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Colple Uniwnity. Hamllt1111. New Yori!

IJ:146

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New Drinltjng Age Sparks Coritr~versy

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Proon•a Elllol'ffll

aJcohol use . . The discussion of
posaible alternatives went beyond
mettly changina 1he policy to
meet the requircmtnts or the new
law, as the Board considered
rewritina the policy sci down in
the Student Handbook. Many
suaaestions were considered, from
changing the wording of the pre•
sent policy to completely
.eliminating alcohol from any Colg11e activities; and while lhc issue
has not by any means been sctiled ,
it is probable that the-re will be
some changes in the Policy this
semester.

All students wishina aJcohoUc
refres-JunftH at Colp.le events
must now be ready wi1h positive
proor of aae. This is most ob,,.
viously s«n at lhe Pub, where the
bancndm on duty must deml.nd
proor from all students an d
pa1rons. At other cven1s, legal
drinking s1atus of all Sluden1s will
no1 be 1aken for granted. Proof•
Ing prattdurcs arc being worked
oul by specific offices dealing with
student groups, including the Student Activities Office, the Office
Residential Life. and 1hc Dean
Studen1s for Fra1ernitie,s orThe Student Ac1ivities Office
lice.
· and the Studt"nt As.sociation are
Another new ruk in effect this
faced with the problem of coming
semester is 1hc elimination or beer
up with a new polky regarding the
kt'l,s in Universi1y Housing. The
use.
student fund s ror alcohol·
rule ends the uadition of frater•
related ac1ivi1ies. One issue thal
nitics bringing beer kegs in10 the
has surfaced is 1hat, with a sizable
residence halls as part
rush,
portion
activities ree--paying
since mosi freshmen will not legal·
studtnts on campus , using funds
ly be allowed to drink during 1his
for alcohol would not be fair 10
spring's rush period. The IFC has
the entire student community as a
formed a group to look at the law
whole.
and its errcc1s on fra1crniHcs and
sorori1ies, no1in1- especially pro·
Fraternities and sororities wUI
ofing procedutts during panics be · considering- changes beyond
and rush and pledge period prac• mere proofing of studenlS as well.
tices. More procedural changes in Rush and pledge policies will have
the use of alcohol will appear as to be examined, and new rules
the date or the change ap· drafted. The hou~ will a lso get a
proachcs. Two under considera- chance to review some of the
tion righl now include 1he regula- policy changes of recent years,
tion or pitchers of beer at the Pub, such as the non.atcoholk beverage
and the guideline
fair distribu- rC'(luircmen1, the advertising rules,
no alcoholtion of residence · hall funds and the guideline
toward nOn·alcohol- related centered parties. II is clc.ar chat
with the change in policy 1hat will
events.
inevi1ably result from this
Rttvaluotion or Alcohol P olley
sc
mcs 1er• s conside ra ti ons,
Last Monday the Student Affairs Board began what promises stuc1ents could find 1hemselves
to be a long, hard look at with a new orlcntatiOI'\ coward
Colgate's prcscn1 policy o n alcohol use at Colgate.

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"SlwdNII n• ...... Ille U•lttnlly to comply wh•

By Nlcholu O.Morc:o
Dethat Col1a1c studenu will
remember for quite some 1imc.
While ii is lhc dale of the change
in the legal dri nking age in New
York State. from 18 to 19. the
changes that" Colaate will have
~
seen. by then may go beyond mere
enforcement of the new law.

There is a new focus of concern on
drinking al Colgate, and the
school may have a completely
revised set of· regulations for the
use of alcohol by that time.
The aucn1ion 1hat alcohol
issues are get1ing at Colgate began
with the State's passing of the new

II•• c• - lo the drhlk... •···"

legal age chis past summer. The
law states that anyone under the
age of l9 may not be scrv«I
alcohol of any type in New York
State, An addi1ional point about
the law j.s that there is no "grand·
rather dausc". that.is, there is no
stipulation that those who are 18
year> old by Dettmber 4. the date
the law goes into.errecc, can be ex•
empted from the law. There will
be quite a rew studenls at Colgate
who will lose lheir recently gained
drinking i)rivilegcs on that day.
The rac1 1hat it is a re1roactivc
change has forced the University
to take action this year. Dean o(
Students William Moynihan

warned that "students can expect
the University to comply with the
change in the drinking age. and we
will expect all scudent groups 10
comply with ii also. iocluding 1he
rraternities." The Dean of
Studcncs' Office has come up wi1h
a n umber of procedural c~anges
in dealing wilh alcohol on cam·
pus. Last yeaf, Colga1e slUdent
1.0.'s began to display the SIU·
dcnl's birthdatc in print; this
year's rreshmen have their bir•
thdate stamped on the 1.0. in rais.
ed leueis. All receptions for
freshmen arc now non·alcoholic
cvenls, a policy begun . this
September.

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Seniors Generate New Ideas
fly Franc MAs mos1 members of 1he Class
1983 arc eonceming themselves
with p reparations for their lives
af\cr graduation, a (cw seniors arc
dircc:1ing their attention to making
the rest of their brief s1ay at Col~
gate more l)crsonal for all lhcir
classmates. The senior class or.
ficcrs are better organized and·
financed than many previous
graduating dasSC's, and have lorly
ideas and goals which are per·
sonified in their president, Pete
Occhescr.
*'During my junior year, there
were many of my friends and
classmates off campus • a 1imc
over which _we all grew and
developed our own character
more completely. Now that we
are all back, we have a chance to
reacquaint ourselves as a class. It
will ~ like fresh man year again ·
except that we know a lillle more
aboul 1he p lace and the people."
Over Senior Weck 1982, many
or the class officers and council
members "brainstormed" at DU .
A letter was draf1cd, which was
completed and mailed by Sue Sar.
ford 10 the members of the senior
class. In 1his letter was a series or
propasals for the fo llowing school
year, which was offered to them.
Decheser was pleased with the
· response, Which has led to some
concrete p lans ror class activities·
and COmmencemtnt,speakers'.
The senior class is very decided
on, the na~iJ~ or. th~r acd~i1ies,
.
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which Pete ,sees as more im· as Joho Irving (Tht World Accoraginative and personal. He hopes ding 10 Gorp) and Roger
that the activities will give the clas.s· Staubach.
Dttheser says 1ha·
a unity that will be broughl out by Chris Willard , class 1rcasurtr, has
an active attempt 10 play upon lhc the budget for such endeavors.
uniqueness of 1he individuals. "I
As far as a commencement
want to see even 1he mos1 reclusive s peaker, a selee1ion has been
or seniors come out of the cellars made, and President Langdon's
o f Bryan, and add to the ~nior invilation 10 Supreme Coun
class activi1ies. I want this to be a Justice, Byron White, should be in
·personal year - we wan1 to give 1he the mail. Justice White i,s the fi rs1
class something 10 make them choice or the class.
want to come back to the reu·
The class gift, however, is
n ions." As an example
"unity undecided and Chris Willard and
through diversity" . Pete gave class fundra i.s ing agcn1 Barb
Senior Club as an example. "We Wilso11 will be relying on a senior
wan1 the Senior Club 10 be more poll and donations 10 determine
1han ·a free beer at the Pub. · We a11d finance the gift 10 1he school
wan1 to move the localion around, which D«hcser says "will lca"c
especially in the late spring, 10 our mark on the c:,a.inpus."
p laces like Spring S1rcct, or ColThe class officers working with
lege Street, or Burch • wherever Marge Loop and Linda Hun1 in
lhtre is a big group or seniors liv- the Act,ivities Office have planned
ing' in a specific area. We would their first big event . a dance in the
like to work with these seniors, Hall of Presidents on November
a nd jo in1ly p lan 1hese local Senior 6. The tickets will be sold ihClubs, wilh 1cn1s and' bands, dividually. Pc1e hinted that there
•where rricnds live. So that friends will be.a bigger dance at the AMA
come down wllh 1he idea of in the spring . a b lack-tie affair
visiting fricnd.s who live nearby.
with a "bi.g band".
We could get the class moving
Ocspilc apprehension when he
around • visiling friends. " Other _took 1he position of prcsiden1,
ide8S for the Senior Club are Pete is happy at the amount or
barbeques and an idea 10 respect the "OU president" has
computer- match sen iors, wi1h a received from the adminis1ra1ion
social as the : culmination of chis and the "lerrific" officers,
project.
especially Amy Vullo, vice p1tsi. Among
the de,n1, he has had the pleasure of
''pseudo-academic'' ac11vtt1es· as working with.. We're ahead of
'Pete caUs them, are lectures, things, in planning. We're going
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_fe&turing such passible speakers 10 take our time.

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Cotton-Pickin' Blues
Muddy · Waters veteran James
C otton and his band will trea1 thC"
•gate to his own brand of the blues
Friday at 8:00.
Cotton, who
formed his own band in 1966, has
played throughout the U.S. For
the past 30 yC"ars. He comes to
Colgate straight from a s:how at
Greenwich Village's Lone Siar
Care.
The nine year old Cotton ran
away from his Mississippi home to
find harmonica b lues player Sonn.y Boy Williamsoo. his radio

hero.
He was adopled and
musicallf rrained by Williamson
after the boyconvinccd him 1ha1
he was orphaned. Couon joined
Muddy Waters for a 1954 gig and
wound up playing wi1h the band
for twelve years.
Cotton is known as a bouncer
and'f- sornersaulter. so he should
have the crowd in the Hall or
PrcsidenlS bopping 10 hi.$ unusual
blend of urban and Delta Folk
blues. And, best of all. il"s r....1

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THE COi.CATE MAllOON

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Landlords Suffer Lack of Tenants
By l~-Wanl
One miaht think 1he housing

problelT\$ 11 Collate arc solnd
btc.:ause or the New College S1rtt1
Apar1mcn1s, b ut apparently, thi..~
is no1 the cast. Both the univcrsi•
1y ' and local landlords have a
surplus of apartment space~.
Sign$ on ll College Street and 40
Broad S1 \ advcr1ise "Rooms for
Rent.'' There arc approxima1cly

twcmy openings un 1hc "Off
Campus Board" in the Rc"idcntial

~

Life Office.
In addi1ion, 1hc
U nivcnitv has a,ailablc -,pacCl\: in
NcwclLBurch and the New J\parl •
mcn1s, A question ariws about
the 111., ~ssity · or the new apart·

mcms.
When 1hc Unh·cr"ity the summer session laM foll. 1hc
need for addi1ional housin~ arose.
Two hundred murc upfl(rdas~
r,crsuns arc on campu" now 1hcn
there welt las1 fall. rhcrc arc two
hundr~d more livin~ llP3l"C!l, The
u niversity figured tll't\lrdingly in
the l"Onstruction or 1hc New College St. Apar1me111)1. Wlw the

surplus?
Erk Hillerbrand. Assis1an1
Dcan·or Rcsidcn1ial Life had some
sr,«ula1ions. He anributcd 1hc
s-urplu5 10 increased orr \:ampus
renova1ion.
'lnere arc mo,,:
pla1.·cs to li\'C orr campus this year,
Anuther fa\:IOr Hillerbrand added was the mh:cd das)I hill, With
uppcrd..Hi..,JK'f:\Ons living on Che
hill, the donm may be overcrowd·
ct.I while: 11ome university apar1mc:n111o arc va1.·a111.
Mo .. 1 upperc la" s ~chons,
e~JX'tially women, know allloowell
the feeling of punk 1l1a1 hi1s in 1hc
)lpring when I hey realize they have
10 \4.'curc a pla1.-c to live for lhc
fo llowing fall. Hillerbrar\c.l con cluc.kd by -.ayins in rderem.-c to
the til'lamncnt lom.·ry in the
"!'Iring, "lhe moral of 1hi" ~IOry is
if you're patient enough, you'll get
one lal'lamncntl. ••
Mr. and Mr~. Werner Koenig ;
owners of 1he TKE house ant.I an·
nex a1 40 Broad St .• have vacant
rooms for the nrsl 1ime sin'-e 1hey
bought it. They've bren renting

·N ew Gym. Sign~Up
By JOHP• Piaq•. .r

This fa ll a new gym registration
procedure wa.s instilutcPhysical Education Depar1mcn1.
Rcais.tration was moved from
durinJ the week to ,a Sunday.
Furiher, in51cad of an open
registration students registered by
class, wilh lhe Freshman going
first.
The Phys.Cal Education
Depa.nment, so far, is satisrted
with the way this new procedure
has worked.
Tbc primary rea.son for moving
regbtra1ion to a Sunday was to
make it more equitable according
10 Mr. Beyer in the Physical
Education ,office. He said 1ha1
under the old system students had
'difficulty making it to rcgistratiOn
times between their classes. 11 was
decided 10 move regl$1ra1t0n 10
Sunday when 1hert would be no
classes 10 hamper s1uden1s.
Some Juniors and especially
Seniors were initially confused
and upset th.al the Freshmen were
10 register firs1. Mr. Beyer,
however, said that the Phys. Ed.
Depanmcnt recognizes 1he , need
for Sen?ors to earn gym crediu,
About 50 percent or the places in

each class were reSC"rvcJuniors and Seniors. with some
places held especially for seniors.
He also said that he was present,
and will be a1 future regis1ra1ion5,
to hclp any Senior who was closed
out or classes. The committee 1hat
set up 1he registration schedule
decided 10 lel Freshman rqis1er
fi rst to help inilia1e 1hem in10
Physical Educa1ion requifemen1 s
at Cola,aie.
ResPon.se was vt-ry good 10 the
nrs1 1rial of 1his new regis1ra1ion
procedure. Mr. Beyer said 1hat
mos, students got into their first
or second choice. He said that ir
o ne didn'I get into his or her fi rst
choice it would be a good idea to
sig n u p on 1he waiting list.
Generally there is as much as a SO
percent attrition ra1e between
registration and the rirst class.
Mr. Beyer said that it is 1rue
students can earn gym credits by
parachuting o ut or a plane.
However to Seniors desperate ror
credi1s(ir you can believe 1hat), he
warned, i1 1 s not simply a matter,..o f
jus1 jumping ou1 or a plane. An
8-10 hour course is required
before o ne may j ump.

NEW YORK
PIZZERIA

room$ 10 Cot,ate Muderus sinl~
1972 and ha,·c reputatio~i as aood
landlords in 1he RcMdcntlal Life
Ofrke. , Like 1he Univer5ily, the
Koenigs dKI n0t rontt any d ifritulty in fi lling up their living
!ipa~-n. La.st i,;pring lhey hekt out
for three people in a 5Uile like
u sual. Mtl'i. Koenig thinks now
1ha1 maybe she 11hould have seuled
for 1wo people in a suice. Mrs.
KOCnig a11ribu1es 1he local renova1ioni by lantJ!ordi,; 10 lhe new law
in town whkh requires owners of
jtOUP resitJenl.'.es lo have a sr,«ial
permit. T his law was- passed. for
health and safc1y reasons, T hu11.
there arc not only m\lft 11laccs 10
live 1hi11 yt"'.tr, there arc more a11rai:ti\'C p lai.:e) 10 liw. She al\O
noted Hlac <.:'hi Omega Rho l"
another new op1ion in living ~pa1.·c
this year. Mrs. Koenig also-mentioned the m i:In rcc1ifying 1hcsc problems the
Univer.;ity migh1 have to make
some regulation changes. An 00'
c:ampus restrktion is possible. It
is predicted that five years from
now there will be a signiritam
dc..:reasc in the studcn1 body. The
Univeni1y will wanl 10 rill u p
univcrsily housing. The m ixed
d as.1 hill might onc:e again b«ome
a Frc-shpcrson hill , forcing up.
pcrduspersons 10 university
apartmen1s. T he new drinking
law mi3ht conuibule to 1his
\!hange due 10 the po1en1ial drinking problem on mixt'd class h ill.
This is the fiut academic year
fo llowing a ~u,mner when the
summer ses.sion was- no1 required,
The Univcrsi1y can only gain expcricn~-c and make adju.s1men1s ill
lime.

Nuclear
Awareness
A Lcc:1ure/ Film Series en titled

"The Nuclear Threa1 and 11s
Aherna1ives: A Commnity Educa,ional Forum .. wili be held this
iall a1 Colgate University. The
serits will b ring some of 1he
o ucsianding spe-akers and/o, films
in 1he field 10 address issues important for understanding 1he
nature of lhe threat and the p,ossib le aherna1ive optio ns.
The ser·ies is sponso,ed by 1he
Office of 1he ,C haplain . 1he or.
rices of the Dean or Faculty and
the Dean o f S1uden1s. 1he
Divisons or Na1ural Sciences,
Social Sciences a nd Univershy
StudiCS, Ecolo8,y House, Four
Minuccs 10 Midnight, ln1erna1ional Rela1ions Council, League
of Women Voters, L,e cture Series.
the Madison County Nuclea,
Arms Freeze Group, Peace and
World Order Studies Prog,am,
R ~lph Bunche House, and
Students fo r _environmental
Awareness. All events are free and
open 10 1he public.

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New European Flair
by Kathy Lewis

most SUPf\Ortive and optimisck
Colga1e•, s1udy groups p rovide abou1 1his residential scheme.
studenis wilh opp,ortunicics 10 There arc no participation re•
learn abou1 new places, cuhures, quirements, and due to the h igh
and people and 10 genera1e
number of in1erested students last
broader perspectives on life.
spring, those desirous of living in
S1uden1s tak ing idvan1age o,f the House are selected by a rev~w
these 1remendous study ven1ures of a b rief wriuen statement by the
of1en experience a culture shock
po tential resident on his or her
when a,riving at lheir destination.
reasons for wanting 10 live in the
but also, surprisingly enough,
House .
Presen1ly Germany,
1hey repeat this culture shock
Austria, Switzerland, Norway.
up()n returning 10 Colga1e. In an
Sweden ind Russia are en.
erron 10 quench this thirst for thu.siastically represented. A pro·
foreign knowledge and to pro- gram advisor. Tom Ruscerhohz,
mote the interpersonal learning also resides in the House. Coming
process, wh ile fu lfilli ng the
from one of 1he Basel proaram•s
Rcsiden1ial Life Committee's · hos1 fam ilies, Ruste.rhoh t adds 10
Recommendations which envision
the European navor of the frenew living ~nters wi1h residents
quent lounge discussions and in·
sharing common interests a group
rormal chits 1h,oughou1 the
of students has formed the Cen House.
tral European House.
T he group emphasizes 1ha1 i1s
T he Cenlral European House is
main goal is 10 promote an inforlocated in WhitnaU and was inmal sharing of experiences, a very
itiated by senior Sieve Voigt last
valuable element of the learning
fall Voig1, now wor-king wilh
process.
sen ior Claudia Zayferc a nd
E very Sunday· night SAGA
sophomore Mark Tindall. is
enables "cultural study snacks..
working to k~p this residential
by giving 1he group use of che kilop1ion a viable an d enlightening chen for preparing these treats,
living possibility.
O n a more introductory note,
Unlike Colgate's present theme
Thursday nighl will reatu re a
ho uses, such as lhe Spanish and
Swi» d inner and ptan.s are underFrench Houses, the Central Euro·
way for inS1ilu1ing some European House stresses not o nly
pe.an sports such as European
language, b ul more importanlly,
handbaJI and Vila par kurs, and a
the cultures of Ctntral European
press club. The press club would
countries. The discovery, while in
galher foreign newspapers in
E u rope, of lhe knowledge to be
hopes of gaining a clearer view of
gained 1hrough people via travellin1ema1ionaJ situations by means
ing o r just going 10 school in a
of a broader perspective on the
foreign city o r cown spurred Voig1
issue$, Enlhusiasm is quite strong
to try 10 continue ' chis learning
within the group and ii promises
process here at Colgate, The
to provide Colga1e wi1h a very
facu lty. in particular M;utha
fru i1ru1 residential experience for
Dietz and Charles Naet, have been all involved.

YN'we Tried tlle Int ..,. Now Try
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01heries Mon. ·

s... 9:30 • 1:30

.37 LEBANON STRED

HAMILTON, N.Y.

Phone: 824-2112

WRCU-90 FM
"Your Sour.ce for Colgate Sports"
Tune in Saturday, October 2 for Complete cowerage
of the Colgate-Dcmnouth fo4'tW gcane_.
Join lohn Hyd~ and Joe Myer for the action.

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TIIJ COLGATE 111.UOON

University Trustees Begin Campaign for Fund~
'

••bricks and monar" portion of' In comparison with · some other Colptt will undertake art not
or Tru•ccs hu authorized plann- the campaip, lncludlna both new collqa ol our calibre, has arown new to colleaa and univmHcs
lna lor a lund-raisina campaian to cons1ruc:Oon and the rmov&1ion steadily. Our silt suPPon achiev- and 1hey are not new 10 Colaato.
increase 1he Univmity's endow· or nistin1 buildinp, is directed ed a new rtm..t and hdp finance oeveral con- almost entirely at facilities thal expansion and rcnova1k>n of our were ..Btidac 10 the Eia,hties"
atruction and renovation pro;«1s. will raise Colptt's standard or libraries are fully subscribtd. ''
which achieved IIS 1oal ol Sl5
The Pffliminary plan lor the residential life. A new dinina hall,
Capital campaisns or 1ht son miHk>n ,fin 1980, and "Essential
campaian was reviewed by the renova1ion of che Colpce S1udcnt
Trull... at a September. 16 Union, and imprOYffl\enls co
meetina, The cxacc size and dura- achlctic: facilhics, while a rdllivc,.
tion or the campaian, PfHiden1 ly small componen1 of 1he 101al
Lana,lon Jr. said, will aoal, will be imponant pans or
The proaram i.s done on a first
By
be Trus1ee decisions to be based ' the campaiart, 1he Presidcn1 said.
The c.ampai&n will also sc,ek 10
°1 think: the reason for its come, first serve basis. with first
on 1he resuhs of the advance-ams
increase annual aivina to the popularity this yea, has alot to do choice given to seniors. Once a
phase or the f\lnd•raisina effort.
The new endowment to be University-...thc year.10...year girts with Che economic situation sludent picks a January, he has
sought in the campaian would from alumni, parents, friends, • around lhe country," explained forty-eight hours to re1urn ii to
enable the- University to suStain roundations and corporations ••cg Fenner. hc•d of the Career 1he office if he chOOSt'S not 10 take
and strenathen 1hc academic pro- th-11, whh tuitH>n and che income Exploration proaram. What Mrs. ii. Jr he does ac:cept the position
he must then 10 aboul contactina
aram. It would provide funds for from endowment, make up the Fenner is referring to is the Rish
the
alum and selling up 1he proopcratina
budgtt.
ror
sign-up
one
week:
a,o
MonaddiltOnal scholarships and loans
"We will triter this c.ampaian day, in which One s1uden1 slept gram. The jobs offered t_re not
fn 1he finariciat aKI program for
from
a position or strength" outside of MacOrcaory Hall in salaried Posilions, althouah some
s1udm1s, the President said. And
board 10 students
it would finance programs to sup• President · Langdon said . "We ordei: to be the rirs1 in Hne. Other offer. room
who
do
not
live
in the immediate
have
a
strong
academic
program
students
ao1
up
at
S:30
a.m.
in
pon faculty in their profmional
taughl to talented students by a order 10 be early, leaving those area.
pursuits.
dcdk:ated, respected facu lty. Our whoarrired 111he9:00a.m. open•
Accordina to Fenner, the
New endowment would allow admissions arc strong. The cam- ing lime, at lhe end or a knglhy response in previou.s years has on•
ly been half or this year's currenl
,. the University 10 suSlain programs pus is well main1aincd and, wilh line.
The Career Exploral io n sludent response. Each Spring,
.such as off-campus study groups theexcep1ionof1hcnttdrorsomc
facilities
1ha1
will
improve
residenJanuary
proaram has existed 11 Fenner sends k-uers out 10 about
and the January special studies
2SOO alumni asking if they would
period. It would finance new tial lirt, ii is well suited 10 o ur sire Colgate for the paS-t lcn years.
holdings for 1he University library and our program. Our resources Whal the program en1ails is sign- agree to h ire a Colgate
· and help Colgate to keep pace have been managed well wi1h a ing . up a1 the January Special u ndergraduate. This year she has
with advances in instructional budget 1hat has been in balance Studies office for an app0intment received 90 Positive replies, hence
for 18 years and an endowment to see the lisl of orrcrina.s in fo ur- the availabili1y of 90 positions.
equipment.
Mr. Langdon $Sid that the ($40 million) tha1, 1hough modesl teen different career fields. Each Unfortunately, 200 students have
opening is fo r a position with a sianed up for the p rogram, leaving
Colgate alum who has agreed to 110 who will be out of luck afler
take on a Colgate undergraduate.
the week or October 4. Last year,
There is also a facu lty sPonsor Fenner remembers havina to send
who ls in the departmenl under back openings from willing alumni because of a lack of student
mid1erms create havoc. Students which the career rans.
By LJsa Turro
Many s 1uden1s, especially 1hat arc worried aboul the
freshmen are unaware or the 1wo "freshman Ten" may stop in and
Htal1h Service clinics available 10 weigh thcm~ lves artcr a New
the Colgate communitY, Original- York Pizzeria binge.
ly, only the main clinic on Broad
However. ir a studem should
By Charles A.V. Cavaliert
Vedas as something that have
Slr~t existed, but tas1 Spring the ever tncounier a more serious inColga1e S1uden1 Health servic,c jury, or a serious illness, he should
T.K. v. Ocsikachar. teacher or come down 10 us no1 from any
launched a satellite clinic to make go to the main clinic. The main yoga and managing 1rus.1ee or the h uman wri1ing or speech, but by
bask medical needs more easily clinic is located on Broad S1rttt, T. Krishnamachar)'a Yoga Man · 1he gods themselves,,. Mr.
available to ~tudents.
convenicn1ly placed across from di ram, Madras • spoke and Ocsikachar commcni«I in his in The Sa1clli1e clinic is loca1cd on the ski hill. T reatment of all dcmonstra1ed on "The Hindu troductory remarks. "Fortunate1hc fir~t n opr o f Kendrick I-l ouse. medic~1I illnes.ws, in juries. and Tradi1 ion of Learning Vcdk ly. because of the anc-ien1 system
A nurse is available i\1ondny rou1ine gynecological care is Charuing" . Thursda)' nighl al of cornmunicatins everything,
down, d,rt-clly, some parts of the
through Friday from eleven until available. There is no cos.1 10 La1hro1> Ball.
four. Many people, cspttiall>· s1udcnl) for services and in mosi
A small, sprigluly m:rn of 44 Vtda-. -.11II remain ~1th u~."
l:~pla1nuig,1hc a\pC'CI!. of Vcthc
s1udcnt'i living off campu!-. are cases med1ca1ion'i arc gi-.·cn fn..-c ol years. M r. Dc-s1kachar, a gtadu:uc
u naware of !hi~ ~ioaller dinic ch.1r~c. al1hough \J)<."<:iar mcdica- of Mysore UmH·r,il)' aod a m,1c.1er chant111r. Mr Desikach::&r ,ti..<•
1!3\'C, a11ou~ ,hon dl'mon-.tratiou-.
btcau~of 11'i rela1ive ncwness and tiOn'i and prc¼'ri1>tion, m3)' h:Hc of Sanc;knl, .;po:.c h> ar>1no,
it,; locaoon on the hill. Ali hough to be purcha~ed at the pharnHIC)'.
unalel)· st, \11•den1\ and proh."')\QP, on the charac1c:ri~U~;; of Vedic
those living off the hill find th:u Uir1h eonirol c~:1mioa1ion-. and at>ou1 the oldim 1radi1101,al lt1d1an .:han1in~. ho\\ ii 1;; 1:.1ugh1 IO
Kendrick Hou~ is not ,1s convc- PAP are administered a1 a charge, <.ha11t-1he Veda. "I need no1 tell young boy'i, ttnd 11, particuliu- cm
nicm a location for a hctihh orrice and man)' different binh control )'OU how imponant 1h1.-sc Veda arc pha~h on pr<."Cmon and t''.\,tC·
as Broad Street is, the Colgate devices may be purchased.
for Hindus. We com,idcr the lltudc.
Studcn1 Hcallh Service urges 1hc
The .main clinic's hours arc
entire s1udcn1 body to use the new Monday 1hrough Friday 8am.
clinic in order 10 keep the main 7pm, Saturday l0am--6pm, and
clinic less crowded.
Sunday I2-4pm. tr an emcrgcnc)'
The Satellite clinic provides should arise after 1he clinic's ormedical care for minor injuries, fice hou~s. you should call 1he
such as bee stings and small Universi1y switchboard operator.
lacerations, as well as 1rea1ing The operator will 1hen put you in
minor illnesses and taking throat touch wilh a physician who will be
c ultu res.
Ovcr-1hc-coun1tr able to help you. the Studenl
· medication is available al no Heahh Service is closed during
" MODHN HAIICUT11NO AT n•s lfst"
charge and your blood pressure Thanksgiving, Christmas and SprTUES. - WED. - FRI. 8-5 THURS. 8-8 SAT. 8-1
mav b.e checked a~ ,_e.;<;;li;;n.;
ic;:,•.;i;.:r·~ i:;
n&
:.;B;;r••
;;:: ;k;;';.
· ------.--.
The Colpt< Unlvcnity Boord

llesourcts for Achie'Vcment,"
which
iu 1oa1 or i.lil

,...,htd

million in

1977.

Ambcfst~

Bucknell, Dartmouth. Harvard·
and Princeton are amona the•
lqes and u niversilies presently in·
volved in camJ)ligns..

Career Exploration Attrac~ Attention

oeo,.; o.

-

Katt••"'•

Clinic Expands to Hill

si.gn~ups.
Fenner is most proud of 1he
growth of the program, b«:ause
she fttls- it enables students 10
..get a foot in lhe door of their
desired field." The program i.s
most helpful in a liberal arts
education, becaus·e Colgate
students can act exptrienc:c and
see the working world.· This year,
several of the positions open are

befog offered by gradualos who
them.selves did Career Exploration
projtc:IS for their company in their
senk>r year:
· T_he program is riot affiliated
with 1he Career planning center,
but comes under the office of the
De.an of Faculty. Supplementing
the program are independent
career exploralions which can be
arranged by studen1s on their
own. While there is no way 10
consciously expand the program;
because of its dependence o n
alumni response, Fenner believes
i1 will a row. "It's a aood proaram
with a n umber of outstanding op,.
portunite.s. I think student need
and awareness will continue its
,popularity."

Desikachar Lectures on Veda

Deadline Is

Would I ,ike To Thank All
The Great People That
Have Made Hi~ First Year
Of B11siness In Hamilton a
Success and Welcome All
Others by Introducing a
Stylist To Serve You
For Quality Hairstyling and
Custom Perms for all.

OCTOBER 18

Rob- Mary-Julie

Attention Seniors!
This Is your chance to get YOU R pictu res In the
year book. We ar e looking for candids, study
group shot, spri ng party weekend '82.

Anything Outstanding
Send pictures to St udent Publlcallons Office, 1st
floor Student Union.

824-3217- 17 Lebanon St., Hamilton

Speaking on cht spiritual aspcc:1
of Vedic chan ti ng. Mr .
Desikachar stated, " .. .i1(vedic
chanting) is 1hc basis fo r mos, of
1he rituals. most of our
philosophy, and even, some pco·
pie say, that ir a person chan1s I he
vedas regularly, he C'an be frt'<.'
from t'Crlain diseases." "llnfor·
1unatel)'," he continued, "vcdic:
chan1ing doc~ nol l!I\ cone a job."
Mr. i)l'<.1bch.1r ,.:ondud ...-d hi!>
4S mmute lcclurc Y,i1h .i pit."1.C of
vedic d1an1ing 1101'11 a hol)' book
of \t:da ul v.h1ch ''one word ,s aJ.
ded e3ch line and one is
dropped."
A shon quc-;1ion·
ansv. er period followed.

REED'S
HARD
WARE
• ,.,. cut to ONler

........

• Hoaewares .
• Small Applancea

824-1880

11 Maple Ave.

....

-

s,,11aw21, ·1,a

THE COLGATE MAIIOON

m~e.•

n.

Edlton-la-Clllef .••.•.. Knry A. Bruau, PHI C. Reily
EJlecatlve Mlton ..•.. Steven D. Balldlff, Cllrlstl•• Kea,
Pllotoan,lly Editor .................Sieve• D. Baadlff
Senior Edlton ....... Kinn B•rk1, Nltholu I. DeM1n:o
Spora Editor .. •......... : •............ Van B•chl•••
Aru Edlton ..... : ..... ... Them1 La~,. Barnll Leiter
AIISOCllle Editor .............. ,. .......... Kathy Lewis
Production M1naaer .............. D••ld C. C1v1a1u1h
Business M1n11er. .......... , . , .... Christopher Schoen

Colipll M..,... U p11bli.J'1«1 l/llfftly txttpl ltoli"-p. J11rw J,ily '""'
AMIii.it b:, tltt st11dfwts of Co1-ott Uni'l'mit:,. TIit Opi,tio,u 11,td 11Wws tX·
p,a,,d o,, this~"" thoJit of tlw authors of tM tdltorlof bof!lrd of tlw
M.,... 11ttd do not r,prn,nt thtopinions 11nd vWw, of tltt-'mlnlstrt1tlon of •
Co/Jolt Uniwnilyor tltt Uniwnily StlHHnt Assoclotlon. All mm,bf,r,0/11,.t
Unh•mity community " " ;,n>itrd 10 subm;, obsitrvm ond lt11,r1 to tltt
£di/ors of tht MarON . All Sllbmlislontshould bf Stnt 10 tltt MareH Col·
gait Station, H'1milton, Ntw Yort 13146 or hm11xl11 w lltt M.,... of/itts
on tM third floor of tht Studtnt Union. S.-C'Ond dus.t post~ is paid in
H11millon, No, York. Subscript/oft is ttn dol.lon ptt ,,a,. Pubficotion 1
numbtr l.t /2IJ10.


STAFF:Jo N,Json, Jont HumpstoM. ond Morty Wtintr.

Oldnt Co/1,r, Wttlcly
in Am,ric•
.
.

F()UNDED 1161

Maroon Responds to the Drinking Question
With 1he change of the New York S1a1c drinking law looming on the horizon. lhe Man.xm
fttls compelled to addrcM the issue now. In
a1..-cordanct with the measures adopted by the
SAB 1he Maroon agrttS 1h11 Colgate musl
rccvalua1e and change ils policy on alcohol 10
mctt 1hc s1a1u1es mandated by the govtrn·
ment. This rttvalua1ion mu.s t encompass all
race1s of campuJ life.

fair 10 those minors who pay 1he fee bu1 canno1 drink.
In o rder 10 accomodate lhe aforemen1ioned
goals the Maroon suggests 1he following
measures. First. lhe adoption of a cash bar
system al university func1ions so thal studem
ac1ivity money con1ributed by minors is not
directed coward the purchase of alcohol. Sc·

students would gc-1 used 10 1hc inconvenience.
We believe tha1 our suggestio ns --would
climinaie lhe sealing off of fra1erni1ies 10
minors who might slill auend th~ funct io ns
but no1 partake in the: consump1ion of alcohol.
Fraternities would have 10 slrictly enforce 1he
law ir 1hey wish to continue serving alcohol.
The Pub has already begun 10 enforce the law.

Specifically. 1hc Maroon fttls 1ha1 two goals
must be met. First, positive idcntifteation of
age mu.st be exhibited for a student 10 acquire
akohol, Second, and equitable system must be
devised to distribute student ac1ivi1ics money
1hat h as been prevk>usly directed 1oward
alcohol related function s. This would be only

cond, we suggest 1he adoption of a color coded
10 system, wilh a bar1ender a1 1he source of liquor (including kq.s). Each 1ime a Student
wanted a drink, he would be required 10 show
an IO with a color signifying thal he was of
legal age.
It might seem to be a nuisance al first. bul

And ii has not shown 10 be an inconvenience 10
the studen1s. We hope 1~at the s1uden1s and
1he .idminis1ra1ion give our suggestions the attention they deserve. The issue of alcohol at
Colga1e promi$C$ 10 bo a controversial and
volalile one. It must be dcah Wi1h swiflly and
effcc1ively.

Letters.

.

'

• •

Letters . . . Letters . • . Letters . • . Letters . • . Letters .

Phi'Delt

Apology
To the Col.gate Community:
. We, the Brothers of Phi Delta
Theta would like to express our
regrets wilh regard to our conduct
at the Comell-Colgate football
game. The Brothers intended the
trip to be an opponunily to suppon the Red Raiders a1 an away
game. We also wan1ed 10 repres,nt P hi Delta Theta and Cotga1e
Univmhy with enthusiasm and
p ride. Unfortunately. our spirit
engendered a form or behaviour
whkh did not reOect Our U'ltentions.
Colgate athletics deserve the
full suppon o f the s1udents.
However, the zeal demons1ra1ed
by our Brotherhood degenerated
into an embarrffling spectacle.
The overall conduct of the Phi
Dell's at the game was a dubiou.s
.manifestation of Colga1e spiril.
Our" athletes and our University
are too fine to receive any support
which mighl portay 1h·em in a bad
light.
Phi Delta Theta apologizes for

any offensive conduc'I al 1he game
and we hope the community will
try 10 recognize our basic inten•
1ions.
Sincerely,
_The: Brothers of Phi Della The1a

Fraternity

baske1 ball, soccer, baseball,
rugby, hockey, lrack, swimming,
golf, and lacrosse teams, all
women's programs and all dub
sports. Almos1 all of 1he pcop)c
involved in these programs do not
reside at DU bul are in1c:rspcrscd
1hroughou1 the Colgate communi.
ty.

In reference to Ouy Osborne
as sa1isfying 'all the ar1isic needs'
of jocks let us point out 1ha1 DU
discos are consis1en1ly well auend·
cd parties displaying some or the
To the Editor.
best available dance music. We
As members of the Della Up·
have never heard Ou.y O sborne
silon fraternity many of us took
played al any of o ur parties.
offense to some of the statements
Regarding the prepQSterous
made by Charles Cavalier in th~ a llegation thal many jocks major
last edition of the Maroon. Many
in geology and the inheren t logic
of the rcr\arks concerning 'jocks'
that because the earth is large and
were assuredly absurd. We will since jocks are large it ronows tha1
limit our com.mentary to all jocks s1udy 1he e_arth, we have had
remarks made after the singling the privilege 10 get 10 know many
o ut of Delta Upsilon, the only en·
male and female athJcles al Colthy at Colgate given such gate. We find no rationalization
undeserved distinction.
or semblance of evidence 10 group·
Hi.s statement referring 10 them into one particular concenDelta Upsilon as a refuge for tration. Mos.I s1udent athletes a1
•most jocks on campuf has little Colgate do not major in geology.
substantiation. Of 1he 69 players
Much of whal Mr. Cavalier
listed in the 1982 Colgate football says ca~ be construed as a knock
roster only 18 live at DU and this againsi 1he football 1eam in
only represents the intercollegiate reference to shaved heads, footfootball program. In referring Jo . ball caps, and the size of many of
s1uden1 a1hle1es Mr. Cavalier the other members of the team.
graciously omiued the men's Perhaps Charles A.H. Cavalier is

Offended

jealous of the atten1ion 1he 1eams
receives or is envious of the fine
athletes which represent Colga1c
a1h le 1ic program s and the
camaraderie which lhey all often
display. Wewill leave1hecriticism
of 01her sweeping generalizations
10 someone else. We would like 10
sug,gcst that Chuck 001 be so
quick 10 make such sweeping
generalizations and characteriZ;ations of a who)c community of
people afler being a members of
said communily for such a shon
period of lime because his ap.
praisal of 'jocks' was 101ally unwarranted and incorrect.
The Bro1hers of Ocha Upsilon

Comment
Clarified

I hope my Wednesday hosts will
conc«le my "basis in fact*' as I
rePon. The Sisler Sig program,
despite its name, has the potential
to be outstanding among i1s 1ype.
If the women arc in fact self.
governing, they may with a welldrawn constitulion and 1ht apparem &ood will or 1he house
nearly achieve local equality. (It
goes wi1hou1 saying that 1hey arc
far less than ~ual in the grand
scheme of national and ritual af.
fairs).
Frankly, J have no interest in
any internal involvement with the
national affairs of any fraternal
organization. And 1 regret the extent to which moves like Sigma
Chi's relieve exter~al pressures o n
frats. I agtte, though, 1ha1 the
Sister Sig program represen1s an
honcs1 effort, and a practical
plan, for bringing the proverbial
"women's 1ouch" in 10 a new
sphere.
. It may be that -some
politico/social barriers are at last
eroding , It wiJI be interesting to
see what the Coalition, as well as
posterity, thinks.

To lhe Editor,
Since it's a bil petty to chide the
MaT!)On for your average rourth
hand quote, I'll just take the OP·
~nunily to clarify my com'"?ent
cued Tuesday, September
21.("Sigma Chi Accepts Woman
Associates").
I on~ harbored the _naive hope Sincerely,
that Sigma Chi would bravely
Eliza'..>eth A. Hinkclman
break with the•r national and adWomen's Coalition
mit wom'en as equals. Now, as the
S.A. Representative
phrase goes, I face Re,ility.

.......,..

,.,.,

~

Plctu,eJOWlllf . . .........
the lhon of a loal body
The NftakJ Is suddenly la·
1en,p1ed bJ lhool11
help. Tllmln1 1owont the...,.. JOOI recoplu
J~ Folwell on4Mod1J11 Mum,
O'Hlff dro..,,lns
mind
how they bolh - . i up In t~
11me pmticommt.) You are raced
. wilh a qQation: Whidl one will
you 11ve?
Tou1h queslion? II you think
so then you ore probebly one or
those people who is unsure as to
wh11 to do about school p,ayer.
Unllkf Ms O'Hare you do not
rind 1hr Ida o r children prayina
lhlllbhorrt~t. Then 1&1ln, untikt
Mr. Falwdl, you do n01 tink
directly tht dtcllnt of America
wi1h 1hr tnd of compglsory prayrr

of- .

ror

«-

in schools. YOU are somewhere in
lht middlt.
You ¥e not alone. W hat i.s un-

doubtably

a

majorhy

or

Is Prayer Child's Play?
Oblener
i\merlc:llis b UMUrt -

scllool
p,aycr. Thb lock .o r dtdsion hu
allowed 1ht ISSUt to bt controlled
by rrinae aroupo 1h11 clolm 10
rq,r...., us olf. Tot proponcnlS
or school prayrr con thtmNlvs
"People ror the Amtrican Way ...
Tht 1wo aroups lhink of ach

ocher as •rnctionartel' or •secular
humanists.•
Which leaves you and me sit1in1 in 1ht middlt. Eithtr btcoust
we have been 100 apa1hedc 10 take
a saand or beaux we just do not

see 1ha1 issue u thal imponant, so
wt hlyt not modt our ftttlnp
known. lut, the issue is impor1an1
enouah to make a stand on, and ii
i.s much to imponan& 10 ignore.

p,aycr may tDCI up btia1 «>ii,
puloory.
Thtst poinll ....,, 10 ffl!lkt
clear !lit ract 1h11 school p,ayer Is
·c11eswlck· noc somr lntldiow p1on 10 11111<• .
children swear by a stilt
School prayer w'ni ·not But thll is :sot lht point. By putnects1arily lnvolvt 1<1uol 'Hail . lin1 p,ayer back In IIChool\ !ht
Marys' or ;Twen1y-1hlrd Psalms•. stat• will bt 11ncdonlns rtllkion .
School 'prayer' con 11kt 1ht form
The sta1e has no need 10 sanction
o r quit! medi1a11on a1 a prescribtd
rtllalon and rtfisjon his no nttd
limt. II could also bt a spteill or s1a1t 11nctioiiln1.
Tot ml 1hrt11 is not a reliaious
..... dnisned to ... o rrmlivt lo
no ont. (Humorisl Mark R..-8 take over o r the coun1ry by a Func1amtn1alis1 Ayatollah, ra1htr ii Is
parodits 1his typr or prayrr with
tht lhreal of a WIShtd out Ida of
closina o f "Amen, and
rtli1ion btins 'suppontd by lhe
, W'"• '\ffl• ")
School prayer would bt vohin- slate. Jusa as Sludmts today,mumtary. No bill prnm1ly btina c:on- ble oaths 10 uone nation, invisi-

Whll makts 1his qutstlon or
ldlool proyrr so lmPortlnl 111d so
vololilt is lht fact 1h11 k involvts
children. Tot issut is whtthtr or
. not children will p,ay In school.
We all have a stake in what
children do. Ehhtr directly as
partnlS or Indirectly u ftllow
citiz.ens. . _W e canno1 leave 1he ii.sue
up to rri• aroups, ii will bt our
children, and no1 just 1hein who
Wm haw 10 abide by our clecision.
So if 1he is&ue is lmponanl,
how are we 10 deal wilh ii? The
obvious answer is: ralionally. We sklered would aive anyone the
musl leave the frin,e aroups and abili1y 10 makt a child pray.
their emotion-ril,led araumen1s However, it has been pointed out
bthind and look al tht fac:1s as wt that studen1s are wry susceptible
know them .
to peer pressure and volun1ary

a

Obsener

• This artklt app,o,wJ i• /he

lician. Whal 1hty do providt ror
people who tn1tr thtse profes.-,
1•••
13
A

K
sion.s,
as wtll as for doctors and
2•, - · p,
• • a,um, .
Gayle ROSte '82 sug,atffl that ~
enainten, is a n inttllectual
print ii b«ouse it rtminframework within which 10 view
some questions and situations
lhal world, Our univtrsities. 1he
Obsener
which she and her /rknds had tnclassical liberal arts curriculum.
counterrd at Colgate.
put us in 1ouch with tht
As pan of whal has evolved in•
II has been said that 1es1 scores
achi,evemenu, and failures, or o ur 10 my weekly autumn routine at
indicate thal the inleUec;tual level
culture in thepasc. They ltach us Colaa1e, I ltt>I out of btd around
of our studtnls has falltn in re«nl
thinas that we did 001 know, noon last Sunday, whisked
years. Having 1augh1 chtmi.stry - - - - - - - - - - - - things lhal we had no idea we throuah my mornina ablu1ions,
for 13 years I can ltslify lhal thi,
should lhink of kno.,ina. They filled a Tupperware bowl with a
is not so. Young people today art _ _ _ __ __ _ _...,_ _ teach us to ask ques1ions or half a box or Cinna·mon Life, and
fully as smart, as able to com• the society around chem, become$ . ourselves ~nd the w~rld around nicked on the television. (Before
prehend lht wealth of human tx· so grea1 that it perturbs tht U!--Some1hmg lhal will servtl us I proceed any further wilh lhe nar•
rativt, ltl me assure Mrs. Murphy
perience and understanding 1ha1 natural process of educa1ion. wtll whatever we do.
we at the university havt to teaCh What I Stt among some - no1 all,
Fritnds and fu1ure colleagues: that I had atttnded services at $:00
them, as we we,e in our time. not tven a majori1y, bur 100 many Let the ways or tht world and a in Bouckville tht previous evenWhat I do perctivt is an ocasive for comfort - of our best students desire ror sccllrity enter your con• ina),
Back in fron t of my ltlevision .
professionalism direc1ed toward is:
sid~ationS as you choose amona
entry into the traditional profcsUnusual compe1i1iveness in in- 1he intelltt1ual riches that any c:ol· a petitt Sony 760 perfect for the
sions · or 'medicine and the other
troductory course$,
lt-g has 10 offer you. Surely you late.show when it's well plSI your
heahh scitnct:s and tht
law
Excessivt grade consciousness. have to-fo r you are part of the bedtime - I round mystff a witness
and toward the newtr profession,
Too muC:h worry about world and you and your children 10 Th• Thrtt S1oogcs. I banished
tnginttring. -1 and my colleagues planning-one's college career need will have lived in it. Bui don•1 let lht.m in a hurry, but, as the deities
see this early professional tenden• not be fixed in ourlinc in the first the future constrain you-you will of central New York's airwaves
cy among our best and brightcsl
week of the freshman year.
' dttermine it. Be inttllectuaUy have deigned to grant us only two
students,
Some failure to take inttllt'C- adventurous . Take a new channels, my only othtr option
Is thtre somethina Wrona with tual risks in decisions on which language and let it be Russian of was one or those insipid News
seeking t ntry into a time-honored course to take.for scientis1s, with Japanese or Arab;c . View map.zinc shows • lhis panicular
profession that serves fellow man, resptct 10 courses in t he dis1ribu1ion requirtmtnls as a segment addressina itself to tht
provides intellectual challenae and humani1ie$ and .social scitnccs, . pGSilivc incentive to diversify tribulations endured by a certain
yet combines nnancial security and ror people in tht h umanilies rather than as a burdtn 10 fulrill. midaet truckdrivtr.
A brief synopsis: II is a Sunday
wilh thtse? Is thef't $0mtthirig and social sciences, the revtrst. , Take that tougher course.
wrong with lht ramily of a Rus-- Within the studtnt's own fie ld WtThe world will wait for you 10 arternoon during autumn in the
sian Jewish, Columbian, or have seen a dis1urbing tendency choose a pr_ofession. But lhere will United S1a1cs or America, and all
Chinese immigrant, tach escaping not to lake the most challenging be few opportunities in your ift I can 1Unt into arc Thrtt Stooges
its own socially, ideologiCIUy or course for which one is prepared whtn your mind, at ils grea1cst rtruns and pre-fabricated human
finanda Uy con.s uai'\ed heritage , bul to choose an easier version, potential for learning, is c-0n- interest stories.
Jusc' as James Bond can return
wishing ils children to move •. o ne 1hat repeals what one has fronted by a ma1ching concentra.ahead-in a profession.and achieve
already learned.
tion of ptOple eager 10 tuc,h you. to his hotel room afler an evenina
material security in their new
chink thest pauern$ or One such greatt experience, of baccarat with Le Chiffre and
land? Ar1er all, thlS is the Land of behavior and c hoic e arc , Stuyvesant High Sch,oot, is behind instincively smell danaer in the air,
Oppar1unity.
deplorable. inconsistent with the you. Another, college, Slands I sense that somelhing is hugely
Let me take an unpapular great American tradilion of a before you. By graspina the amiss, horridly wrong. I turn lht
s1and and say'Ycs, under certain liberal arts or gc-neral cduca1ion. richness and diversity that is about VHF dial much likt .007' miah1
circumstances, there is somtthing Our colleges arc not just steps to a to be offered to you, you s1and 10 have fumbled with lht safely
wrona with txcessive profes, proression . Many of my friends gain a depth of unders1anding of catch on his Sten.gun, quickly,
stOnalism in young people.• The do nor work in a fteld related to our culcure and chat or 01hcrs 1ha1 and then frant ically.
Whtre is Brent Mussbergcr?
world doa and will require doc- their college major, Indeed, our will give you a firm and rich founAnd
Mtrlin Olsen? And John
tors, lawyers, and engineers. But colleg~ do not train people for dation fo r living in our complex
Maddtn? I rose esp«-laUy 10 hear
thtrc is something wrong when the most of the profnsions or ac- world and ford imorovinl it.
press for lhtse sclcctivt profes- tivilies lhat make our society Roald Hoffman, tht 1981 winner their pre-gJme pontifications!
sions, gentratcd in un«iual pan, (unction -from kindtgarten ofthtNo~IPrl.uinClrtmlstry, is ,Where is Jimmy "the Greek"
. by lhe student$, their parentS and teacher to a spar1swrittr 10 a mor- a pro/tssor a, Cornell University. Sn.yder, and the usual tawdry
display of charts, statislics and inside info upan which he makes his
predic1ions?
The harsh realily dawns upcn
me like so much nuclear fallout.
Jimmy the Greek can sleep in toObserver
day. P hylUs Oeorgt will not have
10 shtllac her hair whh VOS •and
rclation.shi,p, bul I haVe not often ' ideas.
Hold on 10 your hats, Women felt intimidated by, harassed by,
Take, for ins1anoe, che touchy reign a knowledge of the game.
at Colpte, Oloria. Sceintm et al, or · abused by the opposite sex. issue of ..cocktail rape" and at 1he For there will be no gamcs. The
htrt comes the blasphtmy... I O.K. you will say "be real." I same cime a re.w minutes 10 finely-tuned machinery or my
believe men are unfairly the brunt have been mistreated but visualize the way some women Sunday regimen hi.s ingested a
of many non.inale related ftmale di.srespec1ful behavior is not con- dress. Whether,knowingty' or not. money-wrench: For cht first cime
frustrations. I say chis in che fined solely to the rcmalc spccie.s. women are oflen literally "asking in NFL history, the players h.ave
mids1 or the controversial issue While ii may be beyond our con- for ii." I am not.saying a',woman aone on strike.
or... sh ... male/female rtlations trol to totally wipeout harass- mus1 don glas.ses, draW her hair ' A 'Stooge• interrupts my sulkon 1his campus. I m'uSI either live ment, we have whhin our abilities back liahlly and Ponray "Miss ing reverie.
"Hey Mo! Fish is Brain
in a vacu1itm or · have been to at .. leas1 diminish h. Women Oowdie" 10 ward off all pleasuremiraculously side-swept by 1he ef- often act in.ways to perpetuate the seeking males. (No offense Food!" pronounces Larry.
.,You oughta cat a whale,"
(conlinu,tf on pag• /1)
fects of the tenuous male/remale abuse and are victims or obselttc

N~w Yont Timaon Soturdo_yJuly

ble" and do not know what liberty
or justice mean, the words of Cod
and prayer may take on ' a
familiarity 1ha1 disguises ia·
norance.

Football Withdrawal

- - - -- - -- - - - -

A

rdislon.

w aste

of
College

Raold Hoffmann

A New View of Self-Respect

.Mary .Donahue

· Austin Murphy
.

'

returns mo, stickina his rork into
the lauer•s forehead, tliciling a
honkina no'ise. I turn· the
'Stooaes' off. I like th• rpisodts
with Curly, and this one features
Schemp. .
Millions or Amtricans 1his
"fruited plain" over are suuggling with the same symptoms or
sudden withdrawal. Of course we
knew the s1rikt was immintnt, but
• as with 01hcr .or lift's unpleasantries - like appaiJument! wilh the
proctologist, or Sadie Hawkins
dances we stupidly said "yes" to .
it is easy to ignore thtm until
they're upan us.
As much as I used to love 10
watch NFL playtrs trample and
snurne (interior lintmen) and slice
and glide (skill pashiOn$) about
tht astro 1urf, I havt problems
mustering up much sympathy for
thtm. Admittedly. some of these
callous stntimen.1s derive from 1he
rc-.scntment which still rankles in
my jayvee &reas1 • because of my
inability to play football on a pro-,
fwional level. Or a college, high
school or intra~mural level, for
that matttr. Still with all due objectivity, ii seems lhat af1cr hear•
ina some or the huae sums or
money being tossed around, many
or 1he players are walking around
glassy-eyed with cupidity.
Having withdrawn thtir demand for$$ perttnt of the NFL's
gross revtnuc (pla.yer represen•
1a1ivc Garvey txplained thal chis
demand Slruck the aeneral pubUc
as a bit too avaricious), the
players' union has decided to
satisfy itself with an additional 1.6
billion dollars over tht next fo ur
year. Tht owners havt agrttd 10
that figu re - amounting 10 roughly
one million crisp ones per player ·
but they'd like to take five years
ins-ttad of four. Other unsettled
issues included bonuses and player
incen1ives.
In che meanwhile, however,
dtJ)'ndcnt I Amtricans must nnd
Ways to fill 1his 1rauffla1izing void.
Though Easttrn European
Women 's Powerlirting and
demolition, derbies, and NCAA
archery can sustain a body for
awhile, they lend 10 c.loy without
providing much of the vital.
vicarious nourishment we gee
from NFL roo1ball.
I fear that many of the
sceelworkers in my homttown wiU
tum to wife and child~beating.
Here's to a quick tnd 10 lhc
strike.

....

THE COLGATE MAROON

Scple•llff 11. 1"2
'

This

individual has observed
that Colpte Univenity does no1
havt an errectivc minority studies
program. Such a program is
highly d«irable. Th• need ror
tuch studies has been recoanizcd

na1ionwide. For cumple, in i1s

A Call for Ethnic Education
O~ner

Mungazl

adopced

sludies, EnJlish, spons, mtdkinc,
etc. Since the-rt ls no universally

March II, 1977, 1he Nebraska

aarctd uPon or dimminatcd

Position , S1a 1emen1

Otpartmrnt of Education 1111td, model syllabus on curriculum em.
"Dtvdopina curriculum which brac:ina mlnorhy studits, ii wo ukl
promo1n a reallaic 'View of be- 1he mponsibilily or 1hc various
rninority people is a task involvina divisions 10 c:kvtlop an trftttivc
all school sys1tms, not tMrely -rroaram in 1htir disciplines.
those wilh minorily sroup
Thett are many ttasons 10

s1udcn1s. "(I)
Some: univmi1tf5 which have
mack an erron to devdop.minori·
oy studies pr.,.,aons •f'P"lr 10

cond pla« or low p riori1y in the
educa1.0nal process of students.
II calls for 1otal commilment on
all levels or the univen;ily. As 1he
new general education program
Dickson
ge1s underway, all dcpartrnenls
tinue to be made, either deliber11e can provide 1heir s1uden1s with an
· or implted. 10 the no1ion or one exci1in1 educational program by
ethnk group beina superior 10 includin& an dftttivc minority
ano1hcr. Aaain, thedifferem:es in s1udies program, folly in1ctt11cd
ethnic backarounds of s1uden1s do in all areas of s1udy as the follow.
no1 ref1ect in1ellec1ual or academic ing examples show:
abili1y in any way. American
(1) Hi.story, Blacks in Colonial
cultural plur,listic socic1y nqa1e1 Amerka
superior/inferior cduc11ional ap(I) Life on the plan1a1ion
proach in any school. All col(2) Masler•sla~ relattOnships
lqu, 1hmfore, have mponsibili(3) A slavt family
ey 10 main1ain 1he cuhural
Abolil tOnl$1 Movemenl
heritaae or each suade:n1 and pro(IJ Undtrground Railroad
mote rela1ed values so tha1 all
(2) lndtrs of UnclerJround
SI uden1s re11in their e1hnic
Railroad movcmen1
(3) Efrttos of oh, momn,no
cul1ural . iden1ity. That is whai .
Colp.le must seek 10 a\..-complish.
on black families
Every student muSI be assisted in
becomina proud or his ethnic
(2) English, Black Li1tnuy
backaround. I am proud or my
F~urcs
(I)
PhyUif
Wheaoley
African backaround.
I speak
(2) Mayo Angelou
English with a Brilish a1,....-cn1. I do
(3)
James Baldwin
not rqret this. II idenlifies me as
(3) Scitnce, Black Scltnli$1S
a n individual P.Crson,
as just me,
.
(I) George Washingoon
as Sammy Davis, Jr. sings, "I've
Carver·
101 10 be me." That is 1he ap(2)
Danit!
Halt Williams
proach all college:s muSI takt- 10
(3) lltnjamin Bannaker
enable the s 1udenu to be
tlemselves. A minorily studies
(4) Educa1ion, Black Educa1ors
program a1 Colgate can be a 1011I,
(I) Booktr T. Washingoon
inclusive and comprehensive .
(2) William DuBois
undcnaking. It must no1 1ake SC·
(3) John Hope Franklin

dnnons1ra1e 1M imponan« of a
minori1y saudiH proaram a1 Colpie. Let us discuss only a few.
(II Unoil 1bou1 oh, middlt'or oh,

may be good buc to others ii may·
seem 10 imply life competition
be1ween varioui ethnic groups.
An institulion can achieve better
rcsulu in i1s educa1ional efTons by
promolina coopcraiion amona
studenls lhan by implan1in1 1he
spiril or compe1i1ion in most collqe ac:1ivi1ies. Minorily s1uden1s
may wnse 1ha1 1hey will be dfeceivdy deprived or an equ.al oppor.
tunily 10 compe1e. by fon:n
beyond 1heir control. By auian·
ina studenu to smaU aroup projects 1hc school promotes a sode1y
or coopcr11ion necessary for
mu1ual fedin,s of respect. This
approach helps to eliminate racial
prejudice, because prejudamcnt
based on race, partiaalarly in
terms of superior-inferior 11·
titude, provides a sys1ema1ic
datrucdon or human rdalionships that are esscntW to the ef.
fons of bulldina the world of
reason and uJKlerstandiOA.(6}
. h Sttms, lhercfore, that any
educational insti1u1ion nttds 10
focus 111enttOn on eliminating
nega1ivc auiludes and s1ereotypcs
amona some students towards


01hm.. No reference mu5' con-

ha~ limhed 1heir aclivity 10 social 201h «n1ury lhe no1k>n of lhe
Mudies. To have dftttive minori• ''mdlina pot" theory exercised
1y studies, Co1&11e Universily 1remendous influence on educa·
needs 10 make adequate provi. lional thouaht and proarams_..in
.5ions at all In-els and in all the U.S. , bu1 as a resut1'or the civil
disciplines, 10 enablit saudcnu to riahts movemen1 in the 1960"s ,
pin 1horou1h knowlrdse reaar· 'Americans have increasinaly
dins 1he hislory and contribu1ion become awa~ of 1heir ethniic
. or mi.norhy aroups in America.
herit• and the Med 10 ret'lect ii
American hislory b rilled with in all educattOnal proccsws. The
many examples of ou11tandin1 "meltina pot" theory, therefore,
achievement of individuals from hu very lillle relevance: 10 the
minoritY aroups. Such ex.ample, educational process. (2) II has
include 1he followina Black b«ome common for omcials 11
Americans: Pedro Alanzo Nino, some universi1ies 10 araue tha1 the
the naviplor of Columbus's ship; minori1y stude,us in 1heir school
Cri1pus At1ucks was 1he first per- have adjus1ed well in10 their
son to die in 1he Boston Mauacrt school and social system, and
or 1770; Oanid Halt Williams, oht ohertfor, ohey s« no need ror
firs1 physician to perform open mU\ority s1udies. Bui acce-p1an«
heart surtff}'. and Charin Drew, ' or minori1y s11.1den1s ''as they are"
who discovered blood plasma: : is a very imPonan1 feature or all
. Mau hew Henson, who went wilh educa1ional experiences a1 any
Perry to discover 1he Nonh Pole: univc·rsity. (3) A minorily s1udics
Phyllis Whea1ley, who wrote a program enables all S1uden1s to
book or venn durina 1he colonial aain decpe-r unders1anding and ap. Everyone has their personal
days. Countless black men fough1 preciation o r 1he con1ribu1ions of preference as far as favorite
· in 1he Re-volu1ionary War, the all citizens, and 10 acquire grea1er seasons arc concerned. There are
War or 1812, 1he C ivil War, insigh1s or 1heir perspec1ives. oh 1he avkl ski monaers who crave the
World Wars I and II, Korean which 10 build a stronger rounda- cokl nip of winier with its snow
War, and the War in lndo-China. tion ror lhe futu re. Any universi- peaked mountains and indoor
M any black athletes have ty plays an imPonan1 rolt in 1his promise of open hcanhs and hot
di,tinaui.shed themselves: Jts.sc funct ion. (4) Some universities chocolate. There arc those who
Owens, Jim Brown, O. J. Simp- provide a separate unit or only a welcome spring wilh more than
son. Others have become ou1s1an- few weeks duration on minorily open arms, reveling in the spiri1 or
d ing social, Polilical, relig ious cultural h istory in a socia l stud ies rrcedom originating in the terleaders.
For example, Rober t curriculum. This is not enough to mination or in1e-rior isol11ion and
Weaver was 1hc Secretary of Ur· adequately cover importan1 the greeting of greenery t-nhanced
ban Affairs in the Johnson Ad. I fea1u res or an ethnic minority by lhe newness of budding
minis1ra1ion. Thurgood Marshall group. ~parlments must not blos:soms and warm winds. Con•
is a member of the Supreme give s1udents an impression that sumer demand for frisbecs is at
Coun; Roy Wilkins, James minority studies programs are less a n all time high during this rime.
farmer, Martin Lulher King, Jr.• · important by assigning only two Doubtless thereisn 'tan individual
Edward Brooke, Lena Home, weeks to a poorly structured unil. alive who d0t$n't anticipa1e sumMarian Anderson; Booker T. lnslead, university p rograms must mer with i1s call to the ocean,
Washington, · a nd Gcorae embra~ fully the compk1e s1>«- bronzing quaJily and compilation
Washina1on Carwr, arc only a 1rum or divergent American 1 of notebook refuse. Au1umn,
few members of the black com- e1hnic groups. To assume that however. combines some beloved
munity who have made an OiUtan- · 1ess time muSI be allocated to aspec1s or all 1hrce of the
din& contribution to the develop. minority stud.CS is inadvertently aforementioned sc.a sons .
In the midst or coming
ment of the United States. .
to suaaest 1ha1 such studies are
coolness,
autumn's wannth is as
These examples illustrate an im· less important · than other cur. 6
portant part that a minorily riculum componen1s. Minori1y gen uine as any 90 summers's
studies program can enrich in 1he s1udies must be rully in1cgra1cd in- day, the colors abounding more
than an equal match for any spring
educalional experience of students to univershy·widc programs.
garden's
noralarray. The crisp air
at Colaatc in all dlscipllnes:
All over the world the concept
science, music, government, socW of compecition in some instances, of au1umn is suCh that everyone

.

Praising the Autumn Spirit

()bserver

.

Lisa Calla

seems 10 exude nothing less than
sheer ruddiness, as o pposed to
winter's unanractive chaffing cf.
fcc1.
Fall, howe-ver, offers more 1han
a framework for a Rockwell in1er·
prctation. With au1umn's arrival
comes a spirit wi1hin uch of us,
awaiting the fes1ive holidays.
smilC$ gcneraled in and by pumpkins adorning bo1h ren~ and
porch, appt1i1es stimulated by
hearty meals or meats and 1rimmin gs, the d esire ror giying and
receiving Teddybear hugs no
doubt stemming from 1he look
a nd texture or new wool found in
hats, scarves and sweaters.
LL.Bean never had it so good.
Stop ror a momenl and look
around. As residents and students
of a r ural town, it appears we are
quite fortunate to be situated in
such a localion as Hamilton while
colors 1um, lawns are concealed,
and the overpowering view of the
mountain,s provides a stillness 10
the environment which adds a
sense of stability and calm to our
Jives needed all the more while
such concerns as academics, job
opportunities and grad school tx·

ams do not innocently creep up on
us- but rather bowl us over, rull
force.
On a romantic no1e, if one can't
fall in love in autumn, he could be
mis.sing the boat, even if ii means
falling in love with life 3nd lhe
idea of living. The beauty of fall
in Chenago Valley is about as
strons an inspiralion as any pOCm
by Shelley or any song rrom the
IOp 40.

Which'is \lanner, hol chocolate
or hot cider wilh a touch of rum?
Which is more romantic, the
pcrsPira1ion generated by a walk
on a hot summer's day or the
brea1h emanating from two peo.
pie conversing while s1rolling
down Willow Path on a d ear,
crisp afternoon. Light clothing
and bare skin can be blatantly
. sexy, bu1 layers of shirts, swea1ers
and down vests kindle the imagination. Challenges are always a
b!t ~ore pa~onate than open in•
vnauons.
\
This is no1 to say that the other
seasons are without their unique
auractions. Autumn, however, 10
me lS irresis1able .

••
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Macaroni, Potato or
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...........

'

THlt COLGATE MAIIOON

in Buffalo

.,....

Rock) were particularly errec1ive

Some 80,000 rans ...,,.;n1 from
youn1 t......,. to midd~_.,sed
paraus crowded into ou1door
Rich S1adium in Orchard Park on

Sunday 10 ..., a band, a ,,.,.,
band. and a rock insdtu1ion. The
band was David Johannsen: lhe
1rri1 band, The Clash; the rock
institution, The Who. Johannsen
played five songs, finished with
the medley " We've Gotta Get Ou1
of This Place," and lhen to
ewryone•s relier, did just that.
The crowd demanded no encore.

The 11len1ed and p0li1ically
vocal British punk rock group,
The Clash, 100k 1he st11•Althou1h 1hey only played 3/4 or

in displayins Tht Clash's raw and
yet polished ener1y.
At 5:15, Pele Townshend,
Roaer Dallrey, John Entwistle,
and Kenny Jones s1ormed the
s1a,e-· with 1wo mtd•sixties rock
classics: "Substi1u1e" (from My
~ntratlon) and . "I Can't Ex·
plain" (from Happy Jaek). The
third sons, "Dangerous, .. was the
first of many songs from their
lalesl album, It'$ Hord. While
..C,y if You Want.'' which is a•
loud mac;hine gun • 1aste of

orian, syn1hesizer) provided a
stron1 bas< ror Deluey and
Townshend. Panicqlarty errective was Jones's drummina on
.. Pinball Wizard"' (from
Tomm1). " I am One.'' · ~
Punk Meets the Godfa1hff.'' and
"$;1$" (all from Quodroph,nlo).
Oormin and En1wislle played full '
force on ..Eminen« Front" and
"Baba O'Reilly" (from Who~
Ntxl), In addition Entwistle con•
1ribu1ed ~ vocals on "The
Quiet One.. (lheir only number
from Fatt Donttf) and ..Twist

Dahrey's voice and Townshend's

and Shour."

guilar on,vinyl, did not live up to
this 111ndard in concert, the vocal
harmonies of '"A Man is Man,..
an hour, 1hcir choke of selections the jau/M'W wave ownones of
was excellent. or lhe eleven sonas .,Eminence Front," and the drivthey performed, "London Call- ina rhythm of the title track clearins" (from London Collin1), ly made up for 1hls weakness. All
.. Police on My Back."' "Ar- in all, The Who played ro, nearly
'
mageddeon," "Magnificent
two and a half hours (24 songs) inSeven" (all from Sandonlsto), cludina a lhree-sona encore: 1he
"R!)(k 1he Casbah" (from Com- loud/soft musical balance of
bot Rock), and "I Fou1h1 1he. "Naked Eye" (rrom Odds and
Law" (from Th• Clash) could Sods), usummeuime Blues"
have been played more s1ron1ty.
(which rivaled the Li~, at Lttd.s
On the other hand, "Brand New version), and '"TwiSt and Shout."
Cadillac," "Ouns of Brixton,"
Between these cndpa'ints was an
"Clampdown,'' "Train in Vain" awesome display of boch in(all from London Col/Ing), dividual and group talent. The
''Career OpPortunities'' (from rhythm section of Kenny
1'11t C/41h), and ." Should I S1ay or Jones(drums), . John Entwistie
Should I Oo" '(from Com/Jot (bus), and Tom Gorman (pll.no,

.

Wllo: 1tlll • . plleaome•o• arter elc~teew

TIit

..

Roger Dahrey has one of, if noc
the besl.' voices in rock. WhHe all
sonas were sung with his
characterisl.il:ally aut wrenchina,
rouah edaed tone, paniCularty
strona were "Behind Blue Eyes"
(from Who's N,x(), "We're Nol
Gonna Take II" (rrom Tommy)
which buried the same version
done at Woodstock, and "Love
Reign O'er Me" (from
Quodroph,n/a) which was per•
formed when lhe up rill 1hen over. cast skies broke in10 a downpaur.
Pele Townshend, .,, he aroup's
lead guitarist and principal sona
writer, is absolutely amazina on
scage. Between hops, crouched
leaps, spread legged jumps, and
swinging s1iff-armed chord slams,
lhe 37-year-old Townshend
perspired so much he had to
switch auitars after each song and
periodically dump baby p0wder
down his black lea1htt jacket.
Known on record more for his
song-wriling genius than his lead
guitar-playing abili1y, he had both
on the same ground in cohcen
i.e., his , harp leads were always
eJ1:cellcnt and at times exceptional.
To single out a few song.s would
be an injus1ice.
In playing together for 18 years,
the individual members arc
strongesc as a aroup (a perhaps
arguable point after hearing
Townshend's solo dforls). "Subsi1ute," a lonaer version of
"Sister Disco," "Who Are You"
(bolh from Who Ar~ You), were
The Who at i1s besl. "Long Live
Rock" (rrom Odds and Sods),
"Behind Blue Eyes," and uw on'I
O•t Fooled Again" (bo1h from
Who "s Next) which rc.aturcd eJ1:plosions at the scan and finish
were The Who and rock music in
ics widest passibk sense at their
very best. Anyone in the sa.lisfied
ye.au. crowd will agree to this .

TIie _,...... er die Gn""'1 .,._., It's -

-

Dancing With the Dead
ByMartyWAshbury free-wheelin'dancing in
1he Slrtels, replaC'td now by Sl
parkina rm. head, to toe body
searches as you enter and "at,..
solutely no ~cina in this aisle
kid. Ir I soua tell you one more
lime you're outa htte." But ir
Saturday niaht's c:rowd or over
20,000 in Syracuse's Carrier Dome
(includina quite a substantial
numbtr or •oa,e O...d Htach) was
any indication, minor inconveniences posed no obs1acle 10 havina a good time, arooVina to the
Oraleful O...d. Al1hough lhe
Dead seems to have made
Syracuse a permanent s1op on
both spring and fall tours, this is
1heir nrst appearance in the
Dome. No, they didn'I sell oul 1he
cavernous 50,000 scat ampilhcater, but by u.sina three
quarters of the noor and only the
firs1 and second tiers, 1he Dead
provided optimum visibility and
surprisingly sood acoustics for 1hc
Dome.
The 3 ½ hour show started with
a somewhat spiritless Jack Straw,
but crescendoed steadily through
'See See Rider• and 'Ramble on
Rose' into a funky version of the
R & B 'New Minglewood Blues'.
Another nrst set highlight was a
prcuy, rather rambling 'Bird
Song'. during w h i c hmany of
Jerry's kids were seen dancing the,
so aptly named, 'Woodstock Sun
O rope.'

The second set staned with
a bang as keyboardist Brent
Mydland ripped 1hrou1h his
rock.in' 1 Far From Me' with Garcia and Weir howlin1 out backup
vocals. Other memorable sonp
were 'Crazy Fingen', 'Goin'
Down 1he Road' and played and much apprteialed
'Ai~o. Aiko', which eased right
into a 1ruly boppin' version of
•Truckin" . The Dead also in•
troducied a new song; 'Ashes to
Ashes' (no rtlation 10 Bowie's
Major Tom epic) is a Bob Weir
rockffs and was received as an in5"'
11n1 classic.
If Weir's overcJ1:citement cau.s,.
ed· him 10 falter sli&hdy on 'Suaar
Magnolia' lyrics ii (!'lay have been
due 10 1he announcement that his
wife had been nown in 10 give him
a'bia wer kiss' on his fifth wedding
anniversary, as bassist Phil Lesh
pul it.
It has onen bttn said tha1 the
Dead are not only the best at what
1hey do, they arc the only ones
who do what Ihey do. Dead shows
are not jus1 conccns, they're hap,pcning.s in which the audience
becomes as much a pan or the
evcn1 as the band, dancing
aimlessly in the corridors, sia1ing
along, or just quielly gelling
weird. Bui onen the Dead's mysli•
que, chc fashion, the aui1ude, and
1he drugs can distract from the
most imponan1 race: the music is
a high syn1hc.sis of the efforts of
. sb fine musicians and countless
road people and 1e:chnicians.

Organist Delights Audience With Diverse Program
By Kattn Hrnlnat:r
This pas1 Friday, Colgate's
Concerc Series added one more
name to i1s list of disti-nguishcd
guest ar1is1s as Karel Paukert,
wdrld l'e nowned organist,
delighted a resp-0nsive audience
with a diverse program. The Orst
half of the concert consisted of
..Music fro m Paris''. including
works by Raison, Correue, Franck and Messiaen. Followil\g the
intermission, works by Alexandra, Kagel, Ives, and Janacek
were prcscnced as "Music or 1hc
Uncommon Composers."
Performing on . Colaatc' s
Holtkamp Organ, the internalionally acclaimed Paukert open·
ed the program with Raison's or.
fcrte Viv'e It Roy which was writ-

'

1tn in honor of the king on his entrance 10 the ci1y hall ronowing a
recovery. Paukert"s musical abili•
1y magnified the al1erna1ing
"Grand Jeux''. "en 1rio",and "en
duo" s«tions. I n~ work was a
plcasan1 opening to the program.
bu1 \he lack of a trompete en
cha,nade stop on Colgate's organ
was emphatically relt .
The nexf piece on the program
was Correue's Grund Jeu (avoc le
tonnere). By placing a board on
1hc pedal keys, Paukert was able
to insert sharp claps of Thunder
(tonncrc) jnto the fa.st moving
body or the piece. The rcsuhing
effect was a feeling of excitement
and an amazed audience:.
Franck's Pnlude, Fugue and
Variation, op. 18 was next on the
(continued on page I I)

rt1pleatleat

ora••

••••c

....

s.,....... 21, 1"2

THE COLGATE MAROON

Faeulty Profile:

Colgate Artist Keeps ~usy
., ......u Law,

the casitrn s1a1es. Loveless also
The Moroon focustS ils faculty has a aallery arfiliation in
pronle 1his week on Mr. James Washington, D.C. , represented by ~
l oveless, Professor of Fine Arts.
Gean Efron.
lovtlcSS takes hiJ role as attacher
In his role as a teach er, Loveless
qui1c seriously.
In a recent feels it is important to continue his
Maroon he said, "Althouah my carter as an activt artist. He
primary respansibilily at Colaate works in a s1udio above the
is 1cachin1. ii is not by sole one.
H amlh on Th tater where a spac:e
In r1ct I'm deadly krious about . for all rull•lime ans professors is
my role as 1 1eacht-r, IS well as a made available. He said, "In a
paln1er. " However, wha1 James university community, ii is incumLoveless considcn 10 be taichina bent for us who are leaching to
is a areal deal more than just 1he make creative contributionJ 10
dictionary definition, He explain• Cota11• as wed. "The fac:t chat I make acncral. And in curn, Cola11e has
ha bdoved who in 1he end available to students my own 1 rcspon1ibility 10 an as a sup,awakens her 10 grttt 1he arrival or work, my ideas and 1hou1hts IS a por1er ror the c-reation of new
sprina aOer 1he Iona rains of practidna anis1 is an inltgral pa.fl knowledac."
Lovtless feels 1h11 the impact
winier. The piece will feature of my 1cachina."
Jamn Lovrless came to Colpce 1ha1 an and new cxprnsion have
Wiliiam Mc Kernan '84 as conducin
1966 from the University of i~ society plays a rundamental
tor.
MuMc of lrvina fine, an early Kmtucky and hu tauJht both role in cultutt. However. 1he one
201h c:cnlury compo5Cf will also be Studio and An Hi.s1ory courses. problem that Loveless SttS is that
performed. Of lhe six pQtms thouah now he teichcs primarily present day society hasn •1 ttally
Loveless believes 1h11 eslablished a role or connection
which as a group n:presen1 a cycle studio.
of songs sec 10 poems by Ben Jon- thett ls indttd a harJ"IOny bc1ween for ar1is1s yec.That is why the
son. entilltd the Hour GIMs. 1hc b01h attas in lht Ans Depart· u.niVfflity's role lo provide a
Chorus will perform one of -the men1, giving ii a cohesiveness that
pieces "Have You Seen lhe White many other universities simply
Lily , Orow"and the Chamber don't have,
As a painter over the pa~ nine
Singers will perrorm two more
years,
Loveless has moved away
..The HourGlaM"and ••o Do Not
Wan1on with lhosc Eyn" fea1ur- from the ab~ract to landscapt
ing solosi.s1s Miriam Garron. Kate rnotifs, .some inspired by sights in
the Ntw York ai-ti. Ht is iftFerguson, and Amy James.
1trestcd
in rts1oring 10 his painThe Chorus will close 1he concctl wi1h 1hc N!lro Spiritual lings something more rtmini.secn1
"Grca1 Day" featuring solois1s or an earlier, more visionary an,
Jennifer Wilason, Andrew Korbel, his goal being to promote solitude
as, opposed to loneliness in the
and Brad Hurley.
Following their October 4 sympa1hc1ic viewer.
Loveless has exhibi1cd his art in
COOP conccn, lhe Chorus and
Chamber Singers will again be ovtr a doten one-man shows and
performing in 1hc Paren1s a varie.ty of na1ional and regional
Curremly, he i.s
Weetcnd combined Student- exhibit.ions.
Faculty Concert on Friday ()c. represented in an exhibi1 spontober 8 al 8:30 pm in lhc Universi, sored~)' the National Museum of
cy O,apel. Bo1h.concerts ar open American Art con1aining ovtr one
10 1he entire community and arc hundred i1ems. Tht exhibi1 is
\:01&11e Fonllty A rtbl Jomes
, free of charge.
presently travtllina throughou1

Chorus Will Sing at Coop
The Col..1e Univershy Chorus

under 1he dirtcttOn or Maritua
Chma. will st,n or 1M year whh
i1s annual COOP Co~n. 10 be
hdd on M onday. October ,4., at

11 :20 a.m. in th< COOP. Th•
concert will feature the works of
1wo "Amerk.an composen and
feature both the University
Chonis·and the Chamber Sinam.
The Chorus will be: doina three
pieces
by
William
8illinp(l746-1800) a compostr
durina the American Revolu... 11onary War. The three an1hems
of biblical k>tt songs att based
upon 1cx1s from one Song of
Solomon... f'Change You, 0 Ye
D1u1tucrs of Jerusalem .. is a
dialoaue belwcen the lover, who is
the "rairest amona women» and
1hc daughters of Jerusalem (the
women of het communilyl.
Featuttd in this work att solois1s
Julia Fuller, Michatl Smith, and
Steven Simpson. "I Am Come Into My Garden" develops three im•
ages., a sensual gardt:n, an ab_senl
lovrr and 1he aa1hering of friends
in celebration. Solois1s In lhis
work arc Jacqueline Perez, Shawn
Murphee, anct Richard Picken.
The las1 of 1he Billings pieces to be
performed, "I am the Rose of
Sharon" lS aobul a lover awailina

haven for creativity in areas such
as lhe visual arls is so crucial.
In addition lovd«s believes
1hat 1he cduca1ional valut or a
subjttt is increa.sed when experi-tnced 1hrouah a practilioncr,
Wi1h ac1ive participation, the SIU·
dent then has a laracr rol-t as a
$Cholar and hopefully will be in$pircd co a are11er ex1en1. ·
Even in a non-acadtmk setting,
for students who don•t wan1 to
pursue arc for cttdiu, Loveless invi1es anyone to 0 1ouch in .. with
him and most of his coUcaues for
advice or ju.SC 10 talk.
Lovdtu a&rttS tha1 workina at
Colgate is a 1re111 opportunity for
a variety of reasons, but what is
truly unique is that tht small size
of the school enables him to rub
elbows with a variety of people
(both
hculty
and
underara4ua1es).
He considers
himseir privdr~ive so much reectback from
people representing such a variety
o r rl•

/

,

/ ?' 1
,\!
" .,t

Lov -

The Hour Glass
'

Wed., Sept. 29 Gin & Vodka Night
.75c Drinks 10 pm-closing

And Don't Forget•Sour Hour 4-6 p.m . • .75 Sours
•Happy Hour 4-7 p.m . Friday
Draft Beer Specials

824-9855

20 Lebanon St.

IOOIIII for rent at 5 M• Street
students welcome by the month
or by the semester.
We need 14 students to .fill the houH
for the fall of 1983.
,

C.. 824-14~ or 853-5250
E.G. Fa1ow Realty

SECOND GEAR is still here!
New this week:
Sma ll applia nces

Dishes, pots and pans, and 1Jtenslls
Qlalrs
Sweaters, (eans and cords

Brow,e """911 our 2 Roon of "new" MttdillNIIH

SECOND G'AR
t MapleAve
(next to Roger's MIit)

Open1W
Mon.-Sat,

..........,a
'

Gallery Shows Matisse

Colgate 13: Singing Brotherhood
By Mat lleuo•

dividual."

accordina

10 John

The year is 19'2,·and 1he place Prince. The "somelhi-. biuer"
is 1hc Maroon Room a1 the Col- is almost a bro1herhood, rivatina
pac Inn. The moment may not any of those exisaina on Broad
have seemed historic, after all ii Sired. The memben of lhe Thir•
wu common for 1he vocally in• tetfl, "Throuah bonds of friendclined at Collate to plher around ship and a love of sinain• have
the juke box and down a beer or crea1ed somethina quite unique,••
two. But for 1hc group or says Kun Anderson, and while

studenLI, past and present, who
became known as 1hc Colgate 13,
the meaning of that day forty
years aao lS more than nostalgic.
As for the university, ii could not
- it$tlr have accivcly pursued a
more worihwhfle outlet for the
spirit, enthusiasm, and talent of
the s.tuden1s, nor one that has
become more ingrained in lhe
Colgate tradition.

· "The Thirteen, is the epitome
of everything . collegiate " sa)'S
lc.adcr Mark Palermo, and there
arc few on this campus with a 1ruc
sense of what Colga1c is aboUI
who would argue the poin1. The
spirit demonstrated in ever)' per·
foim ance is a combination of
talent and enthusiasm brought b)'
each individual 10 the Thirteen
and further heightened by 1hc feel·
ing that ..The group is something
-tm'inensely bigger than the in-

there are those 1h11 consider the
Thirtttn a bi1 "uppity", "I think
they're confusing enthusiasm with

•an auitude'," says Palenno.
The spirit lhal drives the Thir1een can be found al alumni
ga1herings. In some ci1ies, the
1hirtcen can place as liule as a
single phone call, arrive 1hrtt
weeks later, and be handed a
schedule of con4;.erts at local high
schools, as well as free room and
board at the homes o f various
Colgate alumni, such as Eddie
Coaler, who sp0nsors an annual
weekend in Buffalo. "Alumni are
our bread-n-buucr, " says Peter
Juran.
On an individual basis, being a
thirteen is quite tough; each
membe.r is expected to know all of
chc eighty songs in the group's
repertoire, and while solos arc
awarded. on a senio rity S)'Stcm,

some manbers must know two or
lhrtt. Try-outs is another diff1euJt
time for the a.roup. Decerminina
rhe abilit.y of potentials in 1en
minu1es is Often very tryina. on
bOlh parties.
Once a \ludenl .,..... 1hrouah
the inilial staaes he is oflcn
rewarded with a series of tra~I
opponunides, unm11ched by any
organization on campus. This
year's trips include various alumni
weekends, all 1hc fOQ1ball games,
a January swing of Nashville,
Dallas, Cincinatti, Chicago,
C leveland, and Cancun, Mexico.
On campus, Thir1cen appearances
alt limited 10 the Pub throughout
the )'Car, studcn1 activi1ies night.
and on parents• weekend in the
chapel.
The Thirteen, whose favorite
songs include those by the Beach
Boys and the Beatles, is a group
that wants to en1ertain you. The
rapport developed between the
two groups, audience and per.
fo rmers, is mcntial to a good
time. Next time )'Ou go 10 sec 1hc
Thirteen in the Pub, excricist'a lit·
1le discretion b)' holding down the
)'ap. TheThirtcen is a great group
of people, wholl)' de-serving of
)'our support and enlhusiasm.

a, S - T , _
·•n 1he ear•y •900'1 Heari
Ma1luebecame_,,izeduone
. of the preeminen1 Fauvist painters
and he was larJdY resPonsible for
the liberation of color that would
areately lrinumce painlina in the
twen1ieth «n1ury. Matisse had
one of 1he most auaust anisdc
careen in modern limes, but in
1941, at the aae orsevcn1y-1wo, he
fell victim to an in1et1inal
blockqe that almost ~illcd him.
Hil subequent operation lefl him
bedridden for many or his remain•
ina yean, but 1he e"pcrien«, he
claimed made him feel re·
juvenated
and suddenly
philosophical.
This rebirth wu responsible for
M11isse's chanae in medium from
.pain1 10 cut-out paper in 1he nnal
years or his lire. He had previous.
ly used cut paper u a composi.
1ional aid, but a ponfotio of twcnty plates with an accompanyina
text entitled Jo:t presented
Matisse's first use or cut-out ·
paper as a medium in itself. These
plates are currcnll)' on exhibit at
1he Picker Art Gallery and will be
there throush October 24.
The works in the exhibit,
however, arc not composed of IC•
tual paper cu1--outs,
For the
pr_escnta1ion oJ his _porlfolio.

Mallue had his ISS$nlS COVIi>
sheets of while paper wi1h brlllillt'
colo~ ·suache, which he llltn
cue, arranaed and pas1ed on a na1·
paper support. The,c maqueuei'
were then converted in10 stencils,
and prints were made using the ·
original auacbn. le is a c:ollecdon
of these prin1.s that now hangs in
the Picker.
Matisse bcpn work on Jau in
1943 and h was published in 1947.
II is the work's improvisational
qualilies, both chromatic and
rhythmic, 1hat a,ive it its name.
The text th11 accompanies the
prints was written by Matisse in
his own large handwritina. He
claimed lhal 1here wu no connec1ion between 1he pla1es and 1he
text, and that the function or the
black writina on 1hc whi1e pages
wu only to provide a resonant
backaround, much like a frame,
for the UluS1r11ions. As Matisse
himself says, *'These pages serve
only as an accompaniment to my
colors, as as1crs add 10 the com•
position of a bouquet of more im•
partant nowers."" Nevertheless, this claim 1hat the .
cext is simply a visual rest gave
Matisse the freedom to write on
any topic he chose to, and some of
thcs.c lopics appear to be ai &east
1(conlinu~d on pag'~ 11)

..The ''Cirque'' Prinl f rom Pk:,k er'S Matisst Sllow ""

. .,,

Wouldn't you rather
flyMmlne?

NAME Off OTHER PLACE

CONTEST
1st GRAND PRIZE
Dinner for Two at Colgate Inn
Nite on the Town Including
All you can drink ,at our Other Place
Brunch the ne:itt morning

Look for our Nal11e-lt Stubs
,.....t... the • .,.r.omc,
au.lt.ialNiOOI , . . Hornet

ou

Where?
18 Lebanon St. Across from Hickeys
Mon.-Thurs. 7 am-11 pm
Fri. & Sat. 7 am-2 am
Sun. brunch only 9:30-3:00

.

.

F.or A Your College ,.._
'Our Prices . Better Than
The Bookstore .
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School s..pp11. . , \
Ari Suppllft
LNlher Good>_
., .
~z1n,11

.......

THE COLGATE MAIIOON

Film Reviews
11) 0., ..a L, Some films are destined 10

• 1912

Dom O.Luix adds what linlc IC·

Dolly Parton bounce around and

ina cot<. Names lik• Ed Earl
l)odd and Mona Strana•ly rlffll

Jackson's LP: Lyrical

1in11here as. and Robnt Mandan.
make mo"C'Y no maucr how PoOr Charles 0..mina. and Lois Nft.
they miaht be. Uninnal's " Th•. 11tcon stand around w1ilin1 (or
Bcs1 Link Whorehouse in Texas.. somethlna 10 h~pptn.
has made 1hca1cr ownm happy
As you , an Jtt, I have rdrain~
nationwide. The problem-is 1ha1
from rdcrina dirttlly 10 1hc
the avera,e moviqotr does no1 characten by name. All of 1M'm
aet their money's wor1h. Many arc simple on"t dimensional
people are sa1isrttd with watching crtatures 1ha1 dance around look•

are intriaufd with Bun Reynolds
as M strualn to dt.~kk which is
more imponan,. his love ror ~Uy
o r ur himselr.

··Whorehouse" is classified as a
musical comedy.
II is full of
mu~c. A song can brtak ou1 of
ordihary dialogut a1 any mo,ncnt.
A rew sonp are prcuy good. b ut

comedy sets in only when Burt
decKles 10 stan a sons. He is 1alkin1 to Dolly about nothing in particular when he 11ans singing
about how much he loves Mr.

no cxplanatK>n.

100k all 1hrtt

On 1hc 01her

or them

to be 11kin1 a more optimis1te
ii is concerned, music is m051ly 1U view of life. Ak>na wi1h the
riahl, or a1 .leul in a healthy stlle aforemenlioned .. Another
forlhefunure, inspiceofchtfacc • World.'' ..S1cppin1 Out," a
I hat ii may sound, as lhouah ii is carefree cxplor11ion to the
niah11ife of 1he slrttls, is I aood
bcina held h011aae."
example
or chis optimism, and the
This Duke EllinJton quote,
which cffective-ty describts 1he electronic beal should make
musk scene today, is included at "Steppina Out" a hil. J(f hasn't
the conclusion to the lyric shtt1 of loSI his pci,chant for biting sar•
Joe Jackson's lates album, Niiht castic lyrk:s, however. America
ond Doy. Jackson's music has becomes conquered by the boob
bee:n stylistically evolving through tube in the funky "TV Age," and
his career ·- from the New Wave he glibly dtcrecs that ..everything
thrash of his first two albums 10 the gives you cancer" in "Cancer."
The most striking pan or Doy
rqpe-inOucnccd &01 Crazy and
and
NiRlrl comes in the la5-t two
the big band era uibutc Jumpln •
Jiw. Ni1.ht ond Day is ano1hcr song.s, which leave no doub1 as to
stylistic departure, and is Jackson's genius. The dramatic
dominated by Jackson's increased balllld "R•al Man" d..ls with th<
use of keyboards (there arc no chansing roles that men and
women arc playing in 1oda_y's
guitars on the LP).
society.
The game continues, but
Loosely conceptual in theme,
Niiht ond Doy deals wilh daily life nobody is certain of lhe score
anymore. Jackson seems lo sua•
in 1hc city. The front side, or the
"'Night" side, deals with the ur- gcst 1hat-a diak>gue is necessary,
ban niah1lifc. It kicks off wi1h and .. if there's war between the
"Another World," an 11ypically sexes, then there"ll be no people
optimis1ic song in which a left ." The concluding cut on the
wclcqming smile from a friend. "Day" skle and the LP paints a
helps 1hc pro1a,gonis1 r~in his fascinatina picture of a world in
which obnoxk,us DJ's play qucs-sanity after the rigors of daily life.
lionable
luncs while Joe and his
The songs on the ''Nigh1" stpunctua1l'd with la1in percussion girlfriend want them to play "A
and arc very dan«ablc. During Slow Song." The song rings with
the "Day," life is less fran1ic, and a Phil $ptctorish quality and i.s
1hc songs rtflttt the relative quiet. dtcidcdly memorable.
lndic-a1ive of 1hc "Day" cuts is
for those of you who are lookihg
"'Breaking Us in Two,'; a nice
for the biller music and lyrics of
ballad about a strained relationsongs like "Js She Really Going
ship.
Ou1 wi1h Him?", Joe Jackson's
Jackson's gradual shift 10 a
latest might disapp,oint you/
more intelligent, mature 1htmt" is
Those of you who arc in1cre5-1cd in
evident on Nighl and Doy. Whitt>
the cllcgance and the lyrical exhe may not • be the nc,n Cole
cellence of 1hc man will find
Porter, the musical arrangemcn1s Nighl and Doy 10 be a unK9uc
arc more complex and more
pcrspcctivc of life from lhe unique
melodic. Furthermore, Joe seems musical vision of Joe Jackson.

..I am an optimtll. From where

hand. Larry L. Kina, Ptccr
Mas1erson , and Colin Hiaains do
need to cxpain what it was 1ha1
to wri1e.

The p lot is less complka 1td 1h10

Part• •

Or. Suess' Tht Cat in tltt Hat, and
the script is very vcrbost in 1h11 it

••

N••••

The dancina whores were hardly

is 100 rcpttitious.

horTible. Unfor1un11cly, 1hey account for only about S of the 111

Somt or the 26 million dollars
spcn1 of 1his motion pic:1ure can bt

a<.-coun1td ror in subs11nt."t'. The
photography was very good. h is
Jim Nabors adds wha1 othtr a shamt 1ha1 1hty had very li111t 10
humor there is in the tifm. Hi5 ntm. Also. the ch0ttgraphy was
character is a c:harmina, aood- ' spltndkl as Iona as 1hey kept 1ht
naturcamera.s off of Dolly and Bun .

m inutes

,

1h11

''Whorehouse''

s1cals from our lives.
All in all .. Whorehouse .. is like
watching a Iona episode of "Htt
Haw." A richer plot coupltd whh
charac1er d~1h could have salvaaed 1his PoOr old bordtUo. II is a

.

, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - shamt whtn a film could have
b«n attat. The cintma1ography
ATT•NTIOfl
All 11lllte , . . . . . . Ill DICl'I " Rw• tlr Jadl"
and dancina earn a 7 on a 1-25
scalt. You could do worst in your
RUNNERS:
stl«tion
of a motion pic1ure.
1. Thef\ll'lwlll talcaplacellll1 Sundlly,Oc:-3,2 p.m.
Films like "Tempest" and ..The
2. All , _ _ muat bring - r ploclga -11--tlley will bo
your . ,1ry torn, lo the run .
Stcret Policeman's 01hcr Ball "
1 Upon completlan of the run, 10 r..,_. will r_,,,. frff
rank far below "Whorehouse.''
"· ........, - of o.,,,_
Dolly and Burt arc symbols and
no1hing more. They will sneak inPl. EDGE RS:
to the Hamillon Cinema Oc:1obcr
1. vwill make the aillecllon of fvndl p,ompt
alllclont. Pl••• honor your ploclga In the following
1.1, but inevitably will rake in lht
megabucks.
"Whorehouse" is
a. Al . , ofllclal pay 1tanon
rated R, bu1 is as sophistica1cd as
- A t DKE, lmmedla i.ty following the ....,,
"Captll.n Kangaroo." A lilllc
In the Coop. Monday, Tuwlay and WtdnHdly, «
b. GI. . II lo your rvnnar porton11lly
fou l language, a dirty concept,
c. Pt1111 avoid any other method IUCh • • malllno fundl
•and a flash of skin here and there
d. P1ru1",anar1ll pled. . ..,... Frklay,Octobet I
cam the racing which helps to
•· - • I I
paylo "A Run for Jock Fund"
make more money for tht greedy
I. Achldt would boJ)rolorable lo• calll pay_mont.
lilt le producers .

-·"°"

. • ......., •

Record Review:

Whorehouse: -Busted

,,,.,,,,..,

.

.

c-.

GO AN EARFULL OF conoN
THE COLGATE SOCIAL COMMlnEE PRESENTS
THE

JAMES COTTON
BLUES
,BAND

Straight from the Lone Star Cafe

-

FRIDAY, oaOBER 1st
9:00 pm

Hall of Presidents
with guest:

NIGHTWALKERS

Admission is FREE

••, , •••. , . 1"2

THE COLGATE MAROON

circus

Matisse Exhibit
(COlltinu«Ifrom,,.,,, 9)

metaphorically connected with his
visual ima,es. For cumplt, 1hc
plarc ntlilled /cond is placed at
the end or a section 1bou1

airplanes. n is believed that
Maline endeavored to creale a

meaninarul chaos of imqes, both
verbal and visual. in which to ex•
pras some of his ideas concerning
his an and in1enui1y.
Matisse's fasc.in11ions with
,design, pauem, line, and of

. courst, color arc readily apparem
in 1he twen1y plaits. They radiate
wilh bright, vibrant color, and
along with 1heir almost crude
urgency of surface, the prints ex~
ud.e a fresh vitalily which express

-somethina of Matis.se's joy of life.

The imagery in Jou comes
from Matisse's imagination and
memories of physical stnsa1ion.

The subject mauer is ,an,;1argdy
from 1he circus, but also includes
images from mylholog,y, and the

anist 's pcr$0nal travds.
The print entitled The Circus
(which was at one lime Ma1issc's
in1cndcd title f9r 1hc book) is a
view or the circus from ou1sidc of
the big top. Banners, d«orations,
and a large sign advertise the
show. and an anerimagc of 1he
sign's lettering accompanies the
viewer's eye as he ciitches a quick
glimpse of what lies inside. . A
black silhoueue of a . woman
caugh1 in the middle of some
violen1 motion is seen through a
doorway. and the viewer is
momentarily converted into a
voyeur or the excitement and sensuality of the circus.
In another plate dealing with
the circus entitled Tire Cadonas,
Ma1issc depicu two 1rapczc artists

Oylna hiah abooe thetr nets and
the crowd. W hile their trapeze
ban swina back and ronh within
the pic1ure plane. the ac:robars
seem indefinildyaaspended in the
air. frozen in thdr aestures or
maht.
The aniSI playrully
ddlnea1es the acrobats• nets by
me.ans of che negative spaces bet·
wtt11 black squares.
This is
especially representational of his
expressive treatment of the inter•
vats.between pasted fonns, as well
as his admirable artin«, that ~rvades Jou.
Of the many images created in
Jou, a significant amount of a11en1ion seems 10 have bttn given
10 solitary, isolated ligures and
double, or rela1ive ligures. If lhC'
entire work is viewed as a medium
for Matinc•s sta1ement about his
an, these singular images can be
interpreted as metaphors for 1he
artist, and 1he double images
migh1 be seen as d ialogues bc1wttn the ar1iss1 and h is model.
· One of the mos, 1ouehing of
these soli1ary images in 1he book is
i1s fronl ispiccc, cn1itled The
Clown. Matisse has sirt1plified his
clown's colorfu l cos1umc to a few
jagged red fonns on a while
figure. But while 1he clown is
brightly dressed. he s1ands ak>nc
in a dejected t,ose amidst a black,
velve.ty darkness. The "ccars of a
clown" motif is a common one.
but few artis1s can achieve the
emotional, dramatic err«t 1ha1
Matisse has wilh such an economy
or means.
Two of 1he plates irlvolving
dialogues between two figu res
presen ts very different mataphors
for 1he relationship bctwttn 1he
artist and h is model. Tht Knift
Throwr, an illustration based on
1he fam iliar sideshow act portrays

trMILTON

CINEM~
124-3350

Tues.-Wed.
-lhun. 8 PM

"MlkN,-.

dcllout,ow

...... and

-

-

. the
perfonncr at the mo,men, before he hurls his - l y ·
weapon. Matisse has captured 1he
1ens.kln of this particular pohlt in
the ac:c throuah lhe knife
1hrower•s an1ure. which is a sharp
conconed, ~iole:n1 mqerua. u op,.,
posed 10 his assistant'• ..posed,
vulncrablt. cool blue. Surroun•
dina 1he performers are several
clumps or bulbouJ, rhythmic
forms that appear in many of the.
plata. Thao cl1111m or wavy
lines suuest differeen1 imqes in
various prinrs, but they an appear
to symbollu life rorm,. MatbK
anruny palaces a blact 1quare
with one suc:h fctrm cut away from
it over the ban o f the thrower•,
assiJlant, accentuatin, che risk ·in··
votved in 1hc ac1. The fact that
this form Is expressed by means or
a neaative space has a
psycholoalcal impact in I hat ii
crea1es a possible dacinalk>n ror
the_k nife. II is I hole 10 be filled.
The plate entitled ~Tl,,- H,ort,
on the othff hand, clepicls the ar•
tist andltis moc:kl in a m~re sym..
bio1k: ttlacionship. The forms in
1he piece are primarily aeometric.
bul the dialogue 1ha1 results from
their comparison i.s bcau1ifully
sen.sitive. A rig_id. ·neutrally formal structure is ju,ctap(>SN ·with
an image made from 1hrce
overlappina degrees of ~alue hav.
ing al its center. a heart th.at js un•
sure and awkward, b ut neverIhclcss prescn1.
.
Ma1i.ssc's Jou is an exciting in·
novative adventu're in a · new
medium by one of lhe most im·
portant artists or our century. It
is a significan1 work historically in
that it marks the point at which
Mat isse began one of the final
stages of his artistic career;, bu1 in
a senSC', Jou is also the culmination or many o f 1hc explorations
in 01hcr stages of that career.
While the colors in the prints arc
generally bokl and cheerful, the
moods of lh.e pieces arc of1cn
ominous and tragic. The 1hemes
underlying the projtt1 are profound sia1crnents by an artist concerning an and life, and the exhibit is definitely one 1hat should
no1 be missed. As Matisse himself
says in Jou, "There arc flowers
everywhere for those who wan1 10
~cc 1hern."

'r

Organist·Well Received
(contlnu«I from /Hl,e 7)
proanm and was a aood eumplt
of Franck"• use o( cyclical 1hemcs.
The prelude, with its sumptuous
mdody, .and the variation were
almost identical. stressina
franc k•s oriainal idea.
The
Fuaue, however, conveyed a
somber feeling and Paukcr1 100k
advantage of this 10 contra.sc it
with lhe Prelude and Variation.
The retum or 1he original inelody
made lhe end of lhe Fugue all 1he
more effcclive with Paukcn's C':ic·
cellenl phrasing lcchnique and his
use of the fagou solo stop.
The la5t two pieces of the first
half, Alain's Dtuxkm~ Fantask
and Oliver Messiacns Dk11, Parmi nous from la Na11'.-l1t, contrasted so sharply 1ha1 when
Paukert auac.ked the first chord
of lhe Messiaen many members of
the audience were stanled. The
Deuxit.me Frantasie's somber
awakening grew into intensely
pQwerrut chord p rogressions. The
work ended in a solemn, quiet
mood which was s-usrained un1il
Paukert began the Messiaen .
Messiaen wrote arythmically in
Dieu parmi nous and Paukert did
a good job in emphasiz.ing che extremely compltx vertical sound
aggregations. The ar1is1's n orid
style and wide ranging emo1ional
expressiveness in the Messiaen
rounded out the first h~alf of the
program.
Lianas Alcxa nd ras Con sonancts V, heard fo r the fir1!

1

time in che United S1a1e:s On Fr%'..' ·
day. followed the ln1crmission
and created an aura of tension.
Sharp consonant chords were ln· .
..nec1 throuJhout the piece which
served to c-reate a sort of
diuonanoc. Paukert's tec.hnical
abilily wu evident here u there
was always melodic movement to
hdp contras, the chords.
O,n,ro/ (l@, by Maurice Kqd
consis1ed of con1inuous, hollow
sounds in a prncribed ran,c. The
li.gh1s were turned o u1 ror 1his ad.
ding an ttric quali1y to the low
tones.
Heavily contrasting with
Gen~ral Bass was Ives• VariatioM
on Amerh:o. Paukert"s use of color and t«hnique pcrfec1ed this
pie« of e:ictraordinary musical imagination and strengthen ed its
mordant sense of h umor. Several
members of lhe audience reaeted
wilh a smile or c:icpres.1ion of
recognition.
Next, Paukert used his skill to
crea1e a rich and appealing tc:icture
when he ended the proaram wilh
Leos Janacek's Po.s1/Jdi11m.
The audience was dcligh1cd
. with Paukert and called him back
for thr« encores which only added 10 lhc excitement of the even•
ing. He chose Bellini's Sonata ;n .....
G major, 1he chird mo,.·ement or
J.S. Bach's Vivaldi ;n A minor, ~·
and Pastoral by Kuchar, a cornposer from Paukert ·s native
Czechoslovak ia. All who attended left the coiicert impressed by
Mr. Paukert's artistic excellence.

AssortffDtl

"···

Fresll Mlllle Sllll1d1
AINIIINII

a.,.. ,

c.,ttc...
. . ,,..rt

I ...,, Oil
Pldlla

.. ,,._..

-

DIIJ
11ot s,,111111

Q1ck 0w

Mon - Sai9 am - 9 pm
824-3015

ay'HIII'"

Faculty ColloquiuJll
Peter Balakian, Assistant Professor of English,
will speak on

Two Lost Letters: Hawthorne at College;
Longfellow and Hawthorne, The Beginning
of a Friendship
AK

l!tl:III-

IRI-G#hl,-1
----

Tuesday, O ct . 5 4:00 pm G i~ord Classics Center

'

S11111aw 21, ltl2

THE COLGATE MAIIOON

Observer
Continued
:ontlnwdfrom _

_,, ·

mean, ' 10 bespwear ala.ssts mystlr.) Hown-er. ii
is , uue 1ha1 ae11ura. looks,
downca11 ,yes will all mean dlfremu 1hins,s and different 0,11c.OfflH 10 d ifferent people. A flir·
ta1t0Us glark"C, partt'd lips couplt'd
wilh a diaphonous blouse could be

danaffous, or if one4KMrn, erre.:tive. Ya. mm are human. I am
in any way, condonina a man
who fotttfuUy sk>bben: ovtr a
woman bul womtn should be

1101,

aware of and willil)I 10 contend
wi1h ll'lt mns.qn they are pulling
ou1 before anythina (oir occur.
And this leads me 10 ..ca1c1lls,"
ano1her m11t weakness. Admi11edly, 1his' h noi adevu1a1ina pro•
blcm. Some things must be 1aken
with a grain of salt, so 10 speak,
lgnorina 1hem is probably 1he bw
solu1ion, or ... stan whistlina 11
guys, Coost one, s« how 1hey like
it. (I rear they probably would.)
The point is, it is how we deal wi1h
1hls almost inevitable situation
that can slop ii. If women wail.
bemoan and insisl on how crippl·
ina ii is lo walk down Broad Street
nothina will ever be a«0mplishnS.
Oflen too. women assume
beca\HC of customs and tradilton
1hat mm like them in a cercain
way and we try very hard 10 live
up to that imaginary ideal. We
deal wi1h men en masse. believing
they all hold the same opintOns
and are constantly secondauasin& wha1 they woukl like.
Some women will spend hours
before lhe mirror and quake if
lhey shoukl be seen wilhout
makeup. I l}ave a boyfrtend who
loves me: when I ~nsider myself a
veritable slob and would shirk
from the outside world. This is
not' to say one should always look
like a slob. let themselves ao.
never comb their hair. etc., but
. rather learn 10 appreciate and aceept lhe person who is often hidden by Maybelline.
11 it true we cannot always
change others and it is frustrating
10 auempt and fail. We can.
however. chanae ourselves and
our attitudes about ourselves.
Women have to a,me to grips
wilh their own livH, learn 10
r«:oanize both their streng1hs and
weaknesses. and deve:lop conrtdcnce and self-respect. We have
to scop seeing ourselves as helplt'ss
Yictims and me-n as terrorit.ing, as·
gressive beings. Once we have

rallh In ounclva and take
ounelvcs seriously, I beleve...,.
wil too. I've ortm t"°"llfl thal
tne11 and women are very lllucll
alike, wi1h simillar 1houp11, rec1.
mp, aad desira. By
the labelifta the problem ..
one belWffll malts and fen,alts is
noc 1ruly addrnsin1 the issue.
bel_,. females, males,
a..,t, youn1, white and black:
mutual rnpect brlwem diffettn1
people should rally be the p l in
order 10 lay the issue of
,nalc/femalc relations to rnt.

-••1

R-

Obsener

'

R~er's
Advocate
Kristin Pawlak
Wiih ihe rilaing sucnss of 1he,
besl motion· pic1ure entitl~
Chariots of Fi~, runnina has
become an increasinaly popular
spon. Ama1eur ;oum have bttn
haun1ina 1he pavements. Running
is one of 1he most economic.al
Jporls • a pair of runnina sneakers
and shons and you're,re-ady to go.
Colpte students can be seen
diliaently joaaina up and down
Broad Streel. Another 'popular
rouae is around lhc golf course
which cncompa$$CS a healthy
dis1an~ for 1he novice runner. If
you are really embarassed 10 show
your Robby body, a more secluded run is Collqe StrCCI toward.s
lhe farmlands of Lebanon S1ree1.
Did you pound one to many
beer.s last niaJ,t? You couldn't
resist 1h11 third helpina or
Lasaane! Don'1 despair running.a n

daht minute , . .

bums off approxisnaldy 100 calorill per milt.
So _, tl!Dt you've ovcrillclulaed
don't jull 11and, theR lootina a,
the emp1y bq or Chips Ahoy, pu1
on y0ur runn.ina aear and ao for
it.
h is nor an old wivn talc 1ha1
runnina is a care for 1M 'blues'.
Runnin& .speeds up your
me1abolism and 1e1s you're beta:
endOfJ)hins ! pain killers) 1oin1
which aives you a 1e-mporary
'hiah'. ~euion is a common
condition amona.st colleae
Jludcnts ranaina from 1$-24 years
of aar. Depreuion s«ms to hil 1he
freshman \."Offlmun.i1y lhc hardcsl.
Separation from family and
homrtown friends gn be a very
harrowina experience. Effons 10
establish an idcn1i1y and wcx:eect
in an academic environfflfflt ohen
bfinp boulS or 1he blues amonpt
Cola,aie s1udm1s. The 'Reu1er1
S1udy involvnS 18 modcraee to
SC'Vtrly deprnwd colleae s1udents
and ac,cordin110 1he B«k De-pression inventory, half or 1he
s1udenu were plact"d
in
psycho1herapy alone
w'hilC'
other s1udtn1s complained
psychotherapy with •running'
1he-r1py. Thet ran 1hrtt limes per
week for 1wen1y minu1e time intervals. There were no set levels of
spttd or distance. Afler a 1en
week period lhe runners recovered
rrom the dq>ression in a much
shorter lime span than 1he nonrunMrs.
The-re are a counllcss number
of benefils from running. It in:
crcasn 1he stroke volume of your
heartand lowers your blood
prtssure. Running also aids clearing your complex.On.
The first few tim« you a11emp1
lo run arc murderous, bu1 after
awhile you'll fttl lttrific.

BX,UEB•RD·
., : .:
/•

:AUBANT

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

it••, .... DI air

M111

SARAH FULLER; DirfflO< orsuatqk: Plannbt1 Services,
Arthur D, little, Inc., Cambriclae MA, will - t at Colpi<
on consuhfna work as a gl'ffl choice. The prescntadon will be
on Monday, OC1ober 4, at 7::IO pm In the Claalcs Center or
Lawrence Hall. Ms Fuller will clacribe what consultln1 is as a
businns and will aive a ~er-al overview from a non-1tchniC'al
pOfflt of view.
"

Ms FulkT r«c:ived a BA from the Universily of PtnnS)llvania in Hiscory and Mathematics, and and MA in Com•
parative Economics from Harvard Univcnity. She is the Direc1or or 1hrtt retairler services: Heal1h Care lndUJlry, Telematic:s
(tel«ommunk:a1ions, d«1ronlCI, and informa1ion processina)
and Accts.s' (acneral consultina), dealina wi1h 80 clicns
worklwide.
Ms Puller notes that ''90 percffll of any busines.s is bdna
able to read, write, lhink, and communica1c dfeclively. 0 Her
remarks will be of areal interest to s1udtn1s in a wide varie1y of
discipli~.
Nl-W! DIIOP•IN Pt:RIOD
ror U101t
wllo ltavt q•aOoas
nsum~·

•••dteta

rep,....

writini or qukk quntlons wlticlt toke only o few
minut~s,please feel frtt 10 1ake advantage of our drop.in
period

on THURSDAYS during FREE

PERIOD •

I0:~ 11 :00.

).AW SCH09LS
Ame-rican Univertily, Washington College of Law Sepr.27.
Suffolk Universily Law S<:hool Sept, U,9:3().12
Universi1y of Conncc1icu1 School of Law Sep1. 28, 2-4:30
Cornell Law S<:hool Sept. 29, 2:3().4
Universi1y of Puget Sound Law School Oc:1. I, 1-4
Northwts1ern University Sc:hool of Law Oct. 1, 9-12
Vanderbih Universi1 y School of Law 0cc. I, 9-11:30
Universi1y of Richmond Law Sch ool Oc-1. 7. 9.12
Dickinson S<:hool o r Law Oct. 8 10.12
BUSINESS AND GRADUATE SCHOOLS
University of Rochester Oraduate School of Management
S.pt. JO, I :30,S
,
Universi1)' of Bal1imore School of Business Oc-t. 14, 10-4
Duke University Fuqua School of Business Oc1. I.S, 94
Emory University Oraduatc School of Businc$$ Administra·
tion Oct. 18, 9-2
Rice University Jesse H. Jones School of Business Admins1ra.
tion Oct. 18, 1-3
Northeastern Universi1y Graduate School or Business Oct. 20,
10-1
Pace Universi1y, Graduate S1Udies OCt. 21, 10-12
University or Chicago Business School OC1. 21, 9-12

-OLD STONE JUG-•
''Where Good Friends Meei"

"W•~ OJoka,1 b,
A• .Att .AIUI,&lillg
lr A Plaa#" ·.

,.,,,

Career Comer

Happy Hour

& ..... ••• 111•

Fridays 4-6

7sao ....... 11sao ...-. cro,.11 MOINI•
. For Talc1111t S-VICle C..11824-11441
Under tile Red Light , Hamilton, NY

30 Utica St.
824-9898

THE FUQUA SCHOOL
OF BUSINESS
A repreHlllollYe of the .fuqua Scho.ol of Busineu of Duke Univenity
wll be on canlpUI Friday, October 15, to discuss.the MBA Progl•.

Interested students anay obtain fu. llaer information by contacting
the Career Plcfililg Ce111er.

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

.....,'

TH& COLGATE MAllOON

,

I
Women's Tennis Sei'v('S Up a Winning Weekend
l y v••

•di••••

"All ln...all, 1his has been the
most successful weekend for
women's 1cnnis in 1cn years,•'

~merlced an exuberant head
coach, Joe: AbrahalTl$0n . .. Never
have we had thrtt conseC\ltivc
malches, on Friday, Saturday.
and Sunday, and won 1he_m all."
l,n fact, the Lady Raic;ter ncucrs
have been no1hi~g short of J)(rfect
as they boosted their record 10 5-0
and c,ocnded 1hcir two year win
streak to eight gal'(la by winning

four pmes last week. The success
began la51 Tuesday as Colgate
The Lady Raiders turned in a
' sound team effort as 1hcy <»Oly
avenged la.st seaso.n•s 4.3 hear1•
breakins loss to. llhaca.
At first sinales. Jill B«sen notched a straight set 6-2, 1.5 victory
aiving Colaatc a 1-0 advantage.
However, Ithaca fought back as
Robin Kiam ·was defeated in a
touah 1hree set match, 1-6,6-2,6-1 .
The loss was Kiam's first of the
year.
.
The Lady Raiders rallied wi1h
four consecutive straight sel wins
to seal the victory for Colgate.
Jane . Arrics won 6--0,6-2, Amy
Fr«dman downed her opponent
~2,6•2; Katie Feketie won 6-1,
6·1, and firs1 doubles panners
Lisa Aman and Brenda Sabbag
romped 10 a 6-1. 6-1 vic1ory.
Colgate lost at second doubles
as Kathy Richey and Lynn Sikes
were defeated 6-4, S-7, 7-f>. The
loss is perhaps auributablc to a
new playing combination, as
Kathy Richey was forced to step in
for the injured Mary Ross.
On Friday, Colgite hosted last
year's Division Ill State Cham·
pion, Skidmore College.
The
Lady Raiders won 6-1. Skidmore
entered the contest with a 5.2
record but they proved to be no
match for the Lady Raiders, as
· Colgate $wept ·10 five straighl

sinaln victories before suffering a
difficult lou at first doubles.
At first sinales, Junior Jill
Beuen played oxcellcntly as sh<
maintained her poise in a come
rrom.~hind vic1ory. Btssen drop.
peel the first set 3-6 before rallyina
~o win the next two sets 6--t, 6-l.
Senior Robin Kiam won handily
a1 Stt"Ond sinalcs, 6-1,6-l, while
teammates Jane Arries. Amy
Frtedman and Katie Feketie each
recorded s1raigh1 sci victories.
The Lady Raiders dropped 1heir
only match or the day at first
doubles as Lis.a Aman and Brenda
Sabbag lo!l 6-4, 4-f>, 6-3.
Colaate was able to close ou1
the day with a match ~ic:tory as SC·
c:ond doubles pa.nners Mary RO$$
and Lynn Sikes won 6-3, 6-4.
Coach Abrahamson, who felt 1ha1
his 1eam played flawlessly,
specifically noted the performance
of Ross and Sikes. "It was 1heir
firs1 win. They played ex1rcmely
well and consistently", remarked
Abrahamson.
The folloWing morning. the
Lady Raiders left Hamihon 10
play Bloomsburg College.
Although B loomsburg was
scheduled mainly as a 1une up for
Lady Raiders. 1he ma1ch was a bil
n:iore compc1!tive than cxpec1ed.
However, Colgate prevailed 8· I ,
led again by strong play""la t singles.
Jill Bessen lo,agcd her ihird win
of' thc week wi~h a hard rough1
6-2, 6--7, 6-3 victory. She was
fo llowed by Kiam, Arries. Freed·
man, and Feketie who all won in
s1raight sets.
At sixlh singles, Brenda Sabbag
recorded a 6-2, 64 vic1ory for her
first march victory in a singles
slot. Sabbag later 1eamed with
Fcketie 10 win 6-J, 64 at second
doubles. Aman and Kiam also
won in s1raigh1 sets in a doubles
match.
Colgate was unable to shul out
Bloomsburg as first doubles par1ners, Jane Arries and Amy Freed-

man lost 6-3, 6-3. On Sunday, the Lady Raiders
c:ompk1ed their weekend swttp by
downing arch-rival Bucknell, S-4.
The Lady Raider, got off 10 a
greal start by winning four of. the
firsl five matches. Al first singles,
the scnsalional Jill Bess.en improv.
ed her pcrso9al record 10 5-0 as
she hammered her opponent 6.0,
6·l. The victory wa.s Bessen's
fourth or the week, leaving her in
fine shape to earn a good seeding
for the Easterns.
Robin Kiam won 64, 6-0 to im·
prove her individual record 10 4- 1.
Jane Arries won in straight set.s,
6-2, 6- 1 10 give Colgate a 3--0 lead.
Amy Freedman also won in consecutive sets 6,.2, 6-2, however
freshn,an Ka1ic Feketie · lost her

Colgate University
Trap Range

first match or 1he yc-ar 6-0, 6-3.
Brenda Sabbag played al sixth
singles bu1 was defeated in a close
three set duel. Sabbag c:amt wilhin
two poin1s or winning the match
in 1hC sc~ond sci which would
have locked up a Lady Raider vie•
tory, bu1 her opponen1 came back
to win 3-6, 7.s. ~3.
Robin Kiam and Jill Bes.sen
teamed up for a s1raigh1 set victory al first doubles 6-2, 6-1 . This
win proved to be the key match as
Bue.knell defeated Colgate in 1he
following two doubles ma1ches.
The team win over Bucknell was
pleasing for the Lady Raiders. as
it was the third time this year in
which they had beaten a team that
had defeated 1hem last season.
The Lady Raiders are in peak

form as' 1hey pre-pare to meet up,.
coming oppQnenlS. Today they
will hoSI a Powerful undefeated
squad from Syracuse: University,
which shut ou1 the Lady Raiders in
1981. "Overall.._ I . have to feel
good at this point", s1a1ed
Abrahamson. "Syracuse is the
defending sca1e champ, but the
match should be interesting."
Following the battle with
Syracuse, € o lgate will head to
Binghamton
for the weekend
Eas1crns tournament. Jill Bcsscn
and Robin Kiam will play al
singles, while Jane Arrics and
Amy Freedman will represtnl Collate in doubles, along with Katie
Fekctie and Brenda Sabbag. The
1ournament will begin on Friday
and be concluded on Sunday.

WOMEN'S COALITION
invites all to the annual

Open Sundays 1-5 pm
Located on Bonney HIii Rd.,½
mile from the Hamilton St. and
Sm ith Roed Intersection

Reasonable Rates - all ammunitio n,
targets and guns supplied

for zore lafs:zalbw cal tilt .....,_., ltaNIIN Offb'l24-1000 ext. 613

HARVEST
SUPPER
~t}t

~t~
W

ll~arllt.

2 BROAD ST.
HAMILTON, N.Y.

DIZW

ct~.,~
4Y

Sunday • October 3
in the Cultural Center 6:30,
Coop Concert 8:30

Clderf

Cltlll
Homemade Bread

THE aJLGATB MAROON

........, . . • MJ

V -Ball Spikes Challengers

Athlete of the Week

a, s.ea, ...
The Women's volleyball 1eam

ce><.aptains. Kathy Browne and

toumamen1. By practicinaaplnsc

KOffll Lupn, Colpte ran off

lhclr own °quick offense", Che
Lady Raiders were not uttd 10 1he
con1trv11ive Cornell offense
which made rew mistakes.
After defca1lna Rutgers _of
Newark in 1he consolation game,

lat llraic,ht points withou1 allow-

opened t~dr 1982 season wi1h an
imp,aslve showina at the Albany
Great Dane lnvitadonal Touma•
mqlt thia put ,...i.tnd. Out of

This week Maroon Spons chooxs to recognize 1ennis s1ar
Jill Beuen as Maroon Athlctt-or-1hc-Wttk. Bnse:n. a junior,
hdped Ille' Lady Raider tennis team to four con1ttu1ivc victories last week as lhe won five limes, including four matchts
at Ont ,in&lel al'ld one malch a first doubles.
·
Bessen's personal r«ord currently siands at S.O and she will
rcpre.sent Colgate in singles play at the Eas1t>rns in Binghamton
thb weekend.
Congratula1ions 10 J ill for a great week on the court.

ins the oppostion 10 score and
went on to win the same. In addi•
tion, "Cindy Sharrah was unable
10 be ,topped in lhe front line,"
thirlttn teams, the Lady Raiders st11td a plastd Coach Liule.
i,.12, lhe Colple volltyball ltam
finished 1hird in the lournamcnt
Whh 1his vic1ory, 1he Lady ended up with a hard fought third
overall. T heir efforts now show a Raideu moved on 10 face Siena.
place fin.iJh. Overall, the team
However,
Sien.a
did
not
prove
10
successful 4--1 m:ord (or 1he
looked very impressive for ils first
season so far.
be a threat as Colgate produced outing. "Loraine Earley, Lauren
two wins, t,--0 and IS-S. Pro- Schiller, and Debbie Breckinridge
SiJoh year head ca.ch, Janet cttdina 10 the lhird match q.ainst played excellent back line
Linle, hdd high · hopes for the St. Lawrence, Colaatc once again defen.SiC", praised Little. In addisquad since 1he ttam included displayed fine team performance. tion, seis by Karen Langan and
llrona a~d experienced p~yers.
Timin& and coordination, which Ka1hy Browne were well pla«d,
The s1ar11na members cons1s1cd or arc so crucial 10 the "quick of. · according 10 little.
four seniors: Kathy Brown~, fensc" run by Colgate, were exCoach Little plans 10 practice
Karc~ . Langan,
Debb ie . ccutcd superbly. Loraine Earley against a weaker offense thi.s
Brcclunndge, Carolyn Thum.scr, manned the fron t line well with a week. Since she feels Colgate is
two juniors: Loraine Earley, Cin- show or tenacious defense. Also 100 predictable with its offense,
dy Shanah, and one sophomore:
in the front line, Carolyn Thumscr the team will also work on trying
Lauren Schiller. fu rthermore, a
provided a powerful force by her to perrect the placemen! of lheir
wcll..conditioncd Colgate squad spiking and blocking.
· In spikes and vary lhe direc:tion of
. entered lhe tournamenl with condefea1ing SL Lawrence, IS-4 and 1heir hits. The defense will con•
fidence.
I S-S. the Colgate women reached ~ntrattonblocking and bac-k court
Al Albany. Colgate was riut 1heo-semi•finals and faced a 1ough movefflent. In regards to this past
opposed by Brockpon S1a1e. In Cornell squad.
weekend, Liulc spoke ,with enCornell and Colgate me, several 1husiasm. "I was extremely pleasorder 10 win a match, the girls
needed 10 win a best two ou1 or limes laSI year and the Big Red ed with 1he play of the team. Our
three series. Colgate opened with were victorious at e.ach mttting.
offense was impressive consideran exciting victory composed or It looked as though the streak ing this is 1he early point of the
cxcellcnc
play .
Li1lle would end when the Lady Raiders season ... About the future, little
remarked,.. Passes on 1he serve advanced 10 a 16-14 win in che looks op1imis1ically, and feels the
rcccp1ion and derensc allowed st- firsc game. However, in the se- team is better now 1han they ever
ters 10 run a quick offense and cond game after holding on to a had
been
before .
mix set plays effectively." In the 13-13 tic, Colgate let it slip away.
Wilh this in mind. 1he learn plans
second game, poor passes on the The lhird game declared the victor 10 head for Syracuse on Tuesday
par1 of the Lady Raiders enabled of the maJch and, unror1una1c:ly, and also to the Univers-i1y or
Brockpon to take an early lead.
Cornell came out on lop and Massachus:.seus lnvi1ia1ional 1his
or However, with cxcellen1 sc1s by subscquenlly, wen! on to win the weekend.

Harriers Edge Union
ByTlo
gate pack since the beginning
This Sa1urday the Colgate 1he sc.ason.
Men's Varsity Cross coun1ry team
Hun.singer commented that he
was
••rairly pleased .. with Saturstepped on Union, chalking up
their firsl win of the season with a day's results, and he fttl.s 1hat
score of 25-30, and bringing their they're s1ar1ing to make progress.
Hope:fully, "he staled, .. We're getoverall record to 1-2.
Head Coach Jan Hunsinger ting 10 tha1 · point in the sca~n
forcsets 1hat the 1cam will con- where we can stafl to become
cinuc 10 pick up steam, after early more competitive. Every week i.s
season losses 10 Syracuse and Cor- impor1an1 .''
nell. Saturday's race wa.s p.arThis Saturday, October 2, at
1icularly exci1ing since 1hree of 1:00 PM. 1he Colgate runners will
Colga1e's sophomore runners take on Albany at home. Uls:1
1urncd in personal record 1imes on years meeting wi1h the 1e.am s:aw
1he S:IS mile home course. They Albany defeated b y a S<.orc or
were Scott Awender. who 100k 24,33. Although Co lgate has los1
1wch-•1h place overall with a time three o f las.I yea r's suong lcu crof 29:S I, Dave LevC"r. who 100k man and senior 0 ;.1w: DeSoto h
fou nh with a time 28:07, and T im Slill unable 10 run d ue 10 a h ip in S1erling, who fin ished seco nd 10 jury which ke p i him o ff the trail~
Union'i'. Bill Mc~oberts wi1h a last year. Hu nsinger i<: optimistic.
time or 27:47. According to 1-lun- saying that the team is " really
singcr, Stetling has shown steady looking forward 10 ·• Satu rday's
improvement and has led 1he Col- COntCSt.

Women's Soccer Wins Twice
(con1;,111td/rom paRe 16)
Mahoney and Linda Casale. Colgate goalie Caroline Hall prc~rved
the shu1ou1 b)' making elevc-n
saves.
Head Coach J ohn Beyer was
pleased with the victory, although
he felt 1hat his squad d id no1 Pia>·
a good team game. ·'Our combina1io n s a me was no1 1ha1
good' ' , expl~1 n cd Ucycr.
Ko\l,e\lCr, he felt th.II the L~c.l)
Raider" took con1rol of the ram~
in che second half, ob 1hc \Quad
became mo re a.g,grcsw..-c. "Our
bc11e r skills came through when
we s1oppcd hcsi1a1ing " , s1i11ccJ 1hc
head coach. Bc)·er felt tha1 Ka1ic

Mahoney, Oen Kaminsky and been saved by lhc Albany goalie.
Erika Ka palis played particularly Zimmerman was given an .assis1,
well.
·
. as Colgate went ou1 in from 2- 1.
On Saturd3)', Colgalc recorded
Later in 1he half, the lady
an upset victory over Alban)' Raiders added an in,urance goal
S1a1c. Albany, which had been as j unior f o rward Sherri
ranked sixth in 1h e regio n, 1a lliccJ M cKclvey )COrOO {Ill a dire;:1 kick
early in ihe firs1 half to 1al..c a 1.0 from 18 >"ards a" a)'.
lead. llowe, er. Colgate fought
nu: Lad~ Raider" held on for
baclr.. 11:, 1,e 1hc g;t;H(' 1-1 "" mitl- 1hc J- 1 \ i.,;1ory 3.., 1hcdtft:nsc turnliddcr l mda c, ...1k loltt·d ., l"d 111 an(llh~·, ,1ah\,l'I pieforbeaunl"ul ')hot O\C'1 HIC' \lb<111\ 111.111..:c. no.: \ i,,;: ,r, wa, 1'•irgoJllendc:r. 1ht.· una,..,1~ted ~,xii P1utlarly 1,le.,..,m~ h,r the \',(lnu:-n
...umc: fn,,m 15 >.~ud ... 0111.
;,.., 'ht·, ,,t·r~ for.:t.·d to pl,,)
111 the ..,econd h.111, Jun.or f•.li,,Jrd .\'lllurnl IY,~l in1ur..,·J :-.tarh'h,
J ud) Nac,c brol..c 1he dcadlo,.:~ a<,
Followmr H,tcHlol~ ·._ i:1mc
<:he 1.:onverh:d on .i rebound
a.tairM fl.1111ilwn, lhc fir.: yca1
Nac)'C alcrlly followdl up Jud y Lady RJidcr ..,0t.··cw ti.>am "111 1ry
Zinum•rm a n ·s sho 1 whict1 ha tl to con1inuc then win!ling way...

REMEMBER:
EVER_
Y NIGHT IS
Friday (6 pm-9 pm)

The G ator Inn w ill be closed for a SENIOR Closs Piz.zo Porty
After 9 pm w e part y hearty I ! ·

(Stoy t une d for ton ight's special) Pizzo till 2:00 om (and other f ine foods)
)

Don't

fortet: w, 1r1 now bookmg pmlfl parties;
lit

Ill •

OIII llp

for yow trNPII

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

THE COLGATE MAIIOON

Strlcdy Sports

Raider Soccer Nets Two Wins
a,c.The

c...,,.

men•, soccer cam

has

re·

bounded this pu1 week winning
1wo pmn and losina only one . .
The OYfflll auitudc qf the 1c-am
has tnhanced lhtirplay and oher<
is now a good blend of e,cperien~
and new talent that adds more
dimension 10 1htir play, .said

COKh Rose. Playing with a lot
or ln1enshy 1hc men beat
Rochesrer 3-0 home on 1hc 15th,
Ihm we-nt away 10 Cornell a wttk

ago 10 1><11 lhdecline in concentr11ion oo:ured
in 1he "'night game or-Friday a,
Syracuse, giving the Orangcmcn a
2-0 vk1ory. ,.
Colaate really played their own
game aga.ins1 Rochester.
The

superior spttd of the forwards
enabled them 10 get past the
Ycllowjackei defense several

times. Mau t..am.stein, a mid·
rleldcr, sco~ early in 1hc game
with an ass.isl by Matt Davies.
Colgate continued to l dominate

the aamc and had several scoring
opponunitics but 1hc only 01he-r
goal of the hair was by forward
Dave While who blasted one in
with the help of Joe Donnelly.
Colgate's steady defensive play
kepi shots on goal to a minimum
(five compared to none agains.t
R~he$ter)
g1vmg
the two
goalies Andy Hill and Mike Wilback one save a pie«. Steve Szan10 finished off 1hc scoring wi1h 20
min~les to go with a breakaway
that the goalie ·nevcr saw.
The win obviously gave 1hc
team much confidcncc as they
overwhelmed 1ht Cornell player~
who art firth in New York State
and may po,ssibly have national
standing. Since this is the same
1eam tJ,at creamed tl;le Red

Raidffl 5-0, lh< pm< was a
pressure-cooker in which Colpce
sotw1hcir own pme which is hard and
au,nsivc, auackina from the
wings. Frtshman stnsattOn While
broke through the defense by
capitalizing on ils m is1akcs, and
wioh th• soolgoalie 10 contend wilh. Thus the
first goal was gained on a
breakaway.
Freshrhan Szanto,
c.augh1 the Cornell dCrensecomlng
out, so ht moved in and with a
pass from Lams1ein auaincd the
'Gate's second score. The third
occurcd when the Raiders, mainlaining their game plan, moved
1he ball down lhc right winf dr:,,, .
ing the de~n.-.r io 1ha 1 ,hh:, :11hl
1hen lortcd th,· tf.111 h ' 1hc 1cr1
wing. Then l)onndly llid,l.'d i1 up
and booted .s1rni11,l11 iu h• llh.- ~oal.
Thus the ddc u,-.· w;" ld1 -.·om.
plctcly inbala,11.,-..1.
The (Oncciitra1io11 wi1h whkh
the Colga1c offcn~ play-.,1 w,._
,.
mah:hcd by a ,1 ru11)! d-.·l'l '1L,-.'. rhc
, so lid ,1ar1i11~ del'Cndcrs, John
Man in, 0(•uv lbrm;111. Jolrn
Sadowski, and Mau Oa,·k-, ,ur
ported the aggrcs..,.ive r,la)' of 1111:
forwards. Goalie Hill at~, .1-.'t.1uit•
led himself well wi1h M:v-.·n ~0~1li-.·
saves. Another dc.-ci<.l in g foch,r in
lht win was tl'ie superb ..:0111ml lhl.'
Cotga1e men hud uf 1hc b1.,II, while
Cornell M't'mcd h i b-.· l..icking
aimlessly, T he <.lcfon-.e al~• ,,;1 ud
10 their strategy which i, 10 murl: a
corresponding offensive OJ'IP1mcn1
and stay with him. nm~ 1hcy
made ii VCf"Y difrteull rOr ('urndl
10 do any1hi11g with the ball.
The Colgate winning ,;1re;.1k wa~
sho1 down this last Friday nitiht ;11
Syracuse in a very disappoin1ing
loss. The team lacked the inlcn.. i-

'

4

IY 1ha1 lhcy played wilh in lhc
previous ma1dla.
"Physically
, and mcntaUy we were not as ready
as ft should havt been .. c.11.pl3incd forward s1ant-r Baman Rusby
The ascroturf that was pla~ on
al both SyraaJ-te and Cornell
cau$C'd the players 10 tire sooner.
In the first half. the Col.ga~
kickers played well bu1 as the
game wore on the players began 10
lose con\.-cnirarion and $igh1 of
their aamc plan. lnMead of con.
trolling lhc ball and pushing pas1 a
hopcrully conruri defense, lhc.
men began 10 kick the ball arb i1ralily and 1he defense did no1
mark 1he opponen1 as well as they
should have.
The ,.,x:\.-er 1cam now has a 2-2
record bu1 bo1h 1hc players and
the coach cxf.)C'CI a bcucr season
rhen Colgace has seen in recent
years. The new freshmen players
are con"ibu1ing 1remcndously 1.0
1he quality or p lay. All 1hrcc goals
at Cornell were scored by
rreshmcn. 8u1 thec.11.pcrien\.'C and
1alen1 of chc uppcrdassmcn.
despite 1hc injuries of Jay Guinn
and cap1ain Nonn Lautrwald,
gives Colga1c 1ha1 .special blend
needed to develop a winning team.
Coach Rose definitely c.-onsidcrs
1he team good enough
siarc
ranking and at least ten wins.
Though a national tournament is
not out of the team's mind , an
ECAC tourney is the more immediate goal ror this year. The
team is playing cxcep1ionally well
and the games are very exci1ing,
Spectators are always an en(Ouragcment and,5tands arc 10 be
bull• soon 10 accomoda1e (ans and
Colgalt supportm.
T he nc.x1
home game is Saturday Oc1ober 2
al I pm.

ro,

Finn

The lia,h1s were bcamin, over the u1roturr at ComeU'I
Jladium. The band WU playinl IM ramUfar flahl SOOI or lhO
Bia Red, 111< stands were filled wioh rowdy rans and oh• sl1ua1ion looked srim ror Comtll. They Wand 1wcnty frOffl 1heir own rorty yardline. The quarterback
took 1he snap from ccn1er, faded back and hi1 a streak in& wide
r ~ r who eluded two dcrtnsivc bac.k1 and waltzed into the
end-zone. But wait. lhe OPPoncn1s were not the Red Raiden
from Colp.le bu1 lhe Quakers from Penn. This was not Sa1ur•
day ahemoon but Friday niaht. The key block that wu
thrown on that touchdown pass was dcliYered by an offensive
tackle who weighed one hundred nr,y.five pounds. That's no
misprint. Most offensive 1ackles arms weiah more than one
hundred fifty.five pounds. But this is lightweight roo1ball. ll
is not football for people who can'1 handle their liquor, it is a
leaaue for players weighing up to one hundred fifcy.-e isht
pound5 by the Wednesday of the wttk of 1ht game. I wa1chcd
tha1 Cornell-Penn aame in which the Big Red destroyed the
Quake.rs (I always likt.d Quisp belier anyway), and I couldn '1
help b ut think 1ha1 'Gate bdonaed in lhat league. For a jock
school like Colgate, there would be no lroublt in raisin& a
squad. There are enough u -high school football players (who
didn't have lht size 10 play college ball) and all-around athletes
lhat would be willing to put on the pads . The SPon is not
rinky-dink; they treat it seriously and it's a bia.succns. I 'd
like. to s«: the Red Raidm adopt it. I hope Mr. Langdon and
Mr. Dunlap are listening .

S p ort~ .-8 , ltfs
Prior 'to Saturday's game, the Red Raiders were ranked
ninth in the na1ion in the IAA poll. Saturday's game shoukln't
hurl 1hem and 1hey'II probably move up ir someone above
them loscs ...Colga1c could have looked sharper bul they came·
away whh another road victory against a pesky Cornell
squad ... 1he Ocfen.se hung tough and stiffened when they had
to. They held the same Cornell team rhat scored 36 Points the
w«k before to only 6 ••.Corndl was missing 1heir star running
back Oerric"k (Godfry) Harmon •.. You have to wonder why a
school as large as Cornell can't field a better foo1ball team .•.
Carl Boykin filli ng in for the inj ured Gene Bucci set up 1he first
,. TD wilh an intcrccp1t()n .. .Cunis Thompson also had a pair on
INT's ... Raiders mana.gtd to p lay paorly and still win, the sig.n
of a good team ...The only guys who arc psyched about the
strike are the hockey players. Now they can watch C.F.L.
games. .. Did you catch the Edmonton-Montreal game?
Neither did I...Kcnny lslcmoe is takina all bets on C.F.L.
games, so far he has had no takers ...the only poshive aspect of
the suike i.s 1he Gianu didn't lose this Sunday...

Women Stickers Rally to _G ain First Victory

1

By ,Jo•n

Roden

Afttr a pair or.stinging defea1s
earlier in the week, the lady
Raider Field hockey team has
finally reaurned 10 the Chenango
Valley as victors. Following a
disheartening wash out against
Cornell, the Colgate stickers hauled a tough Ithaca College squad in
Ithaca, N. Y.
Unronunacely,
Ithaca, Division Ill powcrhouS,C,
sent the lady Raiders home in
defeat. After two days of rest and
classes, a fired-up Colgate team
stormed off to Brockport and
delivered lhc opposition a crushing
defeat. This Colgate viclory was
as an important boost to the lady
Raider squad.

Coach
Ca r-o l
Rappoli
charac1eriztd team play agains1
Cornell
as
la ck i ng
in
agrcssivtntss. She rett 1he teams
were more or less equal, bu1
mistakes ana penalties had taken
1heir toll on the lady Raiders.
"The loss came as a suprise as we
were toying with 1hcm until ii was
too la1e;'' explained RapPoli,
Another factor that played
ag.ainsl Colg.a1c was the nullifica1ion of thrtt goals. O ne occured
at the buzztr, ano1her on a grounding call, and a third o n an
obstruction foul.
The llhaca College game was a
lambasting for the lady Raiders.
··1thaca just dominated: ou1 shot,

scored o n penalty corners, played
aggressively and stron&" commented Rappoli. In rac:t, Ithaca
had 37 sho1s on goal, over
shadowing Colgate's S. Fur1her
more, Ithaca had JJ penalty cor•
ners compared to only three for
the Maroon and White. Senior
goat tender Jennifer Bue1ow re ndcd orr l8 o f 22 shots on goal in rhe
first half. Sophomore transfer
Claudia Konig made 19 saves in
the scrond hatr, allowing no
goals. In Rappoli's opinion, both
goalies played admirably. T he
coach felt 1hat Konig's saves kepi
the game from geuing ou1 or
hand. The lone Colgate goal came
from Lawre Richmond on a pass
4

by Pam Lubker wi1h 6:2 1 lert in py wi1h the team's prerormancc.
the game.
.,We outplayed them all over 1he
On Thursday, 1he lady Raiders fie ld. We played well as a team,
traveled 10 scenic Broc~rt 10 with cxceplional mid-t'ickl unity,"
scuffie wi1h the pride of the the coach siatcd. Rappoli felt 1hat
S.U. N . Y. sys1cm; Brockpo rt senior 1ri captians Diane Katz,
S1a1e. Dtspi1e 1he tu rgtd weather Jennifer Buetow and Pam Lubke r
and
playing ricld . of ramp.ant all played exceplionaly. RapPoli
elephant grass, the Raiders hand• added 1ha1 sophomore Lori
ed their opsx>ncn ls a bru1al Tavercs played her finest game
stashing.
)'Cl.
Colgate siruclr: early wilh a goal
by sophomore Lori Tavares o,, an
Rappoli es1imatts 1ha1 her
assis1 from freshman 54:nsa1ion, . squad could produce a 12·2
Linda Mason . With two minu1cs rtcqrd. The lady Raiders arc
remaining, Colgalc scaled the healthy ar this poin1 and arc well
vic1orywi1 h a score by sophomore adapted 10 1he freak weather
Liz Gaary on an assis1 from junior which has descended on the
Gwyn Whalen. Rappoli was hap. C henango Valley.

a

WOMEN~S ROUNDTABLE
First meeting of the semester
ALL woman ANP men are welcome to attend

Topia On Being a Woman, Your Images and Ideas
Wednesday, September 29
Dinner 5:30 pm in Alton Lounge
t1.00

for SAGA ltoarden

t2.00 for all othen

-

(sroaTSJ

SPORTS

....
Colgate Cruises Past Cornell to Go 3-0
~,-w-..

,

-- .

t'

S.,C-w ZI, l"1

The Red Raidm mana,cd to
break 1hrouah · for anolher
louchdown in lhe second quartn
after• 1hey recovered a Dave
Mcnol)t'ace fumble la1e in 1hc first
on 1h• Cola••• 39. They movtd 61
ndl. Dunlap decided to forsake a yards in 10 plays including
near certain rield aoal and 10 for a quanerbai:k Calabria 's (20 for 33.
firsl down on fourth and one from 204 yards) TD pass to Mike
the (:ornell six.yard line. The Kovack . The drive fe11urtd rive
pla.)', a four.yard compk-1ion from compl~ions by Calabria and a run
Sieve Calabrla to Joc ·Koz.ak, set for 12 yard\ lhat reminded some
u1, a two yard touch~own run by rans of the quarterba«.:k ·~ M:ramblGil Terenii which put the game ing of last season. Brian Byrne's
OUI
reach ror lht Big Red.
la'Ond extra Point of the day
''I had a reelinlt that we should made it 14.0.
go for it and 1ha1 we would make
Cornell, how~ver, had no inlen •
the first down," staled Dunlap.
1ions of quilling. They slopped
"l had confidence in Calabria and lhe Red Raiders on their next
we needed to show some momen- possession and found themselves
1um.
on the Colgate 49-yar~line with
Colgate movNI in front 7-0 3:0S len in the hair. From here
before many of ,che estimated Hammond generaled the Big Red
crowd or I3,013 had found their · the length of 1he fiekl for a
~ts. Af1er a pass from Cornell touchdown. The Senior quarterquarterback Jerf Hammond was back completed passes of 7 and...U,.
intercepled by Carl Boykin, the yards en route to a one yard
Red Raiden scored on an 18-yard touchdown Plunge by fullback
ca1ch by spli1 end Mike Bone only Mark Miller. The cx1ra Point fail59 seconds in10 1he game,
ed however, when Chick RritII appeared that the 1ame was chard burs1 through lhe line 10
aoina 10 be a wide open arfair but bkx:k 1he kick. The Red Raiders
from here 1he defenses, especiaUy fell on 1hc ball and wen1 -into
Col.gale's, proved otherwise.
hafftime sponing a 14-6 advanNeither leam could muster much ta,e.
offense as punters Mark Brown
In the second half, Colga1e was
and BobToppe tradtd kicks.
on the move again afttr s.afetvrn.-..

/!, gulSy call· by Colptt Head
Football Coach Frtd Dunlap midway 1hrough the final quar1er
enabled th• Colgalt Rtd Raider.to cement a 21-6 vic.1ory over Cor-

or

S..lor tla•t tlld, Mlk• Ko.-.dl MIi to lfffflt I TD - · gM• 1 tht Red R1klen 1. 7.e IHd.

~Pao•ott talbadl Staty Hal movts lo move, htt o,_.. •.....,.

Lady Raiders Romp
8y Van Buchanan

skills appeared to be superior to
those of Wells. Then, with only
T he Co lgate. Unive rsity
three minu1cs len before the
women"s soccer team notched two
break, freshman sensation Katie
impartanl wins laS-1 week, by
Mahoney rtccivtd a pass from
upS(tting regionally ranked varsity ·
Oen Ka.minsky and fired it past
squads fron;i Wells College and
the "'ells goahender. Colgate
Albany State.
seemed to come alive as they took
The Lady Raiders shutout Wells
a J-0 lead into hafftime.
3-0 on Wtdnesday, and clobbered
In 1hc opening moments of lhe
divisionaJ powerhouse, Albany
second half, Ka1ie Mahoney
State, 3.. 1 on Saturday. Playing in
scortd again, giving the Lad.y
their first season with varsity
Raiders a 2-0 lead. Mahoney con•
status, the Lady Raiders upped
verttd the goal fo llowing a hua.e
their record to 3-1 by combining
scramble in front oflhe Wells net.
aggreS$ivc dere.nsive play with Po·
Junior Judy Naeye was credited
ten1 offensive auacks.
with an a$$iSt.
On Wtdnesday, Colgale and
The Lady Raiden finished out
Well; both playtd sluagishly in th• their scoring in Che 58th minute as
first half. Tha Lady Raiders were Oinaer Cox drilltd the ball oas1
unable to capi1a1iu on several eu. the goalie wirh as.,ists from
«.portunities, thouah th~r
(continued on fX18t U)

Jx

John · Hoff recovered a Terry
Thomas fumble on the Comell 22.
A Rich Erenberg run of four
yards brought the Red Raiders 10
the J 8. From here Calabria threw
to Joe Kozak who appeared to
make a touchdown ca1ch. Bui 1he
officials ruled that Kozak was o u1
of bound.s at the three. Two
quar1erback sackS pul 1he 'Gale
back on lhe 21 and forced them 10
attempt a 37.yard field goal.
Byrne's lry was just wide to the
len and an opportunity to increase
their lead was lost.
The rest o f 1he third quarter was
scoreless as the dcfen~s 100k control of 1he play. Colgate 1urned
back Cornell's only threat when
C hick Pritchard blocked his second kick of the game, a 27-yard
fitld goal auempt by Peter Bae-

c:illc. Colgate's offense got back
on track in the fourth quarter as
they methodically moved the ball
down field af1er starling from
th"eir own 17. T hey went all the
way 10 the Cornell 16 until they
were stopped When Calabria was
intercepted on the goal line by
John. Frontera on a pass inlendcd
for Mike Kovack.
But Colgate came right back on
their nex1 possession as they 100k
advan1agc of a short punt to move
49 yards for the fi nal insurance
touchdown. The drive ale up tive
minutes leaving Cornell little time
for recovery. In fact, all h'opcs for
a comeback were dashed quickly
as Curtis T hompson intercepted a
long pass by Hammond.
Sophomore Bobby Wegrzyn
replaced Calabria as quarterback

and guided the R(d Raiders the
rest of the way.
Colgate played will enough to
defeat 1he Big Red, but a tougher
road lies aheld. Co-captain Dave
Wolf, who once agafo led 1he Red
Raiders in tackles, with IO, echoed
these sentiments by saying, "We
were pretty fired up today and I
chink wt played well. We're try.
ing to gtt beuer on defen.se every
game because we've got to gee bet•
1er."
The victory upped Colgate's
record to 3-0, their best slart since
1977 when they wtnl 10-1. But
the Red Raiders now move into
the meatier part of their schedule
as chey race Oar1mou1h in
Hanover. New Hampshire next .
week, followed by Holy Cross and
Rut ers.

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