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Thursday

February 2. 1984 Volume 80, Number 91 Duke University Durham, North Carolina THE CHRONICLE Newsfile New Central facilities proposed 'Playing polities': Democratic legislators were ac­ cused by the White House of "playing politics" on the Lebanon issue and drafting a resolution that "aids and By ELISA DAVIDSON abets" enemies of peace in the Middle East. President In an effort to alleviate campus overcrowding, Univer­ Reagan's spokesman issued a strong denunciation of the sity officials are proposing a plan to expand Central Cam­ House Democrats' resolution, which would call on Presi­ pus facilities at an expected cost of $814,000. dent Reagan to begin "a prompt and orderly The four-phase "Central Campus Enhancement Plan" - withdrawal" of the American marines from Beirut. See to be presented to the University Board of Trustees in page 2. March after administrative review - calls for expansion of existing facilities and creation of new ones. Reagan budget: President Reagan proposed a "We want to make Central Campus look better and ap­ budget totaling $925.5 billion for the fiscal year 1985 peal more to the user," said Joseph Pietrantoni, assistant that calls on Congress to continue cutting domestic University business manager and one of the plan's creators. spending for the rest of the decade, to delay major tax The plan's first phase, Pietrantoni said, includes reno­ increases and to spend increased sums for the military. vates for two apartment complexes to make way for a Cen­ Reagan tailored his budget to the election year. See tral Campus Center and recreation facility. No students page 2. would be displaced by the added buildings, he said. An "Old English-style pub," convenience store, picnic area 'Sadat' banned: Deploring "Sadat," a mini-series and student meeting space, as well as two outdoor tennis about the life of Egypt's assassinated leader, Egypt has and basketball courts, Pietrantoni added, also would be banned all films produced or distributed by Columbia included at a cost of $390,000. Pictures. Abdel Hamid Radwan, Egypt's minister of culture, reportedly charged that the 1983 docudrama, Late last semester, University President Terry Sanford which appeared on American television, contained said a contemplated new dormitory could not be financ­ "historical errors that distort the accomplishments of ed, opening the door for other ways to ease to the housing the Egyptian people." . crunch. The second phase of the plan - costing $57,000 - would SalvadOran election: The Salvadoran election involve the construction of two additional tennis courts, next month is a subject of concern in the Reagan ad­ he said. The present basketball court on Pace St. would ministration, according to U.S. officials. They said ad­ also be paved. ministration officials were privately concerned that the The final phase - to cost $267,000 - involves the con­ March 25 presidential election might lead to a confron­ struction of a $100,000 outdoor, heated Olympic-sized tation between political leaders on the left and right swimmming pool. Pietrantoni said the pool would "give PETER HA/THE CHRONIU.C that could set the stage for a military coup. us the opportunity to use the facility in the summer" and Earthquake? might attract business conferences and other groups. Not quite, but this parking lot on Flowers Dr. appears Pentagon Criticized: U.S. military activity in A "multi-purpose general service building" for dances to be slipping a little, causing concern for workers who Honduras prompted an angry charge by Sen. Jim and other social functions would also be built, Pietrantoni are building a pond in the adjacent Sarah P. Duke Sasser, D-Tenn. Sasser, who is the ranking minority said. Gardens. See page 3. member of a key Senate subcommittee, said the Pen­ The idea for a Central Campus enhancement plan tagon "may be trying to subvert the Congress" by originated in a Central Campus study committee, said Jill The committee's recommendations, Kaplan said, were for­ building "a military infrastructure in Honduras that Kaplan, committee chairman. The committee - created mulated into the current plan by Pietrantoni and Trinity is far beyond anything necessary for the military exer­ by William Griffith, vice president for student affairs - senior Shep Moyle, past committee chairman. cises being undertaken there." was established "to determine why students would rather live off-campus than on Central," Kaplan added. See OFFICIALS on page 5 'Tokenism' Charged: Democratic leaders derid­ ed efforts by President Reagan to trim the budget deficit as "tokenism," and said they would propose their own package of spending cuts and new revenues worth at least $200 billion over three years. Human resource search narrows By JON SCHER may be spending more time on it than some folks think The applicant pool for the vacant directorship of the we should, but this is a critical search. Weather University's Department of Human Resources has been "The University spends $400 million a year - these are whittled to a handful of candidates; two have been asked approximate figures - and $300 million of that goes out Six more weeks: Our to make second visits to Duke. in people costs. . . . People management must be a high friend at right will surely; priority for the University," he said. see his shadow on this1 Charles Huestis, the senior vice president who heads the The Department of Human Resources includes six divi­ Ground Hog Day, condemn­ search, said he hopes to decide by Feb. 15 whether to hire sions: employment, benefits and records, wage and salary, ing us to six more weeks of one of the current candidates or invite three more prospects training and development, employee and labor relations, wonderful winter weather. for second interviews. and employee services. Each division has a director, who Unfortunately, it will be "They're all seasoned human resources people with ex­ reports to the director of human resources. mostly sunny today, with a cellent experience," Huestis said of the remaining can­ high in the mid 50s. Partly didates. "They have fine track records and have demons­ Duke officials said they would prefer to have a new direc­ cloudy and warmer tonight trated creativity and a high level of sensitivity to human tor take over in human resources before May, when the and Friday. Chance of rain relations issues" University's contract with a 120-member union of skilled on Saturday. Pssst . . . the Huestis is looking for a replacement for William Johns­ craftsmen is set to expire. However, in order to insure that snow is coming. ton, who died Oct. 11. Shortly after Johnston's death, the director will be on board by the time negotiations Huestis said the search might last until spring. begin, an appointment would have to be made in mid- The position - which involves administration of per­ February. Inside sonnel-related areas of the University - is being filled in "Both Henderson and Dixon are spending up to half their the interim by University business manager James time [in human resources]" Huestis said. "It's a real strain Inside R&R: Area authors tell why Durham is a Henderson and administrative controller Thomas Dixon. and a burden on them. I don't want that to continue much good place to write. See inside section. longer." More than 100 people contacted Huestis about the vacan­ "Jim Henderson and I are getting tired," said Dixon. "I'm NSF director optimistic: Edward Knapp, cy, which was made public through word of mouth and thankful that we both have real good staffs. People are pull­ director of the National Science Foundation, told an au­ through an advertisement in The Chronicle of Higher ing together very well." dience in Gross Chem last night that the U.S. had a Education. Henderson said approximately 15 initial in­ 'coherent science policy.' See page 3. terviews were conducted by administration and Medical Henderson said no radical changes had been instituted Center officials in the department, but added that it had not remained You may have already won: Take the sports "I'm not sure that the two we invited back for a second stagnant. "We're obviously not taking any new initiatives," quiz challenge! What's your excuse? That's what other visit will be the only ones asked," said Henderson, who he said. "We're sustaining the initiatives that already were six-pack winners used to think! Win big prizes! Send added that both of the primary candidates have corporate in place, making sure they won't lose momentum. It's not in your entry today! See page 11. backgrounds, and one has some university background. exactly a holding pattern. There's plenty of work to be "This is a key appointment for us," Henderson said. "We done." World & Democrats press Lebanon issue By FRANCIS CLINES of the president's foreign policy. NY Times News Service "I am not questioning their patriotism," Speakes said in WASHINGTON - The White House accused congres­ criticizing proponents of the resolution. He added: "We National sional Democrats Wednesday of "playing politics" on the have some deep concern that the Democrats are playing Page 2 February 2, 1984 Lebanon issue and drafting a resolution that "aids and politics with a critical foreign policy issue." abets" those opposed to peace in the Middle East. "Talk that indicates to the Syrians and to others who "I'm not going to pay any attention to it," President are bent on a destructive route in the Middle East, talk Reagan commented briefly after his spokesman, Larry in this nation that we don't have a solid commitment on Speakes, had issued a strong denunciation of the House the part of the president and Congress, only aids and abets THE CHRONICLE Democrats' resolution that would press the president to these people," Speakes said. Associate news editor Stephanie Epstein begin a "prompt and orderly withdrawal" of the Marines O'Neill rather heatedly pressed the issue several times Assistant news editor Carrie Teegarden from Beirut. during the day, saying that the president had changed his Assistant sports editor .Charley Scher "The safety of the Marines is at stake - get them out policy in the period since the speaker and a congressional Copy editors Stephanie Epstein of there," House Speaker Tip O'Neill, D-Mass., said on majority endorsed an 18-month time limit for the Marines. Joe McHugh Capitol Hill in summarizing the message to the president "Never was it mentioned," O'Neill said, that the Marines Associate photo editor Peter Ha contained in the resolution taken up at a Democratic par­ would be guarding the Beirut airport and supporting the Desk Kathy Burkett ty caucus Wednesday morning. Lebanese government army. Night editors Hilary Schoff Supplement (R&R) editor Wendy Nelson As the White House sharpened its opposition, House Watchdog Brendan Daly Democrats reported "overwhelming support" at the caucus Congress began expressing second thoughts on the presi- for the non-binding resolution and said it should come up 'dent's policy after the bombing of the Marine compound Account representatives Judy Bartfett soon for a floor vote, possibly before the next recess begins in Beirut last Oct. 23 in which 241 American servicemen Susan Tomlin Feb. 10. If so, it would be the first major election-year test were killed. Advertising production Todd Jones Composition Delia Adkins Judy Mack Elizabeth Majors Paste-up Leo Hodlofski Reagan proposes latest budget Robin Kingma growth and prosperity," he said. The Chronicle is published Monday through Friday of the "It raises the spectre of sharply higher interest rates, academic year, and weekly through ten (10) weeks of summer WASHINGTON - President Reagan Wednesday propos­ choked-off investment, renewed recession, and rising sessions by the Duke University Chronicle Board. Price of ed a $925.5 billion budget for the 1985 fiscal year that calls unemployment," he added. subscriptions: $40 for third class mail; $90 for first class mail. on Congress to continue cutting domestic spending for the Despite this exhortation, the president tailored his Offices at third floor Flowers Building, Duke University, Durham, rest of the decade, to delay major tax increases and to pro­ budget to the election year, and proposed only modest spen­ North Carolina 27706. vide increased sums to rebuild the armed forces ding reductions and a small package of tax increases. With "All signs point to continued strong economic growth, those assumptions, his budget projects the highest path vigorous investment, and rising productivity, without of future deficits he has proposed since becoming president. Corrections? renewed inflation - all but one," the president said in his His top economic advisers at a budget briefing for the Budget Message to Congress for the fiscal year that begins news media said pointedly that the projected deficits were Questions or complaints about a story that has appeared in Oct. 1. unacceptably high and, if not reduced further, would block The Chronicle? Call 684-2663 between 2 and 4 p.m. Sunday through Thursday. "Only the threat of indefinitely prolonged budget deficits threatens the continuation of sustained non-inflationary See BUDGET on page 5

COME HEAR THE BANDS! The HAUFBRAU is having Boney Maroney (old time rock 'n' roll) TONIGHT AND SHADY GROVE Friday 2/3 and Saturday 2/4 (hot blue grass) Plus, don't forget our 25« DRAFT SPECIAL during televised ACC games. 615 Broad Street Walking distance from East Campus (under Kentucky Fried Chicken) 286-1965 Campus Garden construction underway Page 3 February 2, 1984 By ROBERT HOGE don't have a budget right now; we're still in the investiga­ When the weather gets warmer, builders will finish con­ tive stage" because of problems on Flowers Drive, said Today structing a one-and-a-half acre pond in the Sarah P. Duke Ralph Gionta, director of facility planning. "We can't give Gardens. The pond will enhance the garden's beauty as an estimate right now." Sloan Colloquium in Communications, speaker, well as ease drainage problems, said Larry Daniels, associ­ The project, Daniels said, had been in the planning Harold Evans, visiting lecturer and former editor, ate director of the gardens. stages for several years prior to construction. The Times of London, "Freedom of the Press: A Construction began in September and will be finished Though construction should be complete soon, there are British Perspective," 301 Perkins library, 4 p.m. when the ground dries out, Daniels said. Planners hoped problems with the nearby road - Flowers Drive - said to finish building in the fall, he added, but could not Keith Brodie, university chancellor and acting president. because of rainy weather. Freewater film, "Body and Soul," Bryan Center Film "Suddenly the whole bank of Flowers Drive, where doc­ The pond was designed by the university's civil engineer­ tors park their cars, began to slide and this wide crack Theater, 7 p.m. ing department to hold excess water during periods of opened up," he said last week. heavy rain. Rather than flooding the gardens, as it does Daniels said he had "no idea" what caused the problem Women's Studies Program and House G present a now, the water will be caught by the pond and released but noted that there had been cracks in the road before lecture and slide presentation by Elaine Showalter, slowly downstream. Also, the pond will maintain a per­ pond construction began. Rutgers University,. 130 Sociology-Psychology manent water level during normal weather, Daniels said. Nelson said that the "cause of the fault has not yet been building, 8 p.m. In addition to solving drainage problems, Daniels said, determined, but will be analyzed at a later date." Tn blame the pond will be "aesthetically pleasing" and an "asset to the problem on the construction would only be specula­ EXPORT A, a local band, will appear at the Down- the gardens." tion, he said, adding that he did not want to insinuate any under on Thursday, February 2, from 9 to 12 p.m. The construction, contracted out to the Earl J. Latta Co., connection between the two. Sponsered by P.U.B. committe of Duke Union. Free was approved by university trustees and funded by both the university endowment and the garden's own endow­ with Duke l.D. Duke students who have visited the construction site ment, Daniels said. have generally been impressed. Dan Hogan, Trinity fresh­ Thus far, no cost figures are available for the project. "We man, said, "It's not a pond - it's a lake!" Duke Dance '84, sponsored by Institute of the Arts, directed by Julia Wray and artist-in-residence Jane Desmond, Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center, 8:15 p.m. Knapp praises R&D policies Freewater film, "Pandora's Box," Bryan Center Film By DOUGLAS MAYS Theater, 9:30 p.m. America has a "coherent national science policy," said Edward Knapp National Science Foundation director, last Friday night in Gross Chemical Auditorium. Speaking before an audience of nearly 200 people, Knapp Biochemistry seminar, George Smith, biological outlined tbe need for such a policy, then described the ad­ vances made in recent years, especially concerning the sciences department. University of Missouri, 147 budget, and spoke about some specific areas where con­ Nanaline Duke building, 12:30 p.m. centrated effort is most vital. "To maintain the health of the U.S. scientific enterprise Botany department Ecology Series, Lucinda Mc- requires a long term commitment," Knapp said. "Scien­ Dade, speaker, 144 Biological Sciences building, tists must expect stable funding in planning their 12:30 p.m. research, which comes from a coherent set of long range goals, and the nation must expect a set of goals address­ Music department and Committee on Soviet and ing these long range problems" East European Studies, lecture by David Finko, , Four of these goals, Knapp said, are providing new pro­ composer in residence, University of Texas, Biddle cesses for both high technology and older industries, militarily and economically ensuring the nation's securi­ music building, 4:15 p.m. ty, assessing possible health hazards and helping "us translate our renewed national commitment to excellence Freewater film, "Woodstock," Bryan Center Film in education at all levels and for all citizens." Theater, 8 p.m. Federal efforts, said Knapp, are not enough to support research and development, noting the need to stimulate Duke Dance '84, sponsored by Institute of the Arts, efforts in state and local governments and the private sec­ directed by Julia Wray and artist-in-residence Jane tor. "Implementing such a broad science and techology Desmond, Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center, 8:15 policy is well beyond the capability of the federal govern­ p.m. ment," he said. Despite such a heavy financial burden, Knapp concur­ Freewater film, "Westworld," Bryan Center Film red with George Keyworth, White House science adviser, quoting his Senate testimony: "Science and technology do Theater, midnight. not exist independently from the rest of government. They PETER HA/THE CHRONICLE Weekend See FEDERAL on page 5 National Science Foundation Director Edward Knapp

Basketball, Duke vs. Virginia, Cameron Indoor Sta­ dium, 1 p.m., Saturday.

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By KITTY BRIGHAM "I think people on campus forget what's In an effort to "dramatize some of the going on in the world," said CASC member atrocities going on in Cental America" nine Paul Holmbeck, a Trinity senior. members of the Central America Solidari­ Responses to the "guerilla theater" were ty Committee staged a "guerilla theater" varied. Suzanne Slonim, a Trinity junior, Wednesday afternoon. said, "I think these guerilla theaters are a The CASC members concerned with Cen­ great idea. There is a lack of knowledge as tral American politics, marched in single to what's going on in Central America." file through the Bryan Center, down West "I'm glad there are some Duke students Campus's main quadrangle and on East with enough nerve and morality to speak Campus quadrangle out" said Dannia Southerland, a communi­ Each of the nine members dressed as ty member who witnessed the event. figures illustrating the major participators "It is pretty serious how close we are to in Central American politics and group all-out war, and it's good to see students do­ wore brightly-colored cardboard sandwich ing something about it," said Howard Mach- signs, theater make-up, and clothes repre­ tionger, a University employee. sentative of these roles. After the demonstration, Abell said she At interim points during the march, ac­ thought the "guerilla theater" had gone tors stopped to form a "firing squad." well. Though many are not aware of all the Figures representing "American Govern­ facts involved in the Central American ment" and "American Tax Dollars" executed issue she added that "people aren't think­ others including those dressed as "San- ing negatively [about organizations which dinista Government" and "The U.S. Peace speak out on U.S. involvement in Central Movement." America] anymore as the media has been Trinity junior Marcelle Abell, CASC talking about the seriousness of the issue member, told the audience of the blind Still, the media has not asked enough ques­ allegiance of the American people to the tions or put facts and pieces together." U.S. government's commitment in Central Dave Ethridge Trinity sophomore, ex­ America. plained that the "guerilla theater" shocks

PETER HA/THE CHRONICLE An instantaneous leap into the magical" Central America Solidarity Committee members protest U.S. military involvement people just when and where they don't ex- caskets in a march on campus. Dori Drach- — Washington Posi pect it. mail) Trinity senior, said CASC will con- After the invasion of Grenada last fall, tinue to provide "more theatrical wonders Discover the bestseller that members of CASC protested by carrying for Duke" transcends the barrier between fantasy and reality-and, Avoid Co$tly some say, some of the barriers to world peace LAW$UITS! A #1 bestseller in Germany, Italy, Spain and other European countries where it has become a symbol of the peace movement. Now a bestseller in America. To be a ATTEND THE major motion picture released by Warner Bros, in 1984. Illustrated, printed in two colors throughout. $15.95 at all booksellers LIBEL AND THE NEVERENDING STORY STUDENT \\xgvt\s Token you become part of it toa \ L W**-Z7 — —"awr MEDIA • %: ' THENEVEREND(NGSTORY t MICHAEL ENDE WORKSHOP Friday, February 3rd 3-5 p.m. 226 Perkins SPEAKER MS. BARBARA DILL former attorney for New York Times includes slide show & refreshments Sponsored by The Chronicle the Undergraduate Publications Board and the Office of Student Activities Thursday, February 2, 1984 THE CHRONICLE Page 5 Officials study New budget proposed by Reagan BUDGET from page 2 and Congress will return after the election and approve substantial reductions in the deficit, including further cuts Central appeal the strong economic recovery with low inflation that is un Medicare and in the cost of living adjustments in forecast in the budget for the rest of the decade. federal programs. Reagan also looks to congressional ac­ OFFICIALS from page 1 "Clearly it would be more difficult to have interest rates tion that would result in "the steady withering" of many coming down," said Martin Feldstein, the chairman of the domestic spending programs. Pietrantoni said the convience store would "be geared president's Council of Economic Advisers, if deficits are not Some tax increases, as long as they are "strictly limited," toward foods that can be prepared in the apartments." reduced further. "We would not expect to see inflation com­ are also a possibility, Reagan said. Toiletries and other items would also he sold. ing down as well, and I would not think we would have One suggestion provides that points be used at the the same robust growth." The president, in his State of the Union message last pub and convenience store. After studying the use of But instead of proposing such deficit reductions now, the week, proposed working with Democrats and Republicans point plans by Central Campus residents, Pietrantoni budget, as well as the president's optimistic economic in Congress on a deficit reduction "downpayment" that said, using points at these locations would not "cause forecast, assumes that a second Reagan administration would total $100 billion over three years. financial stress on other point areas." "The enhancement plan would be internally funded," he said. "We would borrow money for 10 years at at­ tractive interest ratea" He estimated that the payments on the loan would Federal science policy lauded range from $130,000 to $140,000 a year, but that the earnings from the operation areas - estimated at FEDERAL from page 3 Human Services $88,000 - would pay a large portion of the debt. The NSF - with an fiscal year 1984 budget of $1.5 Richard Cox, committee member and dean for are thoroughly integrated in the planning, analytical and billion - provides funding for research, projects, and educa­ residential life, said he "wants to look into some way decision-making processes at the White House" tion in the physical and social sciences, Knapp said. of using the pool in the winter." By moving the pool Knapp praised the administration's threefold science Five goals mentioned in NSF's 1984 budget request, closer to the bath house and using a plastic flap, he add­ policy objective: to enhance scientific contributions to Knapp said, were strengthening the base for experimen­ ed, students could enter the pool without having to go America's most pressing needs, maximize the return on tal research, increasing public and educational access to outside. research and development investments, and ensure the advanced scientific computers, maintaining the number continuing viability of the U.S. science and technology "The plan offers things that apartment complexes and quality of scientists and engineers, providing support base. don't" Kaplan said. "It could make Central attractive for the engineering research centers and increasing inter­ for students as a means of staying on campus without Knapp said that the federal government's current role national cooperation in scientific areas. living in a dormitory." in research and development is to provide support. Of the Knapp was appointed to his present position at the end "The plan guarantees that Central is competitive in $79 billion spent on R & D in 1982, Knapp said, federal of 1982; he was previously director of accelerator terms of facilities with other apartment complexes," funding covered almost 50 percent. Additionally, he said, technology at Los Alamos. His speech was presented by Pietrantoni said. . . . We want to bring the Central the government sets standards and regulations and funds the Round Table on Science and Public Affairs, co- Campus student closer to the Duke community." a substantial amount of its own R&D, most notably in sponsored by the Program in Science, Technology and the Departments of Defense, Energy and Health and Human Values.

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To the editorial board: These are some of the problems. These Managing the deficit Amy Schulman's article in the Jan. 23 should be studied, tackled, resolved and Chronicle about Tom Rubinson's sticky suc­ smoothed out before the product is introduc­ One of the major economic problems of the pears to conflict with the spirit of cess story is quite interesting. But before ed in the market. This would be the func­ 1980s is the continued growth in the size democracy. The Constitution enables Con­ he plans a trip to the Bahamas, let me tion of the Research and Development De­ of the federal deficit. According to recent gress to pass legislation by a simple majori­ hasten to point out that there is still a red partment of the "Nubbs Products." estimates, the budget shortfall this year is ty vote, consistent with the concept of ma­ light. He might have overlooked some im­ There are more considerations besides about $180 billion. Such large deficits jority rule It requires two-thirds votes in portant points in his excitement and en­ these: the question of stability and shelf- worsen inflationary pressures, interest very limited circumstances - such as the thusiasm in promoting his "Dab-off." testing of the product, interaction between rates and trade deficits. The current overriding of presidential vetoea Since this Does the product give out toxic vapors? Is the container and the ingredients, testing recovery in private sector investment may constituitional system has worked fairly it flammable? What is the flash-point of the its usefulness under extreme conditions of be "crowded out" by government borrowing. well for nearly 200 years, any changes mixture? What is its vapor pressure at room usage, leakage, its action on household Moreover, interest payments on the $1.5 should be viewed cautiously and critically. temperature? Is it safe to inhale and to fabrics, particulaly the synthetic ones, and trillion overall debt will come to an astoun­ While the budget deficit is a serious pro­ what extent, that is, how many parts per on the dyestuff used on the fabrics, con­ blem, a constitutional amendment has not ding $110 billion this year - more than 10 million parts of air? It is mentioned: "It sumer acceptance tests regarding ease of been demonstrated to be a sound remedy. percent of federal spending. Finally, deficit would stain clothing and burn if applied to application, non-irritant nature, odor, stor­ spending is a politically convenient way to What, then, can be done about the situa­ the skin." It must be a primary irritant. age safety for children, indication of possi­ mask the true cost of government programs. tion? As a result of the accelerating growth How can it be marketed as a household pro­ ble hazards and warnings to consumers ex­ Voters can see the size of their tax bills, but of the federal debt, voters are becoming duct with this obvious and major drawback plicitly mentioned on the labels. Similar they are less able to assess the subtle effects more aware of the problem, for which both and without regard to product safety? Is it other points should be thoroughly dealt of federal borrowing on the economy. Congress and the president are responsible a likely sensitizer giving rise to allergic Political pressure should be brought to bear reactions? Its use in home under normal with and adequate solutions sought. The proposed constitutional amendment on both parties to find concrete ways to conditions of usage does not seem to be safe. I just wanted to indicate very briefly what requiring a balanced federal budget is a reduce the deficit. Congress and the Reagan Have the constituents of the product been an amount of scientific thinking and techni­ possible remedy for this problem. However, administration recently enabled the ERS to tested satisfactorily and checked out for car­ cal sweating go into the production of a suc­ the amendment has several drawbacks. crack down more effectively on unlawful tax cinogens? lb what extent do the solvents in cessful product. Even if the amendment contains a provi­ shelters. Such policies should be continued, the "Dab-ofF pose a health hazard because I congratulate the budding enthusiastic sion allowing Congress to authorize a and efforts to prevent other forms of tax eva­ of the probable concentration of vapors in inventor and wish him a clean success. deficit by a two-thirds majority, the rule sion can be intensified. Further reductions a warm closed room and its contact with the M. T. Chobe may be too inflexible Congress can be in spending should be attempted, since skin? Industrial Chemist deadlocked in situations where it can many of Reagan's budget cuts were merely neither authorize the deficit, nor gain reductions in spending growth. In addition, enough support to reduce spending (or in­ types of taxes which have the smallest im­ crease taxes). Evidence of this problem can pact on economic efficiency can be be seen in the annual battle to raise the increased. federal debt ceiling before the government comes grinding to a halt. Getting a two- Lebanon's hold on U.S. thirds majority to agree on a budgetary Such policies will not eliminate federal When senators and congressmen return­ policy is likely to be even more difficult. deficits. But if there is sufficient political ed to Washington last week, there was A large percentage of the federal budget support among voters and sufficient much talk of bringing the approximately Abigail Johnson is fixed by law or is politically sacrosanct. political will on the part of government 1800 U.S. marines home from Lebanon. Other expenditures are often supported by leaders, significant inroads can be achiev­ However, it seems unlikely that the Con­ the center of the fighting. This option calls powerful special interests. This presents ed. The federal deficit must become more gress will find the courage to act decisive­ for the redeployment of the marines from another practical problem, since there is lit­ than just political ammunition during elec­ ly on this issue To call for early withdrawal their post at the Beirut International Air­ tle room for Congress and the president to tions, for it is only with bipartisan coopera­ of the marines would require acceptance of port to their Sixth Fleet ships off the coast. maneuver in narrowing the deficit. tion that the deficit can be reduced to some responsibility for what events might According to military experts, this would ensue in Lebanon and this is unpalatable In addition, the proposed amendment ap- manageable proportions. have no detrimental military effect. They to most legislators, especially during an argue that the Lebanese army would be election year. able to take over this position while U.S. Much of the concern about the marine Navy ships would continue to maintain the presence in Lebanon has centered on the Suk al Gharb ridge around Beirut. ambiguity of the definition of their role Ac­ Politically, the would con­ cording to President Reagan, the marines tinue to have a presence in the region, are stationed in Beirut "for the purpose of demonstrating its support of the Gemayel providing a breathing spell during which government. At the same time our efforts the Government of Lebanon could reassert at negotiation would continue with Mideast its authority over the Beirut area." Adminis­ envoy Donald Rumsfeld. President Reagan tration officials believe that there would be fears that such a redeployment would be no hope for President Amin Gemayel to es­ viewed as capitulation to international ter­ tablish the legitimacy of his government or rorists. \et, to maintain the marines in for progress to be made on the negotiations their current location, while subjecting for the withdrawal of all foreign forces if the them daily to attack when they could marines were to leave before the end of the achieve the same political and military 18 month authorization in March 1985. ends off the coast, is foolish. Tfet critics of this policy feel that the situa­ President Reagan is determined not to let tion in Lebanon would not be very different his policy falter. He has engaged a former than now. Progress in the negotiations has Illinois congressman, Edward Derwinski, to been negligible and this is due in large part lobby his cause on Capitol Hill. It is time to the intractability of the Syrians. The for Congress to act decisively by pressuring Syrians refuse to support any plan until the the president to redeploy the troops or to May 17 Israeli-Lebanese accord concerning bring them home the withdrawal of Israeli forces from south­ It is unlikely, however, that Congress will ern Lebanon is abrogated. The United indeed force the president's hand. According THE CHRONICLE States refuses to accede to these demands. to Margaret Shapiro of The Washington Jon Scher, Editor While negotiations stall, the US. marines Post: "While Congress often finds it easy to Larry Kaplow, Foon Rhee, Kendall Guthrie, Managing Editors are under fire Since they began their mis­ denounce a president's foreign policy deci­ Guy Seay, Editorial Page Editor sion in Beirut in August 1982, 259 US. sions, and even to threaten strong action, military men have been killed. Of these, it usually flinches before direct confronta­ Joe McHugh, News Editor Robert Margolis, Entertainment Editor 241 died in the October 23 terrorist attack tion." Furthermore legislators do not want Dave MacMillan, Sports Editor Wendy Lane, Associate Sports Editor on the marine headquarters. Most recent­ to assume the responsibility for events in Dana Gordon, Photography Editor Hilary Schoff, Production Editor ly, one marine was killed Monday in an at­ Lebanon should they achieve a marine Ursula Werner, Features Editor Al Bernstein, Features Editor tack by anti-government forces. The United redeployment. Barry Eriksen, Business Manager Gina Columna, Advertising Manager States cannot shun the responsibility which Finally, election year politics will prevent it has assumed to help the Gemayel govern­ any decisive action. Up for election are 435 The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its ment; however, there are alternatives to the House and 33 Senate seats. The marines in students, its workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority current marine deployment. view of the editorial board. Signed editorials, columns and cartoons represent the views of their Lebanon will certainly be a campaign issue authors. One proposal being discussed in Washing­ which will generate rhetoric, but unfor­ Phone numbers: news/features: 684-2663, sports: 684-6115, business office: 684-3811. ton would serve what President Reagan has tunately congressional inactivity is also The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. enunciated as the reason for the marine characteristic of an election year. presence while removing the marines from Abigail Johnson is a Trinity senior. Thursday, February 2, 1984 THE CHRONICLE Page 7 Conservatism's moral defense There exists a very inter­ esting debate over the dif­ ferences between conserva- Arfltf NtPIHll tivism and libertarianism. Given their similarities and ' the steady growth in the popularity of each, it has been suggested that the two are actually the same. This con­ clusion I can't accept as true, and would like to offer, from the perspective of the conservative, a few considerations to this discussion of philosophies. The characteristic common to the libertarian and the conservative is a strong disdain for collectivism. Under g SCORNFUL OF THE DEFICIT DANGERS, HE SENT HIS MARINES TO DIE IN FAR-OFF LANDS various names — socialism, authoritarianism, totalitarian­ p FOR APPLE PIE, FOR CHURCH AND FLAG, FOR SCHOOL PRAYER, FDR HIS POLITICAL KEISTER. ism, communism, etc - the political and economic rights I SUDDENLY AMERiCAWAS STAN DING TALL ©... AND COST WAS NO OBSTACLE! of individuals have been infringed upon by governments. A concern for these rights is therefore valid. ikwt efapk 3"$&'KtfS* tfaPk. m rwrannfc MJRWK xw^r?^ The libertarian, interestingly, takes this concern a step further than does the conservative. Individual rights* are not only important, says the libertarian, they comprise the ultimate good, the greatest end to be pursued. J.S. Mill, the libertarian idol, explained the philosophy's basis: "The only purpose for which power can rightfully be ex­ ercised over any member of society of a civilized communi­ ty, against his will, is to prevent harm to others." elusion of all others is incomplete For this reason, liber­ ephemeral existence of ours for the be-all and end-all to But this principle, developed in the defense of property tarianism fails on the same grounds as does the Marxism. be devoted cheifly to producing and consuming." from democratic majorities, has been modified. In reading Marx told us that man is an economic being, whose needs This recognition of a moral order does not mean that the modern libertarian thinkers one finds not only the valid are best met with a collected economy. The libertarian conservative must defend public policies considered contention that liberty is superior to coercion, but also the agrees with the Marxist premise, but suggests capitalism "moralistic." This distinction is a fine one, but still impor­ notion that no other values have relevance. In the liber­ to be the solution. Russell Kirk, a premier conservative tant. Some conservatives see prayer in the public schools tarian's primary area of concern - property rights - thinker, has written: as vital, but many, including myself, are not convinced. nothing is more important than the protection of one's ™Ib embrace Marxist materialism and determinism in This does not mean that I consider prayer valueless (and possessions, and the ability to acquire more without res­ the name of another abstraction called 'capitalism' is to property valuable), only that First Amendment rights are traint. deliver one's self bound to the foe. Conservatives defend also important. This description of man and man's purpose must fail, for a free economy; they defend it, however, as bound up with Some libertarians will deny that their philosophy is as in reality man is much more than the libertarian paradigm a complex social structure of order and justice, founded narrow in priorities as I have described. I use the terms will allow. Man is an economic creature, but he is also a upon an understanding of man as a moral being." "libertarian" and "conservative" with reservation, given sexual creature, an intellectual creature and a moral Man, as a moral being, recognizes his spirituality as an that I can speak for only for myself and my understanding creature. Retired Duke political science professor John important component of his life. This means that there ex­ of what those labels mean. Still, I agree with Kirk when Hallowell once remarked during lecture: ists something of more importance than self or property. he concludes: "If Marx was correct, we only care about materialism. I, as do many, consider this greatest good to be God. "If a person describes himself as a 'libertarian' because If Freud was correct, we only care about sex. If the Greeks The relevance of this belief for economics and politics he believes in an enduring moral order, the Constitution philosophers were correct, we only care about knowledge. is great, lb again cite Kirk: of the United States, free enterprise, and old American Someone has to be wrong." "The great division in modern politics . . . lies between ways of life - why actually he is a conservative with im­ Man of course has many motivations and a complicated all those who believe in some sort of transcedent moral perfect understanding of the general terms of politics." nature. And a philosophy focusing on one aspect to the ex- order on one side, and on the other all those who take this Greg Neppl is a Trinity senior. Calling for black involvement in student media I can feel a controversy brewing. I just wish it would end form, like writing reflective pieces on the editorial page soon. during or after the series has run. The impending conflict stems from a scheduled Feb. David Bowser The lack of minority representation in the Duke student 13-17 Chronicle series entitled, "Black and Blue: Blacks media is a predicament not only blatantly evident here, at Duke". The week long series promises to focus on several the chance to be fairer and more representative of a diverse but also out in the real world. A 1981 study by the topics in light of the 15th anniversary of the 1969 Allen segment of the Duke student body. Also, The Chronicle American Society of Newspaper Editors found that while Building occupation. The topics include the demands of would turn out to be a much better newspaper for it. all minorities comprise about 20 percent of the American the sit-in and subsequent results, pieces on black student I'm not saying that only black students can write about population, only about 5.3 percent populate our news­ life, viewpoints from black administrators, athletes, faculty black student affairs. On the contrary, I feel that input rooms. and workers. On paper, the series hopes to paint a com­ coming from all races and backgrounds will ultimately A case in point: a newspaper employment service, which prehensive picture of what blacks are actually doing col­ result in a more colorful expose of the matter at hand. devotes itself to this perplexing issue, recently sent me a lectively here at Duke. Last year, I was summoned to give my two cents about job application which summarized in a brochure the state I have two problems with the series, both of which stem what blacks were thinking about at Duke, and what I of minorities in the newspaper industry today: "The need from past experiences. However, out of my own personal thought would be an appropriate angle in which to devote is there. Where are the people to satisfy it?" qualms, I hope to see something constructive coming out an entire edition of Voices, then the weekly magazine sup­ Pretty persuasive stuff. The call is out, beckoning for of all this. plement to The Chronicle. blacks and other minorities to fill a void that has always First and foremost, I believe that most blacks object to Remembering that the profession of journalism usually existed in all Duke student media. being singled out as a "community" for university examina­ wins more foes than friends, I offered my input and followed Participation could have a direct cause and effect. If more tion. To clump 300 plus students into a week full of titillat­ up with a long piece on black fraternities. Other features blacks became involved with The Chronicle, the editorial ing articles does not do justice to the unique diversity of in the issue examined the status of black political, social content of the paper would change If more blacks were Duke's black student body. and cultural organizations. at WXDU, then more than two hours of "funk" music would Second, this singling out process usually is carried out The feedback was, for the most part, negative. The issue be played over our new FM radio station each week. If more by writers and researchers who do not understand the com­ was branded as being biased and stereotypical. I learned blacks were involved with the Chanticleer, then perhaps plexities of the black student body. This tends to make the all too quickly, albeit painfully, that a portion of Duke as letters denouncing the fact that only 10 pages of the latest coverage simplistic and stereotypical, and'in the end the disparate as the black student body does not like to be yearbook included blacks would disappear. I don't know stories really defeat the intended purpose of improving typecasted so easily. For the first time for many black the case over at Cable 13. Regardless, the implications are campus race relations. students, The Chronicle took the liberty of informing them endless. In 1968, the Kerner Commission report on racial and that they now belonged to a ^community." The issue is rooted in representation. All blacks through­ urban unrest stated that "the lack of blacks in decision­ I spent many hours and weeks trying to reason with my out American history have asked for is a fair shake At making capabilities limits coverage pertinent to them." critics. I felt alone and hurt because I did not understand Duke, on the eve of this upcoming series, the effort has This scenario graphically depicts the state of blacks at The what the many black students were attempting to say. I to be initiated from within the black student body - not Chronicle today as the series is being compiled. had failed miserably after being the only black contributed out. I feel this series could offer blacks an unique opportuni­ to the special edition. The challenge is there Our collegiate life here is an ongo­ ty to add a certain sensitivity to the content of the stories What is there to learn from all of this? ing experience And only our university and its students themselves. The situation as it stands is sad because it I have submitted several names to The Chronicle of in­ stand to benefit from a fairer, more realistic and represen- counters this untapped potential. If blacks would partici­ terested black students who would like to participate in tative portrayal of Duke "University. pate in this ambitious venture, then the series would have the series. I hope they will contribute in some shape or David Bowser is a Trinity senior. Page 8 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, February 2, 1984 Swedes developing 'newspaper' for the blind

By JOHANN RAPP An ordinary radio with a recording device picks up the Nevertheless, Rubenstein said, the project's sole purpose The Associated Press information, but anyone trying to listen in to the news­ now is to make newspapers available to the blind. STOCKHOLM, Sweden - A research team at a Gothen­ paper broadcast will be disappointed. All that is heard is Emanuelsson has been a part of the electronic newspaper burg University is developing a unique method for bring­ a nonsense crackle. project since it was based on Braille. He has had a voice ing current events to blind people - a newspaper that But when the subscriber wakes up and heads for break­ terminal set up at home for the second phase, recently talks. fast, he has the latest news at his disposal on a small disc started. The voice is not sensual. It's metallic and non-human, Switched on, the voice terminal to which the memory is Part of his enthusiasm stems from his high-tech job. He but it's understandable," said Kjell Emanuelsson. connected makes sounds of speech in accordance with the has been a software engineer at Goteborgsbank for 10 digital coding. years. And Emanuelsson, 33, a computer programmer who's A spokeswoman for the National Organization for Defec­ When he puts away his white cane on a hatrack in his been blind since he was born, said he was prepared to ac­ tive Vision said she was enthusiastic about the project. office every morning, he sits down in front of a specially cept such shortcomings. "This is the only way I have ac­ "Newspapers are a vital part of social life," said Christina equipped video display terminal. Figures on the view- cess to a whole newspaper on almost the same terms as Andersson. It's important [that the blind] take part in the screen are transformed into a raised pattern on a vibrating everybody else," he said. same information as others. Otherwise, one is easily iso­ plate, and he reads the the text with his fingers "almost As conceived by researchers at Chalmers Technical lated. This follows our policy of integrating the blind in as fast as a person with ordinary eyesight," he said. University, blind people connected* to the system will the community." Emanuelsson says the main problems for the talking receive daily news on a special terminal that transforms newspaper project are not technical but how to find a good the text into electronic speech at the push of a button. When the research project began in 1982, the idea was search system for information one is interested in. The idea behind the futuristic paper is surprisingly to have the home terminal translate the electronic news The ordinary reader skims a paper, he said. Being blind simple. into Braille. The plans were changed because only 2,000 is like being in total darkness with only a flashlight - Goteborgsposten, the morning newspaper that initiated of the 80,000 people with serious sight defects in Sweden concentration must be focused on one point at the time. the research project, already files its production into a know the Braille alphabet. large computer that changes the words into a digital Henryk Rubenstein, who heads the project at Gothen­ Developing a skim-reading system for the blind is a cen­ language of zeroes and ones. burg, said it could lead to other innovations, because tral goal of the project's second phase, which will be Once the talking newspaper is operational, the digital "theoretically any form of home terminal could be used." evaluated by the end of 1984. information will be transmitted, when the newspaper goes He suggested, for instance, that the transmitted signal By then the research group, assisted by Emanuelsson to press, over regular FM waves to receivers in subscrib­ could be used to print a newspaper at a subscriber's home, and four other blind people, hopes to have a functioning ing households, a million letters sent in two minutes. a true electronic newspaper. "talking newspaper."

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J 2 S3 35 36 " 39 •10 Shoe/Jeff MacNelly U P ! 4J NOW I SIT ME. DOWN TO EAT, 45 IFWIUEIORDWSOUL " TO KEEP. • 5? IF I SHOULD PIE BEFORE "" 57 " I WAKE,,.. 153 54 J P i HI 59 • • IM 63 56 y 68 L " . " 73 " Thursday, February 2, 1984 THE CHRONICLE Page 9 Open controversy? Reynolds' tobacco advertisements may re-ignite national controversy

By The Associated Press issue. WINSTON-SALEM - Officials of the The ads, which encourage smoking cour­ American Lung Association are ridiculing tesy and discourage smoking by the young, new commercials by R.J. Reynolds Tobacco have also drawn some skepticism by others Co. which say the dangers of smoking are connected with the tobacco industry. open to debate. Arthur Kirsch, a tobacco analyst with Charles Dahle, director of media relations Drexel Burnham Lambert in New York, for the American Cancer Society in New said he wasn't sure the campaign would York said Reynolds' statement that smok­ have its desired effect. ing remains an "open controversy" is "laugh­ "Cigarette manufacturers are under close able and ridiculous." scrutiny by everybody for whatever they do "What they're doing is investing several and chances are the advertisements do lit­ million dollars trying to convince their con­ tle in the way to deter a younger person stituency that there still is a controversy on from initiating the habit or continuing the this issue when, in fact, the controversy was habit," he said. settled years ago," he said. "I think it's an interesting move, and I cer­ Dahle and Karen Monaco, manager of tainly hope it's effective," said James C. smoking or health programs for the Ameri­ Bowling, senior vice president at Philip can Lung Association in New Tfork, said the Morris Inc., RJR's chief competitor. "I ad­ issue was settled with the first Surgeon mire the motivation that brought it about." General's report linking smoking to disease Joseph Adelson, a child psychologist at 20 years ago. the University of Michigan who evaluated Reynolds spokesman Nat Walker disa­ the ads for Reynolds, said the company greed. wanted to make sure the ads could not be "Because we are responsible industry, we interpreted as inducements to smoka do not say that smoking is good for people Adelson gave the campaign high marks nor do we say it is bad for people," he said. for credibility, but said, "I think it's going "The point is that no one really knows. But, to be very difficult to get kids to read any because there is a considerable controver­ advertising on this issue They're so inun­ sy, we believe that a decision to smoke or dated with communication that it's pro­ not to smoke ought to be made by mature bably going to be difficult to have any mass adults who have considered both sides of the effect."

Don't be shy, Don't be timid BILL BLASS COMES TO DUKE Chronicle classies know no limit In letting your true emotions shine (As long as you get it in on time!) • VALENTINE, BE MINE $2.50 for first 25 words .05 for each additional word DEADLINE: SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1984 3:00 p.m. (If you really love him/her, you'll be sure to get your ad in EARLY) PUBLISHED: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1984 Your Name _ Telephone _ FOR THE 1984 FASHION SYMPOSIUM! Signature Enclosed is my payment $ , Also attending will be Nina Hyde, fashion editor of The Washington Post and Geraldine ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID Stutz, president of Henri Bendel. PLEASE TYPE OR PRINT AD BELOW

Tuesday, February 7 9:30 a.m. Fuqua School of Business (main auditorium) DROP OFF IN BOX LABELED "CLASSIFIEDS" AT TOP OF STAIRS (3rd For Business Students and Faculty FLOOR FLOWERS BLDG.) OR MAIL IN TO: THE CHRONICLE 3:00 p.m. Reynolds Theater of Bryan Center VALENTINE CLASSIFIEDS P.O. BOX 46%, D.S. featuring Bill Blass designs and Japanese DURHAM, NC 27706 fashions DONT FORGET: ADS MUST BE PREPAID "•DEADLINE IS SUNDAY, FEB. 12, 3:00 P.M.*" Everyone is invited Theses, Dissertations, Term Female, nonsmoker, graduate Happy Birthday to you, Happy Papers, Reports, Etc. Fast, Ex­ student or professional to share Birthday to you, Happy 18th Bir­ cellent Service Satisfaction Gua­ a 2 bedroom Yorktowne apart­ thday, Debbie Rygorsky, Happy ranteed. Dorothy Messer, ment. Nicely furnished except Birthday to you! Love, All your 383-6980. your own room. $160 per month Trent 2 friends. Evelynne's Textype Services will plus half utilities and deposit. Alicia L. — hope that you feel bet­ prepare your resume, cover let­ Call Lynne 489-1312 evenings. ter soon. Keep your spirits up ters and envelopes to present Spring Break is coming up soon. your best image to prospective Wanted to Buy Love CB. employers. For an appointment BIG BRO: Happy 20th Birthday! please call 688-0258. Leontyne Price concert tickets: If Aren't you glad I'm back here to HAIRCUTS $4 up, Jim's Barber you don't want to go or will be out help you celebrate it ?! Enjoy your Shop, near Duke & VA at 614 of town, please sell me your day and go crazy! Loveya, UT Sis' Classifieds Trent Drive. Phone 286-9558, ticket. I need two. Call Julie at hours 8-5:30 Closed Mondays. 682-7726. Phi Delt Quiz #2: What three PROFESSIONAL TYPING — Ex- events occur once every four Page 10 February 2, 1984 Need a Jam box (Portable tape perienced in academic word pro­ years. Answer: Presidential elec­ player) for macho studs, to crank cessing, including papers, es­ tions, the Olympics, and MATT "Rocky" while pumping iron. says, reports, grant proposals, LAFFEY goes to the barber. Death to Michael Jackson Haters. resumes, and multiple letters. Steve 383-7620. RUSH COUNSELORS: Congratu­ Good prices, professional ser­ lations on a job very well done. 18- TO 30-YEAR-OLD MALES SALE! SALE! SALE! 40 to 60 per­ Announcements vice. Call Carolyn Rider, 286- Placement Services You were all superb! Your en­ WITH RESPIRATORY COLDS AND cent off of all winter merchan­ 0504. thusiasm and devotion made FLU are needed for a paid re­ dise! Great sweaters, belts, etc. rush a terrific success. We never Small community newspaper in SHAMBHALA TRAINING: The search study at the U.S. En­ for this spring. THE COLLEGE could have done it without you!! New York State has position open Way of the Warrior. Secular vironmental Protection Agency, SHOR just off of East Campus. Beth & Cathy. meditation tradition. Level 1. Chapel Hill. Subjects must be in for general assignment reporter. J.D. — I have a doveheart and "Discovery of Dignity and Con­ good general health. Smokers Details in 214 Flowers. Help Wanted three quailhearts for you — T.M. fidence". A program of talks, and non-smokers needed. Please Dear Miss February — Debbie R. meditation, discussion. Feb. 3-5. call Dr. Robert Chapman or Dr. Lost and Found To us (your ever-loving friends), Free introductory talk Friday, Feb. Robyn Tepper at 541-3804 (days) Part-time employment caring for you will always be the hottest! 3, S p.m. Episcopal Student or 942-3912 (nights). Please tell 2 young children in my home and LOST — DUKE SIGNET RING with Happy B-day! Love you dearly, Center. 405 Alexander Ave. your friends. helping with general housekeep­ M.H.C. AB '84 inside. If found Durham. Information: 286-1487. ing chores. Forest Hills — own please call 383-8128. RRT, LK, JW. DUKE IN NEW YORK ARTS PRO­ transportation. 489-7845. Lost — black, waist-length, mili­ Terry T, — Congratulation on BENCH AND BAR — Duke's Pre­ GRAM: a semester of study, liv­ Want to get involved with the tary-type jacket, flame pin on col­ becoming a ZTA! — Thanks for law Society is having a reception ing and working in New York City Capital Campaign for the Arts lar. Last seen at Phi Kap Party — the inspiration, support, (Hugs) for ANYONE INTERESTED. Come plus ARTS INTERNSHIPS! Impor­ and Sciences? We're looking for 1/28/84. Extreme sentimental and may this be the first Valen- by and meet Dean Wilson, Thurs­ tant Information Meeting: Mon­ students willing to go to their value — REWARD offered. Call tine's wish of the year. BTD. day. 5 pm. Broughton Parlor. day, Feb. 6, 4:45 p.m.. 120 East hometowns with campaign staff 684-7704. To the brothers of Sigma Chi — For those interested in living in a Duke Building. and talk to prospective donors the kings of East Campus You're Men's Selective Dorm on West Planning to wear a bikini during about Duke. If you are interested Lost — Gray Frank Shorter Warm- the greatest. We love you. Your next year; House CC Open Spring Break? Slim down, tone in working on this important pro­ up jacket. $30 REWARD for re­ little sisters from GA. M.D., L.G., House. Sat.. Feb. 4. After the up and look your best by working ject stop by th *SDU office in turn. No questions asked. Please H.H., M.M., A.N., C.P., I.S., L.T., Duke vs. Virginia Basketball out in Trent I Commons. Tues­ the Bryan Center or contact Art call 684-7913. Keep trying. Game. Any questions call 684- day/Thursday 5-6 p.m. 683-1545 Lawida at 684-6403. Smashing for birthdoys. 1 Goid earring found in front of Happy Birthday Gloompa! OYE 1861. FIRST CLASS FREE! get well Cahpel. Call 684-3811 to identify. VAY! Ytou're such a terrific person! $100- $500 weekly possible wishes, porties, or just for SPEND A- SEMESTER IN WASH­ A dictionary defined "fun and FOUND — Frisbee corner of Have the best birhtday ever and mailing circulars spare time. No Markham and Buchanan on the INGTON, D.C. ON THE relaxation" as spending Spring gimmicks. Free details Send self- remember the way of Enlighten- wall. Call 688-3689 to identify. DUKE/HOWARD EXCHANGE — Break sailing through the Ba­ addressed stamped envelope to: . A fellow Gloompa. find out more about this great hamas. Ask the Sailing Club for HESI. Box 261. Chapel Hill, NC Medical Services Go ahead — send Steve a classi­ opportunity at information meet­ more info. Meeting on Wed.-at 7 27514. Nationwide via Balloon ir fied. What would it be worth to ing: Thursday. Feb. 2. 4 p.m.. 229 p.m. in Soc.-Psy 136 or call Jon box you to see a Trinity senior smile Part-time waitress — Must work ABORTION: in a private OUTPA­ Allen. at 383-3107. CALL. 967-3430 again? 1 to 5 nights a week thru the TIENT facility in Chapel Hill. Cost: BLACK MEN AND WOMEN — Bo I loons & Tunes Ernie — to the most terrific FAC, FIELD HOCKEY CLUB — Prac­ summer. Hartmans Steak House, ' $175: over 12 weeks additional $45 will be paid to healthy non- the best TA, the most fantastic tices for UNC Indoor Tournament One of N.C. oldest and finest Downtown Carrboro charge. FEMALE STERILIZATION smokers, age 18-35. who com­ counselor, and absolutely the (Feb. 25th and 26th) are current­ steak houses. Ask for Jack Mark­ also available. Call 1-942-1335 plete an EPA breathing study on best friend — Happy 21sH! Luv, ly on Mondays and Wednesdays ham, 688-7639. for appointment. the UNC campus. Travet is reim­ on the outdoor basketball courts your girls, K and O. RS. — Karen, bursed. For more information ("bubble") above Cameron (up Crcn Personals we love you too. please call collect. 966-1253. steps and toward the Law Services Offered Monday-Fri day, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. School). Men and women need­ SKI NEARBY or refresh your ABORTION to 18 weeks. Private BICYCYLE RIDERS interested in ed. Club members not playing spirits by the fireside. No inter­ Join us for a demonstration pro­ and confidential GYN facility with Is it true you can buy jeeps for afternoon rides, weekend tours this spring p!ease return club- ruptions except those you want testing violence against women Saturday and evening appoint­ $44 through the U.S. Govern­ and (yes!) RACES, don't miss equipment. Questions? Frank M. at MOUNTAIN BROOK COTTAG­ as entertainment. Thursday, Feb. ments available. Pain medication tonight's CYCLIST LEAGUE meet­ 684-1796 or Aletta S. 684-0844. ment? Get the facts today! Call ES, the Getaway Place. $110 2. 6 p.m. in front of Judicial given. Free pregnancy test. ing. New members (especially J- BACK DOOR RECORDS — 25% (312) 742-1142, Ext. 5265. weekend for 2, $130 weekend for Building, downtown Durham. Chapel Hill — 942-0824. frosh) invited. Rm. Ill Soc.-Sci. or $1 OFF ALL LP's Creat Classi­ For sale: desk and chair, dresser, 4 (704) 586-4329. Sponsored by a coalition of con­ Tuxedo rentals — $25 — Present 7:45 pm. cal, Rock. Jazz. etc. 5,200 LP's, lamps, couch, mirrors, book­ cerned groups and N.O.W. For Duke student i.D. for this special WOMEN'S LACROSSE CLUB — Tapes, 45's. 136 E. Rosemary shelves call 493-7641. more information call 489-8058 rate. Not valid with any other anyone interested new and old Lower Level NCNB Plaza near or 471-1865 after 5 p.m. specials. Bernard's Formal Wear Driving for Spring Break? Buy a players important meeting to- Ram Theatres Chapel Hill. Mon.- GREEKS, dorms and clubs: CUS­ — 704 Ninth St. — One block Radar Detector for $100. 383- night 7 p.m.. Ill Soc.-Sci. Sat. 12-6 p.m. BUY — TRADE — 8671 late night or a.m. TOMIZED SPORTSWEAR, GLASS­ from East Campus — 286- We buy records: jazz — — SELL, 933-0019. _____ Dorm-sized refrigerator in EX­ WARE novelties. Upcoming FOR­ 3633. Reggae — Classical — Rock — MAL? Make sure there's favors. REMEMBER WHEN YOU NEEDED CELLENT condition. I moved off- New Wave — Humor — Spoken HIGHEST QUALITY. Lowest pric­ ADVISE? Now you can advice For a Valentine they'll never for­ campus and simply don't need it Word. Lps and 45s. Books/Re­ es. Full color catalog. Rush de­ prospective students by signing get . . . show your love with a anymore. Will sell to best offer. cords/ Comics, 215 North liveries. ORDERING'S EASY with up for Prospective Student Advis­ BELLYGRAM. BELLY DANCING is Call Leila at 286-7623. The Student Gregson (off Morgan). 683-3244. on-campus rep. 684-0664, ing at the Bryan Center Informa- also great for birthdays, con­ Roommate Wanted Susan and Wendy, Thanks for IMMEDIATELY!! Conservation tion Desk. _____ gratulations, parties, conven­ tions. Reasonable rates. Mila, making rush easier, and bid night Happy 18th Debbie R. — May Program OXFORD REUNION HIGH TABLE 682-7732. Roommate Wanted — Graduate so special! Love ya, A, L & M. your fortune come true cuz you — East Campus Ballroom. Feb. 9, or professional student prefer­ To that cute, blonde poodle from certainly deserve it. Love, Caro- - NATIONAL PARKS 6. You must sign up to authorize red. Nonsmoker. Lakewood area. the Sunshine State. See you at line. & FORESTS point deduction by noon. Tues. Fireplace, porch, yard. $97.50 the mixer? Wheres the Best Music this Feb. 7 outside 201 Canterbury or month plus 1/4 utilities. Available Happy 18th Debbie — I couldnt Weekend? Dorsey to Devo at - FISH & WILDLIFE 208 Epworth. Spread the word. March 1. Days 684-3120. nights have wished for a better room­ Brown House, Saturday 9 p.m. Be AREAS Pi Phi Pledges: Welcome to Pi Fine Japanese European 493-2635. mate. To posters, alarms, "I'm not There. - OTHER RESOURCE Phi! Meeting Thursday at 5 p.m. Auto Repair Housemate needed. Share quiet even halfway done!", fortune Steve really doesn't ask for in House A. Bear and Arrow's on­ 2704 Chapel Hill Blvd. house on Iredell St. with 2 grad cookies, all the you-know-whos, much. A safe place to sleep, an MANAGEMENT ly a week away! Get psyched! students. $133/month. Call Deb thin doors, mistletoe, and phone occasional warm meal and a AGENCIES Durham — 489-5800 or Dave 286-9741. bills! Love always, Marisa. classified. Have a heart. ADPis welcome our forty-one EXPENSE PAID fantastic pledges! Important INTERNSHIPS meeting for sisters and pledges 5:30 in 139 Soc.-Sci! Pledging Representative on Campus: ceremony with tempororary big Spectrum Thursday, February 2 sisters and pledges promptly at 5:30! Officer Elections and Initia­ Group Information Meetings DOWNUNDER: Dance to the tion ceremony will follow! Please Today First time parent of a child under at 2 and 3:30 p.m. sound of "Export A" Thurs., 9-12. bring checkbooks for sportswear. two, Parents Supporting Parents 309 Flowers Bldg. Free with Duke l.D is for you. Meetings Feb. 16- Apr. Sisters bring $3 for Godfathers) Spend a semester in WASHING­ TH ETAS: Pledges and Sisters Ice Contact Placement Office Finally, get psyched for our TON D.C. AT HOWARD UNIVERSI­ 26. On Thursdays from 9:30 to Cream Mixer. 10 p.m. Flowers 11:30 a.m. at Asbury United for more information beach mixer with Spe's at 9:30! TY — Informion Meeting: Thurs- Lounge. Meet in the CI. beforehand. day, Feb. 2, 4 p.m.. 229 Allen. Methodist Church. "Libel and Student Media" work­ S.A.L.S.A.: Important meeting, Hillel Shabbat dinner Friday. Feb. CENTRAL AMERICA — Slide talk shop. Friday at 3 p.m. 226 tonight, 7:30 p.m., 305 Foreign Perkins. Barbara Dill, former New 3 Service 6 p.m.. Dinner 6:45 by former State Department of­ Languages. Important! York Times attorney. p.m. Old Trinity Room. Sign up by Classified Rates ficial, recent Christian witness in Wed., Feb. 1. Chronicle Classifieds may be dropped off in the Nicaragua. Divinity School Stu- DUKE DANCE -84 — Student/ Faculty Annual Concert. 8:15 APO Bookfair: Want your money Classified Depository outside our offices on the 3rd dent Lounge, Thursday, 7:30 pm. Harold Evans will speak on "Free­ p.m. REYNOLDS THEATER. TIC­ or books back? Call 684-7585 or Floor of Flowers Bldg., or may be mailed to: Box 46% dom of the Press: A British Per­ KETS AT PAGE and door. 684-7212 to pick them up D.S., Durham, NC 27706. Prepayment is required. spective," Thursday,' Feb. 2, 4 General Hillel Bagel Brunch — Sunday Classifieds cannot be taken over the phone. Rates are: p.m., 301 Perkins Library. EPISCOPAL CHURCH, DUKE UN­ Feb. 5, 11 a.m. House R Bagels, WXDU News Staff Meeting — $2.50 per day for the first 25 words; $0.05 per IVERSITY — Eucharist Thursday, MODELS AND POTENTIAL MO­ Lox, the works! C'mon down y'all! time change: Thursday, 5:15, Duke in New York Artd Program, additional word per day. Discounts: 5 percent off for Feb 2nd, 5:15 p.m.. Memorial DELS! Delta Sigma Thetas First Schlitz Room. Chapel, Duke Chapel. Annual Fashion Show, Feb. 17. Fall 1984 information meeting — 3 consecutive insertions; 10 percent off for 5 WOMEN'S LACROSSE — meeting AEPhi's — Round Table. Thurs. 6 Auditions Thurs. and Fri., 1/26 Monday, February 6, Institute of consecutive insertions. Deadline: 1 p.m., one day prior tonight, 7 p.m., Ill Social p.m. in the U-Room. All are we- and 1/27, Mary Lou Williams the Arts, 120 East Duke Build- to date of insertion. Science. Center, 6-8 p.m. See you there! ing,4:45 p.m.

'. <.',.'. .>«•! . ..*.V... Mud-slinging dirties Olympics Sports NEW YORK - Higher, Faster, Stronger - that's the Olympic motto. But it's incomplete. Louder, Uglier, Phonier Page 11 February 2, 1984 - those words deserve equal billing. Dave Anderson In the snowy mountains of Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, this Women's Basketball week, athletes from more than 40 nations will be gather­ skiers and skaters. For the Summer Olympics, it would dis­ ing for the XIV Winter Olympic Games. When the Olym­ qualify virtually all of the world-class track-and-field Wake Forest 73, Duke 58 pic torch is lit a week from Wednesday during the open­ athletes as well as many, if not most, of those in other ing ceremony, Olympic politicians will proclaim the spirit sports. of the international good will generated by the occasion. Carl Lewis, the sprinter and long-jumper, is whispered Sports Quiz But already there is the reality of the international bad to have earned about $250,000 last year. If he were to win will between the United States and Canada in a border four gold medals in Los Angeles, the "appearance" money skirmish involving the eligibility of two U.S. Olympic he could command would be limitless. The sports fans were out in force last week, and hockey gold medalists in 1980 in relation to three poten­ Good for Lewis and any other Olympian who can turn the random drawing went into effect after perfect tial Canadian Olympic hockey players this year. gold medals into dollars. The quarrel here is not with entries arrived from Allen Fowlkes, Doug Allen, The day before the opening ceremony, the United States Lewis or any other Olympian making money. The quar­ Jon Kleinberg, Mike Yen, Trip Johnson, Bill will oppose Canada in hockey. By then, the bad will might rel is with the IOC for pretending that an Olympian is Mallon, John Molleur, D.H. Malcom, Michael be messier than it has been ever since Alan Eagleson, the not making money from what is really a "full-time job," Leighton, Bob Motsay, Rob Moran, and Joe Canadian attorney who is the mad hatter of hockey, recent­ for pretending that an athlete remains an "amateur" as Crawford. Their answers were: 1. Pele wore #10. ly questioned the 1980 eligibility of Ken Morrow, now with long as his or her prize-money is kept "in trust" by the na­ 2. Red Grange wore #77. 3. Bobby Orr wore #4. the Islanders, and Mike Eruzione, now a TV analyst. tional federation in that sport. 4. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar wore #33. 5. Babe Ruth Eagleson has already won Sarajevo's first event: mud- Open the Olympics, let anybody compete. For two rea­ wore #3. The fates favored Rob Moran, and he will sons. One, to embellish the quality of the competition. Two, be the recipient of a six-pack of American brews. But the real issue is not whether Morrow or Eruzione if there are no rules restricting eligibility, nobody will be were "amateurs" under the Olympic code. The real issue winking at the rules, nobody will be questioning the rules This week the Sports Quiz begins to get psyeh- is that the International Olympic Committee still hasn't as Eagleson is now. ed for Sarajevo, hangout of luminaries like Gabriel recognized that there are very few, if any, real amateurs Eagleson should be questioning himself more often. He Princep and Archduke Ferdinand. If you know in today's world. has more hats than most haberdashers. He's the executive your ice and snow, get your answers to the ''Sports' Sure, all those people you see jogging in the streets are director of the National Hockey League Players Associa­ box in the Chronicle office on the third floor of amateurs. So are the people playing softball or touch- tion; he's an agent for some NHL players; he's often describ­ Flowers building to win a six-pack. football in the park, or golf or tennis, or skiing on week­ ed as "Canada's leading international hockey negotiator" 1. Who won the downhill, slalom, and giant ends, or whatever else people do in perspiring for the sheer for its Olympic and Canada Cup teams. When he recent­ slalom in one Olympics? enjoyment of it. But in serious Olympic competition now, ly talked of putting three players who had signed NHL there are no amateurs, no matter how the athletes are contracts (but had not played 10 games in the NHL) on 2. How did Tai Babalonia and Randy Gardner identified. Canada's Olympic team, the Amateur Hockey Association finish the last time they participated in the In its current task of rewriting the Olympic charter, the of the United States understandably objected. Olympics? IOC has an opportunity to put reality into what it calls The three were Mark Morrison, a center who played nine 3. What Liechtenstein family won as many the Olympic movement. But in recent centuries, melting games for the New York Rangers two years ago; Dan Wood, medals in Alpine skiing as any nation at Lake glaciers have moved faster than the Olympic movement. a right wing signed by the St. Louis Blues, and Mario Placid? "What we insist on," says Juan Antonio Samaranch of Gosselin, a goaltender signed by the Quebec Nordiques. 4. What was the last Olympic ice hockey team Spain, the IOC president, "is that the athlete does not Those three names were quickly lost in the confusion to go through the Games undefeated? make sport his full-time job and that he is controlled by when Eagleson charged that Morrow had signed an Island­ 5. Who swept the slalom events at the 1980 the international federation responsible for his sport." er contract before the 1980 Olympics at Lake Placid, and Winter Olympics? If the IOC were to enforce that phrase about an athlete that Eruzione had earned more than $10,000 with the Toledo Gold Diggers of the International League during By PETE HIGGINS not making sport a "full-time job," it would disqualify vir­ tually all those from Communist nations, and it would dis­ qualify-all of the hockey teams and all of the world-class See OLYMPIANS on page 12 Wrestlers merit respect Some bogus ideas and comments on a slow sports day (Ground Hog Day, in fact), with most humble apologies to BCG: Let's start today's lesson by taking a few Charley Scher minutes to discuss a subject near and dear to the collective hearts of The Chronicle - Rock 'n' Roll" Presley ... On the Wake professional wrestling. When is America go­ Forest front, many knowledgeable fans are ing to wake up and realize that the men of wondering why coach Carl Tacy parts his this sport are the closest thing to Greek hair at his right ear. It's original, Carl, to gods in modern society? say the least.. . - Anyone notice You tell me what constitutes a great that Virginia's fall from grace coincided athlete - some wimpy 280-pound defensive with the graduation of all-everything for­ lineman with a name like Lyle Alzado or ward Craig Robinson? . . . Where else but a finely honed 450-pound stud wrestler who Clemson can they replace an athlete the eats raw liver and is known as "Abdullah caliber of Milan Belich with an Ed Bleynat? the Butcher." Think about it. Pickin' and grinnin' dept. We were all It is also a documented fact that 7-4, saddened by the untimely demise of Junior 500-pound grappling behemoth Andre the Samples (BR-549) earlier this year. The Giant once consumed 112 beers in an even­ portly, slow-talkin' comedian extraordinaire ing. Can a sniveling, pencil-neck geek like made "Hee Haw" what it is today. What this Dick Butkus drink that much in a week? all has to do with sports, I don't know, but I doubt it. These are not mere mortals we're rumor has it that Lulu Roman has become dealing with here. Gods, I tell you, modern despondent over the loss of her biggest, Greek gods, in our very midst. bestest buddy and has gained another 25 But do we pay homage to these lengen- pounds.. . . If you ever drive to Knoxville, dary demi-gods who don the tights and Tenn., and need overnight lodging, don't wrestle professionally? No. Instead, many miss Archie Campbell's Hee Haw Village. misinformed people scoff at wrestling and It's a motel that looks like a motel in Korn- claim that it's fake, field County would. This is a real place - Archie's mug is on the sign. C'mon now, children. If professional wrest­ ling wasn't real, don't you think that the Thank you, Raycom dept. How many F.C.C. would keep the sport off the airwaves? of you were tearing your hair out as David Wouldn't Congress investigate professional Henderson stepped to the free throw line rasslin' for defrauding the public? Have with no time left against Georgia Tech Mon­ these sort of things ever happened? No, they day night - and you couldn't see it? Thanks haven't. Case closed. to Raycom, originators of the ever-popular Sports less important than pro wrestl­ "Season Ticket," ACC fans missed the best ing dept. Some observations about ACC conference game of the season thus far. basketball. . . Did you know that, despite Well, at least we had the Duke Capitol rumors to the contrary, none of the follow­ Sports radio team to keep us thoroughly ing people ever played basketball for an confused, if not amused. ACC school: Larry "Bud" Melman, Irving That's all for now. As Elvis would say, un­ SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE R. Levine, Leonard Nimoy, Reuben Askew, til we meet again, may God bless you. Ay- 450-pound hulks like Abdullah the Butcher (right) are common-place In professional Reuben Kihcaid arid Elvis "the King of dios. wrestling. Page 12 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, February 2, 1984 Olympians are not true amateurs TarHeels win OLYMPIANS from page 11 Tbrrey, the Islanders' executive vice president, "but I assure By The Associated Press you that Ken Morrow did not sign a contract until after the 1978-79 season. the Olympics." GREENSBORO - Reserve guard Buzz Peterson As evidence, Eagleson cited "One Goal," a new book by Despite his salary the previous season, Eruzione was con­ scored a career high 19 points to lead top-ranked and John Powers and Art Kaminisky, a chronicle of the 1980 sidered an Olympic "amateur" because the International unbeaten North Carolina to a 97-75 victory over Clem­ gold-medal U.S. team. Art Kaminsky, an attorney, was the League is considered an "amateur" league. The captain of son in an Atlantic Coast Conference basketball game agent for Morrow in his negotiations with the Islanders, the 1980 Olympic team chose to stop competing after the Wednesday night. as well as for several other Olympians who joined NHL "miracle" of Lake Placid; he's now a TV analyst for the New Michael Jordan also scored 19 points and Sam Perk­ teams. Jersey Devils and will be an Olympic analyst for ABC at ins scored 18 points as the Tar Heels won their 18th straight game and eighth ACC encounter. In the book, Kaminisky recounts how he obtained in­ Sarajevo. surance for Morrow against disability in the Olympics, now In trying to put three NHL signees on Canada's Olym­ Peterson, a 6-foot-4 junior, was splitting time with understood to be $250,000, based on the Islanders' offer. pic team, Eagleson is using the NHL definition that an Steve Hale, both of whom are sharing point guard duties All the U.S. hockey players were insured, he says, from "amateur" is any player who has not played 10 games in in the absence of injured freshman Kenny Smith, who $25,000 up for disability. Morrow also had a firm offer from the NHL - not the Olympic definition. broke his left wrist last Sunday against Louisiana State the Islanders before the Olympics began. Wouldn't it be simpler and better if there were no eligi­ "So Morrow signed," Powers and Kaminsky wrote in the bility definitions for the Olympics, if all an athlete had Around the ACC book. to do was declare his desire to compete? It might even Eagleson took that to mean that Morrow had signed with generate some international good will. Shooting 39 percent from the field prior to the game, the Islanders before, the Olympics, but Kaminsky says it Dave Anderson's column is syndicated by the New York Peterson hit nine of 12 field goal attempts, His previous meant that Morrow'signed" to play for the Olympic team. Times best was 18 points in a victory over LSU last season. Olympic players sign an Olympic form stipulating that North Carolina jumped to an 8-0 lead and pulled away they have neither signed a pro contract nor registered from the Tigers. Clemson finally reached double figures anywhere as a pro player. with 10 minutes gone in the first half, but trailed 52-30 "Yes, we negotiated before the 1980 Olympics," says Bill at intermission. The Tar Heels shot 62 percent from the field in the second half and finished at 68 percent on 39 of 57 at­ tempts Clemson shot 51.5 percent on 35 of 68 attempt from the floor. Murray Jarman led Clemson, 11-7 and 2-5, with 15 points Anthony Jenkins had 14 points and Chris PAM-A-RAMA Michael and Warren Wallace had 12 apiece for the Beauty Salon Tigers. SPECIAL |% COLOR PRINTING for Duke Students & Employees WORKSHOP Shampoo & Set $10.00 Blow Wave & Curl $12.00 Saturday 9:30-11:30, February 4, Jimmy ATTENTION Cold Wave (Jeri) Curl $45.00 Perm $29.00 Crawford, teacher. The workshop will cover Hair Cut $ 8.00 print making using Kodak Ektaflex materials INDEPENDENTS: and make cost and quality comparisons with Coupon Good thru April 30, 1984 other color printing processes Tuition: $16.00 Mirecourt House, a socially ^ ^ •—• 1218 Fayetteville St. active commitment dorm Aji«£5«-^»* 683-2399 You must PRE-REGISTER. Please register at the Duke University Union Craft Center in Eden's Quad, will hold ^ "• ^PAM-A-RAMA located on the lower level of the Bryan Center, its annual OPEN HOUSE on hours Monday-Thurday 11 tun. to 10 p.m. and Friday, 11 a.rn.-5 pjn. For more informa­ Sunday, February 5, from tion please call 684-2532. 2 to 4 p.m. Applications ____W__\ will be accepted only at DUKE this time.

DANCE '84 We at STUDIO ONE are happy to welcome Marti Bishop to our staff of hair designers. Marti would like to invite all of her clients to visit her at STUDIO ONE. For a limited time SAVE Student /Faculty $3.00 on any haircut with Marti, regularly $10.00, NOW $7.00. Concert Offer expires 1-31-84. GENERAL INTEREST THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 MEETING AND FRIDAY FEBRUARY 3 8:15 p.m. and Reynolds Theater AUDITIONS Bryan University Center I Duke University Tickets Available at Page Box Office for S3.00 ($4.00 at door) I Students: $1.50 ($3.50 at door) KARAMU'S SPRING SPONSORED BY THE INSTITUTE OF THE ARTS PRODUCTION OF [ENEN!D YOUR WASH DAY BLUESi AT | Don't Bother Me • THE CLEANERS! • 1 I Can't Cope WASH, DRY & FOLD by Micki Grant UP TO 20 lbs. FOR $5.00 (Additional Pounds at Normal 50«/lb.) Unisex Feburary 6 and 7, 1984 | 2 locations to serve you Haif MLW Center for Black Culture j Parkway Plaza, Durham Dutch Village, Butner I Design 02 Union 5:00 p.m. OnW* 7 a.m.-10 p.m. M-F 7 a.m.-9 p.m. M-Sat | (row Noon-10 p.m. Sun Noon-9 p.m. Sun | bto<*s •a(M>uS Come prepared to dance and sing! 489-1752 528-0811r I Coupon Must Accompany Incoming Ordeder 1 We also need musicians: piano, 1200' 8 •WflO-' phone - 1 (DC) M.1- EXPIRES FEB. 29, 1984 bass, drums TheCr ronicle's weekly entertainment supp ement

Thursday, February 2, 1984 Page 2 Thursday, February 2, 1984 'Silkwood': fine story and great acting

By GREGORY M. SMITH But when she is contaminated by radiation, she realizes When people think of Meryl Streep, they usually think just how vulnerable and ignorant she's been. Karen starts of her versatility, her ability to switch accents, movements, reading and working through her union for safer condi­ iand personalities seemingly at will. Although I do admire tions. This flighty young person becomes a dedicated the acting technique that gives Streep this variety, I'm reformer, and she remains dedicated even when her lover even more impressed by the common denominator she leaves. She evolves into a strong, inquisitive woman who brings to all her roles. She specializes in the vulnerable sometimes frightens her old friends away with her firm heroine, bringing all her emotions to the surface so we will. After Karen begins her fight with the plant manage­ can clearly see her pain. ment, she's contaminated by radiation again, requiring I Streep's heroines can be hurt, and they're usually hurt a vicious scrubbing in a decontamination shower. When badly. Against this background of vulnerability, any she goes to meet a reporter (supposedly to expose the com­ heroic actions seem even braver and more moving. We ad­ pany's illegal tampering of records), she is killed in a mire Streep's heroines more because we can see the fear mysterious car accident. and pain they have to overcome to do anything brave As you might expect, "Silkwood" focuses on its title So it seems appropriate that Meryl Streep has the title character. Although Streep doesn't reach the acting role in the new film "Silkwood". Karen Silkwood doesn't heights of "Sophie's Choice" (I doubt she will ever get a really consider the dangers of working in a plutonium better role than that ultimate sufferer, Sophie), her per­ plant. She does her job as if it were a typical factory job. formance is entrancing. Streep's gawky movemets are She trades dirty jokes and stories with her fellow workers, perfectly modeled to reveal Karen's restless energy. It's snitches food at breaks, and comes in late a lot. She's the a joy just to watch her walk with that half-swagger, half- same not-too-responsible person at home where she lives casual walk. • • 0 with her lover Drew (Kurt Russell) and friend Dolly Once Nichols gets us inside the plant, he combines SPECIAL TO R&R [ (). See SILKWOOD on page 8 Kurt Russell, Meryl Streep and Cher in "Silkwood"

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DC A FINE CLOTHING TRADITION FOR YOUNG MEN AND LADIES OF ALL AGES Open Tues.-Fri. 10-6 - Sat. 9-5 1 806.W,,Ma(nSt,..- .,,,,,,. ,,682,0138 I jj*MjMSj'j-j-jvxr*ffr.r-r.rjr**j:r.t.tt*nrt*ttri>f Thursday, February 2, 1984 Pretenders fly with ''

By RICK HEYMAN . Hynde is tensly gripping her , pick in hand, and clear. "I hurt you, cause you hurt me - so I HURT \ are back. with her wedding ring visible. The picture vividly depicts YOU" feels like a right to the jaw. Despite the death of two of the band's founding members the determination, maturity and driving force behind "" - a real gem - sounds \ that put the Pretenders' future in question, their new "Learning to Crawl". something like Sam Cooke's early '60s hit "Chain Gang" j release, "Learning to Crawl" is by far their best to date. One of the most gratifying aspects of "Learning to done with a Brydsesque ringing guitar backdrop. Billy. Although details are somewhat cloudy, bass player Pete Crawl" is that it proves, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that Bremner, former memher, provides the nimble Farndon quit the group in early June, 1982. a woman can front a band as well as any man. Rock tends guitar solo that makes this song distinctive. "Back on the j James Honeyman-Scott died a few days later, apparently to be very male chauvanistic, and Hynde avoids the Chain Gang" is lighter, like Hynde's "Kid" on the first from a cocaine overdose Farndon, preparing to set up a manipulative traps that most women in rock fall into. She album, than most of the other cuts, and thus provides! new band with ex-Clash drummer Topper Headon, died is a major talent and approaches her music as such; her some excellent contrast to the real rockers. of a drug overdose ten months later. sexuality is no more a selling point or attention getter "Show Me" and "Thumbalina" are rather surprising Only guitarist and singer , the leader than, say, Mick Jagger's. lyrically, compared to the cynical context of the album: and brains of the group, and drummer , Which leads us to the music itself. "Learning to Crawl" both are wide-eyed, optimistic songs. The dose of optimism its brawn, remained. These two entered the studio later is a powerful album, to say the least. is much appreciated, for the cynical "" that fall and, with the aid of a couple well known studio "Middle of the Road" starts the album out with a crack. follows. Echoing Joni Mitchell's CBig Yellow Taxi") mus­ musicians, cut the marvelous "Back on the Chain Gang" Most surprising, however, is that for a song of such sting­ ing that "They paved paradise and put up a parking lot" and the bluesy "My City Was Gone," both of which appear ing intensity, the words are socially significant. "Middle Hynde sings "I went back to Ohio/But my city was gone/ on the new LP. of the Road" is a condemnation of the self-righteous, un­ All my favorite places/Reduced to parking spaces/Way to Yet, instead of rushing forward, Hynde and Chambers caring power elite, decrying Tat cats with diamond rings go Ohio." took their time auditioning replacements. In the mean­ and silk suits": "When you own a chunk of the bloody "Learning to Crawl" is an awsome demonstration of time, Hynde married ' Ray Davies and gave Third World, the babies just come with the scenery." Chrissie Hynde's talents as a composer, singer, rhythm birth to a son. Guitarist Robbie Mcintosh and bassist "Time of the Avenger" and "I Hurt You" are two more guitarist, and band leader. The Pretenders are indeed eventually were tabbed, the band jelled, hard hitters. "Time" concerns itself with mid-life anxiety back, and with a force and determination matched only and the striking "Learning to Crawl" resulted. about vitality slipping away: "Time - one more vodka and by U2. In "Thin Line Between Love and Hate," Hynde Just as the cover to Bruce Springsteen's "Nebraska" con­ lime/IVy to paralyze that tiny tick-tick-tick." "T Hurt You" sings "You couldn't believe a girl could do something like veyed the stark tone of the record inside, the back cover spits venom. Though the vocals are heavily processed this/You didn't think a girl had the nerve/But here you of "Learning to Crawl" captures the feeling of the this are/I guess actions speak louder than words." Hynde has through reverb and echo, the chorus comes through loud the nerve, the grit, the talent, and the band to make the rock world listen up. I'd be surprised to see a more power­ ful, diverse, mature album hit the stores this year than "Learning to Crawl." Astronomers predict that Thursday night, February 2, precisely between the hours of 6 and 10, stellar conditions will produce the most spectacular savings seen on earth in a long, long time... Don't miss it! ^=3 ONE Cjaimtum INlLrrll O Northgate Mall STAND Thursday, February 2 5/TLLJI 6 pm-10 pm ALL FALL and WINTER Separates, Dresses and Shoes Have Been REDUCED 50%-70% All Sales Final! 286-7208

10 MORE EXCUSES TO GO TO yrrfswcrfoj.

1. It is Thursday, after all. 2. They still serve beer lit chilled mugs » pitchers. 3. You'll just go over for a quick beer ... 4. You simply have to have a good steak and cheese for lunch. 5. You really could use a bloody mary for that hangover. 6. Thursday nights are never very good for studying, anyway. 7. They've got perfect tables for "quarters". 8. You'll be able to do the whole paper over the weekend, anyway. 9. Prom 8-11, mixed drinks are $1 OrT. 10. If you bring in this ad, they'll give you a free pitcher with a large pizza. / KeepAnEyeOnUs...Ybu li UKe What You See OPEN Mon.-Sat.. 11 A.H.-l A.M. • 493-7797 (493-7790 for takeouts) Lakcwood Shopping Center, Durham Page 4 Thursday, Februai Triangle writers demonstrate

By GREGORY KIEZ Mobility is a characteristic associated with man in the 1980s Modern literature reflects that transiency. "What we are seeing," said Reynolds Price, Duke English pro­ fessor and novelist, is "an up-ended population . . . and movement from one state to the next. A constant theme in America is that of motion and flight." Because the Triangle literary community is diverse and constantly changing, the writing emerging from this area tends to reflect a personal, rather than regional, consciousness. Now the Durham Public Library is offering the public an opportunity to experience the Triangle's literary diversity. According to poet and Duke professor James Ap­ plewhite, "All the arts are . . . more dispersed across the landscape of America than was once the case" Price said the high mobility of the Triangle population reflects the restlessness which has become an American national trait. This restlessness is both "a great virtue and a tragic flaw," Price said. People need the stability of place as a "constant against which you look at the shifting nature of life." The impetus for the Writers Series came from writer Dick Krawiec, who has been working on his own fiction in Durham since August. "When I arrived [in Durham}, I was amazed by the abun­ Writer Dick Krawiec organized the Friends of the Library Wr dance of good writers in the area," Krawiec said. "I had noticed few readings, and since I had the time to put some­ transience Krawiec arrived in Durham this August and thing into the community, I decided I would like to Petroski moved here in 1980. Only two of the seven writers in t organize the Writers Series" in the Series - James Applewhite and Mary Mebane - A Except for Lee Smith, two-time winner of the O. Henry were raised in North Carolina. coll, Award for Short Stories "we have tried to stay away from The question arises, then, about the importance of place foci: very well established writers" Krawiec said. The series - especially Durham and North Carolina - in the prose She is intended to provide exposure for writers who do not yet and poetry presented at the Writers Series. altr. enjoy strong national reputations URSULA WERNER/R&R Durham is a central concern for author Mebane, who ofle Poet James Applewhite Krawiec wanted the series to be an integrative force for reads on April 15. In her autobiographies, Mebane ad­ N the Durham community, so he consciously kept the series dresses the impact of Durham on her life during the '40s Car independent of Duke University. "Most of the arts [in and '50s, when she faced what she considered a double Peti 'The fan inhales one continuous breath: through Durham] come out of Duke," he said. "It's a positive thing burden: being a woman and a black. blia . . . Durham itself can do something — it doesn't have This upstairs room I am lying awake in, foreseeing the Applewhite, who grew up in eastern North Carolina, tiOTl journey. to wait for Duke." said he faces the problem of "the double gift and burden ft This creek, this street, this one row of houses, diagram Krawiec said Durham residents share his enthusiasm. deriving from the colloquial speech of my childhood. . . . earn Local merchants are providing refreshments he said, and There is an English voice poetry is in and a North Caroli­ freij Town, less than one quarter of the 200 attendants to Lee Smith's nian voice my early experience is in." star January reading, was drawn from Duke As simple as the world As air and the light. Old In his most recent poem, "Greene County: A Pastoral," Pc birthplace 'It was an excellent turnout," Krawiec said. "People Applewhite attempts to meld the two voices by bringing [his Tomorrow we'll go with the current, canoe around seemed incredibly enthusiastic about the whole series" the language and landscape of an eastern N.C. county to cenl snags — Short story writer and Duke instructor Catherine the highly conventional pastoral form of poetry. By us­ Petroski said, "I think we have a rather cooperative and ing the form in this way, he hopes to focus his own emo­ T As I guide my son through the thicket of childhood — open community of writers here. There's a sort of tional views and to regenerate the form he has inherited. Sm Past moccasins uglier than the Biblical serpent camaraderie" Durham's climate and libraries she said, Joe Ashby Porter and Catherine Petroski, who read on tori Passion-flowers as in Rousseau's jungles. as well as the presence of noted novelist Price attract other February 19, are from Kentucky and St. Louis, respective­ iB, writers ly. Porter's most recently published collection, "The Ken­ ana Price said, however, that while writers in the area "do From "Foreseeing the Journey" tucky Stories" was nominated for the 1983 Pulitzer Prize Ken know each other, [there's] not really a community." Setting is an important starting point for Porter. Visits T. By James Applewhite Perhaps this community - that of Durham's writers and to Quebec City and to an island provided the germs for Strt poets - defies easy characterization because of its own two of his novels. Porter recently completed a novel set mis The Travel Center 905 W. Main Street PLAN NOW FOR HOLIDAY AND SPRING BREAKS! BRIGHTLEAF SQUARE Space is Limited and Prices are Subject to Change M-F 9-5 682-OT8 Atlanta, QA $181 • Boston, MA $158 • Charlotte, NC $70 • Chicago, IL $217 • Cleveland, OH $170 • Dallas, Sat. 124 6831512 TX $299 • Denver, CO $278 • Ft. Lauderdale, FL $249 • Houston, TX $299 • Knoxville, TN $98 • Las Vegas, NV $298 • Los Angeles, CA $318 • Nashville, TN $209 • New Orleans, LA $249 • New York, NY $118 • Center. . .For Your Orlando, FL $198 • Philadelphia, PA $110 • Phoenix, AZ $278 • Pittsburg, PA $195 • Salt Lake City, UT $349 Every Travel Need • San Francisco, CA $318 • Seattle, WA $318 • Tampa, FL $275 • Washington, D.C. $96 Certain Restrictions Apply! Summer Abroad Discount Rates based on per round trip ticketing from RDU WHITE STAR JR. Package Available We Have Discount Airfares To All Destinations Corner Cole Mill and:Hillsborough Road LONDON $339 (Air Only) HAWAII $479 JAMAICA $319 (3 nights) The Homestyle Laundry-mat Offers: PARIS $399 (Air Only) ROME $499 BAHAMAS $199 (3 nights) • 40 homestyle • 16 double load washers RIO $479 ACAPULCO $499 ATHENS $629 washers & dryers • Trained attendant on • 4 giant washers duty 7 days a week Vacation Packages Include Roundtrip Airfare, 7 Nights Hotel and Various Departure Cities • 45C/lb. wash/dry/fold Color TV • Video Games • Air Conditioned First International Travel Inc­ FRONT DOOR PARKING us NORTH GREGSON STREET- DURHAM, NC 27701 • (919)683-8771 Mon-Sat 7 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Sun 7:30 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Hours-Mon.-Frt. 8:30-5:30 Sat. 11-3:00 Page 5 j their regional accent

Joe AsUy Porter

URSULA WERNER/R&R ry Writers Series.

amid the political and cultural ferment of French Canada in the 1970a Petroski will read from her award-winning short story collection, "Gravity and Other Stories" At present, Petroski focuses on the problems of theme and voice in her writing. She is moving towards longer forms of fiction, she said, although she enjoys the flexibility and ease of adjustment - offered by the short story format. 'Carefully and in some desperation she had URSULA WERNER/R&ft Neither Petroski nor Porter believes living in North estimated the expenses of raising one child Writer Catherine Petroski Carolina decreases a writer's chances of being published. and she held to her plans regardless of facts Petroski, who does not have an agent, said life in a pu­ blishing center such as New York might prove "a distrac­ as they were She could have dispatched one 'All inhabitants are fed, all dishes are done She does tion or frustration." of them with impunity but her solution was her best to have them live in a clock of a house All floors Petroski said location is less important for writers be­ less direct, more imaginative and perhaps are waxed, surfaces free of dust, offspring sleeping or cause, unlike visual media artists, they do not have to kinder. She simply recognized the existence of feigning sleep beds otherwise made to be unmade to freight unwieldy paintings from place to place. A 20-cent each on alternate days. Every other day each be made The clothing is clean, insofar as that is possi­ stamp provides unlimited access. lived a normal life downstairs with her while Porter has had "good luck getting an agent and having ble Each day the dirty laundry descends to the base­ [his] work placed." He said living far from major publishing upstairs his brother lay in the small rear ment via the chute. The next day these soiled items rise centers has caused no problems for him. bedroom ignored She would interchange from the earth as if lighter than air, seeking their them in the early morning when they were rightful places, defying gravity, blasted off by chlorines The Writers Series began January 15 with novelist Lee still asleep and when she herself was as it Smith and continues as follows: February 19, short story and phosphates. writers Joe Ashby Porter and Catherine Petroski; March were insufficiently conscious of what was She notes that man measures his advancement by his IS, novelist David Guy; April 15, novelist Mary Mebane; happening.' ability to defy the laws of nature' and on May 20, poets James Applewhite and Richard Kenney. From In the Mind's Eye" in The Kentucky The Durham County Library is on Roxboro at Main Stories From "Gravity" in Gravity and Other Stories Street, a twenty-five minute walk from East Campus Ad­ By Joe Ashby Porter By Catherine Petroski mission and refreshments are free

UNC YEAR-AT-MONTPELLIER HUNAM

A Year-abroad program of studies at the Universite de Montpellier, CHINESE France. Classes from September through June Open to majors and non-majors with a good knowledge of French. Full academic credit. Intensive language course in September. RESTAURANT Estimated cost (includes fees, lodging, meals for 10 months and round trip transportation); modest (dormitory)—S4635, moderate serving (town)—S5580. Lunch and Dinner Daily For information and applications, write to: Director, UNC Year-at-Montpellier '2.79 Lunch Specials. 239 Dey Hall (Includes most entrees plus your choice of soup and rice) Application deadline: University of North Carolina March 1 Chapel Hill, N.C 27514 BEER and WINE Now Available 688-2120 INFORMATIONAL MEETING, Thursday, February 2, 1984 3:30-5:00 p.m. Dey Hall-Toy Lounge 910 W. Main St., Durham UNC Campus - Chapel Hill Parking at all Brightleaf Square Lots 919-962-0154 Eat in or take out« Open 7 days a week ———^— Thursday, February 2, 1984 'Gosper mixes soaring music and faith

By JAMES JEFFREY PAUL film's subjects is enhanced by the precision of its composi­ The key ingredient to "Gospel's" success is, as stated Filming so immediate an event as a live concert entails, tions and the balanced restraint of its montage. previously, its performers, who embody the overflowing for obvious reasons, great risks. The event's greatest at­ In addition, and fortunately, Levick and Ritzenburg con­ passion born of sincerity, love of one's art, and belief in tribute, its immediacy, is irretrievably lost; to make mat­ fine the scrutiny of their cameras to the performers them­ one's message. All are worthy of notice, but two deserve ters worse the filmmaker called upon to record the event selves; shots of the audience are used sparsely, and wise­ special mention. The beautiful and charismatic Clark is faced with two equally destructive choices. ly. However, the audience as a whole, and two of its num­ Sisters turn "Is My Living in Vain" into an anguished On the one hand, fearful of imposing his personal vi­ ber in particular, do provide one of the film's highlights: questioning of the worth of persevering that becomes a sion on a communal event, he can simply and disinterest­ as James Hawkins leads the audience in "Hallelujah joyous affirmation of Life and the reality of salvation. And edly record that event, resulting in a visual bore; while (What A Friend We Have in Jesus)," and as the quiet Durham resident Shirley Caesar gives a performance on the other hand, seized by a determination to make this reverberations of the song fill the darkened auditorium, startling in the aggressiveness of its total conviction and simple event wildly cinematic, the filmmaker can "jazz Levick and Ritzenberg provide a succession of shots of the wilting in its poignancy. Ceasar does not gently serenade up" his record of the concert with flashy editing and a diz­ audience as they accompany Hawkins, including a shot her audience but she grabs it by the shoulders and half zying array of camera angles, destroying the power of the of a young mother clutching her child as she quietly sings sings, half loudly proclaims her message to it - a message, event through aesthetic overkill. along her eyes closed - a moment as heartbreakingly like her performance, transcendant and almost boastful To make such an immediate, communal event aesthe­ lovely as the song itself. in its unrestrained joy; like the movie itself. tically interesting while remaining faithful to its special qualities is no easy task. This is all the more reason, then, to celebrate the achievement of "Gospel," the filmed record of a June, 1981 gospel concert held in Oakland, Califor­ nia. Currently playing at the Carolina Theater, "Gospel" is a miraculous blending of a live event and the cinema, CAT'S CRADLE a truly uplifting film as galvanic and exultant as the music it showcases. While most of the credit for the power of "Gospel" must go to its wonderful cast of performers - the Mighty Clouds of Joy, Shirley Caesar, Walter Hawkins and the Family, the Clark Sisters, and James Cleveland - directors David 3EO W. FRANKLIN ST. Levick and Frederick Ritzenburg and editor Glenn Farr must be commended for the film's effortless visual flow. CHAPEL HILL, N.C. Their compositional style and sense of rhythm are impec­ 9679053 cable - long, artfully framed shots that strike a balance between the intense scrutiny of the closeup and the careful THE COLLARD BOYS distancing of the medium shot and which evenly, logical­ Thursday, February 2 ly follow one another. The unrestrained exuberance of the (OHNNY SFORTCOAT 8. THE CASUALS Friday, February 3 THE WROUM/1 THMTKE ARMS AKIMBO & EXPORT A Dcwmcwn cMWifln too-as Saturday, February 4 BLUE SPARKS FROM HELL Sunday, February 5 THE COLLARD BOYS Wednesday, February 8 THE FABULOUS «,.,JAMES CLEVELAND - WALTER HAWKINS 8 The HAWKINS FAMILY The MIGHTY CLOUDS OF JOY - SHIRLEY CAESAR - The CLARK SISTERS THUNDERBIRDS Thursday, February 9 An Unforgettable Mimical Experience! Sat./Sun. Feb. 4 & 5 7:00 & 9:15 p.m. (2 shorn 8:30 & 10:30 p.m.) Mon.-Fri. 7 & 9 Sat. 3, 5, 7 & 9 Sun. Special Matinee at 1:00-52 50 Page Auditorium $1.75 ^RegujarShow^^^^^^^^^ Happy Hours Nightly I 25' Draft Wed & Sat.

Pugllutlcolly. then DUKE IN MONTREAL slzzllngly, presents. SUMMER, 1984 BODY AND SOUL 7,00 only THERE IS STILL TIME TO APPLY FOR THE SUMMER PROGRAM IN MONTREAL BUT TIME IS RUNNING OUT. I (1947 — d. Robert Rossen, 104 min.) One of the best boxing films ever mode traces the career of o Jewish fighter who is corrupted on his way to the middleweight title. Director Rossen and scenarist Abraham Polonsky were among those blacklisted by Hollywood. PANDORA'S BOX 9:30 only CONTACT (1929 - d. G. W. Pobst — 110 min.) THE CLASSIC EROTIC DRAMA OF | THE DESTRUCTIVE EFFECTS OF PASSION The American flapper" comedi­ Professor Marcel Tetel enne Louise Brooks gives one of the greatest screen performances ever recorded on film as Frank Wedekind's immortal character Lulu, the 205 Languages "embodiment of primitive sexuality who inspires evil unawares." the divine beauty of mysterious origins who lures men to their willing 684-3706 destructions until she meets her murderous fate at the hands of Jack the Ripper. A GRIPPING, RELENTLESS, SUBTLY EROTIC TALE OF THE DEADLY VOLUPTUOUSNESS OF EVIL. A classic you won't want to miss. or "Now rf only Burt Reynolds hod met Lulu in The Mon Who Loved 'htomen . . , The Summer Session Office — *fendy Nelson "Lulu reminds me of a girl i doted in high school.'' — Greg Smith 121 Allen BRYAN CENTER FILM THEATER 684-2621 j Free to undergrads with 5.E.C ond l.D. and Privilege Card Holders. All [ others $1.50. Thursday, February 2, 1984 Page 7

Concerts Boys. West Franklin St. (967-9053) N.C. Symphony — Wed., Feb. 1 at 8:15 p.m. Page That's Raleigh Auditorium. (6844059) Billy Joel — Wed., Feb. 8 at 8 p.m. in the Charlotte Col­ Charlie Goodnight's Comedy Club — Sun., Feb. 5, with iseum. (704/372-2600) Ente.-tainmeit shows at 7 and 9:30. Soupy Sales. 861 West Morgan St. Schubert's 'Wlnterreise' — By bass-baritone Fredric (832-0998) Moses and pianist Jane Hawkina Sun., Feb. 5 at 8:15 p.m. in Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus. Lectures Contemporary Music Concert — Sat., Feb 4 at 8:15 p.m. Haufbrau — Thurs., Feb. 2. Boney Maroney Band (rock in the Ernest W. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg., 'n' roll). Fri.-Sat., Feb. 34. Shady Grove (bluegrass). 615 Science and Public Affairs Lecture — "Science Research East Campus. The program for "An Evening of Premieres" Broad St. (286-1965) and Education Policy Issues for the 1980s and Beyond," will include performances of Robert Ward's Dialogues, the by director of the National Science Foundation Dr. Ed­ American premiere of David Finko's Concerto for Viola Chapel Hill ward Knapp. Wed., Feb. 1 at 8:15 p.m. in the Auditorium and Orchestra, Stephen Jaffe's "Ballade" Quartet for of Gross Chemistry Bldg. Violin, Cello, Clarinet and Piano, six Preludes by Ruth Cat's Cradle — Wed., Feb. 1. Roomful of Blues; Thurs., Contemporary Music Lecture — "Music and Soviet Socie­ Crawford Seeger, and other works. Feb. 2. Collard Boys (rhythm 'n' rock); Fri., Feb. 3. Johnny ty: 1940 to Present" by composer-in-residence David Sportcoat and the Casuals (new music from DC); Sat., Finko, University of Texas at El Paso. Feb. 3, 4:15 p.m. Dance Feb. 4. Arms Akimbo and Export A; Sun., Feb. 5. Blue in the Rehearsel Hall, Mary Duke Biddle Music Bldg., Sparks from Hell (rhythm 'n' blues); Wed., Feb. 8. Collard East Campus. Duke Dance '84 — Thurs.-Fri., Feb 2-3 at 8:15 p.m. in Reynolds Theatre. (684-1138 or 684-4059) Music in Clubs Durham Downunder — Thurs., Feb2, 9-12 p.m. Export A with OCKWOO special guest The Front. Free with Duke l.D. FILLIN'STATIO HAPPY HOURS DAILY TRIANGLE METRO 4-7 & 10-1 Daily COPIES ,9)' ALL NIGHT Sat & Sun FULL LINE OF DELI SANDWICHES FULL COLOR COPIES FOR TAKE-OUTS CALL: 489-9954 from ruler photo,, ilidis and chart,, in minute ELECTRONIC REPAIRS AND HIGH QU AUTY DUPLICATING MODIFICATIONS FOR THE MUSICIAN AND PRINTING amps, p.a.s, mixers, speakers, mikes, keyboards Mon-Sat 11 a.m. 'til 1 a.m. Free Parking at our Doorstep 3 synthesizers, effects, pedals, hi-fi Sun 1 p.m. 'til 1 a.m. 431 W. Franklin St., Chapel Hill 929-7737 upstairs across from 9th Street Wachovia Bank 2510 UNIVERSITY DRIVE Courtyard r. t'ORteN TALE

Simple Located on Precision 2nd ROOT, Suire 200 Natural ^y of Hilton Inn Haircuts Across For Men Vj| and Women JP . - for appointment coll 206-91S4

rWWVWWWWWWYWV Board of Trustee Committee Interviews

Academic Affairs

Building and Grounds

Business and Finance

Institutional Advancement

Student Affairs

Applications are available in the ASDU office and are due at 5:00 p.m. the day indicated above. Sign up for interviews in the ASDU office or by calling 684-6403.

A chance to get involved PageS Thursday, February 2, 1984 Streep superb in NichoPs 'Silkwood'

SILKWOOD from page 2 matter. satisfying as they might have been ("Prince of the City" easygoing behavior and dangerous circumstances in some In the domestic and fantasy scenes Streep's portrayal is a good example of this phenomenon). "Silkwood" drags wonderful ironic details. A woman is given a sexy black is highlighted by her interactions with the fine suppor­ in certain middle sections which made me feel I was wat­ negligee in a birthday package covered with "Warning! ting cast. Kurt Russell again shows us his soft-muscled, ching action that was "real" but not too dramatically Radioactive" stickers. As the workers trade off-color hulking sexuality. Cher adds a nice earthy realism to her necessary. stories, we can see the plutonium they're working with part; she seems perfectly fitted for these wide open But this age-old problem with true life stories dwindles reflected in the glass Nichols keeps us jumpy because of Oklahoma spaces. in importance when you consider the strengths of "Silk­ the tension between the danger sensed by the audience "Silkwood" is based on the true story of Karen Silkwood, wood". The gentle exposition provided by rich details and and the relaxed actions of the characters. and the knowledge that much of what we're seeing is the excellent performances by Streep and company make "real" adds another level of emotion to the film. One of "Silkwood" a powerful drama that never feels like nuclear The same attention to detail can be seen in "Silkwood's" the movie's strengths is that it feels real; it's also propaganda. Days after you see this film, bits and pieces domestic scenes. When Karen worries about the possibili­ "Silkwood'"s weakness. Many times filmmakers do not of scenes will come back to your mind. You'll probably ty of plutonium-caused cancer, Drew says, "Well, if you're take liberties with "true" stories that they would with fic­ never forget Streep's haunting a capella version of "Amaz­ really worried about cancer, you'd quit smoking." This tional drama. Sometimes dramatic structure is supersed­ ing Grace". This brief moment of pure cinematic power remark catches her in mid-puff. She stops, thinks about ed by "how it really happened" and the results aren't as is the highlight of a fine new film. it, then slowly resumes smoking. In these domestic scenes we get a real feeling for Karen Silkwood as a person, not simply as an activist. When you consider how many ways this fdm could have been poorly and exploitatively done, •—»™l you really appreciate Mike Nichols' handling of this COMMITTEE INTERVIEWS S APPLICATION Board of Trustee Committees DUE INTERVIEW P Academic Affairs 2/6 2/12 Building and Grounds 2/7 2/13 E Business and Finance 2/8 2/14 Institutional Advancement 2/9 2/15 C 2/16 Haircuts! I Student Affairs 2/10 Undergraduate Faculty Council of Arts and Sciences (UFCAS) Committees -J reg. $12.50" A Advising 2/13 2/19 I \_lL-r. WOO OFF on Cuts, $1000 OFF Courses 2/14 2/20 wupcn on Hi-lighting or Perms L Curriculum 2/15 2/21 Good with Selected Stylists only 2/22 Coupon Good thru March 3, 1984 Health Science 2/16 Program II 2/16 2/22 Study Abroad 2/17 2/23 Honors 2/17 2/23 Undergraduate Admissions & Financial Aid 2/20 2/26 Academic Standards 2/21 2/27 A.B. Duke 2/22 2/28 Human Relations 2/22 2/28 Officer Education 2/22 2/29 Women's Studies 2/23 2/29

\ Universit• y Governin• g Committees n Chronicle 2/27 3/13 — IM Board 2/28 3/14 3/15 3 Radio Board 2/29 Q. Advisory Committee on Judicial Codes 2/29 3/15 Publications Board 3/1 3/18 Student Health 3/1 3/18 Traffic Appeals 3/1 3/18 Traffic Commission 3/1 3/18

Presidential Committees Social Implications on Duke Stock 3/13 - 3/20 Energy Management Advisory Council 3/13 3/20 Presidential Council on Religious Affairs 3/14 3/21 Presidential Council on Black Affairs 3/15 3/22 The University Commencement Committee 3/16 3/25 Athletic Council 3/16 3/26

Miscellaneous University Committees Educational Facilities 3/20 3/27 University Stores Advisory 3/20 3/27 Environmental Concerns 3/21 3/28 CAPS 3/21 3/28 Duke University Food Service Advisory Council 3/22 3/29 Alcohol Awareness Task Force 3/23 4/1 Health, Physical Education and Recreation 3/23 4/1 Student Advisory Committee Mary Lou Williams Cultural Center Board of Directors 3/23 4/1 Summer Transitional Program (STP) 3/23 4/1 University Schedule Committee 3/26 4/2 Student Alumni Relations Committee (SARC) 3/26 4/2 Residential Policy Committee 3/27 4/3 Library Council 3/28 4/4 Placement Board 3/28 4/4

•••••• ••••I