NCR students attend N SA white racism conference Committee begins
faculty, course
evaluations here
Undergt'lld PNJaident, Linda
Nicknish, National Studenta' A•"
ociation c a m p u 1 coordinator
Kathy Daly, and Dale MlliOn, a
member or tho collelll) black atudent.
s' association, attended a
wet.kcnd conftrtnce on "inetilutional
ratiam." Tht> Th.anlcagiv\ng
conference wu held at tht Uni,
·eraity of Notre Damt. It waa
part or a oeri.. or prornoma
tpon10red b)• the National Studenta:•
Auociation.
At the NSA Con~rreaa in August,
atudent delegatea labeltcl
institutJonal radam the most important
problem th•y thought
their aehoola ahould be dealing
with; nnd they said they wanttcl
J>I'Ogmms to concentrate on that
iaaue.
Report in di.Krimination
in college
E;.ch aehool representtcl ut the
toonfef'(':nce submitted a full written
report •letailing area$ in
which the school is most blatantly
discriminaton~ or, more important.
in whkh it has not
acth·elr sought to makt amends
for ita inherent biases.
1-"'ive major areas of unh·ersity
life and organization •·e~ suggested
for examination:
-Curriculum: are courses in
blaek history and eulture, ghetto
psyehology and African language
ortered: are there course a dealing
with white racism and prcjudic(!l;
do education department. ot.tempt.
to deal with issuts like decen·
traliz.ation and eommunity eontrot
or oehools!
1-!xploitath·e lt.ndholding
-Univenity policies off campus:
does the unh·ersity profit
(rom exploitative landboldinlf polidesj
are hiring praetitts and
wages di.sc:riminatory;
-Discrimination: In hiring of
professors and their promotion,
in admissions o.nd ~roitment, in
K.holarships, in athletica, in fraternities
and sororities, in hou•-
NAZAAETW COLLEGE OF ROCNESTER
t/l{ ..
Vol,~ No. 10 December 4, 1968
University of Michigan will
liberalize dormitory curfews
Blood drive results
Barb Dwyer, '70, t>halrman
of the Red Croao blood drl>t
reported that U.7 pints of'
blood were donatrd whtn lhtBioodmobile
~ iailed NCR'•
Ann Arbor, Mich. -(LP.)- University of Alichigan Recampu
last month.
gents hnve extended for an additional year the liberalized
donnitory currew and visiting regulations which they
adopted temporarily last January.
She te.rmtd retponse ··e~ceUent."
Tot a 1 number or
donora K hedu1td wa1 2.50.
The 1\"azoreth Rtcl Crou
told GLF.AN"ER that they
strongly encourage those who
were turned away (bHau.se of
cold.~. etc-.) to try to donat~
during next semuter'a blood
drive.
Regents continued the lifting of curfew regulations for
all women over 21 who live in residence halls nod for those
under 21 who have their pnrents' pennission. Men had
already been Cree or hours restrictions_
Riehard L. Cutler, outgoing
viee preaident for atudent affairs,
recommended that the Regl)
nts make t.he temporary policy
pcrmn.nent.
HThe Board ot Governors ot
Reaidence Hnll1 .1n~ ih<• director
of Univeroity housing reel thnt
the visitation !>Olley haa been
extremely auceurul.'' Cutler told
the Regcnta. "While n low nbuoea
hnve occurred, there Ia no Indica·
tion thnt theBC nrc more frequent
than under n moa·e rC'&lrlc.tivc
poliey.
"The board and the residence
halls starr hod mode clenr that
premarital texunl lntorcourae and
eohabitallon will not be t<>lerated.
The new policy eaata the atarr
in a role whic.h aetually ma.kea
more efrective their errorta to
deal with deviant. IW"havJor."
He nottcl that the atudentraculty
Board or Go,·rmoro had
Cf'rtain rettrvationa about elimi·
natinlf curlew altoðer, but relt
that .,the option ltCt optn to
parenta and their daughtero i•
Sllrtidenlly nexibl• 10 that Individual
arrangtomtnt.a can ~
made to reneet the paltem which
bas de,-,loped In the home.''
ln adoptinJr the temporary policy
in January, th• ~genU reeOif'il~
"the capacity or Uni~·erlity
of lUehlgan 1tudent1 to manace
their ~rtonal Uvea ln a
matu~ and eonetnac.tlve faahlon"
and expressed the duire '"to
foster a climate within whic.h
peraonol rretcJom and reaponaibllity
contribute to educational and
aoelnt development.''
Thia idea, Cut1n not.-d, "n.t.tractett
attention from coll~gc
adminiatl"at.ora nero•• the nation.
With few exct'ptions, it hna been
the aubjcct of unquolitlrd prniee,
and the Univ~r!fity is cnvit•cl ro•·
having !need the issue with earc·
rut thought nnd ror hnvlng
re.nehed 1\ rorwtu·d-looklng de·
cision."
The new policy h•a Je,•nornl
(Continued on Page ~·our)
Orientation com. strives for
l'intellectual perspective"
The Sept. '69 Orientotion for
new Naznret.b studen~ wilt implement
J'Ddical changes ln pro·
cedurea. a~cuuae of discontent
wlth past orie ntation programs,
student council appointed a com·
mittcc to research t.be entire
concept of Ot"ienta.tion.
The committee (for Jist of
memboro, see GLEANER 11/13/
GS) bas diseui!SCd and formulated
auggest.ions lhat. witt detennin<'
Ule b&aie fram~work of Na~areth
orientation programs in the n.e.ar
futurt.
Major issuea of discussion inelude
the deeision to obolish the
Big-little sister and Buddy •>·•·
terns in lavor of art approach
through "sensitivit)" groups"' and
the possibility of commute" living
on campus during orientation
"·eek.
The !unction of orientation in
introducing the new student to
eolleae it ,·iewPd as producing a
'more valuable Int.etl~etunt and
~alistic perat>ective.
Tentative dceiaions includt" appointment
of n ehnh-mnn by stu·
dent. eouneil. To reduct~ ch.u1a·
consciousness, orientation will be
a p1-ojcct or the e nth·e Naz.nrcth
community rather t.han just t,he
junior clnss.
This orientntion would begin
:L full week bef'or·c c:lasau and
continue through the entire yen.r.
Two of the main advantages in
this system :lre unifiCAtion of
commuter and residt"nts and potential
elimination of th~ .. hrrd"
mentality that haa c:hsracteriud
pre,ious orientations.
There will be an opportunit)'
t.o di~uu these eh.angea with tht
Orie.ntation committee on Thursda)",
Dee. 5 at 10:30 in tho eommut:
cr lounge. AU student.a aft'
urged by the committee to brinr
objeeth·es and aug_geations ;tt this
time.
Christmas Formal . upcommg
The nnnual Naznreth-St. John Fisher Chtistmns Fonnal
will be held on Friday, December 13 at the Sheraton Hotel
Bnllroom from 9:30 to 12:30. The theme of the dance," Giving
is Loving is Christmas" is in conjunction with the "Toys
for Tots" program - each couple is requested to bring a
small present which will be given to a needy child to add a
spark of Christmas where thet·e might othewise be none.
There will be a $3 charge for tickets which will be refunded
at the doot·-this is merely to detet·mine the number
or couples lhat will be attending. An unlimited number of
tickets will be available this year. Dress is formal for girls,
although tuxes are optional for men. Paula Siconolfi and
Nick Leoni are co-chairman ror the dance.
Jng polic:iea, medical tacUities,
work-atudy hiring, plncement, in
dealing with non-academic per·
sonnet'!
-Unh•rrt:lty power structure:
thit ent.alla investigating the busineu
in~rtall of trustees and
a~mlnlatratora and whether thy
tngage in racist. or anti-union
practlct•i investigating the ac.
th•itlta of banka at whieh univert:
it)• monty it kept; txamining
the attitudta of ehurchea with
whleh aeboola are a!filiattcl: aeeinc
whether blaek rep"'Sf'ntation
in the unh·eraity powe-r llnltture.
Ia toktn or inOuent.ial.
Cultural bias
-The cultural bias or eampua
lifo: Ia the cultural biao or the
eampua 10 wl\ite that black otudenta
must neeusarily !tel alienattcl
T Can block atudenta feel
eomfortnb1c in their own lite
1t-yle, or must they eontorm to
the white lire atylc?
The last question is one that
cannot bo doeumenttcl wltb stBtistica,
but the one NSA conoidero
most. important. in a discussion of
tho unconscious ways whites
ehow t.heir racism in their insti·
tuLions.
'fhc problem, jn NSA's view,
11 a white one, a problem to be
etudlc<i and aolved by whites.
ln Ita mailing to conference delegatee
i1 n special note to (and
about) black at.,denta, anying
that while black insights will be
hc)J)(ul, the eonftrenee eontiders
U\t' na.eism quution one thnt. will
have t..o be confined to whites
"becaute it is a. white problem."
Whitf: IUIJremadst &OCiety
.. Workinl' a g a. i n 1 t racism,"
NSA aaya, "hu to do not. only
with making it possil>le (or the
blaek man to control his commu·
nit)' and his lif~; it also means
a•kinJ ourselves what it means
to be a white peraon iD a white
l\lpft:mac:itt IOCitty/'
Late last. monthJ The, Undergraduate
As.soc:.iation gave :lpproval
to a committee formM to
compile and publish student e,,.,_
uations of faculty and cour:sea.
On the fo11owing da)• t.he StudentFacultv
Commit:.tee voted to recognize.
this committee aCter an
explanation or the purposes of
student. e~-aluation b)' the Chair·
man of the committ-!-t, Bo-nnie
Meath.
Bonnie f~ls that Nau.reth
needs student eva I u at ion of
courses for at least two rea.sons..
Students ha~·e no '\\-"a)' of knowing
what a course is likeJ she explaintcl
to GLEAt\£R. "The only
descriptions available come from
the catalogue where lack of spa«
limits the amount of information
on texts us.edJ areas covered and
purposes or tha eourses."
The booklet, which should be
nvailabte this spring. would supply
such information along with
$tudents' opinions on how well
the courses achieve their goals.
Another possible value of the student
evaluation should be for
tenehers who want to know what
their stuclcnts find especially valuable
in class.
The committee has begun work
on compiling the questionnirc, n
sample of which should be published
in the next issue of th~
GLEANF.R. The eompleted booklet
will probably publish r .. ulta
from the questjonnires in para.
graphs based on the studenta
opinions rather than in statisieal
form.
Since the e'>ah;aation wBl fi·
n.anee itself, students .. -;.u haveto
buy the booklet. The committee
has stottcl it "'ill gladly weleome
any advice or :1id that students or
faeulty bve time to give.
Phy111a Nor~ood. Dale ~1ason. Joan Thompson rliKuu p1ana for
Natarf:th'• new-formed Afro-american Society.
NCR Afro-american Society
Black students formulate plans
Tht Afro-American Soeiety has
Juat bepn to grow on the eampuoea
or Nuareth and Saint John
Fisher. The otrieera are: President,
Robert Laird; Vice Preai·
dtn'\, Ra1· Col-•y; Seen:tar)", Sylvia
Muon; ttnd Treasurer, James
Chiaholm. Although there are
on1y ten or tw,.lve memberS from
both collel"•· one or the purposes
or the Soeiety Ia to incre .. e tbat
number b)' r.Lising the enroltment
or blaek atudtnta nt Nazareth and
Fishtr.
$ylvln M•110n, Phyllis Norwood
ond Joan Thompson euggested
thia enrollment. (actor as one of
tho rt'atons thtLt the colleges need
the Society. Othc•- purtiOses Included
n desir-e Cor 1rrenter con·
tAct with Roeheato•J• black communlt)•
urr campus, and lhe J)l't!i3·
ing need to make nU ~Jtudcnt.s
OWnt"(' O( LhC in1J>OI't.nnce Of bJnck
cullurc in our society.
Al10, and pr!murily, the A(roA
mtrlean Society will allow the
black 1tudcnt to rind his own
identity, to define it for himself
•nd othera, and to use it
in biking their place in t.ollege
li!e and o.fterward.
The Afro- Ameriean Soeiety
sponsored a mixer in Fisher't
Athletic Center on November 28.
The danees's cluUrman, Phyllla
Norwood, tenned it a succ:en.
The Society hos begun planning
a Black Artt Festival ror this
apring. It "''ill cover difterent
forms of music !rom Gospel to
roek, painting ond possibly bahion.
Special Film _ -
Le Roi Jones'
"Dutchman"
Wed., Dec. 4- 4 p.m.
A-14
Page Two
Editorial
GLE ANERcommends decision
. . At a recent student council meeting, a proposal estabhshmg
one student to serve as sole Iinson between all campus
publications and the council was offered.
Initially the idea seemed like a good one. In order b
ascerta in the viability of such n plan however, editors of
VERITY, SOUTHWlND, SIGlLLUl\1 and GLEANER
were called to a meeting for consultat ion.
The editors unanimously opposed the idea, elaborating
that such a situation would lend itself to confusion and
censorship; that no one student could adequately speak for
such sundry publication; that editors are always available
to clarify issues which might arise. After considerable discussion
and dialogue, the proposal was defeated.
Such a case is an impressive example of the "communication"
for which we all strive. An open discussion of
the proposition resulted in averting what may have been a
threat to free journalism on this campus and what would
certainly have created a situation enmeshed in unnecessary
red tape.
Commendations to the student council for a sensitivelY
considered, intelligent decision. ·
cf
Editorial
Glory only fleeting:
Mediocrity lingers
"Ask everyone if he has heard the story
And tell it strong and bold if he has not
That once there was a fleeting glimpse of glory
That was known as Camelot."
The fifth anniversary of the death of A1·thur has just
passed. One thousand days stand as the once-realized, neverto-
be-regained ideal for his sor1·owful subjects an ideal
perfect in its poignancy, shrouded with emotio~. But Arthur
is irrevocably dead, Gawain has followed him
Guinevere has found a Lancclot. Clinging to relics in com~
mon catharsis of feeling, lhe l'etrospective idealists mourn
the camelot-that-never-was.
But the drama has been miscnsl by emotional, rather
than rational, directors. What is, only seems; what seems,
really is. Imperfect vision has let the promise of a Camelotthat-
could-be go unnoticed, while eyes still clouded with
tears for the death of an unrealized legend have rejected
the living ideal. The standard "Viva Ia vie" has been vanquished
in battle by "Viva Ia mediocritie". Arthur lives but
Mordred r eigns. '
db
Instructor urges expansion
of bookstore facilities
To the editors:
The College-shop is a pro!lt
malting organization managed by
the man·elously cooperative ltrs.
0'0ay-but ultimAtely <ontrolled
by a Boston ba.!ed oompany -
United Art Corp. TM shop O<aapit:
a a smallish t:Omt:r ol
Lountea' basement and in the
Area of book.s, provides assigned
tuta and n small variety of other
titles.. In my limited experience
ot Rocheater book resources, t.he
aupply ia poor to fair and the
ntceatibility of the best or these
selections ia not convenient.
With n student body of 1,200
atuden\.s, plu.a the potentht.l mnr·
ket o! Fisher students, It strikes
my capitalist • tuned .. academic
heart that. herein lies enormou1
potential. What ia needed is an
organiled voice :0 show the United
Art Co. that lllere is a r ... l
market; and to encourage our
local representath""es to expand
to acijoinlng store rooms to ac·
commodate a more S*tisfactory
collect.ion of llle wide ronge of
ine:xpenaive, high quality paper·
bec.ka now available in most
fi ~ldo.
Your courses could become
vutly richer and more self.·de·
t.ermincd (in my expet'ience all
!nculty members welcome inte·
gratlon o( independent l'esearch
and horl.zon--<"Xpanding efforts of
every intelliblc tyJl<'!) And all
of lhis could oo dono to tho maximum
eonve.nienoe of student.s and
(aeulty alike-to say nothing of
prorita !or the boolt store. lm·
atinel F.vPrvonr win.rc!
the faculty to subnut to Mrs.
0'0ay, u 100n as po&ible. a rich
.. lectlon o! titles! And llUlY I
hope that llle student.s will entourage"
.}ln. O'Oay to encourage.
United Art, to opeedily pro,;de
th~fl" th1ea as atandanl support
to thf rtgu1ar U$igned texts!
You aet:med to long !or excel·
len~ on the day or the ait.-in.
Thia l(!(lMJ to be an a.rea where
the pol or Intellectual exeeUonce
could ra.1ily and quickly be sup·
port.cd.
Philosophy Department
Cood apeeci-
Suo Cru·rington
Nuns revolting?
To the fl1Uor1:
COMFORM!Sl'$
CONFORMISTS
HERE!!
aame drua
ume ideu
concerned with the books
WHO
"THE NUNS?"
look agoin .••
what do you-
1\ womon
dl!rca-cnl . . • yet nol so di!ftwcnt.
whnt'a she doing here
ahc't J>Ur\. oC {1. group
they drc11 alike.
the)• lhink ~like!
Whnt't the mysl<lry behind tho
block and whll<l!
An tnigma ... maybe
10h·eablo .•• always
Look to ruture artid<s.
GLEAN ER December 4, 1968
SJF Afro-Club Member:
'I'm black, I was there;' offers
views on Cleaver and Catholic girls
To the edltort!:
Mary Ann Paul ~lnlms Elaine
Pcrors io not c,ualiCI•d t.o dispute
her n:wicw or t-:tdrldgc Cl!!aver's
s!)C<!eh. Sinee Miss l'aul is hung
up on quaU!icationa to eriticize
her reportlnlf, I'll tt.art by giving
mine. I'm black. I was there. 1
ha,,e a cop1 of the lllack Panther
paper and 1 ha,·e followed their
growth throu~h tht mass media
or bolh tht United Stat .. and
Canada for well o'er a year.
I havo llle advantage of knowing
wh.at his white vice·presi·
Dress Code
dentia1 runningmate said about.
Mr. Cleaver at Quaker Meeting
the following Sunday. I nlso have
reports on what he snld nt ~1ndison.
l $11)' .Mary Ann Paul's
article was a racially insulting
collection or trash.
Tho report aoout th• auditorium
was true. The Fire Mar·
shal ordered lllo ttudont.a to obRrve
llle ltpl limit for the
auditorium or lht apeech would
oo called orr. To my knowledge
it wu llle first time at UR lllat
this rule was invoked, and it. ap..
Paperdolls: 'dull, uninformed,
incredibly nice young ladies'
To the editors :
I'm sick of hearing the general opinion of many faculty
members and non-faculty visitors concerning Nazareth students:
that we are not intellectual enough; we don't get
involved in 'world' affairs; we don't discuss pertinent topics,
and we're dull and uninformed. There's a reason for thiswe're
conditioned that way.
Amons other thinp, when v.-e
ft.rrh•e nt Nauu"tth we're told
what to wenr, and where to wear
it. Tho adminiolmtlon might as
wen put Ul In uniforms. In fact,
unifonna would be more nppropria.
tc beeautc with uniforms no
one would bo ollow<'d to dress as
she eeea fit-with a dress code
some are and some are.n't.
\Ve'Vt" COrne U lUHK w~y fi'Vnl
the heolt and dinner d"'u, 11
p.m. licht.a out. •nd the outlawing
of e'·en culottes outside of
dorm hallt. But Itt's ratt it-it
took four )'tara for tbt few
chan~• "'e have and each step
invoh"f'd tonat hours of dorm meetings,
c.ounc:ila meet.in1s. etc. ln·
stead of diecu.ning the important.
thing in th;s world, our resident,
nnd student council• have had to
$pend their timo nnd energy work·
ing !or the (rccdom to dress as
they wnnt.-nnd we'•·e still not
there.
Certainly thc•-e were movementa
Cor Biafm, \.he grape work·
ers, etc. - aome led by counciJ.
aome by other groups. But no
mo,•ement. on campus has lasted
longtr, been more popular, or
rated more unlv~raal discu.uion
and actlvity than llle problem of
the dreu code.
1 would think it.'l about time
for the admlnlttrallon to help us
out a little by giving uo llle !ftedom
to oo OUI'1<!1VH. The whole
idea. ot o. drea.s code is ridicu..lous
-an1•·here. Our whole soc.iet)'
todny is conctH·n~d with the out·
aido o( n JlCriOn to the point that,
without u~~rlng a word, n human
being cnn be ~tC itte l easly I'Cject..ed
just because hla attire is not in
acco,'dance with nnoth~r' a &cn.sc
of propriety. 'f!\Js is •II very
Christian. Wo mlaht as weU b>
a soeiety or pa~r dolls.
What we're really asking for
in llle abollthment or llle dr<u
eode It that we bo rec:o!!"ized u
the women that. we are--capabl~
of d,._ssing oul"tt'h'U a~rding
to our own opinlona o( propriet>~
-not. some else'a!
Maybo I! we were allowed to
d~ss as individua1s we'd begin
to think as tndivl'-tuall and more
important endeavor~ could be undertaken.
A1 lon$l' aa we're paper
dnl111 drtistd In our Na1.areth
c::owtume8. we're aoinsr to play
our tiArtlf, We'••e going to gtay
the dull, unlfo•·med. uninvolved,
but ineredibly nitc young ladies
that we a rt.
Our • Id•rs will bo proud o! us
we'll be Invited to all llle boot
tea partlu gl,.en by our artificial
soddy, Then we can aip our tea.
Wegman worker
assails protest
against grapes
To the editora: ...._
Recently, all o""r lllo country,
there bas been growing aupport
!or the plight of the California
grape grower and th•lr effort
to organize in a union. This
c:ause has evea l"tft'ived aupport
on our campus and that ot Fioher.
Through a ooycou of tl>ese
grapes, Rocheateriana were at,.
U.mpting to do their part to help.
As I undentood it, thit boycott
wo11ld be aupported by peaeetul
protests n n d demonstration•.
Wegman's SuJl<'rmarkcl<l baa oocn
the main supplier or these gr3Jl<'l
in our nrea .tnd it. haa been
against them that most ot the
demonstrations have bcecn aimed.
1 ::tm a pan. time c.mployce or
the Wegman's Sup·ermal'ket at
~75 Monroe Avenue. Saturday,
Nov. 16. our store waa plagued
... illl demonat.ro.ton. About 25
coJiege4ged perwons came in.
They ,·ery quietly procteded to
fill 25 grocery caru with various
articlea of mtrchandite. Att.er
approa<:hing the cuhltr and allo,.
ing h~r to ring up all these
items, a.a the laet item, they
would show he'r a package of
grapefS. When reeciving the an·
$We.t" to their queation that they
were indeed, Calirornia g·mpes,
the prol<lst.er would 1ay. "Th~y
al'C? Then I don'~ wt\nt lhege
groceries."
The cash rcgioten were ohoa1.
of moner-trying to balance them
out agein will bo a very Lime
consuming job. The prot.eata, unfortunately
didn't end there. Our
quiet, Jl<'a«f~l. demonatrators
continued to eonfute the 1ituation
even more by oc-minr and )'elling
at tbe manager and the pay·
ing customers.
This is a pea<c!ul demonstration!!!
They could have cost
the store leu money if thoy had
shot grnpe pita lhrough all the
windows. Along with short-changed
registers, another very
time consuming 11rojoct lo thnt
Of putting 25 t'RI'tl Of groceriCI
back on the •h~lvoa where they
oolong.
I ag"-oe that tho plight or the
grape grow('rs is a pathetic one.
But there certainly must. be aome·
thing l{tore constructive that ean
be done lllan ~araaain(f local
merehanta.
penrs to hnvc been an nttcmpt
to stop the •P<'•ch.
To avoid un ineident tho nlnck
Panthers and the atudcnta so.w
to it the legal limits of tho
auditorium were not exceeded.
Your repo1-ter could have ultd
a little creativity aa did othen
who woolked 0''<!r to hear the ruli
SI>C""h at the U of R radio station
at Todd UniotL
The most blatant of her distortions
was in regard to what ll
demanded and whot was taid by
both Mr. Cleaver and the Black
Panthers. 'Pigs' are any J)C!rtons
• ·ho stand with the eatabliahment
that oppresses the peo,,Je or
America. Pigs profit (rom and
protect th.e. system that strangle•
the non-white people or world.
A 11ig can be or nny tskln c-olor,
but it iJ5 ur;ua11y white.
This term rcf~rs not to t.hotu
whlte, black or yellow, who are
trying t.o radically reroa-m llle
world. Those totally committed
t.o the red !lap or revolution.
and seek a ootter world, are not
pig11. Eldridge Cleaver cloarly
ealled for a union or all thole
"'ho seek freedom to work together
to return power to the
people.
He asks that tile 10 polnt.a of
the Black Pnnther party be met,
so lllat Blacks can have equal
power with whites. n e demand•
that lhe r"ights given a white
racist majority be Jt:lven to the
Black minority. He dcmnnd8 that
lhe treatment :accorded the Jewa
arter World Wa• II be accorded
to Blacks ~!ter 300 yea•o or
white oppression. ne demnnda,
mud ui all • nt:w ~t<~eiet.-y-onc
rele,'llllt to a global village. Not
a society desagned by aome An·
glo-Saxon who thought the world
was his to exploit..
One statement I take particular
o!Cense to \\"8.5 ~lin Paul's reference
to two BlAck women u
females. The de•k in the ouclJ.
torium !o)·er was started by two
blnck women not ••tematea'. 1
grow very skk of little Catholic
girls who claim kinship with the
Virgin. and define others not of
the fold as animal• who are
labeled ·remnlea'.
I would advise the renders or
your paper to obtain the current
issue or ••PLAYBOY" magazine
and read Mr. Clcaver'a interview.
He has adjusted his mode ot ex·
prusion so that oven dainty whlu
academia can comphehend hi•
message.. Then, each of your
readers can det.ennine !or her·
..,I! how well Miu Pa11l has
done in reportinl' the tnatb or
basing her impression• on fact.
AU Power to the People,
James ;\. Chiicholm. Trtaaurer
SJFC Afro-American Club
The GleAner it pubUt.hed wHkl)'~,-~
WednMday-durlntr lhe rt.-ul•r
&~dem lc: )"¢AI' Ill Nau,..U. OoUut ot
Rothut..r. 4!6 Eu:t AntllU.. Roeht6.
t.er, N'IYI!t York Telel)bone 18t.t.UI.
~iton o.dl Br7fOnfkl,
Cotu•S. f'arl•r
Neww edJtor l.ol.ll• O.N~
s~n~- Man;q:w C.thr Keese.r
~ .leu Eatwi•O. ..tit.or
.SO.•uM u....,,.. llarit.F• Watt..
~~~ Kla. Chris C.,.
l..a.r'ovl- "-••• Stoo ..... M.a.r7 BanalDw, p.,. Mwra7
Speda.l Fa.ton. AadJ luo, e.~,tor
$hir..,. u,....,.... Pc lAYkk.
DUUaJt PeNira
Cop7 tdltor 8un1 Lubu
R..oortlq editor Jue f'tldmu
Coruulting editor .M•rp """ P•ul
Statl: P-a.rn Tt.<loM, An.-.Ja Scarfta,
Pllt Ragon.... JOAnn. Pltrtt Pam
MurBY. Ba.rb Moynch-.n, MiturMn
:.t,!'-:~on.s~~:, "r!'l,'~~ •. "·~~";;r;
Knhrht.s. Ann$ Hlr~hnun•r. Marr
Rut..b HMlftJI.ft, Ma.rloa.e Blum N"ora
H i~h,.., DinrwJ Clark, U~Mth 011.r.
ehet., Sue StJes.~Jbaur, Cbrl• WIUor)',
~-~lroia, M•u,....n Tobin, Rr•n
Faculty Interview:
Stu Ross: Reflections on art,
women's education, authority
Viveca Lindfors performs
Brecht, Sfrindberg in A. C.
Vi\-eca Lindfora, Swedish ac.
tr-ss, will present a program or
readinp, spcc<hes and pocma by
Berthold Breeht in tho Arts Co·
ter on Jan. ~- On February 21
and 22, ohe will appear with
the Strolling P!ayere In "Thl-ee
Boards and a Passion'' and
''Strindbez:g on St.d11dbc1·g."
lecture on the art or acting and
will discuss her eraU with h<r
audienu.
Viveca Lindfors was first dia·
<'o\--ered in the hit play .. An~.a~
t.asiau in which she played the
title role. She won supe1·lativea
from t.he critics and the Antoinctte
Per-ry Awt\rd for her
performance. She nloo played the
same role in a CBS t.E!levilion
version of the pia)>"'.
lly ANNE KJRCHGESSlreR
"The Workinp o! the whole
college ·~ based on an honesty
of exchnn~rc. Nnzat-eth functiOilS
on n level of freedom rather than
nccording to a power scale."
St.u Ron, new to Nazareth's
nrt deportment this year, exprt:
ucd the basi• ror his optimistic:
view of the college a.s an
Nlu<atlonallnstitution. He strest'd
the value or thi$ "honesty or
dialogue among people/'
Tn ~ply to the 'JUl'J')', "Wh>·
lt:a.ch at Na.s&n!t.h--o womell"a
to11tgf" !" Rosa upliat~ briefly
in a renect.ion of his educational
philosophy. Espeeially in the field
o( art., teaching js more utbe
communication of a life styleu
than a job preparation.
Because Nazareth doesn't ha\'C
to be so job-oaicnted, it can operate
on this Creer level. Ross enjoys
tenehlng gh·ls bc<ause they
:.'lrtn't a• pree:sured to learn for
job prapnration.
He views the studenta as ,.serious
and committed", but discema
''a humor nnd an open~
ne.u" in their attitudes.
Selt.con~eiou.s students?
Rou expressed a new approach
concerning the alleg«< se!C·
COI\ICioua viewpoint of Nuareth
atudenta.
HStudf'nta here are no more
~~r~ntciou.a than students anywhe~
eJtt. It's in the nature of
atuden"- to be absorbed in their
own problems. Berkeley students,
lor example, n.re more im·olved
In the workings or the community
but a~ atilt self-concerned. Their
6tylo is just. di-tferant.u
He cited ·'the importance of
moro Involvement. in urban affo.
ire:' apeei!ically In the areas
ot nw:iat and educational equat.ity.
Bu~ he reallzea that begtnnmgs
of auch involvem~nt at Na.za..reth,
hopes that it will grow and uis
optimistic that it "ill."
'"The 'univcr:sal student' '\o\'ill
take advantage or the opportv·
nitlea available in the community."
Leading with this statement,
Rou said that he thought
that the !~«hester community
o(fored a limited but good number
o! ctlltural opportunities. He
listed aa ex•mples, the Eastman
Houso or Photography, the ''Memorial''
and private art galleries,
freo recitals at the Eastman
School o! Music a nd free nrt
!ilmt In town. Ross feels that
tho !eatures oC the Art Center
&l'(ln't. even exploited to their
cut lest.
l..aC'k of atudent re.ac:tion:
challen3e authority
Hhe aloo exp~sed the fact that
up untJI thla tim~ he has "seen
no review of the art exhibits or
frae films in the Art Centerby
th• Gi.t:.\NE!l Ol' anyone
e lse." Student oplniO}l should be
voicect COIICCI11intt thp relevancy
of these things,
"But lhnt'a the way people
a~ •.• lt.'a more comfortable to
lounge in Lourdes or Kettrne)·
1'1lther than take ad•'nnlage o£
these opportunitiu."
RON cente~ his criticism
\\-ith the pauive ac«ptance: of
authority by ~azaretb students.
He tbinko that students should
challenge ldeu more. They ohould
be more "et.ive in classroom dia·
Iogue ond a<:«pt uaching !or
reasona of their own rat.htr than
beeau~ an Instructor relayed it,"
he cont.cnda.
He lhen continued by explor·
ing hia belief in th~ ''definite
consh,1ct.lva vnlue of challenging
nuthol'it.y" in n broader context.
.. Too many problems l't!.Sult
from the pouivo reception of
'tnath.' •• (where •truth1 ha$ no
, .. Juc unleaa challenged.) Questioning
authority "forces e. re·
definitiOn Of VAlUeS." HEntten(hed
authority calla this des-tru~tive,"
but "Chun:h, State, :md higher
education -.·on't. tumble" under
the weirht of reCleeti\"e cballeng·
ing.
&yond te\·olt
According to Rou, there is a
ddinitt value to a questioning
spirit; but. he'• unot. advocating
J'cvolution.'' There is always the
"1i11k of n clcatruetive confrontation
likr tho oneo nt Bel'koley or
Columbia." ln such cases, the
''merits" ehould be viewOO. Go
beyond lhe mero fact of revolt
to the iuucs, the whys in the
background.
He emphaai:u'(l again, ..-"1'\-adiuo,..
i• meaningleaa unless questioned
by t \'ery gen~rstion:• This
stat.ement. ia \ .. tid in the. realms
or politic•. education, economies,
religion, etc. It io realised in the
field of an..
Art i1 ali\'e
A tonatant.. l"e\'Oiution is going
on but the old fonno are held
in IRtN!d l'C\'f:renc-. However,
.. Art should have relevance- for
Uving people.''
He used Gr<!ck seulptu l'e as an
cxnmpl~. Ilia ''dead, drained, and
heavy," but.. It is still ineluded
in great Rrt. l!o .. suggests that
t.radition be viiJwf'(l from a ''point
of reh~\·ance.'' Greek sculpture is
••good history/' "not art."
Still, it showa development and
demonatrate:a ''the rontinuity o!
eultu~/· Aa auch, thJs tradition
tunctiona at a ''security blanket
Eastman to present 'Mark Twain Tonight'
Hal Holbrook will bring Mark
Twaln to the Eutman Theatre
stage on Friday D~. 6 at 8:15
p.m. The one-man show "Mark
'!'wain Tonight!" will be pre$0Rt·
ed by the Civic: br'tu.sic Assoc:iat.
ion.
Hoi Holbrook conceived tho
idea for ulfark Twain Tonight!,
In 1963. It was born as an alter·
nate idea to selllng hats at
Maey-'a if he couldn't get work as
an actor. It waa first performed
In 1954, and then he almost gave
It up bc<auae he got a steady job
on a television soap opera. fn.
lttad, he did it in a Green•rkh
VUiage nightclub !or a year
while perfonning the TV show
daytlmea. It was there that be
de\·eloped the original two hours
of material on Mark Twain.
At pre1ent, Holbrook has about
nine houra of mnterial on hand.
He do01 not progr~~m a perfonn·
anee in Advance but chooses hie
mnterlnl na he goes along. The
choice of mnOOrial and the editing
and Arranging or it has been
a !ormidable task and the re·
aultant research has ~overed n
continuing period of many years.
Some ~elections, Jike the .. Waur
Cloact'"' atoa')', art whole piece-S of
material lifted from .3ne source
(in t.his cue a letter in "lJark
Twain's Notebook") and then additional
linea from other sow-cc$
nrc sewn into the fubric ot lhe
piece to eharpen its dramatic or
humoroua poseibilith~!l. Other seLections,
aueh ns the routine on
"Lying", begin with an idea of
aom<' t4pkal value whlch the
actor wane.. to exploit. The idea
is re~archOO and certain com·
menta and an«tlotts about it. are
then wrought tog~ther to lonn a
oati"' on the aubjeet or lying.
The mat•rial ia 99~ ;.ure 1\\1lin.
Holbrook d<H"t not wnte material
for hi.m.
Rewa rch on t.he <"haratt.e.r or
1\vain baa covered a tong span of
time. The source or it has ~n
news paJ>er reviews of his lectures,
photographs. written dcse•'iptions
or 'l'w~ln by those who knew him,
J)<'reonnl inWrvl.-ws with people
who kuew him, vi.sita to the
t-owns nnd pln~s Twain haunted
and, mo1t. importnnt. the reading
of Mark Twu.in't own writings.
The rest is tmsgination.
for man who fears death.'' In·
dividuala may die but the !'ace
goes on.
"When art cNliU to be visually
relevant, it •hould be left to
history. It shou l dn'~ be called
something it in totality isn't"
Jn the nfternoon prior to he.·
performances. }1iu LlndtOI'S will
Tom Paxton coming
to Arts Center
Tom Paxton, folksinger-composer, will appear in concert
in the Nazareth College Arts Center at 8:15 p.m. Dee. 7.
The contemporary popular music scene, with its respect for
quality and its awareness of the world around it, is the
natural habit.nt of Paxton. For him, there's no human activity
that can't be sung about and there are no limits to the
styles and techniques to recreate them.
TOI\1 PAXTON
Gleaner slated
to run contest
LOUI~;t; Ot;:-IEVE
Have you a r.andidate for
GLAliOUR'S 1969 'l'op 'l'en Col·
lege Girl• in America Con~st! tr
so, the GLF:.\Nt::ll staff wants to
know. Thi• year, the new&pnper
h.. been naked to organize tho
contesl on the. Nnznt'Ct.ti College
c.amp1,18.
We tu-e looking ror t\ Nu~n~th
student, from :tny cln!o&-1-esident
or commuter-who rectects individual
thinking in both her
npproach to faohion and ita role
in b~r life.
Ruth Whitney, t:ditor·in-Chief
or GLAMOUR Mapsi~, explained
why GLAMOUR has expandt'd
iLl collese con~at this
year: ''JkocaUM tho colltge girl
has expanded HERSELF. At her
best, .she ia no longer limply in·
terc.sted in her own college world
of studies, dates, and friends. She
is involved with others, with
lheir worlda, too . . , That is
why the wlnn(ll'l tu-e t'<'qu.ired
to show leaderl5hip, not only in
fashion and sra·ooming, but in
rome cn.mput ot· community ac~
tivity that is beyond her ~gular
curricuJar rcquirementa/'
The ten natlonnl !inalitta will
r«th•t nationwide rtcognition !or
them.selvea and their colleges in
the August iuue or GLA:IIOUR
and in ne••apaJ)('n throughout the
tou.nlr>'· Each "·m alto ~ive a
perao11al gift from the editon of
GLAMOUR ond an all-expen..,.
paid Lrip to a fo"'ign eountry,
All N .. areth entri•o will be
considtl"e41 carefully b)' a. p:lllel
oC NCR atu,lent teade1"8, fttculty
members, and ndmini&tl"Ator$,
A student may submit heraeiC Ol'
ony !ellow st11dont at Natnreth
as n candidate by completing
the following entry blnnk and
iJia~ing it ,together with one
photograph oC the nominee, in
(Continued on Pare Four)
Audiences a.re not n1one in
their appreciation of his skills.
Tom Paxton's composition• are
found in the repertolrea of most
of today's "contempornr)• folk"
artists. Some 200 ~ordinp by
other artists of hia songe can
be found in the record catalop.
Ke~rtheless. m o 1 t obsel"\>tra
·~that l'axton himaelf Ia the
best e.'q)One.nt. oC hit own mel~
die-s. He is, in fact., deaclibed u
the successor to the tradition or
Woody Guthrie and Pete Seepr.
Paxton's choice or music as a
career c:P.me alter he- hnd given
up an intere&l in aetlng which
had Jed him to a drt\ma major
ot the Univer•lty of Oklnhomn.
The Paxton family hnd moved
from Chicago, '\\•hero Tom waa
born in 1937, to Bristow, Okln·
horn:a whon ho W1lB ton. At eo1
lege, bia dramatic rolea had
ranged from the Firat Murderer
in "Macbeth" to the Citisen in
"The Devil's Dooplt." But, even
the success of a weatf'm m~lo·
drama at the Cripple c .... k Theatre
could not convince Puton to
continue on &tag~. Ue had been
try!n.g to write sonp .. well all
through his college career and
he dteided he pra!er~d muele to
dramA.
He was assigned to Fort Dix,
New Jersey by the U.S. Army,
bringing him near to the New
York coffee houS""'I whcl'C he was
to mako his firiSt mnrk ns a
musician. Ar~r hi• nrmy d\lt)',
he decided to sl.tly in New Yo1·k
and was soon a mainatay of
G~nv.-icb Villnge'1 G a all C h t
Club which claimed hia tnltnta
for a ruU nine monW. Lattr h&
'vas to t.oor oth'!!'r coffee house•
and nightclubs a round tht
eountt')".
The concert at..ge haa now
become Tom Paxt.on'a platform.
New York's Carnegie. Phllhar·
monic 1:1nd Town H~tlls, l'hiln.del~
phia's A~ademy of Music and
Boston's Jordan Ho.ll nre nmong
them. He has alao been guest
soloist with the (lufralo Philha1··
monic and is constantly in de·
millld for coneute on collcg~
campuses. Paxt-on's thrt'c toura
of the British Isles have ul.tlblished
him as Amc-rica'a molt im·
portant entertainment export.. fit
has the distinction of ha\·ing
sold-out London'a Albert Hall,
pla)ing to a tu.m...away e:rowd or
i,OOO.
Tom Paxton haa made (our
albums Cor Elektra Recorda. Th•y
include a wide c.rosa .. eection of
his special kind o! \·t~·making
treatment ol religion, war, Nazia,
dape, race relations, love, ~duea·
t.ion, h-afCic nnd even the Amc•·ican
press. "The l..aat Thing on
:\Iy Mind," "Bott.la o! Wlnct'' •fJ
Con't Help But Won~e1· Whol'c
I'm Bound/' "The Marvellous
Toy'-' nnd "Lyndon .Johnson Tolcl
the Nation" are but n few oC the
Tom Paxton titles already estah·
lished as contemporo.ry cluaica.
fo"ollowing pe-rformances in 11 rt:·
vial of upa.J Joey" at New York's
City Cenur, she appeared of(.
Broadway in ultiaa Julie" and
''KinK Lear" and toured the U.S.
and South A.tnerica \\'it.h aueh
plays u ... A Far Country/t "I
Am a Cameran and ••An Eve.n.ing
or Tennessee Williams."'
On ulevision, lliu LindCon
portnl)'t'd ~atasha in Dolto)'eV·
sky's ~The Idiot" and La Peri·
thole in "The Bridge of San Luis
Ray."
A graduate of the Royal Dramatic
Theater School in Sweden.
Miss Lind!o1'S is lluenL in hca·
native language ns well aa
l·'a·ench, Germa.n and English, but
eonsidel'$ "Actin~' her first ln.n·
guage.
BEAUTY SALON
OFFERS SI'ECI~I. RATES FOR
COLLEGE SfliDENTS
!lAIR Cllf
SHA~U'OO f! SET
PERMASENT WAVE
COI.ORISG #! !'ET
RAlB AJ'I'U.~Aa.£ ,.,:'fi:OA\ 'f'EflN&;I)AY
W'f1ll l"'r3R:,"'(tA11o.:'N ~o""F ill'UENJ W t.""AIID
Entertainment
offered Dec. 6
Nazareth College will oUer an
e,·ening of entertainment Friday,
Deeember 6. that ohould appoal
to music, poetry, dance, theater
and art enthuaiasts.
The program, which is open t.o
the public without charge, will
include James -Manion, Nnt.nrcLh
faculty member, reading some ot
his oliginal poetry.
Following this recital, Chl'l•tlnn
Oispu, •11, will dance five num~
bora accompanied by flute, IIDxophone,
xuitar, a vocalist and clec·
tronic mus.ic composed "by Tim
Sullivan of the Nazareth m~ic
faculty.
Tom Cahill, a prorusional
danc::c!r who has performed at the
Theater Academy of Rocbeater
and the Bristol VaUey Playhouae,
"•ill dance ten numbers to accom~
paniment ranging from Bach to
thf! folk music of Donovan.
Conclusion of the program will
!enture the Nazareth Art Club
in improvisational theater and
11hnppenings."
A new art cxhfbit by Cutherine
H1·aber, noted la<al artist, will
be opened in the lobby ot the
Arts Center Auditorium the same
evenlng and ¥.ill be en exhibit
until December 28.
Pa ge Four GLEANER
NCR, SJFC library committees meet:
NCR loan policy remains unchanged
A meeting was held Priday,
November 9, in the Tl"easure
Room of the Nazar11th College
Libt·ary, at the request o! the
student. Library committees of
Fishe1· 11.nd Nazareth Colleges, at
which Sistet· Thomas Mariou and
Charles Riggins commented in
detail and answet-ed questions
coneerning t.he prog1-am of coope_
ration between the two college
libraries.
lmt•lientions or request
Sister Thomas )Ia1ion, member
of the Nazareth !acuity libmry
committee, spoke on the irnp1ications
of the Fisher request fot·
unlimited loan sc.rvicc nl Nazareth
kl all F'isher students. The
ensuing diseussirm brought out
infot'Ination that despit<l its much
lat-ger c:ollcetion and facilities,
Nazareth ba!'>ly met the library
sel'vicc 1·equirements of its faculty
and student. body. lL would
be faced with the certainty of
severe shoJtagt!$ ii the Fisher
request were complied with.
Jt w3s noted Lho.t Naza.rcth
cuncntly offers the tull l'tmgc of
library service to o11 Fisher students
snve in the nrca of loans,
where Fisher students not ftnroiJed
in Natal'eth cout·ae work are permitted,
at the diSCJ'Ction Of the
Nazareth library staff, to borrow
up to two books ~t one time pl"()vided
that service to Nazareth
students does not. suffca· as a
l"eSult.
This limitation on loans tloes
not apply to Pishct· students cn\•
olled in. Na~a~-eth courses; such
students are considered as Nazllt"
eth students for purposes or
these courses. and l'eceive IuU
range of libr:lry service. Howe\'
Cl'• since it i& well-established
practice among libraries that each
academic Hbrat')' is expected to
provide Hbrm-y s.crviecs nnd collections
adequate to the nonnal
need of all its students, Nazareth
loans to visiting students only
when such lonns will not. result.
in shorta.g<~s 3.mong Nnza .. eth
students. Robert Gullo, Fisher librarian,
was quoted ol1 this
point in the OcL 4 issue of
l)ioneer as follows: uRowever",
said Gullo, "'my primary 1-espon ..
sibHit)' is t.o Fisher students."
Nazareth has long Celt the s..1.me
responsibility towtu'd the Naz ..
at'Cth community.
Sister Thomas Marion point-ed
out that it. woul(l be ver)' poor
policy for Nauu-eth to attempt. t-o
serve the library needs of both
student. bodies when at the moment
it is hardly ndequat.e fo1·
its own student hody. In this connection
the matter or 1lational
and state standards for academic
library service \Vas lli&::ussed
since t.he (actol'S spelled out in
these codes have a most impor·
tnnt bearing on accreditation.
Events Calendar
December
3 Tues.
4 Wed.
5 Thurs.
6 Fri.
7 Sat.
8 Sun.
The Barrow Poets: "A Yard of Pu~ding"-Arts Center
8:15---$3 admission
Film: Le Roi Jones' "Dutchman"-4·14-4 p.m.
Open meeting of student council Orientation Committee
Smyth eommutel· lounge--10:30
University of Rochester Undergraduate Outside Speako.rs
Committl"f"o SPt·illg: uBlack Cultut'O"-Student Lowtgc,
Douglass Building: Poet Ra)'mond Patterson will read
Jrom his work.&-4p.m.
Fi lm: "Loves of a Blond"- A- 14-7 p.m.
Civic Music Assn. pl"esentation: Rochester Philharmonic
-Eastman Thcatl'e--8 :15~ l.nszlo Somogyi, conductIng;
J!IZ7. Quartet, soloists. (admission charge)
All Arts Evening-Arts Center-8:15
poetry: Mr. Manion-dance: Chi"ISllnas DispasArt
exhibit and Art Club pcrfo•·mance
Civic Music Assn. pres<>ntalion: Hal Holbrook, "Mark
Twain Tonigbt"-Eastman Theatre-8:15 (admission
charge)
Conce11: Tom Paxton-Arts Center-83.50 admission
Concert: Rochester Chamber Orchestra- David Fetler,
conductor-A1·ts Center--4 p.m.- student llckets. $4.
U of R Indian Assn. Film presentation: "Two Daughters"
-Upper Strong Aud.- 7:30 p.m. (admission charge)
Possible co--operation discussed
Higgins discussed the wide
range of cooperative n.ct.ion pos ..
sible between the two Hbro.ries.
Coopct-ative acquisitions, &J>C::Cifi·
cally recommended in the national
standards, would l·esult in the
availability kl both colleges of
cxJxmsive materials which ru-e
not to be found at present in
cithru·.
One of the Fisher students
brought up the matter o! joint
purchas~ and use of the back-file
of the New York Times on micro,.
tUm as an example of this. lt
was noted that Nazareth is in
favor of this and had tried several
times in recent years t-o in·
ter'est Pisher without success.
Nazareth ho.s also proposed coopea
·ntive purchasing of other
ma.terinls in this general cate·
gory nnd believes tt beginning
should be made.
Nazoreth has long felt that
common poU::ics in cet"t3in basic
procerlu1·es &l."e important and has
suggested to Fisher that a common
loan policy, common overduo
poHC)'t C'Otnmon reserv~ policy
should be disctussed.
'l'he Fisher rcpt-eSQntatives' attention
was called to the impor·
tnnce of fully using t.he new re.
gionaJ inter-Hbrat'Y loan system.
It was suggcst.!d that if a sui.
ficient supply of tho request
forms was kept at the Fisher
library service desk, the students
might find that this daily de·
live1·y service to Fisher would be
a very useful way to overcome
any tempomry sho1tage of hooks
in their own librn.!'Y· It. would also
serve as a guide to the Fisher
libi'Rry staff in ordering matelio.
ls needed by Fisher students.
Nazareih student
received in france
(The! following is a l'CJWint of
a newspaper nrtic:le from a
Fl'cneh paper. Sylvia Billet"io is
a Nat..:lreth F1-ench major.)
1' h t' c e Ame1;c;.,u1 students:
M lies Malanchuck, Billcrio 3nd
Weiner have been awarded the
City of Biat'l·itz pl;ze for theil·
outstanding achievements. A
p1·ize -giving ceremony wa$ held
ill the City Rail where o!licials
including the mayor, his deputies,
mltn.ici(Ja-1 eounciJiors and the
American vice~onsul in Bot·dcaux
were pl'esent.
Opportunities
available for
James Oa,•is. a Hamilkln Col·
GLAMOUR contest, . . lege professor has been in charge
June '69 grads
June '69 degree candidates jn ..
terested in cat'Cer oppot'tunities
available in Rochester. and the
surrounding area are invited to
tnke advantage of the third annual
"Project Opportunity," a business
and civic-interviewing program to
ho held on F~iday, December 27
and :llonday, December 30 at
the Rochester Cho.mbe.l' of Com·
merce, 55 St. Paul Street.
The project, an overwhelming
success in its !irst. two years,
provides a convenient opportunity
!o1· Rochestar nrea students, and
others who are inWrested, to
interview representatives of 56
lending Roc.he$tCJ' organizations
in one place during two days of
the Chri.strnns vacation period.
More than fifty job categories
are open, including many in engineering,
marketing, banking,
insurance, ret..'liling, personnel,
science, data processing, teaching,
se11ing, management, I i bro. r y
work, research, quality eontro1,
and other fields.
Brochures fully e.xplaining the
project have been sent kl the
~~~~-~~ _PI~~cment o!tice and are
(Continued from Page Three)
any C tEAN ER envelope some
time before Friday, December 13.
Info1·m3tion may also ~ taken
to Louise DeNeve, Kearney 303,
mail box #198.
Name .. . ... . . Class ..... .
Address (dorm i! resident)
Date of Birth·: : : ::: : : : :: : : :
Height .. .. . . Weight .••...
Dress Size . . . Shoe Size .••
Waist .. Hair Color .. Eyes ..
Co lege Major . . . . Minor ....
Future Plans •.............
Extrn.-Curl'icular Activities ..
i -o~·n•,t . c~;·~i. t~. it;~l~d·c· . ~~~
phou.graph. eitbe1· full or
po1traiL)
of the progl'nm this year. Fiftyfour
American students have just
spent six weeks in Bia1·ritz with
F1~nch families prior to the be·
ginning of the University C:OUl'$CS.
In his welcome addt-ess, M.
Satiety, the deputy mayor
stressed the ft;endly relntions.ships
betw~~n Rt.-udents and fam ..
ilies and expt"essed the hope that
the student.$ would remember t.he
strong tics of his tountrymcn
with th6 States.
with the States. In his reply Mr.
J. Davis thanked the city roprc·
sentativu and the French (am·
ilies fo'r' theh· he;uty welcome and
their valuuble help.
The program for the Arne-dean
students had begun in early Sop·
tembel· and included a trip to the
Basque countl'y and Bordeaux region
as well as visits to the
sunniny :md sandy beaches.
Michigan liberalizes rules ...
(Continued from Page One)
support from both students and
l'esidencc hall staff personnel.
Cutlc���· ga vc the Regents t11e results
o! an extensive survey oC
.studc.nht and staff whlcb was conducted
last tpling by the University's
Surv~)t Reseat·ch Centc1·.
lfost of the ·i,SS5 students and
235 staff members who complet·
ed questionnair\!s endorsed the
idea of each t·c.sidenee unit's au ..
tonomy in fixing \•isitil\g policies.
More thou hal! o! them klok an
active part in deteJmining- the
Most students and staff would
not di!(e~'entinte visiting policie.$
by class level, although some exPl'essed
a more conservative at·
titude toward policy for freshmen.
Inconvenience caused by the
ne.w policies was most common
in the houses with the most lib·
ru·al rules. But these were the
$arne house.s in which students
were most snt.isfied.
Most students and staff (o·
\'Ol'Cd nbolishing curfew Cor freshmen
womeu, but half said that
pare~ta.L .. p~~sion should be
December 4, 1968
Class of '72 elects officers
Ntwly elected Cre.shman c:ll\58 officers attend their fi r¥t undergraci
meeting. They are, from left, 1\bry Ann Martinett, prcsidentl and
Marie )lagro and Donna. Belmonte, s tudenl couJlci1 representatives.
Worker assails grape demonstration
(Continued from Page Two)
Also, where is the £recdom that
is supposod tA> be all over this
country or ours? Since when can
a minority group dicta-te whnt
people ean un cannot cat? I took
a private poll of my own on
Saturda)r of a. large sampling of
the 2500 cusklmers that entered
our store. The majority of the
people did not know klo much
about the struggles on the West
Coast. Of those who did, many
didn't c.arc enoug-h to stop buying
g1·apes. If people want to buy
and eat these grapes, they should
have the privilege to do so. Those
that nrc actively support.ing this
movement. arc definitely in the:
minol;ty in this community.
Don't misunderstand me - I'm
nil for this getting invol\'ed and
giving a damn, etc. There is ecr·
tainly enough in this community
of oun to get involved in. But.,
the California gr..lpe bandw380n
is a safe one to jump on-after
Dress code
criticized ..
(Continued from Page Two)
and curl our little finger, while
Biafrans starve, grape workers
go unemployed, racism runs wild,
anrl a thousand oth<!r more inportant
endeavors go unnided and
uncared for.
uwhat did you do in college?"
"! fought for the nbolishrnent
of the dress code!"
"Wow!"
Sincerely,
~Inuree n Mnybee, '69
~11, it's 3,000 miles away nnd we
don't have to get involved too
much.
It i~ tl cause worthy o( support,
but no cause. is worth the viola·
tion of human freedom and pcae:e[
ul demon&thltions arc not sup·
posod to be at tho great expense
of anyon~ ~lsc.
Sincerely,
Peggy Vogt, '71
Calif. instructors
decide P /F grade
No•thridge, Calif - (1.1.'.) -
Commenting on the revision of
the credit-fail system at San Fernando
Valley St<1te College, Dr.
C. V. Metz.ler~ pt"esident. of the
Faculty Senate, said this action
was a step toward the provisions
the students had l'Cqucsted.
The Faculty Senate tlelcted the
pt-ovision thnt a c:t-edit grade is
a r'minimal C or highet·." Under
this provision a ~<D" would have
been listed on the student's rec·
ord as a fail.
The Senate's action leaves the
decision o! what constitut<:s a
1>assing gmde entirely up to the
individu~l insb-uctor.
Under the credit-fail system
nn undet'gr..-duate student is al·
lowed to register for credit--tail
in one class each semester in non·
major classes. A maximum or 30
credit-fail units may count to·
ward groduation.
~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. I1 College Special at WAHL'S I1
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~ 2 Pieces of Our Famous Broasted !
~ Chicken, Crisp Salad w/ Homemade 79 ~
~ Dressing and Golden French Fries C ~
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