Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAI[Y MArA71NJ F I k,4-.. '5C I nCO .. ..-'* -'- "" '-, ' Ufay, Maiy L5, 1958 A Smaller School, A Nearer Neighbor (Continued from Page 3) Syracuse, sometimes against the chians, and nobody will notice an within 100 yards of a forest which fessional, and plenty of amateurs. State Police, but it is possible to will of the girls, sometimes not. "S" in the football field until stretches for miles. As many as School spirit runs central New circumvent this. The alternate FRATERNITIES are fair game at next spring anyway. 1,000 Syracuse students will charge York for one week. route can turn a 40-mile trip in- both campuses. The two col- However, Colgate obligingly pro- out of that forest at a given sig- 0UTSIDE THE East spirit tends to one of 100 miles, but this is of leges have rules which provide vides a bonfire, which is lit in the nal, armed with torches and head- to die a little, but other parts small concern to the drivers. heavy penalties for anyone caught year's big pep rally the night be- ing for the fire. of the country have their rivalries. Once there, the fun begins. Pan- pilfering. However these are prac- fore the game if the Syracusans Anyone caught by either side There are two major colleges in Onc thes reot the ueion Pa- pilyernfowree ar e ras don't get there first. Finesse in ig- gets his head shaved for his almost every state which contend Cty , raid s areoutofthequeon a t tillynoeab. N hous't pro- niting the fire is not the watch- trouble-the Colgate students have with each other. When this situa- Colgate, which is an all-male willing to admit it couldnt pro- word here, because the bonfire it- an "S" left atop their heads, the titn does not exist, the school can _________________________atter. The remedy is simply to steal self can be and is closely watched Syracusans a "C". Shaving is a usually find some rival. Idaho, for something else in return the next -but it is conveniently located fine art; every house has its pro- IContinued en texS Page) night, and arrange a trade after 40ththe game. Houses which have chapte1 at only one campus are preyed upon by independents. Annifersar Sale For Colgate freshmen, burning a "C" in the middle of Archbold stadium in Syracuse, the annual easonsfor the Failure o Panty Raids site of the game, is the Holy Grail of Syracuse Week. Naturally, the Rests on the Absence of Careful Planning louses. $.59 U stadium is well defended. But each year sees a new crop of freshmen By DAVID KESSEL slang has it) should be directed somewhat well-known eastern in- Skidium-whihdevelop new routes into the st NE ra , hds from source one to source two. stitution where the dismal job of The ium yhichSyracuse owns Arch- of administrators and the de- Unfortunately, on this campus, "student leading" was left for the The ityof yrauseown Arh- o adinitraorsandthede-the student riot is in its infancy. nitwits, and the resourceful stu- S2 99 Ibold Stadium and permits no light of students, the college riot o .Syracuse studts inside the sta- season begins. And for good reason. The students dents spent their time planning M Syacue sudets isid th st- sesonbegns.who stage good riots are all stu- riots. dium. If a Colgate student can Usually, the arrival of Spring,I den seade JAMAICA'S P gain entrance the bonfire is as or anyway warm weather, brings dent leaders, which means they Imagine this: one spring evening -AMACAS PEDAL good as lit. The hard part, of the dorm livers out of their cubi- eat lunch with administration offi- in 1951, all the fuses at eight Rad- PUSHERS SLACKS course, is getting in. But if once cles, bursting with misdirected en- cials every so often, and have cliffe dormitories simultaneously also this can be achieved, the Governor orgy. As the poet says: "In the siomhd. rthe ondeader ty ober fnt i te cnare s , MIX ATC ES of New York himself, annual visi- Spring a young man's fancy; in riot here are the non-leader type over fifty girls were carried off by MIX MATCHES o Tokhme, annual vii Sprin a mn " students, so they wander around student rioters. Accident? Hardly. tor to the game, will view the "C" the Winter, he's a slob." amesyfrafwhussotn h uebxshdbe aeul big as life, on the stadium grass On this campus, what with such aimlessly for a few hours shouting The fuse boxes had been carefully during the game Saturday. huge numbers of men living in coherently, then go home and tapped weeks before, and the men large brick buildings, just down get fined. only awaited a night when the i/ 4 NATURALLY, no similar spec- the street from huge numbers of AT THE moon was new, the watchman old, 219 South Moa tacular display of spirit is pos- women living in large brick build- ATiERISK of being called a and the gates open. sible for Syracuse students. Col- ings, it seems only reasonable that traditionalist, let me recall Now, imagine this: one fall eve- gate is tucked away in the Appala- any riot (or "panty raid," as local riaot of the glorious pa.t, at a n in 1952 the dean of students, nsdsa few of his flunkies were hay- David Kesel, a graduate ing dinner with the ague of Student Informers, at this eastern student and frequent contrib- college, when the fuses again sud- j utor to the Daily Magazine, at- denly blew, and the whole repul- tended the Massachutts Insti- sive group doused with water from tute of Technology where he fire hoses. Immediately afterwards, gained first-hand knowledge all freshmen dormitories were .adynamited, and five co-eds (the of organizing and inciting only five) tarred and feathered. riots. Mere chance? Not hardly. Every- o(Continued on Next Page) 1' ^'j ta s* a r* (*e *..r *f 44 The plaid cotton chemise and the stripe cotton shirt- waist are $10.95 each. 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