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1 The Back Page Hot nght at pavlon Page 8 LEXNQTON, VA. MAR nm Coeducaton 'Easer than expected' Page 4 Your Sprng(?) Weather Snow, sleet possble today; wet, chlly all weekend /. - Gtje Hng-tum ftjt General Notes Howe to do t The deadlne for artcles for the frst ssue of the W&L Journal of Scence s today. Artcles should be fve to sx pages long, typewrtten and should nclude references for copyrght purposes. For further nformaton, contact Guy Caldwell, Jeff Blount or John Long as soon as possble. Try Superglue Kenneth E. Goodpaster of the Harvard School of Busness wll gve the Busness Ethcs Lecture, "An Agenda for Appled Ethcs," tomorrow at 8 p.m. n Commerce School 221. SAB people "Cat People," starrng Nastassa Knsk, wll be shown by the Student Actvtes Board Saturday at 6 p.m. n the Cockpt, and at 9:30 p.m. Saturday and 7 and 9:30 p.m. Sunday n the Student Center. Admsson s $1.50. Grzzly van The Russan and Kurosawa Flm Festvals wll jontly present "Dersu Uzala" tomorrow at 7 p.m. n Red 203. Ths flm, n Russan wth Englsh subttles, won the 1975 Oscar for Best Foregn Flm and was the frst major collaboraton between Sovet and foregn flm studos. Set n 20th century eastern Sbera, ths Sovetzed verson of "Grzzly Adams" focuses on the clash between cultures, between man and nature and between past and future. No, just late Today's chemstry semnar s "Evoluton: Was Wrong?" by junor John D. McCaffery at 5 p.m. n Howe 402. t wll be preceded by tea at 4:30 p.m. n Howe 401. Jazzburger The W&L Unversty Jazz Lab Band wll gve a dnner concert n the Cockpt Tuesday from 6-7:30 p.m. There wll be no cover charge, and the Cockpt wll be offerng a specal meal prce that nght. Stmulatng Dr. George H. Glmer of Bell Laboratores wll lecture tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. about "Computer Smulaton Models of Crystal Growth" n Parmly 201. Refreshments wll be served at 3 p.m. Supermeetng The Superdance steerng commttee wll meet Sunday at 7 p.m., n Room 114 of the Student Center. The 1985 Superdance wll be revewed, and all are welcome to attend. Sprng sng The Rockbrdge Chorus and Orchestra wll gve ther sprng concert Saturday at 8 p.m. n Jackson Memoral Hall at VM. On Sunday at 3 p.m., the Youth Orchestra and Dance Ensemble wll gve a concert at Lexngton Hgh School. One more day Applcatons for edtors of The Rng-tum Ph, The Calyx, the W&L Poltcal Revew and the Arel and for busness managers of The Rng-tum Ph and The Calyx are due n Carole Chappell's offce by 4:30 p.m. tomorrow. ntervews wll be held next week. For prose pros Competton has begun for the Englsh department's George A. Mahan Awards for Creatve Wrtng. There are four $150 prose awards for freshmen, sophomores, junors and senors and one $200 poetry award for any undergraduate. Contest rules may be obtaned n Payne 22 or Payne 24, and all entres must be submtted to the department by Monday, Aprl 29. Better hurry "General Notes" request forms are avalable from the career placement stand n front of Carole ChappeU's offce n the Student Center. VOLUME 84, NUMBER 23 WASHNGTON AND LEE UNVERSTY LEXNGTON, VRGNA MARCH 21,1985 W&L, U.Va. lax game: rght to brag at stake By STEVE GREENEBAUM and MKE STACHURA s The rvalry. You can have your NFC East Cowboys and Redskns, your oldtme Brooklyn Dodgers-New York Yankees bloodlettngs, and even that hoops affar down south a ways between North Carolna and N.C. State. They all dm n comparson as far as anyone n the shadow of the Colonnade s concerned wth what s to take place Saturday afternoon on Wlson Feld. Here, "rvalry" means Washngton and Lee vs. Vrgna n lacrosse. "t's stll for braggng rghts of the state. t s the bggest state rvalry," U.Va. head coach Jm Adams sad. "t's the two best lacrosse programs n the state," sad W&L head coach Denns Daly. "There's a lot of tradton. t's more from our standpont to get up for U.Va. than for them to get up for us." t s a pont well taken. The.' The Generals dropped a tough 11-5 decson to Maryland last Saturday. Story, page 6. Generals and the Cavalers have met 42 tmes n the last 37 years, and U.Va. leads the seres The last tme a W&L squad beat a Wahoo team was n The closest W&L has come snce then has been a 13-8 defeat n 1980, the last tme the Generals made t to the NCAA tournament. "ts a bg rvalry, but they don't respect us n the same way we respect them," W&L senor attackman Rod Santomassmo sad Due to last year's contest n Charlottesvlle, the tde of respect may be turnng. W&L played even-up wth the Cavalers ncludng a scoreless thrd quarter before losng Last year s the frst thng on U.Va. junor mdfelder John Glln's mnd. "Thnkng back to last year, they played a good game. We'll never take them lghtly," Gllnsad. : See Rvalry. Page 7 Next year's Executve Commttee Bg Three ( to r) Mchael Webb, John Lews, Andrew Caruthers. Lews, Caruthers and Webb: New 'Bg Three' looks ahead sad he feels he wll be able to learn much of what hs job By JM STRADER entals by dong just that. Asked about hs lack of ex- perence, Lews sad that he thnks "a lttle new blood School heghtens effort once n a whle s a good thng." Professonalsm and a serous atttude wll Lews sad that recent perceptons of problems on ths characterze next year's Executve Commttee, accord- year's EC stemmed from comparsons made between ng to the commttee's presdent- and vce presdent- ths year's EC and last year's. to add mnorty students elect. Last year's EC was "very much n focus and very ob- "We need to create a crtcal mass The EC also wll do all t can to help the coeducaton transton^ smoothly but wll not overcompensate for vous couldn't get away from t," Lews sad. Ths year's commttee, on the other hand, s a "reacton" to By CHRSTOPHER DEGHAN of black students on campus," he the change. Presdent-elect John Lews and Vce Pres- last year's and, as such, has taken a low profle. n that sad. dent-elect Andrew Caruthers sad ths week. sense, the EC was successful, Lews sad. The Admssons Offce asked F- Although Lews, Caruthers and Secretary-elect Mch- Of ths year's EC's accomplshments, Lews was un- Recrutment of black students ths nancal Ad Drector John H De- ael Webb have not met to dscuss next year's plans, all sure. "t seemed from the outsde that lttle has been year s more ntense than usual par- Courcy to act as organzer of the mn- three offered ther ndvdual thoughts on the drecton done," he sad, because the nner workngs of the EC Sally because of the "automatc orty recrutng effort, they'would lke to see the"commttee take. generally are not seen and the current presdent chose to segregaton" of blacks on campus, "n some ways guess was the "Our utmost concern s to be professonal, and to have keep a low profle. admssons offcals say. natural choce," sad DeCourcy, who a sense of professonalsm when we deal wth anythng Caruthers, sophomore representatve on ths year's Efforts to ncrease mnorty enroll- was fnancal ad drector at Florda n honor," Caruthers sad. Ths s somethng he sad was EC, sad some of the problems ths year stemmed from ment nclude the use of alumn re- Memoral, a prmarly black school prevalent n the two Executve Commttees he has serv- the way the EC was run. "Ths year's presdent has sources and programs that dentfy n Mam. He was also drector of a ed on and wll be an ntegral part of next year's commt- mssed more meetngs ths year as presdent than perqualfed black students program desgned to place hghly tee. sonally ever have." he added. "We have never had suffcent qualfed and motvated mnorty stu- Caruthers s the only one of next year's Bg Three wth Lews sad he plans to run next year's EC "halfway benumbers of black kds here for them dents n 30 publc schools, such as EC experence, but he sad that the new members tween those two [Executve Commttees]." He wll not to really feel a part of the nsttu- those n Swarthmore, Pa., and New wll have no trouble learnng the ropes EC experence s brng up "outrageous" ssues before the EC, he sad, but ton," sad Van H. Pate, assocate Canaan, Conn. not necessarly a prerequste for servng on the Bg rather wll fnd out what s mportant to students. drector of admssons. DeCourcy sad that Admssons D- Three, sad Caruthers, addng that members wll gan a "'m gong to fnd out what's mportant to W&L before Pate sad the tendency to "seek out rector Wllam M. Hartog ll's ntal lot of experence on the job very quckly and ths wll speak, before the commttee speaks." he explaned. your own" has led black students at request was for the establshment of help them to do a good job. To ad n the transton between ECs, a vst to Sky- Washngton and Lee to be "auto- Lews, who, lke Caruthers and Webb, can st n on the lark, the Unversty's mountan retreat, has been planmatcally segregated." :See Recrut, Page 3 rest of ths year's EC meetngs and executve sessons, TjSee Bg Three, Page 5 Junor klled n weekend auto wreck From Staff Reports Junor J. Chrstopher Hunter ded of a broken neck early Sunday about half a mle north of Lexngton after the car n whch he was rdng ran off the road, recrossed t and then ht a tree, authortes sad. The drver of the car, sophomore P. Edward Henson, was charged Monday wth reckless drvng and drvng under the nfluence of alcohol. Hunter, 21, of Cave Sprng, Ga. was a poltcs major and former rugby player who was assstant socal charman of Sgma Alpha Epslon. Medcal Examner F.A. Feddeman sad Hunter ded of "a fractured neck from httng the wndsheld." SAE Presdent L. Gray Sanders sad Hunter and Henson were returnng from a fraternty gatherng at Wndfall, a country house where several Washngton and Lee students lve. State polce trooper E.R. Hamlton, the nvestgatng offcer, sad the whte 1980 Oldsmoble Cutlass was travelng south on state Route 681 about l:30 a.m. when t ran off the left sde of the road. Hamlton sad the drver then cut back across the road, forcng the car off the rght shoulder nto a tree. He sad Hunter ded "almost mmedately upon mpact." M2Phutu J. CHRSTOPHER HUNTER The trooper sad the car was travelng "probably around 50 mph." Rockbrdge County Sherff S.M. Reynolds sad the two-lane, paved road has a posted speed lmt of 25 mph. f Hunter had been wearng a seatbelt at the tme of the crash, Hamlton sad, "t could have made all the dfference n the world." Hamlton sad Henson underwent a blood test about 24 hours after the wreck He sad the results wll not be receved from the laboratory for about two weeks. The fndngs wll not be made publc pror to the court hearng. Henson was charged based on a warrant obtaned from a magstrate, accordng to Hamlton. The trooper sad Henson had begun to recover from hs njures when he was charged at the Lexngton polce staton Monday afternoon. He was released on hs agreement to appear n court no bal was requred. Hamlton sad the addtonal charge of nvoluntary manslaughter can be fled aganst Henson at the dscreton of the Commonwealth's Attorney He sad two factors n such a charge would be f "an extremely hgh rate of speed" was nvolved and f the drver was "extremely ntoxcated." "There were no wtnesses that 'm aware of," Hamlton sad. A prelmnary hearng for the case has been set for May 1 n Rockbrdge County General Dstrct Court The two charges that have been fled aganst Henson each carry a potental penalty of up to a year n jal, a fne of up to $1,000, or both. A manslaughter charge would carry a possble penalty of between one and 10 years n jal, a fne of up to $1,000, or both. Henson, a 20-year-old pre med student, attended the servces for Hunter that were held Tuesday n Georga Sanders sad Henson wll be at home n Dalton, Ga., for at least the rest of the term Sanders sad Henson suffered a varety of head njures He sad that Henson had sttches taken on the nsde and outsde of hs mouth and that See Hunter, Page 5 Chrs Hunter was klled Sunday mornng when ths car ran off the road. By Collon Purvrar/Tkr Hum lum Ph t could have been anyone' By MKE ALLEN Chef Edtor The death of Chrs Hunter last weekend thrust sudden, excrucatng stress onto many members of the Unversty communty admnstrators, hs fraternty brothers, hs frends One of the largest sngle burdens was borne by senor Gray Sanders, a close frend of Hunter's and presdent of Sgma Alpha Epslon An SAE junor prased Sanders' conduct through the crss. "Although obvously dstressed, he has led effec tvely and wth great compasson." the member sad. "t's been the worst three days 've ever had," Sanders sad Tuesday nght as he relaxed n hs room at the SAE house. "We'll get over t someday, but t's a horrble experence. t really does change the way you look at the world." He called a meetng for 4:30 am Sunday to tell the fraternty about the death. "We ddn't want people to hear about t on the rado or from rumors," he sad. "t was the worst meetng n my lfe - t was horrble." "Some of the guys started cryng rght away." he recalled "Others were just stunned." Sanders sad that at the Monday nght house meetng, each member sad a few words durng the usual "comments" tme. "There were 64 pretty bg guys n there just bawlng, cryng." he sad "Chrs was real loud and crazy." he sad. "t was hard to go to W&L and not know hm. so f you were n hs fraternty, you really knew hm well," he sad. Accordng to Sanders, the fraternty's gref s focused both on the heart-rendng death of a frend and on the apparent randomness of the tragedy. "There's the personal loss part of t that really does hurt," he sad. "The other aspect of t s that t was a flln the blank stuaton t could have been anyone n the school." "All t would have taken was havng a stnkn' seatbelt on," he sad. "Now you can't get n a car wth a member of ths fraternty wthout them bucklng up." Sanders sad the angush felt by the house ntensfed as the week began. "t's gotten worse," he sad. "When t frst ht, everyone n the house was, lke, numb t took a whle to grasp t." "Meals are real quet," he contnued "People are spendng a lot of tme by themselves, tryng to understand t. can't understand t myself " Sanders wondered aloud f "there s anythng postve that can come out of ths." " thnk there s," he sad. "t's a horrble way to learn what a car can do." "You read about these thngs t wasn't supposed to happen here or happen to anyone here," he sad. "t's not lke a slap n the face t's lke a kck n the stomach t makes you hurt nsde " "No one's every gong to forget t t's too horrble," he sad. "Ths s the closest most people n the house have ever come to death. We're young guys and most of us haven't had much contact wth death." "Lfestyles don't know f they'll change or not, he sad "That's what so sad about t don't know f t'll change anythng."

2 OPNON Page 2 March 21, 1985 Soberng thoughts Chrs Hunter ded ths past weekend n a gruesome car accdent. Some people are human and mourn; others wll make passng promses never to drnk and drve; some wll vow never agan to drnk perod. But am a skeptc about matters promssory. Hunter's death was smply unnecessary, and many people ndrectly stand to blame for t. am not tryng to dmnsh hs death or begn the fngerpontng by gong on a wtch-hunt; rather, hs death serves as a tragc remnder of how a good thng has been corrupted along the way. Many partes no pun ntended have aded n ths perverson and each stands equally "gulty." The Fraternty Rules Commttee last May ssued a report to the Board of Trustees recommendng the curbng of the fraternty party schedules. Md-week partes were regulated, and weekend partes were lmted to four per house per term. Although ther prmary motve was "lmtng wear and tear on the house," the group also beleved lmtng the party schedules would help to re-orent students to matters academc. However, those recommendatons have proven to have several flaws, and ths weekend's death was proof of one of those falures. n ther near relgous zeal to curb the party schedules, the group faled to realze that fraternty members, lke the average Amercan taxpayer, wll try to fnd a loophole n regulatons. The faculty and student group dervng the rules played exactly nto the hands of the fraterntes by provdng several loopholes. The party Hunter was attendng was held far from campus because the fraternty nvolved dd not want the party to count as one of ts offcal four partes. Unfortunately, whle that s totally "legal," t also proves to be very lethal. Students who venture to dstant country ranches over wndng country roads, drnk ther fll and then try to make the return drve tempt fate. They ought to realze that drnkng and drvng don't mx. But the Rules Commttee, by dsallowng partes n the fraternty houses where the vast majorty of the "parters" mght lve, has ndrectly "pushed" the partes out of town and away from the majorty of students' dwellngs. Ther rules serve as a slent partner n ths most henous of crmes. But the hand has many fngers pontng blame, and students certanly deserve some. Just a month ago, students across the campus and the state decred the state government's move to rase the drnkng age to 21 for all alcoholc beverages. "We are old enough to fght" and "we are old enough to vote" are but a few of the paper defense slogans students shouted. The sayngs are all trte, and the reasonng qute shallow. We may thnk we are mature enough to handle drnkng and drvng just as we are mature enough vote and be drafted but Hunter's death says everyone at that party certanly wasn't mature enough to handle drnkng and drvng. But, you may say, that was only a few students, and certanly not "me." We must all accept equal blame f we are all collectvely gong to enjoy the benefts of an 18-year-old drnkng age. We students need to sober up. We need to realze that all those cute advertsng jngles about drnkng and drvng have a very profound bottom lne death. We students need to realze that havng fun and takng rsks are not always the same. We students need to start actng more our ages and begn to dsplay the maturty we clam we have and wth whch we desre to be entrusted. Lfe s far more than a quck buzz on the weekend or pretty women on Wednesday nghts. Workng together, as concerned faculty, students and frends, changes can ndeed, must be made so that future tragedes are prevented. By Nelson Patterson m\t Sng-turn W Chef Edtors Busness Manager Mke Allen Wllam Schoeffler Bruce Potter News Edtor Paul Kouteh Managng Edtor Rude Wllam! The Back Page" Edtor Cotton Purycar Sporu Edtor Mke Ktachura Edtoral Page Edtor Nelson Patter».. Photography Edtor Cotton Puryrar ('mtaton Manager Peter Crane Advertsng Manager Ale> Bryant Cartoonsts Chrs Bowrtng Chrs Gares Advertsng Salesmen Chuck Bracken. Hank (reenberg. JeflKmbell. HobTolleson The Rng turn Ph s publshed every Thursday durng the undergraduate school year at Washngton and Lee Unversty. Lesnglon. Vrgna. Fundng lor The Rng-turn Ph comes prmarly from advertsng and from a porton of the student actvtes lee. The Publcatons Board elects the chef edtors and busness manager, but The Rng-turn Ph s otherwse ndependent Letters to the Edtor and submssons must be n The Rng-turn Ph offce, room 200 of the.student Center, by 5 p.m. Tuesday of the week they are to be run. Ths newspaper observes current court defntons of lbel and obscenty. 'Nothng qute lke death' MY VEW ByAl Roberts There's nothng qute lke death to remnd us that lfe goes on beyond the Colonnade. When students and a recent graduate de on mountantop, on roadsde and apartment floor, we hear mortalty whstle through our conscousness lke the clammy gusts of recent sunny days. Ask that knd of wnd, and t wll say the warmth t closes 'round s but one spark between eternal nghts. But strdng past our pllars of wsdom, t s only each of us who knows f the soul has chlled before the toes. Who can say how many lvng dead are entombed n the heads we pass each day? Who can say how many have surrendered to somethng less than nner fre? We wonder when we nod greetng only to blank stares ploddng our perphery. We wonder when the deal shatters n the scrutny of the Law. We wonder when we hear of men who cannot face the day wthout a drnk. We wonder when we lose what once was wonderment, and awe and nterest. Where s that tny mnd that wants to capture every thng and moment of each day...touch t, hold t, let t go? You can see t at the church steps almost any day, turnng and turnng n wdenng walks chldren reachng out wth tny arms and eyes so wde they swallow you whole. We all began that way. We all began wth a reverence for lvng a belef that we could fly. Then we found that leaves fall for those who cannot fly. And then we learned that leaves are green before they dry to brown and crnkle lke moth's wngs We learned that lght makes green leaves lve and calls all the moths together out back by the garbage cans. We learned how moths and butterfles begn n lttle sleepng bags from whch they floursh. We learned that we too began n lttle sleepng bags, but burst out to others teachng us how to fly. We learned to love our parents. Fnally we came to ths place where we are our parents. Here we learn how to learn or to pretend to learn. We learn that learnng s not lke turnng leaves or butterfles. We learn that learnng s the creaton of letters and numbers that sgnfy how well we learned. And we are taught to wrap our flud lves n paper packets to be placed n certan hands at the fttng tme. We are taught to take the Ffth, to toe the lne to keep a tran of thought on ts tersest track We read about lfe n Bolva, about economes of scale and the musc of the spheres We meet FFO, LFO and SWAPO. We dscuss the meanng of somethng someone wrote about caves and shadows 'round a fre centures ago. We talk nto natural lght and consder the consequences. Someone s dead. Someone s n jal. These thngs, we realze, have a way of erasng a GPA. Death of body or soul, we fnd, has a way of fndng the least common denomnator how we have treated each other and what we've left behnd n words. When a man becomes entombed by sol, steel bars or stagnaton of hs soul ths thng called learnng dsappears. All that's left s the memory of a good word spoken between sweaty August sprnts. llusons of grandeur explode. When we do not know the face that s the name on the obtuary, we wonder why we never met ths man. We wonder how ths pece of lfe eluded us, how ths one fell to earth wth naught to break hs fall. We wonder where we were when mortalty stung hs skn and despar eclpsed the sun. And soon the numbness of our daly pursut seems the best drug for the pan of havng not been there. We return to learnng. We return to our struggle for a certan future, graspng for the securty of a good grade or a job offer. We guzzle what we beleve s the water of our lves ArstoUe's pursut along those lnes of excellence. But the ancent sad those lnes run wth these thngs called talents. He sad we should fnd these before we seek to excel: and what better method to ths dentfcaton than the survey of others' talents for how could we defne personal excellence wthout the benchmarks of our peers? To do so would be to catch the blueness of the mountans n a brush and spread t on our face lke blush. So when we talk of excellence; let us not speak n absolutes. Let us remember how lttle we have learned and how few we have known. Let us remember that learnng s not only learnng terms, but comng to terms wth leaves and moths and chldren turnng nto men. Let us walk n crcles, frghtened by the mmensty around us. Let us open our eyes wde and gaze nto the present, concerned not so much wth how quckly we approach the future, but wth how fully we sense the present. t lves n faces on the walks, n gusts between red blocks and n the pages of our books. t lves n the fath of those to whom mortalty mples eternty. t lves n those who buld ther own relgon. t lves n the leaf that falls too fast for clutchng palms, but plucked from slence speaks on the pressed pages of remembrance. EC aganst cutbacks of 'ncetes' To the Edtors: am wrtng ths letter on behalf of the Executve Commttee to express ts vews on the recent consderatons to cut back the "ncetes" (as Mr Epley termed them) the 24-ho.r lbrary, the 24-hour accessblty t 0 Colonnade classrooms, the gymnasum hours as they stand and the annual Catalogue. The Commttee u. nanmously opposes any tamperng wth these tradtons; the mere fact that these are even "consderatons" s appallng. The 24-hour lbrary schedule s one of the most mpressve aspects of W&L and should never be abolshed; the Colonnade classrooms' avalablty adds to ths dmenson as well; the gymnasum hours are too short as t s; and prntng the Catalogue annually s not a "ncety" but rather just good sense f $30,000 s so badly needed that we would even make these radcal proposals our "consderatons," the Unversty s ndeed n poor fnancal shape. Why not consder lettng n four more freshmen n order for ther tuton ($28,400) to defray or subsdze these "ncetes" as they were wrongly termed? Accordngly, t s tme to set the record straght: the 24-hour lbrary, the 24-hour accessblty to Colonnade classrooms, the gymnasum hours as they stand, and the annual Catalogue are not "ncetes" at all. They are NECESSTES to W&L's atmosphere. They are the thngs that set up apart from every other small unversty. Take away these and you have taken away W&L's advantage to stand head and shoulders above the rest. The Executve Commttee strongly opposes the mere consderaton of these necesstes as "budget-cuts ' These tradtons make up the foundatons of the Washngton and Lee experence: foundatons are not for "consderaton." Andrew Caruthers Sophomore EC Representatve Lews thanks student body To the Edtors: wsh to thank those members of the student body who supported me n my successful campagn for presdent of the student body. Many people were very supportve and helpful durng a very hectc week and really apprecate t. wll do my best to represent the majorty of the opnons hear voced, so be sure hear all of them. Thank you agan for your support. John B.Lews Class of 1986 Student Body Presdent-Elect Thumbng through the gudes MY VEW By B. Scott Tlley Wth all due respect and admraton for Mr. McAlevy... "t's that tme agan." Tme when hgh school senors wrack ther brans tryng to decde before that loomng Aprl 1 deadlne whch nsttuton of hgher learnng they are gong to lend ther ncredble knowledge, personaltes and leadershp to for the next four years. All of the ratos wll be checked out: student-teacher ratos, lbrary volumes per student, male-female ratos and the number of partes per week. Parents and frends, teachers and alumn wll all chp n ther two cents' worth. And of course, the ever-present "College Gudes" wll be consulted. From Yale's outstandng "nsder's Gude to the Colleges" to The New York Tmes' fne "Selectve Gude to the Colleges" to Lsa Brnbach's attempt (poor mtaton?) at a college gude, outsders try to show what t s lke to be an nsder at the colleges. And t s amazng the dfferent number of mages a prospectve mnk can draw of W&L by consultng a varety of gven gudes, from Yale's "...mage of a tradtonal southern gentleman" to Lsa's "rch, preppy asshole" vew. t doesn't stop there. Though sometmes n synch n some aspects of W&L, these gudes seem to have been vstng dfferent schools n reachng ther conclusons. A small samplng of what these prospectve students are beng led to expect at W&L: Academcs: Yale: "W&L's academcs are sold. Tradtonal strengths have been the humantes, partcularly hstory." NY Tmes: Four stars (out of fve). "Excellent preprofessonal programs, outstandng departments n Englsh and hstory... The excellent placement record for ts graduates testfes to the qualty nstructon..." Lsa: "A guy can get a good educaton at W&L." Academc Pressure: NY Tmes: "Anyone amng for more than a gentleman's C, though, wll fnd the workload stff. 'Guts are smply not to be found,' one former student sad." Lsa: "HA, HA, HA." Tradton: Yale: "Although many campuses boast a reverence for tradton and an equal number possess a flavor of socal and poltcal awareness there are few that combne the two as effectvely as W&L." NY Tmes: "Although certan tradtonal aspects of the school, lke the stately brck and whte-columned buldngs, stll preserve the atmosphere of the Old South, the only real throwback to the days of Lee s the all-male student body." (Tme for a new edton). Lsa: "Favorte school tradton: Gong down the road a bunch of guys get drunk, ple nto a car, and set out to abuse grls at a chosen grls'school." General Lee: Yale: "General Robert E. Lee, presdent of the college for fve years after the Cvl War, s spoken of as a 'lvng presence' on campus." Lsa: " 'General Lee has a real nfluence on why people come here He's a god. 'We call hm St. Bob Thrty-fve percent of the students' rooms have a pcture of General Lee on proud dsplay." Honor System Yale: "An effectve honor system, run entrely by the student government... encourages the easygong recprocal respect common among the students." NY Tmes: "Ths level of respect and frendlness s a result not only of the school's small sze but also of the student-admnstered honor system - 'a smash ht' at W&L. Tests and fnals are taken wthout any faculty supervson; doors reman unlocked, calculators untended, and lbrary stacks open twenty-four hours a day. The only punshment for volaton, one meted out several tmes a year, s mmedate expulson." Lsa: conspcuously not mentoned. Fraterntes: Yale: "W&L's fraternty system creates a hgh-pressure socal scene. t sn't a good dea to appear too studous, and for these unsure of themselves socally, W&L s probably a bad choce." NY Tmes: "The school's 17 fraterntes are stll the movers and shakers of the W&L socal scene, each hostng partes almost every weekend. About two-thrds of the students go Greek and those who don't are urged to share the socal lfe by "at least hangng out at one.' " Lsa: "Almost 65 percent of W&L's 1,363 undergraduates s Greek, dvded nto seventeen fraterntes. Conduct has been a problem. And 'mnmum standards' may be adopted." Women/Coeducaton: Yale: "Women on campus wll undoubtedly have a major mpact on lfe at Washngton and Lee, but no one s sure yet exactly what t wll be. W&L s used to beng a very male unversty, and that aspect of the school s unlkely to change rght a way... Despte the admsson of women, W&L wll probably always be defned by conservatve male tradtons." NY Tmes: "Despte the number of eager and elgble young women descendng on Lexngton each weekend, students contnually cte the allmale envronment as the school's bggest drawback. Maybe the tme has come for Washngton and Lee to surrender agan." Lsa: "Washngton and Lee has just made the epc decson to admt women for the frst tme, whch really burns a lot of students who lke t just the way t s...most of the guys at W&L see grls solely as dversons. They have no concept of women as thnkng bengs." Conservatsm: Yale: "W&L students, despte an outwardly conservatve manner, are hard-workng - and hard-playng males who combne a lberal educaton wth a very actve socal lfe. Ths lberal-conservatve balance s the real strong pont of the school.'' NY Tmes: "Conservatsm s as much a part of the 20th century as of the nneteenth and the student body at Washngton and Lee s no excepton. One student wrtes bluntly that ' 'people who do not lke Southern preppes and farly rch, eltst people' should not come to W&L." Lsa: "Students are conservatve borderng on royalsts. There are two students who are known publcly as Democrats, and because they have workng mothers (and therefore support the ERA), they are referred to as 'Commes.' " Tdbts: Yale: "W&L's campus s beautful ts centerpece s 'the Colonnade,' a long row of adjacent halls wth you guessed t majestc whte columns Facng the Colonnade s the Lee Chapel." "But conservatsm doesn't mean apathy. The tradtonal mock poltcal conventon held every four years for the party out of power s the best example of the school's savorfare." "Washngton and Lee has, n many ways, ntegrated the best of two worlds. Lke the state of Vrgna tself, the school has one foot n the North, one n the South, one n the past, and one n the future." NY Tmes: "Despte stff gradng the rapport between students and teachers s excellent." "Never prone to false modesty, the W&L man consders hmself 'betterlookng, more ntellgent, more outgong, and more self-confdent than the average male.' " "Students spend ther frst year lvng comfortably n dormtory sngles and eatng well n Evans Dnng Hall The good food s 'another plus for neurotc Mommes.' " "Football sparks some nterest n the fall, but W&L students 'lve for the sprng and lacrosse.' Contnual contenders for natonal champonshps, the team holds the campus n thrall from March to June." Lsa: "Certanly Washngton and Lee deserves ts reputaton as a rchboy's school, and homogeneous doesn't even express how smlar everyone s to everyone else." "Students at W&L thnk they would nave to alter ther natural behavor f grls were admtted...few thnk t'< worth the trouble." "Students just want to be lke General Robert E. Lee, and f they can't, emulatng ther fathers would be satsfactory." Beauty s certanly n the eyes of the beholder. But when two more re putable sources dsagree wth y 0 " consstently, how do you expla" yourself, Lsa? Maybe you wll S et that elusve FD bd before the next edton...

3 Letters- Motves questoned To the Edtors: Ths week we held a fnal electon to decde who wll represent us as offcers of the Executve Commttee. Now that we have elected the Bg Three, would lke all of us to consder who we have voted for and what ther actual motves for runnng for offce mght have been. Among any lst of canddates runnng for an offce, there are those who run for personal or utltaran reasons and those who run for the beneft of the nsttuton whose offce they would lke to hold. n lght of ths, would lke to brng up the followng statement made by Andrew Caruthers: "t's a thankless job, but t's a good resume fller." Now ths statement was made by Mr. Caruthers not n reference to hs own poston as sophomore EC representatve, but feel justfed n makng the nference from ths statement about a partcular offce, to any offce n general. Now what strkes me funny about ths statement s that Mr Caruthers acts as f an offce owes the offceholder somethng f not thanks, then at least a greater securty of obtanng economc employment. But, Mr. Caruthers, the job s not there for the beneft of you, t's there for the beneft of the nsttuton. am not snglng out Mr. Caruthers, but would lke all of us to consder the underlyng motves of those runnng for publc offces and remnd those who hold them who serves what and what serves whom. f the sum total of the ndvdual ballots decdes the electon and f the majorty of the ndvdual ballots have not been based upon ratonal grounds, then the elected canddates have been chosen ether non-ratonal ly or* rratonally. Our own ballot s relatvely nsgnfcant when compared to the rest, but t s very crucal that we make t, and make t ratonally. f more of us actually consdered who we were votng for, and for what reasons, thnk a lot of us would end up votng for persons other than those we orgnally ntended to Even f we end up votng for the same canddate, at least we have made a wser choce. There les a parallel here to our selves as students. f we strctly consder our educaton here as a means to an end and our GPA proportonal to how much money we'll make later n lfe, then beleve we're here for the wrong purpose. Everywhere you hear of student apathy and professors' contempt for students and wonder why. t seems too many of us value our grades over what we as students have learned Just because we have receved a poor grade n class doesn't mean that we haven't learned anythng. have often learned more from classes receved a poor grade n than one have receved a good grade n. f coeducaton brngs n an avant-garde of new students wth dfferent values toward educaton, then 'm all for t. Davd H.Gordon Class of 1987 S. Afrcan foes hypocrtcal To the Edtors: was hghly amused by readng last week's Ph artcle about law Professor Wllam Gemer's proposed protest aganst South Afrca, whose government s characterzed by an aparthed polcy of whte supremacy. Mr, Gemer and those helpng hm are typcal of lberals everywhere msguded and hypocrtcal. Lke the Kennedy kds and others who have made t a fad to be arrested-nprotest, Gemer s drectng hs attenton to the least of the evls. Wouldn't t be great f we saw Gemer protestng the oppressve Sandnsta regme, or genocdal war n Afghanstan or the persecuton of the Church n Poland? Or better yet, why don't we see Gemer protestng U.S. commercal relatons wth the Sovet Unon, whose tyranny over ts people s as well known as t s deplorable? nstead, these "protesters" at W&L and those on a greater scale decry a government whch has recently drawn up a new consttuton and repealed a number of repressve regulatons amed at blacks. t's a government whch spends mllons of dollars annually to make blacks more self-suffcent and better educated Even "60 Mnutes" told of over a mllon black llegal mmgrants who were drawn from ther own black-led oppressve dctatorshps to South Afrca's better wages, lvng and workng condtons and educatonal opportuntes. These postves are the very condtons Gemer and frends want to abolsh by ther demands. Many protesters on the natonal level agree, callng for total workplace desegregaton, tranng and promotons for blacks and mproved outsde-theworkplace condtons for blacks employed by U.S. corporatons. The more radcal mnds call for a total dsnvestment by U.S. frms. Bshop Desmond Tutu, currently the lberal patron sant, loves these deas; however, one must beware of Tutu, who backs the Afrcan Natonal Congress, whch supports volence for endng aparthed. For such vews, Tutu recently won the Nobel Peace Prze. Gemer, et al, should lsten to others, such as Chef Gatsha Buthlez of the 6 mllon member Zulu trbe n South Afrca and head of the largest poltcal party there. "Black people of South Afrca have not sad they want dsnvestment." Buthelez sad, addng that "75 percent reject t." These comments are from a black leader n South Afrca, not a professor n Vrgna. What s strkngly dangerous (read: lberal) about Gemer's vews s that:he wants not only the Unted States government to sancton South Afrca, but he wants prvate corporatons to do the same. Our govern- ment has no rght to dctate to a company where or on what condtons t can or cannot do busness, except n cases of extreme natonal securty reasons. Mr. Gemer would fnd t mpossble to prove such a case exsted n South Afrca. f the U.S. government doesn't want to have relatons wth that country, fne. f Mr. Gemer doesn't want to buy the products of companes wth nvestments n South Afrca, that s fne too. But Gemer's vews become alarmng when he calls for sanctons and dsnvestment by prvate corporatons. Those corporatons Gemer s so upset wth have gven more than $78 mllon for medcal, housng and educatonal expenses to South Afrcan black employees and ther famles between 1978 and Ths was $78 mllon more than they had to provde, snce a company s requred to do nothng for ts employees not related to work. Yet these corporatons used ther own money to help black employees. Gemer, on the other hand, s of the opnon that sanctons and dsnvestment would help the South Afrcan black A man of Gemer's educaton and research experence should put two and two together and get four. n hs effort to help the South Afrcan, he s foolshly dong the opposte. JohnR.Maass Class of 1987 Ex-columnst gves hs vew To the Edtors: would lke to correct a msstatement of fact by the Rng-turn Ph's chef edtors n last week's "Readers' Advocate" column. Last summer agreed to wrte the "Readers' Advocate" column ths school year. The column never got off the ground because of a dsagreement between the Ph's chef edtors and myself over how much control they would have over ts content. Chef Edtors Mke Allen and Bruce Potter wanted to delete some rather nnocuous but relevant nformaton from my frst column last fall. Last week Peter Wrght, the new "Readers' Advocate," reported that the edtors clam "they merely wanted to dscuss and queston some of the nformaton and had no ntenton of deletng t" wthout my approval. Ths was not the case. have the orgnal copy of my column n whch the nformaton s clearly marked out by an edtor's red pen. Errors of style and spellng had been corrected and column and type szes were ndcated at the top. t appears everythng was ready for t to be set n type. f the edtors just wanted to dscuss possble changes, why had they already edted the column and taken out the nformaton? n fact, what transpred after they told me of the changes was not a dscusson: t was a heated argument. held to my contenton that f was to objectvely and honestly evaluate the Ph's coverage the purpose of the "Advocate" column n the frst place could not allow them to delete nformaton thought mportant. Both Potter and Allen seemed surprsed at my objecton. Allen told me that f the edtors could edt the column for style, grammar and spellng, then they could certanly take out nformaton they thought gave the wrong mpresson. Nether of the facts they wanted to delete gave the wrong mpresson. n my column, whch dealt wth Allen's coverage of the murder-and-arson ndctment of Scot Mesner, 1 noted that Allen had "scooped" hs competton, ncludng the Roanoke Tmes & World-News, n gettng an exclusve ntervew wth Mesner before he was pcked up by polce. (The charges have snce been thrown out.) thought ths nformaton helped explan why Allen rushed to call Mesner n Roanoke after the ndctment was announced n Lexngton. But the edtors told me they ddn't want to gve readers the mpresson that they were n competton wth the Roanoke paper Just two days before, however, Allen had told me that would "never set foot" n the Ph's offce f ever took nformaton from "Readers' Advocate" ntervews and gave t to the Roanoke Tmes, whch work for as a correspondent durng the school year. Ths does not sound lke the words of an edtor who does not consder hmself n competton wth another paper. n my column also noted that Allen had requested the column after hearng crtcsm from a local polce offcal. Allen sad he ddn't want to gve the mpresson that the "Readers' Advocate" columst was too close to the Ph's edtors. Ths s rdculous. was only notng to readers where the dea for my column had come from. was not reportng that had been ordered to wrte t. By tryng to delete ths nformaton, the edtors were attemptng to do exactly what they wanted to not gve the mpresson they were dong tamperng wth the content of my column Ther hostlty to my objectons only strengthened my fears that, f there came a tme when really crtczed the Ph's coverage, my opnons mght be watered down by edtng or never get nto the paper After all, my frst column had generally prased the Ph's coverage and the edtors stll wanted to make changes. There was one sdelght to our dsagreement. The edtors also expressed concern that my work for the Roanoke Tmes mght hnder my loyalty to The Ph. repled that 1 dd not feel my loyalty to The Ph was mportant, snce understood my dutes to be those of an outsde crtc and not those of an apologst for the Ph's actons. suggested that, to avod my dscoverng unpublshed nformaton from The Ph, would conduct all ntervews outsde of the Ph's offce and that the edtors should not feel oblgated to answer f nadvertently asked questons that mght uncover senstve facts. also noted to tht edtors that Allen was a correspon dent for the Rchmond Tmes-Dspatch. n fact, the nformaton from the Mesner ntervew, blled as "an exclusve" n The Ph, had actually appeared the day before n a story by Allen for the Tmes-Dspatch. (Wrght, as news drector for the campus rado and televson statons, also occasonally competes wth The Ph on news stores.) The dscusson ended after both sdes agreed that my column would not run and that would not contnue as the "Readers' Advocate." Only after was handed back my column dd Allen weakly offer that the edtors had only wanted to dscuss the changes. Perhaps our dsagreement stem med from the past hstory of the column. Scott Mason, last year's "Readers' Advocate," told me of one occason on whch a past edtor ordered hm not to do a column arng crtcsm of The Ph. can see how the present chef edtors, who were on the paper's staff at the tme, mght have gotten the wrong mpresson about the role of the "Readers' Advocate." hope that the "Readers' Advocate" s back on track now and that Peter Wrght wll have the "complete edtoral control" that the edtors promsed on last week's front page. was not gven such control. Perhaps the edtors have realzed that, as the source and messenger of crtcsm about the Unversty, they have the responsblty to open themselves up to the same scrutny. Such freedom of expresson can only make Washngton and Lee a better place. t s a shame, however, that ths realzaton came only after the controversy that surrounded ther handlng of Steve Pockrass' letter March 7. The aftermath ncluded stern crtcsm from journalsm Professor Clark Mollenhoff, whose recommendatons weld much nfluence when W&L students seek reportng jobs after graduaton. f the Ph's edtors respond to my letter, hope that they wll gve me the courtesy one dened Pockrass of allowng me my say frst, also hope they wll avod questonng my character and commpetence and nstead deal wth the substantve ssues 've rased once agan, a courtesy dened Pockrass. (Note to edtors: f ths letter s edted for length, please ndcate so when t s publshed.) Mke Hudson Class of 1985 Correcton Due to a typographcal error. The Rng-turn Ph on March 7 ncorrectly reported Assocate Dean of the College Pamela Smpson's remarks regardng Ttle X. Smpson sad that sexual harassment mght not fall wthn the bounds of Ttle X. 'Rag-tag' The Rng turn Ph, March 21, 1985, Page 3 Tght budget doesn't check Hockey Club By JOHN RLE Y The Washngton and Lee ce Hockey Club faces some nherent problems n ts quest to have fun and stay compettve, accordng to he club's presdent, senor Burl Palmer The basc assumpton of ce hockey s. of course, that one plays the game on ce Fndng ths ce, however re mans the bggest hndrance to the club, because he onlj avalable rnk equpped to handle hockey s the Lancerlot Arena n Vnton. Because Vnton s the only ce around, every hockey team n the area needs to use t, and ce tme s scarce. The W&L club currentl\ practces only twce a month, accordng to Palmer, and usually must share ce wth another team. Ths lack of practce tme, Palmer sad, makes t dffcult for the players to stay n condton, and that lack of condtonng affects the way the team plays. "We run four offensve unts and Recrut Contnued from Page 1 a drect malng campagn "somethng we haven't been dong nthepast." Snce the campagn began, between 6,000 and mnortj stu dents have been sent nformaton about W&L. The effort has yelded 34 applcatons from black hgh school senors, ncludng 13 women, for admsson next fall Seven of the 13 have been accepted, one on the Early Decson program. Of the 21 black men who appled. 17 have been offered admsson. Pate sad the remanng applcants could be accepted at a later date. Names of mnorty students are obtaned from such programs as A Better Chance nc. (ABC. the Natonal Achevement Scholarshp Program and Leadershp Educaton and Development DeCourcy's goal as the organzer of W&L's effort to recrut mnortes s to establsh a malng lst of between 500 and 1,000 mnorty counselors and placement offcals. He sad the malngs help generate a great deal of nterest n W&L Also. DeCourcy attended several ABC functons n Connectcut durng the fall to generate nterest. He sad three defensve unts so that each lne plays for only a couple of mnutes, he sad "t's really hard to keep fresh otherwse, snce we're not n top shape." Then there's the problem of trans portaton The Unversty does not allow club teams to use ts fleet of vans for games, so the club must arrange other means "t gets pretty confusng.' Palmer sad The team a lso faces a money short age The student Executve Commt tee awarded the club $620 ths year, and each of the club's 22 members pay $25 n dues, for a total of about $1,100. All of ths money. Palmer sad, s spent on ce lme and other operatng expenses Each member must supply hs own equpment. The club borrows old football jer seys from the athletc department for ts games, "t's a rag-tag outft,'' senor Steve Carey sad. Palmer dd not complan about the stuaton, though. "The EC has a tght budget, and they have been ncreasng our fundng each year for ho met <»r yean lll hope thev that lmted tme, however, restrcts hs role as an" ambassador.'' Mke Webb, a black sophomore who was elected secretary of the Executve Commttee last week and who s a member of the Student Re crutment Commttee, sad he ap plauds the Admssons Offce efforts. Webb sad t s especally dffcult to attract black students from the North because many of them and ther parents vew the South as a place of racal dscrmnaton. "By and large, once they are down here thngs are OK, "he sad. Webb sad that everyone must enter new stuatons wth an open mnd ncludng black students. "f they're separated, t's manly somethng by choce." he sad. Seven black men and three black women are among students the Unversty has nvted to spend three days attendng classes, meetng pro lessors and gettng a taste of the socal lfe. Students arrve late on a Thursday and leave on a Saturday after an ntervew wth admssons offcers. The Unversty pays the complete cost of ther travel, from as faraway ascaltorna Three other black students wll be on campus ths week. Webb sad hs job wth Student Recrutment s to be "Mr Cruse Drector to, make sure these kds have a good tme " "People have been very mpressed Comng Soon Complete Men's And Lades Fashons 22 W. Nelson St. Lexngton, Va. keep t up." A lot of that personally furnshed equpment serves double duty on W&L lacrosse felds, as the club ncludes several current or former W&L lacrosse players. Most of the players are from the North. Palmer sad, where hockey s more common n the hgh schools and prep schools. Despte these problems, the club manages to stay compettve. "We've got a lot of talent.'' Carey sad "And we can mx t up wth anybody." Steve Carey can mx t up wth anybody." Palmer added The club's next encounter wll be March n a tournament n North Carolna that wll nclude club teams from Duke Unversty and Fort Bragg Next year, the club wll be led by current treasurer Vn LaManna, and Palmer sees contnued success "As long as we can get our 20 to 25 players each year as we've been dong n the past four years, thngs wll contnue to get better." he sad. wth the academc atmosphere,'" De- Courcy sad. "People who have put us down as just another school have put us at the top of t he st of t he schools they want tocometo,'headded. DeCourcy sad another resource for attractng mnorty students s mnorty alumn He sad that f each black alumn would drect two black students to W&L. "t would be a bg help." Eugene C. Perry Jr. who graduated from W&L n 1975 and from the law school n 1978 and who s currently a specal agent for the FB, s organzng a group of black alumn for recrutng purposes. Accordng to James D. Fanar, admssons drector from 1962 to 1978 and now coordnator of alumn admssons programs, "we're n an absolutely new ball game n terms of attractngstudents." You have to look back and realze that n the sxtes there just wasn't the effort to attract mnortes," he sad. n the frst black student "n modern tmes" enrolled at W&L, F'arrar sad "And 1970 was the year we really broke the lne," he added, referrng to the 15 blacks who enrolled that year Between 1966and black students enrolled at W&L Between 1978 and black students enrolled. 14 n 1980and seven n 1982.

4 Page 4, The Kng turn Ph, March 21,1985 Outbreaks prompt nfrmary to noculate aganst measles ByPAULFOUTCH News Edtor The Unversty nfrmary s plannng to gve measles vaccnatons to about 400 students next week n response to recent outbreaks at sx colleges, accordng to Unversty physcan Dr. Frederck A. Feddeman. The Amercan College Health Assocaton sent a letter to health servces at colleges across the country urgng that students be noculated before ther sprng breaks, Feddemansad. Three people have ded at Prncpa College n Elsah, 111., from complcatons arsng from red measles, or rubeola. The college, operated by the Chrstan Scence Church, whose members favor relgous healng over medcal treatment, quarantned tself after 112 people came down wth the dsease. n addton, Boston Unversty reported 65 cases of measles, Oho State Unversty reported 13, and the Massachusetts nsttute of Technology, Boston College and Northeastern Unversty reported at least one case each. Most of the affected schools have begun noculaton programs. Feddeman sad t s mportant to have students noculated before sprng break, because the chance of the dsease spreadng wll ncrease when students converge on Florda for ther vacatons. "That's the bg thng that worres me: You don't know who you're gong to be mnglng wth," he sad. The nurses n the nfrmary have been gong through students' records to determne whch students don't need shots, ether because they have already had them or because they have had the dsease. Senors make up 250 of the students on the nfrmary's lst, Feddeman sad, because the nfrmary has no record of whether they have had shots. The Unversty ddn't requre measles records of ts students untl after the Class of 1985 entered. Feddeman sad students wll be asked f they have had ether the dsease or the shots before. f any doubts reman, the shots probably wll be admnstered because there s no danger n havng them twce n a lfetme. "The vaccne's not that dangerous at all," Feddeman sad. The nfrmary expects to send letters or call students who need the shots, Feddeman sad, although students can't be requred to get the shots. Red measles s a vral dsease that causes a fever and a facal rash for as long as 10 days. The dsease tself s not fatal, but secondary nfectons such as bronchts and tuberculoss can be fatal. "'ve been here 30 years, and don't recall ever seeng red measles here," Feddeman sad. One of the reasons the dsease s croppng up among college-age students, he sad, s that when the vaccnaton was frst developed n 1963, t was admnstered to chldren MC than vear old. and the mmun- RvKradr Wlllm/Ttr RrR-lum 'h DR. FREDERCK A. FEDDEMAN Wll begn measles noculatons ty dsappeared. The vaccnatons were then gven to chldren over l and the problem was solved, but chldren remaned who weren't mmune. Feddeman sad he mght be able to get the Lexngton Health Department to help pay for the costs of the noculatons. "n a stuaton lke ths, thnk we can probably get them to supply the vaccne," he sad. Art, wrtng to blend n new lterary magazne By MARSHALL BOSWELL Although some detals stll need to be roned out, a handful of enterprsng students are attemptng to start a lterary magazne made up of work by students from Washngton and Lee, Hampden-Sydney and the women's colleges. Freshman Anthony Cornealus has been vocal n organzng the project and on Monday presented hs deas to the Executve Commttee. "The goal s to unfy the schools on a lterary and artstc level and develop and apprecaton for each school on ths level," Cornealus sad. As of ths week, Mary Baldwn Col- lege, Hollns College and Southern Semnary Junor College have commtted to partcpatng n the project.cornealus sad he stll s workng to ensure partcpaton by Hampden-Sydney College, Randolph Ma con Woman's College and Sweet Brar College. A meetng for nterested students wll be held today or Monday, Cornealus sad. Cornealus has proposed a 40-page magazne, but that length s tentatve for a number of reasons. Frst, t only s feasble f enough schools partcpate, he sad, and second, the cost may lmt the number of pages that can be publshed. The projected cost for the as-yetunnamed magazne s $3,500. Ths money wll be rased through a $400 $500 contrbuton from each school. f enough money sn't rased n ths manner, patrons may be contacted for contrbutons and advertsements mght be sold, Cornealus sad. He told the EC Monday that he wll be requestng a specfc amount of money next week. Although tme permts only one ssue ths year, Cornealus sad he hopes to produce the magazne twce a year n the future. The publcaton wll consst of poetry, essays and short stores. However, Cornealus sad he s certan ths magazne wll be dfferent from the Arel, a lterary magazne already funded by the EC, n a number of ways. "Unlke the Arel and other maga- znes," Cornealus sad, "we plan to use new technques. For nstance, very few blend the artwork wth the poem and make them each a part.'' n other words, Cornealus hopes to desgn the magazne so that the wrtten word wll be prnted n drect conjuncton wth the artwork, n some cases wth the poem or essay drectly on top of the artwork. n addton, the wrters wll work drectly wth the magazne's artst n creatng an llustrated nterpretaton of the poems. "There are some arguments on the look," Cornealus sad. "Some don't lke the dea of the art, but feel t sets us apart. We are strvng to create the art and the poem together." $677,000 pavlon called 'tremendous asset' By BLL BLOOM Now n ts thrd month of full-tme use, the student actvtes pavlon, even wth ts $677,000 prce tag, s a beneft to the Unversty, accordng to Assocate Dean of Students Mchael A. Cappeto. Cappeto, the faculty advser for pavlon actvtes, called the entertanment/athletc faclty "a tremendous asset." " would lke to see t used more," he sad. "But t s already servng the purpose for whch we had ntended t." The costs of the pavlon, whch was bult durng the summer and completed durng the fall term, break down as follows: $277,000 came from the Unversty, and the student body pad $400,000 fnanced by a loan from the Unversty at 9'/* percent for 25 years. The student body s payng back the loan through a $25 addton to the student tax, whch s pad as part of tuton. At the end of 25 years, students wll have pad more than $l mllon for the pavlon. Accordng to Unversty Treasurer E. Stewart Epley, "f the $400,000 had been left wth the professonal endowment nvestors, t would have created, wthn 20 to 25 years, approxmately $1.3 mllon n revenues." A fnal cost ncurred by the pavlon s the annual $15,000 operatng expense, whch goes to gas, electrcty, water and sewage, and s not supplemented by any revenues from pavlon actvtes. On the benefts sde, the addtonal actvtes students can be nvolved n wth the pavlon are almost endless. "n comparson to other schools n our league, few f any colleges have comparable facltes," Assocate Athletc Drector Rchard Mller sad. The pavlon s used for Unversty- wde socal actvtes, ntercollegate athletc practces and physcal educaton classes durng nclement weather, student organzatons' ncludng fraterntes socal events and, accordng to Cappeto, "any reasonable request by the students." The athletc department uses the pavlon Monday through Thursday, accordng to the gudelnes set for ts use. Mller sad athletes are much safer n the pavlon, wth ts softer athletcs-orented Mondoflex floor, than they are outsde n the ran or nsde Warner Center, wth ts hardwood floor. "The faclty meets the basc need," Mller sad, "but t's not adequate n sze." The athletcs department had wanted a faclty that was bg enough to hold an ndoor track. t s only bg enough to house a tenns court. Any organzaton that wants to use the pavlon must make reservatons wth Cappeto and pay a $50 down payment toward the $75 total fee. Also, Applcatons the group must ether provde ts own cleanup or pay the Unversty to do t. The $75 cost goes to pay a student manager who must be present. Another beneft of the pavlon s a less obvous one. "We want to make t as easy as possble for students to stay on campus," Cappeto sad. A party faclty close to campus reduces wear on fraternty houses and keep students from drnkng and drvng, Cappeto sad. The Unversty has $67,000 remanng from the orgnal cost of the pavlon. Epley sad that would be used to complete the access road and parkng facltes. Cappeto also sad addtons to the pavlon are n the offng. "By next fall pcnc tables and barbecue equpment wll be nstalled along the hllsde next to the pavlon," he sad. "These facltes wll be avalable to all students at all tmes." For Busness Edtors and Managers The Calyx The Rng-turn Ph Arel The W&L Poltcal Revew The Rng-turn Ph The Calyx Should be submtted to Carole Chappell n the Student Center by March 22, at 4:30 p.m. ntervews wll be held the week of March 25th. Coed swtch proved easy By ANDY HOPPES Changng from an all-male college to a coed college was "easer than expected," accordng to the presdent of Davdson College when t made that transton n Samuel R Spencer Jr., presdent of Davdson from 1968 to sad that the swtch was easy n an nsttutonal sense. Davdson dd not have to change ts academc program when t went coed, although the unversty 's facltes had to be changed to accommodate women, he added. Spencer, who s now presdent of the Vrgna Foundaton for ndependent Colleges, spoke at last Thursday's Ph Beta Kappa/Socety of the Cncnnat Convocaton and met wth the Coeducaton Steerng Commttee. The transton years at Davdson were toughest on the frst few classes of women, Spencer sad n an ntervew,because the large mbalance n the number of men and women on campus made the socal lfe at Davdson dffcult at frst. "The women were poneers. The frst women were a bt conspcuous. They naturally felt a bt self-conscous," Spencer sad. Everyone at Davdson tred very hard to make the women feel comfortable, however. u Coeducaton: What Wll t Mean? Spencer sad. But there were no women's groups on campus at the tme to provde addtonal support for the frst women. Nevertheless, Spencer sad that the unversty avoded any really serous problems durng the transton. One area where there were problems durng the transton years was n the athletc department, he added. " don't thnk we planned well enough n sports," Spencer remarked. "n the sports area they [the women] dd feel that we were slow n respondng to ther needs." Spencer sad Davdson tred to meet women's demands for sports as they arose, and now has a sound women's athletcs program n place. A second area n whch Davdson encountered some unexpected problems was n that of health care. ByW. Ptrck Hkwlv/Wtl SAMUEL R. SPENCER JR. Transton "easer than expected" Spencer reported. Although no major addtons were needed n Davdson's health care servces, some changes were necessary to provde for women's health care needs when the school went coed. A lot of plannng and several years of preparng the students, faculty and alumn for the possble swtch to coeducaton were the keys to the ease of the transton. Spencer sad. The Davdson admnstraton tred to avod makng decsons by fat or order, he added. One of the unversty's frst moves n testng the waters to see how coeducaton would go over at Davdson was to begn brngng n a small number of women exchange students durng the late 60s. Spencer sad. He added that t was mportant to see how women would be accepted at Davdson before makng the decson to J go coed n Spencer cted an mproved socal lfe and a more qualfed student body as two of the most mportant benefts of the swtch to coeducaton. Davdson was a "sutcase college" before t went coed, Spencer sad. Many of the students were off campus on weekends at women's colleges when the school was all-male. "Ths [coeducaton] has made for a campus that has a much more healther socal lfe," Spencer sad. Academcally, Spencer sad that,, after gong coed Davdson experenced mprovements n the qualty of ts admsson canddates smlar to-,, those W&L has experenced ths year. Spencer sad ths was the natural result of both the avalablty of., women students and the ablty of the school to attract men who dd not want to go to an all-male college. Snack machne vandalzed; W&L senor's VW van stolen By JASON LS Lexngton Polce Chef L.O. Sutton sad the followng offenses nvolvng students or the Unversty were reported ths week: The Lance vendng machne n the Commerce School buldng was broken nto between 1 and 10 a.m. Sunday. Sutton sad a tre ron or crowbar apparently was used. Damage was $50 plus $25 n change. The money box was found elsewhere n the buldng. Senor Bran Adams reported hs 1971 Volkswagen van valued at $1,000 was stolen from Letcher Avenue between Saturday nght and Sunday mornng. The van was later found overturned n Buffalo Forge. Sutton sad Adams had left hs keys under the front mat. Freshman Roger Hldreth report ed that sometme Saturday nght "U2" leather jacket was stolen fron, Graham-Lees Room 262. Hldre sad the heavy, dark brown jack was worth $110. Freshman Floyd Wley repor hs Msssspp lcense plate was stolen from hs car n front of tht Cockpt between 3:12 and 10 a.m. Sunday. Sutton sad students' trash contnues to be a problem. " am observng a lot of ltter that can be attrbuted to fraternty houses," he sad. "t s unnecessary, unsghtly and unhealthy," he sad. "t gves the town an unkempt appearance, and h thnk t would be nce f the fraterntes could help clean t up." He sad the problem ncludes paper cups and broken glass., Afrcan hunger relef sngle may be avalable tomorrow By TED BYRD "We Are The World" the record made by 46 Amercan muscal superstars to rase money for Afrcan hunger relef should be avalable n Lexngton no later than tomorrow. Two local record stores, Flp Sde and the Campus Shop (formerly Campus Corner), say they've had requests for the sngles and plan to have them n stock by tomorrow. The song, released natonally last Thursday, was wrtten by Mchael Jackson and Lonel Rche and s avalable on both a 7-nch and a 12- nch sngle. Half a mllon copes of the 7-nch sngle and 150,000 copes of the 12-nch sngle were released. An album, featurng the sngle and unreleased songs by Prnce, Lnda Ronstadt and Bruce Sprngsteen, s planned for release Aprl 1. Approxmately 70 percent of the proceeds from the effort wll go to charty, accordng to CBS, whch s releasng the records. Nnety percent of that wll go to Afrcan relef and the rest wll be used to ad the hungry and homeless n Amerca. The sngle was recorded n Los Angeles n January at a recordng sesson that ncluded Sprngs..-en. Rche, Jackson. Tna Turner, Boh Dylan, Cynd Lauper, Steve Wonder and Wlle Nelson. "We Are The World" s on the pla< lst of WLUR-FM, accordng to staton manager Bob Bryant, but t fc.* not beng gven specfc prorty over other songs. "We more or less leave t up to the dsc jockeys," Bryant sad. He added that t s beng played qute a bt on the staton's Mornng Magazne show. n a related effort, Maj. Stephen RCharde, assstant professor of psychology at Vrgna Mltary nsttute, organzed a Chrstmas party to rase money for Afrcan relef. Guests at the party made donaton 1 ; at the door, and the event rased about $1,300. RCharde sad mone was donated to OXFAM Amerca, an organzaton that works on a local level n Afrca to combat hunger. About 75 percent of the money dtf nated wll be used for actual food tha' wll be sent to Afrca, and the other 25 percent wll be used for workng wth local farmers to help educate them n more modern agrcultural methods, he sad. RCharde sad the party was A communty effort nvolvng local merchants who donated snacks anj mxers and the facultes of both VMl_ and Washngton and Lee V *

5 : : * * p - w J 1 ' /-'»,,;» -. ff» ' >' l y t t t» < < * Hunter D Contnued from Page 1 he had a possble cracked jaw and several loose teeth but no broken bones. "He looked lke he'd gotten beaten up really badly,'' Sanders sad. The crash occurred about onefourth of a mle from the Wndfall drveway, Sanders sad, addng that the tree the car ht s very close to the roadway. Some of the fraternty members stll at Wndfall heard the crash, accordng to Sanders. Three of them dscovered the wreck shortly thereafter on ther way back to the fraternty house. Fve SAEs and one other student lve at Wndfall, whch Sanders sad has been "n the fraternty" for about 15 years. He sad the gatherng had been over for more than an hour when Hunter and Henson left. "Everybody who saw Ed dd not thnk he was drunk," Sanders sad. "We wouldn't have let hm drve f he was. No one thought he was drunk don't see how he could have been." Sanders sad there were 64 people and only one keg of beer at the gatherng. "There was no organzed drnkng," he sad. The drvng under the nfluence charge was fled, Hamlton sad, because "through my nvestgaton, could determne that alcohol was nvolved." Dean of Students Lews G. John, who talked wth Hunter's parents and who sad he has been n "constant contact" wth the members of SAE, sad news of the death "ht everyone very hard especally hs frends n hs fraternty." "The ntal mpact s always dffcult," he sad. "The ntal concern s that a frend s dead. "Then you get nto questons of why and how t happened and these other concerns are rased." A memoral servce for Hunter n Bg Three Contnued from Page 1 ned to exchange deas and allow new EC members to ask questons of the current commttee. Communcaton wth the student body wll be an mportant part of next year's EC, all three offcers agreed. As secretary, Webb wll be responsble for handlng the mnutes at EC meetngs. These, along wth an agenda for meetngs, are two ways n whch he hopes to nform the student body of the EC's actvtes. He feels the job s a two-way street, however, and hopes to brng deas nto the EC as well as report them through the mnutes. A lot of the nsde jokes and lack of serousness that have been common n the EC mnutes are unnecessary. Webb sad. Caruthers agrees. " thnk the mnutes should defntely be serous because that's our only way of communcaton wth the student body," he sad. "And although we may try to break the monotony of meetngs n here, don't thnk that should carry over nto the mnutes because people don't know how to take that," An ssue that has been dscussed recently s the proposal to add an ad hoc woman member to the EC next year, provdng that a woman s not elected. Among the Bg Three, there s a rft regardng ths queston. Webb favors the appontment of a non-votng woman to the EC f one s not elected. t s mportant, he sad, to mantan the "appearance of farness" n honor matters. f a woman s accused of an honor volaton, Webb thnks she should have someone on the EC she can talk to, rather than havng to face a commttee of all men. Caruthers and Lews dsagree wth Webb. "'m not for overcompensatng or tokensm," Caruthers sad, addng that he s "strongly aganst" the proposal. There s nothng that precludes a woman from be- Lee Chapel yesterday afternoon was attended by about 300 admnstrators, professors, W&L students and students from area women's colleges. Psalms were read by Sanders and by SAE sophomore W. Barrtt Glbert of Rome, Ga. Unversty Chaplan Davd W. Sprunt prayed for the famles of both Hunter and Henson. He spoke of "the dark confuson n our mnds as we ask the unanswered queston of. Why?' " At Monday's Executve Commttee meetng, presdng offcer Sam Dalton asked for a moment of slence for Hunter. "He was a good frend of mne and thnk we all knew hm," Dalton sad. Ph Delta Theta on Monday sent a letter of sympathy sgned by all ts members "That was an ncredbly nce gesture," Sanders sad "We really dd apprecate t." Hunter's famly has sad that donatons may be made n hs name to the football program at Darlngton Preparatory School n Rome. Ga: Contrbutons may be sent to the Darlngton fund n care of Gray Sanders, Sgma Alpha Epslon, 205 E. Washngton St. Sanders sad the fraternty's Bahamas Party "one of our bggest partes" had been scheduled for tomorrow but has been cancelled. At the party, there tradtonally s a drawng for a four-day trp for two to the Bahamas. He sad the money that would have been spent on the party s beng donated to the Darlngton fund, and each member of SAE s contrbutng an addtonal $20. SAE has a number of house renovatons planned for ths summer. A drawng by Hunter of the house and ts members wll be placed permanently n one of the rooms, whch wll be named for hm. The fraternty also s plannng to purchase a memoral page for Hunter n The Calyx. SAE's pledge ntaton, whch had been set for Saturday n Lee Chapel, has been postponed untl Wednesday. The Rng-turn Ph, March21,1985, Page 5 Road deaths Drnkng, drvng called addtonal hazard on rural roads From Staff Reports The ncdents blot the memory of nearly every student generaton: Feb. 22,1970: Returnng from a debate tournament, a Washngton and Lee professor and a junor are klled at 5 a.m. when ther car hts a guard ral and spns out of control after the drver falls asleep at the wheel. May 14, 1975: Three W&L students returnng from an away lacrosse game de n a sngle-car accdent on nterstate 81. Sept. 25,1982: Three Vrgna Mltary nsttute cadets and one Randolph-Macon Woman's College student are klled after the drver loses control of the car on U.S. 11 about three mles out of Lexngton. March 17, 1985: Returnng from a fraternty gatherng n the country, a W&L junor des nstantly as the car n whch he s rdng twce runs off the road, fnally hurtlng nto a roadsde tree. These are just four of the ncdents on a numbng lst of fatal automoble accdents nvolvng area students n recent years. The hauntng, nevtable questons: Who's next? t could be you. When? t could be ths weekend. Young people and automobles often have been sad to be a lethal combnaton. When alcohol and ths area's treacherous roads are added to the mx, the potental for dsaster s terrfyng. Junor John Lews, for example, frequently travels to local women's colleges. "These are crazy roads," he sad. " fnd t amazng that more people aren't klled." "The road to Sweet Brar s probably the worst road n the state," he contnued. "Randolph- Macon s the same way don't see how anybody can drve 501 wth more than one beer. "Hollns sn't too bad straght down 81; Mary Baldwn s straght up 81. But these others are probably some of the most dangerous roads n the country." Dean of Students Lews G. John agreed, notng that many area roads are "qute dangerous." "Partcularly gong over to Randolph-Macon, ng nvolved n the nvestgatng team n an EC nvestgaton, Caruthers sad. Ths would allow the EC to beneft from "female nput," he sad, somethng that supporters of the proposal say would be mssng from an all-male EC. "As far as 'm concerned," Caruthers contnued, "the Honor System s sexless, and don't thnk we should go nto a state of paranoa over sexual harassment and everythng lke thnk we have." Because next year's transton s so mportant, the role of the EC also wll be mportant, Caruthers sad. "We are gong to be the Executve Commttee that sets the foundaton [for coeducaton]." The EC wll be responsble for "salvagng old tradtons" and addng new ones, he sad. "We're gong to be a very mportant body next year." Lews sad he and students he has spoken wth share Caruthers' vew. The ad hoc proposal s an example of what he calls the Unversty's "caterng" to a hundred women. " thnk that the admnstraton needs to remember that there are [gong to be) more than...grls here next year, that they're steppng on a lot of people's feelngs." Lews sad the Unversty s rght n preparng a foundaton for the advent of women on campus, but stressed that to make decsons on every ssue nvolvng women before they get here s "ludcrous." "f we fnd that thngs are necessary," he sad, "'m sure that we can move fast enough to make sure they're taken care of. The way thngs are now. everyone s foreseeng these horrble problems that may not ever materalze." Caruthers sad he s under the mpresson that Washngton and Lee decded to become coeducatonal on the "very vald assumpton" that men and women are equal. Now, he says, he sees the school leanng the other drecton to "overcompensate" for the women, when women ought to be able to survve on an equal footng wth men. Spanton explans wasted taxes By JOHN WNTERS "Of the $150 bllon spent each year on defense procurement, almost onethrd of that s wasted on excessve costs and bllngs and goes straght down the dran." That's what former defense audtor and "whstleblower"george R. Spanton told those n Lee Chapel on Tuesday was happenng to ther tax dollars. n a speech sponsored by the journalsm department and the Washngton and Lee chapter of the Socety of Professonal Journalsts, Sgma Delta Ch, Spanton sad the Department of Defense and the major defense contractors are deprvng the country of the maxmum defense possble because of excessve costs "These greedy ndvduals [defense contractors) are destroyng our country through economc blackmal and they know t and contnue to do t," he sad. Spanton told the audence of nearly 200 that defense contractors dctate terms to the Defense Department, whch wll accept whatever they ask "'ve yet to see a general say, 't's too expensve, don't buy t,' " he sad. Because government mltary contracts usually are for several years, the threat of contractors' overspendng k very real. Yet even when they do go over ther planned budgets, contractors stll expect to get pad for these addtonal expenses, Spanton sad. Spanton used General Dynamcs, the makers of the Navy's new attack submarnes, as an example. He sad that when the cost of each submarne went over budget by $50 mllon, General Dynamcs just passed that cost on to the Defense Department. Because the mltary "desperately" needed the submarnes, t was wllng to pay any addtonal costs to get them. Spanton sad the government always would gve n because the contractors would otherwse refuse to gve up the completed weapons. n effect, "General Dynamcs s holdng the government and the people hostage wth regard to our natonal securty," he sad. These excessve costs came from "overhead busness expenses" added on to producton blls, accordng to Spanton. Everythng from golf trps to vacatons, chl cookoffs to poltcal donatons and excessve salares would be added to government contracts, he sad. Whle the rest of the country was n an economc slump, contractors such as Pratt and Whtney would be payng employees 15 to 25 percent more than other comparatve companes. Spanton sad Pratt and Whtney had more than 100 employees wth salares above $100,000 at one plant alone. Executves were allowed to rent cars to go to and from work These rental cars turned out to be BMWs, Porsches and Mercedes. Offcers then would use ther personal cars for gong to work and these rentals for prvate use. Later, they would buy the rental cars after ther value had deprecated. Spanton, as an audtor, was to uncover ths and other unnecessary expenses. Yet, he sad audtors and the Department of Defense often were n cahoots. When he frst began to audt the Harrs Corp., for example, he found that audtors could have possesson of only half the accounts When he questoned ths, Spanton was told, "t's all rght, we've done t ths way for years." The lfe of a "whstleblower," as told by Spanton, s not an easy one. He gave examples of attempts by hs employers, the Defense Contract Audt Agency, to transfer hm llegally, to deny hm back pay and to harass hm constantly. He even ponted out that Specal Counsel Wllam O'Connor, responsble for protectng "whstleblowers," sad, "f you stck your head out, they [the Defense Department] wll just blow t off." Yet Spanton sad hs actons and those of other "whstleblowers," such as A. Ernest Ftzgerald, are begnnng to rock the boat. The contractors have begun to classfy all ther contracts as secret and to deny audtors access to them. Among these mltary secrets were tolet seats beng sold to the government for $600. He sad that the DCAA should become an entty separate from the Defense Department and that offcals who make llegal clams should be put n jal and forced to pay for any undue expenses. Sweet Brar or Goshen, for example, the roads are very hazardous," he sad. " try to cauton freshmen every year durng orentaton about the hazards of the roads around here." John sad that untl ths weekend, t had "been some tme" snce the last fatal wreck nvolvng a W&L student. "'m frankly surprsed we don't have more of them," he sad. "On occason, we've had one every year for several years n a row," he contnued. "We've been very fortunate n recent years, but when we do have one, that doesn't erase the tragedy of that one." " thnk students often have a feelng t can't happen to them," he sad. " thnk t takes somethng lke ths to make us realze t can happen to us and to me ndvdually." John sad that one key to keepng students alve s keepng them off the rural roads and n Lexngton. "That s one of the major reasons behnd buldng the pavlon to have events here on campus rather than drvng to Zollman's on narrow, wndng roads," he sad. He added that coeducaton mght have a smlar effect. "f n fact Washngton and Lee males date Washngton and Lee females, thnk there'd be more of a tendency to date on campus or n the vcnty rather than havng to travel an hour or so for a date," he explaned. John was asked f the dangers of drnkng and drvng are very hgh n the conscousness of W&L students. " really don't thnk so," he sad. " wsh they thought about t more." "Perhaps there has been some conscousness rasng through varous educatonal efforts, but guess my basc answer would be 'no not nearly enough.' " Some students have expressed concern that the new rules restrctng fraterntes to four party weekends a term are causng many houses to "party n the country or down the road" ncreasng the rsk of automoble accdents. "t may have that effect," John sad. " honestly don't know. We really have to re-evaluate that whole set of rules." "f, n fact, that's what's happenng, we need to gve some serous thought to fndng other" socal rules, he added. Assocate Dean of Students Dan N. Murphy, though, s uncertan that the party restrctons are pushng many gatherngs nto the country. " don't know f that's the case or not." he sad " have not gotten the feelng that there are very many more partes outsde the cty lmts " Rockbrdge Sherff S.M. Reynolds sad sober students should be able to negotate county roads wth lttle dffculty. "f they go out tanked up, that's when you get nto trouble," he sad. "But for normal drvng, there should be no problem." Lexngton Polce Chef L.O Sutton also defends local roads. "The majorty of the people who drve these roads do not have accdents," he sad. "Occasonally a deer wll run out n front of a vehcle and an accdent can't be avoded, but otherwse accdents are not necessary." Lke John, Sutton s doubtful that the hazard of drnkng and drvng s a hot topc among students. "t's rarely dscussed," he sad. He sad the polce department offers a drnkng and drvng presentaton that explores "the legal and physcal aspects" of drvng under the nfluence of alcohol and provdes a general orentaton to the drunk drvng problem. Sgma Nu s scheduled to vew the program tomorrow. Sutton sad the presentaton s avalable to any fraternty or other group. Sutton sad wearng seatbelts s crtcal because "the body can become a mssle nsde the car under certan condtons." "The seatbelt provdes safety from the standpont of keepng you from gong through the wndsheld," he explaned. A mandatory seatbelt law for Vrgna would be a good dea, n Sutton's vew. "Anythng for safety," he sad. Sutton offered some possble solutons for a student who needs to get from pont "a" to pont "b" but s ntoxcated. "Get somebody else to drve, call a cab or walk but don't drve," he sad. Sutton had a fnal word of advce: "The roads here are not superhghways, and they should not be drven as such." 62 are canddates on Monday A total of 62 canddates have fl- Greg Cole Wes Boa tv.rght ed pettons for Monday's class Gb Davenport Dan DuPre electons. They are: Andrew Hart Henry Exall Pat Hayden Jm Kerr Sophomores EC Rep John Gammage Davd Nchols Tom O'Bren Brad Root Steven Sadler Pat Schaefer Nck Thompson Monty Warren Brandt Wood Presdent Andrew Abernathy Mke Henry Jm Lancaster Tommy McBrde Lance Rae Jon Solomon Vce Presdent Doug Ellott Tony Faulkner Reese Laner Henry Sackett Garth Schulz Junors EC Rep Jm Godfrey Baltzer LeJeune Shayam Menon John Olver Brandt Surgner Presdent Lous A. Cella James Farquhar Mchael McAllster Rob Tolleson Vce Presdent Rchard Hobson Walker McKay Unversty Councl Glynn Alexander Mao Gbson John R. Maass John Pensec Senors Presdent Roger Dunnavan John Henschel Townes Pressler Vce Presdent-Art*; G.T.Corngan Caulley Dernger Anthony McCann John Moody Vce Presdent-Commerce Watson Barnes Alex Castell Chrs John Erc Obeck Jmmy Whte Vce Presdent-Scence Chrs Alevzatos Davd DeHoll Edde Vlla mater Unversty Councl Unversty Councl EC Rep Andrew Wenberg Andrew Cantor Mchael Black McGown Patrck VM sues former cadet Vrgna Mltary nsttute on Monday fled a $16,000 sut aganst a former cadet for damage to a statue of Gen. George C. Marshall n a 1981 fre. The cvl acton says Keth W. Kuelz, of Blacksburg, on Feb. 28, 1981, ntentonally threw gasolne around the base of the statue, gnted t and started a fre that dd "substantal and extensve damage" to the statue. Kuelz was enrolled at VM from the fall of 1979 through the summer of He dd not graduate. Bernard J. Natkn, VM's attorney, explaned the four-year delay n the acton. "They've been tryng to get the ndvdual to pay the damages voluntarly, and he hasn't done so," he sad. Poltcs socety ntates 12 P Sgma Alpha, the poltcal scence honorary fraternty, ntated 10 new student members and two new faculty members last week. Dean of Students Lews G. John was the faculty ntate, and journalsm Profesor Clark R. Mollenhoff was an honorary ntate. Senors ntated were Samuel P Dalton, Mchael W. Hudson, Gregory A. Lukanusk, Keth D. MacDougall and B, Scott Tlley, Junors ntated were Mchael P Allen, James Y. Kerr, Chrstopher P. Lon, Brun S. Rchardson and C Reade Wllams. SOC 3ttC 3C 3C 3MC 30C :xxr Yes Vrgna, You Do Have A Choce Town & Country Cleaners Walker Street Shoppng Center Near Flpsde 8-5:30 Mon.-Fr. 9-1 Sat one 3»C 3(1C 3UC 34C 34K= ste Horse bll sgnng tomorrow What s thought to be the largest bll-sgnng ceremony ever held n Vrgna wll take place tomorrow at noon n VM's Cameron Hall. Gov. Charles S. Robb wll sgn nto law the bll creatng the Vrgna Equne Center Foundaton, whch wll offcally brng the Vrgna Horse Center to Rockbrdge County. Offcals antcpate that as many as 4,000 area resdents, along wth government and horse ndu off cals from across the state, wll be n attendance when Robb affxes hs sgnature to the document. Afterward, the governor and guests wll eat lunch n Evans Dnng Hall. Mayor faces 'jal' tomorrow Twenty-fve Lexngton area leaders wll be "arrested" and "jaled" tomorrow n a Cardac Arrest promoton for the Amercan Heart Assocaton. The "prsoners" wll be released when members of the publc pay ther "bal" donatons to the Rockbrdge Area Unt of the heart assocaton. Lexngton mayor and Washngton and Lee economcs Professor Charles F. Phllps Jr. wll be among the "felons," as wll Lexngton Polce Chef L.O. Sutton, Rockbrdge County Sherff S.M. Reynolds and Commonwealth's Attorney John Read. The mock trals wll be broadcast lve on WREL rado, 1450 AM, from 2 to 5 p.m. ^ftaaue 6 J%aw< ^tu^ha By Appontment LAST CALL Herrng Travel Old Man St. Mall Lexngton, VA Announces Sprng Break Fares Bahamas from $199 Mexco from $359 Jamaca from $ S. Man St.

6 SPORTS The Mental errors cost lax;terps wn, 11-5 By STEVE GREENEBAUM Words such as courage, physcal, ntense and compettve descrbe the way the Washngton and Lee lacrosse team played aganst the Unversty of Maryland last Saturday on Wlson Feld. Although the Generals lost 11-5 to the Terrapns, the game was by far the best outng of the Generals' young season. The Generals' record now stands at 1-2. But f they had captalzed on a few more stuatons, ther record easly could have been 2-1. "Despte the fnal score, we played our best game of the year," sad head coach Denns Daly. "The fnal score was not an ndcaton of how close the game really was." The frst half was anythng but close. The Terrapns scored three unanswered goals n the frst 15 mnutes. The frst two talles came from sophomore attackman Bran Wllard, who was lke a thorn n the sde of the Generals' defense all day Wth 9:23 left n the second quarter, the Terps rased ther lead to 4-0 when freshman attackman Tom Bedard made t to the net. But less than three mnutes later, the Generals' senor Sandy Brown fnally gave the 3,232 fans n attendance a goal to cheer about, makng the score 4-1. Wth two mnutes left n the half, the Generals had the ball agan. The offense slowed the tempo down, lookng for what would be the last shot of the half. But the Generals lost the ball, and the Terps moved down the feld quckly and scored to lead at the half Most people n the stands felt that when Maryland scored ts ffth goal, t was the end of the game, but Daly dsagrees. Undefeated team stays 'on track' By DAVD NAVE The Washngton and Lee track team s undefeated after completng the frst week of ts outdoor schedule The Generals are 3-0 overall and 2-0 n the Old Domnon Athletc Conference. Commentng on the team's performance last week, head track coach Norrs Aldrdge sad, "The team s dong about as well as had expected for ths tme n the season." He added that although the March wnds make t more dffcult for hs athletes to run ther best tmes, they have turned n good performances a t both meets. On Saturday, the Generals opened ther schedule wth a home vctory aganst Davdson. W&L defeated ts NCAA Dvson opponent by a score of Tuesday, the Generals traveled to Brdgewater for a three-way meet that also ncluded Eastern Mennonte. The meet marked the Generals' frst outdoor competton aganst ODAC opponents. W&L won the meet wth 96 ponts. Brdgewater placed second wth 61 ponts and Eastern Mennonte fnshed last wth 19. Despte the wnds on Tuesday, freshman Andy Whte set a new school record for the 110 hgh hurdles. Hs record tme of broke the prevous record held by captan Chrs ves (15.50). Aldrdge also cted Chrs Blegg, Mark PemhrnVe and Chrs McGowan for out- "Goall number fve ddn't gve them any more or any less momentum." he sad "At half, we ddn't feel that goal was any more a nal n the coffn than any of ther other goals We sld a tan nopportune tme." ndeed, the second half brought a new lacrosse game as the Generals seemed to be sharper than durng the frst half The thrd quarter provded perhaps the Generals' fnest moments of the 1985 season to ths pont. Senor Mark Knobloch scored after three mnutes wth the help of senor Rod Santomassmo to close the gap to 5-2. Wth 7:08 left n the thrd perod, the theme to "Rocky" could be heard fantly. Junor Caulley Dernger asssted Brown (fve goals ths season through the tght Maryland defense to make the score 5-3. Eght seconds later, Rchard "Taz" Schoenberg won the face-off. passed the ball to Bll Holmes, who passed to senor Jeff Mason for the score Wth the scoreboard showng Maryland's lead at only 5-4. the theme song became louder The people n the stands became very excted, stampng ther feet and exchangng hgh fves. Maryland was n a bad stuaton - momentum was wth the Generals. But then Washngton and Lee began takng bad shots, and the fourth quarter was the property of the Unversty of Maryland. The Terps took a 7-4 lead wth 10:41 left n the game, and the fat lady started warmng up. "[Goals) sx and seven hurt us," Daly sad. "They took us out of what we were dong and let [ Maryland get ther confdence back " The Generals dd close the gap to 7-5 when junor attackman Todd Brethaupt scored But the worst moment of the game was only one mnute later when the Terps' Kevn Hart Chrs McGowan edges out Derrck meters Saturday aganst Davdson. standng performances. Captan McGowan sad, "Everyone's tmes have been quck for ths early n the season." The Generals currently have several people on the njury lst. Derrck Freeman (400 meters) and Matt Rng-turn Ph March 21, 1985 Page 6 Generals' attackman leaves ball behnd as he looks for open teammate n front of Maryland's net. scored to make the game 8-5. t wasn't so much the goal, t was the fact that Hart s a defenseman/mdfelder wth a long stck that hurt. Long stcks are not supposed to score. "Bggest goal of the game was ther eghth," Daly sad. "Whenever a long stck scores, t has the effect of twogoals." From there, the Terps went on to score three more goals to wn H> tner Pollrr/Thr Hnt Ph. n.n at the fnsh lne to wn the 400 Stelberg (pole vaulter) both have the flu Kevn Weaver, who pulled hs hamstrng n Tuesday's meet, jons Bll Rhnehart, who has been nursng hs hamstrng for a month, on the sdelne. Ths Saturday, the Generals wll travel to Lynchburg to compete n the Lberty Baptst College nvtatonal at EC Glass Hgh School track On Tuesday, the Generals wll host a four-team meet that wll nclude Newport News Apprentce, Eastern Mennonte and Roanoke. The meet wll be held at Wlson Feld. Although t was a dsappontng loss, the Generals accomplshed many aspects of lacrosse they had been searchng for. "For the frst tme ths season, felt we played 60 mnutes of lacrosse," Santomassmo sad Knobloch agreed. "Sxty mnutes n terms of hustle and ntensty we just made mental mstakes,'' he sad. Lookng back on the game, the players and Coach Daly agreed that Maryland won the game wth ts transton attack When the Terps beat the Duke Blue Devls 8-6 the week before, they showed no sgns of a strong transton game. Saturday's result may have been due to the fact that the Terps were just the faster team, outrunnng the Generals over and over agan. Dernger, who had two asssts, was player of the game. By Hrmr Pollrr/Thr KlnK-lum Ph A for the fans, Daly sad. "We greatly apprecate the support durng the comeback' and Maryland's coach even sad t was ntmdatng." Daly hopes that support wll contnue ths weekend when the Generals host the Unversty of Vrgna on Saturday. t wll be W&L's last home game untl May 1. The Generals haven't beaten U.Va. snce 1977 (12-10) and are ready to change that statstc. Golf tees off season today Wth the "exhbton season" under ts belt, the Washngton and Lee golf team opened ts season at home ths afternoon aganst Lberty Baptst andlongwood. Rddled by the loss of ts top sx golfers from last year' the young and nexperenced squad competed at the Dvson James Madson Unversty Tournament last weekend. "We ht a lot of greens," sad head coach Buck Lesle, but "we dd not putt very well." Junor captan John Wheeler led the Generals, who were wthout the servces of freshman Chp Gst, the team's leadng scorer at the NCAA Dvson Dstrct Tournament two weeks ago. THE GREAT OUTDOORS By Dave Montgomery The Lake A. Wlls Robertson Recreaton area provdes ample opportunty to enjoy the warm weather ths sprng. The lake s accessble from Lexngton by gong out past the Aloha Wok on Man Street to Vrgna 251, then followng the sgns to State Route 770 to the lake had no problem fndng t on my frst try. Whle talkng to Lake Drector Donald W. Frebaugh, dscovered the followng facltes are avalable. For fshermen there s a 31-plus acre lake stocked wth bass, bluegll, crappe and walleye. A Vrgna fshng lcense ($7.50) s requred. Bat and rental boats are also avalable. Hkers wll enjoy the fve trals that run through the area For campers, there are 53 campstes avalable wth fre rngs, pcnc tables and hook-ups. Others wll enjoy the area's swmmng pool, softball felds, volleyball, badmnton and tenns courts. Lake Robertson has somethng for everyone. The area wll probably be uncrowded ths sprng and wll provde a varety after your frst 15 trps togoshen " could not take Chp Gst because of hs academc load," sad Lesle, who rotated hs golfers for the tourney. Lesle sad he uses the openng tournaments to help develop a startng lneup and gve hs men compettve experence on the greens. Wth some confdence, he expects the young squad to be prmed forhe twoand three-way compettons and the Old Domnon Athletc Conference tournament. n regular ntercollegate competton, sx team members partcpate. The top four ndvdual scores are counted n the team score. The Generals' top four golfers, accordng to Lesle, are Wheeler. Gst, freshman Gary Campbell and sophomore Mark Zavatsky. Competng for the ffth and sxth spots are junor Wllam Kng, senor Mchael lehman and freshmen Andy Parkey, John Gammage and James Sowersby. " thnk we're startng to come," Lesle sad. "A wn would do a lot for us rght now " The General take on ODAC foe Brdgewater at home on Monday Lesle expects the Eagles to be much mproved over last year. by John V. Lowe 'Beep-beep-zp-BANG'»-»»»»»">-»-»-»»»-<» >»»»»»-»» <»»».», r *!t M?> 1 J Rockbrdge County's Component Stereo Center for your home and car Maxell UDXLs 2.99 ea. The Stml n -\-tvtch Board report! that several decoraton* v a n l al MOW ll,h $450 were mssng after he,m >.- Ball. nnng them are three flags, eaeh valued al almul M0. nx large fan-.,.ml three kten. The SAB nays that f these tems are returned to amr < happem - offee. no queston* wll be asked. n the Cockpt:6p.m. Saturday Above the Cockpt: 9:30 p.m. Saturday 7p.m. & 9:30p.m. Sunday Admsson $1.50 Featurng: Jyc Boson Acoustc Desgn Acoustc, Panasonc, Sony, Maxell, Audo Technca A Dvson of Value Mart 2175 Magnola Ave.. Buena Vsta EAST LEX Phone: Mon.-Sat l_tr.Coke $1.19 Cheap Smokes $6.69 SayL.A $1.69.PH.

7 The Rng-turn Ph, March 21,1985, Page 7» j. J ] EMC, Brdgewater steal two from '9' By WLLAM KNG The Washngton and Lee baseball team opened ts 1985 Old Domnon Athletc Conference season n not so desrable fashon ths week, losng to Eastern Mennonte College and Brdgewater College to extend ts losng streak to fve games. The Generals, who won ther frst two games, are now 2-5 on the season. W&L traveled to Brdgewater Tuesday only to fnd that ts problems at the plate would contnue to plague the team. The Generals were unable to ht wth any consstency n the 5-0 loss. Brdgewater scored all the runs t needed to wn n the thrd nnng, usng two hts off W&L starter Krk Breen to push one run across the plate. Brdgewater added three nsurance runs n the sxth and scored once more n the seventh to make the fnal score 5-0. Breen contnued to be the Generals' hard luck story for 1965 as he allowed only sx hts and two earned runs n seven nnngs before beng releved by freshman Carter Steuart. The Brdgewater loss proved to be especally costly to the Generals as red-hot centerfelder Hugh Fnkelsten njured hs knee durng the frst nnng and wll be out for at least two weeks. W&L head coach Jm Mur dock sad Fnkelsten may have suffered cartlage damage to hs knee. W&L's game at Eastern Mennonte on Monday featured two of the ODAC's premer ptchers n the Generals' Blly Whte and the Royals' Doug Byler. Byler controlled the Generals throughout, allowng only 'lot hts whle strkng out u Whte, however, gave up a bg frst nnng, surrenderng a three-run homer en route to spottng EMC an early 4-0 lead. EMC contnued to pour t on the Generals n the second, scorng three more runs to blow the game open EMC talled once more n the sxth, makng the score 8-0, before addng nsult to njury by scorng eght runs n the seventh and eghth to make the fnal score Whte suffered hs frst loss of the season, allowng sx earned runs n 5M» nnngs. Dave Howard releved Whte. W&L dropped a doubleheader at home to Alderson-Broaddus on Saturday by scores of 8-2 a nd 5-0. n the opener, W&L got on board n the frst when Mlam Turner walked, stole second and scored on Bll Curtss' two-out double, gvng the Generals an early l-olead. A-B ted the game n the thrd and went ahead 2-1 n the fourth. The Generals fell behnd 3-1 n the ffth when Steuart gave up a two-out home run. W&L closed the gap to 3-2 n the sxth when Fnkelsten sngled, stole second, went to thrd on a passed ball and scored when Curtss grounded out. A-B put the game on ce n the seventh, however, by scorng fve runs on four hts and a General error. Only one of the four runs was earned. W&L was unable to score n the bottom of the seventh, makng the fnal score 8-2. n the second game, W&L once agan was unable to get untracked at the plate, producng only two hts n losng 5-0. A-B scored three tmes n the frst B> HrmpPollrr'Thf HnR-tumPhl W&L's Hugh Fnkelsten sngles n Saturday's double header aganst Alderson-Broaddus. The Generals lost both games, 8-2 and 5-0. off W&L starter Bll Schoettelkotte on two hts and two Generals' errors They added nsurance runs n the f f th a nd s xth nnngs Schoettelkotte worked fve nnngs, allowng only two earned runs on three hts whle strkng out sx. Breen ptched two nnngs n relef, gvng up one unearned run. Despte hs team's apparent collapse n the last week, Murdock remans optmstc that W&L can compete for the ODAC ttle n "After seeng Brdgewater and Eastern Mennonte, 'm stll convnced that we can compete wth any team n the conference," Murdock sad. "We get behnd, and people feel they have to make the bg plays to get us back n the game," he added. "That's when we screw up." "You've got to relax to play the game of baseball," Murdock sad. " thnk we've forgotten t's a game." Chances are that the Generals wll treat ther next opponent, Hampden- Sydney, as more than just a normal game. Murdock sad the Tgers are smlar to the Generals. "They've got a lot of kds back from last year, and they've started the season lke we have," he sad. "There s no team n the conference that we can just show up and walk over." Ths afternoon's game at Hampden-Sydney was scheduled to start at 3p.m. Netmen go 3-1, 5-2 overall By LEF UELAND Under clear skes and a blusterng wnd, the Washngton and Lee tenns team last week contnued to demonstrate ts talent and determnaton wth sound vctores, although t also encountered some frustratng defeats. Havng defeated ndana Unversty of Pennsylvana 8-1 on Thursday, Greensboro College 7-2 on Sunday and Emory and Henry College 8-1 on Wednesday, the netters lost to Rochester 6-3 on Frday, brngng ther record to 5-3. The team gave an ndcaton of the extent of ts depth aganst.u.p. wth vctores from non-starters Jm Morgan, Layton Regster and Davd Nave, who occuped the number 4, 5 and 6 postons for the match. Freshman Chrs Wman was also Rvalry Contnued from Page 1 The Cavalers' head coach s as free wth prase as Glln. "W&L certanly has the capablty of playng good lacrosse and s playng good lacrosse," Adams sad. The Generals come nto Saturday's contest wth a two-game losng streak, havng been outscored n ther last two outngs. But the team s not dscouraged. Daly and hs troops are workng every week "to become one week better." And despte last week's 11-5 loss to Maryland, the Generals are pleased wth ther overall performance. "Wth 60 mnutes of good lacrosse, thnk we can beat U.Va.," Santomassmosad. Whle Santomassmo and hs teammates are emphaszng four strong quarters, 60 mnutes of good lacrosse seems to have been the Achlles' heel for the Cavalers. n ther opener aganst Brown, U.Va bult a 6-0 halftme lead only to escape wth an 8-6 vctory. t was the same story the followng week aganst the Unversty of Maryland-Baltmore County. The Cavs went up 94 on the Retrevers but had that lead dmnshed to by the end of the game. Yesterday, the Cavs collected ther thrd wn wthout a loss, a 12-0 vctory over Roanoke. The Generals are focusng on the Cavs' transton game as a key n Saturday's contest. U.Va. has one of the better transton games of the teams W&L wll face ths season. But there s talk that ths year's Cavalers are not as strong as E. Nelson S. 4S successful n hs transton from number 5 sngles to number 3 sngles, where he downed hs opponent. 6-2, 6-2. Frday's loss to Rochester, ranked fve below W&L n the ntercollegate Tenns Coaches' Assocaton poll, was a bg dsappontment, team members sad. Senor captan Andy Harng felt that although t was an mportant match, hope s not lost. "We stll havea shot," he sad. Wman had smlar sentments. He ponted out the mportance of the team's match n Florda aganst Rollns College. Although a loss, Frday's match was close, as were the team's other three season defeats. n sngles, both Andy Harng and Scott Adams contnued to play well, showng the team's overall strength wth vctores at the number 4 and 6 postons. prevous edtons. Despte ther 12 returnng letter men, the team s qute young. Wtness these words, whch open the 1985 U.Va. lacrosse press gude: "Ths season's lacrosse team s so young that Jm Adams...almost has to have ntroducton sessons at each practce." Fourteen U.Va. players are new to Charlottesvlle. But ths game obvously goes beyond the numbers. "We've had a long and good relatonshp wth Washngton and Lee, and we want to keep playng," Adams sad. Glln concurs wth hs mentor. "t's defntely a rvalry. 'm lookng forward to the game. know t wll be a good game, and 'm just hopng we'll come out on the upper end." For W&L, the rvalry goes beyond any pep talk. "t would be an upset, but don't need to say a lot to the kds," Daly sad. That unspoken ntensty s reflected n the words of hs senors, who have yet to beat a U.Va team durng ther W&L careers. "t's not just an ordnary game. t's an emotonal game wth a crossstate tradton and rvalry. t's the bg boys of U.Va. versus the lttle boys of Washngton and Lee," senor a t tack man Mark Knobloch sad. Apart from the rvalry, the senors have the better nterests of the W&L lacrosse program as a whole on ther mnds. "t s a very mportant game as far as rebuldng our respectablty as a Dvson lacrosse team," Knobloch sad. n recent years, W&L has come up short n the bg games Santomassmo perhaps best puts Saturday's meetng n perspectve for the W&L senors, and maybe the whole team "t's our last chance. Perod." Valley True Value Hardware HARDWARE STORES Hardware, Pant & Related tems Mon.-Sat. 8:30-6:00 Sun. -S The matches that could have made the dfference were those of number 3 man Roby Mze and number 5 man Wman. Mze controlled hs opponent n the frst set, wnnng 6-2. After losng the second set 6-4, Mze tred to re-assert hs domnance, but hs opponent, Erc Lpton, was also playng well, keepng hs lead n the thrd set to wn the match. Wman also had a close match, losng the te-breaker on the second set to drop the match 7-5,7-6. W&L's vctory over Greensboro also had ts share of close confrontatons. Perhaps the most exctng match was Davd McLeod's vctory over Bryan Humphreys. After splttng ther frst two sets, McLeod was able to show determnaton n classc form, wnnng the te-breaker of the thrd set, 7-5. Mze and Harng also showed determnaton, both wnnng ther matches n three sets. Jack Messerly at the number one poston contnued to go wnless, whle Scott Adams' undefeated streak was kept alve. Gong nto the Emory and Henry match, the team was somewhat altered, havng Messerly at number 3 wth McLeod at number 1 and Mze at number 2 The change came after a request by the frustrated Messerly. t was a move that got mmedate results Messerly got hs frst wn of the season aganst Emory and Henry. Asked how he felt, Messerly summed t up wth one word:' releved." The match went well for everyone except n number 3 doubles, n whch Mze, who spraned hs ankle toward the end of the match, and Adams lost, 7-5,6-0,7-5. The team wll play George Mason tomorrow Approachng are such teams as Lynchburg College and Hampden-Sydney, whch coach Gary Franke sad wll be mportant for the team's ODAC rankng. Croquet: 'party sport' By JASON LS When the word "croquet" s mentoned, one probably thnks of the game that s played n the backyard on a hot summer's afternoon But accordng to senor John Zabrske, who, wth Brook Loenng, recently won the Natonal Collegate Croquet Champonshps, the game they play s "nothng lke your backyard croquet." Zabrske and Loenng. an exchange student from Connectcut College, competed n West Palm Beach, Fla., March 1, 2 and 3, takng trophes for the best collegate team, best doubles team and the two best sngles players. They competed wth teams from schools such as Navy, Brown, Prnceton and St. John's. Zabrske explans that compettve croquet, "the fastest growng sport n the country," has many dfferent characterstcs from the commonly played backyard sport. Compettve croquet was brought from England to the Unted States n Played on a large open court of grass very smlar to a puttng green' compettve croquet has a long lst of complcated rules, and the mental condton durng the tournaments, as Zabrske sad, "gets really tense." He descrbes the game as a combnaton of "bllards, puttng and chess." Ths month's tournament was a "good tme," accordng to Zabrske. He descrbed the game as "a great party sport," sayng that two man actvtes are playng and drnkng gn. "The grls from Trnty, who traveled wth the Trnty team, were great," he sad, and "the Navy guys were cool." On the serous sde, Zabrske recalled that although the competton was ntense, he and Loenng "went down there to kll." They seem to have accomplshed ths, takng frst place ttles n nearly all the events. Asked what made the W&L team domnate, Zabrske explaned that they won because of ther superor strategy, tournament experence and knowledge of the complcated rules. Compettve croquet has a rather elte reputaton as beng a sport for only the rch. Zabrske sad ths reputaton has perssted because most of the croquet courts can only be bult and mantaned at the most expensve polo and coutnry clubs. " want people to keep an open mnd," he sad As for the future, the two-man team wll "le low" and practce untl they are ready to compete natonally. The number of people playng croc/uet s growng every day and Zabrske encourages everyone to try the game. TRAVEL UNLMTED SAVE -yf TME AND MONEY! Call The Travel Professonals! Ar Tckets and Eural Pass George & Bob U. athletes are students frst...t was wth a lttle bt of trepda- ^Jr*lM TVT t ' on that ' P 61 last weeks Pn "" 5^ ^p ' lvh( sports secton (all rght, more than ^ W OUT.. * usua ' amount of trepdaton), nf*^^ ~~~ es P ec ' a "y the "A day n the lfe By Mke of..." swmmng story. The dea of sucn jjf Stachtra an ' nor dnate amount of tme J spent by the swmmers n Page ^y Remllard's qualty program was, at frst glance, well, uh, nordnate. We're dealng wth your basc 17- hour-a-day commtment, here 'm sure the grpe from some unmentonables s, "Hey, that's too much tme spent for a program that sn't bg-tme. Dvson means no scholarshps, so why so much tme and effort for somethng that leads to no professonal career? Here, t's supposed to be 'Academcs frst, athletcs second,' but the swmmng program makes t look lke t's the other way around." Frankly, that's a half-cocked response. The athletc program and athletc phlosophy here at W&L s somethng of whch everyone should be most proud. There are qualty athletc programs at W&L, and 'qualty' goes beyond won-lost records and champons produced. What makes the W&L program and m sure many others lke t n Dvson so worthy of admraton s ts foundaton n the dea that nobody s gong to make a career out of throwng a ball through a hoop, nto a net or to another magna cum prma donna. Prma donnas need not apply. Good students are gong to get n to Washngton and Lee and wll succeed at whatever they wsh to do. n the best of all possble Washngton and Lees, applcants would not get n solely because they were good athletes, and 'd venture to say that's predomnantly the case. The pont s that athletes at George & Bob's Colonnade of Fun are students frst. And because they are students frst, t s ther decson how much tme they devote to extracurrcular actvtes. That goes for the swmmer and, beleve t or not, the Rng-turn Ph reporter. The 17- hour days are not lmted to the W&L athletes, yet the types that would be quck to pont the accusng fnger at athletcs' occupyng too much of a student's day would reman oblvous to the other extracurrcular ventures that mght occupy a student's tme. The dedcaton of the W&L athlete s somethng that pays off after any cheers they mght have receved have ded down. W&L s not n the busness of producng successful athletes. t s n the busness of producng successful people, and the athletc program s one of the buldng blocks toward becomng a successful person. The athletc commtment s a matter of choce. Those early mornng swm sessons were optonal. t s somethng chosen because that s what the student-athlete wants to do. t s that endless pursut of perfecton, that strvng to be the best you can be, reflected n the atttude of ths year's lacrosse team. t's a qualty to be commended, because, frankly, t breeds qualty......agan, we make the trp down the Colonnade, and here's a quck guess that four good quarters would have left Maryland wonderng what ht them...thev should make the track and feld slogan ths year, "Take no prsoners." (See Davdson, of 17 frst places) on to Real World 101 Frst pupl ths week has to be Doug Flu te. formerly of the ncredble pass fame, now of the ncredble sack and ntercepton(s) fame. But then what are USFL savors for? The league s mpressve n one statstc. n faled savors, they are three for three (see Walker, Rozer, Flute t would be a shame f Larry Holmes left boxng after such an unexctng fnsh. (Who or what s Davd Bey?) Somethng tells me, though, he's not fnshed...take a gander, f ESPN gves you a chance, at those NCAA hockey champonshps. A mte more exctng than your usual ESPN fare......some quck NCAA tourney notes: La. Tech and Loyola are stll there. G-town's had t too easy, and Loyola doesn't practce layups n pre-game warm-up. Says Ramblers' ( beleve ths s ther nckname) coach Gene Sullvan, "Wth the Patrck Ewngs and the Jon Koncaks n there, you don't get a lot of layups these days." Practcal. You have to lke that.. Here's a nasty guess that tapes of Dck Vtale and Bob Ley for umpteen hours on ESPN over the weekend wll be shown to prsoners of war n the future...fnally, from the Excellence n Sports Journalsm (A contradcton n terms?) Dept.: Headlne n The Washngton Post on Sunday, "Maryland defeats Wllam and Mary, 11-5." But gee boss, the headlne fts PZZA SALE: $2 OFF! fm Better hurry to your home town Pzza Hut* restaurant! t's not often you save ths knd of money on our fresh, hot and scrumptous pzza, tl So come on n. Brng the whole *2 famly, ft} We'll ple on layers of pure mozzarella cheese and all your favorte toppngs. There's no better tme to try our unparalleled Pzza Hut K Pan Pzza. See you soon! Eat n, Carry Out Or Delvered OFF $2. off any large pzza orll off anv medum. n- eludes Pzza Hut Pan Pzza! Hurry; offer ex- pres soon. One coupon per party per vst at partcpatng Pzza Hut 1 /A*. -Hut restaurants fleaae pre Mnt roupor *hen orderng Not vald tn combnaton wth any other o. d*h rrdrmplon v»lu C!9H3PmHul nr (ood onl» through %2 m 600 E. Nelson St. Lexnqton, VA 453-/ f 1 J

8 gback Page The Rng-turn Ph March 21, ONCAMPUS Frday. March 22 7 p.m. AKRA FLM: "Dersu Uzala." Red p.m. CONCERT: Jason and the Scorchers, wth Shor Patrol. Student actvtes pavlon. Admsson $3. Saturday. March 23 6 k 9:3$ p.m. SAB FLM: "Cat People," wth cartoons. Student Center. Admsson s $ p.m. - SPRNG CONCERT: Rockbrdge Chorus and Orchestra. Jackson Memoral HaU, VM. Sunday, March 24 3 p.m. CONCERT: Youth Orchestra and Dance Ensemble. Lexngton Hgh School. 7 & 9:30 p.m. SAB FLM: "Cat People," wth cartoons. Student Center. Admsson s $1.50. Tuesday, March 26 6 p.m. CONCERT: The W&L Jazz Lab Band n the Cockpt. No cover charge. Wednesday. March 27 9 p.m. Wednesday nght n the PT: Crus-O-Matc OFFCAMPUS Thursday. March 21 Mary Baldwn College 7:30 p.m. FLM: "Maranne and Julanne," shown by the nternatonal Flm Seres Hollns College 8 p.m. LECTURE: "U.S. Polcy n Central Amerca and the Carbbean Good Neghbor or Bg Stck," by Anne Nelson, photojournalst, and George Black, edtor of North Amercan Congress on Latn Amercan Journal Green Drawng Room n Man Buldng. Frday. March 22 Randolph-Macon Woman's College 7 p.m. HAPPY HOUR. Smth Banquet Hall. Mary Baldwn College 8 p.m. MUSCAL: "Anythng Goes." Annual Sophomore Show. Kng Gym. Randolph-Macon Woman's College 9:30 p.m. FLMS: "Spellbound" and "Suspcon." Smth Audtorum. Saturday. March 23 Mary Baldwn College 8 p.m. MUSCAL: "Anythng Goes." Annual Sophomore Show. Kng Gym. LHmnMugf^yRlkyfl^aVnu Hot band to 'scorch' pavlon Jason and the Scorchers wll play n the student actvtes pavlon tomorrow nght. By DAVE DONAHUE Musc Crtc Don't mss Jason and the Scorchers tomorrow nght at the student actvtes pavlon they are smply one of the hottest bands n rock and roll today. They are tourng n support of ther frst full LP, "Lost and Found" the followup to ther 1964 EP, "Fervor." Led by Jason Rngenberg. ths Nashvlle band has a sound that the College Meda Journal's New Musc report has called "rock-country," largely because of the out-front gutar work of Warner Hodges. Perry Baggs on drums and Jeff Johnson on bass complete the quartet. Ther new album has zoomed to the top of the progressve rado charts, and the press has had nothng but raves. They have a vdeo of the album's sngle, "WhteLes," thatcmj faults for not effectvely transmttng the band's "full throttle lve aura." t recommends seeng the lve show, whch wll turn an ordnary rock and roller nto a Scorcher convert. Songs to lsten for both at the show and on WLUR-FM: "Whte Les"; "Last Tme Around," ther verson of Dylan's "Absolutely Sweet Mare"; and my favorte, "Harvest Moon." Tckets are $3 each at the bookstore or at the door. Show tme s 9 p.m. wth Shor Patrol kckng off the evenng. Once agan, kudos to the SAB for gvng us some of the most vtal rock and roll acts today. Keep t up! Number of flcks to pck ncreasng By PETER BOATNER The past few months at Washngton and Lee have seen a rapd growth n the number of flm seres beng held around campus. n addton to the more establshed flm festvals sponsored by the poltcs and journalsm departments and the W&L Flm Socety, flm seres amed at specfc groups such as foregn language, hstory and even scence students have begun to emerge. Several factors account for that growth. The man one. accordng to SAB Presents... Jason & The Scorchers wth Shor Patrol Frday, March 22, p.m. Student Actvtes Pavlon Tckets: $3 at door or n advance at W&L Bookstore Proper.D. Requred HA^^ reference lbraran Rchard F. Grefe. has been the growng mportance of the Unversty Lbrary's audo-vdeo department. "We have an actve A-V department" wth more centralzed nformaton than s avalable to the ndvdual departments of the Unversty, he sad. The lbrary has ncreased ts vdeotape collecton over the last year to such an extent that offcals say there aren't enough vdeo machnes to meet the demand. The lbrary, however, only purchases tapes that wll be used many tmes over, such as the plays of Shakespeare or scence seres lke "Nova" and "The Ascent of Man." Specalzed flms are much cheaper to rent, the lbrary staff says, and the A-V department performs that servce for most of the flm festvals on campus "We are tryng to encourage use of the A-V center," sad Grefe. Money, he explaned, can be saved by such centralzaton through volume dscounts and by searchng for the cheapest rental outlet. Most of the flm rentals are pad for through the A-V department. Crag W. McCaughrn, a poltcs professor who has been sponsorng flms here snce 1982, sad one of the bg factors n the growth of flm on campus has been cooperaton among the groups showng moves. For nstance, by showng a Russan language flm wth poltcal overtones such as "October," attendance ncreases and money s saved Smlarly, the flm seres hghlghtng the of the Japanese drector can show a move he made n Russa, once agan ncreasng audences and cuttng costs Communcaton also has kept the schedules of each festval from conflctng. McCaughrn reports. The Washngton and Lee Flm Socety, whch tres to concentrate on hghly acclamed contemporary flms that aren't lkely to come to Lexngton's theaters, has been operatng on campus for about eght years. t receves about a thrd of ts fnancal assstance from the Executve Commttee, a thrd from prvate donatons and a thrd through assstance from the offce of the Dean of the College. Flm Socety showngs, whch can cost as much as several hundred dollars to rent, are pcked by the members of the socety, and come along about once a month. Journalsm department Charman John K. Jennngs shows flms durng the fall and wnter terms n conjuncton wth hs flm hstory courses. He offers many nternatonal flm classcs, wth several of the same flms beng shown each year, along wth other selectons. Hstory Professor J. Taylor Sanders has also recently begun a seres of flms to supplement hs Brtsh hstory classes. He sad the moves "are extremely valuable for students" n stressng aspects of settng and mood that are mssed n lectures. The hstory department, whch has ncreased ts move screenngs from none 10 years ago to several dozen ths year, s hopng to nstall a projecton room n Newcomb Hall. Musc ensemble to play Thursday Contnuum, a natonally acclamed 20th-century musc ensemble, wll appear n concert next Thursday n Lee Chapel. The concert, part of Washngton and Lee's Concert Guld Seres, wll begn at 8 p.m. Members of the W&L communty wll be admtted wthout charge. Southern nn Welcome Students Servng breakfast, lunch and dnner for over 50 years Man Street, Lexngton Contnuum's concert wll be the major event n a two-day symposum on 20th-century musc. The symposum wll nclude two demonstratons by the Contnuum artsts, the frst at 11:40 a m. on Thursday. March 28, n Room 102 of du Pont Hall and the second at 9:45 a.m. on Frday, March 29, n du Pont 202. Compostons by W&L students wll be performed by Contnuum at 2 p.m. next Thursday n du Pont 202. Contnuum's events have been broadcast by CBS-TV, educatonal televson, Natonal Publc Rado ard the Voce of Amerca. The New York Tmes has called Contnuum "a contemporary-musc organzaton that consstently offers some of the most ntrgung concerts n New York..." 'Galleo' begns March 29 The Unversty Theatre wll present Bertolt Brecht's "Galleo" March 29 through Aprl 2 n the Unversty Theatre on the corner of Man and Henry streets. Performances wll be at 8 p.m. each evenng. Reservatons are suggested and may be made by telephonng the Unversty Theatre box offce at begnnng Mon- day, March 25. W&L students, staff and faculty are admtted free. Tckets are $3 for adults and $2 for. non w&l students and senor ctzens. > Drected by W&L senor drama major Chrstopher Lllja. the producton wll feature 1974 W&L graduate' Mark Daughtrey n the lead role. PUT US TO THE TEST! Jazz Lab Band SAT - GMA - GRE MCAT DAT GRE PSYCH GRE 810 MAT PCAT OCAT VAT TOEFl SSAT PSAT SAT ACHEVEMENTS ACT SPRNG CLASSES NOW FORMNG KAPLAN EDUCATONAL CENTER KUJBTOSMCC*M n MM *" 5U SONffH UpuntluuKnjCmuu NA0NA MD BOARDS MSKP FMGtMS X NDB-NPB NCB NCUXRN CllNS CPA SPtfDRlADNG tsl NTENSVE RVfW NHJUUCUN 10 AWSCH00 CALL DAY*. EVENMOS WEEKENDS: (804)»7t 3001 m Arlngton Blvd.. SUT* 200 Charlottnvllt.Va. to play Cockpt Washngton fnd Lee's Jazz Lab Band wll present a dnner concert n the Cockpt on Tuesday from 6 to 7: 3C p.m. There s no cover charge for the event, but a cheeseburger, french fres and medum beverage can be, purchased for $2 39 Ths wll be the fnal performance by the ensemble durng the wnter term. Featured wll be solosts Adam Rensten, Todd Harvey and Rchard Norrs on trumpet; John Rley or/ trombone; Andy Whte on tenor sax;' Bruce Reed, Todd Brown and Jay Wngert on drums, and Davd Hager on vbes Alutn-Sonta SPRNG S HERE O.P. & Duck Head Shrts Madras Shrts Knt Shrts Cotton Sweaters OP & Brdwell Swm Suts Sperry Topsder Shoes All Wool Sweaters & Rugby Shrts -1 / 2 prce VSA Choce MasterCard Student Charge 9-5:30Monday Saturday

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