o eaner NAZAAETW COLUGI OF AOCNISTER
October 2 1, 1906
Study Abroad Next Year
Grot opportu nities are open to
students who are interested and
who can qualify for study abroad.
The tnter .. University Commitlet' on
Ttavel Grants announces opJ)Ortu·
nlties for advanced graduate students,
and for faculty and J)O$l·
doctoral researchers, to study and
reaearch in the SOviet Union. Bulgaria.
Czechoslovakia, and Hunguy
during the academic: year
196"1-68.
This Committee also otl'ers three
exchanges with the U.S.S.R. Tht$e
three include an exchange of advanced
gr.aduate and young faculty.
an exchange ot post-doctoral researchers.
and an exchange of
American teachers ot Ruuian for
a .special ten week p rogram during
the JW1UTier. Simil~ r exchaog~ ;.re
Ol)e-n tn Bulgaria. Cu.eboslovakla.
and Hungary.
Speech Ass'y Meets
Unity Stressed,
Officers Elected
The opep.ing meeting of the Nat·
"""Lh CoU•g• - Spo~h and H .. ring
Assembly was held on Thursday,
September 29 in Medaille Social
Room. Orientation or the rreshmen
mto the Assembly was the primary
purpose of th~ meeting.
P residing offic-ers Cor the new
academic term are: President. Jo·
Ann Stetaoson, 1967; Vice President,
Sue Pe llicano. 1968: and See·
retary .. Treasurer. Marie McL:aughlln.
1969.
The club's foremost objetdve is
the promotion and unity among
SJ)e('ch CorrecUon Majors throush
the presentation of research, " uest
lecturers. ftlms. panel discussions
and field trips. Every f))ee('h correction
major ls automatically enroUed
Into the Assembly and is
W'ged to fully participate in the
various opportunities and activities
which the club presen\6. It is only
by this sharing of ideas and exJ>Qrlences
tbat one realizes bow much
Lhcre is to know and how chaUeng ..
ing the fteld really is.
The highlight ot this year's
.,;enda will be the opportunity or
att.Mldlng the American Speech
and Hearing Association Convention
held in Wasbln.gt·on on No·
VMlber 19-2:2.
To participate Jn th~ lnter-Uni·
vera-.ity Committee Program. the
candidate must have proficiency in
the language ot the recejviog coun·
try. The applicants must W: American
citizens. Applicants must be
alfillat4Xi with Amerlc:m universl·
til.-s or colleges. with the exception
ot those applylng tor the summer
exchange of language teachers
open also to American teachers of
Russlan ln .secondary or elemen·
tary schools. Participants are chosen
through a.pplicatlon and inter view.
The deadline for applications
for the 1967-68 exchange Is Novem·
ber I. 19~.
Tht Se:ve.n Seas Division of
Chapman College announces a Umited
nwnber of scholarships of
S1.200 ava.ilable to qualified upper
djvlsion students who wish to study
in an Interdiscipllnary Program of
Coordinated StuWes.
Courses offered m the Interdistiplinary
Program Include Eoonl'>mic
Geography, Com))aralive Economic
Systems, Contemporary World C\11-
tur~s. Living Religions. Govern·
menu ot the Far East. PhUosophy
of Sciences, Ceneral Literature.
Basic Historical Isrues of ~he
Twentlelb Century. Mod<'!ll Drama
and Mental Hygiene.
For lntormatJon on the inter·
disciplinary Program write:
Dr. Ashleigh Brilliant
Ae.'ldemic Coordinator
Seven Seas Dlvlsion
Chapman College
0-ran.ge, California 92666
Tht JnttrdlscipUnary Program
offers study in ports sueh as Lisbon,
Rome. lstanbul. Balboa. Trinidad,
Rotcrdam, Dublin. nnd Ath·
ens. The taU semester embarks on
October 20. and returns on February
4. The Spring Semester
leaves on Febru:ary 7. and retu.rns
on May 25. To qualify for the Inter·
disciplinary Progr&m tl student
must have maintained a 3.0 or
higher grade point average calculated
on a 4.0 iCa:le, in previous
transferable, aeademlc work and
must be in good upper division
$landings at the college.level instl·
tutton hC! most r~cntly atte.nded.
For information concerning the
lnte.r-Univer$ity Committee program
write:
Howard Mahlinge:r
Inter· University Committee on
Travel Grants
021 Lindley HaU
Indiana UniveT1ity
Bloomington. (ndiana 47401
Halloween Tradition Recalled
Once again the traditional practice
of Halloween tk1ts is nur.
lHave you eve:r wondered jua:t
how long this: has b~n a tradition?
Well, we did! And by e litlle
lnvestJgaUng it was tound that tho
first recorded event was in October
1963. Reau.ltlng from unanimous
tnthu.&.as:m the following year they
wc.re legalJy voted in by council,
No spedllc d&te hu been announced
tor the event and at present.
the date decided upOn for this year
is not known.
Many freshme.n and new members
at Nau.retb may not be aware
of what the skits actually entail.
Tbey were established tor purpost:
s of dass unJty. eneouraglng
ela.ss leadership and for sheer enJoyment.
Eaeb year general chair·
men are elect~ from the Sopho-
'Mother Goose Skits
Ocfober 3J
Come in Costume/
more class by Councn flve weeks
before tbe event. Four weeks betore
the "big day .. a theme is chosen
and given t.o individual class
chairman.
Here is one instance where
seniority does not rule. The or<Jer
ot appearance for the production
Is choftn by drawing lots. Judges
pres-ldlng over the events consJst
ot three faculty members. In the
four weeks preceding the actual
day, everyone intuestcd is kept
N. F. News
As a re.sult ot the voting on thcN.•
·.c.C.S. recommendation formulated
by last year's delegates.
Nazareth bas disaffillated: trom Na·
UonaJ Catholic Federation. The
Intention in resigning hom N.F.
ts that the school can then obicc·
lively analyze the organization and
decide whether N.F.C.C.S. should
b.ave a place on campus.
CurrentlY. N.F. it undergoing:
changes tn iu ideals, s tructure. and
approaches. From an historictl
per.spectlve. N.F. has evolved. from
an organization with a purpose ot
be(ng a repre$entationa l student
voice and informational service.
Into an org.anltation with the ideal
of atempting to create a Christian
community on campus.. A Cbrl.stlan
community, the Fedcratlon
<States. is one where: U the individuGls
must communicate treely.
2) where there is freedom tor ~ach
member ot the community to tunc~
tlon as a reS'P()nsible adult. 3l
where the liturgy must be Uving
and Christian, and 4) where an
member.s must be tree to search
for truth wher.ever il ma.y be.
N.F.C.C.S. has changed its st.ruc·
tW'e as well as iu- ideals. Formerly.
the Federation had Rve national
ottlceTs: the number has been
dropJ)ed to two officers ln order to
add greater efficiency and reduce
the membership dues.
A new approach to relatlng lnfonnaUon
to the campust:s, the
Ad lloc Committee has also been
tormulated. Previously, N.f'. had
secretariats to distribute certain
designated projects for the campu.s.
However. with the newly rormed
committee. individual delegates
may ch00$e their own topics tor
discussions or projects. Such topics
range lrom student a:nd r.-culty
relationships, to academic freedom,
to theology and philosophy
curriculum, to leadership training:
eacb del~t<" may handle t.bem in
any way he wishes.
Regional responsibility wiU con·
ltnue as It has, wncemratlna on
problem-solving among member
campuses. leadership programs -
lneluding NOV3•Cor, common serv·
i«: proj~ts to se.hools, and C"duc~tlonaJ
services, for example. film
lJbr-arles...
According to the N.F. approach.
the campus delegates must reeog.
nlte his Increased r~ponsibility
under the new N.F.C.C.S. Re must
help to transform his campu' into
a Christian community. The na·
Honal organlzaUon wiU glve him
leads through the Ad lloc Committee
and the region will provide
personal help.
An £~valuation commUtec has
been set up to study the new
changes In the federation :md de·
termine il N.F.C.C.S.. in the ! uturt,
could be a strong organiz.ation on
the Nnareth campus. Presently.
the committee, headed by Ann
O'Hallora.n, Coordinator of Spiritual
;and Social Action, ls studying
materials obtained at the National
Conv(':ntion. MeetlnJtS have be:e.n
scheduled for 9:30 every Friday:
anyone wishing more infor-mation
is urged lO attend tb(':se meetings.
Kathy Bubsu
MRS. F. SEDITA
MRS. F. O'CONNOR
and
MRS. H. SAMUELS
will be on
campus Oct. 21
quite busy with pubUcity, ref«:sh·
ments, scenery ~nd stage crew.
Students from each class &re em·
ploye<l to write the skit.s..
When the eJected date ~rrives,
skits arc presented and are Collowed
by refreshments. Alter a
long 15 minutes. the winner i.s announced.
However, even the three
classes that don'& win can't teet
as U they have lost when they
stop and reflect on all the tun
that tiley had producing.
Waitressing a Chore?
Try It in Europe!
Applications from U.S. college students who wish to
work in Europe next summer are now being accepted by
Grand Ducy of Luxembourg-The American Student Information
Service, with headquarters in the Grand Duchy of
Luxembourg. The ASIS can place students in temporary
summer work in Great Britain, France, Germany, Switzerland,
Italy, Spain, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Luxembourg,
Belgium, Holland, Austria, brael and Liechtenstein. The
variety of job openings include resort hotel work, office
work. factory work, hospital. child care, shlp, construction,
farm, sales and camp counseling work. Wages extend to
$400 a month for the highest paying positions in West Germany
and the working conditions and hours are exactly
the same as the Europeans with whom the students work.
Every student who Is plae!'Cd ln
a summer job In Europe att~nds a
5 day orientation period in the
Gnl.nd Duchy of Luxembourg that
includes cultural orientation tours
to Ge.rmany. France. Belgium. Hol·
land and Luxemboura. blackboard
U$$ions. on the scene language
practice and lect ures glven by p:ro·
!e$$0rs or th~ Eu.ropean universities.
In its tenth year or operation the
ASIS also supplies job applicant#.
at no ex-tra eosi, with a complete
set ot language records of Lht
Cavalry in which the applicant will
be working. They will 3lso be given
3 student pass allowing the bearer
di.scounts throughout Europe, complete
health and :tccident in!lur:ance
wh.ilt in Europe, and a comprehensive
information service about liv·
ing and traveH.ng in Europe.
Travel arrangements that greatly
reduce the cost ot the •ummer in
EuroJ)c." a re oftered by the /\SIS.
Students are fr£1e to make their
own travel arrangements to 3nd
from Europe II they so wlsh.
The purpose of the ASIS job· inEurope
progr:,.m l.' to provide
every college student with the op·
portunhy to $ee Europe, to increase
his cuJlural knowledge tttrough
travel and at tht aamt' time to
eam and save money. Students
w'th limited budgets would not
otherwise be abla to see Europe.
The student worker also h01s a
goldtn opJ)OrtunJty to a('(lulre a
-speaking knowledge of a fortl(m
language.
A.ny students interested in work·
lng In Europe: should wrltt to Dept.
I, AmerJcan Student Intormalion
Service, 22 Av~ue de 1a Llberte.
Luxembourg City, Gra:nd Duchy of
Luxe:mbOurg. for lhe ASJS 3G·page
booklet which includes a complete
listing a nd descriptions. with photograph.
s ot Jobs available and job
applications. Two doUars Is rc·
quired with each inquiry to cover
the cost or the materinl. One copy
already purchased Is avarlabh: by
conu.tcling one of the editors of I he
Gleaner.
In the Army Now
News was recently received from
the u.s. Army Recruiting StaUon
that Nickle Seh.miU, a .sc.nlor here
at Nazareth is the 6:rst participant
in a special scholarship program.
In June. Nickle was accepted for
the U.S. Army's College Junior
PrOJJram. a four week summer
training period foT women who
are between their junior and senior
years in collc,s:e. This program of·
fen a young lady the opportunity
ot having a "look see" at the Army
with no turther obHgations to
them. They see ftrst hJnd how
Women's Army Corps Ott'icers live.
work and socialize and learn in
general what the Army i.s all about.
Those women who Lake part in
t-his program arc paid as a Cor·
poral tor the four weeks. $168.80.
At the time Nickie entered this
program she had no Idea there
would be a "pot of gold" awaiting
her at the end of the tour weeks.
Toward the end ot the tour week
course the big announcement was
made that the Army had cna\ed
a. grant-ln-atd scholanhlp for those
e:adets in Nickie·s class.. Those rec·
ommended by the Army would be
enliJted lnto the Women's Army
Cor'"' R .. <rvo. oollecl aroun<l $Zf!OO
during their senior year in college.
and when gr{ldUMed would be commissioned
as 2nd Ueutenants ln the
U.S. Army. Women's Army Corps
and serve: tor a period o1 2 years.
The Underc-ra.duate Assoela·
Uon will sponsor a t•ounder's
Day ree.eption and e.otree boar
In honor of Sllltn !Jelen Daniel
on October 20 trom 10:10 to
11:%0 a.m. In the auditorium.
All membet1 or \he t aeulty.
statr, al'ld student bod)' are In·
vUed to come al any Umc wltb·
Jn the hour.
Samuels, Maloy on Campaign Trail
Char les Maloy, Monroe County Demtx:ratJc Chairman, spcakint: at
Nazareth on Octobu 4. cited the electorate today as rather an apathetic
group all too willing to let others make their decision. He ~)<tin ted out
the net!d tor the issues to be central to the campaign and not let tt
become a contest of showmanship, In the quesUons that followed a. few
addhJonal points were discussed ineludlng the growth ol the independent
vote, which he lnterprets ill a healthy sign, :md the rel~tion$hip ot
the Young Democrats to the parent orgonization.
Emphasized was the tact that college students can and should lnv~lve
themselves in politics. They ean be inrt.rumentaJ in phone campaigning,
backing new ideas and renovatlng: the old. Mr. MaJoy sees youth as a
meazu of vitaJiz.ing the party and poUtles. Thtrefore he supports the
work or the Youns: Demoerats and feels that while they may not keep
'lhe same ties wherl they have left school they will do a servtce t.o their
government by belng more aware voters.
Two days later students were presented witb a chance to bear
Howard Samuels, O~mocratle candidatto tor Lt. Governor and running
mate of Fra_nk Horton, tell of his hopes tor New York State. Speaking
at St. BasU's HaU. Fisher, Mr. Samuels said that we bave ••inherited a
society that has tailed to meet Its goals."
Now he se:cs a search !or a new quality, One of tbe directions this
search has: taken is In that of Constltutlonal refonn and he advocated
more power at the toea) level. Another area cited was human resources.
Mr. Samuels backs invertme:nt In t.be people, such a.s in education.
Chance was Mr. Samuels underlying idea, .. We must plant the seeds of
change and have the courage to execute lher.\." At the end ot b.ls speech
he entertained several que:stjons .. . He supports the civilian review board
and unicameralism tor the New York State Jegi&lature. He does not see
hlmstU as a band-picked candidate but one whieb the people want.
Mr. Samuels thinks that there should be more e:fte:cUve use of govt>mment
and that now mlght be a good time to review the ehureh-·state
l'elationship in the area of education. It was also mentioned that whereas
the Republican& b.ave about flve to six million dollars at their dlrposaJ
for the eampllign. the Democrats are work.lng within a budget ot about
one mUUon. Belore leaving, he thJ.nked the Nazareth students who were
there and tbose who have. helped him.
Page Two
Editorial:
From Cocoons to Baboons
Mature butterflies and worms do not make their habitat
in the same natural environment. This is a simple biological
fact. Yet it is apparent that many NCR and SJF students
have managed to ignore this fact. Phenomenally, social
butterflies from both schools have made themselves at home
in the ideal habitat of the bookworm, the Nazareth College
Library.
A solution to this problem has been approached from
assorted angles in past. On one hand, students were put
under the scrutiny of a roving library guard whose duty
it was to hush and hiss at any and all under surveillance
who showed any sigu of movement or life whatsoever. On
the other hand, students were asked to antagonize one another
when gross misconduct called for correction.
It is obvious that both of these attempts to achieve
an atmosphere conducive to study and research have failed.
Thus far we have been unable to find a student solution to
a student problem. It does not rest in the separation of the
good guys from the bad guys by an overseer, nor in our putting
a peer on the carpet when he has acted in poor taste.
The solution lies in the honest answer to one simple
question which each student must ask himself every time
he considers stepping into the library: "Am I going to the
library to work or to lurk?" There is a bit of the bookworm
and a bit of the butterfly in every one of us. The place for
bring out the butterfly is not in the library-they lose their
charm when they revert to the larva stage.
-S.P. & K.B.
Jl~D~
GLEANER
Letters. • •
Propaganda Show
Library Problems
Dear Editor,
Much is said these days on campus
about fostering Lntellectual
g·rowth and Independent thinking.
ADd how Is such development encouraged?
With 3 propaganda
bomb entiUed Why VIet Nam ?, a
movie which insults the lntelll·
gence of Naureth student.'!:, We
wt.re ted the gross ove:rs:impUftcaUon
or the VIet Nam problem that
we we.re the good guy$ 3:1d ou.r
etaemle$ are the bad guy.!i, as lr
we were impressionable chUdren
wa,tching a juvenile Wes~t:rn. 1$
this what the History and International
Relations Clubs thlnks ot
Naureth?
Would not a lecture or 3 series
of lecture$ by one ot our t3CU1 ty
or an expert on South East A$la.
deaHng with the economic situation.
the sociological complexion
and structure. the religious make·
up and dissension that is $0 much
a pan of the Viet Nam conftlet. be
a much more valuable contribution
to the academic lile of lhe campus?
Would not such an apr·oach. a
search tor the whys and the real
issues behind the present conflict,
be mor-e meaningful to those tor
or against. or ln·betwee.n, or with
no opinion at all, than a propa·
ganda appeal to emotional p.atrio·
tism through pathetic scenes and
stirring music? Intelligent ~:~.nd responsib1e
citizens Or a democracy
are formed by respect for them,
!Continued on page fiv•J
Published bi-weekly except during examination
periods and recesses.
Opinions expressed in this paper ore not
necessarily those of the college administration,
or the entire GLEANER stotf.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ASSISTA'NT EDITOR
Kathy Burkard S<Je Parzych
EDITORIAL STAFF
NEWS: Ro Cosello REPORTING: Kathy Butler
FEATURE: Deedee Taylor LAYOUT: Moribeth Norsen
TOPICAL: Kathy Lyons COPY: Chris Redmon
Headlines: Emily Andrews Photography: Dione Becke Ads: Janice Smith
Distribution: Kathy Bubser Managing: Mary l. Pabrinkis Business: Pot Conway
Exchange: Sorb Besig Typing: Ginny Vecchiotti
ADVISOR
Mr. Jack Joyce
Stoff1 S. Albert, R. Alston, E. Andr~ws. S. Billerio, C. 8itel, P. Borg, P. Bovsledl, M. Clair, D. Cleary, J. Cusyck.
l. DeNeve, C. OePon.z.io, G. Oi Nlno, E. Oom, M. Dow. C. Ofilllng. l. Fey, A. Goffney, M. Giordano, M. Gtody, l.
HoWJylut.:, K. Hoyes, C. Heffernan, Mary Kelly, Morle Kelly, A. Kn.obel, J. l(un:r, M. ledeter, l. lipper1, C. Mc:Bttde,
P. McGee, M. Mc;Giynn, J. Nogefdlngcr, V. Nonni, J. Nichohon, A.. Nolen, M. O'Connor, M, Poul. S. Pelllc:ono,
M, Peti llo, S. Perklni, A, Pryjmok, K. Quigley, l . 'Regon, M. Rew, A. Reynoldi, A. Riopko, A. Schiorobo, K. Seni to.
J. Smith~ S. StO$ko, S. Stiegelbouer, 0, ToyiOf, E. Terhaar, 8. Tupoa , A. Walton, E. WilllomiOf'l, S Yennfck. Our
sineere oJ)Oiogie' If we hove fOfgotten you .
October 21, 1966
Guest EditoritJI
Who's the Wise Guy with the Big Ears?
There's been a rumor (spread by a troublemaker, n
doubt) that the library is not the place to go if you wan
to study. Well, whoever originated the fallAcious statement
had better retract it or present facts to confirm it. I happen
to be an after dinner contemplator and find the library
be a usually siutable home for quiet concentration. I su
pose there are times when there is some distracting noise
(heavy breathing behind the Shakespeare volume or a series
of sneezing during a cold season) but I find this only normal.
Of course there was that political chaos season when it
seemed that the Fisher parties campaign headquarters and
caucusing centers were two certain tables found in a mid
library section and then there are the usual gripers wh
send hateful glances at friends who pause (maybe settle
down is more acurate) to chat amicably with friends fo
15-20 minutes or so. After all, it is so hard to catch a perso
during the busy week and you should take advantage of the
chance when you have it.
I suppose you could mention the fact about how it's no
really completely quiet during the weekdays or weekend
either. It seems that the talented construction men can no
only drill, build and climb but do terrific bird imitations
(their all time favorite is listed as the North Amel"ican
Wofl Bird). We don't mind the noise from trucks and cranes
that much now; in fact after the Arts Center is finished we
are hoping to get piped in "construction music" (for the
mood) to study by-it's just a habit you get into. Then on
weekend we have "soft"-footed, suitably armed Pinkerton,
whose domain of protection extends even to the confines o
the library (think of what could be lurking in those dark,
dusty carrels) and constantly, considerately assure us with
periodic unnoticeable tours.
The same person who offered the enlightening informa
tion on where not to study also mentioned as an afterthought,
that it always seems to be "recognition week" in the library
foye.r. Now, this statement really edges on the ridiculous!
What possibly could be wrong with quiet talk in the desig
nated areas? (Last week while studying my roommate and
I made a small unscientific experiment to prove the overt
generalization made. You may not hear a pin drop during
conversational hours in the foyer but you can hear fou
books (two metaphysics, one biology, and one sociology) and
a pocketbook (with spilling contents) scatter with sha
report of a somP.what uncoordi nated person (probably intox
icated from too much studying) miss the open doo1· to thl).
main library hall and stumble into the close<! one. (Seem
we could have something done about that-maybe giv
sobriety tests to anyone who wishes entry.) On second
though it wouldn't be practical because we'd have to extend
tests to the dorms. Why? I saw three different people at
different times playing "Supergirl" (that's in people) and
trying unsuccessfully to walk through Kearney glass fron
door.
Certainly this proves beyond any doubt that the library
is the quiet place which affords any and all the necessar
atmosphere.
Oh excuse me now, but I have to go and talk to Helen
about her date with 'Frank this weekend. She's over there
behind the encyclopedia talking to Phil.
-P.B.
Calendar: What's Going on Here?
OCTOBER
20 Thursday
26 Wednesday
27 Thursday
28 Friday
31 Monday
NOVEMBER
1 Tuesday
OCTOBER
22
22
28,29,30
29
Saturday
Saturday
Saturday
October 18, 1966 - November 1, 1966
NAZARETH
Students' Hour - Club Meetings
NCR Film Festival - " Dr. Strangelove"
Students' Hour -Missions
1:30-Freshmen Investiture
7:00 NCR Halloween Skits
Al l Saints Day - Holiday
UNVERSITY OF ROCHESTER
Eastman, 2:30 " Hansl & Gretel"
TKE Beer Blast
Homecoming
Football - St. Lawrence at Rochester
OCTOS.ER
21, 22, 23
.25
2!J,29,30
31
OCTOBER
18
25
OCTOBER
20
Tuesday
Monday
Tuesday
Tuesday
ROCHESTER INSTITUTE OF TECHLOLOGY Capitol
Cinema
Fine Arts
Little
Loew's
Monroe
Panorama
Paramount
Regent
Riviera
Stoneridge
Towne
OCTOBER
22
26
28,29,30
Saturday
Wednesday
28 Friday
29 Saturday
30 Sunday
NOVEMBER
4, 5, 6
4,5
Cross-Country Track, Roberts Wesleyan (HOME)
Soccer, Alfred U. (HOME)
Cross-Country, U.B. (HOME)
MRHA (Men's Residence Hall Assoc.! Weekend
MRHA Beer Blast (OPEN), Ritter:Ciork Gym
Cross·Country, Conisius Invitational (AWAY)
Skits-0-Froshia (entertoinmeot)
Sigma Pi Weekend, ond Homecoming Weekend
Forensic Debates
ST. JOHN FISHER COLLEGE
SJFC Current Events Weekend
Soccer- Fredonia vs. SJFC, 4:00 P.M.
SJFC - Parents' Weekend
SJFC Mixer
RUNDEL BOOK REVIEW SERIES
George Ford on Catch 22, 12d 5
Wayne Harris on Disaster by De Fault
ROCHESTER PHILHARMONIC
a, 15 Concert at Eastman Theater
THEATERS
"'Cat Ballou"
"The Wrong Box"
"I'm All Right Jack", " Heavens Abovel"
"The Pad"
"How to Steal o Million"
"The Sound of Music"
" The Bottle for Khartoum"
''An American Dream"
"Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf"
"Doctor Zh ivago"
"The Appaloosa"
"The Fantastic Voyage"
LSD-What Is It? Who Wants It?
n
:an To 00 perfectly blunt, J think perhaps the one thtns that Nazareth t College Jtudents have absolutely no lnterert in ls Atademlc Freedom.
r think pages 3 and 4 in the Oct. Slb lAue ot the Gle&Aer are t-wo PIIH
of pretendlna.
J would co 10 tar u to say thU btc:ause J don't Olink that any student
11 Naza~th hat tbouJ,tn far enOUJ;h lnto an lSSUe., or ft.lt 10 stf'Onl.ly
about a.n laue that she has t.ak.en the time or the eoercy to actually
t.l. md bonutly torm an opinion eontrary to that of the admlntstrators.
Jt or whoever .. they'' are who prevent her trom exerc1slna a trudom
1d wbic.h a.he lt supposedly gropJng tor. We don't know 11 we have ocademJc
:J lretodom or not. and could •pparently care less.
tn the Jut Gleaner Issue the d1scuJtlons of academic f_reedom lnsinu·
ated that Naureth does not offer thlt t7~ of freedom to her students
and facul\y. R.ther than br in.alna to Ucht a vague accusation, why
) doesn't .omeone who hN felt the etreeu of the ladt of trHdom. 10meone
1 wbo an actually Just~ a complalnt ln this dt.ld.. che a Jl)telAc caM:,
&.D lnddent in which Nazareth hu faUtd to allow ber Jtudent.t or faculty
a. chance 1.0 research and bring to Utht a new outlook on any problem
which may need to be solved In aomc way othea- than a traditional one
with whtch the collegt bas operated In th~ past!
What b the point of d.Ltlcu.ulng academic treedom or the lack of
it whe;n it Ia dlacu.saed vaguely without speci.dc reterenee?
Before we decide that Nazareth does not want ua to exprus our
1 opinloos, lind better answers, and propose c.h.ance:s into her current
n ust.em. why don"& we for onc-e Itt an Idea and praan it \0 her without
$ the ariplna. the paaive complaiot, and the antagon.irina apathy ~t we
are 10 &ood at di.Jplaying? More tba.n h.alt the tJme we fail tO be aatis:fiect
cimply becau.ae or a lack of communfcallon. not b~uM of a lack of
e academic freedom. The existence ot ac•dernic ~edom Ia proven on1y
n when It Ia teated. Who on this campus he~_s done enough thinking to
ehallengc those who .supposedly deny Jt lo us? Who hu sutTered. any
,_
y
!
consequences for exprHSion of an opinion? Wby make a.n 'illue· of
academlc !rtedom without one ptreon who can provide a justlfted arsu·
ment atatina an occasion when It hal betil denied!
-$ae PanJth "CC
!>rAY IN AND ~p IF 'ttxJ WANT-I'M
601N~ OUi ANP EXPeRIENcE 1.-tF£ !
Effect- Psychedelic Faith?
BY MARY ANN PAUL
"It is kicks, man. It is the
kick. You freak out and
there is nothing but greatness
and madness ... If you
want to Iron out the wrinkles
in you•· brain, it's the cosmic
iron.'' This statement
was made by a twenty year
old college student when
questioned about an experience
with LSD. That version
of the LSD experience is
played up heavily by the nation's
newspapers and student-
geared publications.
The LSD cult has an unusually
large following on
college campuses. It is both a
catalyst which dissolves
apathy and a recognized contributor
to the campus insanity
and suicide rate.
The other article in this
column has explained the
chemical make-up, physical
effects, and social ramifications
of the drug. One could
probably parody Will James'
Varieties of Religious Experience
using interviews with
"acid" (LSD) users. In this
article we would like to present
a sincere yet admittedly
sensationalistic look at the
relationship between LSD
and the religious experience.
Why are so many college
students and professors fascinated
by LSD? Perhaps it
is because there is a spiritual
or metaphysical hunger
among the young adults
which standard brands of
religion don't always satisfy.
ln other words, they- don't
l feel that the issue of ··Academic Freedom .. 1.1 lOll upon many of
the Naz.areth Students. 1 rurtMr fffi lhal the aruclet .,.carding this in
the laJt Glu.nu. by fOC'UliDI on th~ broad issue, dld retadv~ly Uttle to
brine meaning to the Naureth Jtudent. None of the anic::les su~ed
in brlnalnl tht Issue within the rphere ot lnd.lvldu.al concern. Aoimlt·
tedly, this wottld be a dltl\eult matter. But by relylna: heavily on quotca
!rom aevernl persons Cwhote authoriU.live quallRcatlons were left to
the reader's imagination), and explanations or varylna dtftnitions ot
'·'academic freedom•·. the pretentatlon was Hrnlted In lt.t I('OI)e' !rom the
very start. And after all thJ.t.. what Is .. academic freedom'• anyhow! •
However. it i.t DOt the: melhod of prnentatJon or the I<'OPt: that I
am concerned with here. It lJ the propriety o·f the aub)tct matt~r that
I queatlon. In my opinion. lhe attention beoin.c given to thb wide inter·
pretatlon ol academac freedom hu bHt applleatJon elsewhere. I r~J
that the upect or academic freedom dbcu.ssed in the articles J.s not un
jasue of relevance ror thi.s campus. Most sttidt!nta are too remote /rom
the "problems" to se-c any problem at all. And a great many mo[e feel
that their acade.rn.Jc: lretdom Is not propuly a topic for community
dlscuulon.
ln other words., •• rt:1ard.l the: whole issue prue:nted to us throu«b
the artlciH. the di.scussion aee.ms to be geared to only one a.spect of the
problem. Theer are two leveb-t.he pe_rsonal and that which concerns
::~~ ~"e =:~~l.w~urbe;~to11.: :e~~a::.':u:~e a!~:::0~e0~~~~
then will we begin to t-ll:perlence real academic Cree<tom.
Perhap& Jtudents are bored with the idea of concern tor others.
Perhapa &hey are afnlid to dlacover that their commitment to our counlry
and her hlah {deals is va~:ue and ln.etf«live. Too many students are !O
lmmt:ncd in thHnsdves. and their own alflletions that they do not noUcto
the prlvatlon.t borne by thole around them. Under the .culse of inteUee·
tual purlftution and freedom. they often trample on the very individua1
they are .o hdl·bent \o de.ftnd Ttt.IJ. is wbat muJt bt d.lseussed. on the
Na.tartth Campua.
- Anna Walloon '6.1
always transform the way
you feel, the way you experience
your own existence. The
gist of the LSD attraction
is that it involves the whole
being. The mind and body
are plunged into an intensive
state of perception. Time
stands still; colors blaze and
have sound. The ego dissolves;
walls breathe and
memories race by with the
clarity of film.
Dr. Timothy Leary, the
'trip'-preaching psychiatrist
who was released by Harvard
University, claims that
the LSD experience provides
an insight into the "substantial
of things". His arrest
record is probably more impressive
to many than his
words. But Leary cannot be
sloughed off as a demented
prophet of a purely evil
creed. Aldous Huxley, Samuel
Coleridge, the contemporary
poet Allen Ginsberg,
and a number of res,>ectable
research scientists have supported
the mind-opening
powers of psychedelic mysticism.
They claim thAt the experience
does two things: it
gives a feeling analogous to
the state of the religious
mystic ; it makes you more
aware of nonverbal nuances.
The results, of course, are
possible only if-the -patient's
mind is not pushed across
the line to madness before
he reaches joyous perception.
Using LSD is a gambling
game and no one cnn
accurately predict the winners.
I t has been said that the
psychedelic drugs, especially
LSD, make the underlying
human archetypes much
<Continued ott pafl• ttvenJ
The Clinical Investigation £dJ\or's Note:
lt was lnevl&able l.bat the que.Uon or the relevancy of &be Topical
Pa,:o shoald arb-e. After all,. ln a tt.ho.ol where (1) n.o one It aademieally
rep.reswd. ~t) l.SO. pot. alcoholism. and promlsC'a.Jty are lndlvldaal.
lllll.lkd. proble.au., If, bult:e.d .. lb~y arc problems hue al. alt. (J) dis·
D.UsfaeUon. (If any ex:bta) with e.•nu and professors Is never ooe:nl)'
dlse•sse4 and l.ht:rdore snas hardly an lu a~. (4) "Probleau In the
libra..ry caue only mome-ntary an1~r. (5) wealc··voteed 'PrOkll. al'alnst
the few soe.lal rHtrleUons we bave seem mor~ a tr'adiUon. than a moveanent.
(5) to a larJ'e extent, cull.ural and broad enin&' activities are Jell
l.o l.he au.creaUons and tplannlnc of lb.e faculty an4 admJniJt raUon. who
would be m.ou t.ban wi.IUnr to hear our tor~rsU.oos (and lt:l. us bear
some of lbe bur41eo), we aaas.t expect oan: t.o be IUl blae•IQI e&mpDL
By IC.AmY LYONS
Editor's Note:
This is a di.seussion of the
ell'ects of LSD from an unbiased
and non-judicial point
of view. Why talk about it?
That's a good question. Perhaps
no one on eampus has
"taken a trip", but there are
certainly those who have or
will meet so ealled "acid
heads" and/or be faced with
an honest decision of "do 1
or don't I?" LSD is real for
many people our own age.
Shouldn't it, the.refore, incite
some interest, at least in
related scientific data? It's
helpful to see the common
facts about LSD in one spot.
They need to be known, and
this is Gleaner's purpose in
presenting them here.
LSD or LSD-25 stands for
lysergic acid diethylamide. It
belongs to a family of drugs
designated halluci.n.ogens,
psychotomimeties, or psychodelic
("mind manifesting'').
The effects are not new.
Peyote and mescaline are
two natural hallucinogens
that have been known and
used by even the early Indian.
:Mystics and religious
cults from the East are able
to induce the same effects of
LSD merely by means of
faithful meditative exercises
(e.g. "Sartori".) The publishing
of Aldous Huxley's
Doors of Perception and the
dismissal of Dr. Timothy
Leary from Harvard are the
two events which brought
the "cults" of today into existence.
Dr. Ochota's "What is the
Clinical Evidence?" in The
New Republic (May 14,
1966) answers the obvious
flrst question - how does
LSD act?
"The following four stages
of action generally can be
distinguished:
1. Initial, lasting from '!2
to '/, hours after oral ingestion
of 100 to 150 micrograms
of LSD, and producing
slight nausea, some anxiety,
dilation of pupils . •.
2. "Experience," lasting
for one to four to eight hours
and consisting of illusions,
hallucinations, and delusions
associated with significant
alteration of:
a) ol'ientation (mainly impaired
for time, rarely for
place)
b) consciousness {confused
states, dreamlike revivals of
past traumatic events or
childhood memories)
c) sensory perception ( ...
visual illusions, hallucinations
and synesthesias (e.g.
feeling, sound])
d) motor coordination (impaired
... )
e) mood and affectivity
(anxiety, euphoria, hypomania,
ecstasy, autistic withdrawal)
f) ideation (flight of ideas,
ideas of reference, impairment
of concentration and
intelligence.)
g) alteration of personality
(dissolution of personality
by depersonalization and
derealization; impairment of
conscience and of acquired
social and cultural customs.)
To ad: wbdher Nuard.h really Is lt:Ja.,.less. w whd.ber ••r a.path.y
and boncel.t -...eau."' m.a.Jte U 10. a. .potnllrst. u is,. alkr all, not a
~p.roblua. t.o k resol..e4 by coAKilllU. T·he polttt Is. l.bere are n.o ru.llJ
bll' l~P~ts at Nau.rc.Ut now (ll &hue are, ~lease ld'J bu.r about them)
and l.hue b llt.l.le •alae In prdend.lft.r t.o ll. BaC. we ar·e 'Jiarl of a blccer
world than our e.ollere bounctarlu. aN U Is Ute laues of lhb world
world Ulan our coHere bou.ndarln-, and It are l.he lsaau or tbb world
the dlseu.ss.lons.
J wonder If we re-ally wanl. t.o •• lltalted to ou.r own pro.,leau? 1
woD4~r U we art.n"t ""Ua.all" e.noach alrudrt
8. Recovery, lasting for
several hours and consisting
of waves of normality alternating
with waves of abnormality.
4. Aftermath, consisting
of fatigue and tension during
the following day." (pp.
21-22)
The experience can hardly
be described as merely these
enumerated steps, however.
The trip of LSD transcends
clear expression in language.
- KATHY 11111UUJ.AAD
Ullor
As one user was reported to
have said "I could no more
put what happened into
words than I could evoke the
experience of high C to a
person born deaf' . . . One
of the chief reactions of
most LSD takers is that
what is happening to them
is of world-shaking importance.
Another common response
of total disintegration
of the personality, accompa-fCo!
ttiluud "" ,.,. _ ... ,
P09e Four GLEANER
Aadi lao:
Gleaning-In to Out
HEAVY LIGHTS
Do Not Disturb
I yeUed, 'Tire! .. 1n a comJ)utor fa«ory
Hoplnl to cause commoUoo;
lnltt"acl a perforated care!
lnformtd me of demotloo,
And alto O..t if I felt a need
To alna a tons of II.Yt,
1 thould le.avt th~ clty undllturbed
And ftnd some empty cave.
Ancl Now a Word from O• r Sponaor
Reliable doctors suuest.
That btttore we eontinue our quest
To conquer IJ)l«
ln a roektt nee.
We nHd Jut a bit of a rut.
Due to prHIU.rts and st:restu and ltraln.,
We've developed bad breath ot the brain,
And nt&lect of the soul
Adda LO the whole
OleanoaJ1: ju1t a bit ot InSAne.
For prevention of death premature
Or even a high temperature,
Love ancl a ahowu
EVfl'Y twenty·fourth hour
Should prove just a bit ot a cure.
Tile Y•u.r ll&a &ad the Sta
h'a true that the~ ire many
fishes In lht tu.
but in the dtotp end
try to find
more than two or three.
Who Is He?
Ht Is A lime ftrure on a &Unset-reddened pJaln,
a tortured, weathered t'ree
amldll laughing, roHing plenty.
.••. He stand• on • dune high above the ahore,
and sees two thlld~n running hand In ha.nd
uroa the 10lden and.
He is a feeble old man sutlng in tht: doorway ln the dusk.
a lont:, pol&nant shadow
arnon,a lhadowa.
•. • • He watc.bH wh.h a rMmOry-laden heart.
and - small •bililren playlnJ wltb red balloons
and chanttnc old, old tunes.
Who II he!
He is a sad tlnaer In a tilent, nig'ht.·ftUed room,
the hum of life
within lhe dtalh of day.
• ... He walkJ alon1 narrow, darkened 1\tt-etl,
tUent and deterled uve for sound
ot Joyou.s tean of a toul re-found.
He is.
a lontr.
They Say
Tbo,y .. ,.
that f.aith c:an move
mounlalnl
Hope C"a1\ movo wlllJ.
aJ>d ebutty
can move bearu • • .
WhJ'thtD
is the earth movlnc
10 very
slowly!
Ws 'Boss' Man
We at teatterl.nlanu.zy Uttle
-biltrleo
For a bUDd.recl hours. or 10 It liiH'DU
WbeD you look ~r·ftonL
Forms ftow funny tn the bead.
eometimet.
Foggy moon makes mockeey of our
m)ghtymln-
Mind.tl mind? do you ever mind?
But that't no Jmporta:
Blind, blind, 10 hollow and 10
bUndJ
Who II he!
Untitled
A hundred ~uueu were rolled Into
a disc:
And Ill<! II.
Pulled lho pat<tn to I1IJ' neclc
And ale br<!ad
Knowln1 oothlna at all of uc:ri4~.
--111-14
The Two Fae.e. of Lee Harvey
Otwa.lcl t-A von Press
In tho July 24th Issue ol Tho
New York Review ot Books, Proteaor
Richard H. Popkin chu&ed
the Warren Commis:sloo wllh
cate:rtnc to the publlc's nt't'd tot
HCUr1ty b,y c:oncluding, before ex·
amlnlnl aU !acts and ~UIUes
about Prt'lldmt Kenned,y~, death.
tNt the crime was committed b.r
a lone. alienated usa.s:si.ft.
THE SECOI'ID OSWALD. 1 book·
Jen.lth venlon of Professor Pop.
kJn'a widely-quoted article, with
an lntrodueUon my Murray Kempton.
will be pubUshcd on September
lith by Avon BookJ. In addl·
Uon to 10,000 words of new malerlaJ.
the book: c:ontains t.htt f'Bt
autoPIJ report d.Jctated by two
FBI aaenll on November 21. 1M3.
Publ.&lbed In its entirety for the
fttll Ume, the repon dHaibel
what these a,.enta saw and heard
while the doc:ton were txamlnln.a
President Kennedy on the night ot
November 22.nd.
THE SECOND OSWAJ..D olfero
the ftrlt sytte:matlc lheory suaaeat·
Ina how Oswald may have conspired
with others to usaulnate
Prealdent Kennedy. It i.a bued
on evldenc:e 1n the 28-volu.me Warrtn
Commisaion Report. oo new
evkteMe that has a~ In re-cent
wMU. and on recent bOOk:l
trlUe.itl.a,a the llndi.np of the Commt.
aio.n. Profeaor Popkin pre-Knll
evldenee that a man wbo
looked like Oswald, and often
posed aa Oswald, could have been
the actual auassin. He shows that
the Commlsalon di.nnWed lmpor ..
tant evldtn~. A man who looked
like O.wald was identifted at a
Oallu ahootln.a ra..n,ce-. at an auto
Jho'a•room, and the book depository
1\llfll. "!'he author dtes ru.ltnt'I'OUI
other ln.at.a.ncu pointing to t.be role
a aecond O.W.ld may have played
ln the usa•lnaUOa
Unlike the Comm..lssion's theory,
Proteltor Popkin write:a, the U\c:ory
of lhe aecond Oswald ••ftta much
of the known data, and requlres
fewer mlracle.s or highly unUkt:ly
evtn\1. Since aecond Oswald was
an exMllent shot. my theory doea
not require the di.smissa_l of all of
the people who saw SKOnd 0...
wald u ml.nake-n. no matter bow
much coiTOboration they have:·
In 1M IJII>t of tbe ~rt·o d<ft·
dt.ncl~ Profe-ssor Popkin \lri'H
a reope_nlnc of the investlaat.ion.
He believe. the Warren Commi.talon
~erved the American and the
world public b•dly by doing "a
rush job·. a slap-da-sh one. defend·
lng a politically acceptable position."
Profeaaor Popkin Is Chairman of
the Oe.,.rtmtnl of Philosophy It
tM Ur'llvers:lly of California at san
DI<IO.
Pseudo-Prayer
0 Christ, I adore You, half
abhor you, always bore you
with my petty infamies. And
yet-you seem to be coming
back for more. You masochist.
Christ! Can't you see
no soul in me? Where is your
x-ray vision, oh supergod 1
Shall you strike me dumb in
mid sentence? And yet, repentence
comes flowing, following
fast . . The "~erd
tirade.
-Sieipneid
SASTMA.N SCllOOL OF M"OSIO
Kllbourn Hall Chamber
MUJI< Series
PllESENTS:
Odober ~- Eclanlz.
Pianist
November J~det quaru_r
(U. Alabama)
Tueaday Evtnlng1 at 8:15
T lokelo $2.00 each.
le• GleaDet 8 -.Jle:Un Board.
t•r t• rt.ber d.e&alls.
FISHER PRESENTS
READING OF
SHAKESPEARE
''The Thre-e Tabard$ of Shak.eapeare,"'
selections from the areat
traJedles., and blstorles of WlUiom
Shakespeatt', will be preaentad by
PhUfp Lawrence. noted Shake·
wpearean authority, d.Jrector and
aewr, and tour companlont at St.
John Fisher CoU~ge Monday. Oet.
2.4, at 8:1$ p.m. In Kearney Audl·
torium.
n.e presentation lakes ill t1Ue
from the tabud.l (tunlc:s) wom by
\he heralds ot Lht noble tamllles
on which wert emblaz.oned their
lord•a coats of arms. In the per·
tormanee, these tabarda a.l'(! ldcnll·
fted with various human emotlont
which Shakespeare 10 briUlan\ly
portrayed • .Nua.rtth't taeulty mt:mbera
and students are welcome.
On Nowmbu 2-a the Recent
11\eatre wUI praent Moraot Fon·
teyn and Rudolf Nureytv whh
Brh.ain'c Royal Ballet in "'Romeo
a.nd Julet." This unu.a\liJ combl·
nation of a drama a.nd blUet It
being shown for fund rai.a.lnl purposes.
Morgot Fonteyn, Rudolf Nur-eyev
and the RoyaJ Ballet are admowl·
fd.&ed to bt' the vuy but In their
tle.ld. Add to this the Umelut
love Jtory of "'Romeo and JuUet''.
brllUan: color. and the mdc ot
krae Prokoftev, and you have a
motion pieture that la wttbout
parallel.
When a molion picture lt ton·
aldered tor fund rallin,a.. it t.
evaluated trom many polnta of
view. This movie lendt luetr
beautifully to entertainment and
educational value, and Ia one thai
wm be thoroughly enJoyed by au
who tee lt.
October 21, 19J
Acculturate! ~
Theatre Eu1. lloebeltet'a -/
~h':!~~l or;!on~ove:~:J
with Eugene O'Ntlll't Len,. Da1~
~::;·~~"~f:~::.t. ~~~:n::a~!:,
grounds. East H~latta and Ctl
kina Rds. Beginning the lOth,~.
drama educaUoo feature of Thee•
East will be .-lal matinees I •
atuden:ts every Thund.,. durl
the 18-weelt RUOO of nine out
ttondlnc plays. IDdlvldual lldte
to be purduued throuJh ac:hoo I
will be specially priced at Sll The procram 11 .s .. IIP>ed to 11 I
11tudents: an intimate experlt:n
with aood theatre and to b.rin1 t
life lhe drama they study about z
the classrooms. Attcndlng aluden~
each wiU be iJvt.n a S'uden~
Oulde to augment their apprtcil
lion and underJtandln& of the p.r
ductions. Student Ciulde artiel
written by well·known IJ'ta edu
eaton consist of critiques on l thow.. u well u t.lPI on bow
- and enjoy a P'-7·
A non~profit proJect ot Rochett
Perto-rminc Aru: Foundation, lnc.,p
Theatre Eall wW bt thll counlr)'~·1
26th regiona1 theatre and wll
operate under Actors' Equity rtgu
latJons. 'nle retldent company wlll
conJiat of Broadway actors 1nd
1ctresses. who will move Into tb
area to become p.ut or the c:om·
munlty and ita .Wiunl llle. ~
STATE UNIVERSITY COllEGE
AT GENESEO PRESI:NTS:
MAJOit I AitiAitA
by Geor9e Bernard Shaw
Ocrober 28' onGI 29
8:15p.m.
Wadsworth Auditorium
Admission Free
"Story and Glory of Motherhouse" f.
lly Sae Ptrt!Ds ~
Rave you ever wondered what J underStand that Herb Alpen. an4,'
lhe story and glory ol the Mother· the Tiajuana Brut .,., voted num~
house 1st It's not the sort ot topic btr one on their popularlly li.st '
whlc:h ona pur$\I.H voluntarily, es- Tbb ls always a good way of Jet '
peclally alnce the MotherhouM! has tlng the mood lor the mtdlt.atloab~
remained a mystery for '» lonJ, whleb toUows. Attar the medlta·
SurpTI.&InJly enough I wa1 offered tlon. the sisten proe:Hd to ~
all kinds of helpful Information refectory for their evtnlna m~
~:! d:;: i:v:'e ~=~~~!:e: = :~:,e~~a ndTh~~1utfl
I I>ecan to raeareh !be 101bleet. low lwlun belore retlrlnc ""' d .. ltJ
Cthank you. Sltt.u lrtarle t."hrts- voted to study. SOmewbe.re In thb"'
ttne!). r ,craeioutl.y. but vehemently heavy tebedule, the.r must ftftdP.
dMIIned the- offer (myii.Uy or no tlme for the Rola.rJ, the Lltan:,Pt
myatery, I'm not that interested) of St.. .Joseph and tlftH'n mlnutea:"D1
but J did however, pu.nue the tople of tJ)lritual readln,g. After readln&th
further upon the request ~ f my a sch~ult auch as thlt. which b
editor. Jutt a gene.ral outline. one might
It tttma that once a girl hid de· ttart to wondt.r why the t.lsten do I
clded to aspire to the reUgloua life, lt and ask the Question. ••11 h worth
•he nnds btrselt In lor I r\lde It?"' To the layman. lhe sllten
awaktnln&. Would you bellnoe 5:43 seem to bt glvfna up Ju.tt about all
AJ«.! (and we eomplaln about eoe.ial neoesaitia. Probabl7 the ID•
1:30"1!) Tbtre are DW'Ht'OUI acttvt. awer to ~ Jlvtn Is that then ls
tlt:t 1.n t.bt dally acbedule of • a uniqueness in the rell&lou.a voea·
J'OUD& tirtH which lead a ""lecular.. tJon. 1'be Wlique.oea enables
to wonder! Ju ooe weh oultlder =~;:: .. ::lalH!::,.~!.· ... lei 1
hat put it: the importance of their own Ptl·
"'There art: so many apec:ta ot 10nal spiritual Uvea. We c<tuldf
the rell&iou.s Ute that have phrase this as be.lng an lntanJible
been oblcurN ln my mind, 1 :o~::t~. ~;~%·.~~: :'~~e;! t
can't help but be lnqu.laltlvo 11
to what aoes on lnllde thoH :: ~~a':t~:•otv=~~ :Wn: r
bl& brick walll... enough. because t.hue It 1 m7ttei'J t
After con~ulttn,e: sevual au\borl~ Involved In every love. Any tn1t
lla. 1 was sbocked to tee bOw YGCa~tion, la,y or ~ la 1 mat· 2
many lhi.np our sbtera tit Into a ter of love. Tbt'O\I,Ih the 8eeoDd f
abort period ot twenty-tour bours.. '9'aUea1 CouDdl. a new opt:nnHI II r
After the 5:4.5 rising, the-y uy their aril:ing C'OilCle:rnina the role of the
momln.c pray en and partldpat.e tn rtll&ious in our 10eiety. Perhaps 1
the Mus. Next t.s brt:ak(llt and now a child will not 1row up to
cleanup, after wbJch tome of the the •cc of ten without knowin,c n
"glrlJ" leave for coUe.ae. ThOJe who that tblten do have leiJ, or that ,_
don't go to school ha.va d.IITerent they really are peol)le. Contrary •
f:::e::e~ !:~:'! ~~~r:·:r. 6a~or;: :~:~~t!~:!u~e~~~ u
ltJe ttudent( lncludin& myae11) la •lattta do have a apecJtle &ender 3
eaUn1 ht:r am meal of tbe day, lhe and as we now lmow. do haw
re:ddenta of the Motherbou.M art hair. <But I bann't teen &Q1
aetUna rea¢, for their cllnner. blondes yet eo.;en a.mona the Jk*\1.·
'1'1\tl\ daae:a resume and contlnue la.nta wbo are trav~ l.nc:oCJlltoJ
tl\rouch the rest of the .nvnooo.
F'lnall7 It eom~ 111'11 broa.k
of their d~-RecreaUon1 U 1 wue
In their position, my ftnt tboulht
would be to dod the nearest bed.
but they take full advant.eae of
their free time. Since l have never
been co one of thtlr recreation
perlodt. 1 have no t.n:tonnatlon on
wba'l they do for rec:realloo. but
Gleaa.er wl&het no otre:Me to tbt
Josephlte communlty by 0.. prl•• ldv
lng of this article. It wN undtt-jiDn
taken ln a spirit of ge.oulne Inter·~
es;t and culminated In the achltvt· w
ment of new lna.lcht.t lnto convtot
Ute and a new retpeet tor \be~,
Sitters. fa
truder Evicts Students:
vestigators Puzzled
Dorm life can have its exciting moments, too, you k-now.
d there's nothing like an unexpected visitor to relieve the
notony. However, upon returning to my room the other
h~, l was confronted with a very unexpected visitor, con-ng
that my door had been locked. Sitting calmly on my
.dow-sill ~as a chipmunk, busily devouring my supply of
•t. (compliments of lllr. Daly). Resenting my intrusion,
disappeared to the inner sanctum of the radiator.
t~rlinl .JOmewhat. put otr. 1 lt.h
LaHar from France dmne.r: but not wantlnc to aetm
!table. I broucJu oome food
tor Simon (you know-Alvin.
o:re • • .)Well. when my tf· HI!
&o let him exit throu.ah the Does it teem like ft took a terri·
w falltd. we (reendted a tew bty lona time tor tnt to write!
) tried to eomer him Into Would you beUeve it'a taken just
ce (eomplimentl of the 8Jolocy about lh1J lon,g to aet settled? And
o· e-nt). Thlt wu by far the to take the cake. Stephanie (the
e.s exdttn.c pan of the evenlna. tlrl who'• livina wilh me) and I
U• \h gtrl.J donnln& &IOVt:l, jumplnl wiU only be here until the end
1U chaln and lhorouahJy tr(Jhttn• of October at wbkh point we move
to poor Simon, who In the end in with another fa.rnlly (who are
tsmnrted all or Ul by retreatln.a al thJa point Jtill on vacation) .
the radiator. There. under tur· The crOSJlng wa.a a litUe awful
er Ulance or a ftuhUcht. he curled - not from the point ot seasickness.
~; . a.nd wenl to alup. by whlc:h most ot us weren't
111
ndaunted, we decSded on a new bothered, but from the social
U• tea. Slater Marie ChriJUne tt.andpolnt (the female social stand·
111
d brought oome pretzel• for poinc. tbl• la!-llke 2 co ll Oh
ld n. and, putting them In the well! You can't win every round
.is ce. we turned otl the Ucht.a and (but I• it reaUy possible to lose
\\· t the room. When r returned IU them all1) After nJne days, you
e, not only WeJ Simon not In wouldn't believe how absolutely
cage, but he wu nowhere to marveJouJ land looked~ven It it = found. I aearched tor him untU wu only rockJ and a Ugbthouse.
: night wJth no .rueceu. cu Debarkation was little short of
u've ever teen my room. this a niAhtmare. There were '"
ld come as no surprbe). Con· people ft11nJ through one little
int that Simon had lone on room for lmmJ.aration. and t.he
anolhe.r room C•t.a the radiator), waJUill' roo• look~ Ulte Tlmes
climbed into bed-not without 1 Squre oo Ne·w Yea.r•• Eve:. Get·
e lpprehenslon and thorou&h tJna in the door to lhat one UtUe
Uon of the bed-dotht:l. you room wu llke boelnc put through
be sure! However, my .. ee-p a meat grlndu. H1ve you ever
.oon ended. At one A.M.. I Wllc.bed ODe work! All rny sym·
awakened by rwtUna and PllhJ' Ia hencetorth wltb the meat
~hinc nolan ~r my bod. - would you believe that my rft:ht
- bOllia "11 ftuhllcl>t (d-'t arm almost arrived In !here three
OM Jleep wll.h a ftuhllc:htt> people ahead o1 Lbe rut of me!
d:iKovertd Simon ln t.he caae. Jl was about so•F. wM.n we ar-
U.. on &aoLiler plum. So m· rl\·ed at Le Havre 1nd the three
wu he In hll meol. tbol hour lnln rlde CO Part. crushed
d didn't even objec-t to my lock- In • lltUe eomJ>&I'tmt'nt wltb 7 , w cq• door. olhu -lo-ud our boDd IUJlt.
What h.a,ppe:ned the next day wu 1aae---wu PH1ectl7 completed by
t- \1-cUmatlc. Alter e•tlnc break· thto bc1 tb•t tb.u. wa.m'l _,. h•llt
(hall or a plum), SJmon wa• wbaliOu·u.
1.. rted outdoon and wt !rff. Then are 24 people in the
te much u t would have enjoyed C.O.U.P. etou.p (22 girls-. by the
J. u 1 roomm•te, I had to con. way>. Our ctireetrJce bad hired
:e er the $5·a-da.y cueat tee CwhJch a bua to t.-ke vs all to our homes.
:1. bleb enouah for people. Jet alone WdL tome Paris ltreeb are ver1.
!- lpmunkt!) and our curfew•. very. ver1 raanow-and a good
Is lch would ne~~h Simon'• number are ooe way. Guess! We
d umal hablt.l. One thlf\lt atlll rode around for ne1rly t.luee: bours
y thers me, thou.ah. Theae three trying to get to the housu-and
11 s when f couldn't nnd Simon. who were the Wt people to be
8 hue wu hef delivered? At &wo in the mortting,
-sharon Albert (Ct>lltinll<d 011 J>GIIO rill)
se Your Library
e Got It for You
, foUowina ue a few commentl
tly ~laled co Nuoroth CoiIJbral"
7.
IJ Th• Coll<ae hu o reoponal·
, IY CO provide lu lltud"'>l body
, lh a library .foclllly whl<h wUI
J.or u -'ble. Atii!Joctorlly
lbe llbruy needt of IU lltu•
lJ in te:nN of bWldlo.c• and
_.... _ llafl. cou..uo... one!
1. The un<lervo<Juote In tum 11
co uae her collece library
Ill eollece n...S. co lhe fullellt
: be:fore cotn.c to a.notMr
In the areL In thb eon·
'"uae'" mean. l)'ltematlc, In·
exploitation or c:tataloc. In·
.., blbllocrophl... reterm ..
teriol, ond aubjec:c coUectloou.
consultetlon with pro(eulonal
1) N'onethele:u It Is recoenb.ed
t there will be ~ulons when
Ut<rary will not be able tully
meet a teeltJmate need. On
Nu.areth campu1. t.heeo altua·
s typically would involve the
, ational atuclen\ worklnl at an
vanced level on a topic well be·
d thfl scope of the a:eneral In·
ctlonal proeram and thus not
wayt adequately repre.se.nted in
Colle:ge !Library c:ol.lecUona.
a IIIUIII eroup of mojora mlaht
uire IC«A on a Umlted baala
• IJ)eelol c:oUeetlon In lho Roch·
ener a.re.a. Such needs an- cl~arJy
exc:eptJonal, and most Ubraries are
willing co eooperole (provided
lholr lntemol OTnlJ>$en>OIIU permit)
under IUC.b dn:wnstanees.
Jndlvl~u.ol ond UOUP 0Tnll>$01ft011U
.,.., bat INide tllro<och 1M CoUege
Librarian,.
4.) For advanced needa which.
for any ~a.soa. ea.nnot be met in
lhe RO<h<lltU oru. lhe Nuarotb
CoUe10 Library .._ lhe lltanclard
lnte ..... Ubraq loan arrangements.
Only lhe Colleae l.lbruy eon lnltlole
on lnter-Ubrary loon.
5.) Aecaolblllty co materials.
number of copies. conditions of
ua and related mattus au toptes.
whlch require coostant scnatlny
u c:ondltlona <hong<. Studenu
llhould brln1 IIU<h probloms co lhe
aUt.oUon of individual facuUy
memben and library stat! u each
might contribute to a pa:rtltular
tolutJon.
fC010linoud from -· tu>oJ
and t•Jth in the.m, as rational
being• who can weigh facts and
arrive at conclu.tlons. even solu·
Uons. Propa_gand• and attempts lo
manipulate mJndJ bave no place
1n an lnteUectual community ln o.
Ire<! ooclely.
lANE F'ELDMAN
Claso of 'G9
Six Naz honeyt witneued Naz.a.
relh College's own version of the
'burning bush" in (ront of the 11·
brory on Thunday. October e. 1904
at 8:35 p.m.-the dramatic reautt
of a Fisher fellow'a cicarette butt
hitting the top or a humble cedar.
Our sympathies are with JOL
McDONNELL as he qya to hll
10:30 phllooopey <WI •wen. I don't
like to interTUpt too much. but .. :·
A .Nazareth bclle. PAOLA
FLYNN. ~Uy cave the busin~
to Alexander Graham Bell'• bell
on Ke:;~~rney DL
BETTY OSTA. In an auempt to
inAate her deflated ero. hu bee:n
playing y8cei with loaded dice
since the last Cleaner lque (Betty,
crime doesn't p.ay.)
'there are problbly at leal\ 2.318
LOAF!:BS on our campus.
Fisher·s .. BIRD•• wants to know
what the real story on Kathleen
Buller's grandmother is.
MARILY McGLYNN hal a new
method for we~1hin.r and drying her
clothes. First she drie• them with
laundry soap, and thf:n ahe drlea
lbem again wJthout laundry JOap,
BARBARA DoBilUYCKIEil (do
Booker) it being pursued by the
Better Buslneu Bure•u for her
monopoly on tht Nazareth potato
e:hlp trade.
Can anybody help! What il the
siflnilicance of the followlna Hrle•
of leiters: B.Y.D.K.T.T.S.l.L.Y. Any
intonnation ree:elved c:oncemina
these letters (which were round al
~ end of an enormous epb:tle l
will brt forwarded by the Gleaner
co w lnqllirll>a F'lshu fellow ••
a public RJ"VIee. The romance you
cave NuJd be his!
CBIUS REDMAN overheard the
foUowfn.c conversation:
lst Student: l \bou.chl he was
killed in an automobUe a~ldent. . •
2nd ltudent: No. I'm wr-e Sartre"s
still •liv•,
3rd Jtudenl~ Silly, it'• God who's
supposed to be dead!
SiblinCJS Speak
HI. Woe.
I have Jutt recovered from •ureery
or a tplh nan In the bathroom.
Mary lett today and here
are the re1ult1: Lori was home
alone for thirty mlns, 1 cooked
lunch for 3., Jlrn ~nd 1 worked
nl&hl. Old did laundery(!!!) and
mom came houm and made becauac
Jim wanltd to gel back home
early,
Thal'l about ft for tOnlJht, toUts.
This Sam c-repordna on
famHy ncw1 through radio teoc>
WEIRDO.
Well, Lucky, whata new in ltl·
suretandf Oood old S11ter - - hu
me bored already. We spent
exactly an hour and 15 m illS and
for a fan we ret~d only 7 words
before tho ttarted t&Utlnl abOut
Enalllh, and we can't turn her oil''
So pleue. sJ:nee you h.ad Siste;
---. tell me tM buttoa to push
to tun. her off. Hey: f wrow an
awf11l lot to 10\1. Bo1. am 1 stupKI.
Thank: tor the UK of your bed
anyw•yt Cyou IO«!t
Bye Woe.
Slmmt Caged ten1
Presenting Folk Nights:
Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., 8 to 12 p.m.
Featuring Miss Joy Fischer
on the Folk Guitar
FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY HITES
John Dunlap's Six-Piece Orchestra
Come!
Ronnie's Suburban Inn
J9 Jefferson Road, fit
Jallantlne lrldge
I near IUrs new carnpusl
2. When a raceoon comes down
a ttee:, does it come down hud
ftrat. OT back down!
3. What 1s the eolor ot an elephant's
eye!
4.. How did tbe ancient Greek
pbU010pher Aristotle e.am bq liv~!
5.. On a good hot ciay. iJ: a
cucumber reaJJy coot!
I. How tar does a man :.&Sing a
16-in plow walk wben be plows a
ftdd of th.ree acres!
7. Wbat is \be number of dU·
ferent WI.)'S that cards CO\ild be
dealt into bridge hands!
e. What is: the record tor tbe
fatlftt and longest make in the
world?
9. lt lhe earth were a big baU
or ice. how long would it take the
sun to melt it!
10. How far east does the Pacllle
O«an extend?
11. Do diamonds ever Call from
the &ley!
12. How long is the Statue of
Liberty's nose'!
Pictures or all winners 3nd their
answers wiU be printed io each
Wue or Gleaner - all tries weJ .
comed tplaeto: ln the Letters to the
Editor box on the Gleaner bulletin
board). Next week•s priu: a patent
on the color of O'Connor's roof!
AnswerS'• &o l.a.s1. we.ek'a Trivla.:t-
sytvanla: 2-Supermouse Cno
relation to Michty): 3-Don Jose:
4 -Seven - Ba.shfu.l. Doe. Dopey,
Grumpy. Happy, Sleepy, Sneez.y:
$-Did you evu ~aUy t.blnk the~
wu a Morainian •Iphabel"!'; &Topper:
7-Mrs. Gurney; 3-J'ac:k
B&rry: i-Rentrled; l~twl«: 11-
Gus Goose: 11--charl .. Middleton:
13- Grady Willron: 14 -Steiner
Slrefl - San Francisco: 15 - Fay
Wray; Jfl-.,lobn Todd; 17-NI·I·I·
~··: J&-tbat ~>e could sine: ItJim
Amecbe: 20 - Bartholomew
Cubbins; 21-captain Kldd; 22-
WIIIlam Powoll and Myrna Loy:
23-""Can a woman dnd happiness
and romance at 35-J.nd f>ven be ..
yond'!'": 24-The Little Engt..,e: Who
Could: U-Kai-EI: 2&-P•IIu: %7-
Archd'uchess Mari~Loui.se of Aus·
tria: 28-Francis Scent Ke:ye; 29-
The Phantom.
OPERA THEATER
OF ROCHESTER
Ron Nelson's
Birthday of Infanta
Leoncavallo's
II Pagliaccl
Eut High Sclwol
Saturday, Oct. 29, S:J.S p.m.
Student Doutioo: $1.7$
Others: $2.7S
Tickets: Musk Loven Sbops
or can ON $-8356
BUDDY WEEK is when a
week is only three days long,
but you meet more people
than you usually do in a
month.
May we be the host for your out-of-town guests.
BUDDY WEEK is when
you carry around a pinwheel
and you get 17 sophomores
to sign it before you lose it.
BUDDY WEEK is when
you wear a crepe paper bow
in your hair, and everyb<>Qy
smiles at you because they
!mow you're new here.
BUDDY WEEK is when
the sophomores have a party
for you with entertainment,
and you wonder if al.l upperclasameo
are that talented.
BUDDY WEEK is when
you learn a,pin that at Naz..
areth, people care about you.
llin.s ~anttS ~aiel
2835 MONROE AVE.
Moderate R~ICS Gl 2-9220
THE CENTRAL PHARMACY
Prescription Pharmacists
9 South Main Street
PITTSFORD, NEW YORK
•
GLEANER
SUMMER IN KILLARNEY: Andrea and Ramenco
Fall In Love in Spain
For me, Flamenco is perhaps
the one art form which thoroughly
represents the Spanish
char~ter. It is intense,
aesthetic, sensual and totally
original. One does not dance
flamenco with a set choreographic
pattern, but takes
a skeletal form of the dance
and then improvises using
one's own individual personality
to enact every strum of
the guitar. There was, for
example, one gypsy who
danced the same dances differently.
He was never known
to repeat the same steps in
exactly the same way. He
once said that he felt that
the audience was different
every night and as he felt the
mood of his public, so he
danced.
MARY KELLY REMEMBERS
Som•bow tho thousht of Oyin&
from Kennedy Airport in the mid·
dle of the nlcht ond landing at
Shannon, Ireland 4\rat thing the:
next morning, had alway• seemed
a distoJ>t J)OKiblllt,y to me. Yet, Ibis
summer, u our plane be.gan to
dese:eod over the beautiful &Xlt.ehH
ol a:reen fte~ doued occ:asionall:r
with cottaaea and ttaeb of hay, it
.all became vert real for me4 l had
nevt.r aeen w.ch a ~au1itul si&ht
as tbe vivid cree:n end the deep
blue of the cou.ntrytide of lreland.
Tblt ttJp waa, for myself and my
family, more: than ju.Jt 1 holiday.
It was actualJ.y o reunion wttb rela·
tives whom we had, until now, only
known by l etter&. What 1truek me
at ftnt. wu the outcolng attitude
of the people we met and their
Immediate wUUnanea to make u.s
fffi at bome. Of C'OUI'W, we ran
into tome dUftcultJn. The C\IJTeDCY
took • while to cet accustomed t.o:
we were alw.,a drlvlnc on the
Wl"'DI side of the road: and the
rain wat a consunt threa\. Yet,
just belna with the peopl~. ir only
sittln.g around an open ft re, talking,
was enough to give an insight lnto
the differences a nd, the very great
number of almll1rltJes, In our two
worlds. The tradltlonali.sm and
staunch Calhollcllm or the people
was most ouutandlnc to me. and
evident in thelr everyday a:lion.s.
The c:ou.ntry 1.1 vl\ally alive. how·
ever. ln Ill inttrm ln world ar.
(airs and the younJ peopie a.:rt"
(Conti>tu•d fro'!' 7XJg• fi ve)
no leS&! Plut lhe ract that there
weren't enough dinners on the
train·-and who hadn't had any
dinner'! Also---we can't bring our
trunks here •In« we 'rt moving so
soon(all my clothe• are in my
truck., by the WIJ' '· Mme~ Gillet
U.bt: d.irec=trlce. WU &Olng to have
them dtUvt:red \0 her otft~t so we
could &tt a\ them, and Stepbarue·s
arrived-but where~• mine! Lock·
ed UJ) ln U1e apartment O( the
people we're aolnsr to a t the end
of October naturally! Can 1 gN
to lt-oh, eventually. Meenwhile
1 have three colton dresses and one
wool skirt which I bought In des·
peraUon. n·u be worn out In a
month! Also-who lost the equiva.
lent of ten dollars last we-ek-no
idea w~ue or when or bow! And
&o pa.l lbe &opplnc on the eU.ethree
C"UHHS fa.nd &he 1.a.d lWO
don'l eounl) u Lo Who sprained.
he.r an111e rlrhl afltr we arrived..
didn't take care or lt. and no"' s;u(.
fert from a cond.ldon ea.rrently
rese.mbllnr tlephanUaJIJ In lbt left
lert Is there such a thing as a
ten·Umt loter? Oh, Paris is just
lovely!
Really, the clly Ia beautilul. but
we've walked and walked and
walked-our teet are tort of two
big blistero-oo lt'a probably a
good thlq we can't feel them any
more.. Attyw~. h'a kind of ditft·
cult to appreciate the beauty when
you'r wonderlna: at whttt point
your clltd tource or locomotion
will ceate to 1uncllon.
Frenchmen are lmcomJ)ara.ble-a.
nd unS~ccompanled females are
thelr de.terueltu prey. J'm tres
sym--pathlque and would I mlnd
bein& kiaHd? Thil after a cup
ot cotrH in a ca.ft. rm tr~ ¥eo·
Ulle and he•• . \.rea ,.uw and
would.n't be make me a nice fia.oce
-thia &iter bell\l ukecl tbe time
in the mldclle of a bil IQ\l.a.te near
my ••home.'' Mon Olea! 1 wou_ldn't
mind CJDlk 10 mueh Jt they were a
liUie taller. but It'• very dlscon·
cerling to look down Into a Uttle
man•s soulfUl eyes. The trick i$ to
toke It all with a grain of salt.
a.nd that'a 10 tuy when you 1et1
like their molber. M•ybe one ot
these dan I'll run across someone
n.i .. and taU and broadsboulderecl
(JO l don't f'Hl Uke a cow-or
worse s:tlU--Uke a buJl. next to
him) who1l be lntt11Jgenl and
patient with m:r atroeloua Fnnch.
Ma1be! (Jult wateh-he'U be mar·
ried, l! he e:xlsta at all, that is!)
.. In my present atate of mind, rm
almost ready to take the ftrst plane
-plane. nol boot-.home. But real·
ly, It lso't bal! bad here and i1 I
just aot to meet people, I could
even beCin. t.o like it. Keep your
tlngen <tOlled.
conttantly aware or what ia coina
on both ln Europe and Lht Un.1ted
SUites.
Two wetkt of our vacauon were
•pent In London, again with rcla·
Uvea, and J was amazed :tt what
conlraJts J found there. The cit-y
la 10 tuU of history that you can
almool ted It In the alr, and yet,
it il h.,.bl.Y pro&Tessive at tbe same
time. SkJ«rape.ra are juUlnc up
all over the plaee, and the unde.r·
ground JYiltm is constantly be.iDJt
expanded. At times in London J
rclt almoat baekward, wbt.n J saw
the le.ngth of the "mini·sklrU:'' or
notlced the trouser suits on many
or the vlrla. The boys. too, take an
ex-trtme Interest ln fashion. When
we wetil there, everythlna wu
"'Mod", and naturally I paid a
vbit to Carnaby St.rHt. lh~ =enter
of the ''Mod'• oria.in.als. Of cou.ne.
t.b.b was all merely transient. in
comparbon w1tb such pb~ u
Bucldn&ha.m Pal•~. Plecadllly Cir·
eua, the Tower of London. <'r the
Roustl ot Parliament on the River
Thame•. These seemed to me to ba
LOndon. aetually o romanti: view
now, when one sees the number
of c.hansea wroua:.ht since wortd
WuJI.
Jt wouldn•t be po55lble lO relate
even a few or my experien-=cs over
there and, t thank. the coloN ot
l~land and &nstland aTe lost a.n
the deKripUOn, anyway. Dul rm
sure that It anyone e--ver otfe.rrd
me the ehance to go agaln, 1
wouldn't mln It (or the world.
Mixer
Naz Gym
Tonight!
Admission 15c
Flamenco, technically is
not made up of flying leaps
and piJ·ouettes, but has an
intense technicality. It requires
much strength and
an inborn sense of rhythm.
Many can say they dance
flamenco, but few can maintain
the total expressionism
and technique to such a point
as to hold the audience captivated
for an entire evening
performance. Flamenco is
tempestuous, angry, laughing
and filled with the spiritualism
of the Spanish people.
My goal has been accomplished
in that I have
found 11 dance form that contains
all that 1 believe dance
should be.
Andrea Sciarabba
Europe in One Whip: Exhausting
By MABEL BUCKLEY
Ireland ... "Your I em ex-pt:ruive
room IJ SlLOO. yes. and you'd hav~
notblnl lor $2.50" ... OJ>d ScoUand
. - vou are positive that was
tHJhl tos that just le.fL Yes. we
wtre plannlnc to co to Edinburgh.
but OI&JJOW will be tine. 300
mllu? ..... and • .. Amsterdam
. . • "Ia eve ryone's me.et green
i naldet'• •• , and London . .. "No,
I don't know anythin« about Soho.
why do you a1k!" ... and t\nally,
Paris, yu. ftrta ll.y. Paris!
-"Mil•." Scarsella's and ~
lodcll\l. W rue de FauboursSaint
·Honore. (we shared the
~t w1th Char les de Caulle!)
wu one b1oc.k from the Arch of
Triumph and tbe Champs Elyaeu
-but forty.ftve minutes by Metro
ttom our claues-our unforgettable
elHI<!'al Men and women: £gyp.
tiana. Mexleans, Irishmen. Sp.a.n·
iardt. NIKerlans, Indians, Italians.
and t1even "Coupians". Miles.
F ahrer. Ferllc.a. Heimeberger.
Lamberton. Mark:ow.ski. SearMlla.
&hlatftr. Swalna. TUrner. Zutea.
and Bucldey - all g:rfl'tinJ, min·
1111\1. l•uchll\1- leamlng, and lov-
1"1-toc•tber. Wluu eolor mlcbt
love bef
Our weekday&: were well.oecu·
pled from 10:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M.
with the Metro ritual. school. and
once again. the evening MetTo. Can
Well. cla11matea, we m.-de it here--
you pictur-e 450 mercilea bwlneo
men and women pushina to c:ram
Jnto one subway car In 17• weathC!'r
-end 1\l«:eedinc!
On a few special .. Jlrls' n(Jhll
our• we attempted to undenu.nd
lont-1(!()~1 "La Faim at La Sotr·. and
Rost.and's "Cyrano de Be:rgera~·· at
the Comedie Francaise, plu• "Lea
Preeleuscs Ridicules" a\ lhe Hotel
de VIllas open-air theater: a.nd
thoroughly enJoyed thr<!e baUcu at
the Opera. two award ~wlnnlna
movlet "Un Homme et Une
Femme·• (in New York City now)
and Zola'a "La CUne".
Our weekends were entinly de·
pendent on lhe wutber conditions
-In rain. we vlsitt.d the Louvre.
J eu de Pau.nK. Prlsunlt: (Nebnu'a
a la trancais> or the luxury bou·
tlquet bordering the Champa·
Elyteet-but t.hat wacky o1d Nn
ahone brightly many buutiCul
day a: SP~cre Coeur and Montmar-tre,
the evening Bateau Mouchc on the
Scln• with moonlight ahadinc
Notre-Dam• and bro1Wn1 tb• Elf·
tel Tower't grillwork. the Ba.ltllle
Day parade and the ltl'Ht-dandnl
at n1Cht, the gardens and foun\alns
ot lhe TUIJerles. tbe elepnee of
Verallles. the rust.ic calm of the
Bois de Bologne and Vincennes.
And Paris, the people. the teellnJ.
the ex·perienee-we'll remember
a1wayJ.
We're I t Naz.areth CoUese tor our Freshman year.
It'• our MeOnd wee.k with three mixers J)bl,
And tomorrow ni&bt's our flrlt bee.r blut.
We've I+Hft the troUDds
And l .. rnecl tbe rules
And It we t\&1 within bound.l
We won, be eaucht lilte fooll
Trylnl to at.aue.r back before the twelve o'cloclc bell
Knowl.nr that it we don't make, they'll 1lve u.s ••• well.
All In aU, lt'a a prett,y fair pia .. ,
Where our braJns are used tor eomethlnJ besides taking up space.
We all complain, and wt.sh. tor home. •
But. when you come down to il, and think it over good.
WJtb all the plaees to roam,.
We woudn•t lf we could.
Hail Nazareth College-the place tn whkh we areHall
Nauretb CoU~ doorway to OW' liar.
ANONYMOUS l'RESliMAN
October 21,
Wow! Those Freshm
Variety is the spice of life! Accepting this well
adage as truth, the NCR campus is quickly recognizing
promising future the next four years hold for the "hi
seasoned" Class of 1970. No longer dazed, Nazareth's Jar
Freshman Class yet has just recently begun to see itsel
unique individuals contributing to the distinctive bien
their class. Flavors of ttn atot01: CalUo
Buddy Week
"Fifty signatures - that's
fifty more people I know now
that 1 didn't know a few
Connecticut. Maryland. M
sets. New Hampshire. New J e
New York, Ohio, P•n"'Yl
and Vircinlll: and or two to
OOUJ>trles '<oudl Arabia and
land. lend to tbe tam of unlv
ty. Joan Harris. Marilyn Reyn
Kathleen Sullival\, and Mar
W•rreo contribute an ~x otle a
hours ago!" states freshman ~! <~~~~~~."."d.:~~:~~h•;o ·~~
Marsha Smith in connection lands durlnll their hiah ..,
with the new "method" devised
by some thinking
Sophomore of "getting to
know you"-
Buddy Week, the official
Sophomore-Freshman introduction
period, got off to a
rousing start Tuesday night
with a pizza party and variety
show. Dramn, music,
comedy, and food - not necessarily
in that order - were
the main attractionS- The
next day continued the program
with pens scratching
on construction paper pinwheels
and brown paper
bows fluttering in the air.
Due to the bows and pinwheels,
it was not too difficult
to track down or waylay
a few freshmen (and an occasional
sophomore) to get
their opinion of the proceedings.
In general, the consensus
of the freshmen followed
that of Ann Lynaugh, of
Victor, who said: "Buddy
Week is a great idea and
seemed to go over very well".
Sophomore PauUne O'Brien
had a slightly different
outlook: "Buddy Week -
two days - seems to get
shorter and shorter. Before
long it will be a wonder if it
gets squeezed in at all. Not
enough time wa.s alloted to
the Sophomores to carry on
the program they wanted".
Mary Ann Paul, also a Sophomore,
more or less agreed
with this point but added:
"Buddy Week got off to a
banging start. The freshmen
were obviously impressed at
the party - and the Sophomores
seemed to be too. Pe.rhaps
so much energy was
put into the start that there
was not enough left for the
finish. More could have been
done, which, due to unexpected
problems, was not."
Freshman Judy Beeker
had this to say: "I thought
Buddy Week wa.s good but
not half as great as the Sophomores
themselves. They
really put themselves out to
make us feel at home. My
buddy is one of my best
friends!" Congratulations,
Carol Kite! Freshmen Kathy
Volpe and Marl Wa.nnuth
agreed: "Now when you sit
with the Sophomores at
lunch or dinner, you feel you
know them.''
Allie Sabal.is, Sophomore,
stated: "I'm really proud of
the Sophomore cla.ss for the
effort and time put into Buddy
Week. The freshmen
joined into the spirit well,
sporting their pinwheels and
bows.''
years..
Furtherina th.ia forel.cn ftavor
Katherine Spro&tll who J'J)ent
summer In Prance ln conn
with the University of Ha
aDd Irene Kuanle.re who at
lhe University ol Madrid In
Many Other alrlt have
special advanced eounea at v•
colleges and unlveraHle-s sue
Clarkson Colle••· Connecticut
lege School or Donee, Outc
Community Colle 1 e, Fa.irl
Olt.klnson Unlvera.lty, 01 w
Stote Colloso. Potadam Stale
lege., Pntl lnatltutt. Roch
ln.stitute of TechnoiOC'J'. State
vuslty of New York at Butralo
Union Colleg~. Several ctrls
repreRDted on various rot
campuses at apeclal se.m
among whJch Include the Ho
Seminar, the Syracuse 1Jnive
JournaUsm Convention. Ad
tures in Thlnk:Jna ot Geneseo S
and the St. Bonaventure Preu
Patricia Bora. Marttret G
land, Donna Owtina, and Pa
North introduce an outdoor
to the dus ot lt70. Tbese
wen action 1n Olrl Sc.outt tnd
tended the Senior Girl
Round-.p In ldaho In 1065.
JournallstJe: lnt.llnatlona e:an
be detected. LouJse DeNeve,
Durham, Barban Dwyer, Bo
Gallagher, Kathleen Keating,
garet KnJg.htl, Sally Kuhn,
1e.en McM.anus. Mary Ann Ma
Cltherlne Mahlt nbaeher.
N .. blu, Patri<IJI Nortb, P
Slate.rl1. Kathlene Volpe,
Margaret WUTif.n we_re edito
biBb scbo l yearbook$; Carol
Eileen Caton, Bonnie Claeys.
bara De Neve. carol G .
Sally Kuhn, Ancela Vedora.
Elaine Wegman aerved N n
p.a,per edltort and Marsha S
performed aa literary maga
editor.
Flairs for lbe parliamentary
theatrical are evldtnced by o
members of tbit dlve:nUled
Carol 8&)-es, Suunne R
Barbara SUo. and El~n V
served u Pretiden& of
coundls. Rosbn Motu and
lyn Simo.Ucll ae1ed u ci&JS p
dent.s:. Katherine Drl.tooJI
played In summer atock •t
Soutblngton, Mary Jo Cook
had leading roles in tour pl
aJ>d Barabora lA VIIIJI hu be
mamber of the RochtJter R
tory Theate.T.
Final pinches or Jplce for
unique trnhman savor are:
Galle.a a Ha.rvut Queeo:
Eisenschmidt and Mary Ann
dance i.nstructo-rt: Catherln ~
Paula Belair. Vlrcinla l!:h '
Marie Giordano. and Paula Slat
Jy, chu.reh organlau: and El
Freneh. winner of a CYO Cia ]
sin,ging Competition.
M the future looml ahead, 1
ureth hopa t.o tute of, u we •
contribute to the 11)1« ot the C ,
of 1070.
Lo•lM DeNe
Hopefully, the So
mores, through this pro
called "Buddy Week", Ju
made themselves known
only as a class but as i
viduals. A few pens mi
have been lost in the p
but certainly more than
worth in friends and
quaintar ces was found.
Our Whiz-Kids
The deadline for tiling applications for the Fulbright.
es Awards will be reached shortly. These United States
•g vemment Grants entitle recipients to graduate study and
r fessional training in the creative and performing arts.
! e program, conducted- for students below the Ph.D. level,
~d tended to increase mutual understanding between people
:
0 the United States and other countries. Citizens must have
"' achelor's Degree or its equivalent by the beginning date
va the grant, and usually must be proficient in the language
" the host cow1try. Selections are based on academic and/ or
•r fessional record, feasibility of the applicant's proposed
~ dy plan, and personal qualifications. Candidates who are
rg er the age of 35 and who have not had prior opportunity
' study or residence abroad are preferred. Although crea:~
~ and performing artists do not need a Bachelor's degree,
y must have 4 years of professional experience after a
ter of Social Work Degree. and those in the field of
icince must have an M.D.
((.'ontim.ced ott fX'IIt eight)
esting Teachers!
Education Testing Service
announced that college
~r niors preparing to teach
l hoot may take the. National
tc eac,her Examinations on Jan·
rl ry 7, 1967. The tests wlU be
1 iven at nearly 500 locations
roughout the United States.
reparation and general t:u1·
1 background of teachers,
d one of 13 T~aching A rea
' aminations whJch measure
: Mery or the subject they
G~r~~~ :;:~b.these tests are
t ed by many school dlstrlc:c.s
one or the factors in the
lection or new teachers and
1d several suttes tor certif\c.aS
on or licensing oC teachers.
ooJ systems and state dertments
ot cducallon which
the examination results are
dlcat~ in leaflets distrib-
0 ted to colleges by ETS.
Se:nlors should contact the
bool systems In which they
k employment, or the eolge
placement omce, tor spe-.
'Ac advice on whle.h exami·
tions to take and on which
8 ~~t~:e~th~:f~r!:u~!e~::
ining a U.st of ttost centers.
information about the
amlnatlons, as well as a
1 egistratlon Form. may be ob-ined
from the coUege placea
enl office, school personnel
t-parlment.s. or directly from
ational Teacher Examlna-
0 ,ons, Box 911, Educational
e ettlng S~rvice, PrinC(!ton,
0 ew Jersey 08540.
DEPARTMENT NEWS
In Speech Correctjon, ns in other
fteld.s o.r study, Junior and Seni'>r
years seem to be the ye:u·~ where
the knowledge and expe-r1ence
gained have direct applicntion for
the sraduate. The courses taken
have Immediate relevance to the
teaching situations in which we
shall engage.
As part or the Methods or Spetch
Diagnosis course. Dr. Ormandy, the
d irector or the Rochester Speech
end Hearing Clinic, has assigned
each student t.o view :md evaluate
four speech therapy sessions. The
observations include attending direct
therapy and noting the methods
and rehabilitative procedures
used In each individual case.
Speech majol'$ are also permitted
to participate in the consultation
following each session to offer their'
opinions and suggestions.
The pur'J)Ose ot this course·ex·
tension i..s to place the student in
dire-ct tamUiarity with individuals
who have speech problems and to
demonstTate how bro{ld the 6eld of
s~ch therapy i.s, including aU age
gToups and a cross sectlon o!
speech disorders. Speech Therapy
is an extensive fitJd or study. The
speech therapis-t. in order to be
competent and responsible, must
and should be exposed to the vari~
ety of pasonal speec.h dl.O\culties.
At the clinic, speech majon~ are
expo.sed to cerebral palsy patients.
brain damaged children. stutterers.
haryngeetomy patients. stroke vic·
tim.s and emotionaUy disturbed
children. 1t seems that the s:peech
therapist must be as ptrcepUve as
a psychologist and physician in or ..
der to determine what the disorder
Js, why It still persists and lO pro pose
a method or eorrectlon.
ln the e)(posure to these numer·
ous and Intricate speech problems,
speech majors have an indication
of what to expect.
ul~A N ~R
L S.D.
(Contin"'<d from page three)
more vivid to the mind-. Perhaps
this is where the LSD
user's encounter with a supreme
Presence comes from.
There is suddenly a very
powerful feeling of cosmic
consciousness, akin, at least
conjecturally, in symptoms
and in visual imagery to the
most respectable of reUgious
mystical journeys.
In an increasingly dehumanized
world where personal
and human understanding
of the individual seems impossible,
we 1ind ourselves
searching for a sacrament
which offers some real peace.
where sin and the search for
Writers trace back to Eastern
religious philosophies,
a meaningful explanation for
existence are favorite topics.
We constantly try to invade
the mind with self-explorations
and experimental moral
codes. But no one will solve
today's problems with hasty
rules which lie in the poorly
marked border line between
law and morality. Nothing
good will be accomplished
by incorporating psyched-elic
drugs into the mystique of
the alienated youth of the
GO's, or by keeping it from
the hands of objective and
trustworthy scientists and
artists. The LSD question is
an issue touching the freedom
of the human personality.
Do peace and G<>d lie in
a fifty microgram sample?
If not, what secret of use to
humanity does?
One wonders about the social
and spiritual reverberations
of a nation full of
drugged mystics who find
and lose God according to the
altitude of their latest 'trip'.
Anyone for Brave New Haven?
L S.D.
rcontinued frCJrn. page th'rec)
nied by a feeling of celestial
euphoria ta sense of well-being
and buoyancy) or pure.
horror . . ." (N.Y. Times
Mag; Aug. 22, '65; pp. 14.
50) The following are some
u~----------------------------------------------------------
~ Spain Sends Student Spinning
In Spain this summer, I
the opportunity to go to many
ghts and speak with a few
&htcrs. I was eompletely fas·
! ted by the whole thing and
ught that you might wjoy hearabOut
the sport.
think there are some miseon·
1n lions of bullftghting today. the
e ' of which is that the poor,
0 b bull is being cruelly t.l"Cat-ed.
and laughed at In the r-ing.
't purpos~ ot t.b.e bull.ft&ht is not
~ mock a dumb animal, but to
. w tb~ skill and art of the bull·
SSl ter. who ptu his mind and
Bgf! against the power of a
tied bulL U you have ev~r
an angry bull. you know that
is quite a feat.
~ eorrlda., o·r bullfight, is usuheJd
in the late afternoon. The
is divided into two parts. su.n
shade. TiC-kets in the shade
p a good fight may run .. high
r {~:~ ~:~::J:!C:::S ;:~::~~
l. centl. There are usually three
or·H fighting two bulls apiece.
the beginning a man rld(!s out
e presidios dignitary's box t~
bim tor penniss.ion to start
dgbl Then the three matadors
are fighting that day, along
all their peoa.es (assistants)
de around the rln$. The bull·
ter with the mort years in the
Lesha Do
ring begins the ftghiS.
A bullfight is divided into three
parts. In the fl~t part the pleadoru
and banderUJeros perform. The piea.
dor. who is on horotback, uses
3 Ions pole with a point on the
end to prick the whithers or the
bull from one to thr~ times. Next
are the three banderlllero.$ who
each Insert two bright colored
pricks into the bulW whlthers. This
:is done $0 that the muscles of the
whllhers will loosen up and permit
the sword to enter freely later on,
and also to dimini.sh th"! strength
ot the buU. It does not hurt the
bull. but aggravates him Into pur·
-suing the aa..t.a.dor later on.
The second pru-t, called the ta.ena.
is when the matador bas hi.s chance
to show h.l$ skill with the cape.
Not the color, but the waving or
the cape attracts: the bull. The
m3tador performs ma_ny series ot
pass~ wh1c.h show the audience
his sk.iU and the quality of the bu,ll.
Alter about fi.ttecn minutes of th1s
comes the third part. the killing
ot the bull.
This is the moment ot ltuth
when the matador conquers or is
conquered. 'nle matador goes
thMugh some more passes, and
when he thinks he has complete
command ot the bull, he maneuvers
the bc.ll into the killing positionhead
down and forelegs together.
The space through whlcb the
sword can pass and surely kill the
bull the ftl'$l Ume is only as big
as 3 half-dollar, so it th(! matador
is unsk1UtW and keeps stabbing,
the show becomes quite boring and
gory, Otherwise, it can be the
crowning touch to a ~autUul
show.
The matador then sets either
booed or cheered, and receives an
ear, two ears, or two ear'$ and a
taU. depending on hls perlormance.
If the bull has been espe.
cJally brave and spirited, he gets:
a turn around the ring lnstead of
ot the mat&4or.
Amateur bullfights are called
novilladas a.nd are not always
worth seeing. On the other band,
matad.oru. bullfighter&: who have
taken the doctorate ot tbelr profession,
a.lmc»t aJways perform excel·
Jentty, dependlng on the coope:ratlon
of the bulls. Portugese bulls
are considered to be the best because
they are small. fast and pow.
ertul. but there are many excellent
bull ranches in Spaiq,. The matadores,
with lheir suits of lishts, are
almost always very dashing and
handsome, doubly so bec:.a~ of
their valor and c:our~e. Some c:ur·
re.ntly famous fighters are Antonio
Ordonez, El Cordoles (more so tor
h.is antics than skill), ,Diego Pu.erta
and Paeo ca.m.mo.
of the consistent reactions
effected by the psychedelic:
1. "Time often seems to
slow down to a crawl, even
to come to a dead stop . . .
2. All colors seem to be-come
enormously rich and
vivid . . .
3. Music, too, popular or
classic, often takes on an
unearthly beauty to the listener
...
4. Another common reaction
to LSD is synesthesia, a
blending of sense impressions
tthus the title of this
N. Y. Times Magazine article:
"Hearing Color, Smelling
Music, Touching a
Scent") .. .
5. A feeling of tremendous
intellectual understanding,
of rapid mental process, is
also a common experience."
p. 59)
LSD is not habit-forming,
at least physiologically. It is
self-inhibiting; if taken consecutively
for three days, it
will no longer produce its
psychic effect until a week
has passed. "LSD causes, so
far as can be determined, no
organic change in the brain
or any permanent change in
brain activity. When given
under psychiatric supe~·vision,
instances of its causing
psychotic disturbance of
more than a few days' duration
are all but unheard of.
There are reports of reactions
weeks or even months
after receiving LSD, but
documented cases at·e rare.
But researchers are all
cet·tain that LSD can start
violent and sometimes J>ermanent
psychotic ••eactions
among the approximately
5% of the nation's population
that is thought to be
predisposed to schizophrenia
(p. 17, The New Republic.,
"LSD Trigger" by Tom Bucksley,
May 14, 1966). A report
given by the New York
County Medical Society stated
that of the 65 persons admitted
to Bellevue Hospital
between March 31 and December
31, 1965, the "only
patients who seemed to require
long term hospitalization
had prior histol'ies of
sel'i.ous mental illness" before
taking the drug.
Thus LSD is directed towards
a psychotic or a mystical
experience depending
>Upon the following factors:
"the personality of the subject,
his reason for taking
LSD, and the degree to
which he trusts those with
him and the setting in which
it i's given. The personality,
motivation and expectation
of the investigator also play
a part in the result." (Hal·pers,
"LSD and the Anguish
of Dying" by Sidney Cohen,
M.D. Sept., '65) This is why
the administration of LSD
has its safest and most therapeutic
effects under authorized
supervision.
Research to d-ate has established
many successful
uses of LSD in the following
areas: alcoholism, autistic
(no concern or communication
with reality) schizophrenia
in young children,
the anguish of dying in terminal
cancer cases, many
areas of psychiatric treatment
and communication.
Page Seven
This succes is due to the relevance
of the self-transcendency
effected by LSD; there
is a "sense of integration and
unity with the universe as
the boundaries of the ego are
dissolved." (p. 70, HarperS).
Concerning the psychology
of pain to the d-ying:
"Continuous, severe, deep
pain disintegrates . . . personalities
. . . When the patient
knows the pain will
terminate only in death, the
pain takes on the meaning
of death ... " (p. 77, Harpers.)
Pain becomes the entire
consciousness. LSD was
used on a dying terminal cancer
patient nan1ed Irene. Dr.
Cohen states that LSD set
aside Irene's absorption with
herself and the prospect of
death. Man is the only species
concerned and- distraught
with the prospect of
personal extinction. But
make him egoless, and he
realizes his unity in the
whole of existence. The mode
of pain perception is
changed. Dr. Kase states:
"LSD exceeded two other
narctotics in the effectiveness
and du.ration of its pain-relieving
action. My own •·esearch
confirms these feelings."
Here are "rathet· typical
comments of patients dying
of terminal cancer after
receiving LSD: 'The pain is
here, but rm somewhere
else - nothing really belongs
to you. not even your
pain', or another: 'The pain
is changed - when I pressed
here yesterday. I had unendurable
pain. Now . . . it
hurts ... but it doesn't register
as terrifying.'" (p. 22,
The New Republic)
Perhaps the~·e i~< a need for
"mutation" ru; Dr. Timothy
Leary would have us believe.
Someday we may all be taking
"soma" like Huxley's
characters in Brave New
Wodd. What is sure is that
LSD cannot be used freely
by the masses. Even Dr.
Leary agrees here. In fact
he asked that his compab·iots
refrain from LSD for one
year and turn to the cultivation
of a true mysticism
(Leary is a convert to Hinduism,
significantly) to
spread the new cult among
the people of the world. The
very nature of the effects of
LSD indicate the necessity
for caution. If the why and
how of its activity are unknown,
it seems wise to limit
its use. The question today
is, what are these limits? Is
access to LSD reserved only
for professional experimentors?
Or do honestly openmin4ed,
inquiring people also
have a moral right to experience
these "voyages of discovery,
through the limitless
'inner space' of their own
minds, and return wiser and
m.ore loving than when they
started out"? (The New Republic,
p. 15) But "what
might be an e."-"]leriment, a
quest, a religion at Castalia
turns out too often to be the
road to detachment, withdrawal,
and mental breakdown
on many of the campuses
of the country." It's
quite a d-ecision. Think about
it.
FROM OTHER CAMPUSES
A.mong the new undergraduate
programs Is the program '' Dickinson
College called f'aith and
Society. The program's purpose is
to interest students in dealing with
problems and questions tn the
world around them. Fellowship,
worship and action are the three
phases of the program.
At Amhent College. a new u.n-
DEPARTMENT NEWS
The Music De:.partment has planned
another ft rst- a trip to New
York City from October 28 to
October 31. Music majors and students
enrolled in lntroductlon to
Music n:d Music Concept$. as well
as several mernWt$ of the· faculty
wiJI be going.
Tentative plans . include Prokoftelf's
opera "The Love tor Three
Oranges'' to ba staged at the New
York State Theatre in Lincoln Center:
a program of Handel's mu.sic
to be presented in Ph1Jharmonlc
Hall; and a Chopin recita:l. The
group will be touring the Cuggen~
helm and Whitney Mmeums and
the Lincoln Center complex. in~
cludi_ng the new Metropolitan
Opera House.
The -prlmuy purpos" of this
trip is to slve the students a
fir$1 hand cultural expe.rience in
the cor-relation ot music and thco
arts, ln preporation for the open~
ing ot our own Fine Arts Building.
By widening our horlt.ons. h is
hoped that we wm g3in a deeper
insight into nn appreciation of the
arts.
de rgradua t ~ curr iculum has been
initiated. The program lnvolves a
set of three·one·semester cou.rses
called Problems of Inquiry. Under
this .system. studenu could begin
a major as freshmen and possibly
graduate In three yea.rs.
News from Yale University is
that the Paul Moore Memorial
Fund has been established. lt will
provide the necessary time and
assistance to teachers who wish to
experiment with courses; ;.nd ma·
teriab ..
A report from the U of R has
been released concerning academic:
hones-ty. The report discusses de·
vic~. $Uch as a student honor code.
to promote honesty. Recommend·
ed by the report was a "court"
composed ot taculty members and
possibly students that would serve
as a jury whenever a penalty tor
dis.bone.s-ty was to be <lPP1ied.
l n Conclusion. the Faculty· POIIc:y
Committee at Monmouth College
has voted to change the gr•deJ)
Oint requirement In the fteld of
concentr ation. A 2.0 average will
now be required instead of a 2.5
average.
The Under'"radua« IUsoeJa .•
Uon wUl spont~o r • Founder·,.
D•y reception • nd eoft'u. hour
In honor of Sister llelt.n Daniel
on Oetobe·r 20 from 10;10 to
11:2.0 a . m. In the a uditor ium.
A ll members of the tacu_tty,
s:&.aiJ, and student body a re ln vUed
to e.ome at any time withIn
the hour.
On Founder's Day. From Heaven
I stopped in to see the guardian angel of Na1,areth
and I found her investigating her history flies. As she drew
a dusty volume from the bottom drawer she said:
"I have to · get ready for the Founder's Day Tea on
October twentieth. 1 am going to make a speech. At least I
will if the Chairmen Gen-y Gasciewicz and Mary E llen
McGlynn remember to ask me. The tea is in honor of Sister
Helen Daniel and I always make a speech. It's traditional, •.
When asked who was invited to the tea, she t·eplied:
'Why everyone, of course ! The faculty is invited and so
are the staff and the student body. I want them all to hear
my speech. If the guests come to the auditorium between
10:10 and 11:20 a.m., they can listen to my speech. My
subject is going to be 'Nazareth, Change and Growth.' I
remember when I was a young angel. I came to Nazareth
on the trolley car to attend the first classes."
At this point she got up to tum on the radiator which
was making a great deal of racket.
"You know something?" she said, "We had to wear coats
to class because the heaters didn't work. That was bMk in
1924. I guess the heating system has11't changed much."
Just then the te.lephone rang. After a brief conversation
she hung up. Glancing over the tops of her gold rimmed
glasses she said :
"The computer is on the blink again. That's quite a
gadget. I remember the first day when I cut a class and I
walked down the hall and ran into Sister Agnes Patricia.
She knew by heart the schedule of every girl in the school.
She said to me 'Why aren't you in English class right now?'
Show me the computer that can do that!"
The bell rang for class and I prepared to join the mob
in the tunnels. She polished her glasses thoughtfully and
said:
''That tunnel is quite an invention. You could come into
the building in the fall and not come out until the flowers
bloomed. You'd miss all that lovely white snow though.
Sister Raphael used to have to come out and shovel the paths
so that we could go from building to building. But that was
when I was a very young angel baclc in 1924. Don't forget
to come and hear my speech now."
G L EANE R
FromSelma,ALoveStory
Part I
1n a prorram .,.onsored b )' the Fremln Mbslon UnU, we (Beth Wilkes.
Mar)' Walsh, and Ka.&.hlc LaH.aye) tqJoent atx weeks tb.ls SUDU»tr at Good
Samaritan Hospital ln Selma, Alabama: a. town of 30,000 people, d lvJd.ed
a lmott equally bdwee.n whites and Ntp"oes. Our -primary objective was
to k a.eh E~Jish lldlls &o tbe em:ployees of the bonlt&l who wlJbed U.,
u w eU as speeeb c:.orredlon, read.ln,- e-omprebensloD and !JPtllln.r and
r ra.m.mar Improve-ment t.o the ttudent IULrJU,. Our involvement., however.
wlt.b these "People led us beyond the eontlne. of &he hospital and out Into
their commu.n.Uy, where we wue able to abare In thel.r acUvlUe:s and
even t.o.Ula.t.e some of ou.r own for them.
Good Samarll.&n Hospital Wa.t t ouDdtc1 ln ltU by the Fathers of
St. Edmund and b operat.tcl by t.he Sl.a1.ers of SL .Jose))h of Roches.t.er.
who a lso statt S t.. llbabetb,s M.luJ.on School ln Selma. Althou.rb the
hotiJ)Ital ma.i.Dtalns a ~rotram. of total lnt.ec'raUo~mploylnc 70% Ne·
rrou ancl 30o/o whlte&-all but. 2o/o of t.he whlt.e popula tion refuse to teek
belp at the tnsUt.uUon wbJe.h has become a plaee of r etu.re. a nd a symbol
ot strencth and equality a.nc1 b~ for the Nt&'ro ,people.
How Uttle did a.ny of u.s realize
last J une third, as we ftrst viewed
the appro.achi.ng landscape of Ala·
bama !rom the vantage polnt of
oar airplane window that . such a
remote new world was anxiously
calling u.s. Nor did we even SUS•
pect that the red dlrt r oads now
winding below us and the mag.
niftcent people with whom we
were to wal.k them would become
such an intricate and vital part of
our lives. But by the..·tlme of our
return home in just s ix week$'
time, lhls Is exactly what had happened!
Even at the end of our
fi rst day-after a reflective walk
dow·n some of those .s-ame moonUt
dirt roads, past the tiny wooden
sh:acks of Selma, listening to the
faint sounds of a Southern night,
breathing the fragrant blo3SOm~
scented air, uttering a silent prayer
- we sensed a unique beauty about
this little town hundreds of miles
from home. It would oot ~ long.
however, before we were tO Jearn
that night often serves as a dis·
auise tor bittem es, a time of only
temporary tru.ce between the forces
o·t suft'erlng and tht'! human soul:
that the beauty of night can be
likened to a river of forgetful·
ness, whlch offers just a brSQJ rt'!·
treshrnenL to a weary soul.
During our a-lx weeks with the
Neg ro people, we w~ r~ t.o te!e wllh
our own eyes and hear wi:h our
own ears.. re:alities that up to now
had been known LO us only !n
wh:at we had read or heard from
others. In a summer erupting with
news of ··black power .. , the "new
militancy", rncial striJe in Chicago
and Clevel and. and New York and
Los Angeles, It was a rare privilege
to galn an lnsls:ht into the
"Why?" behind the headlines. We
s~nl many evenings in the GUlling
hot. poorly lit one..or·two.room
shacks. with only the barest living'
necessities, and occasionaUy not
even these tor a Negro r.,mUy
with as m:any as twelve members.
W~ walked the roads which the
governments: refused to pa\'C and
which the Negroes could never .aJ.
ford to p.tave themselves. We saw
the railroad track. that ctt"rnal
symbo1 of separation, which di·
v1des the town of Selma into two
utterly opposed acctors - on one
side, the white populatJon. wealth,
freedom 3.nd Hfe: on the oth"-r, the
Negro population, pover~y. spiritual
enslavement. and death·in-life.
lt be-came sadly obvious to us a.s
tb<' weeks progressed that the im·
poverished cond.ltions of the Negro
would never allow him to purchase
o. home in the "elite .. white neigh·
bo.rhoods.. Wht".n we quesUoned rur·
th'"-r. seeking the ca.use of such
poverty, we soon realized that the:
Southern whites were preventing
N"ezroe:s f:rom obtaining almost any
type of job-.IIS clerks, a.s walters
and wo.itresses, even as gas nation
attendants. About the only me;an.s
of employment a Negro woman
couJd hope to secure was as a
maid, tai"nlng for her only $12 to
$14 each week. We were surprised
to learn that Good Samaritan Hos·
pftal l.s the only place in Selma
where a Negro may be hired for
office employment. St:arching stlll
deeper for causes. we found n gen·
eraJ. thous:h unspoken tear among
while Southerners of an eventual
reversal of roles, a day when the
Negro may be powerl\1.1 enough to
retaliate for all the sufferings he
has endured. This is one reason.
we discovered, tlfat so many whites
are driven by a constant compulsion
to keep th~ Negroc.s s ubur·
ient.
NEXT ISSUE; Bou..m.,. edueaUon,
and pollt.lcs at work; The P eoople.
Linda Strahmye r, '66
Nazarene In Ethiapia
Alter completing 12 weeks of
training at the University of Utah,
one of the recent 1966 graduates,
Linda Stromeyer. has been named
a Peace Corps Volunteer.
Linda is one of 87 volunteers at
Utah this summer to supplement
Peace Corps work in secondary
sc:hools throughout Ethiopia. The
entire group was scheduled to
leave for their new assignments
on September 19. 1966.
With their arrival. the number
ot Volunteers at work in Ethiopia
will total approximate ly $70. Other
Peace Corps projects there include
public wor-ks, health and educationa
l programs.
During their training at Utah,
the new Volunteers studied Ambaric.
Ethiopian history and cul·
ture, United States history and
World At'rairs.. Their techn ical
.studies emphasized teaching metb ~
ods and skills as applled to thco
Ethiopian school system.
Lament: Farewell
Yes. Nazareth Is grieving
Over Mr~ Daly's leaving:
No more h.ia che~ry wit an d crin
wm open the doors and Jet us in:
No longer his picnics in the rain,
Chow mein will never be the same.
How wUl waitre$$tS bear the: ccossa.
t ion of noise?-
A kitchen without those two little
boys.
Dam that fortunate Bryn Mawr,
They're gettine the best ot the
whole "Eats" Corps.
Wherever he goes In "'k.ltehtny"
worlds.,
He's got the love and lull stomachs
ot six hundred girls.
With the student body of Naz·
areth exp,·mding at its present rate,
new demands are being made on
the various departments. The
changlng Interests and needs oC an
enlarged enrollment have resulted
in significant acade:m1c: c:.hanges at
Nazareth. One department ma)cing
lmJ)Ort.ant innovations thi.s year Is
the Theology Department.
In the past, there bas been one
freshmen theology course taught
flrst semester, Old Testament The ..
ology. Since several high schools
include an Old Testament course
in t.hei.r curriculum, thi.s meant a
repetition for some studenu. This
ye.a;r, on the basis of a questionnaire
sent to incoming freshmen,
the class has been divided. The Old
Testament course, given to the ma·
jorJty or the freshmen. has been
altered. £ach student attends two
lectures a week. compds.ed of ap·
proximatel,y 100 students. plus a
t;eminar numbering about 12. A
eb.olce was offered to those already
familiar with the Old Testam.L>nt
course. A lecture on Biblical
studies, including prophets and
Wisdom Htcrature, is currently be·
ing given to 30 freshman, whlle
a seminar coune on Biblical
themes is being given to 8 students.
The first semester senfor theology
course Is similar to the course
offered last year in the r~pect that
it ls concerned with the theology
of Vatican li. It dlfl'ers. however.
in the respect that since Vatican
U is no longer i.n session, the docu·
ments a re now available for a
deeper analysis.
A seminar i.s being Ji,ven by
Octob.r 21