C Studying Womankind At all-male Wabash, females are the one-week sex What kind of college would encourage students to spend more time think- ing about the opposite sex? Try Wa- bash, a small liberal-arts institution in Crawfordsville, Ind., which has an all-male student body and a group of feisty female employees. Two years ago women who worked at Wabash-as professors, admin- istrators and secretaries-decided the campus consciousness needed raising. With the college president's blessing, they declared Women's Week, a seven-day whirl of concerts, exhibits, lectures and work- shops about "women's issues" such as gen- der identity, careerism and women's literature. Repeated last spring, the event seems certain to become an annual tradition-if not a universally popular one. Focusing on females as on rara avis strikes some as ridiculous: one student greeted the first celebrants with a sign saying, "How about Australian Pygmy Week?" Although hos- tility diminished the second time around, skepticism remains. "I think you learn more from experience than from lec- tures," says junior Joe Pieters, a political- science major. The coed experience, however, is not eas- ily sampled at Wabash: on this campus even the cheerleaders are male. Founded in 1832 to prepare young men for the minis- try or for teaching, Wabash remains one of only three all-male colleges in the United States (Hampden-Sydney in Hampden- Sydney, Va., and The Citadel in Charles- ton, S.C., are the others). "For the foresee- able future Wabash will remain single sex," says president Lewis Salter. "The ar- guments for changing just don't seem to be that compelling." Wabash old boys agree. Says former alumni director Joseph L. Smith, "The attraction of the members of the opposite sex just detracts from time for serious study." Hometown honeys: Even Wabash's not-so- old boys go along with that. "You really don't notice that women aren't around be- cause you're so busy studying during the week," says John Hiester, an '86 graduate. "You go there to get an education; week- ends are when you go out with the girls." The "girls" are sometimes hometown honeys, sometimes imports from nearby schools such as DePauw, Purdue, Ball State and Indiana University. "What the heck, it's only four years," says Pieters. "I figure I'll have plenty of time for that later on." Even without women, the school is flourishing: while some liberal-arts col- leges worry about declining applications, Wabash received a bumper crop of 844 for 314 places. Its 800 students tend to be white and middle class (housing, tui- tion and fees for one year run about $11,500); most are politically conserva- tive. Ninety percent of the student body participate in varsity or intramural sports (football is the biggest draw); 75 percent eventually earn advanced degrees. Most Wabash men come from Indiana, and many stay on in Crawfordsville after grad- uation. A fair number of the town's doc- tors, lawyers and businessmen are Wa- bash alums. Says Richard Ristine, the director of development, "We have one grand mission-to turn out ever-better Wabash men." If that means studying females, so be it-although one of the most popular events during the latest Women's Week turned out to be more about men. Dressed in fraternity sweat shirts and baseball caps, a standing-room-only herd listened as Di Springer (a staff member of the dean's office) urged them to open up to their male buddies. "Men don't give each other affection," she said. "They think of affection only as sexual and therefore link it only with women." Said an approving Salter: "This is Wabash at its best. She really had them thinking about how we get trapped into stereotypical roles. I can imagine some of the guys heaving a sigh of relief when Women's Week is over, but in the long run it's good." NANCY COOPER with TANYA ISCH in Crawfordsville SEPTEMBER 1987 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 37