P· 5
p. 4
p. 4 GLlANh~ MARCH Zl
NCR COLLEENS COURT SJF GAME.
PLAN ST. PAT'S DAY CEIDLE
MATH CONTEST
The Sixth Annual Mathem•tlcs
Contest sponsored by tho .NC Math
Club will be hold Sat.urday, M.ar<h
Z3. The contest Is open to Jlrls.
Crodes IHJ. Its aim Is to promote
fnterut In mathemaUca amoD.I
hilh lehool students and Interest
In hlcher education In genersl
Reatstrotloo will take place fr<Mn
12:3CH p. m. with the four rounds
of tcstlng beginning at 1 : 1~. The
(Conlin•«!"" pogo four) utlents Elect LeValley President
of the elections for chief Undergrad secretary. The second ballot was taken Monday, erine Brieaddy expressed the ambitions of Monica
announced to the NCR student body March 4. replace the role of the Undergrad Secretary. Cath·
-•~~<>·ua_y, March 7. Riley In an imaginary phone conversation to a
The final effort to persuade the students of friend .
report had been long, long awaited since
slogans and promising posters
halls of Nazareth from Tuesday
February 26-28. Vigor and en·
as the candidates for offices in
votes from members of
Elections were held Friday,
was necessary for the offices
vice-president, treasurer and
the abilities and platforms of the aspirants OC· Ginny Holderbach, In charge of the elections,
curred during Students' Hour on Thursday, Febru· was very pleased with the campaign. She said,
ary 28. At that time, each campaign manager was "The general attitude durl.ng the week of cam·
allotted two minutes to present the qualifications paignlng was very enthusiastic and mature, with
of her candidate. The speeches ranged from seri· which the election committee is very pleased." The
ous presentations of past accomplishments to important thing, according to Ginny, is that the
humorous innovations in the various offices. Marie students got out and voted. If they hadn't, they
Maboney,'speaking for Anne McDonald, proposed would have defeated the purpose of the elections
a machine, which she Invented and displayed, to and the ·campaigning would have meant nothing.
While here at N_,..,th Saney I She beUeves that sebools throu&h·
has been active in class activities. out the area are not aware ol
louder than words,'' said Beth LeValley sandy Clark our new Fll'$t Vlec She wu on the Realdent Board In whit NaUl'f!th Is dotna and
her new office as Undergraduate Associa- President. Is b'uay planning to fos· her Freshman year and was Class should. Her remedy for this situShe
could not verbally express her feelings ter Increased Interest In clubs for Parliamentarian during her Soph- atlon Ia to aet out and tell them
office but felt that her sentiments could be better nevt year. Sandy would llke to aee omore year. She Is presently Stu- about our activities.
her actions next year. more club meetings held at tlmca dent Councli Representative for Since Anne Is servfn& u Social
. . • available to all students, prefer- the lunlnr class. Board Representative of the Sopb-has
held poSltions of authority throughout her year;; ably durlna Student HoUl'$ or 1n omore c1us this year, she undM'-
In her Freshman year she was Student Council the evenlnaa. She Is also hoplnJ The newly-a'eated oll'lee of 5«- standi the problems of the Board.
lf l~.ntative. Later, she became the N.F.C.C.S. Junior dele- to eneourage various clubs, of Jn. ond Vice President u being beld She feeb that. with a llntle per·
Senior delegate. She represented Nazareth at terest to all the students, to pre- by Anne O'Hara. One ot Anne's son In authority ,the Board's work
conferences and one conference on the U.N. sent programs at Student Houra. malo goals next year Is "to give will be much easier.
acted as President of the Junior class. The eleeUon committee wm not back to Naureth As It gave to Ml'nutes a d Mo ch d . h undergo any great revisions be- me." Anne feels thnt. since she n nay many anges . an Improvements ave. ~een cause Saney !eeiB that the com· iecelved sueh a warm welcome When asked about her otrlce o!
Beth for lJ?e cooung year. Her tdeas are dwtded I mlttee's job hu been well done when she came u a Freahman. the Treasurer of the Undergraduate
areas; well·inf?rmed, conte~ted and well·rounded and no major changes are neees- same cordlaJit;y ahould be shown Association. .aopb .Joan Curtin ...,.
(CoxtinK<d on PGII• ..,.) sary, to the Incoming Freshman clus. (Co•dunud .,. pago .UJ
I MC \:JL C Al"4 C f\ neonesoay, Moren 1 ,, 1
I ED IT 0 RIALS I LeHers to The Editor C!Uth~~~~-~!'!~t~
Friday, ltiarch 1, 1963 the underarad elections su~
L-------------------------'· Fellow students, as.enldv etsh teo nthewei ro piTlaicnesr sr oorr ltehnet _rUut.
How often In the recent campaign platforms for major we must not rorget that the a
offices in the Undergraduate Association was the furthering rew weeks brlnll with them ~~
or our college's social life mentioned! True, the intellectual Important elections. The UDI
The GIN ner feels that it is now time to break a time- life was mentioned, but briefly enough as to cause no panic graduate Aaaoetalloo could1u;
honored precedent. We are now go·m g to come out ·m f avor among the student body that Nazareth Col le ge rru· gb t b ecome function as a unlfted body wi ,,,
Electioneering
of candidates for election to campus office. The office: Gleaner more intellectual than it presently is. The general attitude, ~:.~~!~~J.c;';~~i~ ~=b:;,~
editorship. The candidates are still to be announced. Which judging from attendance at and participation in what I will tattvcs.
of the candidates shall we endorse? All of them. Which one do call, for lack of a better expression, extracurricular studies, Is It Is Important to keep In 111
we favor? None of them. The final choice belongs to the rank that of satisfaction with the knowledge (the mere framework that the particular offices •
and :; ~e af~:e ::::n ct::ake. The Gleaner, of neces- ~e!~ i1o ~ g~~~n{~oa!f~~~c'lcg a~~~o~~~!e ~~~~ ~~:r=~:!:!r~=~
sity, must be entrusted to a diligent and loyal campus citizen. our heads their opinions, well-grounded and well-founded, der or importanee. Each oll:too
It Is an instrument whose power and influence will grow as :"~~; !~~b ~~.f.::':~ :'.~ Dear Editor, Important within its own spb
N'azareth College of Rochester grows. We may truthfully and Little has been done to solve I believe I speak for many In and each provides an opportw
proudly say that the Gleane r Is the only means of campus this problem. The few speakers we ~~~~n!~:O~t ~~:~~~t8:;';~1 Y:~~ ~f:,:~e~;;:, le:::rs~."' .~~~
c:ommunicatlon concerning current topics and events which bave bad at students' bou.rs ean- eoncernio& courtesy 1o the Febru· the time for clus oomlnations,
bas enjoyed such a valuable and permanent position in the not have appealed to and aatls- ary 26 i .. ue or The Gleaoer. Be- must be aware. onoe more.-~~.~
life of every NCR student and faculty member. lied the whole student body l.n uuse it Is 10 common, it 1a so cuy potent, wllllnll and enth~
Co un1 ti · th f b b · g•s attendance, alnoe tastes and In· tor us to overlook the Importance candidates.
mm ca on IS e m:ans ~ every) uma~ dn Its terests vary. ln faet, the most pos- or courtesy. The Idea she gave us Th 1 ld t h t ·
relations with another. It can e use proper y or a use . lllve thing I have observed eon- or supematurallzlng our courteous port:'.t" :o"l'e:.~~the~r ;~lc;:'"m
power for good or evil is tremendous. Our d eslre is that every- cernlng the aUmulallon of l.ntereat actions Is on Incentive to make be properly rulftlled in order
one concerned with the elections for the editor of the Gleaner In aoytblng cultural Is the oeea- sure we do perform them-•md Insure clus unity and abo ac11o
bear in mind the potentialities of the power of the press. You slooal notice In TRE GLEANER well. unity. First. she must serve
must take into consideration what the Gle.ner bas been in the or an upeomln& loeture at St. John How many or us have ..-or class ln all that Involves the d
past and relate ~;his to w~at you wan~ the Gleaner to become , !'!~ t:;'\::'e~ ~~~ '!:~ul:~ stopped before to consider "slouch· In a speeiRc way. S<!eoodly,
in the future. Tbmk what 1t would be if the readers of the New I opportunities 11 merely a lack or lng" In class u an act of diaeour- must represent her class to lho
York Times could elect its editor! communication and coordination tesy. But upon giving this sulflclent tire school. Without this vital cl
thOught. we can easily see how diS· leadership, the Undergraduate
We cannot dictate our choice for editor. Nor do we wish between our college and any such courteous It Is. when considering soclatfon and the Student Couo
that this be the case. y<~ are satisfied that each one of ~be ~:=~.est::~·~ ·:~Ju':~t~:! how diaeourieous It must seem to I would be powerleu to functlo~
candidates is ready, willing, and able to fulfill the reqwre-1 belng what we need 10 round out a teacher to elve or his knowledge, Similarly, the class represa
ments for the job. our eduution. For several loJtan- ~:~dt:' :uit.and lind
10
rew ~i~!1 ":f:: .::.;~o~;~~:.~~~w
The recently a pproved •mendmenb to the Constitution COS. these are a few things 1 have We all can well alford to read must be one who is capable of
concerning the editorship of the Glea ne r now insure that only
1
:~u:t~e:~,t about, usually too late the messaae In Judi's column again presslng herself and wUllng
students who are Interested In the welfare of the n-spaper 1 the lecture series sponsored and again-and or course to try to pursue an obJective. Aside from
be the on•• considered to fulflll the managing positions. by 'and beld at Naazreth College. put It Into practice. Thank you, tending weekly Student Cou
Judl. meetings. she must have lhc tl
We beartl!y endorse all those who have announced their 1 A Us~ of speakers appear_ed 00 the Sincere!)', and the e&~crness to seek out-~
desire to be in on the history-making era of campus J. ournal· 011••ial Notiees bulletln board Ann MacArthur '65 cestiona and to devote berseU
. . . . about halfway through lhe series. k. bov all •
Ism. Vote for the candidate of your chotce a.nd select a gtrl Why were we the students not commllt~ wor A e • ~
to carry on in the tradition or the Gleaner-a tradition we Informed of this, ahead of umo? Ask M. L' Abbe' llirl must be approachable for
consider well worth following. 2. the free lectures and scmin- •I•s,m ouqtuhipteie cer"l aohntl yC, ouenaccllh. e.lll
• • •
Drive to the Right
Many felt that there w~s ~n imp ort:.nt oloment ml!;slng
from Douglas Hyde's talk of March 5. Could that item have
been-sensationalism? Most of us feel that in order to counteract
the oratory or avid pro-Communists an impassioned delivery
is a must for the anti-Red. But a no more dispassionate lecture
could have been given by Hyde, arch-toe of Sociallsm.
We consider that his delivery was a compliment to his listeners.
His safe and sane approach to the matter of the Soviet
threat was indicative of his wish for us to try to offset the Red
inJiuenoe in a safe and sane manner.
ora at other Rochester colleges. B:r FATIItlR SHANNON Both or these offices req~
Notice of such Is sometimes pub- Dear &1. l'Abb6: In the Tuesday, time, effort, and 8 constant aw1
Usbed ln the Rochester news- NoY. 6, 196! issue o.r the GLtlAN£R ness or both elau and school
papers. but often not untU the TOll staled that the law or abstl· tlv!ties; but at the same time~
very day of the evt.nL ne.nee on Frl4•7 was • law lDvolv· provide an opportunity tor_ \Ji
3. other cultural opportunities toe qnant111. Could It be that tbia contact with olassmotes and li
or a lighter veln-4rt exhibit$, re- Ia abo lhe cue re&'!ll'dio&' tbe £u. mately with the enUre school. 11
eltals. concerti. The social bulle· ehulstic fast? lmpertant thot all tour clasJ ~r
tin board does post some of these, Ans. Bles. you. At last 1 have ldents and rOproscnh.tivo.c work
usually tho8c •howl which requlru prOof that someone reads this col· gether on oec.atlon to discuss ~
a ticket for admittance. Are Naz.. umn! The answer to your question tual problMU and compare ex!
aretb student$ aware of the stu- Ia: no. The reason Ia this: There Ia lng attitudes. Such ao apport~
dent roeltaia which oeeur at rtJU· a fundamental dltrerence betw~n b facilitated through Studo
Jar lntervaia at the Eastmao The- the two laws. The law or abstln· Council. Rivalry Is healthy 1o
ater and are free to the public! enee forbids us to eat meat on polnt, but beyond that polnt It
Or do we know that tbe Art Dl- Friday and thus makes It slnrul do much to undermine toul ach
vision or the Rochester Public Ll- for us to eat meat on Friday. Now spirit which Is so essential u
brary always hu a free exhibit a person may eat a very small successful Undergraduate Assoc
at the malo library, usually a dia- amount or meat on Friday or a lion.
play of palnting, sculpture, or great deal of meat .In both cues Along this same line or thOIIll
photography? How many students he would be breaklng lhe taw: we must not relegate mtoor ell
Several contrasts may be pointed out between the radical attend the showings at the Dry- but. all tltiop being equal, the otrl= to the ranks of last ~
Red invective and Mr. Hyde's talk. Most of us consider that den Theater, free to the public greater the quantity or the meat Here apln, we must seek out fr1
the Co.m.mu.nlst of today Is a crusader. We imagine him to be every Saturday and Sunday after- the more serious would be the vlo- and willing candidates who b
of the Hitler mold in inciting h is listener through emotional noons7 lotion of the law. considered the worth and paten
oratory to complete dedication to the cause. Such may actually Surely there are countless other The Jaw of the Eucharistic rast, of each oiTice and have madt
be the case. However, Mr. Hyde stressed the insidiousness of opportunities or which I am not on the other hand, does not, choice as to which office lhey
real Communist recruitment He was speaking to mature Col- :::;· F~r 0t'l,~ ;;'!so~·~ !~r~ fo:~:~'i:0~:!: '::.:0 :.t: ~.!t ~":.-e'i;":r:::';,:i=·~
lege students; be appealed to our idealism of routh, certainly like to advocate, by action or the the uklnc or rood or drlnk sinful. lty to spark support and enlh
-but on the basis that each person has the r1ght to his indi· student government. some eoord- Rather it forbids us to go to Holy urn. Consequently, eaeb oiTiee c
vidual p ursuit of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. !nation in cultural opportunities. Communion If we have taken ries with It the responsibility to
Such were his words and the general tone of his argument There are several ways this cnn food or drink wllhln the sllpulftlcd above all, an enthusiastic mom
against enslavement to Communist ideals that we may infer be done, the most eiTieie'!t bclna lime. What Is sinful Is, not taklos or one's clau and a willing leal
the same method of intellectual appeal Is used by the Reds the Initiation of a new oiT•~e. The the food or drink, but golDS to In even the moat elemeotsry, "
In king bs 'b t th "••ialist lin f th glrl chosen for thia OlrlOO, by Ho!y Commu.nion If we do take It tlne activities as attendance at s
see SU Crl ers 0 e """ e 0 ought. eleetion. appointment, or by vol- (no matter what the quantity may dent aod dus hours.
The Communist at times may appeal to the patriotism, unteerlng, could handle lhe co- be.t Thus a person who takes rood Let us not lose, then. the -~
· d · tali f his list B t tbi 1 ordloaUoo between the area col- or drink within the stipulated of these llrst eloetlons, but !o~
emotionalism an se.ntimen ty 0 . .eners. u 5 s leges. libraries. art groups, etc.. time on a day on which he might through on a general camP!
merely a means to an end; these feelings are to be erased who are anxious to give us what ...,ceive Holy Comunlon Is break- policy o! seeking and support
when the Commu nists take over the world: for a world cili· they can. All we have to do Is In& no law. He would break nle competent leadership in e•
zenry will then be formulated under the domination of the accept their otren. law only It he received HolY Com· sphere or student olflee-holdl"!
Red idealism. I am anxious to know whether< munion. But a person cannot re- Patricia Roue)' Horta
any olher studenia feel as strong- ceive HolY Communion more or .--------------4 No shoes were thumped on the rostrum, no screeching
voice sounded from the stage, no great ovation followed the
lecture. Rather, Douglas Hyde, proponent of the rights of man,
Informed us of the possible future of the world in such a wny
that his listeners were intellectually convinced of the threat
to their personal welfare. We were addressed as world citizens
and as such we must recognize the justice of our right and our
duty to uphold the principles of individual freedom.
II TJIB GLEANER
StfldMI hblleatiOft 01
HuareiA CoUoJo
Roclleettr. N. Y.
~ w.....-a, ex~ cbadAI eu•
.taau. ........ ...:1 r--.
o,lalau ~ • dU JIIU« ..,. ... __ ., ... __ u.. .. a.. ...... cu.aa.r ....
EcUI«·llt-Chlef . . AAO Woocll
AMI.Jtaat Editor a!aJ1.ba Coot
N.,.. l:4Uor Rcd.b lhuruntl
P••tv. £4IJor' M.uy .KaT ~
....__~ IUU~t ......
~ ~ M.aalb Wkbrt
.......... Siltu ... Alft
aatt lor "nda tt.litJ a. Abel. A. Amaaa. I.
a.tcbrr. B. 8oCIII., M', Ciraal$o, M, A,,
Clllfotd.. A. OolU.U. L. ~. L. Ea•l.bam.
ik~~· i ?o:;. 8i.8if~~~~
l(rydlak. a.tua Ku&all:owttl. B. Ma.loM,
.L,.. .~..._K,.XJ.I .....t.....n..l uI .. LIMl.l ~·. ~M ·Pal M..•
B. ~ .• 1L ........ L. ~ c. ldlw'aa.
L ~ I • ........ E. 'TU&iM, I .
Uqcr. StAq atnludl-. II. .1. w...u..u.
IL A.. Yibet.Jer, I. Zu1o.
IY about thtl need as I. less. Hence quantity b not In·
Jucl)' Otto, Class of 1965 valved.
S+udent Proposes Parking Solution
''With a lillie maneuvering, I one-way system eould be eatabtltink
I ean make lt. U I back up lbhed, whereby ears would enter
a Uttle. then t:ramp my wheels the a.isle.s Lrom lhe driveway nearsharply
to the ri&ht. maybe ... :· est the sehool and exit by the
driveway from t.he first able near-
NEXT ISSUE
of
THE GLEANER
combined with
THE PIONEER
Wln.ter Ia a trying lime, eapecl- est the dorms. Cars would still park
ally for those day-bops who muot on both aides of the aisles, but
battle each morning with 1now diagonally rather than perpendle-plles
and closely-packed. crooked· ularly, 10 that to enter. It would be April 1
ly-parked ears In the student part. necessary onlY to swlng forward
lng lot. The annual addlllon or Into each space with one easy mo- '------------t
these heaps or snow bas made the tlon, and to leave one would merelY --:-:---:-::----::--::-1
narrow ai<a even narrower t.h1l b.ave to baek out at a sli&bl •n~e would move In the opposJte dill
winter. As a result. It b dUI'Ieull to and pull forward to the exit drive- tlon hero,
pull into and out of parking spaces way, then proeeed around, throOgh With the eoopcration of the.tt
with ease. the first aisle end out. To ma.lntaln ftc eommlulon and student drlv
''But," you may ask. "bn't there the now of traiTie the 6rst aisle perhaps we could remedY this It
10me solution to this problem?" should accommodate onlY one line ftc problem. Top elfl~ency can
One ample 10lutioo seems appa- or cars, parked on an opposite prevail unleu this problem
rent. but It would require the COOP- angle to the other rows. This eradicated.
eratlon or all student drivers. A would be neeeuary stoce tratrlc
and ~cleanel" b...tae. ...,...er JeanDe Sloaa ehof
bulletiD board In aew newspaper otflee altaated
auauiClirnu" stace. --------
Glea ner" has changed its addreu. Its news and
a re now located behind the auditorium stage.
>u~ .... iou,slv the staff s hared q ua r ters with ot her school organthe
Undergrad Room. From now on "The Gleaner"
to share space only seasonally when the SRO-Raff
,,.,od,uclliaJos need their d ressing room.
move was fe lt to be a necessary one by a ll concern ed.
Gleaner" is a bi-weekly publication work ing space
almost constantly to get the paper to press with in
ne time. In recognition of these special circum·
Sister St. Catherine and Sister Gabriella designated
room behi nd the auditorium for extensive newspaper use.
"Gleaner" editor Ann Woods expressed approval of the
of address: " If the 'Glea ner' is headed for bigger a nd
things, then we must have this extra space to have
" She also welcomed visitors to the new address
them to come a nd look over the fa cilities wh ich
fina lly arranged to suit everyone's convenie nce
1.
on College Institutions
eithPr liN" ennt'~rn,.rl with th ~
$peaker's tople or eare enou,gb for
thclr coueae lo pay attention at
any rate. The rest contribute
nolhlna bul a fuller auditoriumand
they detncl areatly throullh
dtstractiD& others and annoYing
the speaker.
st~len~ lt~=t ~~~e,:m:!d:~:
hours on penalty of a fine. There
Ia no written rule about behavior
at such meellnas. There should be
no need tor one. The law of com~
mon courtesy should be for each
collegtenne her "ulde to behavior
lhem out at the desl<. at tbese assemblies.
t1ke them out and care-. Bernade&te Malone
the date on whlch
Page 3
Africans Disenchan~ed with ~eds
try o( Bulgaria. What end can be justlli~
or even achieved by these means?
Editor's Note:
The recent lecture by Douglas Hyde
brougbt home to us the real threat of Communism.
Mr. Hyde stressed in his talk the
Red desire for a "classless society". We found
the following article interesting because of the
first-hand tale It tells of violent bigotry and
prejudice exhibited In the Iron Curtain coun-
The author of the article, Mr. !Wbert
Kotey, Is· (or was) secretary of the Ghana
Students Unlon in Bulgaria. He relates the
events which caused a large number of Afri.
can students in Bulgaria to leave the country
and to attempt to pursue their ~ucation elsewhere.
It has been my unhoppy lot to their heads as they walked '*I we wished to ha•e aD ora...,.b;a.
serve ·as the Informal leader or a neath windows. Uon which e.Ou14 brlDI' ua t.orether
~~0t~S:1 ~~.~~~::~•;;;J~r::~~ to::~~~~t ~~r!~'.";:': :~:::."~~~~ In lhe true 11>frll oi pan-American.
fta, BuJ.aarla - who have been Nigerian student was waiUna for a lim. We feU that lf our various
forced by clrc:umttaneea to Inter- bus to take him to the hottt_l when aaUonal leaders are aow fllbtln.r
rupt our sludJu and to seek new he was a.pproaehed by a eroup or to uottc all of Atrlea. u stude..ntl
countries In wbkb 1o pursue them. BulgarlaDS who bad tell a restaur- II was ...,. dnl:r lo occelente lhlo
It was a p.alnlul declJJon whleh we ant and who were lauahtna. splt~ reali&atJoa In ID7' Wat we eould.
and almost all the other African tiDe and calling names. Taldnc Thlnll:r. we wanted to foster
otudents In Bulaarla have taken. them to be bapplb' drunk be did !r!""dsblp between lhe Blllpri.ln
but when denied pollee protecUon not take otJenee but joined In tbclr :roulb a.nd lhe AtricaiiS.
In the !ace of a pallem o! eonsis- loullhter. At tbis point one o! the By December '''" had dra!led a
tent racial dlacrtmlnaUon. when Bulgarians grabbed him by the constitution of our AASU-whlch.
denied the rlabt to orpnhe a.n collar and pve him a blow. while with the participation of student&
AII·Mriean Student& Union. when a policeman standing by made no !rom 22 countries. repreRDted a
our very lives were threatened. It effort to be.lp. The Ntge.rlan reo- true ••volee of Atrica''--and bad
was clearly not pooslble !or us lo ported the Incident and the ne&ll· elected a list of seven olflcers.
remain in the country. gence of the policeman. but nolh· headed by~erteh Tawl.all of Chane.
My own experlenee began when lng was ever done about tt~ Fre· a Jtudent of philosophy. Wben Ole
1 appUcd !or a e<:holarshlp to study quently African students had the Union had been formed we invited
In my chosen netd o! economics. experience of being beaten up by two .Individuals to palronlu It-the
and my government, which has BuJg.arian.s whHe a pollc·cman near~ Ghanaian Ambassador and, as an
worked out seholarshlp acrecmenu by would protest that he could do aet of iood wm toward the Bulgawith
a number of other aovem~ nothing because he was a.sata:ned to rian authorities. the Minister ot
ments In both the East and the another distrjct, or would mefely EdueaUon. We were surprised
West. selected me for a position disperse the erowd while lettlnc when shortly thcreafler Tawlah
in Bulgaria. In Dec'ember. 1961. a the beatlns conlinue. was called before the Minl.ater o!
number o! Ghanaian atudents-
1
,. We continued to hove some iood Education and told thai be would
wbo bad been selected solely on ,.rlends amonc the Bulgarian stu- have to disband the Union becai!S<'
the basis of educational quallllca- dents and people. but the Butca- It was acalru;t the ·'-principles .. o~
tion5-ft.ew from Accra to Soft.a to rian aovemment took no &tel>$ to Bulrarta. This wu ell the '"'Bull.l·
begin our 111$ber edueatlon. slamp out the hooUcanlsm acalnlt rlan authorities ever.u.ld. then or
We had como with open minds. us. and this led us to conclude later. that In some strange way this
and In the beJinDlnC we were ftUed thai It was beinfl supported from cenulnety pan-A!rlun movement
with high hopes. We received a .. above... wu .. allalnst our pr!Dclples ...
friendly welcome trom meny But· Prior to last year there were The next thing we tnew wu
garla,n people, and we were plaeed only a few A!rlc.a.n studentl- that on February 6 TeUeh Tawlab
in the same hostels. even the same (rom Mall, the Sudan and Guinea was served with an order of ex-put~
rooms. with our Bulaarlan fellow -In Bulgaria. and there was. slon from the University. In spite
students. We set about the formld· lhere!ore. no need for an all-Afrl- or the obvious falsity o! tho
able task or mastering the But· tan students• organization. When ehl'lrges against Tawlah. we would
garian language tn order that we we Ghanaian students arrlvcd last not have been convinced of the
miJ~:hl be able to undestand our year we found OUI'$Clvcs oiJ In the full tmpllcatlon.s of his ease· had It
te.xtbooks and lectures. same hostel. and In order tO sit not been for the fact that the VIce ..
As ume went on our relations together and exc.hanae vJewa we President of the AASU. Mr. Amllk
with the Bulaarlan students and formed the Cbana Sludents' Union. o! Ethiopia. was aJao warned the
peopto took a dl•turblng turn, We of whic.h I was electe-d •ecretary, noxt mom.lng that he woold tW'> ,. ••
bad been Impressed from the be- We never thou11ht to ask the per- pelled if he clid not abide by the
ginning wtlh lbe tarae number or mission o! the outhor!Ues to Corm reiiUlatloos o! -the University. We
misconc~pUons and aeneral lpor- $Ucla an oraanhaUon. and we ea.me knew then that the aeUons of the
ante l.n t.be eountry coneemtnc to fee.l that they were p~pared to autborlUes were not based on the
modern Africa. From student& to deol with us thus on Individual na- personal eonduct of the two stuproCessors
they SHmed In total Uonal bases. denta but rather on the hosUllty o!
darkness co.n«.mln& our eontlnent: We b.ad cone to Buls&rla to lhe Bulgarian govenmie.nt to the
all they appear to have been told olwl:r. nol 1o encace In polll.lu. formation o! an organhatlon which
Is that It 1.1 .. loo hot:• lllal we stUI and we had In the be&iDnlnc re- would unlle aU the Atncm otuhave
snakes ln the streetl, a.nd the siste.d tbe formaUoD or an a.U .. A_fri~ denU In the country.
people 10 about naked. They were ean orcanlzaUo11 !or !ear thai II On Saturday, February u. Tawlah
very surprised, In tac:t, when we mfcbt be fnvolve.d ln poJIUca. Jt was ordered to leave Bulgaria with~
told them that the suits we were was oob when we beca_me eon- In 12 hours. As .news of the order
wearing had been mAde In Chana. viDeed that an all-African or,.anlaa- spread some 150 African atuden"
They seemed to expect that we t.to·n In Bu~a need have nolblnc a:athered at the hostel and walked
would be wearing leaves to eovcr to do with politics tb.t We •l'reed down LenJn street to the Prlme
ourselves. to form one. Minister's office. We wlshed to do ..
African student$ lncreaalnaly be- Wbea. In November and Deeem· mand the relristatement of Tawiah Re: The Smokers came lhe obJecta of harassment by ber of 19&2, we took deft nile slops In the untvenlty and the withsome
of the Bulllarlan studenls loward the o..-anlzallon of lbe All· drawal o! lbe deportation order
On February 5. an event took and people. We were called all Atrlean Sludenls U11lon. we had against him and to Insist upon rocplace
which aiJecled a majority of sorts of names u we walked along seYeral obJeeUns In mlad. Flnl of oanfUon of the AASU u l.he repthe
student~ at Nazareth-the two I the streets, names such u "blac.k •ll. we wished to ha•e • mee:aa by resentatlve yolee of the Alrlcan =::.:: v.~re ~~~d:~~: :~~~;ere~::'~~f~ru::~~ ;:f:!d :r ~:::U '::~:'!..::!: :":!=. .':!:V;~ ~·.:.:• t~:
Inexcusable condition In which the selves bul 1o all o! Africa. Bo:rs of pollee proleclloa all d. look· afler by a nw> who said be was a leader
students bacl left them. Yet there were spat upon !rom buses and onr weUare In the !aee of lnade- of the Bulearlan Komsomol <Youna
Is a reason why the &Iris are not trains. or had water poured on q11ate II~ coaclllloDS. SecondiT, Commdnlst ~e) that the Prime
help by returning conselous ol the upkeep o! these M.IDialer was not available but that
rooms. Tbe thick brlek walls are A T d • T h e I be would meet with our represen·
Jean Elsmoal bare and In dire need O( a fresh rage y In ec n.co or tatlves 9 o·clock Monday mornln&.
S
--- = :f pal~\· T~1 huie windows By Sa lly Beecher Oyer the weekeod. seven stude.nts tudents' Hours they ::.,• .~.:,:d ~~ly0P~~·::: What could you do with forty million dollars? A lot of were elected to represent our post-
1
lion be!ore the Prime Minister.
hours. among the most etlan blinds. good! What has recently been d one. with j ust that sum- and they arrived promptly at 0:00.
attacked o! sehool in· There are tables ~~<:altered here someone made a movie! After they had wafted at the otJiee
constitute a familiar and lbere with a hand!ul or some As reasonably intelligent and mat urely acting Jpersons !or five full hours without a re-eampalgn
plat!orms. Can- ~ matehlna and some odd chairs · be ' sponse,a man who said he was the !e~': ::eJ;'::.~:o~ ;~h pe~: .. .:~:o:r"':~~ ;~~n: ~~d~n~, 0~~ ~~:.:\:x=~i::e~0~~ ~:~f::: ~lth ~~~~g= ~~~~ ~at~b~ ~"':re=:t~;
1n Interesting speakers. Agalmt the walls one IIDds huge reality. Yet, when a time comes for ui to voice op.inlons which see them only latH In the day. The
enUclnll programs and ~· lrash b.-1....,11 and machines with should have been carefully nurtured by the liberal and re- seven studeou then returned to the
will be able lo par- pereptual "all out .. al8l>S on them ligious education we have proudly received, the condemna- hostel to report to us what had
In the middle of the aflernoon. a tion of this sort of immorality is pitifully weak. happned, an.d the executive com·
word appean lobe ··In- wash buckel Is pla~d on one of While we un one clay work lone mlttee of the AASU met to plan
key person is the stu- the tables, whleb Is the signal to and hard lo raise a few thousand ous events dw1DC Ita production, Just how our case should be pre-
11 student Interest some-I file out of thb room and enter an dollus !or charitable purposes; with which headline alter head• seDted to the Prime Minister.
wblch the 0~!:,~d :o~~ :::~th::"'~e n~md':iu~~ whtle we can at one moment be Hn~!:'e. w":'~~ nact. At 3 a.m. Tuescb$ mornlna a
decreased by one hal! aloee the :;~~o:: :eth~vt:,;:.:dl~~ "Well, it's just a movlet•• baven·l large number o1 policemen-at
oan come on!Jo number of persons to doubled. yet understood the facl that If we least 100-quietly surrounded the
lhe ollldenla lbemaelYes. j These are the condlllons provided whUe we un contlnualb' witness are gotng to start l!Omewhere to hostel where we were all sleeplnc.
oe many .rtrll wollld obvl- for those Jllrll who wish 10 go :• ..,":j'O::,iF!~~~~::":::~~~t~o~JI';.':. put our belle!s Into praellee. It ..-r Tawlah. ShouUng awoke the
prder to ... d. tall~, tnlt, someplaee between elosses to en- might as weu· be with the Utile rest of the Africans In the hostel.
leiters or aleep - all ol Joy a etearetlo and relax for a eficlal pro)ec-we can. at the thlngs-lllte a forty million dollor and so many of them came out of
aeiiYIII.. aro promlnenll7 few minutes. same time. calmb' aceept the fact movie. their rooms that the pollee bad to
al ever:r slndenlo hour I Marie Clrando of forty mllllon doUars spent on Those who think about It wiU con lent themselves with arresting
a ope.aker. student U:dltor's note: It muot be pointed four hours· entertainment. aJao see lo It that their protest- Matthews and Daniel Drfah o! Nl-be
foreed 1o sutler the out thai despite Its ottroctlve de- Not only has II been apent on by absence-fa registered at the 11erla. exceuUve commltlee mema
dlolnlerested audlenceT cor Lourde's lower lounge was aJao entertainment. but on enler!aln- box office o! lhls port.lcular show ben who bad made the mlalakc of
who have Interest and closed !or a Umc due to the sloppy mont o! a theme whlcb Ia not any and all othen wbleb are equally staytna In their own roonu.
atlenUon In students hours condlllon in which It was !ound. more uputtlnll than the a<:andal· detrimental to the common Jood. rC.,tinwtd "" poge 1011nt)
Poge 4 T H E GLEANER
What Is W. H. Auden Hyde Pounds
At Red Block
To Freedom
FROM MERRIE OLDE
We Hear !rom Oxford ....
W. H. Auden takes the world as It is-and
it Is harsh. It Is a world with "dives on Fiftysecond
Street" and "strangled orchards" and
"ba"ests rotting In the valleys" and cities
that "predict more than we hope". It Is a
world where " though all our whiteness
shrinks, 1 From the hairy and clumsy bridegroom,
we conceive in the sbudderinf. instant
... " conceive chlldren who arrive 'already
adroit, having learned I Restraint at the table
of a father's rage; 1 In a mother's distorting
mirror I They discovered the Meaning of
Knowing". It Is a world sometimes of sham
and sterility and mirage and money "singing
like streams on the aloof peaks of our think-
Now that Hilary term Is upon us with full force,
moves very quickly ... as it does with you! At this
am beginning to feel as if l live in the "Bod," for it
lee~~~w::. i;:,':.J':.~e -.:;:~~~= sary to plough through so much in order to estabUsh
Wednosd.ty mornln .. Much e. ror that it really doesn't contain anything which by the
a queatlon~er aesalon wilb In· stretch of the imagination l could make use of In my
ureaied sJ:'r!":etsiot{a;:,!'t,..d"::. Early in January I was working on a paper about
<:mada, !be nOJ<t atop on Malone, an 18th century Shakespeare editor who
be commented on lbese ably more than anybody else about the other "'111 ..' " 6 '1"•·"• •. .,
• Chinese Communist well, at that point. That involved a number of afterrtoons 1112
SJ>III: There Is no fundamental the manuscript reading room also, painfully trying
apllt, but only • dU!erence or 1 out what on earth be had scrawled on an old bit of
opinion. This cllacuulon " very I was amused to read later in a memoir written about
vtaorous. as are all Communist . •
d.lxusslons. and revotvea around "he hod a !nee legible bane!.
0
ing .... " ·
But it is the real world-the only one we
have to live ln. And Auden doesn't run from
this place of ours to an illusory world where
God's in His heaven and all's right. God may
be in His heaven, but all isn't right with the
world, and Auden will not play the coward
and pretend that it Is. There are problems in
this world and this world is man's and the
problems are man's and of his making. Auden
the poet rellecls this often ugly reallty, this
often blind man, and man can look at what he
Is and what his situation is. Then Auden plays
the man looking, and sometimes be Is irri·
tated and sometimes disgusted, and his reaction
is a witty thrust or biting satire or just
plain disgust. But Auden the man-disturbed
wlll not wallow Is despair or seU-plty because
be knows man Is not basically, exclusively ug·
Uness-that be is greatly beauty and good·
ness. He sees that man's problems are solv·
able, even if they wlll not always be solved,
and that every step forward Is a step worth
taking. He realizes that man can only solve his
problems by living, not by running or biding.
To bide man needs only fear, but to live be
must have hope-active hope for and in the
world that is, not stagnant wishing for a
world that is not. Auden's hope Is that these
men in this world can and wlll become "new
men making another lovt''.
!be melbod of applYine Marxl$t I less be wu wr!Ung hurriedly," or Senonta runda.mtntals to new s.ltu•tJons. worcb to that tlfect. But what be
The power to annihilate man ~ said W&l weU worth attend.lna to. G I f NCR
~~~~~::.:~c:~n~~~· .:rd:~~.~idh~~~ when you do aet to •• t. ues 0
served Communism very well in ..• we also had the opportunity s anish De I
the past, but nuclear war c.annot to see two splendid productions, p p ,
But although Auden loves man and believes
in man, be also knows man in his weakness,
and so be knows enough to ask that man
be added along his way. He asks: "Bring joy,
bring day of his returning, I Lucky with day
approaching, with leaning dawn".
For Auden, "Something is Bound to Happen"
,-and be thinks it might be good.
ON LOCATION IN THE LIBRARY
serve Communism In the same of whJU a UtUe eometb hen. Lut
::::··w~~ =!~"ae~o~rl~ week !be dramoUc society or Unl·
ror !be Communist cause. Mr. venlty Collece lwhlch wu Sb<l·
Hyde concluded: "I lblnlt !bey Will ley'a coll•ce unW be was "aenl
reaolve Ibis <llllleulty uUs!actorlly down") preaented A Man ror AU
~~:ra~t~~l;c't':mofo:~~· and un- 1 s~uolll at the University Plt.Y·
Ia the Communbt lo.ll a etass- hoUJe. We went to the 5:00 P. M.
len soelety or a world Soviet die. performance on Saturday, 2 Febtalorabh>?
The cllctatorahlp or So- ruary, thlnltlng ll a suitable WI¥
viet Russia is regarded u an un- to obse.rve the feast! u wasn't
desJrable but n~ry transi- Broadway. of course, but it was a
Uonal lleJ> oo !be rood to a class- mlcbty cood per!ol'llWlCO all !be
leu IOcidy. Cornmunlam's tint same. They wt"re Rn.sitive:, ~mpe ..
task Is to break down !be old tent plO¥en and did ll credit.
bourgeois state and destroy the Really Cood literature Is bound to
exlsUng eutt.u.ral Ideology. Tbe come lhrouah, given half a
Russian dJctaton;hJp has gone on chance, and they gave It much
ror 45 years. Yet. slated Mr. Hyde. more tha.n. thaU A week or 10
••Man u we know him today could euUer we had been fortunate
not Uve in a c.la.sslea ~iety." ~nou.gb to aet Into St. MII'Y·lbe-.
Therelore. !be Communl•ts are VIrgin Church INewman'•l to tee
for b1m to reach a state BenJimln Brilte.n•s new version ot
the Cbt"ster pla;y, NoTe'• FJo.dde
INoab'a Flood). A$ you probably
know from his arrangemenll of
Christmas carols. be Is eolorlu!
and yet anxious to make the lradl·
Uonal appealing to modern taates.
This parUcular production a designed
ror children. with a e~~sl
or about tOO. Tho>y bad a "prefabricated"
ark and glorious ehop.
py wooden waves spreading ac:rosa
!be stace, and all !be "animals"
pranced down lhe aisle. 1n mae·
ni!lcent eostumcs (you should
hav~ aee.n the giraffes), singing In
successively higher' keys: "Kyrlc,
K)'l'ie, Kyrle eleison." M they
emera:ed acaln, alter a most lm·
presslve and dramatic storm (with
gorgeous m u 1 I c a 1 bactaround)
!bey parall•led Ibis Invocation
Wllb a trip.te AUelula! Wbcn Noah
sent ftrst the nven (a little boy In
black) and then the dove (a
smaller a:lrl, ln white) out to test
Dou,.las ll1de tor a dry spot, each 1n tum did a
Br Salb Beecher . charming ballet. before under-
B th time a tudcnt has eached 'he college level What tS tbe Job of a younr laktng the reconnaissance Even
Y e S r ' ' Communist? His main allen lion ls i we. !be audience, were broucht bas discovered the library to be a necessity-both as a focused on developlnl himself as Into the produeUoo. as Brltle:n
of information and a haven for study. Yet, there are iew a leoder cap~bte to aelu any op. evidently illces 10 do, ror we were
students who look beyond this and see the library as a caree.r. J>Ortunlty which may eome along. rehearsed on ueond and third
In the comic vein, the image that "librarian" evokes 11 Ia olten taught that Communbts cborusea or thlnp wbieb tbe eut
gray-haired spinster demanding quiet on the believe !bat the eollapae or capit· sang. R .. lly, these English people
when we recently visited a Nazareth alumna, Mrs. James all•m IJ Inevitable. and !bat !be can sing. It was marvelous.
(Marcia Beecher, '60), Children's Librarian at the Lincoln contending clasaes could go down You would especially enJoy our
Branch of the Rochester Public Library that illusion was dis· to common ruin, untcas the Com- dctldinC on seats. We were In·
4>--:;--..,.:..,--.,..-......,,-""::'--:c-,-l munlsu are ready to take over. formed that Uc.kets could be had
pelled. tn !be Classless Soclei>': The Commun- at the door, I! you got lbcre early
Mra. K.ne spoke or !be quallll· l Public Library, !bore 1$ !Jts believe !bot economle equality enoulb. We "et" supper In about
cau...,. for a pro!eaaioaal Ubrll'- program ror groduau. muat eome ftrsl bolore any olber 10 mtnuu. !!at lreal American
lao. "A groduate wilb any maJor In Joinlnc the atalf bolore equality 1$ meanlnCfuL style!) and arrlved practically
In !be liberal arts, ecleneea, bus- , lng Ubrary school. Latin Amerlea: Tbe Communbts lint! Tbu• !be choice or the whole
lnesa, ete, would quall{y for cer- M a chUdren'a Ubrarian, Mra. believe !bat aU conditions which norlb al1te or !be church. Alter
tiftca.Uon after ta.kinJ • master'• Kane not only partlc.lpates 1n the made Communism possible in trying various Joea.Uons. we set,.
degree in Library Sclence." Mrs. regular tasb of running 8 branch Cuba are present ln other Latin Ued tor lhe choir. which meant
Kane received her M.A. from Ubrary, but she •lso holds a week- American countries. The extremes that everyone coming tn began to
Syracuse University In 19111. She ty story hour, visits sehoob, or wealth and J>OVCrty, the reluc- wonder which act we would ap.
recalled that It was a !uelnaUng chooses and revlewa books. and tance to ehonie. the turbulent stu· pear lnl Our New Zealand eonyear
"u our cl....,atea were or odvises Interested odults on Juv. l <lent J>OpulaUon - all these are frere usea on expression "SitUn1
all aaea and from all backgrounds enlle llterstu...-besides asslstlnc eoupled wilb a spiritUAlly hungry up !bore Ulte laclde" to eonv•,
-teaehera, boslnt$$111en, ooe from !be children people whom we number among eompluoney or lrlumpb: we de-lbe
odvertiJioc llelcl. and almost • 1 • h bU been a !be world's calbollc J>OpulaUon. elded !bat we then mlllt have ex-fourth
of the studenU: were from 0 consequence, 1 e Tbe Commun1sts use de.moeney as 'I pressed the quint.eiSente o!
foreign countries!" Because of !be CUeal on 1 local rscllo show, and Ions u possible u a l~ade be- "Jaclrle-nesa"l
departmentallJaUon In libraries, like olber librarians wriU. oeca- hind wblcb they eon operak Many thanlul to all or you lor
the openings in management and si~"f!al spot revt:s t for .. w~~ When internal c:onOict occurs. your letters .•. we pray for each
penonnel. the availability Of po- ~:o~~hpr:gra~:· eo!~~w~ ho; they come up under tho guise ol of you u they urlve. Before very
siUons In schools from primary lm · •1 •• bl g tro thl• del ending democracy and !ben much lonfcr we will be able to
lbroUib gradua~udy level, ond
1
tf::': ona e Y~~n pa 08' atsce a military coup. assure you of Ibis In person. God
the lnnovaUon or speclallzed ll· riear ..:::. ·~:e e. Labor anlous: lllr. Uyde feels bless you al.ll
bra.rlea In professional llelda and • · • that !be u.s. bas aome or !be besl Lo'1111117 In Oar Lord.
--llrms, 1m3 atudent eould 1 lllre the boot, Mra. K.n<>. and !be worst labor unions In !be Slatu Tbomas Marlon
chooae an area or library worlt I !lite your llbi'IJ'7, Mn. K&De. world .• In some eaaes. he hu seen Sbtu Tbomu Marion and .SI•
that would colnel~ wilb bls We like you, Mra. Kane evldenee or greator resJ>Onslbllity ter Joseph Eileen will join Sls(u
Interests. I'll come to your library, Mra. asaumed oo bolb sides, tabor and Emilie In Franee to celebrstc St.
A eer!Uied librarian, In the city Kane. management, !ban In nny other ' Joseph's Day at LePuy whero the
library, holds a ctvU 8ervlce job. Thank you, Mrs. Kane, for go- plnee . . However, Utero also secms 'I SI.stera or St. J~epb were found·
Mra. Kane aaJd., wllb a u lary lng to !be library. to he more tlas• rivalry and more ed. They promiSed to remember
comparable to a teacher'a, and Gre&'orla strikes here. all at Naureth College white there.
(C""ti"•<d '""" pogo
climax of !be day'a
elude p.resentaUon ot
awards in tbe CoUeae
The Malbematlca Club
eash prlzea to the
testants at each ol the
school levels. In
College will award scihol.al'$hlpjfllq
$100 to !be top lb..,.,
eootestants.
In a recent interview with some of the dorm waitresses,
was discovered that this job provides the girls with many
events which are the result of minor mistakes which
"Jrb~c~~:J;~'U::7 occurring. Frani Conboy remembers the time,
:a nuns their food but had forgotten to give them
"I'll never forget the time," Mary Furino said,
I poured milk into one of the girl's laps and ever since
insists on pouring her own." Another common faux pas
related by Sharon Schupp who told how she gave both
to one table and the potatoes and vegetables to
table. Judy Allen also told about the time she
tray of dishes during grace.
the common mistakes, the waitresses are
T-HE GLEANER
CLASS. OF 1984?
Nazareth presents Anne Loulse
MIUer, fint ehUd of Dr. and Mn.
Robert Mlller. NCR faeulb'
membe.n.
with unusual requests fro rnthe girls. Sharon Schupp
that, "I've gotten requests for five-eighths of a glass of or a teensy weensy bit.'' Sue•@-~---.::._ ___ _::_ _____ _ ________ _
told the story that. BOOKS: "UE DOWN AND BE COUNTED" I -get a request for a
of fish and no matter
out, It's too big. I've
her a sardlne the
By SALLY BEECHER
One universal activity of man has been a source of constant
investigation by scientists, by writers, and especially by
college students. The necessity of this activity has stirred
great controversies, epecially between the younger and older
generations, and over the centuries volumes have been
ten on its various facets. Now another authoritative book, by
the eminent Dr. Seuss, commands the attention of all- The
Succinct Symposium
Awarded Laurels
For Scholarship
By JOYCE KOZUCH
The Saint Thomas Symposium
presented at students' hour on
March '1 by members of the ex·
istentlalism seminar was deemed
a welcome return to a custom ln·
sUtuted by Father Lintz when be
was a member of the Nazareth
faculty. Father first began the
symposiums as a result or the
honors seminars conducted in
philosophy, During the post two
yean this traditional presentation
lias not occurred. However. audience
reception last Thursday demanded
its continuance.
Four members or the senior
class ably presented papers on
various phases of existentialism
prepared under the guidance of
Dr. MIUcr. Those Involved felt
tbat a valuable contribution had
been made to the symposium by
other junJor and senior members
o£ the seminar whose questions
and diseusslons aided the participants
in formulating their pre4
sentation.
Patricia Lyons began the symposium
with a general discussion
or e>dstentlallsm itself. She said
Dr. Seuss Sleep Book.
ShakesJl<'are spoke of the el!eets
of sleep on man as "Balm of burt
minds, great nature's second
course, chief nourisber in life's
!east:' Dr. Seuss, too, remarks on
the popularity of sleep:
The number
or sleepers
Is steadily growing
Bed is where
More and more people are
going.
Many have speculated on the im~
portance of dreaming, and have
made various laboratory tests.
Now, Dr. Seuss. bas forged ahead
wltb his analysis or the noted
.. moose and goose dreams." Fur ..
thermore, "SJM'aking of dreaming,
I think you should note that the
Bumble-Tub Club is now dreaming
afloat .. - a spectacular break·
through, It must be admitted. ·
The c.a.use and effects of snoring,
and that other annoying sleep.time
habit, sleep-walking, are also explored.
For those who have trouble
with rising, the curious Incident of
the Chippendale Mupp is also
elted:
He bas no alarm clock.. So thls
is the way
He makes sure that he'll wake at
the right time of day. His ~~~ ':a~: long, he won't ~eel
a speeial dinner. that existentialism bad and still
is not only the patron has several specific meanings,
Church as a whole and of but that generally it can 00 de.many
religious wh. ose tlt.le l fined as "the individual erylng
· 'TU the nip makes the trip
and gets up to his bra.ln.
In exactly eight hours. the Chippendale
Mupp
his name· PoP<' John XXIn out against the feeling of sub-desi.
enated him the mergence lnto th~ unive~sal. or
E'eumenlc.al counciL the ~.ollectJve atmosphere . It Is
also be eonsldered the the philosophy or the commit·
husbands, as well as of ?lent of the individual". Strongly
He is the saint to whom wftu~nced by. the circumstances of
saints have had devo· the times, extstentlalism has gone
he seldom fails to grant in two dlre<otlons. theistic and
one in need. thus prov. atheistic.
remarkable power In An ~:::!,c.e !;ts~;~:~~r. the
philosophy of Soren Kierkegaard,
was then discussed by Patricia
DeMario. Sbe stressed that fo.r
Kirekegaard, 11what Is truth but
to live for an Ideal." This Is the
LOST ~~r:~~:~: e~s:!!e!:!s!:n~~~=~
WUI, at last, feet tbe bite and
yeU "Ouch!" and wake up.
Acute observation i.s only one of
Dr. Seuss•s virtues:
Everywhere,
Creatures
Have shut off their voi<:,cs.
They've au gone to bed
In beds of their choices.
They're sleepln In bushes.
They're slecptn• in crannies.
Some on th<:lr stomachs. and
some on their fannies.
But the attribute whieb. bas
ably helped this book rocket to the
best-sellers' list and which undoubtedly
has earned It the title
"Most Comfortably Read Book of
the Year'' is the instruction on the
opening page:
"This book is to be Read in Bed."
March 8th, saw a Christian. Man goes through
of two bus loads of three stages: In the first or aes·
St. John Fisher stu- ~ theUc, he Is gay and earefrec. The
Toronto. The oecasion second or ethical stage, wblch Is ognlus the primacy or~
excursion for tbe CardJnal tbe consciousness of sin. ultimate- over essence wblcb is the prlmacy
support the team at the J.y leads man to make a choice for of the actual over the potential,
game against St. MJch- God. The period alter this eholce the real over the possible. Sartre's
is the religious stage. Only when Irrational, absurd world can be
you make this choice do you ex.lst. countered with a Thomistic con·
It Is made on the affirmation of cept of an ordered world, a rationfalth
alone. al world whieh lmpllcltl,y testifies
The third SJM'aker, Marie Ma- to the existence of God.
honey, presented the atheistic The audience's general reaction
existentialism or Jean Paul Sar- was a highly favorable one.
tre. Reasoning from Hegel's con· were Impressed by the
cept of God, Sartre came to the not only did the p8Jrtic,lpa.nts
conclusion that God does not sound as though they
exist. From this he eontluded that they were talking about, but they
existence preeedes essenee. Fur- were •ble to make a maJority of
Dunn, Social Board thermoro. by choice. man makes tbe audlenee understand as well.
and Dennis Barrett , himself to be wtiat he Is. Every Perhaps the oonseuaus of aU
charge of the planning ttme he makes a deelslon, It Is a al~ndin&' the sYmPOSium con be
trip for their respeclive eommit.ment on behalf or all rru>n· best eX]Iressed In the words
Part of the finaneing was kind. NCR't • President, Sister
the Salute to Sports Thomlstle VIew Daniel. "Beoauae of the
Patrlela Roney Morin closed the '"'holarshlp required for the
symposium with some general oration and delivery of
eoneluslons which both Saint era, participants In this
Thomas and we, as Christian slum ue the ree!plenls of
In contrast to Sartre's· philoso- the most dlstlnellve honOI'B ·
phy, Thomistic exlstentlaUsm ree· N......,th Colle&'e eonfen."
-~-.. -
Page 5
The
St. P_c;~t's Day Parade
By Bernadette Malone
"Tomorrow is St. Paddy's Day,"
Said Lepr echaun O'Rourke. ·
"I think it's only fittin' that
We travel to New York.
For there they hold a big parade
That's quite a,sight to see."
"We'd have a fine old Irish tinte,"
The others did agree.
So packing the belongings that
All leprechauns r equire,
Like gold and pots and other things
They couldn't find for hire,
The wee folk gathered for th.e trip,
In number quite a few ..
They'd planned to stay in fields and trees
The way they did at home; .
But in this strange land, U.S.A.,
They found they had to roAm.
So on they trudged through busy streets,.
Through crowds of nameless men.
Some wished they hadn't come at all,
Some sighed, some cried, b'ut then-
A furry brogue did greet .their ears,
Their hearts sure 'n' leaped for ,joy.
A man in blue with silv&" star
Was talking to a boy.
"But, lad," the kindly voice went on,
"Sure leprechauns exist.
Ye just can't see the little folk."
Thus did the man persist.
"I ain't nev'r seen such tiny folk,
And so they just can't be;
If you 'spect me to think such stuff,
Then show a few to me!"
The kind mao talked, the boy was firm,
He'd never seen that sight.
While 'neath their feet, the leprechauns
.Were nearly in a fight.
"O'Leary, must you always be
So stubborn and so mean?
The good man needs us for his proof,"
Said Leprechaun McKean. .
McCarthy said he thought they ought
To do the good deed, too.
"For after all, what can a man
With such a child do?"
The vote was cast. the good guys won;
And so the plan was set.
They'd show this boy they really were,
They'd fix his wagon yet.
Then Poof! Poof! Pop! the wee folk went
As they to sight appeared.
The boy gasped loud as with surprise
.He to the sidewalk neared.
"But you are real- real ~eprechauns,
Just as O'Malley said!
I always thought the officer
Had made you in his bead."
O'Malley beamed with Irish pride;
The boy was won, he saw.
From that time on O'Malley's word
To Tommy would be law. 1 "But what's that sound? The band's begun,
Parade's about to start. .
Climb on my hat, you little friends,
Of this don't miss a part."
So up they climbed- they had a view
That no one else could claim.
They saw St. Patrick's Day parade
That sight of greatest fame.
They saw the bands, the Boats, the kids
The Irish everywhere.
And aU the time they sat above
O'Malley's bright red hair. .
'When it was done, the young boy said,
"Corne home with me' tonight;
My broth.er says you don't existI've
got to set him right." "
They stayed the night with Tommy;
Then early the next day
Returned to their dear emerald Isle
With hearts that were so gay.
"We'll always remember Tommy,"
Says Leprechaun O'Rourke.
"And the day we saw the big parade
In little ol' .New York."
Announcing the Big. Topsy-Turvy
- APRIL FOOL'S \
COMBINED ISSUE
of .
THE GLEANER and THE PIONEER
All Contributions Gratefully Accepted
WRITE NOW- PAY LATER
'THE GL-EANE·R
Gone·-- Gone -- Going as PCVs
Pint Lel&er to Sisler Ha,r«alue l wUI eo out to our posts, and the LeU<'r 1o Sisler Ma&'daleae rrom In a recent hitter from the national Peace Corps
hom Harle Saaen. '62, Nyualall4. following Tuesday classes will Bella Carey. '6%. Wut Cameroon, Kathy Chapman received her acceptance into the Peace
Dear Sbter Maldalene. :.,"!;'1~!• a ":!..~~-~h~~~ Afrlt.a, J an....,. 1 • lHS The letter arrived shortly alter sbe took the qualifying
We bave been In Nyualand a moll Sisters uaeh there . .. sec- Dear Sliter Mardaleo, On January 26 and stated that Kathy was "one of the
week today and our orientaUon ondary as wen as teacher tn.lninJ. Tbanlt you tor your leller I highly qualified applicants for Peace Corps training."
eourM bu Gown by. We bave had 1 Whleh 1 will be In is unknown- enjoyed aU the newo ao much. KAiby will now prcpue Ia
speakers oa all phases or IUe bere
1
maybe both. I'm sorry I haven't written aooner, a tnlniDg prorram this
erpedally educaUoa. We bad a tor- The Nuns have bunt U$ a bo~ but you mow bow It roes! For rlx and. when suceessfully eom
mal rreetlnr clven by Dr. Banda out of their aalarles. Three bed- weeks now Marianne and I have she will be uslped to
and today Mr. Chlume, the Minis-I roonu, klteben, bath, diDIDg, and beeo worlrlne at the Buea HOI· duty for 21 months In the
ter ol EducaUon will apeak to us. Uvlnc roo,...__.,ompletely sereened. pl\al. !all or 1963. Her specific
The prea hu Interviewed and pbo- ja 0 expen$lve undertalrlng 0 u t . . . It is an old British army ment wU1 be made durlal
tolfaPhed us. The American Con- here. It is !umislled and they've establishment. now run by the sprlnl and, aeeordlng to
su.l G-eut-ral. and the Amt.rlean j even hun£" c:urb.ins fo.r us. We will government We have workltd tn Shriver, ft will make the
Conaul In Bb.ntyrc cave ua a eoek· bave 1 jeep to get Into Blantyre every section or the hospital ao sible use or ber special talea
tall party al whleh we met mo~ I t•o mU for hoUTS to shop as well we. have rouen to know everyone. e.xpertenees.
mlnbten IBrltlsb and Atrlcanl, u a bicycle apiece. 11 is the most They arc so much run and alw- The uam wblch Kathy
Arnerieana, and repreaentatlvea beautiful part or Nyasaland, and jolrlng. Even Dr. Abba jokea eon- was made up by the Edu
from other American covemments the District Commlssloner bas stonily during a.n operallon. TesUng Service. This Is the
worklnl with the Nya .. bnd cov- , Jlvon u,s a.n open Invitation to use Most of the' work we do Is mak· organt.z.atlon wbleh eom
ernment. Our Peace Corps field his swimming pool wheneve< we ing beds and cleaolnc thouch we College Board Exams and
«.nl~ on the outakJrta of Bla.ntyre wish. But the most impr<!'ssive also pus medleine, take tcm~ra·.. Kalh,. Chapman Graduate Reeord exams.
was tho alto or a picnic-American thing aeeordlng to the many wbo turea and pulse. When working In said that tbe test was &lm
style. I have been down there is the Sis- "out patlenll" Mr. Martin taught tbe Graduate Record and 1
SetlliO Grounds ters. 11 Is our country rep's favo- me how to do simple dreulngs PCV's are worklns In the Educa. "very thorough, lneludlng
The grounds as well •• the hOuse rite plaee In aU or the eouniry. and I on)oy that very much. I lion Dept. whleh has proved to be .. pect of English." The exa
are Incredibly beaullful. It Is blib I The Sisters are from the NYC area. even dressed an clephantltus ••••I very lnteresUng. A few others are taken In Kathy's major field,
overlook ina the city sheltered by I One has only been here a year- As you probably know that Ia the mopping out where the next road Ush, and quauaes her !or tea
high screcnlna lollnire The lawns l and they've even taught the stu· disease which diBiorll a limb, but is to be built. A couple or girls In both the seeondory school
arc terraced 3 Jevela. which pro. I dent$ how to twist! The five of us Jts worst ef'feel ts that It mnkes are aolng on l.rek (via motor> to university level .~
vJde a.epa.rat~ eourta for badminton j ~tolng there arc very excited. one prone to ulcers. There arc two l some of the very small villages to When asked why she decl •
and corquet. The hou.se. on the aide At this moment I can see t.he men who come In every day, each help set up tl communlt.v develop- join the Corps Kathy replied u
of a bill. has balconies, terraces, I clouds literally rolllng down the with one leg haU~catcn away. ment project of the gove.mment. a purely practical vein I
and • patio onto one lawn. E·xotlc t mountain about a quarter mile j They b.ave ~n comlna for over Some of the others have gone that 1~ ls an excellent OPPO a·
lolleae and trees border all the , away. We wiU have rain soon-- a year and It Is qu.ltt u.d to see traveHna or cUmbed Mt. Came ... Lo gam valuable experience p
lawnJ. 11 was quite 0 SIJht 10 aee but the sun Is sUU out. l espe~ally .. there Is no hope !or roon. Tbla Wednesday !our or us myseU. Also, or eourse, It l
42 of UJ apUt up, some playing •Plrt-Pld'' reco ery ln these cases. Imagine I are aolng to Fernando Po wbleh enable me, 1 hope, to do
Uvlng with that day after day! . . gOod !or someone a.nd for the
brldae !Nazareth helped In other Many humorous things have hap. Let me explain "out paUent•" Is supposed to be very exetttng r d II th I
than ac:ademfe areu In that sen~). pened to us-but the people are 1 There are 00 private doc: ton in and look Uke New York City! r•u ;eaC:m:y·are toe :e·rn: t
The Peace Corp.s knowlnc by now all very warm. We •re struggling! Cameroon. When a person a,e .. tell you abcut the trip In the next hard work Is neeessa.ry. but U a
tbe croup a,ppe:llte had plenty of with 'the eurreney system. Pounds, comes ill he must ao to the near- i teller. . when this success comes. It
bot dop ond hamburgers, coke, pence, shillings, and equlvalenls. ,est hospital and walt with about You uked about the other be a great saUs!aetlon to
and beer. Tbls Is the rainy searon We arc using our language some- 1!50 other people !or consultation. , Peace Corps. We see them quite individuals Involved and to
- but It hu only rained 3 Urnes what-41tho' I made this mistake (If yau are at a eerta.ln lob level often eapecisUy now that the entire eouniry"
I only one downpour) and It's aJ. ol ordering shrimp "Pirt. plrl there is 0 apeclol eonsultaUo~ jeeps are here. Durlnc the boll- ·
wan aunny l'Ul not u.neomfortabty prawns" rather than shrimp curry room and prd'~re.nUal consldera- da.ys we have had quite a few ---- ----
hot. It Is o ol In the evenlnp, "Pirl-plrl"- 11 was the hottest lion Is glvtll.) Anyway, after the panlea. cble!ly beach parUes. Tbe
enou&h to wear aweaten and sleep thine I've ever tasted in my life! consultation one ls ae.nt e.tt.her to weather ls fabulous he~. the (Ctnttirtunl fTtnft JXIfe Oltt
under a blanket, of eourM. SoUd 6re! It was snealry--dellelous the dlspen$0ry !or pUis, lnjeetlona water warm. the beaebea long and
Area Sl.rhla taaUne, then the red pepper hit. I room, clreulne room. or all three.l lonely and tropleal ra. ln. forcats plied. "I am tllrllled wltll
0
h ,.. tb b It lJ$1 U1r prlvUege or reprcsenUnc D\1 '
Toehe Hill Teaeber Train Inc We arc now U$ed to ridiDC over I Only a few are admitted. uc.,.os e • orca. • I e low students on the S
CoUeae where we arc ataylna !or sunbaked dirt roads In a 1"'Zma, s Ward Work the movies! Couoell. This, to me, is lbe
the two-\\'Hk ftrf#nt.11on I• •ltu.. well .•s In land rovers.. e Workln.R In the wards it where I A WeddlDc klls est hoaor of m.y offic-e. The
ated 4000 fl. hf&h. The mountains haven t tried to barC&in for ltems one really gets to know the people 1 To answer your question e.st t.aSk of my office wUJ be
arc truly beullful - but dUrerent on the streets and have pald mueb Jand learn Ptdcln. We work In the the total !aeulty last term was seating a balanced, fun
because there are not foothJlls or more. We are observing rules er· same ward for a wuk 10 we be-- Father Minto, Mr. Anthony Mbuy- budget."
continuous r a_n&t'J. They just rl.se I cardinc our malarial suppressants eame quite dose to aome ot the one,ha and the two of us. This In addftlon to presenting 1
auddt.nly. From Toehe we ean see and ironing eve.rythl:nr washed patients. They are ve.ry friendly, was only for 60 students and only a.need budget Joan plans lo
over !50 mllu Into Moumblque- llarvae lald ,In wet clothes bore ' appreciative and love te1ehlns ua one level. Next term there wU1 be lze, as much as pOSSible, her
and just before It Mla!lle Mountain Into the skJ.n and fester until. Pidgin. !Marianne beeame a little two levels and more faculty ... lion 00 Student Council as 1
a:nd plateau The view Is somewhat emergln.a from a boil u 1 wmged too enthusJasUc about teaming no one knows who yet. however. resentative of the student
like a mlxt~re of tropical (Puerto loseet!l-heat ldUs th~m. It is 00:" Pidgin and one or the patient• Mr. Mbuyonsha lives very near us During this year Joan has h
Rico or the Vlrsln lllandsl and routine and w• don 1 worry-It • accused her. "You do talk plenty, on the compound and has beeome oruee 1n a major orra
noribwesl U.S.A. because there are too beauUlul. you do work •malll"l No food Is • very ltOod friend. His main pro.- serving as Seeretary or the
some pines and cedars and craggy If any or ' the girls have any supplied to ordinary patients: leet right now Ia finding a wife min Mission Unit.
roeu. So really we have all felt questions about the Peace Corps, thelr families bring chop at ' . . . he has been engaged about
as If we are on a vacation-much I will be Bind to answer them. I a.m. and 2 p.m. For the most part three times but he keeps changneeded
n!ter Syraeuse and our rig- will write from Mlanje once set- they eat rice with some sort of lng his mind. He Is now baek with
orous Journey, We did oi\)Oy Lon- tied. Say hello to aU. green vegetable souee, some beef the ftMJt one, after going home to
don very much, also Malrobl, and Slocerel)', cooked In a tomato aauee, gorl make things oll'lelal with another
Dar.es-Salaam. Next SAturday we Marie Anne Sauers ~~~k: ~~tt;k e:t"';,r~ae:.n· egu.st soup I ~:~~! ~~~· ar:~. ~~~:~e~~on~~=rq~:::
. . . I have yet to acquire a a process here. It Is more of a
.D- res1• d en t ae t h Le yQ II ey taste for moat Alric.an food. The social cont-ract between families. J>reparaUon Is alwaya more fas. ,A bride price has to be settled and
clnaUng. how It Is to be paid .Also there
fCOJtti""'d from p<>g• o>~•J Another thing about the hospl- arc formal eeremonles whlc.h must
plan or the school will be displayed and every Freshman will tal that Is creat Is that they In· , be held. All or this takes many
receive a "Whom to See for What" list. In -addition, the rules ~~e 1~ ~~~~ • ~:e::u~~·b,S: ~ee~~~~a a1~d :.,~;·~it~~·~~~
enforced by the Student Council will be explained more fully. natunl birth, a hemlo, the re- J Wo received our sur!aee a rew
Contented Nazareth students will be bearing more weD·known mov•l of an ovary, and a tumor re- d- a:fter Chrlstmu so now I
national and international figures such as William Miller and mov~ from a mammy'a neek. have my tape reeorder, I've al-
. . Mananne bas alao aeen a ateel ready aranced with a eouple of my
Leo O'Bnen. The budget will be equalized so as to reduce the $PUnt placed Into a lei bone that Cameroonian frlenda to Jive you
prices of various social events. To have a well-rounded student was !raeturcd. It Is ao ... ao In· an lntroducUon to African culture.
. tercsUnc. I would Ute to ree the Tomorrow 1 a.m colne !or a week's
Naney Neary, Seeretary of
dent Council for the comlng
reels that "It Is a real honor
lng been elected by the
school." Nancy oblectlve
take good obJecUve mlnut
Student Council meetings so
fulfill t.he dulles or her oll'lce
had experience In leaders
her hijlh sehool where she
as Treasurer, Vice President
President or the Mission U
Increased attendance at St
Hour wUI be Nancy's projott
next year. Thls Frosb fee1s
Interest Is laeldng, personal
taet with students may solve
problem.
-llody Beth plans to inaugurate more social events so as to como• rison between the way they
1
holidaY at Prenando Po, but 1 wU1
have fewer weekends "with nothing going on". A culture do thlnp here and at home. tape them the day after I return. well qualified for her
committee ts also being formed to investigate various musical Afrlt.aa Cluirtmu 1" cue any prospeettve PCV's President of the Missions In
. • . Christmas Day wu a blc daY at arc womed about their health, school' she received the
and theatrical ectiv1Ues throughout the aty and report to the the hospital. Three bll trees were Marianne and 1 as well as the din A· d In lJH;O r
student body. Following these various events Beth hopes to put up !arbor vita trees) and olber PCV'a have found Africa to I work ;:arthe MissloO:' aO::.., at
form discussion groups for those interested. Marianne and I wrapped preunll be very healthy. 1 do think our arcth, Connie wu eo-ell
for aU the patlenla and stall' In croup has been parUeularly this fall's Mlsslon Day.
r--------------------------. post mortum twine no lt"SS. . It was l luc.ty. however. We are able to Connie~s main aim for next Iota or fun dlslrtbutlnc them. All cet plenty of native bee! whleb Is to bring a greater unde
SOUTH PACIFIC RESTAURANT
Specielixing in
Your Host
Mr. l ee Ah Chu
Polynesian - Cantonese - Menderin Dishes
Open S•ven Daya a Week- Order~ To Take Out
EXOTIC
TROPICAL
DRINKS
Phone DU 1-2570
Located In Pittsford PICila, Monroe Ave.
the gllll were donated by the loeal Is line to eat 01 welt as liver. log of the Misslona to each
women's club. Candy, clay, and Oecaalonally we buy chlekeo but dent so that the Missions wl
Uny cars to ebUdrco; beadlear!a, l lt'a quite expensive. Incidentally come a vital aspect In eve
h•nkles. and .. chet to women; cute ' you buy the· chicken olive and let Ufe and not jll$1 a school !
beer muas and ties to men. lit walk around your compound for She plans to fnform the st
1 Also on Christmas small groupt a eouple of doys and then ldll II. body about whom their
or ehlld.ren go around and dance There are plenty of naUve pine- buUons arc aiding. Connie
at different homes hoping lor a apples, rrapefrult. avoeadoes and also tlke to stress aeUve pa
little "dash." One Is alwaya elab- oranges. Most of our vegetables lion of student mission me
oretely dressed wblle the others are Imported howevor. Eggs and who are not part or the a
beat out the rhythm on drums milk arc bought at the prison lstratlon board.
and bloeb or wood. The dancert farm. Mlehael bakes our br~ad. ~ ------------J
nre quite good; It's tbelr Rallo- So you see we have everything.' to everyone, but .. peelall
I ween. I J love hearing news about the 1\fJss White and Sr. Barbara
None of the other PCV'a have faculty, etudents and alumnae so !or writing sueh nice notea 2.
as lone vacation as we have, but I hope you will write soon. Also I Christmas.
1 some of them, nevertheleu , have do you think the Gleaner, and Lo
~------------------------....1. taken up short term projects .. Two .Riog could be sent? Give my love Bell
&PERBACKSueprints
for Education
By
.JEAN
I!IISMONT
How many paperbacks have you read this year? A recent
y shows that 3,500 new titles are issued every year. That
d provide reading material for most of us for the next
rs! .
No matter what the topic or its place in history, there
•titles concerning it available in paperback form. Never
re have students had the privilege of personal ownership
· e sources of material and treasures of literatu.re. Since
dawn of paperbacks, books that are long out of print
loo costly to purchase in hardboard editions are made
' able to all. They also provide the "best sellers" and conrary
novels that are sometimes overlooked in their
a! editions. "''>,---..,.------------1
rever your field of Interest Marriage Seminar you can find a paperback to
'rou. Is It English that Is up.. Hears Father Dunn ost in your mind? Last year
series was pubUshed by the
e U. S. Author Series In
the lives and works of such
as John Steinbeck and Edgar
Poe were treated. Just about
· the authors discussed In Eng.
~ 'classes are now convenienUy
ble in paperback form.
.· .. those of us who are "do-it· ~r:~· ~~~.~gea p~e~,'::·~
·Taught" books. These range
· . auch subjects as Basic Geot'
SeU-Taurbl to Basic Bridre.
,l'aurht.
- re ls no need to search
h huge. dusty bookstores for
reading choices. Paperbacks
vailable at our own clean and
ct bookstore. A new addition
ar. paperbacks have proved
a sreat success with the stubody.
Accordlng to Sister
Alice. who places the order$
e books, the bookstore is
\'oring to provide them "both
eational reading and for
In depth'." Lists of sugre.
adings have been subby
the faculty and It is
that students will take ade
or the books available.
ore are paperbacks going
bere? Their topics are tim.
Jy by the Imagination of the
. '•bo publish them.
Wanted
TRADING
STAMPS
ETC.
GREEN
PLAID
To Furnish
w Faculty Quarters
DoaaUon Box In Tunnel
N...,. Cafeteria
Father Cerald E. Dunn presented
the fll'$t in a series of four lectures
concerning m&JTlage on Monday
evening, March 4, at Naureth College.
The lecture .series is being
sponsored by the National Federation
of Catholic College Students
ln conjunction with the CoUege
Sodality. Father Dunn Is Dlreetor
of the Family Life Bureau of Roth·
ester. and serves as a director ol
Pre·.Cana Conferences and Fam.ily
Clubs ln the Rochester area.
The general topic of Father
Dunn's speech was "God's Plan In
Love and Marriage." The aspeets of
marriage as seen from natur-e and
reason and the nature or the marriage
contract itself were discussed.
Father Dunn noted the fact that
in a re-cent California study, one
out ol every two marriages was
discovered to be falling, and then
examined some of the various factors
involved in such marital difficulties.
Including physical and
mental maturity, the attitude of
secular society towards marriage,
and the differences in temperament
between me.n and women.
Father Dunn deslpated marrlaC't:
as the most perfect institution
for ace.ompUshinC" natural
b:tppiness ln this world. ln connecll.
on with Ibis, be pointed out
several factors of happiness which
can be reaUzed throutb marrla.re~
such as security. affection. a sense
of achievement, permane ncy. and
a development ot mutual splrltu·
allly.
During the course of lhe lecture.
Father Dunn mentioned the new
Mixed-Marriage Pre-Cana Conferenees.
This Is a program which has
only recently been established In
the Rochester area, and which may
be one of the first such events ever
org·anJzed.
immediately after the Jeeture a
question and answer period was
conducted, and following lbls a
coffee hour was held In the College
auditorium.
The lecture series has also ar~
tsF========== iranged for Sister Karen. S.S.J .. to
speak the evening of March 11. Sister's
topic was reported as a discussion
of the physiology of
marriage.
jjSoft, whd angel woke me .. /', doth quote Maey Cassata to lc>e
Everett durin&' pracdeo for SPriDr presentation of "Midsummer
Nlrhl's o...,..... ... Maroh 29-31 • . slo.,. oo pare 8.
African Students
Where do we go from here?
(Continued /'f'&m pa.JTfJ l-h.ree) was only by brutally Dreaking their
way through a solid human wall
that the police were able to take
Tawiah. the last of their 40' to 50
prisone.rs.
The next morning we vtrtually
all de<:ided that as fighters for African
unity we were not inte.rested
ln staying in a countTY where the
authorities were working so acUve-ly
against this cause. We therefore
agreed that by 3 o'clock we
would each pack a bag as a symbol
of our detenninaUou to leave
Bulgaria and would march to the
Ministry of Education. There we
would demand that l.f our two
brothers were not unconditionally
and immediately released we must
be given exit visas and air tickets
to permit us to leave Bulgaria for
good. By 7:45 fully 200 of us-<rtudents
from 21 different African
countries-began our march down
Lenin street through tho heavy
snowfall We had covered most of
the three-and-a-half kilometers
when some 600 jeeps full of slx to
seven hundred armed policemen
circled around us. The pOlicemen
poured from the jeeps. and all
traffic came to a halt. The pollee
were soon jolned by civilians who
came down from the balte<l buses.
Together they began attaeklng -us
indiscriminutely, beating and slapping
the girls among us just as
hard as they beat and slapped the
boys. Many of the students were Injured,
some of them seriously. The
police began arresting us by the
dozens. and as civilian informers
pointed out the remaJnlng mem·
bers of the executive committeethe
Ethiopian Vice-President, the
Guinean Secretary - General, another
Togolese and a Somali-they
were one by one arrested and
hauled Into waiting pollee vans. As
a Bulgarian elviltan directed the
police to Tawlab, h'owever. dozens
of African students etustered
around him for his protection. lt
All of lhe anuted students were
lak~n to cells, bat later In the day
'aU were released save th.e five mem·
bers of the exeeutlfe committee of
the AASU wbo bad eluded arrest
in the raid on the. hosU-1 the previ·
ous nlrbl. Thus by delalnln&' all
seven of the oft'ieers 9f AASU and
no otber A.fricano did the Bulnrlan
authorUJes once al'aln
strate thai the unllled
dtnt orran.Jutlon was tbe
of their fear and hence their hosllllty.
We are also aU concerned about
the fate o£ our seven leaders, of
whom we have had no clear
Soc Lectures Spark Campus Thought
since we left Bulgaria. All student
organltaUons and others concerned
with the defence of student' rights
must demand that the Bulgarian
authorities perQlit these. students
to leave the country promptly and
unpunished. as their only ucrlme"
has been that of working lor the
unity of A!ric-a. Our experience
bas convinced us all the more of
the potentl.at power of African
wi.ity, as demonstrated- if by nothIng
else-by the determl.ned cbsrocter
of the ellorts made agalnrt
It by those who would deny or
A series of lectures, designed to correlate with the History
of Social Thought course, is being given by experts in
their fields for the next two months. vert its lofty uplrations.
Helen Marie Kaney
NFCCS Delegate
Moves Up a Notch
11With0ut the interest and back· '
lng of the student body lot N au- •
reth my olllce will mean nothing·
to me and to the students at Nataretb.~
This is bow Helen Marie
Kaney, newly elected Senior
N.F.C.C.S. delegate, expressed bet:
vlews of her office. Serving u
N.F.C.C.S. , ,Junior delegate this
year, Helen. Marie ~ had much
experience ln the organization. ·
Next year Helen M-arie hope~
to bring more of an aWareness ot
what• ts ha~g on the national ,
and lnte.rnatlcla.ld ·scene to tbe atudents.
She also feels that students
at Nazareth should have lU1 )lllderstanding
of what Is happening In
the CathoUc worll! about them.
Helen's main objective Is to try to
create more lllterest 1n the organIzation
among ~e $tudent body.
St. Bonaventure
Sings at N~R.
Guests at Mixer
The evenine of March 9 featured ·
the Glee·Ciubs of Sl Bonaventure
University and Nazareth College
performing In a Join~ eoneeri.
A bus load of male singers arrived
at tbe Col.lege ln sul!lcleot
time to sit down to a 5:SO spaghetti
dinner, open to lht two
slnging groups.
The program, Or. David FeUer
conducting. opened with the Nazarenes
singing the "Ave Marla" by
George Bizet. "Music When Soft
Voices Ole" (Joseph W. Cloteyl,
"Deep River" (arranged by Dr.
Fetler), "Joshua Fit de Battle ob
Jericho" (concer! version by Noble
Calnl. and "Oklahoma" . <O!Ur
Hammerstelnl were also rendered
by the NCR group .
The Bonaventure songsters then
presented to the audience' a
selection of thelr own favorites.
directed by Father Paul Ollgoy.
Bona's fort:v-flve :Diece tu.nd • l.so
made an appearance ln the audi-torium.
· ...
The evening concluded with a
mixer open to the students of botJi'
colleges, and the Bonaventure
alumnl. Vic PJ.ati's orche.tra provided
the music: and refreshments
were served. T\\•o Bona men entertained
during the lnterml.osion
singing arrangements of the popular
folk songs.
At the stroke of twelve, the
Bona men bid adieu to Nuarqb.
Thomas Mullen and· Margaret
Fraser, presidents QJ theli ...,.pee. •
live Glee Clubs, were responsible
for arranging the evening.
The better trained student$ will
surely be tbe ones who wUl supervise
the ellorts of t~el.r brethren
who, for one reason or another,
studied Instructive material
but only used picks and shcvell.
R.P.,\new
Although the lectures are primarily for the Sociology
and Histo~ majors in the course, it is open to all interested
persons in the schooL THE" "N. C.'' COLORING
tts Now! $1.75, $2.00
5, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50
Speakers thus far have been Sister Magdelene, who
discussed Renaissance Art, as a reftection of its age, and.Mr.
Charles Mills, who told the political consequences of Machiavelli's
The Prince.
Future lecture times and locations are:
March 14 Bellarmine: The Theory of the Democratic State
12:30 L15 Sister Mary Lourdes
March 28 Montesquieu: The Spirit of the Laws Persian
12:30 L15 Letters
April 2
12:30 L15
April 4
4:30 L15
April 10
12:30 L15
April 25
12:30 L15
May 2
12:30 L15
Dr. Virginia Otto
Grotlus and International Law
Rt. Rev. Msgr. George E. Cocuzzi
Hume, Locke, Rousseau: Social Contract Theory
Mr. Robert McLaughlin, St. John Fisher College
An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the
Wealth of Nations - 1n6-1963
Miss Elizabeth Fake
Darwinism and Its Social Consequences
Biology Department Faculty
The Communist Manifesto
Rev. Albert Shammon
May 9 Freud: The Origin and Development of Psycho-
12:30 Ll5 analysis
Sister · Jane
May 16 Dewey: On Experience, Nature and Freedom
12:30 L15 Sister Joseph Mary
HAZARETil COLLEGE
, I IRDAilY
@ . '
This is tl.~ SMOKf ~. Color it neat.
s ••
. .,_ ... -
Students En-roled for Play Cast:
"Midsummer's Night Dream"March 29-31
Under the direction of Mr. Joseph Baranowski the Nazare~.
SL John Fisher Drama Guild will present Sh~espeare's
Midsummer Night'a Dream, at the Naureth auditorium March
29-31, at 8:15 p . m. Tickets for this event are priced at $1.00
each.
The complete cast for the production has finally been
selected. Bill Mayrl will play Theseus; Unda Hallen, Hippolyle;
Ray Chrzan, Lysander; John McCarthy, Demetrius· Marie
Mahoney, Helena; Cheryl DiCiacclo, Hermia. Some students
will take two parts, the second being a character of the "play
within the play": Joe Everett, Bottom and Pyramus; Fred
Kaber, Qulnoe and Prolorue: Afternoon Mass, Denny MeCroaen, Snout and
Evening Services Wall; Barry Bru.en, starvellnc and
Moonshine; Daney Holland, Snug At NCR During Lent and Lion: Gene Walz, Flute and
Wednesday, February 27, began Thl.tbe.
the holy seuon ol Lent. For those Other members of the east Jne
ot WI at Naureth It should be 1 elude Joe Cull'llnl, wbo will pl~y
tlme or recollecUon. prayer. and Oberon; Mary c .... ata and Stacy
penance In commemoration of Wtlandt. Tltanla; Sbclla Dwyer,
Christ's passion, death and resur- Puck; Marlene Bleck, Barbara
reellon. Castelli, Sandra Mantey, Virginia
Rlrb 11fau Grealy, Wendy Hall. ~blna Kula·
Father Shannon pnoeded Wed- l<owsl<l and Kathy Pugh, fairies.
oesday's HJgb Mass with the bless- "PJ'Oductlon problems e en t e r
tng of the ashes, one or the II"'•• around capturing the cbum and
liturgical rites or the year. It was OJ<uberance of sueb a rich eomedy
originally Intended tor public pen- on stace." eommented Mr. Bara·
!tents, but b now lnt~nded ror all nowol<l. Behlnd-the-seene aspeets
Christians. •• Lent ahould be a of the produetlon will be handled
time of penance tor aU. under the following committee
Desmond Stone speaks to 1tudent edJtors present at the Awuds
luncheon of the RITPGannett Ntwspape.n Coll.eriate P reu Conference
bdd March 1.
"GLEANER", "SIGILLUM" WIN AWARDS,
AREA COLLEGE PRESS GROUP PROPOSED
Gannett Newspapers awarded "The Gleaner" and
lum" certificates of merit for their publications of the
62 school year. NCR's newspaper and yearbook were classi~
ed as "Good" in relation to other area college newspapers
•n the area. The awards were made at the Fourth Annual College
Newspaper Conference hosted by RIT and co-sponsored
by the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle and Times Union.
During the Lenten season, there heads: Lindo Kltz and Mary Ann
will be two Masua on campus each ! Wheeler, assiJlant dlrectorsj Shel.
sebool day exeept Friday. Tho by Davis. set design: Joyee KoMasseo
will be at 7:00 a. m. and zueh, daneo: Danny Holland, stage
•:25 p. m. In Alma Mater Chapel. manager; Sue MaeDougall, Tam·
Further Lenten devotions will be ara Marte and Elaine O$trowsld, Sister Eva Marie
held tn the evenlnp at 7:00 p. m.: costumes; Unda Hallen. publiclty;
Tbe oontuenoe openod at 8':30
a.DJ. ronowm. ngbtnllon and a
colfoe hour. Ira C. Sapozlnl<.
motjon and PubUt! Relatioru
reetor for the Rochester Tlme.s ...
Union, gave the keynote address.
Clinics dlncted by proCessional
Journalists, and panel dlseusslons
Rosary and Benediction on Tun- Partricla Kowalski. posters. Mary On Ratt•ng Te
cle,ys; StaUons of the cross on Fri- Aslp will see to the business end am
days. or the play: Mary J. Werthman For Pa Colleg
Lenten LlteraiUN> hu charae Of props; Peggy Tay- • e
It was pointed out tbat several lor and Pat Franoo wHJ coordinate From February 17-20 SLtter Eva
addltlons to tho Sodality's pamph- sound. Linda Smith and Mike Marlo. Direetor of Guidance and
let rack provide exceUcnt reading Ftnn have been named treasurers Placement, attended a mceUng ot
for Lent. Amon11 them are "Mary or the production funds. the Middle States Evaluation Team
tn Our Lite" by William Most. and "Midsummer Night's Dream
"Seerets or the Saints" by Henri contains young, bright, energellc In Cornwells Heights, Pa. to evalGheon~
Copies ot Knox·s. Merton·s. acton and actresses!" exclaimed uate a colleee conducted by the
and van Uller't works are still Mr. Baranowsld enthusiamcally. Sisters or the Blessed S.cramenL
available and wlll be round very s ·~ H Thb Community of s~ ... round-conducted
by the partlelpallng l -------------1~
eoUegu, were scheduled for the
rest ot the mornlnc. Luncheon ln
the Nathaniel Rochester Residence
Hall opotllghted the annual Ganprofitable.
peaKers ave Choice ed In 1891 by Rev. Mother Mary
TWENTY ASPIRE Of Topic Treatments Kathryn Drexel. is essentially a
Mr. Joseph Baranowski and five missionary Order oonslstlnc of 550
TO MISSION WORK ~~e~~r:u~':.~hat'!'!~~~.~~~~ ~:~:: .. ~: ~~~e"!:m~~?:.".~"!~~~
IN SOUTH' WEST Convention In SyracWJe on Satur- •nd colored people, and conduct
day, Mnrch 9. Tbe croup gave n eduontlonnt and catechetlcnt cenThla:
summer over twenty Naza4 demonstration speech class for the ten tn twenty~:me states or the
reth 11lrls wlll travel to Oklahoma convention. They seleeted the U,S,A.
Alabama or North Carolina as vol: topic, "lntearatlon Lt Inevitable." For those wbo are Interested,
unte.er mlssfon work:t.rs. 1 and showed how a speech on this Sl.ster Eva Marie mentloned the
Sinee the lnnovaUon of coteebet- same rubjeet could be geared to story of Mother Drexel's Ute and
nett awards.
Desmond Stone, New
journalist and member
news staff ot tbe Rochester
Union was the main speaker at
the alfalr. Mr. Stone told the
aucuc.nt!e of bis expcrJcncc tn
writing a series or articles which
he termed "Blockbusters". FollowIng
hJs talk the spea.ker answered
quesUons from the floor concern.
ln11 the current stat~ or AmericanCanadian
relations with whlcb be
leal work as a colltle project tn dllfennt types of audiences. tho aetlvltlea of the CommunitY or b t•mlliar.
1959, over thlny NCR llirls have Tbe students who acoompanlod the Slstero or the Blessed Sacra- Top honors In the eolleae pubebosen
thb apostolle method or Mr. Baranowai<J are Sister Mary mont eontalned in "The Golden llcatlono fields were taken by:
spreadina the talth. Upper class- Krlstln, Shell• Dwyer, Linda Ritz, Door" by Kathryn Burton, whleh Roehmu Institute or Ted>lnoloiCr.l
men and craduatos have donated Patricia Hebergu and Karen may be round ln the collece "RIT Reporter"; Brookport
summers. and sometimes an entire Kirby. library. "Saga"; and Keuka Collea:e.
year to tea~hlna In Oklahoma: and Jackel." These awards were made
ln 1962 Opportunltlcs tor under. l Jn the newspaper, yea.rbook. a_nd
classmen were opened when four Art Club Queues fior Cu ture literary categoric• respectively.
llirls spent three weeks In mission St. John Fisher also received eer-work
tn RaJelch. North carolina. 0 h S • J lks if N "V' k tlflcale$ of merit Cor their news-
This year Sulon MarJorie Bro- n t e taewa 0 ew .l or paper, "The Pioneer", and tor
PJ>, Soe Bums. Ellen Ford, ud their literary publication. ''The
Thelma McDonald wiU Ollflld tile After arriving in New York City about 9 o'clock Wednes- Anile."
nmmer In Oldahoma. while Jndl day evening, most of the girls walked to the nearby sights, Professor Reetor B. "u<uNaJnd,
Abbett. Linda Lee Domtnllt ..,d including St. Patrick's Cathedral the Empire State Building C.eally adruor to the uRtT
SIJUIJ' Porstess will •pend a whole d DAAk f 11 C t 0 Th 'd th · 't d th u tr ' porter" ln the wllldop or the
n•r there. an '""' e e er en er. n urs ay, ey VISl e e me o- terence mentioned lb lbllllJo
Janel Andreano, Joequellne Fe- politan Museum of Art where they saw da Vinci's "Mona Lisa. "j or tna~.....,.ttn,o • w:s~e':: New
lice, ararcla Fuehrer, D.lane Goar- The afternoon was spent at the Frick Gallery where the stu- York State Colle&iote Press Aosolno,
Allee JJanlon, Sablu Kula- dents viewed a private collection Of WOrld famous paintings, elallon. The Idea Is atilt In lbe lnl<
owsld, Joyce &JoCormock, Diana including several works or Rembrandt, Turner and Reynolds. cuballon stare. but the proCessor's
and Sanely Monel. Sue Marttn, Ann Frtday morning was free but many of the girls decided to pr•posal broult'hl the pton to the
Noce. Pern O'Rellly, and Ann spend the time in a guided tour around the United Nations. •ltenllon or tho al~ndlna- eollereo.
St.lbl wlll represent Nuareth tn 1 th ft th gr tr II d t thr d'ff t Ann Woods, editor, reuorted thai
North Carolina and Alabama. n e a ernoon, e oup ave e 0 ee I eren mu- "Tbe GJuner" plans to second
Junio S.bl Kul t old seums: the Museum of Contemporary Crafts, the Museum of motion and ol'ler any help
plalned r that .:;: wu ~~:;.,, f:~: Modern Art and the adjoining Whitney 1\fuseum. A decorative IIU.T be needed tn carT)'In., out the
ward to the summer: . " .. ror OJ<· dbplay or elued pottery as well as detalb and brlncina- the plan to
perience ln social work and espe-1 Cal d I" sliver exhibit by Rocbesterlan frulllon.
elally with children. 1 tblnk the en ar Don Petcnon were examined at the Other partlclpatlng eolle&es ln
time spent wlll be worthwhile." Crdts Museum, At the Modern Art the conference were: Alfrod State
Ann Stahl, a Sophomore. gave March 14-SL Potrlclt's Da7 Mu•eum and the Whitney, they ob- Tech Institute, Allred University,
this reason: "I'm aolng beeause Porty, a:so p.m. served numerous mod~rn palnUnp, Brookport State College, Bul'lalo
there Is too much tolk abeut Cath- lncludJnc the ''Three Muslelans" of State College, Canlslus College,
oUc Action nnd not enough ac~lon." St. John Fisher Basketball PJeasso. and many sculpture works.. Corning r.ommuntly CollcJ.te. Eric
Aeeordlng to Sister Paulette Game and Mixer, 7 p. m. Saturday morning was spent nt the County Tech Institute. Geneseo
Mission moderator, application$ Gunenhelm, a mWJeum designed State College, Houghton
wliJ be available for othero who Maob 17-Fe.ul or SL Patrie!< by Prank Lloyd Wright . Keuka College, LeMoyne
arc interestod In thla projeet unW Most or the girls toured the de- Monroe Community Collece.
April 10. March It-Feast of SL Josepb, partment stores on Saturday alter. erta Wesleyan College, SL Bona·
Rolld117 noon. In the evening, they uw venture Unlverolty, SL John Pbhu
Megaton Morality I In eonJunctlon with the Junior
Etbles course, Father Shannon,
Chaplain of NCR, la sponsoring an
eventnc seminar Mareh 26. The
!oplc to be dlseussed ooneerns Nu!
lear Warfare and will emphasize
:he morality of mc11atonie olfenlive
and defenslve measures. Also
l.lscussed will be the theories of
paclllsm and passive resbtanee. I
Maftb Zl-Siudents' Rolli':
sud> Broadway pla»s as "Stop the Collece. and Wells Collece.
World I Want to Get Olf," ~Mary,
Club MeeUap lllary," "How to Su...,ed In Bus!· - - -----------
Mal"Ch Zli-Leclure W. B. A aden. ~h'. W~!~~~!u~:S';!lY1:1!~:~:~~~
8 p.m. Vllla8e. ''To Kill a lltoeklngblrd"
March Z&-30--SRO, Rolf GaUd ond a stage production of "Carni-
Sprlna- PlAT at Nar:areth val" were shown at Radio City
~rll 1-Apri1 Fool's Day!
Another combine-d Issue of the
"Giune.r~' and the ... Piooeer"
Music Hall. They dined at some or
New York's most (amou.s restaurants
lncludlna Mama Leone's, Top
or the Six's, Lindy's, Trader VIe's
and O'Henry's. All thls was oceompllshed
before midnight since everyone
mana(ed to m11ke room
check at that bewitching hour '
The group arrived home ln
ester at 9 o'clock Sunday evening
despite the tact that one or the
buses bad sulfued a ftat tire.
Sharon Meehan
Mi earN
DiE
19TE