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Oh, oh, Columbus, NO! 5ical"1492'Ms c out the story \i THFRIDAY, FEBRUAREY 28 , 199CHRONICL2 E CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 87, NO. 103 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Council: Faculty benefits should be kept By MATT STEFFORA federal government's decision a faculty," Shaughnessy said. serving the things that are im­ The Academic Council en­ earlier this year barring the use Some ofthe benefits should be portant to [faculty], while at the dorsed a request Thursday that of federal funds for the perks, voluntarily cut and many of them same time being responsive at a the University maintain as many faculty and administrators have should be paid for out ofthe "uni­ time when budgets are a bit tight," employee fringe benefits as fis­ considered the elimination or al­ versity operating budget," accord­ Shaughnessy said. cally possible. ternate funding ofthe benefits. ing to the report. The largest fringe benefit in The council approved a Faculty Because government funds ac­ "The committee does not have jeopardy, and the one causing the Compensation Committee report count for only about a third ofthe complete budget knowledge ofthe most discussion at the council which presented alternate means total $900,000 in benefits, a large University, so for us to point out meeting, was the athletic dis­ of funding for $900,000 worth of portion ofthe money should still the exact source of funds ... is count. At a price of more than benefits. be left to pay for them, said com­ impossible," Shaughnessy said. $400,000 a year, it includes a 20 These perks, which mainly in­ mittee chair Ed Shaughnessy, Two benefits faculty are look­ percent discount for employees clude discounts on University professor of mechanical engineer­ ing to scale back are discounts on on football and basketball tick­ goods, have been in the past par­ ing. performing arts events and meal ets. SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE tially subsidized by money from "The idea of a subsidy on these service in the Faculty Commons. The proposal calls for the ath- Ed Shaughnessy the federal government. Since the kind of items bring us together as "It's reasonable in terms of pre­ See COUNCIL on page 9 • BP privatization committee meeting crashed by protestors By DAVID MCINTOSH committee's meetings had not been open to A group of more than 40 protesters the public and why employee input had swarmed the Boyd-Pishko Cafe not previously been sought. privatization committee meeting Thurs­ "This is not an adversarial situation," day night and demanded that their con­ said Trinityjunior Jim Goldfarb, co-chair cerns be heard. ofthe committee. "You're acting like we're The protesters were comprised of em­ a bunch of fascists." ployees, managers and students who ac­ After an hour of heated discussion, the cused the committee of "not accurately committee voted unanimously with one [representing] the people ofthe Duke and abstention to accept four new voting mem­ Durham community who would be affected bers: three employees and one representa­ by the University's decision to privatize tive of Local 77, the labor union of non- the BP," according to statement distrib­ academic University employees. uted by protest leaders. The committee also voted to allow one In response to the protesters' complaints, representative of the Black Student Alli­ the committee voted to change the compo­ ance to attend committee meetings as a sition ofthe committee to include employee non-voting member, and to make avail­ representation. Previously, employees were able copies ofthe minutes of future meet­ not represented on the committee. ings. The privatization committee has been The committee tabled discussion of in­ studying the consequences of replacing the creasing graduate student representation PAUL ORSULAK/THE CHRONICLE BP with a Wendy's fast food restaurant. and opening future meetings to the public. The essentials of Duke Seated around a table in the lower level The employees were worried about los­ ofthe Rathskeller in the Bryan Center, the ing jobs. "Our biggest concern about The Chapel, The Chronicle, a bench, and a nice spring, uh, winter day. What committee members were surrounded by Wendy's coming here is that it will elimi- more could you ask for? protesters demanding to know why the See BP on page 7 • Both sides confident as paint shop dispute goes to arbitration

By MICHAEL SAUL after the University began dis­ higher than external rates, but ployee if a trade becomes obsolete To phase out, or not to phase placing employees from the paint blame the problem on high over­ — the employer would have the out? shop. head. Overhead includes manage­ power to discontinue the obsolete That is the question an arbi­ The union and University ad­ ment, vacation days, leave shop and the employees would be trator will have to decide when ministrators determined this and fringe benefits. guaranteed work in another area. confronted with an ongoing dis­ week that the dispute should be The employees have accused "We didn't give in to that lan­ pute between University admin­ settled through an arbitrator the University of padding man­ guage just so [the administra­ istrators and employees in the whose ruling is both final and agement at the painters' expense. tion] can contract out to the cheap­ paint shop. binding. This decision comes af­ In Facilities Planning and Man­ est contractor," said Henry Loftis, In an effort to be more cost ter two meetings between the agement, there are 56 manage­ business manager for Local 465. efficient, the University an­ union and the University in which rial positions and 124 craftsmen. The paint shop has not become nounced last fall it would phase they failed to reach an agree­ The dispute focuses on the true obsolete, Loftis said, and the Uni­ out the paint shop, place its em­ ment. intent of the 10th clause of Ar­ versity is manipulating the true ployees in new positions and Both parties now must mutu­ ticle 27 in the bargaining agree­ intent ofthe clause in order to be freeze their wages at their cur­ ally select-an arbitrator by creat­ ment. The clause states: more cost-efficient. rent rates. ing a list of candidates and alter­ • The Employer may phase out In the last decade, the Univer­ nately striking names. This pro­ or discontinue any occupational sity has closed both the uphol­ The employees claim the deci­ Toby Kahr sion to close the shop violates the cess usually takes several weeks, classification or work. stery and Venetian blinds shops true intent of the bargaining said Toby Kahr, associate vice The dispute began early last • The affected employee(s) will because they had become obso­ agreement signed by the admin­ president for human resources. fall. The University claims the be offered any vacant position in lete. istration and the workers. The University has already paint shop is not cost efficient and the bargaining unit for which they The University's decision to The International Union of Op­ removed two painters from the that the shop's work should be are qualified with no loss in pay. close the paint shop followed a erating Engineers Local 465, paint shop, but the administra­ contracted externally. The union claims the true in­ review of 11 shops in Facilities which represents the paint shop, tion has agreed to halt the phase- The employees at the paint shop tent of the clause was to protect Planning and Management in filed a grievance last November out until the dispute is settled. acknowledge that their rates are both the University and the em­ See PAINTERS on page 9 ^ PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 Worldworm ana and nationalNational Newsfile Democrats pass middle-class tax cut bill Associated Press By ADAM CLYMER They argued that whatever the imperimper-­ Action there starts on Tuesday in thth e Civil War Over: President N.YM V . TimeTimosc NewMovusc ServicQ*»rvireo fection_f* J_* s o_.£f• theiJ.1 _•_r_ billL.'ll , i*Jt_ was bettel J.I r fo£• r ±.1th e FinancT7I* e *"*Committeet *J_J . Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia, who WASHINGTON — House Democrats House, and the Democrats, than inaction. Here are the main provisions ofthe bill: led his republic into a ruinous con­ barely held together Thursday to win the Many Democrats said they considered • The main break for the middle class is flict with Croatia in a failed attempt first battle ofthe election year over taxes, the tax cuts ineffectual, and others thought a tax credit equal to one-fifth of a worker's to hold Yugoslavia together, declared passing a middle-class tax cut that in­ the bill's provisions to index capital gains Social Security and Medicare taxes, up to the war over Thursday. stantly became a political football for both for inflation were too generous to the rich. limits of $200 for individuals and $400 for parties. But an even stronger reason for opposi­ working couples. Asylum denied: The House on No one present contended that the bill, tion, especially among members uncertain Those limits would be reached by indi­ Thursday refused to grant tempo­ adopted on a 221-209 vote, had much about their new districts, was the risk of vidual workers with about $13,000 in rary political asylum to Haitian refu­ chance to become law in anything close to voting for higher taxes at all. wages, and by couples with about $26,000. gees as it debated a bill to suspend its present form. The margin was nowhere near veto- The credits would cost $45.9 billion. the repatriation of those detained in But its vitality as an issue was shown proof strength, and in the Senate, the • The current maximum individual rate the U.S. Naval base in Cuba. when President Bush immediately at­ indications are that a smaller tax break for of 31 percent would be raised to 35 percent tacked the House for rejecting his growth the middle class and smaller increases on for individuals with taxable income over Economy still troubled: Exist­ program in favor of "tax and spend poli­ the rich are likely to be considered. See TAX on page 6 • ing home sales were down in Janu­ cies." He renewed his threat to veto the ary for the first time in four months bill. and claims for jobless benefits rose But the passage of the measure also again in mid-February. kept alive the Democratic argument that Plans to cut military budget their party was for the middle class and Summit Concluded: President Bush was not. It also avoided the political Bush and six Latin American lead­ debacle of failing to pass anything when win Congressional support ers concluded a drug summit in San the president had demanded action by Antonio, Texas, Thursday with re­ March 20. newed pledges to combat narcotics, Bush opposes the measure because it By ERIC SCHMITT Aspin's plan would cut $15 billion, or but Bush cautioned that "at a time of would pay for its tax credits of up to $400 N.Y. Times News Service more than double the $7 billion in reduc­ rather sparse resources" the United for working couples by raising the maxi­ WASHINGTON— A Democratic plan tions that President Bush outlined in the States could not give its neighbors mum tax rate on high-income individuals to cut the military budget by about twice administration's revised $281 billion mili­ all the help they requested. from 31 percent to 35 percent. as much as the White House wants next tary budget for the fiscal year that begins His own program, emphasizing a cut in year picked up important support on Thurs­ Oct. 1. Over all, Aspin's plan would cut $91 Weather taxes on capital gains, was spurned earlier day when the House Budget Committee billion from the military budget by 1997, by the House on a 264-166 vote that fol­ moved to shift $15 billion from the Penta­ $48 billion more than the White House has Saturday lowed party lines closely but not exactly. gon either to domestic programs or to defi­ proposed. Aspin did not specify how the High: 60 • Partly cloudy House Democratic leaders did their most cit reduction. savings should be spent. Low: 40 • Windy energetic sales job in months, with Speaker The action by the committee would In a counterattack, senior Pentagon of­ Thomas Foley of Washington and Rep. embrace a plan for cutting military forces ficials issued on Thursday their sharpest Krzyzewskiville is looking a little Richard Gephardt of Missouri, the major­ and spending outlined last week by Rep. criticism of Aspin's plan. chilly — not to mention damp. At ity leader, working intensely to swing the Les Aspin, the Wisconsin Democrat head­ "Mr. Aspin's budget appears to be merely least it's not raining — yet. last few members into line. ing the House Armed Services Committee. See DEFENSE on page 14 • AEO A DEVIL OF A DEAL! At The Summit, you will discover be :xible Alpha Epsilon Phi floor plans that will match your lifestyle and fit announces their 1992 Annual Fund Raiser your every need. One, two, and three bedroom Sponsored by apartments are available. For instance, our two bedroom, two-bath J Pizza Transit Authority, apartments offer over 1,000 square feet, four different color schemes to choose from, bed­ rooms on opposite ends, lots of windows and $1.00 donation made for each reg. price single pie order huge, walk-in closets. 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(or $3.00 will be deducted from your order) SPECIAL RENT PRICES MOVE IN TODAY Hours: Sun-Wed 11 am-12 Mid NOW PRELEASING FOR SPRING AND SUMMER Thursday 11 am -1 am Duke Hospital and Duke University, IBM, Burroughs, Wellcome, and Glaxo Fri. - Sat 11 am - 2 am employees...we're only minutes away! Ask about special P.E.P. Program Discount! Go Duke! 286-1300 614 Snowcrest Trail, off University Dr., Durham (919)490-1400 (Order on points taken 7 pm M-F & after 1 pm Sat & Sun. CALL OR VISIT TODAY! J"PROPOmE" S © E.H.O. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGES Hill warns NFL players and coaches on collision path By GEOFFREY GREEN changed since those days, Hill said. Own­ in the past, Hill said. "Revenue will flat­ be tremendous. The management and players of the ers still have a distorted view of their ten. Next year each team will get $41 "If only 4.5 million viewers decided to National Football League are locked on a relationship to their players. million from television. My prediction is [pay], say, $250 for a season ticket for an collision course concerning their profits Hill once asked the wife of Jack Kent given the state ofthe economy there will be NFL package that would not overlap cur­ and rights, a sports executive and former Cooke, the owner of the Washington a plateau in the next contract," and that rent network TV viewing, pro football pro football great said Thursday. Redskins, how he felt about his players. teams will get no more than $42 million. would realize over $1 billion in additional The anticipated collision may actually "She replied, 'Jack cares very deeply about The salvation for the league is in the revenue," Hill said. bring cooperation between players and his players; he cherishes and he loves form of pay-per-view television. If Con­ Such an increase would almost double management for the first time, said Calvin them, like he cherishes and he loves his gress, which has opposed any such action, the amount of money which the league Hill, an all-pro running back in the 1960s thoroughbred horses," Hill said. allowed the NFL to show games over pay- currently receives from its television con­ and 70s with the Dallas As the conflict between per-view, the benefits for the league would tracts. Cowboys and two other owners and players in­ teams and currently the creases, the two groups vice president and direc­ will have to learn to coop­ tor ofthe Baltimore Ori­ erate, he said. oles. "I see football adopting "The NFL owners, or a model like basketball, the management as I like where both sides cooper­ to call them, and the NFL ate," Hill predicted. In the players labor [union] are National Basketball Asso­ locked in a struggle for ciation, the players receive control," Hill said. a certain percentage ofthe Two issues are coming league's gross profits. to a head, he said. The Hill also spoke about owners are attempting to television as a major find new sources of profit source of revenue for the because domestic rev­ league. Before 1960, the enue growth is almost league's teams were al­ flat. The meteoric rise in ways in very precarious revenue network televi­ financial situations, he sion brought beginning BRIAN SCULLY/THE CHRONICLE said. Television ended the in 1960 is coming to an Calvin Hill constant struggle for prof­ end. itability. For the players, the issue is their rela­ "[Former commissioner] Pete Rozelle tionship with the owners. For years, NFL revolutionized the NFL when he began to athletes were at the mercy of the teams. propose that the NFL sell its national TV The NFL encouraged the players to form a rights in a single package," Hill said. Since union, Hill said, because "the league un­ that start, television rights are today the derstood that if they wanted any kind of single largest source of revenue for NFL anti-trust exemption, they couldn't get it teams, he said. from Congress like baseball; they needed a "In 1962, [CBS] signed for $4,650,000; union." that's about $330,000 a team. In 1976, $2.2 When Hill was a rookie, contracts were million a year was being allocated to every not guaranteed and players had to play six team," Hill said. "And next year each team exhibition games a year for room, board will get $41 million from the contract." and $14 per day apart from their contract, Primarily because of this revenue, the BRIAN SCULLY/THE CHRONICLE Hill said. If a player was injured in the average NFL team posted an average $10 preseason, the club only owed the player million profit in 1990, according to figures Dead Bears the portion of his salary pro-rated over provided by the NFL Players Association. Grateful(ly) Dead bears that is. They're ready and waiting for the Dead concert three regular season games. Network television revenue will not grow this weekend. The owner's view of their players has not as much over the next few years as it has

Duke University The Vv isdoiML to Know I Lyse Department of Music Duke University Chorale Rodney Wynkoop, conductor St. John Passion

Johann Sebastian Bach with orchestra and soloists Mel Williams, Evangelist I nro TummeroJLOgy. Cream O' Soul UNDER THE STREET, 2/28/92 Penelope Jensen, soprano What lessons must you learn in this life & how Donna Dease, alto will it impact your career choice? Wednesday, Feb. 26 WXDU Presents: Zen Frisbee, Poqo the Amazing Rubber Faced Boy & Pike - $3 James Powers, tenor Thursday, Feb. 27 Yusef Salim & Friends Wayne Lail, baritone How do you get in tune with your particular - upstairs, 9:30 until...no cover Donald Milholin, baritone vibration so that your life will be easier, Friday, Feb. 28 Cream O' Soul happier & more productive? - classy classic rock- $5 Saturday, March 7 Anson Funderburgh & the Rockets Sunday, March 1,1992 For your numerological report based on an analysis of your with Sam Meyers name &. birthdate, print your name as written on your birth J 8 - advance tickets available at the bar 3:00 pjn. certificate, address, city, state, zip & birthdate (month/day/ Friday, Mar. 6 - Sunday, Mar. 8 year/) &. send along with your phone number &, a check, or Journey to India Duke Chapel money order for $10.52 to: dinner reservations recommended BMF & Associates, Admission - $7 613 Guy Walker Way, Durham, NC 27703. Tickets available through Page Box Office Allow 10 days for receipt. oeventh street 286-1019 or 286-2647 1104 BROAD ST., DURHAM 684-4444

Or at least those of you still in town. There is NO staff meeting today. None. Do not come to the office. Enjoy yourself instead. Go to the gardens. Take a nap. Find out what real CHRONICLE STAFF people do at 3:30 on Friday afternoons. PAGE 4 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 Arts

CALENDAR Philistine speaks out on 'Shock Value' Friday, February 28 1492 Editor's note: This article presents a con­ strings attached to her arms and through Reynolds industries Theater trasting viewpoint to the article that ap­ her nipples. Bryan Center, 8 p.m. peared in Tuesday's paper on "Shock Steve Arnold's three-paneled "The Last Admission $22.50, Students $15 Value." Supper" features a smirking Christ in Performances continue through Mar. 7. (See review on page 5.} lipstick along with naked drag queens, a By TERRY HARLIN topless primadonna and other weirdos as Sunday, March 1 What a handful of art students and disciples. Most noticeable is the one whose Duke Chorale critics believe to be the true meaning of an penis is erect. Could this be Peter, the Duke Chapel, 3 p.m. Admission $7 artist's work is irrelevant. Rock? Be it Peter, Paul or Mary, this The Chorale will present Bach's St. John Whether art be a self-serving display of work, despite possible good intentions, Passion underthedirectionofRodneyWynkoop. virtuosity designed to impress connois­ comes off as sacrilegious, offensive trash. Featured soloists will include Mei Williams, seurs or a heartfelt attempt to move soci­ Evangelist; Penelope Jensen, soprano; Donna ety, 90 percent of art viewers do not know Then there's Robert Mapplethorpe, Dease, alto; James Powers, tenor; and Wayne and/or do not care to know the difference whose photographs of men urinating in Lail and Donald MiihoBn, baritone. between Rembrandt and Rafael. each other's mouths do not grace this Wednesday, March 4 For most, a photograph is rarely worth a exhibit. Expect less interesting nudes Music of Mary Lou Williams thousand words. Andre Serrano's "Milk, which may dazzle followers for hours, but Griffith Rim Theater Blood" merits about a dozen: white rect­ to us philistines are merely examples of Bryan Center, 8 p.m. angle next to red rectangle with a hinge in boring "erotica," the acceptable term for As part of the 1992 Freedom Series the between. However, if only for "Shock elitist pornography. Herb Ritts's and Len Center for Documentary Studies, the Value," the exhibit's title, his other works Prince's work also falls into this genre. Screen/Society and the Mary Lou Williams provoke discussion. "Scream," featuring a Amidst the mess, a few works emerge as Center will present the films "Mary Lou coyote hung by the neck, may conjure im­ unique and something that one might ac­ Williams: Music on My Mind" and "But Then ages of human lynchings, cruelty to ani­ tually hang on a wall. William Wegman's ... She's Betty Carter." The films are free mals or even man's destruction of nature. and open to the public. wonderful polaroid of an unusually tall Nonetheless, it is merely a sick, staged woman with a dog's head (or dog with a Thursday, March 5 display of a poor, dead beast. woman's arms) arouses a cornucopia of Duke Wind Symphony The blood in "Blood Cross" looks fake bizarre thoughts, all of which should bring Baldwin Auditorium, 8 p.m. and hints at artificiality in modern reli­ a smile to the spectator's face. Who cares The symphony will perform works by Bach, gion, a common theme for the artist who what it means? It's funny as hell. Bedrich Smetana, Karel Husa, Malcolm gave us "Piss Christ" (not shown in this Arnold and William Schuman. exhibit), a crucifix soaked in his own urine. Lastly, the most interesting and awe- Songs from Jerusalem: The green hooded klansman in his "Impe­ inspiring images on display are Jerry Jerusalem in Songs and Music rial Wizard II" suggests that racism hides SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE Uelsmann's surrealistic black and whites. Nelson Music Room under any color. Serrano's images are vivid His amazing techniques create a breach of East Duke Building; 8 port Admission $8 and colorful, but often blatantly sensa- "Lisa Lyon" by Robert Mapplethorpe Palestinian folk singer Mustafa El-Kurd will reality which captivates even the most sing and accompany himself on a traditional tionalistic. with fetishism and women's breasts. High­ hardened cynic. One line descriptions of Arabic lute. His music is a mix of traditional lights include a woman in a bondage mask his pieces would not do them justice. His folklore, art song, religious music and contem- Joel Peter-Witkins's works, which crit­ holding two fetuses on what appears to be works, worth more than a thousand words, I issues. ics claim show man's dark side, merely a bed of nails, and a naked figure at the are worth more than the rest ofthe exhibit demonstrate his deranged fascination feet of a nude woman with legs spread, put together.

ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING MONDAY, MARCH 1 IN VON CANON C -IRYANltN^

COME FIND OUT ABOUT STUDENT TELEVISION AT DUKE UNIVERSITY AND GET INVOLVED! WRITERS, PRODUCERS, ACTORS, DREAMERS, ANYBODY! LEARN ALL ABOUT THE NEW EXECUTIVE POSITIONS AVAILABLE: STATION MANAGER, PUBLICITY CHAIRMAN, PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR, CHIEF ENGINEER, AS WELL AS TV SUCRS.I§i§ll§i; DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT! FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 5

Friday, March 6 '1492' flops; musical never leaves port Classical Concert Tchaikovsky Festival By JENNIFER GREESON Page Auditorium, 8 p.m. Admission $22-$14 There was a whole lot of stompin' and The program will include The Voyevode, shoutin' goin' on last night in Reynolds The­ Opus 78, Concerto No. 1 in B-flat minor, ater as Christopher Columbus threw a temper Suite from Swan Lake, and Capriccio Italien, tantrum across the wide blue sea for more Op. 45. than two hours. Saturday, March 7 He did stop long enough to diddle a few women and get some laughs from an over­ Art and Psychoanalysis blown homosexual. A Symposium Despite some good college tries from many Duke University Museum of Art North Galiery, 9:30-5:30 p.m. ofthe cast and crew members of "1492," the Admission $5, Free to students new musical by Christopher Bishop was lost at The day-long symposium will feature guest sea without a trace. The musical, promoted lecturers, a panel discussion and reception. during the quincentennial of Columbus' voy­ Composer in Transition age, has been touted as a look at Columbus' Duke Jazz Ensemble inner turmoil and conflict as he struggles to Baldwin Auditorium, 8 p.m. realize his dream of sailing west to the Indies. Admission $10, Students $5 But lack of conflict is the central failure ofthe This concert is the final program in the Julia show. No character is developed enough to Wilkinson Mueller Concert Series. possess any internal drama; all remain simplis­ Exhibits tic, two-dimensional caricatures that we can't Twentieth-Century Drawings care about. Columbus ("the man, the myth, the Duke University Museum of Art musical") is a big cry-baby who literally stomps North Gallery his feet and whimpers when crossed. Figure drawings from the Weatherspoon Art Andhe'scrossedoften. Theentireplotcanbe Gallery at UNC-Greensboro will be on display summed up in a few lines: through Mar. 29. Act I—Columbus tries to get money. He's SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE Jackson Pollock: Psychoanalytic turned down. He stomps. Hetriestogetmoney. Columbus pleads his case to King Ferndinand and Queen Isabella. Drawings He's turned down. He stomps. He gets money. Duke University Museum of Art Act II—The crew thinks they see land. twists—or trysts. Columbus is led offstage by Main Gallery leaves me here." Drawings the 20th century abstract artist They're wrong. Columbus stomps. They think a number of scantily-clad women who execute In the second act, Columbus is immediately gave to his analyst while undergoing psycho­ they see land. They're wrong. He stomps. They pelvic thrusts with grace and ease for big set upon by a woman barely clad in black lace therapy will be on display through Mar. 29. see land. Chris' entertainment. Each leading female who dances up to him and throws her leg Relief Prints The direction by Charles Randolph-Wright character in the play services Columbus in one around his neck for no apparent reason, initi­ Lilly Library Gallery doesn't do much to remedy the lack of conflict. form or another, then reappears in the second ating several daysoffunfor this lonely boy. We Woodcut prints by Wilmington artist Ann The actors rarely address each other physi­ act as a mood ofthe sea, publicized in press soon get used to seeing women in gauze slink Connor will be exhibited through Mar. 23. cally—Columbus spends the entire show star- releases as "Columbus' ultimate mistress." onstage: throughout the rest of the act his Flesh and Blood: Photographs of ingdramaticallyintospace above theaudience's The subplot of "Columbus and his women" main squeezes reappear from time to time as Haitians heads while other characters yell at his back. begins with an apparition of his dead wife and variations of the moody female sea. Each Bivins Gallery Work by photographer Gary Monroe. The music doesn't help much either. There's progresses to a fling with a peasant girl in the wears a variation ofthe same sea-nightgown Photography: Shock Value really no innovation in the score and Bishop first act. When he tells this mistress he's (with slits to show more leg!) and oh-so-subtly Brown Gallery exhibits an alarming tendency to drop off into leaving on his voyage, she's wonderfully ac­ announces "I am the sea" in song. Bryan Center "lite" pop. cepting and sings: "The force that guides those Even Queen Isabella, the absolute monarch {See review on page 4.) Within the rigid plot frame, there are a few geese to their destiny/ Takes you there and See 1492 on page 7 • THE FOREST

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Mon-Fri 9-5 #9 Post Oak Road iFogelma n Management |^v Minutes from Duke Medical Center, Sat 10-5 Durham, NC 27705 Duke Law School & Fuqua Business School Sun 1-5 (919) 383-8504 PAGE 6 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 Quayle attacks failure of welfare state in New York visit

By ROBERT PEAR Quayle delivered his comments in a state where he and States. N.Y. Times News Service President Bush do not have to worry about being out­ In his State of the Union Message last month, Bush Vice President Dan Quayle traveled to New York on flanked on the right by Patrick Buchanan. Bush's oppo­ said, "Welfare was never meant to be a lifestyle; it was Thursday and declared it proof of the failure ofthe welfare nent will not be on the New York ballot in the Republican never meant to be a habit; it was never supposed to be state. primary. Quayle's stinging words were greeted with passed from generation to generation like a legacy. It's "The liberal vision of a happy, productive and content anger and countered with accusations that the last two time to replace the assumptions ofthe welfare state and welfare state hasn't even worked on 22 square miles ofthe Republican administrations are responsible for the se­ help reform the welfare system." most valuable real estate in the world," he said in a speech vere budget crunch. In an impassioned speech at Harvard University two to the Economic Club of New York. Quayle's comments sounded like the campaign themes weeks ago, Cuomo urged the Bush administration not to Quayle said the city showed what happens when people that he and Bush would have used against Mario Cuomo exploit welfare as a political issue. put too much faith in the benevolence of government as a if the New York governor had run for president. Overheated talk about public assistance "would appeal solution to social problems. Even as a non-candidate, Cuomo is extremely irritat­ to and feed a sad, corrosive instinct for negativism and "In man's economic life, the state may be an uneasy ing to Bush administration officials, and they love to divisiveness," Cuomo said. ally, but I don't think it's ever a friend," he said. assail him and his policies. Leland Jones, New York City Mayor David Dinkins' Addresssing the club members during a dinner at the Bush administration officials say the president and press secretary, said, "I think it's regrettable that Quayle New York Hilton at Rockefeller Center, Quayle recited a Quayle intend to emphasize welfare as a political issue in appears to want to out-Buchanan Buchanan. For if the list of New York's problems, including high city and state this election year, on the assumption that voters from Bush-Quayle vision worked, the Kurds would not have taxes, a large number of people on the welfare rolls and a middle-income families will be hostile to generous welfare been driven out of their homeland, and the American high drop-out rate for students enrolled in public schools. programs at a time of economic difficulties in the United economy would not have been driven into depression." Democrats claim fairness in tax bill

• TAX from page 2 $85,000 and couples with taxable incomes over $145,000. That would raise $53.6 billion over six years. • A 10 percent surcharge would be imposed on taxes attributable to incomes over $1 million, a provision that would affect about 60,000 people. That would raise $10.5 billion over six years. • In a change both in tax law and in philosophy, Democrats voted to index against inflation gains on any items acquired after Jan. 31 of this year, so that only that part ofthe profit that exceeds increases in the Consumer Price Index would be subject to tax. Another provision would cut the maximum capital gains tax rate from 28 percent to 14 percent on stock in small businesses held at least five years. Voting for the House bill were 219 Democrats, one Republican and one independent; 163 Republicans and 46 Democrats voted against it, but some of those Democrats were prepared to back the bill if their votes were essential. One member of the task force for rounding up votes, Rep. Donald Pease of Ohio, said that at 10 a.m. Thursday the Democrats had only 198 sure votes. "I'd say the last 30 votes came in because of personal phone calls from Gephardt and the speaker," he said. Throughout the debate, Democrats argued that their measure would make the tax code fairer to the middle class and "return to the time-honored tradition of taxing people according to their ability to pay," as Rep. Dan Rostenkowski of Illinois, chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means, maintained.

The tax cuts in the bill would cost $79.5 billion over six years. Higher tax rates, principally on higher-income individuals, would raise $93.5 billion, permitting the leadership to present the measure as having the addi­ tional virtue of reducing the deficit overall. Democrats called their bill the "Tax Fairness and Eco­ nomic Growth Act of 1992," but they talked more about fairness than growth. "Stand up for the people we represent," Gephardt said. And Rep. Robert Matsui, D-Calif., said that the individual income tax changes "won't have an effect on growth, but will have an effect on equity." But there were other elements in the bill designed to stimulate the real estate market and economic growth more generally, with several provisions taken from Bush's bill. . Those included an extra 15 percent of first-year depre­ ciation for plant and equipment purchased after Jan. 31, penalty-free withdrawals of up to $10,000 form Indi­ vidual Retirement Accounts for purchases of a first home, or for educational or medical expenses, and an easing of "passive loss" tax rules for real estate professionals. Democrats contended that their bill was consistent with the spirit of the 1990 budget agreement because it was balanced over six years. But they acknowledged that it was not balanced, year by year, as the 1990 act required, and wrote a waiver of that act's provisions into the bill. The budget act problem was one primary focus of SQUSn Republican attacks Thursday. Rep. Robert Michel of Ilinois, the minority leader, argued that the budget agreement was "the only defense We're here (as if you hadn't noticed). Spend Spring Break in a hot place. this country has against the majority's voracious spend­ ing habits." The Nike Factory Store. Carolina Pottery Outlet Center, Industrial Park Dr., Smithfield. Democrats made a similar assault in the debate on Bush's program. Rep. Thomas Downey of New York said (919) 989-6100. Discontinued/irregular sports and fitness stuff. Leave now, we'll wait. the bill was "ridden with gimmicks" in accounting changes provided to make it fit within budget act boundaries. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 7 BP privatization committee expands after groups protest • BP from page 1 will decide the fate of people's jobs," she nate jobs," said Jim Pugh, the business said. agent for local 77. Protesters claimed that the people who "Have any of the employees been ap­ gather information and create choices are proached by any member of this commit­ as important to the outcome as those who tee?" said Trinity senior Danielle Sallus, a make the decision. protest organizer. Almost every employee The group also raised concerns about simultaneously answered "no." who would be considered eligible voters in With a food plan mandating five dinners a referendum. per week for freshman, the University The committee was originally comprised could protect employees' jobs, said Wes of three members appointed by the ASDU Newman, director of dining and special president, three members appointed by events. the University Union, one member ap­ pointed by GPSC and two at-large mem­ The committee's purpose is to study bers. Eight ofthe nine members are under­ MICHAEL SAUL/THE CHRONICLE privatization, said Adrianne Threatte, co- graduates. chair of the committee. "The role of this The committee is scheduled to meet again Protestors who crashed Thursday's meeting of the BP committee surround committee is not to make a decision that next Thursday. committee members Adrianne Threatt (first row, left) and Jim Goldfarb In '1492' Columbus re-sails THE CUTTING \EDGE the ocean blue ... and sinks \ HAIR STUDIO • 1492 from page 5 tainment enough, "1492" goes on to mock who granted Columbus the money for his homosexuals. The treasurer of Isabella's voyage, is stripped down to a red and black court is a flamboyant fop in pastels who dance dress (a la Gloria Estefan) for mod­ lisps his way through his lines and takes AWARD WINNING HAIR DESIGNERS ernized flamenco dancing in both acts. every possible opportunity to skip or flour­ Toward the end of this shattering of ish a limp wrist. gender roles Columbus calls all the lead­ Promoters of "1492" boast of its "multi­ 286-4151 ing ladies back onstage to stand behind ethnic" non-traditional casting. But any NEXXUS MON-FRI 10-8 WALK-INS him as he sings "I knew a wife ... I knew "statement" the casting might make is PAUL MITCHELL SAT 10-3 WELCOME a queen . .. I've known a peasant girl. . . completely overshadowed by the show's I've known a lover." Despite all these sexual anachronistic attitudes toward women and conquests, he concludes, "I loved a dream." homosexuals. Truly, "1492" flops as both 2200 WEST MAIN STREET FIRST UNION PUAZA, ERWIN SQUARE Pretty deep stuff. the social statement and the musical it is As if the sexual stereotypes aren't enter­ supposed to be. PRESENT THIS AD FOR $5 OFF YOUR NEXT HAIRCUT WITH SELECT STYLIST. EXP. 3-31-92

AN EXCITING EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE AWAITS YOU ON NORTH CAROLINA'S SUNDRENCHED COAST, SO COME AND EXPLORE THE MARINE SCIENCES WITH US AT DUKE'S SEASIDE CAMPUS DUKE IN CANADA THE MARINE LAB 1992 SUMMER COURSES Summer Study Abroad Program • Two terms: Term I (May 18-June 19); Term II (June 22-July 24) • Stimulating lectures, challenging laboratories, direct field & shipboard Program Information Meeting experience • Undergraduate and graduate courses; small classes 2:00 pm • Work with living organisms • Meet scientists from across the nation and around the world Monday, March 2 • Live and study in a natural setting on North Carolina's Outer Banks (surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean, Cape Lookout National Seashore, Canadian Studies Center estuaries, sand beaches, wetlands and maritime forests) 2016 Campus Drive • Enjoy historic, educational and scenic sights; extracurricular sports (sailing, surfing, volleyball, basketball, and croquet); or bask in the sun on one of the area's unspoiled beaches Intense French Language Program at the • SUMMER TUITION SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Universite du Quebec, a Trois Rivieres Fall & Spring Semesters also offered Information and application materials available in 027 Bio. Sci., Program is open to 04 Allen Building, or by contacting ADMISSIONS, DUKE UNIVERSITY MARINE LABORATORY, BEAUFORT, NC 28516-9721 undergraduate and graduate students. (phone 919--728-2111). Total cost -.$1,500 For information, or questions - Some scholarships are available. DUML Faculty will be on Campus Dr. Daniel Rittschof Dr. Richard B. Forward For more information, contact: Wed., March 25,12:00 noon-5:00 p.m. Fri., March 27,12:00 noon-5: Professor Clark Cahow Room 225 Biological Sciences Bldg. Room 225 Biological Sciences Canadian Studies, 684-4260 (For both faculty, see sign-up sheet outside of 027 Bio. Sci.

Save a tree. Recycle this newspaper. PAGE 8 THE CHRONICLE "FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28/1992 All Duke Alums are invited to watch Duke play UCLA on Sunday at

Restauranr* m. t«__ an_ da Ban r ' SCREEN/SOCIETY, THE PROGRAM IN FILM AND VIDEO NO COVER - Doors open at 3:00 AND Shoppes at Lakewood, Durham 493-7797 THE INSTITUTE OF THE ARTS Have you ever noticed the PRESENT difference even a single FILM AND VIDEO OF THE BLACK DIASPORA rose makes? Celebrate Special Occasions YOUNG SOUL REBELS (1991,105MINS.) with Flowers from ISSAC JULIEN'S CANNES FESTIVAL PRIZE-WINNING FEATURE Sanders Florist 1100 Broad Street MONDAY, MARCH 2 286-1288 8:00 PM PACE AUDITORIUM

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• COUNCIL from page 1 by President Keith Brodie and other se­ council's executive committee, will replace he is president. letic department to consider funding these nior officials as part of deliberations over the current chair, economics professor Roy The goal of DUMAC, which man­ benefits out of its own budget. It is uncer­ the 1992-93 University budget, to be final­ Weintraub, in April. The chair's term lasts ages over $1 billion of University in­ tain whether athletics can provide any ized in May. two years. vestments, is to diversify the subsidy at all, he said, but even if the ticket The council heard from Eugene University's investments among dif­ subsidy is eliminated, faculty and employ­ IN OTHER BUSINESS: The council McDonald, executive vice president for ferent kinds of assets. This type of ees should still be guaranteed 2,100 tick­ elected law professor Richard Burton as asset management. McDonald spoke on diversity should offer high rates of ets in Cameron Indoor Stadium. its next chair. the purpose and goals ofthe Duke Univer­ return while keeping risk as low as The faculty's proposal will be considered Burton, who previously served on the sity Management Corporation, of which possible, McDonald said. Paint shop dispute off to arbitration; both sides confident

• PAINTERS from page 1 any other service provided by Facilities hour. ing by the rules set forth in the contract, which it was determined that the cost Planning and Management, said Thomas Both sides are optimistic about resolving Kahr said. would be higher to use University employ­ Dixon, vice president for administrative the dispute in a manner favorable to them. The union, Loftis said, is determined to ees rather than contract local workers. services. "It is not a question of winning or los­ reinstate the two displaced painters and The difference between the shop's bill­ The billing rate for a University painter ing," Kahr said. "It is a question of resolv­ keep the shop open. ing rate and the billing rate of local con­ is about $28 per hour and the billing rate ing [a dispute] in the contract." These guys are painters and they want tractors is greater for painting than for for an external painter is less than $20 per The University firmly believes it is abid­ to work as painters," Loftis said.

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FIRST UNION PLAZA MARy Lou WilliAMs CENTER ERWIN SQUARE DURHAM 286-3355 LuiMch is ON THE house! STORE HOURS: 10 to 6 Monday - Friday i 10 to 5 Saturday Do you see news? Recycle this Chronicle Call 684-BONE fef Letters EDITORIALS Fake IDs will be confiscated at games PAGE 10 FEBRUARY 28, 1992 To the editor: be confiscated as so directed by the rules Recently there has been a problem with on the back ofthe card. In the past, a wink students giving their Duke IDs to non- and a smile may have gotten you past the Duke students so these people can get into card reader. This will no longer be the the basketball games. According to the case. This enforcement of an old policy is to Colorless power rules found on the back ofthe ID card, "The help protect your right as an undergradu­ transfer of an ID card to another person, or ate to get into basketball games. It is not the possession of another person's ID card, made to punish you. Help us and yourself Recently, a story ran in The News honest and responsible than whites? may result in confiscation ofthe card and by not lending your cards to other people. and Observer of Raleigh describing If that's the case, then citizens of judicial action." This fraud also violates This policy will be enforced. the problems black leaders in Durham Durham should be ashamed. White the Honor Commitment. have faced over the past year. The leaders are just as capable as black Non-Duke undergraduates using stu­ Christian Cobaugh story cited several high publicity falls leaders of misusing their authority. In dents' IDs to get into basketball games will Trinity '94 no longer be tolerated. If an ID is used from grace, including those of City the United States, where throughout fraudulently, the person using it will be Elizabeth Gibson Council member Clarence Brown, po­ our history we have been led by white denied access to the game and the card will Trinity '92 lice chief Trevor Hampton and city Americans, we have seen firsthand school superintendent Hawthorne how capable whites leaders are of Faison. screwing up. Does the name Watergate University selection process good for all The story said the "city's strained mean anything? Or what about the To the editor: Sciences. So his application package was race relations are becoming even more Iran-Contra dealings, or the possibil­ Mrs. Grant and I were delighted when returned to him in its entirety with a note rocky as blacks look for answers— ity of an October Surprise? our son, Max, a Yale senior with an A saying that the deadline for applications sometimes blaming whites—and While it is true that there have been average in his major and 99th percentile had then since passed. whites seek to capitalize politically on a spate of recent incidents involving achievement scores, decided to apply to OK, Duke. We understand the need for the confusion." black leaders in Durham, it is not true the Duke Ph.D. program in American lit­ procedures in an environment where you Numerous scandals involving these that blacks are incapable of leading. erature. Although unhappy with Duke back receive hundreds of applications for a few men have indeed brought about their Politicians seeking to exploit racism in 1988, we understood when the Trinity positions. But what kind of system allows downfalls. Whether it was Faison's and to capitalize on these incidents for College undergraduate admissions folks the first cut of university doctoral candi­ alleged mismanagement of finances their own good should be disregarded found Max's high honors record at Exeter, dates to be made in the mail room? It must his double parent legacy status and two be that a system condoned by high-pow­ or Brown's abuse of his position at by the citizenry. People should take grandfathers being deceased Duke profes­ ered university academics to screen their North Carolina Central University, these incidents for what they are: un­ sors inadequate to carry the baggage of a applicants is good enough to use on any these men were behaving in an irre­ fortunate examples of the corrupting mediocre math SAT score. After all, we applicant screening process. I suggest a sponsible manner. power of leadership. whined, dear ol' Duke has achieved the paper for the MLA convention. "Professors But that is no reason to imply that Blacks as an entity do not deserve to academic levels ofYale, Amherst and U. of for the next century—The Duke Model." I the irresponsible behavior of these men be judged based on the actions of a few. Chicago. As a Duke family, we took pride will even augment the model. I am going to is representative of what happens This holds especially true for the State in that. So young Grant turned down look for some charmer from the N.Y. State when blacks assume positions of lead­ Bureau of Investigation which, as one Amherst, U. of Chicago and went off to Motor Vehicles Department to hire as my ership in the community, as the story would hope, is not focusing its ener­ Yale where he has had an excellent expe­ initial screener. rience. So, Duke, no hard feelings. We in question does. gies on black leaders specifically. Po­ What better proxy for selecting corpo­ even restarted sending a little money True, racial tensions have been litical pressures shouldn't be allowed rate leaders ofthe third millennium than Durham way. the principles hatched by Duke University heightened—witness the recent may­ to distort the investigative services of Little did we know that Duke wasn't for selecting the academics of the third oral election in Durham in which the this branch of the state government. through with lessons for the Grants. It millennium? challenger and eventual winner Harry In contemporary American politics, seems that young Maxwell Grant failed to Rodenhizer used the race factor, al­ scandal is, unfortunately, common­ include a $50 check in his application pack­ Richard Grant beit subtly, against Clarence Jenkins, place. While it cannot be accepted, it age to the Graduate School of Arts and New York, NY the incumbent. But, one must ask, cannot be used as a reason to further why have they been heightened? Be­ drive a wedge between groups of cause blacks are perceived to be less people. Honor system necessary to earn trust To the editor: versity? Duke needs an honor system that works. I suddenly understood. We as a student I came to this realization a few days ago in body have done little or nothing to identify a small convenience store by Northgate ourselves with the invaluable characteris­ On the record Mall after I was essentially accused of tic of honesty. Quite the contrary; a num­ stealing by an employee. ber of students were found guilty of cheat­ Jack cares very deeply about his players; he cherishes and he loves them, like he At first I was surprised at such an accu­ ing last semester. cherishes and he loves his thoroughbred horses. sation based simply on the facts that I had Former NFL star Calvin Hill repeating the wife of Jack Kent Cooke, owner ofthe been browsing in the same section for a few The administration and the student Washington Redskins, when asked how her husband felt about his players. minutes and was wearing a backpack. honor council can do their part to combat These conditions apparently appeared sus­ this problem, but their efforts have little or picious to the employee who scornfully no effect unless the student body as a asked me "just what I was looking at for so whole accepts the responsibility for them­ long." I left the store angry because ofthe selves and for others to remain honest. accusation, but changed my outlook as I Trust is something that is earned. In established 1905 THE CHRONICLE thought about the situation. order to earn the trust of the Durham I was quite positive that the employee community as well as the rest ofthe nation Ann Heimberger, Editor identified me as a Duke student for a we must begin now to identify our univer­ Jason Greenwald, Managing Editor number of reasons. I was wearing a Duke sity with a strict code of honor. If not, Barry Eriksen, General Manager shirt and hat, was only a half mile off maybe you might be the next one to have Jonathan Blum, Editorial Page Editor campus and my age corresponded to that your integrity questioned. of an undergraduate. So why, I asked my­ Hannah Kerby, News Editor Matt Steffora, Assoc. News Editor self, didn't he identify me as an honest Michael Saul, Assoc. News Editor Blake Smith Kris Olson, Sports Editor individual because I attended Duke Uni­ Leya Tseng, Arts Editor Jennifer Greeson, Arts Editor Trinity '95 Peggy Krendl, City & State Editor Leigh Dyer, Investigations Editor Eric Larson, Features Editor Debbie Barr, Health & Research Editor Mark Wasmer, Photography Editor Cliff Burns, Photography Editor Announcement Steven Heist, Graphics Editor Reva Bhatia, Design Editor Adrian Dollard, Senior Editor Jay Epping, Senior Editor Remember: NO EDIT BOARD SUNDAY DUE TO CHRONICLE TRAVELS. Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager Alan Welch, Production Manager Elizabeth Wyatt, Student Advertising Manager David Morris, Business Manager

The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its Letters policy: The Chronicle urges all of its readers to submit letters to the students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of editor. Letters must be typed and double-spaced and must not exceed 300 words. the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. They must be signed, dated and must include the author's class or department, Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115; Business phone number and local address for purposes of verification. Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106; FAX: 684-8295. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union promotional in nature. Building; Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters for length, clarity and style, and ©1992 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No part to withhold letters based on the discretion ofthe editorial page editor. of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Letters should be mailed to Box 4696, Duke Station, or delivered in person to The Chronicle offices on the third floor of the Flowers Building. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 11 Past collides with present for a life-changing experience Only a couple more days ... still say that it's foolish, but I say you just don't under­ I first heard about the engagement sometime last fall. • 42 stand. My father knew how badly I wanted to attend, so he I guess that's why I'm having such a hard time deciding offered to pay for my plane ticket home. For months I kept Jason Greenwald who I want to win Sunday's game. Too many factors weigh asking myself the all-important question: what will I heavily on my mind. All of these powerful forces will wear? present. It is the most profound symbol I could ever hope converge at Pauley Pavilion in a matter of hours, as I By the time this column is printed, 111 be home in Los to create. struggle against myself to try to resolve my inner turmoil. Angeles, seeing friends and family. But my mind will Think about the conflict: what you took for granted as My friends at Duke will pummel me if I pull for the remain fixed with anticipation on Sunday afternoon, 1 a child vs. what you've experienced in a relatively short Bruins, and my friends from LA. will chastise me if I p.m. to be exact. period of time. Old and new fight for recognition; yin and choose the Blue Devils. Perhaps I'm learning that you can It is one of those rare moments that will live forever in yang twirl ceaselessly. never hope to please everyone. In the end, though, I need my memory. I know already that I will recall every last And all of that is at stake in a simple basketball game. to please myself—so I guess I've got some soul-searching detail about the day—it will never die. Perhaps I have begun to understand the power of sports. to do. Why is it so important? Let me try to set the scene. It is not about the game itself, it is about being part of Duke vs. UCLA. It's the game I've been dreaming about Imagine you grew up in Durham, cheering fervently for something bigger than yourself, something the commu­ since freshman year. And I still haven't chosen which the Blue Devils. All your life, your spirits rose with each nity can rally around, something that matters to you. It is shirt I'm going to wear on Sunday. victory, and they sank with each bitter defeat. Any game about unity, about leadership, about individual perfor­ When I return on Monday, 111 be a changed person. I against Carolina was much more than a game: it was life mances and team efforts. It is, essentially, about life. guarantee it. or death—at least until the next match-up. Sports isn't logical. If it were, we'd be fools to camp out Jason Greenwald is a Trinity junior and managing The outcome of a Duke basketball game would set your for two weeks simply to see the Carolina game. You might editor of The Chronicle. mood for at least the next several days. Everyone at school could tell by the expression on your face whether Duke had won or lost, though you would be sure to tell everyone about any victory. After 18 years of rabid fanaticism, you are about to enter college. You decide you want to go away from home, and you enroll at Stanford. You've always liked Califor­ nia, and you enjoy the blend of strong academics in a laid- back environment. Your freshman year, Stanford has a strong basketball team. Duke's team, of course, is also strong. Amazingly, the two teams meet in the NCAA tournament. You are in a quandary: whom should you root for? Having been a Duke fan all your life, you side with the Blue Devils. All of your friends antagonize you for rooting against your alma mater, but you can't bring yourself to wish for a Duke loss. Fast-forward: it is two years later, and Stanford meets Duke once again. It is a late-season match-up between two ofthe top-ranked teams in the country. Once again, you can't decide which team to support. By now, you've been going to Stanford games for three years, and you've grown attached to Adam Keefe and the rest ofthe Cardi­ nal. You've developed \ true allegiance to the team. This is, after all, the only college you will (probably) ever attend. But you still love Duke. Deep down, you may always be a Duke fan. You really don't know which team youll favor. Take the names "Stanford" and "Duke" and replace them with "Duke" and "UCLA," respectively. Then you * I DON'T LIKE HIM MUCH EITHER, BUT I VOTED POR HIM BECAUSE I WANTED may begin to see why Sunday will live forever in my mind. It is the battle ofthe school I now attend with the school TO SEND THE KAISER A MESSAGE / " I once idolized. It is my past coming in conflict with my If Saddam is target again, goals should be clear to public Two little words seem to fill Americans and our govern­ and his inner circle of killers? ment with such terror that we just cannot confront them. • Commentary Kurds and other Iraqi rebels say they and anti-Saddam They are: What then? forces in the army can carry it out without foreign ground At home, if we spend a trillion or so more than we earn, A.M. Rosenthal troops. They figure that in the army of about 350,000 what then? there are at most about 70,000 soldiers, members of Abroad, if we allow the Russian republic to collapse, security and Republican Guard battalions, who will fight what then? Two little words seem to fill for him at all. If we squeeze Israel into militarily indefensible terri­ They hope the first days of U.S.-supported rebellion will tory, and surprise, her enemies try another war to destroy Americans and our govern­ finish Saddam Hussein. But maybe not. Then the rebels her, what then? ment with such terror...What would need supplies and air support against the 3,000 tanks, 150 planes and 600 helicopters that the United And now we are paying for not answering last year's then? States left to an astonished Saddam Hussein as a golden what-then—if we leave Saddam Hussein in full political handshake. power after defeating him militarily, what will we do And before going ahead, Washington has to tell Ameri­ about him later? That failure brings Washington to the cans that there is the chance that some American troops much-leaked decision point on whether to go after him before the Persian Gulf war: precise, publicly understood will be involved. Probably they would be limited to intel­ again. goals of war—no winks and nods, nothing left unsaid. ligence units. From the U.N. and other international teams come Iraqi rebels and others who know the Mideast list three reports making it retchingly clear that Saddam Hussein essential goals: The possibility that Saddam Hussein could long sur­ is still carrying out acts of genocidal murder against vive a U.S.-backed rebellion, well planned and supplied, Kurds and other groups that might ever threaten him. 1. Create the foundation of political freedom in Iraq, is small. But if he does, more U.S. ground forces conceiv­ And he alone is responsible for any shortages of food whether the Syrian and Saudi dictatorships like it or not; ably could be needed. That should be said. and medicine in Iraq. He refuses to sell some ofthe oceans they won't. Neither Americans nor Iraqis can be asked to By confronting what-then now, the United States could of Iraqi oil for supplies that would be distributed by the die, kill or sacrifice to install a Saddamite Fascist regime quickly finish the job left undone after the military victory U.N. minus only the mustache. in the desert. Without candor there will be another politi­ Therefore, if Saddam Hussein escapes death, not only cal and moral, disaster. The military and political logic is that one day the he but the Goerings and Himmlers around him must face Americans will not and should not support action until United States will try to separate bis head from his an international crimes tribunal—and his SS must be Washington has the courage to make its full goals clean shoulders. Not just for his crimes—they sat well enough dismantled. Otherwise there will be civil war without and clear. with the West before the Kuwaiti invasion. But his refusal end. to reveal the size and location of his nuclear, chemical and If it fails, the truth will be that the administration left germ-war capacity will eventually make him just too 2. As soon as any attempt to remove Saddam Hussein a marauding dictator indefinitely in the desert, loose, dangerous to be allowed to remain on his throne of skulls. starts, the United States and the U.N. should recognize armed and preparing—and now cannot do better than In Washington, hints cover the ground like the bulbs of and help an interim rebel government. Yes, there will be wait for him to choose his own next target, at his own time. spring that the United States will go after him soon. If so, divisions and squabbles within the provisional govern­ then what? ment. Name a rebel movement without either. A.M. Rosenthal's column is syndicated by The New York What the United States needs is what it did not have But who will do the job of removing Saddam Hussein Times News Service. PAGE 12 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 Comics

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THE CHRONICLE Editorial page editor: Amy Reed Sports editor: Matthew Haies Scorpion school Copy editors: Jon Blum, Jay Epping,Hannah Kerby, Amy Reed, Michael Saul, Leya Tseng Wire editors: Laura "Censored" Neish, Alison "Where's Max the Wonder Dog?" Stuebe Associate photography editor: Scott Booth Calvin and Hobbes/ Bill Watterson Day photographer: Brian Scully Account representatives: Dorothy Gianturco, Peg Palmer Advertising sales staff: Kellie Daniels, Bob Dean, Utiles. IS THIS TUE MRDYIARE No?? WEIL, I'M LCCKtNG foe i DON'T UNDERSYAND HOW SOMCTAING TUtf OvN DEUMER UEUO? S^VE Of THESE PUCES Robert DiNardo, Kerry Rupp, Lori Wood, \f loo sE\i- CATJWLTS. A SO-PGUND PMLCM) Of SNOV4 STAM IN COSINESS. Roy Jurgens, Alan Mothner, Jen Soininen, ON A SKMi. fEMlNlNE TM&tT. Katie Spencer, Jon Wyman CAN SCM SU33ESV SOKSWNG? Creative services staff: ....Michael Alcorta, Reva Bhatia, Loren Faye, Kathy McCue, Merri Rolfe, • , ^i«s Dan Foy, Susan Somers-Willett, Vineet Sarin \}£4*h^ Accounts payable manager: Michelle Kisloff Credit manager: Judy Chambers Classified managers: Greg Ceithaml, Bob Gilbreath, Linda Markovitz Business staff: Jessica Balis, Amina Hightower, Janet Johnson, Tim Rich Calendar coordinator: Cindy Cohen

Today Pancake Breakfast. All you can eat. Community Calendar Blacknall Memorial Presbyterian InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. York Church. 1902 Perry St. $3 adults. Chapef. 7-9 pm. $1.50 children. Call 286-7773 for more Coetzee and Academic Politics in South Handicapped encounter with Christ information. Jesus Christ Power and Light Concert. 7 .Afrrica. by Ian Glenn. Center for Interna­ Dance. Forest Hills Community Center. pm. Baptist Student Union. Free dinner. tional Studies. 4 pm. 1630 University Dr. 5-8:30 pm. Sunday, March 1 6 pm. Chapel Basement. Christian Game Night. Divinity School Sadie Hawkins Day Sockhop and 2nd Plan V. East Campus Center. 6 pm. Film: Defending Your Life. Episcopal Lounge. Bring a snack and your favorite Annual Silent Auction. E. K. Powe PTA Student Center. 505 Alexander Ave. game. 8:30 pm. Fundraiser. Coffeehouse. 7 pm. $5. Wesley Fellowship. Divinity School Free. 9 pm. Lounge. 6 pm. Chili Supper. All you can eat. Sponsored Highlighting Black Performers and Artists at "Solar Energy Conversion: Mechanisms of by Durham YMCA-Eno Extension. Adults Duke. Sponsored by Alpha Kappa Alpha. 5 pm. Overeaters Anonymous meeting. Light-induced Charge Separation at $4 and Children $2.75. 4:30-7:30 pm. Episcopal Student Center. 2:30-3:30 Hoof n Horn auditions for student written pm. Call 286-1860 for more info. Semicondutor/Liquid Interfaces" Fritz London Call 479-1999 for info. musical. Fred Theater. 01 Flowers Bldg. Lecture Hall (103) Gross Chem. 3:30 pm. Benefit concert for the Triangle Guitar Sign up at Bryan Center info, desk or drop St. John Passion. Duke Chorale. Duke Chapel. 3 pm. Duke Jazz Ensemble. Baldwin Aud> 8 pm. Society. Westwood Baptist Church. 2031 in. 9 pm.-l am. Club Blvd. $10 public. $7 students. Southeastern Chapter of the American "What Feminism Has To Say to Chris­ Science, Technology, and Human Musicoiogical Society. Biddle Music Bldg. tians" Rev. Dr. Paula Gilbert. 211 Old Values Program: "Health Care for All Saturday, February 29 ali day. Chem. 9:45 am. Americans? An Ethical Analysis." Dr. Thomas McCollough. 203 Teer Engi­ Discussion on abortion led by Prof. Lecture: Christoph Wolf. Biddle Music Chapel Services. Rev. Dr. Walter neering Bldg. Dellinger. 9 pm. Bldg. 11 am. Brueggermann. 11 am. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 13 Classifieds

NEED MONEY AUDITIONS AOII PLEDGES SUMMER JOBS Babysitter needed full days Tues­ Announcements NEED MONEY FOR YOUR EDUCATION? Sign up at the B.C. info desk to audition Your meeting is changed (due to the Camp Kanata, a YMCA co-ed camp, is day & Thursday in our Trinity Park High School, Vocational, College, Grad. for the Wendell Theater Group's spring UCLA game) to Sunday at 2:30 in House looking for caring people to be counsel­ home for our active 21/2 year old. PREGNANCY TESTS Students- we at Student Financial plays. For information call Rob at 684- A. Call 684-1370 if you can't come. Get ors. On campus interviews to be held Must have experience, energy and NOW AVAILABLE AT THE HEALTHY Services guarantee to find a minimum 0542. psyched for big sister week! March 4. Contact Career Development plan to stay through summer. Call DEVIL HEALTH EDUCATION CENTER. number of financial aid sources RE­ Center for scheduling. Leigh, 683-1179. Will provide counseling and refer­ GARDLESS OF ECONOMIC BACK­ FOREIGN MISSION ral. You may request a test by GROUND, GPA, TEST SCORES, etc. or ANYWHERE? calling 684-3620, ext. 325, 397 or 100% of your fee refunded and you will Travel and expense funds are available Round trip flight any where in the U.S. SCIENTISTS (In Vitro Laboratory). M.S. Services Offered by walking in during the Healthy receive all sources found Free! Our for students wanting to undertake a $350 or best offer. Call Mark, 684- or B.S. in biological sciences with mini­ Devil office hours (Mon-Thurs, 11- mission project of work in another coun­ 0051. . mum three years laboratory experience computer data base is one of the FREE TANNING 4; Fri, 1>4). The Healthy Devil is most complete of it's kind in the try. Applications obtained in Duke Chapel is required. Candidates must have expe­ located in Room 113, House O, country containing over 14,000 finan­ office. Deadline April 15. AUDITION! rience with various cell and tissue cul­ with any hair service rendered Tues­ day-Saturday. Create N Image Kilgo Arch, next to Phi Kappa Psi. cial aid sources. These sources con­ Hoof N Horn is holding auditions for its ture techniques. Experience with bio­ Haircare. 5 minutes from Duke. Near Pregnancy tests are covered by sist of scholarships, grants, loans, Going out of the country for Spring Break? student written musical, 9-1, Saturday chemical and cytotoxic endpoints, and nervous system culture techniques highly Best Products 3438 Hillsbrough your health fee. work programs, etc. For free applica­ Make your first stop the Travel Clinic at in Fred. tion and info, package call answering Duke Family Medicine Center for immu­ desirable. The successful candidate will Road. 38S4602. With coupon only. KING'S COLLEGE, be responsible for maintaining an in service: 1-800-USA-1221 Ext. 2524; nizations and prescriptions. For more CHI OMEGAS London-interested in studying at King's or Chapel Hill office: (919)967-9010. information, call Madeline Pickett, 684- vitro (cell and tissue culture) laboratory PC'S TYPING SERVICE - For all your Meet a stud at the CHI-O/KA Square College— there will be a representa­ 6721. using a variety of neural cultures. The typing needs. Professional staff gets Dance Mixer. Be at the KA section in tive here March 2,1992 from 2-3 p.m. Engaged Encounter Weekend, March 20- candidate will maintain cell cultures, the job done right! Low rates. 544- western attire by 8:30 tonight! Don't be in the International House living room. 22, Avila Retreat Center in Durham. Get ABSOLUTELY FREE conduct experiments with neurotoxic 2580. to know your partner to be even better In late. chemicals using biochemical and cyto­ There's no cover charge or admissions Eating Disorder Group, Anorexia an atmosphere free of interruptions. toxic measurements, and analyze data ALERT MARCH 6TH This weekend is designed to deepen fee. None! And it's great fun. Come to GET IT IN PRINT usingboth IBM and Macintosh software. and Bulimia, therapy and support, Attention computer users on Duke and enrich a couple's relationship. Open the Food Show in the Blue and White Position is located at the U.S. Environ­ starting March. Duke Psychology Undergraduates: Vertices Magazine Faculty and Staff. TheMichaelangelo to all couples of any faith. Beneficial to Room this Friday, noon-5 p.m. Free food, ment Protection Agency in Research Clinic, 6844344. wants to publicize YOUR Science or virus will activate March 6th. For couples planning an ecumenical mar­ prizes. FREE. Triangle Park. Forward resume to: Engineering research efforts with a sum­ free sample testing and virus re­ riage. If interested call Duke Chapel at ManTech Environmental Technology, Inc. Healthy Volunteers Needed! Males mary in our Spring 1992 issue. Please moval call the Data Mason, 220- and females, 18-26 y .o., are needed 684-2909. Deadline for reservations is FREE FOOD TODAY (PVA #4210-89), PO Box 12313, RTP, call James at 684-0802 by March 9th. 8551. to participate in a study on physi­ March 11, 1992; $45 deposit is total Noon-5 p.m.. Blue and White Room. NC 27709. ological responses to laboratory cost. Come sample products and talk to the manufacturers who provide the food Social Events and everyday tasks. Participants DG PLEDGES SUMMER INTERNSHIPS- Average earn­ Roommate Wanted will be reimbursed for their time served on campus. Register for prizes. who are in the Pledge Skit. Meet in 205 ings $4,000.00. University Directories, and effort. If interested, call 684- It's all today and it's all free! House D on Sunday, March 1,3:30p.m. Learn swing dancing at U nderthe Street, the nation's largest publisher of cam­ SHARE HOUSE 8667 and ask for the ambulatory 1104 Broad Street, Durham. Tuesday pus telephone directories, hires over Private area includes separate en­ study (men only) or the women's PREGNANCY TESTS Turkish Night beginning March 3. Beginners 6p.m., 250 college students for their summer trance, fireplace, furnished room, study. NOW AVAILABLE AT THE HEALTHY intermediates 7p.m., advanced 8p.m. sales program. Top earnings $5,000.00- This Saturday at the International cable hook-up. Ten minutes from cam­ DEVIL HEALTH EDUCATION CENTER. $30 for 4 weeks. Call Richard Badu, $8,000.00. Gain valuabe experience in House. Come enjoy the food and cul­ pus, $300/mo including utilities. To: Will provide counseling and referral. 286-7740. advertising, sales and public relations ture. 7:30pm this Daturday at 2022 Female non-smoker. 489-5473. You may request a test by calling Campus Drive. selling yellow page advertising for your For those who care 684-3620, ext. 325, 397 or by walk­ Entertainment campus telephone directory. Positions ing in during the Healthy Devil office THE HOLTON PRIZE also available in other university mar­ Rooms for Rent about their clothes... hours (Mon-Thurs, 11>4; Fri, 1-4). The kets. Expense paid training program in Healthy Devil is located in Room A prize for the best investigative paper TV SUCKS! Chapel Hill, N.C. Looking for enthusias­ 113, House O, Kilgo Arch, next to Phi on the education of children. Informa­ Change television. Cable 13 Orga­ tic, goal oriented students for challeng­ Large room available now! 21/2 blocks White Star Kappa Psi. Pregnancy tests are cov­ tion in 03 Allen Building. nizational Meeting. Find out about ing, well paying summer job. Internships to East. Share historic home, fur­ ered by your health fee. the NEW administrative positions. may be available. Interviews on campus nished/unfurnished, washer/dryer. INTERNATIONAL Monday, March 2,7p.m. Von Canon Monday, March 2nd. Sign up at the $265/mo. plus utilities. 41^4421. Cleaners BUSINESS- Columbia Business School Hall C. Bryan Center. Be there or Career Development Center. offers the Jerome A. Chazen Fellowship else. Near Trinity and Mangum. Walk to E. 900 9th Street in International Business for college PRESCHOOL ASSISTANT Campus. Secure bldg., great neigh­ SPRING seniors. Information in 03 Allen Build­ MTV SUCKS! 92/93 academic year. Montessori bors. Quiet. All utilities, laundry, A/C, 286-2271 ing, the Prebusiness Advising Office. Seethe World Premiere of Public Enemy's school needs a dedicated, patient, effi­ kit. use. $240/month. 688-7910. BREAK'92 "Shut 'Em Down" video and the contro­ cient and loving teacher who is inter­ • LAUNDRY-MAT HOW FAR HAVE WE REALLY COME?: versial "Arizona" video on Cable 13. ested in exploring a Montessori environ­ Apts. for Rent • FULL SERVICE LAUNDRY 7^7^?* T*7* i^T* i*T* i* Women, Weight and Self Esteem. Every hour on the hour. Cable 13. ment and willing to grow and learn. • DRY CLEAP1ERS 7:00, Tuesday, March 3, Bryan Cen­ Hours 8-12:30 mid Aug.-Jun. 5. Salary ter, Von Canon C. TAG IS BACK! schedule, school holidays, sick leave. Behind East Campus, 2BR duplex avail­ • ALTERATION SERVICE EOE employer. Send resume to MCHD, Shoot your friend with paint pellets in able March 1. $400/month. Call 286- 2400 University Dr., Durham, 27707. ...with Complete Box CHAOS IN THE CI the woods of Northern Durham. It's a 3547. Storage from Charlotte $449 Join the Cameron Crazies in cheering blast! Just ask anyone on campus who's S360/UP WEEKLY tried it. Call Hal at 383-4489 for more APPLE REALTY: Best buy 2BR 302 • LEATHER « SUEDE PANAMA CITY BEACH, FL Duke past UCLA. Big screen TV and free Mailing brochures! Spare/full time. Set info. Bonair $295. Quiet neighborhood 2BR 7 m'ghti beachfront hotel only S119 drinks, March 1st, 4-6 at the C.I. Spon­ own hours! Free details. Send self ad­ 905 Virgie $385. 493-5618. 7 night* hotel and but only $209 sored by Duke University Union and dressed, stamped envelope: Publishers WHITE STAR JR. Class of 1994. Don't wait till it's to late Help Wanted (B) P.O. Box 51665, Durham, NC, 27717. Corner Cole Mill For Info and reservations 1BR apt near E.Campus, large rooms, Students planning to study abroad are SUMMER JOBS! SUMMER STUDENTS hardwood floors, W/D, available now. St Hillsborough Rd. Dan Flores welcome to the Study Abroad Student Conference Services looking for respon­ 489-1989. Application deadline is Monday, March Committee's informal informational sible student to act as "on-call" night­ 383-3256 <§> 684-7836 2nd. Full-time positions providing sup­ meeting. Students who studied in a time/weekend assistant. Handle emer­ STUDENT port and service to summer groups at Houses for Rent number of countries will be available to gency lockouts, late check-ins, mainte­ | TRAVEL Duke (sports camps, academic pro­ The Laundry featured by anser general and specific questions nance calls for summer conference iSKXVICSS grams, dance and music workshops). about study abroad. Come to 231 Soc­ groups and sports camps. Tentative REDUCED to $1350. Fully furnished Maytag in a National 120 N. Aurora St.. Ithaca, NY 14850 Must be professional, detail-oriented, Sci, Monday, March 2,1992 at 8p.m. schedule: carry beeper five nights per home in Forest Hills. 4BR, LR, DR, Advertising Campaign and possess strong customer service week; office work 4 p.m.-6 p.m. M,T; 1 study; cornier lot. Short term lease. skills. Competitive pay, free meals and 1800-648-4849 DIABETICDOOKIES p.m.-6 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m.-5 p.m. APPLE REALTY 493-5618. housing. Six full-time day positions and weekends. Compensation: housing, Please come to our Informal rap session one "on-call" nighttime position. Appli­ meals and $200 perweek. Applications OPEN HOUSE- Saturday, Feb.29, 2- Friday, Feb.27,7:30p.m. Alumni Lounge. cations and Info packets available at and information packets at Bryan Center 4p.m., 602 Maplewood. 5BR. 2BA Can't make it? Call Sean (684-0746) or Bryan Centerinfo desk. Deadline: March info desk. DEADLINE: 3/6. house near Duke available May 21. Augusta (684-0750). See you there. 2,1992. Questions? Call 684-5791. Additional information-APPLE REALTY THE CHRONICLE Telemarketers needed part-time Mon­ 493-5618. FREE MONEY! Work-study studentwanted to videotape Come get involved with Cable 13! day-Friday, 5-9 p.m. Must have good pediatric visits and collect data in Producers, writers, actors, man­ communication skills. Hourly base pay 4-5-6 BR Houses, near Duke, E. daycares on toileting. Need car, Tues­ classifieds information agers, anybody can have a hand in plus bonus plans. No serving involved. Campus. Hardwood floors, secu­ day afternoon availability. Preferfemale, For interview call 490-4693 between student television. Find out about rity systems, W/D-Dish. Large basic rates videotaping experience. Contact Dr. 12-6 p.m. Ask for Mr. Harrelson. rooms, available May/June, 489- the open executive positions. Howard, 684-5513. $3.50 (per day) for the first 15 words or less. Monday, March 2. Von Canon C- 1989. 10

• DEFENSE from page 2 Committee, the proposal has the support of Thomas heads the Senate Armed Services Committee, has not political, appears to be merely an exercise, and tends to Foley, the speaker ofthe House. offered any alternatives to the administration's plan, and, come up with a number that's lower than ours," the Any transfer from the Pentagon to domestic spending in fact, has expressed concern that the White House cut Pentagon spokesman, Pete Williams, told reporters. would require a revision in the 1990 budget agreement too deeply in programs like the B-2 Stealth bomber and Despite the Pentagon opposition, the action on Thurs­ that barred the movement of money from military to other reserve troop levels. day sets up a politically attractive package of military programs. That prohibition appears headed for elimina­ But at a hearing of the Armed Services Comittee on budget cuts and increased financing of domestic pro­ tion in the House, and the Senate would probably also Thursday, Nunn and Sen. John Warner of Virginia, the grams that seems likely to attract widespread support approve the change. committee's ranking Republican, challenged the four among House Democrats. military service chiefs to re-examine redundant roles and The Democratic budget plan would divert Pentagon While President Bush has said he opposes the revision, missions in the armed forces. money to an array of domestic programs, including Head he may not fight it. But he will fight the additional cuts in "Does every service need a legal corps, a medical corps, Start pre-school programs, housing, AIDS research and the Pentagon budget. a dental corps, a chaplains corps, an engineer corps, an assistance for laid-off workers in the military industry. Deeper cuts would probably face opposition in the acquisition corps?" Nunn asked. "Can the services spe­ In addition to Aspin and Rep. Leon Panetta, a Califor­ Senate, which has historically supported higher military cialize more, and provide less overlapping and more nia Democrat who is chairman of the Hour.e Budget spending levels. Sam Nunn, the Georgia Democrat who complementary capabilities?"

From page 13 Computers For Sale SPRING BREAK "92- Make it JAMAICA No charge. Gratis. Complimentary. ADPi PRELAW? with low, low prices starting at $459. Free. Any way you say it, you don't Don't forget to check composite proofs Gain experience by being juror in Law Woodcroft townhouse. Heritage Call Sun Splash Tours. 1-80O426-7710. in Few Fed Lounge between 11 and 4 Goldstar EGA monitor and graphics card have to pay to get in! So come eat all School trial. One or two people needed. Woods, 2BR, 2.5bath. FHA qualifying today! for sale- good quality equipment- $100 the free food samples you can Tuesday, March 3rd beginning at3:15. assumption, $715.PITI. homeowners stomache TODAY, noon-5 p.m. in the for both. Call Pete, 684-1352. Lost & Found It's fun. Call Jeff or leave message association dues $800 to assume, Blue and White Room. Because it's WITTIEST FILM (383-7884) or Craig (383-7883). end unit, well maintained. Call 493- FREE! of 1991! Come see "Defending Your 1787, please leave message. Tickets For Sale LOST-WATCH Ladies Timex white face, black band, Life" and see if you agree with the STAR IN MUSICAL Chronicle. Friday, 9 p.m. Episcopal Stu­ lost 2/14/92. Sentimental value! If CAMERON CRAZIES Auditions Saturday, Feb. 29, 9-1 in Brick coionial house on 1/2 acre for­ GRATEFUL DEAD!! dent Center. found, please call 684-7661. Come watch Duke beat the Bruins! Big Fred Theater for the Hoof N Horn est setting, 5 minutes from Duke, tickets. Buy/sell all concerts, sports, screen TV in the CI on March 1st from 4- student written musical. 4BR. $175,000. 489-7800. theatre worldwide. TOP DOLLAR paid for LOST 6. Free fountain drinks! Sponsored by ADOPT ME! ACC Tournament. (919) 967-9584. Black vinyl daytimer with green check­ the Class of '94 and Duke University 6 mo. old female German Shepard free IT'S TRUE! A Duke grad who sells real Looking for an exciting challenging book. Reward will be given. If found, Union. to good home. Healthy, friendly has all Airline Ticket. One way. Raleigh to D.C. career without the stress that comes estate- call me first if you're inter­ leave at Bryan Center info desk with your shots. Faculty, staff, grad students pre­ ested in buying or selling. Elizabeth $100 or best offer. Call 703-648-0930 with making major bucks? How about name and number. GARY L. ferred. Fenced back yard a plus. Call Baum. APPLE REALTY 493-5618. Chris. 286-2328. teaching elementary or secondary Good luck with all your work this week­ school? Information meeting: Thurs­ 218 WEST MARKHAM AVENUE. U2 Fans. Bring a date and see Bono Personals end. I'll be thinking of you. I love you. BILL CLINTON day, March 5, 4-5 p.m.. Room 202 from 20 feet. Charlotte 3/3. 684- KatO. West Duke Building. Remember, those $76,500. Immaculate 2BR house in Ha! I knew that would get your attention. Duke Park features beautiful oak 1523. who can, teach. Call 684-3924 for Models needed for advance training Happy Birthday, Chris. Love, Andi. floors, new bath. LR with FP, formal demos. Call 683-5515. Across the NANCY details. DR, patios, herb and vegetable gar­ U2 TICKETS Street Hair Design. Thanks for dinner, 1492, S.N.L., root NYC, JTW? dens, fenced yard, new gas furnace, Four tickets forsale. March 3, Charlotte beer floats, and being terrific. Have a TAKING SUMMER CLASSES? NEED I'll take this as a no. Just think what central A/C. 682-4989. Coliseum. Call 684-7873 after five. Don't miss it! All kinds of Free Stuff great trip home, even though I'll miss HOUSING AND MONEY? Confer­ you'll miss: slam-dancing, poetry read­ Friday afternoon in the Pits. Food you. Zoo next Saturday? Love, R. ence Services has a unique "on- ings, CBGBs, being raped, molested or HOUSE FOR SALE: North Durham. 3BR. TICKET TO NY samples, prizes, etc. at Dining Services call" position available forthe right assaulted on the subway. Oh well, I 11/2 BA, Brick Ranch, 1400 sq. feet. One way ticket, Durham to MacArthur. first Food Show. Noon-5p.m. person with a weird schedule. See Delta Sigs guess brotherly things come first. But central A/C. heat. Kinlock Dr. (LI). March 4. leaves 8:50 a.m. $90, it's HELP WANTED. yours! 489-6959. DG PiKA Pledges, hope you had fun last night, next year... you still owe me your life. $78,900. 477-4969. we did. Movies in the section tonight for Hayride mixer! Saturday 8p.m. Bus further bonding. Brothers are invited too DENNIS The Thursday Night Party Machine leaves WCBS. Get psyched to play in the Wanted to Buy (JOKE). Love, S.O.T.S. Autos For Sale hay. Remember to bring $3. Hope your one B-Day at Duke is fabu­ Returns next week after a two-week lous! Let's celebrate right! Happy Birth­ hiatus! I promise this time I'll be in a Need Carolina tix for March 8. Will pay WINE TASTING!?! CHEAP! FBI/U.S. FREE FREE FREE day! better mood. $$. Call Steve, (215)981-5637. No cover. No kidding. Come to the Food Rob & Jay's Wine Tasting Extrava­ SEIZED. '89 Mercedes. $200! '89 Show Friday afternoon in the Blue and ganza! Be there - you know VW, $50! '87 Mercedes, $100! '65 Wanted: two tickets to Carolina game White. Fill up on free food. Register for whe>e...Friday, 10p.m. RSVP 684- Mustang. $50! Choose from thou­ Sunday, March 8. Please call 848-1580. prizes. All at no cost! Yes, it's FREE! 7798. m sands starting at $25. FREE 24 hour recording reveals details. 801-379- Diehard Duke fans desperately seeking Back for the twelfth straight year! 2929. copyright #NC10KJC. tickets to UNC game on March 8. Call Paula, 684-1710. NISSAN SENTRA XE '90 4 DR. Auto.. Saturday/ 22K, A/C. Cass, lyearwrnty. $7,500. Desperately seeking two tickets to February 29 » $rasile/>0 684-5449. 382-7221. Carolina game. Will pay top dollar. Call collect, Howard (day) 215-569- at the ArtsCenter, ^4' Misc. For Sale 5539; (night) 215-564-5575. 300 E. Main St., ^fi Carrboro ^%?*^ COMIC BOOKS Ride Needed 9 PM forsale. X-Men. Dark Knight. Love and Rockets. 1500 books. Leave mes­ REDSKINS sage for Terry at Chronicle. 684-2663. Need ride to D.C. ASAP. Will share ex­ pense and sing folk songs for entertain­ Smith-Corona PWP 3000 TypeWriter- ment. Call Dan at 684-1248. Put on a costume, Word Processor. $300. Also, Mac soft­ a mask, a pair of dancing ware: Claris Resolve Spreadsheet HELP! Ride needed to Atlanta Thursday, shoes. And come lo me $100. Ultrapaint. color paint, and draw. March 5! If you can help call 684-0624. mosf authentic Brazilian $50. Call 489-4947. Carnaval in me region.

Travel/Vacations Enjoy a nal taste of Rio, Audio-Video just minutes from your door. SWIM WEAR 2 MBQuart 290 speakers, oak finish. We have bathingsuits for Spring Break $6 atltve door, $7 odv. at ihe ArhCenter. Excellent for dorm rooms. Superior and year round. We carry Cole, and For tickets call 929-2787. German engineering at an affordable Cole, Vittadini, Bendigo, and For more information, call 942-5858 or 929-8671. price. New price. $500. yours for $250. WhyThingsBurn. In Great Shape, Contact Chad at 684-7668. Northgate Mall, Durham 286-2662. Samba lessons given at 9:30!

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AVAUDDUKEID FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 15 U.S. affirms its commitment to cut back global warming By WILLIAM STEVENS in the energy bill that has just passed the Senate but has The head ofthe British delegation, Dr. David Fisk, said N.Y. Times News Service not yet been acted on in the House. the American announcement "was received by everyone UNITED NATIONS— The Bush administration said Reinstein listed several dozen measures whose aggre­ as a very encouraging first step." But, he said, "We want Thursday that it was taking actions that would signifi­ gate effect on emissions reduction that he said would be to hear more." cantly limit the United States' contribution to global significant. The measures include strengthened efficiency Daniel Becker, a global-warming expert for the Sierra warming and help developing countries address the prob­ standards for appliances and equipment; incentives for Club, said the measures described by Reinstein were still lem. electric utilities to improve efficiency rather than build subject to testing: But "it is really clear that the president Some environmentalists said the statement could lead coal power plants; increasing federal purchases of alter­ has abandoned the Flat Earth Society approach to global to an agreement between the United States and the native-fuel vehicles; capturing methane from landfills; warming," he said, "and for that we should all be happy." European Community on an issue that has deadlocked planting more trees, which absorb carbon dioxide, and The American initiative comes in a political year when talks here on global warming: whether industrialized establishing voluntary public-private programs to install environmentalists are casting the global warming talks countries should commit themselves to stabilizing carbon more efficient lighting. as a litmus test of the administration's ability to show dioxide emissions at 1990 levels by the year 2000 as the If the measures do result in carbon dioxide reductions leadership on global environmental issues. All five major first step toward ultimately reducing them. comparable to those planned by the Europeans, it would Democratic presidential candidates have endorsed the Carbon dioxide, methane and other gases, whose atmo­ put the Europeans and the Americans "in the same European position on targets and timetables for carbon spheric concentrations are growing as a result of human ballpark" in the negotiations, said Rafe Pomerance ofthe dioxide reduction, and Bush would be open for harsh activity, trap heat in the atmosphere. Scientists fear that World Resources Institute, a Washington-based environ­ criticism if the United States were perceived as torpedo­ this could lead to a catastrophic warming ofthe Earth in mental organization. ing the treaty. the 21st century. The present round of negotiations ends Friday, but Industry groups praised the administration's move. "I The talks are aimed at producing a multinational substantive talks concluded on Thursday. A final session think the U.S. is putting its money where its mouth is," treaty on steps to contain global warming that would be before the Rio de Janeiro conference is tentatively sched­ said John Shlaes, executive director ofthe Global Climato signed at a meeting called the "Earth Summit" in Rio de uled to start on April 30 in either New York or Geneva. Coalition. Janeiro in June. The United States also announced on Thursday that it The coalition, which consists of trade associations, The Europeans have been insisting on the year 2000 would unilaterally provide $75 million to help developing supports a policy in which steps taken to limit emission., deadline for stabilizing emissions of carbon dioxide, the countries deal with emissions ofthe heat-trapping gases. of the gases also have other benefits, like controlling chief heat-trapping gas, while the Americans have been Some delegates from developing countries, while reserv­ ground-level air pollution or achieving greater energy resisting any targets and timetables. ing ultimate judgment, noted with approval that the efficiency. But Robert Reinstein, the chief American negotiator at United States was reversing a position in which it had The measures listed by Reinstein on Thursday fit thau the talks, told delegates from around the world that the opposed the principle of aid. The two issues, emissions description. He continued to oppose targets and time­ measures he listed would produce limits on heat-trapping caps and finances, have been central to the talks. tables for reducing emissions, saying thatthe administra­ gases that "compare favorably" with those planned by Environmentalists reacted to the American statement tion would focus on a policy of "do-able" actions that "have European countries. with qualified approval. "At least we now have a signal whatever results they have." Most ofthe American measures are being undertaken that people at high levels in the White House are begin­ "If it achieves stabilization," he said, "that's wonder­ for reasons other than global warming, like improving ning to think about how to limit global warming, and ful." energy efficiency and reducing ground-level air pollution. that's a good sign," said Dr. Michael Oppenheimer, a He said that the United States would come up with But they also reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, which is climate expert with the Environmental Defense Fund. preliminary estimates ofthe measures' limiting effect on produced by the burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil. "But if it's the last thing we hear out ofthe administration greenhouse-gas emissions in time for the final negotiat­ Some ofthe main energy efficiency measures are included on global warming," he said, " then it's a sham." ing session. wm FORMOSA Great Chinese Food that s Chinese & Seafood Restaurant Delicious. Inexpensive. And Fast. All You Can Eat Chinese Buffet CONTACT LENS CLINIC Lunch Mon-Fri. 11:30-2:30 (closed Sat. & Sun) 22 different dishes ON CAMPUS AT Dinner nightly 5-9:30 •Take-out available Sat. & Sun. Closed for Lunch • Seafood Specials • Discounts for parties Duke University Eye Center Planning a party? of 20 to 60 people Contact lens fittings and care for lens-related • Buffet Lunch problems provided. All types of lenses Let us deliver the food! 11:30-2:30 available: extended wear. soft, astigmatic, Sun.-Mon. $4.15 pmma, gas permeable, cosmetic tints, Free Delivery to Duke and Surrounding Area West Point • Dinner Buffet disposable, bifocal. 5:30-9:30 p.m. ($10 minimum) on the Eno Two follow-up visits and a care kit included (Located iunside the courtyard of Dutch Village Inn, 5:30-9:00 2306 Elder St., intersection of Elder & Fulton next to Sun.-Mon. $6-15 with purchase of lens. Call 684-2905 for appointment. 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Quadrangle Pictures A conversation with... presents Janet Smith Dickerson "THE BEST Vice President of Student Affairs MYSTERY MOVIE ** OF THE YEAR Duke University ...Heartpounding, pulsating suspense with elegance "Establishing Common Ground" and electricity." ^^mmm. A conversation on multi-culturalism and diversity in an educational setting

SHHTTEHED Monday, March 2, 1992 6:00p.m. 202 West Duke Building Duke University Saturday, February 29 at 7:00 and 9:30 pm Sponsor: Sunday, March 1 at 8:00 pm J Program in Education Griffith Film Theater • Admission $3.00 684-3924 *Flex Accepted PAGE 16 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992

at the International House >SPORTS CLUB SPOTLIGHT»»> 7:30 pm WOMEN'S SOFTBALL I •• .:i Saturday Night March 28 James Madison 2:00PM Away April 1 Louisburg Jr. Coll 3:00PM Home Come share food and culture* April 4 Meredith College 2:00PM Away Free to I-House Members April 14 Meredith College 3:00PM Home $3.00 Non-Members April 25 Virginia Tech 1:00PM Away Results: 2022 Campus Drive. Duke 5 St. Andrews 15 For more information call 684-3585 Duke 10 St. Andrews 0

1D •„,M"'*»< "«««*CV On February 22, Duke played a double header versu DOES EATING St. Andrew's College. Although the team dropped the CONTROL YOUR LIFE? first game 15-5, they rallied to blitz St. Andrew's 10-0 in the second. The Softball Club starts off their season with a 1 -1 record. Kathy Ast pitched the first game, and by Mary Stokes, R.D, Candy Clary pitched a shut out in the second. Batters Duke Family Medicine Center, and were led by Tiffany Black, Emily Hauber, and Julie Miller Linda Carl, Ph.D., Health Education Coordinator each with a pair of hits for the day. The Healthy Devil WATER POLO The majority of Americans would like to lose weight or eat more healthfully. Millions of "diets" are started each year. Answer "yes" or "no" to the following questions to April 28,29 Mid-Atlantic Water Polo see if your eating habits are getting out of control. League @ Rockville, MD Results: 1. I constantly think about eating, weight, and body-size. Duke 16 Virginia Military Inst 3 2. I become anxious prior to eating. Duke 9 Rockville-Montgomery 8 3. I'm terrified about being overweight. Duke 11 4. I don't know when I'm physically hungry. Virginia Tech 8 5. I go on eating binges and can't stop. Duke 15 NCSU 10 6. I spend a lot of time daydreaming about food. 7. I weigh myself several times each day. Duke won the first of three Mid-Atlantic Water Polo 8. I am very rigid about my exercise plan. League tournaments by going undefeated (4-0) 9. I believe that being in control of food shows other people that I February 22-23 despite playing without some of its can control myself. starters. One highlight occurred in the game versus 10.1 have taken laxatives or forced myself to vomit after eating. Rockville-Montgomery when Keith Koenig scored 11.1 believe food controls my life. with 21 seconds left to put the Blue Devils up by 1 12.1 feel extremely guilty after eating. 13.1 eat when I am nervous, anxious, lonely, or depressed. for the win. Outstanding players over the weekend 14.1 don't think I look good in my clothes. were Jake Fox (10 goals), Brent Lenz (12), Keith Koenig 15. Because of my weight and appearance, I'm more uptight than I'd (9), Vic Adler (6), Ian James (2), and Eric Benson (2). like to be around people who I find sexually attractive. The more questions you answered "yes" to, the more likely WOMEN'S SOCCER concerns about weightand eating habits are controlling your life or making you sick. If you decide it's time to make some March 1 Greensboro 1:00PM Turf changes, take advantage ofthe following free services. March 26 UNC-Chapel Hill 6:30PM Turf Results: For appointments with nutritionist Mary Stokes at Duke Duke 7 Salem College Family Medicine Center, call 684-6721. To identify phy­ Duke 3 Winston-Salem sicians interested in eating disorders at Duke Family Medicine Center, call 684-3620, ext. 242. For counseling On Saturday the 22nd, the Women's Soccer Club took support, call Counseling and Psychological Services, on Salem College and Winston-Salem and turned in a 660-1000. great performance. Against Salem College, the Blue Devils scored a season high in an easy victory with the For individual information or for group programs on help of Cindy Saiter's hat trick. In the second game of eating disorders or nutrition, visit The Healthy Devil the day, the Blue Devils tied last season's league champ­ Health Education Center, 113 House O (11 -4 M-Th, 1 -4 ions Winston-Salem. Besides the three scored by Cindy Fri.), 684-3620, ext. 397. Saiter, other goals were scored by Heidi Wiedemann (2), Julie Zirkle, Debbie Bryant, Natalie Pages, Kathy McCue, Don't miss: How far have we really come? and Gina Ciaverra. Women, Weight and Self Esteem, Tuesday, 7 pm, March 2, Bryan Center, Von Canon C. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 17 Sports Ghosts of Pauley Pavilion to greet men's basketball team

By MOORARI SHAH team." Duke lost in double-overtime to Wizards know their times: Deep night, Arizona, 103-96 last year. DUKE VS. UCL dark night, the silent ofthe night. "If we can play a good team like that in Henry VI Part II, Shakespeare their arena, with their fans, with their GAME FACTS: Somewhere in the wasteland of ominous officials to that close a game than we're a When: 4:00 p.m. smog and Hollywood hot shots somebody pretty darned good team, and we're confi­ Radio: WONC-620 AM is reminiscing about the good old days. No, dent we can beat anyone in the country," Series record: UCLA leads, 4-; it is not Shakespeare's day that Los Ange­ said Gaudet. les city slickers cherish — the "Wizard" Tempo may be the key to Sunday's tilt. UCLA Bruins was their Shakespeare. As far as LA. UCLA would rather see Duke play a fast- inhabitants are concerned, Shakespeare's paced game, while the Blue Devils may Head coach: Jim Harrick {Univ Career college coaching reco Globe pales in comparison to the Wizard's want to force the Bruins into a half-court Record at UCLA: 87-33, fourtl stage, Pauley Pavilion. battle without Grant Hill running the floor Probable starters: Come Sunday, the men's basketball team in transition. Guard—Gerald Mad will play the role of antagonist in the "It has the potential to be a high-scoring Guard—Mitchell Bui newest drama to hit Pauley, Duke versus game," said UCLA's senior point guard Guard—Shon Tarvei UCLA. The highly-touted matchup pits Darrick Martin, who nearly committed to Forward—Tracy Mui No. 1 against No.4 and East versus West in come to Duke four years ago. "I'll take our Forward—Don Mad a made-for-TV clash of titans. And, you team running against Duke any time." Strengths can count on the Wizard to make a cameo All the hype for Sunday's contest will M&M Boys. MacLee appearance. center on each team's shoo-in All-America these two guys' faces from thi The Wizard is, of course, John Wooden, candidates. Forthe Bruins, senior forward Depth. UCLA is nine whose masterfully-directed performances Don MacLean, the UCLA's all-time lead­ Tyus Edney coming off the ber delighted audiences for 27 consecutive ing scorer, will do battle with Duke's Chris­ opportunity. years (1948-75) in a section of the city tian Laettner in what promises to be a Homecourt. Pauley! known as Westwood, and to this day his physical showdown between two often com­ loud, but it's no comparison t< followers respectfully hail him as "The pared, but very diverse playing styles. (Pac 10 officials), none of whi Wizard of Westwood." Though the Wizard The 6-10 MacLean relies on a quick mid- no longer directs the show at Pauley, this range jumper for many of his points, while year's squad (21-3) has rekindled memo­ Laettner's ability to take the ball strong to Coaching. Jim Harrick, yoiTre no Wizard. Harrick is one ofthe many inept bench ries of Wooden's great teams that hung 10 the basket or step behind the three-point coaches in the Pac 10. Last year, Duke had its hands full at Arizona in a double-overtime battle NCAA Championship banners in the arc make him an inside-outside threat. that brought put the best in Mike Krzyzewski and Wildcat coach Lute Olson. If this year's contest rafters of Pauley. "You're concerned about MacLean like against the Bruins is close come crunch time, UCLA will have to rely on Murray or MacLean to In fact, since Wooden left the coaching you're concerned about [Virginia'a BryantJ do the dirty work because Harrick won't have a clue. ranks 17 years ago, the Bruins have gone Stith," said Gaudet. "Sometimes you come through six coaches, none of which has into these non-sectional games, and the taken UCLA back to championship status. public seems to wow like 'How are you ever Current coach Jim Harrick hopes to break going to play this guy, like [LSU's] stre ke will the long drought, and there's no better way Shaquille O'Neal or [St. John's] Malik is, back to the top than beating the defending Sealy?' We're used to playing good guys but ley ma^ national champs. like that in our own league." ben The Blue Devils, no doubt, have other Another dangerous Bruin is junior Tracy nial ideas. "The UCLA game is a lot like other Murray, who, when squared up, can drain games we've played in late February in shots from just about anywhere on the past years," said Duke assistant coach court. Tony Lang will likely draw the de­ Pete Gaudet. "It'll hopefully do the same fensive assignment on Murray. things that the Arizona game did for us Point guard Bobby Hurley's return from last year, which was to give us a good a broken foot gives the Blue Devils an measuring stick against an intersectional See BRUINS on page 20 • Strong pitching leads Blue Devils past Elizabeth City

By BRAD SNYDER from Scott Pinoni to break a 2-2 tie in order City outhit Duke seven to six. Harrell entered the game in the sixth with After snatching a victory from seventh- to escape with a 3-2 victory at historic Jack "I thought they (Elizabeth City State) two outs and Vikings on first and second ranked Florida State and nearly winning Coombs Field. played great," Duke coach Steve Traylor base, and he fanned Viking designated the three-game series last weekend in Pinoni's homer, his team-high third of said. "We hit the ball hard all day, but we hitter Donnell Albritton. Tallahassee, the Duke baseball team re­ the year, was one of just six hits Duke (4- were hitting it right at them. There were Harrell worked out of trouble in the turned home with renewed confidence. 2) was able to muster against Elizabeth some loud outs out there today." seventh, after yielding a single, an error, Perhaps too much confidence yesterday City (0-1). The Blue Devil bats made a lot With the offense not responding, Duke See BASEBALL on page 19 • against Elizabeth City State— the Blue of noise, but they could not do much dam­ relied upon their relief tandem of Phil Devils needed a sixth-inning solo homer age against the Vikings. In fact, Elizabeth Harrell and Mike Kotarski. Harrell (1-0) DUKE 3, ELIZABETH CITY 2 struck out three hitters in two and two- thirds innings for the win, and Kotarski Duke Elizabeth City fanned two in the ninth for his second abr hbi ab r h bi save. Effective in the two tight games McCracken 2b 4 0 10 Langford ss 4 110 against Florida State, Harrell and Kotarski Jackson lb 3000 Byrum 2b 4 110 will win numerous ballgames for Traylor McNally 3b 4 111 Neison If 40 10. this season. Pinoni dh 3 111 Brown lb 40 11 Olexa ss 4000 Bigbie c 40 11 "I think the structure of our pitching Esquieres cf 3 110 Mozelle cf 3000 ' staff has helped us in the stretch that Hopkins rf 200 1 Albritton dh 3000 we've just been in," Traylor said. "Right Harrell, M. c 30 10 Pipkin rf 4020 Piscorik If 2010 Warren 3b 2 0 00 now we've got Harrell coming in middle Daniels ph 100 0 relief and we've got Kotarski to close, I think everybody's role is well-defined." Totals 283 6 3 Totals 332 7 2 When the team cannot afford to give up a run, Traylor puts in Harrell or Kotarski. Elizabeth City 000 200 000-2 In the ten appearance between them, the Duke 110 001 00x-3 pitching twosome has allowed the opposi­ tion only four hits and ho runs this season. £. Otexa. Warren DP - none LOB - Duke 7, E lizabeth Crty. 7 2B-Piscorik. HR — McNatly <2), Ptnonj (3) SB — Harrell, the set-up man armed with an McCracken (3), 1.3ngf6rd , Nelson. S — McCracken, Hopkins. , improved change-up, has struck nine bat­ Piscorik. Warren ters in eight innings with his twin brother, 1P H R EF BB SO Matt, behind the plate. Kotarski, the closer, Duke leads the team with 14 strikeouts in just Zarinsky Stamian six and two-thirds innings. Harrell. P. W, 0 3 Kotarski S,: With the game tied 2-2, Harrell Elizabeth City CLIFF BURNS/THE CHRONICLE squelched two late Elizabeth Cityscoring Creef L. 1-0 0 - 1 Sean McNally's first inning home run was one of only six hits the Blue Devils chances in the sixth and seventh innings. T —2:06. A--143, could muster against Elizabeth City State en route to a tough 3-2 victory. PAGE 18 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 What's up with that? Another foray into columnist's mail

Head for the shelters, everyone. Lock away your valu­ ables. Hide the women and children. If you have a weak Seth Davis public agreement with Monday, Monday: you refrain stomach, this is the time to turn to the comics. from talking about the team, and I'll refrain from talking Consider yourself forewarned. It's Reader Mail time long a dunking video to the "Star Wars" theme would rule about sorority rush. again. the charts at MTV. But they declined. Dear Seth, Since my last installment of this format, I have been That was that, I figured. Early this year, however, I'm Obviously, because of his injury, Bobby Hurley should simply inundated with mail . . . NOT. But I remain reading the "Game Notes" that sports info puts out regu­ not be named first-team All-ACC, right? Please? undaunted. As I always say, everyone is entitled to my larly and, lo and behold, they have a section that talks H. Davis opinion. about the dunking exploits ofthe top-ranked Blue Devils. Chapel Hill, NC Before I begin, let me apologize for taking so long to get You'll never guess how it's titled: "Introducing . . . the This is a ridiculous suggestion and you all would be to your letters. I've been extremely busy the last few Duke Skywalkers!" surprised how many people have made it. Even if Hurley months with my intensive luge training. Since the luge is Not a word about the phrase's origin or who used it had not come back so soon, his place on the first team obviously not a real sport, I anticipate no trouble in my publically first. Whatever happened to ethics, anyway? should have been secured long ago. There's no better pursuit ofthe gold. All it takes is a courageous spirit, a Where do they think we are? Vegas? evidence to his value as a player than the way the team keen sense of timing and nothing better to do for about At any rate, the name is now officially sanctioned. Start played without him. four years. The last one clearly applies to me, since I'm making those T-shirts and printing those posters. Go For the record, this year's first team is as obvious as it's graduating in May. As for the other two, well, it is just the crazy with the idea. But whatever you do, make sure been for a long time: Hurley, Laettner, Rogers, Gugliotta luge. Photo Bob gets his due credit. And his pimp gets ten and Williams. Sorry, H. And now to the letters. percent. Dear Seth, Dear Seth, I sent you a letter a while ago, but I've decided to rescind I hear you beat Kenny Blakeney in a foul shooting Dear Seth, it. Send it back immediately or else. contest two weeks ago. Could you give some tips on tech­ I keep hearing about this thing called the "Final Four." J. Tarkanian nique to those of us out there who shoot free throws like What is the "Final Four" and how often does it happen? Las Vegas, NV Stevie Wonder shoots ducks? A. McGuire Sorry J., When you send me a letter, you make a legally S. O'Neal New York, NY binding agreement. Now maybe where you come from Baton Rouge, LA Dear A., The Final Four refers to the four teams people can back out of legally binding agreements, but Dear S., Good news travels fast, huh? Yes, it is true that competing in the national semi-finals of the the NCAA's where I come from, a legally binding agreement is a I beat THE Kenny Blakeney in a foul shooting contest basketball tournament. It is played once a year the last legally binding agreement and you are therefore legally right there in Cameron Indoor Stadium two weeks ago. weekend of March. bound to abide by it. It's also true that I have as much chance of getting to the Dear Seth, But don't fret and go eating any bathroom accessories, line in any competetive situation as Clemson has of I depend veiy heavily on The Chronicle to learn what the J. You've got nothing to worry about. getting its team GPA over a 2.0. hell is going on with the basketball team, but I'm having No one reads my stuff. Here's my simple secret: grip the ball in your fingertips, trouble deciding whether to read your columns or Monday, The mail lines are now opened for real-live letters for develop a smooth rhythm, follow through, and convince Monday's? How can you help me? Seth's next reader mail column. Address them to Box 4696, your opponent to shoot with his eyes closed. M. Krzyzewski Duke Station, or deliver directly to Third Floor Flowers. Dear Seth, Durham, NC Whatever happened to your groovy "Duke Skywalkers" Dear M., I'd be more than pleased to help you and the Seth Davis is a Trinity senior whose column appears idea from last year? Did the name not catch on or is it just entire University community by offering the following every Friday. that no one reads your stuff? G., B. and T. Durham, NC Actually, the "Duke Skywalkers" was the the brain­ child of former Chronicle photographer Bob Kaplan. I'm just the pimp that promoted it. The "Skywalkers," of course, are Grant Hill, Brian Davis and Thomas Hill. After Duke's victory over Iowa in the second round of the NCAA Tournament last year, I wrote an article pronouncing the moniker to the Chronicle Crazies, feeling certain that it would catch fire and make its way into Middle American households, much like Houston's Phi Slamma Jamma or Georgia Tech's Lethal Weapon Three. I wrote simply, "Introducing, the Duke Skywalkers." The, as noted so eloquently in the above letter, was no one reads my stuff. So I hoped that the Duke Sports Information office would promote it for me, tell it to the people who write things that people do read and before

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1721 SHAWNEE STREET- Immaculate 3 BR. 2 bath Half-off Initiation Fee! Offer expires 2/28/92 home in great location! LR, dining area, kitchen, central air, oak floors, deck, 2-car garage. $72^500. Student Memberships Available by the Semester! METROSPORT ATHLETIC CLUB • 286-PLAY 1204 Broad Street 286-5611 -Across from Duke North- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 19 Baseball struggles to overcome pesky Elizabeth City State • BASEBALL from page 17 off the mark. and a fielder's choice. With Vikings on second and third, With Vikings on second and third, Zarinsky fanned Today Harrell unleashed a vicious, looping curve ball to strike Andre Nelson for the first out but Kovic Brown followed out Viking second baseman Duane Byrum for the final out with a line shot in the hole. McNally snared the hard liner, Men's tennis vs. West Virginia, Duke Tennis ofthe inning. but he failed to make a play and Langford scored. Shaun Stadium, 2:30 p.m. Duke jumped on Elizabeth City early. Sean McNally, Bigbie then singled to right, scoring Byrum and tying the who entered the game hitting .450, slammed an opposite- game, 2-2. field homer 370 feet in the first inning. The Blue Devils Saturday manufactured another run in the second. Ron Esquieres Although Pinoni's heroics won the game, the team has bunted for a base hit and advanced all the way to third on lost two players for the rest ofthe season. Senior pitcher Lacrosse vs. Roanoke, 2:00 p.m. the errant throw to first. Esquieres scored on a sacrifice Lenny Nieves will undergo season-ending surgery on his fly by Cass Hopkins to give Duke a 2-0 lead. elbow March 3rd, and sophomore utility infielder Craig Wrestling vs. Virginia Tech, 1:00 p.m. Elizabeth City, however, countered with two runs in Eskay will have back surgery to repair two herniated the fourth inning. Juan Langford legged out his team's disks. If healthy, Nieves would have been Duke's set-up Women's basketball at Clemson, Clemson, SC, first hit ofthe game when his high chopper caromed off the man and Phil Harrell would have moved into the starting glove of Duke starting pitcher Jack Zarinsky. After rotation. Eskay would have backed up Matt Harrell at 7:00 p.m. Langford stole second, Duane Byrum singled to left to put catcher this season. men on first and third. Zarinsky caught Byrum in a This weekend Duke travels to Warren Wilson and East Baseball doubleheader at Warren Wilson, rundown offfirst, but Ryan Jackson's throw to second was Tennessee State. Swannanoa, NC, 12:00 p.m.

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The African Studies Committee, The English Departmt, The NOON-5 PM HistoiYDepcntmentcmdThe(&a^ Blue & White Room SOUTH AFRICA TODAY Come sample a huge variety of food items, and let the IAN GLENN, Chcrir, Department of English manufacturers and Dining Services know what you like - and University of Cape Town what you don't like. Find out more about the products now speaking on served on campus, and help pick new items to add to the menu next year. Register for these prizes: Coetzee and Academic ToCitics in. South Africa Stuffed Animals Cups T-Shirts Friday, February 28. 1992 Hats Water Bottles Bottle Openers 4:00 p.m. Key chains Recycled Rulers Sombrero Center for International Studies 2122 Campus Dirve 6-Foot Beach Umbrella (2) and Trail Bike (2) Portable Stereo "Boom Box" COLIN BUNDY, University of Western Cape Sponsored by Duke Dining Services • Prizes provided by participating manufacturers speaking on Ht-Ranchr ,

M "War "With "The future? DuDCJqueT Mwaise JM Schwartz "BiackSfouth in South Africa in the 1990 's Monday. March 2. 1992 7:30 p.m. * '?E>»'iu£keH^, ~f— ooctj Center for International Studies ©MOORES 2122 Campus Drive- PAGE 20 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 'Noles sweep UNC There are only a few spots left in first ACC season in Insanity 101.

By BRENT KALLESTAD Associated Press TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Sam Cassell, Chuck Gra­ ham and Doug Edwards combined for 72 points Thurs­ Ill day night to help Florida State clinch second place in the Atlantic Coast Conference with a 110-96 victory kJKJtS — over lOth-ranked North Carolina. The 110 points equalled the most ever scored against North Carolina (18-6, 8-5). Florida State (19-8, 11-5) swept North Carolina, Wake Forest, Georgia Tech and North Carolina State in its first year in the ACC. ft was the first time since the 1989-90 season that North Carolina had lost three straight games. Bruins' bench to play major role

• BRUINS from page 17 experienced floor general to pace the troops, but his playing time maybe limited to allow his injury to heal completely. Hurley will go head-to-head withas many as three Actually, putting Spring Break, MTV and the Daytona Beach Marriott together qualifies different Bruins during the course ofthe game, Mar­ as an upper level course in total madness. But what can we say—we are MTV's headquarters tin, Shon Tarver and Tyus Edney, all part of a deep again this year. And although you may not hang out much in your room, you still have time to reserve UCLA bench. Ed O'Bannon, a 6-8 freshman, and 6-9 one. When you arrive, we'll have MTV "Party in the Park" cards waiting for you. They'll get you into sophomore Rodney Zimmerman also come off the Bruin hot spots like Waves and Kokomo's on the Beach. And make it even easier to get the fun started. bench to bang the boards. Fun you may eventually get over but will never forget. Anything less Gaudet, however, forsees no huge difference in bench play. "Fouls are the things that could make the bench just wouldn't be right for our Class of 92. [important]," said Gaudet. "But, I don't think their bench is any deeper than ours. DAYTONA BEACH "If both teams play to their potential, it'll be one of 100 N. Atlantic Avenue, Daytona Beach, FL 32118 (904)254-8200 1-800-872-9269 those games where you flip a coin to pick a winner," Harriott. MTV: Music Television is a registered trademark of MTV Networks, a division of Viacom International. Inc. said Gaudet.

THE CHRONICLE Management The Duke Community's Daily Newspaper Internships

The Chronicle will be accepting applications for three student managers for the 1992-93 publishing year. These student positions, Student Advertising Manager, Creative Services Manager, and Business Manager, provide the opportunity for greater student involvement than what is otherwise possible with a full academic courseload. While taking classes at Duke during both summer terms, these student managers intern at the newspaper, providing an important opportunity for learning, training and planning for the upcoming academic year. During the academic year, these student managers take reduced courseloads, offset by their summer coursework, allowing them to balance their academics and increased organizational responsibilities. These positions play a principle role in the newspaper's management team and provide students with a unique career-oriented experience while still in college.

Pick up applications in room 101 West Union Building, 8:30-5 p.m., Monday-Friday. Deadline for completed applications: Monday, March 2,1992. Student Advertising Creative Services Business Manager Manager Manager The Student Advertising Manager recruits, trains The Creative Services Manager recruits, trains and The Student Business Manager recruits, trains and and leads the student sales staff in day-to-day leads a student staff of approximately nine graphic leads the student business staff in support of The operations and oversees customer service for artists. He/she is responsible for meeting expecta­ Chronicle's accounting, classified and subscription campus and national clients. Responsibilities tions of quality advertisements and the production operations. Specific responsibilities include include developing materials; working with local, of marketing and promotional materials used by maintenance and analysis of sales, accounts departmental, student and national clients; The Chronicle. This requires ongoing interaction receivable/payable and financial records, adminis­ reviewing sales performance; and ensuring that with other Chronicle departments and attendance tration and tracking of the annual budget, and policies and daily deadlines are met. The Student of bi-weekly management meetings to discuss the promotion and processing of classified advertising Advertising Manager works closely with the goals of the organization. A good eye for design and subscription sales. The Business Manager creative services and business staffs on a daily basis and the ability to work well with others under works with full-time staff in setting departmental and attends bi-weekly meetings of the manage­ daily deadline pressures are required; prior Macin­ goals and policies, coordinates the activities of the ment team. He/she supervises the specials supple­ tosh experience and graphic arts knowledge are business staff with other Chronicle departments, ments coordinator and works cooperatively with helpful. This position provides valuable graphic and participates in bi-weekly management meet­ the full-time advertising manager to set goals and. arts, desktop publishing and managerial experience ings as well as periodic Chronicle Board Financial department policies, identify sales prospects and for students interested in the field of commercial Committee meetings. prepare promotional materials. and graphic arts and design.

PAGE 2 / THE CHRONICLE IMAGEWO/WS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 IMAGE 'ORKS Spring 1992 is here and you want to have just the right look for every occasion. In the following pages, we have tried to cover many situations with advice on clothing for spring. From basic spring trends, we move into pages with business, casual, activewear and formal pictures and sug­ gestions, and even something for those planning a spring wedding. The models are all members of the Duke commu­ nity, and all the clothes were borrowed from local retailers. Hopefully, after looking at the next few pages, you will get excited about the Spring 1992 styles!

ABLE OF CONTENTS NEW FOR SPRING 1992 3 BUSINESS 4-6 CASUAL 8-11 ACTIVE .....1M4 FORMAL 16-17 First Union Plaza at Erwin Square, Durham 286-2990 WEDDING.. 18

SUPPLEMENTS COORDINATOR HEATHER LOWE DESIGN DIRECTOR .....LOREN FAYE COVER DESIGN .ALAN WELCH C/offectidn$) STAFF WRITERS WENDY MARANTZ, MARC I SHARP, KELLIE DANIELS PHOTOGRAPHER KENT MURRAY STUDENT ADVERTISING MANAGER ELIZABETH WYATT ADVERTISING MANAGER , SUENEWSOME ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVES PEG PALMER, DOROTHY GIANTURCO A BUSINESS MANAGER DAVIDMORRIS SOPHISTICATED PRODUCTION MANAGER ALAN WELCH CHOICE OF COLORS... GENERAL MANAGER BARRY ERIKSEN

PECfAL WEALTH OF TEXTURE... THANKS TO First Union Plaza at Erwin Square Washington Duke Inn & Golf Club BALANCING OF STYLES... Linda H. Washburn, N.C. Home Economics Extension Agent Our models and retailers, for their patience and time. And to Kent Murray who was responsible for the photography in this issue. Kent owns a studio in Hillsborough, NC and has won state and national awards for portraiture.

Brightleaf Square Monday-Saturday 10-6 Sunday 1-5 b Missy Kirkman is wearing a multi-colored floral print COVER sheath with a tie neckline. Available at La Vogue. 905 W. Main St., Durham 688-7591 ©THE CHRONICLE, 1992 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 IMAGEWCWS THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 3 With each new season, clothes' and styles change show their confidence and comfort. A trimmed blazer to meet the trends. For the spring of 1992, fashion with a pleated skirt or a two piece suit resembling a continues to extend in new directions as well as return dress are good possibilities. to traditional looks. Women will wear suits for spring in bright colors, In light of the current recession, it is very impor­ orange, purples, and blues as well as natural, neutral tant to look for fashions which complement your shades. These colors will create the soft suit which present wardrobe. Some of the ideas below should allows a woman to remain professional yet display an give you a spark of life to energize your clothing. attractive feminine style. Continuing from a successful winter is the ever so Women should remember that the length of skirt versatile chambray shirt- it can easily be dressed up or should be from knee length to just above the knee. A skirt FO down, depending on the occasion. Likewise denim is with flair or fullness will be more comfortable and will a popular fabric for shorts, jackets, suits, coats, and not create awkward transitions from stand to sit. SPRINC 992 even evening dresses. Men should wear a flattering and subtle two piece The traditional fabrics remain important such as suit that gives a look of poise and professionalism. The silks, cottons, and rayons. These are accented with wool blend, double breasted is a popular style. plaids and novelty touches. For those special formal occasions, the spring Prints are large and bold with abstract and floral continues conservative trends, but this year styles have TRENDS A TIPS patterns, especially roses. In contrast, stripes are also more glitz and glamour than in years past. hot. Whether fat or skinny, stripes are everywhere Men are continuing to wear a basic black tuzedo 61 IC E from body-conscious dresses to bodysuits and form- with a black tie and cummerbund and a white shirt. fitting slacks. Patterned ties and cummerbunds in a variety.of colors FORTHE AS ON Colors are also very bright with strong vivid and patterns are very popular. palettes. Also shades range from butter yellow to deep The primary change for spring is a shift towards brown and red. Classic navy, white, and emerald green comfort in tuxedos. Baggy peg leg trousers are more will also be seen, as well as pink and hot pink. The big fashionable than the stiff, straight leg trousers. spring secret will be white by itself or complemented Women's formalwear continues with more se- by a bright color or black. quinned, tea length silk, and beaded dresses. Lace is Now to target some specific wardrobe needs, not as popular as it once was. Jewel tones, royals, and sportswear will continue with pull-on-pants, leggings, fuchsias are popular colors for skirts that are getting a skirts, and tunics. The key is a look that suggests little shorter. "comfort". Women are paying more attention to fabrics. Chif­ For the business occasion, the traditional look fon and silk blends are a wonderful formal look which continues to hold the classic and conservative profes­ will continue to be fashionable for several seasons. : 37.'. 27:; 7777.7.;' '-77777 7/ Kg: ililll sionalism. Two piece suit in dark blue and gray for In light of all these tips and trends, it is essentially men and a subtle combination of suit-like separates for a time to choose styles which define your personal women are the best choices, especially for interviews. signatures. The options of different styles are based on Women should also choose business suits which your daily lifestyle and personal preference. JRIGGINGS NORTHGATE MALL Over 140 stores. Check out the new spring fashions featured in this issue of The Chronicle.

1-85 and Gregson St., Durham

ANOTHER GREAT STORE AT NoRThqATE MAII

SPRINQ INTO THE HUB BIQ & TALL The finest in men's big & tall clothing and accessories: gallery of fine crafts SIZES TO 70 REGULAR, 70 LONG, 56 XL LARGE TALL TO 4X TALL, 1X-6X BIG

DRESS UP YOUR EARS FREE ALTERATIONS Select from our incredible array of earrings and other adornments in FREE SHIPPING WITHIN CONTINENTAL US. sterling silver, gold filled and other precious metals and semi-precious stones. While you're here browse through our original pottery, studio glass, sculpture and wood. The Hub Ltd. c^ Handmade in the U.S.A. 919 • 286 • 0087 BKS&TALL STORE ANOTHER FiiME STORE AT NoRThqATE MAII 919-286-9660 ANOTNER GREAT STORE AT NoRThqATE MAII PAGE 4 / THE CHRONICLE IMAGEWOftftS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992

The upcoming spring season will bring bright colors and oold designs into the office But many styles for business wear continue with the traditional suits for men and women. TRADITIONAL NAVY Men's suits in a blend of polyester PINSTRIPE SUIT and wool are practical and WITH A WINDMILL affordable and can be worn PATTERNED TIE AND thouehout the year. The color should be dark, a charcoal or navy, A WHITE SHIRT. but not too dark. AVAILABLE AT Either a plain white or a HUNTER'S GREEN. pin-striped shirt with a button down-spread collar should be worn. Ties may show individuality but should not be too wild. Women can also add special touches to business wear with shoes and jewelry. The shoes should have a heel of low to medium height, and a simple classic design, jewelry should be minimal and subtle, but can add a touch of personal style. The styles for business wear have expanded to include clothes with more individuality and color.

Primadonna This spring and summer dare The Menu for Success to be different with imported clothing and Entrees include: Joseph Abboud jewelry from Primadonna! Rene Lezard We offer a unique selection Bespoke Tallia of imports from more than Rachos Axis 15 countries. Choose XMI among our selection of Bolgheri traditional and modem batik from Indonesia. An experience you will enjoy. 286-3353 • Free parking • Free shipping Toll free in the continental U. S. 1-800-721-9636 Primadonna/ THE HUB LTD. AiMOThER GREAT STORE AT NoRThqATE MAII AMOThER GREAT STORE AT NoRThqATE MAII

^ ^V WHENYOITRE READY TO RELAX, The Athlete's WE'LL BE HERE. Whether you're here FOOt for our delicious appetizers, soups, ... has the shoes, clothing, or sandwiches or a full and advice you need to take blown signature dinner of steak, chicken or the winning edge. fish, you'll find great quality in a mellow atmosphere. Nobody knows the athlete's And try our specialty drinks! 286-7612 Ruby Tuesday Restaurant foot like The Athlete's Foot. 286 • 5100 ANOThER GREAT STORE AT NoRThqATE MAII AiMOThER GREAT STORE AT NoRThqATE MAII FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 JMASEWPKKS THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 5

SINESS LOOKS CONTINUE TO CHANGE WITH MANY DIFFERENT APPROPRIATE SUITS. ELIZABETH JAMISEN IS PARING A BLACK COTTON KNIT JACKET WITH PAPRIKA MINI-DOTS AND A SOLID BLACK KNIT SKIRT. THE LOOK IS ED BY A BROWN CALF-SKIN PORTFOLIO AND SHOULDER PURSE. SHEBA HALL IS WEARING A BALCK AND WHITE OOL JACKET; A WHITE BLOUSE, AND FULL BLACK COTTON SKIRT SHE IS CARRYING A BLACK LEATHER SHOULDER IRIS JONES IS WEARING AN ALL WOOL, DOUBLE BREASTED SUIT IN TAUPE PINSTRIPE ACCENTED BY A BOLD TIE. CHRIS HAS A SOFT BROWN LEATHER CARRYING CASE. WOMEN'S CLOTHES ARE AVAILABLE AT MODERN MN'S CLOTHES AVAILABLE ATTHE HUB, LTD. BAGS ARE AVAILABLE AT K. PETERSON.

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BASICS. ESSENTIALS TO

Offering the finest in fashions and atmosphere, WEAR ALONE OR LAYER and featuring our exclusive ULTIMATE IV WITH EASE. ALWAYS AT CAP. cash or charge card-every cardholder earns frequent buyer points toward new purchases. Drop by for an application! Mon-Sat 10-9 Sun 1-6

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Productions' te ing Guide: Straight Talk Spring is just around the comer and In !>outluccessful Wedding Planning" Great Shape at Northgate Mall has everything you need to kx)k great Videos available at: in the sun. Come hy and have a lcx)k at all the great suits, coverups and other fun in the sun accessories.

' v_niiuieii • Conflicts Informative, el presented with 919/286-2662 consultants in e 286-2099 AiMOThER GREAT STORE AT NoRThqATE MAII AiMOThER GREAT STORE AT NoRThqATE MAII T:-1gBAGE €>/ THE CHRONICLE imm/mwoRKs • i : R^Bffft JSgRUARfrgfr 1992

TEN YOUR PLANS INCLUDE BUSINESS, THEN A ti , RESTAURANT RENDEZVOUS, DU ACCORDINGLY: NAM PAI m WEARING A RED COAT DRESS ACCENTED WITH GOLD BUTTONS. THE DRESS IS APPROPRIATE FOR THE SPECIAL DAYS WHEN WORK FLOWS STRAIGHT INTO EARLY EVENING. AVAILABLE AT COLLECTIONS.

(919)929-8119 FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 28. 1992 IMAfigWOKKS THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 7

UILDING IMAGES SPRING 1992

Fashions and Cosmetics by The White House-Chanel with Dillard's-Hofheimer's

More than 120 fine stores, shops, restaurants and theaters including Dillard's, Belk Leggett, Chapel Hill Boulevard and 15-501 JC Penney and Montaldo's. Exit 270 on 1-40 Just minutes from Duke. MALL Durham, North Carolina • 493-2451 PAGE 8 / THE CHRONICLE IMAGEWORK5 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 As predictable as the seasons change, so do fashions throughout the year. For women this year, the softness of spring is accompanied by a more feminine look. As a result, pastels, light floral prints and madras plaids have flooded store shelves. The fabrics of the season are sandwashed silks and sheer chiffon-like materials. For a casual outfit, women should look to the nautical pants and skirt sets that nave recently appeared on the scene. As a general rule, the bulky, SPRINGl oversized look is out, but SPECIAL OCCASIONS fitted clothes are in. WHICH ARE CASUAL It is back to the basics, BUT REQUIRE THAT for men this spring! Navys EXTRA SPECIAL LOOK. and khakis are definitely a GWIN CARTER IS "must-have" for spring WEARING A NAVY : : .;37 73:^:.3^3;'333-^.v;. ., SILK DOUBLE

: BREASTED JACKET! •:• : '777 2 \ ::•.. •• •• :••..••. 7 ••••....•• :. . ;, AND SHORTS. THE RED AND GOLD STARS fcctfortable a&d relaxed ANP STRIPES••G&ET$§? y : : lillff liiili :'SUi'TANAUTiCAi-:. •• ';' f\y '\r: •' • 3"3.'33 .27 FLAIR. AVAILABLE AT Remember to have fun LA VOGUE. and choose clothes which make you naturally at ease.

Where you save 50% or more on your RAY TAYLOR'S Favorite MEN'S & WOMEN'S Catalog Clothing EVERYDAY! Hunter fl (Sreen Ct5. "A Tradition la Men's Clothing" Since 1981 "One does not get a second chance to i LOOK OUT! make a first impression." CATALOG & NAME BRAND OUTLET Hunter's Green Ltd. believes this expression could be applied to almost every significant experience in our daily lives. NEW SPRING ARRIVALS No less important, is a career interview, typically one's first taste of the business world, where first Men's and Women's Catalog Fashion shorts $15.00 impressions can sometimes make the difference between success and Striped & Garmet died pocket T-s $8.50 failure. Famous Maker cotton piquet polo shirts $11.00 Properly dressing for business is not something that simply happens by Pima Cotton Oxford dress shirts $14.00 accident, it is an acquired skill. At Short Sleeve woven shirts; chambray, plaids etc $11.00 Hunter's Green Ltd. we will see to it that you have the correct suits, ties, Men's Catalog relaxed cut Chinos >• $10.00 shirts and shoes for that all important Women's Catalog denim jeans; white and indigo $10.00 interview. It just might make the difference Women's Cotton Cashmere knit dresses, between- . several catalog styles $18.00-$23.00 A simple impression and a lasting "first impression." Women's Catalog bathing suits (mix and match) $8.00/pc Imported Jewelry, silver, brass, alpaca, shell $5.00-$14.00 Good luck and good interviewing! ...AND many more amazing bargains WE CANT advertise! Ray T. Taylor

P.S. 20% off NOW on all suits.

Hunter's Green Ltd. 712 Ninth St., Durham Brightleaf Square 905 West Main St Mon.-Fri. 10-6 Open 7 Days A Week 286-7262 956-8088 Sat. 10-5 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28. 1992 IMAGEWOflftS THE CHRONICLE /- PAGE 9

ASUAL

SPORTING EVENT OR MEETING y.yy.yyyyy.yyyyyyy •OTHERS CASUALLY, A WELL • DRESSED MAN IS ALWAYS :\ NOTICED. HERE, DR. BASSETT WEARS A DOUBLE FEASTED NAVY WOOL BLAZER AND A CHAMBRAYSHIRTW1THARED l^EO/AETRICTSE. THE CHARCOAL PANTS COMPLETE THE CASUAL LOOK FORTHE MAN ON THE 00. AVAILABLE ATTHEHUBBIG&TALL

SPRING COLORS OF BENETTON.

Benetton Benetton South Square Mall Northgate Mall Upper level near Belk Near Thalhimers 489-1917 *M-S 10-9, Sun 1-6 286-5548 • M-S 10-9, Sun 1-6 IMAGEWO/W5 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY PAGE 10 / THE CHRONICLE

N GL D/ EING PR'&MSDfOR All OCCASIONS, CC YOU WANT TO, -UK BEST FOR IN CLASS AND 0:- DU NEVER LE, KNOWV JNINTO. A\ DEAN WASIOLEK '.ATHREE PIECE BL. SILK SUIT WITHAGEi .AL PATTERN. AVAILAB NS, CHRIS CHAFFi: WY TWILL PANTS A' V49010 SHIRT. THE CLASSIC' EDBYTHE CHAMBRAY; i A NAUTICAL EMBLEM. A\ . RICGINS.

0 MOVE YOU ?Kftfl& 1 SEASON COMFORTABLY TONY WEARING A ROSE SILK Bl; \SHMERE SWEATER, AND NAVt; MAILABLE AT BAR-EE STATION. P WEARING A SALMON KNll 1REASTED LINEN TAN CHECK! LKBLACK SLACKS. THE LOOK IS ftr A BOLD GEOMETRICAL AW If TORSO. f, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 UAAGEWORKS THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 11

N A FEW IE GARDENS WILL BE IN BLOOM WITH GLORK IRE IS NO BETTER WAYTO SPEND A DAYTHII It YOU ALWAYS WANT TO BE COMFOR AXED. BETH REIMERS IS WEARING AN INDONE^ A'HITE BATIK JUMPSUIT. THE BLACK LEATHEl llbCCO ADDS A TOUCH OF FLAIR. AVAIL IN A.

OR OUTDOfR JAUNTS IN PRING BRIRC5TIGHTER WEIGHT THEGREATjDUTDOORS,OR FABRICS SUCH AS COTTONS IN JUST A^jflDY DAY s. CHAMBRAY AND KNIT. MATT OUTSIDE, YOU CAN GO CANDLER IS WEARING A CASUAL AND FLY A KITE. LAYERED LOOK OF A WHITE JENNIFER SHODA IS T-SHIRT, A BUTTON DOWN WEARING A CHARTREUSE STRIPED OXFORD, AND A SAND-WASHED SILK TUNIC CHAMBRAY OUTER SHIRT WfTH WITH MATCHING SHORTS. TAUPE COTTON PANTS. SINUL ALEXANDER IS TARN1SHA GRAVES IS WEARING WEARING CLASSIC KHAKI A COTTON KNIT DRESS WITH A SHORTS AND A NAVY AND DROPPED WAIST AND A KAHAKI DOTTED SHIRT. ALL PLEATED SKIRT. ALL rTEMS ARE ITEMS AVAILABLE ATTGIF. AVAILABLE AT LOOKOUT. PAGE 12 / THE CHRONICLE IMAGEV/O/WCS FRIDAY, FEBRABY 28. 1992

Activewear should fit properly and move with the body. Consequently, much of the activewear is made of stretching fabric which aids mobility. Stretching fabrics are most desirable for activities like swimming, aerobics, skiing, and cycling. Fabrics with less stretch are more appropriate for exercise walking or throwing a frisbee. Clothmg that is light and loosely woven is the best to wear in warm weather becuase it allows air to circulate near the skin. Cotton and other natural fibers have good absorbency and are excellent choices for warm-weather active sportswear. Some people prefer synthetic fibers like nylon, lycra, and polyurethane. These fabrics should especially be loose fiting to insure that the body moisture IG is released. CHMEN^TNG Remember for outdoors ACTIVITIES AND activities, wear colors which EXERCISE contrast with the areas where DEMANDS you will be exercising. COMFORT AND Fluorescent colors are good for the daytime, but at dusk or FLEXIBILITY. nighttime, they are not visible. The best options for day and RICHARDSON IS night wear are retro-reflective WEARIN6A materials. Activewear fabrics will last LEOTARD WITH longer if you handle them with PINK LEGGINGS. care and carefully follow the AVAILABLE AT: manufacturer's instructions. IN GREAT SHAPE.

Feeling the winter TGIF Outlets blahs? 50% to 80% OFF EVERYDAY GET READY FOR SPRING! The conditions of winter On Great Men's and Women's have an extreme drying effect on your hair and skin. Clothing from America's A reconditioning treatment $2.00 OFF and new cut or style will get FAVORITE CATALOGS %m£f&^^\$XN ^y haircut you hair back in shape and pick up your spirits. Have AND SPECIALTY SHOPS bv'^C&^/\Y/^r.'^^iS-y< Students & Employeesyou r look as fresh as spring! f^^^^:^fvfe>^?^ with I.D. c«<*t SPECIAL V* Free BEACH-TOWEL* *Beach towel free with purchase of $50 or INTRODUCING more on spring and summer merchandise.

Men's All All By Women's Cotton Cotton Bermuda Bathing T-shirts Pocket-T's "Polo" Shorts by $2.88 $3.88 Knit Tops Camden Suits Complete eye care services. compare compare Passage one piece Terrific eyewear selections. @ $12.00 @ $14.00 $5.99 20% off Limit 3/ customer Limit 3/ customer 20% off O Complete eye exams, walk in 306 West Franklin Street (in old Fowler's Bidding) or by appointment. 967-8093 • Mon.-Sat, 10-6 In Greenville, N.C.; also in Blacksburg, Farmville, Lexington, Lynchburg, Va. 2 86*442 6 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28. 1992 IMAGEWOft/fS THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 13 r n At Our Salon Only Pay For Your HAIRCUT $8.00 HAIRSTYLE $8.00 PERM (includes cut & style) $28.00 THE ORIGINAL Special student rate $24.00 Because the shampooing is always free! Longer & tinted hair slightly higher Our stylists listen. They won't touch a hair on your head until iirer they know what you want.

'i* South Square Mall, Durham 493-0511 ^Dillard's

Priced %[A\[A\ From \f\f

With this ad, take advantage of these special prices- Wayfarer$4495 (Black or Tortoise) KJEIEMOlLa Wayfarer II $5995 (Black or Tortoise) Street Neat $64 (Black/Tortoise, Black/Blue or Black/Jade) :;:fe- Wayfarer MaX $9995 (Black or Tortoise) : A 7 k^ ~

« #r 'iWrnff" SunCear. fc**||::!Ii|::3 THE SUNGLASS CO. || !:-|;||Ii|f

SOUTH SQUARE MALL J i • Spring is a Just a Breeze Away...

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Barr-EE Station Catalogue Outlet has the great spring clothing you've been seeing in the catalogues at 50% Off the Catalogue Price or Better, Everyday! QUALITY LEATHER: BRIEFCASES Before you mail-order, check out Barr-EE's ATTACHES HANDBAGS LUGCACE selection of clothing for men & women: WALLETS BELTS SILK TIES & SCARVES • the latest colors, • the hottest looks, • the lowest prices! Visit Barr-EE Station Today! IL FIRST UNION PLAZA .' ERWIN SQUARE BARfrEE STATION CATALOGUE OUTLET ' DURHAM-286-3355 Downtown Chapel Hill • 149 E. Franklin St. • 929-9990 Store Hours: 10 to 6 Monday - Friday 10 to 5 Saturday PAGE 14 / THE CHRONICLE IMAGEWOftftS FRIOAY. FEBRUARY 28.1992

>R!N0 ALSO BMMTTHOSE OUTDOOR OCCASIONS

BUT YOU STILL WANT T0: B£!N5TYLi:HER£AT

PURE, CLOTHES 8EARING

7 ,••.•. • ,' • " ' FAVORITE UNIVERSITY

, 7 ' ;J 2 77 7 77;-' III: icy NEWMAN IS WEARING A GREY T-SHIRT WITH NAVY REVERSE ON THE SLEEVES AND COLLAR AND CLASSIC NAVY COTTON KNIT SHORTS. DAVE BROWN IS WEARING A GOLF-SHIRT AND NAVY SHORT COMBINATION WITH A DUKE EMBLEM IN BLUE AND GREEN ON BOTH. ALL ITEMS ARE AVAILABLE AT DUKE STORES.

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TRA RT hm RTS WITH LYCRA BIKING SHORTS UNDERNEATH. DIXON MILLER IS JOGGING IN A NYLON MULTI-COLORED SPORTS SUIT. ALL ITEMS ARE AVAILABLE AT DSG. 7f:• t FRJDAyfcftE8RWARy-!a& 1992 ^*4MASEJ#0RK5 THE^CHROMCLE /-PAGE 15

The Right Brands The Right Price.

Why Pay Department Store Prices? Drug Emporium Sells Designer Fragrances Up to 40% Off The Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price EVERYDAY! r i i $-1 OFF i $1 OFF ANY NEUTROGENA ANY "RUSS KALV1NS HAIRCARE0R i GENERIC BRAND®" SKINCARE ITEM i HA1RCAREITEM EXPIRES 3/31/92 1 EXPIRES 3/31/92 i i •ftrrm i •return Valid at: iVali d at: Westgate Plaza • Westgate Plaza 3400 Westgate Dr., Durham, N.C. | 3400 Westgate Dr., Durham, N.C. Drug Emporium Plaza | Drug Emporium Plaza 3501 Capital Blvd., Raleigh, N.C. | 3501 Capital Blvd., Raleigh, N.C. Brennan Station Shops • Brennan Station Shops 8111 Creedmoor Rd., Raleigh, N.C. .8111 Creedmoor Rd., Raleigh, N.C.

I J OFF I $20.00 PURCHASE $COFF OR I ^ ^A ANY NEW OR MORE ^ TRANSFERRED EXPIRES 3/31/92 I ^^^m PRESCRIPTION I EXPIRES 3/31/92 I IjTTTt Valid at: IVali d at: Westgate Plaza J Westgate Plaza 3400 Westgate Dr., Durham, N.C. I 3400 Westgate Dr., Durham, N.C. Drug Emporium Plaza I Drug Emporium Plaza 3501 Capital Blvd., Raleigh, N.C | 3501 Capital Blvd., Raleigh, N.C. Brennan Station Shops | Brennan Station Shops 8111 Creedmoor Rd., Raleigh, N.C. -8111 Creedmoor Rd., Raleigh, N.C. PAGE 16 / THE CHRONICLE IMAGEWORKS FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 28, 1992

HE COMING f RING WILL HOLD MAN'WOJtMA OCCASIONS. fVERYOI >Y UlSissfe GA \L I^^BftjR -NT LOOUETH REiMERS IS WEARING A RED CHIFFON GOWN WITH BEADED BODICE Pledge formals,weddings AND SLEEVES. WITH A and other special formal SHORTER, MORE VERSATILE occasions are quickly LOOK, PATTY STACO IS approaching. The perfect WEARING A STRAPLESS, formal attire is essential to SEQUINED STRAIGHT DRESS make the most of these ACCENTED BY TAFFETA times. RUFFLES. AN ADDITIONAL In addition to basic ADVANTAGE IS AN tuxedos, men are wearing ATTACHABLE RUFFLE, tails, colored cummerbunds, CONVERTING THE DRESS TO ties and waistcoats. Tails are FULL LENGTH. BOTH DRESSES appropriate for day or AREAVAILALBEAT evening evnets and can be MORDECAI BRIDAL AND gray, white or black TUXEDO. depending on the accessories. For the ultra-formal look, men can try a black tail with a white vest, white bow tie and white gloves. A white jacket is reserved for the summer months, although black jackets are still appropriate even in July. The changes is men's formal wear mirror the changes in all men's fashion and to compliment women's apparel. Women's formal wear is OR THE becoming more glitzy and KCASION, glamourous with more a DINNER; decorated materials and 'VACATION dresses. Tea length dresses, OR CRUISE. appropriate for day-or MEL! evening affairs, tend to be more popular than full HODGES IS WEARING length style, which is ultra A STRAPLESS BLACK formal. AND WHITE COTTON Basically, there is no rule PIQUE DESIGN WITH with women's formal wear. A BLACK BELT AND Anything goes from FLARED SKIRT. conservative to trendy. The AVAILABLE AT choose belongs to the owner. LA VOGUE.

WINNING LOOKS ARE JUST AROUND THE CORNER

fet Flace Winner Female Hairvutting 0 Preserve those favorite faces in Artistic, Award Winning Portraiture. National Cosmetology Association SAVINGS UP TO 50%! BASIL'S of North Carolina HAIR DESIGNS 42nd Annual Convention Tradeshow

PHOTOGRAPHY (919) 687-4322 • 732-6668 633-2332 121 North Greqeon OF HISTORIC HILLSBOROUGH Tues.-Fri. 10-5:30 pm FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 28, 1992 IMAGE WORKS THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 17

REPAi IIT OUT( -A A SPEC! ITH THi FOll IS WEARING A RED STRA COO AVAJ< ECAI BRID. RAN WEA US WITH A HOUNDSTOOTH VES1 It AT B \i

THE CUTTING \EDGE STUDENTS DISCOUNT HAIR STUDIO WITH STUDENT I.D. N $33.00&$36.00 AWARD WINNING HAIR DESIGNERS 20% discount off Designers.

286-4151 NEXXUS MON-FRI 10-8 WALK-INS PAUL MITCHELL SAT 10-3 WELCOME bernard's

2200 WEST MAIN STREET FIRST UNION PLAZA, ERWIN SQUARE formalwear

PRESENT THIS AD FOR $5 OFF YOUR NEXT HAIRCUT 286-3633 734 ninth st. WITH SELECT STYLIST. EXP. 11-1-91 1-800-672-5893 durharn, nc PAGE 18 / THE CHRONICLE IMAGEWORKS FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 28. 1992

Spring is the traditional time for weddings. This years styles are a return to past elegance. A popular IOOK has the groom wearmg tails with a matching vest, cummerbund and tie. Other members of the wedding party to wear basic tuxedos witn colored cummerbunds to match the bridesmaids' dresses. The color scheme for the wedding is one of the bride's first and most crucial decisions. For spring, shades of pink are very popular, with blue and green preferred for warmer summer months. The color scheme is reflected in the flower selection as well as the reception decorations. wedding is the bride, and her

Silk shantung is the preferred 3':'-;'- beading. The sweetheart and portrait neckline are very popular this year.

Colonial Inn Restaurant & Bed and Breakfast A Beautiful Setting fdr Weddings as well as: Receptions Showers Bridesmaid's Luncheons Rehearsal Dinners Rooms for Out-of-Town Guests Honeymooners Welcome!

153 West King St. HiOsboro, NC 732-2461 15 minutes from Duke University Innkeepers Carlton and Sara McKee

Wedding specials A former OVER 60 STYLES New York Designer ^yx^H^m e==^/y selected AFTER SIX & RAFFINATI tuxedos $39.00 each selected DESIGNER styles $60.00 each Design Your Special: GROOMS RENTAL FREE WITH FIVE OR MORE Prices good with this coupon only. • Wedding Gown & Veil • Bridesmaid Dresses • Dresses for Mother of Bernard's Bride or Groom • Debutante or Prom Dresses jbrtrjalwear Homestead Market 544-2259 54 at Fayetville Rd 286-3633 1-80O-672-5893 734 ninth street durham, north Carolina 27705 by appointment Durham FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 IMAGEWOMCS THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 19 Where The Gowns Are Seautiyul L^amen "Receptions We feature the world's most beautiful Katio Snaa! L-i\v\cv\e.ons gowns. Large selection, personal DWima+e Rekea^sal T)\nne.rs service, perfect fit, attention to every detail. Experience the difference at... Mordeati BRIDAL AND TUXEDO

'Where it costs no more...it's just nicer"

RAIFIGH DURHAM KttLCHjn New Location 707-09 N. Person St. 4201 University Dr. (2 Blocks from Peace College) Parkway Plaza II (Behind South Square) i_a "Residence 202 West'Rosemary CWapel -Hill 967*2506 919-832-6447 419-1296 M-F 10-8, Sat 10-5 M-F 10-7, Sat 10-5 NORTHERN ITALIAN DINING KAY Trusted Jewelers Since 1910 A\!lKM DIAMONTOLOGISTS & GEMOLOGISTS MEMBERS OF THE DIAMOND COUNCIL OF AMERICA for your... • engagement party • bridal shower Duke Employees & Students - additional • rehearsal dinner 10% discount on anything in store • wedding reception private facilities for up to sixty guests lunch and dinner 212 SOUTH SQUARE MALL DURHAM, NC 27701 (919)489-4590 Carr Mill Mall • Carrboro 919/942-2400 A honeymoon is one of life's happiest memories J™'Honeymoon

for ™*y have mwged wedding^n cT^ """"W >**. Bermuda, even in ScandinaW ff ST? *"*• «"»* ^ » '"canon foryour wedding vLf T °°king f°'a different ""on, licensing, residency'*Z"2T ^ Mp y°" «"« «" 865 mmisters orgovemment regies ^'r^ '««<*&»! sunpie or as eiaborate as you 2, ^T*™0" can •* - We turn dreams into reality. ""'damage yourpoCcetbLk h°Uld *""" *»" ***** Personalized and Confidential Travel Plans A SimP|e honeymoon could be a few H r stains, a, a coZy inn or t^ZT £"* **" ° '" «* Island stays, Caribbean cruises, ski vacations, and weekend getaways. d Consult our certified counselors and destination specialists. "ve ofme wedding. ""Mwakfiw wi,hin a few ^ ^fw the memory of liferim. ^ where a„ L^JZ^ ""** ' Caribl*» VIKING TRA/EL -hidden cos,, WHATEvZToxZZ^ **** *>« *« are 968-45861688-8906 Main Office: Village Plaza, 103 South Elliott Rd. 968-4586 or 688-8906 Branch: Cole Park Plaza, 15-501 South • 968-8747 Branch: 125 E. King St., Hillsborough • 732-6795 1-800-672-5907 PAGE 20 / THE CHRONICLE IMAGEWOAK5 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1992 Into spr**»M

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with High, Quality, Nationally-Recognized Name Brand Clothing!

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