Star faculty Anne Firor Scott and several other University professors were honored on separate occasions THE CHRONICLE ail over the globe. See page 3. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15.000 VOL. 86. NO. 68 ASDU election van wore Gantt fliers Forum reveals flaws in By JONATHAN BLUM said "it seemed obvious" that she What was supposed to be a could coordinate the van's opera­ the new alcohol policy non-partisan van sponsored by tion while she was at the office. ASDU to bring voters to the polls Her other Election Day ac­ By PEGGY KRENDL people actually dispense the on Election Day became a mov­ tivities kept Pearcy unaware of A forum on the new alcohol alcohol. ing Democratic advertisement the posting of the flyers on the policy revealed flaws in the The policy states that when campaign flyers supporting van, she said. "I was very busy." policy's provisions for carders, "event monitors may not con­ Harvey Gantt were posted on the Pearcy was unaware of who petitions to hold parties dur­ sume alcohol at any time dur­ vehicle. was driving the van at any given ing the week, and distribution ing the day on which the event time, she said. Pearcy said she Efforts made by members of of cups. is held." However, the stu­ could not guarantee that all driv­ ASDU to inform the student body The Alcoholic Beverages Reg­ dents noted that the policy ers were somehow affiliated with about the incident may have ulations Review Committee does not make clear whether the University, even though the been dampened by University . will clarify these sections the carders or the servers can agreement with Transportation administrators. before the policy takes effect drink the day of the party. Services had that stipulation. ASDU President Connie on Jan. 7, 1991, said commit­ The committee said they had Pearcy said she suggested to Ex­ She was notified ofthe flyers' tee chair Maureen Cullins, as­ not considered that question, ternal Affairs Committee Chair presence by the secretary at the GEORGE IVEY/THE CHRONICLE sistant to the vice-president of but Dean for Student Life Richard Moore on the Friday ASDU office, who called her at student affairs. Suzanne Wasiolek noted that before the election that a van be the Democratic Party office after Connie Pearcy The forum, held yesterday, state law prevents people secured for transporting stu­ receiving phone calls from both to Pearcy to sign. She refused, was comprised of living group from drinking while they are dents and employees between the Office of Student Life and claiming that the University ad­ and fraternity presidents and serving alcohol. the polling sites and their homes. Transportation Services request­ ministration had told her they members asking questions According to the new policy, Moore, a Trinity sophomore, ing the flyers' removal. would deal with the situation, about the new policy to the parties at which alcohol is dis­ did obtain the use of a University "When I did find out [about the Moore said. committee. The students tributed can only be held be­ donated van. "[Pearcy] took it Gantt signs on the van], they Pearcy said she was "very pointed out some ambiguities tween 5 p.m. Thrusday and 5 from there," he said. came off," Pearcy said. hurt, very disappointed" that the in the policy. a.m. Sunday, but does have a The van was donated to ASDU "It was me, not ASDU," Pearcy Legislative Council had not provision which allows living by Transportation Services with said in accepting blame for the waited to talk to her before writ­ groups to petition for parties the understanding that it was to The new policy creates a incident. She called her actions ing the letter. to be held on other days of the be a "totally non-partisan system whereby groups must "irresponsible." The members of the council de­ week. The petition must be venture," said Mark Nielson, provide two monitors. One Moore said he found out about cided not to send the letter to The watches for underage presented to ASDU, the Inter­ manager of transportation ser­ the incident the next morning. Chronicle. drinkers at the source of dis­ fraternity Council, and the vices. Nielson said Transporta­ He suggested to the members of A few days later, Moore pursued tribution while the second Upperclass Housing Associa­ tion Services has loaned out vans the ASDU Legislative Council the matter with Pearcy again. watches for violations of the tion and it is then passed to for similar use in the past. that they write a letter to The "When I asked her later, she said policy throughout the rest of the Alcohol Beverages Regual- Pearcy, a Trinity senior, was Chronicle informing the student it had been taken care of," he the party. There must also be tions Review Committee for responsible for the van's opera­ body about the incident. "I felt said. a carder at the door who approval. tion throughout Election Day, students should know about it," Pearcy said she offered to write checks IDs and uses a rubber Because the policy states which she spent working at the Moore said. letters to The Chronicle and /or stamp to identify students Democratic Party office in Dur­ that petitions must be pres- The Legislative Council the Durham Morning Herald ex- who are 21 or older. Separate ham for the Gantt campaign. She drafted a letter which was given See PEARCY on page 5 • See ALCOHOL on page 6 • ASDU votes down appeal Cheney says to Congress to avoid war U.S. should fight By DAN BRADY writing the resolution was to ex­ ASDU legislators narrowly press students' desire to give eco­ By MICHEAL GORDON defeated a resolution that would nomic sanctions on Iraq more N.Y. Times News Service have called on Congress to con­ time to take effect, said co-spon­ WASHINGTON — Defense vene and discuss a peaceful sor David Richardson, a Trinity Secretary Dick Cheney told Con­ answer to the Middle East con­ senior. gress on Monday that military flict. "It is easy to sit down in our action rather than economic Opponents ofthe resolution ar­ chairs and let this thing slide sanctions is the only sure way of gued that the bill's content did by," said Trinity junior Sean forcing Iraqi troops to leave Ku­ not reflect the opinions of the Welton, who also sponsored the wait. student body and, even if it did, bill. "But we need to express our Cheney, rebutting suggestions the representatives needed time opinions." from key Democrats and many to consult their constituents In response to critics who said former military leaders that the before voting on such an issue. the representatives did not have wait a year or The resolution which was time to gauge the attitudes of more to see if economic sanctions defeated, 34-28 stated, in part, their constituents, Trinity sopho­ work, told the Senate Armed Ser­ "ASDU appeals to Congress to more Barry Starrfield said repre­ vices Committee that delaying prohibit the intiation of war by sentatives should already know military action for that period the United States against Iraq the opinions of their constitu­ would further damage the world until economic sanctions are ents. economy, allow Iraq to stiffen its given time to work . . . and that "If your dorm isn't talking defenses and risk the erosion of no decision ... is to substitute for about this [the Mideast crisis] the international effort to compel Congressional control of our then you might as well be going President Saddam Hussein of country's use of military force to UNC-Chapel Hill," he" said. Iraq to remove his forces from abroad." "This bill is just asking for the Kuwait. The resolution was conceived Constitution to be enforced. Con­ "There is no guarantee that shortly after Friday's Peacefest gress has the power to declare sanctions will force him out of anti-war demonstration and was war, not the President." Kuwait," Cheney said, adding submitted from the floor of Trinity sophomore Richard that the United States does not ASDU Monday night. Sponsors Moore said he feared this state­ GEORGE IVEY/THE CHRONICLE have "an indefinite period of time wrote it in response to the United ment did not reflect the attitudes Decking the dormitory to wait for sanctions to produce of a majority of students. Nations authorization of force to Trinity juniors Jessica Farnham and Leigh Culpepper engage the desired result." 'This resolution will get to the expel Iraq from Kuwait if it does in the very dangerous art of decorating the tree in an attempt "Given the nature of the not withdraw by Jan. 15,1991. press ... it will be the opinion of to enlighten the exam season. Nice try. regime, given Saddam Hussein's One of the sponsors' goals in See ASDU on page 6 • See SENATE on page 12 • PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY/DECEMBER 4, 1990 World and National Newsfile Associated Press Rebelling Argentinian army factions surrender

Racial violence in Miami: By SHIRLEY CHRISTIAN to retake the 15-story army headquarters. ing toward the city from the northern N.Y. Times News Service Miami youths set fires and threw rocks Late Monday morning, the army com­ province of Entre Rios, from which a rebel and bottles at police Monday night af­ BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Several mand announced the first of the recap­ column was reported trying to advance in ter six police officers were acquitted of hundred army dissidents rebelled early tures, saying it had retaken a battalion armored vehicles. Early Monday evening, most civil rights charges in the beating on Monday and captured the Argentine headquarters in the suburb of Palomar, air force planes reportedly bombed the death of a small-time drug dealer. army headquarters and four other instal­ and in midafternoon rebels surrendered column as it tried to advance at the town lations, creating battlegrounds in an area at the coast guard headquarters just two of Gualeguaychu, 150 miles north of that President Bush is to travel to during blocks north of Casa Rosada. Buenos Aires. Other provinces were Jetliners Collide: A jetliner clipped his scheduled visit on Wednesday. Then loyalists in tanks recaptured a reported calm. another while preparing to take off But loyalist troops, acting on President regimental headquarters in the Palermo Late Monday afternoon, the authorities from the Detroit airport in heavy fog Carlos Saul Menem's demand for a com­ neighborhood, an area of luxury apart­ moved journalists away from the Gothic- Monday, igniting a fire that left one plete rebel surrender, moved quickly and ment buildings where the United States style army headquarters, with the an­ plane in smoking ruins. At least eight forcefully to retake the installations and Embassy is located, and a tank factory nounced intention of bombing it. Loyalist people were killed and 20 injured, offi­ declared on Monday night that the mu­ taken by the rebels in Boulogne, a suburb troops in full battle gear took positions at cials said. tiny had been put down. northwest of the city. The army said the the rear of the presidential palace and be­ The defeat of the rebels seemed to as­ rebels in the tank factory were attacked hind trees and other places of cover in the Continental folds: Continental sure that Bush would go ahead with his from the air. Both actions dragged on for plaza separating the army building from Airlines filed for protection in bank­ visit, spreading the message of a "new most ofthe afternoon. the Casa Rosada as planes roared over­ ruptcy court Monday, saying it was dawn in the New World" that he Loyalist forces also cut a highway lead­ head. overwhelmed by its debts and surging proclaimed in Brazil on Monday. fuel prices. "There is a surrender —it is over," a lieutenant colonel told journalists on Kohl forms government: Chan­ Monday night outside the Libertador High court limits interrogations cellor Helmut Kohl on Monday began Building, the army headquarters, which talks with coalition allies on forming a sits on a small plaza opposite the rear of By LINDA GREENHOUSE new government and prepared to Casa Rosada, the presidential palace. The N.Y. Times News Service tackle enormous problems facing the army said that it had retaken all of the WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, new Germany. sites captured by the mutineers and that in a 6-to-2 ruling on Monday, placed new most of the rebels — thought to number limits on police interrogation of criminal Trade Causes trouble: Negotia­ about 300 — had been taken prisoner in a suspects. tions in Brussels to complete an un­ succession of operations that lasted some In a decision that overturned the mur­ precedented global free trade pact 12 hours. der conviction of an inmate on Mississip­ opened in turmoil as delegates clashed At about the same time, Menem told re­ pi's death row, the court ruled that once a on farm issues, while police outside porters in the palace that "the painted- suspect in custody has asserted his right battled angry demonstrators. faces are finished." The dissidents' cam­ to a lawyer, the police may not initiate ouflage-painted faces have become sym­ any further questioning unless the lawyer Iranian vets warn U.S.: Iranian bols ofthe rebellions they have staged in is actually present. veterans of the 1980-88 war with Iraq the six years since Argentina returned to Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the say the Americans and their allies can­ civilian government. majority opinion. Justice Antonin Scalia not expect a short, quick war if they at­ The army headquarters fell after nearly dissented in an opinion that was joined by tack to liberate Kuwait. two hours of intense firing between loyal Chief Justice William Rehnquist. It is un­ troops and those inside the immense usual for Kennedy and the chief justice to structure as four warplanes swooped be on opposite sides in a case involving UPI PHOTO overhead. Threats to bomb the headquar­ the rights of criminal defendents. Justice Anthony Kennedy Weather ters were not carried out. Justice David Souter did not participate Automatic weapons fire reverberated in the case, which was argued the week Wednesday Kennedy said the Mississippi decision through the capital during most of the before he joined the court. was not adequate to protect a suspect High: 40 - 45 • Partly cloudy day, causing pandemonium in rush-hour The decision overturned a 1988 ruling against "coercive pressures" to talk to the Low: upper 20s traffic. Cars and buses in the combat area by the Mississippi Supreme Court, which police. He said Monday's ruling was Don't worry, finals aren't really here until were riddled with bullets. Many people, held that the police could begin a new "appropriate and necessary" to insure the Monday. There's plenty of time to destroy unable to believe the extent of the danger round of questioning at any time after the vitality of a series of Supreme Court some brain cells before hitting the books. on a pleasant, sunny day, gathered on suspect had been provided with a lawyer decisions intended to carry out the Fifth Happy holidays, and I am outta here! street corners and in plazas as snipers ex­ and had consulted with the lawyer at Amendment's protection against corn- changed fire and troops moved into place least once. See COURT on page 5 ^

ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION COME ALL WEEK Applebee's Specials Good At AND JOIN THE FUN! Contact Lens Neighborhood Grill & Bar 3400 Westgate Dr., Durham, JVC (Across from South Square Mall) MONDAY DEC. 3RD TUESDAY DEC. 4TH WEDNESDAY DEC. 5TH Specialty Care Hola Amigos Taste Our Great Examination & Treatment Of The Eyes &AmigasToo! $1.99 Potato Skins-You'll Contact Lens Problem Solving And Munch Come Enjoy Our Come Back For More! On Our Nachos Today For Contact Lenses Optical Center Unforgettable $1.99. Hard, soft and oxygen permeable Designer eyeglasses Quesadillas 990 Margaritas All Day Contact lenses for astigmatism Budget eyeglasses Also Highballs Continuous wear contact lenses Fashion tints For $1.99. REMEMBER-You Might Win So Bifocal contact lenses Invisible bifocals For 990 Come Register Tinted soft lenses B & L sunglasses Today & Any Day This Week! Contact lens solutions Emergency services All Day. Large office inventory Eyeglass guarantee THURSDAY DEC. 6TH FRIDAY DEC. 7TH SATURDAY!!! DEC. 8TH Loaner contact lens program • Pucker Up House Wine / Coolers ftftftftftftftftft Senior Citizens Courtesy For Your Favorite HAPPY ANNIVERSARY "SOUR" ^P ALL DAY APPLEBEE'S COME HELP US CELEBRATE!! II Academy Eye Associates 990 All Day ~ " OPTOMETRY. O.D.. PA. & $1.75 For all Premium Brands* Dr. Henry A. Greene (Beer, Wine, Mixed Drinks) 3115 Academy Road, Durham. North Carolina 27707 493-7456 Munch ie Baskets Try Our Delicious 'Does Not Include Doubles Mozzarella Sticks Dr. Dale D. Stewart For 990 Buffalo Wings, Too!!! 502 South Duke Street, Durham, North Carolina 27701 688-6306 $1.99! $1.99 GRAND PRIZE DRAWING AT 8:00 RM. Register To Win!! Daily Drawings For Dinners For Two & A Grand Prize On Saturday. Evening Appointments Available TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 3 GPSC wants to extend the library book loan period to one year

By BLAIR BOARDMAN materials immediately. sponsor some events with the Union, such quested by graduate students to improve Graduate and Professional Student Faculty members and teaching as bands and parties specifically for the daytime lounge. Council members want students to be graduate students can borrow books for graduate and professional students. The lounge is still losing money, howev­ able to keep library books for an entire an entire school year. "If anyone knows of any activity we can er, because so few graduate students use year. Policies at other University libraries do as a combined group, I'd be happy to it during the day. Under the present system, students are were not discussed. listen," Freeman said. Vice President William Griffith guaranteed possesion of borrowed books The committee reviewing the use of the responded in a letter to GPSC's resolution from Perkins Library for two weeks, and IN OTHER BUSINESS: University Hideaway Bar as a graduate student on housing in Central Campus apart­ must return the books after a month. Union President Rodney Freeman spoke lounge during the day reported on the ments. The resolution asked the Univer­ In the resolution GPSC passed Monday to GPSC about graduate student involve­ results of a survey given to GPSC mem­ sity to return traditionally graduate stu­ night, graduate students request the priv­ ment in Union activities. bers with information on money spent for dent apartments that had been given to ilege of keeping books all year, so stu­ "80 percent of GPSC money goes to the improvements to the lounge. undergraduates this year. dents working on dissertations and major Union," the Engineering senior and first- Physical improvements ofthe establish­ research projects do not have to renew year Fuqua student said. He stressed the ment including the addition of different Griffith said he hopes to return the 29 books every month. Books requested by importance of graduate and professional food and drinks to the menu has cost al­ housing spots lost by the graduate and other students could be recalled after the student support of Union-sponsored ac­ most $17,000, said Peter Dolman, third- professional student body because of this two-week guarantee period, and students tivities. year Economics student and co-owner of year's extremely large freshman class by would be required to return requested Freeman also requested that GPSC co- the Hideaway. The changes were re­ the 1990-91 school year. Medical Center diving expert honored in ceremony in Japan

From staff reports sity of Rhode Island, according to Duke Prince awards professor: A Medi­ News briefs News Service. cal Center international expert in diving During her two-day stint at each uni­ physiology and medicine was one of three tion would not have been possible if versity, she will meet with students and recipients awarded the First Prince Bryan had not supported research at the faculty in a variety of formal and informal Tomohito of Mikasa Prize on behalf of the University. sessions, including classroom discussions, Federation Japonaise des Activites Suba- seminars, and public lectures. quatiques. Gates honored by institute: A Dr. Peter Bennett, professor of anesthe­ University English and literature profes­ siology, associate professor of cell biology sor was honored along with five others by Professor joins board: Dr. Arthur and neurobiology, director of the Divers the Pratt Institute for his contribution to. Haney has been elected to The Board of Alert Network and senior director for re­ education. Directors of the American Fertility Soci­ search at the F.G. Hall Hyperbaric Cen­ Henry "Skip" Gates was recognized by ety. ter, was presented with two certificates, the institute's new leader, Warren one in English and in Japanese. Ilchman at Ilchman's inaugural ceremony Haney is director of the Division of Re­ Prince Tomohito presented the awards Nov. 30 in , according to a productive Endocrinology and Infertility at a special ceremony in Tokyo Nov. 7 at­ press release. at the Medical Center and a professor of STAFF PHOTO /THE CHRONICLE tended by 400 invited guests and embassy More than 3,500 undergraduates and Obstetrics and Gynecology. officials. graduates are enrolled at The Pratt Insti­ Anne Firor Scott The award is intended to honor those tute in Brooklyn in its schools of art and who have made especially noteworthy design, architecture, engineering, library lifelong contributions to the enhancement and information science and liberal arts Deadline extended again for of underwater activities in science, tech­ and sciences. nology, education, industry, sports and Gates has served as a consultant on the safety. humanities curriculum at the institute. For more than 37 years, Bennett has The institute also honored five others Engineering school elections been involved in diving medicine and for their contributions to fine arts and physiology in five countries, with a special design, business and education. They are interest in initiating and proving the suc­ interior designer Mario Buatta, chair of By AMY REED neering dean's office. cess of technology that now permits very the J. Walter Thompson com­ The results of Monday's Engineering The additional applications were found deep sea diving and work without subject­ pany Burt Manning, former dean of the Student Government elections are still after the election on Monday, in which ing divers to the debilitating neurological Yale School of Architecture Cesar Pelli, unofficial because current officers did not candidates for each position ran unop­ effects known as High Pressure Neurolog­ sculptor Martin Puryear and vice presi­ have all the candidates' applications. posed. ical Syndrome. dent for design for the Ford Motor Co. The application deadline had been ex­ The ESG will hold the election again Lab named for Bryans: A new John "Jack" Telnack. tended from Nov. 26 to Dec. 2 because no near the end of the week or at the begin­ Alzheimer's disease research lab in Perth, one was running for the offices of trea­ ning of next semester with four people Australia has been named for Greensboro surer and secretary, said Engineering se­ running for treasurer and four for secre­ businessman and philanthropist Joseph Scholars appoint Scott: Anne Firor nior and current ESG president Joe tary. Bryan and his late wife Kathleen. Scott, W.K. Boyd Professor of History, is Peterson. The lab is part ofthe Australian Neuro­ one of a dozen nationally known scholars An ad in the Chronicle publicizing the The unofficial winners are president— muscular Research Institute where scien­ selected as a Phi Beta Kappa Visiting date change failed to specify that applica­ junior Greg Erens, vice-president—sopho­ tists are collaborating with colleagues at Scholar for 1990-91. tions had to be turned in to the ESG office more Michael Silver and publicity the Medical Center to find a gene impli­ As a participant in the visiting scholar or to Peterson's room. Two candidates, chairman—sophomore Michael Ryan. cated in Alzheimer's disease, according to program, Scott will travel to eight institu­ one for each position, brought their appli­ Class presidents are Brian Nalle—'92, Duke News Service. tions, including Cornell University, the cations to a correct location, while six Scott Burba—'93 and Mukund Australian officials said the collabora- University of Wisconsin and the Univer­ other students brought theirs to the Engi­ Gundanna—'94. MEGAGEM JEWELERS ANTONIO'S PIZZA RISTORANTE 29 years experience in jewelry mfg. & repair Authentic Italian Cuisine at Affordable Prices UNIVERSITY SPECIAL All You Can Eat Pizza & Pasta Buffet $3.99 10-15% Above Cost includes salad bar & breadsticks EVERY Tuesday 6-9 pm And we'll show you our cost. Parkway Plaza Offer good with this ad or Duke LD. (behind South Square) Best Wishes and Happy Holidays Wide Screen T.V. 4215 University Drive Beer & Wine Available 493-8464 M-F 10-9, Sat 10-7 4339-C Falls of Neuse Rd., Raleigh Open Mon-Sun 11 am-10 pm Visa & MasterCard accepted Parkway?^2>^ Sun 1-6 . Behind Darrylls on Falls of Neuse Road. (919) 872-5994 Exit Old Wake Forest Rd. off US 1 North. PAGE 4 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 Arts

CALENDAR Eisenberg works through comic movement Tuesday, December 4 Student Chamber Music Concert By SUSAN SHARPE acterization is achieved through physical Nelson Music Room, 4 p.m. No doubt about it. Avner Eisenberg is, expression, as opposed to the more con­ The Second Shepherd's Play unabashedly, Eccentric. ventional mode of verbal expression. Duke Chapel, 8 p.m. "Avner the Eccentric" is Eisenberg's And the very real frustrations of the Admission is free one-man performance of a clownish jani­ very real character are what provide the tor falling into "a series of hilarious conflict which fuels the show. predicaments," as Eisenberg described it. "There is almost a plot," which directs

• - It's Avner's unconventional responses the action of the show, Eisenberg to the most basic of life's frustrations that said."But it's really more a character de­ Wednesday, December 5 color this actor as so amusingly odd. Av­ velopment." Duke Symphony Orchestra ner makes an art out of dropping a hat or 'TAvner] is sort of an underdog," Eisen­ Baldwin Auditorium, 8 p.m. tripping over his own feet. And, as a berg said. "He is warm, and people can re­ result, Avner seems as surprised at what late to him in an empathetic fashion." Avner the Eccentric happens to him as does the audience. This bumbling janitor attempts to per­ Reynolds Theater, 8 p.m. The show opens with a rather pitiful form all the tricks a clown is supposed to See article this page. janitor doing his best to clean up a theater have mastered. What Avner masters, in­ after a performance. stead, is utter failure at these tricks. It is Duke Drama At first unaware of his surroundings, this comical failure which defines his ec­ "Mud" centric character. 209 East Duke Bldg., 8 p.m. he is startled to find that there are people A workshop theater production by lyjafia in the audience. He is even more suprised ire-':- rorr.es. when the scraps of paper he holds magi­ Through his act, Eisenberg has trans­ cally turn into a sign which tells the audi­ formed what were once merely slapstick Thursday, December 6 ence — and him — that "the show will antics into a performance that theater begin in five minutes." critics across the nation have given un­ Chorale Christmas Concert SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE umm C"-3_.v':.. < p.r.-. Thus commences two hours of not- usually rave reviews. quite-mime, sort-of-magic-show and bum­ Those who saw "R. Crumb Comix" at "Avner the Eccentric" Special guest will be William Griffith in piace or :e--vS3nfo-o. Admission i&fre&mm bling antics. The performance is a series the University last month will remember of events which play upon one another in Avner the Eccentric as the title character. is an artist. He began to develop his own Avner the Eccentric an appropriately eccentric progression. In the show, Eisenberg's primary com­ unique version of movement theater when Avner never speaks in the play, al­ munication was often his face and body, he went to Paris from 1971 to 1974. though he does quite expressively squawk which entertained viewers with its seem­ While in Paris, he was arrested for jug­ through his kazoo. His real expertise in ingly tireless array of comic-like move­ gling in front of the fountains at Chaillot, East Duke Bldg., 8 p.m. his bizarre communication comes through ments. It was at these times that his and charged with "public buffoonery." Adrrsis.-:'.- fantastically expressive facial and body speech seemed to be merely an after­ "We were just juggling. Making people contortions. thought that punctuated what had al­ laugh ... in public," Eisenberg said. Friday, December 7 ready been expressed by this incredibly NC Symphony Christmas Concert Eisenberg first winced at the misnomer animated actor. He is now an adjunct assistant profes­ ~_.__e ->•-•:: - ' .p.m, of comparing his technique to mime. Un­ sor at the Expressive Therapies Institute like the illusory world of mime, where the Others may remember him as the of the University of Louisville. He also Avner the Eccentric character is "basically neutral," he said, "Jewel of the Nile," in Michael Douglas' recently was a speaker at the National Reynolds Theater, 8 p.m. "my show is real. It is a very realistic movie of the same name. Here again Conference on the Healing Power of character, with very realistic props." Eisenberg played a typically bizarre char­ Laughter and Play. Eisenberg said that his style is actually acter. And he is still just juggling. Making called "movement theater," in which char­ Eisenberg is more than a performer; he people laugh ... in public.

FIRST SCANDIA MOTORCAR SECURITY — MAINTENANCE — 0ALAR M Complete Volvo & Saab Service • PERSONAL PORTABLE ALARMS 25 Years Experience YAMAZUSHI • WALKING ALARMS, MACE JAPANESE CUISINE & SUSHI HOUSE Please call for an appointment • RESIDENTIAL SECURITY SYSTEMS •APARTMENT & CONDO SYSTEMS Experience the Triangle's favorite 9th St. for lunch and dinner 10% DISCOUNT TO ALL DUKE 286-3442 Anderson St. Sushi, Tempura, and Teriyaki 2711 Hillsborough Rd. STUDENTS AND EMPLOYEES Trent St. co Call for reservations Durham, NC • China Inn — 383-7610 Woodcroft S/C RTP ( Park Terrace S/C) Hwy. 54/751. 2223 Hwy. 54. ABC Store ge^ce SCANDIA ^™ 1408 Christian Avenue Take I-40, exit 274 Take I-40, exit 278 (Behind P. Service) Off Hillsborough Rd, behind Bojangles 493-7748 544-7945

THE SEARCH FOR MEANING re you A New Freshman Seminar IN UNDERGRADUATE? CREATIVE WRITER? IDC 49S -- Spring 1991 If so, submit a piece of your work to be considered for the Rosati Prize. As many as three $500 awards will be made. In addition, 7:00 p.m. Wednesdays the winning entries will be published in a special chapbook series. Winners will be announced in April, and the formal Room 08 Languages presentation of the chapbook and the monetary award will be made the following Fall. Writing in any genre will be accepted. Generally, submissions shouldnot exceed 5,000 words for prose, 200 lines forpoetry, or Dr. William H. Willimon 7,500 words for drama. All criteria will be applied flexibly to work which does not fit neatly into any particular category. Dean ofthe Chapel (684-2177) Only one entry per person. Please do not submit work which Dr. Thomas H. Naylor has oeen or is currently being considered for any other writing prize at Duke. Submit entries to 220 Perkins Library by Professor of Economics (684-6774) January 31,1991. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 5 Local restaurants donate some of tonight's profits to homeless

From staff reports The double "V" stands for the Roman A pilot program was tested with 47 res­ Cafe, Finley's Fine Dining, Fishermen Durham residents can help the home­ numeral five, said Durham organizer Bill taurants in Chapel Hill last year, and it Three, Fish Monger's, Formosa Restau­ less and disadvantaged by eating meals in Fleming. Five percent ofthe revenue from raised $7,000, Fleming said. He hopes the rant, Fortune Garden, The Garden, Triangle area restaurants today. each restaurant will be donated to the expanded program this year will at least Golden Corral, Greenfield's, Half Tyme Selected restaurants in Raleigh, Dur­ North Carolina Food Bank, which triple the revenues. Table and Tap, Hong Kong Restaurant, ham and Chapel Hill — 152 in all — have provides food for 400 agencies in the If the program is a success, organizers Le Coca, Little Acorn, Magnolia Grill, agreed to donate ten percent of their reve­ state. The other five percent will be hope to continue it each year "for years to McDonald's (4717 Apex Highway), Ninth nues from today's breakfast, lunch and divided equally among the Inter-Faith come," Fleming said. Street Bakery, Palace International, dinner to agencies that aid the indigent in Council in Chapel Hill, the Community Pizza Palace, Rock Street Deli, Saladelia, the Triangle and the state. Shelter in Durham and Urban Ministries Thirty-eight restaurants in Durham Satisfaction, Seventh Street, Taverna The event was organized by the RSWP in Raleigh. will be participating. They are: Nikos, Tijuana Fat's, T.K. Tripps, Trinity (Restaurants Sharing Ten Percent) Com­ RSWP day is sponsored by The Ra­ 1920 Deli, Amos and Andy, Bamboo College Cafe, Wabash Express Steak mittee, a group of volunteers from local leigh News and Observer, G105 and House, Bell Book and Coffee, Chisholm's, House, Weeping Radish and Wilma's agencies. WTVD-11. Claire's Cafe, Country Junction, Crescent Southern Kitchen. ASDU election van sports Gantt Court limits interrogations

• COURT from page 2 ruled that the police have met their posters; Pearcy assumes blame pelled self-incrimination. obligation under the Edwards decision That series of cases began with as long as the suspect has had the Miranda Arizona, in 1966, in which the chance to consult with a lawyer at • PEARCY from page 1 President Keith Brodie was unavailable court ruled that police interrogation of least once. After that, the police are plaining that the University was not re­ for comment. David Roberson, director of a suspect in custody must stop if the free to initiate a new round of ques­ sponsible for the incident, but several dif­ University relations, said Brodie never suspect requests the assistance of a tioning. The Bush administration sup­ ferent offices of the University adminis­ told Pearcy not to write a letter. "Dr. lawyer. ported this view in a brief filed by the tration, including Transportation Ser­ Brodie did not tell her she could not write The series included a 1981 decision, solicitor general's office. vices, President Brodie's office, and Dean a letter," Roberson said. Wasiolek's office Edwards Arizona, which is much less But the majority said Monday that for Student Life Suzanne Wasiolek's office received a call on Election Day from a well known than the Miranda ruling this was an overly narrow interpreta­ told her not to. University alumnus in the area claiming but which has had a substantial effect tion of the Edwards decision. Kennedy Director of Transportation Services that University vehicles "were being used in reinforcing the Miranda protections. said that when a suspect invokes his David Majestic said he and other admin­ to express partisan support," Wasiolek The Edwards ruling held that once the right to counsel, he is expressing a istrators told Pearcy that writing a letter said. suspect requests a lawyer, not only desire to deal with the police through was unnecessary. "People within the Uni­ "Given my involvement with [the must all questioning stop, but it cannot that lawyer, and cannot be questioned versity administration and myself felt the situation], I didn't feel it necessary to begin again "until counsel has been further unless the lawyer is present. issue was done," he said. Issuing an apol­ write a letter to that person," Wasiolek made available" to the suspect. "A single consultation with an attor­ ogy would "only bring more negative press said. "I didn't tell her not to do it." The question in the Mississippi case ney does not remove the suspect from to the University." The alumnus involved was "not inter­ before the court on Monday was the persistent attempts by officials to per­ "We felt the issue should die," Majestic ested in pursuing the situation in any meaning of the phrase from the Ed­ suade him to waive his rights, or from said. way," Wasiolek said. wards decision, "until counsel has been the coercive pressures that accompany made available." custody and that may increase as cus­ Advertise in The Chronicle The Mississippi Supreme Court tody is prolonged," Kennedy said. TAKEABREAK Come laugh with A THE FUNNIEST MAN IN THE WORLfl Holiday Tree free ice cream samples Dec 5 & Dec 31! courtesy of Ben & Jerry's Lighting Ice Cream 102 W. Franklin Dr. Brodie Lights the Tree Chapel Hill Free cookies and hot cider From the folks who brought you: Baryshnikov in and Santa!!!! METAMORPHOSIS Rex Harrison in THE CIRCLE On the Chapel Quad Jack Lemmon in LONG DATS, Dec. 4 1990 5pm JOURNEY INTO NIGHT Sponsored by - Special Events, DUFS, # TIMES: Dec 5-12, 27-31. and Duke Stores ' (OWJ THEATER: R.J. Reynolds Industries Theater. TICKETS: 684-4444. Duke University Union PAGE 6 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 Government workers forbidden from being paid for articles By ROBERT PEAT how many federal workers will be affect­ ited from receiving any compensation, in­ branch, including military officers and ci­ N.Y. Times News Service ed. cluding honoraria, for speaking and writ vilian employees of the Defense — The federal ethics agency told gov­ "It's fairly common" for government em­ ing on subject matter that focuses specifi­ Department. Of the 907 federal judges ernment workers Monday that they could ployees to be paid for articles and cally on the employing agency's respon­ who filed financial disclosure statements not accept payment for writing articles or speeches unrelated to their work, said sibilities, policies and programs; when the in 1987, 110 reported receiving payments giving speeches, even if the subject is Stephen Potts, head of the Federal Office employee may be perceived as conveying for speeches or articles. Last August the completely unrelated to their work. of Government Ethics, which issued the agency policies, or when the activity in­ Judicial Conference of the United States, Under the new policy, for example, a directive. terferes with his or her official duties." the policy-making arm of the federal judi­ State Department official or Justice Federal workers and First Amendment Starting Jan. 1, he said, "receipt of com­ ciary, adopted rules prohibiting judges Department lawyer would be prohibited lawyers say the new restrictions, man­ pensation will be prohibited for any ap­ from accepting such payments. from taking money for a lecture on or­ dated by Congress, violate federal em­ pearance, speech or article, regardless of chids or for a magazine article on coin col­ ployees' rights of free speech. The maxi­ the subject matter or circumstances." Among those complaining about the lecting. mum penalty for a violation is $10,000 or Potts said the ban was being imposed as a prohibition is Jan Adams Grant, an em­ Government employee unions say thou­ the amount of payment received for an ar­ result of the Ethics Reform Act, signed by ployee of the Internal Revenue Service sands of federal workers engage in such ticle or speech, whichever is greater. President Bush on Nov. 30,1989. who receives $22,200 a year in federal activities in their off-duty time and will be In his directive, Potts said, "Executive The ban applies to federal judges as wages and $3,000 for freelance articles on affected by the ban. It is unclear precisely branch employees have long been prohib­ well as to employees of the executive camping and the environment. ASDU defeats resolution for Students point out problems Congress to avoid war in Gulf with parts of alcohol policy • ASDU from page 1 I ALCOHOL from page 1 islators unanimously approved a reso­ Trinity senior Liz Goldberg, president the students of Duke University, let us lution expressing the wish that the ented at the end of each semester, stu­ of Giles dormitory, asked about a be cautious." Durham Bulls baseball club remain in dents asked the committee when petitions proposed wedding reception in Giles. "If ASDLT legislators should act individ­ for next semester are due. The committee they violate the policy, who will be held or close to Durham. 1 ually on the issue of war in the Middle Last year Durham County citizens said they will provide extra time next se­ responsible? ' she said. Wasiolek said liv­ East rather than as a body, Moore said. voted down a bond issue that would mester for petitions to be turned in, but ing groups were responsible for any viola­ Trinity junior Kit McCormick dis­ have provided funds for the construc­ have not yet set a deadline. tions occurring in public areas. agreed with the bill's content. He said tion of a new stadium. The city could Students also questioned the policy's The presidents also asked if the policy's the world has a chance to rectify the lose the team to a modern facility in requirement that cups issued by carders measurement of alcohol was based on mistakes made 50 years ago when it Raleigh. are used only for alcohol. Trinity senior potency or quanity. Committee member failed to check the aggression of Hitler A random telephone survey of about Eric Harnish, residential advisor for Linda Karl of student health said the pol­ in Czechoslovakia. 150 students showed 90% of the stu­ Wannamaker 1 and member of Delta icy referred to the amount of alcohol. "If we had intervened, we would dent body in support of such a resolu­ Kappa Epsilon said the policy also states have a very different political picture tion, said co-sponsor Richard Moore. that cups cannot be distrubuted anyplace The participants requested the commit­ else at the party. He asked how students today," he said adding that we should Trinity sophomore Andy Lewis, said tee give all students copies of the new pol­ who were drinking non-alcoholic bever­ not discourage the troops already in the confusing wording of the bill made icy before it is implemented. Residential ages were supposed to get drinks from a Saudi Arabia. productive debate difficult. He Advisors already have two copies of the punch bowl. The committee agreed to IN OTHER BUSINESS: ASDU leg­ described the bill as, "verbal diarrhea." new policy, one of which should be posted clarify this issue. where residents can read it, Cullins said.

•5ffihfe£VJ\TER Fellini's Finale! c Don't miss..City of Women HlDID (_»__-._-.__-»_-» Uri-ri 7 & 9:30 pm - BCFT 1980, 138 min., d. Federico Fellini; with Marcello Mastroianni, Ettore Manni, Anna Brucnal, Bernice Stegers, Donatella Damiani. This film is as much a culmination as a continuation of his previous films. Its hero Snaporaz (Mastroianni) is Guido (from 8V2) nearly 20 years older, not much wiser but more curious than ever. The journey begins on a train where Snaporaz is attracted to a big, beautiful, well-dressed woman sitting in the compartment across from him. When he heedlessly follows her off the train, the troubles only begin. The movie is a spellbinding, dazzling visual display that is part satire, part burlesque, and all cinema. City of Women shows Fellini's obsession with his own feeling towards women, by his need for them, his (poor) treatment of them, his continued fascination by them, and his awareness that they will always be different. Please show Duke ID - or pay $3

Warsaw SPECIAL- Fresh Flounder July 1 - July 28 from the INFORMATION MEETING Wednesday, December 5 at 5:00 p.m. North Carolina 320 Languages Building The Department of Slavic Languages & Literatures and the Coast Summer Session will sponsor this exciting new program in Poland. This one-course, four-week program will be based at the University of Warsaw. The program will focus on Poland in transition.

Come meet with Professor Stefan Pugh, Program Director SEAFOOD RESTAURANT I for more information or contact him at 684-3975. Chapel Hill/Durham • HWY 54 at I-40 • 493-8096 • 967-8227 Raleigh • Atlantic Ave at Spring Forest Rd • 790-1200 1 SUMMER SESSIOW Lunch 11:30-2:p0 Sun-Fri • pinner 5:00-9:00 Sun:Thurs, 5:00-10:00 Fri-Sat wmmmmmtmmmmkwmkmmmmkmmmmmmkmmmmmmmmmmmm^a^ma^Kmmmmi^a^^^^^m^^^m^^m TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 7 In the NeXTstatioiTcomputer, go to work. You even get a free trial weVe managed to squeeze the most subscription to NeXTWDRLD™mag- possible computer into the least azine,to keep you up to date. possible space. WeVe also squeezed And to make our case even more the most possible computer into the compel ling, we'll send a free copy of least possible price. the extraordinary spreadsheet pro­ One low price includes not only gram, Lotus Improv (a $695 value), the keyboard and monitor, but a full to everyone who purchases and regis­ eight megabytes of memory a built-in ters a NeXTstation or NeXTcube 2.88-megabyte floppy disk drive and computer, or an 040 upgrade board Ethernet.The NeXTstation is also before December 31,1990* equipped with a 105-megabyte hard We couldn t even guess where disk, onto which we have taken the you could make a comparable pur­ liberty of installing a rather formida­ chase. But we can tell you ex­ ble package of software, including actly where to make this WfiteNow,@J//7/^^///Vv/f NeXTmail™ one. Check the space and Digital Webster.™ So all you have below to find the location to do is plug it in and youre ready to of your campus reseller. RIGHT NOW,YO U CAN GET TWO BREAKTHROUGHS FOR THE PRICE OF ON E.

•58*,. MeW*8.31

Duke University Computer Store Bryan Center 684-8956

•Lotus Improv will be delivered when available. ©1990 NeXT Computer, Inc. All rights reserved.The NeXT logo is a registered trademark. NeXT, NeXTstation, NeXTcube, NeXTmail and Digital Webster are trademarks of NeXT Computer, Inc_ WriteNow is a registered trademark of T/Maker Co. Mathematica is a registered trademark of Wolfram Research, Inc. All other trademarks mentioned belong to their respective owners. EDITORIALS -WW'S r PAGE 8 DECEMBER 4, 1990 Making new plans

It is time for the University to make effects of such an increase on already some tough decisions. The quality of overextended transportation, com­ student, and especially residential, puting and faculty resources. For ex­ 100, life on campus will be significantly af­ ample, responding to the demand for 93. fected by the recommendations of two more seminars, Evans said: "That's a '»-yJ_Kif%_er.i«irtr- <« 5. -^>»JC-P-a£=~ =£2. University committees. problem you can't deal with." The class size committee, led by The Strobel task force realizes that Physics Department Chair Lawrence an enlarged faculty-in-residence Evans, has recommended increasing program would push the University The sunny, serene Florida: the University's target enrollment to to find housing for displaced stu­ 5,900. The current target of 5,700 has dents, and it has also found six resi­ not been met during the last 10 years. dence halls on campus where faculty Get out while you still can In fact, the Univeristy grossly over- could be housed with minimal reno­ enrolled in 1986 and again this this vation costs and lost revenue. It has come to my attention that my year. On a serious where there is a seri­ coverage of snowbird-related topics has • Commentary The Evans committee takes these ous dichotomy between the classroom been something less than balanced. two years as evidence ofthe Universi­ and all other aspects of student life, it Critics have accused me of stereotyping David Grimes our winter visitors as cheap, rude, slow- ty's ability to increase the target to is in the best interest of the Univer­ driving plagues from the North while ig­ 5,900 without overburdening sity to increase the number of faculty noring the equally noxious habits of na­ goers a rash. facilities and faculty, and also recom­ in existing dormitories and include tive Floridians. 7/6/90 — Half of guns seized in Colom­ mends constructing 180 new residen­ faculty apartments in plans for any Therefore, in the interest of giving both bia come from Florida. tial spaces. new dorms. sides equal offense, I will devote this col­ 7/10/90 — Vultures return to Disney The Residential Life Task Force, If President Keith Brodie, the Un­ umn to pointing out the many deficiencies World. led by chemistry professor Howard dergraduate Faculty Council of Arts of Florida and the people who live in it. 7/19/90 — Tampa store sells Ken Strobel, has recommended among and Sciences and the Board of Trust­ My source in this enterprise is the 1991 dressed as Barbie. other things an increase in the num­ ees have their fingers any closer to "Florida Calamity Calendar," published 7/23/90 — 17-foot pet python loose in ber of faculty-in-residence. Strobel's the pulse of student life than the by the Florida Conservation Foundation Tampa. Inc. The items listed below have been 7/24/90 — Lake County inmates run up group advises doubling the number of Evans committee, they will realize culled from honest-to-goodness articles $20,000 bill in "phone sex" calls. faculty-in-residence to 10. that: Facilities and faculty are al­ published this year and late last year in 7/30/90 — Broward County cashier "Uniformly very positive reports ready very strained; the faculty-in- various Florida newspapers. If, after pulls gun on kids who were 2 cents short from the faculty-in-residence" and the residence program is one of the best reading this, several million of you decide on bubble gum purchase. improved quality of life that these ways to blend the currently distinct to move back to Ohio, please do not men­ 8/5/90 — Insurance against UFO ab­ faculty effect are "sufficient reward" academic and non-academic parts of tion my name. duction on sale in Central Florida. for the cost of displacing a few stu­ students' lives; any new residential 1/2/90 — Jellyfish return to South Flor­ 8/19/90 — Gainesville doctors disci­ dents, the committee said. facilities should include faculty resi­ ida beaches. plined for operating on wrong woman. While the increase in target enroll­ dences; and the commitment to such 1/7/90 — Disney World fined for animal 8/20/90 — Manatee County man billed ment is not necessarily a negative new residential facilities should be abuse. $5,000 for removal of splinter. 8/24/90 — Riverview man spits out bul­ thing (in fact, it is just recognition of made before the University legiti­ 1/13/90 -±- Study shows Florida has more cars than people. let deflected by dentures. the status quo and of a University mizes the 5,900 level. Without such 1/17/90 — Sailors robbed by Orlando 9/14/89 — Eustis man fends off 9-foot policy that has gone unimplemented commitments, the Evans committee's child gang. alligator with fishing rod. for 10 years), the Evans committee recommendations signal a "problem 1/20/90 — Orlando bomb squad opens 9/25/89 — 500 tons of trash found on has not done enough to address the [we] can't deal with." musical Christmas card. Florida's beaches. 1/25/90 — 23 Polk County students ex­ 10/1/89 — Lake County man shoots pelled for bringing guns to school. neighbor for playing stereo too loud. On the record 2/9/90 — 11-year-old takes 3-foot alliga­ 10/7/89 — Fire ants halt Sarasota golf tor to school for show and tell. game. People within the University administration and myself felt the issue was done. [Is­ 2/10/90 — 40,000 Africanized bees 10/12/89 — Florida canals filled with suing an apology would] only bring more negative press to the University. We felt the destroyed at Port Everglades. cars dumped for insurance. issue should die. 3/5/90 — Author of book on how to steal 10/13/89 — Amtrak train drops raw Director of Transportation Services David Majestic addressing the Gantt postered cars arrested for car theft in Lake Worth. sewage on fishermen. ASDU election van. 3/22/90 — Apopka traffic "fowled" by 11/14/89 — Head stolen from 26-foot 15-foot slick of fried chicken oil. Santa statue in Orlando. 3/30/90 — Human bones found in suit­ 11/16/89 — North Florida greyhound case in Martin County. trainers used live rabbits. THE CHRONICLE established 1905 4/6/90 — Man claiming CIA planted 11/19/89 — Tampa radio station criti­ bomb in his brain shuts down Miami TV cized for plans to drop live turkey from station. airplane. Matt Sclafani, Editor 4/9/90 — Seven-foot alligator wanders 11/30/89 — "Fudge Suprize (sic)" wins Adrian Dollard, Managing Editor into Spring Hill shop. Key Lime pie contest. Barry Eriksen, General Manager 4/21/90 — IRS car booted in Jackson­ 12/6/89 — Navy rams Greenpeace ship Rick Brooks, Editorial Page Editor ville for unpaid parking tickets. protesting missile launch. Ann Heimberger, News Editor Erin Sullivan, News Editor 4/23/90 — Seven percent of state work­ 12/7/89 — Man in Goofy hat and Mickey Mark Jaffe, Sports Editor Karl Wiley, Features Editor ers' pay so low they need welfare. Mouse shirt robs Disney tourist. Elena Broder, Arts Editor Halle Shilling, Arts Editor 4/30/90 — Fort Pierce kiss-a-pig contest 12/9/89 — Buzzard, copter collide; buz­ Leigh Dyer, City & State Editor Ben Pratt, Senior Editor allowed despite complaints. zard hits Audubon member on head. Jon Blum, University Editor Richard Senzel, Graphics Editor 5/12/90 — More, worse hurricanes 12/15/89 — 70 Christmas trees stolen in Cliff Burns, Photography Editor Bob Kaplan, Photography Editor predicted. Sarasota County. Armando Gomez, Business Manager Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager 5/20/90 — Tampa crematorium solicits 12/19/89 — 83-year-old Pompano Beach Linda Nettles, Production Manager Anna Lee, Student Advertising Manager business by offering free grocery coupons. man caught dealing cocaine. Charles Carson, Production Supervisor Joy Bacher, Creative Services Manager 5/24/90 — Seven-foot alligator found 12/25/89 — Christmas Day freeze napping in Holiday couple's shower stall. causes statewide power outages. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its 5/29/90 — Train, sewage truck collide. Copies of Florida's Calamity Calendar students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of 6/8/90 — Needles found in Sun City ap­ 1991 can be obtained by sending $7.95 to -the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. ples, Manatee County buns. the Florida Conservation Foundation Inc., Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115; Business 6/10/90 — Arsenic in groundwater un­ 1251-B Miller Ave., Winter Park, FL Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106; FAX: 684-8295. der Dunedin juice plant. 32789. For more information, call 407- Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Roor Rowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union 644-5377. Building; Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building. 6/17/90 — Pet exotic snakes often aban­ ©1990 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No doned in South Florida. David Grimes is a humor columnist for part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the 6/30/90 — Erotic doughnut shop opens the Sarasota (Fla.) Herald-Tribune. This Business Office. in Union Park. article was distributed by The New York 7/1/90 — Sea lice give Broward beach- Times News Service. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 9 Letters

AIDS? The homeless? Forty million unin­ sured? What do these words mean? Who We'll miss you guys is responsible? What does this have to do with my life? To the editor: The stakes in the Persian Gulf are high. 60 OUT FC* Girl," you know it's true. Milli Vinilli Higher than they've ever been in our ruled our world. Their multi-platinum short 20 years on the planet. The compilation sold over 7 million copies, and decisions that will be made in Washing­ they were named Best New Artist at the ton in the next few weeks will unquestion­ A 1989 Grammy Awards. They were on top ably affect us all. The outcomes could be WHO f ?oSsv< of the world, and they deserved to be. horrfying and immediate. War means They gave it all to us: a hot beat, a new blood, pain and death. Friends and rela­ sound, soul and swing. So what if they tives shipped home in bodybags. didn't vocalize the image we jammed to, Are we willing to let this happen? What of ^ an image of dreadlocks and dancing, a are our concrete objectives? What alterna­ dream of love and fun, of fully satisfying tives exist? What are the risks and costs each of our senses? They symbolized a associated with each? Most importantly, fantastic package of everything we expect who will ultimately make the decision? in an album. In this day and age of multi­ I propose no simple answers to these media presentation to contemporary Top questions. None exist. It is precisely for 40 listeners, there's not going half way. this reason that we must be willing to TH€ FOREI6AI All or nothing, it's got to be. If anything is challenge both what we hear from others MEAftllfttfFUt to blame, it is the game of satisfying pub­ and what we say ourselves. J*ATU*AU»y SK1PHCAU. lic taste. The debate will be fierce and the out­ As the time goes by, you've got to un­ come uncertain. But we have a duty — to derstand, it's you, the listeners, that ourselves and to our country — to enter lected and their hands will be stamped at It's a whole different world. So Dukies, really matter. It is unlikely that you will that debate now. As ethicist Michael Wal- this time. wake up and think and don't be so conde­ ever forget their number, yet having been zer said, "We take sides in the struggle in If you need to leave the line after you scending. The future of the homeless is ridiculed by every major form of media order to humanize it." arrive (provided that your hand has been our future too. (from G105's "trade in your Milli Vanilli stamped), you may leave identification CDs for some real music" radio promotion Amiel Handelsman with the ASDU monitor for your section. Margo Needleman to Dennis Miller's "Saturday Night Live" Trinity '92 You may only be gone for one hour, anJ Trinity '93 Weekend Update depicting Rob Pilatus as you must return no later than 2 1/2 President Bush's new dog, to even The hours before game time (one hour before/^11 • f-U^ r»r\llftc Chronicle's "Blame it on the Shame" car­ the doors open). No one may leave afterV^lCdll Lip lIlC COUXlb toon), Milli Vanilli will never regain the Let's get in line this time. When the doors open 1 1/2 stature they once held. After what they hours before game time, the line will be gave us, they deserve better. led section by section into Cameron. We want to thank Milli Vanilli person­ To the editor: Ifyou have any questions regarding the To the editor: ally for their music, now that no one else Basketball season is upon us once line monitoring policy, please call the As an avid basketball participant, I will admit they're good. We don't care again, and so the time has come to an­ ASDU office at 684-6403. We thank you have frequently been disappointed with that your Grammy was stripped. The rea­ nounce the 1990-91 ASDU line monitor­ for your cooperation and wish you happy the lack of opportunity to play the game son that we love your group is for what ing policy. The policy outlined below was camping. here at Duke. I am not so much bothered you are. We've played your CD again and by the inadequate number and size of the developed by ASDU's Buildings, Grounds Dan Makuch again, memorizing the lyrics and wearing gymnasiums. Nor does it offend me that and Athletic Affairs committee taking ASDU Vice President for out the dance floor, associating unforget­ into account input we received at the line the few gyms around are largely unavail­ table memories with your music. You're Facilities and Athletic Affairs able year round because of various intra­ monitoring forum held in October. This Adrianne Threatt still the Best New Artists in our book. Rob policy will stand for all games. mural activities. What annoys me is that and Fab: Guys, we're gonna miss you. Chair, ASDU BGAA Committee every time I visit the Central Campus Tent policy: When you arrive to set up Elizabeth Gibson your tent, submit your list of up to 10 oc­ outdoor courts, I am immediately rele­ Jack Williams, Jr. Head of ASDU Line Monitoring gated to spectator status becuse of the Engineering '92 cupants to the people at the front of the line. ASDU monitors will stop by periodi­ dense population of non-students who Geary Graham take over every day at approximately 4:00 Engineering '93 cally to pick up these lists and will accept the order given. Tents are only permitted p.m. on the grassy areas around Cameron, Look at real world I have no idea where these hordes of Card Gym and the tennis courts. Camp­ persons come from, but suffice it to say ers will no longer be allowed to run they are not exactly Durham's best. In electrical cords from Card or Cameron to To the editor: fact, I have met some of the most hateful Join war debate the tents. Detailed regulations regarding As the funk music from kegs broke and hostile people while standing in line electricity will be distributed at the line. through the crip night, the somber tunes to play. I would even go so far as to hy­ To the editor: This brings us to the major change from of a guitar filled the air with ironic pothesize that the number of assaults, At what point in the Persian Gulf con­ last year's policy. Once the tents are set reality. As the participants in the home­ thefts and robberies that have occurred flict are we as citizens charged with a up, ASDU will begin to make random oc­ lessness vigil sang to eradicate poverty this year along on Anderson Street and duty to our country? Most of my male cupancy checks. These checks require and hunger in America, businees went on the adjacent complexes is directly related friends state that if drafted they would that at least one person from each tent be as usual in the rest of our Gothic Wonder­ to the hooligans that frequent the place. feel loyally bound to fight for our country. present. If your tent misses one check you land. My God, I thought. Doesn't anyone For these reasons, I would like to I respect this. But what about right now? will be moved to the end of the tent line. care? But it wasn't because of insen­ propose that the school monitor these Don't we have an immediate duty to enter Occupancy checks may occur at any time sitivity that so few paid mind to the ac­ courts as it does the gyms. At first, this the struggle before the fighting begins — on any day. tivities on the chapel steps. It is our in­ request may sound unreasonable, but it to engage in the democratic debate for In addition, ASDU will make five ran­ ability to truly fathom the gravity of really is not. The mobs usually do not whose preservation we are so willing to dom tent checks beginning 48 hours homelessness. start to congregate until 4:00 p.m., and sacrifice our lives? before game time. Each member of the I guess that we cannot expect people they typically disperse by 10:00 p.m. Thus Democracy is a process — a process by tent will be checked for individually, and who grew up in dreamland suburbia to two shifts of monitors would suffice. which decisions are made. We learned every member must be present for three comprehend what it means to be homeless Moreover, there is only one entrance, so this in high school civics class. Simple of the five checks. When a person is and destitute. I'm sure that many stu­ everyone can check in with one monitor. stuff, right? Theoretically, yes. In reality, checked for the third time, he will receive dents believe that homelessness is a prod­ I realize that Duke has more serious no. All too often, we invest ourselves in a ticket numbered according to his tent's uct of laziness. They believe that anyone problems to solve, but this one is perturb­ the outcomes of decisions rather than the placement, thus insuring him his place in can get a job if they really want to. Beg­ ing to those of us who reside on North and means by which they are achieved. Just line. These tent checks will not be made ging on the street would never be an op­ Central Campus, and it is easily correc­ as we want to know who won the basket­ from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays, since tion. But how naive we are. How we so table. most undergraduate classes are sched­ ball game more than how it was played, blindly take our privileged position in life Brian Alligood uled during that time. Both occupancy we approach Washington politics by in­ for grated. A large percentage of our Law '92 quiring, "Great, but how will this affect and tent checks will officially end 15 mi­ homeless are children, born into it and me?" nutes after they begin. After that time, trapped. Poverty is a vicious cycle. Home­ Why does this happen? Largely because monitors will no longer consider people or less people are not able to work because tents they have already passed. we are busy people with our own dilem­ they do not have an address or a decent Editor's note: The Chronicle will mas to resolve. Papers and tests demand Day of the game: When you arrive to change of clothing. No one will hire them. cease publication for the semester with our attention. We like to relax, and we get in line, your hand will be stamped Just think about being born on the cold the Dec. 10 issue. To be considered for want to have fun. We simply do not have with a color-coded stamp. This stamp streets of New York and left to fend for publication, all letters to the editor time to immerse ourselves in the policy­ does not guarantee anyone (including yourself since as long ago as you could must be received by Dec. 5. making process. While laws are written campers) admittance into Cameron, but it remember. From your present perspective Letters to the editor should be mailed and resolutions passed, we are silent. Yet does serve to establish your approximate you are probably saying, "Oh, I'd work my to Box 4696, Duke Station, or delivered our perceived powerlessness suppresses place in line. Tent campers will be lined way through school and take care of my­ in person to The Chronicle office on the our zeal and reinforces our complacency. up by their ticket numbers three hours self." It just doesn't work that way. The third floor of Flowers Building. The troubles we read about seem as dis­ before game time (or 1 1/2 hours before social and moral standards of your middle tant from our existing reality as old age. the doors open). Their tickets will be col- class society do not apply on the street. PAGE 10 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 Comics

Antimatter/ Rob Hirschfeld THE Daily Crossword bv CF. Murray

ACROSS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 1 "— Me Kate" WMERE'*. T«AT WHEKE5 THAT us use. ; 5 Declares 14 16 "DAN.M Bui^ WMEN DAHN BUS UIHENJ 10 Ratted - 17 19 I NEED IT? X MEET) /T? 14 Villa d'— ALEX TWT/OA/ 15 Cherish " 20 16 At all 121 H22 23 17 Merriment 24 25 18 Privileged H H group 26 27 28 H29 |30 31 32 19 Vincent Lopez CAN >bU ^fSS: theme 33 34 •|3S 20 Liberates H 7 22 Little by little 36 Bis? H38 IAJWCH AtEX B •Wl/_X//V^ 24 Try 39 ••40 WH.CH AL6* ft STKZSUHk7 25 Move H-. 26 Author de 42 43 ^•44 Beauvoir I 29 Erne H45 ^46 &f&f£frt-t.*i 33 Tartan 34 Lawn 47 48 49 H5C 51 52 S3 35 Actor Howard 36 "— She 54 55 56 57 Sweet" 56 59 60 The Far Side /Gary Larson Doonesbury / Garry Trudeau 37 Blind parts 38 Chimney 61 62 63 buildup 39 506 is.'1990 Tribune Media Services, Inc 1 THAT'S WHY ICAN7 40 Numbers All Rights Reserved 12/04/90 MR. PRESIDENT, ({JELL, ALL REALLY BE HELP ACCOUNTABLE game Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: COULP YOU Wit THE ONES 41 Rib 8 Tedious FOR THEM. THE TAX THING, c R A M 1 S T T E u$ SPECIFICALLY 1HAPTO THE ENVIRONMENT THING, THB 42 Green alga routine v A E s L 1 R T U T 0 A WHICHCAMmiGN RENE6E EDUCATION THIN6-~THBYtOER£NT 44 Waffle mixture 9 Feel a blow's A A c P s 45 Loaded 0 L 1 H U N 0 P S PLEPOESYOU ON.../ REALLY MY ^ effect N s T T m 46 Old salts 10 Sp. lady G L A D T 0 N E E N E T -\ UP-SYNCHEP* POSITIONS TO a • B BEGIN WITH! 47 Salad item 11 Assert aaHQ uuuu 50 Rose Bowl 12 Dickens girl A S T E Rm P R E A B L E city 13 Dull •M U T E D o R A 1. G 1 0 W 54 Landed 21 Ward (off) E G 0 1 T 0 N E 55 In — (easily) s s __ P 23 Told fibs L E N S 1 C K F A K E R 57 Alg. port 25 Alliance T R E T I E 1 E R 58 Muse number letters a s •M s H 59 Fr. composer 26 WWI planes 1 UUUR U UUUU 60 Lush 27 As — and A L E u •s T 0 N|E|W A L L 61 Gadabout breathe i. A N « o p A R T o G E E 62 Actor Williams 28 Frenzy A L G A p R 1 M o R U I. E 63 Night light 29 Aquatic birds :• A E <• T Y L E E A R 30 Old Eng. coin • • DOWN 31 Free 12/04/90 WELL, I CAN'T I ALWAYS JT WHOSE PRO/BIT, OF 1 Barrels 32 Stage OF USED TO MA* 2 Capri e.g. direction 41 GWTW home 49 Excavation WERE COURSE, BUT I'M COURSE BLAMEMY HIM! 3 Editor's 34 Curtail 43 Kitchen 50 Party snack THEY, PRETTY SURE THB ITU/AS. BROTHER IT-^ word drastically gadget 51 Ohio's lake SIR? CULPRITWASMY FOR STUFF, mVASi 4 Takes charge 37 Shore 44 Creel 52 Extremely ,m EVILTWHSKIPPY. TOO... 5 Disinclined 38 Commits to 46 Actress Shire small: pref. 6 — parking writing 47 Sharp flavor 53 Shortly \»m 7 — Wiesel 40 Young herring Is-/'0 48 Hodgepodge 56 Strife THE CHRONICLE

Associate photography editor: George Ivey Assistant sports editor: Mark Jaffe \<7?3'/!st]'<&**~~ Copy editors: RevaBhatia, Karl Wiley Ann Heimberger, Erin Sullivan Wire editors: David Mcintosh Calvin and Hobbes /Bill Watterson Production assistant: Roily Miller Account representatives: Judy Bartlett Dorothy Gianturco YOU'RE G01UG MMBE TMEK TOBE.PRETT. I CM. FINISH Advertising sales staff: Cindy Adelman, IOMELS IH TWE. THIS BOOK. Stacy Glass, Trey Huffman, Miky Kurihara NURSING HOWE. Katie Spencer, Laura Tawney, Serina Vash Creative services staff:. .Michael Alcorta, Wendy Arundel, Loren Faye, Dan Foy, Steven Heist, Jessica Johnston Kevin Mahler, Ann-Marie Parsons, Carolyn Poteet Classified managers: Roma Lai, David Morris Credit manager: Judy Chambers Business staff: Jennifer Dominguez, Michelle Kisloff, Candi Polsky, Liz Stalnaker Office manager: Jennifer Springer Calendar coordinator: ..Pam Packtor

•__: Habitat for 'kins, • 894 bv TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 11 Ciassifieds

A POSTCARD Grad. Prof, student wanted for Remodeled 1 BR apts., hardwood GREAT BUYS! Announcements under your door means come get Help Wanted long-term, ongoing, periodic dog/ floors, lots of light. Close to E. Dorm refrigerator- only 1 year you exampack at Few Fed Friday CASH PAID FOR YOUR BOOKS AT house sitting job. Pool, tennis, Campus. $325/mo. 489-1989. old- $50. Brother SX-16 Electric and Saturday 11:00 to 5:00. Looking for a fraternity, sorority or THE TEXTBOOK STORE. Monday - student organization that would beaut, house in Durham. Experi­ Typewriter- only 3 months old- Duke Court one bedroom apt Saturday, 8:30-5:00. like to make $500-$1.000 for a ence and references required. Dr $75. Both Items in great condi­ ROSES OF AOII Available Jan-May. Call 489- How do Your gardens grow? With one week on-campus marketing Pirrung, 684-2409. tion and prices are negotiable. 4434. papers great, and nights up late, project Must be organized and Call Candi at 684-7771. LEADERSHIP Graduate work study students and four exams all in a row? Well, hardworking. Call Jenny or Kevin at Beautiful 2BR APT near campus. Become more involved at Duke! needed for spring semester for TAKE A BREAK and come to the (800)-592-2121. FOR SALE. Yamaha NS-30T Be a RESIDENT ADVISOR! Attend Black Periodical Fiction Project. _! 5 Central heat/air. $400/month. Call , LAST meeting of the semester, Speakers. Excellent condition. ONE of two info sessions: 11/28 hours per week. Stipend. Interst/ John 493-1366 Graduate/Profes­ 6pm, Bio-Sci. And remember, we OVERSEAS JOBS $900-$2000 mo. $135.00 call Ralph. 489-2034 or 12/4, 7 p.m.. 139 Soc-Sci. knowledge in black fiction and sional are ALL tools. Summer, Yr. round. All Countries, (Answering Machine). ATTN: ALL BLUE DEVIL FANS. THE All fields. Free info. Write UC. P.O. computer skills a plus. Call Sara Female Grad/Professional non- ACC-BIG EAST CHALLENGE is ASA MEETING Box 52-NC02. Corona Del Mar, CA Elizabeth at 286-3687. smoker to share 2 BR. 15 baths. Kenwood KR-V6010 AA/ stereo re­ December 5th and the Blue Devils Last meeting of the year! Come for 92625: Large kitchen. $208 . 1/2 ceiver (70 watts, graphic equalizer. need your support!!! Roadtrip up to utilities. Call P.M 489-2666 Dolby surround, remote). $190. Christmas party, secret Santas. EASY WORK! EXCELLENT PAY! AS­ Landover, MD and the Capital 7pm tonight 116 Old Chem. Child Care Sony CDP-470 CD player (remote. Centre to see Duke beat Geor­ SEMBLE PRODUCTS AT HOME. SEMESTER SUBLET. Studio editing functions). $110. Both in Child-Care. State registered, in- getown. The Quality Inn, the host ALL MINORITIES! CALL FOR INFORMATION. 504-641- Apartment. $250 per month. Low excellent condition. Call 684- home, experienced provider has 3 hotel of the Capital Centre, has a Jonathon McGowan desperately 8003 EXT. 5921. heating bills. Duke Court, bus. Call 7681. room reserved for you. 1-800-544- needs a bone marrow transplant! slots for infants to pre-schoolers. 419-0564. WANTED: Healthy undergraduates Mebane, Efland. Hillsborough Macintosh 512K Great'condition." 0121 for info! Minority donors are especially to participate in a research study needed! Free blood testing for areas. Call Deborah 563-5336. Including key board, outer drive, at the Behavioral Medicine Re­ Rooms for Rent and Microsoft Works. $400 or best MALCONTENTS ~~ suitable donors TODAY. 4-7PM, search Center, Duke University Duke professors offer Hope Valley or anyone looking for something offer Call Liz 684-0223. Mary Lou Williams Center. Testing Medical Center. This study will in­ apartment in exchange for 15-20 l-Bedroom sublet in furnished 4- beyond the kegs dominated social does not mean a commitment. vestigate the role of several psy­ hours after-school child care for BR house. $183/month. 16 Sun­ scene. Informal gathering PLEASE COME!! RECYCLED CARDS chological variables in Coronary seven-year-old 'daughter. plus rise- near Forest Apts. Dishwasher, Thursday, 8:00, at Francesca's. For Recycled Holiday Cards and KAPPAS Heart Disease. Subjects will be some paid evening babysitting, washer/drier, cable. 2-car garage, giftwrap for sale on Bryan Center more info., call Shay 684-1156 or asked to complete several ques­ transportation and references re­ Come to the Christmas Party for fireplace, wood deck. Available Walkway- Dec. 6. Dec. 7. Dec. 10. Cristina 684-0859. tionnaires and participate in a quired. Start now or in January. the YMCA kids today from 3:30 to January. Call Dave 382-3176. Dec. 11. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Call Duke moderately challenging interview 684-5173. 684-3580, evening: STREET HOCKEY 5:30 at the Down Under on East. Recycles for information. 684- in our laboratory. This study does 493-0553. Interested in forming a club and It'll be lots of fun! 3362. playing next semester? Call 688- not involve any medical proce­ Houses for Rent DG Formal mtg. dures. Participants will be paid Duke mom is organizing a morning TICKET TO JAX! 6964 for info. enrichment program for pres­ is tonite - the last meeting of the $10. Call 684-2403 and ask for COUNTRY LIVING Plane Ticket to Jacksonville. FL. choolers to share benefit of a won­ ANNEX REUNION semester, and elections! 7:30 in study coordinator from 9 a.m. to 5 2BR, 2BA mobile home c/a screen Leaves RDU Dec. 15. Returns Jan, derful teacher starting January in Who? Seniors that lived in Hanes 111 Bio-Sci. There will be refresh^ p.m. porch w/fan. Wooded 1 and 1/2 ac. 9. VERY CHEAP! Cal! Michelle x- Annex! When? Dec. 7, 9:00-1:00. ments! spacious and loving setting at 20 mm. to'Duke. Must see $400/ 0848. Where? Springfield Apts. Club­ SUMMER POSITIONS: Develop peo­ Woodcroft. 544-4489. mo. Ref. Req 493-0264 aftef 6 For Sale 1 IBM PC Junior with house, 4600 University Drive. ple skills and leadership abilities p.m. SKYDEVILS Loving Reliable Experienced monitor and word-processing BUSES leave flashing light on while gaining valuable life experi­ Election of officers for next year woman or female student needed Very nice 4BR and 2BR houses Towerview at 9.00 and 9:30. BE ences as one or more of the follow­ program $250. 1 Okidata ML192 will be held TONIGHT In FUBAR to care for 18 month old in our available 1/1 Close to W. Campus THERE! ing: cabin counselors, program Prir.terf $250. commons at 6:30. Be there to home. Non-smoker, Mon-Fri, 12 Call 489-1989. specialists (swimming; tennis, SCUBA DIVING voice your opinion. noon - 6PM. References Required. Bassett Captain's Bed w/3 deep gymnastics, archery, riflery, Trinity Park house for rent. 4 bed­ drawers $125. stereo cabinet $35. Instruction with Duke Outing_Club. Starting Jan. 7, 1991. Call 968- YOUNG TRUSTEE sailing, skateboarding, arts and rooms. Walk to campus $850/mo. Gerry 684-3777. If you are interested in getting cer­ 6418 CH. Interested in serving as a member crafts, ropes course, etc.), nurses Call 688-2152. tified and/or a possible Spring of the University's Board of Trust­ (RN), and more. Camp Kanata of­ Babysitter needed for lovable 21 One-way ticket to Denver on Dec. Break scuba trip, then come to ees? Applications available in fers this experience with compen­ mos. old boy in Duke Forest home. 14 $90 Call 688-2152 Dec. 3 OC meeting or see OC Board ASDU office. Deadline: 1710/91 sation based on age, certifica­ $5/hr. Call 493-4889. Real Estate Sales in Bryan Center or call Rob 684- Questions? Call 684-6403. tions, and experience ranging from 0632. Wanted to Buy $1000.00 to $2500.00 plus room CHILDCARE! KERR LAKE WATERFRONT - Lots in The new Ouke Community Service HOUSE COURSE "The Issue of the Berry Hill, Deer Run Acres, Sandie Help your scope make it through and board for 10 weeks. Apply: As­ I need 3 tickets for Feb. 9 vs. Mary­ Center Is accepting applications Nineties." Spring semester, proba­ Point, Taylor's Point. Call Amy finals! Get a CRUSH for your crush sistant Director, Camp Kanata, Rt land. Feb 10 vs. LSU. 684-7587. for a student director. If Interested bly Mondays 5-630. Questions? Knott. Peace Real Estate for from AOII. Bryan Center- Tue., 3. Box 192, Wake Forest, N.C. In this exciting leadership role, call Call Laura Hankin at 684-1901. details. 919-492-5061 or 804- HELP! Wed. 27587. 919-556-2661. Matt Hammer at 684-4377 for 252-0376. I need 3-4 tickets to Dec 8 Duke- Want cash, free food, and your very more Information. MALE SUBJECTS NEEDED. Male Services Offered Michigan game! Leaving the coun­ subjects needed for reaction time try. I'll never have this chance own fan club? Be a Precollege SORORITY RUSH!! Program or TIP RA or TA this sum­ studies at DUMC. Must be 24-29 Autos for Sale again. Please call 383-2615. Last day to sign up is Thursday, ANOTHER BYTE: Fast. Accurate mer. Inquire in 01 West Duke- 684- years of age with normal to correc- December 6. Follow instructions Typist WordPerfect SW. Call 9-9. Chevy Cavalier. Station Wagon B-BALL 3847. Deadline Feb. 4. ted-to-normal vision. Pymt $8.00. outside the Panhel office! Approx. one-hour study. Please call DISCOUNT AVAILABLE. SOME Like New. AC, AM/FM. New Front Need tix to Georgetown this FREE DELIVERY. Call 490-5850. tires. New Battery. Great interior Wednesday Help! Call Mike x- MIDEAST CRISIS USHERS NEEDED!! 684-2528 between 8:00 a.m. and Come discuss the "Crisis in the and body. 493-7479. 7395 Sign up NOW to usher for Nocholas 5:00 p.m. to make an appoint­ TYPING - Quick professional ser­ Middle East" on Tues., Dec. 4th, at Kitchen, violinist (part of the Duke ment. vice for papers/resumes. Mail Ford Escort L 86. 4Dr, HT. AT, AM/ 7:30 in the Bassett Commons Ride Needed Artists Series)! The performance is Research Assistant for Medical Boxes Etc. 382-3030 (in Loehman­ FM. 64,000 mile. $2000 neg. Room. Sponsored by DIPAC. Thurs., Jan. 10 (the day we get n's Plaza). School Neurobiology Laboratory. 493-1769. Ride to G-Town game urgently back from break)! Sign up outside RUSSIAN TABLE Undergraduate student needed to needed. Will help pay. can leave Page Box Office! Don't forget! Do it JUST YOUR TYPE Word Processing Merry Xmas! 1990 RX7 conv. New. Russian table - 12:30 Tuesday work as part-time technician on a anytime. Call Thomas 684-0893. today! Service will type your papers, dis­ 5000 mi. Red, balck leather CD (today) in BC Boardroom. project requiring computerized sertations, etc. quickly and profes­ Extended warranty. $21K. 660- analysis of autoradiographic im­ ~~ UNCLE TERRY sionally. APA style our specialty. 8116 id.4089. Lost and Found ages. Two to four hours per week Emergency typing welcome. 489- Sanford will host the Chorale Entertainment . from now until the end of Spring . 8700 (24 hoars). LOST KEYS Three keys on a brass Christmas Concert on Thrusday, semester. Hours flexible. Pay Karamu presents A Streetcar For Sale — Misc. keychain shaped like a theatre Dec. 6, at 7:00pm in Duke Chapel. depends on experience. Students Come hear your favorite holiday Named Desire Nov. 29 to Dec. 8. ticket. If found, please call Julie at with science background and espe­ Roommate Wanted Furniture Sale: Sofa loveseat and songs. Admission is FREE! Tickets at Page Box Office. Catch 684-2663 cially neuroanatomy skills will be chair. Nearly new. sturdy, attrac­ Desire before it is too late. Graduate student needs roommate given preference. Contact Dr. tive. $350. Joe 286-5939. James N. Davis, Neurology Re­ (female, non-smoker) to share See page 12 • search. Durham VA Medical Cen­ Holly Hill apartment spring semes­ ter, 286-6956. DUKE UNIVERSITY ter (available until August). $175/ is an EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AFFIR­ month plus half utilities. Call MATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER. Sandra 382-3177. THE CHRONICLE FEMALE GRAD/PROF wanted to Housecleaner wanted one day per share 3 bedroom house within week. Fridays ideal. Must have car. biking distance of FVW campus. $166 per/mo + 1/3 util. AVAIL­ MEDICAL STUDENTS! Good pay. 489-2877. classifieds information ABLE JAN. 1. Dog negotiable basic rates Phone 493-6432. The United States Navy is looking for $3.50 (per day) for the first 15 words or less. 100 (per day) for each additional word. Apts. for Rent applicants for two, three, and four 3 or 4 consecutive insertions-10% off. 2 BEDROOM DUKE MANOR APART­ year medical scholarships. These schol­ 5 or more consecutive insertions-20% off. MENT AVAILABLE; CALL 254-5799 or 383-0934. arships cover the full school-related special features expenses of your medical education, (Combinations accepted.) GATE $1.00 extra per day for All Bold Words. as well as providing a personal allow­ $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading Christmas Trees (maximum 15 spaces.) :R ance of $732 per month while you are $2.00 extra per day for a Boxed Ad. Frazier Fir in school. deadline SHOP •Cut the day before 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 Noon. delivery To qualify you must: payment Full Sc •Premium grade Be a U.S. citizen. Prepayment is required. •Reasonable prices Cash, check or Duke IR accepted. Style S Be enrolled in an AMA approved (We cannot make change for cash payments.) Delivered Dec. 1 & 8 medical school, or AOA approved 2-5 pm at the 24-hour drop off location is Mon.-Fri. 8-5:30 school of Osteopathy. parking lot across 3rd floor Rowers Building (near Duke Chapel) >at. 8:00-5:00 Meet academic qualifications. where classifieds forms are available. from Duke Be physically qualified. or mail to: -4030 Alumni House. Chronicle Classifieds To place your order BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706. Northgate S/C For more information, call call (919) 383-1096 or Call 684-3476 ifyou have questions about classifieds. Durham (704) 733-5235, Chief Norm Rogers toll-free at No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline. (704) 765-2338. 1-800-662-7 568. PAGE 12 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 Cheney tells Congress war is only solution to Gulf crisis

• SENATE from page 1 The defense secretary's arguments prompted an im­ brutality to his own people, his very tight control of that mediate rejoinder from Sen. Sam Nunn, the committee society, his ability to allocate resources for the military, chairman, who challenged Cheney's assertions that their ability to produce their own food basically inside, Washington could not afford to give sanctions time to he can ride them out," Cheney said, referring to sanc­ work. tions. "If we have a war, we're never going to know whether Cheney's remarks seemed intended not only to defend they would have worked, would we?" Nunn, D-Ga., said. the administration's decision to get a Security Council "The way you find out if sanctions are going to work is to resolution authorizing the use of force after Jan. 15, but give them enough time to work." also to step up pressure on the Iraqi government. Many Nunn's comments echoed testimony to the committee administration officials have contended that calls for a last week by two former chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of longer period for the sanctions to work had sent the Staff, Adm. William Crowe and Gen. David Jones, who wrong signals to Saddam. urged the administration to postpone military action against Iraq and give economic sanctions a year or more to work. In interviews and at a recent conference in Ala­ From page 11 XMAS CONCERT bama, most former defense secretaries have also recom­ Come to the Chorale Christmas mended patience. Concert! Hosted by Senator Terry LOSTTUXEDOJKT Sanford. Thrusday, Dec. 6, at In his appearance Monday, Cheney also asserted that 7:00pm In Duke Chapel. Admis­ at ADPi Theta Formal. Unridged President Bush had the authority to order an attack on sion Is FREE! (straight) collar. Make is some­ Iraq without congressional approval, remarks that drew thing like St. Stephen or Stephen Erica Chalson strong criticism from Sen. Edward Kennedy and other St Claire. Please call Erich at x- is finally 21! If you see her today, UPI PHOTO 7881. I might have your tux. be sure and wish her a happy Democrats on the panel. ABANDONED DOG birthday! As Cheney outlined the rationale for possible early Secretatry of Defence Dick Cheney Desperatley needs good home. FEIDLER military action, Gen. Colin Powell, the chairman of the Washington next week for talks with Bush and Secre­ Large male yellow Lab mix. Very Hey Leigh, thanks again! Stay Joint Chiefs of Staff, described war plans for the gulf, tary of State James Baker III, and Baker is likely to go obedient friendly, sweet smart. "stoked" through exam week. I'll saying American forces were preparing for a combined to Iraq sometime before Jan. 15 to meet with Saddam. Spent past seven months in give you a call later about the dino­ small cage. Needs outdoor saurs. - Peggy. air, ground and sea attack seeking to win a quick victo­ The talks were proposed last week by Bush after the soace, love, call Wendy ANYTIME ry, rather than waging an escalating air campaign United Nations Security Council approved a resolution 382-8618. Whoever you are - the belated birthday roses were beautiful. against Iraq. authorizing the use of force against Iraq after Jan. 15 if Thank you. Who are you? Cheney and Powell repeatedly told the panel that Personals it does not withdraw from Kuwait by then. KATIE ALBUS Bush has not yet decided to order an attack on Iraq, and JOB APPLICATIONS - GRADUATE Your secret Santa wishes you a to some extent their remarks were intended to keep the SCHOOL - PASSPORT PHOTOS 2/ merry Christmas! ZLAM SS. pressure on Saddam as Washington prepares for talks >V $6, over 10 2.50 ea. LAMINATED To LPL, Crip, Biff, the Calcu­ with Baghdad. personal IDs - everything while you lus Queen, and the Girl with watt. LPI 900 W. Main - Across tacky Christmas decorations Iraq's foreign minister, Tariq Aziz, is expected to visit from Brightleaf. 683-2118. - Thanx for everything this ATTN: ALL BLUE DEVIL FANS. A spe­ semester. I wouldn't have cial rate for all Duke fans has been made it without you. Have a set up for the ACC-BIG EAST CHAL­ great X-mas. - the hyper LENGE at the QUALITY INN/CAPITAL ditz. CENTRE. Call 1-800-544-0121 for reservations. GO BLUE DEVILS!!!!... "Mama's Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cow­ ERICA CHALSON boys" - Pasadena,Texas - HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO MY LITTLE AN­ December 15, 1969. GEL. WATCH OUT FOR MORE SUR­ PRISES' - YOUR GUARDIAN ANGEL! Holiday Tree Lighting - Come cele­ brate the Yuletide Season with The Christmas Spirit GET AN EXAM PAC? Come holiday readings, caroling, and pick it up at Few Fed Friday free refreshments. Festivities and Saturday 11:00 to 5:00. begin at 5pm on Chapel Quad. Has taken over at AMY BLAIR Santa Claus is coming to town! You're the best little brother a guy The new Duke Community Ser­ Campus Florist could have Congratulations. Your vice Center is accepting applica­ big brother loves you. Be happy tions for a student director. If in­ Stuffed Animals, Potpourri & terested in this exciting leader­ KATIE ALBUS ship role on campus, call Matt Christmas Arrangements Who am I? Who am I? Who am I? Hammer at 684-4377 for more Who am I? ZLAM your secret Santa. information. are just a few of the gift ideas TCAPers SORORITY RUSH!! This is it! Our TCAP career is dwin­ Last day to sign up Is Thursday, for your shopping pleasure. dling away. . YES! Emjoy your LAST December 6. Follow Instructions week of classes from hell. outside the Panhel office! Campus Florist 700 Ninth Street • 286-5640 TIME IS RUNNING OUT! The last classified ad Good Vision deadline for this year is and Good Looks... Thursday, December 6 at a Great Price! at 12 noon. 20% Discount Ads received by this date for Duke students, faculty and employees for complete pairs of prescription eyewear. will appear in our Exam No time limit. Guaranteed best price on Break Issue, published complete eyeglasses In the Durham area. A complete line of sunglasses from Monday, Ray Ban, Vuarnet, Bolle and Seren- December 10, geti. Custom orders, one-hour service for single-vision CR-39 1990 plastic lenses and eye exams ar­ ranged easily. New thinner plastic lenses also available. Hard and gas permeable contact lenses cleaned and polished. Soft Undergraduate Financial Ail contact lenses available. fcrightleaf Weekdays Mon.-FrL 10-5:30 Optical Saturday by appointment 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM 683-3464, 908 W. Main St, Durham TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 13 Sports Weber, Darlington pace wrestlers in weekend tourney

By CHRIS HURTGEN placed third at 118 and freshman Keith When the Duke wrestlers looked across Pavlick took fourth at 134. Sophomore the mats Sunday at the James Madison Eric Nesbit finished third at 150 and University Wrestling Invitational in Har­ sophomore Mike Lesick took fourth at risonburg, Virginia, they recognized some 177. familiar faces. The Blue Devils battled to fourth place Bloomsburg and Bucknell, both ranked despite not filling the 167 and heavy­ in the nation's top 30, along with Mill­ weight classes. Sickness also hurt Duke, ersville, met the Blue Devils in season- as senior Keith Karsen, a starter at 150, opening action Nov. 17 at the Bloomsburg did not make the trip and sophomore Invitational, where Duke placed third. Craig Girvan had to withdraw from the Sunday was the second leg of a three tour­ semifinal match of the 158 consolation nament run for the Blue Devils before the round. team begins dual meet competition in "We wrestled very well," Harvey said. January. "It was a tough, very physical Head coach Bill Harvey hopes that the tournament." top wrestlers his squad has faced this fall That strength of competition can only will produce more wins in the winter. help Duke in dual meet competition, ac­ "These are the type of people you've got cording to Lesick. to wrestle ifyou want to go to the national "The more we compete against schools tournament," Harvey said. "We definitely of that caliber the better our program is think it's going to help to wrestle top com­ going to be in the long run," Lesick said. petition, as tough as we can get." "We performed really well overall [Sun­ Bloomsburg captured the JMU tourna­ day] because a lot of [the matchesl were ment title with 111 points, followed by against the national competition." Bucknell, 86, Old Dominion, 80 and Duke, With two weeks of the season and two 51.25. Millersville, 40, James Madison, tough tournaments behind him, Harvey 19.5, and American, 18, rounded out the likes the prospects for Blue Devil wres­ field. tling 1990-91. A pair of Duke wrestlers advanced to "Things look very promising," Harvey weight-class finals. At 125, junior Mike said. "When we put the top 10 guys in the Darlington, 5-2, dropped a 7-0 decision to line-up, I think we're going to be a good Old Dominion's seventh-ranked Noel team." Clavell. At 190, senior Bradd Weber fell The wrestlers will travel to the Bull for the second time in the 1990 season to Dog Duals in Charleston, South Carolina e B|- BOBKAPLAN/THECHRON.CLE Bloomsburg's Bryan Burns, 10-3. on Jan 4 Four days later, the Blue Devils Sophomore Eric Nesbit finished third at 150 in the James Madison University In- Several other Blue Devils had strong open their home schedule with a dual vitational in Harrisonburg, Virginia over the weekend. showings Sunday. Senior Chris Keene meet against South Connecticut State. UNLV, Arizona remain atop Top 25 AP Men's Basketball Pod (First-place votes in parentheses) Rank School (AP) — Kentucky thought it was all dressed up with Record Last Week no place to go this season. Then came an invitation to 1. UNLV (45) 1-0 1 join the rest of college basketball's elite. 2. Arizona (19) 6-0 2 The Wildcats entered the Top 25 poll on Monday at 3. Arkansas 5-1 3 the bottom rung. But that didn't matter to coach Rick 4. Syracuse 4-0 7 Pitino. 5. DUKE 5-1 8 "Being on probation, you don't have too much to look 6. Georgetown 3-0 9 forward to," he said. "To the players in our program who 7. Indiana 4-1 10 have been through so much and worked so hard, this is 8. UCLA 4-0 12 very rewarding." 9. Ohio State 3-0 It was the first time Kentucky had been ranked since 10. North Carolina 3-1 4 the final poll ofthe 1987-88 season. 11. Pittsburgh 4-0 13 Kentucky (3-0) is serving the second year of an NCAA 12. Alabama two-year probation that prohibits post-season play. The 13. Georgia 4-0 Wildcats, who have beaten Penn, Cincinnati and Notre 14. Connecticut 3-0 Dame, were No. 1 for three weeks in 1987-88, the last 15. Southern Mississip pi 1-0 19 season in which they had been ranked. 16. Oklahoma 4-1 18 UNLV, which received the news it wanted last week 17. St. Johns 3-0 21 when the Runnin' Rebels learned they could defend their 18. Louisiana State 2-1 national championship, remained No. 1 in the poll. 19. Michigan State 1-2 5 Besides Kentucky, two other teams joined the Top 25 20. Georgia Tech 2-1 14 this week — No. 21 South Carolina and No. 24 Temple. 21T. South Carolina 4-1 The Runnin' Rebels, who opened their season Satur­ 21T. Virginia 3-2 16 day night with a 109-68 victory over Alabama-Birming­ 23. Texas 22 ham, received 45 first-place votes and 1,579 points from 24. Temple _ 1-1 the nationwide panel of sportswriters and broadcasters. 25. Kentucky Arizona (6-0), the only other school to receive first- Others receiving votes: Kans place votes, and Arkansas (5-1) held second and third, Rutgers 99. East Tennessee _ while Syracuse (4-0) and Duke (5-1) each jumped three 78 DePaul 7^ Mnrrav ^tatp places to be fourth and fifth, respectively. Arizona, No. 1 on 19 ballots, had 1,555 points, while Arkansas, which lost to the Wildcats in the preseason NIT championship game, had 1,435. Syracuse had gtn.a 8, 1,312, 80 more than the Blue Devils, whose only loss was James I. to Arkansas in the NIT semifinals. State 1. Georgetown (3-0) and Indiana (4-1) each jumped three El Paso places to sixth and seventh, respectively, while UCLA, Ohio State and North Carolina rounded out the Top Ten. semifinals of the Tournament of Champions in the first The Hoyas, who have yet to beat a Division I team, meeting ofthe border rivals in 18 years. had 1,164 points, 54 more than Indiana, which Michigan State (1-2) dropped from fifth to 19th after rebounded from last week's loss to Syracuse with wins losing road games to Nebraska 71-69 and Bowling Green over local rivals Notre Dame and Louisville. 98-85. UCLA (4-0), which has set the school's single-game South Carolina (4-1) joined the Top 25 for the first scoring twice this season, including Sunday night with a time since the Gamecocks were in the Top 20 for two 149-98 win over Loyola Marymount, had 1,097 points. weeks early in the 1988-89 season. The Buckeyes, who have broken the 100-point mark in . GEORGE IVEY/THE CHRONICLE Temple (1-1), which was 19th in the preseason poll, each of their victories this season, had 1,069 points, 71 rejoined the Top 25 after beating crosstown rival Vil­ Junior Crawford Palmer had his first slam of the sea­ more than North Carolina (3-1), which dropped from lanova 70-57, knocking out the Wildcats, who had been son in Saturday's win over UNC Charlotte. fourth to 10th after losing to South Carolina 76-74 in the 24th in the first regular-season poll. • •:•. - ._-_--<__.. . .'/.I.v.-, ...,,/,. PAGE 14 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, DECEMBERS, 1990 ACC takes first game in Challenge with Virginia victory

By JOE MACENKA Associated Press game highs. With Stith out for the rest of the half, RICHMOND, Va. — Virginia's Bryant "Stith is too quick for any of our big Pittsburgh quickly took control en route Stith was wrong — dead wrong — but the kids," Pittsburgh head coach Paul Evans to a 44-40 halftime lead. Cavaliers couldn't be happier. said. Stith, showing no sign of injury, started "I really thought I was out for the game The Cavaliers, who were playing their the second half and scored eight consecu­ because I really rolled it over bad," Stith sixth game in 11 days, also got 18 points tive points at one stretch to rally the Cav­ said of his right ankle which he sprained from John Crotty, 15 from Kenny Turner aliers from a 52-44 deficit. to force him out of the first half of Mon­ and 14 from Anthony Oliver. "He made a miraculous recovery," day's ACC-Big East Challenge contest Jason Matthews led the Panthers with Evans said. "I'd like to have a trainer like against No. 11 Pittsburgh. 24 points. Sean Miller added 11. that." Instead, Stith came back for the second Stith's work inside helped Virginia to a Stith said the tape job prevented the half and scored 20 of his 28 points to rally 35-28 rebounding edge. The Cavaliers had ankle from swelling and allowed him to No. 21 Virginia to an 84-80 victory. 22 defensive rebounds. play in the second half, but was painful "Basically, it's the Bryant Stith we all "I couldn't believe it was the same Vir­ nonetheless. know and love," Virginia head coach Jeff ginia team that got beat 2-to-l on the "I've hurt it worse before, but I don't Jones said of the 6-6 junior forward, who boards last Friday night," Evans said, think I've ever played on it this long when was a member of last summer's U.S. na­ referring to Virginia's poor performance it's been like this," he said after the game tional team. in a 60-55 loss to New Orleans. as his ankle, wrapped in ice, rested on a Virginia (4-2) took the lead to stay on a Virginia built its lead over Pittsburgh chair in front of him. spinning 12-foot jumper by Stith that as high as six points early and was up 22- Matthews scored six of his points as the made it 73-71 with 4:10 left. His three- 18 with 8:31 left in the opening half when Panthers used a 10-4 run to take a 69-65 pointer at the 2:30 mark gave the Cava­ Stith, the Cavaliers' top scoring threat, edge with 7:49 left. liers a 76-72 lead, and Pittsburgh (4-1) went down while battling several players But Virginia scored 11 of the next 14 never got closer. for a rebound. Stith, who already had points, including six by Stith, to put it "He can take anybody in the country eight points, needed to be assisted from away. VIRGINIA SPORTS INFORMATION PHOTO one-on-one," Jones said of Stith, who also the floor and went to Virginia's dressing The Cavaliers made six of eight free Bryant Stith had 12 rebounds and five steals, both room, where the ankle was tightly taped. throws in the final 76 seconds. Colorado, Tech, Texas deserve national title consideration

By RICK WARNER ma, Southern Cal, Michigan State, Southern Mississip­ .Associated Press 1990 Filial AP Football pi, Ohio State and Alabama. The eyes of Texas are on the national championship. Because of the bowl matchups, only the Orange, Cot­ (First -place votes in parentheses) The Longhorns leaped from fifth to third in The Asso­ ton and Citrus have a realistic chance to produce the na­ ciated Press college football poll on Monday, improving Rank School Record Last Week tional champion. Colorado plays Notre Dame in the Or­ their chances of winning their first national title since ange, Texas meets Miami in the Cotton and Georgia 1. Colorado (42) 10-1-1 1 1969. 2. Georgia Tech (16) 10-0-1 2 Tech faces Nebraska in the Citrus. Texas, which beat Texas A&M 28-27 on Saturday, The possibilities: If Colorado wins, the Buffaloes 3. Texas (2) 10-1-0 5 jumped over Miami and Brigham Young in the final reg­ 4. Miami, Fla. 9-2-0 3 should win the national title. If Notre Dame wins and ular-season poll. Miami edged San Diego State 30-28, Georgia Tech loses, it would probably be a close battle 5. Notre Dame 9-2-0 7 while BYU was demolished by Hawaii 59-28. 6. Florida State- 9-2-0 8 for No. 1 between the Irish and the Texas-Miami winner. The Hurricanes (9-2) fell from third to fourth, the sec­ If Colorado loses and Georgia Tech wins, the Yellow 7. Penn State 9-2-0 10 ond straight week they've dropped a notch in the poll fol­ 8. . Washington 9-2-0 9 Jackets would stake their claim to the national cham­ lowing a victory. BYU (10-2) plunged from fourth to pionship. But the Texas-Miami winner would also get 9. Houston 10-1-0 11 13th. 10. Tennessee 8-2-2 12 strong consideration. Colorado, which completed its regular season two Blockbuster Bowl opponents Florida State and Penn 11. Florida 9-2-0 6 weeks ago, remained No. 1 for the third straight week. 12. Michigan 8-3-0 13 State are playing as well as anyone in the country. But The Buffaloes (10-1-1) received 42 first-place votes and the winner of that game appears to be locked out of the 13. Brigham Young 10-2-0 4 1,476 points from a nationwide panel of sports writers 14. Clemson 9-2-0 14 title picture because the winners ofthe Orange and Cot­ and broadcasters. ton seem certain to be ranked higher. 15. Mississippi 9-2-0 15 Georgia Tech stayed second after beating Georgia 40- Florida State moved up two spots to sixth after beat­ 16. Illinois 8-3-0 16 23, but closed the gap on Colorado. The Yellow Jackets ing Florida 45-30, while Penn State rose three places to 17. lowa 8-3-0 18 (10-0-1), the only major team without a loss, got 16 first- seventh and Washington went from ninth to eighth. 18. Louisville 9-1-1 17 place votes and 1,397 points. They trailed Colorado by Houston climbed from 11th to ninth after beating Ari­ 19. Nebraska 9-2-0 19 130 points last week; now they are only 79 points be­ zona State 62-45 and Tennessee rose from 12th to 10th 20. Oklahoma 8-3-0 22 hind. after downing Vanderbilt 49-20. 21. Southern Cal 8-3-1 21 Texas (10-1) got the other two first-place votes and Florida, which can't play in a bowl because of NCAA 22. Michigan State 7-3-1 23 1,338 points, 35 more than Miami. Notre Dame (9-2), probation, dropped five places to 11th. 23. Southern Miss. 8-3-0 24 which was idle, moved from seventh to fifth with 1,252 Alabama, which hadn't been ranked since the first poll 24. Ohio State 7-3-1 25 points. of the regular season, moved back into the Top 25 after 25. Alabama 7-4-0 ____ Rounding out the Top 10 are Florida State (9-2), Penn beating Auburn 16-7. Alabama has won seven of eight Others receiving votes: Texas A & M 94, Virginia 61. Auburn 47 , Ore- State (9-2), Washington (9-2), Houston (10-1) and Ten­ since dropping its first three games. gon 24, San Jose State 23. California 8. Arizona 7, Colorado State 6, nessee (8-2-2). Virginia Tech 3, Central Michigan 2, Hawaii 2. Louisiana Tech 2, North Florida is 11th, followed by Michigan, BYU, Clemson, Carolina 2, Wyoming 2. Temple 1. Auburn, 20th last week, dropped out of the rankings Mississippi, Illinois, Iowa, Louisville, Nebraska, Oklaho­ for the first time this season. EAT WITH US

Hair Studio Complete Hair Care TONIGHT AND HELP A You Can Get A Cheaper Haircut... You Can Get A More Expensive Haircut. WORTHY CAUSE! What You Can't Get Is A Better Haircut! Tonight, 10% of our gross profits will be donated to local charities! $2.00 OFFany haircut Students & Employees with I.D.

Now Offering Waxing Services Restaurant & Bar Mon, 10-6 286-5664 1603 Guess Rd. Tues.-Fri 10-8 (across from Scars Auto) EAT GOOD FOOD AND FEEL GOOD ABOUT EATING! Sat 9-5 We honor the "Buckbuster"! Shoppes at Lakewood, Durham 493-7797 TUESDAY; DECEMBER 4, 1990 ' Ttife'CkRO'NlCLE PAGE 15

•••- Boston College dumps Maryland, 100-85 Wednesday Men's Basketball vs. Georgetown in ACC-Ri_? F3**t By JOE MACENKA Challenge. Capital Centre, Lane Associated Press North Carolina State. RICHMOND, Va. — Freshman reserve guard Gerrod Maryland held a 68-62 lead with 11:01 to play, but Abram hit six three-pointers and scored 30 points to Boston College rallied behind Able, who scored seven help Boston College to a 100-85 victory over Maryland in points in a 14-5 run that put the Eagles ahead to stay at Friday the ACC-Big East Challenge on Monday night. 76-73. Boston College also got 24 points from Howard Eisley The Terrapins kept it close and trailed just 83-80 after asketball vs. Texas-Sa n Antonio in San and 20 each from Doug Able and Howard Eisley. Able, a a three-point play by Burns with 3:40 left. : 3s, 4:00 p.m. forward, did most of his damage inside in the second But Able was fouled inside on Boston College's next half, when he scored 13, and Eisley hit 11 consecutive possession and made both free throws, and Abram free throws in the final 1:57. added a fast-break layup to put the Eagles up 87-80 with Saturday Billy Curley added 11 points for the Eagles (5-1). 2:34 left. Walt Williams led Marylarid (2-2) with 30 points. Matt With Maryland forced to foul, Boston College kept Roe had 15 and Evers Burns added 10. feeding the ball to Eisley, who sealed the victory at the ketball vs. Michigan, Coupled with Virginia's 84-80 victory over Pittsburgh line. 30 p.m. earlier, the game tied this year's challenge at one game In the first half, Boston College made five of 10 at­ apiece. The challenge, which ended in a 4-4 tie in its tempts from three-point range en route to a 37-26 edge basketball at Coca-Cot debut last year, resumes Tuesday night in Syracuse, with 4:42 left. But the Eagles did not score again until N.Y., with Seton Hall vs. Clemson and Syracuse against Abie's free throw with five seconds left.

RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS YOUR UNCLE WANTS TO PAY FOR COLLEGE. BUT ONLY IF YOU'RE GOOD ENOUGH. Army ROTC scholarships pay tuition and provide an allowance for fees and textbooks. Find out if you qualify.

ARMY ROTC THE SMARTEST COLLEGE COURSE YOU CAN TAKE. For information contact Major Rob Ralston at 684-5895

Graduating Seniors Only! Semester Membership Available GIVE THE Join Now Save $50 PERFECT GIFT - Join now for only COMPACT DISCS

^jJ^ Our staff c•.^ We carry ^JP* Ourprices _• over 15,000 x£r* is trained to X* are generally Offer expires the last day of this month r different compact offer knowledge­ lower than most able assistance in all disc titles representing music stores but if musical types. We offer over 1000 recording you do see an advert­ personalized service MAC has it ______labels. If we do not ised price lower than • Indoor / Outdoor Pool • Basketball and will guarantee • Nursery • Leagues & Tournaments have the disc you that you are pleased a CD Superstore price, • Open 24 Hours M-F • Children's Programs want in stock, we'll with every purchase bring in the ad. We'll • Sat & Sun - 7am-9pm • Sauna & Steambath you make with us. honor the lowest price. • Located near Duke • Whirlpool special order it. • Nautilus & Free Weights • Fitness Training • Stationary Cycles • Massage • Rowing Machines • Fitness Testing • Aerobics / Aqua Aerobics • Professional Instruction • Raquetball & Squash • Training Seminars

286-7529 Open 24 Hours 501 Douglas St. Monday - Friday SPECIAL HOLIDAY HOURS 10 AM -10 PM Seven Days a Week Across from Duke 7:00am - 9:OOpm CARY DURHAM RALEIGH & VA Hospitals Saturday & Sunday Waverly Place Brightleaf Square Peachtree Market 859-4844 683-2323 847-2393 * Initiation fee only. Monthly dues vary depending on type of membership PAGE 16 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY. DECEMBER 4, 1990 Wrap Up Your Holiday Shopping! Nature's Chaos Text by James Gleick Photographs by Eliot Porter

A unique, stunning union of art and This fascination with patterns barely science that explores a new path for emerging, dynamically changing, is one that understanding nature's wildness and the has possessed photographer Eliot Porter all his particular patterns and harmonies lurking life. He has searched nature's jumble and there. disorder for a harmony, not a static, balanced one, but a wavering, lurching, animating The essence of the Earth's beauty lies in harmony. From the turbulent stresses within disorder, in the disorder of grasses strewn in a the wood of a tree to the jaggedness of a meadow, the blotching of green lichen on a tree mountain ridge, from the cracks in a dried trunk. Scientists today are discovering mud bed to enfolded lava, his photographs uncanny structures, more subtle and intricate illuminate in mesmerizing ways these new than any gardener or sculptor might arrange. scientific ideas and insights. Through the They are beginning to recognize the irregular words of James Gleik and the color order that emerges from pure disorder - the photographs of Eilot Porter, Nature's Chaos formation, metamorphosis, and distortion of teaches us to see the patterns, relations, and patterns that repeat themselves on small and interactions present in nature's disorder and large scales. wildness.

Casey The Lives and Secrets of William J. Casey IAM JLOSEV: HOMTHE (BSTOHII from the OSS to the CIA Joseph E. Persico

The authoritative biography of Ronald Queens, N.Y., Casey had made a fortune, Reagan's CIA director, the first to reveal the acquired power, and won admission into the man at the center of the making - and elite Republican establishment. He had become unmaking - of Reagan's foreign policy. a behind-the-scenes kingmaker. The reward for his successful management of the Reagan In the spring of 1980, Ronald Reagan's candidacy was the directorship of the CIA. presidential campaign was floundering. Reagan's "kitchen cabinet" wanted John Sears, With complete access to Casey's papers, the campaign manager, out. And they wanted Joe Persico is able to offer a revelatory view of William J. Gisey. In 1980, Casey, 67 years old, Casey's controversial tenure and an account of could look back at a remarkable life: lawyer, Iran-Contra that makes clear the complicity author, venture capitalist - the inventor of the and involvement of the men around Reagan tax shelter - reform-minded chairman of the and Reagan himself. Casey is also a protrait of a Securities and Exchange Commission. But contradictory, complex man: a devout Catholic perhaps his proudest moment was as director who was also a hard-nosed pragmatist, an of Secret Intelligence of the OSS London ideological warrior whose black-and-white Headquarters during World War II, when he vision no longer fit shifting political realities, a recruited, trained, and directed the first sophisticated yet oddly naive American patriot American agents to penetrate Nazi lines. - always at the ready with a crowbar or a legal Raised in a poor Irish-Catholic family in brief.

Six new tales of that Words worth-loving, a few glasses of Pommeroy's Chateau JOHN MORTIMER cigar-smoking Defender of the Faith - Horace Thames Embankment and a daily ration of AUTHOR OP PARADISE POSTPONED AND TITMUSS REGAINED Rumpole. steak and kidney pud. Our hero plies his way from Froxbury The trusty English fare is only one of . Court in the Gloucester Road to the hallowed many delights on offer in Rumpole a la RUMPOLE portals of the Old Bailey and the slightly less Carte; more gastronomic delights abound in hallowed portals of number three Equity Court the title story of dirty doings in a fashion­ A LA CARTE - Soapy Sam Ballard's Chambers - fortified by able London restaurant.

20% Discount Above Selections

Student Flex Cards Accepted Monday & Wednesday 8:30 a.m. - 8 p.m. Visa, MasterCard & 684-3986 Tuesday, Thursday & Friday 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. VIKING American Express Upper Level Bryan Center Saturday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.