Daemen University - Summit Yearbook (Amherst, NY)

 - Class of 1971

Page 4 of 207

 

Daemen University - Summit Yearbook (Amherst, NY) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 4 of 207
Page 4 of 207



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Page 4 text:

VOL. I MAY. 1971 CONTENTS STAFF NOTES Guest Privilege 2 Professor Ned Cuddy was looking forward to raising hell in Washington. A few changes next time, and he thinks he can make it. Up, Up, and Away 6 Thought sculpture was all stone and metal? Take a look at what high-powered imagination and some low-cost bal- loons can do. Miss Ethel Winter Affiliate Artist, Rosary Hill College 23 Only once in a great while are a college and a community fortunate to come into intimate contact with such a con- summate artist. Politics: Three-Quarter Century 25 Rosary Hill becomes a microcosm of national politics. Dissatisfaction with the power structure and the results it has achieved. Speaking of People 30 You’ve been seeing them for four solid years now. Pretty soon, they will be little more than a pleasant memory. This is the way they were then. A Community of Service 60 “The fulfillment of the individual can come only where there are genuine individuals.” Bernard Cooke and a funda- mental human truth. A Week of the Arts—Rosary Hill College 80 Drama. Film. Dance. The Graphic Arts. Poetry. Music. Five days of intense interaction can leave you enlightened, and also exhausted. Faces and Fashions 95 Fashions are funny. They change so quickly. We laugh at them later. The nice thing about faces, though, is that they are always nicely peopled. Stimuli and Response A single year includes many events, all of which require some kind of involvement—physical or intellectual, small or great. A poet and an artist evoke some feeling: humor and intelligence are used to praise a play or condemn a movie. Many activities on a single year’s calendar can change an institution or an individual. This book is an attempt to show the stimuli on this campus. It is also an attempt to record a response—but the real response cannot be shown in any book; it is the response that makes a difference in the life of a person. Sister Candice Tucci, O.S.F. All ads included in this book are sponsored by Rosary Hill College and appear at no cost to the manufacturer. (Inside front cover) Anita Ernst (Inside back cover) Mark Zahm

Page 5 text:

Guest Privilege Raise Hell! Professor Ned Cuddy's Congressional Campaign Set the Stage For Another Try The promises of political candidates are impressive, sweetly idealistic and often, as we soon discover by default, very difficult to achieve when the congressional seat is fi- nally occupied. Ned Cuddy admires the straight forward manner and when asked what he intended to do in Wash- ington, pointedly replied, “Raise Hell!”. Well, hell is still down where it always was as Cuddy, we know, lost last November’s race for 40th District represent- ative; but, let’s not dismiss the man too quickly from the scene. In the loss many gains were admittedly reaped and while talking to Cuddy about the campaign more than two months later, bursting, energetic enthusiasm seemed to shout that the political bug within the man is not dead yet. The November race was a rough one in that Cuddy was running with limited funds against an incumbent. His chief concern in this case was one of exposure, and door-to-door campaigning by volunteers was of key importance. Cuddy himself spent many days in the Tonawanda factories dis- cussing unemployment and pollution problems as well as a federal reserve pension plan for this very heavily industrial area. Newspaper support is strategically important in any polit- ical race and Cuddy’s face broke out in a grin of admiration as he recalled the excellent work done by his two loyal press agents. “I’ve come to learn who can be trusted and who can’t. I was amazed at the ease with which people break their commitments. I guess it’s easier to say yes and then not do than it is to frankly say no.” With Cuddy’s campaign relying on both professional and volunteer help, he was especially disillusioned by the sup- port from RHC. Few students volunteered to help and fewer still kept true to their commitments. However, in his opin- ion, the ten students who did work right through the cam- paign made up that quantity in quality. It is about his campaign staff that he attaches many happy and memorable experiences. He recalled that though there were many days of frustration, the staff had wonderful times together and he was disappointed that no romances evolved from it. He especially remembers the evenings when the staff would come down to to his home for sandwiches and beer. His family also enjoyed the company and he feels that they benefited from the whole campaign. “Where else do you know of a five-year old who was aware of Goodell and voting.” When his family was down on him they would cheer Smith on to victory and on happier days even his two- and-a-half-year old would shout, “Vote for Daddy!” His wife, he recalls, wasn’t very enthusiastic about the whole idea but once the campaign started she proved to be a terrific manager and organizer—off the record of course, for the only vote to be gained in that public admittance was .0007% women's lib vote. About running again next term, Cuddy feels his biggest drawback lies in insufficient funds. “It takes about $30,000 to run a decent campaign.” Though mailings and door to door canvassing is a means of exposure-, the use of mass media is essential. Radio and news coverage was good in the Tonawanda area; however, the biggest boost in his poten- tiality as a good running candidate seemed to come from the Niagara Falls Gazette. Cuddy very excitedly talked about the honest and forthright coverage they gave him, even though they almost apologetically endorsed Smith. Such kinds of encouragement occurred throughout the campaign and to say that such hints indicate a different out- come for a future campaign is a wild speculation. One thing definitely going for Cuddy is his political personality, of which he is well aware. He knows his material and beliefs, and is clear, articulate and frank when presenting them. He has the gift of gab and can adjust his tone from that of a university classroom to a neighborhood bowling alley or fac- tory warehouse. His sharp sense of humor and ego enables him to enjoy parades, “traveling billboards” and Cuddy’s Cuddies, and also supplies the source of drive to push him on to victory. In any event whatever the past has been and whatever the future will prove. Ned Cuddy damn well has the enthusiasm to raise hell! 2

Suggestions in the Daemen University - Summit Yearbook (Amherst, NY) collection:

Daemen University - Summit Yearbook (Amherst, NY) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

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Daemen University - Summit Yearbook (Amherst, NY) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Daemen University - Summit Yearbook (Amherst, NY) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Daemen University - Summit Yearbook (Amherst, NY) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

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Daemen University - Summit Yearbook (Amherst, NY) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

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Daemen University - Summit Yearbook (Amherst, NY) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

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