OCR | Digital Collections (2024)

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c o11ate V•l•e relty, lremlltoa,

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... F• lmaarf.It, 191113

Tork

IFC representatlve. Further· .
more. Caprto's office Inspected
the houses agatn' tn January,
and pronounced them In
sall&factory
condtuon,
By Tlaereea Laper
Also. according to Br1ttls.
However. Fenner Inspected
This Janu'l'"Y. an ongoing poltcles concerning the hous·
the
houses lnJanuary,anddld
breakdown of communtcaUon ing program,ere overhauled to
between the governing bodies allow the January office to exof the Office of the Dean of· ercise more control -over the
Frate rnities . the Inte r - proceedings. Lack of control.
Fraternity Council, and the said Brttlls. was one of FenJanuary Special Studies Office ncr·s m~ln concerns.
erupted Into a highly-charged
The salient sUpulallon of the
Issue. and resulted tn a breach new policy was that the Greek
of trust In the area of the IFC's privilege to house exchanges
dealings with the January would be co9ugent on two
_S pecial Studies Office .
satisfactory tnspecUons of FIJI.
Phi Tau. ATO. Sigma Chi. and
Last semester. students G_amma Phi Beta. Both tnspeclearned that the January or- Uons were to be conducted by
f]ce had o!Ttctally abbllshed the the Office of the Dean of Fraterhousing program last May. but nities. the IFC. and the
the fraternlUes and Gamma January Office. and the first
Phi Beta were nor notified. In was to take place tn early
November. the decision was Dece mber. Ideally. any
reversed because. according nec essary Improvements
to January Director Peg Fen- would be effected In lime for a
ner. the fraterntUes were ··not second tnspecUon In early
gtven enough ume to make January.
budget
adjustments.··
The trouble began In
However, Fenner and December when. according to
Associate Dean of Faculty An- Brlttts "the January Ex- not find them suitable for ex- .
dy Rembert clearly specified change Office declined to par· change student housing, She
that the housing program llclpate t.n the lnltlal tnspec- wrote a letter to Brlttls outlinwould end: ··11 was the lFC"s Uon of the houses," because ing a list of complaints. Accorunderstanding that thla was Rembert and Fenner had a ding to Caprio. Fenner's stanthe laat year that the exchange conlllct with another meeung, dards of clean!Jness were dlf.
program would Involve the Nonetheless. the Inspection ferent from that of the other In·
Greek system:· explained IFC was conducted by Dean of spectors. Brttlla said that such
president Dante Brtttls. ..,._.;,
Fratemltles Joe Caprio and an differences of opinion resµJted

Frat Exchange Ended
'

/

'

,

In

I

tne 1n1tJaJ

inapecuon or tne mains that the ureek Housing

houses. He satd t!lat Fenner
mtght have averted the difficulty by simply partlclpatlng
In the first tnapecUon. Many
people were angered by the
January Office's lack . of oar-

arrangement was officially
dlscontlnued as of the end of
January as agreed upon In
November. However. Fenner

stated tn the letter to Brttus.
"Since It obvious (sic) that
the fraternities/sorority
members are not wtlltng to
keep their end of the bargain
(have the houses ready for exchanges). Dean Rembert and I
shall fe1'0mmend to the proper
committee that this program
be stopped as of January 28,
1983." Said Brtttts, "It Is
beyond my comprehension
why (Fe nner) needed to
recommend that the program
be stopped as of January 28,
when that same decision was
made last May and reaffirmed
In November."
Other Items In the letter
· J caused some consternation
:: among fraternity members.
~ Fenner complained that,-"One
~ house had made plans to
house men AND women on the
same floor with the women
having to go downstairs to use
tlctpatton, Including Sigma the bathroom." Nell Qul.nter,
Chi vice president Matt Con- . Phi Tau's vtce-presldent and
Ion. Conlon, who acted as the January acting president. exhouse's president during pressed belief that Fenner did
January said: "They should not realtze that men and
have lived up to the women are housed on the
agreement."
same floor in universtty
The Inspection mix-up not- residences.
wtthstandln.l(, the fact re(continued on page 1 1I

j

Playoff Policy P~oposed

By Karen Burka
recommendation . " Both
,
Johnson and Moynihan agree
The sUr created last fall by that there Is adequate student
the Colgate University football Input on the proposal. There
team, and Its potential lnvlta- are also four students on the
uon to the NCAA play-offs, has Academic Affairs Board,
resulted In a concrete proposal whlch will Insure contlnued
"O
by the Athlettc,Affatrs Board. student contrtbutlon should
The Board, composed of three revisions be made. The two
Colgate students, four faculty alumntwhopartlctpatedtnthe
members ' representing the Board'sdtscusslon, butdtd not
various disciplines, three ad- vote, were added for this
mlntstrators and two alumni specific proposal. Also present
'
from the Alumni Corporation at the discussions. but not a
wtll present this proposal to member of the Board, was
theAcademtcAffaJrsBoardfor English Professor J oseph
approval on February 9, 1983, Slater.
Should the proposal be acThe proposal Itself deals
cepted It must then go before with all Colgate sports. but has
By CbrteUDa Kelly
York or Boston."
Muller worked a 56 hour week the faculty on March 7, and a specific addendum referrtng
Senior Joe Berlinger was one in the Johns Hopkins from there to the Board of to the football team. Basically
Whlle on-campus students of the more than fifty 9tudents emergency room. "I saw ab- Trustees for Ona! approval.
the proposal states that post·
were skllng and banging outtn wbodtd find positions through solutely everything, and I conDean of Students WUllam season play should not Inthe Jug th.ls January, others Career Exploration. As an ap- flnned my thought about my Moynihan ts optlmlstlc about terfere with "academic
were able t9 work at television prentice to an educauonal film career," he said. Sophomore the acceptance ofthe proposal, responslbllltes, ·· I.e. review
statlona, marke.ung nnns. and maker, Joe said he "had ac- JohnD'Urso also Interned In a Moynihan, along with AthleUc period and final exams. The
hospitals In Chicago, Florida, cess to more than Colgate hospital and as a result he Director Fred Dunlap pre- exception to this rule wtll be
and New York.
could ever offer me." Amy decided against a career In sented the lnltlal proposal to the NCAA football play-offs In
· Students obtained these In• Vullo worked for a marketing- medicine. An Internship at · the Athletlc Affairs Board In 1984 and possibly 1985. The
ternshJps Independently or consulting nnn, and among Empire Sports Magazine early December. The Board reason for thl9 Is the current
through the alumnl-,,upporled other things, designed and· helped Paul Retlly to "solidify met again In January for what NCAA play-off structure la set
Career Exploratlon Program. conducted an opinion survey. my thoughts about what I Moynihan labels a "maratho!l for four games. Colgate
During the program's nine She spent two weeks In Florida want to do.·· Paul In- meeting," Although Moy- presently has no control over
years of operaUon, It has at- and stayed with the com- dependently secured the In· nlhan admitted that It was dtf- changing this schedule, which
tracted more students t_han It pany's president. The most ternshtp after reading about ficulttofindacommonground Dean Moynihan terms "exhas been able to place. valuable aspect of the ex- the magazine's publl9her, a between the Athletic and cesslve," because the NCAA
However, despite long lines at perience, said Amy, was thatlt 1975 graduate of Colgate, In Academic personnel on the convention for legislation does
the sign-ups, many of · this ··enabled me to make contacts the Scene.
Board, an agreement was not meet again until January
year's offertnl(s were not and get exposure and opt- cathy McNeil Interned at the
reached. "We all realized th!'t 1984. Colgate wUI, however,
taken, salddh·ectorof January Otons."
athletics should be Important suggest at that time that the
Yale R~pertory Theatre Press
programs Peg Fen.n er. She atat
Colgate, yet we agreed that play-off schedule be reduced
FOCU800AL8
Office" and she said that the
tributes the surplus to the
academics are paramount.''
tb accomodate the many
position may Increase her
locatlo11 of the passed_-up ln- . Students also focus their
. cha11ces
Chairman of the Board Lin· schools which gtve preference
of gettlng Into YaJe·s
ternshlps: "Students are un- career goals through these In<:k Johnson strongly belteves . toacademlcschedullng. lfthts
/continued on page I JJ
wtlllng to gp outside of Ne,, ternships, Sophomore Dave
that the proposal la a "good
(contfnuedonpage 13/

Internships Provic;le Direction

.....

n-.._,......,_

FelilnlarJ a, lHS .

Langdon ~ks Funds
B J T• m T leraey

who are tremendoualy
generous.' Thia generosity.
A faculty meeting w111 held however. muet be encouraged
Monday Feb. 7, during which and lneplred according to
President George Langdon Langdon If Colgate ta to be
addressed aome Of the p"ro- able to stretch Ila Rnanclal
blema and some of the base In times of need.
suceasea of the University.
While Langdon praised the
The President prefaced hta ' significant Improvement of
remarks by noting that It was Colgate In the eschelona of
five years ago that he Rrst higher education, he feared
spoke to the faculty. The pro- that such growth could not be
blem he dealt with In that Rrst maintained without Increased
speech concerned the wen be· growth of Colgate's reaourcea.
Ing of the faculty's tenure: He forcaated that In 1994
thta speech was concerned there would be a decline of 43·
with the Rnanclal well being percent of high school
of . Colgate
Itself.
graduates. and that tuition
The thrust of Langdon'• will be In exceaa of 20,000
remam was that Colgate - dollara. Thus, Langdon main·
"needs more wealth to main- talned that "Colgate muat In•
taln .and auataln'
crease Ila wealth In order to
the academic reaourcea vital • compete· with other ach~ta
to Ila growth and reputation.
for a limited a pplicant pool.
To lncreue the finances or
In order to make the alumni
Colgate an Alumni fundrai. · more a ware of Colgate's
tng drive .W be aggreaalvely needs, a case statement baa
aollc!Ung alumni. taking a been prepared. Thia caae
'tougher and harder Une In statement addreaaea Col•
aaldng for their aupport.' He gate's problem• In three
blamed put pualvtty for, the ~ : where we are now: why
fact that alum ni have ·never we need more money: and
had th e commlttm ent In where we want to be tomor•
tennaofreallygolnglntothelr row. T¥ moat Important
pock et• .·
financial need ta eoi,ate·a en•
Th ie new hard Une baa had dowment. and aflerwarda lta
. a 'strong favorable reaponae" acholarahlpe and llbnuy Im•
for both the Board ofTruateea p r o v e m e n ts .
and the Alumni Corpon,Uon,
Langdori had aome good
according to Langdon. He news concerning the Everett
1181d that put reUcence of the Needham Case Library. The
Alumni Corporation to aollclt Archltaect of the Dana addlcontrtbuUona baa made a 180 lion recently received an
degree tum. and that now It ta award for hta work on the
wllltng to "lake hold of the . Ubrary.Al9096percentofthe
ca m p aIg n . ·
four million pledged' to the
Though Langdon noted library baa been received ..
that Colgate doed not get the
About the "Bricks and Moraame aupportaa other tnatilu· tar' situation. Langdon
tiona of similar caliber, due to reported that the apartment
the fact that we do not have wUI be fintahed thta Spring.
much · Inherited wealth and that · the new dining
am_ong our alumni, he com, faclllty la to be completed In
mented that 'there are people March or next year.

ATO ·Funds Scholarship
ATO President Kevin
Danehy announced today
that the fraternities Alumni
Corppration 'IJ!'a& In the proceae of setting up an endowed
acholarshlp fund with th<
University.
According to Danehy.' ATO
alumni wUI be making con•
trtbutiona to the fund In conJunction with matching gtn
companies. Matching gift
companies make contrlbu·

tions to educational lnstututlona which equal or e xceed
any glft made by an employee ·
of.-that company. Some companies give as much aa four
Umes the amount that their
employee
donates.
The achOlars\llP fund wUI
reportedly be In exceaa or
10,000 dollara. The University requires a minimum or
I 0,000 dollars for atarUn11 an
(conttnuedonpage 12/

A

-tterlDC fll 't lle Uteratffl aY&llable et

tlle Career Pleaata1

Ceater:

Seniors Commence Campus Interviews
By lletllJ Buley
Surveying the anow covered
campua. many atudenta think
long ingly ahead to warm
w eather : for gradua ting
senlora. however. the month of
June may bring with It panic,
aa they face the proapect or
finding a Job In a market that 18
partlcul&,rly bad.
The Colgate Career Planning Center aeeka to relleVe
some of the preuure and prov Id e o p portunities for
graduating sen iors through Ila
Campus Interview Program.
While thl8 organization cannot take on the reaponalbUlty
or providing Jobs for studenta.
It does seek to supply
reaourceaand help atudenta to
detennlne the profeaalon. further education. or other alternative that best suite them. It
Is a marketing establlahment
that expands recognition or
Colgate aaa quality ln.9titution
and Its studenta as competent
Individuals.
·
The Campus Interview Program la beneficial to aU parties
Involved as It provides a group
of the moat qualified. In·
tereated atudenta and It allows
atudenta greater access to
potenUal employers. In addltlon to those obvious benefits.
It aJao Informs atudcnta or
buatncas decorum that seems
ao dl81ant as they don their
Jeans and.down vesta. As the
Interviewer decides whether a
candidate 18 worth pursuing
further. the atudent:s prepara,
tion la crucial to the Impression that he wm make In that
half hour.
Slxtv,two organizations are

.cheduled In February and
March. Each Institution sends
at least' one representative
who wUI lfttervlew with fourteen atudenta In a day. These ·
-'<>na wlll be held In the
Career Planning Center.
The popularity of Campus
Interviewing baa neceaaltated
a unique system to determine
who wUI be able to Interview
with whom. In .the past. the
program operated on a ~ lcome,

first-served

basis:

however. th18 method became
lnequltable. The pro~ now
employs a bid system that provides greater efficiency and
preventa unfair distribution of
interviews.
The bid system has been used successfully at many other
unJversttles, and tt results tn
more care.ful selection of Inter•
views. Colgate first used this
system last year, and It
resulted In shorter lines and
reduced confusion.
Each student Is allotted 400
points with which to bid for Interview slots. For each sue•
cessful bid. points are
deducted. from a student's

total.
Banlts, · accounting firms,

saJes and Insurance companies. and rctall eatabllshmcnts are among the
available organlutions. While
tlie program baa been criticized for representing a llmlted
number of Relds, the CPC
maintains that these large Institutions arc the only ones

that can afford to recruit so
widely.
Audrey Snyder. who
operates the recruitment pro-

gram. has been trying to prov ide greater opportunltiea Ir
the field of aoclal service by
writing to organizations such
aa the YMCA and the YWCA:
however. many of these In·
stltutlons do not actively
recruit. In cases such. as thls.
the CPC ta limited by the In•
abUlty of companies to afford
to come to campus. and can
only provide studenta with the
names of Interested parties.
Another option to seniors Is
the network of alumni who are
wUllng to talk with Interested
Job candidates. While an alumnus may not be able to hire bis
fellow Colgate grad, he may be
able to give advice or recommendations that make the
final distinction between this
candidate arid any ofthe many.
appUcants for a particular
position.
Because most large companies are situated In a few
metropolitan areas. the
geographical dlstrlbuuon or
Jobs ts limited. To compensate
for this. the CPC has p lugged
Into many Job banks .. which
describe
opportunities
available tn diverse JocaUons.
In order to be hired. a student must meet many requirements, Including prepared•
ness,
self-presentation
through resumes and cover
letters, and carrtage at Interviews. Through personal
counseling, group workshops.
and a library of helpful
Uterature. the CPC seeks to aid
seniors In their search. Its In•
tervlew biddings~ yesterday and the Center Is op·
tomlsUc.

PRELIMINARY BID
for

'

FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES
wlll be held
Wed., Feb. 9 from
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
All those interested should submit bids ill' De111 Cat,rio's office,
. . 112 McGregory Hall.

. ........., .. 1. . .

.....•

Admissions Oudook Strong
,
. • , JaM ......has rlaen. yef there are stlll
"The moat lnte,..,.tlng thing 800 more male appllcanta
that's happened thle year le
the things that ' didn't happen," says A880Clate
of
Admlaalo.ns Thomas Anthony. Colgate Is continuing to
attract a high number of appllcants despite the fact that
most high school graduating
claaaes are half the size that
they were five ycars ago.
As of February I. the Office
of Admissions had received
· 4,948 applications. Although
this represenla a drop of 190
from the 5,002 appllcaUona
they had received by the same
date last year, Mr. Anthl>ny Is
conJldent that this year's llnal
total wW exceed 5,000. Summary figurea show that this
year's pool of appllcanla le at ·
least as strong .as thoee who
applied for places ID the class
of '86. The SAT median comblned ocore Is within ten
•• polnla o( last year's pool.
though there has been a slight
drop In the verbal ocore and a
similar Increase In the math
ocore. The number of women
-Ir.Ing admlseton to Colgate

=

than female.

More minority studenta are
applylngandtheyareacademlcally stronger, expeclally In
the mlddle claaa group. The
balance of appllcanls from
public and private ochoola
conUnues.to be as stable as It
has been f9r the past_ ftfteen
years. with between :Z0.26 per
cent from private lnaUtuUona
and the remainder from paro,
chlal and public schools.
Mr. Anthony feels that Colgate·• popularity among high
ochool studenla wW continue
to grow, and with It can beexpeeled an ·1ncreaae ID the geographical distribution ofthoae
It attracts. Judging by thJa
year's pool Colgate Is on Ila
way to getting more studenla
from a wlcler yarlety of areas.
ForlNtan<:e, amongthoeeapplying for the Class of '87 are
25fromTexasandl,800from ·
C&llfornla. Mr. Anthony a ttributes this increaae In Intereat to the hard work and
dedlcaUon of the adml88lons
oftlcerswhohavespentalmost

DI tfnlzdFS l!•ff ,.Wty
'rorty weelr.s this year traveltng
to between 550 and 800
ochools around the country.
When aaked what he felt
were• Colgate's main attracIlona, Mr. Anthony replted
that students "want to go
somewhere where they wtll
feel comfortable both emoUonaUy and socially . . .
someplace where they won't
feel U1r.e' a fish out of wale!,"
Another thtng they look forare

strong· Individual academic·
programs. However. Mr. Anthony feels that "this la the worst
partofthecholcetheymalr.e."
He tr.nows that Colgate can of.
fer them excellent programs.
yet believes that It wW be the
strong liberal arts education
they wW receive which wW
give them the "foot In the
door" they want once they are
llnlehed with school. Mr. Anthony feels that another a t-

Winter Carnival Wa·nns Weekend
Sig) and Lauretta Farrell (IPC)
have decided to adopt the
"Colgate Life" Is the theme
theme of "Spring Break." Acof'thls year's Winter Carnival,
cording
to Amy. "there wlU be
ocheduled to begin thla Fri·
tropical drlnlr.s. an open bar,
day.
g,eat
decorations to put
Co-ordinated by members
everyone In the mood for
of the Charity Fund Drive
b~." The band "Old Salt"
Committee and the lnterle qutte versawe although It
Fratemlty-CouncU, the car·
basically plays rock music.
nival revolves around three
The price of this bash Is $12
main events: a casino night,
·
per couple and tickets are
outdopr contests and acglong
on sale this week, ProUvlUes. and a dance.
ceeds from this event will go
The Fifth Annal Evening at
to the Hamilton Fire Dept.
Monte Carlo, this Friday
WhUe a few students may
from 9:00 • I :OOAM kicks off
leave
this weekend for Dartthe weekend's acUvltJes. This
mouth's famous Winter caryear's caslnp should possess a
nival. a few have had second
' uniquely European navor, In
thoughts
such as Christy Olt·
keeping with It's theme. the
trick
'83
and tindsay War~~meeter Abroad' Three
wick '83 who had pl&1'Jle!l to
dollars entitles you to food,
go.
"My freshman year
drink, and entertainment.
Winter carnival here was a
The various games Include:
flop because of poor organlzablackjack, craps. roulette. and
Valentine's Day Dance spon· uon. sophomore year was fun
a poker tournament.
There are prizes. over '50. sored by the I.F.C. R~ther but there was no snow. last
among these a color television than focus on the typical year was a pleasant suprtse
set. These pcizes will be raffi. hearts and cupids etc. of and the way plans and other
,ed off at the end or the even- Valentine's Day. the commit· things have been going this
ing.
Smooth attire IS re- tee, headed by Natalie camp- year It ~ms Colgate's Winter
bell, Meg Pomeroy. (Gamma Carnival can't help but be a
quested.

On Saturday from 11:30 to Phis). Amy Freedman (Delta blast. ..
~

cana,- c-tortt

4:00 the carnival moves Into
full swing. From 11:30 t o
12:30 there wW be a croaa
country Ilk! race, from 12:30
to 2:00, downhill akl-racea In
Trainer );fW.
Nearby on Whltnall field,
the Broomball tournament
wlll be held from 1:00 - 4:00.
I 982 champ KOR expect to
field a strong team again but
quite possibly Delta Sig inay
be able to dethrone them.
Sign up thla week!
For the
active there will
be free slelgh rides from 12:00
.· 4:00, and throughout the
afternoon refreshments will
be served In the Student
Union lobby. At 3:30 the
snow oculptures will be Judged. Greg Richter (Theta Chi)
ls the co-ordinator of the ourdoor activlties.
Topping off the day Is the

teas

traction ts Colgate's name and
Ila position In the pecking
order of colleges and universities.

No final decisions will be announced unW April let. Then.
over six hundred young men
and women wW accept and
begin to prepare for their
"Colgate experience." Watch
out Class of '86 •• here comes
the Class of '871

IFC invites )'OU to spend

Valentine's Day
in the.tropics
Saturday, February 12
The Hall of Piesidents
Tlcbts available at the C(!op

Tuesday thiu Thursday
SISper couple (open bar)
9am- Jpm

Tl.RED of that same old hairc;ut or thinking
of changing your style? Whether you're
young or old, let the professional s't aff at
Rob's desi11n a look that's right for you.
s=ree consultation and NEX U S Hair Care
,'roducts.

HAIRSTYUNG

824-3217
" MODIIN H.AIICU1TIN0 AT 11''1 HST"

Tues .. W~ .. Fri. •~s, Thurs. 1·5 Sat. a..1

Petitions are now
available in the
S.A. Off ice for
'

Sophomore Council (5 members)

Junior Council
(5 members)

Senior Council
(5 members)
'

'

.......

I

n.c,,.,,:.u, •••

hkuq .. l . . .

OJlyt Cltolgait Aaroon
Nlton-la-Clllef ...... llarenBarlia, ClarlatlaaKellJ'
hentlnBdltor... .. ................. TllereeaLaper
Plloulrapll1ScUtor ................... PIIIIBaml'ua
Bporta Bdltor ..... . .......•.... . ..... Aaatla llarpla1
Artalkllton ............ BarrettLeeter, Daff Talbot

I

Thec.lpt41-- lspubl""ed-lv•-pJuly and Auguo, bg th• students of Co1Qa1, vn,...,.,1y. The op<,
nlonaand IMWl~xprnwd on t'"9PQflearwthowoJtMautho,-,of
lheedUonalboardoflhenddon<><~prnm11heop1n1on.,
and ufews oftMadmlnlltratfono/Colga.t~ Unt0ft'9its,or lh~ un1wrSUt1Sludent Aaociatlon. AllmnnbetWoftMUntW'l'9UJlcommun1t11
411!' tnvftfd to .submU obwnJ,f,., and ldtff8 to the ec:tuora of the

Copy Editor .....•. ~ ...... . ......•.... . 1tat11,-11aa1.,.

1'•aoclate Bdltor• . .. ........... . .. Juae Bampetone,

llanoa.AUsu.bmtsstonsshould~wnttotM . . . . . . Cofgat~Sta.
tfon ffGmllton. ~ Yori: J33-46or broc,.ght totM....,...oJllcnon

.••..•.••.•• . • . ••.•.•.• ~. N&DcyRowe. II.art.la Welner
Prod a cu- llaaacer .. . ...... : ...... Jacllle D1lmDIN

1h,1hlrd}looHamllton, New York. Su.bscnpUon ts ten dollars per·y«Jr. Publfca.

uon nu.mbrtt.

Baelnen llanacer. ...... ., ........ Clarlatopber Kin&
S1aff:Paul
Rellly.
Glen
Brodowsky. John D'Urso. Glen

0/dnt Coll!J,• Wttlcly in A"'"iro

· FOUNOEOIMI

Davt.s, David Ingle. ·

Housing Exchange: Experiment or Fling?
-

Perhaps ihe nicest thing about January ls the relaxa•
lion It afforda. It la a time of penonal relaxation, and It
la aJao a time when accepted rules are less strictly
adhered to. Laat month aome thirty or the exchange
students who came to Colgate were housed In rraternltles and Gamma Phi Beta. Aa we all know ao well.
women residents or fraternities land men ol aororttlesl
are not the norm ·,11 Colgate. However, ror a variety of
reaaons !Including the need to nu yacated roomsl
fraternity brothers and aorortty sisters consider
January an acc.eptable time to co-exist with the op-

pos lte eex .

Since co-ed living seems ao attractive for a short
period. the Maroon must qucstlon why permanent coeducation ls still constdcred taboo. Is It possible that
the program ls succea&rul simply because It Is tern·
porary, and therefore a novelty? We hope not. On the
other hand. tr It ts considered an experimental step.
then the program must be praised .
Therefore, the Maroon recommeods that the
January Special Studies Office reconsider their decl·
ston to abollah the host program. 1rmembers or the Ad·
ministration reel compelled to write letters warning
potentlal reaedents or the programs disadvantages. the
exchange students wut be well-Informed In their
c hoice. Whatever the motives or greek members may
be. the program ttsctr may eventually prove enlighten·
Ing.

·

Both hoats and guests have expresoed their sat.Wac•
tton with last month's experience. Letters or thanks
were written to at least th>T:e fraternities by lta tenants.
A~d the response or Colgate brothers and slaters has
been overwhelmingly . positive.
'
/

Letters

Letters
• • •"

. . . Letters

are ·several different perspes:,

Sophs for
Diversity
' editor:
To the
DlecueelonaconcerntngCol·
gate rootball post-eeaaon play
have been gotng on for .aome
time now and wut contlnu~
throughout the months of
February and March. There
Timothy Leary and o. Oor·
don Liddy are being paid over
,1000 to come to Colgate and
debate tlicJr different points or

view. 1111a la a very cxpcruilve
mhltake. 1 agree with Prof.
Htnaley's.' oR!fllOn "that both
Leary and r::ftldy are ..social
rreaka... They are Indeed a
psMlng fad; a rad which ls be·
Ing suatalned by lnatltutlons
such u ou.rselves who give
them credlblllty.
But even more Important.
compared to many rar more
preaetng pcobleffl4 tn today·•
aoctety. they have llttle social
aJplflcance. They certainly
do not represent the true sen•

tlmenta ofmoat Uberala or con•
aervatlves. Unemployment.
rsclal tension, the remlnl8t
movement. and the nuclear
arma race are all topics that
w1ll powerfully effect the lives
· of all Colgate students,
(regardleaa of their poliUCal
·vtewa). once they leave the
sheltered haven of studtn Hamilton, N.Y. There are
many qualllled and controver·
elal people who can come to

tlves on the tuue, aomc which

ravor post-seaaon play and
others which oppoee It. It ls my
opinion. however, that the advantages of the playoffs to the
Colgate community outweigh
the disadvantages.
Apparently. the opposition
·nndll the mator dlaedvantaae
µ>belackofacademlcprtortty,
ltlnce 1)08t......,n play would
Interrup t RnaJ exams. Alao.
playoff participation. In the
niln~s of aome. damage ·eo1.

Obsene.~

"Freaks"

Debate
llarltLem•
lecture or debate on sLicli

toptca.
The Ltddy·Leary debate wut
be nothing more than a well
rehearsednlghtclubact. Their
relatlonshlp spans more than
a decade. It began when Liddy
was promoted to the White
House ror busting Leary In his
mansion near Poughkeepsie.
N.Y. Since then a harmonious
friendship between the two
has evolved; a friendship
which certainly has had Its
Onanctal rewards.
I have heard Leary speak In
person on three occaatons and
have heard Liddy speak on
two different T.V. talk shows.
Their Jokes are w.ell timed and
their lines are beautifully
memortzed. The debate, ult ls
called. proll)laea to be quite

• • •

Letters . . . Letters ... Letters ..

gate·s reputation as
..academic.. Institution.

an

or cou,....,, this stand does
have Its mertt. but It seems to
define the purpoee of college
for the students at Colgate aa
one of a strictly academJc
nature. There really ls no
spec!Rc deflnJUon of the pur·
poee of college. Consider the
areas available at Colgate
·-academlca.athtcucs. student
government. social lnterac·

.

Uon. etc. -- one can conclude

that an education ultimately
provides for growth or the In·
dlvldual as a socially diverstiled and caoable man or

No
Dichotomy

woman.

Without postoeaaon play for To the editor:
Thl.s letter ls Intended to add
Colgate"s rlne rootball
perspecUve
to current dtacusorganization. the team would
feel unable to truly prove slons within the Colgate comthemselves. Indeed, the munJty on academics and
players would not experience athletics. I hope It docs.
What are Cotgate·s pllrnary
the growth or working hard
purposes
as an 1nst1tut1on or
and succeeding; they would
acquire a no-rootball•purpoae higher learning? Its Rrst pur•
attitude which could become poee. obviously. ls to provide a
challenging academic enviran extreme letdown.
Colgate has been rccogruud . onment In which students
as a achool pursuing many team how to think toglcally.
arcaaorteam1ng, 1naddtt1on to communicate clearly and
academics, wtth great sllc· · make rauonat. humane dee!·
stons. A related purpo9C ls to
CCN. Why can't Colgate continue to 'stand ror dlvers!Red provide a diverse non:.aca·
excellence? Much spirit and dcmtc environment in which
pride has been Instilled among students Rnd seff-expreaalon
the students and staff from and sense or accomplW,ment.
What makes our Alma Mater
put rootball performance, ao
let us not restrict our support unJque ts that these two ennow. Let us work around Rnal vlrOnmenta have co-ex:lsted
exams In the ra11 and discover ror many years. In the hlstory
championship rootball In the or Colgate. there has been no
dichotomy between academic
future at Colgate.

e.ntertainlng. However. let's
Just not fool ounelves Into
believing that lt ls anything
more than supcrRclal enter·
talnment. Then again. Ii u·a a
comedian we want I'm sure we
can get one for leas than
,1000.
Colgate ls a aound academic
Institution. but has loat a lot of
prestige due to a deficiency tn
cultural and true Intellectual
Interest among 1t's student
body. Thia choice for a lecture
only reinforces the psucdolntellectual atmosphere that
CXISts here. ff thl.o ls the
Speaking ror myseff and the
students· choice. ao be It. We
sophomore council, 1 en•
are only roollng ourselves.
However, 1 must agree wlth courage all Colgate students to
ponder the controversy at
Austin Murphy, the student
lmnd and help our cause by
who offtctally made this
signing the peUUons we have
choice, that both Leary and
placed In the Coop and the
Liddy have keen minds. In
Union. These peuttons wUI be
ract. I'd say they are moat
given to the Board of Trustees
clever. They have taken their
who are this &emester fornotoriety and transformed It
niulaung their decision on
Into respectlblllty.
post-seaaon play . .
At the same ·time they are
Thank you.
making a hell or a tot ormoney.
Too bad they are doing It on
Sincerely.
our expenee.
Jeff Ounzenhauer

excellence and non-academic

excellence; they have been
remarkably compatible.
Now we face the quesUon:

Are the two purposes becoming mutually e xclusive? Does
e mphasis on academic
achievement have to mean de•
emphast.s on extra-eurrtcular

achievement- In the perform·
Ing arts. student government
or collel{late sports? Must the
Colgate tradition or overall.
dtversllled excellence gtve
way to a narrow~r focus?
cconnnued on page.J3/

.

~ ..

l . . .,

ltla- , 'tobecomeob enr ed
with your own llfe 'and your
own probleme and remain un-~°'the oe 111oee
around you. Espectally In college. Especlally al Colgate.'
We"re here primarily
the
academlal and the academics
are lnte,-. Aa the - t e r
progreaeeo, llves begin to
revolve around deadlines. We
muet do the work and we muet
do It well. It's . . tr our llfe
depends upon It. Mjl)'be It
does. lt'sstrsnge. really.
In other parts of the country,
both urban and rural, people ·
are llvlng from day to day .
They deal wtth the constant
struggle or maintaining the
necessities or llfe: rood,
clothing. shelter. They work
not tn the hopes securing a
comfortable future, but In
maklng It from day to day.
They have no use.for P&R.
They live In poverty.
These two worlds are quite
separate. Poverty Isn't advcrtlsed. lt"s nice to think that the
poor In America arc taken care
of by the government's social
wclfare programs. It's rellevtng to suspect thatthc poor arc
Just lazy·anyway.
lnJIPIIICY: a CQWBC waa of·
I am presently a Junior at
Colgate. After spending an
cnllghtenlng semester with a
study group tn Geneva this
past fall, I returned home wtth
aslnce~deslre to lncrcaec my

ror

expoeur'e to art. My ex• ,
perlence,, with art abroad
opened up a new world
' to me
and left me eager to pursue
tbla new found Interest. Upon
my return however, this desire
wu otrangled to death In the
One arts department because
the claae that I desired to par·
tJclpate In Is open only to
freshmen and sophomores:
I do not want to argue about
the equity Involved In receiving an educatJon that _la commensurate with the amount of
money my farnlly must pay for
my educatJon- this argument
Is self-evident. I do not want to
point fingers at l"'yonc, nor do
I want to offend students or
faculty members who 'are In·

Ob..,•er

epealten Ylelted and 9baftd
their knowledge and ezperlencea deallng With eome

Poverty·
A View

from the
Other S1"de

NllllCJ • - •
..__ __ ...,._ _ _ _ _ _
fered to explore this lnvlslble
society. Its purpoee was to
question the real causes or
poverty, discuss solutions.
and most l,:nportantly. to experelence It. Thts course was
Poverty tn American Life: the
WordandthcR~lty.
This class. offered by the
Sociology and Anthropology
department. wae tsught by
father Leonard.Kotzbaucr and
Professor Warren Ramahaw
and open to 25 students. It
consisted of two separate but
related parts. The first three
_weeks of January were spent
AP , CIIDJDPI A number of

ObH"er

Seniority
Backfires
'

-- Joeh11a8chwarts

1

volved In any particular
department. I sympathize
with the various 11.mltaUona
that a department In a small
school such as ours Is forced to
contend with. I do, however,
want to tske Issue with the Im·
pUcauons or tbla experience.
At 18-22 years of age In·
dlvlduals conunue to grow
and mature. During this
period, Individuals must also

Ob••"er
Accc,rdlng to the 1982-83
catalogue of Colgate University. "The four week January
Special Studies Period IS
designed to give students
greater opportunity to pursue
·special Interests and to
aseume lncrcaecd personal
rcaponolblllty for academic
work." Addlllonally, the Janplan Is designed to afford
students the tJmc to take advantsge or ooclal and cultural
actJvltJes w!Uch they might
not otherwise have done.
Freed from the pressures of a
normal semester"s workload,
January Is a time ror students
to branch out and explore new
and varied avenues of social
and Intellectual challenge.
TheoretJcally, this Is what
'January should be. Unfortunately for a lot of students.
January has taken on a different meaning.' The word
"January" has come to be
synonymous with "'Party.
Party, Party." While the free
time In January Is Ideal for Iota
of partying. many students

)?ecomc obacssed with large
social gathertngs to the exclu~lon of all other actJvltJes.
' Aa a freshman, I too was
peyched for an exclung month
of parties and other ooclal
events. After about a week and
a hatr. however. I began to
rcaUze that all of the parties
were basically the same - the
same people, the same music.

the same converaauons. and
yes, the same drlnlis. The
monotonous existence of the
Colgate ntght-llfe began to
resemble ihe monotony of
spending sl.x nights a week
studying at the Ubrsry. At a
school like Colgate. which
prides Itself on Its many aspects. It seems Ironic,
that the ooclal Ufe would not offer more variety.
After I llnally admitted to
myself that I was bored (I tried
desperately to convlcc myself
that I was having a ball), I
decided to seek out different
alternatives. I was pleasantly
surprised at what I found. I
checked out facilities such as

T~ Faculty


IS

,

a Fink?

upect oe poverty. Polltlcal.
ooctal anth ropologlcal and
8 .A. WAY
theologlc:al perapectJves were Obee"er
all presented.
The fourth week wu apeqt
Colgate looks down a grovel shaw's awarcncu ol ihe ru.vor
olfcampueataotteofeltherur- trsck with cndlese hurdles. or Colgate ure outside the
ban (UtJca.. Wuhlngton O.C.) Yet the anchor. runner's Col- classroom. Without this,
or rural (Vanceberg, Ken- gate sweats hang In the locker · educatJon suffers.
Dewey-Newman lnltJatJves
tucky) poverty. The work done room. The faculty to whom
these
sweata
belong
muet
help
for
faculty-etudent lnterscal these locaUone wae prscuona go largely unheeded.
· IJcal and acted to Improve the Colgate win the rsce.
The
decllntngappllcant
pool
Concerning
AFROTC, faculty
existing condlllons faced by
thoee llvlng_ there. T hie wu a demands that Colgate dellne members took two month to
flret-hand view or a hidden what It Is and where It Is going learn facts students knew In
' lifestyle.
otherwise we would be fortu- two weeks. Professor Hlnaley
This January claae, by Its nate to reach the hurdles maintains that the Student
design and content, ts much less clear them. The Asaoctatton .,a rbltrartly
valuable. It uncovers another pressing need to set our place allocated money to Lecture
kind or life. It was ·not con- In the educational landscape Serlea. The Senate. however,
structed to Inflict guilt or In- _requires the support of the en- carefully weighed the merits of
spire .25 students to drsmat- tire t!bmmunlty.
funding the Lecture Serles for
lcally reject their Colgate
Students created a new the Liddy-Leary debate. Docs
education and nee to huts In housing lottery system, used the faculty know studcnta any better that the King 1n the
the Appalaclilana. l_t · was a book service, Chi Omega Rho,
course that Instilled a new Dewey-Newman Center and wizard of Id knows his
awareness. It Is not neccoaart- W .A. Gorp. President Lang- peasants?
Students cherish their
ly an amazement at how poor don spearheaded the conpeople llvc. Perhaps It Is a strucuon of the Case library autonomy In residence halls,
rcallzatJon or the value of peo- addition. sclerice llbracy, the fratemltJes and student acpie and life Itself. The chance College Street apartments and tivities. Much more room exto get a new perspective Is of- the new dining hall. Where are ists for faculty Involvement
fered. It Is a class that makes the faculty? Merrill House?
without sacrificing this
Marte Llndhorst's commit- autonomy. To achieve educayou think. And that, la good.
ment
to the Charity Fund uon as ProfeMOr Avent envimake decisions that wtll have
some sort of effect on the years Ortve and Women's Round- sions It, both In and out of the
that follow. partlcularly tho- table provides the exceptJon to classroom. faculty must comselndlvlduals engaged In prevalent faculty lsolatJon mit themselves to learning
from students' activities. with students - even If It Is
undergraduate studies. A
liberal arts lnaUtutJon can and Faculty members lack Hunt after 5:00 PM or on Saturday
should support these decl• Terrell"s or Warren Ram- afternoon.
slons by creating a structure
and atmosphere In which each
student Is afforded the oppor·
tunlty to develop and explore
vartoue lntUCJOts,
The bottom line of my ex•
perlence Is simply that I was ObH"er
denied the Ubcrtlea that a
"'\\(hat on earth Is that stuff amountofmeatcontalnaaufflUberal arts educatJon lmplles.
onyourplate?"Thlslscertalnclent amounts of Important
represents and should afford
• to an Individual who desires to lynotanaUcnqucstlonforthe amlno acids. Vegetarians
learn to plan their meals and
expand his or her exposure to typical Colgate vegetarian. _
The typical answer goes stay healthy the hard way- try
different aspects of educaUOf!.
When requirements. speCIO- something like. "They call this following a compl!mentsry
caUons and pre--condlUons one 'broccoli and cheese · protein chart and you will see
work against the pursuit of bake'." The rcclpe Is almplc: what I mean.
On the ethical side. one
growth and knowledge, I think Saga chds put some broccoli
and
some
cheese
Into
a
dish could fill a Ubrsry writing
the quality and value of a
llberalartseducatJon ls severe- and bake It to a pleasant hard· about the depl~ble Uvlng
nC88. The broccoli becomes conditions of the unfortunate
ly undermined.
.unrecognizable-no doubt thla animals who are raised for the
Is the rcaeon that Colgate din· slaughterhouee. And for me
Ing hall patrons arc perplexed the Issue runs even deeper: I
by the mixture.
belleve that It Is funadrnenlalThls Is not the only type of ly wrong to klll an animal for
questJon tlµlt Is rouuncly put food when we can feed ourGlen Brodowaky to your garden-variety veg- selves from the land. Like any
etsrlan. Aa you know.the Col- other flret principle. this
ga
te student la ever eager to premlac Is so basic to me thatlt
Chapel House, took advantsge
or Colgate's e xtenolvc a thletJc learn new things. For exam- needs no proof.
ThcnatureofmydlctJ,aaled
raclllues. and took the tJmc to pie, would I marry a man who
get to know people on an In· cats meat? And then only If I me to notice Interesting things
dlvldual level In settings other like h!m ..Reaaonable enough. about our society. People Just
than parties. AddltJonally, I . The most logical quc&tlOn Is, do not ~ to respect the
discovered that extrs-currtcu- whydldlbecomeavegetartan, greener Inhabitants of our
lar actJvltJes offer excellent op- anyway?Ofcouraelamgladto world. Vegetsbles are treated
portun!Ues for meeung ln- enllghtenthoeeofmyacqualn- as second-claas side dishes!
tanccs who wish to be let In on This Is an appalling condltJon,
tcresung people.

the great secrets of life. But It and If I were a carrot I would
( speak not only for myself
docs not help that people often not let It pass unnotJced.
when I talk about gctung
ask that questJon In the exact (Thoee of you who malntsln
bored with the endless party of
tone of voice that they would that carrots have conJanuary. Ofcourse, there were
use
to say. ""Why do you walk sclousness. take note.) tr the
nights when I had good tJmes,
around with garbage In your earth's consldersblc green
yet too much of a good thing hat?"
bean populatJon realJJ:ed that
·can be detrimental to ·o ne's
There are numerous the term "steak-house" has
health (lltcrallyl) lam glad that
reasons for adherence to a received widespread approval
I took the tJme to get Involved
vcgetsrlan diet. They fall whllenotonehaseverhcardof
In other actJvltJcs, ae the
under the categories of nulrl- a "house of green beans," we
results have been very enjoy· uon and ethics. On the nutrt- would llnd ourselves· faced
able. I hope that January's uonat side. I have read many with a full-scale equal rights
reputstJon as being a party- books that convince me that a movement.
hearty month wlll, In future well-planned meatless diet Is
But seriously. If people
·years, grow to one Including the healthiest type. Well- would learn to take a'.dvantsge
the mention of countless other planned Is the key condltlon: a of Imaginative vegetable
enjoyable and rewarding op- vegetarian who docs not eat recipes. they would find plants
portunities which this Ume rtght Is asking for trouble. every bit as flavorful as Lonmqkcs avallable for those who. Biology Is on the carnivore's don Broll. Real men don't cat
c hoose to take advantage or It. side. since even a small quiche? Hardly! ·

January: Going for the Gusto
.

...,.

nee,..,.,.._

On a Meaty Subject

.....

,,..,,,....,..._

Jretmaaryl, lHa

Arts----------,------,--------------------------•

,

New Music-from~
Contemporary _Society
.
.

'

By Da" Talllot
reom vartoue arto oocleUC8 ming some very beautiful
Whlle Larry Lutttnger gent· eu~h ao the N. Y. State Council meloclleo called : 'Six Short
ly piled his xylophone with on the Arta (N.Y.S.C:A.). They_ Statements:··- Amazingly.
malleta. a pre-re<:ofded and are the only ouch organization theoe w ere compooed within
preclaely oynchronlzed mono- In New York state outalde or the peat monih by Caravan.
logue opoke out through Manhattan. but there are
The first half ended with a
loudepeaken hie thoughta aa oeveral other ouch groupo dot· !"lllher thin-sounding piece
he perfdrmed. The tape point- ted around the natJon i,unu- compooed In 1974 by Arthur
ed out that every eound In the lng a &rowl"JI Interest In fresh Frackenpohl. Ron Caravan
performance hall; be II a cough tunage.
played clarinet, and Lutunger
or a cloetng door. were really
The eoclety celebrated It's wu 841*ln the p e ~ t.
part oC the complete effect oC tenth annlveraary laot year Although It had It's momenta,
any piece.
with a well-received co~t:l.ln the five part piece had an empIt woulcl almoet be ao If the CarnetgJe Hall. and plana are ty feel to II,
compoeer had prevtouoly writ· , underway to record their first
Thlnp picked back up In
ten theee dleturbanceo Into the album Ihle summer.
the eecond half. John Fonville
mustc..
performed hie four-part " MuTBSCONCSaT
sic
for Sarah," which Included
TBSIOCl&I!
some Incredibly creaUve nute
The ooclety made a atop In work. He p layed II In every
Larry Lutllnger le a percueelonlet With 'Society oC New the Colgate Memortal C hapel way 'poeetble. put dlfl'erent
Muelc.' a S)'J11C1de l!Med Friday. February four, and parto together, played It like a
organuauon oC prof_.onal were warmly greeted by our recorder, rhythmlcallycUcked
mualciaN who give contem- etandard thirty to fo!tY the keys, and came up with
porary compoeen a chance. member audience. LutUnger beautifully conatructed melo"The new muelc oC today are opened thing• up with the dies.
the clualce or tomorrow:· Xylophone drama. concleved
For example, he says In his
qUlpped Roealle Spitzer. a per· stxyearsagobyWUltamCahn. program notes regarding the
forming pianist and preeldent and next were Outlat John thli'd part. "Tongu.e-rams are
Fonvllle and soprano sax uaed to suggest another state
~or the ooclety.
jplayer
Ronald Caravan perfor- or exultaUon, which ends the
The group receives funding

movement." An extremely
creative man. to be sure.
··sometimes you come
acroos a gem theta wort!\while and I believe this ts a
gem," 9ald Roealle Spitzer or
Henry Cowell's. "Fabric for ,
Solo Plano." Thia came after
ehe played R - Lee Finney'•
'PlsnoSonata In E. No. 3' an
lntrtgulngplecewhlchdellesP.
strict clualflcauon. It wu rantulle, and WU weU-d-,vlng
of the rec<>gnltJon she gave It.
"Fabric" wu · the gem,
however. a piece which ehe
epent Ume .explaining
before she playC!f It, It combined three note values and tlm•
Jngsfor_a auange and beauUful
effect. She then played a p iece ,
for prepared piano, In which
keyo are depresaed and the str•
Inge are struck manually.
Herftnal piece, Cowell's "Air
& Scherzo·· compoaed In
I 961. Included a sax accompaniment courtesy of Ron
Caravan. In a Word. it w8S
outstanding. The piano held a
pattern and made Jnteresung

cl)ord changeo while the sax
sang out the most amazing
melodic llneo.
The four musicians preoent
that evening were professlonala. like all In the ooc_lety,
and are very dedicated and excited about what they do. The
thlpg that struck me most
aboutthemwaothelruncanny
sklll and •knowledge oC the In•
strumenta they played.
TBS DD
During part or John FonvUle's " Music for Sarah" he
wao blowing directly Into the
shaft. havtng removed the
mouthpiece. The reeultlng
sound and the melodic line
combined for an almoet ecary
effect. Outalde. a winter storm
was building and harsh winds
whJatled by the cavernous
Chapel.
The rt&uJt was a sort of eerie

chill which aettled over the
meagre audJcnce. It was
almost as !f the compoaer had
previously written the wind ln·
to his music.

Chaucer Comes to Colgate
by Jackie Dunmire

The 1602 edition of the collected works of Geoffrey
Chaucer has been added to
Colgate's rare book collection.
The volume was a recen.tglftof
Vincent A. Thelaen "36 on
bdlalfoftheClassof 1936.
The book, enUtled The
Worlces of Our Anctent and
Learned English Poe~ Oeffrey
Chaucer, newly printed. was
edited i,y Thomas Speght. It Is
esumatcd to be worth severaJ
thousand dollars,
The monetary value of the
new acquisttlon seem& to be ir·
relevant. "We do not plan to
aell the book, so the worth In
dollars ls not Important.''
states Bruce Brown, Head or
Special Collecllons and
University Archivist. The
value or the volume depends
on Its use and appreclatton by
the Colgate communlly.
'We do not plan to sell the
book.so the worth tn
dollars IS not tmportant.'

Zevon Concert Snowed Out
By.Barrett Leater

crew to perform tonlght as
they are required to go O!l to
Reformed alcoholic and
Pennsylvania for another
former excitable boy, Warren·
commitment.,
.
Zevon, who bu releaaed such
Accordlng to WIii Mays,
hit 8lnglee ao "Poor Poor
adverttzlng
Publicity
Pitiful Me" and "Werewolves
Manager or the Social Comof London" mlosed his
mittee, a reschedUled date
scheduled concert ap·
would depend on Zevon"s
pearence atc:ptgate yesterday.
future
avallabtUty as well as
when he wu unable to reach
the Social Committee's
the campua, due to a anow
scl)edule.
A otalflng problem
atom,, wl\.lcb wu alfecung
would artae were the Social
.
moat oC the north eaotem 5PM .
Committee
faced with handl·
T,he reecbeduJln&of the COD·
cout.
Zevon, who had refuaed to cert 1a 11111 uncertain, It la tm- Ing two concerto within the
accept any money for h1a ap- poaeible for Zevon and his aame wedt:.
pearence, wao driving down
from Vermont to meet his
sound and light crew. He wu
stopped an hour and a half
north of Albany, because
route 87 had been
He
then called Colgate at 4 :30 to
cancel the concert.
Four hundred Ucketa had
• been sold by that Ume.
Tlcketa wUI be refunded today
In the COOP from 3PM to

coloed,

According to Brown, this
edition 19 one in a sequence of
many each an attempt to Im·
prove upon the last. The latest
edition prior to 1602 wasdated
1598, The dark, clear print of
Colgate's acquisition makes It
a very good copy or the book.
The Gothic letter type. an old
German style, hinders the
reader somewhat. makJng
Chaucer's English more dlf·
Rcult to decipher, but parts of·
the volume are fairly easy to
read and the entire text cer•
talnlv merlta oerusal.
HF. \.VORKES 01:

-""'--

<1 r,,a,1.YC11 ,1 YC U ,_,.

we w:it ve1y u1:1ppy -.v 110.• ....

the · 1602 Chaucer' here,"
The 1602 edlUon, Includes says Brown. "It ls an ImporThe Canterbury Tales, The tant textln Itself, but ltalsoflts
Romaunt of the Rose which Is In well w ith other matcrtal we
generally agreed to be trans- have from the period." The
lated from French by Chaucer, other material Includes a First
four shortpoemo, "Words to Folio ed!Uon or Shakeopeare,
Adam", "The Story or published In 1623. a 1609 edl·
Thebes" ,and aeveral other Uon of Edmund Spenaer's
poems. ballads and dreams. In. FaerteQueene, andaMeenth
addlUon to these works are century hand-lllumlnated
The l,!fe of Chao.wer, and the manuscript - pages or the Bl·
letter to Henry vm. To aid the ble penned by monks shorUy
reader, the volume Includes after the ume Chaucer lived.

gl.-rtes, The hard words of
Chaucer, e..pla!Nd and The
French and Latlne In Chau·
cer. translated. There ts also a
11st orThe Authors cited by G.
Chaucer In his worlceo. by

name declared. and flnally
the Uat or errata.

A collection of volumes and
manuecrlpta from the period,
Including the new 1602 edt·
uon or Chaucer. ts on display
In the glue cases next to the
card catalogue In Case
Library.

........., ......

DlJTCH PAINTING IN THE AGE OF REMBRANDT
TH

FROM .
.
E M~TRO POLITAN MUSEUM OF 'ART

Dewer lloaeby, L••II• SUot. and Peal llcllapf at
theopnlnlPresently al the Picker A rt Gallery In the Dana A rts
Center ts an ex hibit entitled 'Dutch Patnttngsfrom the Age
ofRembrant. · Included In the display are thirteen ortgtnal
seuenteenth century paintings. Notable works tnctude an
uncontested ortglnaJ Rembrant, another which ts either by
him or a dtsctple, and one by Art VanderNeer. a work of
whose ts a part of the Picker A rt Gallery's permanent col-.

lectlon.
The exhibit comes to Colgate from the Metropolitan
Museum ofArt In New york City and wm be here until April
I 7. Dewey Moseby. Director of the gallery. holls the exhibit
as'a milestone for Colgate and Central New York State.·

Vh!tm

a4mlrlaC

The exhibit. which ts supported tn part by grants from
the National Endowment for the Arts and F'rtends of the
Visual Arts at Colgate. Is open to the publlcfrom I 0-5 Monday through Friday and 1-5 weekends. A fully llfustrated
and descrtptlue catalog Is auallable at the gallery for flue
dollars. or two fifty for gallery mem bers .
.- - - l)aye Talbot

the new eablblL

resorts to seeking the atd of a Itself paints a very bleak pieconvicted felon to help track tureofllfe.Audlencescoulddo
down a couple of escaped without theslow-molton death
murderers. Jack Cates (Nick scenes. The realism In the film
Nolte) has Reggie Hammond· gets the message acr06S with·
(Eddie Murphy) released from out rubbing death In our faces.
prlsonfor(howdldyouknow?) More story and less violence
O
48 hours. Both men have could have made this film
·
'
reasons · for wanting Ganz great. The . producers
(James Renmar) and BIiiy (Lawrence Cordon and Joel
Bcar(Sonny Landham). Ham- Sliver) Instead chose to lighten
by Clayton Lyono
mond has 500.000 reasons for the film with the comic relief
Most major studio releases wa.n tlng · his former gang between Murphy and Nolte.
have a four-stage lifespan . members dead or behthd bars. Murphy's character also seeks
.which usually starts with Cates Is after a cop klller who another kind of relief
theatrical release and con, hashtsgunandhlsprlde.
associated with windy
unues with videotape and
The story Itself Is nothing weather which Is tr · basis for
videodisc distribution. The special. The performances of · much of the humo. . the film.
Olm after conversion debuts Nlc1!' Nolte and Eddie Murphy Murphy'scharactertssavedat
on the tube with various cable car ry· the show. Their the end of the film by the
and pay TV services. Finally. characters Interact with the character played by Playboy
anywhere, from I 1/2 to 8 chemistry of accomplished ac- playmate Ola Ray.
years later the feature appears tors even though 48 Hrs. is Ed·
48 Hrs. ts a film that has

on a commercial
network. die Murphy's mm debut. It something to say and says It
This final stage requires re- would be very Interesting to well. However. a television
edtUng to conform to televl• see a sequel with the roles version while cleaning Jt up
slon standards. 48 Hrs. wlll reversed. Of course. a stronger may also wipe out what enterhave a tough lime survlvtng screenplay would be neces- . tainment value lt has. In other
the suglcal removal of Its sary to puU It olJ.
words, don't wait for ABC. 48
violence. profanity.and nudl·
By marketing the film as a Hrs. may become another
ty. However, the uncut version comedy, Paramount Pictures Caddyshqckwhenlthltscom·
also offers a highly enjoyable has · done a disservice to merclal television. The vamentertainmentexperlepce.
movlegoers. There are a few plre censors can drain the life
48 Hrs. Is about a cop who very funny scenes. butthem.m from a good movie.

Movie p.etiiew:

48 Hrs: Clock
Murph y N Ite

.

.

I-MILTON

UST 3 NIGHlSI

CINEM~

124-llSO.

Tua.-Wed.-111urs.

'

8:00

-

.

Hlck•y's

COMING FRIDAY
NICK NOLTE le • cop.
EOOIE
le o c«iwlct. ..
They_,MURPHY
______
They couldn1 hlft n11nd Ndl other more...
.And tt,o loot,._ IM'f ""'•-11<1 to be llon
tt,o -

-

· E - lor...

Dack Bacon

DMtPGtlot

18 Lebanon Street, Hanllton, N.Y.

w.o.1v.,

''Buffalo'' OllckWI Wings
And Ov., Stuffed Sandwiches
Wkhln V1lloge l..mlts

.

Open Daily at 7 am for Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner

,
'48 I-I.RS.

.......

re11inu7 a, 11n

\

,

·Acting Over January
The stage waaallvelnBrehmer
Theater on the campuo of Colgate University, not with
rcl,carsals for an upcoming
production, but as a classroom
where a dozen students were·

found exercising, gesturing,
projecting, Improvising and
becoming aware of their own
senses.
The explanation for... thls ac•
tlvlty lies partially In the for•
mai course name- ··A Project
In ttie Art or the Theater with
Emphasis on the Problem or
the Actor In the Stage Space"Just one of many offerings In
Colgate' s January Special
·Studies Period. Since 1964
when Colgate pioneered these
·In-depth courees, students
and faculty have been encouraged to uee this month to
explore academic areas Into
which they might very well
not venture during the regular

I

~

-Jeaalfer Parll•

.

Our Town: -Downtown
aa Emily Webb, and Molly

.

It ts aplay which forces the
viewer to uee the lmaglna·
uon.A minimum of prope are
employed- the audience Is
called upon to conJun, up a
garden. Main Street. a phar·
macy, etc. Then, did eeem a
lack of sharpneee In blocklngperhaps the stage was too
small.
The Stage Manager Is the
key role In 'Wilder's .play. and
Stan Young gave an excellent
performance In this role.
Other standouts among the
cut lucluced Barbara Friend
aa Mn. Webb, Jennifer Parks

·our Town ' .

academic terms.

Ramohaw aa the vocal Mrs.
Soames.

Thornton Wllder's charmingly simple tale. which exOn the whole the play prov- plores dally life. ' marriage,
ed very enjoyable vlewtng, and death In a small New
with the Hamilton Music Hampshire town at the tumTheattt giving a oolld n,ndl- . of,the-century, eeemed well·
lion of Wilder's quiet ode to suited to the Ham.llton Music
turn-of- t he-cel)tu ry Theatre Itself. The enAmei-tca.
·
thuslum and plaln fun which
Infused the production spark·
The winds were frtgld and ed similar reactions amongst
the thermo~eter dipped, but members of the au-.
the alr Inside the Hamilton dlence.Thls mon, than made
Baptist Church this first up for a lack of professional
weekend of February wen, polish, which Wilder's play
kept warm with the Hamilton doesn't seem to necessitate
Music Theattt's production or anyway .

given over to guest Instructor
Peter Feldman, a director and
acting teacher from Toronto.

Feldman explalned what he
hoped to accomplish with his
eager'Class,
' 'In alotofthcatcrweseeac·

torswhoappeardeadfrom the
neck down, talking l\eads. We
must try to ~ht this. What
we're working on lsfalrly baalc
stuff. Imagery• the body's
abil!if to deal with an Image
physically, and ultimately the
way In which actors deal with

.

different Crom hi.sown. ''There
are dozens of dUTcrent meth·
ocls, and people who teach ac•
Ung always swear their
mettiod Is best, Any method Is

right If It works for an actor."
Sproul explained the under,
lying motive behind this class
·1s Introducing the students to
the art of acting, "The emphasis Is not on training ac·
tors. In a liberal arts college the
students are exposed to much
.mon,, The four y = they are
here gives them a ctiance to
find out about the rest of the
world rather than concen-

trating on Just one art,
"We hope to eventually have
a class In acting," Sproul said.
"We have had gues!9 In the
past to teach acting. but they
were only one-shot deal&.
We want to introduce the

students to the problems of ac•

ting and the ways In which
they can be oolved," Sproul
said, "and 11'1' helpful to have
different views of lnstnactors. •·

Senior Anne Hudoon from
Hinsdale. Ill. descrtbed this
courseasexperlentlalleamlng
or learning by doing. similar to
how children are taught.

ORDER NOW FOR
VALENTINE'S DAY

Glltner's·
''THE FLOOR
STORE''

Monday, Feb. 14th
at

Hamilton Flower Shop

Carpet Remnants "All Sizes"
Latex Flait Wall Paint
Window
Shadec

The eecond week or this lntenstvc four-week course was

word Images Is most lmpor·
tant. I want to bring the
students physically more· to
life by showing them how to
engage the body with an Image or action."
Colgate's theater director Is
Atlee Sproul, and he will admit
that Feldm,m's approact, IS

24 Lebanon St. •

$8.99 gal.

824-0910

we will also be open Sunday, 2-13,
in additio n to our regular hours:
M-F 9-5:30, Sot. 9-5:00

Wire and Delivery Services
,

.

On Saturday, February 12, 1983,
'

' the Black Student Union will be sponsoring the
Avante Theater Company
performing the Tony Award winning
'

Ain't Misbehavin'
· Tickets will be $1 .50 in• advance at the Coop and $2 at the door .
Curtain goes
up at 8:00 p.m. in Brehmer Threater.
,

..
thla Ideal. canytng Gabriel's
eclec:tlclam even further.
Gabriel's attentton on this

album focuaee on the Inner
feanand neuroetofourmlnda.
Hence. the album could be
dubbed_ "Mental Security:·
Oabrl"I has become more
morose with each successive
album, and "Security" continues this tre_nd. The nrat
song on the album. "Rhythm
of the Heat" deals with tribal
ritual: the lure of the "group
experience" and Its frightenIng power of convlcUon. In this
case. "rhythm" of-the-heat
dictates the flow oft.he ritual as
· a metaphor for llfc's mouva.

I

Uon.

The rhythm Is around me
The rhythm has control
The rhythm Is Inside mP
The rhythm has my soul.

Record Review

''Securi_ty ''.
By l l a t t ~rmaD
"It ·ls here. ft Is now. It Is
real, ft ·cs Rael." 1974, "Lamb
Lies Down On Broadway".
Rael, for thpee not familiar,
la better known as Peter

Gabriel, formerly the lead
vocalist and creatlve Impetus
behind Oeneefs. Now far from

.

the psychedelic world of "the
lamb ... Gabriel works on his
own. having Just released his
fourth solo album. "Security"
(Oeffen Records. 1982).
Gabriel Is known for pro~slve, uncompromising mue.tc
that deOes categorization.
"Security" la consistent with

The Ohanian drums. combined with group chanttng.
gives this song Its rhythm and
·emphastZee the tribal nature
of the music.
Tl)e second cut, "San Jacinto." ts an eerie ballad of lost
tdenuty, telling of a changing
Ume. With the change comes a
shift In values that reflects anew world ousting an older
generatton. The subject ls
reduced to "lioldlng the line"
against the•lnevltable.

The third track bring, · an~ "Klee of Life." The third
Oabtlel back to a more acceel- aong. 'Wallflower" ta a slow,
blepoplevel. The tune, "I have beautlful ballad about llhelthe Touch.. was a commer1cal tered Innocence. The llhdter la
sue~ along with the other both literal and ngurattve, for
single 'Shock !he Monkey," the individual Is detained b)'
the nrat cut on the il side. authorttles, and Iii also removTh- songs combine an up- ed from everyday reality
beat tempo with slngalong through his schl.zophrenlc
lyrics for a more popular ap- withdrawal. The "white
peal. The fact that the lyrics coats" are not able to detain
deal with an lnsattable lust for their prisoner, for as Gabriel
sexual fulfillment probably says in closing:
didn't hurt either.
Hold on. you l\aue gambled
The next cut. "The Famlly with our own life, and you
and the Fishing Net," ls face ttte night alone.
strange even byOabrtel'sstan- While the builders of lhe
dards. Dealing basically with a cages'Sleep with bullets.
fertlllty rttual. the song's dark bars. and stoneThey do not
Imagery Juxtaposes the see you.r rood tofreedom
mother'f•ther "American" ln- That you build withflesh and
sututlon with canablllstlc blood.
tend~nctes and .. vows of
Peter Gabriel's new album ls
sacrallce:· The effect teduces his strongest to date. Strong
the ·:family" to a bunch of not only tn It's musical expreshedonists who requjre vio- sion, but also the phlloeophlence to sumulate an emo- lcal "realltles· e xpressed
ttonal. albe.l t sexual responae. through the lyrtcs. Gabriel has
The song punches through as the panache to combine thls
a startling crltlclam of what "statement'" with syntheGabriel .sees as our sizers, guttar(Chapman sUck),
matertallsttc lobodtmtzed heavy drums. and tribal
society.
rhythms to create a unique
new sound. The nlche that he
'fhe remaining three tracks has carved for himself as an Inon the albtDn continue to pro- novator wUI certalnly be
be the Inner moUvaUon of our perpetuated by this Intense
actions. Two of the cuts are album. Rael ts alive and has
fast, "LayYourHandso,:, Me," found Security.

Jackson thrills with electric pop
8 1) Robert Cappiello
singles that dominated the sets the tone for the rest of the
album, which alternates elec,
charls for most of that year.
If America has produced a
Stncc that albll-m's succcM. tronlc rythym-based dance
pop music lnstJtutJon com~ pop music. particularly Disco, music with synthesizer·
The
parable to f!:ngland's Beatles has moved to a synthesizer drenched ballads.
In terms of influence. based sound. · Groups like ballads are fairly remorable.
popularity. quality and en- Kraftwerk. the Soulsonlc particularly "The Girl ts
durance, It ts the Jackson Force and BrtUsh "synth: Mine" · a duet with Paul Mc·
(which e veryone
family. The Jacksons have pop" acts like the Human Cartney
has
heard).
It Is the dance
been the dominant fo~e ln League and Soft Cell have
Black American inuslc since changed the sound of Diaco music that rules.
' ' Start in' Something'".
the end of the Supremes· hey- music stgnlflcantly. On his
day In the late 'Slxtles, and latest album. Thriller. "Thriller", "Beat It". "BUile
with the poeslble excepUons Michael Jackson and pro- Jean". and "Pretty Young
of Stevie Wonder and Diana ducer Quincy Jones have In• Thing" are all perfect ex'
Ross, they made the most tegrated th.e melodic hooks am pies of the kind of music
graceful and succesful move and exuburant spirit one ex- which has kept Michael
from the Motwon sound to pects from a Jackson L.P. Jackson on the top of the
with the new synthesl.ted charts. Jackson and Jones'
Disco.
· Throughout their career. rythym ' sound that has experimentation with syntheslzer effects adds to the exsinger Michael Jackson has recently become popular.
cttemenl
the sor,gs generate. ·
always been In the spotlight.
The opening song. "Wanna
"Beat
It''
features a guitar
Uterally growing up In public. be StarUn' Somethln'"uses
His 1980 solo album. Off the synthesizer for both bass line solo b):' Eddie Van Halen. and
Wall, was one of the biggest and rythym, and Is rather a the song has consequently
selllng albums In pop music departure for a Michael gained popularity on hard· ·
history. with several hit Jackson recording. This song rock format radio staUons, a
virtually unheard of feat for a
'
Mlchael Jackson recording.
Be• sponsor for 1111 Dmice Mmalhon.
Jackson's voice. like that of ·
Smokey
Robinson. has found
Cal Mak Kayo -0083 or Lisa Den -9728
maturity In the h.lgh tenor
for Colgate CIMallt fund DriYe. .OT
range. and thls makes tt dlfOcult for him to pull off the

'

'

', ..' '

'. '

.. .

.•

' ' •.

'

.'

'

" tough guy" stance of a song
like "Beat It". B~t hls voice ls
perfectly suited for the campy
drama of "Billie Jean". in
which he denies his responstblllty for the child of a
deranged groupie. In "Pretty
Young Thing" and "Wanna
Be Startin' Somethln"' his
smooth tenor nts cpmfortably
lntothemlxofpercusslonand
synthesizers. alternately carrylng a melody and becoming a rylhymlc lnstrumenl Itself.
Thriller Is geared for radio
play. and should get more
than its share this year.
"Startin' Somethln'", "The
Girl ls Mine". and "BUile

.

.'

' .
'

' ·,
',

'

your Imagination. Yoo, llexi>ility. Yoo, lnkialMt. Your
Mllretchff 'fO',JI po•ors ol reuon. tt

heighlons your ene,gy -

talom. Quick 10 prorno10 k.

· N's quick. Quick to rocognizo

•Ai>'allam & Scraus hu 15 11«00 lllrougl>Oul
Now VOik, , _ Jlr10y and Ponnoytvonia.11 It a dMslon

of Federated Oepor1mont S10<-• mufll.blllon Ooflal
divfflifiod re1111 oorpo,atlon. Md MS, l'lol'M-buod In
NOW VOik City, it I Yitai end growing port ol It II.
Our EMculiW TrM!lntl Programa- two oxclclng
carM< pelllS. Ono -10 buying. Ono- to
manaQllfflllnl. Each one ii d11IIJ* IO inlrocu:e the
many1..... ol rNlfolg. from V. Nllng ac,c,, 10 V.

'

Jean" have already become
big hit from thls aibum.
although the entire coUectJon
of ballads and dance songs ts
up for grabs In terms of radlo
play.
Stgnlflcantly. most of the
outstanding cuts on Thrlll~r
were written by Michael
Jackson himself: an indlcaUon that the man has many
years ahead ofhlm not only as
a dynamic performer who
stage act ts legendary. but as
a serious composer capable of
making a lasting mark on
American music,

corpo,aie offices, lllrough ex1Atnsive on-lJ1e.jol) !raining ss
- u Nfl1inln. How far can you go? JU far and u fast
as your drive, 'fO'JI stamina, 'fO'JI ambition and your ability

"' '··

• big hits. This reviewer picks
"Pretty Young Thing" as the

Are you i'eadv for.one of the toughest
tests vou'II ever take? If vou are,
there's a special place for vou in the
Executive Training Program at A&S.
If you like to be challenood, you'll kMI relllllng. h teslS

'

So, ff you lhlnl< you'w go1 u,e lkils we need. uy 1ho
ExocutiW Tr.,;,,,ng Prooram ll MS. Wotch fo, our
Pl- Or
write 10 us, care of Executive -Reervitment, 420 Ful1on
Slreet, Blooldyn, Now YOf!< ti 201

---------- , ---/

..,.10

Fellnauya, 1"s

Black· History:-Events Planned
By Pamela 8pllrllDC

All over the country, black
history
Is ce lebrated
througl)out the month of
February. The purpose or
Black History Month Is to give
people of all races a chance

tO

understand . ..3ppreclate. and
. become

ramlllar with

the

black heritage. Black History
Week was nrst started by
Carter Woodson who believed

that the way to promote har,
mony between the races Is to

acquaint one with the other.
In the sixties. Black History
Week was expanded to Black
History Month.
This year, thcBlackStudcnt
Union. the Charity Fund
Drive, the Cultural Affairs
Board. the Cultural Center.
the

Harlen,

Renaissance

February 20th: A mm called
"The Mack" will be shown In
209 Lathrop at 7:30"PM. This
film deals with the sexplolta·
lion or blacks In the ghe\to.
February 2:l_nd: " The Sounds
or Struggle: A Celebration or
Black Music" wlll be presented
In the Cultural Center, which
IS located nesr the Goop. at
8:00 PM. Also. Acy Jackson.
the DlrC(:toror the Career Planning Center. will be giving a
lecture entitled "Career
Development Through Artistic Expression·· In 122 Dana at
3: 15 PM.
February 23rd:
The Pub

~

prcsepts Disco Night at which
We. Funk will · provide the
music.
February 25th:· A lecture on
James Pappas· "Blacks In
Film" wlll be given in 209
Lathrop at 8:00 PM.
February 27th: A film called
"Black Face·· White Face" wlll
be s hown In 308 Olin at 8:00
PM.
February 28th: The art exhibit entitled "Through Our
Eyes" which started on the
2nd or February will be closing.
The Cultural· Center
hopes that everyone wlU come
to sec their exhibition.

Charity Committee Drives to Help Needy.-

Center. Office or the Dean or
Students. Office Qf Supportive
Wanderer's Rest. and the MenServices. the Residence ExBy lllarlJo Bury
l
i
Beth
Fentpo
tal Health Department of
ccuuvc Board, the SoJ9urncrs.
University Church and We
In Umes of economic hard- Madison Alcohol and Drug
Funk have worked together to ship. donating to charity may Prevention Program, Addi·
organize several Rims, lec- tiot ap·peal to already thinly tlonal charities benefiting
tures and other'events.
worn wallets. However, In from this year's drive are the
Natural Resources Defense
February 9th: A Rim called these times It becomes even
Council,
the Urban League or
"Black History: Loot. Stolen or more Important to help the In·
Strayed?" wlll be shown at the dlgent, Fulfilllng basic human Syracu~. Amnesty ·lntema,needs Is one aim of the UonaJ, and Covenant House.
Cultural Center at 7:30 PM.
charities chosen by this year's
Even if these names sound
February J 2th: The Avante
unfamiliar
•to you. contribute·
Colgate
Charity
Fund
Drive
Theater Company will be perto the Important goal or the
forming "Ain't Mlsbehavln' " Committee.
1982-83 Fund Drive. Educa•
The
thirteen
beneficiaries.
In the Brehmer Theater at 8:00
chosen after a rigorous month lion Week, February 7th-14th
PM.
at the Coop, wlll feature
February J 3th: "Claudine" or examination and discussion
wUI be shown at 209 Lathrop by the Fund Drive Committee. representatives or the various
serve not to give hand outs, benenc1ar1es who are willing
at 7:30 PM,
and eager to Inform students
February J 5th: A lecture call- but to help the needy to help
about their organization. The
themselves.
The
lnternaed "TheMcseagetntheMuslc"
will be given byWeFunkatthe UonaJ, national and local best kind or giving Is lntelllgent giving, so stop by and
Harlem Rena!e99:1ceCenter In chartUe-S &elected serve a
variety of needs, such as those talk with these lnteresungand
East Hall at 8:00 PM
or the elderly, the handicap- dedicated people. A schedule
February l 8tn: A videotape or ped, the poor and the natural of visitors can be found tn the
Coop.
TonyBrown'sJoumalcnUtled environment.
"Blac.k s In White TV" will be
'Fu!fllllng baste human needs Is one atm of
shown at the Cultural Center
the
charities chosen by thts year's Colgate
at 7:30 PM. Also, Professor
Charity Fund Drtve Committee.·
Mungazl wlll be giving a lectu.re on "The Educational
Many students arc unaware
Direct student. faculty and
DUemmas or Black Africa" In that Madison County Is \jle administration sollcltatlon
the third noor faculty lounge poorest county tn New York (February 8th-15th). wlll be
In Alumni Hall at 3:30 PM.
State, and the Committee felt followed by a month long
February 19th: Dl.n ner will be It Important to select many series or evenlS Including Pub
served at the Coop at 5:30 PM. local charities. These Include Discos (every Wednesday
Afterwards. a group of Colgate Madison County Office for the Night), a science ncuon fllm
studenlS who call themselves Aging, Madison C9unty Rape festival featuring --2001-"Across I 10th Street Playe.r s" Crtsls Service . •catholic (February 18th), a talent show
wlll be performing a musloo.l Charities or Madison County. (February 19th).andaSunday
entitled "You Are There." The Hamilton Refugee Resettle- morning Pancake Breakfast
dinner and theater together ment Committee, HamUton (February 20th).,
cost five dollars. For people Hospital. Madison County
The highlight of the Drive Is
·who Just want to see the play. Children's camp, Madison
the 30 hour Dance Marathon
which starts at 6: 15, admls•
County Special Olympics, (February 2.5th-27th), where
slon Is 1.50.
'

dancers raise money whllc
competing for a spring break
trip to the Bahamas. During
the last few hours of the con,
test. the marathoners will be
Joined by fellow students In an
all-campus dance (February
26th). · Come down to Hun•
tlngton Gym to help the
dancers wind down the major
money raiser for the Drive.

Sign-ups for the Marathon as
well as the Talent Show begin
this week In the Coop.
Last year's Drtve earned tenthousand two hundred and ftf..
ty dollars, but times have gotten even tq~gher: The
1982,83 Charity Fund Drive
hopes to help soften the blow
by contributing to organlza•
uons that help others.

Coffeehouse: .

Not Just a Meeting Place
by llart1n Welner
tern Jeff Schwartz. who have
This semseter the Colgate reorganized Cecelle's as not
community hastheopportunl- only a place wh~rc people can
ty to explore a nighttime alter- meet for food and drink but
natlvetotheregularbarscenc. aJso as a place for expertmenThe organizers.or the recently ta! visual and performing art.
re-established Cecelle's Coffe- Ce<:ellc's encourages artists
house In the basement or Interested In displaying In the
Ralphe Bunche House Invite coffeehouse to call WIii Keller
student and faculty to ex- at 824-3432 or 824-9720 and
perlence Colgate's taSte or Interested performers to conGreenwhlch VIiiage. Cecelle's , tact Gordon Tappe.r at the
Is open Wednesday through same number.Tapper notes
Saturday, 9 p.m. to I a.m .. of· that performances do not have
fers cappuclno. espresso. fresh to be musical. Faculty are also
ground coffees. a selection of · encouraged to contact Tapper
herbal teas and features to use Cecelle's as a place for
freshly squeezed fruit and - lectures or seminars.
vegetable Juices as well as dipFuture plans forCecclle's Inspecials and baked goods. all elude the possible recruitment
at low prices.
of well known area artists.
Cecelle"s . returns after a poets and performers and an
three-year closing thanks to assortment of periodicals for
dollars provided by the Hous- browsing. Ce<:elle's also hopes
Ing Office and the efforts of to be able to pay workers who
Cecelle's coordinators. Bun• have been donating the.Ir Ume
che House residents Gordon voluntarily and If popularity
Tapper. Lisa Klelnbub, Diane continues, Ce<:elle's wlll open
~llman and Peace StudJes In- afternoonsaswcllase,enlngs.

1he Cotga1e Record Co-op cmnounces its hours for the Spring semester:

SUNDAY. .-

.

FRIDAY,

4:30 - 7:30 pm ~

STOP by and check out the latest releases by:
Squ. .ze
J. Gell• Band
Joumey
Mlulng Persons

..

. ,

Michael Jackson
'
Blade Sabbath
The Waltreues
Soft Cell

located on tfte tlird floor of the. Student Union,
the Record Co-op ltas the best a only prices in townl

,

,,..~

• *7eOF l. 1N8

. ---

.Medical Ethics. .Explor~s ]}eliefs, Differences
Strong arguments concern-

Of the 18 students In the

this course because I wanted a
'ell/ bull for making decisions
lnotead or Just Intuitive

tng queatlona with _e normous. course only a~t half are conlmpllcallons brought 18 G<,1· sldertng .' !'edlclne as a career.
gate University students Theremalnderdlffergreatlyln reasons."
tc,cether for four weelm of In· their academic pursuit.a: law.
Lauren Simon. aJuntorfrom
tensive study of,"Medtcal pollUca, bualneas. " sclenUllc Palm Beach, Fla.. said she had
Ethtca"· one of the college's research and phUoeophy are wanted to take · the counie
January projects.
, all represented. Religious apd elnce she was a freshman. "I
Colgate pioneered tts ethnic backgrounds are also come from a medical backJanuary Special Studies mixed. All the stu.den ta, ground," she Said. "I am
Period In 1964. Studenta and however. have collectively 'mind set' on certain taaues
faculty have been encouraged =d~i::,:.or one reason- ~
-; : :0
alnce that time to explore
Senior Steve Wiener from open my eyes to several aides
academic areas Into which Yorktown Hetghta In West· of an laeue. It gives you a
they might very -well - ven- c h - County Said, "I didn't definite perspective on very
lure , during the re!fular know the anawera to eome of controversial Issues. In
academic terms.
these queallona myself, and I medicine, the more vie'\119 you
Phtloeophy profeaaor Hun~ wanted to be exposed to other see, the better off you and your
ttngton Terrell has Instructed vleWpolntaandcomparethem'-""llentare."
the medical ethtca project with my own."
ProfeasorTerrellagreeawlth
since 1975, "I have tried to .
"These are not laaues that Simon. "I would hope any
can be dlemleled," said Diane phyatctanwhotreatameormy
help my students develop a Richter. senior from RJA-. family '!fOUlcl have gone .
respect for human differences
...,.
1n all. my courses," Terrell
wood. N.J. "lnacluellkethla throughacoursellkelhla." he
all ihe conatderatlons can be satSaid, "andeven1poreaotnth18
course...
brought out. I believe anyone stlll a r.w:1y new Idea and I'm
Involved In science, as I am, not sure a ny medical schools
Strong emotions and total should be clear on the laaues have such requtrernenla."
Involvement prevail • as the and the altematlves they may
Terrell Said he has never hact
studenla alt facing one another encounter."
.
'around a table. Who bas the
Sophomore Karen Cannon
right to make Judgmenta from Dameatow n. Md. la an
aboutpaln?Howdoyoudeftne Engllah major who plans to
pain? la emoUonal pain worse . study veterinary medicine.
thanphyslcalpaln?Whattsln· . She Said. ''I've thoughl about
competent? How do you define · ethics since my biology claaaea
trraUonal?
In hlfi' school. I signed up for

:::.;::.i;:n:i:

a problem filling hlaclaae. Asa·
matter of fact. he had to limit
the number or studenta to ap,
proximately 20 to keep the
group on an Intimate basta.
"I feel Colgate should be
tratnin, people who-wtll queaUon what profeaatonals do In
their lines or work," Terrell
Said. These studenta and their
Involvement are very precious

IAP!C,
"It Is not uncommon to

hear.. : 'That's what I
t h ink, but I haue no right
to Impose
this on, you. "
,

"Noj,1e who are liiiecure In
having their IJ,ellefs and Ideas
questioned do not come Into
thla course. We are all very
oonacJoua of how sharply we
differ on certain thtngi,. We
weigh things differently, ~tlonally. But for all our ,dlf.
ferencea. we are trying· to
decide on lasuC$ \n terms that
we canJusUfy to others. We're
narrowing down the frame-

work.''

For all their differences. the
students are anuwngly sen,
sltlve to one another durtng
their dtacuaatona. It la not un•
common to hear a student end

hla or her argument with,
"Th'at's what I think, but I
have no right to Impose this on
yoo."

"Rational people will con•
tlnue to differ." Terrell Said.
"It's when these dUfertng opinions collide that we need encounters such as lhla. It's a
delight for me to see how a student la gotng to come up with
something that's worried me
alao and present It to the
othen and deal with It."
Morality. patemall8m, abor·
tton. eUthanuta, general
ethical conceptions and
'speclftc moral,medlcal problems •• many people may ftnd
these tasues too controversial
to dtacuss openly. Colgate's
Profeaaor HunWlgton Terrell
ftnda these Issues too Important not to. ~

Jan-Exchange ~ded·
"every comment that I have

(conttnuedfromfront cover}

heard has Indicated that the
'
That. according to ATO January experience was a
president Kevin Danehy, Is In· favorable one for the ex·
dtcatlve or a lack or1about student life on the part nlty/aororlty members alike."
orFennerandRembcrt.Bl1tU9 Caprio ad,d ed, "I penonally
llnd Danehy Said that at the feel that for the twelve years In
November meeting, Rembert · which we've had the exchange
wasnotawarethatColgatehaa program hoeted by the frater(contlnuedfromfront cover} «I ~laatJofarJ.',., with being
a coed fraternity. Said · ntues and the sorority. It has
unpaid, although many said
Danehy, "I've never seen been benalclal. Several Umes school or theater admlnlatra· that they were asked to per,
anybody so poorly prepared we·ve questioned the par· lion.
form menial tasks at times. "I
for a meeting In my life."
, tlctpants, and we've always
think or llas paying my dues...
Regardleas or Fenner's opt- heard ·that It !'as an ex- TBJtY DON'T DO IT
said senior Austin Murphy.
P'ORTIIBIIONJtY
nton or the condition of perience that they could not
houses. BrltUs said that gain at their own lnsUtuUon."
Most students are not paid "As some of our students are
for their work. "The alumni not as e xcellent as others.
are doing a great favor by neither are our Faculty. and so
opening up their professions ." theselntemshJpsdon'talways
said Fenner. In a Jetter · work out perfectly," said
soliciting alumni support for Alumni Association Secretary
the program. Fenner wrote: ··tt and Program Co-Director Bob
Is a d ecided advantage to the Howard. speaking at an lhterAJumnt sponser to have the view orientauon ror seniors.
services of enthuslastlc
undergraduates for a month
Fenner says that the prowith
llttle
or
no
financial
gram
prefers that alumni pro.

obligation ." None or the vide living ,u-rangements for
students Interviewed express-- the students: "There ts no

January Experiences Invaluable

Attention
Seniors

.

o.ne
There
IS
position available in
the Senior · Class
Council. Petitions
are in the S.A. office.
.
They
are
due .
Friday, February
11·.
.\

obllgauon for you to provide
any flm!nclal assistance
unless It Is required by law."
the letter further states.
Students who obtained In·
ternshlps Independently are
not barred from receiving a
salary. "That le between the
student and the employer,"
said Fenner.
The contacts that students
make through·.the experience
are often considered more
valuabl e than financial
renumeration. Several Intern•
ships have led to Job offers.
According to Fenner. alumni have been Impressed with
the performance of Colgate
student9. "I am very proud of
our kids... she said.

SOPHOMORES:
interested in the exci~ ski

Those
weekend
March 11-13 must bring their S30 deposit to the Coop
this Wed. or Thurs. between 9 & 12:20.
Another $30,,$40 will be collected later in the month.
The rice can't be beat. It includes:
rtation to (on Friday) and from (Sunday
everµng) reek Peak.
- beautiful chalet housing
- 18 hours of fine~.
Food and bars are all on grounds.
Don't miss this once in a sophomore chance!

....,.
,

~

........ ...,_

Pe.......,. a. 1Ha

'

ATO
Fund

.

MELLO'

'

1

l M NOT

VOUR

SWEET

BA8800!

(conttnumfrom page1l1
endowment fund.

Brother• of ATO and
members of the Alumni Corporation wUI meet to decide
the exact conditions for
receiving the echolarshlp.
However.
preltmlnary
minimum requirement.a have
already been ,.greed on. The
recipient of the scholarship ·
muet be a brother of ATO and .
must demonstrate nnanctal
need.
ATO Is the only fraternity
on the row that ts presently
Involved In an endowed
acholarshlp fund with the

EXC\ISE ME. MIS6 ... MAS

WMEN ME COIES IN TO

!if(

11W fft( VAI.EN'TlNE CANDY,
Pl.EASE TB.I. MIM TMAT I
"6ER CIIOCOLATECREAMS

SWEET BA8800 9EEN

IN TME ~ ltlMY?
1

81/T NO COCONUT !
I MATE COCONUT!

THAT

1M
NOT '/Ol/l

6NES/IIE

A61U:AT
IDEA!

SWEET

IIA8800!

University.

'This scholarshlp fund

demonatrated · lncreaaed cor•
porate Interest In education.
In the race of recent govern•
ment cuts: saye Danehy. 'In
effect. corporations are pick•
tng up the slack for the
government. I think ti's ex·
citing that a fraternity and Its
Alumni Corporation can work
together on aomethtng which
ts undoubedly
the best In·
terest of members or the Col·
g a te
community.

DID vov see MY "SWEET
SA8800" STAHOIM6 1HERE?
.,\

..

, ff!:~
..,
.
~, ,,
.__, -

ME'S MAH61N6 AAollND
TME CANOY STORE

OR

IT LL PROSA8t.V 8E A

A 1116

80)( OF CANOY SMAPED

TRVIN6 TO DECIDE WMAT
TO 6ET ME FOR

ZERO!

LIKE A 1116 HEART...

ISN'T HE
TME CVTE5T
TMIN6?

VALENTINE'S PAY...

'

,

~ajor Points: Athletic Affairs Board Playoff Proposal
Polle y oa Poet-h a PIay
Poot......,., play taeepectal·
ly Important to llltercolleglate
athletlca at Colgate University
1*autle o( OW' Independent
lllahla and the ~
uent
lack ota'feacue clwnplonahlp
88 a goal. The competitive
nature of attracttng gifted
athletes to Colgate makee the
goal o( poat--.aon competl·
tlon very Important. elllce
• euch competition provldee
atgnlllcant motivation for 111·
dtvlduale and !eame.
Therefore. 88 a general policy,
the llletltutlon welcomee poet,
eeaaon play Ill all eporte and,
If a t all poulble, allowa
rep reeentatlon by duly
q ualified Colgate teams
and'or llldlVlduale when 111·
vttatlona are extended. This
general pollcy ta subject to ti!.•
followtng reetrlctlone.
1. Funding muet be
available wtthlll the epeclllc
eport · budge t.
the
men'e'women'e eport budget,
the cha mplonehlp ad·

-

mlntatratlve budget. or from
support group fun d ing .
2. All net Income realized
from poet•eeaeon athleUc
competlttonlg ate recetpta.
eharea of a pool. TV rights.
etc.) will be placed totally and
completely lllto the endow·
ment of the Un:lverslty.
3 . The Athletic Director. Ill
conaultatlon with the Dean of
Studenta, will develop a procedure through which In·
dtvtdual athletes. prty:ately
and without preeaure. can ex•
pre•• their attitude• and
desires regardlng·poet-eeuon
competition. No Individual
wlll be coerced lllto par·
tlctpattng In poat-eeaaon
athl etic
competition.
4 . Formal acceptance or reJ«tlon of any lllvttatlon to
post-seaaon champtonehtp
play will be made by the
President after a dt.ocuaelon
with the Director of Athletics
!except 88 epeclfled In 5
below!. That dectaton will be
based upon the a ttitude of In·
dtvldual ,athletes or team

members toward poet-eeason
competition .. determllled Ill
3: the llldlvtduala' or \eam'a
record o,i.er the 8C8110n: and
the effl!Ct euch participation
will have on the academic
reeponalbllltlee of the parUclpanta 88 epeclJled below.
5. In genersl, we believe
that post-season play off
gamee of llldlvldual · Cham·
ptonahtp participation ehould
not cc>nlllct wtq, the review
period and e x amination
schedule of the llletltutlon.
However, the calendar of the
tnatututlon and of vartoua
playoff gamee and Individual
competltlona may come lllto
conflict pertodtcally: the
nature and extent of confllcta
will vary. When theee confltcta artae. the ...ue of partlclpatlon will be determined
by the President after discus&Ion and a recommendatloi:,
by the Committee on
A t h Ie t t c s .
Ad-a.aa: NCAA l •AA

J'ootllall

Playoff•

Dlvlelon !,AA playoffs tn

There wlll be an organlzatlonal m-tlng for

at 7:00 p.11 In Alton Lounge
Thunclay, Feb. 10

Please attend or contad Shelly Friedman ~x 1062
Robin Peterson 3045

Carol Robl.nson A-79

198 4 .

B. Because the ntxt NCAA
convention will not take place
until J anuary 1984. the Com-

mtttcc recommends to the
President that he approve participation tnthe 1983 Dlvtalon
I-AA playoffs should an invltatloon be extended. Thia
also lie the case the following
year If. In the Judgment of the
President. NCAA legtslatlon ta
still pendlllg and has a chance
to be adopted at the January.
1985. convention. After that.
all future Invitations under
the current four-game format
wlll be declllled. Any new for.
mat developed by the NCAA .
must be approved by the
President following review
and a recommendation :by
the Committee on Athletics.
C. In the meantime. we
recommend that the President and the Director of
Athletlca explore. expedltloualy and eertously. a
'
cloeer affillatlon
wtth other
collegee tn the east similar to
Colgate. Including but not
llmtted to the Ivy League
achoots, with which we tradl·
tlonally compete and ahare
a cademic
values.'

.

l _983 CHARITY
FUND DRIVE

Cllarity Fund Drive tight aub Night

All students Interested In
Waltreulng
Waitering
Bartendlng or
Committee member

football are now established
88 a four-game poet......,n
aeries. extendlllg the football
8C8110n by 30-40 percent for
the two teame which reach
the Rnal game. Currently, the
third and fourth games Ill the
series conlict with Colgate's
revtew and examtnatlon
period.
Colgate was recla8ellled Into thta Division by the NCAA
agalnat our y,tahes. and the
Un!Verstty had no chance to
Influence the playoff format.
A.The University should
play a leaderthlp role.
through Its Prestd'ent and Its
Director of Athletics.In efforts
to being about major changee
Ill :the playoff format. We
should strive to have the
playoff format reduced to two
gamee. Such a change would
require the llltroductlon of
new leg1slatlon at the next
NCAA convention In January

DANCE
MARATHON
Raise money for charity while
competing for the prizes
including:

GRAND PRIZE:
Trip to the Bahamas

.......,.......

..,..s

Do Real.Men Lecture?

~ Handboolc. He lold
the movie rtghta to "Real
Men" to Columbia Pictures.
Felntetn baa eubatltuted for
RuMell Balter at The ~
/conttnW!d/rom cover/
York
Ti mes
Sunday proposal ls not decided upon 11,
Magazine, and he has been the 1984 meeung. and ls put
published In Playboy. ...rr until 1985, Colgate wtll
Glamour. al'ld New York allow the football teem to parM~tne. He has aloo Just ticipate In the 1985 play-offs.
finished edlUng "Real Men However. It la made clear that
Don't Cook ," a new release parttclpatlon wlll not extend
from Pocketboolrently at w orit on a ocrcenplay
What Moynihan feels would
called Kt.sstng with Gene be most beneficial to,Colgate,
Wilder. e1arrtng Gene Wilder as presented In the proposal, Is,
and Gilda Redner.

Playoffs Reconsidered

ocramble all · the old tiexual
equations. "A lot of confusion
oUll e,<1sts:· he says. "You
meet a woman and want to go
Ol!t with her. but how do you
achieve your goel? Are you
soft and vulnerable or do you
warm and sensitive and come on.like Tyrone Power?''
vulnerable. I'm convinced
~
thing,, were better off ln the
past. Men were men. Women
were eex objects.··
• •
Author Felrateln, 29, wlll
appear at the Colgate Chapel,
7:30PM on· February 9th
Wednesday. His tallt will e}(•
plain how he feels about the
blurring of ,s ex roles fostered
by the avalanche or rhetoric
from the fernlnlet and human
pqtenual movements. ·
Instead of prejudging all ln/contlnuedfrom page 4/
Hie number 1 beet eeUer,
vttaUons for students to par"Real Men Don't Eat Quiche,"
The answer sh9uld lie "No." ' tlclpate In special off-campus
has been on top of the charta
as long as the lnsUtutlon con- events. Colgate policy-makers·
for weeks. The book Is an exUnues to give top priority to should devise a proceee which
panded version of a piece
high-quality education.
leaves room for e xceptions
Felrateln did for Playboy. "I
.
I urge the Colgate gover- and variances. The goverlike to prick balloons," he
After · gradua~ng ln 1976. nance structure to adopt nance structure should be able
says. "I Just looked at all the he spent four years In policies about student par- to' review each situation on Its
trends and decided It was Manhattan advertls.lng agen- ticipation In Intercollegiate own merits, weigh the advanUme to make fun of them."
cles wr1ung copy for Flat, compeUtlon and post-oeaaton tages and disadvantages to
Raised In Maplewook, New Volvo. and Pioneer stereo ads. tournaments which are flexi- partlclpanls. and base the final
Jersey, where his father ls a He quickly became the whiz ble and rcalt.stlc. Each oppor- decision more on long-term
sales executive for a texUle kid of Madison Avenue tunity for spectal achtcvcmcnt benefit to s tudents than on
firm ,and his mother Is a first· cemertng 13 Clio awards. In ·· In off-campus study projects, short-term tnconvCn1ence. to
grade teacher, Felrsteln 1978, at the age of 25, he won musical or stage tours, or faculty and staff.
began wrlUng parodies of a Cito for the "World's Best athletic contests .. should be
As long as the Colgate comTV's Dragnet at 14.
At Television Campaign" for his Judged on Its own merits. The munity ls committed first to
Boston University's School of work on Pioneer HI Fl Com- pattern of American ooclety Is the tradJtton of excellence In
Public CommunlcaUon. he ponents. Two years ago he not one of'etthcr or chotccs:as the claeeroom, the tradtuon of
became editor of the student left advertising and began John Nalsbltt points out In exccUence on the concert or
paper, The Dally Free Press: wrlung screen plays to Col· "Megatrends," It t.s one of theater stage, In campus
Living In BU's newly coed umbla, Paramount, and CBS mulUple opUons. That should pollUcs. or on the playIJJg Reid
dorms, be ssw how the Thcetr!cal Films. In addlUon. be the pattern of a liberal arts aloo should be eoncouraged.
women's movement r1cu!c! he was a contributor to The colle.l(e.
They are compaUble.
"We've become a nauon of
wimps.
Pansies. Oulche
cetera." says satltlet Bruce
Felrateln. "Alan Alda types
--who cook and clcen and
relate to their wives. Phil
Donahue clones ·· who arc

-

lo Jotn an athletle: league composed of ochoola which arc
academically oriented, yet

strong In a thleucs. For the
ume lielng Moynihan rcallzea
that the proposal ls not• a

"purist" one. Conceaelona
were made by the advocates of
athletlcs and those of academics In, "an attempt to
bring · the community back
together.",

No Dichotomy:

'

Tradition of Excellence

Cecelie's
Coffee House

Emlyn I. Grtmth '42
Former Ed-In-Chief, Colgate

Maroon

CASINO NIGHT
Friday, Feb. 11, 9 pm to 1 am
.
in the

is open Wednesday through

HALL OF PRESIDENTS

Saturday nights from

9 :00 pm to 1 :00 om

Games of chance, prizes, free beer,

Come in for a snaclc and enjoy the
coltural atmosphere with student
art and entertainment weeklI
· features, political speakers and
exhibits to come!
'

Ce&$,

5th Annual

located downstairs in
Rolph Bunche House

I

1.n this context, Colgate officials should use their good offices to have the National Col·
leglate Athletic AoaoclaUon
avlod ochedule conflicts with
final examinations and other
academic commttmcnts. That
may· take a while, but I am
sanguine about the results. In
the Interim, there should be
flexibility In the dect.slonmaktng process on campus ·· a
rccognlUon of those unique
t,.ldlUons which molded the
llves of Colgate alumni who
have become lcedera In busl·
ness, Industry, Journallam,
educauon, theprofesslonsand
public service at state and national levels. There Is a IC880n
to be lcemed from past suc,

wine,' non-alcoholic beverages
Tickets $3.00

Semi-formal

Sponsored by the Inter Fraternity Council

Petitions Now Available:

OFF CAMPUS SENATORS

I

Due Friday, February 11th,

5:00 p.m. S.A. office
ELECTIONS FOR:
Sophomore Coui,cil
Junior. Council
an TNSClay

n

W.......,, l'elml•v

Senior Council
Off Campus Senaton
.

15 n

16, ;:00 .. . 2:00

p111

at t1it Coop

......

~

-

.........._

Pellnery a, 1 NI

,

'

,

&pnrts-.--------"--·-·~-----,--~
The Colgate Maroon wtshcs to teeognlze Ila
athlete of the month u freshman Gaald Wulen.
rtght wing for the Red Raider hockey team. HallIng from Humi,oldt, Saskatchiewan. Gerald has
come on extremely strong In the latter half of t!'e
season. Going Into tonight's contest, Waslen has
tallied In eight coMeeuUve gam"' for the Red
Raiders. On the season. he has 17 goals and 19
-tsto, and needs_ only 22 · more points this
season to become Colgate's moet prollOc

Swimmers
• Splash Back
BJ Jlfanc1 Rowe
'-' .

I

.

' Both the women's and
men's swim teams 9COred
decisive victories ovei: Cortland last week. The men·s
!13-30 win was especially
rewarding after their earlier
heartbreaking looe to B.U. )>ya
mere .006 eeconds In the Rnal
event. The Lady Raiders
booeted their conlldence with.
an lmpffllalve score of 93-56.
The men·seffort ral8ed their
record to 6-3. Fine. performances In many events
eecured the team's vlCtory.
Senlof
captain
J ohn
Shepberdaon took Drat place
In the !IO free. Sean Dolan captured It In the 100 free and
Chrta Welba followed eutt by
PlacinC !Int In the 1000 free.

freehman

scorer

ever.

'He had a llttle adjust.m en! at rtght wlnl!, · states
Slater of the ex-center. 'But after Chrtotrnas he
came back with conOdence.' he related. He's
been popping goals ever since: Indeed t.hat-.be
has.

Athlete of the Month

,
..
Dinos Comer
'

, _ place Ylctorles'were..,
turned In by John McConDlldl
1n the 200 Ry. eophomore ·
Ke9ln Ruac:h In the 200
h:b'JGU, and Mark l)eylne
In Ille 200 ,....,otatrake. Tbe
400medleJ relay '""8 taken by

Sure. the Super Bowl has been over for more
than a week, yet I'd still like to add my two centa

._, I

on
the
'ultimate
game /
The Redsldna 27-17 victory over the Dolphlns
put to rest the notion that Miami's 'Klller Bee'
defenae was u nbeatable. More Slllnlflcantly. the
game became the personal ahowcaee olJ ohn Rig·
gtne. ~ veteran running back out of Kanaas
amaabed the Dolphin line for 144 yards. In·
eluding a Super Bowl record 43 yard TD run. An
honorary member or the ·11~: Washington's
huge olJe,atve line, Rlgglno dominated the game

eoi,oie 11eca,_ or the 1eunwor1r di lkComleck. Wlielon.
~

- and Pihl. The

COlll·

blriauoa or Anow. Moree.
Muth, an!! Pihl picked up Drat '

In t he 400 free relay.
Sophomore diver Buzzy
Stryker ' lodled lliat place In ·
both the one and three meter
·d!Ylnl nents. His conala!ent
wtna·~
to eend him to
the Notlonala.

The women's meet waa a1ao ·
hlgh)lghted by a number or
spectacular
show ings.
Sophomore Hope Kaiser
dominated, taking first In the
400 J.M., the 200 Fly, and the
50 Fly. Colgate swept the
freestyles, with sophomore
.captain Ertn Scott placing first
lnthe500and 1000,andAnne
Whitney taking the 50 and
l 00. OIiier first-place vlctopcs
were snagged by Nancy PatUllo In the 50 Breast. Donna
Schulz In the 200 Back and
Chris DeLoulse In the 200
Breaslatroke, The team of
Schultz, Patttllo. Kaiser, and
Whitney took first In the 400

aa

-

.

.

..

J ai,,., i ~ • w, ,1~'"'1 . 111 .. \ 1, .. i~ ,

CoJ&ata' UDl-.eral(J'I Lllleberr, Jllatatortam will · h""'t thla 1ear'1 Upper New Tork Colle&fat e
W011181l'1 lll-.ttattoaal Swimming aA4 DITlllC
lleet Oil J'eb, 17· 19.
Medley Relay. The women also
captured the one and three
meter diving events with
)'.ll~andTrudyWebbrespecU'vely taking first In these
events.

Colgate's crushing defeat
over Cortland showed balanced teamwork and rhythm
which resulted from practice.
talent and hard work.

~ta~ a, -=a •~~PCPtsr-Ml~e,~~ e-

NEW YORK
PIZZE-RIA

f

t

Ii

37 LEBANON STRED

;

HAMILTON, ·N.Y.

j

Phone: 824-2112

~

·YwYI Tried .._ lat ••,. Now Try
... l11t

©

4t
()

O.lnriu Mon. - S.. 9:30 • 1:30

(>
@

t -'f.J~ ~,$-~---~4'4'a..o"

no one

has stnce Jtm

Brown.·

Super Bowl XVU features more than Just Riggin's Incredible performance. Fulton Walker's 98
yard kick-off return for a touchdown after the
'skins had knotted the &COne at ten might have
been . the sprtngboard the Dolphins needed to
control and put away the game. Instead Miami
QB David Woodley loet tits ability to move the of.
fensc. Lack of offense forced the Dolphin defense
to stay on the Oeld far too often to be effective.
The second half was terrtbiy one sided.
Washington physically beat-up the Dolphins,
blowlng them off the llne vlrtually at will. ·
Getting back to Woodley, how many of you
knew that this LSU product was the youngest
quarterback ever to start a Super Bowl?Hls SC·
cond half performance was the poorest of any
Oeld general since Cratg Morton led the Cowboys
and Broncos to deafeat In Supe's V and XII.
respccuvely. Woodley failed to lead Miami to a
Orst down In the second half and was spared
complete Ignom iny by Jimmy Cefalo's pass-run
play
for
a
touchdown.
Although It Is tough to criticize one or the
greatest coaches or all time. Don Shula must
shoulder the brunt or the blame for the loss.
Shula stuck with the kid Instead or going with
rellrf man Don · Strock on a key 4th quarter
P098C881on. Woodley faJled to mu'ster any offense.
and the Dolphlns had to punt. Winning quarter,
back Joe Thetsman proceeded to engineer a timeconsuming drtve capped by a TD reception by
Charlle Brown that put Washington up 27-17
with Just under tow minutes remalngtng. Strock
came Into the game. but by then It was loet. The
Redskins were champions or the strtke-ndden

season.
Game Notes: Colgate was represented In
Pasadena by ex-Red Raider Mark Murphy. Murp hy was the Redskins' lcadlng tacker, and
recorded a key Interception. The'77 graduate
became the 2nd Raider to own a Super Bowl rtng,
following Mark Van Eeghen., who garnered two
with Oalmany people- lncludlng Las Vegad Bookmakers.
would have preferred to see the Jela square off
agatnst the Cowboys. The posslbUtty or scuh a
match-up would have generated more money for
televtslon· and gamblers allke ..NBC deserves applause · for a well-delivered showcase. Merlln
Olsen and Dlck,Enberg went easy on the cltches
and provided Insightful commentary, and stlll
managed to be techntcally precise with clear
replays. Let's hope .B rent Musberger and co. at
CBS learned a few things for SB XV!ll.

.... ..

l'elmlary8.1Na

In recog11ltlon of rapldly multlplylng numbers
of HtneM-oeekers Infesting campua roadoldes.
and welght-rooma these dayo. the Maroon
has aollclted the conaultlng services of one or Colgate·, foremost pre-meda.

pools

'

-

TINt Ledy llalder -etball tnNlle4 te - _
t o a w t lut weekead. 8erall Ceehran led all
In l'rtAlaJ
71•18 loH to I~•- Pnehmen ~ Gn1akutll

-•n

..,.t'•

'· - •
\~\.

tel,..,. 11 point In Ce!fate'~ coaeolatlaa N-18
neat •••ht
Backaen.

•••r

•lctory the

(conttnuedfrom page 16)

Ask Doctor ·Jack
Dear Dr. Jock
I'm a 175 lb. mlddle-llnebacker. and my coach

says I should gain weight. Will the use of
anaboUc-androgentc sterlods Increase strength
and muacle-maas?
A friend· of mine wants to know.
Fed up on J,V.'

Hey J.V.I
Taking sterlods need not lead to Increased
muacular mass and strengthl In fact. such a
practice may constitute a serious _hazard to yoyr
Internal organs, Including your grapes, fella.
Better smarten up and stick with the Weeder
Weight - shakes. Why do you think Randy White '
ts childless?
Dear Dr. Jock

My n ew glrlfrlend has thl9 unquenchable. tnsatJablc thrtst for,uuh, exercise · yea,, exercise.
Like, she makes me go RUNNNG with her. two,
three times a dayl dig?
Doc, rVe been on the border of complete ex·
haustlon for weeks - ·you gotta help me. How
, tnuch time Is needed between, uuh, 'performances' for adequate recovery?
Sore In Stillman
Hey Stlllmanl
_It all depends on the kind of performance
you're talking about. you raacal. After say. sprlntglng, a recovery period of about an hour ts
recommended. With prolonged endurance performances • like a marathon • you may need up to
several days of recovery. You'll alao need to
restore phosphagcn and oxymyoglobrn, and
rcplacy glycogen.

Hit the Slopes
after class!

½ session passes

Only $2.00 with Student ID
Monday-Thursday 3:l0-':00 pm
Friday 3:00-5:00 pm
Wednesday eve6:30-9:l0 pm

....,,_,

_n
J\ [

confidence .
The Red Raiders remain optimistic and eager for aomc
wtns as they look forward to a
four game homestand which
stsrts Saturday and Includes
Important games against dlvlolon rivals Vermont. Cantslus.
and Maine, as well as Army.
'Nobody's throwing In the
10wel,' concluded Glordano.

Lady Skaters
Sharpening
BJ Karen Barn

Tht Colgate Women's Ice
Hockey Club will begin Its
rigorous February achcdule
on Thursday the tenth at Skidmore. The team did not have
an official achedule during
January, although several
players on campus were able
to pracUce regularly, With the
second half or the season fast
approaching, the team ts re•
condlUonlng In order to be
prepared for the hectic month
\head.
Head Coach Jaime Roeer
and Assistant Coach Scott
Brown are opttmtsUc about
the team's prospects. ReturnIng to the squad after a
semester's leave
Lori
, Hodln and Anne Reiser. whlle
newcomers Sarah Savage and
Jeanine Nlcholaon wlll add
depth to the team. The team
Itself has experienced a boom
tn interest. with team practice
attendance ave raging 30
players. This has enabled
Coach Roser to create six
talented offensive line&. Insur.
Ing depth at every poslUon. On
defense, Virginia Grote wlll
lead the backltners, whlle
Cathy Johntson Is returning
after an Injury last fall. Vast
Improvement has been evl·
dent In the goaltendtng corps.
with th e addtuon of senior
Debbie Breckenridge.
T he. team's Hrst home game
will be next Friday night
against Ithaca College. All arc
welcome to come support

them.

are

Strictly Sports

Finn

Some thoughta on the Super Bowl ,
Before the door ts closed on another
NFL seaaon, before the argument of
who's better - the 76ers or the Cc!Ucs
-atarts popping up everywhere, before
obnoxious lslan(ler fans start getllng
ready for a fourth straight Stanley Cup
celebraUon, and before Ralph Sampeon
and the Virginia Cavallera Hnd another
way· not to win the NCAA Basketball
championship, !eta' take one more look
at the Super Bowl. The game Itself was
cntcrtatnlng but not great. I would personally rather watch an aerial circus ala
the Plltsburgh-5an Diego playoff game
than sec John Riggins carry the ball 35
times against the Dullftns. Although the
big plays were present (Cefalo's TO.
Walker's return, Garret's reverse), the
dramatic element was missing. I'd prefer
a Jim O'Brien Reid goal with three
seconds left anytime. As far as player
personalttles

were

conccr,n cd,

the

OullJlns had none, and the Skins had two
(Riggins and Thc18Ill9Jl!I), Joe (the
throw. Hclaman as In) Thetsmann did his
best to pump bl9 team and his own head
up, but no one takes Joe that aertously
anymore, except for Joe. of course. Riggins, on the other hand, Is a true blue
Rake, aod he made the 'Bowl' more enjoyable.
But there were no brash
statements guaranteeing victory !Ike
thoee from games past · (Joe Willie
Namath. Fred 'the hamct' Williamson).
All too often the pre-gadle quotes read
somctlng Ukc this. "Well. we're really
peychcd for this one, and If we get the
breaks. score early, move the ball and
play great defense, we ahould wtn. But
that's not tak.l ng anything away rrom
them. They're a nnc football team ... Not
exactly words that are found posted on
an opposing teams lockerroom wall or
that would start a heated rivalry. The
worst part of the pre game hype was that
there was no croozln with the Tooz. Personally, If I didn't have money on the
game, I would have watched Star Wars
agatn. But anyway the re was no doubt
that by the end of the game that the Redskins are the best team tn football, and
that · Joe Thelsman Is t he most
resourceful quarte rback tn the NFL.
However If you think that the Skins are
going to repeat, you're out of your mind.
The Redskins (!Ike the Raiders of '80 and
the Ntners or '81) road the wave of emotion, played over their h eads and got all
of the breaks. They shouldn't be surprt&ed when they Hnd out that the glass allp-•
,pers they found In '82 wlll not Ht next
year,

'

.

arnnn

l'ebnull • 8 , 11183

. . . . .8

.

-RaiByA••tla llupby

period last Thursday night,
,
three Terriers had tallied nve
The Colgate Hockey 9!1uad. ,.g;...is to one drought-ender
cam~ perilously clooe to the from Colgate's Ken lselmoe
gloomy spectre or elimination (assisted by Houle and · '
from post season play. as they Wallace), scored with Just five ",_~ ~
traveled to Boston University seconds remaining In the SC· I
last Thursday night and IQSt cond period. With the score
"
1
5-4.
/
4-1 at the second lntermlsTralllng 5-1 after Just over ston. 3.000Terrterfansbegan ,
two periods of Ineffectual play licking their chops In an·
and sporadic defense. Terry t1ctpat1ng or a .third period
Slater'syoungskatersexpold· rout.
They were dlsap,
ed for three goals In one eight pointed.
minute stretch or the third
Whatever words Coach . .
period. In spite of that offen, Slater used to exhort his boys
slve seminar. B.U. was able to during that breather. Colgate
hold the Red Raiders fans can only hope he hall
scoreless for the last eight them written down. Unformlnutes of play to preserve tunately. they didn't. lake erthe win,
.
feet Immediately. as B.U:s
With the loss. which lowers Sinclair scored his second
Colgate's overall record to goal of the evening . the even,
10.9-2, Its ECAC slate to tual game winner. at 4:50 In•
4-8·3. Raider skaters nnd to the third. boosting his
. lhemaelvea In grtm straits.
team's lead to four.
"We'd have to win all six re·
Only then did Colgate ac- coicate aoaue Jeff Cooper l.ll actloG bere aaamat Princeton, wlll be lllatr.m
h=
""lll
=-t.b
=e;.;EC
;--"';.;
AccC.c.'_ __ _ _ _ _ _ __
malntng games to make the curately
reflect
the .ental lll t.be Raiden' lafHl:tcb nm to atay •-:1:.
playoffs."
slated
a superlative brand of hockey It
Six minutes after Wa.sleu's for Maroon that night, recruiting, and It will get us
philosophical Terry Slater.
ts capable or. Freshman pro- goal. center Jim Wallace though. Boston _
u. held Col· over that hump."
Those . who have borne dlgy Gerald Waslen from up scored on a powe( play. with gate for the next eight
Colgate will either take a
witness to some of the team's Saskatchewan way. picked help from Steve Smith. This minutes. and Colgate lost bite out or that hump or
post-Christmas moments or up where lselmoe had left off made the score 5.3 with Just , another painfully close one.
founder before It tonight, as
brllllance may dare speculate with a daullng. unassisted under ten minutes to play..
"We've been playing teams arch-rival Clarkson skates {n.
that such a feat might not be 'shorthanded goal at 3:50.
Their cushion rapidly like New Hampshire and B.U. to Starr Rink with a mind to
too far outside the realm or The effort was his 17th goal or disintegrating. the momen- In their own buildings. and push the Raiders off the plank
ix-fblllty. or course. the the season. gave him his 21st tum clearly with Colgate. the where most teams are getung and out ofECAC compeUtlon.
facts that Colgate hall also · and 22nd points, and was Terriers began to get a bit ant- blown out, we're right In the Last year before a standing
performed less than brilliant· characteristic of the sort or sy.
game. "
observed Coach room only crowd, the Raiders
ly at times, and that among play which won him ECAC
Before two minutes more Terry Slater,
.
defeated the Golden Knights
their next s1X opponents are co-rookie or the week honors had ticked away. Mike
We've been losing 5-4. 3·2 Jn overtime.
Earlier this
some or the most formidable last week. Seven goals or 18 LeBlanc took a pinpoint pass ,the kids have lmpoved all season Colgate came from
In the East, do little to stop points In the remaining six from Ken lselmoe and nipped season.
They have the well: .;;,hind to tic Clarkson,
pessimists from running off at games or the season wlll allow It past B.U.'s Dakalakls. nar- maturity· we just Jack a cou 5 . 5 .
the mouth.
Wasleu to set several rowing the gap to one goat.
pie of key spots this year.
By 3:50 Into the third freshman records.
There was to be no miracle Hopefully, we' ll get them

~R,

Cagers Fight Gamely, Lose
By

'
'

,Adam

Sacha

The University or New
Hampshire . . leaders of the
ECAC North division.
capitalized on size and speed
advantage!! and a second half
outburst to hand the struggltrig Colgate Red Raider
hoopsters their sixteenth toes
In eighteen games, 68-56 on
Saturday In Durham, New
Ha m ps h tr e .
A crowd of 2,375 was
treated to an exciting and
close first half as the 11 -7
Wildcats or New Hampshire
grabbed asllm 28-25 lead at
Intermission. But as IndlcaUve or numerous other
games this season. the Red
Raiders suffered a mid-second
half breakdown which allow,
ed the game to slip away toan
opportunistic UNH squad.
"We played wUI In the first
half and most of the
sccond.''sald freshman guard
Tad Brown. who scored 10
polnts and handed out nve
assists. 'But halfway through
the second half we had a men,
lal lapse and lost control or
the game. We committed

three or four turnovers In a
row which they converted Into fast break baskets. We
went from down only six
points to 12 or 14 down In just
a few m.lnutes, · Brown cont In u e d .
Senior guard Rob Glordano,
who hit five of seven shots
from the neld, contributing 10
points. also singled out tur·
novers as leading to Colgate's
downfall. ' We ran our offense
and hit from, the outside will
In the nrst half. Our defense
wall solid and they didn't fast
break much,' he explained.
' But we turned the ball over
too much In the second half.
They started fast breaking
and getting the basll Inside on
us. forctngus to foul. We could
never
recover.'
Colgate committed 20 turnovers to UNH's 12. By mov,
tng the ball Inside on the Red
Ralder'sconference leading
defense, the Wildcats managed to get to the foul line for 35
shots. hitting 22. .The Red
· Raiders could only muster
nine foul shots, converting
six. The foul shot advantage

proved to be the winning
, margin for UNH. Colgate was
led In scoring for the 11th
time this . season by senior
Eric Jones, who scored 14
points. one under his season
average. Lowell Steen provld,
ed a spark off the bench. scoring 10 points. Robin Dixon
burned the Colgate defense
for 20 points to lead UNH.
Although a 2-16 record
doesn't exactly Inspire visions
of greatness. !he team has
denn1tely shown much Improvement since the beginning or the season. 'We've Im·
proved 100 p erce nt,'sald
Brown. ' We're doing things
now we were struggling to do
before Christman. We're running our offense much better
now. getting shots whenever
we want. Our Urning Is down.'
he
continued.
'We're playing hard but
we're Just not getting the
breaks. We can play better
though.
We've been In every· game.
Any team we play we can
beat.' Brown proclaimed with
/continued on page 141

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