Still on top The Blue Devil basketball team is number one for the 16th consecutive week. To see THE CHRONICLE where everyone else is, go to page 11. TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1992 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 87, NO. 105 Orange landfill site to be decided this week

By PEGGY KRENDL ing the Duke Forest site at Duke Forest: home of wild­ last week's meeting. life, research — and Orange Duke Forest is an inappro­ County's trash? It could be, priate site for the landfill, pending a decision by the Or­ Christensen said. It would ange County Landfill Search harm research and teaching Committee this Wednesday. that takes place on the site; The search committee will nar­ the site lacks the necessary row its current list of four sites to biological, hydrological and two or three. One of the sites, geological characteristics of a OC-17, is an 853-acre plot in Duke landfill and consideration of Forest east of Old N.C. Highway the site breaches Orange 86 and north of Eubanks Road. County's 1987 promise to help The current Orange County protect Duke Forest lands, he landfill, which is adjacent to OC- said. 17, should be full by 1997. "It would be a loss of a criti­ ALEXIOUS BUTLER/THE CHRONICLE "We hope they will eliminate it cal teaching and research as a possible landfill site," said area." Even the iguanas are camping out David Roberson, associate vice He added that the selection Every Duke student is looking forward to the upcoming Carolina game- no matter what species president and director of Univer­ ofthe site would cause "a lack they happen to be. sity relations. "We don't have any of confidence on Duke's part" indication on how they will vote." toward Orange County's com­ Norman Christensen, dean mitment to preserve the for­ of the School of the Environ­ est. Changes made for phone registration ment, echoed this sentiment. Joyce Engineering suggests "We would like for them to say the bedrock level in a landfill be it was a mistake for them to on average 30 feet deep, but in ACES to expand; drop/add problems corrected consider the site in the first the Duke Forest site the bedrock place." level in the forest is 12.6 feet By NOAH BIERMAN day will hear a recording: "Please to call later. The open Fridays dur­ The meeting is a continua­ deep. The forest contains wet­ Students can begin registering call back during your registration ing registration will serve as mini tion of a heavily attended pub­ lands which are under federal for next semester's classes but with period," said Martin Warner, assis­ drop/add periods. lic hearing and presentation jurisdiction and the forest is a new twist: all registration will be tant registrar. The open Fridays were invented by Joyce Engineering, the com­ home to a rare orchid species, via telephone. "I11betthat6,000 people are going at the University by using new pany surveying the possible the small whorled pogonia, stated Student course books are now to call ACES on the day that it opens technology to alleviate excessive sites, held last Wednesday. Duke Forest Resource Manager available in the Allen Building. just to see if it really does that," he calling. Last semester, 10,000 calls The members of the search Judson Edeburn in a letter pre­ TheACESsystem,familiartostu- said. came in on the first two days of committee voted to decide on sented to Edward Mann, chair of dents who used it for drop/add last Registration will work like drop- drop/add, Warner said. the final sites this Wednes­ the landfill search committee. semester, has expanded to include add did last semester, with a few The average student should day. "We remain confident that all course registration. Students changes, Warner said. spend about five to 10 minutes on At the last meeting, the the regulatory processes re­ must get new personal identifica­ Hours will expand so fewer lines registration, Warner said. The members ofthe committee lis­ quired by endangered species tion numbers and dates that they are clogged. During registration, computer does not allow students tened to complaints from and wetland issues as well as can register from their academic ACES will be open seven days a to stay on the phone with ACES groups representing each site the physical and environmen­ advisors. week, 7 a.m. to 11 p.m., with an hour for more than five minutes. At the on why their site should not tal limitations of the OC-17 Students will register according off for maintenance. They are not end of five minutes, a message be chosen. The committee will make its use as a landfill to color designated "windows." surewhathourwillbeusedformain- tells students to hang up and call postponed a decision last week site not feasible," Edeburn Graduate students will be able to tenance yet. again. in order to give themselves stated in the letter. register first on March 28. Under­ When drop/add begins, weekend Warner saiditisimportanttoadd time to review the material After the committee selects graduates will be divided into five hours will change to 9 a.m. -3 p.m. classes before dropping them, incase brought up in the hearing. two or three final sites, Joyce color groups that will be based on The expanded hours, combined the new class is not available. If The committee also viewed Engineering will complete in­ how close they are to graduating. with three other changes will pre­ there is a conflict in a student's slides and geographical mate­ tensive studies of each. The Each color group will have three vent phone lines from overa-owding, schedule preventing the addition of rial presented by Joyce Engi­ information will be reviewed days to register. But, Fridays will be Warner said. The system will give a new class, the computer will ask neering on the four sites. by the Land Owner's Group open to all students with open win­ fewer busy signals, and put more the student to choose between the University administrators which will select a final site. dows. Windows are considered open students on hold while they wait for classes. If the student wants the and members from a group The governments of Orange for students whose color has already available lines. Students who do get new class than the computer will opposed to the selection of OC- County, Chapel Hill and come up. a busy signal will get a fast busy drop one of the student's other 17 tried to dissuade the com­ Carrboro will vote on the final Students who call on the wrong signal which means they should try classes. mittee members from choos­ site as well. GPSC passes resolution objecting to scheduling of UWC

By DAN BRADY more effieciently the University's the administration scheduled The administration is not bal­ lems facingthe graduate students GPSC unanimously passed a infrastructure, but objected to the electives at this time, Larsen said, ancing the number of classes be­ which include commuting and resolution Monday night disap­ disproportionate burden that falls it would face the risk that very fore 10:00 a.m. with classes after child care, yet did not admit the proving the Administration's de­ upon UWC instructors' backs. few freshmen would enroll in 3:00 p.m., Larsen said, because it pedagogical ones. cision to schedule University "This decision is bad pedagogi- them. wants to treat all freshmen "This is the single most hated Writing Courses next years at cally for students, bad logistically The change could be the begin­ equally. class at the single most hated 8:00 a.m. for teachers," said Caren Irr, a ning of an administration initia­ "Rather than make 30 percent hour," Irr said. "This decision will adversely graduate student in English and tive to eventually raise enroll­ of the freshmen unhappy, let's Instructors were also worried effect the quality ofthe graduate UWC instructor. ment, he said. The administra­ make everyone equally unhappy," about having to resort to "police student teaching, academic work During the debate ofthe reso­ tion is rescheduling UWC classes Larsen said in mockery of what tactics" if they will be forced to and daily life, and this council lution, several students ques­ early in the morning to prove to he felt is the administration's fail every student that misses objects to the administration's tioned the motives ofthe Univer­ the trustees that it can effectively view. more than three classes as next disregard for our needs and inter­ sity. manage existing resources. Once Irr said she was dismayed with year's policy now states. ests in this matter," the resolu­ The administration might be this was achieved, Larsen said, last Wednesday's meeting be­ "[The administration] has given tion stated. taking advantage ofthe Univer­ the adminstration could legiti­ tween UWC instructors and Trin­ us the run-around. It was fairly The graduate students at the sity Writing Program because it mately ask for an increase in en­ ity College Dean Richard White. clear that [administrators] had meeting acknowledged the is the only mandatory course at rollment, which would lead to a She said she was alarmed that he made a policy that they don't want administration's effort to use the University, Larsen said. If larger operating budget. acknowledged the logistical prob­ to take back," Irr said. PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1992 World and National Newsfile Serbs build barricades around capital city Associated Press By CHUCK SUDETIC million eligible voters cast ballots in favor the "tyranny of the majority." Gotti betrayed: A former friend, N.Y. Times News Service of independence according to unofficial Serbian leaders in Bosnia and confidant and heir apparent of John SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia— Gangs of results based on a tally of 78 percent ofthe Herzegovina have proclaimed their own Gotti began testifying in New York masked and armed Serbs, angered by the votes. The republic's Serbs did not vote in Serbian polity, which they define as cover­ Monday against the reputed mob results of a weekend referendum on inde­ the referendum. ing about 60 percent of the present boss, calmly revealing a life of loan pendence for the republic of Bosnia and With the departure of Slovenia and republic's territory. They have warned for sharking, armed robbery and mur­ Herzegovina, set up barricades on Mon­ Croatia from Yugoslavia, Muslim Slavs months that they would take up arms to der. day and blocked all transportation routes and Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina keep the republic inside the frontiers of leading to this mountain capital. fear the prospect of being left behind in what is left of Yugoslavia. Agent defends Noriega: A CLA But by late Monday night, television what is certain to be a Serb-dominated An explosion of serious intercommunal agent testified in Miami Monday that reports said the Serbian guerrillas had rump Yugoslav state. strife is the worst nightmare of everyone Manuel Noriega and Cuban leader agreed to lift the seige and that some ofthe On the other hand, Bosnia and living in this highly charged territory, Fidel Castro agreed to meet to dis­ barriers were being dismantled. At the Herzegovina's Serbs reject the notion of which has a grim history of internecine cuss guerrilla violence in Central same time, bursts of gunfire continued to being cut off from Serbia by an international violence, including atrocities committed America, not cocaine trafficking as echo off the mountains that surround this frontier and argue that the other two nations here during the civil war that gripped U.S. prosecutors charge. city, where four people had been reported are forcing independence on them by using Yugoslavia from 1941 to 1945. killed and at least seven wounded in clashes Adams pressured: Sen. Brock near the barricades. Adams of Washington came under The blockade prevented trains from en­ pressure Monday to resign over alle­ tering, and only a few ambulances and Tsongas gaining ground as gations he sexually harassed eight police cars were allowed to pass the barri­ women. cades for most of the day. The action also choked roads in other parts of Bosnia and Clinton loses some support King jury seated: Ajury with no Herzegovina, including the main highway blacks was seated Monday in the to Croatia. Muslim Slavs and Croats had By R.W. APPLE In two other caucus states, Minnesota assault trial of four white Los Ange­ also erected barricades near some of their N.Y. Times News Service and Washington, Tsongas is described by les police officers accused of beating enclaves in the republic. ATLANTA— On the eve of the most local politicians and journalists as the a black motorist a year ago this week. The well-coordinated effort was clearly important day so far in the 1992 presiden­ strongest candidate; in a fourth, Idaho, intended as a signal by the Serbs, who tial campaign, Paul Tsongas' bid for the officials said no contender had caught fire. make up almost a third of the republic's Democratic nomination was reported on Only in Georgia, whose primary will population, that they were not only dissat­ Monday night by politicians and poll tak­ provide the first test of Southern senti­ isfied with the vote for secession but that ers to be gaining rapidly in the seven ment this year, do the state polls show Weather they were also ready to stall or derail it. states scheduled to hold primaries and Tsongas trailing his main rival, Gov. Bill caucuses. Clinton of Arkansas, and there are indica­ Wednesday The message was intended for the Mus­ lim Slavs and Croats, the two ethnic groups Polls in three states show the former tions that even here, Clinton's margin High: 20 • Partly cloudy that account for 60 percent ofthe republic's Massachusetts senator, whose campaign might not be as large as had seemed cer­ Low: 7 • Winds: 16 kph 4 million people. They favor independence was derided by many a month ago as an tain a week ago. Aaaahhh... Scamming is in the air and are eager to have the European Com­ impossible dream, in the lead. Those are A New York Times/CBS News poll of at Krzyzewskiville. munity recognize Bosnia and Herzegovina Maryland and Colorado, with primaries voter sentiment nationally shows Clinton (Remember the metric system?) as an independent country. on Tuesday, and Utah, which has a cau­ on top, with the backingfor Tsongas, which Well over 60 percent ofthe republic's 3.1 cus. See ELECTION on page 5fr»

JKiSSirrasMilASae^-^jrro?*^ »^,<£y^5y^?&*^&^j^£^&?x?: i^;'&4JS*?^y^J3KKS:^7ir. The Governors Center at Duke University, The Institute of Policy Sciences and Public Affairs present The First Gubernatorial Fellow of 1992

George S. Mickelson of Introducing South Dakota Ronkin's New LSAT Premium Program. Just because something has been obtain the highest possible score so around for a long time doesn't that you can get into the best law necessarily mean it's good. school. Because, as you know, The Ronkin Educational Group is graduating from law school doesn't Wednesday March 4,1992 an innovative company that has put guarantee a job. You need to together the latest in research, graduate from the best. technology, and teaching So don't take chances by 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. techniques in a new LSAT going to an old test course. We call it our LSAT preparation company. Premium Program and it's Call Ronkin today. The Lecture Hall been designed to help you You deserve the very best. Old Chemistry Building Chapel Hill • 932-9400 Raleigh • 832-9400 LSAT • GMAT » GRE • MCAT • Over 145 locations Nationwide Stas^y.?^^^ TUESDAY, MARCH 3. 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 3 Vice president of NOW to speak on reproductive rights

From staff reports Dupont are scheduled to address waste TIP'S 1992 Summer Satellite Science Pro­ The vice president of the National Or­ News briefs generation and disposal, changes in pro­ gram, according to Duke News Service. ganization for Women is scheduled to ad­ duction techniques and changes in prod­ "The Burroughs Wellcome Fund recog­ dress reproductive rights and civil liber­ will democratize the currently non-respon­ ucts themselves Wednesday. nizes the value of encouraging students to ties Thursday. sive political structure and bring women Brooke Triplett, manager of environ­ seek scientific careers." said Martha Peck, Rosemary Dempsey, vice president of into political power. mental engineering and chemical man­ executive director of the fund. "Duke the organization, will tell University men Dempsey was elected vice president in agement at IBM, and Kirt Williams, envi­ University's TIP gives our foundation the and women how to counter legislation seek­ 1990, but her experience in the feminist ronmental manager at Dupont, are plan­ opportunity to provide academically tal­ ing to strip their reproductive rights, ac­ movement reaches far beyond her 20-year ning to discuss changes that their respec­ ented students with a challenging sum­ cording to a press release. involvement with the organization. tive companies are making which help the mer science experience." The organization has targeted schools Dempsey began her activist career during environment, according to a press release. The program is a non-profit educational like Duke to mount a campus organizing the student anti-war and civil rights move­ The discussion will take place at 7 p.m. organization established at the University drive to mobilize students for the We Won't ments of the sixties. She later worked to in room 113 ofthe Mathematics and Phys­ in 1980. It receives support from student Go Back! March for Women's Lives in form a number of women's groups, includ­ ics Buidling on Science Drive. fees, individuals, corporations and foun­ Washington D.C. on April 5. ing a battered woman's shelter in New dations. In her speech, Dempsey is planning to Jersey called "Womanspace." Grant funds scholarships: The TIP annually identifies more than 50,000 draw connections between attempts to take The event will take place at 8 p.m. in 136 University and the Burroughs Wellcome seventh-graders from 16 states in the away women's rights to reproductive free­ Social Sciences. Fund have announced a $30,000 grant to Southeast, Midwest and Southwest who dom and health and a move to limit indi­ the Duke Talent Identification Program. are mathematically and verbally gifted. vidual freedom and self-determination for Speakers to address environ­ The grant will fund 26 scholarships for More than 1,000 students attended TIP's all. She intends to focus on strategies that ment: Representatives from IBM and women and minority students attending educational programs in 1991. Backpacks stolen on West Campus From staff reports Two freshmen reported their backpacks stolen this weekend. One reported her backpack stolen Friday from outside the Biological Sciences building on West Campus. She left Crime briefs it under a lamp post at about 7 p.m. and when she returned at about 9 p.m. it was missing, said Chief Robert Dean of Duke Public Safety. The backpack contained her wallet, books, a computer disc and calculator. The loss in stolen property totaled $300. Another freshman reported his backpack stolen Satur­ day from the BOG commons room on West Campus. He left it unattended at about 6 p.m. and when he returned at about 9:30 p.m., it was missing. The backpack contained a casio watch, his wallet, $25 in cash, credit cards and a dorm key. The loss in stolen property totaled $144.

Door kicked in: A student reported the door of his MELISSA BERMUDEZ/THE CHRONICLE dormitory room on West Campus damaged. Someone attempted to kick-in the oak panel ofthe door Overflowing with mail sometime between 9 p.m. Friday and 12:30 a.m Satur­ Mike Arichea, Engineering '91, actually gets mail even after graduating, as Trinity senior Beth Ruggiero day, Dean said. is finding out the hard way. The loss in damaged property totaled $150. Correction A story on page 3 of Thursday's Chronicle incorrectly depicted the state of funding for the new student publication, "Explorer." The Publications Board will vote on whether or not to fund the magazine through the YAMAZUSHI board's discretionary fund. JAPANESE CUISINE & SUSHI HOUSE The Chronicle regrets the error. We serve Sushi, Tempura, Teriyaki & Sukiyaki

formerly Have you ever wanted to be a singer? Trvon Seville Here is your chance to be a STAR! Yamazushi (RTP) has the only KARAOKE in the area on Friday &. Saturday from 10 pm-1 am. DAYS INN NORTH Come and bring your friends! Woodcroft S/C (RTP) Park Terrace S/C Taking reservations for Hwy. 54/751. 2223 Hwy. 54. Take 1-40, exit 274 Take 1-40, exit 278 Myrtle Week 493-7748 544-7945 1-800-845-0605 Individuals or Groups Call Now! Ever wonder where all our trash goes? To a landfill. To find out where and why, see Currents this week. PAGE 4 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1992 Arts

CALENDAR Drawings reveal glimpses of artist's mind

Wednesday, March 4 By KERRI FOLB Pollock used strong, brutal Music of Mary Lou Williams "Jackson Pollock-'Psychoana- strokes and dense compositions— Griffith Film Theater lytic' Drawings" provides interest­ similar to the style of Picasso—to Bryan Center, 8 p.m. ing insight into the life and mind of evoke in the viewer a violent, un­ The films "Mary Lou Williams: Music on the artist. comfortable feeling. Recurring My Mind" and "But Then...She's Betty Pollock, who died in a tragic car themes include his use ofthe bull Carter" will be presented as part of the accident in 1956, was one of the and the horse as the aggressor 1992 Freedom Series. Both are free and leading members of the abstract and the victim, and figures with open to the public. expressionist movement in the bulging eyes and screaming open Thursday, March S 1950s. In 1939, struggling as an mouths which convey fright and ferocity. Duke Wind Symphony unknown artist, he became an al­ Baldwin Auditorium, 8 p.m. coholic with emotional problems Under the direction of Michael Votta, the and entered the care of Dr. Joseph Pollock also showed violent por­ symphony will perform works by Bach, Henderson.- trayals of women. Drawing No. 4 Bedrich Smetana, Karel Husa, Malcolm Pollock was a difficult patient depicts sexual intercourse be­ Arnold and William Schuman. and did not respond well to the tween a frail, weak male and an Songs from Jerusalem: therapeutic treatment of free as­ immense, overbearing female. Jerusalem in Songs and Music sociation—giving a running ac­ Drawing No. 22 represents a Nelson Music Room count of every thought and feeling frightening woman raising her East Duke Building, 8 p.m. Admission $8 one experiences. Because this arm as she prepares to hit the Palestinian folk singer Mustafa El-Kurd will method was ineffective, Henderson child at her breast, potentially sing and accompany himself on a tradi­ asked Pollock to submit some of his symbolizing Pollock's desire for tional Arabic lute. drawings. Pollock presented 69. the "all-giving mother" and his identification of the female as a Thursday, March 5-Saturday, Henderson sold the drawings negative influence. March 7 after Pollock's death, despite pro­ Pollock addressed the concepts Aunt Dan and Lemon tests from the artist's widow, Lee of animism, where human char­ Duke Drama Krasner, who believed the sale to acteristics are projected onto the Branson Theater, 8 p.m. be a breach of the patient-doctor non-human, and totemism, where The workshop production of the play by relationship. Krasner lost the suit. the individual feels a link with Wallace Shawn is free and open to the public. While some scholars have ar­ nature, especially with the ani­ gued that these works are expres­ SPECIAL TO THE CHRONI mal kingdom. In Subgroup VI he Friday. March 6 sions of Pollock's sickness, others One of Jackson Pollock's drawings used erasure marks to suggest Classical Concert disagree. Claude Cernuschi, as­ movement and fluidness and to Tchaikovsky Festival sistant professor of art, argues in his cata­ The drawings were rendered using col­ further link the living energy between Page Auditorium, 8 p.m. log essay that the drawings are the prod­ ored and lead pencil and inkwash. Be­ humans and animals. Admission $22-$14 uct of Pollock's intellect. Michael cause they are not numbered in any chro­ "Psychoanalytic Drawings" prove stimu­ The program will include The Voyevode, Mezzatesta, director ofthe Duke Univer­ nological order, the exhibit is separated lating and fascinating to the art student, Opus 78, Concerto No. 1 in B-flat minor, Suite sity Museum of Art and organizer of the into eleven subgroups according to color the psychology student, and the general from Swan Lake, and Capriccio Italien, Op. 45. exhibit, also emphasized in a press release scheme, composition, theme and degree of public. The exhibit will be on display in the that the drawings are works of art. abstraction. art museum through Mar. 29.

PANEL DISCUSSION How Far ON CAPITAL PUNISHMENT Have Tonight, • 8:00 pm • Social Sciences Rm. 139 We Really PARTICIPANTS INCLUDE: TY HUNTER Come? State Appellate Defender MARSHALL DAYAN Women, Weight Attorney in State Appellate Defender's Office and Self Esteem MARY ANN TALLEY Cumberland County Public Defender 7:00 Tuesday March 3 JIM LEWIS Leader of the Religious Community's Bryan Center Death Penalty Opposition Movement Von Canon C JAMES COLEMAN Lyhne Hanrahan, Professor, Duke Law School Duke ' 90 Mary MacGill Stokes, R.D., LAO RUBERT Student Health Victoria Vandenberg, Director of the NC Prison and Jail Project, Women's Center LibbyWebb, M.S.W., Counseling and Psychological Services COME WITH QUESTIONS

Health Education, Counseling and Psychological Services, The Women's Center HUMAN RIGHTS WEEK, 1992 DUKE AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 5 Church unconcerned at convention ire over gay unions

RALEIGH (AP) — A Raleigh church's either way to a committed monogamous tonomous and democratic. Individual con­ it was a decisive vote. I didn't want to see decision to bless a gay union has created a caring relationship between homosexual gregations make their own decisions, a 51 to 49 split." debate among Baptists about the Bible's persons," he said. 'The examples speak rather than following policy set down by Others said the choice was

• ELECTION from page 2 Georgia. President Bush is considered the permitted by Georgia law, to support him grew after the New Hampshire primary, likely winner here, but his aides expressed in the Republican primary. now leveled off. considerable nervousness, even after a late At his last stop of the day in Marietta, Traveling between Macon and Colum­ endorsement from opponents of abortion. near Atlanta, Buchanan, who has been bus, Ga., on Monday, Clinton lashed out at Bush spent the day in Washington, but accused of anti-Semitism in the campaign, Tsongas, accusing him of "blatantly false" his principal challenger, Patrick Buchanan, was greeted by a group of about two dozen advertising. As if to prepare his support­ crossed this state one more time, soundingthe Jewish hecklers. He looked out at them and ers for bad news, Clinton said he had not racial themes that he hopes will persuade said, "This is a rally of Americans, by Ameri­ fared as well as he had hoped in Georgia, conservative Democrats to cross over, as cans and for the good old U.S A, my friends." Maryland and Colorado because his oppo­ nent had been able to "have it both ways" on tax and nuclear policy. "This guy gives nothing to the middle class except more pain and more agony," ClintonsaidinabittercornmentaiyonTsongas, delivered to reporters as his campaign plane Your favorite Pizza idled on a runway in rural Georgia. UPI PHOTO While the Democratic contenders have crisscrossed the nation in the last 72 hours, Pat Buchanan the Republicans have concentrated on DELIVERED! (cash St points) SUMMER SCHOOL 1992 Restaurant and Bar "The best pizza in all of Durham, at competitive prices." & eorgetown Shoppes at Lakewood, Durham 493-7797 UNIVERSITY MAY18-JUNK12 P-RK-SKSSION JUNES-JULY 10 FIRSTSESSION JUNES-JULY 31 EIGHT-WEEKCROSS SESSION m JULY 13-AUGUST 14 SECOND SESSION We Are Doctors During the summer months Georgetown Univer­ sity's School for Summer and Continuing Education offers more than 300 regular graduate and under­ Who Specialize In graduate courses for all students. Visiting students from other colleges and universities can earn credits which are ordinarily transferable to their own degree programs. Summer courses are talight by members of Contact Lenses. Georgetown's distinguished faculty and other visiting scholars. Which means that your eye examination, diagnostic fitting, and all Enrollment is open to all students in good standing follow-up visits will be conducted by a doctor. at Georgetown and all other colleges and universities, It also means that we've had years of training and experience in foreign students with a TOEFL score of 550 or above fitting that most difficult contact lens cases. And we fit every kind of (600 for linguistics courses) and individuals whose educational background and experience qualify them contact lens available - from the simplest to the newest and most for the courses they wish to take. sophisticated. Catalogues along with the application form are avail­ We realize that deciding to wear contacts can be a big decision. able by phone request 202-687-5942, fax request 202- Call us to discuss fees and any questions you have. 687-8954 or mail request to: Georgetown University, Call about free Acuvue® Evening & Saturday SSCE/306 ICC, Washington, D.C. 20057-1075. Lens Trial Pair Program. Appointments Available. Information for • The Fnglish as a Foreign language Program or • High School Programs is available through separate brochures. Please check the appropriate box I Academy Eye Associates OPTOMETRY. O.D.. P.A. to receive information.

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A Letters EDITORIALS Review of photography exhibit lacked PAGE 6 MARCH 3, 1992 scope; "shock" has several meanings

To the editor: lead us to believe. Rather, the title sug­ I find it surprising that Josh Kun's ap­ gests an underlying context from which Use reason, not religion proach to "Photography: Shock Value" in each artist begins an expressive venture. his article "To Shock or Not to Shock This title is a starting point, not a bound­ (What's in a Name?)" is one of such limited ary. The individual expressions of this The Republic of Ireland has shown the Community. They ruled that the scope considering his professed support of exhibit are paramount to its overall mean­ that a judicial body can correct its girl could go to London. expression and apparent knowledge ofthe ing. It is important to realize the medium country's mistakes. This case demonstrates the need for photographic medium. The word "shock" of photography is stressed in this exhibi­ The Irish Supreme Court justifiably the Irish government to realize it, along used in the context of this exhibition en­ tion, not the subject matter. Other values compasses a variety of connotations. Un­ of "shock" can be seen in the unique ap­ overturned a High Court ruling and with its citizens, is in the twentieth fortunately, Kun limits the word only to a proaches to the medium itself. Uelsmann's permitted a 14-year-old girl to travel century. This government was going singular value. surrealistic manipulation of images is star­ to London in order to have an abor­ to force a child to bear a rapist's baby. This value is seen in the images of tling and powerful. Len Prince abstracts tion, which is illegal in the Republic. This government was going to allow a Witkin and Serrano which Kun suggests the form of the human body while Herb The girl alleged that she was raped child to suffer an incredible amount of are the only "shocking" photographs. The Ritts and Robert Mapplethorpe imbue the by her friend's father and found out emotional damage in addition to the value Kun attributes to shock is limited to subject with immediate sculptural and she was pregnant several months af­ damage done by the rapist—she has the disturbing qualities of certain subject erotic qualities. It is surprising that Kun ter the incident. Her family informed been saying that she would rather kill matters. The expression of these themes is poses the question "Why is this shocking?" the Irish police of the girl's plans to herself than have the baby. arrived at through highly direct presenta­ Considering his position as a critic, this is precisely the question he should be at­ travel abroad while asking if the po­ For years Irish women have been tion of imagery, not through innuendo. Consequently, the photographs simulta­ tempting to answer rather than simply lice wanted any evidence from the discreetly traveling to London to un­ neously revolt, challenge and "shock." The abandon. operation to genetically identify the dergo abortions. They travel as citi­ title, "Shock Value" does not present a rapist. zens ofthe European Community and paradigm which devalues the individual Brian Biel The girl's family was trying to re­ are free to go where they wish within expressions of each artist as Kun would Chairman, Galleries Committee main within the boundaries of the the Community. In a country that is law. They did what they believed was 95 percent Roman Catholic, it is the right and were honest about their only option they have. By going abroad Chronicle fails to cover important story plans. But instead of protecting the they are still true to their homeland's To the editor: of sex." It lists as obscene "materials that family and the girl, the Irish Attorney laws while still exercising the right I am writing to remind The Chronicle subordinate, degrade, or dehumanize General and High Court made them that all other women in the European staff that a significant segment of your women." Kathleen Mahoney, attorney for victims. The girl became a potential Community possess—the right to readers are women, and that you need to the Women's Legal Education and Action criminal if she remained in London. choose what they do to their bodies. remember to include news items that might Fund explained that "this type of expres­ The family and the girl were forced How much longer can the Irish gov­ be of interest to us every once and a while. sion harms women personally, harms their to return to Ireland. And now the girl ernment ignore the abortion problem? I will mention a particular item of interest right to be equal, affects their security and to women, not just to make my previous changes attitudes toward them so they has become a symbol for the women of Along with the abortion operation, Ire­ point, but to have it mentioned in The become more subject to violence." Ireland and a sore point to the Irish land has outlawed abortion advice in Chronicle, since the staff didn't find it government. The tragic implications pregnancy counseling and remove the significant enough to include off the wires. The Chronicle failed to mention this ofher situation were all too obvious for names of foreign abortion clinics from "Canada Court Says Pornography story Friday, and again failed on Monday pro-choice advocates. libraries. Harms Women and Can Be Banned" was after given several days for the story to Last week, the Irish high court rec­ Perhaps the Irish government can the headline ofthe article which appeared make its way here. This article has social ognized that Ireland cannot prohibit a follow its high court example and right on the front page of significance; it has academic appeal to not European Community citizen from its own wrongs. Abortion has been on Feb. 28. For those of you who don't get only students of gender and women's stud­ traveling where she wishes within the illegal in the country since the 1860s. the Times, or rely solely on The Chronicle ies, but law students as well. So why was Community, a principle both basic and It is time to take the Irish dilemma out for news, the article describes the Cana­ it missing from The Chronicle? This news dian Supreme Court decision which rein­ item is the type which shouldn't be skipped legally guaranteed to all residents of of British hands. forces and fills out the definition of obscen­ over in the wires, and the staff is account­ ity, and applies that to the distribution, able for the omission. sale or public display of obscene materials, i.e. "any publication that has as a domi­ Selden Holt On the record nant characteristic the undue exploitation Trinity '91

We would like for them to say it was a mistake for them to consider the site in the first place. Norman Christensen, dean ofthe School ofthe Environment, on Orange County's consideration of a site in Duke Forest for their new landfill.

THE CHRONICLE established 1905

Ann Heimberger, Editor Jason Greenwald, Managing Editor Barry Eriksen, General Manager Jonathan Blum, Editorial Page Editor Hannah Kerby, News Editor Matt Steffora, Assoc. News Editor Kris Olson, Sports Editor Michael Saul, Assoc. News Editor Leya Tseng, Arts Editor Jennifer Greeson, Arts Editor Peggy Krendl, City & State Editor Leigh Dyer, Investigations Editor Eric Larson, Features Editor Debbie Barr, Health & Research Editor Mark Wasmer, Photography Editor Cliff Burns, Photography Editor Steven Heist, Graphics Editor Reva Bhatia, Design Editor Adrian Dollard, Senior Editor Jay Epping, Senior Editor Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager Alan Welch, Production Manager Elizabeth Wyatt, Student Advertising Manager David Morris, Business Manager Letters policy: The Chronicle urges all of its readers to submit letters to the The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its editor. Letters must be typed and double-spaced and must not exceed 300 words. students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. They must be signed, dated and must include the author's class or department, Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115; Business phone number and local address for purposes of verification. Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106; FAX: 684-8295. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union promotional in nature. Building; Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters for length, clarity and style, and ©1992 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No part to withhold letters based on the discretion ofthe editorial page editor. of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Letters should be mailed to Box 4696, Duke Station, or delivered in person to The Business Office. Chronicle offices on the third floor ofthe Flowers Building. TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 7 Circular reasoning aides contemporary yellow journalism

I am regularly amazed at the freedom and power ofthe Or, much more likely in my view, are they simply trying press. • An unexamined life to get more people to buy their newspaper? Here in Durham, for instance, a series of articles in the Like the consumers of the fabled "yellow journalism" Herald-Sun swiftly shook up the police department so Edward Benson that gave us the Spanish-American War, are we buying thoroughly that several higher-ups have either resigned into the audience-grabbing sleaze of the modern media? or been relieved of their jobs. The allegations printed have anything else, and there appears to be grounds for inves­ Let's be honest: it isn't illiterates who buy the tabloids. startled many: that paper's letters page has been inun­ tigation, at least, if not yet for all-out legal action. Or buy the Herald-Sun, or watch "Nightline." It is the dated with claims from a lack of respect for the police to Clinton's case is a stickier one. It now appears that Ms. normal consumer's willingness to buy "scandal-sheets," outright racism. Flowers, who was paid over $130,000 for her story, is at and the media's profit-driven willingness to pander to I suspect that the truth probably lies somewhere be­ best a poor witness, or at worst a liar. A number of her such taste, that drive today's "infotainment" industry. tween, and is more tied to the competition in the area's alleged meetings with Clinton took place on nights when And the media, conscious of their power to affect the newspaper market, and to the general old newspaper lore they weren't even in the same state; their first meeting issues and the methods and terms of debate on those that "scandal sells." occurred in a hotel that hadn't been built until two years issues, shrink from responsibility all too readily, by point­ There is nothing, after all, that attracts flies, or journal­ after that night she claims to remember so vividly. ing right back at the consumer. ists, quite like the rich aroma of sleaze. As of this writing, another story has come to light Don't believe it? Look again at ABC News, the major For example, despite Ted Koppel's recent defense here regarding a senator running for re-election. He is accused supplier of news to America. The most thoughtful feature at Duke ofthe print and television media, the fact remains by seven women of harassment, and by one of rape. None on their regular broadcast is "The American Agenda," a that "Nightline," his show, first gave substantial coverage ofthe women pressed charges, and more critically, all of nightly report on a given issue, and a feature which they to a presidential candidate when they covered the Clinton- them have also insisted on remaining anonymous. pointedly did not introduce until just after the 1988 Flowers allegations. Sexual harassment is a serious charge, rape even more election and which they still hold in tight rein immedi­ Mr. Koppel had one good point in his argument for going so. And in our system of law, the accused has a right to face ately prior to a vote. ahead with the story: namely, that the press should not his accuser in court. Why? Because they don't want to "influence the elec­ decide what the public may or may not hear. So is the paper that printed those allegations engaged tion." But if that were really true, then why would Durham's in irresponsible character assassination? Or in the pur­ Get real, media people! own Independent need to annually publish the "Top Ten suit of justice by wronged individuals? Or in bringing You have nothing to lose but your putative purity. Least-Reported Stories ofthe Year?" That list, always a relevant information to the voters? Edward Benson is a Medical Center employee. hallmark of solid investigation and refusal to parrot the mainstream line, always points out controversies of which even a well-read person may be unaware. Why? Because the media routinely engage in precisely what Koppel so concisely and eloquently attacked: they choose for us, the public, what is newsworthy and what isn't. And that's exactly what news editors are supposed to do. During my college days, my girlfriend was editor ofthe school paper, and more than once, in an otherwise pleas­ ant discussion, she would recap the latest no-win clash at the paper over the merits of running a certain article. Perhaps the most valuable thing I learned from those talks (other than to avoid disagreeing with her position during such a heated reminiscence) was that such de­ bates were not purely intellectual pursuits unrelated to our daily fives. Conversely, I also have witnessed the sense among some journalists (like Mr. Koppel) that it was possible to stand above the fray altogether, in pure objectivity. Ask our resigning police chief, or Bill Clinton, or Gary Hart, how they feel about the press. I suspect they'll attest to the power ofthe pen, but not necessarily to its purity from any bias. So where does this come from? Where it does it lead? Certainly, Gary Hart literally asked for his fall from grace. He challenged reporters to prove he was fooling around, which they promptly did. But neither Clinton nor the Durham police requested i UKE»W£ sow BITES, BUT a/^^^ an investigation. In Durham, irregularities in the police department seemed to emerge by chancers much as A person's body is every bit as spiritual as a person's soul I go to church every week on Sunday, to the evening talking through every idea, learning by teaching, solving Mass at the Chapel. I am Christian because I believe that • Compass problems on blackboards. It is an active mode of studying road leads to true happiness. But every week at Mass, I that requires the use ofthe body in speaking and writing; witness a grave problem that deeply bothers me. It is the David DePerro moreover, nearly everything I have learned at Duke I way that people just sit there. The Catholic Mass is highly have learned in this active type of learning environment. ordered, and around the whole world in every Mass there see it as a serious deficiency in our view ofthe importance I thought it was funny that, in my rather large econom­ are times you sit, times you stand and times you kneel; ofthe human body in every one of our activities. ics class, it was announced that the Academic Skills these positions of the body are related carefully to the We have a problem appreciating this importance in Center was planning something new: the organization of content of the Mass, and they are pretty much the same great part because of our upbringing in the Television willing students in our class into small groups for study­ everywhere. Yet at the evening Mass here at Duke, Culture. A personal example: it dawned on me toward the ing together. I laughed inside; isn't that exactly what nobody stands up anymore at the times where I have end of high school that I am a slow reader, purely in terms discussion sections are for? But, as mentioned above, always done so at every service I've ever been to anywhere of speed. When I hear someone here at Duke talk about sections have become like lectures because students just else. Instead, everybody just sits there. And, further, reading 300 pages of intellectual material in a day or two, sit there. As far as I'm concerned, there should be no people don't sing very much (despite a wonderful choir), I am amazed because I must spend a week or more on this chairs in classrooms for discussion sections; only black­ they don't smile very much. All in all, I couldn't tell a thing amount of material. I am convinced that the problem is boards. You should have to spend 50 minutes per week in about what they feel inside because they just don't let it rooted in the fact that I watched seven hours per day of standing, talking, listening and writing in a group atmo­ out. These people are wonderful, animated individuals; television in my youth. Television is passive, while read­ sphere. Learn by teaching. Get your body involved. why are they so unanimated at church? ing is active; it employs the body as well as the mind. This And the body is no less important in worship. When I It is not just in churches that I see this problem. My is clear from the harmful impacts on studying caused by sing praise to God, my body wants to praise, too. My lungs roommate walked into the room yesterday and spontane­ tiredness, hunger and hangovers. When the needs ofthe want to sing out and my hands want to clap. I can barely ously broke out with his wonder at the way students in body are not accommodated, the body reduces the effec­ stand to sit there the whole time the way they do at too one of his classes just sit there. Sure, lectures of 350 tiveness of all its activities, including studying. Con­ many churches (of all faiths) today. But I don't think this students accommodate such a state, but there are no versely, when the body is made an active part of the is just a little idiosyncrasy of mine; the body is the temple excuses in a section or seminar. The oppressive silence of process, through proper posture and good note-taking, for of the soul, and the songs of the soul should echo in the the students forces section and seminar instructors to example, studying is made much more effective. temple. How can you praise God without your body? He lecture, even though their classes are sized specifically so Despite my awareness of these wonderful reading strat­ saved you with his body! students will do something besides just sit there. egies, I have a hard time making it happen. Reading, for For any kind of growth, whether spiritual or intellec­ Even Coach K has commented on this problem. In a me, is often like television: a passive endeavor. But those tual, we cannot neglect our corporeal aspects, or our concerned criticism of Duke fans, he wondered about how who know me understand me to be anything but passive, growth will be incomplete. So get your body into the act. we could be the home ofthe number one basketball team especially regarding academics. I just study best in differ­ And, whatever you do, come halftime at the Carolina in the country and yet, come halftime at Cameron, we just ent ways: talking, listening and writing on blackboards. game, DONT JUST SIT THERE! sit there. What is wrong? What is this sickness of ours? I My fellow physics majors and I study together all the time, David DePerro is a Trinity sophomore. PAGE 8 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1992 Comics

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37 Branches 64 65 66 38 Ratio words The Far Side / Gary Larson Doonesbury / Garry Trudeau 39 House or berth 67 68 69 41 Twofold 1 NORlAillilHOlP FORTH ONTHE 42 Ham or lob end ?1992 Tribune Media Services. Inc 03/03/92 R5/UY? FOR YURI All Rights Reserved TYSON VERPICT, THE COPS OR.4 3 — West FIVEBUCKSMORE,UJONT 44 Afr. fly Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: I GET PEACE ANP SAYKJORP THE WEATHER. I ALSO UJONT 46 Annoying one 7 Red deer QUIETALLTHE WAYONEABOuT GET LOST, IWNTSPEEPANU 47 Assorted: abbr. 8 Shoe width R A T E s c 0 W L E R A L 10 THB AIRPORT? THEMAYOR! WONT SCREAM AT MY PIS- 49 Lock of hair 9 Bustling about E L U T E H A H A L U N A \ PATCHER IN ARABIC. 50 Lively dance 10 Kind of cook E A T U P E R I C U R I S 52 Poem 11 Not any F R U I T L E SHS C A L E 54 Pretentious talk 12 — Clapton • s E E K T R A I L E R 57 Time saver of a 13 Geometric S R 0 T 0 Y L A N D kind figure: abbr. L 0 A D • P E N 0 A N T S 62 Old-time actor 18 Say A S T I AlP A R T| T A R T Warner 21 — Storm p A SlPlOlR T A E R I E 63 Pottery type 23 A Rose s 64 Suiting 24 Firm and fresh onciB nnra HHEJ 65 Ripped 25 Speed 66 Bancroft 26 Kefauver 67 Fragrant 27 Like some plans compound 29 Records 68 Appraise 31 Fry quickly 69 Back talk 32 Accumulate 33 Vexes 03/03/92 DOWN 35 A season 1 '—Well That 40 Cannikin kin Ends Well" 45 Cubic meter 2 "Winnie the —" 48 Colleague 3 —China 51 Sea duck 56 Pastry 59 Galilee village 4 Forecaster 53 Recipient 57 Gr. walk 60 Samovars 5 in quest of 54 Fireman's need 58 "— the night 61 Golfer's need 6 Oklahoman 55 Corrida cheers before..." 63 Ship: abbr.

THE CHRONICLE

Assistant sports editor: Brian Doster "Waiter, is that a hair in my salad?' Copy editors: Ann Heimberger, Hannah Kerby Peggy Krendl, Matt Steffora, Leya "one more week" Tseng Wire editors: Geoff Green, Caroline Nasrallah Associate photography editor: Cliff Burns Day photographer: Alexious Butler Calvin and Hobbes/ Bill Watterson Account representatives: Dorothy Gianturco, Peg Palmer Advertising sales staff: Kellie Daniels, Bob Dean IF TUERE t\9£ NO QUESTIONS, CERTMULvA YJUfrTS TUE I NENNT AN^ QUEST\ONS FRAKKLS, ID LWCEToUME Robert DiNardo, Roy Jurgens WELL MOVE ON To TUE MEXT CALVIN. I POINT OF KBOUT TUE SUBiECT AT UfvKD TUE \S5UE RESOLVED BEFORE Alan Mothner, Kerry Rupp, Jen Soininen COPTER. , WUM \s w?y UUMfvN I EXPEND ANV tADRE ENERGY Katie Spencer, Lori Wood, Jon Wyman \ EXISTENCE' ON TU\S Creative services staff: Michael Alcorta, Reva Bhatia Loren Faye, Dan Foy, Kathy McCue Merri Rolfe, Vineet Sarin, Susan Somers-Willett N Accounts payable manager: Michelle Klsloff W^ L Credit manager: Judy Chambers Classified managers: Greg Ceithaml, Bob Gilbreath, Linda Markovitz Business staff: Jessica Balis, Amina Hightower, Janet Johnson, Tim Rich Calendar coordinator: Cindy Cohen

Today "1492" Reynlods Theater. 8 pm. Plan V. The Green House. 202 Watts. Community Calendar Harvey Gantt. Speech on campaign race Cail 682-0887 for more information. vs. Jesse Helms. Ill Soc Sci. 7 pm. Mardi Gras Pot Luck Dinner. Fr. Mike Eucharist. Wesiey Fellowship. Wesley Green House Cooperative info/ KOINONIA. Chapel Basement. 9 pm. Shugrue's House. 6 pm. Sign up at office. Chapel Basement. 5:30 pm. organizational meeting. 108 W. Duke Catholic Student Center. Habitat for Humanity weekly meeting. Live Jazz Ensemble. Coffeehouse. 9-11 pm. Bldg. 9 pm. House D. 9 pm. "How Far Have We Really Come: Women, Weight and Self Esteem" Vonc Canon C. Support Group for Students Challenged by "Plethra and Hekatompeda: 100 Foot Arabic Language Table. Schlitz Room. Bryan Center. 7 pm. Medical/Physical Conditions, rm 01 Rowers. Fields and 100 Foot Temples" by Alison Bryan Center. 5:30 pm. 4-5:15 pm. Burford. Art Museum 103. 8 pm. The Women's Center Open House. Few Taize Evening Prayer Service. Memorial Fed Lounge. 4:30-6:30 pm. The Wesley Singers. Chapel Basement. 5 pm. University Service for Ash Wednesday. 8 Chapel of Duke Chapei. 5:15 pm. am. and 5:15 pm. "1492" Reynlods Theater. 8 pm. Lutheran Campus Ministry Worship with Carrom Night. Coffeehouse. 9-11 pm. Holy Eucharist. Duke Chapel Basement. Spring Film Program: Black Moon. Duke „' Society of Women Engineers elections/ 9:30 pm. Museum of Art. 7:30 pm. Celebration of Eucharist. Welsey meeting. Few Fed Lounge. Guest Fellowship. Wesiey Office. Chapel speaker: Martha Simmons. 6 pm. Ash Wednesday Catholic Mass. Duke Music of Mary Lou Williams. Jazz Films. basement. 5:30 pm. Chapel. 12:30 and 9:30 pm. Health Awareness Speaker: Johnetta Griffith Film Theater. 8 pm. The Honduras Team Meeting. Wesley Bowen. Zener Aud. Soc Sci 6:30 pm. Open Mike Night Arts Theme House. 10 pm. office. Chapel basement. 6:30 pm. Thursday, March 5 Wednesday, March 4 Dupont and IBM representatives speak on Tom DeLuca: Hypnotist and Comedian. Environmental concerns and policies of their Plan V. The Green House. 202 Watts. Page Aud. 8 pm. Plan V. East Campus Center. 6 pm. companies. 113 Physics Bldg. 7 pm. Call 682-0887 for more information. TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 9 Classifieds

Announcements BlackCrowesTix Duke Pals Parkwood Swim Club, Durham, seeks BlackCrowesTix Today tickets avialable to Duke We are going ice skating Thursday. pool manager, assistant manager, life­ Autos For Sale Today tickets avialable to Duke undergrads, grads, faculty, and staff Meet at the West Campus Bus Stop at guards, (full, part-time). Red cross train­ CHEAP! FBI/U.S. undergrads, grads, faculty, and staff Healthy Volunteers Needed! Males ONLY, (must bring Duke ID). Tickets on 6:45p.m. Skating for your pal is free. ing, WSI (new method) certification re­ ONLY, (must bring Duke ID). Tickets SEIZED. '89 Mercedes, $200! '89 VW, and females, 18-26 y .o., are needed sale to general public starting Wednes­ You will need about $5. Questions? quired. Call 544-7304, 5:30-10p.m. on sale to general public starting to participate in a study on physi­ $50! '87 Mercedes, $100! '65 Mustang, day! tickets are only $10 (cash orcheck Call Wendy, 684-1831. Wednesday! tickets are only $10 (cash ological responses to laboratory only). Available at Page Box Office. $50! Choose from thousands starting at or check only). Available at Page Box and everyday tasks. Participants 1492-STUDENTS $5 Child Care $25. FREE 24 hour recording reveals Office. will be reimbursed for their time details, 801-379-2929. copyright BlackCrowesTix Student Rush Extended. 1492 tickets at and effort. If interested, call 684- #NC10KJC. BlackCrowesTix Today tickets avialable to Duke door with Duke student ID. All perfor­ Babysitter needed fu II days Tuesday 8667 and ask for the ambulatory Today tickets avialable to Duke undergrads, grads, faculty, and staff mances through March 7. & Thursday in our Trinity Park home study (men only) or the women's ONLY, (must bring Duke ID). Tickets on for our active 21/2 year old. Must NISSAN SENTRA XE '90 4 DR, Auto., undergrads, grads, faculty, and staff study. sale to general public starting Wednes­ have experience, energy and plan to 22K, A/C. Cass. 1 year wrnty. $7,500. ONLY, (must bring Duke ID). Tickets day! tickets are only $10 (cash orcheck Meetings stay through summer. Call Leigh, 684-5449, 382-7221. on sale to general public starting Scuba classes start Feb.15. Why not only). Available at Page Box Office. 683-1179. Wednesday! tickets are only $10 (cash go diving over Spring Break? Call Wa­ CENTRAL GUARDS Misc. For Sale or check only). Available at Page Box BlackCrowesTix ter World. 596-8185. ATTENTION Central Campus Life­ Services Offered Office. Today tickets avialable to Duke guards!!! Mandatory meeting March COMIC BOOKS BlackCrowesTix NEED MONEY undergrads, grads, faculty, and staff 6, 3p.m., at 1915 Yearby Ave apt. E. for sale. X-Men, Dark Knight, Love and PC'S TYPING SERVICE - For all your Today tickets avialable to Duke NEED MONEY FOR YOUR EDUCA­ ONLY, (must bring Duke ID). Tickets on Call Britta, 684-5489, for info or RSVP. Rockets, 1500 books. Leave message typing needs. Professional staff gets undergrads, grads, faculty, and staff TION? High School, Vocational, Col­ sale to general public starting Wednes­ for Terry at Chronicle, 684-2663. lege, Grad. Students-we at Student day! tickets are only $10 (cash orcheck the job done right! Low rates. 544- ONLY, (must bring Duke ID). Tickets 2580. on sale to general public starting Financial Services guarantee to find only). Available at Page Box Office. Duke Commemorative Plates, 1937, set/ Social Events Wednesday! tickets are only $10 (cash a minimum number of financial aid 12, Wedgwood, Mint condition. $650. ALERT MARCH 6TH or check only). Available at Page Box sources REGARDLESS OF ECO­ SCC MEETING Interiors, Durham, 489-2316. NOMIC BACKGROUND, GPA, TEST All sports club presidents must at- Learn swing dancing at Underthe Street, Attention computer users on Duke Office. SCORES, etc. or 100% of your fee tendl Wednesday, March 4 at 7p.m., 1104 Broad Street, Durham, tuesday Faculty and Staff. The Michaelangelo refunded and you will receive all Soc-Psych 126. beginning March 3. Beginners 6p.m., virus will activate March 6th. For free Tickets For Sale DON'T FORGET every Tuesday the sources found Free! Our computer intermediates 7p.m., advanced 8p.m. sample testing and virus removal call Women's Center has an Open data base is one of the most com­ HEY AEPHI'S! $30 for 4 weeks. Call Richard Badu, the Data Mason, 220-8551. GRATEFUL DEAD!! House from 4:30-6p.m. Refresh­ plete of it's kind in the country Leave yourtent for a nonbusiness meet­ 286-7740. Psychotherapy tickets. Buy/sell all concerts, sports, ments served and everyone wel­ theatre worldwide. TOP DOLLAR paid for come! containing over 14,000 financial ing Tuesday at 8p.m. Check Panhel Quality, inexpensive individual/ Board for location. ACC Tournament. (919) 967-9584. aid sources. These sources consist Entertainment couples counseling. Kerry Johnson, FREE CONCERT of scholarships, grants, loans, work Duke Wind Symphony live in Baldwin; SpeakOfTheDevil M.A., M.S.W., 1318 Broad St., For sale: 2 final four tickets in Upper programs, etc. For free application Durham, 27705. 549-6361. Thursday, 8p.m. and info, package call answering is auditioning all male singing parts for TAG IS BACK! Level Metrodome. Call Kirt: 512-595- service: 1-800-USA-1221 Ext. 2524; next fall! March 10,11. Sign-ups: B.C. Shoot your friend with paint pellets in 2769 or 512-595-7830. DJ the woods of Northern Durham. It's a or Chapel Hill office: (919)967- Info Desk. Rooms for Rent 4 FINAL 4 TIX Sorry I missed the ad deadline for 9010. blast! Just ask anyone on campus who's your birthday. Happy late birthday! Best offer. Call Lenny (Ohio) days: 216- AUDITIONS tried it. Call Hal at 383-4489 for more Luv, Tiffani. TOMORROW Sign up at B.C. Info Desk to audition for info. Large room available now! 21/2 blocks 273-3200, evenings & weekends: 216- the Wendell Theater Group's spring to East. Share historic home, furnished/ 292-0643. Buy 2 or 4. Kristen Sanford Look for a survey on SEXUALITY— plays. For information call Rob, 684- unfurnished, washer/dryer. $265/mo. Happy Birthday to my geology buddy back page of tomorrow's Chronicle. 0542. Help Wanted plus utilities. 419-4421. and sister! Luv, Tiffani. Be heard! Send it in! Wanted to Buy SWE MEETING HARVEY GANTT HARVEY GANTT Work-study student wanted to videotape Room rental, temp/long-term, prefer to Tonight at 6p.m. in FewFed Lounge. share w/professional female. 493-2310. Need Carolina tix for March 8. Will pay will be speaking in ill Soc-Sci will speak about his 1990 campaign pediatric visits and collect data in Martha Simmons will be speaking, and $$. Call Steve, (215)981-5637. Wednesday at 7p.m. about his Sen­ against Helms. March 4, 7p.m., Ill daycares on toileting. Need car, Tues­ we will be having elections for new offic­ ate campaign against Jesse Helms. Soc-Sci. day afternoon availability. Prefer female, Apts. for Rent Wanted: two tickets to Carolina game ers. videotaping experience. Contact Dr. Sunday, March 8. Please call 848-1580. Auburn GO TO HELL UNC! DG FORMAL Howard, 684-5513. Behind East Campus, 2BR duplex avail­ Amanda: cheese? tractors? Kansas? AEPhi Spirit Link this week- B.C. Wajk- Diehard Duke fans desperately seeking meetingtonightin Bio-Sci. Pledges-6p.m. able March 1. $400/month. Call 286- Brazil? Big Duece perhaps? Happy ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT- fish­ tickets to UNC game on Mrach 8. Call way. Show your group's spirit. Sup­ Sisters-7:20p.m. Get psyched and bring 3547. Birthday! eries. Earn $5,000+/month. Free trans­ port your favorite charity. checkbooks. Paula, 684-1710. portation! Room & Board! Over 8,000 1BR apt near E.Campus, large rooms, CINDY GREGORY ROPES COURSE STAFF: Mandatory AEPHI PLEDGES!! openings. No experience necessary. hardwood floors, W/D, available now. Desperately seeking two tickets to Find the man whose last name is synonynmous with a great BBQ joint Safety Review meeting Wednesday, Y'all are too awesome! Hope you en­ Male or Female. For employment pro­ 489-1989. Carolina game. Will pay top dollar. in Durham. He lives in a dorm that March 4,8p.m. in room 311 Soc-Sci. joyed last weekend, look forward to gram call Student Employment Services Call collect, Howard (day) 215-569- might be mistaken for a famous En­ If you cannot attend you must call good times to come! LML, a random Phi! at (206)5454155 ext. 1498. Furnished effeciency/room, $285/ 5539; (night) 215-564-5575. Inara and arrange a make-up session. $225. Includes utilities, cable, and glish monument. Be there by 9:30p.m. Bring your calenders. ADPi $40,000/Year! Read phone. On bus line. 490-9754. DESPERATE: I need 1-6 tickets for Duke- for the full tour...GOOD LUCK! Love, Meeting tonight at Wann. IV at 6:20p.m. BOOKS and TV scripts. Fill out simple Carolina. Call John Myers, 1-800-992- YBS. BOG INTERVIEWS! for all alphas and sisters. Don't miss it! "like/don't like form. EASY! Fun, relax­ 2976 days, 919-441-5035 nights. Houses for Rent FRANCISCA: In a world full of strang­ This week is your last chance to inter­ ing at home, beach, vacations. Guaran­ ers, it is a rare and miraculous find to view for the best all-male selective Harvey Gantt will talk about his 1990 teed paycheck. FREE 24 hour recording 4-5-6 BR Houses, near Duke, E. Cam­ Travel/Vacations stumble across a true friend. Thank house on West. Call 684-7283 by campaign against Jesse Helms on (801)379-2925, copyright #NC10KEB. pus. Hardwood floors, security sys­ you for everything. Wednesday, March 4 for sign-ups. Wednesday at 7p.m. in 111 Soc-Sci. tems, W/D-Dish. Large rooms, avail­ SPRING BREAK '92- Make it JAMAICA Sponsored by Duke Democrats. BE ON TV! Many needed for commer­ BBALL TRIVIA able May/June, 489-1989. with low, low prices starting at $459. Call ENVIRONMENT ~~ cials. Now hiring all ages. For casting IBM and DuPont discuss corporate questions and answers needed/Con­ Sun Splash Tours. 1-800-426-7710. SOCA info, call (615)779-7111 ext. T-1734. environmentalism and answer ques­ tributors scknowledged. Send to Infor­ Wonderful, huge, historic homes near Students Ofthe CAribbean meeting Sun­ tions Wednesday, March 4, Physics mation Navigation, 4201 University East. Partly furnished large bedrooms, Lost & Found day March 8 in the Mary Lou at 3:30p.m. $360/UP WEEKLY 113, 7p.m. Drive, #102 Durham 27707. Agenda: elect officials and meet visiting fireplace, porches, W/D, and more. Avail­ Mailing brochures! 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Bring yer friends. performances through Saturday, Chronicle Classifieds •niDWT March 7. BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706. Durham |T*AV1L Morning person? Like getting up at the crack of dawn to 1492!! Student Rush Extended. 120 N. Aurora St.. Ithaca, NY 14850 Call 684-3476 if you have questions about classifieds. make classes? Then you'll LOVE Central $5 at door with Duke student ID. Campus. Or, live in BOG! Last week for All performances through Sat* No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline. near Harris "Teetelt 1800-648-4849 interviews. Call 684-7283 urday, March 7. PAGE 10 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1992 Supreme Court decides to hear cases on sex, drug money

By In appealing that ruling to the U.S. Justice Clarence Thomas, who as a mem­ service organizations. N.Y. Times News Service Supreme Court, Montana is arguing that ber of the appeals court sat on the unani­ The policy was challenged in a 1985 WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court the decision "effectively eviscerates sex mous three-judge panel that invalidated lawsuit. Last year, the 9th U.S. Circuit agreed Monday to decide whether sex of­ offender programs and other similar the ban, did not vote on whether to hear Court of Appeals in California, ruled that fenders can be required to undergo therapy therapy programs" that require partici­ the appeal. Justices Byron White and the policy violated the children's constitu­ as a condition of staying out of jail if the pants to accept responsibility for their Sandra Day O'Connor voted to hear the tional right to due process of law by sub­ therapy requires the offender to acknowl­ behavior. case. jecting them to detention without suffi­ edge guilt denied at trial. Montana is arguingthat the self-incrimi­ The FCC defines indecent material as cient justification. Therapy programs as conditions of pro­ nation clause is not even applicable to a that containing "patently offensive" refer­ In its appeal, Barr vs. Flores, No. 91- bation are widely used alternatives to case like this, in which a person has al­ ences to "sexual or excretory activities" 905, the administration is arguing that prison sentences. Many therapists view ready been convicted and does not face a although it falls short of being obscene. the appeals court should have deferred to acceptance of responsibility as an essen­ threat of further prosecution from any The commission had previously permit­ the immigration service's judgment that tial part of the treatment. incriminating statements to a therapist. ted such material to be broadcast late at the policy is in the children's best interest. In an appeal brought by the state of But Imlay's lawyer told the court that night, on the theory that children would Writing for the appeals court majority, Montana, the justices will decide whether his client might face perjury charges if he not be listening or watching. In 1988, Con­ Judge Mary Schroeder said the immigra­ requiring such acceptance of responsibil­ confessed to events that he had denied gress ordered the commission to extend tion service knew nothing about child wel­ ity can violate the constitutional right during his trial. The state's argument the ban to 24 hours a day. fare and was not "entitled to any defer­ against compelled self-incrimination. would force Imlay "to provide the rope for In its ruling last May, the appeals court ence." Twenty other states joined Montana's his own hanging," the brief said. interpreted previous Supreme Court deci­ — Forfeiture of Drug Proceeds: In an­ appeal of a ruling by the Montana Su­ Beyond the therapeutic situation pre­ sions as providing that indecent material other government appeal, the court agreed preme Court. The case could have broader sented by this case, judges frequently take is entitled to at least some First Amend­ to decide whether a person who receives a implications for the influence of the Fifth into account defendants' willingness to ment protection and cannot be completely gift of property that was acquired with Amendment's protection against self-in­ acknowledge responsibility for their ac­ banned. money from drug trafficking must lose it crimination on criminal sentencing. tions when deciding on a sentence. The appeals court ordered the commis­ under a federal law that makes the pro­ In this case, a man who was convicted of The Supreme Court has not directly sion to give broadcasters a "safe harbor" ceeds of drug trafficking subject to forfei­ sexually assaulting a 7-year-old girl de­ addressed the implications of imposing a period, a time of night when the material ture. spite his assertion of innocence, was sen­ longer sentence on a defendant who has could be broadcast to an adult audience. The 1978 law on forfeiture includes an tenced to five years in prison, but the exercised his constitutional right against — Custody of Alien Children: Accepting "innocent-owner defense," which shields sentence was suspended on the condition compelled self-incrimination. The decision a Bush administration appeal, the court people who do not know that property they that he take part in an outpatient sexual in this case, Montana vs. Imlay, No. 91- agreed to decide the constitutionality of a own has been used in the narcotics trade. therapy program. 687, might shed light on the broader ques­ federal policy that provides for detaining But the lower federal courts disagree on After four months, the therapist refused tion as well. children in shelters if they are illegal aliens how this defense applies to assets that to treat the man, Donald Imlay, because These were among the other actions the facing deportation proceedings and no adult were acquired through drug proceeds and, Imlay was still denying that any sexual court took Monday: relative is available to care for them. in the government's view, were never le­ contact had occurred. The therapist said — Ban on Broadcasts: The court refused Thousands of unaccompanied children gitimately owned by anyone in the first no progress could take place in light ofthe to hear the Bush administration's appeal are picked up every year by the Immigra­ place. continued denial. of a lower court ruling that struck down a tion and Naturalization Service. After a hearing, the trial court revoked proposed ban on the radio or television Under the policy, if no immediate family In this case, U.S. vs. A Parcel of Land, Imlay's probation and ordered him to serve broadcast of all "indecent" material. members are available to care for them No. 91-781, the government tried to take a the rest of his five-year sentence in the The case, Federal Communications Com­ while they wait for a deportation hearing, house in Rumson, N.J. that was bought by Montana State Prison. mission vs. Action for Children's Televi­ they are confined in a special shelters for a a woman whose male friend, an indicted The Montana Supreme Court set aside sion, No. 91-952, was an appeal from a month or more until guardians are ap­ narcotics dealer, provided more than the sentence on the ground that the Fifth ruling last May by the U.S. Court of Ap­ pointed. $200,000 for the purchase. Amendment prohibits increasing a peals for the District of Columbia Circuit, The immigration service asserts that The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in defendant's sentence as a penalty for re­ which found the ban unconstitutional un­ following this policy is safer than releasing Philadelphia ruled that the woman was fusing to confess to a crime. der the First Amendment. the children to unrelated adults or social entitled to use the innocent-owner defense. Movement toward Scottish independence gaining ground

By WILLIAM SCHMIDT the British political debate, raising alarms among those year than it contributes itself in taxes. N.Y. Times News Service who say they fear for the future ofthe union, and suggest­ At the same time, Neil Kinnock, the head of the rival KILMARNOCK, Scotland — Each morning, when ing opportunities among those who sense in the Scots' Labor Party, says that if Labor wins the national election Alastair Mac-Innes arrives at the Scottish National Party's restiveness an opening for electoral advantage. this spring, he will introduce legislation within a year to cramped office here, he finds a bundle of cards pushed In a speech last weekend, Major, whose party com­ give Scotland its own taxing powers and a separate through the postal slot, sometimes as many as 20, mailed mands a majority ofthe House of Commons but holds only governing assembly. by people who want to join the cause of an independent 9 of the 72 parliamentary seats from Scotland, warned Scotland. darkly that the disintegration ofthe union with Scotland "Suddenly, people are realizing they are Scots, first and would be "pure poison" because it would diminish Britain's foremost," said Maclnnes, a longtime party stalwart, as international influence and weaken Scotland. he stuffed envelopes beneath a banner displaying the Among other things, the Conservatives argue that blue and white St. Andrew's cross, the ancient emblem of independence, or other forms of autonomy, would cost Scotland. "Something powerful is changing in Scotland, Scotland jobs and bring higher taxes, since Scotland and it is more than just sentiment." receives more money from the central government each For nearly 300 years, Scotland has been the northern division ofthe United Kingdom, joined in peace and war to England in a union that also includes Wales and Northern Ireland. But in the taverns and factories and housing

estates of this working-class town, as in scores of others across f"i ^a^^^ Dulf Uhmhv IMoa Scotland, a new mood has been quietly growing, fanned by the Good Vision nationalist winds blowing from Europe. fl In recent months, more and more Scots have begun to ifUJU W rRffMttLR and Good Looks... say openly that they they want to sever or, at the very A Technicolor Freewater Presentation! least, loosen the covenant that has bound Scotland to A Life's Passage Into Experience at a Great Price! England and the rest of Britain. In the new Europe, they Guaranteed best price on argue, Scotland should have its own voice. GIGI So far, it has been a peaceable, even quiet, revolt 7555, 116 min. d. Vincente Minnelli; with Leslie complete eyeglasses in compared with the nationalist tumult on the Continent. Caron, Maurice Chevalier, Louis Jourdan. Perhaps the crowning achievement of the MGM the Durham area. But its sentiments can be heard clearly, not only in the musical era, this enchanting musical revolves around oratory of politicians but also in the lyrics of Scottish rock the life of a young, carefree Parisian girl, Gigi (Caron), Opthamologist on premises. musicians and the public pronouncements of Scottish on the verge of womanhood. A rich playboy, Gaston celebrities like Sean Connery, the actor, who has already (Jourdan), befriends her but slowly discovers that Gigi >•»*»•, lent his voice and prestige to the nationalist cause. is no longer the awkward little girl he once knew. The It can also be measured in public opinion polls. Al­ delightful score, by the legendary team of Lerner and Visit us in our new Lowe, is one of the greatest ever written for the silver though Scots seem divided on whether they want outright screen and truly enriches the warm, Parisian location at independence or just a greater stake in their own affairs atmosphere of this classic film. Chevalier won an within Britain, only one in four say they want to continue honorary Oscar for his amusing, glorious performance ll6CmtchfieldSt the existing arrangment within the United Kingdom. as Gaston's woman-idolizing uncle. tbsid&of Whether the mood is a passing phase, an emotional 7:00 & 9:30—Griffith Film Theater Durban County Genen^Hospital flirtation with nationalism, or in fact a serious political FREE—to Duke Students with ID Brightleaf challenge to the union will be measured in the coming months All others, $3.00 Mon.-Fri. 10-5:30 Opfical when voters across the United Kingdom cast ballots for a new Our LIFE'S PASSAGE INTO EXPERIENCE series ends tonight! Saturday by appointment Parliament. Prime Minister John Major is expected to call a The night they invented champagne... 471-6928 national;election no later than early May. But already the shift in the Scottish mood has colored TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1992 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 11 Sports Women's basketball bounced by Georgia Tech, 75-53

By TOM ENSTICE the field for the game and 1-7 (14.3 percent) from three After sandwiching a home victory over Wake Forest point range. between two impressive losing efforts on the road against If Duke had beaten Georgia Tech, the Blue Devils nationally ranked Maryland and Clemson, the women's would have finished in a tie for seventh place in the basketball team went into Alexander Memorial Coliseum conference with the Lady Jackets. Since the Blue Devils and was stung by the Georgia Tech Lady Jackets, 75-53, would have then swept the season series with Tech, Duke in the final Atlantic Coast Conference game ofthe regular would be facing second place Maryland, a team which season. Tech caused eleven steals and forced twenty- beat the Blue Devils, 74-69, in College Park just two three Duke turnovers. weeks ago, in the ACC Tournament. Instead, Duke now The Lady Jackets were led by junior Devony Caldwell needs to beat Wake Forest on Friday for the right to play who had 20 points and 5 steals and junior All-ACC Virginia, a team that has beaten Duke twice this season candidate Joyce Pierce who added 17 points. Senior Celeste by an average margin of 36 points. Lavoie scored 16 points for the Blue Devils. Duke drops to 13-14,4-12 in the conference while Georgia Tech moves to 15-12, 6-10. DUKE VS . GEORGIA TECH The loss now places the Blue Devils into a play-in game Duke MP FG 3PG FT R A TO BLK ST PFPTS Lavoie 35 7-10 CO 2-2 5 110 0 2 16 versus Wake Forest on Friday in Rock Hill, South Caro­ Johnson 34 4-11 0-0 3-4 6 0 3 2 0 1 11 lina, to determine who will face regular-season champion Wills 24 3-6 OO 4-6 7 0 4 0 I 1 10 and number one ranked Virginia in the ACC Tourna­ Anderson 9 0-1 Ol 0-0 0 0 10 0 0 0 Kost 17 1-2 CM) 1-2 1 0 10 1 5 3 ment. Brandau 10 1-1 CK> 0-1 0 12 0 0 1 2 Tech swarmed the Blue Devils from the start, going out McDonald 30 2-7 1-3 Ol 2 2 2 0 0 0 5 to a 17-2 lead in the game's first six and one-half minutes. Baker 23 1-8 0-3 4-5 3 12 0 2 2 6 McFarland 8 0-1 0-0 OO 0 12 0 1 1 0 Duke fought back, however, and with 4:42 left in the half Kauffman 7 Ol 0-0 OQ 2 0 3 0 0 0 0 cut the deficit to 28-23, behind sophomore Nicole Johnson's Meiman 2 0-0 OO 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ten points. McKaig 1 0-0 0-0 OO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Team 4 Tech's Caldwell, however bettered Johnson's perfor­ Totals 20019-48 1-7 14-2130 6 23 2 13 53 mance, picking up 16 points and three steals for the half s and her team went into the locker room with a 40-30 Georgia Tech MP FG 3PG FT R A TO BUC ST PFPTS Lounsbury 31 2-4 1-1 OO 2 110 0 0 5 advantage. Caldwell 28 8-10 2-2 2-2 8 3 3 0 5 3 20 In the second half, things got bad for Duke in a hurry. Pierce 32 7-15 0-0 34 10 3 3 1 2 3 17 The Blue Devils rebounding effectiveness was dealt a Baldwin 23 35 OO 0-0 0 2 2 0 0 1 6 Echols 23 4-6 OO 2-3 2 2 13 2 4 10 quick blow when 6-1 senior forward Monika Kost, saddled Davis 22 1-3 0-0 00 2 5 10 1 0 2 with two first half fouls, picked up her fourth foul ofthe Kauffman 14 2-5 0-0 0-2 3 0 2 0 1 4 4 game with 18:42 left to play. Tech then proceeded to go on Weiss 18 4-7 OO OO 3 Oil 0 3 8 Keener 4 Ol 0-0 OO 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 20-10 run, stretching its lead to 60-42, before Kost fouled Fischer 3 0-1 Ol 1-2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 out ofthe game with 8:07 remaining. Harrgon 1 1-1 0-0 00 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 Georgia Tech extended its lead to 23 points in the next Team 1 three minutes and finalized the score at 75-53. Totals 20032-59 34 8-13 34 16 14 5 11 19 75 The Lady Jackets' defense clamped down on the Blue Georgia Tech 40 35 75 PAUL ORSULAK/THE CHRONICLE Devils in the second half. Tech contained Johnson, limit­ Duke 30 23 53 ing her to only one point for the half, and held Duke to 40 Technical Fouls: None. Offk ials: Sally Bell. Bob Hamby. Nicole Johnson had 11 points against Georgia Tech percent shooting from the field. 1 Attendance — 1,632 but Duke's defense couldn't hold back the Jackets. The Blue Devils shot a dismal 19-48 (39.6 percent) from Men's basketball still on top of poll, UNC falls six spots

JIM O'CONNELL way until they dropped to 48 first-place votes last week. St. John's and Connecticut—were from the Big East, but Associated Press The Blue Devils had 58 No. 1 votes this week and 1,617 Seton Hall's return has the conference with three teams Duke solidified its hold on No. 1 Monday while the Big points from the nationwide panel of sportswriters and meaning the Big Ten and Southeastern Conference have East continued its shuffling at the bottom of The Associ­ broadcasters to easily outdistance Indiana and Kansas, the most ranked teams with four each. ated Press college basketball rankings. which held second and third. St. John's (17-8) split its two games last week beating The Blue Devils (23-2) beat Virginia last week to clinch The Hoosiers (21-4) received three first-place votes, one Providence on the road and losing at Notre Dame to end the Atlantic Coast Conference regular-season title and more than Kansas (21-3) as both teams won their only a seven-game winning streak. Connecticut (17-8) contin­ defeated then-No. 4 UCLA on the road to get back some of game last week. ued its late-season slide with losses last week to Pitts­ the first-place votes they had lost. Arizona (22-4) moved up one spot to fourth and Ohio burgh and Seton Hall giving the Huskies a 1-7 record Duke has been atop the rankings since the preseason State (19-5) jumped from eighth to round out the top five. since Feb. 1. They had been ranked as high as fifth during poll and every week since was unanimous or nearly that UNLV (25-2), which received the final two first-place the season. votes, moved from seventh to sixth and was followed in Nebraska (18-7) was ranked for just one week as the the Top Ten by Arkansas, Southern Cal, UCLA and Cornhuskers split their two games last week and dropped AP MEN'S BASKETBALL POLL Kentucky. from the poll. Rank Team Record Last Week Arizona, Southern Cal and UCLA gives the Pac-10 au DUKE (58) 23-2 1 three teams in the Top Ten. Missouri, which was sixth last week before losing to 2. Indiana (3) 21-4 2 Laettner is named 3. Kansas (2) 21-3 3 Kansas State, led the Second Ten and was followed by 4. Arizona 22-4 5 Oklahoma State, Michigan State, Cincinnati, DePaul, 5. Ohio State 19-5 8 North Carolina, Georgetown, Michigan, Florida State 6. UNLV (2) 25-2 ACC Player of 7 and Alabama. 7. Arkansas 22-6 9 Tulane led the final five and was followed by Seton Hall, 8. Southern Cal 20-4 13 Louisiana State, Syracuse and Massachusetts. 9. UCLA 21-4 4 Cincinnati (22-4) and DePaul (19-6), members of the the Week again Kentucky 22-5 11 10. first-year Great Midwest, made the week's biggest jumps, 11. Missouri 20-5 6 12. Oklahoma St. 22-5 14 each moving up six spots to 14th and 15th. CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) — Duke's Christian Laettner, 13. Michigan St. 18-6 12 The biggest drops were of the same length as North who scored 29 points in the top-ranked Blue Devils' 14. Cincinnati 22-4 19 Carolina (18-7), which has lost four straight, fell from victory over then-No. 4 UCLA on Sunday, has been named 15. DePaul 19-6 21 10th to 16th, while Tulane (19-5), which lost to South the Atlantic Coast Conference player ofthe week. 16. North Carolina 18-7 10 Florida and Louisville last week, dropped to 21st. Laettner also scored 32 against Virginia. His jersey was 17. Georgetown 18-7 18 Seton Hall (18-7) was the highest ranked ofthe new­ retired that night. 18. Michigan 17-7 17 comers this week at 22nd. The Pirates, who beat James Forrest of Georgia Tech was named rookie ofthe 22 19. Florida St. 19-8 Georgetown and Connecticut last week, had been out of week. Forrest tied his career high of 26 points against 20. Alabama 21-7 16 the rankings for one week. Tulane 19-5 15 North Carolina State and he grabbed a career high 16 21. Louisiana State (18-7) was out the last two votings and 22. Seton Hall 18-7 rebounds. He scored seven in a win over Wake Forest. — returned at 23rd with wins over Mississippi and Ala­ 23. LSU 18-7 — It was the second time this season that Laettner and 24. Syracuse 18-7 22 bama. Forrest earned the honors. 25. Massachusetts 24-4 — Massachusetts (24-4), which has already clinched the Others receiving votes: St John's 157, Texas-El Paso 84, Oklahoma 82, Atlantic 10 regular-season title, was ranked for one week Nebraska 66, Wisconsin-Green Bay 51, Texas 50, Wake Forest 46, Houston Today 42, Pepperdine 32, Princeton 22. Richmond 19, Connecticut 15, Montana earlier in the season, the school's first-ever appearance in 14, Georgia Tech 10, Brigham Young 5, Louisville 5, Memphis State 4, the poll. The Minutemen earned their way back in at No. baseball vs. St. Augustine, Jack Coombs Field, 3:30 Delaware 3, Iowa 2, Miami (Ohio) 2, North Carolina-Charlotte 2, Notre Dame 25 with wins last week over West Virginia and Duquesne. 2, Boston College 2, Evansville 1. Penn State 1. p.m. Two ofthe three teams dropping out ofthe rankings — PAGE 12 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1992 Important information from the Textbook Store

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