ANNUAL SEND-HOME EDITION THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 16,000 VOL. 85, NO. S8 Complaint filed against University

By MATT SCLAFANI ceal the University's financial in­ A second doctor has charged terest in the sale of B72.3. the University with threatening Dr. William Johnston, chair of psychiatric treatment for those the cytopathology division of the who raised complaints about the pathology department and advo­ controversial cancer test B72.3. cate of the test, has been Dr. Kenneth McCarty Jr. of the manufacturing B72.3 at the Uni­ pathology department said Uni­ versity and his department has versity Counsel David Adcock received over $13,000 for its sale, tried to intimidate McCarty by according to the News & Record. suggesting he seek psychiatric Biomedical Technologies counseling because McCarty crit­ agreed "not to promote these icized the use of the monoclonal products [B72.3] utilizing your antibody B72.3. name and or institution as the Another Medical Center pa­ producer of, or as consultant. We thologist, Dr. Benjamin Wittles will use your name as an in- filed similar charges on June 28. dependant researcher who has He said Pathology Chair Dr. successfully utilized these prod­ MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE Robert Jennings threatened to ucts," according to documents ob­ Dr. Kenneth McCarty fire him and suggested he seek tained by the News & Record. treatment from a University psy­ Both Johnston and Maurice plaint is in response to a suit chiatrist because of his com­ Lamarque, the president of Bio­ filed against him by Johnston al­ plaints about unethical practices medical Technologies, deny any leging his criticism of Johnston in the pathology department. His attempt was made to mislead was motivated by professional suit says this threat is known anyone about the University's jealousy and resulted in emo­ colloquially among doctors as the role with B72.3 although tional distress. MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE "Russian Treatment." Johnston told the News & Record His complaint names the Uni­ Frogboy In a related development, the that Lamarque "got a bit carried versity, Jennings, Adcock and away with his rhetoric there." Jose goes incognito to check out the babes at the Central Greensboro News & Record Dr. Andrew Wallace, vice presi­ dent for health affairs as third Campus pool. reported last week that a Massa­ These recent events have chusetts company agreed to con- added more confusion to the con­ party defendants. troversy that began when a Neither Jennings, Adcock nor Catawba County woman sued Wallace could be reached for University to evict Carolantic tenants the University in January be­ comment. cause she said B72.3 resulted in McCarty is requesting Jen­ By JAMIE O'BRIEN a false diagnosis of cancer and nings, Adcock, Wallace and the unnecessary and harmful radia­ University pay for any damages Nine tenant families of the tion treatment. should McCarty be found liable Carolantic Apartment complex to Johnston. on Elder Street will be forced to There are currently four law­ relocate by Dec. 31 as the Medi­ suits pending surrounding the The complaint states that cal Center expands into the area. use of B72.3. In addition, a Con­ McCarty questioned the accuracy gressional subcommittee is in­ of diagnoses from the cytopathol­ According to Max Wallace, as­ vestigating possible fraud on the ogy department and extra char­ sociate vice president for govern­ part of the University. ges for the B72.3 test in May of ment relations, residents of the apartments will have six months McCarty's third party com- See COMPLAINT on page 19 • after receiving notice on June 30 to vacate their apartments. Each tenant will receive a $500 moving allowance from the Uni­ High Court ruling sparks versity to help defray the costs of moving, Wallace said. He said the University will not pay legislators' abortion bill relocation costs because the ten­ MATT SCLAFANI/THE CHRONICLE ants are not being asked to move By JAMIE O'BRIEN on short notice. Tenants will be looking for new homes. souri law prohibiting the perfor­ "We had made it pretty clear A new abortion bill drafted by mance of abortions in public that the use of the land there was Realty Co., Inc., dated June 30, "I feel we're working hard to several prominent conservative facilities. going to change over time," Wal­ was hand-delivered to each ten­ address the concerns of these state legislators could impose a Rep. Paul "Skip" Stam (R- lace said. "Nobody's happy about ant. The letter stated that each people; that will minimize the wide variety of restrictions on Wake), characterized in a June the fact that people have to Carolantic tenant will receive impact," Wallace said. elective abortions. The bill takes 22 Independent article as The move." $500 and a refund for the deposit Patton said his company has advantage of the July 3 Supreme Prince of Pelvic Politics," said he A letter from the Dick Patton on their apartment. See HOUSING on page 22 ^ Court decision upholding a Mis- expects the Roe v. Wade decision to be overturned by the Supreme Court within a year. If overtur­ ned, individual states would be Inside Students need to buy dorm phones allowed to prohibit abortion in all cases. Filthy rich: The University By CRAIG WHITLOCK their own telephones. a modular jack at no direct cost, The recent Webster v. Repro­ raised HUGE sums money Students who want to phone No one incident caused Tel- which would enable students to ductive Health Services decision, this year. Maybe they'll lower home after arriving in campus Com and the University to agree hook up answering machines and which allows states to prevent parking fees. Maybe they dormitories this fall will have to in late June to remove all other phone accessories. Previ­ abortions by public employees or won't charge for ice at the C.I. do more than hook up telephone phones, said Tel-Com Director ously students could pay Tel- in public facilities, has raised Maybe they'll lower tuition. service — they will have to find a Norman Sefton. An ASDU reso­ Com $25 to have a modular jack controversy over whether or not See page 3. phone. lution, the need for phones in the installed. it contradicts the near-absolute Tel-Com is removing telephone new dormitories, and a desire to Tel-Com originally planned right of elective abortion granted It'S not easy: being green. units from all campus dorms and give students more flexibility all only to convert the phones to in Roe v. Wade. All those trees in the Duke the Central Campus apartments contributed to the decision, he modular jacks. But rather than Elective abortions refer to Forest are in limbo again. Dis­ this summer, but at the same said. install the older-type phones cur­ abortions that are not performed cussions on the forest rezon­ time will install modular jacks in In March ASDU passed a reso­ rently in use in the new dor­ because of endangered health to ing have stalled. See page 4. each phone's place. Students will lution that petitioned Tel-Com to mitories, the decision was made the mother. 9 then be responsible for finding provide each campus phone with See PHONES on page 26 • See ABORTION on page •• *• PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 Summer Update

From staff reports total crowd of between 10,000 to 12,000 came out to also stipulates that the Hideaway will be used as a watch. graduate student lounge during the day. New Brodie term approved: The Board of Trust­ Medical Center lawsuit ends in mistrial: A ees approved an open-ended second term for President Graduation under scrutiny: Rowdy behavior by some students at this year's graduation disturbed a lawsuit charging the Medical Center with "grossly negli­ Keith Brodie in May. Brodie's original five-year term gent security" ended in a mistrial in June when jurors ends next May. number of administrators. In response, President Keith Brodie decided to form a task force in the fall to discuss a could not reach a unanimous verdict. Ira Pettiford al­ While Brodie had said he would not remain president leges his wife was raped and murdered while a patient any longer than a second five-year term, the trustees ap­ possible restructuring of next year's graduation ceremo­ ny. Some suggestions included having parents sit with at the Medical Center in 1986 because of lax security proved an open-ended second term so he may leave early measures. The University claims she died as a result of if he choses to do so. graduates or having separate ceremonies for the various undergraduate, graduate and professional schools. injuries sustained in her car accident. A new trial has currently not been scheduled. Anti-harassment policy considered: Adminis­ University may end J-Frosh program: Adminis­ trators and representatives from student groups have Blacks set admissions record: The class of 1993 proposed an addition to the Undergraduate Judicial trators are considering eliminating the January Fresh­ man program since fewer students have been leaving has set a record for the highest number of blacks in Uni­ Code that would ban speech, as well as any other con­ versity history. The 123 black students who will matric­ duct, that is offensive, demeaning, intimidating on the the University in the spring semester. This has left less room for January Freshmen in University housing and ulate represent 8.4 percent of their class and a 23 per­ basis of race, sex, national origin, age, sexual ori­ cent increase over last year. entation, handicap, religion or veteran's status. The may result in the cancellation of the program. change is intended to combat incidents of racism and sexual harassment. Child care report presented: The University's Discrimination report released: A committee task force on child care proposed the establishment of a Law School professor William Van Alstyne criticized formed in December to offer solutions to campus dis­ the plan as violating the spirit of free speech and called permanent child care facility near campus and the for­ crimination released its conclusions in June to President mation of an independent corporation to oversee the it "totally unworthy of a major university." Keith Brodie. The recommendations include forming a William Griffith, vice president for student affairs, facility. The program, if approved, would probably not committee to review affirmative action complaints, begin until January of 1990. said an exact proposal will be ready by the fall for stu­ creating a code of ethics for employees and University dent approval. recognition of Martin Luther King's birthday. Afro-American studies may change: A com­ Unions negotiate contracts: Local No. 465 mittee should be formed next semester to examine the signed a new three-year contract with the University Henderson transfers: Men's co-captain possibility of overhauling the Afro-American studies and Local No. 77 negotiated a wage increase. Phil Henderson has decided to leave the University for program. The formation of a Third World Studies Local 465, which represents approximately 100 Uni­ undisclosed personal reasons. Henderson, the team's program is also under discussion. versity maintenance workers, concluded tense negotia­ second-leading scorer this past year, may be headed for tions. The Union agreed to wage increases and a new the University of Illinois after sitting out a year in accor­ Glaxo to build on tobacco property: Glaxo inc. sick leave policy. Local 77, representing about 1,000 sup­ dance with NCAA rules. Henderson was arrested on will be the first new tenant of the American Tobacco port staff, housekeeping employees and Duke University charges of driving while impaired after a blood test al­ property in downtown Durham. They announced plans Food Service workers renegotiated salaries and agreed legedly indicated Henderson was illegally intoxicated. to build a new factory on the current parking lot. They to a new greivance procedure adjustment. have also agreed to hire one-third minority employees. Hideaway getS facelift: As part of an agreement Children's Classic raises thousands: The 16th between the University and new owners, the Hideaway Jewish Center will include mikvah: The Sup­ annual Duke Children's Classic raised $525,000 for pe­ Bar will reopen in August with a new patio, furniture port Corporation of the upcoming Center for Jewish Life diatrics at the Medical Center. Around 75 celebrities, in­ and bathroom facilities. The Hideaway was closed for voted to include the ritual bath known as a mikvah. The cluding Jeopardy host Alex Trebek, singer Perry Como renovations after a last-minute plan to keep the bar inclusion of a mikvah had caused some controversy and ACC sports greats competed in and on open through the summer fell through when the owners when some argued a mikvah would be more appropriate West Campus and at Croasdaile Country Club while a failed to obtain new liquor licenses. The new agreement in a synogogue.

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I .iftP.- r?»\T fl-O t jj££___Q_lLJX_^____1___> i ' { _a_fl-M-a_M_i_H-a---i WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 3 Three sites considered for new stadium

By MATT SCLAFANI The bottom line, Powell said, is to fol­ stadium project, in addition to a new sta­ Since the Durham City Council voted to low what the public wants unless there is dium would enhance the downtown area fund a new baseball stadium on June 27, a compelling reason not to because "it's of Durham, Powell said. From an eco­ City Manager Orville Powell and his staff their money you're spending." nomic development standpoint, the Ford have been preparing a report on the next There are a number of problems with site is probably the best, Powell said. It is milestone — choosing a site. the current sight but Powell said that a clear that Glaxo would prefer the ballpark After the council voted 8-2 to sell $17 Durham Morning Herald article which next to their American Tobacco property, million worth of certificates of participa­ stated that the current site had been he said. tion to local corporations, Mayor Wib Gul­ ruled out was incorrect. This has made some wonder if the ley asked Powell to present a recommen­ "I think the architect's comments were financing plan approved by the City dation by August 26. a little out of context," Powell said. While Council grants the corporations too much There are currently three sites under the current location "is perhaps the most control over the ballpark. consideration: the current site at the Dur­ difficult to work with because the stadium "We're at the mercy of those people. The ham Athletic Park (DAP), The University is landlocked" by streets and local private sector will control everything," Ford dealership downtown and the Briggs businesses, the architects have a number council member Johnny "Red" Williams MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE Avenue extension, Powell said. of options which might alleviate the prob­ See BALLPARK on page 20 • Orville Powell Powell and his staff are currently ex­ lem of fitting a larger facility to replace amining all aspects of the three locations the 5,000 seat DAP. including traffic flow, parking, environ­ In order to build a new stadium, the mental impact, visual impact, effect on DAP would have to be demolished, leav­ Development office sets record neighborhoods and economic impact. ing no place for the Durham Bulls to play Each of the three areas has advantages for a year. and disadvantages. The current site has Another problem with the current loca­ By CRAIG WHITLOCK pects," Piva said. "We just need to con­ to be considered first because a large tion is the lack of available parking, For the first time in its history, the Uni­ tinue to keep the big gift momentum number of people have expressed their af­ Powell said. versity has received more than $100 mil­ going." finity for the location at West Corporation The University Ford site is ideal for lion in gifts, almost 20 percent above the The totals were bolstered by eight indi­ and Morris Streets. parking because it lies adjacent to the total for 1987-88, according to University vidual gifts of $1 million or more each, a "The advantage of that site primarily is American Tobacco property. At night the development officials. $7 million grant from the Duke Endow­ the feelings that folks have for that site. If large American Tobacco property would The University's fundraising goal for ment and a $5 million gift from an it wasn't for that, it probably wouldn't provide ample parking for a new stadium, the past year was $96.8 million, but per­ anonymous foundation. even be considered. People feel really Powell said. sonal gifts, foundation support and corpo­ "I think we're just beginning to see the strongly about that site. There's a nice The development of American Tobacco rate giving added up to $102.1 million, ac­ kind of major gifts we want to see," Piva warm feeling . . . you don't want to lose by local corporations, including Glaxo In- cording to Harry Gotwals, director of Uni­ said. that," Powell said. c, which has committed to invest in the versity development. The $100 million mark represents a "Duke's sitting in a pretty good spot," meteoric rise for the University's develop­ Gotwals said. ment efforts. In 1980-81, the University Individual and foundation gifts made raised only $27 million. up the bulk of the total, with both catego­ Much of the reason for the increase has ries increasing by over 30 percent from been the Capital Campaign for the Arts the year before. and Sciences and Engineering, the Uni­ Corporate giving, however, declined by versity's effort to raise $200 million for about nine percent, with business charita­ the endowment. Last fall the Capital ble gifts and research grants added up to Campaign was expanded to the $400 mil­ $28.3 million, Gotwals said. lion Campaign for Duke, which includes The University ranked 11th in the na­ all types of giving, not just for endowment tion in annual development support dur­ purposes. ing 1987-1988. Only six institutions "The Capital Campaign . . . has built a raised more than $102 million last year. momentum," Piva said. "We think it's a "I think this year's total will put us momentum that will continue." solidly in the top 10," said John Piva, vice At the end of June, the Campaign for president for alumni affairs and develop­ Duke had raised a total of $226 million in ment. pledges, Gotwals said, 10.8 percent ahead Gotwals added that rankings for 1988- of schedule. The Campaign is supposed to 89 would not be available for another six go through 1991. to eight months, as fiscal year schedules "We are very encouraged with our prog­ MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE are different for each institution. ress there," Gotwals said. Expansion of DAP is being considered. "We're identifying more and more pros­ See MONEY on page 10 •

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Student flex cards accepted Monday & Wednesday 8:30 a.m.-8 p jn.* Visa, Master Card & American Express Tuesday, Thursday & Friday 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Morning coffee available Saturday 10 a.m.-4 p.m. MEDITERRANEAN TAKE-OUT FOOD Special events announced in The Chronicle * Academic Year Woodcroft Shopping Center 490-5770 10-8 Mon.-Sat. PAGE 4 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Trial postponed while Henderson in Illinois

From staff reports Legion Street, according to Durham police son remained in Durham until the end of The trial of former Trinity student and reports. the first summer term of classes, and he is former men's basketball co-captain Phil­ After being stopped by arresting officer now living at his home in Chicago. lip Henderson has been postponed until L.B. Evans, Henderson failed a chemical August 14. The reason for the delay is sobriety test, registering a 0.11 percent Basketball officials have insisted that that he is currently attending summer blood alcohol content (BAC). Drivers with the DWI charge was not the reason school at the University of Illinois, accord­ a BAC of 0.10 or above in the state of Henderson left school in June. Henderson ing to Henderson's lawyer. North Carolina are charged with driving will not elaborate on the "personal" rea­ Henderson was arrested June 4 on while impaired. sons for his departure. charges of reckless driving and driving As a freshman in 1986 Henderson ran while impared after speeding along The former men's basketball player, into academic difficulty at the University Chapel Hill Boulevard, police records who was to be the University's top return­ and was forced to sit out two semesters. show. Henderson was stopped for travel­ ing scorer in 1989, announced for un­ By the fall of 1987, Henderson was rein­ ing 59 m.p.h. in a 35 m.p.h. zone near the specified reasons June 12 that he was stated at the University and has since intersection of Chapel Hill Boulevard and transferring from the University. Hender­ steered clear of trouble.

STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE Rezoning of Duke Forest indefinitely stalled Phil Henderson

By CRAIG WHITLOCK 8,300 acres of forested land in Durham, in the county as public interest district land was fueled in part by a 1985 study is­ One year after the Orange County Com­ Orange, Chatham and Alamance coun­ (PID) land. sued by the Urban Land Institute (ULI) missioners began the process of rezoning ties. About 2,800 acres of Duke Forest are Under PID restrictions, commercial which analyzed the development po­ Duke Forest as public land, the effort has located in Orange County. and residential development would be tential of the Forest. According to the ULI stalled and both county and University of­ Last summer the Orange County Plan­ prohibited, thereby preserving the Forest report, the Forest was worth hundreds of ficials say they don't know when the mat­ ning Board announced a public hearing as open space. millions of dollars if developed to its full ter will be resolved, if at all. scheduled for late August that would con­ What has followed since last summer, potential. The University owns approximately sider a proposal to rezone all Forest land however, has been a long series of conflict "They of course wanted to rezone in and disagreement between the county total, which caused us to draw the battle and University over whether the county lines," said Associate Vice President Max has the legal right to zone private prop­ Wallace, the University's government erty as public land. relations representative. The rezoning decision was postponed Wallace offered last August to enter twice at the University's request. When a into a binding agreement with Orange second public hearing was finally held in County that the University would not de­ February, the University refused to ac­ velop the Forest in any way at least until cept a modified PID proposal and revived the school's Land Resources Committee a threat to sue the county if it went ahead report could be released in December. The with the rezoning. The county then tabled county commissioners, who had received the proposal and little headway has been a recommendation from the planning made since. board in October to rezone the land, "One of the things that is striking is grudgingly accepted Wallace's proposal that it's usually difficult to get govern­ and no more action was taken until Feb­ ment to move fast and in this case Duke ruary. said 'Wait, hold it,'" said Barry Jacobs, Formed in response to public outcry chair of the planning board. over the ULI report, the LRC released "I think that because there was some their findings in December of an 18 misunderstanding on both sides and a lit­ month study of the Forest. The LRC rec­ tle bit of posturing on both sides, what ommended that approximately 90 percent should have been a painless and amicable of the Forest be reserved for research pur­ decision instead turned into kind of poses only and was approved by the Board drawn out power struggle." of Trustees. The February public hearing followed Ever since the University rejected Or­ months of public bickering and mutual ange County's revised PID proposal at the STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE distrust on both sides. February public hearing, little has been Duke Forest Orange County's rush to rezone the See FOREST on page 12 ^

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Researchers there are working with the idea cure for AIDS. nally conceived to protect plants against viral infection of injecting defective proteins into the blood, said Cullen, The use of mutant HIV genes could be used as a drug represents what very possibly may be a future treat­ who added that a drawback to this approach would be in treating an AIDS patient but would not be practical ment for the AIDS virus. the prolonged need for frequent injections to the patient, as a vaccine, since the procedure involves a bone marrow A research team headed by Bryan Cullen, assistant rather than a one-time treatment. transplant, according to Cullen, who cited a ballpark medical research professor at the University, is testing The basic idea for the technique of gene transplanting figure of $100,000 for the cost of the treatment. the possibility of injecting defective HIV genes into blood was devised by Stephen Johnston, assistant professor in cells from the bone marrow of an AIDS patient. The al­ the botany department at the University. Johnston tered cells are then injected back into the marrow, refers to the technique as "pathogen-derived resistance," where they produce defective HIV proteins. a term which he feels more appropriately describes what This treatment will definitely These proteins will interfere with the reproduction the procedure is all about. exist in the future at some process of the HIV invading the immune system, The general idea of pathogen-derived resistance was thereby restricting the virus' means of reproducing. actually conceived several years ago in an effort to point. Eventually, the unaltered cells die off, and the new, im­ protect plants against viral infection, Johnston said. He mune cells take over. added that the idea was published in a paper and even Bryan Cullen laid out how it could be used for AIDS. AIDS researcher Ironically, Cullen and his associates never saw the Additional money wouldn't paper. "The funny thing is that it was someone at Duke [who ended up using the procedure]," Johnston said. Both Baltimore and Cullen predict that gene therapy advance the progress of AIDS Gene therapy is currently receiving a lot of publicity as an AIDS treatment will be available in 10 or 20 years. research; money would be because of its wide application in serious disease, Cullen This technique is a "feasible approach to AIDS" and "a said. The use of gene therapy has been previously done very promising first step," Cullen stated. "This treat­ useful in this [gene therapy] with herpes, he added. ment will definitely exist in the future at some point," he approach. Cullen, whose work is sponsored by the Howard affirmed. Hughes Medical Institute, said that his job right now is However, there are two foreseeable technical prob­ to "open up intellectual avenues that can be pursued by lems to the gene therapy approach. There are people Bryan Cullen others." He is currently seeking to secure sponsorship who will have ethical qualms about the technique since AIDS researcher for work on his work from drug companies. it requires introducing new genetic material into the pa­ Further advancement of the lab work "hinges on com­ tient. There are also very possible problems with the pany support," Cullen said, and he is "75 percent sure treated patients developing leukemia, according to Cul­ Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome is caused by that one company will go for the idea." len. the HIV virus. The virus attacks the cells in bone mar­ The drug company would take all the research and ex­ Cullen's goals right now are to develop approaches to row, in effect taking over these cells, which protect the perimentation garnered thus far and set up its own sci­ allow the entry of the defective HIV genes into the cells body from disease. With the takeover of these cells, the entists on a larger scale, Cullen said. in high efficiency and to improve on the original mutant patient is left without an immune system and is ex­ These scientists would more aggressively approach HIV gene. He hopes to make a defective HIV protein tremely susceptible to disease. A patient with AIDS can the actual testing of the possible treatment on labora­ which more effectively prohibits reproduction of the become gravely ill from a common cold, although the tory animals, a stage which Cullen and his colleagues virus. greatest cause of death among AIDS patients is com­ have not yet reached. While AIDS research is not lacking in available funds plications from pneumonia. Testing and experimentation work is currently limited right now, Cullen believes more money should be de­ This procedure is referred to as "intracellular immuni­ to tissue culture dishes and test tubes at this point. Cul­ voted to testing procedures such as gene therapy. ty" by David Baltimore, director of the Whitehead Insti­ len foresees advancing to the stage of mice testing in "Additional money wouldn't advance the progress of tute in Cambridge, Mass. Baltimore proposed the idea of about a year and a half, although "we are technically to AIDS research," Cullen said. "Money would be useful in gene therapy for the treatment of AIDS, but is working the point where we can work in mice." this [gene therapyl approach," he said.

BOTSWANA JAPAN CANADA CARIBBEAN MEXICO MOROCCO CHINA NETHERLANDS EGYPT ENGLAND SCOTLAND FRANCE SOVIET UNION GERMANY GREECE SPAIN TAIWAN INDIA ZIMBABWE ISRAEL ITALY PLAN NOW TO INTERNATIONALIZE YOUR DUKE EXPERIENCE STUDY ABROAD INFORMATION MEETING FOR INCOMING FRESHMEN AND TRANSFER STUDENTS for Academic Year and Summer Programs SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 10:30 a,m./BRYAN CENTER FILM THEATER For Information on Specific Programs Contact: STUDY ABROAD OFFICE SUMMER SESSION OFFICE 2022 Campus Drive 121 Allen Building 684-2174 684-2621 PAGE 6 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 Jenkins becomes first to declare candidacy for mayoral race

From staff reports "A prosperous, kind, progressive Dur­ News briefs ham" is in the sights of the first candidate for mayor of Durham. Jenkins said he seeks to unify diverse Democrat Chester Jenkins, currently segments of Durham's populace. "We are mayor pro tempore of Durham, is the only a city of diversified thought and opinion," candidate so far to officially declare his in­ he said; the candidate is seeking to band tention to seek the office in the November this diversity together into a "unified ef­ elections. fort to move Durham forward." The candidate urged the continuation of efforts to bring new development and business to Durham. However, Jenkins also urged that progress should not come at the expense of existing neighborhoods. Jenkins hopes the city will "protect exist­ ing communities while planning future ones." Jenkins also plans to make the develop­ ment of a better water system a top priority. Two Durham politicians seen as po­ tential mayoral candidates, Ken Spauld- ing and Clarence Brown, dropped their LAFANI /THE CHRONICLE campaigns to support Jenkins. "Their Trouble with the new dorm won't leave students out in the cold. support has had a tremendously positive effect on my campaign," Jenkins said. cited his among his reasons that he Philip Letsinger, a University staff archi­ Durham developer Clay Hamner has also wanted to spend more time with his fam­ tect. expressed his support for Jenkins. ily. Gulley graduated from the University "The contractor [C. C. Woods] is doing Jenkins said he is "terribly optimistic" in 1970. Among his accomplishments as everything he can to get it ready," he said. on the eve of his campaign. The candidate mayor were the economic revitalization of Letsinger said the contractor was sup­ said the various segments of Durham's downtown Durham and a proclamation posed to finish the dorm by the end of population have the same goals despite stating that the city would not discrimi­ July, but whether they will be finished their diversity. "From one end of the spec­ nate on the basis of sexual preference. "remains to be seen." trum to the other, we will have some "We can't be certain," he said. support," Jenkins said. Dorm completion uncertain: The The new dorm is scheduled to house SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE Mayor Wilber Gulley announced last new dorm in Eden's Quadrangle may or 120 undergraduates in the fall. The Uni- Chester Jenkins declares candidacy. month he would not seek reelection. He may not be completed by fall, according to See NEW DORM on page 11 • FOLLOW Memories THE BLUE DEVILS IN THE MAKING ON THE ROAD Join other Duke alumni and friends at festive pregame events planned in conjunction with four away football games in the fall of '89!

SOUTH CAROLINA ^JL*T| ^ September 2 7 PM Kickoff Kick off the season with __ a pregame buffet! TENNESSEE J September 16 7:30 PM Kickoff • Enjoy autumn in Knoxville Mm and a pregame buffet with Duke friends Am VIRGINIA A September 23 7 PM Kickoff M Join Duke friends for a pregame ^k picnic in beautiful Charlottesville M WAKE FOREST A November 4 1 PM Kickoff M Enjoy a pregame brunch and then jmt^^m WARSAW SINFONIA watch this traditional duel between ^^ V ^^^B Yehudi Menuhin, conductor the Devils and the Deacons! ^^r _fl ^^^^ KATHLEEN BATTLE DUKE UNIVERSITY soprano ANDRE WATTS pianist If you live near any of these Please send me information on the following ANI AND IDA KAVAFIAN game sites, watch for special event(s): Duke Alumni Association South Carolina Virginia duo recitalists mailings. Otherwise, Duke student complete the form for NORTH CAROLINA additional details concerning Name the receptions. In order to discounts : DANCE THEATRE guarantee adequate food Class year (if alum) service, advance reservations Address up to 50% OFF. JULIAN BREAM are required. l-800-FOR-DUKE (U.S.) guitarist and lutenist I-800-3DUALUM (N.C.) Call Page Box Office, 684-4444 for complete season brochure. Mail to: Duke Alumni Football, 614 Chapel Drive, Duke University, Durham, NC 2 7706 WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 7 New trustees chosen for University board From staff reports Six new members were elected to the 37-member Uni­ ^m0mam^" versity Board of Trustees. The Board of Trustees meets quarterly to discuss issues of University governance. # _T^m^' Four of the new trustees were elected to six-year terms. A trustee may then be re-elected, but may not serve more than two consecutive terms. Of the other two new trustees, one was elected to a one-year term and the other to a three-year term. The new six-year trustees are: • Samuel Barnes, who is James Orin Murfin Profes­ sor of Political Science at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He received his bachelor's and master's X " degrees from Tulane University, his doctorate degree from Duke in 1957 and completed postgraduate work at Institut des Hautes Etudes Politiques in Paris. Barnes, whose wife, Ann, and son, Michael, also at­ tended the University, is the author of numerous books and articles and program director for the Center for Po­ litical Studies at Michigan. Carlton Minnick, resident bishop for the North Carolina Conference of the United Methodist Church. He was born in Greensboro and grew up in Lynchburg, Va. He is a graduate of Lynchburg College and received his bachelor's of divinity and master of theology degrees from Union Theological Seminary in Richmond. Minnick was principal author and project coordinator for the document "In Defense of Creation: The Nuclear Crisis and a Just Peace.' • Wilhelmina Reuben-Cooke, an associate professor SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE of law at College of Law. In 1967 Queasy she graduated with distinction from Duke, where she Dianne Rodwell's watercolor has made a big splash. Sea it at the Bryan Center until Aug. 21. was May Queen and a member of Phi Beta Kappa. After graduation she attended Harvard University on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship. She later received her doc­ torate degree from the University of Michigan. She is ac­ tive in numerous professional and civic organizations, including the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Association of Black Women Attorneys. • Morris Williams, a partner with Miller, Anderson & Sherrerd, an investment firm in Bala Cynwyd, Pa. A na­ tive of Roxboro, Williams earned a bachelor's degree in 1962 and a master's degree in 1963, both from the Uni­ versity. Williams has served as chairman of the Board of Visitors for the Divinity School (where his grandfather graduated in 1932) and is currently a member of the ex­ ecutive committee for The Campaign for Duke. Serving a one-year term will be Robert Heidrick, im­ mediate past president of the Duke General Alumni As­ sociation. Hedrick, a native of Kansas City, Mo., is co- founder of The Heidrick Partners Inc., a Chicago-based firm specializing in nationwide searches for senior level executives and directors. He received his bachelor's degree from the University in 1963 and his master's of business administration from the University of Chica­ go's Graduate School of Business. Margaret Nelson, who graduated magna cum laude from the University in May, has been named Young Trustee to serve a three-year term on the board. Nelson majored in history and received departmental honors and a certificate in Women's Studies. During her time at the University, she was an ASDU representative, a residential adviser, and a member of the President's Honor Council. She served on the Duke University Child Care Task Force and chaired the Women's Center Advisory Board.

71 luxurious hotel rooms, casually elegant dining and the Robert Trent Jones designed golf course, Tee time has never been Call for our $93 per person golf special. mm, NC 27706 Tel: (919) 490-0999 Fax: (919) 688-0105 1001 Cameron Blvd., SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE Margaret Nelson, young trustee PAGE 8 THF CHRONJCLI WEDNESDAY. JULY 26, 1989 Anthropologist receives prestigious grant DUFS to close

From staff reports In 1977, she gave up her career in social medical research professor of biochemis­ Anthropology professor Patricia Wright work and began studying for her doc­ try and anatomy, and psychologist Rat for facelift torate in anthropology. After completing Michael Weiss, who both received the is one of 29 new MacArthur Fellows an­ From staff reports nounced July 18, by the John D. and her doctorate in 1984, she joined the Duke award in 1985. Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. faculty. The Rathskeller is among the cam­ All 29 winners will receive MacArthur The MacArthur Foundation was estab­ Student takes flight: Dieter Bruno, pus eateries that will be receiving a Fellowships, which range from $150,000 lished in 1978 with the fortune of John D. a Trinity junior majoring in zoology, is new look this fall. to $375,000 over five years. The amount and Catherine T. MacArthur. The family taking part in NASA's Space Life Sciences The Rathskeller will be renovated to of the award depends on the age of the re­ owned the country's largest privately held Training Program. "open up space" in the serving area, ac­ cipient. Wright will receive $275,000 from insurance company, Bankers Life and Ca­ The six-week program, held every year cording to Barry Scerbo, director of the foundation to use as she chooses. sualty Company. Since 1978, the at Kennedy Space Center, introduces col­ Duke University Food Services Wright is a Duke primatologist and as­ foundation has awarded more than $725 lege students to the planning, develop­ (DUFS). Changes scheduled include sistant professor of anthropology who is million in grants. ment, and execution of life science experi­ two beverage stands on either side of leading efforts to save the endangered pri­ MacArthur Fellowships are awarded to ments for potential use in the Space Shut­ the serving area instead of the current mates of southeastern Madagascar, a individuals of all ages from all fields. Re­ tle program. The students participate in central beverage island and two cash­ large island located off the east coast of cipients must be nominated for the research and hear lectures from astro­ ier stands on either side of the Africa. She is currently conducting re­ award. Each year 25 or 30 individuals are nauts and other authorities in the life sci­ entrance rather than in the center. search in Madagascar. selected for the MacArthur Fellows ences and space flight operations. DUFS also plans to reface the walls She received worldwide acclaim for her Program. Including the most recent Bruno was one of 36 students selected and add new lighting to the entrance of discovery in 1986 of a previously un­ awards, a total of 283 Fellows have been from a field of over 600 applicants for the the restaurant. Renovations are ex­ known species of primate, Hapalemur named since the program began in 1981. program. The students can earn five se­ pected to cost approximately $17,000 aureus, or the golden bamboo lemur. In Previous recipients of MacArthur Fel­ mester hours of college credit through an and will be funded by DUFS. the past decade, only two or three new lowships at Duke are Jane Richardson, a agreement with Florida A&M University, The Rathskeller will close on July 29 species of primates have been discovered. which manages the program with NASA. and will re-open no later than Aug. 20, Following her discovery of the new spe­ Scerbo said. While the Rathskeller is cies, Wright became the main player in a Student wins internship: Brenda closed, Licks will be open from 8:30 move to establish a national park near Toineeta, a Trinity senior majoring in a.m. until 11 a.m. In addition, the Ranomafana, a town in southeastern public policy, is taking part in Boyd-Pishko Cafe will be open from 11 Madagascar. She led efforts to collaborate "Leadership America," a ten-week a.m. until 7:30 p.m. and will serve its with the government in Madagascar on program designed to encourage the devel­ traditional fast-food menu. the national park, campaigning on the opment of leadership potential. Since the Bryan Center opened premise that a park would provide jobs Students in the program spend one seven years ago. every eatery has been and tourist income for the economically week at the Center for Creative Leader­ remodeled; in 1987 the Boyd-Pishko depressed island nation. She received the ship in Greensboro, one week at Outward Cafe was renovated and Licks was con­ government's endorsement for the plan, Bound in Leadville, Colo., and three verted from a bar to an ice cream shop and is now working to create the 17,375 weeks in classroom activities in Dallas. in compliance with new drinking laws. square mile park. The park will be The students then separate to perform in­ DUFS is also remodeling the East designed for both conservation and educa­ ternships at various locations before Campus Union this summer into a food tion and will protect a dozen species of reuniting in Washington, DC. court. Instead of the old cafeteria, stu­ lemurs, as well as other wildlife. Toineeta is one of 50 students chosen dents will be able to choose options Wright received her B.A. in biology from 700 applicants for the program. The ranging from delicatessen to Mexican from Hood College in Maryland and her program is managed by the International to fast food. Scerbo said the food court Ph.D. in anthropology from the Univer­ SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE Leadership Center, a non-profit leader­ is expected to be open by the fall. sity of New York. Anthropology professor Patricia Wright ship training corporation based in Dallas. STUDENTS WELCOME DUKENGINEERS! The School of Engineering welcomes the Class of 1993. The School offers many activities that will help THE CHRONICLE BOARD you get to know your fellow Engineers and you are is seeking undergraduate, graduate and professional students to serve on invited to participate. the newspaper's governing board for terms starting with the 1989-90 SPECIAL FALL EVENTS academic year. October 23, 24, & 25 Engineering Telethon The Chronicle Board, composed of 6:45-10:00 (Pizza & Prizes!), students, faculty, and administrators, DUPAC Building is the official administrative liaison between the University and the October 28 Parents' Weekend newspaper and functions as the 11:00-12:00 Engineering Seminar, newspaper's board of directors. The Randall L. Tobias, Speaker Board's responsibilities include direct­ Vice Chairman of Board, AT&T, ing the newspaper's organizational 125 Engineering Building policies, budgeting priorities and long-term organizational planning. 12:00-1:30 Engineering Barbecue, Engineering Lawn Interested students should write or call to request an application from: Barry Eriksen Look for information on events such as the Engineering 103 West Union Building Student Government Welcoming Picnic, Seminars, Social P. O. Box 4696 Hours, Donut Days, and the Egg Drop in the DukEngineer Durham, NC 27706 Monthly and posted in the Engineering and Teer Library Bldgs. (919) 684-6106 or 684-3811 8:30-5 p.m., Monday through.Friday We're glad you're here! m WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 9 You may never The Duke University Medical Center get a second Bookstore chance to make a IVIedical Reference B 6o|cs first impression. Medical Equipment Texrotioks Join the Blue Devils' Advocates, a new group of student volun­ teers working with prospective students in associaion with the Undergraduate Admissions Office. As a member of the tour guide, student hosting or visitors program, you can make the Duke Difference.

ATTEND ONE OF TWO ORGANIZATIONAL MEETINGS:

Wednesday, August 30th 5:30 pm Zener Auditorium (in Soc/Psych)

OR Thursday, August 31st Seeley Gfflftdd Bldg. 9:00 pm Zener Auditorium (in Soc/Psych) m. - Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.tsff Sat. 1 0:00 a.nu • 4;QQ ipUmU^ia^adj^Lmc year) Returning members must attend. Attendance is mandatory. 684-2717 Everyone welcome.

THE CANADIAN STUDIES CENTER The Dept. of Housing Management INVITES • ALL DUKE UNDERGRADUATES • FALL 1989 TO EMBARK UPON A JOURNEY TO CANADA IN COURSE SELECTIONS Undergraduate Housing Will Open FROM THE FOLLOWING NEW OFFERINGS On These Dates: FALL 1989

HISTORY 166S U.S. and Canada: Canadian-American Relations Upperclass Students Dr. John Thompson, Visisting Professor of History, McGill University Residence Halls HISTORY 183S Canada from the French Settlement Tuesday, August 22 Dr. John Thompson 8:30 a.m. ENGLISH 186 Canadian Literature in English Dr. Ted Davidson, Professor of International Studies and Canadian Studies Central Campus Apartments IDC 282S Canada and Comparative Issues (History, Anthro., Dr. Clark Cahow, Director of Canadian Studies, staff, Wednesday, August 23 Sociology, PS) and visiting lecturers from Canada 12:OOp.m. POL. SCI. 153.01 Politics and the Media of Mass Communication (Canadian documentary film content) Dr. David Paletz Freshman FRENCH 113S French for Business and Law Residence Halls (Quebec materials provided) Professor Annemarie Bryan Thursday, August 24 PUBLIC POLICY Public and Private Life: The American Crucible 8:30 a.m. 195S.41 Professor Edward O'Neil

ENTER CANADA THROUGH DUKE: PREPARE FOR Keys are issued only during Service YOUR NORTH AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP Office hours. Please plan to pick up Visit the Canadian Studies Center, 2016 Campus Drive for keys during Service Office hours or satellite news reception from Canada, a supplementary materials make arrangements for other collection and films about Canada accomodations. PAGE 10 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Development office sets record with $ 102 million in donations

• MONEY from page 3 have joined to try and counteract that," Gotwals said. The one area that did not show an in­ Piva added that Duke is especially see­ crease last year was corporate giving. ing more competition for corporate dollars Gotwals said a "flat" national trend in cor­ closer to home. Such gifts to the Univer­ porate philanthropy and the "difference of sity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a couple of major gifts" from 1987-88 were North Carolina State University have the primary reasons for the slowdown. jumped recently, he said. The previous year had shown a 40 percent increase, he said. One consequence of the anticipated Formerly an area dominated by private leveling off in corporate support has been institutions, public schools are taking an an extra effort to obtain foundation increasingly larger portion of corporate money, Gotwals said. gifts each year, according to a recent "There has been increasing recognition report in The Chronicle of Higher at the University that as public funding STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE Education. has decreased, we must seek out Dialing for Duke was one program that contributed to the University's record "There are private institutions who foundation support," he said. $102 million in fundraising.

The Right Place Triangle Travel's UNIVERSITY SERVICE at the Right Price. Good News for University Travelers

In recognition of the particular Our goal is to provide you with Best needs of our University travelers, the most efficient, responsive, pro­ Western] Triangle Travel has established a fessional travel planning assistance WORLDWIDE unique service dedicated solely to you can find. LODGING the University community.

• AAA - 3 Diamond rated 286-6720 Your exclusive number to professional University travel services! • Large comfortable rooms with queen beds • Park-like setting • From Duke and VA Hospitals, follow Airline Ticket Delivery & Pickup • Emergency Travel Service Erwin Road to 751. Turn right, go to US 70 Complete Accessibility • Guaranteed Lowest Airfare • Personalized Travel Profiles and turn left (we're 1/2 mile on the right). Enhanced Travel Automation • Exclusive Hotel Discounts • International Travel Expertise Group and Conference Planning • Airport Ticket Service • Lost Luggage Retrieval Service Best Western Skyland Inn & Restaurant 1-85 Exit 170 at US 70 West on Old Hillsborough Road Toll Free Numbers Triangle Travel Durham, N.C. USA - 1-800-334-1647 University Service Triangle Travel Airport Ticket Services NC - 1-800-672-2515 1018 W. Main Street (919) 383-2508 731 Broad Street Located at Thrifty Car Rental 24 Hr. Emergency Assistance Durham, NC 27707 "Each Best Western Is Independently owned and operated" Durham. NC 27705 1-40 at Airport Road 1-800-343-5880 (919) 286-6720 (919) 286-6710 (919) 544-6419 Chapel Hill - 929-5055

We Are Doctors Who Specialize In Contact Lenses. lV)HT\HG Which means that your eye examination, s diagnostic fitting, and all follow-up visits will Md_>P«Hf be conducted by a doctor. It also means that we've had years of train­ ing and experience in fitting the most difficult contact lens cases. And we fit every kind of contact lens available-from the simplest to the newest and most sophisticated. We realize that deciding to wear contacts can be a big decision. Call us to discuss fees and any questions you have.

Evening And Saturday Appointments Available. I Academy Eye Associates OPTOMETRY. O.D..P.A. .he prinb shop Dr. Henry A. Greene Dr. Dale D. Stewart 3115 Academy Road 502 South Duke Street Durham. NC 27707 Durham. NC 27701 north hills northgate university mall durham/286-0386 chapel hill/942-7306 493-7456 688-6306 ralelgh/783-8360 WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 11 Freshmen scavenger hunt scheduled Towerview ramp to From staff reports cording to Semans. slow Durham drivers Freshmen will be able to start the year with an un­ The freshmen will be looking for points of historic usual view of Durham by participating in a scavenger interest, the North Carolina Central University cam­ • NEW DORM from page 6 hunt that could possibly reach as far as the Eno pus, older businesses like Parker's, established points versity has an insurance policy by which students who River. such as Bennett House, and possibly some locations are supposed to be housed in the new dorm will be pro­ ASDU President Tommy Semans said the purpose on campus, Semans said. vided other accomidations, possibly in a local hotel, if of the hunt is to allow freshmen "to see the heart of Participating students will pick up some souvenir the dorm is not completed in time for the beginning of downtown." The hunt will be sponsored by ASDU and at each point to prove that they did actually go there. the semester. Richard Cox, dean of residential life, was several local businesses. The event will probably end with dinner and enter­ out of town and could not be reached for comment. The as yet unnamed scavenger hunt will run from tainment on East Campus. 1:00 until 4:30 or 5:00 on Sunday, Sept. 17. Each The hunt will be held in conjunction with Center- Governor taps profeSSOr: An associate professor team will consist of four first year students who will fest, a Durham fair held every fall featuring local in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engi­ have the option of driving themselves or using a crafts and entertainment. neering has been appointed by Governor Jim Martin to volunteer driver. The drivers will come from various Semans said through the scavenger hunt freshmen the Environmental Management Commission. student organizations. will have an opportunity to interact with up- Miguel Medina is one of four new members appointed perclassmen and meet students from various campus As a grand prize ASDU is hoping to get "Uncle" to a six-year term on the commission, which is composed organizations. Harry Rainess mountain cabin for a weekend, ac­ of 17 members responsible for establishing rules and regulations to protect the state's air and water resour­ ces. The commission has several powers, including the right to revoke or refuse an industry's permit, to declare an emergency when it finds a dangerous condition of water or air pollution and to direct an investigation of any large-scale killing offish and wildlife. Members of the commission have diverse back­ grounds, with representatives from the health, industry and agricultural community. "I'm looking forward to serving on the commission. I think it will be a unique challenge," Medina said. Medina brings to the commission knowledge of groundwater contamination, urban runoff and water resources engineering. He is particularly involved in working with computer models that could be used to assess the environmental NOBRACNER. impact of contaminants. For instance, if an industry planned to locate in North Carolina, a computer model would be able to estimate how long the company could discharge waste before groundwater contamination be­ came a problem. Medina has acted as a national and international con­ sultant on water quality and water resources for numer­ ous organizations, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Pan American Health Organiza­ tion, the World Health Organization and the Inter- American Development Bank. In 1984, Medina was awarded a Fulbright grant to lec­ ture and conduct research in Australia. He has recently been appointed chairman of the Technical Advisory Committee of the International Ground Water Modeling Center and has also received the 1989 Earl Brown Out­ standing Civil Engineering Faculty Award.

Towerview Slowed: A speed ramp will be installed on Towerview Road to reduce the amount of non-Univer­ sity traffic and to slow cars passing through the pedes­ trian crosswalk which links West Campus to the athletic facilities. According to a letter from Ronald Blickhahn, director of facilities planning and management, a recent survey of traffic on Towerview Road determined that much of the traffic on the road was non-University related vehi­ cles using Towerview as a shortcut. The speed ramp will consist of a short incline followed by 15 feet of level road, then a short decline. This device is easier on passing cars than speed bumps such as those located on Science Drive, Blickhahn said. In addition to the speed ramp, stop signs will be in­ stalled at the intersection of Towerview Road and the Fuqua School of Business Drive. Towerview Road will be closed to through traffic from August 7 to August 13 during construction of the ramp.

Director named: Rosalyn Holt Alexander, a parent G_Tlta(_HECKENG\>ta education consultant with the Durham County and Wake County school systems, has been named the child Its pretty simple to figureou t who has the better deal on free checking. At CCB. care coordinator for the University. it only takes $250 in Premium Savings. Plus, CCB has more advantages: Alexander will serve as an advocate for child care and family-related policies on campus and will work with • A branch adjacent to Duke at 2714 Erwin Road community child care services. Her specific tasks will in­ • Two Express 24 automated teller machine locations on campus clude the encouragement of on-campus child care initia­ tives, publicity of services and resources for the Univer­ • More Triangle locations than any other bank sity community, and providing counseling and education Don t lose an opportunity to sign up for this no brainer. We 11 be in the Bryan programs for parents. Alexander will not be involved with the management of any child care centers proposed Center during orientation. for the campus. Alexander has worked as an elementary school 1 800 CCB 9139 teacher and guidance counselor for Durham elementary schools, a parent counselor-educator consultant with Wake County schools, and a parent education consul­ Central Carolina Bank tant for Durham County Schools. She is also past presi­ dent of the Mental Health Association in Durham Coun­ Your Financial Advantage. ty, and she remains on the board of directors of the asso­ ciation. Member H)l(. ill/IIRELRV PAGE 12 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 University, county stalled on rezoning of Duke Forest

• FOREST from page 4 The final settlement will be one "which satisfies Or­ good-faith negotiations with the county if it still insists done to forge a rezoning proposal acceptable to both ange County's land use concerns, but doesn't push the on rezoning the Forest, but would be happy to drop the sides. The University still maintains that the LRC study unfairness button," he added. matter and retain the current land classification. is enough of a promise not to disturb the Forest, while Wallace disagreed with Gledhill's assertion, saying "In some ways, I wonder if we need to go any farther," Orange County is still trying to put that promise into that it would be unconstitutional for local government to he said. "We have no plans to do anything with that legal code. take private land and rezone it in the public interest. land. The LRC report made that clear." "I think there are some administrators and trustees "Governments are designed to serve the populace, not "We are not going to sneak out in the dead of night who think their word is as good as gold," Jacobs said. the other way around. And we're a member of the popu­ and put up a shopping center," Wallace added. "Government has a different obligation and that's not lace," he said. "It's not up to us to accommodate them Jacobs said he didn't think the rezoning effort would to take people at their word. It's to protect the public in­ beyond reasonably good neighbor relations." be dropped. Although he couldn't estimate when the terest. "I don't think the majority of people in Orange County matter would be resolved, he said he hoped a public "I think that some administrators and trustees at want to radically rezone our land," Wallace said. "The hearing on the matter could be scheduled this fall. Duke have felt that somehow people are saying that average person in Orange County does not feel it's "One of the possibilities we're looking at is trying to they're not trustworthy, and that's just not the case." necessary to take our property rights." come up with some different kinds of PID districts" that At present, however, no dates have been set for a new Rezoning the land would be a problem for the Univer­ could provide more flexibility with land use restrictions rezoning proposal or a public hearing, said Mary Scear- sity if they ever did want to develop or sell portions of of the Forest, he said. bo, an Orange County land planner. the Forest. "When you lose it [unrestrictive zoning], it's Jacobs added that he was slightly optimistic that an "We don't have anything else to say other than it's hard to get it back," he said. agreement could be reached. "We've seen some indica­ being worked on," she added. "It's just at sort of an awk­ Wallace said the University is willing to enter into tion that there's room for agreement." ward stage right now."

Government has a different obligation and that's not to take people at their word. Barry Jacobs Planning board chair

Negotiations are currently in the hands of Wallace and Geoff Gledhill, Orange County's attorney. "We have really talked in generalities. We'll be mak­ ing a proposal to Duke at some point," Gledhill said. Although Gledhill said he didn't know the substance of the new proposal, he has "a faint outline of a plan in my mind." Nevertheless, "I really can't give you what the bottom line is, because I don't know," he admitted. The rezoning matter is entirely the county's responsi­ bility, and it is up to it to come up with a plan. Gledhill said, however, that he and Wallace "have agreed to talk" so a proposal can be worked out that is acceptable to both parties. "It's not the county's intention to negotiate the rezoning," Gledhill said. "On the other hand, Duke Uni­ versity owns a lot of property in Orange County and is one of its leading citizens." Despite the apparent agreement to negotiate a com­ promise, both sides still adhere to their previous stances on whether Orange County has a legal right to rezone private property into quasi-public land. "The paramount interest from the local government's point of view is what's in the general public's best inter­ est," Gledhill said.

^|fc_j5 •,nByf»j^ ^^^ South Square Mall _ ^w

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MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE W * 1 J ^^W. *" J.B. Deke? _^^ Chapel Hill Blvd. & Business 15-501, 01' James Buchanan shows silent approval Durham 493-2451 despite a pusillanimous ad campaign. •1

WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 13 Court ruling sparks abortion restrictions

• ABORTION from page 1 As a result of the Missouri-Webster decision, North Carolina House Speaker Joe Mavretic is planning to ap­ point a committee to examine the state's abortion laws. Stam and Michael Decker (R-Dist 29) have drafted a bill, titled the Abortion Control Act, which prevents pub­ lic employees from performing elective abortions and prevents such abortions from being performed in public or public supported facilities. Another clause of the Abortion Control Act requires a physician to perform a viability test after 20 weeks. This type of restriction was allowed for the first time by the Webster decision. CHAD HOOD /THE CHRONICLE The bill also restricts the general availability of funds The battle over abortion has been shifted to the state legislatures for abortions, a restriction that was legal before the Webster decision. Especially affected by this law would be women who can not afford to pay the $250-$750 that an abortion generally costs. The bill states that "it is unlawful for any public funds to be expended for the purpose of performing or assisting an abortion, which abortion is not necessary to save the life of the mother." The bill also restricts the use of pub­ lic facilities to perform abortions and prohibits public employees from performing abortions "within the scope of his employment." In addition, the bill states that "The General Assem­ bly finds that the life of each human being begins at con­ ception, unborn children have protectable interests in life, health, and well-being, and the natural parents of unborn children have protectable interests in the life, health, and well-being of the unborn child. The General Assembly, therefore, recognizes the right to life of all hu­ mans, born and unborn." This conflicts the analysis presented in Roe v. Wade which allowed states increasing authority as the fetus entered the later stages of gestation. In the first three months of pregnancy, Roe ruled the right of women was the overriding principle. Dr. John Steege, a physician in the gynocology depart­ ment at the University Medical Center, said the Abor­ tion Control Bill, if passed, would be "very unfortunate for the poor." ~ Earlier this year, Stam was instrumental in getting the state abortion fund, then at over $900,000, cut by ap­ proximately 75 percent in the House. Steege said that public funding for abortions is "something we need." If the Abortion Control Act passes through the legis­ lature, the Medical Center would not be able to perform approximately 30 of the 150 elective abortions they per­ form because of lack of funding. Currently, the state funds approximately $500 of the cost of an abortion if the mother can not afford it and the University absorbs a portion of the remainder of the cost. Were North Carolina to strictly limit abortions, women with available funds could probably still go out of state to obtain abortions. Low income women who could not pay the high price of an abortion or the price of trav­ eling out of state to obtain one would face the greatest difficulties, Steege said. AtJJTKRate^uCmStay Stam said a woman would have three options if abor­ tions are severely restricted in North Carolina: the woman could travel to another state, not comply with the law, or not get pregnant in the first place. AtAnQmniHotel Steege, however, said many pregnancies result from contraception failure or misuse, although in the adoles­ cent group, the problem tends to be "more that they're not using contraception." WthoutAnyReservations. A second bill that passed in the House and is currently awaiting consideration by the Senate is titled "Consent There's a misperception that For a limited time,you can for Minor's Abortion." all Omni Hotels are incredibly stay at the new Omni Durham for In this bill, "No physician licensed to practice medi­ cine in North Carolina shall perform an abortion upon expensive. So, if youVe never just $59 a night. Every day. an unemancipated minor unless he . . . first obtains the written consent of the minor and of: a parent with cus­ stayed in an Omni Hotel because Call 683-6664 or 1800THE- tody of the minor, the legal guardian of the minor, or a of the price, now's your chance to OMN1. For $59, they'll be the only parent with whom the minor is living. The minor may petition for abortion consent if parents deny permission check in to the finest accommo­ reservations you'll have about stay­ or may petition for waiver of parental consent." dations in theTriangle. ing in the Omni Durham Hotel. A third bill requires "A person authorized to perform abortions in this state shall, before performing the abor­ tion, provide medical advice and counseling to the woman seeking the abortion regarding the potential medical, physiological, and psychological consequences QMNI#DURHAMHOTEL of having an abortion." &CMC CENTER Stam said pro-choice organizers currently have five lobbyists working in Raleigh and that there is only one pro-life lobbyist working part time. He said, however, the pro-choice lobbyists have been "very ineffective." Fear and loathing at Duke: EDITORIALS The Medical Center fiasco PAGE 14 JULY 26,1989 Staff rivalries, charges of fraud and ha­ rassment and evidence of blatant ethics • The killing joke violations are all contributing to a grow­ ing crisis of confidence in the University Matt McKenzie Attitude adjustment Medical Center — a crisis for which the University must take responsibility. tor, claimed that Medical Center adminis­ By making a concerted effort to at­ once they are hired. Complaints Betty Eldreth's B72.3 lawsuit has ex­ trators responded to his criticism by forc­ ibly confining him in the psychiatric unit. tract and recruit black faculty, the about tenure also reflect dissatisfac­ panded far beyond its original allegations. Several months ago, the controversy sur­ University has taken an important McCarty's complaint also draws atten­ tion among black faculty members, rounding the experimental cancer test tion to David Adcock, a University asso­ step in resolving a difficult, divisive fostering a belief that well-qualified seemed to be a matter of simple malprac­ ciate legal counsel who is playing a promi­ issue. black professors may not gain tenure tice. Malpractice, as unfortunate as it is, nent role in the Eldreth case. Adcock's Unfortunately, the benefits of the as quickly or as easily as their white sometimes happens; either the University role as an alleged proponent of the black faculty hiring initiaive are counterparts. would be held responsible for Eldreth's "Russian Treatment" adds an even being endangered by concerns over Richard Davis summarized the claims that she suffered from a false can­ stranger twist to the affair, raising the the treatment black professors en­ University's philosophy towards cer diagnosis and unnecessary treatment, possibility that the University is using counter once they are here. Unless black faculty as "we don't treat them or the matter would be dropped. hatchet men to silence dissenters. these concerns are dealt with decently unless we have to." Such a Now, it is no longer that simple. What­ If Wittels' and McCarty's charges are promptly and effectively, the Univer­ statement seems exaggerated; still, it ever happens to Eldreth's case, the Uni­ untrue, then the University should ex­ sity may stand to lose much of the reflects a dangerous lack of communi­ versity faces allegations that go far plain why so many of its doctors suffer beyond "simple" malpractice. Because of from delusions of persecution — and why progress it has made. cation between the University and its such allegations, it is now clear that the they should expect patients to tolerate it. A large part of this problem is the black faculty. Medical Center suffers from serious in­ More garbage from the University PR ap­ perception that the University is con­ This lack of communication also en­ ternal problems and is unable to police it­ paratus insisting that these problems are cerned more with sheer numbers of dangers prospects for attracting dis­ self effectively. Such failures will have a isolated or insignificant isn't going to do black professors than with guaran­ tinguished black faculty in the future. serious effect on the center's reputation, the trick. teeing them fair and equal treatment The University's hiring efforts cannot among both its patients and its peers. once they arrive. In 1983, for instan­ exist in a vacuum; eventually, such What should the public make, for in­ ce, the University hired six black efforts will stand or fall on Duke's stance, of the charges and counter-char­ The Medical Center's faculty members. Today only three of reputation as a quality place for black ges currently flying between University crisis of confidence is these six remain, with two of the faculty to work and teach. doctors? Professionals who are supposed to work together as a carefully integrated getting worse. professors who left citing poor treat­ team are tearing each other's throats out ment as a factor in their resignations. These difficulties do not signal an while the University looks the other way In addition, at least one black profes­ irreconcilable rift between black and politely declines comment. sor, Richard Davis, filed a complaint faculty and their white colleagues. It University physician William Johnston's On the other hand, if Wittels' and with the Equal Employment Oppor­ does, however, indicate that the black lawsuit against fellow doctor Kenneth McCarty's charges are ever substantiated, tunities Commission over his treat­ faculty issue is more than numbers McCarty is a reflection of the Medical there is the chilling prospect of an admin­ ment at the University. and hiring statistics. Without an en­ Center's fiddle-and-burn syndrome. istrative bloodbath in the Medical Center Other black faculty members feel vironment of trust and acceptance for Johnston, a defendant in the B72.3 law­ unlike anything the University has seen. that factionalism within academic black professors to work in, the Uni­ suit, is suing McCarty for defamation, The University's legal staff has shown a versity's commitment to minority claiming that McCarty is actively engaged great deal of skill in doing what lawyers departments isolates them because in an attempt to ruin Johnston due to pro­ are paid to do: , obstruct, and other­ they don't fit a department's "image" hiring will remain only half-fulfilled. fessional jealousy. wise disrupt all of these cases in order to Defamation or not, Johnston's motives gain a favorable judgment. This is quite a are hardly above suspicion. McCarty contrast to their bungling attempts to ex­ recently signed an affadavit condmemn- plain this fiasco to the rest of the world. ing the B72.3 test, which Johnston played Terse, militant statements of innocence a major role in developing. And Johnston and legions of stone-faced lawyers can maintains a considerable financial inter­ stop lawsuits, but they look silly and est in validating and marketing the tech­ deceptive to the patients, doctors, alumni nique — an interest that dissenters like and others who are watching this affair McCarty are now threatening with char­ with growing dismay. ges of fraud and misrepresentation. Unfortunately, such platitudes may be Other, more serious allegations are the only tool the University has left to emerging from the Medical Center. In a control the damage within the Medical lawsuit filed last month, University doc­ Center. If even a few of these allegations tor Benjamin Wittels charged Pathology are proven in court, heads will roll in the Department Chair Robert Jennings, also Allen Building. And if new charges come a defendant in the B72.3 case, with to light, the entire process will simply threatening to fire him without cause and repeat itself, ad nauseum. have him committed as a psychiatric pa­ Even if the entire mess is settled out of tient after Wittels complained about the court tomorrow, the University will still cancer test. Wittels referred to this ^ha­ have to deal with a Medical Center staff rassment as the "Russian Treatment" in that is deeply divided, openly hostile, his lawsuit, suggesting that this isn't the ethically suspect and unworthy of the XJUST 1UWK-SOrV\E U6EKM, WOULD KWE WASTED AU1UK!' first time administrators used insinua­ respect and faith it once commanded. tions of mental incompetence to gag whis­ In his lawsuit, Benjamin Wittels claims tle-blowers in the Medical Center. that Robert Jennings warned him not to Other doctors have complained of simi­ hang out the Medical Center's "dirty laun­ lar treatment. McCarty, too, alleges that dry" by voicing his complaints outside the established 1905 THE CHRONICLE Medical Center administrators tried to si­ hospital walls. Such a threat now seems lence his criticism of the B72.3 treatment almost comic, if it is true. The Medical Craig Whitlock, Editor by suggesting that he was mentally in­ Center's dirty laundry is out to stay, and Matt Sclafani, Managing Editor competent. In a separate lawsuit filed every new attempt to keep it hidden is yet Barry Eriksen, General Manager several years ago that was later dismis­ another admission of guilt and failure. Matt McKenzie, Editorial Page Editor sed, Kwan-sa You, a visiting Korean doc- Matt McKenzie is a Trinity senior. Chris O'Brien, News Editor Jamie O'Brien, News Editor Rodney Peele, Sports Editor Beau Dure, Arts Editor Eric Harnish, Business Manager Susan Shank, Student Advertising Manager Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager Linda Nettles, Production Manager On the record

The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its It's the ideal position for me at this time in my career students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of Black Professor Richard Davis describing his arrival at the University in 1983. the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115; Business Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106. / was tricked into accepting a low and inequitable salary. . . . No institution can be Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union takeniken seriously in its claim to valuevalue Black faculty when it offers such meagre and Building; Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building. inequitable compensation. ©1989 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of Richard Davis in 1989 after leaving Duke for Brown the Business Office. WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 15 Just say no to the temptations of liberal student organizations

If you're new at Duke this fall, you should realize that often get when I feel really in tune with a social justice the University offers a plenitude of distractions, enough •. Point blank cause." If you regularly use words like "imperialism," to keep you out of class and away from the library 24 "oppression," "alienation," or "bourgeois" . . .if you get hours a day for the next four years. Stanley Ridgley that warm electric feeling mouthing socialist cliches Here're a few insider tips on the extracurricular mi­ . . .sign up with the Missing Link. lieu at Duke so you don't get suckered by some Eddie joke? Marx in the English Department? What can one Tobacco Road, mercifully published infrequently, of­ Hatcherite hawking his wares at the Bryan Center say about an English Department more enamored of the fers student essays with a "social conscience" (as with Third World Bazaar. conspiracy theories of an irrelevant 19th Century Ger­ the Missing Link, these essays need not follow Some groups on campus whose members mind their man rabble-rouser than the plays of William prescribed rules of syntax, nor do they require editing). own business are viciously savaged periodically; iron­ Shakespeare? What next? Mickey Spillane methodology In Tobacco Road, you will also find lots of awful poetry ically, Duke's most obnoxious student groups are almost in Political Science? Economics students analyzing Jerry and the obligatory angst-ridden liberal working out his never criticized except in the most ginger of terms. Lewis films? or her white-guilt complex on paper. If this judgment Fraternities and sororities get hammered; the Duke Gay You could turn to campus journalism to vent your in­ seems harsh, pick up a copy of this self-damning tabloid and Lesbian Alliance and Black Student Alliance get tellectual steam. Right now, The Chronicle offers you and see for yourself. kid-glove treatment. Let's look at some specifics. your best shot at getting something in print that won't But hey, the outlook is not all bleak. You'll hear a lot about the Black Student Alliance get you in trouble when you try to get your first job. The In the political realm, your best bet on campus for in­ throughout your Duke career. If you happen to be a Chronicle lists somewhat to port, but what else did you telligent discussion, relevance and good sense is The black freshman and you have no desire to think for your­ expect? Duke Blue is an innocuous magazine begun last Duke Conservative Caucus, followed closely by College self on social and economic issues the next four years, year — you could do a lot worse than write for these Republicans. then the BSA is for you. You'll find a valuable support guys. As for socializing, stick with the Greeks. Any group group that will sustain your prejudices and nurture you For instance, you could write for the Missing Link, that is this much maligned by the campus left has got to on Jesse Jackson nostrums that have become orthodoxy which is Duke's bad rendition of The Daily Worker. have something going for it. for many blacks at Duke. Writers for this rag say things like this: "When these peo­ Stanley Ridgley is a graduate student in political sci- Don't expect to hear anything about brilliant black ple spoke with us, I got that warm electric feeling that I economists like Thomas Sowell and Walter Williams or first-rate black academics like Harvard's Glenn Loury who dare challenge the Jesse-speak orthodoxy. The Grand Poobah of the BSA will instruct you what to care about, what issues are important, who your enemies are, who your friends should be, what to demonstrate for, when to demonstrate and what to wear at the demon­ stration. Some folks fancy this group as showing "solidarity." Actually, it shows nothing but the inherent dangers of lemming-thought. You might consider working with the Student Activist Coalition, a group of sixties-radical wannabes with no war to protest, no draft to dodge and no significant agenda to speak of. Armchair revolutionaries, they're a bunch of real grouches with nothing but time, money and contrived guilt on their hands. Come the revolution, these folks will watch it on cable between tennis sets. In one of those bizarre quirks of the academic market­ place, Marxism has recently become quite the rage both in and out of the classroom. Move over Robin Williams, step aside Timothy Dalton . . . Karl Marx is hot. If you're already riding the crest of this fad and in search of your very own Marxist maven, Duke is for you. Some of the richest Marxists in the country are fever­ ishly cerebrating at Duke University — mind you, these are the best Marxists money can buy. Moreover, you'll find Duke's coterie of high-power, highly-paid Marxists thrumming away where you'd least expect it — in the English Department. Fortunately, most of them don't teach; that mundane task goes to graduate students ,Ca^, ^____^c___^e__D^ W^MMfiL^ \/ -7 \ \ \ V- Z^-^S— _y It must have crossed your mind — is this Marx thing a x It must have crossed your mind — is this Marx thing a -^=__r.~- \-/S 1 _J — ' — — --^ Woodstock anniversary finds student activism alive and well Everything important happened in 1969, or at leasleastt . . -I-I • • • tive campus, but activism here is so rampant some ststuu ­ onnnpe micrVitmight. think SsOo fromm the news latelylafplv . .TnnrnfJournalistl listss • ThI ft _e^ nOTTniTbottoml Ilin IIIPe dentHpnts jokeinkprdl last sprinsnrincgr thathatt, "mayb"mavhep wWeP shoulshnnlHd havep ai have spent so much time commemorating this or that protest against protesters." The current wave of social anniversary that some current news stories have been consciousness began in 1985, when students protested overshadowed. July's excessive reliving of the moon Gillian Bruce apartheid in South Africa by building and burning shan­ landing probably outdid the attention paid the event ties on the quad. Women — and men — marched to take cal overtones than Woodstock. Sure, the people who when it originally happened. back the night; students of all colors demonstrated for went to Woodstock tended to be liberal, tended to advo­ The moon landing and Chappaquiddick were essen­ more minority faculty. cate free love and the legalization of marijuana and tially political events that had political consequences: The CIA came recruiting and got a rather rude recep­ tended to be pacifists. But that's not why they went. The United States beat the Soviets in the space race; tion, and even President Reagan was the target of public They went to hear the music: The incredible list of Ted Kennedy was forever kept out of the Oval Office. criticism. Students took part in the Crop Walk, performers included Jimi Hendrix, The Who, Credence But occurences that have "social" impact tend to rate demanded day-care facilities, and worked to improve Clearwater Revival and the Grateful Dead. much lower on the scale of newsworthiness, although low-income housing in Durham. Quite a few campus rep­ They also went to hang out. Despite shortages of food, they may have set the tone of a decade and dictated the resentatives traveled to national demonstrations, such blankets and medical supplies, people shared what they values of an entire generation. We probably won't hear as the marches for abortion rights and Soviet Jewry in had and the weekend was peaceful. Bring half a million much about the 20th anniversary of Woodstock — the Washington and the march for the homeless in Atlanta. people together in one place today and they'd start a riot greatest hippie gathering in history — because it didn't More politically liberal campuses like Harvard and within minutes. affect presidential policy or foreign affairs. Columbia may claim even more student activism, but Several recent books about Woodstock speculate on Political activism back then was passionate but gener­ Duke's example is important. Even a mostly Republican whether the concert had any effect at all. Most authors ally disorganized. Large numbers of people felt strongly student body can get involved in community and na­ seem convinced that the flower children of the 1960s about an issue so they took to the streets. It certainly got tional concerns. have grown lazy and complacent, never capitalizing on attention, and it effected some changes in the system. Mysteriously, the withering flower children want to the spotlight when they had it, and that today's young But often the lack of a specific strategy meant the impose their cynicism on us. They seem to believe that people are too apathetic and materialistic to get involved movement stagnated after the initial burst of energy. their generation was the only one special enough to in social or political issues. Maybe that's one reason baby boomers feel their revolu­ really care, to feel angry and be willing to fight for Members of the "Woodstock Nation," as concertgoers tion died after Woodstock. A lot of other factors — the es­ change. were later dubbed, have long romanticized the weekend calation in Vietnam, assassinations and Watergate — as a symbol of the ideals that made the 60s the most tur­ also put a damper on the excitement. But times have changed, and the children of the 80s bulent decade in American history. When aging hippies look at today's college students, have learned from their parents. We're working not just But they forget that Woodstock was almost expressly they see apathy because vast numbers of kids aren't oc­ for ideals, but for concrete changes. At Live Aid in 1985, non-political. When radical Abbie Hoffman stood up to cupying administration buildings or rioting on the quad. veteran hippie Joan Baez told the millions in Philadel­ rally the crowd about Vietnam and civil rights, Who gui­ Instead, students divide into smaller action groups tar­ phia that "This is your Woodstock, and it's about time." tarist Pete Townshend kicked him off the stage. People geted at specific issues: racial discrimination, abortion In a way, she's right: As Woodstock symbolized the pas­ in the audience said bringing up politics was "a real rights, faculty recruitment. Students use the press to sion of the 60s, Live Aid, and its mission to help the hun­ bummer." All they wanted to do was listen to the music, their best advantage, work with the authorities to gry, symbolizes the action of the 80s. smoke a few joints and relax. achieve solutions and organize themselves efficiently. It's about time. In the 1980s, Live Aid and Farm Aid had more politi- Duke is often characterized as a politically conserva­ Gillian Bruce is a Trinity senior. PAGE 16 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26/1989 Comics

Bloom County / Berke Breathed THE Daily Crossword .yj-m.. _-»!<*

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THE CHRONICLE "And notice, gentlemen, the faster I go, the more Simmons sounds like a motorboat." Copy editors: Beau Dure Chris O'Brien Jamie O'Brien Doonesbury / Garry Trudeau Matt Sclafani

HONBY HUAH?THB YBS, CHBCK OUT THAT PAS5P0R7, LBT MB 6BT THIS HBY, THB Photography editor: Matt Sclafani MOSTWAhlWP BUT IT'S JACK' P/PLOMAT/C! HUAN'5 STRAIGHT. YOUMAR- YOU SUIT CHICK'S OH, SIR... H00LI6AN IN OKAY MY IAJIFB, AND YOU PEOPLB RJBPARUMOR- GOT IT, Y0UR- WORTH A THAT'S Layout: Roberta Miller MILLION ALL OF CHINA? NOW. CANT TOUCH HBR. NOW, M0N6BRJN6, COUNTBR-PIN- SBLF, SO R5V0LUTI0NARY, BUCKS TO CAPICH5-*. HEAP. SIAIBFT! Paste-up: Ro I Iy M i 11 er BAD-BLBMBNT MB!, THU'6? Account representatives: Judy Bartlett Betty Hawkins Advertising saies staff: Jennifer Tripp Advertising production staff:... .Charles Carson Roily Miller Secretary: Jennifer Springer

Today South, 12 noon-l:20 p.m. For information and copies Community Calendarof storie s call Joy Javits Stewart at 684-2027. Irish Band and Baliadeer, in concert at Sarah P. Duke Gardens, noon. Room 1102, 12 noon-1 p.m. For information and reg­ Exhibit Thursday, July 27 istration call 684-2756. North Carolina Quilts, an exhibit featuring a variety of Wednesday, August 2 sizes, patterns, fabrics, will be on display throughout "Project Management," lecture presented by Ameri­ the month of August. North Carolina Crafts Gallery, can Society for Training and Development. North Mallarme Chamber Players in concert, Sarah P. Duke 212 West Main Street, Carrboro. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon­ Carolina State University Faculty Club, 3:30-6 p.m. Gardens, 12 noon. Rain date August 9. day through Saturday. For information call 942-4948. $5 members, $8 guests and visitors. To register call Quitting Time Part II, free program for Duke employ­ Paula Berardinelli, 851-4601. ees who want help to quit smoking. Duke North, Room Public Notice Saturday, July 29 1103, 12 noon-1 p.m. Internships are available for the Broadway Preview Series presentation of THE CIRCLE starring Rex Har­ Arts and Crafts Festival presented by Orange United Sunday, August 6 rison, Glynnis Johns, and Stewart Granger. The show will preview at Duke in mid-September before its offi­ Methodist Church, 1221 Airport Road, Chapel Hill. Paul Jeffrey Quartet in concert, Sarah P. Duke Gar­ cial New York opening. Ail undergraduate and 2 p.m. For information call 942-2825. dens, 5 p.m. Rain date August 13. graduate students are eligible to apply. Internships Monday, July 31 Friday, August 11 begin at start of Fall Semester; a limited number of interns are needed immediately. For information and Quitting Time Part I, free program for Duke employees "Stellar Stories," creative literary discussion, Dean's application call Ron Kumin, 684-8924 or Peter Coyle, who want some help to quit smoking. Duke North, Conference Room (MI33) Green Zone, Duke Hospital 684-2911. WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 17 ^EVERYTHING GREEN *£*PLANTS FLORIST NURSERY We're bigger than we look! Need

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NEED WORK STUDY STUDENT for JUST YOUR TYPE Word Processing 1-7 BR, convenient to Duke. Personals Announcements Help Wanted data entry, coding, calculating. Service will type your papers, dis­ Charming older homes w/FPLs, $5.10 per hour, 15 — 20 hours per sertations, letters, etc, quickly and 10' ceilings, hardwood floors. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED for study of Freshman! Sophomores! Juniors! RESEARCH STUDY week. Flexible schedule starting professionally. Emergency typing Apple Realty 493-5618. Kegel muscle function. Must have Seniors! Interested in performing Healthy men and women (ages I8­ end of August. Call Judy Moore, welcome. 489-8700 (24 hours). never been pregnant orhave not worthwhile service? Interested in 60) are needed to participate in a Auxiliaries Finance Office, carried pregnancy to term. Please meeting new people? Interested in study of calcitonin effects on Vita­ (919)684-5132. Real Estate Sales min D metabolism. The study will contact John Thorp or Watson Roommate Wanted attending exciting social gather­ involve getting 4 injections of cal­ Bowes in Chapel Hill at 966-1601. Several assistants needed for HOUSE FOR SALE ings? Interested in belonging to a citonin, a medicine used in the EXPENSES COVERED! school year in Medical Psychology. Grad or Professional female, non- Duke Forest (near Lakewood) — close and dedicated group of peo­ treatment of Paget's Disease, over Tasks include administering ques­ smoker to share large furnished 2 Spacious 3-bdrm house w/carport ple? If you are, then rush Alpha Phi 2 days. There will be a $75 com­ Magnolia Grill is now hiring for tionnaires to patients with chronic bedroom apartment. Across the in perfect condition on wooded cul- Omega, the only service fraternity pensation for those who partici­ evening dessert station and pain, arthritis, and sickle cell dis­ street from East Campus, $221/ de-sac. All major appliances. LESS at Duke! pate in the study. For further infor­ night dishwashing positions. ease. Must be 80/20 work study. mo. low utilities. Please call 688- THAN 1 MILE from Duke. Large mation please call Dr. Michael Please apply at 1002 Ninth St. Contact Dr. Williams at 684-4443. 2379, evenings. backyard. Quiet and convenient to Econs at 684-6089 or 684-6697. Partyology 212 Mon-Sat between 10 a.m. and 4 all parts of Duke. $79,500. Call You signed up for the course: NEED A HOUSEMATE? Female grad Edmond at 489-9304 or leave p.m. Child Care that took guts. You crammed all BE A SUMMER TOUR GUIDE! If you student needs a home near Duke. message on answ. machine. will be in Durham area the month ASAP. Prefer non-smoker. I'm mov­ night long for the midterm: that MOTHER'S HELPER NEEDED for 2 of August, consider being a paid TEACHERS FOR RELIGIOUS and He­ ing from Boston and will be visiting took dedication to learn. But or 3 afternoons per week, flexible STUDENTS! WHY NOT OWN spa­ Duke tour guide. All those inter­ brew school 1989-90, Thursdays Durham July 26-30. Call me then now, It's time to celebrate! Par­ schedule, starting end of August cious 3-bedroom home with ested call 684-3214 x43, Monday and/or Sunday. Also Music Teacher at 286-4362. Ask for Elana. tyology 212 — The Graduation. for child care for 5 year old and character near East? Fireplace, through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 Needed, good wage. 489-7062, Don't miss the chance to get newborn, including light house­ carpeting, appliances, W/D con­ p.m. 933-2182. down and dirty and fooze with work and errands; must have own Apts. for Rent nections. $57,000; assumable the DKE's. It's time to show what transportation and references; $6/ mortgage, 1217 Clarendon, ADOPTION — PLEASE ANSWER INTERESTED IN SOME PRACTICAL you learned In class. Keep an hr. Call 682-6784. NON-SMOKING FEMALE to share 286-0013. OUR PRAYERS. We are a happily business experience before you eye out for the flyers. Coming townhouse. Prefer prof., grad married, financially secure cou­ graduate? Work/study accountant For 4 month old beginning 8/15. 4 bedroom, 2-1/2 bath home on soon to the White House. student. Furnished BR, own bath, ple who dream of sharing our needed for Fall 1989 Duke United Near campus or downtown. Call 2.75 acres in SW Durham. 2000 W/D, util. furnished. Must like love with a newborn baby. Expen­ Way Campaign. 12/15 hrs/wk, 683-5224 or collect (919) 362- sq. feet, fireplace, basement, lg. JOSH house cat. 383-8729. Your gray hair makes you look SO ses paid. Legal and Confidential. flexible schedule. Bookkeeping ex­ 7138. deck. Freshly painted, new roof. distinguished. I want to run my fin­ Please call Lucy/Howie collect: perience helpful, but not neces­ Conv. to Duke and UNC. PROFESSIONAL COUPLE NEEDING 4 bedroom, 2 bath apartment. gers through your flowing mane — (516) 625-0657. sary. No fund-raising required. $137,000. 933-5752. warm, mature caregiver. 20 hours Large, sunny, across street from an admiring classmate. Please call 684-3710 when you BODY WAXING and/or permanent weekly, $5+ hourly. References, East Campus. Washer/Dryer. return if you are interested. painless hair removal. Finally Free transportation required. 493- Available August 1st. $840/ For Sale — Misc. Painless Hair Removal, 714 Ninth Research assistant needed for lab 0999. month —489-1989. 1974 Honda 360 motorcycle, just St. 286-1213. studying cystic fibrosis, 15-20 hrs/ BABYSITTER NEEDED FOR THURS. tuned and inspected, includes hel­ wk, prefer student with science LAMINATED AFTERNOONS 12:00 p.m. — 5:00 mets, cover and Duke parking major. Available through next year, Houses for Rent p.m. for rest of summer or continu- sticker. $350 — call Brent at Freshmen $4.50-$5.50/hr. Call 684-6879. PHOTO ID'S Come see "Young Frankenstein" in ing. Call 471-3855. 2 BR duplex behind East Campus. (919)489-6773. • Instant Passport and Job the Bryan Center Film Theater on BE A SUMMER TOUR GUIDE! If you Hardwood floors, extra storage Creampuff Application Photos In Color your first night at Duke, Thursday, will be in Durham area the month room — $390/ + MU. Call 544- 2/$6.00 • over 10 - $2.50 ea. Services Offered '76 rip-roaring Plymouth Volare Aug. 24 at 7:00 p.m. and 9:30 of August, consider being a paid 6490. •Photo I.D. Cards available. Best offer. Will go 120 p.m. It's Free to all Duke students Duke tour guide. All those inter­ ROTC haircuts $5. Jim's Barber 'Laminating m.p.h., if driven off a 1,000 foot because it's a Freewater Prod­ ested call 684-3214 x43, Monday Shop near North Campus at 614 CONDOS, HOUSES, APART­ AH Services While You Watt cliff. Transmission's park, first, uction. through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 Trent Dr. Open Mon, Tue, & Wed MENTS. REAL ESTATE ASSO­ 900 West Main third, fourth gears work. Will throw p.m. only. Phone 286-9558. CIATES. CALL 682-8000. (across from Brightleaf) in fuzzy dice Call x- 7801. _ »_1_683-2118' M-F 10AM-5PM

Five Oaks COME - LIFT EVERY VOICE! Wesley Fellowship Seventh-Day Make a - The Wesfey Fellowship at Duke is a Adventist Church joyful * I* group of undergraduate friends, many of Minutes from Duke Sj whom are United Methodist. We care Saturday Sabbath School noise *** about reaching out to the world as a sign Meeting Time: HONCXR & PRAISE GOD! of our faith and hope, so we're involved "University Class" 9:30 AM in local missions like the retirement home LUTHERAN Worship 10:50 AM and the soup kitchen. This September CAMPUS Pastor Dave Banks MINISTRY we'll go to tbe-beach for a weekend For additional information and/or in the basement retreat, and another retreat to the moun­ transportation call 489-7777 or 489-2378. of Duke Chapel tains this winter. 4124 Farrington Road, Durham Campus Pastor Hubert Beck 684-6955 These are great times for fun and a deep­ We gather for Holy Communion every Wednesday ening of our faith. THE CHRONICLE evening at 9:30 p.m. in Duke Chapel Basement. CLASSIFIEDS INFORMATION We gather for a Fellowship Supper every Sunday Our office is in the basement of the Chapel and evening at 5:30 p.m. in Duke Chapel Basement. our campus minister's name is Oli Jenkins. All are BASIC RATES welcome. Office phone: 684-5955. $3.00 (per day) for the first 15 words or less. 100 (per day) for each additional word. I DONt MHT TO SO SPECIAL FEATURES For those who care To SCHOOL. 1 DON'T WfVHT floo ubtvecove ** about their clothes.., (Combinations accepted.) TO 8_ UERE AT All. A 3WiWM£...UMM $1.00 extra per day for All Bold Words. WV8BA M&&A... $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading The Annual Pilgrimage 00HP-WTf 00MP- (maximum 15 spaces). THPT/ White Star Once ugain. o new year is born. $2.00 extra per day for a Boxed Ad. Don't miss your opportunity Cleaners to be a part of DEADLINE 900 9th Street 1 business day prior to publication The Chronicle 286-2271 by 12:00 Noon. • FULL SERVICE LAUNDRY PAYMENT • DRY CLEANERS Prepayment is required. • ALTERATION SERVICE Cash, check or Duke IR accepted. ...with Complete Box (We cannot make change for cash payments.) The Chronicle's Storage 24-HOUR DROP-OFF LOCATION WHITE STAR JR. 3rd floor Flowers Building (near Duke Chapel) where classifieds forms are available. Corner Cole Mill Open House fit Hillsborough Rd. OR MAIL TO: 383-3256 Chronicle Classifieds BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706. Come one, come all to the open house of The Laundry featured by the Duke Community's only daily newspa­ Maytag in a national CALL 684-6106 IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT CLASSIFIEDS. per. Sept. 1. Third Floor Flowers Building. Advertising Campaign NO REFUNDS OR CANCELLATIONS AFTER FIRST INSERTION DEADLINE. 4 p.m. Be there or be a freshman. I _—.__— ' E.C. Smart, President i. . .:. \ _J WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 19 Doctor files complaint against University

• COMPLAINT from page 1 brought his complaints to the attention of Dr. William 1986. In response to these complaints, "Dr. Jennings ad­ Arilyan, then chancellor for health affairs, the complaint mitted the impropriety of charging unsuspecting pa­ states. Anlyan, "acting in good faith," referred him to tients $120 for this B72.3 test," accortding to McCarty's Adcock. complaint. "Mr. Adcock obstructed any meaningful dialogue or in­ While Jennings refunded money to a "token group of vestigation of the issues by first attempting to further 23 patients," he did not conduct an investigation into the the attempt at intimidation of Dr. McCarty, suggesting use of B72.3 despite information suggesting unethical Dr. McCarty seek psychiatric counseling with a Duke practices were being used, the complaint states. administrative psychiatrist and fostering the ap- Instead, Jennings proceeded to inform Johnston of pearence of a personal conflict between Dr. McCarty and McCarty's complaints, an action which "raised Dr. Dr. Johnston to deflect any meaningful investigations of Johnston's anger against Dr. McCarty," the complaint the actual concerns which had in fact been raised by sev­ adds. eral attending physicians within the Duke Medical Cen­ In 1987, Johnston signed an agreement to market ter," the complaint states. B72.3 manufactured at the University, an arrangement that Johnston, Jennings and the department stood to The complaint also charges Jennings, Adcock and profit from, the complaint continues. Wallace with failure to settle the dispute, which is a In response to continuing use of the test, which violation of published University rules and the Ameri­ McCarty felt posed a threat to patient health, McCarty can Medical Association Principles of Medical Ethics.

MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE Shroomin' DIALING Those professors are conducting some weird ex­ FOR DUKE periments outside of the physics building. IS GOING STRONG! Baptist Church

On behalf of the entire University, the Annual Fund Inclusive, Liberal and Warm Visit us for worship and consider us for would like to thank the students, individuals and your Church. We are pleased to offer a organizations who volunteered to call alumni to raise fellowship group and Church School Class operating funds for Duke. for Students. Information 15-501 & Willow Dr. & Rides Church School 9:30 SPRING 1989 HONOR ROLL WINNERS Chapel Hill 942-4964 Worship 11:00 |

Individual Winner: Jim Farrell '89 (Prize: answering machine) Honorable Mention: Ted Ebel '92 (Prize: tuxedo rental) The BAPTIST Daniel Dees '92 (Prize: dinner for two) STUDENT UNION, Greek Winner: Alpha Epsilon Pi ($100 for charity of choice) a Christian fellowship Honorable Mention: Delta Sigma Phi Delta Kappa Epsilon group on campus, Sigma Alpha Epsilon welcomes all new Alpha Delta Pi Pi Beta Phi students to Duke.

Freshman Dorm Winner: Southgate (Dominos Pizza party) Honorable Mention: Gilbert-Addoms BSCl #- This Fall, you and/or the organization with which you are affiliated will have the opportunity to be listed on our next Honor Roll of Winners. Telethons begin in late September, and we need your help.

'C/S^ The 1988-89 Duke Telethon Program raised $2 million for university academic operating expenses. Next WELCOMES YOU! year, Duke's needs will be even greater. This important Thursday Lunch university program is counting on you to help raise vital 11:30-1:30 Chapel Basement Kitchen Monday Program funds. Put it on your calendar today! 7-8:30 p.m. Chapel Basement Lounge

Susan D. Fricks, Presbyterian Campus Minister 036 Chapel Basement • 684-5955 PAGE 20 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 New ballpark sites considered

• BALLPARK from page 3 ceptionally good to work with." told the Durham Morning Herald the day The third alternative, the Briggs Ave­ after the council voted. nue site, is the least expensive, Powell Powell disagreed with Williams' asses- continued. Briggs Avenue is located on ment. The corporations offered to invest the outskirts of Durham where more open in a new stadium knowing that there land exists, Powell said. The city already were several sites under consideration. owns a plot of land on which to build a Their investment is not contingent on any ballpark. The city could create "a nice site, Powell said. "The vice president of park-like setting," Powell said. Glaxo is at all of the Durham Bulls games Because this location is further away at DAP — I know he likes the existing from downtown than the other two sites, stadium," Powell said. it is more inaccessible and contributes The problem with the University Ford less to Durham's economy, he added. site is that it is probably the most expen­ Powell has also begun to meet with sive option because of the need to buy out County Manager Jack Bond on how the the dealership, Powell said. He would not City and County will split the cost, Powell release the price to buy the Ford property. said. One of the problems is that there is "We're not far enough along in the nego­ no set formula to use to divide up city/ tiations to say. I know what the sticker county responsibility, he said. But overall, MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE price is, but we're still trying to negotiate Powell said he views the ballpark as a it down," Powell said. "Ford has been ex­ joint partnership. University Ford has a high sticker price.

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Before you take the big test- Give a little one of your own.

How do you find the best course for the LSAT, GRE or Invoices for fall tuition and fees have been GMAT? Try asking course directors the following issued to all registered students. Please questions. 1. Is your average class size 10 students, grouped by shared contact our office immediately ability? Is the maximum 12? 2. What is your average score improvement? (919) 684-3531, if you have not received an 3. Do you give at least four diagnostic tests? Score them with sophisticated computer programs to track progress, invoice by 07/21/89. Late identify weak spots? 4. How are your teachers trained? With tapes, or by charges may be assessed on trainers? For how long? 5. Do you provide free tutoring for students who have done all the regular course work but need extra help? payments received after 6. Do you have a money-back guarantee? 7. Do you spend $500,000 every year on research, 08/21/89. Non-registered development, and training? students are required to make payment for tuition, THE fees, required deposits, and PRINCETOETONN ^8 any past due balances at the REVIEW time of registration. (919) 967-7209 The Princeton Review is not affiliated with the Educational L Testing Service or. Princeton,University. J ___. ———. ___. ___. ———. ———. ———* mmmi ——— ——— ^^ ^^^ • .._ ^^^ . WEDNESDAY, JULY 26. 1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 21 TEXTBOOKS NEW 6Tm ••• SV/. AND • • ••• USED Save 25% on used books at THE BOOK EXCHANGE Downtown at Five Points 107 West Chapel Hill Street, Durham

Your first stop in Durham should be The Book Exchange. See us...then compare. Our 56th Year of Service to Duke and Other Students in the Area 682-4662 OPEN LABOR DAY! OPEN Mon.-Sat. 8:45-6:00 We will be OPEN on Sunday, Aug. 27 1:00-5:00 PAGE 22 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 University serves eviction notices to Carolantic tenants

• HOUSING from page 1 plans to move. The letter said the tenants would be "We've never tried to take that stance," he said. "We had no complaints from the residents of the apartments. given another notice six months before they will have to don't like the impact of that. We're trying to soften the He said some of the tenants have already gotten in touch move as well as $500 for moving costs. blow with the Public Housing Authority so they can receive Wallace said the letter told the tenants they "need to "As long as we handle the process fairly for the indi­ vouchers to look for new apartments. realize that this neighborhood is going to change" into viduals, that's our major concern," Wallace said. Letters were sent to 11 tenants, but George Leech of Medical Center expansions. The Medical Center plans Forty-two families living in the University-owned the Durham Public Housing Authority said two tenants for the apartment complexes are still unclear. Westover Park Apartments were forced to relocate be­ have since left, leaving only nine tenants. "We know that this information may cause you some tween March and July of 1988 when the complex was Leech said he has not met with the tenants of the concern, but we felt it best to keep you up-to-date and rezoned Controversy arose when representatives of the Carolantic Apartments yet, but has not received any give you the earliest possible notice of our plans to use tenants claimed the University was not providing ade­ complaints from them. He said the supply of low income these apartment buildings for University purposes," the quate compensation for the tenants. housing available "has outgrown the demand. T think letter from Wallace told the tenants. The University provided the Westover Park tenants [the tenants] can adequately find units." Wallace also sent an explanatory letter to the City with the equivalent of two months' rent to aid in reloca­ "Here Duke is willing to pay an adequate amount and Council detailing the University's plans to convert the tion plus $250 for moving costs. Tenant representatives we are able to subsidize," Leech said. Carolantic Apartments in six months and other apart­ Terry Barrett and Joseph Horton requested $3,250 for Tenants of other apartment complexes in the area also ments in the area with a year. each tenant; their request was denied owned by the University, were given letters from Wal­ Wallace said that under state law, tenants on a Leech said the Westover Park problems were a result lace stating they would be given relocation notices monthly lease only have to be given notice a month of "miscommunication." within the next 12 months and should begin making before relocation. Craig Whitlock contributed to this article.

byte type S € R V \ C € S. Word Processing, Desktop Publishing, Data Entry

= Newsletters = Catalogs = Forms = Manuscripts = Reports == Flyers _= Flow Charts = Stationery = Resumes = Repetitive Letters = Proposals = Brochures = Correspondence = Business Cards = Overheads = Transcription Questions = Statistical Typing = Mailing Labels 500 Eastowne Drive, Suite 208 = Box 3733 = Chapel Hill, NC 27514 USA = 919/942-206 and 919/489-8401 Residential Life and the Cleland Fund will sponsor a series of programs to address publicly ethics at Duke University.

OUR VALUES - OUR COMMUNITY will begin on September 28 with a panel discussion in which Duke Community representatives will speak to the ethics of our community. Questions from com­ munity members are invited so that the discussions reflect your ideas and sensi­ bilities about how this community defines,, promotes and lives its values. IN Submit your questions to: OUR VALUES - ONE COMMUNITY ^Berlin 209 Flowers Bldg. • 684-6313

Register for MARXISM AND SOCIETY

Taught during Fail Terms only

!DC 139 M/W 1:50-3:05pm, 204B East Duke Bldg.

The course wil! combine a ciose reading of January 31 - July 21,1990 selected texts by Marx with presentations on central topics by invited speakers from a A Duke semester based at the variety of disciplines. The unifying theme of Free University of West Berlin the course will be a critical appraisal of Marxist methods of analysis and their social For additional information, a brochure and implications considered in the light of application form, write or call: theoretical alternatives and changing Administrative Director, Duke in Berlin historical circumstances. Duke University, 121 Allen Building Durham, N.C. 27706 Tel: (919) 684-2621 WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 23

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A Wonderful Place To Unwind PAGE 24 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989

Tips On Buying Your Books! SHOP EARLY! • Avoid long lines and crowds by shopping early. • Used books cost you 25% less than new books. Shop early for the best selection. • If you are paying by check, stop at the check approval desk first and bring two forms of identification. > if you are uncertain about your books, go to class first.

DUKE UNIVERSITY TEXTBOOK STORE 10*0 et *_<_ Lower Level Bryan Center, West Campus Durham, NC 27706 (919) 684-6793 WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 25 DUKE UNIVERSITY TEXTBOOK STORE Your Source for Duke Course Books SAVE 25% WHEN YOU BUY USED BOOKS

Open Mon. - Sat. 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. SPECIAL ORIENTATION HOURS Sunday, August 27 l p.m. - 5 p.m. Monday, August 28 8:30 a.m. - 7 p.m. The Textbook Store has the largest selection of new and used books available for Duke courses. DUKE UNIVERSITY TEXTBOOK STORE ii_i? ct &£ Lower Level Bryan Center, West Campus Durham, NC 27706 (919)684-6793 PAGE 26 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Tel-Com move means students must buy telephones for dorms

• PHONES from page 1 a basic desk handset and a wireless simply to remove all phones, Sefton said. phone, Craig said. The entire episode was not planned un­ Prices will range from $39.95 for the til mid-summer, Sefton added. basic desk model to about $120 for the "It just kind of happened with a series combination phone-answering machine, of events," he said. "We just hit a cross­ he said. roads, and hey, the plan we had wasn't going to work and we had to regroup." "I didn't want it to come across as if I A lot of students are was pulling a fast one. That wasn't my in­ tention at all." looking for more than Most residential colleges and univer­ your basic phone sities presently require students to pur­ chase their own phones, which allows for service. more flexibility, Sefton said. Because Tel-Com will no longer have to Tommy Semans repair phones, the basic service rate will not increase this year, Sefton said, even ASDU President though extra funds are being used to remove phones from the dorms. All telephones sold by Duke Stores will be manufactured by Southwestern Bell, except the Blue Devil phone, which is UPI PHOTO made by ITT, he added. Wiring accesso­ Students will need to purchase their own phones for dorm rooms. I didn't want it to ries, miscellaneous jacks and other acces­ come across as if I sories such as separate answering will was pulling a fast also be available. Sefton said Tel-Com workers should one. That wasn't my have all phones removed from University GENERAL ELECTRIC intention at all. housing by the start of the fall semester. Summer residents will be able to retain use of their phone service, although work­ Norm Sefton ers will retrofit the jack connections Tel-Com Director before removing the phone unit at the end of Summer Term II, he added. "I'm optimistic right now that it will all As a result of the new jacks, students be done by the start of the school year," will now be able to easily connect answer­ Sefton said, adding that he still expected ing machines, computer modem hookups, that some returning students may be wireless phones and multiple phone sets. caught by surprise. Through Duke Stores, Tel-Com will sell "I'm anticipating that there will still be all 2,400 of "the good old vanilla type somewhat of a shock" when students ar­ phones" that formerly were in the dor­ rive back on campus, he said. mitories for $3 each, Sefton said. ASDU President Tommy Semans said The old telephones will only be avail­ he was initially surprised after hearing of able this fall, however, so in future years the decision to stop providing phones free students will have to purchase phones of charge, although he said the plan was a elsewhere, he said. sound one. Duke Stores will sell a myriad of other "It's a scary thing to think about right DUKE UNIVERSITY phone brands in addition to the used off the bat," Semans said. "It's just a step models, according to Tom Craig, manager in the right direction. I think that they've STUDENTS • FACULTY • STAFF of West Campus stores and operations. made it a pretty comfortable move." Among the choices available will be a Semans said he was pleased that the Identification Required? Blue Devil touch-tone phone, red designer ASDU resolution calling for modular phones with enlarged number pads, jacks was being followed, albeit in a more BONUS DISCOUNTS phones with answering machines built in, drastic way than expected. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED' ... OR YOUR MICROWAVE OVENS MONEY BACK! AND ^|r ACCESSORIES H I \hN ^1/1 B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations •SAVE TIME!! $yy95^ • COMPLETE MEALS! ORIENTATION EVENTS •COMPACT SIZE! •DISCOUNT PRICES! FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 7:00 P.M. Only With University Identification I Oneg Shabbat & Reception $99.95 value Old Trinity Room - West Campus Union Now you can have your own microwave oven SAVE MONEY AND TIME! SUNDAY, AUGUST 27,11:30 A.M. Picnic - East Campus Gazebo HURRY! OFFER ENDS SOON!! (in case of rain, Giles Dorm Commons) ASK FOR YOUR SPECIAL OFFERS NOBODY TAKES CARE OF YOU LIKE FRIEDMANS! WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 9:30 P.M. L Ice Cream Social FINANCING AVAILABLE /UNIV ERSITY Chapel Basement f Tf WER

TO (:HAPE L HILL BLVD OURHAM The Hillel office is located SOUTH A SQUARE MAI I in the Chapel basemenL FRIEDMANS I E THE MICROWAVE SPECIALISTS 1 Tel. 684-5955. I 489-2384 UNIVERSITY DRIVE Rabbi Frank Fischer or Lauren Stone VISA-CHOICE PaiHway Pia/a MASTERCARD Shopping C*»"l*i DISCOVER K MART ^^^ Jewish Student Organization PARKWAY PLAZA CENTER FRIEDMANS L. WiVtVMWWAVAV. WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 2

STUDENT STUDENT LABOR SERVICES JOB FAIR SHORT ON CASH? Applications accepted: LOOKING FOR GOOD JOB EXPERIENCE? Wednesday, August 2,1989 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Student Labor Services can provide Duke Bryan Center/ students with needed job experience at Video Screening Room (West Campus) convenient on-campus locations. • Flexible Hours We provide flexible work hours. Set your own • Free Meals (with Food schedule with a maximum of 19.9 work hours a Service Jobs) week possible. Wages start at $4.10 an hour • $4.10 per hr. Starting Pay with pay increases based on the number of • Uniforms Furnished hours worked as well as the quality of • No Experience Necessary performance. • Training Provided At Student Labor Services we provide any Must be at least 16 years old and training or uniforms necessary for jobs such as enrolled in High School, College, or bartender, mover, typist, cashier, lab assistant, Technical School, etc. courier, computer operator, waiter/waitress, and others. Positions Available: Cashiers Fill out this application form today and send to: Student Labor Services Box 4853, Duke Station Dish Machine Operators Duke University Durham, NC 27706 Waiters /Waitresses Food Service Helpers APPLICATION FOR EMPLOYMENT Movers Student Managers SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER: Bartenders NAME: last first initial Bus People PERMANENT ADDRESS: Grill Cooks ... and more! street For additional information call: city state zip BIRTH DATE: DUKE PHONE # 684-2752 or 684-5147 DUKE STUDENT: FRESH. SOPH _ JR. _SR. GRAD. Please bring two forms of I.D... .One PREVIOUSLY EMPLOYED BY DUKE: YES .NO .IF YES, WHERE: _ from each group listed below: WORK STUDY MONEY: YES NO U.S. CITIZEN: YES NO Group I: IN CASE OF EMERGENCY NOTIFY: NAME: A state-issued drivers license or permit OR ADDRESS: A state issued I.D. Card CITY: STATE:. ZIP: Group II: TELEPHONE: ( ) Original Social Security Number-card, OR ' RELATIONSHIP: An original birth certificate issued by a state, county, or municipal authority, bearing a seal. Student Labor Services is operated by Duke University Food Services. PAGE 28 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 ZENITH ANNOUNCES NEW PRODUCTS NEW PRICES

$1685 $2058 Z-286/8 MHZ LP Desktop PC Supersport Laptop Computer ZSA 208-2 ZWL 184-2

Additional configurations available upon request Additional configurations available upon request

ZENITH DATA SYSTEMS CELEBRATES YOUR RETURN TO CAMPUS WITH SPECIAL STUDENT PC OFFERS! It's the start of a brand new school year. And Zenith Data Systems would like to welcome you back with this special personal computer offer. With a Zenith Data Systems PC, XT or AT on your desk $2326 you'll be able to write and edit papers in a fraction of the time. Z-286/12 MHZ LP Desktop PC You'll also enjoy many advanced capabilities that'll give you ZMC 212-20 a definite advantage throughout your college career. Of course, that advantage will continue long after college since Zenith Data Systems PCs are among the preferred MS DOS computers in business, too. So visit your nearby Zenith Data Systems Campus Contact today and make this your most exciting year yet. Make Your Return To Campus A Happy One — Visit Your Zenith Data Systems Campus Contact: Additional configurations available upon request Duke University Computer Store ym^mmmm data Bryan Center • 684-8956 systems THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON >

Special pricing offer good only on purchases through Zenith Contact(s) listed above by students, faculty and staff for their own use. No other discounts apply. Limit one personal computer and one monitor per individual in any 12-month period. Prices subject to change without notice. © 1988, Zenith Data Systems THE CHRONICLE

WEEKLY PULL-OUT SPORTS SUPPLEMENT WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 SPORTSWRAP • EXTRA! • • READ ALL ABOUT IT! • • EXTRA! •

TH c E CHRONICLE MONDAY. DECEMBER 15, 1986 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15.000 VOL. 82. NO. 72 DUKE WON. AKRON ZIP By MICHAEL LEBER i w Valenti set up to take the kick and waited for one of his teammates to make a run to­ _iS^ A^__^_TS NCAA title is school's first everward s him - and waited. any player or coach on the Duke soccer team and he will tell you. "The referree and everybody was yell­ Can Duke Soccer The Blue Devils should know, because ing at me to play the ball," Valenti said. "I as the scoreboard clock in the Tacoma dumped it into the middle hoping to get a Dome wound down to 0:00 in the NCAA lucky break." Division I soccer championship game The ball carried over the head of Akron Saturday night, Duke forward Tom defender Matt Smith to Blue Devil mid­ Stone's goal early in the second half still fielder Carl Williamson at the far post. Do It Again? stood as the only tally of the match. The second-year law student, who later in The 1-0 win over 12th-ranked Akron the evening would be named to the aca­ gave Duke, lOth-ranked entering the demic All-America team, trapped the ball. playoffs, the first team national cham­ As Zip goalkeeper David Zupko moved See Page 2 pionship in the school's history. over, Williamson passed the ball behind "It feels unbelievable," said Duke coach him to Stone who deposited a six yard John Rennie. "If the University wanted to strike into the top of the net at the 46:38 give the Duke soccer team a degree it mark. would be in chemistry. We found a com­ "Carl Williamson got himself into great bination that just refused to lose." position," Stone said. "Luckily [the pass] Ever since they beat Harvard 3-1 in the was right on my left peg." national semifinals last Sunday, the Blue Although Stone only had one other Devils kept insisting that they weren't shot, a soft header late in the first half, he satisfied with just making it to the finals. was named the game's outstanding offen­ That was also the case with Akron. "We're sive player. Senior sweeper Kelly Blue Devil Football: Weadock took defensive honors. extremely adamant to go out and win the game," said Zip midfielder Derek Gaffney While Stone scored the game winner, it at a press conference Friday. "We came was Duke's defense that truly won the out to play a game and we came out to game. The Zips launched 17 shots, but win." only three were good enough for Blue Devil goalkeeper Mark Dodd to be forced Bowl Game Bound The fierce determination both teams JANE RIBADENEYRA. THE CHRONICLE showed prior to the contest carried over to to make the save. Do the dome: Team members celebrate after 1-0 victory in championship game In the waning minutes of the game, Ak­ the soccer field. Akron came out playing a Saturday in Tacoma. physical style of soccer in the first half ron brought everyone forward in a last See Centerspread while the Blue Devils played with more fi­ three of Akron's seven shots and five of 16 tie, but the deadlock didn't last long. gasp effort to send the game into over­ nesse and looked a little tentative. Mid- fouls in the first half. "He is a typical Duke midfielder Joey Valenti, one of time. With 3:20 remaining, Akron's fielder Grahame Evison led the Zips' English player," said Duke senior forward three freshman starting for the Blue Dev­ Shaun Docking received a pass 30 yards charge. The sophomore from Crow- John Kerr. ils, was awarded a free kick on the right See ECSTASY on page 3 borough, England was responsible for The game reached halftime a scoreless wing about 30 yards from the Aknm goal. PAGE 2 / ThE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Duke soccer needs new dose of glory

Once again, and believe me it's becoming an annual occurrence, there are high hopes for the Duke men's soc­ Rodney Peele cer team. The Blue Devils have had unmatched success individually and as a team during this decade at Duke. team, and we did not have legitimate goal-scoring power Four times in the last seven years, Duke players have on the long run last year," Rennie added. "We had to ask walked off the field with the , pres­ guys like Joey Valenti and Brian Benedict and Clint ented annually to the best college player in the nation. Carnell, who were not pure strikers, to score goals, or The Missouri Athletic Club also awards a trophy, the Steve Knull and Chris Harrington and Brian Donnelly, MAC, to the best player. Duke has won that once as well. when that's really not their function either, to be the In 1983, Duke reached the national championship main goal-scoring threat. So we didn't have that last game only to lose in eight overtimes to Indiana. The Blue year." Devils reached the title game again in December of 1986 Does this team have the potential to correct those and this time they were not denied. Duke shut out the problems this fall? One can only wait and see. Zips of Akron, 1-0, to bring the school its first national "We certainly hope it's different," Rennie said. Accord­ championship in a team sport (see cover). ing to the Duke mentor, two players who had been slated Several freshmen — Brian Benedict, Bob Probst and to become primary goal scorers the past two seasons Joey Valenti — played key roles in that victory. Probst were Jason Hadges and Mike Clifford. Hadges has been shut down Roderick Scott, Akron's leading scorer, and injured for two seasons (see story, page 4), while Clifford drew a key foul on Scott. Valenti used the free kick from transferred before the 1987 season. that foul to set up the only goal of the contest, lofting a "This year we feel the depth is definitely there and we ball to Carl Williamson, who passed it to . have three incoming players who have been primary Stone then scored the game-winner with less than two goal scorers in their high school careers, as well as Jason minutes gone in the second half. Hadges returning," Rennie said. "We don't expect the With the exception of Benedict, who took a year off to three freshmen to play that role — one might be a de­ play for a U.S. national team in Chile and has two sea­ fender — but we've got players now to add to what we sons remaining, those freshmen are seniors now. In ad­ had last year, and we don't lose anybody out of the of­ dition, Troy Erickson (hurt during the playoffs in 1986), fense from last year." Steve Knull (walked on in 1986), and Keith Wiseman Even with so many players returning, Duke will have (injured in 1986) are back for their final seasons at trouble in the ACC. Other top teams such as Virginia, JIM JEFFERS/THE CHRONICLE Duke. North Carolina State and Clemson all have a majority of However, in the two years since the championship, their players returning as well. Brian Benedict, a finalist for national player of the Duke's seasons have ended in disappointing losses to The heart of the Blue Devils must be the senior class if year, is often a step ahead of defenders. North Carolina. In 1987, UNC eliminated the Blue Dev­ this team is going anywhere in November. They've ils from the NCAA's in the first round, and in 1988, the tasted the success of 1986 and they know what it takes. make a real good team out of," Rennie said. "But we had Tar Heels stopped Duke in the Atlantic Coast Confer­ Those memories should be inspiration for this team. to rely on midfielders to score goals or players who really ence Tournament. That loss kept Duke from earning a Benedict is part of that senior group, even though he weren't primary goal scorers to be key goal scorers, and bid to the NCAA's. has an extra year of eligibility remaining. Last year, he that doesn't last over a period of time, so we were up and "We were thin and then we lost some key players, but was a finalist for the Hermann and the MAC. His chan­ down. we were still a good team," said Duke head coach John ces to win will increase each year, although last year's "When those guys did score the goals, then we were Rennie. "I thought we still deserved a bid to the playoffs winner, of Indiana, was a sophomore as well. fine, but in most games we didn't have the primary goal and didn't get one. But those things even out, maybe No one created more opportunities for his teammates scorer, which we had with a John Kerr (42 career goals even 1986 where we could have been left out, we got in. last season than Benedict. Now Duke needs a player at Duke) or a Tom Stone (38 goals) or a (51 Those things balance out. who can consistently turn those opportunities into goals. goals) or a Sean McCoy (35 goals). Since I've been here, "We did not have a lot of senior leadership on the _ "Everything else on the team was good enough to on every team we've had anywhere from two to three See SOCCER on page 3 • Durham's Athletic The Finest Shoe, in Mobile Electronics & Installation Equipment, Apparel,

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Boulevard Plaza Suppliers of Duke Varsity Sports Equipment in front of South Square Mall Northgate Mall - Durham, South Square - Durham Durham Oak Creek Village - Durham, University Mall - Durham 493-5473 Also in Raleigh North Hills Mall - Raleigh, Tarrymore Square - Raleigh Parkwood Mall - Wilson, Golden East Crossing - Rocky Mount •^^MJVM^ WSWJ'S'wSKS^^ WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 3 Duke in the NCAA Soccer Tournament Goal scorers wanted for soccer team Year Round Results 1972 First Howard 9, Duke 0 • SOCCER from page 2 U.S. national teams. Few squads in the country, in any 1980 First Duke 2, Appalachian State 1 guys who all their careers had been big game scorers, sport, can match that. The ACC is the top league in the Second Alabama A & M2, DukeO and last year we didn't have any." country for American soccer talent. The team's lack of consistency could be blamed on 1981 First Alabama A & M 1. Duke 0 (0T) This year in the conference, Virginia will be the youth. One week, the squad downed North Carolina preseason favorite with Duke, Clemson and State right 1982 First Duke 2, South Florida 1 State on the road and North Carolina at home. Clemson behind. North Carolina and Wake Forest are far from Second Duke 2, Clemson 1 (OT) came to town next and routed the Blue Devils, 4-0. slouches as their NCAA appearances last year prove. Quarterfinals Duke 2, George Mason 0 "Keith Wiseman got hurt in 1986 and did not play, Semifinals Duke 2, Connecticut 1 "I can't tell [who's the best]," Rennie said. "I don't Championship Indiana 2, Duke 1(8 0T) and a senior went in to take his place," said Rennie. think there's any great disparity in talent among those "Last year Keith Wiseman got hurt and we went to teams. UNC, over the past two years, has been a very 1983 First Duke 2, North Carolina State 1 freshmen." Alabama A & M 3, Duke 2 good team, and so has Wake Forest. I think if there's a Second The problems Duke had were typical of the entire team lacking in talent right now it might be Maryland, 1985 First South Carolina 3, Duke 0 league last season. Virginia made it through the confer­ but since I've been here we've had terrible matchups 1986 First Duke 3, South Carolina 2 ence schedule unscathed, but faltered in the NCAA's with Maryland. Second Duke 2, N.C. State 0 when it couldn't score goals. "I think the league is very close in overall talent with Quarterfinals Duke 2, Loyola (Md.) 1 "The league was young last year," Rennie said. Virginia right now, going into the season, having the Semifinals Duke 3, Harvard 1 "Clemson didn't get a bid, N.C. State didn't get a bid, edge based on last year's performance. I would rate them Championship Duke 1, Akron 0 and Duke didn't get a bid. That's the only time since I've the preseason favorite in the league and after that I 1987 First Round North Carolina 2, Duke 0 been here that that's happened. Carolina had a veteran would say it's pretty much a toss-up." team last year and that was it in the league. Virginia With the exception of Maryland, each team had a good jelled very quickly, and played the whole season with ba­ shot at making the NCAA's last year. The NCAA erred Hermann Trophy Winners sically the same team." by only inviting three (Virginia, Wake Forest, and North Sitting on the sidelines because of a knee injury, Carolina) of the six teams that deserved bids. Year Name School Jason Hadges watched his teammates all season long. "Last year was a down year for the league because we 1967 Dov Marcus Long Island He could see a difference between Duke and Virginia only had three teams get in the NCAA playoffs and no­ 1968 Manni Hernandez San Jose State last year. body got out of their region," Rennie said. "I think the 1969 St. Louis "They have the type of talent that we have, but the at­ league will be stronger overall than last year. It 11 be 1970 Al Trost St. Louis titude is different," Hadges said of the Cavaliers. "They back to normal. Normal means four or five teams in the 1971 Mike Seerey St. Louis have a confidence when they walk on the field that they playoffs and maybe the national champion coming out of 1972 Mike Seerey St. Louis know they're going to win because of the hard work this league. 1973 Dan Counce St. Louis they've done and the hard work they're going to do the 1974 Farrukh Quarishi "Three teams out of seven is not a weak year for most Oneonta State day of the game. We walk on the field, we know we're leagues, but for us it was a down year. I'd like to think 1975 Brown going to win because of who we are, the talent that we 1976 Hartwick there's five every year, and maybe six with Wake Forest 1977 BillGazonas Hartwick have. getting a bid last year, so the league will be real strong, 1978 Angelo DiBemardo Indiana "I'm not saying that we don't work hard at practice, or back to normal, back on top." 1979 Penn State that we don't work hard during the games, but I think Duke has finished first or second in the ACC five 1980 Joe Morrone Jr. Connecticut we need to come together a bit more as a team. We're not times this decade, and has the talent to take it to the top 1981 Armando Betancourt Indiana going to win as 11 individuals. Granted, Virginia didn't again. The addition of some key ingredients should im­ 1982 Duke win the national championship last year, but they were prove the team's chemistry. 1983 Duke the best I saw last year as a team, not 11 individuals. As "It would almost be a crime that this much talent 1984 Amyr Aly Columbia far as 11 individuals on the field, I think we can match could go to waste, that this much potential couldn't be 1985 Tom Kain Duke up with anyone in the country. We need to develop more fulfilled," Hadges says. 1986 John Kerr Duke of a team attitude, and once we do that, we'll be He's right. It's time for Duke to stop resting on the 1987 Clemson unstoppable." laurels of 1986 and start working towards the honors of 1988 Ken Snow Indiana Duke boasts eight players with experience playing for 1989.

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By RODNEY PEELE "We were playing a little scrimmage and I planted my "There aren't any tricks. It's hard work and pain and foot and went back for the ball," Hadges said. "As I cut, loneliness. But you can come back, that's what I want ev­ my knee went, it just snapped. It sounded like somebody erybody to know. You can come back." — Gale Sayers, breaking twigs, and Rich Riehl, our trainer back then, Chicago Bears running back, on recovering from knee came running over to calm me down. It was the most ex­ surgery. cruciating pain I've ever felt, and I've had a ton of "The first knee injury was more of a shock. The whole injuries." time I was rehabilitating I was in shock that I was in­ Hadges immediately had a feeling that he wouldn't be jured. The second knee injury was devastating because I playing again any time soon. He had torn the anterior was looking forward to playing. I had worked so hard to cruciate ligament and the lateral meniscus cartilage in come back from the first one. Although I never tried to let his left knee. The necessary surgery, performed by Dr. anyone on the outside see it, on the inside I was devas­ Bill Garrett, was successful, and Hadges worked hard on tated. When I was at home with my folks, I used to sit up rehabilitation. countless nights just trying to cry myself to sleep because "Every day I went in [for rehabilitation]," Hadges I couldn't believe it happened." — Jason Hadges, Duke says. "I don't think I missed one day of rehabilitation. As soccer player, after successive major knee injuries. a matter of fact, you're only supposed to go in there three Just like any freshman, Jason Hadges arrived at Duke or four times a week. I'd get in there five, six, maybe with high hopes. He entered school with a soccer schol­ even seven times a week. I'd never take days off and all I arship after an impressive prep career at New Rochelle could think about was next season, the next season, the High School in New York. next season." However, his troubles began early. A severe injury to Rehabilitation was not easy. It required working with his left knee in his first soccer game at Duke resulted in weights to build up the muscles around the knee; there nine months of difficult rehabilitation. Shortly after his isn't much else that can be done. Throughout it all, doctor cleared him to play last summer, he injured his trainer Reihl helped Hadges survive. other knee. After another long rehabilitation, he's ready "He [Reihl] always listened to me bitch and moan," to play, again. Hadges says. "Whenever I started feeling sorry for my­ "I can't wait for the first day, just to be on the field self, he was there to give me a kick in the ass if I started MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE with my teammates," says Hadges. "For two years I've to slack off a little bit." Jason Hadges takes a shot at the Duke soccer sat on the bench and watched them. It was off the field Nine months after the surgery, Hadges was told by camp. that I tried to keep my spot on the team alive. I became Dr. Garrett he could start playing again. He was at very close with pretty much all the guys, and I just want Duke in July working summer soccer camps, and he he was determined to make it back. He already knew started playing in a few scrimmages. to get out there and play with them, instead of watching what it would take. them play." "I was playing in a little pickup game on the astroturf "After the first injury, they promised I'd be back in The first knee injury occurred in Duke's first game of and went to cut back," Hadges remembers vividly. "I nine to 12 months. After the second injury they told me 1987 against arch-rival North Carolina. Hadges slide- planted my right leg, no one touched me, and went to cut it was going to be the same exact thing," Hadges remem­ tackled UNC star defenseman David Smyth early in the back. And then I felt the exact same pain I'd felt the first bers. "No one ever told me I wasn't going to be able to game and Smyth landed on him. Hadges felt a twinge in time, and I remember rolling around on the turf play again, but I bet 90 percent of the people never the back of his knee, but didn't think much of it at the screaming, 'I can't believe I just did the same thing to thought, or still don't believe, I'll be half the player I was time. That evening his knee "blew up," swelling like a my other knee! I can't believe I just blew out my right before the injuries. balloon. knee!'" "That Was something else I was shooting for. I never A trip to the doctor uncovered little wrong and Hadges wanted just to come back from the injuries, I wanted to was okayed to play with a knee brace. Two days after the Sure enough, Hadges had torn the anterior cruciate come back and be better than I was before, just to prove Carolina game, Hadges was back on the field with the ligament and lateral meniscus cartilage in his right to myself that I could do it." protective brace. knee. The second injury was devastating to Hadges, but See HADGES on page 5 •

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• HADGES from page 4 operation, as he did with the recovery from the first "In my mind I want to do it, but I have to condition my "He was a starting player on a team that had just won operation," Rennie said. "We're all amazed at how well knee to be able to do it," Hadges says. "My knee's strong, a national championship the previous season," said he's done, how far he's come from the standpoint of the but it's never going to be the same as everyone else's. Duke head coach John Rennie. "He wants to get back to injury recovery. I've never been around anyone who's That's the thing I have to take into account. that level." worked harder at coming back from something this seri­ "The knee is as strong as it's going to get. I have to While Hadges has not performed on the field for the ous." gain the confidence in it to be able to do all the things Blue Devils, he has certainly been a part of the team. Soccer trainer Reihl left to work with the U.S. na­ I've wanted to do. I've pretty much overcome any fears I One area in which he took on a large load of work was tional team, but Hadges received unexpected help from had. The only thing left to do now is play. I haven't hosting prospective players. another player who had to sit out last year. Goalkeeper played in two years, and that's a long time." "He's channeled his energies into those areas to do Jonah Goldstein transferred to Duke from Brown and Another question that arises is where Rennie will anything he can do to help because he hasn't been able had to wait a year before playing in a game for the Blue want Hadges to play. Hadges was recruited as a goal to perform," Rennie said. "He very much wants to be an Devils. They were quite a pair when dealing with each scorer, an area the Blue Devils were weak in last year. important part of our soccer program and has become an other's problems. "That's mainly why we recruited him, to be a forward, important part." an offensive player, and hopefully a goal scorer," Rennie Rennie pointed out that Hadges was an inspiration to "We were pretty cynical about the whole situation," said. "Unfortunately that's a position on the field that the other players because he wouldn't give up despite Goldstein recalled. "I knew I couldn't play, and it's hard takes more of a pounding from opposing players than the unfortunate circumstances. Hadges himself was mo­ to come out and practice every day. I had to practice, any other position because you're continually getting hit tivated by a serious accident involving teammate Hector Jason couldn't practice. We tried to keep each other by defenders." Zuklic last summer. happy by being as sarcastic about the situation as we "Coach has not told me where he wants me," said Shortly after Hadges' second surgery, the team possibly could, laughing about it, but deep down it was Hadges. "I think he's just going to be happy to see me learned of Zuklic's accident. For a while, doctors were obviously frustrating for both of us." there come the first day of preseason, and then well unsure if he would live, and then they weren't sure if he "Someone should have listened to the conversations worry about it from there. would walk again. Zuklic can walk now with the help of that went on between the two of us," Hadges laughed. "I don't care where I play. I haven't played for two a cane, but he will never play soccer again. "We'd sit there at opposite ends of the room and just years. I'd play goalkeeper if he needed me to play goal­ scream at each other about all of our problems. It's pa­ keeper. The only good thing about it is that I've played "Hector was a very good friend of mine, and that (the thetic to look back at it, but it was funny at the time." every position on the field at one time or another, for one accident) devastated me," Hadges said. "If you knew During the fall season, Hadges and Goldstein watched team or another, so 111 be pretty versatile. I can go up Hector, he was one of the hardest working guys on our quietly and sadly from the sidelines. In the spring, they front, and I feel confident that I can play up front and team, and probably was in the best shape out of anybody started to do more. the back, without a drop in my level of play." on the team. "Second semester came along and every free opportu­ "They knew he'd never play soccer again, and the nity we had, the two of us went out there playing," For now, there is the unfinished business of a com­ whole time I was on crutches for six weeks, for that Hadges says. "We motivated each other. If I had a bad plete recovery. Hadges has been in Durham most of the period of time, all I could think about was 'Jason, you day he'd pat me on the back and tell me to take it easy. summer working at the Duke soccer camps. really don't have it that bad. This is something you can On my good days, he never let me get too high." "Every day when I get done with camp, I go back to my come back from.' I considered myself unfortunate but "The downpoints of coming back are realizing that you room and I say to myself, That's another day I'm out very lucky it wasn't worse. That was a bigger factor in haven't played for so long and that the game is unfamil­ there, and another day closer to preseason,'" Hadges my rehabilitating than more people could believe. I had iar to you now," said Goldstein. "Getting out and playing says. "That's my goal, to get back in and be healthy. the positive attitude just because of that one unfor­ in some of the scrimmages, things that were automatic Once I'm back in and healthy for preseason, then I know tunate incident with Hector." to you before weren't automatic any more. You know you I've come back from the injury and 111 be fine from As a result, Hadges is back on the field and playing can do it, but you have to re-train yourself. It has a lot to there." himself back into shape. According to Rennie, Hadges is do with confidence." Hadges has felt the pain, survived the loneliness and ahead of schedule, but there's no way to tell what level Hadges describes himself as a physical player who struggled through the hard work to make it back. For Hadges can pull himself up to. loves to throw hard tackles. He does a lot of pivoting and everyone involved in the Duke soccer program, just to "He's doing extremely well with the recovery from this cutting when he takes on defenders. see him on the field is remarkable.

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t§T ^ PumV Prince 286-4110 AV\ Jimmw'm FROM WIMBLEDON TO THE WORLD CUP AVAILABLE PAGE 6 / THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 Rosenthal returns to Duke By RODNEY PEELE "I should have talked to Coach Hempen It was a shock last winter when beforehand, and I should have talked to women's soccer star Mary Pat Rosenthal my Dad about the concerns that I had decided to transfer to Notre Dame after [last winter]," Rosenthal said. "If I had one semester at Duke. It was also a sur­ done that, I probably would not have prise, but not a shock, when she decided made the switch. At the time that's what I to transfer back this summer. thought was best for everybody." "It was always in the back of my mind As a result of the moves, Rosenthal will that she might come back," said Blue have to sit out all of next year. She can Devil women's soccer coach Bill Hempen. practice but she cannot touch a ball in a "It was a bit of a shock, but it was a pleas­ game in the fall or spring for Duke. ant surprise." "If there's some way I can contribute Rosenthal had an excellent freshman without playing, then 111 feel like I had a campaign for the Blue Devils in the debut role on the team and I played a part," said year for the varsity women's soccer team Rosenthal, who added that she'll lose out at Duke. She was the only Blue Devil to on valuable game experience for a season. be named all-Atlantic Coast Conference "Hopefully 111 be able to play again next last fall. year. I still have three more years of eligi­ After the fall semester, however, Rosen­ bility." thal decided to transfer to Notre Dame She would like to play three years, but where her father, Dick Rosenthal, is the feels it's up to Hempen if he wants her on athletic director. Mary Pat Rosenthal said the team. Hempen, of course, is happy to she was worried that she was missing have his lone all-ACC performer back for some of the traditions of Notre Dame, three more years. where her five brothers and sisters had "She's a positive influence to have in gone to school. the program," Hempen said. "There's no "I always felt I should carry on the negative aspects [to her return], they're Notre Dame athletic tradition that my fa­ all positive." ther had started because none of my other During her semester at Notre Dame, brothers and sisters played sports at Rosenthal discovered she missed the Notre Dame," Rosenthal said during a things she liked about Duke. She realized break from work at the Duke soccer camp that her reasons for attending Duke in this summer. the first place were also strong reasons to After a semester at Notre Dame, Rosen­ return. thal realized that she hadn't been missing "Duke is new, and things were different out on anything after all, and wanted to and exciting," Rosenthal said. "I really return to Durham. Talking things over missed the people here and the atmo­ with her father helped convince her that sphere. Even though I have to sit out, I'm despite her move last Christmas, a return just glad to be back. I can't wait for the to Durham this summer would be for the season to start, to get the team back to­ best. gether. "I found some things out that now I can "My teammates and Coach Hempen be totally happy at Duke," Rosenthal said. have been great throughout the whole MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE "Even being here in the summer, I'm so thing, welcoming me back and under­ Mary Pat Rosenthal juggles the soccer ball at the Duke soccer camp after sure this is where I want to be. standing everything." deciding to return to Duke.

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Avoid the back-to-school rush by opening Relay or CIRRUS® automatic teller machine, i 1 a Wachovia Checking Account now, by any time day or night, seven days a week. Please send me information on how to open a mail. Not only will you get ahead of the The perfect card for midnight pizza runs. checking account now so I can get fifty free checks. game before you even get to school, but And when exams hit and there's no I you'll get fifty,fre e personalized checks time to go to the bank, grab the nearest from Wachovia. phone and call our free Quick Access 24SM number to get a quick account update More Freebies: or find out if the check Mom sent City Zip has cleared. (Send this coupon to:) When you open a Wachovia Checking or So fill out the coupon, apply for Wachovia Bank & Trust Wachovia Bank & Trust Duke Medical Center Office W Durham Office Statement Savings Account, you'll get a an account, and get ahead of the game. P.O. Box 2252 QR 2000 W Main Street free Wachovia Banking Card. It lets you And get fifty free checks. That's The Durham, NC 27702 Durham, NC 27705 get cash or make deposits at any Teller Ilf Wachovia Way. • Located at Duke Hospital South. Located two blocks from Duke East Campus. THE WACHOVIAWAT Wachovia Bank & Trust Member FDIC PAGE 8 / THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Ferry goes second in draft, but gets booed in L.A.

Dw DAnklCV DCCI C By RODNEY PEELE second overall by the Los Angeles Clippers in the 1989 the draft, but Elliott's quickness is suited for the back- posted some impressive numbers at NBA draft, making him the second-highest draft pick in court while Ferry's size is suited for the inside game. Duke. He became the first Atlantic Coast Conference Duke history. Ferry, of course, didn't help the situation when he player to collect over 2,000 points, 1,000 rebounds and Besides the individual awards, Ferry certainly played made it clear that he preferred to be traded. Although he 500 assists. Few players, if any, have ever done that in a large part in the success the team has had over the last didn't criticize the Clippers directly, he had said before history. four years. During Ferry's career the Blue Devils made the draft that he wanted to go to a team that needed Ferry won the ACC Player-of-the-Year Award twice, three Final Four appearances, won two ACC titles, and him, not one that picked him because he was the best and he has a chance to win the McKelvin Award as the totaled nearly 120 wins. Not bad. player available. Los Angeles picked Ferry because they ACC of the Year for the second time. Only one With all this going for him, why did fans in Los An­ thought he was the best player. person (North Carolina State's David Thompson) has geles boo when the Clippers made Ferry the second pick Ferry wasn't the only pick to get booed by home-town won the ACC Player-of-the-Year award and McKelvin in the NBA draft? fans. Several picks later, when Charlotte passed on award twice. To put it simply, they didn't want the star of the ACC. and to get North Carolina's The last three players to win the ACC Player-of-the- They wanted , the star of the Pac-10. That's J.R. Reid, some boos could be heard in Charlotte. Year award more than once became either the first or understandable, especially when you consider that the Admittedly, the cheers for Reid drowned out the boos, second choice in the National Basketball Association Clippers need backcourt help, not another forward. and Reid handled them better than Ferry. draft. Ferry continued that trend when he was picked Ferry and Elliott were the best, most versatile players in See FERRY on page 9 • 1989 NBA DRAFT First Round

No. Player Team 1 Sacramento 2 Danny Ferry L.A. Clippers 3 Sean Elliott San Antonio 4 Miami 5 J.R. Reid Charlotte 6 Stacey King Chicago 7 George McCloud Indiana 8 Randy White Dallas 9 Washington 10 Minnesota 11 Nick Anderson Orlando 12 New Jersey 13 Michael Smith Boston 14 Golden State 15 ToddLichti Denver 16 Seattle 17 Sean Kemp Seattle 18 B.J.Armstrong Chicago 19 Philadelphia 20 Chicago 21 Utah 22 Portland 23 Atlanta 24 Anthony Cook Phoenix 25 Cleveland UPI PHOTO 26 L.A. Lakers Danny Ferry (right) joins (left to right) top pick Pervis Ellison, third pick Sean Elliott, NBA commissioner 27 Detroit David Stern and seventh pick Stacey King at the NBA draft.

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• FERRY from page 8 of the new team has worn off and the losses mount. If "Those people must have been some Duke fans who Bob Ferry trades for his son and in turn creates a con­ are still mad at me," he said. The Duke fans in Durham tender in Washington, he too could take all the credit. weren't booing, however. They were laughing at the Hor­ With Dad dealing and Los Angeles fans booing, it's no nets for picking J.R. sixth. surprise Ferry disappeared for a while. After making the The two players picked after Reid were King and rounds as a celebrity in May and June, appearing in pa­ White. When the picked King sixth and rades in the Washington area and speaking at the later added point guard B.J. Armstrong, it was clear DeMatha High School graduation, Ferry went to Europe that they had the best draft of any NBA team. White for six weeks. After the NBA draft, Ferry saw Europe was snatched up by Dallas, where the Mavericks hope with Paul Stewart, a former roommate and son of race he'll be as successful as the last Randy White to play pro car driver Jackie Stewart. A millionaire-to-be, Ferry can sports in that town. easily afford such trips these days. In this year's draft, the Hornets and Washington Bul­ After four hectic years at Duke, Ferry deserved a lets each looked to create odd marketing situations. The vacation. If he plays four years in Los Angeles for the Hornets pulled it off while the Bullets haven't, yet. Clippers, he'll need another. Bob Ferry, Danny's father and general manager of the The trip was not all pleasure, however. Reports sur­ Washington Bullets, nearly pulled off deals for his son faced recently that Ferry met with officials of a profes­ both before and after the draft. The problem that arises sional basketball club in Rome. The team also arranged for Charlotte and could arise for Washington if it obtains for Ferry's parents to fly to Rome and discuss a possible the younger Ferry is simple: What if Ferry or Reid contract. stink? "It's just an option he has," Bob Ferry told the Wash­ How does a general manager get rid of his son who's ington Post. "I really don't know what he's thinking." probably overpaid and well-liked by Washington fans Last summer Ferry was contacted by several pro clubs who saw him play local high school ball at DeMatha in Europe who wanted Ferry to leave Duke before his se­ High School in suburban Maryland? How do the Hornets nior year and play overseas. If Ferry had negotiated a deal with J.R. if he doesn't have what it takes for the contract at that time, he would have lost his eligibility JIM JEFFERS/THE CHRONICLE NBA? last season. Danny Ferry was booed in Los Angeles when he was Then again, if Reid is great, Charlotte will continue to Danny Ferry was not available for comment from his announced as the Clippers' first round pick. pack the stands for years to come, even after the novelty home in Annapolis, Md.

Where players who won more than one Duke's First Round Picks ACC Hayer-of -the-Year award were drafted Name Pick Year Team Name School Years Of Award Draft Pick Year Team 1st 1963 New York Danny Ferry Duke 1988,1989 2nd overall 1989 L.A. Clippers Danny Ferry 2nd 1989 L.A. Clippers Maryland 1985,1986 2nd overall 1986 Boston Jack Marin 5th 1966 Baltimore Virginia 1981,1982, 1983 1st overall 1983 Houston Jeff Mullins 5th 1964 St. Louis David Thompson North Carolina State 1973, 1974,1975 1st overall 1975 Atlanta 7th 1980 New Jersey South Carolina 1969,1970 14th overall 1971 Phoenix 10th 1986 San Antonio Larry Miller North Carolina 1967,1968 62nd overall 1968 Philadelphia Tate Armstrong 13th 1977 Chicago Wake Forest 1961, 1962 5th overall 1962 Syracuse Jim Spanarkel 16th 1979 Philadelphia Wake Forest 1954,1955 ? 1955 Boston 18th 1986 Denver

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« (MM ten. v 1c W«UMe_-M-_ttK_&_ PAGE 10 / THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 Duke players heading for pro teams

From staff reports Gminski is one of Philadelphia's top players. Although Danny Ferry was the only player drafted by Gene Banks is trying out with the the National Basketball Association, several Duke play­ after playing in Italy last season. Todd Anderson and ers will try out with NBA teams this summer. Jay Bilas played in Europe last year as well. This season Kevin Strickland, who graduated in 1988, wants to Bilas will be the graduate assistant coach for the Blue land a spot with the Orlando Magic. The Magic are one Devils while he is in the Duke Law School. of two expansion teams in the NBA this year. After concluding his playing career at Duke last DawkirtS recovering: Former Duke All-America spring, John Smith is also testing the waters in the Johnny Dawkins plays guard for the San Antonio Spurs, NBA. He plans to try out with the expansion Minnesota where Quin Snyder is trying to earn a spot. Dawkins, Timberwolves and the talent-heavy . however, is currently coming back from a bizarre leg in­ Quin Snyder tried out briefly with the Indiana Pacers jury. Dawkins suffered "drop foot" last winter when he and now will check out the San Antonio Spurs. San An­ over-iced his leg during practice. tonio head coach Larry Brown heavily recruited Snyder out of high school when Brown was at Kansas, which Duke's Dr. Frank Bassett, a sports medicine expert, is certainly improves Snyder's chances of making the treating Dawkins, along with roughly half of the other Spurs squad. drop foot cases in the country. Bassett has said that only Mark Alarie, Johnny Dawkins and Mike Gminski are 12 such cases are known at this time. the only other Blue Devils who were on NBA rosters last Dawkins has been playing in pickup games daily at season. Alarie's status with the Bullets is solid, while 's basketball camp this month.

DUKE IATTENTION! DUKE UNIVERSrrY UNIVERSITY TRANSIT PARKING CHANGES TRANSIT Effective July 1,1989, the following changes in the administration of parking and in the utilization of parking lots will occur:

• The administration of parking, including, but not limited to, permit sales, road and lot repair, special permits, will be transferred to the Transportation Department. The new office will be located at the corner of Swift Avenue and Hull Avenue, 1415 Hull Avenue, 684-PARK.

• Public Safety will continue to handle all enforcement related matters.

STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE Kevin Strickland is trying out with the Orlando • The Science Drive lots: lower Law, SA, SB, SC, and X, will be gated and Magic, one of two new expansion teams in the NBA. the fee for these lots will be increased to $120.00/year.

• The parking fee for resident students will increase to $75.00/year. 1989-90 Duke University • Fees for transient students and employees parking in ungated lots will Men's Basketball Schedule remain at $50.00/year.

Nov. 22 USSR (Exhibition) • Permits for the AG and BG gated lots will be increased to $200.00/year. Nov. 25 HARVARD Nov. 29 CANISIUS • A new lot is under construction on Wannamaker Drive (below the Dec. 2 at Northwestern graveyard lot) for transient students and employees. Dec. 6 Syracuse (Greensboro, N.C.) Dec. 9 at Michigan Dec. 21 at Davidson • Bus service between the new lot and Science Drive will be provided 6:00 Dec. 23 WASHINGTON a.m. - 9:00 p.m., Monday - Friday. Service times will be monitored and Dec. 27-30 Rainbow Classic (Honolulu) improvements will be instituted as demand warrants. Jan. 3 THE CITADEL Jan. 6 VIRGINIA • Between 7:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m., Monday - Friday, residential students will Jan. 11 at only be permitted to park their vehicles on the campus of their resi Jan. 13 MARYLAND Jan. 17 at North Carolina dence. Jan. 20 at Wake Forest. Jan. 22 at William & Mary • The entire Card Gym lot will be reserved for student parking. Jan. 24 NORTH CAROLINA STATE Jan. 28 GEORGIA TECH • The Kilgo lot will be re-surfaced and will become hourly visitor parking. Jan. 31 CLEMSON Feb. 4 NOTRE DAME Feb. 8 at Virginia • Traffic fines and enforcement will be increased to protect the accounta Feb. 10 at Maryland bility of spaces for those who have purchased permits. Feb. 12 at Stetson Feb. 14 EAST CAROLINA • To reduce through-traffic on Towerview Drive, a four-way stop will be Feb. 18 WAKE FOREST installed at the Fuqua/Chemistry entrances, and a speed platform will Feb. 21 at North Carolina State be constructed at the Card Gym flashing light. Feb. 25 ARIZONA Feb. 28 at Clemson Mar. 4 NORTH CAROLINA Should there be any questions regarding these changes, Mar. 9-11 ACC Tournament (Charlotte, N.C.) please feel free to call 919-684-PARK. WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 11

A MESSAGE TO THE MOST IMPORTANT PERSON

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ANHEUSER BUSCH. INC "ST LOUIS PAGE 12 / THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, With little fanfare, Metts is always part of the play

By BRENT BELVIN He's the first one to the line of scrim­ mage every time Duke runs a play, but perhaps the last player fans will take no­ tice of when the play is over. The cheers are reserved for wide receiver ' spectacular catches and Roger Boo­ ne's touchdown bursts. Carey "Bubba" Metts doesn't mind. Centers have never received much atten­ tion and they never will. But that does not keep the Blue Devils' starting center out of Burlington, N.C. from deriving satisfac­ tion in playing the game. In fact, being relatively unknown at a school that has its share of high-profile, easily-recognized can be quite nice. "We were talking in my sociology class about how it would feel to be Danny Ferry with all that pressure," said Metts. "He can't go out to eat with people bugging him. Of course, he's going to be making a DUKE SPORTS INFORMATION PHOTO couple mil. So, I guess it has its advan­ Center Carey "Bubba" Metts. tages financially, but I like my personal life. I don't like to be pressured. It would Carolina, North Carolina State and Wake be nice to be noticed, but as long as I know Forest — joined in the recruiting battle. it and the people I play against know it, Metts also heard overtures from South and as long as I don't disappoint anybody, Carolina, Clemson, Stanford and even it's no problem." Oklahoma. Fortunately for the Blue Dev-

If you can control the center of someone's body, you can pretty much control wherever they go. Carey Metts Center

Metts certainly hasn't disappointed ils, Duke was where Metts wanted to go anyone, except maybe the opposing defen­ all along. Center Carey Metts prepares to snap the ball to against Clemson in sive linemen and coaching staffs who un­ "I visited Duke and I really enjoyed it," 1987, Metts' first year as a starter. derestimate his ability. Those who have Metts said. "It was my first visit, and I usually wound up on their rear ends. had a couple of others lined up, at State up-and-coming program and I wanted to and looking at the coverages. On running "Other teams look at him and they say, and at South Carolina, Wake and North be a part of it." plays, I called the defenses out and I That's Bubba Metts?'" said assistant Carolina. My mom wanted me to go to The chance to play defense was appeal­ called the blocking schemes. If I see a look coach Rich McGeorge, who has molded an Duke, and I kind of didn't want to deal ing to Metts and led him initially to con­ where I know a running play will work offensive line that could be one of the na­ with going out [on visits] anymore. I sider other schools, like UNC, that would better if we go to the other side, I won't tion's finest during the upcoming season. wanted to go out with my buddies up to give him the opportunity, but at 6-1 and hesitate to tell the quarterback. I did it a "A lot of people look at pro-type centers, the mountains for a four-day weekend, so 240 pounds, he figured a future as a couple of times last year, and sometimes and they're usually about 6-4, so people I decided to commit." defensive lineman in the Atlantic Coast we were successful and sometimes we ran have a tendency to overlook him. I think The football establishment in the state Conference wasn't too likely. From the into a stack of defenders. Bubba's got to be the most underrated of North Carolina knew Metts' choice moment he arrived at Duke, then, Metts "[Calling plays] is fun. It's a learning center in college football." would be an interesting one. His father was a center. experience and I like that. I like Coach Not bad for a guy who played defense in played for State from 1966-68, while his After a year's apprenticeship under se­ Spurrier's offense and I like his scheme of high school. His senior year at Walter uncle, Billy Bryan, was an All-America nior center Paul Constantino, Metts was taking what the defense gives you. It Williams High School in Burlington, center at Duke and now plays for the Den­ ready to assume the starting role when makes sense. If they've got five guys Metts led his team to the state 3-A cham­ ver Broncos of the NFL. Who could fault became head coach in stacked up on one side and four on the pionship and was named MVP of the title Pop if he secretly wanted his son to bleed 1987. Two years and 22 consecutive starts other, naturally we're going to try and get game against Forest Hills H.S. Metts was Wolfpack red? His son's decision to attend later, Metts enters his senior season as a [the ball] to the four-guy side. And it's chosen to play in the Shrine Bowl, an an­ Duke, though, was accepted graciously. strong candidate for All-ACC honors. worked out well for me. It's like a differ­ nual matchup pitting the all-stars from "He was happy for me," said Metts. "He Metts was also voted team captain by his ent kind of study," Metts said. North Carolina against their counter­ didn't pressure me in any way. He just teammates, a testament to his leadership Some might say that Metts has been parts from South Carolina, but couldn't told me to go where I wanted, and Duke's and ability, according to Spurrier. forced to become a student of the game, play because the date of the game con­ where I really wanted to go. I saw most of "Bubba cares about Duke," said Spur­ for at 6-1, he definitely is not your proto­ flicted with the state championship game. the games when my uncle played here. rier. "He hates to lose and he won't allow type center. But Metts has never felt his College coaches didn't need any all-star I've always been going to Duke games, al­ himself to play at anything less than his height, or lack of, was a disadvantage. games to discover Metts' talents, though. ways been a Duke fan. I felt that when best. He's a tremendous example for all "Personally, I like it," said Metts, who All of the Big Four schools — Duke, North Coach Sloan was here, that Duke was an the young players. You can only hope they can bench press 430 pounds and squat will see him in the weight room, in run­ 525. "I've had several teams try to put tall ning drills, on the field, and grow into men on me to pass rush, thinking they being just like Bubba." could get around me. But [being shorter] "The other guys see what a competitive has worked to my advantage. I get into 1989 Duke Football Schedule person he is," said McGeorge. "Bubba people a lot quicker. Anybody will tell you plays the game like it's supposed to be that if you get your hands into somebody Date Opponent Site Time played." quicker, you're more likely to be suc­ With last year's graduation of quarter­ cessful, because if you can control the cen­ Sept. 2 South Carolina Columbia, S.C. 7:00 p.m. back Anthony Dilweg, Metts will be ter of someone's body, you can pretty Sept. 9 Northwestern DURHAM 7:00 p.m. counted on to provide more leadership much control wherever they go. Sept. 16 Tennessee Knoxville, Tenn. 7:30 p.m. this season on the sidelines and on the "But for a pro scout, [being short] is def­ Sept. 23 Virginia Charlottesville, Va. 7:00 p.m. field. Like most centers, Metts is respon­ initely a disadvantage for me. It's a mark- DURHAM 12:00 p.m. sible for calling out defensive fronts and down." Sept. 30 Clemson blocking schemes at the line of scrim­ McGeorge, who played for the Green Oct. 7 Army DURHAM 1:30 p.m. mage. With a new quarterback in Billy Bay Packers for nine years, thinks Metts Oct. 21 Maryland College Park, Md. 1:00 p.m. Ray who will not have had as much time may be underestimating himself, though. Oct. 28 Georgia Tech DURHAM 1:30 p.m. learning Spurrier's offense as Dilweg had, "He's definitely got a chance," Nov. 4 Wake Forest Winston-Salem, N.C. 1:00 p.m. Metts will be an even more important McGeorge said. "He's from good stock. His size will be against him when the pro 11 North Carolina State DURHAM 12:00 p.m. presence on the field. Nov. "Last year I experimented a little bit," scouts come to look at him. But if they Nov. 18 North Carolina Chapel Hill, N.C. 12:00 p.m. said Metts. "Anthony [Dilweg] was more look long enough, they'll find one heck of a concerned with checking off to pass plays football player." LY, JULY 26, 1989 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 13 Bowl game remains to complete Duke 'education'

As I approach my senior year and the specter of the Clemson had the ball. It was like a basketball game, you real world looms ominously on the horizon, a nagging Brent Belvin know. For the life of me, though, I just don't understand sense of urgency keeps gnawing away at my innards. how we could lose to Maryland again. I thought this time Like most Duke students, I don't want to leave this cam­ next week's showdown with N.C. State that should we had 'em." pus until a few basic goals have been accomplished. The crown a new ACC champion and send the winner to the Nantz: "With a bowl bid pretty much locked up, many only difference is that my goals lie outside the periphery Citrus Bowl. I have here with me in the studio the mas­ people in the football world think you've done all you of what every Duke student must do, morally or immor­ termind behind the Blue Devils' rise to power, Steve could possibly do at Duke, a basketball school where ally. Spurrier. Steve, what's the secret behind your 38-point- football is downplayed or not taken seriously. Would you Oh, I admit frolicking in the gardens with a certain per-game offense?" consider returning to your alma mater at Florida or someone would be nice. But never will I scale Baldwin in Steve Spurrier: "Well, Jim, it's pretty simple. We going to Tennessee should those positions open up, as an act of rash bravado, nor will I go tunnelling, and driv­ pass a little, we run a little and then we pass some rumor has it? Or is the NFL a possibility, with a team ing backwards around the traffic circle seems too easy, more." like, say, Tampa Bay?" anyway. Nantz: "Okay . . . Your quarterback, Billy Ray, brings Spurrier: "I don't think so, Jim. I'm pretty happy My goals lie directly in the world of Duke athletics, a new dimension to your offense, Steve, in that he adds here at Duke. I think it's a good job, and there's plenty of and consist of certain standards of success that I hope mobility to the quarterback position. That's something good golf in the area. And I think you underestimate each team achieves. With apologies to the women's you haven't had in the past, although Steve Slayden and what is possible down at Duke. I think we can contend in teams and all other non-revenue sports whom I root for Anthony Dilweg proved to be fine passers." the ACC not just this season, but on a yearly basis. I but not on an avid level, the four sports in which I genu­ Spurrier: "That's right, Jim, but I'll tell you what, want to be a part of that." inely grieve and fume over losses are basketball, base­ Billy's gettin' some help. 01' Clarkston [Hines] is about Nantz: "Boy, folks in Durham must sure like to hear ball, soccer and football. as good as a receiver as there is and we've got some other talk like that. Thanks for stopping by our studios, Steve. In the last three years, the basketball team under the mighty fine receivers getting the job done also. And this I think the rest of the country now knows, or will soon leadership of head coach has sur­ year, we're finally getting the running game going. find out, that Duke does more than just play a little passed what I had hoped for when I first arrived at We've got some big boys up front opening up some holes, basketball." Duke. Two trips to the Final Four, an Atlantic Coast and [running backs] Roger Boone and Randy Jones, they Conference championship, four wins over North know how to find 'em." Could it happen? Probably not to such an extent. But Carolina and a perfect slate against Virginia far out­ Nantz: "Coach, everyone knew you were going to the prospects for a bright season with an extra game in weigh the disappointment of losses to Kansas and Seton score a lot of points. In the past, it's been your defense December, or perhaps, (Gasp!) January, look good. The Hall in the last two Final Fours. that has let you down, but this season, you're holding Blue Devils return perhaps the best receiving corps in Soccer has been another success story — the national the opposition to 18 points a game. What are you doing the nation, an offensive line that also is being touted as championship in 1986 speaks for itself. Head coach John differently?" among the best in collegiate football and a deep and tal­ Rennie has kept his program consistently in the Top Spurrier: "Well, I may not know much about defense, ented backfield. Twenty, and with a talent-laden squad returning in but I wasn't going to stand on the sidelines another year If new quarterback Billy Ray is as good as Spurrier 1989, the Blue Devils should be among the nation's best. and watch us lose any more 48-45 games. This year, I've thinks he is, and if the defense, which returns nine Baseball has been another story. Without the benefit been having my say. The other coaches and I just tell the starters from a unit that struggled last year, improves, of scholarships and a full financial commitment from the boys to tackle the man with the ball, don't let the receiv­ Duke will be a much better team than the 1988 squad athletic department, the team has struggled. Just once, ers get wide open and don't let the quarterback stand that finished 7-3-1 and narrowly missed a bowl berth. I'd like to see Duke post a winning record, and not just around for fifteen seconds before we can get a hand on A bigger if is the schedule, which promises to be the against the Warren Wilson's and North Carolina A&T's him. And you know what? It's working. To tell you the Blue Devils' toughest in years. The first five games in­ on the schedule, but against the rest of the ACC. truth, though, having nine starters on defense back does clude road trips to South Carolina, Tennessee and Vir­ It remains to be seen whether head coach Steve make things a little less complicated." ginia as well as a home game against Clemson. If Duke Traylor can overcome the obstacles that make playing Nantz: "How has the school reacted to your team's can escape from this stretch with no worse than a 3:2 re­ winning baseball difficult. But to be honest, if I were a success?" cord, the schedule becomes significantly easier, with highly-recruited player out of high school with my sights Spurrier: "They were a little skeptical after we beat home games against Army and State being the major ob­ on playing professional ball, Duke University would be South Carolina, Northwestern and Tennessee. But you stacles. A mark of 7-4 might be enough to earn a bowl far down on list. Duke may one day play winning base­ can't hardly blame them. I mean, we'd gotten off to great bid, while 8-3 would ensure one. ball, but it won't happen before I graduate. starts before. But when we beat those self-appointed Surely this is not too much to hope for. Keeping the Which brings me to football. Not once in my four years snobs up in Virginia, they got excited. Duke fans ac­ lessons of past history iifmind, I still cannot disguise my have I so eagerly anticipated an upcoming season. At the tually outnumbered the Clemson fans for the first time impatience to get the season going. This year has to be same time, I keep telling myself to exercise caution, to in Wallace Wade Stadium, I understand. Things got so the year for Blue Devil football. Otherwise, a Duke temper my enthusiasm, and ultimately, to prepare for loud the refs had to stop play and ask for quiet when "education" would not be complete the inevitable. After all, I watched in disbelief as the Blue Devils choked a 15-point lead to Maryland in the final seven minutes two years ago. I followed the flight of that ill- timed yellow hanky that allowed North Carolina State Duke Bowl History to tie the game on the final play and deprive Duke of a bid to the Peach Bowl last season. Day Year Bowl Location Opponent Score If ever there were a team that seemed destined to just Jan. 2 1939 Rose Bowl Pasadena, Calif. Southern California Southern California 7, Duke 3 fall short, it would be Duke. Well, I'm tired of it! I want a Jan. 1 1942 bowl game desperately. I want to crack the Top Twenty. Rose Bowl Durham, N.C. Oregon State Oregon State 20, Duke 16 I want to hear the following exchange: Jan. 1 1945 Sugar Bowl New Orleans, La. Alabama Duke 29, Alabama 26 CBS' : "Well folks, the surprise team this Jan. 1 1955 Orange Bowl Miami, Fla. Nebraska Duke 34, Nebraska 7 year has got to be those . They're 8-1 Jan. 1 1958 Orange Bowl Miami, Fla. Oklahoma Oklahoma 48, Duke 21 now, and with wins over Clemson and Virginia, head Jan. 2 1961 Cotton Bowl Dallas, Tex. Arkansas Duke 7, Alabama 6 coach Steve Spurrier and his team are looking towards

For right now, though, the immediate Bubba Metts' life, it does not consume future is most important for Metts. After him. It would be hard to imagine Metts at posting their best record in a quarter-cen­ a football factory like Clemson or Okla­ tury last season (7-3-1), the Blue Devils homa where football players are treated appear to have an even stronger team in like demigods. Those players come away 1989, with 18 of 22 starters returning. Ex­ taking life for granted, only to find that pectations will be higher than ever, and once their four years of eligibility are used Metts and his teammates have set some up, the alumni are no longer around to lofty goals. primp and pamper. For Metts, a history "We sat down as a team before we left major, life beyond Duke is still a question this summer and made a list of goals we mark, as it is for many students. Armed wanted to accomplish," said Metts. "We with a college degree from a prestigious wanted to be in competition for the ACC university, Metts will probably go a long crown, wanted to play on national TV if way with or without football. possible. We also wanted to win eight or "It'd be great to get a shot to play on the more games and we want to make a bowl professional level, but if it doesn't work game this year. That's one of our top out for me, I'm not going to be priorities. disappointed," said Metts. "I can look "I'm excited about the season. We had a back on my four years at Duke and say lot of guys stick around this summer. I've really enjoyed it. Duke meant a lot to About 30 guys were here for the first me and its given a lot back to me. It's [summer school session], just working given me a free education, which is great. out." I've met a lot of different people and made When talking with Metts, one gets the a lot of friends." feeling that this is an athlete who has put When Metts graduates next May, here's STEVE GOLDBERG /THE CHRONICLE his sport in its proper perspective. While one who believes he'll be harder to replace Carey Metts (No. 53) picks up his man as the entire offensive line makes its blocks football has been an important part of than anyone could ever have imagined. last year against Vanderbilt. PAGE 14 / THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989

SQUASH/RACQUETBALL FREE WEIGHTS/NAUTILUS The taste of Olde Germany awaits you at the Weeping Radish Restaurant and Brewery. The Weeping Radish's fine selection of appetizers, entrees, wines, cheeses and desserts offer you a taste of Bavarian EXPANSION SALE heritage. Our large dining room and beer garden are Save up to $200 on a membership! perfect for that first meal away from home. Bring your parents and friends, and MetroSport Athletic Club is expanding! We've just added a enjoy our fine German cuisine served with the flair of brand new Squash Court. Plus, we're making our fitness Southern hospitality. Welcome to Duke. Welcome to area even bigger! Join the club that offers the most in Durham. Welcome to the Weeping Radish. facilities, service, and savings today!

Studebaker's - Take a Break From the Books with Our Live Entertainment & German Style Beer. How would you like to watch your beer brew while you drink? Only at Studebaker's, located upstairs at the Weeping Radish, can you rock with Durham's hottest live entertainment and relax with our finest German style beers. Featuring Motown, beach, jazz and good old rock 'n' roll, Studebaker's is the place for Duke night life. Come try our Amber, Helles or Black Radish beers, brewed on premises in our micro- brewery. Rock your night with genuine INDOOR/OUTDOOR POOL German draft and the area's premium entertainment. Also look for our full pub grub menu, served from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. Monday through Saturday.

Party Store Banquets Kegs fresh from the brewing vat. Your gathering is never too large. If partying at And if you want to have a big home is your party, reception or meeting scene take our outside the home, that's no beer to the problem. Our Fest Room has yet party. The to fail to accommodate any Weeping person's request. We do it all, Radish has opened its party store. from hot dogs for 20 in the beer Now the finest beer in Durham is garden to prime rib for 200 in the available on the go. We have kegs Fest Room. Choose from our full AEROBICS CHILD CARE ranging in size from 5-liter minis banquet menu and let the to 58-liter fulls. When you are Weeping Radish make your ready to break in the new party gathering the talk of the town. OFFER GOOD THROUGH END OF MONTH season, give us a call to order your keg. / MetroSport Athletic Clo_V

501 Douglas Street, Durham NC 27705 286-7529 682-2337 115 N. Duke St. (across from Brightleaf Square) Open 24 hours, Mon-Fri; 8AM-9PM, Sat; and 9AM-9PM Sun WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 15 Back injury ends Peterson's kicking career From staff reports and contribute any way I can." it still wasn't any better," Peterson said. Duke University placekicker Doug Peterson, a double major in history and "I just thought it was some muscles, but Peterson will not play football again due English, is Duke's all-time scoring leader since it persisted I had more tests done to a back injury. Peterson, a rising senior with 193 career points. He's hit on 82 of when I came home for the summer. They from Sarasota, Fla., remains upbeat his 89 career extra-point attempts and showed I had a ruptured disc. With that about his future away from the gridiron. connected on 37 of his 51 career and some birth defects that were discover­ "After playing football for 11 years, this tries, including 30 of 33 attempts inside ed, they [the doctors] said there was no is obviously upsetting," said Peterson, the 40-yard line. way I should play any longer." who ruptured a disc between his fourth Peterson said he does not expect to take and fifth lumbar vertebrae. Doctors have "It's a big blow to our team," said Duke a medical hardship season and return to advised him not to play football again. head coach Steve Spurrier. "He's the all- active duty in 1990. "But I'm pretty optimistic about the time leading scorer in Duke football his­ "Right now I'm just trying to avoid sur­ future," Peterson added in a press release tory, so we'll miss him. He's going to help gery by resting and exercising," he said. from the Duke sports information coach the kickers and be a part of the "The doctors have recommended that I department. "It will be exciting to move team. We have a lot of confidence in [in­ don't play any more due to the structure on to what's next. I certainly haven't put coming freshman] Randy Gardner as well of my back and what's already gone on. I all my eggs in one basket. Even before as some of the other kickers we have on feel fortunate to have played 11 years. A this, I didn't have my life impending on this team." lot of guys don't get to play three years in DUKE SPORTS INFORMATION PHOTO an NFL football career. When the season "It [the back] hurt last season, then in college and I've already done that, so I'm Placekicker Doug Peterson. starts I'm sure 111 miss it, but 111 help out the spring I rested it and tried again but very thaiikful."

SENIORS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS PLACEMENT SERVICES - IMPORTANT DATES Student PLACEMENT SERVICES SEMINARS: August 28 - Orientation (7:00 pm - Page) August 29 - Orientation (7:00 pm - Page) Health August 30 - Resume Writing (7:00 pm -139 Soc. Sci.) August 31 - Orientation for Engineers (7:00 pm -125 Engineering) Calendar available in 214 Flowers Building for other seminar dates! Program PLACEMENT SERVICES RESUME DROPS AND DEADLINES: PICKENS HEALTH CENTER • 684-6721 September 15 - 1st Resume Drop September 22 - 2nd Resume Drop • Medical Care • Cold and Flu Self-Help Table September 25 - Interviews Begin for Technical & Nontechnical Majors • GYN Clinic • Allergy Clinic September 29 - 3rd Resume Drop • Pharmacy October 4 - Placement Services Student Registration Deadline • Lab and X-ray Services Calendar available in 214 Flowers Building for other • Health Education Center Resume Drops and Deadlines! HEALTH EDUCATION • 684-6721

Individual appointments or group programs on: • Diet and Nutrition • Stress Management • Alcohol/Drug Use and Abuse • Contraception FALL 1989 • STDs including AIDS • Exercise • Smoking Cessation THE MEDIA IN INFIRMARY • 684-3367 COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE Inpatient Care Dial-A-Nurse for 24-hour telephone advice

Sociology 182, Political Science 180, IDC 182 STUDENT SPORTS CLINIC (Card Gym)

A study of the mass media in several different • How to begin an exercise program countries, looking at their relation to social and politi­ • Injury Prevention cal life, and their role in bringing about social change • Rehabilitation on the national and international level.

Professor Joel Smith SPORTS MEDICINE CLINIC (Finch-Yeager) Mondays and Wednesdays 1:50-3:05 • Treatment of exercise/sports related injuries. Room 129, Building Nine By appointment, call 684-6721. PAGE 16 / "THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 NCAA considers accrediting athletic departments

By CRAIG WHITLOCK and this just adds to the amount." "It's going to be pretty tough to set a standard," Brad­ The National Collegiate Athletic Association will con­ Probably the greatest advantage of accreditation ley said. "If some guy at Indiana thinks he knows how sider in January a proposal that would require the ath­ would be increased communication between athletic an athletic department is supposed to run, and then he letic departments of all member schools to be accredited departments, which could lead to the transfer of better comes to Duke and sees a whole separate program, what in a manner similar to the academic accreditations of in­ management techniques, said , assistant is he going to do? Tell Duke to change the way they stitutions. athletic director at the University of Kentucky. operate?" What impact the program would have on cheating in "There's not as much shared information between It remains to be determined if the accreditation plan college sports, however, remains to be seen, say NCAA schools as there should be," Bradley said. "I would really could help reduce or prevent cheating among schools, and athletic department officials. hope that something like [accreditation] would come which has reached epidemic proportions in recent years. Under a general plan approved by the NCAA adminis­ down to a sharing concept. Most of those interviewed, however, doubted that ex­ trative council and Presidents' Commission in April, ev­ "When you get athletic departments, people don't net­ ternal reviews would cure the cheating malady where ery NCAA member would be required every five years to work as much," he added. "You're kind of like your own other attempts have failed. be reviewed in such areas as recruiting, admissions little small business." "It's got the potential" to discourage rule-breaking, policies, fundraising methods and graduation rates. What could complicate or detract from the process Kennedy said. "[But] if schools have flouted their The institutions will not be expected to meet any sort would be unnecessary recommendations made by a recruiting, their scholarships and their fundraising, why of national standards, however. Each college or univer­ review team that might not fully understand the way a are they suddenly going to be legitimate for this process? sity will be judged directly in comparison to non-athletic particular athletic department works. "If people are going to cheat, they're going to cheat no aspects of the same school. For example, graduation For that reason, only those people with adequate qual­ matter what," Kennedy said. rates for athletes will be measured against the rate for ifications and authority should be used to certify other Hearn agreed that certification probably would not be other students, and the number of special-case athletic schools, Hearn and Bradley agreed. able to work miracles. "No amount of accreditation is admissions will be held up to the figures for other stu­ "It's awfully important in the accreditation process to going to substitute for people of goodwill," he said. dents. get people who know a lot and have a lot of experience," "It's just too complicated and too big a network of in­ Essentially the accreditation process, officially called Hearn said. "People with NCAA experience would be stitutions to expect this to clean it up. It's not going to "certification," is a peer review process, quite similar to better [to conduct the external reviews]." happen," Kennedy explained. reviews that the academic sectors of institutions are re­ quired to undergo. An external group would evaluate each school's program, and would be comprised of officials from other institutions such as athletic directors, admissions coun­ selors and faculty athletic representatives. Bradley pushing bill on Capitol Hill If the review group found a school's operations to be below par, the institution could face a loss of scholar­ By CRAIG WHITLOCK ships, probation or some other form of disciplinary mea­ sures. Congress is currently considering a bill that, if pas­ "It's a self-policing type of thing . . . rather than a big sed, would require all colleges and universities brother type of thing looking down at you," said Jim receiving federal funds to make public the graduation Marchiony, a public relations official with the NCAA. rates of its student-athletes. "It's not NCAA investigators going out. Sponsored by Sen. Bill Bradley (D-N.J.), Rep. Tom "It's a new concept because traditionally the members McMillen (D-Md.) and Rep. Edolphus Towns

ATTENTION STUDBNTS- THE CHRONICLE'S 1989-90 In order to expedite the delivery of your packages being shipped back to school, the following format should be used: BLUE Name Dorm Name and Room Number Duke University DEVIL'S Durham, North Carolina 277_ _ Phone Number ADVOCATE (If at all possible, please do not use a P.O. Box number.)

Thank you for your business and your cooperation! A guide to Duke and the Triangle

Department of Health, Physical Education and Recreation Fall 1989 Course Offerin gs

Cardiorespiratory Conditioning/Aerobics P.E. 11.1 Intermediate Tennis P.E. 11.1 MW 1:50-3:05 Buehler P.E.41.1 MWF 10:20-11:10 LeBar/Staff P.E. 11.2 TT 12:10-1:25 Buehler P.E.41.2 MWF 11:30-12:20 Raynor P.E. 41.3 MW 12:40-1:55 Raynor Dancing for Health P.E. 41.4 MW 1:50-3:05 Hursey P.E. 12.1 MW 12:40-1:55 Sharpe P.E. 41.5 TT 10:35-11:50 Raynor P.E. 12.2 TT 10:35-11:50 Sharpe P.E. 41.6 TT 1:45-3:00 Raynor P.E. 123 TT 3:20-4:35 Sharpe Advanced Tennis Tension Control P.E.42.1 MW 12:40-1:55 LeBar/Staff P.E. 14.1 MW 12:40-1:55 Staff P.E. 42.2 TT 12:10-1:25 LeBar/Staff

Weight Training Competitive Tennis P.E. 15.1 MWF 9:10-10:00 Falcone P.E. 50.1 TT, 1:45-3:00 LeBar/Staff P.E. 15.2 MWF 10:20-11:10 Falcone P.E. 153 MWF 11:30-12:20 McCauley Racquetball P.E. 15.4 MWF 12:40-1:30 McCauley P.E. 43.1 MWF 9:10-10:00 Harvey P.E. 15.5 TT 9:00-10:15 Harvey P.E.43.2 MWF 10:20-11:10 Harvey Designed to acquaint (or reacquaint) P.E. 15.6 TT 10:35-11:50 Stahlke P.E.43.3 MWF 11:30-12:20 Spangler P.E. 15.7 TT 12:10-1:25 Stahlke P.E.43.4 TT 9:00-10:15 Skinner students and employees with who's P.E.43.5 TT 10:35-11:50 Skinner Endurance Swimming P.E.43.6 TT 12:10-1:25 Hursey who and what's what at Duke and P.E. 16.1 MW 1:50-3:05 Forbes P.E. 16.2 MW 3:15-4:30 Woodyard Beginning Karate the surrounding Triangle area. P.E. 163 TT 10:35-11:50 Woodyard P.E. 51.1 MWF 10:20-11:10 Bowen P.E. 16.4 TT 12:10-1:25 Spangler P.E. 51.2 MWF 11:30-12:20 Bowen P.E. 16.5 TT 1:45-3:00 Forbes Free Circulation: 16,000 copies Intermediate Karate Beginning Swimming P.E. 56.1 MWF 12:40-1:30 Bowen P.E. 20.1 MW 12:40-1:55 Spangler P.E. 20.2 TT 10:35-11:50 Spangler Beginning 3,000 distributed Aug. 24 in freshman P.E. 52.1 TT 1:45-3:00 Beguinet dorrnitories and high traffic areas on the Intermediate Swimming P.E. 21.1 TT 3:20-4:35 Woodyard Intermediate Fencing first day of Freshman Orientation. P.E. 53.1 MW 1:50-3:05 Beguinet Water Safety Instructor Course 12,000 distributed Aug. 29 throughout P.E. 25.1 TT 1:45-3:00 Woodyard Volleyball Duke's campus and medical center as an P.E. 60.1 TT 12:10-1:25 Wilson Scuba Diving* insert to The Chronicle. P.E. 26.1 MW 1:50-3:05 Thompson Yoga P.E. 26.2 TT 1:45-3:00 Thompson P.E. 65.1 TT 12:10-1:25 Spector 1,000 distributed through special P.E.65.2 TT 1:45-3:00 Orr Whitewater Canoeing' « programs for transfer students, P.E. 28.1 TBA Staff Social Dancing prospective students and their parents P.E.72.1 MW 3:25-4:40 Trout Beginning Golf* P.E. 72.2 MW 5:00-6:15 Trout and new faculty members. P.E. 30.1 MWF 9:10-10:00 Lloyd P.E.723 TT 4:55-6:10 Trout P.E. 30.2 MWF 10:20-11:10 Lloyd P.E. 303 TT 11:30-12:20 Lloyd Equitation* P.E. 30.4 TT 9:00-10:15 Lloyd P.E. 80.1 MW 1:50-3:05 Herman Display Ad Deadline: August 10

Intermediate Golf* Advanced Equitation4 P.E.31.1 MW 12:40-1:55 Lloyd P.E. 81.1 TT 1:45-3:00 Herman For additional information, contact P.E. 31.2 TT 10:35-11:50 Lloyd Advanced First Aid & CPR The Chronicle Advertising Advanced Golf* P £. 100.1 TT 12:10-1:25 Raynor P.E. 32.1 TT 12:10-1:25 Lloyd Department at (919)-684-3811. Diet & Nutrition Beginning Tennis P.E. 110.1 MW 3:25-4:15 Gringle P.E. 40.1 MWF 9:10-10:00 LeBar/Staff Display advertising deadlines P.E. 40.2 MWF 11:30-12:20 LeBar/SUff History of Sports P.E. 403 MW 1:50-3:05 Raynor P.E. 170.1 MWF 10:20-11:10 Strome for other Back-toSchool Issues: P.E. 40.4 TT 9:00-10:15 Spangler P.E. 40.5 TT 10:35-11:50 LeBar/Staff Freshman Orientation August 17 First Day of Classes August 21

•Additional Fee Required Football Preview August 23

For more information, contact Dorothy Spangler , Director of Undergraduate Studies/HPER Don't miss out! 684-2202 -106 Card Gym Plan ahead to meet these special deadlines! PAGE 18 / THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989 Henderson remains quiet about transfer, future plans Over a month has passed since Phil Henderson an­ parently hasn't accepted Henderson, yet, and that has nounced that he was transferring from Duke, but Rodney Peele stalled talk of Henderson playing for the Fighting Illini. Henderson and others involved in the basketball Although Henderson may not have a 4.0 from Duke, it program have remained tight-lipped about the situation. The answer was no, and I was told I couldn't quote would be ludicrous for Illinois not to accept him when The initial surprise of Henderson's decision has worn him on that. Henderson wasn't angry, just firm. they've brought in players who didn't meet Proposition off, but serious questions have not been answered. There As a result, the questions remain unanswered. 48 standards in the past. Henderson is rumored to have is only speculation as to why Henderson left, and the di­ Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski didn't force scored 500 points higher on the SAT than the 700 re­ rection he is going is far from settled. Henderson out, despite classroom difficulties and the quired by Prop. 48. The delay by Illinois indicates that Most indications point to personal reasons for the DWI charge. On the contrary, most of the Duke coaches they may have other concerns about Henderson, such as move, an understandably private matter. However, it is tried to get him to stay. Even Henderson's mom said she the DWI or the secret reasons of Henderson's departure not unreasonable to ask Henderson about his plans for was unhappy with her son's move. from the Durham area. the future if he does in fact have any plans at all. Once it was final that Henderson was leaving, every­ Even if Illinois head coach backs away One thing is clear: Henderson does not want to talk one wanted to know where he was going. After all, it's from Henderson, schools such as Arizona and Oklahoma about it, yet. Reached at home in Chicago on July 21, not common for a player of Henderson's abilities to sud­ are always around to pick up extra players. Henderson refused to comment about any aspects until denly become available for practically any school in the Regardless of where Henderson goes, or what his rea­ he had everything resolved. country. sons were for leaving, the loss will be felt by the Duke Henderson's refusal to elaborate is not a shock, as he At first, it appeared Henderson was a lock for Illinois. basketball program. After losing Danny Ferry, John has declined to talk about some topics in the past. Still, He even told this reporter in June (in another short con­ Smith and Quin Snyder to graduation, the team didn't for him to keep quiet about taking summer classes in Il­ versation) that that was where he was going. Illinois ap­ need to lose a returning player as good as Henderson. linois is out of the ordinary. A lawyer for Henderson said the basketball player was enrolled in summer classes in Illinois, and post­ poned Henderson's DWI trial in Durham until the mid­ dle of August. Armed with that information, I asked Phil about it: Explore the Marine Sciences Evil, prying sportswriter: "Phil, can you tell me about your summer classes?" Jr on the North Carolina Coast at the Duke University Marine Laboratory

Advanced Research Training in Marine Molecular Biology and Biotechnology Kitty Hawk Analysis of Coastal Ecosystems Barrier Island Ecology Beach and Island Geological Processes Behavioral Ecology Roanoke PO Benthic Marine Algae Biochemical Communication and Regula­ Island —p^ tion in Marine Organisms Biological Oceanography Biology of Marine Macrophytes Continental Margin Sedimentation Ecology of Chemical Signals Experimental Ecology of the Marine Intertidal Zone Independent Study Light in the Sea Marine Animal Navigation Cape Marine Biology Marine Ecology Hatteras Marine Invertebrate Zoology Marine Policy Marine Sediments Organization of Marine Communities Physical Oceanography 4. Physiology of Marine Animals Morehead City

Cape Lookout

DUKE MARINE LAB Audio-Visual Presentation on Semester and Summer Programs: Saturday, August 26, 1:30 p.m., 136 Social Sciences Building.

MATT CANDLER/THE CHRONICLE Phil Henderson's departure remains clouded by un­ Cape Fear usual circumstances. WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 19

WELCOME

BADMINTON NEREIDIANS BASEBALL RACQUETBALL ALL MEN & WOMEN CREW ROADRUNNERS CROQUET RUGBY CYCLISTS SAILING DANCING DEVILS SKI EQUESTRIAN SKY FENCING MEN & WOMEN SOCCER DUKE WOMEN'S TOUCH FOOTBALL TAE KWON DO UNDERGRADS FRISBEE MEN & WOMEN TENNIS GOLF TRIATHLON MEN & WOMEN VOLLEYBALL KARATE WATER POLO MEN & WOMEN

Join a SPORTS CLUB AND Enjoy Competing Against Other Teams on a Non-Varsity Call the Sports Club Office for Level further Information: 684-6624 PAGE 20 / THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Junkin reportedly used steroids in '87

From staff reports can be a fine football player." Former Blue Devil All-America linebacker Mike A Cleveland scout once described Junkin as "a mad Junkin allegedly used steroids while a senior at Duke, dog in a meat market." according a report in the May 7 Cleveland Plain Dealer. Cleveland traded All-Pro linebacker to The report, which cited unnamed sources, said he was San Diego for the fifth pick in the 1987 NFL draft, which prescribed steroids by a doctor for an ankle injury he the Browns used to select Junkin. No Duke player had had as a senior. Junkin allegedly failed a steroids test been selected in the first round since Bob Matheson was before the draft in 1987 ad- picked by the Browns in 1967. minstered by the National Scouting Combine in India­ Junkin was traded from the Browns to the Kansas napolis. City Chiefs in April for a fifth-round draft choice, which Junkin could not be reached for comment. the Browns used to select Maryland wide out Vernon The Cleveland Browns reportedly knew of the results Joines. Once a top defensive prospect, Junkin's career of this test when they made the linebacker the fifth pick has been hampered by injuries in his two seasons at overall in the 1987 draft. Cleveland. "He failed at Indianapolis and everybody in our orga­ While at Duke, Junkin led the Blue Devils in tackles nization had a copy of the report," said one source quoted for three seasons. He holds the school's career mark with in the article. "Everybody knew it. It was not from tak­ 513 tackles, including 298 first hits. Junkin became the STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE ing steroids for weightlifting. It was prescribed by his first Duke defensive player to earn All-America honors Linebacker was known for hard hits doctor to help an injured ankle." in 15 years. when he played at Duke. At the time the NFL tested all prospective draft picks for steroid use. There were no penalties for testing positive, however. Since then, the NFL has instituted supensions for players who test positive. The NCAA, however, has an absolute ban on anabolic steroids, said Frank Uryasz, an NCAA drug-testing of­ ficial. Steroids help build muscles and can be useful for extreme injuries but have severe medical side effects, Uryasz said. BUS DRIVERS An unnamed scout from another team said they would DUKE DUKE not pick Junkin because "he was a pumped up guy com­ UNIVERSrTY NEEDED UNIVERSnY ing out of college." TRANSIT TRANSIT Duke Director of Athletics Tom Butters said he checked with Dr. Frank Bassett, the team physician, af­ ter he read the reports. Bassett told Butters that no one Several positions are available for student bus drivers for the fall at the University ever prescribed steroids. "I just don't semester. Choice of work schedules up to 19.9 hours per week. Pay think that is true," Butters said. rates range from $5.25 - $7.01/hr. If you are interested and if you can Bob Eller, assistant public relations director for the Cleveland Browns, said their policy is not to comment on attend one of the three training sessions in August, complete the any drug tests. application below and return to: "The Browns as an organization thought Mike Junkin was a fine football player," Eller said. "We still think he Transportation Department Indicate preference of training session Duke University (1-highest, 3-lowest) 712 Wilkerson Avenue Summer Session I Attn: John Manning Summer Session III Phone:(919)684-2218 August _7-12 _ 14-19 _ 21-26 •Temporary Housing Available Today's Date: Name* Social Security: Last First Middle Local Mailing Address:

Local Residence: Local Phone:

Permanent Address: Permanent #:

Duke Student? Yes No Class Status: Fr So Jr Sr Grad Other (explain)

Driver's License No. Type: State: Have you ever had an accident? (If yes, explain) Yes No

Driving Experience: Manual Transmission? Yes No

Buses? Yes No What type? ______How long? Trucks? Yes No What type? How long? Other? What type? How long? STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE Duke officials have denied any knowledge of Junk- Have you taken a defensive driving course? Yes No in's alleged steroid use. Describe:

GRID PICKS Other experience or training:. The Bod," The Bruiser," The Laugher," The Court Are you willing to obtain a N.C. Class A Driver's License? Yes No Jester," The A-Train" and others are preparing to (This is necessary to operate the buses) guide Duke students through the steamy, seedy and How many hours do you want to work per week?. stormy world of college football predictions in The Chronicle this fall. WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 21 Seven Blue Devil athletes competing in Olympic Festival

From staff reports Blue DevilS in the minors: Six former Duke base­ Several Blue Devil athletes are slated to compete in Sports briefs ball players are in the minor leagues this summer. Bob the U.S. Olympic Festival this summer. The festival in Brower, John Furch, Scott Bromby, Don Fowler, Kent Oklahoma City, Okla., lasts from July 21 to August 1. with Denver, while Cedric Jones will soon begin his Hetrick and Mike Trombley are working their way to the In men's basketball, incoming freshmen seventh season with the New England Patriots. majors. and Billy McCaffery are on the East team, while return­ Joel Patten now plays for San Deigo and Brian Bal- Brower leads the way at the plate, hitting .253 for ing sophomore will play for the South. dinger is with the Indianapolis Colts. Jason Cooper will Class AAA Columbus in the New York Yankees' farm Meanwhile, junior volleyball player Bev Stross earned try to land a spot with the . system. Furch is recovering from an eye injury with a spot on the East volleyball team. In addition, sopho­ Class A Utica of the Chicago White Sox, batting .198 mores Clint Carnell and George Dunn will join incoming Baldinger Charged: Former Duke football player with three home runs and 13 runs batted in. freshman Tim Vieth on the soccer field. Brian Baldinger was released on $350 bail on Thursday, Trombley, who just concluded his junior year at Duke, July 20, after being charged with leaving the scene of an is off to a great start in Class A Kenosha for the Minne­ Duke In the NFL: Anthony Dilweg, drafted in the accident, harassment, and criminal mischief. sota Twins. Trombley is 5-0 with a 3.05 earned run aver­ third round, has a good chance to earn a spot with quar­ Baldinger, 30, pleaded innocent to the charges which age. Hetrick is 6-5 with a 3.48 ERA at Class A Stockton terback-poor Green Bay. Dilweg was the Atlantic Coast arose from an incident when he allegedly jumped up and of the Milwaukee Brewers' farm system. Conference Player of the Year last fall. down on a woman's car after an accident in Long Island, Fowler is 4-7 and has six saves with a 3.68 ERA for Mike Junkin and Steve Slayden now play for the Kan­ N.Y. Baldinger played at Duke from 1979 to 1981. He Class A Waterloo, a Baltimore Orioles organization. sas City Chiefs after each began their careers with the played in Dallas from 1982 until 1987 before joining the Bromby is at Class A Rockford for the Montreal Expos, Cleveland Browns. Billy Bryan heads into his 12th year Indianapolis Colts. and has a record of 0-1 and a 4.35 ERA.

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By JIM FURLONG — is not because of any disinterest that I athletic director. He said the USGA possi­ Tom Butters, Duke's shrewd, savvy, have at Duke University nor any lack of bility marked the closest he has actually and strong-willed director of athletics, ad­ excitement that I have here ... I consider come to choosing to leave Duke. mits he did seriously consider leaving my present job at Duke as director of ath­ "Yes. If you can say not being offered Duke earlier this year, but now says he's letics to be important. I consider it to be the job is close," he said. "Had I been of­ definitely not seeking any other job. exciting, interesting and I have appreci­ fered the (USGA) job, I would have been "I have no plans to leave. I have no ated the. privilege of being able to serve probably more tempted by that opportu­ plans to do anything else," said Butters in Duke in this capacity for a long period of nity than any opportunity that has come an interview July 21. time. my way." The 51-year-old Butters, in his 13th "I will continue to feel that way. But the Butters first joined the Duke staff in year as the boss of Duke sports, did ex­ fact that a very interesting job became 1967. He's worked as head baseball coach DUKE SPORTS INFORMATION PHOTO plore the possibility of becoming the new available a few months ago, that involved and the inaugural director of the Iron Director of Athletics Tom Butters. executive director of the United States a game I am particularly fascinated by, Dukes, the primary fund raiser for Blue Golf Association. Earlier this month, the sparked my interest. It's that simple." Devils' athletics. His steady rise resulted proposed building will have "in the neigh­ USGA, with its headquarters in Far Hills, Butters, who was appointed a univer­ in his selection as the AD in the spring of borhood of 150,000 to 175,000 square N.J., promoted from within to fill the job. sity vice president 13 months ago, said he 1977. Since then, Butters has spear­ feet," said Butters, and he suggests a loca­ "I thought it was an extraordinary op­ first expressed a strong interest in the headed substantial improvements in tion linked to the aquatics center and portunity for someone and I was attempt­ USGA post last April. He said he went Duke sports facilties, and a much-ad­ stretching to the IM Building and sur­ ing to evaluate whether that someone was through "a whole series of interviews with mired endowed scholarship program: rounding parking areas. me," Butters said. "It was certainly very the search committee." On June 30, a Durham newspaper "I think this building has been much interesting. It is one of the few jobs like it He stressed he's not discontented at reported that two sources suggested But­ needed for a long period of time and it in the country, and I have a particular Duke. ters might be slowing down or that he did would serve the student body and the fancy for the game (of golf) and the integ­ "I have — and I have said this many not see new challenges at Duke. faculty and staff of this university every rity of the game . . . I'm not embarrassed I times — what I consider to be the best job "I have been here a long time and I read bit as much, if not more, than it would in­ lost the opportunity. I thought I ran the in intercollegiate athletics at Duke Uni­ with interest some of my colleagues in­ tercollegiate athletics," said Butters. race as well as I could ... I didn't run the versity," said Butters. "But this was an dicating that I was tired of what I was "This is a building that we need and I in­ race for the heck of it. I ran the race be­ opportunity that had a different set of ho­ doing and that I had done all that could tend to see to it that we get it... it would cause I felt it was a job that would inter­ rizons." be done," said Butters. "Their comments take five years (to finish)." est me." Butters considers the task of being the were uninformed, misguided and I don't Butters said the new recreation build­ How long will Butters be the Duke AD? future caretaker for much of organized expect to see that in the future. I certainly ing will likely cost $15 million and he "For as long, perhaps, as they'll have golf in this country, which includes in­ don't expect to see that in the future from thinks private contributions will pay for me," he said. "I don't know. Since I have ternational dealings, an extremely ap­ people who desire to be employed here." the large majority of the cost. no other opportunities, nor am I seeking pealing and worthwhile challenge. In the future, Butters will actively seek Jim Furlong, a Durham freelance writ­ any ... my interest in the (USGA) posi­ In the past, Butters has been ap­ to build a multi-purpose, extra-large rec­ er, contributes to many regional and na­ tion — let me make this as clear as I can proached by other colleges seeking a new reation center on West Campus. The tional publications.

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IFOK •o MOURN FOR TH_ ^LORIOUS DEATH OF CUR BWTHeRS MO SivreRS

Agony in China touches students

abroad -Daee

Black Faculty face disillusionment pages New Women's Center director outlines visions —page6 Science at Duke heads into 21st Century with massive $70 million facility — pagei4 PAGE 2 / THE CHRONICLE FEATURES WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Chinese students here try to cope with violence in homeland

By KEITH LUBLIN from CBS News who asked him to smug­ Evan Gottesman had been in China University group 'continues the cause' gle video tapes across the border to a con­ since February teaching English to medi­ nection in Tokyo. This practice, called cal students in Beijing. But his classes "pigeoning," was a technique the net­ were dwindling as his students left the works had been forced to use since the university for Tiananmen Square, where Chinese government began jamming fellow students were conducting a hunger broadcasts. strike and attracting world-wide atten­ When Gottesman delivered the video tion. The students were protesting for tapes after arriving in Japan, he was greater freedom of speech and freedom of asked to be interviewed by Dan Rather, the press. the CBS Evening News anchor. Gottes­ These rights are part of China's law but man agreed, and that night described to the government often prevents the people viewers across America the truth about from saying or writing anything it finds what happened in Tiananmen Square in offensive. The students refused govern­ the early hours of June 4. ment orders to leave the Square, and Indeed, since that dark night nearly when martial law was declared May 20, two months ago, many students and danger to the students seemed im­ faculty in the University community have mediate. expressed anger at the Chinese govern­ Yet despite this, Gottesman, a Yale ment for smashing the protests with such graduate entering Columbia Law School shocking violence. this coming fall, went down to see his stu­ After attending a large protest in front dents and spent the night in the Square of the Chinese Embassy in Washington with them. the day after the tragedy, Chinese stu­ "There is safety in numbers," he said, "I dents from the Triangle area demon­ didn't want to leave them alone. Besides MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE strated in Raleigh on June 7 for demo­ there were some exhilarating moments, Chinese students marching in Raleigh June 7 to protest violence in Beijing. cratic reforms in China and to mourn being part of an issue where right and those lost in the massacre. wrong were so clearly defined." "We went down to the square and saw dents were rounded up and executed; The Raleigh march came on the heels of On the night of June 3, Gottesman was the soldiers shooting into the crowd," Got­ others found a way to leave the country. a June 5 memorial gathering in front of planning to spend the night with the stu­ tesman said. "These huge crowds would Although the Chinese government would the Chapel, where approximately 50 Chi­ dents again, except he liked to watch "the inch toward the square and then when try to place the blame for the violence on a nese students at Duke decried the armed evening propaganda." The news that the soldiers fired, they'd duck and run few student leaders, Gottesman notes, repression of student demonstrators in night warned the citizens to obey the mar­ away. Those who were injured were "the student leaders didn't play a huge Beijing. tial law. But "the martial law had become strapped onto the backs of bicycles and part [in the protests] because they were Others have directed their efforts to­ sort of a joke since the government had rushed off to the hospital." spontaneous. Everyone came to the ward educating the misinformed Chinese not enforced it," he said. Although many people might think it Square with their own complaints." about the massacre. Last month the Chi­ Actually, troops could not be found that horrific to be in the midst of such violence, Gottesman left China on June 8 as the nese Student Association at Duke Univer­ were so blindly loyal that they would Gottesman said that he felt "less scared U.S. Embassy was notifying all American sity, (CSADU), published a pamphlet crush peaceful demonstrations by their than I might in a deserted street in New citizens that it was unsafe to remain in a claiming that they have a "responsibility own countrymen. But this night would be York City. Because we were in the Square country whose leadership was so unstable to resume and continue the cause that different. Gottesman fell asleep and was for a reason; I felt strongly about what and whose military seemed on the brink thousands of students and civilians died awakened at 1:30 that morning when his was going on." of civil war. When he got to the Beijing for." roommate said, "Evan, they're shooting." The carnage lasted for days. Some stu­ airport, he was approached by a reporter See page 3 •

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• From page 2 the massacre ... we hope that someday dents from Duke, North Carolina State According to his office, Helms' bill was Specifically, the pamphlet announced this fund will be able to directly go to the University (NCSU) and the University of rejected when a weaker bill offered by the formation of a Chinese Democracy democracy movement in China and make North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-CH) Senators Robert Dole (R-Kan.) and Fund to be used to finance CSADU in its its contribution to bringing more freedom sent Governor Jim Martin a letter asking George Mitchell (D-Me.) was favored. pro-democracy efforts in three ways. to the Chinese people, one fifth of the him to suspend all official contacts North Congressmen have also tried to aid Chi­ First, to "send information about the world's population." Carolina maintains with China until the nese students in the United States who massacre back to China where people are However, it will be difficult to compen­ situation there improves. For instance, a fear the threatening situation in China. given absolutely no access to what ac­ sate the victims' families directly because, "Friendship Treaty" signed last July was Under the terms of their visas, most of the tually happened in Tiananmen Square." "there is just not enough information on designed to develop trade between North Chinese students in the U.S. are required Xiaouyu Li, the president of CSADU, their addresses," Li said. Carolina and the Chinese province of to return to China for at least two years noted that the group had "already mailed According to Li, $2,100 has been raised Liao-Ning. immediately after they finish their home hundreds of newsletters with for the Chinese Democracy Fund so far. Even though the treaty has proved un­ studies. The reason for this, according to graphic pictures; we have also tried "Most of that money has come from Chi­ profitable for the state, no action has yet Li, "is to prevent the so-called 'brain faxing images, reports, and analyses back nese students at Duke," he said. been taken, according to Martin's office. drain' of the Third World Countries." to China." Five hundred of those dollars have been Second, the group wants to build "a net­ donated to a newly published newspaper, work among Chinese students in the U.S. Press Freedom Herald, which is pub­ We hope that someday this fund will be able to and hopefully develop a global association lished by Chinese journalists living in the for democracy in China." U.S., Li said. "The purpose of the paper is directly go to the democracy movement in China The last goal is to "raise money to sup­ to print some news and discussion of and make its contribution to bringing more port those who have lost their beloved in democracy in China," he added. The remaining money from the fund freedom to the Chinese people. will go to support the democracy move­ ment in China, "in whatever way we find Xiaouyu Li helpful," Li said. One way CSADU may use the funds CSADU president raised would be to help send a delegate from the University to the First Confer­ On the federal level, Chinese students That is, to prevent these newly educated ence of Chinese Students, which began studying in the U.S. have received sup­ students from remaining in the U.S. July 21 at the University of Chicago. Li port from both of North Carolina's U.S. where they might enjoy a higher standard said he assumed the conference will be senators. In discussing an amendment to of living. held to discuss how Chinese students na­ the Immigration Act, Senator and Presi­ Recently, Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi tionwide can combine their splintered ef­ dent Emeritus Terry Sanford said "I of California introduced a bill which forts into a national endeavor. believe we have a responsibility to the would exempt Chinese students from this For example, The Tiananmen Square over 400 students and academics we host requirement. "This bill will provide us an Foundation (TSF) is a southern California today in North Carolina — a responsibil­ opportunity of waiting until the situation organization with the same purpose as ity to guarantee that they will not be forc­ in China gets better," Li said. Four Uni­ the Chinese Democracy Fund. TSF has ibly sent back to a land that quakes again versity students, along with students raised over $30,000, according to presi­ under totalitarian crackdown." from UNC-CH and NCSU went to Wash­ dent Jason Wen. TSF and the Chinese Saying "Communists are Communists," ington last month to appeal to North Democracy Fund share many of the same Senator Jesse Helms introduced a bill Carolina's congressmen to vote for goals and could support favored causes that "emphasizes the fact that we simply Pelosi's bill. more effectively if the many different cannot have business as usual if the mur­ The students were assured personally groups could combine their finances. der rampage resumes or is continued." by North Carolina Congressmen Martin The various Chinese student associa­ His proposal asks that the U.S. roll back Lancaster and David Price that they will tions have appealed not only to the popu­ trade and related matters to the level at support the bill. MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE lace, but also to the government, on both which these relations stood before the Last Thursday, the bill passed through Xiaouyu Li, president of CSADU the state and federal level. A group of stu­ start of the decade. See CHINA on page 19 ^

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By CHRIS O'BRIEN While seen as a great leap forward by a attempt to fully integrate its faculty, but "It's the ideal position for me at this University that only began to desegregate he remains optimistic. "In the last three time in my career," said Richard Davis in its faculty in 1966, some believe too much years we're just beginning to see that di­ 1983. Davis, a black scholar who had just emphasis has been put on the hiring of versity at Duke is a good thing," Wood been recruited away from Middlebury black faculty and not enough on improv­ said. "And we're beginning to reap the College, was commenting on his appoint­ ing the University environment in which benefits." ment to the University as a professor of they must live. Wood characterized the first year since Chinese history. "The main problem is our belief that the Black Faculty Resolution as a success­ Brackette Williams was a black profes­ we've done enough," said Jerome Culp, ful one. Three new regular rank faculty sor who had just been recruited in the an­ the only black tenured professor in the were recruited along with three new visit­ thropology department at the same time law school. "Just adopting this resolution ing professors. In addition, two visiting as Davis. "It may take some getting used is insufficient." professors were moved up to regular rank, to, but one isn't as openly confronted with William Turner is a black professor in and two offers remain outstanding, al­ race [at Duke and in Durham] as is nor­ the Divinity School who has recently been though both seem likely to accept. mally associated with the South," she said promoted to director of Black Church Af­ Recruitment at the University stands to at the time of her appointment. fairs. He provides an unusual perspective improve in the areas of honesty and can­ Four other black faculty were added in on the University in the sense that he has dor, he said. "There is a disparity between 1983, including religion professors Melvin been here since 1966 as an under­ what you're told and reality. Duke does Peters and Sandra Robinson, artist-in- graduate, graduate student and now a more than its share of this, but I feel like residence Paul Jeffrey and anthropology professor. we're getting better," he said. professor Michel-Rolph Trouillot. "You can see improvement if you look at White disagreed with Wood's assess­ Despite a major effort by the University the numbers" in terms of increasing black ment somewhat. "In order to compete, we to attract large numbers of black profes­ students and faculty, Turner said. "But if See page 5 • sors, Williams, Trouillot and Davis all you look at Duke vis-a-vis where it ought chose to leave. SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE to be, then the improvement argument is Williams left the University at the end History professor Peter Wood tenuous." of the 1984-85 academic year. When Richard White, dean of Trinity College reached in New York where she is cur­ Rhode Island where he is now teaching at and dean of arts and sciences, described rently teaching at Queens College, Wil­ Brown University. the atmosphere for black faculty at the liams refused to comment on her reasons "The morale of black faculty [at the University as "mixed. But by increasing for leaving the University, saying only University] is generally low," Davis said. the number, we can make it more that she had "no hard feelings" and "My leaving is a reflection of that." comfortable." wanted to "let bygones be bygones." And so despite 1983 being an extremely "One thing that eliminates marginiliza- Trouillot, who now teaches at John successful year in the recruitment of tion is to have a critical mass," Culp said. Hopkins University, would only say this black faculty, that success has been "And we have not achieved that." of his decision to leave the University: marred by the loss of half of those "But [the] history [department] has the "The possibility of resigning from Duke recruits. largest number of black faculty at Duke," was strong enough to consider even before The ongoing effort to lure black faculty despite its problem with Davis, Culp said, the Hopkins offer came. Once it did come, was bolstered by the Academic Council's "so it's not simply solved by increasing the I knew I would leave." passage of the. Black Faculty Resolution number." Davis, however, who left officially at on April 21, 1988. Among other things, it Peter Wood, professor of history and the end of the 1988 fall semester, chose to required each hiring unit to hire at least chairman of the Academic Council's Com­ be more candid about his reasons for one additional black faculty member by mittee on Black Faculty, also saw many SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE leaving. Davis was reached in Providence, 1993. problems remaining in the University's Law professor Jerome Culp Crook's Corner * Fine Southern Dining

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• From page 4 mean Davis' claims are false. "I don't try to be explicit," he said. White also think you can conclude anything simply stressed that minorities are not recruited because the agency rules one way," he any differently than other faculty. said. "The kind of discrimination Davis al­ Of course many black professors do leges is very difficult to prove." choose to stay at the University. Culp Culp cautions that he has not examined cites himself as an example of someone the University's records and so cannot be who has enjoyed his position. "I have al­ sure of the EEOC's ruling. "But if you look ways been treated fairly by the Law at what the University paid, it is inconsis­ School, so that is a counter-example [to tent with its policy of trying to encourage Davis]," Culp said. more black faculty," he said. Davis appears to be one of the most ex­ When Davis originally came to the Uni­ treme examples of the disillusionment versity in 1983, he was paid $20,000. Five that several black faculty members have years later his salary had risen by $6,400. experienced. His problems began almost Davis claimed that his starting salary from the time he set foot on campus. In a was "low and inequitable" in a letter to detailed letter to the Committee on Black the Committee on Black Faculty. Faculty, Davis described his reasons for After Davis received tenure in April leaving the University. 1988, he received a $9,000 pay raise. The "I was tricked into accepting a low and normal raise for such a promotion is inequitable salary," he stated. "No in­ $3,000, he said. Later, after informing the stitution can be taken seriously in its administration of his plans to attend claim to value black faculty when it offers Brown, he was offered an additional SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE such meagre and inequitable compen Students attend a rally for black faculty hiring. $10,000 pay raise to match Brown's offer. sation." In less than one year, the University had He also laments the treatment of black loss of Davis, but informed him that the in Raleigh, said federal law prohibits him offered to almost double Davis' 1987-88 faculty by the history department. "No University would not pay Davis' salary for from revealing any knowledge of a case. salary. sector in the University has been more the second semester of leave because he Dolores Burke, director of the Equal "No slew of gifts at the end compensates successful in recruiting black faculty, but was not returning to the University. Opportunity office on campus, said there for mistreatment at the beginning," he the department's subsequent treatment of Davis said he was then forced to forgo his is nothing unusual about an EEOC said. that faculty is deplorably callous and con­ second semester of leave and begin teach­ charge being filed against the University. Wood also stressed the importance of descending," Davis said. ing at Brown a semester early. On average, about 10 to 15 charges are paying equitable salaries to black faculty Davis continued by accusing history "The basic University strategy is 'we filed each year, which is not surprising for members. With the higher demand across department chair Warren Lerner of don't treat them [black faculty] decently a company that employs 17,000, she said. the country, he said, straight marketplace sabotaging his attempts to gain tenure by unless we have to,'" Davis said. Subse­ It would have been unusual if the economics dictate the need to do so. delaying the application process. While quently, he filed charges with the Equal EEOC had decided that the charges war­ Lerner admitted that Davis' salary was the process began in September 1987, he Employment Opportunity Commission ranted further legal action, since the Uni­ low, but said that the problem with low did not receive final notification of tenure (EEOC) alleging inequity and discrimina­ versity has never had a case taken to salaries extended beyond just Davis. It until April 1988, despite the fact that the tion in his treatment by the University. court, she said. was a problem the entire department was process usually takes less than a semes­ Kenny Williams, a black professor of Walz agreed with Burke's assessment trying to deal with, he said. ter, Davis said. English has also previously filed charges that the number of charges filed against "It's true that the history faculty [black The final confrontation for Davis came with the EEOC, Davis said. Williams was someone does not necessarily indicate and white] are paid very poorly, especially when he notified the University in out of town and could not be reached for that discrimination is taking place. The ones hired at the same time as me," Davis November 1988 that he was accepting an comment. number of charges filed "more reflects the said. offer from Brown University to join their The EEOC concluded that it could find public's perceptions of problems of dis­ "Even if the issue is not race, the issue faculty. Davis was just completing the no pattern of discrimination at the Uni­ crimination," he said. is that a University that desegregated first semester of a two semester leave. versity, and ruled against Davis' claim. Although the EEOC ruled against only two decades ago cannot afford even White expressed his dismay over the Richard Walz, director of the EEOC office Davis, Culp says it doesn't necessarily See RETENTION on page 20 •

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_•_ «»>__**_*__ •m-'m*A«l-**#-t'm' '«!*_ J__a_W_t ___A_- PAGE6 / THECHRONICIE FEATURES WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Women's Center director outlines visions Simmons says leadership resources must be used

Chronicle Reporter Jamie O'Brien recently inter­ This summer we've been researching the climate at viewed Martha Simmons, the new director of the Duke for women. What are the leadership opportunities Women's Center. The following is a partial transcript of for women and how can we enhance those in the that interview: student, staff, and faculty populations? We're doing our Chronicle: How would you describe the vision of the homework so when we get this information on wants Women's Center? and needs we'll have some background to plug it into. Simmons: In working at other colleges, I have seen There are also some specific programs that will hap­ what can happen when a single individual or a group of pen over the year. We're going to be hosting a group of people clearly articulate their goals and then works to­ Russian women who will be here in October but we're gether in a mutually respectful process. The women and working with the host group to have them meet Duke men at Duke are already accomplished when they get students and to talk about their lives in the Soviet here, already leaders. When you add that to the wealth Union. We're also co-sponsoring a concert in October. of resources on this campus for helping people realize But our main event will be a celebration in March, a din­ their full potential, both as individuals and as a commu­ ner to recognize the women at Duke in arenas of accom­ nity, this creates a dynamic environment. plishment. We're co-sponsoring the dinner with And all of them need help in creating new visions, in Women's Studies. creating an environment that will foster full potential. We're also sponsoring a play during orientation to es­ Because women's history, sociology, psychology, lives sentially talk about communication about sexual issues. and contributions have either been unrecorded, or as­ It's a play that presents various scenarios that are com­ sumed to have been the same as men's, we are just now mon on a campus and helps people to realize strategies MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE realizing what this new vision can be, as a community. for being clear about what they want and don't want and We are just now creating the scholarship; we are just how to avoid bad situations. That's going to be on Satur­ Women's Center Director Martha Simmons now realizing who women are, what they have done, day of orientation. what they can do. Chronicle: Do you expect for men to be more involved and continues to do research on women specifically, This is what the Women's Center is all about — being with the Women's Center? How do you envision male in­ there's going to be new information that needs to be a focal point in the Duke community for the Actualizing volvement? passed on, not just to women for their understanding of of an environment where gender is one of many Simmons: Well, conceptually, there's really no their own situation but for men who have mothers, part­ respected differences, a tool rather than a barrier to full women's issue that doesn't involve men in some way. ners and women friends. realization. Even if it's just that the reason it's a women's issue is be­ We want men to be involved in leadership positions, Chronicle: With that in mind what programs do you cause men don't have a clear understanding of the whole particularly around issues such as safety, and this is an have in mind for the next year or so ? scope of it. issue that involves both men and women very critically. Simmons: It's interesting, we are working very hard Even in women's health issues, many men are in part­ Men will have a real opportunity through the Women's right now to set up a framework through which we can nership with women and it helps for them to have an un­ Center to learn about issues of leadership; men and listen to the constituencies that we've identified, which derstanding of how women's health issues are different women together evolving new models of leadership is a will include our administering questionnaires to various from men's health issues. That's a new idea, by the way. very exciting possibility. The whole notion of men and groups: students, staff and faculty, and our meeting Not just in the human community, but in the women's women working together and being equals as leaders is with them to determine how they could best utilize a community that's a new idea. something that we want to foster. Women's Center. Most of the scientific research that's been done and Chronicle: Do you think men have been involved in The Women's Center is chartered to do programming most of the scientific research that's still being done is women's issues to a significant degree in the past? and support, advocacy and information referral. Within done on male bodies, male physiology. There are contin­ Simmons: I think men have been involved. Margaret that programming area we've identified three areas that uing conclusions drawn about what people need or about [Nelson, Trinity '89] and I were just involved in doing a we want to do that programming in: safety, health and what people's disease patterns are based on one kind of presentation to a group of international scholars and personal and professional development. These areas body. But a woman's physiology is much different from a visitors to the Duke campus and in the course of that we give us a pretty broad arena within which to work. man's physiology so as the medical community begins to See SIMMONS on page 18 •

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A UNIQUE, HISTORIC CENTER OF DISTINCTIVE SHOPS, RESTAURANTS AND SERVICES Corner of W. Main and Gregson • Durham, N.C. PAGE 8 / THECHRONICLE FEATURES WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Keeping a low profile Volunteer health group serves as information source for state gays, lesbians By CHRIS O'BRIEN of several local professionals and volun­ volunteers and nine paid staffers, who do members of the community," Johnston Chances are, you've passed by the of­ teers. "Our health care concerns were not necessarily share the same sexual ori­ said. "But the reactionary backlash in the fices of the North Carolina Lesbian-Gay being avoided," Johnston said. "With so entation. "We have volunteers who are form of laws governing homosexual ac­ Health Project (LGHP) in West Durham much information around, the larger Tri­ not gay or lesbian," Johnston said. "And I tivity, violence and homophobia are inevi­ at least once, but its unlikely that you angle community should be able to sup­ think that speaks to what these individu­ table, so we must come together," she were aware you were doing so. The people port some sort of agency." als think this [LGHP] is about: good said. who work there don't advertise their pres­ A steering committee was formed to di- health care." "We've worked so hard and lost so many ence, and they believe it's for the best. members of our community, we've learned "We don't put our name on the door, the cost of being silent." less for the people who work here, and Many people, however, cannot make it more for the people who want to use it, so to the office. In order to serve these peo­ that everyone on the streets who sees ple, the project has started "Healthline." them come in doesn't know their Sunday through Thursday night from business," said Julie Johnston, interim di­ 6:30 to 9:30, a phone is staffed by a volun­ rector of the LGHP. "Because of the na­ teer who is able to provide a wide range of ture of our work, we must be confidential, information to callers. our public image is important." They are also the only organization in the phonebook with the description of It's not like one day "lesbian and gay" printed with their name. "We wanted to make it as easy as you're not gay, and possible for people to find," she said. "We're a contact place for people who are the next day you are. very isolated." Coming out is a Johnston explained that the LGHP continual decision. tries to provide a variety of services the gay and lesbian community might other­ wise have difficulty obtaining. "There's so Julie Johnston much to be done, with so few resources. SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE LGHP interim director We try to do as much as we can." Services Julie Johnston, interim director of the LGHP include providing counseling, AIDS education, emotional support for AIDS rect the project and funding came from Foremost, LGHP provides counseling The Healthline serves as a sort of victims and general information to the grants, donations and private sources. for gays and lesbians, especially to help "informational clearing house" as people gay and lesbian community. The first paid staff members were hired in deal with the pressure that "coming out" call from across the state to ask a variety LGHP was started in 1982 and is the 1986 and in 1987 LGHP had become big can bring. "It's not like one day you're not of questions, said Rebecca Wilson, Trinity only organization of its kind in North enough to think about reorganizing. At gay, and the next day you are. Coming out '88 and LGHP staffer. These questions in­ Carolina. On p*aper LGHP aims to serve the time a board of directors was created is a continual decision. You constantly clude where to find social organizations the entire state, but Johnston said finan­ along with the position of executive di­ have to make little decisions like 'Should I such as gay bars, adequate health care, or cial realities limit their main target area rector. talk about my partner?'" Johnston said. legal information. In addition, the volun­ to the Triangle. The LGHP now operates under a bud­ "You do see a new acceptance that gays teers are counseled to a caller if The project grew out of the joint efforts get reaching $100,000 and is staffed by 75 and lesbians are here, and are viable See page 9 • 'A HUNAM h Gourmet Chinese Restaurant A lot of restaurants in the area are cooking Chinese food. Only we cook your kind of Chinese food.

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• From page 8 grown so much in the past few years that —gay-related immune deficiency, the knowledge and apply it in some way that they need to talk about a problem they when reorganizing in 1987, the project term used by CDC [Centers for Disease can help others and maybe save a life," he are having. split into two separate sections, the sec­ Control] in late '70s." As of July 5, 469 said. "We don't have a cure, we don't have "People might not indicate they have a ond being called The AIDS Services Proj­ people in North Carolina had died of a vaccine, we just have information." problem, but sometimes if you just give ect (TASP). AIDS. Since coming to TASP last November, them the opportunity, they'll start And this has also meant broadening the "There is a real mountain to climb in Bengie has helped to organize one of its talking," Wilson said. scope of their work beyond just the gay AIDS education. Most people don't think largest programs, called "Reducing Our Healthline also includes a health care and lesbian community. they're at risk of getting the HIV," Hair Risk." The program, funded by a grant referral network. "That service is pro­ "The U.S. public health services has said. from the North Carolina state govern­ vided when people call in and want a sen­ stated that within five years, everyone Hair entered into AIDS-related work ment, sends packets of information about sitive health care provider," she said. A will know someone who is HIV infected, after the loss of someone close to him to AIDS and condoms to local bookstores, list of physicians and dentists who are or has died from AIDS related diseases," AIDS. The reason was not to speed his and outreach workers to local gay bars sensitive to gay and lesbian needs is com­ said Bengie Hair, a TASP volunteer. own personal healing process, but rather where they sit at tables and provide pack­ piled through personal references and is "Most people still see this as a gay related to make use of his experience. ets and answer questions for the patrons. available to those who call in and request disease, and don't feel at risk. We con­ "I've seen the day-to-day horrors of Rebecca Wilson, one of several outreach them. front AIDS education from the fact that AIDS and the discrimination it brings workers, spends her weekend nights in a The initial mission of LGHP focused on people view AIDS in the terms of GRID along with it. This is a way to take my See LGHP on page 17 • meeting the needs of the gay and lesbian community, and in the past few years, this has increasingly come to mean help­ ing people deal with AIDS. The scope of the LGHP's services relating to AIDS had Students to serve as buddies for AIDS patients

By CHRIS O'BRIEN volunteers will receive an additional eight relax. Beginning this fall, a handful of stu­ hours of training in AIDS education. Julie Even though some patients are too sick dents will be doing their part to help the Johnston, interim director of the Lesbian- to do anything taxing, the buddy can at Medical Center in the treatment of AIDS Gay Health Project, will conduct the least sit and talk with them, she said. patients. AIDS education part of the training. Five Many patients must bring their chil­ The Duke University Student AIDS students have already committed to par­ dren with them, and the buddies can look Project (DUSAP) will be added to the ticipating in the program, Blackwell said. after them. In addition, the buddies can Health Career Volunteers (HCV) program The idea for DUSAP derived from a spend time with the patient's families, on a trial basis. Under HCV, a student class the students were taking this year. Blackwell said. Often they are afraid and who wants to be a volunteer in the Medi­ The class, Religion 196, was a seminar on just need someone to talk to, she said. cal Center can do so in a variety of depart­ AIDS taught by Thomas McCollough, as­ One major obstacle facing the program ments. But until now, students have not sociate professor of religion. The students is the lack of space in the AIDS section in been able to volunteer in the AIDS center, came up with the idea after Johnston the Medical Center, Blackwell said. Cur­ according to Kim Blackwell, a Trinity se-' spoke to the class, Blackwell said. rently, there is not even enough space for nior and a DUSAP volunteer. The volunteers, often referred to as all of the patients, many of whom have to "The normal hospital volunteer proba­ "buddies," will be able to assist the pa­ sit in a waiting room down the hall from bly can't work in the AIDS section," she tients in a variety of ways, Blackwell said. the treatment area. This is the reason the said. Because many of the patients are from program is currently only on a trial basis, HCV is run by Sandra Tuthill, a special outside of Durham or are poor, they have she said. assistant in the Trinity College of arts no way to get around the city. The ward is But, if all goes well, the program will and sciences. Tuthill was out of town and usually crowded and patients must spend begin full time in January. And the stu­ could not be reached for comment. a long time waiting for treatment, she dents who are trained this semester will RONICLE Volunteers will spend eight hours train­ said. The buddies will be able to get the be able to train additional students, Free condoms ing for the HCV program. The DUSAP patients out of the clinic and help them Blackwell said.

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By CRAIG WHITLOCK mending that the state immediately form Up until a few years ago, North a legislative task force to study the wet­ Carolina's thousands of acres of wetlands lands problem, with the goal of introduc­ were considered to be one thing: waste­ ing a wetlands protection act in the 1991 lands. General Assembly. Swampy lowlands are not available for "We are in a real difficult situation," development or agriculture unless they said Elizabeth Babcock, a research as­ can be drained. And drained they were. sistant and student in the School of For­ But while industry expansion and agri­ estry who co-authored the report. "If we culture have grown greatly in the eastern don't do something soon, we'll lose one of part of the state, probably over two-thirds our most precious natural treasures." of North Carolina's original wetlands "I think the worst is here right now," have disappeared. Babcock added. "But I certainly don't The public is beginning to discover mean to say that if things are left the way what environmentalists have known all they are, we won't lose any more along; that wetlands are integral to not wetlands." only the state's natural heritage, but to its Wetlands are exactly what their name implies: land covered by some amount of natural existence as well. Source: N.C. Environmental Defense Fund BRENDEN KOOTSEY/THE CHRONICLE The North Carolina Environmental water at one time. Colloquial synonyms Defense Fund, (NCEDF), a non-profit re­ include, among other words, swamp, search and advocacy group, has released a marsh, bog, pocosin, savannah, bay and ence. Types of wetlands range from salt is becoming increasingly obvious that lengthy report detailing wetland loss in dismal. marshes (located along coastal barrier is­ wetlands not only function as a refuge for the state. But the NCEDF report differs But much of the problem in preserving lands) to Piedmont forested swamps (such 70 percent of the state's rare and endan­ from a purely scientific study by recom­ wetlands lies in identifying their pres- as Meadow Flats in Duke Forest) to poco- gered wildlife and plant species, but also sins (a sort of elevated peat bog concen­ as a major "chemical sink" that filters out trated in North Carolina). pollutants. "Some of the driest lands are wetlands," Wetlands are also "critical to the main­ said Doug Rader, director of NCEDF's tenance of a productive marine fishery" in coastal resources and water quality North Carolina, a $70 million annual in­ program. dustry, according to the report. Most of the state's wetlands are located "Although there is much we don't know in the eastern part of North Carolina, about how much of our original wetlands especially among the sprawling sounds remain, what we do know is shocking," and river systems neighboring the Outer states the report. "We know of many large Banks. wetlands that have been destroyed in These lands are often of great historical recent years. Certainly less than 50 per­ and biological importance, such as bot­ cent remain [of the state's original wet­ tomland swamps along the Black River lands]; probably less than one third." basin containing the oldest trees east of the Rocky Mountains, including cypress NCEDF officials point out that while it trees almost 1,700 years old, according to may be easy to show that wetlands are the report. disappearing, it is a much more difficult Ever since Europeans began to settle in task to move the government and public North Carolina, wetlands have been to action. A plethora of private and gov­ drained and cleared for development and ernment agencies are responsible for the agriculture, primarily because no one had protection of some kind of wetland. But no

MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE any use for a swamp. umbrella organization or legislation ex- North Carolina's wetlands are disappearing. Over the last decade or so, however, it See WETLANDS on page 19 • CPI photo finish m^ah WOMEN'S FALL 1989 • •••••••I flfK(W i Pt1?!?, _lf% 5r i STUDIES COURSES AT DUKE UNIVERSITY % Open House Come meet new faculty and old friends, and pick up information on Save 50 new courses and house courses for the fall. on color processing & 4x6 prints Friday, September 1st 4:00-6:00 Each picture is the best Selected Courses Fulfilling Certificate Requirements

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Prices In This Ad Effective Through Tuesday, August 1, 1989 In Durham County Stores Only. We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities. None Sold To Dealers. We Gladly Accept Federal Food Stamps. PAGE 14 / THE CHRONICLE FEATURES WEDNESDAY, JULY More than doubling the size of West Can Science Resource Initiative will cost almost $80 million in initial phase alone, providinj

By MATT SCLAFANI The long term goals include providing Anlyan, head of the SRI steering commit­ Dr. Melvyn Lieberman's laboratory in space for interdisciplinary research and tee, said a problem such as a lesion in the Nanaline H. Duke building is like a laby­ space for corporate scientists and Univer­ brain requires scientists from a whole rinth. With high ceilings and narrow cor­ sity scientists to work together. Other range of fields such as chemistry, neurol­ TRUSTEE ridors, one feels a little claustrophobic. space will be allocated for large and ex­ ogy and even animal neurologists. Enigmatic gadgets and apparatus, freez­ pensive equipment which could be shared Lieberman, who is head of the COMMUTE ers with mysterious specimens, comput­ by many researchers. program's faculty advisory committee, ers with enflamed spaghetti wire The interdisciplinary aspect of SRI is agrees with the need for interdisciplinary crammed into nooks and crannies remind what makes the plan truly unique, said study. "Science is really crossing boun­ one of a mad scientist's lab in a bad late Charles Putman, vice provost for research daries and as a result the traditional dis­ night movie. and development. It is a necessary move ciplines are breaking down and we are Lieberman has been at the University in order to keep pace with a current trend using technology from various areas to for 25 years. Nevertheless he does not at Duke and in research in general, he solve problems." VICE-CHAIR have all the lab space he needs to conduct said. A self-accreditation study released in JACK BAUGH his cardiology research. Lieberman is not "Much of our science and research now 1988 focused on the growth of interdisci­ alone however. The University is suffer­ is becoming interdisciplinary. There are plinary research. The report, titled ing from a general space shortage. The common areas of interest and common "Crossing Boundaries: Interdisciplinary problem is particularly acute for the sci­ areas of research discovery," Putman Planning for the Nineties," discusses the ences because extensive room is needed to said. history and importance of interdisciplin­ conduct experiments. "A facility in itself does not necessarily ary research at the University. The paucity of space for research has automatically foster a collaboration but "Interdisciplinary activity has been an made it difficult for faculty to test creative the fact is if we can create a facility that established aspect of Duke teaching and new ideas. Graduate students do not al­ functionally works very well then there is research for a half-century. In the next ways have an adequate chance to conduct research of their own. Meanwhile, the ad­ ministration has lost prospective faculty recruits because it could not guarantee Science is really crossing boundaries and as a lab space to star scientists, let alone up result the traditional disciplines are breaking and coming assistant professors. down. In response to this crisis, the University FACULTY ADV. has embarked on the Science Resource Melvyn Lieberman COMMITTEE Initiative (SRI), a massive expansion of science facilities that will continue into SRI faculty committee chair the 21st century. The first phase alone of the SRI will a good chance, good opportunity that the half-century, however, interdisciplinary cost between $70-80 million. The initial interaction and the collaboration will es­ activity may well become a hallmark of structure built will be larger than all of sentially improve our research base. Now Duke teaching and research," the report the buildings on West Campus combined, when you talk about improving our re­ reads. CHAIR according to Tom Dixon, assistant vice search base you're clearly addressing the The number of interdisciplinary MELVYN LIEBERMAN president for administration. The long whole issue of education," Putman added. programs at the University has grown term plan is a series of facilities which Putman is the central coordinator for from 17 in 1972 to more than 100 in 1988, will dramatically change the shape of the SRI, which is fitting because it is his the report states. In addition, federal campus. brainchild. He is responsible for making funding for interdisciplinary research has FACILITIE! Around 65 acres of space behind Sci­ "the trains run on time" as he likes to put grown substantially. OUTSIDE SPACE PLANNINC ence Drive will be used to build a series of it. It was Putman who produced a report Many administrators believe the science buildings over the next 50 years. while he was dean of the medical school unique qualities of the University are par­ PROGRAMMING that advocated a new biotechnology cen­ In September an architect's plan will be ticularly conducive to interdisciplinary re­ CONSULTANT presented to the Board of Trustees detail­ ter — a facility where scientists from search. ing the direction the project is headed. various departments could apply their sci­ "Interdisciplinary research happens to Preliminary discussions have included entific knowledge to solving concrete real- be at the forefront of thinking today. For- the possibility of a new science quadran­ world problems. tunetely for us at Duke, that happens to gle and even moving Science Drive itself. Such cooperative research has become by a way of life and so its not where we But the program does not merely at­ necessary because of modern medical and suddenly have to force people together to tempt to provide more space for research. scientific challenges. Chancellor William say you're now doing interdisciplinary re­ search," Lieberman said. The close proximity of the various schools and departments facilitate com­ munication between faculty, he said. After the research is complete, the At a school such as Harvard, such com­ space will be vacated and made available munication is not so simple, said Anlyan. for new projects, Lieberman said. For doctors from Harvard Medical School Lieberman's faculty advisory commit­ to meet with collegues in the arts and sci­ tee is currently discussing ways the space ences, "They've got to get in a car and will be distributed and governed. Some drive for 30 or 40 minutes," he said. form of faculty review board will probably The University's relatively small size be created to listen to research proposals for a major research institution makes co­ and evaluate them. These recommenda­ operative research a necessity, according tions will then be presented for approval to the accreditation report. The Univer­ by some other body or office, Lieberman sity is therefore required to maximize its said. Ultimately, the chief executive of­ faculty and equipment by pooling resour­ ficers will decide who gets the laboratory ces. space. "To use a pugilistic analogy, Duke can Some of the space will probably be usually not stand toe-to-toe with the reserved for recruitment of new faculty, heavyweights and slug it out. Rather, the he said. University has often been successful by Another aspect of the SRI is the space being light on its feet. Interdisciplinary for shared instrumentation. Some equip­ approaches have been a major reason for ment is so large and costly that it can only this success," the report said. be purchased if used by a large number of In red: The initial structure will include researchers. Currently the University flexible laboratory space in standard sized owns equipment that is not being used ef­ Areas for 1 units. These labs will be provided on a ficiently because the space it is housed i* future science temporary basis to researchers who have does not allow for more than a handful °f a specific project in mind, Lieberman investigators to use it, Lieberman said. facility said. He cited the electron probe The advantage of flexible space is that microanalytical facility in his building -"" construction it can be adjusted for various different a piece of equipment that is being used ft>r projects. There may be the ability to vary six different research projects now but the size of the labs to accomodate projects could be used for up to 10 if more space of different scope, said staff architect existed. BRENDEN KOOTSEY/THE CHRONICLE Steven Thweatt. Yet another portion of the initiative's »AY, JULY 26, 1989 FEATURES THE CHRONICLE /PAGE 15 impus ding for increased interdisciplinary research

industrial research. The remaining space will be used for support facilities such as loading docks and science shops. In order to manage a project of such broad scope, the University has created a separate bureaucratic structure to bring the plans to fruition. Putman and the provost's office are at the center of the project's administration. He coordinates plans with the team headed by Dixon. The project team manages the plans for the building and future development. It also develops financial models for the $70 million plus project. On the basis of infor­ mation produced by the provost's office, the project team determines the best methods of financing the building. One model proposes floating $45 mil­ lion in tax exempt bonds, applying for $5 million from the National Science MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE Foundation and raising $10-15 million in gifts. The Medical Center would provide Severely cramped lab space will be eased by the first SRI facility. $10.6 million from its reserves with $4 million from the Duke Endowment. Lieberman said he was very satisfied by hand everyone is looking to 'God this is Researchers are expected to have corpo­ the great deal of faculty input into the going to be exciting and we can do some­ rate or federal funding, some of which will project, particularly in light of the dispute thing that is really good,'" he said. be used to pay back the debt on the build­ over University governance this past Not everyone on the faculty committee ing. Lieberman said that quality will not year. A number of faculty were invited to is entirely satisfied, however. Physics be sacrificed because a project has to have a meeting with the architects so they department chair Lawrence Evans said a proven merit to receive funding. The more could offer their ideas on what the build­ number of issues seemed to have been gifts that are raised, however, means less ing should look like, he said. determined before the faculty committee debt to pay back in the long run, he said. "The fact that the faculty is playing a got a chance to discuss them. Anlyan is handling the gifts, and very instrumental . . . important role in "I'm not the chair of the committee. I'm fundraising is currently in the early the development of this project — I'm not not obliged to be as upbeat as Mel [Lieber­ stages. Anlyan and others in University sure that that has happened before. Nor­ man] is," Evans said. Development office are making contacts mally, at least from my perspective, ... is Evans said he didn't understand the around the country with potential donors. that suddenly you find out a building was decision to grant space specifically for "We don't have a sugar daddy yet, or a planned. What is happening now is that some departments such as biology and sugar mommy," Anlyan said referring to a the faculty have real input into the plan­ computer science and not others like very large donor. It is harder to raise gifts ning of this building," he said. physics and engineering. Because the re­ for Duke than other prestigous univer­ searchers are suppossed to pay back the sities, he said. The University faces the Lieberman has a difficult task because debt on the building through grants, the problem of not being located in a large he must satisfy faculty from many differ­ life sciences are ill-suited for such a build­ city with a great deal of wealthy individu­ ent departments each of which have their ing, he said. als such as Chicago or New York, he ad­ own needs and preferences, Dixon said. "It's not the kind of research that comes ded. As a result, there exists the possibility of into big bucks," he said. "We've got to work the nation and some­ the planning being harmed by faculty Lieberman, however, stressed that all times overseas to remain competitive," putting their department needs over the the space dedicated to interdisciplinary Anlyan added. Furthermore, Duke is not needs of the University as a whole. and corporate research will be open to any as old as other universities that might Lieberman believes, however, that most department who can present a good pro­ have multigenerational legacies. of these problems have been solved. posal. He also said there are many

I BRENDEN KOOTSEY/THE CHRONICLE Nevertheless, Anlyan feels the Univer­ "What was an interesting challenge in departments who did not specifically sity will probably be able to meet its $10- the beginning was to work with a commit­ receive space and that it simply was not 15 million goal. "I'm a gambler, but I'm a tee where everyone on board was looking possible to grant space to every depart­ conservative gambler," Anlyan said. out for how their own interests were going ment and still leave room for temporary Meanwhile, Lieberman has been col­ to benefit. . . where we are now is every­ interdisciplinary space. lecting faculty opinion. His committee one is on board looking to the make this Evans said he was also concerned that the space will be set aside for collaborative consists of 12 faculty members appointed work for the University. We've broken the Medical Center will dominate the ble ventures with University researchers and by Provost Phillip Griffiths from various down the provincial barriers . . . and its facility especially in light of its $10 mil­ corporate researchers. These projects science departments. Lieberman repre­ working. No one has forgotten about their lion contribution to the facility. nit- have been difficult to conduct in the past sents faculty on the steering committee. department affiliation but on the other "It may well be that there may be some ace simply because there was not any space neat-o things in term of biomedical re­ me that could be used. Lieberman sees many search. Well, then let the medical center bly advantages of joint research with indus­ build it," he said. >als trial scientists. Staff architect Steven Thweatt said da- "It will bring industry onto the campus there is a "heavy draw" toward the Medi­ val to work with faculty and get some cross- cal Center in terms of the building's ian fertilization and may develop new friends location. But that decision, which is still of- for the University in the long-run," he not settled, will be made on the basis of ory said. where the majority of the occupants are The remainder of the space will be dedi­ coming from. be cated to specific departments. According Lieberman said that because the idea lty, to initial estimates, the computer science for the SRI came out of Putman's plan for department will move to the SRI facility a biotechnology center, the intiative ace and occupy 31,500 sq. ft. out of a total of necessarily implies a large role for medi­ iip- 175,000 sq. ft. The current computer cal researchers. Lieberman said Evans' niy science facilities in North building were complaints reflected "sour grapes" at the r of deemed to be inadequate for the fact that physics was not receiving any sity department, Putman said. dedicated space, but added that criticism ef- Because computer science has broad was necessary. lin applications for many fields, it is particu­ By September, the administration will lof larly beneficial to an interdisciplinary have a plan for the building as well as a facility although "it is clear they are not a long term proposal for future construc­ obe service department for the University, tion, Dixon said. These ideas, after thor­ r -— Lieberman said. ough review will be presented to the 'for The chemistry department will receive trustees for approval, he said. Construc­ but 9,000 sq. ft., while botany and zoology will tion on the building should begin in 1991 ace receive 18,000 sq. ft. The Medical Center and will be completed by 1993 a goal that MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE will take over 25,000 sq. ft., and 65,500 is "ambitious and still realistic," Thweatt said. ve 's sq. ft. is reserved for interdisciplinary and SRI will be located in the 65 acres of forest behind science drive. PAGE 16 / THE CHRONICLE FEATURES WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Career development congregates in Page

By JAMIE O'BRIEN A comprehensive Career Development Center (CDC) should be in place by January of 1990, according to the vice provost for academic services. Plans for the CDC show a multi-level facility housing Placement Services, Duke Futures, health career intern­ ship programs, and Counseling and Psychological Ser­ vices (CAPS?, according to Paula Burger, vice provost for academic services. The center will be located in the box office wing of Page Auditorium, which currently houses technical services, Chapel music, cultural affairs, and Page Box Office. According to Burger, the center will serve three pur­ MATT SCLAFANI /THE CHRONICLE poses in the students search for a post graduate career: self-discovery, including career education and career CAPS will be moved to Page from its current location on Central Campus. counseling; career exploration, overseeing various in­ ternships; and placement services, which concentrates on matching students with employers and careers. "Most institutions have some sort of coordinated coun­ seling program," coordinating professional and personal counseling, she said. Burger said she hopes the CDC will serve to acquaint STUDY ABROAD students with careers outside of traditional fields and in the non-profit sector early on in their college careers. "The institution needs to help keep alive possibilities" Information Meetings for student careers, she said. "Exploring these things at an early stage will relieve some of these pressures" stu­ - and the DUKE/HOWARD UNIVERSITY EXCHANGE INFORMATION MEETINGS - dents normally face. Fall Semester 1989 The CDC will also provide student resources including Trinity College of Arts and Sciences and the Office of the Summer Session, Duke University an employer data base, a computer student references file, and data on summer work. Wednesday. September 6. 1989 5:00 p.m.. 126-Soc-Psych. Bldg. DUKE IN FRANCE (Academic Year/Semester Programs) 5:30 p.m.. 126 Soc-Psych. Bldg. DUKE IN PARIS (Summer Program) Exploring these things at an Friday September 8. 1989 4:00 p.m.. 126 Soc-Psych. Bldg. DUKE IN GERMANY (Academic Year/Semester Program) early stage will relieve some of 4:30 p.m.. 126 Soc-Psych. Bldg DUKE IN GERMANY (Summer Programs) these pressures. 5:00 p.m.. 126 Soc-Psych. Bldg Study in the U.S.S.R. (Semester/Summer Programs) Tuesday. September 12. 1989 Paula Burger 4:00 p.m.. Sludy Abroad Library Study in CANADA (Academic Year. Semester Programs) 2022 Campus Drive Vice provost 4:30 p.m.. Study Abroad Library DUKE IN MONTREAL (Summer Program) Thursday. September 14. 1989 4:00 p.m.. Study Abroad Library Study in the MIDDLE EAST (Academic Year/Semester/Summer Programs in The CDC will occupy four floors of the Page building; 2022 Campus Drive EGYPT and MOROCCO the basement will contain interview rooms for student / 4:30 p.m.. Study Abroad Library Study in ISRAEL (Academic Year/Semester/Summer Programs) potential employer interviews, Duke Futures and the Placement Office will be on the first floor, and CAPS will Monday. September 18. 1989 occupy the second and third floors. Also located on the 4:00 p.m.. 226 Allen Bldg. Study in DENMARK (Semester Program) second floor will be a career resource library. 4:30 p.m.. 226 Allen Bldg. the NETHERLANDS (Summer Programs: Learning Disabilities. Economics) Another goal of the center is to document professional Wednesday. September 20. 1989 STUDY ABROAD RE-ORIENTATION AND RECEPTION paths taken by University graduates. "Professional 4:00 p.m.. Von (anon B for Students returning from Study Abroad (Academic Year 1988-89. Spring 1989. paths have not been well recorded," Burger said. and Summer 1989) According to William Griffith, vice president for stu­ Thursday. September 21. 1989 dent affairs, the original conception for the CDC grew 4:00 p.m.. 226 Allen Bldg. Study in the BRITISH ISLES (Academic Year/Semester Programs) out of a desire to return CAPS to West Campus. Last 4:30 p.m.. 226 Allen Bldg. DUKE IN THE BRITISH ISLES (Summer Programs) summer, CAPS was relocated from the Old Chemistry Wednesday. September 27. 1989 Building to Central Campus. 3:00 p.m.. International House. SOPHOMORE WEEK—ICE (REAM SOCIAL FOR SOPHOMORES Once CAPS moves to the CDC, a few CAPS psycholo­ 2022 Campus Drive interested in Study Abroad opportunities gists will spend some time in career counseling, Griffith Tuesday. October 3. 1989 said. However, CAPS will remain an independent office 4:00 p.m.. 326 Allen Bldg. Study in GREECE (Academic Year/Semester/Summer) with the primary purpose of comprehensive under­ 4:30 p.m.. 326 Allen Bldg. Study in ITALY (Academic Year/Semester'Summer) graduate counseling. Thursday. October 5. 1989 "Career planning relates to all aspects of life," said 4:00 p.m.. 326 Allen Bldg. Study in FRANCE (Academic Year/Semester/Summer) (non-Duke programs) John Barrow, assistant director of CAPS. "Our role is to Monday. October 9. 1989 lead people into getting started. The central location will 4:00 p.m. Asian Pacific Inslitute DUKE STUDY IN CHINA (Summer/Fall Semester) really help; it's clearly a good move." 2111 Campus Drive Although the CDC does not yet have a director, 4:30 p.m. Asian Pacific Institute DUKE IN TAIWAN (Summer Program) Burger said an advertisement was placed in The Chroni­ Tuesday. October Ml. 1989 cle of Higher Education for the position. 4:00 p.m.. 326 Allen Bldg. Duke in SPAIN (Semester Summer) Some resistance to the location of the CDC has been 4:30 p.m.. 32(> Allen Bldg. Study in SPAIN voiced by the University Union. Flowers Gallery, cur­ (Non-Duke programs. Academic Year/Semester/Summer Programs) rently located off of Flowers Lounge will be housing Cul­ Thursday. October 26. 1989 tural Affairs once the CDC moves into the Page Audito­ 4:00 p.m.. Study Abroad Library Study in LATIN AMERICA and the CARIBBEAN rium box office wing. 2022 ( ampus Drive (Academic Year/Semester/Summer) According to University Union President Rodney 4:30 p.m.. Study Abroad Library DUKE/HOWARD UNIVERSITY EXCHANGE. WASHINGTON. D.C. Freeman, the Flowers Gallery is the only gallery on cam­ (Semester Program) pus that is used solely for student art, and that the gal­ Tuesday. October 31. 1989 lery should be retained for that purpose or another loca­ 4:00 p.m.. Asian Pacific Institute. Studv in JAPAN (Academic Year/Semester/Summer) tion for it found. Griffith said he is currently looking for 2111 Campus Drive another place to house student art. Thursday. November 2. 1989 Technical Services, which is currently located in the 4:00 p.m.. International House Study in AFRICA (Semester/Summer) basement of the building, will be relocated to the base­ 2022 (ampus Drive ment area under Reynolds Theater in the Bryan Center 4:30 p.m.. International House Study in INDIA (Academic Year/Semester) and Chapel Music will be moved to the old Housing Thursday. November 9. 1989 Management office in the basement of Union Building. 4:00 p.m.. 326 Allen Bldg. Duke/University of Oxford. England (Summer Programs) The executive committee of the board of trustees gave 4:45 p.m.. 326 Allen Bldg. Duke/University of Oxford. England (JUNIOR YEAR ABROAD) the center its final approval in June, Burger said. Renovations to the box office wing are expected to cost FOR MORL INFORMATION ABOUT STUDY ABROAD - Please visil the OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD. International House. 2nd up to $1.1 million, which was the cost limit approved by floor. 2022 Campus Drive. 684-2174. and the OFFICE OF THF SUMMER SESSION. 121 Allen Bldg.. 684-2621. the board, Burger said. The center will be funded by an anticipated University fund year-end surplus. WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 FEATURES THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 17 Health project serves to counsel and teach

• LGHP from page 9 local gay bar, The Power Company, sitting at an AIDS information table. Seeing the amount of socializing that Wilson does at the table, one might be led to believe that the job is rather carefree or frivolous, but she says it is all part of the job. "When you hang out, people get to know your face, and get to trust you," she said. "You get to know their lives, and their lovers, and their problems." And this even­ tually earns you their trust, she added, which is the key to getting people to ask for her help. "It's hard to maintain people's confidence," Wilson said. "If we lose our credibility, people will be afraid to deal with us. It's important to meet people on their own CHRIS O'BRIEN /THE CHRONICLE terms." Wilson doesn't measure the success of the project in Rebecca Wilson counsels a caller on the Healthline. the number of condoms or pamphlets handed out, or the number of people who approach her each night. Instead, the success comes from simply being in the bar four nights a week. "By sitting here each night, I've made it very hard for someone not to think of AIDS at least for a couple of minutes. And that makes it a lot harder for them to ignore it in the bedroom, which is the bottom A Crash Course In line," she said. While a great deal of emphasis is given to prevention, TASP recognizes the need to help those who are already Furniture Rental suffering from AIDS. Jennifer Warburg, Trinity '81, runs a "Buddy Program" for AIDS patients. She describes the program as an "emotional support program" for people staying in the AIDS stations in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Memorial Hospital, the VA Hospital, and the Medical Center. Course 101: "These people are sick, lonely and they want someone to be a friend," she said. "A lot of people, for one reason (without Aaron Rents) or another, don't have a support group. It gets hard, Studentius Slobbum: a especially when you get really sick." peculiar condition that com­ monly exists among many campus environments in There's so much stigma with which the knowledge of Aaron Rents Furniture AIDS, it's hard for people to live is unacquired. in a community. Jennifer Warburg Trinity '81

The program consists of about 25 volunteers, who are each assigned to a person with AIDS. People volunteer for the program for a variety of reasons, Warburg said. Some may have just seen a television program and want Course 102: to help out, others have lost a loved one to AIDS. Thorough training is undertaken before anyone ac­ (with Aaron Rents) tually begins working with an AIDS patient. Buddies Studentius Contentum: a are counseled in active listening and crisis counseling. pleasant condition charac­ Physical care is not required of the buddies, but, War­ teristic of smart students burg says several do so anyway. "It's a mental health is­ who have discovered that sue we're dealing with at this point." Aaron Rents is a prerequi­ The buddies are expected to see the patient at least site to living with decent once a week, plus keeping in contact over the phone. furniture. "But most are willing to go beyond what's expected of them" in terms of both time and involvement, Warburg said. Many help out by cooking for their AIDS patient, helping with grocery shopping, or just running errands. Warburg said there is a definite need for the program. "There's so much stigma with AIDS, it's hard for people to live in a community. I've known poeple [with AIDS] SPECIAL STUDENT SAVINGS: whose family won't come to visit them because they're afraid. It's a very lonely disease on top of being debilitat­ ing, and the buddies really help fill that gap," she said. 25% Off First Month's Rent and And having someone spend just a few hours each week with them can mean a lot to the patient. "Some patients will tell me 'My God, this is the longest time anyone has No Security Deposit! spent in here,'" Warburg said. OR We'll Match Any Competitor's Offer. But despite all of their preparation, the involvement can be a real emotional drain on some of the buddies. Bring in this ad and present student I.D. to receive offer. "Certainly if you get to know them [the patientl well, you get attached and it's difficult," she said. She added At Aaron Rents you get more: lowest rates, short-term rental period, next-day that most of the buddies stick with the patient until they delivery and wide selections. Plus, ask about our special student package. leave the hospital or until they die. With Aaron Rents, it's easy to turn your campus quarters into a class act. When asked if she would like to expand the program in the future, Warburg replied with an emphatic "no." "I'd like to see it cut down in the sense that the num­ ber of people getting AIDS goes down," she said. "But as long as there are people getting sick, we'll need buddies." Aaron Rents Furniture" In all aspects of the volunteers' work at the LGHP, the work is in no way easy, and can be very taxing. People at 4512 Chapel Hill Boulevard, Durham 493-1481 the LGHP will say that the burn-out rate here is very high. "It's a flood of emotion and words. You've got to be America's Largest Furniture Rental and Sales Company able to find your limits," Johnston said. "You've got to learn how to put it aside." PAGE 18 / THE CHRONICLE FEATURES WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Women's Center director prepares for first year at position

• SIMMONS from page 6 pany doing personal and professional development work coalesce my interest in women's issues and to see and saw a video of women's history, essentially. Men were for women. The workshops that I designed for that pur­ participate in the process of developing strong women's very involved in working for the passage of the ERA; pose came out of years of research into, essentially, gen­ leadership. But because of this background, I didn't men have been leaders in various feminist and women's dered perspectives on life goals, plans; how men and really understand that there were any barriers to issues and I think that's wonderful. women make choices and how the process of making women's equal life experience until I got out into the I don't think it's great for men to be the only leaders. I those choices is similar and different. It was this process world. think it is wonderful when men, even if they're in male and an interest in formalizing and legitimating this dominated arenas, are open to equal relationships with study that brought me to Duke to do graduate work in Chronicle: I know there are divisions within the women. I think those people can be very real and strong Women's Studies, through the Master of Arts in Liberal women's community in terms of race, sexual orientation, leaders for women's development. Studies program. and class. How do you expect to work within those divisions at Duke ? Relationship issues are very tricky these days. I think Chronicle: So, have you always been interested in men are just as confused about it as women are in terms women's issues? Simmons: And political background. I don't want to of "how do you do this? I mean we're supposed to be gen­ Simmons: I think so. I was an eldest child; eldest sound trite and I run the risk of sounding trite when I tlemen but does that mean I open the door for this children tend to be assertive about things they care say that there's some commonality of interest here that woman and she yells at me. I don't get it! What do you about. And I also grew up with a covey of boys. I was a can be functional and useful in bringing people together want?" tomboy, played a lot of sports. It never occurred to me who have differences on many different issues. Chronicle: What sort of plans do you have to work with that women didn't have equal opportunities when I was We're not real interested in having this woman see Women's Studies? growing up. I attended a women's college; that tended to things the way that woman sees them. Simmons: We're very deliberately forming a strong relationship with Women's Studies. As a graduate Women's Studies student, I've been involved in that arena and I've taught Women's Studies study sessions through the introductory class and Dr. Jean O'Barr and I are working together to delineate individual and coop­ erative arenas. In a very simplified explanation, Women's Studies is organized to meet the classroom based intellectual needs of the students and is also engaged in academic research. Our research is more geared to the Duke community and our services to the personal and professional needs that grow out of gender issues. We have a joint news letter in the planning stages. Chronicle: How do you expect to work and interact We know with other women's groups at Duke? Simmons: We are very conscious of the opportunities that co-sponsorship offers us. It gives us ways of getting you need to know other organizations by sharing resources to ac­ complish the same goals. your own We're working hard to figure out a way for the women's center to offer as much opportunity as possible for students to take leadership positions. space in In a nutshell, our process is identifying what the needs are, identifying what the resources are to meet those needs, and then identifying the leadership and the Durham/ energies to make that match. Chronicle: How do you expect to identify those needs? Research Simmons: We've got two different elements for doing that. One is through written questionaires that we're de­ veloping for both student groups and staff and faculty Triangle groups and the other is through a series of meetings with student and other organizations to talk about gen­ der issues and about what those people would like to see Park. happen with the Women's Center. Chronicle: When talking about the Women's Center, you're talking about a place, where will it be? Simmons: We'll be in the Bryan Center at first. It's temporary and it's supposed to be temporary. We will be behind the Information Desk, next to ASDU. Permanent space is still being examined. Chronicle: What is your background in women's is­ sues? How did you first become interested in women's is­ SPECIAL DUKE sues? Simmons: Well, I guess the part of my experience RATE most directly related was the work with my own com- 95 So we give you plenty For reservations, of it. Your Pickett suite call your travel agent $54 includes a spacious or phone toll-free per suite, per night living room with 1-800-PICKETT. through 9/10/89 conference and dining area. Plus a separate 2515 Meridian Pkwy. bedroom and dressing Durham, NC 27709-4067 UNUSUAL area. You'll also enjoy (919)361-4660 WHIMSICAL a full complimentary ABSURD breakfast. At Pickett, Luxurious suites at there's room to work, room rates UNIQUE to meet, to relax. RISQUE And still room to spare. Bring This Ad For 15% OFF Our Reg. Priced Merchandise Good through 9/2/89 SPECIALIZING IN STERLING NORTHGATE MALL NORTH HILLS MALL Durham • 286-3436 Raleigh • 781-7545 New Section Near Information Center Lower Level By Parking Deck WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 /=__4tU__l_S THE CHRONICLE / PAGE iy Chinese students organize relief effort New study shows

• CHINA from page 3 University might drop in coming years. the House Subcommittee on Immigration, Refugees and In addition to protecting the Chinese students the resource in danger International Law and will now be submitted before the University, the administration has tried to keep its own Committee of Judiciary. Bill Quinn of Pelosi's office said students away from the violence, Giles said. The itiner­ • WETLANDS from page 10 the bill should be approved by the full House before ary had to be changed for the 23 undergraduates par­ recess Aug. 5. ticipating in this summer's Duke in China program. ists that has jurisdiction over all wetland types. "We still face a sizeable task in transforming that Quinn said he is confident that Chinese students Originally scheduled to stay at Beijing Teacher's Col­ fairly diffuse concern [of wetland preservation] into studying in the U.S. "will never be mandated to return lege for three months, the students instead have been effective action," Rader said. to the unstable environment of China." studying in Hong Kong, she said. The students will go to One recent attempt to centralize state efforts was a This legislation is vital to the students nationwide Nanjing to study for the fall semester. wetlands bill sponsored by State Senator Bill Barker scheduled to return to China this year. However, Chi­ A program directed by the Talent Identification (D-Pamlico) that was modeled after a freshwater nese students at the University are less affected by the Program (TIP) has also suffered due to the instability in protection act in New Jersey. bill since none of the 65 Chinese graduate students here China. In the past, TIP has provided high school stu­ The Barker bill had been drafted this past year but are finishing their studies this year, according to Car­ dents an opportunity to study in Beijing. However, the never introduced to the legislature. It was dissemi­ lisle Harvard, director of the International House. one month program which should have taken 15 stu­ nated to landowners along the North Carolina coast dents to China on July 17 has been cancelled, according Although no Chinese students will be leaving the Uni­ for perusal, but "there was a real strong knee-jerk to Leslie Thomas of the TIP office. versity this year, it is unclear how much the recent vio­ reaction" because the forest products industry lence will prevent other students from leaving China to Although many American companies and programs claimed citizens would lose major property rights if study here. like TIP have pulled out of China this summer, Trinity the bill was passed, Rader said. As a result, the bill "Students in China are always applying to study senior Chris Cashin said "business as usual" is, in the was tabled. here," said Donna Giles, assistant dean of the Graduate long run, the best outcome for the Chinese citizens. Currently a legislative study commission is being School. She noted that presently there are more organized to recommend a way to propose major wet­ graduate students here from China than from any other "The worst thing possible would be if [U.S. companies] lands legislation. The membership has not been final­ foreign country. stayed out of China," Cashin said. "I can see the point of ized, but "it's still a fairly unbalanced commission" bi­ view that U.S. companies don't want to help an immoral Although there has been no official policy statement ased in favor of industry, Rader said. issued by the Chinese government restricting students government, but I just don't think that it's the best from coming to the U.S., Giles said, "since the offices in course of action." the Chinese bureaucracy are so behind in paperwork, Cashin was in Beijing and Nanjing last fall as part of surely some of the students will be held up." She also an­ the Duke in China program. This summer, he is working We still face a sizeable task ticipated that the number of Chinese students at the at the U.S. for China Business Council in Washington. in transforming that fairly diffuse concern [of wetland preservation] into effective action. TheT_5_igle's Doug Rader Director of NCEDF

The forest products industry, residential develop­ ment and agriculture are the major groups who are opposed to restricting wetlands development, Bab­ Neighborhood cock said. In fact large corporations like Weyerhauser own much of the state's natural wetlands and drain them to grow trees commercially. "In their eyes they're using wetlands in a way that is consistent with good, long-term management. That is questionable," Babcock said. BLACK HORSE RUN "It's a relatively fine line and environmentalists would be hesitant to say they're being well managed," It's An Oasis In Northern Durham County, Just 10 Minutes From Durham, Off she said. "I would find that extremely questionable." Industry has not been the only villain, however. Highway 501 (Roxboro Road). A Unique Residential Community Of 1-3 Acre Wetlands are sometimes converted into recreational Homesites In A Most Exquisite Setting. settings for the public to enjoy, such as nearby Falls and Jordan Lakes. Sportsmen pushed for the con­ Acres Of Community Property, Near struction of dams and impoundments to create areas Golf And Shopping And The Finest favorable for duck hunting, but in the process Schools. All Of The Amenities For A changed the natural character of the land, Rader Truly Remarkable Lifestyle: said. "People see wetlands and try to improve them," he • Olympic-Size Swimming Pool said. "I don't see that they gained anything" by in­ • Spacious, Luxurious Clubhouse stalling the subimpoundments at the lakes, now large • Jogging & Nature Trails recreation areas, he added. • Lighted Tennis Courts "And what for? So people can shoot ducks in an ur­ • Equestrian Center, Featuring: ban setting?" Rader asked. Riding & Show Ring

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• RETENTION from page 5 tioned the cases of Peters and Gaspar. "But even worse the appearance of impropriety towards black faculty," than what I went through," he said, "is the cost at which Davis said. "They can't afford to pay black faculty at the those [black faculty] who stay, stay." Peters and Gaspar bottom of the scale." "did not have to go through what they went through," he Lerner disagreed strongly with Davis' evaluation of said, because their qualifications would have allowed the history department's treatment of its black faculty, them to go elsewhere. and expressed pride in the history department's achieve­ Currently, there are eight black faculty members at ments in regard to minority recruiting. "We've always the University with tenure. Four, Peters, Culp, Gaspar, been an aggressive department in recruiting women and and Raymond Gavins, associate professor of history, are minorities. We don't need quotas to make us move." Of the only black faculty members to receive tenure at the 32 black faculty at the University, the history depart­ University. Gavins, who was the first black faculty ment has the most at five. member at the University to receive tenure, was out of Davis' complaint regarding his attempts to get tenure town and could not be reached for comment. began in 1986, when he became eligible for tenure. Margaret Bates, vice provost for academic programs Lerner told him to wait another year, Davis said, the and facilities, was quick to dismiss any thoughts of dis­ reason being it was too early in his career. crimination in the system, however, noting that no black In 1987, when Lerner approached Davis and asked faculty member on tenure track has not received tenure. him if he wanted to seek tenure, Davis said he requested She said it was inappropriate to comment on Gaspar and a chance to think about it over the summer, but notified Peters because she did not want to single anyone out. Lerner in August that he wanted to pursue tenure. Despite his problems regarding his salary, treatment, Lerner denies having mishandled Davis' attempts to and the tenure process, Davis said his biggest mistake get tenure. "I think he's a very able person. And I almost was informing the administration that he was going to feel libeled." Lerner said it was Davis who requested a Brown in November while in the middle of his leave, year delay in being considered for tenure. The reason for rather than waiting until the required May 1 deadline. STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE this request, according to Lerner, was that Davis was al­ "Had I known they would cut me off [during his leave], I Arts and Sciences Dean Richard White ready considering leaving the University and didn't would have waited," he said. want his mobility hampered. Susan MacDonald, assistant provost, explained that said, but rather, it was a basic disagreement over Uni­ In response to accusations that he delayed the process in the Faculty Handbook "there is a general statement versity policy. "You had a very unhappy faculty member during the year, Lerner said, "So he got promoted a few that when on a paid leave, there is the presumption who believed he wasn't getting treated properly," White weeks later than he wanted, so what? It's not a racial is­ there that the faculty will return afterword." This said of Davis. "He had the sense of being abused here." sue. His claim that I delayed the process is absurd." "general statement" appears under the explanation of When asked about the administration's treatment of However, Davis' problems regarding tenure also seem sabbatical leaves, but MacDonald said "there is no dif­ Davis, Wood replied, "It illustrates how many different to reflect on problems other black faculty members have ference" regarding junior faculty leaves. places the ball can be dropped." had regarding the process. According to Davis, both Mel- Lerner agreed with MacDonald's assessment of the However White said the administration is very con­ vin Peters and Barry Gaspar, a black history professor policy regarding junior faculty leaves, saying "I had a cerned about the handling of black faculty. "Our sensi­ were turned down for te? re despite ample qualifica­ hand in developing it. I don't see that they're wrong." tivity is quite high," he said. "Each loss is a major one." tions. Later, both decisions were overruled and both However, both Davis and Culp disagreed with this ex­ "We do have a high retention rate of [black] faculty," were granted tenure, he said. planation, saying nowhere in the Faculty Handbook un­ White added. Peters declined to be interviewed for this story, say­ der the section explaining junior faculty leaves is it Davis retained a lawyer to represent him, but has ing, "I'm black faculty-ed out." stated that a faculty member is required to return. since decided not to pursue legal action, saying that it Gaspar canceled a scheduled interview when an emer­ "Duke takes the position of following the strictest would be too long and costly of a battle, something the gency arose and could not be reached for comment. How­ standard of law in regards to its employees," Culp ad­ University is better prepared for than himself. ever, Gaspar's case is documented in two stories that ded. "But this is inconsistent with what happened." "I probably will just drop it. It's been such an ordeal," ran in The Chronicle in 1986. In September, Gaspar, In no way was the incident of a racial nature, White Davis said. along with two other white faculty members were turned down for tenure despite strong departmental support, according to the story. After departmental appeals on behalf of all three, Gaspar was granted tenure, but not the other two professors. Overturning the decision, however, could be po­ The Homeplace At Woodcroft Is tentially interpreted in more than one way, according to Davis. "Did they do it because he deserved it, or was it interest group pressure?" he said. When contacted for this story, Trouillot also men­ Closing Its Final Phase And Celebrating With Special Offers

Woodcroft's most successful new home neighborhood is having a Grand Closing Celebration for its final phase. 493-8108 Along with standard amenities, the Homeplace is now offering: (Take Woodcroft Pkwy. to Higate Dr. • GE appliance package including a microwave and refrigerator and look for the • 91/_%* financing with 2-1 buy down Homeplace sales office.) • Woodcroft Swim/Tennis Club initiation fee paid • 10 year warranty * . ,. ... „k«-„_ * interest rates subject to change The Homeplace is located just 5 minutes from RTP. Come by and see the wide variety of 2 and 3 bedroom homes starting from $85,900.

Homes by Hoying Huff Only 10 Minutes to Duke. WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 21 SPECIAL HOUSING SECTION

HOUSING LOCATOR

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Bainbridge In The Park - page 25 2800 Bainbridge Drive, Durham Black Horse Run - page 19 Highway 50 1 (Roxboro Road), 11 miles north of I-85, Durham Beech Lake - page 22 4800 University Drive Extension, Durham Carriage House - page 26 11. Forest Oaks - page 25 200 Seven Oaks Road, Durham 316 Morreene Road, Durham Camden Pointe - page 24 12. Homeplace at Woodcroft - page 20 Behind Happy Inn off Avondale, Durham 500-16c Woodcroft Parkway, Durham Chapel Towers - page 26 13. Lochn'ora - page 24 1315 Morreene Road, Durham Off Erwin Road between Randolph Road & Cornwallis Road, Durham Duke Manor - page 26 14. Milan Woods - page 22 311 South LaSalle Street, Durham 5 Jessica Court, Durham Duke Villa - page 28 15. Pinnacle Ridge - page 24 1505 Duke University Road, Durham 3611 University Drive, Durham Flint Ridge - page 25 16. Strawberry Hill - page 20 I-85 (Exit #164) & Old NC 86, Hillsborough 1321 New Castle Road, Durham 10. The Forest - page 23 17. Willow Creek - page 24 9 Post Oak Road, Durham 18 Weather Hill Circle, Durham PAGE 22 / THE CHRONICLE SPECIAL HOUSING SECTION WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 1 Month Free on a 12-Month Lease for a limited time only Frank Ward JULY, 1989 Realtors ANNIVERSARY MONTH CELEBRATING TWENTY-FIVE YEARS IN DURHAM REAL ESTATE The residential specialists, one of Durham's oldest and most respected companies, ready to serve you with these listings of special interest to Duke people:

Trinity Park 814 W Knox St - Well kept cottage in good neighborhood. 3Br IB $69,500 Walk to East Campus. American Village 4501 Valley Forge Rd -11/2 Story 3BR 2B, Great Room with FPL Lots of storage. 5 mins from Duke. $134,900 Preston Woods (off Hope Valley Rd) New construction. 3Br Two story and ranch. Double & single garages, Quiet and convenient. 120 and 130 thousand range. Bluffs of the Eno Affordable homes in the 90s New development on the edge of the state park Many models & variations Closing costs offered. Why overlook a parking lot Heather Glen II Large lots one acre +. Double garages. Two story, 4BR, luxury features, Quiet, secluded 180 -190 thousand range. (15 min. north) when you can overlook a lake? Black Horse Run Beautiful executive homes on one acre + lots. Custom standards by best Durham builders. Many • location! bay windows and decks extras 200-300 thousand range, (near Treybum) • gym, pool, tennis • location! See especially 9704 Straightaway Lane 4000 sq ft 4BR 41/2B three zone heat. Double garage courts and hot tub • fireplaces Jacuzzi and much more $319,900 • walk-in closets • vaulted ceilings with Townhouses • location! ceiling fans North& South See Walden Pond, 27 Georgetown Ct. 2BR1-1/2B $65500 and Beech Hill, 13Pinnacle Rd. Almost new contemporary 3BR 3B $95,000

*to qualified applicants •limited time offer WANT TO BUILD We work with Durham's best builders and have lots in all areas. See our 11 to 14-acre lots in beautiful rolling woodland off Pleasant Green Rd, in the country but ten min. from Duke.

Located on University Dr. 688-1341 % mile South of South Square, 518 South Duke Street only 3 miles from Duke, 7 miles from RTP. Developed and managed by Durham, N.C. 489-7599, open 7 days a week CHARTER PROPERTIES, INC, PRICE-LOCATION-VALUE • Milan Woods

Bedrooms Bedrooms 11°x12° IVxIO- Milan Woods features include: • Traditional Exteriors with Contemporary Interiors • Cathedral Ceilings

""vrrV [J Kitchea n h-x- • Skylights c,rw__J_ Master SLite • Apollo Gas Heating System Greet Ftoom 12°x17° 20°x 13" t T • 10-Year Warranty Vaulted ag. a Vaulted Qg. ? • 12 Minutes to RTP • 10 Minutes to Duke ELM $89,850 Milan Woods provides you with a Great Home Value • 5 Minutes to Downtown just minutes from Rt. 70 & 85. Durham & Durham County Free G.E. Refrigerator and Microwave General Hospital

COME SEE WHY WE'VE SOLD 63 HOMES IN ONE YEAR Prices Start in the Mid 70's MODELS OPEN DAILY 12-6 688-5141 Highway 70 to Geer Street exit, North of Geer one mile. Right on Milan Street and go 1/4 mile to MILAN MILAN WOODS Sales Office. Broker Co-op Invited planned community Only 10 Minutes to Duke Homes by Hoying-Huff WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 SPECIAL HOUSING SECTION THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 23 The Forest Apartments

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Just off 15-501, NC 751 North at Constitution Dr. Convenient to Duke University, Research Triangle and Chapel Hill 383-8504 Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 1-5 THE FOREST

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- PAGE 24 / THE CHRONICLE SPECIAL HOUSING SECTION WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Refuge from Lochn'ora Will Put You the ordinary Where You Need To Be. • Unique interior designs in 16 different styles • Pleasing, scenic landscape • Sauna and exercise facility • Indoor racquetball courts • Solariums • 4,500-sq.-ft. clubhouse • Private gated patios and sun decks Call about our move-in special!

Sign up now! On site summer storage. When deciding on a new home, location always ends up being one of the most important considerations. You need to be close to work. The children have to be in a good school district. And it doesn't hurt to be close to shopping centers and recreational facilities. No community is more conveniently located to all of these than Lochn'ora. 490-0531 Combine this location with homes built by only the area's best builders and Lochn'ora has to be one of the best communities in the Triangle.

Live there and you will be where you Located on University need to be! Drive, 3 blocks north of South Square, only Priced from $150's 3 miles from Duke, Model Open Daily 1-5 7 miles from RTP Agent On Site

Directions: Going North on 15-501, take Hwy. 751 Exit; left on Erwin Road; entrance to Lochn'ora one mile on left. "•*• A Charter Community For Information Call 498-6085 Howarard Peny AkRetier and or Edith Lawson 490-9000 KAUORS* A site for Camden Pointe sore eyes. After a busy day, you really can appreciate the convenience of Willow Creek. We're just a short drive away from nearly all the Triangle business centers, the universities and shopping areas!

From $360

New one bedroom apartments convenient to 1-85 and Durham County General Hospital. Fully equipped with a full- sized washer/dryer, dishwasher, disposal, frost-free refrigera­ tor and stove. Each apartment features plush carpeting, custom draperies and decorator wallcoverings, ceiling fan and a private patio/balcony with outside storage.

Camden Pointe apartments qualify for the "MAX", Duke Power approved Maximum Value Home. It allows you the biggest discounts possible on your power bill. "Comfort at minimum cost." TICON,INC. (919) 493-4331 # M^*^«e>v._u.©juu OKU yjw?B """' '"" • : : i I. WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 SPECIAL HOUSING SECTION THE CHRONICLE / PAGE^5 The perfect roommate & We're Not Just floor plan at the perfect Another Pretty Face roommate price.

Flint Ridge Apartments Offer Beauty, Charm And Class Plus A Whole Lot More. •LOCATION Less than a mile from Interstate 40 and Interstate 85 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 BAINBRIDGE! •EXTRAS • Laundry room • Jazzercise classes ilN THE PARKI • Country' atmosphere with city convenience *PLUS One month's FREE rent the first year and Cornwallis Road, Durham one month's FREE rent the second year.* Between Fayetteville Rd. and Hwy. 55 919-544-5795 M-F 8:30-6, Sat. 10-5, Sun. 1-5 Flint Ridge Professionally managed by Donathan Properties rHillsborough , N.C. • 7324418 • Exit 164 at 1-85, exit 261 at 1-40 9-5 Mon.-Fri.; Sat. Sun. by appointment Located minutes from Durham, Chapel Hill and RTP. k(S t *First-time Flint Ridge renters Opening New Phase Surrounded by established trees Speeial Builder Buydown Starting at only q>43 1 per month Qo/mA 1-85 O /O Financing SALES PRICE $72,950. $3,200 down %S

payment $431.15 at 8% with a MCC %S0ahAT M < ) k K credit of $112.65. 2nd year payment at 9%. 3rd year thru 30th year at 10%. Taxes and Homeowner Association Affordable Townhomes dues are not included in payment .'ilfi Morreene Road, Durham, North Carolina 27705 shown. MCC subject to buyer qualify­ ing and availability. Other financing 1-6 DAILY 383-3114

programs are also available. Financing Another duality Ik-wlopment I5y I OGI.LMAN _ WILLIAMS subject to change w/o notice. PAGE 26 / THE CHRONICLE SPECIAL HOUSING SECTION WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 r Spacious and Affordable 1,2, and 3 bedroom Colonial Townhomes Featuring Country Charm with City Convenience Walk to Campus. Professional family atmosphere conveniently located to Duke Medical Center and Treybum Industrial Park. County School District (Easley, Carrington Jr. High, Northern H.S.)

471-6493 200 Seven Oaks Road, Durham 1-85 to N. Duke St. (U.S. 15-501) North 3 1/2 miles, right at Riverview Shopping Center

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New Listing: 5339 Yardley Terrace. This A wonderful large home as well as income The Apartment People OfPOHTUNITT wonderful brick ranch house sits on 3/4 of an property. Office, guest suite with kitchenette acre lot in a great neighborhood. Everything plus 5 BRs & 5 1/2 BAs. Fabulous lot. House you could ever want, formal living room and has been renovated. $285,000. dining, den with fireplace, gas logs, 4BR/ one Pleasant Green & Buckquarter Rd. Horse or Ride could be used as study/playroom. Also updated with new roof and dishwasher, and self-cleaning country. 15 minutes to Duke Univ. 4BRs, 4 1/2 oven. Great Buy $99,900. BAs, contemporary on 10 ac. Kitchen overlooks pool. Formal areas. Rec room. 3FP, 2 wet bars. the Duke Shuttle! 3500 Winding Way. Location! Location! Garage. A great buy. $399,900. Location! Wonderful family neighborhood. #12 Five Oaks. Pretty 3 BR 2 1/2 BA end unit. Min. to Duke Univ., South Square, and 1-40, Private deck. Quarry tile entry. Eat in kitchen, Durham & Chapel Hill. Fabulous ranch house dining room, LR with fireplace. Easy access to I- on 1/2 ac. lot. Stone FP in family room. 3 BR, 40, Chapel Hill & Duke! Priced to sell! $79,900. 2BA. Must see! $99,500. 4324 Beechnut. Super location! Neat multi-level Lake Orange. Swim, boat, fish year round. interior in great shape! Living room w/fireplace Lake frontage with dock, 3 BR, 2 BA, detached & bookshelves, dining room. Loaded kitchen w/ guest home on scenic 1 ac. lot. 20 minutes to all appliances! 1st floor BR and bath plus master/ Duke Univ., 10 minutes to 1-85 & 1-40. study/ bath upstairs. Ready for a new owner! $119,900. $78,500. 4439 American Drive. A lovely home and the 2369 Camellia. Cute one bedroom plus loft on best buy in American Village. 3 BRs, 2 BAs, cul de sac. Wood levelors, washer, dryer remain. Cape Cod with formal areas & den that has Gbrt's Version Of Unit in very good condition and ready to be large FP and vaulted ceiling, wonderful yard somebody's new home! Call today about the VA with garage that backs up to Duke Forest.. loan assumption! $50,000. $124,900. Drop/Add: 3700 Northampton. 4 BR painted brick Cape 5222 Oakbrook. Hope Valley Farms. Close to Cod with screen porch on acre lot, adjoining South Square, 1-40, Duke Univ., CH, and pond. Prettiest kitchen-in town! Sunny, open V_,ort's version of Drop/Add is Research Triangle Park. Traditional 2 story. Lg. interior! An incredible buy in New Hope Valley a lot easier, don't you think? There kitchen & breakfast nook. Lovely crown for only $265,000. are no long lines and we always molding in family room. Great private deck and have exactly what you want. garage. 3 BR, 2 1/2 BA. $136,000. 3706 Northampton. More space than you can Whether it's a sofa, a bed, a desk, imagine in this 3 level home! Pickled pine floors, computer tables or anything else you Lot 119 Oakbrook. Hope Valley Farms. New 3 fireplaces, basement playroom with full bath. need to furnish your home away construction. 3 BR, 2 1/2 BA, with bonus room Double garage. $345,000. from home. over the garage. Enjoy meals in the breakfast And our pricing is a slide. We room with a wonderful view or sit on the deck offer affordability and flexible lease 3709 Northampton. Elegant brick low country and enjoy peace and quiet. Close to Duke, 1-40, lengths semester after semester. And home with 4 BR, 3 1/2 BA, library, family room/ & RTP. $149,900. that's not all. There's: kitchen with FP, living room with FP and wet bar. Gorgeous brick work and mouldings. Cozy • Quick delivery and set-up )fop 320 Continental Dr. Willowhaven Golf Course children's area upstairs. Nestled into a creek • TV and VCR rentals & Country Club. Enjoy the bountiful azaleas on bordered lot with lovely courtyard. 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Garage & carport. are over and you're heading to the beach PADTc • n 3BR, 2B A plus lower level guest suite, playroom, Surrounded with wonderful brick work. & great workshop! All you could want in a instead of riding back home with Dad in l*l_#IYI Furniture Rental $210,000. house—including a fireplace in the family room. the U-Haul, you'll thank US. Suddenly We Make Your Place A Home. 2700 Circle Drive. Fabulous Duke Forest. $139,500. Minutes to Duke Univ., South Square, and 1-40. Raleigh Rental Showroom Durham Rental Showroom Cort Clearance Center 1819 New Hope Church Road 5400 Chapel Hill Boulevard 1819 New Hope Church Road Raleigh, NC Durham, NC Raleigh, NC 876-7550 49V25A1 876-7550 For More Information Call: In Chapel Hill, call 929-5075 Bobbie Dubin 489-8106 or Susan Peak 489-2223 Ir WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 SPECIAL HOUSING SECTION THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 27

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BOB MOULD: Album of the Summer RECORDS: The BoDeans The Call Lloyd Cole and the Commotions The Cure Fetchin Bones Loudon Wainwright III

Monk Institute Update Derryberry & Alagia Coming Attractions Jesse Helms vs. NEA

Dve. flwfivtei/fe \MeeU^M> fr ^a4*W**h \y&***^ >*<)#,ftg? -J PAGE 2 / ThE CHRONICLE R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Washington duo muses on education and life

Derryberry and Alagia provide us with the Deny berry and Alagia much-used musings about love, frustration and SOUTHPAW rejection on this, their first record. "[Southpaw] is a pretty dark album as far as by Doug Smooke lyrics go. There is a lot of songs that just aren't happy tunes," said Alagia. oug fidgeted with the mixing board as the Southpaw kicks off with "How To Love Dmusical tracks of a song played on a porta­ You," a piece that tells of the obstacles of love. ble cassette player. John took about three mi­ Like the rest of the album, "How To Love You" nutes to spread peanut butter on each cracker rarely strays from the formula of D & A's soft he ate. It was one of those rare times that Doug harmonies, Derryberry's intricate guitar leads Derryberry and John Alagia could take a break and sideman Guy Hillsman's percussion. from playing gigs and recording the compact After "Desire," a song "that just dosen't make disc version of their new release, Southpaw. any sense," according to Alagia, D & A break A folk rock duo based in Washington, D.C, into "Perfect Pair," a song Derryberry wrote during his freshman year at Georgetown Uni­ versity. R&R STAFF

Editor Beau Dure Writers Chris O'Brien [The couple] didn't fulfill their potential.

SPECIAL TO R&R Georgetown wasn't big enough for the both of them. Copy editors "[T]hat song had to do with thoughts I had... about what bullshit college education was, be­ cause there's all these kids here, and there's fulfill their potential as . .. humans. They life you can't do anything about. Derryberry this huge, age-old, highly esteemed university didn't see beyond what their lives were all called this realization a "submission to reality." we were all at and ... people's main pursuits about." Only available on cassette in Washington, were getting fucked up and getting fucked," ex­ While Derryberry and Alagia are currently D.C. and North Carolina, Southpaw is an am­ plained Derryberry. listening to bands like .XTC and Lyle Lovett, bitious introduction to the work of Derryberry "So [the song] is real whimsical musings their influences from the 60's are clearly felt in and Alagia. The tales of love, frustration and about what am I doing here and is this worth it? "Tell It Like It Is" and "Gimme a Kiss." Der­ rejection are nothing new, however, and the lis­ Because I really didn't want to stay." ryberry plays guitar on the former with a high- tener is left looking for something more power­ On side two, D & A open with "We Could pitched strain reminiscent of the Byrds, while ful and identifiable. Never Get There," a tune that Alagia wrote the latter is a Van Morrison cover, the only "I have a hard time packaging an expression about two people he knew in Louisville, Ken­ cover on the album. into a format that'll make people be into it," tucky. The biggest surprise comes with the finale, said Derryberry. "But when people are ready to "They accepted things the way they were — "Evenin' Summer Breezes." Unlike the rest of listen to a song I write, they'll listen to it they were content with the simple life. They Southpaw, which has a distinctive folk flavor whether it's gonna come up and jump in their got married at twenty, and they never returned to it, "Evenin' Summer Breezes" mixes the ear and shake their bones or not." to the life that was so great," said Alagia. sound of a 50's serenade with lyrics describing The people are ready to listen. Derryberry "They sold themselves short. They didn't the realization that there are certain things in and Alagia just need to shake our bones. \R&R\

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by Mujeeb Shah-Khan one of the best cuts of the album. It deals with the aftermath of betrayal ("You know these things take time," says Mould) and of homas Wolfe once wrote "You can't go home again." Even relationships gone wrong (personal, working, and otherwise). Tthough home may be the same as you left it, it will be for­ "Poison Years," the most bitter track, is full of venom when ever different. Like a college student returning home after being Mould utters the lines "The more I think, the less I've got to say/ in school for a while, Bob Mould has found that home is now a (I don't remember you no more)/About these poison years: it's very different place for him. On his first solo LP, Mould ex­ just a memory." Is Mould just a little bit unhappy? Side one plores themes central to many of his songs written during his closes with "Sinners And Their Repentences", a song in which time as a member of Husker Du: growing older and betrayal. Mould acknowledges that he isn't completely free of blame During this summer, Mould's album has become one the most ("We've all sinned before/I have sinned before"). important alternative releases of the year, perhaps even the last few years. Alternative radio stations, such as WXYC and, of course, our own WXDU, have continued to play this album for months after its May release. In fact, Workbook stood at number The result is a stunning brand one on the CMJ Radio Top 100 chart (for the week ending June of music rooted in acoustic 30), the Alternative version of Billboard. Workbook is an album that endures due to its personal guitars, not the Gibson Flying nature. Bob Mould's heart and soul is in this one. The breakup of the grand thrash-pop band Husker Du was V's that Bob the Husker was one of many breakups in alternative bands. But Husker Du was a bit different. Starting out as a hardcore outfit, as seen on their known for. first album Land Speed Record, the band began a long process of evolving in the eighties. With its double LP Zen Arcade, Husker Du began to write songs, real songs that had something Side two opens with "Brasilia Crossed With Trenton," an acous­ more to them than just the attitude of Land Speed Record. tic song that tells of the author's new life ("Department store/ The band's songwriting began to hit its peak with their 1985 The only place I buy clothes anymore /1 used to be a big shopper release Flip Your Wig, their last release on SST Records. Moving 'round the world"). Mould then moves into a "jaunty" section of to Warner Brothers in 1986 proved to be the beginning of the the album where Mould is unafraid to bring in a keyboard part end for the band. Conflicts began to arise between guitarist/ MARC NORBERG/SPECIAL TO R&R (something rarely done with Husker Du). The stunning con­ vocalist/songwriter Mould and drummer/vocalist/songwriter Bob Mould strikes a pensive pose. clusion to the LP is reached with "Whichever Way The Road Grant Hart, and after releasing their swan song double album Blows," a song that would have fit on a Husker Du album. Warehouse:Songs And Stories and the subsequent tour, those Fier (formerly of the Feelies, Pere Ubu, and now with his own "Whichever ..." almost seems to be an elegy to road kill problems overwhelmed the band. Grant Hart's heroin addiction band, Golden Palominos). The result is a stunnning brand of ("Jackrabbit done run cross that road/Goin' to motel in the and Mould and Hart's bitter infighting finally led to the January music rooted in acoustic guitars, not the Gibson Flying V's that sky."). But it's not a fitting end to an LP that serves as a catharsis 1988 implosion of the finest thrash-pop band ever. Bob the Husker was known for. for Bob Mould. What would really be fitting is to end the album In the year and a half that has passed between the fall and After starting the album with "Sunspots", a brief instrumen­ with "See A Little Light," the album's first single which actually today, the members of Husker Du have not been silent. Grant tal that is decidedly un-Husker, Mould gets into the meat of the expresses hope after a time of turmoil. It's the only spot of opti­ Hart released the 2541 EP in 1988 and is due to release his first album with "Wishing Well." "Well" begins acoustically with mism in an otherwise pessimistic view of things. Growing up post-Husker LP. Bob Mould retreated to his farm in Minnesota the electric guitar slowly coming into play, yet it's very and accepting changes in life has been a major theme in to begin writing songs for his LP. Eventually Mould was joined restrained. "There is a price to pay for a wish to come true/ Mould's work (especially see "These Important Years" from by an ensemble consisting of bassist Tony Maimome (of Pere Trade a small piece of your life /Roots the soil, uprooting the Warehouse). Bob Mould has made peace with his past, and he's Ubu), cellist Jane Scarpantoni (of Hoboken, NJ's Tiny Lights, soil ... Wishing well is dry," states Mould as he revels in the ready to step into the future. Whether this future brings him the whose cello work lends a beautiful quality to the songs; after all, ashes of his past life. success in either college radio or in "mainstream" music is any- how often do you hear cellos in rock music today?), and Anton Betrayal works its way into "Heartbreak A Stranger," easily body's guess. \R&R\

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The BoDeans Love Is Good," the leadoff track, sets the mood The couplet of "No One" and the album's other Lianas song, quickly moving to the some­ HOME for the album, with Kenny Aronoff, of John first single, "You Don't Get Much," are the first what frenzied "Worlds Away." "Red River" Cougar Mellancamp's band, propelling the Slash / Reprise Records in a series of love songs that take a page from cops some inspiration from Robbie Robertson's whole machine with his thundering drums. the late Roy Orbison. Lianas tells the first story, "Somewhere Down The Crazy River" (for With Aronoff around, you know it's going to be the story of Cherry, a beautiful woman, lost in which Lianas provided backing vocals). It's the by Mujeeb _>hah-Khan a bumpy ride. But bumps and rough edges are despair, a "fallen angel of blue, like an Orbison highlight of the second side. The album closes what make rock 'n roll bands great and the song." "No One" brings to mind "The Ballad Of with "Beaujolais," an acoustic song that's very t's been almost two years since the BoDeans BoDeans are no exception. "Beautiful Rain" Jenny Rae," one of Outside Looking In's finest waltz-like. Hell, you could even waltz to it (if Ireleased their last album, the stunning Out­ features your typical Sammy Lianas (vocalist/ moments, in how sad it gets. "You Don't Get you know how to waltz). side Looking In. In that time, the BoDeans have The BoDeans have delivered on what is opened for U2 on their fabled Joshua Tree Tour probably going to be their make-or-break al­ of America, appeared on Late Night With David bum. They don't have anything to fear at all. Letterman, appeared on Robbie Robertson's For the BoDeans, the third time is definitely the self-titled debut solo album, and have earned a charm. reputation as a great live band. Wisconsin, the band's home state, was never thought of as a hotbed for new music in America; that honor Fetchin Bones — Monster was reserved for areas such as Athens, Ga., Capitol Records Minneapolis, Mn., the Northeast, and even North Carolina (gasp!). But with the rise of the Since the early 1980s, North Carolina has be­ BoDeans and their labelmates the Violent Fem­ come a hotbed for the one of the nation's most mes, people are actually taking Wisconsin seri­ interesting music scenes. Most of the action has ously. As a tribute to how home has shaped been centered in the Triangle and slightly west what they are, the BoDeans have released their (as in Winston-Salem), but Charlotte has al­ third album, Home. ways been making a loud, joyous noise. The The album was recorded in their "home" preeminent band from the Queen City has been away from home, a Milwaukee warehouse that Fetchin Bones, a quirky quintet with four al­ the BoDeans have used as a their rehearsal stu­ bums to its credit. We last heard from them in dio. With the help of a mobile recording studio, GARY PORTER/SPECIAL TO R&R 1988 when they released their own version of the BoDeans turned their rehearsal space in to a The BoDeans: a home-ly bunch of guys Rick James's pseudo-classic "Super Freak." recording studio. Essentially recorded live, the LP captures the energy of the BoDeans's live songwriter /acoustic guitar) vocals (once Much," sung by Kurt Neumann (the other Their newest LP, Monster, is their first that performances, such as their December 1987 described as a cross between Bob Dylan and vocalist/songwriter/guitarist in the band) is doesn't utilize the production talents of Don stop in Page Auditorium on the Outside Look­ Tom Petty) as he prays for rain during a probably one of the most beautiful songs ever Dixon, and the first that they've recorded out­ ing In Tour. drought. "Rain" is the only track that departs written by the BoDeans. The electric guitar is a side North Carolina. Ed Stasium, the man re­ Previous albums such as 1986's Love &• And from the BoDeans's standard themes of love, bit subdued, almost Edge-like with it's use of sponsible for the production of Living Colour's &• Hope & Sex 6- Dreams and 1987's Outside hope, and dreams. The hardest rocking moment echo. The addition of Michael Ramos on key­ Vivid, produced and his influence is clear on Looking In gave the BoDeans national recogni­ for the album comes when the band launches boards helps make the song complete. Not to be this one. Hope Nicholls greets the world with a tion as a band with integrity. The new album into "Good Work," a song they once performed forgetten, Bob Griffin is the ever-dependable growl on "Love Crushing" and doesn't let. up breaks from its predecessors by being having on Letterman. It was good then and it's good bass player in the shadows. until "Deep Blue," the requisite one calm num- more more of a rock 'n roll feel to it. "When The now. Side two starts off with "Hand In Hand," an­ See Records on page 5

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From Records on page 4 soothing violin, "Cross" is a satisfying con­ ber for the Bones. Quite simply, Fetchin Bones clusion to a great album. have never rocked harder than they do on With Monster, Fetchin Bones are now in a Monster. position to receive the nationwide success they For Fetchin Bones, you could call this either have long deserved. They can become the next their fourth album, their second second album, Let's Active, or even better. or their fourth debut. Fetchin Bones in now in its second complete lineup after the departure The Cure — Disintegration of founding members Gary White (guitar) and Elektra Records Marc Mueller (drums). The two formed the Skeeters, while Fetchin Bones continued on. Alternative music has been a product of the Erroi Stewart (guitar) and Clay Richardson Eighties, growing into a full-fledged branch of (drums) were able to step in quickly and help music during (of all times) the Reagan Era. the Bones make Galaxy 500. their second al­ With the end of the decade drawing near, Alter­ bum for Capitol Records. Along with original native music has seen some of its stalwart members Aaron Pitken (guitar), Danna Pentes bands' fall by the wayside (Husker Du, Echo (bass/violin), and Nicholls, the second Bones And The Bunnymen, and The Smiths to name lineup proved to be more durable than the first only a few). One band that has stayed together DEREK RIDGERS/SPECIAL TO R&R (of course, if they break up after this one...). after all these years is the Cure, which found The latest fashion—or overexposure to horror films? commercial success with its last release Kiss "Love Crushing" is a straight ahead powerful Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me, has weighed in with its the Cure does disintegrate, Disintegration can for years finally imploded this year. In the song about a really bizarre crush Nicholls's final vinyl for the Eighties, Disintegration. serve as a fitting epitaph for one of the most in­ hopes of exposing the world to the their music, character has on her victim. Many of the songs teresting bands of the Eighties. Capitol Records followed rule #1 and released are about love, not exactly normal forms of it Instead of trying to produce Kiss Me, Kiss 1984-1989, a compilation of some of the band's —it's stretching it to call them abnormal. Per­ Me, Kiss Me II: The Next Day, the Cure has re­ best work, including "hits" as well as some un­ Lloyd Cole and the Commotions haps the best love lyric of this LP is contained corded what may be its masterpiece. It's a dark released B-sides. in "I Dig You" when Nicholls sings, "You sent and brooding work, reminiscent of Joy Division 1984-1989 my heart in a barrel /Down Niagara Falls." Now at the height of its power. The Cure has been Capitol Records The Commotions, while not a poppy band, that's wild. "You're So Much" is an interesting down this road before with 1982's Pornog­ managed to maintain a level of quirkiness that tale of a woman who meets Mr. Right ("He raphy, but this time they've honed their skills Whenever a band breaks up after years of made them rather endearing to some. 1984- showed me inside his heart/A place like child­ with songs such as "Pictures Of You," an ach- working together, the band's record company -1989 serves as a document of a great band that hood/He pulled me into his arms/And the ingly beautiful song if ever there was one about can do three things: managed to take aim at heartbreak and ro­ world was good."). As Nicholls put in an inter­ a doomed relationship done in only the way a 1. Release a complilation album of the band's mance, drugs, and even Sean Penn. While the view it's "...a philosophical love song." "Mr. student of the Ian Curtis school of alienation "hits", B—sides, or unreleased tracks; Commotions are no more, Cole now lives in Bad" serves up a very offbeat revision of Rose­ can do ("If only I'd thought of the right words/I 2. Release a live album; or New York, where he's working on his first solo mary's Baby. "Bonework" is delivered in a could have held onto your heart/If only I'd 3. Wait for the band's singer to release his LP with producer Fred Maher (Lou Reed, Sonic multitude of languages, and maybe it makes thought of the right words /1 wouldn't be break­ first solo album. Youth) (see rule #3 above). Until Cole surfaces sense. But the high point for the LP's second ing all my pictures of you"). Robert Smith, the Lloyd Cole And The Commotions, a Scottish with his first LP, we can comfort ourselves with side comes with "Cross," a song about love, Cure's leader, has been hinting that they will band that produced critically acclaimed al­ the a collection of songs from a band that destiny, and road kill. Closing out with Pentes's disband after their American tour this fall. If bums without achieving commercial success deserved better. \R&R\

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The Call M; M LET THE DAY BEGIN MCA Records The real tragedy of all this is that many of these songs -1 ^PI__&> _?*• by .Beau Dure contain excellent ideas hidden ft \ • J_fc __„ . ^•sSH^H he Call is in a rather precarious category — bands which behind rather bland •••ss-v S.Sr' sss:| Trelease important singles every few years, then remain in .Ifp relative obscurity in between singles. Like Big Country or Psy­ production. W\d X chedelic Furs, The Call strikes a raw nerve every two or three years with a truly memorable single, then disappears from pub­ lic view, only to turn up two or three years later with a few per­ solo which sounds too much like David Gilmour on an infinite, sonnel changes and another memorable single. Meanwhile, number of Pink Floyd songs. "For Love" sets stinging blues gui­ critics hand them names like "band of the 80s." tar work against a rhythm which recalls "Let The Day Begin." With Let The Day Begin, The Call's sixth album, the group It seems that the majority of these mistakes could be easily continues this cycle. The title track is this album's memorable fixed. Had "Surrender" featured more inspiring guitar work in­ 1 _fe. single. An inspiring anthem which recalls the Alarm in spirit stead of the sappy keyboard line which dominates the song, or if and sound, the song features powerful guitar work and strong "When" had been stopped before the likable drum-and-piano m. vocal harmony, easily endearing itself to AOR radio playlists. combination had been played to death, The Call could have pro­ While the lyrics sound too vague on first listen, singer/song­ vided a set of songs to equal the success of the titletrack. SPECIAL TO R&R writer/guitarist Michael Been neatly avoids many of the cliches One possible hint of trouble comes form the production cred­ Some call this group a band of the 80s. which would render similar songs unlistenable. it. Been and keyboardist Jim Goodwin, the band's chief song­ Unfortunately, the rest of the album fails to avoid these pit­ writers, produced the album themselves. This fact could ex­ sounds almost too confident, glossing over any emotion con­ falls. "Closer" is a trite ballad which recalls Richard Marx at his plain the unusual reliance on Been's functional yet bland voice tained in the lyrics. least artistic. "You Run" contains clever melodic devices which to carry many of the songs, a tactic which works on "Let The The band's instrumental work must also be questioned. wear thin all too quickly, rendering it useless for anything ex­ Day Begin" and fails on more restrained pieces, such as "Everywhere I Go" used both guitar and keyboard with expert cept filler material. "Jealousy" and "Uncovered." restraint; on Let The Day Begin, each instrument is either absent The real tragedy of all this is that many of these songs contain The lack of a producer also seem curious when one considers or overpowering. This problem creates the most disap­ excellent ideas hidden behind rather bland production. that the band strove for a "live" sound. Perhaps Been and Good­ pointment, as this same band gained its first national exposure "Surrender" (not exactly an original title) features inspiring win have now discovered the difficulty of living on both sides with "The Walls Came Down," in which the riffs stung as much lyrics ruined by a cheesy repetitive keyboard riff. "Same 01' of the microphone simultaneously. as the lyrics. Story" is an attempt to flex the band's instrumental muscle, fal­ On the other hand, the band may be simply unable to main­ Hopefully, Been and company are not content with Let The ling terribly short as the solos get worse and worse. tain the edge that distinguishes their singles. Been's vocals on Day Begin. It would be to easy for the band to ride on its past Equally aggravating is the fact that the band finds success by "Everywhere I Go," the band's single from 1986's Reconciled, critical success. The world is littered with bands who can toss stealing ideas. In "Jealousy," an overly morose reflection on ... succeeded by allowing an element of fragility that gave the song out singles for food and filler to ice the cake. The Call has the well ... jealousy, guitarist Tom Ferrier adds a very effective tremendous emotional power. On Let The Day Begin, Been tools and the track record to be much more than this. \R&R\

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Beaufort • Chapel Hill • Charlotte Emerald Isle • Oriental • Raleigh Rocky Mount • Virginia Beach Wrightsville Beach WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 7 Monk Institute visits Italy as Durham site progresses

by Leya Tseng In addition to taking classes, the participants performed in concerts with the instructors ev­ onstruction plans for the world's only con­ ery evening. Cservatory of jazz are nearing finalization, Paul Jeffrey, the university's director of jazz while officials for the school have completed a studies, served as the vice chairman of the study program in Italy. program's academic council. Clark Terry, a spe­ The Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz, an in­ cial guest instructor, was chairman of the coun­ dependent, accredited, degree-granting cil. program, will be located at the corner of Foster Jeffrey, who played tenor saxophone with and Morgan streets in downtown Durham, Thelonious Monk from 1970-76, and Terry, a across the street from the Carolina Theater. trumpet player best known for his tenure in the Negotiations are complete, and Durham now band of The Tonight Show, were two of the owns the property which it will be leasing to program's 10 faculty members. The other the institute, according to Thomas Carter, ex­ musicians were pianist Walter Bishop, Jr., saxo­ ecutive director of the institute. phonist Gary Bartez, guitarist Bobby Brown, The Durham City Council has secured the trombonist Curtis Fuller, trumpeter Eddy property, thereby upholding its end of the deal, Henderson, drummer Lewis Nash, and vocalist said City Manager Orville Powell. Now it is up Roberto Davis. to the institute to plan and construct the As the finale to the two-week program, the facility, he said. 10 artists gave a concert on the last night. The STAFF PHOTO/R&R The institute is currently reviewing possible performance was outstanding, both within the Paul Jeffrey took his teaching talents to Italy this summer. architectural plans and hopes to begin con­ stand point of education and without, accord­ struction around the first of January, Carter ing to Carter. The program, especially the final The Monk Institute is currently working with Roberts, who plays in Wynton Marsalis' quin­ said. It will include a dormitory, classrooms, a concert, was much more than Italy ever expec­ director Clint Eastwood on "Straight, No Chas­ tet, and Ted Rosenthal, who performed at Duke recital hall and an extensive jazz library. The ted, he said. er," a film on the life of Thelonious Monk. The last year. institute is expected to be completed in 1991. The institute will continue to sponsor the movie is scheduled to open in New York in The institute, named after Thelonious Monk, The enrollment will eventually reach 200 stu­ overseas program. There will be another sum­ September and in Los Angeles in October, ac­ the late jazz legend and Rocky Mount native, dents. mer program in Italy, and, hopefully, a winter cording to Carter. will engage in academic exchanges with the This summer, the institute sponsored a program in January or February. Another project the institute is now sponsor­ university and will be a major cultural center in program in Italy, which ran from June 26 to July Although the institute does not plan to move ing is its third annual international piano com­ Durham. Jazz greats Dizzy Gillespie, Hank 7. The program, open to students from all over the Italy program, it is looking into various petition. The competition will take place at the Jones, Wynton Marsalis and Clark Terry will be the United States and Europe, was comprised other international programs in other countries. Smithsonian Institute in Washington on Nov. invited to the institute as visiting or part-time of 100 musicians, including 13 Americans. One possible future site is Japan, Carter said. 17-18. Previous winners include Marcus professors. 1R&RI MANAGER'S BLOWOUT SALE CD 88/10 CD 286/12 CD 286/16 CD 386/20

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IBM" is a registered trademark o) International Business Machines. Inc Raleigh Durham Greensboro 3316-K North Boulevard 4201 University Drive Stones Throw Crossings COMPUTER Starmount Shopping Center Parkway Plaza II 3725 Farmington Drive Raleigh, NC 27604 Durham, NC 2?707 Greensboro, NC 27407 DIRECTIONS (919) 872-8002 (919) 489-8994 (919) 855-8403 Hours: Monday-Friday - 10 a.m. - 7 p.m. • Saturday - 10 a.m. - 6 p.m, PAGE 8 / THE CHRONICLE R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 Duke Artists Series celebrates 60th anniversary

by Beau Dure tures Rex Harrison, Glynis Johns, and Stewart Granger. "The Circle" will run from Sept. 12 to ex Harrison, Yehudi Menuhin, Julian Oct. 1. RBream and the Kronos Quartet will be Also appearing in the series will be the among the visitors to University auditoriums American premiere of "Artist Descending From this year as the Duke Artist Series and Broad­ a Stair," by Tom Stoppard, and the Red Clay way preview series headline a full year of Ramblers production of "Merry Wives of Wind­ music and drama. sor, Texas." The Duke Artists Series will celebrate its The Broadway at Duke series, which features 60th anniversary with a series that includes the performances of past and present Broadway return of violinist / conductor Yehudi Menuhin, shows by professional touring companies, will who first appeared at Duke in 1939. Menuhin include two Tony Award-winning musicals will conduct the Warsaw Sinfonia with violin and the play which won the 1988 Pulitzer Prize soloist Robert McDuffie on Oct. 29 in Page Au­ for Drama. The series opens with Working on ditorium. October 11 and continues with Tony winner Another musician returning to the Artist Se­ Me and My Girl on Nov. 5. ries is classical guitarist Julian Bream, a British This spring, the series will continue with musician with strong ties to the late guitar mas­ Pulitzer winner Driving Miss Daisy, Edward ter Andres Segovia. Bream will perform in Page Albee's Who's A/raid of Virginia Woolf?, Tony ApriU. winner Big River, and ISO Dance Theater, a The series will also include artists with highly original dance group consisting of for­ strong local followings, such as the North mer members of Pilobolus, a favorite of the Carolina Dance Theater and pianist Andre Wat­ American Dance Festival. ts, who performed a cycle of Beethoven's works In a special performance not included in the in the Triangle in 1989. series season ticket plan, ISO will perform with The Broadway preview series, which the Bobs, an a capella quartet known for such brought Mikhail Baryshnikov and Ellen Simon songs as "I Hate the Beach Boys," "Banana to the University last year, begins with Some­ Love," and "Please Let Me Be Your Third rset Maugham's play "The Circle," which fea- World Country." The Broadway at Duke series is sponsored by the Performing Arts committee of the Univer­ sity Union. Another special concert this spring will be the performance of the Kronos Quartet, a string quartet dedicated to experimentation. The MICHELE CLEMENT/SPECIAL TO R&R March 29 concert is sponsored by the Chamber Arts Society and the Encounters series. The Kronos Quartet will bring their strings to campus March 29. The Chamber Arts Society, now in its 44th season, will begin with the Juilliard String faculty member and director of the Encounters The commemoration will also include a per­ Quartet, who will perform in Reynolds Theater series. formance by John McCutcheon, a renowned Sept. 23. The series also includes the Tokyo Lee, a Beijing native who now resides in Bos­ dulcimer player who also plays a dozen addi­ String Quartet and the Dorian Wind Quintet. ton, will be a visiting faculty member for the tional instruments, and a memorial service in The Encounters series, a program sponsored 1989-1990 school year. Jaffe described Lee as a the Chapel. by the Department of Music which features per­ "prolific" composer with some interest in jazz Hoofn'Horn, a student-run musical theater formances of contemporary work, will begin in as well as classical. group, will open its season with Guys and November with a program to be announced In November, there will be a commemoration Dolls, which will run in Sheafer Theater Oct. later. devoted to the 1979 Greensboro tragedy, in 17-Nov. 4. In December, Encounters will present a per­ which five people, including one University Duke Drama has not finalized its schedule formance of the music of Karel Husa and employee and one University graduate, were yet but will open with Stage Door and Hamlet Thomas Oboe Lee. Husa, a native of Czechoslo­ killed in an anti-Ku Klux Klan demonstration. in October. vakia now on the faculty of Cornell, is also this The commemoration will include a perfor­ year's Mary Duke Biddle Distinguished Com­ mance by the Aspen Wind Quintet, who per­ Special events still in the planning stages in­ poser, the first person named as such. Husa is formed in the Encounters series in 1986. The clude the Mary Lou Williams Jazz Festival, most famous for the work "Music for Prague, quintet will feature the composition "In scheduled for Oct. 27-29, and the Winterfest of SPECIALTOR&R 1968," which has been performed over 7,000 Memoriam," written by the brother of one of Contemporary Arts, to be held Jan. 15-Feb. 28. Classical guitarist Julian Bream times, according to Stephen Jaffe, University the victims of the incident.

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919-941-6066 140, exit 281,4620S. Miami Blvd RTP's newest IxHel is ttow open (compr i0 * Hotel PAGE 10 / THE CHRONICLE R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE WEDNESDAY, JULY 2 Summer in the city Summer at Duke presents a variety of dance and theatre with some surprises

ummer at Duke yields a variety of artistic Audience members expecting a flurry of mo­ Sopportunities for both performers and au­ tion were undoubtedly disappointed. However, dience alike. The American Dance Festival, the group's excruciatingly slow pace forced a with its performances by world-renowned great attention to detail which made the viewer dancers and classes for all levels of ability, took truly appreciate the performance as a piece of over East Campus for six weeks for the twelfth stunning visual art. consecutive year. The Duke Stage Company -Beau Dure brought professional drama to Sheafer Theater with a successful inaugural season. In addition to these series, there are several ADF - The Black Tradition In American loosely organized performing groups and mini- Modern Dance - June 24 festivals which bring music and art to Duke Gardens and auditoriums. The Festival of This program, now in its second of three Chamber Music brought pianist Claude Frank scheduled seasons, presents performances of and the Mallarme chamber ensemble to the landmark pieces in the history of Black Ameri­ University, while the resident Ciompi Quartet can dance in addition to a series of lectures and made several appearances on campus. A group discussions about the history of the art. As of Hoof'n'Horn alumni and students formed many have pointed out, the pieces are land­ Phred Players, which performed GodspeJJ on a marks for all idioms of modern dance. grassy hill in Duke Gardens. This year, the series featured Eleo Pomare's Much of the summer artistic activity was de­ controversial piece "Blues For the Jungle," a cidedly untraditional. Phred Players cast a fe­ 1966 work set in a ghetto. Pomare's choreogra­ male in the role of Jesus. The Duke Stage Com­ phy pulls no punches, from a lengthy solo by a pany amused many and shocked more with a junkie to a dramatic conclusion in which the variety of unusual artistic devices. The Ameri­ dancers charge through the audience to the can Dance Festival continued its tradition of LES TODD/UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHER sound of gunfire. At ADF, the dance was per­ blending old favorites and new trailblazers. Jack Young (1) and Charles St. Clair gave a decidedly feminine interpretation to Arse­ formed by Dayton Contemporary Dance Com­ While some of the summer activity was not for nic and Old Lace. pany, combined impressive acrobatics with the faint of heart or the diehard traditionalist, some pieces of dialogue to in an unforgettable, the festivals and series presented a diverse ar­ convicts to innocent children. The two acts of ing piece, "A Brahms Symphony," emphasized unsettling performance. ray of sight and sound. the play were connected only in theme, as none the romantic notions of the music by staging a Gallman's Newark Dance Theatre followed - Beau Dure of the plot or characters appeared in both acts. complex love story amidst the company's this piece with Talley Beatty's "Road of the The first featured Chapek and Tannenbaum as furious motion. Phoebe Snow." The dance featured a complex oversexed convicts obsessed with cockroaches - Beau Dure plot which was sometimes difficult to follow DSC - Arsenic and Old Lace - May 30 and Elvis. The time spent in character develop­ but built to a dramatic conclusion. ment was rewarded in a brilliant ten-minute The program's, closing piece, Donald Two sweet little old ladies charmed audi­ scene in which the actresses performed in a ADF - Eiko and Koma - June 19 McKayle's "District Storyville," was also ences attending the Duke Stage Company's completely darkened theater. The scene, which danced by Dayton Contemporary Dance Com­ production of "Arsenic and Old Lace" with took place at Elvis's grave, was uncannily "The Day The Earth Stood Still" could have pany. The dance was a tribute to the New Or­ humor and kindness. funny and disgusting. been a movie about the duo Eiko and Koma. leans area of the same name and the music There were only two flaws in the set-up. The The second act featured much of Ball's social The two dancers bent themselves into creatures which came from it. The piece was the most two kindly aunts were actually murderers who commentary. Chapek and Tannenbaum por­ that seemed not to move, but to evolve. consistently entertaining of the evening, as a se­ had poisoned twelve elderly men and buried trayed two females at many stages of childhood The first piece, "Night Tide," featured the ries of playful sketches and the outstanding them in the cellar. The Brewster sisters were and young adulthood, juggling roles with a sur­ dancers in a shallow pool constructed on the solos by Eric Miles successfully captured the also portrayed by male actors. prisingly high degree of continuity. Reynolds Theater stage. The two drifted toward spirit of early jazz. DSC director David Ball's use of cross-cas­ The act turned into an examination of the each other at an agonizingly slow pace while a - Beau Dure ting, the portrayal of female roles by male ac­ meaning of beds. Ball explored the irony of the series of otherworldly noises yielded to a bag­ tors and vice-versa, enhanced the comedy of bed as symbol for childhood neuroses and sex­ pipe-like drone. the play. In "Arsenic" Ball cross-casted the two ual activity. The exploration was reinforced by The next two pieces were quite similar, com­ DSC - Macbeth - June 27 female leads and the two villains. occasional use of direct speech to the audience, plimenting rather than contrasting with the Jack Young and Charles St. Clair as Abby and offering commentary on the scene which had first piece. For the second piece, "Canal," the The Duke Stage Company brought night­ Martha Brewster were delightful grandmoth­ just passed. group created a rainfall that actually lowered mares to life in its hauntingly eerie production erly figures. Jody McAuliffe as the demented - Beau Dure the temperature of the entire theater. The third of "Macbeth." criminal Jonathan Brewster and Sally piece was an ADF-commissioned premiere, The cast included several strong performers Nussbaumer as his sidekick Dr. Einstein were ADF - Lar Lubovitch Dance Co. - June 17 "Rust," which featured the dancers on a fence previously seen in DSC's "Arsenic and Old appropriately evil. which dangled from the ceiling. Lace." Jack Young performs well in the title Other strong performances included James Acclaimed choreographer Lar Lubovitch Goodspeed doubling in the roles of the Rever­ aims to dazzle his audience. Using bright light­ end Dr. Harper and Officer O'Hara and director ing and a constant stream of motion, Jim Boerlin as Teddy Roosevelt, the mentally Lubovitch's dancers seem to be updated ver­ disturbed Brewster who has delusions of being sions of the traditional cheerful ballerina, smil­ Teddy Roosevelt. Kevin Witte was wonderfully ing and spinning to colorful orchestral music. stuffy as the straight-laced fussbudget Mortimer At ADF, the company performed Lubovitch's Brewster, providing contrast to the rest of the most acclaimed piece, "Concerto Six Twenty- "Arsenic" characters. Two," set to the concerto bv Mozart. While the

Some of the summer activity was not for the faint of heart or the diehard traditionalist, the festivals and series presented a diverse array of sight and sound.

A beautiful set design by artist-in-residence first and third movement were brisk and vi­ Wenhai Ma, including a real staircase and brant, the second movement provided the most window, subtle lighting and music enhanced stunning performance of the evening with a the play's mood. duet between Sylvain Lafortune and Rick - Leva Tseng Michalek. The duet, which uses delicate gym­ nastic motions to symbolize support between two friends, provided a perfect element of con­ DSC- Bad Guys and Bedfellows -June 13 trast to the other movements. The other pieces on the program used a vari­ David Ball presented a very convincing argu­ ety of effects to maintain visual appeal. "Beau ment for futons with his play "Bad Guys and Danube," set to music by Strauss, used a glitter­ Bedfellows." ing snowfall and a pseudo-Viennese backdrop. The play. used a two-member cast, Susan The unaccompanied "Big Shoulders" used Chapek and Shirley Tannenbaum, to portray colorful costumes and explosive solos to imi­ several characters, ranging from foul-mouthed tate a citv constuction site. The evening's clos- The Dayton Contemporary Dance Company presents a history of black dance. w, JULY 26, 1989 R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 11

ADF flourishes through new international flavor

by Margie Shim looking for talent one cannot be confined by geographical boundaries," he said. Tuly 22 marked the end of another successful season for the While much of the festival's appeal stems from its foreign fla­ J American Dance Festival (ADF). The festival, which is vor, its interest in local talent was also apparent by its commis­ headed by director and president Charles Reinhart and his wife sioning of the North Carolina Symphony to accompany severa1 Stephanie Reinhart, has kept residence at the University for the performances. past eleven years. For six weeks the University was brought to The festival is not only a showcase for premiere talent, it is a life by dancers from around the world who spent a grueling school for dancers of all abilities. The school is home to 250 pre- Durham summer limitlessly exercising their creative geniuses. professional and professional dancers from around thre world Each year the dance festival, which is considered one of the who participate in dance-related workshops and conferences world's greatest showcases for cultural modern dance, invites led by premiere artists. In addition to classes and performances choreographers, master teachers, students, professionals, and extensive humanities projects supported by the National En­ whole companies from around the world to come together to dowment for the Arts are held for the participants. share and exhibit the infinitude of human creativity from a The success of ADF is based on the strong support it receives dancer's perspective. Dancers who become part of the ADF not only from international and national organizations but local "family" are actively recruited from college campuses and stu­ ones as well, Reinhart said. This year, problems arose when a dios as well as from professional companies worldwide. Venezuelan group, the Ballet Contemporaneo del Theatro de The festival, which is not simply a transitory party or a tem­ San Martin had grants withdrawn by the government. In porary assemblage of performances as its title suggests but response to the crisis, local Durham community groups and rather a heterogenous dance school of sorts, has altogether revo­ families came to the rescue. Many opened their homes to the lutionized the world of dance as we know it. Its dancers have dancers while emergency funds were established for their pioneered and established new dance forms that have helped to speedy transportation to the states. give American art its own personal identity. While the-dancers In addition, the programs have been generously supported by change annually, the festival's vision of creating a home where over 40 national business companies. both budding and established talent can refine, express, and While the University has adequately served the needs of the create new techniques has remained the same. dancers, the facilities are "less than ideal in terms of dance stu­ Since its conception in Bennington, Vermont over fifty years dios," says Stephanie Reinhart. She points out that the Univer- ago, ADF has increased its scope and size dramatically in the past few decades. The festival has brought together some of the

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role as the power-hungry would-be king, as does Charles Other memorable performances include Jim Boerlin as the St.Clair in the role of Macduff. drunken Porter and Victoria Christian as Lady Macbeth. Perhaps the best performance in the production was Teodoro Director David Ball does an excellent job creating a heavy Giuliani, an Italian actor who made his American theatrical aura of doom and a distinct feeling of uneasiness for the audi­ debut and his first English language performance, as Banquo ence. His use of eerie lighting, a fog machine and an ominous and Hecate. background drum beat effectively create an air of mystery and Sally Nussbaumer as the Queen of Scotland, in lieu of the intrigue which were enhanced by artist-in-residence Wenhai traditional King Duncan, is a variation on the company's recur­ Ma's scene design of moss-like multi-colored rags. ring use of "cross-casting," the use of female actors in male roles Ball also employed three supernatural creatures who hissed and vice-versa. the entire play along with the actors. While the serpents suc­ ceeded in adding a nightmarish dimension of evil seduction, they were distracting to the point of pre-empting some of the ac­ tors' soliloquies. - Leva Tseng

ADF - Ballet Contemparaneo del Teatro San Martin - June 30

Power, grace and sensuality flooded Page Auditorium with the fluid movements of the Ballet Contemporaneo del Teatro San Martin of Argentina. The company opened with the history of the tango. Beginning SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE first with one sole male dancer and then several male dancers, still without females, the company performed the tango as it Actress Susan Chapek is a Bad Guy but a Good Bedfel­ began originally. The females then joined in the seductive, be­ low. witching dance. The company successfully blended contem­ porary ballet with the tango of today to create an aura of mystery fiantly plunged his foot in one of the paiis. and one female was and sensuality. placed in the water by two male dancers as they poured water "Triple Tiempo" (Triple Time), the group's middle piece. over her. The flowing of water did not appear humorous; in­ consisted of only three men. The dance captured the strength stead, it enhanced the appeal to the audience's senses. and beauty of contemporary ballet at its most powerful. The - Leva Tseng dancers showcased strength, control and agility in many of the dance moves. In one gazelle-like leap the dancer appeared to be suspended in the air by invisible wire. ADF - Sutki - July 6 With the absence of female dancers came the necessity of more interaction between the men. This interaction was skill­ The American Dance Festival presented the Italian company fully achieved without disturbing the romantic qualities of bal­ Sutki in a hauntingly fanatical performance titled "Ahnung" let. (Premonition). The final act of the Argentine company featured a series of "Ahnung," more a series of "theatrical panoramas" than ac­ dances titled "Bailando en la Oscuridad" (Dancing in the Dark). tual dance, begins with the most mundane of situations. As the These dances were the most romantic of the evening, full of sen­ situations progress they become increasingly tense, finally suality and magnetism. The dancers showed to the fullest the receding into a wild and haunting set of movements. grace for which ballet in the form of social dance is known. According to the group's bio, Sutki's portrayal of In one of the mini-dances within the final act, the dancers "Premonition" is one which presents something between the brought pails of water on the stage. Several of the women danc­ SPECIAL TO R&R ers immersed their hair in the water, one of the male dancers.de- See Summer on page 12 PAGE 12 / THE CHRONICLE R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989

tennial of the French Revolution, this piece, titled "La Maison Summer des Plumes Vertes," was performed on the 200th anniversary of the storming of the Bastille. Yet the dance, choreographed by From page 11 Jean-Francois Duroure and performed by the Compagnie Jean- ADF AT A GLANCE Francois Duroure, seemed to have little to do with any revolu­ end of the world and the unworldly. "Ahnung" is a premonition tion. and omen of finality and the end. Year founded 1934 The dance begins with many separate situations which at first The setting is relatively vague, described in the program as Year moved to Durham 1978 appear to be ordinary motions. Each innocent event soon gives "An imaginary, timeless place, with feudal overtones — a castle way to a very bizarre set of movements which hint at near-in­ standing between heaven and earth." The characters are equally Number of performing companies 31 sanity. In one scene, a male dancer is dressed in a ruffly white mysterious, "A man imagines he is a king. He invents his own gown and handed two other dancers swaddled up as babies. court: a fool, two knights and three queens. Each of them com­ Number of performances 39 The scene appears to be a loving one at first. Soon, however, the plies with his wishes and submits to the rules he imposes." Number of world premieres 14 babies are taken away from the "mother," who is then quite crudely disrobed. And this is where the fun begins. Any attempts to follow a Class enrollment c.250 While the idea behind "Ahnung" is interesting and well-con­ plot-line are soon abandoned as the audience simply allows its Number of students from Korea 52 veyed, it is very unsettling to the viewer who walks into the au­ imagination to wander along with the rich variety of music: ditorium expecting dance. The Sutki company performs not Monteverdi, mandolins, Turkish love poems, and Indian raga. Number of students from Japan C.25 dances but choreographed steps to music in an event which The simple set design consisting of three silk tapestries that seems to last forever. The performance ran one and one-half change from brown and black to bright colors suddenly in the Number of six-week faculty 20 hours without intermission, in order to avoid interrupting the middle of the performance also defy a concrete interpretation. Number of entries in a contest careful progression toward insanity. Anna Sagna, choreographer for the group, named her com­ The dancers' movements are the final touch, ranging from to design the 1989 ADF T-shirt 90 pany Sutki after her first choreographic work in the late 1960s. slow and elegant to vibrant and emotional. Clothed at first in simple medieval peasants clothing, and later in finer garments, Sutki is a Russian word meaning "tour of the clock, 24 hours." Statistics courtesy of Alison Jones, ADF press repre­ - Leya Tseng the dancers suggest an on-going tension between harmony and chaos. This cycle is only broken when the dance ends as sud­ sentative and the ADF performance program. denly and quietly as it began. ADF - Jean-Francois Duroure - July 14 - Chris O'Brien As part of the "Made in France" series, celebrating the Bicen­ [R&m __r%* i

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return of a Chapel Hill native who's been "Aphrodisiac" from the LP ("She was bound to tion/They not sure you can grasp it/They Loudon Wainwright III around for a while. Loudon Wainwright HI, son be a critic's darlin'/So he knew what she was don't give you much credit." THERAPY of Life Magazine's Loudon Wainwright II gonna to go through/At first it feels like the "'Harry' Wall" explores fame (even pseudo- Silvertone / RCA Records (author of "The View From Here" column) has tunnel of love/But it can turn on you ... The fame) as the continuous refrain of "There he just released Therapy on Silvertone Records. nextthing you're having your first come-back/ goes, there's what's-his-name. We saw him on by Aiujeeb _>hah-Khan It's very much in a folky vein. At one time, And you're wonderin' where you'd gone"). T.V." goes on. Maybe you did see him on T.V... those in the know had dubbed Wainwright the Wainwright played Captain Calvin Spaulding f 1988 was the year of the female folksinger- next Bob Dylan (as if one wasn't more than on the television series M*A*S*H as, what else, Isongwriter (Tracy Chapman, et al.), 1989 enough already). Luckily, Wainwright hasn't a singer/songwriter in the middle of Korea, may be the year a forgotten breed of musician, achieved the fame and success that Dylan has Luckily, Wainwright suddenly bursting into song. But he notes that yes, the male folksinger-songwriter. In the past (plus Wainwright actually has a singing voice). "[Many songs]...I write somehow pertain to this breed has produced Bob Dylan and Woody Wainwright may suffer the fate of becoming a hasn't achieved the me." Wainwright leads an interesting life, Guthrie among others. This year marks the critic's darling, a fate he decries in though he's not terribly good at maintaining re­ fame and success that lationships (maybe not even capable of carrying on one) as seen in "Fly Paper", "Nice Guys", Dylan has (plus and "Mind Read (It Belonged To You)." Wain­ wright can also deal out some stunning put- Wainwright actually downs as ably demonstrated in "Bill Of Goods" has a singing voice). when he takes on a girlfriend determined to keep up her false appearances ("There was a whiff from your nicked armpit/When the real you wafted through/And your deodorant Being a critic's darling isn't the greatest thing couldn't stop it"). But the most moving moment in the world, it does get one exposure. Wain­ on the new LP comes "Thanksgiving," a song wright has seen the "big time" with his 1972 about a family Thanksgiving when the family single "Dead Skunk in the Middle of the Road" all returns to the family home after years of that became a minor hit. It didn't translate into being apart. With Richard Thompson's addi­ major success though. Wainwright kept being tional guitar (Thompson, a founding member of shipped around various record companies (At­ Fairport Convention and solo artist, lends his lantic, CBS, and Arista) finally ending up on guitar and mandolin abilities to several of the English independent label Demon Records. For LP's tracks) and B.J. Cole's pedal steel guitar, his twelfth album, Wainwright ensures contin­ Wainwright's song takes on a gentle hushed ued semi-stardom as he attacks the machina­ quality. tions of the music business. In "T.S.D.H.A.V." (This song don't have a video), he attacks the Overall, Therapy is a great work from a MTV generation that ensures that an artist can't sometimes irreverent, yet always thought- be successful unless they have the correct type provoking foiksinger/wordsmith. Loudon of video to go with song X. Wainwright offers Wainwright Ill's own "View From Here" estab­ MATT SCLAFANI/R&R the advice, "Use your imagination/Forget lishes him as a folksinger/songwriter to be Loudon wrestles with himself, among others about the radio/They won't play it on the sta­ reckoned with. Iff&ffl

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Art Events is responsible for sponsoring gallery exhibits of both stu- Freewater Presentations also began several new programs this past dent artists and local crafts people. Exhibits from the 1988-89 school year: a Saturday Afternoon Matinee format was instituted to corn- year include the following: Another Classroom: Documentary Pho- plement the Saturday morning movies aimed at Durham Community tographs by Duke Students (Aug. 25 - Oct. 1), Tie-Dyes: Student children, the Committee began to produce a booklet that reviews all Dyes (Oct. 2 - 30), Another Classroom: Part II (Oct. 30 - Nov. 28), the movies scheduled for the semester, and the Filmmaker's Series The Colors of Woman: Pastels by Polly Polumbo (Nov. 29 - Jan. 15), kicked off with a visit from Academy Award Nominee Christine Studies in the Nude: Student Drawings from Merrill Shatzman's Choy to discuss and introduce her film "Who Killed Vincent Chin?." Figure Drawing Class (Jan. 15 - Feb. 4), Freewater Productions saw a busy year Batik: Southern Impressions (Feb. 5 - of progress. Fall and spring semesters Feb. 28), Fundamental Light: Photo­ were both packed with Wednesday night graphs by J.K. Nicholas (March 1 - April filmmaking workshops covering such 1), Scenes of the Imagination: Paintings topics as process, storyboards, camera, by Holly Edwards (April 2 - 15), Italy light meter, and film basics, basic light­ and Beyond: Paintings by Liz Dalgetty ing, basic editing, basic sound, and post- (April 16 - May 15). Art Events was also production. These workshops were responsible for bringing the following hands-on experience - as the Committee workshops: Freshman Tie-Dye (Sept. €lDlD produced several movie shorts, and filmed 18), Holiday Decorations Workshop Duke University Union footage for a movie entitled "The Inter­ (Nov. 29), and Batik Demonstration (Feb. view" which is currently in production. 21). Cable 13 saw the addition of five new shows to last fall's line- Spring Semester saw the premiere of two student-made films: up. Inside Duke (In-depth News Magazine), Bull Session (Political "Woods Off the Highway" and "Academics Now." Both films Talk Show), Duke Street Diversions (Entertainment Review), Your received great crowd reaction as well as phenomenal attendance. Favorite Drinking Game (Game Show), and Reel Stories (Student- Several more films are in current production, so look for more film written ______._mi_a______^m______m_^^___^_^^^_^ premieres this Drama)joined __• wk f a 1 1 returning Galleries shows stayed busy SportsCenter, keeping pro­ Trinity Feud, fessional art­ and Fuqua ist's work in Looks at Busi­ the East Cam­ ness. Cable pus Gallery 13 also began and in the to broadcast Louise Jones four of its pro­ Brown Gal­ grams on Dur­ lery in the ham Cable- Bryan Center. vision last No­ Exhibits in vember . both locations Spring semes­ included the ter saw the ad­ following: dition of two A n g e 1 i c o more new Cruz: Photo­ shows: Entry graphs from II (Entertain­ Mexico (Aug. ment Informa­ 18-Sept. 30), tion) and Donna Gre­ Sports Line (Sports Trivia). Spring also brought an open house for gory: Angst to Absurdity (Oct. 2 - 28), David Benson: Kinetic Light interested students, a seminar by Paper Tiger Television, and an Sculpture (Oct. 29 - Dec. 2), Bragtown 6th Grade Center: Egypt in interview with Roe v. Wade attorney Sarah Weddington. The latter Durham (Dec. 3 - Jan. 7), Robert Amberg: WNC Photographs (Aug. part of the spring saw Cable 13 preparing for their move into the new 19 - Sept. 23), Connie Rubino Schwab: Paintings and Drawings studios located in the Bryan Center. Freewater Presentations (Sept. 24 - Oct. 28), Benini at Duke (Oct. 30 - Dec. 15), Laura brought over 125 movies to campus during 1988-89. Tuesday and Paresky: Images in Oil Pastel (Jan. 8 - Feb. 6), Sherman Fleming: Thursday nights' series format produced eight great series: Images Big Rebus Paintings (Feb. 7 - March 10), Larry Dew: Dali to of Madness, Documentaries of the Decade, Hitchcock in Black and Dinghushaw (March 4 - 20), Lance Blum: The Menace (March 21 White, British Protagonist, Chinese Cinema, Orson Welles-Director, -Apr. 14), Linda Nisselson (Apr. 15 -May 19), Maureen Banker (Jan. Robert De Niro, and Great Directors, Great Actors. Friday night 9 - Feb. 10), Cathryn Griffin: Photographs (Feb. 11 - March 19), regualr shows as well as midnite shows were as popular as ever. Eric Green: In Praise of the Middle Ground (March 19 - Apr. 16), WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE THE CHRONICLE / PAGES

Interior/Exterior (Apr. 18 - May 18). Galleries also co-sponsored Coffin, Arturo Rodriquez of the United Farm Workers, Author John arts-related events around campus, and committee members were Updike, Photographer-artist Evon Streetman, rape experts Robin treated to talks by many guest artists who attended the regualr Warshaw and Barry Burkhart, Israeli economist Gur Ofer, Poet Allen meetings. Interaction kept busy over the past year through a wide Ginsberg, Activist Bobby Seale, Roe v. Wade attorney Sarah Wed­ variety of programming that works on student/faculty, black/white, dington, Movie producer of "The Handmaid's Tail" Daniel Wilson, graduate/undergrad, and Duke/Durham relations. Talk on the Walk and Author Margaret Atwood. Performing Arts had a busy year co­ was a regular Friday activitiy with topics like race relations at Duke, ordinating the Broadway at Duke series and their other activities. and Univer­ Broadway at sity child care. Duke brought Student-fac­ six great ulty luncheons shows to Page let you meet Auditorium. your profes­ The Mystery sors, and ALL THIS! of Edwin Hobby Days Drood, Nun- let students sense, Little teach the fac­ AND THE INFO DESK Shop of Hor­ ulty. Gradu­ rors, Come­ ate school for 684-3322 dian Jerry a Day let you Seinfeld with see what AND STUDENT LOCATOR Special Guest Duke's gradu­ Charles ate schools are 684-2323 Zucker, A like, and Col­ View From lege for a Day AND THE CRAFT CENTER the Bridge, let you show and 1000 Air­ Durham high planes on the school stu­ 684-2532 Roofprovided dents what just as muck college is like. variety and Video screen- showmanship ings around campus of "Racism 101" provided a good forum for as you can find on Broadway. Performing Arts also sponsored discussion about racial issues on campus. Major Attractions kept Showcase '89, and a capacity performance by the Hudson Vagabond Duke dancing during 1988-89! Bruce Hornsby and the Range (Sept. Puppet Company. P.U.B. brought all kinds of entertainment to 30) showed Duke that banging on the ivories can still bring down the campus during 1988-89. The highlight of the year had to the conceit house. UB40 rocked Cameron in a big by Living Colour on Homecoming week­ way on Oct. 4, thanks in part to reaching end, but P.U.B. also brought Deny Berry Duke's campus at the height of the popu­ and Alagia, Flat Duo Jets, Waxing Poet­ larity of their remake of "Red, Red Wine." WHAT ELSE ics, Blind Mice, Barrence Whitfield and Windham Hill's Winter Solstice concert the Destroyers, and Dreams So ReaL came to Cameron on Nov. 15 and proved Publicity made lots of progress this year. that new age music is here to stay. A co- COULD YOU The new Macintosh enabled committee sponsorship with P.U.B. brought Blind members to create more professional pro­ Mice and Barrence Whitfield and the ASK FOR? motional materials for Union events. Savages to the Coffeehouse on Feb. 22 (TURN THE PAGE) Flyers, banners, personals, advertise­ and enjoyed a standing room only crowd. ments, public service announcements, April 14 brought Major Attractions' and the like were all used to let the entire free concert of the year - Guadalcanal Diary - to Clocktower Quad Duke Community know about Union events. Publicity also took the and a huge crowd. Major Speakers brought a phenomenal number Union slideshow to all of the freshman dorms to let new students of speakers to campus during 1988-89. Duke professors Rick know what the Union is and how to get involved. Special Events" Roderick and Dr. Bryan Gilliam participated in Major Speakers' main job during 1988-89 was Oktoberfest and Springfest - both were Last Lecture Series, but that hardly makes a dent in the list of speak- great successes. Special Events also sponsored Duke on Display ers. Jesse Jackson spoke to a capacity crowd in Cameron as part of (Duke's talent show), the banner contest, and Blue and White Night freshman orientation. Other speakers include: Political speaker Tom over Homecoming Weekend, as well as sponsoring "The Rocky Hor- Walker, Julius Chambers of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, Sena- ror Picture Show", Reebok's Rugged Walker Contest, and the Holi- tor Joe Biden, Dominik Kulik of the Center for Common Security, day Treelighting. Major Attractions, Performing Arts, Major Political speaker Erik von Keuhnelt Leudihn, Former Communist Speakers, and P.U.B. also brought comedian Charles Zucker to kick Party leader Junius Scales, SANE/FREEZE Pres. William Sloane off the Union's newest program - the Comedy Series. PAGE 16 / THE CHRONICLE R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989

HOW ABOUT ANOTHER GREAT YEAR OF IT? BELOW ARE SUMMARIES OF OUR PROGRAMMING COMMITTEES. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN JOINING ONE OF THEM, ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS CALL THE UNION OFFICE FOR MORE INFORMATION. 684-2911 (INCOMING FRESHMEN: LOOK OUT FOR THE UNION SLIDESHOW IN YOUR DORM DURING THE FIRST FEW WEEKS OF SCHOOL. IT'S THE EASIEST WAY TO GET INVOLVED.)

ART EVENTS MAJOR ATTRACTIONS SPECIAL EVENTS

If you are a student artist or if you just enjoy art, Art If you enjoy big name musical artists, Major Attrac­ Union members joke that any event which does not Events is your kind of committee. Art Events tions is the committee for you. Bringing a wide fall under any other committee's area is a "special sponsors gallery exhibits of both student artists and variety of bands. Major Attractions has something for event." Each year Special Events sponsors Home­ local crafts people. Art Events also sponsors several everyone. Artists over the past few years include coming activities, Oktoberfest, the Holiday Tree workshops throughout the year, including Tie Dye. Guadalcanal Diary, R.E.M., Echo and the Bunnymen, Lighting, Springfest, and other yearly and one-time Photography, and Holiday Craft Workshops. UB40, Bruce Hornsby and the Range, and Windham events. If you have an idea for a campus activity, Hill. Special Events may well be the committee that can make your idea a reality.

GALLERIES INTERACTION FREEWATER PRESENTATIONS

The Galleries Committee maintains professional art The Union's Interaction Committee is active in If you love to watch movies, this is your niche. exhibits in galleries on both East and West Campus. bringing diverse groups together. Interaction works Freewater Presentations shows movies on Tuesday, The East Campus Gallery is located in the East with student/faculty, black/white, graduate/under­ Thursday, and Friday nights at 7:00 and 9:30 pm. Campus Library, and the Louise Jones Brown graduate, and Duke/Durham relations. Regular Some Fridays also have midnight movies, and classic Gallery can be found in the Bryan Center. Many of activities such as "Talk on the Walk" and Student- children's movies are shown on Saturday mornings at the opening receptions are now offering an added Faculty Luncheons are supplemented by special 10:30 am. Keep your eyes open for the new treat - a gallery talk by the artist! programming like College for a Day. filmmakers series of special speakers, too!

CABLE 13 PERFORMING ARTS FREEWATER PRODUCTIONS

Are you tired of Video Puke? Cable 13 equals Pepto Musicals, Comedy, Drama, and Dance - the Perform­ Freewater Productions provides a chance for people Bismol. Check out Duke's own cable station on com­ ing Arts Committee has it all. Aside from their major interested in filmmaking to attend workshops and to mons room tubes, Central Campus televisions, and undertaking,the Broadway at Duke season, Perform­ make their own movies. Freewater Productions also now Durham Cablevision. News, Comedy, Politics, ing Arts has a comedy series and a dance series in the has a grant application procedure whereby interested and Entertainment shows all add up to a plethora of planning stages. Help plan the whole thing and then members of the Duke Community can create their video entertainment all coming to you from Cable enjoy! own celluloid masterpieces. 13's brand new studio in the Bryan Center. A visit to the new studio may get you hooked on Cable 13!

MAJOR SPEAKERS PUBLICITY P.U.B.

Duke's reputation attracts many important people to Every time the Union does something, you can find The P.U.B. Committee specializes in bringing up- speak here, but it also takes lots of hard work to out about it from the Publicity Committee. The and-coming musicians to locations all over Duke's coordinate their visits. Major Speakers' efforts in Publicity Committee creates flyers, advertisements, Campus. A jazz series is in the planning stages, and publicity, hospitality, ushering, media coverage, and banners, and publicity campaigns for Union events as the P.U.B. Committee is also working on the new location bookings have enabled Jesse Jackson, John well as promoting the Union as a whole. Look for campus comedy series. Recent successes in picking Updike, Roe v. Wade Attorney Sarah Weddington, the Union Logo to see what the Union does for you. rising groups include performances by the Connells and many others to enjoy their visits to Duke over the and Living Colour. Come help bring the hot bands of past few semesters. tomorrow to Duke today! WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 17

GALLERIES FREEWATER ALSO THIS FALL: LOUISE JONES BROWN GALLERY, BRYAN CENTER PRESENTATIONS FRIDAY NIGHTS August 26 - September 24 SPECIAL EVENTS Durham Schools Art Teachers Show August Reception: Sept. 5; 5-7 pm 25 Young Frankenstein OKTOBERFEST September Friday, October 6 1 Eight Men Out September 26 - November 8 Crafts Fair: 10 am - 6 pm, Chapel Quad Peter Dean, Paintings (midnight: The Omen) 8 Cousin, Cousines Concert: 7 pm, Clocktower Quad Reception: Sept. 27; time TBA (midnight: Bedazzled) 15 Salaam Bombay BLUE AND WHITE NIGHT November 9 - December 2 (midnight: Rosemary's Baby) Saturday, November 11 Danielle Epstein, Paintings 22 Last Temptation of Christ Concert and Dance: 9 pm - 12:30 am, Reception: Nov. 9; 5-7 pm (midnight: Heavy Metal) 29 Cane Toads / Joe's Bed-Stuy Barber Shop: Von Canon Hall, Bryan Center We Cut Heads December 4 - December 8 (midnight: It Came From Outerspace) HOLIDAY TREELIGHTING Duke Craft Center Show and Sale October Opening: Dec. 4; 5-7 pm Monday, December 4 6 The Milagro Beanfield War Holiday readings, carolling, free refresh­ 20 The Thin Blue Line ments, and the traditional lighting of the EAST CAMPUS GALLERY, 27 Alice EAST CAMPUS LIBRARY November University holiday tree. 3 Dangerous Liaisons (Page) 5 pm, Chapel Quad August 17 - September 14 10 Pelle the Conqueror V! Bryan Carey, III, Paintings (midnight: The Wolf Man) Reception: Aug. 29; 5-7 pm 17 Babette's Feast (midnight: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde) December CABLE 13 & September 15 - October 24 1 Red Sorghum Doug Deneen, Cibachrome Photography (midnight: King Kong) FREEWATER Reception: TBA 8 Mystic Pizza PRODUCTIONS October 25 - November 20 LOOK FOR THE FALL SEMESTER LOOK FOR ANNOUNCEMENTS HERE Marthanna Yater, Photographs POSTERS AND BOOKLETS WHICH IN THE CHRONICLE CONCERNING Reception: Oct. 27; 5-7 pm CONTAIN SCHEDULES FOR THE OPEN HOUSES AND TUESDAY NIGHT, THURSDAY NIGHT, BEGINNING WORKSHOPS November 21 - January 8 AND SATURDAY MORNING EARLY THIS FALL. Annabelle Meacham, Paintings MOVIES AS WELL. Reception: TBA V. PAGE 18 / THE CHRONICLE R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1989

st'iis "'

. ••*•;».„ •S:- S ." 4* * - * DUKE DRAMA IsSI Courses, student productions, professional produc­ S tions, film & video projects, new plays, independent _m studies. -S,'r.»*l v ":% For brand-new beginners, intermediates, and the most advanced. The Institute of the Arts. . .Duke University's center for Fall classes still open to everyone (including interdisciplinary arts courses and programs... new freshmen): Offering these courses in fall '89 Dra 51 INTRO TO WORLD THEATER Dra 145S THEATER FARCE (also taught as English 17 IS) Al 122: Arts as Human Experience (J. Desmond) flf you need a literature course, look closely at The arts as a form of cultural practice, located in their this one.) sociopolitical context. Performances and guest lectures Dra 161 STAGE COSTUMING complement readings and discussions. 1:45-3:00 TuTh. Dra 170 DESIGN AND COLOR (visual principles and practice for stage) Al 123: Music Theater Practicum (McRae Hardy). A pratical workshop in staging, singing, acting, movement, Dra 185S THEATER ADMINISTRATION and other elements of musical theater. 1:50-4:30 F. Dra 196.01 STAGE MANAGEMENT (For those who like running and organizing things, and who want to Al 150: Managing the Arts (K. Silbiger). learn how to do it right) Current issues and practical skills in the field of Dra 196S.02 FILM AND VIDEO (production techniques and experience) management for nonprofit arts organizations such as museums and galleries, orchestras, dance companies, arts Dra 99 (INTRO TO ACTING) is full for fall, but 5 councils, etc. Guest speakers, field trips, work with a local sections will be open for spring. arts organization are part of course. 10:35-11:50 TuTh.

Sign up during add/drop. For advance information, call the Duke NEW STUDENT OPEN HOUSE Institute of the Arts, 684-6654 or visit 109 Bivins Bldg. Sunday, August 27, 2 pm, Shaefer Theater (lower level Bryan Center)

ASIAN AND AFRICAN Introduction to Duke Drama for incoming LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE students (and other interested newcomers to PRESENT Drama) THE LANGUAGES OF THE FUTURE Meet faculty, other students, and find out about the many ways to be involved right from Learning a language is much more than mastering a skill, it Is a unique introduc­ your first days here. tion to a culture. Asian and African Languages and Literature offers the opportu­ nity to learn Arabic, Chinese, Hebrew, Japanese, Persian and Swahill—languages spoken by almost 2 billion peoplel

In response to popular demand, Asian and African Languages and Literature has AUDITIONS added new faculty in Arabic, Chinese, Hebrew, Hindi and Japanese. Duke Drama's first two fall shows are HAMLET and STAGE DOOR, Wed. 8/30, Thurs. 8/31, Fri. 9/1, Reynolds Industries Theater, 7-10:30 pm. Call for appointment (684-2306) or just New Course - Fall, 1989 show up. Modern Arabic Literature In Translation. Read literatures of the Middle East, North Africa and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict as well as novels by this year's Duke Drama activities and classes are open to everyone. Over Nobel laureate in literature, Nagulb Mahfouz. Cooke. 75% of our roles go to non-majors, and most classes are open New Courses - Spring, 1990 to everyone, including beginners. There are also classes and ac­ tivities aimed at advanced students, and exciting on-campus Comtemporary Culture In South Asia. Literature, theater, film and television. internships with pre-Broadway and other professional produc­ Satti Khanna. tions open to everyone, even if you have never done a thing in Literature and Revolution: From the May Fourth to the Post-Mao Era (in theater. More fine opportunities are available with Duke's extra­ translation). Introducing the history of modem Chinese literature—the rise of the curricular groups (Karamu, Hoof'n'Hom, Cable 13 TV and League of Left-Wing writers, the socio-political role of May Fourth writers, the Freewater Film Productions), and students move easily between emergence of "modem consciousness" In the post-Mao period, and contro­ groups and between extracurricular and Drama Program work. versy of socialist alienation in the early 1980s. Readings include works by Lu There are enough Duke theater, film and tv activities to keep Xun, Mao Dun, Ding Ling, Lu Wenfu, Zhang Xlanllang, and contemporary you as busy as much as you want, so start early. women writers. Jing Wang.

Come and meet the faculty—Ada Chen, Miriam Cooke, Roger Kaplan, Hlroko NEWCOMERS PARTICULARLY INTERESTED IN DRAMA Kasahara, Satti Khanna, Reiko Kido, Richard Kunst, Yasumi Kurlya, Bruce ARE ENCOURAGED TO STOP BY AND SEE THE Lawrence, Akiko Nomlya, William O'Barr, Suwen Qlan, Shawkat Toorawa, Jing DIRECTOR OF DRAMA, 206 Bivins, East Campus. Come talk Wang—on Monday, August 28 between 4 and 6 pm at 2111 Campus Dr. as soon as possible if you are contemplating a major in Drama.

^^^^ WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989 R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 19 Helms, Herald ain't got no appreciation

by Beau Dure the entire Senate to join Helms in his attack. Several questions remain unanswered by On the same editorial page, the Herald fea­ this crusade. Who exactly is the "public?" Is it a esse Helms, known for his often controver­ tured a letter from Jim Dickson, which attacked majority of the people as a whole or a small sial crusades on the Senate floor, entered the not only the Serrano exhibit but also the coalition of art professors who devote much of Jart world this summer with an attack against "Morality Tales" exhibit, which was in the their existence to the study of art's philosoph­ the funding policies of the Southeastern Center Duke University Museum of Art this spring. ical implications? for Contemporary Arts (SECCA). The author opened his letter with "I cannot In any event, it seems unlikely that Helms Helms apparently became offended upon the describe artistic filth but I know it when I see and his cohorts at the Herald have studied any sight of the work of Andres Serrano, who it." He then complained that the faculty at­ philosophical implications. Did Helms see the created a photograph in which a crucifix was tempted to justify this exhibit with dance of Eiko and Koma, in which nudity was submerged in his own urine (Serrano's urine, "meaningless rhetoric; i.e., social commentary, used not as a suggestion of sex or other perver­ not Helms's). The senator became further in­ the art challenges us to rise above morality, the sity but a necessary tool in the portrayal of furiated upon learning that the artist had role of art in our society." beings which were not human? If so, did the received a $15,000 grant from SECCA, a branch The Herald revived the issue with a June 21 senator ponder the possibility that such art of the National Endowment of the Arts (NEA). editorial which questioned the Durham Arts might not exist if no one had dared to break Helms took his case to NEA, asking the tax­ Council's decision to pay two New York artists down the barriers of onstage nudity? payer-supported group to rethink its funding to create a work in which the artists wrote the History has shown that civilization without policies. He was unhappy with the response, city's revitalization plan on three pieces of culture ceases to be civilization. If we impede which he described as "Down, boy, we know sidewalk. Weeks later, the artists demolished the progress of art, the progress of society is what we are doing." the sidewalk and left in it three trucks outside useless. The Herald, through its distinction be­ UPI PHOTO The Durham Morning Herald ran an editorial the arts council building, for public viewing. tween censorship and withholding money, im­ Renowned art critic Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) supporting the senator on May 31. The column The Herald acknowledged the arts council's plies that the mere right to create a work of art said the senator's assertion, "[Serrano] is not an claim that no public money was spent on the is sufficient for the progress of art. As any starv­ ists who do not offend the senator or happen to artist. He is a jerk," was "gentler than project. However, the editorial concluded by ing yet talented artist will tell you, this is sim­ be independently wealthy. This crusade vio­ deserved." The editorial then said: "The greater saying "The public has some rights, too, espe­ ply untrue. lates the immortal words of Bob Dylan 25 years jerks are those who awarded [the artist] a cially to estabish standards by which it will If Sen. Helms has his way, the progress of art ago: "Don't criticize what you can't $15,000 prize for blasphemy," and called on judge who gets the handouts." in the United States will be determined by art- understand." \R&R\ Shanghai Chinese Restaurant Experience the magic of Marco Polo's where the West meets the East. A unique restaurant among the Triangle _3L <_•__£ !_-_-rifi Cities decorated to reflect the travels of Marco Polo and the authentic cuisines from those countries he visited.

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Duke University Museum of Art presents Rage, Power &_ Fulfillment: The Male Journey in Japanese Prints

cirV' $W#W* ftef \x&c NA°de< ° .0v)****t * e ot 0de C >d«oc1%«e\«^ rV*^o^ Bukioka Yoshitoshi, Benkei Prepares to Read the Subscription List de^*° Student Opening: September 8, 1989, 4 p.m. n os ?i$ :> Exhibition dates: Museum Hours: 9-5 Tues.-Fri. \\\e \*y*e* September 1 - October 22, 1989 10-1 Sat. •\o9 DUMA, Main Gallery 2-5 Sun. && East Campus Closed Monday and National Holidays

.^•-:>v- - • '••/ -rf/S&>s>>&ir-ty*!&& . . PAGE 20 / THECHRONICLE R&R WEEKLY MAGAZINE WEDNESDAY, JULY 26,1989

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