Soviets enjoy Seniors: A chance to speak out Wrestlers at top the U.S. of performance on coeducation

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WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSIT Y L EXINGTON, VIRGINIA VOLUME 88, NO. J.3 JANUARY 26, 1989

1 By f\.1arle Dunne 'ttudcnt seJtual harcJs\n1Cntf being a cauon of Women at the As.'lOCiation of Starr Reporter problem on th1' campus.·· s:ud Anecc An1encan Colleges as reported tn Mt:C'Iuud, A'o~1ate Dean of Student., "The Clas'iroom Climate for • .. m~tt!(llli' lum dt'HIIfllf('c/ I 11n~ for Minority and lntemauonal Af· Women." by Bernice R. Sandler, Th~ tht• dm ht• /o pmft.'\.\1)/ I cllkt'tl me 1t1 faar.. American Woman 1987-88. • 1lt•tp 11'1111 lum • u IVu\hmgum mul McCloud. the admini\Lrator who " We are on a par with other college u e fm~ttlr \twh m handll~ compl:unt' und conducl't tn· campu.~. especially of the same That remarK 1' un eM:crpt lrom a ve'ttigauons of~ of faculty to ~tu type." !>Did McCloud. who srud she is 1 letter to the edator m tha ~ i''uc of The dent hara.~\rnent , declined to g1ve ranlang W&L according to articles Ring-tum Ph1, and 11 andu.:atc' that SjX.'CJiic mfonnauon on the number or 'lhe hru. read on sexual hara.c;sment. ~x ual haru,!tn>ent ot Mudcrw. hy fa­ nature of any c~e~ of faculty to Mu· However, she pointed out that preva­ ' cult) i' OCI.u rring on the W&l cam­ dent hara.'tsmcnt at W&L. lence of llexunl harassn1em of ~tudents pu'> •·con!!dentiah ty '' the key word in by faculty io; difficult to determine. The Confidential Re' JC\\ Com- aJI of th1~ . We w1ll alway~ take anto " It's a very difficult thing to • nuttee ha' <:reared a JX'IiC) to h.mdle account the fact that thi1> IS a vel) evaluate bccauc;e there have been so w...e!. ol 'ttw.lent' hura\\11111 other 'ti1Jall campu., and af detail'> are given. many vicums- not JUSt women, but ' '>IUdcnt\. even without nan>e'> being included , homosexual men- who have experi· But la c.: uh) to \tudent hura'isrnent pc<>plc might be able to trace who i ~ enced it , and for vari~ ~shave amulvcd ... srud ~k'Cioud not talked to anyone about 11 So we· re fall' under the JUmdkuun ol the "ell ~ \\Omen. 'he~id ham"nlt!nt dad not occur pnm hi the • W&L admiOJ\Imtion. and the ad· Nauonal statiStic' 'how that a.' JUSt sort of gu~sing right now. •· said · 'Tha is not JUSt a female problem Accordmg to McCloud , complamt ., la\1 two )Car,, -.:tad McCinud . hut mma-.tmll ha'> created a poliq much a.'> 20 ro 30 percent of female McCloud It can involve two men, or 11 can in­ of facult) to '>tudem ham"nlCnt ha\c " the female \tudcnt' on c;ampu' to hear complamt't. !.tudent~ w1ll experience sexual While sexual harassment may ap­ volve two women, or a female facuhy been reponed w1thin thl lao;t two 'unlC of them huvc ren:hcd their loUJ " We have received mdaeatinn., that haro,,mcnt fmm faculty . according to pear to be a female phenomena, Me· member and a male !.tudent. We muo;t year\. See _, there 1\ the pcl\'IJbihty of I facult) to the ProJ bemg one- 1dcd." Ho~c"er. these report' dtl not nll.'an Plea.o,e I lara..,.., Page J

Adolfo Calero orority, sorority. • • talks on freedom By Christopher GibUn referring to the wd given to his coun­ Staff Reporter try during the past eight years. Calero questioned the productivity Adolfo Calero, a leader in the of the humanitarian aid being g~ven to Nicaraguan resistance against the the saying, " while the San­ Sandimstas, ~>poke last Wednesday dinistas are receiving all out aid from night to about 400 people in Lee Soviet Russia, Cuba and Libya, the Chapel. conlras are not receiving any aid lor Gllero· talk was the fifth in alienes we.tpon~ ... of lectures presented by Contact, a He saJd that when military a1d was student-financed orgaru.zation that br­ g1ven to the contra'>, " The Sandam'>ta.'> mgs pubhc figures to the W&L cam­ wanted to go to the negotiating table." pus. He added that 15,000 contru fighters ··A true fighter for freedom and were holding off more than 100,000 democracy. •' said Contact Co­ Sandinista • " until Feb. 3, 1988, ChaimlM John Roach a he introduc­ when aid ~ cut off again." He said ed the man who was forced out of his Congress approved m April 1988, country in 1982. humanitarian aJd that will last until Calero began his talk by saying that March 31, 1989 since 1978, the year the Sandinistas "That will not hold up to the 30 to began fighting for the communist 40 million doUars in milit.ary aid that cause, over 600,000 Nicaraguans i~> given to the Sa11

Thi~, weel the Ring-tum Pht chose to run a letter anonymou I)'. a policy The Pht usually avoid!-. However, an important opportumty arose and the Phi cho e to break its own code in order to make a statement.

The Ph1 does not encourage anon} mous letters for ~cve ral rca!ton!. First, anonymou leners are oflen htghly cnucal and m­ tlamatory and sometime filled with harsh accu auons that these C. 0 NVL NTI ON/11. might not normally be written were it not for the rna k of anonym­ WIS~M ity. If a writer wishes to be critical the writer must bear the conse­ quences of his or her actions. Second. The Phi is a medium of communication for the commum­ ty of Washington and Lee. An anonymous letter would not provide an ave nue for a member of the W&L community to respond . This letter was submitted to The Phi in late September, 1988. At the time The Phi chose not to run the letter because of its anonym­ Politics' less glamorous side revealed· Ity. After much consideration and more than enough encourage­ from th~ ground came a bubblin • Ron, wearing nothing but baggy the Reagam make me think of the ment from members of the administration not to print the letter. The MY VIEW crutk-oil thai is-blodc gold, etc. underwear. was trying lO fit hi lawn Beverly Hillbithes. Pht felt that the issue it presented could not be ignored. etc." mower into the U-HauJ truck and The two families have so much m It was the Beverly H11lbtU1e!. By Jon Sbar cussing at Nancy under his breath for common. I wru. M> m~pi red by the Sexual harrassmcnt on a college campu is a serious problem. Before I had time to change the having so many " damn dresses." scene that I decided to write a poem The Phi felt that Washington and Lee is not immune. We received channel I was too far into the plot. Nancy. who was wearing polyester about the transition in and out of the Since I missed Bush's inauguration shorts and a bandanna over her head, White House sung to the tunc of the some negative support from members of the administration who It was Friday, Jan. 20 at It :55 a.m. speech 1 decided to oover the less was arguing with the White House Beverly Hillbillies. didn 't want the "calm W&L seas" to be rocked . Since September, five minutes away from the Inaugural glamourous side of presidential landlord about getting their house de­ "I'm here to tell you 'bom a man • The Ph1 has realized that simply ignoring a problem won 't make it Address. I was about to write the politics-the relocation of an old posit back. named '1he Gipper '; before politic.t go away . even in quaint Lexington. greatest political commentary of my president. Nancy: Lt ten landlord, you're go­ he worked nights as a stripper. 111e11 life. I was ready. Yes reader, while George "Sex, ing to give me my deposit back. one day he was sleepn ' in the nude ·. My trusty journalist's tool lot, com­ drugs and rock n' roll" Bush was re­ The letter is an important pan of the story of exual haras ment Landlord: Sorry Mrs. Reagan, but and out ofth e closet pupped a real hip plete with pencils, paper and model ceiving medals and eating chocolale I'm gonna need it to oover the cost of dude Bush tluu is Vice President a at Washington and Lee. airplane glue was already open. Quiv­ mousse, our old friend Ronald Reagan that hole in the Oval Office. Republic011. ering with anticipation, I turned on the the --EJP was getting ready for big trip back Nancy: But that hole was there Next thing WJII klww Ron anti television expecting to hear the to California. As the reader has prob­ --NKW when we moved in, Outer must have George are drinking bur and then national anthem. Instead 1heard this: ably guessed, I happened to be at the dooeit. George said, 'Ron mol'e a'Wl) from ''I'm he~ to tdl you about a man White House for the sentimental As the Reagnns got everything here. California's tlr~ place you ought named Jed;poor mountaineer nt\'t'r departure of a man who has jw.t lost straightened out they jumped in the U­ to be, ' so Ron loaded up tire U-Hau/ kept his family fed, bur then one day his job. Haut and headed for California. Wat­ and moved to Beverly Hills that is All editorials appearing on the Editorial he MJS shooting at Somt! food and up Here's how the scene unfolded. ching them head West into the sunser presidemial pensions retiremem. ·' page which are not letters or My Views are Letters written by the editors of the Ring-tum Phi.

They do not necessarily reflect Geimer's view on Contact speakers opposed To the Editors: for the same thing that Cardinal Obando y Bravo, all; u ·~ tyranny. Eden Pastora, and Ronald Reagan tand for: Mr. Geimer, you're upset. You're upset that the opinions of the paper as a whole. I am writing in response to Professor Geimer's freedom. ~jmer from your letter that youilre will­ me and my generation, or rather, the "audience". sakle letter questioning CONTACT's choice of ing to bel~eve ~ lie that Daniel Onega and is not going to walk with you down the easy path. ~kers . Mr. Geimer is especially upser that Miguel d~ooto and Fidel Castro constantly tell. We are not a bunch of useful idiots. We will not Letters are welcomed and must be signed. CONTACT hires "criminals to come in and give It is the biggest tie of the 20th cemury: the doc­ follow your direction, and tum our backs to those lectures rei nforcing the arrogantly comfonable trine of Marxism. in need. We realize that tyranny. whether it come view of the world already held by most of the au­ Aldolfo Calero i a modem day Ben Franklin. from the left or the right, from Pinochet or dience. •• AJdolfo Calero· s presence in Lee Olapel He is in the United States, as Franklin was in Castro, from Sonm.a or Ortega, is wrong and can last week prOTTlp(S his letter. France, to ask for help in the fight against not beju tified. ft\.y jr-{fr:u-J f. ... lk ....n.yf'lt(.r (..J ~\J r 1\C.r~r- Well Professor Geimer, with all due respect, tyranny. We hould never forget that the french The Nicaraguan Resistance is fighting for (J)t_ J"to.J. J>e.U t:.•'lfr,~f~ / you're wrong. Mr. Calero is not a criminal helped us in our revolution. We should help the freedom and against tyranny. And freedom is (unless, of course, you take what the Sandinista Nicaraguans in theirs. something you and I have t.~ken into our lungs for regime espouses as truth). And the views of the And Mr. Geimer. do you really think that the so tong, that we can't even imagine what life audience, which are also my own, are many view 1 just tated is "comfonable"? Don't you would be without it. Dammit, Mr. Geimer, men things, but comfortable they are not. realize how easy it would be to swallow the token my age are dying down there; and they are dying 1 teamed a great deal last week about the tine? Major new papers lik:e the Washington Post for freedom . I would think that you could do a Nicaraguan Resistance and its leadership. I learn­ and other lounge-chair liberals gleefully chant, liuJe better than to write a cau~ti c letter proclaim­ ed that AJdolfo Calero i not the capitalist pig that " Give Peace A Chance!" . Ah, now THAT is ing Mr. Calero a criminal , and my views as you and other Sandinista supporters attempt to comfortable. But if these leftovers from the sixties ··arrogantly comfortable.'· paint him as. I learned that he is not a stooge for weren't so glassy-eyed in their vision, they would the Coca-Cola Company. AJdolfo Calero stands realize that peace without freedom isn't peace at Ray Welder '91

Dear Editors: Alger His!., Angela Davis, the brothers Berrigan, world already held by mo 1 of the audrence ... One " Hiring criminals''? Was a writer to the Ring­ and Sister McAllister? There 's a noble band of has to be so careful in picking and choosing one '<, film Plu1ast week really fretting about CON­ jailbirds/criminah.lmartyrs. No problem with favorite criminals. TACT's bringing "criminals" such as G. Gordon those worthies, though . because they'd never J.D. Futch Liddy and Adolfo Calero to W&L? How about reinforce ·'the arrogantly comfortable view of the Prof. of HiMory Dear Editor; ticular source of concern in American foreign pol­ On the other hand, Mr. Calero represcnl'o the This ill in response to Profe sor William S. icy since the fall of the Somoza government in only organized fighting force actively oppo..,ing GemM:r's letter of January 19, 1989 addressing 1979. In its place, Daniel Onega ha ~ erected an­ the Sandinistas. I do not believe fonncr P~rde nt CONTACT' recent ponsor hip of Adolfo other dictatorship which has succeeded in making Reagan's pronouncement of the Contra!> as 1hc Calero. Mr. Geimer que~tions " the wisdom of life even more miserable for the population. He moral equ1valen1 of the Foundrng father... Nor do that choice." Referring to Calero ru. a has broken his promises of democratic refonn. I dio;pute lhat the Contr~ have acted on occa"on , ... . "criminal," he sees little value in a lecture oppressed the Roman catholic Church, muzzled with shocking brutality. However. there i.., liulc to "reinforcing the arrogantly comfortable view of the mcdra, expropriated private properly. indicate thar such brutality ill l>Y'>tematic. unlike the world already held by rllO!.t of that audience. •' betrayed the non -Conununi~t members of the the damning evidence agatn\t Ortega's reg1mc He aS!terts that it would been " better for truth, for original Sandmi!>ta coalition. and ruthlessly The Contrns are a beuer alternative to a Staltnt\1 cducauon. and for ju uce af CONTACT had a.'ked o,ileoced hrs domestic opponentl>. He has armed police tare bent on expontng revolution. VJewet.l h1m to peak without charge. bur with the h1~ nation to the teeth with weapon more ap­ in a Ba'>markian manner. 11 '' m Amerrca·, inrere<,l undel"\tanding that the fat fee that w11l unfor­ propriate for lighung a conventional conflict, to suppon Calero's organization. Thu ~. it i ~ much tunately be paid Calero be diverted instead to help rather than a guenlla war (e.g .. rank!. and jet to our benelir thai the W&L community wa .. af­ the civilian victim~ of hi !> 'freedom lighters.'" lighters). IJ doc ~ not require a leap of imagination forded the opportunity 10 hear Calero\ insighto, Nt.WSSTAfl' I rcl!pectfutty disagree. It i~ entirely proper and 10 expect Onega to usc these weapons to follow even if rhcy conflict with 1hc view' of Mr. wrllt that Aldopho Calero '>peak at Wa.<, hmgton through on hill call\ for reg1onal revoluuon once Geimer Trl-F.dlton ...... Eilubdh Pv1liM and Lee. The root of N1caruaga's woes is not the the Contr~ have been elimtnated. h follow!. that llddllte.d Contras. but the sandlna'>ta'>. The Mrateg1c loca­ the Sandlnt\tao, repr~nt a 013JOr thi'C

• ditorlal ~Editor ...... Pamtll Ktlley l'lr1oonisU ...... SCtphtn tnar1m ...... Jtlf Woodhrnd New policy strikes blow to W&L athletics To the Edrtoro .. : courtS often otter no vacancie!t. on n1ce d..tys one n~em·, <~m.J l'tmrnbuuon, uut punr-.hcd Spc.ms can The Phy~rcal Educatton Depanment '!> dCCI\IOil can lind football or fnee game!> on the colon­ again be an rmportant and o,ucce~\ful a'pecl ol Bl SI\E STAff to grve varsrty athlete\ next year onl) one·lifth nade, overnowmg tenna'> coun ... group<> playing W&L rf the 1ncenuve to pan1c1pate m rhem ,., 10 · Buslnes1 M1881tr ...... C hristie Chtmplln credit for their participatron rather than the cur­ lacrosse, brke nder\, and runner' creru.ed The new polrcy w1 11 not 1ncrea..c mcen rent t\l.o-lifths was not made wrth the best rnter­ The department mu~t reah1e that more often uve e'"' of the vars1ty athlete!> and the statu' of than not var.,uy athlete~ partrcrpate rn the above The problem that McHenry mcnuon'> with the A"'klant BU! lnas M1nqu ...... 'rtd Turpin athleucs at W&L in mrnd . actr vities. MO'>l athlete~ do not become donnant 10 swunmer who took P.E. h fe~v rng has an ea\y Ad•mbln& MlnAJtr ...... Annt 0ySir1 Coach McHenry was quOted as saying that the the off-season. and the ellerci~e they ..,eck ~~ often sol ulion. Simply prohibrt an athlete from wking ('lrtulatlon Mana1tr ...... KariiiiMOll department is not · •... bemg farr to student\ ..... not the lollme all thetr 101ercollegiatc l!pon They the P.E. cour-.c comparable m hi' or her inter Tht R•na-tum f'tll h publlshrd t•rr> Thundl.t durlna thf uoc~trvNu.tt tchool )fir wrth the current pohC) because the athlete!> are not do not need "wrder vanety" in the fonn of an ad coltegrate spon Do llOI force the athlete to lllke an 11 ~ash logton ud 1M lnl>tnll)', wlqton, Vl'llnll. F1111clins rorTht Rln&·tum f'tll offered " .a wtde vanety of actiVItiC\ " d1tronaJ P E reqUirement exrra cour-.e ,_ prl1111rUy from Jld•m 11J llld trom 1 ponlon of lhf ltucknl lttl\ldn ret. Tht Ho\l.ever. the department writ \CC that th1-. 1s an AthletiC'> at W&L have taken the brunt of recent I hope that the admtni,trauon and Phy.,ical Edu· Pllbllcatlons Board tlms lht ehld editon •nd buslntW man-«tr, but Tht Rlna·tum f'tll lll<.'Orret.:l ob..ervauon 1f it witt only look around changes at thr ~ umversuy. a\ can be ..een b)' cauon Department w11l con'>!dcr the~ arguments I• lllhfr-.lsf lndqltndtnl. campu., on any given day. coaches' rccruurng fru'otrations. It I'> only natural l,tlltn to Ill< Editor and ubmiBIOib mu~tlll' In Tht Rlna•tum Phi otnce, Rooml08of before they Mrike another blow at mtercoltcgralc thr Sludtnl Ctnltr. by ~ p.m . Tllt'lday or lht IOffk lht) lrt toM run. Or Hnd lhtm 10 every afternoon. txuh gym!'t arc overcrowded thai 1he departmcnl wrshes to reas...en II'> rote '" athletic'>' \truggle to become pmnuncm agnm. I ht Rln~t ·tum f'tll, &\ 899. t ..nlngton, VA 14450 Thl Of\Oiptpl'r ob-u•t'\ tun"tnl wuh ba.,kctball pick-up game!>, mtramural com the "W&L experience " But decrea.,mg athletes· thUr1 dtOnihllll< of hlll'l1nd ~tnit). pcutmn i'> exteru.ive, the ..quru.h and racquetball P E credit i-. not the way to comlxtt the depart Jt,hnny Sarber '89 NEWS The Ring-tum Phi, January 28, 1989 3 ------~Sexual h.ar~ment ~~ not limned to ''I thml; one of the reason., \loC ~an' t the under~raduate chool. a1d What constitutes sexual harassment? get a ~~ p on ho"' prevalent 1t I' there Harass Schrocr·La.mont, noung l~ud~nh an: so many more fear:, in\olved.'' While this broad definitiOn would Some ewnples of thi behavior: have been abu\Cd by both peers and said McCloud. ~definition of 5eltual harassment profe,sors in the current faculty handbook and seem 10 include all in.~ ppropuue behavior, researchers have found that • professors tend to make more eye "Some ~-e thi' U!> one of the woN University cutalog reads a\ follows: In addition to the grnde level of the faculty may treat female t.tudents contact Wlth men than women (continued from page 1) eli.lmplc., of )cxual haras.,ment ind1viduaJ 'tudent, McCloud said the "Unw~lcome u .tunl ad~'Oilr,s, rt· differently than male studenL'i m very • professor tend to be more atten­ bccau..c the Mudcnt ;, m a posiuon th year and therefure feel n lmle more d1ve~ity of :.tudents· "some are go· !>ubtle, seemingly triv!al way~ . tive. through gestures and body lan· when! they arc looking up to that fa· fiii'SI\ for Sl'~ llill fin'tlrs, and Ollttr conftdent in coming torward." ing to be more wilhng to make a St!XU/1/ Roberta Hall and Bernice R guage, while men are speaking than culty member II\ a leader, a... a role vtrbol or physical conduct ()fa Anne C. Schroer-Lamon! , A'..oci· report than others"- and the lllCrcase IJOillrt ronstitltf' .lt'Xua/ lwru.ssmtnJ Sandler identified over 30 ways in wh1le women are '>Oil'le()OC who i~ there for ate Dean of Students, agreed. notmg 10 the number or women at W&L may wh1ch faculty treat females differently the J'llii'J)me uf helping them make ed· ~~~~" • professor!> interrupt women that Junior and senior women Mudent:. have influence on lhe dec:is1on to and outlined those behaviors in their students more often than men students UOltional deci ion'i in the cta... !>room. I) submiwon to such conduct is tend 10 be more ~ure m their social report a oomplamt. hut alr,o helping them make v tt<~l dec1 · mod' tllhtr t.tplintf.v nr mtpllettly a paper, " The Classroom Climate: A • female students are noe called lives than freshmen and <;Optl(lmorc ttnn of C'(Jtu/itum of an uuih'ldual 's Chilly One for Women?" upon as often as male qudents Victnll!l have also exp~ con­ ~ion <; in their everyday live,," ,he tudents and are therefore more confi· said. tducatiofkJI or tmplo.wnent tldiiWtCl'· ' 'Some of the behaviors observed in • male tudent!> are "coached" to dent m reportmg harassment- be 11 cern that hamwnent docs not happen ~Ill,' than the study are so small that they might explain their answers more student to tudent or faculty to 'IIU· to other students 10 the1r dcci~ion to "Part of the healing procc's can 2) subnussmn to or rrJt'c·tiOfl ofsud 1 be considered triVIal. They do not female tudents dent. report har'a!lsrncnt. said McCloud. C'Ofuluct by an u~tln:it.IJwl is used as tht happen in every class, nor do they • prof~rs ~pond to male com­ sometunes con.,i 1 of bemg removed "Freshmen and <;ophomores are ''The victims who have talked w1th ba.\IS for ucuc.knuc or tmploymtnJ happen all the time, and as isolated in· ments more extensively than female fmm the \Wtu' of victim to the .. tatu still scared . ~yare under the belief me. whether it's been faculty to tu· d«tStOfU thnl cidents, they may have httle effect comments . of being m control uf thc1r own afftnmg individual: or that somehow their social lives will be dent or whether it's been tudent to 3) Such conduct luu tht purpo t of But when they occur repeatedly. the1r ~ behaviors, combined with lt v~.·' sa1d McCloud. completely ruined if they file charg~ tudent. most or them have exp~ substantial/} 1~ttll an tn· cumulative effect can damage remarks that disparage women or imtifmnJ< or if they talk, o;o they endure quite a COI'ICems about ·nus has happened to divulual 's academic or worlc peifor­ women's self-confidence inhibit their make stereotypical comments or jokes The procedu~ for fihng a com­ bit of quiet agony. or hare it onJy me. I don't want this to happen to ...o plaint are designed to help a "tudcnt matiCt or <.'rt'llling llll imimidatmg, learning and classroom parucipation, about women, are part of what is corn­ Wlth one another. or don't do anything meone else, ... she said. take control of their situatton, \lohether hoslllt. or nfft'tJStve tducauonal or and lower their academic and career ing to be called "gender· untJI sometimes a year or two years aspirations. •• harassment." or noc they decide to make a fonT!Oll tmplovmem enwnmmtm. '' after a very -;erious event," <>aid Faculty to student sexual harnss· complaint. Schroer-Lamont ment is different than other types of How to file a faculty sexual harassment complaint harassment in that a faculty member i And while thc\e procedure!> only lnf01 mal Pha!tc which will be held on file at the of the University to discuss the m a position of power over the stu· recently were developed, W&L doc!> Jn some case!>, nothing can be done dent, said McCloud. Associate Dean •s office. complaint. about an event that occurred more seem to be logging in handling the Complatnt-; ·hould be brought 4. The Associate Dean will at· 6. At the President's discretion, than a year ago. "It's too late," said l!oSUC Of SCXUallulms!omcnt. Student to sll.Jdent harassment may to the Associate Dean of Studen~ tempt to fmd a resolution through an ad-hoc committee will review Schroer- Lamont. " Where it's not too for Mmonty and lntemationaJ Af­ infonnal mediation between the the case and conduct further in­ be as serious or tend to be more According to Schroer-l.amont , late is if we're hearing the same name ·'violent, " said McCloud, but " from fairs (cum:ntJy held by Anece student and the faculty member. If vestigation, if necessary. The "Other schools that went coed 15 or for the second time, thu'd time, or a layman's perspective" student sex­ McCloud), who disc~ the com­ a resolution is agreed upon , no accused faculty member shall be founh time, whether that':, a faculty 20 years ago d1dn't really bcgm deal· ual haras!>ment by facuhy appears to mg with these i ues unul they had plaint wtth the student and explore further action will be taken and the allowed to resent evidence and give person or a member of the ~tudent possible solutions. tile of the case will be held in the rebuttaJ testimony before this be a more •' traumatic emotional expe· been oo-ed for 12 or 15 years. Some body." rience." 2. If the Mudent decu:lc\ to file a Associate Dean's office. committee. are really just now dealing with 11 " complaint, they will fill out a Fonnal Phase 7. The President, after hearing wntten fonn d~ribmg the event. the report of the ad·hoc comrruttee, If the rudent does not w1sh to take 5. If no resolution i reached may take whatever action he deems further actJon, the wntten report through mediation. the Associate appropriate. Any disciplinary ac· will be held on file at the A'>M>Ciate Dean will make an in-depth in· tion will remain, to the extent Deatfs office vestigation of the incident. which possible, confidential. 3. If the rudem d~ wt.,h 10 may include interviewing 8. AU reports and investigative take further action, the Associate wimesses and examirung physical materials will remain confidential Dean will interv~ew the accused evidence. The Associate Dean will and subject to disc l~ure upon au- faculty member may file a written prepare a written report of the fin· thorization of the President. report or statement or the incident, dings and meet with the President Source: Temp procedures .... Historical calender of sexual harassment policies at W and L 1972 • Title TX of the 1972 Edu· Education reaffirmed its jurisdic­ onJy inappropriate behavior in ed· cation Amendments states as tion over sexual harassment com­ ucationaJ institutions; it is against follows : plaints under Title IX. the law. •· ''No pcrM>n in the United States 1984 • W&L Board of Trustees Oct. l988 • Procedures for shall , on the basis of sex, be ex­ vote that the school will become claims of sexual harassment of cluded lrom participauon in, or be coeducational. students by faculty are developed denied the benefi~ of, or be ub­ by the Associate Dean of Students I 985 • First coeducational class Jected to discrimination under any for Minority and Foreign Student matriculates. education program or activity re­ Affairs. ceiving Federal financial FalJ 1987 • Statement on sexual Sources: Sexual Harassment assistance ·' harassment is added to the faculty Statement, Faculty Handbook handbook. defining sexual harass· Temporary Procedures for Claims 1981 • The Office for C1vil ment and asserting, under Title IX, of Sexual Harassment ... from Rtghts or the u.s. Department of "sexual harassment is, thus, not '·,· Anece McCloud.

This concept was tested and proven this past fall. when Professor Geimer in his editorial suggests that the Con· carefully thought through, ba'ied upon the belief that Mr. the Contact Committee ponsored engagements with tact Committee should first determine the likely consen­ Calero would offer the student body and the W&L com· CONTACT Senator Robb, a debate between the Chairmen of the sus of the probable audience, and then tum 180 degrees munity, an opportunity to acqture first hand. the perspec· Virginia Republican and Democratic Parties, assisted the in the opposite direction to 1dentify a speaker. I respect­ live of one credible insider representing one side of the debate between Rep. Olin and challenger Judd, while fully disagree, for this is exactly how past comminees Contra issue. I reject Professor Geimer', view that the W also sponsoring a discussion by Mr. Rideout, of the selected such speakers a'i Dr. Timothy Leary. & L conununity to which Contact serves tw.. an In regard to the honororia paid to Mr. Calero, it was "arrogantly comfortable view of the world." On the con· (conllnued from page 2) ABA. Only one of the Fall Contact speakers was paid our primary goal honoraria, and that was for Mr. Kirk, which was divided modest in comparison to the honoraria paid in the past for trary. it is because this community does 110( have such an for Contact '88-'89 was to attract diverse and qualified by three groups. less qualified and l ~s capable speakers. Professor ideologically blindfolded view of the world that it is will· speaker-b. produce panel discussions and debates, assist This commi ttee, ldso recogni7.es the reality that in Geimer also implied trult the honoraria paid to Mr. ing to take the opportunity to rcaffim1 or denounce their with symposia, and for the first time attempt to coor­ some circumstances we will need to utilize honoraria to Calero will be used by the "freedom fighters·· to hann support or opposition for the Contra movement, through dinate efforts with other groups on campus, including the attract the best speakers, due to the fact that many in our Nicaraguan civilians, and thus ContaCt hould have di· such public lectures. law school. This Iauer concept has all ready proven itself society fo llow the motto " there is no such thing as a free vcrted these monies to assi 1 civilian victims of the Discussion over the proper and efficient operation of lunch." Regardless, Contact will endeavor to ftrst utiJize "freedom fighters." First, Contact is not authorized to Contact is welcomed and encouraged. however. analysis valuable in bringing 10 both campuses Mr. Russell Kirk, wh1ch was an cffon of the Contact Committee, the W&L contacts in searching for speakers, and attempc to spend its budget in that manner, and further I believe that or critici m of the committee's functioning should be Tucker Law Forum, and the Federalist Society. bring them 10 campus at the least expense. it is more reasonable to believe that Mr. Calero will devoid of partisan political rhetoric, and concentrate on In addition, we also rated to the Executive Comrrunee Contact has an open door policy to any srudent, probably use these momes in order regain popular sup­ the facts. Finally, I only wi h that Prof~r Geimer. a that it was a primary goal of Contact to greatly improve member of the faculty or admini tration who has a sug­ port in this country for the Control Movement . person very well-educated on the i!>Sue of Nicaragua and the variety and quality of services provided to the student gestion regarding an i sue or peaker that they believe Professor Getmer also questions the wisdom of selec· its civil war, would have requested the opportunity to would provide valuable discourse and public debate in ting Mr. Calero a Contact lecturer, due primarily to respond 10 Mr. Calero· add~ . Or in the alternative, body. while attemptmg 10 curb the reliance upon speak­ a oppo the the ing agent!. or agencies and thus reduce the COlli of bring­ this community. Professor Geimer, received a similar his very strong ition to Contra Movement. of exercised hi right to have used question period at the ing speakers to cnmpll!o. Further, it has also been this invitation from Contact this past semester, in a open which Mr. Calero i a leader. Professor Geimer also end of the Calero discussion, to submit into the market conunillecs' belief that it is functionally possible to bri ng letter that we sent to all members of the faculty and ad­ uggested that Contat.'t would have better served " truth, place of ideas his perspective or Ull) very IIIIJ)Urldlll very qualified and di tinguished speakers to campus by ministration, encouraging thei r participation and in· education and ju tice," if we had chosen a person to issue. relying upon and utili7ing student, faculty , and alumni volvement. It is unfortunate that Professor Geimer has speak, who was more closely aligned politically with "contacts" in order to attract individuals for little or no not accepted that invitation, rather choosing dema· himself, which is a matter of pcrM>nal opinion. John M. Falk '86C '90L honoraria gogue">: on the editorial page. The selection of Mr. Calero. wa:. a decillion that was Vice-Chainnan, Contact Conuniuec

!Interviews by Sandi Dudley I KBACK !Photos by JuLee Messerlch l

How would you feel if someone handed you a Dating Contract?

Lee Lewis, '91 , Utlle Rock, AR Robert Hole) '89, b:\inJ.,rtOn, VA Rowan Taylor, '89, Portland, OR ~y Patl1l0l"e, '91, FisbkiJI, NY Beth Stutzmann, '90, Port Wash· - I think you \\OUid be hard pro.!'IMXI - FJther \\UY you can't ~o \\fling. I'll - Maners on ~hether or not 1 wJ.nted -That's ndiculous! I would pay for l~on, NY - I would probably laugh to find any girl., around here ttl do e1ther get un e~ccllcnt meal. or an ex­ to sleep w1th her and ifbreakJast ts in · the date. at him. cellent rneal. eluded. that. The Ring-tum Phi, January 26, 1989 4 New Soviet policies put to test General Notes Hope and Glory There's more The W&:l. l1lm &~e;1cty '"II for your life B) Brooke Jarabek <.how Hof>t wul G/or)~Englurxl, Swff Reporter 1987) Frid.t) and ~turd.!\ . Jan 27 Si.•.tr,, Rtl\:hud .1nd Co. 1 'flO"· and 28. at 8 p m 10 C'la,Mumn A -.tmng a p;ml congrc,,lonal intern· When the dean~ fiN infonned Nona of lew• ~ Hall Adm•ss1on i" frc~· . slup pwgmm lot joumalism and t-.h:hcdh\h\ •II and her d~smatc!o 10 D1roctt:d by John Boomun, the nw'' cummunic..~.ttions Mudenb the ~l\ 1et Union that it wa<, ~~1ble film '" one of lllll\t popular foreign trnm Feb. 1 thruugh April 30. h' " It\\~ study m Amenca, 'he -.aid, films in the U S 10 recent )'1!41~">. 19tX), Aprli~.ttiu n , lclr nomina· lind uf a joke." He also direct~'rc in­ "Everyone wa\ laughing We took Emerald For,·.H and l~\wltb111 . In lonnatlllll t:ull Juhu, Dickens at the t~t a... a way to tease the teacher," Hupe OJUI Glory. he PJ)' hum.tge 1202)7J7 4'l an occJ.l>IOn lnr longer thought II was andcom:dy. skiing plus a joke. An Academy A'-"<~rd Otlllllnce Her arrh al at Washington and Lee for Se:,t Pictu re. the lilm -.tar' l:ln ah,ng with Va'lly Kharik and Bannen and Sar.th ~hie, , kayaking in the Vla<.hm1r Kul) ulun J!o the direct re ult otlhc Sov1et Uruon·~ new pohc1~ ol pool GI;N~t and Perestroika. "I"hh 1s the fiN year that Sov1et students are 'Ole Ouung Club IS !>pun.-.oring a Ploolo b): Cll.l')l8at'Mtl'lllt Rlq-uam 1'111 Brothers .&!lowed to Mudy 10 Amenca and lll''' ~c>u ntr) 'l.ung trip to We!>t G~i- Va">ily Kharlk, ona Mchl>dli.,hvili, and Vladimir Kulyukin of the So\ let Union. Au~rican \tudcn~ arc penruued to The Gemlall depanmcnt " spon V1rgmiu durin!!- the February '>ttkly in the Soviet Umon. soring 71w BrothctJ Kmw11wm• hr..:.1k. lntl.!rc~ h.. 't! l>ludent' should fhcse three studen~ are promoting family until she came to America. She His courses at W&L include Soviet Mchetllbhvih rlan-. to be a jour­ (USSR. 1968. dir./M:rccnwruer ;ttll.:nd thl.' nrgaml'lUOnal meeting better unden,umdtng between the two said, " There is wo much in· politics, pure mathematics (functional nuli,t . She a~'umcd the authoritie at lvan Pyriev, from the novel b) 1m the tnp on 1 uc-. Jan. 31 at 5 \:Uiture:. through the1r vi it here. dividualism. lt 's hard to be S(l Ill· analysi,). opti c~. asymptotics methods Middlebury assigned her to W&L Fyodor Dosioyev~kly. m Rus'>iun p.m. m Baker 106 None of the three expressed any dependent. " in mathematics and tensor analysis. because of its jOUrnalism departrreot. with English .,ubtith.:~) at 7:30 p m In a1.khtum. 1h ~ dub continu~ to .m1mo~ay toward the United States But she said he lik~ campu hfc He ha!> submitted articles to the Jour­ She took only two years of English on Friday and Saturday Jan. 27 28 !opon'llr l.ayakmg in'>truction Mon· before arriving. Nor do they have because it has Jtiven her the chance to naJ of Math Phy ics nt Duke Univer- about four years ago; thus, language in Room 203, Reid HaJI. d..t) cvcnmg' from 6-7 in the old much cnuctsm of the U.S. now that be free to elUUTUne he~lf and lty. provided a large bamer for her. The Grcmd lnqw~itor ~g n'W!nt un ponl m the gym No experience i'l they are here. others-to ~t her hnu~ Although he misses the Lenin The people of her native republic a separate reel will be l>hown OCI..'C,\Jr)'. •Amenca is upposed to be so The students had to pal>~ t to study. climate in the country has changed . ·'Too many people are ready to accep torate of the Nicaraguan Democratic SAB's first Bingo Night Kulyuk.in studies foreign languages at People are not afraid of <;peaking their for Nicaragua what they arc not will­ force, where he served as president the Moscow Institute of F01.::ign Lan­ minds ... ing to accept for themselves.'· and commander in chief. ln 1985, he attracts more than 300 guagell and Khank IS a mathematical Kharik, who wa~ bom Ill Bul.ovina Calero, born in 1931 and educated joule major at Moscow State Uni­ located in southwe!>t Ukraine. learned sn the Umted State.-.. received his Nicaraguan Opposition, a position he \Cf'>ll}'. four languag as a youth, none of undergraduate degree m busi~ ad­ held until 1987. when he resigned to ~l.ln l! Huttar.tnJ, u th1rd- year law Mchedh-.hv•h . \\hc.'l IS a journalism which was Engh h H i~ only experi· mini~tration from the University of serve on the Directorate of the By Genienne Mongno '>tudcnt lmm Fa1rpon. N.Y. \~tudcnt at a umvers1ty in Georgia, ence wuh English pnor to his amval Notre Dame and did graduate work in As embly of the N1caraguan Staff Reporter VCR. and J Wa}n.: Burn... a jUiliOr U S.S.R , experienced some culture in Amenca was through \\ riuen trarb· industriaJ adminLc;tration at Syracuse Resistance. There he represents the lrnm l yfl('hhurg Va • \\On a Ninten­ -.hock. She had always lived with her lations of scientific matenal. Unjver~ity. conservative political current. dn game Four Washmgton and Lee lllcn: \\ere ,tl \t> nuntemus other students \\On b•g pn1e~ and ""'r ~ -.nuller pr11e-. 1ndudmg Fancy Ores!> others just had fun at the Student Ac· PJc l.ag"~ and nl(l\ ie f"b."'e8, sa1d Plans for hotel/conference center underway tivities Board's Bingo night la'>t Fn Fr.tnkum. day, according to S.A. B. V1cc The 1dcn lur Bmgo ni)!ht belonged DDA hopes to promote tourism and economic growth in Lexington chainnan Charle.., Frankum to S.A.B member Michael Ap­ Don Schaeffer. a cnior from Lex· plebaum and it '"'L" organized by By Carrie Davis becau~ of il'> proximity to Wa!>hmg­ 150 rooms and banquet facilitie!> for from the Midwest, will also encourage ington, Ky .. won a three-day cnsi'c hl frnnl..um . StatT Reporter ton. D.C. and other large c itie ~ about 300 people. Parking facilities Midwestern firms to look to Lex­ the Bahamas; Chri!. Boone, a sopho Frankum -..tic.l ~.A.B wa!. en­ throughout the Southea:,t. She uddcd Will be constucted. ington . more from Lufkin. Texas, won a scv courugl.'d l.v the largl' turnout and Plans for the conversion of the Old that the quaint downtown area make~ Herrick hopes the new conference en-day trip to Cancun, Mex1co,; ··~:~,oke nholll c\cn" tor the ni~ht. M,1in St. Mall to a hotel-conference Lexington an auractive place to hring center will promote tourism and Currently. Lexington has no means economic growth in downtown Lex­ for holding business conferences. Ac· ~:e nter continue but are not definite. spouse · and children. ington. cording to Herrick, the larger hotels Valley True Value Hardware .t~cordi ng to Dianne Herrick. cx­ " We feel that Lexington is a des· ccutJvc director of the Lexington tination for touri ts and we would like Hernck said the completion of do not provide the elegance needed to attrdct fimll>. There is also a lack of Dow ntown Development Association. to have the kind of facilities for con­ Interstate 64 through West Virginia. The plan calls for the city to work ferences, especially with the two uni­ which has eased travel to Virginia space for dining. w1th the developer, Douglas J. versi t ie~ here ," Herrick told 77r~ Nodine, of Greensboro, N.C., by ob­ Richmond 1ime:.·Di:J[Hltdr in a May Right Jo taming a $1 .5 million federal urban 10, 1988. an1cle. ~('~ de' elopment grant to provide partial ''Tile two schoob m Lexmgson Hardware, Paint & Related Items linancmg. Local investors are also be· have a lot of alumni upport. We feel mg. -.ought. that many of them would like to come " It 1s well known that Lexington back here for conferences and bring net.'t!!- more hotel pace.'' Herrick their families,'' she Slud. The hotel· Hamric & Sheridan, Jewelers ..a1d " But a hotel can not survive on conference center would prov1dc Robby Jones the e1ght or 10 big college weekends a facilities for &mall-to mid·'li7.cd con­ 703/463-2022 yc.tr." ferences for firms seeking a moderate· Herrick said Lexington would make ly priced, quaJity hotel. Standard 10% Discount 11 W. Nelson St. an attructivc small conference center The proposed hotel include!. 100 to With Student I.D. Lexington, Va. 24450 Country V Fare STUDY FOR ONE YEAR OR FOR ONE ON T WO TERMS IN COUNTRY C RAFTS 8c ANTIQUES

KAREN A NOELl 4 E WASHINGTON ST 703/ 463-2088 LEXINGTON, VA 24450

Jt!stDownTheRoad. Sc-\M'.U t'f>l ...lt<">C'll Oxford Unl\~~ 1 )' h.lv<' lnvllrd Otr Wo~."' lngtl'fllriCrmatkllwl S4ud1C'5CC'nl~ ''I U''UCtlllll tid IJU•lhllfG -.!UIIrlll~ Cn SIUd\ lor 1>11<· )'t'oV IJI' fill' ltllf' fJf ClliO ll"nll' Lov.M' Jun_.,. Another Prominent Institute ..t. n u\ 1• rnjuln d and graduatt ~11d1 IUvalLlblr . Sludrn~ ollt' dtrn tlv C"nn~lrd n t~r<'1,11rlt" uul n~~·l•r tr.m...-rtpuo lrrom thdr Oodord c·ollrgr thl~ 11 N()J" pn>jtr~m c-ondtl<'ltd 1Jy" US C'CII For Higher Learning IC'I!• tn Odurd A. 'lpt('l.i.l st.mlll('r OC"'IIIoll '' dlrN 11'11 b1 WJ!ie.' Enter our lip synch contest, Rock Alike, and help raise money to fight INTERN IN multiple sclerosis. WASHINGTON, LONDON The most popular performance on campus raises the most money and qualifies for a chance to appear hveon MTV. .. Contact vour SAMS campus chairperson or call 1-800-I-BUST-MS

WISC all<'"~ tnternslup. .. ub ('00.:.,... wtth 1~ WhltC' llo·.- wllh c~ ~aa md topartic1pate. Help SAss~­ ""llh lhlnlt l;mkl.. C."cmment ~ JoumalLMn c~ ~"' I.IUChl b) !Ot'f\101' ltvrl p ... mnlf'nl us short circuit MS . s=s::= ••tk'bl• who atf' alJD ach ~\lotm team had an up and wrc.,thng coach Gal) Franke on rna.,tertul as al\loa)''· \loOn the 190- down couple of Oa)!> thi., paM week· WcdneM!ay afternoon wa-. tu talk to u pnund IItie Sophomore Larl) Ptlkcy end nn tts trip to Baltimore and wa.,h· -.ccmmgly content man. Ht -. ~uad h.td (10·4 a' of Thur..Ua)) and fine mgton . ..J, JUSt fini..,hed fifth m the mne te.un fre,hman Peer Soderberg at 158 both The Gcnerab laced the of thctr "'etght cla\'14.!!1. Hoyus on Saturday afternoc:m at le~., mere pmnt, and, more imponantly, it but dtd not capture the champton\htp. than lull ~trength ao, 'Ome of the key ;: wm. perfonmng to nearly the top of tl!t Senior Manoli Loupa'>l>i w.t., thtrd 10 members of the team were fighting il · •• potential Ho"'ever, Wednesday night the 177 pound dtvi\1<10, and ~pho­ lnc .. -.cs Oe<,pttc thJs fa~;tor and the dtd not bnng such good cheer a't morc 8111 Avery carne in luunh at tlun} ptllnt'> W&l .. p visnmg Virgm10 Tech rudely treated 150 alter the d1v10g \:Ompcllllnn. the CA!n II) \\ l'alrkk H••h \1 lrl Fr.tnke ~id that all five wre..,tler'> tb ho..ts. winnmg the dual meet 39 Senior Richard Redfoot eems in complete control of his first-round opponent in at- craJo.. \loCnt on to ~in the dual ~-et '•. \loho plat-ed dtd \\.Cil, emphasiL10g 12'i 95 - II urday's W&L Invitational. .. FtN, thegood new . Saturday\ lif that, ··we wre!>tlcd to the top of our Inc Genemls were sparked by th·placc fini!>h wa!> made even more potential in the cla.,..es where we plac· W&L -,cheduled the match against hoped that perhap.., the meet "could Redfoot. once again \\.restlin~ utter wong performances from both remarkable by the fact that the Gen­ ed." He wa.s "not surpn..OO" that Tech. a Dtvtsion I ..chool. becau-.c the help prepare u' down the rood " the match had ulr~td) hccn tb:tdt:d. Jell Bercaw and Davtd 01-...>n •, eral., did not e' is to Predu.:tably. after a pin by Ptlkey wa' 'pcctalular He dmnmatcd h1 -. 'Bercaw i., bep.mmng to S"-tm hke I ~~- in three wctght classes. In fact , 11 did. saying that they had !thOW11 the \Chcdulc m-state schoob. While evened the 'core at btx apiece. Tech \ opponent from begmnmg to enJ. l..mw. he can. " sLud head ctlach Pugc .. 1 would not have been inconceivable for capaci ty before He wa.'t pleased with Fr.mke was not thrilled about facing a 'tupcrior depth and ubtlity took hold. fccd10g him a thomugh druhbtng to Remtllard " He really keyed u'> th" the team to have damlCd third place Loupa.'"' · a !>COlOr captam, who team full of scholan.hrp players, hi~ The Hoktes captured 27 po10t' 10 a \"'10 by tC\:hnK·.tJ fall 10 the '14XOnJ v.cckcnd ... had the Generals been at full trength ~prung from an un...eeded po-.llion to team had already faced Divl\ion I row on two ptns, one forfeit. and three pcnod. It wa\ the highlight of the After defeating the Hoya.' the Gcn- . , Offictally, W&L's 39 teum point!~ cam third place in hts weight cla'>s. wrestlers (from Funnan), and he decision,, This iced the mntch. but evening for W&L. erato, headed nonh to Baltimore where they faced nval Jo~ Hopkins Uni­ veNty. W&L was the victim of wme ,· Generals falter at Hampden-Sydney; remain atop ODAC standings bad luck on this panicular Sunday v: 26-25. That proved to be thetr last \treak to mne games. though. were able to weather the first would get. Ralph Baker·, (22 poml't) afternoon. Fir'tt of all • .,cmor David ,. • thn.-e point b<1mb put the figer-. up 60 By Jay Plotkin lead of the night. On TueM!ay, the Generals rerumcd Tiger nurry. leading 41 -39 at the half. Dtet7 fell prey to a mi~Judged w-.lll a.'> ,.r 49 at the 15 00 mark, and the) ne,er Staff Reporter Scmor guard Lee Bradmg put the to the ODAC to take on Hampden­ Canfield\ mam worry prior to the he completely mtssed the wall on a General., in front. M:onng -.even of the Sydney on the road. The last time conte!tt was not to get involved in a looked back. running to a 93· 79 wtn flip rum in the 50 freestyle. This 1 exclamatL't.l h) Orson Wtlliam't' 116 , The Washington and Lee basketball team's laM II pomt~ m the half to give these two teams met, the Generals running game with Hampden-Sydney. re..ultcd in a 'tl'CI..'IInd ' tean1 had something to prove to itself the Generals a 36-29 lead He ..cored walked all over the Tigers 94-74. and "Sydney want~ to play very much an 111ne Dtctz ha '> not had ~•nee granm1ar over the past week . 10 of hi '> team·htgh 17 10 the fiN half head coach Verne Cartflcld knew up-tempo game, and that i!> !>Orne con· left to 'top the General' mnc g.mtc 'tCh('IOI. c • ~ The General!> know they can wtn at oo four of ~ix shooung. and the Gcn· payback was on the minds of Hamp­ cem of mine, becau~ we've been ~trcak . ''I have been pracucing a new nip '•' , home (they are undefeated in the eml'> led at halftime by the ...co re of den-Sydney. " They will be. as they playing an up-tempo game. yet i don't Next up tor the 12-1. 6 I GcnernJ. .. techmque because I've been turntng Wamcr Center -.o far thi!> ~n), but 36-31 ...ay, wmt10g for U!l, They have been th10k we can play 11 all the time. i.., conference co-lcaJer Emol) & too clo..e to the wall I gue,o,l JUSt nw.- • , ·~ 1 tt ts the long and winding road that hal. In the second half, the General'> play10g well of late. They have a IOL of The Tigers then came out running 10 Henl) tomght nn the road (WLUR­ JUdged the waJI and flipped too far • I • ·,n , caused problem-, for W&L. This paM were without wphomore center and lire power. and they will be highly the second half. going on a 9·2 run to FM wtll bro only made one !>C rt ou-. run at highly motivated. The Generals, but that would be a... close a' W&L Weekend. 200 breaststroke. Olson wa~ the un· ., began last Thur!tday, :.taning with a W&L. fonunate vicum a.c, 11 was ruled he ;.1' 1 s t~ in Bridgewater. Sophomore forward Edward Han Women swimmers undaunted despite two losses ~an illegal buuerfly ktck tnstead of .-:. 'nc team. traded ba!>kct unul tepped to the forefront for W&L. StiliLratmng inteno;tvely. the team is 1 Charlotte. FreCt her Hopkins ri v al~ to win the 5o­ fif\ccn point !>wing agamst W&L Todd Deberry's three pointer with danger. W&L could then relax and By Amy Packard resting phase. Spirits are high, yard freestyle event. becau..e Olson had won the event. ...: 9:19 left in the first half. Deberry. Co:t'>ttO it!> 74-64 VICtOry. Staff Reporter though. despite the grueling regimen. Head Coach P.age Rermllard ·~ pro­ Thc.se two mi~haps really put W&L BC'' leading SCOrer, scored !ICVCn On Saturday. the General' ventured " lt's unusual for everyone to be in ud of the women for their atutudes · Ill a hole, but the Generals didn't '>Ur- firM half point:. and fimshed with 10. out of the conference to take on Mary The women's !>Wim 'team remaam .. such good spirits." said Remillard . toward these panicularly challenging rcndcr. "We made a great effon to get .•:. well below hill 16.9 average. When wa..,hington. where they had never undefeated in the Old Dominion " In the middle of the !)CUSOn that's not meets and for their gul!.y pcrfor· back mto a situation to win. It came Bridgewater'!. own round mound of won. W&L overcame a rather !>Jow Athletic Conference and undaunted by expected." mances. do"11 to the final relay where \loe were • ,. something. Ben Beach, hn two free stan-down 13-0 early- to wm the 11 recent los!tes to non-conference op­ The women will need to hold on to •' The \\.Omen have mhcntoo a touched out by six-tenth'> of a second. • throws with 5: 16 left, the Eagle~ led game 94-85 and extend it\ winning ponent!t Georgetown and Johns that adrenalin for their next two difficult 'tchedule bccau~e many We o,howcd a lot of poi<;e and com· I Hopl..in-,. These past meet'> ..erved meets. The first is at 7 p.m. on Friday schools want meets v. ith both men and po'>ure in our comeback. Hopefully .,., more a.' training than as reah~ti c com· against Shepherd College. Then on \loOn1Cn.'' he \iltd. "Otten. m order performance!. hke the~e will spring U'> • petition. Saturday they will compete against for the men to compete. the women mto great poSt ...cason pcrfmmances, ·' '• This strategy has paid off with Gettysburg at I p.m. Bolh meets will have to race al,o. A'> a ct,n..cquencc. satd Remillard unexpected re!.ults. Sophomore be at home, and both competitors will there are ...orne tCdlll!> v. lltch the Despite the 111-93 Joso; to Hopk.10'1. .. •• Sharon Coleman broke the school be fierce . Remillard b optimistic. women aren't yet prepWimming very well at a umc when there ill usually a let dOWI1 10 the season. The guy!> are keeping Gettier's Gifts high ~piri t !l and they know faster times ;~.:J now will re!luh in faster tapering times •:-: CARDS, POSTERS & GIFTS .• he d •4~ Route 60 W. across from Keydet General Iater. !>Ill • Plenty of Parking Other strong performance!> for the Generals can1e from !.l.''\ior David • Open M-S 10-6 Reavy, junior Shawt1 Copeland and •' · Jay Smith, all of whom are making a ••· Generals basketball live on 91.5 lot of progre!.S this year. The General'>· next two meets arc ':r: WLUR·FM both at home - Fnday against Shcp- ... · herd and Saturday versus Getty\burg • Tonight v. E&H Coverage begins at 7:20 in the fnendly coniine!> of Cy 'i Twombly Pool.

ROCKBRIDGE WINTER A::~al SLOSH AUTO PARTS, INC. Featuring: The Press I '< ROUfl 80 EAST 1SK)3 SYCAMO"I! A VI! NUl Saturday, January 28th •. UlUNGTON, YI"GINIA 24450 BUENA VIITA, YI"GINIA 2441 S ... 281 ·8181 • "'I (7031 483· 3 1 I 1 (7031 ), $8Couple $5 Single ~ k.' LEXINGTON ~ ------,YOU QUALIFY FUR I ~ SHOP FOR PAPPAGALLO f Ticket Sales: '• INSTANT CREDIT! : ..t I Thurs .. Jan. 26th 4-6 p.m.. Fri., Jan . 27th I p. m. ·,., Start making c redit pur- I Ladies' In the Arl ington Women's Center .'•. chases HIHEDIATELYI lole 1 Shoes, Clothing $10 T -Shirts (limited quantity available) ... will send you a Members 1 •.·• Credit Card at once with I and Accessories ·! NO CREDIT CH -EC-K.- u_;y :1n~ I Jewe lry, Cloth!ng,Sport- I Live Drive will be available at the University Center ing Coods,Watches, Elec­ 23N Ma1nSt tronics & MORE l All with I (703) 463-5988 installment payments nu t I of our "Giant 100+ Png.c~ I Ca talog ." Take 12 mnnth!= I to repay. Your personal I credit card is a -second I I.O.- valuable for chec~ I cashing, etc. plus vour I ~tudcnts Credit Croup A-1 r~>ference will he nn I audiotronlcs file t o h~1p you ~btain I VIRGINIA'S STEREO SPECIALIST \\1.· "'' 111. \ou to "JX.'nd .Ill unit >t gl'lt,thk· mght . 11 \\ tntlTgt l'l.'ll '> th~r credit c:trd~. S1, I Ontup ~~ ournt~>unt.tnl ,·null l111d ll\l' .... lt>JK'" lu 1c.1d\ .1nd YAMAHA ALPINE "end In )Ollr $} c.ttllPI' I DE NON BOSTON \\,tlltng lot \tlltt "kung plc. .'.h llt'l' And thl'\ '>1.1\ •>JWllllllttl t order) I KEF SONANCE SIGNET B&K "', 1. <>llll' ~.·.1rh .1nd "'·" l.u~.· I KLIPSCH NAKAMICHl lk'l.lll.'tl' ,tlllllg \\ 1111 till' hl''l "Ill 1\\ lll.lh tllg l'qlllpllll'lll Ill I ill' EsiJ bb h '('» C'tldl\ I odlV I I All COMPONENTS PRE TESTED George's \ltd \il.llllll \OU .IIIIIld gt'l'.tt food .tnd gll'.lll'tllut.tllllltl'lll GIIO nlllell 100 ~ s~r.s'J:!'J'I • BUYER PROTECTION PlAN \\ IIHl'rgtl'l'll .Ju't t5 1111k· ...... , >ttth\\l''t' ~ ( h.ul« Jill'"' till' lat ~ ~ 1!4 ;)1' ry SICk) CAR INS lAlLAliON OEPARTMENT El l IN·STORE SERVICE CENTER h 11 tllllll.tltl't thr1llnt thnl.u k Hairstylist ...... ____tty ____ I WE SERVICE MOST BRANOS Fnt <1\\.'11\lghtt'l'"l'I\,IIIIUl'> <.til I HO 1 ~2:; 2200 I( wtltl l.ttl'"l "hi - I TR AOE ·INS ACCEPTEO I J6 \ arncr r ane ll'pnll Ltll I XIII .t!"' '-1 \:0\\ SID ______,_ ___ .J63-J975 I (800) 468-6667 Opl'll En•ningli MEMBERS ,.o. BQx 46-4! I GRAND PAVILION MALL Studt>r I roRr LAUOEROAU, il Wintergreen I I Across from Tanglewood CJi r~ • C•H FlORIDA )3))8 I I 4235 Eleclnc Road • Roanoke 1=or 'pedal di~counl~ 11ec your campu~ rcpre~cnlalive . 1------1 ~BACK PAGE The Ring-tum Phi, January 26, 1989 6 calendar

Calling All Seniors Friday. January 27

~dline for opplicatton!, for Washington Tenn Progmm (Congrcs· s1onal lntermhtp 111 Spring Tenn). S« Prof Connelly. Room 108, Contribute to "A Look at Coeducation: 4 years later" Commerce School. 4 & 7:30 p.m.-RUSSIAN FILM SERJES Brothm Karamowv. Room 203, Reid Hall 8) Mictwel Thggle No~. SenJors, It is your tum to on, and lf nothing else we art the libelous or profane language In any 1 p.m.-SWIMMJMG: Generals v~ . Shepherd College. Twombly Entertainment EdJtor peak. transition between the Washington letter ls strictly prohibited and wiD Pool. In the last couple ~eeks of the and Lee of old and that of the be grounds for exclusion from con­ 8 p.m.-FILM SOCIETY: Hu~ and G/ory(England, 1987). Some time 18..\1 term I overheard a term I am going to put together a future. And because of that, It is sideration. Letter should be Clas~room ··A." Lewb Hall . 'ophomore complaining about pedal supplement to the Ring-tum time to put aU or our thoughts, fed­ brought to the Rlng-twn Phi oftlce coeducation and thought to myseJr Phi called "A Look at Coeducation: lnp and ernotiom lnto a Concise col­ on the second floor of the University 8 p.m.-REUGION DEPARTMENT LECTURE "Who Goes There? " What gh~ him to right to com­ Four Years Later." 11tt supple­ lection to see where coeducation at Center by Friday, February 10 (the The Cenamlies and Unceruunties of Sexuality. Anuna and Arumus. ·• plain bout it? II ht didn't Uke it he ment "~till be comprised of letters Washington and Lee Is, wbere it has day ~e leave for Washington Break) Ann Be~ford Ulanov. professor of psych1atry and religion. Union 'bouldn't have come to Washington from President Wllson, seJeded been and where It ls going. at noon. Theological Senunary. and Barry Ulanov, prof~r of English. Bar­ and l~ ... dean\ and professors and from )OU 'The senJor letter section or the This can be a \el) ~orth"'hlle col­ nard College. Lee Chapel. Pubhc mv1ted For u.\ ..enlor.., it see~m that the senior clas.\. supplement "'ill be made up of lection If )00 take the tlmt to be AWAY ATHLETIC EVENT INDOOR TRACK VirgimaTech lnvna­ coeducation and il been the from our class because ~e are the Unfortunately. due to rtnandaland bad meaningful thlngs to say but topic of concern from dav one. only ones ~bo can justiJlably carry speclaJ restrictions, we cannot af­ have De\'er taken tbe necessary time Some of the discu•;sion ~ been to It down and "'Tfte letter. Now on this conversation. We ~e~ the ford to print every letter we receive. a Saturday, January 18 enlightening ~hile some of it has ru-st coeducational cla'iS and "'e are We "'ill bo"'ever, include as man} is the opportunity to come together ht."tn <,() outrageous!} absurd that it the onl) dai to have experienced as possible. as a class; as the first dass, to once ~a.' ernbarrassfnR. Nevertbel~ . that. 1be letters should be bet~een 400 and for all vent all of our frustra­ GMA T Exam. Commerce School. the arguments, the feeling~ and the I think it is safe to say that many and 500 words and sbouJd be well tions and all of our emotions about I p.m.-SWIMMJNG: Generals vs. Geltysburg College. Twombly emotioru. rage on waging whether of the large wrinkles that "'e en­ written and legible. A selection the one thlng that bas dominated Pool . coeducation has been ~ood or bad countered in September, 1985 were panel or two professors, two our lives for the past four years. 1:30 p.m.-OPERA BROADCAST: 8/uebean/'s Castle (Banok); Er­ and ~hether or not It ever bouJd ironed out by the time the class ~>1 udents and myself will choose the Please take the time to contribute. wanung (Schoenberg). WLURtFM (91.5). hiiH' ht.oen instituted In the fi('l)'t behind us arrived In 1986. We ~ e~ letters for inclusion based on their Make this something we can all be 5 p.m.-ALUMNI BASKETBALL GAME: Warner Center. place. the first, ~e were the~ focw;ed clarity and their content. 1be use or proud of. 7:30 p.m.-RUSSIAN FILM SERJES: Brothers KaramL~QJv . Room 203, Reid Hall . 7:30 p.m.-BASKETBALL: Generals vs. Lynchburg College. Warner Center. 8 p.m.-ALM SOCIETY: Ho~ lJIId G/ory'(England. 1987). Heat of the Night and Midnight Caller Classroom ''A," Lewis Hall. lead excellent programming on NBC Monday, January 30 3:30 p.m.-MATHEMATICS COLLOQUIUM: " Primes in Arithmetic Progressions.'· George T Gilbert, De~m of dcc1dcd I hat 1ntelhgent program., deal to them The program presen~ the man who had AIDS. who knew he had Mathematics, St. Olaf College. Room 6, Robinson Hall. Refreshments 8) Michael T~le mg w1th moral<. and eth1cl. were the l)sue of predjudice, but never ~ the d1~ and who contmued to in­ at 3 p.m. in Room 21 Public invited. Entertainment Edltor wa}- 1o go. Now. With the add1llon of on 11 as the onJy issue. It deals with fect people. Last week's ep1sodc, the tv.o new progr.um. the argument other sens1tive issues such as incest as timely with the Bundy executjon SHnlC umc ago wmcv.herc near the Mrengthe~. But '>0 does NBC's pm­ well. earlier this week, was about capital 1'\lesdav, January 31 hcg1nnmg uf the ·so ., there wru, a tur­ gramming. In the Heat of the Night is an intel­ punishment and the last thoughts of a n.lmun<.l 10 tclevl\ltln that lew could ligent look at life in the south during man rC4ldy to die for hi& crime. hd1l.'vc NBC h.1d taken home the last In the Hem oj the Night is ba'>Cd on 7:30 p.m.-BASKETBALL: oCnerab vs. Guilford College. Warner the 60·s (the ~ how is se1 in Sparta, Center. pl.llC trophy 10 the N1eh.ell!> for who the 1967 Nom1an JCWI!.On film that Mississippi) and at many of the moral The program alway ~> follows the 7:30 p.m.-WRESTLING : Ocneral!, vs. Gustavns Adolphus. Warner know' hov. long while CBS and ABC won live Academy Award~ includi ng and ethical problems facing us today. same format and always sums up the Center. \\ allowed Ul the top 'upportcd by the Best Picture. Sidney Poitier plays a The acting is excellent and the pro­ moral questions and answers at the ;1\.'CU\Ithuac programming. l11cn. the help a Rooncck \heriff, played by Rocl tm HBO. Midnight Caller is much li.ke Wednesday, February I wonderkJd ~howcd up at NBC. Steiger. M>lve a bizarre murder The other new NBC program set­ that. It's not quite as bizarre as 71te Brandon Tart1koff. the now head of mystery. The film ha~n · t lo~t any of ting the world on fire is Midnight Hitchhiker but it's equally as good if ""'BC, turned the network around from its timehne~., at all and neuher has the al/er tarring Jack Cole and Wendy not better. 8 a.m.-ECUMENICAL PRAYER SERVlCE: Lee Chapel. Puhlic m· IJ.,t place and put it at the top of the progmm. ~llbourne. Cole plays Jack Killian. a vi ted. ratmg' Qualll}-. mtelhgent program­ once-time cop who accidently hot his 4 p.m.-HYPERTEXT LECfURE SERJ ES: "Going completely Hy­ per wi th HYPERCARD and HYPERT ALK.' . Kenneth Lambert. assis­ mmg " what gave NBC the edge and Harold Rolhns of Raxtime and A partner m the crossfire during a drug In the Heat of the Night comes on " C\JCtly v.hat Will keep It at the top S tion and book signing 10 follow in Boatwnght Room. Public invited. Steiger's role a., the '>henff.. Midnight Caller come., on NBC. thJt v.11l keep 11 then: und tw.o of the AWAY ATHLETIC EVENT: WOMEN'S SWlMMlNG: Hollms. J~t a~ effectively a~ the film. In the Midnight Caller is one of the be5t channel I0. on Tuesday mght at I0 0..:" 'how)> to come along m yea~ . Heat nf the NiRht takes on the racial new programs to come along in years. p.m.. f-rom H1ll Stret•t Bluef. to the current 1s ucs of a black man living in the Every episode is incredibly well-done hit LA Law. 11 ~ ~ clear that NBC deep sou1h during the '6().,, and add<, and timely. One episode dealt with a Thursday, February 2

3:30 p.m.-MATH COLLOQUIUM: " lnner Fu,ctions in One and Furniture De1lert Several Variables," Barbara MacCiuer, University of Richmond. VARNER & POLE Room 6, Robinson Hall. Refreshments at 3 p.m. in Room 21. Public in­ !! SALE!! vited. For your extra pieces of furniture 5 p.m.-CHEMISTRY SEMJNAR: Toby Allen '90 and Mike Stancina 111 VInyl Available In: ·90. Room 40 1. Howe Hall. Refreshments served at 4:30 in Room 402. 115 S. Main St 463·2742 Ring Binders Public invited. Black. Dark Blue, Blue, only. 7:30 p.m.-BASKETBALL: Generals vs. Emory & Henry. Warner $1.95eo. Center.

All Undergraduate Students are invited for dinner THIS AND MORE CURRENTLY ON SALE AT: and Bible Study m the Parish Library of R.E. Lee Epis­ copal Church th1s Sunday, January 29, at 6:00 p.m. J & fJ IJ!Iu 9,;,ti,A& See you there! 23 West Washington St. Lexington, VIrginia 24450 (703) 463·3432 Seniors: Please Wolff System Tanning Bed Contribute to the Coed Supplement Merle Norman Studio College Square Shopping Center Jewelry- Manicures Sculptured Nails, Facial Waxing

Monday-Friday 463-9588 10 a.m. - 7 p.m. Saturday 463-1782 Old Main St. Mall Lexington, Va. 24450 II 10 a.m.· 5 p.m. Rt. 11 North s'<'o9

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