OCR::/Vol_092/WLURG39_RTP_19930114/WLURG39_RTP_19930114_001.2.txt 5 stand in a tiny balcony, while V Prize winning journalist Nan im./‘i Co¢"' ‘me uurvsasmr tti;rr‘Ar'z”*? wnstzrmon it use ti;ww’ere‘s‘iii‘ lE.)‘l!~::3‘i'0?J, wt. 24.455 JAN 15 I993 ’ ‘A. .» Hitting A High Note Guest conductor, clarinetist highlight upcoming Lenfest events The Thrill of Victory Genrals break losing streak with win against Hornets in Hoops ’ trip: at g-tum lfllti _ VOLUME 92, NO. 14 Journalist . battled prejudices , By KRISTA TAURINS Phi Contributing Writer 2 for many years, women re- -‘ porters assigned to cover National Press Club conferences had to their male counterparts sat in the ‘ spacious ballroom area, Pulitzer Rgbertson told a Lee Chapel crowd Monday. _‘ “We stood up there, packed ‘ together, lunchless, unable to ask , questions,” the former New York Times reporter said. “We were ‘ hot, we were jammed together, . there were no seats. Not only that, but we could barely hear the speakers. Now that was real dis- crimination.” Robertson, a self-described “uppity woman and proud femi- nist” joined other female Times re orters to form the Women’s C cus in 1972, which filed a sexual discrimination lawsuit against the Times. “The core of our complaint was that women were being paid thousands of dollars less a year s. ' WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY for doing the same work as men g inQ"he New York Times, and that women were repeatedly training By NIKKI MAGAZINER Phi Staff Writer men to become their bosses,” Robertson said. The caucus also found that no women held positions of impor- tance at the Times. Instead, wOmen reporters were assigned to cover “food, family, fashion, and fumishings.” “When I came to Washing- ton, did I cover the president of the United States? I covered the first lady, her children and their T U see TIMES, page 6 “Hi! I don’t think we’ve met...have we?..Yeah...Maybe?..No...Oh, well, if not it’s nice to meet you.” Women’s Rush concludes tonight and freshmen and actives alike say they will not miss most of it. “Sometimes I think that if I have to tell one more person where I’m from or what mymajor is, I'm going to scream,” one freshman said. Even with over 150 rushees and hundreds of sorority actives crowding into the University Center each night, there have been no major problems or mix-ups, Parthellenic Council Presi- dent Carrie Eubanks said Wednesday. Rho Chi Kate Townley, whose job during Rush is to lead her small group of rushees from party to party, said everyone seerfls to be having a‘ good time. “The rooms have been fine and nobody’s passed out yet,” Townley said. “People are staying up late and scrambling to make all the prepara- tions perfect, which is normal.” But some freshman women looking forward to pledging a sorority say the fomialities of Rush can be tiresome. “It’s really hot [at the parties] and LEXINGTON, VIRGINIA Photo by Leigh Allen, The Ring-tum Phi Rushees prepare between Bush parties in the University Center Tuesday night. Tonight is the last night of women’s Rush. Rush elicits screams I’m losing my voice,” one freshman rushee said Monday. “But I’m glad I'm meeting so many new people.” Eubanks said that after tonight’s Preference Night, sororities and rush- ees will choose each other in a “mutu- ally matching process.” Each sorority will have a quota of pledges that is determined by dividing the number of women attending Preference Night by four, Eubanks said. At presstime, the quota had yet to be determined. Parthellenic Publicity Chair Joanna Love said she's glad that the end of the long week is in sight. “ [Rush] is fun, but everybody’s glad when its over,” she said. Class of ’92: W&L social scene lacking .g By FAITH TRUMAN Phi Staff Writer “If you could change one aspect of ' student social life at W&L, what would it be?” When 100 members of the class of ’92 answered this question on the Senior Exit Survey, 85 percent said they were dissatisfied with some as- pect of the social scene at Washington ‘ and Lee, citing problems in the frater- nity system and in the Honor System’s ap lication to social situations. t alf of those who found faults with the fraternity system said they ' were unhappy with the recent admin- t istrative interference and some cur- rent students agree. “Our administration has been plot- t a slow, gradual and complete over of W&L’s fraternity system. ‘ I’m glad I only have one more year «College politicos anticipate inauguration in different ways left here. Hopefully [I’ll graduate] before the ‘Nazification’ is complete,” ‘Should I go to a fraternity party or a fraternity party? ’ ” sophomore frater- juniorDoug Shepard nity member Brian said. McClung said. The other half of The graduates those dissatisfied alsopointedoutsome with the fraternities shortcomings with believe the school put the Honor System. too much emphasis The Honor Sys- on fraternities in gen- tern inspired a “spirit eral. Half the inde- pendents who re- sponded to the study said being an inde- pendent had a nega- tive effect on their so- cial lives. Even current fra- ternity members agree that most so- cial events center around fraternities. Mcclung of trust” in only 64 percent of recent graduates. Some re- spondents com- plained that the Honor System ap- plied to academics studies, but not to the social life. “Socially it is a joke,” one student said in the survey. “The Honor Sys- “When you’re going to go out on tem at W&L is virtually non-existent a Saturday night the question is By ROBERT WILSON Phi Contributing Writer groups. 1 * W&L’s College Democrats will travel to Wash- ington D.C. next week to take part in inaugural festivities for President- ~ elect Clinton. “A few of us will be strategies to countermea- “ going up on Sunday for a Sures by the new admin- reunion on the Mall istration. group President I which will involve a cel- Ted Elliott Said. ehation of America’s diversity with arts and crafts and things,” Col- lege Democrats Presi- dent Cottie Miles said. The festivities on the ‘ Mall will be followed by tagathering at the Lin- coln Memorial, Miles ' said. , . Miles said about 15 College Democrats will travel to Washington Tuesday to witness the inau- ‘guration ceremony and participate in activities surrounding it, Miles said. The ceremony will take phtce at 11:30 Wednesday moming and will be followed by a parade down Pennsylvania Avenue at 2:30 p.m. College Republicans, vowing not to hibernate until 1996, also have plans for inauguration week. In aTuesday night meeting entitled “On the Eve ing days in reaction to Clinton’s administration. “Watch out for the College Republicans. We will become very active on campus in the coming days, as well as working on various state cam- paigns,” Elliot said. Miles said the members of College Democrats will carpool to D.C. for the inauguration in several _ Elliott also said students should watch for Col- lege Republican T-shirts, which say: “Don’tblame me, I voted for Bush.” when applied to Greek organizations and social situations.” Academically, the survey showed that students approved of the university’s general education re- quirements. In addition, a W&L education sparked new and creative interests in 76 percent of those who answered the questionnaires. About 75 percent of the graduates said their extracurricu- lar activities were rewarding. “Playing basketball lets me meet girls from other schools and see other campuses, too,” sophomore Kather- ine Boozer said. Copies of the Senior Exit Survey results are on reserve in the Univer- sity Library for anyone who would like to read it. Members of the W&L commu- nity may also obtain copies from Pro- fessor of History Robert W. McAhren, chairman of the Institutional Effec- tiveness Committee. JANUARY 14, 1993 EC to review White Book By-FRANCESCA KEFALAS Phi Staff Writer The EC Monday created a committee to propose a formal Honor System review process and clarify the process for amend- ing the White Book. \ Executive Committee President Josh MacFarland said he would like the new section to require-an Honor System review every four years. That way, he said, every student generation will have the opportunity to re- view the Honor System. MacFarland said the last Honor System review was three years ago and followed an open trial. He said a peri- odic review process would be better than a review sparked by the controversy surrounding an open trial. “You want to take a step back from [an open trial],” MacFarland said. MacFarland also said the amendment process of the White Book should be more specific. The student constitution now says a majority vote of the EC is needed to I amend the White Book. MacFarland be- lieves at least a two-thirds vote should be required. MacFarland appointed EC Secretary Bob Tompkins, Vice President Ames Hutton, junior Rep. Jimmy Kull and fresh- man Rep. Peter Agelasto to the committee 2 and asked them to have a proposal by February vacation. On Monday, the EC will review a list of Honor System issues sent to them by W&L Rector Stephen A. Miles. MacFarland said he asked Miles to compile the list of issues from letters Miles had received concerning the Honor System. MacFarland said the EC will dis- cuss the issues Monday, but he doesn’t believe they will make any significant changes. “I’d rather all this stuff be done in a formal review,” MacFarland said. Tompkins said he be- lieves the list of the issues is generally good. “Some of the [issues] we might do well to examine closely,” Tompkins said. “Some of the changes wouldn’t fundamentally change the Honor System, but make it clearer to those not involved administratively with it.” MacFarland said the list of issues the Miles asked the EC to discuss includes the single sanction, whether infractions should be categorized it as major and minor; investigation procedures; if a guilty ver- dict should require a unanimous vote; whether intent to commit an honor viola- tion should be considered; and whether the administration should play a role in the Honor System. MacFarland said public opinion will be welcomeat Monday’s meeting. New Scholars join despite uncertainty By RICHARD WEAVER Phi Staff Writer Despite uncertainty over the future of the University Scholars program, 14 fresh- men joined its ranks this semester. The recent appointments come at a time when a committee of faculty and students is conducting a review of the program to determine whether it should be eliminated. ‘ Committee member Alan Carter, ’95, said the new appointments do not mean that the pro gram will continue unchanged. “The new appointments should not be interpreted one way or another in terms of having an impact on what the committee will recommend in its report to the fac- ulty,” Carter said. Some faculty and administration mem- bers have said that the program, which allows selected students to interact more easily with professors and each other, is no longer necessary because the current student body has a higher academic qual- ity than when the program was created. Scholars advisor John Evans said in November that if the Scholars program is eliminated, it will be phased out over four years to enable all students currently en- rolled to complete the program and gradu- ate with honors. The committee will report its recom- mendation on the future of the program to the Courses and Degrees Committee in the spring. The new Scholars are enrolled this term in the first step of the University Scholars system, a one—credit reading course. The course consists of two books impact of the voyages of Christopher Columbus on Latin American culture. Scholars will continue to take special discussion seminars while at W&L and must complete an honors thesis before graduation. Privileges of University Scholars in- clude the option of a one—on-one tutoring session in place of select courses, access to a Scholars’ lounge and invitations to spe- cial functions and speakers that come to campus. The new scholars are Jeanne Briggs, Amy Carrington, Phaedra Cianciulli, Pe- ter Dishman, S.R. Evans, Gretchen Hall, Laura Howell, Robin King, Istvan Majoros, Meagan Miller, William Robert, Kirk Susong, Marina Vasilara and Peter Weissman. ' of Apocalypse,” the Re- publicans will discuss The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the College Republicans of- fice in the University Center. He said Tuesday's meeting will include a discussion of objectives for the party in the com- It doesn’t feel like January Photo by Mallory eyers, The Ring-tum Pi;/I Live Drive asking for volunteers By RANSOM JAMES Phi Contributing Writer Students who take advantage of W&L’s Live Drive should think about pitching in to help keep the service designed to save lives running, the group's orga- nizer said. Junior Sarah Butler, head of the organization, said Live Drive no longer pays students to work on big weekends, so student vol- unteers areessential. “It’s a volunteer organiza- tion,” Butler said. “It’s for the students, and if they want it, they have to help organize it.” Any students who wish to do- nate theirtime can call 464-4017. Live Drive provides rides for Freshmen Dominique Chappelear and Margaret Hawn take advantage of unsea- sonably warm weather Wednesday behind Robinson Hall. students from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. on Friday and Saturday nights. The Live Drive number is 463- 8947. OCR::/Vol_092/WLURG39_RTP_19930114/WLURG39_RTP_19930114_002.2.txt PAGE 2 @112 ‘ifiittg-tttm 1311 i Founded September 18, 1897 Justdoit Hello. Hello! Yes, you. The one staring at your toes while you walk down the Colonnade. Are your toes so interesting that you’ve completely for- gotten a little thing called the Speaking Tradition? You remember the Speaking Tradition. Prospectives hear all about it during tours of Washington and Lee, and fresh- men learn it during orientation. It’s really a very simple concept: W&L students acknowl- edge each other, even when they aren’t personally ac- quainted. It’s just one of the little things that makes this campus warmer than all those big state schools. But lately we’ve noticed a distinct trend on the Hill: selective participation in the Speaking Tradition. Friends do it. Guys tend not to. Freshmen do it. Upperclassmen tend not to. What the hell is going on? Do you really want W&L to turn into just another UNIVERSITY with a bunch of students who don’t know each other and don’t care that they don’t know each other? Saying hello doesn’t kill brain cells or take too much time or drain too much oxygen from the atmosphere. And it just might make someone feel warm and fuzzy inside. The Speaking Tradition. Just do it. Just do this, too Speaking of traditions, the Calyx has been around W&L for a long, long time. Most things grow when they age, but the poor, malnourished Calyx just keeps getting skinnier. Imagine yourself in, say, 40 years. You’re developing a paunch and your kids have left the nest, and you’re feeling nostalgic for the good ol’ days at Washington and Lee. So you open up your cherished Calyx, only to find a bunch of pictures of professors you’d really rather have forgotten. And then you remember. You and your friends decided to sleep in the day pictures were made, and you decided to spend your $15 on beer instead of the sitting fee. Well at least the beer gave you a physique that lasted. But:.seriously~folks,\ every Calyx is one »class’s senior Calyx,‘ and we all want our ‘senior Calyx to be a complete. reminder of these halcyon days of youth. The Calyx Picture. Just do it. One more thing The Executive Committee is talking about revising the White Book, having appointed a committee to determine how the revisions process should work. Whatever the EC’s motive for considering a White Book review, we are optimistic that EC members will find their way to determining the necessity for any revisions. But experience from the last White Book revisions pro- cess, two years ago, tells us that students will play a disap- pointingly small role; the last White Book revisions gave new meaning to student apathy. In a My View this week, senior Bill Coffin stresses the importantrole “the student generation involved” plays in the Honor System. We hope the current generation won’t shirk its responsibility to participate in the coming proceedings. Gllir ‘iaittg-tum ifilti Executive Editors . . . . . . . . . .Cathryn Lopiccolo, Richard Peltz News Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Leigh Allen, Gregory Patterson Editorial Page Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Francesca Kefalas Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sean 0’Rourke Features Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Joyce Bautista Photography Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mallory Meyers Editorial Cartoonist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jeb Tilly Editorial Page Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sarah Wyatt Computer Graphics Artist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .i . . . . .Phil Carrott Reader Realtions Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Richard Weaver Business Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Whitney Swift Advertising Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Benjamin Plummer Circulation Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hal Waller The Ring-tum Phi is published Thursdays during the under- graduate school year at Washington and Lee University, Lexing- ton, Virginia. Funding for The Ring-tum Phi comes primarily from advertising and subscription revenues. The Washington and Lee Publications Board elects the executive editors and business manager, but The Ring-tum Phi is otherwise independent. Letters and other submissions must be in the Phi office, room 208 of the University Center, by noon on Tuesday to appear in that week’s edition. Advertising does not reflect the opinion of The Ring-tum Phi or its staff. This newspaper observes current court definitions of libel and obscenity. The Ring-tum Phi Post Office Box 899 Lexington, Virginia 24450 OPINION ~'I ; , , . The Ring-tum Phl, January 14, 1 993 Democrats breaking promises already WASHINGTON —— During the campaign Democrats promised “change,” perhaps assuming that “change” is a synonym for “progress.” During the transition they have proven that it is not. Having promised a Cabinet that “looks like America,” Bill Clinton has cobbled together one that looks the way Americans fear that America is becoming: 13 of the 18 nominees are lawyers. Considerations of “diversity” (different chromosomes and skin pig- mentations, not different ideas) have slowed the staffing of the administra- tion, but it is off to a brisk start breaking promises. The Bush administration ’s revision ' — upward, as usual —- of the deficit forecast is Clinton’s excuse for retreat- ing from his promise to halve the defi- cit in four years. He calls the projec- tions a “revelation,” although as early as August his campaign had the Con- gressional Budget Office’s warnings about the soaring deficit. The projections are also the excuse for scurrying crabwise away from the promise of a middle-class tax cut. But three weeks before the new projec- tions, Wall Street Journal interviewers noted that Clinton was “clearly luke- warm to his own proposal to cut taxes for the middle-income families.” He said: “I don’t think there's anybody that thinks it’s a very good way of getting theeconomy up.” . In Septemberthe ‘Clinton ,carii'paig;i . said:“wesiiotiidciri'§riid;ii§§r;r§§;a§;e,§; I 6 immediately by 10 percent.” The post- election position, stated by adviser Robert Shapiro, is “no new taxes on middle-class Americans until their in- comes are moving up again.” That is, we won ’t take more until there is more to take. Unless, perhaps, middle-class Americans own automobiles. Candidate Clinton denounced as more than it did last year with its bank and post office and other debacles. Although 27 honorable Democrats broke ranks, the bovine herd of the other Democrats was large enough to pass the measure giving virtually full voting rights to the delegates from Sa- moa, Guam, the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia. All “unfair” a five del- gasoline egates are m ,,,_ GEORGE WILL D,,,,,,,,,,,, crease. By - o of course. Dec em_ Washington Post Writers Group E V e n berhewas the bovine saying only that a 15-cent per gallon increase is “a lot to raise in one year.” By Jan. 2, there was this New York Times headline: “Gasoline Tax Rise is Reviving: Clinton Said to be Easing Opposition.” The legislative branch also is be- having badly, again. The Senate’s Democratic leader- ship has made former Senator Wyche Fowler, the GeorgiaDernocratdefeated in November, a $130,000-a-year “spe- cial deputy” to the Federal Election Commission. Democrats believe the FEC should have ordered the GOP to curtail its spending during the Novem- ber nin-off campaign that Fowler lost. Fowler will recuse himself from the FEC’s continuing consideration of that case, but his appointment is an intimi- dating reminder to the FEC of the Sen- ate majority's power. _ ”The House hashit the ground run- in thelrace to disgrace itself even were so squeamish about this that they made it ludicrous as well as unconstitu- tional: The delegates’ votes will count only it they don’t count. That is, the votes will count unless they provide the decisive margin on an issue. This abuse of power, done for no apparent purpose other than to adver- tise the majority’s ability to do what- ever it wants (until the courts cry “Halt! ”), was hardly the only example of the House Democrats’ growing ar- rogance of power. They have now given the speaker the intimidating power to arbitrarily add or remove any member from any select or conference committee. Worse, House Democrats, whose party traces its pedigree back to Jefferson, have jettisoned the principle that a commit- tee “can only act when together,” a principle whose pedigree rims back to Jefferson ’s Manual of Parliamentary Practice. ‘ . Until now, a committee quorum had to be actually present when a commit- tee is drafting legislation because de- liberation is a collective undertaking, and Congress is, in theory, a deliber§- tive body. 'I'hat theory is mocked by the new rule, under which a “rolling quo- rum” shall suffice. That is, a chairman can declare that a quorum necessary for drafting legis- lation exists when a majority of mem- bers has been present for any part off’: session on the legislation. Chairmen —— they are all Demo- crats, of course —— can even be one- person quorums after enough mem- bers have passed through the commit- tees’ rooms. The Government Operations Com- mittee is one of the House’s principal instruments for oversight of the execu- tive branch. Last year, funds for the’ committee’s investigative staff were allocated 90 percent for Democrats, 10 percent for Republicans. Democrats said this was justified because the Re- publicans controlled the executiwe branch. Anyone who believes the allo- cation this year will be significantly different has not been noting the might- makes-right swagger of the unbridled majority. Or noting The New York Times of Jan. 12: “And Mr. Clinton’s staff h$ said in recent days that yet another pledge, to reduce the White House staff by 25 percent, might be difficult to fulfill.” . © 1993, The Washington Post Writers Group Clinton "Cabinet connects kitchen and capitol’ WASHINGTON—When President Lyndon Johnson bragged about all the Ivy Leaguers working for hint, Sam Rayburn said he’d feel a whole lot better if just one of LBJ ’s best-and-brightest had “rim for sheriff once.” Bill Clinton is not making the same LBJ mistake. The signature aspect of his Cabinet-to-be is not so much its ethnic back home. home. and gender diver- sityasitspolitical weight. Just as Clinton recruited CHRISTOPHER MATTHEWS Tribune Media Services aposse of brilliant hotshots to win the White House, the President-elect braved the Christmas msh to pick an equally impressive bunch to help him keep it. A quick recap: This time last year, Clinton faced a field of Democratic rivals for the nomination and what looked then like a tough Republican incumbent in George Bush. To run the best possible campaign, the young Arkansas governor quite simply hired the best in the business: James “the Ragin’ Cajun” Carville and quiet sidekick, Paul Begala. What made Carville and Begala unique was: 1) their ability to attract middle-class voters to their Democratic clients; and 2) a winning track record marked by fresh victo- ries in Kentucky, Georgia and New Jersey, plus a L string of wins in Pennsylvania capped by Democrat Harris Wofford’s come-from-behind upset of U.S. Attorney General Dick Thombuigh in a 1991 U.S. Senate race. Clinton looked for the sameset of bragging rights in recruiting his presidential team. Jimmy Carter failed because he couldn’t connect with the politics of Capitol Hill. George Bush failed because he Bush. couldn’t connect with the kitchen-table economics The Clinton Cabinet has been selected for its ability to make both connections: on the Hill and at Lloyd Bentsen, who will be 72 in February, has been winning elections for a half century, from county judge to U.S. Congress, where he served (as he once re- minded Dan Quayle) with the young John F. Kennedy, to the U.S. Senate, which he entered by beating fellow Texan George A secret to Bentsen’s success has been his ability to connect with the average family on bread-and- butter issues. As chairman of the Finance Commit- cares about what the folks back home That attentiveness to grassroots politics is one reason that the eight-terrn congressman is equally popular on Capitol Hill. Speaker Tom Foley and House Demo- craticleader Dick Gephardt know Panettanot as soul: bureaucratic nurnber-cnmcher but as a colleague who, just like them, knows what it means to seek re- election every two years. Picking a veteran politician as his budget director is Bill Clinton’s way of saying he wants his spending and tax decisions to sell, not just in the dank halls of Capitol Hill but also in the lush farmlands and coastal communities of Northern California. Ron Brown, Clinton ’s new commerce secretary, is tee, for example, he champi- counts, one of the few tax faced a field of Democratic convincedthattheirPresi- breaks most middle-class rivajs for the nomination dentis creating economic families haveevermanaged to . hope,andnotjustforthose en,-°y_ and what looked then like a who missed out in me 6,. . votes back home. oned the return of full tax de- ductions for money deposited in Individual Retirement Ac- Bentsen wins in Washing- ton, in other words, because he never loses touch with the prime currency of Capitol Hill: Leon Panetta, 54, is another pro.Peopletalkaboutthe Cali- fomia congressman as a defi- cit “hawk,” a legislator seri- ous about reining in the country's fiscal excess. He is. But Panetta is also a Democrat with the proven talent for convincing a middle-class, socially diverse constituency that he another impressive politician. As chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Brown got the two- winged party to fly a winning course the last 12 months. As a member of the Cabinet, he will b: This time last year, Clinton tough Republican incum- bent in George Bush. To run the best possible campaign, the young Arkansas gover- norquite simply hired the best in the business.... asked to do the same: keep down-and-out Democrats ’80s; also, keep the new President aware of what folksinthe neighborhoods are saying and feeling. While Bill Clinton de- serves credit for forming a Cabinet that “looks likg for sheriff.” America, ”he’s also made sure there are plenty of people around him who lcnow what it means to “run ® 1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc. Kindness can stamp out stereotypes ’ - MY VIEW . By James Hambrick, ’94 Everyone knows the dangers of ap- plying stereotypes, but everyone does it anyway. Each and every person I know, including myself, has certain prejudices and a working idea of the way the world works. And sometimes, these prejudices just don't apply. As students here, we “fit” into a model: rich, arrogant snobs who ride into town, get drunk, rip Lexington to pieces, and ride out again. We are victimized by this stereotype, but we victiniize the town, too. I've heard a thousand times that Lexington wouldn't be here without W&L. No one ever seems to consider that W&L wouldn’t be here without the town. These stereotypes create an artifi- cial distance that no one seems willing to bridge. We don't really need to look far to dispel the W&L stereotype. The students can speak for themselves, but more often than not, they only speak to themselves; by countering the stereo- type in their own peer group, they preach only to the converted. We don’t reach into the community to build stron- ger relationships, and counter some stereotypes. Now, some students at Washington & Lee are munity, as an exemplary kindergarten teacher. Now, however, the child’s time has come, and she has had to take off work to see the child through her final hours. Unfortimately, her love and emotional reaching _ , , strengtliwillnot across the This IS a Call to dispel the pay the bills_ gar» A stereotypes of everyone in This“ is Where woman in th .t hether the nch, arro- the commu- _e Fommunl _y9 W gant snobs” Siisan within or outside the stu- $2: inzs the 1115, IS In Wlm mubla Her dent body. Stereotypes are Team will be c 1, i 1 .1 , not good, but they re real. conducting a Kristen, at ° 9 - ° ' 9 24- hour Swim- birth Sufi Susan Elkin ssituationisn t Amwmomise fered from good, but it’s real. Here is money to pay disease with the bills and at- a;,fe,,xpec,- our chance to change both ,e,,,pm,g,,,e,,,,, my °f these situations at least a S°“‘° °f ‘h° around a _ wages she will month. This little f0!‘ the better. lose this month. week, the Anysuppon we child is two can give to the years old. This woman has carried the child through two arduous years with love. Above and beyond her love for her child, Susan has given to the com- swim team, or anything we can do on our own, to see this woman makes it through this extremely tough time, is vital. Because Lexington, believe it or not, is a vital part of the W&L experi- ence. instead of cracking jokes about the range of entertainment opportuni- ties and food selection here, consider what it adds to your experience -3- remember it was part of what brought you here for what is arguably four of the most influential years of your life. This woman, a recent transplant from out-of-state, has perhaps less rea; son than any of us to love this commu- nity, but she has proven her dedicatioi9, and she gives us a bridge to reach out to the community and say thank you. This is not a call for a debate on what the W&L student body does or doesn’t do for Lexington. This is a call to dispel the stereotypes of everyone in the community, whether within or cu! side the student body. Stereotypes are not good, but tliey’re real. Susan Elkin’s situation isn’t good, but it’s real. Here , is our chance to change both these situations at least a little for the better. If you wantto help, get in touch with Coach PageRemillard, Department 06 Athletics, Washington and Lee Uni- versity, 463-8694. ery-person-for-himseU . s. OCR::/Vol_092/WLURG39_RTP_19930114/WLURG39_RTP_19930114_003.2.txt Spos’ SPACE By Tom Hespos So, ABC has a new weapon in their war against “those notorious keg par- 4 ties,” huh? Should this strike fear into the hearts of the beer-drinkingest, pzfity-hardiest college students in the western civilized world? Hell no! Through the ages, Washington and Lee students have been selectively bred in order to produce the perpetrators of the world’s most extravagant alcohol parties. Scientific studies show that if armebae are allowed to roam freely in a petrie dish full of Budweiser, the single-celled organisms will eventu- ally evolve into W&L students, com- plete with Duck Heads and wom-out baseball caps. Further studies indicate ‘ that W&L students can derive their , emire U.S. Recommended Daily Al- lowances of all essential nutrients from i just six cans of cheap brewhaha. Once, several respected scientific minds came up with some cockamamy experiment that involved placing 12 W&L stu- dents in a sealed environment for three waks. After the three weeks were up, the students emerged from their sub-environment completely intoxi- '« cated. Dr. Evan Von Schmendrick commented, “Man, those W&L boys ' are a rowdy bunch! Evidently we mis- calculated what the test group would dogwith the basic grains, yeast and The Ring-tum Phi, January 14, 1993 water we gave them in hopes that they might make food.” My basic point here is that no matter the hardships W&L students must over- come, they can always find a new way to get drunk. Spos predicts that the new keg law will not make a difference 01’ aluminum cans? It takes a lot of aluminum to fill the demand for all of those cans. Here’s where Spos’ plan comes in: First, everyone buy stock in aluminum companies like Alcoa. Sec- ond, buy loads and loads of beer in aluminum cans. The increased demand for alu- OPINION Spos lectures on avoiding new keg law with regard to how often W&L stu- dents will pickle themselves. Rather, it will dictate the new ways in which stu- dents will get wasted. Once the W&L student body sets its mind to finding loop- holes in the new law, students will be completely unstoppable. Please allow Spos to prime the pump and start the ideas flowing: IDEA #1- No so whaddya say we go out there and prove to them that W&L students are more than beer - swig- ging idiots. Let ’s prove to ABC that we’re beer - swigging idiots who can make complete morons out of those high-ranking officials who spend years trying to write new laws that prevent us from hav- ing a good time. minum will cause the stock to skyrocket. Third, use our dividend checks to buy more beer. See how this works? IDEA #3- Write to the big beer companies. Tellthemthatwe ..won’t buy their products unless we can buy it in kegs. They, in turn, send lobby- ists with huge biceps and Ital- ian lastnames to kegs? How about party balls? Party balls can be a lot of fun. Just think of them as smaller kegs. Also, when you and your friends kill a party ball, you can cut out the bottom, stick it on your head and pretend to be “the Great Gazoo” from The Flintstones. IDEA #2- What’s wrong with good shake up the ABC. Next thing you know, we’re back to having 27-keggers at Zollman’s. IDEA #4- Alternative beverages. Drink lots of bourbon instead. How about Southern Comfort? Jagermeister is pretty cool too. Eventually, beer distributers will PAGE 3 catch word of who is responsible for their declining market share and the aforementioned Italian goons will pro- . duce a solution. IDEA #5- Disguise your keg. Glue yellow yam to the keg in order to sirnulatehair.Dressitupinafull-length gown. Use your imagination. If the ABC officer can't prove that it's a keg, he can't bust you: ABC G,uy—-Hey you! Is that a com munal source of alcohol ?! Frat Guy’-— How dare you call my F D. date a communal source of alcohol! Now look what you've done. You've been so rude, you've rendered her speechless! ABC Guy — Er, uh...um. It’s truly a sad thing that ABC has brought it to this. It's obvious that they are specifically targeting college and high school keg parties with the new law. So whaddya say we go out there and prove to them that W&L students are more than beer-swigging idiots. Let’s provetoABCtliatwe’rebeer-swigging idiots who can make complete morons out of those high-ranking officials who spend years trying to write new laws that prevent us from having a good time. Long live Anheuser-Busch! NIY VIEW ‘ By Bill Coffin, ’93 ‘ Dear Mrs. McCord, .I am responding, as requested, to your charge of “the responsibility of examining and debating the imperfections in a dogma everyone at W&L sancti- fie but few truly understand.” I have read and re- read your article, the White Book, and have dis- M cussed my feelings with my fellow students. Your cry for a review of W&L’s Honor System is poorly founded, nor do you even have the right to cast judgment upon how this student body conducts its affairs. You state that because a doctrine is old that it is not necessarily without flaw, backing up your argiment by highlighting the Honor System’s most glaring inequities. Indeed, the Honor System is not without a certain unavoidable unfairness that can be expected from any institution created by the fallible something thafeach -student ‘wh‘o‘e'nrolls at W&L, which included your daughter, complies with by viiQ.'ue of choosing to attend, thereby approving the behavior expected of us. I You cpmplain your daughter is a victim of her ignorance conceming a system few at W&L “truly understand.” Any student enjoying the privilege to study here is obligated not only to act within the purposefully vague parameters established by the M Hqior System, but equally to study, and thus “truly understand" it. Any student who does not, (i .e. your daughter) deserves whatever fate they bring upon themselves as a result of their “complacency.” If your daughter acted ignorantly and thus brought ’ about her own academic min because she, unfamil- iar with the mechanics of the Honor System, failed to acumder the standards established by it, then she has forfeited her right to attend W&L. As unfair as that may seem, it is a reality every W&L student will- ingly lives under by attending this magnificent university. Undoubtedly, if I were to ever feel wrongly accused and convicted of an honor violation, I’d prtjiably feel as bitter as you do concerning your daughter (who, as I understand it, comes from a long line of W&L alumni — I find it hard to believe that the Honor System had not been fully explained to your daughter previous to her enrollment here). But, I realize the vestigial risk of judicial error and hap- pily subject myself to it day after day, much as your 4darghter did. 1 hands of humanity. The Honor System is, lioRv‘t=L’x>té'r‘:‘ We attend W&L to earn an education, become adults, and most importantly, to subject ourselves to certain ideological living conditions, which, if prop- erly met, arm us with something most of the world outside W&L grievously lacks —honor. I so strongly support such a goal that I easily excuse the few errors a human institution such as the Honor System is liable to make — accepting even the potential victim of myself ~— in lieu of the overwhelming good the system otherwise produces. I do not believe, how- ever, that your daughter’s case is just another casu- alty in any “legion of the wrongly convicted”; she committed an honor violation and was expelled for doing so. The White Book states three very important dis- tinctions which I suspect you have either overlooked or misinterpreted. “Persons attending Washington and Lee must realize that our commitment to the principle of honor is firm.” Obviously so, as evi- denced your daughter’s dismissal last spring. ‘Hdvlév‘er;’whIat"y'<.>'u jfa11.,tr.> un.d;ér.staric1.,.arr<1’;the,r.<:E,2‘y ; complain against, is that “under our system students must not lie‘, cheat, steal or misrepresent themselves in any way that is considered dishonorable by the student body generation involved.” Read that again, Mrs. McCord, because for all your touted research, I doubt that you have read that passage with sufficient care. The foundation of the Honor System is not a sharply defined outline of rules. Instead, it concerns itself with several vaguely termed offenses, the exact meanings of which, by their very nature as student- created expectations, undergo constant examination and reinterpretation by the “student generation in- volved.” Your daughter’s honor violation might not have been considered as such by “the generation involved” 20 years ago, or by those yet to attend this university, but at the exact moment when your daugh- ter attended W&L, she committed an offense as defined by “the generation involved,” which in- cluded herself. I scoff at your accusations of student complacency when your daughter helped define the very charge which caused her dismissal. I wonder, Mrs. McCord, has she fallen under your careful eye of scrutiny as well? The White Book also asserts that “no violation of this trust is too small to be ignored, for we understand that honor is not measured by degree.” That is the very spirit on which this university lives and breathes. Your statement that the dismissal adhered to only the “letter” of the law and not its “spirit” is wrong. When your daughter committed her so-called “error in lhterviews and Photos By Troy Hill ‘Scott Howe, ’93, Hurst, Texas —- .“Until W&L,graduates saturate the gene pool.” 3 longer.” Pa. — “1,0()0 years.” will sup ‘Student grapples with honor questions judgement" she violated the trust of every student attending this university. It matters not if you feel she did not intend to deceive; she inflicted equal damage by making her peers unable to dust her. Her inability to abide by the Honor System thus displayed that she had no place here. Furthermore, the institution that dismissed your daughter from W&L was an Honor System, not an honor code. We students do not agree to act under a crystalline set of rules. That is a code, and also is incapable of properly addressing honor. Contrarily, we live under the influence of a constantly reinterpreted authority determined by ourselves, an ever-adapting, ever—replenishing system. IT is we, the “generation involved" who redefine the expecta- tions we must live with every time an honor violation is reported. We hardly need you to remind us of a duty whichis being constantly served. If any are compla- cent, it is those who fail, through lack of effort, to .“t,ruly understand" their Honor System, which obvi- ,.5',QiASiy,iIl¢ludes yo1_1r.d,aught§-.r, _clairn,th_a.t,__. she is a Victim or'hé'r5'w‘n ignorance. I’m sure you mean well, but since you have no . directtie to this university as a student, you really have no place or justification in suggesting how the students’ treatment of ourselves should be changed, much less offer that we examine the Honor System according to your desires, such as emulating the honor codes of other schools (e.g. UVa). The Honor System is indeed harsh and structurally imperfect, but these are points only the students affected by it have a right to address, not lookers-on such as your- self. As close as you are to being a W&L student, having both marriedand given birth to one, you still lack the distinction and subsequently the right to comment on the inequities of our system. If your husband would like to address the Honor System then let him do it. Otherwise, you have no true understand- ing of our community and hence, no business invad- ing it with your myopic insight. Finally, Mrs. McCord, your daughter’s dismissal concerns her, not you. Here at W&L. when an open trial has ended, we are expected to put it, whatever its result, behind us and continue living. I despise your use of a convenient immunity from such expectations as a medium to snipe at an Honor System which, your daughter and a potential handful of others notwith- standing, has greatly enriched the lives of thousands. If you find our system so inequitable, then either accept it or wholly detach yourself from it. Don't pick at it from a distance because you feel transitively slighted through your daughter's expulsion. TALKBACK Hu.Ying wu, Chinese Teachng Sakina Paige, ’96,Bayshore,N.Y., and Christa Kirby ’96, Couderspoff, Susan Rucker, ’93, Brinklow, assistant — “If we take care of the place we live, maybewe will last Senior Photos Remember to sign up for senior pictures Friday, outside the Co-op from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Any ques- tions? Please call Shannon at 463- 5137 or Anthony at 463-4352. Women’s Forum Women’s Forum presents “Women and Christianity,” a dis- cussion with Father Jay Biber on Sunday, at6:30 p.m. irithe Women’s Center. Everyone is welcome. I- House Drop by the International House on 8 Lee Ave. for our Open House. This term we will celebrate the Chi- nese New Year, sponsor a lecture by Professor McDaniel, celebrate St. Patrick’s Day, and more! Come find out more on Jan. 17, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Refreshments will be served. Ariel Absolutely lastdeadline forAriel subrriissions is, Feb. 1 by 5 p.m. in Carol Calkins office. Photographs, artwork, poetry, and prose accepted. Questions? Call Brian Carpenter at 463-1001. Repubficans The College Republicans will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Mock Convention office. The dis- cussion topic will be “On the Eve of Apocalypse: the Clinton Inaugura- tion.” For more info please call 463-8579. T-shirts are now in. CD&P The Kaplan Prep courses for both the LSAT and the MCAT are begin- ning. Interested students should cometothe CD&P office right away to enroll. Seniors wishing to participate in practice interviews need to sign up in the CD&P office as soon as pos- sible. Interviews will be held on Jan. 18 and Jan. 26. These are the last two practice interviews sched- uled forthis year.’ -‘.. ‘ ' " ‘ I .:T_he will sponsor aru_In- 1* ' terview Workshopon Monday, Jan. ,3 25fro’m 4‘p.m to 5‘p.in. in room 109' of the UC. The CD&P office will sponsor a Resume and Cover Letter Workshop on Tuesday, Jan. 26 from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. in room 109 of the UC. The CD&P personnel will also be available all day Friday, Jan. 29 to critique resumes. Please call 463-8595 for further information. Big 4 Elections Petitions for the election of Ex- ecutive Committee president, vice president and secretary, and Stu- dent Conduct Commitee president are due Feb. 1. Elections will be held Feb. 8. Housing The “priority” housing applica- tion deadline is Friday, Jan. 1 5. There are still some suites available in Gaines I-Iall,as well as apartments in Woods Creek. Stop by Payne 4 or call 463-8752 for more infonna- tion. General Notes are compiled by Matt Haar dent ‘of the’ American Foundation . “Jan- ‘2l,at 7:30 -‘p.m.-in{Lee Chapel Film Society The Film Society will present “Howard's End” (England, 1992) on Friday, Jan. 15 and Saturday, Jan. 16 at 8:05 p.m. in the Trouba- dour Cinema at the comer of Main and Henry Streets. WLUR WLUR 91.5 FM is giving away two free back-stage passes and 10 row tickets to see Alabama, Dia- mond Rio, and Michelle Wright. Register at the Co-op and listen to the country shows from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m from Monday to Friday and from 3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. on Sunday for more information. Registration ends Wednesday. Pre-Law The W&L Pre-Law Society will meet in room 221 of the Commerce School on Thursday, Jan. 21 at 7 p.m. with members of Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity. All under- graduate students considering law school after graduation are invited to attend. For more information con- tact Professor John in room l25—B of the Commerce School. Superdance Registration packet for Superdance are available in front of Carol Calkins ’ office. Sign up to be a dancer and support MDA. Racquetball Anyone interested in playing in- tramural racquetball with the W&L Racquetball Club should call 464- 3927, before Jan. 25. Fencing Fencing Club will meet Tues- day, at 7:30 p.m. in Fairfax Lounge. Anyone interested in participating should attend. AIDS Education The AIDS Education Project will hostDr. Merv Silverrnan ’60, presi- £_or, AIDS .éR.ese2u_ch .orr:'*I'hursday, for"a” lecture entitled ““A‘H3S: A Global Overview.” Lost Black Julie Klienhalf-lengthcoat on Saturday night. If foundiplease call Julie at 464-6125. ODK Schedule Schedul of classes for Tuesday A — 8 a.m. - 8:45 a.m. B —— 8:50 a.m. - 9:35 a.m. C — 9:40 a.m. - 10:25 a.m. D — 10:30 a.m. - 11:15 a.m. Convocation — 11:30 a.m. - 12:55 p.m. E — 1 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. F — 1:50 p.m. - 2:35 p.m. G — 2:40 p.m. - 3:25 p.m. H — 3:30 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. I — 4:20 p.m. - 5:05 p.m. J —— 5:10 p.m. - 5:55 p.m. - How much longer do you think the human race Maryland, — “I don’t know.” Leo Morozov, ’94 Ulyanovsk, Russia — “A couple more years OCR::/Vol_092/WLURG39_RTP_19930114/WLURG39_RTP_19930114_004.2.txt PAGE 4 The Ring-tum Pnl, January 1 4, 1993 IFEATURES By JOYCE BAUTISTA Phi Features Editor Her art hits the viewer over the head with a strong blow of bright colors. “My art does not take my en- erg)’/’ nationally known artist Dorothy Gillespie said, speaking at Monday’ s opening of her sculp- ture exhibit in duPont Hall “It gives me energy.” Head of the Department of Art Pamela Simpson sees Gillespie’s energy in her sculptures. “When you look at her work you see vitality and optimism,” Simpson said. Gillespie, anative of Roanoke, said Monday she never thought she would see the day when she would be talking to women stu- dents of W&L. Simpson said 72-year-old Gillespie has been an artist for over 50 years. Gillespie began working at a time when there was no such thing as a woman artist. “It’s an amazing thing to think that she was an artist back then,” Art imitates life Artist’s energy radiatesthrough work Simpson said. Simpson spent last weekend with the visiting Gillespie. “She has more energy than I do,” Simpson said. “I love the work,” Simpson said. “It’s beautiful, colorful and full of energy. I like them all.” Gillespie’s works hang in the permanent collections of Yale Uni- versity, the Guggenheim Museum, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and other nationally acclaimed museums and galleries. Simpson said Gillespie is the “one big name artist” the art de- partment brings to campus every year. “No matter what sophistica- tion,” Simpson said. “Everyone seems to respond to them [Gillespie’s artwork] in the same way.” Gillespie has been a board member for the Women’s Caucus for Art and Women in the Arts. Gillespie’s works, mostly enamel on aluminum, are abstract compo- sitions of twisting and curling rib- A bons, painted in brilliant colors and full of animated movement. This enamel on aluminum work is entitled “Ebony Sentlnel.” Gillespie’s enamel on aluminum sculptures convey a sense of move- ment and energy. On the left, “Color St0l'I"l'|" and on the right, “The Is- land." Photos by Mallory Meyers ‘:3 The Student ctivities ‘ Board pres en ts COUNSELORS WANTED for Camp Wayne, a co-ed children’s camp in Northeastern Pennsylvania. June 22 through August 20 Positions include: Tennis, Golf, Swim (W.S.I. preferred), Waterski, Sailing, Basketball, Volleyball, Softball, Soccer, Gymnastics, Dance/Cheerleading, Aerobics, Drama, Guitar, Nature/Camping, Batik, Sculpture, Ceramics, Painting, Silkscreen, Photography, Self-Defense, Other positions available. On campus interviews Thursday, February 4, 1993 For more Information, call 7 516-889-3217 or write 12 Allevard St., Lido Beach, NY 11561. Include your school phone number. Walls crumble Music proves stronger than any barrier ’ By KRISTA TAURINS Phi Contributing Writer Ukrainian , guest-conductor Alexei Gulyanitsky will direct theJan. l6con- cert of the University-Rockbridge Sym- phony Orchestra in his first American orchestra appearance. Gulyanitsky, chief conductor of the Armenian State Philharmonic Sym- phony Orchestra since 1966, holds the title of “People ’ s Artist of the Ukraine” and was more money. Up to the very last minute there was a possibility he wasn’t going to come. “But he’s here,” Kolman said. _ Finally they had to overcome 9: language barrier, since Gulyanitsky does not speak English. Gulyanitsky’s son, who speaks En- glish, was unable to come to W&L with his father, so Kolman had to find someone who could translate musical terms at orchestih rehearsals. The solution to this problem was Arkady Jeyfets, a awarded the professional violin- country’s coveted istlivinginNewport “Order of Honor.” News, VA, who Associate Pro- emigrated from the fessor of Music and USSR. director Barry The synagogue Kolman met thatsponsorsleyfets Gulyanitsky in and his family sent Yalta, Ukraine last hisresumeandtapes year when Kolman to all the orchestra! d i r e c t e d Gulyanitsky’s or- chestra. they could find in Virginia, including the University- p. t . Kolman said that ‘ Rockbridge Sym- getting Gulyanitsky - phony. to the United States Guzyamtsky J eyf ets audi- » was a two-year tioned for Kolman ’ struggle. and was selected as concertmaster for “It started with getting him a visa, which was four-month process,” said Kolman. “It’s very difficult to get foreign musicians here _ on visas. The US. gov- ernment since July 1 has riiade very strict requirements for mu- sicians in particular." After numerous calls to Russia and visits to a congress- man in Staunton, Kolman was able to get Gulyanitsky’ s visa. Meanwhile, Gulyanitsky was deal- ing with monetary problems in Yalta. “Hisorchestra, which was supposed to pay for the ticket, pulled out at the last minute,” said Kolman. Finally Gulyanitsky’s son went around to all the businessmen in Yalta, asking them for money, Kolman said. Then, the airfare went up after the first of the year, so he had to get some Saturday’s conceit, and translator dur- A in g rehearsals. Jan. 16 also marks the first anniver- sary of J eyfets ’ emigration to the United States. “Is good symbol,” says Jeyfets. Mozart’s “Eine Kleiiie Nachtmusik,” Mendelssohn’s “Italian Symphony” and a concerto by Hummel featur- ing Major John Brodie of the Vir- ginia Military Institute on the trumpet. The orchestra is composed of W&L students, local residents and profes- sional area musicians. The concert will take place in the Lenfest Center at 8 p.m. . Krista Taurins is a musician with the University -Rockbridge Symphony Orchestra. The night's repetoire includm. OCR::/Vol_092/WLURG39_RTP_19930114/WLURG39_RTP_19930114_005.2.txt 1 he Rlng-tum Phl, January 14, 1993 1. n~ FEATURES Colonnade Crossword ACROSS 1 3 1 HBPPY 5 Following 10 Colorless 14 Lounging attire 15 Lacking in sophistication 16 Vatican site 17 Singles 18 Utopian 19 Extremely bad 20.Warm greeting 22 Final dinner course 24 Historical penod 25 Fender mishaps I Debussy, Porter at i Lenfest JFrom the W&L News Office i Claude Debussy and Cole Porter are among the compos- ers whose work clarinetist Ri- chard Stoltzman will perform ! guesday, at8p.m.intheLenfest I i 25 Literary sketch ‘ entef_ FT: ' ' . . “I’m very pas- 30 Abounded Stohzman will also perform BYJEANNE BRIGGS Sionate about the 34 Copy. abbr. . . . . W . _ _ 35 Corn spike works by Olivier Messiaen, Phi Staff flier woods, and climbing 35 Perfume Johannes Brahms, Timothy '*‘—‘—i—‘ has given me great 37 Taxi . _ Greatbach, Clare Fischer, Dick K11-1(1:0110, 1001010, respect for the mom. 3? gggefégggg! HYman and Jimmy R°W1e5- in German and direc- 131115.” F0110 S_a1d- . 42 Representative Stoltzman is a graduate of 101- 0f the w&L our- Follodescnbeshis 44 Speck _ _ 0 Q)hio State University with a ing C101,, takes his mountaineering ac- jg igfilifg ©'§’i?3iI,i1?£"nZ§i.?5é?iS°"'°°" '"°‘ do‘-‘hie maJ°r 1“ muslc and math’ profession far Outside “Vines 35 mV°1V1n$ 3 48 Involved Last week’; answers: ematics. He earned a master of the classroom. modest degree ofdif- so Dish of greens 10 Chest or music degree at Yale Univer- F0110 Spends his ficulty. 52 °"“'“ drawers 5313’ While 5111(1)/illg with Keiih summers mountain- He said he climbs 53 Z:':,$ahn°g"e° X/,:?,?:,: Me, I Wilson and later worked toward climbing in the swiss mountains ranging so Swim 13 Leather sash ._ adoctoral degree with Kalmen A103, 00m1,1n1ng his f,0m 10,000 10 60 Enderwatler _l]\_Al:ln.g"pfOfiUCl ‘ . perman atColumbia_Univer— 10“, 0f 1110 German 14,000 feetin height, 61 Efifggéy ° 25 Szoffédegf V ‘ 311)“ A 10-year Pafilclpani 3‘ language with his in- where there is some 63 Poker stake 26 Clergyman .’ the Marlboro MUSIC FCSIIVBJ, ter-est in the 0utdo01-s_ Snow and ice but no 64 All-knowing 27 Picture he gained extensive chamber wh110 in 010 A103, V01-11001 fa00S_ 22 Sgaglishaped 28 a music experience there and sub— 110 011,005, studies the Follo said that he 57 Heavy meta; 29 Ha sequently became a founding 010015 and 11150015 10 generally stays inone 68 Doled out 31 Point of a story _ member of the noted ensemble 1110 sm0und1ng 0,0,1- place for a period of 69 P"°“°" gfé_'f'::haio':fe';‘ 1 QFASHI’ whlch made us debut Fonmemr and Speaks lime 39‘! makes (13)? DdWN 38 Flower essence in 1973. 1 h German with the na. excursions. ; groeper 39 flagged ‘ - ' ' o I ary u n ‘ rtS.mce dthen’ S1“? as nVe5- _ 1 He Sfald he chmbs 3 Biblical brother 40 Waited upon PC Orme 35350 °15‘W‘ m°_’° In addition to 310119 Or the H1031 4 Downward trend 43 Cuddled than a hundred Orchestras. In sharpening his lan- ‘ 1’ ‘ . part, which means 5 Enlivened together ' ‘ ‘ ' - ’ ,- s - 6 Lose color 45 Move to another adgmgm tg work as a récuahst gu.age Sk‘“.S' F0119 ‘ .. ’ . » .,,,.'. that he mus?‘ Cmrllcer-1 7 Four-in-hand country 53 Hood 57 Be aware of an. ° am. 6‘ m“5‘° 9° °m‘.°’* Said he believes his .__ 5 = ,._. . . . A traie 0“ W *3“ 5 ‘S 3 Get away by 47 Skiing race 54 Indian 58 Feminine suffix Q Jazz ‘mm and 3“ excluslve trips also help his , doing 81a11'llfneS- deceit 49 In the past 55 Space agency 59 Sly look RCA recording artist In 1936 teaching in other Follo approaching the summit of the Totano dl Rozes located “Climbing is very 9 Give in 51 Animated 56 Location 52 Tub he became the first wind player ways. In the Italian Alps. restorative. There is to be awarded the Avery Fisher “ [ M o u n t a i n - a certain amount of Prize, joining Such eminent re- climbing] develops in you a sense of ing, rock-climbing, biking, white—wa— solitude in the mountains,” he said. ' cipients as Richard Goode and concentration,”he said, “andit strength- ter canoeing and kayaking, as well as Follo, who has been climbing 10 Yo-Yo Ma. ens your will to environmental pro- years, said he has had only one acci- - widewhaiiedasdoinsfor oi» dent released by EC dance boord . . grams. the Clarinet What Rampal and Staeles and en1iV- He sald he chn.‘bS Follo said his time He said he was fortunate to have Galway have done for the flute, ens you, which is mountain 5 rang“; g in the Alps and in the been climbing with a group of friends 50 years ago in the Phi — Student officers and enlisted men with the Stoltzman has appeared as 3 irnportant in the Cascade Mountainson when it happened- Aim ’s School for S eciol Service who ottend the Fonc Dress boll :°1°i5‘ With ‘he New Y°’k Phil‘ °1a5Sr°°m-” :mm. 10’00.0 hm 1413000 the We?‘ °°a5‘ has °“' T"’° S““‘“‘e'S a3.°» F9”°f°“d“rin8 will riot be requlredpto weor costumes, as other FD otteiidonts will. . armonic, the Orchestra Of La Follo also eet In heig ll, W ere abled him to learnalot a descent from a climb in bad weather . - 1. R d- S _ . . ._ _ . . Ticketsforofficers and enlisted men are $3.50 eoch. Otherstudents Scala. the Ber In 3 10 Ym brings his experi there IS some snow and about the plants and and dislocated his shoulder. , ophony,theEnglis_hChamberOr- ence ‘and exper- . . 1 f animals in both areas. _ “_We had gotten through the most Vt/Iii be charged $4.40 each. _ . chestra and thePittsburgh Sym- use 1n the out- [Ce but no Vertlca aces. He compares what d1ff1cu1t pan, but easy ten-am can very FIVE YEOTS C90 ID the Phi - After months Of DYGDOYOTIOH ASSOCIOTG phony. doors to the (_)ut- _ he studied there to the often become treacherous,” Follo said. 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Ct VICTORY, from page 8 The Generals had one more chance this week to end the drought against an- other ODAC rival, the Hor- nets of Lynchburg. The Generals would trail at halftime and for the first few minutes of the second, then a 12-minute period would turn into the Bryan Watkins show and that would be all she wrote for the seven-game losing steak. The play in the first half was pretty sloppy at some points; there were a number of turnovers, ill-advised passes that wound up as steals, just lack-luster play. W&L trailed by three at the half, and according to Canfield, were lucky to do so. “If it wasn’t for our de- fense, we might have been down 10 or 20 at halftime." Bryan Watkins entered the second after sitting for all of the first and responded with an incredible drive-do- a-360-and-bank-it—off-the board-shot. It was the igni- tor the Generals were look- Photo by Jameson Eeonai, The Ringu Phi Matt Newton (with the ball) and Robert Miggins head down court to set-up the W&L offense against Mary Washington. Miggins has been on fire this season, shooting 66 percent from the floor. 3-point range and 16 points in all. He was W&L’s lead- ing scorer and didn’t see ac- tion for the first 22 minutes. “Bryan finally played the way he should,” Canfield said. “His drive was a form floor, the game was still up for grabs. Cummings, the 6-7 jun- ior transfer from VCU was on fire. The Hornets had a go-to guy and Cummings did all he could. first win since Nov. 28. ' “Pmhappyforthe guys,” Canfield said, “this will help them a little bit. “I'm hoping this some- thing more than a win,” he said. “Maybe this is the step ing for. of leadership; and then he In 19 minutes ofaotlon, we need to take.” _ _ It tied the score at 46 and sankthe three andthatpicked Cummings finished 34 W&L can savor their win the Generals never looked the team up.” points on 11-of-16shooting, for about 20 hours and then back. With hindsight it can be including 3-of-4 from 3- it’s back onto the court to Watkins finished his 12- said the Generals had the pointland,andsixrebounds. getreadyfor Randolph-Ma- minute stint going 6-for-6 game well inhand, but with But even his efforts could con, who visits W&L on from the floor, 4-for-4 from Anthony Cummings on the not deny the Generals their Saturday. & Fumlture Dealers For your extra pieces oi furniture 115 S. Main St., Lexington 463-2742 Reporters Ad Salesmen up your résumé The Fling-tum Phi wants help for winter term: Production Assistants The Phi uses Aldus PageMaker, Mi- crosoft Word, De|taGraph and Aldus Freehand. Proficiency in at least one of these programs is expected in the business world today! OCR::/Vol_092/WLURG39_RTP_19930114/WLURG39_RTP_19930114_008.2.txt Last Week: Bball-W&L 87,Lynchburg 77 (4-8) MSwim-W&L 137.5,Catholic 67.5(4-0) WSwim-W&L 143,Mary Bald. 93 (5-0) Wrestle-W&L 33,Davidson 18 (1-1) PAGE 8 making By MARK SAPPENFIELD Phi Staff Writer Last week it seemed as if head Washington and Lee wrestling coach Gary Franke felt akin to Atlas as he set out to bear the troubles of the W&L wrestling world on his back. His team’s youth, inexpe- rience and number all seemed to foretell of a year of certain doom. What a difference a week makes. ' The problems that existed one week ago are far from solved, but with a new recruit and a win, the Generals, for now, are world-beaters. W&L hosted Davidson College of North Carolina on Sunday, and gave them athor- ough drubbing, 33-18. W&L was faced with the prospect of competing with wrestlers at only six weight classes, but the wrestling gods looked down favorably upon coach Franke’s band, and gave four of the six victories. In addition, new recruit Matt McCollum offered his services for the remainder of the season at the previously uninhabited 190-pound weight class. Sophomore Kevin Batteh moved up to 177 pounds, and an injured Julian Montague found a new role on the team as he took a forfeit win for W&L (Davidson had no wres- tler at that weight). Batteh and McCollum were unable to win their matches. That didn’t stop Rob Sands, Eric Shirley, Adam Williams, Curt Futch, Owen Smith, and Lea Abercrombie from sweep- ing their weight classes. Shirley, Futch, and their talents Wrestling: bestof Sands Abercrombie each pinned their opponent at 134, 150 and 167 respectively. Futch pinned the same wrestler who had previously pinned him at the VMI Invita- tional before the winter holi- day. Sands remained the only undefeated W&L wrestler at 2-0 with a 8-2 win over his Davidson opponent. Franke said Davidson's in- ability to change their line-up helped the Generals’ execute their game plan. “Davidson had only nine people, so they couldn’t re- ally juggle their line-up,” Franke said. “We were able to watch ‘ wlilat was going on and change our line-up accordingly.” The Generals will get a chance to further test its new line-up combinations atatour- nament at Johns Hopkins this Saturday. Lebanon Valley will join W&L and the host team in the tournament. The Generals participated in the Lebanon Valley Tour- nament in ear1yDecembcr and finished a respectible 19th considering the rash of inju- ries and sickness the befell the team earlier this year.’ The team hopes to remain healthy as they face a run of four consecutive tournaments within the next month. S (J11: iaittg-tum Iflltt PORTS BASKETBALL, INDOOR TRACK, SWIMMING, WRESTLING Watkins ‘drives’ W&L to win ' Generals’ losing streak stops at seven with Hornets the victim By SEAN O’RotJRi<1-: Phi Sports Editor Last week I compared the sea- son the men’s basketball team was having to the Cyclone roller coaster. This week, I thought a cliche might be best able to capture the feeling of the tearn’s last three games, say, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”. But then again, a cliché is so, well, cliched. Then I thought of compari- sons to some professional bas- ketball teams that are having rough seasons. But I felt the Gen- erals deserved more credit than, let’s say, the Dallas Mavericks. (Sorry Maverick fans). Finally I came to the realiza- tion that the best way to explain the past week would be to let the three games do the talking. I mean, what better way is there to tell the tale of three to- tally different games than to tell the tales. FirstcameO1dDoniinionAth- letic Conferencepowerandmost-- hated foe, Roanoke College. The Maroons came to the Warner Center with a record of 7-2, 3-1 in the ODAC. A record that preceded them. Head coach Verne Canfield was well aware of Roanoke’s offensive punch, especially their frontline players. Canfield knew the team would need to play flaw- less basketball to win. Well, they really didn’t. The Generals actually came out strong, hanging with Roanoke for more than ten minutes of the first half. At one point the score was dead even, 25 apiece. Then the game got weird. It became a game of spurts. The Maroons would run off ten straight points; W&L would re- spond with five of their own, and so-on-and-so-forth. « The problem was Roanoke always seemed to have the larger rims and pulled away rriid-way through the second. Canfield could not explain why the game went as such. finish. ‘‘I really don’t have an expla- nation for it,” he said. “It was just a crazy kind of game.” From a purely statistical stand- point, the Maroons were the su- perior team. They outshot the Generals from the field, from outside the 3-point arc and from the charity stripe. But W&L played some inspired basketball in spurts and that is what kept in most of the game. “We played hard in spurts,” Canfield said, “I’ve got to give them that. Sooner or later that will pay off.” The Generals fell 90-73. Two days later, the Eagles of Mary Washington College came callingat the WarnerCenter.T'lie Eagles entered the game 2-4, with this being only the second game they played since Dec. 19. This was a strange and excit- ing contest right down to the fi- nal buzzer. Canfield has been trying des- perately to find combinations that would work together and pro- duce positive results. So he re- sorted to mass substitutions. He started five, then substituted five, then sent the original five back. He said it helped to instruct each group. “With this method I could tell all five what to do and give them instructions. It’s fine to do in the first half, but you want you best out there in the second.” The scheme might or might not have worked depending on who you talked to. The fact still remained, the Generals trailed after the first 20 minutes, 44-41. The deficitwas tough to swal- low for W&L because they had a definite height advantage but were being out-rebounded and had few offensive rebounds to their credit. Canfield said this caused the three—point deficit. “We did a good job on the defensive end, but we shot our- selves in the foot. We had 2-on- 1 and 3-on-2 opportunities and didn’t convert. “But we had almost no offen- sive rebounds and couldn’t get any second shots.” minute. With the score tied at 83-83 and 38 seconds left, Mary Wash- ington set up for one final shot to win or go to overtime. At the ten second mark the Eagles drive for the hoop, one shot is attempted and blocked by Robert Miggins. The Eagles get it back and attempt a “baby hook” from the left side of the basket with three M-n-ow Phi Staff Writer in an utterly dom i natin g Bombs fell on Iraq. Ross Perot chat- performance. ted with Larry King. The W&L swim The men teams won. Not much has changed this avenged last week. year’s defeat - _ The Washington and Lee men’s and to Catholic H h women’s aquatics drowned any sor- with a 137.5— 3 er rows of the year gone-by with victories 67.5 wipeout over Catholic University on Saturday in their first meets of 1993. Furthermore, the women sank Mary Baldwin Collegewednesdaynight with a 143-93 victory to improve to 5-0. The Generals won 13 of 14 events in the meet against MB. Senior Claire Dudley, sophomores Brandi Henderson and Susan Fisher, and freshman Rebekah Prince won three races each of CU, Saturday. Six different Gener- als came away with victories as the squad totaled nine wins in the meet’s eleven races. Freshmen were leaving wake all over the pool, as Justin Dardani won both the 500-yard freestyle and the 200-yard individual medley. Class- mates Craig Sears and Frank Darden each claimed a first and a second place Men’s head coach Page Remillard was cautious going into the meet in spite of W&L’s strong start this season (4-0). Some of his swimmers were com- ing off injuries and Remillard was concerned about some of the men who were unable to return to Lexing- ton early over vacation. He was hoping the team would not repeat last year’s performance when, he said, the Generals “did not respond” to Catholic’s challenge. Saturday, though, the Generals sim- plyblew Catholicoutofthepool,claim- ing individual wins in the 50, 100, 200 and 500-yard freestyles; the 200-yard backstroke, the 200-yard breaststoke and the 200-yard IM. W&L also took the 400—yard med- ley-relay and the top two spots in the 400—yard freestyle relay. The undefeated Generals will next swim against Buffalo State on Thurs- day in the Cy Twombly Pool, and then Saturday at Georgetown. The women will also be racing in those meets. After three meets in four days, women’s coach Kristin Jacobs expects her team to be pretty exhausted by Saturday. The afternoon competition at Georgetown will be even more diffi- cult for the women in that the Hoyas outnumber the Generals by 3-1. “By Saturday we’ll be pretty tired,” said Jacobs. “We’ll need'to race like we did against Catholic.” The W&L women won eight of the eleven races Saturday, but mustered only a 104-88 win due to their small ' This Week: Bball-R-MC 1/16 3pm;at E&H 1/20 Swim-Buffalo St. 1/14 7pm(M&W); at G’town 1/16 (M&W) 0 Wrestle-at Johns Hopkins Toumy 1/ 16 IT-Lynchburg Invit. (M&W) 1/16 seconds to go. Airball 1 straight defeat. W&L loses, 85-83. Canfield said afterwards that it is impossible ‘to gauge how -a team will respond to a loss like that. “No coach knows how a team will react to this. Everyone thought we ’d win, but we didn’t play with spirit and enthusiasm.” Generals’ swimmers are cruising into midseason form. size. Regardless, the women have shown that quality has counted morethanquan- tity by consistently taking the top spots M in nearly all of their events. Prince continued her outstanding frosh campaign with three victories over Catholic: the 500—yard free, 200- yard IM, and the 200-yard butterfly. In the 200-yard IM, Prince came within 0.2 seconds of Dudley’s school record. Dudley contributed two wins in the 200-yard breaststroke and 50-yard freestyle. Henderson chipped in with wins in the 100 and 200-yard freestyles. Fisher and freshman Jill Sheets finished sec- ond in two events. If both the Generals’ men and women can pull off a couple of victo- ries this weekend, the two squads will Photo by Jameson Leonardi, The Ring-tum Phi Forward Darren Johnson deposits two of his six points against Mary Washington on Monday. Ironically, it will be this same basket where the Ea the game-winning basket with no time left on the clock. The Generals hung tough, though. They took the lead and gave it back, took the lead and saw the Eagles take it back. It went like that until the final But, low and behold, the Eagles’ Scott Pate is on the other side to receive the gift, and his two-foot lay-up with no time left sent the Generals to their seventh JANUARY 14, 199. The losses hid the fact" that some of the Generals were put- ting up some decent numbers. Cam Dyer scored 16 against Roanoke and 19 against the Eagles. Mark Connelly pogted 17 and 10-point games respec- tively. But the Generals could never get all five guys on the court on the same page. * “A coach can’t make the chemistryforhistearn/’Canfield said. “The guys have to do giat on the court.” CI See VICTORY, page 7 be mid-way to undefeated seasons. With some of the other Generals t e a m s struggling, these two have given W&L fans afewthings to feel good about. Neither team can b e c o m e c o n t e ii t, h o w 9 v e r . Both are rather young in some places, so the middle of the season could‘ become a vital part of the season. With meets against Emory, Swarthmore and Johns Hopkins stfll to , come, the season is just starting. Henderson. We’ll make you look good! Come to us for all of your design needs. Ads, flyers, logos, résumés, faxes, and quick copies. PHONE: 463 - 1712 M Lee F iatgllugh Lee M.Miley iifiniimunis ~|3illlll?il| 125 W. NELSON ST. 0 LEXINGTON, VIRGINIA - ACROSS FROM THE POST OFFICE W&L Art 1870 Washington College Diploma signed “RE. 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