THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1986 < DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL, 82, NO. 54 Nolting elected president Dertke, Abrams win Controversies arise ByTOMRAWLINGS By RICK CENDO and RICK CENDO Thursday's ASDU runoff election ended Jan Nolting won Thursday's runoff in controversy when presidential candi­ election for ASDU president, beating op­ dates and the election commission dis­ ponent John Chapoton with 53.6 percent agreed about bylaws regulating institu­ ofthe vote to 46.4 percent, or by 1,442 to tional endorsements and polling place ac­ 1,255 votes. tivity. In the runoff for executive vice presi­ "The election commission could have dent, Dan Dertke beat Leslie Haynsworth done a far better job in notifying candi­ by 57 to 43 percent. Dan Abrams edged dates about endorsements by University out Ed Nusbaum in the race for vice presi­ groups such as the The Chronicle and the dent of student affairs, winning by only Interfraternity Council," said candidate 62 votes, or 51.3 to 48.7 percent. John Chapoton, who added that his com­ Shunning the ASDU victor's traditional plaints are "not sour grapes" over his loss celebration spot, The Hideaway, Nolting to Jan Nolting, but rather concerns about held a party in her room because of the ASDU policy. new 21-year-old drinking age. "I'm really Chapoton said he gained an endorse­ glad it's over," Nolting said. "The last two ment from the IFC on Tuesday evening days have been really tension-filled." for the runoff Thursday. He then received She said dealing with controversies approval from the ASDU election commis­ over the curriculum and the residential sion to have IFC president Craig Martin's college is at the top of her agenda. The endorsement published in The Chronicle's president-elect said she plans to fight the letters to the editor section. requirement of 34 course credits for grad­ Read Martin, Chronicle editorial page uation in the proposed-curriculum and editor, said he recieved the IFC presi­ hopes to ensure an administration dent's letter on Wednesday aftertoon. An decision by Jan. 30 on the residential col­ ASDU election commision official told lege that reflects the amount of student Martin, however, that publishing IFC let­ interest in the project. ter without a similar letter for Nolting Dertke said he was glad he and his op- would violate ASDU election bylaws. SUSAN HELMS/THE CHRONICLE See RUNOFF on page 3 See CONTROVERSY on page 3 Jan Nolting, ASDU president-elect, celebrating with friends Reagan backs Iran moves UFCAS OKs curriculum Denies arms deal, admits 'secret' acts By ROBERTSON BARRETT 'Don't bother,' " he said. The Undergraduate Faculty Council of But nearly all opposition centered on By BERNARD WEINRAUB Arts and Sciences (UFCAS) lent final ap­ raising the course load requirement to 34. N.Y. Times News Service proval to the proposed Trinity College An ASDU statement distributed at the WASHINGTON — President curriculum Thursday, arriid numerous meeting stated that a 34 credit require­ Reagan, under intense domestic and faculty questions and unanimous ASDU ment would be expensive to implement international criticism, Thursday opposition to raising the number of course because of the additional courses and night defended what he called his credits required for graduation from 32 to faculty that would be needed, and that "secret diplomatic initiative to Iran" 34. other financial projects should receive priority. But White said the cost will not and vigorously denied that the United The new curriculum, which council be great. "We are not convinced that this States had sought to exchange weap­ members passed 21-10, should be in place will be an immediate blow to the budget." ons for American hostages in Lebanon. for incoming freshmen in 1988, according In a nationally broadcast speech, to Richard White, dean of Trinity College. Randall Rainer, ASDU president, said Reagan said he had authorized the White said an implementation group, to after the meeting that he felt faculty transfer of "small amounts of defensive consist of the chair and two members of members would have voted against the weapons and spare parts" to Iran. The the curriculum committee that developed requirement if White had not made a last- president said his intent was to "send a the proposal, two assistant Trinity deans minute appeal. "I'm very disappointed in signal that the United States was and Clark Cahow, registrar, will work out the way Dean White used his position as prepared to replace the animosity be­ details in a "justifiable way," consulting chairman of the council to influence the tween us with a new relationship." alumni and incoming students. The council," he said. Reagan, who confirmed that his ini­ UPI PHOTO process could not be completed by next In a statement to The Chronicle, Rainer tiatives began 18 months ago, insisted President Reagan speaking to the fall, he said. wrote: "Dean White's contention that the that the administration had not vio­ nation. Under the new system, Trinity students required enhancements linked to 34 lated its policy of refusing to negotiate improve ties with a strategically piv­ will meet requirements in five of six aca­ courses will not present significant finan­ cial obstacles in light of needed initiatives with terrorists. Instead, Reagan said, otal Persian Gulf country. demic areas: arts and literatures, civiliza­ in advising, tutoring and financial aid is a the United States was seeking to deal It is "utterly false," the president tions, foreign languages, natural sciences, gross misrepresentation ofthe facts." with Iran on the presumption that Iran said, to assert that the United States quantitative reasoning and social scienc­ had leverage over the captors of some sent weapons to Iran as "ransom" for es. Three courses — two of them related An amendment to the curriculum pack­ ofthe American hostages. Americans held in Lebanon. — must be taken in four ofthe areas and age proposed by Evans to keep the mini- Before Reagan spoke, Treasury offi­ "The United States has not made two courses must be taken in the fifth. See UFCAS on page 8 cials said American and Iranian finan­ concessions to those who hold our peo­ Four of the five areas must include a course at the 100 level or above. cial officials met two weeks ago in The ple captive in Lebanon — and we will Weather Hague to discuss the return of nearly not," Reagan said. "The United States In addition, students will have to meet $500 million to the Tehran govern­ has not swapped boatloads or departmental requirements for Bachelor Remembrances: Try not to be ment. The money represents overpay­ planeloads of American weapons — for of Science or Bachelor of Arts degrees and too pessimistic about the forecast. ments by Iran when it settled bank have a minimum of 34 course credits to the return of American hostages. And Tomorrow promises more of the same claims in 1981 as part of the arrange­ graduate. we will not." — cold and cloudy. A great day to stay ments that ended the hostage crisis "Our government has a firm policy Lawrence Evans, physics professor, that began in 1979. in to catch up on those 500 pages not to capitulate to terrorist demands," said he opposed the curriculum proposal you've been meaning to read for the Reagan's speech, marked by an un­ Reagan continued. "That 'no conces­ because he feared a student would be able last month. But there's bound to be a to avoid a difficult academic area, such as usually defensive tone, depicted Amer­ sions' policy remains in force — in lovely mauve sunset tonight. You can science or foreign languages, by counting ican contacts with Iran, and the estab­ spite ofthe wildly speculative and false never fully know Mother Nature. lishment of a secret arms relationship, stories about arms for hostages and al- it as the sixth study area that may be omitted. "The clear message sent to stu­ Check out page 4 for more Proustian as the central elements of a strategy to See REAGAN on page 17 dents by the curriculum we present is, insights. THE CHRONICLE Friday, November 14,1986 Our Town Personal property tax reconsidered, NAACP seeks to current system loses millions yearly block Klan march By The Associated Press

ByALANBOYCE failed for 15 years because officials "keep saying it can't CHARLOTTE — The NAACP said it would ask the Associated Press be done." city's parade permit committee to refuse to issue a RALEIGH — The property tax on motor vehicles could He hoped to defuse opposition by replacing the tax permit allowing the Ku Klux Klan to march through be traded in for a newer model if the state representa­ with either a declining annual excise tax collected when downtown Charlotte on Nov. 22. tive who engineered the demise ofthe personal property car owners renew their licenses or a sales tax paid at the If a permit is issued, the NAACP said it would seek tax on household goods has his way. time the car is purchased. a court injunction to stop the march. "One in 10 people who own cars, and I'm not talking "Just have a one-time fee and be done with it," Mav­ The civil rights group's statement came Wednes­ about businesses, don't pay the tax at all," Rep. Joe Mav­ retic said. "It will only take 4 percent — 2 percent for the day, the same day city officials and community retic, D-Edgecombe, said in an interview Wednesday. state and 2 percent for local governments." groups met to discuss ways to prevent Ku Klux Klan "And the recovery process is so expensive, particularly Sam Johnson, a lobbyist for the North Carolina Auto­ violence in a southwest neighborhood from spreading as time passes, that tax collectors in many counties mobile Dealers Association, said car dealers oppose in­ to other parts of Charlotte. throw up their hands and say, 'It's beyond me."' creasing the sales tax. He said the increase could hurt Community action was spurred by the Klan appli­ Mavretic tried several routes to win repeal of the tax car sales and recommended instead that lawmakers cation to parade down Trade Street Nov. 22, the anni­ on personal household property, hammering away at op­ work to improve enforcement of current laws. versary of the assassination of President John Ken­ position with the rallying cry that the tax "makes liars of The Property Tax Study Committee heard those argu­ nedy and one day after a NAACP-spon sored anti- us all." ments this week, but took no action on the proposal Klan rally. He failed to get a bill enacted to eliminate the tax, but pending the next meeting in December. The seven-member parade permit committee will forged a bipartisan coalition to add the proposal to an­ Meanwhile, Mavretic, chairman ofthe committee, said review the application at 9:30 a.m. Friday at the Law other bill in a late-session revolt against the House lead­ there might be other moves afoot to shift North Carolina Enforcement Center. ership. away from property taxes and toward sales and use N.C. NAACP President Kelly Alexander Jr. said In the 1987 legislative session, House members may taxes. the group did not protest a Sept. 6 Klan march in be hearing about the vehicle tax in which rogue car "I'll take anything I can get," he said, including com­ Charlotte. owners say, "catch me if you can." plete elimination ofthe taxes on intangibles and manu­ "It's worth the risk of not reporting," Mavretic said. facturers' inventories. The General Assembly reduced "The result is $10 million to $12 million a year in lost those taxes last session. Announcement revenues to local government, and the problem is essen­ Rep. Ed Warren, D-Pitt, echoed the sentiments of many lawmakers when asked about property tax reform. tially beyond local government control. The system is All staffers going to the Washington conference this "There's a lot of things in there that make sense," he the problem." weekend, please meet in the The Chronicle office said. "But I don't think we ought to do it all at once." Mavretic said attempts to change the system have today at 3:30 p.m. Don't be late. Plush Duke vans will be waiting. Return Sunday will be in time for a 1 p.m. editorial board meeting. We hope.

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BASSETT-BROWN COLLEGE, Duke's new residential college, planned for fall 1987 opening if YOU, the interested Duke students, say you want it. Friday, November 14,1986 THE CHRONICLE Page 3

Survey says: drinking age no deterrent Employees due From staff reports Only 19 percent of students have used for pay raise falsified drivers licenses to obtain alcohol, according to a phone survey of 100 on- By DAN BERGER campus students under the age of 21 con­ ducted this week by The Chronicle. The University is planning pay raises of an undetermined amount for But 86 percent of those polled said they all levels of personnel, according to have found other ways to drink since Toby Kahr, assistant vice president for North Carolina's minimum drinking age human resources. rose from 19 to 21 Sept. 1. Kahr expects the raise, to be effec­ Eighty-one percent of those surveyed tive in July, to exceed a cost-of-living who have drunk alcohol since Sept. 1 said increase, since he said the recent na­ they have been given alcohol at a party; tional trend is for increases to be a per­ 62 percent said a friend 21 or older had cent or two more than inflation. bought alcohol for them; and 55 percent said a friend under 21 had purchased it The pay hike is a part ofthe Univer­ for them. sity's continuing effort to be competi­ tive with companies in the Research Less common means of obtaining alco­ Triangle area. hol, according to the poll, included being served without having to present identifi­ Kahr believes the University's com­ pensation program currently rivals cation (31 percent), using a falsified driv­ 21 drinking age requirement went into ef­ least once a week indicated that they had those offered around the market, but it er's license (12 percent) and using some­ fect, according to the poll. received alcohol at a party; 76.5 percent of is a constant battle. "We are com­ one else's authentic driver's license (12 Only 3 of the 39 freshmen surveyed the freshmen that drink at least once a petitive . . . but we have to maintain percent). Further down the list were: buy­ said they fell in that latter category, while week said a friend under 21 years old has this competitive position," Kahr said. ing or obtaining alcohol using another 5 ofthe 32 sophomores, 5 ofthe 25 juniors bought them alcohol. form of falsified identification (9 percent), and one of the four seniors surveyed said Pollsters interviewed 52 women and 48 "It is an intensely competitive labor and using someone else's falsified driver's they did. men for the survey, which had a margin of market that requires we constantly maintain and adjust our position. license (7 percent). Seventy percent of those surveyed said error of about 5 percent. There is no option of falling behind. We they knew prior to this week that falsify­ Fifty-one percent of those surveyed said lose people rapidly," Kahr said. they have drunk at least once a week ing driver's licenses is a felony. Nine stu­ Ed Boyle, Steve Goldberg, Lane The Triangle area generally has one since Sept. 1; 35 percent said they have dents were arrested last week and Hensley, Douglas Mays, Shannon Mullen, of the lowest unemployment rates in drunk less than that and 14 percent said charged with that crime. Rocky Rosen and Jenny Wright contrib­ the nation. Because of this, "There is they have not had a drink since the new All 17 freshmen who said they drink at uted to this poll. not a reserve of skilled workers wait­ ing for jobs," Kahr said. As a result, the University has been forced into a posi­ Election sparks controversy tion of vying for people who are already Nolting wins employed elsewhere. CONTROVERSY from page 1 for all the candidates for the same office," For example, "the secretarial area election bylaws. according to Lenny Rubin, ASDU attor­ continues to be of concern. Companies The editorial page editor said he then ney general. as president have been forced into hiring from one called Nolting to ask her for a similar en­ dorsement. Nolting requested a letter In another matter, political campaig­ another," he said. RUNOFF from page 1 ners were reprimanded by election offi­ Duke has been using fringe benefits ponent ran a good race and a clean from the Panhellenic Council, but the Council refused to make a decision with­ cials for being too close to polling areas. as well as wages to compete. In the campaign. He said he will move for­ Campaigning may not take place within past year, the University has estab­ ward with his plans for a Martin out interviewing both candidates, accord­ ing to Lauren Cooks, Council president. 100 feet of elction polls, an ASDU bylaw lished three major benefit programs. Luther King Day celebration and says. The first is the Duke Health Service, a "My decision [not to publish the IFC let­ "basically, I'm going to work with Jan health plan which offers lower ter] was based on what a commission offi­ and see what programs she has in At the time the bylaw was written polls premiums and fewer restrictions than cial told me the ASDU bylaw was," the ed­ mind." were placed outdoors, far from a high con­ comparable programs, and has no de­ itor said. The paper, however, is not "I'm really pleased," said Abrams of centration of students. Last year, the ductible. bound to uphold the bylaw. his narrow victory. "They were really polls were put inside to adapt to the Duke See RAISE on page 10 close numbers, but I came out ahead." The bylaw says: "The media should Card system that verifies voting eligibil­ provide equal time under equal condition ity by computer.

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Public Invited-Admission Free • ••••••••iilHlll-l — oris Friday, November 14,1986 THE CHRONICLE Page5 'Remembrance' provides revelations U.S. military aid PROUST from page 4 "The first volume lets you be innocent, the second vol­ while eating a beef turnover in The Pits. ume destroys that," Starr said. One night last year when Joan Rivers was hosting the to allies reduced The course requires a time commitment that rivals Tonight Show, she asked a guest whether or not she con­ that of an intimate relationship, Starr said. At times, he sidered herself an intellectual. Do you do things like said he feels as if he has a personal relationship with the read Proust and underline key phrases and make com­ book which is "sometimes good, sometimes bad." ments in the margin, Rivers proposed as a test. The guest laughed, and said something like, "No, but I do The Reagan administration, responding to congres­ The book hits undergraduates particularly, Fowlie watch Masterpiece Theater." sional reductions in foreign aid. is about to announce said, because it's concerned with change and a break cuts in military assistance to some close allies, in­ from innocence. "It's about time and the mobility in our Fowlie acknowledged that people sometimes make cluding nations that provide important bases for lives. We are changing all the time as time moves along, jokes about the author. "He is eccentric and American forces. and this is what they [the studentsl are beginning to exaggerated," he said, but when people actually read the book, they are caught by it. The administration's allocations of military aid in Even President Keith Brodie's wife Brenda is taking the current fiscal year are to be set forth in a report to the course. "I'm sure that it makes students think about Congress, which, under the law that provides mili­ The professor is reading the things that they have always been aware of, but they tary assistance, must be published by Nov. 17. But just haven't pulled it all together," Mrs. Brodie said. the decisions are.still being made, and the report may book for the 22nd time this "Going into depth in this man's life makes everyone be delayed a few days, the officials working on it said. semester. think about their own life." She said that she would have "It is an extremely contentious issue, and is still experienced the material much differently had she read being decided," one administration official said. it at 20. Publication ofthe report will serve notice on some At the beginning ofthe semester, Fowlie said he hears nations, perhaps including Spain, Portugal, Korea, two questions, first "Who's this guy Fowlie?" and then, , the , Jordan and Oman, that grasp today, that in terms of love, a girl and a boy in love "Who's this guy 'Prowst'?" their military assistance in the fiscal year 1987 will are changing every day themselves. Fowlie, who just turned 78 last week, has become a be cut by hundreds of millions of dollars from the "They worry about this and this little thing and it's veritable legend on campus. He studied under T.S. Eliot 1986 levels. never exactly the same. And who am I? Why do I keep when he was a.student at Harvard, and he first read Deciding which nation's loans and grants to trim changing?" This hits them of course, mobility and Proust when he was 20. He was going to France that has confronted the State Department and the change, and Proust sees that mainly in society first. summer and he finished the novel, in French, "before I Defense Department with painful choices, the offi­ "It's really about the death ofthe aristocracy in Fran­ got on the boat," he said. When he arrived in Europe, cials said. Either small amounts of available cash ce, that's one ofthe main themes. The wealthy families Fowlie said he told French acquaintances that the book must be shared sparingly among recipients, including ofthe bourgeoisie will take over from the nobility." was "the greatest experience I've had in reading. I some nations accustomed to generosity, or some na­ While Starr said he doesn't always agree with the meant that." tions must be excluded entirely from obtaining mili­ book, the course has been the most influential of his While Fowlie said he has never thought he was tary assistance. Duke career. "Anything you spend that much time on Proust, he admits the book has affected his writing. The decision has been looming since Congress last would be hard to forget," he said. "It penetrates your su­ Working on his memoirs, he said he "can't avoid remem­ month cut the administration's foreign aid budget re­ perficial life." bering things as Proust does." quest by more than $1.6 biilion, granting only about And so they, the Proustian ones, sit around their The professor is reading tbe book for the 22nd time $4.9 billion for military aid in the fiscal year 1987, apartments, and look at their roommates and say things this semester. For Fowlie that adds up to some 66,000 which began Oct. 1. like, "It's true. You can never really know someone." All pages of Marcel Proust so far in his lifetime. Certainly, Despite the reductions, Congress set aside, for spe- that when the roommate was just pointing out a scope that would influence one's memory of things past. See ALLIES on page 18

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By STUART TAYLOR Jr. jobs, such as road construction, to the same level as the She said Johnson "was treated unfairly as women N.Y. Times News Service percentage of women in the local work force as a whole. have been treated unfairly for years and generations A case about a man and a woman who both wanted "What is that based on?" Scalia asked. "Human expe­ and centuries." Joyce said that she had been told by a the same promotion came before the Supreme Court rience? Or some governmental policy?" When the lawyer supervisor when she applied for a job in the roads Wednesday as the justices heard oral argument for the suggested human experience was part of it, Scalia department that she should not seek what had tradition­ first time on the legality of affirmative action prefer­ pressed on, in an incredulous tone: "Human experience? ally been regarded as "a man's job." ences favoring women over men. In this country?" The case is a lawsuit by Paul Johnson against Santa Constance Brooks, Johnson's lawyer, argued that the County officials have maintained that the two were Clara, Calif., for promoting a woman instead of him to be under-representation of women in such job categories equally qualified for the promotion. But a federal district a road crew dispatcher, under a plan voluntarily reflected "societal" attitudes and a lack of interest court found Johnson better qualified and ruled the adopted by the county to increase the percentage of among women in those jobs, not necessarily past dis­ county had violated the ban on sex discrimination in women and minority group members in its work force. crimination. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by bypassing He had scored higher than her on an oral test. She said the court's precedents indicate that employ­ him in favor of a woman. Johnson's appeal was heard with another affirmative ers may adopt affirmative action preferences for women action case in which Solicitor General Charles Fried and minority people only to redress past discrimination The county appealed. A federal appellate court, while urged the court to strike down as "strictly arbitrary" a against those groups, not simply to achieve a statisti­ leaving intact the district court's factual finding that court-ordered quota requiring Alabama to promote black cally balanced work force. Johnson was better qualified, reversed the lower court's and white state troopers on a one-for-one basis to make After the arguments, Johnson told reporters outside ruling and held that his rights had not been violated and up for past discrimination against blacks. the courthouse that he had wrongly been denied a the affirmative action plan had been valid. Justice Antonin Scalia, the court's newest member, promotion "that I had planned for and that I'd worked Fried, the solicitor general, filed a brief on behalf of posed tough questions from the bench in both arguments for and that I know I was by far the most qualified for" the Reagan administration in August supporting that seemed to underline the deep skepticism about af­ solely because of his sex. Johnson's "reverse discrimination" suit, Johnson Trans­ firmative action he had expressed when he was a law But Diane Joyce, the woman who had won the promo­ portation Agency, Santa Clara County, No. 85-1129. professor. tion over Johnson, said, "I don't know how you can have Scalia bored in with the questions when Steven Wood- affirmative action without someone being impacted." side, the attorney for Santa Clara County, suggested it had been reasonable for the county to set a goal of in­ creasing the percentage of women in traditionally male

MM OUR HATS... arc off to you! TURKEY TROT •Dress Hats -Cowboy Hats •Hunting Caps *Hawaaian Hats •Musical Caps 'Baseball Caps •Carolina Caps *Duke Caps •Safari Hats 'Virginia Caps NOVEMBER 16,1986 •Wake Forest Caps 'Berets 2:00 p.m. in •Toboggans Wallace Wade Max Headroom T-shirts Long sleeve $5.95 Short sleeve $4.95 Open on Thanksgiving Day! Open to entire Duke community, 21/2 OPEN 6:30 to Midnight - 286-_110 C *_ •-*-» ' __>. __.___!* miles prediction run. ERWIN ROAD (Between East & West Campuses) OCllIl » Vl^UllV • Newsstand Out-of-town • Special Party Prices Newspaper* OnUrgeBttror YVineOnlen •Sports Prediction Sheets ^Hundreds of Magazines Shop Come out and win your Thanksgiving turkey! GIFTS, CAREERS The warm feeling of and GIFTS, Christmas starts in our PROFESSIONAL GRADUATE PROGRAMS Christmas shop in GIFTS, GOVERNMENT & with an INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS GIFTS an informal discussion with OPEN HOUSE representatives of both the on Sunday, John F. Kennedy School of Government November 16*1-4 pm Public Policy Program DAYS HOLIDAY HOURS HARVARD UNIVERSITY & A Mon-Sat 10am-9pm Woodrow Wilson School Sunday 1-6 pm of Public and International Affairs PRINCETON UNIVERSITY WEEK DATE: Tuesday, November 18 TIME: 3:00 & 4:00 groups BRIGHTLEAF SQUARE OPEN HOUSE • NOVEMBER 16 LOCATION: Please contact your Career Placement Office for this information. All years, alt majors welcome. For additional information, please contact MORGAN IMPORTS your school's Career Development/Placement Office. BRIGHTLEAF SQUARE DURHAM 68K-U50 Friday, November 14,1986 THE CHRONICLE Page 7 Iran says arms not linked to hostages

By ELAINE SCI0L1N0 attitudes, recognition of the right of the people of Leba­ N.Y. Times News Service non and repayment of what the United States owes Iran. The highest ranking Iranian official in the United Rajaie-Khorassani acknowledged that Iran has been THE DUKE States strongly denied Wednesday that his government receiving American-made military equipment for some was involved in trading American hostages for military time from various places, including the United States, equipment. But he made it clear that Iran would wel­ but he did not specify whether the equipment came from CHILDREN'S BENEFIT come better relations with the United States. government stockpiles or private arms dealers. At a news conference, Said Rajaie-Khorassani, Iran's "I don't deny the receipt of arms from the United chief delegate to the United Nations, also confirmed that States because we are buying our armaments that are HORSE SHOW Iran was receiving American military material and of­ needed for the American items of our military hardware fered new details ofthe recent visit of Robert McFarlane, from the free market in different parts of the world," he President Reagan's former national security adviser, to said. He said it was not clear to him whether the Ameri­ Presents Tehran, can-made equipment had been delivered from the THE NABISCO BRANDS, INC. "We don't have any arms deal or any other kind of deal United States "on the basis of their previous debt to us, $25,000 GRAND PRIX JUMPING EVENT with regard to the release of the hostages with the or we just bought them and carried them home as we United States or with anybody else," Rajaie-Khorassani have been doing for the past seven years." featuring the Rolex Crown of Excellence said when asked about reports that the United States But at another point he said he did not think that the in association with Osterman Jewelers has been arranging for the shipment of American-made recent shipments came from government-held equip­ military equipment to Iran in return for its help in ob­ ment bought by the previous Iranian government and Saturday, November 15, at 7 p.m. taining the release of American hostages held by Irani­ never delivered. an-backed guerrillas in Lebanon. American officials knew about the shipments of Amer­ He added, "It is not our affair to set any conditions for ican-made military equipment from both inside and out­ Gov. James B. Hunt Jr Horse Complex release of hostages in Lebanon and it has never been side the United States in most cases, he said, because before." American authorities confiscated or prevented some of NC State Fairgrounds,Trinity Road, Raleigh He called the arrival of American-made equipment to the shipments. Iran shortly before an American hostage was released Since the hostage crisis, it has been illegal for any reserved seats, $5 "purely coincidental." American arms dealer to ship arms or spare parts from But he conceded that Iran would consider it a positive the United States to Iran, and the United States has had general admission, $2.50 step if the United States returned to Iran funds frozen at a policy of not shipping arms to either Iran or Iraq in the time of the hostage crisis and delivered arms that their seven-year old war. half-price with ticket stub from NC State game Iran has already paid for. Rajaie-Khorassani also denied that the American- "Of course, the fulfillment ofthe United States obliga­ made arms were shipped with the help of Israel. "We tion would be interpreted by us and the Moslem people have no connections or arms deals through Israel or Is­ Tickets, available at gate, also entitle you to see the ofthe region as a positive step toward the abandonment raelis," he said, adding that Israel "is an illegal regime Edward J. Hilliard Memorial Jumper Classic of its hostilities toward the Moslems of the region and and it must go." at 6 p.m. would consequently ease up the anti-American senti­ But he also seemed to acknowledge that arms could ments in the region," he said. have been transferred through Israel without Iran's In fact, he said that Iran would have "no objection to knowledge, pointing to reports that said Israel went to establishing relations with the United States" if these great pains to disguise the ships and the point of origin. A benefit for the Duke Children's Medical conditions were met: a change in the administration's He neither confirmed nor denied that Iran played a and Surgical Center policies toward Iran, an abandonment of its anti-Islamic part in the release of American hostages. loiicctw^\ VENTURE INTO PRINTS

Brightleaf Square 905 W. Main St., Durham Monday-Saturday 10-6 688-7591 Page 8 THE CHRONICLE Friday, November 14,1986 Despite questions, UFCAS approves 34 course rule

UFCAS from page 1 necessary to get students to explore all the academic Marjorie McElroy, curriculum committee chair, said mum course credit requirement at 32 lost 13-19. areas stressed in the curriculum report. "I've always student.'; would not be able to take an ample number of Bill Lipscomb, Trinity senior and a curriculum com­ seen [bringing the requirement up to 34 credits] as a electives — a key element in the free choice the report means of encouraging exploration," he said. mittee member, said while he supported the content of stresses — and take courses in five of the six academic the report as a whole, he found the reasoning behind a Rainer said trying to create interest through a more areas if the requirement was not raised. The increase 34-credit requirement faulty. "A 34 course requirement rigorous course load would not. work. "Students can cur­ should not impose a problem, she said, because most would pose an unfair advantage on some rently take more than 32 courses, and you'll find that See UFCAS on page 17 students. . . . We feel these students are a substantial those who take 34 or 36 credits do it through genuine minority who should be considered." motivation," According to the ASDU statement, students with Ad­ Jenny Lazewski, another committee member and vanced Placement (API credits would not have to take Trinity senior, agreed. "The student who needs addi­ overloads, while work-study students and those from tional credits will likely obtain them through fphysical less rigorous high schools who did not have a chance to education | courses, house courses and crip courses," take AP courses would "effectively be excluded from ex­ Lazewski said to UFCAS members. NEED CASH? tracurricular activities." But Malcolm Gillis, economics professor and former curriculum committee chair, said the requirement was You can earn up to $85 per month The Amos Tuck School DONATING BLOOD PLASMA of Hemophiliac^ Burn Patients and Others Business Administration Depend Upon Plasma Donations. If you are over 18 years of age and healthy, Dartmouth College • Hanover, N.H. you can become a Regular Plasma Donor. Men and Women Seeking Call for an appointment for further Graduate Education for Management information.;. are invited to discuss the Earn $20 on your first donation with this ad and your student I.D. TUCK MBA I. B. B. Plasma Center Tuesday, November 18 411 E. Main St. Durham, N.G. Stephen Clapp, Assistant Director of Admissions 682-6306 Individual interviews will be scheduled Hours: Mon.-Sat. -8 A.M.-3 P.M. Sign up with the Help us give a lifetime to others Office of Placement Services while earning extra income. ^f- "-ii^f- -"-y "'^f i*iiyi r~ i\__ i if

TRANSPORTATION CAREER OPPORTUNITIES- DUKE MBAs IN FLORENCE CSX DISTRIBUTION SERVICES, Baltimore, Maryland (form­ erly the Sales and Marketing units of Seaboard and Chessie Art History System Railroads), will be giving a presentation and recep­ tion at the Executive Lounge, Fuqua School on Tuesday, History Program November 18, 1986, from 5:30 PM — 7:30 PM. In atten­ dance will be company executives representing Sales, Mar­ Summer 1987 keting, Financial Analysis and Strategic Planning. You are in­ May 14-June 27 vited to come and meet them and inquire about the exciting career opportunities that exist in our dynamic marketing- oriented company. Careers begin with positions such as Mar­ ket Planning, Strategic Planning and Economic Analysts. INFORMATION MEETING CSX initiated Single-System Service, One Stop Shipping and many other marketing innovations in the transportation field. Monday, November 17,1986 4:00 p.m., 108 East Duke We look forward to seeing you there and sharing the CSX story and career opportunities with you. Meet Professor John Spencer, Director ofthe Program, and learn about the program. Two courses will be offered:

CSX Art 145: Renaissance Art in Florence, taught DISTRIBUTION by Professor John Spencer HST 182: Politics and Culture In Renaissance S&KK SERVICES Florence, taught by Professor Equal Opporiunily/Alfirmative Action Employer Andrew McCormlck.

Office ofthe Summer Session -121 Allen Building • - 684-2621 Friday, November 14,1986 THE CHRONICLE Page 9 When the weather get's cold, we start to cook.

Du>I Unman. H»M TREBLE tOlLW « Precariously presents.. ZLfl IBJMUBEKSIB River Runner's (Nathalie Baye, Philippe Leotard, 1982) French with English subtitles

Emporium French smash film which received all the major Cesar awards in its year. It is a hard-hitting, : high energy mix of police thriller, love story, and - and realistic treatise on the ins and outs of the Paris underworld. Sensational acting makes it an in­ stant classic.

SfEno Traders and at MIDNIGHT....

for supporting our prize VIVA LAS VEGAS

give-away BRYAN CENTER FILM THEATER FREE to undergrads, most grads and S1.50 for the rest of you.

South Square Mall RAY TAYLOR'S upper level near belks mon-sat 10-9 Hunter fi (green £t5. '"m Sundays 1-6 "A T™UUon In Men'• Clothing"

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4215 University Drive Parkway ?& beneflon 489-1900 (Behind South Square) Monday-Friday 10-7 at south square Saturday 10-6 open Sundays 1 -6 Page 10 THE CHRONICLE Friday, November 14,1986 Workers due for across-the-board pay hike above inflation

RAISE from page 3 table. This is offered to all employees the amount ofthe pay increase, the Office casts of future salary increases by the across the board and is tax-free. Kahr des- of Human Resources last summer con­ competition. The University wanted "to Another recently created benefit is the cibes this service as "golden handcuffs". ducted a poll of employers in the same find out where these same employers are Tuition Grant Program. Under this A third benefit is the Educational As­ markets as the University. The poll had likely to go," Kahr said. program, for any University employee sistance Plan, which allows employees two purposes: first, "to assess what every­ The poll asked employers to provide the with at least five years of service, Duke who have worked at Duke for at least two body in the market is doing now and find number of employees, the types of em­ promises to pay the equivalent of 75 per­ years to take courses at Duke at a 90 per­ out where we stand now," Kahr said. The ployees, and the total compensation cent of Duke's tuition at any college or cent discount. Kahr said there has been a "market" polled included various occupa­ amount. Total compensation includes university in the United States for up to tremendous response to this offer. tions at local, state, and national levels. wages and benefits, such as health care, two children, subject to a $500 deduc- As part of the process of determining The second purpose was to make for- retirement plans, and vacations.

Two minutes is too long for Calabash Every second counts when you're cookin' Calabash. Holiday Travel Plans? When the color's perfect Check Into Our you're done, and that's always less than two STUDENT TRAVEL SERVICES minutes. That's why • LOW AIRFARES - Charter Flights and more Calabash seafood has so • CJ.E.E. - We have their programs much taste and tenderness, • AYN - Youth Hostel cards on the spot heaped up high on your • EURAILPASS - Issued right in our office plate! • TRAVEL ACCOUNTS - Students travel on business too! • STUDENT TOURS - Study, work or play abroad • GROUP TOURS - During Fall & Spring break Two Offices Near East Campus LA-VDLUBBER'S Dinner: 5-9,7 days a week 1018W. MainStreet 731 Broad Street SEAFOOD RESTAURANT Lunch: 11:30-2, Monday-Friday where the cookin's timed 493-8096 / 967-8227 Major credit cards 682-5521 683-2291 E* in seconds Hwy54^statf-40

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By PHILIP SHABECOFF cent ofthe blood lead levels, with the rest coming from strokes, neurological illness and liver disease in adults. N.Y. Times News Service gasoline fumes and other pollution and lead in the soil, "Lead poisoning is our most prevelent environmental Proposed federal restrictions on lead in drinking paint and other materials. disease." Silbergeld said. water are insufficient to end the country's "lead epidem­ Lead in drinking water comes chiefly from pipes or ic," a leading environmental toxicologist said Thursday. plumbing joints and is leached into a plumbing system Dr. Michael Cooke, director ofthe EPA office of drink­ Dr. Ellen Silbergeld, senior scientist for the Environ­ by corrosive water. ing water, said in response to a question that since the mental Defense Fund, said the maximum permissible Silbergeld noted that the recent EPA report on lead in agency had proposed the lead standard of 20 parts per level of lead in drinking water should be cut to 10 parts drinking water proposed that 10 micrograms of lead per billion, several studies had suggested that lead at much per billion, half the standard proposed by the Environ­ 100 milliliters of blood be considered a maximum safe lower levels could result in some adverse health effects. mental Protection Agency. level. Levels above that woula be considered "lead poi­ Accordingly, he said, the agency is reanalyzing its data A recent report by the agency found that 40 million soning," she said. and considering requiring an even tougher standard. Americans drank water containing more than 20 parts She said children of pregnant women with more than Calling lead in blood an epidemic "might be overstat­ per billion of lead, the proposed new standard. The new 10 micrograms of lead per 100 milliliters of blood have ing the case." Cooke said. He said that as a result of EPA maximum levels are scheduled to be put into effect in been found to develop more slowly. Other health prob­ rules requiring the removal of lead from gasoline, the 1988 but would not be enforceable by states until 18 lems associated with elevated lead levels include mental "overall lead in people's blood is coming down rapidly." months later. retardation in children, and high blood pressure, The agency's currrent maximum lead level for drink­ ing water is 50 parts per billion. At a news conference here, Silbergeld said a majority of Americans now had amounts of lead in their blood­ stream higher than the level considered dangerous to health. A CONFERENCE ON SCIENCE, FAITH Drinking water, she said, accounts for about 40 per­ & TECHNOLOGY

FRIDAY, Co-sponsored by: NOVEMBER 14 -Lutheran Campus Bryan Center. Duke Ministry of Durham University -Duke Chapel 7:30-9:30 p.m. -Duke Program in (Von Canon C) Science, Technology & Human Values

SPEAKER: **oxiHt RESPONSE: Jay David Bolter, Ph. D. Stanley M. Hauerwas, Ph.D. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15 Bryan Center, Duke University MORNING PANEL: 9:00 A.M. AFTERNOON PANEL: Science, Theology and the 1:00 P.M. Modern World View Tampering with Human Life: Moderator: Hubert F. Beck How Far Should We Go? Edward M. Arnett, Ph.D. R.J. Reynolds Professor Moderator: Hubert F. Beck " of Chemistry at Duke, member of the National Michael Bates (Trinity '84) Academy of Science Third year student in Duke's Earl Brill, Ph.D. M.D./Ph.D. program. Episcopal Chaplain at Duke Allen R. Dyer, M.D., Ph.D. University, and former Director Department of Psychiatry and of Studies at the College of Department of Community Preachers, Washington and Family Services at Duke Cathedral. , Martha Henderson, B.S., M.S.N., M.Div., Diane Hatchell, Ph.D. Nf Min. Candidate. Joseph Wadsworfh Research Director of Out-Patient Professor of Ophthalmology Services, Carol Woods and Physiology at Duke Retirement Community in ChapelHill. Seymour Mauskopf, Ph.D. Professor and Director of Gary Stuhlmiller, Ph.D. Graduate Studies in Duke's Assistant Medical Research Department of History. Professor, Duke Department of Surgery; Vice President and George Pearsall, Sc.D. Director of Research, Professor of Mechanical Piedmont Research Company. Engineering and Materials Science and Professor of Public Policy Studies at Duke The Duke Community Is Cordially Invited To Participate ——^—m IM__* «....- -..*_> _•.*.* _»_»_» <•.*» .*_» _..*_».« rr nnii nwrw.i ji ji n n j JUH iJjmrfdA* Opinion Letters Page 12 Friday, November 14 No speaking, no Soviets To the editor: likes a simple life, getting visitors in and Recently the Soviet national basketball out with as little effort as possible. Never­ team visited Duke, and a number of inter­ theless, the result was inexcusable. ests were served. For one group of stu­ Cultural and sports exchanges make no ASDU's serve dents, however, the experience left a bit­ sense if they do not contribute to better ter taste. The undergraduates who study understanding; a university has abso­ There are two ways to receive a too late to do anything about. The Russian on campus are relatively few in lutely no business getting involved in serve in tennis. One is to be on the Rainer administration had the Cur­ number (too few, given the enormous such contacts if the students who can ben­ balls of your feet, ready for anything riculum Committee's report in its business opportunities that will open up efit from them and want to benefit from that comes your way. The other is to hands at the beginning of the semes­ in the next decade with Soviet economic them are deliberately excluded. be caught standing on your heels, ter, but because of an agreement with reform), and they have far too little oppor­ The University of Maryland Athletic which makes it a lot slower getting to University officials to keep the con­ tunity to speak Russian. department is learning that the athletic the ball. tents secret, ASDU was unable to act When a Soviet delegation or team ar­ program should not be divorced from the until the proposal was formally pres­ rives in Durham, it gives the students a educational process, and the Duke Ath­ The past year ASDU has been on its letic department needs to learn the same heels when the Allen building serves ented. That delay took away oppor­ chance to practice their language with na­ tunities for students to effect change tive speakers. The Russian Club wanted lesson. If a Soviet team proposes a visit to proposals. Once, ASDU initiatives such a chance to meet with the visiting Duke in the future, it should be told abso­ were more frequent. in the report in time before it is enac­ lutely that one of the prices it must pay ted. Soviet basketball team informally, but When the possibility of large tuition was turned down flat. for its hard currency is contact with stu­ increases loomed in 1984, ASDU sur­ ASDU seemed to be even less effica­ No doubt, some Soviet bureaucrats still dents who want to improve their Russian. veyed over a hundred students for cious on the tuition increase. A 9 per­ live in the Brezhnev era, feared a demon­ If the Soviets refuse, they shoud not be their feelings about a tuition hike. cent tuition boost seemed likely last stration and just wanted to earn their permitted to come. The results presented the adminis­ December, when President Brodie hard currency without any contact. No tration with an efficient and sup­ made his pledge to the Board of doubt, the Duke Athletic department also Jerry Hough ported student reaction. Trustees to keep a new hike under Political Science professor Last year tuition was again an is­ double digits. ASDU has been ver­ sue, and the concerns of one ASDU bally responsive this fall. If Wan- leader, Student Organizations Com­ namaker's status as a freshman dorm mittee chair Kevin Vaughn, enabled were considered earlier vice-presi­ Why can't we be friends him to get a student voice in the bud­ dent Griffith may not have made a geting process through weekly meet­ decision on its use next year before To the editor: hearing ASDU's opinion. The student are now meeting for lunches and dinners ings. This year ASDU members ad­ A couple of weeks ago I went on a just to stay in touch and maybe plan some mit they don't understand the budget. drug testing discussion until this caving trip under the auspices of the Resi­ week never elicited a strong state­ event ofthe sort I've been talking about. Former ASDU President Marty dential Life Office's Outdoor Adventure It would be nice to see a concerted effort ment from ASDU for or against the Series. It was, as Mick or Aretha would by ASDU and GPSC directed toward the November made student government plan. more visible. He seemed to be every­ say, a gas. The six undergraduates, two support of this kind of social event. It where on campus talking to everyone, gradute students and the staff member would also be nice if GPSC could try to who went on the expedition were quite uncover all the extracurricular activities and his administration began the The point is this: Student concerns nice and fun-loving people. We enjoyed "can we talk" sessions that brought both undergrads and grad students can can be anticipated. Studies, though the dank underground for a couple of days participate in, and then pass this infor­ student government into dormitories. they suggest bureaucracy, could and then got into a serious discussion of mation along to the students via their ASDU has been understandably, gauge areas of student interest before the apparent gap between the undergrads handbook. but discouragingly less visible this administration plans provoke student and advanced students here at Duke. I noticed that GPSC is planning a mixer year. After all, its character changes response. The aforementioned con­ We all agreed that there was interest in for graduate and professional students. with every year's administration. But cerns this year may have been un­ getting more interaction going on between Perhaps undergraduates could be invited, it has also been slower to identify a wieldy. Anyone who has tried to read the two "groups" of students and set out to too. It might upset a few of the stuffier future agenda. the University's budget would sympa­ find ways of achieving this. Some good grad/professional students, but that isn 't This year's presidential candidates thize. We hope that this year the ad­ ideas were a grad/undergrad jam session as important as opening more lines of ministration will respond to ASDU's on the quad, mixers specifically held to communication between all the students discussed proposals — on overcrowd­ bring the two groups together, and simply on campus. Let's meet each other and ing and tuition particularly — the latest plans, and not the other way around. explicitly inviting members of the other make friends. Everybody has something new student administration may be student community to parties and other to offer that could make the Duke years social or quasisocial events that are al­ more rewarding than they already are. ready being held. Well, the nine of us who went caving David Wright Biochemistry Department Plato would have cut letter

To the editor: a fourth Reich. I will restrict my comments to one as­ Beyond this, these two masterminds vi­ pect of Tim Dayton and Craig Hanks' let­ ciously attack the campaign slogan, "Are ter to the editor ("Reagan's way for few you better off today. . . ." To this I say, only," Nov. 7) —-to its ignorance. Can you let's be practical — people vote for who say, "I'm dogmatic?" That means they are they think will promote their own best in­ close minded to the point of seeing only terests and not for who they think will their side of an argument, for you non- help every other interest group in the English or Philosophy graduate nation. Did these guys skip Civics? students." Besides, this is a valid question. Every Let's just look at a few ofthe masterful citizen can vote. Every citizen can ask insights of these truly erudite grad guys themselves if they like what the president THE CHRONICLE or should I say buffoons. They presented a has done . . . ergo, the poor can ask them­ veritable teaspoon full of very limited selves if they "are better off and vote ac­ data which portrayed an America where cordingly. Shannon Mullen, Editor the rich get richer and the poor have Summary: First off, Hanks and Dayton Michael Milstein, Rocky Rosen, Managing Editors babies (i.e. hopelessly linger in their should have kept their rebuttal to Mary- Barry Eriksen, General Manager poverty). And in the same faltering Elise Haug's letter exactly that, a rebut­ Read Martin, Editorial Page Editor swoosh they exclaim that, "Clearly, the tal, instead of attacking Reagan's Laura Allen, News Editor Robertson Barrett, News Editor Reagan way is racist, sexist and morality. Secondly, let me advise these Whit Andrews, City & State Editor Deborah Geering, Features Editor classist. . . ." Let's talk rhetoric, elitist ar­ guys, especially Hanks, to go back and Jeffrey Ryen, Sports Editor Tammi Henkin, Photography Editor rogance, intolerance and bigotry. read Plato's Cave analogy which basically Jane Ribadeneyra, Photography Editor Douglas Mays, Senior Editor Maybe they dislike Reagan's policies, says, don't be too critical of anyone, be­ but they certainly can't singlehandedly cause you never know if they know more Jenny Wright, Senior Editor Ed Farrell, Contributing Editor or less than you do. Therese Maher, Associate News Editor Carrie Teegardin, Senior Editor judge Reagan's morality and imply that Nadine d'Epremesnil Associate Features Editor he does not care about anyone but the rich Lane Hensley. Production Editor Gina Columna, Advertising Manager white people in America. From their view­ MarkVahradian Kevin Witte. Business Manager Johanna Daniels, Student Advertising Manager point, Reagan must surely be developing Trinity'88 Friday, November 14,1986 THE CHRONICLE Page 13 Help on the way • So sue me Chip Purcell

Faster than you can say "red tape," the ASDU elec­ tions are over. The student races are always interesting because they bring into focus issues not everyone is aware of. Listening to the different promises of reform, it is hard to believe the candidates are talking about Duke. Lucky for the University the elections only come once a year or we would all be terminally depressed. The candidates break Duke down into two groups: stu­ dents and administration, constantly pitted against each other in a struggle for power. As the campaign speeches tell us, we are always at the mercy ofthe ad­ ministration. Whatever President Brodie and his bud­ dies want to do is unstoppable by the students. ASDU, candidates claim, isn't much help either. This group of student legislators is made out to be a Shakespearean tragic hero. Although ASDU may mount a brilliant effort to defeat the dreaded enemy in the Al­ len Building, our hero stumbles on his own tragic flaw (no communication, inactivity — you name it). In the end, the enemy kills the hero and the world is in chaos. Doesn't sound terribly promising. Fortunately for students, help has arrived in the form Kids have the power: imagination of ASDU candidates. They have the traits that will lead the University down paths of glory. The only problem It's not uncommon, when people discuss recent global with these claims is the students essentially have to problems, for someone to exclaim, "I would hate to raise • Double fault take their word for it. It's impossible to convince each of a child in today's world," and bemoan the threat of nu­ the six thousand undergraduates in two weeks that a clear war, the national debt, skyrocketing college tuition Jeff Diamond candidate is trustworty, loyal, obedient, kind, and the and rampant crime. rest ofthe adjectives describing a Boy Scout. Claims of moral "goodness" can basically be thrown out the wind- As someone who refuses to believe he's seen the last of puberty; I cannot even begin to think about raising a child today. At the ripe age of 19, however, I can say that Another favorite claim: "I lack ASDU experience." (See I'm glad I'm not a child myself. Mark Jakubik. I This, it is said, gives the candidate the Forget nuclear war. Forget the economy, and forget unique ability to approach the office with fresh perspec­ crime. These issues don't bother kids, because kids do tive. The perfect analogy is someone saying, "Well, I've not yet know about them, much less care. Like us at age never driven a car before, but I promise you I can do a five, they are more concerned with fishing the Bugs good job." A nice thought, but a little too risky to actually Bunny bike reflector out ofthe Cheerios before their lit­ encourage. tle sister. The issues and campaign promises are the highlight of the entire electoral process. Some of them are time- Nah, what would bug me if I was growing up in the tested and seen each year on campaign fliers. Raises in eighties would be the toys I'd have to play with. Today's tuition, advising systems, the academic curriculum and kids are bombarded from all sides by hard-sell advertis­ the fact that the food stinks always make their way in. ing which hawks a fleet of vegetabilized dolls, turbo- charged horses, cars that turn into Ultraman and minia­ One of the more distinctive new issues of this year's turized likenesses of professional wrestlers, who by the campaign concerned crime on campus. Dan Abrams, way, are another reason I'm glad I'm not a tyke. candidate for vice-president for student affairs, proposed assigning Public Safety officers to foot patrols, as op­ This summer my two little cousins, innocent victims of posed to strictly riding around campus in cars. A novel this assault, hit the beach with the essentials: A Cab­ idea; the Public Safety officers could use the exercise. bage Patch Kid in full wardrobe (including jams); a But Abrams wanted to assign the foot patrols to the strapping blonde named He-Man on a horse that "high crime" areas of campus. resembled a Harley-Davidson; a Volkswagen that trans­ formed into a plasti-chrome likeness of Herman Munster High crime? To most people, these words connote and a nine-inch replica of His Royal Highness, Hulk shady looking characters standing on street corners Hogan. waiting to commit a felony. Duke seems too peaceful to I had a frisbee. Egad. even have high crime areas. The problem of overcrowding is a favorite topic. Can­ Other children, whose parents may not appreciate the didates believe they can push legislation through that fine art of performing a double-suplex on the cat, may will end expanded triples and build a new dorm. This choose more sedate, ethical toys. Instead of She-Ra, He- seems like a rather lofty claim. I have to wonder how the Man's female counterpart, there's Grace, the Pro-Life Admissions department would feel having ASDU tell Doll, which for a cool $39.95 comes with a tape of Pat Greyskull, Lego houses had a different blueprint every them they could only let in a certain amount of students Boone singing "Let Me Live." When hugged, Grace says, time. per year. "God knew me even before I was born." Never has there The Legomen who lived inside may not have been as been a better way for pre-schoolers to voice their moral convincing as Star Wars action figures, but they Admissions would probably tell ASDU to mind their and political views in the sandbox. changed to fit the contrived tale ofthe day. How many own business. And even if ASDU gained a pledge to cap times can you blow up Death Star? enrollment, previous promises have been almost as reli­ As I watched the VW and the Harley do battle, I able as DUFS promising quality food. fondly recalled my kindergarten days, when I had the My friend Lance, who must have had more Legos than last 50 pages of the Wish Book memorized. Back then, any living first-grader, and I once created a huge truck The campaign insight of the year goes to John toys were toys. Lincoln Logs. Tinker Toys. Etch-A- with dozens of wheels and every window brick we could Chapoton, who said, "Reducing overenrollment is the Sketch. And last, but not least, the toy that carried me find. It had a ladder on the front, a dinghy on the back, only way to end the housing crunch, reduce huge lines at through my childhood and may ultimately be responsi­ and a modified moonbase on top. Best of all, it was our dining halls and eliminate the serious parking problem." ble for the evolution of another engineer: Legos. own creation. Bounded only by our imaginations, it A promising start to any bureaucratic career. Give that changed as it grew, from a conventional tractor trailer to man a desk. Oh, Lincoln Logs were great, but nothing you made ever rolled. Tinker Toys were fun, but there were never a space-age fire truck that could probably float if it had Months from now when we have all settled back into enough green sticks. Etch-A-Sketch was a challenge to. our weekly routines and elections are a thing ofthe past,

Doonesbury/Garry Trudeau

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45 Piglet: * ..'timtmrnrntttttttttttttutttuttti. X ezsmsssm^ Friday, November 14,1986 THE CHRONICLE Page IS Researchers admit to by-passing rules on gene-splicing

By KEITH SCHNEIDER ing such tests. There are advantages here over conventional vaccines," NY. Times News Service The development ofthe gene-altered vaccine began in said Wedman. "The potential exists here for producing a Researchers at Oregon State University said Wednes­ early 1984, according to Dr. Alvin Smith, a professor at vaccine that can provide immunity to a number of dis­ day that they had conducted field trials on a gene-al­ the Oregon State University College of Veterinary Medi­ ease agents at once. But I am concerned because much of tered viral vaccine in New Zealand, bypassing U.S. regu­ cine in Corvallis. Researchers at the school isolated a this work could take place outside the United States." lations on such tests. single gene from the Sindbis virus, a common insect- The field tests earlier this year were financed by the borne animal virus, and added it to the genetic code of Department of Agriculture and were approved by two the vaccinia virus, which was used 200 years ago to New Zealand government agencies. produce the first vaccine for smallpox. The Chronicle. The prototype vaccine, a genetically engineered com­ Smith said the gene-altered vaccine was to be used as bination of two animal viruses, was injected into dozens a research tool and in a December 1984 laboratory test of farm animals last spring at a research center near on two calves, the vaccine produced an immune respon­ Always on the lookout Wellington, the capital of New Zealand. se. The announcement by the Oregon scientists came two After reviewing the results, said Smith, the research days after a prominent biomedical institution in Phila­ team decided to test the live vaccine in more animals. 43* t& delphia, the Wistar Institute, confirmed that it had Smith said the larger field trials were approved by the for news. tested another gene-altered vaccine in Argentina with­ university's institutional biosafety committee, a group of out the knowledge ofthe Argentine government. In that scientists charged with overseeing genetic engineering case, researchers said they, too, were bypassing U.S. research at Oregon State. But the researchers did not regulations. apply to the Department of Agriculture or any other fed­ It is not known how many other American researchers eral agency for approval. have tested living, gene-altered microbes outside the Instead, Smith and his colleagues decided in 1985 to United States. But top-level federal scientists and ad­ seek permission from New Zealand, where an Oregon ministrators said Wednesday that the two cases that State veterinarian, Dr. Edward Wedman, was spending LUNCHES have come to light so far might be a sign that American a year on sabbatical. & scientists were becoming more aggressive about taking Wedman said he submitted the data on the vaccine, their field trials overseas. and the plans for conducting the field trials to the Minis­ DINNERS The government's program for regulating gene-altered try of Agriculture and Fisheries in Wellington which microbes is coming to be regarded by many American approved the experiments in the spring of 1985. Final Caviar & Champagne scientists as a barrier, rather than a benefit for the de­ approval was granted by the New Zealand government velopment ofthe biotechnology industry. "The pathway in February, 1986. Discreet Boardivalk Booths may be clearer in foreign nations to getting approval," In April he inoculated 37 calves, 16 chickens, and 4 Pullman Car Tables • Private Rooms said Dr. Alan Goldhammer, director of technical affairs sheep at the Agriculture Ministry research station out­ at the Industrial Biotechnology Association in Rockville, for Gradualion - 967*93} side of Wellington. m Duke Campus in Carrboro Md. The test was entirely successful, he said. The inocu­ The veterinarians who developed the new vaccine said lated animals produced antibodies to the vaccine, and the field trial was conducted in New Zealand to avoid the vaccine itself did not cause diseases in the animals. the "complicated, unclear, and inordinately slow" "I think the results are further proof that recombinant program in the United States for reviewing and approv­ DNA vaccine are a safe method of producing vaccines.

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/V ^_f brush back _^_t__\ satin gown pink & blue sizes S,M,L reg. $38 now $22 Receive an extra $2.50 OFF any pizza order over $12.50 or more by presenting ANY pizza ad from the Yellow Pages. Present pizza ad before ordering. Fresh, Hot Hand-made Pizza Remember, Steverino's always gives a FREE Northgate beverage with a pizza order. Mall only j Hot & Cold Subs while / includes chips & pickle. Ptoaea allow adequate tima for our made-to-ordur food. supplies / FREE DELIVERY last ; On and Off Campus, Hospitals, and Residential *-Qt_ OOKO Personal checks gladly Northgate J __Ov'v4wfe. accepted at no charge. Mall \M 2419 Guess Rd. Mon.-TTiuM1:OOa.m.-11:00 p.m. Durham Fri.-Sat11W)a.m.-« Durham \J \~ DUrnam Sun. 12*X>noon-11:00 p.m. Autos for Sale Roommate Wanted ALPHA O's! Tonight — T-shirt paint­ ing & pizza party from 5-9 in Few '67 Bug Fully restored. New en­ Roommate wanted for Spring term. Fed — Saturday is our Night to gine New red paint. New interior. Chapel Towers Rent and 'h REMember - buses leave 830 Formuling wheel Berg Shifter utilities Convenient to Duke 383- WCBS and will continue all night Classifieds Michelm Tires on Porsche Rims. 7167 Sunday — wear your letters and $2,500 Call Dan. 596-5306 Roommate needed for GREAT 2 br cheer on Duke soccer! SLIME SLIME SLIME Did you hafta Page 16 Friday, November 14, 1986 TOYOTA COROLLA - SR5. do it? Wednesday, at 1115 a.m. Liftback. 1977. 5 spd. AC. AM/FM. CHEAP RENT. 684-2003 days. : the CI I 30 mpg, Good Condition. $1400 Tel: 383-9735 after6 pm. a down CAREERS IN PSYCHOLOGY: Inter­ Join Hillel al Beth El < 1 Lost and Found hang a flyer Yup. I turned my back night meet 7:30 p.m. '57 Bug 12 volt conversion Big Announcements ested? Then don't miss Dr H Keith for 5 seconds. UMBRELLA GONE! H. Brodie, Dr Robert Carson, and Campus BusStop. Bore bit engine Runs perfectly, DEADLINE for Duke Card Food ac­ Dr Robert Thompson as they dis- very powerful $850. Call Dan 596- PAID VOLUNTEERS NEEDED for is the justice in this world. Give IT count changes is NOVEMBER 14! tf 5306. Hearing Study You MUST be 60-90 BACK — the rainy season is upon 8you need to change your meal years old In good health Normal Walden Pond on Sat.. Nov. 8- us! Drop off the gray albatross 3t plan you MUST do so by then Go or near normal hearing PAY $5/hr. Please call 684-6106 before 5 the BC info desk. by the Aumlary Services Contract 2V,-3 hrs. lotal NO NEEDLES Off Of I ice. 024 Wesl Union lunder Ihe p.m. or 383-7077/286-7182 after SHOTS FOR MORE INFORMATION What a imeball! CI) Mon-Fri 9-4 p.m. 5 Your help is appreciated. CALL 684-4158 FOUND PUPPY approi one year BEAVER COLLEGE REPS will PAID VOLUNTEERS NEEDED for old white wilh light orange spots. If holding an info meeting for Services Offered Hearing Study You MUST be 21-40 you have any info please call 684- dents going abroad on Thurs ! or foreign climes Happy birthday years old In good health Normal 0106. 20 at 2 45 in ihe Study Abroad id how they differ ROTC HAIRCUTS - $5. Jim's or near normal hearing PAY $5/hr and love from Dad. Mom. Amy, hee 12022 Campus Dr j n those made by Barber Shop, near Duke and VA, at LOST: Oct. 91h, Duke Soccer Field: 2'/,-3 hrs. total NO NEEDLES OR Michail. Shana and Leah. Some- m. 11/17 Mary 614 Trent Or 286-9558 small female dog, white-tan spot­ St Andrew's Scholarship SHOTS FOR MORE INFORMATION TYPING SERVICE - term papers ted 541-7109: evenings: 544- $10,000 and an academic year m CALL 684-4158. theses and dissertations profes­ BUGSARE BAD: ( Scotland Applicants must be of sionally lyped in ihe Turabian style PI PHI'S: Pack up your pillows, Scottish descent, from the New Hey all you ZTA Goddesses! Gel by Triangle Business Sen/ice LOST: grey wallet and Ouke key- psyched for the Rush Retreat blankets and toothbrushes, our FAC Steering Committee!! Meeting England area (and NY. NJ. PA,, and Please stop in to see us al 714 chain between Dope shop and E. Tomorrow (Saturday)1 It'll be from Overnight Rush Retreat starts al on Sun at 5 p.m. in 201 Flowers Ninth Street. Suite 104 (across ihe Duke on Wed. PLEASE call Laura at 10-1.30 in Flowers Lounge 7 30 and is at the Episcopal Center — Elections aren't over yet! Applications due Dec 31. so come sireei from Wesl Durham Posl Of­ 684-1734 if you've found it on Alexander (Don't forget it's Jeff — Happy 21st a day early Just to the Study Abroad Office 12022 SORORITY RUSH SUGN UPS All up- mandatory) PS: Snacks will be pro- fice) or call us at 286-5485 HELP! Lost light green spiral note­ think you're finally legal! But Campus Drive, NOW for details Get your personalized sweatshirt at book on bus. Tues Nov 4 Any in­ Sturdivex Computing Services no chunk blowing. Student ed in the Duke/ fo, call Cecilia. 361-2636 Digitized Faces or lettering, possi­ ?ya Ellen and Sue. Oiford program for the year or the NEW SONY FM/AM walkman. last summer Applications are available bly your favorite art work. Make at the Study Abroad Office Dean Freshmen may also come during your own saying for opposing Center midnight 11/12/86 Wed If Weller is also available for ques­ Ihese times Please note that this Help Wanted found please call 684-1896 tions between 2-3 30 p.m.. M-F. at will be your only chance to sign up Thank you. the Study Abroad Office (2022 Music teacher/guitarist preferred, ATTENTION Males ages 18-24 Campus Dr ) yrs. DUMC will pay $1 for measur­ OUR FUTURE IN WHOSE HANDS? wanted for Jewish religious school Entertainment AMY COX HAPPY BIRTHDAY YOU April MCAT students Register early ing your blood pressure This mea­ Come hear scientists theologians, on Sun mornings Call 489-7062. BEAUTIFUL REDHEAD You look engineers, philosophers, phys­ 933-2182 surement will take about 10 mi­ Get in shape at the Aerobic Work­ lavador! The birthday celebration icians and researchers discuss our nutes and will be used tn recruit shop Nov 16ih at 8 p.m. in begins now so cut class! Stacy. volunteers for additional blood Broughton. Co-sponsored by pressure studies Come to our ta­ Broughton and the Office of Resi­ OAVE POLLOCK: A long distance 9-8720 or, 489-2348 for i ble in the Bryan Center on Mondays dential Life personal is the next best thing to ledulmg information through Thursdays, 1-4 p.m. if you :Pn- Secretary for being there . Happy Birthday are inlersted. or call 684-6513 for COME HEAR DUKE'S FINEST! The Ski Winter Park Colorado with thi school Thursday fcmcmuuics auu L.B.! See you soon and. of course, Fame. Fortune. Jeopardy appear­ more info PITCHFORKS will sing at House H Duke Ski Devils Airfare. Condo. lif Sundays Good wage. 489-7062. Lenny fell down I love you. Debbi. ances All these might awail you on on Nov. 16 at 10 p.m.. It's ihe per­ 933-2182 Qaulity word processing and fect musical studybreak! Co-spon­ all included for only S539 Wil Dukes College Bowl Team IM editing. Reasonable rates. Call sored by House H and the Office of make flight arrangements fron Tournament Sal and Sun 1 p.m. OVERSEAS JOBS Summer, yr Geeks Unite! Stop the festering Residential Life. anywhere Calt John Herbert a 136 Soc Sci Call Bill 684-0650 round Europe. S. Amer . WordSense. 489-4593 No calls Wahoos! (Andtheirilk). 684-7378 to reserve a spot Mus for details Asia All fields $900-2000 after6pm . please DIET ON DUKE FOOD? II can be Sightseeing Free info Write UC. KDs Get Psyched for an awesome JUST YOUR TYPE Word Processing done! Come hear how Nov 19 ai PO Bo*52-NC 2. Corona Del rush retreat 9-2 in the Mary Lou Service will type your papers, dis­ 10 p.m in Broughton Co-spon­ CA 92625 Williams Center sertations, letters, etc quickly and sored by Broughton and Ihe Office •rofessionally Emergency typing Coach for Masters Swim Team. 3-6 of Residential Life. hile BC walkway 12-2 [ welcome. 489-8700 (Call 24hrs) hrs/week Call 8ecky after 5:30 Mon . Personals House on East intrigues you. picl p.m. (493-1587). CHARTER MEMBER APPLICATIONS SATISFACTION PIZZA DELIVERY is der wagen haus up an application in the Epwortr J-FROSH FAC INTERVIEWS! Sign up tor BASSETT-BROWN COLLEGE. Crossroads Hurry they're due Nov now hiring drivers and phone per­ ALS. now lo be a J-Frosh FAC on Nov 10-14 Duke's new residential college, sonnel Average J7/hr No uniform Ratability ' at the Bryan Center Info Desk. In- Fine Japanese & European opening Fall 1987. due by 5 p m. required Call 493-7797 5 p.m.-1 Nov 14. Bio Sci 027 Allen Bldg i. Bring your Auto Repair 107 Flowers 20? It its for YOU ertations to 111 N. Duke St. Travel field opportunities Gain ihe people boul getting it right. Nor eof Durham 682-2741 valuable marketing eipenence Ski Winter Park Colorado with the of while earning money Campus rep­ Duke Ski Devils Airfare. Condo. lift typos No extra charge for legal or resentative needed immediately tickets, bus Iransfer. and parties medical typing For rush jobs and i 7-9 p all included for only $539 Will n 012 DELTA GAMMA get ready for for Spring Break trip to Florida Call large projects please make reser­ make fllghi arrangements from Flowers Preparation of Cole Porter "Night to Remember' with the Campus Marketing at 1-800-282- vations to ensure gelling your anywhere Call John Herbert at song encouraged, music on AOPis Saturday night al the Big 6221. paper when you want il Call 682- SUNDAYON live in Biddle Music Library Barn Buses start 8:30. bottles (0 SALES REP NEEDED Earn High 4628 for an appointment, then Questions Call Laura Fogt 684- _C.'iH( come by Brightleaf Square. North act soon, this trip will sell out 7033 late evening or Jeff Storer. Building. Second Floor, near Mor­ Hoof 'n' Horn presents Ihe FANTAS- 4-3181 Call backs on Wed International Association has Open gan Imports Our hours are 9-5. M- TIKS in Sheafer Theatre Nov. 13- House every Sat at Ihe In- .. 19 nessage we'll 15. 20-22. 815 p.m.. and Nov. MICHAFI JACKSON IS COMING TO 23. 2 p.m. Tickets available at our speaker will discuss politics get li DUKE' The representative from ihe Page Box Office or at Ihe door, and its effects on Italian Graphics' «rsity of Stirling m Scotland $5 75 or $4.75 with a Ouke ID SEE YOU THERE' WORDS BY ED-WORDS Mar i refundable upon the a CAREERS IN PSYCHOLOGY: Inter­ dissertation typing. Will Attention DG'S. Chi O'S PHrenDs. ested' Then don't miss Dr. H. Keith and deliver each morning c4|e KAs. and Omegas, pics from H Brodie. Dr. Robert Carson, and Melrospori mner 304 Burton ends 528-0347 Dr Robert Thompson as they dis­ 4fiiS cuss different aspects of careers in dependable person psychology. Weds Nov 19 at 7:30 Duke Urnvef srty U~on S. 2 30-6 p.m . 3daysA_k. to _rAud _ikmg parents with child- Campus 9-7 p.m. 493-4954. are (Kids 10 and 13). cooking, DUKEDUKFDUKE SOCCFRSOCCFR TYPIST reasonable rates, corre­ ghi housekeeping Musi have car. SOCCER NCAAGOGOGODFVII5' spondence lerm papers, legal, •6'hr Call683-2768after7p m SUN DAYGOOD LUCK! CHRONICLE CLASSIFIEDS theses, elc Fast accurate 489- Babysitter wanted for three year 4864 day/evening 11:00 AM INFORMATION old girl Occasional some eve­ TYPING AT REASONABLE RATES. The Duke nings, some days 383-8777 after CALL DAWN NIGHTS AND WEEK­ Chapel Rates 6pm ENDS 596-1773 $3.00 (per day) Service Weekend evening DaOysiller TAP SHOES tap shoes TAP SHOES for the first 15 words or less. needed for charming well-behaved Houses for Rent tap shoes TAP SHOES tap shoes 100 for each additional word. three year old girl in Forest Hills TAP SHOES Call 489-8882 for details APO - Are Ya Ready to Dance? I.FADLTNF. For Sale — Misc. Bring Checkbooks (i e GFT 1 business day prior to publication PSYCHED!! Semi-Formal Fri BE 9:30 PM THE STEREO WORKS Everything THERE! by 1 p.m. you need in Audio Sales and Ser­ American Village 2 BR 2 Balh Rockworld vice 2606 Hillsborough Rd (near LARGE Rooms, fireplace, deck, THFGODSARE COMING PAYMENT Trenij 286-3891 patio outside storage $525/mo THEGODSARE COMING Call 383-1033 THE GODS ARE COMING Prepayment is required. Rooms for Rent Cash, check of Duke IR accepted. Hey Luciana You're the greatest Hope you feel better Was that 10:30 PM Silver-Reed letter Journey concert fun or what? Love DROP CLASSIFIEDS OFF AT: Software included: Fuqua Looks B,,rt( Filer and Cale ing Washer/Dryer. microwave, at Business 3rd floor Flowers Building iS.flg. I dishwasher Convenient to Duke/ Concerned about your future? Curi­ (near Duke Chapel) where spreadsheet s UNC graduate/prof es si ona I: $250/ ous about technology's effect on Pre-printed classified forms are available mands for ease in learning and mo l-'3 utilities. 493-9387 our society? Questioning how far usei. WordStar games, and more we should go in tampering with hu­ OR MAIL TO: ALL for $975 or best offer Call man life? Come hear several Duke BOX 4696 D.S., Durham, NC 27706 684-0049 evenings and week- Wanted to Buy professors, reserchers. and theolo­ gians discuss I ll:OOPM Wanted to Buy Shortw; erning t r future. QUESTIONS? BIG RECORD SALE SAT NOV 15 Sports Center 7:30 Call 684-3476 after 1 p.m. 10 a m til 4 p m DJ s DIVEST with Billy King ROCK PUNK JUNK BARGAINS 1013 8106(0) or 489-6752 (r NO REFUNDS OR CANCELLATIONS AFTER FIRST INSERTION Gloria Ave two blocks from East Campus Bring Cash Friday. November 14,1986 THE CHRONICLE Page 17 UFCAS gives final Reagan defends Iran arms shipment

OK to curriculum REAGAN from page 1 UFCAS from page 8 wide embargo against weapons to Tehran. But he did Trinity students already average 34 credits before alleged ransom payments." "We did not, repeat, did not trade weapons or any­ not cite congressional opposition so much as press graduation. reports that he said had distorted "the facts." Donald Fluke, zoology professor and master of the thing else for hostages — nor will we," Reagan said. Reagan made his speech Thursday night reluctantly, planned Bassett-Brown residential college, said "Those who think we have 'gone soft' on terrorism according to aides, and largely because of reports that financially disadvantaged students, who compose 60- should take up the question with Colonel Gadhafi." have deeply embarrassed the White House about the es­ 70 percent of Duke's minority student body, might be "We have not, nor will we, capitulate to terrorists," he tablishment of secret contacts with Iran and the supply hurt by the cost of a higher requirement. said. of American military equipment to Tehran. McElroy said the higher number of courses need Reagan appeared somber during his 15-minute Publicly; Washington has long called for a worldwide not impinge on disadvantaged students because speech, which represented an effort to justify potential arms embargo against Iran and Iraq, which have been at financial aid allows for summer courses and a ninth American ties to Iran as part ofthe broader national se­ war for more than six years. semester. curity needs ofthe United States. White said the effect on financial aid students In this context, Reagan seemed to be arguing that An angry Reagan told reporters earlier in the day at would be insubstantial. "I think that we can show U.S. policy was intact because his administration had the White House, "You've made it all necessary for me to that the addition of a course or two over four years is not dealt directly with radical groups holding the Ameri­ speak out at this time because I've never heard such dis­ not an overly heavy burden." can hostages, but with the Iranian government, which semination of misinformation since I've been here as has had leverage over these groups. been going on for the last several days." He made that Included in the proposal approved by UFCAS was a comment at a meeting with U.S. ambassadors on the ad­ revision of the Latin honors system. Requirements "Our interests are clearly served by opening a dia­ ministration's plans to curb drug abuse. under the new rules are: a grade point average of 3.9 logue with Iran and thereby helping to end the Iran-Iraq for summa cum laude instead of 3.7; 3.7 for magna war," the president said. Larry Speakes, the White House spokesman, said cum laude instead of 3.5; and 3.4 for cum laude in­ The president's speech was apparently designed to Reagan decided to make the speech because he "feels it stead of 3.3. respond to a wave of bipartisan congressional criticism is appropriate in view of all the speculation, some of it that secret American arms shipments to Iran had under­ inaccurate, that he wants to set the record straight for Students can now also earn Latin honors on the cut administration policy that ostentibly sought a world­ the American people once and for all." basis of their senior theses if they have earned grade point averages of 3.3 or higher. UFCAS members rejected a move to keep Latin honors out ofthe curriculum reform. Roy Weintraub, economics chair, said raising Latin honors require­ ments now was essential to the proposal. "This is a LUNCHES desire to modify the curriculum to let students dem­ WHITE STAR JR. onstrate excellence to the college on the basis of aca­ Corner Cole Mill and Hillsborough Road & demic work," he said. DINNERS The Homestyle Laundry-mat Offers: • 40 homestyle • 16 double load washers washers & dryers • Trained attendant on CaviaT & Champagne Come see a c duo m action [ • 4 giant washers dutY 7 davs a w«k Redford ani New "Butch Discreet Biwrdivalk Booths Cassidy ant the Sundance Kid" • 5(fc/lb. wash/dry/fold and "The Sting. Purple Color TV • Video Games • Air Conditioned Pullman Car Tables • Private Rooms Parlor. Fn .<:• a.t 7 and 9 respectively Now Open White Star, Jr. II for CraJua.! Lakewood Shopping Center Duk_ i {ill —'sorry but you CAN'T h; Mon-Sat 7a.m.-10:30 p.m. Sun 7:30 a.m.-lU:30 p.m. >abies. However, when you . iver I will get off rny high cl

commons, because more than three or fi if you guys. — tl Of Stone GIVE A GREEK The Eightfold Paih. lee Roth. Buck- band Wass Uncle Bruce. Sasquatch The Man And. that weird guy who can't play ping-pong and never get's in 'til midnight. Be (here. Chew big pieces of broken glass to get psyched. ^^_ >Y BIRTHDAY JOANNE!! We GREEK. ; celebrate in Leningrad, so have to settle for Ouke! Get y to celebrate our birthdays a real American citizen! (Do I to take down my Commie '] Love. Manisha ("If you must ne anything, call me Desire1 "| ie four senior Tri Delts in the r BMW: Thanks for the JOV to P HEAVEN! Freshmen Greek hats, key chains, picture frames and stuffed animals. JO-JO Drink, sleep, eat cheese a. have a Happy Birthday Bud L anyone? The Girls. Attention: Duke Campus! Dana Greek Sachs' -hot" khaki umbrella is mugs, missing Please help her find it. glasses, Dear RINSK! Always a pleasure tumblers welcome you (and Gand) back and Greek lavaferes, Duke - Love. YBB. Greek sweatshirts, sweatpants and huggers rings and it you're thinking. Bert football jerseys by Russell Athletic. Should I symbol jewelry 5 12 fi 357 Mag- you butt in­ fection clean off my bed. you have to ask yourself one question: "Do I feel like a lucky dog'" Well do ya. Bert? — Mike "Go ahead, make my day" Cooler What the hell's a Wahoo' BIG JAY'S Susan Lyasko. Director of Adi sions and Test Score Falsifica 701 Ninth Street • Durham, N.C. 286-3634 for the University of Virginia.

Bait* £« J^. Ja.. .>_^»^*ii^- • • • Page 18 THE CHRONICLE Friday, November 14,1986 Military allocations reduced Political, labor leader slain BySETHMYDANS Nation, called on supporters in a state­ N.Y. Times News Service ment to "pour into the streets" in mass ALLIES from page 5 When it became evident last summer MANILA, the Philippines — A political demonstrations. cific nations, nearly $4.3 billion of the that Congress, while preserving aid to leader who headed both a major leftist The event complicated an already tense total. Israel, for example, was assured Israel, Egypt and a few other large re­ party and the nation's largest labor union situation as Aquino returned from a four- $1.8 billion, Egypt $1.3 billion, and cipients, would sharply trim foreign was found slain Thursday, and party day visit to Japan with strong words con­ Turkey, Pakistan and Greece hun­ aid in general as a way of saving members immediately blamed the mili­ demning government ministers who have dreds of millions each. money in an election year without of­ tary for the killing. The country's top mili­ created problems for her. The only way to provide substantial fending domestic constituents, the tary officials denied the accusation. aid to nations not earmarked for as­ State Department objected strongly. The death of the leftist leader, Rolando "Such self-indulgence will no longer be sistance, the officials said, would be to Thursday, a senior administration offi­ Olalia, and his driver came on the eve of a tolerated," she said. exercise special authority contained in cial said the situation had put severe crucial negotiating session with Commu­ Bias Ople, a conservative politician who the law in order to disregard congres­ strains on relations with close allies. nist rebels that government negotiators was secretary of labor under former Presi­ sional instructions and shift aid from Among the worst repercussions of had said could lead to an imminent cease­ dent Ferdinand Marcos, said: "I detect a those five countries to other nations. the cuts, said government officials spe­ fire agreement. The two men had been sharpening of the confrontational atmo­ This is unlikely, one administration cializing in foreign aid, would be cuts missing since Wednesday night. sphere building up. All over the land you official said. The administration is not to countries like Spain and Portugal The Communist negotiators, who had see these acts of violence being repeated satisfied with the levels of aid to Tur­ that rely on the assistance as compen­ been scheduled to appear on television on both sides." key and Pakistan, thinking those sation for providing military bases for Thursday night, went into hiding after countries deserve more. Politically, it American forces stationed overseas. word ofthe slayings, and the negotiating During Aquino's absence, Manila had is thought unfeasible to cut Greek aid session was put in doubt. been gripped by rumors of a coup or other without cutting Turkish aid. Reduc­ Spain, for example, would have got­ The killing of Olalia was the first of a violent action by soldiers close to Defense tions in aid to Israel and Egypt are ten $400 million in foreign military national political leader since the assas­ Minister Juan Ponce Enrile, who had be­ considered out of the question for polit­ sales credits, which are low-interest sination of Benigno Aquino Jr. in 1983. come a vocal critic of the Aquino govern­ ical reasons. loans for the purchase of American That killing galvanized the political op­ ment. With several less favored nations weapons, under the Reagan budget re­ position and eventually brought his qualifying for some amount of aid next quest. Portugal was to receive $66.5 widow, Corazon Aquino, to the presiden­ Reports had emerged that these sol­ year, and a few major countries seek­ million in loans, along with $75 million cy. diers might strike at leftist figures in an ing hundreds of millions each, it was in direct grants under the related mili­ Members of Olalia's three-month old attempt to create a backlash that could clear that some allies would be asked tary assistance program. political organization, the Party of the justify a military crackdown. to sacrifice.

THE LAZARE DIAMOND' SENIORS PLACEMENT SERVICES SEMINAR TOPICS How to contact companies not recruiting at Duke. GRADUATE Cover letters, resources, etc. will be discussed. TO AND BRILLIANCE. Procedures for an Interview Day in New York with ad­ Brilliance is never easy to achieve. vertising, publishing, non-profit organizations, legal Especially when it comes to diamonds. research, consulting, and possible other employers. That's why The Lazare Diamond is so special. Cut to ideal proportions, it releases November 17 5:30 pm Zener Auditorium a matchless fire and beauty: November 19 7:00 pm 139 Social Sciences November25 5:00pm 139 Social Sciences Give the diamond whose brilliance graduates with honors.

The Lazare Diamond. Setting the standard for brilliance," THE VANDERBILT MBA The Placement Office Thursday, November 19 j Vanderbilt's Owen Graduate School of Management is I one of just 16 accredited institutions in the country | devoted exclusively to the MBA and Ph.D. in j management. Owen's student faculty ratio is just j 10:1 and the enrol' aent of 400 enables a personal j approach to teaching and learning. More than 100 | corporate recruiters each year interview at the I School.

| Joel Covington, Owen's Director of Admissions, will | be in 212 Flowers on Thursday, November 19 | from 9:00am to 5:00pm. Visit the Placement Office | after November 10 to arrange an interview.

| Vanderbilt is an equal opportunity, affirmative action 420 Daniels Street. Raleigh. North Carolina 2760^ • 9I9-H32-WI 1 university. Toll-Free in North Carolina 1-800-722-2132 iiJ!l!llllllllli!llll!!!>illll!:i^ Friday, November 14,1986 THE CHRONICLE Page 19 Senate panel, aviation groups urge airport improvements

there had increased, differed with indus­ and Sen. James Exon, D-Neb., advocated taxes paid by users of our air transporta­ try representatives at the hearing over full federal financing of aviation tion system, is desperately needed," Kas­ Aviation groups Thursday joined with a whether Congress should pass laws to programs. They joined in criticizing past sebaum said. Senate panel in urging that the federal restrict airport noise. The Chicagoans say sessions of Congress and the Reagan ad­ government spend all of the ticket and Congress should adopt some legislation to ministration for refusing to spend all the She backed legislative efforts this year fuel-tax revenue it collects on improving control airport and aircraft noise. aviation tax revenue that is collected. A to separate the trust fund from the gen­ airports and the air traffic control system. It was the first of a series of hearings in surplus of fuel and ticket-tax revenue is eral budget-making process, but the ef­ Members of the the Senate Commerce, advance of congressional consideration being held in the Airport Trust Fund, forts were unsuccessful. Exon said, "If we Science and Transportation's Subcommit­ next year of reauthorizing the Airport and created in 1970. The fund is used for im­ are going to continue to charge, we ought tee on Aviation, at a hearing here, ex­ Airway Improvement Act of 1982. The proving the air traffic control system and to use the money." pressed reservations about an airline in­ measure sets financing levels for federal airports. dustry proposal that Congress create a aviation programs ranging from air traffic Kassebaum said the Department of Moving an agency out of the federal bu­ private corporation to pay for, manage control to aircraft safety to airport con­ Transportation has estimated that a $5.5 reaucracy "does not always solve the prob­ and operate the traffic control system. struction. billion surplus in unused aviation tax rev­ lem, a la the Post Office,'' the Nebraska Spokesmen for neighbors of O'Hare In­ Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum, R- enue will accumulate by this time next Democrat said, "I have some misgivings ternational Airport, saying that noise Kansas, chairman of the subcommittee, year. "That sum, which is made up of about it,"

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Campus via Science Drive to Duke Hos 16. Individually-controlled heat and ail con Enny 11, via Science Drive and Toweiv tioning. Chapel Tower and on to Duke Manor. 17. Cable television. HBO and Cinema* avi able. 18. Optional rental furniture available. 19. Laundry facilities. 20 Radio-dispatched. 24 hour emergency ATTENTION 21. Within* : A_]d, w Racquet Club, with 1G letball ct 23. Only two blocks Irom Duke Medical Center STUDENTS: 3. You can select youi own apartment (1 24. Adults only. Separate sections for under - If you suffer from exercise-related students. and married students. 25. All buildings and neighbors are coed. pain, or limitation of function 26 Not subject to University housing rules/ OR regulations. Duke undergraduates, gic 27. Nine or twelve-month lease available. (A If you need information on the types and taculiy. administrators, dc private bedroom or your own apar twelve-month lease enables you to leave ond residents who need [r Eliminate doubling- up! youi belongings iheieovei the summer.) intensity of exercise best suited to your 6 You can choose your own food (no i Subletting permitted. Up to lour student: apartr inthlyre needs, is available on an optional basis. per persi nsonable; in tact The I imnsdunr

THE SPORTS INJURY m 6:30 a 9:30 Monday through Friday, and eve TREATMENT AND .ours trom9:30a.m lo _:_0 p.m. on Salurd Sand and asphalt volleyball couils. PREVENTION CLINIC Duke _ n, .ersily escoil service is availol Basketball goals. ck to Duke Manor irom 2 Fantastic new clubhouse and pool dec AVOID THE LOTTERY BLUES- -APPLY NOW! 10:00 p Your deposit guarantees an apartment tor Fall located in the basement of bus is trom Duke Manor. 4. Youi own complete kitchen, private ba occupancy. _ lo Research Drive soul Duke Hospital Entry 11 carpeling. This otter is limited... oToweiview Drive. Tow. S Plenty ol parking space PHONE 383-6683 TODAY! CARD GYM West Campus. West Car door W.thlhebusservi .you wont eve will provide a staff therapist from Campus. East Cam to West Car ; parking perm Come see the model apartment! Duke's Department of Physical Therapy available to assist YOU between 4 and 7 Compare this p.m., Mondays through Fridays. University ret » This service is free, and open to Duke Furniture Not Included Students only. Furniture Included S664 -_r-ii_* ftec no i pAflTtX .yetnufeS me.?*, ._& eni'cieO rttroW^evCiqfnMotjm Sports Page 21 November 14

Today

Volleyball vs. Florida in Gator Invitational, Gaines­ ville, Fl., 7 p.m.

Saturday

Football at N.C. State, Raleigh, 12:15 p.m.

Volleyball vs. Tech in Gator Invitational, Gainesville, FL, 7 p.m.

Sunday

Soccer vs. South Carolina, first round ofthe NCAA Tournament, Duke Soccer Field, 1p.m. JANE RIBADENEYRA/THE CHRONICLE The seniors on the soccer team will be playing in their final NCAA tournament, which begins Sunday against South Carolina. Back row, left to right: Mike Linenberger, Darin Olson, Mark Noonan, Glen Lerner, Soccer tickets Mike Buckmire, Everett Harper, Bill Colavecchio and Kris Sirchio. Front row, left to right: Kelly Weadock, John Kerr and Carl Williamson. Admission into Sunday's NCAA Tournament soc­ cer game between Duke and South Carolina at the Duke Soccer Field will be $2 for Duke stu­ Soccer to face Cocks in NCAAs dents and $4 for all other spectators. It is impor­ By ASHOK REDDY tant that the Blue Devils draw a big crowd as the Although the average attendance for weekend home The NCAA selection committee has done its job, and matches is just under 4,500, Rennie realizes that it is NCAA will take into consideration the amount of now it's time for the Duke soccer team to do theirs. the crowd's activity, not its mere presence, which creates people and the revenue each tournament game Pardon the cliche, but the lOth-ranked Blue Devils Duke's true home field advantage. There is no better draws in determining the site of the subsequent will begin their second season Sunday when they host reminder of that fact than last week's 1-0 victory over tournament games. If Duke draws a large crowd 13th-ranked South Carolina, a team they defeated 3-2 in visiting North Carolina, when the winning goal came and wins, it is possible that its following game overtime three weeks ago in Columbia. with just 20 minutes remaining in the contest. against North Carolina State would be at the Duke But according to head coacji John Rennie, the victory "I think the crowd helped us get into the game," said Soccer Field. over the then fifth-ranked Gamecocks is no reason for Rennie. "But it should be the other way around. It took his team to be overconfident for this first-round playoff us a while to get started. Bus to the Duke-State game match. "This time we need to get the crowd into the game "We were very fortunate to win down there," said Ren­ right away." ASDU is sponsoring a bus, free of charge, to nie. "They put a lot of pressure on us, but we were able A large, raucous crowd would be even more beneficial to withstand that and win the game. We're glad that we for the Blue Devils if they win. Since the site of the sec­ transport students to Raleigh for the Duke-North don't have to go down there again." ond-round game against seventh-ranked North Carolina Carolina State football game. The bus will be "IT1 admit that they dominated the last game," said ju­ State (which received a first-round bye) has not yet been leaving the West Campus bus stop at 12 noon nior defender John Hardwick. "As their record would at­ determined, the revenue-hungry NCAA would certainly Saturday. test, they're very tough to beat in the Graveyard ithe acknowledge a good showing in an established college Gamecocks' home field]. But I think we'll dominate them soccer atmosphere. Meeting this time." Crowd support aside, the Blue Devils 113-5-11 have a Domination is the word that would best describe very difficult task at hand against the 17-4 Gamecocks. There is a mandatory and important sports staff Duke's success at home this season. Within the friendly Duke has been in an offensive slump much ofthe second meeting today at 4:30 p.m. in the sports office. It confines of Duke Soccer Field, the Blue Devils have half of the season. See SOCCER on page 22 will take five minutes. posted a 9-0-1 mark, outscoring their opponents 33-5 in the process. Cooper, Duke to take on much-improved N.C. State

By DEAN BROWN bad enough you can take from In last week's win over Wake Forest, somebody." Duke did what it rarely does - execute At New Canaan High School in New- successfully when the outcome was on the Canaan, Ct., Cooper was a running back. line. Doug Peterson's 32-yard field goal in and he credits that experience with help­ the closing seconds of the game granted ing him with his receiving and his ability the Blue Devils a hard-fought 38-36 win. to run the ball. "As soon as I got I to Duke I However, just as instrumental in this I was too slow to be a running back so I turnabout was tight end Jason Cooper. added some weight and moved to tight Against the Deacons, Cooper caught six end," Cooper said. He sees tight end as an passes for 94 yards, three of them coming ideal position for himself as it gives him on the drive that led to the winning field the chance to combine his size with his goal. All of these catches were for first ability to catch and run the ball effec­ downs. The most memorable was a 17- tively. yard reception on fourth-and-nine which "We're more of a short to intermediate kept the Blue Devils' game-winning drive route passing team. That works well for alive. the tight end," said Cooper. "He's not as good a blocker as he is a While his speed is not going to make pass receiver," said Duke Coach Steve him a running back, Cooper makes up for Sloan. "If he wants to be a truly great this with short bursts of quickness on the tight end, I think he'll have to improve his field. "I have a lot of field quickness," Coo­ blocking ... He catches a lot of passes be­ per said. "It isn't straight out speed but is cause of the design of the offense and be­ lateral movement and the ability to start cause he can catch it in a crowd." and stop quickly." At 6-foot-4, 235 pounds Cooper is a Cooper has improved his lateral speed tough man to bring down in the open by playing on Duke's nationally-ranked field. He also has the talent and ability to lacrosse team in the spring. "ILacrossel is make tough catches in a group of defend­ a totally different movement sport than ers. With 34 catches for 374 yards, Cooper football ... It has helped me move around JANE RIBADENEYRA/THE CHRONICLE ranks fifth among Atlantic Coast Confer­ people and get open," said Cooper. Junior tight end Jason Cooper hopes to continue his clutch receiving against a ence pass receivers. "I like to catch the Wben Cooper and the rest of the Blue much-improved North Carolina State team Saturday. ball," said Cooper. "If you want the"fiaTT" See FOOTBALL on page 22 Page 22 THE CHRONICLE Friday, November 14,1986 Blue Devils to play South Wolfpack to play Duke Carolina for second time minus Kramer, Worthen

SOCCER from page 21 getting the ball in the penalty box a lot, FOOTBALL from page 21 week's game against Virginia which After a torrid pace at the beginning of and, as a result, they put a lot of pressure When Cooper and the rest of the State lost 20-16. He played in the sec­ the season which produced 36 goals and a on the defense." Blue Devils meet the North Carolina ond half and led the team to two field 6-2 record, Duke has cooled somewhat in "The other outside back, Robert Probst, State Wolfpack this Saturday in Ra­ goals but worsened his injury. Kramer its last 11 games, going 7-3-1 but scoring and I have an extremely tough job in stop­ leigh, they will be battling a much-im­ is listed as questionable for the Satur­ only 14 goals. ping [forward Dougl Allison and f forward proved team. Duke (4-5, 2-3 in the day's game. He is expected to play but "The longer the season goes, the harder Scottl Cook," said Hardwick. ACC) has had some success against the not start. Starting in his place will be the goals are to come by," said Rennie. One player who earned a significant Wolfpack in recent years, winning the freshman Cam Young. But he commented that of their three amount of praise from Rennie for his fine last three meetings. Kramer has often teamed with overtime games, the Blue Devils have defensive play against the Gamecocks Under first-year head coach Dick flashy wide receiver Nazrallah Wor­ won two and tied one, and that each of was senior defender Darin Olson. Sheridan, who joined the Wolfpack af­ then, who has averaged 17.6 yards per their last five wins have come by a one- Although he has not gotten as much ter leading Furman to the champion­ reception and caught two touchdown goal margin. recognition as seniors Kelly Weadock and ship game of the NCAA Division I-AA passes. Worthen is also listed as ques­ "Those are very positive signs," noted John Kerr, Olson, a solid contributor all playoffs, State has turned its fortune tionable with a knee injury. Rennie. "Those are the kind of things that season long, has not even begun to think around. Picked to finish among the Duke will again use the split-back give you a lot of confidence. It's the sign of about the possibility that this could be the bottom three teams in the ACC, the veer offense that caught Wake Forest a team finding a way to win." last game of his career. Wolfpack have surprised everyone by off guard. "[State] has had a week to Duke's first match with the Gamecocks "No one will be thinking of the ramifica­ posting a 6-2-1 (4-2 in the ACC) record work on [the veerl," said Sloan. "We was one of those close victories. Despite tions beforehand", said Olson, a back-up to date and enters the Duke game with surprised Wake Forest ... so it might being down 2-1 at halftime, the Blue Dev­ during most of his career. "I'm not looking a chance of tying for the conference not be as effective or it could be more ils came back to tie the game early in the at it as 'if we lose, then it's over.'but there championship and going to a New effective. It's hard to stop." second half on a goal by junior forward will be that sense of urgency at game Year's Eve bowl game. While Duke's offense has improved, Jason Weighter. Then the Blue Devils time. Much of the credit for N.C. State's its defense has been effective through­ scored the winning goal only 1:06 into "All I know is that I've waited a long success in the clutch this season goes out the year. "The defensive talent on overtime when forward Tom Stone slip­ time for this [significant playing time in a to all-ACC quarterback Erik Kramer. the Duke team is outstanding," said ped the ball just past Gamecock keeper playoff game |, and I've done everything I Under Kramer the Wolfpack has aver­ Sheridan, "I really think they are one Charles Arndt. should have done. Every time I had trou­ aged 190 yards passing per game with of the two or three best defensive "South Carolina is very good at getting ble, I always remembered that I'm out 11 touchdown tosses. While his num­ teams we've played, and [Mike] Junkin into the attacking third |of the field 1," said here to have fun. bers are not particularly impressive, may be as outstanding an indivdual as Rennie ofthe team that outshot Duke 28- "But now I'm going to be giving a nut Kramer has performed well in key we've played." 10 in their first meeting. "They end up out there every time." situations. His touchdown pass on the If the Blue Devils defeat the last play of the South Carolina game Wolfpack and arch-rival North gave the Wolfpack a 23-22 victory over Carolina next week, they would have a the Gamecocks. winning record for the first time under Unfortunately, Kramer injured his Sloan. "I think the opportunity to have ankle on the drive that gave State the a winning record is our biggest SPORTSWRAP. It's coming victory. He did not start the following motivating factor," Sloan said.

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• hardware and software from the most prominent vendors • networking SOCCER • microcomputer-to-mainframe links • CADD: computer aided design and drafting • consulting and programming services PLAYOFFS •training • university volume pricing Duke Forest Place, Suite 210A 3326 Chapel Hill Boulevard Micro Duke (13-5-1) Durham, NC 27707 Glyphics (919)493-8444 vs. South Carolina (17-4) Opportunities in Investment Banking th The First Boston Corporation, a special bracket investment banking Sunday, November 16 firm headquartered in New York, is recruiting for its financial analyst program. We will be interviewing on February 17th for positions in the 1:00 pm Investment Banking and Corporate Finance Departments, including the Mergers and Acquisitions Group. Duke Soccer Field All Seniors are cordially invited to attend a presentation and informal reception to discuss First Boston and its Analyst Progr-ffn. Monday, November 17. 1936 7:00 P.M. Von Canon Center Room C Admission $422 Adults Student Admission $222 Up The First Boston Corporation Including Duke Students Park Avenue Plaza, New York, New Vtifft UJflv*

• l_Ff_ RRIrlt^TWfwKiWPlSMWBH •W-TiWBT wm_ Friday, November 14, 1986 THE CHRONICLE Page 23 GridF>ick s Guest picker: Senft Smith Reddy Leber Scher Home Away Jan Nolting (11-9,140-60) (12-8, 139-59) (10-10.135-65) (12-s, 135-65) (11-9. 135-65) N.C. State Duke 17-21 21-16 28-17 21-19 1-2 (fl OTs) work ers-bosses Maryland Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson North Carolina NorthCarolina NorthCarolina NorthCarolina NorthCarolina North Carolina South Carolina Wake Forest Wake Forest South Carolina South Carolina South Carolina South Carolina South Carolina Alabama Temple Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama Arkansas Texas A&M Texas A&M Texas A&M Arkansas Texas A&M Arkansas Texas A&M Auburn Georgia Auburn Auburn Auburn Auburn Auburn Auburn Boston College Syracuse Boston College Boston College Boston College Boston College Boston College Boston College Colorado Oklahoma Oklahoma Oklahoma Oklahoma Oklahoma Colorado Oklahoma Indiana Illinois lllin Indiana Indiana Indiana Indiana Indiana Mississippi State Louisiana State Lou siana State Louisiana State Louisiana State Louisiana State Mississippi State Louisiana State Mississippi Tennessee Mississippi Mississippi Mississippi Mississippi Mississippi Mississippi Notre Dame Penn State Penn State Penn State Penn State Notre Dame Penn State Penn State Pittsburgh Rutgers Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Rutgers Texas Tech Southern Methodist • hern Methodist Southern Methodist SouthernMethodist Texas Tech Texas Tech Southern Methodist Washington UCLA. Washington Washington Washington Washington Washington Washington Bostin University Colgate tie Boston University Colgate Colgale Colgate Colgate Virginia Tech Vanderbilt Vifg nia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech East Carolina Cincinnati Cint Cincinnati East Carolina Cincinnati Louisville West Virginia Louisville West Virginia West Virginia West Virginia West Virginia Westv,rginia

Brown Ryen Diamond Mullen Urn Home Away (9-11,135-65) (11-9.134-66) (9-11.134-66) (11-9.133-67) (13-7. 131-69) N.C. State 17-31 Farmers by a little more 7-21 31-30 23-16 Maryland Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemsbn Clemson Clemson North Carolina Virginia NorthCarolina North Carolina North Carolin NorthCarolina North Carolina South Carolina Wake Forest South Carolina South Carolina South Caroiir South Carolina South Carolina Alabama Temple Alabama Alabama Alabama Arkansas Texas A&M Arkansas Texas A&M Arkansas Arkansas Auburn Georgia Auburn Georgia Auburn Auburn Boston College Syracuse Syracuse Syracuse Boston College Boston College Boston College Colorado Oklahoma Oklahoma Colorado Oklahoma Oklahoma Colorado Illinois Indiana Indiana Mississippi State Louisiana State Louisiana State Louisiana State Louisiana State Louisiana State Louisiana State Mississippi Tennessee Mississippi Mississippi Tennessee Tennessee Notre Dame Penn State Penn State Notre Dame Penn State Penn State Penn State Pittsburgh Rutgers Rutgers Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Texas Tech Southern Methodist Southern Methodi t Texas Tech Southern Methodist SouthernMethodist Texas Tech Washington UCLA. Washington UCLA Washington Washington Washington Bostin University Colgate Colgate Boston Universit Colgate Colgate Boston University Virginia Tech Vanderbilt Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech East Carolina Cincinnati Cincinnati Cincinnati Cincinnati Louisville West Virginia West Virginia West Virginia West Virginie West Virginia

THE BALLOT BOX - Well. well, well Isn't this ex- 20 games. The entire campus waits with bated breath. Front-runners Incumbent John Senft is still n first hve platform We gotta increase our defense. Leber citing All this week, the Gothic Bulletin board has 0 een In light of last week's aicking performance, however place with an impressive 140-60 record, but hi 11-9 said, explaining why he picked Army last week, netting covered with campaign posters and signs endorsing all it seems only fitting tha elections be the theme of the performance a lowed senior Paul Smith, th« Alan him an unexpected victory seven dwarfs well six dwarfs and Snow White - for day. While Grid Pickers records usually resemble an Ed­ Cranston of the staff, to pull within one game of the Also-rans: With identical 11-9 records. Jeff Ryen and ASDU president. Low and behold, things got close and monton-Rangers hockey game (16-4, 15-5. etc.). last lead. "Iknowt'rr going to pull t is baby out," Smith said Shannon Mullen appear to be conceding defeat Al- we had a run-off. The Grid Picks board, well aware ol weeks winning percentages read like election results when reached t his campaign headquarters, the left- though Mullen has stayed up late making phone calls the tremendous clout its Word carries, prudently de- — half right, half wrong Split down the middle, or at hand stall of th eC.I. men's ro m. '1 have more »xpen- for votes his 133-57 mark shows that he had better cided to abstain fron comment on this week's race so least pretty close. ence than that Senft guy. and. besides. I'm opposed to pack it in Ryen who s relying on good campaign orga- it would not sway our numerous worshippers. But we Lame Ducks: Grid Picks rookie Jeff Diamond, who has the newcurricu urn plan." ni.ation. has been undermined bv poor erass roots oer- arrange for the vict r to make his or her Grid Picks never been able to match his opening-week 17-3 per The Pack: Li e the ASDU e ections. the Gric Picks formance "1 still car 1 believe no one wants to do the debut. formance, hit a new le w with a pathetic 9-11 mark race has a big number of can idates running together Wake Forest basketball preview." Ryen moaned And the winner is . . . Jan Nolting, still reveling in knocking him off the toe tier for the first time this year. just off of the 1 ad Heading tt is group is Editor Emen- Dark horse: She has only two weeks left lo make up a post-victory festivities, nonetheless approached her 'I'm doing this on purpose." Diamond explained "1 was (us Charley Scher, who. with n 11-9 week, re named lot of ground, but it appears that Jessica Lim may be first official duty as upreme commander of the ASDU winning early, but 1 staTe d getting threatening phone five games off he pace. Chalz would probably do better preparing to make a un at the top Lim still maintained forces with fierce de ermlnation The Yardley, Pa. na- calls in the middle of the night." if he knew who te was chasing He has been see n aim- her loyal cult followin g by making the George McGovern live realized that he handling of Grid Picks would set Dean Brown, who. a m onth ago. looked to be the dark lessly roaming the campus, s ngmg mud in al direc- pick of the week Navy over Syracuse Even the Orange- the tone for her te nure as president. Thus Nolting ake the Senft administration tions. "Watch o t. Ty Malone? ." Scher warned he Middies but Lim still managed quietly consulted he most trusted advisors about the came in at 9-11 as we Brown tried to drum up loca tied quad dog. m gunning for you " a 13-7 mark, the be it of the week Look out. Senft,' critical choices confronting her But the final decis support in Chapel Hi! but lost out when Clemson Hanging onto Scher's coatta Is are Ashok Reddy and Lim said from Ynt f„r •Jr.ia hi-adquarters in the suli- were hers alone, m ade in solitude and after much trounced the Tar Heels It doesn't bother me." said Mike Leber. Wi ha 10-10 wee . Reddy is losing is grip hasement of Perkins Tm cumin' up." deliberation Studen respect for her hinges on a n Brown. "I'm still a North Carolina regular.' fast, but Leber (12-8) is going strong with a co

Want to change your Spring Semester MEAL PLAN? Here's your chance: ^•fc"J Go to the Auxiliaiy Services Contract Office located at 024 West Union (undertheCI). Hours of operation are Monday through Friday 9 am to li 4 pm. There will be a service charge of $ 10.00 to change plans. DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 14 No changes will be after this period your points plan usage re available ict office and registers; Page 24 THE CHRONICLE Friday, November 14,1986 Seniors to finish season in Florida By STEPHEN GOLDBERG Duke coach, "contributed immediately and built the On Friday, Oct. 7, 1986, six players walked off of the program into what it is in the present. They left a legacy floor of Cameron Indoor Stadium for the last time. behind." The departure of seniors Cora Geyling, Meret Keller, The contributions of Geyling and Keller, two defensive Linda Kraft, Susan Wilson and Denise Yamada, along specialists, have been less tangible than those of the with sophomore Kerstin Karlsson who is going to the other seniors, but no less significant. This season Geyl­ University of Stockholm in Sweden after this fall semes­ ing is seeing the first real playing time of her career, but ter, will mark the beginning of a new era in Duke volley­ Keller, who played more in past years, is playing less in ball. 1986. No longer will a Wilson jump serve bring the Blue "Both stuck with ithe teaml four years in a row as Devils back from apparent defeat; Kraft will no longer walk-ons," recalled coach Wilson. "That's not an easy seem to hover indefinitely as she decides which hand to thing to do here at Duke." kill the ball with; Yamada won't be there to make key Both Geyling and Keller have felt frustrated with blocks; Keller won't be in the backcourt digging oppo­ their situation but feel that ultimately it was worth the nents' spikes; Karlsson will not cry "yah" as she serves; effort. and Geyling will not make the save nobody thought she "I've learned so much, not only about volleyball, but could. about people really," said Keller. "There have been some "This group of seniors has been the nucleus class," really bad times, but I learned from them." said coach Jon Wilson. "These have been the people who Geyling described Duke volleyball as "different than JANE RIBADENEYRA/THE CHRONICLE lifted us up for the past three years." anything I've ever done before in my life ... It was the Freshmen Lauren Libeu (13) and Suzanne Wrede The current seniors came into a program in transition first time I came into a situation and I couldn't [do as (14) will play key roles for the volleyball team next and established Duke as a nationally respected team well as I wanted to| by working at it. season. and Atlantic Coast Conference power. "You learn about humility. |You learnl that what's The home season is finished, but two games in Florida Wilson likened his situation for next year to that of going to make you the happiest won't be best for the still remain in the regular season. Then there are the Duke basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski this year. The team." ACC championships Nov. 21-23. backbone of the program will graduate, leaving fresh­ "There aren't many people who are willing to play for The Blue Devils will enter the ACCs seeded third, man Lauren Libeu in two-time ACC tournamnet MVP a team and not get recognition," said coach Wilson. "To which means that to defend their championship, they Susan Wilson's place at setter. Freshman Suzanne be a great team you have to have people like that." will have to win their first-round game and then defeat Wrede and junior Kim Manigault may line up in the Geyling described the last home match against Ten­ North Carolina State and North Carolina back to back. spots of All-America candidate Kraft and Yamada, a nessee Nov. 7, when the five seniors were presented Coach Wilson explained that at the Gator In­ four-year starter. with roses and saluted by the fans, as "the beginning of vitational, held this Friday and Saturday in Gainesville, "People like that Ithe above three seniorsl you don't the end.". FL, it will be extremely important for Duke to play well replace," said coach Wilson. "You just build a new "It was sad to leave Ibecause] we didn't leave with a two matches in a row. The Blue Devils will have to du­ program." Wilson believes that this year's freshmen big bang," said Yamada, in reference to Duke's four- plicate such a performance against State and Carolina have the same potential as the graduating seniors, and game victory over the Lady Volunteers. "It was kind of a in the ACCs. that the class of 1990 actually has an edge. "Their ad­ letdown because I thought [Tennessee was] going to be According to Wilson, in its last two games, Duke vantage is that they get to play with seniors, which will better." "played with a lot of emotion against Tenessee and then be a big factor in two or three years because they'll have Over the past four years, Duke's volleyball squad has played with far less against Eastern Kentucky." Wilson role models to look back on," he said. amassed over 6,000 kills, an 85-47 record, dominated its sees the Gator Invitational as an opportunity to play two The graduating seniors this year had no such fortune. conference to the tune of two championships in a row, consecutive good matches and enter the ACCs playing "They came in as kids," remembers the seventh-year and this season isn't over yet. good volleyball.

Interested in a Career in Health Administration? presents Board of Visitors Policy Seminar Friday, November 14 The Duke Department of Health Administration invites you to a seminar for students interested in a career in 1:45-3:15 p.m. health administration to be held at Duke in Room 144 Trent Drive Hall at 6:00 PM Thursday, November 20. "The Implications of the November Elections" 116 Old Chem Bldg. More than 800 Duke masters in health administration Stanley N. Lundine, N.Y. Lt. Governor-elect alumni have leadership positions throughout the hospital David Price, N.C. 4th Congressional District Rep.-elect and health care field. They have chosen careers in Thomas Drew, President of Phoenix Communications hospital and clinic management, consulting, health Philip Lader, President of GOSL Land Assets planning and financing, medical center administration, and federal and state government agencies. "The Crisis in Financial Markets" The two-year Duke curriculum includes course work in 111 Social Sciences Bldg. both general management and health services Christopher Cramer, First VP Drexel Burnham Lamben, Inc., administration including accounting, finance, decision Richard Swann, Swann & Haddock theory, behavioral science, economics, medical care Dan Durning, Professor of Public Policy Studies organization, health law and public policy, as well as field work in various types of health service institutions. "Disinformation and the Press" Students from a wide variety of academic and 226 Allen Bldg. professional backgrounds are accepted for our program Douglas Bennet, President of National Public Radio each year. Typically they score in the top third of those Eugene Patterson .Chairman ofthe Board and CEO who take the GRE or GMAT. of the Times Publishing Company Robert Entman, Associate Director, Institute's Center for Communications Policy and Journalism.

For more information or application materials, For more information, contact Marcia Still call 684-4188 or come by the department in Trent or Kathy Kunst, 684-6612. Drive Hall on the Duke campus.