ALAN H. FEILER Special to The Jewish News rusting yellow taxi came to a screeching halt at the curb of the Concord Resort Hotel. Like strangers arriving in Mecca, four young women jumped out of the cab and looked up, dreamy-eyed, at the glistening white facade of the colossal hotel. Attired in tight black mini-skirts and dresses with plunging necklines, the wo- men reached into their purses and pro- duced brushes for their well-coiffed, per- manently-streaked hair. As they com- menced brushing, their taxi driver gunn- ed his engine and sped into the upstate New York wilderness. The merger of fe- male fragrances gave the air the aromatic quality of a K-Mart perfume counter. "So this is the Concord singles week- end," one of the women gushed to a friend in the hotel's parking lot while balancing her arm on the shoulder of another com- rade to adjust a high heel. "Single men, look out! We have arrived." With a squadron of groaning bellhops lagging behind with enough baggage to transport a road production of Les Mis- erables, the women confidently strolled into the hotel's ornate lobby. They seem- ed to catch the eye of every massively pumped-up, gold necklace-laden male checking in at the front desk or sitting on the velvet couches and chairs lining the foyer of the Concord. "Yo, bay-bee," a man in his late 20s with a Sylvester Stallone inflection in his voice yelled at one of the women. "Like if you really want to have some fun this weekend, call me in room K224." In a lounge adjacent to the lobby sat David Bromberg, a 28-year-old advertis- ing executive and veteran of several sin- gles weekends. Sipping an icy Bud Lite, he briefed a newcomer on what to expect over the next 72 hours. "A lot of women come here to find rela- tionships," the Boston native sneered. "But for the guys, it's sort of like every- one's fantasy of being stuck in a cabin in the North Pole after nuclear war with a dozen hot babes. The women are stuck with us in a closed environment for the entire weekend. We can be as obnoxious as we want. There's no escape." The area in New York's Catskill Moun- tains affectionately called "the Borscht Belt" by generations of Jews is no longer a haven for vacationing families or a breeding ground for up-and-coming gi- ants in entertainment. Relatively inex- pensive flights to tropical islands and Europe have taken their toll on Catskill resorts. But in recent years, the Borscht Belt hotels have served as central meeting grounds for singles. "My father's friend's stockbroker's son A met his wife here," boasted Eileen, a speech therapist from Queens, N.Y., in her mid-30s who attended the Concord's singles weekend from Feb. 1 through 3. "I'm hoping my luck will come through this weekend." Winds emerging from frozen and pic- turesque Kiamesha Lake sent a succes- sion of cool breezes through the swinging doors of the 53-year-old resort. Located on the outskirts of Monticello, N.Y., the 1,200-room Concord hosts four special weekends a year for unmarried men and women. In addition to the 2,000-acre resort's skiing, golf, tennis and ice skating facilit- ies, the Concord offers a potpourri of ac- tivities for singles such as group mambo dance classes, sporting competitions and coed swim parties. For $221, the Concord's singles week- end package included accommodations for two nights, three seemingly-endless A singles weekend at the Concord Resort Hotel is a case study in the battle of the sexes. meals a day, sporting and entertainment activities, and all the opportunities for schmoozing and cruising any single could ever desire. A 30-year tradition, the Concord's sin- gles weekends have spawned over 10,000 marriages, according to the hotel. Al- though past singles weekends have in- dividually attracted as many as 3,000 unmarrieds, the current recession cut the number of attendees at February's event to about 1,200, said Gordon Winarick, the hotel's executive director. About three-quarters of the people who attend the Concord's singles weekends are Jewish and from the New York met- ropolitan area, Mr. Winarick said. While singles weekend guests usually range in age from early 20s to mid 50s, most at the February event seemed in their late 20s. Most attendees said they had never been married and reported they heard about the Concord weekend through commercials on New York television and radio stations. About half said they had been to the Concord before. "Singles want to spend time sharing their hopes and dreams together," Mr. Winarick said. "Our resort offers that in a beautiful environment that is safe and weatherproof with plenty of activities. We get singles nowadays whose parents and grandparents met here." While opening activities for the singles weekend were kicked off Friday after- noon with a cocktail hour, most of the unmarrieds — working full time jobs — did not arrive at the Concord until after suppertime. After unpacking and cruising around the lobby, some people received their first taste of singles life at the Concord by at- tending a Latin dance class with a mid- dle-aged fellow in chinos and a ruffled shirt who said his name was Machito. Alan Katz poked his head into the Con Room to watch several rows of rhythmically impaired singles mambo to Tito Puente under a crystal disco ball. The 38-year-old physician from Manhat- tan soon decided to catch the Concord's "All-Star" variety show. It featured co- median Vic Arnell and a troupe of "dirty dancers" who appeared in the 1987 movie of the same name. Less than jubilant about the quality of the show and intellectual caliber of wo- men attending the singles weekend, Alan left the Concord the next morning. "I originally thought it might be fun to get away and meet some people and play some tennis," he said. "My expectations weren't that high to begin with. But this just isn't my style." After the show, many of the more ad- venturous singles decided to dance into the wee hours of the night to the disco sounds of the Artie Narvez Band in the Nite Owl Lounge. Resembling a bar mitzvah reception for dancers turned down by the producers of "Soul Train," the Nite Owl Lounge was alive with disco tunes rightfully unheard of for more than a decade. A returnee to the Concord singles expe- rience, Marvin May, 48, said he enjoyed the freedom to shed inhibitions offered by the resort's designated weekends for un- marrieds. One of those freedoms, he pointed out, was the right to do the Hus- tle in a leisure suit with the best of them. "I don't set things like sex or marriage as goals when I come here," said Marvin, a Manhattan systems analyst, while shaking to the music on the dance floor. "Not that those things would be bad. But I really needed to get out of New York and have a chance to enjoy myself." After midnight, those not ready to call it a night headed to the hotel's all-dairy THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 25