THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1995 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA E933E Asian Americans gather Speakers to examine diverse roots challenge By HARRIS HWANG "We wanted to do something They came from countries that might debunk the model such as , Korea, the minority myth," Jer said. "Most students Phillipines and India. Or at of the Asians at Duke are from least their forefathers did. middle- [to] upper-class subur­ By HARRIS HWANG Last Friday, about 900 Asian- bia, so most of the Duke com­ Three speakers urged nearly American college students rep- munity might think that all 500 students from about 30 resenting universities from Asians are from the [middle or East Coast universities to step Colby College in Maine to the upper class]. Not all Asian forward in the battle to elimi­ University of Miami journeyed Americans are from this class. nate Asian-American discrimi­ to Duke to attend the 17th an­ There is a significant percent­ nation Saturday. nua! East Coast Asian Student age in our nation's inner cities." Speaking as part ofthe 17th ' Union Conference, marking the Attendees said raising such annual East Coast Asian Stu­ first time that Duke has ever awareness in American society dent Union Conference, they hosted the event. is important in an effort to gain addressed the conference's This year's conference ex­ equal rights for Asian Ameri­ theme, "Exposing the Plight of pounded on the cans. Asian Pacific Americans in our theme,"Exposing the Plight of "You look at places like Nation's Inner Cities," and re­ Asian Pacific Americans in our Chinatown, and when you go counted their own experiences Nation's Inner Cities." Trinity there, it's a lot different from overcoming prejudice. J.D. senior Darren Jer, co-coordina­ suburban areas," said Kei Hokoyama, keynote speaker, tor of the conference, said the Kurihara, a junior from the TOM HOGARTY/THE CHRONICLE sought to dispel myths and ste­ theme was relevant to the so­ University of Vermont. "You see reotypes held about Asian J.D. Hokoyama, keynote speaker for ECASU 1995, addresses Americans. cioeconomic climate at Duke. See ECASU on page 6 • students about confronting the model minority myth. "We need to confront myths like the model minority myth— a stereotype that we have made it in the country, are rich and Prop. 187's legal, political effects discussed secure, and have overcome all By HARRIS HWANG forms of discrimination," such as health care and educa­ can Legal Center of Southern ers. Hokoyama said. A discussion Saturday on tion. Supporters of the law say California. "It's harmful to the One attendee of the confer­ California's controversial immi­ it will help California and other sick and the poor." ence, Dean Nafarrette, a senior "In reality, we are not all the gration policy touched on states save money and stem il­ One panelist said the initia­ at the U.S. Naval Academy, model minority. We run the broader issues of racial attitudes legal immigration. Since the tive shows how groups such as agreed that the proposition whole range. We also have in­ in America. election, there have been numer­ Mexicans and Asians have be­ marginalizes minorities, regard­ dividuals who are struggling," Speaking in Page Auditorium-, ous lawsuits filed to oppose the come scapegoats for the Ameri­ less of whether or not they are he said. four panelists gathered with initiative on grounds that it will can public. "The majority ofthe illegal immigrants. "Proposition Hokoyama currently serves about 500 members ofthe East marginalize legal immigrants people who are illegal did not 187 is directed towards all mi­ as president and executive di­ Coast Asian Student Union and American citizens who are come across the Mexican border. norities," Nafarrette said. "{You] rector of Leadership for Asian Conference to address the legal members of minority groups. Why don't people talk about the take it personally because it's Pacifies, a non-profit organiza­ and political ramifications of "The law will be abused [be­ Canadian or Italian [illegal im­ your own race, it's you." tion founded in 1982 to increase Proposition 187. cause] people with accents or migrants]? Who are they attack­ the number of leadership posi­ Nevertheless, panelists tions among Asian Americans. Passed in last November's people who don't speak English ing? People of color," said Emma stressed that the issues raised election, the controversial Cali­ can't defend themselves," said Gee, co-founder and chair ofthe by Proposition 187 should not be Hokoyama sought young fornia state initiative denies il­ panelist Carolyn La, staff attor­ board of directors of Pacific viewed in purely racial terms. leaders in the audience to ex- legal immigrants public services ney at the Austin Pacific Ameri­ Asian-American Women Writ­ See PROP 187 on page 14 *- See SPEAKERS on page 13 • Author calls for gender equity in NCAA sports By ALLISON CREEKMORE Setting a Course for College A feminist journalist and au­ Athletics." The conference was thor came to campus this week­ presented by the Duke Journal end demanding gender equity of Gender Law and Policy in in athletics. the TerrTen y Sanford Institute of "It's time for equal opportopportuu- Public iPolic y on Friday and nity," said Mariah Saturday. While Nelson, who specifi­ Nelson played varsity cally writes about basketball at gender issues and Stanford in the late sports. "If women 1970s and later • B^ KL. TU had 70 percent ofthe played professional r athletic opportuni­ basketball in Europe, ties and men had 30 her career since then percent [of the ath­ has focused on sports

TOM HOGARTY/THE CHRONICLE letic opportunities] and feminism; she has for the next 100 Nelson written for several With flying colors... years, that would be 0 newspapers and peri­ Vice President and Vice Provost Leonard Beckum (r.) was honored by the Omega Zeta chapter of justice." odicals and has also published Omega Psi Phi fraternity Sunday night at a banquet In the Bryan Center's Von Canon Hall. Nelson headlined a confer two books on the same subjects. ence titled "Gender and Sports See GENDER on page 14 • THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1995 World and National

Newsfile Egypt takes issue with Israeli weaponry Associated Press Rebels attack: Kuki rebels By YOUSSEF IBRAHIM An unconfirmed report on Sunday in Middle Eastern countries, notably Iran, hurled explosives and attacked se­ N.Y. Times News Service Maariv, an Israeli daily, said that as a Iraq, and Libya, do not pose a nuclear curity forces during weekend elec­ PARIS — Egypt's foreign minister, conciliatory gesture, Israel was prepared threat. tions in southeastern India's Amr Moussa, said on Sunday that, af­ to allow Egyptian scientists to visit their Peres, Moussa, and Arafat were in Manipur state that killed six people, ter 15 years of relative serenity in rela­ Israeli counterparts to discuss nuclear Paris at a conference on the future of a news agency said. tions with Israel, "serious difficulties" issues. the Mediterranean after peace comes had emerged. At issue, he said, are Yigal Palmor, a spokesman for the Is­ about. Witness finds: A witness with Israel's nuclear weapons program and raeli Foreign Ministry, would not com­ Moussa's remarks came at the end of knowledge of links between the Sicil­ the "fragile and vulnerable" state of ment beyond saying: "There are talks a tense week during which Prime Min­ ian Mafia and Italian politicians has talks between Israel, the Palestinians, given prosecutors new evidence going on between us and the Egyptians ister Yitzhak Rabin of Israel accused against Giulio Andreotti, a former Syria, and Lebanon. on a possible compromise." him of leading a hostile campaign to prime minister under investigation In a wide-ranging conversation here, But Peres insisted that Israel had not embarrass Israel over the nuclear non- on suspicion of Mafia ties. he said that Arab countries would insist wavered in its refusal to sign the proliferation issue. The treaty to limit that Israel accept some restraints on its Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. the number of countries with nuclear Gramm defends: Sen. Phil nuclear arms, because of concerns that Israel's stated position is that it will not weapons is up for indefinite extension Gramm, defending the fact that he "Israeli extremists" could come to power sign until it is satisfied that other See WEAPONS on page 5 > did not serve in Vietnam, says his and be tempted to use them. actions are different from President Moussa spoke at his hotel here after Clinton's because he supported the war instead protesting it. attending meetings on Saturday with Britain using border checks the Israeli foreign minister, Shimon ISSlie rises: Republican presiden­ Peres, and the chairman of the Pales­ tial hopefuls Sen. Phil Gramm, R- tine Liberation Organization, Yasser to keep out immigrant flood Texas., and Senate Majority Leader Arafat. The meetings failed to budge the Bob Dole, R-Kan., are making affir­ frozen peace negotiations. By WILLIAM MEILLER Major was forced to make the state­ mative action an early campaign is­ Peres sounded conciliatory in his re­ N.Y. Times News Service ment after the immigration issue — sue, saying they want to end such sponse on Sunday, saying in a state­ LONDON —At a time when anti-im­ with its undertones of nationalism and programs as they now exist. ment: "It is only natural that differences migrant feeling is on the rise in several racism — landed on the political agenda of opinions exist even among friends." European countries, Britain vowed last with the unexpected resignation of a In impromptu remarks to reporters, week to maintain its border checks in government minister. he said that talks on Saturday between order to keep out a feared flood of immi­ Taking the political community by Weather Moussa and Arafat had softened dis­ grants from the Third World and East­ surprise, Charles Wardle, who was im­ Tuesday agreements over the slow pace of Mid­ ern Europe. migration minister for two years before High: 60s • Partly cloudy east negotiations. But in an interview "We are determined to maintain our taking up his most recent post as a jun­ Low: still warm • Winds: rewritten broadcast on Israeli television on Sun­ fair but firm immigration policies and ior trade minister, said he was quitting To love another person is to see day, Peres complained about Iran's pur­ that means we shall retain our border in order to alert the nation to the dan­ the face of God. -Victor Hugo suit of nuclear research, saying: "Why controls," Prime Minister John Major ger of an "uncontrolled" flood of immi- isn't anyone saying anything to Iran?" told the House of Commons last week. See IMMIGRANTS on page 7 • Half Price on The Spring Babysitting Full Color and Elder Care Directory • will be published in The Chronicle Wednesday, February 22. 50% OFF Film Developing This directory is a cooperative Take advantage of this great when you drop your film off offer! Save 50% OFF the reg- at work! It's a deal you can't project between The Chronicle ular price of film developing. pass up. But hurry, it's a Plus, save valuable time limited time offer.. and the Employee and Family Programs Department.

Kodakix 50% OFF Film Developing Offer good for 50% OFF develop and prinl processing of one roil of color print film. Available from 110, 126. disc, or 35mm full-frame color print film. Photo Galaxy" not available from 126. Offer good with Standard Processing or KODALUX Processing Services. Not valid with panoramic, PROWe5"1 or 1/2 frame 135 film. Cannot be combined with another offer or with KODALUX Mailers. One coupon per order. Coupon must be included with order. Offer expires 2-25-95. Pink Smock Gift Shops Employae Drop off at PRT Photo Center located in Duke South & North ..feme Shuttle lobbies MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1995 THE CHRONICLE Federal government garnishes wages to collect loans

From staff reports Paul Allvin, Arizona Students' Association executive The Clinton administration has announced that bor­ director. rowers must pay off their student loans through monthly Ivory Towers McGrath said that the bill would save taxpayer payments based on income or risk having their wages money and classroom space, Allvin was skeptical garnished. Arizona limits credits: A new bill in the Arizona about its effects. Under the new system, defaulters can get out of debt State Legislature may punish students at the Univer­ by negotiating a repayment plan based on income and sity of Arizona if they take more classes than their ma­ College pays unemployed grads: Next year, St. outstanding balance. jor requires. John's Fisher College of Rochester, N.Y, will pay quali­ Defaulters who fail to arrange a payment plan with Students who take more than 10 classes over their fying graduates $417 per month, up to a total of $5,000, the U.S. Department of Education may now have their major requirements would be forced to pay the non-resi­ if they cannot find a job within six months of gradua­ wages garnished if they do not object to the proposed dent tuition of $7,434 per academic year, more than tion. garnishment within 30 days of notification. $5,000 greater than the current resident tuition of To qualify for the new program, named the Fisher The Education Department will continue in 1995 to $1,828. Commitment, students must complete a job-related in­ collect on loans to borrowers who are in default through "We have these people who make a hobby out of going ternship, plan their careers with academic advisors, join IRS withholding of borrowers' federal income tax re­ to school," said the bill's sponsor, Rep. Jean McGrath. "I certain student activities and graduate with at least a funds. In additon to being subject to the threat of wage don't think it is incumbent upon the state of Arizona to 2.75 grade point average. garnishment, defaulters are ineligible for further fed­ pay for their hobby." After receiving their diploma, graduates must remain eral student aid and will have their default status re­ Some groups fear that the measure would severely in contact with the college, both to receive guidance from ported to credit bureaus. undercut those who change their major, transfer from the college's career counselors and to demonstrate that In 1994, defaulted student loans cost taxpayers $2.4 another school or double major. they are actively pursing job leads. "A college degree is billion, of which $598 million was recovered through "It will hurt so many students. Thousands and thou­ not a magic piece of paper," said Fisher President Will­ withholding refunds. sands go units over through no fault of their own," said iam Pickett. "It has to be a symbol of some real change that has happened in a student's life." Class of '95 concert tickets to go on sale From staff reports This year's senior concert will feature three bands for the price of one: The Dave Matthews Band, Big- head Todd and the Monsters and an opening act, The Ugly Americans. The concert, scheduled to take place in Cameron Indoor Stadium on April 7, is an annual event tradi­ tionally sponsored by the senior class. This year, the event is sponsored by the University Union's Major Attractions Committee. Trinity sophomore Andrew Fechner, chair of the committee, said Sunday that seniors would be able to get their tickets free in a three-step process. Seniors can sign-up for tickets starting Wednesday on the Bryan Center walkway and continuing through Tues­ day, Feb. 28. Line numbers, which will determine seat­ ing preference, will be given out on the walkway on March 3 at 1 p.m. Seniors can pick up their tickets on the day of the concert. Better when dry.. For the rest of the community, line numbers will be Visitors pause in the rain Saturday on West Campus' main quad before being led to the next "area of given out Feb. 28 at 12:30 p.m. on the walkway, interest." Rainfall last week topped February's average. Fechner said. Tickets may be purchased at Page Box Office on March 3 at $18.50 each. DIALOGUE: RACISM Freewater Productions is offering a grant of up to $1500 to any undergraduate, "Institutionalized graduate, or community member for the production of a student film. Racism" Applications are available at the Bryan "Men [people] hate each other moved to because they fear each other, Center Information Desk and are due on and they fear each other Monday, March 6. because they don't know each other and they don't know each other because they are often separated from each other." The production period will extend from February 20th at 8:00pm Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Monday, March 20 to the semester's end. Monday, February 20, 7 to 9 PM A completed film is expected by the end Duke University of the Fall semester 1995. For more Mary Lou Williams Center information call Freewater Productions West Campus: Basement of West Union, Room 02 Chairman Matt Littin at 684-2911. General Admission Join with others to learn new information, share e:\periences, ask questions and DIALOGUE Tickets available al FREE ADMISSION Page Box Office REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED 684-4444 !„ Sp- w.r, [r.Jurj; CmuwHing ind FSichulupial Sen UTS. Batol Club. InUiimc Fn TV Healing Of H*MI. THE CHRONICLE MONDAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1995 Killing of exiled anti-apartheid campaigners attempted By The Times admiring policemen put him up in an According to preliminary testimony unlocked cell with a cocktail bar, cellu­ compiled by the prosecutors, the "De Kock's order to them was to spread the lar telephone, and color TV and allowed Vlakplaas unit bombed the headquar­ AIDS virus amongst the prostitutes in the area." visiting privileges for his old buddies. ters of labor unions and church groups Before his cozy life was leaked to the and conducted cross-border raids to kill newspapers and he was moved to a anti-apartheid campaigners in exile. Vlakplaas member Willem Nortje maximum security cell, he made out­ ' Some ofthe unit's presumed ventures ings to bars and rugby games. seem to reflect a taste for god-playing. Although Mandela has said that de Willem Nortje, one of several Vlakplaas president, P.W. de Klerk, called off the tomatic rifles, rocket-launchers, and Kock should not be eligible for a re­ members expected to testify against the war, freed Nelson Mandela from prison, grenades to the Zulu-based Inkatha prieve, prosecutors worry that their defendant, told prosecutors that de and agreed to negotiate the end of white Freedom Party for its civil war against case could be aborted by an appeal to Kock onee sent four sick members of his rule. A few months later, the Vlakplaas Mandela's organization, the African the forthcoming truth commission. unit to a seedy area of Johannesburg unit was ostensibly disbanded. National Congress. De Kock's lawyer, Flip Hatting, said on what seemed to be a bizarre errand But the Vlakplaas operatives contin­ Within the tight fraternity of white resis­ his client was considering seeking im­ of divine retribution. ued their labor of resistance, specializ­ tance, de Kock remains even now a hero, munity from prosecution. "De Kock's order to them was to ing now in fomenting fratricidal war­ an invincible commando who retired from "We've got to wait and see what the spread the AIDS virus amongst the fare among blacks. the police with a $350,000 golden hand­ act looks like, the cutoff date, and the prostitutes in the area," Nortje said. According to a judicial inquest last shake approved by de Klerk's Cabinet. definition of what offenses would In February 1990, the last white year, Vlakplaas operatives supplied au­ When de Kock was arrested last May, See APARTHEID on page 13 • Clinton accused of using abortion to divide Republicans By JIM ABRAMS tion an issue to divide Republicans." surprised if he did get confirmed." abortions he had performed. Associated Press Clinton "makes a grave mistake Clinton also criticized lawmakers, The White House, however, is as­ WASHINGTON (AP) — President when he refers to pro-life supporters including Democrats, who have spo­ serting that Republicans are opposing Clinton is making a "grave mistake" as extremists," Dole added. ken against the nomination. "This is Foster, a man with a long career in in using the troubled nomination of Foster's nomination ran into trouble an outstanding man with an outstand­ reducing teenage pregnancies, in or­ Dr. Henry Foster as surgeon general after it was revealed that the Tennes­ ing record who deserves to be con­ der to stay in the good graces of the to brand anti-abortion groups as ex­ see obstetrician-gynecologist performed firmed. If they don't want to vote for anti-abortion right. tremists, Senate Majority Leader Bob some abortions during a nearly 40-year him, that's their problem, not mine," Dole said the Senate Republican Dole said Sunday. career. he said in the interview taped last whip is trying to ascertain how GOP Dole, speaking on ABC's "This Week The president, in an interview sched­ week. and Democratic senators will vote on with David Brinkley," urged the presi­ uled for broadcast Monday, reiterated Senate Republicans opposed to Fos­ Foster. dent to drop the nomination if it be­ his support for Foster. "I don't think that ter have sought to avoid a showdown "When I make that determination, comes clear Foster doesn't have he has done anything that disqualifies over abortion, pointing instead to the I'll pass the information on to the enough votes in the Senate to be con­ him," Clinton told CBS's 'This Morning." issue of credibility resulting from con­ president," Dole said. "If he doesn't firmed. He said President Clinton is "I don't think it's dead," he said of flicting statements from Foster and have the votes, I don't see any reason using the nomination to "make abor­ Foster's nomination. "I wouldn't be the White House on the number of See NOMINATION on page 15 •

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Tuesday, February 21 • 4:30 - 5:30 Room 101 • West Duke Building THE CHRONICLE East Campus The Duke Community's Daily Newspaper A New Undergraduate Interdisciplinary Certificate Program 101 W. Union Bide • 684-3811 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1995 THE CHRONICLE Cease-fire in Chechnya Nuclear weapons disrupt ends as fighting resumes Egyptian-Israeli relations By CHRIS BIRD their way into downtown Grozny • WEAPONS from page 2 to be the low point in relations since the Associated Press late Saturday and with attacks on in April. two countries signed a peace treaty in GOYITY, Russia — The cease-fire Russian positions in the city's Israel has also charged President Hosni 1979. in Chechnya expired as the sun southern outskirts. Mubarak of Egypt with impeding Israel's But the dispute over nuclear disarma­ went down Sunday, and the first It said Russian forces "blocked normalization of relations with other ment has taken center stage, as a num­ hours of darkness were rent by ex­ and eliminated" 80 Chechen fight­ Arab countries and lining them up behind ber of Arab countries have said they plosions that promised a resump­ ers who attempted an assault from Egypt's stand on the nuclear treaty. stand behind Cairo, threatening to deal tion ofthe war in all its ferocity. the south, using mortars, grenade The United States, which supports a blow to Washington's hopes that a Heavy explosions were heard ev­ launchers and small arms. Israel's position that its acquisition of majority of countries renew their com­ ery few minutes in this town about The bodies of 18 Russian service­ nuclear weapons is a separate issue mitments to the non-proliferation treaty. 10 miles south ofthe Chechen capi­ men killed during the truce were from the extension of the non-prolif­ Israel is reckoned by Western intelli­ tal, Grozny, but it could not be de­ brought to the main military base eration treaty, has hinted that it may gence services to have some 200 nuclear termined which side was firing. at Mozdok just outside Chechnya, penalize Egypt by reducing its $2 bil­ warheads. Although it has never ac­ Earlier, as the five-day truce was the ITAR-Tass news agency re­ lion annual aid. knowledged that officially, Israel has in its final hours, Russian and ported from the base. But Moussa said pressure would not argued that it faces potential threats Chechen rebel officials reportedly Meanwhile, Dudayev's loyalists dissuade Cairo, insisting that Israel from Iran, Iraq, and Libya, which are consulted by telephone to arrange were setting up pockets of resis­ must give concrete assurances that it said to be at various stages of develop­ another round of talks. But the tance in settlements to the east of would address Arab concerns. ing nuclear arms technology. Russian commander said his side Grozny, the press service said. "We are called upon to vote on the But Moussa said that if Israel did not "has exhausted existing possibili­ In the capital, Russian artillery, universality of a treaty and its eternity," join a nuclear disarmament program, ties to stop armed conflict." mortars and tanks shelled Moussa said. "We are told, however, that "the region is certain to slip into an arms Russia must now "take adequate Chechen-held areas into the early universality does not apply to Israel. race, which, to our way of thinking, measures," Col. Gen. Anatoly hours Sunday, the Interfax news How can a country in its right mind ac­ would be a catastrophic development." Kulikov said in a statement. agency reported. cept an eternal commitment of this sort Asked what concrete steps he had Russia's peace proposals in the Dudayev's military aide Musa with its neighbor being allowed to re­ in mind for Israel to take, Moussa 10-week-old war have amounted to Merzhuyev, speaking to Interfax, tain and develop nuclear arms? said: "Israel must become engaged in virtual demands for Chechen dis­ blamed the Russians for violating "Israel seems to have an attitude of a serious process of disarmament that armament. Chechen President the cease-fire by repeated artillery calling anyone who disagrees with her would deal with the nuclear problem Dzhokhar Dudayev has been no bombardments of Chechen posi­ policies an enemy. We hope they come and arms of mass destruction in the more flexible, saying that he is "un­ tions around Grozny. to see our interest in regional security Mideast region." conditionally" ready for peace — Interfax said representatives and the advancement of Palestinian-Is­ The adamant Egyptian position has except for the condition that Rus­ from both sides were in telephone raeli talks to be just as important as puzzled Middle East experts, since the sia withdraw its troops. contact Sunday to determine if and their concern for economic cooperation issue of Israel's nuclear weapons has not Moscow's government press ser­ when peace talks should be re­ and greater normalization." been raised in the last few years and the vice said the Chechens breached sumed, and Merzhuyev said even The Israeli complaint against Egypt consequences of American anger could the truce with an attempt to force See CHECHNYA on page 15 • last week came during what many ex­ bear heavy penalties for Egypt's hard- perts in Middle East affairs considered 1 economy.

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Founders' Week Celebration February 20-25, 1995

£>r&ee>t(te Gloria Anzaldua Latina, Chicana dyke-feminist, tejana patlache poet, writer and cultural theorist. Her works include Borderlands/La Frontera: the New Mestizo, This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color, and Making Face, Making Soul/Haciendo Caras: Creative and Critical Perspectives by Feminists of Color.

7 pm, February 21 Von Canon, Bryan Center Duke University MONDAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1995 THE CHRONICLE Dole emerges Britain pressured to relax borders IMMIGRANTS from page 2 partners to drop their controls. Jacques Santer, the grants. new president ofthe European Commission, the EU's as front-runner Britain, he said, was not doing enough to withstand administrative body, has told the European Parliament pressures from the European Union to drop its border that the commission would use all its legal powers to By SCOTT SHEPARD achieve a frontier-free Europe. N.Y. Times News Service controls. An ally, Sir Winston Churchill, grandson of the World War II leader, said that to drop border con­ On March 26, the first major step toward the EU's MANCHESTER, N.H. — The campaign for trols would be "a disaster for Britain." goal will be achieved when seven countries — Belgium, the 1996 Republican presidential campaign be­ The 15-nation European Union is committed to dis­ the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Germany, France, gan Sunday with Senate Majority Leader Bob Spain and Portugal — abolish border checks. Dole, a two-time candidate for president, emerg­ mantling all internal borders, making it possible for ing as the clear front-runner. the community's 350 million citizens to move freely Greece and Italy are expected to join by the end of from one EU state to another — in effect, traveling the year. Polls coming exactly one year before New from the Mediterranean to the Arctic Circle without Even this step, however, is not being taken without Hampshire's first-in-the-nation primary showed showing a passport. reservations. Dole with a commanding lead over a field that could include as many as nine candidates be­ Britain, Ireland and Denmark, however, won agree­ France has agreed to suspend border checks only fore the actual voting next Feb. 20. ment in 1985 for an opt-out enabling them to main­ for a three-month trial period, and Germany has tain border controls. moved an additional 500 border police to its western But in New Hampshire, the politics are per­ frontiers. sonal, dominated by grassroots organizing and Now, all three are under pressure from community party activists rather than money and adver­ tising. And leading in the polls, even by more than 30 points, as does Dole, does not guaran­ tee victory. RAPE AWARENESS WEEK Consequently, Dole and eight other prominent Republicans — some declared candidates, some February 19-26, 1995 not — came to Manchester for the state Repub­ An Event for Women and Men, Students, Employees and Visitors lican Party's $100-a-plate annual fundraising dinner Sunday night. TIE A RIBBON on the Quad Dole, acknowledging his front-runner status, in honor of you or the survivors of sexual violence you know. Pick up quipped to the dinner audience that he would like the New Hampshire primary to be even ribbons at the Bryan Center Info Desk, the Phone Desk in Perkins, the earlier in the presidential campaign. Women's Center, and at the information displays in the East Union, "If you move it up to tomorrow, that would be Trent Cafe and on the BC Walkway. Stop by the Alumni Lounge to all right with me," he said. write why you tied a ribbon and to read why others did. The event attracted 1,400 party activists, most of whom are still undecided on which candidate MONDAY • OLEANNA they will support. Ofthe 140 tables sold, only 8:00 p.m. Reynolds Industries Theater. A controversial play by David 40 were aligned with campaigns. February 20 Mamet about gender and power on the college campus. A panel with Long before any of the candidates took the podium, there was what David Currier, a state cast and members of the Duke community follows. For tickets and senator, described as "hand-to-hand combat" group discounts call Page Box Office, 684-4444. with the candidates moving from table to table soliciting support. TUESDAY • SECONDARY SURVIVORS OF SEXUAL ASSAULT With so many candidates and no clear issue February 21 7:30 p.m. Duke Women's Center. John Butler, Coordinator of the Duke dominating the way the economic recession did Men's Project will share some of the common responses of friends and in 1992 and with al! the candidates portraying themselves as anti-government, organizing for family to the rape of a loved one. the 1996 GOP primary becomes even more im­ portant. WEDNESDAY •NIGHT AT THE IMPROV By virtue of his position as Senate majority February 22 with Duke Acquaintance Rape Education (DARE) leader, Dole got the coveted spot of speaking first 6:30 p.m. Duke Women's Center. Come to watch or participate in Sunday, followed by his congressional col­ hilarious improvs such as the Sex Machine. leagues: Sens. Phil Gramm of Texas, Richard Lugar of Indiana, Arlen Specter of Pennsylva­ •DIFFERENT COMMUNITIES ON CAMPUS - nia and Rep. Bob Dornan of California. How We Deal With Rape Next were former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander, former Labor Secretary Lynn Mar­ 8:00 p.m. Duke Women's Center. Shirley Collado will explore how tin, former State Department official Alan Keyes various cultures and communities at Duke approach the problem of and television commentator Pat Buchanan. sexual violence. Dole, who at 73 would be the oldest president in the country's history, sought to address the THURSDAY • CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE - age issue by reminding the audience of his World February 23 Why It Matters on the College Campus War II heroism, declaring that there may be "one more mission for my generation." 7:30 p.m. Duke Women's Center. Alumna Anne DePrince gives a must- Dole, who was skewered by George Bush as hear presentation on how events in childhood can have a huge impact "Senator Straddle" for refusing to rule out in­ on college students. creasing taxes in 1988, sought to avoid a repeat of his past failures, vowing not only to cut taxes FRIDAY • SPEAK OUT but to consider a flat tax. February 24 1:00-4:00 p.m. Clocktower Quad. A time for survivors and friends to tell Gramm, widely regarded as Dole's chief op­ their stories. If you would like your story to be read anonymously, ponent, wrapped himself in the Ronald Reagan please submit it to the Women's Center by 2/24,12:00 p.m. RAINSlTE: mantle, recalling his role in promoting the Reagan tax cuts and opposing the Clinton health The Alumni Lounge. care bill. "I was conservative before conserva­ tive was cool," he said. • CELEBRATION OF COURAGE In weekend polls by both Boston newspapers, 4:30 p.m. Duke Women's Center. A gathering and healing service for Gramm trailed Dole by as much as 33 percent, survivors and their friends, including music, dance and poetry. despite his lead in fund raising and early orga­ nizing in the states with primaries immediately •MOVIE NIGHT - What's Love Got To Do With It following New Hampshire's. 8:00 p.m. Duke Women's Center. Come watch and discuss the powerful To halt Dole's momentum, should he hold on film version of Tina Turner's life and her escape from an abusive mar­ to his commanding lead in New Hampshire, Gramm's supporters are following a "firewall" riage. Co-sponsored by the Student Working Group on Relationship strategy similar to the one used by George Bush Violence. in 1988. Bush's strategists got South Carolina to move up its voting in 1988 to give Bush some momen- See DOLE on page 15 • Letters to the Editor THE CHRONICLE Independents 'betrayed' by Keohane FEBRUARY 20. 1995 The following is an open letter to Presi­ mentioned as a possibility. Never. Now, dent Nan Keohane. approximately 300 students will face the Now that you have made your true prospect of living on North next year. intentions known, I am taking this op­ In your haste to implement your plan, Make 'em pay portunity to give you feedback on the you have betrayed a large group of stu­ residential plan. This past fall, the sum­ dents—independents. If we, the inde­ Cash bar, investment key to alcohol planmarie s ofthe six final residential plans pendents, were to share the burden of under discussion were published in the this unfortunate situation with the rest It's that time of year again. be. Not only do such conditions fos­ newspaper, and Duke Student Govern­ ofthe living groups on campus perhaps For as long as most undergraduates ter underage drinking, but they also ment representatives visited residen­ we would be more understanding. Inde­ can remember, spring is the season increase the risk that a student can tial falls to discuss the plans with the pendents should not be punished for for alcohol policy revisions. In the keep drinking well past "when to students. Two of the six plans stated choosingnot to join a formal living group. past, such changes were usually the say when." With such easy access to that North "could be phased out" before alcohol, students continue to be sent Your idea of "student involvement" is purview ofa fierce student vs. admin­ ultimately closing, but there was not nothing but a pretense for kowtowing to istrator debate, with students calling to the emergency room at an alarm­ mention of upperclassmen taking part fraternities and selective houses. And for ever-increasing access to beer while ingly high rate: Last semester wit­ in that "phasing," (The other plans had any selective house or fraternity that officials clamored to cut off the tap. nessed a threefold increase in such North closing immediately or remaining cries about how their house will vanish This time, things could be different. visitations compared to fall 1993. unchanged.) You, Madame President, on North should take a good look at their Coming on the heels ofa call by the To prevent such problems, the Uni­ made a conscious effort to involve the group and decide if they're in it for the Interfraternity Council to end open versity should move to a cash bar student body in the formulation of the shared experiences or just housing on distribution, administrators and stu­ policy for all open parties. new residential plan. West, Perhaps it is time for the indepen­ dent leaders have held numerous dis­ This policy would have several ben­ Ironically, that residential plan made a dents to get organized. cussions on the issues involved in efits. First, by hiring a licensed bar­ mockery of that "student involvement." It policy reform. tender, living groups would avoid the was assumed that upperclassmen would Andrew Hill Perhaps most importantly, those temptation placed on students to serve not live on North since this was never Trinity '98 dealing with the alcohol policy have underaged drinkers or students who acknowledged that social life on cam­ have clearly "had enough." Clum 'blatantly transgressed' truth pus, and not drinking per se, should Second, charging a nominal fee for be the focus of any new plan. The students to drink would require them It is rare to find a professor at a major advance the rights of lesbian and gay success or failure ofthe policy will rest to consider, for at least the time it took academic institution such as Duke who men." But it doesn't stop there. The on whether or not administrators turn to pull out a wallet, whether they steps outside the bounds ofprofessional ­ Human Rights Campaign Fund, with a that acknowledgment into a concrete really wanted "one more beer." At the ism and so blatantly transgresses cold, $3.2 million budget, is a political action commitment when Janet Dickerson, moment, the only deterrent to down­ hard facts for the sake of political dia­ committee specifically set up "to exert vice president for student affairs, an­ tribe. However, Professor John Clum in the power of lesbian and gay Americans ing another 12 ounces is having to his Feb. 17 column did exactly that. on national politics and legislation." In nounces the new policy next month. fight through the mob at the bar. Clum's faulty rhetoric falls victim to the 1992 elections they spent the same The task force that met last fall Finally, such a policy would free up his own inherent hypocrisy. While push­ amount as corporate giants Phillip devised a number of changes, such as student group funds—and creativ­ ing the noble idea that people should not Morris and General Electric, and more 24-hour access to athletic facilities ity—for new programs. Currently, be stereotyped, Clum himself consis­ than the top three conservative political and a campus pool hall, to expand administrators estimate groups spend tently generalizes that gay relationships action committees combined. In all, some social options. as much as $150,000 annually on al­ are more loving and stable than hetero­ pretty impressive figures for a suppos­ Too often, however, such renova- cohol- A consumer-funded cash bar sexual ones. But even Randy Shilts, edly nonexistent political lobby. tionsorprogramsappear as "unfunded would make that spending unneces­ author of "And the Band Played On," However, what is most reprehensible mandates" alongside policy changes. sary. If even a fraction of those funds suggests that the rampant spread ofthe is that someone who is supposed to rep­ This time, Dickerson should be pre­ were directed toward creative pro­ HIV virus throughout the homosexual resent the best of academia would dare pared to put her money where her gramming options, social options on community during the 1980s was most compare the struggle for special gay mouth is when it comes to improved campus would doubtless proliferate. definitely not the result of "stable, lov­ rights to the unspeakable atrocities of ing gay relationships." facilities and programming. Such changes will matter little, how­ the Holocaust. To do so is not only grossly At the same time, the policy for ever, if the University does not make Clum goes on to stereotype anyone unprofessional of Clum, but it also distribution of alcohol needs to a clear commitment to funding and who might disagree with his gay-rights trivializes one of the most repugnant change. Currently, students can con­ infrastructure for programming. Both agenda as "social radicals." How can episodes in modern human history. Clum sume an unlimited amount of alco­ students and administrators say they millions of religious, value-oriented has transformed the mass genocide of Americans concerned about the direc­ an entire race into a political tool for his hol at no cost, and the chaos of dis­ realize the need for a comprehensive own activist agenda. tribution at a typical keg party approach—let's hope it shows when tion of their nation be classified as a makes it nearly impossible to deter­ the plan is unveiled. If not, spring fringe radical movement? By the way, Professor Clum, just in mine how old—or how intoxicated— could remain "that time of year" for Clum also either did not bother to case you missed the last election, all of a student seeking another beer may decades to come. check the facts he put forward in his us who you label as "social radicals" are column, oris simply lying to himself and the ones who are truly everywhere. We the entire University community. Clum suggest you learn to deal with it. stated there is no homosexual lobby in THE CHRONICLE Washington, a point on which he is just Jason Barclay plain wrong. In fact, the National Gay Trinity '98 Alison Stuebe, Editor and Lesbian Task Force and the Lambda Russ Freyman, Managing Editor Jonathan Angier, General Manager Legal Defense and Education Fund col­ Andrew Bell Justin Dillon, Editorial Page Editor lectively spend $3 million a year "to Trinity '98 Sanjay Bhatt, University Editor Rose Martelli, University Editor Dan Wichman, Sports Editor Rebecca Christie, Medical Center Editor On the record Noah Bierman, Features Editor Megan Trevathan, Arts Editor Autumn Arnold, City & State Editor Geoffrey Green, Senior Editor In reality, we are not all the model minority. We run the whole range. We also have Scott Halpern, Senior Editor Doug Lynn, Photography Editor individuals who are struggling. Barry Persh, Graphic Design Editor Sue Newsome, Advertising Director Catherine Martin, Production Manager Christian Pregler, Advertising Manager J.D. Hokoyama, president and executive director of Leadership for Asian Adrienne Grant, Creative Services Manager Mary Weaver, Operations Manager Pacifies, on Asian-Pacific Americans Larry BohalL Classified Advertising Manager

The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company. Inc.. a non-profit corporation Letters policy: The Chronicle urges all of its readers to submit letters to the independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those editor. Letters must be typed and double-spaced and must not exceed 300 words. of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent They must be signed, dated and must include the author's class or department, the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. phone number and local address for purposes of verification. Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports; 684-6115; Business The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811: Classifieds: 684-6106; Editorial Fax: 684-4696; promotional in nature. Ad Fax: 684-8295. Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union Building; Business and Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building, Duke University. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters for length, clarity and style, and ©1995 The Chronicle, Box 90858. Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this to withhold letters based on the discretion ofthe editorial page editor. publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Letters should be mailed to Box 90858 or delivered in person to The Chronicle Office. offices on the third floor ofthe Flowers Building. THE CHRONICLE

WEEKLY PULL-OUT SPORTS SUPPLEMENT MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1995 SP0R1SWRAP Women's basketball holds off pesky Yellow Jackets By ALLISON CREEKMORE ets fell to 12-14 (4-10 ACC). That overlooking ofthe Yel­ Basketball teams up 19 points "The bottom line is that we low Jackets in the second half at halftime don't usually have won," Duke head coach Gail almost led to Duke's demise. problems maintaining such a Goestenkors said. "Down the The Blue Devils seemed lifeless lead. All they need to do is to stretch, when it got real tight, after halftime. keep their opponents in check. we did what we had to do to win. "I think we were a little too But the women's basketball We shouldn't have been in that complacent with how we were team had that problem versus situation, though." playing," junior center Alison Georgia The Blue Day said of Duke's problems in Tech on ACC WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Devils were the second half. "After the first Saturday unable to half we thought, 'Wow, we're afternoon STANDINGS avoid get­ doing great.' We just got a little in Cameron League Overall ting into bit too cocky and confident. I t *' - **i '• t^"'; *>•' Indoor Sta­ Virginia 13-0 20-3 that sit- like the way we were able to dium. North Carolina 10-4 23-4 u a t i o n , hold them off, but nobody is The Blue Duke 10-4 19-5 though. happy with the way we played Devils al­ N.C. State 9-5 16-8 The Yellow in the second half." most lost a Clemson 8-5 18-7 Jackets After the intermission, the huge lead Georgia Tech 4-10 12-14 dominated Yellow Jackets came out with a in the sec­ Wake Forest 3-11 10-14 Duke de­ vengeance. Duke only scored I ' | %•:• Florida State 3-11 8-18 ond half. fensively two points in the opening six \, fk •"'.'*?:•. - They led by Maryland 2-12 10-15 for much of minutes ofthe half, while Tech as many as the second tried to close in on the Blue 24 points in the first half, and it half. They outscored the Blue Devil lead. Georgia Tech made took a 19-point lead into the Devils 43-33 in the last 20 min­ a 14-4 run, cutting Duke's lead locker room. The pesky Yellow utes ofthe game, and Duke had to six by the 4:47 mark. Jackets, however, just wouldn't constant scoring droughts After a jumper by sophomore go away. Duke survived a scare throughout the half. guard Kira Orr with 59 seconds mi Wc in the closing minutes to snatch a victory from Georgia Tech, "We put in a new defense at remaining—which was quickly 77-68. No. 22 Duke improved to halftime," Georgia Tech head coach followed byafoulandtwo missed 19-5 (10-4 Atlantic Coast Con­ Agnus Berenato said. "We kind of free throws by Georgia Tech ference), while the Yellow Jack- felt out of it so we tried something sophomore star Kisha Ford—the different. We really believed we Blue Devils were up by seven could win the game. Duke prob­ with 52 seconds left. Duke sealed WEEKEND RESULTS ably never had any thought that the victory and left Tech in a BRIAN SCHOOLMAN/THE CHRONICLE we could come back." See TECH on page 6 •• Duke forward Tyish Hall was a force on the glass against Tech. VMi'iNilHNMHrarCT Georgia Tech Duke , Wolfpack rally locks Duke in ACC cellar pages 1, 4 By JEREMY LEVINE similar to their last-ditch RALEIGH—Play it effort in a three-point loss Duke 79 again, Sam. And again. at Florida State earlier this wmmmmnn And again. And again. N.C. State 84 season. Duke stacked both It was a new day, it was blocks and ran Langdon off pages 1, 4 a different gym and it was a pair of screens for a three- a another Atlantic Coast point attempt from the Conference opponent. But right corner. But N.C. Navy 3 the results were all the State defended Langdon Duke 12 same. As has happened on perfectly, so Duke swung page 3 many occasions this sea­ the ball to the left corner son, the men's basketball where an open Cherokee team faltered down the Parks jacked up a trey. stretch. This time N.C. "Cherokee, of all big men Maryland 25 State supplied the frustra­ in not the conference, but tion, handingthe Blue Dev­ the country, when he shoots page 3 ils an 84-79 defeat in the three, I feel it's going Reynolds Coliseum on Sat­ in," N.C. State head coach urday afternoon. Les Robinson said. "I didn't •I'IH:LH.H:I:IH Entering the game, a win want him shooting, and Duke 7 was crucial for both teams when I saw him squeeze to Notre Dame 0 if they hoped to avoid the TIGGER HITCHCOCK/THE CHRONICLE get open ... [I thought], play-in game at next Duke guard Ricky Price glides to the basket for two of his 17 points. 'Bam! He's going to hit...' month's Atlantic Coast HecanshootHereallycan." Conference tournament. N.C. lot of our games together, and right now we're just not tough." Although Duke's execution EEELUHnma State still has hopes of escaping they'd look really similar," fresh­ As has been the case in every was flawless, the jumper was Brigham Young 4 the basement battle as it im­ man guard Trajan Langdon one ofthe Blue Devils' six down- not. Parks, who finished with Duke 5 proved to 12-10(4-8 in the ACC). said. "We're ahead in the sec­ to-the-wire ACC losses, Duke 17 points and six rebounds, But at 11-14 (1-12), Duke has ond half, and towards the five had a chance to get back on top watched as his attempt bounced set a school record with 12 con­ or six-minute mark we start or tie the game. After N.C. State off the rim. And with just 17 '•'MAMJU-HWIAIAIUM ference losses and seems breaking down and givingteams freshman Ishua Benjamin sank seconds left, the Blue Devils trapped in an ever-repeating rut open shots. were forced to foul. Duke places seventh at both free throws in a 1-and-l to that has guaranteed the Blue "They start hitting them, they put the Wolfpack up 80-77, the "It was the same play, same the Atlantic Coast Devils a spot in the ACC tour­ take the lead and once they get Blue Devils burned a timeout Conference meet. shot and same player that we nament opener. the lead, it's tough for us to get it with 31 seconds remaining. had at Florida State," Duke act- "It seems like we could fuse a back. And that's our problem- They set up a play frightfully See STATE on page 5 > PAGE 2/THE CHRONICA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1995 Women's tennis overcomes injuries to top BYU, 5-4

By AMBER ISAK there's no reason to see her get hurt." CHAPEL HILL—Members of the Duke compensated for the default by women's tennis team often encourage quickly winning its next two matches and congratulate each other after a hard- with senior Monica Mraz at the No. 1 fought point by saying "So tough." And position and sophomore Karen tough they were last Friday. O'Sullivan at the No. 4 spot. Despite two injuries, the No. 6 Blue BYU battled back, though. Sophomore Devils were able to hold offNo. 20 Brigham Wendy Fix achieved Duke's last singles Young for a 5-4 win at the Cone-Kenfield win ofthe afternoon. At the No. 3 spot, Tennis Center in Chapel Hill. freshman Laura Zifer was defeated by "We got through a lot of adversity Angela Nelson, 6-4, 6-3. today," head coach Jody Hyden said. In the only three-set match between "Anytime we beat a team like BYU with the two teams, freshman Ellen McCance the things that went on today, it's just sprained her wrist when she went wide awesome. We were fighters today." for a ball and fell, landing on her hand. The match started off on a bad note The injury both physically and mentally !••! when senior Wendy Lyons was forced to affected McCance. Down 2-4 in the sec­ default at the No. 2 position due to a ond set when the incident occurred, she strained rotator cuff. Lyons had felt some dropped the next two games and then pain the day before fell 6-0 in the final but decided to start WOMEN'S TENNIS RESULTS .'•.•; . •. . ..••,:••. . • -..-,.; •••;:••• ;• playing the match Duke 5, Brigham Young 4 Heading into the anyway. After win­ doubles portion of CHERYL FRiCCHIONE/THE CHRONICLE ning the first game SINGLES the match, Duke Monica Mraz helped Duke with her No. 1 singles and doubles victories. against BYU's Jen f. Mraz CD) d. Kancsbire, 6-0.6-3, .: was even with the Soret, Lyons realized 2. SOret (BYU) d. Lyons, 1-0, ret Cougars at 3-3. from a close 3-2 advantage by winning In the next game, there was a dispute the pain was too 3:Nelson {BYU) d Zifer, 6-4, 6-3 - Mraz and three straight games. over whether or not a let was called by great for her to serve 4.O'Sullivan (D) d. Oomanico. 6-3,6 O'Sullivan paired The second set would not prove to be Menefee. Menefee claimed she had, but the second game, at 5. Hx (D) d. Mend'ce, 7-5, 6-2 up at No. 1 doubles, as easy. With the score 4-3 in Duke's the official didn't hear it. This gave Duke which point she de­ 6. Alder (BYU) d. McCance, 5-7.6-%6- and although the favor, the teams went to deuce, and a 40-15 advantage and the momentum faulted the match. DOUBLES second set was BYU won to even the score. Again at to win the game. 1. Mr;i/A>\Sui!iv;m (D) ii. Kaneshire/ "It's not worth close, with both deuce in the next game, the tables turned Yet BYU wasn't through. The Cougars Soret, 6-3,6-4 hurting something teams trading and Duke edged ahead, 5-4. were able to take the next game, again at 2.R\/Zifer(D) d. Mcnd'ee/Domansco, so early in the sea­ games, the Duke The team appeared to be heading for deuce, to force a tiebreaker. In the . 6-3. 7.-6 son that might make duo won with rela­ victory when Fix and Zifer jumped out to tiebreaker, BYU lost its steam. Fix and 3.Nelson/Alder (BYU) d. Spadea/ me sit out later," tive ease, 6-3, 6-4. an early 40-0 lead. At match point, how­ Zifer dominated, winning easily 7-2. McCance,4-1,ret. . . . • • Lyons said. The deciding ever, BYU hit a deep lob which bounced "Today was really a total team i "Wendy's such a fighter she would match then came down to No. 2 doubles on the baseline, cutting the celebrations fort-—everyone contributed because they have loved to have just served under­ where Fix and Zifer battled Julie short. The shot seemed to motivate the had to," Hyden said. "Adversity didn't handed to try and finish the match," Menefee and Michael Domanico. In the Cougars, as they came back and won the bother us, and that means we're on our Hyden said. "But the season's early and first set, the Blue Devils broke away game. way to being a really good team." Cameron Crtiy Appreciation Day j&DuLinux Wednesday, Feb. 22 \J The Linux Installation Experts Duke vs. FSU Ever wished you had a Unix X-Workstation

6:00 DINNER in your Compliments of Southern Catering Dinner provided for first 500 students dorm room? 6:45 Students admitted into Cameron. Complete Installations begin at only $20! Seniors will be given priority. Minimum Configuration: Dr. Leroy Walker, President of the (IS 7:00 386DX/33,8 MB RAM, 120 MB Free Disk Space Olympic Committee, will address the and an Installed & Registered Ethernet Card Cameron Crazies.

9:00 TIP-OFF!!! write [email protected]

Sponsored by: Duke Athletics, for more information Office of the President, DSG MONDAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1995 Tm; CHRONICLE / PAGE 3 Women end swim season at ACCs

By DAVID HEINEN clear that she's been committed to doing added to the Blue Heather Reger became the first Duke something very special." Devils' point total in women's swimmer since Olympian But while she knew that she had the- the consolation of Nancy Hogshead to garner All-Atlantic talent to be among the top swimmers in three individual Coast Conference honors this weekend. the conference, Reger still did not expect events. And fresh­ As a team, the Blue Devils placed seventh to swim a full second better than her man Dani Peterson in the ACC meet in Chapel Hill, with 210.5 previous best time in the event. advanced to the con­ points. North Carolina, thehost school, won "1 was really shocked," Reger said. "I solation of the 100- the competition with 804 points. knew I could get to the finals, but I never meterand 200-meter Although Duke finished in last place (only expected to get second. It was the best butterfly. seven ACC schools have women's swim­ meet since I've been here." Some of Duke's ming programs), several Blue Devils had The 100-meter breaststroke was not best performances of strong showings in the meet, and the team the only event in which Reger earned the meet came from was satisfied with its performance. points for Duke. She also placed sixth in its distance swim­ "I was really excited about the meet," the 200-meter breaststroke in 2:21, and mers. Sophomores head coach Bob Thompson said. "This was was 18th in the 200-meter individual Liz Harris and a nice way to finish the year for us. This medley. Her time in the 200-meter Kristin Sosinski and reminds me of why I enjoy being at Duke." breaststroke was also a Duke record. junior Abbey Jones Reger, a junior, placed second in the And Reger was part of two medley placed 13th, 14th conference in the 100-meter breast- relay teams—the 200-meters and 400- and 16th, respec­ stroke. Her 1:04.99 performance, which meters—which broke school records. tively, in the mile was just 0.2-seconds slower the winning Junior Molly Brown and sophomores freestyle. Thompson time, was also more than a second faster Abby Huggins and Sue Kresel joined was particularly than the school record in the event. Reger Reger as part of the record-breaking pleased with Harris, became just the fourth Duke swimmer relay squads. who has done well in in the last 17 years to earn All-ACC Brown swam 58.2 in the 100-meter dual meets this sea­ distinction—and the first since Hogs­ butterfly and came back to win the con­ son, but struggled in CHERYL FRICCHIONE/THE CHRONICLE head won four events at the conference solation finals ofthe 200-meter fly. the 500-meters ear­ Heather Reger breaststrokes to second place at ACCs. lier in the ACC meet. meet in 1981. "That was a great swim for her," Th­ "She is one of the most successful ompson said. "She had gone 2:10 in the The Blue Devils had hoped to slip past tion does," Thompson said. "You can swimmers I have coached in my 17 years morning, and was very disappointed with N.C. State into sixth place in the conference, only control what you do. I think we had at Duke," Thompson said. "I wasn't sur­ it. Then she came back and had a great but the Wolfpack performed better than a very successful meet. I was very pleased prised [with her second-place showing] swim and went 2:08." expected, particularly in the diving events. with our kids. There wasn't anything at all. She's been close before. And it was Kresel and junior Pam Morris each "You can't control what your competi- they could have done better." Terrapins slam wrestling to 25-9 loss Baseball's

By BRANDON EHRHART "Realistically, [Heckel! should be at anything else could go on, time ran out." The Maryland Terrapins crawled past 126, and we knew team-wise we would In the 150-pound weight class, hot hitting the wrestling team Saturday night in be stronger," Harvey said. Maryland's Pat Flynn was able to get Cameron Indoor Stadium. The match began with sophomore Indra junior Scott Frinzi off his feet for a Although Maryland defeated Duke 25- Sulijoadikusumo dropping a narrow 3-2 takedown en route to a 3-2 win. Senior sinks Navy 9, all of the Terrapins wins went the decision in the 118-pound class. With Keith Pavlick fell to the Terps' Mike Van distance, and they edged the Blue Devils Heckel's victory, Duke seized its only lead of Oss 6-3 at 158 pounds. By WILLIAM DVORANCHIK by a mere point in four of those victories. the match at 6-3. But freshman Dan Kocab, In the 190-pound weight class, After four straight days of rain, it "They didn't overpower us by any filling the void left by Heckel at 134 pounds, Maryland's Humphrey Atiemo, who was was doubtful that the Duke baseball means," Duke head coach Bill Harvey lost to Maryland's Shane Mack, 4-1. ranked nationally earlier this year, nar­ team would even be able to take the said. "We wrestled them right down to With the match knotted a six, Duke rowly defeated senior John Kays 5-4. field forthisweekend'sgames against wire just about every match. [The one- sophomore Dan Covatta faced Terrapin With under a minute left and the score the Navy Midshipmen. The sun point losses] are the worst kind of losing Jeff Whalen. Trailing 5-1 with 1:30 re­ 5-3, the referee awarded Kays one point smiled upon the Blue Devils, though, becauseyou can figure out so many ways maining, Covatta got an escape point, after calling Atiemo for stalling. How­ ever, Kays could not bring the fellow as the clouds parted and the field you could have won those." cutting the lead to three. As the clock dried up enough that Duke was able The lone pin ofthe match belonged to closed under 10 seconds, Covatta earned 190-pounder down in the few ticks left on the clock. to play on Sunday afternoon. the Blue Devils, as sophomore Chris two more points with a takedown, closing Navy was probably hopingthe storm Heckel picked up Maryland's Luke Leary the gap to 5-4, but the final seconds ticked "I was going into him and he just kept off before he could produce the finalpoint . clouds would reappear as the Blue before throwing him to the mat for the backingup,backingup," Kays said. "That Devil bats caught fire in the middle of pin. Actually listed in the 134-pound "I didn't score when I needed to, and was smart on his part because he could the game, leading Duke to a 12-3 weight class, Heckel moved down to last that is what it came down to," Covatta give up a few stalling points before the dismantling ofthe Midshipmen. The year's weight, 126 pounds, to pick up the said. "[At the end] we got in a flurry, I match closed out." victory. win was Duke's fifth straight, and the came out on top with a take down. Before With the match well in hand for the Blue Devils improved to 5-2 on the Terps, the Blue Devils did not roll over on season while Navy lost its season their backs, as sophomore heavyweight opener to start off at 0-1. Matt Eckerman defeated Maryland's The key to Duke's win came in the David Vermier 3-1 in an overtime thriller. fourth and sixth innings ofthe game. With a small but boisterous Maryland fan contingent shouting, Eckerman knot­ While the Blue Devils scattered some the score at one going into the third. of their 11 hits throughout the con­ Once in overtime, where a takedown guar­ test, all 12 of their runs were scored antees victory, the quicker Eckerman had in those two innings. the advantage. "I thought we became a little bit more aggressive with the bats after "We thought our lighter heavyweight the first three innings," assistant would be in better shape than their big coach David Koblentz said. "I thought guy," Harvey said. "If we have to, we'll their first pitcher got a little bit tired, take him into overtime, wear him down but he didn't throw too bad the first some more and then try to get the takedown. That's the way the plan was, half of the game. He kept the ball and the plan just happened to work." down and had a nice little slider." Duke scored its first three runs in Consequently, Eckerman gained a 3-1 the fourth inning on two hits. The victory, and Duke won its second contest Blue Devils waited until the sixth of the night. inning to put the game out of reach "It is a little disappointing when you get when they scored nine runs as 13 beat like this, but if want to look at some­ Blue Devil batters reached the plate. thing positive, we know that when we hit TOM HOGARTY/THE CHRONICLE Mike King led Duke's offense by hit- these guys in the ACCs, we can turn the one- See BASEBALL on page 7 k» Duke wrestler John Kays lost a tough match at 190-pounds versus Maryland. pointers around," Harvey said, PAGE 4/THE CHRONICI. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1995 Postseason just a dream for Duke RALEIGH—When asked if the men's basketball team still had a chance to make a postseason tourna­ ment, senior co-captain Kenny Blakeney just laughed. Game commentary "You're kidding, right?" Blakeney said. There is nothing unusual about this response from a David Heinen Duke basketball player near the end of the regular Meek has been a ferocious inside presence for Duke at season. Typically, by this time ofthe year, the Blue times this season. Both of these seniors are looking to Devils have already assured themselves ofa high seed Impress professional scouts so they can improve their in the NCAA Tournament. In recent years, Duke has stock for the NBA draft. used its late February regular season games and the And for the younger players, this season is a chance Atlantic Coast Conference tournament to build mo­ to hone their skills for the future. mentum for the upcoming March Madness. "A lot of stuff has happened to us this year," fresh­ And at the start ofthe season, the Blue Devi Is had no man Ricky Price said. "It's been a bad situation for us reason to imagine that this year would be much differ­ this year. But I'm going to stay positive no matter ent than previous seasons—Duke would be among the what. I'm looking forward to the rest ofthe games this best teams in the conference and the nation. Sure, season. And I'm looking definitely forward to next , Tony Lang and Marty Clark had gradu­ season when Coach I ] gets back." ated. But with the addition of three highly-touted Price bounced back slowly after an injury early in the freshmen and with seniors Blakeney, season. Against the Wolfpack, he showed that he can and Erik Meek stepping up their games, the team had be a leader on the court, scoring a career-high 17 points lofty expectations. and grabbing six rebounds. "[We thought] we were going to win the ACC," Parks Along with Price, freshman Trajan Langdon and said. "In the [NCAA] Tournament, we thought we'd go sophomore Jeff Capel have seen extensive playing to the Final Four again. That was realistic." time—which can only make them better in the future. But the 1994-95 campaign has turned out to be And junior Chris Collins has begun to play better of much worse than the Blue Devils expected—or even late, after struggling much of the year following bis imagined was possible. Saturday's 84-79 loss at return from a broken foot. Lifl TIGGER HITCHCOCK/THE CHRONICLE N.C. State typified this season for Duke. The Blue "Obviously it's been a disappointing year from the Devils led most ofthe game, but al lowed the Wolfpack start," Collins said. "I just told myself, Tou've got to Cherokee Parks one-handed alley-oop jam was remi­ to hit some crucial shots in the final minutes, and stop feeling sorry for yourself.' I think everybody on niscent of much-missed superstar Grant Hill. then couldn't come up with a big shot of their own in this team has got to stop feeling sorry for themselves the end. with everything that has happened. accomplish? Winning another game would probably be Now, with four games remaining, Duke's goals for "We've gone out and just competed, and I think our a good place to start. the season have changed. At 11-14 (1-12 in the ACC), team is going to be better for it." "My ultimate goal is just to win," Price said. "That's the Blue Devils are obviously out of contention for a But it is tough for a team which has been to the Final why I came here, and that's what I want to do. All the conference title or an at-large NCAA Tournament bid. Four seven ofthe last nine years—and has advanced to points that I had today, I'll trade in for a win. In fact, climbing out of last place in the conference or the national championship game four out ofthe past "Duke has prided itself on its winning, its national finishing the year with a winning record would take a five seasons—to think exclusively about the future. championships and its Final Fours, and now we're not minor miracle at this point. So what can Duke hope to The Blue Devils are still holding on to their last thread winning anything. We're last in our division, and accomplish the remainder ofthe season? of hope for this season—winning the ACC tournament. people are really laughing at us right now." "It's just game by game," Parks said. "I don't want to "I really just want to focus on each individual game," Saturday's game offered a good sample of Duke's use the word 'salvage,' but we've got to try to get what Meek said. "I want to enter into the ACC tournament struggles this season. Against State, the Blue Devils' we can. There's only a few games left. We've got team seeing that our team has developed to where we are statistics looked like those of a winning team. They goals or individual goals or whatever we think we can playing well together. Then we can enter a tournament shot 50 percent from the field and had 18 assists with accomplish the rest ofthe season." like that and do well." just six turnovers. Duke had good ball movement and Individual goals? Surely this can't be coming from the But Duke's prospects for the ACC tournament are balanced scoring. mouth of a co-captain of the Duke basketball team—a bleak at best. The Blue Devils are now assured of But the Blue Devils allowed the Wolfpack's Lakista program which has come to epitomize the spirit of team starting their spring break a day early so they can McCuller several open looks from the three-point arc, play in college athletics. But realistically, if the team is compete in the play-in game on Thursday, Mar. 9. No and committed 11 second half fouls, enabling State to to take anything positive from its frustrating season, it team from that No. 8 vs. No. 9 game has ever beaten the hit 18-of-21 free throws. may be individual accomplishments. top-seeded team the next day. And no ninth-place Although Duke showed some sparks against the Parks has put up big-time numbers this season- team has ever won a tournament game. Wolfpack, the result was something which has become averaging 19.3 points and 9.4 rebounds a game. And So what team goals are left for this Duke team to all too familiar this season—another loss. Duke women shoot for 20 against Clemson tonight By ALLISON CREEKMORE ever, the team posted 10 Atlantic Coast and the Blue Devils control their own In this matchup, Duke faces a Tiger The women's basketball team made Conference wins in a season. The accom­ fate in terms of finishing near the top of team which currently occupies fifth place history on Saturday afternoon in plishment, however, means little to this the conference. in the ACC standings. If the Blue Devils Cameron Indoor Stadium with a 77-68 year's talented crop of players. "We realize we're one win away from can outlast Clemson, they will have win over Georgia Tech. For the first time "It's great that we have the 10th win, the 20 wins, two games away from the locked up a no less than a third-place but our goals are bigger top three [in the ACC]," sophomore guard finish in the ACC. than that," Duke head Kira Orr said. "We just have to concen­ With the help of an 88-86 N.C. State GEORGIA TECH US. DUKE coach Gail Goestenkors trate on being able to play 40 complete double overtime win versus North Caro­ Georgia Teqh MP Ffi 3P6 FT R A TO Rl K ST PF PT5 Finney 37 5-9 5-7 22 5 1 2 1 • XT':-. said. "We never talked minutes of basketball. We can celebrate lina on Sunday, the Blue Devils are Ford 33 10-25 0-0 O 4 25- : about having 10 wins in after we reach our goals, not when we're currently tied with the Tar Heels for 17 2-4 ; 0*0 00 3 0 3 i 2. • A-' the conference. Our goal 20 0-5 0-2 0 0 2.. one win away from reaching those goals." second place in the conference. How­ Marlm ; 38 1-3 0-0: 6-0 3 t\ 7 2 is still to get the 20 wins, The Blue Devils played a lax second ever, Duke must win at least one of its Keener 12' 5-9 0-0 0-0 2 1) 0' 10- • to finish in the top three two final games to guarantee a top-three i 23 2-3 • 0-0 2-4 .5 0. . 1 A 4 half against the Yellow Jackets and came Smith 18 1-6- 0-2 OO .3 :2 • 0 C> <+ 2 2 [in the ACC] and to get close to blowing a 19-point halftime lead. finish in the conference. Caspar 2 G-0 Q-0 O-Q 1- 0 2 0 1 0; 0. the [NCAA tournament] In order to complete its last goal, Duke The other opponent remaining on the Totals 20026-64 5-11 11-17 31 9 18 3 15 15. 68 bid. can't afford to blow any more leads that Blue Devils' schedule, North Carolina, it might obtain. The two foes remaining already lost once to Duke this year. But Duke MP FG 3PG FT R fl TO Etl.K ST PFPTS "If we take care of our­ C. Kauffns 3 10 • selves—do the things we for the Blue Devils in regular-season that Blue Devil win came in Cameron on Haft ft- 3 15 play are Clemson and North Carolina, a last-second shot with the help of 5,000 Day . U 2 17. need to do, like be more • 3 2 12' • focused for 40 minutes— neither of which is likely to let Duke win fans. The atmosphere will no doubt be On' 0 • 11 ; we feel like our goals are with the erratic play that was promi­ tougher in UNC's Carmichael Audito­ '-* 0 ••&'; : nent in the Georgia Tech game. Caggeshaf !'• A ••• going to take care of them- rium on Saturday. "[The Yellow Jackets] were ready to So entering the final regular-season 0- •••'&:'; So far, this approach play again and didn't die," junior center stretch, Duke carries its destiny in its Totals 20030-65 6-14 11-1143 1? 20 2 ltf 13 77 has worked rather well Alison Day said. 'They came after us. own hands. The Blue Devils will be look­ for the Blue Devils. Duke We've learned that lesson before, and we ing to finish with a strong showing and Georgia Tech 25 43 68 (19-5, 10-4 ACC) is only shouldn't have to learn it more than once." carry their momentum into the Soke 44 33 - 77 one win shy of that first The Blue Devils' final home game is postseason. If Duke can knock off the Officials: R South Q. FUSCD, '•'.-. Savage. goal. An NCAA bid is vir­ against Clemson tonight at 7 p.m. in Tigers tonight in Cameron, fans will be Attendance — 2.50Q. ' tually guaranteed now, Cameron. witnessing history in the making. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1995 SPORTSWRAP Tun CHRONICLE/PAGE 5 Blue Devils fall to N.C. State again

• STATE from page 1 it to the line, I thought we'd get our Indeed, on the ing head coach Pete Gaudet said. "Every­ timeout, we'd get it together, and we'd Wolfpack's next posses­ thing was the same about it. Something come back and score and be on top. But sion, Lakista McCuller he's done a lot is hit that shot." that wasn't the case." pulled up for a trey on But not this time. And to make mat­ A lot of that had to do with the the break. In less than ters worse for the Wolfpack's per­ a minute, Duke's seven- Blue Devils, N.C. ACC MEN'S BASKETBALL sistence. Late in point lead slipped to State was uncon­ the second half, one, 66-65. scious from the free- STAHBINGS N.C. State stared "Defensively, we had throw line all game. League Overall a seven-point some breakdowns in the The Wolfpack con­ North Carolina 10-3 20-3 deficit in the face second half," Parks verted 86 percent of Virginia 10-3 18-6 but refused to said. "They hit some its freebies, includ­ Maryland 9-3 20-5 fold. wide open threes... and ing 15 of their 16 Wake Forest 8-4 17-5 "We played are right back in it. Our shots from the char­ Georgia Tech 6-6 16-9 with the poise of defensive intensity just ity stripe in the sec­ Florida State 5-8 12-10 a solid basketball wasn't there." ond half. N.C. State N.C. State 4-8 12-10 team," Robinson The Blue Devils also did not even score a Clemson 3-9 13-9 said. had some defensive field goal in the fi­ Duke 1-12 11-14 The Blue Dev­ problems concerning nal 2:13, but it ils also main­ N.C. State's 6-11 cen­ thwarted Duke's Sunday's games tained a great ter Todd Fuller. Two comeback with six Maryland 74, Cincinnati 72 Virginia 73, North Carolina 71 deal of poise years ago as a fresh­ perfect free throws. throughout most man, Fuller was ridi­ "I thought we ofthe contest. Duke was in control ofthe culed for his poor per­ were going to win throughout the whole lead for virtually the entire game, in­ formance in Durham by game," Duke freshman Ricky Price said. cluding a brief moment towards the end the Cameron Crazies. "Even in the second halfwhe n they made of the first half when the Blue Devils "He doesn't lose his clung to the game's larg­ composure," Robinson est lead—a 10-point ad­ said. "He can have the DUKE US. N.C. STATE vantage. whole place booing, and TIGGER HITCHCOCK/THE CHRONICLE Dak*' MP: FG 3PG FT H A TO BLK ST PFPTS N.C. State's Todd Fuller was a powerhouse versus Duke. .-pf.ce •• • ••"34:7-11 a-3 •(H) .6 1 1 0 it. 2 -.17 N.C. State, however, Todd doesn't know it. MeeK 31 S-S 0-0 V-.-t iO 1 0 2 •1 3 12 was looking to prove that He doesn't care. He's at f>art«: :- • 31 7-14 1-2 6 1 0 0 D 3.::1? - peace with himself and handles pres­ •.Capel . 35 8-18 1-3 •iW- 3 5 .2 0 u '3.-'.:17 its double-digit win in point land, and many of his shots kept Langdon ..":• .25 4-8 .: 1-4 2 3 10 2 9:: Cameron Indoor Stadium sure very well." N.C. State at bay throughout the first • Blakeney . 19 15 0-2 04) •:*'•' % last month was no fluke. On Saturday, Fuller's freshman-year half. •Co.iins ?1 L3 12 0:0 1 .3- 1 • 0 :.!,: •2:':.3:: 4 11 oO IHt 0 0 0 0 si ;; Down 66-59 with just un­ schooling was just a distant memory. "Individually, I'd like to keep my play der seven minutes left in The much-improved big man struggled up to where its been the last couple of Totals 4-8 ::3 16 79 v :• 20034-88.:7-ie: 31 18 6 2 the game, Benjamin, who at times from the field, but still finished games, and try to contribute to get a scorched Duke for 23 with 19 points on 8-for-18 shooting and NC State MP F6 3PG FT R A To euCsr PFPTS win," Price said. • • Hyatt • 3 • • 3 •' points in the team's first pulled down 15 rebounds for the Pack. This time with the game on the line, • Daniels meeting, drained a wide- Duke had problems defending against Fuller- "Fuller is one ofthe best players in the 1 13 ' open three-pointer after league," Gaudet said. "He's got a huge the three and trouble containing Fuller : : ••• Mo,uJier ' 1 19 ' missing his first seven wing span, and offensively he sells a inside. In other contests, the Blue Devils •.• Wilson-. .•Day is • tries. target about as well as anybody." have been plagued by a stagnant offense n •%-' "We made a substitu­ Offensively, the bright spots for Duke or opposing defensive presses. But is Team'"

Totals 13 S4::::- tion, and I don't know if came from Jeff Capel and Price, who there a focal point to which Duke's game- we communicated real each tallied 17 points. Capel provided ending troubles can be traced? Diike 79 well in who we had [defen­ his usual mix of drives to the bucket "I don't know," senior Erik Meek said. N.C, St 84 sively]," Gaudet said. "Any with some long jumpers. But Price, who "It's tough to go through right now. I

Officials; D open three is a confidence was averaging just under eight points wish I had answers, but I don't. You just Attendance builder for a team. So they per game, caused fits for the Wolfpack. have to do what you can do to keep hit another one." He was a perfect 3-for-3 from three- doing."

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By ERIC FRIEDMAN match. The men's tennis team out-battled the MEN'S TENNIS RESULTS After the doubles victories, Duke eas­ Duke with Fighting Irish to gain a 7-0 win Satur­ Duke 7, Notre Dame 0 't ily earned the remaining three points day afternoon in South Bend, Ind. necessary for the win with straight-set DOUBLES The fifth-ranked Blue Devils improved victories by Pressley, 22nd-ranked jun­ 15 points JKWAYWMDX) Sprouwffun, 8-5 ior Rob Chess and senior Philippe their record to 3-0 behind a strong team • TECH from page 1 :;>^ky/,Mi>«sio{L>>il Simme/ Moggio. Chess defeated Ryan Simme, 6- effort. Duke head coach Jay Lapidus desperate fouling spree as the clock 2, 6-2, and Moggio scored a 6-4, 6-0 win said he was extremely pleased with his wound down. over Jakub Pietrowski. team's overall performance against 15th- The Blue Devils spent the first ranked Notre Dame. The Fighting Irish "Pressley, Chess and Moggio all played half in a shooting and rebounding fell to 3-3 on the season. very well," Lapidus said. "They all won bonanza. Junior guard Jennifer "When you win 7-0, you know that within an hour or an hour and a half, "Sk.Cfess (£>] d Simme, 6-2, 6-2 Scanlon nailed a three-pointer at everyone came through well," Lapidus and each of them won while losing only 3; Aycr-. (I» d Pun, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4 the 15:13 mark to give Duke its four games." said. "All-around, it was a good effort. A-Cksky ( l)j 0. O'Brien. 4-6. 7-5, 7-6 second lead ofthe game, and Duke All of our players either blew out their 5. Moggio IDt

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If you are really responsible, detail-oriented, personable. John Barrow committed to customer service, professional, flexible, Stephanie Jenal and energetic .. .WE WANT YOU! Sally Kennedy Counseling & Psychological Services • Great salary • Room and board provided • Valuable work experience • Challenging, fast-paced, and fun work environment Topics will include: Signs of Stress • Practical Stress Reducing APPLICATION DEADLINE: MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20. Tips for Time, Mind, & Body Applications and job descriptic is arc available al Bryan Center Information [X'-k or ,n 0044 Bryan Center (use outside glass atriui entrance). Questions? Call 684-5791. Ask for Elaine. Jim. or Jeanne. Sponsored by School of Engineering ec Counseling & Psychological Services MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1995 THH CHRONK-LH/ PAGE 7 Baseball sails past Navy Virginia upsets UNC to with offensive explosion grab share of ACC lead

• BASEBALL from page 3 positions, even the freshmen playing the ting3-for-4, including two RBI on a two- outfield," King said. By BARRY JACOBS Deane, who made all eight shots he out double in the sixth. The ease with The Blue Devils will face Md.-Eastern N.Y. Times News Service attempted from the floor in the sec­ which Duke scored suprised many ofthe Shore in a doubleheader today at 1 p.m. CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — The ond half, finished with a game-high players. effect was surely coincidental, but the 28 points. That matched the best of "We really don'texpect to roll over people DUKE 12, NAVY 3 symbolism was striking nonetheless. his career and enabled Virginia to like last year," said King. "This year we A breeze inside Virginia's University post 10 ACC victories in a season for have base hitters, and we don't have any Duke Navy Hall stirred a single banner hanging from the first time since 1983, when 7-foot- super power hitters like we did last year." the rafters, one celebrating a 1983 squad 4-inch Ralph Sampson was its center. Before Duke's offensive outbreak, how­ that was the last at the school to finish an "We're always overlooked, because ever, the game was very much in doubt. Atlantic Coast Conference regular sea­ we're very underrated," Deane said. Duke started senior right-hander Craig son with a share of firstplace . "People don't think that we have the Starman, who is still recovering from Sunday afternoon, the 16th-ranked talent, that we have the personnel. surgery. Starman was pounced on early Cavaliers took a prodigious step to­ We don't have the big-name players as Navy jumped out to a quick 1-0 lead in ward matching that achievement, thattheseotherteams have, but we're the top ofthe first after a fielder's choice overcoming an 11-point, second-half just as good as everyone else and we grounder by Matt Smith. deficit to down second-ranked North work the hardest. I knew it was going "Starman is in a situation where we Carolina, 73-71. to show up sooner or later, and it have to monitor him, he's on a pitch The victory raised Virginia's record showed up today." count," said Koblentz. "He's only throw­ to 18-6,10-3 in the league, and forged Virginia was sparked by a 17-0 run ing 75 percent coming back from the a tie for first place with North Caro­ midway through the second half that surgery. He's come a long way, and I 100 000 020- 3 lina and Maryland with two weeks lasted four minutes, and was inter­ Navy left in the regular season. rupted only when Smith called a rare think he threw well. Duke 000 309 OOx- 12 Starman left after three innings and North Carolina, poised to ascend to timeout to settle his team with 8 was relieved by junior David Darwin, the top spot in the polls for the third minutes 50 seconds remaining. who pitched the next four and picked up time this season, instead fell to 20-3. Key to the outburst was a decision the win. Darwin was replaced by fresh­ IP H R £R SB SO Harold Deane, a sophomore guard, by Virginia Coach Jeff Jones to bench man Jim Fishburn, who got in an inning provided the winning margin, mak­ the senior forward , of play, and then by junior Brian Casey, ing a pair of free throws with 4.2 his team's leading scorer, and go in­ who retired the final three batters. seconds remaining after he was fouled stead with four perimeter players. The Blue Devil pitchers limited Navy on a drive to the basket by Carolina "To heck with the inside offense," to seven hits in the game, but even when center . "I'm disap­ Jones said. "We just wanted to push the players got their bats on the ball. pointed that a foul was called with the basketball." Duke's defense was there consistently four seconds to go," said North Caro­ The victory was Virginia's fifth making clean plays. The Blue Devils lina coach Dean Smith. straight since losing backcourt leader didn't record any errors in the game. Television replays indicated the call by for the season with a "Everyone is comfortable in their new the official, Zelton Steed, was correct. broken ankle. ACC TOURNAMENT PREVIEW Published Thursday, March 9 Advertising Deadline Friday, February 24

THE CHRONICLE 101 W.UNION BLDG. The Duke Community's Daily Newspaper 684-3811 PAGE 8/THE CHRONICLE- MONDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1995

Vm*i- hVol. 5. No. M13 ** *'Th e Career Deve opment Center E-rnail:[email protected] Graduate Students thought provoking AND fun. "" Shadow Intern­ OCR Newsgroup: Have you learned CareerNet videos for summer camps and are looking for ships for Fall 95: Interviews for Fail Shadowing and subscribed to the CDC's on-line OCR News videographers and video editors for the summer. WED Info Session: "Negotiating a Faculty Job will be held in March k April. You'll be able to Positions will be filled by April 30 and May 15. • Offer" 2-22,4-5,103Page.Anoverviewofsalary/ group? if not, you are missing current Info, relat­ interview with Mrs. Tuthill after Feb. 20. Shadow ing to On-Oampus Recruiting dates, companies, New Republic magazine is offering competitive benefit/workload issues for job candidates inter­ Applications available only during interview. Are editorial internships with stipend, apply by March viewing now. schedules, etc.. you planning Fall Study Abroad? and wish to Interview Training: interview training sessions are1. • Powerhouse Theater at Vassar is accepting CAREER DEVELOPMENT SERIES IN MARCH Shadow in Spg %? interview in March 95! applications from students interested in a sum­ "Professional job Search Skills for Grad Stu­ offered weekly at the CDC. See the CDC bulletin board and CareerNet for dates and times. mer theater intensive. Appropriate for students dents" Four Thursdays 4-5 on March 2,9,23, and interested in almost any aspect of theater, from 30 in 03 Page: 3/2 "Information Interviews and ••.••'•MnhhlW-hEaM Families USA. Wash., DC. Paid internships in acting, directing, playwriting to stage manage­ Networking" 3/9 "Resume Critiques"3/23 "Writ­ Have you learned CareerNet and subscribed to the media, field work (organizing), and govt affairs. ment or design. • Midway Airlines wishes to ing Cover Letters" 3/30 "Interviewing" For grad CDC's on-line Business Neivs group! If not, you are Summer, fall, or spring. See CareerNet under hire a student campus representative and market­ students who are conducting a job search this missing out on current info, relating to Business Public Affairs & Community Service and Com­ ing design coordinator. • Sales Managers needed spring and would like to practice skills. Coordi­ jobs and internships. * Triangle Economic Re­ munications/Mass Media for details. for WEGX-FM in Florence, NC & Myrtle Beach, nated by Dr. Virginia Steinmetz. TO REGISTER search (TER), an RTP-based firm specializing in VISTA position: Lutheran Family Services in SC.Noprevious experience necessary,see "Broad­ IN ADVANCE call CDC 660-5050. natural resource valuation, is currently seeking Raleigh & Greensboro, NC. Position available to cast Opps. in NC" folder in Media/Arts shelf in NEW ON CRAD SHELF.CDC LIBRARY (217 entry-level economists with a BA/BS in econom­ start mid-March. Details on CareerNet. Apply J.O.B. Rm. • Vibe Magazine is looking for excep­ Page): For TA's and RA's, the new Directions in ics and an interest in applied microeconomics. On immediately. Also VISTA position with Durham tional jrs & srs for summer internships, deadline Teaching, a handbook of resources for Duke's Thurs., Feb. 23, TER will be conducting an on- Communities in Schools, Inc. as Student Intern­ Ma rch L teaching and advising staff published by the Cen­ campus seminar at 4:15PM in Rm 327 Soc. Sci. to ship Liaison. Apply asap. ter for Teaching and Learning. APE Bulletin (As­ discuss the type of work they do at TER, their Public Relations Specialist - Veterans Adminis­ sociation of the Departments of English), Winter workingenvironment,andtheirexpectations. Fol­ Summer Job Searches If you are interested in tration - Office of Research Publicity, Durham, 1994 issue contains nighlightsof theMLA's survev lowing the seminar, they will collect resumes, finding a summer position that will provide you NC See listing under Communications, perma­ of changes in faculty size (1990-94) at PhD-grant- transcripts, and writing samples from all those with experience in education, be sure to take nent (VAMC) on CareerNet. ing modem language departments. For English interested inapplying for a positional TER. Please advantage of the resources available to you in the Dept. of Conservation & Recreation, Common- students on the job market an article by Wayne bring all three required materials to be considered CDC Job Rm and the CDC Library. The lower wealthofVirginia. Claytor Lake State Park. Mul­ Booth Entitled " Why Is It Harder to Lead an for a position. An unsealed or student copy of shelf in the education section of the JOB Rm tiple positions. See Govt, section, internship file English Dept. than to Be CEO of IBM?" For stu­ your transcript will be sufficient. A desirable features hundreds of summer camp descriptions box for listings. dents in Sociology, the 2nd edition of the ASA's writing sample would be a short paper (5-20pages) and applications for employment. Other shelves Family Health International - Research Triangle Sociologists in the Corporate World by Delbert written for an economics class, preferably one contain information about special programs in Park. Some undergrad positions, most grad stu­ Miller. For orientation to news and issues in the which reflects your ability to synthesize and criti­ the field that hire summer interns, such Prep for dent positions. See booklet with projects in J.O.B. community college sector, we subscribe to the cally analyze economic concepts and/or perform Prep, Summerbridge, Center for Talented Youth, Rm, Human/Soc. Ser. section, internship file box. Community College Times, published by the Am statistical analysis. Dress is casual. If you are Academic Study Associates, Fresh Air Fund, and Deadline: March 3. Assoc, of Comm. Colleges. unable to attend but are interested in the position, many more. Don't forget to look at special oppor­ Everett Public Service Internship Program-Mul­ CONFERENCES: NSF Town Meeting and Out­ please send your materials to: Rob Sandefur, Tri­ tunities available with environmental and wil­ tiple organ, with opps. in NY, DC, CA, Chicago, reach Days Feb 23,24,3:30-5:30A North Bldg: 2-23 angle Economic Research, 1000 Park Forty Plaza, derness programs that hire interns to teach in the MA, Boulder. Pick up brochure with listings in Teleconference with NSF Director Dr. Neal Lane Suite 200. Durham, NC 27713. summer. Many independent schools offer sum­ J.O.B. Rm, Human/Soc. Ser. section, file box. on challenges and successes of research & sci­ mer programming and hire students from com­ Institute for Experiential Learning (IEL) - The ence/engineering education in NC and on 1996 petitive colleges. You can find guides to indepen­ Capital Experience-Wash., DC. Internships. See budget request. 2-24 Panel of Geoscience, Com­ J. Walter Thompson will be interviewing for their dent schools in the library. Pull up the summer info, in Human/Soc. Service section, J.O.B. Rm, puter Science & Engineering and Education & Professional Development Program. Free sign for jobs and internships field on CareerNet and look ternship file box. Human Resource Directors. Mephistos, the 14th this OCR Flex starts on Feb. 24. If Interested in at all the listings. More arebeingadded each day!! annual conference forgraduat e students working Media Planning with an advertising agency make And.... if you want up to the minute notification in the history, sociology, & philosophy of science, NY. Co. District Attorney's Office - Investigati an appt. with Gail Williams at 660-1050. • VIBE about summer positions, be sure to subscribe to tech. for medicine will beheld in Bloomington, IN, Analyst. 3 positions available. 2 yr. commitment. magazine is looking for exceptional juniors and the General Education News Group on e-mail. April 1-2. E-mail: [email protected]. See details on CareerNet under Law, permanent. seniors interested in journalism.See CareerNet. • Notices are sent to this group as soon as they are UNC-CH Graduate Women's Studies Sympo­ Also, the Frauds Bureau has positions as Trial Sis 2 Sis and Bro 2 Bro continue to meet for the received. There are wonderful opportunities sium: "Women Across the Disciplines" March 17- Preparation Assist. (Paralegals) available. Dead­ spring. // interested in joining a support group, callavailable . Don't miss out! 18. Proposal submission deadline: Feb. 22. Info: line; March 1. • Covington & Burling - Parale­ M^amesa^6Mm^^^^^^^^^^^ RSVP Literacy Coord./ESL Coordinator - Or- 942-0228. gals. Positions will begin during summer. 2 yr. angeCo.Govt.-HiIlsborough,NC SeeCareerNet commitment necessary. Details on CareerNet under Education for details. ilBmf^«HH!WiHJJ.IJIJ,IJH ider Law, permanent. Interested in an international job or internship? SENIORS who wish to stay at Duke and work Pick up an International careers booklet from the Info. Rack in the hallway of the CDC. • Have you £9 research: Be sure to pick up the regular Duke Sponsor agreements are past due. If you have US EPA - Research Triangle Park & Montgomery, learned CareerNet and subscribed to the CDC's on­ MHwuffifflnmiHanmH Human Resources Employ, application from the not turned vours in at CDC, please do ASAP. Alabama offices. Summer Employment for cleri­ line International News group? If not, you are HRofficeon Broad St. Get intothesystem! Use the cal and technical opps. to assist professionals and Research Resource Books/Publications in the CDC; missing out on current info, relating to Interna­ scientists. See details on CareerNet. Appl. ac­ tional jobs and internships. • American Friends Undergrad& Grad., Dr. Patricia O'Connor they will give you info on research that is being cepted Feb. 15-Mar. 15. conducted at Duke/DUMC; make an appt. with Service Committee (AFS) - Chicago. Paid intern­ There are many reasons to join a NewsGroup. DC office of EPA, Green Lights & Energy Star Mrs. Sandy Tuthill. ships. Deadline for summer: May 1. See Oneofthemost important is to find outaboutnew Programs, Global Change Div. Permanent posi­ CareerNet.* Japan Summer Internship Program. CareerNet now has many job opportunities in summer and permanent jobs which have come in tion to work on pollution prevention prog. See For graduate students or students accepted to many different categories. Don't miss out using or new employers who will in terview on campus. CareerNet for details. Send cover letter and re- graduate programs. June 8-Aug. 11. Salary and this resource by accessing it at least every 2-3 days! Some employers change from invitational to travel. Ability to hold a conversation in Japanese. Infectious Diseases; Pediatrie/Pulmonary; Car­ open schedules or add open schedules. These Deadline Feb. 24. Details: call Ms. Chikako diovascular Surgery Research Positions: DUMC. announcements are made only in NewsGroups. Konohana,DirectorofNAMBUFoundation(NYC) 2-year commitment. See CareerNet. Special Employer Info Sessions are announced in OCR Invitations: Please review the OCR section at 212-582-8389. • Representatives from the SENIORS who are accepted/waiting to hear from NewsGroups. Some jobs are put in NewsGroups of the Career Guide (pp. 30-32) for instructions, BUNAC Work in Britain program will meet with Med. Schools? Info, on Air Force Scholarship is only! Ifyou have anytrouble subscribing, call the dates, and procedures for accepting on-campus Duke students to discuss opportunities and pro­ available inCDC,posted on HMLSBulletin Board. interview invitations. CDC. Don't miss an opportunity. Begin by cedures for working in the U.K. for up to6 months. subscribing to every one which might be of inter­ Last chance for appl. is mid-March. FLEX OCR Interviews: Some companies elect to Wed., March 29,4 PM, Rm. 203, Teer Engineering est. You can always unsubscribe if you are getting Health Policy Research SUMMER Internship: schedule flexible on-campus interview opps. Library. Formore details about BUNAC, call 203- too much mail or the news is repetitive. Have you seen this exciting summer internship in which often fall outside of the routine OCR proce­ 264-0901. • Undergraduate Summer Research Are you reviewing options listed on CareerNet CareerNet in Indianapolis? Challenging project and dures and deadlines. Look for details of the Opportunities: The Center for International Stud­ on a regular schedule? New options are added excellent salary to work with former Duke medi­ following FLEX OCR opportunities (with resume ies offers each year an annual competition for the constantly, such as Research Internship at AES in cal sociologist. Deadline extended for accepting deadlines) in the OCR section of CareerNet. Per­ Overseas Summer Academic project. It awards 5- DC area, BS/MS EE or BS CPS for communica­ resumes until 3/15. manent: American Power Conversion (3/1); 7 scholarships (maximum $2000) for academic tions at Booz, Allen & Hamilton, BS/MS Chem­ Eddie Bauer (2/20). Summer & Intern: Eddie FIRST YEAR & SOPHOMORES! Do you need projects to be undertaken overseas during the ists for infrared spectroscopy position at Uniroyal Bauer (2/20). to have questions answered about your career summer. They are intended for rising soph, with in CT, the AMP Summer Student Program for planning? It isn't necessary to "have your act Employer Info. Sessions This Week: Public littleor no direct exposure outside the U.S. Project many majors, or info on pa id summer opportuni­ together" to meet with Mrs. Tuthill! Call 660-1050 Interest Research Groups (PIRG) - SUN, 2/26 - 7 proposals should be focused and of at least four ties at EPA in RTP. You must have a good resume Mrs. T. is available also for lunch appts/discus- PM - Location TBA weeks' duration, with preference given to projects and cover letter. sion— so why don't you and a friend call for a Open Interview Schedules: Some employers outside Western Europe. Submit applications by lunch -crunch?! recruiting on campus do not review resumes March 1. For applications and further details OCR FLEX schedules will conbnue. Watch for HEALTH CAREERS INTERNS: Use your E- before theirvisits. All qualified students may sign contact the Center for International Studies, 2122 info, about INTEL or Aeroquip for MS/PhD can­ mail to subscribe to the HMLS and HCIP on these schedules by using the OCR System—an Campus Dr., (684-2765). didates. • Check yourdepartmentbullefinboard NewsGroups. Important info may come to you! extension of CareerNet. Open schedule sign-ups or the CDC for information about the paid You received instructions for subscribing when begin on the Fri., two weeks before the week of the summer Undergraduate Internship Program at scheduled interview. To determine which OCR the University of Minnesota Supercomputer In­ you attended the Sensitivity Training Session. ** Are you searching for a summer internship? summer employers have OPEN schedules, look at the stitute in Biophysical Computing and Computa­ Remember to attend your Group Interaction Ses­ job? or pennauentjob? See CareerNet for the follow- "Other Info." sections of their records on tional Dynamics and High Performance Comput- sion! Feb. 23, Mar. 22, or Mar. 28. All sessions in ing listings: The Late Late Show with Tom Snyder CareerNet. Refer to the calendarof OCR dates on ing in Fluid Dynamics. 2/28 deadline. 139 Soc. Sci. Bldg., 7pm Sharp! This is an integral is now offering summer internships in research, part of your internship that is administered by the P.31 of the Career Guide for other important OCR Check out OCR FLEX dates and deadlines. production, and talent. Deadline March 15. • Duke Univ. School of Medicine. The exercise is Camp TV produces yearbook and promotional it's for all majors, all career fields. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1995 THE CHRONICLE Commentary Black History Month upholds facade of racial harmony In fourth grade, I prepared a report look at who determines the nature and homosexuals and anyone else whose his­ about George Washington Carver. extent ofthe celebration and who gains tory suggests our nation has been cruel Carver was born around 1864 and died Bite me politically. Frequently, as was the case and oppressive. Until we face up to white in 1943. An agricultural chemist and at Southern High .^^^______' history, black educator, he is best known for discover­ Philip Poley School, Black His­ history will con­ ing the agricultural value of peanuts. people. Do white people think their his­ tory Month activi­ tinue to get cat- While Carver was trying to make his tory can or should be compressed into ties are devised by Until we face up to white ego r i z e d , way in the Reconstruction-era South, one month? Do white people even think people (most of history, black history will marginalized his white neighbors were laboring fever­ that they, as white people, have a his­ whom are white) continue to get catego­ and com­ ishly to erect social and cultural barriers tory that is separate and distinct from who are part ofthe pressed into to everyone who shared his skin color. history with a capital "H"? power structure rized, marginalized and Black History The report taught me how similar black Black History Month doesn't have to that is most compressed into Black Month. and white people are in terms of their perpetuate the segregation of history, threatened by a Confronting dreams and ambitions la new concept to and some projects undertaken during true and complete History Month. history is scary, a nine-year-old white kid who grew up in the month are insightful and enlighten­ inclusion of the particularly a very white town), and I was shocked to ing. Many, however, are nothing more history of black when that his­ learn about the evils of Jim Crow. than a token gesture. Apparently it people. Yet, by paying lip service to the tory might tarnish the image of our Thankfully, the report had nothing to hasn't crossed anyone's mind to develop idea, people in power maintain the sta­ national heroes. But there's no way to do with Black History Month. Without history curricula that include fully the tus quo while upholding the facade of escape it, and in attempting to run away that particular social construct, I was history of black people and the white racial harmony and respect. from the truth, white people perpetuate free to think of black history as Ameri­ people who enslaved them. We all know that information is power, the segregation and racism that created can history that just happened to be Students at Durham's Southern High and today the information we have about Black History Month in the first place. made by black people. Hell, it wasn't School got a little fed up with the hypoc­ our history is incomplete. It excludes Philip Poley, Trinity '91, is a Univer­ even February , ,,, risy last Thurs­ black people, women, Native Americans, sity employee. when I did the re­ day and i port. Now, unfor­ a sit-in to pro­ tunately, we teach Frequently Black History test thu school's children that Month activities are de­ backhanded black people have vised by people who are treatment of a history that can Black History somehow be sepa­ part of the power struc­ Month. Bull rated from the his­ ture that is most threat­ Connor wasn't tory of whites in ened by a true and com­ around to break the country. it up, but six Maybe we ought to plete inclusion of the sheriffs depu­ spend this month history of black people. ties managed to studying the scope quell the 50- of an oppression so student "dis­ horrific and complete that the very his­ turbance." The demonstration broke up tory of a race of people is not common after 90 minutes and no one was sus­ knowledge. pended from school, but reporters were What a clever device. If you think blocked from the area and school offi­ about it, you might conclude that Black cials refused to answer questions. History Month is a cop-out that lets Ultimately, the most important ques­ white people assuage their guilt while tion isn't how Black History Month is simultaneously marginalizing black celebrated. Rather, we ought to take a CREAM rescues Keohane from tragic housing crash I often view this column as more than dialing "0, O, CREAM." Library, having received reports of a an opportunity to make people laugh. I Fortunately, the crack response team strangling. The boys arrived on the scene also view this column as less than (or Monday, Monday had just finished a delivery around the to find a Tri-Delt sprawled out on the equal to) an opportunity to make people COLONEL CHUTZPAH corner and was on the scene in a matter quad with latte dripping out ofthe cor­ cry. Today, however, I consider myself... of minutes. One of the team members ner of her mouth. She had apparently myself... the luckiest man... luckiest Housing] "No, frat boy, you clowns are deftly removed the two-pound model been strangled by her black, leather man... alive... alive. I also consider this getting stuck with Round Table! Ha Ha!" from Nan's leg, saving the beleaguered mini-backpack on her way back from the column a chance to feature the unher­ "No way! No way, dude!" A heated president. While Nan was able to escape library. alded efforts of Duke Public Safety's clash of plastic figures ensues as Nan serious injury due to the rapidity ofthe The CREAM team quickly loosened CREAM (Crack Response Emergency repeatedly smashes the straps, reviving Action Milkmen) team. The CREAM the two together, ~ ^^^^——— tne gjr] ana treating team is a force of highly trained troops cackling uncontrol­ her for shock. The who, by day, are milkmen. By night, this lably. Tragically, While Nan was able to escape serious injury CREAM chief ex­ force responds to emergencies, cloaking just as the Desert pertly sized up the the campus in a shroud of safety. Sure, Commando Dean due to the rapidity ofthe team's response, she situation, dabbing Public Safety gets credit for nabbing was gaining the up­ did seem a bit delirious, shouting, "Put them all the girl's mouth with those who put clear glass in the green per hand, Nan acci­ on East! Every single one of them! A ha ha!!" his finger, tasting it glass containers, but now we want to dentally knocked and muttering to expose the truth: Not only does the into the Clocktower — himself, "Hmmm... CREAM team put the milk in our lattes, Quad replica, send­ skim milk." The Tri- but they also put the safety in our public. ing the whole model crashing onto her team's response, she did seem a bit de­ Delt was back to normal in no time and So, join us, won't you, as we embark on legs and trapping her. lirious, shouting, "Put them all on East! in a stunning display of thanks, she a typically exciting, danger-filled, Luckily, Fred Goldsmith was in the Every single one of them! A ha ha!!" asked the chief to her formal. The chief Dangerfield night. corner ofthe room playing with his me­ As the heroic CREAM team member again left the scene, imparting some The night was dark and milky. They tallic, vibrating football game. After exited the scene, he offered a few sound sage words of advice: "Don't wear those got the call from the Keohane house at Goldsmith realized that the quick-kick words of advice for the kids out there: damn mini-backpacks and get on the 11:56 p.m.—apparently an accident oc­ doesn't work in toy football either, he "Always make sure you play with toys in health kick—milk's got more!" curred while Nan was playing with her alertly noticed the accident at hand and a secure area, and milk, it does a body COLONEL CHUTZPAH regrets to toy West Campus Housing Model and ran to the phone as Keohane shouted to good, pass it on." inform you that this is her last column. student organization action figures—by him, "Dial nine eleven!! Dial nine It was 12:01 a.m. when the team left Feeling a sudden influx of Jewish pride, Tyco, of course: [Acting out dialogue eleven!!" While Goldsmith struggled to Keohane Land, but its night was far she has decided to pack up her dreidels, while positioning ATO action figure face- find the eleven on the phone, he showed from over. The team was again quickly hop in the mikvah and run off to join a to-face with Desert Commando Dean of his poise and did the next best thing, dispatched to the area outside Perkins kibbutz. THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1995 Comics THE Daily Crossword»,« Paper Cuts/ Chris Blackburn -i W i |TTi ;;: | \r\ \ i I "i i i i ^vn i I •" i i B^ •I i i •* i ! •~n TTJ•" I i I 1' ' !i ;i '_•• _" • i ' i i I _ ^1 •" : J" i i 1^1

02/20/95 Saturday's Puzzle solved:

It's all right, it's OK, we're going to be sane some day... Copy guru: The Sanj Ready to quack: Alison 'Write an edit": Roger Croak and Dagger: Jon and Jeremy Watchdog wonder: Rebecca The man: Roily 'I'm STARTING at 2 a.m.?': Demse Goddess: Cheryl Determined to get his shot: Tom Account representatives: Dorothy Gianturco, Melinda Silber Advertising sales staff Lex Wolf, Jamie Smith. Ashley Koff, George Juarez, Ashley Altick, Linda Jeng, Justin Knowles, Laura Weaver, Brandon Short, Cheryl Waters. Sam Wineburgh Creative services staff: Jen Farmer, Jay Kamm, Viva Chu, Sarah Carnevale, Doug Friedlander, Emily Holmes, Jessica Kravitz, Ben Glenn, Susan Somers-Willett, Kathy McCue Classified Asst. manager: Allison Creekmore Classified Staff:....Erin Nagy, Janet Malek, Rachel Daley Editorial Secretary: Nancy McCail Business Secretary: Rhonda Walker Roadkill / Jim Funk Only 42 Issues left, baby!

Gestures to avoid when someone is trying to ask you for help in sign language. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1995 THE CHRONICLE Duke Bulletin

The Chronicle publishes sarin! public service calen­ Choral Vespers - Memorial Chapel. 5:15 pm. A Reassemble, and Alice Walker and Pralibba "Artists.MarketsandMyths About African Art:20lh dars through the week as detailed below: cappella music sung by the Choral Vespers Ensemble. Pannar's Warrior Marks. 8:00 pm. 204-D East Duke Century Funerary Art in Dahomey Benin" Edna Bay. Duke Bulletin Board Monday Bldg. 684-4130. Executive Director, African Studies, and Prof., Emory Community Calendar Tuesday-Friday Catholic Student Center - 6:30 - 7:30 pm Catholic Univ. 5:00 pm, Feb. 20. North Gallery Lecture Hail, Sport* Events Monday Identity seines. • Clerks. Fri.. Feb. 24,10:00 pm& midnight, Freewater presentations. D.U.M.A.. East Campus. Arts Events Tuesday & Friday International Community Fellowship at International Entertainment Thursday House - 8:00 pm. Every Thursday. •The Goonies. Sat.. Feb. 25. Freewater presentn- "Preparation and Applications of Nanocrystaline Tit submit a notice for our Duke Bulletin Board and tions.l0:30 am. Community Calendars;, send it to the attention of Duke Hillel • United Jewish Appeal Phone-A-Thon - Semiconductor Films" - Dr. Michael Graetzel. Swiss "Calendar Coordinator' at the below address or fax. when your phone rings please give generously - we Federal Institute of Technology, Wed.. Feb. 22. 3:30 Submissions fur these calendars arc published on a are counting on your help to make this year's cam­ pm. Fritz London Lecture Hall. P.M. Gross Chem space-available basin with priority given to Duke paign the best ever! Lab events. Notices must lie for events which ace open to Qi^" Performances the public and are free or for which proceeds benefit u FRIDAY •"European Travelers to Italy in the Renaissance" • public /not-for-profit cause. Deadline for the Bulletin Inscribed In Mv Heart: Lute Songs from Elizabethan Luigi Monga. Vanderbilt Univ. 5:00pm - 6:30. Room. Board is noon Thursday. Duke Hillel - Kiruv. Orthodox Jewish group, will England and s'eicento Italy. Tues.. Feb. 21. 12 noon, 305 Language Center. speak at Hillel House. 311 Alexander. To RSVP free. Memorial Chapel. please call 684-6422. 6:00 pm services, 7:00 pm din- "The Effect of Substance Hydoiphobicity on Endot­ To submit a notice for the Sports, Arts, or Entertain­ Duke University Wind Symphony - Michael Votta, ment calendars, send it to the attention ofthe Sports Jr. conductor. Thurs., Feb. 23. Baldwin Auditorium. helial Cell Adhesion Strength" • Jeff Burmeister. Editor. Arts Editor, or R&R Entertainment Editor. The Venus Project -performance addressing women's East Campus, Free. 660-3300. Grad. Student in Biomedical Engineering. Feb. 22. respectively, at the below address. poetics and representations of the female body in 660-5356. Measure for Measure - William Shakespeare di­ western art and culture. The Ark. 10:oo pm. 660- rected by Devon Allen, Sheafer Theater, Feb. 23 - 26. The Chronicle. Box 90858. Durham, NC. 27708. Fax 3356. Also performed Sat. & Sun. at 8:00 pm. March 2 - 4 8:00 pm: Feb. 25. March 5 at 2:00 pm. 684- 1919)684-8295. Phone<919)684-2663.(Sorry, notices "Unholy Matrimony: Banned Unions in the Late International Coffee Hour - Chapel lounge, base­ 4444. cannot be taken over the phone.). Roman Empire"- Professor Hagith Si van i University ment. 12 noon - 1:00 pm. Every Friday. Faculty Recital-Douglas Buys, piano; Jane Hawkins, of Kansas! - Fri., Feb 24, 4:15. 226 Allen Bldg. Catholic Student Center - 5:30 pm, Holy hour of piano (assisting). Fri., Feb. 24. 8:00 pm, Baldwin MONDAY prayer and silence. 7:45 pm Friday Fellowship. Auditorium, free. "Arabidopsis Mutants that Constituitively Express Systemic Acquired Resistance" • Scott Bowling, Dept. "Opportunities for Undergraduates at Biolc; Catholic Student Center - 5:30 pm Holy hour of Telemann's Paris Quartets - performed by faculty Stations" - an information session. 107 Biological Prayer and Silence. 7:45 pm Friday Fellowship. artist RebeccaTroxIer, Richard Luby. Brent W issick. of Botany, Cell & Molecular Bio. Dept. Duke. Fri., Sciences. 7:30 pm. Elaine Funaro. Sat., Feb. 25,8:00 pm, Nelson Music Feb. 24, 10:00-11:30 am. Room 140 Bio. Sci. Bldg. Lutheran Campus Ministry - Service of Holy Com­ Room. 684-4444. CAPS - Dialogue: Racism < institutionalized racism) munion, Chapel Crypt. 6:30 pm. ''Melodic And Rhythmic Solfege in South Indian Mary Lou Williams Center, the 5th in a series of 7 Music"- Matthew Allen. 104 Biddle Music Bldg.. Fri. evening discussions. 7 - 9 pm. SATURDAY Feb. 24, 4:00 pm. Organ Recital - Maurice Clerc, free, Duke Chapel, Women's Center Art Gallery - Celebrating the Black Epworth /Share - 4th Annual Gong Show Party - at Sunday, Feb. 26, 5:00 pm. Music by Buxtehude. Woman-art exhibit featuring portraits and personal Epworth, 9:00 pm, Call Ed Byrd at 613-0727 to Muffat, Hanff, Lubeck, Bach. statements from black women of Duke. Feb. 20: 28, register acts or for more information. "Eco and Cal vino Reading Dante"- Guv Raffa, Univ. Augustana Koto Ensemble - Sunday, Feb. 26, 4:00 9-5. or Texas, Austin, 4:00 - 5:30 pm 116 Old Chem. Rock For Choice Concert - Coffeehouse - Scarlet pm, National Humanities Center, RTP. (9191 549- Catholic Student Center 5:30 pm evening prayer Green opens for Some Things Coming. $5.00. Pro- 0661. "Seedling Dynamics of Sierran Conifers"- Ruth Kern. to Feminist Majority earmarked for abortion Grad. Student, Dept. of Botany, Duke, Fri.. Feb. 24, Westminster Presbyterian Fellowship meeting - UNC-CH Jazz Festiva!-Feb.24-28,Mostevents free. Chapel basement lounge. 8:30 - 9:30 pm. 684-3043. Call (919) 962-1449 for information. 12:45 -1:45 pm, Room 144, Biol. Sci. Bldg. "Kohn-Sham Density-Functional Theory: The "Per­ SUNDAY Ballet Theatre de Bordeaux - Duke Artists Series, 3 TUESDAY fect" Molecular Orbital Formalism" - Dr. Axel Becke. Lutheran Campus Ministry - Fellowship Supper, & 8 pm, Sunday, Feb. 26, Page Auditorium. 684- Community Service Center - Faith & Service Pro­ Queen's College - Ontario, Fri.. Feb. 24. 3:30 pm, kitchen area of Duke Chapel basement. 6:00 pm. 4444. gram & Dialogue, Chapel basement, all welcome!! Fritz London Lecture Hall of P.M. Gross Chem Lab. Sponsored by the Community Service Center, 6:30 Wesley Fellowship Sunday night gathering, Divinity pm. School lounge, Gray Bldg. 6:00 pm. Early Childhood Studies Certificate - information meeting about courses and internships. Tues., Feb. 21, 4:30 - 5:30 pm, 101 West Duke Bldg. East Cam­ Film & Video "Gender and The Deconstruct on of National Iden­ pus. tity in the Balkans and the Baltics" - Ekaterina Volunteer Recruitment Day for people wanting to French Film Festival - Mon., Feb. 20 - La Femme Nikova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and Na­ Episcopal Center- Holy Eucharist, the CryptofDuke volunteer for Durham based AIDS organizations. Nikita. 8:00 pm, 204B East Duke Bldg.; Tues., Feb. tional Humanities Center; Use Trapenciere, Latvian Chapel, Thursday, Feb. 23,7 - 9 pm, Durham County Library 21, Cvrann De Berperac. 7:00 & 9:30 pm, Bryan Academy of Sciences and visiting professor. Center Auditorium. (919) 286-7475. Tuesday through Friday morning prayer, 8:30 am, Center Film Theater; Wed.. Feb. 22. Madame Bovarv. for Intel-national Studies. Memorial Chapel. 8:00 pm, 204 B East Duke Bldg.; Thurs., Feb. 23, ThreeMen&ACradle. 7:00 & 9:30 pm, Bryan Center "Macro and Molecular Evolution in the Catholic Student Center - 5:30 pm Bible study, 7:00 Film Theater; Fri., Feb. 24, Too Beautiful For You. Scrophuiariaceae: Implications for Systematics" - "Taste-Full Memories: Traditional Foods ofthe Ru­ pm Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults followed by Bryan Center Film Theater, 7:00 pm. Andrea Wolfe, Dept. of Biology, Vanderbilt Univ., ral South" - a black history month program by Alice refreshments Wed., Feb. 22, Double screening in ethnographic film Mon., Feb. 20, 12:40 -1:55 pm. Room 144, Bio. Sci. Eley Jones, free. Historic Stagville. Sunday. Feb. 26, Wesley Fellowship - Eucharist. 027 Chapel base­ 2-4 pm, (919) 620-0120. 5825 Old Oxford Hwy., ment, Wesley office. Every Tu. Wed., Thurs. 5:30pm. WEDNESDAY Center for Lesbian. Gay & Bisexual Life - Stereotyp­ ing. Mvths. & Homophobia in the African-American Student Government Announcements Community. 211 Flowers. 12:00 - 1:00 pm. Drama Program - post-production discussion for The Model Apartment, Branson Theater, 5:00 pm. DSG Announcements GPSC Announcements Amnesty International - meeting, every Wednesday FREE LE6AL AID CAMERON CRAZIES Meeting: General meeting tonight a 17:00in i-oom at 7:30 in 111 Soc. Sci. Support human rights. 613- 208 Engineering Bldg. All graduate and profes­ The DSG Attorney is available by appointment Leroy Walker, President ofthe U.S. Olympic Commis­ sional students are welcome to attend, depart­ 2182. every Monday from 5:30 - 8:00 pm. Call 684-6403 sion, will be here to speak to YOU on February 22 in ment representatives are particularly encour- THURSDAY for more information or schedule a consultation. Cameron before the game. Details are coming soon... "How Hot was Ice-Age Africa?" - a seminar for under- DSC COMMENTS COINC TO VISIT BONK? iRS Concerns? An IRS representative will be i, 144 Biological Sciences. 7;00 pm. coming to Duke this Friday. Feb. 24 to help Want to share vour comments about the activities An additional bus is now available on the route from graduate and professional students with any Women's Coalition - 7:00 pm, meeting, come help of DSG? Call'684-DUKE or e-mail us at DSG- East to Science Drive at 11:30. just in time to get you problems they may be having with their taxes. plan educational program re: sexual harassment. com ments @acp ub. duke.edu. to your chemistry class at 11:50. This took a lot of work to make available to chem students coming Tentatively scheduled for 7:00 in 208 Engineer­ Get involved! Women's Center. AEROBICS!! from East, and in order to insure the permanence of ing, [email protected] D.U.M.A. After Hours - Dr. Dorie Reents-Budet dis­ this extra bus, administrators have asked to see a for confirmation. No appointment is necessary cusses the art of Mesoamerica. Cash bar. 5:00 - 8:00 Freeaerobicsclassesarebeingofferedagain! They demonstrated need for the bus. So, e-mail Shefali at for this service. pm. 684-5135. are held every Monday-Thursday at 5:15 and 6:30 [email protected] and tell her you think the new pm in the Trent weight room. bus is great!!! Any other comments or bussing needs? John Tolsma is right! Graduate students must Chess Club - meeting. Everyone welcome. 7:00 - 9:00 E-mail those to her too! protect their federally subsidized loans. Don't let pm. Social Science room 232. 490-3269. BRYAN CENTER MESSACE the Contract with America take away our finan­ Wesley Fellowship - Bible study, 027 Chapel base- BOARD CASINO NICHT1995 cial security. Speak Up! ment.Wesley office. 7:00 pm. TGIF: This Friday from 4:30 to 7:00. $2.00 off Want to post a message on the DSG ticker sign in Casino Night 1995 is on the way!! Any groups domestic pitchers. 25c soft drinks. Bring ID. Westminster Presbvterian Fellowship lunch - open the Bryan Center? Call Nadeem or Carol at 684- interested in being a part of it should contact Daleep to evei-vbodv, 11:30 - 1:30 pm. Chapel basement 6403. It's FREE! at xl361, Trang at x0240. or Viva at x2368 ASAP. kitchen. Cost $1.00. 684-3043. THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1995 Classifieds

Announcements FREE FINANCIAL AID MARDI GRAS! DUET MEETING! Houses for Rent Kick olf to Mardi Gras al Ihe Under MEETING TONIGHT in 231 SOC/Sci 6 and scholarships is now available. All ground. Thursday. Feb 23. 10:30pm. company. Flexible hours between 9:30pm. Please remember dues! An HOUSE OFF EAST students are eligible regardless ol Sponsored by Ihe Class of '97. FREE ??? Call Kristine@ 613-1286. 4:00pm and 11:00pm to do filing. This grades, income or parenls' income Call lo all dues-paying sophomores, will be a temporary position lasting ap­ For rent this June, July, August. 5 imale products or sen Studeni Financial Services. 1 800 263 oihers. cash/food/fie*. proximately four lo si* weeks beginning bedroom, 2 baths. S1400/mo. Call urge you lo exercise caution m/iarir 6495 cm. F53601 Entertainment mid-February in the Duke University area. Pete 286-9143. ending money to ;n»> advertise, YOU FALL '94 STUDY ABROAD Please call i-800-57 3-7 272 and ask for e always justified in asking any ad DUKE WOMEN RETURNEES' EDWIN MEESE Misc. For Sale Curious ahout GYN exams? Contracep­ Undergr The former Reagan Administration Attor­ tion? STDs? Peer Health Educaiors are abroad during Fan 1994. the Re­ ney General will speak on "America al NEEDED: Work Study studeni preferably altering programs for women lo answer turnees' Reception is Tuesday, to do "accurate" typing, proofing, filing. Feb.21.4:00pm. Von Canon C, Bryan the Crass roads' 7:30pm in Page Audito­ rium on Thursday February 23. Tickets and leroiing. The typing includes typing lour Business Manager barrasscu to ask! Come lo a coi Center. If you are coming and haven't free and available on the BC Walkway Of Annals Of Surgery for Dr. David letus know, please call 684 2174 so Sabiston. Jr. (Macintosh—Microsoft er. --TheCnronlcie. and at Page Bo* Office. Sponsored by Healthy Devil. Call 6846721 o we can count you in. Word) 8 to 12 hours per week. Flexible the Major Speakers Committee of the 3620 ext. 282 fl schedule to be worked with. Contact Duke Union and College Republicans. LEAVING COUNTRY - MUST SELL!! Barb a ra Ki nd red. 681-3852. PEOPLE NEEDED WESTMINSTER Buick Century'85 12,800. Good con­ EARLY CHILDHOOD ship TONIGHT. 8:30-9:30pm, Chapel Toe> dition, 93K. AC. cruise, price nego­ s. Ten' Basement. Join us lo learn aboul and Help Wanted i-r>r,ir> i) Early Childhood Studies Certifical Students Wanted tiate. Appliances all only 6 months 3:45pm. evening: 5:00pm 10:15pm Information meeting about courses old. Sharp Telephone/Fax. $180. DAEWOO 19" Color TV. S130. Iron. $7/hr * incentive plan. Bachelor's internships. Tues, Feb. 21. 4 Shifts available for the following days/ SHAKESPEARE RETURNS $15. ironing Board. $7. Hairdryer. $7, degree required. We train. APPLY NOW 5:30pm. 101 Wesl Duke Buildin, Carolina this summer? For Summer Answering machine. S15. Tel: 403- rojeel beginning March. April and East Campus In Duke Drama's production of Measure employment and housing information 9525. Measurement Inc. 423 Mum?, (or Measure. Opening weekend perfor­ mances on February 23-26 at 8pm and call Paul at 800-662-2122. St. Ournam. NC 27701. 683-2413. ISSUE ONE! Tuesday 10am- 2om. Wedn esd ay 4 -6 P m. February 25 at 2pm. Tickets at Page Thursday 7pm-12am. Friday 10:30am A Duke McLaughlin Group comes to the (684-4444). Tickets For Sale STUDY AIDS Griffith Film Theater 7:00pm Wednes MALE SMOKERS! Men. ages 18-26. day Feb. 22. Fred Barnes. DavidGergen. are needed to participate in a study on Mial's Ihe Natural Energy Alternative David Price and Peter Feaver will dis FILM GRANT physiological responses lo laboratory

o Coffee? Give yourself Ihe natural cuss the state olthe Clinton Presidency, ' • .-.•..i • • tasks. Participants will be paid up to >dge when study I ng for you r next e *am. Tickets Free and available on ihe BC of uo to 11.500 for the production of a $50 for their time aod effort. If inter­ walkway and at Page Bo> Office. Spon ested call 684-8667 and ask for the Part-time work study position available sored by Major Speakers. !'• at the Bryan Center Information Desk Men's Study. once. Duke Democrats and College Re­ to perform clerical tasks. Ten hours a and are Oue on Monday. March 6. Pro week available at $6.00 an hour. Hours publicans. auction will commence on Monday. SECURITY GUARDS Basketball Tix WANT TO PUBLISH? .irv Nc-xioie. but uielsrat least four days March 20anda finished film is expected Part-timefor weekends/special events/ a week. Position available immediately. Undergraduates; submit your papers by end of Fall 1995 semester. For more ISSUE ONE! Please call Katherine Noble at 684- DUKE/MARYLAND lo Eruditio. Jou mat for Social Sciences. information call Chairman Matt Littin al Hex time. Grad students only. Contact 3030. 31 8C Info Desk by 5:00pm Feb. 22. A Duke McLaughlin Group comes to the 684-2911. Cpl. Gunn. 684-5135: Duke University Finishing Grad student has NEVER Questions. 613-0136. Grimm Film I neater 7:00pm Wurje.es been to a Duke game. Need 2-3 tin day Feb. 22. Fred Barnes. David Gergen. (for spouse and 15yoson) for Duke/ David Price and Peter Feaver will dis­ Duke in France Acad. Vr. 95-96 and Fail Maryland (3/li. Please leave msg: Needed: work-study student preferaoiy r SUMMER STUDY ABROAD 1995 Applications are now available in Institute forParapsychology (across l orr 383-97S4. THANKS! cuss ihe stale of the Clinton Presidency. to do "accurate' typing, proofing, filing 205 Languages Building and 121 Alien East Campus) needs help for research FINANCIAL AID. Applications lor Tickets Free and available on ihe BC and xeroiing. The typing includes typing Building, please contact David Ben. On andadministrativestaff.Calli""" "" Duke Un iversity Summer 1995 Study walkway and al Page Box Office. Spon­ of Annals of Surgery for Dr. David Campus Director, for an interview soon. M-F. 9:00am-5:00pm. id programs due in 121 Allen sored by Major Speakers. Political Sci­ Sabiston. Jr. (Macintosh. Microsoft Deadline for applications: March 3. Building no later than 5:00pm. Fri­ ence. Duke Democrats and College Re> Word). 8 to 12 hours per week, Flexible 1995. day, February 24. ABSOLUTE DEAD schedule to be worked with, contact Apts, for Bent DESPERATE!!! Barbara Kindred © 681-3852 Promised daddy a ticket to FSU game al aid to be eligible to apply. EDWIN MEESE THE HOLTON PRIZE for birthday. Will pay cash, do your :ions. 684-2174. The former Reagan Administration Attor­ Sublease 1 BR/BA at Springfield. laundry, anything. Call Corinne. x- ney General will speak on 'America at Porched balcony, walk-in closet. C/A. MACANDERSON FUND the Crossroads'" 7:30pm in Page Audito­ tion in 03 Allen Building. ceiling fan, and all other major appli­ SCHOLARSHIP FUND DUKE SUM rium on Thursday February 23. Tickets videographers needed lot ances. W/D connections. Close to Promised to future boss a ticke 1995 FOREIGN LANGUAGE free and available on the BC walkway UJA WILL CALL U productions. Want 'hands on" viO Southsquare mall. Safe neighborhood FSU game, i need 2. PLEASE Ci SCHOLARSHIPS, Applications lor 20 and at Page Box Office. Sponsored Oy experience? Like being outdoors? Li and very good environment. Available On Thursday. FeBruary 23 or Tuesday, April 1st or ten days earlier for free. ERIC @ 286-7821. Please help r - $900 Scholars trip Fund Awards for the Major Speakers Committee of the kids?Caii today for info and apDlicatic Duke Union and College Republicans. February 28 for our annual United Jew­ CAMP TV 800-284-8437.

WASHINGTON (AP) —Anti-abortion on the 1996 ticket include GOP gover­ • APARTHEID from page 4 Dries van Heerden, another conservatives are lining up behind an nors William Weld of Massachusetts, qualify," Hatting said. Vlakplaas operative turned witness, ultimatum to GOP presidential hope­ Christine Todd Whitman of New Jersey To head off such a political escape, said that after the unit blew up the fuls: give up support for abortion rights and Pete Wilson of California. the prosecutors have taken the line headquarters of the South African or give up the race, None will be qualified for even the vice that the crimes were not authenti­ Council of Churches in 1988, one of "Only a pro-life candidate will be president's slot, Schlafly said, without cally political. de Klerk's Cabinet colleagues, Adrian nominated by the Republican conven­ a clear denunciation of abortion. "Beating your own colleague to Vlok, went to the farm to congratu­ tion," Phyllis Schlafly said Saturday. "The delegates will not go for a mixed death with a snooker stick because late them. Hers was the same warning sounded message," she said of a possible split he reported that his firearm got sto­ Coetzee, the intended target ofthe last week by Christian Coalition Execu­ ticket. len — it's difficult to see what that tape-player bomb, said it was "obvi­ tive Director Ralph Reed who said reli­ While abortion was certain to become had to do with politics," said the gov­ ous" from this that de Klerk must gious conservative voters will not sup- an issue in the 1996 GOP primaries, ernment lawyer, referring to the case have known more than he has ac­ ofa black policeman clubbed to death knowledged. at Vlakplaas. "The great majority of "Did Vlok lie to the leader of his these crimes are sheer gangsterism party?" he said. "Can de Klerk really "It's really a not-so-subtle form of blackmail." and lawlessness." be that stupid?" To spread the anxi­ But no one minimizes the poten­ ety wider, de Kock has hinted he Sen. Arlen Spector tial political fallout from the case. might also name officials within the Witnesses have already implicated African National Congress who col­ senior officials of the Inkatha Free­ laborated or informed. port the Republican ticket in 1996 if ei­ most party leaders hoped to avoid a di­ dom Party, which is a partner in the The reckoning is painful not just ther candidate supports abortion rights. visive debate so early into the new Re­ coalition government and the gov­ for politicians. Appearing with Schlafly on CNN's publican Congress. But those hopes col­ erning party in one province. Many Afrikaners fear that raking "Newsmaker Saturday," Sen. Arlen lapsed in the wake of Reed's Feb. 10 The bigger question is whether the up the past will make it impossible Specter, R-Pa., was not cowed. speech to the Conservative Political Ac­ trial will accuse top officials of de for them to live safely in South Af- "It's really a not-so-subtle form of tion Committee and the controversy over Klerk's National Party. blackmail," said Specter, who supports President Clinton's choice for surgeon abortion rights and is likely to seek the general. 1996 presidential nomination. Revelations that the nominee, Dr. And with a warning of his own, Specter Henry Foster, performed abortions tore Minority politician, editor said some 43 percent of Republicans sup­ open the abortion debate in the Senate, port abortion rights and Schlafly and Reed which must confirm him. could destroy Republican chances to reclaim Schlafly said Foster's performance of urge activism, education the White House if they persist. abortions, though legal, should dis­ "If we insist on excluding about half qualify him as the nation's chief spokes­ • SPEAKERS from page 1 the party, it will give his best man for public health. pose issues such as the model minor­ chance — perhaps his only chance — to "Gambling is legal in most states, but ity myth and Asian inner-city prob­ "We must tran­ win," said Specter. we don't want a professional gambler as lems. scend stereotypes Other moderates likely to seek a spot secretary ofthe Treasury," she said. "We need individuals who help us define our own needs, concerns and within our commu­ viewpoints," Hokoyama said. "Too of­ nity that we may • From page 12 ten we let others define who we are, harbor wrongly MACANDERSON FUND WHO IS ZOLA??? and it's now time we do that our­ SCHOLARSHIP FUND - DUKE SUM­ selves," he said, drawing applause about our non-Asian MER 1995 FOREIGN LANGUAGE FRESHMEN ENGINEERS SCHOLARSHIPS. Applications for 20- from the audience. neighbors." $900 Scholarship Fund Awards lor Seminar, -Engineering Your Stress Duke University Summer 1995 Lan­ Response: A Siress Management For­ "If I had a mirror and I held [it] up, FLY DIRT CHEAP. Caribbean/Mexico guage Study Abroad programs due in mula Just For You." Tuesday, Feb. 21. then you'd see them [leaders], because $189 RT. Europe S169. California 121 Allen Building no later than at 7pm. 203Teer Engineering Library Ram Uppuluri, S129. Air-Tech Ltd. (212) 219-7000. 5:00pm. Friday, February 24. ABSO­ if they don't come from us, you won't [email protected] LUTE DEADLINE. Questions. 684- see them," Hokoyama said. Democrat candidate 2174. Duke in Spain. Paris. Erlangen. FALL '94 STUDY ABROAD Russia andCtiina. for Tennessee's How's this for a dream? Overlook­ RETURNEES' RECEPTION. Just a While Hokoyama sought to summon ing the ocean from a seventh floor reminder to Undergraduates who third congressional ZOLA IS COMING! luxury suite on Hollywood Beach. studied abroad during Fall 1994. the audience to action, Ram Uppuluri, Sleeps 5, everything furnished, the Returnees' Reception is Tues­ recounted his experiences as a minor­ district kitchen, 2 bedrooms, 15 min. from Give the gift of life. Be an egg don day. Feb.21, 4:00pm. Von Canon the excitement of Miami or Ft. maternal surrogate for a cfiilc C, Bryan Center. If you are coming ity politician in Tennessee and the in­ Lauderdale, beaches, airport, Jai- couple: S2.500/S17.000, plus and haven't let us know, please call evitable struggles that he had to over­ Alai, dogs, unbelievable night life. penses. 800-308-7367. 684-2174 so we can count you in. March 11-18, $800. Act now, | only come in a conservative voting popula­ have one. Call 205-948-7493 and e weight for summer! I lost over 20 tion. make it come true. anecdotes from his college experi­ mds. went from a size 9 to a 3 in Uppuluri was once a legislative as­ ence, Wong assured the audience it weeks, without diet/drugs/exer- CRAZY ZACKS. Gradweek. 1, 2. 3 :! All natural! Product-guaranteed sistant to U.S. Representative Jim that if necessary resources such as bedroom Oeacti nooses. Pool, volley­ ults! Kelly, 732-0823. Cooper and U.S. Senator Al Gore, Jr. cultural literature or lectures are ball. 1-800-645-3618, He recently finished fourth in his run­ not available, then students should ISSUE ONE! - SPRING BREAK '95 - Jamaica from A Duke McLaughlin Group comes to the TACO, so much yummy (oops) so little ning for U.S. Congress in the Demo­ gather that information on their $509, Florida from $149. Charlotte Griffith Film Theater 7;00pm Wednes­ time until your birthday. Happy 21 to cratic primary of Tennessee's third own. departures. Ziggy Marley live in day Feb. 22. Fred Barnes. DavidGergen. someone who shouldn't be legal yet. Jamaica, March 13th. Don't miss David Price and Peter Feaver will dis­ congressional district. Wong, who graduated from the out, space limited. Call Dave @ cuss the state of the Clinton Presi­ FAITH AND SERVICE "It became clear to me that my can­ University of California—Berkeley 613-2458. dency. Tickets Free and available on the Come discuss the link between BC walkway and at Page Box Office. didacy was to transcend stereotypes... in 1971, disparaged the college cur­ community service and faith. Personals Sponsored by Major Speakers. Political Equality is fundamentally an Ameri­ riculum he had been forced to study Science. Duke Democrats and College Open dialogue and all opinions Republicans. welcome! 6:30pm, Tues.2/21, can issue. That's why we fight for [it], as well as that ofthe present day. Free pregnancy tests. Continental Chapel Basement. Sponsored by not because [it's an] Asian-American "You have to ask yourself, 'How caring help in a crisis. Pregnancy GA 91-92 REUNION The Community Service Center. Come join us! issue," Uppuluri said. can your education prepare you for Support Services. 490-0203. Feb. 20, 9:30pm. Satisfactions. Bench theR to follow. Don't miss it! In order to effectively do away with the 21st century?' Every student .; Myrtle Beach Week! Birthdays racial discrimination, however, one here must prepare themselves for •s ana conaos in walking lack's". Call (800) 714- must understand both perspectives the multicultural and multilingual HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!! and not perceive the movement as a world of the 21st century," Wong EDWIN MEESE Tell that special person "Happy war between races, Uppuluri said. said. "Get no grades, take no cred­ SUMMER STUDY ABROAD Birthday!" with a Birthday Classi­ The former Reagan Administ •n At- its, be your own teacher." . FINANCIAL AID. Applications for Duke tomey General will speak on fied from The Chronicle. It's "We must transcend stereotypes University Summer 1995 Study at the Crossroads'- 7:30pm in Page quick...It's easy...you can do it by within our community that we may Abroad programs due in 121 Allen Auditorium on Thursday February 23 phone.. .and it doesn' 1 cost an arm, harbor wrongly about our non-Asian Building no later man 5:00pm, Fri­ Tickets free and available on the BC teg or any other prominent body Wong has written two novels, day. February 24. ABSOLUTE DEAD­ Walkway and at Page Box Office. Spon­ part! Place yours today! VISA/ neighbors," Uppuluri said. "American Knees" and "Homebase," LINE, You must currently be sored by the Major Speakers Commit­ MC/Ftex/Cash/Check accept d. and has edited two widely-ac­ nancial aid to be eligible to ; tee of the Duke Union and College Call 684-3476 for more Informs- Questions, 684-2174. Republicans. Speaker Shawn Wong urged stu­ claimed Asian-American antholo­ dents to educate themselves. Telling gies. Tin-: CHRONICLE MONDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1995 Media criticized Equity in college sports 'improving' By ALLISON CREEKMORE for coverage bias For those who thought the women's movement for equal treatment was a thing ofthe past, a conference "If this issue involved English • GENDER from page 1 held this weekend was something of reawakening. or political science, it would Her current book, 'The Stronger Women Get, The Countless scholars and feminists were at the Uni­ More Men Love Football," looks at the unique versity this weekend to debate the future of college be different." situation of football as a sport in American cul­ athletics for women at a gathering titled, "Gender and ture and how this affects women. Sports: Setting a Course for College Athletics." Brian Snow, general counsel for Nelson said that the history of women's sports Five panelists analyzed the movement towards gen­ Colorado State University includes a long 1 ist of reasons why men believed der equity in college athletics on Friday in the Terry women should not play sports. She also stressed Sanford Institute of Public Policy. Two advocates for that the phenomenon continues to the present Title IX, who were from the National Women's Law A major problem cited for the lack of adherance to day, citing the fact that 1984 was the first year in Center and the Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, Title IX is the sport of football. Since football takes up which women were allowed to run the marathon squared off against general counsels from two univer­ so many of the scholarship opportunities for males on in the Olympics. sities. A representative ofthe NCAA also sat on the most college campuses, the football coaches are find­ While Nelson acknowledged some progress, she panel. ing themselves under fire to reduce their numbers and said many changes still need to be made. Al­ Title IX, a federal law passed in 1972, states that no spending. though more females participate in sports than program or activity which receives federal financial "There has to be belt-tightening in the sport of foot­ ever before, there are still moves to limit the in­ assistance can discriminate against a person due to ball," Connell said. "There has to be some cutting out volvement of female athletes. gender. Court decisions and regulations that have been of waste and excesses." "The media is a place where we're not winning adopted since then apply Title IX specifically to inter­ And that statement comes from a Southeastern Con­ yet, especially in sports," Nelson said. "There are collegiate athletics. ference school, where many consider football to be sa­ subtle ways of not acknowledging men's failures "The state ofthe union in terms of complying with cred. The biggest complaints, however, come from and instead blaming these failures on 'too much Title IX is pathetic, but improving," said Arthur people who do not want new women's programs to come strength/The media also ignores women's sports. Bryant, executive director of the Trial Lawyers for at the expense of men's programs. Men's sports take up 95 percent ofthe sports sec­ Public Justice. "There is a great lack of enforcement Indeed, some supporters of Title IX say that men's tion in the newspapers. We should notice what's of Title IX." sports need not be cut completely, rather, that money going on in women's sports." One ofthe only ways that Title IX has been enforced should conie from excess spending in the "big money" Nelson brought up the coaching disparities of is through actual or threatened lawsuits. Mary sports like football and men's basketball. One univer­ sports in the United States. More than 80 per­ Connell, general counsel for the University of Missis­ sity in Texas facing a Title IX lawsuit claimed that it cent of high school coaches are male. sippi, headed a study of Mississippi to see where the did not have enough money to fund a new women's Another key contributor to the lack of equity school could achieve compliance with the law. sport, yet somehow the athletic department found in sports is what she termed "internalized sex­ "The litigation is working," Connell said. "I think $120,000 to repanel the football coach's office that same ism." With eating disorders rampant among col­ we're beginning to get the point. [Universities] are not year. lege women, Nelson lamented the stereotypes of doing very well, but we're all slowly about to catch "Cost is an issue because it's a reallocation of funds," the weak, frail, skinny woman. on." said Janet Justus, the NCAA women's issues coordi­ "It's not okay [for women I to have big muscles," But others pointed to a vast amount of work yet to nator and primary liaison to the NCAA Committee on Nelson said. "It's not okay to win. Women are be done. "The presidents, boards of trustees and ath­ Women's Athletics. "Attitude also plays a large part using sports now to be thin, to be smaller, to take letic directors don't have the passion for this like they in addressing these issues. The concept ofa level play­ up less space. Women should use sports to em­ should," said Brian Snow, general counsel for Colo­ ing field needs to be in all areas, [such as] recruiting power themselves rather than to become smaller." rado State University. "We should be looking at a more and benefits for student athletes." She also suggested ways in which women — global approach. If this issue involved English or po­ Instances like the repaneling one above are found and men who are interested — can work together litical science, it would be different." on college campuses across the nation because the to solve the problems she pointed out. Nelson said Several major universities have faced lawsuits un­ prevailing view among schools seems to be that they she would like to see more teamwork and coop­ der Title IX, including Brown, Temple and Auburn. are part of a broader society of schools that make simi­ eration in the female community to protest the Snow's own university faced a lawsuit in 1993. Mean­ lar decisions. injustices that women face. while, no university has been able to prove in court "People won't change unless they know that every­ "Society tells us it's urifeminine to be loud,"Nelson that it has been providing adequate opportunities for body else is changing," Justus said. "The education said. "We need to protest the assassination on Title women. about [Title IX] needs to increase." EX [a federal regulation against sex-based discrimi­ nation] and protest the media. Coach women's sports. We need to think of ourselves as coaches and RECYCLE RECYCLE RECYCLE teammates with other women. There should be fe­ male bonding off the court." Nelson acknowledged that these initiatives will not be easy for anyone to accomplish. She suggested that women take a courageous, proud attitude and not expect widespread approval. "Feminism is about having power over ourselves ir-V«vsv-\wiw/^ and choosingfor ourselves," Nelson said. "Sports are empowering women, and it's changing society." Restaurant and Bar Economic issues "THE BEST PIZZA IN TOWN behind Prop.187 • PROP 187 from page 1 "Proponents of the legislation are not all racist," said • HOMEMADE CRUST AND SAUCE • panelist Eric Liu, a first-year student at who has served as speechwriter for President Bill Clinton. "We have to look at the substance of their • HAND-SPUN PIES • arguments." For example, panelist Jeff Yang said economic factors played a key role in the proposition's passage. "With •ALL-FRESH TOPPINCS • Proposition 187, you see a situation where within the Asian community, you see some friction developing be­ tween those more well-off land those who are not I," said Yang, founder and editor-in-chief of "A. Magazine: In­ side Asian America," a nationally circulated publication FREE DELIVERY - CASH OR DUKE POINTS for English-speaking Asian-Pacific Americans. "The state of California in particular has by and large been one of the most economically segregated in that there are wealthy people involved and a vast underclass who in many ways are [fundamental to] the commu­ BRIGHTLEAF SQUARE, MAIN ST., DURHAM 682-7392 nity," Yang added. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1995 THE CHRONICLE GOP questions Fighting in Chechnya begins anew • CHECHNYA from page 5 part ofthe cease-fire agreement. "this illusory chance" should not be wasted. Although tenuous, the brief truce on Saturday al­ appointment Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin lowed the Red Cross to bring its first convoy of aid • NOMINATION from page 4 said Sunday that Moscow wanted to continue ne­ to Grozny, a wasteland of rubble without heat, elec­ gotiations and solve the conflict by political means. tricity, and clean water. to bring up the nomination." Lamar Alexander, a potential rival of Dole's "We favor continuing the negotiating process," Many of the city's 400,000 residents have fled in the contest for the 1996 Republican presi­ ITAR-Tass quoted Chernomyrdin as saying in since the Kremlin sent its troops into the separat­ dential nomination, said he knows Foster well Kaliningrad on his return from a trip to Poland. ist republic last Dec. 11 — and especially since the and "I think he's a good man." As governor of "The bloodshed must be stopped and everything Russians first tried to storm Grozny on Dec. 31. Tennessee, Alexander appointed Foster chair­ must be solved by political methods, not force," After the failed assault, the military changed tac­ man ofa commission on infant mortality. Chernomyrdin said. "But this unfortunately de­ tics, attacking from a distance with heavy artillery pends not only on us, but also upon the opposing and missiles, and then slowly taking the city with But Alexander, also appearing on ABC, said: side." ground troops. "Putting an ob-gyn into the surgeon general's position right now is a very bad idea unless A planned exchange of prisoners has failed to ma­ Thousands of Chechen civilians and fighters, all you are trying to do is introduce a huge terialize, but the sides did exchange the bodies of and at least 1,400 Russian servicemen are be­ debate in this country over abortion rights, war dead, Moscow's NTV news said, without giving lieved to have died in the conflict 1,000 miles which you really don't need." any details. The prisoner and corpse exchanges were south of Moscow. Senate hearings on the nomination are ex­ pected to begin in mid-March. Dole likely to lead Republican effort • DOLE from page 7 turn going into the Southern dominated Super Tues­ day. Gramm's supporters are trying to do the same thing with Arizona, where the Texas senator is supported Because stuff*happens. by Gov. Fife Symington and Sen. John McCain, and in South Carolina, where he has the backing of 20 ofthe *Hey this is corporate America. "We have to keep it clean. state's 46 count chairmen. New Hampshire Republicans have been annoyed by efforts in Arizona to move its primary ahead of New Hampshire's. The participants at Sunday's dinner faced the diffi­ cult task of trying to establish their own unique quali­ fications for the presidency while avoiding to depart from established Republican dogma on the major do­ mestic policy issues. Lugar, while promoting the idea of smaller govern­ ment, tried to introduce foreign policy as an issue since it is "the first requisite" ofthe president. Specter, who entered the race primarily to remove the anti-abortion plank from the GOP platform, warned that the Republican Party would give Clinton "his best chance to be reelected" if the GOP keeps the plank. Dornan, a firebrand, chided his fellow Republicans for not criticizing Clinton more. "Folks, we've got to do better than that," he said. Alexander presented himself as the Washington outsider, despite having worked in the Nixon and Bush administrations. "But I went home," he said, and has remained "outside Washington where we usually go for our presidents." Alexander also called for an end to affirmative ac­ tion programs to redress racial discrimination, declar­ ing, "We should treat Americans as individuals, not as part of groups," and repeated his idea that Con­ gress serve only parttime. Martin was the most eloquent speaker, not only pro­ moting abortion rights but also invoking Abraham Lincoln's anti-slavery rhetoric to contrast the Repub­ lican Party with Democrats "who believe in groups" rather than "the hopes, aspiration and dreams of the It's everyv^herc American people who work hard." Keyes delivered an impassioned plea to ban abor­ you want to be.* tions, comparing it to opposing slavery. "You cannot have the right to do what is wrong," he said. And re­ ferring to the dominance of budget issues in politics, he added, "We don't have money problems. We have moral problems." Buchanan urged the party to remain "pro-life," but said, "We're not going to close the door to any Republi­ can." Buchanan also railed against "world govern­ ment," vowing, "No more NAFTA, no more GATT, no more bail outs of Wall Street and Mexico." Buchanan, who received 37 percent ofthe vote in his one-on-one challenge of then-President Bush in the 1992 primary, had threatened not to appear if forced D Visa USA. Inc. 1995 to speak last, but eventually relented. THE CHRONICLE MONDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1995

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