during the season's first snowfall. The popular Outing Club arranges hiking, camping and skiing trips and rents equip- ment inexpensively. A pair of cross-coun- try or downhill skis for the weekend can cost only $3. Hard-core skiers arrange spring classes on Tuesdays through Thursdays, ensuring long weekends; lift tickets dangle from almost every down jacket. The combined downhill and cross- country team is a regular contender for the NCAA championship, and the hockey team is competitive. Even the students who don't spend much time outside look as if they do. Sunglasses, white turtlenecks worn under heavy sweaters, jeans and hiking boots are de rigueur. "Everyone who comes here is a little bit crunchy after awhile," says senior Jennifer Cairns. All the fish look alike: Although UVM bills itself as culturally diverse, there is a strik- ing absence of minority students on cam- pus: of the more than 8,000 undergradu- ates, only 279 are minorities, including 40 blacks. (According to 1980 census figures, fewer than one-half of 1 percent of Ver- monters are black.) "It's a fishbowl here with nice water and rocks," says Leo Trus- clair, a black administrator in charge of the minority-student program, "but all the fish are the same." Almost as disturbing is insensitive tradition: until 1970 the most popular event on campus was the Winter Festival's Cakewalk, in which pairs of fraternity brothers in wigs and blackface would high-step before a cheer- ing audience. In a state where heated town meetings abound, activism at UVM follows. A pair of stu- dents sit as voting members on the university's board of trustees, and there is a small but vocal group pressing for more student involvement in administrative decisions. Last October, 19 students were ar- rested when they occupied ad- ministrative offices after the career-placement office gave student r6sumes to the CIA, which conducted interviews in a downtown building. As sen- ior Will Zorn points out, "Lots of the crunchy people are more politically aware than just wearing natural fibers." And, should meetings prove too tiresome, students can always take out their frustrations in another big campus event: during finals, everyone opens the window, leans out and joins in a 15-minute group primal scream. To date, no avalanches have occurred. CHRISTOPHER M. BELLITTO in Burlington Strong package: A setting for books in student center, whiteout on the quad Jonah Houston, editor of the campus news- paper, The Vermont Cynic. The drive to improve has also resulted in an increased teaching load for the faculty: professors are asked to teach five or more classes per year in addition to keeping up with their scholarly publishing. Even provost John Hennessey admits that "this faculty is overworked." Of course, when academic overload kicks in there's always the Great Outdoors. A major campus event is the snowball fight MIKE KEMSLEY-UVM I