WEEKLY SUMMER EDITION

Thursday

June 27. 1985 Volume 80B, Number 8 Durham, THE CHRONICLE Cocaine cases complete No jail terms handed down in five cases By ED FARRELL graduate Alexander McKinnon, Mitchell Decisions were handed down in the cases said. of the five defendants in the Feb. 23 cocaine- Modi, along with Duke student John El- related robbery by Durham County Supe­ Masry and non-student Tony Saunders, who rior Court Thomas Lee on Monday and were not involved in the cocaine deal, abducted Van Dyne from Wilson Dormitory Each of the defendants pleaded guilty to on Feb: 24, took him to McKinnon's house the charges presented. Hearings were then off campus and assaulted him, Mitchell held to determine sentencing. None of those testified. involved received jail terms. Saunders, whom police have been unable The prosecution utilized the testimony of to locate, has not yet been arrested and no state's witness Lt. Thessie Mitchell of Duke warrant has yet been isssued, according to Public Safety in each of the five hearings. Durham County district attorney Ron His testimony in the sentencing of Modi Stephens. was entered into the record in the four Modi pleaded guilty to conspiracy to following hearings in which he was cross- possess more than a gram of cocaine with examined. intent to deliver it - a felony charge - and According to Mitchell, former Duke stu­ misdemeanor assault. A charge of second dent Alexander Van Dyne led former Duke degree kidnapping was reduced to misde­ student Lalit Modi to the Econo-Lodge meanor false imprisonment, to which he motel on Guess Road to purchase $10,000 also pleaded guilty. The judge granted Modi worth of cocaine, where Modi was robbed at a continued prayer for judgment on the gunpoint by a friend of Van Dynes, Shep­ cocaine charge. herd Small, who prearranged the deal with Modi was given a two-year suspended Van Dyne. There was never any cocaine sentence and five years probation for the present. misdemeanor charges with the conditions that he never have in his possession any ALICE ADAMS^THE CHRONICLE After the robbery, Modi, suspicious of Van Dyne's involvement in the robbery, controlled substance unless prescribed by Summer Camp Dook approached the other buyers he was repre­ physician, undergo counseling and treat­ Participants in the Young Writers Camp, one of many camps this summer, enjoy senting about getting the money back. One ment, perform 300 hours of community a space usually reserved for older non-writers. of the contributors, who also solicited service and pay a $10,000 fine. money for the deal, was recent Trinity See COCAINE on page 5 Professors weigh implications of TWA hijacking

By DOUGLAS MAYS "So far, it has been handled correctly: with The importance of the June 14 hijacking extraordinary caution and restraint. We've of TWA flight 847 extends beyond the safe learned a lot from 1979, and there are a lot release of the prisoners, according to three of parallels," he said, referring to the U.S. University political science professors. hostages held in Iran. Eldridge predicted The three agreed that the United States that the hostages will not be released "any must soon develop a policy for dealing with time soon. The real issue is who is going forces in world affairs that it has so far to have the power to cause their release," he failed to recognize formally, but disagreed said, noting the "complete breakdown of on what that policy should be. civil order" in Lebanon. "If the situation is not handled correctly, Timothy Lomperis, assistant political it will only contribute to one of two negative science professor, said he was "guardedly images of the United States that the world hopeful" for the release of the prisoners. The already has: that we are helpless, or that presence of Amal Shiite leader Nabih Berri, U.S. foreign policy is without direction and who assumed responsibility for the hos­ suffers from shifts and changes. It's not tages' safety, has given President Reagan merely a question of getting the hostages a target for his frustations, he said. back," said Albert Eldridge, associate pro­ In addition, Reagan's efforts to "isolate the fessor of political science. Amal from any sympathetic world opinion" have been succeeding, he said, noting that "Jordan, Egypt and even Syria have been UPI PHOTO distancing themselves from the terrorists. The TWA hijacking: "It's not merely a question of getting the hostages back," said Inside "If the situation is not resolved within a Albert Eidridge, associate professor of political science. week, we will be past the point of maximum The effect of this response, he said, will Carter in the Iranian case, "which is the Honor Requirements Raised: pressure on the captors, which could have be important: "If he goes crazy it will mean only way possible, given the limitations," forced them to succumb to background You're going to have to work a lot harder real trouble. Every American in the Middle said 0!e Holsti, George V. Allen professor pressures. After that I can imagine a long to graduate summa, magna or just plain East will be a target. If it's too little one can of political science. "It's been more difficult standoff: the Shiites will have developed too cum laude. See page 3. see a lot more of the same kinds of incidents for the Reagan administration because it much capital to let [the hostages] go with­ happening." has been talking tough but has shown itself Breaking away: Two Law School out major concessions." Regarding the president's handling of the to be a paper tiger." students are planning to bicycle from At this point there will be an increased incident so far, Lomperis said: "It's too Eldridge, Lomperis and Holsti agreed Mexico to Canada to raise money for the possibility of some kind of direct action from difficult to call one way or the other. One that this incident underlines the need for American Lung Association. See page 4. the White House, Lomperis said. "As long cannot discern major blunders or strokes of a well-defined U.S. policy to deal with as there is palpable hope for the hostages, genius, although either may have occurred." terrorism and "non-state actors" in inter- there will be restraint. When that hope But he questioned Reagan's refusal to ask national relations, although they differed New NCAA penalties: The Uni­ recedes, Reagan can prove that diplomatic Israel for the release of the 700 Shiite on the best way to approach this, versity's representative to the special channels have been eliminated and there prisoners "when we had said [their impris- "We need to work closely with allied and NCAA meeting last weekend in New will be pressure on him to sort of write off onment] was a violation of international other governments to isolate terrorism," Orleans comments on the strict new the hostages in favor of retaliation. It's law anyway." Holsti said. "We should try to strengthei penalties approved there. going to be tough to avoid the call for a Reagan's treatment of the crisis has been response." similar to that of former President Jimmy See HIJACKING on page 11 Page 2 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, June 27, 1985 New building to aid institute, med center By ROBIN EPSTEIN The clinical and research laboratory building currently under construction on Research Drive will increase the contact between the existing scientific community and the clinical activities of the Medical Center, according to Bob Winfree, assistant vice president for health affairs. A covered walkway will connect the new building to the south tower of Duke Hospital North, Winfree said. The building's completion is expected in October 1986, Winfree said. Construction began last July. The total cost of the project, which includes construction as well as everything "from soup to nuts," is estimated at $19 million, Winfree said. Three separate sources contributed money for the new building. Each paid a sum proportional to the space they plan to occupy. The Hospital and Child Care division of the Duke Endowment earmarked funds expressly for the hospital's clinical laboratory portion of the new facility, Winfree said. Funds have also been allocated to provide for the Robin Epstein/THE CHRONICLE:" research activities of the Departments of Medicine, Construction of the new research building to be shared by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, departments Pharmacology, and Psychiatry. in the Medical Center and the Hospital and Child Care division of the Duke Endowment should be completed The Howard Hughes Medical Institute, which has had in July, 1986. The cost of the building is estimated at $19 million. a unit of scientific investigators at the University for over 20 years, is the third financial participant in the construc­ "From the standpoint of biomedical research all of those Dr. Bernard Carroll, chairman of the department of tion of the new building. scientists going in there are excited about the opening of psychiatry. The largest private medical research organization in the the building," said Paul Thacker, business manager for the "We have a major expansion underway in psychopharma- country, tj_e institute was established by Hughes in 1953. department of medicine. "There will finally be some relief cology, neuropeptides, and developmental psychobiology. HHMI hires research scientists to staff 17 units located from the overcrowding," he said. "There will be more space We are recruiting new faculty and placing them in the new throughout the United States. for their research to grow and prosper." space," he said. The Hughes'Institute's decision to expand its physical "We in the Department of Medicine feel we're extremely 'The Department of Psychiatry has received major fund­ and scientific presence at Duke coincided with the Medical tight for space," Thacker said. "Medicine is a research- ing to follow up its project dealing with the way the Center's need for more clinical laboratory facilities. The oriented department," he said, "we feel it's very nervous system is affected by drugs," said Carroll. package enabled the participants to do as a group what appropriate." Pharmacology also plans to take on an additional faculty none of them could have accomplished alone, Winfree said. With the construction of the new laboratory building, member, Dr. Norman Kirshner, chairman of the Depart­ The Hughes Institute's primary areas of research include the Department of Psychiatry will no longer need to carry ment of Pharmacology said. "We're the smallest basic genetics, immunology, metabolic control and neuroscience. out research in borrowed space in the Sands Building, said science department at the Medical School," he said. {Collection^ DUKE CREDIT UNION

SIZZLING SUMMER LOOKS LOAN RATE SALE ON SALE on NOW NEW Sr, t. 1/4 T01/2 OFF CARS ^p^^

BE THERE! 9.9% APR NQ GIMMICKS! Everyday—Not just for this sale: • Same low rates on any new car— not just the one the dealer wants to unload. • Simple Interest—no prepayment penalty. • Up to 48 months to repay. • Up to 80% of sticker price financed • Payroll deduction for easy repayment • Low-cost life and disability insurance at your option Brightleaf Square Durham, NC COMPARE AND SAVE AT YQUB CREDIT UNION! Monday-Saturday—10-6 - 688-7591 - 2600 Erwin Road Open Monday-Friday 8:00-5:00, Wednesday 8:00-1:00 Campus Honors requirements increased By DOUGLAS MAYS Page 3 June 27, 1985 The graduation of the Class of '85 in May marked the end of "easy" honors. This year the implementation of Today stricter requirements for the distinctions of summa cum laude, magna cum laude and cum laude upon receipt of Public Safety, "Take A Bite Out of Crime,". 9 p.m., degrees begins, as well as more stringent criteria for the Few Lounge. annual Dean's List. The Undergraduate Faculty Council of Arts and Sciences American Dance Festival, "Pilobolus Dance Theater.' (UFCAS) approved the decision to make the honors more 8 p.m., Page Auditorium. selective in the spring of 1981. The new requirements first appeared in the bulletin of undergraduate instruction for 1982-83, according to Virginia Bryan, assistant dean for Friday Trinity College, and were thus applicable only to those entering the University in the fall of 1982 or afterward. American Dance Festival. "Pilobolus Dance Theater.' UFCAS decided at that time that honors should be 8 p.m., Page Auditorium. distributed on a floating scale derived each year from the grades of the previous graduating class. By taking the top Candlelight Vigil for the Hostages of TWA Flight third of those grades and dividing it into three categories, 847, 10 p.m., Chapel Lawn. the standard for each level of honor was determined. In the winter of 1982 UFCAS decided that this method was unsuitable, and voted to return to set standards, Saturday although at a higher level than previously. The new changes appeared in the bulletin for 1983-84, and apply Picnic for students, Central Campus picnic shelter, only to those entering Duke in the Fall of 1983 or 5 p.m. STAFF PHOTO afterwards. Virginia Bryan, assistant dean for Trinity College "It was calculated that this method [of floating standards] American Dance Festival, "Pilobolus Dance Theater? was not accomplishing what the faculty had hoped for: a class of '85 had faced the new requirements, said Bryan, 8 p.m. Page Auditorium. substantial number of cum laudes, while reserving the "there would have been a bit more than 250 cum laudes, magna and summa cum laude honors for the students that approximately 80 magna cum laudes and 32 summa cum International Association Party, International do sensationally well," said Bryan. "These means didn't laudes," resulting in approximately 29 percent of the class House, Campus Drive and Anderson Street, 8 p.m, really meet those goals." receiving honors. "This makes very good sense," she said. All students are welcome to join international As a result, the class of 1986 will be subject to the Princeton University typically awards honors to approxi­ students for beer, sangria and sodas. floating standard derived from the top third of the grades mately 45 percent of its graduating class, while Stanford of the class of 1985, while the classes of 1987 onward will University's figure is close to 10 percent, according to fall under the set standards. administrators there. The requirements for these honors Sunday Members of the class of 1986 will have to achieve grade go significantly beyond the achievement of a certain GPA, point averages of 3.774, 3.548 and 3.322 for the honors of however; students are judged on the basis of theses and DUU Galleries Committee, Reception for Louis St. summa cum laude, magna cum laude and cum laude, work within the department of their major. Lewis, 6 p.m., Brown Gallery, Bryan Center. respectively. Those in the class of 1987 and beyond will UFCAS decided last year to increase the GPA required have to earn averages of 3.8, 3.6 and 3.3 for the respective for a student to appear on the Dean's List from 3.0 to 3.3. Freewater Film, "Take the Money and Run," 7:30 honors. The previous standards were 3.5, 3.3 and 3.0, The council also voted to change the name of Class Honors p.m., Bryan Center Film Theater. according to Harry DeMik, associate registrar. to "Dean's List with Distinction," and to increase the 'The faculty felt too many students were graduating with minimum GPA from 3.3 to 3.6 for that honor. "This also honors: about 50 percent of the class," DeMik said. "With makes considerably more sense," said Bryan. "It's not much Monday the new criteria it will be approximately one-third." If the of an honor to get a 'B', the average grade." Reality Break, "Star Wars, Space, Weapons and War," with associate political science professor Darryi Roberts, 9 p.m., Few Lounge. Producers plan film distribution American Dance Festival, "David Gordon/Pick Up By ED FARRELL "When the Trumpet Sounds," which relates the inspira­ Company," Reynolds Industries Theater, 8 p.m. "When the Trumpet Sounds," a major motion picture to tional story of the 1958 Kentucky basketball team, Pen- be filmed on the Duke campus in September will attempt land said. The script has been circulated among churches Tuesday to reproduce the commercial success of "Chariots of Fire" and larger community organizations nationwide such as by using the same unconventional marketing techniques, Youths for Christ, the Campus Crusade for Christ and according to the producers. Fellowship of Christian Athletes. American Dance Festival, "David Gordon/Pick Up Tim Penland of Cornerstone Productions of Glendale, It is "not out of the question" that a major distributor Company," Reynolds Industries Theater, 8 p.m. Calif, who will produce the film along with William Van such as Warner Brothers may eventually distribute the Allen Jr. and Doug Dean, was involved in the marketing film, but currently the film is being financed indepen­ Wednesday of "Chariots of Fire." "That was the first time a film was dently of a major producer, Penland said. marketed through the Christian community," Penland By selling tickets for showings of the movie, local church Quad Flix, "Harold & Maude," 7 p.m., Bryan Center said. and community organiztions will receive 50 cents per Film Theater. The same informal distribution network of over 35,000 ticket. When "Chariots of Fire" was distributed, some volunteers, along with 1,000 paid workers will be used for groups made as much as $15,000-25,000, Van Allen said.

All-You-Can-Eat Snow Crab Legs Friday & Saturday ,5:00-10:00 p.m. 1 For your 1 dining JSAIL; pleasure, Uncle Al's will be adding a 905 W. Main St., Brightleaf Square, Durham bar this Monday-Saturday 11:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Page 4 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, June 27, 1985 Students bike for bucks Afln Pacific trip to benefit lung association fe s,...... ^ft*

By JENNY WRIGHT tive lifestyle" as a common goal. There is Bicycling up the Pacific Coast for charity "a degree to which we can have some con­ may not be the ideal way to spend the trol" over factors affecting lung disease, she summer for most, but for two Law School said. students "it's a vacation." Whitaker and Nix have been talking Kelsey Nix and Greg Whitaker are mak­ about their trip since last fall. They origin­ ing their 2000-mile trek from Mexico to ally thought of going cross-country east to Canada to raise money for the American west, but decided going south to north Lung Association of North Carolina. They would take less time and enable them to will leave July 12 and plan to ride for six work for part of the summer. weeks — five hours per day, seven days a To train for the ride, Whitaker and Nix week. have lifted weights, run up and down the Both are avid cyclists: Whitaker took a bleachers of Wallace Wade and 600-mile trip along Lake Superior last taken 50-mile weekend bike rides. Their summer, and Nix has taken weekend trips primary emphasis is on strengthening their of 150 miles. knees. But "there is no way you can train They have had some trouble getting for a ride like that," Nix said. pledges because of a lack of publicity. Plans "You have to go much farther [than a with the American Lung Association were runner in training] to encounter the dis­ not finalized until May - after exams comfort you encounter on a bike," said ended - so they were unable to inform Whitaker. "The first three days are going ALICE ADAMS/THE CHRONICLE other students, Nix said. However, they to be the roughest," said Nix. Kelsey Nix and Greg Whitaker plan to bicycle from Mexico to Atlanta in six weeks. hope media coverage, promotional ads on They expect "little discomforts," Whitaker initial part of the trip, they said they may of the pledges to the American Lung Asso­ G105 radio and a soon-to-be aired television said, like numbness in the hands, back do some sightseeing toward the end. "If we ciation will go toward their expenses. "If we spot with basketball coach Mike Krzyzew­ pains and possibly swollen knees. In addi­ see anything interesting, we'll stop," Nix can't find any sponsor who will pay for our ski will help their efforts. tion, there will be mechanical problems like said. They may continue into Canada, if trip we'll pay for it ourselves," Nix said. Although their goal is to raise $10,000, the "occasional flat tire." They also expect time permits, perhaps going as far as They will receive some equipment from the money raised is not as important as the occasional heavy traffic. Vancouver. sponsors Bull City Bicycles in Durham and publicity gained for the American Lung They plan to carry "tools to service almost They approached the American Lung Tumbleweeds Cycling in Chapel Hill. Association, Whitaker said. everything - except truly major disasters," Association because "they match what we're The American Lung Association is in their estimated 30 lbs. of baggage, trying to do. . . emphasize overall health," Anyone who wishes to sponsor Nix and pleased with the affiliation "whether or not Whitaker said. said Whitaker. The association also was the Whitaker can pick up a sponsor form from they are able to generate a lot of money," They plan to camp most nights, Whitaker most enthusiastic of the organizations they any Durham Sporting Goods or Athletic said Eleanor Blackwell, regional director of said, though "once in a_while we'll splurge approached, he said- Attic, or can contact the American Lung the association. and stay in a cheap hotel." In addition, they Nix and Whitaker hope to get a corporate Association by calling 834-8235 or writing "We're delighted to be associated with a have friends in most of the cities they want sponsor to underwrite their expenses. None P.O. Box 10394, Raleigh, 27605. project with goals similar to our own goals," to see, Nix said. said Blackwell. She cited a "healthy, posi­ If they get a lot of riding done in the

After A Day Durham in the Sun, comes alive Come Visit Us for Some at Anotherthyme Food S. Fun! 3_ Pizza ._. Subs C OPEN Gyros Monday-Saturday Burgers 11 a.m.-l a.m. Salads & Bar Open until 2 a.m. Friday-Saturday 6S . TAKE OUT AVAILABLE HAPPY HOURS Monday-Saturday 4-6 p.m. *. hen the new Durham relaxes, Anotherthyme is the All ABC Permits choice". Anotherthyme's menu features continental and 493-7797 • 493-7790 seafood cuisines; a wide variety of extraordinary dishes i 00(j shopping Center, Durham for the discriminating diner. Anotherthyme's bar boasts freshly squeezed juices and friendly, expert bartending for the best mixed drinks in the Triangle. So come alive in Anotherthyme's relaxed atmosphere 2 FREE DINNER SALADS • and be a part of the new Durham.

with the order of a large pizza Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:30 Happy Hour Sat. 12:00-2:30 4:30 p.m.-6 _ 0 p.i Dinner Sun.-Thu. 5:30-10:00 <>f_Ti<>mcTio$\ Fri. & Sat. 5:30-10:30 Restaurant and Bar not good with other offers. Good with coupon only until 8/ 31/85 | Thursday, June 27, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 5 Five cases decided in cocaine-related robbery

COCAINE from page 1 Mitchell testified that in the course of their investiga­ not have had a case. A continued prayer for judgment allows the judge to hold tion, Public Safety officers found that at least six students Neil Van Dyne, Van Dyne's father, testified that his son the defendant's plea of guilty without actually convicting contributed a total in excess of $5,000 to a cocaine purchase did not at the time understand the severity of what he was him on the charge. that was supposed to be $10,000. doing, but that he does now. The elder Van Dyne said that Former Duke student Alexander Van Dyne received a Two more people allegedly involved in the case were his son had shown "intense remorse" and is undergoing three-year suspended sentence. He pleaded guilty to a arrested in April and charged with conspiracy to possess therapy in New York. felony charge of obtaining property under false pretenses. a felonious amount of cocaine: James Kanski, a rising Stephens said the incident was "not a traditional armed He received a five-year probation with conditions that he Trinity junior and Michael Renaud, a recent Engineering robbery," although it may have met the technical require­ continue to receive counseling and treatment, perform 200 graduate. A warrant was issued for a third party, 1982 ments of an armed robbery. He called the crime a "flim­ hours of community service and pay a $2,500 fine. Trinity graduate David Riordan. None of these three has flam" with the appearance of violence. Van Dyne went to McKinnon pleaded guilty to a felony charge of conspiracy been indicted. great length to make sure he didn't have a weapon, to possess more than one gram of cocaine and a misde­ Each of the defendant's attorneys stessed that their Stephens said. meanor charge of soliciting buyers to purchase cocaine. client's decision to engage in criminal activity was based In McKinnon's case, Mitchell testified that McKinnon McKinnon was given a two-year suspended sentence for on poor judgment and was uncharacteristic. had asked the other defendants to leave his house when soliciting and the judge granted a continued prayer for In Modi's defense, Susan Ross of the Development Office Van Dyne was being assaulted. McKinnon was not judgment on the felony charge. He received a five-year appeared as a character witness. Ross, who has known involved in the assault. Dr. Robert Senior testified that probation with conditions that he never have in his Modi and his parents for two years, was not representing McKinnon has and would be able to make great progress possession any controlled substance unless prescribed by the University. in therapy for cocaine abuse that he is now undergoing. a physician, continue to receive counseling and treatment, Ross testified that she had been in contact with Modi McKinnon's attorney asked the judge for a continued perform 200 hours of community service and pay $2,500. and talked often on the phone to his mother. Modi came prayer for judgment on the felony charge because El-Masry pleaded guilty to a charge of misdemeanor to Duke from India as a vegetarian who did not drink, was. McKinnon has been hired in Spain and would be unable assault and received a continued prayer for judgment. All deeply religious and had no previous experience with to assume the job with a felony conviction. felony charges against him were dropped. drugs, Ross said. She said he needed to be accepted by his El-Masry was the only defendant to receive no sentence. Small received a three-year suspended sentenced on a peers as he tried to become accustomed to a foreign Mitchell testified that his investigation, which included felony charge of obtaining property under false pretenses, country. corroborating statements by Van Dyne, concluded that El- to which he pleaded guilty. He also received a five-year Ross praised the Modi family's contribution to society Masry was the "most minimal of the three participants" probation with special conditions, a $2,500 fine and an and said Modi was remorseful. Modi's attorney, Wade in the assault and that he could be credited with having order to make restitution. Smith, presented letters to the court in Modi's behalf, prevented further injury to Van Dyne. The use of cocaine on the Duke campus and the absence including one from former N.C. Governor Jim Hunt. Allan Kornberg, chairman of the political science of drugs in the case were elements in four out of five cases. Smith, one of five lawyers hired by Modi, said that Modi department and a three-year acquaintance of El-Masry, In his recommendation for sentence in Modi's case, had no previous criminal record in the United States or testified that El-Masry is a person of "good moral character, Stephens said that if drugs had actually been present he in India. Modi was suspended from the University and has who likes to be liked," and who is "not a mean or malicious have would recommended lengthy prison sentences. made an agreement to attend Pace University in New or malevolent person." Stephens said this was not a typical drug case but "an effort York. Smith said Modi was important to his family's "I never doubted the integrity of the United States to rip off a bunch of rich kids-in the hopes that they would enterprise, and that if he were convicted of a felony he judicial system," El-Masry said after the hearing. not report that rip-off." would be deported. Small's attorney said Small had already served seven "I was not shocked but surprised by the permissive use In Van Dyne's case Mitchell said that Van Dyne had been days in jail in California, that he had employed a psychia­ of cocaine on the Duke campus and the number of students cooperative in identifying the other perpetrators and that trist and that the robbery was "not violent but basically involved," Stephens said. without Van Dyne's testimony, Duke Public Safety would stupid." Committee On Social Concerns Interviews ASDU will be holding interviews for a committee on social concerns relative to Duke Investments (Social Implications of Duke Stock). We need six (6) undergraduate students to be nominated— three (3) will be selected by President Sanford. all 684-6403 to sign up for an interview. Interviews will be held Friday, June 28 3-5 p.m.

STUDENT AND EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT WITH I.D.

B&L Sunglasses We Have Rec-Specs In Stock Good for All Sporting Activities BRUAD ST.

iPTICAL OPEN ANTHONY M. LINER 10-6 LISCENSED OPTICIAN MONDAY THRU WAVES $35.00 reg. $50.00 286-4347 909 BROAD ST., DURHAM FRIDAY C Includes cut & style) 2 BLOCKS FROM EAST CAMPUS Good with Lori only Coupon expires 7-4-85 Please present coupon Ask about our partial perms Page 6 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, June 27, 1985 Talking Heads fall, others rise in new albums

By DAVID LOOMSTEIN sounds like David, Tina, Chris and the rest have lapsed change of pace as it is faster (in its original version) and Talking Heads - Little Creatures (rating: 5 out of 10) into c slower .{in the dub-reggae version) than everything else. Generally speaking, it would be best for those interested "Don't Work That Hard" provides a horn-supplemented in buying the Talking Heads' latest musical creation to R.E.M. - Fables Of The Reconstruction (8) speedburner of a song. avoid purchasing it as a record. It could very well dull the Undecipherable lyrics have always been a trademark of Overall, harmless unabrasive stuff. needle this Athens, Ga. band. With their latest album, you can Byrne and company have stripped down the layered upgrade {or downgrade) that status to pure babbling. Bryan Ferry - Boys and Girls (7) sound of "Speaking In Ibngues" for a simpler, sometimes Yes, the band you can't understand has recorded 11 tunes Ferry combines Roxy Music's progressive style with his country-flavored, down-home sound, leaving this typically that all consist of one incredibly long compound word. own romantic daydreams for a moody musical compilation. brilliant band atypically boring. Of course, that doesn't mean that the music doesn't sound Guest musicians Guy Fletcher and Mark Knopfler of Five of the album's nine songs, including "Give Me Back good. It does. Better than ever, in fact. "Can't Get There Dire Straits, Nile Rodgers, David Sanborn and David My Name" and "Creatures of Love" barely work up enough From Here," "Life And How lb Live It" and "Kohouter" each Gilmour make for quite a few novel sound arrangements. juice to power a night light. showcase the band's expertise, and complex arrangements The songs are individually unique and lean towards slow Happily, the four remaining numbers manage to contain make for bright sounds. rhythms with synthesized backgrounds. "Sensation," some life. "And She Was," "Television Man" and "Road To Bgrhaps some of the blame for the vocal spaghetti goes "Windswept," and "Stone Woman" are particularly strong Nowhere" are all innovative meanderings that provide the to Mitch Easter's drive-in recording studio being hit by examples of innovative combinations, while "Slave To Love" quirkiness and life expected of the band. Too bad the rest lightning during the album's post production. For a band lets Ferry croon like the stud he thinks he is. as complex as R.E.M., production techniques can be But it's not so much pretentious as it is Ferry indulging crucial. in a few personal treats. Sometimes they even add to the Whatever, Michael Stipe's guitar continues to propel the album, which can stand up quite well on its own merit. band to new musical heights, although they could have increased the input from the drums a tad. New Order - Low-life (9) As for the lyrics, no one could understand them anyway, What? A new album from New Order on the same label Illarie? so just rely on the titles for meaning. as Michael Jackson, Quincy Jones, and James Ingram? All right, so New Order is into dance music too. But a hit Scritti Pblitti - Cupid & Psyche '85 (9) single and a supporting video? Have the English lords of Here's more English techno-pop for the dance-minded and death-dancing gone pop? ~~_+* REALTY COMPANY ^^ light-hearted. Scritti Politti brings a sense of humor and Not really. Somehow with all of this contradictory non­ a host of hooks to this compilation of new music and older sense New Order has come up with an excellent album. 1204 Broad Street songs from the British charts. "The Perfect Kiss" is the single and video, and it provides NEW LISTINGS "Absolute," "Hypnotize," and "Woodbeez" are all happy the danceability of 1982's "Blue Monday" with the format ROUTE 4, ALSTON AVENUE ROAD-Prime com­ tunes that take a simple hook and stretch it a long way. that turns a single synthesized tape-loop into a real song. mercial property located in Alston Park Area. 2.75 Vocalist Green (that's it) takes the one word titles of these No more wandering psychedelic music for this band. Low- acres with 316 feet of road frontage. 1196 square foot ditties and makes them memorable songs. life showcases focused psychedelic music The influences house and 3 outbuildings. Excellent location for devel­ "Flesh And Blood," with its reggae-ska flavor adds a nice range from country to hard-rock to soul, and it makes for opment with proximity to RTP and RDU airport. considerably more variety than the stylish, but repetitive $250,000. Power, Corruption and Lies album. By the way, the video for "The Perfect Kiss" isn't bad, 1212 FRANKLIN STREET-Good investment! Living although no one comes close to cracking a smile during room, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, aluminum its four minutes of facial close ups. Hard to predict. siding, gas circulator, currently leased. $31,900. 4231-C AMERICAN DRIVE-Very lovely townhouse in a great location. LR w/FP, dining area, kitchen with all built-ins, 3 or 4 bedrooms (one could be den), 2 baths, full basement, 2 decks. $92,500. DUKE MANOR ANNOUNCES ACADEMIC 307 LEON STREET- Northgate Park-Cute cottage features living room, kitchen/dining combination, two YEAR LEASE AND IS NOW SERVED bedrooms, 1 ceramic bath, beautifully landscaped lot with fenced back yard and garden spot already planted! BY DUKE UNIVERSITY TRANSIT Look for Ihe Pfnk Sign! Bus service to and from campus is now available free. Avoid the lottery 286-5611 or 688-2304 blues and the housing crisis. Apply now for guaranteed fall occupancy. 1^ National Relocation [H: •_-__•-• THE ADVANTAGES OF MOVING USJtl Counseling Center L- -1 Wl. TO DUKE MANOR IT emergency 19 Within walking di and shopping centers 20 Adjacent to the new Racquet Cub, under construction with 10 indoor-racquetball courts and Nautilus equipment 21 Only two blocks from Duke Medical Center 22 Adults only Separate sections for . You can live with the friend oi your undergraduate students, unmarried choice Select your own roommate(s) involuntary doubling-up graduate students, and married students 23 All buildings and neighors are coed 5 Stretch oui and enjoy your own oft- Cr)MP In order to help relieve the tight housing 24 Not subiect to University rules regulations campus private bedroom or your ow: situation. Duke Manor Apartments located apartment! Eliminate doubling-up! 25 Nine or twelvemonth lease available. (A ]ust west ot campus is being served by the 6 You can choose your own lood (no twelve-month lease enables you lo leave Duke University Transit youi belongings there over the summer ) The bus service is available tree of charge mandatory board): however. Universll Subletting permitted Up to four students to all of the Duke University family including food service is available on an optio permitted per apartment keeps youi unde[graduates graduate students taculty. monthly rent per person reasonable in administrators doctors, nurses interns and 7 Free complete male and lemale privi fact even lower than many campus residents who need transportation between health clubs with |acu_iis. saunas. accommodations Start Your Own Fireworks Duke Manor West Campus. East Campus and The Duke Medical Center and lockers 26 Summer session leases also available with Sam's Beer Specials. The new service will alsP provide some 8 Six tennis courts 27 Moving off campus no longer invalidates relief to on-campus parking problems Duke University's Housing Guarantee, Stroh & Stroh Light, 12 oz. cans ..... $2.69/6 pk. The bus runs during Ihe academic year, 9 Two swimming pools should you later decide to move back Miller Lite, 12 oz. cans $2.99/6 pk. coordinated with the class change schedule 10 Sand volleyball court onto campus (but at least twice per hour] from 6 30 a m to 11 Basketball goals 28 All ot this and Duke Manor is also within All Michelob, 12 oz. bottles $3.29/6 pk. 9 30 p m Monday through Friday and every 2 12 Your own complete kitchen, private t walking distance of campus, in fact as Coors & Coors Light, cans $5.69/12 pk. "30 pm on Saturday living room, dining area wall-to-wall close as Central Campus Apartments, and carpeting closer than East Campus Duke University escort service is available Beer • Largest Selection in Town :ansportation back to Duke Manor from 13 Plenty ol-parking space—right at you i p m to midnight e route ol the bus is from Duke Manor m-campus parking occupancy Wine • Great Variety & Good Prices iss Erwin Hoad to Research Drive south on pr.,!-_ h Drive to Duke Hospital Entry II 14 Individually-controlled heat and air This offer Is limited... Kegs Available south on Science Dnve to Towerview Drive. conditioning Spurts Prediction Sheeh Towerview Drive to West Campus. West 15 Cable television HBO and Cinema* Campus to East Campus. East Campus to West PHONE 383-6683 TODAY! • New York Times • Washington Post Campus. West Campus v\_ S;ience Drive to Duke Hospital Entry II via Science Drive and Come see the model In & Out of State, Daily & Sunday Newspapers Towerview to Chapel Tower and on to Duke through Metrolease apartment!

Open 6:30 a.m. to midnight Erwin Rd. at East-West Expressway 286-4110 Groceries • Newsstand Thursday, June 27, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 7

Festival performances varied Buy, sell or trade Clarke disappointing, Desrosiers exciting in premieres in the classifieds

By TIFFANY WILMOT Desrosiers Dance Theatre made its American debut Mon­ In the only disappointing premiere so far of the day in Reynolds Industries Theater in a completely satisfy­ American Dance Festival, Martha Clarke, the choreo­ ing show. Like Clarke's group, Desrosiers' choreography is grapher or stage director (no one knows exactly which), a synthesis of different performing arts. But the piece was presented her theatre/dance performance last Thursday, primarily a dance; the singing, acrobatics, mime and Friday and Saturday nights in Page Auditorium. jugglers were only icing on the cake that made the show CONTACT But the Festival bounced back with last Monday and more entertaining. Tuesday's performance of the Desrosiers Dance Theatre, Desrosiers, who was born in Montreal and graduated the best ADF presentation yet. from the National Ballet of Canada, was the guest choreo­ LENSES Clarke's cast included musicians who take part in the grapher to the Quebec Ete Danse choreographic workshop dance as well as actors and dancers. Her work "The Garden and was the first winner of the Canada Council's Specialty Care of Earthly Delights" was inspired by 15th century painter Jacqueline Lemieux Award. He founded his collection of Hieronymus Bosch. Her choreography dramatizes Bosch's performers in 1980 to "pursue his vision for a dance- Complete Eye Care Services fantastic dream paintings which hang in the Prado in intensive theatre company," according to a Festival Madrid. brochure. Bosch was one of the first surreal artists and is said to Desrosiers' performers were electric, the stage filled with have been 500 years ahead of his time. But Clarke no vibrant dancers and wonderful costumes and masks. The attempt to create a bright and lively stage: The dancers music is all original and performed mostly live by the Dr. Henrv A.Greene wear flesh-colored body stockings and the sets and lighting "Handsome Gouchos," John Lang, Ahmed Hassan and Jean Optometry are just as bland. Dorais. The music was perfectly matched with the choreo­ On top of that, all the movement was done in a resili­ graphy; both were exotic and surprising. ent, slow-motion manner that, while it requires a great Much of the performance was pure dance — there was 3115 Academy Rd Durham N C 27707 (919) 493-7456 deal of control and strength on the part of the dancers, it (Across From Durham Academy Lower School) no need for wild props, flashing lights or any of the usual also takes a great amount of stamina on the part of the distractions. Desrosiers was able to rely on the power and audience to sit through the performance. flexibility of his company. The favorite numbers included The work shuttles us from the blissful Garden of Eden a "mad" concert pianist solo (performed by Desrosiers) and to man's creation of the Seven Deadly Sins and finally to "Mille Millions de Tonneres" (Bad Weather) in which a Hell. At one point, while we're in "Hell," a cellist was great thunderstorm at sea was recreated. playing on stage when a snake woman approached him and successfully wrestled away his bow. When she offered The performance included everything from the ghastly TYPESETTING her arched body to him, he forcefully stabbed her with the net of death where the dancers were entangled in a huge spike of his cello and went on to pluck a playful song as net hung from the ceiling, to a green alligator slithering the lights faded to blackness. across the stage, to a dancer who used hoola hoops not only In stark contrast to Clarke's performance, the Robert as props but also as'her primary article of clothing.

BEACH BRING-ALONGS

HALFTONES LAMINATING TRANSPARENCIES Brightleaf Square 683-2439 OPEN: 8:00 AM until Midnight M0N-FRI 9-5 SAT 1-4 SUN

NOW SERVED BY DUKE UNIVERSITY For your beach trip.. . bring a wind sock for hanging & a world globe ball for throwing! TRANSIT! Adjacent to Duke Campus and so convenient to The prices are throw-aways: all of Durham, Chapel Hill and Park. One and two bedroom garden plans offer modern kitchen with dishwasher, carpeting and •VIND SOCKS GLOBE BEACH BALLS air conditioning. Swimming pool and laundry. 16 inch globe $3.49 1315 Morreene Road. Open Monday-Friday 9-6, 18 inch - $2.99 Saturday 10-5. 30 inch - $3.79 28 inch globe $9.99 Phone 383-6677 today! 46 inch fish - $7.99 In North Carolina, call toll-free 1-800-672-1678. 56 inch - $5.99 Nationwide, call toll-free 1-800-334-1656.

MONDAY-SATURDAY 10AM-6PM FRIDAY TIL 9 PM SUNDAY 1-6 PM M West Durham MORGAN IMPORTS CHAPEL I BRIGHTLEAF SQUARE DURHAM 688-1150 I TOWEQ I Letters Opinion Keep morning noise low Page 8 June 27, 1985 To the editorial board: Actually, I can more than appreciate the In the great tradition of early morning University's need to keep the campus ground crew adventures (e.g. leaf blowers), looking beautiful, but it is time for Duke I was awakened last Friday morning at 7:30 to be more considerate of the students, Once again to noise that had Buchanan Dormitory's especially on the first day of final exams. Gothic stones shaking from their foundation. Couldn't the University's untimely ver­ In what is beginning to become a consider certain alterations in their Almost to my surprise, tree-cutting sea­ sion of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre have familiar - yet nonetheless terrifying future dealings with the Shiites, the son had begun, and Duke wanted to utilize waited until nine or 10 a.m.? No one is yet Islamic fundamentalists, the Palestin­ the first official day of summer to get a head sure whether a falling tree makes a sound - nightmare, the United States has start. For students, though (remember us?), if no one is present. Unfortunately, I can once again found itself placed in frus- ians and others of their ilk. the first day of summer also signaled the assure Duke that falling trees next to a tratingly defensive posture. It should be clear even to the White first day of final exams. There's nothing college dorm room at 7:30 a.m. are indeed Once again its citizens are at the House that "swift and effective retalia­ quite like staying up late studying only to heard, and not appreciated. mercy of terrorists for whom the threat tion," while useful in the image and be awakened in three or four hours by of death causes as much concern as a headlines department, has not with­ James Watt tree enthusiasts. Mike Yen five-dollar parking ticket causes for a stood its test in the field. The presi­ Trinity '86 Duke student. dent's proposals to beef up airport Once again the country finds itself security, issue travel advisories and adorning objects with yellow ribbons plan for worldwide anti-terrorist Reflect on Modi episode and driving with lights on during the actions will undoubtedly lessen the chances of such a tragedy happening day because it can find nothing more To the editorial board: useful to do to help the situation. again. wide that, as reported in the Durham Morn­ But they will not eliminate those On June 24, Durham County Superior ing Herald on June 25, "exhibited many Once again there is a swell of impo­ Court Judge Thomas Lee gave Lalit Modi benevolent traits." chances; this will not happen until a a two year suspended sentence, a $10,000 This episode has caused me to reflect. I tent anger rolling across the country; serious shift occurs in U.S. foreign fine and a continued prayer for judgement need a quick $15,000 to pay off my college anger that the country that many policy. All of the president's remedies to prevent deportation. Modi is the ex-Duke loans My father doesn't have business regard implicitly as the most powerful so far have been, to coin a well-used student accused of kidnapping and assart­ interests all over the globe, but he does run and most righteous in the world cannot phrase, treating the symptoms and ing a victim. The state allowed Modi to a stand at a flea market and he has been avoid being locked in a stranglehold by ignoring the causes. plead guilty to three charges, some less known to be benevolent. a jabbering rabble halfway around the As painful as it will no doubt be for serious than those cited in the original If I am arrested for some criminal act, world that devotes most of its energies both the United States and her allies, indictment. surely Wade Smith can defend me as an to leveling its own homeland. formal recognition of these non- Defense lawyer Wade Smith presented "educated little poor girl" who sort of has It has been made abundantly clear sovereign elements is manadatory for Modi as a "poor little rich kid" who made gone wrong but not reaiiy, assertions that a mistake and got in over his head. Letters will immediately be supported, I am con­ that there is little that can be done now anything even resembling peace in the of reference in favor of Modi were presented vinced, by every pseudo-liberal with an that could improve the immediate future. Yes, the thought of offering as evidence, the one from ex-Governor Jim interest in flea markets. situation; this has been analyzed and murderers the same consideration as Hunt receiving special attention. agonized over on dozens of front pages any legitimate state is repugnant, but More to the point, Smith explained that Sharie Harless across the nation. The best thing for the reason these groups cause such Modi's family had business interests world­ History graduate student the Reagan administration to do is to terror and misery is that it is their sole play a calm and cautious waiting game means of expression. and remain receptive to any overture The cause of the Palestinians certain­ that might allow an end to the crisis ^Ai^fcCMlKKStt.TtTOTO^Y'W*. ly deserves more attention than the SIR- BEF0PE *X) Q00U> EVEN AiW.PT without extraordinary loss of face. United States has been willing to show. THE. THINGS 'WE HfVVETO PO , YOUTp m_ TO Negotiating with terrorists can only And while there are certainly few rTSMVOuRlVNUNESS! YES, YOU'D HWETD- precipitate more of the same. Accepting people in this country today who want a resolution that is not an absolute to know about it, the Lebanese Shiites victory is something else altogether: have got a pretty solid case of their the rational choice in an otherwise no- own. win situation. No one here is condoning terrorism And while Reagan and his cohorts in any form; what is being advised is are engaged in this waiting game, it what is almost certainly the only way might well be worth their while to to put an end to it once and for all.

Letters Policy Man's greatest gift is his voice, his ability to speak out against the actions and opinions of others when they conflict with his own beliefs. For this reason, The Chroni­ cle encourages all members of the Duke community to submit letters to its editorial board and to use the University newspaper as a means of public expression. Letters to the editorial board should be mailed to Box 4696, Duke Station or delivered in person to The Chronicle office on the third floor of Flowers building. The Chronicle attempts to print promptly all letters it receives, but reserves the right to withhold any letters that do not adhere to the following: • All letters must be typed and double-spaced. THE CHRONICLE • All letters must be signed and dated and must include the author's class or depart­ ment, phone number and local address. The Chronicle will not publish unsigned let­ P_.ul Gaffney, Editor ters. If for any reason you wish to withhold your name from your letter when it is published, please feel free to discuss the matter with the editorial page editor. Re­ Douglas Mays, News Editor Ed Farrell, Editorial Page Editor quests for anonymity, when supported by valid reasons, will be granted. Jenny Wright, Features Editor Jim Arges, Sports Editor • The Chronicle will not print letters that contain racial, ethnic or sexual slurs, Alice Adams, Photography Editor inside jokes or personal innuendos, vulgar language or libelous statements. • The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters for length and clarity. Barry Eriksen, Business Manager Gina Columna, Advertising Manager • The Chronicle reserves the right to withhold letters or portions of letters con­ Alex Howson, Assistant Business Manager taining promotional information designed to benefit groups or publicize events. Thursday, June 27, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 9

S|_l.^&ibime. Identify, fight ...NOWGTOWOI^A^i;- ^TITWIliPEWVOURLWfc crimes of sexism IN NICARAGUA SOMEWHAT... It seems to me that the thread connecting wife bat- %/*!*•! ^ tering, rape and porno- will _!Il© graphy is overwhelming. pO|l|l(||*_T Sexism and misogyny allow these frightening combina- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^m tions of violence and intimacy to occur at phenomenal rates. Rationalizations and explanations for these atrocities often obscure the blatant comments they make on the status of violence, sex and sexism in our society. As my unsuspecting housemate could tell you, I become livid when I hear people offhandedly say that rape is a violent act that has nothing to do with sex. While this reasoning has a basis in truth, it creates a mental split, separating the violent dynamics of rape from its roots in generally accepted attitudes about male/female relations. It is extremely important to recognize the violent and aggressive presence of rape, to recognize that it is not an act of libidinous desire but one of the desire for power and control. Yet how can we ignore that man's achievement of power and control has such a strong psychological connec­ tion to sex? Rather than dismissing sexual violence as something categorically different, we might ask ourselves what it means to us and how it is reflected in more main­ stream, less violent human relations. Renography is perhaps not as ostensibly terrible a social tions of family violence This is in spite of evidence showing Another dramatic sex- and gender-related phenomenon disease as are rape and battering. But it is borne of the that batterings go way down after the batterer experiences is male to female battering. Chances are we all know quite same seed as the other physical atrocities and has been arrest. a few people who grew up in violent homes or who are now shown to be a perpetuator if not an instigator of sexual The Ohio report on Domestic Violence reported that in a relationship themselves where violence plays a part. violence. In a 1975 book on the history of rape, Susan during a nine-month period 15,000 calls landed only 700 And those of us who think we might be safe because we Brownmiller claims that pornography promotes a climate reports which in turn amounted to a meager 460 arresta live in one type of socioeconomic community or another in which acts of sexual hostility are not only tolerated but How can we stand for an assault-arrest rate of one in every are in for a surprise: Battering cuts across all social and ideologically encouraged. 32? Furthermore only two percent of men who beat their economic divisions and is equally as prevalant a problem A recent editorial in the North Carolina Independent female living partners are ever prosecuted. in all. warns against some of the pitfalls of vehement anti- Certainly most people no longer believe that a husband At least two-thirds of all marriages endure at least one pornography campaigns. As one who herself has endured has flogging rights over "his" wife, but on the other hand bout of violence, 25 percent of all wives are severely beaten family violence and rape, the writer urges us to look it is statistically difficult to say he does not have a great during the course of their marriage and 25 percent of all beyond the banning of pornography as an end in itself. We deal of immunity to legal punishments suicide attempts by women are attributed to the internal must instead struggle against the cause - heavily Legal decisions such as a recent one in Durham County conflicts and effects of being battered. ingrained sexism - as well as the effects. are important rallying points to. turn back the tide of Something dynamic that promotes family violence is At the very least we live in a domain where there exists institutionalized tolerance. In this case a woman had been sexism. In battering cases, while individual circumstances an institutionalized tolerance for sexism. When we look charged with manslaughter for killing her husband, but vary wildly, some powerful elements are inescapably at the legal inaction and accepted social barriers that keep the charge was dropped on the grounds of self-defense and consistent. The man looks to violence to satiate his per­ us from resolving these problems, this becomes more clear. because of the man's history as a batterer. ceived need to gain and maintain control. Ninety-five For instance, in the case of battering, recent federal Anyone concerned by these cases and statisitics can percent of battering cases are male to female. cutbacks have caused 76 percent of the already over­ become involved in local battering support groups or rape Violence and aggression are not feelings felt and crowded domestic violence programs to reduce their ser­ crisis centers. It might be helpful if we make some connec­ expressed only by men. But they are feelings that men vice. Police rarely file reports on domestic violence cases. tions and become intolerant of sexism and its have the societal go ahead to express more freely than do In fact, in a 1975 suit Scott vs. Hart, evidence showed that manifestations, police forces generally discourage intervention in situa­ Valerie Faulkner is a recent Trinity graduate.

PBS Vietnam 'documentary' poses as journalism

What would it be like if the press in this country, as in of PBS. The National Endowment for the Humanities gave so many others, were an official mouthpiece? If its role were it a big leg up with a grant of $30,000. After that PBS to be a cheerleader instead of a skeptic? apparently decided it would look worse to turn the film We get a vision of that kind of press - an inadvertent Anthony Lewis down — worse especially to the conservative zealots who vision — in an unusual television program now being now run the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. aired. An extreme right-wing group made a one-hour film Defenders of this affair say it is a precedent for opening denouncing the Public Broadcasting System's documentary "objectionable" for the PBS series to state that many up television so any critics can get a counter-program on series on Vietnam, and public stations are showing the American veterans of Vietnam "are still haunted by the the air, not just right-wingers. That presumably means we film. It is propaganda dressed up as journalism. experience." Heston and his supporters do not want the can expect to see "documentaries" produced by the Islamic The 13-part PBS series, first shown in 1983, was an press to speak even the most obvious truth if it is Party of God and the Communist Party. extraordinarily careful, meticulous television examination unpleasant. The press needs more criticism, broadcasting not least. of a divisive subject. Scholars worked on it over a period The real point of the film is to blame the press for Opening up television time for the equivalent of Op-Ed of years. It won the highest awards in television. America's loss in Vietnam. Heston says: "In the end, words columns or letters to the editor is fine. But it is another The rebuttal film denounces the series as insufficiently - disinformation, deception - were the deciding factors thing to broadcast outside criticism that is made to look pro-American. One commentator, Douglas Pike, says it did in the Vietnam War." like a documentary: as if The New York Times were to let not "produce anything on the screen that an American There it is: the paranoid style in American politics, as outsiders write bits of page one. It helped a little, but not could be proud of - a notion reminiscent of Spiro Agnew's Richard Hofstadter called it. When things go wrong, there enough, when PBS wrapped a professional framework demand that newspapers print good news. must be a conspiracy. around the propaganda piece. It is all so heavy-handed that it would be funny if it were To think that way is to miss the purpose of history, which When the Vietnam series ran in 1983, a woman in Texas not serious But it is serious The fact that public television is to show the painful, complicated realities that determine wrote the producers that it had enabled her husband to broadcast a doctrinaire harangue posing as a news docu­ events. In the particular case of Vietnam, it is to miss the talk about his experience in Vietnam for the first time. mentary raises worrying questions about political pressure reality that Communist leaders were able to rally their For there it all was on the screen: "taking a hill one day and public television's will to resist it. people to withstand suffering beyond our imagination. and losing it the next, seeing regiments of Vietcong almost Much of the criticism offered in the rebuttal is demon­ They beat a sophisticated French army. And no serious completely wiped out, only to see them completely strably mistaken. Pike says the PBS series showed "con- American military analyst ever thought they were about refurbished in a few months. . .. " tempt" for the South Vietnamese by minimizing their to give up. "I want to thank you most sincerely for producing this government's role in the 1973 Paris cease-fire agreement. Of course there were flaws in the PBS series: That is series," she wrote, "because it has made such a tremendous But any contempt was shown by Henry Kissinger, who journalism; that is life. But the series tried hard to show difference to these two tired, old broken hearts." There largely excluded Saigon from those negotiations - with the complexities. It showed the Communists as ruthless, wrote an American: a believer in reality, not in good news the well-known result that South Vietnam at first blocked and also as superb tacticians. Should we hide from those by the number. the agreement. realities? Anthony Lewis' column is syndicated by The New York Charlton Heston, who narrates the film, says it was The worrying part is how such a film got the sponsorship Times Page 10 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, June 27, 1985 Violence prevails over comedy in The Goonies' By CARTER ASKREN resembling the Elephant Man, has been chained to the Despite some comic relief, the film's grisly violence is In his latest effort, Stephen Spielberg attempts to atone wall f we are led to believe) for years. His diet has consisted distasteful. One is left wondering what effect this type of for the exploitive violence in "Gremlins," which he pawned of fish heads and non-stop television. scene might have on young children. It will certainly fill off as a kiddie movie. He doesn't competely succeed in Sean Astin plays the asthmatic Mikey, constantly inhal­ any conscientious mother with disgust. It was Spielberg's cleaning up his act. "The Goonies" has its fair share of gore ing cortisone mist. His portrayal of a sickly young boy seeming canonization of violence in "Gremlins" that made and horror. caught up in his own daydreams comes across with that movie so revolting. Stephen Spielberg's latest kiddie version of "Raiders," remarkable sincerity. Jeff Cohen plays Chunk, the compul­ In one scene, Mama Pratelli, the Disneyesque hag, played "The Goonies," might be more aptly titled "The Elephant sive overeater, the delightful fat boy that almost every perfectly by Anne Ramsey, drops a tomato into a blender Man Meets Walt Disney." Somewhat unoriginal, "Goonies" person has known. as she describes what will happen to Chunk, one of the depicts a group of young adolescents, the Goonies, who Corey Feldman's portrayal of Mouth, the group's sex Goonies, if he does not confess to where the rest of the kids inadvertently discover a treasure map in the attic of their maniac, proves to be classic — the typical adolescent boy are hiding. In this torture sequence Chunk's hand is forced leader Mikey's house. gone wild over the discovery that he was not left under within inches of the blender blades. Fearful of injuring his Spielberg doesn't write as an adult for children. His a cabbage by the neighborhood stork. Ke Huy Quan, who hand, he reveals the location of his friends. movies have the gruesome quality of many of the original played Short Round in "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Grimm's fairy tales. Doom," makes another cute performance as Data, the whiz With its weaknesses, "Goonies" does have suspense. Spielberg's films are starting to take on the monotony kid who dreams of being James Bond. What started out as a mere child's fantasy of buried trea­ one usually expects from a Bond movie. The story line is Kerri Green as Andy and Martha Plimpton as Steph, sure turns into a panicked run-for-their-lives. The film is already a cliche. Hero finds old treasure map, searches for teenage girls along for the ride, provide enough sex appeal a nostalgic grab bag of an adult's childhood mythology; treasure in booby-trapped caves while being chased by bad to hold the interest of half the older folks in the audience. throughout the film are allusions to Errol Fylnn, James guys and then saves the day. There is plenty of the sexual joking and four-letter words Bond, Jim West, the Phantom, Butch Cassidy and the But if the story line is somewhat stale, the acting is not. typical of young t Sundance Kid and Dirty Harry. None of the young actors and actresses who play the As Cyndi Lauper, the quintessential goonie, sings in the goonies is a star, but the cast as a whole is refreshing. John What actually constitutes a goonie? From the context theme song, "the goonies are good enough." The Goonies Matusak's Sloth is the significant character, both disgust­ of the story, a goonie is a deformed or semi-deformed social may be good enough for Cyndi Lauper, but at four dollars ing and lovable - a deformed and half-starved giant outcaste. Ifet only a few of the characters fit this description. a ticket they could be a lot better.

Doonesbury/Gar r y Trudeau

Hl.mt!S YOUWIU, I'M SORRY, HoiiiAearrauAT- UH..MA'AM. ACOPTAetZ'Dm McmRAwms Bemserm AOBPTA MA'AM, m BWLJHeN.ru. ImniHSK MAH.THi. BROOCH HO, I ToacniMrrnhm. m>, MA'AM. F8&0HAL CAHOHLY tiAY-imuAmw IHATSAaWT- WA66imnDMY Mem.. TRAVeLUWMCASt cHax,_mr TAKECASH. SRCOOi'WITHYOU A8i£AS.. MOJHeRBYTHe muxAiaiRReNcy your] UHnLICAHHAVB wcH&.o.nem! couAPsep. yeo&Hume. \^_\ \ ~''A 1 &

£*7 ||j lip 7'ruCTT^~T J1UCTTH—wru—

Bloom County/Berke Breathed

\m Hftrtvee's -mi/trs1 0CA56 CO__£CWN...i3? CAMS THE Daily Crossword byjeann.vm.on OF LWY'S HSKRim COCKTAIL /WP MY any of we wmssf. wiums /SiHA.cr 'pemmse"

5 Sandy .sound 8 Soviet sea 12 Novelist Jaffe 13 Fluffy scarf 14 Lost color 16 Grads'publi­ cation 18 Prayer 20 Sound otf? 21 Renter 22 Subjugate 25 - gratlas 27 Important age 26 Jungtrau, e.g. 29 6 pt. scores 31 Antl VEftK V£Hy LUCKY 34 Drained 36 Morechi-chi MAN. iiweep? 38 Continually cotwfmiuvoffi! 43 Gentle 44 Amateur sports grp. 46 Actress Swit 49 Gab 52 Tennis stroke 53 Simian 54 Building wing 56 Lower in value 56 Recreation "C'mon, Gordy. ... Are you realty Yesterday's Puzzle Solved choking, or just turning green?" 61 Maurois or Prevln 6 Source V r H T___|W F I 7 Simulated I (I s JTMB A s 63 Actress Stritch ih I 1 '.1 III li X F 64 Rawllngs' 8 Defensive ,i i: r, A L .•: b L b "The -" literary work fl i: u •. N F R Shoe/Jeff MacNelly 68 Grain pits 9 Steak order __ H A 1 F 1 1 t I- S Y H F ¥1 i 10 MaeGrawetal. B _T fl R 70 Potpourri 11 Diminish A X I .s K 3 s II H t 71 Product of 15 Busy ones K I I) H X F (1 17 Author Harte 1 S _ nidification • :• H N 1 r N i • R 19 Straight t : s fl 72 Literary S (1 1 f- o| II S WEBs-SONNAWEA ] wmwmm ./ryrinli monogram 22 Faerie queen : flN 1 II I\ 1- t II s _. { 73 Clifton or 23 Friend I) H II P •i H•M 24 Graf — _ fl _ r s r !Jr-Tl_.V0Ti£«E|2£." • ro./.V.r^RTHE \fio\\\\ 26 Restaurant •All s N s ftK fc 30 Shoe TO D_B»R b u r| _1- flH H ii 32 Gas: pref. _i_j_in b 33 Mangle itiuuu uuan i 35 Appointment a a a u aaaa AFTSRHl... .; g£AU£WEPTO DOWN 37 Grain _ __ _ _>_ 1 Distorted 39 Soak flax 47 October 57 Under FZ_IV

HIJACKING from page 1 "we need non-traditional non-state diplomacy," Lomperis demonstrate that we can influence countries that they said. "Governments cannot control these people. If we want depend upon, like the Soviet Union, Syria and Iran." international law, although we have shot ourselves in the a presence in the Middle East we have to deal with the In the past the United States has "worked out a policy foot in the past in this regard." He was referring to the warlords; they have made themselves a force in the inter­ of almost not dealing" with non-state actors, Eldridge said. U.S. decision not to appear before the World Court to face national system and we need to impress upon them that But there is hope that this incident "may spur on the charges from Nicaragua. "We can't always have our way. we are not ipso facto enemies, even though we may not development of an appropriate policy. With each act we "I'm not particularly optimistic about dealing with the be friends. are forced to learn a little bit more." problem in general, or about the administration's ability "We need to include non-states in the decision-making to cope with it; it has no conception of a long-run policy. process, even if it irritates other states. We have to have It takes international cooperation to deal with the problem formal talks with the Palestinians and the Shiites, giv­ effectively and we don't seem interested in international ing them recognition and making terrorism unnecessary." cooperation unless it's strictly on our own terms," Holsti "It's going to be very difficult for the United States to HAIRCUT SPECIAL said. get along with [the fundamentalists] because they don't To deal with the phenomenon of Islamic fundamentalism want to coexist with us," Eldridge said. "We can, however, NOW $Q00 v Reg. $12 by stylist Pam Andrews _TA RIRl-FA /V 286-4910 608 Trent Dr. 3§e^> JY Ks_-F\M__M__}_L//-11 walking distance from Duke •_€? /T> Tues.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 _#G&-\#- -_V€sdd^i_ ThursThuro . n-:_n.ft-38:30-8:3n0 " BEA ERS lOffer good through 6/30/85 aJ 2410 Reichard St. •Durham, NC 27705 •(919) 477-9093 AINTIQli* ,•1 Impressions. Inc. > S(.(> ARIIBi S55<_» BARBADOS Jt/lcdem „ Orders Accepted *59 •>T. MAAHTtM J(> All "Quality offset printing/copying when you need it." Packages Include: — QUICK KODAK COPIES AVAILABLE — • Accommodations Typesetting • Letterheads • Envelopes • Business Cards number nights selected, Stationary • Snap-Out Forms • Statements • Invitations • Roundtrip air from RDU, mid:^ Reports • Flyers • Postcards • Carbonless Forms (NCR) week, via Eastern Airlines or Bulletins * Wholesale Distributor for Office Supplies The Travel Center W.edding Announcements • Tickets and Much, Much Morel other scheduled carrier. • Roundtrip transfer between airport and hotel. Brightleaf Square 477-9093 - PICK-UP AND DELIVERY - 477-9093 • Travel Impressions representative to Mon.-Fri. 9:00-5:00 serve your local needs. • Island briefing for Sat. 12:00-4:00 general information. • Plus many extras based on choice of hotel. 682-9378 • 683-1512 .Stanley H.Kaplan The Smart A Bicycle Built for Two MOVE!

or Stop By and Rent A Canoe! PREPARATION FOR: GMAT • CPA • MCAT

TANDEM BIKES: $10/day CANOES: $15/weekend, $10/day jF KAPLAN 2634 Chapel Hill Boulevard RIVER RUNNERS' EMPORIUM Suite 112 Corner of Main & Buchanan Streets across from East Campus Durham, N.C. 27707 Monday-Friday 10-8, Saturday 9-6 688-2001 (919) 489-8720 Female roommate wanted for Roommate Wanted next fall/spring semesters. 2-br /2-bath apartment in the Forest. Pool and tennis court nearby. Racquet Club. Single Duki Everything furnished except your Female Roommate wanted for Faculty Membership. $200 o room. Call Alice at 383-5835 or next fall/spring semesters. 2-BR best offer. Call 684-5234 o 684-2663 and leave a message, /2-Bath apartment in The Forest. 929-9093. or write PO. Box 9113 Duke Pool and tennis courts nearby. Everything furnished except your HAMMOCKS! Top quality brightly Page 12 June 27, 1985 Station. (Avaiable after second colored string hammocks hand­ summer session.) room. Call Alice at 383-5836 or 684-2663 and leave a message, made in Yucatan. Easily holds or write RO. Box 9113, Duke two adults! Durable The most Announcements BLACK MEN AND WOMEN are Station. (Available after second comfortable hammock made. Help Wanted needed for breathing studies by Ride Needed summer session. $37. Will deliver. This is the last the Environmental Protection time you'll see this ad! Call now. Literature _. History bought and Studs . Cleric: Agency. $45 plus travel wll be Looking for ride to Washington Ask for Judith (933-9551 or sold. Books Do Furnish A Room, nediately. Approximately 10- paid to healthy non-smokers, age 489-0989). 215 North Gregson 683-3244. DC weekend of July 5-7 Will 15 hrs/wk. thru second summer 18-35. who take part in these gladly help with gas. Call Alex at CASSETTE TAPES now sold by Books & Records bought and studies on the UNC-CH campus- term. Apply m person to Barry 383-6445. Please help me Books Do Furnish A Room. 215 sold BOOKS DO FURNISH A Get a free physical exam and be Eriksen. 102 West Union North Gregson Street 683-3244 ROOM. 215 North Gregson 683- ASTHMATICS: Earn up to $150 in a part of improving the environ­ THE House for Sale Comic Book & Graphic Nouds 3244. a breathing study at UNC con­ ment Call 966-1253 (collect trom Durham or Raleigh). Books Do Furnish A Room, 215 25 Percent Off Books _ Records ducted by Environmental Protec­ OPEN SUN. 2-5 p.m. Warehouse tion Agency researchers. To be SUNTAN North Gregson Street- 683- with this ad Books Do Furnish A Condominium. 500 N. Duke St.. 3244 Room. 215 North Gregson. 683- eligible, you must be a healthy, 56-301 Bookcases abound in 3244. (Expires: 6/30/85.) Caucasion non-smoker man ptrlUo_(rifia«7 this beautiful, 2130 sq. ft. STUDIO GOVERNMENT HOMES from SI. INSIGHT MEDITATION RETREAT ages 18-35. with a history of custom designed unit in Historic (U repair). A'so delinquent tax — The Carolina Friends School, asthma For more information Landmark. Two lofts with 15-20 property. Cal (805) 687-6000 Fine Japanese European Durham, will be the sight for a call Susan Rusch-Behrend at ft. ceilings, living room, dining, King of Suntan Beds! Ext. GH-9813 tor information. Auto Repair retreat designed as an introduc­ 541-2603 (toll free from Raleigh, breakfast room, two bedrooms, Wolfe System Going..Going...HAMMOCKS' Get tion to Insight Meditation led by Durham, and Chapel Hill). 2704 Chapel Hill Blvd. dressing room, two baths, den. yours before they are all gone. SUMMER $$$! Healthy non- office, storeroom, two skylights. "Luxury Model" John Orr Saturday, June 29. 10 This is : .•••• •t- this Durham-489-5800 all electric appliances in very a.m. to 6 p.m. Fee $20. For regis­ smokers, ages 18-35. are needed Profi Riviera Bed special kitchen. Also washer/ tration and information, call for an environmental and health effects studies on the UNC-CH dryer. On most desirable top Features: 286-4754. COLLEGE REP WANTED to work Is it true you can buy |eeps for campus. Volunteers will receive floor. Elevator, handicap ramp at this campus. Good income $44 through the U.S. govern­ STRESS GETTING VOU DOWN? $5 to $7 per hour plus travel, and parking Must see to appreci­ 400 Watt Facial For information and application ment? Get the facts today! Call all-natural product. 100 percent bonuses, and a free physical. To I ate. Available August. $129,900. write to. Allen Lowrance. Director. Assumable Mortgage. Owner/ (Extra Face Sun) 1-312-742-1142 Ext. 5265. money-back guarantee, call Mike participate, you must have two or 251 Glenwood Drive, Mooresville. Broker 682-4380 Privacy, built in stereo, 8290864 more mornings of afternoons NC 26115, or call (704) 664- STATE PHOTO IDs—From $6.50 available. For more information, 4063. tokens, 30 min. session (Proof of breathing required). RESEARCH PROJECT ON LAN­ call the EPA Recruitment Office. + more... PASSPORT PHOTOS. 2/$2 50 ea.. GUAGE DEVELOPMENT: Children 966-1253 (collect] EARN $400-$1000 per month Typing Services 10/$2 00 ea. ACROSS from beginning to use language (using part-time selling health products. BRIGHTLEAF. 688-3105. "phrases") and their Call Mike 829-0864. _ Typing at reasonable rates. Call First trial visit—$3.00 s needed tor research on Wanted: Loving responsible baby­ 1975 Buick LeSabre. Good Condi­ Dawn Lewis. 596-1773. Night and il language development. sitter for Fri. and Sat. pm's. Own 4 visits $25- tion. Clean. 8 :yl. extras $1,250. For information call Marolyn weekends. car preferred. Sweet two-year-old Apartments for rent Get 1 Free visit Call Mary 684-6808 or II 383-4612. boy. Call after 5. 383-4962. MY WORD! We type research 8 visits $48-Get 2 383-5880. - 2-BR. Vh BA $330/mo. Close to papers, dissertations, etc. Pick­ Duke. Call after 5:30 p.m. for up, delivery available. 24-hour Free visits or $25 for a Professor needed for this two- more info. 383-2887. service available_493-4254. 6 month membership year-old, 2.130 sq. ft. Warehouse Furnished Duplex Apt. Near Duke WORD PROCESSING — Just Your Condominium near Duke East Campus. Available August 1st. 2 Type Word Processing Service $5 per visit, every 10th Campus. Bookcases abound in br — bath — kitchen (stove & will type your dissertations, form visit is free! this beautiful, custom designed Classified Info: refrig.) — living-room No pets letters, papers, etc.. Quickly and unit in Historic Landmark. There please. $280 per month. Call professionally. Emergency typing Tues-Fri. 8-8 are two lofts and 15-20 ft. ceil­ welcome. 489-5470 (24 hours). Rates (per day): $2 for firsl 15 words 489-2703 or 489-3298. Saturday 9-5 ings, living room, dining, break­ Sapcious one-bedroom duplex Let my Home Secretarial Busi­ fast room, two bedrooms, dress­ 105 each add it tonal word aptmt, near Duke Hospital. Large ness help you with your Word ing room, two baths, den. office. shady yard, nice neighborhood. Processing and Typing needs. Inside the storeroom, two skylights, all Discounts: 5% off for 3 consecutive days Furnished incl. all utilities, avail. Call TEK Business Services at electric appliances in very 10% off for 5 or more consecutive days July & Aug. only. 286-1309 (919) 528-1974. "Total Look special kitchen. Also washer/ dryer. On most desirable top floor Beauty Salon" with view of Durham Ballpark. Where: Bring to 308 Flowers Bldg. Deposit Box. Rooms for Rent Services Offered Comer of Clubs Roxboro Rd. Elevator, handicap ramp and -OR- Mail lo: Sox 4696 D.S.; Durham, NC 27706 parking. Available August. 1985 Duke History/Poli Sci grad Call for an appointment $129,900. Assumabie mortgage. Rooms available. Clean, spacious seeks research position for Other???: CALL 684-6106 house _ mile off East. 2 full 471-8529 Owner/Broker 682-4380 kitchens, washer/dryer, color Has VRAP. Honors thesis and Deadline: .. one business day prior to date of insertion. cable tv. 4* baths, large yard. computer experience. 684- SlOO/month. 286-3792. 3630, ask for Laura. See Page 15 mtmam m «-HWMll>li—!«•••-

••CLIP THIS COUPON" The New Competition "This important new book provides a fascinating look at marketing strate­ gies Japanese companies have used to CENTER STAGE capture world markets. It goes way be­ The New yond the cliches about Japanese firms to expose the underpinnings of their (prnpefition success." • '- • WHAl —Michael E. Porter, Professor !tll OK. / l)ll)N 1 VIDEC Harvard Business School nu .oi .-.isori MAKKETlftG Rent il VCR & 2 MOVIES Unique in its research, thor­ ough in its analysis, probing • Overnight for only in its insights, THE NEW COMPETITION is a book that tells the inside story of how some of the most innovative and revolutionary marketing PHILIP KOTLER plans were devised and put LIAM FAHEV S JATUSRIPITAK $io°° into practice.

„ ff j Sunday, June 30, thru Ulier gOOCt Thursday, July 4, 1985 DUKE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE 684-6793 3421 Hillsborough Rd. 383-8017 Hechinger Plaza Mon.-Sat. 10-9 Next to Piece Goods Sun. 1-6 discount good 20% OFF thru July 31 Sports NCAA passes stricter penalties; Page 13 June 27, 1985 Duke representative optimistic Bulls in Durham By PAUL GAFFNEY The stiff new penalties for rules violations in college Durham Bulls vs. Winston-Salem Spirits. Durham athletics passed last weekend by the Presidents' Commis­ Athletic Park, 7:30 p.m.. June 26-28. sion of the NCAA evoked a "favorable and positive" reaction from the University's representative to the special Durham Bulls vs. Peninsula Pilots, Durham Athletic convention. Park, 7:30 p.m.. July 6-8. "It seems to me what they did was first and foremost symbolic, but important for that reason," said Eugene Durham Bulls vs. Salem Redbirds, Durham Athletic McDonald, senior vice president for business and finance. Park, 7:30 p.m., July 9-11. But the new penalties are also "practical and feasible corrective measures," he said. Under the new regulations, any major violation in a Durham Bulls vs. Prince William Pirates, Durham school's athletic program, such as illegally distributing Athletic Park, 7:30 p.m., July 19-21. money to players, will result in a two-year probation for the program, the elimination of expense-paid recruiting Durham Bulls vs. Hagerstown Suns, Durham trips to the campus and the end of off-campus recruiting. Athletic Park, 7:30 p.m.. July 22-24. Also, the coach involved in the violation can be fired or suspended without pay. Durham Bulls vs. Lynchburg Mets, Durham Athletic Another new sanction, unofficially called the "Death Park, 7:30 p.m., July 31-August 2. Penalty," would result in the suspension any school's program cited for two major violations within a five-year Durham Bulls vs. Kinston Blue Jays, Durham period. Many people feel this penalty would all but kill a program for more than a decade. Athletic Park, 7:3t> p.m., August 3-5. The new penalties will be ah effective deterrent to institutions, who will have to be aware of the consequences Durham Bulls vs. Winston-Salem Spirits. Durham of cheating in college athletics, said McDonald, who also Athletic Park. 7:30 p.m., August 13-15. serves as University counsel. "It will be a heavy presence." The "Death Penalty," McDonald said, is a deterrent to Durham Bulls vs. Peninsula Pilots, Durham Athletic "even the most ardent booster." In the past, the NCAA has Park, 7:30 p.m., August 22-25. put several programs on probation for violations committed by alumni and others who actively support the program. Durham Bulls vs. Salem Pilots, , 7:30 p.m., August 26-28. Another round of reforms is expected to be proposed at STAFF PHOTO the NCAA's next scheduled meeting in January. Topics to Eugene McDonald, Senior vice president for business and be considered include drug testing for athletes, freshmen finance and University counsel, was Duke's representative eligibility and Proposition 48, a controversial bill that to the NCAA's special convention last weekend. would set minimum SAT and GPA standards for student- Hi IK. shells .v.:....- pn athletes, entering a university. Despite the new regulations and the promise of more to whv Red Cross needs 1 Proposition 48 has been criticized as discriminatory come, many critics contend that this action ignores the root low-typed blood. job. That s right, five percent against blacks student-athletes, many of whom would be of the problem — that college athletes, who receive scholar­ otitic people eive 100percent disqualified from competing if this rule were passed. ships and often other compensation, are not amateurs. of the blood that's donated McDonald disagrees with this contention. "If you're between 17 and The University supports Proposition 48 in its original 66. and senerallv healthy you form and any modified form that eliminates discrimination "The cause of the problem ultimately is that academic can help change all that. And but retains its "operative effectiveness," McDonald said. your one blood donation can institutions of higher education have lost sight of, or helpuptoj.vp people to live. But the University opposes a proposal that prohibits sometimes have become confused about, what is their 'Call your Red Cross Blood athletes from competing in a sport their freshman year. primary mission, which it to educate students. Center and make a donor appointment soon. Itsuneway "We think it is somewhat hypocritical for schools to wish "Athletics is but one supportive element in that mission," you can help keep Red Cross to make all freshmen ineligible for football and basketball he said. and at the same time to engage in a practice of massive "Every day ot the week. McDonald credited the Presidents' Commission for the there's somebody who needs redshirting" McDonald. Duke has no extensive redshirting strong, new penalties. The commission, created in January your type of blood. program. "But (he thing about blood 1984 as part of an earlier effort to reform college athletics, is: it doesn't keep very long. Duke also also has no drug-testing program for its is comprised of university presidents or their representa­ Which means we ve got to HI keep the supply coming con­ 1 athletes, unlike many other schools, including ACC tives from all the NCAA-member schools. stantly. Donors are needed ii member school Maryland. The University does not intend Many people thought the commission would not have every day. .- to start testing for drugs, McDonald said. "Sony to sav. there are HH^_B significant power and authority to affect change, McDonald never en™., donors. "We are not prescient enough to oppose it at other institu­ said. "But events of the past week would suggest they were "In tact, live people out of 1 tions with wisdom. We just do not believe at the present every 100are doing the whole Keep Red Cross mistaken." time it is a justified response at this institution to problems ready. out there in society," McDonald said. See NCAA on page 15 -MJb. •Ajpcrcul CHINESE RESTAURANT] uie cut hair lor your coo not our/.. ~~I UH DAILY DINNER SPECIALS $6.95 \$ I rn / Includes: Entree, Soup (Egg Drop, Wonton, Hot & Sour or \ £\ WHAT 15 p supcrcut ? Chicken w/Szechuan Cabbage), Eggroll, Fried or Steamed B ^UPC_ CUt i> Cu/tom r>«/k_ned Rice and Fortune Cookie, with small glass of plum wine. NO MSG, NO SALT, NO OIL- fl ^UpCrCUl i/Preci/ionCut Just ask and we'll gladly cook your Ml fl _VpCfCUt u a Fini/h_d Product meal to meet your special needs. Hunanr* . B ^UpCICUl i/ for men Women S Children Restaurant 910 W. Main St. fl SUpCfCUt l» Beautiful * Durham and.. a JTJpCfCU t i/ al way / (across the street 8 CHAPEL HILL Ho Appointment/ DURHAM from Brightleaf 141 Rams Plaza 3117 Shannon Road Square) 967-0226 (Regency Plaza) 489-7674 688-2120 *^&3Gtaera Mon.-Fri. 10-8 Sat. 10-6 Page 14 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, June 27, 1985 Bilas, Amaker play in Taiwan Bennett on last From staff and wire reports Duke basketball stars Tbmmy Amaker and Jay Bilas are stop' in football among 12 college players selected to play in the R. Williams Jones Cup, an international tournament in By The Associated Press Taipei, Taiwan July 2-15. Former Duke quarterback Ben Bennett says the The U.S. team was chosen by the Amateur Basketball Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League will Association's Men's Games Committee, which is chaired be his "last stop" in his search for a home in professional by Olympic gold medal winning Coach Bob Knight of football. Indiana University. The team, under head coach Gene Keady of Purdue University trained June 22-27 at Purdue "Pro football, so far, has been nothing but a devastat­ and will compete against teams from 12 other countries. ing experience for me," Bennett said in a telephone interview from Atlanta's training complex in Suwanee, Ga. "I've not been given the opportunity as of yet to Women's tennis COach: Former professional ten­ show that I can play. nis player Jane Preyer has been named new coach of the "It would be different if someone along the way had Blue Devil's women's tennis team, announced Tom Butters, just told me that.I don't have a the talent to play, but athletic director. that's not the case," Bennett said. Preyer, who played on the professional circuit for five Bennett signed with the Falcons as a free agent last years, replaces four-year coach Charlie Frangos, who February after he was cut by the Jacksonville Bulls of resigned at the end of last season. A native of Greensboro, the United States Football League. He is one of six Preyer was once ranked 58th in the world and reached the candidates who will vie for two, possibly three, quarter­ 16th round at Wimbledon in 1982. SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE' back spots on the Atlanta roster. A 1976 North Carolina graduate, she coached the Jane Preyer, the new women's tennis coach With veteran Steve Bartkowski and his understudy, Greensboro Page High School's girls team to a state cham­ Mike Moroski, as two of the candidates, it appears will occupy the 12:00 noon to 3:00 pm timeslot, with kick- pionship in 1983 and was chosen conference coach of the Bennett has only an outside chance of playing in the year. She served as assistant women's tennis coach at UNC- off scheduled for 12:20 pm. NFL. In addition to the Jefferson Pilot presentations, the ACC Greensboro last season while completing her master's "Whatever I do here, I have to leave nothing to chance," degree in Sports Studies. is expected to have ten other appearances on television, be said. "This will be my last stop. If I don't make it seven on CBS' national network and three on the Atlanta- here, I'm through with pro football. It's now time for based cable station WTBS. me to put up or shut up." Football On television: Jefferson Pilot Teleproduc After setting NCAA career records for most passes Pirate tryOUtS: The worst team in the national league tions and the Atlantic Coast Conference have announced attempted and completed and most passing yardage his will hold tryouts at historic Jack Coombs field Saturday a 12-game football schedule to be aired in the ACC area senior year, Bennett graduated with many expecting for the 1985 season. Duke will appear once, in its game at 9:00 am. Any interested players aged between 16 and at North Carolina Nov. 23. The other ACC teams will be 22 years of age are invited to attend. They must bring a See BENNETT on page 15 seen between two and, in North Carolina's case, five times. complete uniform, shoes, glove and personal gear. Of the 12 games, ten will be conference meetings; the two n on -conference games match Maryland with Penn State Sept. 7 and Virginia with Navy Sept. 28. All games « ffilimh bourn out ai trie 3unr_ itouicr j

• L______K__L __.__._T__.__. m MM M ______t __ m __ __ a __• _* _t m * Take a REALITY BREAK . TIC _ « Discuss Real World Issues with Experts * *STAR WARS: * ^2^5 SPACE, WEAPONS, * * AHSftr Performances * Cuddly BailQco Animals ;* ** ANANDWAR^D WAR ** ** * * Costumed Deliveries with Dr. Darryi Roberts, Political Science _m&___ nday, July 1 •¥• 9;00-10 p.m. Free Delivery lo Durharo/RTP sw Lounqe 4t * "•* Refreshments * Vi i TtrTTTr r rrn 11 n n 11111 i-J

John and Sue from Duke There's more than one way welcome the community to to get to the CHINA INN Best SEAFOOD! Daily Luncheon Specials dr\ \ - Mixed Beverages - Mon-Thu 11:30-10:00 1 •SZECHUAN • HUNAN • Fri 11:30-10:30 \__V • PEKING • Sat 4:30-10:30 5___C • CANTONESE • Sun 12:00-10:00 J—. CJt. • SALT, OIL or MSG ,Ai\pLrBBERS Jct^T* FREE DISHES' Beverages v^^™/«H Thursday, June 27, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 15

Final chance for NCAA penalties 10.000 BTU Kenmore High Effici­ ency window air conditioner. Used only three months. Still To Public Stacey and her friends: under warranty. $250. How do you say BUTA(ss) in Bennett in Atlanta 489-2908. more stringent French? We know now — it is Just LOSE WEIGHT FAST. NATURALLY! maaarvalous. The Riviera is really BENNETT from page 14 NCAA from page 13 All-natural product, 100% money bitchin; dude. Do you like plants -back guarantee. Call Mike on your playground? We'll explain 829-0864. him to become a professional star. The commission is empowered to call special conven­ tions like the one last weekend, to initiate searching Entertainment our Euroraps. Have fun in ol' So far, that hasn't happened. He was offered a healthy studies into topics such as Proposition 48, to initiate Durham, grosses bises. Gigi. PJ. signing bonus and a no-cut contract by the Jacksonville English and Beanls. PS Get out proposals at regular and special meetings, as it did last Records & Tapes bought and Bulls, but Bennett decided to wait and see where he would weekend and to arrange the order of legislative sold Books Co Furnish A Room. be drafted in the NFL. 215 North Gregson. 683-3244. Goodbye. Uncle Terry. Expecting to be a first-round pick in NFL, Bennett had The commission also can order a roll call vote at any- to wait until the sixth round for the Falcons to select him. meeting on any legislation. All the legislation at last weekend's was subjected to roll call voting, said "I was totally confused and didn't know what to do," he McDonald, who stressed the importance of this voting said. "It's not one of my fondest memories. I don't even like procedure. to talk about it." "Every president at home is going to know how his Jacksonville continued to wait for Bennett, but the Bulls representative voted in the hurly-burly of convention Advertise in THE CHRONICLE closed their pocketbooks somewhat. Bennett reportedly activities," he said. "No institution will be able, to hide lost between $500,000 to $1 million by not signing with from its vote and no representative of any institution the Bulls at first. will be able to hide from his president's review of that It's the best way to reach vote." "I still got a very substantial signing bonus and figured Duke has been able to keep its athletic programs out I was going to get a chance to play," he said. more than 15,000 buyers of the trouble that has affected other schools because But Bennett said he never got a chance. He broke a few it has kept its academic priorities straight, McDonald minor club rules in Jacksonville. He was fined for unknow­ said. He added that the University's athletics are well ingly parking his car in the coaches' lot and then com­ managed at every level by responsible leadership. plained about the fine. McDonald said he thinks the "value-driven" policies TME CflKOUN-l THCflTRE OOWNTOVN _U___n 6A&H939 Not long afterward, the Bulls signed former NFL that guide Duke athletics would remain the same under fl quarterbacks Brian Sipe and Matt Robinson. After playing Chancellor Keith Brodie, who will assume the Univer­ sity presidency July 1. Ladies & Gentlemen, in only two professional games, the Bulls cut Bennett. Bennett said the cut had nothing to with his playing you are cordially invited to skills and that was told it was purely a financial decision. "From the time I was a little kid I dreamed of playing pro football," he said. "That was the ultimate dream. I thought pro football was everything. But I've learned that .PRIVATE there is absolutely no compassion whatsoever in pro foot­ The Montessori ball, no loyalty." FUNCTION Children's House A DELICIOUS COMEOT. For those who care about their clothes . . . OF DURHAM Affiliated with the American STARTS FRIDAY White Star Cleaners Montessori Society since 1976 JUNE 28th 3:30, 5:15. 7:15. 9:15 900 9th Street NEW "AROUND THE WORLD" Special Admission Prices 286-2271 rULt SCKVICE LAUKDRY • DRV CLEMEKS • ALTERATION SERVICE PRESCHOOL SUMMER PROGRAM Fri. & Sat. only . . . with Complete Box Storage Study art, crafts, cooking, dance and music of France, 1 Ticket Hog jowls/2 lbs. bacon Germany, Africa and Japan. ov 2 Tickets Porkskins & Pickled pigs feet (VJ WHITE STAR JR. Four 2-Week Sessions, June 10-August 2 Family of six A slab of ham Comer Cole Mill 8f Hillsborough Rd Previous Montessori experience helpful ^° Group of Twenty A whole pig 383-3256 Call 286-9714 1120 Onslow St., P.O. Box 3289. Durham, NC 27705 Late show Fri. & Sat. 11:30 19th Week For "THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW"

Continental Breakfast X/ARSITY fe*fc Ne. at GELA TO D'ORO Do you need supplies for your: Next to Ihe Varsity VEAST FRANKLINI -U-l •'.^A^K ITM^WWAMWAWTX * 3_Z______3____E I __>___ fi_P __?i ffitffMlU!^ Apple Epson IBM tH_GO% %S>.50 Toshiba Okidata C.Itoh t_i^M______^ NEC Juki Brother gmmmmw—: Xerox Diablo Panasonic CARMEN FINAL ENCORE • 2 00, 8:10 • ENDS THUR. »»mM!5 "John Huston's breathless rollercoaster ride through the American Dream ascends, plunges and races — deliver- p. Ing the kind ot Imagination — liberating high that we '! most often associate with controlled substances. In this *" tun house the skeletons that jump out at you are still quite freshl" — Vine** Cantor. Ma* Yort Tfcn«a Duke University Stores JvfklNrUH MX » KATIII.__.NTI KNKK f Upper Level, Bryan Center PRIZES ;rl ______684-2344 IHONOR 2:40, 5:00, 7:20, 9:40 _•_••••__.,,._.;_.! *i..i.i' Page 16 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, June 27, 1985

JOIN MEMBERSHIPS — Family or single adult memberships available at the THE DUKE reasonable rate of $500 non-refundable, initiation fee, FACULTY CLUB! with a payroll deduction option.

ELIGIBILITY — Annual dues of $175 — All Staff and Faculty Members. — Transient memberships are — Alt Medical Residents of the VA available at a reduced rate and Duke Medical Centers for persons affiliated with — Employees of Duke University the University for one year who are compensated on a or less, and whose classification monthly basis. would make them eligible for — Professional personnel who membership. have a major responsibility in organizations affiliated with Duke University. MEMBERSHIP FACILITIES AND PROGRAMS INFORMATION — A serene setting located in a beautifully landscaped area. Please contact the — The largest outdoor pool in the Durham area. Duke Faculty Club — 2 lighted paddle tennis courts. — An activity calendar complete Office to arrange with social and recreational events for members of the family. an appointment Everything from fingerpainting The Duke Faculty Club's swimming instruction Monday-Friday. to Crab Feasts and Pig Pickin's! staff (from left to right) Michelle Baldwin, Lome — Babysitting service available. Jo Cleary, Karen Fisher, Anne Casey, and Karie — Our Pro Shop is stocked with Trumbull. equipment and attire to fill all your tennis and jogging needs. — 12 tennis courts (4 lighted) TENNIS Duke Faculty Club — Group and individual tennis lessons SWIMMING taught all year round by Club Pro, Hwy 751 at Duke Golf Course — Swimming pool includes lap lane Jane Burkhart, who has taught and swimming and diving area. coached on the collegiate level, along with assistance from her fellow staff — Kids wading pool. members. — Red Cross Approved Swimming Classes. 684-6672 We offer Beginners to Advanced Lifesaving for ages 2 to 102! Full instruction programs — Kayaking and water exercise classes. for children and adults — Take advantage of our extra swimming — Summer mini-camps for children season, with our pool opening in early — Private lessons and clinics for adults April and closing in November. — Novice through competitive play — Enjoy the pool 7 days a week. — 12 tennis courts (4 lighted) i^

A Great Value For A Moderate Price ... (Even E.F. Hutton would like to join...... THE DUKE FACULTY CLUB