the merciad, april 29, 1983

9
•- r Bishop Myer s S cholarship To Attract BlacrdStudents By Frances M. Moavero Merciad News Editor A scholarship program in the honor of blac k clergymen, Bishop Jefferson Davis Myers and the Reverend Ernest Smith, has been initiated to attract more black students from the Brie diocese to Mercyhurst College. Tyrone Moore, ^director of Career Services and chairman of the; scholarship funds selection committee said -this scholarship will provide the necessary incen- tive to bring students to Mer- cyhurst^ while at the same time provide them with an incentive to continue residi ng in Erie. As many astnine high school seniors can become the recipient of the scholarship, Moore said. However, one of the scholarships is not based on financial need. According to sMoore, the Bishop Myers scholarship is not necessarily based on financial need while the Rev. Smith award is designed to aid black students who may need financial support. Potential applicants must be nominated through their parish pastor and are to be selected as a recipient, by various ad- ministrators and faculty members of the co llege who *, are on the selection committee. Members in- clude: Andrew Roth, director of admissions; Miriam Maschank, fresh men studies; fina ncia lJ aid director, {Cathy Crawford; and Charlene Gee, assistant professor of foods and nutrition. Students must haveji achieved high academic standing in their senior class as well as demonstrated community service and involvement within their parish to be considered as a poten- tial applicant. Moore said this scholarship is si miliar to the Bishop Watson scholarship program which was initiated in 1982. The main objective of this scholarship is to "bring in a high quality student who may have gone to .other institutions," Moore said. |Bishop Myers, deceased, jand Rev. Smith, 89, a retired parish pastor were honored with Wilis scholarship in their names because of their combined years of service to the Erie community. Moore said, "We have honored them for their significant con- tributions to the Erie community for their combined efforts of over 90 years as pastors." MSG Prepares For Brenner; New Officersfiegin Next Week By Darlene Nolan MERCIAD Staff Reporter At the Mercyhurst Student Government (MSG) meeting on Tuesday, April 26, Wydetta Carter reported on *the David Brenner concert that will be held tomorrow night at 8:00 p.m. in the Campus Center. " Da vidl Bren ner tickets will be sold Saturday, April 30 from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. in the MSG office "Tickets will also go on sale at 6:00 p.m. at the door of the Campus Center, according to Carter. MSG president Rich Lanzillo explained that next week the new* ly elected MSG officers and representatives will take over for the remainder of tbe year. "I know Dave (Robinson) and the new ' officers and represen- tatives will continue to run MSG with the power student govern- ment has always had," said Lanzillo. Laura Copney, SAC Chairper- son, announced that there will be a "mystic night" this evening from 7:30 to 9:30 in the Student Union. Things such as hand- writing analysis, rock analysis and body aura will be; 1 performed at "mystic night", according to Copney. The movie for Sunday. May 1, is Young Doctors In Love. The movie will be shown at 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. in the Zurn Recital Hail. Doors Open for the David Brenner Concert Four characters from the ballet "Gaite Parisienne," Michael Fuhrman, Heather Powers, Jean Weber and Stephanie Vollmer, pose among several art works to be feat ured at the Arts Gala at the Warner Theatre on May 7. See related story on page 4. 1 Dr. Gar ve y To BelEvaluated 1 Enteri ng Last Yea r Of C ontract » » By Carl a J. Anderson MERCIAD Assistant Editor Dr. William P. Garvey, Mer- cyhurst president appointed in 1980, will be entering the fourth and final year of his contract and has requested that an evaluation of his terms a s) president be performed. \ £' According to Jane Theuerkauf, chairperson of the Board of Trustees, 'IHHe's the kind of guy wh o wants-things done right. ^Trustee William Sennett, chairperson of the 'Presidential Review Committee, has announc- ed that the committee will seek opinio ns of th e ^faculty, ad- ministration, students and;: the Board of Trustees. The committee consists of the following trustees: William Sen- nett, Jane Theuerkauf, Sr. Eustace Taylor, J. Robert Baldwin,! Dr. Barry Grossman, Joy Kolb, and Richard Lanzillo. Dr. Garvey explained that there 7:15 p.m. Saturday evening Tickets available at the door. are two main reasons why he re- quested the evaluation: "My con- tract is for four years, allowing a one year notice to seek replace- ment if necessary, or to renew the contract and plan for the future. Secondly, it is time to determine if the Mercyhurst community is satisfied with the growth of the college." . f j The growth and development of the college is important Ho everybody, and people should be able to express themselves, said Garvey. "The president should be evaluated to appraise the past and measure the future. We need to know what people think. This is an opportunity for the whole community to stop and reflect on the progress of; the college," he added. J According to Dr. Garvey, or- dinarily at colleges and univer- sities, die Board of Trustees solely evaluates and makes decisions concerning the president of its in- stitution. "I've been a part of Mercyhurst for 20 years and I'm sensitive to what all the people I work with think," said Dr. Garvey. Joy Kolb, faculty member, president of the College Senate and a member of the Board of Trustees, is responsible for soliciting opinions from the ad- ministration. "I am personally in- terviewing the president's im- mediate staff and administrators. I am asking them to perceive Dr. Garvey's strengths, weaknesses. and their overall views about him and the college," said Kolb. After the interviews are .com - pleted, Kolb will write a synopsis of the results and give it to the Presidential Review Committee. The committee in turn will make recommendations to [the full Board of Trustees. "It's time consuming, but an excellent idea. The people at the college have the best knowledge of the day-to-day operations. The evaluation is a good technique," commented Kolb. "Dr. Grossman is the represen- tative on the Board of Trustees serving on the Faculty Policies Committee," said Edward Gallagher who is collecting evaluation results from faculty members. Gallagher explained that the evaluation form asks that faculty respond as honestly as possible to the questions. "Faculty are asked to perceive the president's strengths, weaknesses and if they would favor his retention as presi- dent," said Gallagher. "The evaluation encompasses areas that are good and improvements that could be made. It is not a negative process. It's praise and construc- tive criticism when in order," commented Gallagher. He explained that Grossman will collect the faculty input and formulate a final summary. The summary will then be given to the See Garvey on page 2

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Page 1: The Merciad, April 29, 1983

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Bishop Myers ScholarshipTo Attract BlacrdStudentsBy FrancesM. Moavero

Merciad News EditorA scholarship program in the

honor of black clergymen, BishopJefferson Davis Myers and theReverend Ernest Smith, has beeninitiated to attract more blackstudents from the Brie diocese toMercyhurst College.

Tyrone Moore, director ofCareer Services and chairman ofthe; scholarship funds selectioncommittee said -this scholarshipwill provide the necessary incen-tive to bring students to Mer-cyhurst while at the same time

provide them with an incentive tocontinue residing in Erie.As many astnine high school

seniors can become the recipientof the scholarship, Moore said.However, one of the scholarshipsis not based on financial need.

According to sMoore, theBishop Myers scholarship is notnecessarily based on financialneed while the Rev. Smith awardis designed to aid black studentswho may need financial support.

Potential applicants must benominated through their parishpastor and are to be selected as arecipient, by various ad-ministrators and faculty membersof the co llege who *,are on the

selection committee. Members in-clude: Andrew Roth, director ofadmissions; Miriam Maschank,freshmen studies; fina ncia lJ aiddirector, {Cathy Crawford; andCharlene Gee, assistant professorof foods and nutrition.

Students must haveji achievedhigh academic standing in theirs e n i o r c lass as well asdemonstrated community serviceand involvement within theirparish to be considered as a poten-tial applicant.

Moore said this scholarship is

si miliar to the Bishop Watsonscholarship program which wasinitiated in 1982.

The main objective of thisscholarship is to "bring in a highquality student who may havegone to .other institutions,"Moore said.

|Bishop Myers, deceased,jandRev. Smith, 89, a retired parishpastor were honored with Wilisscholarship in their names becauseof their combined years of serviceto the Erie community.

Moore said, "We have honoredthem for their significant con-tributions to the Erie communityfor their combined efforts of over90 years as pastors."

MSG Prepares For Brenner;New Officersfiegin Next Week

By Darlene NolanMERCIAD Staff Reporter

At the • Mercyhurst StudentGovernment (MSG) meeting onTuesday, April 26, WydettaCarter reported on *the DavidBrenner concert that will be heldtomorrow night at 8:00 p.m. inthe Campus Center. "

Da vidl Brenner tickets will besold Saturday, April 30 from10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. in theMSG office"Tickets will also goon sale at 6:00 p.m. at the door ofthe Campus Center, according toCarter.

MSG president Rich Lanzilloexplained that next week the new*ly elected MSG officers andrepresentatives will take over forthe remainder of tbe year.

"I know Dave (Robinson) andthe new ' officers and represen-tatives will continue to run MSGwith the power student govern-ment has always had," saidLanzillo.

Laura Copney, SAC Chairper-son, announced that there will bea "mystic night" this eveningfrom 7:30 to 9:30 in the StudentUnion. Things such as hand-writing analysis, rock analysis andbody aura will be;1 performed at"mystic night", according toCopney.

The movie for Sunday. May 1,is Young Doctors In Love. Themovie will be shown at 7:00 and9:30 p.m. in the Zurn RecitalHail.

DoorsOpenfor the

David Brenner Concert

Four characters from the ballet "Gaite Parisienne," Michael Fuhrman, Heather Powers, Jean Weber anStephanie Vollmer, pose among several art works to be featured at the Arts Gala at the Warner Theatre May 7. See related story on page4. s£ 1

Dr. Garvey To BelEvaluated1

Entering Last Year Of Contract

» »

By Carl a J. AndersonMERCIAD Assistant EditorDr. William P. Garvey, Mer-

cyhurst president appointed in1980, will be entering the fourthand final year of his contract andhas requested that an evaluationof his terms a s) president beperformed. \ £'

According to Jane Theuerkauf,chairperson of the Board ofTrustees, 'IHHe's the kind of guywh o wants-things done right.

^Trustee Wil l i am Senne t t ,chairperson of the 'PresidentialReview Committee, has announc-ed that the committee will seekopinio ns o f th e ^faculty, ad-ministration, students and;: theBoard of T rustees.

The committee consists of thefollowing trustees: William Sen-nett, Jane Theuerkauf, Sr.Eustace Taylor, J . Rober t

Baldw in,! Dr. Barry Grossman,Joy Kolb, and Richard Lanzillo.Dr. Garvey explained that there

7:15 p.m. Saturday eveningTickets available at the door.

are two main reasons why he re-quested the evaluation: "My con-tract is for four years, allowing a

one year notice to seek replace-ment if necessary, or to renew thecontract and plan for the future.Secondly, it is time to determine ifthe Mercyhurst community issatisfied with the growth of thecollege." .fj

The growth and development ofthe college is important Hoeverybody, and people should beable to express themselves,saidGarvey. "The president should beevaluated to appraise the past andmeasure the future. We need toknow what people think. This isan opportunity for the wholecommunity to stop and reflect onthe progress of; the college," headded. J

According to Dr. Garvey, or-dinarily at colleges and univer-sities, die Board of Trustees solelyevaluates and makes decisionsconcerning the president of its in-stitution. "I've been a part ofMercyhurst for 20 years and I'msensitive to what all the people Iwork with think," said Dr.Garvey.

Joy Kolb, faculty member,president of the College Senateand a member of the Board ofTrustees, is responsible forsoliciting opinions from the ad-ministration. "I am personally in-terviewing the president's im-mediate staff and administrators.I am asking them to perceive Dr.Garvey's strengths, weaknesses.

and their overall views about hiand the college," said Kolb.

After the interviews are .com

pleted, Kolb will write a synopof the results and give it to tPresidential Review CommitteThe committee in turn will marecommendations to [the fuBoard of Trustees.

"It's time consuming, but aexcellent idea. The people at tcollege have the best knowledgethe day-to-day operations. Tevaluation is a good techniquecommented Kolb.

"Dr. Grossman is the representative on the Board of Trusteserving on the Faculty PoliciC o m m i t t e e , " s a i d E d w a rGallagher who is collectievaluation results from faculmembers.

Gallagher explained that thevaluation form asks that faculrespond as honestly as possiblethe questions. "Faculty are asketo perceive the president'sstrengths, weaknesses and if thwould favor his retention as presdent," said Gallagher. "Thevaluation encompasses areas thare good and improvements thatcould be made. It is not a negatiprocess. It's praise and constructive criticism when in ordercommented Gallagher.

He explained that Grossmawill collect the faculty inputandformulate a final summary. Thsummary will then be given to t

See Garvey on page

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Curtains UpOn The'Hurst's Own1

The J Dan ce,* Art, Music, and Hotel-Restaurant Manage-i ment departments will proudly represent Mercyhurst at the

college's first-ever "Arts Gala" ito be held May 7 at the

Warner Theatre in downtown Brie. * fw . , fy^By taking the student a nd faculty talent off-campus for thecity of Erie to appreciate and by superbly planning and com-bining their efforts, the departments involved make the Galaa rare event which should not be missed. Before anyonegraduates from a strong liberal arts college like Mercyhurst,he or she owe it to themselves to become exposed to dance,music, and art and become a patron of all campus presenta-tions in those areas. -*% •%>

When a college can offer a ballet, art exhibit, concert, andreception all in on e evening at the most grand theatre in town,it has proven itself as a leader in the art world.

The MERCIAD extends its congratulations to all thosewhose time and talent will make the "Arts Gala" a night toremember in Erie.

G a r v e ycontinued from page 1

Presidentials Review Committee,and then < to the entire Board ofTrustees.? !££ I Ifj?• Mercyhurst Student Govern-

ment President Richard Lanzillois a member of the Board ofTrustees and is responsible forgetting student opinions about thepresident's performance.

••'We have appointed freshmanJo-Ann Israel to do the samplingof the Mercyhurst students," saidLanzillo.

He explained that .Israel isdeveloping two* surveys. Onesurvey will be given to juniors andseniors. It is set up in a com-parative manner that encompassesgrowth changes of the college,perceiving the value of theirdiploma, and t how their depart-ment has changed. '\ 'C.

The second survey was designedfor freshmen and sophomores. Itincludes questions dealing withthe value they place on theireducation, perception of the role.of the president, institutionalgrowth eand accessibility of the

president, according to Lanzillo."We are aiming for a represen-

tative cross-section of thestudents. We want a sampling ofat least 60 students," he added.

A summary of the results willbe compiled and presented to thepresidential Review Committee.Then, a report will be given to thelull Board of Trustees. 'L i

"Hopefully beneficial informa-tion will surfaceout of the evalua-tions," commented Lanzillo., According to Dr. Garvey,William Sennett, the chairpersonof the Presidential Review Com-mittee, will receive all of theevaluations by i approximatelyMay 7. It will take about thirtydays to review the information,and then a recommendation willbe presented to the Board ofTrustees who will make the finaldecision regarding Dr. Garvey'srenewal as president in 1984.

"I think my job needs, to befinished," said Dr. Garvey. "Iwant to raise four or five milliondollars for the future of the col-lege," he added, k J i.*V.

Letter

Student DefendsRA. Selection i*.Editor's Note: Due to a printing

error in last week's MERCIAD, aletter to the editor was not printedwhile an article about the MSGRep elections and SAC officerselections was printed in its place

on page 2. The letter, written byDonna Satmary, appears bdow.The paper apologizes for theerror.Dear Editor: - *

This? letter is in response to"Students Question SelectionProcess," April IS, by Sue Tarnoand Maria Santangelo. A s an ex-isting Resident Assistant recentlyre-hired for the 83-84 academicyear, I have experiencedtwo Resi-dent Assistant Interviews. ' fl

It should be pointed out thatthe process is more than just aninterview. The student is requiredto evaluate his/her selfand write a

brief paragraph concerning theirqualifications. Three additionalevaluation forms are requested to

be handed out to those ithe applicant feels wimend them.

The interview itselfducted in such a manner asthe applicant ' an ideasituations he/she may if hired as a Resident Situations are also throwapplicants by Phyllis ASeniorrJt.A.s. This "Roing" is used to test the areactions, confidence ato deal with unusual, apected situations.

An R.A. not only hawith those on their flwhole, but on a one-on-the interviewprovides a simmosphere. I ask you, feels belittled after a'ses"Let's Pretend," how going to feel when theyintoxicated u students damaging the dorm or twmates who conflict and ble objects as their wefor one, am satisfiedprocess.

Donna SatmaryFirst flo or BaldwinResident Assistant

«

r\

Tiff MERCIAD welcomesexpressions of Its readers InOpinion". All letters must be and should contain an addretelephone number, to be useverification^ > purposes Contributions will be editgrammatical or spelling Letters must be submitted byTuesdays preceding publicati

THE MERCIAD

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For P#t«'s Saker -

Advisor fcv

TributeiTo The MerciadI.was never very musically in-

clined, and the (result: the busysounds of a newsroom'-/\ withtypewriters, VDTs, telephones allworking at full blast*/ representmusic to my ears. •

Most of those sounds, industrybehind me, still generatea pulsingbeat - but now from the thirdfloor of Old Main, the presenthome of THE MERCIAD.

The music grows louder asWednesday draws nearer. Bythen, th e sound levelsare akin to ajazz workshop.

Reporters scurry in and out.But there is organization in theapparent confusion. Editors,shirtsleeves rolled up (when theweather's nice), copy pencilspro-truding from behind ears likeantennae akimb o, dash from deskto desk. The telephone neverseems to stop ringing.

Typists are hammering away atthe tools of their trade, trying tosmooth out rough copy droppedon, their desks while editors ex-amine page dummies - trying tomake all of Mercy hurst's news Titto print', f it the: pages of theiweek.

The clock on the wall ticksaway a lot faster on Wednesdaythan most days of the week.Deadline is at hand. The pressesroll Thursday. -.; • t

'Last minute checks of advertis-ing are made. Tardy reporters,with late stories, are sought byeditors whosetime is running o ut.

A last minute'story may alsohave been assigned and everyonebegins hoping it was: worth thewait, the extra time / hopingthere's enough to fit thespace leftfor a potential major story. fi\

This year's >editor, Donna J.Peterson, has been a marvel. Injust a fewweeks she will graduate.She's supervised a staff of 42 thisyear, a record number which in-cludes a 3:1 ratio of non-majorsto comm unication majors. I.

She's beena diplomat, handlingstaff relations well. Why'severybody so happy? Well, myobservation has been that staffmembers take a great deal of pridein the product: THE MERCIAD.She instills it in them.

She's been a teacher, as well,working with new staff membersand veterans alike. The newspaperis a pre-professional practicumfor majors and an outlet forUlents donated by non-majors.Her, professional attitude carriesover to her staff. ^ H L 1

And she's had a lot of help

from talents suchASCarla Ander-son, this year's assistant editor;

Richard Garcia £Martha J Camp, feature editor;Fran Moavero, news editor;advertising manager KathyToscano; newly appointedbusiness manager Darlene Nolan,who also doubles as a»reporter;Amy Wood worth, an art majorwho's now circulation managerand a reporter; Karen Merkle, astellar reporter who hasn't misseda week yet; newcomer ChristineChemielewski.iiour London cor-respondent and-: many, manymore. \

A newspaper -without talentedstaff members isn't much of aread. And talented staff memberswithout good leadership don'tre-main motivated long. Goodleaders can attract talentedstaffers. f i

And people aren't happy if theleadership is heavy-handed; theydon't learn without example; they

don't produce without direction;they don't stay long withoutpraise; and they won't be accurateif editors don't demand thehighest standards.

And an advisor without areliable leadership cadre couldend up with ulcers. Fortunately, Ididn't this year.

Reliability is a • trademark ofDonna's. She's studied com-munication and has become a pro-per practitioner: she com-municatesup and down the chain,followsup on every item, large orsmall. If shesays Til see you at 2p.m .,' she's there early. &^

She's not? afraid to make deci-sions, and in newspapering, youhaven't got a lot of time to put offuntil tomorrow. She never puts

things off.Yet, she's also managed towinpraise at Hamot Medical Centerwhere she has interned sinceJanuary in the office ofcommuni-ty affairs. As an intern, she has

SELF KYPHOSIS WORKSHOPS jWilliam Vorsheck, Erie Institute of Hypnosis, willpresent a series on the subject Sell Hypnosis and itsCreative Applications beginningMonday, May 2 at7 p.m. at the college. The classes will enable par-t icipants to use techniques oi self hypnosis and theskill for self- improvement, relaxation, and creativi-tv. For further information call 825-0296. f

redesigned a major publication;

written many features which havebeen published locally; helpedwith a major news conference;learned word processing; *putplanning theories* into practiceand still found time to maintainhigh academic performance inclassrooms here. }&

I have been in newspapers forover 11 years and in public rela-tions for 16, and I'll tell you thatI've seen people in both fields,with a.lot more experience, whowere miles behind Donna.«, jLi

My only real criticism as an ad-visor would be that she doesn'ttake enough time off.

•Next year's editor is going tohave it tough. Peterson's a toughact to follow. f

Richard Garcia is a visitingAssistant Professor of Com-munications at Mercyhurst.

Successful Women ]Workshops To Begin

SUCCESSFUL WOMEN: IM-AGES^AND REALITY will bepresented in four workshopsdesigned for thewoman interestedin developing and furthering hercareer and image. Offered underMercyhurst College's Officet ofCommunity ^Education, theworkshops will be presented eachThursday morning in May at 7:30a.m. and ending at 9:30 a.m.Breakfast is included in the priceof $15.00 per seminar or seriesprice of $55.00 for all four

breakfast seminars.Subject areas for the workshop

are as follows: Thursday, May "Influencing Management Decsions";* Thursday, [May 12"Dressing *for Success"; Thurday, May 19, "Communicatinfor Effectiveness"; and Thurday, May 26, "Putting Xour BFace Forward."

To register for the classes, for information, call the Office Community Education 825-0296. ft I

Desire A CareerIn Human Services:School & Community?

"~— — — — — — — — *~—

TheVfollowing;Counselor Education Degree and Certification programs",areavailable at Indiana University of Pennsylvania: . ,f * ,. .

•The Master of Education Degree IGraduates are certified to function as elementary andsecondary school . :

counselors,vj*The Master of Arts Degree in Counseling Services

Preparation for employment in community counseling agencies. i*The Master of Arts Degree in Student Personnel Services

Preparation for employment in all areas of student personnel services inhigher education.

•Post Masters Certification ProgramGraduates are prepared to function as supervisors of guidance services andsupervisors of pupil personnel services for basic education K.-12.

I*Doctor of Education DegreeGraduates are prepared to function as managers of human services in schooland community settings.

I GENERAL INFORMATION

Graduate Record Examination is required/GENERAL (aptitude) TEST .Education degrees or teaching credentials are not required for admission to1UP

Counselor Education programs but are recommended for those desiring employment

in school settings.Graduate assistantships with waiver of tuition areavailable .on a competitivebasis.For further information, complete the form below and send to:Department of Counselor Education

Indiana, PA 15705Phone: (412) 357-2306Name .. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^School AddressCollege/ University and MajorDegree and Year _ _ _ _ _

THE MERCIAD

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I

Arts Gala To Be An Evening Ofa Total Entertainment

By Martha CampMERCIAD Feature Editor

Editor's Note: This Is the secondstory In a series promoting the"ARTS GALA'9 to be held onMay 7 at 8 p.m. at the WarnerTheatrejln downtown Erie. TheMercyhurst College DanceDepartment will present twoballets, the 'D'Angelo SchoolofMusic will provide intermissionentertainment,' a pre-performancereception will he hosted by theHotel/Restaurant .ManagementDepartment, and a lobby exhibitwill feature the works of collegeart faculty members and students.The following article outlines thecontributions of the latter threedepartments t o : the "ARTSGALA."

Visitors t o the Wamer Theatreon May 7 will enter an evening of

total entertainment, with theirevery sense played upon.*Greeted at the door by waiters

in black ties and tails, they will beescorted Into a sumptuousWarnerLobby filled with the artistic ef-forts of some of Mercyhurst'smost talented artists.

While browsing through thepaintings, prints, fabric andceramic works, guests will sampleculinary delicacies and*sip wine,served jby HRM Departmentwaiters.^

Led into the theatre proper andseated, guests will be transportedto Paris in the 1890's - to anightclub filled with laughter anddancing.

When the dancers have[hadtheir fill, and have all found true

love, the curtain will close for achange of scene. Meanwhile,guests will be entertained withselections arranged by theD'Angelo School of Music.

The evening is not complete yet.Again, the curtain will rise— thistime on a high-spirited, fancifuldance entitled "The MinstrelShow," V : $

This is the first time that Mer-cyhurst will undertake this type ofpresentation for the Erie com-munity. It is a group effort offour departments: Art, Dance,HRM and Music. * -t

Participating in: the Art showwill jbe instructors: Dan Burke,Marsha Cisek, Tom Hubert,

Ernest Mauthe, Joseph Pizzat,Mary Rosiak and Shelle Barron.

They will display paintings, tap-ings, ceramic pieces, fabric pain-tings, wall hangings, prints anddrawings in a one-night show,specifically for this gala.

Musical {interludes will bepresented by D'Angelo Schoolfaculty and students and perform-ed by Sam Rotman, along withArt Martone, baritone; Julie An-nunziata, pianist; and Leslie Cur-tis and Peggy Monroe, flutists.

Tickets for this evening ofentertainment are $5 for thegeneral public and SI formembers of the Mercyhurst com-munity. For information andreservations, call 825-0256.

YOUWAKE UP

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BUT NEVER AffENOEft

THE OL DFOOD I N TH E BACH OF YOUR REFRIGERATORPftOMES SBHTlNENT LIFE,,, 1

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HRMPRESENHOTEL

The Hotel RestauraManagement Departmwill be sponso ring a

c presentation, 'HotelMonday, May 2 in 20Main at 8 p.m. The fibased on Arthur Hail

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involves one of the grand and privately ohote ls. The story alsowith the rise of the m

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THE MERCI AD

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Brenner Arrives TomorrowTickets On Sale Until Showtime

By Teresa TracyMERCIADStaff Reporter -

Tomorrow morning, DavidBrennerwill be arriving in Eriefora Saturday night performancescheduled at 8 p.m. in the Mer-cyhurst Campus Center.^ While in town, Brenner will bestaying at the Erie Hilton.

According to Wydetta Carter,MSG Rep. and chairperson of theBrenner event, there have beenapproximately 1250 tickets soldand sales were boosted somewhatby his appearance at Mercyhurstbeing mentioned * on the TonightShow last Wednesday. Carter ad-ded that Brenner's visit to* Eriewas also mentioned in U.S.A.Today.

Carter does not foresee a con-flict in ticket sales with the up-coming George Carlin show at the

Warner Theatre May 12, sincethey had begun advertising for theBrenner show three weeks earlier.

"I think they attract twodif-ferent crowds,'* commentedCarter. i ^ f

Tickets will be on sale in theMSG office Saturday from 10a.m. to4 p.m. and from6 p.m. to8 p.m. Saturday evening at theCampus Center ticket bo oth.

"It should be a good show,"said Carter,| " I think everyoneneeds a break around now."

Magician Bob Borgiawill be thewarm-up act for David Brenner.Borgia has been j a magician forthe past three years and hasdeveloped an act consisting of il-lusions, escapes, birds and rab-bits, blended with humor!andcomedy. Borgiawill precede Bren-ner at 8:00 p.m.

Fall Term SchedulesAvailable May 9thRegistration for Fall Term will

be held May 16, 17, and18 in theBlue R oom and May 19 and 20 inthe Registrar's Office, accordingto Academic"Dean Dr. DavidPalmer. j •

Schedules* for Fall Termregistrationwill be available in theRegistrar's Office onhMonday,May 9.

-There will be some schedulingchanges for Fall Term due to the

recent leasing of St. Mark'sSeminary on East* GrandviewBlvd. Dean Palmer stated that allclasses in Music, Hotel-Restaurant Management, and theMercyhurst Career Institute willbe -scheduled at St. Mark'sCenter.

To accommodate all studentswho must attend classes at bothSt. Mark's Center and on theMercyhurst B campus, the times

You Are IniritedTo A Charily Softball Game

WMCY, Mercyhurst

WLKK

To benefit theErie;Community Food Bank

Any donations accepted.

Game begins at 1:00 p.m.Saturday May 14 at the*Mercyhurst

Baseball Field

Immediately following:

WMCY vs.The MfiRCMP

Wydetta Carter

between all classes have been ex-tended to 15 minutes rather than

the normal 10 minutes. The timespent- in class'will remain thesame. ?

In addition, P almer said thatlunch will be available in the St.Mark's ^cafeteria for thosestudents who attend classes at theCenter right beforethe lunch hour(11:00 - 12:00) or right after thelunch hour (12:30-|l:30). An ar-rangement £ has been made withKC Foods toperm i t board-payingstudents to eat in the St. Mark'scafeteria under these conditions.

Any registration questions canbe directed to the Dean's Office.

D'Angelo School ofMusic

presents

MUSIC0F

ANTONIO VIVALDI

': featuring*Mercyhurst College

Concert ChoirWayside United

Presbyterian ChancelChoir

Members from the Erie^Philharmonic Chorus

and thetyivaldi Camerata

OrchestraFrancesco Santelli, Guest

Conductor

Christ the King ChapelMercyhurst CollegeErie, Pennsylvania

. Sunday AfternoonMay 11983

3:15 PM

AdmissionAdults $3.00

Students $1.50

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THE MERCIAD

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College Job M aifcet

The Class Of'83To Experience Tough YearDespite some encouraging signs

that the nation's economy may bestarting to pull out of the worstAmerican recession since WorldWar II, the recovery has yet toshow u p on college campuses, andprobably won't in time to helpthis spring's,graduates find jobsright away, according to the Col-lege Press Service (CPS). H

In fact, campus recruiting andthe number of job offers* tograduating seniors are down againthis spring, while experts say star-ting salaries are lagging behindeven the declining inflationrate.*'.

"It's as depressing as theysay," commented Tyrone Moore,director of career planning andCo-op education at Mercy hurst."Reaganomics has a tremendousimpact on corporate America,small industry, schools, and

public agencies/' he added."Last year was a tough year,and this year's going to be evenworse," warns Victor Lindquist,placement chief at NorthwesternUniversity and director offcEn-dicott Report.

Jack Shingleton, MichiganState's placement director andcoordinator of the school's an-nual national student job surveysays that, "For the class of '83,it'll be the toughest year." Conse-quently,: the job market will bemore crowded than ever, withfewer job s available as companiescontinue to delay hiring newemployees. "There will be1,300,000 students graduating t hisspring, and a million jobs open,"he added. 1

Liberal arts major will have thehardest time finding work, accor-ding to Shingleton's study. Jobsare better for electrical engineers,computer science, business andother engineering!grads, in thatorder.!But, there are still 12 per-cent fewer engineering positionsavailable this year than last year,the College Placement Councilreports. Similarly, even schoolsthat are faring relatively well thisspring are in terrible shape.

Moore explained that variouscompanies are assigning theiremployees extra job respon-sibilities, rather than hiringanother worker for a positionwhen people retire. Then, nocapital for new employees has tobe used. * ? i

At New Mexico State Universi-ty, the number of employersrecruiting on campus is down to44 percent, Placement DirectorSteven Sal way says. Companya f t e r c o m p a n y c a n c e l l e drecruiting visits, leaving seniors'job search nothing short of "hor-rendous," he added. In addition,25 percent of the firms scheduledto interview at Kentucky this spr-ing cancelled because they "justaren't recruiting in order to savemoneys * said Drema Howard?UK's placement director.

"We're down about 36 percentfrom a year ago in the number ofrecruiters, and we have 18 percentfewer students being interview-ed," said Oregon State PlacementDirector Marjorie McBride. "Inthe old days we'd have had 200 to300 recruiters on campus in the

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Tyrone Moore"A trend today is that students

are going on to post-graduatestudy. I feel this reflects theunemployment situation," saidMoore.

Even if the recovery-'begins towhittle away at the unemploymentrate, the blue collar workers willbe brought back first, Then therewill be a considerable lag beforecompanies start hiring white col-lar people, said Shingleton.

"Mercyhurst students need tounderstand that there are anumber of- positions! available.But the average graduate won'tget in, as businesses pick thecream of the crop," * reflectedMoore. S e e J o b s o n p a g e 7

TRADE

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Going to McDonald's* is almostasmuch a part of school as going to class.You've made us the place to meet, totalk, to have a good ime, o celebrateyour victories and help forget defeats.k You've made McDonald's morethan just another place to eat. Andthat's why, at McDonald's, "we do itall for you.*" s

'Hurst Laker'

Cheerleaders SelectedThe Mercyhurst College Laker

cheer lead ing / squad has beenselected for the 1983-84 season.f^The new cheerleading membersare: freshmen, Lynn Martin/Lynn Fisher and Jeanne Nystrom,and sophomore Laura Ruby. Thetwo, alternates are freshmen SuePrennatt and Ann Corvin.i . *,? Joining the squad are the retur-

ning cheerleaders, juniors JaniceFury.* and Sandy Solle jandsophomores MaureenO'Hara andTina Andrako.

•w

"Tryouts as a wholetremely well. I feel thagirls who tried out werecandidates," • said senDilluvio, former checaptain. -.*'[J The judges for the cheselection were: Gina Mary Lynn .Miller, Winiarczyk, Pat ,tWeisWolper and Daryl Geor

},"Next year's squad hapotential and they will together," said Dilluvio

Sill

* * •If you are a third-term freshman and•haveaQ.P.A. of 3.0 or higher 5 - | \~*are interested in challenging, enriching classroomexperiences J

•would like to graduate with the distinction of anhonors degree j* ^ •fcy$*^il %

You should apply for admission-to the Eg an Scholars program by May 6.1983. Forms aro on the bulletin board outside the office of Dr. VivettaPetronio, Director of the program. Interviews will be scheduled after ap-plications are submitted. For questions, contact Dr. Petronio at her office,Preston 220 or ext. 315.

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THE MERCIAD

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APRIL29,1983 * * T . " - JMfc t tS . . ' - : - ' " i - -• • ~ * PAGE

HELP WANTED

Earn J500 or more each'schoolyear. Flexible hours. Monthlypayment for placingposters Oncampus. Bonus based on results.P r i z e s , a w a r d e d ; a s w e l l .800-5264)883

LOSTMan's watch, found near thepond on April26. Contact securi-ty at ext. 304 to give description.

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J o b continued from page 6spring. This yearit's in the 50'sbracket." McBride? is; urgingstudents to get out and contactemployers directly, rather^ thanrelying on campus interviews.

This is the worst yearI have everseen," she added.

"Our students can do more tomake themselves marketable.They need to ob tain an experiencebase. The best way is to get in-volved in at least two co-op ex-periences," said M oore.

"We'll be hiring considerablyless this year," says Phil DeLong,spokesman for Amer icanTelephone and Telegraph's »col-lege recruitment division. "Partlybecause of the economy, andbecause of our divestiture pro-ceedings, we're taking acautiouswait-and-see attitud e." ;i

Texas Instruments' hiring isdown about one-third from1980,said George Berryman, managerof corporate college relations.

"Butwe anticipatea pickup in thefall and spring of nextyear/' he

PERSONALS j . ii m

Select pledge applications for the 5 l J L / • % S \ WB.E.D. club will; bet juried ™ A & M A

f Wednesday night. Accepted ap- I

*^.^*'^:. 1 . D ° ™ Slgn-UpsHAPPY BIRTHDAY CHRIS Residence Hall sign-upswill be onH.H! K Thursday, May 5 in the Blue

• Room in Old Main. Next year'sLiz: What a super, super Sund ay, seniors shouldsign-up a r l p.m.,Thanks kiddo! - Cinderella jun ior s at 1:30 p.m ., and

sophomores at 2 p .m.Ton BucciClue Number Three -

X ™ ' r°W' y°Ur b°at" B°W Ta b , e T e n n | S ClubClub meetings are held every

Baboo! I adore you, saccharin- Tuesday and Thursdayevening •breath! \ from 7 to 11. There!is a $2.00

..;. , 1.. membership charge, which en-JACK WYLAND - HAPPY 21ST compasses equipment use. F orBIRTHDAY more information, contact Pierre

Donyegro, president at 825-4413.

f 0 n Ta pEducation Workshop

All education majors are invitedto attend a workshop on Satur-day, April 30tat 9 a.m. Mrs.Earlley will be having theworkshop. She will discusscreativeideas for learning centers,bulletin boards, learning^games,etc. Come and join the fun! V

^Attentlon RunnersAnyone interested in participatingin theHamot 10kilometerrace onSunday, June 5 should contactDonna Perterson, Box 57 Prestonor the MERCIAD-office for anentry blank.

Baptist ServiceA Baptist Service will be helWednesday, May 4 at 4:30 Rev. Don Seely will he presidin Campus Ministry.

WMCY SoftballThe WMCY softball orgational meeting will be held day, May 1 at 6:30 p.m. inradio studio. If you want toih (he WMCY/WLKK softbgame, you must attend.

added. -Moore said that, "Students

need tobe flexible, noble and will-ing to relocate. Our students canfind a jo b in their respective areasof study. But, they must begin thecareeringprocess earlier than theirsenior year.

"I feel there is a level of apathyon the part of the student body.They don't take a real interest inthemselves until prior to reachingthe panic of graduation," Mooreadded ^

"With fewer recruiters andfewer job offers being made,many placement directors havenoted that students are acceptingthe first or second offer that theyreceive," said Linda Penigillyfrom the College PlacementCouncil. "Salary offers are notincreasing like they were severalyears "ago," she adds. "For thelast few years, we saw salaries in-creasing by eight to ten percent ayear. This year they have gone uponly one to twopercent.'*•

Apartment DepositsAll Mercyhurstf Apartmentsdeposits and contracts must be inby Monday, May2 or the unit will

be forfeited. •£

1 Graduation MassPersons interested in helping toplan the GraduationMass,are in-vited to attend a planning sessionon Tuesday, May3 at 4:30 p.m. inCampus Ministry.

If your club, organization, ordepartment would like to have anannouncement printed in "W hat'son Tap?", please contact CartaAnderson, assistant editor at 825-7812, or the Merciad office. Announcements are due by noon onWednesday. No fee is charged.

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THE MERCIAD

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3aseba II

Costello Shines;Lakers Split Six*By Greg Yoko

MERCIAD CO-SPORT EDITOR,After splitting a Saturday

doubleheader at YoungstownState (6-0, 5-15), the 'Hurst gain-ed two impressive victories overBehrend (9-0, 8-4) on Tuesday,only to drop two decisions onWednesday to Fredonia (7-3,6-4).

In their 6-0, 11-inning win atYoungstown, Mercy hurst pitcherJohn Costello pitched ten shutoutinnings before relinquishing.toRick Skonieczka who received thewin in the eleventh.

Costello yielded only seven hitswhile striking out eleven.

Chip Lewis and Glenn Allenprovided the Lakers with the of-fense in thefinal frame; they eachhad two runs batted in.

Lewis* came on a 360-foothomerun. %In the second game, the Blue

and Green managed only sixhitswhile getting shelled 15-5.Skonieczka was tagged with theloss. j ?

Costello collected: two RBI'sand a pair j of hits includingjahomerun.

Head Coach Garry Cordes andhis club made their belateddebutby hosting the Cubs from PennState Behrend.

The Cubs were given a rudewelcome by pitcher Costelloas heshut the door. He allowed fourhits while striking ou t twelve.

This computes to17 innings pit-ched without yielding a run. Inthat span, Costello has struck out

23 batters.Laker Jim Ho vis picked up the

Violation jCausesForfeits J

j? By Kathy KohnkeMERCI Al l Co-Sports EditorThe Mercyhurst Women's

Basketball Team has been forcedto forfeit two wins in their1982-83 season due to the in-eligibility of one of their studentathletes. *

This violation occurred as ofFebruary 14, when one athlete

dropped a class, giving the student

Lady Lakers]On Streak

"Untouchable" seems to beone of the words that coulddescribe the Mercyhurst Women'sSoftball team as they have made Itsix in a row without a loss.

The Lady Lakers met VillaMaria College in a one-sidedaf-fair that saw the Blue and Greenbelt 22 runs out of 21 hits. LisaDeMichele and Kathy Kohnke

victory in the second contest bypitching a four-hitter of his own.

Scott Lucas powered ahomerun and collected two RBI'sin the 6-4 triumph.

The Laker homestand took aturn towards the bad as theballclub lost both ends of thetwin bill against Fredonia.

The Lakers lost the opener atthe hands of Fredonia hurler MikeDePalma who fanned 13 Hurstsluggers. Laker Tim Ruth suf-fered the loss. g;

Fredonia took!advantage of asix run sixth inning to spoil thehopes of Mercyhurst rooters.'Hurst catcher Ted DeSanti was abright spot as he produced twohits; :"i

•Unfortunately for Laker fans,

the first inning of the nightcap setthe stage for the game.Fredonia scored three runs in

the opening frame to take a leadthey never lost.

Skonieczka was tagged with thedefeat as the 'Hurst bats couldn'tconnect when necessary.

The offense for the BluelandGreen was provided by LouAlverio, Francesci, and Lucas.The trio teamed up for seven ofthe 'Hurst's nine nits.

Lucas also had three j RBI'swhile Francesci stole two bases.The Lakers left seven men on basein the game.

Mercyhurst will again play theh o s t in a n a f t e r n o o ndoubleheader this Saturday asthey welcome Ashland College.

Starting time for the twin bill is1:00.

part-time status and therefore in-eligible for further participation.The'infraction was not detecteduntil a routine check of, players'transcripts surfaced the problem,according to Ms. Janet, Price,Director of Women Athletes, n

A win over Thiel Collegeand anovertime win over Allegheny Col-lege were the two victories thatwere affected, dropping the LadyLakers to 6-18 on the season.

The Athletics Committee hasbeen meeting throughout the yearin hopes that some solution couldbe reached to alleviate the pro-blem o f academic eligibility! of

student-athletes. It was juggestedcombined for the win off themound as a host of Lakersaddedto the hitting attack. Cathy Crottylaced three singles along with An-nie Burbules connecting on fourhits, one being a home run. SherryPutnam added two singles, a dou-ble and a triple with Sherri Shileybelting in three hits.

The Lady Lakers then downedGannon University 12*1. CandyHoover and Sherry Putnam addedthe offensive power at the platewith Laura Ames and Mary Butlercombining for the win. ,

IntramuralSoftballExplained

Due to the inclimate weather

and poor field conditionsand afield to play on, the SpringSoftball Season has.forced usto make the following changes:

The 12 teams that enteredthe league will be divided intotwo leagues- American Leaguethat will consist of:

1. Who Knows2. Barbarians3. Over the Hill Gang4. B.T.W. 5. %5. Excaliber6. Gorfs

and the National League:1. Zookers2. Bale fisherman3. Degenerates4. Basket Cases5. Gumbies6. Hell HoundsThere will be a doubleelimination tournament in

each league - The •.winners ofeach league will then have abest of three series to deter-mine the league champions -The |first two i games will beplayed on Tuesday, May 3,3:30. j

Schedules may be picked upat the Campus Center. Oneforfeit will resultin eliminationfrom tournament.

If>jany team would like topractice, you may use the in-tramural equipment.

Thank youDave Cherico >Director of Intramural

Sports

that a need was present to haveimproved communication amongthe M ercyhurst College comm uni-ty regarding eligibility of student-athle tesi - especially? amongathletic administrators, coaches,athletes, advisors, and faculty.

It was also suggested thatstudent-athlete handbooks becompiled and distributed by theathletic administration. In addi-tion, sometype of communicationdirected to advisors and facultyregarding academic requirementsfor athletes was recommended, inhopes that a problem of this typewill not arise again in the near

future. • 1The Blue and Green took a

Keystone .Conference double-header from Grove City Collegeby the scores of81-0, 5-0. In thefirst game, Laura Ames providedthe needed hit at the plate to in-sure the Lady Laker victory. MaryButler added 10 strike-outs for the'Hurst. In the second game, LisaDeMicheleand Laura Ames com -bined for the two hit shutout. LisaJacob itz, and freshman CarolPuzarowski had two hits nor theLady Lakers.

The Lady Lakers are now 8-2-1on the season.^ •= THEMERCIAD

Crew ActionThe Laker navy hosted Mariet-

ta and Ithaca, two of the top smallcollege rowing teams in the coun-try, last Saturday on nearbyFindley Lake, and in the "Davidvs. Goliath" race, the rowingLakers proved that they can becompetitive with the best.

The Lady Laker varsity crewoutstroked Ithaca but were anoars-length away from a win toMarietta.

Tennis vs.Local Teams

The Mercyhurst Tennis teamtook on two localrivals during theweek and one win and lossresulted.

-The Laker netters easilydefeated the Golden Knights fromGannon University, 9-0.

Each single and doubles matchwas captured by the 'Hurst,^in-cluding the Jens Caap - WayneAshmeade doubles combination.This was the duo's twelfth con-secutive victory without a loss. .

However, the Caap - Ashmeadeduo suffered their first loss of thecampaign at the hands of TonyWomeodu and Kanwarjit Sabher-wal from Edinboro State College,6-2, 3-6,6-7. i ,

The Fighting Scots also pulledoff a bigger upset as they beat thetalent-laden Lakers 5-4. I

Erik Bouline and PhilNykyforuk were the other Lakersthat triumphed in singles actionwhile the pair of Joe LoCastroand Juan Blazquez took the onlydoubles win for the 'Hurst.

The loss to Edinboro, who is14-6 on the season, gave the Blue

and Green a 7-9 slate.

.Rowing in a new shell,lost their initial home raseason. *

The Lady novices didnwell 'as they lost to bothcrews by open water.

-In the men's varsity was Marietta all the way,Lakers and Ithaca battlincond place; a battle Itha

In the men's lightweigheight, the 'HurstJfinishedween two Ithaca varsicapturing another second

In fours competitiLakers fielded a crew rowed only once togecame within 500 meters a seasoned Mariettacrew

Yet another second plawas the outcome lightweight four as they Ithaca but fell to the Pio

Finally, it was no contnovice race as Marietwhelmed the 'Hurst bwater.

Coach Al Belovarac wpointed that his crew ccatch Marietta, but he n

recent loss of the crew'sing shells and the resualignment of .the prdefinitely had an impact day's races. %

4'We've bouncedr baweek," he n oted ,| "aneager to take on CaniWest Virginia this SatuFindley Lake."

The races are j expectedclose since the three sqrelatively equal.

Belovarac also revealeinsurance claim on last wcident looks very brightprogram wilt have the shells replaced by new ein time for the fall seaso

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