Thursday

September 13, 1984 Volume SOB, Number 15 Duke University Durham, North Carolina THE CHRONICLE

Newsfile Baker advances WXDU budget

Diana Off COast: Hurricane Diana was lurking off By ANN HARDISON North Carolina Wednesday "with no sense of direction," Sidestepping usual procedures this summer, ASDU since westerly winds that would normally blow it to sea President John Baker advanced $1200 to WXDU-FM from had not materialized, according to Dr. Neil Frank, direc­ the station's 1984-85 budget to-pay outstanding bills and tor of the National Hurricane Center in Miami. fund summer operations. The year-old student-run station now faces premature shutdown during the spring semester. Unity Crisis: The Labor Party leader, Financial problems arose last spring when, in planning Shimon Peres, confronted with an llth-hour crisis in for summer operations, WXDU General Manager Ann his negotiations with the Likud bloc, was forced Kim reviewed the balance of the 83-84 SOC allocated Wednesday to postpone the planned introduction of a budget. new government of national unity. "I was taking care of bills and realized we were low," Kim said, estimating that less than $900 remained in the ac­ Unrest in SowetO: Demonstrators stoned police count at that time. on three occasions Wednesday in Johannesburg's dense­ According to Kim, officials at the station and advisory ly inhabited satellite of Soweto in continuing unrest in board members "always intended to run the entire year," black townships. The violence Wednesday coincided but underestimated the costs due to lack of experience in with the seventh anniversary of the death in detention 12-month projection. of Steve Biko, leader of the black consciousness But ASDU did not appropriate funds for the FM station's BETH BRANCH/THE CHRONICLE John Baker, ASDU president movement. first budget with a 12-month operating period in mind. "If [WXDU] intended to run over the summer, they never "Technically the legislature has to approve anything like Private Latin aid: Members of the House Select once brought it up before the SOC," said SOC chairperson this, but since the legislature was not in session," Harner Committee on Intelligence said Wednesday that they Julie Guest. said, "The standard operating proceedure is that the presi­ accepted the assurances given by administration of­ When WXDU converted from an AM to an FM station, dent has to issue an executive order which then must be ficials that the government had not encouraged private "they made their budget request for eight months," said approved by the speaker." United States aid to the Nicaraguan rebels. Paul Harner, speaker of the legislature. Harner said, however, that he was not at Duke when "My initial reaction is that because WXDU only Baker made the decision and therefore he was not con­ Thatcher Criticized: Dr. David Owen, leader of budgeted for eight months operation, it should not have sulted before the transfer of funds was made. "Everything the centrist Social Democratic party, said Wednesday decided to switch to 12 months without being assured of possible procedurally was done [by Baker]," Harner said. that Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher headed "The necessary funds," Harner said. "It was a judgment call on the president's part . . . and most incompetent Tory government since Sir Anthony "I don't feel that [WXDU] in good faith spent the money I have no problem with ASDU's response to the problem." Eden's in 1954." In a speech closing his party's annual for what they Were budgeted for" Guest said. Because ASDU by-laws state that the legislature can conference at Buxton, Owen also called Neil Kinnock, "I don't think anyone was planning for us to shut down review and vote on executive orders, any legislator can now head of the Laborite opposition, "perhaps the most at the end of the year," Kim said. "You don't build an au­ make a motion to overrule Baker's decision, but the vacuous leader the Labor Party has ever had." dience and shut down for four months." legislature as a whole must approve such an action, On the advice of former student activities financial Harner said. manager Bailey Nager, Kim approached Baker for an ad­ Weather vance on the station's 84-85 budget. See BAKER on page 2

Sleep in: There is a 60 percent chance of showers or thunderstorms with the temperature reaching the Honor commitment use questioned low 80s. The wind will gust between 15-25 mph. By JERRY SLOTKIN In a controversial move, the University sent letters to former Hanes dormitory residents last summer asking Sorry them if they had signed the Duke Student Honor Com­ Voluntary code mitment and for information about the theft of a Math 32 final examination. NO COmiX: A computer failure last night forced The Members of the President's Honor Council, which over­ sees the honor code, expressed dismay at the decision to still evolving Chronicle to drop four pages, including the "Comix" and "World & National." The only thing we knew everybody use the personal code for enforcement. By JERRY SLOTKIN This prompted Suzanne Wasiolek, dean for student life, would want to see was The Far Side. Here it is: Duke's honor code, established in 1982, differs from to consult with the council before using the code in future those at other universities because of its voluntary judicial investigation. The Far Side/Gary Larson nature, said University President Terry Sanford. "This situation demonstrates the crucial neccessity of "This is not something the University is imposing on individual integrity within a university environment," she [students]," Sanford said in a telephone interview. "The said in the letter. "Indeed, such is the basis for the Honor University is reminding you of the necessity of integrity. Commitment which was developed by a student commit­ You must enforce [it] for yourself." tee several years ago." Sanford said he was optimistic but uncertain about Trinity senior Paul Harner, a member of the Honor the new code's future. "It's going to go where the Council, said, "From the beginning, the Honor Commit­ students take it," he said. "I think Duke will become ment was designed to be separate from University judicial the first school to have an established honor commit­ code. ment, [but] it will only become so through acceptance "Despite what I am sure were good intentions on the part and use." of the Student Life staff, such a use of the Honor Commit­ ment is ill-advised and ill-conceived at best," said Harner; In the convocation of incoming freshmen in 1978, San­ also ASDU speaker of the legislature ford asked the new students to develop a honor code, presenting it at their graduation in 1982. "It seems clear that any attempt to use the Honor Com­ "I suggested to the freshman that integrity was in sad mitment as in [the Math 32] case involves a degree of repair on college campuses," he said. manipulation of. personal value, and is as such a distor­ tion of the right of individual decision," he said. A student committee, led by 1981 graduate Sam Warfier, developed the Duke Student Honor Council member and University Union President Peter Commitment. Block said, "I'm not convinced that the Honor Commitment should be used as a tool of enforcement. I think people need An excerpt from the two-paragraph code reads, "I will to be reminded of it, but not in that way." adhere to the established and required community code of conduct. According to the dictates of my own con­ Trinity senior Dave Nahmias, a member of both the science, I will report behavior in violation of such Honor Council and the Undergraduate Judicial Board, was established standards. In addition and beyond the re­ less critical. quirements of any code or law, I confirm my own com­ "I believe that the Honor Commitment should never be mitment to personal honor and integrity in all matters intertwined with judicial proceedings," he said. "1 am un­ large and small." \ sure in this ease whether the two in fact were intertwined" . See COUNCIL on page 2 See HONOR on page 2 Thursday, September 13, 1984 THE CHRONICLE Page 2 Baker bypasses Honor code used in enforcement HONOR from page 1 None of the 95 students receiving the letter responded with useful information, Wasiolek said. The two students Wasiolek defended her action, saying, "I definitely believe involved in the theft, both Hanes residents, were caught. that the Honor Commitment and enforcement of judicial usual procedure code are separate issues. However, I don't think it is wrong Other deans supported Wasiolek's action. "I think the use of [the Honor Commitment] in this situa­ BAKER from page 1 to remind students of the Honor Commitment in the judicial process." tion is highly appropriate," said Richard Cox, dean for residential life. "[The letter] is not saying that anyone According to Baker there was "no great decision to "I don't have records of who.signed the Honor Commit­ violated an honor code." be made by ASDU. I wouldn't even call it an executive ment," she said. "This was merely a reminder to students order. The decision [to enter the 84-85 budget] was one that they had accepted admission to a university which "I was supportive of this letter going out," said William to be made by WXDU," Baker said. stood for integrity and high standards." Griffith, vice president for student affairs. "We were look­ ing to see if some students had intestinal fortitude. It gives Convinced by Kim of the station's need to cover its However, Wasiolek said, "Since this has become a debts, Baker authorized the $1200 advance on May 21. the individual who had nothing to do with the incident debatable issue, in the future I would allow the Honor a chance to clear his name." "Operation this summer was not that expensive as she Council to review this use before including it in another related the figures to me," Baker said. He added that letter." Trinity senior Sue Feigin, newly elected chairman of the Honor Council, said most of the council members have only it was "less expensive for the station to continue con­ On a questionnaire attached to her letter, the question recently heard about Wasiolek's letter. tracts and services than to cancel subscriptions and was, "Upon admission to Duke, did you sign the Honor enter into new contracts [this fall]." Commitment?" "We believe that Dean Wasiolek's intentions were nothing but good," said Feigin, adding that the council has Baker said that although he "did not promise her The remaining questions asked the student if he had re­ formerly considered the issue once, but will continue to anything" in the way of additional funding from ASDU, ceived or knew of someone who had received, a copy of the discuss it. he did convey a willingness to discuss sources of fun­ examination. The test was stolen from a professor's office ding and alternatives with her. "I told her that I didn't near the end of last semester. "That's the reason we exist, to discuss such issues," she know how the legislature would react [to requests for aid]" he said. The decision to maintain summer operation, however, may result in bankruptcy for the station. "Unfortunate­ ly, [choosing to use the allocated budget early] sets up. Council pushes code awareness the situation where, unless we set up something, we are going to run out of money," Kim said. COUNCIL from page 1 The President's Honor Council, which includes 14 "I didn't see that we had a whole lot of choice as we Sanford said the Honor Commitment, because it is seniors and four juniors selected each year by ASDJ, had so many setbacks and delays last year," Kim said. voluntary, is not a judicial code. was formed in the spring of 1983 to publicize the new "It was important to run continuously . . . and the im­ "We already had what most students call a judicial coda mediacy of the situation outweighed the considerations code," he said. "A judicial code is for those who can't en­ "The Honor Commitment is simply a personal state­ of running out of money again." force the [Honor Commitment] themselves." ment of adherence to an individually developed code The advance of funding permitted WXDU to be on In April 1979, Warner's committee sent out a rough of ethics and morality that is expected to be a part of the air 21 hours a day during the summer months. draft of the proposed commitment to all undergradu­ generally accepted community principles," said Trini­ "Most college stations don't broadcast over the summer ates, asking for comments and suggestions. ty senior Paul Harner, a two-year member of the honor and most don't even run 24 hours a day during the The issue was discussed in the committee's weekly council. academic year .as WXDU does]," said station disc jockey meetings and in occasional conferences with Sanford. Harner said the definition of honor in Duke's code was Charity Snyder. A formal draft of the Honor Commitment was endor­ intentionally left ambiguous, to show the committee's Kim estimated that 25-30 students worked at WXDU sed by the student body in a referendum vote in the "indigenous confidence in the ability of the individual this summer. spring of 1982. to develop and adhere to his own high principles." According to Kim, if the station runs out of money, WXDU will ask ASDU for additional funds. "We are not a commercial station and cannot make more money," Kim said. "If money does not come from ASDU, we can­ not run." Harner said that if and when WXDU approaches ASDU, the future of the station will be discussed. "When ASDU considers additional funding, it will also discuss the issue of summer broadcasting," Harner said. Both Harner and Guest said the issue of summer broadcasting may be submitted to a student referen­ The dum. "Students should be able to decide if WXDU should run through summer because they are paying THE CHRONICLE for it," Guest said. Guest suggested conducting a "cost HAUFBRAU benefit analysis to see if it is worth it to run year-round." Highly personal

proudly presents for you Deadheads & such . For a Mardi Gras of fun and excitement watch: The Boney LATE NITE Maroney Band (old time rock 'n' roll) Your best $2.00 cover charge entertainment value. This week: Music starts 9:30ish Tonight at 11:30 A special segment, TONIGHT! on Duke's Cable 13. FUN ON A BUDGET. 35* on select draft beers Join our live COME OUT AND DANCE! studio audience in 010 Old Chem. 615 Broad Street Walking distance from East Campus (under Kentucky Fried Chicken) Come! 286-1965 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Campus Groups plan political activities Page 3 September 13, 1984 Today Democrats to boost j CRs plan active role Freewater film, "The Guru," Bryan Center film morale, confidence in state, local races theater, 7 and 9:30 p.m. By ERIK HERZOG By ANDREW BAGLEY Friday "The Duke Democratic party is not dead," said Michael "President Reagan will be a lame duck if the Senate does Kirwan, president of Duke Democrats. "We are going for not stay Republican," said David Hirshmann, co-chairman Botany Department Weekly Plant Ecology Lecture: a higher profile." of the Duke College Republicans. "It's as important for us Frosty Levy of Duke Botany Dept. 144 Biological "There is a majority of Democrats outside of Duke .... to work for the congressional candidate as it is to work Sciences building, 12:30 p.m. We forget this majority out there. We are going for a higher for the president." profile. It is too easy to be overwhelmed by the [College The College Republicans, are gearing up for the upcom­ Field Hockey, Duke vs. High Point College, Hanes Republicans]" Kirwan said. ing election by establishing a schedule of activity aimed field, 4 p.m. On Nov. 6, Democratic presidential candidate Walter at involving as many students as possible, Hirshmann said. Mondale will face President Reagan. Other important Planned activities included: a weekly table in the Bryan North Carolina races include the senatorial race between Center, campaigning in Durham and inviting prominent Volleyball, Duke vs. UNC-Charlotte, Cameron Indoor Democratic candidate Gov. Jim Hunt and Republican Sen. Republicans to speak at Duke. Stadium, 5 p.m. Jesse Helms and the gubernatorial race between Democrat Rufus Edmisten and Republican Jim Martin. Democratic On Nov. 6, President Reagan will face Democratic Freewater film, "Rear Window,'" Bryan Center film Rep. Tim Valentine will be challenged by Republican Duke presidential candidate Walter Mondale. Important North theater, 7, 9:30 p.m., midnight graduate Frank Hill. Carolina contests include the Senate race between Republican Sen. Jesse Helms and Democratic Gov. Jim More than 50 students attended the group's first meeting Hunt and the gubernatorial race between Rebulican Jim Weekend last week, raising the club's dues-paying membership to Martin and Democrat Rufus Edminsten. Duke graduate 45, said Mark Jaffe, the club's treasurer. Kirwan, a Trini­ Republican Frank Hill will also challenge Democrat Tim Volleyball, Duke vs. Virginia Commonwealth Univer­ ty senior, was pleased with the turnout. "We're coming back Valentine for his seat in House of Representatives. .... We're more visible this year," he said. sity, Cameron Indoor Stadium, 10:30 a.m., "Participation [in the CRs] has increased nearly 200 per­ Saturday Kirwan explained the rise in the club's membership: cent since two years ago," said Corey Burr, chairman of the "Last year we were an issue-oriented club. This year we Duke campus Reagan-Bush campaign. "It shows a strong are a campaign-oriented club." Freewater film, "Jason and the Argonauts," Bryan wave of conservatism and the support for the president and "It's an election year. People like to see tangible results Center film theater, 10:30 a.m., Saturday the vice president." .... It helps you focus and concentrate into a political at­ According to Hirshmann, nearly 150 students filled out mosphere," said Jaffe, a Trinity junior. Soccer, UCLA vs. South Florida, Duke Soccer membership cards at the club's first meeting, raising its The Democrats' plans for this semester are keyed on stu­ membership to 450. "We still haven't gotten everybody in­ Stadium, 6 p.m., Saturday dent involvement in electing as many Democratic can­ volved," he said. "We can do better." didates as possible, Kirwan said. "Our main goal is to make the community aware of the Soccer, Duke vs. Southern Illinois, Duke Soccer Planned activities include: on and off campus voter importance of voting," Hirshmann said. "We will par­ Stadium, 8 p.m., Saturday registration drives, active participation in as many cam­ ticipate in voter registration drives in Durham and pro­ paigns as possible and publicizing candidacies through vide absentee ballots on campus. We hope to do it in bi­ Quad Flix, "Terms of Endearment," Page phone banks, Kirwan said. partisan ways." Auditorium, 7, 9:30 p.m., Saturday and Sunday The Duke Democrats will canvass Durham precincts Hirshmann said the CRs will place a table in the Bryan every Saturday morning to register voters, Kirwan said. Center at least once a week to hand out campaign International Association Open House, International This Saturday The Duke Democrats will sponsor "Rock materials, raise funds by selling posters and T-shirts and give out Republican paraphenalia. House, corner of Anderson and Campus Drive, 7:30 Against Reagan." Bands including the XTfeens will play and there will be speeches in between sets. Kirwan Money raised by the CRs will go toward inviting speakers p.m., Saturday describes the event as "an enthusiasm generator to get peo­ to campus this fall and spring, Hirshmann said. ple fired up about the campaign." Two speakers have already accepted to speak on cam­ Soccer, Illinois vs. Florida, Duke Soccer Stadium, According to Kirwan, the club wants to get involved with pus, Hirshmann said. They are Art Laffer, prominent 1 p.m., Sunday the Durham campaigns of Mondale, Hunt, Edmisten and supply-side economist and Newt Gingrich, a young Georgia Valentine. representative and a stalwart of the New Right. DUU Galleries Commmittee, reception for artist The Duke Democrats will also participate in debates - Hildy Tow. Brown Gallery, Bryan Center, 2-4 p.m., one of which may be televised by WRAL-Channel 5 - and He said his club has invited Jean Kirkpatrick, U.S am­ Sunday will distribute literature, posters, bumper stickers and yard bassador to the United Nation, to speak on campus and signs supporting the local and national Democratic that back-up choices include Rep. Jack Kemp (R-N.Y.) and candidates. Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole, a Duke graduate Residential Life, Music Department, piano recital and member of the University Board of Trustees. by Benjamin Ward, Baldwin Auditorium, 8:15 p.m., Other events on the Democrats' agenda include setting The CRs will also organize trips into Durham to cam­ Sunday up a table on the Bryan Center walkway each Monday to paign and pass out flyers for the various candidates, Hir­ hand out brochures and buttons and to register voters. shmann said.

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?•—-•-_•__••__•_•___•• , , fPOD SERVED 'TIL CLOSING EVERYDAY ______——— -r. Opinion Know a Frankenstein Page 4 September 13, 1984 when you've read one

Dante's "Inferno" begins: "When I had URAP program offers journeyed half of our life's way,/I found myself within a shaddowed forest,/For I had Sandy Keziah lost the path that does not stray." In this first canto, the narrator describes a hill part-time employment which he is prevented from climbing because of the appearance of a leopard, a Anyone who has read The expansion of the Undergraduate the logistics research will make them bet­ lion and a she-wolf. Research Assistantship Program, which ter able to compete for the finite pool of The situation is perhaps interesting, but Frankenstein knows that helps students find paid part-time research grants. if we were to read this only on a superficial the monster is an intelli­ work with professors in all academic Program directors also see URAP as a level without realizing the allegorical disciplines, is a commendable effort on the way for students interested in a subject, but meanings, Dante's work would be cast aside gent being who repre­ part of the University to relate our liberal not sure they want to pledge the time to an and viewed as unrealistic No one would sents the evils of ego­ Arts and Sciences education to the* "real independent study, to explore the area believe that a man was literally led through world." without a binding commitment. Hades by the dead poet Virgil. tism and ambition in the The program, which has been in existence This year, the program has the funds to Instead, intelligent readers understand 19th century. for 12 years, pays student research accommodate 74 people. Applications are that a man lost in a "shaddowed forest" is assistants for 40 hours per semester, due on Sept. 14. Students should take ad­ one who is bewildered and confused. The although students often continue working vantage of the opportunity to work with hill he tries to climb is more than a mound claims are legitimate. after their funds run out. professors on a less formal basis than they or a mountain, it is the way out of his But my article never questioned whether Encouraging students to explore their normally do and to study in-depth a facet predicament and into understanding. The or not the restaurant should expand and subject areas in a more active, more ex­ of their discipline. leopard, the lion and the she-wolf are not create the added conveniences I merely ex­ periential way, helps train the next genera­ just animals, but they are obstacles he en- pressed sadness at the loss of "the w_.rm, tion of researchers on the cutting edge. The program endeavors to match students . counters on his way to understanding. earthy atmosphere of the old Somethyme." Even students who do not plan to pursue and professors with similar interests. They represent incontinence, violence, Tbm Prince told us of Somethyme's "direct research as a career should gain from the Because students can control how much ef­ and greed respectively. Without these link to the food chain." We learned from him program a broader knowledge of the origin fort they put into a project after the initial underlying meanings, The Divine Comedy that they provide the "realest, freshest, of information they are spoon-fed in class. 40 hours, students with heavy course loads would be a ridiculous tale that would never most nutritious, tastiest variety of foods Although the new director, David McClay, need not be as wary of the work as with an be considered classic. available" They "buy as much local produce is an associate professor of zoology and the independent study. The success or failure of this writing as possible," they teach people to cook, and last director was a botany professor, the URAP should be more widely advertised depends upon the reader's ability to ex­ they use the finest carpenters. research areas students choose are often not by the professors, who stand to benefit from trapolate from concrete situations the All these things are undoubtedly true. I in the natural sciences. the program as much as do students. And deeper thematic statements being made. would even go a step further and say that Because research money in these areas academic departments might make Too often, however, readers cannot see the Somethyme is one of the best restaurants will probably not be as readily forthcoming students aware of what "kind of research is forest for the trees. Rather than comprehen­ in town. I have eaten there three times in as in the sciences, teaching students about being conducted in their areas. ding the underlying map, we tend to only as many weeks. Somethyme is to be com­ grasp the stickpins or markers that are in­ plemented for their excellence. tended to guide us. But these things have absolutely nothing A good example of this is Mary Shelly's to do with what I wrote. I spoke only of Library a fine addition Frankenstein. Most people who have not Somethyme's choice to change the aesthetic read her book think that Frankenstein is appearance from rustic to modern. Anyone having a class on Science Drive sion. The possibilities for filling this space a horror film monster who walks around I do not question their position in the during the past two years could not have include a biotechnical or bioengineering with his arms extended, killing people. community, nor the skills of their crafts­ helped noticing the major construction research center on the fourth floor and a But anyone who has read the novel knows men; they did a great job of creating the which has been going on next to the biotechnology facility for the basement. that the monster is an intelligent being desired style. I was just expressing my per­ engineering library. The Teer Library is both a welcome and who represents the evils of egotism, ambi­ sonal preference for the old rather than the The construction is over. Last Friday much appreciated addition to the Univer­ tion and scientific progression of the 19th new. afternoon, the University opened the new sity. With other fine engineering schools in century. There is much more to the story The problem I addressed goes much Nello L. Teer Engineering Library. The the region, this new facility will help Duke than the sensational thrills. deeper than a restaurant in Durham, N.C. $4.35 million building was completed last compete on an equal or superior basis. Duke When I read the Sept. 10 Opinion page The problem involves Chicago, April. wants a strong engineering school, and the of The Chronicle, I realized that I had writ­ Philadelphia, Brooks Brothers, the Duke The new library is more than just another new library is a fine addition to it. ten a Frankenstein. My Sept. 4 column, en­ University Book Store, "Mr. Ugly," (all men­ pretty building on campus. It is a needed During the dedication ceremonies, titled "Polyester: Epitome of America," tioned in my article) and even myself. facility which will alleviate the crowded University President Terry Sanford com­ turned into a monster who ruthlessly kill­ I was the foolish American tourist who conditions in the existing Engineering mended former Engineering School Dean ed, rather than becoming a series of was so used to modern compromises that I building and hopefully help maintain that Alexsander Vesic for providing much of the stickpens that guide the reader through a did not acknowledge the wisdom of a school's continued growth. impetus behind the construction of the map. The readers seemed to grab hold of the Florentine merchant until months later. Previously, the Engineering library oc­ library. The Teer family of Durham, which concrete symbols without acknowledging My intentions were not to evaluate the cupied a much smaller location within the made the original grant of $1.5 million for the deeper implications. quality of Somethyme, Chicago or old building. The new building dramatically the building, should also be lauded for their My column addressed the problem of Philadelphia, but to show the reader increases this library space, and also con­ contribution. moderninity, and America's sell-out to ex­ through these concrete examples a larger, tains a lounge area, classrooms, and ad­ pediency. My most extensive example of this more important theme. ministrative offices. The Teer Library presents both a great was Somethyme restaurant; however, less Once again Somethyme has provided me In addition to these new facilities, there gift and a great opportunity for the Univer­ than one-third of the column was devoted with a concrete example of a large and is presently some unused space in the sity. Duke was fortunate in getting such a to this example. deeper theme. I hope that this time the library, as the unfinished basement, and gift, and hopefully will use it as a tool to Mary Rocap, in her well written letter, readers will see beyond Frankenstein, The fourth floor remain designated for expan­ help greatly improve its engineering school. responsibly disclaimed my accusations of a Inferno and Sometyme to the more sell-out. In this letter she lists the many ad­ submerged issue discussed. vantages of the modern addition. Her Sandy Keziah is a Trinity junior. THE CHRONICLE Joe McHugh, Editor-in-chief Larry Kaplow, Associate Editor Al Bernstein, Kathy Burkett, Managing Editors Paul Gaffney, Editorial Page Editor Elisa Davidson, News Editor Townsend Davis, News Editor Carrie Teegardin, University Editor Andrew Bagiey, State & National Editor Wendy Lane, Sports Editor Jenny Wright, Production Editor Peter Ha, Photography Editor Will Hicks, Photography Editor Peter Tarasewich, Sports Production Editor Flora Garcia, Entertainment Editor Amy Schulman, Features Editor Shari Williams, Features Editor Tim Dyer, Business Manager Gina Columna, Advertising Manager

The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Signed editorials, columns and cartoons represent the views of their authors. Phone numbers: editor: 684-5469, newsfeatures: 684-2663, sports: 684-6115, business office: 't^SRaWEMi1rOJ5ar(^V^T[jgEU: WITH AS0CCESSWL UKUD'lABORGWlffiON.' 684-3811, advertising office: 684-6106. 'NUMBK'WSWE-. IWouSHOUDSrBgSO LUCKY. ' The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. Thursday, September 13, 1984 THE CHRONICLE Page 5

'NtoNDalfi NeeDs TO ROLL UP HIS siseves, LOOSeN HIS Tie. dND HIT UM WITH TVS FaCTS/.."

Enjoy Dukespeak, but be ready to cast it aside

The use of all verbs has been made obsolete at Duke by wonders if it doesn't function somewhat similarly. the grammatical phenomenon, "do." Any action can be ex­ Just as James B. Duke sometimes seems akin to Big pressed as "doing" something. A multitude of examples ex­ Ed Farrell Brother, when people start saying things like, "Oh, he's ist in a typical student's day. a Gamma (i.e.)," or "She's an Epsilon Xi" frequently, they One doesn't go to study at the library, he "does Perkins." Ratburgers, "blow it off," DUFS, DUMB, ASDU, DUPAC, lose some perception of reality and individuality. A weekend adventurer doesn't travel to UNC, he "does and DRFTB (don't run for the bus). Labelling of this type does have clear practical value, Chapel Hill." Eating at the Blue and White Room is "do­ These are obviously convenient to know, and abbrevia­ since it is impossible to know everyone as an individual ing lunch at the Pits," or more succinctly "doing the Pits." tion-mania is common on almost all college campuses. on a campus this size Labelling, however, should never Even worse, eating in the DownUnder is "doing the DU," Dukespeak is one unifying factor for the entire Duke become a barrier to normal social intercourse. (pronounced "do"). One doesn't play music on his or her population. Intellect and intelligence do exist at Duke, despite some stereo, but one could quite readily "do a tape" while "do­ Where else does the simple compound word "airball" theories to the contrary, and many students take pride in ing calc or psych." evoke such stirring connotations. As freshman (a.k.a. being smart without being intellectual "dweebs." This is This irregular construction has become quite widespread schmen, frosh, and even worse, J-frosh) learn Dukespeak, why, for example, a T-shirt reading "Duke-it even sounds and admittedly can be interesting to see how far it stret­ they become more involved in the "Duke experience." cool" sells well on the "walkway." ches. However, away from the proper atmosphere, this can A possible problem which emerges from this is a result The idea is to "do speech" with the realization that one's sound unusual, as two Duke students related from in­ of slang becoming an unconscious barrier on one's ability verbal ability can easily erode into babble. With a cidents over vacation. to communicate. reasonable effort one can think and wear Dukewear at the One, upon asking his friends what they were "doing New George Orwell's "Newspeak" was a language imposed by same time, giving Washington Duke his money's worth. Year's Eve," received strange looks. The other, when con­ a totalitarian state which deliberately reduced the per­ In all, one must learn and enjoy Dukespeak while here, fronted with having to wake up early in the morning, missible vocabulary annually to limit freedom of expres­ but he or she must just as quickly cast it aside in "the real remarked bluntly, to his friends' confusion, "I don't do 5:30" sion and restrict the ability to think. Dukespeak, on the world." (a variation on "I don't do windows.") other hand, is quite voluntary and often enjoyable, yet one Ed Farrell is a Trinity sophomore. There are certain limitations which hold in polite con­ versation, though. "Doing" another person has pro­ miscuous connotations. If one hears, "I think I'll do a freshman girl (or guy) tonight," then he has heard an abuse of terminology, although one can quite politely sit home Letters Policy and "do" nothing. Man's greatest gift is his voice, his ability to speak elude the author's class or department, phone number This widespread grammatical anomaly emerged from out against the actions and opinions of others when they and local address. The Chronicle will not publish un­ the drug culture of the 1960's or possibly earlier. "Doing conflict with his own beliefs. For this reason, The signed letters. If for any reason you wish to withhold bongs," "doing coke" or "doing acid" are the standardized Chronicle encourages all members of the Duke com­ your name from your letter when it is published, please forms of describing drug-related activities. munity to submit letters to its editorial board and to feel free to discuss the matter with the editorial page "Doing shots," and "doing beers," have become methods use the University newspaper as a means of public editor. Requests for anonymity, when supported by valid of describing legal actions and have become part of general expression. reasons, will be granted. American slang. Letters to the editorial board should be mailed to Box • The Chronicle will not print letters that contain Eventually, this spread to "doing" just about anything, 4696, Duke Station or delivered in person to The racial, ethnic or sexual slurs, inside jokes or personal and seems to have taken a unique foothold at Duke, even Chronicle office on the third floor of Flowers building. innuendos, vulgar language or libelous statements. being used as a noun, as in "nice do!" to comment on an The Chronicle attempts to print promptly all letters • The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters for unusual hairstyle. it receives, but reserves the right to withhold any let­ length and clarity. The construction, "do," is just one facet of the interesting ters that do not adhere to the following: • The Chronicle reserves the right to withhold let­ artificial sublanguage which can be called Dukespeak. All • All letters must be typed and double-spaced. ters or portions of letters containing promotional infor- freshmen, upon entering Duke, are given a guide to some • All letters must be signed, and dated and. must in-. . niation designed to benefit groups^or publicize^events. of the moreeftmnMW Dukespeakexpressions,suchas. -G.Ir,' Satisfaction Restaurant & Bar is CUSTOM DESIGN T-SHIRTS AND THE NEW YORK TIMES subscrip­ looking for day waitresses. Must HATS. Large order discounts for: tions now available. 20 percent be available from 10:30 a.m.- 4 Fundraisers, dorms. Bid-night below newsstand rates. Call Lisa p.m. at least 2 times Monday- shirts, and group who wants to Schneider 684-1135. _ Friday. Cook positions are also be noticd! Call 684-1043. Ask for THE DUKE UNION NEEDS A available. Apply in person. John. FINANCE CHAIRPERSON. Re­ 493-7797. quires time, enthusiam and the Housestaff couple need occas­ •p tr jDogtn $atfX ability to work with crazy people. Classifieds sional evening babysitter for 1 Call Pete at 684-2911 and win child. Right off intercampus bus X______^___ this wonderful opportunity to Page 6 September 13, 1984 line. Call 493-5382. Fin* japMWM European serve humanity! Auto Repair STUDENT LEADERS: help coor­ dinate formation of Triangle Area 2704 Chapel Hill Blvd. Wanted: Drum Drummer and Female Sing Singer Listen! This SORORITY FORMAL RUSH COM­ SORORITY WOMEN: Sign up Chapter. New Oxford Society — Durham — 489-5800 Announcements MITTEE: Short meeting Thurs­ NOW (Bryan Center Info Desk) for natonal collegiate organization of is all new original music based on day, 5:30 p.m. in Panhel Office. RUSH COUNSELOR interviews Traditional Episcopalians — for old originals from various new WORD PROCESSING — Just Your The New York Times Subscrip­ Questions? Call Debbie at being conducted this week. fellowship, study, service. Call Fr. wave funk and folk artists. New Type Word Processing service tions now availible. 20 percent 684-7553. MANDATORY 11 percent from Stenhouse, Chapel Hill synthesis! Creativity and Humor will type your dissertations, form below Newsstand rates. Call Lisa each sorority. helpful. Call Will at 383-8849. Schneider. IFC Youth Outreach needs YOU. letters, papers, etc. quickly and Attention Women Singers! Out of Be a Big Brother or Sister for a HOOF IV HORN needs a TECH­ professionally. Emergency typing the Blue, Duke's only women's a Sudi's Restaurant. Positions Durham youth — one of the most NICAL DIRECTOR and a MASTER 20 Immediate openings: Typist, available immediately for welcome. 489-5470 (24 hours]. cappella singing group, needs rewarding and fun possibilities of CARPENTER for "MERRILY WE telephone, talkers, delivery and one second soprano! Auditions qualified cooks _ waitpeople. Ex­ your Duke experience. Sign up ROLL ALONG." Please call General Office Persons. Ideal for perience preferred. Apply 111 Lost and Found Wed.. Sept. 19th, starting 9 p.m. for interviews at Bryan Center In- Vanessa, 684-0218, or stop by students. Part time — day and Sign-up information outside Giles West Main St. 2-3 p.m. fo. by 9/16. Fred Theater, 012 Flowers. eve. hours available. Call — LOST: Gold watch Saturday night THIS IS YOUR CHANCE. If you've 204. Learn about STUDY OPPOR­ 682-5500 for appointment 10 at the football game. If found Written a paper you're damn pro­ always wanted to get involved MEN'S TENNIS CLUB: Meeting TUNITIES IN at informa­ . 5 p.rr please call Cindy at 684-0761. ud of?? ERUDITIO (formerly trie with Duke musical theater, but tonight, 9 p.m., rm 126 Soc/ tion meeting, Thursday, Sept. ACNE STUDY — Women 18-40 REWARD Duke Humanities Review) is now you're not a performer (or even 13th. 4 p.m.. 226 Allen. years — Good health — mild to Psych. This is a must! If can't al accepting submissions from ALL if you are), now is the time to take Lost: Gold ring with black stone CONSIDER STUDYING IN INDIA moderate facial acne — 12 week tend, call Tony at 286-0349. DISCIPLINES. DEADLINE: Mon­ advantage of this rare opportuni­ in Perkins or Bryan Center men's — Information Meeting: Thurs­ free study — safe, known effec­ Politics and morality an day, Sept. 17th. Turn papers in at ty. Hoof 'n' Horn is looking for a bathroom. August 30, sentimen­ day, Sept. 13th, 4:30 p.m., 229 tive medicine plus cosmetics — necessarily related. — Ronald Student Activities Office. Any responsible, dedicated person to tal LARGE REWARD. 684-7983. Allen. $40 to complete study. Call Reagan. The first amendment problems or questions, call fill the position of PRODUCER for 682-8929 Durham, 942-0512 LOST: Black & Grey Tabby cat, has erected a wall between 684-1937. Have an impact on the future. their fall production "MERRILY Chapel Hill. Tues. to Fri. 8-5 p.m. male. Named ""Simon," shaved on church and state. — Hugo Black, Duke Democrats: Meeting Thurs­ WE ROLL ALONG." Also needed is XSL106SALES INTERNSHIP OP­ Responsible, affectionate Front paws, needs medication. In former Supreme Court Chief day, 7:30 p.m. in 229 Social a COSTUME COORDINATOR. No PORTUNITY. Valuable business caregiver needed by professional vicinity of Poplar Apts./Chapel Sciences. TOPICS: Mondale, Fer­ experience is necessary for Justice. experience for your resume as couple to care for out one-year- Towers. Reward. 383-4427. raro. Hunt. Voter Registration, either postion. so join the Hoof THETAS have KISSED 925 guys well as high income potential. A Debates. Dues . . All welcome. FOUND — Freedom of speech at Duke! Don't forget STUDY major national financial corpora­ n' Horn family! For more informa­ and politico-muscical awareness Attention Women Singers! Out of tion, stop by Fred Theater (012 BREAK 10 p.m. Cleland Com­ tion which is rated best in its field the Blue. Duke's only women's a — meet with us Sat., Sept. 15th mons tonite. Much more to be in Fortune Magazine survey of­ cappella singing group, needs rs) East Quad 4-8 p.m. X-teens said revealed — don't forget annuals fers college students manage­ one second soprano! Auditions 9-2825. SO. LOST — Reactionary Ronalds & underwear! Pam and Ann. ment. For details and appoint­ Services Offerred Raygun. Wed . Sept. 19th, starting 9 p.m. Amanda - ' '0 donna di v ment, call Scott Hoffman after 1 Sign-up information outside Giles Help Wanted p.m. at 489-6505 FREE COLOR ANALYSIS. FOUND — BLUE/GREEN woman's 204. raincoat in 136 Soc. Sciences CELEBRATE EARLY! Design the 4 WORK STUDY POSITIONS Tues. night. Call 684-0489 to logo for HOMECOMING '84 and Pi Phi Pledges and Si Pre- AVAILABLE AT INTERNATIONAL analysis offered free in your win $25! Details are at the Bryan initiation ceremony tonight at HOUSE: Study Abroad Assis­ home. Others charge from $35 AEPhi: Don't forget mandatory Center information Desk. Entries 5:30 p.m. in Giles. Tomorrow is tants, newsletter editor, recep­ to $95 and more. Call Donna at LOST: keys on red keychain, Tues­ meeting standards retreat this day on West. Please call Ann at are due September 21st. the BIG PAY! tionist. Call Dr. Silver, 684-2174 544-4495 for more information. Sunday, Sept. 16th at 7:30 p.m 64-1719. THETAS: Become progressively or 684-3585. •:f:*3a'«-mti»*7_v_n«t% in House H Commons. Bring For anyone interested in happier at the Kappa Sig Pro- goodies! SERIOUS martial arts training: Part-time weekend restaurant Roomate Wanted gessive Drink Mixer this Saturday help needed. Apply in person Thanks to everyone who made traditional OKINAWAN GOJU-RYU my birthday so special. I love you KARATE CLUB. Instructor: Alan Best Western Skyland Inn — 1-85 all! Catherine. Jacobs. 2nd Degree Black Belt at U.S. 70 W. (286-7827) Tues. & Thurs. 8-10 Drivers: Have fun. See the world. Women of TABARD: Don't forget p.m. $30/month at the Excer- Full-time, part-time, flexible wine and cheese get-together citium Studio. Upstairs in Check out the Asian Students schedule. Can earn $6-8/hr. and Friday night, 7:30 p.m., Brightleaf. 1st class Thurs., Sept. Association party Sat. nite, 9 more THE NEW YORK EXPRESS Available immediately: Large cemmons. 13th. p.m.. at Few Fed Lounge. NEEDS YOU! More than a Job — apartment in Synagogue-owned BOCC: Pizza, rhine wine or me? THE ACHIVE, Duke's literary It's an adventure!! Apply in person Kosher House. Will sleep four. DUKE TUTORS — Interested in Never thought you'd ALMOST gi magazine, has staff positions after 3 p.m. 2699 Chapel Hill One block from East Campus. giving one or two hours a week it. Oats. RS. — Your place t open. If you're interested, come Blvd. Corner or Hope Valley Furnished, Utilities included. to tutoring Durham school to organizational meeting Mon­ Road. Call: 682-1238. 9 a.m.— 1 p.m. children and plannning field trips My Daddy used to spank my bare day, Sept. 17 at 7 p.m.at the East Housemate needed in a large for them? Previous members: bottom everyday, but now he's Campus Center, call Claire at house three blocks from East Wednesday 5:30 p.m. Old Chem gone, will you be my Daddy? If so, 684-7551, or come by 209 WANTED: ENTHUSIASTIC Campus. Call 688-0437 or come 03. Important organizational call Larry C. House D. PIZZA STORE by 1111 Gregson St. meeting. New members: (no ex­ PERSONNEL KELLY — Well, you're an adult perience necessary) Thurs. 5:30 Kappas, mandatory formal Part or full time. Pizza now. We're getting so old! Who'd p.m. Old Chem 03. Questions? meeting Friday the 14th, at 6 makers. Phone persons. have thought it would all work out Call Sara 684-0558 or Deanie p.m. in 136 Social Sciences. Pol­ Flexible hours and days. so well? It's really been great — Men's 10-Speed Motobecane. 684-7758. ly will be here for initiation thanks for being a real friend. Must be at least 18. Must Sealed bearings, strong X-TEENS are jammin' for justice Review — bring notes. Happy 21st Birthday, and here's be able to work weekends. aluminum rims. $150. 493-1057, — Duke is rockin' against Reagan to many more! Love, S. Must be clean cut and evenings. and Helms — Sat. Sept. 15th ADPi's: Meeting tonite 6:30 p.m.. have the desire to be part CLASS OF 85 — Big Huge Senior East Campus Quad, 4-8 p.m. — 136 Soc. Sci. PAYDAY! Ciao. of America's largest pizza Cutlass Supreme 1970. good party TONIGHT IN VON CANON 8 Food. Beer, Political Awareness Presbyterian Campus Ministry: 6 delivery company! Apply mechanical condtion. new bat­ p.m.-ll p.m. More than 5 kegs! also Reggae Truth ana Rights. p.m. Mary Lou Williams Center. in person at the tery and tires. $1100. Call even- Please bring Semester Enroll- Fun, food, fellowship. Questions? * Caff us first! " mgs. 286-0099. COME TO THE BLUE DEVIL FEUD DOMINO'S PIZZA location ment card. TO SEE WHO THE BEST BLUE Call 383-6927. Is it true you can buy Jeeps for in,your neighborhood. If you're a SENIOR then you DEVIL REALLY IS! See the Duke TOURGUIDES — Remember to $44 through the U.S. Govern­ •1984 Domino'* Pizza, Inc. 1 £25£Ba I should be there!! 8 p.m. to athletes take on Duke student come to the Tourguide Reception ment? Get the facts today!! Call leaders — East and West Cam­ p.m. in Von Canon. Lots o' beer! today a 4:30 p.m. in Few Fed Two SENIORS to serve ; £*_.-.... . ^9^9 .••.••.• .• .^^^z. . ... *£ 1-312-742-1142 Ext. 5265. pus — in Duke's First Blue Devil . paid Lots o' music! Lots o' fun! Lounge!! Be there aloha^ participants in persi Oscillating 12" desk fan for sale. Feud! Fri., Sept. 14th, 139 Social zm.wtoifa*W:\M;t__ | Flipping, Tripping, G & T sipp­ MEN'S TENNIS CLUB: Meeting assessment course. $3.50 per Brand new and unused — at a Sciences, 7 p.m. Sponsered by ing . . . Rocking, Socking. hour, averaging about $100 per used price. Call Mollie 684-0441. Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. tonight, 9 p.m., 126 Soc/Psych. VOCAL INSTRUCTION. Study Body Popping . . , Skiing, Pee­ semester. If interested, please 3 cubic foot refrigerator for sale. Donation: $1. DOOR PRIZES!! This is a muse If can't attend, call singing with a singer! Training ing, "Ain't Nobody- call Mrs. Williams. 684-3645. TEAM PRIZES!" GIFT CER­ Tony at 286-0349. and performance in and Dorm room size. Excellent condi­ ing" . . . Throwing, Blowing, WANTED: Part-time office help. TIFICATES from Darryl's. Oh! U.S. Beginning and advanced tion. $85. If interested call Tom Homegrowing . . . "Hi'-ing, Duke Badminton Club vs. Bristol, Telephone, reception, data entry Brian's. Satisfaction, Domino's students, for repertoire or au­ Smith 286-0716. "Bye"ing, "Omega Psi Phi" England. Part of the British- and light office duties. Minimal and a 3-MINUTE SHOPPING dience preparation. Call: Nell ing . . . Snoring, Flooring. American Festival. Matches start skills and a good attitude a must. Family membership in Durham SPREE at A&P See you there!!! Wiseman. 489-1541. '"Like-Never-Before"- 6 p.m., Sunday, Sept. 16th. Spec­ Flexible hours in a stimulating at­ Racquet Club. Substantial Dis­ ing . . . Calling, "Brawley Hail­ Class Ot '86: Lottery drawing for HELP FOR ANOREXICS/BULI­ tators welcome. mosphere. Call 684-3630. count. Contact: Leigh Kammerer, ing": Skylab Falling . . . Eating, the two $100 prizes . . . Thurs­ MICS. Special meeting of ILG (International Living Group): 4245 DeLeon St., Ft. Myers, Fla. Greeting, Random Black day — 12:15 p.m. — Bryan WORK-STUDY POSITION AVA1L- 0vere3ter's Anonymous. Call Don't forget lunch TODAY (Thurs­ 33901. Meeting . . , Sunning, Funn­ Center walkway. If you paid your BLE for student interested in an Nancy at 684-1756. IT'S YOUR To a good home. 75 Buick Regal. ing, Always Running . . . Hipp­ dues you can win! day) EAST CAMPUS UNION at 12 OPPORTUNITY TO HELP REVISE CHOICE. Friendly, loyal, good tires. $850. ing, Hopping, Never Stopp­ noon. Meet in front lobby. THE UNDERGRADUATE 8ULLE- HAIRCUTS $4.50 and up. Jim's 688-0235 after 5 p.m. ing .. . Caring, Sharing, "I'll TIN! Junior or senior preferred. Barber Shop, near Duke and VA be there-ing ... — And I Flexible hours. Please see Dean 76 VW DASHER STATION WAGON at 614 Trent Drive. Phdne wouldn't have it ANY OTHER WAY! Wittig, lfo Allen Bldg, — Stereo — 4 spd — One owner 286-9558; hours 8-5 p.m. HAPPY 21stt! RS. See you at the 684-5585 —well maintained — GREAT LIT­ Closed Mondays. TLE CAR — REGULAR GAS. Ask- Fresh,Fly, Fest. . . Love Karhys. DATA ANALYSIS ASSISTANT for DISSERTATION PROBLEMS? ing $1595 - 489-0832. Start the weekend early. Come to hospital evaluation projects. Richard S. Cooper, Ph.D., Clinical Small refrigerator. 3x2, freezer, the Senior Class Party tonight in Classified Rates $5/hr, flexible schedule. Prefer Psychologist offers a group for wood-grain exterior. Used just 2 Von Canon. Bring Enrollment senior/grad student. Ms. blocked students. Not traditional weeks, moving and must sell. Chronicle Classifieds may be dropped off in the Beckman. 684-2768. psychotherapy, this is a time- Card. COLOR ANALYSIS: Earn up to limited, task-oriented, problem- $150 or best offer. Call Molly at Classified Depository outside our offices on the 3rd SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS $200 per day and more in the solving support group. New 383-4680 or 684-2520. SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS Floor of Flowers Bldg., or may be mailed to: Box fast growing BeautiCare and Col­ group begins week of Oct. 1. For SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS or Analysis business. Call Donna information call 489-6087. Personals 4696 D.S., Durham, N.C. 27706. Prepayment is Start early at the class of 85 par­ at 544-4485 to set up an ABORTION TO 20 WEEKS. Pri­ ty tonighLJjeejwjhere!_ required. Rates are: $2.00 per day for the first 15 vate and Confidential GYN facili­ APO — BROTHERS AND words, 10$ per additional word per day. Discounts: ty with Saturday and weekday ap­ RUSHEES. Be at the graveyard Assert you seniority! Be at Von STUDENT BARTENDER/ WAITER/ pointments available. FREE field Friday, September 14th at Canon tonight. 8-11 p.m. There 5 percent off for 3 consecutive insertions; 10 WAITRESS WANTED for law PREGNANCY TEST. Collect 4:30 p.m. Be there because Tush will be PLENTY OF BEER AND percent off for 5 consecutive insertions. Deadline: school party, Friday, Sept. 21st. 942-0824 Chapel Hill. wants you there. Meat and PLENTY OF FUN {Even Doug 383-3558. wieners supplied. 1 p.m., one day prior to date of insertion. Maynard will be there!). _ Sports Page 7 September 13, 1984

Friday Field hockey vs. High Point, Hanea Field, 4 p.m.

Volleyball vs. UNC-Charlotte, Cameron Indoor Stadium, 5 p.m.

Men's tennis in Big Four Tournament, West Cam­ pus Courts. Saturday

Men's tennis in Big Four Tournament, West Cam­ pus Courts.

Men's and women's cross country at Wake Forest. BETH BRANCH/rHE CHRONICLE Duke's Mark Chapman, show here in Sunday's action against George Mason, got his second and third goals of Volleyball vs. VCU, Cameron Indoor Stadium, 10:30 the season Wednesday night. a.m. Volleyball vs. Appalachian State, Cameron Indoor Stadium, 6 p.m. 'Scrambled' lineup passes test as

Metropolitan Soccer Classic (all games at Duke soccer stadium): Blue Devils blank Davidson 2-0 By WENDY LANE "One of the things that did not work well was changing UCLA vs. South Florida, 6 p.m. Despite a starting lineup that looked a little unfamiliar the lineup around so much. We were a little disorganized to most of the spectators, seventh-ranked Duke had little in the first half." Duke vs. Southern Illinois, 8 p.m. trouble scoring two goals to shut out Davidson 2-0 Wednes­ "We never played that group together that we had out day night at the Duke soccer stadium. to start tonight, never in practice or anything," said Chap­ Sunday Spectators were understandably confused when instead man. "It's kind of tough to do that and it didn't look too of Tom Kain, John Kerr and Mark Noonon, the Blue Devils' good in the first half. In the second half we did a little front line consisted oflbm Stone, Everett Harper and Carl better." Men's tennis in Big Four Tournament, West Cam­ Williamson. Despite playing in unfamiliar positions, however, the pus Courts. The midfield also was rearranged, making way for Blue Devils<4-0-l)weathered an early Wildcat attack led Robert Goebel, Jason Weighter and Mike Chapman. Duke's by leading scorer Tbny Cabrales Metropolitan Soccer Classic: usual center midfielder, Mike Linenberger, played sweeper, On the counterattack a defensive scuffle in front of while Kelly Weadock moved from sweeper to left fullback. Davidson's net set up a pass from Weighter to Chapman, Southern Illinois vs. South Florida, 1 p.m. Bill Colavecchio and John Meadows rounded out the back- who kicked the goal into the right corner of the net at the field. 2:23 mark of the game. Duke vs. UCLA, 3 p.m. "We changed the lineup for two reasons," said Duke assis­ "Their [Davidson's] defense screwed up," said Chapman, tant coach Ken Chartier. "One was to rest some people for who was the only Duke starter playing in his usual spot. a very intense weekend coming up. The other was to give "Two defenders ran out and I found the ball right at my Men's and women's fencing vs. University of Bristol, players such as Robert Goebel and Everett Harper a chance feet and kicked it in." Cameron Indoor Stadium, 3 p.m. to show themselves for at least 45 minutes and they proved Although the Blue Devils continued attacking, the Wild­ fairly well. cats remained persistent as well. Davidson's best offensive chance came 15 minutes into the match when a Wildcat throw-in hit Cabrales in front of Duke's goal. Cabrales' shot rebounded off Duke keeper Pat Johnston and was put out Experience the cornerstone of of danger. The Blue Devils continued to accumulate shots on goal, but couldn't convert their chances At the 35:21 mark Stone put on an impressive ball-handling display, dribbling Duke men's cross country team across the field through four Wildcat defenders and passed By BELL SHEW to Weadock. Weadock's pass found Harper whose header nucleus. Because of this, Forbes sees the team as one from 15 feet out was saved by Kelly. The Duke men's cross country team fields one of its of the "most mature in years. All Five have a good deal Kerr, Marlon Robinson, Hardy Knowlton and Jeff most experienced squads in years, according to first-year of experience and could come into their own this year." Romano returned to the lineup in the second period, and coach Mike Forbes Those seniors, each of whom have lettered previously, the Wildcats were quickly tamed. While still officially assistant to Al Buehler, Duke are Dave Taylor, Andy Keitt, James Daniell, Dave Mit­ Duke's final goal of the game came on a spectacular play track coach for the past thirty years, Forbes has been chell, and Eric Frederickson. by Weadock, who had returned to his usual spot at sweeper. responsible for the team's training this year. He is very In Daniell, the team captain, Forbes is looking for a Taking the ball down almost the length of the field, he enthusiastic about their chances, saying, "As far as passed to Kerr on the outside. Kerr crossed to Chapman training goes we are further along than I've seen in good deal of leadership and is considering him one of the team's top runners. "James spent the summer train­ at the mouth of the goal, and Chapman hit a perfect header three years. We return a lot of experienced runners who into the left corner. paid the price this summer, averaging 80 to 90 miles ing in Colorado and has learned to be patient in his "I just stole the ball from the [Davidson] back and I had a week, and we could surprise some people in the running," said Forbes. clear sailing down through the middle," said Weadock. "It conference". Since returning to school, Daniell has averaged more feels really good to get a breakaway like that every once The Blue Devils' first meet is Saturday in Winston- than 100 miles a week. Noncommittal about his and in a while after playing defense all game long." the team's chances, Daniell says that the team "is in Salem against Appalachian State, Furman and host The Blue Devils now prepare for this weekend's Metro­ great shape. Our goal is to surprise some teams, as lit­ Wake Forest. politan Insurance Soccer Classic when Duke hosts 17th- tle is expected from us this year. The seniors are our According to Forbes, Saturday's race will be a good ranked SIU-Edwardsville, South Florida and No. 4 UCLA. indicator of the team's potential. "Wake Forest returns strength, and each of us wants to go out on a positive its top five scorers from last year's conference runner- note". up squad, and both Furman and Applachian State are According to Daniell, freshmen Jonathan Hersch and traditionally strong so we will be looking to see who John Spiller both have a good shot at finishing in the can run with them," said Forbes. top seven at the Conference Championships, while DAVIDSON o o _ o another freshman, Al Peterson should also challenge "It will give us a good chance to see where we stand SCORING — Duke: Mike Chapman from Jason Weighter (2'23j Chap­ as a team and how each individual places on the team." for a spot though losing practice time due to injury. man from John Kerr (63:50). Another thing Forbes will be looking for is narrow­ "Hersch and Spiller are very evenly matched and run­ ing the time gap between Duke's top five finishers to ning very well," said Daniell. "Peterson has come back SHOTS: Duke 19. Davidson 6. from the injury very quickly and is moving up the less than a minute. Overall, however, the meet is be­ SAVES: Duke (Pat Jotinston) 3. Oavidson (Tim Kelly) 2. ing viewed as a training race, with everyone's eyes team" already on the Atlantic Coast Conference Champion­ The entire team seems quietly confident, yet anxious CORNER KICKS: Duke 9. Davidson 3. ship in late October. to see the fruits of summer training. Frederickson con­ Although it lost the top three finishers from last year's cludes, "In a way, we are like the football team. We have FOULS: Davidson 27. Duke 12. team, Duke still.fields five, seniors who make up its everything to gain and nothing to lose". RECORDS: Duke 4-0-1. Davidson 0-2. Page 8 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, September 13, 1984

The 1984-85

Only material accompanied Information: 684-7551 by a self-addressed, stamped envelope can be returned. | f

HH_Hr 1he Chronicle's weekly entertainment supplement

Thursday, September 13, 1984

Three Naked Guys' in Chapel Hill. See page 4. Page 2 R&R Thursday, September 13, 1984

FILMS l__lr% trl Bolero — with Bo Derek and George Kennedy. Plaza, GrGI Ri if? Chapel Hill (3, 5:05, 7:10, 9:20 p.m.) Lakewood Shopping to Center, Durham (call 489-4226 for times) Oreamscape — with Dennis Quaid. Ram Theater, R&R ed or .... Rick Heyman rison Ford and Kate Capshaw. South Square Mall, Chapel Hill (Call 967-8284 for times) AOvertis ng Droduc on Jud th Cook Durham (7:30, 9:40 p.m. Weekend mats. 1:30, 3:40 p.m.) Adverts ng represe tativesJudj Bartlett Exterminator II — with Robert McGinty. Lakewood The Karate Kid — with Ralph Macchio. South Square Susa Tomlin Shopping Center, Durham (call 489-4226 for times) Mall, Durham (7:10, 9:20 p.m. Weekend mats. 1:40,4 p.m.) Compos Adkins Flashpoint — with Kris Kristofferson and Treat The Man Who Knew Too Much — with James Stewart Williams. Carolina Blue, Chapel Hill (7:30,9:30 p.m.); and and Doris Day. Varsity, Chapel Hill Elizabet Majors South Square Mall, Durham (7:45, 9:45 p.m. Weekend The Neverending Story — with Noah Hathaway, Bar­ Copy ed tor .... Larry Kaplow mats. 1:45, 3:45, 5:45 p.m.) ret Oliveand Moses Gunn. Yorktowne, Durham (7, 9:15 Robert Margolis Ghostbusters — with Bill Murray and Dan Aykroyd. p.m. weekend mats. 2:15, 4:30) Paste-ut Robin Kingma Carolina White, Chapel Hill (2:30,4:45, 7, 9:15 p.m.); and Oxford Blues — with Rob Lowe Plaza, Chapel Hill (3:15, South Square Mall, Durham (7, 9 p.m. Weekend mats. 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 p.m.); and Northgate Mall, Durham (7, 1:10, 3, 5 p.m.) Gremlins — with Phoebe Cates. Carolina Blue, Chapel The Philadelphia Experiment — with Nancy Allen Hill (7:15, 9:30 p.m.) Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom — with Har­ See WEEKEND on page 7

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Stewart and Day's son. In the 1930s, dur­ By JAMES JEFFREY PAUL ing his British period, Hitchcock made "The Man Who Knew Too Much," the "Sabotage," a film in which an innocent third of five long-unseen Alfred Hitchcock young boy is killed in a bomb explosion, films currently re-released, stands in a a scene for which Hitchcock was showered peculiar relationship to the suspense with protests from horrified viewers. Had master's two masterpieces, "Rear Window" young Olsen played the victimized little and "Vertigo." boy in "Sabotage," the director would also have been subjected to a storm of viewer If, as other critics have noted, "Vertigo" protest - that such an obnoxious, ir-. represents Hitchcock at his darkest, and ritating brat should have been allowed a "Rear Window" stands as a combination of rapid, painless demise. his lightest and his darkest elements, then "The Man Who Knew Too Much" shows us And there is also, naturally, Bernard a somewhat grey embodiment of Hitch's ar­ Herrmann's music. Herrmann - in whose tistic sensibilities - essentially a light, scores Hitchcock found the perfect musical entertaining yarn. counterpart to his visual images and The overall picture is nevertheless faint­ SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE underlying obsessions - has little to do Doris Day and James Stewart in 'The Man Who Knew too Much. ly darkened by the black gleams of its here. His fine score is somewhat over­ director's insights into human nature. But shadowed by the Academy Award-winning the above must not be taken as a criticism the fatal shot. other light entertainments; the well song, "Que Sera, Sera," and by the half- of the picture; indeed, "The Man Who The tale is an arresting one in and of chosen cast performs with subtlety, depth inspired, half-turgid piece performed dur­ Knew Too Much," a film made by Hitchcock itself, but two factors heighten its impact. and power. ing the climactic Albert Hall concert, Ar­ thur Benjamin's "Storm Cloud Cantata" while at the height of his artistic powers, First, of course, is Hitchcock's impeccable James Stewart as Ben MacKenna, the (conducted by Herrmann). Still, the haun­ provides tension-Filled, exciting and well- visual sense. The perfectly arranged com­ American doctor caught in a situation he ting melodies, hyperkinetic movements, nigh flawless entertainment, positions, the measured yet greatly com­ cannot begin to understand, turns in a and deep-bass wind grumblings so pelling editing rhythm, the constantly shif­ rather atypical characterization - as A remake of the director's own 1934 characteristic of Herrmann's work are here, ting succession of camera angles and the stalwart as ever but also headstrong and British release of the same name, "The employed as always with subtly enhancing menacing, claustrophic camera movements domineering. Surprisingly, Doris Day, as Man Who Knew Too Much" concerns an skill. American doctor who, while traveling with that became Hitch's trademarks are all his frightened wife, performs with an his wife and young son in Morocco, acciden­ here, employed with a tight sense of con­ anguished intensity that nearly over­ After 28 years, "The Man Who Knew Too tally becomes involved in a complex es­ trol that increases their effectiveness. Vir­ shadows the rest of the cast. Much" remains a model of suspenseful pionage plot that he at first cannot tually alone among filmmakers in his in­ One of Hitchcock's greatest strengths entertainment; deeply compelling, shot understand. tuitive grasp of the possibilities of mon­ was his gift for locating and portraying the through with consummate skill and subtle­ tage, Hitchcock at his best displays a After their son is kidnapped, the dark, perverse side of everyday life. His ty revealing depth of characterization. It kinetic power that rivals Eisenstein's and frightened couple follows his trail to Lon­ unorthodox casting of these supposedly stands as both an object lesson to contem­ a discipline that makes the Russian don and find themselves in the middle of cheerful, apple-pie performers lifts the film porary filmmakers on just how meaningful master's work seem slipshod. a bizarre assassination plot - a foreign above the level of simple entertainment, and compelling a work of "entertainment" prime minister is to be assassinated dur­ Second, are Hitchcock's rich character giving it a tension and depth that it other­ can be, and as further evidence of Alfred ing a concert in the Albert Hall at the portraits. "The Man Who Knew Too Much" wise would have lacked. Hitchcock's unique versatility, skill, and in­ sight-qualities which validate his position precise moment of a particularly loud cym­ is thankfully free of the heavy-handed com­ The remainder of the cast is also superb, as one of the greatest of filmmakers. See it. bal crash that will drown out the sound of ic touches that mar some of Hitchcock's but a word about Christopher Olsen as

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By ELIZABETH ASPLUNDH strings, just like you and me. And why The audience is involved, playing them­ No doubt most everyone has heard of the shouldn't he be? After all, he's the one who selves - an audience, just as the actors are band The Producers. But there is a different ran around and dredged up all the money. playing themselves - comedians; all are a type of producer in Chapel Hill now; he is The other type of producer is a rarer breed. part of the illusion of the stage. "It's a new responsible for bringing a play with the This producer plays a leading role in the kind of writing," Freydberg says. "A play outrageous title "Three Guys Naked from the creative process, and has artistic input within a play within a play, within reality." Waist Down" to the Triangle, as well as Tony throughout the entire production. He too On a deeper level the play is about choices; Award-noninee "Baby" to Broadway. Not on­ must raise funds and keep an eye on the the choices the actors must face in their lives, ly is he not a band, but he is a producer with purse strings, but he does not see this as his and the choices everyone faces in his own life a different attitude. primary function. This kind of producer "We blame Hollywood for what happened to James Freydberg is the man behind "Three starts with an idea, a dream, what have you. Freddie Prinze," Freydberg said. "In reality Guys," and its success. He has hopes for this He has the vision, gets the people together, he destroyed himself. He made a choice." show - Broadway for instance. And not on­ gets the whole ball rolling - his way. Freydberg explained further with the tragedy ly because it's funny, but also because it has James Freydberg is one of these rare pro­ of John Belushi. The Saturday Night Live a lot to say to all of us. ducers. His definition of a producer is sim­ Bee Act "was a perfect example of John do­ Not everyone knows exactly what a pro­ ple and straightforward. "Everybody's a pro­ ing what he thought was just s-t, but he ducer does; although there are many wild ducer who controls an option on a proper- chose to keep performing it, and his choices and zany variations on the theme "producer." ty,"he says. eventually destroyed him." One can generalize, greatly simplifying His opinions about a producer's job are Freydberg has personal experience with things, and say that there are two different equally straightfoward, though perhaps less these kinds of choices. His father was a types of producers. conventional. "People think of producers as businessman, solid, stable, safe. His mother The popular notion of producers is that they money people," he said. "The worst way to pro­ was a theater woman. are money-men, more involved in putting up duce is to think of how much money you're At first Freydberg followed in his father's and/or raising the money for a show, than in making." footsteps and became a businessman. He the actual creative process (leave that to the Freydberg feels the goal of a show should decided a change was in order after taking artsy types, thank you). The producer is seen be artistic, and that the problem with most a test that told him he was "an unconven­ as a businessman, interested in cold hard producers is that their goal is monetary, not tional businessman that belonged in the facts, like donations, schedules, budgets, artistic. "I'm only interested in moving au­ arts." He made his decision and is apparently losses, profits — money. You know, a normal diences," he said. SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE sensible type, with a sharp eye on the purse Indeed, if one can believe the reviews, this happy with it. Certainly he is successful, Producer James Freydberg most recently co-producing "Baby" which was is what Freydberg seems to have done with nominated for seven Ibny awards and six his most recent production, "Three Guys Drama Desk awards. Naked from the Waist Down." He does not Freydberg first saw "Three Guys Naked place much value on reviews, however. He from the Waist Down" in workshop form. At thinks good reviews are nice, but a play can that time "Three Guys" was under the iron get good reviews and still be thoroughly grip of no less than five different producers misunderstood, and if that is the situation, "I loved the score," he said, "and the idea Freydberg feels he has failed in his goal. fascinated me. In the past the tragic comic 'The most important thing about produc­ figure has usually been a clown. ing is to know yourself, to know your own "I thought the idea of the American Dream taste." There will always be critics. "It isn't in a comic tragedy using comedians as the good or bad reviews, it's what the reviews say comic tragic figures was brilliant. But it was about the show." not executed very well," Freydberg said. At This is one of the reasons "Three Guys" is the end of the workshop Freydberg told the opening in Chapel Hill at the Paul Green producers, "If you ever drop this show, I'd love Theatre, instead of in a more commercial to do it." Of course, as fate would have it, they area. Freydberg feels it's better to start in did drop "Three Guys" and Freydberg bought smaller places, free from the commercial it out- pressure and hype that prevail in bigger Freydberg is pleased with the show and its places. Working in the relative anonymity of reception in Chapel Hill. "The audience in Chapel Hill has allowed the actors more ar­ the Triangle area is very sophisticated," he tistic freedom and given them more room for says. "Playmaker's Repertory Company has, experimentation. over a period of time, educated the audience." The low-key setting of Chapel Hill seems to have been a good choice. The actors' And what are the greatest rewards of freedom to experiment has produced a fresh, theater production for Freydberg? "Watching amusing play with more to it than you might the audience. When I see an audience laugh at first expected. "We wanted to create a show at a joke that I helped create, or did create, SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE the audience could become involved in," said I am deeply satisfied. I can watch that night Kassir, Colker and Bakula Freydberg. after night."

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Open: a.m.-midnite M-Th 1915 9 a.m.-1 a.m. Fri & Sat 1 Chapel Hill Rd. Prn.-midnite Sun 489-U93 :ember 13, 1984 R&R Page 5 Baring Three Guys' By ELIZABETH ASPLUNDH winner. I expected something strange-1 expected All the actors' performances are strong, something far out. And, well, I expected and they are particularly funny when nudity. Is it far-fetched to expect these onstage together. Especially good are the things from a play entitled, "Three Guys musical numbers, "Don't Wanna be no Naked from the Waist Down?" Superstar 2" and "The American' Dream," What I found was a musical comedy featuring Bakula as Ted, Jerry Colker as with many funny, delightful moments No the angry comedian Phil Kuhin, and John nudity though, unless you count the slides Kassir as Kenny Brewster, the neurotic in the background. comedian who Ted describes as a "Zen "Three Guys Naked from the Waist Catholic." Down" is about, you guessed it, three guys. Interestingly, it's Colker, the play's They are comedians seeking fame and for­ author and lyricist, who is sometimes in­ tune. We follow their rise to sucess in a consistent and disappointing as Phil. He series of loosely connected nightclub acts, tends to get carried away with his comic and serious monologues, and song monologues, rushing words together, and dance routines. straining the audiences prowess in lip- The loose storyline provides the actors reading and lessening the potential im­ with a nice structure on which to display pact of the script. their considerable comic talents. The second act tends to drag. The script Scott Bakula opens up the show as Ted at times becomes more serious and emo­ Klausterman, a struggling comic doing tional than is appropriate for the general his thing in an anonymous off-off- spirit and pace of the play. The second act Broadway dive. His opening monologue — as well as the audience — is fortunately starts the lively and amusing chain of saved from too much sentimental mush by comic acts that leads these three guys to several snappy musical numbers that a spot on the Tonight show, and later, the pump life back into the second act. dubious honor of a hit television series. Otherwise, the play progresses With the success of the television series smoothly. The lighting adds intensity to the comedians gain wealth but lose their the serious moments of the play. The individuality in the public eye, and, costuming, while not elaborate, is suitable ultimately, their self-esteem. The televi­ for the relaxed style of the play, sometimes sion series requires the comedians to play drawing a laugh purely on its own comic three policemen in drag, and to sacrifice value. The musical score, composed by their artistic integrity to agents, sitcom Michael Rupert, is enjoyable and well- scriptwriters and director a performed, with Duke's own artist in In an attempt to salvage their self- residence, Paul Jeffrey, on the saxophone. respect, and to show the public what they All the actors have solid experience really are, they produce a feature film behind them. Bakula made his Broadway THEIR way. The film receives critical ac­ debut as Joe DiMaggio in "Marilyn," and claim from the likes of Time and most recently starred in "Broadway Newsweek, but flops at the box office. Babylon." Their film's failure, contrasted with the Jerry Colker has played Riff in the success of the ridiculously silly television Broadway revival of "West Side Story," and series prompts the three comedians to re­ has appeared in "A Chorus Line," and evaluate their dreams and goals, and this "Pippin." is when they call it quits as a comedy John Kassir may be familiar to some as threesome. the current champion in the comedy In the end they are forced to settle with category on the television program "Star life in their own individual ways. The com­ Search" (admit it, you've watched it at edians struggle between the desire for least once). He is a performer and writer fame and fortune and the desire for in­ with the Animal Crackers Comedy dividuality and artistic integrity, seems Ensemble, and he has appeared in two to reflect the struggle that Everyman USO world tours faces everyday. How much is any person willing to sacrifice to reach his dreams? If you want to laugh, get yourself over And are those dreams worth the sacrifice? to Chapel Hill and catch this show before As Ted states in the first act, "I don't want the ticket price hits sixty dollars up in to play this game. I just want to be the New York.

ON THE INSIDE TRACK AT THE OLYMPICS HUNAM a conversation with M&9 CHINESE COACH AL BUEHLER RESTAURANT coach, USA track and field team 1972 and 1984 Lunch and Dinner Daily %2.79 Lunch Specials. NANCY HOGSHEAD (Includes most entrees plus your choice of soup and rice) USA swim team 1984 BEER and WINE Now Available DAN MEAGHER Now Open On Sunday! Lunch 12-3 Canadian Basketball team 1984 688-2120 THURSDAY SEPT. 13-8:00 p.m. 910 VV. Main St., Durham YORK COMMONS Parking at all Brightleaf Square Lots Sponsored by the Office of Residential Life Eat in or take out • Open 7 days a week Page 6 R«R Thursday, September 13. 1984 Eastwood cops out with lame Tightrope'

By WILL DAVIS be a model example of single-parenthood to his two "Didn't Clint Eastwood just make a Dirty Harry movie ' daughters by day. It is therein that the tension is supposed a few months ago?" That seems to be the general response . to reside. when someone finds out that Eastwood once again stars i Unfortunately, it does not work. as a hard-nosed cop in his latest film, "Tightrope." As Eastwood becomes more and more kinky and par­ So why would Eastwood bother playing a policeman at j ticipatory in his nocturnal fact-finding (for some reason, all if it is not going to be the awe-inspiring character of j almost every women he meets seems more interested in Inspector Harry Callahan? Well, it appears that he and j getting him into bed than in breathing), the killer writer/director Richard Tuggle had something to say in becomes more discriminatory in his choices of victims - this film which just would not fit in the Dirty Harry namely, the females Eastwood has been mucking around mythos. with. Unfortunately, films with a message are usually Supposedly, we are expected to see an intertwining and notorious for being box office losers. But when a hint of eventual merging of the lives of the killer and the cop. commerciality is injected to attract the public's attention, When Eastwood gets around to enlisting the aid of rape the message is in danger of being compromised. The resul­ awareness counselor Beryl Thibodeaux {Genevieve Bu- tant hybrid often ends up making a star look uncomfor­ jold), the stage is finally set for the killer's big climactic tably like a fish out of water, with the film's message lost attack on everyone Clint holds dear (daughters included). somewhere on the Great Barrier Reef. The film's best performances come from Allison "Tightrope" seems to be trying to tell us is that maybe, Eastwood (Clint's real-life daughter) as Amanda, and Jen­ just maybe, the honest and trustworthy members of our nifer Back as Penny, Detective Block's daughters. As police forces are not all that different from the looney always, Eastwood delivers his lines through a firmly clen­ tunes it is their job to protect us from. Think of the old ched jaw and looks convicingly imposing. Bujold is rather "takes a thief to catch a thief routine. Except that this uninspiring as Clint's romantic interest and everyone else time, it is the usually irreproachable Clint Eastwood who is fairly innocuous. plays the slightly unsteady Detective Block. What ultimately causes the film to fail though, is the "Tightrope" introduces one immediate deviation from fact that we are supposed to perceive Eastwood as being the Dirty Harry films: Clint as a father. He has two a confused, guilt-ridden, nerve-wracked loner, one step daughters, products of a marriage apparently ruined by away from being a slobbering sex-fiend. Clint Eastwood? the strains a policeman's job places on any relationship Fat chance. I spent most of the movie waiting for him to - the long hours, the overwhelmingly slimy clientele, and unveil some sort of hand-held ballistic missile launcher the fact that every day on the job could be the last. and blow away every creep within a 30-mile radius. The rest of the film though is comprised of classic Dir­ Eastwood has made a career out of portraying ty Harry elements. Basically, what we have is a nut case characters who are the ultimate in cool, even when the loose in the red light district of New Orleans doing highly odds seem impossible to surmount. After four Dirty Harry unpleasant things to the more shapely members of the movies, asking the audience to forget all this is a bit too Bridals feminine half of society. big a task to demand. Naturally, Eastwood's responsibility is to see that these By employing Clint Eastwood as box office bait, After-Fives unpleasant acts are brought to as immediate a halt as 'Tightrope" double-crosses itself. What could have been possible. To this end, he must prowl the seedy side of the a moi'ie with an intriguing message instead turns out to New Orleans' social world by night, while attempting to be nothing more than a bad Dirty Harry movie.

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"IT IS TO BE SEEM AND SAVORED: "a thunderbolt fro, -,*',-• . At1.fi tbe gods. . ." John Wilson, New York Times

Friday, Sept. 21 8 p.m. Memorial Hall Chapel Hill, NC Tickets now on silt. Sugar cane Alley S6 per person i dim by Euihdn Falcy Carolina Union Bos Office _•___•*- fytM^fi 962-1449 Open Monday thru Friday, 7 fir 9 nightly Matinees Sat. & Sun. 5:00 PM noon lil 6 p.m. LATE SHOWS-KINO OF HEARTS . . . Mastercard and Visa tele­ Sept. 14th « 15th 11:30 PM phone reservations sarpred. Admission $2.00 A Carolina Union P CLASSIC MATINEES 3:00 Daily in nuocintitm wirh ENDS FRI. THE PHILADELPHIA STORY Saturday & Sunday, Sept. 15 & 16 Stephen B_-_fbcK Entertainment BAND WAGON Sept. 15th-21st 7:00& 9:30 p.m. T— . . . Thursday, September 13, 1984 R&R Page 7

WEEKEND from page 2 Call 962-1121 for information. Sept. 22 at Carmichael Auditorium cancelled. Call Lakewood Shopping Center, Durham. (Call 489-4226 for Curt Stager — Folk guitarist at the Ninth Street 962-1449 for information. times) Bakery. Call 286-0303 for more information. Rod Stewart — Oct. 2 in Greensboro Coliseum. Tickets Purple Rain — with Prince and Morris Day. Plaza, on sale at Sears in Northgate Mall, Durham. Chapel Hill Saturday Grateful Dead — Oct. 5 in Charlotte Coliseum. Call Red Dawn — with Patrick Swayze. South Square Mall, (704) 375-7060 for ticket information. Durham Count Basie Orchestra — at Durham High School in Elton John — Oct. 10 in Charlotte Coliseum. Call (704) Revenge of the Nerds — with Robert Carradine; Ram, Weaver Auditorium at 8 p.m. Call 683-5561 for more 375-7060 for ticket information. Chapel Hill (7, 9:10 p.m. Weekend mats. 2,4:10 p.m.); and information. Yorktowne, Durham (7:30, 9:30 p.m. Weekend mats. 2:30, Terms of Endearment — with Shirley MacLaine, Jack 4:45 p-m.) Nicholson and Debra Winger. Page Auditorium, 7 and Sugar Cane Alley — directed by Euzham Palcy. Carolina 9:30 p.m. Theatre, Durham (daily 7, 9 p.m. Sun. mat. 5 p.m.) Three Guys Naked from the Waist Down — At 8 p.m. Tightrope — with Clint Eastwood. Ram, Chapel Hill; Call 962-1121 for information. Next week in R&R: and Northgate Mall, Durham UV Prom — at Cat's Cradle in Chapel Hill. The Woman in Red — with Gene Wilder and Gilda Radner. Varsity, Chapel Hill (3, 5, 7:30, 9:45 p.m.); and Sunday Lakewood Shopping Center (call 4894226 for times); Ram, Chapel Hill (call 967-8284 for times) Terms of Endearment — with Shirley MacLaine, Jack Nicolson and Debra Winger. Page Auditorium, 7 and 9:30 Thursday p.m. Three Guys Naked from the Waist Down — At 2 and The Guru — Bryan Center Film Theater. 7 and 9:30 p.m. 8 p.m. Call 962-1121 for information. Interview with Three Guys Naked from the Waist Down — Musical Jazz at ArtSchool — with Charles Dungey, 7 p.m. Call comedy at the Paul Green Theater, UNC campus, Chapel 929-2896 for information. Hill, at 8 p.m. Call 962-1121 for information. Upcoming Concerts Mike Mills Friday James Taylor — Sept. 28 in Reynolds Coliseum, Rear Window — Bryan Center Film Theater. 7, 9:30 Raleigh. Tickets go on sale Sept. 17, call 737-2106 for more of R.E.M. p.m. and midnight information. Yes — In Greensboro Coliseum at 8 p.m. Tickets on sale R.E.M. — Sept. 25 and 26 in Page Auditorium. Tickets at Sears in Northgate Mall, Durham. still available at all Record Bar ticket outlets. Three Guys Naked from the Waist Down — At 8 p.m. Go-Go's concert cancelled — Concert scheduled for

10/12 BERLIN ALEXAN._BPi.ATZ

X/ARSITY i& 1:45 LIQUID SKY S VEAST FRANKLIN^*- ••:"-J":l"' WHEN: Thursday, EMIUOESTEVEZ "A CREAT MOVIE! And so much better than any new P r September 13 HARRY DEAN STANTON movie that one feels both elated and dismayed." TUTORS —David Denby, nave a little extra tirr* _, TIME: 5:30 NEW YORK MAGAZINE s""flR and are interested in _.£»5 WHERE: i"*£umarr, community, don, m ___*» _ri organizational meeting of "* 03 Old Chem ^..Student Tutors. Duke _n> |R i Wfflen and Direaed by ALEX COX ?»„rs work in area Durham schS" Questions? TUt°, within walking distance i_ " • * • • ^pus, tutoring in various sub*" AN ENCHANTED COMEDY ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S C a Call Sara x-0558 or •REPR0 MAN' is the saltiest, sweetest, most sublimely sleazy ias It's '^warding and fun «*? tickle in the Los Angeles ribs, if It doesnt convulse you with THE MAN WHO '_» tw semester. Deanie x-7758 belly laughs, then you're a stiff... The most astonishing feature film debut since Steven Spielberg's Duel.' n KNEW TOO MUCH —Carrie Rickey, Boston Herald STARTS FRIDAY: 3:00, 5:00, 7:30, 9:45 2r15, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 fpGi

USgMSjm gladly presents:

THE GURU 7 and 9:30 (1969, India. 112m.)

Michael York plays a British rock superstar who goes to India to study with o famous sitar master, only to discover that he is beyond his depth (!) in the older musical tradition. Studded with a number of small, perfect scenes, the film is a probing, sophisticated, and sometimes hilarious exploration of two very different cultures in close interaction. The musical sound track is by the legendary sitarist Ustod Viloyat Khan. "See. George, what happens when you take yer music too seriously? Its not Within you, Without you Why don't we do it in the road!" —Ringo TONITE At the Bryan Center Film Theater Free to Undergrods with ID ond to Union Priv. Cord holders. Others. 150. Page 8 Thursday, September 13, 1984 All the world's a stage for Tom Fenton

By ADAM McMANUS ting more money towards what is destruc­ "It is much more satisfying [to direct) in ficult to get to know. My first impression Just imagine a curfew of 7 p.m. Everyone tive as opposed to what is constructive . . . the sense that you have much more artistic was that he was a cerebral European. You wouid have to be inside with the lights out I'm not part of the school of thought that say in whatever is happening. You have a can misread his British accent as being for fear of providing clear targets for the believes that the more bombs you build, finger in every pie," said Fenton. arrogant." bombers. the more peace you have on earth. That He added that in directing he is much But DeAngelis added that as he got to Indeed, Trinity senior Tom Fenton, a doesn't create peace, that creates more aware of the technical side of theater. know Fenton better, he discovered a per­ leading figure in the Duke drama scene as intimidation." "When you're on stage you don't realize son who "has a positive view on life. He is an actor and director, knows what it's like. But Fenton's background and political half as much as you should. There are ac­ a very warm person who's laughing all the He lived in the midst of the Yom Kippur convictions are only part of his story. tors who selfishly believe that they are the time." War in Israel in 1973. In the past four years, Fenton has become most important product of the show. This In a nostalgic tone of voice, DeAngelis Not only was there a strict curfew, but involved with Duke's drama department. is not the case at all." recalled "drinking Scotch with Tom and there was -also "a neighborhood bomb John Clum, Director of the Duke drama Trinity senior Lindsey Amtmann, a some friends up in his room while listen­ shelter which we went to whenever we program, recalls his first encounter with fellow dramatist, believes Fenton practices ing to wild, electrifying European music. heard the air raid sirens," said Fenton in Fenton. Clum needed a certain character what he preaches. "As an actor he's very He is very human." his distinguished English accent. for the play "Misalliance" desperately. He considerate of other actors with whom he This past summer Fenton was a resear­ Because Fenton's father is the Senior was on the verge of hiring a professional is sharing the stage," she said. "That's not cher and assistant producer at CBS News Foreign Correspondent for CBS News, he actor to take the part. Fenton arrived as a universal trait." in and , where he worked on has lived in Paris, , and Lon­ a January freshman and auditioned as a Fenton said his fascination with the per­ pieces for the fourtieth anniversary of D- don travelling to cities from which his "convincing 70-year-old man," said Clum. forming arts originated from the French Day. "When you are working on a piece it father broadcasts. Fenton also acted as the Cardinal In­ side of his family. His uncle is a songwriter is very similar to writing a paper but the The constant moving taught Fenton that quisitor in "Galileo," in which he influenced and producer and his cousin is an assistant difference is that you are working visual­ "Darwin was right; you have to adapt to the Pope to torture Galileo, the man who films director. ly," he said. This unusual experience has your environment to survive. I think it has proposed that the earth wasn't the center "It's an art form that you create by work­ helped him to gain much confidence in made me more liberal, more open-minded." of the universe. In addition, he acted as Dr. ing with people, as opposed to an art form himself. Fenton, a native of Baltimore, , Carrasco in "Man of La Mancha" who was that you create by isolating yourself, like Television journalism and the theater are explained that his experience "made me "another bad guy." writing or painting," Fenton explained. both careers that interest the drama and much more aware of international politics. By playing characters who have com­ This year Fenton is vice president of the English major at this point. He is plann­ I tend to find the average American very pletely different philosophies, "it makes Duke Players and Amtmann termed him ing on going to graduate school, where he isolated in his awareness of the world you question your own philosophies and at as a "mover and a shaker" within the Ex­ will direct stage productions and study situation. It is sometimes disturbing." the same time strengthens them because ecutive Council. "He gets things done." dramatic literature. Fenton's concern with what he sees as a you are always re-evaluating them," he Mark DeAngelis, a Trinity junior who Whatever the future holds, Fenton said precarious international situation led him said. * has known Fenton for three years, said, with a wry smile, "it is not sitting behind to take an active role in a British political Fenton also enjoys directing. Not only did "Tom is reserved, subtle, and times very dif­ a desk nine to five. That's purgatory!" group that supports nuclear disarmament. he direct Woody Allen's "God" last "Having lived through a war, having had semester, but he is currently directing several terrorist attacks only a couple Michael Frayn's "The Clouds." blocks away, the violence of it all makes "Tom has the directing talents that ex­ me a supporter of nuclear disarmament," ceed the average student director," said Fenton said. Trinity senior Rob McDowell, who acted "What worries me the most is the under Fenton's direction in "God." DOMINO'S deteriorating relationship between the U.S. There is no question whether Fenton PIZZA and the . . . Reagan is put­ prefers acting or directing. DELIVERS" FREE. CORRECTION In yesterday's Chronicle (September 12, America's favorite pizza 1984), the Satisfaction ad should have delivery people read "50* Off Imported Beer." The We're looking for enthusiastic Chronicle regrets the error and any in­ individuals to train for the convenience this may have caused to following positions: Satisfaction customers. phone delivery pizza persons persons makers

Part or full time. Part or full timet Part or full time. The Duke Dance Program Ffexihle hours and days. Flexible hours and days. Flexible hours and days. Must be at least 18. Must be at least 18. Must be at least 18. announces an Must be able to work Must be able to work Must be able to work nights and weekends. nights and weekends. nights and weekends. Average $6 - $8/hr, Must have own car and insurance. for a new Jazz Piece Please apply in person choreographed fcy MARIAN TURNER, UNC Dance Faculty TIME: 8 p.m. Domino's Pizza Domino's Pizza DATE: Thursday, September 13 746 9th Street 2617 Chapel Hill Blvd. PLACE: The Atk, East Campus Durham, N.C. Durham, N.C. PERFORMANCE IN FALL DANCE CONCERT REHEARSALS: Thundays, 8-9:30 p.m. and Saturdays 2:304:30 p.r

•19B4 Domino's Pizza, Inc.