Peace This dog doesn't look particularly warlike— but how peaceful is he? For a review ofthe THE CHRONICLE "Pictures of Peace" photo exhibit, see page 4. DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAiV i.i.mu,i.!,im..«ii Coffin's Bush, Clinton hurl insults as election nears By DAVID ESPO at any comparable period since Democratic vice presidential can­ Along the way, he lashed out at before World War II." didate Al Gore joined in. Texas — Bush as a "desperate person who family Bill Clinton and George Bush Ross Perot's name turned up in a reliably Republican state essen­ just wants to hold power.... And clashed over the economy on the strangest place. Vandals doc­ tial to Bush's chances — is a dead if you're totally shameless and Thursday and swapped uncom­ tored the 50-foot letters of a sign heat, he said. somebody tells you you're not tell­ mourns monly personal insults in their that says HOLLYWOOD in the Perot stayed out of public view ing the truth and you keep on run for the White House. The presi­ hills above Los Angeles to read: in preparation for an evening ap­ doing it anyway, which is what By MICHAEL SAUL dent said "two bozos" are on the PEROTWOOD. pearance on CNN's "Larry King Bush does, it's hard for the Ameri­ While Ricky Lamont Democratic ticket while Clinton With five days to go, most public Live." can people to know what to make Coffin's family mourns its accused his rival of saying "incred­ polls showed Clinton with a lead But his spokeswoman, Sharon of it." loss, authorities continue to ible, incredible dishonest things." in single digits. From the cam­ Holman, complained that the news Clinton said Bush says "incred­ investigate Tuesday's hos­ Invective aside, Bush pressed paign bunker in Little Rock, his media was inaccurately depicting ible, incredible dishonest things," tage crisis and day-long his underdog's campaign by stress­ aides insisted their margin was the race as a two-way competition and aides said he was referring to shooting spree. ing over and over that the economy holding. But from Bush on down, between the president and his radio commercials the Republican Coffin, a fugitive from is on the road to recovery. "Not as Republicans proclaimed loudly Democratic challenger. "The president is airing in several Guilford County Jail in High sick as the opposition would have that the momentum had swung to American people do not consider states. Point, took four Duke Hos­ you believe," he said in Michigan. them. this only a Bush-Clinton race," Clinton has complained about a pital employees hostage be­ Clinton scoffed at that as he "We've got a November surprise she said. commercial in Louisiana accusing fore a marksman fatally shot made his rounds five days before for Bill Clinton and that is George Clinton delivered a speech on him of favoring a complete ban on him in the head. the election. "We are 18 months Bush is going to be re-elected," the economy in Michigan and had offshore oil drilling. He favors a As Coffin's mother pre­ after the bottom of the recession said Vice President Dan Quayle. another one on AIDS scheduled ban on selected areas. He also has pares to bury her son in and we are still doing worse than Two could play that game, and for later in New Jersey. See ELECTION on page 14 • Asheboro on Saturday, she struggles to understand the events that led to her son's death. Claudette Coffin de- mands that the case be in­ Student leaders advocate vestigated and that the flaws in the system be corrected. The authorities at the jail reduced academic loads in High Point should be held responsible for providing By BRAD RUBIN leaders at Harvard manage with­ Coffin with the opportunity Student leaders at many other out any relief from academics, to grab a handgun from a schools say that Duke's recently Shenk said, but not without diffi­ lockbox, she said. Although canceled leadership assistance culty. each lockbox is supposed to programs are unusual and could "We're a daily paper, and it's have a unique key, investi­ be beneficial at their schools. crazy here because we work worse gations Wednesday showed The Chronicle Leadership As­ hours than most full-time jobs," that one key could open sistance Program and the Stu­ Shenk said. "Our academic life multiple boxes, said Maj. dent .Affairs Leadership Assis­ does suffer. It's very stressful." Larry Linthicum. tance Progr.am allow student lead­ Shenk said he is taking a re­ Claudette Coffin also ers to take a reduced course load duced course load this semester, questioned why the police during the academic year. Par­ but he is a rare case. resorted to deadly force in­ ticipants in the programs remain Not all schools are without lead­ stead of using tear gas or at the University duringthe sum­ ership assistance programs, spending more time negoti­ mer to take courses. though. Stanford University of­ ating. She said she hoped In July, these programs were fers student leaders the option of the investigation would re­ terminated by Janet Dickerson, taking eight to 10 credit units veal that other measures vice president for student affairs, instead of a normal 15 units, said could have been taken. who accepted a committee's rec­ Howard Libit, news editor ofthe Chief Lewis Wardell of ommendation that the programs Stanford Daily. Students taking Duke Public Safety said the were arbitrary and destructive to this option pay a pro-rated tu­ purpose of shooting Coffin J/THE CHRONICLE a student leader's identity as a ition and often take an extra quar­ was to render him unable to student. The decision is now un­ ter to graduate. injure anyone. Hot & Kinky! der review. Many student leaders take ad­ The marksman did his Trinity freshman Shawn Faust models black lace underwear Harvard Crimson news editor vantage of this reduced load op­ tion, Libit said. See COFFIN on page 14 • in Southgate laundry room. Anyone interested? Joshua Shenk marveled at Duke's leadership programs. Student See LEADERS on page 14 • Abortion, family values divide presidential candidates The following is the fifth in­ life ofthe mother is threatened or "Abortion is the main issue . .. strictions on abortion, such as a ernmental limitations onabortion stallment in a six-part series on in cases of rape or incest. Both because of the way the Supreme mandatory waitingperiod, paren­ prior to fetus' viability, which in the major issues in the presiden­ .Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton Court is right now it's absolutely tal consent for minors and medi- Roe v. Wade is defined as the sev­ tial race, and how they affect the and independent candidate Ross crucial," said Trinity senior Jen­ calcounseling before a woman has enth month of pregnancy. Bush Duke community. Today's story Perot are pro-choice. nifer Krzyminski. the abortion. has vowed to veto this act. focuses on social issues and They each support a Ofthe 15 justices Bush supports the parental con­ Clinton also promises to repeal Monday's will address the envi­ woman's right to have who have sat on the sent restriction for minors, and he President Bush's "gag rule" that ronment. an abortion if she bench since the Roe believes that states should have prohibits medical personnel in fed­ chooses. v. Wade decision, 11 the authority to impose reason­ erally funded clinics from advis­ By BRYAN GARNER The issue is particu­ have voted in favor able restrictions on abortion. Bush ing women on pregnancy options. The age-old issue of abortion larly critical in this of abortion. The believes he represents the m.ajor- The Bush administration sup­ and the new debate about the fam­ election because the other four who have ity of Americans on this issue, ports the "gag rule," saying that it ily have emerged as two key is­ Supreme Courtis split voted to restrict because while only 35 percent of follows the Hyde Amendment, sues as politics became entangled on the issue. Four of abortion are still Americans consider themselves which prohibits federal funding of with values in this year's presi­ the nine judges on the serving, said Walter abortion opponents, 70 percent of abortions except when the dential election. court have expressed anti-abor­ Dellinger, a University law pro­ Americans favor parental consent mother's life is in danger. "Whether Because of its black-or-white tion views. A supporter of legal fessor and nationally known abor­ for women under 18, according to you support abortion or not, it is nature the abortion issue usually abortion, Justice Harry tion rights advocate. a Gallup poll from January of this the broad consensus ofthe Ameri­ tends to polarize candidates and Blackmun, will probably retire in The Supreme Court made its year. can public that the taxpayer dol­ this election is no exception. Presi­ the next four years, leaving the most recent decision on the abor­ Clinton opposes anyrestrictions lar should not be used to support dent George Bush openly takes a newly elected president to appoint tion issue this past summer, in on abortion. He promises to sign abortion," said Jeremy Shane, an anti-abortion position. He op­ the justice who will swing the Casey v. Planned Parenthood. It into law the Freedom of Choice deputyissuesadvisorfortheBush poses abortion except when the scales one way or the other. upheld states' rights to place re­ Act, which would prevent any gov­ See VALUES on page 7 p> THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 World and National Newsfile Stagnant Soviet republics required to reform By JAMES STERNGOLD Associated Press like humanitarian assistance, technical includes the United States, the European N.Y. Times News Seivice assistance and energy aid, the new process Community, Japan and more than 50 other Cars burn new gas: This winter TOKYO — The nations providing emer­ will be broken down by country. And that countries in Tokyo to observe the proceed­ automobiles in most American ur­ gency aid to the former Soviet republics means that Russia and the other new ings, the IMF, World Bank and other orga­ ban areas will be polluting less, have agreed at a conference here to dis­ states will be treated much like Third nizations offered a sobering analysis ofthe thanks to a cleaner burning, peppier mantle the year-old system for funneling World nations are treated by the World problems in Russia and the 14 other former gasoline required by the government. billions of dollars to those newly indepen­ Bank and the International Monetary Soviet republics. But the new gas will probably cost a dent countries and replace it with a pro­ Fund. little more. cess thatwould still offer large amounts of The Russians had been resisting that Oil production has declined 30 percent aid but would apply more pressure on the approach until now. But what seems to over the last four years, they said. Grain Dog Sniffs drugs: Marco, a dog countries to open and reform their stag­ have given impetus to the new phase is the production, while up this year from 1991, with an unerring nose, has been nating economies. bleakness of the economic situation in is still below average levels in the preced­ prowling Mexico's highways in a While the decision is intended to trans­ Russia and the other states. ing five years. Inflation is rising at more Narcomobile, sniffing out marijuana form what had been an ad hoc process into In a report to the conference, which than 20 percent a month. with such success that smugglers a more permanent and efficient one, it also have offered $25,000 to anyone who sends a strong message to political leaders kills him. in Moscow and the other capitals that the assistance they receive from the West could Poll-mania grips the nation Jordan negotiates: Jordan has be jeopardized if they do not move faster to for the first time stated in writing its build market economies, officials here said. willingness to negotiate a peace The purpose of this conference was orga­ during final campaign weeks treaty with Israel, high ranking Is­ nizational rather than to provide a forum raeli officials said on Thrusday. to pledge new funds for the former Soviet By RICK HAMPSON neck." The president, headlined the Daily states. News, had pulled off "A late poll vault." CIA COVerS Up: The CIA knew But the United States and Japan did It's Clinton ahead by three lengths but It's all part of what University of Virginia before the GulfWar that at least five announce new programs. The Japanese here comes Bush closing fast on the outside political scientist Larry Sabato has called recipients of U.S. exports to Iraq saidthey would provide anadditional $100 with Perot bringing up the rear. Into'the "the worst orgy of polling in American his­ were defense industries, but it did million in food and other humanitarian stretch it's ... tory." not tell the Commerce Department, assistance and the United States an­ It's an old complaint: Pre-election polls Two television networks update their elec­ which approved the sales, documents nounced that it would provide $100 mil­ are turning the Republic's greatest delib­ tion polls daily, giving a fresh answer to the show. lion in corn. erative exercise into something as unseemly one question that matters most in a politi­ Both countries said their aim was to as the fourth race at Aqueduct. cal campaign: Who's ahead? insure that the people of the new states This season the charge has new urgency, The number of national presidential elec­ Weather were adquately fed through the coming as poll results dominate the closing days of tion campaign polls increased from three in winter. the presidential campaign and, some warn, 1972to259fouryearsago. This year, ahalf- Delegates to the conference were united threaten to shape the very outcome ofthe, dozenpollingorganizationsaredialingtens High: 68 • Partly cloudy in calling this the last meeting under the ah, race. of thousands of people across the ration in the Low: 48 • 40% chance of rain old aid-coordination system, which was On Thursday, President Bush's rise in two weeks before the election, and hundreds of Don't you miss the days when Hal­ begun in January in Washington, and the the polls was all over the airwaves and state and local news organizations and candi­ loween meant shaving-creaming first in a new regime. It will have two across Page One in New York's tabloids. dates are conducting their own polls. little kids and egging houses? immediate effects. "Closer" reported Newsday, while the New The Seattle Times is not among them. Instead of being organized by sectors, York Post had Bush "Breathing down Bill's See POLLS on page 8 •

The DUKE UNIVERSITY CHAPEL CHOIR and ORCHESTRA

will perform

Qeorge Frederic Handel's a4H£££aA?I w PROGRAM INFORMATION MEETING Monday, November 2, 1992 Friday, December 4, 7:30 p.m. 6:00 p.m. Saturday, December 5, 2:00 p.m. 228 Gray Building Sunday, December 6, 3:00 p.m. Excavating in GALILEE... IDC 99: Perspectives in Archaeoloay Rodney Wynkoop, conducting REL 132D: Palestine in Late Antiquity The Program has some travel grants available. GENERAL ADMISSION—$10.00 Come meet with Professors Carol and Eric Meyers, Program Directors, to find out more about this exciting program. Tickets go on sale Monday, November 2 at Page Box Office. Program applications will be available. Check/Cash Only. No phone orders. For further information, also contact the Office of Foreign Academic Programs MESSIAH sells out quickly—buy tickets NOW! 121 Allen Building 684-2174 FAX: 684-3083 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 THE CHRONICLE Plethora of groups solicits support on Bryan Center walkway

By MATT FRAMPTON ent ideas, but there isn't much outside of Environmental Alliance. "Environmental way to solicit student support for President Anyone walking down the Bryan Center the mainstream." awareness at Duke is pretty low," Nacker George Bush. walkway this week has undoubtedly no­ Judging from the number of students said. "We want to change that." " [I am] pleased with the last 12 years. ticed the multitude of student groups solic­ congregating around tables, it appears that The alliance is attempting to get stu­ George Bush will help us to continue mov- iting student support. Students For Choice is the most popular. dents to sign two different petitions. One is ing forward," said Trinity junior Tom Blake, Organizations from Duke Democrats to The group designated this week as Choice in favor of the Woods project, a plan de­ the president of College Republicans. College Republicans to Students for Choice Week with different events planned for signed to take Durham children into the Duke Democrat volunteers Amanda are petitioning student support in prepara- each day. outdoors to learn more about themselves Dawsey and Angie Jones, Trinity sopho­ tion for next week's elections. The group has posted more than 100 .and the environment. The other petition mores, have seen a large amount of support "We are here to increase student aware­ pictures of students who have shown sup­ requests the establishment of an environ­ for Gov. Bill Clinton. ness," said Trinity junior James Nackler port for its cause. mental theme dorm in the former BOG "We've had about 500 people sign up to who is volunteering at the Environmental "We have the pictures in order to portray section on West Campus next year. volunteer or to join Duke Democrats," Alliance table. the diversity of pro-choice America," said Trinity freshmen John Chen, a volunteer Dawsey said. The group has been on the Some students are not so sure that goal Trinity sophomore Matt Drexler, the head for College Republicans, said student re­ walkway for the last three weeks and has is being accomplished. "I really don't think of speakers and special events for the orga­ sponse to his table has "been better than I sold most of its election merchandise. the tables will have a large impact on unde­ nization. The table has even been visited by expected." Dawsey and Jones strongly support Cli nton cided voters," saidTriniryfreshmanliaSaGoetz. N.C. State Democrat senatorial candidate Students are generally concerned, even if because ofhis abortion rights stance, and "I wish there was more diversity in the Wib Gulley, and Paul Luebke, a represen­ the group's attempt to hold debates on the their beUef that "the Democrats support the political tables," said Trinity freshman Ja­ tative in the state House. walkway did not yield many participants, average person while the .Republicans tend son Abair. "It is interesting to see the differ­ Other tables include one set up by the Chen said. The organization is on the walk­ to support the wealthy." Libertarian party champions concept of individual freedom By JUSTIN DILLON didate for the U.S. Senate in North Caro­ "Your money or your rights!" That is the lina. He cited a recent study that said that only distinction between Democrats and U.S. production was the highest in the Republicans, according to the Libertarian world because the U.S. government in­ party. volves itself less in private business than With a record 768 candidates running do governments of other nations. for office this year, Libertarians feel they Tax cuts are key to the Libertarian eco­ have a real chance in upcoming elections, nomic plan. "The only true way that we can said Scott McLaughlin, the Libertarian turn the economy around is through drastic candidate for North Carolina Governor. and sweeping tax cuts," McLaughlin said. "[It is] becoming clear that the only To balance the budget, Libertarians plan difference between Democrats and Repub­ to "cut military spending, abolish the De­ licans is which freedom you're going to lose partment of Education and abolish the first," said David Knight, campaign man­ Department of Energy," said Curtis ager for the Libertarian party of North Krumel, N.C. congressional candidate for

VY CHUaTHE CHRONICLE Carolina. the twelfth district. Responsibility for en­ The Libertarian party claims to be the ergy and education would be under state Anti-bus people mean between these two extremes, and jurisdiction, and those states which could not afford to pay for education would re­ Although no bike path exists between North Campus and West Campus, many believes that "The Democrats want you to ceive federal assistance, Krumel said. students would rather bike to class than wait for a bus. do good. The Republicans want you to be good. We want to treat you like adults," The environmental positions ofthe party Knight said. emphasize "litigation over regulation," ac­ The Libertarian policies on issues such cording to Knight. He said that "pollution as the economy, the environment and edu­ should be treated as a trespass," and that Clarification cation illustrate this commitment to indi­ people should be allowed to sue companies vidual freedom. who pollute the area where they live. In a page 1 story in Thursday's paper about the race relations forum, one of Keith Libertarians believe that the key to "Businesses fear lawsuits more than Daniels' statements was misrepresented. Daniels was telling the audience that most promoting economic growth is to remove governmental regulations," McLaughlin people think the campus has different degrees ofracism , not that the campus is racist. government interference in the private said. He feels that lawsuits would be more sector, said Bobby Emory, Libertarian can­ See LIBERTARIAN on page 6 •- • Quadrangle Pictures £ S presents 0 2 Steve Martin GoMifyHawjL • MJ^~^ She's turning his house w/r- -.,JiiL intoahome...hers!

i^Ykw' iM ' Hi

1

l^^a^SiimS Housesitter • Tk [PG{g3a% IMAMS' ry.„..~;r' """'y"'

J Sati II I October 31 at 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. W^ G ay, November 1 at 8:00 p.m. K"j Film Theater • Admission $3.00* Kj J Crabtree Valley Mall Cary Towne Center Cameron Village *Flex Accepted K_J 781-1533 3800056 833-1741 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 Arts CALENDAR 'Pictures of Peace' are pictures of—what? Friday, October 30 By TED MiTCHNER peace, but what about all the Organ recital If your idea of peace is Mike photos of third world residents Linton Powell Tyson kissing a dove—before his working in the field? Would they Duke Chapet, 8 p.m. be celebrating the Fourth of July Powell, ofthe University ofTexas at Arling­ conviction for rape and subse­ ton, presents his concert In celebration of quent incarceration, of course— as readily? World peace would "500 Years of Spanish Keyboard Music the latest exhibit in the Bryan seem to require a unified world (X492> 1992}," "me concert is free and open Center is for you. This assort­ not divided into separate coun­ to trie public. ment of black and white photo­ tries. Apparently the Americans graphs titled "Pictures of Peace" in these pictures would disagree. Friday, October 30-Saturday, purports to present a glimpse of However, some of the photog­ October 31 what the world at peace would raphers have captured a sense of Assassins look like. But what it actually community and companionship Hoof 'N' Horn represents is a slap-dash round­ more identifiable as peaceful. Sheafer Theater Paul Grendon's series of peas­ Bryan Center, 8 p.m. up of visually strikingimages that Admission $7, Students $6 never really gel. ants playfully laboring indicate that work and play aren't incom­ Hoof'N'Horn's fail musicai, with music by The photographers asked to Stephen Sondheim and direction by Trinity participate have chosen older patible. In another ofhis photos, sophomore Enoch Scott, assembles a cast photos not shot especially for this two children do donuts in their of the great successful and would-be presi­ exhibit. While this doesn't in­ homemade vehicle, which prob­ dential assassins of history. The show con­ stantly make for a bad exhibit, ably took hours of construction cludes with aflnal matinee Sunday at 2 p.m. the choices are so random that before it could be enjoyed, {Reviewed Oct. 23,) some unintentionally humorous S| Max Vadukul presents a more Night Songs and Street Songs juxtapositions occur. Next to a ^ leisurely conception of play. His Manbites Dog Theater photo of an elderly Ecuador peas­ simply titled "Old People" and Duke University Museum of Art SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE 8:15 p.m. ant clasping his dog to his chest is "Beach" show people of all ages Admission $3.0, Students $6 another photo of Madonna grab­ "Rock and Roll, Brincando Na Barra," by Aragao just sitting around, enjoying each The theater performs a staged selection of bing her breasts in a similar ges­ other's company in their free time. cabaret songs by German composer Kurt ture. Even if this arrangement were inten­ Peace also seems to mean naked people Many of the photos.if included in another Weill, choreographed by assistant profes­ tional, what does it say about world peace? and frolicking children, or even better, na­ exhibit, would have more impact as arrest­ sor of the practice of dance Barbara Similarly disturbing are photos smiling ked frolicking children. While world peace ing images, but their conglomeration here Dickinson. The action is set in a German bar seems synonymous with happiness, many waters them down because ofthe question, in the 1940s. celebrities such as Louis Armstrong and Marilyn Monroe shot by Bert Stern in the of these naked people were taken by prima­ "Why was this included?" The best way to Saturday, October 31 1950's. Everyone knows Monroe was never rily commercial photographers such as Herb view this exhibit is to single out each photo Ritts and Annie Leibovitz. The images are as a separate entity, not subsumed as an Pre-Col legiate String School truly happy as a sex kitten, and this Piedmont Youth Orchestra hindsight makes her provocative pose un­ appealing, but resemble the latest ad cam­ image of peace. Baldwin Auditorium, 11:30 a.m. settling. Why has she been included? The paign for Calvin Klein. Capitalism must be The University Union will hold a public The conceit witl feature Mussorgsky's only highlight of this group is Marlon alive and well in this world of peace. reception Nov. 6 from 5-7 p.m. in the gal­ "Night on Bafcj Mountain." Admission is Brando parodying superficial celebrity Also interesting is the prevalence of lery. Kim Zorn Caputo, the New Yorker "free and the public is invited. happiness by squeezing his cheeks and American flags, especially on Fourth of who organized "Pictures of Peace," will eyes together. At least he knew it was all July celebrations. The people in the photos speak and sell her book, which documents meaningless crap. definitely look like they're revelingin world the exhibit

Keep Your Favorite Witch Happy For Halloween With A A Colorful Happy Halloween from _^^& Bouquet. Campus Florist

We have a "Special Halloween Bouquet" just for you! Don't be "scared" to come in or call and Sanders Florist make your choice today. v%&& 1100 Broad Street 700 Ninth Street #te+t& 286-1288 286-5640/2864802 GREAT LOOKS ARE JU5T AROUND THE CORNER 1 T.J. HOOPS PERM AND WEEKEND HALLOWEEN BASH HIGHLIGHT LIVE BANDS FRIDAY & SATURDAY SPECIAL (Come before 9:00, 1/2 price cover charge) Friday, 10/30 - Dr. Brawn's Code Blue Review $39.95 Saturday 10/31 - "Get Spooked" with Cold Sweat 0 includes haircut BASILS With Selected Stylists Costume Contest G N S (mention this ad) Over $200 in Prizes Available Food & Drink Specials 635-2332 121 North Gregeon Shoppes at Lakewood 4! FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 THE CHRONICLE

'Buddy' tour to bring local actors to Page Sunday, November I AN Saints' Day Concert Duke Chorale By JENNY LYNN riage to Maria Elena Santiago Duke Chapel, 4 p.m. This weekend, the Pegasus and his brief rise to stardom Admission $7, Students $5 Players' traveling production of are also chronicled. The student Chorale's concert wili feature "Buddy: The Buddy Holly The set includes a collage Mozart's "Solemn Vespers," along with works Story," six weeks into their tour drop made up of James Dean by Pureed, Beethoven and others. of 140 cities, makes a stop... at pictures and other '50s para­ Sunday, November 1-Monday, home? phernalia. A jukebox stands November 2 Actually, the stars ofthe mu­ center stage with a radio an­ nouncer sitting atop it, narrat­ Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story sical are recent graduates of Broadway at Duke North Carolina School of Arts. ing the story. Page Auditorium, 8 p.m. Christopher Eudy, Lindsay (See review this page.) Jones and John Noyes play revo­ One of Eudy's favorite mo­ lutionary '50's rocker Buddy ments is the Apollo Theater Exhibits Holly and his backup band, the scene at the end ofthe first act. American Art Before Columbus Crickets. "The scene is really funny Duke University Museum of Art "[These two performances] and one of the highlights. If North Gallery are a lot more special because I there is a message in the show, DUMA'S fall exhibition examines pre- was born and raised in the it's here. It's the multicultura­ Columbian art from geographic locations as lism—that people should have far north as Mexico and as far south as Peru. South. I feel like I'm getting my (Reviewed Sept. IS.) accent back just by being here," fun together," he says. Wenhai Ma: Watercolors and Illustrations says 22 year-old Eudy. Eudy warns the audiences, Institute ofthe Arts Gallery He began actingin high school however, that "You can get a Bivins Building, East Campus at the age of 16. When college SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE message ifyou try, but mostly Ma, a theater designer and instructor of design with Duke Drama, exhibits fancifui and choices came down to majoring Christopher Eudy, gettin' down as Buddy Holly it's supposed to be a good time in English or acting, he chose celebrating rock 'n' roll." masterful scenes frorcv fairy tales and from the latter. The actor enjoys performing in college childhood. and rock harder. Also, a good bit of the (Reviewed Oct. 23.) "Acting is infinitely more challenging. trite acting stuff is cut out," Eudy said. theaters the most because of the atmo­ Pictures of Peace It's fun and I enjoy what I do," he says. Another positive aspect Eudy points to sphere. Photography by various artists While studying at NCSA, Eudy, Jones is the younger cast, whose ages range "We like it because they're not afraid to Louise Jones Brawn Gallery and Noyes started their own band, called from 22 to 32. shake their butts. So if you want to come Bryan Center The Nubile Thangs. Players' director Although Eudy was not yet born when to dance, come and dance." "If the world were at peace, what would you Victoria Bussert took notice of the trio Holly died, "The Buddy Holly Story," a After these two performances, "Buddy" shoot?" is the question answered by 37 well- while directing the musical "Baby" at known photographers in this exhibit of 92 1978 motion picture starring Gary Busey, will play in Las Vegas, Los Angeles and black-and-white prints. Photographers repre­ NCSA. gave Eudy a first glimpse ofthe legend's Seattle, among other cities.Eudy espe­ sented include Use Bing, Evelyn Hofer, Peter Bussert found their combination of mu­ life and works. cially looks forward to St. Patrick's Day Lindbergh, Annie Leibovitz, Herb Ritts and Bruce sical and acting talent perfect for the "I remember that it was one ofthe first when "Buddy" will be performed at Holly's Weber. The exhibit is on view through Nov. 28. roles of Holly and the Crickets, and so movies I ever saw. I sang "Peggy Sue" final concert site, the Surf Ballroom in (See review on p. 4.) brought them on to the Players' produc­ around the house so much that my mom Clear Lake, Iowa. The Players end the Recent Paintings by David Stratton tion. bought me the Buddy Holly album," Eudy tour in January. Booklover's Room Lilly Library Although "Buddy" is Eudy's first pro­ said. Eudy's final note to potential fessional endeavor, he is not afraid to The musical covers Holly's short life up theatergoers: "If you like rock 'n' roll, Stratton's exhibition of oii and acrylic paint­ compare the Players' version to the origi- to the tragic 1959 plane crash in which he you'll get into it. Ifyou don't like rockabilly ings, which explores the effects of color o n.al Broadway and London casts. and fellow rockers J.P. Richardson and or Chuck Berry, then stay home. This depth perception, is on view through Nov. 22. "We're one hour shorter, much better, Richie Valens lost their lives. His mar­ show is for everyone to get involved."

RESERVE YOUR HOME TODAY! The Summit can give you your RACQUETBALL/SQUASH SWIMMING new address today! A One or WQNSTEft MADNESS Two bedroom apartment can loin for $49.95* be yours! Get Your First Month Free Also at the Summit, you'll find: Saturday, October 31,12 noon - midnight only • Outdoor walkways for biking, jogging, strolling • Sand and water volleyball • Lighted tennis courts • Two designer swimming pools • Garage rental available • Park area with BBQ grills and a croquet lawn • Eight station exercise room APARTMENTS • Glass enclosed jacuzzi AVAILABLE • Variety of floor plans and options • Also convenient to RTP and Chapel Hill MO\ E IN TODAY! • Professional atmosphere P.E.P. SPECIAL! Duke, UNC, IBM, CYBEX/FREE WEIGHTS 8 WK. BODY SHAPING Burroughs Wellcome, Northern Telecom- 2 9 GTE—Lease today and receive a discount S METROSPORT ™ll? off your first month's rent. ATHLETIC CLUB 614 Snowcrest Trail, off University Dr., Durham 'All joining fees are $49.95 on Saturday, Oct. 31, 1992 ONLY. (919)490-1400 Prices increase on November 1,1992. tsJi 501 Douglas Street across from Duke N. Hospital. Open 24 hours. CALL OR VISIT TODAY! THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1992 Group of merchants struggles to alleviate Durham crime

By LISA PASQUARIELLO proposal to the Durham City Council on changes by prioritizing next year's budget group by asking them to join the Durham A new group of merchants plans on com­ Oct. 22 outlining suggestions to help pre­ so that "education and the elimination of Drug and Crime Task Force," explained batting rising crime through petitioning vent crimes and to deter potential crimi­ crime and criminal behavior should be our Lorisa Seibel, city council government bodies. But members are find­ nals. first priorities," DeVito said. Group mem­ member. ing it difficult to capture the attention of bers do not support raising taxes to accom­ The group will present its proposal again elected officials. The plan recommends that the city hire plish their goals. to the Durham City Council and the state Durham Merchants and Citizens Against 45 more police officers, institute a wide General Assembly in January when bud­ Crime has been working since its creation range of .social programs that deter poten­ The proposal was not discussed until late get decisions will be made. last July on proposals to alleviate the crime tial criminals and pass legislation that in the meeting. Mayor Harry Rodenhizer Crime has risen in Durham in the last problem in Durham. makes parents civilly responsible for the and Chuck Grubb, city council member, two years, according to a police proposal Its founder, Edward DeVito, manager of actions of their children. had to leave before the proposal could be recently submitted to the Durham city LeCoco restaurant on Roxboro Road in On a state level, the proposal requests discussed at length. manager. Durham, said it originally consisted of "a that legislators add more judges, build more Group members were disappointed that From the first half of 1990 to the first small group of merchants on Roxboro Road prisons, pass stricter sentencing laws, add their proposal was not given more attention. half of 1992, violent crime has risen 84 who were being burglarized a lot." The more staff to the District Attorney's office Some city council members think they percent, property crime 15 percent, mur­ group now includes about 40 merchants in and require inmates to work, learn and were able to make some progress with the der 77 percent, robbery 101 percent, ag­ Durh.am and 10 local residents. attend rehabilitation. gravated assaults 80 percent and bur­ The group submitted a comprehensive The group proposes financing these "We dealt with the request from that glary 54 percent. Yugoslavian civil war expert Libertarians bemoan lack to address problems in Bosnia of national, local coverage From staff and wire reports • LIBERTARIAN from page 3 candidates of Americans' third 1 An expert on the Yugoslavian civil war News briefs effective because companies who pollute party — not a failed Republican who will speak about the conflict Friday. the environment can lobby Congress for cannot be trusted, a fence-straddling Soffet Abidcadvia, coordinator of the money raised in the Duke Children's exclusions from undesirable regulations. Democrat who says different things at Coalition for Free Bosnia/Herzgovina and Miracle Network Telethon, held in early In terms of education, the candidates different times, or a quitter who offers senior director of Bosnia refugee repa­ June. support tax credits of up to $2,200. This lame jokes instead of specific solutions to triation, will speak about the problems in "It's amazing how popular the cards money would enable lower and middle- our nation's ills," said Mary Gingell, Bosnia in a rally on the steps ofthe Chapel have become in the decade we've been class parents to afford private education Libertarian party national chair. at 4:30 p.m. selling them," said Mike Krzyzewski, for their children, if they could not oth­ "It's a sham," Krumel said. "It's a He will also speak at 7:30 p.m. in 136 men's basketball coachand honorary chair erwise do so, Knight said. terrible thing to do to the American Social Sciences. He will discuss the politi­ ofthe campaign. Anyone could get involved in this public, since the American public got cal and historical events in Bosnia. "People don't just buy them because program, including corporations who the Libertarian party on the ballot in The speech is sponsored by the Bosnian they benefit sick kids at Duke, they also wanted to sponsor a child's education all 50 states. It's an attempt by the Relief Committee and Major Speakers. buy them because the artwork is so cre­ and receive a tax credit for it. major parties to keep us down and pro­ On Thursday, President Keith Brodie ative." McLaughlin also supports the com­ tect their own position." issued a statement about the crisis. The cards cost $10 for a package of 24. plete decentralization ofthe school sys­ Publicity problems also plague Lib­ "My fervent hope is that the moral tem and the implementation of full con­ ertarians in North Carolina. power of the nations of the world can be Charity coming to Hideaway: A trol by local school boards. This would McLaughlin was also denied participa­ broughtto bear to end this pointless blood­ band will play at the Hideaway on Friday cut down on the government bureau­ tion in the statewide gubernatorial de­ shed, "he wrote. to raise money for a University student cracy and return power to the hands of bates. When a Libertarian representa­ group that tutors local school children. the people, he said. tive called the North Carolina Associa­ Cards gO On Sale: Holiday cards to The band Loose Britches will perform Despite the party's rise in popularity, tion of Broadcasters, the committee who organizes the debates, he was told to benefit sick children will go on sale at from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. There is a $2 cover it has received very little national or talk to the association's lawyers and retail stores throughout the state on Mon­ charge for the show, which is open to local press. Andre Marrou, the Libertar­ day. was given no reason for McLaughlin's those 18 and older. Students must be 21 ian candidate for President, is on the exclusion, Knight said. The cards are designed by local chil­ to drink. ballot in all 50 states yet was excluded dren and benefit Duke Children's Hospi­ The event is sponsored by CHANCE, from the national debates. "That is absolutely wrong. It just tal. which will also sell raffle tickets on the 'The voters deserve to hear someone shows how stuck in the mud the tired The card campaign is expected to gen­ Bryan Center Walkway for $ 1. First prize else in the debates, the serious and active old parties are," Emory said. erate $45,000, which will be added to is a weekend at the Durham Hilton.

You are cordially invited to a FONVILLE Morris Dickstein's Reception smd ran new book, Double Book Signing Agent, makes an impassioned plea (O)(919)493-4434 AGENT (919)942-6000 honoring for criticism to (H) (919) 493-2651 Dana Ripley, \\mm move beyond the Buying & Selling Ph.D., GRI limits of post-struc­ Call the Best: Broker Associate turalist theory, ec­ Retired Duke Professor & Fonville / Morisey & SOCIETY Morris MORRIS DOSTEIN centric scholar­ 2732 DOGWOOD RD. Urge (.6 Ac), secluded lot in DUKE ship, blinkered formalism, opaque jar­ FOREST, Great Rm with glassed-in Fam Rm. 4BR, 3BA Two level. 5139,000 gon, and politically motivated cultural WOODCROFT TOWNHOUSE One of ihe .best. Lovely Dickstein studies. setting with yatd on hill. 2 BR, 2 BA, high ceilings, skylights. $84,900 OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 2303 CYNTHIA DR Extiri«| i*|m cul-de-sac. Specially decorated with skylights, vaWtHMJ. 3BR, 2BA. $89,900 at NEAR EAST DUKE CAMPUS Den, 2BR, 1 BA, coiy LR. DR. Ptivate shaded ior. Det. Gar. Hwd floois. $68,000 (rent with c ted it to buy) Gothic Bookshop WALK TO DUKE from c«

• VALUES from page 1 who is a member of College Republicans. is necessary to insure that no workers are family," Dellinger said at a lecture Wednes­ administration. Family values represent another issue forced to choose between maintaining their day, sponsored by Students for Choice. "I don't see it as a 'gag rule,'" said Emma that has elicited heated debate among the jobs and caring for a child or family member. "It's good to have family values, but ev­ Osteen, National Right to Life Committee candidates this year. The Republicans have Perot takes an economic approach to the eryone can't be cloned. My family valuesare director for North Carolina. "Family plan­ made family valuestheheartoftheirplatform. family values issue. "If we strengthen our completely different from someone else's," ning should not include killing a child that Both Bush and Clinton are in favor of tax economy, we lessen the pressures of unem­ said Pat Phillips, a nurse at the Duke Fam­ relief to families with children. They also ployment and low incomes that so often ily Medicine Center. Some officials in federally funded clinics both support improved child care and stricter tear families apart," Perot writes in his University students hold very different have different views. "We are against the enforcement of so-called "deadbeat" par­ book, "United We Stand." views on the issue ofthe family. Republican 'gag rule.' By law people can receive an ents who neglect to pay child support. Americans have been bombarded with supporters tend to feel family values repre­ abortion. It's hard for us to understand why But the candidates differ in their stahces the issue of family values in the media, sent what is most important in this elec­ it is illegal for us to talk about what is a on the Family and Medical Leave Act, which most notably with Vice President Quayle's tion. "It just penetrates into every single person's right," said Irving Hoffman, clini­ would allow workers to take time off from attack of the "Murphy Brown" television issue... ifyou don't have a family to go back cal director ofthe Durham County Health their jobs to care for a newborn child or sick show. Quayle criticized the program, which to, ifyou don't have standards to go back to, Department, a clinic which receives federal family member. features a single-mother family, saying that then we don't have any standards at all," funding and is directly affected by the law. President Bush vetoed the act, calling it itis a poor portrayal of the American family Ferguson said. Some people reject politicizing the abor­ a "one size fits all" federal mandate that and represents the nation's current "pov­ Others criticize the discussion of family tion issue altogether, saying that it is a would hurt American business .and cost erty of values." values for distracting people from more personal, moral decision and should not be nearly 60,000 jobs. Instead, Bush favors a Critics have attacked the Republicans for important issues. "I think the economy is a subject to legislation. "I think a lot of people more flexible arrangement of employer-to- having too narrow aconception of the Ameri­ much more important issue right now than agree with me that it shouldn't be a political employee negotiations. can family for the modern world. "[Republi­ the concept of a family," said Trinity senior issue," said Trinity junior Cheryl Ferguson, Clinton, on the other hand, thinks the act cans] think that every family is the Cosby Jeff Leavitt.

ALL SAINTS' DAY CONCERT

featuring Mozart's Solemn Vespers Ki[TEW0N&(0+ DUKE UNIVERSITY CHORALE Rodney Wynkoop, conductor

Sunday, November 1, 1992 4:00 p.m. Duke Chapel

General Admission - $7 and Students - $5 Tickets will be available by calling Page Box Office at 684-4444

Sponsored by Duke University Department of Music and Duke Chapel ////////////////////////////////A. UNDERGRADUATES INTERESTED in ENGLISH COURSES 1 Ibu are invited to: PRE-COLUMBIAN The English Department REPRODUCTION IE WURY t. SCUIPTU RE Student-Faculty Reception 540TOS990 galeria cano When: Wedsesday, 4 Novembet 1992 Bogota 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. Where: 328 Allen Building (the department lounge) Why: Conversation with professors, English ERWIN SQUARE • 2200 W. MAIN majors, and other undergraduates DURHAM. NC • (919) 286-3355 interested in English courses. T$ STORE HOURS: M-F lO TO * • SAT 10 TO 5 QUALITY LEATHER ACCESSORIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN WOMEN'S SHOES JEWELRY CAPES SWEATERS & HATS i ITALIAN CERAMICS (. WOOD SCULPTURE VllHHHHHUUIIHHHimnia THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 Even pollsters admit 'horse race' analysis is excessive • POLLS from page 2 digit deficit, he told a crowd in Cornelia, Ga: polls and polling. that showed Clinton far ahead of Bush may The Seattle Times is not among them. "Don't believe these crazy polls! Don't be­ But he adds that the campaigns them­ have forced voters in recent weeks to finally "Who's ahead" polls are "the junk food of our lieve these nutty pollsters!" selves are constantly doing private polls, focus on the prospect of a Clinton presidency. democratic process," executive editor On Thursday Bush seemed to take a and asks: "Why shouldn't the voters get a As a result, some Clinton supporters may Michael Fancher wrote in a column this more tolerant view, saying in Michigan, look at the kind of information the cam­ have changed their minds — which, month. But, he admits, "readers love to talk "I'm encouraged by the way these polls that paigns have access to? If a candidate is Molyneux argues, they presumably would about them." we live and die by are shaping up," acting desperately, now you know why." have done eventually. That doesn't mean everyone wants to Whatever their accuracy, poll results can Other critics worry that polls create an Michael Traugott, a University of Michi­ talk to the pollsters. For those who don't, obscure the candidates themselves, as well electoral bandwagon, turning a front-run­ gan political scientist, has studied whether Daniel Greenberg, a syndicated columnist as their messages. Talking about who's ner into a winner. Pollsters generally reject poll results change election results. He was specializingin scientific issues, has a home­ ahead without talking about the issues, the charge. out of the country Thursday and unavail­ made remedy: When the pollster calls and complains Fancher, is "a little like arguing "There might be some front-runner vot­ able for comment on the week's events, but asks for your opinion, preference or plans, whether a movie deserved two stars or ers out there whoivant to vote for a winner, he published this conclusion in an article simply respond: "None of your business, three without talking about its plot." but there aren't many," says Guy Molyneux, earlier this year: thank you." Some pollsters even concede the point. coordinator of polling for Cable News Net­ "The influence of poll reports on voter Even the candidates can grow impatient "We're seeing an excessive amount of horse work. "And they would only add a bit to a preference are likely to be small, although at the barrage of polling—especially when race analysis," said Lee Miringoff, director winners m.argin of victory—they wouldn't not insignificant in close races, and to offset it runs against them. Earlier this month, of the Marist Institute for Public Opinion change the outcome ofthe election." one another." Some voters join the band­ when many polls had Bush with a double- and normally an exuberant advocate of In this election, he said, early-fall polls wagon, others the underdog.

SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT THE FUQUA SCHOOL BUSINESS OF BUSINESS CONFERENCE

"Careers in Sports & Entertainment Management'

Wednesday, November 4, 1992 1-5 pm Geneen Auditorium Fuqua School of Business

Conference P.articipants: Serving the Duke Community for More than 30 Years marie? Keynote Speaker: Austin Mr. Stan Kasten NEW PRICES-\*_j REALTYCOMPANYV* .

• Another price reduciion - last chance President, Atlanta Braves before rental. $54,900 w/$ 1500 toward buyers" closing costs. To be sold "AS IS." 3/4 BRs. 2 BAs, large kitchen, fenced yard, "Management of a Pro Team" garage. 2407 HIGHLAND AVENUE - Charming Nonhgale Park cottage. LR. DR. 2 BRs, eat-in kitchen, utility/hobby room with 'h bath and outside entance. REDUCED TO $69,500. 1011 GREEN STREET - REDUCED TO $89,000! BEST BUY IN TRINITY PARK! 1600 sf 3 BR, 2 bath brick, new kitchen 1988. LR, w/ FP, combo DR/FR, workshop, greenhouse, patio, Mr. Jay Faires Mr. Drew Rosenhaus garden space. 1124 RAYNOR STREET - REDUCED TO $49,500. Sellers President, Mammoth Records Rosenhaus Sports Rep. will pay $1500 CC for buyers on ihis totally renovated 3 BR home. New paint, vinyl and carpet. Has vinyl replacement "Entrepreneurial Ventures" "Athlete Representation" windows. LOT 4 .IQHN OAKS ROAD - New construction split foyer. Open living, dining and kitchen areas. 3 BRs, 2 baths, full unfinished bsmt., large deck, comer lot. REDUCED TO $82,900. LOT 1 ,IOHN OAKS ROAD - 3 bedroom ranch, only 4 year- Mr. Hill Carrow Mr. Pete Bock old, on over an acre, features new interior paint, carpet, dish­ washer, counter tops, double garage. REDUCED TO $77,000. Carrow Sports & Marketing President, Raleigh Icecaps 1006 MIDLAND TERRACE - 2 BR, 1 BA cottage in a beautiful 2.3 acre park-like setting. Hardwood doors. Great investment "Olympic Marketing" "Team Marketing" potential or first time homebuyer. REDUCED TO $50,000. 2419 W, CLUB BOULEVARD - 2-story brick traditional on a deep lot v/l fruit trees. LR w/ FP, formal DR, kitchen, breakfast nook, 3 BRs, 1 'A BAs, basement, den w/ FP. carport. REDUCED TO $134,900. "*Open to all students and faculty* 1204 Broad Street 286-5611 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 THE CHRONICLE

Attention Students! QUID rRfflMfR Tonight, Freewater presents... PPS GLASGOW PROGRAM EDWARD II 1932,91 min., d. Derek darman; with Steve Waddington. Andrew Tierman, TiiUa Swinton FALL 1993 Director Derek Jarman updates Chlstopher Marlowe's classic 16th century tragedy about a young king who is destroyed by his neglected wife's Jealousy and his male lover's desire for power. After his father's death, There will be an informational meeting Edward II (Waddington) Infuriates his barons and his French wife, Isabella (Swinton), by sending for his lover Gaveston (Tierman). Director Jarman Monday, November 2 has designed the movie to Jar complacency by showing the anti-gay prejudices which were behind Edward's violent fall. 5:110 p.m., 116 Old Chemistry 7:00 & 9:30 Griffith Film Theater FREE - to Duke Students with ID. All Others - $3.00

COURSES SPONSORED BY THE CENTER FOR DOCUMENTARY STUDIES Hpplebee's SPRING 1993

Neighborhood Grill & Bar AMERICAN COMMUNITIES: A DOCUMENTARY APPROACH. PPS 176S. This seminar focuses on the theory and practice of documentary photography. Each student will choose a community outside the University setting and complete a semester-long documentary photographic study of that community. Permission of the instructor required. For more information contact Phyllis Rorex, 684-3029. Margaret Sartor. COMMUNITY SERVICE AND THE DOCUMENTARY TRADITION. PPS 195S (paired with history). This course explores the work of documentary writers, photographers, and filmmakers and their struggle to reconcile scholarly, literary, and artistic pursuits with moral concerns. Students must be involved in community service during the semester that they are enrolled in the seminar. Permission of the instructors required. For more informtaion contact Phyllis Rorex, 684- 3029. Robert Coles, Alex Harris, and Chris Chafe.

IMAGES OF THE CONTEMPORARY SOUTH. ENG 109S.1 For would-be writers and photographers, this creative writing class with a strong visual component asks the questions: What is the South? What are its traditional images? What images speak to us today? In an attempt to answer these questions, the class will look at photographs and read fiction by 1991 contemporary Southern photographers andwriters, and ask students to go out and create their own images. Permission required. For more information contact Susan Bello, 684-6820. Alex Harris and Lee Smith.

COME DRESSED LITERACY THROUGH PHOTOGRAPHY: TEACHING TO PHOTOGRAPHY AND WRITING IN ELEMENTARY AND MIDDLE SCHOOLS. EDU 170B. WIN PRIZES! This course instructs students in methods of teaching photography as a form of communication and then translating that ability to communicate to the written word. Students will develop their own photographic projects, read ENJOY OUR SPECIALS. and discuss relevant materials, and intern in elementary and middle school classrooms as part of the Center for Documentary Studies' Photography in the Schools Project. Permission of the instructor required. For more information contact David Merritt or Darnell Arnoult, 687-0486. Wendy Ewald. HMFrKER&HOUSEWE $1.06 AIDty TWENTIETH CENTURY SOCIAL MOVEMENTS. HST 351. This graduate colloquium focuses on the history of twentieth century social movements and includes extensive reading in historical literature, oral and 0 ri A WHEWINGS written reports, and discussion. Permission of the instructor required. For $ more information contact Vivian Jackson, 684-2343. William Chafe. C* . \3 \3 During the ftrtyjM I WOMEN'S ORAL HISTORY AND PERFORMANCE. HST 255.1 This course draws on oral history, women's history, and performance theory 3400 Westgate Dr. to explore issues of sexuality and reproduction. Performance is used as a (across from South Square) means of interpreting and conveying oral history texts. Permission of the Durham, N.C. instructors required. For more information contact Darnell Arnoult, 687-0486. jacquelyn Hall and Delia Pollock. Letters EDITORIALS Help Durham kids haunt East Campus OCTOBER 30,1992 To the editor: community members together, and we en­ On Saturday, Oct. 31, between 4:00- courage interested students to get involved. 7:00 pm, The Community Service Center If you are interested in volunteering or and other student service groups will host a sponsoring the event, or in becoming in­ Halloween carnival for over 400 Durham volved in one of our many other programs, Have a heart children. The carnival will take place on the please call the Community Service Center East campus quad and there will be trick- at 684-4377. To provide a safe and enjoy­ able atmosphere for the children involved, There is something to be said for the Senate conference committee that or-treating in many of the dorms. We also plan to have numerous booths and activi­ we ask that Duke students refrain from worked on the Clean Air Act. The state old adage "if it ain't broke, don't fix it," ties for the children, including face paint­ using alcohol during the hours ofthe event. especially in the second district. Sierra Club has endorsed Valentine. ing, bobbing for apples, and a dance in the Incumbent Tim Valentine "ain't Unlike many politicians, he listens coffeehouse. We are very excited about this Jeffrey Lippman broke," and any attempt to replace to the people who elect him. At times event which will bring Duke students and Trinity '93 him could bring a Jesse Helms clone to he has changed his position after re­ the U.S. House. ceiving feedback from his district. For Valentine has not been the perfect example, he originally sponsored a Support Spectrum diversity awareness House representative. He supported constitutional amendment to ban flag befriend the interested people who ap­ defense spending even after the Soviet burning but he changed his vote when To the editor: Picture it. Students blanketing the West proach us this culture week because all the Union crumbled and cut off benefits he realized that was not what the Quad, all mimicking the movements of a things they learn about our cultures will for the long-term unemployed. Some­ majority back home wanted. single shadow boxer. Students discussing a be meaningless unless we can relate it to times he even forgets how he votes, as Furthermore, Valentine's opponent, video in the Mary Lou Williams Center by their lives through ourselves. he did when asked about his vote on Don Davis, is running on a platform of a great Nobel Prize winning Indian philoso­ We as mainstream students need to ex­ providing less money for Pell grants. God and family. Davis opposes gun pher and "world teacher." Students making tend ourselves and meet the people of But despite his weaknesses, Valen­ control, affirmative action and labor colorful bead necklaces on the Bryan Cen­ these different backgrounds. We must re­ ter walkway from South America. This week, tine has made a great commitment to unions. Valentine is clearly the hearty alize that knowing one person from a dif­ Spectrum holds its annual culture week ferent background can teach us more than protecting the environment He opposed choice in this election. festival to promote cultural awareness at all of the cultural awareness events that oil and gas drilling off the North Caro­ Monday's editorial will endorse can­ Duke. Each year, people attend such events could ever be held. lina coast and he served on the House- didates for county commissioners. to show their support for multi-culturalism We as Duke students need to make an and diversity. For a few hours, they experi­ effort to get to know each other. We must ence customs of the many ethnic back­ believe that we can be friends with people grounds at Duke. that have backgrounds and experiences Watt's up But when culture week is over, most totally different from our own. We must people return to their everyday lives and not prejudge. We must believe that the Regardless of the race's outcome, defense to domestic areas. are no more in tune with the wide variety of value of such a friend is completely worth voters in North Carolina's newly cre­ His vision of economic recovery is people here than they were before the week's the extra effort it might take. These are ated 12th congressional district will be "trickle up"—revitalization of urban events. That's because they have no stake the only things that will save our school making history, electing the state's first areas, incentives to get people off wel­ in the multi-culturalism here at Duke. from further racial misunderstanding. black representative in this century. fare and a restructuring ofthe tax sys­ We as minority students cannot afford ITI be looking for you on the quad. Democrat Melvin Watt is the perfect tem to reduce the burden on the poor to simply present our culture in "take it or candidate to begin this new era in and middle class. He favors universal leave it" fashion. We need to get to know Darren Jer North Carolina politics. health care coverage, gun control and each other on an individual basis. We must Trinity '95 Watt has championed social justice more investment in the nation's chil­ in his work as a civil rights activist and dren through programs like Head Start. a .state senator. He managed Harvey Watt's firm commitment to civil Men cannot appreciate pain of abortion Gantt's unsuccessful senatorial bid rights and improvement ofthe nation's To the editor: belief. To Knudsen, abortion is not, as you against Jesse Helms, maintaining the cities makes him an ideal representa­ I was disgusted by two consecutive col­ so naively stated, contributing to child high ground in a campaign marred by tive for the 12th, a black majority umns in The Chronicle this week, dis­ abuse. Ifyou w.ant to be that crass about the incumbent's divisive smear tactics. district which runs through nearly gusted enough to let the authors of the the issue, tbe fact is that many potentially If elected, Watt will bring to the U.S. every urban area in the state. columns know. David DePerro and James abusive parents (without money, where a child adds immeasurable strain to a Congress the same high ideals he has Watts' Republican opponent, Bar­ Knudsen have taken it upon themselves to perpetuate the myths and lies surround­ family's economic situation) are stopped shown as N.C. senator, working to bara Gore Washington, cannot match ing the abortion controversy. If either one from abusing their children simply by not help the poor and protect abortion Watt's experience and vision. We have of them were educated at all on the issue of having any. Your "skyrocketing" child rights. Watt recognizes the need for a every reason to expect great things abortion, they might not be so quick to abuse statistics may have more than a shift in government spending from from Melvin Watt. make fools of themselves in a campus-wide little to do with the fact that more parents , publication. are out of work, financially strapped, on Anti-choice forces in America love to tell drugs, or just too young. Some of these On the record the public that "life is a wonderful choice." factors are direct results of 12 years of Fine. Preservation of life should certainly Republican administrations. You are pa­ be a concern for us all; however, if we are tronizing to women and to their concerns It's good to have family values, but everyone can't be cloned. My family values are talking about what is clinically defined (by and intelligence when you rattle off your completely different from someone else's. doctors and scientists, not uninformed totally groundless "results" of abortions on Pat Phillips, a nurse at the Duke Family Medicine Center, on the issue of family soap-box (male) preachers like Knudsen women: breast cancer, dysfunctional be­ values in this year's election and DePerro) as a group of cells, we are not havior, suicide attempts. I cannot imagine debating about life, we are debating about why you would choose to present such responsibility, maturity, and cold, hard ridiculous claims in your column. established 1905 economics. THE CHRONICLE When a potential mother decides to ter­ One ofthe rational answers to the grow­ Jason Greenwald, Editor minate a pregnancy, it is usually an ago­ ing number of abortions in America (which Peggy Krendl, Managing Editor I News Editor nizing decision. There are many factors is, I agree, very sad) is increased sex edu­ Michael Saul, Managing Editor I News Editor involved in the choice to have an abortion, cation, and free distribution of condoms, Barry Eriksen, General Manager and they cannot, for the sake ofthe woman which most conservatives oppose. This Amy Reed, Editorial Page Editor or the potential child, be ignored. "Can I society must also stop treating women as continue my education if I have this baby? mindless incubators. We must have ulti­ Michael Robbins, Sports Editor Laura Neish, City & State Editor Will I be left alone, on Welfare, unable to mate control over our bodies and our lives. Noah Bierman, Assoc. News Editor Geoffrey Green, Assoc. News Editor provide for myself or my child? Will my The issue of abortion is central to our Jason Schultz, Features Editor Jennifer Greeson, Arts Editor parents disown me, or abuse me when they struggle to escape from the patriarchal Paul Orsulak, Photography Editor Heather Heiman, Health & Research Editor discover I'm pregnant?" All of these issues system our society has embraced. To all Chet Fenster, Graphics Editor Betsy Kaiser, Senior Editor are critical to women when they discover men out there, please, respect our deci­ Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager Alan Welch, Production Manager that they are pregnant; it's pretty much a sions and our choices. Help your mothers, Randy Gibeau, Student Advertising Mgr. Ashley Austin, Creative Services Mgr no-win situation in many cases. A woman sisters, and girlfriends come to informed, Jessica Balis, Business Manager either decides to have the child, and face healthy resolutions in this emotionally all ofthe above dilemmas and more, or she charged issue. It's a cliche, but you cannot The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of decides to have an abortion and face the truly understand the pain we face as women the .editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. semi-crazed anti-choice protesters who will in this society. Ifyou dont want to have an Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115; Business block her car and simulate a baby's crying abortion, don't have one. Just don't tell me Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106; FAX: 684-8295. voice as she drives into the clinic. (Yes, this or any other woman what we can or cannot Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Rowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union does happen, right here in Durham.) do with our bodies. Building; Business and Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building, Duke University. To DePerro, I'd like to say that abortion ©1992Tne Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reseived. No part is, in fact, a very legitimate health concern Jessica Reaves of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. for millions of women, contrary to your Trinity '95 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 THE CHRONICLE Attack Chihuahua derided in Scotland's political debates

Author's note: I have to confess an error in my last nearly as much as we do. column. Urquhart Castle, the one on Loch Ness, is not • Haggis I finally just asked someone why there was so much actually the Castle Aaaaaaagh! The genuine article is fascination with the American presidential election, and Castle Stalker, on the west coast of Scotland, not far away Hannah Kerby I got an answer which, if you think about it, says a lot from Loch Lomond (the other loch everyone's heard of.) I about how the U.S. is viewed in the rest ofthe world. The regret the error, whether The Chronicle does or not. Any­ that runs twice a week, and, while I was there, seemed to person I asked said that, in effect, the American people way, I have much more interesting things to talk about. consist exclusively of Dan Quayle Watch, from Murphy are electing the president not ofthe United States, but of Being out ofthe country during the presidential elec­ Brown to the "potatoe" incident. His name is held up in the "free world" (i.e. the Western Hemisphere), and that tions is really quite an enlightening experience. You last week's Glasgow University Union debate as an ex­ what we decide directly affects their lives as well, so it wouldn't really expect people in other countries to care ample of what could happen if Britain abolished the behooves them to be interested. about our political circus — we dont care about anybody monarchy and elected a largely ceremonial president (the That response is a little something to think about it else's, right? I expected to hear absolutely nothing about vice presidency being a largely ceremonial position). you're planning not to vote. As voters we have a responsi­ Bush, Quayle, Clinton, Gore, Perot, Stockdale, or any of Chances are there's not a British Dan Quayle, but I bility to the rest ofthe world as well as to ourselves, and the other pseudocandidates. suppose anything is possible. After all, someone actually the fact that our voter turnout is one of the lowest in the Boy, was I wrong. The Europeans, the British and Irish chose him to be vice president in the first place. industrialized world sends a very clear message. Even in particular, are extremely interested in the whole nasty The election even serves as a topic of conversation on though we've spent too much time concentrating on for­ mess. The cover-age ofthe campaign ranges from blurbs in the Top 40 radio shows. Chances are you wouldn't catch eign policy while the domestic situation gets worse and the tabloids on the latest poll right next to the daily dose your run-of-the-mill morning-show disc jockeys talking worse, even our domestic policy effects the rest ofthe of page three nudity in The Sun, to long, insightful about the British elections unless something really unbe­ world. It's a responsibility we should take a lot more commentaries in The Herald, Glasgow's paper, on why lievable happened, like Big Ben collapsing on the newly seriously than we do. Bush will be defeated because he's a complete incompe­ elected Prime Minister or something equally catastrophic. After all, we still havft,the most to lose if we make the tent and how Clinton is the best thing since sliced bread. The DJs over here, however, have spent quite a lot of time wrong choice. It's not that I disagree with their assessment, but nor­ talking about it, from the inevitable Dan Quayle jokes to Hannah Kerby is a Trinity senior studying at the Univer­ mally such a glowing praise of one candidate is relegated some serious discussion of "who would you vote for and sity of Glasgow who wishes the BBC would show baseball to the editorial pages in U.S. papers. In the British press, why?" I'd be willing to bet they talk about our election instead of just debates, even though the Braves lost. it's the "news" stories that give these opinions at great length. I haven't actually seen any ofthe coverage in the ultra- •HARtTO conservative papers, but they're hard to find around here. ^OltohlCvtT- The Times, bastion ofthe Conservative Party establish­ ment, isn't sold on campus because the Students' Repre­ sentative Council, GU's more competent version of ASDU, APART lAT&V. is boycotting Rupert Murdoch, who is reportedly just as scummy as the late Robert M.axwell and is still alive. I would imagine, though, that the Conservatives' coverage is slanted more toward the "Bush as statesman" line. Politicians over here are elected in a large part because of their ability to defend their party's positions coherently and with style. The debating societies at universities here are miniatures of the House of Commons, with all the yelling, thinly veiled insults, harrumphi'ng and back-and- forth exchange that makes watching the debates interest­ ing. (C-Span occasionally shows Commons debates — watch one and you'll see what I mean). By contrast, our own debates look like an over-orchestrated photo oppor­ tunity where the candidates happen to talk. For example, Republican attack ChihuahuaDan Quayle (don't tell me he didn't remind you of one during the Veep Debate) is a source of unfailing entertainment to the British people and the British press, and the Veep Debate itself was viewed with a sort of polite derision. One ofthe Irish newspapers has a column called "American Diary" 'Blue Jeans Day' gives invisible minority visible power

We live in a time when gay bashings, internalized Harlem Renaissance or the Civil Rights Movement were homophobia, andinstitutionalizedheterosejdsmt&ke their • Guest Columnn often told to keep quiet about sexuality matters— for toll on a gay community characterized by an ability to blacks already have enough problems. I realized that the endure abuse of almost every form. Blue Jeans Day at Tim'm West black community that I had relied on for support all of my Duke University is here again. And though I may em­ life would only affirm me as long as my sexuality re­ brace or find offensive the responses that recognition and mained a non-issue. Several persons even asked me: visibility bring, it is only 1 day out of 365 a year when "What are you first, black or gay?" This question, to say people must acknowledge my existence as a gay man. Several persons even asked the least, was quite offensive to me. But I could not let Around times like these I am often reminded of the me: "What are you first, black anything deter me from having a voice in the black risks that gays, lesbians and bi-sexuals take when they or gay?" community or even in the larger community. decide to affirm their lifestyles by "coming out." Coming With visibility comes the opportunity to educate and to out is certainly an act of courage and bravery in a society have one's voice heard. As an African-American I was not where the benefits of "straight" life are undeniably over­ the seemingly comfortable confines ofthe black commu­ presented with an opportunity to conceal my skin color in whelming. Many who seek affirmation of their life choices nity at Duke. order to benefit from a white dominated society. To some "come out of the closet" only to find that condemnation, As my interactions with the Duke Gay and Lesbian degree my skin color required others to acknowledge that ostracism, and dehumanization await them. Association began to grow, I became closely identified I am different, and compelled me to fight racism in our My experience of coming out at Duke is one I feel with persons in the gay community. Several friends asked society. I was given no way out. Gays, lesbians, and bi- compelled to share. Though I was very closeted my first me if I was "turning" gay, and being a person who was sexuals can make the same type of gains made during the year and had no intentions of coming out, Duke's Vision afraid of rejection I decided to reinforce their assumption Civil Rights movement when we began to make ourselves seemed to present an image ofthe University as a tolerant that I was heterosexual by denying the accusations. known, when we demand what we want for ourselves, our atmosphere for gay, lesbian and bi-sexual students. Need­ Every time I did this I became more and more angry. I families, and our futures. less to say, after a day or two I realized that there was no became angry because denying that I was gay gave my Today members ofthe gay, lesbian, bi-sexual commu­ such atmosphere at Duke. The Duke Gay and Lesbian peers lisence to say things like "somebody should hurt nity at Duke make visible an invisible but powerful Association, however, was experiencing growth at the that faggot" without considering that I had a friend who minority. The reality is that my coming out story is rather time and consequently I was able to meet others who were was beat to death by homophobes like themselves. These plesant compared to many others'. However, as more having difficulty dealing with campus homophobia. One so-called friends would always talk about how they didn't gays, lesbians and bi-sexuals come out, we are presented friend in particular stands out in my mind. She was a know any gay people and I wondered how many of their with better opportunities to educate and inform the public first-year student who had begun to understand that in friends and family members were assumed to be hetero­ that we have contributed much to our society despite our visibibty there is power, that silence = death. During a sexual and were not. oppression. True the risks of being "out" are great. I speak-out on Blue Jeans Day of 1990 I had the opportu­ cannot even say to what extent I will be "out" after I nity to hear her speak about the struggle one undergoes This .anger soon caused me to fight back. I initially saw coming out as a way to upset those who thought they knew graduate from this great Gothic Wonderland. I do know, in re-defining one's life with respect to one's sexuality. however, that we must encourage gays, lesbians and bi- She spoke of how our society perpetuates the myth that what I was all about. The reaction of the black community was perhaps the most memorable since I had become sexuals to speak out on those institutions, policies and only a strange and small segment of the population is persons oppressing them. We must assure gays, lesbians homo.sexu.al and called for all to re-think their assump­ active in the Black Student Alliance where I held the position of newsletter editor. I didn't initially experience and bi-sexuals that until their voices are heard, their tions concerning sexuality. I wondered how my life might concerns as an invisible minority in whatever community any blatant prejudice though I did lose a few "friends." In change if I decided to reveal my sexuality to family and they operate will remain neglected. peers. I was convinced that I would find rejection within the black community, homosexuality is largely seen as a detriment to our struggle. My black gay heroes of the Tim'm West is a Trinity junior. THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30.1992 Comics

Mephistopheles / Danny DeCillis THE Daily Crossword ^uu^^^m,,

ACROSS 1 6 11 •a Solar-lunar n ' ,. calendar • " difference 17 *1 „ Inventor Howe 1 a, 1 " K * n 3"1 | Oxymoron #1 Self 1 . 35 N Blue sky 37 • " _ » a. ,, Enthusiastic one 1 Tell all B'7 friends *aa B S3 H M 57 Everything Took off 59 I " E•l _ 63 Issue" M" Kind of measure H 67 Tie *»• 10/30/92 Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 8 Ridges 9 Small child nnnn nnnn nnnnn 10 Oxymoron #3 inncm mncin nnnnn 11 VIP nnnn mcinn nnnnn nnnrannnnnnmnn nnnn nnn •nnnn nnnn nnnn nnnnn nnnn nnn 24 Robert — nnnnnnnnnnnnnnci 26 Kitchen wear nnn nnnn nnnnn 27 Mother of the nnnn nnnn nnnnn 28 Charity nnn nnnn 29 Oxymoron #4 nnnnnannnnnnn ---- of nnnnn nnnn nnnn nnnnn nnnn nnnn nnnnn nnnn nnnn 36 Fencing swot 38 Base bailer Ryan 39 Close tightly 40 Card holding 42 In attendance 45 Everlasting, to poets ! 57 Run, in a way 47 Smooth stone i 59 Evergreen 48 Book of maps i 60 Zuider —. Neth 49 The ones here 61 Comp. pi.

THE CHRONICLE

Assistant editorial page editor: Alison Stuebe Sports people: Chris Hurtgen and Michael Robbins "Well, this isn't very promising." Copy editors: Jason Greenwald, Jennifer Greeson Matt Steffora, Alison Stuebe and Michael Saul Wire editor: Brad Rubin Associate photography editor: Brain Scully Calvin and Hobbes/ Bill Watterson Death by lead poisoning?: Roily Miller Account representatives: Dorothy Gianturco, ITS NOT MUCH PJN PLATO Cyndy Johnson WITH SOMEONE WHO WOULD Advertising sales staff: Kellie Daniels, Leslie Dickey, BATHER TACKLE TUHN WIN. Rob DiNardo, Jason Fedo, Roy Jurgens, Jessica Kravitz, Kerry Rupp, Jamie Smith, Ericka Wilcher, Jon Wyman Creative services staff: .. Erika Serow, Vanessa Phillips, Brian Toth, Susan Somers-Willett, Reva Bhatia, Adrienne Grant, Kathy McCue, David Martin Accounts payable manager: Tim Rich Credit manager: .....Bob Gilbreath Classified managers: Chris Tapia, Rhonda Gittens o/V Business staff: Sharon Morgan, Joy Spangler, Jason Rodgers, Rob Armstrong, Miranda Perry Calendar coordinator: .Sharon Koterba

Auditions for Devil May Care, a new co-ed Today a cappellasinging group. Sign up at Community Calendar the Bryan Center Info Desk. All voice Reception and Booksigning honoring parts needed. Graduate students, Morris Dickstein, keynote speaker of Shabbat Services and Dinner. Hillel. 6pm, professionals, and employees welcome! the campus conference "Celine, His 311 Afexander Dr. Saturday, October 31 American Presence," and author of Sweet Potato Gleaning. Gleaning Net­ General Public Notices "Double Agent, The Critic and Society," Potluck dinner. Sponsored by Spectrum. work. 8:30am, meet at East or West Noon-lpm, Gothic Book&hop. 7:30pm, Mary Lou Williams Center. Campus Bustop to carpool to Benson, SafeWalks/SafeRides runs daily, 10pm- Karamu will perform.Part of Spectrum N.C. Blue Jeans Day. Duke Gay and Lesbian Culture Week. 2am, Fridays and Saturdays, 11pm- Association. Mike on the Walk, noon- Halloween Extravaganza. Spnsored by the 3am. Don't Walk Alone! 2pm, Bryan Center Walkway followed by Facuity/Student Tea. Round Table Dorm. Community Service Center. 4-7pm, East 4-6pm, Round Table Commons Room. Ali Ride for the Homeless. Fuqua School of a picnic open to the campus commu­ Campus Quad. Anyone interested in are welcome! Business is sponsoring a fundraising nity, 2-4pm, Main Quad. helping with booths, escorting chiidren, bicycle ride to benefit the Durham etc., call 684-4377. Tap Chi demonstration. Asian Students Meeting of the Intervarsrty Christian Community Shelter for Hope. Saturday, Fellowship. 7pm, York Chapel. Association. Noon-2pm, West Quad. All Hallow's Eve Service and Eucharist- October 31,9:30am, registration 8am, meet on Science Drive, near the Brought to you by Spectrum Culture Choir Rehearsal. Duke University Gospel Duke Campus Ministries. 10:30pm, Duke Week '92. Chapel. Wallace Wade Stadium entrance. Choir. 6pm, Mary Lou Williams Center. Minimum donation to ride is $20. Performance of Loose Britches. Doug Clark and the Hot Nuts. Sponsored Sunday. November 1 Riders are encouraged to raise pledges C.H.A.N.C.E. Pall Fundraiser. 10pm- by Phi Delta Theta. 9:30pm-12:30am, which may be paid later, but may also lam, The Hideaway. $2 cover, 18 to The Rathskeller, Local band, know for All Saints' Day Concert. Duke Chorale, sponsor themselves. Call Dave enter, 21 to drink. college appeal! 4pm, Duke Chapei. Stephens at 383-0864. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1992 THE CHRONICLE Classifieds

Announcements LAST DAY! DOWN-HOME COUNTRY WALL STREET CAREERS SCIENCE ETHICS ALL HALLOW'S EVE Servle: Saturday "•Campus Reps ' COO KIN'- Lunch at the University Room! Brokerage/ in vestment Banking/ Science, Tech nology. Medi­ Night in the Chapel, there will be a . Spring Break Today's menu: Fried Porgy. Chicken Pot Trading. Order your profiles on top cine, and related ethical issues? Come worshipservlcecommemoratingtliellves s & the biggest »t knowingly Pie, Broccoli Rice Casserole. Col lards. 20 Investment firms, includes con­ to an Information session for the Sci­ of the Saints. The service begins on the e inform ations. i ad tnat aces not offer Black eyed Peas. Candled Yams, Lima tact name, address & phone. Send ence Technology and Human Values Chapel steps at 10:30PM. call 800395-WAVE. legitimate products or services. We Beans. French Fries. Hushpupples, your name, address & S20, check Program-Wednesday, November 4 at urge you to exercise caution before Combread, Home-style Desserts. 11:30- payable to: Wall Street Data Part­ 7:30 in Room 124 SocSci. Refresh­ BAGEL BRUNCH INTERN AT! 0 N AL EM PLOYMENT- M ake sending money to any advertiser. You ners, 230 West SStfa St.-Suite 20E, ments and Intriguing discussion to fol- Duke Hillel Foundation is sponsoring a money teaching English 3broao. J* are always justified in asking any ad­ NY, NY 10019. Jump Start Your Ca- Community Bagel Brunch Sunday, Nov.l pan and Taiwan. Make $2,000- vertiser for references or In checking NOW's YOUR CHANCE at 12 noon at 311 Alexander Ave. The $4,000* per month. Many provide wilh the Better Business Bureau. Enter the H Ida way without ID, hear SHABBAT SERVICE cost is $1 and can be put on your Duke room and board + other benefits! Should you believe there Is a problem Financially & Culturally rewarding! For "Loose Britches" play, villi prizes FrirJ ay night 6:00I=M there wl II be Shabbat CarO. For more Information call 684- and support Dur 6422. International Employment program and Ufe at Duke. Panel Discus­ services and dinner at the Duke Hillel application, call tne International night 10PM-1AM. S2 Cover. sion. Mary Lou Williams Center, Foundation at 311 Alexander Ave. The Employment Group: (206^632-1146 Monday Nov.2, 9PM. Cosponsored cost Is $5.95 and you can put it on your Stop Elephantiasis! Stop Elephantiasis! 6M.J5360. EARN EXTRA MONEY!! by DGLA, GPGLA, DSGLC, Women's Duke Card. For more Information call Stop Elephantiasis! Stop Elephantiasis! Selling extremely popular, colorful hand­ Center, CAPS. 684*422, Stop Elephantiasis! Stop Elephantiasis! Cash paid for your books. Come to made meiican and stylish Guatemalan Single father seeks mature female Duke University Textbook Store. Mon­ Stop Elephantiasis! Jackets, tie belts, baja shirts. .Excellent Pi Phis DUKE INDIA ASSC student(s) to assist with housework day-Saturday 8;30AM-5PM. Lower and to provide transportation and c Christmas gifts, unlimited Income po­ Get psyched for Halloween Mixer with Level Bryan Center. tential, no investment required. For info VERY IMPORTANT GENERALBODY MEET­ panionshipfor teenage daughterwhen Delts, Kappas and SAE's, 6:30PM at ING MONDAY 11/2 AT 7:00PM IN 126 evenings 2-3 days/wk. Call write to: Via Zapata Trading Company, Delt Section on Saturday. PPS SUMMER INTERNS 1313 Charlene Street, Edlnburg TX SOC PSYCH BE THERE. PPS SUmeer 1993 Independent In­ Hey You-In the Wuo jeans-1 know terns—Sign upoutside Room 2130ld you're gayl Join us for "Mike on Hair Stylist- Full or Part time (Week- the walk~(12-2PM) Cnem for Informal interviews to be A CAPPELLA! service project is tonight! Sisters who nights or Saturdays), Clientele ai aredecoratlngbeattne section at 6PM, equipment provided- pd. holidays and Don't miss the Speak of the Devil/ all others at 6:30PM. Dress appropri­ IF YOU BELIEVE call the Great Cab­ vacations, medical insurance [ Lady Blue Parents Weekend Invita­ ately and plan to stay for the band!! bage 3S2-297S. IF YOU DOUBT call student loa n ass ista nee progra m. tional. Friday Nov.6 7:30 Reynolds the GreatCabbage 382-2978. IFYOU training locally by top Supercuts edu- Theatre with the Tarheel Voices and Potluck dinner andKaramu Performance WANNA KNOW...call the Great Cab­ Jamaica. Cancun, Rorida from $119. the Maryland Treblemakers. In Mary Lou Williams Center, Friday 7:30- DOU YOU SING? bage 382-2978 Book early/save $$$! Organize group 10PM. Tal Cnl on Quad in afternoon. Devil May Care- new COED acapella travel freel 1-800426-7710. Halloween night Is coming. Students, group, needs all parts. Sign up BC Info BE IN GODSPELL come check out T.J. Hoops. Back-to- BLUE SMASH BASH desk or call Rebecca. 684-0223. Au­ Auditions for this groovy H-n-H musi Lab tech. needed, up to 10 hrs/wk.. SAVE MONEY - PROTECT THE ENVI­ back bands this weekend. Halloween KA - Friday. 10PM to 1AM with PURPLE ditions 11/1-2. Wed.Nov.4, Thurs.Nov.5. Come wit RONMENT with Duke EarthMug! Bev­ night: costume contest with over $200 SCHOOL BUS $5,75/hr. Contact Medical Res tdence GRAD & PROF. song and asmile. Sign upfor time at Office, 681-2383. erage discounts on campus with this in prizes. Dress to kill. Food & drink info desk. Questions? 684-0554. specials and more. 493-9251 T2 CLASS of 95 Wanna sing at Duke? Audition for Devil able today, Bryan Center walkway or May Care, a new COED acappella group STUDENTS or ORGANIZATIONS. Pro­ Trent 2 reunion for class of 1995! Meet Duke Democrats mote our Rorida Spring Break pack­ East Campus Union Building, 10AM- DR. FOWLIES'S PROUST COURSE for dinner in the Pits on Tuesday Nov.3 11/1-2. Sign up BC Info Desk. 3PM, $1.75 cash or points. Clinton/Gore: Volunteer to help with our ages. Earn MONEY and FREE trips. (DPC 195, formerly 203) will be of­ at 5PMI final push. We need volunteers for litera­ Organize SMALL or LARGE groups. fered spring 1993. Permission re­ AOPi-SIGMA NU SEND A GOBLIN ture drops, get out the vote efforts, Call Campus Marketing. 800423- quired. MWF .01, 9:10AM, ACES W. CLUB TENNIS Halloween Mixer is tomorrow! Wearyour phone banks, dorm storming, etc.. Call 5264. grab bag to a friend $3 on the BC #137382; .02, 10:20AM, ACES r Wannamaker IV 6-7:30 Friday Durham Democratic HQ at 682-9492 of walkway Oct.22 thru Oct.30. We de- #137369 Damen at 684-1328. NOW HIRING AOPi S7-10 per hour. Pizza delivery HEY TRANSFERS!! COSEN MEETING WOMEN PICTURES OF PEACE. PICTURES OF drivers. Apply at 1106 Chapel N,ew sisterworksho p is Su n d ay. Nov. 1; GET A JUMP ON THE COMPETITION FOR Interested In tbe Women's Handbook? Hill St. or call 493-5977. PEACE. PICTURES OF PEACE. 28 Transfer yourself overtoKiigo Quad this SUMMER EMPLOYMENT IN SCIENCE. Friday for a BBQ with the FAC Board! Chanelki's Pioa. OCTOBER - 38 NOVEMBER. BROWN All students Interested In obtaining in- GALLERY, BRYAN CENTER. Burgers and fun begin at 5:30PM. See you there! Nursery attendant Sunday mornings portunlties In science are Invited to at­ 8:30 to 12:30 year-round. Epworth CHOICE WEEK! Show your face Pro TRIVIA WHIZ? tend tne COSEN meeting on Thursday, United Methodist Church. Durham. CholceAmerlcalStopbytabieali week The Duke Intramural College .Bowl Tour­ IT'S COMING!! Nov.5 at 7PM In the Breedlove room In Social Events Call 493-8597 or 489-6557. to have your picture taken. nament will be held Sunday November Phi Psi celebrity Auction- Friday Novem­ Perkins Library, Some applications will 1st. Registration Is free, all week on the ber 6th on the BC walkway. Come and be available. REFRESHMENTS SERVED. JEWISH SINGLES DANCE. If you're Jew­ Papagayo's Mexican Post BUDDY HOLLY BC Walkway. Enter a teaml support Duke Children's Cancer Re- ish and single, age 21+, Join other Jew­ Is accepting applications for part-time Seetlieman.Hearthemusic.t ROCKY HORROR!! ish singles from all over the Southeast bartender, host, wait, and cooking legend. Come see" Buddy" on 1 SOPHOMORES It's fust a Jump to the left - Let's do at our Symposium and Fifth Annual Fall positions. Apply in person at E ber 1&2 at 8PM In Page Audii i helping out with Halloween NOT A PUMPKIN Dance, In Durham. Saturday, Oct.31. Douglas Street, off Erwin Rd„ 2 bio Tickets still available at Page Box festivities for Durham Youth? Call SarO, PATCH- Glean sweet potatoes for the Information: 489-8700/967-4517 from Duke Hospital, 286-1910. Office! 6840473. hungry Saturday October 31st and Sturday November 7th at 8:30AM. Meet Entertainment Intelligent, reliable students ne SOPHOMORES at either bus stop. Call RaeJean 684- toorganlze and earn blg$$$$. L 4977 or Molly 684-0060 for informa­ HEY YOU 800-786-3411. tion. Vanna help atlO.OOO MANIACS? Come FRIDAY FILMS o 126 SocSci. 7:30PM Monday Nov.2. Documentary/Antidocumenatry Film Student job vacancy—clerical. I-HOUSE MEMBERS ts mandatory. Series, Classic and experimental worte Phytotron Bldng., Botany Dept. Sci­ shown every Friday 8:00 PM East Cam­ ence Drive. 684-6523. international Halloween, Saturday at pus Carr 103. Sponsored by Rim and 7:30PM. Pizza and refreshments at the GRAD STUDENTS Video program and Center for Documen­ oking for caring, dependable per- l-House and then off to Chapel Hill for party today at Hideaway, 5- tary Studies. trlck-or-treatfunon Franklin Street. Must 8PM. FREE beer, burgers, soda, candy, in to care for newborn and 4yr, old optional. Bring ID. 1s In our home 2 days/week. Please THE CHRONICLE Help Wanted ill 489-6564. PIZZA DEUVERY SPRING BREAK '93—SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE!!! Student Accepting applications for delivery driv­ Travel Services is now hiring campus classifieds information ers. Must be 18, have own car and representatives. Ski packages als basic rates insurance, and have out-going personal­ available. Cal! 1-800-36434849. ity. Potential earnings of $Si2/hr. Ap­ $3.50 (per day) for the first 15 words or less. ply in person, 1000 W.Maln St. [across STATS & MATH TUTORS 10* (per day) for each additional word. from Brightleaf Square) Tutors are still needed for Intro stats- 3 or 4 consecutive insertions-10% off. tics and math courses. The schedule 5 or more consecutive insertions-20% off. is flexible. Course books win be vlded. The rate of pay for undergrads Is $7/hr and grads tlO/hr. If I special features ested, please contact the Peer Tutor­ (Combinations accepted.) National Award Winning Portraiture ing Office at 684-8832. $1.00 extra per day for All Bold Words. Creative Wedding Photography $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading WORK STUDY: IBM Pagemaker and (maximum 15 spaces.) 17 Boone Square (919) 687-4322 • 732-6668 editing experience required for layout of international journal and symposia $2.00 extra per day for a Boxed Ad. Historic Hillsborough Tues.-Fri. 10-5:30 pm proceedings. Call Eleanor John 681-6455 for Interview. deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon Child Care payment NEEDED: Part/Fulltime babysitter In our home. Possible exctiaafe Prepayment is required. With room, 660-2649 or S43-0901 Cash, check or Duke IR accepted. days, 493-5846 •< (We cannot make change for cash payments.) Greek Merchandise 24-hour drop off location The .Area's Largest Selection Services Offered 3rd floor Flowers Building (near Duke Chapel) of Sorority & Fraternity I wll I c lean you r house for $354 5. where classifieds forms are available. Gifts & Clothing graduate student with experience and Custom Imprinted references. Call Heathe r Jennings 682- or mail to: 5326. Chronicle Classifieds Sportswear BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706. Qlasses, Paddles, Mugs, BJ'S BUSINESS SERVICES Resumes, thesis, term papers, word- Shirts, Key Rings, More! processing, wedding invitation and phone orders: accessories and business cards, 688- call (919) 684 - 3476 to place your ad. Visa, 4114. MasterCard acceped. Stay at home mome witn degree in psychology/chl Id development wishes to care for child in her home. Terry Call 684-3476 ifyou have questions about classifieds. 5966813. No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.

See page 14 !• THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992

• From page 13 THIS IS IT! Your last chance to enjoy REAL down-home country cooking. Find Roommate Wanted out what coilards are. Taste REAL fresh Reduced course loads help leaders hushpupples. Chow down on pork-sea­ soned black-eyed peas. Lunch only. • LEADERS from page 1 Lyzette Leal, news editor for the Daily Northwestern, Female or male to share 2BR, 2BA University Room. duplex in American Village. 1/2 rent, "Managing editors of the newspaper as well as other said that academic relief for working on her paper is 1/2 utilities. Pleasecallafter8:30PM, LOWEST AIRFARES student leaders usually do it," Libit said. "I myself am not impossible because the paper is completely independent 382-8038. Available Jan.l. GUARANTEED! Booh your Thanks­ on the program, and sometimes I regret it." from the university. Editors of the Daily Northwestern giving and Christmas Break tick­ are paid, however, and sometimes take time off from ets now and lock-in SuperSaver Stanford's leadership program is unique among the Rooms for Rent fares. Call Thomas Cook Travel nine schools contacted by The Chronicle. school to edit the paper, Leal said. today. (800) 843-2198. FREE Margaret Kane, city editor ofthe Daily Pennsylvanian, At Duke, students .are required to take four or more TICKET for rent in house. 2 blocks from East said that there are great sacrifices in taking leadership courses unless they obtain approval from their academic Campus. Women grads preferred. 682- HIDEAWAY FRIDAY positions because ofthe conflict with a full academic load. dean. At some other schools without leadership programs, 3202. getting permission for a reduced course load is easier. bar 30th, $2 cover: 18 to enter, 21 to "Here, it's pretty much sink or swim," Kane said. Bedroom with private bath, kitchen & drink. Prize giveaway drawing. Prof- "It's definitely hard to wholeheartedly pursue academ­ Brent Stamps, president of Vanderbilt's Student Gov­ laundry privileges. Duke Park area, Its to CHANCE. ics," Matthew Klein, executive editor ofthe Daily Penn­ ernment .Association, said the administration sometimes convenient to Duke & Durham Re­ sylvanian. "It's too bad because a lot of people have to grants student leaders special permission to take a re­ gional Hospital. Deposit required. Call VANESSA DURAN Happy Birthday to you and your vacant m,ake a conscious decision between academics and extra­ duced load. look. Keep smith'! Love, The Evil Lemur curricular activities. They can't do both." "There's nothing in black and white about it," Stamps Apts. for Rent PURPLE SCHOOL BUS said. "But usually student leaders are able to work some­ (Aliman Bros, and Dead covers). Friday, thing out with the school, especially if they're seniors Newly remodeled 1 BR apt. for respon­ 10PM-1AM — KA Bush, Clinton assess within a few credits of graduation." sible working person. Quiet building, mature neighbors. $295/12 month The decision to cancel Duke's leadership programs is lease. 688-7910. not final. Dickerson is reconsidering her decision, in economy differently consultation with the Council on Undergraduate Affairs. Houses for Rent The council met earlier this month to discuss the pro- Devil May Care- a new COED • ELECTION from page 1 grEims and will meet again Nov. 5. Townhouse for rent. Near South acappella group has auditions 11/1- cited a commercial running in some farm states suggesting Square Mall. Available MidOec. $600/ 2. Ml parts needed- if you sing, ttign he favors giving government planners the right to decide what mo. 2BR. 2BA, loft. 4934730, leave upBCInfodeskoi 0223. fields can be planted, another claim he attacked as a falsehood. message. Grad students preffered. Happy Hallo-Waynein Bush denied Clinton's accusations, and criticized the Real Estate Sales media liberally for what he said was overly pessimistic Officials continue CARA CHOTINER reporting on the economy. Townhouse, Rnley Street. Walden As for the economy itself, he said: Pond, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths: large to investigate case bedroom, full bath lower level. End Happy Birthday! Love Ben and Matt "A lot of people are hurting, but we're growing. And that unit on lovely greenway. Kitchen appli­ CARA CHOTINER is the key factor," he said in an appearance on CBS' This ances. Near Duke. Durham Freeway. Morning." He pointed to this week's report showing eco­ • COFFIN from page 1 Price negotiable. Call 383-9730. is 19 today. If you see her, wish ner a happy birthday. I love ya! Have a great. nomic growth was up 2.7 percent in the most recent job perfectly," Wardell said. "It was the best shot quarter, more than had been predicted. that he could have taken." Autos For Sale ANT "That's a pretty darned good turnaround here, pretty Although Wardell said he wished Coffin had sur­ Congrats on San Fran and happy oi beginnings, not robust growth, but it's far more impressive vived the crisis, he was pleased with the outcome CHEAP! FBI/U.S. SEIZED year anniversary. I love you! AEM than, obviously, all these economists had been predicting," under the circumstances. 89 MERCEDES $200 AEPhis Bush said. The State Bureau of Investigation is in the pro­ 86 VW $50 Come to a Barnyard Raise with B.Walsh Later, in Warren, Mich., he criticized Clinton and Gore cess of interviewing persons involved in the incident 87 MERCEDES $100 and friends. Wann3,9PM. Dress to Hoe — whom he called "Mr. Ozone" — for saying that the United including the hostages, witnesses, administrators 65 MUSTANG $50 States was falling behind other nations in key economic areas. and law enforcement personnel, said Ron Hawley, Chooseform thousands startlng$25. AEPhi RUSH "My dog Millie knows more about foreign affairs than an SBI special agent. The bureau also thoroughly FREE Information-24 Hour Hotline. Rush Retreat Sunday, Nov.l, Brown 1- investigated the crime scene on the second floor of 801-379-2929 Copyright #NC10KJC. 6PM. Mandatory, the.se two bozos," he said of Clinton and his running mate. new officers. Clinton fired back on the economy as he said that in "our Baker House, which is located in the southern 1976 Volvo Station Wagon 2400L, division ofthe Hospital. standard transmission, good tires, no Do the TIMEWARP bravest and best moments, Americans have not run away AC, worth fixing up for solid transpor- God said let there be lips and they from change." Hawley declined to comment specifically on the were BIO and they were RED and He said the country had suffered a decline in non­ status ofthe case, but said a report should be issued they said: "Come see Rocky Horror within several weeks. Misc. For Sale on the East Campus Quad at mid­ government jobs and personal income in the last four years. night on Halloween." "So when Bush tells us we should rejoice at our economic Public Safety continued Thursday to review the plight, I think we have to tell him it's time to move beyond the case and to try to identify aspects ofthe University's Weider weight bench with leg exten­ Feeling A Little TiPsy? sion and 12010 weights $50. 681- passivity and complacency ofhis presidency and of this cam­ response that could be improved such as communi­ Are you curious as to who on this cam­ cation. 2515(days) or 967-2259( nights). pus other than yourself attended the paign." Talent Identification Program's Summer "I can sympathize with people who didn't know AX FOR SALE The surrogates were limberingup for the final days. Former Residential Program (SRP)? We are too President Reagan was booked into North Carolina and what was going on," Wardell said. "People want to Kramer ST-200 Electron ic Gu its and would like to invite all Duke stu­ call Rob 684-7955. dents who attended any term of SRP to New Mexico by week's end for Bush. Jesse Jackson was in be perfectly informed, but I don't know if we could a reception on Wednesday. Nov.4 from Florida, where he said the Republicans don't understand ever do that." 5-7PM at our office: 1121 W.Maln St.lin the struggles of average Americans. the Old Coca-Cola Building near East Campus Domino's), The dress is casual "They understand playing gold. They don't understand Audio-Video and the food will bear no resemblance to caddying," he said. "We're not going to be caddying for them Union food. A call to 683-1400 to con­ firm your attendence would be appreci­ after Tuesday. Speakers for sale/ Irving Fried model ated but not required. Not so fast, Bush said. with sub-woofers, super-tweeters and When a caller expressed support for him on the CBS 2-way midrange. 84&1100. Doug Clark & the Hot Nut*. Friday show but inadvertently referred to "President Clinton," night at 9:30. The Rathskellar. Pre­ Bush swiftly broke in. Computers For Sale sented by Phi Delta Theta. Free. "President would-be Clinton," he corrected her. YO WUSSUP MacClassic with Extended II keyboard Major Attractions meeting, 7PM in 320 and software $650. Call Brian 684- Languages, Monday. Lotsa big things to 0067. THE HONORABLE DAVID DEAN Wanted to Buy TRISH FLYNN It begins and ends this Saturday. Love, Paid Volunteers Former U.S. Representative to the Republic of China UVa- DUKE your Maxwell Terrorist. and Need two tickets for Jan.17 basket­ GREGG WILKERSON! Have a Happy Needed Adviser to the Chiang Ching-Kiao Foundation for ball game vs. Virginia. Will pay good International Scholarly Exchange money. Please call Mi for Fever and Asthma Studies Ride Needed To the .gum on bottom of the shoe, Individuals 18 years and older with a recent onset of fever associated with a cold or Will talk on: HAPPY B-DAY JUL Morrissey fans unite! Rides needed li Julie Laurenzano turns 21 on Sunday! flu needed for a short research study. his Southeastern shows In Atlanta $50 paid Incentive if qualified to participate. Charlotte. Jacksonville. Ney York, etc "United States Policy Will pay half of gas. Call 684-7730 fo JUUA IS 21 dates and info. Individuals 12 years and older on daily asthma Well, not until Sunday, So buy he tonight since she can't yet! And medication needed for research studies. Toward China" Personals a big hickey for her BIRTHDAY. Up to $600 paid incentive for those PPS SUMMER INTERNS JOO-LEE-UH! chosen to participate. PPS SUmeer 1993 Independent In­ Happy Birthday Julia Laurenzano! I hope DATE: Monday, November 2,1992 terns— Sf,sn up outside Room 213 Old the world can deal with another 21 year old physics geek. Love, Reva. * * * ATTENTION PARENTS * * * TIME: 4:00 p.m. Chem for informal interviews to be Children ages 4-11 needed for held on November 2. 3, and 4. KENNEY BROWN research studies. PLACE: Room 226, Perkins Library Show your stuff (Old) man! We bellev. PAINT WARS! you. You worked hardest, now just dc Up to $400 paid incentive for those chosen to participate. Love, the Women, SPONSORED BY: ASIAN/PACIFIC For More Information FALL CLASSIC! STUDIES INSTITUTE Tickets are on sale on the BC Walkway! Call: Carolina Allergy and Asthma day aight at 9:30. The Out of the Blue and the Pitchforks an­ Research Group nual event. Nov.6 in Baldwin Auditorium on East Campus. Bring your parents at (919) 881-0309 Lecture is free and open to the public. Monday Through Friday 9 am-5 pm FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 THE CHRONICLE Sports Football teams looking to rebound after tough losses By TOM ENSTICE back. I think in his early years he would In the early hours of last Sunday morn­ throw the ball into a crowd pretty much. ing, the Atlanta Braves for the second Not to say from time to time any consecutive year were frozen out of a World quarterback's going to throw some inter­ Series championship, once again turning ceptions but he's matured a lot in that the city of Atlanta into a city of disappoint­ area." ment. Since the last time Duke has faced the So, perhaps it is fitting that Atlanta is Yellow Jackets, they have acquired a new the site of tomorrow's Halloween Atlantic head coach, Bill Lewis, formerly of East Coast Conference matchup in Bobby Dodd Carolina. Wilson said that he sees a little Stadium between the football team and bit of Lewis' old team in the way Georgia the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, two teams Tech has been using Jones. that certainly encountered disappointment "They're using him a little bit differently last Saturday. than perhaps Georgia Tech did in the last The Blue Devils were shocked in the couple of years," Wilson said. "He does not final 13 seconds ofthei r Homecoming game appear to be coming out on the perimeter with Maryland in Durham, as the Terra­ as much. They're in a one-back set a lot of pins went 89 yards in 13 seconds to steal a the time, perhaps most ofthe time, some­ 27-25 victory. what like East Carolina's offense a year At just about the same time Duke was ago, although it's not the same total con­ letting its first conference win of the sea­ cept. [Georgia Tech's] running game is son get away in Wallace Wade Stadium, more extensive I guess than East Carolina's the Yellow Jackets were down the road in would be." Chapel Hill and on their way to being This season, Georgia Tech has spread humbled by North Carolina 26-14. The the load out among five running backs who loss knocked Georgia Tech out of the top- each have more than 30 carries this sea­ 25 rankings and dealt a blow to their son. Tomorrow, however, its running at­ chances of finishing high in the ACC stand­ tack will have a slightly different look ings. because of injuries. Michael Smith, who "We know that Georgia Tech is a good leads the Yellow Jackets in rushing with football team," said head football coach 199 yards on 39 carries will start. Jimy Barry Wilson. "I'm sure they're down after Lincoln, who has 182 yards on 49 carries, their loss to Carolina in Chapel Hill Satur­ will not start due to a virus, although day afternoon." Lewis said that he anticipates that Lin­ The Georgia Tech offense is led by quar­ coln will play some. Starting in Lincoln's terback Shawn Jones who has passed for place will be JeffWright who has picked up 1,468 y.ards so far this season. The speedy 158 yards on 31 carries. Jones could create problems for the Duke Lewis said that as of Thursday, he defense if he decides to venture out ofthe wasn't sure how much Georgia Tech's other backfield, according to Wilson. running backs, William Bell and Dorsey "Obviously, because ofhis speed and his Levens, will play due to nagging injuries.

quickness, he's always a containment prob­ "We're planning on Jeff Wright and GEORGIA TECH SPORTS INFORMATION PHOTO lem," Wilson said. "He is hard to hem up, Michael Smith taking the bulk of [the much like [Florida State's] Charlie Ward. running] because they're healthy," Lewis Coleman Rudolph, an All-America candidate, leads the Georgia Tech defense with He's matured a lot I think as a quarter­ See GEORGIA TECH on page IS • 47 tackles and 7.5 sacks. Women's soccer faces N.C. State in ACC Tournament By CASEY ZIMMER the women's soccer program. North Carolina the next day. the Blue Devils and some things have This one is big. When the starting mem­ A win over second-seeded North Caro­ But for the first time in the program's changed for Bill Hempen's squad. Since bers ofthe women's soccer team take the lina State on Saturday, game time 3:00 history, the women's soccer team will face that time, Duke has posted impressive field in the Atlantic Coast Conference Tour­ p.m., will most likely se nd the Duke women someone other than Maryland in the open­ wins over 15th-ranked Central Florida nament on Saturday, they will take their to the big dance. ing round of the ACC Tournament. The and 16th-ranked Notre Dame, as well as fate in their hands along with them. With For the last four years, the Blue Devils Blue Devils, 1-2-1 in conference play this tying sixth-ranked Virginia and 19th- a win, they will almost certainly be able to have played Marylandin the first round, a year, tied Virginia for third place in the ranked Florida International. The Blue raise those hands in exultation for accom­ battle between the last two teams in the conference but earned the third seed in the Devils haven't lost in their lasteightgames, plishing something never before done by conference to earn the right to lose to tournament by virtue of a better goals dating back to a 6-0 thrashing at the hands differential than the Cavaliers. Facing off of top-ranked, undefeated and unquestion­ against second-seeded N.C. State, Duke able ACC andNCAA Tournament favorite ACC WOMEN'S SOCCER TOURNAMENT looks to avenge a 2-1 loss at the hands of North Carolina. the Wolfpack early in the year. FIRST ROUND SECOND ROUND FINALS Hempen has solidified the front line Friday Saturday Sunday A first-round win against N.C. State, with sophomore Meegan McMullin and ranked 12th in the country, will virtually freshmen Kelly Walbert and Katherine #2 NC State assure Duke of its first-ever trip to the Remy, and moved Caitlin Connolly to the (3-1, 16-4^1) NCAA Tournament. A loss, and the Blue midfield. The difference has been impres­ Devils will be in a familiar position—on sive, as the trio up front have worked well the tournament bubble. And in past years, together and Connolly has been able to 3:00 p.m. when in that position, the bubble has burst. spread her t ntensity and savvy all over the Now, the team has a chance to redeem field from the midfield position. #5 Duke itself for one of the few blemishes on its But N.C. State is on a nine-game win­ record. In a game in which the Blue Devils ning streak and is still the favorite in the (1-2-1, 13-3-2) thoroughly outplayed the higher-ranked game, Duke will have to contain the vi­ Wolfpack, N.C. State escaped Durham with cious frontline of Cunningham and senior a win that Wolfpack head coaeh Larry Kim Yankowski, as well as solve the prob­ Gross deemed "lucky." lem that the N.C. State defense poses. ACC Champion "This is what we've wanted all season," Freshman Thori Staples is one ofthe quick­ said senior co-captain Heidi Mauger. est and most solid defenders in the league "We've wanted a chance to play them again. and shut down McMullin in the first con­ #1UNC Now we have that chance and hopefully test. (4-0, 19-0) we'll put them away." In Hempen's mind, this is the chance #4 Virginia Mauger, Duke's defensive stopper, will that the team has been waiting for to say 1-1-2-1.12-3-1) have the difficult task of containing something to the tournament selection Wolfpack forward Colette Cunningham. committee. Cunningham, third in the conference with "If anybody is on a roll, I'd say N.C. State Winner of #4/#5 37 points and 16 goals and a finalist for the is on a roll," Hempen said. "But 1 hope and ACC women's athlete of the year award, I think that our team is ready to make a scorched the Blue Devils for both goals in point that we belong in that [NCAA] tour­ • #5 Maryland All games played at Duke Soccer Stadium the N.C. State win on Sept. 9. nament." J (0-4, 11-6-1) Admission $2 with student ID Thatwas the third game^qf the year for See SOCCER on page 18 •-. THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 No. 1 men's soccer to finish regular season at N.C. State

By JOHN SEELKE Carolina Wesleyan, head coach John (28), fifth in goals scored (10), and fifth in points (18), and fourth in assists (8). The top-ranked men's soccer team trav­ Rennie's 200th victory at Duke. Emotions assists (8). Another key playerfor Duke on Rennie is positive that Sunday's els to Raleighon Sunday to play third- should be high for a game that will have a Sunday is goalie Garth Lagerwey, who is matchup, pairing two of the ACCs top ranked North Carolina State in a game great effect on the postseason plans for first in the conference in goals allowed rivals, will be a low-scoring, hard-fought that will have conference and national both teams. average (0.77), second in saves percentage contest. A Blue Devil win gives the team significance. The regular seasonfinale, set (.815) and third in shutouts (5). Midfielder another shot of momentum heading into for 2:00 p.m., marks the end ofthe Duke The game against the Wolfpack contin­ A. J. Siebeneck is sixth in the conference in next weekend's postseason play. ues the trend of nationally-ranked teams The Blue Devils are coining off of two the Blue Devils have faced this season. very emotional wins-a 2-1 victory over "[This game] is another game against a Virginia that earned them their No. 1 nationally-rated opponent," Rennie said, Field hockey to close year ranking, and a 6-0 trouncing of North "The season started with Indiana and has included David son, Clemson, and Virginia, _' * *^ and now ends with State." with own destiny in hand ^.0 r%" Instead of concentrating on their new No. 1 ranking, Rennie said the Blue Devils y *#*' must continue to focus on the upcoming By DAVID ROYSTER their outings but manages to score just one It has come down to this. goal and win the game." ' "We have to worry about the NCAA After nearly two months of playing in While today's game is of critical impor­ Tournament," Rennie said. "DukeandN.C. the toughest conference in the country and tance for Duke's national standing, State are in the same region and the win­ taking on one ofthe nation's most difficult Sunday's encounter with the Tar Heels ner is likely to get home field advantage in schedules, the field hockey team's fate has will most likely determine the ACC regu­ the NCAAs." come down to two games. lar season champion and with it the top Rennie also pointed out that this game This afternoon, the ninth-ranked Blue seed in the conference tournament. The will mean the difference between the sec­ Devils (11-4) will take on William & Mary Tar Heels beat Duke 3-0 earlier tliis year Wk ond and third place see dings in next at West Campus Field and then turn their in a match that was much closer than the weekend's Atlantic CoastConference Tour­ attention to a critical matchup with No. 4 score indicates. nament in Chapel Hill. North Carolina in Chapel Hill on Sunday. If Duke wins, then the Blue Devils take The two teams that face each other on The results of the weekend will go a long home their first regular season ACC title. Sunday will have never really played way in determining Duke's seeding for the If Carolina triumphs, it still has to beat against each other before. Atlantic Coast Conference Championship Virginia next week to clinch the champi­ i "N.C. State has a very different team, next weekend in Winston-Salem and will onship. very fast, very talented," Rennie said. also be important with regard to Duke's A UNC victory Sunday and a Virginia "Duke also has a different team. I really chances of receiving a bid to the NCAA loss to the Tar Heels next week would put don't know what to expect." Tournament. the Blue Devils in a three-way tie for The Wolfpack are led by goalie Steve "The stakes are big," said head coach second place and the deadlock would be Moore, who has had five shutouts this Jacki Silar. "William & Mary is a must- decided by a draw, not by goal differential. season, along with a ,785 save percentage win game." If the Blue Devils come out on the losing and an average of 1.28 goals allowed per William & Mary is ranked sixth in the end Sunday, they will be at the mercy of a game. South Region while the Blue Devils are random drawing that could pit them against last-place Wake Forest in the play- PAUL ORSULAK/THE CHRONICLE The Blue Devils are led by senior Chris ranked fourth. Yankee, the ACC Co-Player of the Week "William & Mary has a winning record," in round ofthe ACC Tournament. A.J. Siebeneck and the men's soccer for his play against Virginia. Yankee, who Silar said. "They're very explosive. They're "We want to be in charge of our own team will take on N.C. State Sunday. is second in the conference in points scored a team that has been outshot in a lot of destiny," Silar said. A SECOND

Medical Center Store HOLOCAUST? Duke Tee Shirts & Clothing IN BOSNIA/HERZEGOVINA Medical Instruments & Books Soffet Abid Catovic Scrubwear, Lab Coats expert on the Balkan Conflict Office & School Supplies* will speak at a rally on the Chapel Steps Children's Clothing & Gifts Friday, October 30, at 4:30 pm "20% Discount on Office Supplies when Purchased on an IRi.

Just off the PRT Walkway Chapel Steps Between Duke North & South Hospitals in 106 Facilities Center Look for a collection booth in the Bryan •I* Center to donate food points and/or cash. Monday - Friday 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Sponsored by: SaJurday 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. The Bosnian Relief Committee and the Major Speakers Committee

Visa, Mastercard, Amerk:on Express, of the Duke University Union Discover, Flex, IRLPersonal Checks For more information, contact Nouman at 684-0313 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 THE CHRONICLE

Royster Svrluga Hales Zimmer Shah Greenwald HOST GUEST (107-19-4) (103-53-4) (102-SM) (102-54-4) (1G1-5S4) (98-584) Grid Picks Georgia Tech DUKE 17-10 34-21 30-13 31-7pi 27-25 31-17 Maryland North Carolina North Carolina North Carolina North Carolina North Carolina North Carolina North Carolina A trick-or-treat bonanza-It's Hallow­ Wake Forest Clemson Ciemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Ciemson Clemson een time again and the Grid Pickers have Virginia Florida State Rorida State Florida State Rorida State Rorida State Rorida State Rorida State gone out hitting the streets looking for Georgia Florida Florida Georgia Florida Georgia Florida Georgia candy. The of-age half of the crew ventured Arizona St. Southern Cal Southern Cal Southern Cal Southern Cal Southern Cal Southern Cal Southern Cal Washington Stanford Washington Washington Washington Washington Washington Washington off te Chapel Hill te join in the All-Hallow's Rutgers Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Rutgers Rutgers Virginia Tech Rutgers Rutgers Eve festivities, while the youngsters re­ Nebraska Colorado Nebraska Colorado Nebraska Nebraska Nebraska Colorado mained behind to find out the best Durham Texas Tech Texas Texas Texas Texas Texas Texas Tech Texas had to offer. East Carolina Southern Miss. East Carolina East Carolina Southern Miss. Southern Miss. East Carolina Southern Miss. Dave "Boss" Royster started the Wisconsin Illinois Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Illinois house-to-house escapades off of East Cam­ Mississippi LSU Mississippi Mississippi Mississippi Mississippi Mississippi Mississippi pus. Walking up to the first house with his Minnesota Indiana Indiana Minnesota Indiana Indiana Indiana Missouri Missouri Missouri Missouri lowa St. lowa St. Perot mask firmly affixed to his face, he towa St. Missouri lows Ohio St. Ohio St. lowa lowa Ohio St. lowa Ohio St. was greeted by Barry Svrluga "Caviar" Air Force Utah Air Force Air Force Air Force Air Force Air Force Air Force who was still getting his costume ready for Connecticut Richmond Connecticut Richmond Connecticut Connecticut Connecticut Richmond tbe foray to Chapel Hill. Delaware St. South Carolina SI Delaware St. Delaware St. South Carolina St Delaware St. Delaware St, South Carolina St. "C'mon, Caviar, fork over the candy, no Kentucky Mississippi St. Kentucky Mississippi St. Mississippi St. Mississippi St. Mississippi St. Mississippi St. fancy stuff, or I'll really blow you out in Grid Picks. I've been holding back." Sacks Krachon Enstice Hurtgen Robbins Michael Saul HOST GUEST (98-58-1} (98-58-4) <9&fl(M) (96-60-4) (93-63-4) "I don't have any candy, but here's a

Volleyball vs. Ciemson* Cameron in­ Rudolph and the rest of his defensive door Stadium, 6:00 p.m. teammates, who have allowed about 393 yards of total offense per game, should be COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL Women's soccer in ACC Champion­ challenged by the Duke offense, specifi­ ships, Duke Soccer Stadium cally running back Randy Cuthbert. In 1989 against Georgia Tech, Cuthbert had will conduct two perhaps the best game ofhis career, run­ Men's and women's swimming vs. ning for 234 yards and three touchdowns. informational meetings for N.C. State and Maryland-Baltimore, Currently, Cuthbert is third in the ACC in Duke Aquatic Center, 12:00 p.m. rushing, averaging 94.3 yards per game. prospective applicants Last week against Maryland he picked up Men's and women's cross country at 101 yards and three touchdbfthiif" ' on ACC Championships, Raleigh, N.C, "Randy Cuthbert is an outstanding indi­ Tuesday, November 3 10:00 a.m. vidual," Lewis said. "He's similar to Natrone Means ofNorth Carolina in that 3:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. Men's tennis at Clemson Invitational he's a big, strong, powerful back. We need to contain him." Location: 217 Flowers Have a Nice Fright Night! Beer Halloween * £ * •? x-%% Specials am-fi Horror L«0-0*S*E Suitcase & Quik I ^^k Flicks 12 pk. Specials Shop | %^ JP Miller Ute S •Halloween •R*|«T«OH«E< $6.99/12 pk - Fright Night Suntory Erwin Road at 9th * Nightmare on at the Hideaway $3.19/6pk Hm5 Rolling Rock and Main Streets •Diacnla TONIGHT $7.39/12 pk Open Daily Molson 'Frankenstein 10pm $2 $8.99/12 pk 6:30 A.M. to Midnight •ChUd'sPlay Colders 'prize giveaway drawing* $5.99/12 pk 286-4110 Gator jaaiSLl 160 • Redneck Zombies profits goto CHANCE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992 THE CHRONICLE Volleyball squares off against Georgia Tech, Clemson

By LEWIS KRAUSKOPF the South Region. ets are vying for the ACC crown. Senior -Amy Verhoeven leads the ACC in As the Atlantic Coast Conference sea­ The team will be facing the 14th-ranked The Tech attack is led by middle blocker kills per game (4.15), while leading the son winds down, the Duke volleyball team team in the region in Georgia Tech, which Kerry Annel and setter Jennifer Castillo. Blue Devils in kills in 13 of their 21 matches. will be in high gear comes into the Annel, a freshman, has immediately made Junior Jenny Rohrig, who last Saturday this weekend as it match at 25-7, 2-1 her mark on the league as she is currently participated in 11 of Duke's season-high faces Georgia Tech ACC VOLLEYBALL STANDINGS in the ACC, on Fri­ leading her team in kills, while Castillo, a 23 blocks, is second in the conference in and Clemson at League Overall day night. The Blue senior, has provided leadership forTech as blocks per game (1.27). Leading Duke in Cameron Indoor Devils' 15-game she tops the team with 993 assists. digs and hitting percentage are two sopho­ Duke »-l 17-* Stadium. winning streak The following evening, the Blue Devils mores, Ashley Wacholer and Adrian Nicol, Florida State 3-1 16-5 against the Yellow who have both notched 289 digs on the The Blue Devils, Maryland 3-1 16-6 will square off against Clemson, which last year's ACC Jackets is on the boasts an impressive 22-4 record, with two year. Wacholder is also second on the team Georgia Tech champions, are cur­ 2-1 25-7 line as Duke has ofthe four losses coming in league play to with 264 kills while Nicol owns an impres­ rently tied with North Carolina 2-2 12-10 never fallen to Florida State and Maryland. sive .330 hitting percentage. Finally, fresh­ Florida State and Clemson 1-2 224 Georgia Tech. The Tigers are ledby two sophomores,Robin man Cappy Meyer is averaging 12.16 as­ Maryland for first N.C. State 0-2 11-12 But this may be Kibben and Niki Maser, who lead Clemson sists per game, putting her at 15th in the place in the confer­ Virginia 0-4 10-15 the toughest Tech with 304 kills and 413 assists respectively. nation. If Meyer keeps up this pace she will ence with a 3-1 team that the Blue finish her rookie campaign second on The Blue Devils boast a well-rounded Duke's all-time single season record chart record. Overall, Duke enters the weekend Devils have ever faced. Behind second- attack, as five players lead the team in five at 17-4 on the season and is ranked sixth in year coach Shelton Collier, the Lady Jack- behind Karen Greiner (13.58).

Kic1 gglas—With— s IkJVxARKETS & JVIANAGEMENT STUDIES Senator Terry Sanford

AND SPECIAL GUEST. iring 1993 Senator Core and Elective Courses Bob Kerrey CORE COURSES —meet Democratic Candidates—

Hot dogs, drinks & entertainment yrovided. SOC 142.1 Organizations & Global Perepec MWF 12:40-1:30 W10.1I1 Gereffi,G. Monday, November 2nd SOC 144.01 Organizations & Environments MW 3:25^1:45 W9.129 Budros, A. 5:00pm-7pm SOC 155.01 Organizations & Management MWF 9:10-10:00 W9.129 Janoski, T. at Durham Athletic Park SOC 158.01 Markets & Marketing TH 9:10-10:25 W6.116 Spenner. K. —Home ofthe Durham Bulls— SOC 159.01 Enttepreneurehip MWF 9:10-10:00 W9.126 Stephens, C. ADMISSION IS FREE SOC225D.01 Careers & Labor Markets TH 10:45-12:00 W9.259 DiPrete,T.

SOC225E.01 Sociology of Work TH 5:05-6:20 W9.259 Simpson, I.

ALL HALLOWS' ELECTIVE COURSES CA 110.01 Advertising & Society TH 3:204:45 W9.259 Luttrell, W. EVE SERVICE C-L: SOC 160; ENG 120 ECO 134.01 Japanese Economy & History TH 9:1010:25 W10.232 Bronfenbrenner, M

Saturday, October 31, ECO 140.01 Comparative Economic Systems TH 1:55-3:10 W10.231 Naylor, TH. 10:30 p.m. ECO 189.01 Business & Government TH 9:1010:25 W10.139 Vernon, JM. HST 143B.01 The Emergence of Modem Japan MWF 9:10-10:00 EB.240 Gordon, A

Duke Chapel MS 120.01 Managerial Effectiveness MW 3:254:40 W10.111 Studer-Ellis,E.

MS 120.02 Managerial Effectiveness MW 1:503:05 W10.111 Stephens, C.U.

An ecumenical commemoration of those MS 161.01 Marketing Management MW 1:503:05 W10.229 Gaaijarino,EC. people of faith who have gone before PPS 145D.01 us, by candlelight. The eucharist will Leadership, Policy & Change TH 3:304:45 W6.I16 Payne, B.L. PPS 195S.61 also be celebrated]^'!" |^pjflj Corporate Leadership MW 10:20-11:35 W6.116 Brown, A.

S X143 01 Management & Lator Relations MWF 12:401:30 W9.129 Janoski. T. Sponsored by S X156 01 Global Contexts in Sci/Tech MW 1:50-3:05 W9.129 0'Rand,A Duke Campus Ministry ••

THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1992

FREE E N V I R O N M E N TA L CAREERS SEMINAR

The perfect job. One that lets you hold fast to your principles and also offers security and a strong salary. Those are the Kinds of positions David J Warner will be discussing in his seminar on environmental careers FREE TO STUDENTS Topics will include: Marketplace Trends, Hot Jobs, Career Descriptions, Salaries, Inter­ Bryan Center - Von Canon Hall XT national Opportunities, Course Choices, and Employers Offering Environmental Careers. Monday, November 2 - 4:00 pm. Warner is an environmental scientist with Delta Environmental Consultants and Hosted By: author of Environmental Careers: A Practical Guide Duke University School ofthe Environment to Opportunities in the 90s. Come find out why high L/NDERWRJTTEN BY. Duke University Career Development Center principles and good pay aren't the only reasons to DUKE POWER Mfrh Delta pursue an environmental career. S^/tepfeVtftfifiwgy M