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THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1989 © DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 85, NO. 48 Activists begin Domino's boycott

By HARRIET SHELLEY Numerous student activists across the nation have organized a week-long boycott of an in­ ternational pizza chain to protest alleged activities of the chain and its owner. The boycott, directed against Domino's Pizza and its president Thomas Monaghan, will take place Nov. 1-8. The boycott is in response to Monaghan's personal support of pro-life organizations, the Nicaraguan Contras, and other groups, said Trinity junior Lesley McCollough, a repi-esenta- tive of SAC (Student Activist Co­ CHAD HOOD/THE CHRONICLE operative), which is organizing the boycott on campus. Activists gather in front of the Main Street Domino's for a press In conjunction with the boy­ conference. cott, SAC is asking University may eventually be expanded to (SOS) and the Student Action administrators not to give Domi­ additional pizza venders. Union (SAU), have distributed no's Pizza a pizza-on-points con­ The nationwide student ac­ flyers charging Domino's Pizza tract, said McCollough. tivist organizations are hoping president Thomas Monaghan Domino's is one of four com­ that the boycott will give stu­ with "anti-union, anti-women, panies bidding for the right to al­ dents influence within the cor­ anti-black and anti-Nicaragua" low students to purchase pizza poration to affect policy changes, practices. from their restaurants with the said McCollough. "We want the SOS, SAU, and SAC claim that Duke Card. The cost of the pizza students to rally behind this to Monaghan donated $10,000 of CHAD HOOD /THE CHRONICLE would be charged to the student's show the power students can Domino's corporate funds and Squirrel people food account. For the first year of have on on public policy," McCol­ $100,000 of personal funds to the operation, only one pizza com­ lough said. Michigan Right to Life Commit­ A group of Biology 110 students gather acorns in honor of pany will have a contract with Two national organizations, tee to end state-funded abortions quad rodents. the University, but the service Students Organizing Students See BOYCOTT on page 9 • Ortega ends Conference to emphasize global warming 19-month By HEATHER HEIMAN In addition, the campus envi­ "The real driver for the global "The Heat is On," a national ronmental group ECOS will man . . . climate change issue is car­ campaign for education on global tables in the Bryan Center all bon dioxide and trace gasses in cease-fire warming and the greenhouse ef­ week long. By distributing the atmosphere," said Strain. "I fect, will be emphasized at the educational pamphlets and pres­ think that there are going to be By MARK UHLIG N.Y. Times News Service University next week with a se­ enting a short videotape, the significant changes in the cli­ ries of lectures, video pres­ group will "attempt to connect mate ... in the world in fifty MANAGUA, Nicaragua — entations and panel discussions. with individuals," according to years," he said. President Daniel Ortega Sponsored by the Union of Boyd Strain, professor of botany A wide array of possible solu­ Saavedra on Wednesday Concerned Scientists, the week's and an organizer of the confer­ tions to the problem will be ex­ ended a 19-month cease-fire events should "heighten people's ence. amined throughout next week. with U.S.-backed rebels. But awareness" about the changing Global warming is the gradual "It's fair and appropriate that the he left open the possibility of world climate, said Norman increase in the earth's tempera­ whole spectrum of suggestions be restoring the truce through Christensen, professor of botany ture as a result of heat-trapping put out," said Edward Arnett, new negotiations on andmember of the conference's gasses in the atmosphere that chair of the chemistry depart­ demobilizing the rebel army. organizing committee. "It's a trap solar radiation. It is ment and member of the organiz­ Ortega's statement, problem that's truly global in believed that much of the prob­ ing committee. One of the confer- STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE delivered at an unusual 6 a.m. scale," said Christensen. lem is caused by man. See WARMING on page 8 • Norman-Christensen news conference, was the cul­ A forum entitled "Global War­ mination of a series of widely ming, Problems and Responses" publicized and seemingly con­ will be one of the week's focal tradictory diplomatic maneu­ points. Beginning at 8:15 p.m. on Greeks need to end abuses, Keim says vers over the future of the Tuesday in 107 Gross Chemical cease-fire. Laboratory, the discussion will By EDDY ODOM trays Greeks as being more inter­ The announcement ap­ feature three noted experts on Greeks were challenged to ested in drugs, alcohol, and sex peared intended to use the the subject of the greenhouse ef­ drink responsibly, to avoid or while exhibiting poor academic threat of new combat as a tool fect: Michael Bower of the Union halt drug use, to act sexually re­ performance. to force the disbanding of the of Concerned Scientists, William sponsible and to quit hazing in a Keim also said that while rebel army, as called for in re­ Chameides of Georgia Institute speech by the Reverend Will Greeks generate millions of dol­ gional peace accords. But it of Technology, and Bruce Faust Keim titled "Demythologizing lars for charity and provide hun­ restated the commitment of of the School of Forestry and En­ the Animal House" in Page Audi­ dreds of thousands of hours in the Sandinista government to vironmental Studies. torium Wednesday at 8 p.m. communinity service, this does See NICARAGUA on page 5 • Several student groups will Keim, who speaks frequently not compensate for the people hold panel discussions on differ­ on Greek issues at colleges "murdered" in hazing-related in­ ent evenings next week. The around the nation, asked the au­ cidents and the gang rapes which groups, including Alpha Epsilon dience to "motivate yourself to occur in association with frater­ Pi, House CC, and York House, care" in the name of enlightened nity parties. Weather have expressed interest in dis­ self-interest, if not "just because However, Keim, who is himself cussing such subjects as the ef­ you are a good person." CHAD HOOD/THE CHRONICLE a member of Delta Upsilon fra­ ternity, said he believes in the Cheerful weather: its fect of deforestation on the atmo­ Keim employed satirical Will Keim supposed to rain, and we're all sphere. A finalized schedule of humor to contrast the rhetorical Greek system and thinks that going to die someday. Just these dorm meetings will appear image that fraternities project tion depicting the goals of Greek Greeks can combat widespread something to think about. in Monday's Chronicle, according with the realities of fraternity be­ life to be integrity, brotherhood, student apathy and produce peo­ to David Drake, assistant dean havior. While Greeks send a ver­ scholarship, and fellowship, ple who are ready to assume soci- for residential life. bal message to the administra- Keim said, their behavior por­ See GREEKS on page 8 • PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 World & National Newsfile Refugees flee as East Germany lifts ban Associated Press By JOHN TAGLIABUE N.Y. Times News Service sought to project a more tolerant and "Krenz is trying with a lot of nice words Aid Won't resume: Nicaraguan open image. in the next few months to reinforce his President Daniel Ortega is drawing PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia — Hundreds At a news conference in Moscow, Krenz chair and make a few friends," said a 24- harsh criticism from President Bush of East Germans swarmed to the West denied that he was a hard-liner and said year-old truck driver from Leipzig, who and members of Congress for cancell­ German Embassy here Wednesday just that dialogue with demonstrators seeking wore a button on his lapel that said ing his country's cease-fire, but they're hours after East Germany lifted a ban on greater freedom in East Germany was ev­ "Gorby." not ready to resume military aid to the travel to Czechoslovakia. idence that a "turning point" has been He said he had been among hundreds of Contra rebels reported to be re-enter­ The official East German press agency reached. thousands of demonstrators who marched ing their homeland. said that as many as 8,000 had crossed Nevertheless, among those who arrived in Leipzig calling for greater change. Peace not likely: The Contras say into Czechoslovakia, although it was not at the embassy in Prague on Wednesday "But nothing has happened," he said. clear how many were intent on leaving for were people who said they had no faith they don't recognize the Central Amer­ "Only words, promises." the West. that Krenz would be able to fulfill pledges ican peace accords and they won't ac­ After the announcement last week that East Germany imposed a ban on rou­ for change that he made when he took cept demobilization. That stand has the travel ban would be lifted, East Ger­ tine travel to Czechoslovakia almost a over in October from Erich Honecker, the now become a stumbling block to re­ man officials said they anticipated a tem- month ago, after 20,000 East Germans aging hard-line leader. gional peace and to democratic elec­ See GERMANY on page 6 • had passed through the embassy on their tions in Nicaragua. flight to the West. Summit debated: U.S. and Soviet Wednesday evening, as more people officials are jockeying over expecta­ continued to arrive at the embassy, some EPA sets tougher standards tions for next month's summit between East Germans inside the building put the President Bush and Mikhail Gorr number on hand at 500. West German Foreign Ministry officials in Bonn, By JOSEFHEBERT ing hazardous releases under current fed­ bachev, debating whether it will be Associated Press merely a low-key meeting or a mile­ reached by telephone, said 300 were in­ eral air quality laws. stone in superpower relations. side. WASHINGTON — The Environmental He said some changes would shorten The normally easy access that East Protection Agency tightened controls the process by years, such as the proposal Bomb research blocked: Is­ Germans had to Czechoslovakia was sus­ Wednesday on radioactive releases from by President Bush to no longer require rael's attempts to manufacture a hy­ pended Oct. 3 to halt the wave of people hospitals, nuclear power plants and other the EPA to make risk assessment for each drogen bomb are partly hampered by coming to Prague in hopes of heading to facilities, although officials said in many type of release and, instead, establish U.S. reluctance to sell supercomputers West Germany. That suspension was cases the tougher standards already are broader requirements for industries to to Israeli research and development in­ lifted at midnight Tuesday and once again being met. use the "best available" pollution control stitutions, according to a classified East Germans were able to cross the The new regulations were issued 10 technology. report and experts' opinions. Czechoslovak border by showing only years after the federal Clean Air Act So far the EPA has only established their identity cards. For all other travel, a called on the agency to establish emission regulations for eight of the hundreds of Colombians assassinated: in passport is required. standards for radioactive byproducts. toxic or carcinogenic chemicals released an apparent escalation of drug traffick­ The almost immediate renewal of the Such releases already are controlled by into the air by industry and other sources. ers' anti-government terror campaign, refugee flight came at a particularly awk­ the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The new regulations on radionuclide gunmen assassinated a federal judge ward moment for the new East German William Rosenberg, the EPA's assistant emissions cover nearly 7,000 facilities — in Medellin and a crusading anti-drug leader, Egon Krenz. He was concluding a adminstrator for air and radiation, said most of then hospitals, laboratories, re­ congressman in the capital. two-day visit to Moscow, where he met the long delay in the regulations reflects search facilities, atomic power plants, and with President Mikhail Gorbachev and the difficulties the agency faces in reduc­ See EPA on page 7 •

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U THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 3 Folk musician to perform as part of memorial programs

By BEAU DURE A mixture of traditional music and so­ cial conscience will be presented as folk multi-instrumentalist John McCutcheon performs in Page Auditorium tonight. The concert is part of the commemora­ tion of the tenth anniversary of the Greensboro Massacre, an incident in which five protestors were killed during an anti-Ku Klux Klan rally. Three of those killed were associated with the Uni­ versity. McCutcheon said he feels the commem­ oration is more of a celebration of the leg­ acy of the deceased rather than a time of mourning. "One of the tragic mistakes that people could think is that this is going to be a dreary, morbid series of events," McCutcheon said. For McCutcheon, the commemoration is a continuation of a long-standing commit­ SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE ment to social causes. A native of Wiscon­ John McCutcheon sin, McCutcheon moved to the South twenty years ago, settling in the coal-min­ variety of contexts. McCutcheon has per­ ing region of southwestern Virginia. formed with Paul Simon, , McCutcheon came to the South to be near Arlo Guthrie and Metamora in addition to the traditional music of the area and traditional folk music settings. quickly discovered that the music was in­ McCutcheon has also experimented with tertwined with the political movements of the instrument itself, adding electronic ef­ the day, especially the activities of the lo­ fects similar to those used by rock gui­ GEORGE IVEY/THE CHRONICLE cal coal miner's union. tarists. It's a bird "I learned you can't separate art and For tonight's performance, McCutcheon Superman probably couldn't fit into this phone booth anyway. life," McCutcheon said, "the same people See McCUTCHEON on page 5 • performed at square dances and in the union hall." His experiences directly af­ fected his approach to his music. "From the very beginning, my music has had a political perspective to it," he said. Students sign up for new babysitting service This sense of politics will appear in to­ night's performance. McCutcheon said By PAUL TELLER care problem of the University," Clark "You hear a lot about child care . . . but that the issue of racism and race-related Seventy students signed up last week said. I've realized what an incredible need for incidents such as the massacre is "one of on the Bryan Center walkway to help "This is a valuable service for the par­ child care there is," Gantt said. the things I'll be dealing with [in the meet the child care needs of employees, ents," Alexander said. Parents seeking Gantt first became interested in the concert]." faculty, and student-parents in the uni­ child care can consult a directory of stu­ need for child care last year when he in­ Although McCutcheon plays a variety versity community as part of a new baby­ dents at the Bryan Center information terviewed students for the Child Care of instruments, he is best known for his sitting service. desk. Students are available to babysit at Task Force, now headed by Janet San­ mastery of the hammer dulcimer, a tradi­ The sign-up was organized by Rosalyn all hours of the day and over weekends, filippo, assistant to the chancellor. "We tional string instrument that is played Alexander, coordinator of Child Care Ser­ Alexander said. wanted to do something relatively inex­ with two wooden mallets. McCutcheon vices, and ASDU Child Care Committee The child care "is not a free service," Al­ pensive, but helpful to the Duke commu­ said the instrument may sound like a members Claudia Clark, a Trinity senior; exander added. Parents must negotiate a nity. This is the most efficient thing we harp, a piano, or "100 different Natt Gantt, a Trinity junior; and Lynda babysitting fee with the individual can do," Gantt said. instruments." Montgomery, a Trinity senior. student. The service, however, requires Students interested in participating in This multitude of sounds has allowed "We just thought it was a good way for students to arrange their own transporta­ the service were required to attend an ori- McCutcheon to use the instrument in a students to become involved in the child tion, Alexander said. See CHILDCARE on page 7 • Which Will It Be? VIKING TRAVEL Door Number 1 or Door Number 2

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1 PAGE 4 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 Improvements made Commission recommends waste facility ByJEFFNESMITH Cox News Service in superconductors WASHINGTON — In a report that is expected to stir up renewed debate over what to do with tons of un­ By MALCOLM RITTER wanted radioactive waste accumulating at nuclear Associated Press power plants around the country, a federal commission NEW YORK — Researchers increased 100-fold the recommended Wednesday that Congress authorize con­ amount of electricity that could be carried by crystals struction of a temporary storage facility. of superconducting material in a new study, boosting The facility, capable of storing up to 5,000 metric tons hopes for making the materials practical, scientists of spent nuclear fuel and other radioactive power plant say. waste, would be used as an interim storage site until a The work indicates a solution is possible for one ob­ permanent underground repository can be built, the stacle to making high-temperature superconductors commission said. carry useful amounts of current, said researcher Sites in Tennessee and South Carolina are among Robert van Dover. those that have been considered in the past for possible Superconductors are materials that carry temporary storage facilities. electricity without resistance. All those discovered so far must be chilled to work. The three members of the commission, which Con­ gress created two years ago, were still answering ques­ In recent years, scientists have created the high- tions about their report at a press conference when aides temperature superconductors, so called because they to Tennessee Sens. Jim Sasser and Albert Gore started require less chilling trian previously known materi­ distributing copies of a joint statement condemning the als. Scientists hope these compounds will have more idea. uses than the previous materials. "The notion that we need interim storage at all is Researchers want to use these new materials in UPI PHOTO based on the totally unsubstantiated claim that some such applications as high-power magnets, floating Nuclear power plants are accumulating unwanted utilities are in imminent danger of running out of on-site high-speed trains and devices for storing electrical radioactive waste storage space," the Tennessee senators said. power. The new study addressed a barrier to such uses: in "There is absolutely no evidence that on-site storage nearly 20 years of efforts by the government to come up a magnetic field, bulk samples of high-temperature facilities will not meet needs in the foreseeable future." with a way of disposing of nuclear power plant waste. superconductor have been able to carry only small The report of the the Monitored Retrievable Storage By the time nuclear plants currently in operation or levels of electrical current without losing supercon­ Review Commission, which was established by Congress awaiting licenses to operate in the United States are ducting ability. after the Department of Energy proposed building a decommissioned, they will have generated 87,000 metric The researchers bombarded a crystal of supercon­ temporary storage site in Tennessee, is the latest in tons of waste. ducting material with neutrons, tiny particles that make up parts of atoms. The crystal could then carry about 100 times the current that untreated crystals could without losing superconductivity, they found. House increases funds for drug war The result represents about a 50-fold improvement over what other researchers have attained with sin­ By MIKE ROBINSON The measure would add almost $3.2 billion in spend­ Associated Press gle crystals of bulk superconductor, van Dover said in ing to the war against drugs, bringing the total to $8.8 a telephone interview. WASHINGTON — The House on Wednesday voted to billion for the fiscal year that began in October. The new result is comparable to the performance of step up spending in the war against drugs by almost Contained in the new funding package is $1 billion for extremely thin films of superconducting material, $3.2 billion, $900 million more than what President the federal prison system for buildings, $308 million for said David Welch of Brookbaven National Laboratory Bush requested when he launched the campaign almost justice assistance block grants and $727 million for in Upton, N.Y. Thin films, however, are not practical two months ago. programs involving alcohol, drug abuse and mental for making magnets and other relatively large-scale The money represents the major congressional contri­ health. uses, he said. bution to the war against drugs this year, and lawmak­ Everything in the package except for a few details was ers said it was urgently needed to combat the scourge of worked out between the administration and Senate ne­ The new work does not address a second crucial ob­ illicit narcotics. gotiators in September, and the measure moved easily stacle for bulk superconductors: loss of current-carry­ "It's destroying our morals, it's destroying our lives," through the House. ing capacity that occurs between crystals in a sample. Appropriations Committee Chair Jamie Whitten, D- A number of non-money portions of the anti-drug "That problem is still out there," van Dover said. Miss., declared as the House approved the funding in­ package were dropped in the conference committee, with crease on a voice vote. House members saying the Senate should never have The money was included in a transportation money put them in a money bill. bill fashioned by a House-Senate conference committee They ranged from requiring states to have drug and the overall measure must be acted upon by the Sen­ programs to laying the groundwork for stepped up aid to ;A HUNAM

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• NICARAGUA from page 1 But the Sandinista leader coupled that corps in Managua were abruptly can­ phatic terms, blaming the Bush adminis­ carry out national elections next year, declaration with a proposal for new peace celled late Tuesday as members of the tration for blocking the demobilization regardless of the outcome of the demobili­ negotiations next week between represen­ nine-member Sandinista National Direc­ process, and condemning what he called zation dispute. tatives of Nicaragua, Honduras, the Con­ torate reassembled for secret meetings on the cowardice of regional leaders and poli­ Spokesmen for the rebel army in Hon­ tra army and international organizations. the cease-fire issue, culminating in Or­ ticians who he said had declared them­ duras asserted Wednesday night that the Ortega said the cease-fire could be re­ tega's announcement Wednesday mor­ selves in favor of disbanding the Contras Sandinistas had begun a large-scale mili­ stored in weeks if those talks yield prog­ ning. without exerting the efforts necessary to tary operation against its troops in north­ ress toward dismantling the Contra army News that the cease-fire would be realize that goal. ern Nicaragua. But a Sandinista military as provided under the peace accords ended provoked new apprehension among "If the international community wants spokeswoman said that such reports were signed in Tela, Honduras, in August. many Nicaraguans and diplomats, who peace, they have to work for peace." Or­ "totally false" and that new operations And he insisted that Nicaragua would said they feared widespread fighting tega said in an interview Wednesday af­ against the rebels were still in the plan­ follow through with its election plans, might follow. It also drew criticism from ternoon. "But they don't. They simply ning stage. despite any increases in military activity. international officials, who warned that watch the fight, and applaud when Nica­ In Washington, administration and "President Bush has told me that he Nicaragua's electoral process could be se­ ragua takes positive steps. They don't congressional leaders denounced the wants actions and words," Ortega said. riously endangered. have the courage to pressure the United Sandinista move, but there was nor move "Now I'm telling him that we want actions In a statement Wednesday, the United States, they only have the courage to to resume military aid to the rebels. and words — we want concrete support Nations, which is monitoring the election pressure Nicaragua." Asserting that the cease-fire had pro­ for demobilizing the Contras." process here, declared that "the secretary Ortega said his government extended vided cover for continued attacks and in­ Ortega's statement ended days of spec­ general is extremely concerned at the invitations Wednesday to representatives filtration by the rebels, known as Contras, ulation and intense debate about the breakdown of the cease-fire in Nicaragua" of Honduras, the Contra army, the United Ortega said his government would sus­ cease-fire, which was thrust into the spot­ and urged both sides to exercise Nations and the Organization of Ameri­ pend the cease-fire and use "all the force light by the Sandinista leader last Friday "maximum restraint" so that the truce can States to meet Nov. 6 and 7 at U.N. necessary to strike the Contras that have at a meeting of 16 heads of state in Costa could be re-established. headquarters in New York to discuss been killing our people." Rica. But Ortega defended his decision in em­ ways to break the impasse. At that meeting, Ortega announced that the cease-fire would not be renewed, provoking a storm of criticism from others at the conference, President Bush and the meeting's host, President Oscar Arias Folk musician will perform Sanchez of Costa Rica. The announcement was also sharply • McCUTCHEON from page 3 McCutcheon will perform solo, playing criticized by leaders of both parties in the will offer a variety of music that he feels a variety of instruments and singing. The U.S. Congress and international officials. will coincide with the mixture of people he concert will include primarily material In the face of such pressure, Ortega ap­ expects at the concert. McCutcheon ex­ that he has written, although it will also peared to retreat from his decision. And pects that many who have seen him on a include some traditional folk music, he as late as Tuesday morning, senior Sand­ regular basis will join those who are said. inista officials said the Nicaraguan leader drawn to the concert to commemorate the Much of the concert will bear directly had decided to extend the cease-fire until Greensboro incident. "People will see me on the commemoration of the incident it­ Dec. 5, the deadline established by the for a variety of reasons," McCutcheon self. "When you commemorate people who Tela accord for the demobilization of the said. Although this will be his first ap­ are no longer with us, you take your direc­ Contra army. pearance at the University, he is a regu­ tion and inspiration from people who have UPI PHOTO But scheduled announcements of that lar visitor to the Triangle, especially the gone before you and made sacrifices," Daniel Ortega Saavedra decision to journalists and the diplomatic Arts Center in Carrboro. McCutcheon said.

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-^ ... i ...... _t . ..: I.) < • ' KX.K-..K\- •--.-.•.. m PAGE 6 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 Iran approves law permitting arrest, trial of Americans

By ED BLANCHE In 1987, FBI agents lured a Lebanese Shiite, Fawaz lamic justice," the bill declared. Associated Press Younis, wanted for the 1985 Beirut hijacking of a Jorda­ "We have to empower the president and officials of the NICOSIA, Cyprus — Iran on Wednesday approved a nian airliner carrying U.S. citizens, to a yacht in in­ Islamic republic to take reprisal measures" to protect law giving it the power to arrest Americans anywhere ternational waters off the Mediterranean island of Iranians, Karrubi said. and put them on trial, and one newspaper suggested Cyprus and arrested him. Tehran's radical daily Abrar said Capt. Will Rogers that the first target be the former commander of the A U.S. court recently sentenced him to 30 years in III, commander of the missile cruiser Vincennes when it USS Vincennes. prison. mistakenly shot down an Iranian airliner last year, The action came amid growing anti-U.S. passion being The new Iranian law allows the Tehran government to should be the first person brought to trial under the new whipped up to mark the 10th anniversary of the storm­ arrest Americans deemed to have acted against Iranian law. ing of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. Protesters plan to interests anywhere in the world and bring them to the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who succeeded Khomeini burn 160 American flags outside the compound — now a Islamic Republic for trial by no-jury Islamic courts. when the revolutionary leader died June 3, vowed to school — on Saturday. "U.S. citizens and their agents, and countries which "confront all aspects of global arrogance throughout the The official Islamic Republic News Agency said the collaborate with the United States in kidnapping or en­ world." Majlis, or parliament, unanimously approved a final ver­ dangering Iranian citizens or the interests of the Islamic "Global arrogance" is a favorite Iranian name for the sion of the bill that earlier had been passed by the 12- republic, will be tried by Iranian courts according to Is­ United States. member Council of Guardians, a constitutional watch­ dog body. The council acted after the 270-seat Majlis ap­ proved a first draft of the measure on Tuesday. The law will remain on the books "as long as the U.S. Refugees swarm West German embassy president is authorized to commit inhuman practices against the lives and interests of Iranian citizens," the • GERMANY from page 2 and small amounts of baggage, were mostly in their 20s agency reported in a dispatch monitored in Cyprus. porary jump in departures, but indicated they were will­ and 30s. The Iranian move was in response to the Justice ing to take the gamble on the assumption that the num­ A 31-year-old butcher named Manfred said he, his Department's authorization of the FBI to arrest sus­ bers would stabilize. wife and their 9-year-old daughter left their hometown pected terrorists abroad and bring them to trial in the In Bonn, the Foreign Ministry official said that more of Rostock on the Baltic Sea on Tuesday night, crossing United States without the permission of the countries than 1,000 East Germans were in the West German Em­ the border to Czechoslovakia shortly after midnight. where they were located. bassy in Warsaw, or in buildings put at the embassy's "Krenz is making a lot of promises," he said. "But we The U.S. move did not specify Iran. But it is one of sev­ disposal by the Polish government. do not believe him. We do not see any future, and cer­ eral nations accused of supporting and encouraging ter­ Under recent arrangements with the governments in tainly not for our children." rorism, including the kidnapping of Americans and Warsaw and Prague, East Germany has simplified the Most of the East Germans entered the embassy by other Westerners in Lebanon, assassinations and hijack­ procedures for emigration by issuing East Germans who climbing over a seven-foot iron fence that surrounds the ings. flee to West German embassies temporary identification formal gardens at the rear of the building. Iranian radicals clearly saw the Justice Department's documents and affidavits releasing them from East Ger­ Though the main embassy entrance was open to them, action as aimed at the Islamic republic. man citizenship. most said they were afraid of the Czechoslovak police "You who scream about human rights and talk about Under West German law, which stresses the continu­ who regularly stand guard outside the splendid baroque terrorism, are yourselves innately terrorists and crimi­ ance of one German nation in two separate states, East palace that houses the diplomatic mission. nals who have taken security away from the people of German citizens are immediately eligible for West Ger­ the world," said Parliament Speaker Mehdi Karrubi, a man passports. A 42-year-old dentist who arrived with his wife and leading radical. Under those arrangements, groups of up to several three children in a rickety car recounted how they had Several Iranian-backed Shiite militants in Lebanon hundred East Germans have left Poland by plane and passed the border about noon Wednesday without en­ are wanted by the United States for hijacking a TWA Czechoslovakia by bus almost every day in recent weeks. countering difficulties. airliner in 1985 and killing a U.S. Navy diver aboard the Like the thousands who passed through Prague early "I think the new leadership is one thing," the man jet. last month, those who arrived Wednesday, with children said. "What they can accomplish is quite another thing."

ASIAN AND AFRICAN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE the experience of 3 billion people Summer LANGUAGE Session

Arabic 2, 64, 156 Program Chinese 2, 64, 126, 184, 186S Summer 1990 Hebrew 2, 64 Hindi 2, 64 May 10-June 29 Japanese 2, 64, 156, 184 Swahili 2, 64 LITERATURE

Chinese 148S Literature and the Revolution Wang, MW 1:50-3:05 Chinese 166S The I Ching Kunst, TTh 1:45-3:00 INFORMATION MEETING Hebrew 181 Hebrew Literature in Translation Kaplan, MW 3:25-4:40 with Professor Helga Bessent, Admin. Director Hindi 173 Contemporary Culture in South Asia Thursday, November 2, 1989 Khanna, TTh 1:45-3:00 Japanese 162 Classical Japanese Literature 4:45 pm Douglas, TTh 3:25-4:40 08 Languages Building AND

LITERATURE 121 Topics in Asian and African Literature Toorawa, TTh 3:25-4:40 Sponsored by:

THE CORE COURSE FOR THE CERTIFICATE IN ASIAN AND Department of German Summer Session Office AFRICAN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE. 104 Languages COME SPEAK WITH US ABOUT THIS EXCITING 121 Allen Bldg. NEW OPTION AT DUKE. 684-3836 684-2621 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 7 Students sign up for babysitting

• CHILDCARE from page 3 quested child care services from students, entation session presented by Alexander Alexander said. A few employees even and a representative from the Red Cross. asked for child care services right on the Students were informed of the importance Bryan Center walkway, before the list of of safety and of preparing a checklist with students interested in providing child the parents before beginning the babysit­ care was compiled, according to Gantt. ting, so that the student becomes familiar Involved students will be asked to keep with what is expected of him or her, Alex­ Alexander informed about all aspects of ander said. each job, especially if a student is feeling Students may attend the orientation uncomfortable. The "safety fof the session being held Thursday evening, if students! is important too," Alexander they missed the one held Wednesday said. night, Alexander said. Alexander also provides counseling for There was a similar program offered at student-parents on how to balance a fam­ the University several years ago, accord­ ily and a college career. Workshops such ing to Gantt. However, that program met as "How to Choose Quality Child Care," with little success since the publicity con­ "Child Care Resources in the Community" sisted of "names on index cards," Gantt and "Reducing Parenting Stress," will be said. Alexander, Clark and Gantt have all planned to help meet the challenges of expressed their happiness at how well the being a student-parent, she said. new child care program seems to be prog­ For more information on the child care BOB KAPLAN /THE CHRONICLE ressing. or student-parent services, call Rosalyn Several families have already re­ Alexander at 684-8687. Students sign up to babysit. EPA tightens controls on hospitals, nuclear power plants • EPA from page 2 in areas where they are exposed to a plants and medical laboratories — be­ —A number of Energy Department uranium mines or processing plants — higher than l-in-10,000 risk level. Under cause they already meet the tighter risk sites where excessive radon is released where atomic materials are used causing the new regulations that number would standards. from radioactive wastes, some dating radioactive byproducts to be released into be cut to fewer than 1,000 people. But other facilities have risk levels — back to the early days of the nuclear the air. Some environmentalists have argued as much as 6 in 10,000 at some phos­ program in the 1940s and 1950s. The EPA under the new standards re­ the EPA should use a risk level of 1 in 1 phorous plants, for example — that will quires such releases to pose no more than million even for those living close to such require tighter controls on emissions to —Some of the country's five operating a 1 in 10,000 risk of individuals closest to facilities, but Rosenberg said such a stan­ meet the new standard, he said. elemental phosphorous plants where a facility getting cancer from a lifetime of dard would be counterproductive since it According to the EPA, tigher controls to health risks to nearby residents exceed exposure. Although many facilities, in­ likely would cause significant restrictions curb radioactive releases likely will be re­ EPA standards. A phosphorous plant in cluding hospitals and atomic power in the use of radioactive therapy that is quired at: Pocatello, Idaho likely will have to install plants, currently meet such standards aimed at saving lives. —Seven of the country's 15 under­ a $2.4 million scrubber to reduce emis­ others do not, said the EPA. Guimond said the regulations likely ground uranium mines at a cost to the in­ sions because radioactive pollution there Richard Guimond, director of the EPA's would require no changes, other than per­ dustry of $400,000 a year. As many as five poses an estimated cancer risk 12 times office of radiation, estimated that cur­ haps in record keeping, at most of the of the mines may choose instead to shut greater than the l-in-10,000 standard al­ rently as many as 10,000 people may live facilities — especially hospitals, power down, officials said. lows, according to the EPA.

J. C. &CO. Flint Ridge Apartments Offer Beauty, MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Charm And Class Plus A Whole Lot More Largest Independent Investment Bank "LOCATION Less than a mile from Interstate 40 and Interstate 85 in the Southeast 1-, 2- and 3-bedroom gardens and townhouses, *SIZE ranging fom 740 square feet to 1,339 square feet • Pool • 5-acre stocked lake • Tennis courts • Paved walkways "AMENITIES • Basketball goal • Clubhouse • Free basic cable service • Patios/balconies • Beautifully landscaped • W/D connections • Pets allowed "EXTRAS • Laundry room • Jazzercise classes • Country atmosphere with city convenience "PLUS One month's FREE rent the first year and one month's FREE rent the second year.* Tuesday November 7,1989 7 - 9 p.m. flint Ridge Von Cannon Hall C Hfflsborough, N.C. • 7324418 • Exit 164 at 1-85, exit 261 at 140 9-5 Mon.-Fri.; Sat. Sun. by appointment f*_._p Located minutes from Durham, Chapel Hill and RTP. •First-time Flint Ridge renters PAGE 8 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 Greeks should curtail substance abuse, speaker says

• GREEKS from page 1 do to improve their image and to make this country by using drugs should also be ing you can push other people down to lift etal responsiblity and thus fill the themselves more socially responsible, abandoned, Keim said, urging Greeks to yourself up," and to concentrate instead "leadership vacuum" in America today. beginning with the issue of responsible think of their own drug use as reinforcing on just lifting yourself, and others, up. . But first, Greeks must disprove the ste­ drinking. He asked that Greeks recognize the demand which supplies drugs to chil­ Keim closed his speech by reminding reotypes associated with fraternities that that "if you have problems when you dren, such as their own younger siblings. the audience that Greek life is not indis- seem to portray them as "Animal House- drink, then you're a problem drinker." pensible, and that many colleges and s," that is, as similar to the fraternity Emphasizing the connection between al­ The third thing Greeks must do, Keim universities no longer allow the Greek depicted in the movie "Animal House," cohol, sex, and unwanted pregnancy, said, is to act in a sexually responsible system, saying that fraternities have "no Keim said. Keim emphasized that in or­ Keim said that Greeks should be secure manner. By citing statistics concerning place" in a university community if they der to do this Greeks do not have to be enough in their individual ideas of who AIDS and by applying humor to sexual re­ do not function as a supportive part of perfect, but asked them to simply "treat they are so as to be able to withstand the lationships, Keim asked Greeks to "not that community. Keim said he believes people like you want to be treated." peer pressure to drink. have sex and feel good about it" or to carry fraternities should be about integration Keim listed four things that Greeks can Contributing to the drug problem in and use condoms because "I don't want rather than separation, and asked that you to die of embarrassment." Keim also fraternities do their best to integrate all said that no one should feel alone if he or races into themselves and to integrate she is not having sex because "not every­ themselves into the university communi­ Warming conference to be held body who talks about it is doing it." ty. Finally, Keim asked that fraternities The speech was sponsored by Phi • WARMING from page 1 not yet been statistically proven. The stop hazing, saying "Help me stop the Kappa Sigma fraternity, the Interfrater- global warming trend is still disguised by madness." Keim further said, "Quit think­ nity Council and the Panhellenic Council. ence's primary goals will be to "remind normal fluctuations in climate, Arnett ex­ people of various approaches to plained. Christensen cited the lack of conservation," he said. "hard evidence" or what he termed a "Prudence would argue that you take a "smoking pistol" to affirm the greenhouse conservationist response," Christensen effect. >v said. Arnett expressed his hope that the con­ TEACHING, COACHING, COUNSELING Arnett, Christensen and Strain all cited ference will yield "honest, open, and the potential difficulty in communicating skeptical" discussion. "We're all in this to­ the urgency of global warming, which has gether," he said. And Other Career Opportunities in Independent And Private Schools

Panel discussion and informal question and answer session

Participants: Larry Maskel Director, Office of Placement Services Don North Headmaster, Durham Academy (a day school) Ginger Wilson Head, Department of Humanities North Carolina School of Science and Math (a residential school) David Malone Director of Undergraduate Teacher Department of Geology Preparation, Program in Education Spring Semester Courses The Department of Geology is offering the following Thursday, November 2, Room 202, West Duke Building courses available to both science and non-science majors: 5:00 p.trim -6:00 p.m. Refreshments Geology 41: Introduction to Geology. This course is aimed at providing an overview af all aspects of geology. The broad survey includes a Sponsored by:The Program in Education presentation of the earth's composition and the forces that interact to create geological landforms including volcanism, mountain building, The Office of Placement Services weathering, and transportation and deposition of sediments. The effects of these processes are discussed with respect to man and his activities. Geology 43: Application of Geologic Principles. This is a laboratory Offered for the first time in Spring 1990 course that is usually taken concurrently with Geology 41. Rocks and minerals will be identified and topographic and geologic maps will be utilized to give the student a broad introduction to geological problems. Geology 72: History of the Earth. This course provides an outline of the CHAOS evolution of the earth during the last 4.5 billion years, and considers the evolution of animals and plants through time. A weekend camping trip Physics 38S to the Appalachian Mountains is an opportunity for the student to collect fossils and a variety of rocks. Alaboratory is included in the course which TuTh 12:10-1:25, Room 158 Physics introduces the student to fossils and includes exercises in geological analysis. The prerequisite for this class is Geology 41. Instructor: Karen Anderson Freshman Seminars: Geology 49S.01: Geology and Public Policy Issues. This seminar will Chaos is a new scientific discipline touching on everything from study how geologic information is used in the formulation of public policy erratic heart beats to patterns of dripping water, from fluctuations in the areas of energy; strategic minerals stockpiling; nuclear test ban in wildlife populations to fluid turbulence, from economic pat­ treaty compliance and monitoring; earthquake prediction; beach and floodplain development; and space exploration. The ways scientists work terns to chemical oscillations. Many everyday phenomena are and think about these problems will be considered as they have bearing now being viewed in terms of order within chaotic patterns. upon national and local needs. The class will emphasize the difference between "scientific facts" and the more pragmatic concerns of poli­ This seminar course will examine the mathematics of chaos and cymakers. applications in physics and other disciplines. There are no pre­ Geology 49S.02: Earth-Rock. An introduction to the basic concepts of requisites, but the student should be comfortable with basic mathe­ earth crust as a framework for discussing the locations of various rocks matics through trigonometry. The course does not fulfill require­ and minerals. This background will permit consideration of the environ­ mental, economical, and political consequences of the uneven distribu­ ments for a major in physics. tion of rock-related resources on the face of the earth. The emphasis will be on the role of these resources in industry, the military, and the For further information call Karen Anderson at 684-8231. everyday life of students.

... THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 9 Student activists begin week-long Domino's Pizza boycott

• BOYCOTT from page 1 iums and shopping malls, McCollough supports the Contras, a Nicaraguan rebel Dan Shefte asked students not to con­ last year, said McCollough. said. army. tinue the boycott because he believed it Domino's spokesperson Moira McDer- Monaghan does "own several acres in Monaghan is in no way connected with would only hurt the local franchises. The mott responded by saying that Ann Arbor" and has purchased land for The Word of God, said McDermott. student-run boycott "will not really affect Monaghan, a Roman Catholic, made a malls, but he never purchased any wild­ Monaghan is presently financially sup­ Domino's," said McDermott. The boycott single donation in 1988 to the pro-life life reserves, said McDermott. There are porting a Catholic missionary in El could in fact only heighten awareness of cause, and has not made any other dona­ "no wildlife reserves in Ann Arbor or the Mochito, Nicaragua and does not support Domino's pizza and create more sales, tions to the pro-life cause. Ann Arbor township," she said. the Nicaraguan Contras, said McDermott. said Tyndall. Domino's Pizza is among a number of "The problem is that they don't have These boycotts probably will not change The flyers distributed by SOS also state food chains in which workers are not correct information. Where they got their Monaghan's personal viewpoints, said that Monaghan does not allow union labor unionized on the store level, including information, I don't know," said Alan Tyn- McDermott. "If students really want to in his corporation. In addition, the flyers Pizza Hut, McDonald's and Burger King, dall, Senior Operational Supervisor of the make a difference, they should contact the charge Monaghan with buying huge said McDermott. local Domino's Pizza. legislature," said McDermott. amounts of land near Domino's corporate McDermott also rejected the flyer's McCollough named the National Catho­ "Monaghan has never pretended to headquarters in Ann Arbor, forcing local assertion that Monaghan "belongs to a fa­ lic Reporter and the New York Times as speak for his employers or franchisees," homeowners to sell their homes. Also, natic religious-corporate organization sources for the claims against Monaghan. said McDermott. "He never indicated that Monaghan has bought a number of wild­ known as The Word of God" and that In a meeting with University student he wanted his employees to line up be­ life reserves in order to develop condomin­ through this organization, Monaghan groups Oct. 11, local Domino's franchiser hind him in his beliefs," she said. y UNDERGRADUATES: Jim O'Donnell CHOOSE DUKE'S Specializing in ADMINISTRATORS FOIL HIGHLIGHTING DIMENSIONAL You could be one of the undergraduate representatives CREATIVE COLI on one of the following search committees: CORRECTIVE COLOR

Career Development Center: This search committee will make recomiriendations for a Director of the newly created Career Member of Haircolor USA, Development Center, a major new initiative to combine Duke the national network of professional colorists Futures, the Placement Office and CAPS. UNIVERSAL HAIRsBESIGN 760 Ninth St. 286-0055 Public Affairs: This search committee will make recommendations for a University Vice President and Director of the new department of Public Affairs, which will unite and expand the services of FULL SERVICE... University Relations, Government Relations and the Duke News by Durham's Service. FRANK WARD Residential Specialists REALTORS Since 1964

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To the editor: racist. Nor are we allowed to tell you how I can see it now. The future headline of the person was dressed, for that would The Chronicle might read as follows: surely imply what sex the person was, Lower education "Duke student attacked" and that would be sexist. However, we "A Duke student was attacked and se­ can say that the person was alive and By now, everyone is familiar with to those who want to see NSCU's aca­ verely beaten yesterday by a person (The breathing at the time of the attack). Duke the athletics scandal that humiliated demic integrity restored. It is hard to Chronicle regrets that we are unable to University students should be on the North Carolina State University believe that a person who has chosen inform you of the assailant's sex, for that lookout for this person, as he (or she) is (NCSU), led to Chancellor Bruce to spend his life educating others can would be sexist. We are also unable to in­ deemed by Public Safety as being quite Poulton's resignation and forced Jim maintain such a low opinion of aca­ form you of the assailant's color, for that dangerous." would be racist. We can't tell you the per­ Valvano to resign as athletic director. demic integrity and the value of a lib­ son's size, for then you might be able to Matthew Cubstead Unfortunately, not everyone has eral arts education. infer his/her race, and then we'd be Trinity '90 taken the scandal's lessons to heart. It is not difficult to imagine a soci­ In the Nov. 4 issue of The Wolfpack- ety that reflects Smetana's thinking: er, NCSU's athletic booster newslet­ it would be utterly devoid of any ter, Professor Frederick Smetana in­ sense of culture or historical identity; Rights are fine when you have a place to sleep sisted that the school had "violated no it would completely lack the ability to academic rules with regard to basket­ comprehend and build upon the di­ To the editor: so as to enable folks less fortunate than ball players." Smetana, who teaches versity of opinion and thought that Craig Greenlaw claims that people do Greenlaw and I, who have the luxury of aerospace engineering at NCSU and maintains a great culture; and it not have a "right to employment," or a sitting in front of our word processors and was a member of the school's Faculty would suffer from moral and spiritual "right to housing," or a "right to health engaging in intellectual masturbation, to Athletics Council from 1982 to 1988, bankruptcy. Are these the goals an care"("Human rights limit society's live a more comfortable and secure life. maintains that the school did nothing institution of higher learning wants demands," Oct. 12). And, indeed, the au­ With equal opportunity. wrong by granting preferential treat­ to promote? thors of the Constitution did not create Greenlaw appears to be unwilling to ment to student athletes. these rights. Unfortunately they also share his gotten gains with the less for­ More ominously, Smetana said he NCSU, which already faces the stopped short of creating the right to tunate, and he appeals to the Constitu­ equal opportunity. believes the school was overem­ overwhelming task of rebuilding its tion to defend his wealth against the evil This is serious because there is not hand of charity, generosity, kindness, un­ phasizing liberal arts courses that en­ shattered reputation, knows it can do equal opportunity in this country, nor in selfishness and sharing. Is he quite will­ couraged "adventures of the mind," without this sort of publicity; the any other. One would have to be naive to ing to have his tax dollars spent on invad­ and that the school's overriding school acted quickly to dissociate it­ think that there is. For those who have ing small islands and manipulating Cen­ priority is to train students to get self from Smetana's remarks, and jobs (Craig Greenlaw, employee of the tral and South American countries rather profitable jobs — not to provide a Acting Chancellor Larry Monteith as­ DUMC) and money, and housing and than helping folks in the next block who diverse, well-rounded education. As a serted that he does not share health care, this inequality is not a prob­ weren't lucky enough to be born with at result, Smetana condones special Smetana's views. Yet it is discourag­ lem. Indeed, it is probably a welcome least a stainless steel spoon in their treatment of athletes in order to help ing to know that even educators are situation. There isn't room at the top for mouths? If that is the case, if natural se­ them get jobs in professional sports. not immune from the kind of thinking everyone to "have," and the "haves" will of lection is to be extended to society, if those course seek to maintain the status quo. who are too lazy to work are to be con­ Smetana's remarks are a disgrace that landed the school in trouble in Greenlaw believes that rights are a demned to death, fine. But let it be on to educators and a particular affront the first place. means of subordinating society to moral Greenlaw's head. Personally, I would law. He appears to exclude from moral rather pay people to do nothing than con­ law those very things that concern in­ demn them to poverty, homelessness and On the record ternational agencies such as WHO and death for indolence. UNESCO. These are things like housing, We're all in this together. health care and employment, things that Callum Ross people in other countries do regard as Department of Biological Chemistry department chair Edward Arnett, on global warming and the green­ basic human rights. Perhaps the Consti­ Anthropology and Anatomy house effect. tution needs to be modified or interpreted

LETTERS POLICY Snuffing out the "thousand points of light" The Chronicle urges all its readers to submit letters to its editor. Letters must be typed and double-spaced and must not exceed 300 words. They To the editor: formal ban on assassination by redefining must be signed and dated and must include the author's class or department, Our new president promised us a it as "accidental killing." With this new phone number and local address for purposes of verification. The Chronicle will not "kinder, gentler nation." Here's what executive definition in place, if a foreign publish anonymous or form letters or letters whose sources cannot be confirmed. we've gotten over the last few months: leader is "accidentally killed," such cannot The Chronicle reserves the right to edit for length and clarity, and to withhold • In his campaign, George Bush pan­ be considered assassination if United letters, based on the discretion of the editors. dered to the racist fears of White America States forces are employed against any Letters to the editor should be mailed to Box 4696, Duke Station or delivered in with the spectre of Willie Horton, and in­ nation or organization "whose actions person to The Chronicle office on the third floor of Flowers Building. sulted all of us by selecting a spineless pose a threat to the security of the United and remarkably stupid person as his run­ States." (And, I imagine, the Sandinistas' ning mate. "action" of overthrowing a brutal, U.S.- • On national television, George Bush backed dictator in 1979 could be consid­ THE CHRONICLE established 1905 threatened the nation's youth with all the ered such a threat). Essentially, George prisons he's building, and called for a Bush has declared himself the head of a Craig Whitlock, Editor more rigorous use of the death penalty. terrorist state. Matt Sclafani, Managing Editor • George Bush has retained our option • Finally, George Bush continues to Barry Eriksen, General Manager to produce poison gas weapons after the cloak all these crimes in the American Matt McKenzie, Editorial Page Editor treaty to phase out poison gas takes ef­ flag and has thereby succeeded in further fect. This will protect a special Pentagon impoverishing what little political debate Jamie O'Brien, News Editor Chris O'Brien, News Editor project he's partial to, which is developing there is in this country. Just last Friday, Keith Lublin, Features Editor Rodney Peele, Sports Editor a chemical bomb that kills by a nerve Vietnam veterans in Seattle demon­ Lenore Yarger, City & State Editor Beau Dure, Arts Editor agent that causes paralysis and blocks strated by burning hundreds of flags in Jim Jeffers, Photography Editor Jim Flowers, Photography Editor breathing. protest of American imperialism abroad, Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager Eric Harnish, Business Manager George Bush has assaulted the and in protest of the new flag-burning law Susan Shank, Student Advertising Manager Linda Nettles, Production Manager English language in order to hamstring that is meant to keep the ahistorical, jin­ Charles Carson, Production Supervisor Carolyn Poieet, Creative Svcs. Coord. real political debate. Webster's defines goistic spirit alive at home. Tellingly, the most vocal and violent The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its "liberal" as "marked by generosity, open- students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of handedness, open-mindedness, a belief in counter-demonstrators defending the new the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. progress and essential goodness in man, law were the White Pride skinheads. Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469: News /Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115; Business and standing for the protection of political I think this is an indication of Bush's Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106. and civil liberties." To George Bush, this true political alignment, and it's one that Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union is an insult and anyone with such moral can hardly be characterized as kind or Building; Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building. credentials should by no means be al­ gentle. c 1989 The Chronicle, Box 4696. Duke Station, Durham, N.C; 27706. All rights reserved. No lowed in high elected office. part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of • By a similar rhetorical maneuver, Martin Thies the Business Office. George Bush rescinded a fourteen-year graduate student in English THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 11 A deal the Soviets may want to refuse

"Polls show it," Marju Lauristin said. "It's the will of the Estonian people to be an independent country." Then she laughed and added, "Now the only problem is how to fulfill this will." Lauristin is a teacher of journalism and sociology at Tartu University in Tallinn: hardly a political spring­ board, one might think. But last year she helped found the Popular Front of Estonia. This year she was elected to Mikhail Gorbachev's new Congress of People's Depu­ ties and then to the Supreme Soviet. Now she is a, perhaps the, leading voice for Estonian independence. On her first visit to the United States, I asked her whether she really thought it was possible to solve what she cheerfully called "the only problem" — getting Soviet agreement to independence. "We have a scenario to achieve it in five to seven years," Lauristin said. "Peacefully. Nobody is talking about violence. "To start, we think the Soviet government will at least recognize the fact that it annexed the Baltic States in 1940." It would admit, that is, that Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania were taken by military force, not with the OH.tuBWE! VpH (M YOU SW YOU NEW* W® Wc IN FORTY Y£M« Of MRRIA66?' popular consent that has been the official version of the event. tin in the effort to correct false history. Her father, Why would Mikhail Gorbachev make such an admis­ • Abroad at home Johannes, was the first leader of the Estonian Commu­ sion? I asked. nist regime after Soviet annexation. He died in 1941. "It's a test of his promise to finish with Stalinist Anthony Lewis Ms. Lauristin said her mother explained that he "was history," Lauristin said. fooled by Stalin. It's clear now. But then it wasn't." Honesty about what happened in 1940, she argued, Were people in Moscow shocked, I asked, when they In the Supreme Soviet, Lauristin's role is not limited would also release economic energies in the Baltics. And heard such ideas? to Baltic matters. She is a supporter of President Gor­ development there would benefit the Soviet Union. "At first yes," Lauristin said. "But the Supreme Soviet bachev's reform program at a time when it is under at­ "When Gorbachev goes to Finland," she said, has heard many radical ideas now. Every week, step by tack because of severe economic problems. (She remains "everyone in Estonia can see him on Finnish television. step, the idea of self-determination is becoming more a Communist Party member.) When we hear his speech in Helsinki (praising Finland acceptable." as a model of stability), everybody can imagine the same The next session of the Supreme Soviet, in December, "The threat is that neo-Stalinists may use the eco­ speech in Tallinn. may well confront the Baltic question. It will have a nomic situation to rouse the population against "If the Soviet Union had conquered Finland in 1940, it report from a commission, of which Lauristin is a mem­ perestroika," she said. "Their solution will be to go back would be a Soviet republic today in the same unhappy ber, on the Hitler-Stalin pact of 1939. And itwill contain to a centralized, militarized, totalitarian system. It's a economic state as the others. And it couldn't help the So­ reports from similar commissions in the three Baltic re­ real threat. In the crisis, people look for enemies: intel­ viet Union." publics. lectuals, the Baltics, cooperatives.... The next step toward independence, Lauristin said, "Our Estonian commission said that all actions of the "The Supreme Soviet is a very important school, a would be to negotiate "a special status for Estonia in the so-called Revolutionary government in 1940 were ille­ school of democratic procedure and rational thinking. It Soviet Union." It would have a confederal relationship: gal," she said, "because they were taken under the pres­ must show people, on television, that both sides are "more freedom to build up democratic institutions, a sure of Soviet forces. The report declares that the decla­ there making their arguments. It must show that the multi-party system, a market economy." ration of unity with the Soviet Union was null and void. economic crisis cannot be solved without political Finally, Estonians would negotiate a right to decide My mother, who is 87 now, is a member and signed the reforms." their attachment to the Soviet Union by referendum. report." Anthony Lewis' column is syndicated by the New York That is, self-determination. There is a strange personal element for Marju Lauris­ Times News Service. Steroids kill — but the victims are still going unnoticed

These days, talk of anabolic steroid use and abuse in case not only has the press helped create a devastating athletic circles has become almost old hat. America may • Flip side problem, their so-called "objectivity" has masked their have been surprised by highly publicized steroid scan­ complicity in its spread. dals involving football star Brian Bosworth and Olympic Peter Winkler In researching this article I surveyed a 20 year-old for­ sprinter Ben Johnson, but that time of innocence is over. mer steroid user. Unlike the high schoolers who took the By now, those wise to the game have figured out that the drugs to improve appearance and self-esteem, this user use of anabolic steroids, or anaboles, is rampant at the Short-term effects, such as acute acne and testicle had taken an eight-week cycle of the anaboles Winstrol- upper levels of football, weightlifting, and track com­ shrinkage, occur in almost all cases of anabole use. But V and Anavar for the specific purpose of bulking up to petition. instances of their appearance were never mentioned in gain a starting offensive guard position on the Cornell Few observers question the intensity of press coverage the Herald article. football team. in cases involving high profile steroid users. But while Instead, reporter Angie Cannon recounted numerous This young man certainly didn't face the level of com­ big time athletes caught with their hands in the phar­ steroid success stories, such as one high schooler's one- petition encountered at college football factories like maceutical cookie jar make great headlines, a large seg­ year rise from 128-pound weakling to 206-pound behe­ USC, Penn State or Oklahoma. He was also playing in ment of the steroid-using population has gone virtually moth. Yet, for all its success stories, her article failed to the Ivy League, a non-scholarship conference noted for unnoticed. record the viewpoint of a user who had suffered any mis­ its student-athletes' dedication to higher educational On December 21, 1986, the Miami Herald published a fortune because of steroids. goals. feature story entitled "Steroids: 'Scary' Student Body Looking past the article's substantive inadequacies, So why was he taking steroids? Fad." That article constituted the first nationally promi­ consider that it almost certainly would not have been "I weighed 205 when I entered college ... I was one of nent coverage of the distressing rise in steroid use written without the extensive media attention already the strongest linemen; I just did not have the weight to among high schoolers. being given to Bosworth. Coverage of a star that Sports start," the user says. "I just needed that little bit extra." Ironically, the story's impetus was a 90-day NCAA Illustrated had created was setting the agenda for yet My Cornell pen-pal had bulked himself up to 230 suspension that had recently been levied upon Bosworth another media crusade, and no one (certainly not Miami pounds by the beginning of this season and secured a when the Oklahoma linebacker tested positive for deca- high schoolers) was the wiser for it. starting position. Unfortunately, his season ended durabolin, a banned anabolic steroid. Bosworth, a tal­ Because of their relative inexperience in weightlifting abruptly when a defensive lineman rolled into his knee ented but controversial enigma, had vaulted to celebrity and athletics, high schoolers stand as the users most prior to the team's first game. status following a complimentary early-season Sports Il­ likely to be ignorant of the risks involved in anabolic Fully aware of his continual susceptibility to the possi­ lustrated article. His flashy style had spawned a cadre of steroid use. Additionally, they are the least likely users ble long-term effects of steroid use, this former user says loyal high school supporters in Miami. Many of these to take the time to do research or seek medical advice. he'd take steroids again if faced with the same situation. young disciples had reportedly shaven their heads in a Yet the Herald story fed them a dramatic rags-to-riches He also says that steroids are a much bigger problem "mohawk" style imitative of "The Boz" and were raven­ line similar to what one would see in a Charles Atlas than people may think. ously popping steroids to gain muscle mass. bodybuilding advertisement. "The thing that kills me is that people keep saying it is While the Herald article concentrated its efforts upon I'm sure that Cannon would claim that her story's only not a problem. Nobody thinks that their son would do it. a largely ignored segment of the steroid-using popula­ intention was to present an objective account of the People don't know how big it is getting." tion, its sensationalistic style detracted from the topic's growing trend of steroid use in Miami high schools. And Perhaps not, and we may never know if we continue to significance. Devastating long-term side effects of maybe that would be an acceptable excuse for the Her­ blindly trust stories in Sports Illustrated and the Miami steroid use, such as hypertension, liver and kidney dis­ ald's tabloidism if the media's extensive exposure of Herald without opening our eyes to the realities of teen­ orders, cancer and sterility were given only brief lip ser­ "The Boz" hadn't already turned him into a cult hero. age vanity and competitive pressures. vice. This excuse just wouldn't hold water. Because in this Peter Winkler is a Trinity junior. mmm

PAGE 12 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 Comics

Palm City/Carie Fletcher THE Daily Crossword _yD_na.dB.Groa.

ACROSS 1 2 3 4 15 6 7 8 9 11 12 13 1 Harper's Ferry - action 14 15 Land or sea ,. end 17 18 I 10 A few " 20 21 22 14 A Lanchester _H 1 WEU-,TH6 6RASS UA& 15 Panama city H23 24 • 25 H26 6JR0U/N ONE ZtaiONTH 16 US naturalist OFANINCHTU-TSINCG 17 Like lago 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 XVe Besry H€RE 19 A Klemperer 20 Bessemer 34 35 B35 37 38 39 product Ai£#, 21 Strove with 40 41 42 43 I difficulty 44 45 46 23 Indira attire _H W^JylMMk 25 Meet a poker 47 48 49 50 51 bet H 26 Have being 52 53 54 55 56 57 | 27 — culpa _B 30 Central point 58 59 60 •s: 62 63 64 32 Films' Bruce 34 Constellation 65 66 67 I The Far Side / Gary Larson Calvin and Hobbes / Bill Watterson 36 Arthur of TV 68 69 70 37 Ms Thompson 40 "Victory 71 72 73 belongs to the —" ©1989 Tribune Media1 Services, In c 11/02/89 (Napoleon) All Rights Reserved 44 Noted hotel Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 45 Eng. river 5 Sch. subj. 46 Nora's dog 6 Deem R A - A H " ? P A ? P L U B 47 Beams 7 Thanks —! E R I C A H E R 0 L 1 N F 49 Tennis serves 8 Decants N 1 . H TlM A R E A P ,S F 51 Coal scuttle 9 Followed PI u s E n 52 Two — kind 10 Bane of cities 11 M 1 § E Y 54 Exclamation 11 Bizarre •V 0 R•___ T E_n N EAR 56 Speaks 12 Bishop's hat 1 V R L 1 P lovingly 13 Wear | . m* E n § R 0 58 AZ waterway gradually A v . n l» I n | n 61 Cruising 18 Thicke E L A T M A G F s 65 Et - 22 Ninnies R 0 L L E R IN E R Y F • p •w 66 Via and iter 24 Garment IRIE BIU K L i 1 A Hi 68 Pleased 27 Parent imnn nrann nnnnl 69 Type size 28 Grand poetry w i N 5 B I 0 0 H HULK D 70 Wild disorder 29 Canberra E L K E JL A RNJ S N I D F 71 Thrall of yore native fl ______A N PY T E T 0 N 72 Mended a 31 Atelier item i shoe 33 — avis 11102(89 73 Adm. Zumwait 35 Portico 48 Kent and 59 Ocean 38 Division Cornwall phenomenon DOWN word 50 Fly high 60 Jannings of Races the 39 Mild oath 52 Indian early films engine 41 Comic Richard tribe 62 Leave port Landed 42 Denounce 53 Niagara — 63 Esau Capri e.g. scathingly 55 Molding 64 Regarding Valleys 43 I forbid: Lat. 57 Accumulate 67 Actor Beatty

© 1963 Chronica Features *$f*'( THE CHRONICLE ' Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate

"Ok! Now don't move, Andy!... Here comes Mom!" Assistant sports editor: Neil Falis Copy editors: Beau Dure, Jamie O'Brien, Matt Sclafani Wire editor: Leigh Dyer Associate photography editor: Chad Hood Doonesbury / Garry Trudeau Layout artist: Jamie O'Brien Account representatives: Judy Bartlett, Betty Hawkins Advertising sales staff: Trey Huffman, HEUO? ACTUALLY, I WAS IMAFRAIPSO, IN THB PAYS AHEAP, YOU MAY GLAD TO Anna Lee,Jennifer Phillips MAY I IM0NPERIN6IF1 MEET YOU, ANPY. THIS HAS START TO FEEL PEPRBSSEP OR ITtVON'T NO,NO,UJ& HELP COULP HELP YOU, AN6ELA. BEEN A TERRIBLB ANXIOUS OR EVEN GUILTY OVER CONFLICT CAN WORK Laura Tawney, Serina Vash you-? ANPY. I'M AN6BLA YOUMUST EXPERIENCE FOR HAVIN6 SURVIVBP. THAtSWHY tVITHMY AROUNPIT. Creative services staff: Wendy Arundel, Joy Bacher, JAN 19, FROM THB BBABUSY A LOT OF PEOPLE. I'M HERB -TO OFFER ANY AIPS COUN­ COUNSELING \ Loren Faye, Jessica Johnston, TRAUMA \, LADY SELING, YOU MAY CENTER. THESE WILL IT* Kevin Mahler, Ann-Marie Parsons NBBP. DAYS. Subscriptions manager: Dan Perlman Classified managers: ....Candice Polsky, Darren Weirnick Payables manager: Greg Wright Receivables staff: Judy Chambers, Kevin Csernecky, Linda Markovitz, Susan Stevenson Secretaries: Pam Packtor, Jennifer Springer Calendar coordinator: Melissa Newman

Black Campus Ministr Today Community Calendar Stallings, a controversii Kitty Kolbert, lawyer with Priest who has foundec Reproductive F"reedo m Proje D.C, to speak. DukeCh campus. Browii bag lunch d ECOS meeting, 136 Soc the upcoming abortion. 1191 College Republicans: L Council Debate. Bry Webster: Wh Theater, 3:00 pm. States? " publ lawyer with the dom Project. 1(

John McCutch* music in the be t THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 13 Classifieds

Seniors ADPi-PhiPsi BASSETT FUND Someone needed to help KEVIN Announcements Interested in a career in Invest­ Dress up as your elementary All BASSETT FUND applications for with the Bernoulli Box. school past for tonight's School Nov are due Mon. Nov 6, by 5 p.m. ment Banking? Kidder, Peabody in­ English tutor needed. Prefer tutor­ ABORTION Days mixer! 9 in the Section! vites all seniors to an information Questions? Call Shona, 684-7441. ing experience in proper pronun­ Private & Confidential Care. New session on its 2-yr Financial Ana­ Modern Facility. Free Pregnancy KITTY KOLBERT ciation & accent reduction. Approx lyst Program. Senior Bankers and ENGINEERS 3 hrs/wk. $8/hr. Call 968-4873. Test. Sat & Weekday Appoint­ other Analysts will be there to Run for ESG, the place to be (EN­ Come talk with Kitty Kolbert, State ments. Chapel Hill, 800-433- answer questions about career op­ GINEERING STUDENT GOVERN­ Legislative Action Coordinator for 2930. portunities on Wall Street. Thu Nov MENT WANTS YOU). Petitions the ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project, about "What's In Store for Child Care STEREO — ALL YOUR NEEDS. The 2, Von Canon B, 7-8 p.m. Please available outside the ESG office Roe: The Supreme Court's Agenda Stereo Works sells & services contact Joe Stevens, 212-510- in the basement of Teer, by the Wanted: Babysitter with own trans­ following Webster at 12 today in home & car stereo systems. The 3396 or Mark Hagan, 212-510- PC cluster In the 'Old Red' Engi­ portation to take care of sweet 6 119 East Duke Bldg. Drinks and best service in town at reasonable 4111, if you have any questions. neering Bldg, and In the Dean's mo old boy for approximately 4 hrs/ Office (305 Teer). Petitions are dessert provided. prices. 2606 Hillsborough Rd (near CHINESE CUISINE wk in my home. Call Cathy at 489- Anderson St.) 286-3891. due Mon Nov 6. 8650. Win a free dinner for two at China INTERN-FRANCE Inn for being the top caller at DIAL­ SHARPE'S WORKOUT Holiday Aero­ Nell Riviere-Platt from the Intern­ Loving daytime nanny for our beau­ ships in Francophone Europe ASTHMA STUDY ING FOR DUKE tonight. Free dinner, bics SPECIAL! JOIN for Nov and Dec tiful infant son. Full-time beginning Individuals with asthma on in­ Program will speak on Fri, Nov 3 in mug, MetrSport membership, at the same time and we'll give you Jan. Optional part-time Nov-Dec. haled steroids for a Paid inves­ 129 SocPsych at 4 p.m. about a 4 phone call. Cash prizes! 6:45-10 Dec for $16 (Dec Reg. $24). Un­ Must be nonsmoker with own tigational study. For more infor­ month internship program in Fran­ p.m.. 3rd floor DUPAC. Questions? limited high impact, "abs, thighs, transportation. Excellent salary. mation contact Carolina Allergy ce. Through the program, students 684-4419. buns," and funky low impact. 706- Call 490-5146. & Asthma Consultants at 787- receive five weeks of preparation 1/2 Ninth St., 286-9342. 5997, 493-6580, or 933-2044. GETTING FLABBY? and orientation in economics, poli­ Get in shape at MetroSport Athletic tics, social structures, and busi­ Services Offered PPS Summer 1990 Interns — Club with the month free member­ LOCAL DEBATE!!! ness etiquette, and then are Please sign up for internship inter­ ship you'll receive for participating Durham City Council Candidates placed in a twelve-week internship ProType does: resumes, cover let­ views outside Rm 213 Old Chem. in DIALING FOR DUKE tonight. Then will debate Thu Nov 2 In Bryan with a major public policy leader. ters, papers, theses, reports, The interviews will be held on the nourish yourself with the healthy Ctr Film Thtr, 3 p.m. Last chance Students must have a moderate newsletters, brochures. Call 682- following days: Criminal Justice, dinner you'll win at CHINA INN (hold to see candidates before elec­ fluency in French to participate in 4628 or come by Brightleaf Sq., Nov 7; Journalism, Nov 6; Health, the MSG!). Treat yourself right and tion! the program. upstairs near Morgan Imports, 9-5, Nov 7; State and Local, Nov 6; help Duke out! 6:45-10 p.m., 3rd Rock for the Homeless! Come hear M-F. Telecommunications, Oct 31; In­ FOOD! Kappas! Remember Schol­ floor DUPAC. the lotas, Flyin' Mice, and Boney dependent Sequence students, arship Banquet tonight 6:15 Von- RUSH RUSH RUSH Maroney this Fri at Under the Nov 8 & 9; Environmental, Nov 8. The Ultimate Frisbee Tournament. Canon. Formal meeting attire, Your newsletters, brochures, Street, 9:30. $4 or 4 cans of food. Coming Soon. Register BC walkway please. resumes, posters done NOW. Rides at East and West bus stops STUDY IN INDIA — Important info 30 Oct to 3 Nov. 1st prize will be Graphics, chanting. 600(!) dpi at 9:30 & 10. Sponsored by Old Phi meeting about study abroad provided by the Party Store at laser output. Typing, editing, styl­ Kaps and the Homeless Project. PUBLIC SPEAKING programs in INDIA (Academic Year/ Lakewood. ing academic papers. You do the Semester), Thu, Nov 2, 4:30 p.m., Come see how easy it is! Duke WOMEN'S STUDIES Toastmasters meets tonight at creating: I'll do the details. Rapid- International House, 2022 Campus Fa la la la la Word 471-6671. Dr. and all that. Time to book holiday Ever thought about earning your 7:30 in 311 SocSci. Bring check­ parties before we book up. MUSIC certificate in Women's Studies? Do books! Call Kirk 684-1717 for PAPERS TYPED — $J7pg or $2/pg a concentration with some of the details. DR. FOWLIE'S PROUST COURSE TO YOU Discjockey Service 684- for same or next day service. Call most interesting courses on cam­ (DPC 203) will be offered SPRING 1139. Nick at 684-7620. pus. Stop by the office, 207 East 1990: MWF 9:10-10 and 10:20- PiPhi-Kappa Sig FRATERNITIES, SORORITIES, SER­ Duke Bldg or call Vivian at 684- 11:10 in 116 Old Chem. Olympics Mixer 9 tonight in the VICE ORG'S: Your organization can 5683 for more information. section. Wear your team colors Roommate Wanted earn significant profits im­ SOPHOMORE WOMEN SENIOR SEMINARS and be on time. 'Cause the mediately (40% of sales) plus 10% games can't start without you. Mature Grad or Professional Did you miss rush sign-ups? profit on reorders for three yrs by Sign up for a Senior Seminar in wanted to share 3 BR house near Come to one of the freshmen offering Premier Checks' exclusive Women's Studies this Spring. 2 to TRIDELTS — The meeting tonight if Woodcroft Dec 1st. Dogs allowed. sign-up sessions. Don't wait un­ line of personal checks to your choose from: "Between Naming Formal. Senior Mixer at #14 Erwin 493-2735. til it's too late! classmates, friends and family. and Claiming: Bridging the Per­ Square begins at 10:30. Limited number of groups on your sonal and the Political"; and "Ob­ Spacious condo n/ Brightleaf to FRESHMAN WOMEN! jectivity and Feminist Theory: A DIA SOCIAL share w/ prof'l male. Furn. kitchen campus can take part, so call Delicious dinner at International Rush sign-ups. Please bring $10 Case Study of the Scientific Meth­ & living rm, huge private BR. HBO. today on our toll free line, 1-800- House. 6:30 p.m. Fri, Nov 3. All and a pencil. Also, find out if you od." For more info, call 684-5683. $300 + 1/2 util. Available Nov 10- 525-2201 for free info. Bonus if members invited. Dance at NC are a legacy. If you can't make May 31. 688-8598. you start your fund raiser by Nov CCC — Conference on Career State follows. your dorm's session, come to an­ 10. Premier Checks, Inc. Winston- Choices — CCC —- Get Involved. other one! Salem, NC. Find out more and sign up to inter­ FOR THE CHEF Real Estate Sales view at the Bryan Ctr Info Desk. Lancaster County Farm Cookbook. Pegram and Jarvis women sign DGLA HOTLINE Collection of nearly three hundred up in Jarvis on Fri Nov 3rd at 4 The DGLA Hotline offers informa­ The Conference on Career Choices recipes gathered from Amish and For sale — Unique condominium, p.m. tion and referrals on issues of is looking for 10 enthusiastic, Mennonite farm families of Lan­ 1/2 block from Duke East Cam­ sexual orientation Thu night from hard-working students to fill 10 caster County, Pennsylvania. pus. Classic 1920s architecture, Hastings women sign up in Hast­ 8-12. Call 684-3414. positions on its Steering Commit­ $4.50 postpaid. Conestoga Supply 2 BR. 286-1054. Come see 813 ings on Sat Nov 4th at 11 a.m. tee. Sign up to interview at the BC House, 372 Mt. Sidney Rd., Lan­ Lancaster. Are you a confused music lover? Info Desk TODAY! caster, PA 17602. THETA CLASSIC! MIXED DOUBLES Howling Wind gives the straight American Village. By owner. TENNIS; sign up to play on BC dope at only $10 for 12 monthly is­ SOPHS/JUNIORS! Help Wanted Need a sale fast. Terrific location walkway this week! sues. 6202 North 16th St #43, Looking for paid career-related, for Duke Personnel. 3BR, 2 1/2 Phoenix, AZ 85016. and interesting internship experi­ MAN OF LAMANCHA OVERSEAS JOBS. $900-2000 mo. BA, GR w/FP, LG kitchen w/bay & ence this summer? DUKE FUTURES island. Save real estate commis­ Auditions for Hoof N'Horn's Winter ADPi meeting Summer, Yr round, All Countries, PROGRAMS is having two more info sion. $126,900. 4312 Valley musical will be held Mon-Tue from Programmed meeting tonight at All fields. Free info. Write IJC, PO sessions on Mon, Nov 6. One info Forge. 383-07S8. 6-10 p.m. in Fred Thtr. Sign-up BC 6:20 — House A commons. We session is at 4 p.m. in 130 BioSci. Bx 52, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. Info Desk and come with a song need your John Hancock for impor­ The other one is at 7 p.m. in Zener GREAT HOLIDAY JOB tant papers. Get your calendars! prepared! Aud. You need to attend only one OPPORTUNITY — Going home for Garage Sales of the sessions to pick up your reg­ the Holidays? Need a fun part-time istration packet. Since info ses­ job? The HONEY BAKED HAM CO. Collectibles Yard Sale. Vintage sions are mandatory to participate is In search of seasonal help to fill clothing, old records, books, in the program, if you are unable to our sales counter and production unique home furnishings. 1212 come on Nov 6, then you must plan positions. We have stores located Glendale, Durham. Sat Nov 4, 9 THE CHRONICLE to come to our final set of info ses­ in the following markets: Raleigh, a.m. -3p.m. sions on Dec 5. Ii is never too early Durham, Greensboro, Winston to start thinking about your future. CLASSIFIEDS INFORMATION Salem, Wilmington, Charlotte, At­ For Sale — Misc. ASA SKI TRIP! lanta, and other major cities throughout the southeast. Please BASIC FATE? _ Wanna ski Jan 12-13? Then bring AIRLINE TICKET, Albany NY to RDU. check the white pages or informa­ $15 deposits to 401 Fubar by Nov 27 (Mon after Thanksgiving). $3.00 (per day) for the first 15 words or less. tion for the store nearest your $70/B.O. Msg 383-7051. 100 (per day) for each additional word. TOMORROW! Checks payable to home. Apollo Khine. Late charge after 11/ Yamaha C-50 pre-amp and M-50 3. Rock Street Deli, University Tower power amp, 120 watts per chan­ SPECIAL FEATURES needs part-time help 10-2. Pays nel. Mint condition, $250 each or FAC BOARD $4.50/hr plus lunch. 490-2000. best offer. Call and leave mes­ (Combinations accepted.) Meeting Sun at 1 p.m. in 201 Flow­ sage, 684-1980. $1.00 extra per day for All Bold Words. ers. Be there for elections. Students needed for special proj­ $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading ects or library assistance, 12-20 hrs/wk, $5.50/hr. Flexible hours. Ride Offered (maximum 15 spaces). Call Harriet Tutor, North Carolina $2.00 extra per day for a Boxed Ad. Biotechnology Ctr, RTP, 541-9366. GOING HOME TO MIAMI FOR THANKSGIVING? Need student to ATTENTION: EARN MONEY READING ____ADLJN£ BOOKS! $32,000/yr income po­ drive car from Durham to Miami, tential. Details. (1) 602-838-8885 leaving 11/21 or 11/22. Willing to 1 business day prior to publication Ext. Bk 5277. pay 1 night hotel, gas, and 1-way «Vshippingny airfare return from Miami to RDU. by 12:00 Noon. Representative Needed! Earn Call Jim Davis, 493-1728 after 5 $2500 and FREE trip selling Baha­ p.m. mas, Mexico, Jamaica, Spring PAYMENT Do you need to send a Break Trips. Spring Break Travel 1- Prepayment is required. package but aren't sure how Ride Needed 800-638-6786. Cash, check or Duke IR accepted. to do it? Look to your neighborhood resource... SENIORS! Interview with top em­ Going to Beaufort this weekend? I (We cannot make change for cash payments.) Mail Boxes Etc. USA? ployers like IBM, AT&T, Procter & wanna go and will share costs! Call Jennifer 684-7629. Gamble & Westinghouse at Ca­ Where there's good ?_t.HOUR DROP-OFF LOpATIQM 23B______E 1 reers '90 Atlanta, Jan 30 & Jan 31, ______POOKIE food and good times, it's 3rd floor Flowers Building (near Duke Chapel) MAW. BOXES FTC. US>1 1990. See your Placement Office I long for your company. How about where classifieds forms are available. or call 203-624-5899 for details. a romantic dinner for four Sat only Natural. Natural Light DATA ENTRY (bring the twins) 7 my place? Love from Anheuser-Busch. Loehmann's Plaza Students wanted for data entry. Fred. Now in Iongneck- to go. OR MAIL TO: 1821 Hillandale Road $5/hr. Flexible hours. Contact: OHIO! Chronicle Classifieds Durham Reid Storch — Dataflow Com­ Thanksgiving ride needed to, BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706. panies, Inc. 286-5509. through, or anywhere near Colum­ Computer tutor needed. Experi­ bus. Will share expenses. Call Pam Natural 382-3030 ence in Lotus, Dbase, Wperfect, 684-7098. CALL 684-6106 IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT CLASSIFIEDS. M-F 9am-6pm, graphics packages, preferred. Call 968-4873. NO REFUNDS OR CANCELLATIONS AFTER FIRST INSERTION DEADLINE. Sat 10am-2pm See page 14 • PAGE 14 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 Ban on fetal research extended

By DEBORAH MESCE tion, said at a Health Reporters' Break­ Associated Press fast. WASHINGTON — A top federal health "I'm concerned that the United States official said Wednesday he intends to ex­ government, in sponsoring fetal tissue tend indefinitely the current ban on fed­ transplantation (research), that there will eral money for fetal tissue research be­ be the clear perception on the part of cause if such tests were successful, "we'd many that their government is encourag­ have more abortions." ing or promoting abortion," Mason said. James Mason, assistant secretary for Mason's predecessor as assistant secre­ health at the Department of Health and tary for health, Robert Windom, last year Human Services, told reporters he has the forbade use of government funds to fi­ authority to continue the ban, imposed a nance such research and established a year ago by his predecessor, but that he special advisory committee on whether it will consult first with HHS Secretary should continue. Late last year, the com­ Louis Sullivan. mittee recommended the ban be lifted. Sullivan will concur with Mason's Sullivan had been widely expected to decision, according to HHS sources, who make the decision, but when asked about spoke on the condition of anonymity. An that, Mason said, "I have a vast array of announcement was expected to be made authority" over policies that relate to the Thursday. Public Health Service, which includes the National Institutes of Health. Scientists argue that research using tis­ However, he said he would not make sue from aborted fetuses holds great the decision without consulting with Sul­ promise in treating Parkinson's disease livan and "we're in that process right and other conditions that are now in­ now." He said he would inform NIH of his curable. But conservative supporters of decision within 10 days. the Bush administration have promised a Gary Bauer, president of the conserva­ firestorm of protest if the administration tive Family Research Council, welcomed lifts the ban. extension of the ban, saying such research "The moratorium should be continued raises "deep moral and philosophical indefinitely," Mason, an opponent of abor­ questions."

From page 13 "The times they are a-changin'; He should know, he AOPis! c PANAGIS Don't miss our fun-filled rush Congrats, the hard work really paid changed them forever, and he's changing them still. As his workshop Sat Nov 4th at noon in off. Wishing you all of the best for September album 'OH MERCY' will prove...a splendid new Personals House G! the rest of the semester. TAL. FAC BOARD album.'' TIME MAGAZINE JOB APPLICATIONS — GRADUATE REBEL PRIEST Meeting Sun at 1 p.m. in 201 Flow­ SCHOOL — PASSPORT PHOTOS 2/ Come and hear Father Stallings ers. Be there for elections. $6, over 10 $2.50 ea. LAMINATED Rebel Roman Catholic Priest. "...'OH MERCY' is the most deeply satisfying collection personal IDs — everything while Has appeared on Donahue, Opening Reception and Exhibit For you wait. LPI 900 W. Main — Oprah. Larry King, CNN. in Time. Durham Artist Dora Hinson Sun. of songs to appear from a major pop artist this year... Across from Brightleaf. 683-2118. People, etc. Thu 7 p.m. Nov 2. Nov 5 3-5 p.m. Mary Lou Williams a masterpiece." MUSICIAN 25% OFF! Duke Chapel. Center 02 West Union. DUKE STUDENTS — Need a Break? LAST CHANCE!!! Kara. Meg. Melinda, Vicki, & MOUNTAIN BROOK COTTAGES in Don't miss the final week of GUYS Carolyn — "I don't want to work. I "...'OH MERCY'—ten songs to play in the face of the hurri­ the NC Smokies. Now $97.50 per AND DOLLS. Shows start at 8 p.m., just want to bang on these drums weekend for 2. FIREPLACES. Spa/ Sheafer Thtr. Tickets: Page Box Of­ all day." CI tonight? LT. cane— will prove as resonant and lasting as anything he's sauna area. 704-586-4329. fice. JAMIE FITZ ever recorded." N M E PPS Summer 1990 Interns GOLDEN KEY I've been watching you play. You Please sign up for internship inter­ Congratulations New Golden Key handle your baljs with such skill. I views outside Rm 213 Old Chem. Members! Reminder: Induction is hear you're great on the court as The interviews will be held on the Thu Nov 2 at 7:30 p.m. in Zener well. Please call — I'll make it following days: Criminal Justice. Aud. worthwhile. H. Omemaker. Ten songs from the brilliant new album, Nov 7; Journalism, Nov 6; Health, PI PHIs & KSIGs Nov 7; State and Local, Nov 6; ADPI-PHI PSI Telecommunications. Oct 31; In­ Who will win the gold tonight at "Oh Mercy." Come relive those childhood dependent Sequence students. Beer Olympics? (Don't forget to memories at the School Days Nov 8 & 9; Environmental, Nov 8. wear your colors)! Mixer. STARTS at 9. Be there. Includes Everything Is Broken. SE-DEUCED! JOANNA JULE SIGALL By the THETA CLASSIC! Mixed Dou­ Happy 18th to the best roomie ever I hope you remember what today Political World. ble Tennis Tournament, Nov 4-5. and welcome to legality in Aus­ is! Hint: Number 8, It's orange Grab a partner, sign up to play for i tralia! STAGE yourself to walk thru and fat not green. Oooh, Isn't fun and prizes! the DOOR of Beta! If not, can you this mysterious? Happy you Man In The Long Black Coat Which of the following sexually- tell me how many seats are in the know what from you know who. transmitted diseases is a Duke MEEK Australian Congress? I love and more. student most likely to contract? 1. you! P.S. Don't be too mad! AL­ BIG PECS! Gonnorhea 2. AIDS 3. Genital WAYS—CATH. Come see LOU FERRIGNO flex 'em in HERCULES. Free pizza. Warts 4. Chlamydia 5. Trick ques­ BITE-NIBBLE,WET tion-does not apply. Call PISCES Mon Nov 6. 9 p.m. Perkins 201C. You Think I'm Driving You Crazy for the answer: 684-2618. Hint: Bob Dylan. "Oh Mercy." NOW. Just wait until I take over that DOUBLE VISION It's NOT #5. special chapter in your diary. I Where? Wannamaker I Commons UNDER THE BRIDGE: Just for know I can't wait! Who Says I Rm — Tonite! See Panhel or IFC of­ laughs. 11 p.m. on Cable 13. need(have) to?!? Blake C. fices for details.

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704A ninth St Durham THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 15 Sports Blue Devils face N.C. State with NCAA berth at stake

By BRIAN DOSTER for the announcement that never came. With an NCAA tournament bid on the The Wolfpack would like to return to the line, the Duke men's soccer team battles NCAA tournament as much as the Blue North Carolina State tonight in a must- Devils, but these teams' interests will con­ M win situation in the first round of the flict in tonight's matchup. £jj&K3££&gX______-- third annual Atlantic Coast Conference The Blue Devils lead the series 31-14-5 Thursday Soccer Tournament at the Duke Soccer and have a two-game winning streak Field. against the Wolfpack after this year's win #2 Wake Forest and a 1-0 victory in Raleigh last season. The Blue Devils prevailed 1-0 in a pre­ 3:00 p.m Sunday vious contest against the Wolfpack earlier The Wolfpack have an 8-7-1 record overall #7 Clemson > in the season, but they face a more experi­ this season and are are mired in the ACC cellar with Clemson and North Carolina, 6:00 p.m. enced Wolfpack team in the tournament, #3 Maryland a team that is hungry for an NCAA bid. each at 1-4-1. The tournament seedings 6:00 p.m. \_ N.C. State was overlooked last year by for these clubs were determined by com­ the NCAA tournament selection commit­ paring head-to-head records. N.C. State, #6 UNC / tee in much the same way as was Duke. having beaten Carolina and tying Clem­ son, was given the fifth slot. 2:00 p.m. Both teams lost in the second round of the #4 Duke ACC ACC tournament and had to sit and wait After posting three consecutive victo­ 8:00 p.m Champion ries over Radford, North Carolina, and #5 N.C. State Furman to close out the regular season, > the Wolfpack appears to be playing well. 8:00 p.m. #1 Virginia State struggled early in the regular sea­ son, and like Duke had been unable to Virginia score goals. Bye > "I Would have thought that one of the biggest threats for this team [N.C. State] would be to score," Wolfpack head coach STEVEN HEIST / THE CHRONICLE George Tarantini said of his club. "When your leading scorer, Henry Gutierrez, last plagued by injuries to three important victory in the ACC tournament. year had 15 goals and like 12 assists, and starters — Brian Benedict, Jason Hadges, The last time that Duke played N.C. today he has one goal and 4 assists, some­ and Brian Donnelly. Benedict's season State in the conference tournament was thing is wrong." ended when he injured his knee against 1987, the inaugural year of the tour­ Gutierrez actually had 14 goals and six North Carolina, and both Donnelly and nament. In that game the seventh-seeded assists in 1988. Hadges have been hampered by injury Wolfpack squad embarrassed the second- Tarantini also pointed out that a num­ throughout the season. Donnelly and seeded Blue Devils, the defending na­ ber of injuries and a young lineup have Hadges could be in the lineup, but they tional champions, 3-0. contributed to the Wolfpack's woes. remain questionable until game time. "What usually happens is that teams However, the Wolfpack have potent "We've got three of our starters that that need to do well in terms of getting an scorers in first-team All-ACC selections haven't been playing and that's had a tre­ NCAA bid really play as hard as they can, at midfield and Chris Szanto mendous impact on our depth," Rennie and teams that have a bid assured don't in the backfield. When combined with said. have quite as much motivation." Rennie Gutierrez up front they compose a formi­ Due to these injuries, freshman mid­ said. dable offensive threat. fielder Derek Lachman and sophomore Rennie hopes that the Blue Devils cur­ "All three are capable of scoring goals," midfielder John Gwin will probably step rent must-win situation will increase Duke head coach John Rennie said. "They into the lineup to help fill the void. Lach­ their intensity, enough to get them past are three of the best players in the United man netted the lone goal that defeated the Wolfpack and advance in the tour­ JIM JEFFERS/THE CHRONICLE States, and they're capable of beating you the Wolfpack in October, and Gwin scored nament. Junior Brian Donnelly may return for to­ on any given day." the game winning goal against Wake For­ For North Carolina, Maryland, and night's ACC tournament. Duke, on the other hand, has been est last year in the Blue Devils first round See SOCCER on page 17 ^ Garrett saves Blue Devils from career-threatening injuries

By MARK MCLAUGHLIN their own. Short of surgery, the preferred When you consider what Jason Hadges treatment for a cruciate tear is giving up has gone through in the past two years, it the sport. seems amazing that the junior forward "For the competitive athelete we recom­ can even play soccer today. Yet thanks to mend reconstruction, but it's a totally the work of Dr. Bill Garrett and his staff, elective procedure," Garrett said. Hadges will see action in his first Atlantic Over the past three years, Duke soccer Coast Conference tournament this eve­ players have chosen to let Garrett rebuild ning when Duke takes on N.C. State. and reconstruct the ligament with tissue An often overlooked part of the soccer from around the knee, but the process team's support staff, the Duke sports doesn't end there — not by a longshot. medicine department puts the banged-up "Not many people would do what Jason players back together so that they may and Keith have done," said Garrett. "We continue to compete and contribute. restore stability; it [the surgeryl puts "One of our strongest assets as a team them in a position where they can is getting players back after an injury," return." said men's head soccer coach John Ren­ Once surgery is complete, it is up to the nie. player to decide how much effort he will Dr. Garrett, an orthopedic surgeon and dedicate to rehabilitation. According to team doctor for both the men's and Lohnes, who oversees the recovery women's soccer teams, has performed sur­ process, how quickly one returns to a gery on Hadges (twice), senior Keith playing level and how high a level is Wiseman and most recently All-America achieved depends upon an individual's ef­ forward Brian Benedict. In each instance, fort. the player had torn the anterior cruciate "Jason's an exceptional case," Lohnes ligament in his knee. said. "He really worked hard, so his For the Divison I collegiate soccer play­ [playingl level didn't decline as much." er, a cruciate injury could be career end­ Hadges' stats back up Lohnes' asser­ ing. As Garrett's assistant John Lohnes tion: he has started eight of 13 games and explains, the cruciate is one of the major is currently tied with sophomore George stabilizing ligaments in the knee joint. Dunn as the team's third leading scorer Unlike the collateral ligaments located on with a pair of goals and two assists. either side of the joint, the cruciate liga­ Wiseman has also started eight games, ments cross in the middle of the joint. In and has sparked the team in both the MATT CANDLER/THE CHRONICLE this position, the cruciates do not receive backfield and midfield. Dr. Bill Garrett and his staff have helped several Blue Devil athletes to return to the blood supply neccesarv to heal on See GARRETT on page 19 • action after serious injuries. tmrn mm

PAGE 16 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 Duke may need to win ACC tournament to receive NCAA bid

As the leaves begin to fall and the calendar turns to started three freshman and three sophomores, while the November, some things have come to be expected here at Brian Kaufman first two substitutes off the bench were freshman. Duke. Shorter days, colder weather, a football team with "We're extremely thin right now," Rennie said. "With a losing record, and of course a soccer team competing NCAA's. The Blue Devil's post-season hopes will also be Benedict going out, then Donnelly, and now Hadges, it for the national title. However, things are amiss this affected by the results of the conference tournaments. As puts a lot of pressure on too many young players out fall. with the NCAA basketball tournament, upsets always there. I think there's a chance we can have both Don­ The football team is primed for its first postseason ap­ occur, decreasing the number of at-large bids available nelly and Hadges back for the [ACC1 tournament, but pearance in decades, while the men's soccer team is in to teams such as Duke. neither one of them has played recently." danger of missing the NCAA tournament for a second Another appropriate question to ask is why are the For the first time all season, Duke knows the next consecutive season. The 8-4-3 Blue Devils are faced with Blue Devils in this must-win situation in the first place? game could be its last. The Blue Devils have proven that a virtual must-win situation in their first two games of What has happened to a team that just three years ago they have the talent to play with the best teams in the the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament if they hope won the national title, and in the past has cruised into country; now they have to show that they have the men­ to receive an NCAA bid. the NCAA tournament ranked in the top ten nationally? tal toughness to overcome their problems and win the While the Blue Devils can assure themselves a bid in The difference this season is that the Blue Devils have big games when they count the most. the NCAA tournament by winning this weekend's ACC not won the big games. Duke has proven it has as much "The situation is black and white right now," Rennie tournament, anything less would put their fate in the talent as any team in the country by its performance said. "If we lose to N.C. State it will be the last game of hands of the NCAA selection committee. If your memory against high-caliber teams. The Blue Devils outplayed the season, unless someone hands us a gift, which is not has faded, this is the same group of unsympathetic top-ranked Santa Clara for most of the game, but lost 1- going to happen. We know there are no second chances coaches which banished the Blue Devils from the tour­ 0 on a goal with a minute left in the second overtime. at this point and our backs are up and against the wall, nament last season despite a 15-6 record and a top 20 Duke was also victimized against second-ranked Virgin­ so we're going to fight with everything we have." ranking in both national polls. ia, as the Cavaliers scored with 1:46 left in regulation to The NCAA divides the country into eight regions with escape with a 2-2 tie. every region guaranteed two teams in the 28-team It is obvious that Duke has had trouble converting its Soccer America Men's Soccer Poll championship tournament. In the South region, the two scoring chances this season, but this is only part of the Last Week schools which appear to have locked up bids are sixth- problem. On occasion the Blue Devils have shown they Rank School 1 Virginia (18-1-1) 1 ranked Wake Forest and ninth-ranked South Carolina. have a formidable offensive attack. Duke shut out North 2. Santa Clara (15-0-2) 2 The remaining twelve positions in the tournament are Carolina, 4-0, and scored two goals against Virginia's 3. Indiana (14-1-2) 3 determined by the NCAA selection committee, which , the starting goaltender on the U.S. national 4 UCLA (16-1-1) 4 ranks the rest of the teams under consideration by re­ team. 5. Portland (17-1-3) 5 6. Rutgers (16-2-0) 7 cord and strength of schedule. However, the committee The major dilemma that the Blue Devils face is that 7. Wake Forest (12-3-1) 9 does not always choose the twelve best teams available they lack a true striker who they can count on to score in 8 South Carolina (13-2-2) 10 due to the fact that the champions from nine national crucial situations on a consistent basis. In the past, 9. Fresno State (14-2-3) 6 soccer conferences receive automatic NCAA bids. While Duke had players such as All-Americas Tom Kain and 10. Fairleigh Dickinson (15-2-0) 13 these league champions may or may not be nationally 11. Philadelphia Textile (12-1-5) 12 John Kerr, who were a threat to score any time they 12. Evansville (16-3-0) 8 ranked, they are assured a bid. The committee has also touched the ball near the goal. 13. San Diego State (13-4-2} 14 been known to make a number of irrational decisions This season, Duke has had to spread out its scoring 14. Duke (8-4-3) 11 which completely ignore the national rankings. among a variety of players. While sophomore forward 15. Southern Methodist (13-4-0) 16 16. St. Louis (16-3-2) 15 So what does Duke have to do to get into the NCAA Clint Carnell has picked up some of the scoring slack 17. Vermont (14-2-1) 17 tournament this season? late in the season, his team high six goals ranks him 18 Clemson (13-5-1) 18 First of all, the Blue Devils must defeat North only tenth in the ACC. Freshman forward Chris Yankee 19. James Madison (14-1-3) NR Carolina State in the first round of the ACC tournament and senior All-America Joey Valenti are the only other 20. Hartwick (12-3-2) NR tonight. A win in the semifinals over second-ranked Vir­ players to score more than two goals this season. ginia would improve Duke's national ranking and chan­ "The lack of a major goal scorer is a very obvious prob­ ces of qualifying for the tournament but would not guar­ lem we've had in the last year or two," said Rennie. ISAA MEN'S SOCCER POLL antee an NCAA bid. It all depends on what happens "Most teams in the league have a player who is going to Rank elsewhere. be their main goal scorer. Right now we have a pretty School Last Week 1. Santa Clara (15-0-2) 1 "We dug ourselves a hole early in the season with two balanced scoring situation, but we do not have a player 2. Virginia (18-1-1) 2 losses in the Met-Life tournament and two ties in games who has emerged as a consistent big game threat. UCLA (16-1-1) 3 we should have found a way to win," said Duke head "As a result everyone has to play well and we have to 4. Indiana (14-1-2) 5 coach John Rennie. "Right now we're playing as well as a spread the scoring around," Rennie continued. "If you 5. Rutgers (16-2-0) 7 Duke team has played in the last three or four years, but 6 Wake Forest (12-3-1) 8 have a player that can win a game or two for you when 7. Portland (17-1-3) 13 there are more quality teams out there. We used up a lot you're not playing very well, that's a great asset. This 8 Evansville (16-3-0) 4 of margin for error in our early games and that's really year we don't have that." 9T. South Carolina (13-2-2) 10 hurting us right now." Duke has also been hurt by a number of untimely in­ 9T. Southern Methodist (13-4-0) 11 The two teams which Duke should be most concerned 11. Farteigh-Dickinson (15-2-0) 6 juries. The biggest loss was that of All-America Brian 12. Hartwick (12-3-2) 12 about are Clemson and South Alabama, both in the Benedict. While he had not played up to his ability in the 13. Vermont (14-2-1) 14 South region. 20th-ranked South Alabama is currently period before his knee injury, Benedict is one of the best 14. St. Louis (16-3-2) 15 15-1-1 and ranked third in the region ahead of Duke. players in the country and is an someone you always 15. Fresno State (14-2-3) 9 The Jaguars can virtually assure themselves of an 16. • Old Dominion (9-3-3) 20 want to have on the field. 17. San Diego State (13-4-2) 17 NCAA bid by winning the Sun-Belt conference tour­ Junior forward Brian Donnelly and junior midfielder 18T. Yale (10-3-0) 19 nament, even though the champion does not receive an Jason Hadges have also missed games with injuries, 18T. Philadelphia Textile (12-1-5) 20T automatic bid. putting additional pressure on Duke's younger players 20T. South Alabama (15-1-1) NR Adelpht (10-3-3) Clemson, 13-5-1, finished dead last in the ACC stand­ to perform in high-pressure situations. In their final reg­ 20T. RV Also Receiving Votes: Columbia, James Madison. ings and is 1-3-1 against the top teams in the South ular season game against Wake Forest, the Blue Devils region. However, the lone win was a 3-1 romp over the Blue Devils which could be crucial if Clemson knocks off Wake Forest in the first round of the ACC tournament. A loss to Wake will end the Tigers chances of making the Attention Juniors & Seniors NCAA tournament. interested in attending Duke must also worry about games on the national scene. Five teams from the West region are ranked in LAW SCHOOL Success can be the top twenty and are likely to receive invitations to the a matter of making The Admissions Office at Duke Law the right School is conducting an Information connections. PATTISHALL'S Session concerning the admissions GARAGE & RADIATOR SERVICE, INC. Reporting & Writing • process and our program of study. Magazine Publishing C Specializing in Broadcast Journalism C All interested students are encour­ Newspaper Management Q u Medill • American Rabbits aged to attend. Advertising C Cars Scirocco Corporate PR C • Dasher Toyota PLACE: Duke Law School Direct Marketing C

• Datsun Honda (Towerview and Science Drives) Make a connection. • Volvo Large Moot Court Room, 2nd Floor A Medill representative will be at Informational Session and Individual DATE: Thursday, November 2, 1989 Interviews - Thursday. November 9. 1989 Auto Repairing & Service • Motor Tune-up TIME: Begins at 4:00 p.m. Or call 1/312/491-5228. General Repairs • Wrecker Service Over by 5:30, refreshments to follow Medill School of Journalism Graduate Programs 286-2207 Northwestern University 1900 W. Markham Ave. For information, call Admissions (located behind Duke Campus) Processing: 489-0556 r-r-rmr-rmm-m-, r^. " 'tS\\WVSV\SV%V»' THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 17 Several ACC teams on the bubble as tournament begins

• SOCCER from page 15 seed and a first round bye. The Cavaliers will face the 3-2-1 in the ACC) is coming off a loss to George Mason N.C. State, any hope of making the NCAA tournament winner of the Duke-N.C. State matchup in the second and a tie to Old Dominion. Before these two contests, the field rests upon an ACC championship, which carries an round. Terrapins had won three straight, with consecutive wins automatic NCAA berth. Clemson and Duke need to have Virginia is 18-1-1 overall this season and is currently over Clemson and North Carolina. Dom Feltham and a strong showing and may not need to win the tour­ ranked second in the ISAA poll and number one in the Nigel Burdett represent the Terrapins on the All-ACC nament. Virginia and Wake Forest are comfortably as­ Soccer America poll. They have four players that are on team. sured of a spot in the NCAA's. the All-ACC first team, including the ACC Player of the The sixth seeded Tarheels of North Carolina (9-8-1, 1- "Those teams [N.C. State, UNC, Maryland, Clem- Year, goalkeeper Tony Meola, who leads the ACC with a 4-1) have lost three straight regular season games, in son,and Dukel all go in with an everything to gain and .41 goals allowed average. Cavalier head coach Bruce addition to dropping their last three ACC contests. nothing to lose attitude because it's a must-win Arena was named ACC Coach of the Year. Derek Missimo leads the ACC in scoring and goals, and situation," Rennie said. "That can produce some intense Chad Ashton leads the conference in assists. games and some surprises as well." The second-seeded Demon Deacons of Wake Forest are 12-3-1 overall (4-1-1 in the ACC), and boast an eight- The Clemson Tigers round out the tournament field as The tournament could be rife with these kinds of sur­ game winning streak entering the tournament. Deacon the seventh seed. They have a 13-5-1 overall record (1-4- prises because, despite the seedings, there is great deal goalkeeper Matthew Olson leads the ACC in goals al­ 1 in the ACC) and are coming off a 4-2 loss to Virginia. of parity within the middle and lower ranks of the ACC. lowed average versus conference opponents, and he also Making the NCAA tournament appears to be the only Virginia, the defending ACC champion, is unquestion­ leads the ACC with four shutouts against conference priority for these clubs, but besides carrying an auto­ ably the king of the heap, while Wake Forest is not far competition. He was named the ACC Player of the Week matic tournament bid, the conference title stands alone behind. But Maryland, Duke, North Carolina, Clemson, for his shutouts against Duke and Appalachian State as a great accomplishment, considering the intense com­ and N.C. State are all around the same talent level. last week. petition of one of the best soccer conferences in the Virginia went unbeaten in the ACC and gets the top The tournament's third seed, Maryland (8-6-2 overall, nation.

Thursday Valenti receives ACC Men 's Soccer Statistics Men's soccer All-ACC honors (Through Tuesday, October 31) State in ACC T Scoring Leaders Goal Leaders cer Field, 8:0C By The Associated Press Name Name Goals Missimo, North Carolina Missimo. North Carolina 20 GREENSBORO — Virginia goalie Tony Tormey, Clemson Tormey, Clemson 15 Friday Meola became the third straight Cavalier Kelderman, Virginia DeVries, Wake Forest 8 to be named the Atlantic Coast Confer­ Davies,'Wake Forest 23 Feltham, Maryland 8 Men's soccer in ACC Tournament, ence men's soccer player of the year, the Maessner, Virginia 21 Davies, Wake Forest 8 Kelderman, Virginia 8 Duke Soccer Field, TBA league announced Wednesday. Ashton, Virginia 20 Meola, a 6-foot-l, 205-pound sophomore DeWilligen, Clemson 20 DeWilligen. Clemson 7 from Kearny, N.J., has allowed 0.41 goals Feltham, Maryland 19 Buffin, North Carolina Volleyball vs. Georgia Tech, per game and has recorded five shutouts, Duguld, Wake Forest 18 Maessner, Virginia 7 Cameron Indoor Stadium, 7:30 p.m. including two in ACC play. DeVries, Wake Forest 18 Eight tied with Crawley, Virginia 18 Junior defender was named ACC player of the year last year, while Saturday was tabbed in 1987. Meola joined three other Virginia play­ Football at Wake Forest/Groves Sta­ ers named to the 11-man first team as 1989 All-ACC MENS SOCCER dium, 1p.m. voted upon by the league's coaches. In­ First Team Second Team cluded in that group were junior forward Name Pos. School Name Pos. School Volleyball vs. Clemson, Cameron In­ John Maessner, junior midfielder Curt F Clemson door Stadium, 1:30 p.m. Onalfo and Agoos. F Virginia Virginia's Bruce Arena was named ACC coach of the year for the second straight Volleyball vs. :ameron season after leading the Cavaliers to an Indoor Stadiu 18-1-1 record. The rest of the all-ACC team included Jeff/: Clemson's Pearse Tormey, Maryland's Todd Sunday Nige Dom Feltham and Nigel Burdett, North Tony Carolina State's Darlo Brose and Chris Men's soccei ent, Szanto, Duke's Joey Valenti and Wake Duke Soccer f Forest's Todd Renner.

"The Supreme Court and Abortion after Webster. What's At Stake for the States?" CHINA INN

OfOfOfOl KITTY KOLBERT ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project

7:30 PM, Thursday, November 2 Room 103, The Law School

Kitty Kolbert is one of the key figures in the coordination and development of the amid curiae briefs and the oral SZECHUAN • HUNAM argument for Webster v. Reproductive Health Services. She PEKING • CANTONESE currently assists ACLU affiliates with state legislative SALT, OIL or MSG FREE DISHES strategies. Daily Luncheon Specials Mixed Beverages Sponsored by: Duke Women's Studies, The Law School, The Institute for Policy Sciences and Public Affairs, The Duke Women's Center, The Department of Political Science, 2701 Hillsborough Road Comer of Trent Dr. and Hillsborough Rd. Duke Students for Choice, local chapters of the ACLU, and Planned Parenthood 2 blocks from Trent Hall of Orange County. 286-9007 286-2444 286-3484 M-TH 11:30-10:00 F 11:30-10:30 Sat 4:30-10:30 Sun 1200-10:00 For more information, call 684-5683.

i mwmm

PAGE 18 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1989 Citrus Bowl still considering ACC teams NC State basketball

By DAVID DROSCHAK Associated Press may avoid probation Citrus Bowl scouts haven't passed on the Atlantic By The Associated Press Coast Conference yet, although the agreement between the game and the school is in its option year and there's CHARLOTTE — North Carolina State could no guarantee an ACC team will get an invitation. receive a light sentence for violations of NCAA guide­ However, bowl representative Steve McClain said the lines by the basketball program if the school proves ACC's agreement with the game may prove beneficial. it's sincere in making changes, an NCAA representa­ "The policy of the selection committee is to take for the tive said. host team the highest ranked team available with spe­ "I think they (committee members) have an oppor­ cial considerations given to the ACC," McClain said tunity to judge the people who come before the com­ Tuesday in a telephone interview. "The selection com­ mittee and get a feel for how credible these people mittee may have to decide ... if an ACC team is ranked are," David Didion told The Charlotte Observer in a only one or two spots lower than another team we would telephone interview. have to take that into consideration." "The committee could decide that they are very sin­ The ACC has a four-year agreement (1988-1991) with cere and concerned about correcting problems, or the Citrus Bowl, with the bowl hosting the league cham­ they could decide they are just there putting on a pion in 1988 and 1990. But the bowl has the option to in­ show." vite an ACC team in 1989 and 1991, or may pass and in­ N.C. State was charged with eight violations of vite any two teams it wishes. NCAA guidelines during an eight-month investiga­ Three ACC teams are in the top 25 this year, but none tion by Didion, an enforcement representative. The among the top 10. If either No. 18 North Carolina State, most serious of those violations involved the sale of No. 21 Clemson, No. 24 Virginia or unranked Duke don't shoes and tickets by players. move up in the rankings in the final weeks of the season, Four N.C. State officials — basketball coach Jim a bid to the Citrus Bowl appears unlikely. Valvano, interim chancellor Larry Monteith, interim athletic director Harold Hopfenberg and legal counsel Meanwhile, McClain said seven of the bowl's scouts Becky French — are scheduled to have a hearing on attended games involving Clemson, Duke, N.C. State Friday with the NCAA Committee on Infractions, and Virginia last weekend. which will decide what sanctions will be placed on the "We have scouted the ACC very heavily," he said. He Wolfpack program. also said bowl representatives will be on hand this A light sentence is especially possible considering Saturday when N.C. State hosts Virginia and Clemson the university requested the investigation, has imple­ travels to North Carolina. mented a new policy for the distribution of tickets "We feel like we still have a lot of interest in the ACC," and shoes and has made self-imposed recruiting McClain said. "Everybody is beating everybody — not restrictions. just in the ACC — but in the national picture. For them "I do believe the committee will take that into con­ (the ACC) to be left out (of our bowl) is way too early to sideration," Didion said. tell. N.C. State could end up 10-1." "In the past, it has (led to lesser sanctions). It all The bowl doesn't fancy any of the four teams still depends on whether the committee considers it a fighting for the league crown. unique case." "Any of the ACC schools have great fans ...," he said. Didion would not speculate on potential sanctions The Fiesta Bowl in Arizona, which can hand out close for N.C. State, saying it is difficult to predict what the to $6 million, has attracted the majority of the bowl at­ committee will decide. He said he "mvestigated the tention the past three seasons with highly-ranked na­ Wolfpack program fulltime from January through BOB KAPLAN /THE CHRONICLE tional matchups, including last season's mythical title August. He said he interviewed more than 100 peo­ game between Notre Dame and Weast Virginia. All-America receiver Clarkston Hines is one of the ple, including current and former Wolfpack players. But McClain said with an ABC television contract, the main reasons Duke is still in the Citrus Bowl hunt. Citrus Bowl's ultimate goal is to attract a national title game. This year's payoff will be $2.4 million, or about $1.2 million for each team. "MUSIC FOR WILDERNESS LAKErr Delicious! Fast! Inexpensive! and other videos by R. Murray Schafer, including DYNASTY EXPRESS "The Princess of the Stars" and "The Greatest Show" Great Chinese Food A screening of videos with discussion by Free Delivery to Duke and Surrounding Area ($10 minimum) R. Murray Schafer Lunch 11:30-2:30 (M-F) Dinner 5-10 (M-Th) Fri., Sat., Sun. — Dinner (5-10:30) composer, educator, environmentalist, visual artist Sat. & Sun. Closed for Lunch Planning a party? Discount Prices Negotiable. Friday, November 3rd at 8:00 p.m. Ideal for Tailgating. Video Screening Room, Bryan Center, Duke University Free and open to the public. (Located inside the courtyard of Dutch Village Motel, 2306 Elder St., intersection of Elder & Fulton next to Duke North & VA Hospitals) 286-2255 • 286-1133

• jWabash Expressfj

Steak House

Bite Dining Serving the Duke Community for over a decade. We specialize in Prime Rib! Departures- Sun-Thurs 5pm-9:30pm Fri & Sat 5pm-10:30pm Private Dining Cars Available • Gift Certificates Available Patrick O'Keefe - Conductor 286-0020 -2517 Guess Rd., Durham Presented by the Duke University Institute of the Arts, in cooperation with the Duke University (next to Carolina-Duke Motor Inn) Canadian Studies Center. Please call for more information: 684-6654. L THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 19 Medical staff an integral part in Duke's athletic success

• GARRETT from page 15 Riehl get the job. When the team's orthopedist resigned, Stahlke treats minor, everyday soccer injuries and Benedict, who popped his cruciate ligament against Riehl in turn suggested Garrett. Berlin takes care of a player's general medical problems. North Carolina on Oct. 8, has a long road ahead of him if As for his relationship with Duke's coaches and play­ Because both tend to deal with less serious problems he hopes to regain the form which has made him an All- ers, Garrett said that over the last few years "he has than Garrett, they receive less credit and recognition. America and Hermann trophy candidate. If all goes well, come to feel like part of the team. However, he is quick Nevertheless, Rennie appreciates the work and does not Garrett thinks Benedict may be back playing by next to admit that Lohnes, trainer Dave Stahlke and Dr. Mel know how the team would survive without them. summer. Berlin take care of most of the medical problems. "Overall it's just a great medical situation at Duke," Besides his work for Duke, Garrett also serves as Rennie said. "Dr. Garrett handles the traumatic injuries medical director for the United States Soccer Federa­ Lohnes has worked with Garrett for the past three but he's not the only one by any means. Dr. Berlin [has tion. Garrett travels with the U.S. national team which and a half years. His major focus apart from rehabilita­ also been] invaluable to our team's success since I've is playing World Cup qualifying matches, and in this tion is injury prevention. This fall, Lohnes conducted been here." capacity he has treated Hugo Perez, arguably the team's pre-season fitness testing on the soccer teams with the Rennie should know. When he took over as head coach best player. intention of screening out the more high risk athletes. in 1979, Dr. Joe Maylan, then head of Duke Medical A graduate of Duke's medical school and orthopedic Lohnes says that statistical studies of individual Center's trauma unit, helped out on a voluntary basis. residency program, Garrett became involved with the flexiblity, strength, and agility have led to experimenta­ Maylan, whose sons played soccer for Duke in the late national team through former Duke soccer trainer Rich tion with more extensive warmups. As a result, the 1970's, now owns Eurosport soccer shop. Although he's Riehl, now the national team trainer. As Garrett tells it, number of players suffering muscle strains has gone no longer in the field, Maylan started a tradition in when the trainer vacancy opened, he recommended that down dramatically. sports medicine which continues today.

TWO NEW SPECIAL TOPICS COURSES IN THE ARTS OFFERED SPRING, 1990

NOT FOR DANCERS ONLY!!

DAN 181S.01 - DANCE AND POSTMODERNISM. Investigates issues in postmodern theory as they relate to the explosion of dance in America from the '60's to the '80's, considered in the context of other art forms of the time. No previous dance background required; students from related diciplines such as English, Art History, Drama, Music, etc. are encouraged to KIDDER, PEABODY & CO. join. Taught by Jane Desmond. (Cross-listed Al 181S.) Incorporated DAN 181S.02 - INTEGRATION OF MIND AND BODY. Focuses on principles and practical appli­ cations for both sedentary and athletic endeav­ ors in everyday life. Stretching the mind, making the body think and rediscovering the joy of moving and the kinesthetic sense. Taught cordially invites by Clay Taliaferro. Questions? Call the instructors, or the Institute of the Arts/Dance Program, 684-6654. DUKE SENIORS

Discriminating people, to attend a presentation on the two-year you Liberal Arts graduates You've learned how to distinguish between Ulysses (highly intelligent, but devious) and Hercules (full of drive, but no gray matter). You can appreciate the differ­ ences between George Washington and Benedict Arnold. You've cast an eye on the strengths and weaknesses of INVESTMENT BANKING Leo Tolstoy and Mark Twain. In short, you have a solid understanding of Homo sapiens: You know what kind of animal he is, and whether he's likely to succeed or not. You know about square pegs in round holes.

FINANCIAL ANALYST PROGRAM So why don't you join our executive recruiting firm The book says you've got to be extremely ambitious, highly motivated, enterprising, assertive and articulate— with impressive interpersonal skills. Not too liberal. Not Tonight too artsy. Find out more at your placement center. Submit your resume by November 8 to interview with us at the November 2,1989 Atlantic Recruiting Alliance on February 12. 7:00-8:00 PM.

Bryan Center - Von Canon B Human Resource Management 535 Fifth Avenue, 32nd Floor, N.Y., NY 10017 (212)867-2650 30 Vreeland Road, Florham Park, NJ 07932 (201)966-0909 PAGE 20 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 THE HEAT IS ON THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT, ENERGY CHOICES AND YOU November 6-12,1989 Video presentation and a literature table will be in operation on the 2nd floor of the Bryan Center throughout the week. 10:30 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.

Monday, November 6: Meetings in Dormitories to be announced. Tuesday, November 7: 10:30 A.M., Room 202, Biological Sciences Building "URBAN PHOTOCHEMICAL SMOG: DO TREES PLAY A ROLE?", Professor William L. Chameides, Georgia Tech.

8:15 P.M., Room 107, Gross Chemical Laboratory FORUM ON GLOBAL WARMING, PROBLEMS AND RESPONSES: Drs. Michael Brower, Union of Concerned Scientists, William L. Chameides, Georgia Tech., Bruce Faust, Duke. Wednesday, November 8: 1:50 P.M., Room 107 Gross Chemical Laboratory Lecture - "CARBON DIOXIDE AND CLIMATE CHANGE - MAJOR UNCERTAINTIES AND CHALLENGES," Dr. Michael Farrell, Oak Ridge National Laboratories.

Meetings in Dormitories 7:00 P.M. 8:15 P.M., 107 Gross Chemical Laboratory Forum, WHAT TO DO? Policies and Ethics. Speakers to be announced. Thursday, November 9: 4:00 P.M., Room 144 Bioscience Building Richard J. Norby, Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, "RESPONSES OF FOREST TREES TO C02 ENRICHMENT AND CLIMATE CHANGE." Meetings in Dormitories, 7:30 P.M., to be announced. Friday, November 10: 1:50 P.M. Room 107 Gross Chemical Laboratory Lecture - "RISING SEA LEVEL, ERODING SHORE LINES: THE FUTURE OF THE COAST," Dr. Orrin Pilkey, Department of Geology, Duke.

T H Ad Hoc Organizing Committee SPONSORED BY THE Lee Altenberg, Zoology UNION OF CONCERNED Edward M. Arnett, Chemistry SCIENTISTS Norman L. Christensen, Botany Jonathan Kimmelman, ECOS 26 Church Street Kama Kramer, ECOS Cambridge, MA 02238 James Langenbrunner, Physics 617-547-5552 Boyd R. Strain, Botany ttfc

TW (W\\d2e's \Ale_W ^k ^•^^vAyv^ l\^g^v^^ lW*wW 0~t 1989 PAGE 2 / THE CHRONICLE R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE TH\tasDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 Silence of 'Old Times' infects audience with lethargy

by Carolyn Karr engages the audience and helps convey Pinter's for most of the first act, Rinehart's monologue plant of the stage interferes with the vision of meaning. However, the buffet meal without di­ in the closing moments helps convey the disor­ the audience. Surrounded by audience on three ilence rarely hits harder than in the Play- alogue that "Old Times" puts on the table der Kate feels as her past meets her present. sides, the characters on stage cannot always SMakers Repertory Company's production destroys rather than augments the viewer's at­ Playing Anna the visitor, Dede Corvinus make themselves available to the patrons. Un­ of "Old Times." Written by British playwright tention span. makes a strong presence on stage as the woman fortunately, the efforts of Long fail when the au­ Harold Pinter, this second play in the Play- who wrenches the evening apart. Corvinus dience cannot see the actors' expressions when Makers' season depicts the relationships be­ Although the silence grates, the PlayMakers' compels the viewer's attention even in the si­ they play to the other side of the arena. tween a woman, her husband and her former production of "Old Times" otherwise engages lent periods between lines. Although engaging, Equally expressive of the play's meaning, the roommate, who comes to the woman's home for the audience. Deeley, played by Ray Dooley, Corvinus, and Dooley as well, appear to be lighting, designed by Mary Louise Geiger, con­ an evening of reunion and reminiscing of expe­ captures the audience's interest as the physically much older than Rinehart. Unfor­ trasts the silence of Pinter's play. Although the riences that each remembers differently. repressed British husband. Dooley sputters his tunately this discrepancy in age further distorts silence lingers for as much as twenty seconds As Pinter intended in his screenplay, Kate, lines out with jocular wit and in a convincing the relationship of the characters. between exchanges of dialogue, the lights inter­ Deeley (her husband), and Anna (her former British accent recalling those of John Cleese. rogate those on stage when words do not. roommate) view their relationships dissimi­ But at the end of the play, he lacks words to Director Long carefully blocks the Play- In the second act, the blanket of light that larly. Pinter deemphasizes language in convey­ describe his confusion concerning his marital Makers' rendition of this play. At crucial mo­ covers Kate, Deeley and Anna erodes to spot­ ing meaning. Instead, he wants to make the au­ relationship, as he silently resigns his head on ments of conflict, the staging emphasizes the lights as they face one another, often in silence. dience feel the meaning of the play, rather than the lap of his wife. weird group dynamics. Often the characters As Pinter suggests, words cannot wholly eluci­ interpret it literally. Although overshadowed by the performance stand in a triangle, with Anna and Deeley fac­ date what the characters feel. Although the si­ Following Pinter's lead, director Kathryn of Dooley, Susanna Rinehart has her moments ing Rinehart, and in the apex of the tension, lence grates throughout this production, at least Long minimizes the importance of language by of strength as Kate, the woman also confused Anna and Deeley flank Kate on either side, lights prevail where words fail in the Play- using periods of silence — up to twenty sec­ by the times rehashed by the three people. vying for her attention. Maker's rendition of "Old Times." onds between exchanges of dialogue — to Deeley and Anna compete for Kate's attention Despite Long's brilliant staging, all too fre­ "Old Times" runs now through November 12 create the desired confusion. A snack of silence in the course of this evening. Although reticent quently in the Paul Green Theatre, the physical in the Paul Green Theater at UNC. ____H

SPECIAL TO R&R SPECIAL TO R&R Deeley (Ray Dooley) thinks he is going to hook up . . . . only to find he'll get nothing. HOMECOMING'89 Quadrangle NOVEMBER 10-12 presents

Rotten

Early deadline for display ads in the November 10 issue of THE CHRONICLE is Scoundrels NOON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2 Bryan Center Film Theater Display Advertising Office 101 West Union Building Saturday, November 5 684-3811 7 & 9:30 • $3.00 *Duke Card Accepted THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1989 R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE ThE CHRONICLE / PAGE 3 Sentiment runs amuck in 'Immediate Family'

by -Rick Brooks rison's "Into the Mystic," a song that tries to gloss over the women's completely different lives. t had to be the eighties to make baby-bearing bourgeois. Test Immediate Family relentlessly attempts to convince us that Itube babies; in vitro fertilization; fledgling sperm and egg the misfortune dished out to someone in the world can be made united in a Petri dish. Child birth has become a business. And the gain of another — that tragedy can be resurrected as tri­ nothing proves that more than Immediate Family, a motion pic­ umph. Jonathan Kaplan, who directed last year's Oscar-winning ture that reaches for our hearts just moments after it reaches for The Accused, moves the film's characters through scenes with our pocketbooks. brilliant mixtures of gravity and wit, but it always seems that Glenn Close and James Woods are cast as Linda and Michael laughs and light-hearted soul are destined to win in the end. Spector, a couple forced to the uneasy center of Immediate In one scene, Lucy's boyfriend Sam, a rough-and-tumble Family because their efforts to conceive a child during their 10- musician played by Kevin Dillon, tells the Spectors about his year marriage have failed. rocky childhood. He says that his father, who carries a signifi­ Each month Linda charts her basal body temperature, while cant paunch beneath his grubby t-shirt, killed a man. Kaplan Michael embarrassingly retreats to the bathroom with a copy of weighs the significance of the violence and finally uses it ex­ Penthouse magazine and produces a sperm sample. Somehow clusively as humor. "I think you'll be excellent parents," Sam their heroic efforts fail, and the couple is agonizingly left to ad­ says. "When this baby comes, no matter what he does, just don't mire the children of their friends. hit him with anything." After yet another month of frustration in which Michael says, After nearly an hour of accomodating pleasantries between "We make love for fun, and we make babies in a jar," the Spec- the Spectors and Lucy and Sam, things finally get ugly. It's tors visit the office of Susan Drew (Linda Darlow), an attorney about time. Despite the advantages of affluence and maturity, who arranges adoptions. Adoption is the answer, Drew tells Lucy decides that her newborn child belongs to her. She backs them. After all, she says, "Giving birth is Nature's way. Adop­ out on the adoption deal and returns to Ohio to raise the child tion is God's way." with Sam. God and Nature begin their strange union when Linda gets a Life in the heartland soon sours for Lucy and her son, and she phone call from Lucy Moore, an unwed 17-year-old from the eventually shows up on the Spectors' doorstep to give up her outback of Ohio. Lucy, played by Mary Stuart Masterson ( Some child again. With little more than a ring of the doorbell, Lucy Kind of Wonderful) wears a Guns 'n' Roses t-shirt, a mini-skirt and Sam have the revelation that Immediate Family wants them and black boots. Four weeks away from giving birth to her first to have: "We can't do right by this baby," they say. "He belongs child, she concludes that the Spectors can provide the upscale, here." yuppie lifestyle every newborn deserves. If you enjoy the predictable triumph of the upwardly mobile In the Utopian span of a half an hour or so, Lucy comes to the and the simultaneous redemption of the big-hearted down-and- Spectors' Seattle home and falls in love with their neo-conser- out, then the ending of Immediate Family deserves kudos. En­ vative affluence. Lucy and Linda quickly like each other enough couraged by the idyllic Spectors to make something out of them­ to share reminiscences about their lives. Linda says, "Not hav­ selves, Sam and Lucy go back to Ohio. The Spectors are left ing a Barbie doll is one of the great tragedies of my life." standing in front of a romantic bay window, holding their son "You've had a tough life," quips Lucy in response. and swaying to Van Morrison again. The one thing that links their remarkably different worlds is a Sentiment is quite appropriate for events like childbirth and common love of Lucy's coming child. After taking Lucy to the weddings, but in Immediate Family emotion overflows the film. obstetrician, both Linda and her husband touch her stomach drowning it in its own excess. All the post-birth cigar smoke and are captivated by the baby as it flails around inside her. any proud father could blow would still fail to rescue the film And if that won't work, Lucy and Linda share a mini-slumber from its ultimate sacrifice of reality, the stark truth of child- SPECIAL TO R&R party in the living room, dancing and singing along to Van Mor­ bearing that Immediate Family ignores. \R&R\ All right. Now we're getting really mad.

WWW ti / 493-3502 SOUTHSQUARE DUKE DRAMA 1501 HORTON RD • 477-4681 CARMIKE MALL . _•» * IMMEDIATE FAMILY (PG13) GROSS ANATOMY (PG13) 1 Shows nightly 7:20,9:30 :• Shows nightly 7:15,9:45 Sat. & Sun. 1:30, 4:30, 7:20, 9:30 Sat. & Sun. 2:20, 4:40, 7:15, 9:45 PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (R) Shows nightly 7:20, 9:30 FAT MAN & LITTLE BOY (PG13) Sat. & Sun. 1:30, 4:30, 7:20, 9:30 SCREENWRITING WORKSHOP Shows nightly 7:00, 9:30 THE BEAR (PG) Sat. & Sun. 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 Shows nightly 7:20, 9:30 Sat. & Sun. 1:30, 4:30, 7:20, 9:30 Neal Marshall (Duke 64) SEA OF LOVE (R) WORTH WINNING (PG13) Shows nightly 7:00, 9:30 Sat. & Sun. 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 THE FLAMINGO KID screenwriter Shows nightly 7:20,9:30 Sat. & Sun. 1:30, 4:30, 7:20, 9:30 Sunday 11/12 7:00-10:00 pm SHOCKER (R) LOOK WHO'S TALKING (PG13) Shows nightly 7:15, 9:45 Shows nightly 7:00, 9:45 Open to anyone interested in screenwriting Sat. & Sun. 2:20, 4:40, 7:15, 9:45 (experienced, newcomer, or in between) Sat. & Sun. 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:45 NEXT OF KIN (R) Shows nightly 7:00, 9:45 \$ -f . / /' 967-8284 Neal Marshall is a Duke alum with an enviable resume of writing Sat. & Sun. 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:45 r

by Bruce McDonald issue such as this becomes my priority because I just think it's the right thing to do. You can't separate the music from the peo­ azel Dickens is not a name that is regularly splashed across ple from which you came. I just have to support this cause. Hthe pages of music fanzines. Yet she is one of America's There wouldn't be a way for me to rationalize not doing it." best known and most revered bluegrass performers. The accom­ Skeptics would be hard-pressed to dispute the authenticity of plishments of her thirty-year career have not been limited to her music and her message. Raised in the coal regions of West only the musical spectrum. Throughout that time, Dickens has Virginia, she has lived the life about which she sings. lobbied adamantly on behalf of coal miners, welfare rights "Coming from the coal country, I saw the way people live," groups and women's organizations, lending her time and talent said Dickens. "They have a lot of pride and dignity, and they for rallies and benefit concerts. Saturday night she will appear with Billy Bragg in a concert at Memorial Hall in Chapel Hill, the proceeds of which will be donated by the artists to the United Mine Workers of America, currently on strike against the Pittston Coal Company, The "Coming from the coal money raised will be used to buy food and medical supplies for the striking mineworkers, most of whom have been without country, I saw the way people work since hitting the picket lines on April 5th. In a recent in­ terview, Dickens shared her insights about her music and the live ... They have a lot of political issues about which she sings. pride and dignity, and they The origin of the current labor struggle in western Virginia re­ lates to Pittston's refusal to ratify the basic industry contract don't like you to say that that United Mineworkers had negotiated in 1988. "They wanted to break off and deal with the union separately," said Dickens. they're living in dire poverty, "Of course, that's not the way good things get done — when you isolate yourself." because some of them aren't." When its existing labor contract expired, Pittston abruptly terminated health benefits for 1500 retired or disabled mineworkers and widows. The company claimed the action was a necessary step as a result of escalating health-care costs don't like you to say that they're living in dire poverty, because and the coverage abuse. some of them aren't." "The health and benefits issue was the real big factor," said In the early stages of her career, Dickens avoided mixing po­ Isn't she a friend of your mom? Dickens. "Some of these people are so disabled. Now they run litical messages with her music. "I used to be a real purist, and the risk of losing everything. Those that are sick draw on their I'd get mad at people that used the music that way. I was very pensions and their social security to pay for their treatment. protective of the music," said Dickens. They feel like they're fighting for their survival ... for their "Then, I began to see how people began to look up to me in a existence." way that they never had before, and I realized that I could do some good for my own people. I don't do it for my own self. I've never thought of it that way." This unselfish, honest approach to life manifests itself in her craft. Dickens' musical goal is to create songs that promote "Some of these people are so traditonal values and ideas. "A lot of the songs that people write are nonsensical, and the disabled. Now they run the Ivrics are terrible. In Nashville now, they have a hook line, and all the current songs are based on that. It's strictly for commer­ risk of losing everything... cial reasons — for crossing over the music. I like roots-oriented They feel like they're fighting music — songs that I can believe in," said Dickens. Although she is regarded as a champion of the working class for their survival... for their causes, Dickens does not feel that tweaking the audience's so­ cial conscience needs to be part of every artist's mandate. "I like existence." it when I see people who are somewhat committed and will give of themselves to some kind of a cause," she said. "I don't say that they have to do it. You can be creative in music and let your craft stand on its own. You don't have to give Part of the problem for activists like Dickens is attracting the your hands to struggle, but I do hail and praise those that do." attention of a national media enthralled with international is­ Dickens discusses future aspirations with the same modest sues. "I just want to turn off the television. It's hard when you sensibility that has characterized her career. "I will never be care about the bread-and-butter issues and about the working more popular or any bigger than I am now," she said, "because I people in general," she said. don't strive for anything else. I don't strive for any hits in Nash­ Though actively involved in supporting workers' and ville. I'm happy doing what I'm doing, and I think that helps me women's rights, Dickens does not consider herself a politically to stay close to my roots." motivated entertainer. "I don't go out and do this type of concert Dickens will open the concert for Bragg at 8:00 p.m. Tickets all the time," said Dickens. are $11 for UNC students and $13 for the general public. "I play traditional music and other forms, but sometimes an fffgRl Don't get too excited, Bob.

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r, NOVEMBER 2,1989 R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE TVIE CHRONICLE / PAGE 5 unite in the Triangle get ready to sing their convictions

byJoshKun newfound creativity. These efforts are reflected on Oh Mercy. Impeccably produced by the multi-talented Daniel Lanois, f you think of who could be the greatest songwriter of our Oh Mercy envelops the listener in an aura of sound that is both Itime and perhaps one of music's most influential figures, the dense arfd chilling. The tone of the album indicates that Dylan name Bob Dylan immediately comes to mind. Recently, howev­ has grown increasingly mellow and somber. His thoughts, er, Dylan seems to have lost his flair for the controversial and meanwhile, have grown more intense, and unfortunately in his ability to write intelligent and critically biting songs. His some cases, overly idealistic. new album, Oh Mercy, reflects this unfortunate trend, yet it Dylan confronts various political issues and moral concerns proves that Dylan is at least trying to expand his creative as well as, as one writer wrote, "matters of the foundation. heart." Dylan does maintain his lyrical intensity however, Since his reign in the sixties as the king of popular folk music and political protest, Dylan has not grown much as a musical mind. In his heyday, Dylan was praised for his raw, untrained approach to music and for his honest and unabashed lyrics. .. . [E]ven one of the most vital These talents, though, could not begin to make amends for the entire catalog of albums that he put out throughout the seventies and important musical minds and early eighties. Every once and a while though, Dylan would come out with of our century is not safe from an album reminiscent of Blood on the Tracks that would hint that his musical spirit was alive and well. 1983 saw the release the debilitating effects of time of such an album with Infidels, hailed by some as being one of ... [A]ll thes pitfalls have his best albums ever. It appeared that Dylan had returned to top form. forced Dylan to grow, and as Since Infidels though, his career has been unfocused. Dylan temporarily dropped out of the music scene to pursue a possible Oh Mercy proves, he is acting career, starring in the flop Hearts on Fire (with none other than pop singer Fiona). Needless to say, Dylan found it definitely a changed man. wise to step down from the silver screen before he lost even more credibility. DAVID GAHR/SPECIAL TO R&R This lack of direction was consequently echoed in his music. whether it is on songs like the opening "Political World" or on Once he did return to the studio, though, Dylan did not do it on more introspective pieces like "What Good Am I." his own, but rather relied on a little help from his musical The tracks on the album range from the powerful "Everything friends. is Broken" to the idiotic and senseless "Disease of Conceit." It is First, there was the Dylan and the Dead project which did ab­ on this latter song and others like "Ring Them Bells" that Dylan solutely nothing to prove Dylan's ability to create interesting gets carried away with his all-too-familiar role as a musical new material or to help him emerge from underneath the loom­ icon. The result is a delivery of sermons that make him hard to ing veil of his past. But with the release of Traveling Wilburys believe. Like Dylan's most recent career, Oh Mercy is full of ups and downs. The album as a musical concept is complete and Since his reign in the sixties as enthralling, which is due in most part to the amazing quality of production and sound that Lanois and engineer Malcom Burn the king of popular folk music achieve. Oh Mercy proves that Dylan's creative mind is not completely void of activity. and political protest, Dylan In the pas! couple years, Dylan has tried to take some chan­ has not grown much as a ces, some of which have failed miserably, while others have brought him increased success and acclaim. It just verifies that musical mind. In his heyday, even one of the most vital and important musical minds of our century is not safe from the debilitating effects of time. But I Dylan was praised for his raw, suppose that all of these pitfalls have forced Dylan to grow, and as Oh Mercy proves, he is definitely a changed man. untrained approach to music Oh Mercy is a good listen. That's all. At times, Dylan success­ fully exhibits his known talents for insightful lyrics and harmo­ and for his honest and nious instrumentation, while at others, he, like U2, becomes a unabashed lyrics. victim of his own idealism and political consciousness. Regardless of its musical merit, Oh Mercy does, however, remind us that Dylan, as a creative and innovative musical enti­ Volume one, Dylan was thrust back into the commercial lime­ ty, has not been dead — he has just been asleep. Let's hope that light, while at the same time receiving critical acclaim. he can wake up soon and, in doing so, face the music — his own His work with the Wilburys combined clever lyrics with music. frivolous musical arrangements, a combination that produced Dylan will let thut scratchy voice of his wail in Cameron In­ one of the most uplifting and entertaining collections of songs door Stadium Wednesday, November 8th, at 8:00 p.m. Straight KEN REGAN/CAMERA 5 produced in this decade. Since then, besides the disastrous forward Nashville rockers Jason and the Scorchers will open Down in the Groove LP, Dylan has attempted to maintain his up. \R&m

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Party Store Kegs Just Your Size Our Award Winning Beer will add a natural pleas­ ure to any party. Take our brew home with you. The Weeping Radish 115 H. Duke St., Durham, H.C. 682-2337 PAGE 6 / ThE CHRONICLE R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1989 Steppinf Out 1 Calendar Music Theater

John McCutcheon, folk singer and political activist, per­ Manbites Dog Theater Company presents "The Day forms at Page Auditorium tonight at 8:00 p.m. Tickets are Room" by Don DeLillo. DeLillo is the author of several criti­ $10. cally acclaimed novels, most recently Libra, a fictional replotting of the assassination of John F. Kennedy. The play The Butthole Surfers, legendary sickos from Texas, are at opens tonight and runs through November 18th at Brightleaf Cat's Cradle tomorrow night at 10:00 p.m. They have two Square. Tickets are $5 Wednesdays and Thursdays, and $7 drummers, and their lead singer likes to use a megaphone on Fridays and Saturdays. The curtain lifts at 8:15 p.m. Call stage. Anything could happen. Only $10. 682-0958 for more information.

Believe the hype! Public Enemy fights the power at the Transactors Improv Company performs every Friday until Cradle at 3:00 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are $13.50 and are December 8th at The Artscenter. If you are into audience par­ available at Poindexter Records. ticipation, this is your big chance. Show starts at 9:00 p.m. The Cradle brings yet another treat from Jamaica, when Tickets cost $5. reggae DJ Eek-a Mouse comes to town. The toasting starts at 10:00 p.m. Doctors Orders, a '"r:al four-piece jazz outfit, plays at The Performance ArtsCenter in Carrbc.o on Sunday. Tickets cost $4.50. Show starts at 7:30 p.m. Irreverent English professor Joe Ashby Porter reads from C.H.A.N.C.E. benefit Tuesday night at Under the Street. his novel-in-progress, The Near Future at No Boundaries to­ Live music by the Nomads. Tickets are $3, $2 if you have a night. 9:00 p.m. East Campus Coffeehouse. Free. Also, Senga raffle ticket. Raffle drawing will be held that night. Starts at Carrol, a Duke graduate student, reads poetry, and Nancy ADRIAN BOOT/SPECIAL TO R&R 9:30 p.m. Novotnoy, another Duke grad, plays acoustic guitar. Why doesn't my senior portrait look this good?

iTE-ViMER The "Anti-Mickey Mouse" /fn/7J/l 1989/90 DUKE UNIVERSITY Animation Series continues... ^J^ilr TELEPHONE DIRECTORY HEAVY TRAFFIC DEPARTMENTAL DELIVERY SCHEDULE (d. Ralph Bakshi, 1973, 76 min., Rated X) A cruel and heartbreaking journey through the streets of New York, a world kept alive The 1989/90 Duke University Directories will be available October 30 through by its freaks, junkies and crooks. Michael, a shy young cartoonist with a nagging Jewish November 6, 1989. Please get directories for your department according to the mom and Mafia dad, is playing the pinball game of life as he lives the New York schedule below. If your building is not mentioned, please go to the location nearest you experience. An artistic and critical success for Bakshi after being assaulted for altering or call 684-2239. the character of Fritz the Cat. This film contains strong language and explicit sexual depictions (just thought you'd like that). — ONLY ONE DIRECTORY PER TELEPHONE IS AVAILABLE — SHOWING AT 9:30 ONLY MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1989 PICKUP: Hosp South - Red Basement (near red elevator) WIZARDS TIME: 9:00 am - 3:00 pm (d. Ralph Bakshi, 1977, 81 min.) BLDGS: Bell Bldg, Hosp South An animated favorite which orchestrates the struggle between good and evil. Avatar, the good wizard, fights his evil twin brother Blackwolf (not Skippy), who resurrects Nazi PICKUP: Hosp North - Room 1103 propaganda in an attempt to win the world for technology. TIME: 1:30 pm-5:00 pm SHOWING AT 7:30 ONLY BLDGS: Bell Bldg, Hosp North TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31,1989 PICKUP: Hosp South - Red Basement (near red elevator) TIME: 9:00 am - 3:00 pm CPI photo finish'm^Mh BLDGS: Bell Bldg, Hosp South PICKUP: Flowers Lounge TIME: 2:30 pm - 4:00 pm BLDGS: Allen, Bryan Center, Chapel, Divinity School, Flowers, Gray, Languages, Old Chemistry, Page Auditorium, Perkins Library, Social Sciences, Soc-Psych, Union West % . WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1989 PICKUP: Sands Bldg - Main Entrance Save 50 TIME: 12:00 noon-4:00 pm on color processing & 4x6 prints BLDGS: CCIF, Clin & Res Labs, Nanaline II Duke Jones, North, Research Park, Sands, Surg Oncol Res Fac, Vivarium Each picture is the best - THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1989 . PICKUP: Hanes House Lobby it can be or we TIME: 9:00 am-11:30 am BLDGS: Civitan, Hanes Annex, Hanes House, Pickens, School of Nursing, Trent Drive reprint it free . . . now! Hall one hour services: photo finishing • enlargements • reprints • double prints also available: wallet photos • instant color passport photos • video transfer PICKUP: Broad St Bldg • copies from prints • cameras and accessories • film TIME: 2:30 pm - 4:00 pm BLDGS: Broad St Bldg 1220503 4x6 11x14 Color FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1989 PICKUP: East Duke Bldg Color Prints Enlargements TIME: 9:00 am - 10:30 am % $ 95 BLDGS: All East Campus 9 each PICKUP: Public Safety - Conference Room 50 off TIME: 1:00 pm-2:30 pm (regular $12.95) regular one-hour price Great Christmas Gifts! BLDGS: All Bldgs on Campus Drive, Central Campus Office C41 in lab process only. Print length varies Free Custom Cropping! 11x14 with film size. One roll per coupon, not enlargements from 35mm and 126 color combinable with other processing and negatives only. No limit, not combinable print offers. with other enlargement offers. Students Pickup Days for 1989/90 Duke Telephone Directories Will Be on the Coupon good through Jan. 20. 1990 Coupon good through Dec. 23. 1989 CPI photo finish *dP CPI photo finish'^/Kh Following Days in the Bryan Center: one ttour one hour photo *^& I j Ptoto ^L^\ Thursday, November 2 - 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm - Lobby Friday, November 3 - 2:00pm - 4:00 pm - Lobby South Square Mall MAKE-UP DAY upper level next to food court Monday, November 6, 2:00 pm - 4:30 pm Bryan Center Lobby

lilt »M«»'"»"'M»"»»»»»» q fU THURSDAY; NOVEMBER 2,1989 R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE THE CHRONICLE, / PAGE 7 WXDU'S TOP TEN RELEASES R&R STAFF WEEK OF OCTOBER 27 — NOVEMBER 2 Editor: uougias _»mooKe Assistant Editor: Hugo Lindgren 1. Kate Bush The Sensual World Writers: Rick Brooks 2. Poi Dog Pondering Poi Dog Pondering Carolyn Karr Josh Kun 3. Camper van Beethoven Key Lime Pie Bruce McDonald A Dead Horse 4. The Golden Palominos Cover Design J. Lawrence Dew 5. My Dad is Dead The Taller You Are, The Shorter You Get Layout: Douglas Smooke 6. Tracy Chapman Crossroads 7. The Jazz Butcher Big Planet, Scarey Planet 8.TheMekons Rock'n'roll R&R SAYS: 9. Bob Dylan Oh Mercy 10. Timbuk 3 Edge of Allegiance FIGHT THE POWER! The Top 10 countdown can be heard Tuesday nights at 10:00 p.m. on 88.7 & 90.7 FM.

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Nov 11-18, 1989 Reynolds Industries Theater, Call Page Box Office OeventTTl Bryan Center, Duke University 684-4444 street Duke Broadway Preview Series presented by DUKE DRAMA RESTAURANT ON ITS WAY TO BROADWAY . . . 1104 Broad St. Durham 286-1019 PAGE 8 / ThE CHRONICLE R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1989

Conference on Career Choices •H •-[

THE CONFERENCE ON CAREER CHOICES 1991 STEERING COMMITTEE POSITIONS

The Conference on Career Choices is a biennial event for which approximately TOO alumni return to Duke to participate in panels that share with Duke students information on their careers and other career related issues. It is a weekend conference that will be held in February, 1991.

Get involved in one of Duke's most respected and worthwhile student-run confer­ ences. Interviewing will soon begin to fill 10 important positions on CCC's Steering Committe. Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors are encouraged to interview for Committee positions for the 1991 Conference.

The following positions must be filled:

HOSPITALITY - coordinates all meals, acconr* CONFERENCE DAY COORDINATOR - respon­ modations and entertainment for alumni sible for transportation, room reservation, participants. physical set-up and logistics of career pan­ els and seminars. ADVERTISING - plans all advertising for printed media, i.e. Chronicle, posters, logo, sweat­ BUDGET DIRECTOR - tracks budget from day 1, shirts, etc. organizes chairman budgets and commu­ nicates with ASDU. ALUMNI SELECTION - researches possible alumni participants, selects alumni participants and COMMUNICATIONS-promotes the Conference makes follow up phone calls. through audio and visual media, i.e. WXDU, Cable 13, dorm and club presentations, MODERATOR SELECTION - interviews, selects, raffle, etc. orients and oversees student moderators. ASSISTANT TO CHAIRMAN - works with CCC PROGRAM - puts together pictures and alumni Chairman '91 on inter-committee commu­ careersummaries into Conference Day Pro­ nications and other administrative duties gram; researches printing companies. including meeting minutes and typing. Pick up an application and sign-up for an interview TODAY at the Bryan Center Information Desk, Further information is available at 684-1483.