THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, JANUARY 19. 1987 ' DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 82. NO. 80 • • .. Oil scare alarms Marine Lab By MICHAEL MILSTEIN "It was sort of awesome."' said Costlow, Emergency crews stabilized Morehead who is also the Chairman ofthe N.C. Ma­ O A City State Port fuel tanks threatened by rine Fisheries Commission and was pres­ __ __ erosion Friday afternoon and Saturday, ent when Gov. Jim Martin inspected the saving the area, home ofthe University's site Friday night. "There wouldn't have Marine Laboratory, from a severe oil spill. been much we could do" had a spill Any oil released from the tanks into ad­ occurred, he said. "It's the perfect exam­ _Y^_\\ m jacent Rogue Sound would have seriously ple that you don't just stop the sea." affected the Marine Lab's operations, ac­ _^______is_f ___? <*.\ )t*Vv i cording to Director John Costlow. "The ef­ fect it would have on local flora and fauna would be very damaging," he said. In the event of a major oil spill, Costlow indi­ ~^%* WAKE V cated the Laboratory would be forced to curtail local research and shut off pumps supplying seawater to its aquariums. The fuel tanks are perched next to Colo­ nial Oil Co.'s berth at the state port in Morehead City, about one-half mile west ofthe Marine Lab. About 9 a.m, Friday, waves began to *_m undercut the tank closest to the water af­ "We were very concerned when things ; ter a 50-year-old sea wall protecting the started collapsing.'' McMahan said. %. E W - ,J'v tanks from the tide tumbled over, said "Nobody knew what was going to ///_ * Port Manager Don McMahan. By mid- happen." morning a road, railroad tracks and a few From about noon Friday. Colonial Oil small buildings had already been under­ and port workers, aided by state environ­ '^Ipfa-ft mined by the waves, which were continu­ mental agencies and the Coast Guard, at­ .p. 1 JANE RIBADENEYRA/THE CHRONICLE ing to erode the shore at a rate of about tempted to stabilize the tanks by dump­ five feet each hour. Local officials were ing rocks in front of them to halt the in­ Short cut concerned the tank, filled with thousands coming tide. At the same time, Coast Tyrone Bogues could run, but he couldn't hide and he couldn't score Saturday of gallons of diesel fuel, might crack or Guard boats set up booms to contain any as Danny Ferry and the Blue Devils delivered Wake's 21st consecutive ACC tumble into the water and let the fuel possible oil spill, according to Coast loss. For more on the game, see SPORTSWRAP. loose. See LAB on page 2 Applicant numbers Application shifts again on the rise show new appeal By MOREY OSTEEN The number of applications for undergraduate admis­ By RICK CENDO sion has jumped at least 18,5 percent, from 12,650 last While the University has seen a tremendous in­ year to over 15,000, according to Richard Steele, director crease in its number of applicants, that trend was not of undergraduate admissions. "I know we're over 15,000, apparent at high schools that have traditionally sup­ I just don't know by how much," he said. plied Duke with students. The 1987 applicant pool marks the third consecutive At the Hill School, for instance, the number of ap­ double-digit percentage increase in undergraduate ap­ plicants to the University has actually gone down, to plication numbers. In 1986, applications increased by 17 20 from 21 last year, according to guidance counselor percent after rising by 10 percent in 1985. Steven Lloyd. Other coun­ The increase in the number of applications is causing selors contacted also report News logistical problems for the admissions office, said Connie small or no increases in ap- *____•• .— •—, Johnson, assistant director of undergraduate ad- plications to Duke. A Y\3lySIS misssions. "Our deadlines are the same if we are work­ In light ofthe small in- ~m^—^—^—mm—^—^ ing with 8,000 applications or 15,000." crease of applicants at familiar high schools but the The time-consuming admissions process requires two large increase of applications to the University in officials to read each application and make comments, general, it seems that the admissions office has ex­ Johnson said. If the two readers appraise the same ap­ panded Duke's appeal over new areas, rather than plicant differently, a third official is called in to review simply tapping deeper into old feeder schools. the application. The two most similar evaluations are That the number of applicants at these schools used in the final decision. remains steady, despite Duke's increased popularity Although the admissions staff reads approximately and media exposure, indicates a subtle but important 300 applications evesy day. Johnson said that might not about the character ofthe new admissions pool. be fast enough. She joked that the staff may have to SETH ANN FARLEY/THE CHRONICLE' "Our number of applicants has gone slightly down work al! night to finish in time for presentation to the Admissions office staffer unloads some of more because Duke has become more competitive," said decision board, which ultimately decides whether to ad­ than 15,000 undergraduate applications. James TenBroeck. guidance counselor at Tower Hill mit each applicant. school. Lloyd called this a self-selection process. "We're feeling pretty overwhelmed, but everyone is co­ room obsolete. However, that idea has not yet been ap­ "Several years ago. a C \ student might have applied operating and working very hard". Johnson said. "We'll proved. to Duke as a long shot, but now that student won't get through it. We may all be bleary-eyed, but we'll get Heather Krause, a high school senior from Delaware, even try." through it." came to look at Duke last Friday although she had not While the raw number of applicants has risen sub While much ofthe undergraduate admissions staff is been able to complete her application by the Jan. 15 See ANALYSIS on page 8 new. Johnson said she did not expect any problems to deadline. arise due to inexperience. "They've already been through "I'm realty sorry I didn't get my application done in the early decision evaluation process in the fall," she time, this place looks terrific," Krause said. "I'm think­ said. ing about applying here as soon as possible as a transfer Weather The decision board begins meeting in early March. Ap­ student." plications, grouped by geographic area, are presented Krause said Duke has become extremely popular at Don't lose those bOWS: Rush isn't over yet, and defended by a staff member representing that area. her small, private school — six out of a class of 30 sent girls. Anyway, if all else fails, you can still pledge The applications this year. "Each year it becomes more popu­ In an attempt to expedite the admissions process last Chronicle. High in the low 60s today with periods of lar". Krause said. "Duke ranks with Dartmouth, U. year, Steele proposed installing a computer system. The rain. Partly cloudy Tuesday with a high in the low Penn., Princeton and Georgetown as really hard to get system would allow each counselor immediate access to 50s. an applicant's file, and make repeated treks to the file Page 2 THE CHRONICLE Monday, January 19,1987 Our Town Blacks disappearing from nation's farms Oil menace

WINSTON-SALEM lAPf — Suffering about getting ahead, about making a prof­ alarms Lab the effects of restrictive inheritance laws, it." the scarcity of credit and the increased He says the commission "could have LAB from page 1 mechanization that encourages debt and saved money on the report because it Guard Quartermaster G.P. Kesserling. expansion, the days of the black farmer hasn't made a difference." And by late Friday evening, crews had almost completely emptied the tank may be numbered, officials say. Betty Bailey, the director of the Farm closest to the water, which was in the In 1920. one of every seven farmers was Survival Project in Pittsboro, said: "The most immediate danger, and had black. Today, that ratio is one in 67. Department of Agriculture hasn't done begun the process of removing more In 1910," blacks owned 15.6 million anything to correct discrimination. In viscous oil from the other tanks. acres; in 1982, 33,000 blacks were farm­ fact, it's probably gotten worse." Calm weather allowed the agencies ing 3.1 million acres, mostly in the Deep Samuel Cornelius, who was appointed to work unhindered, Costlow said. South. by the secretary ofthe department of agri­ The most recent state statistics show culture in March 1984 to oversee civil After the 8:30 p.m. high tide passed that, although they owned 1.2 million rights issues, acknowledges that prob­ and most erosion had subsided, tense acres in 1950. black farmers now own less lems within FmHA have not been cor­ officials were able to breathe a sigh of than 400,000 acres. rected and that black farmers are nearing relief. "Hopefully it's history," Port Manager McMahan said Sunday, Until 1982, when the U.S. Civil Rights their end. "Thank God it wasn't real bad." Commission released its benchmark "Even if we don't stop the trend of loss report. "The Decline of Black Farming in of land, we want to at least slow it down," Several years ago, Costlow said, stu­ America," the loss of land by black he said. "But when the black farmer dies dents at the Marine Lab projected which areas would be in most danger farmers went almost unnoticed. UPI PHOTO or sells the farm, no one comes to replace from an oil spill, depending on various In its report, the commission urged the Black farmers are becoming fewer and him." Farmers Home Administration to in­ tidal and weather conditions. He said farther between. Other officials of the agriculture he made those projections available to crease black representation within its department say that there is no discrimi­ management, field operations and loan the Coast Guard Friday in case of a FmHA has not followed the recommenda­ nation within the agency. full-fledged disaster. policies. The basis for those recommenda­ tion to overhaul the department's civil They attribute blacks leaving the land tions, the report said, was the FmHA's in­ rights and loan policies to keep blacks to a historical distaste for farming. McMahan said the damaged berth, built in 1952, was the port's oldest. volvement in .the "very kind of racial dis­ from losing their farms. Vance Clark, the administrator of crimination that it should be seeking to George Amnions is a black farmer who FmHA, said that the agency has made an Port officials are still not sure what correct." farms 175 acres of cleared land and raises extra effort this year to erase any percep­ triggered the erosion that felled the Five years after the commission issued 100.000 turkeys a year in the piney woods tion of discrimination within it. The sea wall, but both McMahan and its report, there is no sign that the trend about 70 miles east of Fayetteville. agency has made strides in that area, he Costlow suggested that offshore dredg­ ing may have contributed. McMahan has changed. "If I could get the interest rates lower added, but it has done a poor job of public said an investigation directed by the Few of the policy changes which the and pay off on my turkey houses, I could relations. Port's safety officer is scheduled to commission had urged the FmHA to make stay in business," Amnions said. "Hell, I "Young blacks just don't have the inter­ begin this week. have been carried out. For example. could pay off some bills and start thinking est in farming that they used to," he said.

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By PATRICIA GILFEATHER Lack of progress against discrimination and black student apathy was the focus of alumna Dr, Brenda Armstrong's speech Friday at the Martin Luther King memo­ rial dinner sponsored by the Black Stu­ dent Alliance. Armstrong, now a professor at the medical school, said little has changed here since the late sixties. One of about sixty black students who occupied the A].fen Building in 1968. Armstrong urged blacks to begin making race relations an issue on campus. "We can no longer afford the foolishness of in­ action. We can no longer afford to procras­ tinate or to work only for self," she told the about 150 people who attended the dinner. "Nowhere is I racism] better depicted SUSAN HELMS THE CHRONICLE than in the lack of access to higher educa­ New BSA president Maurice Green tion for our children," she said. According to Armstrong, 30 percent In other business: Trinity junior more black teenagers have been graduat­ Maurice Green was1 installed as the new ing from high school in recent years, but BSA president, replacing Monica Reid. there is an 11 percent decrease in the Green said he is planning a grass roots number of students going to college. campaign to address discrimination is- White 80 percent of black students attend the 3,200 predominantly white institu­ Reid. who will graduate in the spring. tions in America, she said 50 percent of "said the BSA's major achievements last blacks who actually graduate from college year were sponsoring speakers and events from black colleges. and increasing activities with Duke's "MIT receives more appropriation from black alumni group. Title III than all ofthe 114 black institu­ Green hopes to continue working to­ tions in this country put together." ward many of the goals of past BSA ad­ Armstrong said. Title III is the govern­ ministrations. He plans to invite black ment program which endows funds to alumni back to talk with students about universities. past and present racial problems. "Perhaps more than anything we must "I also want to try to get the student in­ be mindful that growing and making volvement back in the BSA." he said. "We changes takes time and demands hard would like to hear from the students." work. For those of us who are black, there Also. Terrence Laster was installed as is much to be done. The challenge is BSA vice-president and Chris Foster was enormous." installed as treasurer. SALE! Any Hooded Sweatshirt NOW SINGERS • DANCERS • INSTRUMENTALISTS TECHNICIANS * VARIETY PERFORMERS Kings Productions, the world's #1 producer of live entertainment, is holding ouditions for the $10.75 spectacular 1987 season at CAROWINDS, Charlotte, North Carolina. At Big Jay's we'll Pay is good and jobs are plenty (we'll even ^ provide one round trip oirfare if you're hired to sew or press your I work at a park over 250 miles from your home). Make your audition o show we can't do without! favorite names or •slogans on to our top Give us your best at: quality Russell Athletic GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA Friday, January 30 sweatshirts, sweatpants East Carolina University; A. J. Fletcher Music Building; Recital Hall Singers & Instrumentalists: 1 - 3 PM and football jerseys. Dancers: 4 - 5 PM; Technicians: 1 - 5 PM WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA All the best Saturday, January 31 North Carolina School of the Arts; Workplace Studios, Studio #615 colors. Sizes MS Singers: 1 - 3 PM; Dancers: 4 - 5 PM Small-XXXXXL! ss_i!_ Instrumentalists, Specialty Acts, & Technicians: 1 - 5 PM XXL and XXXL are 35% off... Sale ends when supplies run out C-rowinds Emertainmenl Office 704/588-2606 Kings Productions 800/544-5464 KINGS ISLAND • KINGS DOMINION • CAROWINDS CANADA'S WONDERLAND * GREAT AMERICA BIG JAY'S AUSTRALIA'S WONDERLAND = Kings Productions 1987 701 Ninth Street • Durham. N.C. 286-3634 Opinion Letters Page 4 January 19,1987 Resolve race issue quickly To the editor: wringing their hands in frustration while I am amazed at how quickly and effec­ their subordinates run amok. tively the University has responded to the The spoken policy ofthe University is to problem of game lines. Why can't the Uni­ stop suspicious persons, but what cannot In the name of King versity move so efficiently to solve the be driven through the heads of various Georgia's Forsyth County, popula­ — a dream. problem of racially motivated stops com­ thick-skulled officers of Duke Public mitted by Duke Public Safety? Safety is that black does not equal suspi­ tion 38.000, has no black residents. That is precisely why the King It is an undisputed fact that blacks are cious. When will members of Public Safe­ No blacks have lived there since holiday is so important, and ought to being harassed because in the minds of ty, ASDU, the administration and black 1912, when they were fired from their be officially observed by every state. some officers they just don't look like stu­ student associations meet and find a jobs, threatened and finally forced out It's unique because unlike the Fourth dents. If this occurred rarely it would quick and effective solution to this prob­ of the county following rape accusa­ of July, Memorial Day and Columbus amount to a few regrettable incidents, if it lem? tions against a black man who was Day, it reminds us all of unfinished occurred occasionally it would be a prob­ The next move belongs to the adminis­ ultimately hanged before a crowd of business. While it helps us recall the lem but when it occurs with the frequency tration — as it has for many years — for 10,000 people. aims of King and the generation that that it does at Duke it is the unspoken they alone can correct the injustice, or The families of those residents are walked with him, it holds out a some­ policy ofthe University. maybe it's just too much for black stu­ still afraid to go back, for good reason. times difficult challenge to present To think otherwise you must suspend dents to expect to be treated with courtesy and respect. If the University is to con­ On Saturday hundreds of Ku Klux and future generations: to work daily belief and buy two highly unlikely propo­ sitions: 1. that Public Safety officers are tinue business as usual it could at least Klan members threw rocks and bot­ to remove prejudice from our hearts consistently and publicly behaving in a inform prospective students that they will tles at a small group who walked and discrimination and inequality manner that could get them fired; and 2. be subject to the whims of men with big through the county on an "anti-im- from our towns, schools and busines­ that Paul Dumas, director of Public Safe­ guns and tiny minds. tidation march" in honor of civil ses. ty, does not approve of his officers but he, James C. Lee rights hero Martin Luther King, Jr. This challenge applies to our com­ President Brodie, et. al., are helplessly Law '88 Fortunately only the state's pride and munity, not just Forsyth County, reputation were injured. New York or Philadelphia. Racial Today's march from East Campus problems exist on this campus. Black to West at 3 p.m. offers a welcome students, faculty and employees are contrast to the deplorable incident in complaining about the degrading ex­ 'I'm SAA, ground me' Forsyth — a'testament to the peace­ perience of being stopped and ques­ ful coexistence of various races in this tioned by police simply because they The ad in Gaborone's Gazette says "Now city and on this campus. But the in­ don't look like they belong here. you can jet to Jo'burg in 40 mins." South • Foreign affairs cident, like the King holiday itself, There is still little interaction be­ African Airways adds that via Johannes­ must not be overlooked. tween black and white social groups burg it can provide connections with "non­ Flora Lewis stop SAA flights to London and direct Such sad recurring racial confron­ on campus. And the University has flights to New York and various destina­ tations show that the nation still has difficulty attracting black teachers tions in Europe." Afrikaner newspaper editor, is convinced a long way to go before the ideals of and students. The Chronicle itself, Zimbabwe's prime minister, Robert that President P.W. Botha will make equality and brotherhood are truly which must strive for fair, accurate Mugabe, whose country is vulnerable to "resistance to American interference" a realized. The much-publicized, racial­ and complete coverage of the entire South African reprisals, has called for key issue in coming South African whites- ly-motivated killing of a black man in community, has often struggled to cutting off air links to South Africa. He is only elections, the rallying cry to attract live up to that challenge. right. That would be an unequivocal form conservatives whose support is moving to­ Queens, New York last month and ward even more intransigent leaders. the threats to black residents in of sanctions, making clear South Africa's The nation King saw from the That offers an opportunity for the U.S. white areas of Philadelphia provide isolation and yet selective in the distur­ mountain top is an illusive one that bance it would cause. Not many of the The Reagan administration's policy of further proof that King's dream of a often seems far, far away. But if we blacks in South Africa's unhappy town­ "constructive engagement," the idea that nation where every American is truly take time to remember his ideals and ships frequently fly off on holiday and change can be promoted smoothly and free to live, work and be educated hold them dear in our daily lives, business trips. peacefully by placating the Botha regime, wherever they please is still just that we're halfway home. has not only failed, it has hurt America by Botswana, along with Lesotho and Swa­ identifying it with the adamant racists. ziland, is in a customs union with South Africa and would probably have to con­ Now, it could help the U.S. to give Iffll ' .-__SB______!8 tinue allowing flights to and from Johan­ Botha more reason to run on an anti- nesburg. But obliging all passengers to change planes at their airports would bring them some compensation for the A chance to act ___MM burdens that sanctions inevitably also im­ against apartheid pose on them. The argument that sanctions hurt South Africa's neighbors and its black American platform. This is not only a workers as well is true, of course. It is also matter of image and future relations with true that they are consciously prepared to the rest of Africa. Nor is it just to redress make what sacrifice is necessary to the geopolitical error of leaving to the promote a real change of the apartheid Russians the claim of being the one power I_-___11_F ___m^ regime. backing opponents of apartheid. Further As Legwaila J.M.J. Legwaila, Botswa­ measures could increase the resonance of na's U.N. delegate, told a meeting here, U.S. congressional action and public opin­ "The revolution has begun in earnest." He ion, which the ambiguity of American pol­ ______£_&•>• was appealing to what he called "the mar­ icy in recent years has muffled. velous historical instinct for survival of The only hopeful scenario of how IN THEGULAG IHTHEG-ULAS the white Afrikaner tribe" to recognize change might come at less than utterly that its future on the continent depends tragic cost is based on a split among BEFORE GOR&VOW ^TERGDRBVOIEV on coming to terms with blacks "who are Afrikaners, provoking the growing just as African" before the spreading di­ minority who see disaster looming to seek saster strikes them all. a negotiated settlement. Botha won't do THE CHRONICLE There is no real illusion in South Africa it, but he may retire soon and his succes­ that such appeals, cutting air links, or sor could move toward a coalition of Shannon Mullen, Editor even far more drastic sanctions will make moderates and liberals against repres­ Michael Milstein, Rocky Rosen, Managing Editors things better soon. The consensus is that sion. Barry Eriksen, General Manager much worse times are ahead before "the Only an alliance against extremists on Read Martin, Editorial Page Editor long dark night" South Africans speak of both sides, against whites who refuse Laura Allen, News Editor Rick Cendo, News Editor begins to end. But there is also a firm, change and blacks heading toward indis­ Kathleen Sullivan, City & State Editor Therese Maher, University Editor deep conviction that white minority rule criminate violence in desperation, could Michael Leber, Sports Editor Tammi Henkin, Photography Editor cannot endure. still avert catastrophe. The African Na­ Jane Ribadeneyra, Photography Editor Douglas Mays, Senior Editor The open questions are only how it will tional Congress' president, Oliver Tambo, Jenny Wright, Senior Editor Ed Farrell, Contributing Editor end and what will follow. The answers and its imprisoned leader Nelson Man­ Lane Hensley, Production Editor Linda Nettles,Night Production Manager depend on what many people do now. dela have said they are ready. The U.S. Kevin Witte, Business Manager Carolyn Haff, Advertising Production Manager America's role is essentially marginal, but can encourage that alliance by sustaining much attention is focused on the United pressure on Pretoria and helping the • 1987 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. States because the forces being unleashed neighboring states that South Africa is No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permis­ are so frightening that the margin really undermining. sion ofthe business office. matters. Flora Lewis' column is syndicated by Harald Pakendorf, a - - -dissident The.New-York Times - Monday, January 19,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page5 Buchanan in '88? • Essay William Safire

Far be it from me to put the kibosh on Pat Buchanan's possible run for the presidency, but it's better that the secret come out now: conservative True Believers should know that he is a member ofthe Judson Welliver Soci­ ety. This group is made up of the Establishment men and women who have written speeches for presidents during the last eight administrations. It is named after the first White House speechwriter, Judson Welliver, who was responsible for the reputation for eloquence held by Calvin Coolidge. Although the ghostly society has conservative window dressing like the Eisenhower writer Bryce Harlow and Nixonian Ray Price, its roster is shot through with such known liberals as Clark Clifford, Richard Goodwin, Harry McPherson and Arthur Schlesinger Jr. In the be- smearments of a primary campaign, it would be leaked that Pat Buchanan has actually supped with the likes of these people. Why do I rat on my old Nixon colleague this way? Be­ cause President Reagan's combative (no story can be written about Buchanan without the adjective "combative") director of communications is thinking about seeking the Republican nomination in 1988. L cuts your grocery bill even more In the Nixon years, he was the coiner of such phrases as "instant analysis" and "the New Federalism" and ast Saturday I sat in front of my television watch­ emerged from Watergate not only unbesmirched but ing the Duke/Wake Forest game, wondering just D Monday, Monday strengthened. Pat was also the brains behind many of L who it is that calls Cameron Indoor Stadium "The the alliterative barbs of Spiro Agnew ("pusillanimous Zoo," and some commercials caught my eye. These were is, if they're all so American, why does Mike "sing" with pussyfooters" and "vicars of vacillation" were even more ridiculous than tbe guy with the exploding a fake Australian/European accent? More importantly, Buchanan's; "nattering nabobs of negativism" was mine) finger. how can I get Mike to sing at my party? and he survived the fall of that nolo-contendering I'm talking, of course, about the Tom "E." Smith Food • Name the new Fat Cop. It's the end of an era. We clayfoot. Lion commercials. Like many other seniors, I'm strug­ aren't going to have Fat Cop to push around any lunger. In the Reagan fall from grace, he has sallied out from gling with the fact I don't have a job or any plans after I Vern. the trustworthy night watchman for a local all- the White House bunker to lash back at this administra­ graduate. But I think I'm going to apply to the Food Lion night fast food restaurant I'm not allowed to name, has tion's tormentors and to castigate its sunshine soldiers. company as a copy writer. See what you think: been promoted to Captain by the North Carolina Detec­ His friends fear that Pat — as civil in private as he is IsiiPKR: Tom E. Smith, President. Wears sweater with tive Agency and reassigned, according to his successor. savage in public — has become type-cast in this role on "FL" embroidered on the front, hair neatly trimmed. In the ever-burning deck. the background. Baptist white boys miss lay-up after Should he run for president? lay-up. All are glad to have Tom get in their way. I S * HE'S SPUNKY! The argument for taking the plunge is that he would "You know, if we paid ACC basketball players a dollar P * HE'S SQUATTY! galvanize and turn out the True Believers, ignite a na­ for every point they scored, that would cost us $19,200 x * HE'S AN AMERICAN! tional debate with a mediagenic version of "a choice, not per season. So we don't. Likewise, if we have 10 checkers g * HE'LL SING AT YOUR an echo," and polarize the opposition. on duty and 10 carry-out boys per store at $3,35, that's £ PARTY! ' The argument against is practical: it would further $67 per hour. Forget it. "For $200 and 45 cents per mile we can drive to split "the Movement's" ranks. Jack Kemp, who has a •:•: Impress your friends! Leakey, Texas and pick up a vanload of wetbacks. At 20 chance of winning a national election, now has much of •:.: Everywhere he goes, the activist right's support, but some of that strength cents per hour, we make it back in three days. And that SJ people stop and ask him, may be drained by the televangelist Pat Robertson. A adds up to a substantial savings on your weekly food j;: "Hey. Mike! How'bout a Buchanan crusade would undercut Kemp, which is why bill. IDrops ball.I Hey! Paco! Picko uppo that ballo! ICut George Bush and Bob Dole are hoping Buchanan wil! to extra low prices logo. \" £; song.'" »___# dive in. No good? Try this one: _£ As he prepares to leave the White House, Buchanan is | SUPER: Tom E. Smith, President. Eyesare red, grin is asking himself if his candidacy would serve the right or typically stupid. Two shopping carts are filled with razor split and wreck it. At 48, a lifetime spent in advocacy, he blades. | MIKE LINENBERGER does not want to be the instrument delivering the nomi­ "In the ACC, all the teams play by the same rules. nation to a pallid centrist, or be the one who denies the Wouldn't it be nice if drug dealers did the same thing? Republican right a nominee with a fighting chance of But they don't. IMove in tight on Smith, as he holds up winning the'election. two ziplock bags with white powder inside. I From here on the sidelines, I can say the more the "This bag of cocaine costs $15,000 in Atlanta. But in MONDAY1 • Phi delta Ttieta. 2.-.Q.0 a.m. merrier. At the start, let Bush, Dole and Kemp be joined Cary, N.C, the same bag costs only $13,500. That's be­ Somewhere. but no; ihe commons-room by Baker, Haig, Kirkpatrick, Buchanan, du Pont, cause there's a Food Lion store in Cary. When upper TUESDAY1 * Delta Kappaep'si'ion. 9 QO p m Rumsfeld and as many ministers-in-makeup who feel management buys in bulk, we realize substantial vol­ the call. The political spectrum is not as neatly cali­ ume discounts. And that's good news for your total gro­ WEDNESDAY * Sigma Phi Hair SaiOt!. lEOO a brated as psephologists say; in the crucible of the cery bill. [ Lion roars, giggles, falls over. |" Gtvthefeeneh- gol d ciiai). s Optional primaries, leadership can be forged and a party rein- • Sing for me, baby. It was a hard weekend. I needed to vigorated. If a Buchanan platform features a genuine party. I had just arrived when they came in: soccer flat tax, an end to farm subsidies and a pullout from the teammates Carl Williamson and Mike Linenberger. U.N., let's examine his ideas. You've probably been to one of those parties where ev­ erybody is standing on something, haven't you? Well at But most people in "the Movement" today are not on this one, everybody was standing on countertops and ta­ the sidelines. Between the time of Goldwater and the era bles. Carl had already made it up, and he was trying to of Reagan, a sea change has taken place in conservative pull Mike up, too. But the best part is, the new guy is just as fat if not bosoms: the death wish has been replaced by the win fatter. And we need a name for him. Do this: You know wish. The right is not fated to sink gloriously with prin­ After three unsuccessful attempts, they looked like the restaurant. Go there. Meet him. He's very nice. And ciples uncompromised; its activists seek a true-enough they were going to give up. so I gave Mike a boost. I send in your suggestion for a name. My idea is "Junior," believer who turns them on without turning everybody thought my brush with greatness was over, but it had because he's younger and he looks like the late Junior else off. only just begun. Samples. Drop your ideas off in the classified ad box, My hunch is that Pat will take a provocative look Later in the night, and I suspect with some external third floor Flowers Building. Results next week. around and then disappoint the effete corps of salivating provocation, Mike jumped onto another surface: a table, /- in living a lie. editorialists. He may decide he can do more to advance located right in the middle ofthe party. And before any­ the Movement on the air than on the hustings. one could react, the crowd was shushed, and he began to Would have been nice, though, to have a Judson Wel­ screech out the song. "Everywhere we go . . . People stop On the record liver Society dinner in the State Dining Room of the and ask us . . ." etc. From behind, Carl sang along, but White House with the president ghosting his own all the while maintained a look of "Come on, Mike, give / admired him and I always will. speech. it a rest." Paul Dumas, director of Duke Public Safety, on Mar­ It was 2:30 in the morning. At the end, he gurgled tin Luther King, Jr., whom he helped protect as a William Safire's column is syndicated by The New "And if they can't hear us , . . We'll sing a little louder Montgomery, Ala. policeman. York Times. . . ." And he did. I left at 2:31. But what I can't figure out Page 6 THE CHRONICLE Monday, January 19,1987 Comics Bloom County/Berke Breathed THE Daily Crossword _yj.dsonG.T.em MWUOK' * j#r//W«v£~ 111 if I MTswe me NORMAL. rp$e ^i II II mmsepimJLwr 66TA GRIP ON ACROSS i t 3 i s Me. i H^H" " 1! UTrWrinvewr WfseiF...riiie> ROOTB&R 1\V»™- 1 Elec. unit or mse-. ampfR Criw.y fiNPwwHtm % IJ'V ••(_vmt HOSPITAL- 10 One-liner / nw•mrmw.r 13 Soap plant sme...sme. -ml smete viRwes Rim ww.. 14 Kill a bill ofseLF-msmm.. 15 Frenzy 16 Automaton 17 Formicary

18 Ardor U K X 19 Profound M •BJip?] M_r 21 Contend (with) 22 Sediment 23 Marries secretly 25 Spaghetti e.g. ______" FM BB"~"^ ______2B Dye source 30 Hay worth or Moreno 31 Russ. news The Far Side/Gary Larson Calvin and Hobbes/Bill Watterson agency 33 Rick en backer 37 Pithy wit­ ticism 39 Most neat 41 Bristles 1/19/87 42 Roman road Friday's Puzzle Solved 44 Narrative 45 Fall beverage 5 Abhor A 1 F A|A s N f R V n V. 47 Anoint old 6 Ol no — R F F • •P H A R (useless) s 1n A V F RlL V n F i i F F 49 Leatherneck 7 Indicates i o 52 Ratio words 8 Aleutian isle I T f RiA R Y 11 ii T F R 54 Mars: pref. 9 Low-growing 1 1 u 1 ;i; r • H A H H 55 Profound II r r A i: r • H F i: A 1 W F n 61 Bill ot fare 10 Lively dance II N r 1 ElS F R T 1 ¥ A 1 F 62 "— us a child V F 1 1 SWIA n n F R 1 il t p n « HI 1 s f P fl n F 63 Aesopian S n V A B E A N • P 1 1 F F H ingredient 15 Profound | 1 ODD • R t li 11 V 64 Literary 20 Pampas rope S A N___BC 1! H N V A collections 24 Fibbed p F 25 Meerschaum 1 n T S fl i F 1 II r. K •M A N 65 Ruler: suit. A r 1 Y h N A 66 Soul 26 Keep — ii sHc n 67 Antonio or (persevere) P •'.n T Fernando 27 Profound 68 Shelter 29 Bone: pref. 69 Nuzzled 30 — ad judicata 46 Subtract 56 Concerning 32 Henri's girl 48 William the 57 Something DOWN 34 Transaction Conqueror e. forbidden 1 Make hay 35 Seagirt land 49 Parents 58 Rainbow 2 Formosa 36 Summer: Fr. 50 Stadium goddes* Strait port 38 Control 51 Fr. historian 59 Point a I 3 Defrauds S3 "Ivanhoe" finger al 43 Isolde's love 60 Pleased

THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP editor: John Senft Copy editors: Ed Boyle, Rick Cendo, Michael Milstein "He's got one shot left, Murray Copy desk: Liz Morgan and then he's ours!" Associate photography editor: Susan Helms Day photographer: Susan Helms Layout: Spencer Joslin, Shannon Mullen Video watchdog: Brenden Kootsey Doonesbury/Garry Trudeau Assistant news editors: Gillian Bruce. Matt Earl. Jon Hilsenrath. Kathy Nooney. Charles Rawlings. Laura Trivers YOU DONTWIPER- RICK.YQU Staff reporters: Dan Berger, Julie Byrne. Elizabeth Cohen, Tom _fflNP,XVW/-.MY PK0M/55P Curie. Leslie Davis. Cassie Dorn, Elizabeth Edwards. Dennis epimrsotn&CK, .TAKE Foley. Patricia Giifeather. Maxine Grossman, Liz Morgan, John $01... \ HIM! WU Neclerio. MoreyOsteen, David Shutley, David Schwartz. Kevin Tan, Craig Whitlock, Melanie Young Assistant editorial page editor: Ed Boyle, Jeff Diamond Associate production editor: Heather Elliott Early production: Lainnie Davis Paste-up: Roily Miller Account representatives: Judy Bartlett. Suzanne Johannessen Advertising production: Charles Carson, Chris Klugewicz. Leslie Kovach, Lura Luther. Lars Lyon. Ted Rex Business staff: Heather BarnhiH, Kim Blackwell, Deana Gomez, Russ Parker. Steve Ritchie. Gregg Siuciak. Nicki Smart, Craig Stiffler. Lisa Vash. Stephanie White Classified advertising: Luciana Marcial, Becky To lief son

TODAY COMMUNITY CALENDAR TUESDAY "The Romantic Flute" wit) be presented by Rebecca Troxler, flute: Jane Hawkins, piano: and Fred Raimi. cello, at 8 15 A Zoology Department Seminar at 4 15 At 3 p.m. a March will be held, on- The Pi Sigma Alpha Politic:: So eici ginating at the East Campus bus stop Honor Society "wis. 1 hold a luncheon with and concluding outside the Bryan Center Dr. Alex Roland at 12 p • ' rhe Schlitz on West Campus A short ceremony wil! Room. Or. Roland wilt address the topic:

Central America Solidarity Committee Interviews for the new ASDU Study

.l^nfroTm^aaaoV . r Page 7 THE CHRONICLE Monday, January 19,1987 Classifieds

Announcements TERRORISM IN A TECHNOLOGICAL Do you know how long it takes to Can you believe it? No way! Open­ DOES PEPPERONI TURN YOU ON? RESUMES1 Resume drops are com- WORLD: A three day international Then Pizza Devil has a job for you DEADLINE FOR HOUSE COURSE WALK FROM EAST TO WEST CAM­ ings in the ASDU legislature. At-lar­ conference, held in Washington, REGISTRATION : January 21. In­ PUS? Well . . . FIND OUT- ge. off-campus, central campus Call Bob or Ron at 684-5854 after your resume Let ProType laserset shown via satellite LIVE!! Speakers structor's permission required on . . . TODAY. Gather at the East representatives needed If you care 3:30 your resume quickly and profes­ include GEORGE 8USH. ED MEESE. Bus Stop and well figure it out- about Duke, [and I Know you do). sionally Cover letters also done at Iran Hostage BRUCE LAINGEN. our . TOGETHER go to ASDU office and APPLY NOW reasonable rates TERM PAPERS! INTERVIEWS on WEDNESDAY and able in 103or HOAIIen own Deari Eldridge. SAM Spring Break Don't be fooled by ProType will type your papers. DONALDSON. SHIMON PERES... hidden costs and fancy advertise­ THURSDAY. MUST SELL! 1985 Suzuki 6O0SP for maybe, maybe even Ronnie- NO ments. Bahama-Mama Charters is $1.50 per page. ' SCHOLARSHIPS: Senior PHI ETA on or 'Off road motorcycle. Ex JOKE!! Tuesday. Wednesday. experience insures e«cellence. Thursday See ads for details. SIGMA members beginning cond Only 1500 miles $1700 Meeting Wed 7pm 231 Soc Sci Come By our co graduate work next fall shoul pick 471-0664 Ask for Vittono. Coffeehouse m_ eting Tuesday at up applications at the Pre-Mapr Soma Cosmopolitan 10 speed bi- Tridevils Triathlon Club meetin 9:00 p.m. All in erested in getting Advising Center Applications due Tuesday. Jan 20 in 104 Card Gyi $100.00. call Jeff 286-0297. e COFFEEHOUSE Friday. Feb. 20. please attend. at 7:30 p.m. We will be discussin 10-speed Free Spirit Mens Bike PUBLICITY COMMITTEE; Lets try a Ten years old. $40 Call Rob at WXDU SPORTS: Get involved in new time: TUESDAY at 530. Same 684-0382 Good buy! needed for clir radio sports announcing and repor­ PAID VOLUNTEERS — needed for place. If you can't come, please ting. Organizational meeting Mon­ CHESS CLUB — everyone welcome Brand new red Mustang GT 86' 5995. Hearing Study. You must be 60-90 call Kitty at 684-2911. day. House CC Commons. 5:00 First meeting of semester Room convertible. Wife doesn't like Xmas yrs. old. in good health, normal or p.m New and old members. RSVP 311 Soc. Sci Tuesday 730 Play. present $15,500 493-2615 near normal hearing. Pay: $5/hr 684-1155. Wanted to Buy —2V.-3 hrs. total. NO NEEDLES Young Trustee Young Trustee 1773 OR SHOTS. FOR MORE INFORMA­ Young Trustee. Due today 5 p.m. Selling two Genesis tickets to the Broadcasting is easy-Come to a YOGA AND MEDITATION CLASSES Due today 5 p.m. Due today 5 p.m. January 31 show Call Tom around TION CALL 684-4158 WXDU NEWS meeting and find out. Wed evenings beginning Jan 21 6:30 pm at 1-933-3863 Tickets available for sold-out Gen­ Tuesday, 7:00 p.m. Schlitz Meet­ DURHAM EDUCATION VOLUN­ at ihe Durham Friends Meeting esis Concert on Feb 33. Prime ing Room (or call Gerri at 684- TEERS: meeting Tuesday Jan. 20. Pool table. Saunier-Wilhem Like House 404 Alexander Ave Between 1738). seats, lower level. Call Doug 1- 7 p.m. York Commons Room. For new Commercial grade, suitable West campus Call 286- 942-3956 or Mitch 1-929-9906 for fraternity. $1250. 489-4167 EQUESTRIAN TEAM: Mandatory il_i f meeting Monday. 1/19 at 8:00 tutonnR kids m Dur­ Help Wanted leave message. ham schools Quest.ions' can p.m. in York Commons. Questions? THE STEREO WORKS Top Quality Looking for a HOUSE COURSE? Janis at 634-7741 Help -eep abortion legal' volun­ Personals "Women and the Law." Tuesday 7- Call Blair or Kirby. teers needed ? Hours per week at Equipment, lowest tape prices, fastest repairs 2606 Hill­ 8:30 in Broughton and 'Career ATTENTION-The re is a mandatory The Rugby CiuD will be noiomg its 9tn Street Office Can Nat.onai Vacation Rental Puerto Vallarta. sborough. 286-3891. Goals and Personal Relationships: meeting for all RUGBY players, old first organ zationai meeting Tues Abortion Rights Actior League Mexico; 4/9-4/16; 2 Bdr; 2 bath: Exploring options for life after and new, Tuesday Jan 20 at 7:00 Jan. 20 ai 7 p m in 311 SOC So -86-9807 3 Jan. 31 Genesis pnvate pool; Call 467-4935 after Duke" Brown House. Tuesdays. p.m. in 311 Soc/Sci. BE THERE!!! 6:00 Cabo San Lucas. Mexico: 2/ Supersub Sunday' Trie Sub Way Work-study positmr available for 3:30-5. Call Women's Studies. 12-2/19: 3 bdr. 3 baths: Jacuzzi: SAILING CLUB: Important meeting delivers Sjnday noon until mid­ motivated independent responsi­ 684-5683. for more information. _ call 467-4935 after 6 00 for all interested Tuesday. Jan night. There is nothing i_ a Sob ble undergrad Diverse tasks in 1978 Ford Mustang PSYCHOLOGY CLUB: Get involved! 20th at 7:00 p.m.. 136 Soc/Sci. eluding program development ed vinyl roof. V6. auto- MIRECOURT think about next year's Come to our organizational meet­ HILLEL SHABBAT DINNER Friday public relaiions pub'isneng man­ wer steering and brakes. housing now!! MIRECOURT COED ing TUESDAY JAN. 20 at 7:00 p.m. January 23. 6:00 p.m. Old Trinity agement and genera' office tasks : upperclass selective housing in its ty. ue. ifs wue1 Bwa;mg Sad- M best offer. 684- in ROOM 319 SOC-PSY. OFFICERS Room. Sign up by 1/21 in Hillel of- Flexible nours Contact Cne« Sis- New Dorms MIRECOURT OPEN pw.ninf Wed 21. >n ie H WILL BE ELECTED, so don't miss tek 684-5683 HOUSE lor prospective residents film 7.9.11. 2 c • from North and West campuses. What _ nice mc vie! Outdoor work available 10-15 hrs/ Autos for Sale "Invest Your Summer", watch for Mon Jan 19 from 7-10 p.m and wk. $4 50-$5/hr weekend in­ the summer jobs fair on Friday. 1978 RED FORD PINTO Hatchback from East and Central campuses. DUKE UNIVERSITY WIND SYM­ ATTENTION FRATERNITY RUSHEES: cluded. Must have carl Call 1-828- Bryan Center. 11-2. AM/FM just tuned Exc Cond One Wed.. Jan 21 from 7-10 p.m PHONY SEMESTER IN VIENNA. Fall Bid cards should be turned into the 9491 for interview date between 9 owner call 489-6267 MIRECOURT for more info . call 1987 applications are available The Publications Board has 2 Interfraternity Council office along and 3 p.r 684-0268 or 684-7253 NOW in the Study Abroad Office. openings for the spring semester with the $10 bid fee between 12 >l.nc y . We i 2022 Campus Drive. Rolling ad- Interviews are Friday. Jan 23. ap- and 4 p.m. on Wednesday. Jan. located in Raleigh but Do you think you should get credit 21. The office is located in rm. 104 you'll be working in the Durham. $100? Call for facts today 602- for studying in the Bahamas? Inter­ West Union down tbe hall from the Chapel Hill area Call now views for the new Study Abroad 1987-1988 DUKE/KENT DEADLINE ASDU office. For more info, call 837-3401. Ext 2501 684-6403 University Room. Task Force are Tue. Jan 20 Appli­ IS TUES JAN. 20. Please come by WANTED; Campus Sales Rep for Sign up now before it's toolate ! In­ Roommate Wanted cations and more info at the ASDU the Study Abroad Office at 2022 S.E.T.A "Students for the Ethical terviews for the new ASDU com­ Office or 684-6403 Campus Drive for more info. Treatment of Animals" presents or Senior. For info, see Duke Fu­ puter Advisory Committee are to­ 2 Bdr. Erwin Sq apt Fully fur­ Do you think you should get credit "The Animals' Film'' Wed. Jan. 21. tures weekly job Bulletin Musi Are you taking the April MCAT. the night. More info at ASDU office or nished $338/m. pluselec Lease for studying in the Bahamas? Inter­ submit resume at Futures Office by March GMAT. or the Feb LSAT. or call 684-6403. 4:30 p.m. 201 Perkins. ends May 15th 286-1348 the GRE"> it's not too late to views for the new Study Abroad THETAS! Mandatory Cabinet Meet­ Female roommate wanted $164 prepare with Stanley Kaplan Task Force are Tue. Jan. 20. Appli­ ing tonight in 211 Foreign Lan­ Mac ATT ACKER NEEDED for prod- per month plus 1/2 utilities Call Educational Center Call 489-2348 cations and more info, at the ASDU guages at 10 p.m. All officers have uction of Guideb Lyssa 477-4109 or 489-8720 for class info Office or 684-6403. to be there Thanks! Pagemakes. Flexible ho rs. Nego- ASDU wants youi Many positions DUKENGINEER. Writers, editors, tiable rate. Cal 471-8398 today! Roommate wanted — large fur­ PSYCHOLOGY CLUB Get involved' on University Committees are nished 2 5r Duke Manor Apt S180 Come to our organizational meet­ photographers, artists, and others Wanted: Loving responsible person opening up for the Spring Semes­ interested Organizational meeting *

MarieLove t______.61°rZtSJ: Complete 24 Hour Service From TERADYNE A Very Large Scale Invitation TJ.f . from a Technology leader In electronics, tbe era of very targe scale integration (VLSI) bas arrived, leaving many JENNINGS companies with products suddenly obsolete and engineering staffs struggling to catch up. But not Teradyne. Tbanks to S16S million spet nS&Dfrom 1981-1985, Teradynewas Income Tax Return Preparation ready and wailing for VLSI. Financial Statement Preparation Ready with VLSI memory testers, logic testers, analog testers, board testers. Computerized Accounting Systems Ready in Boston. Massachusetts, and Woodland Hills, California, where Teradyne develops ATE for tbe electronics industry. 714 Ninth Street. Suite 104 383-5668 P.O. Box 3148, Durham. N.C. 27705 286-5485 Ready in Deerfield, Illinois, center for Teradyne s telephone system testing operations. Ready in Nashua, New Hampshire, where Teradyne produces backplane connection sys­ tems and state-of-the-art circuit board technology designated to meet VLSI requirements. Tbis kind of technology leadership Instant Passport spells growth. Excitement. In Color Challenge. Career opportunities you just can 7 findanywhere else. SHARE 2/$5.00 • 10 or more $2.00 ea. Teradyne. A company • Photo I.D. CARDS ahead of its time, looking for some good IN OUR !___)' Laminating While You Wait people to keep it ahead. For more information, see 900 West Main SUCCESS your Placement Counselor. (across from BrighHeaf) 683-2118- M-F10AM-5PM

PATTISHALL'S GARAGE & RADIATOR SERVICE, INC. Specializing in • American Cars • Rabbits » Dasher • Scirocco • Datsun • Toyota » Volvo • Honda -laaiUMB Auto Repairing and Service • Motor Tune-up General Repairs • Wrecker Service 286-2207 1900 W. Markham Ave. located behind Duke Campus THE CHRONICLE

WEEKLY PULL-OUT SPORTS SUPPLEMENT MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1987 SPORTSWRAP Bogues held scoreless in Duke's 69-49 victory By JEFF DIAMOND Cameron may have been ignited late in the game, but Ignited by a key steal early in the sec­ both the team and the crowd lacked fire in the first half. ond half, the overcame a five point def­ The Deacons took an early 7-4 lead, but Danny Ferry icit to defeat Wake Forest, 69-49, Saturday in Cameron scored 10 points in as many minutes to lead Duke to a Indoor Stadium. The win raised 14th-ranked Duke to 23-14 advantage 14 minutes into the game. The Blue 13-2, 2-1 in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Wake fell to Devils had Wake on the ropes, but were unable to 8-6, 0-4, with their 21st consecutive ACC loss. stretch the lead, a weakness that Billy King thinks de­ As Demon Deacon Mark Cline brought the ball up­ serves attention. "If we get a 10 point lead, we've got to court after a Quin Snyder free throw three minutes after build it to 20." said King, who had nine points. "We just intermission. Wake Forest led, 34-30. The advantage can't let a team get back in and make a game of it." was due largely to the fact that the Blue Devils shot a Hindsight must be 20^20. because that is exactly what miserable 39 percent from-the floor in the first half, and Duke did. The Deacons went on a 16-4 tear and took a Duke's two leading scorers, Kevin Strickland, who 30-27 lead into the locker room. played despite a thyroid infection, and Amaker, had yet "That was the first time I've not seen us aggressive in to score. The Blue Devils were caught up in Wake For­ the first half." said Krzyzewski. "I think we were playing est's slow-down style of play. on our heels. We have a lot of respect for Wake, espe­ As Cline crossed midcourt with the ball, however, cially their perimeter game and Bogues, and maybe we Amaker picked his pocket and coasted in for a layup, didn't attack as much as we needed to." getting the crowd to their feet and the Blue Devils in The Blue Devils returned to outscore Wake 42-19 in gear. Duke outscored Wake 39-15 the rest ofthe way, as the second half, but Krzyzewski had nothing but praise the Blue Devils shot 74 percent from the field in the sec­ for the Deacons, who lost their first three ACC games by ond half. only six, three, and eight points. "'Everybody played well for us in that last 17 minutes," "They have a good team," Krzyzewski said. "They're a said Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski, who coached his difficult team to play against, because they have the 100th game in Cameron, garnering a gaudy 74-26 re­ ability to control tempo. Once we played a little bit cord. "We almost didn't make a mistake." faster, I think that was to our advantage. That's the way Krzyzewski, who praised Amaker for his brilliant we're accustomed to playing." defensive play, thought the senior guard's timely theft Danny Ferry, who missed several perimeter jumpers turned the game around. "I thought Tommy's steal there at the outset, moved into the lane, where he was able to where he left IDeacon guard Tyrone] Bogues and came get a better shot. Once he got the range inside, he was from behind IClinel and got it ignited us, and it just able to shoot over the smaller Deacon defense. "I started seemed to pick up the whole defense." out on the wing for a little bit. and then | Krzyzewski Amaker, who finished the game with eight points, moved me in," he said. "Because of my size, I could while holding Bogues scoreless for the first time in 44 take advantage of them." JAI.E RIBADENEYRA THE CHRONICLE games, also thought the play got the Blue Devils on See HOOPS on page 2 Tommy Amaker's sparkling defensive work and eight track. "I really felt that it raised us just a notch at that points helped Duke to turn back Wake Forest. time," he said. "We needed a play, we needed something to lift us, to get us going, to get us pumped up, and to get the crowd back into the game. "That was the turning point ofthe ballgame." He would get no argument from the Deacons. After Blue Devils defeat Terps 70-63 Amaker's steal, Duke made 17 of their last 21 shots in the game, and kept Wake off the scoreboard for as much as 5:34 at a time. behind Meier-Moreland combo Freshman Robert Brickey, who exploded for a season- high 12 points, punctuated Duke's run with two mon­ strous dunks. The first, at 13:32, tied the game at 40, By ANDY LAYTON and the Blue Devils never trailed again. Intensity. The missing element in Wednesday night's lead and never looked back "Situations happened when I had the chance to dunk, loss to Wake Forest proved to be the difference Saturday "I think that our patience on offense was the key to and I used to be kind of tentative in those situations," as the Duke women's basketball team (11-4) shut down our win," said Blue Devil head coach Debbie Leonard. "I said Brickey, whose previous high game was nine the highly touted Maryland Lady Terrapins. 70-63. was pleased by the way we performed in critical situa­ against St. Joseph's. "Then the crowd got into it, and Katie Meier and Chris Moreland combined for 42 tions tonight. that got us pumped." points as the Blue Devils exploded to an early 15 point "We made some changes in our man-to-man defense "Brickey was sensational inside there during that after the Wake game and we worked extremely hard on stretch." said Krzyzewski. "We had a couple of dunks our offensive execution and tonight it paid off because there that just ignited the whole place." we were very patient," said Leonard. "In past games we've taken a lot of shots too early that probably would have hurt us. but tonight we benefitted from our pa­ tience." ACC BASKETBALL SCORES This patience resulted from a new-found confidence and intensity. "I think that we were really psyched up North Carolina 96, N.C. State 78 coming into the game basically because we were looking at it as being a must-win situation for us," said junior All-America forward Chris Moreland. Clemson 74, Maryland 67 "It Iconfidencel was something we've worked on. but tonight the kids were ready. They stayed intense for the Virginia 88, Villanova 57 entire basketball game and that's the way we'll have to be in the rest of our contests because our schedule doesn't get any easier." added Leonard. Maryland I9-6I. a team which relies heavily on their Tuesday abundance of team speed, was never able to successfully get into their running game. "We didn't want them to get Wrestling vs. North Carolina. Cameron Indoor Sta­ any fast breaks and I think that they only got one fast dium, 8 p.m. break the entire game." stated Leonard. "We just sent two of our players back immediately and all in all it was a very good transition from offense to defense, much bet­ ter than in the Wake game." Wednesday "Their fast break was what hurt us at Maryland be­ cause they would get the , make the outlet pass. Men's basketball vs. N.C. State, Raleigh. 7:30 and end up shooting layups," said Moreland. "This time p.m. we didn't let them shoot layups because we got back, sent three players to the boards and had someone find JIMJEFFERS THE CHRONICLE Lisa Brown and this probably frustrated them. Women's basketball vs. N.C. State. Cameron In­ Chris Moreland, returning from an injury that kept "It's a logical thing if some team starts shooting lay door Stadium, 7:30 p.m. her sidelined for two games, scored 20 points and had. seven rebounds. See MARYLAND on page 3 PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP MONDAY. JANUARY 19, 1987 Amaker providing leadership, winning attitude

Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said before this season Amaker's versatility has proven invaluable on this started that if he could have it written into his contract ASHOK REDDY young team. He has silenced many critics about his of­ that Tommy Amaker could play for him every year, he fensive production this season by nearly doubling his would guarantee a winning season. without fouling and to still run the team is just outstan­ points per game average from last year. In two ACC A pretty strong statement for such a respected coach, ding. He played as a point guard, and as a former point games last week, Amaker scored 19 and 17 points but after Saturday's 69-49 win over Wake Forest, guard myself a long, long time ago. I Amaker played I the against North Carolina and Maryland, respectively. Krzyzewski needs to provide no further proof to substan­ ultimate point guard game. Unfortunately, Amaker's all-around ability is not tiate his claim. "It really didn't matter if he scored or not, because he likely to place him in the national spotlight. Sport maga­ Amaker displayed his characteristic unselfish style by understood his impact on the game without scoring." zine obviously took his contribution to last year's 37-3 concentrating on the defense of Deacons' star Tyrone "Tommy did a hell of a job on Bogues," agreed fresh­ team for granted because its preseason basketball issue "Muggsy" Bogues, thus limiting him to only four shots, man Robert Brickey. who himself was a major part of rated Amaker the tenth best point guard in the nation no points and six assists while forcing him to make a Duke's second half surge with two slam dunks and 10 and only the fifth best in the conference. To get an accu­ team-high four turnovers. In his three previous Atlantic points. "We knew coming in that our ability to keep the rate assessment of Amaker's impact, just ask Coast Conference games, the 5-3 Bogues averaged 18 ball away from Bogues was the key." Krzyzewski about him. Or better yet, ask Bogues. points and 12 assists per outing. "I thought it was best for the team that I concentrate on playing defense." said Amaker. who himself took only six shots and scored eight points, six below his season average. "[ Bogues I is an excellent player, forget the size Blue Devils win and all that, because he can do so many things." Blue Devi! fans know about Bogues' influence, be­ HOOPS from page 1 cause as a sophomore, he led Wake Forest to a 91-89 Quin Snyder, who was held scoreless in last Satur­ overtime upset of the nationally second-ranked Blue day's 85-77 loss to North Carolina, scored 12 points, Devils, despite playing with the knowledge that a death while dishing out 7 assists. "I thought the passing of threat had been issued toward him earlier in the week in Ferry and Snyder was terrific," Krzyzewski said. "We Winston-Salem. He sank the game-clinching free throws ran our 2-3 motion extremely well. We just played in the OT period and played great defense all evening, outstanding basketball there in that second half." limiting All-America to eight points. Notes: Strickland, whose infection caused him to Last year, Bogues scored eight points and totaled 12 as­ sists and six steals as a practically one-man show in a become sick during the game, said he felt "terrible" 92-63 Duke win. Blue Devil fans responded to his effort after the game, and entered the hospital Saturday with a rousing ovation when he left the court. night to speed the healing process . . . John Smith was in street clothes at Saturday's game after badly This time, it was Amaker who deserved the ovation. straining his back in a defensive slide drill in Friday's Amaker sacrificed some offensive glory in his defense of practice. "We're hoping that he'll be okay for Wednes­ Bogues. and as a result, he too was held scoreless in the day lagainst N.C. State]," Krzyzewski first half. It was only fitting that Amaker's first points said . . . Tommy Amaker has started every game would come on a breakaway layup after his defensive since he's been at Duke, and Saturday's game was his pressure caused a steal. That play, according to MIKE HALVERSOM,'THE CHRONICLE 120th straight. . . With his two slams, Brickey pulled Krzyzewski. "ignited" both the team and the crowd. Danny Ferry led the Blue Devils in scoring and rebounding for the second straight game despite to within one of the team lead with nine. Billy King "I can't say enough about Amaker's play." said has 10. Krzyzewski. "To keep that much pressure defensively cold shooting from the perimeter.

.7m>m,m>_.uMlif\>^mm(Ttflx_w__^ The Office ofthe Summer Session and the MATERIALS CHEMISTRY Department of Romance Languages

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An opportunity to aquire a second foreign language

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CONTACT: U Professor Miguel Garci-Gomez | Mail tc Prof. T.J. Pinnavaia Department of Chemistry, | Department of Romance Languages gan State University, East Lansing- MI 48824. | 203 Languages Building Mich 684-3706 MSU is an affirmative action/equal opportunity institution _ff_w__wwrwwuri__imiiniii wi w vii mi wi SE MONDAY. JANUARY 19, 1987 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE PAGE 3 Full court press in second half keys Duke victory

MARYLAND from page 1 jng to us and we forced them to make the and fed it to Edna Campbell for the easy for the next five minutes as the Blue Dev­ ups on you for you to feel like kicking mental mistakes." layup. Moreland. however, followed up ils maintained their 15 point lead at 54-39 yourself," continued Moreland. "You put After Duke took a 2-0 lead on Katie with three straight baskets giving the with 11:35 left. more pressure on yourself and then you Meier's 12-foot jump shot. Maryland Blue Devils a 8-5 lead. Maryland was Maryland, however, suddenly caught start making more and more mental mis- stormed back to take a 5-2 lead after never able to recover from this barrage. fire. Campbell drilled a 15-foot baseline takes, but we stopped that from happen- Zorana Radovic stole the bail from Meier Duke extended its lead to 14-7 at the jump shot and Subrena Rivers connected 13;02 mark following back-to-back 15-foot on a follow-up to cut the Duke lead to 11. jumpers from Meier and Sarah Sullivan. 54-43. Following a power move by Hunt. The Lady Terps scored twice on baskets Vicki Bullett and Campbell each con­ from Christy Winters and Beth Hunt to nected on short jumpers to slice the lead cut the lead to 14-11 at 12:20. but the to five. 54-49 with 7:39 left in the game. Blue Devils responded with eight straight After a Duke timeout and a swift ex­ points, the last four from junior Paula change of baskets, Andersen completed a Andersen, to build a comfortable 22-11 three point play to stretch the lead to 59- lead with 9:45 remaining in the half. The 51. The Lady terps retaliated with back Blue Devils' lead reached its high point of toback long range missiles from Brown to 15 following Meier's spinning baseline narrow the lead to four. 59-55. Meier hit move with 5:52 left. one oi' two foul shots to give Duke a 62-57 Maryland mounted a comeback late in lead with 2:32 remaining, hut Brown the first half following two long range responded again, this time from 15 feet to bombs from Lisa Brown to cut the lead to make it 62-59 with 2:18 left. This was as 10 at 29-19 with 3:28 lea. The lead was close as Maryland would get. maintained at 10 until Radovic hit a pull- up eight- foot shot in the lane with 42 sec­ Moreland put in an offensive rebound onds left to close out the half making the and was fouled by Hunt, who in the score 33-25. process fouled out of the game with 1:53 The difference in the first half could be remaining, and Sullivan made two free seen in the field goal percentages. Duke throws with 1:03 left to seal the Lady shot a solid 56 percent from the field Terps' fate with an insurmountable seven while the Lady Terps could only manage a point lead. meager 33 percent. Duke was led by Meier with 22 points, The Blue Devils surprised Maryland at Moreland with 20 points and 7 rebounds, the start ofthe second half as they came and Andersen who had 16 points. Hunt out with a tenacious full court press and and Campbell each had 16 points for following an Andersen nine-foot jump Maryland Duke takes to the court again shot with 17:28 remaining. Duke Wednesday night when they collide with JANE RIBADENEYRA THE CHRONICLE regained a commanding 15 point lead of the Wolfpack of North Carolina State at Paula Andersen scored 16 points, one of three Blue Devils in double figures in 42-27. The game seesawed back and forth Cameron Indoor Stadium. Saturday's 70-63 win over Maryland.

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By TOM FOREMAN JR. Associated Press J.R. Reid took advantage of the absence of two North AROUND THE ACC Carolina State players to score a season-high 31 points and lead third-ranked North Carolina to a 96-78 victory over the 17th-rated Wolfpack Sunday afternoon. The one Reid felt was not N.C. State's 6-10 center The Tar Heels climbed to 4-0 in the Atlantic Coast Charles Shackleford, who sprained an ankle last Conference and maintained its half-game edge on 12th- Thursday. The Wolfpack also was missing 6-9 reserve ranked Clemson, which downed Maryland 72-64 Satur­ forward . Without them, Reid and 6-10 day afternoon. Joe Wolf helped the Tar Heels take control on the boards The 6-foot-9 Reid tied the North Carolina freshman at both ends. scoring mark set by Mike O'Koren in the semifinals of Six straight points, four by Reid, broke a 25-25 tie. the 1977 NCAA tournament against Nevada-Las Vegas. N.C. State got within 35-31 after a pair of free throws by Walter Davis also scored 31 "points against Duke in Mike Giomi with 5:11 left before halftime, but another 1974. North Carolina run of eight points — six by Kenny Reid hit 13 of 14 shots from the field and added 13 Smith and two free throws by Reid — expanded tbe Tar rebounds. Heel lead to 43-31 at the 4:10 mark. "I just know that when 1 got the ball inside, I felt only N.C. State staged a brief charge at the start ofthe sec­ one person on me. and coach said if you have a good shot, ond half, but Reid scored on a jump hook following a go ahead and take it." Reid said. "I felt I was taking good timeout and the Wolfpack was never closer. shots when I did take them." scored 22 points and Wolf added 20 for the Tar Heels, who won their 13th straight game and

From page 7 J FROSH.J •!'•;;.- J FROSH 1 VOL.! climbed to 15-1. Bennie Bolton scored 22 points and misses the pre-game dessert par- Kenny Drummond scored 20 for the Wolfpack. 11-4 and ty. pick u 3-2. and T-shirt TL Alumni H :.u,r schools? Come io a meetinng of ASAP1 "We can't lose Shackleford and Brown and play as well DURHAM EDUCATION VOLUN­ 20% OFF1 DUKE students. R & R in as we have been, especially against this caliber of team," MIKE HALVERSON/THE CHRONICLE TEERS: Tuesday. Jan 20. 7 p.m. January. March. April Getaway to N.C. State coach Jim Valvano said. "I feel pretty good, as Billy King scores two of his nine points over Mark York Commons Room Questions? Mountain Brook Cottages in the good as you can getting beat by 18." Call Janis at 684-7746. Cline. One of the keys to Duke's second half blowout Smokies Now. $104 weekend tor Guards Michael Tait and Michael Brown scored 16 2. $130 weekend for 4. FIRE­ was King's defensive work, limiting Cline to one Giant SuperDowl subs and sand­ PLACES. Spring break rates points apiece as the Tigers not only held off the Terra­ point after he had totalled 14 in the first half. wiches delivered to your door. Sun­ available 704-586-4329 pins, but battled back from several cases ofthe flu and a day through Thursday 5-12 p.m. STEVE and JIM: Thanks tar talking team-wide case of fatigue. crunched Villanova 88-59. Durham's original since 1975 The Sup Way 688-2297 "On the whole, this was one of our weaker Andrew Kennedy scored a game-high 23 points, and performances," Clemson coach Cliff Ellis said. "There the Cavaliers hit 13 straight free throws down the CRT - Belated HAPPY BIRTHDAY1 Thanks 10 the Trent-3 Sorority Rush were several things that contributed to that. We've had stretch to raise their record to 10-4. Hope your 20th year brings as counsellors who gave me a tide to this flu bug, plus this was our ninth game in 20 days." "Villanova is the kind of team we can play against," much tun and success as did your the game I en|oyed the ride 19th Keep all ol the Boys guess­ Clemson is unbeaten after 16 games, while Maryland Kennedy said, adding that the Wildcats "don't have all ing and try to stay out of any diffi- is now 3-6 and 0-5. Steve Hood scored 20 points to lead those big guys like Carolina." the Terrapins. The Tar Heels pinned a 95-80 defeat on Virginia last No. 14 Duke downed Wake Forest 69-49 and Virginia Wednesday.

"King for a Day" National Birthday Celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

UNITY DUKE IN ZIMBABWE MARCH AND from East to West BOTSWANA A short ceremony will culminate the march, Summer 1987 including speeches by: May 18-July4 SECOND Dr. H. Keith H. Brodie Jan Nolting, ASDU President INFORMATION MEETING Maurice Green, BSA President Wednesday, January 21, 1987 Bruce Payne 4:30 FM Nat White, one of the first blacks 204 Ferkins-Breedlove Room to graduate from Duke Meet Professor Sheridan Johns, Director, Refreshments will be served. and learn all about this exciting program. Office ofthe Summer Session 121 Allen Building EAST CAMPUS 684-2621 TODAY BUS STOP MONDAY, JANUARY 19. 1987 SPORTSWRAP THF. CHRONICLE PAGE 5 Coach movement leaves ACC football in disarray If recent, events continue, people will start calling the Atlantic Coast Conference "The Turnover League."' I'm not talking about excessive interceptions — Vinny Tes-, MICHAEL LEBER taverde has cornered that market. I'm talking about ACC football coaches deserting their Yet Sloan is headed for Alabama along with former schools like battle-scarred privates leaving the front. Georgia Tech coach Bill Curry, another coach with a los­ With the resignation of A! Groh Friday, after six years ing record in the less-than-overwhelming ACC. Ala­ at Wake Forest, the tally of conference coaches who have bama's football tradition is every bit as storied as that in packed their bags since the 1986 season is up to four, Ann Arbor or Austin. Do the people in Tuscaloosa know and there was nearly a fifth in North Carolina State's something that we don't know? one-year wonder Dick Sheridan who almost switched to Hardly. University of Arizona. Alabama wants to restore the academic standards in Close to home, Steve Sloan, who had led Duke to a 13- the athletic department to those of the rest of the uni­ 31 record over the past four years hit the road when his versity, and they knew the man who could do the job for alma mater came-a-calling. Sloan is the antithesis of them was the football coach at Duke. Thus, they named what coaching in college football has become. At most him as the director of their athletic department. schools in the country, Sloan wouldn't have been around If the football team can produce the success on the long enough to compile 31 losses. gridiron that Spurrier is anticipating, the new coach will Instead, Duke athletic director Tom Butters stood by deservedly get a lot of credit. But, let's not forget the his man for other reasons, most notably the academic man who built the foundations for success. success of his players. In that respect, new coach Steve It was Sloan who wouldn't take no for an answer and Spurrier has a tough act to follow. eventually was given a new training facility by the ad­ How long would Sloan have lasted at Texas, where ministration. Sloan and recruiting coordinator Tommy Fred Akers won 75 percent of his games before being un­ Limbaugh also brought in a fine bunch of freshman last ceremoniously dumped after one losing season? Even year that should provide a solid nucleus for Spurrier to before the Longhorns embarked on what would become a work with over the next three years. 5-6 campaign, "Fire Fred" banners were being printed SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE Years from now, when Duke football fans look through Wake Forest head football coach Al Groh resigned up by the burnt orange faithful. Texas backers wanted the history ofthe team, they'll see something like: "Steve from his duties last week. He was the fifth Atlantic to see Akers flesh toasted to a burnt orange color. Sloan - head coach 1983-6, overall record 13-31." Such Coast Conference coach to do so since the end of Michigan is another school that would not have wel­ an entry won't tell the whole story of Steve Sloan's comed a 13-31 record. Head coach Bo Schembechler is in tenure at Duke. the season. no apparent danger of losing his job, but has received With Sloan and Curry gone for Alabama, Bobby Ross coaches. Ford is one year behind him in terms of seniori­ considerable flak for his 1-7 career record in the Rose out at Maryland and back in at Georgia Tech, Joe Krivac ty. Bowl. What Wolverine fans forget rather easily is that taking over at Maryland and Groh stepping down at Sheridan, who surprisingly led the Wolfpack to the Schembechler won eight conference championships in Wake Forest, the ACC is in disarray. The new coach that Peach Bowl in his rookie season as a head coach in the Big Ten, probably the toughest football conference in can make the transition in the smoothest manner will Division I-A, was nearly lured away by big bucks in the America. have a chance of keeping up with Clemson's Danny Arizona desert. Wolfpack fans were delighted to hear Of course, Texas and Michigan are two schools with a Ford, North Carolina's Dick Crum and Sheridan at N.C. that their man had bucked the recent trend and decided tremendous gridiron tradition, whereas the name Duke State. to stay at home. With new head coaches at four other doesn't conjure up more than a handful of memories of With nine years as head coach at Chapel Hill under schools in the conference, the 1987 ACC football season major bowl experiences. his belt, Crum is the dean, so to speak, of conference is expected to be different and wide open.

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Wake Forest's Sam Ivy was recruited by several major colleges that wanted his basketball talents, but the freshman for­ Chosen as ward said he chose the Demon Deacon program because he wanted to play and PC-Compatibility lead a stumbling program into the NCAA HARDWARE PICK tournament. or BEST BUY ofthe YEAR by: "I didn't know I would come in and play as big a role as I have been." Ivy said. "But I still feel that I need a lot of work. Wall Street Journal-PC Week'USA TodayPC Maga- "I knew that they were rebuilding, and zine-_nfoWeek»PersonaI Computing-Consumer Reports by me being a freshman, I could play a part in the rebuilding role," Ivy said. For Duke were at another school, I would have to Students and Faculty work my way up. Here, I'm joining in with SPECIAL everybody else trying to rebuild. "I think that we definitely have the players to get into the NCAA tournament, SALE $1195 but I think we need more of an inside game." he said. In 12 games this season. Ivy has posted Leading Edge® Model D™ includes: some good numbers. 512K Ram-MS-Dos 3.1'Diagnoslics-GW Basic Manual'Microsoft Basic Software* The 6-fbot-7 St. Louis native has Operators Manual'Resct Control-Forced Air Cooling-Intel 8088 Microprocessor- started every game for the Demon Dea­ JANE RIBADENEYRA THE CHRONICLE cons and is the team's fourth leading Sam Ivy (40) couldn't stop this Robert MS-Dos Reference Manual-Guide to MS-Dos Manual-Lifetime Toll Free Hardware scorer at 12.5 points per game. He was Brickey slam Saturday, but Wake For­ and Software HELP-Onc RS232 ASYNCH Serial Port-Slot for 8087 Math Co- recruited by Coach Bob Staak primarily est will probably keep the talented Processor-RAM Upgradable to 768K on the Motherboard-Right Angle Connecting to provide rebounding help, and he is freshman anyway. Keyboard Cable-Monochrome TTL and Color RGB Output-28% Smaller System leading the team with 5.1 per game, Unit Size Footprinl-Baticry Backed Built-in Clock/Calcndcr-Sclcclric Style Tactile- slightly ahead of senior Mark Cline. "I like Tyrone and I wanted to play with Touch-Audio Kcyboard-Fi. icen Month Warranty on ALL Parts and Labor -One Ivy. Wake Forest's high scorer in two him before he left." Ivy said, adding that Centronics Parallel Printer Port-Hercules Type High Resolution Monochrome games this year, also is shooting better his April visit to the Winston-Salem cam­ than 60 percent from the Held, part of an pus was what convinced him. Graphics-Twin (Lotus Look-Alikc Spread Shcct)-Two Half Height Totally Silent overall effort which has surprised him. "He said Wake Forest was a nice school HALF HEIGHT 360K Floppy Drives-130 Watt Power Supply and Four Full Si/cd He said he wants to get more aggressive and that if I came down here. I would Empty Expansion Slots-Leading Edge ® Word Processor with Mail Merge and Spoil on the boards, but it appears he has made have to work in academics and athletics," Dictionary-Monochrome TTL Monitor (720x348 Resolution), Your Choice Amber progress on that goal. Still. Ivy said he is he added. "Muggsy tries to calm me down or Green-Your Selection of Five Public Domain Software Disks from Our 500 Disk not completely satisfied. when things get out of hand. I'm not wor­ Library-Two Hours of Class and Individual Instruction "In high school, I played center all of ried that he's nut going to get me the ball." Leading Edge® Model "l)"7 the time and I was already underneath So far. Ivy has resisted the urge to be­ the basket and I could get position." he come more of a scorer and less of a said. "Now. I'm playing on the wing and rebounder. He gave in to temptation in DATA WAY, INC. perimeter and I feel I have to manue.ver last weekend's game with Clemson. and my way inside to get position. It's kind of he said his moment of weakness was Carr Mill Mall difficult, so I have to work on that a little costly. Carrboro, North Carolina hit more." "As soon as I tried to |do morel, I tried Ivy was recruited by Tulsa. Cincinnati to do too much. Muggsy passed me the 919/967-7499 and Nebraska, but his choice of Wake bail, and I bounced it and I got a charging Leading Edge ® is a registered trademark of Leading Forest was based on his desire lo help the foul. That got my level of play down, and I Edge Products.® Inc. Model "D"n_ fc program improve, and on the influence of had to get myself back up," he said. "I try a trademark of lauding Edge ® Products. Tyrone Bogues. the 5-3 senior guard who to keep myself under control. If I get out he said wants to go nut a winner. of control. I tend to do silly things."

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JAI\P_U KB1 K'tt Dinner: 5-9,7 days a week SEAFOOD RESTAURANT Lunch: 11:30-2, Monday-Friday & where the cookin's timed 096 / 967-8227 Major credit cards The Chronicle. in seconds Hwy54WestatM0 Bringing you the truth even when it hurts- There is no last piece to the puzzle. 1987 DURHAM CITY The Associated Students ol Cuke University in cooperation with the Duke Union present THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE AND EXPOSITION I __ TELEPHONE DIRECTORIES TERRORISM IN A TECHNOLOGICAL WORLD The 1987 Durham city directories wili be available January 19 through January SPONSORED BY DISCOVER MAGAZINE, ATIMEINC, PUBLICATION 26, 1987. Please get directories for your department according to the schedule ...live via satellite from Washington D.C, the first comprehensive international symposium on world below. If your building is not mentioned, please go to Ihe location nearest you terrorism. Panel Discussions will focus on issues ranging from the media to counter espionage. or call 684-2239. SCHEDULE TUESDAY. JAHUABY 20 7 PM. PAGE AUDITORIUM * ONLY ONE DIRECTORY PER TELEPHONE IS AVAILABLE * Keynote Address: BLDGS: Hospital South, Bell Bldg. TERRORISM: THE LONG WAR DATES: Mon., January 19 and Tues., January 20 The Honorable George Bush, Vice President ofthe United States TIME: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. PICKUP: Hospital South, Red Basement WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 21 Time & place to be announced: BLDGS: Hospital North, Bell Bldg. DATE: Mon., January 19 THE TERRORIST THREAT TO WESTERN SOCIETIES TIME: 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. The Honorable Ed Meese, Attorney General ofthe United States PICKUP: Room 1103, Hospital North TERRORISM: INTERNATIONAL LAW & ENFORCEMENT The Honorable David Boren, Chairman of the Senafc 1 nteUigcr.ee Commi ttoo BLDGS: Allen, Bryan Ctr., Chapel, Divinity School, Flowers, Gray, 11.-00 am, Video Auditorium, Bryan Center: Languages, Old Chemistry, Perkins Library, Social Sciences, Soc-Psych, Union West PANEL I: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF TERRORISM DATE: Tues., January 20 Moderator. Dr. Robert H. Kupperman, Executive Director for Science and Technology and TIME: 2:30 p.m. lo 4 p.m. Senior Advisor, Georgetown Center for Strategic and International Studies PICKUP: Flowers Lounge THE TECHNOLOGY OF TERRORISM: PLOICY TO MEET FUTURE CRISES Dr. Robert H. Kupperman ALIF, Clinical & Research Labs, Nanaline H Duke, Jones, TERRORISM: HOLDING NATIONS HOSTAGE Ambassador Bruce Laingen, immediate past Vice President, National Defense University; North, Research Park, Sands, Vivarium Charge d' Affairs, U.S. Embassy in Iran and hostage in Iran during the Iranian hostage crisis. DATE: Wed., January 21 THE PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF TERRORISM: EXAMINING AUDIENCE REACTIONS TIME: 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. Dr. Albert Eldridge, Associate Dean,Trinity College of Arts and Sciences and Professor of Political PICKUP: Main Entrance, Sands Bldg. Science at Duke University. FROM TERRORISM TO NEGOTIATIONS-*RIDGING THE BAP Civitan, Hanes Annex, Hanes House, Pickens, School of Dr. Fredrick J. Hacker, Psychiatrist and expert on terrorism Nursing, Trent Drive Hall 12:30pm, Video Audit. Bryan Center: DATE: Thurs., January 22 TIME: 9 am. to 11:30 a.m. THE MEDIA: PARTICIPANT AND OBSERVER PICKUP: Hanes House Lobby PANELISTS: Reporting News va. Being the Object of Events BLDGS: All Broad Street Bldg. Mr. Sam Donaldson, Chief White House Correspondent, ABC News. DATE: Thurs., January 22 Public Information vs. Private Diplomacy TIME: Mr.HoddingCarter.AssistantSecretaryofStatefor 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Public Affairs in the Carter Ad nostra tion PICKUP: Broad Street Bldg. Developing An Editorial Policy on Terrorism Mr. Jerry Friedman BLDGS: All East Campus When the Reporter Becomes the Reported DATE: Mr. Jeremy Levin, Cable News Network, Fri., January 23 former hostage in Beirut TIME: 9 a.m. to 10:30 am. PICKUP: East Duke Bldg. 7:30pm, Page Auditorium BLDGS: All Bldgs. on Campus Drive TERRORISM: ITS CAUSES, ITS IMPACT, ITS CONSEQUENCES DATE: Fri., January 23 Special high level speaker to be announced TIME: 1 p.m. lo 2:30 p.m. PICKUP: Conference Room, Public Safety THURSDAY. JANUARY 22 10:30 am, Video Auditorium, Bryan Center: The 1987 Durham telephone directories will be available for pickup by students on the following days in the Bryan Center Lobby: THE HONORABLE SHIMON PERES. VICE PRIME MINISTER OF THE GOVERNMENT OF ISRAEL Thurs., January 22-2 p.m. to 4 p.m. 12:45pm Video Auditorium, Bryan Center: Fri., January 23 - 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. FEATURED SPEAKER TO BE ANNOUNCED If you are unable to pick up your directory on the above All lectures and discussions free to the public dates, a make-up day is scheduled for Mon., January 26 (Ifyou can't make n auditorium you can still tune into Terrorism In A Technological World Cable 13, provided by the Duke University Union) from 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the Bryan Center Lobby,

Special trtanksio; Dean ol Trinity Arts & Sciences, Political Science Department. Office of Student Affairs West Campus. Questions? Call ,84-2239. PAGE 8 THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP MONDAY. JANUARY 19, 1987

Informational Meeting UNC YEAR IN MONTPELLIER LPftiTrta Sigma Come to a 2-hour Wednesday, January 21 MEMBERS WHO WILL BEGIN GRADUATE WORK INSOMNIA 3:30- 5:30 in Toy Lounge WORKSHOP 3:30 Video Presentation IN FALL 1987 especially designed for 4:00 Student Panel are eligible to apply for (4th Floor Dey Hall, UNC) scholarships awarded by the Duke Students! national Phi Eta Sigma Tuesday, organization. Awards range from February 10, PW^^^P^PW^ $500 to $2000. for full-time 3-5 pm graduate or professional study Sign up by February 6 beginning in Fall 1987. atCAPS.214 0ld Chemistry Building, or PLACEMENT SERVICES SEMINARS Applications: call 684-5100 REPEATED Pre-Major Advising Center Deadline for submitting ORIENTATION completed applications: January 13-4:00 p.m. 139 Social Sciences Friday, February 20 RESIDENT January 19-5:00 p.m. 136 Social Sciences P_:__8_.-..-_>;- -_K.^\_o_/: ADVISOR

INTERVIEW HINTS ^V-Ix\*l_*\l*.3l*l.lt^^ January 26 - 7:00 p.m. 136 Social Sciences IDEA POWER.

"There is no army on earth," wrote Victor Information Sessions Hugo, "thai can resist the power of an idea whose time has arrived." At Northern Telecom, our ideas and the Monday, January 19 people who create them are the force behind 7:30 p.m. Choosy mothers choose SPORTSWRAP. our leading edge technology, the force that creates the right ideas at the right time, thai generates our continued success in today's in 136 Social Sciences marketplace. As the world's largest supplier of fully digital telecommunication systems, we have opportunities in Engineering, Computer Science, Tuesday, January 20 Marketing, Accounting/Finance, Business Systems and Human DUKE UNION CRAFT CENTER Resources. 7:30 p.m. SPRING CLASSES A representative from Northern Telecom will be on jour campus Thursday, January 29. Consult your placement office to in 139 Social Sciences Registration 12-4, Monday-Friday. Lower Level, Bryan Center. determine the specific degrees/ma j on that we have requested for our interview schedule. Specific addresses of the 15 • • • Northern Telecom facilities in the U.S. may be obtained from • Applications are available at your campus placement office. We are an equal opportunity information sessions. Beginning BlacksmHtiing: Thursday, 7-10, employer m/f/h/v. begins Feb. 5,8 classes, $50 • Applicants must attend one meeting or Build Your Career in Communications. call 684-6313. • Open to all rising undergraduate jewelry/Metals: Tuesday, 7-10, begins Jan. 27, northern 8 classes, $58 (or) telecom juniors, seniors, and graduate students. Thursday, 7-10, begins Jan. 29,8 classes, $58 rVt Photography I: Tuesday, 4-6, begins Jan. 27, 8 classes, $49 Photography 11: Wednesday, 6-8, begins Jan. 28,8 classes, $49 Pottery I: Monday, 7-10, begins Jan. 26,8 Durham's New classes, $64 Pottery II: Wednesday, 7-10, begins Jan. 28, Community Bank 8 classes, $64 Weaving I: Monday. 7-10, begins Jan. 26, 6 classes, $77 Weaving II: Monday, 6:30-9, begins March 16, 5 classes, $70 WoQtlworking I: Tuesday. 7-10. begins Jan. 27,8 classes, $70 Woodworking II: Thursday, 7-10, begins Jan. 29,8 classes, $70 Now open on Westgate Drive, across from South Square Mall 493-0069. Knitting I: Thursday, 7-10, begins Feb. 5, Kroger and Cole Park Plazas (919) 929-0252 3 classes Registration for classes is taken on a first-come, first-served basis. Regular hours begin January 15. For more Information, call 634-2532.