Thursday

November 29, 1984 Volume 80B, Number 63 Durham, North Carolina THE CHRONICLE

Newsfile

Dole Wins Senate VOte: Bob Dole was elected Senate majority leader. Senate Republicans chose Dole, of Kansas, over Ted Stevens of Alaska by three votes in the final round of a hard-fought contest among five aspirants. Dole's election set off a chain reaction that put moderates in several key party leadership posts. Sen. Jesse Heims of North Carolina announced he would definitely not assume the chairmanship ofthe Foreign Relations Committee, opening the way for Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana to head the panel. See page 2.

Military force outlined: United States military forces will not be drawn gradually into combat in Cen­ tral America, according to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger. But, he said, if forces are committed anywhere, it must be with the clear intention of vic­ tory. See page 2.

RUCkelShaUS resigns: William Ruckelshaus is resigning, effective Jan. 5, as administrator ofthe En­ vironmental Protection Agency, a post he assumed from Ann Burford in the spring of 1983 when the agency was in deep crisis

Drug Stopper approved: "A non-addictive drug" that blocks an addict's craving for heroin was approv­ ed by the Food and Drug Administration. However, Lynn Ansara, a New York state drug official, said the approved drug, naltrexone, could not be used by the 60 percent of heroin addicts who have liver damage Also, the drug's effectiveness depends to a great extent on the motivation of the people who use it. Play ball! BETH BRANCH/THE CHRONICLE CIA man Charged: An accused spy appeared to be, until Wednesday, a militant anti-Communist refugee Tommy Amaker defends against Scott Trimble in helping the nationally ranked Blue Devils crush William & Mary, who vigorously supported conservative causes, accor­ 92-60. Amaker scored 10 points in Duke's long-awaited home opener. See page 9- ding to his friends and neighbors in a cooperative apart­ ment house on Manhattan's Upper East Side. The ac­ cused man, Karl Koecher, was formally charged with infiltrating the CIA to obtain U.S. intelligence for Trustees to consider tuition hike Czechoslovakia. Provost, Baker each to present increases next week

Weather By ANN HARDISON and research facility improvements as third and fourth, Fun in SUn City: Today will be sun, sun and more Provost Phillip Griffiths and ASDU President John respectively, on their list of priorities Increasing faculty sun. Highs should get into the upper 50s, fair tonight Baker will each present tuition recommendations to the salaries was fifth. in the low 30s Winds, in case for some reason you care, University Board of Trustees at their meeting Dec. 7. Nahmias' written report also emphasizes the role of stu­ should be from the northwest at 10 to 15 mph. Friday, Griffiths will recommend an above-inflation tuition in­ dent input in tuition policy. will be partly cloudy with highs near 60s again. And crease but will not name a percentage figure until next Griffiths' proposal ranks financial aid as the administra­ in an effort to enhance Duke's intellectual atmosphere, year's University budget forecast is completed. Top ad­ tion's top priority but he said Duke "was not going to get we remind you that there are only 40 more shopping ministrators have said that double digit increases would in the game of buying students. We want to use financial days until Elvis' 50th birthday. be proposed. aid creatively," he said. Baker will present a bill passed at Monday night's ASDU Faculty support is the administration's second concern, meeting endorsing a '^rnall over-inflation increase" with according to Griffiths He said support includes increased specific stipulations on how revenues should be spent. He salaries and increasing faculty size to lower the student- Inside will also present a report outlining results of a student to-faculty ratio. tuition survey conducted by David Nahmias, ASDU vice In addition to "infrastructure improvements," including Don't dare miSS this: Those who want to be president at-large. additional computer faclities and new laboratory equip­ prepared for life in 1985 can't miss the latest in trend Last year, the trustees raised tuition 8.9 percent, to ment, Griffiths said he will propose that additional analysis. If you havent yet traded in those old Thriller" $7,380 from $6,780 per year for Trinity College undergrad­ revenues, generated from a tuition increase, be used to im­ albums and still enjoy casual sex, you have some stu­ uates Engineers pay $7,920 per year. prove graduate student programs and increase graduate dying to do See R & R for a totally arbitrary, but amaz­ That was the lowest tuition increase in six years and now student enrollment. However, he does not plan to equalize ingly astute, set of guidelines some University officials are saying that an unusually undergraduate and graduate enrollment levels large increase is needed for Duke to continue making Griffiths said he would like to see a long-range planning Womens' Basketball: The men Blue Devils improvements and priorities committee developed. The committee would weren't the only ones to pile up the points Wednesday. Griffiths' proposal will be supplemented by a staff report include student members and would review projects with The womens' basketball team made its record 4-0 in a sent to trustees earlier this fall. The report studied in­ major budgetary implications 93-60 win over Mars Hill, from Asheville See page 9. creases up to 13 percent to finance capital improvements, Before approving the recommendations Baker will pre­ financial aid packages and salary increases. sent, the ASDU legislature defeated representative Bill Court iS in Session: Columnist Ed Farrell takes According to the ASDU survey, described as speculative Eskind's proposal linking minority enrollment with tui­ a few swipes at some of the world's foremost powers - due to the small sample size, tuition and financial aid "are tion increases The proposal stated minority recruitment the United States, the United Nations and Judge not very important to many students" programs should be expanded if tuition is raised. Wopner. See page 7. "Most students are so rich at Duke, they complain about BOG dormitory representative Kenny Dupree, who sup­ tuition but they are not really worried about it," Nahmias ported Eskind's proposal, said that although the survey said. did not indicate concern about minority enrollment, ASDU However, the ASDU report adds, "tuition levels and was supportive of recruitment plans and the proposal was [financial] aid offerings appear quite important to many "valid because ASDU is more aware of student opinion Vote [than the 68 students surveyed}." Today is the runoff election for ASDU Executive Vice . . . lower-income students." President. Polls are open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the ASDU's bill, based on their survey of 68 students, recom­ Nahmias said the proposal failed by approximately 15 East Campus bus stop, the Bryan Center and the mends five spending priority areas. Greater student- votes because although the concern was valid, it was not Perkins Library. . teacher interaction received the highest ranking followed indicated in the survey and thus could not be included in closely by financial aid. Respondents ranked job programs a-bill based on the survey. Dole elected majority leader By STEVEN V. ROBERTS of their most skillful legislators and accomplished public World & NY Times News Service speakers, a conservative Middle Westerner with a flair for WASHINGTON - Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas was elected pragmatism and compromise. He was the party's vice- majority leader ofthe Senate Wednesday, defeating Sen. presidential nominee in 1976 and is considered a likely National Ted Stevens of Alaska by three votes in the final round contender for its presidential nomination in 1988. of a tense and hard-fought contest. Wednesday, Dole said he would cooperate with President Page 2 November 29, 1984 The election of Dole by the majority Republican members Reagan and push his program whenever possible. He said set off a chain reaction in the Senate and produced a new that in a telephone conversation after the balloting he told leadership team with moderates in several key posts the president, "Boss, I'm ready to go to work." But Dole Sen. Richard Lugar, an Indianan with appeal among said he had also warned the White House that coopera­ THE CHRONICLE both moderates and conservatives, who had come in third tion between the two branches had to be a "two-way street." in the leadership race, will become chairman ofthe Foreign The Senate majority leader is one of the most influen­ Assistant news editor Doug Mays Associate sports editors Jim Arges Relations Committee, succeeding Sen. Charles H. Percy tial figures in Washington, and his power derives from two Charley Scher of Illinois, who was defeated for re-election earlier this sources. Inside the Capitol, he sets the Senate agenda, John Turnbull month. decides what bills come to the floor and negotiates com­ Assistant sports editor David Loomstein Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina, a leader among promises with House Democrats. Outside the Capitol, he Associate photo editor Don Mullen Senate conservatives, opened the way for Lugar when he speaks for the Senate to the White House and, through R&R editor Rick Heyman announced that he would definitely not assume the leader­ news organizations, to the public. Copy editor , Elisa Davidson ship ofthe Foreign Relations panel. Helms could have ex­ Many senators said they had picked Dole because of his Copy desk Larry Kaplow ercised his seniority to do so, but he said he would retain ability to perform these functions. "In the ultimate Night editors Shayana Kadidal the chairmanship ofthe Agriculture Committee, as he pro­ analysis," said Sen. Slade Gorton of Washington, "we picked Jeffrey Skatoff mised in his recent campaign for re-election. the individual with the most experience in managing bills Sports production Paul Smith Day photographer Doug Harper In picking Dole, the 53 Senate Republicans chose one on the floor. He is also the best public s Watchdog ' Jerry Slotkin

Account representatives Judy Bartlett Susan Tomlin Possible military use explained Advertising production . . . Judith Cook Composition Delia Adkins In a speech entitled 'The Uses of Military Power," Judy Mack Weinberger outlined a set of tests, drawing on the lessons Elizabeth Majors WASHINGTON - Secretary of Defense Caspar of Korea and Vietnam, that he said the United States The Chronicle is published Monday through Friday of the Weinberger said Wednesday that U.S. military forces would would apply when deciding whether to send military forces academic year, and weekly through ten (10) weeks of summer not be drawn gradually into combat in Central America, into combat. sessions by the Duke University Chronicle Board. Price of but he left open the possibility they could be used in a He said that national interests and objectives must be subscriptions: $40 for third class mail; $100 for first class mail. swift, all-out attack. clear, that sufficient forces must be employed with the clear Offices at third floor Flowers Building. Duke University, Durham, Pentagon officials said Weinberger wanted to assert that intention of winning, that the use of force must have the North Carolina 27706. any use of military force would not be indiscriminate and support ofthe American people and that it must be used that the Reagan administration intended to avoid being only as a last resort. Corrections? dragged into a quagmire in Central America. Weinberger further cautioned allies of the United States In an address at a National Press Club luncheon, that they must bear their share ofthe burden for the com­ Questions or complaints about a story that has appeared in Weinberger also suggested that the War Powers Act, which mon defense. "Recent history has proven that we cannot The Chronicle? Call 684-2663 between 2 and 4 p.m. Sunday- through Thursday. is intended to restrain presidential application of military assume unilaterally the role of the world's defender," he force, should be modified or repealed. said.

Can you pickout JAZZ the MBM from the MBA's? at Duke University Page Auditorium Thursday, November 29th—8 P.M. Paul Jeffrey Presents The World Famous Dannie Richmond

By giving yourself the advantage of a Masters of Brand Management, you're giving yourself a better opportunity than an MBA to get a job and quickly succeed at building a productive, lucrative career as a corporate product manager or account executive. Quintet If selected for admittance into the Masters of Brand Management program, you'll spend time in the classroom and spend time as a salaried intem with a major national This is a company. Qualifying applicants may also be eligible for a 56,000 scholarship in the form For ticket information call ( ofa tax free stipend. special PAGE AUDITORIUM Discover the difference one degree can make. Use the coupon below to contact Tickets BOX OFFICE us for details today. Or call i'-ofessor Fred D. Reynolds at 1404) 542-2123. Benefit Concert 684-4059 I ^xr — 56.00 General Admission Professor Fred D. Reynolds /fi"~"- "'_•• S5.00 students for the Brooks Hall . S4.00 Senior Citizens The University of Georgia ;- |l Ooke Employees Mary Lou Williams Tickets also Athens. GA 30602 & • '.# Jazz Society Jazz Festival "85" sold at door Please send me information on the Masters of Brand Management Program. "~^-^ Members & Duke Jazz Ensemble Day of Concert Name . .. Address School .__. JA^^ Graduation Date Defense expert doubts 'Star Wars' Campus By MICHAEL MILSTEIN "A comprehensive defense ofthe United States is highly Page 3 November 29, 1984 unlikely, if not totally improbably," said Paul Stares, guest scholar at the Brookings Institution, in denouncing Thursday the Reagan administration's space defense plan. Stares criticized the Reagan's Strategic Defense Intiative Annual College Bowl, Bryan Center film theater, 3 or "Star Wars" in his speech Wednesday night before more p.m. than 80 people in Gross Chemical Auditorium. The 29-year-old received his doctorate from the Univer­ sity of Lancaster in England, and has worked as a research Festival of Arts of the Indian Ocean Area, lecture officer to the Armament and Disarmament Information by A.K:- Ramanujan, poet, scholar, linguist, Nelson Unit at the University of Sussex. He has co-edited and Music Room, 4 p.m. written two books on space weapon systems, as well as numerous articles. Duke Investment Club speaker, Rudolph Penner, In his lecture, Stares traced the development of nuclear director of the Congressional Budget Office, Zener defense systems, which has included missiles designed to Auditorium, 7 p.m. destroy nucjear warheads in flight, as well as the recent­ ly proposed space-based anti-missile defenses. Women's Studies Program and Russian and Slavic Stares said since nearly all of the past projects were Studies, lecture, Dodona Kiziria, Indiana Universi­ determined to be infeasible, the United States has had to rely heavily upon a policy of deterrence, or "Mutual ty, 139 Social Sciences building, 7 p.m. Assured Destruction." Under this policy both the United States and the Soviet Union are discouraged from laun­ Freewater film, "If. . .," Bryan Center film theater, DOUGLAS HARPER/THE CHRONICLE ching nuclear weapons at each other by the knowledge that Paul Stares, guest scholar at the Brookings Institution, 7 and 9:30 p.m. their opponent can retaliate with the same action. said protecting the United States with a space defense Stares criticized Reagan's statement, made in his 1983 system was unlikely if not Improbable. Asian/Pacific Studies lecture, Masao Miyoshi, "Star Wars" speech, that nuclear weapons can be destroyed University of California at Berkeley, 204 Perkins "before they reach American soil," and thus be made American programs, he said. Library, 8 p.m. obsolete. Stares quoted a Congressional Office of Technology His lecture was part of the Round Tkble Lecture Series Assessment report which says that a "Star Wars" Festival of Arts of the Indian Ocean Area, poetry sponsored by the Program in Science, Technology, and technology providing a "near perfect" defense for the Human Values. reading by A.K. Ramanujan, poet, scholar, linguist, United States "is so remote that it should not serve as a Even though the United States has been investigating basis of public expectation." Nelson Music Room, 8:15 p.m. the uses of various "exotic" weapons systems - including Even after spending $26 million thus far authorized to sophisticated satellites, directed energy weapons such as study new defense procedures, Stares said, the quality of Music department, Mary Lou Williams Center, BSA, lasers and particle beams, kinetic energy weapons — U.S. defense systems will remain unchanged. Danny Richmond Quintet, Page Auditorium, 8:15 Stares doubted the feasibility of Reagan's plan. He cited While "not opposed to considering viable alternatives to p.m. the difficulty of building technically complicated systems, Mutual Assured Destruction," Stares said he "remains pro­ and counter-me_a_sures which the Soviet Union is certain foundly skeptical that we can obtain these lofty goals set Lecture, Andrew Ramage, Professor of Classical Ar­ to take. Such counter-measures will further retard by President Reagan through ballistic missile defenses." chaeology at Cornell University, "The Gold of Croesus," 204B East Duke building, 8:15 p.m. Friday Former naval officer backs freeze By BILL STANFORD of confrontation," Withrow said. Each government favors Asian/Pacific Studies lecture, Eleanor Westney, MIT, In his speech Wednesday night retired U.S. Naval Cmdr. an arms reduction only if such a reduction will benefit its 204 Perkins Library, 3 p.m. William Withrow said he supports a unilateral nuclear own nation, he said. freeze to resolve the dangerous military climate that ex­ However, negotiations can only be successful if both coun­ ists between the Soviet Union and the United States. tries want world peace, he added. Secretary of State George Chemistry seminar, Harrold Martinson, University Withrow said the combined US-Soviet nuclear stockpile Schultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko have of California, 103 Gross Chemistry laboratory, 3:30 can destroy the world 50 times over and he discussed how agreed to meet in January in an attempt to restart stalled p.m. the U.S. arsenal had grown. negotiations. The Joint Chiefs of Staff decided in 1967, Withrow said, Withrow said "our future depends on our ability to Romance languages lecture, Joan de Jean, "if we could destroy 200 targets in Russia, the Soviet Union educate the American public" Princeton University, 226 Perkins library, 3:30 p.m. would cease to exist as a social structure." One thousand Withrow's speech, before approxiamtely 30 people in Minute Man missies were made to adequately destroy Duke Hospital North, was sponosored by Physicians For Music department lecture, William Prizer, Univer­ these targets, he said, adding that the United States now Social Responsibility, a nation-wide organization designed sity of California, Santa Barbara, Rehearsal Hall, has more than 10,000 nuclear warheads. to educate the public to the consequences ofthe arms race Biddle Music building, 4:15 p.m. Withrow said apparently U.S. citizens still believe that and nuclear war. the if the Soviets have more nuclear weapons than the Withrow said he is a unique speaker because he United States, then the United States is vulnerable. understands both sides ofthe nuclear arms race and has Freewater film, "Educating Rita," Bryan Center film The United States has 5,000 submarine-based warheads experience as a military officer. theater, 7, 9:30 p.m., and 12 midnight which are invulnerable to attack by the Soviets, he said. He also discussed waste in the Defense Department, say­ Although the Soviets have twice as many nuclear sub­ ing that after the United States spent "$7 billion on the Duke Chapel Choir, Handel's "Messiah," Duke marines, only 10 percent of their submarines are opera­ ABM [anti-ballistic missile] defense system, the defense Chapel, 7:30 p.m. tional at any one time. department shut down the program because it was ruled "We can either take the path of negotiations or the path obsolete." Page 4 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, November 29, 1984 Fuqua student promotes Peace Corps experience

By BLAKE NEWMAN where to be sent; he is sent where he is needed. Imagine yourself riding a motorcycle down dusty African Another reason for the Corps' success is its intense three trails from village to village and speaking to farmers in month training program for all volunteers The training Swahili about how they can expand their fish ponds or covers technical knowledge, cross-cultural education and raise their crop production. Then imagine spending a language. For technical training, volunteers are sent to warm Sunday afternoon chatting with some ofthe same an institution that teaches their field. farmers about their lives and yours. The Peace Corps of­ The training session teachers also instruct the volunteer fers this kind of experience and many others for a select about what the host country's culture will be like. The few who are accepted. Mel Adam, Duke's Peace Corps teachers try to remove any stereotypes or misconceptions representative, can verify this. He has spent 3 years in that the volunteers might have. They tell them about the Africa, eight of them with the Peace Corps. realities ofthe situation, how to avoid problems and what "I enjoy programming and organizing projects and I love problems to expect. working with people," said Adam. "The Peace Corps gave "The glamour of traveling wears off quickly," says Adam. me a chance to have this responsibility right out of college." "You have to work hard and you work when the native Adam's experience with the Corps began in 1970 when culture works It takes a great deal of responsibility." he was sent to Gambia in Western Africa. Later in 1973 The volunteers also learn the native language during he joined the Catholic Relief Services as an auditor and the session. They must know Spanish to go to South or worked with businesses and governments in Upper Volta, Central America and French to go to Africa, but each coun­ Niger and Rowanda. Then in 1978 Adam joined the Peace try also has native dialects. For example, in Senegal, one Corps again as a director on the administrative staff. He ZACHARI MATEEWTHE CHRONICLE ofthe many places Adam was stationed, French is the of­ traveled around Gambia, Zaire, Malawi and Tanzania, Duke Peace Corps representative Mel Adam ficial language, but Mandinto and Wolof are spoken by visiting sights where volunteers worked and organizing tries, to develop a better understanding of these host coun­ many ofthe people, and neither language is related to the jobs with the host governments. tries,, and to have the host countries develop a better other. The language changes in each country. The "I always used the volunteers as resources," exclaims understanding of America. volunteer will pick up the language quickly, however, Adam. "I would ask them what would work and what Initially headed by Sargent Shriver, the Peace Corps was because he must learn it to live in the host country. wouldn't and set up programs from this information." an immediate success, increasing the number of volunteers Probably the most important reason for the success of It was during this time that Adam dealt with fish pond from 900 in 1961 to 12,306 in 1966. Every country that the Peace Corps is the administrative staff itself. The culture. He organized many volunteers in Central Africa originally asked for volunteers has by now doubled its re­ primary goal is to always work at the village level. This for this job with great success. In 1983, he married and quests. Far from slowing down, the Peace Corps grows personal touch makes both the volunteers and the villagers entered the Fuqua School of Business and he now acts as every year and now offers more services to host countries content and things usually run smoothly. Duke's Peace Corps representative. than ever before. The Corps also does several things for the volunteers. Adam is not the only person satisfied with his Peace Through good management and organization, the Corps' A living allowance is provided each month along with free Corps'experience. The Corps has been sending eager administration has been successful at achieving its goals medical care. The host country contributes housing and volunteers to underdeveloped countries for over 20 years. and making its volunteers feel like their responsibilities office space. Plus, each volunteer accumulates $125 each The organization was started by an executive order from are meaningful. One of the main reasons for this success month he is overseas and after two years can re-enlist. President John F. Kennedy in 1961 and was subsequent­ is the Corps' difficult selection process. Commitment and This is the third year that the Peace Corps has actively ly approved by Congress under the Peace Corps Act. flexibility are required. A volunteer must be able to ad­ recruited at Duke. The first year 15 students applied. Last Its three main goals were and still are to provide just to any new situation and carry out his job. While year 22 people applied and the figure will probably in­ technical assistance and knowledge to developing coun- preferences are allowed to be given, no one can choose crease this year.

Simple Located on 2nd Floor, Suite 200 Precision of Hilton Inn CLASS OF 88 Natural Across Haircuts from Duke For Men for oppointmenr Greet Your and Women coll 266-9184 January Classmates! Student National Medical Association The Freshmen arriving in the Spring Dear-SNMA Members: term want to know their Fall counter­ Bello, this is an informational letter concerning the next meeting of parts. Help make their transition to the SNMA. For the next meeting we will discuss research programs and intern­ Duke easier and a lot more fun. You ship programs for the summer. These are programs which are important to premedical do not need to come back early. Just and health-oriented students for strengthen­ be around during the semester so ing your credentials through experience. ye will also' elect officers for the they can meet others from your year 1985. Please remember that we are one of the few universities which has an fantastic class. undergraduate SNMA and a supportive gradu­ ate SNMA. The SNMA needs the support of all health professional students. Come Sign up at the Bryan Center Informa­ to our next meeting and get involved. tion Desk to be a J-Buddy to a J- Sincerely, Frosh. Cynthia Jones, President Student National Medical Association Hurry! There are only fifty positions DECEMBER 2, 1984 * 5:00-6:00 p.m. available! note correction Mary Lou Williams Cultural Center ill Thursday, November 29, 1984 THE CHRONICLE Page 5

Herman and AT&T. The Long Distance Winners.

Herman van!

' AT&Ttong distance leaves the others far behind, too. You'll get great service, unmatched qualily-plus savings that keep on rolling every day You'll save 40% evenings-60% nights and weekends. So you'll come out way ahead. For information on AT&T Long Distance Service call 1800 222-0300.

The more you hear the better we sound."1 Letters Opinion Alternative for ASDU Page 6 November 29, 1984 To the editorial board: believe they will declare later, or vote for John Walker's Nov. 27 column suggesting a pre-major representative (perhaps there the streamlining of the ASDU legislature could be two, one each for Trinity and by reducing its size was very astute; I am Engineering). one of the many former ASDU legislators Certainly this proposition raises ques­ Vandalism despicable who sat in those weekly meetings, bored to tions which would have to be discussed and tears. However, he did not put forward a resolved. However, if this new system of plan for the "redisricting" this would en­ ASDU representation by major were on Chapel or elsewhere tail. I would like to suggest one. adopted, I am sure the result would be a ASDU legislators should represent the more efficient, more responsive and hence Vandalism by definition is the malicious is especially sad. Many channels for various academic disciplines offered at more respected student government for all destruction or defacement of public or political expression exist on campus, more Duke, and should be elected by the under­ of us. private property. It is also one of those prominent and effective in conveying a graduates majoring in each discipline (cur­ things that is rationally unjustifiable. It is message than the Chapel. And if the van­ rently, ASDU legislators are elected by and Larry Lang a pointless and senseless act that serves no dals were motivated simply by the desire ostensibly represent their living groups). Engineering '86 other purpose than to provide "fun" for the to spraypaint, then do it on the bridge. The most obvious advantage of this vandals. system is the smaller, more manageable Act of violence On the Thursday evening before Thanks­ legislature that would result. By my own giving someone spraypainted on the It is bad enough that unofficial count, from paging through the To the editorial board: Chapel. The "message" - circled Stars of University bulletin, the new body would A year ago someone spraypainted "Jews David, characters resembling Arabic and someone has to have about 35 seats, down from the roughly Suck" on an archway. A week later someone the words "I AM BACK" - carried no ob­ 120 there are currently. wrote an editorial carefully demonstrating vious meaning. In fact the primary response spraypaint sidewalks and In addition, the new way of apportioning that the person with the spraypaint can was to the act was the expected one - outrage. other buildings on representatives would foster the growing in­ guilty of fallacious reasoning, over-general­ There are some things you just don't do. terest in improving the University's in­ ization and prejudice. The sacred nature of the Chapel, or any campus. You would hope tellectual atmosphere. Now an outrage is committed against the house of worship for that matter, should that the Chapel above all The current system favors students who Chapel, and we hear a faculty member tell make it off limits as a target for vandalism. choose to join tightly organized living us, "Trying to assign blame in this is not It is bad enough that someone has to spray- other things would be not groups — fraternities and commitment the way to go; we have to focus on what this paint sidewalks and other buildings on be considered by such nouses - over those who choose to live in symbolizes." campus: You would hope that the Chapel more loosely organized independent dorms, I do not care if they paint "Everyone be above all other things would be uncon­ malefactors. and completely fails, for all practical pur­ Damned" or "Happy Holidays." If these sidered by such malefactors. poses, to represent those who choose to live despicable individuals really wanted ex­ Indeed, that has usually been the case. Many people have also speculated that off campus. pression they would have used a bulletin Bob Criminger, physical plant maintenance Duke students were probably not involved Under the new system, the common in­ board or the Main Street bridge. manager, said that this is only the second in the incident. Rev. Joseph Burke, chaplain terest that students share in their main These acts of violence are not poetic time in 53 years that the Chape! has been of campus activities, said that Duke subject of study would serve as a unifying statements whose symbolic interpretations vandalized. Unfortunately, the last case oc­ students are "too intelligent" to commit force supporting better representation. are to be discussed over tea and crumpets curred last February, when vandals also such a crime. Let's hope that this is the case. Two groups do not fit easily into the new in our seminars. They are abominations to spraypainted seemingly meaningless In general, foolish acts such as vandalism system: students with more than one ma­ be condemned wholeheartedly by the entire marks on the Chapel. Let's hope this does are often easily overlooked as senseless. jor and students with no declared major. University. not become a standard practice. However, when it occurs in such a promi­ The former group could register one "voting At Duke, there are a plethora of outlets nent location as on the Chape! it shouldn't major" with ASDU. The latter group could Damon Scott for any kind of expression. If the marks on be ignored. Let's hope it's a lot longer than either register the "voting major" they Graduate student the Chapel were politically motivated, as 53 years before anyone spraypaints on the some people have speculated, then the act Chapel again. No commons for grads To the editorial board: Professional Student Night" sponsored by Recently the Graduate and Professional the GPSC with the cooperation ofthe Hide­ Student Council (GPSC) was alarmed to away Bar. learn that the President's Committee on Equally evident was the assumption by Residential Life (PCRL), which is comprised many of the undergraduates present that of six faculty members and six ASDU- the Hideaway was their bar, which had been appointed undergraduates, had discussed invaded. For those of you to whom this is the option of restricting Central Campus news, the Hideaway was originally opened housing to undergraduates. as a graduate and professional student bar, This would eliminate the only on-campus owned and managed by graduate and pro­ housing available to graduate and profes­ fessional students. sional students and make it virtually im­ The reasons for its takeover by undergrad­ possible for incoming graduate and profes­ uates are many, not the least of which is its sional students to arrange housing prior to current location, making it difficult to find their arrival in Durham. and virtually inaccessible to anyone driv­ The GPSC did not request representation ing a car. That includes the vast majority on the PCRL at the time of its formation, of graduate and professional students who as we were led to believe the committee was must live off-campus and commute by car. concerned only with undergraduate hous­ Gradeli's met a similar fate when Trent ing issues. We have since requested repre­ Drive Hall was converted from graduate to sentation and have received a verbal agree­ undergraduate student housing. ment allowing GPSC to appoint one The undergraduates have their gothic graduate or professional student to the playground and their shiny new student THE CHRONICLE PCRL. center; the faculty have their commons and their club. The graduate and professional Joe McHugh, Editor-in-chief We see this incident as part of a general trend. Places on campus originally serving students at Duke have no place, on campus Larry Kaplow, Associate Editor graduate and professional students have or off, where they can balance the hours Al Bernstein, Kathy Burkett, Managing Editors been taken over by the undergraduate spent in the library or laboratory with Paul Gaffney, Editorial Page Editor population at Duke. relaxing, enjoyable social contact with their Elisa Davidson, News Editor Townsend Davis, News Editor In the time I have been a graduate stu­ peers Carrie Teegardin, University Editor Andrew Bagley, State & National Editor dent here, I've seen both Gradeli's (grad deli, The Provost and University President Wendy Lane, Sports Editor Jenny Wright, Production Editor get it?) and the Hideaway Bar fade from be­ Terry Sanford have recently spoken of the Peter Ha, Photography Editor Will Hicks, Photography Editor ing graduate and professional student need for improvement in the quality and Peter Thrasewich, Sports Production Editor Flora Garcia, Entertainment Editor gathering places to almost being used ex­ quantity of graduate students at Duke. Abbie Baynes, Features Editor Debbie Blum, Features Editor clusively by undergraduates. Tim Dyer, Business Manager Gina Columna, Advertising Manager Graduate and professional students fre­ We strongly suggest that in addition to quently complain about the difficulty of considering the quality of faculty advisors The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its meeting students outside of their own and the availability of financial aid, they students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view department or school. Currently there is no also consider the less scholarly but no less of the editorial board. Signed editorials, columns and cartoons represent the views of their place on campus where graduate and pro­ important social aspects of graduate and authors fessional students can relax, socialize and professional student life at Duke. Phone numbers: editor: 684,5469, news/features: 684-2663, sports: 684-6115, business office: meet new friends. 684-3811, advertising office: 684-6106. Sherry Marts The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. The desire for such a place is evident in the large turnout at a recent "Graduate and Vice-chairman, GPSC Thursday, November 29, 1984 THE CHRONICLE Page 7 The Case of the Big Stick Bully On Monday the World Court ruled 15-1, with the American judge dissenting, PJ Comall that it has jurisdiction to CO rdllCII hear a case brought by Nica- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^*_ ragua that the United States has violated international law as an aggressor country. The World Court, known of­ ficially as the International Court of Justice, is the judicial arm of the United Nations. Located in The Hague, Netherlands, the World Court has no authority to enforce any of its rulings, relying on the United Nations security council to uphold them. For­ tunately for the United States, we can veto anything that the United Nations wants to do, as can the Russians. This is part of the reason why the U.N. is so effective. We only have to pay for the U.N. (and all their parking tickets in New York). We don't have to listen to them. Nicaragua is suing the United States for a violation of the "1956 U.S.-Nicaragua Treaty of Friendship, Free Com­ merce, and Navigation," which stipulates that any disputes should be taken to the World Court. For some reason, those silly Sandinistas think that just because we mine their harbors, print booklets on assassina­ ting them, almost invade their country because of MiG jets that were never there and fly jets over Managua on a regular basis, which just happen to break the sound bar­ ofthe Tribunal Mundial, the World Court?" against the United States would be detrimental to the Con­ rier and cause them to soil their shorts, we're not honor­ "I never thought of that. Thanks, Pedro. Now maybe we tadora agreements in Central America. This complaint, ing the "friendship" part of the treaty. get some justice." which was pulled out of left field, was basically ignored, Since the United States dominates, or at least tries to Before anyone had time to object, Nicaragua petitioned so now the United States has a "policy dilemma" on its dominate world opinion, someone in Nicaragua got an idea the World Court, appearing in front ofthe world's version hands. to turn the tables, probably a sneaky Sandinista visiting of Judge Wopner, saying in a sense, "We were just minding The United States will eventually have to decide whether America. our own business, suppressing some human rights and hold­ or not to change its policy in Nicaragua, or simply ignore "Hey, cousin Pedro, what's this? You Americans hold your ing elections, and los Estados Unidos decides to try to over­ the World Court's ruling. Like the People's Court, the World trials on televeezion? Do they show the death squad ex­ throw our government. They can't do that, can they?" Court can't actually "do" anything, but if the United States ecutions, too?" . The United States then objected that Nicaragua wasn't tells the World Court to take its decision and stick it you- "No, Sandinito, that eez only the People's Court. It's a even allowed to appear on "The World Court," because they know-where, we become an international bandido nation. television show for entertainment. Those trials aren't real. had never ratified the Court's authority in any official docu­ Unlike Judge Wopner and Doug Llewelyn, the Interna­ That is Senor Wopner, a famous retired judge who listens ment. The Court overruled this objection, 11-5. tional Court of Justice will take about six months to render to people's complaints that are too ridiculous for a real The United States objected again, citing the United Na­ a decision on U.S aggression. The World Court has already courtroom." tions charter, which says that the World Court can't deal ruled that the United States stop all military activity in "Que buen idea, they should have something like that with cases of armed conflict; the United Nations security Nicaragua, anyway. in Nicaragua. But what happens if you lose, do you go to council must deal with these. The Court overruled this ob­ It will be interesting to see if State Department officials jail or pay a big fine?" jection, as well, saying the matter was only a "peaceful evade this dilemma through another legal loophole, or lose "No, you just look muy estupido in front of all the people dispute" between two countries. the "Case of the Big Stick Bully." The Nicaraguan govern­ watching who know that you're not telling the truth. And The United States was now left with an easy solution ment has for now achieved a minor legal "touche," and beat the winner gets some money and matching bath towels." for the problem of jurisdiction - declaring war on Nica­ the U.S. at its own game, by heeding the simple warning: "It's too bad the world community doesn't have something ragua. "Remember, don't take the law into your own hands. Take like that for us Sandinistas." But the U.S. State Department continued to object to the it to court . . . the World Court." "They do, Sandinito, you loco, you. Haven't you ever heard Court's authority, saying that a World Court decision Ed Farrell is a Trinity sophomore Real intruder sometimes difficult to determine I spent Thanksgiving tucked away in the North Carolina confusion that neither one of them could be clearly heard. mountains, where I spent time with my family, hiked and The longer I drove away from the mountains the more read. Perhaps the most interesting reading of the week Sandy Keziah jumbled things became. was a philosophical work by the existentialist Soren 38 Special finished their song, but a commercial on Kierkegaard entitled "Fear and Trembling." life, blasting out everything the speaker said and disrup­ alcoholism took its place as the disruption (somehow that In this book, Kierkegaard explains his conceptions ofthe ting my education. It wasn't that had at first, since I could seemed appropriate). third and, in his view, the greatest mode of existence - still get the gist of what was being said, but within seconds The end of the hour was approaching and the speaker the religious stage. The book centers around the biblical it was all-out war! The speaker - 38 Special _ the speaker concluded his talk. During his final words a new voice was Abraham, who is considered to be a true "knight of faith" - 38 Special. The harder they fought for my attention the heard — it was Boy George. I couldn't hear any ofthe words because of his willingness to sacrifice his son Issac on louder it got. I kept turning up the volume to glean the to his song except one sentence that repeatedly broke Mount Moriah. few words I could. through the static - "It's a miracle." Just as Abraham decended the mountain with a greater I was struggling to hear the words but the intruding I'm not trying to promote one view or opinion in this col­ understanding of faith after his ordeal, so I felt my music broke any concentration. It finally became so loud umn. Instead I am presenting an image. Is the speaker understanding was greater when I drove through the and confusing that I didn't know what was going on. I some form of knowledge or wisdom and the music a distrac­ mountains on Sunday coming back to Duke. looked at the speedometer and I was going 80 mph on the tion or passion: or is the music some form of truth and the As I cruised down the Parkway punching the scan but­ curvy mountain road. speaker stifling convention? Maybe both the music and ton on my car radio, I happened to hear the name At this point I stepped back from the situation, turned the speaker represent truths, I don't know. Do with it what Abraham, so I listened. It was a broadcast which compared down the radio a little, and began to think about how the you wish. the covenant between God and Abraham to the covenant two forces which battled for my attention caused so much Sandy Keziah is a Trinity senior. Christ established with the church during the last supper. I was excited to hear more about the event that Kierkegaard regarded as so important, and hoped to get another perspective on it. Just as my attention and interest were held by the Letters Policy speaker, he was disrupted by the crackling interference Man's greatest gift is his voice, his ability to speak it receives, but reserves the right to withhold any let­ of another station. I turned up the volume a notch and out against the actions and opinions of others when they ters that do not adhere to the following: could easily hear every word he spoka After a minute or conflict with his own beliefs. For this reason, The • All letters must be typed and double-spaced. so the interference became worse. I could hear clearly Chronicle encourages all members of the Duke com­ • All letters must be signed and dated and must in­ enough to recognize the Pointer Sisters periodically inter­ munity to submit letters to its editorial board and to clude the author's class or department, phone number rupting the speaker; nevertheless he continued to speak use the University newspaper as a means of public and local address. The Chronicle will not publish un­ forcefully on the subject. expression. signed letters. If for any reason you wish to withhold The more I drove, the worse the static got. I became Letters to the editorial board should be mailed to Box your name from your letter when it is published, please frustrated that the R>inter Sisters were pointing away from 4696, Duke Station or delivered in person to The feel free to discuss the matter with the editorial page an interesting broadcast. Eventually they died out and Chronicle office on the third floor of Flowers building. editor. Requests for anonymity, when supported by valid once again I learned about Abraham. The Chronicle attempts to print promptly all letters reasons, will be granted. But not for long. Soon 38 Special shot its way into my Page 8 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, November 29, 1984 Comedian Kushner pioneer in corporate humor By MICHAEL MALONE It has been a hard road to humor for Kushner, who door. Then I show them where I've worked and that usually N.Y. Times News Service studied communications at the State University of New earns me .two minutes. Luckily, nobody ever says, 'Hey, we What does a fellow from New York City do with a York at Buffalo. After graduation he held jobs as a taxi don't want any humor in this company.'" master's in communications, a reputation as a theorist on driver, a loading dock worker and a teaching assistant at A one-day, $1,500 seminar tries to overcome an au­ language behavior, a law degree and a second place on the University of Southern California. dience's fear of using humor in stressful situations. "The Gong Show" with a trained plant act? Why, move to Kushner then decided to earn the master's degree in Kushner shows how the best humor arises from the situa­ San Francisco and set up shop as a humor consultant to language theory at Southern California. "Everyone wanted tion at hand. "Jokes are like mental cosmetics but people industry. me to stay for a Ph.D.," he said, "but I looked at all the are afraid to use them," he said, "because they are afraid At least that is what Malcolm Kushner did, and, as classmates ahead of me who were now driving cabs in L.A. they'll bomb. I tell them they're more likely to bomb if perhaps the ultimate testament to his ability, he lists the and figured I'd go to law school. Hastings was a good law they're not being funny." Internal Revenue Service as a client. Kushner's client list school and San Francisco was cheap, so I went there. I real­ Kushner's biggest challenge has been the Fresno service includes the San Francisco Police Department, the Univer- ly didn't intend to be a lawyer. I just wanted to be a law center of the IRS. Kushner was brought in to help s/y of Santa Clara Business School, the board of direc­ student." managers deal with subordinates during stressful situa­ tors of the California Business Bank and Navy missile After passing the bar Kushner joined the firm of Graham tions. The center's assistant director, Don Alexander, has engineers. & James but stayed only 10 months. What drew him away encountered hostility when he is introduced as the speaker For Kushner, who is 31 years old, humor is a serious was comedy. During his Manhattan days he had gone at area meetings. Thanks to the Kushner program, he has business. He views his work as a crusade to improve cor­ several times to Catch a Rising Star, the comedy club, and found a solution. porate communications. eventually worked up his own routine - what he called "I just tell them that a piece of paper is being passed "What I'm selling is not a bunch of jokes," he said, "but the world's only trained plant act: "I had ferns jump around for them to. write down their names and Social an idea based solidly on communications theory. Humor through hoops, sawed a plant in half, shot a plant out of Security numbers, and anyone who causes trouble I'll get gets more attention and retention. It's cost-effective, too. a cannon. I even had a spinning wheel of death with a back to later," Alexander said. "Of course there's no paper, Corporations spend tons of money on corporate com­ plant tied to it that I shot at." and they laugh, but I've also let thefn know that I'm not munications to convince their audience of something. Why Announcing that you are a corporate humor consultant going to take a lot of grief from them." not spend a little more on humor as insurance that peo­ is one thing; finding clients is another. "For appointments Kushner's explanation of his success is simple: "People ple will pay attention to the meat ofthe I wear a three-piece suit," Kushner said. "It gets me in the always said that if I went to law school I'd do well."

Doonesbury/Garry Trudeau

R R j_B_R;|iN Y'A W 1 Ifl 'i !l KHAIHH A:; S R i H F G ii A SIM* 1 r H 1 a T R.I .__• w.fl 1 LI S I F f- H t u u OIA'T'S I- tf i- i WWII H F NHT ! I 1 • SILiA T L S I|S H,. ifl ' F 12 Ireland P III ElA !I a_ o ••( .R 13 Tchrs.'gip. i F I:|H i: A H • i M ;; E s- 21 Cup handle . flH I I III I F S>F___H 22 Extend Ihe hand I |h 1 II 25 Friend of ^> lilt ; LDIL H V II Pythias tjf.y. ' N .. A 26 Runoff H flr fl"H_M KB 1 'It ] 1 27 Trifling ll flS T s s U H A| .1 ; 1 28 Silly . 29 Malicious gossip 40 Big top 52 Bit ot m 30 Groups ol performance 53 Border upon workers 46 "Nor — in the 54 Close by 31 Small marble iger"(F0R) 55 Actor Andrews 32 Fools 48 Edible grain 56 See 12D 35 Average 49 Rent 57 Seed covering 37 Retinue 51 Points where 58 Team at Shea 39 Ford's folly rays meet 59 King Cole Duke dominates in home opener Sports By ROBERT MARGOLIS After weeks of anticipation due to pre-season notoriety, Page 9 November 29, 1984 the fourth-ranked Duke basketball team took only three minutes to show the 8,564 Cameron Indoor Stadium fans Men's basketball what they wanted to see. Junior forward Mark Alarie scored nine of his game-high 25 points in an opening 14-2 Blue Devil spurt which paved Duke 92, William & Mary 60 the way to a 92-60 drubbing of William & Mary in Wednes­ day night's home opener. "If we emphasized one thing in this game it was to get Women's basketball off to a good start," said Alarie, who recorded his 1,000 career point in the second half. "With there being no shot Duke 93, Mars Hill 60 clock and William & Mary being a poised, slowdown type of team, we didn't want to get into a slowdown ballgame where they just held the ball." Saturday Thanks primarily to a tenacious man-tb-man pressure defense and some hot shooting from the floor, the Blue Men's basketball vs. St. Joseph's, Cameron Indoor Devils were able to control the game from the outset. After Stadium, 7:30 p.m. the early spurt, the Tribe could get no closer than eight points, whittling the deficit to 16-8, the closest it would Women's basketball at Radford, 3 p.m. come. The Blue Devils, now 2-0, forced W&M into 11 first-half Wrestling in Lafayette Invitational, 10 a.m. turnovers and shot 61.3 percent from the floor en route to a commanding 48-30 lead at the end ofthe period. PETER HA/THE CHRONICLE "That's a trademark of our team," said sophomore guard Freshman Billy King stuffs in two points to cap the Blue Men's and women's swimming vs. UNC-Wilmington, Tommy Amaker, who recorded 10 points and four assists. Devils' victory Wednesday Duke Aquatic Center, 2 p.m. "We come out there and stop them on defense, and that center Jay Bilas nine — Krzyzewski got strong perfor­ usually helps us on our offense. We get a couple of steals, mances out of his reserves. a blocked shot and that gets us going on offense and it car­ With junior guard David Henderson and sophomore ries over throughout the ballgame." center Martin Nessley still sidelined, junior forward "Just looking at it position by position, we do have an Weldon Williams scored eight points and freshman forward excellent jump-shooting team," said Alarie, who shot 11-15 Billy King, who led the Blue Devils with six rebounds, from the floor. "Tonight William & Mary tried to pack in added seven, including two electrifying slam dunks, to help the zone a little bit to prevent our inside game and we keep the pressure on in the second half. Freshman guard managed to hit those open jump shots." Kevin Strickland's efforts produced four points. William & Mary made one minor run at the Blue Devils, "Wei don's-stronger than he was last year and the year scoring the first four points in the second half, making it before," Krzyzewski said. "He can shoot the ball and he can 48-34, on buckets by Keith Cieplicki (22 points) and Kevin . I still want Henderson and Nessley back, but I'm Richardson (eight). Alarie quickly responded with two glad to see some ofthe guys on the bench doing a good job." jump shots to take the momentum back from the Tribe "We've been working hard, especially in getting our and prevent the type of second-half letdown that hurt the younger players into it and they ready to came to play Blue Devils last year. tonight," Dawkins said. "We're capable of playing a number "We talked about that at halftime," Alarie said. "One of players in the clutch." game that really sticks out in my mind is the Wake game Duke defeated tbe Indians by only two points, 70-68, last [a 79-77 Duke overtime win] where we were up 20 at year, in a markedly different affair than Wednesday night's halftime and they came back and tied it. We seemed to contest. lose something after getting a big lead. 1 think we've "I think the basketball team here at Duke has gotten gained a little killer instinct and with our experience we a whole lot better [since last season]" said William _ Mary realize that when we have a team down we have to keep coach Barry Parkhill. "It's just a different level here. I do on pressuring and keep on doing the things that got us think we are a better basketball team than we showed that lead." tonight." "I never look at a lead as comfortable," said Duke coach NOTES - Scott Coval and Matt Brooks scored eight points Mike Krzyzewski. "What we look at is execution apiece for the Indians, now 0-1. . . Nessley suited up for throughout and I think our guys have done a good job of the game but did not play, while Henderson sat on the executing our system no matter what the score is. That's bench in streetclothes . . . The Blue Devils face St. what we want to get across." Joseph's Saturday night in Cameron Indoor Stadium at MPETE R HA/THE CHRONICLE Besides the balanced scoring ofthe starting five - junior 7:30 p.m.. .,. The student section, encouraged by the Blue Johnny Dawkins scores two of his 17 points in the second guard Johnny Dawkins added 17 points and seven assists, Devils' performance, started "We want Georgetown" chants half of Duke's 92-60 over William & Mary senior forward Dan Meagher had 12 points and junior in the second half. Mars Hill becomes latest women's basketball victim By TOM LISTER In both the first and second periods, senior The Duke women's basketball team upped forward Joanne Boyle provided the Blue its record to 4-0 with a 93-60 victory over Devils with a spark off the bench. With Mars Hill Wednesday night in Cameron In­ 10:40 to play in the first half, Boyle drove door Stadium as freshman sensation Chris past two Mars Hill defenders to score her Moreland led the Blue Devils with 24 points first basket of the game. Three minutes and 73 percent shooting. later, Boyle stepped in front of a crosscourt Moreland also grabbed nine rebounds. pass and scored an uncontested layup to up "Ever since we started to recruit her, we told the Blue Devils lead to 30-16. her that she could step in and be an im­ In the second half, Boyle again came off mediate factor," said Duke coach Debbie the bench to spark the Blue Devils. With Leonard. "In the last three games she has 12:22 to play, she scored the first of three proved exactly how good she can be." consecutive baskets as the Duke lead grew Whatever hopes Mars Hill had of making to 68-42. Boyle scored 19 points while a second-half comeback were dashed by a shooting 9-17 from the field. Blue Devil surge at the beginning ofthe se­ "Joanne has been doing that for us all cond half. The Blue Devils scored the first season," said Leonard. "We start off the six points of the half to up their lead to game with our big lineup. They are able to 49-30. compete relying on their size. When we Moreland and senior guard Maura Hert­ bring Joanne off the bench, the complexion zog sparked the Blue Devil surge as they of our game changes. We are able to forced Mars Hill to commit three turnovers pressure the ball and make things happen. in the first two minutes of the half. Hert­ Teams have trouble adjusting to the switch. zog capped the early offensive spurt with "She is our David Henderson" said a and a layup. Duke never looked Leonard. "She lets us do things that we can't back. do with the starters. We can run and zone "Our problem so far this season has been press with her quickness." playing well as a team," said Leonard. "We MORELAND, NOW averaging 22.9 have so much talent and the ability to score points and shooting 70 percent from the a lot of points, but we just haven't gelled yet. field, asserted herself immediately in the The team has two players starting that first half as she scored five of the Blue weren't part of the program last year, and Connie Goins sets' up the offense during Duke's 93-60 victory o it will take them awhile to adjust." See BLUE on page 11 Indoor Stadium White Females 18 years and older who are using self-induced Services Offered Roommate Wanted vomiting as a means of weight ABORTION TO 20 WEEKS. Male or female apartmentmate survey please c< Private and Confidential GYN needed to share 2-bedroom facility with Saturday and week­ Chapel Towers Apt. for Spring 933-9761 day appointments available. '85. $178 plus utilities. Call Lille FREE PREGNANCY TEST. Collect at 3837832. Keep trying^ Paid volunteers wanted for hear­ 942-0824 Chapel Hill or call HOUSEMATE(S) WANTED: need 1 Page 10 November P9, 1984 ing test. Purpose: To obtain data male and 1 female to rent 2 on normal subjects. Timer 2 489-1386 in Durham bedrooms in fully furnished 4 hours. Pay: $5.00/hour. Vou must TUXEDO RENTALS $26 Special bedroom house. 1101 N. Duke be 21-90 years old, have normal Rate. Present Student l.D. Not Pi Phi's — Don't forget tonight's St. 2 Vi blocks from East Cam­ Announcements hearing, be in good health, and valid with any other specials. Ber- Study break at 10 p.m. in Wind­ courses for the spring term — pus. $160/180 per month. In­ free of drugs and medications nards Formal Wear. 704 9th St., sor Commons. Pi Society please come to 110 Allen Building NOW cludes utilities, water, heat, Financial Forum Series; -RUDY For more Information call: 1 from East Campus. Dring munchies Also, MAN­ for information. washer/dryer, HBO, and fireplace. PENNER, Director of Congres­ 684-4158. 286-3633. DATORY Post Initiation workshop Lease from Jan. to May. sional Budget Committee, to Creative writers, artists, poets, Main Street Clinical Assoc, 2020 at 6 p.m. in House A Commons. photographers — submit original The Affective Disorders Special­ 682-6284 after 9 p.m. Keep speak on "THE DEFICIT DILEM­ All new initiates must attend! Mai St., MA." Thursday, 7 p.m. Zener work to TOBACCO ROAD! Call ty Clinic of the Dept. of 684-7512 or leave work in Tobac­ Psychiatry at DUMC seeks nor­ psychological assistance to in­ trying! _____ Auditorium (130 Soc Psych] FREE dividuals, couples and groups. Male Roommate needed to share AND OPEN TO ALL. co Road mailbox. Office of Stu­ mal healthy volunteers of both dent Activities (Bryan Center). sexes, aged 18 to 65 years for Within walking distance of East 2-bedroom Duke Manor Apt. Religious Cultures in American Campus. Health insurance Film: Protestants. Jews. Catholics January 15th deadline (work over participation in on going $150/mo. plus Vs -utilities. Call ASOU accepted. — new film course offered spring break!). research projects. There will be George at 383-2690 early mor- a standard health screening semester. Tues/Thurs Kappas, scholarship banquet Typing on PC: Text-$1.35/pg dot nings or late nights. before study begins. This re­ tonight, 6:15 p.m. in House A. matrix print (double spaced): Erwin Sq. Apt. — 2 bedroom 2 2:30-4:35. Eng. 171.2 For more quires that subjects spend two ELECTIONS Even If you don't have a 4.0 come $1.60/pg letter quality print (dou­ bath and loads of space. It's just info call 489-1562. half days at the clinic, one for and enjoy wine & cheese with ble spaced; for more info call one block off of East and is close pre-study health screening and CLASSES for January 1985 your sisters! Becky at 493-1587 after 5:30 to everything (except, of course, GMAT now forming at the one for the actual study itself. P-m. N.Y.). Call Tim at 684-4321 (days) Don't forget sorority RUSH-SIGN­ STANLEY H. KAPLAN Education Vote Today The latter involves standard tests or 286-3755 (nights). UPS are Tues.. Dec. 12th from 12 of endocrine functions. There will TYPING/WORD PROCESSING. Center. CALL 489-8720 for $1.25 per page. Free correction LSerious Grad or Postdoc to information. in the runoff for on to 4 p.m. in the Panhel Office be a $40 reimbursement for par­ (105B Alumni Lounge). This is ticipation. Interested subjects •of typos. Other services, share spacious condo near E. Tobacco Road writers — I or so­ your last chance to sign up if you please call Dr. Loosen or Dr. reasonably priced, include: pro­ Campus w/ prof, woman. $215 meone will be at the East Cam­ Executive want to rush this year. Bring $5 Thadaniat 684-2884. ofing, pickup and delivery, rought + V_ uts. 688-8598. , pus Center Monday, Wednesday, Waitress _ Part-time hostess draft availability, overnight and and Friday at 4:30 p.m. the^e two Vice-President possible. DON'T FORGETH needed. Apply in person 9-11 emergency typing servies, charts Wanted To Rent weeks for help and conferences. a.m., 2-4 p.m. Ivy Room and graphs. Call Burns Enter­ Interviewers please pick up tapes Restaurant. 1000 W. Main St., prises at 489-6896 from 10 a.m. Three responsible male students 9:00 a.m.- to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. need house or apartment to live I have two tickets to Bruce Durham. NEED A PAPER TYPED? I'll do it in during spring semester (from Springsteen (floor seats) in Atlan- 5:00 p.m. Healthy Males, 18 to 28 years for you — six pages or more, $1 January 1 to April 1. 1985). Be ta. December 16. Interested? old, with parents who have high a page. Call Erica at 682-1921. glad to sublet, assume lease, etc. Call Doug 684-0454. blood pressure, can earn $50 in Typing, Word Processing — Good Call 684-7944 or 684-1041. What can we do to prevent studies on physiological rates, good work — Major Leaving Duke and stuck with an human rights violations? Call in Perkins, responses to stress. Time re­ papers, thesis, dissertation, let­ apartment lease till summer? We Amnesty International on WXDU, quired 4-6 hours. If interested, ter quality printer. Call 544-7465. are interested in subleasing an call 684-2941. Ask for Nan 88.7 FM, Sunday. Dec. 2, 7-8 East Campus, Nights or leave message. apt. for the spring. Call Anil or p.m., 684-8870. Durham/Duke McCown. R.N. EYEGLASSES — Benson Optical Hercules at 684-2434 or chapter's activities during Dec Bryan Center. Normal Volunteers for medical in the Duke Eye Center offers dis­ 688-7143. y 3-10, Stop Torture Week, will be clinical research projects (drugs count to employees and and medical devices). Must be students. 684-4012. Wanted to Buy Contribute to the prevent!on of 18 years of age or older and in QUALITY TYPING. Call Pat rape — Come to RAPE AWARE­ good health. Males/Females. Neems 684-5884 (day) or NEEDED: ELECTRIC BASS of NESS DAY - Sunday, Dec. 2 - AEPhi SENIORS Senior gathering GOURMET Fees and compensation paid to 477-6765 (night). moderate price. Also small Self-defense lecture (12-1:30, 10:30 pm House C Commons applicants accepted for program. MASSAGE: This time of year it's amplifier for same. Call Elissa, Reynolds Theater): self-defense Room Thursday night — Show Call 919-682-6140. _ luxury, it's a necessity. Greg 489-7325 evenings. __ workshop (1:30-3. Von Canon MEXICAN CHILDCARE. COMPANIONSHIP, that spirit! Need 2 Messiah Performance Hall — women only); Men's mfor- PLAY, 2-3 afternoons per week interested in Business? . . . Tickets at Duke Chapel — any Business Endeavors, a business next semester. Ages 1 1/2 and 9. performance — preferably Friday (1:30-3): Rally wth speakers interest group is meeting today Car needed. 684-5830, — will pay EXTRA! Call Sherry at (3:30-4:30. Main Quad): Take at 4 p.m. in 226 Allen New Papagayo 4 89-0353 681-4625 or 493-3359. Back the Night March members welcome! Child care: Professional couple (4:30-5:30): Candlelight vigil seeks responsible person to care Available for Rent [5:30. East Campus): Dinner and T-Shirts 4 and 5 year old girls in Hope _ . live music in the Coffeehouse. •Orr J-U_gtn£cBJ Valley home — Tues 12-2 _ Wed. just in time D Single room within walking INTERACTION COMMITTEE L. 3 12-3 starting Jan. 9. Own distance of East Campus. 920 meeting tonight at 7 p.m. in transportation and references re­ Buchanan Blvd. Call Wendy Fine Japanese European for the Holidays! :•: Our Duke Union 3ffice. IMPORTANT! quired Call 493-4760 or 286-7476 PLEASE be there Auto Repair 489-6176 after 6pm. , Special Includes ' 2704 Chapel Hill Blvd. 1 fur- SPAGHETTI VS. KARTOFFELN- Professional and Student typists yard: rent negotiable; 286-9853. SALAT. Come and hear Italian .Costum Durham — 489-5800 3 Styles to needed for Teacher-Course i Room for rent in two bedroom and German students discuss Evaluaion Book. January 3-8. Call jellybean th current European issues. Sat. house, Guess Road near Nor­ Presbyterian Campus Ministry: 6 Stu (383-9147) or Harris Dec. 1st. 7:30 p.m. at Interna­ p.m. Thursday Chapel Basement. choose from: (684-0755). thgate; pets OK. 1-929-1757 tional House Refreshments will Fun, food, fellowship! Questions? B evenings be served. Sponsored by Intl. Darryl's 1890 Resuaurant is ac­ Call 383-6927. Baseball $5 cepting applications for the Audiences, Production person­ following positions: Dining room For Sale Students planning house nel, and cast of "Merrily We Roll Muscle $4 & kitchen personnel. Please app­ courses for the spring term — Along" are urged to open post­ ly in person Mon. — Thurs. 2-4 CLOSET SALE - My closet sale come to 110 Allen Building NOW p.m. and Sat. 2-3 p.m. 4603 is almost over, but I still have two mortem TODAY at 5 p.m. in Fred T-Shirt $4 for information. Theatre (02 Flowers). Help us do Chapel Hid Blvd. Durham great items left: a pair of amaz­ GAY GAY GAY GAY GAY GAY GAY better next time! ing NORDICA SKI BOOTS (only GAY. The Duke Gay and Lesbian ATTETION ALL SORORITY used twice, si.e 8-9, and going Alliance Phone Hours for this WOMEN: The positions of 501 Douglas St. for a mere $100 O.B.O.). And. an week are: Thurs. 7-9 p.m. and Fri. TREASURER and VICE- AKAI TAPE DECK which also hap­ 12-2 p.m. Give yourself a chance, (off Erwin Rd.) - perience in the design and pens to be in excellent condition PRESIDENT of RUSH for the : Call us first! « call 684-3043. Panhellenic Association are still 286-1910 J development of business ap­ and is out of the closet for $100 Get your paper published in the available. Petitions are in 105B plications software on a part-time OBO (For those of you well vers­ L basis (10-20 hrs/wk) at a com­ ed i classified speak, OBO. DUKE JOURNAL OF POLITICS. Alumni Lounge and 109 Flowers Anything vaguely related to petitive hourly wage. Database i £25€Bu \ means OR BEST OFFER). Call Mr. Lounge. They are DUE: 5 p.m. Entertainment politics is acceptable. Place sub- Nov. 30 in 105B Alumni Lounge. knowledge preferred but not re­ vtimejt 684-1006. Contact your Panhel rep. for quired For more information cail £••*•].C'1:M.;">*[•:.'( _c I I he Music Loft- Spend your free Student Activities Center. Ques­ more info. Thanks! Welcome to an evening of music, Mark 493-602? (after 6 p.m.). time retaxing with a guitar or tions — call Maria 684-7685. Duke Democrats Meeting: This is conversation, food and drink with Students interested in part-time keyboard. New location next to ADPi's; Important meeting 6:30 it — Kirwan Says Goodbye. Elec­ the North Carolina Student Rural Lost and Found £_•<_ Campus in November. 1918 Health Coalition at the Duke East p.m. in 114 Physics. Elections; tions Tonight. 7:30 p.m. 229 Soc. come! Good opportunity for com­ Perry St. 286-9539. _ Campus Coffeehouse 9 p.m. munications, marketing, adver­ bring balloon bucks. See ya'll. LOST Se>ko watch ( MUSIC ENTHUSIASTS — I unfor­ Wednesday. Nov. 28th. tising and sales. Send resume to tunately must sell 2 pairs of JAZZ. The World Famous DANNIE Imagery Magazine. PO. Box 3815 tickets for the Duke Artists series RICHMOND QUINTET will be ap­ Chapel Hill. N.C. 27515-3851. [at (ace value). Vladimir pearing in Page Auditorium on LOST: Homecoming Weekend — Ashkenazy and also the Rotter­ Thursday. November 29th at 8 dam Philharmonic. Call Rafe at p.m. This is a benefit concert for Study Abroad Blue reversible down coat 3/4 684-1006. Classified Info.: the Mary Lou Williams Jazz length with brown mohair gloves Festival "85." This is one you Students planning to study in pocket. REWARD. Please call STEAL THIS — My entire album Rates (per day): $2 for first 15 words don't want to miss!! Tickets on abroad Spring 1985 — Dont 684-0073. collection (108 records) $375 Tapedeck $100- Turntable $60. 101 each additional word sale at Page Box Office. forget ORIENTATION MEETING — LOST: Pair of gold-rimmed Thursday. November 29.3:15pm, glasses in tan case. Call Steve 684-0171^ ______Help Wanted Von Canon C A NEW KAYPRO computer with Discounts: 5% off for 3 consecutive days 684-1725. STUDY TOUR TO CHINA: Three printer, double disk drive, word 10% off for 5 or more consecutive days processor and more! Must sell to White Females. 18 to 35 weeks. May 6-26, seven cities: Correspondence weighing 20 percent or more see Dr. Lacy. Divinity School. pay the bills. Call Lynn at 684 0360_ Where: Bring to 308 Flowers Bldg. Deposit Box. above ideal weight who are In­ SOPHOMORES: It's not too late Wanted -OR- Mail to: Box 4696 D.S.; Durham, NC 27706. terested in participating in a paid to APPLY TO DUKE/KENT EX­ '81 SUBA.RU WAGON, Excellent research survey, contact JoAnn CHANGE PROGRAM FOR ONE I am 37 and a Blk. Male (Sag.). Condition. 4WD. AM-FM Stereo, at 933-9761; YEAR OF STUDY AT A BRITISH Mature, intelligent and have no $4600 or best offer. 493-3032 SECRETARY part-time for UNIVERSITY. Reception and slide bias or prejudices. Expecting the after 5 p.ro synagogue. Dictaphone and presentation on Kent, this Friday. same. Write: Leonard Meadows good with people Call 489-7062 November 30th. 3:30 p.m., 229 #177-009 PO. Box 69, London. and leave message. Allen. Ohio 43140-0069. See Glassies on page 11 Thursday, November 29, 1984 THE CHRONICLE Page ll

CLASSIES from page 10 lappy BARGAIN OF THE DAY! Electric;.! neighbor! No screaming for three Blue Devils beat Mars Hill Typewriter $110; JVC Stereo Set Religious Cultures i weeks? We'll believe it when we AM/FM Cassette (new $340| now Film: Protestants, Jews. Catholics can't hear it. Hope you get your $250; large writing/working table — new film course offered spring king! Love ya. Nicki. Deatrice. (6 ft x 3 ft) $40 with modern semester. Tues. /Thurs. Ten. Sarah. Navjit. chromium plated chair $20; as Moreland leads blowout 2:30-4:35. Eng. 171.2. For more RA.B.: Happy 22nd to the best Used bicycle for men $30; info call 489)562. 2nd time rounder I've ever defense," said Leonard. "It is going to take almost new Golf Set '•Nor­ BLUE from page 9 DAVID — I'm not getting tired of known. Cheers to a successful us time to adjust to playing against a zone." thwestern "with bag and plenty of pizza/movie project, and I'm glad you yet; you and Needlenose are Devils' first nine points. "The last three games I have shot more balls (bonus; free elctrical home you like "the neighborhood" Hap­ putting device] $60; 2 table welcome at my place anytime. py day. Love your "Board rooms The 6-1 forward scored her first basket effectively," said Hertzog. "[Ibnight] was one lamps $10 each; wing fill bed The_ Dog Lady. ___ after slipping behind the Mars Hill defense of those games where I didn't feel comfor­ cover $10; electrical iron with 50's-siyle Rockabilly Party — Psi are better" fan. "You know free iron board $10: new Camera U section, Friday November her? . . . " on the baseline. Moreland powered the table shooting. I *ry to concentrate on other Kodak Disk 4000 with built in 30th, 10 p.m. Come dressed to Rene A: I know your name and layup past two defenders and converted the things when that happens." flash and bag $25. Call now! dance to Elvis, Buddy Holly, your pretty blue eyes, and I want for a three-point play. Each of her The Blue Devils led Mars Hill 43-28 at Chuck Berry, the Stray Cats and to know you. Go to SAE's once in 471-6354. many more! awhile! — An 3dmirer. four first-half field goals came on similar halftime, but their first-half performance 1976 VW Dasher. Must sell before post-up moves. SHARE. Student Hedonism And ATTENTION SORORITY WOMEN: was marred by sloppy play oh defense and Related Experiences. Were just The positions of TREASURER Senior forward Candy Mikels also con­ eight turnovers. seeking new friends. Call Liz and and VICE-PRESIDENT of RUSH tributed 11 first-half points to the Duke ef­ "At times Mars Hill got the ball into the SYNTHESIZER: Yamaha CS-5 Nate, for these are the voyeurs of for the Panhellenic Association fort, making three jump shots from the free post at will," said Leonard. "As big as our monoplionic. boss program­ tfie Starship Epworth! throw line. Mickels finished the game with front line is, we should not let that happen. mable drum machine, Deltalab We're holding a TORCH up to you 105B Alumni Lounge and 109 18 points and a team-high 14 rebounds. qigital delay. Call John 684-1596 DOUGLES GIBSON! Congratula­ Flowers Lounge. Contact your Stronger teams are going to take advantage 1979 brown convertible MGB tions on winning the TORCH Panhel rep. for more info. Thanks! "Candy has asserted herself on the court of that weakness." with newly-installed 1981 engine, SONG TRILOGY trivia contest. more this year," said Leonard. "She is more Although the Blue Devils are 4-0, they DEANS NATHANS, WASIOLEK only 21.000 miles, $3800. Call Condolances to other entrees, and WILSON; PROFESSORS willing to shoot." have yet to face tough competition. That 1005988 or 683-3073. but TICKETS ARE STILLON SALE grand new hardboard RENTE CHRISTENSEN MAUSKOPF, The Blue Devils got little offensive help will change when they travel to Radford, AT PAGE AUDITORIUM. ROBISHEAUX, and ROLLESTON; game for $9. Buy the game of from normally productive guards Hertzog Va., this weekend to face Radford College. LEMUR! — Happy Birthday to the "BLITZKREIG" GESCHWIND, Pete skill that is now in vogue wildest member of the Primate "SPORTSQUIZGOD" HIGGINS, and Connie Goins. The two, who were com­ "This weekend will be a good test for us," Call 684-0073 evenings. family! Have a great day, and stay BILL "MANDATE" LIPSCOMB, HAT ing into the game averaging 12.3 and 14.7 said Leonard. "We expected Furman and Bonus Flight coupon good for Vs off those couches in the ladies "DOUBLE-X" MORGAN, HODMAN points respectively, combined for five first- William & Mary to give us tougher games. price on roundtrip.coach fare room! Love always — Schooner. "(T'S REAL" SABETI, and half points. There is no question Radford will be good. anywhere United flies. $75 or Stephanie — SURFS UP! How CHARLIE "INCOMPREHENSIBLE" best offer. Call 383-8396 after about those waves on the Trinity YUE will all be at the COLLEGE "Our guards are big and we don't get as We can't afford to make the mistakes that 4:30 p.m. waterbed. Sea sick much? Drink­ BOWL CONFLICT. Bryan Center much chance to post them up against a zone plagued us today against them." BACK DOOR RECORDS XMAS ing and surfing don't mix. Pi love. Film Theatre, today at 3 p.m. SALE 25% on $1 OFF ALL LPs C. The COLLEGE BOWL Conflict is Great Rock, Jaz;, Classical. WOMEN'S SOCCER: Grasshop­ Consumated in a Culminating Crescendo: Cbryan Center Blues. Movies, Country, Comedy, per Party at May's (314 Ander­ . Also tapes, rock posters, and Ctheatre. Ctoday, C3 p.m. SWAT son, Apt. R), Fri., 9 p.m. Bring TEAMS WILL COMB THE CAM­ gift . : f I r: 136 E. your uniforms and any pictures. Rosemary, Lower Level NCNB PUS TO CRUSH POCKETS OF HAPPY BIRTHDAY JEFF SANDLER RESISTANT NON-ATTENDEES. Plaza near Ram Theatres Chapel — HAPPY BIRTHDAY JEFF Hill Mon.-Sat. 12-6 p.m. SANDLER — HAPPY BIRTHDAY Call 684-2663 933-0019. BUY-TRADE-SELL. Help make banners for the Rape JEFF SANDLER — HAPPY BIRTH- Awareness Day TAKE BACK THE 72 Plymouth Satellite. Excellent DAY JEFF SANDLER ______NIGH T MARCH. Sat., Dec. 1st, 10 condition FM /Cassette. ASDU ELECTIONS: Vote for the a.m., 1300 Green St. All are when you see news + epi's. Very reliaQie Local/ Executive Vice President on highway d ving. Must se . going Thurs.. Nov. 29 at Perkins, East Take hot e for MBMC will meet at 7 p.m Friday Christma s! $750 Campus, Bryan Center, Trent and at MLV Cultural Center. Please 286-5414 Engineering._9_a.rn. to 5 p.m. be prompt, bring your robes. This Reunion is definitely in store. Bought new portable Electric will nc_- oe a long meeting. Let's do it Trent I '83-84! Typewriter for typing course. H.D.— Id someone with first two Hideaway tonight. 10 p.m. Dropped the course and now l.D., you have Burkett's GO PSI U! GO PSI U! Best of luck have a typewriter I can't use. out Garveyism and 1 bad- The Travel Center in today's College Bowl. Love, the IX Tell them you saw Smith Corona. Call 544-2277 or ly neec to borrow it. Please call Little Sisters. Larry a X-2663 or 286-5642. it in THE CHRONICLE 905 W. Main Street BRIGHTLEAF SQUARE M-F 9-5 682-9378 "LOOKAT Sat 12-4 683-1512 US NOW" quik^H^Jshop Jacques Bonet Champagne $2,85 We've Redecorated All Our Rooms Moosehead Beer $4.05 6 pk. At the Durham Hilton, we have completely renovated and redecorated all 140 of Beer • Largest Selection in Town our guest rooms and executive quarters. Wine • Great Variety & Good Prices

Brand new, cherry Drexel furniture. Bright new draperies and carpet. Every­ Kegs Available thing is "sparkling" fresh and clean. Sports Prediction Sheets All of our same friendly staff is still here. They are working doubly hard to make • New York Times • Washington Post sure that our guests will receive first-class service and accommodations at the * In & Out of State, Daily & Sunday Newspapers Durham Hilton Inn. Plan to visit us soon. Sam's Southern Pride Car Wash "Eliminates Hand Washing''

Open 6:30 a.m. to midnight Erwin Rd. at East-West Expressway XHILTON 286-4110 The Hilton Inn,2424 Erwin Road.Durham,North Carolina 27705 (919) 286-7761 Groceries • Newsstand Page 12 THE CHRONICLE Thursday, November 29, 1984

ISRAEL UNITED PEACE STATES

The peoples of the United States and Israel share common ideals, values, and spiritual roots. Both countries are committed to democracy, justice, and freedom. WE AFFIRM OUR UNYIELDING SUPPORT FOR THE STATE OF ISRAEL and its right to live within secure and recognized borders free from threats or acts of force. It is essential for the Congress and Administration to continue the bi-partisan policies which will enhance Israel's economic recovery and military security. These policies are beneficial to Americans and Israelis, and to all lovers of freedom. In light of this consensus, we commemorate the November 29, 1947 United Nations resolution which fed to the establishment of the state of Israel. That resolution reflected the high ideals and fundamental principles of the U.N., sadly neglected in recent years. The Arab rejection of the November 29 resolution has led to a continued state of war in the Middle East. We call on Israel's neighbors to end-their rejectionist policies and join the process which will make peace a reality. Peace between Israel and her neighbors, as reflected in the Camp David accords, must encompass normal diplomatic and commercial relations, the end of hostile propaganda, and the termination of political and economic warfare. There must be mutual understanding and respect by all peoples of the Middle East. When these goals are realized, Israel and all her neighbors will enjoy harmony, prosperity, and peace. This Ad paid for by the following: Mike Adlin Lou Mintz Teddy Xanders Katherine Bryan Andy Banoff Al Nelson John Zeitler Tracey Haith Jeff Nadaner Jason Jackson Mike D'Antonlo Mindie Nodvin Andrew Ringel Tim Walter Henry Kohn Deborah Geering Nathan Siegel Audrey Eve I off Greg Janicik Anne Montany Howard Shoobe Lawrence Brown Erik Herzog Monica Reid Eric Chabinsky Charles VanSant Eric Fine Steven Royster Keith Mandel Adam McMarcus Scott Gatje Dina Siegel Lee Rubin Eric Prusan Mike Fridholm Lisa Auslander Paul Bernhard Llevelyn Rhone Hal Burnett Debbie Snyder Joshua Rievman Rob Brager Craig Richardson Debbie Schwartz Stephen Sisson Chris Brice Neil Roth Brian Gelfand Jenna Jolovitz Dan Clancy Ed Ruiz Martlca Lederman Brigltte Ball Immanuel Spira Barb Sisson Matt Kaliff Brian Klshner Gordon Berger Trein Schlffelbian Jane Gottesman Neat Horen Jeff Wertheim Jon Schindel Leslie Spasser Frank Spector Michael Jabionover Mark Swartzberg Rachel Braun Michael Rosovsky Joan Taback Laurel Seltzer Liz Cohen Suzanne Winltsky Mark Newman Jonathan Perlman Laura Kitchman Brian Model Harris Schild Steven Cellial Dave Simon Rebecca Leader Larry Taub Daniel Horwitz Rebecca Franco Melissa Widen Steven Chabinsky Peter Applebaum Mike Wolitzer Terri Gordon Paul Collins Jim Schnabel Lynne Cohen Kristlne Ristaino Dom Coric Phil Shaikun Lisa Simon Stacey Stern Mark Dorosin Brad Sherman Debbie Waitman Jill Franks Kenny Dupee Stacey Sultar Risa Satloff Dino Flores Margaret Campell Barry Brokaw Kimberly Stolychnberg Andy Fox Karen London Bennett King Jeff Capri Ed Freedman Daniel Cohen James Tarlton Marlene Wagner John Blank Alan Baklor Heidi Albers David Kapper Neil Kalin Frederic Resnic Nancy Safir Peggy Needle Louis Kornberg Lynne Aronson Willie Berg Michelle Cascardi Steve Rosen Karen Magid Peter Block Jody Berger Lowell Singer Julie Hoffman Tina Koppersmith Wendy Cramer Steve Edbril Pete Smith Hallie Kostrinsky Jonathan Wood Kenny Blank Lisa Levy Marie Prelog Julie Rosen Zachari Mateev Steve Goodman Bill Swotes Roni Hertan James Scheinmen Rich Gladstone Larry Walke Shari Lewis Rabbi Frank Fischer Pat Hayes Dave Workman Janine Wulfsohn and DIPEC John Heacock Mike Swotes Dan Hanfling i_r_\ r^ __n _ r \ m^# — The Chronicle'sweekly entertainment supplement

Thursday, November 29, 1984

SIGNET CLASSIC

By RtCK HEYMAN AND FLORA GARCIA 1984, the long awaited year of George Orwell's nightmare, has nearly run its course. And although the presidential debates might have given the casual viewer the sinking feeling that doublespeak was indeed the government's official language, 1984 was more a typical year of pop culture trends than one of Big Brother watching us. This week R&R has compiled a list of what's in and what's out in our "Gothic Disneyland" and in "The Real World," whatever that is. Remember, however, that the nature of style requires that some things become so in that they're out and other things are so out that they will probably never be in. So without further ado or doublespeak, here's the official R&R Ins and Outs list for 1984. OUTS INS C.l. Hideaway Add-a-beads Twist-a-beads Ben Bennett Nancy Hogshead Compassion Selfishness After-Christmas finals Before-Christmas finals Mondale Reagan Econ PPS David Bowie Bruce Springsteen Briefs Boxer shorts Water on West Body odor Substance Style Grass on the quad Dirt patches ASDU Apathy Southern pride Comparing to Ivies Ivies Hot Colleges Sinkholes Roads Michael Jackson Prince Traffic circle stop signs Rolling Stops Central America groups ROTC Pigmania Trivial Pursuit Jean jackets Duke sweatshirts Bo Derek Mariel Hemmingway General Hospital All My Children Diane Keaton Meryl Streep Alan Alda William Hurt Dean Smith Coach "K" Baggie jeans Cropped jeans See INS AND OUTS on page 4 Page 2 Thursday, November 29, 1984 PlayMakers present poignant 'Our Town'

By FLORA GARCIA well and were able to keep the momentum at a cons­ undue burden on an audience already digesting heavy Bringing New Hampshire to Chapel Hill, the tant, sustained level. material. PlayMaker's Repertory Company continues what has been Wilder's specifications in the play's text are for no cur­ The play reveals universal truths and has a poignant, a strong and innovative season with an impressive presen­ tain, no scenery, and a bare stage at the opening of the disconcerting ending, which PlayMakers' effectively tation of Thornton Wilder's "Our Tbwn." play. The set changes are not to be hidden from the au­ executed. Set in Grover's Corners, New Hampshire, "Our Town" dience, an element which initially can be disconcerting. The PlayMakers' production is an outstanding perfor­ shows us glimpses ofthe lives ofthe town's residents by The supporting cast was strong and a chorus of women mance of an American classic, and will run at the Paul taking us through time spotting town residents. The play cackling, as George's and Emily's mothers fed imaginary Green Theatre on the UNC-Chapel Hill campus Wednes­ uses Wilder's blunt staging and homey dialogue to il­ chickens, provided a large dose of comic relief. day through Sunday until Dec. 9. Call 962-1121 for more information. lustrate how basic life can be. Lighting was outstanding and emphasized the set's Opening with an introduction to the town itself, the au­ blandness without making it appear washed. The sim­ dience is led through the story by the Stage Manager who ple furniture and stairs kept the focus on the powerful fills in the set, introduces new characters, and explains and dynamic dialogue. what has occurred in between our visits to Grover's Cor­ ners. The PlayMakers' production featured James Prit- chett (Dr. Matt Riwers from NBC's The Doctors") in a con­ The company attempted to use a heavy New England WW vincing, professional role. dialect which proved, at times, uncomfortable and forc­ Through the Stage Manager, the audience is introduced ed. The events in "Our Town," as well as the characters to Emily Webb (played by Kathryn Meisle) and George in the play, are entirely without geographic home or even Gibbs (played by Mahlon Bouldin), who are only young date, and to utilize such a different, strained, accent placed An American Classic this Holiday neighbors at the story's inception. George and Emily grow For the Entire Family to Enjoy up together, grow into love and get married. Bouldin pro­ ved a shy, innocent George in contrast to Meisle's confi­ \_Xac dent, intelligent Emily. The duo complimented each other Don't you know Town PAUL GREEN THEATRE someone who would S*__Ai _l_\l6 love our jewelry by Thornton Wilder for Christmas? :: 5 & 9 pm; Sun: 2 & 7 pm

" CENTER SAT. _ SUN. MATINEES m THEATER ifm

H 1 MISSING IN ACTION (R) 7:00 & ' (••. 3:05, 5:05, 7:05, 9:05 5:00 P.M. SAT., SUN °-j__«2&_^_ II COUNTRY (PG) CLASSIC MATINEE 3:00 _ 5:00 PM. WEEKDAYS 2:30, 4:45, 7:00 8, 9:15 3:00 PM. ONLV SAT.. SUN BOGART'S BACKI 'PETRIFIED FOREST'' ends Fri "ACROSS THE PACIFIC' DEC 1 H III JUST THE WAY YOU ARE (PG) -• 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00 "holi N°TER 489-4226 !TJ,' IsBfflsK - University Square Chapel Hill 967-8935 Quadrangle Pictures presents MAY & AUGUST GRADUATES

REMEMBER RESUMES FOR SIRS COMPANIES DUE NO LATER THAN DECEMBER 3 FOR ALL JANUARY INTERVIEWS DECEMBER 10 FOR FEBRUARY 1-22 INTERVIEWS

Admission $2,00 Saturday & Sunday, December 1 & 2 DONT MISS THE DEADLINE FOR THESE 70 COMPANIES • p.m. . Theater Thursday, November 29, 1984 Culture Club's stupid And people are stupid, and their music means nothing, so don't buy this record

By DINO CARLAFTES possibility did therefore exist that Culture Martin Luther King, Jr., rock manager Culture Club sprang up in 1982 at the 'Waking Up with the House Club might release their best work to date. Brian Epstein and Beatie John Lennon. cliched "right time" — when the music in­ "Waking Up With the House on Fire," in Culture Club, however, practices none of dustry eagerly anticipated the emergence on Fire,' in addition to the addition to the most awkwardly inane ti­ the bold "art as realism" beliefs of Farmer, of a new- platinum-selling bubble-gum pop tle in recording history is one of those very preaches none of the social and political cult figure, a phenomenon which has the most awkwardly inane title few albums that lacks any redeeming ideals of King, exhibits none ofthe daring tendency of rearing its ugly head every few in recording history is one feature. creativity of Epstein and has none ofthe years or so in the rock business. The latest radio single, "The War Song," charming counter-culture irreverance of of those very few albums provides an indicator of what constitutes Lennon. that lacks any redeeming "Waking Up." A blatant reworking ofthe The only fascinating thing about "Wak­ "Tumble 4 Ya'" formula, "The War Song" ing Up" is revealed by a careful considera­ feature. expands to new, unchartered regions of tion of its lyrics, song titles and songs bubble-gum pop in a doomed-at-inception themselves. By a simple twist of fate, or (if Culture Club's music quickly became an­ effort to produce the most catchy sing-a­ one is willing to attribute such cleverness On th cillary to their antics and there was no long of the year. to the Boy) by the strongest of intentions, D_- _ doubt that novelty, and not talent, was the Poorly disguised as a protest song, there an ironic message emerges. For example, rCBCw commercial cornerstone of the group. The is no denying that the only reason for this "Dangerous Man" asks, "are we not men, novelty has now worn so thin that the ap­ cut is to give a 12" disco record producer can you save us; are we not men, did you Epic Records, however, got more than it palling mediocrity of Culture Club's music a new assignment. Hopefully, the public try?" as an amateurish ribbing of the had bargained for: a quartet of British is finally exposed, for all to see, on their won't be shanghaied this time; the moronic band's own problems with gender popsters, master expositors of the catchy, latest outing, "Waking Up With the House lyrical refrain of "The War Song" alone, is identification. albeit mundane tune, fronted by a her­ on Fire." enough to churn the stomaches of even afi- Another song speaks of Fats Waller and maphroditic tatterdemalion purportedly Readers may suspect a predisposed desire cianados of children's TV-show theme the charms of jazz while churning out the representing - both "politically" and in this reviewer to blindly attack Culture songs: "War is stupid, and people are most cliched blues arrangement ever put fashionably - every member of the Club without giving them an objective stupid, and love means nothing, in some on vinyl and calls itself "Crime Time." And cultural melting pot. Culture Club became listen. Though "eager anticipation" would strange quarters." in a song which blatantly plagiarizes the ultimate cartoon band - the Archies greatly overstate my feelings, I indeed Moreover, Boy George has finally suc­ Wham's "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go," in drag. awaited the arrival ofthe band's third disc cumbed to the temptations inherent with by simply slowing down the tempo. Boy Once "Kissing to be Clever" topped the with a sort of morbid curiosity. star status. Whereas once he assured fans George confesses, "I love a mannequin!" charts, Culture Club became the center of There is no question that Culture Club that his schtick was all in fun, he now at­ Culture Club will cease to exist in a very a heated, yet endearingly silly controver­ has recorded some fine top-40 fluff. "Time: tains new heights of pretentiousness. short while if this sort of thing happens sy. There were those who praised, even Clock of My Heart" was one ofthe better As if setting himself up as some kind of again. But why listen to me? Take it from emulated Boy George and of course those hits of 1982 and tracks like "I'll Tumble For a modern-day Solomon concluding that the Boy himself: It would be an "Unfor­ — either threatened by his message of an­ Ya'," "Karma Chameleon" and "Miss Me war is stupid wasn't enough, the Boy had tunate Thing" (Side One, track three) if you drogynous lifestyles or simply revolted by Blind" combined just the right proportions the audacity to thank the following people were to go out and buy the third Culture a sacheting, no-talent fairy - who would of soul, calypso, blues and sterile techno- (among a list of thousands) for inspiring Club album, which could aptly be subtitl­ gladly string him up, braid-by-braid. pop to warrant a casual listen. The slight him: actress Frances Farmer, statesman ed "Mistake No. 3" (Side One, track five).

You are invited to attend a Fall Reductions up to 40% off! A Before Christmas Presentation Selection at After Christmas Prices on Investment Banking

:00 p.m., Monday, December 3 Von Canon A Bryan Center

Open invitation to sf/bstfrer all undergraduates Reception to follow

Always Priced Below Retail Parkway Plaza, Durham , Burlington Manufacturers (behind South Square Mall) Outlet Center Mon.-Fri. 10-8, Sat. 10-6, (1-85 Exit 145 B) Lehman Brothers Sun. 1-6 Mon. -Fri. 9-9, Sat. 9-6, Sun.1-6 Shearson Lehman/American Express Inc. Page 4 Thursday, Novemt R&R's Ins and Outs Li INS AND OUTS from page 1

OUTS INS C

Concern for human suffering Conservatism R Duke Soccer Duke Basketball Fi Androgynous clothes Sex-typed clothes B Boy George Masculinity Y; The new Duke President Pre-med Pre-business D THI FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON Motel-like dorms Residential Colleges 0 Greeks Greeks T. OP shorts Jams T. Houses off East Campus Off-campus apartments P( Plastic shoes Boots Fl Quiche Bagels Ty New York Washington B< MTV David Letterman Ci Robert Redford Mel Gibson Te Nestle's boycott Campbells Boycott Ul Hacky-sack Quad football Tl Aerobics West Campus weight room P; Billy Idol Cyndi Lauper Le Duran Duran U2 El "Hey, thank you! Thank you! That was 'Tie a Yellow Ribbon.' ... Now, what say we all really get down?" Dan Rather Ted Koppel PI BMWs Saabs M 5-/2 you CAN ALWAYS TELL Cabbage Patch dolls Masters of the Universe o <£? C5 WHEN HE'S BEEN LISTENIN6 TO LEO SU5CA6UA TAPES.. Peanuts Far Side c Break dancing I ' 3 Pearls '/vi1^"' Rhinestones "*"<__ hz: Torn sweatshirts Torn T-shirts

John and Sue from Duke welcome the community to n COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY CHINA INN SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS

Daily Luncheon Specials For careers in: International Banking and Business - Mixed Beverages - Mon-Thu 11:30-10:00 Federal, State and Local Government / The United Nations •SZECHUAN • HUNAN • Fri 11:30-10:30 • PEKING • Private Voluntary Organizations and the Media Sat 4:30-10:30 • CANTONESE • Sun 12:30-10:00 • SALT, OIL or MSG SIPA has been successfully placing students in these positions since 1948. Mixed FREE DISHES' For information or an application, write to: Beverages School of International and Public Affairs Office of Admissions 1420 International Affairs Building Columbia University • New York, New York 10027

2701 Hillsborough Road 286-9007 • 286-2444 ty, November 29, 1984 Page 5 List for 1984

OUTS INS

Rocky Horror Repo Man Frosty the Snowman Grinch Barron's College Guide New York Times Magazine Yankees Cubs Digital watches Swatches Oak room Magnolia Room Tab Diet Coke Taxes Deficits Pedigrees Quad Dogs Flashdance Purple Rain Typewriters Word processors Being pleasant Complaining about finals Coors beer California coolers Terrace Cafe Rat UNC Chapel Hill The new Duke President President Sanford Paul McCartney Julian Lennon Learning Grades El Salvador Nicaragua PIRG Americans for Progress M*A*S*H Cheers Painted city buses Trailer buses FBI John DeLorean Casual sex K -'ationships Covert overthrows Assassinations books Hair spray Hair styling mousse

U.S. AIR & PIEDMONT STUDENT AIRFARES 50% OFF Space is Limited and Prices are Subject to Change

Atlanta $181 • Boston $179 • Charlotte $78 • Chicago $217 • Cleveland $238 • Pallas $339 • Denver $339 • Ft. Lauderdale $289 • Houston $339 • Knoxville $243 • Las Vegas $369 • Los Angeles $304 • Nashville $229 • New Orleans $289 • New York $129 • Orlando $289 • Philadelphia $151 • Phoenix $389 • Pittsburgh $208 • Salt LakeCity$389 • SanFrancisco $356 • Seattle $439 • Tampa $293 • Washington $99

Roundtrip Airfares From RDU /Certain Restrictions Apply / Discount Airfares To Ali Destinations

AIRFARES FROM RDU AND VACATION PACKAGES (All packages 3, 4 and 7 night hotel packages and transfers) London $577i-ia'r , Hawaii $539 (air » taeij .Frankfurt $518 (rt air) Cancan- $399 fair - hotel) W $548 (atr 4-Jwtei),.'; tas'Vegas ' $339 i_ - hotel) Bahamas' ' ,$298iair - jwwijX Ifelylaws $944 (_-• -w,X Disney World • $21S(air - hotel) 4 Day Cmse $419 iar - cruise) ..Jamaica S337 t_ - m. ". Cotorado Ski Package " $454> - hotel)

235 •(.. Grtjgson Si. fun «>'«%" ' ..- __ S*"" 4818 Six Fortes fla. ™ First International Travel Inc. "SsS ^ Page 6 R&R Thursday, November 29, 1984 Terminat*w' violent, entertaining film By WILL DAVIS really a good word to describe Schwar­ "The Terminator" is full of comic book Violence is a funny thing; strange that zenegger, because he is not really so much violence. Sure, people get blown away on is, not humorous (unless of course you are an actor as one big special effect. the average of one per minute but at least a fan of "professional" wrestling). Just So what, you may ask, does "The Ter­ we do not have the camera pointed right about everyone agrees violence is bad, minator" have to do with violence? Better at the jagged wounds. It is kind of like a especially when it happens to oneself. But to ask what it does not do, since there is good football game. It is fun to watch as it sure is fun as heck to watch, isn't it? in tne not much in terms of violence that this long as we do not have to deal with the Next to sex, violence seems to be the ri<__r movie does not cover. shots ofthe players sprawled in agony on thing civilized man just cannot get enough But don't get me wrong! "The Ter­ .the field. of. My guess is that sex and violence must minator" contains some ofthe best violence And the violence in this film is so have been the major components of the to come down the pike in quite some time. gratuitous that one cannot help but laugh primordial slime we all supposedly evolv­ man. "Mad Max" is almost like a sleeping pill at it. The plot is set up solely to further ed from. Be that as it may, ever since Speaking of primitive man and weapons in comparison. The reason the violence is the opportunities for mayhem. The se­ primitive man stood on his hind legs so he (impressive segue, huh?), the current so much fun though, is because it avoids quence of events makes sense once we are could whomp his buddy over the head with number one movie in the nation is "The the buckets of blood and flying body parts willing to suspend our disbelief and from a club, we have been pretty well fascinated Terminator," starring Arnold "Conan" which plague so many other action films there, everything flows along fairly by the effects weapons have on our fellow Schwarzenegger. Actually, "starring" is not today. See SCHWARZENEGGER on page 8

Duke Dance Program : HUNAM presents: CHINESE Mh RESTAURANT Lunch and Dinner Daily $2.79 Lunch Specials. (Includes most entrees plus your choice of soup and rice) Lunch and dinner take-out orders available for group partiea Minimum 5 orders. Now Open On Sunday! Lunch 12-3 688-2120 910 W. Main St., Durham ANNUAL FACULTY-STUDENT Parking at all Brightleaf Square Lots Eat in or take out • Open 7 days a week CONCERT BEER and WINE Now Available / All ABC Permits Friday & Saturday December 7tk & 8tk 8:15 PM Reynolds Theater Bryan University Center, Duke University TICKETS: $3:00 Gen'l Adm., $2.50 Students; $4.00 & $3.50 at tke door. Wachovia Bank & Trust On sale at Page Box Office 684-4059 welcomes You to an Information Session on i_w Career Opportunities Proudly in Banking r Presents: Tuesday, December 4 knowing that finals 6:00-7:00 pm ore coming up. presents: Old Trinity Room IF Duke University 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Topics Will Include: (1969—d. Lindsay Anderson—111 min.) Overview of Wachovia Bank & Trust Company, N.A. Our "angry young mon" series continues with this modern Why Choose a Career in Banking? classic, a searing block comedy of repression and violent youthful fantasies. Malcolm McDowell (in his film debut) stars Areas Discussed Will Be: os a student in a typically tyrannical English boarding school • Retail • Corporate who, sick of the repression ond brutality to which he and his • Operations • Personal Trust fellows are constantly subjected, leads an armed insurrection. Incisive, sometimes surreal, always unsparing, lf\s one of the Please Join Us great postwar British films—ond a great chance to get rid of repressed hostility os finals approach.

"This is happening right now at Yale, isn't it?" Wachovia Bank&Trust — Monte Cooper

"Jean Vigo goes to England. What a great combination." — Gorth Green Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Thursday, November 29, 1984 R&R Page 7 Films Oh God, You Devil — with George Burns. Northgate 8:15 p.m. Tickets available at Page Box Office. Mall, Durham (7:10, 9; Sat.-Sun. mats. 2:30, 4:30). . . _ with Malcolm McDowell. 7 and 9:30 p.m. in The Adventures of Buckaroo Bonzai — with Peter Places in the Heart — with Sally Field. South Square the Bryan Center Film Theater. Weiler and John Lithgow. Varsity, Chapel Hill (3,5, 7:30, Mall Cinema, Durham (call 493-3502 for times). Our Town — 8 p.m. in the Paul Green Theater, UNC 9:30). Purple Rain — with Prince and Morris Day. Carolina Campus, Chapel Hill. Call 962-1121 for ticket Amadeus — with Thomas Hulce. Varsity, Chapel Hill Twin, Chapel Hill (call 942-3061 for times). information. (1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45) and South Square Mall Cinema, A Soldier's Story — with Howard Rollins. Ram, Chapel Durham (Call 493-3502 for times). Hill (2, 4:15, 7, 9:15). Friday Another Country — with Rupert Everett. Carolina Supergirl — with Faye Dunaway and Peter O'Toole. Kroger Plaza, Chapel Hill (2:50, 5, 7:10, 9:20) and Nor­ Theater, Durham (7:30, 9:15; Sat.-Sun. mat. 5). Handel's Messiah — 7:30 p.m. in the Duke Chapel. Call thgate Mall, Durham (7, 9:15; Sat.-Sun. mats. 2:30,4:30). A Christmas Story — with Melinda Dillon and Darren 684-4059 for ticket information. The Terminator — with Arnold Schwarzenegger. McGavin. Carolina Twin, Chapel Hill (call 942-3061 for Educating Rita — with Michael Caine. 7 and 9:30 p.m. Yorktowne, Durham (7, 9:30; Sat.-Sun. mats. 2:15, 4:45). times). in the Bryan Center Film Theater. Country — with Jessica Lange and Sam Sheppard. The Graphic — Dolphin recordings artists at Rhythm Kroger Plaza, Chapel Hill (2:45, 5, 7:15, 9:30). Thursday Alley, Chapel Hill. Call 929-8172 for information. A Joke of Destiny — with Ugo Tbgnazzi. Carolina Our Town — 8 p.m. in the Paul Green Theater. Theater, Durham (7, 9; Sat.-Sun. mat. 5). Missing in Action — Lakewood Shopping Center, Rain Parade and the Long Ryders — new music from Saturday Durham (7:5, 9:05; Sat.-Sun. mats. 3:05, 5:05). California at the Cat's Cradle, Chapel Hill. Call 967-9053 Night Of The Comet — Yorktowne, Durham (7:10,9:20; for information. Danny Richmond Quintet — Jazz in Page Auditorium, X-Teens — Dolphin recordings artists at Rhythm Alley, Sat.-Sun. mats. 2, 4:30). Chapel Hill. Call 929-8172 for information. UV Prom and Faster Faster — new music at the Brewery, Raleigh. Call 834-7018 for ticket information. Handel's Messiah — 2 p.m. in the Duke Chapel. Call 684-4059 for ticket information. A Christmas Story — with Melinda Dillon and Darren -. McGavin. 7 and 9 p.m. in Page Auditorium. Our Town — 5 and 9 p.m. in the Paul Green Theater. The . Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson — in Greensboro Coliseum. Call 373-7474 for ticket information. Upcoming Concerts

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band — Thursday- Friday, Jan. 17-18 in Greensboro Coliseum. Ticket prices and beginning sale date to be announced. presents •. •. -fc

D)IFS1, -. December 3 is . •. Director of the •. Contact Lens Day

•. Congressional Budget Committee •. . J.

Call (or an . Thursday, 29 November 1984 appointment Consultant N.C.L. Certified Optician £ Northgate Shopping Center 7:00 •fc (across from Big Star parking lot) 286-4402 -fc Zener Auditorium-Social-Psych Rm. 130 . •fc -fc •fc •fc -fc BUSINESS PAK •fc IM ; DEFBOT DQU w -fc •fc •. -fc •. as part of the •fc •fc -fc ^$1699. DJ -fc .COM, fonum -fc ^ ° COMPLETE! •fc KAYPRO 2X MICROCOMPUTER • KAYPRO LETTER- QUALITY PRINTER • 11 POPULAR SOFTWARE •fc PROGRAMS • COMPLETE DOCUMENTATION • -fc TYPE-IT" TYPEWRITER EMULATOR • 2 HOURS INTRODUCTORY IN-HOUSE TRAINING • PUBLIC •fc DOMAIN SOFTWARE • USERS GROUP MEETINGS Organized by: The Duke Investment Club, -fc • TELEPHONE SUPPORT • IN-HOUSE SERVICE •. Duke University Department of Economics •fc •. •fc ^•. Sponsored by: Major Speakers, The Bassett Fund, ASDU, E. F. Hutton -fc 1208 Duke University Rd. 489-2322 (5 MINUTES FROM CAMPUS) Page 8 Thursday, November 29, 1984 Schwarzenegger powerful in brutal movie

SCHWARZENEGGER from page 6 leader, John Conner. mitted to film. Both Reese and the Ter­ and visually striking scenes. The sets for smoothly. The computers deduce there is only one minator seem to excel in wholesale the "flashforward" sequences are im­ The basic premise is this: forty years way to come out on top, and that is to send destruction. Add to this the fact that Ar­ pressive and the episode where Arnold from now, the world is a nuked-out crisp. a Terminator back into the past to kill Con­ nold is pretty well impervious to anything single-handedly takes on an entire police But not because of us humans! Nope, in­ ner's mother, thereby wiping out his ex­ this side of an H-bomb and you have the station is unforgettable. stead, our own computerized defense net­ istence and robbing the humans of their ingredients for some pretty severe Some people may say films like "The Ter­ work got smart somehow and decided it inspiration. demolition. minator" are unhealthy because they breed was not worth having a bunch of loony The humans manage to send one of their Schwarzenegger does not say more than violence and destruction in the minds of carbon-based life forms mucking up a own back to stop the Terminator and bingo, five lines throughout the entire film, but the audience. Well, I've got news for you, potential computerized Eden. So, ta-daa, there you have it — instant conflict. If you some credit really is due him for being a the violence is already there. The antisep­ time for nuke city. have not guessed by now, Arnold is the very convincing robot. The stunts and tic destruction in movies such as this is a Well, naturally some isolated humans cyborg killing machine sent to eliminate special effects steal the show however. necessary outlet for aggression and is a survive to fight on and to take care of them Sarah Conner (Linda Hamilton - very ap­ Writer and director James Cameron pro­ good alternative to kicking the poor old the computers develop the Terminators, pealing in her role as the innocent ves quite competent at keeping the tension family mutt. cyborg (part human, part machine) killing bystander caught in the middle of a mini high during the chases and the mood For people who are not connoisseurs of machines, to infiltrate the humans and WW III). Michael Biehn is the human menacing throughout the film. Despite a fine violence, no problem, this film is not wipe them out. But despite all this, the rebel, Reese, sent to stop good ol' Arnold. somewhat overdone ending, the story is for you. For the rest of us however, hear­ humans start to get the upper hand, due "The Terminator" has some of the most clear and well told. tier fare than "The Terminator" will be dif­ largely to the courage of one man, their explosive action and chase scenes ever com­ "The Terminator" is full of memorable ficult to come by.

Finally, the long-awaited Dr. Masao Miyoshi PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH ggic battle of trivia recall^ UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY WILL LECTURE ON The first annual The Novel, STUDENT-FACULTY COLLEGE Shosetsu, and BOWL TOURNAMENT Colonialism

Today, Thursday November 29 BREEDLOVE ROOM 3:00 p.m. (204 PERKINS LIBRARY) THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1984 Bryan Center Film Theater AT 8:00. RM. Free Admission-Public Welcome SPONSORED Br: THE ASIAN/PACIFIC STUDIES INSTITUTE

| 1 , 1 L El_G> D h&H HOLIDAY CRAFT SALE Nov. 27-Dec. 7 Monday-Friday, 11 AM-6 PM

In the Craft Center (tower level Bryan Center {£ next to Von Canon) Sponsored by the Craft Center and DUU Galleries Committee