WEEKLY SUMMER EDITION THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1988 ! DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 7,500 VOL. 84, NO SI Trudeau calls on graduates to question conventional wisdom

By CHRIS GRAHAM But while impertinent questions about Pulitzer-Prize winning cartoonist Garry society have often produced important Trudeau, in his commencement address changes, people must also ask imper­ on Sunday, challenged approximately tinent questions of themselves, Trudeau 2,400 graduates to ask impertinent ques­ said. "This is impertinence of the gravest tions, both of society and of themselves. sort," he explained. "The impertinent question is the glory Many college students today have be­ and engine of human inquiry," Trudeau come overly concerned with self-advan­ said. "Whether revered or reviled in their cement, Trudeau said. But one of the lifetimes, history's movers framed their primary goals of a liberal arts education is questions in ways that were entirely dis­ to prevent such vanity, he added. respectful of conventional wisdom. "The whole point of your education has Civilization has always advanced in the been to urge you to see and feel the con­ shimmering wake of its discontents." nectedness among things and how that LAURA ALLEN/THE CHRONICLE Until recently, people have failed to ask connectedness must be fostered so that Garry Trudeau the impertinent about President Reagan's civilization is sustained," Trudeau said. administration, Trudeau said. And yet many people believe "it's OK to Before his address, Trudeau was puter scientists in the world, was The mere fact of this president's enor­ be selfish as long as you're up front about awarded the honorary degree of doctor of awarded the degree of Doctor of Science. mous popularity was used to cast it," he said. "This is a pretty bleak portrait humane letters. Cathleen Morawetz, director of the suspicion on the motives of even the of the values of a generation, and my Kenneth Clark, an educator and prestigious Courant Institute of Mathe­ loyalest of opposition," he said. guess is that I'm looking at hundreds of psychologist, whom President Keith matical Sciences, was awarded the degree "Ronald Reagan once appealed to the exceptions." Brodie described as "one of the major ar­ of Doctor of Science. most fundamental values of American The way to avoid this bleakness, "comes chitects of integrated education in the Robert Shaw, music director and con­ society — honesty, truthfulness and hard down to a matter of remaining intrigued United States," was awarded the degree ductor of the Atlanta Symphony, was work. But the administration he created enough by life to welcome its constant of doctor of humane letters. awarded the degree of Doctor of Fine Arts. set new records in undermining just those renewal. In short," he said, "it comes John Cocke, a 1945 Engineering alum­ The student speaker, David Feitel, said values," he added. down to the impertinent question." nus recognized as one of the leading com- See GRADUATION on page 4 • ski^.ir-i "I Evicted tenants demand more compensation iflflfrafiS ...... By KATHLEEN SULLIVAN demanded relocation compensation In the living room of a Carolee 3 The University will decide by the end of amounting to $3,250, a significant in­ apartment, about 20 tenants told As­ this week how it will respond to new crease over the current University offer of sociate University Counsel Max Wallace I demands by apartment tenants who are two months current rent plus $250 for they needed more compensation than * .! being displaced by Medical Center expan- moving costs. what the University is currently The tenants are also demanding that providing. Former Westover Park tenant At a May 4 meeting with University of­ Duke provide comparable housing for dis­ Joseph Horton said the University pay­ ficials, tenants from the Westover Park placed residents, and that it reveal ment had only covered his deposit and and Carolee apartments, in conjunction specific plans for Elba, Elder, and Pratt first month's rent when he had relocated. with the Association of Community Or­ Street properties, which include the Wes­ "We're not asking you to support us for - ganization for Reform Now (ACORN), tover Park and Carolee apartments. life," said tenant representative Terry 1 Barrett. "But these are not costs we chose. They were put upon us." The new $3,250 figure includes $100 a month for 24 months, towards increased STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE: Alumna Gann named law dean; Westover Park Apartments will be first woman in position See TENANTS on page 7 *•

By CHRIS SCHMALZER Carrington, who has served as dean for Man charged with student rapes Pamela Gann, a University professor the past 10 years. Carrington will of law, has been named dean of the remain a member of the Duke law From staff reports cording to Duke Public Safety detective Law School, Provost Phillip Griffiths faculty. A Durham man was arrested Friday Lewis Wardell. announced. Gann, 39, received her under­ and charged with counts of first and sec­ Wardell said he expects Hawes to be in­ At a news conference Tuesday, Gann graduate degree in mathematics from ond degree rape in attacks on two Duke dicted by a grand jury in June, and that said one of her main goals as dean the University of North Carolina at students on April 29 and May 4. the case would likely come to trial later in would be to increase the school's en­ Chapel Hill and was a Phi Beta Kappa Lawrence Edward Hawes, who had the summer. dowment by $20 million over the next graduate. She graduated with honors been paroled from the Harnett Correc­ Hawes had been imprisoned in 1985 five years, the Raleigh News and Ob­ from the Law School in 1973 and tional Center in Lillington, N.C, on April under an eight-year sentence for separate server reported. served as articles editor for the Duke 26, was also charged with one count of convictions on two charges of breaking Gann's appointment will mark a se­ Law Journal. crime against nature and with two counts and entering and a charge of robbing the ries of firsts for the law school. She will After graduation, Gann served as an each of first degree sexual offense and Ivy Room restaurant at gunpoint in 1984, be the first woman, first North associate at the law firm of King and first degree burglary. according to The Raleigh News and Ob­ Carolina native and first Duke Law Spalding in Atlanta before becoming Hawes was arrested after a joint inves­ server. School graduate to serve as dean of the an associate with Robinson, Hinson & tigation by Duke Public Safety and the school. Bradshaw in Charlotte. Durham Police. He is accused of raping a However, Gann downplayed the fact female student in a Giles dormitory study that she was the first woman nominee, Gann joined the law school faculty in room in the early morning of April 29, and Inside the News and Observer reported. She 1975 as an assistant professor. She raping another student in her 301 Swift said her appointment reflected the fact was promoted to associate professor in Ave. apartment on May 4. Decisions, decisions: Besides that more women are attaining the ex­ 1978 and to professor in 1981. He was charged with first degree rape, letting 2,400 students graduate, the perience necessary for senior adminis­ Her teaching and research fields in­ defined as rape involving serious injury to trustees also decided to raise the hospi­ trative positions. clude federal income taxation and in­ the victim, in the Giles incident, and with tal fees at their meetings this past On July 1, Gann will replace Paul ternational business transactions. second degree rape, involving less serious weekend. For details, see page 3. injury in the Swift Avenue incident, ac­ THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 12,1988 World & National Newsfile U.S. may drop charges against Noriega From wire reports From wire reports WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration ap­ Texas bank lOSing money: A single savings in­ pears to be backing a proposal under which it would stitution in Texas lost nearly $1.2 billion in capital in drop all drug-related charges against Gen. Manuel An­ March, the government said Wednesday, but refused tonio Noriega, the Panamanian leader, in exchange for to reveal the institution's name. his speedy departure from the country, administration officials said Wednesday. Bomb explodes in Cyprus: A car loaded with The Panamanian government denied that Noriega dynamite blew up and killed three people near the Is­ had agreed to step down as armed forces commander raeli Embassy in Nicosia, Cyprus on Wednesday after and leave the country in return for dismissal of charges police prevented the driver from parking at the em­ against him in U.S. federal court. bassy building. A deputy assistant secretary of state for inter-Ameri­ can affairs, Michael Kozak, has been in Panama for the Banks increase prime rate: Major banks last week negotiating with Noriega, administration offi­ raised their prime lending rate half a percentage cials and Panamanian opposition leaders said. point, to 9 percent. The move was prompted by grow­ Details of the proposal were apparently worked out in ing fears at the Federal Reserve Board and on Wall a series of meetings at the State Department and the Street that inflation is a greater threat than reces­ White House on Tuesday. According to some administra­ sion. The increase sent tremors through the stock tion officials, the date of Noriega's proposed departure market, contributing to a substantial drop of 37.80 has yet to be determined. points, or 1.9 percent, in the Dow Jones industrial av­ erage. The Panamanian military leader was indicted by two grand juries in February on drug-trafficking and corrup­ Radical group charged with bombings: tion charges. Seven members of a radical leftist group that used A federal law enforcement officer said that a written "armed propaganda" to protest government policies proposal to drop the indictments was circulating within are charged with setting off bombs in the U.S. Capitol the FBI and the Justice Department over the last two. and seven other locations, the Justice Department weeks. said Wednesday. Last week, before returning to Panama, Kozak told Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega Capitol Hill staff members that if Noriega demanded that the indictments be dropped as the first step toward tion System, or SNI, told The Associated Press: "In Pan­ Fat may lower cholesterol: A major form of his yielding power, then the United States might have to ama there have been simple conversations on diverse saturated fat in beef appears to lower cholesterol go along, a leading congressional staffer said. subjects. There has been no agreement about anything. rather than raise it, so meat may not be as bad for the Kozak said the goal of American policy was Noriega's heart as 'many experts had believed, new research He continued: "Such reports only come from sources departure from power, not necessarily his departure concludes. interested in sidetracking the conversations and in ag­ from the country, the staff member related. When asked gravating the existing situation. These reports form part Walesa not disheartened: Lech Walesa said whether the United States would allow Noriega's close of the confusion and confrontation provoked by certain Wednesday a nine-day shipyard strike in Gdansk, Po­ associates in the Panamanian Defense Forces to remain elements of the Washington establishment." land, failed because it lacked nationwide support, but in their positions, Kozak apparently indicated that the Until now, the United States has echoed the demands "if necessary, we wiil try again," The government said matter was one for the future Panamanian military of Panamanian opposition leaders that not only Noriega, it did not plan to punish the strikers. chief and the future Panamanian government to decide. but also his top associates, be removed from power to Boris Moreno, director of Panama's National Informa- permit a transition to democracy.

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Minutes From Duke Campus And Duke Medical Center Located Off Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd. • Behind Yorktowne Theatre Rain Location Episcopal Student Center 2132 Bedford St. Apt. 23, Durham 505 Alexander Avenue 489-3111 Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00 No Charge THURSDAY, MAY 12,1988 THE CHRONICLE Durham black leaders allege Trustees still undecided about discrimination at University future plans for visitors center By KATHLEEN SULLIVAN By CHRIS GRAHAM Colored People (NAACP). restrooms to the plan, which currently Three top University officials have "The community has become very The fate of the proposed University Vis­ provides for only one men's and one agreed to meet next month with Dur­ concerned about the race relations and itors Center is uncertain following the women's restroom. But the Business and ham black leaders to discuss charges of the discriminatory practices against May 7 meeting of the Board of Trustees. Finance Committee defeated the proposal discrimination and poor race relations black faculty, students, professional Standing committees meeting Friday for the Visitors Center 5-to-4 over the is­ at the University. and support staff. We hope that you disagreed over the future of the Center, sue of whether or not the president's con­ The charges of discrimination were also share our commitment to equality with one committee voting to expand tingency fund should be used to help fi­ raised in a letter sent to the Board of and the eradication of racial barriers," proposed plans for the project and an­ nance the Visitors Center when many Trustees on April 29. The letter was the letter read. other committee voting to defeat the pro­ other University sectors, particularly aca­ posal. But Saturday the full Board voted demic, were more needy. signed by Willie Lovett, chair of the President Keith Brodie, Board of to refer the matter to the Executive Com­ Durham Committee on the Affairs of Trustees chair Fitzgerald Hudson, and During the Saturday Business and Fi­ mittee for a final decision. The committee Black People; John Edwards, the ex­ former Trustee chair Neil Williams nance Committee report to the full board, is scheduled to meet June 10. ecutive director of the North Carolina have agreed to meet with the four on a motion was made to refer the matter to Civic Education Project; Paul Stewart, June 9. At the same meeting, the Board also ap­ the Executive Committee. Young Trustee president of the Interdenominational "We have been receiving complaints proved a 13.6 percent average rise in David Nahmias opposed referring the Ministerial Alliance of Durham and [of discrimination! over time, which Duke Hospital rates. measure to the Executive Committee, Vicinity; and James Black, President cover almost every part of the Univer­ Members of the Buildings and Grounds saying funds for the center would be bet­ of the Durham branch of the National sity," Lovett said. Committee recommended increasing the ter spent on academic uses, such as ex­ pansion of faculty office space. Association for the Advancement of See DISCRIMINATION on page 8 • scope and cost of the Visitors Center proj­ ect by at least adding additional See TRUSTEES on page 6 ^ Benches, quads targeted for landscaping improvements

From staff reports The landscaping of the benches in front News briefs of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity sec­ tion and Cleland dormitory was the first first, he said, except that they were at one step in a long-range grounds improve­ end of the residential quadrangle and ment plan, said Ron Blickhahn, director therefore a logical starting place. Blick­ of facilities planning and management. hahn said he hopes to add similar landscaping to all bench areas on both "My intent is to, as we can, allocate campuses as funding becomes available. money to grounds improvements," Blick­ He also said he hopes to give attention to hahn said. The facilities planning and the individual quads, and cited Kilgo management department, along with a Quadrangle as a "sad situation" which grounds committee of students and ad­ needs improvement. ministrators, has identified a number of steps toward improving landscaping on Christmas tree lights go out: The both West and East Campuses. fir tree near the Cambridge Inn which has Funding for the projects, including the been a part of the University Union's first step of adding grass sod, foundation Christmas tree lighting ceremony since shrubs and brick pavers to the two 1972 has seen its last spring, Blickhahn benches, came from President Keith said. The tree had been "going downhill Brodie's year-end discretionary fund, for awhile," he said, and its poor condition Blickhahn said. Blickhahn said he was finally necessitated that the tree be unsure about the specific price of the chopped down last week. landscaping. Jake Phelps, director of the Union, said The bench areas had become problem­ he did not know what the Union would do atic because of a lack of drainage, causing for this year's Christmas tree lighting. them to become "mudholes," Blickhahn "We haven't dealt with it yet," Phelps said. No particular priority was given to said, although he said he expects Union LAURA ALLEN /THE CHRONICLE those benches which were landscaped officers to discuss the topic in the fall. Recent landscaping provides a better groomed home to the SAE lion.

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From staff reports public school system and at Mars Hill question conventional wisdom Flags flew at half-mast Friday for College in Mars Hill, N.C, Russell former University curator Mattie Rus­ came to Duke to earn a doctorate in sell, who died of cancer in Duke Hospi­ history, which she received in 1956. • GRADUATION from page 1 more, students are able to influence the tal on May 4. She was 72. members of the University should "let University, Feitei added. He suggested To support herself while studying for her doctorate, Russell took a job at the Duke be Duke," and quit emphasizing that students should use this influence to During her 33 year term as curator, Russell contributed greatly to the circulation desk of Perkins library in "form over substance." Feitei received an press for more black faculty and minority manuscript department by developing 1946. In 1948, she became an assistant Bachelor of Arts degree in political students. a catalogue system, while expanding curator in the manuscripts science from the University in 1985, and Too often, the University has em­ holdings from 1 million to 7 million department. She became curator in received his Juris Doctor degree on Sun­ phasized power and image more than the items. 1952 and held the post until her retire­ day. substance of its education, he said. ment in 1985. • When President Reagan visited cam­ In addition to her position at Duke, pus, Feitei said the entire conference Russell was an associate professor in Russell is survived by a sister, Mag­ seemed staged. "It would have been much the School of Library Science at the gie Nelson of Oxford, Miss., and by sev­ The whole point of better had Reagan just been honest and University of North Carolina at Chapel eral nieces and nephews. your education has told us the reason he wanted to come to Hill from 1969 to 1978. A memorial service will be held Sun­ Duke was to meet our basketball team Born on May 14, 1915 in Randolph, day, May 29, at 2 p.m. in the Chapel. been tcf urge you to and get a sweatshirt." Miss., Russell was the youngest of 12 Memorial contributions may be children. She graduated from the Uni­ see and feel the "Duke should concentrate on ... made to the University's Mattie Un­ versity of Mississippi in 1937 with a preparing Istudents] to make a positive derwood Russell Fund for the Collec­ connectedness bachelor of arts degree, and in 1940 difference in the world," Fietel said. tion and Preservation of Manuscripts. with a master of arts degree. among things and "Their accomplishments will reward the The fund was established at Russell's how that University with all the publicity it needs." After teaching in the Mississippi retirement. connectedness must be fostered so that civilization is Hardee's donates money for bone research sustained. By CHRIS SCHMALZER velop the field." marrow centers in New York, Baltimore, Hardee's, a national fast-food restau­ The funds will be used to help recruit Minneapolis, and Seattle, Prather said. Garry Trudeau rant chain, has given the Medical Center faculty and staff and to purchase supplies Bone marrow is the "blood factory" of $600,000 to establish a children's bone for the Pediatric Bone Marrow Research the body. If it becomes diseased, either Commencement marrow transplant program, William An­ Laboratory, Anlyan said. The University through illness or genetic predisposition, lyan, executive vice president and chan­ is constructing an eight-bed pediatric diseases such as sarcomas can result. By speaker cellor for health affairs, announced bone marrow transplant unit, scheduled temporarily removing the diseased mar­ Wednesday. to open in 1989, he said. row from the bone to clean it, or by trans­ One of the best aspects of the Univer­ The grant by Hardee's is the The program will also focus on re­ planting marrow from a suitably matched sity is that it "takes a personal interest in largestsingle donation ever made by a cor­ search, which may help doctors treat ge­ donor, patients whose disease had seemed students that extends beyond the confines poration to our department of pediatrics," netic defects like cystic fibrosis, hemo­ hopeless have been cured. of the classroom," Feitei said. Further­ Anlyan said. It "will open the doors not philia and sickle cell anemia. Hardee's, which has its headquarters in only to expanded clinical care, but also to The new program will relieve the stres­ Rocky Mount, N.C, is the third largest the training and research needed to de­ ses of having to travel to the current bone fast food chain in the world.

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By GILLIAN BRUCE niture and lawn care equipment, Clark A mall may seem a strange place to said. She estimated the total value of the build a house, but a local group for help­ requested items at approximately $6,000. ing battered women has constructed a As of Tuesday, the project had yielded be­ model "house" at Northgate Mall as part tween $1,000 and $1,200 in gifts from of their effort to fund a women's shelter in shoppers. Durham County. Mall merchants have also donated ser­ The Orange/Durham Coalition for Bat vices and products for the housewarming, tered Women is Af~^_ she said. One merchant donated cookies sponsoring the (| B as incentives to those who purchased event to help fur- jnpV7UHI^V-^URR items for the shelter. Others offered gift nish the shelter certificates and discounts to participants. through donations The battered women's shelter itself has from mall mer- -"""lOW"^^^^~"^^^^N~ not been established yet, Clark said, al­ LAURA ALLEN/THE CHRONICLE chants and shoppers, said Charlotte though the Coalition has been working for The women's shelter display at Northgate Mall. Clark, housewarming co-chair. The dis­ some time to get a shelter in Durham About 80 women and 90 children flee­ shelters. In order to meet the Coalition's play features approximately 300 tags list­ County. An existing shelter in Chapel Hill ing abusive situations were housed in criteria, the house must be zoned for mul­ ing items needed for the shelter that can is currently the only facility available to Durham hotels last year because the ti-family residential use, be able to ac­ be purchased at Northgate. Shoppers are abused women and children in both Dur­ Chapel Hill shelter could not accomodate comodate at least 20 women and children asked to take a tag, buy the item and ham and Orange counties. Clark said the them, Clark said. In order to establish a and fall within the $150,000 range. Once return it to the display. shelter was unable to sufficiently take second shelter, the Coalition embarked on the shelter is established, its location will Furnishings requested by the Coalition care of the more than 600 people who a $150,000 fundraising drive this spring, be kept confidential. range in price from about $2 to $100, and called the Coalition for assistance last raising so far approximately $110,000. include basic household needs such as year. About 75 percent of the requests The Coalition is already considering were by Durham County residents. rt target date of late summer has been kitchen utensils, bed and bath linens, fur- several houses in Durham as possible set for moving into the shelter, she said.

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• TRUSTEES from page 3 under budget by $640,000. The approximately $300,000 Center will be funded by Student aid is $237,000 behind budget as well, follow­ the president's $400,000 contigency fund, which is built ing the overenrollment trend, McDonald said. into the operating budget and is used at the president's He also noted that the success of the men's basketball discretion in emergencies and for projects the president team this past season helped to generate $800,000 more endorses. than scheduled in the athletic department's budget. Of Some trustees said the Center is too necessary to post­ that sum, $200,000 will be dedicated to scholarships for pone. "I'm conservative. I don't believe in spending funds women athletes, while $600,000 will go to renovation of for things that we don't need," said Trustee P.J. Baugh Cameron Indoor Staduim. of Lexington, Ky. "But it's important, that first feeling of "Overall the financial picture is very healthy," coming here. It would be a travesty if we put I the center 1 McDonald said. "The Hospital is performing well by all under the table." standards, but it's disappointing because we had such "It's been suggested that a couple of committees have high expenditures." He said the hospital's budgetary dis­ some things to work out," said Trustee George Grune of crepancies are a "manageable problem." Pleasantville, N.Y. "It seems that's what the Executive Committee's for." After further discussion the full Board approved the It would be a travesty if we put motion to send the issue to Executive Committee. STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRON ICLE Later in the Business and Finance report. Committee [the visitor's center] under the Outgoing Trustee chair Neil Williams Chair John Forlines reported an an 8.4 percent hospital table. rate increase because of operating expenses and a 5.2 the Duke Endowment is used to bring minority students percent hike due to unreimbursed services. to Duke. Forlines said this year the hospital wrote off about $82 PJ. Baugh A few trustees expressed misgivings about the million in unreimbursed services,amounting to approxi­ Trustee "rigidities" of the resolution. But others, such as Trustee mately 20 percent of patient bills. Three years ago, less Samuel Cook of New Orleans, La. called the resolution a than 10 percent of patient bills were written off, he said. "giant step." He attributed the rise in costs to budgetary shortcom­ IN OTHER BUSINESS, in Saturday's executive ses­ Trustee Nathan Garrett of Durham said the resolu­ ings in Medicare and Medicaid, and to the $23 million sion, Vice-Chair Fitzgerald Hudson of Charlotte, N.C. tion was essential to ensuring that "no Duke graduate given by Duke Hospitals in charity care to Durham was elected chair of the Board to replace outgoing chair leaves this University without experiencing faculty and County. Neil Williams, who announced in September that he students from other backrounds." The budgetary shortfall "is not unique to Duke would step down from the post after five years in that The discussion was followed by a presentation and dis­ Hospital," Forlines said. "It is a national problem, par­ position. He will remain on the Board until 1992. Hud­ cussion on University planning. The ad hoc planning ticularly with large, teaching hospitals." son has been on the Board since 1979. Baugh, a trustee committee reported on planning strategy, while Mar­ In his regular report of University and Hospital since 1981, was elected to replace Hudson as vice chair. garet Bates, vice provost for academic programs and Financial operations, Executive Vice President and Uni­ Also in executive session, formerly Associate Vice facilities, reported on University follow-up to the Dober versity Counsel Eugene McDonald said Friday that the President and Corporate Controller Jack Adcock was report, the 1987 proposal for the use and development of overall year-end surplus for the Duke North/South promoted to vice president and corporate controller. Tom University facilities. Hospitals will likely be about $5 million, rather than the Butters, formerly director of athletics, was promoted to Bates said the University's two major concerns in budgeted $12 million. McDonald attributed this discrep­ vice president and director of athletics. planning are greater investment for academic facilities, ancy also to increased expenditures and the erosion of Friday's meeting of the full Board included an ener­ and using the University's assets of open space, tree revenue adjustments through Medicaid and Medicare. getic discussion of the recent April 21 resolution by the cover and overall aesthetic appeal. Specifically, Bates McDonald also reported overall University operations Academic Council that the University require each mentioned needs to preserve the historic value of both are $418,000 ahead of the budgeted net surplus, for a to­ hiring unit to hire an additional black faculty member East and West campuses; to develop a science-engi­ tal $18.2 million net surplus. He said the favorable in­ by fall 1993, or report on why it could not do so. The new neering complex; to address parking problems; to focus crease is due to a new strategy of recording revenue as it resolution replaced a March 19 resolution that replaced on Central Campus as a possible future center of a sin­ is received and expenses as they are incurred. "require" with "provide incentives." gle campus. Areas of the University budget performing favorable "While there was some tension, which is not surpris­ Trustee Tony Duke of Glen Head, N.Y. gave a report of to budget, or better than expected, are the Duke Endow­ ing, the atmosphere was not threatening," outgoing the Land Resources Committee, which is examining ment by $568,000, and improved investments by about council Chair Philip Stewart said in his remarks to the present and future uses of the Duke Forest. He said the $618,000. Investments were enhanced by having $14 Board, committee recommends that the University hire the million more in cash to invest, and by favorable perfor­ A few trustees commented on one section of the resolu­ land planning consulting firm Wallace, Roberts & Todd mances with interest rates, McDonald said. tion providing funding for graduate study elsewhere by to help determine the best uses for the land. University i ncome from tuition and fees are black graduates of the University. Some trustees ques­ $1,740,000 favorable to budget, due largely to under­ tioned whether the section was a need or a "gesture," graduate overen roll ment. But McDonald said overen- and inquired what funds were available for black rollment is also a factor in the Arts and Sciences year- graduates who wished to study further at Duke. Provost rnn You Are Looking For The Exception- end surplus' being under budget. Annual giving is also Phillip Griffiths responded that a portion of income from w No: the Rule, Why Not Venture Into THF, FOREST. FULL SERVICE. . by Durham's Residential Specialists Since 1964

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2800 Middleton Avenue at EFFICENCY, ONE AND TWO BEDROOMS. .. FROM $350 Morreene Road & 15-501 Durham, NC • Minutes from Duke 518 SOUTH DUKE STREET All Adult - 383-8504 - Professionally Managed By Erwin Road lo La Salle, then left on Middleton DURHAM. N.C Iff Fogelman Management 919/383-8575 Beyond Your Expectations THURSDAY. M«vt2 <98j THE CHRONICLE Evicted apartment tenants demand more compensation

• TENANTS from page 1 but there is affordable housing out there." rent; $400 for one week's vacation from Some tenants said the location of new work in order to move; $150 for deposits housing was especially important, since and hook-up fees: and $300 moving costs. they worked at the University or at the Wallace asked why tenants needed nearby Veterans Administration Hospital time off from work and couid not move on and would be forced to pay more for the weekends. Many said they work on transportation because they would no the weekends, and they do not always longer be able to walk to work. have two consecutive days off. Much of the meeting focused on the The Westover and Carolee apartments, University's conduct throughout the ranging from $180 to $260 per month in rezoning and relocation, its accountability rent, may be underpriced, Wallace said. and its responsibility to future displaced Such an underpricing would account for tenants. Westover Park and Carolee the difficulty in finding comparable hous­ tenants repeated charges voiced since the ing at comparable prices. City Council rezoning hearing Jan. 4 that Tenants also demanded that the they had not been properly informed of University provide housing that meets the University's intentions and had not living standards, school needs.and job, had adequate time to prepare for a transportation and safety requirements. relocation. Wallace maintained that the University Tenant T.C. Newman said he had called was not in the rental business. "We buy the University a year earlier to ask about property because we want to use it for the status of the apartments. "All of the what a University is good for." sudden, Jan. 20 comes along, and we get a LAURA ALLEN /THE CHRONICLE Terry McAdoo, an representative in the letter." Carolee Apartments University employment office of human "It was systematic deception," Barrett Wallace said earlier this week he was Elder, Elba and Pratt Street areas. resources and ombudsman between the said. She claimed a survey team had come unaware of such activities by surveyors. Fred Brown, assistant to the chancellor University and the tenants, argued that into her apartment saying they were He said the University is somewhat for health affairs, said Wednesday that in affordable housing does exist. "No one will taking measurements for possible im­ removed from day-to-day management of that area, the only University-owned be able to replace what you have here," he provements when in fact they were sur­ the property, which is handled by Bobby property not affected by the rezoning is said. "It may not be in the area you want, veyors for the University. Inscoe Realty. the Cook property apartment building on However, Wallace said, "I think we Elba Street. He said the University has made a mistake in not notifying tenants no plans to stop renting apartments on sooner." that property. r_U/tilourcLlk&nemaa €£ "I'm terribly disappointed in Duke University," Horton said. 'The University Wallace said he would submit the is supposed to be something to help people demands voiced at the meeting to the SCHOOL DAZE (R) EVERY TUESDAY out. . . . Durham has a problem with low- Council of Executive Officers: President Shows Mon-Fri 7:00 & 9:15 NIGHT income housing and you're uprooting this Brodie. Provost Phillip Griffiths, Chancel­ Sat & Sun 2:00 4:15 7:00 9:15 whole block." lor William Anlyan and Executive Vice ^ THE UNHOLY(R) ALL ADMISSIONS Wallace said the neighborhood was President Eugene McDonald. Tenant changing regardless of the University's representatives Horton and Barrett also v<* Shows Mon-Fri 7:00 & 9:15 $ action. "We can buy the property and turn addressed the May 7 Board of Trustees Sat & Sun 2:00 4:15 7:00 9:15 ONLY 2.49 it into clinics and do all those things you meeting with a short presentation. 4 DEAD HEAT (R) say are the responsiblity of a University, Wallace said while decisions on the %. Shows Mon-Fri 7:00 & 9:15 , or we can sit on our hands and watch tenants" demands are the administra­ Sat & Sun 2:00 4:15 7:00 9:15 saj» SEVENTH SIGN (R) Days' Inn come in and buy the land and tion's responsibility. "There has been *" Shows Mon-Fri 7:15 & 9:00 put up a hotel," he said. "Inevitably this quite a bit of conversation between trus­ area is not going to be an apartment sw,» FRIDAY THE 13th, PART VII (R) Sat & Sun 2:30 4:45 7:15 9:00 tees and administrators," about the ^ Shows Mon-Fri 7:00 & 9:15 area." demands. "The tenants can now be as­ Sat 8. Sun 2:00 4:15 7:00 9:15 FATAL ATTRACTION (R)] Tenants inquired about the Univer­ sured that the trustees know what's going SW^ Shdws Mon-Fri 7:00 8, 9:15 sity's intentions toward property in the SHAKEDOWN (R) Q f'^Sat & Sun 2:30 4:45 7:00 9:15 Shows Mon-Fri 7:15 & 9:30 Sat & Sun 2:25 4:30 7:15 9:30 BILOXI BLUES (PG-13) BEETLE JUICE (PG) •&_, Shows Mon-Fri 7:15 4 9:30 V* Shows Mon-FH 7:10 & 9:15 CPI photofinish Sat & Sun 2:15 4:30 7:15 9:30 Sat & Sun 2:10 4:15 7:10 9:15

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By TOM KRATTENMAKER of the Nazi research could save lives and, • DISCRIMINATION from page 3 Most of the employees who had been Associated Press if published with a condemnation of the The complaints have included racial employed as associate directors were MINNEAPOLIS — A scientist is plan­ methods, call attention to the plight of the harrassment and maltreatment result­ assigned to different positions within ning to use Nazi studies of concentration Jews, Poles and Gypsies killed in the ex­ ing from the University's "plantation the hospital, Burke said. A few, howev­ camp prisoners deliberately frozen to periments. style of management," Lovett said. er, resigned. death to further his research about Because the Egyptians used slave hypothermia. The University has also discrimi­ Employees and students who feel labor, "does that mean we should never nated by not hiring blacks, and not they have been discriminated against But some scientists and Jewish leaders gaze at the pyramids?" asked Dr. Thomas promoting those who are hired, Ed­ have primarily two options, Burke have sharply criticized his intention to Murray, director of the Center for Bio­ wards said. said. They can either approach her of­ use data obtained during the Holocaust. medical Ethics at Case Western Reserve Approximately 35 percent of the fice, or they can approach the Equal Dr. Robert Pozos, director of the University in Cleveland. University's 12,000 non-faculty em­ Employment Opportunity Commission hypothermia research laboratory at the "It sends a chill down every normal hu­ ployees are black, said Delores Burke, (EEOC). Either way, the charge of dis­ University of Minnesota, Duluth, says he man being's spine to think of the horrible special assistant to the president, who crimination will be investigated to plans to analyze and republish "The things the Nazis did there, but I'm handles charges of racial discrimina­ determine whether any action should Treatment of Shock from Prolonged Ex­ separating the results and the circum­ tion within the University. be taken against the University. posure to Cold," a study by doctors at stances," said Ephraim Zuroff, Israeli rep­ Dachau. It includes observation and phys­ resentative to the Simon Wiesenthal Cen­ One of the main examples of discrim­ Currently, eight charges of discrimi­ iological measurements of people placed ter in Los Angeles. "Actually, if the U.S. ination which Lovett and Edwards nation at Duke are being investigated in vats of freezing liquid, often to the doctor dedicated his study to the memory cited was the recent reorganization of by the EEOC. Approximately two are point of death, according to those familiar of those victims of the Nazis, it would the Medical Center's nursing filed every month against Duke, Burke with the study. serve as a nice way of reminding people department. said, but the EEOC has never upheld about the horrible experiments." The result of this reorganization was any charges, she added. "We should under no circumstances use to decrease the number of blacks in "I think we have the same problem the information. It was gained in an im­ Use of Nazi science by post-World War middle and upper management posi­ that the larger society has," Burke moral way," said Dr. Daniel Callahan, di­ II researchers is rare but not unprece­ tions, while increasing the number of said. "Obviously, there's a perception rector of the Hastings Center, a medical dented. After facing a similar quandary blacks in lower management positions, [that the University discriminates], ethics think tank in Briarchff Manor, this year, the federal Environmental Lovett said. and it's hard to get rid of perceptions." N.Y. Protection Agency deleted references to When the department was reorga­ She said the solution "is largely a "I think it goes to legitimizing the evil Nazi research in its own draft report on a nized, the University eliminated 12 as­ matter of awareness." For example, done. I think the findings are tainted by toxic gas. sociate director positions, Burke said. she said supervisors need to be more the horror and misery," said Abraham Pozos, 45, says he decided to use the Nine of the positions were held by sensitive to employees who feel they Foxman, national director of the Anti- Nazi hypothermia data after seeing a white nurses, and three were held by have been discriminated against. Defamatibn League. resurgence of public and scientific curios­ blacks, she said. Edwards said he did not know Because mammals differ widely in their ity about it. He says copies of a 1945 Previously, head nurses reported di­ whether many of the specific charges of physiological response to cold, hypother­ English translation of the Dachau study rectly to the associate directors, who discrimination were factual, but ad­ mia research is uniquely dependent on have been available in about a dozen had control over hiring and firing em­ ded, "Whatever the reasons are, the human test subjects, says Pozos, a spe­ libraries around the country. ployees. After the reorganization, this problem is still there." cialist in the field for 12 years. Motivated in part by the loss of pilots in power was given to four directors of the However, discussions with the ad­ "It could advance my work in that it the frigid North Sea, the Germans used various nursing divisions, to whom the ministration should begin to improve takes human subjects farther than we're 100 to 300 prisoners to test the body's associate directors had previously the racial situation at the University, willing," he said. response to extreme cold, Pozos said; how reported. he said. Several medical ethicists contend study many died is unclear. Walk to Campus. QUADRANGLE SUMMER or Ride the Duke Shuttle! FILMS May 18 THE BIG CHILL May 25 THE BLUES BROTHERS June 1 AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT June 8 CROCODILE DUNDEE June 15 PURPLE RAIN June 22 THE GODS MUST BE CRAZY June 29 A VIEW TO A KILL July 6 THIS IS SPINAL TAP July 13 The Apartment People RAISING ARIZONA July 20 THE JEWEL OF THE NILE Live Rent FREE! July 27 SPACEBALLS All films are on Wednesday at 9:00 p.m. in the Bryan Center Call for the catch! Film Theater. Cost: $3.00. .^MtJRSQA^A^S^Sg THE CHRONICLE Regional Robeson county residents said Lt. Gov. candidate rejects to fear reprisals for complaints 111 percent salary increase

WASHINGTON (AP) — A black Government, said potential informants By TOM FOREMAN salary and that members of the Council of leader from Robeson County told a con­ feared "reprisals and even death" at Associated Press State get 15 percent increases. It recom­ gressional panel Wednesday that peo­ the hands of blacks, whites and In­ RALEIGH — Jim Gardner lashed out mended that salaries of cabinet officials ple with information about alleged cor­ dians who are the tools of the system Wednesday at a proposal by a legislative appointed by the governor be set by the ruption and drug dealing in the county and the establishment." study panel that would hike lawmakers' N.C. Personnel Commission but not ex­ were unwilling to speak out publicly Rose, whose district includes salaries by 111 percent, saying that plan ceed those of Council of State members. because they feared reprisals. Robeson County, told the News and as well as a proposal to elevate the house Asked to compare the current pay level The Rev. Joy Johnson, a former state Observer of Raleigh: "Joy Johnson has speaker's job to full-time "reaches a new with that of other states, Gardner said he legislator and former member of the misinterpreted the context of my level of absurdity." was not concerned with such compari­ North Carolina Parole Commission, remarks. I was asked to get the House "I think a 111 percent salary increase is sons. chided Rep. , D-N.C, for Judiciary Committee involved in inves­ ridiculous," said Gardner, the GOP candi­ "I'm interested in what North Carolina having said recently that people charg­ tigating official corruption in Robeson date for lieutenant governor. does," he said. "This kind of pay increase ing that corruption exists in Robeson County." The committee's staff "has Speaking at a news conference at state coupled with the continuation of pork bar­ County should "put up or shut up." told me that no one will talk to them Republican headquarters, Gardner said rel spending is a blatant disregard for the "The reason we cannot put up now," without immunity from prosecution." • he not only opposed the plan, but he interests of the North Carolina taxpayer," Johnson said, is because some county Rose said the subcommittee's chair­ resented it. Gardner said. residents have agreed to "give testi­ man, Rep. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich., "A five-percent pay raise for (state em­ "The people need to look closely at what mony of corruption and drug traffick­ "has told me he cannot grant immunity ployees and teachers) now pales in signifi­ is really behind this proposal," he said. "It ing in Robeson County" to lawyers rep­ from prosecution. If this committee is cance and seems like tossing them a is purely and simply another power play resenting them. But "the clients will to be useful, it must have information." crumb," Gardner said, adding, "Until we by Liston Ramsey with the cooperation of not give testimony unless they are "I should not have used the word can attack the problems of education in Bob Jordan. It is designed to make Liston given immunity (from prosecution), 'shut up,'" Rose said. "But I do hope in this state, we don't need to be increasing Ramsey 'speaker for life."' and in some instances the names must the absence of solid proof of official any salaries of particular part-time peo­ Referring to Ramsey as "Boss Hogg." be withheld." wrongdoing, that those who criticize ple." Gardner said in addition to the salary in­ Johnson's testimony before the U.S. will understand that Congress can do The panel's recommendation drew crease that would come with full-time sta­ House Judiciary subcommittee on nothing without evidence." mixed reviews, although Sen. Kenneth tus, Ramsey would more than double his criminal justice was part of a "wide- Other witnesses who testified Royall, D-Durham, said the plan would retirement benefits. He said if that hap­ ranging hearing on hate crimes," or vi­ Wednesday included NAACP Execu­ help attract the best qualified candidates pened, Ramsey would receive retirement olence against racial and religious tive Director Benjamin Hooks and for public office. pay of $50,000 at the expense of the tax­ minorities and against homosexuals. Christina Davis-McCoy of the Dur­ "They have missed the boat with that payer. The subcommittee has been holding ham-based North Carolinians Against reasoning," Gardner said. "The fact is, we Ramsey noted the National Conference such hearings intermittently for two Racist and Religious Violence. can attract finer representatives by find­ of State Legislatures, in a study last year, years, but has scheduled no hearings Ms. Davis-McCoy said drug-traffick­ ing ways to make the operations of the said North Carolina ranked last among specifically on Robeson County. ing rings in Robeson County had be­ General Assembly more efficient and to the 50 states in the cost of running the Johnson, president of Robeson come "a fearsome kind of paramilitary make sessions shorter." legislature. County Concerned Citizens For Better force." The panel also recommended that the Ramsey said Gardner's remarks were speaker of the house receive a full-time insignificant. A Comfortable Way of Life! Night Scene on Ninth Street

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tually ban labor action were dropped. the strike started. Parliament's move Wednesday appeared to be an act And in other places, such as Bydgoszcz, the govern­ GDANSK, Poland — Wednesday, for the first time in of desperation, for if the recent labor unrest ment gave bigger wage increases than planned to the more than two weeks, Poland was free of labor disrup­ demonstrated anything, it was that the government and striking government-approved unions. This concession tions, sit-ins or other strife. the party no longer possess the vigor to enforce such will create pressure on the government to make bigger But many of the issues that caused the unrest, such as powers, especially in the wake of the international out­ wage increases uniform across the country, creating in­ methods to economic revival, are still unresolved and cry that followed the police raid to break up the strike at flation that could seriously damage the government's there is no guarantee that this calm will be any more the Nowa Huta steel foundry last Thursday. economic plans. durable than the previous one. The strikes in more than a dozen factories, including For the union, the strike was encouraging for several When workers at the Lenin shipyard here linked arms the main ones in Nowa Huta and at the shipyard here, reasons. Tuesday and marched grimly from the yard to end their were the work of small bands of embittered young Though weakened by arrests and defections, it saw a strike, there were those who felt the procession was a workers. rash of strikes erupt, some of them crippling major in­ funeral cortege for the government's economic plans. The large numbers of workers who stayed away from dustrial complexes for more than a week. But there was also a sense that the men may have the strikes did so not because they disagreed with the The government was compelled to use force to end the been marking the death of the notion that the outlawed strikers' aims, but rather out of a sense of hopelessness one at Nowa Huta and to undertake direct contact with Solidarity trade union can be mass movement of mil­ and fear. Solidarity advisers to end the one here. lions of workers. The government is no less fearful of the workers who The government was even claiming it had sought The union's weakness was evident in the comments of didn't strike than of the strikers. direct talks with Lech Walesa, the union leader, someth­ workers who weren't involved in the strike at the outset On Tuesday, even as the strikers were preparing their ing he denies. But it was a far cry from recent disparag­ or who left the shipyard before it ended. dramatic march from the yard, those who did not strike ing references to him as a private person, and to Some of them complained that the strike got too politi­ were called to a sports field house near the center of solidarity as a phantom, an organization that simply no cal when strike leaders, welders and mechanics like Gdansk to collect their pay for April. longer exists in Poland. themselves, were strong-armed by outsiders. Others The peaceful affair, in which several hundred workers But if the strikes demonstrated that Solidarity still said the timing was poor. Others seemed simply afraid. stood in line to pick up their pay envelopes, unfolded un­ exists, they also showed clearly that the heady days of The solution reached in Gdansk was a face-saving der the watchful eyes of hundreds of riot police. 1980, when the union could mobilize millions of workers, compromise for both sides. "Look, we're collecting our money, and we're collecting are not about to come again. Solidarity was free to continue its pressure on the it under police sticks," a 27-year-old welder said, nod­ Virtually no factories heeded a call by the union's na­ authorities to follow through on commitments to ding toward battered blue police vans. "They're afraid of tional council Monday for job actions in support of the economic change. our shadows." striking shipyard workers, who were facing the The authorities were spared the international outcry For the government, the lesson seems simple. Though likelihood of a police assualt to end their strike. that certainly would have followed a decision to end the it won a partial victory over determinedly peaceful When Walesa reaffirmed the union's slogan Tuesday strike with broken bones and bloodied heads. strikers, it has yet to win the support of a disenchanted night after leaving the shipyard, saying, "There is no The government, of course, was not about to announce citizenry and a sullen, uncooperative work force. freedom without Solidarity," his wife, Danuta, inter­ the cancellation of its economic plans. In Warsaw Wed­ Solidarity was born out of frustration with steadily jected bitterly, "There is no Solidarity." nesday, as if in a sequel to the strike, Poland's Parlia­ deteriorating living conditions, out of a desire for the But Tadeusz Mazowiecki, a senior adviser to Walesa ment approved broad emergency powers for the govern­ good things after years of empty promises, and out of during the strike, put it differently. ment's economic czar, Deputy Prime Minister Zdzislaw cynicism about ruling class corruption. "History sometimes repeats itself. But never in the Sadowski. The strikes showed that these feelings had not chan­ same way." The new powers will enable him to enforce the ged, although the union was officially outlawed in 1981 Walesa appears to have drawn conclusions from the program for economic recovery by dismissing uncoopera­ and then replaced by the government-sanctioned unions. change. tive managers, freezing wages and prices and even Solidarity did not obtain its main demand for Again and again during the nine-day shipyard strike, making strikes subject to approval by the Politburo of legalization, or lesser demands for pay increases. he insisted that the comparison with 1980 — when mil­ the Communist Party. However, next month the Lenin shipyard workers will lions of workers both young and old followed the union Stronger measures enabling the government to vir­ receive a wage increase that was scheduled even before — was flawed.

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agreement to scrap all U.S. and Soviet in­ Sam Nunn, D-Ga.. the chairman of the to give the Soviets loopholes to cheat." termediate-range missiles, were taken up Senate Armed Services Committee, and State Department officials were less GENEVA — American and Soviet nego­ by two teams of negotiators headed by other critics that the ban would apply to critical but also urged the Soviets to tiators reached tentative agreement American Maynard Glitman and Col. intermediate-range weapons that have modify restraints they intended to impose Wednesday night on a handful of sticking Gen. Nikolai Chervov, the senior arms not been developed yet. on American monitors at missile plants. points on preventing cheating on a mis­ control specialist on the Soviet general Shultz said earlier Wednesday he could Shultz suggested that Shevardnadze sile-ban treaty, a senior U.S. official said. staff. not guarantee Senate approval of the was as interested as he was in seeing the The issues are technical, but U.S. Sen­ Four or five issues were tentatively treaty before the Moscow summit. treaty ratified. ate leaders have vowed not to take up the resolved, including two big hurdles, the "I can't tell you what the Senate is "I am not going to try to characterize treaty until they are settled. U.S. official said. One deals with U.S. going to do," Shultz told reporters before the disagreements," the secretary said. The official, who spoke on condition of demands to inspect Soviet missile con­ his first meeting at the U.S. mission with "Since nobody has ever done anything anonymity, declined to predict Senate tainers big enough to hold only a stage of Shevardnadze. "That's for the Senate to like this before, it's not surprising there passage of the nuclear missile treaty as a a rocket. The other involves how much ac­ decide. But I think it would be a good are problems. Obviously we think we're result of the progress in talks supervised cess U.S. inspectors will have to Soviet thing to have ratification before the sum­ on the right track. However, we approach by Secretary of State George Shultz and missile plants and bases. mit meeting." this in a problem-solving spirit." Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Nine verification problems surfaced in On Monday, the Senate indefinitely Gennady Gerasimov, the Soviet Foreign Shevardnadze. recent weeks. In addition, the Soviets postponed debate on the treaty. Demo­ Ministry spokesman, said in an interview But, he said, "it is still our expectation demanded the right to inspect West Ger­ cratic and Republican leaders said the So­ with the British Broadcasting Corp.: "We we're going to get this resolved" before man Pershing 1-A missiles stored in the viet response to U.S. complaints about think that we can iron out our differences. President Reagan's visit to Moscow May United States. restrictions on monitoring were inade­ They are not very big ... so we still hope 29 for a fourth summit meeting with Mik­ In another sign of progress, the two quate. and we think that the Senate is going to hail Gorbachev. sides agreed to exchange notes on futuris­ Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia, the ratify the treaty before the Moscow The issues, involving verification of the tic weapons. The aim is to persuade Sen. Democratic leader, said: "We don't want summit."

The Last Emperor (PG-13) IdilMilJIMU 4:30 & 7:30 1 ELLIOTROADalE.FRANKLIM 1 Sat&Sun only 967-4737 Salsa (PG) Bus Drivers Needed $2.50 'TIL6PHDA1LY.ALL DAY TUES. (EXC. HOLIDAYS) 2:40 only Several positions are available for student bus drivers for the fall Robert Duvall & Friday the 13th semester. Choice of work schedules up to 19.9 hours per week. Pay rates Sean Perm Part VII range from $4.92 - $6.47/hr. If you are interested and can train over the Colors (R) The New Blood (R) summer, OR attend one of the three Training Sessions in August, 2:45 5:00 7:15 9:35 2:50 4:50 7:00 9:15 complete the application below and return to:

Transportation Department Indicate preference of training session: OMNI#EUROPA HOTEL Duke University (1 highest, 3 lowest) 712 Wilkerson Avenue _Summer Session I Summer Session II Attn: John Manning AUGUST __8-12 _15-19 _21-26 Phone:(919)684-2218 temporary housing available

Today's n°t"' Name:. Social Security: Last COMetf M Local Mailing Address: 2PNE ^ Local Residence: _ Local Phone: __ Permanent Address: Permanent #:

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SHOWT1MES How long? , Friday 8:30 8.10:30 Have you taken a defensive driving course? Yes No Saturday 8:30 8.10:30 Describe: Sunday 8:30 8. Udies Night (All Ladies Admitted Free) Other experience or training: _

For More Information and Are you willing to obtain a N.C. Class A Driver's License? Reservations Call (This is necessary to operate the buses) 968-4900 - Chapel Hill How many hours do you want to work per week? 682-9651 - Durham "firVfi"Niffi5(R.'(AcruAiw,H^ 1O0K.6WE.'WJ6N - NOT WITH N\E. Mo. IN FKT. INVWERS ffl»\ WE NEVER REMtf ycr. WE'RE IN WO TOTftlW DIFFERENT EDITORIALS HvNMttwsieNr M«v12, 1988 Just compensation The tenants of the Westover Park most of the relocation payment can be and Carolee apartments have asked applied to time taken off work and the University for $3,250 per family higher rent costs. to compensate for their forced evic­ The majority of the new compensa­ tion from University-owned low-rent tion sum is in fact $100 a month for housing units, which will be reno­ two years to meet increased rent vated and used for administrative ex­ costs. But as Associate University pansion of the Medical Center. Counsel Max Wallace has argued, if This demand is a hefty increase no other comparable housing is avail­ Congress should stay out of over the University's current compen­ able at the rental rates the tenants sation offer of two months current are currently paying, then very likely rent plus $250 in moving costs. While they are living in underpriced factory closing notification any increase the University may housing. agree to pay the tenants would cer­ Since the University is immediately "We've got to be out of our minds," says tainly be generous, Duke is not obli­ responsible for these people having to a Republican pol. "Here we are with the • Essay gated to further compensate the resi­ confront market rental rates, it is blue-collar vote up for grabs, and we hand Dukakis his dream issue — notification of William Safire dents in order to prove itself a respon­ right that the University compensate plant closings. We're for the bosses, he's sible and ethical community member. enough to make that change a transi­ for the workers. Whatsamatter, can't gument. The bill's sponsors claim this The tenants hold that the current tion rather than a shock. But a Uni­ Reagan count?" won't apply to small business, or force compensation figure does not take versity with a limited budget cannot Certainly it seems a peculiar place to companies to take losses until they go un­ into account money lost from in­ maintain an under-market condition draw a line in the sand. The trade bill is der. Not yet. creased rent over a longer period of to which the tenants have become ac­ about to be vetoed because it requires It's in the nature of this kind of legisla­ time, new security deposits and tak­ customed. businesses of more than 100 employees to tion to expand. Today, 22,000 companies ing time off work to move. It then would seem that in demand­ notify workers 60 days in advance of with more than 100 employees; tomorrow, But the University has enlisted the ing $3,250 the tenants are expressing plans for layoffs or plant closings. hundreds of thousands more, affecting Opposition is ridiculed as the arrogance small professional firms as well. Today, help of a relocation assistant and sev­ in money not just the need for a 60 days' notice of layoffs of 50 or more; smooth transition, but frustration at of heartless richies. As television news­ eral Durham realtors to help tenants casts and AFL-CIO radio spots present tomorrow, six months and six people. find new housing, and has promised not being able to have the stability the issue, why shouldn't bosses with their At a time when the Soviet Union and to provide trucks and other moving and choice which people with more "golden parachutes" of lavish severance China are experimenting with layoffs, services free of charge. money take for granted. But the ten­ pay be required to give average working having discovered that central control Considering that Duke is absorbing ants' grievances are better directed stiffs some warning of layoffs? Why strangles an economy; at a time when the most of the costs of moving, and that against laws and slumlords that shouldn't communities be tipped off to American system is driving down un­ the security deposit from their cur­ belittle low-income people, not help them prepare for downturns? employment to decade-low rates — why rent apartments can eventually be against a University which is trying Here's why: Economic arguments be­ are we threatening the source of our to meet their demand for a less bur­ tween management and labor should be golden eggs? As Bert Lance says, "If it transferred to a new apartment with ain't broke, don't fix it." minimum additional money paid out, densome move. worked out between those two interests, and not decided by the federal govern­ Many big companies already have ment and the courts. agreements to notify workers in advance (That answer has no sex appeal. Try an­ of layoffs; that's partly what unions are other.) for. And giant corporations don't want to When a business is in trouble, and the alienate entire communities, whose citi­ interests of its many stockholders must be zens would rightly holler across the na­ protected, it needs the flexibility it now tion's television screens at an unnecessar­ has to cut costs quickly. The last thing a ily sudden closing; cruelty ain't good struggling enterprise needs is the dead business. hand of Uncle Sam delaying its hard This law would hit the medium-size decisions; if the company cannot cut back company already in trouble, reducing its without inviting lawsuits galore, the chances for survival. No chance for whole company — with all its jobs — bravely smiling through; competitors could more easily go bankrupt. would be notified that loyal customers can (That's a little better, but it still won't be snatched, and bank credit would dry fly in an election year. Don't our trading up when most needed. partners in Europe have mandatory ad­ Who would gain from this intrusive vance layoff notification?) law? Not organized labor in the long run Now we have an opening for a compari­ — as federal law takes over business son that might make people think twice. decision-making, the need lessens for col­ In the past decade, while Europe has been lective bargaining. Not workers in gener­ stagnating, the U.S. has added 18 million al: it would depress the job market. This jobs. In France, most managers have no would be a bonanza for lawyers, who will right to fire a worker without wading clasp to their bosoms the yuppies so through miles of red tape. Some execu­ cruelly laid off in Wall Street, thereby tives call themselves "forty-niners" be- generating fees to settle suits of lawyers cause they stay under the limit of 50 laid off by the law firms. It would be wel- workers to avoid government restrictions, corned by bureaucratic managers who like THE CHRONICLE established wos Larger businesses choose to be under- to relax and let the government and staffed rather than to invest in hiring to courts make decisions for them. Good-bye, Kathleen Sullivan, Editor help the company grow. competitiveness; hello, managing judge. Gillian Bruce, Managing Editor If we had a no-firing-so-fast law here, Practicality and principle cry out for Chris Graham, News Editor Brenden Kootsey, Production Editor businesses would be encouraged to play it sustaining a veto of this populist pap. Brent Belvin, Sports Editor Rodney Peele, Sports Editor safe: instead of creating real new jobs, Why can't Reagan make the case and turn Barry Eriksen, General Manager Carolyn Haff, Advertising Production Manager they would use more overtime, or consul- the public-opinion tables? The fault, dear Linda Nettles, Production Manager Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager tants, or part-timers. Why hire somebody Brutus, is not in our stars. Leslie Kovach, Student Advertising Production Manager permanently you may be stuck with? William Safire's column is syndicated Now comes the nose-under-the-tent ar- by . The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its 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. Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115; Business On the record Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106. Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union Don't we have a right to ask the American people tonight, 'If the Democrats return to Building; Advertising Office; 101 West Union Building. the White House, what happens in 1989V ©1988 The Chronicle, Box 4696. Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of Ronald Reagan, after he formally announced his endorsement of George Bush for the Business Office. president Wednesday night THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1988 THE CHRONICLE Asking impertinent questions is pertinent to education

Ladies and gentlemen of Duke, my wife, who works in When American popular will becomes the problem, television, tells me that a typical interview on her show • Commencement Address this is conservatism stood on its head. And yet this, the used to run 10 minutes. It now only runs five minutes, most conservative administration in decades, seems to which is still triple the length of time an average televi­ Garry Trudeau believe that the very qualities from which this country sion news story takes. The average rock record these has traditionally drawn its strength — idealism, open­ days lasts around three and a half minutes, or about the But how many of you learned to turn that around, to ness, freedom of expression — are naive and dangerous time it takes to read a story in People magazine. The ask the impertinent question to get at that which is per­ in a cold war struggle. stories in USA Today take so little time to read that tinent? It furthers the arrogant position that America's they're known in the business as "news McNuggets." I first came across the impertinent question in the raucous squabbles, its noisy dissent, in short its very Now, the average comic strip only takes about 10 sec­ writings of that master inquisitor, Studs Terkel. He heritage, have weakened it as a nation and caused it to onds to digest, but if you read every strip published in himself claims to have adopted it from the physicist, lose its unchallenged supremacy. , as Larry Speakes now claims the Jacob Bronowski, who once told him, "Until you ask the As the New Republic's Mike Kinsley put it, "talk about president does, it takes roughly eight minutes a day, impertinent question of nature, you do not get a perti­ blaming America first." which means by my tally that the leader of the free nent answer. Great answers in nature are always hid­ In fact, it's been the absence of impertinent questions world has spent a total of 14 days, 16 hours and 48 mi­ den in the questions." that has imperiled the interests of the nation. For the nutes of his presidency reading the comics. When Einstein in 1905 questioned the assumption first six years of this administration, open challenges Which explains a lot. held for 300 years that time is a given, he asked one of were attended at some risk. Ask any Pentagon procure­ Of course that information is downright reassuring the great impertinent questions: "Why? How do I know ment whistle-blower. Ask any of the many departing when compared with the news that he has spent a com­ that my time is the same as yours?" EPA regulators. Ask David Stockman. The mere fact of parable amount of time reading his horoscope. And we The impertinent question is the glory and engine of this president's enourmous popularity was used to cast can only wonder at the time spent revising White House human inquiry. Copernicus asked it and shook the suspicion on the motives of even the loyalest of opposi­ schedules to read like this: foundations of Renaissance Europe. Darwin asked it and tions. "Aquarius: Today you should avoid refiagging, is repudiated in certain quarters to this day. Thomas There is no question, of course, that for a while the colorization and all photo opportunities involving ani­ Jefferson asked it and was so invigorated by it that he president seemed to fulfill a deep yearning in many mals. At about 10 o'clock you will walk across the South declared it an inalienable right. Americans to feel proud of their country again. And yet Lawn to a flying vehicle, possibly a helicopter. You will Daniel Defoe asked it and invented the novel. James the Reagan presidency often reminds me of a remark greet a charismatic foreigner with a large birthmark ei­ Joyce asked it and reinvented the novel, which was made by a woman to sportscaster Heywood Broun fol­ ther on his forehead or his nose. He may want you to co- promptly banned. lowing the victories of the great racehorse Secretariat in sign various documents. Resist this. A Jupiter-Venus Nietzche asked it and inspired Picasso who restated it the Triple Crown. After the trauma of Vietnam and alignment indicates this could result in a food fight or and inspired a revolution of aesthetics. Watergate, she told Broun, Secretariat had "restored her possibly nuclear war." The Wright brothers asked it and their achievment faith in mankind." was ignored for five years. Computer whiz Steven Jobs I would submit to you that Ronald Reagan has been asked it and was ignored for five minutes, which was the Secretariat of the '80s. He presided over the trans­ Whether revered or reviled in still long enough to make him $200 million. formation of a country that once wanted to be good into Whether revered or reviled in their lifetimes, history's one that now seems content to feel good. But in so doing, their lifetimes, history's movers movers fraTned their questions in ways that were en­ he underestimated his countrymen. To the president's framed their questions in ways tirely disrespectful of conventional wisdom. Civilization apparent puzzlement, he has been held to his rhetoric, has always advanced in the shimmering wake of its dis­ held to his trust. that were entirely disrespectful contents. As the writer Tristan Vox put it, "Doubt is Ronald Reagan once appealed to the most fundamen­ of conventional wisdom. precisely what makes a culture grow." How many of tal values of American society — honesty, truthfulness what we call our classics were conceived as the breaking and hard work. But the administration he created set of laws, exercises in subversion, as the expression of new records in undermining just those values. Over 100 But horoscopes and comic strips aside, there's one doubt about the self and society that could no longer be political appointees have been charged with illegal or other exception to this relentless compression of time in contained? grossly improper conduct. At one point there were no modern life. That's right — the graduation speech. The value of the impertinent question should be self- fewer than seven special prosecutors, concurrently in­ When it comes to graduation speeches it's generally con­ evident to Americans, for at no time in human history vestigating three former senior White House aides, a ceded that time — a generous dollop of time — is of es­ has it been asked more persistently and to greater effect former national security adviser, an attorney general, a sence. than during the course of the American experiment. It is former assistant attorney general and a former cabinet This is because the chief function of the graduation at the very core of our political and cultural character as officer, all of whom were appointed by a president who speaker has always been to prevent graduating seniors a people and we owe our vitality to its constant renewal. still describes his managerial style as appointing the best people and letting them do their jobs. from being released into the world before they've been Today, the need for that spirit of renewal has never properly sedated. seemed more pressing. There is a persistent feeling in Like all anesthetics, graduation speeches take time to this country that many of our institutions have not mea­ kick in, so I'm gonna ask you to bear with me for about a sured up, that with all our resources and technology and The value of the impertinent quarter of an hour. It will go faster if you think of it as good intentions, we as a nation have still a long way to the equivalent of four videos. It will go faster still if you go to fulfill our own expectations. question should be self-evident will close your eyes, as I see some of you already have, It's difficult to think of an institution that has not had and take the opportunity to work on your tans. to Americans, for at no time in to re-examine its agenda, to ask impertinent questions I want to speak to you today about questions, about about the purpose and means of its mission. Society's human history has it been pertinent questions and impertinent questions, and leaders, whose number you join today, face a wall of pub­ asked more persistently and to where you might expect them to lead you. lic cynicism. As professionals, they have to speak more I first learned about pertinent questions from my fa­ clearly about what they can do. As citizens, they have to greater effect than during the ther, a now-retired physician, who used to practice in speak clearly about what they should do. course of the American the Adirondacks. Like all parents racing against the Actually, its been something of a banner year for im­ experiment. clock to civilize their children, my father saw to instruct pertinent questions — questions like, "what did the vice- me in the ways of seperating wheat from chaff, of asking president know and when did he know it?" and "Jimmy sensible questions designed to yield useful answers. Swaggart was wearing what?" and "What does Ed Meese That is the way a diagnostician thinks. Fortunately for have to do to get fired, knock over a liquor store?" There is a price to pay for systematic violations of the me, his own practical experience frequently contradicted public trust, and for many of those involved, that price is his worthiest intentions. Those with vested interests in the answers to these questions charge that all the recent truth seeking, being paid right now. As a friend of mine put it, "Our Here's a case in point: A man once turned up to my fa­ whether in congressional committees, or PTL audits, or long national daydream is over." Impertinent questions ther's office complaining of an ulcer. My father asked the SEC or special prosecutor investigations, is damaging to are once again being asked and voiced by concerned citi­ pertinent question. Was there some undue stress, he in­ our well-being as a nation; that as General Richard zens who love their nation as deeply as the putative pa­ quired, that might be causing the man to digest his Secord told the Iran-Contra hearing last year, "the rest triots on parade last summer. stomach? The patient, who was married, thought for a of the world laughs at our periodic outbursts of moral One of the things that has always distinguished this moment, and then allowed he had a girlfriend in Syra­ fervor and self-flagellation." country from most others is that we've always come back cuse, and that twice a week he'd been driving an old Indeed, some of our closest allies do seem amused and to challenging ourselves to do better. We have always pickup down to see her. Since the pickup frequently been willing to reinvent ourselves for the common good. broke down, he was often late in getting home and had puzzled by what are widely viewed as America's self- destructive tendencies. As Tristan Vox put it, This is the true glory of America. This constantly to devise fabulous stories to tell his wife. My father renewing hope is what stirs me as a patriot — not a win­ sternly informed the man he had to make a hard "arguments abound to the effect that a nation does not grow great by doubting itself. Indeed that self-criticism ning medal count at the Olympics, not the ability to drop decision about his personal priorities if he was ever to 9,000 service men on a Caribbean golf course, and cer­ get well. is the trap that American democracy has laid for Ameri­ can greatness." tainly not the jingoistic commercials that told us the The patient nodded and went away and six months pride was back, America, when for many of us the pride later came back completely cured. My father congratu­ Even with last year's stunning revelations about the had never left. lated him and then inquired if he'd made some change in Iran-Contra affair, these arguments still enjoy a great The impertinent question — the means by which we his life. deal of currency at home. Indeed, they are the chief les­ affirm our noblest impulses as a people. But what about The man replied, 'Tup, got me new pickup." sons some would draw. The much praised neo-conserva- the impertinent question as it pertains to us as individu­ So the pertinent question sometimes yields the imper­ tive Charles Krauthammer noted recently that "One als? Bronowski had an addendum to his comments on tinent answer. In spite of himself, my father ended up cannot sacrifice the rule of democracy in pursuit of even the subject. "Ask the same kind of question," he charged, teaching me that an unexpected or ineovenient truth is the most obvious and disinterested national objectives." "not about the outside but the inside world; not about often the price of honest inquiry. Of course, you presum­ But he added ruefully that the price of democracy is that facts but about self." ably wouldn't be here if you didn't already know that. "we must expect more debacles of this sort." The problem This is impertinence of the gravest sort. The inner life I'm confident that your education has been fairly stud­ is not democracy, Krauthammer writes,"the problem is has found little to nourish itself during this the Age of American popular will, which is deeply divided on ded with pertinent questions yielding impertinent Hustle. The spate of recent insider books has described a whether to accept the responsibilities of a great power." answers. See TRUDEAU on page 15 • THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 12,1988 Comics

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Amoeba aerobics THE CHRONICLE / Garry Trudeau Sports editor: Rodney Peele 1 WONDER Copy editors: Dan Berger, Gillian Bruce, mt... WHAT THsy'ne ITS MIKE UPTD. Chris Graham, Therese Maher, Kathleen Sullivan Wire editor: Chris Graham Associate photography editors: Laura Allen Jill Wright f& Layout: Brenden Kootsey, Therese Maher Video watchdog: Brenden Kootsey Paste-up: Roily Miller

TODAY Community Calendar EXHIBITS Summer Session opening picnic beginning at •5,p.mJ Namesakes an exmoit profiling mt? [eopi^ for Students and faculty invited. Ciompi Quartet will per­ whom well known du«idmgs and places dt Duke are form at 6 p.m. Patio of the Anderson/Yearby block: •" Summer Chapei Choir Rehearsal-, no audition^ all; named; East Campus Library, through May; •••' Singers welcome, directed by Dr. Rodney Wynkoop. "Two Viral Genes Required for-immortalization- by Duke Chapel, 6:3Qp.m, : Epstein-BarrVirus," Dr. Biti Sugden, McArdie Labora­ PUBLIC NOTICES tory for Cancer Research, Univ. of Wisconsin, 143 JonesBldg./12:30 p.m. THURSDAY, MAY 19 The American Red Cross needs health professionals forits Disaster Relief Team. Enroll in a 12-hour cour- Mifl Atlantic Criair.r.er Orchestra Reynolds industries scE^Pfoyidtng Disaster Health Services," to get trie.':: TUESDAY, MAY 17 . Theater,. Bryan Ctr,. 8 p.m. Free.to students, $5 for training you need 1 4 CEU s will be awarded to regis­ ' others;:' tered nurses Ca" 489 6541 f

• TRUDEAU from page 13 economic prospects to the graduating senior. As NYU so­ fered their grandparents, that sense that there is no leadership circle which is intellectually inert, obsessed ciologist Richard Sennet has pointed out, government good news about the other side. But Goodman, being in­ by television, bored by introspection and ideas of sub­ involvement in the professions during the '60s produced corrigibly of her era, also believes that micro evolves into stance. Indeed, the closest the president has ever come a number of new ways to practice law, medicine and the macro; that to be involved inevitably leads to decisions to the doubts brought on by competing ideas was the glo­ sciences in succeeding decades. Moreover, the expansion between larger, if more imperfect options; that many of rious day he uttered the words, "Sure we have problems, of technical, financial and informational sectors has you will take risks, make mistakes, and become citizens but let's not throw the baby out with the dishes." created an entire job market that previously didn't exist. in spite of yourselves. Meanwhile, across town, and up and down Wall Still, for most students, that sensation of vulnerability It won't be easy. In my commencement strip this year, Street, the sad stories of mindless overreaching still — and the need for control over one's life — persists. The a student in cap and gown is approached by a homeless abound, all pointing to the prevailing ethic of self-ad­ pressure to embrace certainties, to pursue concrete goals man and asked if he has any spare change. "Are you vancement, where soul-searching is weakness and unquestionably has become unrelenting. Indeed, as you crazy?" replies the student. "I owe this place $40,000." reflectiveness an opportunity for someone else to get a look around, you may see very little to distract you from head start on you. the narrow path of self-absorption. This need for control, this need to get on track and And yet that is exactly what your liberal arts educa­ In fact, it's been the absence of stay there, comes up again and again in conversations tion — with its emphasis on ideas, on inquiry, on hu­ with students today. One recent graduate told the New manist values — was designed to do. As the president of impertinent questions that has York Times, "Every minute Fm not accomplishing some­ my alma mater once observed, "The whole point of your imperiled the interests of the thing I feel is wasted." education has been to urge you to see and feel the con­ nation. For the first six years of A teacher recently asked a group of 20-year-olds how nectedness among things and how that connectedness many would take the opportunity to travel to Europe must be fostered so that civilization is sustained." this administration, open during the summer. "Few would," he reported. Why? Our understanding of the interdependencies of the hu­ challenges were attended at The majority were afraid of feeling out of place. The man experience is the only force which keeps a society same worry that they couldn't cope made many fearful of from fragmenting. The extent to which you seek that un­ some risk. experimenting with careers. Many feel it isn't possible to derstanding is the extent to which you will prevail in do what they love." repudiating the callousness you see all around you. Be that as it may, we may well have to come up with And listen to another student. "Here's how we think: Not everyone will have you believe this is possible more than spare change in the future. If ours becomes a Get to this point, move on. Get to this point, move on. today. One of the more astute voices of your generation, society intolerant of failure and uncompassionate in the We're all afraid to slow down for fear of missing some­ author David Leavitt, has written of his peers, "Mine is face of suffering, then surely we are all lost. With the un­ thing." a generation perfectly willing to admit its contemptible certainties of the future hedging in on you, you need to qualities. But our contempt is self-congratulatory. The assess your commonalities. You need to say how you buzz in the background, every minute of our lives, is would treat other people, and how you would have them Indeed, some of our closest that detached, ironic voice telling us 'at least you're not treat you back. allies do seem amused and faking it, at least you're not pretending; it's OK to be sel­ The best your college education can do for you now is fish as long as you're up front about it.'" remind you that it's one thing to be self-absorbed, and puzzled by what are widely This is a pretty bleak portrait of the values of a gener­ quite another to be self-aware. It comes down to a mat­ viewed as America's self- ation, and my guess is that Fm looking at hundreds of ter of being open, of seeing. It comes down to a matter of exceptions. My further guess is that the yearning for remaining intrigued enough by life to welcome its con­ destructive tendencies. moral commitment is as intense as it's ever been, but stant renewal. In short, it comes down to the imperti­ that the generation with no rules, the generation that nent question. Missing something indeed. What many observers find grew up in the rubble of smashed idealism, fallen heroes From those of us floundering out here in the real so puzzling about all this is that the opportunities for and broken marriages, is deeply suspicious. world, to those of you preparing to enter it, may I just this generation of college students are, in fact, generally Columnist Ellen Goodman has speculated that this is say welcome — we need you. as bright as they've ever been. There is a myth of some why apartheid and the soup kitchens have emerged as Thank you, and good luck. durability that the affluent '60s were more conducive to the causes of choice on campus. They offer that stark, Garry Trudeau was the 1988 Commencement s risk-taking, when in actuality the '80s offer very similar unambiguous clarity of purpose that World War II of­ and is a Pulitzer-Prize winning cartoonist.

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PAYMENT Prepayment is required. Cash, check or Duke IR accepted. Purchase, procure, draw, ob­ (We cannot make change for cash payments.) tain, shop, market, bargain, 24-HOUR DROP-OFF LOCATION vend, dispose of, merchandise, 3rd floor Flowers Building (near Duke Chapel) where classifieds forms are available. Congratulations, offer, barter, distribute, dis­

ORMAILTO: » % Grads! pense, retail, traffic, liquidate, Chronicle Classifieds auction, hawk, peddle, swap, BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706. Brightleaf Square and exchange in the Chronicle CALL 684-6106 IF VOU HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT CLASSIFIEDS. 905 W. Main St. 688-7591 NO REFUNDS OR CANCELLATIONS AFTER FIRST INSERTION DEADLINE Monday-Saturday 10-6 Sunday 1-5 classifieds. THURSDAY, MAY 12,1988 THE CHRONICLE President Reagan formally endorses Bush's campaign

needed to limit the insatiable fiscal appe­ tite of government." WASHINGTON — President Reagan Echoing an argument used frequently ended one of Washington's longest-run­ by Bush recently, the president urged his ning and least suspenseful political dra­ audience to remember the last year of the mas Wednesday when he endorsed Vice Carter administration and what he President Bush as his successor. described as America's declining In a speech prepared for a black-tie Re­ "influence and respect around the world." publican fund-raiser Wednesday night, "Don't we have a right," he said, "to ask the president called Bush "my candidate" the American people tonight, 'If the Dem­ and added, "I'm going to work as hard as I ocrats return to the White House, what can to make Vice President George Bush happens in 1989?'" the next president of the United States." In making his long-awaited endorse­ Reagan had withheld any formal en­ ment at a dinner for Republican House dorsement until the outcome of the Re­ and Senate candidates, Reagan guaran­ publican presidential race was completely teed himself an enthusiastic audience clear. Wednesday the last challenger to that could well play the role of extras in Bush, Pat Robertson, who had suspended television commercials broadcast by the campaigning, said he would formally Bush campaign this fall. withdraw next week. But political analysts in both parties "I will be making that official on say Reagan's endorsement will have only Monday," Robertson told reporters after limited value to Bush, since the president meeting with Bush at the White House. has previously proved unable to readily "The race is now over." transfer his personal popularity to those The former television evangelist en­ he supports. In 1986, for instance, Reagan UPI PHOTO couraged his supporters to stay involved campaigned across the country for Repub­ President Reagan and Vice-President Bush at the 1984 Republican Convention in politics and promote conservative lican Senate candidates but was unable to ideals. But "virtually to a man or a wom­ forestall the Senate's return to Demo­ die Mahe, a leading Republican campaign more than five years, accompanied by low an," he said, Robertson backers "will be cratic control. consultant. "If he doesn't do that, Ronald inflation and a big decfitee in the un- unified as Republicans this fall" behind Moreover, analysts say, no endorse­ Reagan's endorsement will not be enough employment rate. the vice president. ment will cure the basic problem facing to get him over the line." Mahe pointed out that Reagan could In his speech, Reagan foreshadowed the Bush campaign: the lack of public per­ Still, Republican strategists say also be useful campaigning in front of con- themes he is likely to use on the campaign ception that the vice president has an Reagan can benefit Bush by reminding servative groups, "where there is still trail this year. He excoriated the Demo­ identity independent of his role in the voters that in his administration eco- some softness with regwd to George crats as big spenders and said, "I promise Reagan White House. nomic growth has continued unabated for Bush." you this: even after I leave office, I will "Clearly George Bush has to define never stop campaigning for the tools George Bush better than he has," said Ed- Come in and Register today- 14 kt. STERLING GOLD SILVER You could walk JEWELRY to Switzerland in 'Where our everyday low prices are Rockports. lower than the 40%-60% off 'SALE' prices!!" Rockport shoes can help mum shock absorption. Vermont Foliage lour (5 winner?: you go the distance. Only And now during our . :•• • E •.:.••. :• Rockports have Spring lour Promotion' (100 winners! the exclusive £.. ' •'•-'• .pucanwinan all RockportSi:. : '. ~ •• -•• RockportWaik W^ expense paid Walking shirts (5000 v. Support Sys- V •..;;,:uriand Come in and try on the shoes that 1 tern for perfect E>E!:;y^t::eseiZhi;r can take youthe balance, lightweight great prizes. stability and maxi­ Rockport€> Upper Level- Men's DresSport: Near Beiks South Square Mall^ Yiangle Mon-Sat 10-9 493-7865 Gold Sunday 1-6 -;#] HUNAM *j 4 *• Gourmet Chinese Restaurant \^ -9 28 Fast Luncheon Specials • Daily Dinner Specials SALT, OIL or MSG FREE DISHES Mixed Beverages Women's Rockports and SuperSports This Week's Special Peking Duck Dinner (Half Duck served with 4 pancakes) $8.95 House Specialties Prawns & Chicken $6.95 *Orange Chicken $6.95 INCLUDES SOUP, EGGROLL & RICE

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By SYDNEY RUBIN Islamic Jihad for three years. By MIKE ROBINSON Associated Press Interior Minister Charles Pasqua over­ Associated Press sound all the more harsh. PARIS — A former hostage said saw negotiations that led to their release. WASHINGTON — Democrats Democrats said the issue was bound Wednesday that he and two other A fourth French hostage, Michel Seurat, stepped up their challenge Wednesday to strike a resonant chord on the cam­ Frenchmen were freed by captors in Leba­ died in captivity. • to President Reagan on trade, threat­ paign trail. Party Chairman Paul Kirk non because the public pressured France Kauffmann said he believed all nine of ening an all-out fight until the Novem­ said voters would "rally to the banner to negotiate with Iran, and he urged the American hostages and the three Brit­ ber elections unless he drops his veto of the Democratic Party" in House and Americans and Britons to do the same. ish hostages were still alive. threat and signs a 1,000-page trade Senate races. "I don't understand the Americans and He was flanked by his wife, Joelle, and measure. On hand for the rally were lawmak­ the British," said journalist Jean-Paul the head of the committee of journalists "Don't turn your back on America's ers, their aides, religious and labor Kauffmann. who pressured the government for his future, Mr. President, don't give Amer­ leaders and a handful of laid-off work­ "I have the impression that they have release. Kauffmann writes for the weekly ican men and women a pink slip," Sen­ ers brought in by the AFL-CIO for the abandoned their hostages. But these men news magazine L'Evenement du Jeudi. ate Majority Leader Robert Byrd, D- occasion. Republicans were absent. are suffering, and what is to be done has Kauffman refused to discuss the status W.Va., said at a congressional bill- At the bill's signing, Rep. Dan Ros- to be done very quickly. It is urgent," he of the foreign hostages. He said that doing signing ceremony. tenkowski, D-Ill., the chairman of the said. so could put them in danger or cause The signing and a Capitol Hill rally House-Senate conference committee Outgoing Premier Jacques Chirac them to lose the small privileges that held outside Democratic national head­ that drew up the bill, urged Reagan to thanked Iran for its help in freeing the make life bearable: the few books and cig­ quarters were parts of a show of politi­ sign the measure. French hostages. He said the Islamic Re­ arettes they are sometimes allowed. cal muscle orchestrated by House There have been recurrent reports of public had intervened to get them out of Former American hostage David Jacob- Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas, as a friction between Rostenkowski and Lebanon and announced that diplomatic sen sat in the front row beside Jill Mor- sendoff for the bill before it goes to the Wright over provisions of the bill that relations between France and Iran, bro­ rell, fiance of British television journalist president's desk. appeared to guarantee a veto. Notable ken last July, may be reestablished. John McCarthy, 31, kidnapped April 17, With 15 television cameras trained among them has been a feature requir­ Nine Americans and three Britons are 1986. on him and scores of baffled tourists ing companies with at least 100 em­ among the 18 foreigners still held captive Peggy Say, sister of American journal­ wandering through, Wright signed the ployees to give 60-day notice of plant by pro-Iranian Shiite extremists in Leba­ ist Terry Anderson, the longest-held hos­ massive bill at a ceremony in ornate closings and major layoffs. non. The U.S. and British governments tage, spoke to Kauffmann and the other Statuary Hall near the House cham­ Rostenkowski's office said he had not have said they will not negotiate with ter­ two French hostages. Fontaine shared a ber. Supporters of the legislation ap­ been invited to the rally. "But our nose rorists. cell with Anderson for several months. plauded and Wright passed out pens isn't out of joint about it and neither Kauffmann spoke to 250 reporters, a Anderson, chief Middle East correspon­ that were used in the ceremony. should yours be," press secretary Jim former American hostage and relatives of dent for The Associated Press, was seized Senate President Pro Tempore John Jaffe said. He said the affair was hostages at a packed news conference in a in west Beirut March 16,1985. Stennis, D-Miss., was expected to sign "being blown up." Left Bank theater. "I have never tried to tell my govern­ the measure quickly and return it to "There was a consensus among the ment exactly what to do," said Say. "But I Wright for delivery to the White In explaining his veto plan, Reagan French that they wanted to free their hos­ think that after more than three years, House. Democratic leaders indicated has pinpointed the plant-closings tages, and they supported what their gov­ they could, perhaps, take some pointers they planned to have it there by the provision as well as the bill's curbs on ernment did to get us out," he said. from the French and follow the leads and end of the week. Alaska oil exports. Kauffmann, 44, and diplomats Marcel initiatives the French government has Wednesday's ceremonies clearly At the White House, spokesman Carton, 64, and Marcel Fontaine, 45, were provided." were aimed at casting the bill in a flat­ Marlin Fitzwater reaffirmed that freed May 4 in Beirut. They had been held Mrs. Say met earlier in the day with tering light and thus make a veto Reagan will veto the bill. by the pro-Iranian Shiite Moslem group Pasqua.

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Maybe they're right Sunday, May 15, 1-3 p.m. PENTAX CLEARCOAT'" Grand anti-reflective lens coating virtually eliminates annoying reflection and lets the real you show through. And it lets more available light reach your beautiful eyes, loo. West Craft Center That means you can see more while reducing eye fatigue So, even if your friends don't call you "Flash", ask us to tell you more about PENTAX CLEARCOAT brand mutti-layer, anti-reflective lens (lower level Bryan Center) coating. We will show you how it can help you to see better anrfiooh better, too. There is a clear difference For more info call 684-2532. EYE EXAMS ARRANGED Located ON CAMPUS in the tunnel between QlDID Benson Duke North Hospital & Duke Eye Center OPTICAL 684-4012 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 12,1988 Jury acquits Navy man of assault in AIDS court-martial

decade behind bars. ford as a guinea pig to see how far it can go on the AIDS The case was unprecedented in the Navy, although issue." SAN FRANCISCO — A Navy technician accused of there have been similar cases in other branches of the Lt. Cmdr. Jane Gilliland, prosecutor in the case, said having sex with his fiancee without telling her he was military. in her closing statement that Crawford, depicted as infected with the AIDS virus was acquitted of assault Crawford was accused of having unprotected sex with caring and concerned by the defense, simply didn't care Wednesday by a military jury. Elmer in 1987 without warning her he had tested posi­ enough about Elmer to tell her about the tests. Petty Officer 2nd Class John Crawford, 27, of Magno­ tive for the AIDS virus. He was charged with adultery "She had no idea that the act of sex which she engaged lia, Ark., stood at attention in the packed courtroom as because Elmer was separated, but not divorced, from her in with Petty Officer Crawford was potentially fatal to the seven-member jury delivered the verdict after 4l/2 third husband. her," Gilliland said. hours of deliberation. Crawford, an avionics technician, testified he told El­ Crawford has said Elmer was bitter that he had bro­ The jury also acquitted Crawford of adultery and of mer about his test results and wore a condom when the ken off their brief engagement and filed charges for wrongfully and in wanton disregard for human life ex­ couple made love in his barracks room. revenge. posing his former fiancee, Jeannie Elmer, to the AIDS But Elmer said that she didn't learn Crawford had Meanwhile, in Arizona, the AIDS-related court-mar­ virus. Elmer is a civilian. been exposed to the virus until the next day, when her tial of Adrian Morris Jr. resumed for the hearing of mo­ The sailor was convicted of a minor charge of having a housemate — who also had been Crawford's lover — told tions after a nine-month delay. visitor in his room after hours. He could get up to two her about the sailor's test. Elmer has tested negative for Morris, a 28-year-old Army private from Caseyville, years for the offense. The jury was to reconvene Wednes­ the AIDS virus. 111., is accused of having threatened the health of three day night to decide on Crawford's sentence. soldiers by not using condoms during sex and failing to "It was what I felt was right," Crawford, accompanied "The government is attempting to explore how far the warn them he had tested positive for the AIDS virus. by his present fiancee, Karen Skavdahl, said of the ver­ Uniform Code of Military Justice can be applied against dict. an individual. . . with the AIDS virus," defense attorney If convicted, Crawford could have been stripped of his Lt. Ron Richman charged as the case went to the jury. rank, dishonorably discharged and sentenced to a "The government seeks to hold out Petty Officer Craw­ O Unlimited hushpuppies.

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'Rate shown is for Individual Special Summer Membership. Other low rates ' for teens, couples, and families are available starting as early as May 1,1988. TkixmMir Sports Women's tennis advances past Arizona in NCAA tournament

By RODNEY PEELE kept the pressure on to clinch the hard- Making their first appearance ever in fought victory, 7-6,5-7,6-1. the NCAA women's tennis championship, "Arizona has strong doubles so we knew the Duke women's tennis team won their they'd be tough [at the end]," Preyer said. opening match in dramatic fashion, 5-4, "In the singles, it's not that we played over the University of Arizona. The win badly, it's just that we lost some close Wednesday in Los Angeles improves matches. Duke's record to 24-5 while the Wildcats "I was worried that since we'd been out fall to 15-9. for a month because of finals and stuff, A great comeback by Terri O'Reilly and the break might hurt us in the close Katrina Greenman at the number two matches. That may have tipped the scales doubles position set the stage for Patti in the singles." and Christine O'Reilly to pull Duke past Arizona took the top two singles the Wildcats. matches as Russo downed tenth-ranked With the team score tied at 4-4, The sophomore Patti O'Reilly 4-6, 6-1, 6-4 and last match was the number one doubles Summerville put 19th-ranked freshman match between Duke's O'Reillys, ranked Susan Sabo away by the score of 6-4, 6-1. 18th, and Arizona's Susan Russo and The other two times this season that both Betsy Summerville, who entered the Patti O'Reilly and Sabo lost their singles match ranked third in the nation in dou­ matches the Duke team ended up losing bles. the match. "It was two outstanding doubles The only senior playing for Duke, Lee teams," Duke coach Jane Preyer said. "It's Shelburne, and sophomore Christine O'­ a big win for Patti and Christine." Reilly came up with big wins in singles. The O'Reillys squeaked through the At number three, Christine O'Reilly first set, 7-6, but after taking a 5-2 lead in crushed Henriette Knoles 6-2, 6-0. In the the second, the Blue Devil sisters lost five fifth spot, Shelburne rolled over Patsi consecutive games and the team of Russo Ranger, 6-1, 6-3. and Summerville evened the set score at "Christine played great," Preyer said.

From staff and wire reports Peele came in to snuff the Blue Devil rally. afraid to get in the dirt. He has a hell of a time playing GREENVILLE, S.C. — Pitcher Brian Barnes, with Clemson was leading 4-1 and Duke had runners on this game." relief help from Tim Peele, lifted Clemson past Duke 9-1 first and third when Peele struck out David Hawkins "The roof caved in [in the eighth inningl," Duke coach Wednesday in the first round of the Atlantic Coast Con­ and John Furch. Steve Traylor said. "That let the air out of the balloon a ference baseball tournament before a partisan Tiger Clemson quickly boosted the lead with five runs in the little bit. We had the exact kind of game we hoped for crowd of 3132. bottom of the eighth off three Duke relievers. Bert Hef- before [the eighth]. We didn't boot the ball around or Barnes, 12-1, struck out eight Blue Devil batters and fernan and Randy Mazey belted one-out home runs. For walk a lot of people, so I was happy with that aspect of yielded just one run in 7 1 / 3 innings. Mazey it was his seventh home run of the season in his our game." Darryl Clements walked to lead off the eighth inning second-ever left-handed at-bat. Heffernan's home run, Each of Clemson's first four batters — Heffernan, but was forced at second by James Smith. Smith ad­ his sixth, was a three-run blast. Mazey, Mike Milchin and Jerry Brooks — collected three vanced to second on a single by Rick Torgalski and both "Heffernan's the catalyst," said Wilhelm of his all- hits. All told, they accounted for seven of the nine runs runners moved up on a wild pitch. Doug Eastman then ACC catcher and leadoff hitter. "He's been doing it for and seven of the eight runs batted in. lined a single to left that scored Duke's only run before four years for us. It's like a broken record — he's not Duke senior Don Fowler, 3-10, took the loss for the Blue Devils. He gave up 10 hits and four earned runs in six innings. "I was tickled to death with Don," Traylor said. "I was real proud of the effort he gave us. He wasn't throwing the ball as hard but perhaps that's why he was so effec­ tive. He had the Clemson hitters way off stride." Despite the victory, Clemson head coach Bill Wilhelm was not particularly pleased with the Tigers' play. "It was not a good game," he said. "We were lackadaisical at the outset." On the other hand, Traylor, Duke's first-year head coach, was hardly displeased. "There was a talent discrepancy out there," Traylor admitted. "We knew we had to keep it close, hang in there and try to stay within three-four runs. I was very pleased with our effort but displeased with the outcome." Clemson's record is 48-10 while Duke drops to 10-34. Barnes established a new Clemson school record for strikeouts in a season. His total of eight strikeouts gives him 131, breaking Harold Stowe's total of 126, estab­ lished in 1958, Wilhelm's first year as Tiger head coach. Duke will try to avoid a quick return to Durham against the University of Virginia today in the double- elimination tournament. The Cavaliers are 30-18 and defeated Duke in all three meetings this season by the scores 9-5, 2-1, and 21-15. The Blue Devils eliminated Virginia last year as 1987 graduate Kent Hetrick threw a five-hit shutout for the Blue Devil's only win of the tournament. Notes: Duke first baseman John Furch and pitcher Mike Trombley are the only Blue Devils among Atlantic Coast Conference leaders in batting and pitching. Furch is 18th in batting with a .348 percentage while Trombley is second in strikeouts <94), fifth in innings pitched (94), JIM JEFFERS/THE CHRONtCLE fourth in complete games (5) and fifth in strikeouts per Don Fowler pitched well for six innings but the Blue Devils could only muster one run — in the eighth — as nine innings (9.0) . . . Torgalski extended his hitting they were defeated by Clemson. streak in ACC games to 13 with two infield hits. THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 12,1988 Sports fanatic Herb Terbauer leads an Today Baseball vs Virginia, ACC Tournament, Greenville, easy life as the number one Duke fan S.C. 10:00 a.m. Women's Tennis vs. Stanford. NCAA Tournament. By STEVE GOLDBERG painted it Duke blue, and ran around the Kansas City UCLA's Thrifty Corporation Los Angeles Tennis Herb Terbauer was at every Duke basketball and foot­ Arena ringing it. "Everyone ran when I rang it," Ter­ Center, 3:00 p.m. ball game this year. bauer says. He rang the bell so much, his fingers blis­ He was at every basketball and football game last tered. But he kept ringing the bell. year. And the year before, and the year before and the Aside from the stubs, Terbauer also collects Duke bas­ Friday year before. ketball T-shirts, hats (he has a hat from the Tacoma "I'm just one of those lucky people," Terbauer says. Dome where the soccer team won Duke's only national BasebaU at ACC Tournament, Greenville, SEC. Terbauer came to Duke in 1959 and graduated in 1964 championship), game programs and old Sports Illus­ — "one of those five-year academic marvels," he calls trated magazines. Everything is organized in neat piles himself. During those five years, Terbauer was a Duke on shelves in his collection room. Women's Tennis at NCAA Tournament, UCLA's sports fanatic. He managed the baseball team in 1961 Aside from keeping a neat room, Terbauer is exactly thrifty Corporation Los Angeles Tennis Center • when it won the Atlantic Coast Conference champion­ like a second-semester senior with a job staring in Sep­ ship, he road tripped to both the 1963 and 1964 Final tember. He has no worries and is open to do anything, Four, and he went to every football game. anytime, anywhere. Saturday Because of a Food Lion stock option, Terbauer now A friend calls on the phone and Terbauer's end of the Baseball at ACC Tournament. Greenville, S.C. has enough money to do what he enjoys most in life — conversation sounds like this: support Duke athletics. "Well you drank enough to be hung over this He retired from Food Lion last June and now his only morning." Women's Tennis at NCAA Tournament, UCLA's job, aside from following Duke sports, is in the summer "Yeah you did." Thrifty Corporation Los Angeles Tennis Center• ,.. when he helps his neighbors fill a pool, "and that'll be me "You did real well." for the summer," Terbauer says. "No, you didn't." Terbauer lives alone in a house not much bigger than The exact content isn't important. The spirit of the Sunday a Central Campus Apartment. Inside, he subscribes to conversation is, Terbauer simply has refused to grow up. the philosophy of moderation —there aren't a lot of Terbauer's first and only love is Duke sports. He tried sal) at ACC Tournament, Greenville, S..C. plush ornaments and there isn't an abundance of Duke marriage once and told his wife that Duke sports would paraphenalia. be more important. "I don't think she believed [that I "You have to be kidding," Terbauer told the police. He Before Terbauer made his money from the stock mar­ could be so devoted to sports]," Terbauer says. "I think laughed that the police spend so much time stopping ket, he would work seven days a week at Food Lion so he she learned, though." scalpers while drug deals and crime takes its toll on the could take time off and see Duke play ball. He quit a job The most famous part of Terbauer's wardrobe is his city. he had earlier in life because it took him out of town blue leather hat from Mexico. Duke basketball has par­ Probably his most eventful day, though, was in when there were Duke sports to be seen. ticipated in the NCAAs every year since he got the hat November 1985 when Terbauer drove from the Duke- Terbauer shows off his ticket stubs with the reverence and people get nervous when he shows up without the Carolina football game to RDU Airport where he hopped of a grade school student displaying his baseball card hat on his head. "Don't worry," he assured people in on a flight to see Duke play basketball in the 1985 Big collection. The stubs lie in a cigar box in his closet and Kansas City this April, I have the hat. Apple NIT. each stub has a story. The Kansas City trip was Terbauer's most recent "You gotta enjoy what you do," Terbauer says. His fu­ Looking at the Final Four stub from 1964 when the Duke sports outing and he managed to make it a memo­ ture plans are to open a sports franchise store, but for ticket price was $7, Terbauer remembers jumping into a rable one. He was arrested for scalping tickets for a now, you can find Terbauer working on his tan at the 1958 Plymouth with five friends and driving to Kansas friend. The way Terbauer tells the story, Kansas City pool in Raleigh, remembering one of his many road trips. City. In those days, face paint and T-shirts were un­ police entrapped him by qouting him a price and then Ahhh, sure is nice to be a second-semester senior all heard of, so Terbauer bought an 18-inch cow bell, slapping the cuffs on his wrists. year long. ttrnxxn ™

BASEBALL CARDS SPRING SPECIALS mm STATION 1987 Heer Tin Set - $55.00 1987 Donruss Highlights Set - $7.95 J 986 Donruss Highlights Set - $6.95 1984 Topps Set-$65.00 Weh;om e New Stude nts! 1987ToppsSet- $19.95 1987 Sportflics Set - $29.50 1988 Sportflics Set- $29.50 1987 Fleer Update Set - $9.95 SPRI NG INTO SUMPJIER ! 1987 Topps Traded Set - $9.95 1987 Donruss Set - $29.95 Compk ste Line of Tennis/ Apparel & Equipment "Everything for the Collector-Hobbyist" • Best Selection of F acquets Anywhere * • Fo r Water Lovers! • • Prince • Kennex • Wimbledon • Wilson • We no w have water skis! • * Donnay•h ead • Dunlop • Co ineiy • Kidder» Ho Upper Level- 1 hour Racq jet Stringing ( )'Neil Wetsuits Near Belks South Square Mall Mon-Sat 10-9 4221 Garrett Rd., Di rham, NC M-F 10-6 490-1111 Durham 493-7865 Qpld 'H Cards Sunday 1-6 (Behind Darry I's) Sat 10-5 c 68-0731 Chapel Hill THURSDAY, MAY 12,1988 THE CHRONICLE Butters named university vice president; Lacrosse season over

From Staff Reports Sports briefs Men's tennis finishes third: The men's tennis On Saturday, May 7, Duke athletic director Tom But­ team finished third in the Atlantic Coast Conference ters was named a vice president of the university effec­ Tournament by defeating Wake Forest in their final period. North Carolina then scored five straight and the tive July 1. Despite the added responsibilities, Butters match after losing, 7-2, to eventual champion Clemson contest was never in question. The Tar Heels pumped 50 will remain the director of athletics. the day before. shots on goal compared to just 25 for the Blue Devils. "Although many have contributed to the success of For the third year in a row, the Blue Devils did not Duke's record is now 22-5 and an NCAA tournament athletics at Duke University, no one has contributed receive a bid to the NCAA championship. bid is a small possibility. greater leadership nor set higher standards than Tom Butters," Duke University president Dr. H. Keith H. Brodie said. Butters graduated from Ohio in 1963 and first came to Duke as a director of special events in 1967. He became Duke's seventh athletic di­ rector in 1977. "I honestly don't know an AD anywhere who has done a better job than Tom has with the Duke program," At­ lantic Coast Conference Commissioner Gene Corrigan said. "Everything about it represents quality. They haven't sold out in order to do anything — they've made [athletics] fit into the personality Duke is as an institution." The athletic program under Butters has three Final Four basketball appearances and two national cham­ pionship games in soccer, including the 1987 NCAA tit­ le. Since 1980, Duke has led the nation three times in football graduation percentage and finished second three times. The basketball team has graduated 100 per­ cent of its players since Butters took over and over 90 percent of all student-athletes at Duke in all sports have graduated in that period. "It signifies the importance of the relationship be­ tween the director of athletics and the CEO," Corrigan said, "and it acknowledges the fact that communication within the university should include the AD."

LacrOSSe Season ends: The Blue Devil lacrosse team lost their final game of the year, 18-9, to North Carolina. The third-ranked Tar Heels (8-2) won the At­ lantic Coast Conference Championship by going un­ defeated in the league while Duke concluded the season BETH ANN FARLEY/THE CHRONICLE with a 8-4 record, 0-3 in the ACC. After falling behind 5-0 in the second quarter, Duke Sophomore attacker Josh Dennis scored three goals against UNC but he will have to wait until next year for tried to rally and cut the lead to 5-2 early in the third the chance to play in the NCAA lacrosse championships.

rf*" DUKE CRAFT CENTER ^> SUMMER CLASSES 1988

The Craft Center is again offering a wide variety of summer classes. Beginning May 12 you can register for any of the following:

BASKETWEAVING - Wed., 7-9:30 p.m., June 1-July 20 Tuition: $42.00 Supply Fee: $20.00

JEWELRY/METALS - Thurs., 7-10 p.m., June 2-July 21, i Sun., 1-4 p.m., June 5-Aug. 7 • ^^S- Tuition: $45.00 ' Supply Fee: $6.00

PHOTOGRAPHY I - Thurs., 4-6 p.m., June 9-July 28 Tuition: $45.00 Supply Fee: $7.00

PHOTOGRAPHY II - Tues., 6-8 p.m., June 7-July 26 Tuition: $45.00 Supply Fee: $7.00

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WEAVING I - Tues., 7-10 p.m., May 24-July 12 Tuition: $65.00 Supply Fee: $12.00 6§S. You can register beginning May 12, Monday-Friday, 12:00-4:00 p.m. in the Craft Center (lower level, Bryan Center). Remember that you must pay your tuition and fees to reserve your spot in a class! Full class schedules are available at the Information Desk in the Bryan Center. For more information, call 684-2532. Off Erwin Rd., Durham • 286-1910

I I.M II..•• THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 12,1988 Second-ranked Stanford up next for Duke's women's tennis team

• TENNIS from page 21 Also, it has really been hot here." see that." Next up for the Blue Devils is Stanford. Rounding out the singles competition, The Cardinals have compiled a 22-2 re­ sophomore Terri O'Reilly went down in cord this year and are seeded second in defeat to Danielle Klurman, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4, the NCAA tournament. in the fourth position. Freshman Katrina The match is scheduled for today and Greenman was victorious at the number the winner will advance into the quarter­ six spot over Nancy Breem, 6-1,6-3. finals of the NCAA championships. Stan­ The first doubles match to be completed ford had a bye in the opening round but was the number three position where Preyer did not feel that that would be to Ranger and Klurman teamed to beat their advantage today. "It's not an advan­ Cathy French and Shelburne. As a result, tage [Thursdayl but where it's an advan­ Arizona took a 4-3 lead in matches with tage is later in the week," Preyer said. just one match needed to clinch. "Clearly Stanford's a great team," It appeared that Duke's season would Preyer said. "I have full respect for them be over when Terri O'Reilly and Green­ but I really believe this [Duke] team can man fell behind 3-0 and then 4-2 in the beat them. I think the team is excited for third set against Arizona's Knoles and it. We're going out there for the win." Breem. Somehow the Duke pair rallied to win four straight games and the match to Notes: Duke women's tennis coach tie the team score at four. Jane Preyer was named the Southeast "Almost every game was a 3-all game," Region ITCA Wilson/Coach-of-the-Year. Preyer said about the last set of that She is also one of seven nominees for na­ match. In tournament action, no-ad scor­ tional coach-of-the-year. Preyer holds a ing is used which means that the first side 62-22 lifetime record in her three years at to get four points wins the game. "It was Duke and this year she became the first tough odds to do what they did but they coach to lead Duke to the ACC champion­ pulled it out." ship. ... In the past four years, Duke has Travelling to the west coast and playing been represented by Sue Taylor (1984- at a large tennis facility didn't hurt the 1986) and Patti O'Reilly (1987-) as indi­ Blue Devils' too much Wednesday. viduals in the NCAA tournament. Neither "We had a limited practice for an hour Taylor or O'Reilly advanced past the sec­ [Tuesday] so I was wondering about how ond round . . . The Blue Devils broke the the team would react to it," Preyer said, school record for victories this year, sur­ "but they did well. One thing that's been passing the 21 wins in the 1985-1986 sea­ bothering everybody has been the smog. son.

JIM JEFFERS/THE CHRONICLE Christine O'Reilly was victorious in singles (6-2, 6-0) and doubles (7-6, 5-7, 6- i with sister Patti) to help the Blue Devils advance in the NCAA tournament. There's more to Duke than the Library- discover Duke Forest. South Square Mall and W Lite salute "The City of Medicine" WMlv( during BlCYCLfiS National Hospital Week

900 West Main May 8-14 Across from Brightleaf Square 286-0535

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