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THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1987 * DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 82. NO. 105 Bressler faces fifth CIA chief nominee sex, drug abuse suit favored Iran deals

From staff and wire reports A.Medical Center nurse has become the fifth woman to sue former University psychiatrist Bernard Bressler, WASHINGTON — Robert Gates, the nominee to be alleging that he prescribed dangerous types and quan­ director of central intelligence, agreed to send the White tities of drugs for her and coerced her into having sex House a memo in 1985 that favored arms dealings with with him, according to the complaint filed Friday in Dur­ Iran, even though he knew its reasoning was at odds ham County Superior Court. with conclusions reached by his analysts at the Central The suit also claims the nurse, Jonzella Bailey-Prid- Intelligence Agency, intelligence sources said Sunday. ham, became addicted to other drugs when she stopped The memo was sent out with the signature of William seeing Bressler in 1979. Casey, then the director of central intelligence. But the Bailey-Pridham, 36, further claims in the suit that sources said Gates, as chairman ofthe agency's National President Keith Brodie, who was psychiatry department Intelligence Council, had played a direct role in the chair when Bressler practiced here, fraudulently con­ decision to circulate the memo within the government. cealed information and complaints about Bressler's al­ One source said the agency had been repeatedly asked legedly irrproper medical practices and sexual encoun­ by the White House in recent years whether the Soviet ters with patients and was negligent in not stopping the Union was making greater inroads in Iran and had said alleged abuses. this was not true. Bressler did not return calls to his home or office But the 1985 memo, written as a 'think piece" by Gra­ Friday and Sunday, but in the past he has denied any ham Fuller, a senior analyst, suggested that the United charges of wrongdoing while at Duke. He left the Uni­ States should permit Western allies to sell arms to Iran versity in 1979 and is now in private practice in Rich­ as a means of enhancing Western influence and blocking mond, Virginia. the efforts ofthe Soviet Union. University Counsel David Adcock issued a statement The memo led to the first National Security Council Friday saying there is no merit to Bailey-Pridham's al­ planning for dealings with the revolutionary authorities legations. "Bailey-Pridham's treatment received at Duke in Iran, even though the Senate Intelligence Committee Medical Center was proper and helpful in all respects," JANE RIBADENEYRA/THE CHRONICLE report said the document was rejected as "perverse" by the statement reads. Ain't sweet Secretary of State George Shultz and "absurd" by Secre­ Brodie could not be reached Sunday but has a policy of The women's basketball team celebrates its ex­ tary of Defense Caspar Weinberger. not commenting on the specifics of pending cases involv­ citing 77-76 victory over Virginia Saturday night. It was not clear what motivated Gates to send the ing Bressler. Bailey-Pridham, whose husband is a Duke Fuller memo to the White House, although former senior physician, referred calls to her attorneys. intelligence officials said it was not unusual for views at Of the four other suits, one also names Brodie as a County against Bressler and Brodie because an odds with the consensus opinion to be circulated. defendant, and is pending in Guilford County Superior four-year time limit had expired since Jordan's last One source contended that Gates had sent the Fuller Court. A second was settled for a reported $1.1 million, treatment. Gladden, who with his partner Max Gardner memo to the White House as a means of winning politi­ and two others were dismissed. also represents Jordan, has filed a motion to reinstate cal favor with senior officials. Bailey-Pridham's suit alleges that she came to Duke the case, claiming Mills made a procedural error in his But Kathy Pherson, a CIA spokesman, said it was "ab­ in 1979 because of its national reputation for psychiatric dismissal. A hearing on the motion will be held March surd" to suggest Gates had forwarded the memo to the care. Bressler told her that for $2,500 cash in advance 30. White House for political purposes. "he would give her a vacation from the world for six No hearings have been scheduled for Bailey-Prid­ "It's our job to pass on different points of views to pol­ months," said Thomas Gladden, one ofthe Shelby attor­ ham's suit, which the defendants have 30 days to icy makers," she said. 'To say this memo was sent to neys representing Bailey-Pridham. answer. The suit also names as defendants Frederick curry favor is kind of a cheap shot." The suit claims Bailey-Pridham was last treated by Hine, former director of inpatient psychiatric care; Ervin She added that such memos were clearly identified as the Private Diagnostic clinic in the spring of 1986, a fact Thompson, former assistant director of inpatient care; one person's opinion and not the conclusions of the CIA. that may block defense motions to dismiss the case on Daniel Pauk, former University professor and psychia­ The issue of how Gates handled the memo is signifi­ the grounds that the statute of limitations has expired. trist; the Private Diagnostic Clinic; the University; and cant because members of the Senate Intelligence Com­ Guilford County Superior Court Judge Fetzer Mills Joy Stull Bressler, former Medical Center nurse and mittee, which is considering whether to confirm Gates as dismissed a similar suit filed by Betty Jordan of Guilford Bressler's wife. director of central intelligence, have publicly questioned whether he is sufficiently independent. At the confirmation hearing last week, Gates was questioned about the Fuller memo, and asked why its Chronicle elects Rosen new editor reasoning appeared to closely resemble a paper provided to the National Security Council by Adnan Khashoggi, a Saudi arms dealer who was later a prominent figure in From staff reports pect ofthe paper," he added. Rosen said he hopes to im­ the American arms dealings with Tehran. Managing editor Rocky Rosen was elected by the prove staff reporting skills and develop a more thought- newspaper staff Friday to be editor ofthe 83rd volume of provoking opinion page. Gates told the Senate committee that he had not seen The Chronicle. Notable stories Rosen has reported include the Janu­ the Khashoggi document. He also said the agency en­ Rosen, a Trinity junior from Santa Monica, Calif., has ary 1986 shooting outside the Mary Lou Williams Cen­ couraged senior analysts, or national intelligence of­ worked for the paper for three years, holding the posi­ ter for Black Culture; Hurricane Gloria, which threat­ ficers, to write "think pieces" that countered accepted tions of reporter, associate news editor as a sophomore ened Duke's marine laboratory at Beaufort in Septem­ views. and managing editor last summer and this academic ber 1985; last November's police crackdown on fake National intelligence officers like Fuller make up the year. He was a five-year participant in his high school identification users; and the Brotherhood March II in National Intelligence Council. At the time, Gates was newspaper. A political science major, Rosen also worked Forsyth County, Ga., last month. both its chairman and the CIA's chief of analysts in his with Cable 13 as a crew member of Late Nite with Webb "Coming into this year we had a lot of new people on position as deputy director for intelligence, and he was Millsaps, his freshman year. the staff and a new computer system." he said. "We've thus directly familiar with the views of other agency an­ "When I first came to the paper my priority was to be a done a good job, but next year we won't have to get used alysts about Iran. good reporter and writer," said Rosen. "Since then my to all these changes. We'll be able to start off strong and One source said the decision to circulate particular interests have broadened to encompass departments improve from there." "think pieces" through the government was routinely other than news." Rosen will replace Shannon Mullen at the end of this made by Gates, although other sources said Casey some­ "Now my job will be to ensure the quality of every as­ semester, pending approval by The Chronicle Board. times also did so on his own. '• The issue of Gates' willingness to contradict more se­ nior officials was raised repeatedly in his confirmation hearings, mostly in the context of whether he should Inside Weather have notified Congress about suspected irregularities in the Iran operation. Clatl Ban: A superior court judge ruled that a Ku Go tO X&?!$: Four days until the K-crew travels At one point in the tense sessions, Gates insisted that Klux Klan rally in Forsythe County be cancelled to Dean's dome to step on a few Heels. Sunny and he was not a "sycophant" and that his candid advice, not Ipage 2), On the Lighter side, Monday, Monday gets breezy in Durham today. High in the mid 50s. But a propensity to please his superiors, was the reason for to the heart of hoops woes and discovers fraternity se- temperatures are near a boiling point in Chapel Hill his rapid rise in the CIA. crets (page 51. and Smith is starting to sweat. Several members of the Senate Intelligence Commit­ tee, who asked not to be identified, said in interviews that they had questions about Gates' independence. Page 2 THE CHRONICLE Monday, February 23,1987 Our Town Judge orders Klan Helms' club looks for party control RALEIGH (AP) — Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C, and the National Congressional Club say they have launched not to demonstrate their drive to defeat Gov. Jim Martin's choice for state Republican party chairman. CUMMING, Ga. (AP) — A planned Ku Klux Klan Through statements and speeches during a dinner rally Sunday in racially torn Forsyth County was Saturday night in Raleigh and political meetings before­ cancelled by order of a superior court judge, at the re­ hand, it was clear the rift is widening between the wing quest of local officials. ofthe party loyal to Martin and the wing tied to Helms. Superior court judge Richard Gault issued Satur­ During his speech to club supporters, Helms made it day a 30-day temporary restraining order stopping clear that he considers party infighting healthy. the march planned by the North Carolina-based "Somewhere along the line, you have to take a stand," Christian Knights ofthe KKK. Helms said. "And I can't think of a better place to take a The order came in response to a petition filed by stand than on the Democratic process of letting the Re­ lawyers represented by Forsyth County and Cum­ publican members make their choice about the chair­ ming city officials, charging that the Klan group did manship." not comply with a Jan. 27 city ordinance requiring In a letter released by the Helms-allied National Con­ PETER AMAN/THE CHRONICLE groups holding parades or demonstrations to obtain a gressional Club, the senator endorsed Barry McCarty's Former senator Jim Broyhill. ^^^^^^^^^^^^ city permit. challenge of former Martin campaign manager Jack eastern part of the state who will stress ideologically Forsyth County, a virtually all-white, rural com­ Hawke. conservative issues. munity 40 miles north of Atlanta, has been the scene "I shall have no difficulty whatever in supporting During an interview before his speech with The Char­ of heightened racial tension in recent weeks. you," Helms said in his letter to the club-backed McCar- lotte Observer, Helms said McCarty's election will help A civil rights march Jan. 24 — which prompted the ty, a speech professor at Roanoke Bible College in Eliza­ Martin and other Republican candidates win votes next permit ordinance — drew 25,000 marchers, led by ac­ beth City. year in Eastern North Carolina. The conservative Demo­ tivists including Atlanta city councilman Hosea Wil­ Hawke, Martin's choice to head the party, was elected crats who live in the region have been instrumental in liams, in response to a violent attack on a small group interim GOP chairman Jan. 31 by the state Republican Helms' past victories. of brotherhood marchers a week earlier. Executive Committee. But to win the two-year term up "If we don't do everything possible to get those conser­ The Klan then announced plans to hold its own for grabs at the party's state convention in May, Hawke vative Democrats in the East, down we (Republicans) march in Forsyth County. will have to defeat McCarty. go," Helms said. He said Broyhill lost last year's Senate Gene Neely of Augusta, Georgia Grand Dragon of In his letter, Helms said he has "the highest regard" race because he failed to win those conservatives from the Christian Knights, charged that Gault's order for Hawke and would not "say one derogatory word" Democrat Terry Sanford. "It's apparent in the arithme­ was a "classic case of reverse discrimination" and about him. tic," he said. vowed that the KKK would reschedule the march Last year, both Helms and Martin remained publicly Helms disputed the notion that Martin's image as a next month. neutral in the hard-fought GOP senatorial primary be­ leader will suffer if his choice for chairman is defeated. "They (Forsyth County officials) are so scared that tween Martin mentor Jim Broyhill and the club-backed "If you're playing for looking good, fine," he said. "If if we march, Hosea Williams will be back next week David Funderburk. Funderburk was defeated in the pri­ you're playing to get re-elected, then it's another battle." and fly in 20,000 more homosexuals and commu­ mary. Broyhill went on to lose in November to Democrat The senator stopped short, though, of promising to nists," he said. "This is far from over." Terry Sanford. personally campaign for McCarty in the coming months. Cumming city attorney Zack Rice said Virgil Grif­ It is the nature of that loss, Helms and the club con­ "I got a plateful in Washington and I don't have a plane fin, who represented the Klan in a Saturday morning tend, that calls for electing a party chairman from the to carry me around," he said. meeting to discuss the march, promised to seek the required permit and set a new date. Saturday's legal developments came on a day when 65 Ku Klux Klan members and supporters rallied on the courthouse steps in Winder, in northeast Georgia, to protest the killing of a white school principal by a black teen-ager. DUKE UNIVERSITY That rally was called in response to the November stabbing death of Bethlehem Elementary School prin­ cipal Murray Kennedy, a white man. A 13-year-old FfflMM, [IIMIGMTO! SOT black student, Keyvin Jones, arrested after the scuf­ fle in the principal's office, has been charged with murder. SPRING SEMESTER, 1987 r\ Undergraduate Reading Days April 23-26,1987 JENNINGS Monday 9:00-12:60 noon MWF 6 2:00-5:00 p.m. MWF 8, 9 Income Tax Return Preparation April 27 7:00-10:00 p.m. MTH 19, 31,32, 34,111 Financial Statement Preparation Tuesday 9:00-12:00 noon MWF 7 Computerized Accounting Systems 2:00-5:00 p.m. MWF1 714 Ninth Street, Suite 104 383-5668 April 28 7:00-10:00 p.m. MWF 4 P.O. Box 3148, Durham, N.C. 27705 286-5485 Wednesday 9:00-12:00 noon CHM 12; TT 6, 7 2:00-5:00 p.m. MWF 2 April 29 7:00-10:00 p.m. NO EXAM Last Week: [Thursday 9:00-12:00 noon MWF 3 2:00-5:00 p.m. TT5 Russian Snow April 30 7:00-10:00 p.m. FR 2; SP 2 This Week: Friday 9:00-12:00 noon TT1 The Russian Revolution 2:00-5:00 p.m. TT3 May1 7:00-10:00 p.m. TT4 Celebrate Saturday 9:00-12:00 noon MWF 5 2:00-5:00 p.m. TT2 the fall of the tsar May 2 7:00-10:00 p.m. NO EXAM with Professor Samuel Baron of UNC SEE OFFICIAL EXAMINATION SCHEDULE IN 103 ALLEN BUILDING FOR Wednesday, February 25 at 4:00 PM PEVTION DEADLINE AND OTHER PERTINENT INFORMA TION. Zener Auditorium Monday, February 23,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 3 Official challenges Gannett CEO speaks on media futures myths of homeless From staff reports pers also have a different future, Curley said. Unlike television and other advertising carriers, a newspa­ The president and CEO of America's largest news­ per is the only information source "where you can By MATT CHURCHILL paper, in a speech before about 20 University alumni read the sports scores, put [the paperl down, and and parents Friday, predicted that one television net­ check something else 15 minutes later." Homelessness in the United States is an extensive work and one newsweekly magazine would go out of problem, not easily solved, according to Verna Egg- Curley said he sees the editorials in small papers business by the year 2000. leston, director of Emergency Housing/Referral As­ giving way to a larger letters section. "Small papers sistance in New York City. Eggleston, past director of John Curley, president of Gannett Co. Inc., which will get out of the opinion making business." two homeless shelters in New York City, is currently re­ owns 91 newspapers including USA Today, said in­ The CEO said he hoped papers would become more sponsible for placing homeless families in city shelters. creased competition from cable television would force colorful. The Wall Steet .Journal, which features out one of the three full service networks. Because drawings rather than pictures of people, is currently Eggleston challenged individuals to devote their lives ABC and CBS have both recently come under new considering color for its pages, according to Curley. to social work and to use their education and talents to management, Curley said he could not predict which help the poor, in her Saturday afternoon speech before Curley, 47, worked as a reporter and editor for the networks would survive past their prime time. an audience of about 50 people in the Old Chemistry Associated Press before joining Gannett in 1969 as buidling. "When you leave this room you are going to Curley singled out Newsweek, however, as the the suburban editor ofthe Times Union in Rochester, make the conscious decision to go for the money . . . and newsweekly most likely to fold. Time, the first New York. to forget about the problems ofthe poor," she said, "or newsweekly ever published, has a firmly established He became Washington bureau chief of the Gan­ you're going to go out there in the community . . . and niche, he said, and U.S. News and World Report has a nett News Service in 1974, and served as editor of you're going to decide that you're going to give up your high-income readership which many advertisers find USA Today when it was launched in 1982. Last year life to save another life, in what ever capacity you work." attractive. Curley succeeded Allen Neuharth as chief executive officer of Gannett Co. Inc. Before her address, Eggleston divided the audience In the world of quickly multipling media, newspa­ into six groups, asking each group to list the characteris­ tics of the homeless. The descriptions stereotyped the homeless primarily as poor minorities, products of little education and an underpriviliged childhood. The lists Task force to visit campus parties also included persons with mental disabilities or drug and alcohol addictions. From staff reports Although the majority of the people with whom she rector. He acknowledged that Telecom continues to deals are are black or Hispanic women, Eggleston coun­ After postponing plans to visit parties last week, a receive approximately seven complaints per day out of a tered the audience's stereotypes. "The sad part about it task force created by the Alcohol Policy Committee will total volume of 10,000 calls made through the Blue Net is the homeless could be us," Eggleston said, citing an attend registered parties this week and weekend to ob­ system. Sefton attributes these complaints to problems example of a medical assistant who slipped on the job serve enforcement of University Alcohol Policy, said inherent in the system, such as the long wait for calls to and crippled her back. Worker's compensation provided Suzanne Wasiolek, dean for student life. transfer through the maze of switches. this woman with 65 dollars per week, two dollars over The task force was formed in January when the APC Dan Abrams, ASDU vice president for student affairs, the elegibility level for welfare assitance. The worker concluded that living groups did not satisfactorily en­ agreed that many ofthe problems have been solved, but was unable to provide food and shelter for her children force alcohol policy during the first semester. student complaints he continues to receive through the and was forced to move into a shelter. Student Affairs Committee have prompted a survey to gauge satisfaction with the Blue Net system. The survey The goal of Emergency Housing/Referral Assistance is Blue Net quality to be surveyed: Most ofthe will ask, in part, if students are willing to put up with to move families from shelters, which are harmful to problems that occurred earlier this semester with the delay in switching, or would rather pay the extra 20 per- family relations, to permanent housing as quickly as Duke Telcom Blue Net long distance service have been See BRIEFS on page 8 possible, according to Eggleston. "Shelters break up cleared up, according to Norman Sefton, Telcom di­ families," she said. "If you really want to help them you have to move fast. You have to get them in the system and gel them out .ofthe shelters]." Most shelters are large gymnasiums where beds are closely arranged and people wait in line for food and share public bathrooms, she said. In addition, the condi­ Discover Duke Manor! tions eliminate the privacy necessary to foster family unity and to provide children with basic instruction on simple practices such as proper bathing and nutrition, ACADEMIC YEAR LEASES AND she said. Unemployed parents forced to take residence in home­ DUKE UNIVERSITY TRANSIT! less shelters often have difficulty maintaining their own respect and the respect of their children, Eggleston said. This loss of respect is due to their acceptance of welfare handouts in order to survive. "Welfare has allowed families and people to no longer be responsible for their Campus via Science Drive lo Duke Hospit. 16 Individually-con trolled heal and aii condi­ own lives," she said, "to no longer be responsible for their Entry 11, via Science Drive and .overview tioning. Chapel Tower and on to Duke Manor 17. Cable television. HBO and Cinemax avail­ own existence." able. See HOMELESS on page 8 18 Optional rental furniture available. THE ADVANTAGES Or MOVING TO 19. Laundry facilities. DUKE MANOR 20. Radio-dispatched. 2 .-hour emergency 1. Free Duke bus service. Bus slops within 21. Wilhin walking distance of restaurants and shopping centers. 22 Adjacent to the new Racquel Club, with 10 indoor racquetball courts Instant Passport Photos 23. Only Iwo blocks Irom Duke Medical Center. 24. Adults only Separate sections lor under - In Color nied graduate 3T,c m 2/$5.00 • 10 or more $2.00 ea. 4. You can live with the friend ol your ::._,:••.!; lary doubling-up. •Photo I.D. CARDS Duke undergraduat 5. Streich oul and enjoy your own off-i

• Laminating While You Wait 6 You can choose your own food (nor i. Up to four students and Ihe Duke Medical C.ntei loiy board): however. Unrversily lo. vides some relie Is available on an optional basis. 900 West Main •mplete male and female ] (across from Brightleaf) health cl swithja h.di.lr- [ i. All ol this, and Duke Mono 683-2118- M-F10AM-5PM eperl TI 6:30a. walking distance ol campi 9:30 p.m Monday Ihrough Friday, and every 2 as Central Campus Aparlr hours from 9:30 a.m to 9:30 p.m on Saturday 9. Twoswimming pools. lhan Easl Campus. and Sunday. 10 Sand and asphalt volleyball courts Duke Universily escorl service is available lor 11 Baskeiball goals. transportation back to Duke Manor from 12 Fantastic new clubhouse and pool deck PATTISHALL'S GARAGE 10:00 p.m 10 midnight. 13. Unsurpassed social program! The route ol Ihe bus is Irom Duke Manor, 14. Your own complete kitchen, private bal across Erwin Road to Research Drive, south on & RADIATOR SERVICE, INC. Research Drive lo Duke Hospilal Enlry 11. soulh carpeting This otter is limited... on Science Drive lo Towerview Drive. Towerview 15. Plenty of parking space- -right at your f PHONE 383-6683 TODAY! Specializing in Drive to West Campus. West Campus to Easl door With Ihe bus service, you wont ev • American Cars ,.y '•• > • Rabbits Campus. Easl Campus lo West Campus. West Come see the model apartment! • Dasher . ^~ ft iW. , • Scirocco To ota • Datsun JB ______•» ' Y Academic Year Lease Ccsl • Volvo ^^^_-^^^^^^^__T • Honda Compare this to Per Student Per Semester Auto Repairing and Service • Motor Tune-up University rents! General Repairs • Wrecker Service J'B'KS™;, issssii 286-2207 Furniture Not Included $450 $600 $901 1900 W. Markham Ave. Furniture Included $523 _$698 $1047 J located behind Duke Campus _ Opinion Letters Page 4 February 23.1987 Carry Duke Card in open

To the editor: dents' wearing their card upon their per­ Clearly stated on the back of the Duke son in a clearly visible fashion. Not only University Card is that the card is Duke's could Duke officials more readily identify Faculty dine in peace property, and that it should be carried at students and non-students, but the card all times and presented to any University would be readily available for food pur­ The food can't be that good. a place to get away from them. The official upon request. chases and identification at University events. Some students and faculty mem­ faculty commons was not designed to Recently, friction has resulted from the action of Public Safety officials' request­ Displaying the card, just as University bers have complained about the new promote faculty-student interaction, ing presentation ofthe cards of black stu­ employees do, is an action that should be University policy of keeping the but rather interdepartmental ex­ dents. practiced by all Duke students regardless faculty commons closed to anyone but change of ideas. As a white student whose card has of race, sex, religion or other factors. faculty and senior administrators. Robert Dickens, chair ofthe faculty never been requested, I feel that Duke Now it is no guests allowed, and there commons committee, said the com­ students can help to alleviate the I.D. Jason Hasty is nothing wrong with that. mittee decided to keep out students check problem. This can be done by stu­ Trinity'87 It is great for students to be able to and junior administrators because dine or "do lunch" with professors, the commons was too small to handle but in case professors have not no­ the numbers. Simple problem, effec­ ticed, there are more than a few tive solution. Safety tips beat blind fear places on campus to chow down. If Keeping the faculty commons for students want to have lunch with a the faculty will make it more pleasant To the editor: to see reports on T.V. showing cases professor, what could be more appro­ for those who seem to mind having Daniel Edwards, who proposed manda­ where family and church members were priate than the Oak Room next door. students around. And it will encour­ tory euthanasia for AIDS victims (letter, as loving to a family member dying of There is no obvious need for a place age faculty to eat elsewhere on cam­ "Euthanasia can save nation," Feb. 171 AIDS as Jesus was to the lepers of his where professors can bring students pus. —as if that would save our nation from time. to eat. Yet professors clearly deserve Let the professors eat in peace. this plague — is a very frightened man AIDS is a plague which is spreading all who hates homosexuals. too fast. Since the symptoms may not There is nothing merciful about his show up for five years, most of those who heartless proposal. Unless the patient have it don't know they do unless they wants to die, what the letter's headline take a blood test. Rather than kill these Follow the bouncing ball termed "euthanasia" I call murder. In Ed­ people, we should combat the disease by wards' blind fear he seems to be ignorant educating each other to either use con­ The plug has been made in other of a great crowd to the Duke team of how uncommunicable AIDS really is, as doms or to save sex for marriage, by spaces, but the women's basketball may earn the women new fans and if you can spread it like a common cold in­ avoiding prostitutes and drugs and by game 7:30 p.m. tonight against UNC make them a box office draw like the stead of by sexual or intravenous contact. supporting research to find a cure as soon deserves a packed house. This eve­ Carolina women's team the Blue Dev­ People dying from AIDS suffer doubly, as possible. ning benefits more than one worthy ils oppose. many of them being rejected even by their Daryl Junk cause. It should be entertaining to the And after all, this is Carolina as own family. It has been very heartening Computation Center 1,700 students the team seeks and well as charity. J.R. Reid and com­ the paying customers, whose ticket pany's success this season has made money goes to the Ronald McDonald the game tonight the likeliest bet House in Durham, a care facility for Duke has to trounce the Tar Heels Youth committed to selves families with children in the hospital. this year. A boost for women's basket­ To the editor: corporate creativity every day in the hun­ Also at stake is the attendance re­ ball, excitement for fans and a worthy In response to Ron Kozar's letter on dreds of look-alike advertisements and cord for a women's basketball game in cause should be an unbeatable com­ Feb. 10, it is difficult to understand how look-alike products that flood our mar­ this state, 6,800, set at N.C. State bination. The women's basketball someone could overlook obvious factual kets, don't we? against UCLA in 1979. The exposure team certainlv thinks so. evidence. Certainly, Ralph Nader cannot, Kozar's second criticism poses a ques­ as Kozar asserts, hate "our corporate tion that almost answers itself: What economy." America's corporate economy is kind of citizen would advocate the use of responsible for the existence of Ralph resources in areas where they could do Nader, and others like him. Without "our the most good and the least harm? Per­ corporate economy" Nader wouldn't have haps a consumer activist. a focus. Also, Ralph Nader doesn't scorn Kozar also states that just because con­ "those of us who desire to play a role in" servative Duke students lack activism, this economy. What Nader scorns are cor­ that doesn't make them moral derelicts. ruptions and misuses of this economic Truly, these capitalism-inspired, hedonis­ system. tic youths are deeply committed to the Kozar continues to say that the pursuit morality of the people that are closest to of wealth is not crass; and that corporate and mean the most to them, now and for­ greed requires creativity and the efficient ever . . . themselves. use of resources. He also states that Nader's "soft socialism" endorses neither Edwin Partee of these goals. Indeed, we all experience Trinity'90 Letters Policy Freedom of expression is essential to any free society and especially important in an academic community. A newspaper, as a means of expression, should do more than just communicate the news. It should function as a forum for initiating dis­ cussion and responding to issues. For this reason, The Chronicle urges all members ofthe Duke and Durham com­ THE CHRONICLE munities to submit letters to its editor and to use the University newspaper as a means of public expression. Shannon Mullen, Editor Letters to the editor should be mailed to Box 4696, Duke Station or delivered in Michael Milstein, Rocky Rosen, Managing Editors person to The Chronicle office on the third floor of Flowers Building. Barry Eriksen, General Manager The Chronicle attempts to print promptly ail letters it receives, but reserves the Read Martin, Editorial Page Editor right to withhold letters, based on the discretion ofthe editor: • All letters must be typed and double-spaced. Letters must not exceed 300 Laura Allen, News Editor Rick Cendo, News Editor words. Kathleen Sullivan, City & State Editor Therese Maher, University Editor • All letters must be signed and dated and must include the author's class or Michael Leber, Sports Editor Tammi Henkin, Photography Editor department, phone number and local address. The Chronicle will not publish Jane Ribadeneyra, Photography Editor Douglas Mays, Senior Editor anonymous or form letters. Jenny Wright, Senior Editor Ed Farrell, Contributing Editor • The Chronicle will not print letters that contain racial, ethnic or sexual slurs, Lane Hensley, Production Editor Linda Nettles, Production Manager inside jokes or personal innuendos, vulgar language or libelous statements. Kevin Witte, Business Manager Carolyn Haff, Advertising Production Manager e • The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters for length and clarity, 1987 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. • The Chronicle reserves the right to withhold letters or portions of letters con­ No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permis­ taining promotional information designed to benefit groups or publicize events. sion ofthe business office. Monday, February 23,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 5 Iran scandal needs rules

The best advice given Ronald Reagan in this space was not to run for a second • Essay WE'RE EXCHANGING term. Now all of us who are covering the crumbling of executive authority need William Safire IT FoR THE fresh advice on how to cope with the tor­ HOSTAGES. rent of revelations to come, so that we do their publication is usually a sign that a not aid those dovish partisans seeking to reporter is under too much editorial pres­ reverse the election of 1984 or otherwise sure for a sensational lead. succor the blame-America-first crowd. 5. Do not be too quick to denounce a I have pasted the following seven rules phony-looking story. I bridled at the inter­ of fairness-in-scandalmongering on my est given a speculative piece in The word processor: Lowell (Mass.) Sun about the possible 1. Do not allow the natural revulsion diversion of part ofthe diversion of Con­ against paying arms ransom to a terrorist tra funds to U.S. political campaigns. The nation undermine more effective efforts to allegation may still be wild, but the report defeat terrorism. It is suddenly chic to that a big contra fund-raiser had two for­ derogate any anti-terrorist actions as the mer Reagan White House aides on his lawless antics of cowboys in the White payroll at a combined rate of a third of House. Resist this; the only trouble with million dollars a year makes me glad I President Reagan's strike at Col. Gad- kept my trap shut. hafi's headquarters last spring was that it 6. Do not fail to reexamine old, aborted was not powerful enough. We should stories in the light of new evidence. To­ remind ourselves that we are at war ward the end of 1985, I raised a very against a network of murderers and kid­ small ruckus about the purge of "Piffiab," nappers and that it is moral and ethical to the President's Foreign Intelligence Advi­ punish and deter them. sory Board. Nosy members not beholden 2. Do not, in cultivating news sources, to William Casey, such as the diplomat overlook the shortcomings ofthe people in Seymour Weiss and the economist Martin the white hats. The federal appeals court Anderson, were booted off — at just the panel that appoints special prosecutors time that CIA involvement in the Iranian operates without oversight and has been covert action was expanding. Be a good oblivious to conflicts of interest following idea to follow up the bamboozling of chair­ its selections. Worse, the Senate Intelli­ man Anne Armstrong's Piffiab. gence Committee was told by Robert In the same way, fuss was made here McFarlane in sworn testimony last year years ago about the secret taping by USIA about possibly incriminating computer director Charles Wick that mentioned fat- tape backups and pretended it did not cat fund raising for "Project Democracy." Fraternities master art of hear him. If the committee gets so upset USIA and Justice Department lawyers about not being told of covert action, why frantically sought to prevent exposure of did Durenberger & Co. ignore the hot this and other documents. A Freedom of news it was given? Information suit brought by The New obscure president names 3. Do not repeat, without checking for York Times and ABC has been defended refutation, the attacks from ambush of so assiduously by the government that a the score-settlers. I reported here that federal judge has refused to rule on the egal or not, here I come. I see Monday, Monday Howard Teicher, then the National Secu­ Wick case for almost two years. Wonder ASDU business "manager" David rity Council's Middle Eastern chief, had why. L Pyle has graciously decided not to impound the Union's fees because such a been widely fingered as the source for the 7. Do not assume that tough-mind- • Church Chat: You know, I'm not "disinformation" about plans for a second edness and security consciousness must move might not be "in the best interests of the students." Isn't he just a prince? So even Catholic, so maybe this is none of my strike against Libya. But widespread fin­ ultimately corrupt officials and lead to ex­ business, but after last week's B.Y.O.H. gering does not a disinformer make; he cesses in the application of power. At this far, there's no word as to whether or not The Chronicle "may" continue printing. (Bring Your Own Heathen) Mass, I began denies the charge vociferously and sub­ week's memorial service for Bryce Har­ to question matters of faith and liturgy. mitted to a polygraph test to prove him­ low, the gentle hard-liner who served as If it's O.K. with David, I'll change And I'm peeved. self innocent. It also should be reported paragraphs here. Eisenhower speechwriter and Nixon If Supreme Court justices threw in that Teicher has not avoided testifying legislative aide, mourners joined in sing­ their own little ditties to the Constitution, under oath, and denies knowledge of the ing the second verse of "America the • Dinah won't ya blow . . . i think we'd all be doing guest spots on Superior contra fund diversion. Beautiful," which carries the lesson about I figured out what went wrong against Court like Justice Blackman. Why do 4. Do not get daily story-itis. Watch out the use of power for all presidential aides: Ga. Tech Saturday. It's Holly Farms' priests feel the need to do the same thing for shocked-and-appalled reports about "America, America, God mend thine ev­ fault. ("Ya dip 'em and ya do 'em, and ya with the Mass? the discovery of secret contingency plans. ery flaw — Confirm thy soul in self-con­ dip 'em and ya do 'em . . ." Come on, Dinah, that's what got Bozo in trouble A little history: Brilliant theologians Remember that various government trol, thy liberty in law." four years ago.) Rather than playing as a from around the world spent literally agencies have in their files the most far- William Safire's column is syndicated years agonizing over each and every semi­ out contingency plans imaginable, and real team, the Blue Devils are all going af­ by . ter the personal glory in the form of the colon of the Mass. Every fine detail was Holly Farms Player of the Game award. methodically hammered out to exacting So it's really no wonder at all, now, is it? clerical specifications. And then the "now, On the record with-it, happ'nin'" priests got hold of it. "They /Forsyth County officials] are so scared that if we march, Hosea Williams • Grand Poobah speaks: Last will be back next week and fly in 20,000 more homosexuals and communists," he week I was at the tux shop, just kind of Ya dip 'em and ya do said. "This is far from over." hanging out because I certainly didn't Gene Neely, Grand Dragon ofthe Christian Knights, in Augusta, Ga. comment­ need a tux for the Kappa/Pi Phi formal 'em. ing on a cancled KKK march. since I wasn't invited. (I'm sure it was just an oversight.) Anyway, the guy came in asking about some special deal his Dinah Shore "Commander" arranged with the shop. Truth being funnier than fiction, I are you, O Lord, God of all cre­ checked up on the fraternities and discov­ ation," they begin, followed by incessant ered most have their own silly names for ad lib monologue. "You know, I was just "president." Hence: saying to Father Lou yesterday, you cer­ tainly are blessed. I think these pretty Alpha Epsilon Pi Master robes I'm wearing tonight remind me a lot Alpha Tau Omega Worthy Matter of your blessedness, and I'm sure there Delta Kappa Epsilon Brother Beta are a lot of non-Catholics in the room to­ Delta Sigma Phi Apex night, perhaps wondering where their Kappa Alpha Number One spiritual journey is taking them, blah, Kappa Sigma Grand Master blah, blah. . ." Phi Kappa Psi Grand P[SF.CRET STUFFl Is that what the book says? Is that what Phi Kappa Sigma Alpha two popes died trying to put together? Is Pi Kappa Alpha SMC that why the heck I'm sitting here in Sigma Alpha Epsilon Eminent Archon a crowded basement blowing off Sigma Chi Worthy Consul homework? Is It?!? Sigma Nu Commander Boy, if I had wanted that, I would have Theta Chi Ex Arch been a Unitarian. Next week: secret handshakes, L is free this weekend, if there are any A.E.K.D.B., Phi Alpha, "kai" and the red formals left. Leave photos and resume in sun sets at the foot of Minerva. his box. Third Floor Flowers. Page 6 THE CHRONICLE Monday, February 23,1987 Comics Bloom County/Berke Breathed THE Daily Crossword byH-..eyL.ci»w PONT OETTHeWf&Nb /PEA. WE ACTUALLY HAVE LOTS i?]i M^ Iri! HID ll 11 13 tN COMMON. IN FACT, We SHARE Ft YOU'VE" KAFTi/ROUSLI/STfOf? EVeN FLOUNPee 0KAINS SNIFFI/V& 10 Cleric's title 1" 1" FAT6 ON-TRISCVITS: SCOFE" 14 On the peak y /£\ AGAIN, 15 Actress Talia 16 Bulgar 17 Dressing 19 Peel 20 Island west of Naples 21 Siren

25 Need 26 Consume 29 Formally 31 Beard's boys: abbr. 34 Former Mets The Far Side/Gary Larson Calvin and Hobbes/Bill Watterson 36 Aged 37 Hastens MM 38 Awaken roughly •" •" 39 Two 2/23/87 40 Sugar suflii 41 Uncle Miltie Friday's Puzzle Solved 42 Sweater size 6 In front 43 Sawbuck 7 — in the sky F U J lB.fi J SLUMS u R F 44 Bone: pref. 8 Gaelic 0 R A N|A S C 0 TMliR A E 45 Sagacity 9 Sign on again R A c KBJ _.ft£Aa 0 1 7 E 46 Morally low 10 Meat jelly EtXlPt LT | T 1 N S.E.L. 46 Ridicules 11 "The — Jungle' ••AMAH > IB 1 S E II 50 Patella 12 Naked 53 Revokes, as TENORSlCOOKYJAR 13 Always A L A T E 1 a legacy 18 Salmon P. — 56 Deer 22 Domesticate T A P E | M N|T S • T V R E 57 Misleading 24 Shoulder piece A T E | D |L A V I S A W E 0 26 "Some Like —" R E S T R A 60 Solar disc 27 Clamor • 1 Hjl N_. IFERALII 61 Opponent of 28 Special UTEEDIS ITElKID Pericles _ A W B R E K E RMC F D E 62 Small lump 30 Trick A M 1 EBR 1 N OBA R E A 63 Part of n.b. 32 Ir. county RET sms , N D sirS A fl 64 Large 33 Pertinent sandwiches 35 Wine 65 Evergreens 38 Systematic inquiry 54 Distance 39 Witness of a kind 55 Mountaintop 41 Pear 50 Kubla — feature 42 Liquid 51 Alliance 58 Ger. article acronym 59 Dramatist 45 Broadens 52 Soccer great monogram

THE CHRONICLE SPOflTSWRAP editors: John Senft, Jessica Lim Copy editors: Laura Allen, Therese Maher, Rick Cendo Copydesk: Jon Hilsenrath Evidence from a dog crime Associate photography editor: Tammi Henkin Day photographer: Tammi Henkin Layout: SpencerJoslin Video watchdog: Brenden Kootsey Assistant news editors: Gillian Bruce. Matt Earl. Jon Hilsenrath, Kathy Doonesbuiy/Garry Trudeau Nooney. Charles Rawlings. Laura Trivers Staff reporters: Dan Berger. Julie Byrne, David Chen, Matt Churchill. Elizabeth Cohen, Tom Curley. Becky Currie, Leslie Davis. Cassie Dorn. IIIII TFAM.ASVOUALLKHOUJ, TODAY THIS AGENCYHAS TAKEN LADIES AND 6ENTLEMEN. I TO PROMOTE Tara Dunion. Elizabeth Edwards. Heather Elliott. Jackie Escano. Suzanne Fajans, Gaye Forren. Linda Fox. Carl Ghattas. Patricia Jl) THE NATION IS CURRENTLY ON A NEW CLIENTtmOSE PRODUCT WONT MINCE WORDS. THIS ISN'TOT £^_:_P SrW WHAT'S |f FACBOWITH A GRAVE IS NOWRECOMMENDGP BY THE Gilfeather. Maxine Grossman. James Guitard. Doug Haar. Jeremy JUST ANOTHER. ADVERTISING 0F5AFB WHAT? THE: Hirsch. Mike Kent. Matt McKenzie. Liz Morgan, Laura Meister. John i PVBUC HEALTH CRISIS - SUR6E0N GENERAL AS ANIMPOR- CAMPAIGN! THIS IS NOTHING WHOOPEE! ; mwt7, Neclerio, Morey Osteen. Lisa Page. David Schwartz, David Shutley, " __«-_____ Wf UNCHECKED s^^TAMPREVENlA- LBSS THAN A PUBLIC EP' Kevin Tan, Beth Ann Torlone, Nancy Vollmer. John Weatherspoon, Craig ^S^\5PREAPOF 1 g^^\7!Ve MEASURE- ' SERVICE MISSION! Whitlock. Julie Wolf, Craig Wortman / Assistant editorial page editors: Ed Boyle. Jeff Diamond Associate production editor: Heather Elliott Early production: Lainnie Davis Paste-up: Roily Miller Account representatives: Judy Bartlett, Suzanne Johannessen Advertising production: Charles Carson, Chris Klugewicz, Leslie Kovach, Lura Luther. Lars Lyon. Bill McCullough, Ted Rex Business staff: Heather Bamhill, Kim Blackwell, Deana Gomez, Russ Parker. Steve Ritchie. Gregg Siuciak, Nicki Smart. Craig Stiffler. Lisa Vash. Stephanie White Classified advertising: Luciana Marcial. Liz Olilrich. Becky Toilefson

NEW CRITERIA Lutheran Campus Mini tr worship ser COMMUNITY CALENDAR vice ' with ' Holy Eucharist, Chapel basement. 9:30 p.m. Space limitations have forced us to limit length of insertions. Announcements al­ Duke Players "Happy Hour," Branson Dialing for Duke, DUPAC, 6:45-10 pm Richard. Stubbing,: PPS Dept., -The ready submitted have Seen amended Theater. 5 p.m. . .Defense Game." National: Humanities accordingly. Bring announcements to Martin Lakin and "One Flew Over the Center, 7:30 p.m. . "The Chronicle's offices on the third floor French Club film: ELe Retourde Martin Cuckoo's Nest," 319 Soc. Sci.H6:30 flowers or mail them to: Community Guerre." 305 languages Bldg.. 5 p.m; p.m.. .Steve- Spurrier, Psi Upsiion section,- 7 Calendar, Box 4696, Duke Station, 00r-: French Table, The Rat, 7 p.m. mm, N.C. 27706. Complete new Due to the rescheduling of the Women's criteria & format information available Amnesty International meeting on. East Record Breaking Basketball Game, 3-5, 684-2663 or the drop-off box, third THURSDAY Africa, East Campus Coffeehouse, 7:30 ASDU meeting tonight, 139 Soc. Sei..: 6 floor Flowers. p.m. There will be speakers.,,; •.'•p.m..' " 'Ecocide: ft Strategy of War," Wesley Foundation, 214 Pittsboro St, Chapel TODAY Central America Solidarity Committee WEDNESDAY Hill/ 7:15 p.m.-9:15 p.m. Fee: $1. More meeting. 100 W. Duke, 9p.m. info: 929-9821. .DUPAC. 6:45-10 p.m. Chapel LtJnchtime Series-, Concert. TUESDAY "Cantatas of J. S. Bach," Chapel, 12:30 ^Dialingfor Duke, DUPAC, 6:45-10 p.m. •p.m.E . ;••.; /V-EE; ,•••;.. ieminar: Colin J. Permy- : : Class officer elections petitions avail­ -tebrates — Three Solu- John Kennedy Hanks, tenor & Ruth Dialing for Duke, DUPAC; 6:45-10 p.m. able in ASDU office from today, due !tn," Ill Bio. Sci., 4:15 FriedburgE piano, Nelson Music Rm. £-.".. back March 5. More info; 684-6403. Duke, . Africa travelogue. Pegram,.8 p.m. Monday, February 23,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 7 Classifieds

1 Announcements WOMEN'S TENNIS CLUB — practice Roommate Wanted For Sale MEET THE NEW FOOTBALL COACH begins on Thur. Feb. 26 at 4. East Come hear Steve Spurrier Feb ASDU Studenl Travel Service office Campus Courts. Old and new mem­ HOUSEMATE needed April. $158/ Royce-Union 10 speed Bicycle. 25th at 7 p.m. in Psi Upsilon. Co hours: Monday 11-1 and 3:30- bers welcome! If unable to attend mo. + 1/3 utilities. Near East. De­ Good condition One look at this sponsored by Psi Upi the 5:30. Tuesday 1:30-5. Waiver call 684-7528. If weather is bad posit. Non-smoker Female Grad speedster and you'll say "I must Office of Residential Li forms must be returned lo pick up meet inside East Campus Gym. Student/Professional preferred have it!" $50 Or best offer. Call tickets for Bahamas Trip. DO SOMETHING EXOTIC Come TRENT SPRING BREAK PACK dead­ 286-7515 evenings. 383-4571. line extended to Feb. 24. Order Female housemate wanted to 2-bdrm. Chapel Tower apt. avail­ Africa. Wed Feb. 25th at 8 p.m. in forms were distributed in dorms share great house. 1/2 blc-ck from able May 11. Terms of Lease nego Pegram Co-sponsored by Pegram and are also available In Trent and the Office of Residential Life EAST, with 1 female grad. 1 male tiable. You can walk or ride your Hall. SAVE MONEY! grad. and 1 dog. Available March 1 bike from this convenient, quiet or ASAP after. $175/mo. ' 1/3 Wanted to Buy ZETA PLEDGES Don't forget — we location Call 383-4571 utilities. Call Carol: 684-2693/ KATHLEEN. How DO you keep those Future Politian s Take I! Class meet tonight with the sisters in RAYBAN AND VUARNET Classic officers elections are here!! Peti­ day, 682 -7 98 6/ even ings pants inside your socks? Good 114 Physics at 7:30. See you Sunglasses at guaranteed lowest tions available in ASDU Office thing you dont wear bell bot­ prices. Don't delay — spring break starting Thurs. Feb. 26. Petitions Rooms for Rent toms Whut else? Maybe set DUE Thursday March 5 Come by t'was zee meelk! HAPPY BIRTH DAT! Melanie. 493-2623 California or Oust' Phyllis. Andrea. the ASDU office or call Roy Bar­ 3 BR 2 BA house. W/D. fenced in $$$ FOR PAPERBACKS! Will con­ quet. Attorney General, at x-6403 yard Across the street from East MUST SELL' Need the cash. 1986 sider anything except for formula orx-7120. There will be a manda­ Available immediately. Furnished Black Lamborghini. Best offer. Call Offering 10% of pub- JWSThanks forth last two months tory meeting for all candidates on except your room S165/mo Anne- Trevor at 684-7924 anytime ncredible Break it 5 p.m Marie, 493-9823. 684-4142(w). a Leg this Week Love your little get will be due Monday. Mai Beth —383-1188. The deadline for the Duke/Howard Spring B/Ocall 684-7093 One RUN FOR PRESIDENT. VICE PRESI­ exchange is Feb 27 — make sure DENT, TREASURER, or SECRETARY. Lost and Found Baseball season officially began you submit an application soon at Services Offered 20% OFF! Duke Students R S R in Look for ads in next weeks paper. the Study Abroad Office (2022 this weekend' Nice field thought c Pen: Black foun­ January. March. April Getaway to ASPIRING OUTDOORS TYPES! The Campus Drive). tain pen with gold trim. GREAT sen­ Pregnant? Need Help? Free preg- Mountain Brook Cottages in the outing club has the workshop for Good luck this year. Guys Looking Smokies Now. $104 weekend for timental value. Call Lee x-0577. forward to two months of books VOU. Camping basics for winter. 2. $130 weekend for 4. FIRE­ Univ. study abroad programs wiil I0ST- BLACK & BLUE COAT at and beers on The Hill Chiefs summer, and good grub at Camp­ PLACE Spring Break Rates be holding an information session blinking light Tower View 2/13/87. ing FUNdamentals. Tues. 2/24. Available. 704-586-4329. on Wed Feb. 25 at 3:30 in 226 Al­ If found please call 383-8008. ABORTION to 20 weeks Private 7:30 P.M. 139 Soc.Sci. Ques­ .Duke Players Happy Hour Today len Bldg, All interested students and confidential GYN facility with tions? Call Lori at X-7849. PHI MU is 1 oking for a few good on Theater. Refresh- Help Wanted Sat and weekday appointments. 5 p.m. Brans ested' Call Ann 684- talk. Big talk. Be Free Pregnancy test. Pain medica­ ments. Sma DUKE MENS CREW — Mandatory The Duke in Cairo program's appli­ 1882. Tara 684-1273 Melissa FREE MEMBERSHIP plus wages tion given. Chapel Hill 489-1386 meeting Monday 2/23 8 p.m. 224 cation deadline is Fri. Feb. 27. 684-7320. C r Bonnie 684-0913 when working for Metrosport Ath­ Hey you awes me THETA PLEDGES! Soc.Sci. Jackets, etc. We get on JOB APPLICATIONS-GRADUATE Come by the Study Abroad Office, letic Club Position Available for ASDU Student Travel Service office The meeting onight is at 5 p.m. the water on Sat. 2/28. Welcome SCHOOL-PASSPORT PHOTOS-2/ 2022 Campus Drive for more info. front desk staff Apply at 501 hours: Monday 11-1 and 330 - Dont forget! See ya to Bahama. Take a ten Douglas Street. $5.00-10 or more $2,00 each. 5:30. Tues. 1:30 - 5. Waiver forms Free Food! Hillel invites you to a there LAMINATED PERSONAL IDs All must be returned to pick up tickets If you are going to a NON-DUKE chipwick break. Tues. Feb. 24. GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,040- to the Bahamas trip. Be a part of a great Duke Tradition. SUMMER PROGRAM. Please pick Chapel Basement, 10p.m. $59-230/yr. 1 uring Call 1- Sign up today to DIAL FOR DUKE at up the permission forms at tbe Nihongo hanasemase ka? Join the 805-687-6000 Ext 9813 ARE YOU UPSET THAT AN OUT­ the Bryan Center Into Desk or con GREAT TYPIST fast, accurate, and Study Abroad Office, 2022 Campus Japanese Speaking Society this rent federal lis STANDING PRO FES SER HASN'T tact Sterly Wilder '83. Telethon Di­ dependable. with reasonable RECEIVED ANY RECOGNITION'' You rector at 684-4419 DATES: Feb Thur. at 5*30 in the Schlit. Room, ENTHUSIASTIC, MATURE INDIVID­ rates. Call day and evening. 489- can make a difference! Take time 16-18. 23-26. March 23-25 TIME Hear Coach 8euhler talk on the UAL tc * appr, t. 20 hi STUDENTS going ABROAD for the 6:45 to 10 p.m. PLACE: 3rd floor ol OLYMPICS Wannamaker II Com­ including every weekend. fall or academic year: Please pick Undergraduate Teaching the DUPAC Bidg (over Wallacf Sat. 9-2, & Sun 1-5 Data entry Typing at reasonable up your leave of absence packets mons Tue. 2/24 iO p.m. Stadiur Dawn Nights and Wi s the d :iding at the Study Abroad Office, 2022 and people skills required. Medical Zetas: Meeting tonight at 6:30 596-1773- uded < iridivi pri_, Campus Drive. Deadline for the backround helpful. Minimum 6 (pledges come at 6:45) in 114 months to 1 year commitment. In­ awarded nightly. Grand prizes will return of packet is March 30. JUST YOUR TYPE Word Processing Desperately seeking tickets to Physics. Wear sportswear and we'll terested? Contact Patty Croom. be awarded for individuals and Service will type your papers, dis­ Duke-Clem son basketball game 684-3620. groups at the end of the semester. Men's Tennis Club practice Fri. all go over to the b'ball game after sertations, letters, etc. quickly and 248-3763 (day) or 481-2937 HELP RAISE IMPORTANT FUNDS East Campus Courts 4 p.m. New an exceptionally short meeting! professionally. Emergency typing (evening). OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, yr FOR THE UNIVERSITY — SIGN UP members organizational meeting Tridelts slating for your new of­ welcome. 489-8700 (call 24 hrs.) round. Europe, S. Amer., Australia. PREGNANT? NEED HELP? Free TODAY. hurs, 7 p.m. Card Gym rm 104. $7 ficers on Wed. night mandatory fot Asia. All fields. S900-$2000 mo pregnancy testing and counseling Dues, eight matches s all sisters. Time and place to be Entertainment Sightseeing. Free info. Write UC, CALL PSS. 493-0450, 942-7318 Car: P.O. Box 52-NC2. Corona Del Mar. All services confidential. HEE/BATH REPRESENTATIVE will be WXDU-FM presents the TOP 100 CA, 92625 at We Study Abroad Office (2022 S: Let's go to the game to- ALBUMS OF 1986 IN COLLEGE Campus Drive| on the morning of and cheer Ann on! Meet in Office Skills needed for clerical RADIO, Tues.. Feb.24 from 3 p.m. Feb. 24. All interested students sat 6:15, and wear your let- positions on week nights. 5-9 until 12 midnight. A countdown of See page 7, SMRTSWRtf are invited! p.m., plus every other Sat and all that made the year great in Sun. 10-6 p.m. Applicant must live music! At the end of the count­ Tridelts — Sophomores and junior Mike On the Quad: Civil Rights and down, welt take the 88.7th caller, Racism. Main Quad. 1 p.m. How and that lucky listener will win their slating forms by Tues. Take to 125 pick of ten albums from the TOP far we have come. How far we must Windsor. If you need a form I wil! 100 Celebrate the year in prog­ go! Fri. Feb. 27th. be in the Alumnae Lounge between Babysitter for one year old. Two ressive music - tune into WXDU | TODAY ON | 8 and 9 p.m. Thanks — Susie. days a week. Flexible hours. Prefer 88.7FM. D.U U Student Faculty Luncheon someone who will be here this Why is Fri 11:30-1:30 Von Canon. Call ATTENTION THETA PLEDGES. The summer- 544-2926. 684-2656 for reservations. The Al­ meeting tonight is at 5 p.m. (not Kaplan ternative to the Faculty Commons! Summer Camp Counselors needed 8!) in 231 Soc-Sci for Brother/Sister Camp in Waynesboro. Pa Men and women der wagen haus the worlds shows for Cable 13? Applications and resumes for sum­ skilled in Sports. Riflery. Archery, putting your creative t mer jobs with University Directories Swimming. Lake Front. Nature, best in screen? Great must be submitted to the Duke Fu­ Rocketry. Photography. Ham Fin. Japanese & European nalism experience is available here tures Of. ice TODAY BY 5 p.m Radio. Unit Leaders — Write Camp Aulo Repair test prep? at Duke — take advantage! Come Director, 1 Newtown Woods Rd. to a meeting of DUKE MAGAZINE Square, PA. 19073 or 111 N. Duke St. tonight at 7:15 Flowers Lounge. I (215) 353-0981. Durham 682-2741 CXJte Unrversrty Union I

MONDAY The best test results- Faculty-Staff consistentiy higher scores. ( HKONIOLE C'...\ssrni.n$ Desktop Beaufort 4:00 The best materials- Waterfront Rentals Rockworld created by experts, time INFORMATION weekly—3 day weekends tested. Publishing 5:00 The best in enrollments- Rates Bodyworks over 1 million students. $3.00 (per day) The experts in 7:30 The best track record- for the first 15 words or less. Special neariy 50 years. 100 for each additional word. laser printing The best nation-wide Events: Gary network of centers- DEADLINE and computer Hart 120 in all. 1 business day prior to publication typesetting! 9:30 by 1 p.m. Trinity Zone • Macintosh and IBM 1 bedroom—$250 /week or 10:00 PAYMENT $55/nlght for 3 night weekend Roomies compatible •1st floors—all modem kitchen, Prepayment is required. washer/dryer, porch 10:30 Cash, check of Duke IR accepted. • In-house Macintosh & Night Night 2 bedroom—$450/week or 11:00 DROP CLASSlFTEnS OFF _T- LaserWriter use $75/nlght for 3 night weekend 1986 Yearlook 3rd floor Flowers Building •2nd floor—full private poroh KAPLAN • Quick copying/printing overlooking ocean and sound I (near Duke Chapel) where • fireplace, phone, TV, Cable 13 can Prc-printed classified forms are available • FAST turnaround washer/dryer, dishwasher OR MAIL TO: make you a 2634 Chapel Hill Blvd. wlnnerl Enter 489-2348 489-8720 BOX 4696 D.S., Durham, NC 27706 • Resumes, flyers, Just seconds from the the Cable 13 dissertations, etc. boardwalk, several restaurants, crossword puzzle Mon.-Thurs. 9:30-9:00 QUESTIONS? contest. Blank Fri. 9:30-5:00 Call 684-3476 after 1 p.m. Call 489-1668 forms are in Sat.-Sun. 10:00-6:00 1807AW. Markham Ave. today's NO REFUNDS OR CANCELLATlpNS AFTER FIRST INSERTION for pamphlet or 286-7759 reservations. ChPonlcle. Page 8 THE CHRONICLE Monday, February 23,1987 NYC official encourages social work

HOMELESS from page 3 pay your apartment bills on time." Currently, there are Families often spend long periods in shelters before 70,000 children in foster care in New York City and their relocation to permanent housing, Eggleston said. 10,000 babies in social service care awaiting faster par­ In 1982 the average shelter stay for families was 3 days, ents. but by 1986 this statistic had risen to 21 days, and in Eggleston criticized both the federal and New York 1987 to 48 days. City governments for their handling of the United In response to the exponential increase in home­ State's homeless problem. She said the federal policy lessness, New York has created "welfare motels," city that restricts the use of federal aid money to building motels to which the homeless are moved after __1 days in temporary shelters rather than permanent housing for a shelter. Individuals may stay in these motels without the homeless blocks a solution to the problem. She also cost up to 27 days. Frequently, homeless persons return encouraged law and public policy students to lobby in to a shelter, creating a housing cycle in which they move Washington, D.C. for better welfare legislation. from shelter to hotel and back again, she said. In addition, she said that computerization of social Children raised in the care of foster parents are prone services, removes human contact from the programs. to become homeless adults, Eggleston said. At the age of "The folks who created this system . . . have no concept 18, foster children are provided with an apartment and of what a client is," she said. "They only know comput­ $70 dollars in food stamps a week by the city. However, ers." they frequently return to welfare Support, she said. Eggleston's speech is one of a discussion series on TAMMI HENKIN/THE CHRONICLE "Nobody talked about life skills," she said. "Nobody told women's issues sponsored by the Coalition for a Verna Eggleston, director of Emergency Housing/ you about writing a check. Nobody even told you how to Women's Center at Duke. Referral Assistance in New York City. Blue Net system surveyed

BRIEFS from page 3 Cuomo balk hurts alum: New cent in long distance rates that a York's lieutenant governor, Stan Lun­ return to AT&T services would entail. dine, '61, may be the biggest loser in Mario Cuomo's decision not to seek the Changes in the system will be made presidency, according to The New York according to majority student opinion, Times. The paper implied that the for­ Sefton said. The survey will be mailed mer congressman ran as Cuomo's with each student's March 5 phone bill, number-two man because of the gov­ subject to Sefton's approval. ernor's political aspirations.

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Deadline: February 27 Send work to: 101-3 Bryan Center Duke University Durham. N.C. 27706 Be part of a tradition of excellence! You have to ^se^__s^^^^^^____s______z______i

>eventl call this: street 682-3030 When Stars Collide... The Carolina Theatre & WHY? Seventh Street Restaurant Because your neighborhood extend this special offer: Domino's Pizza has moved UThroughout the months of to a brand new, shining location. \amart) and Mruaru, come to lunch New location: or dinner Monday through Thursday and receive a FREE pass for anu movie 1209 West Main Street attheCarolinaTheatre.fi serving i 104 Broad Street, Durham 286-1019 Duke and surrounding areas. Present ai for ticket

rv lesMha n $20.00. * 1987 Domino's P N THE CHRONICLE

WEEKLY PULL-OUT SPORTS SUPPLEMENT MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1987 SPORTSWRAP Ramblin' Wreck holds off Blue Devils 79-72

By JEFF DIAMOND Neal may have been sure, but the rest of Cameron In­ fortunately things didn't go our way." They tried zone defense. They tried suffocating man- door Stadium was preparing for another Blue Devil Duke (21-6, 8-4 in the Atlantic Coast Conference) has to-man. They tried fouling. They even tried Oodles of comeback. Duke trailed the entire game, and was down danced to that tune with Georgia Tech (16-9, 7-5 in the Noodles. by as many as 12 points, 58-46, before a defensive surge ACC) before. In Atlanta Duke sent Tech guard Bruce Nothing the Duke basketball team, or the Cameron and three Danny Ferry three-pointers took the Blue Dalrymple to the line at the end ofthe Jan. 29 game, and fans, threw at Georgia Tech's Craig Neal Saturday could Devils to within five, 73-68, with 1:41 remaining. the senior made seven straight foul shots for a 75-66 Yel­ prevent the junior guard from sinking six straight free Duke took a timeout to plan the rest of its comeback, low Jacket victory. Saturday Dalrymple fouled out with throws in the last 45 seconds to seal a 79-72 Yellow and the enthusiastic crowd anticipated another pa­ 7:17 left, so Duke picked on Neal, a 76.9 percent free- Jacket win. tented Duke run, like the 18-3 blitzkrieg that sunk N.C. throw shooter. With a different shooter in a different "I always want to be on the free throw line," said Neal, State two days before. "We believed we were going to city, the outcome was still the same: another Georgia who finished with nine points. "It was just a situation win it until the very end," said Blue Devil guard Quin Tech win. where I knew [the shots! were going to be good." Snyder, who scored five points. "We played hard, but un- For a while, it seemed as if the Rambling Wreck would never miss a shot, much less a free throw. Sophomore forward Tom Hammonds, who played all 40 minutes, scored 20 of his 26 points on nine-of-11 shooting in the first half as Tech raced to a 12-4 lead and then held a 30- 20 advantage with 4:31 left in the half. "For a 10-minute stretch in the first half we didn't play well, and they got that lead." said Duke forward Robert Brickey. The lead did not grow so much out of Duke's poor play, but because Tech shot the lights out. The Rambling Wreck shot 67 percent from the floor in the first half, while Duke managed only 41 percent from the field. Hammonds and Tech prevented the Blue Devils from garnering many second chances by clearing the boards on the defensive end. Hammonds had five carroms, four on defense, as the Yellow Jackets outrebounded Duke 13-9 for the half. "I don't think it was our defense that played that bad, as much as them Iperforming so well]," Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "Hammonds was amazing in the first half." Though Hammonds scored the majority of Georgia Tech's first-half points, Krzyzewski was more concerned with center Antoine Ford, who was a perfect three for three from both the floor and the foul line in the first half. "The thing that hurt us in the first half, I thought, were Ford's nine points, more than Hammonds," Krzyzewski said. "You can't let the other guy get going. We played fairly good defense, but we didn't defend Ford in the low post like we should have in the first half."

JANE RIBADENEYRA THE CHRONICLE The Blue Devils hung tough, however, canning 13 of 14 foul shots, including nine of 10 from the hand of for- Tom Hammonds (20) and the rest of the Yellow Jackets ran away from Duke early, and the Blue Devils never could quite catch up. See GEORGIA TECH page 2 Women upset No. 7 Cavaliers

By STEPHEN GOLDBERG added Moreland. If Cecil B. DeMille were to write the script for "The When asked if this was the most exciting game of her most exciting basketball game", he would have a tough career, Christopher replied, "probably." time topping the Duke women's basketball team's 77-76 "I just knew we could beat them," she said. "And all we upset of No. 7 Virginia Saturday night. had to do was work real hard. In the final three minutes, a one-point lead changed "I think they took us too lightly. And even if they hands eight consecutive times. The Blue Devils {18-7, 7- didn't, during the game they certainly shouldn't have 6 in the Atlantic Coast Conference) started out with a taken us lightly, because we were there and we came to 69-68 lead and ended up on top thanks to senior Kim play today. It was a team effort and it was great." Hunter's jumper from two feet behind the foul line with Talk about a team effort - less than four minutes into 20 seconds to play. the contest, every Duke starter had scored a field goal. Virginia's Nancy Mayer had her last-ditch inbounds All 10 Blue Devils who played logged at least 12 minutes pass deflected by Paula Andersen. Tracy Christopher and each hit at least once from the field. then knocked the ball out of bounds off Virginia guard Every Duke player also committed a personal foul and Daphne Hawkins's foot- with one exception, everyone had a turnover. It was appropriate that Christopher was in on the Virginia's play was the reason for both the team effort final play, because the consensus was that she played at and the turnovers. The pace was frenetic, the tempo the top of her game. furious, and Duke needed to reach deep into its bench. "Oh my God can I talk about Tracy," said Meier. "We tried to slow it down," said Duke coach Debbie "The girl was on fire. She did the things that we've been Leonard. "I thought Kim Hunter did a great job in the missing this year, like she made the big plays or got the first half [running the offense.." big rebounds that in the past we haven't been getting." Virginia applied a full court trapping defense that Christopher evenly divided her 18 minutes of playing yielded 19 steals and unnerved the Blue Devils. Carolyn time to produce nine points and nine rebounds, eight on Sonzogni, Duke's starting point guard, was forced into the offensive end. Christopher had averaged two points seven turnovers. Many of those came on steals by Wahoo and two rebounds per contest prior to Saturday night. junior guard Donna Holt, who registered a game-high "Tracy Christopher played out of her mind. I thought eight thefts. Coach Leonard conceded that Holt is the she was incredible," said Chris Moreland, who leads the best defensive guard in the ACC "without a doubt." ACC in scoring and led the Blue Devils with 16 points Meier was the lone Blue Devil who stayed turnover- Saturday. free, but she had a scarier kind of turnover . . . one that JANE R! BADEN EYRA/THE CHRONICLE "It was neat because they were keying on post players involved her body. With 18:14 left in the second half and Stong play down the stretch by Tracey Christopher more and Tracy just snuck in there and took over," See VIRGINIA on page 4 enabled Duke to upset Virginia 77-76. PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP MONDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1987

Clutch shots by Neal preserve win DUKE-TECH STATS

GEORGIA TECH from page 1 DUKE MP FG FT R A F Pt 3PG ward John Smith. Duke went on an 8-2 mini-run in the Ferry 35 6-11 2-2 3 2 3 17 3-5 Smith 30 4-10 1C 12 1 1 4 o last two minutes and trailed by only four at halftime, 36- 18 C Nessley 10 0-1 C 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 32. Snyder 37 2-8 C 1 1 a 4 5 1 6 Tech stretched its lead to 10 at the start ofthe second Amaker 39 3-6 3 4 H b 9 C ? half, but Duke's pressure defense crumbled Tech's Strickland 24 2-3 .1 1 3 2 2 5 0 1 businesslike execution of the first half. Suddenly, the Brickey 20 7-8 2 3 4 0 1 16 0 0 Yellow Jackets forced passes and missed open jump Abdelnaby 5 1-1 C 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 shots. "We got rattled in the second half," said Tech Team rebounds 2 coach Bobby Cremins. "It was a different basketball Totals 200 25-48 18-22 20 19 23 72 4-14 game." Whenever the Blue Devils got too close, though, a Ga. Tech MP FG FT R A F Pt 3PG Tech player was there. The Duke defense keyed on Ham­ Hammonds 40 10-16 6-8 b 1 1 26 0-0 Ferrell 5-9 H 4 3 3 monds, so that player was usually Duane Ferrell. The 39 6 16 0-0 Ford 20 4-5 3 3 4 1 4 11 0-0 junior forward had only one point in the first half, but he Oliver 40 3-5 4 4 2 3 1 10 0-0 scored 12 points in the first 8:14 after intermission to Dalrymple 27 3-4 1 1 3 b 7 0-0 maintain Georgia Tech's advantage. Munlyn 13 0-0 0 0 0 0/ 2 0 0-0 "In the second half we defended Hammonds a lot Neal 21 1-1 6 6 2 6 3 9 1-1 better," said Krzyzewski, "and Ferrell makes some big Totals 200 26-40 26-30 20 21 19 79 1-1 buckets for them." The Blue Devils increased their defensive pressure, DUKE 32 40—72 but the bounces did not fall their way. A steal by Snyder Ga. Tech 3fa 43—79 was negated by a traveling call, and an Amaker theft met a similar fate when the senior guard stepped on the Technicals — None Turnovers — Duke 19, Ga. Tech 18 Of- sideline. ficials — Paparo, Armstrong and Fine. Attendance- 8,564. "It is frustrating when a team is trying to play that hard and you force something and it doesn't happen for them," Krzyzewski said, referring to Amaker's steal. ish with 16 points, his season-high. "Brickey off the "We just could never get that big play to put us within bench was excellent," Krzyzewski said. "Robert got away one bucket," said Krzyzewski. from being a freshman to f being I a main guy." The loss was not without its bright spots for Duke. Af­ Brickey, averaging 4.6 points per game, is just pleased ter scoring four points in the first half, Brickey shot a to get floor time. "I just want to play," Brickey said. "I flawless six of six from the floor in the second half to fin- like the coach's system — no roles."

LANCE MORITZ/THE CHRONICLE Robert Brickey hits a jump-shot for two of his six­ Study Abroad Through teen points, a career high for the freshman. Syracuse University.

GET INTO SPACE The Program in Science, Technology, and Human Values in conjunction with its upcoming Symposium on "Our Future in Space" presents Want To Learn More?

The War of the Worlds 3:45-4:45 p.m. on Wednesday, February 25th Wednesday Room 226 in the Allen Building 25 February 1987 Margaret Stone, Assistant Director, will be on 7,9, and 11 pm campus to meet with interested students. (Her Film Theatre, Bryan Center visit in January had to be postponed because Admission $2.00 of weather.) For further informotion, contact the Duke Office of Study Abroad at 684-2174. Come see this H.G. Wells science fiction classic, first released in 1953. This will be the first in a series of space movies to be presented by the STHV Program in early March, leading up to the symposium, "Our Future in Space," to be held 18-20 March. SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS ABROAD 119 Euclid Avenue Syracuse. New York 13244-4170 (315)423-3471

•ti -••• »• MONDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1987 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE PAGE 3 Slow starts hampering recent Blue Devil efforts

By JESSICA LIM Aesop's tale ofthe tortoise and the hare doesn't always hold true in real life. Hard work and determination cer­ JESSICA LIM tainly provide impetus in the race against an opponent, but there comes a time when not even the most stringent The Yellow Jackets kept right on rolling, and that put effort can produce the victory. Saturday afternoon, Geor­ a lot of pressure on the Blue Devils at both ends ofthe gia Tech became the rodent that ran off with the prize. court- to contain Georgia Tech while also executing Duke has started out slowly in a few games over the their own offense smoothly. That's a tall order for any past two weeks but has managed to overcome any defi­ team to fill, especially for one that's relatively inexperi­ cits through its resolve and staunch defense. "The last enced and missing its best defender, Billy King. Turn­ three games we've gotten behind, but we've been able to overs and missed shots at key times kept Duke back. battle back," said Duke forward Danny Ferry, who "I thought we gave them a good shot, but we couldn't scored 17 points in the weekend contest. "We haven't overtake them," Blue Devil guard Quin Snyder said. "A played badly, just not as good as we need to." lot of intangibles didn't go our way- travels, shots that In their 66-50 win over N.C. State Thursday, the Blue didn't fall." Devils allowed the Wolfpack to work the ball easily in­ In response to the speculation that his team played side and fell behind 16-9 in the first 6:30 of the game. A flat going into games last week, Duke coach Mike 13-6 run in the eight minutes following put Duke ahead Krzyzewski answered vehemently. "I don't think we for good. were fiat at all," he said. "We missed shots- does that A week ago in South Rend, Notre Dame got off to a 9-0 mean you're flat? They're hitting and you're off." lead in the first three minutes before Duke reeled off 12 "Intensity isn't always shown in diving for a ball," straight points. Duke had compensated for its initial lag, Krzyzewski added. "We played our butts off all week. I but the sharp play from the Blue Devils was intermit­ don't like to hear the word 'flat'." tent. The outcome ofthe seesaw game ultimately hinged Whether it is labeled as intensity or not, something on steady play by the host team and opportunities unex- has been missing or 'off in the Blue Devils' opening mi­ ploited by the visitors as the Irish won 70-66 in over­ nutes in recent contests. In some cases, the poor starts time. haven't made a difference in the outcome of games, but Against the Yellow Jackets, a slow start did hurt the Georgia Tech was presented with a distinct advantage Blue Devils. It put them in the postion of having to play in the first few minutes ofthe game. An advantage that catch-up with a strong team that shot off the mark, rac­ Duke had given but was not able to take back. ing to a 12-4 lead in the first four minutes. During that "We need to come together more," Ferry said- "We LANCE MORITZ/THE CHRONICLE time Georgia Tech was hitting everything, so you can't need to really work hard in practice and in games. It John Smith and Craig Neal were the kings of the fault Duke's rebounding on the defensive end. However, means more when you're working hard. free-throw line Saturday. Neal was perfect from the Duke did not have a single offensive board in that same "Today hurt." line, and Smith scored 10 of his 18 points at the period either. Tournament time looms closer, and the Blue Devils line. "Today was the poorest we've come out in the last must tighten up all aspects of their game, physical and team escaped from the Tigers' claws Jan. 24. but Clem­ three games," Ferry said after the loss. "Often the begin­ mental. son's not likely to let that happen again. ning ofthe game sets the tone. It's something we have to In the remaining regular-season games against ACC "We really warn Isecond placel," Ferry said. "Our des­ work on. rivals North Carolina and Clemson, Duke needs to stay tiny is in our hands." "IGeorgia Techl got off to a good start and didn't really close from the tip-off. A second-place finish in the confer­ And when single-elimination competition begins. let us back into the game." ence still remains a possibility for the Blue Devils. The Duke can't afford to give up anything to the hares.

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InrktOUine 2132 Bedford St. Apt. 23. Durham Open 7 Days A.Week 688-2120 giOW.MainSt^Durham \ 489-3111 Mon ,rri 8:30-5:00 12 Noon-10 PM Across from Brightleaf Square r PAGE 4 THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP MONDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1987 Duke ecstatic over victory, anxious to host UNC VIRGINIA from page 1 the score tied at 37, the sophomore guard twisted her layup with 11:36 remaining capped the run and knotted right ankle and had to be removed from the game. the score at 49. She came back from the training room with 11 mi­ "When we lost Katie we were just like, 'Oh my gosh DUKE-UVA STATS nutes left and at the 10:46 mark she made a brief (one what are we gonna do?' But Tracy came in and did a fan­ minutel return appearance. In that minute, she im­ tastic job," said Moreland. VIRGINIA MP FG FT R A F Pt mediately re-stole the ball from Virginia freshman Christopher had a hand in nine of Duke's last 11 Mayer 22 5-10 2-3 8 3 1 12 Lank Tonya Cardoza and scored to put Duke up 53-52. points, scoring five herself and dishing low to Chris 26 2-2 0-0 2 0 3 4 Carter 30 5-8 8-12 6 1 4 18 During Meier's absence, Virginia had a 9-2 run that Moreland twice. Christopher missed a drive in the lane Hawkins 37 7-16 5-7 5 1 4 39 ended in a 48-41 Cavalier lead. Duke countered with an with :45 remaining and Duke trailing 76-75. Moreland's Holt 6 1-10 5-7 2 6 3 7 8-1 run of its own. Sonzogni's steal and coast-to-coast follow-up was snuffed for a jump ball, but Duke got the Cardo_a 23 1-7 7-10 5 1 1 9 ball on the alternate possession with :41 left. Bryant 18 1-5 3-4 6 0 1 b Duke called timeout, and 21 seconds later. Duke's Anderson 11 1-2 0-0 2 0 2 2 Hunter finished off her prey with a 17-foot swish MacNeilage 11 0-0 0-0 0 0 1 0 through the Wahoos' hearts. Team rebounds 3 Although the final three minutes were spectacular, Totals 200 23-60 30-43 42 12 20 76 the end ofthe first half was far from uneventful. Duke OUKE MP FG FT R A F Pt coach Debbie Leonard picked up her first technical foul Andersen 30 4-11 1-3 6 0 3 9 in four years when she walked out to talk to the referees Moreland 32 7- 13 2 3 10 0 4 16 about their performance. Leonard's march out to mid- Sullivan 22 2 5 0 0 3 4 4 4 court resulted in a free throw by Donna Holt to cut Sonzogni 20 4 0 0 1 2 3 6 Duke's halftime lead of 35-32 to two points. Meier 15 4- 1 2 1 1 ? 9 Langhi 15 3 9/ 0 0 1 2 3 6 "I just thought the officiating was not good," said Harnett 21 4 6 2 b 8 3 4 10 Leonard. Her players agreed. "I thought it [the of­ Christopher 18 4 9 1 2 y 3 4 9 ficiating] was really weak," said Sonzogni. Hunter 15 1 2 4 4 1 1 ? 6 "Basically, I wasn't too happy with the officiating," Morgan 12 1 2 U 0 0 2 1 2 said Moreland. "I thought to a certain extent that some­ Team rebounds b times it was five against seven." Totals 200 33-68 11-19 4b 18 30 77

Moreland's 16 points were five below her average. In VIRGINIA 32 44-76 the past few games, Moreland has not hit her average. DUKE 35 42-77 "Everybody else is scoring, so I don't really have to score," she said. Turnovers — Virgin! _ 22, Duke 25. Tech lica Fm s — Duke "When points are going up on the board, it doesn't Bench. Officia s — Deane and Coffee Attendance --475. matter who is scoring as long as at the end ofthe game you're ahead," said Moreland. Meier. "Chris did a lot of good things besides scoring points," Leonard agreed that the win was the biggest of the said Leonard. "She played good defense. She went to the season. The seventh-ranked Wahoos are the highest- boards really well." ranked team Leonard has ever defeated in her 10 sea­ JANE RIBADENEYRA/THE CHRONICLE "It was the most exciting I game I've ever played, be­ sons with the Blue Devils. Kim Hunter, shown here fighting for a loose ball, hit cause the pressure was on us to win because Carolina "We were a top 20 team tonight," said Leonard. the winning basket for Duke with 21 seconds left to just beat Maryland so in order for us to get third in the When asked if Duke was a top 10 team she replied, keep the Blue Devils' tournament hopes alive. conference, we had to beat Virginia and Carolina," said "No . . . we'll be a top 10 team Monday night."

ROUND TABLE on Science •• anAll d Public Affairns STUDY ABROAD Q&A PRESENTS Fall, Spring, and Full-Year PROFESSOR JAY DAVID BOLTER Author of Turing's Man ENGLAND Thursday, February 26,1987 4:00-5:00 pm "TEXT AND TECHNOLOGY: 326 Allen Building READING AND WRITING IN THE COMPUTER AGE" FRANCE Friday, February 27,1987 Among its many other achievements, the 4:00-5:00 pm computer is changing the way we read and write. 326 Allen Building The ubiquitous word processor is only the first example of how the computer can be used as a technology of literacy. Recent programs have gone beyond the word processor and transformed the computer into a medium that is EUROPE more dynamic and visually sophisticated than Monday, March 2,1987 such previous media as the printed book, the 4:00-5:00 pm handwritten codex, or the papyrus roll. Indeed, 326 Allen Building the computer compels us to rethink the whole history of writing. This proccess of rethinking will affect many aspects of our cultural life (which is still ASIA and AFRICA so dependent on literacy) and perhaps our Tuesday, March 3,1987 assessment of human nature itself. 4:00-5:00 pm 326 Allen Building Wednesday, 25 February 1987 8:15 p.m. Teer Engineering Building Freshmen—Sophomores—Juniors Reception Following All students encouraged to attend! Sponsored by the Program in Science, Technology, and Human Values Sponsored by the Study Abroad Office • 2022 Campus Drive • 684-2274 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1987 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE PAGE 5

WOMEN'S TENNIS Blue Demons avenge Duke loss Duke 8, Maryland 1 Singles: Claudia Borgiani (Maryland) d. Jenny ByJOEMOOSHIL Strickland, who has been criticized as to his shooting Reason (Duke) 6-0, 6-2; Christine O'Reilly (D) d. Associated Press ability, especially on free throws, was 11 of 17 from the Kerri Stern (Ml 6-1, 6-2; Megan Foster (D> d. Denise Dallas Comegys and Rod Strickland put on a magnifi­ field and 6 of 6 from the free throw line. Fisher (M) 6-3, 6-4; Lee Shelburne (D) d. Elizabeth cent show Sunday in leading fourth-ranked DePaul to "I just happened to get the shots," said Strickland. Schram (M) 6-4, 7-6; Terri O'Reilly (D) d. Dede an 84-67 college basketball victory over Georgia Tech. "Comegys and Strickland played like two All-Ameri- Adolph (M) 6-1, 6-3; Donna Preston (D) d. Missy Both enjoyed career highs in scoring. Comegys had 33 cans," said Georgia Tech Coach Bobby Cremins. Aguino(M)6-0,6-l. to eclipse his previous high of 32 against Loyola last "Comegys was awesome at times. We started well, came Doubles: Patti O'Reilly-C. O'Reilly (D) d. Borgiani- year and Strickland scored 28 to exceed his previous back and then had two crucial turnovers." Stern (M) 7-5, 6-3; Preston-T. O'Reilly (D) d. Adolph- high of 27 against Marquette last year. Cremins refused to lean on the excuse that his team Aguino (M) 6-2, 6-2; Foster-Shelburne (D) d. Fisher- "I thought we were going to get shut out early," joked was tired, following Saturday's 79-72 victory at No. 17 Schram(M)6-l,7-6. DePaul Coach Joey Meyer in reference to DePaul Duke. Duke Record: 7-3, 1-0 in the Atlantic Coast Con­ managing only four points in the first seven minutes. "I didn't think we'd be tired," said Cremins. "It wasn't ference. "We were excited but Georgia Tech played well on that, it was Comegys and Strickland. DePaul is an ex­ Next Match: Tuesday at Wake Forest. defense until these two guys got going," said Meyer of ceptional team. We didn't play well today but I think we Comegys and Strickland. can play with DePaul." Actually, it was three guys. With 12:47 left in the Georgia Tech held a 21-17 lead when Kevin Edwards game, only Comegys, Strickland and Terrence Greene scored for the Blue Demons. Edwards followed with a Monday, Monday is had scored for DePaul. steal and a dunk to tie the game at 21-all. Strickland put "I was a little nervous at the beginning ofthe game," DePaul ahead with 3:42 left in the half and Comegys said Comegys. "Once they got me the ball, I went to the scored six of DePaul's last eight points before intermis­ WRAPPIN' day. basket." sion.

jrrrrBTTrrrrrrrffTOTrro^ inrraTrTnrinnrir UNDERGRADUATE JUDICIAL BOARD INTERVIEWS The Institute of the Arts Rising juniors and seniors interested in becoming members of invites nominations for the 1987-88 Undergraduate Judicial Board should pick up applications and sign up for interviews in the Office of Student Life, 109 Flowers Building. Applications will be due on Thursday, February 26,1987 at 5:00 pm. The Louis Sudler Prize in the Arts

For all interested students, a mandatory information session This $ 1000 prize is awarded annually to a will be held on Wednesday, February 25, 1987 at 7:00 pm in 136 Social Sciences Building. Interviews will be held on graduating senior in recognition of outstanding Tuesday, March 3 from 7:00-10:00 pm; Wednesday, March 4 achievement in the creative or performing arts. from 7:00-10:00 pm; and Thursday, March 5 from 7:00-10:00 pm. Each interview will last twenty minutes. Students must be nominated by a Fellow of Undergraduate Judicial Board members are asked to hear the Institute. Nominations are due by March 16. cases of alleged violations of the Undergraduate Judicial Code as found in Appendix C of the Bulletin of Information and Regulations. For information, contact Kathy Silbiger, 684-6654.

P0PPPPPPPPP0PPPPPOPPPP0PPPP0PPPPPOPPPPPPPPPP0PPPPP0PP1 CABLE 13 CAN MAKE YOU A WINNER Enter the Cable 13 Crossword Puzzle Contest Prizes: 1st prize: Microwave, donated by Circuit City 2nd prizes (3): Tanning Packages, from Totally Tan __•_ 1 a 3rd prizes (4) VCR & two Videos: Rental, 1 QIm u i • from Center Stage Video 1 1 Ii IIi • 4th prize (1): Top Gun Video l,3l 1 1 Is 1 5th prize (1): 1987 Video Yearlook • II 1 i i _____ an Questions: Bill Across: Down: 1. Graduation Student Speaker in 1986Yearlook 1. Sex therapist on " No Pretensions' 2. Where polls on the quad are held 2. What Cyrus X drinks 1 I 1______"T" \l 7 L 3. "CyrusX" co-host. ness 3. # of balls the stick figure Juggles between Mum 4. Mon-Thurs. at 4pm shows. -fl _r^_^H_k\l 5. R. , "SpecialEvents" Speaker. 4. Feud colors &orange. • 6. Owen, searches for graft and 5. Bodyworks Instructors wear 1 • 1 corruption on" No Pretensions" 6. Cyrus X's real name. • | CuDI• • _•• t. Who " Loves" credits on Sports Center 7. M.C. ontheFeud:. Cook • 8. Drinking Game In Unton Commercial 8. Bodyworks instructors do . 9. "Medical Minute" doctor on "No Pretensions" 9. Gary Hart speaks about on Special III 1 ___• • 10. Answers on Feud obtained by events. i a • 11. David , painted on " Sports 10. Bodyworks gets you Into . • 1 Center" background 11. First song on '86 Yearlook 12. Trinity Zone warns against . 12. #of peopleonNightNight's "QuadSquad" 13. Favorite paper of " Fuqua Looks at Business" 13. Night Night: Clint Eastwood's father • • . 14.MolraQutnlanlsa/n on "Duke 14. Last name of Sports Center host. _H3 _____! J H Magazine" 15. news and interviews on Magazine • in 1 ill i m Instructions/Rules: l.All__oswersto theerosswoMpuzzfequesttonsareobtaJiiedby watching Cable 13. Schedules are i posted in dorms and around campus. 2. Allforms must be completed and turned into the Bryan Center information desk by Friday, H.E 1 an February 28,1987 with name and telephone numberonform. 3.Winner Is person with the most correct answers. Incaseoftle.adrawlngwill occur amongthose with the same number of correct answers. • 1 4. Cable 13 members not eligible to win PAGE 6 THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1987

BASKETBALL SCORES Tuesday Wednesday

North Carolina 96, Clemson 80 Wrestling at N.C. State, 7:30 p.m. Lacrosse vs. Hampden-Sydney, Duke Lacrosse Virginia 72, N.C. State 65 Field, 3 p.m. De Paul 84, Georgia Tech 67 Women's tennis vs. Wake Forest, West Campus Wake Forest 75, Maryland 68 courts, 1:30 p.m. Baseball vs. Virginia Commonwealth, Jack Coombs Field, 3 p.m. Monday Men's tennis vs. UNC-Ashville Baseball vs. Atlantic Christian, Jack Coombs Women's basketball vs. North Carolina, Cameron Field, 3 p.m. Indoor Stadium, 7:30 p.m. NOW SERVED BY DUKE UNIVERSITY PUBLIC LECTURE TRANSIT! Adjacent to Duke Campus and so convenient to all of Durham, Chapel Hill and Research Triangle Dr. James Schlesinger Park. One and two bedroom garden plans offer modern kitchen with dishwasher, carpeting and Former Secretary of Defense air conditioning. Swimming pool and laundry. 1315 Morreene Road. Open Monday-Friday 9-6, Topic: Reykjavik and the Saturday 10-5, Phone 383-6677 today! Iranian Revelations In.North Carolina, call toll-free 1-800-672-1678. Nationwide, call toll-free 1-800-334-1656. Page Auditorium 8:00 pm M West Durham Monday, February 23,1987 CHAPEL I IaTOWtn I

Cellar Door, in association with the Duke University Union Major Attractions Committee, presents Tlie Hoodoo Irin and The FIESHTOIMES

Thursday, February 26 at 8.-00 pm Page Auditorium Tickets: $10.00 students. $11.50 non-students on sale at Page Box Office. 684-4059 MONDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1987 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE PAGE 7

From page 7, Chronicle ). HAPPV BIRTHDAY to the on I would eat "unsauced" Watch out Ouke. Wendy Grant Spring Break 87 on the Florida Love ya. DOODLE _rns 21 today' HAPPY LEGALITY. beaches LAST CHANCE! Miami DUKE WOMEN VS. Beach/Ft LaudertJale: Daytona Thomas Trail Fenton. YES. this per­ Beach. Fort Walton Beach from sonal is for you. Surprised? Don't HURRY, call be. , . I usually keep my wort]. It's Sunc'i e Tours the Buchanan progre line 1- party on 2/9 in Johi 800-321-5911 d SPRING BREAK is approaching Cur room? Please call NORTH CAROLINA Food costs by ordering a TRENT 1072 or 684-7173 Gill; Here's to seesaws, wrestling, SPRING BREAK PACK. Hamburgers. motorcycle 'ides - OH. BV THE cheeze. fruit, bread, soda -- lots GAME FACTS: WAV. HAPPY BIRTHDAY - Ros­ more! Forms distributed through sini's, jokes, obsessions, advice. dorms and available in Trent Hall. EXTENDED DEADLINE FEB. 24. Time: 7:30 p.m. EST, Monday. MY Club Nouveau tape, YOUR flight DUKE CHORALE RECORD! ( iacket. and a great friendship no* for only $7.50 from a Place: Cameron Indoor Stadium, Durham, N.C. Have a super 19th! Love ya. MAXWELL HOUSE APPLICANTS: The Radio: WXDU-FM (88.7). Audrey. acceptance lists and waiting lists rale member or Duke sto Series record: North Carolina leads 20-5 will be completed and posted by now. or you'll wish you had! Ric ard Hariss I'm so psyched to Thur morning. If you can't come by TAMMY DARUNG! 21 was Last meeting: NorthCarolina 76. Duke 68-Jan. 7, 1987 in Chapel Hill. my big er. Vou the Commons room to check cali Last Duke win: Duke 86. North Carolina 79-February 12, 1986 in Chapel Hill. Pat at 684-0974 or John at 684- II MOM! Welcome yo- little sis 1817 to find Out your position Lou se- Ha ppy Birthday! Vou are Tracy Thomas — You're the most North Carolina Tar Heels (17-8, 8-5 ACC) the greatest Get psyched awesome DG pledge! I'm so er! ILY Sa PSVCHED you're my little sis- Head coach: Sylvia Rhyne Hatchell (Carson-Newman, '74) P.S Lose you "•!" on! Record at North Carolina: 17-8 Record vs. Duke: 1-0 Probable starters: Guard — Darlene Cannon, 5-4 senior, 5.6 ppg. Guard — Marlene List, 5-11 senior. 7.8. Center— Dawn Royster, 6-0 senior, 19.0,10.0 rebounds. Forward —Tia Poindexter, 6-2 junior, 9.7. DUKE'S PLACE TO PARTY Forward —Kathy Wilson, 6-2 junior, 9.8.

Appraisal The Tar Heels are a good running team. Offensively, they are comparable to Virgin­ ia, but defensively, they aren't as quick. Carolina is an excellent rebounding team, "and that's where they beat us before," said Duke coach Debbie Leonard. Leonard in­ ifrrtsmcTfoti dicated that the key to the game would be rebounding, in the last meeting, 18 Tar Heel points came from offensive rebounds turned into baskets. Restaurant and Bar "Rebounding will be the key to the game," said Leonard. "We can't allow them to have more than one shot at the basket." 50 Imported Beers Great Nixed Drinks A major question mark for the Blue Devils is the availability of Katie Meier, who Great Rock Music sustained a significant sprain of her right ankle. Leonard said that Meier would start if she suits up, but that she will not be as effective as usual and may have less play­ Full Menu Served Until Closing ing time than her norm. 493-7797 Chris Moreland, the ACC's leading scorer with a 21.0 average, has an injured right wrist which may slightly affect her game. Lakewood Shopping Center. Durham

By STEVE GOLDBERG

THE INSTITUTE FOR PARALEGAL TRAINING DUKE UNIVERSITY SRYAN CENTER'S Demand for * » FIFTH BIRTHDAY our graduates * a exceeds supply IClEMm/OTOM 2tol. * • What more can we say? «. \our presence is requested • ... except that college grads come from as far as Hawaii and Alaska to take the Institute for Paralegal Training's acclaimed 4-month program. .• f • We train them in any of 7 specialized fields, including Administrative and Public Law and International Trade Friday, 27 February, 1987 Law. And our placement service helps them get a job in the city of their choice — a service backed by a unique Schaefer MaM, Bryan Center . tuition refund plan. « #-" . 3:00jj.m. • Right now our students are in demand by banks, cor­ porations, government agencies and law firms nation­ wide. Four months after you graduate college, you could be, too. Call 1-800-222-IPLT. In PA., call (215) 567-4811. We'll be on campus February 26 fc*-" guest speakers^ including Contact your placement office to arrange for an interview or group presentation. Nfery Duke Biddle Trent Semans* GSL loans, Merit Mail this coup< Institute for Pa ilegal Training Scholarships, and 1926 Arch Stre. Housing available Philadelphia, PA 19103 1 300-222-1PLT THE INSTITUTE Please send a copy of your catalogui ^dedication of Bryan Center yide*. FDRPARMECAL I TRAINING j Addrei Auditorium

Approved by the American Bar Association MMM.....IJ.IIUJ18 OB ______PAGE 8 THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1987 THE CHRONICLE 1987-88 BUDGET To The Duke Community: Published below is The Chronicle's Fiscal Year 1987-88 budget as approved by the The Chronicle Board on Feb­ ruary 13, 1987. Your questions or comments addressed to our business office in room 102 West Union Building are welcomed.

REVENUE SUMMARY PHONES PROMOTIONS 3.281 OPEN HOUSE EXPENSES 150 PRESS ASSOCIATION MEMBERSHIP FEES 400 OPERATING REVENUE TOLLS 1,500 AWARD ENTRY FEES 150 PROMOTIONAL & MISCELLANEOUS XMAS PARTY 100 HELP WANTED ADVERTISING CONTINGENCY 400 YELLOW PAGES ADVERTISING 368 1,463 SUBSCRIPTIONS 29.400 MISCELLANEOUS PROMOTIONS 100 END OF YEAR PICNIC 630 200 BI-ANNUAL OFFICE PARTIES 200 TOTAL OPERATING REVENUE OFFICE SUPPLIES 4 FORMS OFFICE SUPPLIES & FORMS PRINTER PAPER 4 RIBBONS 185 473 VDT FLOPPY DISKS 65 100 ART/CARTOONIST SUPPLIES 315 TOTAL REVENUE 607,419 100 TELETYPE PAPER & RIBBONS 100 AD INSERTION CARDS 788 RECORDING TAPES 118 AD CONTRACTS 150 MISCELLANEOUS SUPPLIES 685 EXPENSE SUMMARY CREDIT APPLICATIONS 190 COMPUTER PAPERS. RIBBONS 250

10-MB HARD DISKCARTIDGES 700 EXPRESS MAIL CONTINGENCY 150

STOP ADVERTISING ORDERS 50 STUDENT PAYROLL 29.976 DISPLAY ADVERTISING PRODUCTION 8.521 POSTAGE. FREIGHT, & HANDLING 3,465 NEWSPAPER PRODUCTION EXPENSES CIRCULATION 10.258 COPYING 1,047 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 500 EDITORIAL 38,494 18.483 PRINTING GENERAL 166.000 NEWSPAPER PRODUCTION 196.845 1,575 DISPLAY ADVERTISING SALES 6.435 4-COLOR SEPARATIONS & PRINTING 1,600 SUBSCRIPTION SALES 20.380 DISCRETIONARY INSERTING 2,125

TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES* 514,447 CIRCULATION EXPENSES CTEXT SERVICE CONTRACT 7.200 TECH. SVCS. HARDWARE MAINT. CONTRACT 2.100 ONE-TIME EXPENSES 9,773 TRAVEL BACK-END SERVICE CONTRACT 5.022 VAN RENTAL HOME FOOTBALL GAMES 417 DEPRECIATION ACCOUNT ALLOCATION 35,957 COURIER MILEAGE REIMBURSEMENT 504 TYPSETTERPROCESSOR SUPPLIES 9,900 525 GRAPHIC SUPPLIES 1,323 5,830 TOTAL NEWSPAPER PRODUCTION 196,845 SEND-HOME CIRCULATION RESERVE FUND ALLOCATION 47.242 MAILING LABELS 30 ENVELOPES 641 POSTAGES. HANDLING 2,312 •BREAKDOWN OF EXPENSES BY DEPARTMENTS FOLLOWS DISPLAY ADVERTISING SALES EXPENSES TOTAL CIRCULATION 10,258 TRAVEL REIMBURSEMENTS

DISPLAY AD PRODUCTION EXPENSES AD AGE SUBSCRIPTION CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING EXPENSES NATIONAL ADVERTISING BUREAU MEMBERSHIP EQUIPMENT 8. MAINTENANCE PMT SERVICE CONTRACT CLASSIFIED FORMS PROMOTIONS PMT SUPPLIES 2 PROMOTIONAL MAILINGSOOPIES PMT LAMP REPLACEMENTS TOTAL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING BROCHURE TYPESETTING EQUIPMENT REPAIR CONTINGENCY BROCHURE PRINTING COPIER LEASE BUSINESS CARDS CLIP ART SUBSCRIPTIONS EDITORIAL EXPENSES TOTAL DISPLAY ADVERTISING SALES GRAPHIC ARTS TRADE MAGAZINE EDITOR'S DISCRETIONARY FUND SUBSCRIPTION SALES EXPENSES OFFICE SUPPLIES 4 FORMS GRAPHIC ARTS SUPPLIES TRAVEL AD CHANGE FORMS SPORTS PROMOTIONS AD PRODUCTION FORMS OTHER TRAVEL RENEWAL MAILINGS 2 CLIP ART BINDERS NEW SOLICITATIONS MAILING LASERWRITER TONER CARTRIDGES INDEXING CURRENT YEAR RECENT GRADUATES MAILING LASERWRITER COATED PAPER FRESHMEN ORIENTATION COPIES BOUND VOLUMES ORDER CONFIRMATION MAILINGS TOTAL DISPLAY AD PRODUCTION EQUIPMENT REPAIR CONTINGENCY OFFICE SUPPLIES 4 FORMS LABELS PHONES MAILING ENVELOPES GENERAL BUSINESS EXPENSES SERVICE TOLLS POSTAGE 4 HANDLING 3RD CLASS POSTAGE & HANDLING CONFERENCE TRAVEL 4 REGISTRATION FEES WIRE SERVICES 4 SYNDICATE SUBSCRIPTIONS 1ST CLASS POSTAGE SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE COLLEGE NEWSPAPER BUS 4 AD MGRS. ASSOC. NEW YORK TIMES WIRE TOTAL SUBSCRIPTION SALES COLLEGE MEDIA ADVISORS UNITED PRESS INTL PHOTOS CROSSWORD. MACNELLY PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION MEMBERSHIPS FAR SIDE SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION DOONESBURY COLLEGE NEWSPAPER BUS & AD MGRS ASSOC 0L1PHANT ONE-TIME EXPENSES COLLEGE MEDIA ADVISORS BLOOM COUNTY STUDENT PRESS LAW CENTER CALVIN 4 HOBBES PHOTOGRAPHY EQUIPMENT AD PRODUCTION LIGHT TABLES EQUIPMENT SUPPLIES & MAINTENANCE LIBRARY OFFICE CHAIRS PHONES PC SERVICE CONTRACTS - 2 PUBLICATION SUBSCRIPTIONS CYPHER LOCK CHANGES 4 ACQUISITIONS EQUIPMENT REPAIR CONTINGENCY TOTAL ONE-TIME EXPENSES