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Vol. XLIII—No. 7 MERCYHURST COLLEGE January 15,1971

Art \lntersession
Retrospect
By Francis T. Schanz

London, Amsterdam, Athens, Greece the students aiso visit-


Venice, Sorrento, Rome,! "Study ed the Tenuple off the Seven
here—See it*"there" was the Virgins and the Theater of Di-
ibasis far? the art department's onysos. Of specials interest was
recent art seminar in Europe, the Tavern Kalokerinos where
The art students left Erie In- Jthe group spent an exciting
ternationaD Airport, November evening dining and participat-
27,fl970 for their twenty-one day |ing in|native Gretian dances.
tour. They- includedfPaula Dun-
ning, Mary Haas, Janice Jan- Cholera interrupted .the itin-
ocha, iBarb Kaminski, ^Gina erary, instead of Istanbul, the
A. J. 1Adams, Tournament Director
Miano, Michele iParlevecchipo, next stop was Venice, a replace-
Kathleen Slavin, Marcla Sluser, m e n t which proved to be just as
Roberta Yetman, (Ray Chartier, fascinating and |informative. A
Tom Scheffner, Sr. M. Carolyn flight took them from Venice to
Herrmann, College ^President Sorrento which sits high on a
and Sr.fM. Angelica Cummings, natural terrace overlooUring the
Program ^Director. They were sea. An excursion took the
joined later by|-Debbie Sandy group to the Me of Caprifwhere
in Pittsburgh and iDarlene Hil- they 5visited the famous Blue
fiker, Sue Denno and Candace Grotto o!f Tiberius. By bus they
proceeded to Rome. by Bob Parks, s e r* s Family Billiards, will be a | women's 8-balI
Melbourne lin Rochester, New
Associate Editor There isja registration! fee pool tournament, and a mix-
York. 1 I I >f f The last five days incompass- ojf 1-00 t o hel
ed a multitude oflplaces in and On*January 27 1971 fthe $ P. defray costs ed doubles ping pong tour-
The group's first stop was around Rome. Initial stop was „. S , * '•„!,* ' „ i for using & the pool tables, nament. More information
London, England. In adverse first annual straight pool}. . *; . . .
the Spanish steps andjBorghese x -ii u~«;~ Tun Those interested! in regis- will be released wSuture is-
weather they viewed Trafalger tournament will begin. I n e Atering
___._j are __,__, 1 3
asked* toj&see * 1U ^ *» &§3
sues of the Merciad. T
Gardens. ;Also seent^wast The tournament, sponsored b y |
Square, Piccadilly Circus, fol-
lowed by visits? to Westminster Villa^ Medici, followed by a visit *the|*Merciad, will feature Tournament Director LA. J. The success!of thisiproj-
Adam
to the Sistine Chapel, The Ba- prizes of $30, 15, and $5. $ (above! photo)^ be- e c t depends solely on your
Abbey,^Buckingham Palace and tween
The Curiosity! Shop, fimmortaliz- silica of Saint Mary Major, and The event will span onef Tuesday, January 19 participation and support-
ed by Charles Dickens. They Basilica of Saint John Late ran. week with the quarterfinals and ^ i d a y , January |22, in Hopefully, programs such
Stops also included The Baths being held the 27 th andf the Student Unions as this will serve a twofold
^
alsol took in St. Paul's Cathe-
drai| Tower of London and| the of Caracalla, The^ Aqueducts, semifinals and finals onfthe fBesides the straight pool function. First, to generate
(Windsor Castle, Britain's foldest Old Appdan Way, Catacombs following Wednesday. tournament,|the Merciad is ajmore viable campus social
royal^residence. and Coliseum. At Tivoli, thirty The tournament is open! also sponsoring two other life. Second, to encourage
miles outside Rome, they view- to all Mercyhurst| students tournaments in the upcom- other college organizations
After a short flight to Amster- ed Hadrian's Villa and Villa
JB
and is being played at And- ing weeks. These events to take up similar projects.
dam the sightseers saw The D'Este with its fountains, pa-
Royal Palace and the f Island of viHions and artifical gardens.
Marken where houses were built
on stiMs and peotplefwore wood-
At each city they visited the
group *had aiday of leisure by Apathy Exists
en shoes and! ethnic costumes whichj theyf could do anything
reminiscent of|our own Pennsyl- desired. The content of art seen
vania Dutch^It is rumored Han§ and|persqnal|ex!periences during
Brinkei&was seen? there.
Ancient. Athens and its Aero-
those three weeks cannot be Ire-
Icapped. There will always be an
RUS ELECTIONS
polls on The Attic Plain was the enrichment in viewing a Titian
next stop. The above section of
Thef Parthenon was photo-
graphed by Roberta E. Yetman,
painting or Michaelangelo's
J Pieta". For those fwho went,
the art seminar inpJurape prov-
WINTER iTERM
•ophomore art major. $While in ed y$ry rewarding. \ tion. This article is intended to ber | of the group <4 he or she
by BilUSachse, News|Etidor
impress J p the| TABULAE wishes to represent can regis*
In talking with Rochelle ROSA the fintrkacies of nomin- ter. The registration is to take
George (President of RUS) $ one ation and election. place in theptUS office in the
senses an air of disappoint- j | Winter term is designated in presence of two RUS members
ment. This feeling.* comes not the RUS constitution as the Following registration is one
period in which the election is week of open campaigning,
through a direct personal short- to take i>lace. ending with the voting proce-
coming" of Rochelle but rather Among | the offices to be fill- dure. ^5
through a ^negative! school-wide ed are the execuMve committee The constitution^ allows* for
accomplishment. The Mercy- of President, Vice President, absentee|votes in extreme cases
hurst student body has again Sec., and^Treas .,* Alsosafe the but denies validity to write-in
offices of class representatives, ballots.
achieved apathy on a crucial NSA-'ii Co-ordinator, Colloquy
issue, the impending RUSfelec- £ The dates fo^registration and
Chairman, and Social Chair- election this year^ are ^tentative-
tions. man up for-re-election, i ly scheduled for March. Fresh-
'i To correct this^condition it is The|terms of the^ofifices be- men take.^notice—your elections
necessary to inform the jstu- gin iSpningj Term land run for class officers j is today.
dent body on the rules>and reg- through next Winter Term.;? The fondesU dream of Roch-
ulations ofi elections as laid out All^matriculating students are elle?jGeorgei|and^ Al2 Messina
*% "I eligible to vote. ^ (President PRO«TEMPORE)AJS
in the RUS; constitution. It*can jJThe nomination . procedure $is thatv perhaps the Mercyhurst
at bestfrbe hooped thatpthe moti- Quite! simple in that^it consists student body: will, armed'with
vating force behind student of merely registering^ This is this information^act according
apathy here is ignorance of the limited to a two day period in to it and make this election the
which anyone whoHs a? mem- most representative of ^ali.
The Parthenon procedural! footwork to elec-
Pa«Tw© MERCYHUBST COLLEGE January 15,1971

MEKCYHURST COLLEGE, ERIE, PA.


^ e r o i a d Staff I
BETWEEN US /

Editor J5J. ; . X Al Messina


Associate Editor k • . , . . J . . . . Bob *Parks
Feature&Editor 9 JainieiLKamletf Brendia Brewer
KewstEditor Will Sachse m
Sports Editor <*•••• BilU Dopier ala
Layout Editor
General Manager
, fflaveijfRohde
Bob Betik
AND
Business Ma/nager . . . . > GindryfGttsHn m
Circulation a/nd jtEwtihtmge Ma/rlme Smith Rj»S\N
Rick Lamb
Layout Staff 4 • W^an^Ahearn, Bill CModo,
* f\ | Anni Potts
Staff Writers ,
i }
Audrey ^Rosenthal,
I • | J Q}%dk LmnbyiBrendaUireivery
Educations Failure
^^UUwiotar,Jin4lTromb^Hi
Staff ». • . . & . . A Carol MetiJding, Julie SamipJc, to deal with reality
! ElleniH emrich, Mcwkfffidne A^jfew*weeks agof we heard a we were told. The man remain- submit to becoming nothing -but
recording of a-man speaking. ed silent for -awhile and we be- machines programmed to per-
His. name escapes ?me now, but ea»me aware ofethe many sounds form a specific function. In
I do remember his suibject|mat- •around-us whichfewe hadn't no-
ON STUDENT TEACHING fiter^He ^pofceJabout reality and
'(man's lossjtof it. The subject
,wasn't neiw^to us, but we have
j$ced (before.
' fn contemplating ^the sub-
stance offthis marts "Ideas about
short, our .schooling teaches us
to fit into our -proverbial slot
in society. S. .?
Confidence! motivation never reallyit thought of reality
asJlhfcs man'jspoke of it. Listen- •sense perception and reality, we
began to thimk aibout our posi-
•For instance, a psychologist^
inglolosely, ifor the voice was Layne Longfellow, speaking
g reatest ems one that nobody could ignore,
we were told thatfpeople never
. tibns as students, and about ed-
ucation iri*general. '•% about non-verbal communica-
by Audrey Rosenthal tions said "educated men and
really face reality for what it During the many years of , w o m e n j t r a i n e d totdepend. upon
If recall student teaching with mixed femotions. There are is. He spoke cf how our minds .school wfweh a ^person , goes
are? too cluttered with theories words, tend; to 4ack skill in the
times whenfyou kkejit and times* when you despise it. Half the through, he is-crammed full of
aibout reality, about ourselves, • all sorts of ideas. It begins with more natural language of hu-
battle |is surviving the twelve weeks. man, interaction. They are, ip
It hasn't resolved my career. People#suppose that after your and aibout the way we live for simply learning to read land
us to even really enjoy reality. write and can end with* some- this -sense, culturally deprived."
inoternship you are immediately inspired to dedicate your life to He told of how we demand the thing ast intense $as Iflying to They, are culturally deprived
instructing mankind. It's|not thatjsimple. It's still an|experi'ence use of nuamJbers and works to the 'moon or operation on some- due to their education and it's
that I haven'tlcategorized. Things may^someday form a meaning'- understand the wo#ld$aibout us. one's ibrain. In this develop- •rigidity. An educated person is
ful picture. Now, I can only express *my feelings, g The ^speaker then commanded mental processing. a ^person can taught to speak properly and to
Confidence and Motivation are tthe greatest! problems, confi- his listeners tolcloseitheir eyes, surely become lost in all this think systematically. He is
dence lin your ability and motivation of your class. After I shook remove everything from their knowledge. Our education can taught to control his emotions
minds and just| listen to all the drown jour fcreativity, imagina- and to respond to situations ip
off the sheer fright of teaching twelfith|grade, I began!to analyze certain ways, causing them to
'(my students problem-apathy. I wanted their ideas, their re- sounds ^aibout them. We dad as tion, and youthful spdirit, andj&we
appear stuiffy and unnatural) An
sponses. $1 was frustrated many times. Perhaps I took the|job educated person is likejy to
.too seriously,obut Igfelt that sincerityjrwas the tool that I needed handle a situation coldly and
Jo communicate fwfth the oore of theugroup. You can't reach >^s^a systematically and less on mere
eLverygstudei^t. human nature.
Twelfth graders iare a mixture of jsteeny bopper and young
^vAs* studenfs^iwe* are victims
adult. You can't pamhem'on the head. You can't ignore tlrem. I ^and participants in Ithe devia-
,tried to outmaueuvey ^them. I bombarded my pupils with ditto tions oif our educational system.
sheets, records, film strips, tape recordings and discussion First we are victims because
groups, iidejnanded that tih'ey express tand defend their opinions. we are subjected^to thelsystera
The pay off arrived when|these school hellions took over class as it is now.. Second we. are
discussion. participants IbecauseJ we go
<Each gpoup possessed a distinctive personality. I discovered alongfwith the system.?We al-
?this when I could not usefrcer»tain methods with every class. For low! our schools to twist our
jinstance: smart alecks dominate first period, yet period two had realities to ibqcome |what l4hey
ifantastic rapport. ^ think society would want uslto;
My evaluation of ^student teaching; also rests on such variables toe. 1 - S I ^ 1
as school, age group and co-operating teacher. *I taught middle W Recently, there^has been a
jplass white children, twelfth^ grade at McDowell. This makes my of talk about student participa-
experience different than that of an Elementary Education maj- tion in the protolems off society
or, or different from an intern who instructed* ghetto children* and aibout the concerned, involv-
or still different from any one placed with a poor teacher. Other ed college. We wonder just how
circumstances might have produced other feelings. These inci- involved and concerned % Mercyr
hurst is, could be, and would
dents happened to me. There're too personal *to get eloquent like to be. Mercyhurst is cer-
about. Besides, eloquence is fori teachers and scholars. I'm not tainly not as stifif as it used*to
either one yet. | be but it is yet to be seen wlfc
ether Ithe new attitudes at
Mercyhurst willfoeibeneficial-to
Timet Between Classes? the students and the community
or whether they are only signs
of a fashionable trend. Itiap*
don't think so pears that the attitudes of in-
dividuality^ and creativity, fof
by Jim Trombetti both the -students! and the ad-
' Pant! Pant! Pant! Hymn? Did I use enough! deodorant to ministration, will have to
Idllfthis aroma? What Mass am-}I going to anyhow* What does change and grow even more if
Mercyhurst is to graduate stu-
ithnajiter? Til be late anyhow. % ft dents who are well educated
? This, is -jiot .a gi&pe column, for fthave fewigripes. Tjiis is a «?3SKS-;-i:-«-Ki»ts-.;- 3&&tiM£*dft humans and not just|cold, hard,
^pjjjntout^f.jny thougtotsjon a subject? during the past few days. walking encyclopedias.
"What Iiwanted to^talkiabout is the fact that lido not|havei;enough The business-ofi(this College is business
jtime ^between my* classes. ^The ^intention of this article* is to view
an opinion?in which I feel I :am|nat alone in holding. I cannot in
ihe span of |five minutes change my Jthinking processes *from
analytically Jin physics;* to jconceptual, in perspectives* on religion.
If I am interested Jin one subject^ will still be thinking^ about it
TO THE EDITOR
Dear .Editor: an^in discussing|itHWith others I've talked to ?some students
when ithe bell rings for Icominencement of my next classy Sec- flw*was<wondering when the ad-many said |they would not be who a*e not < satisfied ^enough
ondly is^the fact tthatweven in high^ school I was* alloted seven to ministration<jplans on informing able to continue at Mercyhurst wi|h the currioudum to stay o°
.eight and *me half minutes between classes, and then all off my the students^ about Ithe truth of if this uprice|| hike takes jplace. through ^another price hike.
classes;^ were inithe fsame building! This may be a Ismail prob- nesft y^aT's tui^ipn costs. Cur- How^wiH we increase our stu- f IWith the availability a8d low-
fcem you say, -but, nevei&fche less it still$is a problem? Andjfl^you rentjTumors have' it rfsmg two dent body >pQpulation with high- er costs of I State colleges, I
alleviate thelsmall problems, the larger ones become subsequent- or fthree hundred ^ollaFS.iTOie er fcosts? If summer jobs lave thinfe it should be realized that
ly easier to solve. * | rumors have a«been» circulated as scarce this year- as last, many ^students wiiil notkpemain.
P.S. &• | through "hints" by|various in- whereMs 4Ws money| going to lAeUeve that if there are pl« nS
* * structors^ and the ^usual^stuieQi come from? Manys^tudents are lor raising 4Jhe tuition, fthose ift
Special Uvords to administration gossip.. 5 . *?%&%$&* already .reciving loans k and ?a charge ^shQiiW? ask themselves
^ I -realize that fthis problem cannot simply|be solved. I'm Alfter Thanksg£ving^ee#were great many are resiponsiible for Where|the^ t^k<we will-oWaift
not asking for miracles. All I am asking is a piece of your time given a student questionnaire supplementing tofthe tuition the extra money*
feetweejn TOim breaks to thmk over this matter. ''", \ on our personal financial status cost through outside jobs. & 1 Anonymous
January 15, 1971
1 MERCYHURST COLLEGE
PareThrM

Social Science Department Believe n e w dership needed


To Conduct; Evaluation
By4Bob Beck
| h e n .Social Science Student end of the winteifterm, and will
Advisory Board consists of 11 express the s-tudents feedings on
members, 4' from the Sociology the capability of the professor.
0©pt., 4 (from the History Dept.,
2 from the Psychology and *I The regular meetings are held
on Thursday at 6 p. m., in the
faoffl the Political|.Science De- English seminar freonf on tfirst
partment. Each *«• its^ner i>ers floor Egan. These meetings are
wepe picked iby the heads of openr* to students who want to
thek departments. $ Sister M. Anne Francis Cav-
attend and at this time the Sister Carolyn also was a lectur- Currick Brotherhood Award by
anaugh, superior general of the er at the University I of Notre the Temple Men's Club of Erie
Bie boards* first function is board§wall taike ^jjy complaints.
Sisters of Mercy and chairman Dame during; the summer f of "in public recognition ?of her
to develop a questionnaire con- t This |fs the (first attempt to *©f «4he Mercyhurst board | of 1*61. I ff outstanding and distinguished
sisting of three parts, 1) course incorporate students into* tfte trustees, announced Wednesday She has had a number of re- service to the ^people of Erie/*
evaluation, 2) Teacher eyalua- decision making process at the night, January 6, the resigna- search papers published in the 3
£on a) \A"student*polliaibout the department level. Hopefully, tion of Sister M. Carolyn Herr- Journal of Organic Chemistry Under Sister Carolyn's leader-
4taDurse*fThis questionnaire ^uivill other departments a tithe col- mann as president of Mercy- and in the Journal of the Ameri- ship Phase I- of a totally reor-
hurst College. p can Chemical Society. .£ § ganized and reoriented^, aca-
be passed out in the middle and lege wiM take similar initiatives. demic blueprint.* was implement-
Sister Carolyn's ^resignation- Thef Mercyhurst president is ed at the college inf 1967. The
presented* to and accepted by a -member of the ^American programjfof sthree terms and a
i the trustees earlier 4his week- Chemical Society,! the Society! three week Intersession—stress-
becomes effective July 1, 1972. of Sigma Xi J and was an execu- ing independent stud and plac-
tive committee member of the ing greater responsibility on the
The, Mercyhurst president Pennsylvania Association i of
•steps down from the adminis- student inf the educative pro*
C o l l e g e s iand Universities cess—hallmarked a ^genuine in-
trative post having achieved the (PACU)—a position *to which
I goals she fset ^for the college novation Jn 1 American higher
she was elected in (1966 for a education. Phase II—begun Sep-
I when raised from Jfexecuti ve
vice president -and tfean to pres-
three year term. She is current- tember 1970 and incorporating
ly a member of the student rela-
I ident eight years ago. | tions committee of PACU.
plans for off-campus commun-
ity-oriented programs—will I be
E Sister M. ICarolyn Herrmann, Sister Carolyn is afmember of fully developed before Sister
a native of Erie, was educated the board of directors off the Carolyn leaves office.
at Mercyhurst ^College where United Community Services of
she obtained her bachelor of Erie County, the Erie Urban Explaining her resignation
Coalition and has recently com- the college president I said,
arts degree. She received her "Each decadetfbrings with it the
master of science degreefat the pleted her'termfof office on the
University of Minnesota and United Fund (board of directors/ need for a specific typetof pro-
her Ph.D. in chemistry at the gress involving radical change.
She is also the president of
University of Notre Dame. the Commission of Higher Edu- "The,; Sixties jrwere no except
cation of the Religious Sisters tion. il believe 1 that I have led
She was a faculty member in Mercyhurst College through a
the ^departments $<Df chemistry of <Mercy Federation, -1970-72
term. period of planned expansion and
and»biology at Mercyhurst from development, particularly^ the
1939 until 1961 when she was In 1966 Sister Carolyn receiv-
ed the Centennial of Science areas of - institutional govern-
appointed executive fvice presi- ance and educational reform.
dent and dean. She held 'this Award from the University of
4<
post iuntilsher appointment as Notre Dame for her great dis- "However, :Jl feel the college
Mercyljurst College "president in tinction in the fields of science, is tnow ready lor new leader-
1963. f ||. I research, education, manage- ship.! And I believe Mercyhurst

Friday
ment and technology." I College deserves and must, have
Monday In addition to her past. teach-
ing experience at Mercyhurst,
x
Hjj And in February 1970 she was
presented the Rabbi Max C$
the best in dynamic leadership
toskeep it ^moving* forward.'*

Dear $ Book!project
Textbooks Trumps
4& k jk **
Pear Tcwnps:
^•Got ajprdblem? Who doesn't
Right? ?Good that's what. I like
Mercyhurst
Reference Materials to hear,* Finally after years of .. Ch/rfrm&n of the Social Sci-
reading reasonable ifacsimilies, ence Department, Mr. Richard.
tically sensitive subject &d the
Cold W^r Period would* not be
Dear Trumps Arrives! ! KulbiakJ has recently endeavor- condusive to Mr. 3£uj|>iak's in-
Drawing fSupplies *
IDear Trunups will fee like a ed a project to coldecS-and send
wind to* a becalmed sjiip, as rain abroad to several^Communist
tended purpose which is three-
fold: 1) Mr. Kubiak hopes thru
to parched soil |etc. Anyways nations a number of books con- ^uch a iproject as this to ^in-
Notions kids, here's! yourv chance to ex- cerning * Amenlcan
press that secret andlvery real ©oaks which tell a/bout America
Studies, crease the available source ma-
terial which Communist 'nations
problem to Trumps (me). An- histowipaljy an<j soo$aHy<pointing •have on America, 2f*to militate
Souvenirs swers iBririted on a plain *brown out ibothiAimerican4strengthrand
i4
/paper ibag §p /who iwill know it shorfeicoming§ are of prefer-
againstf propaganda, and 3) to
present a broad perspective of
was you thatf wrote it. In all ence.; American and English America. % £
seriousness,^ 1 accept serious Literature and F&glfeh History
f«rclWems tool Seriously! ^Send books are also acceptable. Mr.%Cuibiak ^hdipes to be able
your questions or problems a- to send-^ about 100 jbooks per
Social Committee; Poll Results nonymous if want to, to .any The only boofcslwhieh w4H. be
memft>er|of the iMerctad JStaflf, or uejeoted are those written on
month ^in small packages of
#tree orffour. ^No formal appeal
feave them inUhe Infionaatioji the Cold fWar Period. These for donations has yet*5been
fypes of Music Erefejred Office, j . m 'Sf - ? books'|might|be taken as intui- made,J however, any contribu-
^Out of Ssight! f T '%' {tiohsjiaf books in the aforemen-
Jazz 31 •M (deciding factor In the tive or critical of Communism tioned areas would be weJcom-
types of new records to be pur- jTbanks^ __
Pard&Rock ;f. • f55 Trumps ^nd Sor thJis reason such a poli- ed.
chased^2nd. term) |
passical ,~V,.. » 7
2^decidiog factor in the types
Polk 111 fer%K>tfps to have at the Coiffee
foul
Rock*..I
69
. . . . . . 1 . . . 75
house—WATER MELON* BAI&*
ROOM)
WOMEN LIBERATION
Yes No
160 19
Pinter Weekend ggi.^4..^...*.***.".*:.••**••)
1 11
-MERCYHURST | COLLEGE
Concerts ^^MJ.^*A^..^^^^M^^*M^^4J^^^I^ I
Spring Weekend .j Z • • 148
J 3
Open ^ to iFaculty land Students
152 86 :
£us| Trips ; %....%• | r*
Tuesday, January 19th-7 30 p.m.
fiance iM 54
Zurn, Second Fl • i«
/

fotai Enrollment Mercyhurst ^College 750


Ibtal Response to the Poll •..« ISO rieature|Spetkerj Barbara Starrett, UtefaturelProfessor,
Thank*yo^lor|your Interest Vifla Mada College I
The Social Comirifie^
•MBRCYHURST COLLEGE January il5,1971
Page^ Four _

Numbs—46 Scores by Halves


Intramural Knhrt
% G gF
6 Sa
T
i3 Kin-A's
1 2
Totals
23 16 39
]l 0 2 Knicks
I Sports Gutting
Manning , 0 Narcs—74
35 50 85

BILL DOPIERALA *Games of Dec. 14


McPoland
Thompson
7 0 14
7 0 14 Creghan
G F J
<& 1 23
Williamson 1 0 2 SimMss 4 3 U
Sports Editor Royal Kto-A's|39
• i
G
4
F bT
0 8
Beck
Totals
0 0 0
222 2 46
Pettinelli
Havrilla
12 0 24
7 m
Sortino f f Score by Halves C urreri 0 0 o
iRiley| 3 0 6 > 1 2 Totals Collins
Joyce 1 0 2 0 0 o
Honcos 24 39<63 Marrelli 1 02
l"W
•Powers 7 5 19 19 27 46 Totals
EMHRM SSKS^ NK¥$w
Guytin 1 0 2
Numbs 35 4 74
Misfits—44
Being Sports Editor doesfhave its advantages on oc- Rkhter 1 0 2 Games of Jan. 11
Totals 17 5 39 'Royal Kin-A's -39 McAndrew
casion, and this is one of those times. It gives me a chance Highballers 31 G F 9 0o
Gearhart 0 0o
to appealfto you on behalf of the Tennis Team. As many G F T Sortino 4 0 8 Weiss '"'•
of you know, a spring tour to Florida for training was Mazanowski 5 0 10 Powers 7 0 14 Colavinlenzo
DiSteifano «j 2|L 5 Gallo | 1 0 2 ^ 1 13
planned for them. This trip is to enable the team to get 7*1 15 Joycej 0 0 0
Zielinski
Moryc Totals 21 2 «
an early and excellentfpreparation for their season. They Feinlberg 0*1 l | Murphy 6 •1 13
are to leave shortly after the end of fthe;Winter term, Horvathg 0 0 0 Richter 1 0 2 Score by Halves
and spend five days inf Florida, playittgfmatches each day Totals 14 3 31 Totals 19 1 30 | l l 2 Totals
Score by Halves Narcs W. 34 40*ft
against some of the top small coltege^teams in the area. Knicks—85 Misfits 22 22 44
Kin-A's P I 24? 15 39
G F T
In all, theftrip was tQ|take around ten|days.fPlaying top 1 2 V Totals 5 0
competition at the time of year when most teams in this Highballers 12 19 31 ParkS^
Heiberle
i 0
10
14
area ar4looking%t snow,|is hoped to give your team that |7
Nies 2 12
little extra ^advantage that could be important to having Fessler 11 1 23
a successful season. Fedor 4 0 8
Bukowski 6 0 12
Felix 3 0 6
|However, that old "Bug-a-boo" of any trip, ^money. Totals 4a 3 85
could possibly endanger the extent.to which*the team
would take advantage of the tour. That|is why, as Editor,
Ilcan write and explain to you what*the situation's.^ At
the present time, the team's budgetfis lacking the neces-
sary amount oft funds jneeded to make the trip. Rather
than^'beg" for more money, Dr. feryan, the coach, pro-
posed something that!could raise money, asfwell as add
Narcs—56
:|G F T
Burhenn s
Petinnelili 3 5 11
something to the "social life" on this campus. Whatfwas Havrllla .k 8 3 4l9
envisioned is this & two basketball games, one involving
the men's facultyfand, probably, the top intramural team
Marrelli
Creghan
i
3
9
0 6
2 20
Pharmacy
at? the timcfThe other game would hopefully involve the Collins 0 o of
Curreri 0 0 0
girl's Varsity J team and an opponent to be named later. Totals? 2& 10 36
After these games, a "Campus Party" and possibly a Numbs—64 v •

dance would bejheld. G F T


Manning 4_ 3 11
Gutting * 7 ™~ 1 3*5
I must note the fact that* the (F.K.ffor this project Williamson to 0 o|
has not%een givep at* the time of this writing. Once the Thompson 7 0 14 Your Center for Health
"go-ahead" would be given, exact details as to sitesjcosts Kuhrt 7 3 17
and other essentials could be taken care of. This "Orange! •McPoland 8 1 17 and Cosmetic Needs
Juice Benefit" would go a long way towards seeing that B e c k ^ ^ 0 0 OS
the fteam JgotHhe chance to go to Florida! and prepare Totals # H27 10 64 'SB

themselves fully Ifor ft heir first year|( and this school's) Scores byfHalves *-

of Intercollegiate competition. | |fe f ? | | 1 2 Totals •

Narcs 32 24 156
1 ilknow as you are dreading this there *will be those (Numbs £ 28 36 64
who will say "Why should they get to gogto Florida with Games,of January 6 i

G Fa^Rr
iny mojiey!'? The|fact of the matter is that if Mercyhurst Palladino
%i

Corner of 38th St. and Pine Ave.


0 0 0
is to be the national "powerhouse" Sinftennis that they! DiiStefiano 0 4
hope to be, a Spring tour of this sort is necessary- In com- • M

peting with schools from the warmer climates in national! Horvath fo|p 0
Erie, Penna. 16504
•: v

Mazanowski 7 fo 14
tournaments, |the olny Northern schools that make good Feiniberg S 1 0 2
Recounts of themselves are those whichjjinclude a Southern Moryc 1 !? 0 14
tour for their f'Spring training." Two examples of this Barron| 0 0 0
are East Stroudsburg, which finishedlthird fin the NCAA Koehler 0 0 0
College Division Tournament two years ago, and Edinboro, Totals | . , • i 17 0 34
hich finished 11th out|of 60 teams, in the NAIA Na- Narcs--104f
ionals last summer,!Above all, I hope you would remem- \ G| F T
ber that the tennis team is representing you and your,
school. iMany| people are anxiousl#awaiting the spring
in order to prove, as they hope, thattMercyhurst's entry
*Greghan
Simkiss
vuirreri i
•16 | 2 34
14 0 28
| p gO 0 |
Fashions by
Ooffins^k; | 0 0 0
into intercollegiate, athletics and co-educational as well,
wa& a big mistake. § f Pettineflft
Havrflla?
Totals £
15 0 30
| 6 0 12
• M.2 2 104
ROS LLE T"

I I I hope that ii| this|plan. is accepted, as many of you


as possible would|support your team.lNot only wouldlyou 1920 East !38th Street
«-"

be supporting the team, but also*you could add something | Erie, Pennsylvania
to the Social Life ( ? ) " here atjMercyhurst. *
Telephonel864-7011

K1EP A COOL, COOL HEAD i


• •

WITH [Oil

Distinctive Styles in j
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m HS
m
Dreaaea • Sportswear • SAceessoriei
LO_
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L"JC

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Wffl

T * M |. JScore by Halves
T""" ». | ir^gf Totals * *

(Highballers 16 16 34
Narcs 44 60 m 4 m

Honchos—63
CRAY m^HOf"' ij
t ^B
ss 11 ^O
:
F|T
ail $. 23
Open Monday* and!rriday]9:00 5 J L 9

Turos f MX- | e a 13
•15 EAST 26th STREET Diimupi h ¥fi 9 1 19
10% Discount $o MiMercyhurst Student!
Harris t t ^ 3j o te
Schianz I 4" i? a m
Totals | 1 30 ^3 63

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