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Mudlli ,1'12

Langdon, Trout to Face Senate
By Calhy HIii
President Oeorae Lansdon,

Dean of Facully Charles Trout an4
Dean of Students William
Moynihan will appear at Tuesday's
Student Senate meeting 10 al\swc-r
characs levelled against the Ad·
ministration in a Senate resolution
of March 9.

PVC tablna fo••d h, Wyan and Mte;rqory.

Tubing Poses Hazard
By h r1 Obey
Last February a fu ror ar0$c over
the installat ion of polyvinyl

chloride (P, v:c.) lubing in 1he

New York City Subway Syscem.
Eking a summer straphangcr, I
kept abreast of this issue and was
somcwha1 dismayed when I saw the
very same grey pla's1ic 1ubing in the
1unncl$ bc:twttn Wynn and Olin
Halls.
P. V .C. condui1 is, and I quote
from 1hc New York Times .. A kind
or clccukal tubing which is

oullawcd in many New York City
buildings because it' emits toxic

the 10101 amoun1 of P. V. C.
tubing al Co/11,ate is unknown.

There is a P . V.C. conduit runn·
ing from McOregory Hall to Wynn
Hall throush the tunnels, and this
tubing seems to spread throughout
the ceilings of the science
buildings. This tubingcon1ains low
level elcctrkal wiring. The total ex.
1ent of 1hc P. V.C. tubing is
unknown.
Although the build i ngs
themselves arc rela1ively fire proof.
all science buildings con1ain many
highly flammable substances and
there exislS an inhcrant danger or
fire in any of them. More so than
any 01her univeuil)' building.
These, however. ar(-1hc buildings
which seem to 1.-on1ain most or the

P.V.C.

The resolution alleges . that the
Dean of faculty's Office im·
properly handled an announce·
mcnt of finlncial aid Cuts to study
1roups.
The MaroQn ran an anicle on
Tuesday, February 16about a deci.
sion 10 cut extra finandal aid to
studenu anending off.campus
study groups. Traditionally, Col.
gate has offered an extra SI ,000 in
scholarships or loans 10 students
who demonstrate need to enable
1hem to participate in the study
groups. According to infonnation
the Maroon reporter who wrote the
article received. Dean Trout,
among others. de-cided during
reading week last December tha1
the University could no longer af.
ford to do t~is, I nd that the aid
program would ~ cut.
Robin Jayc9x, director of finan·

dal aid, received a memo dated
December 7 about this decl$ion.
Jaycox told the Maroon in
February that he put this infonna•
tion in the.March I letter sent out to
all studcnls, but tht informa1ion
was deleted. Jaycox did not know
when the cuts were to be
announced. The Maroon was also
not able to set an answer to this
question,
On Friday, February 19
members of the Administration
met to discuss the issue. Jaycox

Tuesday's Stnalt mteling
should ,finally' clear up the
misunderstanding concerning
tht announcement of study
group aid cut{,
was told to come •up with the
money to aid study group par·
ticipants.
The- following Monday, the
Maroon rc:poner had a meeting
with Betsy Eismcicr, director of the
budget. Unbeknownst to the
reporter, Andy Rembert, asslStant
dean of racuhy. eeg Fenner, study
group director, R,V. Smith, professor oi philosophy and religion,

Robin Jaycox, financial aid direc.
tor, and Eismeicr all were present
at 1he mee1in1. The subject of the
discussion was lhe Maroon article.
The purp0$C of the mectin& was to
dear up what they believed wert
misunde:rstandings prfnted in the
Maroon. In response 10 tha1
meetina, 1he 'Maroon ran another
artkle retraetina the earlier state·
mcn1 that aid had been cut.
On Much 2, lhe Maroon
published an anonymous letter
from someone: knowledgeable
about the controversy. outlining
the even1.s as they first appeared in
the Maroon, and making some
specific charges aga.inst members
of 1he Administration.
The information in the letter
sparked discussion in the Senate on
Tuc-sday, March 2. It resulted in
the drafl and passage or a Senate
resolution. This rt$0lution qucs·
tioncd the actions of some of the
member~ of the Admin_iswuion,
and invited President Langdon 10
Tuesday's Senate meeting.
Langdon announced his decision ·
Fr!day to attend this meeting.
TheScna1e meets at 7:J S p.m. on
Tuesday in IOS Lawrence. Anyone
may attend these meetings.

AJA W May Yield· to NCAA
:he suit, The NCAA/AIAW suil
could take as long as thr« years,
but the AIAW needs an injunclion against the associa1ion this
spring. The Al~ W is appealing

-

be affected if 1he AIAW ceases 10
by Sluarl B. Anlboay
Would a laboratory fire ~ hot
exist after 1his sprina. However in
'
enough to melt the P. V.C. tubing
regard 10 Colgate's affilia1ion,
The Association for Inter.
fumes when heated." Granted any ovcrhcadt When asked this ques- · collegiate Athletics for Women,
Lilllc stated that the school
fire will produce noxious gases, bu1 tion. Or. David Uwis, Prof. or the AlAW, which is currently su"wouldn't switch until forced
P. V.C. need on1y be heated to 90° Chcmistr)' said that despite the fire ing the NCAA for lhcir infringe.
10," and that Colgate would pro·
)'esistan
t
ce
il
i
ng
panelling
centigrade (or 1cn degrees below
bably continue as an AIAW
mcnt and monopoly of women's
the boiling point of water) to overhead, he could not guarantee athletics, has failed 10 gain the inmember
if the l$$0Cialion con.
There could be a change in
that
such
a
situation
migh1
not
OC·
release large quantities of carbon
tinues operation, nexl year.
junction again.st the NCAA that school alignment nexr year.
monoxide and hydrogen chloride, cur. Furthermore. when Wxnn 's 1hey sought. As a result, the
If the women, who are presently
both which arc highly Poisonous . ventilation system shuts down, the AIA W has not distributed
competing 11 Division II level,
Much evidence has also been building becomes effectively se.aJ. membership applications for next Jhc court's decision. A lcuer fro m were to enter the NCAA, then
presented that polyvinyl chloride ~d. increasing the danger of the year. There will be no change in
1he Eastern United S1ates AJA W they would be forced to compete
was pal'tially responsible for the gasses. Would these fume$ be a the Colgate's women's spans
representative informs colleges al Division I level in order to com·
hi,gh dea1h lolls in such fires as lhe hazard for those remaining in the schedules this spring, b u1 there
1ha1 a decision concerning ply wilh NCAA policy Iha! bolh
one at the MGM Grand Ho1el. building or 1hose trying 10 tx· epuld be a change in s.<:hOOI align- whether AIAW will continue: men's and women's teams at the
There is no question that P. V.C. is tinguish the fire? How much ment nexl year.
operating for the next year will be ~ame school oompc.te at 1he same
a hazardous substance when burn• P. V.C. is used o n this campus,
level. <;olgate would have 10 face
Janet Little, A$Sistant to the announced by April I .
cd, and that P. V.C. and poor ven. where is it and what sort of danger Athletic Oircc10r for Women's
Little explained that the recent additional transportation cos1s,
tilation spell d isaster in the event of it prCSents in evcnl of a fire mu.st be SPortS, related that her office had decision will not have any affect recruiting costs and a larger
determined.
on 1he women's sports schedules )(holarship fund, along with the
a fire.
received a letter from the National
1hisspring, The dcc-ision ''docsn•1
1oughcr competition. An amend·
Executive Committee of the
really
affect
us
this
year"
says
Litment to 1he NCAA const.itution lo
AIAW, stating that they had
1le
because
the
AIAW
"will
con1llow schools to compete in dif•
su.spcnded the.it recrui1ing rules
tinue
1heir
championships
through
.:rent d ivisions was narrowly
and membership drives as of
this spring" and Colgate will
efeated last year. This amend•
through the distribution of free · March 1, ·1982. This action was
by Lisa H ipp
"continue
10
go.
"
nen1,
which is suppartcd by 1he
posters and albums. Most of 1he taken after a preliminary injuncObviously, Little continued, Colga1e athletic department,
In an effort to improve station music was by new talent; pro·
tion was not granted by the
next
year's women's schedule will inight be initialed again 1his year.
management. and the quality of gressive groups like "Slow Federal District Court handling
programming. seven WRCU staff Children" and "Doug and the
members attended the 18S (Inter· Slugs." "Most of the exhibitors
collCgiate Broadcasting System) were away fro m mainstream AOR
Convention . the first weekend in music," said WRCU General
March in the nation's capito1. IBS Manager Katie Bilik·.
is the national ol'ganization of high
Bllik said staff members, who
school and college radio stations of paid for their own trips, learned by
which WRCU is·a member.
u meeting people who have ex.
The informative sessions perienced the ups and downs of
covered a variety of topics, iO· running a radio station. " This exeluding station promotion, fiscal change or ideas revealed just how
management, staff organization good WRCU is compared toothe,
and news and spores programming. college sta1ions. In a session on
Friday night's session reviewed news produc1ion. repre$Cnlativ~
new FCC regulations. Howard from other schools talked abou1
Stern, a prominent Washington letting their news from
disc jockey (DC 101), voiced his newspapers, while 'RCU u ses the
conuoversial opinions about latest Associated Press machine.
women, and 01her issues, in a SCS· Music Oircetor Rob Treucr said
WR'CU 's good reputatiori
eliminates any trouble gcuine
WRCU compores well with records: a problem experienced b)
other co/leg• stations.
many college stations. WRCC
doesn't have 1he poor facilities anc
sion on "Personality Radio."
I'A __ _ / \._
unenthusiastic staff thal other sta,
Record companies promoted
tions complain about, said Bilik.
Daaee M1nt1toaer ..,e.ts down'' oa 1M noor. For mott news on n,e. danchl& ffft and rHts, Sff paaet.
new talent at the convention

WRCU Seeks Improvement

-.

THE COLGATE MAaOON

T .....J, M-" ~·· 1"2

Sale· of Nukes Deemed Immoral

Colgate Clips

B1Galllll•llpw

CUTV Forum

Althou,h his lectu~ was eluided

,

There,, ill be an imformational meeting open lo the entire
campus concerning CUTV on Thursday March 18. at 7: 1S
pm in 105 Lawrence. Bring all your Q.uestions dealing With
th e issue. All SentHOrs ,ut• especially invitt,•d to ,mend.

Pro-Reagan Racial Activist

· ·Canadian Nuclear Politics",
Professor Fred Kndman spok• la•t
Thursday night primarily or th•
evils of 1he nudear anns race.
Knclman, a consen,attOnlS1 Ind
meray cxpe,r1 as well as a peace
movtmen1 leader, is currently pro•
fessot. al Concordll Univers.ity in
Montreal and special advisor in
conscrva;ion to the S1ace of

Cali rorn la.
Award-winning authnr Nathan Wright Jr. will p resent
"A Positive Attitude Toward P~ace" i n a Colgate Universi,
ty lecture Tuesday, March 16, at 7:30 pm .
.
Sponsored by the Colgate Cultural Center, Or. Wright's
ta lk will take place in 209 Lathrop hall. The public is invited.
·
"
Or. Wright is chief editorial consultant to Black
Resources Inc. i n New York. In addition to 1S books. he
has written for scholarly jou rnals and comments
twiceweekly on public issues in a column carried by more·
than 100 black and' white newspapers. The Harvard•
trained urbanist and racial activist p resents a pro-Reagan
point of view.

Breakfast with the President
Interested students are invited 10' join President
Langdon for breakfast on any of three scheduled dates
during March and April .
.
The number of students at any given b reakfast will be
limited to the first filleen who sign up at the Saga office in
the Student U nion (extention 668). Breakfasts, to be held
at the Merrill House, will begin at 7:30 am and end promptly at 8:30. Students who do not subscribe to the Saga
board plan will be guests of the President.
The dates are:
Thursday, March 18 President Langdon and Dean
Moynihan
Thursday, April ,8 President Langdon
Tuesday, April 13 President Langdon

Love American Style

Hedesc:rib«I I he arms race as the
"holocaust ortife" and the "most ·
uraent ma11er in my life." •
Knelman has d4,.-voted 35 years of
service 10 lhe study of and the
educalina of people a,ains.t the
IJJTIS build-up. In discussina the
arms race, Knelman was encoura,cd by the widaqread antinuclear activity currently aoing on
. in 1he world.
.. Knclman seemed to pul the
blame on the U. S. ror its having
, begun the escalation of the arms
race back in 19.55. United State's·
fears of a ''bomber aap'', whereby
the USSR was supposed to have
700 bombtrs by t9S7, initiated increased U.S. military spendina toa•
currently proposed military budac1
I or SI trillion in lhc comina ri.scal
· year. Knclman ~ lhe present ,
condition of "rouah parity" be-'
twe•n the U.S. and USSR•• btina

Kntlmaa: "Stop th~ ra« before it's 100 fatt .....

arutly di•turbed by U.S. deploy.
ment of such wc-apons as the cruise or affairs whkh Knclman referred
missile, Pershing 11, an4 Trident to~ "immoral" .
II.
. Presently, the U.S. and Canada
The remAinder of the lecture arc involved in the mutual testing
deah with Canadian nuclear · of the Ground Launch Cruise:
poU1ies. Canada, an original part· Missile (GLCM) at Cold Lal« in
Iler in the Manhattan Project, has Alberta. Thc·e has, however.
been selling nuclear reactors and rece111 ly ~ ...~ a movement called
uranium to Aracn1ina, South "Project Plowshare:.: to make
Korea, Pakistan, and India, a state Canada a nuclear fre< zone,
·

Phi Tau Pledge Song
·Adds Fuel to the Fire
By Calhy HIii

Slava Paperno, a native of Leningrad and an accomplished translator of English and American literatu re,
will deliver a Colgate University lecture in Jewish studies
at 7:30 pm.Wednesday, March 17 in 217 Lathrop H all.
" Authority, Work and Love:' Comparing Russian and
American Attitudes" is Paperno's subject. The public is

welcome.
Paperno emigrated to the United States in April 1981
and lived in Ham ilto n for four m onths before taking up
residence in Ithaca where he is 'teaching Russian in the
department of Slavic linguistics at Cornell.
The Russian lecturer-writer numbers among his published translations works by Melville, Henry James, George
Bernard Shaw and Ro bert Penn Warren. In the Soviet
Union he made his living in part as a translator and in pan
as a teacher of English, mostly to would -be emigrants. He
is a d edicated observer of Soviet life, and in his last years
in Russia he completed a science fiction trilogy that is in
large measure a parody of what he witnessed.

Much controversy has erupted
o ver the Phi Tau pledges' song al
the Coop last Wednesday, bul few
people are aware 1ha1 Phi Dell
pledges participated in a similar
"prank" a1 1he Pub on Thursday.
According to witnesses approximaiely sixceen Ph i Och brothers
and pledges, filed into the Pub dur· ing its afternoon hours. O ne stood
on a chair, was handed a pile of
papas and began 10 read a letter
written as if it were appearing in the
P,nthouse Forum.
The students who spoke to the
Maroon were disturbed by the incldenl. " I wan1cd to leave when he
started 10 read because I was really
embarrassed,. Phi Tau is gelling
all sores or grief but I think what
the Phi Ochs did was worse," said
one witness.

The inciden1 which raised the
question of appropriate p ledge activities was Phi Tau's pledge class
song last Wednesday. Joe Caprio.
associate dean of fraiernities. has
shor1ened the Phi Tau p ledge
period. and ii will now end March
26. Phi Tau hassubmi11cda shoner
pledge program which has been ap·
proved.
The house will also be issuing a
formal apQlogy 10 1he community
and co-sponsoring an event rel:ued
to increasing awareness of problems in male-female relations on
campus.
Brad Hacken. president of Phi
Tau says "It's common agreement
in o ur house tha1 something was
done that was wrong. We don't
cond one wh.at happened and we
didn't mean 10 emb arrass

anyone." He coniinucd saying
that the pledges 1hough1 it was all
in good fun . They didn't know it
wo uld ca'use so many problems."
Man)' students ha\'e expressed
con~rn over tlfr,. inciden1. ov~r
what happened and how it rent't':tS
on the fra1erni1ies. "As soon as I
heard the fi rst line, rtef1. I 1hough1
it was really insuhing," said one
woman ... , just couldn't belie,..e ii
was-so easily accepted ."
Some fralern ity members were
concerned lhat what happened
could be blamed o n 1hc fraternity
system. "I d,on'I 1hink fraternities
cause 1his, mos, people have those
attitudes towards women when
1hey come to Colgate," said a student. ''Fraternities are j ust institu lions that reOttt the anitudes of
many men on campus.•·

- - - - - - - - - T h e Women 's Resource Center announces

''THE HISTORY OF WOMEN AT COLGATE''
presentation by
,

Mary Bufwack, ·wanda Berry,
Elizabeth Brackett

On Tuesday, March 16 at 8:00 pm
.
in the Women's Resource Center, Cutten Core
.

..
T91 lit, Mwc:1116, HG

1'1D COLGATE MAIIOON

Maralile Denounces "Hacist Straie~"
"It is critic:ally important when
conrrontlns the evils or today to

tut a historical approodl to contemporary issues,'' said' Dr, Mannina Marable, profeuor of
Arrican Sludies and R...an:h at
Cornell Unlvenity.

However. it '- imponan1 to note
that blacks may bear the pea!ff
bwden or New federalism but
whkes comprise the ma)ority or
people who wm-.urrer.
"'What Req;anism represen~
socs far beyond cutbacks in health

care, weUare and social services,••
said Marable. He believe, 1h11
New FederaHsm may have
unleashed the ,,... light ror racist
reaction. He s1a1e, 1hat, ''Racism
at the levd of Popular cuhure and

/>rople without history an like
tnu without roots; it looks
very sturdy and appears ~ry
. race relations have actually
strong, but it Is dead.
Al his Wednesday nisht lsponsored by the Cultural Alralrs

Board, titled "Reaaanism,
Racism, and ~eaction in the
1980Js0 , Marable s1ressed the imPortan« of an individual's critical
con,ciousness. He empahisized,
"lhat people who.cannot critically
rencct about their own history
cannot crea1e a dream of what
kind of society they want 10 see in
this country... Quoting Manin
Hdderger, he added that "people
withouJ history are like lrecs
without roots; ii looks very sturdy
and appears very strong. but it is

dead.
The drastic rcduclions of social
services, health care and welfare
are "closet racist strategies"
which facilitate the dominance of
the cl*tlSt white middle c.lus
society, s1a1ed Marable.
He
believes lhat New. federalism or
New Feudalism is a rchashment of
stacc's rights which may be rooced
in public policies of the l900's.
Or. Marible also questioned
whe1her Rcaganism may be lhc
rea.Uza1ion of a dream deferred or
relived, Quoting ,he Ntw York
Times, he added, ,.What is the
logic of federalizing one poverty
program while turning the others
bick to the staces? ·Do poor peo..
pie get equally sick in different
places wilh Medicaid, but u ne-·
qually hungry?"
Or. Marable believes 1hat pco.
pie suffer from a sense of false
consciousness, holding the razor
at their throats "while politicians
slide it across ... An experience he
had in a Utica gro«ry store em•
phasized his view. An elderly
white woman standing in front of
him wore bathroom slippers on a
c·o ld and very snowy mid·
November day. Althouih she was
u,sing food stamps to purchase
doa food, she wore a "Rcapn for
Presiden1" button on the lapel of
her tattered cloth coa1. Alona
these lines, blacks are affected
more heavily by welrare cuts than
whites-in the U.S. because blacks
are poorer on the averaae.

escalated in Reapn's term." He
continued by. citina many ex·
amples of what he termed an
0

avalanche of racist &$$1.uhs"

which the majority of people fail
to ttalize. Dr. Marable alludl(I to
the media's power to edit

Port of oppnssion is not what
people an told, but what they
an not told.
materials and stated that "pan of
oppression is not what people are
told, but what they arc not told."
Reaganism has also caused
poUtieal and economic reaction,
especially in the criminal justice
systems. Despite the fact that
mass imprisonment does not.
lower crime many 1,;onscrvallve
whites have t,een pressing for increased jail terms for violent
crimes. This maneuver serves to
perpetuate inequality, panicularly
to under-developed black and
latino people . Marable stated that
"in 1980 the U.S. has the third
highest rate of incarceration in the
world, and according to prison of.
ficials this ra1e will pass South
Arrica's in the 1990's.
,

-

.
I

~~

''

...

-.. , ,

•• -« .,..

Marable betieves that the end of
one fonn of opprasion bu
resulted in the institutionalization
of another rorm. He reets that
prisons are beina used to
perpetuate the .. dual-labor
market." Instead or denyina jobs
because or . nlCC, you deny jobs
bued on one's criminal ffl:Ord.
Marable added that every yar in
the U.S. approximately 2 million
blacks
per can or the Popula·
tlon) are arrested. Blacks are
more llkely 10 be both arrested'
anci convicted, servina lon,er
terms for crimes involvina Im
money. Blacks comprise 27 per
cent of those ancsted but total SO
per cent of those convicted.
, The new bidding system for
N.earina his conclusion, fraternities worked well this year,
Marable quoted Bob Marley:
accordins 10 Associate Dean or
"Until the philosophy which Fraterniti.. Joe Caprio, who
holds one raoe superior is finally believes 1hat 0 othcr campusa will '
and permanently discredited and want 10 know about this
abandoncd ... Until the color of a proa,ram.' 1
man's skin is of no more
C.prio says the· success of the
sianmcance than the color of his proaram can ''bcsubstantiated by
eyes ... that until the basic human less panyina involved in the rush
riahts are equally auarantttd ...
procedure this year." He main·
the dream of lasting peace and in- 111ns that people pledged hou~
ternational morality will remain because they had "built up friend•
but a flectin& illusion to be per. ships with members of the houses.
sued by never realized.,.
We avoided the mass hysteria of
In the discussion which follow• earlier yCl.rs."
ed his lecture, MarabLc emphasiz.
One of the advantages of lhe
ed that chis dream may be realiz.cd new program to houses is that
by unhina all people wilh a com- "there is an early sianal to those
mon interest. "The elderly white houses who aren't doini well to
woman buying dog food should rally and make up for the &round
unilc with the poor black woman •they had lost . No system can be
with five kids," he said. He add- IOO per cent perfcc1, but of all the
ed that the job or our atneration is ones I've seen, this one comes che
to eliminate false consciousness closest."
and "his1orical amnesia" and test
The number of scudents pledgtheory in realily.
ina houses is up this year. Ap-

ca

- . - ai

0!,~
.
~

Caprio Is Pleased
proximately 6S per cent'orthe flnl

·yew men pledJod, a allaht Inerrrom last yar. Twenty.....,. per
:ent or all first year women plods·
· :d, a Ila'!" nearly double that or

ut rear:
The proa,am wu desianed by'
the executive council of the lot.er~
fraternity Council. Caprio says
"Although I initiated the idea of
chanain.a rush, the actual system
was
developed
by
the
undcrarads. ••
There were some problems that
need to be worked out for next
year, but Caprio attributes these
10 the fact that it was the first time
1he pr0lf01R bad been tried.
"Basically, I'm pleased." states
C.prio, 0 1 know there has been
some displeasure expressed but I
think the program made tremendous strides in trying to deal with
people as people. By orterins dir·
ferent lime periods and more ln•
formation. I think. we difu&ed the
emotional peak that usually occurs."

'

Spring in-Washington
.

By Anne Cadigan and Amy,
Heierm~n
.
Congress is not the only thing in
session this spring! Since the
beginning of the semester, twelve
Colgate students have been par.
ticipadng in the history depart•
ment's newly crca1cd Washington
·sludy group under the dircc:tion of
Professor Nancy 8. Tucker.
The aroup assembled in
Washinglon o n February I and
'settled into their new living
quarters just a few blocks from
Capitol Hill. The first week was
devoted to orientation activities
~ and general sightseeing. 'fhe in•
tricades of ridina Washinaton's
space age metro system vim
deciphered as the aroup explored
·Stith cultural landmarks as the
John F. Kennedy Center for the

Performing Arts , enjoyed a tour
of the Capitol Building hosted by
the Senate Curator's omoe ·and
visited the Wbite House and even
the FBI.
Primarily concerned with problems in Ame,rican diplomatic
history, this new group of Colgate
Washingtonians had also been
taking advantage of the city's in•
ternational and political environ:
ment.
The group attended a . panel
discussion with foreign corresponden1s from t,he Washington
Post covering ciurrent crises in
Poland and the Middle East and
was invited to a briefing at the
State Oepartmfflt on Western
European defense issues.
Since their arrival in
(continu«I on J'OI• 1 f1

,

STUDENTS AND FACULTY

NEED CASH?·

TAKE A BREAKI

TOP DOLLAR PAID
FOR USED RECORDS

Enjoy DONUTS and COFFEE
from 9:-50 am-10:20 am on

Rock, Jan & Folk Albums
In Excel••• Ccnicllion

WED.

•1NG THEM TO THE

USED RECORD SALE

Morch 17

In the Colgate Bookstore

bljJ,

Fri,. March 19
Mon., March 22

w,- 1111

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Maroon Vie.w : January Proposal Questioned
This week the Academic Affairs Board will
discuss the newOeneral Education program proposal. This proposal includes'plans for a graded,
mandatory first-year January project and a
series of ungraded, mandatory lectures wilh supplementary required readings. As they have been
presented, these p lans do not seem realistic.
A graded, mandatory January program for
Freshmen presents a number of problems for
many Colgate students. With only three

Oencral Education program and no.t considered
a reaular January, then the problem arises as 10

semester students with what would appear to bea

whether or not the course will count as a January
for graduation rtquirements. If it is not a regular

fifth course without credi! seems unreasonable
and unworkable. making these lectures man-

Janaury, the faculty will also have to rethink the
recently approved graduation requirement of 32

datory, yet ung.radcd, is an unrealistic expect&·
t ion. Surely the Classics deserve a more serious

collrses and three January sessions.

and thorough 1rca1mcn1 than this.
Perhaps it would be possible 10 combine 1hese

The benefits of studying the Renaissance (the
proposed January course) as a common ex-

mountable flaws. Loading first year, firsi

lectures with ' the Freshman Seminar program.
The seminar could become a mini-course lasting

January~s now required for graduation, on-

perience course may outweigh the disadvantages
of fewer courses offerings for upperclassmen.

campus attendance during January will

Making this January a graded course, however,

semester focusing on the C lassics as taught

decrease, resulting in a correspondiqg decrease

will be a continuation of January's slow erosion
from a ••greater opportunity to pursue specia l in.
terests and to assume increased personal respon.
sibility for academic work" to a class not 100

through the already proposed Leciure Series.

much different from the other eight classes
students take each academic year.
Replacing University Studies I 7S Philosophy and Religion - with a series of 111&ndatory, ungraded lectures with required reading
of classic texts is a orooosal with seemin2.ly insur·

seminar grades.

in courses offered. Furthermore, Fall first-year
studcnis arc enrolled in a single course, this will
further decrease course offerings for the remainder of these in auendancc.
The idea of a sraded January is inconsistent
with the ideal of the January session at Colsatc
University. If, as the Oencral Education Commillee has suuested, this first-year January is
considered to be separ~ue course within ,h,.

harmony with a tremendously·
increased industrial capacity.
Knowledge became a valued
thereby fulfilling all thai had b..it national 1001.
In the nuclear age 1hat followed
asked for from us. In turn. 1he
the
war, the race for rcchnological
Senate reneged on their original
commitment 10 provide full fun. advances becween the United
ding, and slashed S200 from our re- States and Rus.sia clearly took a
quest. This was because they place of priorily in America's
disagreed with the prize money we plan.s. II was declared 1hat we
offered for the snow sculpture con- could keep pace 'o nly by producing
a generation of college-educated
test.
The injustice lies in the racr 1ha1 wizards.
The fu ll force of government
lhe IFC worked hard 10 provide a
suCttSSful even1 for the communi· was thrown behind that effort. 11
ty, with the assurance of funding, became a patriotic duty to get a col•
but afler the faCt, the fund ing was teae education. "Sputnik," the
not provided. We ask, is this rair? first man-made earlh satellite was
Is it rair that they didn't provide a launched in 1957 and the race 10
budgec meecing before the event? educate more Americans cscalared
Is ii rair that we were cold to pro. yet another notch. Today's budget
c«d with lhecarnivaJ? Is ii fair chat Sttms to have lost sigh1 of that
the Senate backsoul arter the fac:1? original priority.
Cuu prop0scd in 1hc President's
We think not.
budget pose a serious thtta110 ''the
I.F.C. Executive Council great equalizer". a government ..
guaranteed college education. 1've
voted for Prtsiden1 Reagan's tax
and budget cuts almost universally.
though we've disagrttd on foreign
aid, farm bill.s and a rew other
minor subjec1s.
In the long run, though, I've
tried 10 supPort his " master plan"
for
the economy. This is one place
Deir Editors:
It's ironic to think that the Soviet where I cannot agree. I fear thal
U nion helped put American deep cuu in s tudent loan
student$ through college. But guarantetS may be short-sighted
when you get right down to it, chat and, in the final analysis, counter•
productive.
was the case.
The policies treat higher cduca
For generations. a colJcge educa1ion available in America (and tio n as a l'uxury: something that
much or the world) only to the everyone has equal oppOrtunity to
children of the well-to-do. Though earn . That just isn't always the
there were some notable exccp. case. Hard work will help a student
tions, the costs of college were high finance his or her own education,
enough 10 keep most students from but afler that, luck plays a bigger
even considering further educa- part. Being in the rig.ht place at the
tion. The Cold War changed all ri.ghts lime to receive a £ounda·
that. The United States won · tional grant or Scholarship is
World War II with the help of tough. My job at Cornell was to
superior brain trust, work.log in help students be in thal place at

Sena1c with a detailed breakdown
or how every dollar was SJ)('flt dur.
ina Winter Carnival weekend.

I
F
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Prptests
Cuts
To the editor:
ll appean that a severe injustice
has been done to the Inter·
Fraternity Council. The IFC annually runs a Winter Carnival for
the benefit or the entire Colgate
community. The SA. in IUrn, has
always provided funding for this
evenl. This year. however, 1he SA

refused to grant the IFCS2,600for
Winter Carnival - the exact same
amount as asked for la.SI year. The
only reason given was thal 1he
former IFCTreasurer had not provided a detailed breakdown or how
the mo nies were to be spent.
The IFC understood this, was
assured by Rich Litwin (SA
lreasurer) 1ha1 ano1her budge1
hC8ring would occur before the
evenl, and a1 1ha1 1ime we would .
get our funding. Unfonunately,
this budget hearing ne ver
ma1eriali1.ed. Lilwin encouraged
us to pn;,cted wilh the event, assur.
ing us 1ha1 asking for the extra fun ding was merely a formalily,
provided we submit a de1ailed
breakdown of how mo nies were
spent.
As most or us know, Winier Car·
nival '82 was probably the most
successful in years, and surpri.sing.
ly ii only cost SI. 700 - a S900
reduction from the previous year.

Last Tuesday nigh, the IFC Presi:
dent and Treasurer provided the

Your
Congressman
Wri tes

4

a half semester, with the second half of the

Freshman seminar professors could be responsi·

blc for monitoring aucndancc, and could assign
papers which would be a factor in the student's

The Maroon feels that the rest of 1he Ocneral
Education program, as outlined by the Oenera l
Education Commiuee at las1 week's sena1e
meeling, sounds like a very promising and wor·

thwhile oron<>sal.

that lime.
New loan guaranttt policy also
seems to suggest tha1 much of the
need for a broad college-educated
population is behind us; that
somehow the sch~lars we helped in
the 50's, 60's and 70's can carry1he
ball from here.
Nothing could be farther from
the case. If anything, the budget
reduclions in other programs dtm·
dand I hat more studentssuend colleae. not le.ss. Today we've gone
rar beyond pure technological need
in America. '
Reduc1ions in public as.sis1ance
will demand that more and more of
o ur nation 's marginal.income
families pull themselves ou1 or
depe-ndency and into self-sufficient
livt"S. A college education pries
ope-n doors of opportunily for an
ambitious poor' American as well
as a rich one.

SCIC
Voices
Concern
As a group seriously concerned

with the quality of relation.ships
here at Co)aatc we are diJturbcd
both by the deroptory, sexist sona
sung by the Phi Tau plodacs in the
Coop Jut week and the acncral
rcspomc to·tbat sona. We realize
that the pledaes did not "Intend"

10 offend anyone and funhcr, that
incidences oecurrin& in both the
fraternities and the sororities and
elsewhere on campus. We simply
ask that both men and women cake
this opportunity to think bard
about the attitudes this type of incl·

lent implies.
It•$ easy to make 1he argument
that s1Udent loan guarantees arc a
bad financial risk; many go un.
paid. And it's easy 10 point to 1he
unsavory campus unrest of the60'.s
and 70's as the by-products or the
••opporcunity ror everyone"
approach. Both eases could entice
some members of Congress to
agree with the President on this
issue.
But I'm not convinced that 1he
need to con1inue 1his aid has
diminished even slightly. The case
is, In my opinion, quite the contrary. Student loan programs can

be policed; they can be adjusted;
they can be discussed. But they
shouldn't be discarded o r
emasculated. America - bo th today and tort\orrow - will find it 10
be a bad bargain.

What docs this song say about
the way Cotaate men view Colaate
women? Or women in general?
Wht\t does laughter from women
say about the way they view
themselves and other women?
Does it express a healthy attitude
toward our sexual relationships?
What does it say about trust and
respect? How can we build community up if we are forever putting

down the individuals who belong
to it?
Yes, it is true that we must learn
tolau,hatoursclves. Butnooneat
the Coop was lauahina at his or
herself. No. we shouldn't take
ourselves too seriously - but we

ou&ht 10 take others seriously.
If we arc truly interested in improvinJ relation.ships here 11 Colptc WC ffliaht bqin with an honest
eumination of the attitudes buried
Sincerely, in incidents ,uch u this.
Oary A. Lee
Sincerely,

Member of Congress

sere .

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........,. Madi 16, 1912

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TH& 001.GATE MAllOON

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Convention.
Reasserts
.
. Goverµment's Responsibility
By J oo« Blackorby, Ptlt r liberal alternative. The thtmt of
Everyone's human riJhts art
lhe conference, entilled' ''The jeopardized by the Administra.
1
f ranklin and ElcanOr Rooscveh tk>n's polidci on nuclear weapons.
'11w .,.,,hon •1ttnd«/ IM ADA Tradition: It's Conrribut.On To- Speakers at the ADA were at,horROOltW/1 Cfflttnn~I Co,if,,.nc, day", wu prt:scnr throuahou1. A' red by the Adminbtralion's flip.
in Walllnlton, D. C. on Mirt:h S, 6 variety or speakers, with political pant auilude towarct'nuclea.r con•nd7.
dilpositions ran&i,na from socialist fronlation. Oeor1e· Bush has said
· Welcome to supply.slide year to tri-lateralist. speakina on he believes th11 we can rtaht and
19821 Ont year or Reapnomics economics, forcian policy, nuclear win nuclear war, Secretary of
hu brouaht the 1111ion Into a dtti> armamtnts and civil rishtt, all had State, Al.under Haig,
of
reccaioni however in many .areu in common a condemna1ion of provina our nuckar capability by
ofthe nation one can already_. Reqanism and at least panial droppina a bomb in Europr, and
or depression·: national unemploy• praise for th• New Deal. They' Edwin M..,., throwins a bo'nt to
.JDtlll fisum.,. up to 8.8l)tr cent ·aa,eed, implk:illyorexplicitly, that the anti.:nuclear movement, can
of the entire work force. the some form of welfare slate is the ' say only that *'Nuclear War may
hlahat fisurt recorded sin« 1939, direct.On thA1 the United States not be desirable at this time." In
exborbltant inttreSt rates continue must lake.
shon, it seems that 1he Reapn Adtq discouraae investmcn1,
Ctrtainly, one of th• biases• ministration d0t0 not bditve that
crlppllns not only tht American questions is · 1h1t Of Americ-.n n~leartobeallthatbad. They say,
economy but also foreian fordsn policy. Marton Halperin, wt must deter the Soviets at all
economies around the world which Olrec1or of the Cetuer for National costs.
must bo_n-ow dollars to enaage in r Security Studies, presented a witty
Herbert Scoville, former direc:•
attack on the most danserous tor of the CIA, Betty Ooelz Lall,
international trade.
,Th• ytar 1981 brousht policy that the Administration is director of Urban Affain 11 Corlower standards or livina ror the c_urrently punuina: economic and nell University, Rear Admiral
averaae American and failed military interven1ion in Central Gene Laroque, director of the
businesses w~e more numerous America. He funher criltqued rhe Center for Defense lfl Formation,
1han ever. Yet somehow President current U.S. policy on refuatts. all believed, contrary to the AdReaaan sees H fit to blame The Administr11ion has con- ministration's stancic, that the exAmerica's economic woes: entirely sit!cntly denied polllicaJ asylum to. istencc or nuclear weapons lS I far
on his prfor 1982 is the same as 1ha1 we saw them to El Salvador, wh~re they security than ii lb~ Soviet
ln 1981: the cut of e$Kntial social are sure to disappear under° the . Union. Scoville points · to the
services and an unhistorically Duarte aovernment . The Ad- development of the MX and
precedented anns build-up com- •ministration wants · ,o avoid a' Pershina missile s ystems as
binina to.starve the poor and-create possibleinfluxofrefugees(ldtist?) underminina deterrence , and
a federal budgel deficit of nearly 10· the United States which miaht increasina incentives for the
one hundred billion dollars (a occur through any changes in 1he Soviet Union to build up its
statistic which Rea,an claimed politic.al structure of the region. In own nuclear arsenal ancl to
durina his campaign was a primary COntrast Halperin suaaests we look launch a first strike . Why?
contribution to hiah inflation to David Roc:kdeller, head of These
weapons
systems
rate,). But wail, there's more, Chase Manhauan Bank~ who / (known as coun1er-fo;ce) are
Am,ric:a's unprt«denrcd military recently stated that irrespective or designed to eliminate Soviet
build.up, inconsistent anct_ag.
missiles before they can be
aris.sive foreign policy tiave done
launched. Thus, the Soviet
no1hlna but alienate alltcs and
Disarmament, then, is clea~iY. On.On, rather than being deteradversaries alike. These are just
red, is forced to a similar first•
a policy which ""'must actively
somt of rhe results of 1he Ad·
slrike capability. Also, in the
and sincerely pursue.
ministra tion's policies which
event of an international--(i.e.
march us all on a path of economic:
a
Sov iet
i nvas ion
of
depression and&rowingdangers o f
Poland)-.the Soviet aoverr\·
war.
the system government, alJ small ment would be forced to launch
Bui who has ,alternatives to Countries want to trade with the all its missile:1 in order to avoid
Reagan's callous policies? The United Slates. Nor do they wish to an American first -s trike.
Democratic: Pany has yet to offer a be our' enemy with American LaRoque agreed with Scoville
coltlprehensive cqunterplan. Yet, military presence already •so im- • that deterrance is fa1aUy ftawed
there arcsiJns 1ha1 this is changing. mense in the area. Halp,crin's as the United States ·already
On March S, 6, and 7, lhe answer is to end all coonomic and possesses
more
nucJe.ar
Americ4ns/or Democralic Action, military aid to ElSalvadorand only warheads t.han the Soviet
knoW'n infonnatly as the left wing provide support for a regime that is Union. Lall. further, emof the Democ:ratiC Party, spon- concerned with 1hc human rig.his phasized the enormous cos1s of
sored a convention to discuss a of its Populace.
nuclear build-up which she SCC$

Browa. ltaalfer M a.di s

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as both economically and
militarily danaerous. We must
stop thinkina of national
secyrity In purely military
terms, . but we must ~Ito consider the economic, polltic:al
and social consequen'Ces.
Dbannament, then, is clearly a
pclic:y which we must 1c1ively
and sincettly pursue.
Noted MIT economist,
Lester Thoreau, endeavored 10

will fail, for It certa.inly will,
rather what are viable alternatives to it. They suaaested
that the Ameriean W elfare
State was ineffective not
bec.a use it went too far but
rather it did not pro,reu far
enouah, -'Ne m11$1, they said, 10
rar beyond the pins or tht lut
thirty-five years to establish an
equitable distribution of
wealth and aoods in American
society. Prttently one percent of American
Bui who has o/ltrtrilll•es Jo citlzms own fifly percent of tbt
Rtogon :S callous policies?
stoct and •il!ttY percent or tht
trust (unds. This economic
disparity leads to poli\leal
out what has
wrona disparity because th• wealthy
with th<· American economy. It can buy politiul influence and
_is clear that American industry are essential to economic
has becn routed by (oreian arowth desired by all. This
competition, which i,s able to situation subverts the PoSJibillproduce hiaher qualily pro- ty for real democracy.
ducts at lower prices. Can we
What is to be done?
really believe President Rcqan
I) We must create more
when .he says that too much public sector job proarams and
aovernment spendina and make a realistic step toward full
over-rcaulation has led td our employmau.
slu11ish economy? In th•
2) Corporations will bt subrelatively he.ahhy economies of sidized wilh tax breaks only
West Omnany and Japan, the when they actuaUy invest irl
covtrnments account for near- creatina jobs, not merely for
ly half of thcir respective aross their promises.
_
national products, whereas, in .. 3) Creation of a national
'the United States, government · credit bank to subsidize and
accounted for only 22 percent cootrol interest rates at an afor the ONP in 1980. Ineffective fordable levd.
aovernmtnt may be part of the
4) .We must develop a truly
problem however aovcrnment equitable and proa'.re.ssive ta.x
spendina is no excuse for poor structure taxina individuals
economic l)Ct"formancel
and industry equally.
Tho reau s uggests thal
Wha t then ls the general
Aqierican indusuy has been liberal alternative to current
whipped . , both the manqtrial ftdtral policies? It is ..........
a nd aovernmental levels. tion of aovernment responAmerican mana.,ers have lack- sibility of providing for the
ed a wholistic view of economic social welfare of the American
growth as American industry people and the reinstituti~n
continues 10 be ineffective and and extension of the social.
was1dul when compared to its economic and political proforeign competition. The arams beaan by President
President's hard line supply- Roosevelt in iesponse to the
side advisors now contradict economic collapse of his day.
their basic free market ideology Despite all the differences on
by desiring to sh ut off the the kf'l, Liberals mu$l seize the
American market to foreian . opportunity 10 unite and
goods.
counter £he Administration's
further, as asserted by uradlcal" programs of wealth
socialists Michael Harrington and power redistribution
and Irving Howe, our concern towards the wcalt~y and the
is not whether Reagonomic:s tide of rising militarism.

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by Garry Trude~

DOONESBURY -

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GREG MILLER

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The Colaate S1udmt Auociation exisls for the ,
students, and thU.J m\lll both reprc:sen1 and respond 10 •
their needs 1Dd concerns. The S.A. Prtsident b the person who is ultimately raponsiblt for ensurina that the
S.A. ls runction!na erfecdvdy for the students.
One
of the
msot . impouan t . task s
of the S.A. President is to ensure 1h11 s1ud~1 opinion is ·
'ICCura1ely expressed to the facuhy and Adminis1ra1ion.
But how is ..,1uden1 opinion .. on issues learned? For one,
the S.A. President must wivdy and rmiuently approach
,roup$ and studerHSi he canno1 wait for these people to
come to him. In order todf*tivlty rtpresent all students

llolh o r theN
can be stimulated with a
st""'I Scudent Sawe. ~ Sonat_< is one voice o r student
Ol)inloa.and is directly mponslblr for the rundln& or 1h•

campus orpniutions, The S.A . President must be able
to WOleadership. By lidpins the senator> become more involv•
eel in. and aware or 1he various aspects of the Student
,Association, new and crea1ive kleas will hopefully
emaae. The Scna,..,_.mhip conftrences held in 1hc
early fall have shown how brainstormina can lead 10
realized objective.
,
The Student Associatfon is, of course, limited in ils
capabililies, Bui is also.has the poten1ial to do more. The
S.A. Presidtnt must be open and approKhable. eqer to
undertake a full ·year's commitment. The Presktent can.not be someone who sits in the S.A . ofrtec cwo hours a
week. rather, he must actively Sttk the oPink>ns of the
students and express them. Howevtr cumbersone, the
lea,i.sla1ivc aovernance structure is responsible ror most
major academic and rcsidenlial policy at Colpte. An ctrective S.A. P resident must be one who can work within
this structure. The Student AssociatKJn offteen must
have ambitions as well as adequate resources, bin it is
esaential that they have th• knowleda• and ~ence
within the S.A. to obtain student sol.is.

Acodtmic Affairs Boord - Cltoirperson, ~ Ital~
Acodtmk A/fain Commilltt- Currkwlum Commilltt
- ~nator - Dtbatt Sodt"' - Ro,.;,,, TNm

he cannot re-fleet·the opinions of one a,oup alone: the

.

President must be open to the opi°nions and suuestions of

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au

student&.
It ls bnpei'ative that s1udcnt concerns are expiesscd and
undffllood beforrchanaes are made. AU too frequently
these opinions are mere reaclion5 to an already determined policy. The S.A. President mu.st be willing to s1and up
and criticize the Admini.s1ration and to press for changes.
In eisenoe, he must actively strive 10 achieve studenc

aoaJs,

.

Myexptticnct in this realm is extensive, including both
student and university govcrnanoe. I currently chair the
Senate Academic Arfairs Committee and am a reprcseniative 10 the Academic Affaars Board, one of the two ma•.
jor policy-makina borads within the Univmity. Last fall
I araued to 1.hc Administration tl\e need for a minors pro•: gram and just recently echoed the strong student suppOrt i
for thcoonlinuation of January. Curren1ly lam sp0nsor-·
ina legi.slation to extend the G.R.O. declaration deadline
until after midterms.
A 5eeond, bu! equally imp0rtatn role of the S.A. Presi'dent is that of ooordina1or of student organizations.
~The most effective· arm of coordination is the
budaed ng process. Wher~ it is essential that these campus groups remain autonomous, many can be encouraged
to foUow a specific b udgeting philosophy. For example,
one way to aid the improvement of minority/ majorily
relations would be 10 encourage and fu nd joint activities
run by both the Black Student Union and other campus
a;roups, includina fraternities. A productive Union
Board woukl serve not only an illformational purpose,
but also to encouraae cooperation between various campus groups. ,

TOM RAMSAY

The 01t1ce of Student Association President can be
defined in many ways. The SA President must reprt,sent
students and present their needs 10 the administration and
faculty in forums such as the Student Affairs Board . An
effective SA president must be responsive to student oon~erns and, more imponantly, be willing .to pursue these
concerns.
In addition to I he spokesman role the SA president performs, there is the general expeflenoe and awareness an
individual brings to the orrice. In many respects the individual defines the office. It is imporlanl 1ha1 any can.
didate for Stude.nt Association Ortice have a wide range
ex~rie.nct with the different f"cets of the university.
The SA President mus1 gather divergent threads that
make up this university into a purposeful pattern.
TheOfficeofStuden1 Association Pres-iden1 is o ne I am
extremelyquaJiried for. More importan1ly, though I have
proven my commiument to Students at Colgate. My experience in academic and student activities , residen1ial life
and govcniance afc unmatched by any 01her candidate.
As Student Associalion PrtsidC'Rt I would concinUe to
work for students and respond 10 their con«arns here ac
Colga1e.

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reu,_

LESLIE LYONS
I think that indefinin1 thejobortheS.A . President as I
a ditferent viewpoint than my op,Ponents. The office or Student Association President is
one tha1 I feel should serve as an initiator of policy within
the different partsof1heStudent Association, and act asa
liaison between the Student Senale, 1hc various Committees, and the Student Body as a whQle.
~
I believe that the President should be a true rf'pr«entativeorthe Student Associa1k>n, and not the mere tool of
a leadership structure who.se past is sadly marred by
dlsr$rd for. and sometimes opposition to, the spirit and
intent of the student body.
Studa1ts and their rammes pay a great deal of money to
·attend this institution, and it is only fair that students
should have some say as 101he allocation of their fees and
endorsem*nt orcricicism of University p0licy. We at Colgate are supposedly ••intelligent'' individuals; it is not illogica.J that our opinions shot.Lid be given consideration by
our "leaders".
In the pa.st, the.Student Government apparatus has suffered from a negative public image; this image is selfperpetuating because or the fact that fNStudents care 10
become involved in an organization derided as a collection or "tools" and "drones". The prc~nt Student
Senate has not, I maintain, done an errective job of conveying Student Opinion; few senators actually consul!
with their conslituencics about i.ssues and policies· under
consideration; the Sociil Committeecon1roversy last fall
is a case in poin1. The Senate, which seems to be or
cphermeral imponan~. often ac1$ asa .. Rubber Stamp"
for decisions made by the Committ~s (e.g. SAB,' A.AB.
Budget Committee, etc.) whose membership includes administrators Who communicate 1he Universi1y's view_point. Perhaps the Committees would be morcdfcetive if
concerned students, not necessarily connected 10 the
Senate, were given more of a chance to serve on them.
I believe that the S.A. President's job is 10 assure
representation to the Student Boto serve as a link between the various organs of Studenl
'Government. J also hope that it will be possible to injec:t
some new blopd into the system, so that the S.A. will control Student Oovernmenl, and not vice versa.
'

see it, I am ta.kin&

S.A. Elections will be Mar,:h 23rd and 24th.

"W/te,e C.OOkina Is
An Art And, &ting l_!
Is A Plea•1e " ·
T..
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R LI ht · Hamilton NY

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51 la,, NHd> 16,

Hl2

11D OOLGA.ft NA.1lOON
Senate 1,:, be• more open and mon,eully accalble budtutlon.

Vice President

My Quallllcatlons:
Havin, been active in the Senate for 1hret Jtll'$. two or
which I spent u • member or the ladership circle, I feel
lluit I can run the Senate In an efficient, responslble and

. WENDY TRUGMAN
I am rurinina for S.A . Vice President because I believe I
can unke lhe various factions or the Colpte Student
Body and rosier• sense or Community. Too often on this
campus, people criticize other people for who they are,
-what they do, and how they live. I believe tluil Colpte
sl!ould be • place where people are not only siven • free
choice or alternative lifestyles, but also a place where peo-.
pie's choices wh11ever they maybe are respected. In other
words, people shoukl respect one another's beliefs and
lifestyles. FOr example, fr11emity men and sorority
women should respcc1 each other and also respccl lhose
who choose not to join a fraternity or sorority. Unfor1una1ety, this sense of mutual ICQC'J)tance is cu.rrenlly not
the cue II Colaate. In the three yea,.. 1ha1 I have been 1c1ivc sith the S1udent Senate, I have noticed the increasing

_

tendency of 1he campw to splinter in10 various groupS not
only advocatina purely individual in1erts1s but also
. criticizina one another. Obviously, this is not good for 1he
• university.
,,

most imponantly, productive manna. Asan S.A. officer
under both Tim Murphy and Chris Arpey, I am fully
aware or the dulles and responsibilities or the VlcePresiclen11al role. Funhermore, the fact 1tu,1 I'•• dealt
with the administration as well as worked closely with the
other offieen In matins clecisions'in the P'ISI p edl me
confidence 1hat 1'm qualifted to usume that role apin in
the future.
I reallu the best arid the wroct of past student administrations and I've Sftfl what has worked and what
will work. Not only do I brina experience to the offtee but
I also brina a sense of purpose of what I want 10 accompti,h,.
Whal chanaes I envision for the fu1ure as well u my
standina on the major issues affectina Colaate will appear
in next '#eeks edition of the Maroon . Until then, lhank.
. you for your suppon .

While CoJsate is indeed composed of 2l00 diverse individuab here for a variety of reasons (which makes some
factionaliza1ion inevilable), all too often our differences
.cause us to lose siaht of our common aoal: to make Colaate into a belter place for au or us. As Vice-Preadent,
would encouraa,e.,,.t he Senate 10 operate as a body ttuit
would unite the Colgate Community and foster a sense of
mutual respecl among all s1udent$. AU major issues
· would be decided on the basis of what's be$t for everyone,
rather than what is best for one or two particularly vocal •
a,roups. Because· I am no1 tiahlly afflliated with any one
interest aroup on campus, yet associ11ed wilh many, I
would be an objective Vice-President who would push the
issues that would benefit the university community as a
whole.
··
Essentially, I am seekina to promote a community of
mutual respect and cooperation where any student can
voicehisorheropinK>n without fear of ridicule. I want the

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Chiropractor
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wishes to announce the opening of his new office

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on March 22. 1982
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~

The Student Association (SA) ovmees .and funds virtuaJJy every studen1 run activity on canipus, from WRCU
to the Youns Republicans. Every year you contribute 80
dollars in the forff\Ofstudent activity fees to the SA. from
these fees the S1udm1 Senate distributes about 190,000
dollars each year 10 student aroups all ~er campus;
you're probably a member of a1 leas1 one such group.
The single offidal fund ion of 1he SA vice-president is
presiding over the Senate, which is composed of students
from every dorm, fraternity, s~lal interest house, and
off-campus. As a bare minimum, the vice-prt:$iden1 must
be.able to run an effective Senate meeting. It is during
th* meednas chat student groups are recognized and
funded. As a body the Senate helps shape the academic,
social, and exlra-curricular atmosphere which we all are
immersed in most of the year. In the upcoming year,
students••;usinglhe Senate asonechannel--must make 1he
administration respec1 what sludenu wan1, need, and
d estrve f rom Colgate.
Before 1his can happen, though, the Scna1e musl earn

..

tll,e r-.,:t o f the 11udent body. The vice-president mllll
- - lhf . _ , or 11uden11 and admlnblrl!On, In
this manner, the vlce-pmldent can foqe the Senlle Into
an accurate and powffful voice which apealts ror all student concema. Communlcallon In both directions between Sludenll and administrators Is a major problem here
11 Colpte, u evidenced by the recent mlxup coneemlns
study a,oup lid.
Anolhere,wn\,le of• problem wlllch demands our Im.. mediate and,.. ierious attention is overcrowdlna .
Overc,owdtn,-both In cluoes and dorms--detrlCIS from
the quality or our Colpte ..pertence. The a-,al housina mas on campus, th\ future of aeneral educadon and
January term, and male/female and fraternity/sorority
and non-fraternity/sorority relations are but a few other
important issues which we can influence.
My qualiflCllions for chis office are extensive: Senate
General Oversl,i,1 and Academic Affall'$ Committees,
Women's Advisory Board, 1982-1983 S1u~en1 Compendium Co-editor. I would like to see a large vo1er tumout
this year; every sludcnt can vote. It's your school, it's
your home. Please suppon me,,and u k your friends to
1uppon me also.

Acupressure

M uscle Balancini
Sports lnjur lei

Please join us for an Open House Celebratlon

Sunday, March 21, 1982 2-5 pm.

tMILTON ..,. Wed., Mri 17

CJNEM ~ Wed. & n.n. I , .
824,3350

· Fri. & Sat. 7: 15 & 9:00

......

THE COLGATE MAIIOON

Colgate University

College
·euide
Scrutinized

Total Enrollment 2,6M
Undt,J.-duat« J,5IO
Malt/Female 5514$
SAT V / M 60t/65t

financ:'81 Ai4 65 ptrttt1t
Part-time Jobs 60 pt'f'CttU
Expon,e Pr$$$

lly IC1llllfftt Daly IIHI Ktny Bttau•
The c:ollqe education is «nain to emerge from the year 1982 a

sorely bauertd entity. As if Ron.aid Reagan's frenzied axe waving
ilft'I Pl;inful enouah, we must know con1tnd with Edward 8 .
Fiske"s Snttti~t Guidt to Collt,a, which had:s away a1 our cot.
leaiate
repu1a1ions.
1
The auide, which re«ives added clout from Mr. Fiske'; posidon
as education editor a11he Ntw York Tilnaas well as the paper's lofty imprimateo.r, hu aenerated wounded eaos and cries of ou1ra,e
from s1udenu and administrations at se-vffal of the 26S schools pro·

Applkanos 5,200
Accepted 1,,00
Enrolled 618

Academics••••
Social•••
Qofl ...

In chllly upstate New York, Colaate University has found t..;.o sources of alternative enersy. The firsl
is wood.fired heal, which the collqe introdu«d in 1981 . The second is ils studtnt body - a.mixture or
2,600 vola1ile, Independent thinkers who convert the isola1ed campus into a hotbed of academic and
extracurricular activity.
·
The stan of Colgate's thoroughly liberal~aru curriculum a 1t 1he aeolosy depanment (''All aeo majors love it and the profs") and philosophy and religion. Students also praiie bioloay, chemistry,
hi.slory, and Enalish . The sciences enjoy a new b'uildin1, areat racilities, and "lar1~numbersof faculty
who wckome con1act and work with studenl-S." Social sciences and 1ht' arts, a«J)t ror an improving
depanmen1 of polhk.al science, arc weaker. The in1erdiseiplinary freshman seminars, where .students
ae1 close, first-semes1tt contact with top professors, give students an excellent in1roduction to the
various depanments.
The hallmark or Colpte's aeademic proa.ram is Oexibilily. The college operates op a year-round
calendar (wilh al lt'1$1 one summer term in residence required), and there Is a January special sludies
prot,ram that setsuklea month rorconttntration on a project of the student'schoi«. Majors can 1ake
1he form of individualized ••1opical conocntra1ions, '' and the aenttal education requirement i.s currently a brttU to fulnll (though composition and roreian·language requirements may be added soon).
Students may staya1 Colgate to earn a master's degree in either counseling or 1eachina, witll internships
in nearby schools.
UnusualJy confiden1 of their ability to achieve, students rend to value learning abovearadcs, a priori•
ty enhanced by the new "Grade Recordina Op1ion." Jns1ead of commiuing themselves 10 the all-ornbthina pass/faiJ, students can taraet their preferred srade in any course. tr they make 1ha1 grade or
above, it i.s recorded; if not, they redeve a "crcdil" Only.
_.
Abou1 half or evc-ry class 11kes advantage or Col&atc's impressive array of orr,<'.ampus " studyaroups. '' These are cultural studies aroung 1he globe, departmen1al proarams (English, hi.story, and
economics)in London, and lanauaae studies infran«, Spain, and Switzerland, as well u a work-.study
.Protram on an Israeli kibbutz. Many or these offerings fulfill the summer•term rcqµittment. Back
home, aeoloay students pursue fieldwork: in the Northeast, political science majors spend timt in
Wuhin,1on, and almost anyone can enter an intershipwith a Colgate alumnus , take a leave ofabsence
on the Venture proaram, or sail away on a Sea Semester.
Althouah the administration has kept a balanced budge1 since 1964, it is tough 10 figure out where
they scrimped. Alf facilities (with the exception of the frat houses) arc in rairly good repair, new ones
haw been built, and the library, while still inadequate for major research, received a desperately nttded expansion in 1981.
·
Half the student body comes from within 1he state, and mostly everyone else from Nor1heastern
suburbs. While academic record is 1he sinaJc most imponant factor in admissions, Colgate wants
students "who arc able 10 make substantive con1ributions to campus life." Obviously. a strong record
of extracurricular work in hi.gh school can•, hurl here. Minority grgups are eagerly recruited and reprc•
sent about 13 percent of the studenl body.
Almost everyone is a jock at Colgate, and their love or the outdoors enables them 10 survive the ·
ChenJngo Valley's long winters in st.yle. Those with the stamina can avail themselves of a gotr course, a
ski run on campus, a trapshooting range, and sailing, cre\l(, and canoeing on scenic Lake Moraine. Varsi1y team take on an ambitious Division II schedule, and Red Raider roo1ball usually rares well.
All dorms house freshmen and upperclassmen in a choice of doubles, triples, quads , or larger suites
wilh fireplaces. In addition, Colgate-owned apartments in town offer one.year leases 10 an equal
number of SOP,hom*ores, j uniors and seniors who compete for 1he c9ve1ed places in the spring lonery.
Theme housing is another highly 1ou1ed alternative, and French and Spanish speakers, environmcn.
talists, femin ists, and majors in peace studies all have 1heir own accommodations. Unfor1una1ely, the
housing shortage rorces quite a few sophom*ores off campus, particularly women who cannot use the
fratern ity system asa faUback. In all , aboul 400students make do outside or donns, at lea~t for a year.
Frat men cat in their own houses, whileo1hers use the three cafeterias, bn either a ninctttn or ten meal
plan. A snack bar serves the most palatable fare but costs exira .
Colgate's lovely hillside campus features tree.lined drives, spacious lawns, and scenic ,..istas bu1little
10 do. Hamilton is hardly more 1han a hamlc1 with a few inexpensive bars, so more by default than by
student desire, frats dominate 1he social life. With 70 percenl or the freshman males joining the
brotherhood, men can expect a good deal of pressure to turn Greek. Women are generally less interested in the two moribund sorori1ies than in countervailing the fraternity inOuen1.~ through a
number of reminist organizations. Both men and women complain about the mistrust a nd alienation
betw«n the sexes and report there is little dating on campus and little traveling to look for alternative-s.
Colgate offers a traditional curriculum with a number Oranraclivc academic 1rimmings, encouraging slUdents to struclure their own education in and ou1 or the classroom. •'Colgate demands participation," says the admissions director, and those willing to rise 101he occaison will rind a n amount of flexibility and academic freedom that can elude all but lhe most dctcnnined al many o ther small colleges.

.

n&ed. This controversy stems both from questions about the
,uide's mcthodoloo and iu contcn1.
The unique ratina system includes a tangible evaluation of each
... school's academics, social life, and aeneral quality of life (ranaina
from 1·Sp0intseach). This system etnds to bedeceivina, for Fiske

rares private schools separately from public, thus the University or
Massachusetts receives a whoPs>ins 13 total points out of a possible
IS, while Printtton rece-ives a relatively meqer 11 . Other scores or

interest includ<: Colaatt - 10 pts.; Hamilton Coll<1• - 12 pts;
University of Virainia - 14, and Harvard - 12 pts. Althouah
Fiske claims, in a N~W$wtt/c anicle published on Marth I, that the
.. ''suide wu not Mf'Ont to be a compe1hive comparison ofcolteacs, ••
it is naive to bdie~e that it will noc be perceived 1ha1 way. Perhaps
the system itself is not misleadina, but iu interpre-ration promises 10
be.

Obviously Mr. Fiske strives to present a balanced pic1Ureof each
school. Granted, an endeavor so .subj«tive in nature is bound 10
raise many an eyebrow. It is difficult, however, not to note an
authorial bias toward small, isloated private liberal arts schools. At
the risk of soundina paranoid, schools like Colaate, Middleb.ury,
Bowdoin, Colby and Amhm1 au scored surprisingly low in the•
areas of social life and general qualhy or life.
The author spares no feelings in his brutally frai;ik, ra1her infor·
mal commmtaries, which ranae in subject from the quality of cam.
pus life 10 1he merits of the History Ocpanment. Mount Holyoke
students, for instance, are understandably up in arms over lines in·
corporated in the commcnlary like, ''Soulh Hadley has a popula.
tion of ,ix, includina two wild dogs." The University of Rhode
Island has considered filing suit over blatantly derogatory
st11emm1s like, '' •.•As long as you don't ask 100 much of URI , it ·
won't ask 100 much of you."
S1udtnts at Colgate might question our lackluster showing in the
auide. Naturally a portion of that queslionina is due 10 a fttlingor
loyalty. However, there arc several incorisislencics which one can.
not fail to pick. upon. For example, Fi.skecomments, "Those with
stamina can avail themselves or a aolr course, a ski.run on campus,
a trap.,shooting range, and sailing, crew, and canoeing on s.cenic
Lake Moraine.' ' One wonders then, of his later statement: ''Col•
aate's lovely hillside campus features tree.lined drives, spacious
lawns, and scenic vistas but liule to do." What does he mean by
'*do"? Colaate comes off sounding like a vacuous counuy club.
Fiske also encounters inconsistency in Ms presentation or the
academic quality of Colgate. Though he propiliously remarks that
Colgate students arc " unusually confident or their ability to
achievf' and that those same students "'convert the isolated cam,
pus into a hotbed or academic and extracurricular activity" he
miaht be labeled miserly for slappina us with rour.star rating. Mr.
Fiske"s article is onen uncomfortably subjec1ive; it borders on 1he
damqjns, One hopes that the PotentiaJ college student looks
beyond the prestige of Mr. Fiske's spOnsorshtp and job title, and
takes into account the author's very informal, rather narrow point
of view.

, Tltls ls a rtprint oftire essay tJS it appeared in " Th, Ntw York Tlmts Stleclive Guide to Colleges,. com•
pikd by Edward 8. Fiskt.
'

Professor lsma'il R. al Faruq) who Is Professor of Religion and
Director of Islamic Studies at Temple University as well as
consultant to several universities of the Middle East, North Africa
and Southeast Asia will be on campus Sunday, March 21 and
NY:>nday, March 22 to give two public lectures as follows:

Sunday, March 21 , 1982
7 :30 p.m.
209 Lathrop
"Why Study the Qur'an in a General Education Course?
What doe~ it offer for Meaningful Human Existence?"
Monday, March 22, 1982 . 7 :30 p.m.
105 Lawrence
"What Solution Does the Muslim World Offer for
the Middle East Problem? ·,,
fhese lectures are sponsored by the Department of Philosophy
and Religion, the Division of the Humanities and the Middle East
Students Association of Colgate University.

,'h Hf1$• .__. 16, 1112

Fund Drive:
'

. , • •, fmll•

TID COi.GAD MAIIOON

Colgate Student.a Shake a Legfor Charity ·

·--

hours to ao, 27 _ . . left.

Colpte SIUdents OR a C...tlve We've rocked around the clock!
lot. The Isolated community; the BreakfaSI arrived an hour qo to
alven (and alven and alven) aive much needed eneray. Even
· -in the commualty; and the th9uah
normally poor Sludent financial tired from dancinJ 'di dawn
soun:a OR racion whk:11 may halt .. .and beyond, spirits OR 11W up. A
othen but do no< deler Ille Colpte lot has 10 do with suppon from
student boo}' rrom findlna ways to non--dancin1 1tudents comlna
avoid bomcwort.
down to Huntinaton to cheer us
fnlaJ Nlpl pa.
on. Everyone b awue thal the vast
One hour of danana has aone by majority or Cola••• is sound
and the only Injury has been a asleep. I'd alve my risJtt fOOI for a
i,o,ter falllna off the wall. Ourina bed ...even in K.E.0.1
the five minute per hour break,
11:tt mOSI or the ~ have heoded We've .,_- the halfway Poini
for the soda • thlni quenchin1 and but it aeema little consolation as
caffeine supplyioa. "It (the fir11 tired u we a.re, we have jUII as
hour) weru really fut," wu the m11Ch ahead of us u behind us.
comment from one of lhe 30 Viskon keep droppin1 in to put a
students danchla, One down, 29 to little llfe back in us, but our
10. How hard can it be?
lhouahts are on more imJ)Ol'tlnt
thinp--like the shower and lunAt this break, after four hours of break at I :30
dan1:31 pa A clwl.. of clothes and
head towards Saturday. The taped clean hair has made at least one
music is aoocl, and althouah noc as dancer (namely me) feel re.
ener,etically u earlier, everyone juvenated. After a lunch of
conlinues to dance. A night at one boloe:na and cheese sandwiches we
of the Pub Discos is 31-1 hours of have but on more clock revoludon
dancing, so nothina areal has been to ao. An interestina thina happen.
accomplished .... in the back of one ed thouah, I've never been fond of
dancer's · mind though, was the boloana but funny thing .. 1've ..
thought -·· there are still 26 hours never enjoyed it more. Or, for that
co go. Twenty-six.
mailer, seen so many people enjoy
6:ttam
il!
Hooray! A half hour break after
6:GOpa
ten hours of daneina. Hours don't It's a ·good thing Marie Undhorst
ao by as fast and eneray is pretty (Asst. Chaplain and advisor to the
low, but showt-rs and breakfast Fund Drive) was here this after•
should wask everyone up noon .• her services (as in final
•4lmosr. .. somc take the oppor- funeral) may be riec,ssary. Dancers
1unity to sleep, though I'm bq,inn- eneray levels are on Jiffercnc cycles
ina to sense 1hat that can be ac- - half of the 24 dancers left will be
complished on one's feet. Twenty up durina one hour, then down the

.......,,,

I

nat. Webster", and the Marathon
Nia Nie that danana· Is 'con-

·d oan't matter now. The laSI five . KathyHoustenrorajobwdldone.
There..i atill more to come for the
hours went ra11 •100(111 as
dnuousrhythmic motion' .. shuffl• the marathoners were no lonaer a fund drive - Pub Disco tomorrow
Ina around the nm floor may not 1roup· or coupla but a aroup' or •iaht reaturina the sound or New
qualify anyone for 'Dance Fever' dose friends wildly danan110 beat Wave,' drafu and aood ol' Pizza
but k wlU help us survive u there the band, one can say. A aood Hut Pizza.On Friday, Bopnfllm
OR stW daht hours to ao. But as crowd wu on hand to cheer u1 on
fell showlq In two location, -Olin
tired and mlscrable moll everyone and as the laSI hour ticked down, 308 and Lathrop 209. Each movie,
is ree11na. au left ... psyched for lhe 1urvivon pve it their all, C-bloltco and To HIIWtmd H~
the nm half hour break and all toaether. 2:campus dance. Just one thouaht yet happy people head for a well eac:b location. You sit 11W ... we
roll, throuah my mind, ''They
shoot hone,, don'l lhey?'.'

l:ll ,Half hour break! A shower and
final •hanae or clothes aets us all
ready to finish up with style. With
1hecampus com.ins down to watch,
we're tct to lhow them what the
word 'perseverance' means. Ase•
cond (Or better yet 10th) wind has
entered and the end is near, In
more than one way!

2:tt The Marathon i.s over, fini, caput,
which also describes the state of
many feet and lep. But all that

desrrvedrest. h'sover. We've had
the thrill of victory, and the aaony
of feet··but what a story to tell our
a,andchildrcn I

So with dancin1 done, au that,..
mains Is to collect pledaes, the couple brinaina iJ'I 1he mOSI money will
find themselves headin1 for Bermuda. The marathon is one of the
prime money makers for the fund
drive, which hu so far railed over
$3,000 for charity. The marathon
also takes a
deal of time and
CDff1Y to orpnize - con,ratula•
lions ao out to Mary LaMantia and

.,..1

move the films! Tickets, available
at the door, are SI .50foroneshow,
$2.50 for both. Saturday niaht is
International Niabt in the Student
Union. Tickets OR $2.00 (or this
event which features oquue dancin1 called by Professor RV Smith,
beer and food from around the
world, and International dance.
With the five week fund drive
nearin1 its end, your supPoft Is
asked and appreciated, 001 only by
1he committee, but by the 11
benefittina charities. We've
reached out, let's keep thinp
rollina.

CHARITY FUND DRIVE WEEKEND EVENTS
.

FRI ., MAR. 19th

SAT., MAR. 20th

Bogart
Film Fest

International
Night

$1 .50 fo r one,
$ 2.50 fo r both movie s

-Squa-e Dmldng witfl I .V. S..lirft &

1h Cole Hil ,_,.,,

Held in TWO locations
O lin 308 :
-CASABLANCA a t 7 :00

·- lntemafional Da,,ce

- Beer & food fro11 Around fh World

TO HAVE & HAVE NOT at 9 :30

- Hot & Cold Apple qder

'

209 Lothro p:
TO HAVE & HAVE NOT a t 7:00

CASABLANCA a t 9:30

You sit still, w,e move th fillllsl

9:00- ,,,,.. 1:00 •

in th Hal of th Presidents
Aclnrission: $2.00

T1R COLGATE IIAllOON

St. Pat's Day At Hickey's:

'

The Legend Continues
By Kare• Uaaer

.
Top 0'1he moE,"'ndin'
Aye, n' 111.11·, 1he
ou11ide

time 1hat people
sixpacks (or twcl

waitina for a certa

wilh
ckJ) and sand~iches,
l*r to open. Which

bar? Why. Hickey's, of course. There's no
place else to be when March IJth roll-.
around.

Lines bqin forming outs.ide the door a1
about 7:00 am. and 11 8:00 am the doors
open and tht pany begins - with frtt shoh
of Irish Whiskey until 9:00 am. they usually go throu,h a case of whiskey in that
hour. Three people will be behind 1he bar.
5Cf'Yina shots and arttn beer, and nothing
but Irish tunes will be played. As usual.
there will be dancina on 1he bmches, tables
and C\lff)'whcre else. and everyone, whether
lr_ish or not, will be having a gttat time.
St. Patrkk 's Day CelebratK>n (and in,
ebriation) al f1ickey's began about ten
years aao. The Hickey family, which own,
ed the bar until 1978. began the gala even1
in the early 1970's and, when Randy Jont,
and Hamy Trudeau bought 1he bar in 1978.
lhcy kepi up t_hc SI. Patrick'& Day tradition .
And tradition it is. PeopJc talk about it
' from January IHI May, and even alumni
make sure to come back fo r 1he eelebracion.
Rumor has it that Tom Rosenfeld '81, is
flying in from San francisc:o 10 be 1here
because "h's the grea1est ." He's only one
of many. ·

Mary Lou Doyle '80 ,is ano1her former
Hickey's celebrator who is aoing 10 be on
hand for the festivities.
She reminisced
about S1 Patric;k'5 Day when she w1.5 a
Senior at Colpte. She had a mid1erm 1h11
day, which she hadn'I studied for : Mary
Lou got up that mornina, intending, 10
s1udy, 'but she found herself down at
Hickey's for "just one beff." Well, many
beers, and a few hours later. 5he realized
thu she was, 11 1h11 minute, supi,ostd 10 be
taking a test. A friend drove her up the hill
and Mary Lou staagerttd into 1hc room.
Since she could not even read the test, she
wrote a note to the professor, explaining
her siluation and prornlsing to take the lest
at a later date. She handed in her empty
blue book and lefl. So, SI. Pairick's Day
took ils 1011 an yet another unsuspecting
student? No! Mary Lou ended up gelling
an A in 1hc course, and she had a great time
as well!
Not all stories have such a happy ending.
Brian ·Plunkelt '82 and George "Swanee"
Swan '82 told me the sad story of Chick
Pritchard. He htsn't been seen since St.
Patrick's Day 198l when. as Hkkey•s
Jcicnd h&s ir. he drank so much green beer
thal he turned into a leprechaun and disappeared.
• There probably will be lots .9r
leprechauns at Hickey's Wednesday morn•
ing, Chris McNamara 182 will be decked
out with shamrocks and Irish Charm (Or so

l hear) and Rocky Calavi1a '83 ("I'm hair
Msh, you know.'') will be green with
lrishncss, and a wee bit of green paint.
Irish 1weed caP5, bunons, shamrcxks and
shillelaghs will adorn everyone from Flynn.
ConnolJy and Murphy to Matarewski, Coz.
zaghano and Jones. During the course of
the day, 'between five and six hundred pco.
pie will be in and out of Hickey's, 1oasting

good ole Eire and dancing a jig or two.
When asked why Hickey's goes all out
for S1. Patrick's day, Randy Jones.
ans;,.,cred simply, 0 Hickey"s is Irish.'' On
this one day of the year, ev-eryone is Irish so
here's somehting to remember."
An
Irishman is never drunk as long as he can
hang on to one blade grass and not faU orr
1he face of the earth." Erin go bragh!

Dates at the Gate
TUESDAY

,

WOMEN AT
COLGATE?
Tht Women's Resoutte Centtr pruents
"Tht History of Women at Colgate"
with Mary Bufwack, Wanda Berry, Liz
Brackett in the Cutten Core at 8:00 p. m.

WEDNESDAY

DISCO DOWN
Pub disco for the Charity Fund Drive,
9:30-1 :00 a.m.

THURSDAY

CHEMSEMS
/ant Soldano, '82, will discuss "Redox
Reactions of Plutonium" and Joseph
Was, '82, will discuss "Dissolution of
Crystine Stones" in JJ J Wynn at 10:15

a.m.

COFFEE
ANYON_E?
Cofftt break in the Wynn Lobby 1ponsortd by Kono.sioni from 9:50-10:20

a.m.

DINEAT
MERRILL HOUSE
Supper Club will conw,ne at the M_e"ill
HoU# at 6:00 p.m,
·

MOVIE TIME
"The 111/ormer" w/11 be pruented by
Takt Twoin3080/in at 7 and9:30p.m.;
Admission Is SJ.

LET'S DANCE
Colgate lnttrnatlonal Folk Dance Club
will mttt in J 14 Huntington from
7:30-9:30 p.m.

ON CULTURES...
"Authority, Work, and Lovt: . Comparing Russian and American At. tltudts;; - a lecture in Jewish studies by
Slava Paperno in 217 Lathrop at 7:30
p.m.

DANCING A GAIN H.M.S. PINAFORE
Colgate International Folk Dance Club
will meet In ll4 Huntington from
7-9:00 p.m.

BOGART BUFFS

''H.M.S. "Pinafore will bepresented in

the Brehmer Theater at 8:00 p.m.
$2.50

WORLDLY BEER

Take Two presents "Casablance" and
"To Have andHave Not" in 308 Olin at Charity Fund Drive 's International
7 and 9:30 p.m. Admission is Sl.50for Night will be held in the Hall of
one film or S2.50 for both. Presidents from 9:00p.m. - 1:00a.m.

TECTONICS
Tht Tectonics Seminar Ser/ts pruents
Yngvar lsachen, NYS Geological
Survey, "Tht Adirondacks Are All
Thty'reCracked up to Be" at 4 p.m. in
217 Lathrop.

AMERICA THE
BEAUTIFUL
The Cultural c,nttr w/11 present a panel
discus:sion, "Bicentennial Plus Six-A
Loo"" at Amtrica" in 209 Lathrop at
7:30p.m.

H.M.S. PINAFORE
"H.M.S. Pi,uifore" will be presented
by the University Theater in Brehmer
Theater at 8:00 p.m. - S2.

FRIDAY

BIO BITS
Bob Slngtr will speak on "liffects of
Acidic Preceipltatlon on Aquatic Food
ChaiM" and Richard April will speak
on "liffects of Acid Precipitation on
Lake Acidification" in 209 Lathrop at
3:30p.m.

H.M.S. PINAFORE
"H. M. S. "Pintifore will be pre~nted in
the Brehmer Theater at 8:00 p.m.
S2.50

SUND4Y

RING IN SPRING
Colgate conctrl series prrsents Jan
Debaetani. mezio•soprano. and

SATURDAY

Gilbert Kalish, piano, in tht Memorial
Chapel at 3:30p.m.

GMATS ANYONE? ANDMORE MOVIES
GMA T exam will be given in 209
Lathrop from 8:00 a.m. -/ :00 p.m.

"ThtLastHurrah"willbepruentedby
Takt Two In 3080/inat 7and9:30p.m.
SI.

JOSNEJ

CHINA SLIDES
A showing ofthe China Study Group's s/idts
"Tht Computtr Wore Tennis Shoes" will taktpla~in Olin at 7:30pmon Tuesday.
w/1/ be pruented by Take Two for Big Wint and ch~ will be serv-ed.
Brother/Big Sister participants in 308
Ollnat l:30p.m.
The un;versity Church will sponsor a
Retreat Weekend. The theme .will bt
"Listening: How Can Wt Bt Btlttr

MORE MOVIES...

• 5:30 pm
Llsttntn." Rldts ltavt Friday,

from the Student Union and rtturn by noon

on Saturday. Sign up by Thur$da)' in tht
Ta/ce Two pruents "Nosferatu" in 308 Chaplain's Ofrice and bring a slttping bag.
Olin at 7 and 9:30 p.m. - SJ.
ALL ARE WELCOME/

......
hat You've Always Thought, But Nevet Dared-to SayFllture corpontc 1ools: you 1ve p

your

suit, you've eoc yollr cruel shoes, you've

("You -Id try trod:1111 thfOtllh 1/w!lhult
on 1/w hHI Ill Pflmp, Olld • wool .,.ii. '1
(3) Interviewer: "So Suan, teU me about

younelr."

your new while shirt. The broad

Susan: ••1ama very career-oriented Poti1teal

of 1he corporate world are yours - if

Science majo( with a broad back.around in
the libenl an,. In addition, I have qultc a

)'OU have

the winnjn1 answe;n to your
te interview.
Advanced clones can aid in the demise of
lity by memorizlna the following
to lhose pu.tzlin9 in1trview ques·
Bankina lnterv~w
Interviewer: 11 Hello. I'm Joe Smith,
an, you? (handshake)
Doe: ••fine.sir, lt'sapla.su.retomeet

ly thinkln1: "My shots hurt 11kt ht//,
luznds art clammy, and God, I hop, I
, trip ov,r 1h01 lousy oran1t bock pock
IH mkld/1 of th• room. '1
Interviewer: "Bauliful weather we're
I today,jsn't ii? ..
"Yes, lovely. 0

wide ranae of c,nracurricular aclivilies ...
("1 Mould havt ml«l,t 1 play,d in th• botountatM,tt and ron in tht ann&1al nm ,ind
ch11r...

(4) Interviewer:

.. What's your best

qualily?"
Susan: "I have quite an ability to elucidate

upon the essential existential possibilities of
the libenl aru, panicularly thooe pertaining
101he intergovernmental relatN>nsof lhe present day situation in che world."
.("God, con 1 bullsftit likt cn,zy. ")
(S) Jnlerviewer: "Tell me what your most
memorable cw, at coi_.te has been."
$JJ-S1n: ..The Polltks or the Soviet Unjon,
because it exposed me to a uniqUe aov~n-

PEANUTS@

mental system in a new lisht, and I wu Jble
to recoodle mapy put dbcordant thoqhts
that I had about that paUtical Jystcm. I feel
lhat it's imponant to learn how 10 be openminded in order to produ~ harmonious
relations between people."
"C/a:sn? Go to rlassnond mllsG.H.?'1

(6) ln1ervteWer: .. Why have you chosen our
bank and what can you offer to our company?"
Susan: "I reel that First N11ional Bank of
Northern New Jersey offers me the srea1es1

oppcnunilies to draw upon my abilities and
to extend my fu1urc C&reer potential. I can
ofter both knowledae and ambition to your
company."
('"It PIIP wll. ·~

(7) Interviewer: , "Would you have a...
aeoaraphjcaJ prefer~noe? for instance, how
would you feel about workina at our company hc.adquarters in Hoboken, New
Je:rsey?"
Susan:.._ "I love New Jersey! That would be
perfect.''

by Charles M. Schulz

.----..,.....·-----, ,-----------, r---------,
MOW DO I KHJW WMAT
WAAT AA! WE SUPPOSEP
TO BE ™ING NOTES ON?

THSR NAMES ARE?

("For I/lb I bid JJO f10/ntJ?'1
(I) lntervlewtt: "What a,e your short term

•*'"'

Suan: "I'd like to find an entry-levd po&ition in bankina that offm me opportunitles
for upwa,d job mobility."
(,"I'd llltt 10 llort thfll twnty fH1tt Aittory
that~ dw in th• montilll, '1
(9) Interviewer: "What an, your lona-tmn

soal•?"
Susan: "I'd eventually like to work my way

up 10 an executive pOSition in bankiaa.,"
("I'd llk•tof/nlsh that
'1.
(10) Interviewer: "What is your sreatm
achievement at Cotpte1"
Suan: ••1•ve been able to achieve the status
or a well-rounded student due to my ability
to combine my many extracurricular ac-

,...,,ry,,.,,._,

tivities with my acadanic endeavors."

, .., outchuggtd Jay Wo~,d~rman lost
Wffk, ")

lncerviewer: .. What has rounded out
your experience at Col,ate7"
Susan: "The oppGrtun.ity to hear speakers
such as John AndffSOn and Andrew Youna
have added 10 my academic experience at
Colgate. making it a more fulfilled and
benerteial one."
("The pub")

(12) ln1crviewer: "You'll probably be hearing from us. It's been nice meeting you!•
Susan: "It was nice meeting you. also. I
hope I hear from you soon ."
("Who tht ht/I wants ro work in New
(11)

Jerxy?'1

WHY? WMAT CAN A
TREE DO TO YOU?

YOU s+lOOLM SAY 13AD
THINGS A80VT TREES

....

I

'

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'

Pinafore Revie_w:

The Ship Sails Today
By Naacy Ellis

wlnd.s, and a synlhesizer. Normal. ly the show calls for a full classical

Are you homesick for Broadway? WellonMan:h 18, 19,and20

orchestra, but Corson felt 1hat the
band sound would be more in-

at 8:00 p.m. in BrehmerThcarcr, a
liulc bil or Broadway comes to
Hamihon, NY. when William Cor-

ches1ra work welJ together which
will greatly enhance 1he perfor-

son '82 dircc,s Gilbert and
Sullivan' s musical "H . M.S.
Pinafore" . Otherwise known as
"The Lass that Loved a Sailor.''
this student production is a €inc example or the strona talent that can
be found here at Colgate.
The cast i.s compri.sed of 2A cnthusiaslic members who have been
hard at work on the show for the
past six wttks. The orchenra has

Fllller,Seid. . . aN cMI ,..,... to la•IICII Pinef=.

ten musicians, includina brass,

-~

teresting.

The case and 1he or-

Josi.
The pk>l or 1he play revolves
around a love triana.Je:. the Cap-

tain's daughter, Josephine (played
by Julia Fullt:r) is in love wilh a
commOn $Ailor (Eric Sddman) but

P. K. JOKES
'e~d'1
,

• t t

For A I Your College Nee

Our Prices Better Than
The Bookstore
~
School Supplies \
Art Supptl..
'

. Give your local Anny Reserve unit a weekend
a month and a oouple of summers during oollege,
and they1lgiveyouover$12,CXX>foroollege. Upto
$4,CXX> in oollege aid is yours just for joining most.
units. Plus over $2,200 for two summer training
periods. And another $6,CXX> for serving a weekend a month plus two weeks a year. Interested?
Call your local Anny Reserve recruiter toll free at
800--421-4422. In Califotnia, 800-252-0011. In
Alask~ or Hawaii, 800--42}-2244.
·

··-·

Rome, New Yon 13440
337-6320

street

.....,..,.y .
t..eotner Goods

Map11...

'

..

The cas.t has put in several hours
·of rehearsals, and lately has been
practking three hours a day, while
1he"principals have bttn rehearsing
six hours a day. Althouah it is a lot
of work, everyone involved with
the show is having a great time.
Their aim is to make thi.s the best
show ever at Colgate.
Tickets arc S3 foi' acneral admis..
sioll, S2 for s1uden1s and senior
citizens, and 1hcy arc available in
the Dana Ans Center box office.

The show really looks ar,at, so
come aboard mates, and prepare
for a fantas1ic voyage aboard the
"H .M.S. Pinafore."

-ON SALE NOW- .

Record Coop/ Charity Fund
Drive Raff le Tickets

·.-....
301 West Donmck Street

her hand in marriage has been promised to 1he Admiral (John
· Thompson) by her father, Captain
Corcoran, (Rober1 lair ). The play
cakes place on the quar1er-deck o f
1he H.M.S. Pinafore, which allows
ror the humor or Gilbert and
Sullivan to be taken to an extreme.
The amazing scenery and props
look quite professional, and the
costumes come from a p rofessional
shop, 1hus no theater magic will be

1st ,P rize - $50 In L.P.'s
2nd Prize - $25 In .L.P.'s

·f ive 3rd Prizes
- $8.98 L.P.

'

Donation $1 .00 Each Tickets available a t Record Coop and
Charity Fund Drive Events. Drawing International Night
Mar. 20 You do not have to be present to win.

...

:

TlsHIIS', .._. 16' 1912

-Pastel Display Highlights Return of the Cloakroom Ga llery
lty Sally a1aak
With all the library re:nov11k>ns
hnc been 1oin1 on, s:1uderus
have of late deli,i,ted in wanderina

1h11

about 10 explore all 1hc la lest nooks
and crannies open 10 public use..nd
inspection. The new sec1ion. 1he
new staircase, the n~ smoke &
co*ke room :. all are nowoJ)ffl. Last
wftk, in Case Library's anteroom,

Rendered boldly in pas1et at such
larae proponions, the ef;ect wu
su!klna and force1ul~ The assianme-nt took 1wo and one~half weeks
to complete, and was 1he "crown·
ina achievemen1 of the semester,''
accordina 10 Randy Hoppe, one of
the sludenl anis1s whose work was
shown.

Ihm wu a welcome rc-openlna of
an impOrtant old library "addi•
1ion:" the Ck>akroom O~llcry.

Exhibits at the Cloakroom
Oalltty will change every week
throuataou1 the semester: The line·
The cxhibj1ion selected to up includes mainly one-man
c;hrbten this rc-o~ning came from shows, bu1 lhcrc arc two installaLynn Schwarzcr's rirs1-semes1cr tion shows consistina of
drawinactass. The nintteen Iara«· . pho1oaraphy and printmaking
than-life-sized portraits were a scheduled as well .
1tSult of a color assi,anmen1, · exThe Cloakroom Gallery has
ecuted wilh considerable anen1Jon
tocom_position and scale. The pro- al'Ways served as a dis1inct and im·
cedure included choosina an port ant "addition" to Case
already--existcru work, croppina ii Library. It Sttms to ace as a
down, and '"blowina ~t up" lo the s1ra1cai4:aJly placed anthctic buffer be1ween 1hc inner, studious
J.arae proportions of 1he finished
library
atmosphere and the outproducts.
·
door world of campus. As you pass
from one to the other, do not
Choten subj«ts rangtd rrom
Willi&!" Blake and Brnege1 to foraet to stop and admire the artistic elemen1 i1 provid$5.
modem magaz.inc advercisemcnts.

Movie Review:

Skip ''Saturday the 14th'' This Week for ''Amateur''
family in WWII he soua.ht -and
received his rcvrnae. The question
is ratSed (and appropriacely so) as
to whether revenge serves 10 bring
If a loved-one is e.xccu1cd in loved ones back. The father felt
public by a group of 1errori.sts 1ha1 ii did bringhimback to life and
- because their demands were not lhis conversation conviced Charles
mel in 1ime, what would you do? to do the same.
Human nature often seeks
..The Amateur.. is a Canadianrcvenge, but it is not always easy to financed film that is intriguing and
aocomplish.
suspenseful while remaining quite
"The Amateur" is a sto ry about believable. 11 is 1he surprising
Charles Heller (played by John 1wis-ts in the plot that really make
Savage), who "forced" the CIA the film. Some people may find ii
into allowing him to seek his too complicated especially if they
revenge. As an employee of lhe are not attracted to spy dramas. It
CIA, he acquires the material is a film that you will probably
necessary to black mai l the "love or hate". Personally, I rcelit
organization to train and send him is a tremendous achievement in
into G~hoslavakia in s.carch of 1he era
the ludicrous James
his girlfriend's assassins.
Bond films. Bond is aooc1: but is
The g:lrlfriend (Lynne Griffin) is not very believable . n The
taken hostage and executed in front Amateur" contains more human
of the U.S. Embassy in West Ger- . drama than many or 1he other
many. Her rather (Jon Rubes) told spy pictures.
Heller 1hat when he lost his firsl
Some have said that this kind or
by Claylon (..yons

or

theme has long sina:depaned from
American pictures. If so, then that
makes this picture even more imPortanl. Terrorism is not dcclln·
ing. Events as they are protrayed in
the film could ()()n<:e:ivably happen.
If so, what would you u a viclim
do?
"The Amateur" e.a ms a 20 on a
1-25 scale becuase or iu rare combination of entertainment and
mc-aning. It is not a film for every
one. Anyone with an open mind
could enjoy this 20th Century-fox
release. Directed by· Charles Jarrott, this R.ratcd feature is 111
minutes long. Other stars include
C hrislopher Plummer, Manhe
Keller, Arthur Hill, and Ed Lauter.
This film was released in
February, therefore it is not yet
coming to Hamilton. Unfortunately, we are blessed with "Salurday
the 14th" which isa 15 minute film
from New World that seems to be
twice as long. Scarring Richard

Cornell Law School

Benjamin and Paula Prentis.s, the
film is a comedy/horror spoof that
is a joke and an insult to the motion
pic1ure indus1ry. Its rew laughs
(available on any TV--sitcom) earn
a3ona 1-25scale. Theinvulonon-

lylasu until Sa1urday, March 20th.
..Breaker Morant" finishes the
week (21-23). 0 Raatime" and
"Reds" will both be coming to
Hamihon, but not until after the
Academy Awards on March .29.

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634 Myron Taylor Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853
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ANNOUNCES OPEN WORKOUT
4:00-6:00 pm
MON. & WED.
SMALL
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COACHES AVAILABLE
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ll1Iif OOll.llmm mu»m

Ade(phl Unfumlcy Mni&s Students 01 Tht: &SlS Of kKtMdo.tl Mtril And

Without f«.,gNd ToR.a«. Colot". Cfftd. Sex Or~.

.......

T.....,, Mllldl 16,

THE COLGATE MAROON

HIJ

'

Roundtabl~ Constructively Gripes Colga~e
lly Cylldi Skrtpak
The scene miaht sound familiar:

sludenll compl.1nln1 1bou1 Colple. Bullhisglipearoupwasdiffem u. ·
Nearly 60 women and men
shared 1helr dlsconten1 durina 1he

Women's Roundtable discu.ssion.
TIiey also debeted ideas for chanae
11 Colpte and moved 1he dlscu>slon toward conuructive thou,hts.
Topics for >mall sroup di>cus-

sion emeraed after I brains1orming
session wich the focus ..Gawd,
Ain't it Awful."

.. Jus1 tell us

anythin& 1h11 you 1hink i.s wrong

with Colcate

were 1he insuuc·
tions. The supeslions fell into
0

three c11eaories: social life, the in•

stitu1ion and administralivt
Policies, and auitudes, •
Fr11emi1y issues dominated, as

undcrclasswomen in panicular,
q~ioned the plcdae activities of

lheir friends. Olhtrs c:rilicized 1he especially acute because many feel
sys1ern &11!(1 said rr11trnities were , the Administration did not handle

" anli·arowth•· and .. retarded in•
dividual developmern." h was an
opponunily to air all aritvances
with· others symp11he1ic 10 the
same viewpoint.
'
Sophom*ore women said they
are made to envy incoming first
year women. '"All lh< suys >ay
freshffllft year ls bes.I for women, ..
said one. "I &el sucked into the
frat pany sttne like a 101 of other
nrst year women," 51,id ano1her,
Sororities also came into ques~
tion. Some wome-n said I.hat
sorori1ies seem 10 be imha1ina
fraternity ae1ivi1ics. ra1htt 1han
providina a differen1 experienct
for women,
Rape was a pa.rticular concern or
1he ins1iludon group. The Ad·
minlSuation mus1 develop a pro ..
ctdure to "4ndle rape casn. Sliid
several pt<>ple. The problem is

well 1hc rape at Colpte last year.
Women's Roundtable grew
from an in1eres1 in a continuina
discussion or fem inist views which
bepn last fall. Janice Bers.man
and Marie Lindhorst, coordinalors
or the Roundtable. fell 1here. was
enouah intern, 10 stan such a
group.
The Round1able meets .every
other Wednesday in Allon Lounge
for dinner followed by disc::ussion.
Topics vary each week, from rape,
toddinina feminism at Colgate, to
many 01htn. All ue wekome al
these SHSions.
On 1he off weeks, women only

may gather in the Women's
Resource Center (Cuuen Core) to
continue the excha nae or ideas. All
interesred women may auend, and
should bring a ba.g supper,

STUDENT ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT:

. . Vote for a candidate
who. has proven himself
.
COMMITTED and EFFECTIVE
in the S.A.

1976 plus six years
On Wednesday, March 18, the Cultural Center will present a panel discussion "Bicentennial Plus Six - A Look at
America" moderated by Jerome Balmuth, professor of
philosophy. Taking part will be Coleman Brown, University chaplain; Acy Jackson, direcior of the Career Planning
Center; and Elaine SpilZ, visiling assis1anl professor of
political science. The d iscussion will begin al 7:30 pm in
2~ Lathrop, and all are welcome.

History of Women at 'Gate
The Women's Resource Center is pleased lo presen1
" The HiSlory of Women at Colgate" tonighl at 8:00 p .m. al
the Center,.which is located in 1he Cullen Core. The eveni ng will begin with short presenlations by Professors Mary
Bufwack, Wanda Berry and Liz Bracketl, then p roceed into
a question and answer session and close with informa l
discussioll and refreshmenls.
.
The presentation hopes lo promole an analysis of 1he
development of the role of women at Colga1e over the past
decade. Questions such as " why were women admined to
Colgater', "wha1 was the environment like for 1he first
Female studentsI", and "how much p rogress has been
made towards true co..,ducationl" will be raised in hopes
of initialing active discussion. Please join us 1onighl at 8:00
foMhis iinportanl program .

Anthropologists Congregate
Several eminent an1hropologis1s' from'New York, Illinois
and Maryland w ill lake part in a Colgate University seminar
on mnemonics, March 24-25.
O rganized by Anthony Aveni, Colgale professor of
astronomy and anthropology, the seminar will dealwilh 1he
definition of li1erary - literacy in the sense of writing and
communicating - among the Andean people of South
America.
The seven anthropologisls who will present papers al 1he,
Colgate seminar are contributing to a book on mnemonics
and cognition to be edited by Billie Jean Isbell of Cornell
University. Other Cornell participants will be John V.
Murra and Craig Morris, who is also associated wilh lhe
American Museum of Natural History.
01hers who will present papers are W i lliam Conklin of
Chicago's Field Museum, Calherine Allen of George
Washinglon U niversily and R. Tom Zuidema oflhe University of Illinois.
The seminar on "Mnemonic Schemes and Cognilion
among Andean Peoples" is sponsored by Colgate's Division of Universily Studies which Or. Aveni serves as director.

GREG MILLER

DAYTONA
BEACH

-Hos occwately expressed student opinion wllife_
.
dNiring die SMate Academic Affairs Comfllittee.

$189

-Has faced faculty and adnlMistrators, and won,
fitlrting for reform while on tfle Academic Affairs

Board.

Think of What Greg Could Do
as Your President
Tollc witlt laim • • • He will listen.

Clips




a

Round Trip C ·harter Coach
7 Nlghta Lodging an the Beach
Welcome Part~ with
Refreehmente
Pool Party wl,;h Refreehmente
Daily Diaco and Uve Band
at Paalelde

Hotel Sal- Taxae

Free Kitchenettes to
the First 40 People Signing Up!
For Raenadou
Cd Roellleen Bqqe

-

'

' 'l'llnl1t, lfllllllf.tm

Women's Films··Are ,a Festival
....
s....•.

., a,k•11 11.a;

'

..,..,_

AM'o-,
The of the NYC Women's ,
Filmsisanattemptbywomenrummaten to come to terms with
women's role In society
their
..... au,y · Presented lut Tuesday
In Ob HaD, It lndoocleo -.hi short
films which deal with the issua in
various _,._
An untitled rum11y Linda Jasslrn
.,..._.danoetroupelnaconsldera-

IQiq, "You are 1111 tMnlaa star.
Merry i.luiotmu.'' Marie hat lo«
her Sod and her fum._t, She
even Iota her ldendty for Marie
doa not appear on camera after
Raphael's death.

A••lller l'llwofMoe1rll1Dd
The G/bbow/llOOII Isa movinc
exploratloaofflall-t ibrov,h
a dltterent view of motherhoo.11,
The mm uaes a c1ocu-1a1y,ttyle
Se,erfldll Med I I World ......_
format and 1s In black and
Co.., Girl:
F - In Focus
while 10 empbulze Its talittic Incentlon. Marie, the aubject, is a exploN another woman"s IOlteh
French Canadian unwed mother for flllflllment. The subject hu
who 1s enchanted by the Idea of been cboaen Model ofthe Year,
motherhood.
"It h very. and the fflm ....... the RIPH·
and empdaesa of this tradi-channlna," she says of-nancy. fldality
tlonal role. The a-al tone of the
All Marie talks about is her baby
rum 1s that of a public Nladons
u4;s v~rycltarming, ''fhtsays and tiabf clothes; •indeed ihe is
for the modellfta business.
obouaed with chOdren in seneral.
ofpft8nancy.
The criticism is rev~ in a state•
When her doctors tell her that she is
ment by the model, ''The people in
prepant with twins, she i1cat1dc.
, this business Uffl 't very inteUiaent.
tioa or rape, prqnancy and birth. , But their d•ocis is Incorrect; the They
aren't
very
The flbns bqiDJ with a aroup of ~ of Marie's uterus confliaed anythina, .. They're beautiful peo.
male 4lftcen noatina and swarm- them, and they - k her child's pie,'' she says. ••tt was so beautiful
inato"-nlawomanwhoisquickly arm durlna delivery. Marie's you could aet sick. Some people
trapped by them. Her vict~iu- uterus is heart-shaped, symbolic of
tion is brief and thedanoers qwckly aD the love she hu lavished on the
float away lavi111 the woman fruit of her womb.
"It was so bnutiful you could
pre,nant. Her prqnancy alter•
Marie retains her opdmism ~~ gel sick. Some JHOple did get
nately fascinates and dlsausts her thou,h her Raphael musuemam on sick. "
as shC remembers her rape and yet thehOIPitat. But she is lost without.·
wOr\ders al tHe child growina him: "I feel empty and I feet
within her. THis aradual involve~ aione.'' Hcreiuirelife~revolved did act sick,,'' she describes the
meru with the child r~ults in the around Raphael. Mu1e's tenuous paaeant
wonian identifin1 with her unborn hold on the object of her fulfiJI.
Tfte ~odd cmphulzcs that thi.s
child and is seen transformed into a mcnt renders the film's endins all is just a temPorary carttr bcfon:
re,us. The movie ruchcs a climax the more poignant. It is a shot of she marries and settles down. ·She
as the women breaks from this con· fhc ocean;~ voice.over tells us tha 1 describes modclina as "her chance
finin& mcmbrancc, sYmbolizin.& Raphael died on Dec~bcr 2A, to see the world," when really all
both her child's birth and her after four ~ 00th5 • aod th at Marie shecvcrscesistheinsideofexercisc
rebirth, Her risins body is tilled/ SC1llered his ashes on the ocun, and beauty salons. She clutches at

-1

,.w

u

n1m

'

,,

befoN In my Hfe," she concludeo,
and the flbn lmpUes that she is not
likely to ever do much else.
is a lhort, powerful
rum whidl con-. the Uva of
wotklnc men and workins women.
'at the Scandale trau>
' Ill•
II tioa, where busineamm are bcinJ
dropped orr In expensive can by
their
wlva. After the
buslneamen leisurely board the
tnlD, it pulls away and is replaced
Thm is no violen« in th,ir /Jtby another train on the inbound
tercour# - theyo~f10$$iollllle
tide of the tracks. The .
'
who " ' o rr .,. the maicu for the ~I corillg.~

Scandale wives. The mostly black
-and weary women climb the stairs
u the camera pans thdroverwork:- ina. 'Above aD the mwic aeems
ed faces.
threatenins. 11 created the r - .
Aa~llefo-lp
that someone wu about to inlnlde
Hofdur,, oae or the most intense upon them. This fear of ouulde inrums nplom the rdadomhip bet- terference, vlOlence and t be
ween two lesbians. 'The film alter~ misunderstandina of their lesbian
nata between ,cenes of lhe women rdadoruhip NKbCI the . . _ ,
wanderilla around the countrys;de but fortunately dnes not affect the
and intimate scenes or their sexual women. Thou,h thNalened, their
encounter. Jn the scenes out of world is praerved, u shown by
doon. the two women exhibit a ·char peeful frolic al the close of
1rea1 deal of freedom. Their the fflm.
These films presented a divmity'
playful roarnina<>f the fields, their
explora1ion of lhe woods obvious- or ideas that are impartant because
ly show the women are comfor- they reveal how women view other
table with each other and the world women, and how the filmmakers
around them. In the sexual scenes, view themselves. Unfonunatcly,
this type ofopen, comfortable rela- only a small number or Colaate
tionship l$ also evident .. Both are students &aincd any new lnsiahts;
presented as equal sc,i;ual partners there Were onJy fifteen people at
concerned with mutual enjoyment. this showitla,

Com_,.,.
11meen

Cornell

Ramsay

At Cornell. you can fulfill requirements. accelerate your degree proeram. or simply take
advantage of the opportunity to study those intriguing subjects that you have always put off.

...__

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" l 've....,cloneanydllni

'83

Request an A • - - 1
and see for yourself all the
reasons why Cornell is the
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summer. Tuition is $14 S per
semester credit or less.

'
'

S.A. PRESIDENT
''New Blood For A Fresh Stai1''

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bow,..,., the JOUDdlnck plays an
Important role. The mllllc tnck
ployed throusbout the movie is a
lbup conuu to the vbual pro.
11Tam, particularly In the aex
- · The mllllc for is loud and clubiq, lmplylq
ttruqle and violence. 1beN is no
violence in their iatercouue
theya,-puaonace,~car-

What better place to I)!! than far above Cayuga's
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11o1r..,, .. •,.,,);., 1M

I

All#,Dc(MullcNILMfw of•'IMI
• WtA

-Liberty

Lobb)', Ibo WuhiqlOD·

Ibo nation's powerful, besl
fueled ull-Scmldc pro-di
DClworlt ID Ibo U.S., accordlaa 10
the Alld-Defamrtion ~ or

"Hitltr's defeat was the defeat
- of Europe. Ando( America."

A.-Powerful
-Tool of ·AntiSemitic Attitudes

orthl 111 cy'1NECmeetlqatthe
-:,-..
..,.... ._llotel.
fouaded In 1961 with a rcporled
Mr INaJklD caled WUlil carto, !Int year of SJS,000. The
Ille
fOWldcr o r Uberty rcpon on to ,ay that Ubcny
Lobby, ... profeuional anti- Lobb)' bepD the IMO's with a
S.,w, aGd Nul sympathiJler" and ,_ied IIDDIIAI of ,-rlJ
"the meMer-mllMl o r 1~ __,_ $4 mlllioD dollan and, In IUdem
work." He Slid 11W prior IO the with the,_ ofCMtolc operation..
u..........rul nomination laM year 1ubltantially inaeued ·~he ICOpe,

,s.- ~

.

,

elude "Our Nordic Race" and
"HcnDlllllo.m,: ThcMIDand
His Worlt," and which distributes

A l(hou1h "Spollilfhl"cl~imsit
.is not anli-!wnitic but ,only
"anti~Zionist", its articles on
/srul, J,ws and J,wish cqn.
of ill uti-Sanltlc and cerns_refule the claim.
·

ora,.,... LlbertJ Lobb)' ofllclal,

111d Warrt11 Rlchanlaoa, for • h.lah eatremiat pl'opa 1 aada,._ • Mr ,
P0M ID Ibo redenl Depanmm1 or llialkln pointed out that Ubcny
Hmhh 111d HSenlcea, carto Lobb y divides Americans ln10
1
I atablished Americans, t I Which it
Carlo had some success in deftna u thooe of North Eurohiding the true nature of Liber· pean ci-1 - and "unestablishty Lobby 'behind a facade. of ed. Americans. If

COnttrvativr llsptttobilily.

of c _ . and bouts that k hu
alven Coqnaloul testimony on
over 100 Issues lince 197S, camviaQrously In favor o r 1he

Pllaned

'

B'nai B'rlth.
The Lape documented the
scope 111d octlvilla or Ibo opera- •
lion ID a rtport made public on
, . . . . , 13 b)' ltmDClh J. llialklD,
chairman or A DL 's National
Buc:utlw C-mltt• , at• smloo

ed the acti.e •ppon or

..

Liberty Lobby: _·

buod, lllf,ttyled ''preuwe lfOUP
ror l)Olll'lodsm," ii -,beadina

the inlamous anli-Sanitic for..,-y
1

''Protocols ofthe Elden ofZion• ;
- A so-called Institute for

Historical Review. which pro·
-IOI the alltplion,l hat lhc Nazi
HolocaWl never took place and
that the mus murders of European
Jews were. 11Zionist myth 0:

The ,_rt, published - - of "AOL Pacts,'' chei lhe foBow•
Ina u the chier mans uacd by the
- Publication of an anti·
had_,. in hldlna the true carto "p.--..dacmpire" to set Semitic quuterly ul\dtr the title or
' the once wldeJy.repsected
Dlllure o r LiborY Lobby behind • it,...,.,.,. acroa:
r....ie pf consavalive respect- A Liberty Lobby weekly mapzlne Am,riwhich carto allcult, he declared, when Ubcrly clalms'aradcnhipof300,000~Mr. Bialkin said th¥ Spotl/thl
Lobby'1 back.,ound was revealed sonsj
has the largest circulation of an.y
111d the propriety or nominat1D1 a
- A daily Ubcny Lobby news far rich• publication in the U.S. A
form« offlctr for • hiah 1owrn· and commauary radio pro,nm,
major thrust of iu articles, he went
meat J)Olition wu q uestioned.
with a claimed distributfon to hun· , on, is Carto's "cons-piracy theory
1be ADL report, which traces drcds or U.S. radio stations; ,
of history, 1hc concep< or hidden
Carlo's activities oYer l$ years: ,.
- A book publilhina arm. forces manipulating events and
aams lhal Ubcny Lobby was Noon1ide Prt11, whQSt lillcs in- con1rolin1 1ovemments for their

sale of AWACS r=nnaiuonce

own 1pccial interests
and
'Zionists,' a euphemism for
' Jewa,' are too often tbeculprita.~·
He noted that oldlouah Spotl/tht
claims It is DOI and.Semitic but only ••aatj..Zioa.iat I I I itJ articles Oft
lirael, 'Jews and Jewish conccnu
rtfllte the Claim. AdvcrtiscmCDII
ID the publlc11ion IDclilde thooc by
the notorloutly anti.Jewish, antiblack, Nalionll Slaltl Rlahll Party, the C1lristlan Defense Lcque,
aod for JUCb "merchandise" u
swastika f1a11, Adolf Hiller
,..-i,a Ind a variety O~lhe antiStmltic, racist books turned oul by
the Noontide Press.
Th• report describes 1he In•
llltute for Historical Review u 1he
central force in the "Holocaust
revisionism" movement which is
providiDa a new avenue for antiSemitic themes. The "Institute"
solicits membership from t he
public and from academic raaures,
some of whom ue unawue of its
charae1er. 11 hu hdd 1hree conventions since 1979, Mr. 8lalkin
satd 1 with 5peakers including wellknown revisionist 11hl$torians, 11 i
Nazi symP.at.hiurs, and Carto,
hinuelr.

planatoSol>di A,.t,lalaslyar. In
pushin a for t~e sale, Mr. Bialltln
sud, it au.acked opponenu u be·
in1 ••ford&n a,ents" and 0 Zionilt
collabora1on," and In Spotlt,llt
articles ftllcd with and--Scmitk: Innuendo, questioned their loyalty.
Indeed, he _,..., "the carto
network•, an1i:1sroe1campalan has
ttcalaled since 1978 from sporadic
snipina ln10 susl4i1>ed dillrlba."

The conservative weekly,
Hum1111 Ewnts1 dacribed Liberty
Lobby last year U an "Orpnlza·
lion which most responsible con,ervativa have lon1 believed exploits racist and anli-Stmltlc ,en.
1imm11 and which is beaded by
Willis Clfto who 1w Ion, been
sympathetic
to
H itle r's
O~rm.any." In correspondence
published by Columnist Drew Person in 19661 Carto wrote:
0 Hjtler's defeat was the d~.feat of
Europe. And of America. Ile wu
(Jewish) propanpnda ... which
blinded 1he w.., 10 whal Oermany
was doing."
Despite the attempt by Ubeny
Lobby 10 portray ilsdf as "conservative/' Mr:. Bialkin said, prominau American oonvervarives, suc-h
u William F. Buckley, Jr., and R.
Emmett Tyrell, Jr .• have
denounord it as extremist.

,

-

-s

Uberty Lobb)', whkh Ills claim-

.WENDY TRUGMAN
for

S.A. -VICE-PRESIDENT
.Seeking· a Better Community

Performers .Needed
..

For Junior Class Talent .Show to be presinted April
12
.

1st Prize: $50.00
2nd Prize: Brunch ·for 2 at Colgate Inn
3rd Prize: $10 Coupons,for ·the Coop

Contact Christina Kelly . Box 1248
or Chris Willard

Tel. 824-3784
.

.....

,

Taula,, 1181111 16, ltl2

Wa,bington Study Group

Career Comer

and aboul Capl10I Hill in such
Wublnaton, 1he studenlJ have locations u the Foreian Affairs
abo enjoyed 1he hospitallly or a and Nalional Defense Division o(
ni who spon$0red a wine and. lhe CoRlfffflOnal Rete1rch Ser·
cheese recep1ion on Capl10I Hill as vice, the Senate Curacor's Ofrtee.
wdl u aivina tiPS on culture and the Oepanmeru of Jusaice, the
safety in- the city.
Stale l)epanmen1, an4_ 1he NaOnce acquainlecl wilh lhe ways 1ional Archives. Alona wilh par,
of Washinaton, the students tk:ipa1ln1 in the daily activiHes of
plunaed into an academic the om«, the interns undertake
semester encofflpassiaa a seminar shon and lona..tcnn research pro-on U.S fordan relations in the ;ects under the auidanc:e of their,
twcruieth century, a lecture series respective organizations.
provklina contempQrary perspectiva on diplomacy, and indepenTo date the group has also been
dent research projects.
takina advanta,c of the expanded
Ano1her unique and challenaina ••cultural environment'' beyond
aspect or the study group is 1he inlhe Chenanao Valley.
Thi$
temship usianment. Each stu- semesttr the midni&ht oil is not
dent spt'flds four days a week in an only burnina durina Conarm'
• •office selling which enables la1c.nigh1 sessions on Capjtol Hill,
·him/her to utilize historical skills but also at 1hc Capitol Park where
1hc students are findina the s1udy
l~ned in the classroom.
The in1ernship opportunities aroup experience both intnesting
'have placed Colgate students on and worthwhile.

.(-ftom-JJ

Students interested in applying for !klloltlrsll/pl and Fellowsltlps, such as the CIC
Minorities Fellowships in the H umanities and Social Sciences, tbe Euenhower Memorial
Scholanhip, the Fulbright Grants, the Luce Scbolan Proaram, t h, Manhall Scholanhlps,
the National Science Foundation Minority Fellowbsip and Graduate Fellowship , the Olin
Fellowships for Women, and the Rhodes Scholarships, next year or at any otMr time,
should make it a point to attend an informational meeting next Monday, March 22, 1982, at
I l:20 (durinathe fr~ period) in Room 7, ~ wrence Hall. The application process for many
of these is riaorous, so fi nd out how much is involved and set off to a 1ooct start.
lnteresled in law and l aw !klloob for your future? Acy Jackson and Judy)ischer will
meet wi1h all interested students on Wednesday evening, March 24, 1982, in Room 217
Lathrop H all, at 7:00 p.m. Discussion will center on law school applications, recommendations and t he new LSAT. ·
If obiaining a Masters in Business Admlillstrot/011, commonly known in the trade 0as an
MBA, is in your future, pleasecometoSpear H owe on Mo ndayevenm,, Marchn, 1982, at
7:00 p.m. Acy Jackson, the campus MBA aapplications and recommendations, and wil a nswer your questions.

A;tpl,alkllS . . . . . . . •••••
for fr11r:lt .. . . fw hi 1912
... ., S,tb; 1~.

maroon

,

wants

A;tplcullu..a . . • 2 11 lb L ...
'

••••c• !ap1111 D1pm111111t. ·

Looking for us???
The Office· of Supportive Services is now
located in the lower level of East Hall.
· The following services and facilities are
available to all students through the

W., ecc1ptMI •••r. Medi 2'.
...... NI

Ma, I, Zia, 207 lawt IICI,

,_ ar..111111ca1 _..

.,,1,.,1,.:

East Hall Commons Room Clower level)
The Martin-Stevens Study Center (study-conference rooms,
student typing r ooms avallable)
'
SCHEDULE
,

Monday-Fr ida y
Monday- Thursda y
Satur day
Sunday

9: 00 a.m .'-5: 00 p.m.
7: oo a.m.-12: 00 p.m .
9: 00 a .m .. 12:00 noon
i: OOa.m.-6: 00 p.m .
1: 00 p.m.-6: 00.p.m.
7: 00 p.m .•12:00 p.m .

The University Studies 170-171 Writing Program has also
relocated to East Hall, lower level.

Office of Supportive Services

ATIENTION

ZAMBIA STUDY GROUP
Mr. R.V. Smith, Director
Four courses & a January program
APPLICATIONS NOW A VAILABLE IN
105 M cGREGORY' HALL
FINAL DEADLINE' FOR FILING
APPLICATION S IS MARCH 26th

DANCE MARATHONERS:

Fatl, 1982

ACT NOW !

Spm1III 111111 fw 1912-U . .

Professional Tutoring, Peer· Tutors, Orientation Groups, Counseling, Upper-Links, the Math Clinic Avallable to all students are:

We've moved

'

A,plcull;lwt fw relld11ee L

· lemem6er to collect your pledtesl
Couple b,liltint fftt most money wil win a t,atd
'
prize trip to Bermudal TV's to to second place,
Bnmdtes at,Braelodt & Inn to to 3rd &
41ft place couples.
,

Pleclue• 11N on Mardi 2211d a the Allt. Clla,11 I •'a Offke, llaciaC 1111.

VOTE LARRYA c~~~~~TE
.

EXPERIENCED
'

RESPECTED
CAPABLE·

in Senate General O versight and A cademic
Affairs Comm ittees, Women 's Advisory Board, ·
A cademic Affairs Board (alt:)

By students, faculty, and administrato~s
Of effectively leading the Senate

••• and READY
•.

to serve YOUR needs

FREEDM.AN FOR S.A. VICE PRESIDENT

' .

.....

... ....,. MMdl .,. 1112
MINlfflll OF nm MIIIITINO

·s ilver·Puck Awards
Honor Slater's Skaters
The nvc major hockey award winners Were announced by Col.
pte Univfflity head coach T"")I Slater at the annual Silvtr Puck
Dinner.
The Steve Rials Memorial Trophy, 10 the player bat combintlemanly/J>lay witb a hip standard or playinl ability, WIS
aivm ror tbe oecoad suu,ht year to 10ph0t1101C center Steve
Smidt or Peterboroqh, Ontario. Smith Is currently the Red
Raiden' _
,_din& ICOl'Cf with U &011s and 37 . .1,u (or 52
pointa wblleutilla only nve minor penaltla in 29 aames.
Smitb bu peced tbe Red Raiden in the plus-minus clltesoiy
ud received the bat devensive player award for the second
lllqbt year. In 29 - · Smith hu accumulated a plu,-41 for
lbe .......

ma ...

The jlob Ries Memorial Award wu presented to senior
player who provided the m011 inspiration and leadenhlp. M11teosian, who hu been a raerve player for four seasons, i.s one or'
tbe unsuna playeq on the 1quad. Ahhouah he isn't a h~h pointproducer, his spirit and never quil attitude has been instrumental
In the Red Raiden suocesa.
·

.

Senior left winaer Dan fridaen from Amprior, Ont., who is the
kadins 1..i.com in the East, wu tabbed the best offensive
player for the second strllaht seuon. Frid1en has tallied 37 goals
and 17 aalsta for 54 points.
The Coac:hes Award wu presented 10 freshman defenseman
Mike Leblanc from Cornwall, Onuuio as 1he most improved
player. Leblanc hu tallied two aOlls and 12 assists for 14 points
while beins I steady blueline porrormer. He is plus-26 on the
aeason, ..cond best amona the defensem*n.

J,

@Q~~ ~· ~d , ~® ~ ~~

..

~
!

~
I

NEWYORK
.
.
~-.PIZZERI~ c&
~

1"

37 LEBANON STREET

6

HAMILTON, .N.Y.

i£ft
~

~

PIIOlle: 824-2112

~

.......
0...... ..... s... 9:30 . 1:'30

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Yw.ft TrW IN Int , .,. Now Try

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. ! a CIB //j ta ~ cD e E:7ffl

Mac's eorcraals and
Fine W111s

w

1,

C0MMITl'U ON ATHLBTJCS
Atblotic J)irector Fred Dunlap
opened the meetina with I spoclal'
· n0ttition that the minutes from the
11$1 meetins were hi&hli,i,ted and
circulated 10 aD coaches. Coaches
were asked 10 advise their student
ahtletes of their upcomina
schedules prior to re,istration.
Brad HOUSIOn reported 1h11 ht
hid checked with Harry Robens
in thtcqe rqardin&theuseof 1he

TIie Lowdown

Rich Kiehl

Spring Is In The Air
Wilh the beginning of the baseball season on the horizon,
ii is lime 10 begin lhe annual scouling reports on teams
1hroughout Jhe league. This week, the American League's
Easlern division is looked at in order of the teams' predicted
finish:
1) - New York Yanktts - The Yanks are out to show tht
world that there is indeed life.after Renk Another
Reds,import, Dave Collins, will battle wi th Bob Waison for
the firsl base job, while Bucky Dent fights to regain his job
from lhe capable hands or Larry Milbourne. Greg Nettles
anchors the infield, but the Yanks must find an able back-up
in case of injury to their 37-year-old third sacker.
The pitching staff is as solid as any in baseball, with Tommy John, Ron Guidry, Dave Righetti, and Rick Reuschel all
0

squash cour1s ro, recreation and
club teams. No probleros were .
rcponed. Upon conclusion of the
club's season. llme blocks ror
recrealionaJ purposes will be ex•
tended to one hour seaments,
Hodley c .... • P"'"'s Brad
Houston reported that he had
proven winners.
checked with Bob Holcomb al
Collate Security. Holcomb .sus- '2) - MH°waukee Brewers - The news must have hil the
Brewers a nd their fans with the force of an earth tremor.
aested that
plowina Whitnall
Field ror possible parking wu not
Just last week, Rollie Fingers, the right-handed relief pita good idea as the field is 100
cher, who won both the Cy Young and MVP awards in the
muddy a1 times. There is no
American League las t season, separated 1lis left shoulder
available li&htin• and lhe co'mand will not be ready for full duty when the season starts.
bination of the two would create
However, it is the pitching staff that will prevent the Brewers
problems.
from capturing the division title. Pete Yukovich's ERA of
II was recommended 1h11 addi3.54 was the lowest on the staff. Mike Caldwell (3.94),
1ional parking be used bc~ind the
Moose Ha;i.s (4.47), and Randy Lerch (4.30) will not inEast bleachers of Andy Kerr
timidate many batters. With this questionable staff and an
Stadium. Proper lighling, plowinjured Fingers. the BrC~trs should end up as first runner..
ing and sanding of foocpaths to
Starr Rink could be accompli1hed
up in the East .
wilh minimal dforr as well.
3) - Baltimore Orioles - Earl Weaver has said that this
Houston noled 1ha1 1hert should
might be his last season at the helm, ancl he wanes to go out a
be no additional charges for 1he
winner. He has the names on the pitching, but are these
snow removaJ from the area as ii
names slill backed up by strong arms? Jim Palmer, a future
would come under general snow
Hall of Farner, must prove he is not washed up. Mike
removal. It was recommended
Flanagan must regain Cy Young form. Steve Stone must
that wt do not charge for parking.
avoid the injury jinx. On the posilivcside, Dennis Martinez
Physical Ed•callon Credits of
and
Scott McGregor are quality pitchers to be s ure. The O's
lnt•rhave the muscle in Ken Singleton, all-world Eddie Murray,
Cashman prOPoscd lhat athletes
and new comer Dan Ford. They also have the ideal lead-off
in spJiJ.season sports bt given
more credil for thtir participation
.hitter in Al Bumbry. However, they must fill gaping holes at
in in1ercollegia1c athletics.
third base and shortstop with the departures of Mark
Cas.hman believes tha1 the deBelanger and Doug DeCinces.
mand on their academic and
4) - Detroit Tigers - The Tigers are on the verge. With an
athletic: schedules doesn't allow
outfield of Chet Lemon, Larry Herndon, and budding
1hem 10 participate in courses of.
superstar Kirk Gibson, Detroit has average, power and
rered by the Colgate Physical
speed in the line-up. They are tight up the middle with the
Education Otparcment.
keysto_ne combination ?f Alan Trammel and Lou Whitaker.
P .E. Chairperson John Beyer
responded that he felt that the inclusion of those courses for tht
student--athlc1c.s was very important. It provides an in1roduc:1 ion to
carry.,ovcr spons that could be used af1er Colgate. After a lengthy
discuS1ion that involved many
Po$$ible sotutions, it was resolved
lhll John Beyer would take the
issue up with his steering commiltec and rCPort back at 1hc nexl
meeting wilh more information

The University Church will
sponsor a Retreat Weekend.
The theme will be "Listening:
How Can We Be Better
Listeners." Rides leave Friday, .
5:30 pm from the Student
Union and return by noon on
Saturday. Sign up by Thursday
in the Chaplain's Office and
bring a sleeping bag. ALL ARE
WELCOME/

5) - Boston Red Sox - I( Dwight Evans, Jim Rice, and
Carney Lansford play up to their enormous potentials, this
could be the surprise team of the league. The infield of
Glenn Hoffman, Dave Stapleton, and Jerry Remy is solid.
And don't be fooled by their ages: Carl Yastrzemski and
Tony Perez wiU supply plenty of offensive punch at the DH
spot. Also, Jhe pitching is suspect. Dennis Eckersley and
Mike Torrez may have seen belter days, and_lhe other starting spots are up (or grabs. Fill those spots, and the Sox
could surprise.
6) - Cleveland Indians ----'-- Larry Sorenson
and Silvio Martinez provide the depth on the pitching staff.
The bullpen is horrendous, though, with Dan Spillner the
only proven veteran. Miguel Dilone is the spark thal makes
the teatn go, but Mike Hargro~e, Toby Harrah, and Rick
Manning must contribute more to the offense. Thornton
and Charoneau are still the keys, and both must have big
years to make Cleveland competitive.
7)- Toronto BlueJays- There is decent p itching here, but
Dave Stieb and Jim Clancy are still the subjects of trade talk,
and there is no guarantee they will be wearing Toronto
uniforms come opening day. There are too many untested
talents on this squad.

./nary Jane's
'unisex Beauly Sbop

We now pierce ears with a gun.

Buy Earrings ·and the piercing is FREE!
EXECUTIVE TUINING

Phone 824-2033
23 Lebanon St.,Hamilton, NY

.....

-.

THIE COLGATIE IIAllOON

.

Swimmers Impressive
Also 1umin1 in impttSSive Pff·

ISyCarolH ......

fonnanScott and Kerry Whelan . Erin plac-

Eisht members or th< Women's
. swiinmina 1am travelled to the
Univmity or Idaho lul wttk for

ed 2111h in the SOO freestyle and 23rd
in the 16SO freatyle. Kerry was
2Sth in the SO backstroke and 100

1he AlAW Division II Nalionals.
The women placed 2111h out of SS
teams. Coach Benson fell it was "a
a:rea.1 mee1, and a areat way 10 end
the season."

in lhe 100 baclulroke.
The relay 1eams also swam
stronatY and each placed-within lht
top 20. The 400 rreestlye relay
comprised of Curran, Rowley
Scou and fioren1ino pla«d• 14tt
and sci a new university ttCOr<
wilh a time of 3:42.14, The sam1
women swam in che 800 freesiyli
relaya(ldpla.ced l61hwi1ha1imeo
8:06.4S. The 200 free relay •
18th,

Frahman Hoi,e KAiser eameAll-American honors for her
OUJstandina ptt(ormuce in 1he
200 butterRy. Her time of 2:08. 76
pve her a rounh place and a new
univmity record. Dianne Curran
is under consideration for All·
Amtrican staaus for her performances. Dianne placed 9th in the
100 butterRy with a time or S9:13,
13th in the 100 ~eestyle and ISth in
the 200 freestlye.

Stryker

Each individual performer plac-

ed well in htr events, and all scored
p0in1s for Colaa1c. Junior: Julie
Calhoon placed 13th in the SO but•
ttrOywilh a 1imeof27.6J. Junior
Michelle Rowley placed 16th in 1he
200 buuerny with a time of
2:14.67. Mary fiotentino be
her university ro=ord set last year in
the ,orreesrtye wilh a cimcori..89
and placed 16th.

"a great mtt.t and a great way

to ~nd th~ season. "

In thc200 medley relay, the team
of Whelan, Nancy Patilllo,
Calhoun and Fiorentino placed
13th and were timed a, I :SJ.69.
The 400 medley relay placed 19th.
Coach Benson was ex1remely
p leased with the results of the five
day mett. Hi~ swimmers worked
,hard and performed well; ''they all
deserved it."
'

Takes 11th
freshman d iver Buu.y Stryker
placed I llh on one and three mecer
at th.e Nalional Qualifying meet at
Penn Slate. Stryker was One of ttle
cop 22 divers from 13 stattt lo
qualify for lhe meel.
Coach Mau Leone wa5 e:xtremely pleastd with Stryker•S perform&nce. Leone stated char "all of
Buu:y•s diva were soUd, · and he
didn'I miss anything." He was
especially pleased wi1h his reverse
2½ twister from 3 mc1ers.
Buzzy beat several divers that
scored higher than he did
throughout rhe rqular season. lie
also scored 30 Points hig:her a,
Eastcrns, To go on 10 the Nalional
meet .o ne must srorc in the top
fo ur. Leone is lookin.g forward to
next year's competition where he
feels 1ha1 Buuy " could go all ch~
way. ''

,

Renaud~ All-American Honors
'R enaud and Dan. frklaen were invited to panicipate in the senior all•
s1ar game on March 29 in Bloom..
ington, Minn.
Renaud Wd: "No questiOn ii is
che grea1est honor I've h·ad in my
hoc.key career. It wu a lilllebi1.surprisina, I know there are a lot of
good defensem*n in the league.
All-America - it's something to
remember your college carttr by.''
"Chris is lhe kind or guy who
can move the puck and do what he
wants with it. He's the type of
player w·ho's like a quarterback he looks to pass but he's a double
1hrca1 because when there's an

Boykin Leads Harriers To Second
By Kattn Burka
Paced by the outstanding per·
fo rmance or Carl Boykin. 1hc Colgate Indoor Track 1eam finish~
second to Corlland at the Union
Jnvi1a1ional last weekend.
Competing in a field of cwenty1wo teams. Colgate p laced five
winners in the mttt's seventeen
events. Carl Boykin, who sci a
meet record in the SO meter high
hur~lcs wich a time of 6.8 seconds,
was voted the oulstanding competitor of the entire mee:1. Boykin

also came in third" in the SO mecer
dash (S.9), and ran lead-off for
Colgate's winning mile relay team .
The rest of the mile relay team is
composed of Phil Collias, who
finished second in -1he SOO meter
dash , Miguel Lluesma, and Doug
Burgoyne who placed second in the
hurdles competition.
Other winners for Colgate included Jed Hall, whose throw of SI
fl. 7 inches in the JS pound weigh1
ch row set a meet record and was his
au time personal best, Tim Kane

also won the long jump compcti•.
1ion wilh a distance fo 22 n. 7 inches, while Brad Hacken led 1he
high jumpers with a heigh1 of 6fl . 6
in ches.
This weekend lhe team has i1s
final appearance al St . Lawrence in
the NYS Collegiate Track and
Field Association Championship.
Facing rivals Fre_donia an d Cortland, coach Hunsinger siad the
team has 1he potential 10 win the
championship afier a successful
7-3 regular season record.

openina he can go with it,'' Coach
Slater explained. "Chris has got
everything. He's go taJenc, he can
skate, he's got a shot. When he has
the puck on his sti~k it's very tough
10 get it off, and that's a mark of a
pro player."
It is this rqietoire 9! ofrauive
skilb Iha! enable Renaud to, transcend other ECAC cleren,emen.
"Pint l"m defensive in mind;" he
says, ''but it's equally imponant 10
generate offense from your own
z.onc, to set the puck up ice. 11 To
bqin a play, the 5.11, 185-Pounder
can unnerve the oppanent with his
uncanny stickhandlins ability and
with above-average quick ness;
then once in the auacldn& zone, the
sleek bluelincr turns into an offensive wizard, firing low bullets from
1he ten point position.
And the statistics illustrate
Renaud's success. He scored. 12
times in 1980-,81 to scr: the Colgate
record for most goals by a
defenscman in a single-season. He
also picked up 30 assisu and his 42
points ranked him second in
ECAC Division 1 scoring for
defensem*n. With elevenaoals and
28 assi.st.s in 28 games this season,
Renaud has tallied_32 soaJs and 84
assist.s fo r ll6point.s in l19cueer

games.
Renaud was at his best ,in front

or a sizeable plhcrina ofmeclla
and pro ocouta lul at the
Empin Cup Tournament i.a 01em
Falls, NY. Renaud, nearly flawleu
throupout the openlns round
contat with
Concordia, ended a double overtime
affair by
home a shot
from Point blank ....,. with dibt
secoad< .....1nm, i.a ihe marathon
sasioo. Renaud abo shined the
followi.aa - i . , In a 6-3 triumph
over scn,ppy Western Ontario.
The superb defeoxman usisted on
Dan FridJen 's shorthanded tally
early in the second period and th~
wrapped up tournament MVP
honor, by snappins a 3-3 deadlock
with a Po- pl,.y slapshot mkfway
through the third period.

Canadian-,

s1ammi.aJ

for now, with Colga1e hoc-k ey in
his past, Chris Renaud is looking.
ahead: With talent and desire, the
pros are a di.S1inc1 possibility.
though he was not drafted by National Hockey Uague clubs. The
task al hand is to sift 1hrough the
maze of potential agents and the:n
hook o nto a ream for a 1ryout in lhe
faJJ. The beginnings of a pro career
might require tough adjustments,
both o n and off the ice. Even if
problems exist al the start,
remember: there was nothing very
glamourousabou11he very beginning rour years ago.

-VotHe-

Leslie Lyons·
for Student Association President
Proven experience on the Residence Executive Board,
January Special Studies D>mmittee, Resident Advisor, Search D>mmittee
· for Dean of Student Activities and JanBu"ee coordinator!

She'// put her experience to work ·for you_/
' '

SPORTS
T.....y, Muc• 1,, IM2
.

Renaud Caps 'Gate Career As All-Amer_ican
-a, Jolla Hyde
There was nolhlnc allmourou~

about the very bqlnnm,. It tool
plac:c on a mid-November evcnin~
four ycan qo, and thoush this wa,

nervou1MSS," recalls Renaud, an

articulate and personable individllll.

"We sot an the Ice and

Providcncc j1111 blows n,1,t by us.

A ncrward, everyone's 1oin1 home
fedlna, "Oh no, what havt we go1
ECAC powerhouse Providence . ourselves in10?' Jt was some kind
Collqe, mumainedempty-,commc.!'taryon
Shonly thernfter thinl$ beaan.
Colpte's eiaht consecutive losing to improve and in the Sprin, or
scuonsand its 17th place finish the 1979 Colpte found itselr Jusi shy
year before.
orthc playoffs with a 15-13 overall ·
As second-yea( coach Terry won-loss mark. A year later, wilh
Slater'watrecruits on the ice apinst a Divi- way and Renaud anchorina the
slon 1 oPponern for the fint time, defense, the underdog Raiders
the lowly Ralden fell behind by upped their record 10 18-12-1.
three 1oabafteronly two minutes of earned a playoff bcnh fonhe fine
play. Theytrailvidence a brief scare before bowing

1be Division I opener a,ainsl

Latcin1hccvenina,withtheoutcome decided Ions ...,, Colgate's
Tom Lynett put in the final soal or
the game to make the sOne uaist on Lynett's aoal was
awarded to hish-flyin1 freshman
center Denis Lapensee. The other
auist also went to a freshman, a
spare defensem*n who was wrap,,
plna up a very unspectacular

out in the lea,uc quancrfinals.
Then last season, as Renaud and
Dan Frid1en were voted ECAC
second-team AII-Stm, 1he squad
set a school record with 21 wins,
and thrilled their fans with a trip 10
Che ECAC toumament at Boston
Garden and an NCAA quaterfinal
appearance aaainst the University
or Minnesota.

debut.
Olris Renaud, now one or the
top bluelinen in coUeae hockey
and a key force in Col,a.te's
transformation from ECAC doormat to nationaJ quanerfinalist in
1981, seems to relish the memories
of that pathetic begin.ning four
years aso. The misery or Day One
makes today's success so much
swee;ter.
''All the freshmen were sitting in
a row in 1.he locker room before the
game and we were all shaking from

This past 5e15on, with a senior•
dominaled roster, Cotga1c chalked
up ils third consecutive playoff
btrth despite winning only chree of
the final ten games en route to an
I 1-8·1 ECAC Division 1 season
(19·19,1 overall). For Renaud, who
for much of the campaign ~rformed at the same level of exceUence that made him instrumental in the rise of Colgate hockey,
the slrctc;h run was panicularly
frustrating: a knee sprain, 1he

-

'

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-

Renaud's offensive drivts spurred Colaate against Olvlsk,n I opponeats.
resuh 0£. a wear-and-tear frOm a
As his collegiate career came to
foreign confines or Walke,r Arena
Febru ary 27 contcs1 a1 Vcrmoni, an end wilh last week's p layoff
on a dismal nigh1 in Potsdam, New
forced 1he senior 1ri-captain to the defeat a1 C larkson, Renaud had 10
York.
sidelines for all but 1wo brier shifls face what is ~rhaps 1he ullima1e
The end . however, had one fi nal
in the final three games.
depression for a Siar a1hlete: 1he twist. This pasl week, C hris
" It wasn'I coornucti fun. lt's haroerto sense of helplessness which results
Renaud was voted to 1he NCAA 's
sit in lhe s'lands 1han anything from being prtven1ed from helping
All. America· East squad by 1hc
else," Renaud explained. "To bca ont's team when ii is most in ne-ed.
American Ho ckey Coaches
part of the team for rouryCars, and
The odwy that began with an Association. Las1 Thursday. he
at such a crudal 1ime 10 be out ori1, unglamorous debul four years and
was named 10 the ECAC's First
it's just frus1ra1ing nol being able over 100 games ago end ed with
Team All-Star squad. In addition.
to contribute your share."
Renaud as a spectator in the
(continutd on pagt 19)

Steve Byk

Concerning Sports

Pro Pros_pects Abound As Raiders Enter Market
,

Chris Renaud is an All-American. He is also an
ECAC-first 1eam All Star. He is going to play ,n the
East-West Senior All Star Game in Minnesota later
this mon1h.-H e 1otally deserv~s all of these honors.
Dan Fridgen is not an All American. He is not on
the ECAC-first. second or honorable mention AllStar ceams. He is going to Minnesota however to
play in the.Eas1-Wes1Senior All Star Game. He, like
Renaud, totally deserves such honors, but will
have 10 go w11hout some of.t hem.
No one who knows what Dan Fridgen can do
and did 1his past year can believe that he was passed up by 1he Eastern and National All Siar 1eam
seleciors. Clearly Fridgen, a second leam AII-Eas1
member in 1980-111, had a better year in 1981-82
bu1 still was ignored by the selection comminees
(made up of college hockey coaches).
Luckily for Dan, the lack of pos1-season honors
will no1affect his search for a p rofession,1I hockey
contract. For Renaud. a player who maintained a
much lower profile 1han Frid gen in his four years as
·· a Red Raider, 1he post-season honors should draw
agents and professional offers galore.
Fridgen, who will probably sign with Pro Sports
Management, Inc. - the same agent-anorneys that
got Mark Morris a Los Angeles Kings contract could sign i mmediately with either the Kings or the
Hartford Whalers. Both teams are c homping a, the
bit for Dan's talen1, and the c haos tha1 surro unds
1he pro sports contrac t underworld has · gol
fridgen's head spinning. With Coach Slater's
guidance, Dan will be in a pro uniform somewhere
next year.
For Renaud, the picture is much the same.
Agents are calli ng the Windsor, Onl. nalive wirh

the lure of pro offers from a plethora of teams. The
All-America and All-East awards helped fuel 1he
fire~ of interest i~ Renaud , and the heat is beginn•
ing to be fell by the-big defenseman .
All Red Raiders fans are rooting for lhis pair in
their quest fOr NHL-stardom, and an excitement
that is difficuh to explain cou ld grip Colga1e when
no.6 and no. 18 are playing for NHL 1eams.
But there are other seniors that have drawn the
attention of 1he professional agen1s. M ilch M cCalmon, Lennox Sterling, GuyLemondeand Denis
Lapensee have all been con1acted by agents who
are in1erested in getting the Raiders into professional leagues. Some may get offers from the European teams. while others may toil in the American
minor leagues a bil, working into NHL form. As
Mark Morris has shown lhe Colgate hockey fans,
desire 1oward a goal can get you as far, or farther,
than raw 1alen1.
'
.
.
Morris finished his career at Colgate with only
one thing in h is m ind; a shot at 1he pros. A 101 of
people said he would never make it, b ut Mark has
more desire 1han mosl people. He made ihe Kings
top farm club- 1he New Haven Nighthawksoflhe
AHL - and has had an excellent season there. H e
got-into camp wi1h desire, hustle and abili1y, and
now they' re leaching him everything else he needs ·
to know io make it in the big leagues.
Lapensee. McCalmon, Sterling. and Lemonde
each will have a rougher road to 1he professionals
1han Fridgen or Renaud. But the potential is obviously there, and only the right altitude can pace
these men in their search for a professional hockey
career. They all can do it, and everyone wishes
them well.

With the winter sports finished, every fan's fancy
turns to Spring and there very well m ight be some
fireworks in store for Red Raiders spring sport fons.
The men's lacrosse and baseball teams bo1h
show greal promise, and only a pair of particularly
tough matches stands belween the laxer> and a
po1en1ially great year. The Red Raiders " 9" has an
ambitious spring irip, and hopefully an upset or
two on the swing could b ring lhe Squad back happy and raring to take on the fastern foes. (A win
against the Moral Majority at Liberty Bap1ist would
be pariicularly sweet.)

The track team had a great winter season, and
everyone should look 10 lhem for a good spring
too. Jan Hu nsinger sent three, or maybe two
thinclads 10 1he IC4A's in Michigan this weekend,
and thal's a real accomplishmenl.
Look for exci1ing play from 1he Lady Raiders
Squads on the lacrosse field this Spri ng, and expect
softball to fare well. 100.
I almost (orgot Joe Abramson's tenacious 1ennis
squad in talking about the men. They, as always,
will be among 1he East's best racque1 teJms.

••••••

IDLE GOSSIP - No commenl on Nor1heas1ern
winning the ECA<;: hockey crown. After Clarkson
and New Hampshire fell 1here was no longer a real
power left in the 1ourney. The East will be routed in
the Na1ionals if 1he Wildcats and Golden K'nights
don't pull themselves together. The Harvard and
Huski• squads will be eliminated in the quar1erf inals .. .. How about a Boston College Georgetown finale in !he NCAA tournamen1 on the
hardboards? II could happen. I like the Hoyas all
the way. · "

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