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c·o1p,. 11n1..n111. llolllllton, N•w Yorti.

Mud, I, l'77

Sounds of Silence ·

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fly GOLD/£ JILUMENSTYK •"" JILL WICKS

"For it ii only in tM ,il,n<, that OM finds God."
inscription on suatue "Silence• in Chapel House
Chapel House, nestled in the lrilb above
Colpte, is a unique racility designed for people
or all raiths or none; there one can punue the
answcn to religious and private questions. It
provides a selling for wonhip, study and
mediuation. "The secrel and genius or it is that
it's a racility and it's there, and that people take
the initiative to explore and use it. It is a n,eans,
not an end," explained John Ross Carter,
Director ur Chapel House.
Chapel House came to Colgate u a girt fron,
• an anonymous donor in 1959. The donor
realized what men and women around the world
have always demonstrated, that religious values
are crucial, and she wished to foster this
undersuanding. She requested that her name
never be mentioned in association with the gift
and the Chapel House brochure quotes her as
saying, "I am an old woman and soon I shall be
going over to the other side where I'll see all my
friends. tr I had done something for the Lord and
added my name to it, I'd be ashamed to see
the m."
The donor lert a fund to develop and maintain
a high level of instruction in the major religions,
according to Carter. It was decided that this
money could best be used ir given to a major
graduate school for the study or comparative
religions. The Center for the Study of World
Religions at Harvard University is the graduate
school established from this fund.
,
But according to Carter. it was realited that
t he money could also be userul in exposing nonscholarly people to this wealth or material in
personal way. Colgate's Chapel House.
according to Carter, fulfills the provision for
those who are not religious scholars. who may be
pursuing other careers, nnd provides them with a
place to examine their lives and then "go out to
their goals in Jifc with awakened awareness."
Chapel House is located in a fittingly serene
spot by the cemetery. The exterior of the
building was designed to avoid association with
any particular denomination . • The interior
houses a chapel. a library, dining facili1ies and
guest rooms.
The guests at Chapel House range from
Colgate students to local housewives to
Buddhist monks. C hapel House has gained
international recognition. even though it does
not advertise. lls reputation has spread largely
by word of mouth. and also through Carter"s
connec1ion as a director of the Fund for the
StudY. of the Great Religions of the World.
which operates out of Colgate.
Although Chapel House does not keep
records. Carler estimated that well over 2.000
people visited Chapel House lasl year. On the
average, there are two or 1hree guests a day. and
more on weekends. In recalling the different
types or people who have used rhe house, Carter
spoke of a family who would bring their mother
for the week of Mother's Day every year. They
felt that giving her time to read. relax, and listen
to music was an appropriate gift. Another guest
was Shibayama Roshi, who taught Zen for two
Jan Plans while living at Chapel House. and one
woman came from Australia expreSsly to use Chapel House's facilities. Hindu swamis. Shin10
priests, and Tibetan and Buddhist monks have
stayed at Chapel House at various times. But
Carter stressed that Chapel House has just as
much purpose for housewives, farmers, high
school teachers, and unemployed husbands. He
noted also, "A rew Colgate faculty members
have been known to slip up here on occasion."
Carter confirmed that a number of students
also make use or Chapel House~ "Colgate
students arc under as much pressure as we all
are," he said. Some came up on Friday arter
classes, and stay for the weekend. The Chapel is
open twenty-four hours a day, and Carter is
aware that students slip up during the night to sit
in the silence and think. "No one knows who
comes here at night," Carter said, "But they
know."
The Chapel is designed primarily for

'

a

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'
(Craig)

individual use, although groups such as the
Colgate Jewish Union, Quakers, and Christian
Scientists occasionally hold services there. The
only permanent religious symbol in the Chapel is
a large .c ross, placed there because the founders
were Christian. Carter explained, however, that
this does not detract rrom the universality or the
Chapel. He suggested that we distort when

looking for superficial commonalities in
studying each other. He continued, "Our real
task is to take each other as we are." .
Those that would be disconcerted by the cross,
however, may draw a curtain over the cross and
substitute other religious symbols, if desired.

Continued on p. 17

AY

News-In-Brief -

Batter Up

TMak Mueh?

A symposium on the brain.tite capabUities of computtn is to
be held at S. U.N. Y. at New Paltioa. March 21 and 22. For more

infonution oa the first National Symposium for Philo&ophy
and Computer Tec:hnolol)', write: to Or. Manin Rinstc.
Department of Philosophy, State Univenity College. Nc:w

"-ht. N.Y. 12561.

Cldckm Soup GIIOR

1\ere will be 'a Shabbet dinner and Purim Celebration with
grogenand hamentaffleft on Friday. Mardi 4 at 6 pm in the
Chapel buemen1. Those interested must li&n up by Thursday
afternoon at the Chaplains offlOC in the buement or East Hall.
The dinner ii free to Sap boardm who bring their meal tickets
to the Sap off,cc by Thunday.

••••

I Prefer- The View I Have
'"The Rabbinic View of Women.. will be the, ,ubject of an
informal study seaion on Friday, March 4 at 5 pm in the East
Hall Baaement Lout\.ge.

••••

••••

Whats Up Doc?

,

Tbe MCAT applteltions are in for rncdicalstudenu. The: tests
will be &iven on April JO at Colpte Uniw:rsity and the 3"tadline
for maili"I applica1ions i.s April 2. Applic11ions can bt pic.ked
up in the Heallh Sciences:
1088 Olin.

om«.
••••

A mc:etin.a for all women interested in playina club softball
this sprina will bc: hdd 11 7 pm on Tuesday. March I in
Huntington &Ym, Room 6.

••••

Flaimn
Asian Scholar Owen Lauimore will speak on ..The Fire
Between Two S1icks: The Peoples Between Russia and China"'
as part of the Picker Lectur sc:rict on Wednesday. March 2. The
lect'urc:, 11 8 pm in l08 Olin. is open to the public.

• •••

Chem Sem

On Thursday. March J 1t 10: IS am. the Chemistry
Department will presen1 a seminar conducted by Nina S. Lewin
Some1hln1 Ale-Inc You?
'77 on '"Monitoring Fetal Oc:ve:lopme:nt with Radioimunoassay"
The Pe:ople:'sCaucu, i.ssponsorinaa Sbcnyand Ale Hour this and Richard Prieto •77 on ..Ginseng: Pitt. Prc:icntand Future."
Friday, March .(, in the Picker Gallery. All members of the
The scminar will be held in 217 Lathrop and is open 10 the
Colgate: community arc cordially invited 10 ancnd.
public.

• •••

SoYltt a -a

lluee films will be,bown in 209 Lathrop 10ni&ht at 7:30pm in
COIVWldion with Social RellltOns 371 and Fine Ans-404. "Kino

Pnvdl", 1922-192$, wu the film equivalent to the offteial
commu.nist newspaper, Pnwlo, Tbe mutiny on the benleship
Potankb in 1905 ii the subject of a film by Serge, Eise:nsteinand
""t"he Train Rolls On," directed ~ Chris Marker in 197S, is the
stol")' of the Cine--crains which croued the Sovic-t Union in 1932.
Admissi.n to the film presentation is free.

• • ••

Family FIim
The Amcucan Drama Film SerteS will present ..All My Sons'"
by Arthu.r M iller on Friday, March.( 11 7:JO pm ip the: Brc:hmc:r
Titeliter or t~ Dana Arts Center. Admission is SI.C)O.

••• •

••••

Will The Real Yul Brenner ~ Stand Up?
li's once again time to get your act together. The People's
C~uc:us will be sponsoring another of the popular Talent Night
on Saturday. March S.at 8:lOpm in the Coop. Admission is free
if you do, and 25c if you don't.

• •••

Notes and Quoits
Frederick Marvin, internationally 1cdajme:d pianist and
musicologist. will be presenting a lecture/ recital in the Bn:hme:r
Theater·~ 8 pm on Wednesday, March 2. The pleasure: of your
company 1s requested.

••••

Corporation Conclomeratlon

--Mullinatiol\ll Corporation...Comparod to Whatr' will be
che: subjc:CI or a Colloquit,m on Corporal~ M1naaement on
Thursday. March l a1 8 pm in Allon l.ounge. The speaker will
be Warren M. Anderson '.(l. presiden1 or Union Carbide: Corp .

• •••

Allied Alhletes
The Womcn·s Athletic AJJlance wiJI moc:t on Tuesday. March

I at 7:30 pm at Bolton House. All offioc:rs as well as those:
intc:rc:stod a re urged to attend.

• •••

Strlnp In The Wlnp

Have I Got A Deal For You

The Madison Quartet, Coi,1te's re:sidentchambc-rgroup, will
perform one o( two on~mpus conoe:ns that are slated for thi1
semester'. on Sunday, March 6. at J:30 pm, in the: Br-chmer
20. Gallery hours are 10 a m-S pm Monday-Friday and lpm• Theater of the Dana Ans Center. The con5pm Saturday and Sunday.
~-admission charge. will inc.lude works by Moiart. lvet and
Brahms.

"'New Deal for An .. is thetilJe ofa ncwc:xhibition that is in the
Pieter Art Gallery of the O.na Arts Center now through March

••••

••••

Plan Ahead
The First General Meeting or the Colgate: Women's Center
will be hdd on Thursday, Mardi J at 7 pm in Bolton HOUR,
Come: and share ideas abou1 plans for the upcoming seme:s1cr.

••••

Alice in Radio Land
Co1gue Radio Theater will present part ll or 1hc continuing
series ..Alioe:1s Ad~-enture:s in Wonderland." Colplc: students
and Professor Joseph Slater as narrator will perform thi:. series
of radio adaptations of Alice', adventures, this Friday. from
7:30 10 8 pm on WRCU- FM. a Colgate Studcn1 Theater
Production.

••••

Does Apalhy Trapelh Thee?
The: Winter Camiv1I idea and the Snow Sculpture Contest
are presently on ice and will have 10 be dropped unless more
inte:resc is shown. People can leave names in the recreation
office. localed on the second Ooor or Huntington Gym.

••••

Peace, Love, Dove
Application.s for fa ll 1977 habitation at Peace House are
available on the first Ooor of Ralph Bunche House. The
deadline is March 18 •and funhc:r information is ob1ainable
through Bill Wylie at 824-0116.

• •••

They're Gonna Gel Ya
For your n:ading plea.sure, the fo llowing deadlines have be<::n
furnished and are. perhaps. worthy of note: GMAT·Oeadline
for Marc.h 26 tesl is March 4; LSAT·Oc:adlinefor April 16tcsl is
Mare t> 17; and GRE· Oeadline for April 2l test is March 23.

••••

Pinned Yel?

Applications for the: I.F.C. College 9o,.,1 arc due Friday,
March 4. They may be picked up in Dean Caprio"somce loca1ro
on the first Ooor of Eaton Hou.sc.

••••

I Dare Say, Whal Is That Thing!
Montage presents the film ...Conversation Piece... on Friday,
March 4. in Olin Hall. Show times are al 7:00 aDd 9:30 pm,
admission is Sl.00.

• •••

,

The Used Bookcellar
will pay students for all
consigned books on March 3
from 3-4 PM.
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This will be the final date
for payment.
,

I lffl

E

M A RCH 1· 1m

office was n01ifted by some membcB
of Phi Gamm fratcrnily 1hat 1~e
pictures ha.d been btOughr" to their
hot.lSC by some 01hcr pcopk.
probably as pan of a fraiem it)'
prank. The Phi Gamm member$
brought the portraits back to the
proctors office where they will be
examined for damages lomorrow.
according lo Wanen.

Wwcn also confirmed the rumor
that entry to the dining room was
obtained throuth an open window in
che e mployees' la.dies room on che
gi;ound Ooor of the: Union, wichin the
kitchen complex.
As of Monday nigh1, the
pcrpctra.1ors of the crime have noa
been offically determined and it is
unknown if charges will be filed once
1hcy are found.

,

A Mink fa«

Off-the- J!1all Pictures
Floor $chool Officials
By GOLD IE Bl._t,JM ENSTYK

saw chips of picture on the stairwell

It wasn't exactly the Great Train
Robbery or the Crime of the Century
but, for approxim1tely eight hours,
lhc Proctor', offtee was baffled by' a
pretty slick ctipcr. Seven valuab~
paintings were s1olen from the Hall

and I called the proctor... According
toa Saga.employee, the ptC1ures were
taki:n sometime between 9:30
Sunday and 7:30 am Monday.
Throu.1-hout the af1ernoon, the
Proctor's office refused to comment
on lhe lhef( 01her than to confirm
that 1he act had taken plaoc,
However, Dave Myers, Sap Food
Serv1Cc Director, did sta1e 1hat there
was '"no sign of forced cn1ry and the
place was locked when we came in."
It appe.ars, howc-ver, 1h.at the
..crime" has been solved. La.st night,
the M•oon tearncd that the pic1urcs
had all been returned to the Proctor's
of(icc by 4pm. According 10 Sid
Warren, a universit
roc-1or, his

or Presidents,

the freshman dining
hall in the S1uden1 Union, sometime

between Sunday night and Monday

morning. The pictures, portraits or
previous Colgate University
reside n ts are vaJued
at
pproxim1tcly SJ.3SO. according 10
Vickie Horton or the Treasurer's

office.
The theft was discovered by Otis
Shelton, janitor in the Union on
a momin • He ex lained .. ,

Corporation Loses
Sch_o larship Applications
An estimated 10,000 New York
Regents Scholanhip a pplicacions
were lost by the corporation that
a.wards the m, according to Dir-ector
of StudenJ Aid, Robert Jaycox.

ROBIN JAYl:V >.

Jaycox said that 1100-1200
Colgate students who have applied
for New York Regents Scholarships
and Tuition Assistance: (TAP) grants
thropgh the New York State Higher
Education Services Corporatipn
have met varying degrees of
frustrat ion caused by processing
delays. His office has worked
extensively with st udents
experiencing prOCC$Sing problems.
and as of this date thCfc art still a
number applicants who ha\·e had
no response from the corporation.
Jaycox thinks that most of
Colgate's New York State students
have been affected in some way.
If you are wondering whether your
application has been lost or delayed
in processing, you'll find out soon.
This week. Colgate will receh-c a

or

cumulative listing of all st1:1dents
whose applications have b«n fully
processed or art on record in some
pending status. Any Sludent who has
submitted an appltca1ion for either a
Regents Schohirship or Tuition
Assisuance a nd has rtceivcd no word
15 to their aw:nd for 1he current
academic year. ihoukl come to the
Office- of Student Aid to determine if
an application is on record with the
·corporation . All students who have
not had a response to 1heir
application arc urged 10 submit a
second application 10 the Higher
Education Servicts Corporation by
certified ma il. return receipt
rcquestC"d. postmarked not later th an
March 31. 1977.
Once thi.s deadline pass.cs thNe
will be no opportunity 10 receive
awards for 1he curren1 academic
year. This ma.yrcQuirc somes1ucknts
to submil a second. 1hird. o r e ven
fourth applic.ation. It is understood
that there will not be 3n c,nension of
the deadline. Immediate ac1ion is
required since most applications will
require writing 10 parents for
additional information.
Any student requiring a new
application may obtain it at the
Office of S1udent Aid.
For next year (1977-78) Rege.nlS
Scholarship and Tuition Assis1a ncc
Pro3ram (TAP) applications will be
sent 10 c urrent file rs 10 their
permontnt a,ltlrrll early in April. In
order to reduce payment delays for
the next academic year 10 a
minimum. it is importan1 that
eligible s1uden1s comple1c and
submi1 their application as $Oon as
possible. Students who plan to
attend 1hc 1977 summer term should
send their application before May I,

tiVandals
Strike·· At
D.U.,
. :.:.-"'
andomHouse, And A.T.O.
Vandalism i.s once apin taking its
toll at Colgate.
Yesterday morning, accoiding to
Hamillon Poilice Chief Holcomb.
lhe room of Daniel· J. •Connor, a
reiidcnt of Random House, was
broken into. A black .and white
television and an Olympic stereo
system including turntable, receiver,
radio, tape player a nd speakers we-re
stolt-n.
· The crime took place at some tim'e
bctw«n8:SOand J l:20amaccording
10 Holcol'nb. Although there were a
numbe, of people in the house, the

vandals managed 10 ge:t in and OUt
Without being seen.
'
la.tC Saturday night or earl
Sunday morning, a night patrolman
discovered two men·who had stolen
food from the D. U. fraterhity house
and a keg of beer from the A.T.O.
hOUR,
Holcomb said that O.U. refuw
10 prc.ss charges and A.T.O. wanto
10 vote on whether pr ,not to press
charges.
Holcomb ~s goina ro 1ry to prus
charges wi1~0.1.it consent of the
vandalized houses.

Board Of Trustees Ho~d_s ~eet~·gs
In ''Men Only'' University· Club
Colga1e has annual Trustees January '1or years.,.
mectinas in a club which
Asked whe1her he thought ii
discriminates on the basi, of sex.
strange that the Tr'UJteesshould meet
The Trusttes ha\·c convened in at a club practicina sex
January each year since 1969 at the diK1imination, R)·dcr said, .. No. it
University Club in New York City. doesn't strike me funny."
Women may allend the meetings bu1
He explained "lhe c.Jubis open for
are not al(o~d to visit cenain parts women to co~e and go to sec
of the bu1k:hng unescorted. a nd a~c__ functions.,. He added. ,.It's their
no1 able to become members-of tlic club: they can run ii as 1hcy will.
club.
- - -..
They provide a service and we make
use of the services." He claims that as
far as Colp1e is concerned. there is.
no problem.
A problem arose when Lynne
Burkhan. now Special Assistant 10
the Undersecretary of Transpona ..
tion in Washington D.C.. then
Assistant Professor of Anthropology. who was attending the
meecing as a Student Affairs
Commissio n members. was
informed by a Trustee that she
c.o uldn't walk around o n the lower
noor to look at a display.
Gary Ross. Student Association
President. also in anendanee s.aid he
was "'shocked and disappointed" 10
find out why Burkhan was confined.
.. You hear a1>1>ut these thin.gs but it
1.S. RYD [R
amazes you v. hen it happens.
Bcnram S. R)·dcr, Secretary of the especially in New York - in 1977.'"
Un iversi ty Corporation, is Ross saiJ.
Ryder suggested that the
responsible for setting m«ling
places. He said 1h11 Colgace has bctn Univcrsil,)' Club "'has come a fong
mcc1in.g at the Uni,·eui1y Club in wa)''" since he first auended a

NitllTON

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CINEM~

'.-

mcetina there in January 11)6t.
"'Women weren't alloMd 10 emer
then." he said . . .. It was strictly i
private male club."

LYNNE BURKHART

He said, ""they havcchan~d that,'"
although there arc Hill areas from
which women are excluded. He said
th.at some areas art off•bouncb for all
non-members but that more arc
closed off 10 women than men nonmembers.
To the question ..Do you lhink
that men and women non-members
should have equal s111us," Ryder
replied ... I have no strong feelings on
that mauer."

Wed. · Thur. 8 PM
Fri. · 7 & 9 PM
Sun. - Tues. 8 PM

1977.

New Items
All -Weather Maroon
Colgate -Poncho

A Long Hooded Co-rer-11p for Dorm or Pool

Colgate University Bookstore
., .... " - ...

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........,,.- ......-..,;;;,..;;;.._;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;,;;~~;,,;,;;,.,;;;;~,.;,.;;,;,,,,.,;.,,.--J

THE COLGATI: MAROON

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DAVID, KUTIK

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TUF.SDA Y MARCH I , 1'71

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Observer:

Ripped Off

F OUNDED 1161

OldtJt Coll~t Wttkl)' in Am~rica
ANN MARSDEN
Editor f
JILL WICKS
Muualnc Edlto,

GOLDIE BL UM ENSTYK
Esff'lltin f.dhorSTEVE WILKINS
KEN STUTZ
ANDY CRAIG
KEITH LEWIS
SCOTT MANNING
DIANE SUSSMAN
BRUCE KNECHT
ROBIN Fl:NSTEMAKER
CARMEL WALTERS
M ARLENE MASSEY
STEFAN S HAFFER

ABBY ALEXANDER
P EGGY FI SK

SISSY MAY

-

Sports Editor
Sports Editor

Photoenphy Editor
Assbtent Phocoiraph{ Editor
Atsodatt Editor
Auodatt Editor
Assodatt Editor
Anodatt Eclilor

Production Manaaer
Ass!stant Production Manas«
Buslntts Manactr
BuslnHS Manaatr
BuslntU Manactr
Circulation Man11er

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Not Funny

Around 1his 1irne or )'tar. students
a rc becoming in1ercsltd in 1he
various off-c-ampus sludy groups
1ha1 Colgate spans.ors. Below is a
disc·ussion 0£1he P\Jblic Policy Study
Group or which whic h I was a
member last fall.
The Colgate Washington. D.C. •
Public Policy S1udy Group is a n
interdisciplinar)' siudy group which
has as its main reature a component
of upcricntial &earning. S1uden1s
SU\'e as members of a1enci« or
.organi1.a1ionsand g_et a close-up view
or the inner workings of 1he federa l
bureaucracy. As a member of this
1roupone is supposed to gc1 a feel for
1he gamesmanship. the politics and
1he chicaner)' th.al go in the world
around him or her. Unfortuna1ely
for the members or 1he study group
1his past fall. one did not have to look
rar into the federal bureaucracy but
only as far as the Colgate
ad ministra1ion r unning 1he study f
group 10 gai'} thi.$ particular insigh1,
In short, the members of thi.$ study
group were ripped o((.
The basis for this statement docs
not lie in thCwaycours.cs were taught
or with any of the Colgalestaff in the
O.C. area as. in 1he main. the dfort.$
of these individuals were excellent
and made the group ao ex1rcmely

worthwhj le experience. II lie.$ with
various individuals in the Offict or
the Division or University Studies
and those fac u lty members
"in1ercsted.. in the fate of the group.
The ..rip•off,.. this fall came in two
rorms. One was a n administra1ive
mix up. a lack of communk11ion.
The other was a mone1ary matter.

the Government Accounting O(fice)
was hastily hired in the middle of the
summer before the group was to
slart. A.$ this was such a laie date.
Peterson was already commined to
the writ:ng of 1wo boob. Thus.
Peterson had linle time 10 aid
siudents on the group in their effons
to fi nd housing and was terribly
delayed instarcing the procedures for
getting studenu p laced in
internships. The situation that
followed can best be described as
poor. One girl was forced 10 spend
over a Wttk int he Oistricc living by
herself in a ra1herdubiousapartmen1
until she ~uld find tieuer (but not
much bcner) aebecause of the delay · in intern.ship
placemen!, se\val studenu had still
not been placed one month in10 the
in1crnship r,criod (a 1hird of 1he 10111
1ime). 1hus depriving 1hcse sludcn1s
of valuable experiences.
The second rip-off concerned a n
eight hundred dollar fund thal was
sup p osed to be u sed for
miscellaneous ilems. In previous
years. this money had bttn used to
subsidize stude nts' c ultural
excursions with the rationale being
thal since the students could not take

T he firtl rip~(( came when the
director of lhe study group, Or.
David Peterson (formerly a History
professor at Americ.an University
and c-urrentlya program analysl with

Continued on p. 5

MATTHEW SCHWACH

Observer:

Everyone loves a harmless joke.
Looking back on what now appears co have been a fratcrni{y
prank in snatching the seven president portraits from the Student
Union dining hall, one is tempted tO chuckle. And assuming 1hat
Having always been in1ere$1cd in
no serious damage was done to the paintings, we can simply laugh literature.
the pro.Spect or going 10
it off as 'just one of those things".
London appealed 10 me a great deal.

Outside Insight

Unfortunately, the vandalism problem at Colgate has already
surpassed the childish prank stage. The television and the stereo
thefts from Random House yesterday and the food thefts from
0. U. and ·A.T.O. over the wcekend•are just two recent examples of
an incrcasing_"crime wave.. one our picturesque "never-ncverland .. campus. Apparent))', never-never has Come \lOw-now.
and it seems that there have been many o ther small-scale crimes
committed which the Colgate community is not aware of because
the vandals arc not caught or, if caught, they are not charged.
We do not necessarily advocate "throwing the book at 'cm" but
we do believe something more should be done. The A1aroon hopes
that those responsible for these more serious crimes will be
apprehended and forced to make recompense.
It's only fair.

Making Hi-story
G>ry Ross and the Election Commission have done something
good.
..._
But it is hard to believe that guidelines for elections were not in
writing before this time.
.,,.
/ The Maroon hopes that the e lection committee will carefully
oversee this year's elections. making sure that candidates comply
with the guidelines. Unless there is a watch dog effort by the
group, the written word may be purposeless.

I applied last summer for 1he Spring
1977 English S1udy Group and a£1cr
man)' anxious niomen1s, was
accep1ed. The way my schedule
worked out, I had all last fall lo
a nticipate and prepare for my
joornc)'· I _ planned to tra\·el
utensively with a £cw friends
aftc·rwards, so I knew 1had 10 make a
lot of money. Ironing in a $\Ir-Cal shop
was tedious. bu11hough1-s of London
kept me going,
0( course. before I knew it. the
"big day" arrived. I wa.s ner,.·ous as
hell I hat day and I called to routinely
reconfirm my night flight a11noon.
"Ye-s. Mr. Shwash (people always
mispronounce m)' name). Thank you
for calling ......
The receptionis1 was very nice.
This is going to be easy. I chought.
. "Your night ha.s been cancelled."
My indignation was a sight!
Further inquiries revealed 1ha1 lhere
were labor problems at Hea1hrow
and that British Airways couldn't get
me Oul for a 14ttk! However. a£1cr a
frenzy of phoncca l h and
blackmailing my tra\•el agcn1. a scat
was found for me on a Pam Am jet
leaving the next day ... and arriving
a1 6:40 in 1he morning.

are tose: of the authon or of the editorial board of the Maroon a nd do not
necess.arily reprusent the opinions and views of the administration of Colgate
Univenity or of the Univeristy S1udc nt Association. AU members of the
Unjvcrsity community are invited to submit Obscrven and Leners to the
Editor of che Maroon. AU submissions , houkl either be sent to Tht Colgatr
Maroon, Colgate Scation, HamiJton, New York 13346. or broughr up to the
Maroon offices on the third floor of the Student Union. Second class po1tage
1
is paid in HamiltOn, New York.

u..=--:::-

-

London! The so-called "Western
Capilal or 1he World" is an
incrcdibl)' large and sprawling city
on the Thames River. Our Oat
(apartmc-nt) in Chiswick (pronounced Chi.s-ick) is a 40 minule
Tube ride - subway ride - from

ceniral London. yet it . is still
technically part of1heci1y. However
big it may be. London is still a
fri-cndly city. unlike New York. The ,
London uanspon system is
relativel)' easy 10 figure out. They
have many or the familiar red
double-deck er buses and an
cx1ensive subWa)' system called the
Tube or the Underground. It makc.s
adju$1ing to a foreign country much
easier when one can get from place to
place without suHeri n g a
breakdown. Free maps arc in
abundance with many guides
a vailable telling exactly how to
arri\•e at one's destina1ion.
London has a s eemingly
inexhaustible supply o( cheap things
10 do and, sigh1s 10 sec: 1hea1re.
cinema, popular. classical and jazz •
mu.sic. galleries, museums. Walks
and famous his1orical si1es arc in
abundance. London's most famous
free show has 10 be Parliament. The
House of Commo ns often is in
session through the night wi1h Big
Ben chiming ov/rhead, reminding
o ne in its grandiose fashion o( the
passing hours. Gaining admission
during these off-hours is no problem
and vtewing the debate from the
Stranger's Gallery is great late-nighl

Continued on p. 5

ROBERT J . FRAIMAN

Observer:

What A Rush

But we have to hand it t o the Student Association. Such set • Well. fr11erni1y rush is finally
principles ought to prevent elections from being unfair or chaotic. over. and 1herc: are now hordes of
As such, they should upgrade the c haracter of Colgate politics. fresh men· pledges running a round
Stafan Shaffer's name must be down in the history books doing various ridiculous tasks as
directed by frat brothers or pledge
alongside Napoleon's and the Roman Emperor Justinian's for fat
hers. The fra lernilics are all
these two were also responsible fort he codification of great bodies through with their sugarof law.
'treatment of freshman. Frat brothers

11t~-calga1~ Maroon is published every Tuesday oftheschool year by the
students ofColaate University. The opinions and views expressed on this page

I prO\'td to be a s1range contras1 to
the man I sat next 10 on the jct for he
wu a tiled , middle aged.
professional traveller. a tech rep ou1
of Michener',; Tht Drifter.f. He
advised me on many things as we
Oe" over the Allantic.jeuingtow111r'1
London's Heathrow Airport.'-

cuning on 1he pan of the fra1crni,ies
and in turn, on the pan or many
freshme n to get into a "prestigious"
frat lo be highly disillusioning a nd
upsening.

I am well aware of the fact th.al this
has gone on for years a1 Colgate a nd
a1 a ny fraternity on the row, other all over the nation. Thi.s makes
than the one a particular, freshman • absolutely no differer.cc as far as I
joined, if in fact he did. have no am concerned. The present system of
further reason 10 put themselves out ru1hing a1 Colga1e is poor and too
10 be nice 10 ,hat freshman or any many people are hun, directly a nd
other freshman, for that maner.
indirectly, by it.
For some freshmen, the past week
might have been just great as we
. In the put few weeks I have seen
always hear fraternity rushing is groups or fri ends split up, perhaps
from our fathers and others who permanently. by the fra terni1ics. I
have been through it before. For have seen many freshmen worried
many, if not most freshmen at and actually scared to tell the
Colgate, it has been far from that brothen at a panicular frat that they
terrific, fun time depicted by so were joining or even con.sidering
man)!. For me, I have no.hesitations joining, a different house. I ha,.•es«n
10 say that it was the wC>rst week I freshmen continuously pressured to
have spent at Colgate thus far. I join during the silcn1 period fro m
found the phoniness a nd 1hroat- midnight Friday 10 S:00 P.M.

Saturday. I have seen frtShmen
..blackballed .. a1 a frat so tha1 they
couldn't get into tha1 particular
fra1erni1y because of o ne person in
the house. I have seen what
supposed ly d oesn 't and isn't
supposed to go on a1 any time during
fraternity ru.sh a t Colgate. And not
only have I seen 1hose things, but I
have fel11hem as well. It £ell 1erriblc.
University official, were corrcc1
lhis year 10 be worried abou1 the
• pledge banquets and the kind of
craziness that has a pparently gone
on in 1he past The measur« they
took this year were good s1eps in a
posi1ive direction. But they arc
misguided . Where the system i.$
hurting the most is in the weeks
kading up to lhe pledge banquets.
This must be changed bcforcano1her
single freshman at Colgate has to go
through it. I find it unfortunaie lO
say that what many people call the
.. best days ofcollege life.. -.-ere for me
a nd many others, the worst.

.. .

,

JYISDAY. MAaCH ,. am

THE COLGAn MAaOON

Reader's Forum

,

'

'
Call to
Arms·

To the Editor:
Once upon a tirM a Cotpte class went
through colle'ge without witnessing a rootblll

victory prevail nevtrlcfl the heansorColgate men. My
cla" experienced dcfea1 not only tl'lrou,gh our
four years (three SyracUR pmcs) as
undergraduates but also two more ye-arJ as
alumni.
After one d isappointin, dcfdt the student
body mare.heel down to the Syracuse Ci1y Hall
a nd held a pep rally a half hour after the game
had ended. The purpose of the rally was ..Beat
SyracUK" next year, We didn't that nut year,

but how firm 1he resolve motivated tnc student
body.

Along with a few classmates I returned to 1he
campus and in the seventh le-an year saw a
virgin SyracUK goal line aive binh 10 .,wins..
u predicted lhc niaht before by Colptc's head
cheertcadcr.
.
I detect among the t ludents, alumni and staff
a bumlris desire this year 10 even 1he score wich
Ruc,crsaflcra rcw humilialingyears. And I am
reminded of a pre.Syracuse rally one year.
featuring as a speaker the gttat •Craw'". Dr.
William Henry Crawshaw.
-Craw.. spoke on the topic, "'BEAT
SJ'..RACUSE." He broke down BEAT into (I)
BE at Syracuse, and (2) Be ATSyracU$Ctotear
them apart. Then he poked the usual jibes at
Syracuse.

,

It· oocur, to me that we might substitute compcnsa1ion1 such as the freedom 10 teach Col,atc parents were taken oul or contu.L I
Rutgers for Syracuse in 1977-BE II Rutgers and do rest-arch· in whatever attas we please. said that ir we compare Colptc's chuae:, over
(£ame). Be AT Rut,e.n (fight fiercely as my These reasons arc not enough, however, 10 the past 20,years as a proportion or real family
income in thi$ counlry, it has become a smaller
force U$ to live in perpetual genteel poverty.
roomie wuold say!), BEAT RU-TGERS•
The rationale: for the guidelines now in use and smaller portion in the last five yean.
Yours for a bis win in Sept.
arc
1imple enough te undcrt11nd. They are (B«ause rcaJ family income has 1one up faster
Wilbur H. Cox '21 ·
based on the ave-rage growth in earning made than o ur c ha,acs.) I speculated chat if this
by other workers in the coun1ry and no more. dee-lining proportion was true for national
, Average earnings in this country have usually family income, then it must be even smaller for
been myrc thin the inflation rate. If you don"t Colplc ramiltCS since most Colgate ramilics
want ydur youna professors to be earning at represent profwions and occupations who,e
To the Editor:
65 what thcY are earning now, their salaries increase in real earninas are mrh greater than
I was not surprised by your ttcent edi1orial mwt be increaKd more than the rate of the national avcr1ae.
Finally, I reported ihat t~rc is JOund
on the salary auidelines for facuhy and inOation. Aside from the moral iuuc of this
research
whi(.h indicates that high ability
personnel of 1he university. I have found q...estion, if we did not incrcas.c salaries more
students,
such
H those who apply to CoJaace.
students usually ..mi.sinformedaoouthow much than the r11c of infla1ion, when most other
do
not
make
decisions baaed primarily on
their prolessors make. They arc amazed to $Cgmcnts of the profess.ions and workina
financial
consMlcrations
but rather on the
find, for example, that we hire youna populatio n did, we would soon come to, point
quality
of
the
institution.
Naturally finaftcial
instructors with a Ph.D. for about SI I,SOO. 1r when we could no lon,er auract cicdicated
considerations
do
play
a
rokl
tostudenuoflow
one con$idcrs 1h11 this is less than what 1he teachers to the profession. Regardlcu of
income
ramilies
and
we
must
always incn:ue
rook.y policemen, 1he 1,1rbqe cqHccton and principles and how dedicated a tcac.her may be,
financial
aid
as
we
inc.reasecharaa
tostudmll.
many other occupa1fons start with, one: he too has to pay his bills. educate his chiklttn
We
must
also
aJways
be
sure
1h11
our
charfCS
wonders how we order our priorities in our and plan for his retirement.
arc
competit
ive
with
institutions
of
society,
The problem wilh private colleges is that
comparable
or
higher
quality
thal\,.oun.
One or my colJeagues ha$ a pan..-ime they must rely on tuition for the bulk of their
J want 10 U$Urc you 1h11 the close slllldtnt·
research assistant. The auistant hua BA and a money and this has never betn enough to
teacher
relationship you mention in your
regular full-«ime position in the vicinityeamina balance budJet$. 1r we are 10 in4;re1s,e salaries
editorial
is
something we alsochc:rish. We feel,
much more 1han my colk.a,1ue. Or you might just enough to keep them even with the avenge
however.
th.at 1hc financial aspirations
*consider the fact chat many students will cam increase in 1he country. then we must inc·rease
represented
by the guidelines an not
more than their professors when they act their studen1 charges at rates higher than inflation.
unreasonable
nor
contrary to what we teach ill
first job. !f you take the time to talk 10 many of The allcrnative is either 10 foroc prorcssors to a
the
classroom.
We
have found that Whenever
your older teachers, you wiU find that many of permanent stand•stiU in real wages. thus
students
have
access
to the facts: in these issues,
them have.had to pain1hOUICIOVff the summer. subsidiiing your education even more than we
they
have
always
supported
our modest ,oats.
work at the race-track, eic. in the past. just to do now, or 10 d ilute the quality or education.al
We
welcome
your
continued
suppon now.
make ends meet. Obviously, ,we chose the programs. Clearly both are unacceptable.
The remarks I made relative to income or
teachina profession because it ti.a, 01hcr
Nicholas Longo

In Response

· •ae

Fall Study Group In Washington
Dissatisfies Colgate Customer

London Bridge
Continued from p. 4

UCIFIYI

fi.gul'C a nd 1hen to the na.rrator who.
said very properly. -wcu, she hasn't
much to s.ay, has she?" He then
calmly stepped oY!r her unconscious
fi.gurc and interviewed the remaining
person.alilies. Some minuccs la ter
whenthe narrator was finiahedand he
$igncd off, lhe camera dttw back for
a Iona range shot of the group
showina the men and women in their
ornate costumes - with one figure
still n.11 on the noor. The woman had
only fainted from the heat or the
lights, but 1his story doe, show. in a
warped way, 1h11 it cakcsalottofaze
the Bri1ish. They ca n and will endure
their curren1 crises with the railing
pound and rising unemployment...

entertainment. MPs ( Mcmben or
Parliamc-nt) will always say what•s
on their minds a nd the dialoa:ue can
tend to get both heated and witty.
A note on the English people: by
, nd large 1hcy are a friendly people:
a nd the spirit ofcomposure and calm
that helped them survive the
bombings of World War II still
prevail$. To wit: a true story related
to me by Mark Holland, a Colgate
student who was here last fall with
the h.istory aroup. The 8 . 8.C.aired a
special one night on the topic of
protocol. A number or actors dressed
the pan of people representing
various stations of lire (royalty. law,
medicine, etc.) and formed a line As part of an indr1Nnd,n1 profrdown which the narrator proocedcd, journalim, MauhrM' S<'hwa<'h is
di$playing the correct form of pursuing ovnsras with Mr.
addressing them, When he came to 8/arkmor,, hr is srnding rolumns 10
the lady dressed as a Magi.stra1e. the th, Maroon t'\'t'rl'Othrr M'tt'k. 7nis Is
woman collapsed in a heap. The th, first of m~ny 10 appear ,his
nmcrt panned, to 1hc sprawled St'ntt'Slt'r.

Continued from p. 4
advanta,e
or the University's
racilities in Hamilton, N.Y. and yet
were payina full 1ui1ion, this rund
would ,crw as restitution for this
in~qu_ity. This put year however, ~his
pracuoe was not followc-d. Peterson.
followin1 directives from superiors,
balked II using the money for'"social
purposes,.. favoring instead to use
the money to buy books, pay for
lecturers and other more aca demic
uses. This was unfavorably viewed
by members o~ the _aroup who
,~ought thac 1hc remainder or 1hc
eight hundred dollars plus the
reba1cs from the Student Ac1ivi1y fee

would make handsomt social fund . euremely vulnerable to the
However, Peterson balked again. capricious whims of Colaate
claiming thac the powers th.at be at administrative personnel. Just think
Colgate (namely those parties isn't it bad enough tht on-campus
unfavorably mentioned in paraaraph studcnu arc subjecud to
three) desired a redue1ion of bureaucratic run.around and
spending in this area so 1hat thty selected faculty paranoia, but what
cd\iJd eliminate this item completely happens when this befalls off·
from next year's budget and could be campus students? Theorcticatly, on
ju.stificd. on paper,indoinaso. What campus studcnu can mobilize
this meant was that the pleasure or student govc-rment to 'tight any
one on-campus faculty member (who wrong with a moderate degree of
thought that Colgate money spent swiJtness. The off-campus s1udent is
for a nything but purely ac.ademic not so fortunate.
What, then, is the fate of off.
purposes was a grievous wrong)
campus
Sludcnts to be? Hopefully,
could be served.
The point of the above is chis: !his piece will shed $0me light on this
studenls who arc off-campus ll'C 1$SUC.

In a nar1ttlc ,rinted in the Fcbntiry 2,2 Maroon. a primingerrorstated that IHI )'Car.seventeen out oftwc-my-two
a partments ~~remade available through thcapar1mcn1loncry. The statement should have read seventeen out of
seventy-two apartments were available. The Maroon regrets the error and apologi~es for anyinconvenienrecauted
to a nyone.

COONE

Trudeau

'

. AND,QF(1)(115E,PIESIIAU8£

CIMR/116 PeTENrc! AS 'IW/Ul/.L
'50:, 1Ne QV/.Y P/lJ/CTKAl (IJtf 7fJ

j IN5/I/Ef-

Q'IIOQA/MIISllllJcS

; TK£.4T 1/S,lm 7/ER{)/111 PfilJl'te/

'

• /

'

8QT, f)RJMWALWTH11111W
/IJ6HT5?/

I

.,

---~
ME?

'

.,
,.,LY,
I

MJ/11.WIE
8,11l1E'f., ,
I

!

w, COLGAJJ MAROON

U:GISII

T.U£SOA Y1 MARCH 11 Im

- Women's Athletic Program Inadequate?
87 M ARX XULEWICZ

'
from Morris's
offtee concerning the
question of obtainina funds, but,
givefl. budgetary constraints, Deming
feels that '"thcpossibilityoftaldnaon
a ll three sports II the present ti11ne is
out of the question." He ar,ues that
aside from the operational cost of
transportation, equipment (about
S),000 fo, ,rack, S7,000 for sof1ba ll.
a nd $10,000 for ice hockey), and
referees, there arc associated
ex.ptNCS such as a poss.iblc new
softball diamond, coaches and

Thouah

two of lhe sports were
denied vanity status tu, year, an
effort ii bein,a made 10 uppadethree
women's club sports: ice hockey,
track, and softball. Junior Carolyn
Cooley and sophom*ore Randi
Greenberg are leading the sroup and
• both feel 1hat the presen1 women's
prosram is in need of expension and
improvement,
The e mphasis on women's
athletics has been steadily increasint:
since tht college went cocducacional.
Lui - k Cooley and Oreenba-1
met with Dean of Faculty John
Morris. Fred Dunlap, Director of
the Division of Physical Education,
Recrution and Athletics and Ruth
Ooehrin&. Women's A thlelic Coach
10
chis"d'fort. Cooley said that
'"the purpose of the meecing was
baste:ally to examine the present
situation with respccc 10 the three
club sports and women's athletics in
·,eneral.~ At the samt. time they
sought to i•npras on MorTis and
Dunlap t.hc strona commitment they
feel exists amona women athletes 10
an uparadin& of the women's
proaram Ind their desire for a
reconsidffation of club sport status.
Tbc meeting was useful in that it
opeiled up the lines of communicaaoa D£MINC.
tion between studenu and ma intenance. The advantaies chat
administraton. Cooley felt that make intercolJegiate ream status
M orrisAnd Dunlap were open and desirable, primarily better coaching
ryll\pathetic to their ideas, and that a and hipcr priority in the use of
'"spirit ofcooperation seemed to uist alhktic facilities, also make it more
on both sides... 'J'hcff att, however, expensive.
problems 10 be lack~ be.fort the ~ At present approximatdy 3. 7%of
desired women's proaram can the total- uni"'ers.ity budget is
become a reality. As$Qciate Director distributed to men's athletics. as
of Athletics Bob De-mina secs .compared to ,3% for women's
funding u the 1ru1cst obstacle. programs. Cooley and Gr«nberg
T~ms require money. and the argue that it would only require a
bud,et is limited. The athletic . 196, inc-rcase in the women·s budget
com.million is now awaitin.t word to effect the dt$ii'td chan,e. Nor do

""w

I

-

For the A1hle1ic Affairs
Commi.ssion. weighing the need for a
new women's coach w:rsus the
popular demand for expansion of the
number of women's varsity sports
has been a . d ifficult problem
complicated by legal and fi na ncial
cons id erat ions. T he athle1ic
department rca:ivcd a 'flat' budget
for nu1 )'Cir or a budget wi1h no

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support for the existing clubs ·a.s a
working basis. without e ither
displacing any men's programs or
seriously disrupting 1he budg,ct.
The future- of the women's
program remiins problematic. The
changes now under con.sideration
could not go in10 effect until the
1977·7J school year. ,ince this year's
budget is alrtady completed and irl
operation. Cooley is hesitant to
speculate on 1he outcome of the
prcsen1 endeavor. hopin, that the
coo pe ra1jve spi r it or the
administrators i.s an ind ication of the
seriousness of their intentions 10 do
something positive about women's
a1hktics.
Yet behind thm hopes lies the
more substantial force of Title IX.
De-ming says 1ha1 1he athletic
department is ttaching or h'"a.s
already reached full compldnce with

athletes. and. with the addition of a
women's coach next fall. soach•
student ratios. The mu«1 problem
is o ne of unequal and inadequate
facilities, bu1 Deming said thal,
..within the next month final plans
for the .-snovation of Huntington
gym and Reid athletic. center,
cs1ima1ed to cost approximately $1. 3
million, will be p~n1ed to the
Board of Trustees for approval. .. It is
irq_nic that the costs of compliance to
litle IX puts a heavy strain on the
budget, making it e\·tn moredirlicult
to attain fund s for things such as
women's teams.
.Cooley intCrprets Title IX to mean
that '"when a school offers a sport for
men. it must offer a comparable
$port for women, a lthough it doesn't'
require- 1ha1 a n equal amount of
money he spent for both." While in
Wuh1naton. D.C. during January.
Greenberg spoke to HEW_ (Health,
Education and Welfare department)
Officials with reference to Title IX,
and she was advised that women's
sports at Colgate would ha~ a good
legal case should the ongoing
auempt to establish the three
intercollegia1e teams fail. Cooley
said that other sour«s haYc
confirmed this opinion, especdtlv in
liaht of the fact that 101al compliance
is ttquin::d by 1978.
Whether this is so is uncertain.
. Goehring has doubts about the
efficacy of using Title IX in this way,
and she believes otherfactors, such
as the bud&ct, mu.st be taken into
account before a new team can be
instituced . Cooley cmphasiicd.
however, 1hat there arc- no plans as of
CAROLYN COOLEY
yet to take lcgil acti~. and that they
litle IX requirements to expiate s.cx prcfer instead 10 work together with
discrimination in athletic programs admini$tra1ors for an a1hletic
in such areas as medical care, program that will benefit male and
compcnsa-ion, financia l aid for female Colgate athletes equally.

Ath/,eticAffairs Commission Opts For A New
Woman Coach To Meet Title IX Qualifications
87 LYNN ONDREY

RUTH GOEHRING

they beiicve 1h11 such an uparading
would require a curtailment or
nlsting men's programs in any area.
They do not conceive of the problem
or fundina in terms of the economics
of limiting resources 10 be
distributed and utilized in
accordance wi1h a gi\•cn standard of
priorities and vatue:s. Instead they s«
it as solvable through the application
of a relatively small additional
dosage or money. Where the
additional ,Money is to come fro m
remains. for the present, an opc-n
question.
Another possible problem
rt\'Olves around 1he issue of student
support. In 1972 the T itle IX
Educa1ional amendment calling for
the elimination of sex discrimination
in.athletic progra ms by 1978, became
law. To comply with litle IX
requirements, the athletic
commis:sion d is1ributed a survey last
fall to a ll students 10 measure scudent
intertSI in athletics in ~neral as well
a.s in existing and possibk future
programs. and in this way to
facilitate the process of structuring
the development of athletic
programs 10 mttt sludc-nt needs and
interests. Only .5% of the surveys
were returned and the in1eres1
e,cprtssed in women's softball. ,
hockey and track was 'ICgligibk-.
amouming 10 a combined total of
less than lO people.
The existence of the three clubs
does &ive Slrt.ngth to an argument
1hat therc is rul interest despite poor
survey resuhs. Fur1hermore. the
dubs contain the nucleus on whic-h
"'arsity teams can be built. Both
Cooley and Greenberg believe that
they were able to convince Morris
and Dunlap of the possibility of
establishing the teams on the
intercollegiate level, usins the

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increases.flaking a C'lltback in some
programs inevitable. The University,
however, must also move towards
compliance with Title 1X of the
Eaucation Amendments Act of 1972,
which call for equality of resources
and opportunitict oflercd 10 men
and women at all govtrnmcnt•
aided universities.
In an Athletic A(fail'$Commis.sion
mccr,ng last Thursday, the consensus
of the administrators. faculty and
student members present was that a
third wom,an'scoa.ch wa.sancssential
and immediate need. The University
has begun ad\'erti.sing for a coach
whose prime rcspansi bility would
include volleyball and athletic
uaining, with a secondar)' emphasis
possibly on the co.aching of men's
and women's diving teams.
According to Robert Deming,
Assoc,ate Direc1or of Athlecics, the
salary t:ir the new coach will preclude
the addition of a &e\.'enth varsity
.spon immediately. The money
budgened for a seventh sport,

combined with money in the salary
line item freed by another s.tafl
c hange , will pay the third woman's
salary.
There arc numerous difficulties
foreseen with the po1ential
eslablishmcnt of a St\'Cnth women's
varsity sport. Because of the lack of
substantial increase in the athletic
budget, adding another varsity sport
seemed unwise because it would
probabl.y be eliminated in the next
fiscal year. The Commission feared
spreading the women's spons
program 11 Colgate too thin too fast.
Women's coach-sup p orted
"Scholarships were first awarded last
year at Colgate and the ta le nt base
for high-le"'el compe:1ition i.s still
being developed.
A possible a lternative to the
financial limitation \-crsus program
expansion -dilemma was the
possibility of cutting out one male
varsity sport to allow for a new
women's sport. Thirteen varsity
programs for men are currenlly

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available. HOwt\-Cr. both female
student athletes and facu lty
expn:sscd cheiruncertaint)' about the
desirability of 1his option.
Coordina1or o f Women' s
Athletics Ruth Goehring: feels an
expansion of the basketball and
swim schedules would be a welcome
addition 10 the women's program. At
present, 1he Colga1e women's
basketball season consis1s of only
twelve games. as compared to most
other schoofs schedules of JS-2S
meets. The restrictions imposed by
the January program and \11.Cation
schedul ing have created the
situation.
Goehring wants to
increase the number of games to at
leaJt IS by culling down on the
number of the a1hlc1es' off-campus
absencn during these periods.
Goehring also emphasized the need
for increased Colgate rcprc-scn1a1ion
at ,uch important policy-making
mee1ings as the National Assoc-ia1ion
of lnter-Collegia1c Athletics for
Women a nd the need for expansion
of opportunities for any wome n to
become invol\•cd with sports hcrc.
The currcn1 srn.ge of women's
athletics at Colga1e can best be
described in terms or a d ifficult
weighing or ideal priorities and
financial limita tions . Mo"'int
towards compliance with T i1lc IX isa
primary consideration in all 1he
a thletic depa rtments' decisions now,
yet the problem of how to alloca1c
budget funds. facility space and
scholarship aid is a dirficult one.

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TUlt:SOAY, MARCH I , I m

PAGISJUN

TH£ COLGATE MAROON

Study Group Budget ·po~cy Changed
,

By USA MELl, ENCAMP

The- Uni,,.eni1y has this >fl'
changed its budgetary policy with
resp«t to study gro4:1ps. Previously.
the study group prograrr
coordina1ed throuah the Oivisior
Uni,.•cnity Studi~. were not an ilt .
on the Univcrsi,, budget. This yea.
a new policy has been insti1utcd,
rcquirin& study group expenses ~,d
· by the University to be on 1he official
budget
According to Robert Freedman,
Director
the Division of
University Studies, this means that

or

ROBERT FREEDMAN
all study groups going June 1978
1hrough M ay 1979 must be put on
the October 1977 Univcrs.ity budgc1.
All study group directors must
thcrcforc submic their individual
group's budget to the University
Studies Director by the end of
September in ordtr to be considered
by the Dean·s Advisory Committee
(DAC) for lhe October budg
A total stud)' group budget
subdiviexpenses is submitted to the DAC
and e.1t1mint'd 10 sec if the academic
expc-ricncc provided by the group
j ustifies i1s expense and to see if 1he
I" upenses are necessar)'. Since the
.,roups are now part of the budget.
· the total amount spent on the
programs is subject to cutting: the
money allocated to lhe programs is
now dcpcndenc on 1he fina11cial
situation of the UniverSilv.
Frttdman explained 1hi1 un1il this
year, the total spent onall 1he groups
has not maltercd. Under the previous
policy. if lhc dirtt·tor of a particular
group had e nough interested
students (a minimum of 14 students
is the gvideline) and the OAC passed
the director's projcc1ed program.
1here were few expense problems for
1ha1 group. The $tuden1s paid
normal Colgate t ui1 io n . the
University took out a n overhead and
t~e remainde r was available for 1he
C0$1$ of the group. ~ow since the
study group expenses are part of the
budget, the number of the group$
going for thC year. the expenses of
each group. and the financial
situation of the University are all
added fac\ors.
When asked about the reason for
the change in policy. Frttdman
stated 1hat it was a decision made by
President Thomas Bartlett and his
uaff. T hey decided thaa t he
University $houkl ideally accept
no more than 2SOO students
includina those off-campus on
Col1ate stud)' groups. Those
$tuden1s used to be replaced by
acceptance o( additional students
such as transfers or visiting students.

Freedman cmphuited that
Freedman went on to explain thai
lhe admission of addition.al students althou1h the student activities fee
mean, thAt those students on $ludy was still collected by 1hc University
groups paid for themwlves. The from 1hose students o n offUl1iverSity still had approximately aroups, "the entire amount is turned
the 2500 s1udcn1, on campus tha1 it over to the dirc-c;cor o( each group to
needed to run the University in the be spent on whatever activities lhe
black. a nd it wasalsoabletosponsor $1udcnts want" One-hal( of the
numerou.s srudy groups for the
tuitions o( the students on the group
wtnt directly toward paying for that
group. Under the new policy, the
University does not repla« those
students away o n study groups with
new admissions: therefore. every
student now ~ an off-c-ampus
groups is ta king the cost of the
program with them. Study groups
now have to be budgeted like any
other campus activity.
The University does not pay for all
the expenses incurred by offgroups. Students arc responsible for
their own transportation and room
and board . T he University pays for
all program and faculty cxpcnsc-s;
1hcsc would include such things as
hi~ing of guest l«tvrers and tutors.
R.V, SMITH
tui1ions to Universities attended by
langvagc study groups. expenses for yearly (ec of sixty-fwo dollars. or
moving the group toa d ifferent study thiny..one dollars. is g.i\·en 10 the
locat io n , v isits to mv sevm s. d irector for each student: any money
institutions., theatres. and places of lefc unspenl is returned to the
Joe-al interest, travel and differential Student Acth·ities Office. Students
livin& expenses for facuh)' and their should be aware that thC)' maydtcide
fa milies. and insurance for the the use of these funds and should
students while with their director. watC'h to be sure chat their d irector i.s
The study group guidelines issued by ind«the University Studies Office amount.
svmmarize: .. ,n short. all thO$C
Explaining 1ha1 1he cost of each
expenses directly connected with the $tUd)' group varied due todiffertn<"es
study group. allowing lttway for in number of s1udtnts and in
cmc-rgencics. a c:er1ain, amount for loca1ion. Frttdman said that the
entertainment of visiting speakers. Colguc groups <'Ost from
presents to helpful people.etc. arc all approximately S7.000 to SJ0.000.
legitimate expenses."'
The eighteen stud~· aroups offered

this year have • ·b udttl of about
$200,000•.The study group auidclincs
i$$ued by the University Studies
Office explain 10 the directors of the
groups that "'There is no ncc:essary
connection bctwctn the c hargec for
1he semester's wor~ a nd program
expenditures. You artff'Ot obliged to
account to the students for the use of
their money. A fair proportion of
that money stays at Colgate for
overhead and any surplus over
proaram costs goes into gene ral
f u nds to s upport on-campus
prog,ra_ms."
Asked whether 1his meant that
studcnu were perhaps not gcuing
their mocny's wonh·. Freedman
emphasized 1h11 1he amoun1 of
variance between different study
groups was no wide..- than l ha1
between different fields of study on•
campus-. "It just depends on whether
you think you're geuina your
money's worth here," Freedman
said. He explained that the science
courses offered at Colgate arc much
more expensive to maintain, as a
rule. than the: ans courses. especially
English. and that in a sense part o(
the studenc body was subsidizina
another portion that took capital
intensive- courses or courses in
depanmcnts that did not pay for
themselves due 10 lack of stude nts.
He went on 10 say chat. this was no
different than 1hc study aroup
$)'Stem, where in a sense some
students arc subsidizing other
$ludents.
With the instituting of the new
study group policy. the rest of the
$lUdent body is indeed in a .seue
paying for the studcncs taklq

Continued on p.16

Student Election Procedures Formalized
New Committee Will Review Appeals
By MIKt BtC K£R
Elections o( Student Association
lc.aders. student senators. and class
officers are a semi--annual prooen at
Colgate. This $Cmester 1he elections
will proccde as usual, with one major
Change: for perhaps the finl lime in
Colgate's history. the election
eroc-edurcs will be wriuen law. No
doubt will exist a.s to 1hcdetailsof the
e lections.
Gary Ross. Student Association
president, said that 1hc old election
proced u res were loose and
unorganiud. These standards only
governed 1he number of names
required on each election petition
and the eligibility requirements o(
those running for e lection. Ross
added that in the past there has been
no e lection commiuce in the senate
10 oversee the election procus.
The $Cnale election committee was
created in September 197S. Ross
said. and it was adircc1 outgrowth of
the constitution revision commintt
which WM established in the summe r
of 1hat year. The election committtt
has since formulated the new election
rult$, In Ross'opinion ...acommintt

like this is longo"erduc... Ross addtd
that one of the commiuee's major
rcsponsibilitiC$ is 10 hear election
protests. while in 1hc past 1here has
been no such body 10 hear
complaintS.
Stefan Shaffer was appoin1ed
commissioner of the c leccion,
committee earlier this ye.ar. The

~-·I
I

~

committee. under Shaffer's
direction. has articulated in writing
the guidelines whK'h had ne\·er
before been clearly defined.
Thtse guidelines cover the
following areas : e l igibi li t y
requirements, nc«SSary number of
election signatures. amounts of
money tha1 may be spent on each
clcc1ion (the proposed. though not
yet final. figures are $100 per
candidate fo r each regular e lection,
$.SO for each rvn-off election which
may be needed). the new use of
absentee b.allocs this yc-ar. e lection
night procedure (one candidate
representative and o ne reprcsenla·
tivt from each media arc allowed 10
view the vole counting), lhe
procedure for run--off el«tions. 1hc
exact definition of a majority needed
to win, 1he procedure dealing with
ballots that arc cast incorrectly. a nd

the prtsexpense rteeipts. A«ording 10
Shaffer. a ll or most o( these
pro«durcs wtre followed to some
extent bu1 b«-ause of lhe lack of
written guidelines. different
intcrprc111ions could be used for
differen1 elections., Also. Shaffer
said. 1hese standards. "never rcall>
uisted in form. ~obody c-ver kneY.
what the story was:·
Shaffer emphasized lhe point that
a nything done b)' 1he ekction
commi11ec- in the wa>' of con1esting
an election is not a fina l aC'lion in
iuelf. but rather a recommendation
10 the senate about what action to
iakc. There
is a
possib'ilit)',
Shaffer
said. 1ha1 \'Oting
machines ma)' be used in elections in
the near fucurc. buc Shaffer added
that this possibility is "'very mvch up
in lhl! air... The elc-ction commiuee

\
STEFAN SHAFFER
now a lso run$ all the s1udent
referendums. such as the recent
Colga1c Nc-ws fu nding re(crendum,
At 1his time. Shaffer concluded.
the wriuen clc-c:1ion guidelinesb nty
apply to Student Association
tkctions. but they probably will
e\·entually apply to class officer and
student senate elcctioN as well.

The Maroon
CA.RY ROSS

Sexuality Counseling and
Information Center

SCIC
if you have a prob/em or
just a question
call or visit
Sun. thru Thurs .

7-11 pm
Room 7 Student Union 824-2497

.

'

needs typists
If you can type 50 w.p.m.
or more, and are
an accurate typist and think you might be
able to replace 'Hot Fingers Baumel',
please call the newspaper office at
824-1170 or stop up to see
us on the 3rd f[oor of the Student Union

• TH£ C(jLGATE MAROON

• •

,::

TUESOA Y, MARCH 11 1'77 -

...

• •

Early Russo-Chinese Contact·
Subject .of Latti~ore Talk
By ANN MARSDEN
Own Lauimor,c no1 only spcnl
much of his aduh life as a
businc,sman.joumalis1 and cxplortr
in Mongolia and Inner A.Sia, but he
a lso grew up lhere. And following a
carttr lhat included being Chiang
Kai·shek's advisor (1941-42). and the
only non•Russian foreign member of
the Mongolian Academy or Scien~.
the outttanding Asian scholar,
u:plorer diploma1 has somehow
ended up at Colga1e.
How, did it happen? Sheer
coinciden~.
Martha Olcott. lns1ructor in
Political SC'tencc, explained. '"a c lose
friend of mine was sub&euin.g his

hous.c in l,,«ds (England). She',
rcspon.sibte for the idea. Since she
knew Lanimore wat coming (to the
United S1a1es). she sugges1ed that I
might try to get him vi.sit Colgate."
O lcott said John Morri~ agreed to
fina nce tht lecturer. "By Colga1e
standards, I'm sure he's the mos1
expensive lccturerc we've had this ,
yc-ar." she commen1cd.
Lauimore was one of the primary
1argc1s of the McCa rthy period,
Olcou said, ••for completely
groundless reasons. At least Alger
Hiss had some eonn«tions." she
laughed. Aocording 10 O lcou,
Lattimore was auaekcd by 1he
Syracuse newspaper (or being a
revisionist.

OWl:N LATTIMORE

New Sprinkler System In Andrews
But Rear Exit Ladders ·Still Remain
878ETH WARD

not violate New York t1a1e law
beca use it was legal at 1hc time it was
in.stalled ... In as much as there is no
and former Assistan1 De-an of renovation o( 1he build ing." said
Students Gary Pa vela were involVN Joerger. "'the ladder is leg.at .. Pa vela.
in an effort 10 pcnua.dc the: however. did not believe the laddtr
Univenity to replace oblolete -fire was legal under any c irc*mstancn.
laddm'bn Andrews Hall. Since then, PaYCla said. '"II is clearl)' wrong to
en,ineert have partially compkced • s.ay 1hat no codes are violated. Aus1in
the installation of a new 1prinlder Joerger -has been informed in the past
system in Andrews and East Halls. as 10 tht law. he tLas seen the eodts,
but the ladderS remain.
.. and knows vtrywcll there isa $Crious
The Andrews Hall tear exit fire, violation."
ladden a.rt the only ahernlle means
Along with the (act o( suuctural
or tteape (besides stairways) from o!Jsolcscence arc the dangers
the sceond and thjrd floors. The associated with using the ladder asan
ladder passes direct))' over windows escape during panic c.onditions. The
which wou.ld expo,e someone trying Life Safety Code states • that
to escape directly 10 smoke and every building must ha,·e u leaSt 1wo
flames. h doa not extend to the means or egress remote from each
founh floor, which is occupied by other and ananged so that the
twenty persdns. The cn'ladder is nearly thin«n feet from the fire is minimiicd. A means of caress
coocrete ~ n rface below. These is defined as ..a continuous and
conditions violate s-everal unobstructed exit o( travel to a
11ipulations of Ufc Saifecy Code pu blic way."
number S-.9211 whic:hse:rvesas law in
With the installation of the
New York S111e. The code states 1h11 sprinkler system last summer. the
.. No form of ladder should be used as status of the fire ladder has become
a fire escape unc4er provisions or this C\'Cn more clouded. According to
code (except) to provide a means of Gordon Dresser, who was appointed
dseape from boiler rooms. grain to tht newly c·rc.ated post of
elevators a nd towen..."
University Fire Marshall on January
Last year the controversy centered l. the presence of sprinklers in the
around whether or not the fi re ladder halls a nd corridors has waived the
constituted a legal means or egress. legal requirement fora second means
Austin Joerger. Physical Plant or egreu. In addition. 1hc loca l
Oireclor, claimed that theladderdkl village engineer advised the

Lui year at this time. several
safety and fire orr.c:ills, studcnu.

1,

Univenily to leave the ladders in
place o n lht grounds lh at to tear
1hem orr would serve no purpose.
Dresser himsel(woukl ratherreniove
the ladders and ..end the hassle: but
he idded th.at the Adminisuation
will adhere to the advice of the village
engineer. When pressed, Dresser
admiued 1hat the ladder, ..in a nd oj
i1sclf, is not legal."
Th.at the need for a second mea ns
of egress was waived recently under
state law was news 10 Dean Shaul,
C hief o( the Hamilton Fire
Department. He noted that the law
probably could be interpreted in
such a way s~as to nullify the status
of lhe fire ladder entirely; he
comented, "the law contains so many
loopholes 1hat it can be worked
around." Nevcrthtless, Shaul termed
the presence o( the ladder as "no1
aood. 11 should be corrected."

need for a new means or escape.
According ,10 Ross, wa1er
pr«surc decreasc-s five pounds with
each flight upwards so that by the
time water reaches 1he fourth Ooor.
the sprinklers would be operating on
only fiflecn pounds of pressure. "Not
only is it doubtful lhat a serious fire
could be pul ou1." said Ross ..but the
effect of a weak spray from the
sprinklers would be to ere.ate more
smoke and toxic fomes. Student,
would still be trapped." S haul al.so
explained thal it is difficult 10 climb
ou1 10 the ladders from the inside.
Also. the ladders, which arc made of
iron, could get cx1remely ho1.
making them difficu1 to grasp and
hang on to.

T he sprinkler system has not
ended lhe debate over 1hc Andrews
Hall fire ladders. Along with the
conniccing opinions surrounding the
Because the ladder docs not reach ladders is the unccr1ain1y a.s to ir and
the fourth noor in the e\'ent ofa fire whe n the sprinkler system will be
o n the third noor blocking the completed. Ptt$Cntly. the corridors.
stairway, egress would be severely stairways, and basem*nts of
limited by smoke and crowds 10 the And~ws a nd East Halls and the
point where no one could get out, kitchen in Bol1on House. arc
Student A$$0Ciation president Gary sprinkled. This job a lone cost
Ross reiterated 1he concern O\'Cr 1his $17,000. There arc plans 10 continue
problem expressed by Pa,·ela ano installment in students' rooms. but
former SIUdent Association vice• whether this gets done. said Dresser
president David Kutik last year. "depends o n 1he mood of the
Ross isnotconvinced of th e adequacy 1rus1ces," who have the power to
or tne sprinkler system under panic prohibit an expensive proposition on
conditions, or 1hat it e liminates the 1he budget

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6 Broad Street
Introduces

NEW OWNERSHIP

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t o t he Ham ilton Are-a

Your
host's
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Also: Crewel, bargello,
latch-hook rugs, -macrame

Jack
.. .. . Benton
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&
Rosmary Holt
'

'

'

'

GRAND OPENING MARCH 4th

Open 10 a.m. to 2 a.-.

For all yo ur Drugstore
needs It 's the

Schlitz, Genesee and LaBatt on tap

COLLEGE PHARMACY

Great Sandwich Menu
· Spedalizing in
'
"tenderloin steak sandwich''

I.
'

I

'

(rontinwd on pogr nin~)

YARN ET AL

under
,.

The reknowncd scholar spoke
yesterday for Professor Franda's
Politics in Contemporary China
c lass. for · Professor Reading's
Russian Policy and Proressor
OlcotL's Sovie1 Union in World
Affairs class, and for Proressor
Geycr's course in Problems in World
Communil)'. He also moderated a
discussion of civil liberties at Peace
House in the afternoon.
'
In his lec1ure on Russo~
Chinesc/ Sovic1..chincse Relations
(Part I) yesterday. Lanimorc
discussed contact between the
Russians and the Chinese empire.
which he dales fro m the time of the
Manchu rulers (officially 1644).
Russia was in the midst of rapid
change from 1hc late ISOO's on, he
saitf. when lhe)' broke lhrough 10
Sibe~ Figh1ing the Swedes and
the Turks on 01her froncs. 1hc
Russia ns had to cenlralize power in
the hand.$ of the cur to manage,
Serfdom, l.auimort e xplained.
didn't de\'elop in lhe neW tcrritroy
east or the Urals, because 1he stale
demanded the revenue landlords
would have otherwise squeezed out
of the Russian peasanl as s.erf.
Deep into previously Chinese
territory b)' 1he end of the
seventeenth centur)', the Russians
halted 1heir dri\'C, Lauimore posed a
question: why didnt lhc Runians try
to take 1he Mongolia and Chinese
Turkestan? He answered his
question bydiscussingthe "extremely
interesting hiStorical phenomenon"
1hat he terms "'the self•limitations of
empire." "The Marxisu can't dea.l
with this one," he sta ted
parenthetically, ..b«ause
im·
perialism is insa1iable, as far as they
are concerned."
To explain the "sel(.limitations or
empire," the scholar used the Great
Wall of China as an example of a
frontier, In lhc third century 8,C,,
the waJI was built to defend the
empire from ·barbarian invaden",
aocording to the standard analysis
which Lauimore termed "complete
nonsense:· That area had previously
been inhabited by barbarians and the
Chinese kicked lhem out, as they
expanded, he said. '"The wall marks a
geographical a nd climatic as well as a
military and political frontier," he
pointed out. On one side of the wall,
a griculture is more profitable; on the
other, the terrain could not be

" On the cor ner"
'

-

~

Prescri ption - Drugs Complete Line of Men's Toiletries
Cosmetics - Cameras & Film --gifts

1"61ever..&fldi-es-,......,.....,._..,..........,,..,...._

THE COLGATE MAROON

TUESDAY, MARCH 1 lffl
1

Syracuse Fraternity Provides
Option Fol_" Colgate Blacks

'

'

By ED ANDREWS
While few people would
characterize Cotpt.r's rraternity life
u consciously exclusive racially. the ·
paucity of minority lnvolvmcnl with
frt1crnilies remains one of the
striking features of those
inslitutions.
La.st year. however. fraternity hfe
seemed to offer somethina new to
blades. At that time, sophom*ore
M:ark Fury and six other bllc:k
Colgate s1uden&s pledpd at the
Kappa chapter of Omep Phi Psi at
Syracuse Uni~rsity. This year,
lar,ely due to the efforts of f ury.
another seven men have decided lo
pled,e. The Colgate students do not
• have their own chapter as yc:1,
ahhough that is not an undesirable:
prospect for them. Currently, they
are Kappe brothers., on the Syracuse
list.

The fraternity. composed
essentially of b lacks and other
minorities, is nalional, and boa.SH
S0,000 members in cities across the
country. The Syracuse chapter daces
its o rigins to the 1920's, but had been
inactive (or-many ya.rs after that. In
1968. i.l ttnewcd its operations.
Today, it commands a house and a
small but confident nucleus of
Syracus.e students. lncludins the
graduate chapter, about lS Syracuse
men are involved.

Fury, the fraternity's c h ief
apok~man. is not hos1ile to
Colgate's own fraternity system. He
ishe said,a'"preppic:." who-ssqciates
with everybody. A.s a (rcshm.tn, he
seriously considettd joining the
Theta Chi chapter at Colpte.
Omcp Phi Psi interested him.
however. because his girlfriend had
been closely associated with those
students. Throush her he bcn.me
personally anachcd to the fraternity.
As Fury describes it, Omega Phi
Psi i.s not the vanauard o( either
radical chanae or separatism. The
latter notion, in fac1. he
chlractcriud as "'a waste of time,"
and ..kind of stupid." Rather, the
fraternity brothers areexs,ccted to 10
into all parts of· society and make a
constructive contribution.
Fury commented that, -. s.ign or
real strength. or real awareness, is to
go out and prove yourwJ( without
losing your identity." He believes
that by joinina together in a
fraternity, this kind o( strength
would be cuter to develop.
In spcalong o( his reasons for
joining. Fury commented th.at, "'In
theory. fraternity members should
cithibit the viru~s of manhood,
pcrservcrancc, scholarship and
uplift.'" He emphasized that c.ach
man was 10 Ir')' cons1.1ntly 10 bcncr
himself. For Fury, this means

becoming ,ucmsful in either law or
business, bul he saMJ that the
fraternity e ncouraged cxctllcncc in
all fields. By collectively strivin1 for
self-improvement, each member
would posi1ively innuence the
othcn. Fury hoped that whatever he
did woukl s«m as a c-haUen,e 10 be
surpassed by his younaer·brothers"'.
The other d imension or this
collective ambit ion. Fury
elaborated, was in the oblip1ion
that each member Md to 1he other.
Once having achieved a desree or
success, a mC"mbtr was expec:tc'(f 10
look back and he.Ip his brothers..
Fury hoped that his fraternity would
be an asset in his own career puriuits.
Less seriously, Omcp Phi Psi
offers attractions for potential
recrui!s similar to those hdd out by
Colgate'• own orpniiations. Not
without an elcmcn1 or tongue•in·
chttk,
Fury suggested that the
fra ternity's potential rested with the
fact that, ·we get the girls-and the
airls get lhc guys."'
A second c lement in 1he
rccrui1mcn1 formula is 1he "line
dance," a ritual coll«tion or dance
step.s which all brothers musl ma11cr.
Whtn performed simultaneously by
all membcr.s. Fury said it coukl draw
appreciative audiences,
With seven students pledging th.'
year, Omega Phi Psi has thirtet11
Colgate members. About ten arc

Cobb Fellowships Reward Students;
·
Jd }
- C0 Igate
ea S And Spirit Stressed
By TED SOBEL
In 1944 Ocorge W. Cobb, Class or
1894, cstabli.shed an endowment at
Colgate "to stimulate and recognitc
_ effective undergraduate leadership
and service to !the college." He
stipulated th&! not less than ten and
not more than twenty awarcb should
be ma.de a.nually. The awardt which
carry with 1hem stipend or $SO 10 all
except the "'President" o( the group.
who receives SI SO, arc to be ,ivtn ou1
at the..,. Civic Awards Convocation
April 18.
Because the awards are made
annually to "those s1.udent1 who,
during the collcac year immediately
pttoedina the award. shall have
demonstr11cd qualities of
outst.tnding leadership and effective
influence among their (ellow
students on camput," nominations
(or the honor are $0U&Jlt from all
parts or the Coltate community.
Nomination
were circulated in
January to tludent senators,
department heads, all faculty and
staff, hou.se pruidenls, fraternity
presidents, R.A.'s. chaplains,
ch.airmen or student aroups and
dean's ua.rr personnel. The
nominations were returned by
~bruary 2S a nd a list or the names
compikd. All the nominees received
an information sheet 10 be filled out
and returned to Acting Dean or
Students Coleman Brown's omce by
March 11.

•bttt•

Mad F-,, 0.111 PM N S,1tr an
currently on campus. Thouah their folk.. (UM F), Melvin Lewis, anot..her
number is sm.all. the fraternity may
have more impa~t than one miaht
think. Some of its members are qui1c
ac1ive in minority affairs and in the
laraer Colgate community. Fury iJ
known for his contribution as an
actor, and is a l.so Communications
Chairman of the Unioa of Minority

Lattimore Lectures
(continu,d from ·~

"6hl)

eftkienlly cxploilcd by the Chinese.
They would have run into

t~Si;~~Y

0
0
:~·.~'' "~~~~~~~

Lattimore a l.so disc-usscd the
frontier or th< Roman empir< and
how it. lent credence 10 his notion of
~
cconomicdiminishin1re1urns.and the
Cobb Fellow and it consists of both• "scJf.limitations
empire...
students and facuhy,
Beyond the Roman's frontier, he
Ckarly, in order 10 be a Cobb said.impcrialiJm would have cost
Fellow, one has 10 be very active in more than it was worth.
.school affairs. bu1 the depth of one's
ThCTt was a lways a faction 1h.1t
involvement is also impor1ant. John wanted to go into Chinesc Turkntan
Hoagland, a junior and a Cobb or Mongolia. L.attimott suq.es1ed.
Fellow last yur. was a senator, a but St. Petersburg would prevent
member of the ~nate Watchdog them from (ur1her upansion.
commi11ce. and the tttasurcr of DKE
From the Chinese side, the curTC"nt
house. All these things contributed doctrine is 1h.at the Russians .arc
to his being selected. but he also said rapacious conqueron. he .said.
1h11 '"it helps 10 know people on. the ti1 al-..;ays subduinaothc~. The ~hine~
S.A. commission. " Hoagland. c laim 1h.t1 some Russi.an tcmtory 1s
echoing the feelings or other Cobb really theirs , ince ii was part of the
Fellows and nominees. expressed the a ncien t C~incse empitt.
.
thought that it was a very nice thing
The Chinese also say t~at ':hma
to be so honored. especially becausc ha.s always been a mult1~na11onal
the honor comes from the whole slate, in which 1he poW(rhasauome
campus. A fellow is not chosen by times bttn held by minority peoples.
racullyor s1udcn1salonc, but by bo1h The the Monaol and Manchu
combined. which makes 1hc honor conquests arc not conquesu b)'
all the more mcaninaful.
1be desiJnation u a Gcorae W.
The Trillium
Cobb Fellow cn1ails no forma l
d u1ies. bu1 when Cobb established
6 Broad Street
the endowmtnl he suggested two
responsibilities 1h.a1 go a Iona wi1h i1:
to maintain the old 1radi1ions of the
college and the Colgate spirit. and 10
striYc fo r the continua.I development
or the fi nest pha.scs or Colgate life.
The selection of a Cobb Fellow is
not a popularity contest . ..but an
effort to discover the men and
women who cffttiively exemplify
Colgate ideals and spiril."

or

The question sheet Which the
nominees received is much like part
or the collcae applications Colgate
students filled out in their senior
years or hi&h school.. It is an
..extracurricular activit.C.S" sheet and
asks the nominee to ..,cu us
something about your activities and
accomplishments outside the
classroom." As one or this year's
nominees put i1. the question sh«t is
a chance for those s1udcnts "'who
have gone beyond. the call of duty" to
explain how far beyond chcy have
sonc in terms or activities.
community service. athlclics and so
forth.

or

A list the nominees is sent to au
commission chairmen. chaplains.,
pttSident and Vice•pre,ident
the
Student Associ11 ion. Student
Activies Director. Dean or
FreshfflCtl, Director or Housing,
Advisor for Fr11crni1ics and offCampus Housina, Pra.dent of past
year"s George Cobb Fellows (Gary
Ross). Dean o( Admissfons and
Dean of Students. The above
comment o n or rate the nominees
and their, evaluations arc to be
returned by Marrh 18.

or

When all the forms a.re in, the
nominations ao to the Student
Affairs Commission, wh.Ch JCliecls
1he twenty finalists. The commission
is chaired by Wendy Bynum, a 1976

oriJinal member or the Syracuse
chapter, is the president ofthc UMF.
Bentley Winfield. who is pledaina
this · )'C"tr, is recognized as one of
Colgate's outstandina acton.
ThouJh very actiYe in life on the
Colgate campus. the:K men have
found a way to extend fra&enlity J:ifc
off the campus.
·

foreigners but civil wars. Similarly,
the Chinese, $CC Gengh1 Khan as a .
unifier or China rather simply
dcstruetive.
Finally Lattimore discussed
"'periods of sprouts of capitalism· or
•ones in which under the severe
ptts.surc or b.arbaria n.s, the Chinese
.
merchants prospcrc'(f, He cxplatncd
1ha1 the Chinese. fearing invasion.
paid out huae amounts or silver in
tribute to barbari.ans. This created
purchasina power among barba
rian.s, which allowed the Chinese
economy to
stren,thcn, The
..periods of sprouu or capitalism"
never lasted h:>ng enough to crealC a
flourishinJ merchan1 cJass.
Lattimore said, but "'withered". He
concluded his lcctutt on thi,
fottboding point.
Lattimore will also lectutt on
Wednesday for threcclaseesa.nd that
cvenins. he will address '"The Fire
Between Two Sticks: The Peoples
Be1wcen Russia and China.. at 8:00
• in the O lin Lecture Hall.
Among the scholarly books
Lauimore has published are Inner
Asian Frontiers or China (19'40).
Ordeal by Slander (1950)and S1udies
in Frontier History (1963).

.

Mon-Sat.
10:00 · 5:30

The Trillium
a flower • so called because all species have
leaves In sets of three and a large solitary center.

Concert
MA({c.H 6 e·.30

a.t the Coop sot

Also a lovely shop transplanted from Lebanon
Street to

6 Broad Street

The Trillium will open lt;s petals and bloom
again on Friday, Mardi 4, 1977.
Please join us for

,

Opening Day Specials
refreshments and a preview of Spring.

-

TUESDAY, MARCH 11 tm

THE COLGATE MAROON

·The Colgate Scene, Way Back Jfhen .
'
By combi.nint the black powder
with some iron o-.ide Manhall

note which read, ,.Dear Sir, Found
the little bastard on the grass,"
ac:hiewd his desiR!d effect. ,nc1 from"
Dave Small. clan or 1959. was a
then on upon firina, lhe cannon member of Fiji cluring his under
graduue days. and nostalgically
It is understandable that current would release I heavy cloud of
recalls lhe FUi Island of'S7. The men
maroon smoke,
students reel that Colpte bclonp to
During his senior year. Marshall of the fraternily had ordered two
thc-m, but one must remember that decided 10 get rid
the rcmaininJ truckloads Of sand to be brought 10
one hundred and rtfly odd classes iron oxide ,hells in one fell s\l·oop. the house and dumped onto the
have felt that way. The Colgate of Afler the Syracuse game in 'SI ba.sem*n1 floor. h wu a rainy day
toda)' l1 • melanae of the Colgates of (traditionally the last pme of the when the sandman arri\·ed. He
yesterday.
season), whi~ the post.game party· survt:yed the situation and seeing
A retumina alumnus mutt feel a ing was in full swing, he moved the that there was a large window
11i1ht wrenching of 1hc bean ,vhen· cannon ou, onto Broad Street in throuah which coal wa.s pused. set
ever he sea a ~w building up,
rront of the Lambda Chi fraternity up the coal shuulc and pas.scd the
Many alumni hive no1 adjusted: to (now Bunche House.). In the w~ sand through.
The exci1ed brothen swept the
the idea or women bein& in the dorms hours of the morning he fired the
- one alumnus rememben lhlt in 'SS cannon. loading the shells in one sand all over the floor. and fashioned
his roommate wu"?xpelled for it.
after the next. The noise rnounded 1he basc:ment a la beac h. On the walls
BuJ the memories that remain are throuih a slttping town. and Marsh·
no more anachronistic thin the all continued 10 man his gun.
buildin,s which stood then a nd stand .. Minutes later an ecstatic: Marshall
today.
fell a tap on his shoulder. T urning
Alumnus Robert Ma.rshaU, class around he found himself face to face
of 1951, fondly recalls the days when with Dean Kallgran. the Dean of
be was enrolled in the ROTC Students. Kallgran. hair Nffitd.
training prvaram that was once '?1"6fhes dishelveled. with a weary
offered by ihe schoo1. He remembers look in his eye said to a sobering
that his group of 1rainccs was Marshall. "Well then. Are you
rnponsible for the maintenanoc and done?""
firina of the school cannon .. large,
'"Yes. sir." said the partied-out
solid iron, French mountain artillery senior.
weapon ..1 the wteldy foot~U
, One alumnus re-c-.alkd 1he days
th
games. The purpose of fin~g e when the boys would sit out in the
can~o~ was '? arouse fans with the back of McGregory Hall and shoot
terrific booming sound after eVffy at the crows that woukl land in the
C.U. touchdown. The cannon was trees between McGregory and the
Administration Building. At the
time. 1he president of 1he unive-rsit)'
resided in the maroon house now
,,. known as Griffith House.
One early morning the roommaie
of this particular alumnus dec.cled 10
go crowshoo1ingou1 b)' Mc Gregory.
In the fever of the sport he got carried
away with his efforu. and started
shooting right over the president's
house. Out c.ame 1he president. out
wtnt the roommate.
(Note: After severe disciplinary
Br GUY BOYD
action had 1aken place. the crow
A large crowd auended the Chapel
shoo1er was allowed to return to
,
Colgate and receive his degree. The Saturday ni,ght 10 hear 1he_ Colgate
incident was not. 10 say the least . the Orchesua perform a'"Beethoven
crow-ning glory of his Colgaic Festival.'" The ambitious 2½-hour
program consisted of the Coriolanus
.. career.)
Alumnus Hans Guenther. class of Overture. Bee1hovens·s only
1942. remembers well a classic conceno for violin and orchcs1ra.
in1erchange
that a classmate of his and his famous Symphony no. l.
loaded with shells that contained a
The Coriolanus Ch•enurc \lo"&S
flashless powder and therefore did had with President George Barton
p
layed
solidly and served as a good
Cutten.
Cuuen
strongly
objected
10
not produce any smoke.
opening
piece. The Concerto for
students
walking
on
the
lawns
of
1he
Marshall decided to add a little.
Violin
and
Orchesira in O major
university
and
the
lawns
were
thus
color to the weekly routine and
featured
Felix
Eyle. former
off
limits
10
anyone
and
e\•erything.
induced his peers in the chemistry
concertmaster
of
the
Metropolitan
department to supply hjm with some Guenther remembers a classmate of
Oper
..
Orchestra
a
nd
presently a
black powder. He then obtained the his found a dead sq_uirrel o n the
Special
Jnstroctor
at
Colgaic.
necessary licensing that would en- grass, which he promptly nailed to
Unfortunately,
it
wa.s
hard
10
hear the
able him to purchase a nd possess the front door of 1he president's huse.
soloist
from
the
back
oflhcchapel
in
Along with the squirrel he tacked a
gunpowder.

8 1 D IA NE SUSSMAN
The alumni came home this put
weekend, brinpla to Colpte't pment, their memories of itt put.

or

they put murals or palm trees ano
~
d~p blue water and sand dunes.
The night of Fiji Island. the Jirls
arrived. reple1e with grass skins.
(Beach attire was a must for the
occasion.)
Mtn and women filed down to the
b:l,sem*nt to- enjoy the beach 5«ne
the Fijis had worked hard 10 crea1e.
It wasn·1 Iona before the men and
women realized 1ha1 a slew of s.and
neas had invited themselves 10 the
fes1ivc occasion. The women slapped
and scratched and were miserable all
evening. The fleas wined and ~ined
a nd had themselvts a wonderful
1ime.
Small rlCCalled another party week
end when tirls were invited uo. DKE

• •

house had rC$Crved one whole noor
or the fraternity to aocomodate the
women, who were to stay overnight.
Small and his pal.s would frequenl
a certain moiel thal was locaced in
the Catskills. called the Three Bear
Inn, In fr('l11t of the Inn were sta1ucs
of three bears. One bear had a
c rouched stance.
This particular weekend several or
Small's friends had decided to brina ..
the crouched bear back to school
with them. They also decided that the
bc.ar would be most comfortable in
1he ba1hroom on the girls' noor at
DKE,

An orehtttrattd tfTtet

Orchestra Per/orms Solidly,
Time· Will Add Lacking Luster
1his very bcau1iful pie« and the
orchestra tended to drown himoutJII
times. The first two movements were
taken fairly slowl)' a nd included
SC\•e ral repeats not often played. The
1hird a nd final movement, the
Rondo. was. however, played at a
ruter pace and stirred an
enthusias1ic response rrom 1he
audience.
The second half of 1h( program
was Bee1hoven's Symphony no. 3,
popularly known as the Eroica, h
was written at 1he very beginning of
the 191.h century and marked
Beethoven's break rrom the
sym phonic tradition of his
predcecsson. Haydn a nd Mozart. It
i.s a long piece a nd in placa the
performance wavered and uemed 10

lack strcn,gth. The final mo\•emcnt,
however, was dynamic and served as
an exciting conclusion to 1he
evening's program.
As the followers or Colgate's
musical setne undoubtedly know.
the orchcs1ra is scheduled 10 play at
Town Hall next month. Many of the
people in the audience were cager to
hear how the orchestra. which has
been extensh,ely revi1aliied in re«nl
years by Professor of music William
Skelton. performs. Saturday night's
concert was Oawed by the excessively
slow tempo of the music apparently
caus.cd by lack or extensi\'e rehearsal.
Howe\•er the orchestra played well.
despite the slowness at which they
were performing. The Town Hall
concert ought 10 be a great success.

A Right To Live A.nd A Right To Die
By MI CHAEL GRAZEN
Even normally late risen got up
Saturday momina to hear what
Andrew Rembert, Assistant
Professor of Philosophy and
Religion termed~ dilemma with no ·
answer,."
·A Right to Live and a Right to
Oie," was discussed with great
competenoc by both Rembert and
Colgate alumnus, Attorney Donald
G. Collester Jr., the trial prosecutor
for the celebrated Karen Anne·
Quinlan ease. Arran,ed by Alumni
Corporation Secretary BobHoward
as part 6( Alumni Weekend, the
disc,\IUion was held before a large,
rcccpt.ive audience composed · of
students, facu lty a nd alumni.
Collester, a '61 Phi Beta Kappa
and a Harvard LawSchoola,a.duate,
ledoffthediscu.ssionbyoutliningth«r·
problems posed by the recen1
biological revolution in medicine.
Developments such as artificial
respirators a nd heart aids amon,g
others have combined to increa,
ethe p;oportionof"lingcringdcaths"
among the population. The onset of
death now 11kes longer, oocurs at an
older aae, and involves the spending
ofmoremoneythaneverbefore.Asa
mull, new 4uestions have emerged
concerning the ex.act definition of
death and che legal right of the
individual to live 01 die.

Collcster then centered on the individual to refu$C extra..ordinary
Quinlan case which brought all these medical auention but chat the
i.uues to worldwide auenlion. Karen decision could be made by someone
Anne 'Q uinlan is a 21-year old els.c. Yet he criticized the court for
woman who went into a coma in sugges-tina the establishment of
February. 1975. the doctorsdeclaf'Cd hospital ethics committees and then
her chances of recoverina from the
coma as nonexistent and called her
condition an ..irreversible vegetative
scate," Her life systems were being
aided by a respirator that forced air
down her trachea into her lungs
making her heart beat. In CoUester's
words, ·"she was slipping with
h('lrrible gradualness to death." Yet
even though her parents ordered the
doctors to take her off the machine
and '"pull the plug." the refused,
fearful of the possibility ora lawsuit.
The Quinlans brought the matter to
court and the case finally ended upat
the New Jersey State Court of
Appeals where they ruled that the
Quinlans could legally take Karen'
off the respirator and if their doctors
refused, the Quinlans could change
ANDY REMBERT
doctors. T he respiratorwasgradualy
taken off and to the s-urpri.se of dropping the impor1an1 question or
who is qualified 10 be on the
everyone, Karen still '"lives,"
Collester praised the court for it.s committee and how far their power
sympathy in the matter. Citing an old would extend. The problem with
legal ma xim that "hard cases make these ..Ood.scruads" as he referred to
weak law," he said that the them, i.s the problem with all
precedent.setting aspect of the committees ... that there is no
decision was not that they asserted individual ruponsibHity. Also, he
the constitutional right of an said, a committee means

I

compromiu on an issue that few
people would compromise on. The
possibility of abuse is always there.
Collester indicated his support for a
California bill on the $Citing up of
committees that "insures no brief
decisions."
Touching upon a number of other
thoughts such as the question of
what is the standard for thequalit,y of
lire and how muc h of a role does the
lawyer have in these matters,
Collester concluded hi.s comments
on the Quinlan cau by saying, ..her
case brought these ideas out of the
psychic closet and fort hat we should
be chanksfol."
Rembert in his reply. pointed out
that he agreed with Collester on
many points and that contrary to
what many people thought, the talk
was more of a discussion than a
debate.
He noted 1ha1 there is '"a natural
human desire 10 break things down
10 a yes or no ans ..·er." )'Cl after
carefol painstaking analysis wt have
no definite answers. He saw a
possible danger brought out in 1he
Quinlan case illustrated by the fact
that the high court may have
obscured lhedefinition of the right of
privacy by noting in their decision
that ii wa.s clear 1hat most people, if
in Karen's position would prefer
death, This tends to imply that the

right of decision puses from the
individual co society. lflh~ is true, he
claims, then the righ1 of privacy is
severely diminished. cases of this
sort should not "be a routine political
decision that is appealed 10 public
opinion." He warned that 1his a
question where we cannot draw any
lines... We must begin with saying we
do not know the answer." And i(we
evtr draw any lines. let them be
dr.1wn "'shaking wi1h fear thal "'Care
drawing 1hem in the wrong pla«."
To most students the ide.a of de.ath
isa d isiant thought. seldom arising in
everyday affairs. T he q uestion
cannot be answertd 1hrough apathy
a nd ignorance. It must be
remembered thal the decisions made
today set the precedent for lhe
Future. Discussions on such relevant
issues Cncouragc people 10 become
emo1ionally and in1elkctually aware
of these mauers.
I SSUE STAF~-

MaUy Baumtl
Ed Parran
Dtnlse Van "orrtn
Marltnt Glltttt
Gordon Stack
Susan Calhoun
Robin Ftnsltmaktr
Mike Sorkin
Sallr Oesio,h
Ted Sobtl

THE COU;ATE MAROON

'
,

PAGE ELEVEN

THE COLGATE MAROON

Degr~e R ecipients Chosen

'

87 IILL WICKS

,

HANS GUENTHER
~

A R eminiscent Weekend
Continued from p. 10
\

And the prt, would 10 10 rhc
john and watt intO a particular itall
and diacover·i l wu already occupied
and fall into a dead raint on the floor.
the boys were qwc.k to the rescue.
Small also rc:mcmben that thert:
wu once a be1utifully-1haped evergreen on the front comer of the: Phi
Gamm propmy. EVff)' year at
Chri1tmutime the boyswoulddecor- '
ate the tree, wirinJ it ,rith lights by

TUESD AY. MARCH 11 lffl
e

the day tifl?e. Willow pa1h on«
sc.rvrd IS a dn.1 strip th.at could
accomodate two cars side by side·
until they Jot to the bridSf.
' Colpte of the past was youns.
frivolou.s. gay and reckless. And 1uch
is an eternal Colp1e.

Colgate has chosen four
individuals to receive honorary
degrees lor thi.s academic )'$If.
Actor•Comedi'a n Danny Kay.
executive Ruth Clausen. Prorcssor
Robert Bruce Merrifiekl, a nd
Senator Daniel Patri.ck Moynihan
will receive honorary dqrecs 11 the:
commencemc:n1 ceremony on May
29. 19n.
A joint racuhy..trustec committee
convastc:s nominations ror these
degrees. and then sends out
invitations. The comminee choosn
degree recipitnt.i on the: basis of
Sffieral cateaories or public ama.rs,
li1c:rature and aru. and busineu and
profeuional life. .,
Moynihan. who will also deliver
the: commencement addrCIJ. is a
newly e1cclrd Senator from New
York State.
He was lhe United
States repreKntative to the United

Nations. and -.·as a member "'
Nixon's White House staH.
Moynihan taught at Harva rd
University as Pro(c:ssor of
Government a nd Profcstor or
Education and Urban Politic:s.
Actor-comedian Danny Kaye i.s
known to audiences for his roles in
Whit, C'hri.,1mosand 11,, ~rrtl U/t
of Walter MillJ'. The sixly•fOur yur
actor won an Emmy for hll television
show Th, Danny Kayt Sho-.,.·. He is
Amb'a.uador • at·l.arp:
for

UNICEF.
Ruth Chic~ering Clausen ls the
national president of the League: or
Women Voters. She: has been a
member or many committees a nd
ddcp1ions dealing with environ·
menial protec:tion, and has been
active in women's affairs,
Merrific:kl is a Professor of
Bioc h emistry at Rockefeller
University in New York City. The
fifty•six. year old profeuor has
1.1u1ht there since 1966:

Laxness Called Culprit
In Measles Outbreak

17 GORDON STACK
Rubella. or German rmasles. ha.s. has reached almos1 e pidemic
running electrical lines from the
according 10 Thomas White:. proportions. Abou1 600 casn have
inside or the house.

One morning the Fijis awoke to
discover the tree was no longerthctt.
Where it once stood was a foot-long
stump that had b«ndcanly· hewn.
Tbc bO}'$ se-arched for the tree all
day I to no avail.
It wasn't until two days later that
th ey learned the whereabouts or the
tree. Thue it stood in Jlf its beauty
andgrandeur, illuminating th,.e living
room of DKE house.
II goes on and one. A Colgate of
the p&SI saw hi.ling at its height,
when Taylor Lake was 1he place fo r
naked Freshmrn boys to be. Fros.h
used to wear little: green beanies that
they would happily rdinquish on
..moving up day". During Rush.
paddlin, was very muth in vogue
and pledaees would *uaume the
pos.ition.., whjdl tactfully explained
Guenther, was a way of "'preserving
one's manhood".
- Ban were common 10 every frat·
a lthough most of the boys were
undc-r age- and would diappar
behind camouflaged boards ~uring

Director of University Health
Strvicts, recently put four people
into the Colgate infirmary. .
Around the: councry. German
measks has reached almos1 epi~c:mic

T HOMAS WHIT[

/

bttn reported in Los Angcks County
and Chicago suburbs. Other harcJ·hit
places include Indiana, Iowa.
Wisconsin, Montana and Pennsyl·
vania.
According: 10 Htwr,,.·ttk., an
apathe1ic anitude toward measles is
the cause: of the outbrea k; while all
children in forty·sevcn states arc
supposed to be vaccinated before
they are a llowed into public schools.
oi:ily about 70% or the children in
those states bc:tw«n the ages of I and
13 have betn, This can be explained
by a laxness in observing the
regula tion that is symptomatic or
most people's altitude.
Rubella; orrers no serious threat to
the Colgate community.as it hits. for
the mosi part, young childttn. The
rubella strain, however. i.s potentially
harmfol 10 pregnant women,
Therefore, any woman who could be
pregnant.' a nd has never had the
measles, should receive the
vaccination. fi she hH never had it
before:.

:lA I.PH J OIIF"

Beta Tax Challenge
Litigation Postponed
B7 BRUCE
The Beta Theta Pi (ratc:rnity is
bringing a Law suit against the Town
or Ha milton, claiming that their tax
l.~$Smcnt ls unfair. Litigation ...,...s
schedukd (or February but ha.s bttn
postponed until May.
While most such courts convene
monthly, the court presidingoverthe
ease meets only two or Ihm times
a nnuaUy...And so our novel ease will
have to wai1,"said Ralph Jones, Beta
alumnus and 1hc Legal Counsel for
Development.
Because fraternities and their
alumni associations do not have
local political contacts, there is no
check On the 1$$C$Smeni process,
Recogniiing widespread distrust of
the Hamiltonrealestateassc:ssmc:nls,
Beta has initiated the suit, which may
set a precedent.
'If suoocssful, other fra ternities will
probably file 1imilar suits, according:
to Auis1an1 Dean of Students, Joe
Caprio. Jones suggested that 1he
coun•s definition or asseumen1
facto rs coukl affect fraternities
throughout the state.
The Beta house is presently valued
for tax purposes at $78,000 by
the Town. Apprai.scrs for Beta will
propose SS0,000 as a more
appropriate figure and the villase is
expected to present a revised
appraisal of at leas1 $90,000 10
counter the challense.
The dispute hinges on the method
employed to determine the legal

KNECHT
value. ':'1\c: village claims that it can
use a combination of rtplaocment,
market, and capitalizing income
values. Beta claims that only the: one:
melhod that yields the highest va lue:
can be utilized.
Jones has developed positions 1hat
reduce1he impact of each or the
methods. He argues tha t since the:
Beta house coukl never be replaced,
replacement value can not be
accepted. The house could
necessarily be replaced with a
cheaper structure.
To usccomparablesalesasthcsole
determinant would also rtduce 1he
assenmcnt. The one frate rnily Jold
recently provides a comparison
betw«n the purehase price and 1he
assessed value:. The TKE house,
which was somehow appraised at
Sl20,000 several ye:ars ago, was sold
ror only S.S0.000.
The eapitaliz.ing income method
would a lso reduce the appraiul.
d.
accor ,na to Jones. The system
th
1
0
~n:'~~e ~::
::
derived from the house. Afler
incredibly costly renovations.
nc«ssary to compete with existing
dormitory facilities. it would be
impossible to make any significant
income, according to Jones.
If the court pcrmils the use or only
one method, it seems certain that
Beta and other Colgate fra1erni1ics
will have to devote Ins or their
resources to 1hc village or Hamilton.

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Nothing Ventured Nothing Gained
17 ROBIN FENSTEMAKER

the VcntUrc people seek specific jobs
for
those students whose
For th~ Colgate student.
~mployment
a ims arcn'.( met.
mpiling a resume is a pJinstaking
Once
the
application
is processed.
avor. M ost emplO)'tl'5 ask
~tudcnts
a
re
encouraged
to make
dents to support career objectives
initial
contacts
with
the
College
th prae1ical work experience.
Venture
workcri,
Student-employer
lgate's emphaslS on libtral ans.
d subscquen1 de-emphasis on connections ate only fina li1.cd aflei
uiring employable skills, mah:s an itllcrvtew 11 lhc company
s task difficult: however. the location. Employment opponunity
in the U.S extends from Main 10
Ucac Ven1urc program. now in its
ond year at-G'olgatc, provides the Atlanta, with an overseas program in
Europe. Asia a nd Lalin A merica.
t with.an option.
The followina jobs available to
ccording to Gertrude Weber
Colgate
students demonstrate the
siuant Director of Career

England Mcrchanl Bank as a
conYCrsion clerk.
Colgate senior Angel Alicea just
finished a six-month assignment as a
co--op in the T urbine Financial
Operation with General Electric in
Schcnec1ady, N . Y. "Most of us are
unsure o( where we arc going after
graduuion. Six months on a co-op
assignmenl provides the student with
a long hard look 11 one field of
in1ercst,'' says Alicea. Upon
graduation, General Elcc.ric has
offered Alicea a job.
.
Whether contact with a n employer

nning and Colptc's Ii.a.son to
nlure. ..The program exists to
blc 11udents to havt significa nt
r oriented experiences d uring
r tcrm(s) off-campus."
ortheastcr n University.
ovati~ in co-operative education
lhc last sixlya;$Cvcn~yars. headed a
ortium of sixtcer. liberal arts
~ to provide these off-campus
rt experiences. By pooling their
nclll resources, the sixteen
ools now off'cr "'needed f.cld work
rience to round out the
demic experience for the liberal
studcn1," a(:(Ording to Ray
Iiams, Assittasnt Dirtetor of the
legc Venture Program. List year
Ve('lture Program p laced
roximatcly 360 students from
c schools in either paid or
nt«r positions.
olgate's interest in Venture grev.
use like many universities the
t academic calendar enables
ents to be off-campus during a
Jar semester. Students apply to
turc through Spear House.
lications, resumes. and a
cnt of goals arc required.
udcnts identify preferential jobs
a "job bank"' booklet.
ployment is available in
tically all career fields. and often

variety of the program: Mary
Nohara worked for the National
Leaaue of Cities in Washington,
O. C., as an urban economics
researcher, Peter Marguliej worked
for the Atlantic Urban Corporation
at Georgia State Unhui.sty as a
newslcncr editor, and Marie
Sterheim worked at the New

results in a job offer or not, the
experience of applying and
interviewing for a job is beneficial,
Comments Weber, "It (orcts the
student to stan identifyinJ what his
cuecr goals mi;ht be. Looking
through the "job bank"' and seeing
the kinds of jobs available ..out
there" is good stimulation for

students. The student is forced to
narrow down the choioe,. and the fact that students evaluate and
decline jobs is valuable in itself."
According to Williams. ac«pting
employment is '"proof tha1 you can
make it on you'rown in a total way.
You are completely self-sufficient,
and acquire e xperience in writina
resumes, taking real interviews, and
dealin1 directly with eompan~...
The College: Venture J'rogram
Abroad it especially demandina- In
non-English speakina countrtCS.
CUTRUl>E WUER
fluency of the native languaJt is
required. In many cases students live
with a family, which provides chem usually acncrat~ by pa~1s who
wi1h a unique introduction to the worry a_!)out 1he prospect of their.
culture. Studtnts interested in c hildren in an unfamiliar city. Qui1e
Venture Abroad arc advised to often there's a culture shock due to
notify Spear House at lc-_s t 1hrtt the change in lifestyle and
months in advance, so working environment.
Williams anticipates more positive
papers and Vis.as e,an be had in a mple
reaction from Colga1e studenu: in the
time.
Colgate s.1udcn1s who participated future: "The firsl)'ear at Cotgaie was
in Venture Abroad include Paul slow, because the Vtnture contact
Kennedy, who was a Manag,cment was a science major. I have a liberal
Train« in Paris. and Carole Ka hrs a rts background. which is more
and Nancy Baldwin. who worked in attuned 10 thct1udcnts here." Asit is,
Frankfurt as Adminis1rat1ve • Colgate is more actively involved
than Cornell, Hobar •William Smith,
assist.ants.
Says Kennedy of the proaram. "It and Union, the 01her New York
gave me work experience 1ha1 wa.s schools affiliated with the program.
A further auct to the program is
impossible to fi n d for an
undergraduate student, a nd it a lso the influence practical work
gave me an opportunity to live in a experience has with araduate
foreign eoun1ry for an extended schools. especially those offering an
period o( time and have enough MBA. For example, at this point
money 10 subsi.st. It relieved my Harvard requires a minimum o( one
year work experience in the busint$S
doubts about the real world."
The program is anrae1ivc for world.
Williams concluded, •wc·d like to
employers bec.ausc it supplies them
..with entry level work done by sec more Colgate studen1s. Colgate is
motivated, bright students. Because a natural for the proaram because
it is an clccti\·e program. students they've c hanged the traditional
tend to be involved. Almost no summus-off calendar. Venture is a
cmploytrs do i1 for altruism. If that career sampling program. It's als-oan
wtre the case. then I haven't done educational service that gi1,u the
student a life~xpcricnce side to the
my job effccti\•ely," says Williams,
Problems with the program are academic-side: a total education:·

Bartlett Heads Search Committee
87 JIM P EYSER
. Thomas A. Bartlett, recently
n of the Regents Advisory
miuce on 1hc Commissioner·
said yesterday that in judging
·cants for the position o( Commner of Education for the State of
York he would look for a
· tc who would ••..ee.k to
rvc educational values and
frictio n with the State."'
rtlctt stated, ..no particular
sophy"would be required of the
· nts for the post soon 10 be
ted as a result of the recent
0\#trs-ial dismissal of CommisE'tlrald 8. Nyquist. Bartlett
played lhe issues- involved in
ismissal and stressed the impor•
of "'administrati\•e compe,,
, (amil'8rity with broad (undaal public issues in education,
capacity to deal effectively in
is in the broadest sense: the

politili!al arena," in the selection of a
new commissioner.
Bartlett conocdcd that his position
of removing the selection prooess
from the context o( the presenl
·eontroversy over Nyquist's dit•
missal,' and concentrating on administrati~ capabilities may be why the
Board of Regents chose him to head
up the committct-.
Bartlett refused to comment on the
circ*mstances of Nyquist's dismissa l.
ConOict between Nyquist and the
Board of Resents, the_Stale Lcgi5la1urc. and the State administration,
had b«n Prescnt for several years.
The Board of Re-gents was dis.satisfied with Nyquls1 because many of
them felt 1ha1 he had often wurped
the power of'lhe Board and altered
the Board's policy through his
liberal intcrprc1ations. The Board
had also become more cOMCrvativc
and politicized
throuah r«cnt
appointments to the point where one

Regent called the Board ..a little sub-- the issue o( Regents indepc-ndence
committee of the Lcgislatu.rc."
were the bl.sis fort he crisis which was
The State Legislature which is to come to a head in September o(
ra1hcr conservati\'e compared to the last )'Cir. At that time Commerce
liberal Nyquis1. also di.sliked the Comminioner John S. Dyson.
Commissioner. His $lances on inte- auacked Nyquist for running an
gr11ion and busing were- particularly inefncient bureaucracy and waste•
irritating to the Legislature as well as fu lly spending money. which he
the Regents,
called 1he leading cause of high 1ues
In the administration there was and 1hc erosion o( the State's
jealousy of the independence which business climate. Dyson called for a
the Regents and the Commiuiontr 10% cut in spending for education
enjoyed as opposed to 1hc rest of the and described Nyquist as a • king
state agencies. An.d for the past few presiding over the last kingdom in
years the adminisu11ion has
A~rica."' Meanwhile, Governor
auemptcd to limit that indcpen• Hugh Carey was expressing confidcnce.
dence in Dyson while rebuffing
Thus. the ideological schism and Nyqui.st on several occasion!.

JO, 1977.

N)•quist's dismissal was the fin.t
dismissal of a Comminioncr of

Continued on p.15

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The Regent's feared that continued feuding between Nyquist and
the State could cause the loss o(
independence of the Board. This plus
the existing tensions between the
Reg,cnts and Nyquist, ca'!SCd the
Board (which has the sole power to
dismiss the Commissioner of Educa•
tion) to act. On November ), 1976
the Regents voted 10 10 S to ask
Nyquis1 to re.sign. When Nyquist
refu1Cd the Board voted 8 to 7 to
dismiss him effecti\'e no late, than

, -

v-

-

p

N

THE COLCAR

MAROON

TVESDAY MARCH I

H~using Situation For Next Fall
Should Involve ''Fewer Problems''
campuses acr°" the country. faigcn
noted •
. ?<> you know where yo.u'II be Lasl week. freshmen and
living next fall'? If you re an intcres-tcd upperclusmen were given
up~rcllssman; you probably ha.vc the opponunity to tour East and
· an idea. If you re a freshman. you re West Stillman and the Cutten and
probably loo~i, ar~und.
Bryan complexes. They were also
IJ JVAN F LOR ES

1

~ chance 1n .pohcy, lhe: present

variety of housing on Cl!"pus, and
extra effort by the Housing Office
should be sians that fewe r problems
will be faced u the start of the 1971
fall term. A repeat of the 1976 fal1
term crisis, during whkh there wa.s
an insufficient number of rooms for

exposed to the spccial interest houses
which-arc corinectcd with University

housin ·

Bol•!~
"'

l·fouse. cited by one

uppcrcla$Smen at the beginning of
the term. should be avoided

Accordina to Ja~ioe Faigen.
AssisU1nt Dean of Studen1s, a change
in present policy elirninaaes the
requirement for transfer 11uden11 to
live in ullivenity housi~is lowen the nuinber of housing units
nec«Pry to aocomodate sophom*ores, j uniou and seniors.
Housjna for upperclassmen varies
from 1raditional dormitories such as
the Bryan and Cunen complexes to
special interest houses. such u Boh•
on House and French House, to the
Newell and Universily Court
R ALPH£ I VNCH E HOVSE
Apanments. ·
o«upant as "'an aliernati\'~ for
.After present residents of women." is acccp1ing new rHiden1s
uppercla.ss dormitories $elect their on the basis of a sp«ial lotter)'. All
rooms, the sdcction process by women who wished to li\'e in the
freshmen is throuah the freshmen ho'*SC were required 10 anend an
loltery. Rcccnt problems in placina information meeiing and 'Nere asked
uppeclas.smen in dormitories is to submit an applica1ion 10 assure
auributcd to the growing number or thatonly those really intented would
ttudents interested in living on be included in the selec1ion
campus, ac:cordin& to Faigen. This procedure. The louery was made up
ch.tinge in students' auitudes is of all women who submincd
evident on our campus and on other applications.

EstCJ. or Griffith House. is a living
unit for underaraduate women
where individuals do their own
cooking.
Maison Francais (French House)
ls hou.se:d by four1een students and a.
native French speaker, French isals.o
spoken by 1he s1uden1s in the house.
which is run in coopcra1ion with tht
Department of Romance Languages. According 10 Julie Fensctr, a
French House midcnt. the house
offers a ··ramily type situation that is
not just a place to live. but a homt,"
"In addition." she continued.
"'French House ofren the chance to
fh•rn about the French cuhUre
tu~tt:_.et special acli\'ities and
CU$10ms adoped in daily life. The
only drawback is the isolation from
the rest of the campus,"

.

Ralph Buncttt House. known
informally as Pea1.-c Houu. is
another special intere-st house. The
requirements for residence in Ralph
Bunche House include a
commitmen1 from the studtnts 10
make 1he Housc a center for sociaJ
concerns. Residents are n ot
necessarily Peace S1udies
concencrators but are students who
a rc in volved in campus or
community activities. As one
resident put it, '"the house is a cen1er
for a lot or activities arranged
through people in the house. Pea«
Studies facUl1yand 1he Peace Studies
Department. There's always
something differen1 going on."
Las1 w«k a louery wa.s held for
1he Newell and Burch apanmenl.s.
Thrtt hundred and eighty students

Poetry and short fiction
now being ac~epted for the

Spring· '77
Colgate ReviewSubmit material to
Box 1244
or A 64 before Apri I 7.

'

-

' J""'
r·:>E"CH
. , ., • J.•,
.; ....., 1':"
.:..

par1icipa1cd for 3 position 10 choose
from IS 10 20 units,
No predic1ions can be made for
another month as 10 the availability
or housing for upperclassmen. Not
un1il after preliminary surveys or
upperclassmen and after fraterni1y
rush will the how;ing crisis will be
faced next rail. But extra effort is
beini pul into assuring a living unit

Off-Campus Housing
''Crowded But Better''
By DON WILSON
The OH-Campus housing
situacion for the 197? fall $tfflCSter
wiJl be crowded, bllt better lhan last
year. according lo Randy Pickard,
director of the Off-Campus Housing
Bureau.
"Residence patterns have
changed; upper cla.ss dorms are
becoming more popular,.. said
Pickard, "and thus there are more
apanments from which to choose.
We are basically a sludent service. so
the more apartments available, the
belier...
The ()f'(~CampU$ Housing Bureau.
located in 1he Chapel basem*nt. was
formed last spring to serve as a
"clearinghouse" for student
qucs1ions relating to residency
ou1side 1he campus.
In add ition to acting as
"middleman" bct\llo'Cen studen1 and
landlord. the Bureau offers legal
advice 10 students in conjunction
with Hamilton lawyers .
..One or 1he bigges1 problems in
the Hamilton area i.s apartment
landlords who insiSI on oral
contraclS," said Pickard. "This can
lead to serious mi.sunderstandings.
Bill Caroll, another Bureau staff
member. has drawn up a de1ailed
kasc wh.Ch students may use.
Other problcm:S dealt with by the
Bureau include provision or written
receipts, return or damage deposits
and questions about breaking
contracts,
.. New York State
favor

Roger's Market
Complete Deli

landlords," Pickard said, "All
have to do is provide running w
no1 necessarily hot - electricity
heat. The landlord can break
contract at any time...
Those students who have
long leases will provide mosto

RANDY PICKARD
summtr listinp. accordin
Pickard. He doesn't expect
these to be taken.and explained
number of available apartme
the summer always exceed
demand."
Pickard reels 1ha1 the presen
Janioe Faigen, Assiscant
Students, will reduce 1he conf
and problems regarding ho
which occured last fall.

Edwa rd Van t ine Studios, Inc.
Nationally Known

l o cated at ·the Corner of Maple and Lebanon St s.

Subs, Salads, an.d Cold Cuts

for all t"ol,s.ite s1udents.
For lhose interes1ed in
Uni\'ersil)' housing. 1hc aherna
arc (ratern11ics. which ha\·e
compleced rush 1his week. and
campus residenC'eS w)1ich coul
found among other sources 1hr
the Off-Campus Housing Bu
which is located in 1he bascme
the chapel.
,

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Discount Prices on
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Catering Service Available
Bag & Block Ice

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Oomeatic and Imported

-

TlJISDAY, MARCH I, lffl

PAG£ fln££N

TH£99LCAR MAROON

Museums. in·Our ''Backyard''
ly DOUGLAS ERWI N
We walk by at least one or them
each day.ahhough rarely do we look
in and fuJl y explore whit they have
to offer. Museums. that is.

One wall hol,ba acological map of
New York State which can, ff one is
willing 10 pu1.1..Jc through the
iymbols. provide an insight into the
composition
the )tacc, and with

Colgate's .Socia I Rclati't>ns.

~omc knoJ lcdge of geology, into i1s

or

Geology and Biology Departments
each maintain museutn.$ or d ~lays
on their areas of study.
Lathrdp Hall contain.a the third-

history.
The museum also holds a d isplay
of gems a nd a seismograph, part of a
net of seismographs throughout New
noor Geology Museum, cont1ini11g -En3land opcl'ated by Columbia's
numerous mineral disp lays, ' Geology Laboratory.
organitcd in their various groups.
The h1Uw~y ou1side. !he museum
These displays also contauJ contains cabinets deta,hng some of
descriptions to aid in understanding the history of the Adirondack region.
the minerals. There i.s also a large
The room across the halJ contains
collection of Devonian a nd other a large wall map of the world
fossils, many of them collected detailing the outline of the plates
around the Hamilto n area.
which cover the earth's surface.

'

The Social Relations Depanmcnt
ha.s a museum on lhc second Ooor of
Alumni Han providing e xhibiu o n
the Indian c ulture of the arc.,.
The d isplays include a history of
the cultural history of upper New
York State. maps and charts on a
number of e xcivatcd Jndian sites in
the area and the Herbert Bigford
Iroquois coUections. ~re are
numerous exa.mpJcs of Iroquois
c ulture. and ihe cultures whic"h
preceded it.
O ne wall is devoted 10 examples of
the Choco culture. a group of
Indians in Columbia. There are also
cxampld of A1.ttc and Ma yan
u:ulpture.

Grants For Student Art Work
ly TASSEY R USSO
With books in hand and sound
intentions -of studying in ipind.
studen11 who enter the Case Liltt'ary
may not notice the room to the right
oL.t~e entrance. II is in this room,
however. tha t the Ooakroom
Gallery will be found .
T he C loa kroom Gallery is
operated by the Student Active Aru
organization of which A~n Paulsen.
an assistant professor in the Fine
Arts department, i$ advisor. The
S.A.A. tS an organizat,iort_for those
people who are interested in the
basics of r unnina a gallery or who
have an interest in the creative aru.
The two co~ irectors are Oury
Pape I'$ and Patty Flynn. Since there
is no organi.ttd structUre within the
S.A.A., Papel'I and Flynn divide
most of 1he a·d ministrative activities
between themselves. The Cloakroom
Gallery i_s the main concern of the
Student Active Arts. Created
roughly five years ago. Papen
con.siders lhc main purpose of the
gallery to be '-to promote and
encourage any a rtistic endeavor here
at Colgate not funded or supponed
through academic channels."'
One of the ma.in functions of the
Student Active Arts is to provide
grants to those student-s in need of
money who for financ.1al or academic
reasons cou ld not otherwise
complete a project of importance to
1hem. Student Activities gives the
S.A.A. a budget each semester to run
the gallery and to provide money for
the grants. Previously. grants were
given mainly to art majors. largely
d ue to the fact that they were the first
to hearofthem. But now,all.studen11

who wish to get involved with
something different in the creative
ans are encouraged 10 apply fo r a
grant. Also. grants can now be
applied to January projects and
other acadenii? couf5.CS: this has not
been done ill the past.
There are two basic requirements
which the s1udent must agree 10
before an applica1ion for a aran1 will
be con11clered. First, the project must
be able to be exhibited a nd mu.st be
available for a show in late May of all
grant work. Stcond, the applicants
must be willing to buy 11II RC'CC'$.$1ry
ma1erials themselves: they keep the
receipts and arc reimbursed by the
Student Active Ans at a later date. In
addition, a brief but cogen1 grant
proposal and an estimated, itemiz.ed
account or expenses must be
. presented. Papers also stated that
applicants .. muu s h ow the
,ignificance of the pro;«-t 10 their
overall development." Papers or
Flynn shoukf be contacted for any
informat ion concerni ng this
procedure.
Though the Cloakroom Gallery is
mainly used to display S1Udent work
there have a lso bttn other non·
student exhibilS. Last semester Alan
Paulsen exhibited his sculp1urc and
in 1he early fall a special traveling
show that had c1rtula1ed throughout
the East was al~o displa)·cd in 1he
gallery. Also, special projttts were
shown in the past. Twosuchdisplayt
were concerned wilh the O lc1·Bioand
Tht Maroon. These were ch osen for
their representation of the spirit and
cue~ of Colgate. Accordini to
Papers. --ne S tudent Ac1h•e Arts
can be a sounding board or vehicle

for these lypcs of things10 get s1a rted
but they must be suggested ...
Papers be lieves th at the
Cloakroom Gallery is verysuettssfol
both in students exhibiting their art
and in students coming in 10 look a t
the d isplays. Also. ii is an excellent
way for art majors to have a show.
The gallery•, limit11ion s are
rccogni~ed. though. There is not as
of yet any scuing or carpe1ing.
However. the Cloakroom Gallery
contains prores.sional lighting a nd is
situated in a superb location.
The hours of lhe Cloakroom
Gallery · are Su nday through
Thursday evenin,s. 7:JOto 10:30 P~
and Sund-ay 1hrough Friday
a fternoons 2:30 to S:JO PM. Wood
a nd Plexiglass backgammon boards
made by student Doug Weiser are
currcntl bein exhibited .

11tt'Colgatt Maroon would likt t
rtdlet that spring will l>t arrfrin
arlltr than uputtd this ,i'tar.
Ctrtafn factors. such as tht lt\'tl o
Tal'lor Lokt, tht noiu lub on Mondaynightsa.ndthtmajo
dmlnlJ1ra1frt tur.novq la.st fall
a,·t ltd us 10 this h·arlri condwion
But don·, i"OUnt your ducks befor
hty svdm .

...••••M,._.,_.'
The Biology Department has
se\-eral displa)'S in O lin Hall.
including the different families of
birds throughout the world and four

.

examples of Ja nuary Projecu which
have been completed on trips to
Jamaica. There is also a display o,f
the various types of coral.

- ---------Regent Spot Open
I

-·----··- pp---·
- . ----

Continued from p.10

--

ind procedures ofchedismiual ,..,.

Education in the his1ory ofthe State. unfair... But. he declined to go into
It etiuscd grc'at turmoil a nd even detail in his opinion of the specific
evoked .strona emotions among the issues involved.
·
Regents and may yet rc:sult in a
The five person committee wb.ich
rather massi\'C turnover of person- Bardett chairs will submi1 a short list
nel in 1he agency.
of names to the Regenu from which
The d ismissal brought on much they will choose the next Commi$.
criticism of the RegenlS, Many sioner of Education. At this point the
claimed that the dismissal of Nyquist Committee is invitina applications
would seriously reduce the Board's and nominations for the job. This
ability to revtrse or hold back the coming Thursday they will hold the
State"s attempt to subvert the first of three or four au day sessions
Regc:nt's powu a nd independence. to go over applications. As of now
and would striously undermine the Bartlett could glvt no nam$S of the
cause of education in New York k adina contenders for the poll~
State.
saying it was too early to teU.
Thomas N. Bonner, President of
The State Commissioner of £du.
Union College. charged that the cation is the Chief Exccuti\'e of the
dismissal was a r«uh of '"cheap Board of Regents, has jurisdiction
politics and \-engeful personalittC:5... over all educatonal institutions in the
which has left an ..irremovable stain . State. plus licensing, regulatory. and
o n education in this S1a1e."' Bartlett disciplinary powers over all profcommented that this was an ..o..,er· essions, except law. He also has the
s1atement".
power to make quui,judic'8f rulings
Bartleu did say he Mt the :-
MONTAGE
presents

,-

The
Conversation
Piece
Friday March 4

7 & 9 PM OLIN HALL
·
,
s
s
i
On
.
$
l
.
0
0
Ad m

Thediff0oo,mmonpl.ace lifestyle and the e,rtrM)l'(flnary. It's also the difference betweffl VOlcus-toma,v &in/vodb and Bole.ma from Holland.
~ yPs thevwill all get ','OU v.+,ereyou' re going-but howl If you' re conctfned
;.;,h thar diff«encc. """ lifestyle ,eq,,i,~ 8okm, from Holland.

130KMA U.S.A. Inc. Pfinc('lOO. N,I,

~==
- =======::======:--::===-:::-::==ir-"'""""""--~~--~=-~
··;:;·.:·: -•::::·il"~~:::-==·==·=·.,..,~-::.1,-,------ - ..-,,.,,,o,l'lfflfNetflffll
--..--...-· -----

l
.__

Sp.ri.-1"'1" ~t-Otr,tillM@..80:R'MoL. ·-

,

h:•tr . . .n • Ntw Deal

'

C~rrent Picker Exhibition
Offers Visitors Good ''Deal'' ·
TALK Of THE TOWN

Vlrp,11 Soedoktr
May 17, 1941

New Policy
Seeks Cut Costs
Continued from p. 7
advantage ofthe:'ofT-campus groups..
If those students on groups remained
on campus. Ihe Univeni1y would not

be paying out the: additional
amounts needed to cover the costs or
the a,oups. However, the guideHnes
stale that ..Each ttudy s;roup should
'PAY FOR ITSELF"' and d;rare uraed to keep costs down.

a llow for hidden expenses that did
n:>1 go on his group budget. such as
his salary or his ac1ing as Dean of
S1uden1s and Director Studies for
those in hi.sgroup. On the question of
whether lhe s.1uden1J re<:c:i\ltd 1hc:ir
money·~ worth from the group,
Smith pointed out, as Freedman did,
that one had 10 compare it with

or

Contrary to 1Populr belief. great
Works of art do not appear only on
postage stamps. They are also fou nd
on post office walls, and for that
milter o n hMpital, cour,h9uJC,
prison, school and library walls also.
Proof ofthis statement may be found
in the presentexhibil in the Dana Art
Centc-r's Picker Gallery, which it
entitled ,.New Deal for Art ...
The exhibition, sponSOrcd by the
GaMery Association of New York
State (GA.NY$), includes more than
165 wor·k"s of art reprcsentin.& the
program of govirnrrtent patronage
for. artiHs and public,rt that was
part of the New Deal of the J930's.

The Government Arts Projects of
thi.s period were not merely a way of
employing artisu: they embraced a.n

Mic.a ol art and artu:ts as an integral
part of society and as pan of the
public environment . Literally
thousand$ or artists were employed
to make large scale murals and
sculpture for public institutions.
Artists · represented in this
historical survty include Jack.son
Pollock. Stuart Davis, Mabel
Dwight, Walker Evans. Arshile
Gorky, Edward Laning, Mina
Lowry. James Penney, Ben Shahn
and many others. Tne works include
easel paintin,s, murals, sculpture,
poster and graphic work,
photographs, objccu from the
Indian Arts and Crafts Project, and
ilh.15trations from the lndex or
American Design,

Perhaps the most interestina part
of t,he exhibit i.s a revolving slide

show which displays these: works of
art in their natura l habitats across
New York' State. Included arc
multitudes of pllotographs of murals
and rclid5 ,,at areeasilyovc-rlooked,
because of their fami liarity.
·New De.al for Art," which
cqntinuc-.s in the gallery through
March 20, is made pos,ible by a
grant from the Nat.ional Endowment
for the Humanities, aDd was
organized by John Jay College for
Criminal Justice, City of New York
and GANYS, whose programs are
supported by the New York S1a1e
Council on the Arts. the National
Endowment for the Ans, members
and friends. Gallery hours arc
Monday through Friday. 10,S and
Saturday and Sunday, l·S.

gelling one's money worth when one
Professor R.V. Smith, director of is on-campu.s. He added that the ·
this summer's study group to cxperience.s of bdng abroad, of
Oxford, Warwick, and Sterling seeing a different country and way of
explained what the study group life. and of studying certain subjms
auidelincs meant for his particular with reference to material, people
group. The budJCl for his forty-ei&,ht a nd places unique to Britain a ll
member group is approximately placed a n additional value to the
S30,000. This of course does not program. One has less to choose
include student transportation cosu fro m due to the necessarily limited
. and 1hcir room and board. Smith is program, according to Smith, but a
colleeiins $800 for room and board student can gain an invaluable
for each student, more 1han it ~uld cxptrience in 01her ways.
cost 10 be at Colgate this summer.
This higher price is due in part to
This is 1he 1111 time that Smith will
special meal arrangthat British universities are now unless another professor was
charging tourist prices to foreign interested in taking the group that it
study aroup.s. and also to the slightly would be discontinued, :..at leaSt
longer length of the term (June 20 - temporarily. Smith a lso said 1ha1 he
Sep\, 10).
thought the University would be
more amenable to financing the
When asked how much or each group if 1he co.n s and number or
ttudent's Colgate tuition he would be students were cut. This is perhaps a
spending, Smith estimated S&SO 01 direct consequence or t:,..: univusity's
more and explained that this did no1 new policy.

WOODWORKING BATIK TIE DIE SPINNING

MEMORY BANK
(:raft - Book
Sale

a

Tht mtmbers of the Madison Quartrl, Col1,a1t's vrry 0~11 rffidtnte chambtr music group, art known to ih·t
thtir all to their ln,truments. lndividuaJ mastrry and musical compatibilitycombineto crcatta ptrformance that i,
tonally and tcehnkallycaptivatinc, ftut don't taler thtst word~ at ratt valut,stt It for yourstlf. This Sunday, March
6, at 3:30 pm In tht Brthmrr Thratrr.

VI

~

-

2:

March 3rd - .I 0th

20% Off
All -Craft Books

"'
0
C)
,...
),,
VI
VI

>

:,0

rrExjc~

Many variations bf green plants large
and small both in pots and hanging
baskets, cut flowers and blooming plants
Also Wire Service

Brigg's Floral Shop

MACRAME SCREENPRINTING NEEDLEPOINT .____R_ive_r_R_
oa_d_
, _Ha_m_1_1t_on_Ph_on_e_a2_4,~09-10_ _...,.

YOUNG'S SIRVICI
STATION
31 utteA snm ·

,2..,.,0

HAMILTON.N,1', 13.Mt

<@ '

S V

ndividuals Served
-"B y Chapel House

'

..

td from r,ax, on,)

• walls of yellow German cathedral
glass. The archit«t plani,cd the
J hapd is dnig:ned primarily' stone floor to have no pancm, so

'

'

Vidual use. although groups

that it would not distract a person

the Colgate Jewish Union.

meditating.

and Christian Scientisu
~Uy hokl services thtrt. The

Colgate

When Chapel House was buill,

h

• that this don not detract

t univc~Jity of the Chapel.
ltd tha t we distort when
or superficial commonali·
udying uch other. He
.d , ..Ou, real task is to take
r.cr as we are." T hose that
c disconcerted by the t ,ross.
, l'!_'IIY draw a curtain over
,ss and substitute other
{ symbols. if desired.

@
t

ont of lhc Chapel is made of

t mOS1ic tiles which reflect
t coinin.a through the side

'

'

was

still

an

all-male

institution. The donor wish(d to
provide a placie ..where a young man
c-0ukl cry his hean out. and hold his
chin up." The arc.hitect in1erpr-t1ed
this wish by including tow curtained •
m~it11ion stalls in the rear or the
Chapel. equipped wi1h prayer
benches, Yoga cushions. and a chair.
The library or Chapel House.
which is in a comfortable room•
stocked with chairs and a large
fireplace, contains approximately
3,000 volumes of religious work,.
The largest coUectioM include the
sured wri1ing1 and commentar.CS of
the Chrisiian, Buddhist, Islamic and
Jewi~h traditions. but the Confucian,
Taoist. Shino. and Sikhs tradicions

fmanent religious symbol in
pel is a llrge crou, pla<:-..-d
ccause the foundcn were
an. Carter explained,

' I '

N

'

CH APEL HOUSE LIBRARY

'

;

..-11....., -.. are also represented. The library is
open from 7:30 AM 10 11 PM fo r
anyone Wishing to read these books.
A large selection or religious music is
available in 1hc mwic room. The
records range from Hindu chants. to v
cxpedmcntal compositions to works
by J.S. Bach.
An impressive collection or
religiou s art heightens the
contemplative atmosphere or Chapel
House . Original works by
Rembrandt, Marc Chagal. Goerges
Roualt a nd Tanyu Kano adorn 1he
walls. The libraly contains two
major pittes - a wooden crucifix b)'
Ivan Mcstrovic and a bronze basrelief by Eiben Wdnbtrg. The
Weinberg work, ihc only piece
commissioned expressly for Chapel
House. dcpic1s the major statement
or the Jewish tradition. Mosts
receiving the Ten Commandments
on Mount Sinai.
Some of the artwork was donated
a nd some wu bought. Two monks
who stayed in Chapel House for a
month in I97S donated an inscribed
s1a1ue or 1he Oatai Lama thai no\,I,•

sits in the library. Retired Professor
Phitosophy and Religion KcnM'lh
M organ was insuumental in
acquiring a great deal of 1hc an that
was bought.

Concerning the use or Chapel
House, Carter made the distinction
between ..visitors" and "guests,"
Visitors stop a t Chapel House and
re.ad. browse. or listen to records.
Guests stay overnight, and sleep.
stroll, or use the facilities at their own
pa«. There arcsc\•en guest rooms on
lhe lower Ooor as well as dining
facilities. G uests are encouraged 10
stay at least 43 hours so that they
ha\.·e a chance to slow down and
de\telop their own routines. A guest
can expect silence and solitude in his
room: conversation and interaction
arc generally limited to meal times.
In fact. Carter said, "Meals are the
only reminder of time we have: here."
Use or Chapel Housc dtpends
heavily on individual motivation.
"There isn't any structure hert,"'
explained Carter . ..T he structure is in
the guc51," The Rcsiden1 Supcrvitor
Marie Koch lh·cs in the house and

acts as hostess, preparing '""ts and
fixing the rooms. $he is available to
answer q uestions, but Carter
stre»ed, "No one on the staff asks
anyone why they come. People come
here to find their own answers."' Not
c:veryone who comes to Chapel
House has a major problem though,
Carter stl'tSSCS, those who come feel
a pp in their li\'CS,
The anonymous donor never PW
Chapel House, but died before it was
built. Yet Caner knows it fulfills i1s
purpose. As he explained, the donor
once said, .. If ont person uses it in the
way it was intended, it is
worthwhile." He reflec1ed,
.. Whoc\·er 1ha1 charming pcnon was,
she can rest at case...
PHOTO STAFF-Ed P•rnn, Do.,.
T r1pntll. ktthyLtppic, Marly
Wydm•n, Jtnt Cttts, Uz Nay, Jo
.Palom•k!, Jim Snydtt, Douala
nrin, Ocbbit Sprlnl,b0rn, L
akov, Ltnc::e Brigp. John Snydtr

R.A. Selection Process Rigorous
Sy SUSAN CALHOUN
selection process for resident
rs continues this "'CC):. with SJ
1 ori~inal 80 applicants still
constdercd for as many as 16
igs.
~pplica~ts will _attend gro~p
)ion session~ this weekend 1n
•rt to determine how the)' react
ntcract. T he same type _of
ts were held las! w«kend_. with
• or _sc\·en or eight app!1can1s
8 with 1woorthree(acd1ta1~rs
~~ part of the stlect1on
1.uee <.members. of th~ Dean's
1dcncc s_1af0 Fndayn1g~1. The
lay ses.s,o~ arc compnsc~ or
1sus exercises. role playing.
nc, pnd wrap-up. Afte:rwards,
1pplic:a11ts and faci litators are
1ragcd to co mmc::nt on
:.Ives an~ o n othe~ applicants.
~n 11pply1ng for residence staff,
ts sta~e a prefcren_ce for a type
ng unit (co-ed. maxed classes.
ten. or upperclass) and if hired
Ire ask~ wilh whom they
mos1 like 10 work. Allen
ab. assis1ant Dean for
:n1ial Life. makes the fi nal
men1s. which 1hc- ncwlyued advisors mus-1 accept.
age r-equircmcn1s restrict the
:r of students cli ible for

-}firi~ch~
]uality Clothing
1r

Men, Women,

and Students"

I

Leba non St. Hamilton

iouth Brood st,, Norwldl

.,
pos1t1ons. Rather. Schwab and the prercqu1s1tc is that the applicant
selcciton committee look for must h;t\'C alrcad)' been hired as an
applic::ants with a ..willingnc.ss 101ake R.A. He or she will ha\'C an
risks." who arc ..open to change and advantage. howc\'er. if pariic ularly
grO\lr1h." "'There are no preconceived competent in business. leadership,
sci or things to look for. What works and coordianting. as the du1itsof the
for one person may not work for Head Rcsiden1 extend 10 overseeing
another." he said. The onlyconcrc::tc check-in and chccl:..out. rnking
stipulations arc that the student.s be occupanc)' suryc::)'S and dis1ribu1ing
e nrolled a1 Colga te during their. time dama.1te bills.
or employment a nd be making
The rc-sponsibilities or the rcsiden1
normal academic progress,
advisor staff h:n~ been nca1ly
Schwab encourage.s students co divided into six catcgories:-'ldvising,
apply by recruit ing
through programming. polic)' cnforcemen1.
advertising. leucrs and even personal adminisuation. communication. and
calls. This year. k11ers were sent 10 miscellaneous. More .specifically.
all 700 rooms in uni\·enil)' housing these duties en1ail consulting wi1h
and to all fratc::rni1ics and staff studcn1$ about regisua1ion and
members. In the pas1. s1udc-nts and ,. rooma1c problems. helping 10 plan
faculty members have al so evcn1s. working with 1heproc1orand
suggested names or persons whom maintaining good siudy conditions.
they reel would be a valuable 1~ handlin, C'hc::ck-in , nd room changes.
addition 10 the residence staff. These a ttending staff meetings and posting
people receive a personal phone call notices. and dc,aling with parents.
rrom Schwab encouraging them 10
apply because "1hcrc arc lots or
But the Office or Rcsiden1ial Life
people on campus wh1> could do 1he expects a rt-Sident a dvisor 10 cany
job quite well, bu1 to whom it migh1 his or her role btyond thHt duties.
ne\'er occur to apply."
The aoolicatio n stales that
"'"1upportive· is 1hc concept, which
Those wishing to be a Head bes:t exemplifies the hoped-for role of
Resident Advisor which involves our Residence Staff." Among tht
coordinating a$ many as six R.A.'s, co?1poncn1s of " s upp orlive"
must a I se aratcl . The onl

about and bcinjl open to 1he needs of measured by 1he hour. with SIOOO
1he men and wo men )'OU live with," bring the projc:c-1c::d )'tarl)' $a lary for
a nd ..dcmonsmu ing a thoughtful. an R.A. and Sl.2SO-SI.JSO being
balancc-d altitude which encourage.s approximated for Head Resident
Advisor. Salaries a lso vary
according 10 )'ears of experience,
Ever)' two wec::ks. the staff membc
mu.st sign a voucher suuing ho
many hours ht or she has worked
during that period. The Residen1iaJ
Life orficc suppli¢:s c-ach member
wilh a detailed dcscrip1ion or what
constitu1cs '"work... For those
activities which do no1 qualif)'. such
as tutoring, sex ·a1i1.ina. or playing
fo r a rc-.sidcnce hall athletic team,
the advisor will not receive
compc:ns.ation
Thus far, nine members of this
year's Residence S1aff have b«n
offered rhppointmentsforncx1 ytar.
Ir all nine accc:pt, as many as 16
posi1ions may still be open. Those
applicanis accepted by the selection
!AL LAN SCHWAB
c ommiuec will be notified by March
fairness, independence, and freedom 7, following the final round of
from stcreo1ypcd rcspon$C$ to either interviews in 1he selection processes
people or c ircum.stanoes," according this wcc:kend.
to the application.
On 1hc a\·erage. 111Jf members
spend approximatley 13 hours a

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Used Furniture, Clothes, and
Hardware Items

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Have any u,ed furniture?
Benco will sell it for you on consignment

FINE FOOD AND BEVERAGES
Open 7 :30 A .M, to 11 :30 P.M.

MIii St, Eaton, N,Y,
Tues, • Fri. 8:00 em · 5:00 pm
Sat. & Sun 1:00 pm • 6:00 pm

Atone
684:u38

Closed Mondays 82 4-1840

-----------------------..1

'-----==-===----==-"-.-::.-,_...;.=,....- ======-:-=.--L -'·-""'-....

THE COLGATE MAROON

TUESl)AY, M ARCH I, I

'

Red Raiders Trim Skidmore
.
(romlnutd from J)Qlt 1w,n1y)
her three ..A..ocs. Andrews. Allison.
and Totie Armstron,i;. who
responded by taking 12, 10, and six
respecli\'e points. Colgate won that
hand 30-9, which included a 16
straight"'point deluge. in the first IS
minutes or 1he lauer hair:- Hanwic-k
star Deb King took the 111$1 two
poin1s. but the Raiders pockel«I the-win.
- Allison produced her highest point
10111 of the sta.son. hitting II Ooor

sho1s and rive charity shots for 2.7
points. Andrews also had a cartel•
hiah or 2S points . Marantis
coritrlbuted nine.
·
Harlwick's Kin3 finished with 2$
points, although she didn"t get
started un1il the second half in whic.h
she connected for 18. Several of her
teammat« foukd ou1: four of 1hcm
had three fouls by hal(time.
The Raiders droppt!'(t a tough one
10 state power Oneonta la.st Thurs·
day. 69.S,, despite a hard-fought

second hair comeback a111cmp1.
Colgate took a 4·2 lead
Oneonta strung tottether 13 poi
Th.111 edge ad\'an«d 10 a 2S...X I
with Se\~n minutes left in the
Fighting back in the s«ond
Colga1e fell jusl shor1 of the h
team's prOduction, .10-JI .
Pai Car,ol gave the game•win
18 points, She, together wi1h t
foot•plus OiscosiJtef$, ma.de Q
13 one of the top teams in 1he 5
with a 16--1 record.

finishing the season with a S-4
record, the team will split up into two
groups this weekend, one on its way
10 1he Easterns at Army and 1he
other 10 S1. La.wren« for the Upper
New Yort Stale Championships, Bill
Morosky will be pooling his effons

for a possible qualifica1ion for
Nationals whil,e Rick Taylor wi
swinaming towards two new rte
in the breastroke at the Eas1erns.
UNYSSA Champion.ship congr
tion will be gunning for a first p
crnwn.

- Swimmers Edge Big Red
By 1108 DAWSON
La.st season. Cornell's swimmers
ou1las1cd Co1Ja1e. 62~S I. in a rMet
which was decided b)' the final relay.
John Skudin or Cornell was
instrumental in lhat victory but not
so this year. Colgate hekl off Skudin
in two o( hi.s three events 1oc<1pturea
S9-S4 \'ictory. Nol only was the
victory the fint over 1he Big Red. in
Coach Bob Benson's career but a l.so
one of the few meet,1 tha1 Benson's
squads ha,•e won with the last relay.
.. The relays were a key raetor in the
victory and $Cl up the win." Benson
commcn1ed.
For 1he six seniors ending their
colleaiJte careers it was • great way
to fini$h. Jim Keogh, who did not
swim at Colgate last year but rather
in Puer10 Rico in an a11empt to ma ke
iu O lympic team. improved ste.adily
as ,~ gason progressed and 100k
.,
two thirds: one in the 200 individual
By TED SOBEL
Next week are the IC4A medley and the other in the SOO free.
Steve Korbel!, who has swam rairty
The track te.am finished iu dual championships at Princeton. Only consistently in the SO (rte, won 1ha1
1wo Colgate track men ha,·e qualified
mert ,eason with an 8-9record
lhis winter. freshman Rick Swanson e,•cnt in 21.9, took third in the 100
Traveling to St. Lawrence Saturday
and sophom*ore Ke\'in Magee. Both rn:e and led orr the victorious 400
to face slx other schools. the Red are: $printers who qualified with rrte relay.
Raiders beat Binghamton. times of 6.4 in 1he 60 yard dash. The
Paul Craig has had an exceptional
Brockpon, and Oswego, while losing rut of 1~ team will go to Cortland season and shO\lr'Cd his \'ersatility in
to Syracuse, S1. Lawrence, and che for an invitational wi1h 2S schools leading off 1he 400 medley relay and
University of Rochester. Allhough a nd the following w-eck the team goes swimming to a 22.l and a 49.2 in the
Coach Jan Hunsinger wu to Union College 10 compete in the SO and 100 free c,·ents respectively.
disappointed about losing 10 St. Union ln\'itational,
Co-captain Da"e Pitier split a fast
·
Lawrence and Rocht$ter. he was
52.6 off 1he 400 medley relay and
pleased wit.h certain individual season. Abo laking s«onds for swam the 200 fly, an event which he
pcrlormanoes.
Colgate were Mark Angelino in the impro,•ed upon dutina the season.
Bill Fisher, Colgate's distance ace. long jump (20'11'1, and J im "Sheriff
BiU Barrett made an incredible
placed second in the IW().milc with a Bud .. Collins in the JS lb. weight eome back this season after taking a
personal best of 9:12 and he is throw(44'1'").
)'ear off. Barrett swam 10 two
gearing himself for the state
The two mile relay (4x880) personal bests with a I:48.4in the 200
association meet three weeks from recorded its best 1ime of 1hc season free and a 2:00. n in the 200 fly.
now. am Canepa cook two second (8:02.3) whik placing third. Mike Above all the seniors on the tea.m this
places in the 60yard high hurdles(7.7 Runda led 1hc way with a l:S9.S.split. year, Bill Morosky has stood out
sec.) and in the triple jump(45'6-"). In followed by Dave Ragsdale, Stevie continually. Morosl:y swam to a
both events, Canepa recorded Redmon. and Tim Owen. Runda double win \'crsus Comell in ta king
personal bests butcouJdn't bc:uu Art a lso had 1he bes1 split on the Mile the 200 indi\'idual medley in l:S8.7
Monk of Syracuse. who ha$J:>«n his Relay team, runnn.g S2.9, despite it a nd 1he 200 ny in l:S?.42 for a new
nemesis throughout the winter being his 1hird race of the day.
pool record .

Track Finishes 8-9

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pass from MacKcn1.ie, 1he
whetling pl.a.y continued a nd Pe
Tom Whitehead made the score
10 see the SaintS 1ie i1 up aDd win lhe Rheauh closed out the scoring in
conte,1 in the last four s«:onds. first period on assists from
When Popiel scored his J«Ond goal bro1hers De<:ock.
Finke replaced his goalie with
of the game and brouaht 1he score 10
4--J, knowledscable Colgate fans Jackson. who engineered
were apprehensive. But that was all Quakers recent win over the Ha
the Raiders need«! to remind them Crim.son. But Jackson found
or the St. Lawrence comeback. Colga1e attack too dominatin
Colgate handily outshot the Larries handle. Freshman Siar Mike Ro
in the period and held o n toclineh its beat Jackson early in the period
nin1h league win .
the third goal of his abbrevi
Pcnnsyl\'ania, last Wednesda.y, season. Assists went 10 Davis
proved 10 be the perf«t medicine 10 Ste,•c McGrath. Colgate took a
break the Raiders oul of a lead into the lockerroom
devastating slump. The Quakers McGrath scored at 18:2.S with
looked horrib!y incompetent and the from Davis and Rowley.
Raiders looked eagt-r to take
Colgate goalie Kevin Barry
advantage. It was the only game of tight in the third period to allow
the season in which the opponents one additional Quaker goal. Ki
aUow-ed Colgate forwards to park in kept the margin a t four with
front or the net. The lack of Colgate seventecn1h homerofthes.c:ason
goal production during the slump as.si.sts 10 MacKentie and Oa\'is
was dearly due to inability to control
With three mort Division
1he slot, either on offense or defense. wins than last season. 1he Rai
Barry Kibsey opened the scoring ha\'c only two remainina cont
on an assist from MacKenzie. The Though you may have thought
line of Kibsey, Cyr, and MacKenzie Clarks.on left town the Rai
totalled eight points in the game. wouldn't play any more number
Penntylvania coach Bob Finke teams in the nalional, you
started hi.s second string goalie, wrong. New Hampshire has repl
Freshman Jim Nista, but it bac.kfired the Golden Knights a.s the top 1
horribly . The netmindcr wu in the East and the Red Raiders
bombarded with sc,~ntecn shots. hos1 the powerful Wildcats
MacKenzie added the second goal on Wednesday. The final game of
a pauern from Gibson and Kibsey in year is also a1 home and
the powerplay situation. After Penn opposition is R,P. 1., a team Col
scored, Cyr came right back (nine beat 10. 7 in Troy. Gametime is
seconds later) to score on an assisting on Saturday.

(mnlinutd /rum pt1/lt lk"tnl,r)

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T\IUOAY, MAaCH I, lffl

THE COi.ColTE MAIOON

PAGE NINETEEN

CO'LGATE'S FANTASTIC FOUR (fow left lo rlpl): Anne Rldlardloa, llffly Wds!Nqll, ltecky Wtbl> UNI 0 - - C -.

'

Relay Sweep Highlights Colgate's Performance
(rontinwd from p11~ l'f4'ffll)')
In the ,oo yard r...,tyle, held
lburtday, Betsy Wellbu,ah took
seventh place, Kim Peterson took
niDlh, and AnncRkhardsonfinilhed
tenth. in three meter divin,.
defending champion Gail MajdaJany
placed ,econd for the Red Raiders
and Anne Duke placed eleventh. At
the ffld of the ,first day of
competition, Colgate trailed
ManhananviUe 42·29.
On Friday, individual 1ction
began with Betsy Weisburgh
finishing· third in the 200 yard
freestyle, setting a new varsity record
with a time or 2:00.8. Kim Peterson
finished in tenth place. Sandy

Stev.'lrt placed c.iahth in the 50 yard ville for a fi n al sco r e of
backstroke, Becty Webb finished Manhattanvine 327, Colptc 319
si:dh in the SO yard freestyle, and (Syracuse University, who Colpte
Anne Richardson 1et a new varsity 5oundly beat in regular season·
record IS she took third place in the competition, fini5hcd in 3rd place
SO yard bunetfly, with a timeof28.4. with a final score of 213).
With Colpte's IIt place finishes in
Jn addition tofint place: fini.$hcs in
the 400 yard relayt and SO yard two relays, 100 breaststroke and one
breasmroke. the second day of meter diving Kim Petcnon qualified
competition ended with the score for Eas1erns in the 100yard bu.tterfly,
Manhauanville 196, Colpte 160.
pJl('jng seventh with a tie of 1:03.1.
She alS<> placed eleventh in the 200
On Saturday, the last day of the ).. yard individual medley behind Beuy
day marathon meet, Colgate ma de a Weisburgh's third place finish and
strona last-half finish as they new varsity record with a time o(
consistently have done a ll season~ 2: 18.6.
In the 100 yard freestyle, Anne
Unfortunately, Colgate finished 9
Richardson
tied her pool and varsi1y
points behind PO\\'t'rful Manhattan

record, placing second with a timco(

2: 18.6.
In the 100 yard freestyle, Anne
Richardson tied her pool and vanity
record. placing s«'Ond with a lime of
56.1. Beck)' Webb finished fifth,
Betsy Weisburgh's vanity record·
breaking second place finish in the
100 yard backstroke rounded out
Colp1c finalist finishes.
The mos1 notable upec:t of
Colptc's performance is th.It. with
very fc...,. exceptions. e\·ery swimme r
did her personal bc11 times.. The
imprO\'e mcnt on last year's se\•enth
p lace finish in the State
Championships can be c redited to

the entire team. accordln, to Coach
Solcnbcraicr, '"I am the proudest
person waltina around on the
Colgate campus bcclutecach pc:non
did her own personal best time of her
Life. What more ca.n a coach ask (ot'?
That's the epitome of a coach",
effort."
With the Eastern Championships
coming up this weekend. and
Nationals two week.a after that,
Coi,ate swimmers and diven still
have a long road ahead oh hem. But,
the much-noted closeness a nd spirit
of the enWC team, along with
dedicated work, should stand this
am.uing tc.am in \'Cry good stead.

Ice Fans' Antics
Spur Controversy
n,,

By PHILIP PORTERA
following i1 1ht " ·' ' a/ a

, ommtmary 11101 I madt on m,1•
Sa1urday oft,rnoon spor1s rtpor1/or

,,,,
Perkins Sees Final Wrestling Goal
As Trip To Nationals In Oklahoma
enroll at Colgate, but his board·
scores
were not up to par. After two
. Colgate., U n iv,cuity's sen ior
weeks
at
Rutgers. Perkins decided to
wrcstk:r Scott Perkins (Saratoga,
Jc.ave
the
New Jersey school. He
N. Y.) has only one unaccomplilshed
worked
hard
to improve his scores
goal. The co.captain wants a berth
and
after
a
year
of work, pined
on ch c N.C. A.A. wrestling
acceptance
to
Colpte.
But N.C.A.A.
championships in Oklahoma on
rules
made
him
indligibk:
for
Ma,-,h 17-19.
intercollc,iatc com.petition durin&
hi5 freshman year. Nevertheless, he
Perkins has achieved almost practiced with the Cot,ate squad
everythin;s else in eastern wrestling everyday and beclute 0 ( his
competition. This season in dual dedication was elected a co<.ap&ain.
meet adion. Perkins notched a
Despite losing a ycaro(dligibility.
pc:~ect IS-0 record and in over-all Perkins broke the Col&ate record for
action he won 32 of 33 matches. The most ca.rccr du.al meet victories with
only los, came February ~ in _lhe 45. His final coUe,edual meet record
New York Stat~ cham_p,~n,h1ps. - &1 45,.2-1. The three year coSeeded firs.t. Perk.u,.t fell vidtm toan also holds University records for the
overtime match in the _1emi.fin.als. most takcdowns(4S). m0.tt dual meet
Coach Curt Blake expll1ned...Scott wins in a season (18) and most near
wrestled well, but it wu obvi~us falls (14 tied with im Rich). All
from the start thal the oven.1.me those records were established by
match in the semi:finals tired him."' Perk ins in hi• sophom*ore year. This
The eventual winner _wa.s Steve season, he brok.e his sophom*ore
Clvaycro, (~om SUNY 81ngha~ton, record for most tea m points scored
whom Perkins had beaten two tames with a n outstanding 65.
thll tcason.
Perkins. who wrestles at 142, a lso
Last_year~ Perk!ns won !he State reiancd supreme in five open
~hampionsh1p, whtch Sot h1!1' a sl!'°t toumamcnts thi.s year. He repeated
in the eastern tournament. an which
as c.hampion in Colgate's Open and
he fin ished fift h. The venture for the -the North Country Tournament and
na1ionals continues next weekend in he added the crowns from the
Syracuse's Manl~y Fieldhouse.at the MiUcnvillc Open, the Mid•Southem
eutems. If Per·k.1n1 can place h1m1elf Invitational and the Saratoga Open
in thc'lop three. his final goal will be he.kt last Ja~uary.
'
realized.
As a team leader Pukins has led
_Whct_her_ or ~01 Perkins atta_ins his sqU,adS to imPrcssivc seasons.
thts ob,cct1vc:, h11 collqe ~thng Last year, the Red Raiders compiled
ca~ has been mo~t outstandmJ. Al ,a 10-.5 record, including a third place.
a b11h tehool senior, he wanted tQ1 finish in the State championships

By STEVE WILKINS

and cwdfth position in the Eastern
competition. This season. Colgate
posted a 12-3 clual meet record with
an unprcccden1ed win over Rutgers
thal pleased Ptrkinsto no end. In the
State championships. the Raiders
pla«d founh.
Coach Blake contends that
wrestling is a unique sport beet.use it
rcqui~ tremendous mental and
physical dedication to maintain the
proper wci1ht. The discipline
required to 'make weight' as well as
the constant training have made
Perkins work for his improvement.
To be II IUCotUful I.I he is requites:
the kind or commitment ~ showed
he was willing to make during his
freshman year. Blak.e commented,
·Scott has reaped many of the
bcnefiu.o(athletics and hlsderiveda
great deal of personal satisfaction
from his effons. 11 h.as his tca.m. He
is very unselfish. We could use fiftee n
more of him!"'
Perkins is n·ot • flashy wrestler. He
has the self-confidence to work
methodically bcciuse he is well
d rilled and knows the rudiments
cold, Thi, is not to say, however. that
Perkins.is not an advanced wrestler.
On the contrary. any athlete or his
caliber must excel. In hi,h sehool,
Perkins-was not u succrssful as he
has bttn 1111 Colgate. He has worked
1 for his lilies.
March +.S in Syracute Perkins
pursues a shot at the Eastern title.
but mos-t of all he wants to
participate in the national
championships.

WRCl.l-F.\f.
Last week Mr. Lo rinKleeger wro1e
about Colgace hocke )' rans in the
Colga"• Sl'n·s. I . a sa sportS fan. ~·a.s
somewhat insulted. l.et me SI)' a few
words regarding Colga1e hocke)'
fans. A hockey fan. in general. iJ
looking 10 see good hockey. Yelling
and screaming isintrinsic:to a hockey
fan's nature. The purpose or his (or in
some cam. her) heckling and jeering
the opposina. team is 10 do his part
for his 1eam b)' dcmoraliiing the
\'iSitors. In his own way. he's a player
sons uniform.
In my opinion. the reason for this
has been the increasingly vioknt
play of collcg,c hockey teams. Two
cases in point: I) If any of you wc:·re
present for the Northeastern game.
you saw a wide varidy of slashes,
punches. elbows. and eventually
kicb; in particular a kick 10 Colgate
goalie Drew Schaefer's face which
prompted me 10 become one of the
more vocal rans and finally to
become enga,cd in a verbal battle
with the N.U. head coach when he
decided to stan answering bad. to
the fans.
2) My second point in\-olve, tt\e
Providence game whic h Mr, Kleqcr
attempted to describe. A similar
situation to the N.U. pmc arose
when some Providence playcn
decided to answer fans inquiries
reprdins, in one inlllnoe. their
chcerkaden. This culminated in an

end o( 2nd play ruckus between the
pla)·ers and one Providence player
deciding 10 shut the crowd up by
inj uring one ran at random with h is
Stick, namdy #9, o ne Joe Campisi.
attempting to maim. you guessed it,
yours truly.

SPORTS
COMMENTAR_Y
This season bepn with its fair
share of. what r11 call. vocal hockey
fan.s; but as the season wore on these
vocal hockey fanJ bcc.ame more
numeroUJ and vociferous.
It seems to this sportscaster the
reason for now not allowins fans to
sit in the fil'lt rowbehindthe vtlitor's
bench is to. obviously, prevent
run her altercations between the fans
and opposing teams; which is a step
in the right direction. But what really
needs to be done is to have college
hoc.key coachninstiUin their players
some sense o( professionalism. By
that I mean. specir.eally. ignorina the
fans' comments and no1 responding
to their sometimes aaaravaHna and
vulpr remarks. It is incrca.singly
apparent that when opposina players
and even coaches rcton with their
own threats, it incites the fans to
further indui,t in their cuu.
So, Mr. Klccger,don't blame wtLat
I think arc knowledgable, interested
and interesting hockey fans for the
adions of a handful. Blame the
collc,e hockey coaches for not
disciplinin& their teams.

Raiders Fall To 12-11
I

(comlnwd from·pogt twtnly)
finish with 22 points. Larry Herron
provided • stron., in.side pmc ( 11
points, S rebourwfs) while Reggie,
who received the tot en s&aning call,
netted three of four auempt.s from
the floor for six points.
Regaie Robin.son and 6'4" guard
Wh;tey R;,sby collected JO and I I
point, respc,ctively. Ri,gsby, who
owned • hot hand from twenty feet
o ut. and senior Playmaker Joe
Roscrs each dcaled off cl&ht usi.sts.
Overall. the Wildcats put on a
aood display or
buketb&JJ in

po,..,

the second half, piling up 4S points
(63.6%) and enjoyina a 16-6
rebounding edge. On defense,
Villanova was able to keep the ball
1w1y from forward Chris fa*gan'
(16.5 ppg), who was held sthe second half.
·
Guards Dave Har,ett and Ben
Carter paocd the Colpte at&ack with
18 and 16 points respectively.
Hargett also collected five assists.
The loss dropp,:d Colpte's record
to 12-11 . The squad will travel to
Alfred on Thursday night for the
final game o( the season.

SPORTS

arnonl SPORTS I

afr

PAGE TWENTY

T UESDAY, MARCH I , i,77

Manha~t~nville .Surprises Colgate In State Swim
IJ MELISSA COLEY
The Colptt Womt11'1 Swimmina

•nd Divina Team captund ,econd
pla« out ol 29 tea• in the New

York State AJA w Champioashipo
held ., Brodtpon Slate lllit .....
-ktad, ...... 10 MAnllatlUYillt
Colltat by a -•• 9 poillu.
Altboup Colptt didn't achieve
its s01J or a state championsbip, the
entire tam p\l.t forth its bcsl cfTon
and turned in many neon! bnlklna
times. '"We arc IU'OIIIIH 1han
Muhalta.nville on an mclividual

ba1j1... ,aid Coach' Courtney

Solenberacr. -The key to their
victory ii the r..:t that tbey had more
deplh. In evtnh where we would
have 6 women qualify for final
competition. they would have 11...
Usina .,... MAM'• [Ot' aood
luck, Colpte wu able to talr.e lint
placa in all four rdap, the ,0 and
100 yard .,._,-11rokt. and I _ . ,
divina, tettina • new lllk, meet.
pool, and vanity rttord in each .
event.
The all.frooll 200 r.....y1e rteam of leuy WetllNHJh. Annt
Richardson, Doana Cantr and
llecky W
off 1heir pttvious bcs1 time to qualify
for Nationals. They also set a state.
' mct1,pool anb vanity rttord whh
lhcir winnina tmc of 1:41,6.
In 1ht 400 yard medly rtlay. oht
same leam again qualified for
Nat.Onats and broke an previous
records. doclcina a ,:09.9. TlK'n. the
same Fantastic Four won 1he 400
yard rmstylie ttlay with a 1lme of
3:4S.l. K1tin1 ano1her nc:w "8te.
meet. vanit)' and pool record.

Donna Caner. Their 200 yard
l :SS.J. apin.
anothc-r tteofd•mashcr.
Donna Caner won both thc,Oand
100 yard breast stroke with times of
Jl.4 and 1:08.5 mp«tiwly. She K1
·new stale, mct1, vanity and pool
r«0rds in both events. The frahman
, 1afs total of ,ix finl places (all
recorcf..bff1kin1 times) i, a very
imprasive feat for any sinale
swimmer in one: meet,
In ont mc1er divin.S, Gail
Tht final rday hdd in the meec was Majdalany broke htt own 11ace and
won by Sandy Stewan. Kim.. meet reeord from last )'Cir aDd 1e1 a
Peterson. Anne RK:hardson and new vanity and pool record with a
mcdky time was

sound fin,1 place win wich a total of
6.k poincs. She credils her success to
che hard wort of her «)Ach. Mark
Randall, who has brou&hl her a long
way in >n injury-prone season.
Th• depth
1ht Colpie Squad
displayed iudC in many events. with
a aood number of swimmc:rs
fini.shina as lop twelve finalists.
Coach Solcnber,er ii1ht1 Colpte's
main depth probkm in tht meet as
..no one qualifin, for lhc finals in the
100 yard individml medley and
M anhattanville having five
finalises.'"

or

(C'Cllllht11tld M , , .

,.,,,,,,o

Gibson Powers Icemen
IJ STEVE WILKINS
Two powe('play aoa ls by
dc!enwnan Larry. Gibson tttured a
~ ) triumph over St. Lawrence
for the Raiden IUI Saturday in Scarr
Rink. The sophom*ore defender has
been on somethina or a rampage. as
he has scored four goals in the la.st
thiu games.
The squeakff over the Division
One cellar~wellers was the Red
Raider's second straight win and
movtd coach Ji,n Hia,ins· team to 91Jin Oivi.tion One. Wt Wednesda)'.
coi,,te beat the Quakers or
Penns)'lvania in every
way.
includina a 7-3 score.
The Larries came into Starr Rink
with a previous last minute win over
the Raiders under their belts. The
two games were shockingly similar.
Colgate jumped out to a quick lead
up in Canton in January.just as it did

On S.turda)'. Captain Bill Davis rana
up 1he first ,oai in a four-on-four
situation with as1in110 Ken D«ock
ind ao,al.C Drew Schader. Wi1h
elevtn 1«ond.s remaining in the first
period. Dave MacKenz.C broke in on
krt wing and g11hcrtd a pan from
linemate JO(y C)'r. The assisu1n1
captain then beat St. Lawrtrice
aoal.C Rick Wilson high on the s1ick
side.
After between periods en1enainment - Zamboni demolition derb)'.
Gibson notched his first goal.
comina on a po.,.,upla)' slapshoi'
from the blue l!ne. C~dit for 1he
assists went 10 Davis and Jon
Rheault. Twent)'-five seconds later.
the Saints returned the favor 10 put
the score aL3·1. Sophom*ore Kevin
Oouahtfty be.al Schaefer on the
aoal. The Colgate powerpla)' swung
into service at 3:38 6r the («Ond.

Gibson scored C'olpte's founh aoal
foun«n seconds liter wilh help from
Davis a nd Mac Kenzie.
The definite highlight of the pmc
was 1he penalty killing of Giblori.
Davis. MacKenzie. a nd scvtral
others on a down-two situation that
la.s1ed for 1:43. The pc-natty killins
....,.ntt401 a standing ovation from the
Starr fans. Unabk 10 soore on any of
the five rnan advant.a&a, 1he St.
Lawrence squad pummeled Schaefer
throuahout the first and second
periods. lronicall)', Co.lga1e onl)' put
twelve shots on the Larrie,' goal in
those periods. The Saints unloaded
twenty shots on Schaefer. Dean
Popiel sco*kd the: final goal for che
pcdod · to bring his Larries wi1hin
two.
Last January the Raiders carried a
similarcdgt into the final period onl)'
(romlnwd on pag~ tlsh,ti>n)

- Matl Polft.Chuk and Mike Rowley (l)dl& lnfronl a1alnsl Penmylvanla.
MrGrath (18) awaits a pau .

Herrons Explode, Blnst Raiders
BJ KEN STUTZ

Philadelphia - Senior Larry.
junior Keith and freshma n Reggie
Herron made a bit of NCAA his1ory
Sa1urday night whc-n they became
the first throe brothers to start the
same game for the same team,
U n fortunaicly for Co lgate,
Villanova·s strategy was not merely a
gimmick
The Wildcats' talented trio
combined for 39 points in helping
Villanova subdue the Red Raiders.
82-66. at the Palestra.
The less--calen1cd Colgate squad
was not awed by Villanova, who has
compiled an 18-8 record playing
so~e of the best schools in 1he East.
At the half, the Wildcats owned only
a .seven point advantage but assumed
control of the game midway through
the sceond half b)' running off 11
unanswered points.
Villanova overwhclmcd Colgate in
the opening minutes of play by
racing out 10 23,-8 lead. It could have
been a rout of Prin«ton, Syracuse,
and Holy Cross proportions. bu~ the
Red Raiders kept their poise, forced
the Wildcats into fo ul c limbed back into lhe game.
Both team.t ihot poorly ir'I the
Ope"ning twenty minutes and by
battling Villanova (a physical but
rathel undisciplined squad) on the
boards. Colgatedrewseven foulsahd
then e njo~d th e bonus situation at
the foul line for the final 1en minutes
of the half. The Red Raiders netled
10 or their 30 point-I on free throws
and despite a 37% fie ldgoal
percentage, trailed 37.30 al the
intermission.
The Wildcats came 0111 in a 2~1·2
zone defense to Jtart the second half
and Colgate capitalitcd by feeding
the balJ inside to center l;k,b
Schr eiber. The Red Raiders
narrowed Jhe 8'P to five· at 41·36
before the Herron brothers, et ol,
closed the door.
Bro1hcr Keith ( 19.4 ppt)found bit
niche in the o«en1t, hittinJ on six of
sewn sho1s in 1he second half, to
(contlnwd on /Xllt niMtttn)

Women
Finish

8-5
87 JOHN PALOMAKI

.. II fee ls great. This is a great wa)'
to end a season!"
Coach Ruth Gochring·s Raider
women climaxed their first winning
basketball season (8-S) last night
wi1h a 56-47 trimming of Skidmore.
Colgate led from 1he beginning.
opening up a 17 poin1 lead at one
point in the fir5t half. They also
withs1ood an early second period
onslaught when Skidmore closed the
gap 10 five.
Kell)' Andrews and Sand)' Allison,
once again Colga1e's big guns.
hooped 16 and 14 point,. Sheila
Killeen d umped in 19 for Skidmore
before fouling ou1: Marti Hinchley
added 13.

..

'
-

··" - -

$

-.

0a the way to a braket. Rolt Hudlcon (55) tttals tlte ball from Vlllanoft's Sien Uncoln,
Counnr of Jo,,tp,/J f'. Md""'flllllf Md 1"" ftillttdtlplti• /JaJltlln.

Colgate broke away from a
deadlock with t-lanwick late in the
first half and reeled orrl6conS<'cutivc
points in one s1retch at the beginning
or the second half 10 wipe out the
v1s11ors 75.55 las1
Saturday
clinching the Raider women's first
winning season.
Although Ha rtwick ht:kl a 3·0
margin in past games against
Co lgat e. the Raiders were
determintd to snap the streak. The
score fluctuated sevual times in the
firs1 17 minu1es before Coach Ruth
· Qochring's runnning gramc 1rumped
the 'Wicks.
Co~ptain Sany Allison tied the
score for the last time wi1h a pair of
free throws. 2)-23. • With 2:S2 I
remaining in lhe half. sophom*ore·
Dc'nise Marantis grabbed a rebound
and hooped it, and followed that
with a fast -break la,y-up to put 1he
Raiders on top for good.
Their firepower didn't end at the
half•time buuer. Goehring played

(corrtinwd on P4gt ti1htttrr)

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