inside'' in!
oa·mation about their big sisters.
follow ~ome or the fucts not gen·
er.1lly known by the masses!
Maq: ~l erke l does :t good imp~rsination
or ft:nrtha Kitt, and Sue
O'Oay hAl n fine rendition of u
clauic 8011$: nbuut. "The A me dean
Chee~e Snndwich." Such t..alcntJ
B1•idgc ~~~ n fti'Cnt. ganu:, bul
rumor haK it. thul -E,•ie Savage
would mthcr piny it than <.'Ill.
Also, underclassmen are being
taught how to say "1 Love You'·
iu Chinese b)• Marina PanJ! . . .
new t"Omnn~;;?
Jeanrttc Mar1ino had an ide:ll
job last. summe•·-in n men's
cloth ing Alo t·c7
Did unyono notice thnt no one
was sm·prised when Peg Furino
I{Ot he>· dinmond ~ M:oybe it was
uecause Peg wns the last to know
:obout it!
Everyone seems to agree that
J-\ rlene Ur·ent spends her time
hounding people Cor their "Ver·
ity" a1'ticle• nntl that Therese
Clnrk spends n lot of her spn•·c
time in the smok-.·.
Finally, ot the 1•ecent Cunisuis
Concert, one ot the fellows wns
overheard stntinjl' that Candy
Pilla had the nicest smile of any
Nazarene he h~d seen!
WAF Omce,.. J nformation. Dept. 82
Box 700~. \\'athin«ton •· D. C.
The Rochester Redwings
Gals Go for Guys Who Play the field
11lf n womon decides s he'K a haachnll fan she's n t·enl g t·cnt. ha~cbull
f:tn," Tom Decker, WVET •Pol't.cnstel' f o•· the Roehe~ter Rcdwings.
t-emu•·ked at a recent interview. Espeeially nltrnctive to the gh·ls i.s
Lhis )'Ctu·'s Rcdwing team. "Th(ly run faster, steal mm"C bases, ntake
hetter derensive pl:tY• und nltempt ir.1possible cntches." Mr. Decker
tomntented.
Cot Deal, who has been with the Re<lwings :>s a t>itchcr. since 1952.
became their manager lnsl year. He pitched Com>crly with the Red
Sox nnd the St. Louis Cordinul•.
Stnr Redwing l,lnycrH, thoa<'
npt to hit the most bome 1·uns
n re : Tom Burgess, Don LnKsctcr,
nnd Ed Stevens. Tom ljul'gCss,
rrom London, Ontol'io, hit 22
home runs last year. Don Lassc~
ter, from Omaha, n new outtleld ~
r. hit 27 home runs last year.
i'::d SteventS, a "~eteran first bus~ ..
mon, who has been in the International
League since 19&2, hit
12 home, .. in 1957.
The Redwings , member• of the
Triple A Lcnguc s ince 1900, piny
164 games :o year: 77 at home,
77 elsewhere. They play ut BuC·
fulo: Columbus, Ohio: Mont>·enl:
Toronto: Richmond, Vu.j Miumi;
ftnd Havann, Cuba. They tini•hed
in ft,.,.l place 12 times und in
"~cond plate 13 times. Sinc.c 1948
they have achieved one of the
top four plnces ~ve>·y year except
lust yeua·, when thc)r cume in
ACt h.
The age of the playe•"' vuJ·ics
!1'0m 19 year old Bob Miller to
:15 year old Cot Deal. The IIV·
~rage age of tbe playe•·s is 25.
Mr. Decker eomn1ented that usuall)~
A boy sig.ns a contr..•ct im-mediately
afle>' ~t~•ndualing f>·om
high school. Bill S;~rni, the Redwings
conch, iM the youngcRt ever
to play professiOnal baseball. Jn
1945, at the ajl'e of 15, he played
with Los Angeles.
April Fool's duy tomes more
often than on<e n year to Redwing
Qunrters. When a pla)'Cl'
has a lucky streak: hits several
honte runs Ol' J)itchu a shut-out,
the other fellows put a smaller
s ized hat in his locker. While
the chagri ned J)luyca• J)ulls nnct
tu,s at the cup, the others oc...
us.e him, luughingly, or getting
a swelled heud. Another trick is
nailing a player's shoe• to the
floor.
The Redwinn returned rron>
Havana to play th•ir first home
game April 23. "This year's team
i" an improved tenm 0"'tJ" last
year. They •how the crowd a
colorful~ cxcltinP." gnmc.'' eoneluded
M1·. Decker.
"The trouble with the school of
experience is thnl most of its
graduates jl'et their diplomns too
late to do any good."
FOR THE WOMAN OF
EXECUTIVE ABILITY:
A challenging job and world-wide
travel as an officer in the
U . S. Air Force
There are few other jobs open to :<>day's woman of execut
ive ability that offer t he oppor t unity f01· I'CSJ>Onsibility,
job ec,uality, wot·Jd-wide lJ•;wel and adventure, as thn\ of an
otl!cer in the U. S. Ail· Fo•·ce. Now, for the first lime in
yen•·s, the Air Force offet·g direct commissions to those who
cun qualify. If you mnke the grace, you will emb;u·k on a
career that fits ideally with )'our talents. You'll h•we a
chance to serve yourself while you serve your connt1·y, as
well. Investigate you•· chances Cor a direct commh<sion in
the U.S. Air F o•·ce today.
MAIL THE COUPON NOW FOR FULL INFORMATION
ON YOUR OPPORTUNITIES FOR A D IRECT COMMISSION.
Pleal!t> t>nd ntf' mor(!, information on my opportunities for a DJRf:C'T C'OMMJS~JON in the
U.S. Air Forte. I am n U.S. tilittr\ bet.we~n the ag-es of 21 throuxh 33. unmnrr-iM 3nd without.
depc.o:ndents under 18 re&rs of ~~Jre.
t\'ftiiUt------------------------------SI""<'
I-------------------------------
Citu----------------Z•n•--St4to--------Coll~
ll•------------l>~g,·u----MnjorS,.bjtc1------
THE GLEANER Friday, May 9, I '158
'n Alumnae To Visit Special Events Climax Year's
Brussels' Fair Activity for Campus Groups
Con1e recession or high wate•· (notieed the ct•nal lately!) spring
comes through, and it's great! N.C. girls are utilizing the great out·
doors to the fullest. They're finding nnture's study hall to be n•uch
more J>lcn:s.~mt than the conventionnl one. Wouldn't advise tl'ying any.
thing too l>roround out there, though, too many dist•·nctions. But, we
must be tolerant! Some of tho•e notes thnt wnft down !rom the thb·d
floor mny be the l)Oundings of a Cuturc Rachmaninoff. Remember,
p1·octice mnkea perfect.
Americans nre descending on
the World's Fair at Brussels. For
a few, like Diane Smith nnd Jane
Donnelly, '68, the utmospbere
wilt not. be new. Juno und Diane,
alumnnc of Nozurclh, will Rnd a
bit of tha college nt the l'uirin
the science dis pluy ot the Vat·
icnn exhibit where the work of
fou•· Siste.-s of St. Joseph (two
cf whom are fnculty members of
Nuareth) Is shown.
Enrertuinrnent noCes: All you
jou rans will be happy to hear
that An1eric:n's own contribution
to the world of
muP.ie will be
represented by
Benny Cood·
mon at the
World's Fair
in B•·ussels. He
und his retinue ,
will pe•·Jo•·m
aL the A meri·
can Lhenli'C lor
u week . ...
S1>eaklng o I
Laura Polla
jnzz, mod~1n jazz bands have one
big P•·oblem. Despite an increase
in the jan audience, (because o!
l.p.'a and some T.V. programs),
night dub outfits have troubles
.,.,ing heard. They can't rise above
the noise. Vne exasperated leader
won a temporary v1ctory over the
usually noisy c:rowd in a New
York cluo b)• announeang: ··\Ve
will now have nn audience pnrliclpution
number. we wlll play
.iour bnrs. 'J'bcn you break glasses
nnd just make noi~e for !our batS.
Then we'll !>loy again. 'l'he tiUc
of the song is 'reverse l>sychol·
ogy,' dig?" ... The art of musi·
cnl comedy (once considered illegitimate)
hn• come into its own.
01 the long productions on broadway
tasting through the summer,
sox of the ten have been musicals.
Need more evidence? Musical
comedy, as nn art, is now being
otudicd in m:•ny colleges.
The World or Books: Read some
comment about the sky being the
litCI'i\fY limit Leday. Donald
Adnm• (New York Tilnes) s aid:
"You can wl'itc todlly about the
utmost in humun degrndation.
\Vhv." he continued. 11should '"e
l>c a sked in l>ooks to suffer what
we refuse to suffer in ,..,a] life��the
comj>nny of rools, bores, and
degenerates!'' Think he's got a
t>Oint T Check your .,.,st seller list •
. . • A while ago, a book called
·j Love lle Little" was regarded as
America's an•wer to the sudden
vogue for youthful romances. It
was adgned by an •• An"'landa Vail."
,\mnnda turned out. to be \\rnn-en
Millea·-no answer to F~-ance . ..
Jncquea Moritain, French philosoph~,.
and .forme•· Pa·inceton prof'cKsor,
likes America and he's telling
us nbout. it. His new book :
··Reflections on America,. contain
•omc ref•·eshln~orly objective ideas.
Tells us about the 1-atings of both
g-oodneu nnd intelligence in ou•·
•oci~ty, the roll or the Catholic
intellectual and comntents on various
other phases of American
lifo. This i• one you'll enjoy .,.,.
toming acquainted with-brand
uew on our own Library shelf.
lncidenlals: Congre~s may per·
mit le~tislntion p•·ohibiting the de(
r.cement of thP 113tUI'lllly beau·
tlrul COlllltry•ide by billboard ad·
vertisinK- Just. in time fo•· vaca·
lion dt·lvlng. Arcn1L the intricacies
or gOVCI'IllllCnt nmnzing? - .. The
1 un on jokes about psycho-analysis,
o•· the cull cf the couch, sign
o£ the benl generation, culminated
in the opening of a new coffee
house in G1"eenwieh viHage. h.
"tb named "Th~ Cou'-h.'' \Yaiter.:s
wore Doctor's snuwoks and served
concoction. like "p>ychic masso·
ehi~t," "lhe comp ex/' the ··or.
f"'reud," and more of the same-.
It went over likt crnzy! Read
:;omeplnce where nn eminent au·
tho•· dia•nissed the possibility of
emigration to outer space :.ts a
•olution to ovcr-IJOpulation-We
a1·e glud!
La•t Wo•·ds: Th~ year's dl'nw·
ing to it• inevitable close. It's
l•een great, airing views ubout
things near :~nd far- not often
one gets the chnn;e. How about
one lnat try! I THINK: that I'm
going to mi~· this chnnee to talk
for 5CO or so wOI'.b with no in·
tCITUption-nnd, I len ve nty lille
niche on the Clt•ancr staff with
great reg~eta.
Vatican Exhibit
The Cily of God. nnme of the
Vatican exhibit, mark. the first
time the Vatican ha< been rep·
1-esented at the World's Fair. The
United States will pa•·ticipate in
!our sections of the Cil) of God
-seieneeJ cduenlionJ .sociul life,
and Catholic ehnl'ity. Th1·ee build.
ings comprise t.he Vatican exhibit,
which Is fl·onted by a
$40,000 ca•·illon donated by
David Snrnoff, choh·man or the
bond of Rndio C) rporntion o!
Amerien.
Out of U.ound~. In \~nncouver,
B.C., golf pro Jock McKinnon
learned from docwrs that he is
allegric to grnas. (Time)
Fashion Goes Chemise With
Multi-Colored Accessories
fn its Spring Fashion Report, the New York Times gives
a one word summary of the Spring silhouette: CHEMISE.
The one essential characteristic,-a slight or loose fitting
about the waiRt The numerous versions: "straight UJ> and
down . . . ; a clinging front and turtle-shell back; a
bloused lot·so. or a high, fitted bodice above a wide skirt.''
tilfck. Uttrdn ttml t.'laine l\Josi~r. Nay Cnrtwau.lr. nml
l.ouil'lr / Jarr•l!ll ltHJkin~ lrP$ cltit'. in tllf+ir t'.l.,.misl"s.
The effectivcnes• of the loosefitting
designs iB due in no small
meas ul'c to the use o! the supple•
t of fub•·ics. Softly woven
woolens and tweeds, plinble cot·
ton blendl4, ond silks have won
ove•· the fashion audience. The
sometime~ !Subtle, sometimes
hlnzing colors hnvt )ll'ovided fur·
the•· tnptivnlion.
The d.-ilf''" nnd colo1·s put us
all back in Fihl,'<:'l·ald's "Roar.
ing Twtntie,... r.l«Kl, and we're
encourug-ed b)' tht' milliner's ma.r·
ket.. Your whole outfit is completed
by either u cloche (helmetlike
atTnir), u tuthan. or a jnu.nty
I'Oller.
While the style has '' definite
apj>enl to the fu•hion-conscious
ladies, the ludic&' audience, in
turn, hns u dlmmea· view of the
11S1\ek." F'or this reason, nnd in
considel'Ution of the fact that
the style only e~rphasizes what
i~ most aappem~ to hide. many
think the more <xtreme designs
will be quick in fading. Chemiseput
·chasing should become a
pick~t.ry·on-and Rti'Utinize affair.
Foa· those who choose to ign01·e
fnshion'M spnMmodic shrnnls, u
Stll·ing-into·Sununcr wtu·drobe of
attractive shenthK, nnd feminine
frills will •till A'ive them n maximum
of eye-ratth~nJC I)()W~r.
The ~ea~n'a nctc~•Y collce·
tion is as varied, colorful. and
stimulating as lh< dreliS de.•i~:ns.
Everything f•·om ropes of
beads, bold-sited pins, tinted
stocking'S, nnd flowea·ed ~h04!shas
been designed to compliment
milady's wurdr'Obc.
The key lo rnsh ion secul'ity
remnins eonslnnt. D1·ess to suit
your own indivlduully charming
pcrsonnlity, wp off with n dash
of your !avoa·it.e Crogl·uncc, l'e·
tax, nnd enjoy you,.sell.
(.hemis try Club-
On Saturday, Apfll 26th, mem·
bers o! the t;hemist•·y C•ub ut·
tended a meeting In miniutm·e at
R.l.T. An inte•··collegitltc guther·
ing, papers were g iven l>)' a·epre ..
sentativcs of noighbol'ing col·
leges.
Biology Club-
On the snme duy (At>l'il 26th)
the Biology Club took a Lour u!
Bergen Swamp und•r the guitlanee
of n ... Ro•• Arnott, i>I"'f4UIsor
o! Biology at St. John F•sher
College.
)lath Club-
As a part or a llrOjl'Ct of in·
vestigating the job OPPOI'tunities
for college Mnth Majora, the club
sponsored u film on indu:,try a\
their April 29th meeting. Kay
Morl)hy, P1·csident of the Math
Club, felt it wnK '" ' excellent eli·
max for theh· yeo r-long p1·oject.
A the Mny 13th meeting, th~
new office••s ro•· next ye&l' will be
elected and at the •ame time th•
club wilt plan a flcld trip to some
Rochester incfuMry wh•re they
expect to see an electronic "brain"
in action.
Musi< Club-
At the April 21st meeting, tho
:Uosic Club elected thei•· new officers
for next year. Ann Louise
Lark wHI be next yetu"'s Presi·
dent, assisted by Sue Co pjmrelli.
who was cho,;cn n8 Se<:l'etfu·y.
The Glee Club will be headed l>y
Carol l!usso, and the Band and
Orchestra will have llnry Agnt:ti
A lrutt ns Presid~nt, und UC\'erly
Stannarius for Secrctnry-Treusurer.
Sociology Club-
At the tnst •ncctinl( of tho So·
eiology Club, which wos held on
Apt·il 29th, Lhc Junior majors
gave their report on a t~ut·vey
which they conduet<"d R o m t·
months ago. The outcome was
MJ)ecially i..nt~l"ettin~t 10 the Sft"OUP
and wn:; •-~Jated to a t~pecial
seminar t1 which the Juniors nrc
participating.
The lla)' meeting of the club
will be devoted to the election of
news officers :tnd the making or
plans !or t1 party 01· pitnic to
close the school yem·.
Art Club-
May Day decorations this yc•u·
will be unusual, but. in J)eJ-fccl
keeping with the c:elehi'Hlion of
the Lou•·des them•. The Sopho·
more Att Majors :.rc making life·
size scenes depicting vnriouK Ul)·
paritions o! Our Lady. They will
be used to decorat~ the Jtym Cor
llass and the crowninJt .
At the lllay meeting Cl( the club,
the annual Art Club Dinner will
be planned.
Also in May, the club will huve
nn exhibit or faculty nrl work.
This will include th~ nrt or Siste•·
)lagdalen, Miss Wnl•h, M•·•·
0 1Conncll, and Mr. Pokrop,
I-vy League
Is it ever Ivy! Why, Coke is tb.e most
correct beverage you can possibly
order on campus. Just look around you.
What are the college social leaders
going lor? Coca-Cola! So take a leaf
out of their Ivy League book and do the
same! Enjoy the good taste of Coke!
SIGN OF GOOD TASTE
Botlled under oulhorily of The Coco-Cola Company by
ROCHESTER COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.