THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1989 s DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 84, NO. 101 Central, East Campuses lose electricity for hours

By CHRIS GRAHAM Gilchrist, manager in the Central Campus was with­ utilities section of facilities out electricity for almost four planning and management. and one-half hours Tuesday The repair is only a temporary night, and East Campus lost one, however, and workers power for nearly one hour af­ "have some more fixing to do" ter a high voltage switch on today, Tinsley said. Central Campus shorted out. Gilchrist would not com­ The power loss caused the ment on what may have closing of the Central Campus caused the switch to short out. Pub, Uncle Harry's General The Pub, Uncle Harry's and Store, and the Down Under, the Down Under closed be­ SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE as well as resulting in the cause the lack of electricity "Women of the Calabash," a video musical by Skip Blumberg malfunctioning of the security rendered their cash registers systems in Giles and Jarvis inoperable. The Pub was also dormitories. unable to cook without Power went out on both electricity, said Renee Million, campuses at approximately 6 an assistant manager at the Cinematographer displays video art p.m. East Campus regained Pub. Both the Down Under power between 6:45 and 7 and Uncle Harry's reopened p.m., while Central Campus after power was restored. By STEPHANIE GERMAIN program, Too Hip for TV: Video "From the start, we wanted to did not regain power until The East Campus Union, With the aid of English subti­ Documentaries by Skip do something that contrasted 10:20. however, was not affected by tles, a fat Thai street chef shows Blumberg", shown on February with TVs cut-and-dried look." Harold Tinsley, assistant the outage, as all its food had us how to cook and serve a tradi­ 20 in the Bryan Center Video Blumberg said. director of facilities operations been cooked previously, said tional dish of spiced up morning Screening Room. The program's films on un­ for facilities planning and Betty Simms, a manager at leaves. His repetitive 50-foot tos­ Blumberg is a pioneer in the usual sports and games exem­ management, described the the Union. Emergency lights ses from a flaming wok to a wait­ use of portable video. Esquire's plify his artistic novelty. One high voltage switch as a in the Union were sufficient er's receiving plate make up the 1984 Register of Outstanding cannot categorize them as perfor­ "control mechanism" for the for diners, Simms said. entertaining short color film Americans Under 40, referred to mance art, documentary piece or electrical circuit supplying Last September, when East "Flying Morning Glory {On Fire)" him as "one of the original new political reportage because power to East and Central Campus experienced a similar by New York-based cinematogra­ TV journalists." Sony's invention Blumberg fuses all the areas to­ campuses. power outage, the Union had pher, Skip Blumberg. of the portable video in the 1960s gether. His bizarre subjects' dar­ The switch made a loud to shut down for the night. As part of Duke Institute of the offered Blumberg a novel art me­ ing to do the unusual makes "pop" before the two campuses That outage, however, oc­ Arts' Winterfest of Contem­ dium to form his own personal them symbols of freedom — per- lost power. It smouldered for curred before employees porary Arts, the film opens the style. See BLUMBERG on page 5 • nearly an hour, prompting the began cooking dinner. Durham fire department to The power shortage also arrive at the switch with one caused the malfunctioning of fire truck. The firefighters left the security systems in Giles at approximately 7 p.m. with­ and Jarvis dormitories. Nor­ ASDU debates student representation out taking any action, after mally, students can only enter determining that the switch or exit the dorms through one ByMIKEGRABLE each from ASDU and GPSC, said because they did not want to in­ was not in danger of catching door, which can be opened ASDU officials in their meet­ Dan Dertke, ASDU representa­ crease the committee's size, on fire. with residents' Duke cards. ing Tuesday expressed dis­ tive to the IRB. Dertke said. Facilities planning and The power outage, however, pleasure about the Land Resour­ The Academic Council re­ Graduate and Professional management workers by­ allowed residents to enter and ces Committee's (LRC's) decision quested at least as many mem­ Student Council (GPSC) Presi­ passed the switch to restore exit through the normally to limit student representation bers as the students, and LRC dent Margaret Rowlett said she power to East, Tinsley said. locked doors, said Jarvis resi­ on the Institutional Resources responded by limiting student was displeased by the change. Power was restored to Cen­ dent Andie Fraser, a Trinity Board (IRB). representation to one, alternat­ "It's very unfair that because tral Campus after workers freshman. Students could not enter the dormitory through The IRB is the group that will ing annually between ASDU and the Academic Council says they replaced the damaged switch the regular entrance, she said. oversee the areas of Duke Forest GPSC. The LRC rejected adding have to have at least as many or with a cable, said Ron zoned either for immediate sale another faculty representative See ASDU on page 12 • or reserved for land swaps, as well as the land reserved for fu­ ture campus expansion. The IRB's decision was a response to the Academic Coun­ Survey results show areas considered unsafe cil's complaints that they had only one representative on the ByJAYEPPtNG students identified as being the would not help because there are Task Force is "to give the Duke IRB, while students had two, one New locks on s&me academic most dark and unsafe, said Mil­ too many places to hide. community a list of recom­ buildings and a walking tour of ner, who is also the under­ "That is a very dangerous area mended routes for travel. What the areas students feel are the graduate representative to the and unfortunatly people are feel­ we consider the best way to get most dangerous on campus are Task Force. ing forced to travel there," from point A to point B," Milner some of the actions the Ad Hoc The walk, scheduled for this Semans said. Finding and mark­ said. Task Force on safety are taking Monday and Tuesday, was post­ ing alternative routes with signs Semans said adjusting bus in response to ASDU's poned because the snow made for areas like the Gardens and schedules was another possible Saferoutes survey, said Ber- the paths unnaturally bright, ac­ the paths behind the Chapel is solution to some problems. He nadette Milner, Trinity soph- cording to Milner. The walk will one function of the Task Force. said while the bus schedules more and chair of Safewalks and be rescheduled as soon as the Another top priority of the See SAFEROUTES on page 5 >- Saferides. snow melts. Further recommen­ The Wannamaker Drive park­ dations about lighting and emer­ ing lots and the area behind the gency phones will result from the Chapel were the areas respon­ walk, Milner said. Inside Weather dents to the Saferoutes survey ASDU president Tommy identified as the two most dan­ Semans said some areas, like the gerous areas on campus, said Sarah P. Duke Memorial Gar­ : The Black Stu­ Looks like rain: There's Trinity junior Henry Purdy, dens, will be impossible to dent Alliance sponsored a spe­ half a chance that it'll rain ASDU vice president for Engi­ protect, and students will need to cial program commemorating today, and a 30% chance that TOM LATTIN /THE CHRONICLE neering. be told "Don't walk here". Malcolm X Day Tuesday. See it'll turn to snow tonight. page 3. Lows will be in the upper 20s. The Task Force is planning a Semans said even blanketing the walk of these routes and others Gardens with lights and phones THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1989 World & National Newsfile North portrayed as patriot, liar as trial begins Associated Press

Havel COnviCted: Leading Czech By HARRY ROSENTHAL The first testimony comes Wednesday dissident Vaclav Havel was convicted Associated Press morning when Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., Tuesday in Prague for his role in a WASHINGTON — Oliver North's crim­ the former chairman of House Intelli­ banned rally and sentenced to nine inal trial opened Tuesday with the prose­ gence Committee, takes the stand. months in jail in a trial that drew cutor portraying him as a liar who "places Keker told the jury Tuesday that North criticism at home, in the East bloc and himself above the law" but with North's had profited personally by using travel­ the West. lawyer defending him as a patriotic Ma­ er's checks furnished by a Contra leader rine who obeyed unflinchingly the orders and, on a broader scale, had told lies that Court rules: The Supreme Court, of his commander in chief. amounted to "a crime that goes to the soul boosting a growing nationwide drive North, now retired from the service, lis­ of our self-government." against pornography, ruled Tuesday tened intently as prosecutor John Keker Tou will hear he considers himself a that states may use anti-racketeering told the jury the defendant had lied time patriotic person, but there is.no higher laws to crack down on adult book­ and again to his president and to Con­ patriotic purpose than to protect our sys­ stores. gress about the Iran-Contra affair. tem of government," Keker said. "To lie to Chief defense lawyer Brendan Sullivan Congress because you mistrust it then is a Ambassador Wars: Iran recalled countered that North, a former top Na­ crime and not a defense." all its ambassadors from European tional Security Council aide, worked in a Sullivan did portray North as a patriot, Common Market nations Tuesday and secret world where "he always acted with saying he believed in the Marine motto Britain expelled an Iranian envoy as the approval of his superiors; he acted al­ "Semper Fidelis" — always faithful. the diplomatic battle grew over Ayatol­ ways with the best interests of his coun­ "He lived with that Marine Corps mot­ lah Ruhollah Khomeini's death threats try." to. He was always faithful to country, to against author Salman Rushdie. Thus the two sides squared off for the commander in chief, to his family, to oft-delayed first trial to come out of the those whose lives depended on him," said Interest rates to rise: Federal Iran-Contra affair, a trial that may take Sullivan. Lt. Col. Oliver North Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan as much as five months to complete. See NORTH on page 4 ^ said Tuesday the central bank will keep up its inflation-fighting efforts by pushing interest rates higher to com­ bat what he termed a troubling accel­ Senate Committee to vote on Tower nomination eration in price pressures.

By SUSAN RASKY Tower's private life to public view and drinking and womanizing that have dog­ Cancer cures progress: Four N.Y. Times News Service new studies show that chemotherapy have produced the remarkable spectacle ged Tower's nomination as "vicious and hormones can moderately improve WASHINGTON — The Senate Armed of senators airing doubts before television rumor," and he urged prompt action by the outlook for the 70,000 women diag­ Services Committee on Tuesday tenta­ cameras about a former colleague's per­ the Senate to confirm him. nosed each year with early breast can­ tively scheduled a vote Thursday on John sonal conduct. The Senate majority leader, George cer, but experts disagree over whether Tower's nomination as secretary of defen­ It has been as much an ordeal for the Mitchell of Maine, has previously pledged every patient should get these power­ se. Senate as it has for Tower himself. swift action once the committee votes and ful drugs. The confirmation process has been a President Bush on Tuesday denounced today defended the rigorous investigation two-month ordeal that opened details of as "vicious rumor" the allegations of hard of Tower.

DUKE DRAMA Presents THE Whether you want to lease, rent, borrow, buy, or sublet, the best way to find a place to live is to read The Chronicle's

1989 Housing Guide.

Tuesday through Saturday Evenings February 14-March 1, 8:15 PM Wednesday, March 1 Sunday Matinees February 19 and 26, 2:00 PM ousiN/n EAST DUKE THEATER 209 EAST DUKE BUILDING-EAST CAMPUS Students $4.00 General Admission $6.00 Tickets at Page Box Office • 684-4444 Latecomers will not be seated. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1989 THECHRONICLE Contest winners will perform with symphony, director Muti

By BEAU DURE simplicity. "Everybody does big flashy Four accomplished soloists will dazzle concertos," and the LeClair concerto adds Baldwin Auditorium tonight when the variety to the program, she said. winners of a November concerto competi­ The program will continue with Ludwig tion perform with the Duke Symphony von Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3 in Orchestra directed by Lorenzo Muti. C Minor, Op. 37, featuring Huang. Due to The soloists are Lori Brudner, flute, time considerations, the orchestra will Patti Huang, piano, Amy Moore, violin, perform only the first movement of the and Raymond Loewy, piano. These per­ concerto. formers were chosen from a field of 26 The next piece, Concerto for Violin and entrants, including Orchestra, Op. 14, was written by Samuel pianists, violinists, Barber in 1941. Moore, the soloist on the wind players, and TARTS& piece, said she admires the modernism singers. The and romanticism of the concerto. The or­ lection jury for the LEISURE chestra will abbreviate this piece as well, JILL WRIGHT/THE CHRONICLE competition in­ performing only the Allegro movement. He loves me, he loves me not cluded violinist Sylvia Arnett, flautist Al­ Obviously Jack frost's favorite flower isn't daffodils. Maybe he prefers to tip­ lison Dimsdale, and pianist and Assistant The program will conclude with the toe through the tulips. Or was that Tiny Tim? Dean for Residential Life Benjamin Ward. first movement of Robert Schumann's The concertos themselves represent a Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in A wide variety of styles and periods. The Minor, Op. 54, featuring Loewy. This 19th program will begin with Jean-Marie century composition represen£s the ro­ Muti, the orchestra's regular conductor, a freshman, Moore is a junior and Loewy LeClair's Concerto for Flute and String mantic period, which Loewy described as said although the winners of the competi- and Huang are seniors. Orchestra in C Major, a baroque piece fea­ his favorite era. Loewy, who performed tion were selected on the basis of perfor- The competition, which took place for turing Brudner. Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 1 in C mance alone, the program includes a vari- the first time in 1987, will take place ev- Brudner said she was attracted to the Major at a concerto concert in 1987, said ety of instrumentation, with flute, violin, ery other year, Muti said. Admission to piece because of its relative obscurity and he has admired the piece since childhood. and piano, and student age as Brudner is the concert, at 8:15 p.m., is free. Malcolm X Day program honors slain civil rights leader

By PETER WINKLER ever, as El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X) refused Muhammad, a man whom Malcolm termed the "true A film presentation and discussion commemorating to react non-violently to whites in the manner of his con­ divine prophet." the 24th anniversary of the assassination of civil rights temporary, Martin Luther King, Jr. The clips of Malcolm X's speeches were punctuated by leader Malcolm X was sponsored by the Black Student "He believed that if someone was going to be violent a number of quotes concerning the status of blacks in Alliance (BSA) Tuesday night in the Bryan Center video toward you, you had the right to be violent in return," America during the '60s. screening room. McKinney said. "If you're black you were born in jail," he said. The The BSA's first annual Malcolm X Day honors the Following McKinney's brief speech, a standing room civil rights leader urged his black brothers and sisters to Black Muslim leader who preached separation of blacks only crowd of more than 100 people viewed an 80-minute "stop talking about [racism inl the South. Any time and whites and equality "by any means necessary," who documentary that featured a number of Malcolm X's you're below the Canadian border you're in the South," was killed on Feb. 20,1965. most notable speeches and a narrative biography of his he said, a comment that drew laughter and applause Explaining that the purpose of Malcolm X Day was to youth and subsequent rise to prominence in the black from the Bryan Center audience. "eliminate a lot of ignorance" about a man many view as community. The documentary considered issues such as the a violent revolutionary, BSA President Craig McKinney, The film described the murder of Malcolm's father by "vicious cycle" of ghetto culture that left black families a Trinity junior, explained that Malcolm X only wished the Lansing, Michigan Ku Klux Klan and his mother's impoverished. Malcolm X posited as the most expedient on whites what that race had perpetrated against association with militant black leader Marcus Garvey of solution to the race problem the necessity of blacks blacks. the "Black Panthers" civil rights group. The narrative standing on equal ground with whites before integration McKinney said "many believe that all TMalcolm X] was briefly skimmed over Malcolm's five years in prison can occur. is a reverse racist who endorsed the killing of a lot of before closely analyzing his change in philosophy and The second documentary ran approximately 40 mi- people." McKinney said such a belief is mistaken, how­ subsequent association with Black Muslim leader Elijah See MALCOLM X on page 6 •

ELEANORSMEAL Complete II:iir Carr Quality Doesn't Have to Be Overpriced. At A Cut Above, We Cut Great Lines - We m i Pouncs AND WOMEN IN THE 1990'S: Don't Just Hand You One 1 j PROSPECTS FOR THE FUTURE 00 WEDNESDAY 8:00 PM $2 OFF \ A any haircut 139 Social Sciences Students & Employees with I.D.

Sponsored by: The Women's Coalition, ASDU Special Programming, Major Speakers Union, The Departments We honor the "Buckbust of Public Policy, History, and Political Science, and 286-5664 The Women's Studies Program. Mon. 10-6 1603 Guess Rd. Tues.-Fri. 10-8 IKTOH trom Son Auto) B Sat. 9-5 THECHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1989 Salvadoran rebels offer permanent cease-fire Trial of Oliver By LARRY ROHTER The talks, held on neutral ground in a question of the election and into the much N.Y. Times News Service Mexican government resort here, are the broader terrain of how to bring an end to OAXTEPEC, Mexico — Salvadoran first between the two sets of political forc­ the nine-year civil war that has cost the North starts up guerrilla leaders said Tuesday that they es, and both sides said they had been lives of some 70,000 Salvadorans. would lay down their arms permanently pleasantly surprised by their ability to It was not immediately clear whether • NORTH from page 2 and "incorporate ourselves into the na­ maintain what one participant called "a the offer by the rebels to halt hostilities And yet, said the defense attorney: tion's political life" if the Salvadoran gov­ good and serious atmosphere." would still stand if the parties reject their "Lt. Col. Oliver North has in the end ernment made fundamental changes in No immediate response from the Salva­ demand, made publicly last month, to been abandoned by his government." the military apparatus. postpone the elections for six months. doran government was expected. Neither North's eyes moistened as Sullivan The proposal came on the second day of the government nor the military is taking Tuesday's statement described the Jan­ wound up his opening statement al­ negotiations between the Farabundo part in the talks here; nor is the United uary document as merely "a first step to­ most in a whisper. Marti National Liberation Front and rep­ States, which has provided hundreds of ward seeking agreement and generating The lawyer said that North was the resentatives of El Salvador's political par­ millions of dollars in aid each year to keep conditions that make the road to peace ir­ troubleshooter at the National Secu­ ties on an earlier rebel proposal to post­ the rebels from overthrowing President reversible," indicating that there was rity Council, and if "a secret mission pone the presidential elections scheduled Jose Napoleon Duarte. room for compromise. had to be accomplished, it was 'Let Ol­ for March 19. [A State Department official said Tues­ But a senior military commander for lie do it.'" day in Washington that the United States the rebels, Shafik Jorge Handal, told re­ When Congress decided not to sup­ had no immediate reaction to the rebels' porters Tuesday morning that "this is not port the Nicaraguan freedom fighters new proposal because officials had not yet a new proposal, it is the further develop­ in 1984, Sullivan said, "the president seen the details. ment" of the offer already on the table. was angry . . . and he vowed be would "It isn't for us to support or endorse any In the document issued Tuesday, the find a way to support them." of this," the official said. "It's a matter be­ rebels said they would be willing "to Reagan ordered National Security tween the rebels and the political parties recognize the existence of a single army." Adviser Robert McFarlane "to keep of El Salvador."] They have previously insisted on repre­ them together body and soul and it was Representatives of many of the 13 polit­ sentation in the Salvadoran armed forces, then the job of Ollie North," Sullivan ical parties taking part in the negotia­ as well as a share of political power, as an said. essential condition for any end to the con­ tions, who are certain to come under addi­ He recited a lengthy version of the flict. tional political pressure at home as a history of the Iran-Contra affair to the result of the new rebel initiative, said But in return the rebels are insisting on jury, some of whose members appeared they had not had sufficient time to digest concessions that Duarte and the army in to be nodding off. Sullivan noted that the new proposal and therefore could not particular are likely to find difficult to ac­ while the Reagan administration was comment on it. cept, including the "judgment and the ap­ barred by law from directly helping the But others said they regarded the ini­ plication of penalties to those responsible Contras, officials solicited funds for the tiative as an important and as encourag­ for massacres and political crimes." cause from other countries. ing new development. Cases specifically mentioned include He quoted Reagan as saying pri­ The new rebel document, made public the assassination of Archbishop Oscar vately at the time, "If this leaks out, Tuesday morning, is apparently intended Romero in 1980 ana the killing of four we'll all be hanging by our thumbs out­ Salvadoran soldiers on guard to move discussions beyond the narrow American nuns later that year. side the White House until we find out who did it." North followed the opening state­ ments of Keker and Sullivan with un­ Bush assails Iranian threats against Rushdie flagging interest. He sat upright dur­ ing the presentations which took four hours, sometimes looking toward his chief envoys from Tehran after the Ira­ writers' groups, newspapers and civil wife, Betsy, who was in the front row of nian threats. liberties advocates, who felt that the ad­ spectators. President Bush on Tuesday criticized "However offensive that book may be," ministration was too slow and reserved in The courtroom was filled to its 120- Iran's death decree against the novelist the president said, "inciting murder and its criticism. seat capacity, with reporters taking 60. Salman Rushdie as "deeply offensive to offering rewards for its perpetration are The 6,500-member Authors Guild and The public got only 15 and the rest the norms of civilized behavior" and deeply offensive to the norms of civilized the American Civil Liberties Union, for went to assorted lawyers, prosecutors warned that Tehran would be "held behavior. And our position on terrorism is example, had both written to the presi­ and government security experts. U.S. accountable" for any violence against U.S. well known. In the light of Iran's in­ dent urging a forceful statement. District Judge Gerhard Gesell allowed interests. citement, should any action be taken While senior administration officials four representatives of intelligence The president's remarks in Washington against American interests, the govern­ would not say so explicitly, the state­ agencies in court to monitor the large were his first reaction to the international ment of Iran can expect to be held ments by Bush and Baker appear to have amounts of classified information ex­ pected to be revealed publicly in the uproar over the call by Ayatollah Ruhol- accountable." been calibrated to express Washington's trial. lah Khomeini, Iran's supreme leader, for Asked whether he thought the West condemnation of Iran in a low-key man­ Muslims to seek out and kill Rushdie, the European allies should impose economic ner. North is charged with 12 criminal author of the novel "The Satanic Verses," sanctions against Iran, Bush said, "They They contrast with the outspoken reac­ counts, nine of them having to do with which many Muslims find offensive. will be discussing that, I'm sure, but I tion of several European leaders, includ­ deceiving Congress and the president. The remarks were also the strongest so don't know where we go from there." ing Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher of The other three involve charges that far by anyone in the administration about Bush's reaction followed several days of Britain and Foreign Minister Hans- he personally profited from the Iran- the affair, which has erupted at a delicate restrained U.S. response, beginning with Dietrich Genscher of West Germany, who Contra affair. time in U.S.-Iranian relations. Secretary of State James Baker Ill's com­ have condemned Khomeini's remarks. "The need for secrecy is no excuse for "I strongly support the EC-12 declara­ ment last Thursday describing Ayatollah The issue presents a quandary for the lies," Keker said. tion in response to the Iranian threats Khomeini's call for Rushdie's killing as new Bush foreign policy team. At one point, he said, a House com­ against Rushdie," the president said, "regrettable." On the one hand Baker and Bush are mittee had met with North in the referring to a move by the 12 members of The president's comments came after disturbed by the Iranian action and its White House seeking the truth about the European Community to remove their several days of appeals and criticism by implications for freedom of speech. the situation.

THE ANNE FLEXNER MEMORIAL iprtsTficrtof. AWARD FOR CREATIVE WRITING Restaurant and Bar The Anne Flexner Memorial Award is offered for a piece of creative writing submitted by an undergraduate student at Duke University. There are three categories: fiction, poetry and one-act drama. As many as three awards may be given, no more than one in any category. The amount of each award will be $200. Conditions 1. The prize is open to all undergraduates. 2. Only prose fiction (500-word limit), poetry (200-line limit), and one-act plays (7500-word limit) are eligible. 3. Contestants must choose a single category and submit one manuscript only. 4. All manuscripts must be typed double-spaced and must be delivered to We Rock either of the English Offices (314 Allen or 319 Carr) by 4:00 pm on Monday, March 20,1989. The author's name and address must appear on Hours: Mon-Wed 4 pm-lam. Thurs-Sat 1 lam-lam a separate sheet placed before the manuscript. The judges will make no The Shoppes at Lakewood. Durham 493-7797 award in categories ;that lack submissions of sufficient merit. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1989 THE CHRONICLE Cinematographer produces creative, entertaining videos

• BLUMBERG from page 1 beads. They sport a CONSATSU (Congress of South Af­ at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1978, the In­ sonal, social, and cultural. "My heroes are non-con- rican Trade Unions) banner and sing, "The African na­ ternational Center of Photography in 1985. He recently formers in traditional ways. The fact that my subject tion is in the dark . . . and we will die unaware because added a retrospective at the Berlin Film Festival to his matter is unusual allows me to be stylistically daring," we have no representatives in Parliament." boutiful biography. Blumberg said. The annual jump-rope contest is the Despite all this recognition, Blumberg still is the Divided into three parts, the program began with the focus of another of Blumberg's films. Blumberg captures struggling independent. He comes up with an idea and cooking video shot on location in Thailand as an example the frenetic energy of the 50,000 girls in this cultural searches for funding. Blumberg sees himself as a "kind of culture as performance art. city event. Close ups of the rapid sneakered feet and the ofa professional tourist" who goes around with his por­ Three ball pieces, examples of the cultural avant jumping and thumping of soles transmit their physical table camera searching for his next project. garde make up the second part. In "Nine Person strain. He favors the preproduction phase, project choice and Precision Ball Passing", several palm sized yellow balls Blumberg values the communicative ability of sound. research. However, the audience's response to the fin­ pass from hand to hand in synchronized patterns. The "On television, the picture is always limited to that very ished piece is even more rewarding. multiple screen splits are examples of Blumberg's play small window. But the sound spills into the room." "I want my programs to move the audience. I mean with the medium. Blumberg coordinated these shots We experience the joyful screams and laughs of the really move them. Out of their chairs and into their own with new wave choreographer Charles Moulton. Another winners and the tears of the losers. The tradition and activities." This energetic bearded redhead overflows piece, "JGLNG", a much earlier work shot in black and culture. with warmth and a love for his work and people. white, gives the dizzying motion of a juggler's pins, balls "Skip's work is a celebration of life," said Carol Bran­ and hoops with a ground-level camera view aiming sky­ "Pick Up Your Feet: The Double Dutch Show" won denburg, a senior program executive at WNET, a New wards. three Emmy Awards, and the Ohio State Journalism York public television station in an Emmy Magazine in­ Blumberg closed the program with two of his longer Award, among others. Blumberg, a Guggenheim Fellow, terview. "He has a way of making ordinary events seem pieces. His video musical, "Women of the Calabash," has has had his video programs broadcast on PBS, the Dis­ unique. And making unique events more real." a political message underlying the obvious cultural ney Channel, Showtime, NBC's "Today Show", ABC's theme. Amid the colorful stage decor of 4,000 feet of Afri­ "Ripley's Believe It or Not" as well as on TV networks In the immediate future, he has an invitation from the can cloth in 35 different patterns, a black female quartet worldwide. Indonesian government to find unusual cultural phe­ chants South African songs to the drumming of their His videotapes .are in the permanent collections of the nomenon as well as a video on the making of Chinese traditional Calabash, a hollowed dried out squash with Museum of Modern Art, and he has done one-man shows noodles by hand. Saferoutes survey results show areas considered dangerous

• SAFEROUTES from page 1 Tom Dixon, associate vice president for administra­ get information about rumors about crimes they may ideally are good, the buses sometimes do not follow tion and head of the task force, is working with the park­ have heard. them, and "it is unsafe to wait at the bus stops for 20 mi­ ing task force to try and make any new parking areas Semans estimated that approximatly 2,000 surveys nutes." safe, as well as find possible solutions to the safety prob­ were returned. Some of the surveys were tabulated by Milner said Carr Building was "overwhemingly" men­ lems in the present parking lots, Milner said. computer, and the rest by student volunteers, the tioned by students as the most dangerous building. Carr One short term solution is the Safelots program the Women's Colition, and ASDU. and Social Sciences, identified by the survey as the sec­ Intrafraternity Council (IFC) is starting, Milner said. The Saferoutes survey was distributed to students by ond most dangerous building, are already being Volunteers will monitor selected parking lots, watching ASDU in response to the recent rapes on campus. The equipped with new Duke Card locks, Milner said. In ad­ for crime, and a more long-term solution might be shut­ surveys were not distributed to employees, which an­ dition, Milner said the Task force would recommend four tles to West Campus from far parking lots, Milner said. noyed some employees, Semans said. The survey asked more academic buildings to receive Duke Card locks this Other actions of the task force include helping plan respondents to identify the routes they traveled most of­ semester. the "Confronting Rape Symposium" to be held April 7-8 ten, the routes and academic buildings they believed The Task Force is considering whether the buildings on campus, and working to get public phones installed in most unsafe, and the darkest areas on campus. students listed as most dangerous or the buildings con­ academic buildings, said Milner. The top three routes students listed as the darkest taining computer clusters should be locked up first, said Milner said Public Safety Director Paul Dumas, also a and most dangerous were the Towerview Road area in­ Milner. member of the Task Force, is working with Durham Po­ cluding Science Drive, the route from the West Campus Another possible project would be to use the results of lice to compile a report of crime rates in off campus areas bus stop to Edens Quad, Research Drive and the route the survey to lobby the Durham City Council to recon­ where many students live. This information will be pub­ from West Campus to North Campus around Duke lished with other information the Graduate and Hospital South, Milner said. sider "obsolete restrictions" on lighting, Semans said. Profesional Student Council (GPSC) provides to "Restrictions on lighting off East Campus are not Purdy said the areas considered most in need of lights graduate and profesional students. realistic and encourage violent crime," he said. Seamans and safety phones were the area behind the Chapel, said both students and administrators supported such a Public Safety will also begin publishing all reports of Edens parking lot and New Dorms, the parking lots on plan. "I hope that lobbying would represent a coopera­ crime on campus every two weeks, Milner said. The Wannamaker, the path from Southgate and Gilbert- Adorns dormitories to the East Campus bus stop and the tive effort between off campus student groups, ASDU reports will update new safety features around campus and a phone number students and employees can call to area around Biddie Music building. and the administration."

Duke in New York Arts Program Reception and Booksigning INFORMATION SESSION for

Wednesday, February 22nd JULIUS LESTER 5-6 p.m. author of Institute of the Arts Gallery Bivins Building, East Campus Love Song

Bruce Payne, faculty director for fall will be held at semester 1989, and Kathy Silbiger, Gothic Bookshop coordinator of the program, will be on hand to answer your questions. Wednesday, February 22 (Refreshments, too!) 4:30 - 6:00pm

Call 684-6654 if you cannot come, but have questions or need an application. ^^MoVKic th Ejr* [booWhc>p Application deadline: February 27 , to 684-3986 Upper Level Bryan Center Institute of the Arts, 109 Bivins Building. Student flex cards accepted Monday & Wednesday 8:30 a.n Visa, MasterCard & Tuesday. Thursday & Friday 8:30 a.n ,-5p American Express S. turday 10 a.n ,-4p THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1989 Malcolm X honored in BSA program Tornadoes hit state • MALCOLM X from page 3 The presentation concluded with a short panel discus­ By The Associated Press sion. Assistant Professor of Political Science Darryl nutes and consisted mostly of a description of Malcolm Storms and tornadoes besieged the South on Tues­ Roberts credited Malcolm X with the unique ability to X's time in jail and an explanation of his evolving rela­ day, ripping a roof off an elementary school in North "internalize the struggle of black people in this country tionship with Elijah Muhammad. The film depicted Mal­ Carolina, causing sewers to back up in Alabama and and connect it with the struggle of blacks in Africa and colm's rebellious youth and the indifferent malice which dumping still more rain on flood-weary Kentucky and around the world." earned him the title "Satan" during the initial portion of Tennessee. his five-year prison term. Muhammad was credited with Roberts called Malcolm X a "deeply spiritual man" A mass of warm and humid air spawned the severe having told Malcolm X to reform his behavior and to able to make a spiritual connection between himself and storms and twisters in a wide band from the Gulf take pride in himself. The narrative also recounted the poor. Discussing the "new perspective" on whites Coast states to New England, with Georgia, Ala­ Muhammad's excommunication of his right-hand man that Malcolm X supposedly gained during his pilgrimage bama, Tennessee, Kentucky and the Carolinas the from the Black Muslim religion, following a widely criti­ to Mecca, Roberts said the black leader realized that hardest hit. cized statement Malcolm X made after the assassination "Islam was not something limited to the black man." of President Kennedy. The film contained a section that possibly linked Elijah Muhammad to Malcolm X's killing to protect the secret of Muhammad's alleged marital improprieties. cinema PAX! PEACE! 1104 BROAD ST., DURHAM [^^^^ V? BENEATH SEVENTH STREET RESTAURANT 286 -2647 OR 286-1019 The blessed peace of God is I VII Ml I MS AND TANNING SALCN much to be sought after! 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To the editor: what she was talking about. I do not I am a graduate student at Duke from mean the incident that happened at Nan­ the People's Republic of China. I read the jing. I wasn't there so I don't have the article "Racist riots in Nanjing — a Duke right to make any statement. What I Try and try again student's eyewitness account of the un­ mean here is her general opinions about rest in China" (an interview conducted Chinese attitude. She doesn't know Chi­ The presidents of the five Central nous peace agreements, the Bush ad­ with Suzanne Reasenberg) published in nese in-depth. I hope before she talks American countries want peace in ministration should give peace a The Missing Link on Feb. 1. In the article about Chinese or other things, she gets to Nicaragua. But will the United States chance to spread in Central America. Reasenberg said something about Chi­ know them well first. If the Sandinistas do not live up to nese that makes me angry. I don't have let them have it? Ask George Bush. time to write a long article, but I can't Anan Li On February 14, the presidents of their promises, what have we lost in keep silent. Reasenberg did not know Forestry graduate student El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, making an effort to stop the violence Costa Rica and Honduras announced that the United States originally an agreement to bring peace to Nica­ helped inflict on the area? ragua. The leaders vowed to remove The recent agreement is pragmatic Housekeepers getting short end of the broom the Contra rebels from their bases in and a positive step towards peace. Honduras in exchange for an open However, the leaders still need to ad­ election in Nicaragua one year from dress problems in other Central To the editor: cantly, an insufficiently cleaned bathroom now. A plan would be drawn up American countries. As I read about the recent Ser­ or commons area after a Duke house­ within 90 days to relocate some The situation in El Salvador, for in­ viceMaster incident in The Chronicle on keeper has finished with it. No matter 11,000 Contras and their families to stance, is verging on the brink of a Feb. 16 and 17, I was reminded of a what horrible messes we fools make in third countries. familar adage: "If it ain't broke, it don't our dorms after weekend revelry, the cus­ massacre not seen in that country need fixin'." The administration has de­ todians invariably return all to normal. In return, international observers since the government killed some cided to hire a private management com­ Their loyalty, diligence and hardworking will verify a free election in Nicara­ 30,000 people in one month in 1932. pany, fully unfamiliar with and uncon­ attitude should be noted by some profes­ gua, including uncensored access to Guatemala, meanwhile, continues to cerned about Duke's irreplaceable custo­ sors and administrators at this universi­ the press for all parties. Nicaragua carry out a policy of genocide against dial service workers, without consulting ty. I feel ashamed that only after the also vowed to release most of the the Indian majority in that country. the union. spectre of ServiceMaster appeared did I 3,300 Contra prisoners that it cur­ Sadly, these issues have remained ServiceMaster was supposedly hired to stand up and take notice of how invalu­ able the housekeepers are. The treatment rently holds. untouched and shielded from view improve efficiency. Instead, their man­ agement representative, Ed Jones, has they have received from the administra­ Although the compromise answers under the wing of U.S. friendship. tion is despicable. I hope that the stu­ many of the Nicaraguan opposition's chosen to insult the integrity of our custo­ dians and intimidate them with threats of dents who live in the dorms, use the demands, the Contras and the Bush The very fact that the U.S. can ap­ job termination. The most bizarre facet of facilities, and attend class in the rooms administration expressed suprise and prove or veto a pact by the Central this situation is that this company was that they clean will go to bat for these skepticism over the plan. The admin­ American leaders reveals the long hired to solve a problem that, as far as I folks and act, if necessary, to ensure that istration doubts the Sandinistas will tentacles of the Monroe Doctrine and can see, simply does not exist. Never, let justice is served. keep their promises because they northern paternal interference. It is me repeat myself, never have I witnessed have supposedly failed to do so in the time for the United States to quit its or heard about an efficiency problem with MarcBraswell past, without mentioning that the Cold War games. The Bush adminis­ housekeeping personnel or, more signifi­ Trinity'92 Contras' destabilizing influence on tration should permit these countries the Nicaraguan government is to search for their own answers, with­ largely to blame for this. out the harness of economic sanctions Instead of always naysaying indige­ or foreign-financed guerillas. Consent laws lead to nothing but waste

To the editor: has been a decrease in Massachusetts' The North Carolina public should be "teen abortions," there has been a corre­ LETTERS POLICY aware of the impact that the passage of sponding increase in Massachusetts House Bill 93 will have, and its contents. minors seeking abortions in neighboring The Chronicle urges all its readers to submit letters to its editor. The bill is better known as tbe "Parental states. Girls often have to dangerously Letters must be typed and double-spaced and must not exceed 300 words. They Consent" law: it forces minors seeking delay their abortions until sufficient bus must be signed and dated and must include the author's class or department, abortions to obtain the consent of their fare can be raised, and then they don't get phone number and local address for purposes of verification. The Chronicle will not parents; otherwise, they must petition the the post-abortion medical care they need publish anonymous or form letters or letters whose sources cannot be confirmed. courts, thereby delaying an abortion and because it is too difficult to return to the The Chronicle reserves the right to edit for length and clarity, and to withhold endangering the health of the mother. clinic. They also do not receive ongoing letters, based on the discretion of the editors. In The American Journal of Public contraceptive services — with predictable Letters to the editor should be mailed to Box 4696, Duke Station or delivered in Health (May, 1987), researchers found no results. Many who cannot get to the clin­ person to The Chronicle office on the third floor of Flowers Building. difference in the percentage of parents ics sometimes attempt to self-induce an notified by minors in Minnesota, with its aboriton — risking their health, their fu­ parental notification requirement, and ture fertility, and their very lives. that of Wisconsin's, which has no notifica­ A study of authorization/consent stat­ tion or consent stature. The facts are that utes in the American Psychologist (Jan. THE CHRONICLE established 1905 most teens do seek their parents' guid­ 1987) summarized these laws this way: ance when faced with an unplanned preg­ "At best, they are benign but costly and nancy. At a Charlotte clinic, for example, purposeless legal procedures. At worst, Kathleen Sullivan, Editor 85 percent of the teens 15 and younger they increase pregnant minors' delay Gillian Bruce, Craig Whitlock, Managing Editors have discussed their decision with their seeking medical attention and induce em­ Barry Eriksen, General Manager parents. The teens who don't talk to their barrassment, anxiety, and family Liz Morgan, Editorial Page Editor parents are children from stressed and conflict." unstable families, in physically abusive Chris Graham, News Editor Maxine Grossman, News Editor situations or — worst of all — who are vic­ History has demonstrated that par­ Brent Belvin, Sports Editor Rodney Peele, Sports Editor tims of incest. Mandating parental autho­ ental consent laws are a mistake. No mat­ Edward Shanaphy, Features Editor Lenore Yarger, City & State Editor rization would not help these girls; in fact, ter how hard one would like to try, one Rae Terry, Associate News Editor Kristin Richardson, Arts Editor it would punish the very children whose just cannot legislate healthy, open com­ Beth Ann Farley, Photography Editor Tom Lattin, Photography Editor families are already in crisis. munication among family members. Greg Kramer, Business Manager Brenden Kootsey, Production Editor North Carolina can, and should, learn Dan Berger, Senior Editor Ed Boyle, Senior Editor In Massachusetts, where a mandatory from history in order to avoid making this Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager Linda Nettles, Production Manager parental /judicial authorization statute is same mistake. Carolyn Haff, Advertising Production Manager in effect, teens who feel they cannot talk Leslie Kovach, Student Advertising Production Manager with their parents travel to a neighboring Cynthia West Shang state for their abortions. So, while there Durham Tne opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115; Business On the record Office; 684-6106: Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106. Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union The evidence will show that when the time came for Oliver North to tell the truth, he Building; Advertising Office; 101 West Union Building. lied. When the time came for Oliver North to come clean he shredded, he erased, he ©1988 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No altered. When the time came for Oliver North to let the light shine in, he covered up. part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. John Keker, associate independent prosecutor, at the start of North's trial Tuesday WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1989 THE CHRONICLE Passing the time with the usual gallows conversation NEW YORK — After the Ayatollah Khomeini offered mitting millions of God's devout worshipers to hunt financial and spiritual incentives for the murder of Sal­ • Observer down and murder a lone human being, was surely an ex­ man Rushdie, the press fell to with a will. traordinary development in the march of progress, yet it The first comment I read said it was just politics. It Russell Baker occasioned almost no response that was not utterly said factions in Iran were exploiting Rushdie's novel for banal. internal political advantage. Each of the usual suspects used Rushdie's predica­ Was this supposed to comfort Rushdie? Since almost Anger, of course, made me temporarily forget Rushdie, ment as an occasion to round up the usual arguments for everything in Iran is just politics, including its incessant just as the opportunity to scold his readers had made the the usual causes. author of this insulting and misinformed article forget hangings and shootings, there seemed little in it to cheer Scholars of Islamic civilization seized the chance to him. that the issue in this case is not humanity's inevitable and enduring ignorance, but a fellow human under sen­ lecture on Western ignorance of their specialty. Foreign- The next piece I read made no effort to comfort him ei­ tence of death without due process of law. affairs diviners familiar with Iran delivered the usual ther, but took a very stern tone toward me and every­ explanations about radicals and moderates struggling body else here in this part of the world for not being I then read several more pieces stating once again and for control of the revolution. more knowledgeable and sensitive to the Islamic reli­ at great length what I had long known; to wit, that the Defenders of the First Amendment deplored the gion. Islamic faith is much given to gentleness and kindness ayatollah's assault on publishing freedoms and This made me rather angry, because while I don't and has made many vital contributions to civilization. denounced chain bookshop corporations and the Cana­ know terribly much about Islam, I know a good deal It seemed curiouser and curiouser as the days passed dian government for cowardice in stopping sales of the more about it than about any of the earth's other reli­ that no one in all journalism wanted to come to grips Rushdie novel. gions except Christianity and Greek and Roman with the agonizing plight of Rushdie. This refreshed conservative commentators with new paganism. This eerie capital sentence issued from Tehran, com­ strength for the eternal struggle against liberals and lef­ tists, or "the Western literary herd," as Patrick Buchanan called them while declaring that "the First Amendment has succeeded phony patriotism as the last refuge of the scoundrel." To his credit, Buchanan at least acknowledged that Rushdie was in a terrible pickle and suggested a possible remedy: "Since he is so high on Danny the Red and so down on Thatcher, maybe Sal will want to fly down to Nicaragua and seek sanctuary there." By this time I had seen several people abuse the ayatollah on television by saying that he had condemned Rushdie without even reading "The Satanic Verses." Why do people say things like this? There has been noth­ ing published to the effect that the ayatollah didn't read the book. And what if he didn't? Do we want to live in a world where we must actually read a book before pronouncing on it? Last year every other American you met expressed passionate opinions on Allan Bloom's "The Closing of the American Mind," a book so unreadable that it reminded me of Mark'Twain's comment on The Book of Mormon: "chloroform in print." The Rushdie story defeats journalism, I suspect, be­ cause it approaches science fiction. Rushdie's plight was foretold years ago in a Ray Bradbury story about a nightmare future in which manhunts had become live television entertainment, with vivid camera work bring­ ing the agony of the hunted right into the parlor. It was — and is — the old-fashioned public hanging adapted for the global village of television. Instead of a hundred in the village square, there are millions of us now, but while waiting for the entertainment we still pass the time with the usual chatter. Russell Baker's column is syndicated by News Service. A Third World fish story: The company that got away

It was the conspiracy of the dollar legal issues: an understandable reaction for a company, That mixed poisons in Bhopal • Burning bridges perhaps, but not for a member of the world community. Mixed the poison in America They balked at helping the Indian government with in­ And dumped it in Bhopal. Eric Martin terim aid, sending a belated $5 million only after an In 1985, these were some of the words they sang and American court ordered them to do so. They resisted chanted in the streets of Bhopal, India. They demon­ even any deaths or serious injuries. other interim payments while spending $24 million on strated, singing for the victims, the living, the dead. There were some other serious differences as well. In leeal fees and investigations. They were hurt and scared and angry. They wanted the Bhopal case, Union Carbide rejected responsibility Through the Indian government 500,000 people filed something done. for the tragedy, insisting that it was the result of sabo­ complaints against Carbide; these people have been The details of the tragedy were on everyone's lips. Of tage by a "disgruntled employee." They are sure of this, awarded what comes to $940 apiece. The amount of how on the morning of December 3, the Union Carbide they explain, simply because it is the "only way" the ac­ money is not the problem. What the money says is. plant in Bhopal spewed forth the nightmare cloud of cident could have happened. They are so sure of this The $470 million is shut-up money, money to keep the methyl isocyanate (MIC), of how some 3,000 people died, that they offer no concrete evidence and refuse to iden­ Third World happy while the multinationals get on with 200,000 were hurt, 300,000 were displaced from their tify the man who was responsible. business. Carbide's payment shows how the multina­ homes in the cursed city. They talked about children This same surety led Carbide to dismiss and avoid tional who cuts costs and milks profits in the Third choking in the streets, about lingering lung problems other issues. Like why the dilapidated flare tower (a World can, for the most part, escape the disasterous and uncounted dead. But there was a feeling through all safety system) was on the blink. Why a scrubber unit consequences of their actions at the host country's ex­ of this that the world has somehow learned a lesson, was on standby. Why the refrigeration system for tank pense. No matter what the legal experts consider that justice, poetic or otherwise, would be done. 610, which was the source of the leak, was out of "reasonable", they got away with one — the experts Valentine's Day fell some four years later, and much operation. Why there was 60 percent more than the rec­ looked only at legal complications, not at the moral is­ of the world had forgotten Bhopal's tragedy and after­ ommended level of MIC stored in the tank. sues involved. math. On this day, a settlement was reached: Union Union Carbide controlled its Indian-based operations Union Carbide will now pay India an amount that the Carbide would pay the lump sum of $470 million to the at a time when Carbide was fighting to cut costs and get New York Times says "will have only a small impact on government oflndia by March 31,1989. a competitive edge. Multinationals like Carbide do the company." For multinationals around the world, it is By most standards, $470 million is a lot of money. Not pretty well abroad — their profit return is higher be­ a mark of what they can get away with, a comforting of as much as, say, $1 or $2 billion, the numbers set by two cause of cheap labor, lax regulations, tax breaks and in­ their fears of tighter restrictions and penalties. A case independant detailed estimates for compensation. But centives from foreign governments. that many thought would help the Third World has only then again, it is a good bit more than the $200 million They get higher profits, but they also get sloppy. They reaffirmed the First World's visitation rights and immu­ Carbide offered after the incident occured (the amount, store hazardous chemicals in the heart of a community nity in the world of business. incidentally, covered by their insurance). The settlement of 900,000. They introduce technology that only Ameri­ But hold on. $470 million: now who's to say they got brought the case to what the New York Times "experts" can-trained workers can understand. They cut back on off easy? There is an answer key for that one. Past called "a reasonable conclusion." the number of employees at their plants. They write the GATX, past NtSemi, past Teldyn... Just for comparison, the Three Mile Island incident safety manuals in English. UCarb. Up 3 and a half points in three days of heavy cost Metropolitan Edison $300 million in property dam­ The attitude that comes across does not exactly reeK of trading. ages alone, and the total bill for the disaster came to $4 mutual benefit, but more of profit and convenience. Car­ It was the conspiracy of the dollar.,,. billion. In the Three Mile Island disaster, there were not bide was chiefly concerned with public relations and Eric Martin is a Trinity sophomore. THECHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1989 Comics

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THE CHRONICLE

Assistant sports editor: Steve Goldberg Copy editors: Gillian Bruce. MattSclafani "Hmm ... not bad, Kemosabe ... Rae Terry, Craig Whitlock but this one little better maybe." Wire editor: Braxton Perkins Associate photography editor: Jill Wright Assistant editorial page editor: Matt McKenzie Doonesbury / Garry Trudeau Layout: Craig Whitlock Paste-up: Roily Miller LESS7HANCNE MONTH SINCE- THEN, i&VE SEEN JOHN TW­ Account representatives: Judy Bartlett, Betty Hawkins fl60, &EOR6E BUSH'S ER SCMmuZEPSYHiSPEOAPiL- AtL OF THIS PUR1N6THE ACTUALLY,! „„ Advertising sales staff:.. ..Tom Carroll, Mary Kay Dabney, LOSlNVaVI I6W/NE,IV0IY1ENANP, FIRST TWO WEEKS OF THEME-OF-THE-WEEK FEZLK1NPA CLAYED Deana Gomez, Adam Gurwitz, Paul Jacobson, ti/AS ETHICS! H5IWULP —*^/ 0NEA&UME5, SONGj 6EOR6E BUSH'S WATCH! SORRY MP HONEYMOON ^$V>?V^, JACK KEMP, AC' IS THIS WHAT BUSH Miky Kurihara, Anna Lee, Chris Michael, tm TOLERATE, HETDLQ ~^L '—^OfSEPOFFINAN- US, EVEN1HE APPEAR- MEAMT0Y...0y„. Kevin Tan, Serina Vash, Susan Shank ^dANCBOF ,/ \ ._ \ Advertising production staff: SmedesAyers, 6 IMPROPRIETY Kevin Connor, Bill Gentner, Babita Lai INHISAP- Ann-Marie Parsons, Carolyn Poteet, Ted Rex MINISTMWN! Business staff: Kevin Csernecky, Eric Harnish, Dan Perlman, Candice Polsky, Greg Wright Secretary: .....Pam Packtor Classified managers: Liz Stalnaker, Darren Weirnick Calendar coordinator: Melissa Newman

Today Duke Symphony Orchestra, Baldwin Auditorium, 8:15 Community Calendarp.m. Lutheran Campus Ministry Worship with Holy Eucha­ Italian Tabie, Schlitz Room in the Rat, 1:30*2:30 p.m. rist. Duke Chapel Basement, 9:30 p.m. 'The Elderly," a public forum at the Durham County "Communities in Peril: An Agenda for Faithful Ser­ Circle K meeting, co-educational service club, all are Public Library, 7-9:00 p.m. vants," lecture by Reverend Council-Austin. York invited. Windsor Commons, 6:00 p.m. Chapel, 10:00 a.m. BSA Speaker: Louis Stokes. Page Auditorium, 8:00 The Society for Creative Anachronism meeting, Room p.m. Chinese Language Table, 101G Bryan Center, 12:30 108B West Duke Bldg, 8:00 p.m. Ali are invited. p.m, Duke Drama presents 'The Miser." 209 East Duke German Table, Ratskeller. 12-2:00 p.m. Bidg, 8:15 p.m. $6 for the public, $4 for students. "Women Abroad," dinner discussion sponsored by the Women's Coalition. International House, 6:00-7:30 North Pole Slide Show - Prof. Dodds Meddock, Dept. Batik Demonstration by professional artist Rita of Zoology, reviews his hot air balloon trip. House P Fitzpatrick. West Campus Craft Center, 8:15 p.m. Commons Room, 9:00 p.m. Information session on immigrant visa number lottery "Abortion: Stories from North and South," discussion Berman Amendment. All immigrants without visas "Dialing for Duke," free dinner, orientation session, with Suki Ornorato, Dept. of Sociology. Maxwell may be eligible to receive one during March. Impor­ PRIZES! Everybody welcome. 3rd floor of DUPAC Bidg. House Commons. 8:00p.m. tant meeting, 125 Engineering Bldg, 5:00 p.m. 6:45-10:00 p.m. Spaghetti Supper sponsored by the Catholic Student "Home Rule: Environment in the American Family," Lunchtime Concert series featuring Janet Page, oboe, Center. Free, Ail Welcome. Chapel Basement, 5:30- lecture presented by the Psych Majors Union, Zener • and Cynthia Turner, organ. Duke Chapel, 12:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Auditorium, 7;30 p.m. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1989 THECHRONICLE Ciassifieds

Announcements WINDSURF MINORITY INTERN BSU Prayer Breakfast! Every Wed JOB APPLICATIONS — GRADUATE This spring on my Mistral Super- Paid summer Internship* In ac­ morning. 8:15 a.m.. in the U- SCHOOL — PASSPORT PHOTOS 2/ DEADLINE: DUKE/CAIRO applica­ light: 12' board. 6.3 sq meter sail. counting, Investment banking, Room. Join us! $5, over 10 $2.25 ea. LAMINATED tion Fall 1989 due Fri Feb 24. 5 Great for beginner or advanced. management consulting, & corpo­ Pi Phis: Meeting in Physics tonight! personal IDs — everything while Only $600 Roof rack, wet suit, rate law are available to minority p.m.. Study Abroad Office, 2022 Sisters — 6:45 p.m. and please you wait. LPI 900 W. Main — harness also available inexpen­ sophomores & juniors through the Services Offered Campus Dr. bring $1. Pledges—7:15 p.m. Across from Brightleaf. 683-2118. sive. Call Rob, 286-0972 SOON! Sponsors for Educational Opportu­ DEADLINE: DUKE/HOWARD applica­ nity Internship programs. SEO Is a Call Protype for papers, resumes, ECKANKAR theses, etc., 682-4628, or come GREEK WEEEK tion Fall 1989 due Fri Feb 24 5 college scholarship & career guid­ Entertainment PRESENTS A FREE introductory by Brightleaf Square, upstairs near POINTS AT STAKE! DIAL FOR p.m.. Study Abroad Office. 2022 ance service that places selected video: "The Journey Home" Thu, 2/ Morgan Imports. 9-5 M-F. OUKE. tonight from 6:45-10 Campus Dr. minority students In Internships 23, 7:30 p.m. Durham Library OW! OW! OW! OW! p.m.. 3rd floor DUPAC Bldg.. and PHI ETA SIGMA with prestigious NYC firms. An In­ JUST YOUR TYPE Word Processing receive coompetition points for (Downtown]. 330 N Roxoboro. For Come see Barrence Whitfeld & Reminder for Sophomore, Junior, formation session on the programs Service will type your papers, dis­ your Greek Group. In addition, info. 1-832-8445. the Savages with The Blind Mice. Senior members: Scholarship will be held Wed Feb 22 at 7 p.m. Wed 2/22 ( the Coffeehouse. sertations, letters, etc. quickly and the sorority or fraternity with the In Rm 127 Soc-Psych. Applications professionally. Emergency typing highest participation percentage DEADUNE: Fri Feb 24. Information SATISFACTION $4w/ID$5- general public. at Pre-Major Advising Ctr. 884- will be available. For further Infor­ .489-8700 (24 hours). will receive $100! Free dinner. Restaurant Pi ;a Delivery — This 2583. mation calf the Duke Futures Of­ SOCIAL CHAIRS candybars. prizes, MetroSport ad good for $1 off any • '-::• fice at 684-6601. There's a DJ on campus with pro­ TYPING MADNESS: ONLY 99 membership provided. Ques­ CENTS/PAGE! Theses, resumes, HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! za! 493-7797 — "Abortion: Stories from North & fessional equipment and great tions? Call Cyntia Baker at 684- Non-smoking females. 18-24. ate exp. 2/25/89. anything! Emergency rush jobs wel­ South." A presentation by Suki Or- music. Call me about your next par­ 4419. needed to participate in a study on come! (24 hrs). 490-0319. ADPi&DANNYFERRY norato, Dept of Sociology, tonight ty. Adam Sheridan. 684-0374. physiological responses to labora­ Work Study Student. Computer In lieu of regular meeting meet a at 8 p.m. in Maxwell House com­ tory tasks. Time required is 1.5 consultant. Computer background in alumni lounge to go to b-t mons rm. Sponsored by Maxwell Help Wanted hours. Participants will be reim­ Roommate Wanted and aptitude required. Call Fannie. game together. House & the Office of Residential bursed for their time and effort. If 684-2163. interested, call 684-2941 and ask Life. OVERSEAS JOBS. $900-2000 mo. Graduate or professional to share for the Women's Study. •.wing groups/fraternities — Sign Where are the women student Summer. Yr round, All Countries. large house near campus. Master STUDENTS — Springbreak is ap­ All fields. Free info. Write UC. PO up for yearbook group portraits BR w/BA. $200/mo + 1/4 util. proaching, schedule your waxing -' BC Info Desk or you won't be in Bx 52. Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. appointments early. Across the FREE DINNER Available 3/1. 382-0000. ...e book! Sororities not submit­ trustees? Come hear Eleanor Street Skin Care Clinic will be SUMMER JOBS TO SAVE ENVIRON­ Progressive, nonsmoking room­ CANDYBARS. PRIZES, ting bid-day photos sign up also, Smeal, President of the Fund for closed Mar 4-7 due to our atten­ MENT EARN $2500-$350O. Na­ mate — female or male — wanted METROSPORT MEMBERSHIP... please. the Feminist Majority speak on the dance at the International Beauty DIAL FOR DUKE, tonight from tional campaign positions to pass for huge 3BR apt with all national campus Feminization of Show. 683-5515. 6:45-10 p.m.. 3rd fl. DUPAC KAPPAS! Please give $60 to Jen clean air act, stop toxic pollution, amenities. Leave message, 489- Power Campaign WED, 8 p.m., Bldg. and receive these perks (111 Windsor] or Kim (48 Erwin) for tighten pesticide controls _ 8700. 139 Soc-Sci. and more! Help raise important Myrtle ASAP! promote comprehensive recycling, operating funds for Duke Join Community organizing, environ- available in 18 states & DC. mtvs 10000 MANIACS?! student volunteers tonight! CRIME AWARENESS on campus 2/22.23. Call Kate toll- Apts. for Rent Questions? Call Cynthia Baker at social change — how to get a job Nope, we only have room for 1000 & Prevention is your responsibili­ free at 1-800-622-2202. 684-4419. working for what you're about. THU, Spacious 1BR, freshly painted, HW AIRPLANES ON THE ROOF. Come ty. Find out more about it TO­ DUKE UNIVERSITY CONFERENCE floors, near Duke. Shared entran­ see Philip Glass' latest creation. NIGHT at 8 p.m. when Public 232 Soc-Sci, 7 p.m. SERVICES Is currently accepting DEADUNE: DUKE/GLASGOW PUBLIC ce, W/D. $250/mo — call 682- FRI FEB 24, PAGE AUD. 8:15 p.m. Safety Officer Ruby Tompkins applications for F/T summer posi­ POLICY STUDIES PROGRAM appli­ Environmental law. 3594 speaks in the Canterbury com forestry. tions at DUKE. We offer compete- A SCIENCE-FICTION-MUSIC-DRA­ cation due Wed Mar 1. 5 p.m. 112- mons rm. Refreshments served. business, hydrology. computer tlve pay, on-campus housing, and MA? Music by Philip Glass, script E Old Chem. ATTN: Mary Edwards. Sponsored by CANTERBURY & the science, engineering Geology valuable work experience. Stop by Houses for Rent by Tony Award winning David Henry DEADLINE: LEAVE OF ABSENCE for Office of Residential Life. can put you 1 step ahead of the 106 PAGE BLDG for applications Hwang, & lighting by Jerome S Iri In GREAT GRADUATE DUPLEX! Near competition. Come to and job descriptions. QUESTIONS? — the designer of Madonna's last "Abortion: Stories from North & Duke, new appliances, big yard. 2 1989-1990 Study Abroad due Thu. student sponsored 3EOLOGY Call Diana Hogan at 684-5791. tour. 1000 AIRPLANES ON THE South." A presentation by Suki Or- BR. $325/mo. 493-6852. Mar 30, 5 p.m.. Study Abroad Of­ OPEN HOUSE FRI AT 4 3 m., 201 ROOF. FEB 24, 8:15 p.m., PAGE norato, Dept of Sociology, tonight fice, 2022 Campus Dr. Old Chem Bldg. Work Study Student. Computer AUD. at 8 p.m. in Maxwell House com­ consultant. Computer background Real Estate Sales DEADLINE: Summer 1989 Study mons rm. Sponsored by Maxwell Bicycle Repair Course Tue 6:30 and aptitude required. Call Fannie. HOME RULE: Abroad ALL paperwork due Thu. House & the Office of Residential 684-2163. "Environment in the American Fam­ p.m. — Bull City Bi es. 286- SALE BY OWNER 3BR, 2BA, 4150 Mar 30. 5 p.m..Study Abroad Of­ Life. ily" Feb 22, 7:30 Zener Aud. 0535 for more info. sq. ft. home. Watts Hospital. fice. 2022 Campus Dr. POOL ATTENDANT Fearrington Please Come — Maybe you'll learn "Abortion: Stories from North & Finely remodeled. $149,900. Bro­ SORORITY PICS Swim and Croquet Club. Inc.. Pit- something. For your protection, get Scotland South." A presentation by Suki Or- Composite picture HERE — PiPhi. tsboro. May 15 thru Sept 4. $6/hr. kers welcome. 682-1987. Yard's finest English Bobby whis­ norato, Dept of Sociology, tonight AEPhi, Tridelt. DG. ChiO. KAT. This Call 933-9081 or 542-5761 after GET SOME tle's shrill tone heard over a mile. at 8 p.m. in Maxwell House com­ Autos for Sale Sun at Daytona or Panama City $4.95 postpaid. Volume dis­ mons rm. Sponsored by Maxwell 1:30 a.m.—5:30 beach. Prices start at $119!! Call BARBIZON counts. Check. Visa/MC. Marsh House & the Office of Residential fpf Travel: 286-4748. ATTENTION — GOVT SEIZED VEHI­ and Moor. 47 Calhoun Rd., Life. PART TIME MODELING INSTRUC­ Waynesvhle, NC 28786. (704)- GRREK ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN FEL­ TORS. Experience in modeling, act­ CLES from $100 Fords. Mercedes. At 4:50, we are driving. I shift & Dig Yourself! 456-3793. LOWSHIP — NEW TIME — Come to ing, make-up, fashion, or teaching Corvettes, Chevys Surplus Buyers she watches. We don't speak at all. With Barrence Whitfeld 8, the 0012 Divinity tonight at 6:30 p.m preferred Eves and Sat. Only chic, Guide. 602-838-8885 ext A5277. At 5:02.1 am alone. Savages plus The Blind Mice ASDUBABYSITTING not 7:30 p.m. fashionable need apply Will train. 1979 Pinto S/W. AC. AT. PS, PB. Play with kids. Earn money. Get a Wed 2/22 at the Coffeehouse. CALL 876-8201 AM/FM cass Runs well $600 neg. Barrence Rocks! break from campus life. Sign up on $4 w/Duke ID. $5 — general PRE-BUSINESS? Call 383-5123. The Coffeehouse Wed 2/22 with Come hear Monty Dram, Fuqua MANAGER NEEDED the Bryan Ctr Walkway Feb 20-23. The Blind Mice. Beat the cold Visiting Professor. Tonight, 7:30 No experience necessary: Must The Major Speakers Committee with Barrence Whitfield & The IMPORTANT INFORMATIONAL p.m., 226 Allen. Sponsored by For Sale — Misc. meets tonight at 7 p.m. In the make year committment. Good Savages. MEETING: Representatives from Business Endeavors Assn Denmark's International Study Bryan Ctr Board Rm. benefits. Opportunity for ad- 1987 YAMAHA SCOOTER — Great TR-12 Program (DIS-Copenhagen), Wed, MEET TRUSTEES SMAKA - I love you. Love. L _ me. person. SATISFACTION — Shop­ Turn in your gas card and keys to Feb 22, 11:30-12:30. Study Come to an ice cream & coffee so­ pes at Chuck Abroad Library. 2022 Campus Or. cial with the Board of Trustees. BIG COCKROACHES Thu. 2/23, 9-10 p.m. in 201 Flow­ LAW Students leach tot The Stan­ NEEDS A HOME Poltics and Women in the 1990's: The Brown Open House for Wed ley H. Kaplan EduCanonai Ctr. Free, friendly, affectionate, female Prospects for the Future Speech i P-l: 1988 and 1989 pledge ers Sponsored by GPSC and ASDU. night has been moved to Mon. preparing students tor the June shepard. 2-1/2 yrs. Healthy, by Eleanor Smeal, Duke alum and dinner. Meet in the Pits to- Help Durham Battered Women and Feb 27 ALL THE BUGS SHOULD LSAT. Applicants should call the spayed, all shots, boosters, inddor/ national women's rights activist. at 5:30 p.m. (Be thinking Children. Donate clothes, toys, BE DEAD BY THEN. Get psyched! anything! Collections in BC. DU, Durham director at 4898720 WED.8p.m.. 139 Soc-Sci. Bring Raid! Trent, Uncle Harry's, Hospital N. 2/ (days for inromiationl For sale: Piedmont roundtrip ti SENIORS: Don't hf job yet? 20-3/3. We'll pick them up! Spon­ SALES - i, more" Outdoor Spe­ from RDU to LaGuardia, New T That's okay. Come sored by KAT. For info — 684- cialty shop. Evenings & Sat. River Leaves Mar 18, 6:45 a.m. talk about alternative jobs ai Runners' Emporium, 201 Al­ returns Mar 19. 9:56 p.m. Cost: THE CHRONICLE. 1873. job search process. Let's bemarle St.. Durham. Apply in per­ $148 or .best offer! Call Lisc ideas! THU. 232 Soc-Sci. 7 p CAS MAJORS son. Backpacking, Canoeing, Toyama in Raliegh at work: 467- CLASSIFIEDS INFORMATION UNION! Reminder: Meeting Thu. Kayaking Experience preferred. 3131 or call collect at home 783 Do you like travelling? Wc rking in 6073. Must sell by Mar5! Feb 23. 5:30 p.m., 128 Soc-Psych. BUT reliability & enthusiasm impor- the outdoors? Come sei BASl^RATFS All are welcome. Refreshments geology can take you Geology Open House. Fri 4p.m. CAMP COUNSELORS NEEDED June Wanted to Buy $3.00 (per day) for the first 15 words or less. 201 Old Chem Bldg. 19-Aug 25. Day program for 5-12 100 (per day) for each additional word. Weekend MBA students desperate year olds. $6/hr. Call 471-6300 CHI-0 PLEDGES for tickets to 2'23 NC State game. leave message. Call Shirley at 684-5172 or 682- r weekly meeting is TONIGHT SEECjLALFEATURES >ss from 114 8io-Sci at 6 p.m. TATTISHALL'S* Italian Importer of Ceramics needs 6995. creative help. Reorganizing and (Combinations accepted.) Seeking 2 tickets for NC State packing travelling display Tempo­ $1.00 extra per day for All Bold Words. GARAGE & RADIATOR game Call Dave at 684-1340 & rary P/T. possible F/T. Call Marc make his father very happy BAMBAMSB'DAY $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading Blackwell. 732-5933 in Hillsboro. SERVICE, INC. was yesterday! Brendan Anthony (maximum 15 spaces). or 682-7266 in Durham. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE sell my Martin is 20 now! Give him a $2.00 extra per day for a Boxed Ad. Specializing in: parents 2 tickets to the Duke-Ar­ spanking GET PSYCHED! BRING Child Care izona game this Sun at the CHECKBOOKS! DEADLINE • American • Rabbits Meadowlands so they'll stop Cars • Scirocco ASDUBABYSITTING bugging me. Will pay top dollar. 1 business day prior to publication Play with kids Earn money. Get a Call 684-1239. by12:00Noon. • Dasher • Toyota break from campus life. Sign up on the Bryan Ctr Walkway Feb 20-23. • Datsun • honda Lost and Found little brother ever! EAYMENI • Volvo GOOFY!! DKE is the b( Lost: Sapphire & diamond ring. you'YBS —Debby. Prepayment is required. Somewhere by York bench & ATO's. Cash, check or Duke IR accepted Please call 684-1764. Reward! PAUL (We cannot make change for cash payments.) Thanks for the quarters you schmuck! 9d-HOURDRQP.CiFFLOCATION JAMIE YAVELBERG Congrats! Yavel gets the gavel! We 3rd floor Flowers Building (near Duke Chapei) Auto Repairing love you! Your humble servants. At- where classifieds forms are available. & Service Motor Tune-up JANE GRAVES ORMAILTQ- Alarm Light 2" by 4" for hand or Personals Happy Birthday to a great person, General Repairs purse. Switch forward for flash-light, friend, and ex-roomie. I love youl1 Chronicle Classifieds 25% OFF! SPRING backward for alarm. Strap also Rachel Wrecker Service BREAK SPECIAL! Hide-a-Way al BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706. sounds alarm. 286-2207 MOUNTAIN BROOK COTTAGES in SMAKA — I love you. Love, L & me. CALL 684-6106 IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT CLASSIFIEDS. Send $10.95 to: the Smokies. $48.75 nitely for 2. 1900 W. Markham Ave. Hampton House, FIREPLACES, spa/sauna area. NO REFUNDS OR CANCELLATIONS AFTER FIRST INSERTION DEADLINE, (locaUdbshindDulocCuT^u.) « (704)-586-4329. 318 E. Park St., Cary, NC 27511. See page 12 • THECHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1989

I from page 11 JJ FROSH Smile Sweetheart! Sorry about a the trash you're going througt ASDU objects to representation limit JANE GRAVES Cheer up. you're wonderful an Happy Birthday i don't deserve this hellacious mess son and roomie. We hope today is We're here for you. All of our love • ASDU from page 1 point a representative each year, with only one of them Cat. Pammi, Xer as special as you are. Goodbye more representatives as the students that ASDU and having the power to vote. The voting right would alter­ teenager, hello 20 year old! We OUT OFTHE BLUE GPSC are pitted against each other," Rowlett said later nate between the groups annually. io Er a Come Jam with Out of the Blue at their first annual a capella smor­ Tuesday night. "By putting ASDU against GPSC, you're The key to having student input is information," K for a great gasbord! Also featuring the Tufts assuming that all students are interchangeable around Dertke said. "We need someone there on a permanent Tell Brooke, Melissa. Elizabeth. Al­ Beelzebubs and the UNC Clef­ here, which they are not," she said. basis. The actual voting is almost secondary to that." exandra. Claire, Christy, and Kris- hangers! Sat, Feb 25, 7:15 p.m. In ten it was nice to see them again/ Baldwin Aud. Tickets $3 at Page Dertke said the LRC approved the change at a meet­ IN OTHER BUSINESS:In his President's Report, meet them! Wish there were more and Bryan Ctr, $3.50 at door. Bop ing last Thursday when he was absent due to a class "women" like/all at Brown. ASDU President Tommy Semans criticized the Univer­ til you drop! conflict. Rowlett said she attended part of the meeting. sity's contract with Servicemaster, a housekeeping man­ GLORIA NIEMI!! "If yo j are insulted because of the She also said she and Dertke were notified of the agement firm he said has threatened many housekeep­ Happy Birthday!! Happiness is... a of Christ, you are blessed. changes at noon Tuesday, only four hours before the ing workers. 'There have been a number of complaints terrific roommate! Get psyched for forth = Spirit rests on you." 1 Peter. our Mar 2nd celebration. (Hey — committee's final report was completed for consideration 4:14 from the housekeeping staff about their treatment," 6 pack!) Tell by the Board of Trustees. Semans said. Sieve 5 "or .! ingle' SMORGASBORDIt'S here! Don't miss a feast of gourmet a capella "We were just caught at the very last minute trying to The legislature passed a resolution supporting the music as Out of the Blue hosts 2 respond to this situation," Rowlett said. Task Force on University Governance's recommendation HILLEL male groups, the Beelzebubs of Come see Julian Lesterl Today, She and Dertke have offered the LRC a compromise to make the provost the senior executive officer of the Tufts and the UNC Clefhangers in from 4:30-6 p.m. he will be selling our 1st annual concert! Sat. Feb proposal that would allow both ASDU and GPSC to ap­ University, second only to the President. and autographing copies of his book. "Louesong", in tbe Gothic 25. 7:15 p.m.. Baldwin. Tickets on Bookshop: tonight at 8 p.m. in 107 sale now at Page and the BC. Gross Chem he will be speaking on hey 59 — i bet you never thought "My Journey Into Judaism"; tomor­ you'd see 1 of these for you! chick­ row at 12:30 p.m. he will be having adee, you're the best friend in the DUKE vs. STATE an informal discussion with stu­ world and i love you! — 60 and dents in the Mary Lou Williams Ctr dropping fast. (Free brown bag lunch provided!) Thurs., Feb. 23 STEVE BEELZEBUBS You are the kindest, most lovable Come early and get a good seat. They're coming! Don't miss Out of & conventional guy I knowlHappy the Blue's 1st annual concert. Sat. 21st! Thanks for the sunshine! I IT'S JUST LIKE BEING THERE! Feb 25. 7:15 p.m.. Baldwin. We'll love ya. Woolsie! Tash — (start be jammin' with the Beelzebubs of hanging!) Tufts and the UNC Clefhangers. Preston PLAY BASKETBALL!!! Tickets on sale now at BC and I hope Todd enjoys the chopped Page. Don't miss it! " ir and begins to feel better. Your YO ANDERSON d buddy, Brax. Indianapolis or bust. You can if you Rebecca Forgash! Welcome to the think you can. Earn that towel this family! I'm so proud you're my DG year. OK? Good luck! Swim Fast! little little sis. Love, Git. Good Vision anc Good Looks... at a Great Price! EARN $$$$$$ 20% discount for Duke students, faculty and Need money for a new car? Your own apartment? employees. No time limit. Guaranteed best price Tuition and books? Or just to make life a little on complete eyeglasses in the Durham area. easier? The United States Navy Nuclear Engineer­ Avant Garde • Marchon • Logo ing Program can make it possible. If accepted into our program, you will receive a $4000 acceptance • Berdell • Tura » Silhouette BONUS, $1200 a month, free medical and dental A complete line of sunglasses "A REAL SPORTS BAR" coverage, AND a guaranteed job on graduation. All from Ray Ban, Vuarnet, Bolle -50 Different Beers- you have to do is meet the following requirements: and Serengate. Custom orders, one-hour service for single- A private club for members vision CR-39 plastic lenses and and their guests. eye exams arranged easily. Member-No Cover • Be a Sophomore or Junior New thinner plastic lenses also Except Fri. & Sat. Must be 21 or older after 6:00p.m. • Be physically fit available. • Be _ U.S. citizen Now accepting membership applications. Brightleaf The Shoppes at Lakewood Don't wait! Each month your delay could cost you Optical $1200. For more information, call petty Officer Mon.-Fri. 10-5:30, Sat. 10-2 493-9251 Mitch Welch in Raleigh. 1-800-662-7419. 683-3464 Brightleaf Sq., Durham

Put your favorite professor • KA0 • KA0 • KA0 • KA0 • KA0 • KA0 • KA0 • KA0 • in the running for the K K KAPPA ALPHA THETA A A Alumni KA0 proudly presents its KA0 0 0 Distinguished razzling, dazzling • pledge class of 1989: • Undergraduate K SoniaAltizer Jai Liriano K Teaching A JillAranson _mi Jann Garbutt Louisa Liss A Jennifer Braden Jill Golden Kathi Lublin Award 0 Margaret Bradley Carolyn Goodzeit Linda Markomtz 0 Susan Brown Molly Groom Sharon Meltzer One $3,000 award, plus an extra $500 • • Ann Dabrotvski Vimla Gupta Rebecca Miller for books in the professor's field to be K Kara DioGuardi Jennifer Holly Ashley Nelms K purchased for a Duke library. A Maria Fernandez de Castro Claire Horton Cathy Ramsey A Lisa Foley Alyssajohnsen Lbren Reynolds ENTRIES DUE: Friday, February 24 0 Submit a short, informal explanation stating e Toni Friess Cynthia Joyce Hope Sidman why you feel a professor should receive this Susanne Fuchshuber Allison Knight Lizzy Weiss • award to: Andi Fusco Eleanor Lassiter Gretchen Zahnow AIUMNI AFFAIRS K K 614 CHAPEL DRIVE

Forms available at Bryan Center Info Desk or Alumni Q WE LOVE YOU!! @ House. Contact Barbara Pattishall (684-5114) for additional information. • KA0 • KA0 • KA© ' KA0 » KA0 • KA0 • KA0 » KA0 • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1989 THECHRONICLE Sports Stinson (30) leads Pack Attack; Women lose 92-78 at N.C. State

By MARK JAFFE 17 minutes per game. More importantly, RALEIGH — From the singing of the the Blue Devils had no post players left on national anthem by North Carolina State the bench while 6-3 Sharon Manning and reserve forward Natalie Nester to the in­ 6-0 Sherri Hobbs came off the pine for termission, the game Tuesday night was Wolfpack head coach Kay Yow. all Wolfpack. The twin towers of Manning and 6-3 Spurred by sophomore phenom Andrea starting center Rhonda Mapp banged and Stinson's 18 first-half points, N.C. State harassed Duke's Sue Harnett all evening. took a 50-30 lead into the locker room and The duo in the pivot totalled 26 points held on to beat the Duke women's basket­ and 13 rebounds compared to 12 and six ball team, 92-78, at Reynolds Coliseum. for Harnett. The loss dropped Duke to 11-14 (1-11 in There were too many of them and not the Atlantic Coast Conference). State had enough of us," said Blue Devil head coach already clinched second place in the ACC Debbie Leonard. "Their substitutions in and the win upped its standard to 20-5 the first half really wore us down. We (11-2 in the ACC). Stinson finished the entered the game with only two post play­ game with 30 points on 15-20 shooting. ers healthy enough to play. "I was really proud of the effort yet they The Blue Devils, who have had limited got a few breakaways in the first half. depth all season, were forced to play with­ Other than that I thought we played out key frontline reserve Marcy Peterson, pretty well. We missed a lot of shots I who injured her right elbow in practice on thought we had a good chance of hitting." Sunday. The extent of the damage is un­ known. Senior forward Tracey Chris­ In the first half Duke shot a subpar topher had a knee injury which hobbled 39.4 percent. The Blue Devils were also her, however, she suited up and had 12 haunted by their old nemesis — the turn­ points and 11 rebounds. over. They committed 15 first half give­ Peterson's injury left Duke with only aways while trying to break the JIM JEFFERS/THE CHRONICLE seven players who have contributed Wolfpack's three-quarter court pressure. Duke freshman Jenni Kraft had a team-high 18 points last night, but it wasn't throughout the season whereas State had "[State's defense] was very aggressive," enough as the Wolfpack beat Duke 92-78. eight players who have averaged at least See PACK on page 15 • Henderson quietly does the little things that need to be done

By RODNEY PEELE "Our teams have basically been said. "That's the kind of chemistry that There's always things in your game that a This is the first ofa two-part feature on dominated by the seniors as far as atten­ we're trying to develop." lot of people don't know about, and they junior Phil Henderson. The second part of tion is concerned," Krzyzewski said. "If "That's helped them communicate say 'Oh, I didn't know you could do that.' this feature will appear in Thursday's you don't come in as a returning starter, more," Krzyzewski said, "We've changed Well I could always do it, but I just wasn't Chronicle. then you're not going to get that atten­ how we structured the team in January, given the freedom to do it." When Phil Henderson, arrived on the tion. Phi! earned his starting position, by having not just Quin be the handler, With the graduation of Snyder and Fer­ Duke campus in the fall of 1986, people and he's continued to progress throughout but have Phil be the handler. Quin's the ry, Henderson will have handle the ball expected him to be the next Johnny Daw­ the whole year." leader, but he doesn't have to be called and shoot more often next season. His kins. Temporarily sidetracked with aca­ Henderson feels that he is at his best the point guard to do it. Phil has become stats will be more impressive as his as­ demic trouble his freshman year, Hender­ when the game is at a fast tempo and he's much more creative in the open court." sists and points go up. son is now demonstrating his abilities on going all out. Earlier in the year, he didn't "I'm getting a lot more freedom to do "People are going to think 'Wow, he's the basketball court. Nevertheless, he approach extra playing time properly. some things I've always wanted to do," gotten so much better,' " Henderson said. doesn't always receive credit for doing the "I found times when I started to play Henderson says. "That's a very big word, "He'll definitely score more, and we'll do little things. 39, 40 minutes toward the middle of the freedom — not so much to gun, or hog the more things to take advantage of that Monday night against Georgia Tech, season, I started pacing myself, and it ball, but when you're given more of a scoring," Krzyzewski said. "He has to be Henderson scored 12 points, pulled down backfired on me, because I'm not a good green light, you can do some things. See PHIL on page 14 • two rebounds, and dished off three as­ player when I'm trying to pace myself," sists. Henderson didn't miss from the Henderson said. field or the free throw line on the way to While no part of Henderson's stats an near ideal game for the 6-4 junior from jump out as spectacular, he's in Duke's University Park, 111. top five in every statistical category. "For me getting nine points, and four or Scoring, making assists, or getting five rebounds, and three assists, that's a rebounds, Henderson does it all with little good game for me, because I'm fulfilling fanfare. my role," Henderson said Monday before "I try to play for the team all the time, the game against the Yellow Jackets. "Not and when I play for the team, I'm always turning the ball over a lot, that's a good playing better," Henderson says. "I game for me. A 20-point game isn't always haven't established myself as a big the best thing Phil Henderson can do for enough player in the ACC that people just the team. It might look good, but for us to come at me solely. Nobody's trying to get be successful, I need to do a variety of Phil Henderson. People know I'm a good things." player now, but they still don't key on me solely." "That's one of Phil's strengths in that he gives us a little bit in a lot of areas," Henderson and Robert Brickey have said senior guard Quin Snyder. "He can roomed together throughout much of their score as a one-on-one player, he's given us Duke careers; their chemistry has been ballhandling, taken care of the basket­ good. This season Henderson adapted to ball, and most recently the thing he's been playing with Danny Ferry and Snyder as giving us that's really helping is defense. well. As the season has progressed, The fact that he contributes in so many Henderson's chemistry with his team­ ways and can do so many things makes mates has raised his play to new levels. him very valuable." "January was the month where his of­ "We're in a lot of trouble without Phil fensive skills took on a new meaning," [Henderson] in the game. We need him to Krzyzewski said. "He was doing different be successful," Snyder added. things, his ballhandling, his basket cuts, Henderson's career high is 19 points-, shooting, and he started to get a great feel established against Wake Forest last .sea­ for playing with Danny." son. This year, he has scored 17 points on Krzyzewski has Snyder and Henderson three different occasions and had highs of room together on the road, and the team has benefited. nine rebounds against Clemson and six JIM JEFFERS/THE CHRONICLE assists versus, Davidson. The numbers "Since that's happened, we've had a lot Junior Phil Henderson hasn't been spectacular, but he's been one of the have not yaulted.Hendersqii .into the spot-, jTjoce fyopteytng wjth.e.a,ch.Qthej-_a!Jd fit­ light, yet. ting in tune with each other," Snyder steadiest Blue Devils this season. THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1989 Next season, Henderson could be in spotlight Today Wrestling at N.C. State, 7:30 p.m. • PHIL from page 13 rebounding long. We've got to make sure Henderson was assigned to Cavalier gun­ demonstrative, he has to talk, because as that the guards on our team are rebound­ ner Richard Morgan, a player who had Thursday a leader you just can't be quiet." ing just as good as the big men. been averaging over 20 points a game. For now, Henderson takes on less visi­ "To me its much more easier to rebound "Towards the end of January, and the ble responsibilities that are nonetheless from the perimeter because I get a run­ month of February, especially February, Men's basketball vs. N.C. State, essential to the team. ning start," Henderson says. "They're box­ his game's gone up another level because Cameron Indoor Stadium, 9 p.m. "I'm rebounding a lot better than people ing out, not worried about anybody com­ of his defensive play," Krzyzewski said. thought I ever would, from the guard ing in, and all in a sudden you take it "All in a sudden now, he's guarding Men's golf at Palmetto Invitational spot, because people don't worry about from them." Richard Morgan, John Johnson. And he's me," Henderson says. "We need rebound­ Rebounding shows up in Henderson's done a great job. Men's swimming at ACC Champion­ ing regardless. A lot of teams we play stats, but his defensive efforts don't. He's "He makes one of the great plays last have three-point threats, and are shoot­ improved in both areas significantly. [Monday] night when he takes a charge ships at Chapei Hill ing from long distances, and the balls are In the second game against Virginia, on [Georgia Tech's Johnny] McNeil early in the game," Krzyzewski said. "McNeil is Women's swimming at Eastern Inter­ 6-8, 230, about 60 pounds more than Phil, collegiate and Phil just takes it right there." Morgan ripped the Blue Devils for 31 points in the first Duke-UVA game, and Friday Krzyzewski didn't want that to happen again. With Henderson all over him, Mor­ Men's golf at Palmetto Invitational gan shot a miserable three-for-18 in the second Duke-Virginia game. Men's swimming at ACC Champion­ "I still never felt that I personally stopped Richard Morgan," Henderson ships at Chapel Hill says. "It's having that confidence in your teammates that if I come up to him full Men's tennis vs. Virginia Common­ speed, pressure him, that if he gets past wealth me, somebody else is going to be there waiting for him. That gives you more con­ Women's swimming at Eastern inter- fidence to go at him, with those guys backing you up. That team confidence col iegiate helps you out, and it helped me out that night against Morgan." Women's tennis vs. Georgia at Team and individual confidence has Gainesville., Fla. Henderson quickly becoming Duke's most consistent player behind Ferry. "He's been very steady, and steady at a Saturday high level," Krzyzewski said. For Henderson this season, that is the Women's basketball at Georgia ultimate compliment. Tech. 12:15 p.m.

MATT CANDLER/THE CHRONICLE Senior Quin Snyder (center) has some of his ball handling respon- sibilities to junior Phil Henderson. The Duke/UNC Joint Program in Judaic Studies Durham-Chapel Hill Jewish Federation and B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation are proud to present TRAVEL WITH D.U.D.O.G. JULIUS LESTER

Well-known veteran of the Civil Rights Movement, author of several books Escape from the classroom!!! Students in the Duke mostly concerned with issues involving Blacks in America and his own Journey to Judaism. A native Southerner, Julius Lester has appeared on University Department of Geology (DUDOG) regularly Radio and Television talk shows. He is currently on the faculty of the travel to the outer banks of North Carolina, the Appala­ University of Massachusetts at Amherst. chian Mountains, and the Florida Keys. Undergraduate and graduate students have also traveled to Texas, Cali­ FEBRUARY 22-23,1989 fornia, the Caribbean Islands, Puerto Rico, Morocco, and LECTURE I: My Journey to Judaism Wednesday Evening, February 22 at 8:00 p.m. tie South China Sea as part of funded research trips!!! 107 Gross Chemistry Building iWrW, V r/X—WB-Xi llnvffl V' 'Hk Duke University, West Campus Find out about a major In geology dwiBw a geology Reception to follow course cart take you to new and different places Informal Discussion: Luncheon with Julius Lester Thursday, February 23, at 12:30 p.m. Brown Bag Lunch will be provided Mary Lou Williams Center GEOLOGY DEPARTMENT Duke University, West Campus

OPEN HOUSE Wk LECTURE II: Blacks and Jews in American History Thursday Afternoon, February 23, at 3:30 p.m. Room 105-106 Carolina Union Friday, February 24 University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Room 201 - Old Chemistry Reception to follow

4:00 p.m. The Gothic Bookshop at Duke is sponsoring a reception and book signing for Julius Lester's book Love Song All students are invited and on Wednesday, February 22, 4:30-6:00 p.m. encouraged to attend!!!! Co-Sponsors Duke Black Seminarians Union, Refreshments provided!! Duke Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture, Duke Office of Black Church Affairs, Durham/Chapel Hill Round Table of Blacks and Jews, UNC Black Cultural Center, UNC Histoiy Department

fe^W^J This ad donated by Gothic Bookshop. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1989 THECHRONICLE Second half surge not enough to overcome 50-30 halftime deficit Join us in a dialogue with • PACK from page 13 merely a stop-gap measure for Duke. Leonard said. "They pressed the whole Over the final 3:48 of the half the Professor Julius Lester, game and the pressure affected us." Wolfpack outscored the Blue Devils 11-4. At no point was the State pressure "The three break-aways in a row to of the University of more evident or meddlesome than at the Stinson kind of broke our back," Leonard five minute mark of the first half. Stinson said. Massachusetts at Amherst, had just checked back into the game after "We picked the tempo up," Stinson said. a three minute rest with the score in "We got the outlet pass out better. The noted scholar, author and State's favor, 29-24. transition game is what we really look to." Krista Kilburn drove for a Wolfpack "We got our transition game going," lay-in. Following a Duke miss Mapp gath­ Yow said. "When we get our transition critic. Dr. Lester will ered the rebound and threw an outlet to game going I think fStinson's] going to Stinson. The ball appearred destined for I score a lot], I was pleased with Andrea discuss issues relevant to the cheap seats so Stinson leaped, caught [Stinsonl for the halfcourt offensive shots the ball and banked in an over-the-head that she took. She had some incredible reverse lay-up before returning to the transition baskets, but she also made Black/Jewish relations in floor. That bucket electrified the 1,327 good decisions in the halfcourt offense." fans and sparked the 'Pack for the re­ At the beginning of the second half, the Mary Lou Williams mainder of the period. State took up where they left off before State senior Debbie Bertrand stole the the half. They led by as many as 26 points Center at 12:30 p.m. ball on Duke's next possession and tossed before Duke caught State in a 'Pack nap a near-identical outlet pass to Stinson. at 70-48 with 10:06 to play The Blue Dev­ Lunch is on the house!! Stinson responded with the same move, ils called time-out and when play only this time she landed before sinking resumed they launched a 17-10 streak, the same impossible reverse. A Mapp highlighted by 12 Jenni Kraft points. steal led to a Sandee Smith bucket. Then Stinson capped State's 10-0 run with a That run forced Yow to reinsert her nifty drive to the hole. starters into the game and State easily Christopher's ensuing field goal was hung on for the 92-78 victory.

DUKE US. N.C. STATE N.C. State MP FG 3PG FT R A TO RS ST PF Points Kilburn 20 4-8 0-0 2-2 2 1 3 0 1 1 10 Smith 15 2-4 0-0 0-0 5. 2 1 0 0 4 4 Mapp 26 5-7 0-0 2-2 7 4 4 0 1 2 12 Bertrand 22 3-3 0-0 3-3 3 7 2 0 0 2 9 Stinson 30 15-20 0-1 0-2 3 10 1 ? 5 2 30 Hobbs 15 1-2 0-0 0-2 3 0 5 0 0 2 2 PEACE CORPS: A Good Career rAove Manning 16 7-11 0-0 0-0 6 1 1 0 0 4 14 Robuck 15 0-3 0-0 0-0 1 4 1 0 1 1 0 Hancock 10 0-2 0-0 0-0 0 2 1 0 0 2 0 Nester 12 3-5 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 0 0 0 6 Lehmann 15 1-5 1-5 0-0 1 3 3 0 0 2 3 (40 , t Hull 4 1-1 0-0 0-0 3 t) 0 0 0 0 2 / «>6s'74° ; «'>« / Team 4 Totals 200 41-71 1-5 7-11 39 35 22 2 8 22 92

DUKE MP FG 3PG FT R A TO 8S ST PF Pofnts / ^^Itur^^tril ^~~~~~~~~—'~~~-_ Christopher 39 6-9 0-0 0-3 11 2 5 0 0 4 12 / Z^nts !' tecft"iquJ ~ "—- Langhi 36 6-15. 0-2 0-0 4 2 .3 0 1 2 12 Harnett 29 6-11 0-0 0-0 6 2 2 0 1 2 12 e Baker 25 1-6 0-0 3-3 7 5 4 ' 0 0 2 5 / ^X ^>^er?/ /w "> Williams 34 3-13 0-0 7-10 3 4 3 1 0 3 13 / ' "»«t°S, *"""•«/ *~w Kraft 16 6-10 3-5 3-3 2 0 2 0 0 0 18 B b Morgan 15 2-4 0-1 0-0 1 2 1 0 0 0 4 / '"nu » ~«»« ,,? °« "/ _t_\ j««*"« Rodgers 3 0-1 0-0 2-2 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 J LUJ 3 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 / «f , '- con.. . «: f"" tfMlll 1 ill "T *. ___^_M McFarfand S Team 6 1 "^"off's"" "•"'""• "f W'^-V&sakmi Totals 200 30-69 3-8 8-15 36 17 20 1 3 13 78 • ' .' «"io»"""» •""=•«..• / _g_wm_t'*_u N.C. State 50 42 -92 Duke 30 48 -78 iv ad r,. • e1-v ,^ cjief ,'g ... S__W_m_mt ***•• c Technical Fouls None. Officials Corteau, Coffey. A - 1,327. _ «««.x.;:x &*% »?m • 1 • °»° OS?,=~.«..J< *%31 Triangle Travel's UNIVERSITY SERVICE Good News for University Travelers TRIANGLE TRAVEL.

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