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The Chronicle THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1988 < DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 84, NO. 7 Canada, U.S. Women's soccer kicks off with 6-0 blowout By MARK McLAUGHLIN The Duke women's soccer program law compared began their inaugural varsity season with a bang by rolling over the Alabama Crim­ By DON JOHNSON son Tide 6-0 Saturday night before an es­ Four fellowships to study timated 750 fans at the Duke Soccer similarities and differences between Field. the legal systems of the United States Wasting no time, freshman Katie Spen­ and Canada have been established by cer scored the historical first goal only the University's Canadian Studies 4:26 into the game. Center (CSC) and are scheduled to "I told myself before the game that I begin in 1990. wanted to be the one to score that first The fellowships were proposed be­ goal," Spencer said. "After I scored, it cause the neighboring countries share didn't click and then it was like 'Oh my historical connections, including law- God, I scored the first goal.' " related connections, said William Van Immediately following that first goal, Alstyne, William and Thomas Perkins coach Bill Hempen gestured with his Professor of Law, and assistant to hands and looked to the heavens. "How Clark Cahow, director of the CSC. did I feel right then? Thank God I didn't "You can't be neighbors in trade have to wait any longer than that," Hem­ without laws in common," Van Alstyne pen said. said. Hempen started nine freshmen, none of Cahow said the chief justices of both which had ever played together before as­ Supreme Courts have given their ap­ sembling as a team two weeks ago. proval to the fellowship program and "They did a lot of freshman things and to a spring 1991 conference involving they did a lot of senior things. They federal judges from both countries. played very well together," Hempen said. JEFFERS/THE CHRONICLE Chief Justice Rehnquist has expressed "They did things out there tonight that Freshman Katie Spencer scored the first goal In the history of varsity women's an interest in attending the conference they really haven't done so far this year soccer at Duke. along with several of his associate jus­ and I was very pleased with that." tices, Cahow said. Spencer netted her second goal at the goal of her own by beating the Alabama Blue Devil goals. Two University faculty members or 31:24 mark when she took a pass from goalkeeper one-on-one at 39:56. Can- "We had worked so hard in preseason graduate students and two counter­ freshman Nicole Canzoneri and scored zoneri's ability to dribble past Alabama but we didn't know how we would do. We parts from any Canadian university from 15 yards out. Canzoneri scored a defenders contributed to three of the six See WOMEN on page 1 SPORTSWRAP ^ working in the area of law or law-re­ lated fields will be awarded the fellow­ ships, Cahow said. As part of the program, each Klan marches meet no violence Photos show recipient must spend three months in Canada and three months in the U.S. BySEANREILLY offered the Klan a permit to march Sept. researching issues that affect appellate Marches on Saturday by the Christian 10 instead. grit, poverty courts, with an emphasis on comparing Knights of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) in Howard Bobbitt, assistant grand and contrasting between the Canadian Raleigh and Hillsborough ended without dragon of the KKK for North Carolina, and U.S. court systems. Each scholar violence, despite furious words between said last week that the Klan would not ac­ By KRISTIN RICHARDSON must use the Supreme Court libraries, supporters and opponents of the white cept the alternate permit and might sue While the poverty of Appalachia has law school libraries and national ar­ supremist organization. the City of Durham for infringement of its been documented unemotionally, most chives of both countries. The only arrests oc- _f~^_ first amendment rights. Powell said people never encounter its reality per­ See CANADA on page 4 ^ curred when Dur- ==m J Friday he had not yet been contacted by sonally. The Doris Ulmann photog­ m any Klan representative regarding the raphy exhibit now on display at the ham police discov- riT *\_JJF\ ^R ered marijuana and lawsuit. Duke Museum of Art offers the oppor­ drug paraphernalia Terry Boyce, grand dragon for North tunity to catch a glimpse of that TOWN heritage, in the car of a ~ Carolina, said the Klan was holding the Student struck Klansman who was passing through Dur­ marches as "an exercise of our constitu­ Part of the interest of Ulmann's ham on his way from Raleigh to Hill­ tional rights," as well as to let elected offi­ work is created by the tension between sborough. Four Klan members were ar­ cials know "the people" supported the the artist's aesthetic and documentary by falling glass rested as a result. Klan in its opposition to drugs, abortion, goals. She uses a The two marches, which involved about communism and race-mixing. soft-focused, Im- g^^ArprrC! n~ From staff reports 70 Klan members from North Carolina, The Hillsborough march, the second in pressionistic TT ^*jS.i 9L^. The glass globe surrounding a South Carolina, West Virginia, Ohio and the Orange County town this year, was techmque, LEISURE lightbulb in a Cambridge Inn (CI) Georgia, were part of a series of Labor more heated than the Raleigh event. As though she is = chandelier fell and shattered onto a Day weekend events for the KKK. In ad­ Klan members, many wearing the tradi­ recording the table Sunday, causing minor cuts in a dition to the marches in Hillsborough and tional robe and hood, assembled next to hard lives of an impoverished people. student's arm. Raleigh, the group held a rally Saturday the new Orange County Courthouse at Her photograph of a group of The student, Trinity junior Katie night in Reidsville and marches on Sun­ 4:00, approximately 60 supporters and 80 children in a stream near two empty Ohotnicky, said she had decided not to day in Wilson and Greenville. protestors looked on. barrels demonstrates this conflict. At go to the infirmary, as the glass had An application by Klan officials for a Those protesting the Klan's presence in first glance, the image is aesthetically only scratched her and she did not see permit to march through downtown Dur­ Hillsborough generally said they came pleasing in its balance and soft mood. any glass embedded in her arm. ham on Saturday afternoon was rejected out of concern and disgust for what the But the subject cannot be ignored: it becomes apparent that one of the "There was just this big crash and I early in August by Durham City Manager KKK represents. young girls is pregnant. This fact was covered with glass," Ohotnicky Orville Powell. Powell cited the heavy "I feel an obligation to come up and yell brings up other questions — Is the said. "I thought someone had thrown traffic expected from the football game be­ at these people," said Dave McKee, a baby she holds hers, too? Are the something at me." tween North Carolina Central University Trinity sophomore. "It's very hypocritical others her sisters or her children? Ohotnicky said Brenda Pratt, the and North Carolina State University. He See KKK on page 3 • CI's manager Sunday night, had of­ Ulmann began her travels of Ap­ fered to replace the shirt she had been palachia in 1925 while pursuing an in­ wearing because it had been soiled Inside terest in handicrafts, but it was the with blood. Weather people of the area that captured her Pratt said she believed the globe had imagination. Their "genuineness of I should have known better: character" led her to devote the rest of not been secured by maintenance How many Beatles songs could you Slave labor: Go to class with highs in the lows 80s as the real world her life to photographing them, Ul­ workers on Friday when they changed recall word for word given a title and r =pends their vacation time at the beach mann explained. lightbulbs in the CI's chandeliers, and first line? Find out how well son- ir mountains. At least you can hope Two years before her death in 1934, added that she had asked maintenance other students did, and whai the they'll have a lousy time with a 40 per­ Ulmann's interest brought her to *the to check and secure all the remaining results might mean about memory, on cent chance of showers. on Monday. page 3. See PHOTOS on page 4 ^ IkE CHRONICLE World & National Newsfile Thousands of Chileans rally against Pinochet Associated Press the wide avenue for the generally festive the opposition since Pinochet, the army Eastern clear for layoffs: East- rally that became violent when some commander, lifted on Aug. 27 the the em Airlines posted a $4.7 million bond SANTIAGO, Chile — Thousands of peo­ groups began the march toward the capit­ state of emergency that restricted public with a federal court, clearing the way ple rallied in Santiago on Sunday to al's central district. Journalists estimated gatherings. for the money-losing carrier to lay off protest the nomination of President Au- the crowd at more than 100,000. It also was the biggest organized 4,000 employees later this week, a gusto Pinochet as the only candidate in There were no police reports of arrests demonstation since Pinochet and his fel­ company spokeswoman said Sunday.
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