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lHE L/HRONICLE The big bad wolf? FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1991 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 87, NO. 54 Gephardt says U.S. economic strength declining By ROGER MADOFF ourselves/' he said. Elementary schools, secondary Other ideas to improve train­ Speaking on America's declin­ The congressman offered a plan schools and high schools need ing in the work force included a ing economic strength, Represen­ to raise America's ability to com­ improvements. The federal gov­ vocational corps, he said, point­ tative Richard Gephardt of Mis­ pete with Japan and Germany. ernment should mandate mini­ ing out that people in other coun­ souri called on students to help The plan focused on education, mum educational standards by tries who have no formal educa­ the country compete internation­ trade, and industrial develop­ national testing, he said. tion can still go into skilled fields. ally. ment. Gephardt suggested linking "We need a training regime that "I believe that the future of our Gephardt wants to place a state-wide performance stan­ really works," he said. country can be bright," Gephardt strong emphasis on education. dards on the tests to extra federal An apprenticeship program said, challenging the audience to "Education and training must be funding. that teaches management skills overcome the problems facing an absolute imperative if we are Gephardt drew applause from and other responsibilities could America in his speech in Page to maintain a high standard of the audience when he said, "Any take people out of the cycle of Auditorium Thursday evening. living .... If I get nothing else college student who can get in "dead end jobs," he said. "It all depends on the intent across to you tonight, we must ought to be able to go. There Gephardt also spoke of trade as and desire that we find within focus on education." should be no excuses." an integral part of America's com- SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE See GEPHARDT on page 10 • Richard Gephardt Council sets financial priorities, OKs major By STEPHEN HIEL dents and faculty, he said. The Arts and Sciences Council Tuition increases were men­ passed a resolution Thursday stat­ tioned in the resolution as a means ing faculty financial priorities in of increasing income. The Uni­ light ofthe current budget short­ versity ranks "18th in tuition costs fall and voted to approve a pro­ among the 24 major private uni­ posal for a new undergraduate versities," according to the reso­ program in Environmental Sci­ lution, which suggested there was ence and Policy. room for increases. The first part ofthe priorities Larger enrollment was also resolution examined Arts and mentioned as a longer-term op­ Sciences resources, which include tion. "In the short run, we nave both graduate and undergradu­ sufficient academic resources to ate assets. External causes in­ provide for another 100 students cluding "the recession, diminished or so with no perceptible negative investment income,.. . lower re­ consequences," stated the resolu­ BRIAN SCULLY/THE CHRONICLE turns on endowment and a short­ tion. fall in annual fund receipts" were The second part ofthe resolu­ Where is Public Safety when you need them? cited in the resolution as primary tion prioritized expenditures. The squirrel crime wave is getting out of hand. First car covers, then cars. Who knows? causes for the forecasted budget Maintaining a need-blind admis­ gaps. sions policy, maintainingthe com­ The resolution called for pos­ mitment to meet 100 percent of sible changes in three areas—the need for students receiving finan­ University financial formula, tu­ cial aid and maintaining competi­ ition and enrollment—in order to tive faculty salaries were listed Popular Durham restaurateur dies increase income. as the top three concerns, in no The resolution suggested a re­ particular order. duction in the percentage of gen­ After these "essential" needs, From staff reports as fried chicken, vegetables, hush New York Yankees. eral University administration maintaining the strength ofthe The founder of one of Durham's puppies and, of course, barbecue. costs paid for by Arts and Sci­ research library, modernizing most popular restaurants, The restaurant will be closed ences. Under the present finan­ computing facilities and continu­ Bullock's Bar-B-Cue, died Tues­ Especially popular among Uni­ Saturday in honor of Bullock, the cial formula, Arts and Sciences ing improvements in the finan­ day at the age of 86. versity students is the "family Herald-Sun reported. are slated to pay 86 percent ofthe cial support of graduate students William Bullock, who started style" or all-you-can-eat option at "We've certainly experienced a University's general administra­ rounded out the top six priorities. his business in 1952, had been ill the eatery located on Wortham loss and everybody feels that our tion costs, said Malcolm Gillis, The council clearly delineated for quite some time, according to Road. employees had a lot of respect for dean of the faculty of Arts and these from the seventh and eighth an article in Thursday's Durham The entrance to Bullock's is him," the paper quoted his son Sciences. priorities, which were incremen­ Herald-Sun. decked with photos of its founder Tommy as saying. "He took pride "That figure is not tenable," tal expansion ofthe arts and sci­ Bullock's is known for its South­ posing with stars such as Kenny in seeing people enjoy his barbe­ Gillis said. Arts and Sciences only ences faculty and maintaining ern cooking, including dishes such Rogers, Ronald Reagan and the cue." accounts for 70 percent of stu­ See COUNCIL on page 10 • Senior class gift vote ends in tie; runoff election Tuesday

By PEGGY KRENDL Approximately $58,000 of the viders. Duke, North Carolina Central senior Mandeep Dhillon, co-chair A runoff will be held on Nov. 19 expected $70,000 senior gift will The program would help Uni­ University, and the Durham com­ ofthe senior class gift committee. to break the deadlock between be given to one of the organiza­ versity employees put their chil­ munity. This year Trinity and Engineer­ two Senior Class Gift proposals: tions. The other $12,000 will be dren in day care. A child care ing seniors are combining their Habitat for Humanity and Duke put into the University's Annual center for University employees, The families that move into the gift funds for the first time. There Child Care. Fund. which opened in August 1990, homes would repay Habitat for are about 1,500 seniors in the Duke Child Care would use the offers space for 80 children. There Humanity through small inter­ combined senior classes, Dhillon Both proposals received 256 funds from the senior gift to pur­ are 500 children on a waiting list. est-free payments. The payments estimated. votes from the senior class in chase start-up kits for child day­ would then be used for building Wednesday's election. A plural­ care providers who take children The proposal from Habitat for other homes. Seniors can vote Tuesday be­ ity was needed to win the elec­ into their homes or go to a child's Humanity would use the gift tween 10 a.m. and 6 a.m. at one of tion. The third proposal, from the home. The money would also pro­ money to build three homes for The election turn-out was "sig­ three locations: Bryan Center, Community Service Center, re­ vide training materials and equip­ the underprivileged. The houses nificantly higher that it has been East Campus Union and the En­ ceived 142 votes. ment for in-home day care pro­ would be built bv volunteers from in previous years," said Trinity gineering Building. PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1991 World and National

Newsfile U.S. indicts two Libyans in Pan Am bombing Associated Press By ANDREW ROSENTHAL bomb's timing device and other evidence Soviets may leave Cuba: Talks N.Y. Times News Service that led investigators away from those two on the withdrawal of Soviet troops WASHINGTON — The United States countries and toward Libya. from Cuba began Thursday in Havana indicted two Libyan intelligence agents on "All Americans are horrified by the mon­ in what the official Cuban news agency Thursday in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am strous nature of the Pan Am bombing," described as a frosty atmosphere. Flight 103 over Scotland and left open the Fitzwater said. "We call to judgment those possibility of military retaliation for an responsible." Implants still available: AFood attack that killed 270 people and became a Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd of Great and Drug Administration panel horrific symbol of terrorism. Britain said in London: 'This was a mass unanimously recommended Thurs­ As the authorities in Scotland issued murder which is alleged to involve the day that silicone-gel breast implants similar indictments against the two Liby­ organs of government of a state. This was remain available to women despite ans, who are believed to be in Libya and a fiendish act of wickedness. It cannot be finding that safety data submitted by are unlikely to be extradited to the United passed over or ignored." four manufacturers was inadequate. States for trial, the White House all but But the indictments also stood as a state­ blamed Libya's leader, Col. Moammar ment of policy toward Libya and signaled Airline's finances crash: Mid­ Gadhafi, forthe bombing. 'This consistent a new round of tensions in the long-volatile way Airlines employees and others pattern of Libyan-inspired terrorism dates Libyan-American relationship. Over the who depended on it for their liveli­ from early in Gadhafi's leadership and years, the United States has regularly hoods scrambled to find a new begin­ cannot be ignored," said Marlin Fitzwater, accused Libya of terrorism, including the UPI PHOTO ning Thursday after the surprise the White House spokesman. See BOMB on page 7 • Moammar Gadhafi whirlwind collapse of the carrier that At the same time, the United States said once symbolized growth and success. there was no evidence to link Syria and Iran, which until about a year ago were SerbS ClOSe in: Serb-dominated prime suspects, to the bombing of Flight Three year old data indicate forces fighting house-to-house closed 103, and officials did not appear interested in Thursday on the center of Vukovar, in further pursuing their possible involve­ a bombed and battered Danube river ment. city where Croat rebels have been Administration officials said their con­ China helping build reactor under siege for three months. clusions about Iran and Syria were based solely on the results ofthe long investiga­ By ELAINE SCIOLINO photos revealed that the secret plant was tion and had nothing to do with the Middle N.Y. Times News Service well under construction. By that time, the East peace talks, in which Syria's partici­ WASHINGTON — The United States project had advanced too far to be easily Weather pation has been crucial, or with American received clear intelligence data three years stopped. efforts to improve relations with Iran. ago indicating that China was helping The Algerian program is part of an ag­ Weekend Officials said suspicions of Syrian and Algeria build a nuclear reactor that many gressive and secret Chinese campaign to High: mid 70s • Sunny Iranian involvement fivst surfaced because administration officials suspect is intended export technology and weapons that takes Low: low 50s the bomb was of a type used by a Syrian- for nuclear weapons research and produc­ advantage of uneven American and other This Chronicle has 24 pages. Don't based terrorist group backed by Iran. But tion, according to current and former se­ Western efforts to stem the spread of say you weren't warned. they said that an inch-by-inch search of an nior administration officials. nuclear, chemical and other weapons of 845-square-mile area surrounding the But American officials did nothing with mass destruction. crash site had more recently produced the the data until late last year, after satellite See REACTOR on page 11 • Walk to Campus*

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TIM Apart nwnt P*opt* or Ride the Duke Shuttle! FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 3 Task force examines issues facing homosexual students By CAROL VENABLE administrators and faculty, letters contact­ implications ofthe recent addition of gays, ministrators from both the gay and straight A new task force has begun investigat­ ing student organizations and the creation lesbians and bisexuals to the University's communities, McDonald said. ing the status and concerns of homosexual of a survey to be distributed to all University nondiscrimination statement; housing; The group meets once every two weeks students at the University. students in the spring. safety; health; enrollment in the ROTC in a closed session, Slebos said. In addition, "We're supposed to in some way take a President Keith Brodie approved the task programs and the teaching of literature the task force has three committees dealing look at what it's like to be a gay, lesbian or force's formation in the spring of 1991. It written by gays, lesbians and bisexuals, with student, institutional, and health and bisexual student here and to make some was precipitated by an open forum held in Slebos said. safety concerns. recommendations that relate to those find­ the fall of 1990 by the Duke Gay and Les­ He refused to elaborate on these issues. ings and to begin to implement some things," bian Association. The group felt that gay, Other task force members were forbidden The task force is expected to report its said William Slebos, process consultant in lesbian and bisexual students were ne­ to comment without his permission. "The findings and decisions to Brodie, Leonard human resources and chair of the Task glected, said Mickey McDonald, a graduate task force felt that because ofthe nature of Beckum, vice provost, and Janet Dickerson, Force on Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Mat­ student in mathematics and vice chair of the work, they didn't want information fly­ vice-president of student affairs, at the end ters. the task force. ing out willy-nilly," Slebos said. of this academic year. It will share any The task force is presently gathering data "We'll be tackling a lot of issues that the information gathered with the President's on attitudes, issues and policies involving DGLA isn't tackling," McDonald said. The task force is comprised of undergradu­ Committee on Nondiscrimination formed these students through interviews with The task force will be investigating the ate and graduate students, faculty and ad­ last year. Stress just a word, alumnus says in new self-help book

By ERIC LARSON said. Traditional stress-management tech­ "When we think a problem exists in our niques emphasize managing time and think­ mind, we think we can control it, that it is ing ofthe mind and body as separate, but a just as easy as changing our minds." Such a University alumnus believes these distinc­ mind-set can only lead to failure and frus­ tions are unhealthy. tration, since most stress-related problems For most, stress is an obstacle, yet for Dr. are deeply ingrained in the whole body. Morton Orman, Trinity '69, stress is simply "Many of our tendencies are hard-wired a word, and he has devoted a few thousand in our bodies, and that you can't change." other words to explain this point in "The 14 For example, the tendencies to be overly Day Stress Cure" (Breakthru Publishing, critical or to think negatively can be com­ 1991, 323 pp., Houston). Orman earns his pared to the knowledge of how to ride a living by helping professionals and other bicycle. "There is no way you can unlearn patients cope with the causes of stress in that," Orman said. their lives. "It is not because you are mentally weak, In his book the Baltimore native attempts but because those processes are in your to help people wrestle with their stress- body," Orman said. related problems without getting tangled Once people realize such tendencies may up in the burden ofthe term. be with them forever, their goals should be "Stress is a word we use, and that is all it to organize their behavior to combat them. is. We cannot deal with stress. What we can A heavy drinker may always be prone to deal with is your anxiety, your anger, your over-drinking, but he may still be able to grief," said Orman, who has been counsel­ steer his actions away from alcohol. ing patients for 10 years in addition to Orman's method is different from those practicing internal medicine. of stress-management courses, which con­ Orman calls himself a proponent of sist of mainly relaxation, exercise and diet "biolinguistics," a model which holds that techniques, he said. Orman's approach ex­ GREG PAZIANOS/THE CHRONICLE the human being is "a body which has plores situations in which people react nega­ unique and remarkable capacities for lan­ tively and tries to figure out why. In the closet guage." The idea runs counter to the tradi­ "In order to get angry, there are certain This student seems to enjoy sharing small, cramped spaces with his laundry. tional separation of mind and body, a dis­ ways to think We feel the anger, we see tinction "that can cause people to suffer," he See STRESS on page 17 •

Experience Duke Center for Judaic Studies SINGAPORE! is proud to Present Dr. Joseph Dan of the Hebrew University with Good Vision Homai McDowell and Good Looks... Foremost contemporary authority on Jewish Mysticism and Singapore students at a Great Price! Author of Gershom Scholem and the Mystical Dimension of Jewish History, Egwin Sung and Eng Lim 20% Discount The Early Kabbalah, Jewish Mysticism and for Duke students, faculty and employees for Jewish Ethics, The Teachings ofHasidism, complete pairs of prescription eyewear. No time Studies in Jewish Mysticism limit. Guaranteed best price on complete eye­ FREE Oriental Lunch glasses in the Durham area. Lecturing on Friday, Nov, 15, 12:30-1:30, DAILY WEAR CONTACT LENSES 'The Impact of the Spanish Expulsion on Price Per Pair Jewish Mysticism and Spirituality" at the BAUSCH & LOMB ....$39.95 B, U, 03, 04 Mary Lou Williams Center AMERICAN HYDRON $39-95 This lecture commemorates the 02 Union West Z-6, Z-4 500th Anniversary ofthe Expulsion BARNES HIND $39-95 Softmates I of the Jews from Spain. CIBA - Clear, Visitint $39-95 Sunday, November 17, 7:30 p.m. Must bring copy of act for sale. 136 Social Sciences Co-sponsored by Student Activities, Good through 12-25-91 Brightleaf (across from Perkins Library, Duke West Campus) Spectrum Cultural Coalition, & Mon-Fri. 10-5:30 Optical Mary Lou Williams Center Saturday by appointment 683-3464, 908 W. Main St., Durham fo

CALENDAR Bawdy "Cuckolds" comedy comes to campus

Friday, November 15 By MARK HEIMANN The stage is set for Duke Drama's pro­ Silent Echoes PSI Theater, Durham Arts Council duction of the commedia dell'arte classic, 120 Morris Street, 8 p.m. 'Three Cuckolds." Commedia dell'arte is a Admission $8, Students $4 low comedy theater style which was popu­ This multi-cultural multi-media show fea* lar in the 16th and 17th centuries. The form is known for its spontaneity. Actors were originally given only plot out­ lines instead of full scripts. Ttiey then improvised their lines onstage. In 1958, playwright Leon Katz devel­ fhe oped an original commedia plot outline ini" into the full script, "Three Cuckolds." Duke the Drama's present production is artist-in- residence Johnny Simons' adaptation of Katz's script. Simons is directing this play for the fifth Friday, November 15-Saturday, time in his career. He keeps coming back to November 16 this play because "it is a really good ex­ Three Cuckolds ample of what we think commedia was Duke Drama like.. .it's rough, rustic theater." Sheafer Theater Simons believes that the style primarily Bryan Center, 8 p.m. Admission $6, Students $4 deals with "sex, food. . .that's about it." See preview on this page. Commedia dell'arte deals primarily with sexual matters because, in the 16th and SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE Ark Dances 17th century, such themes attracted audi­ Steve Monroe, Ari Fliakos, Sarah Urech and Gary Budoff in "Three Cuckolds." The Ark Dance Studio ences and prompted them to give coins to East Campus, 8 p.m. the actors after the show. tion— it features Arlecchino in a hilarious people having a good time!" Simons pledges Admission is free to the pubiic. See pre Actors usually specialized in specific tale of manipulation and seduction. that the show will be true to the commedia view on page 5. stock characters who were known through­ "Three Cuckolds" is the story of three style-complete with "earthy body lan­ Hans Davidsson guage." Duke Chapei, 5 p.m. out Italy. Stock characters ofthe commedia old, ugly husbands who are dissatisfied theater have descendants in the comedy of with their own wives. However, each man "Three Cuckolds" will be performed in this era, Simons said. For example, the is interested in the others' wives. The ugly Sheafer Theater November 15,16,19,20, Marx Brothers had a style similar to that old men, who truly believe that they are 21,22,23at8p.mandNovemberl7and24 of commedia dell'arte—and Chico's name ladies' men, are manipulated throughout at 2 p.m. It will be presented in two acts and character were even derived from the by the deceptive joker, Arlecchino, who is with a ten minute intermission. Admis­ famous stock character Arlecchino. trying to get whatever he can—whether it sion is $6 for the public and $4 for stu­ be sex, food... dents. Arlecchino, the first actual harlequin, The show is "a ridiculous comedy that is The production is dedicated to Trinity appears in many ofthe commedia dell'arte typical ofthe commedia plot," Simons said. sophomore Alex Cohen, who died in a car 1 scenarios/Three Cuckolds" is no excep- "There is no deep meaning, just a bunch of accident earlier this semester.

• •'•.. •'''.-.•'' 7 : ' '•' XXX 11 MEN GOT GOTTEN FRtDAY, NOVEMBER 15. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 5

Tuesday, November 19 Weekend's Ark Dances promises diversity Dmitri Pokrovsky Ensemble Page Auditorium, 8 p.m. Admission $8 The Ensemble will present an evening of Students will dance in African, ballet, jazz and modern styles Russian folk music and dance as part of the Institute of the Arts Folk Masters series. By JAMIE FRANKLIN of Ark Dances' first section. Wolff calls it trays the transition from the safety of Winterwinds Ark Dances has become a tradition. "ethnic" because the dance is inherently childhood to the terrifying freedom of inde­ Mallarme Chamber Players PSi Theater, Durham Arts Council Every fall, the informal dance concert gives Haitian, intermixed with elements of other pendence. Pittman will dance solo to mu­ 120 Morris Street, 8 p.m. student choreographers and dancers a African dance. sic by pop singer Kate Bush. Admission $12 venue for presenting their latest works. "I used my background as a Haitian "It's about the different choices one is The Maiiarme concert of woodwind-based Ark Dances 1991 will be especially dancer and applied it to African folk dance," faced with in the transitional period from pieces includes performances by depart­ memorable. For the first time, the annual Wolff said. "It's basically a story of a people, clinging to one's old cultural background ment of music faculty members Michael concert will feature performances in all of lightheartedness despite burdens." "Eth­ and becoming an independent self," Votta {bass clarinet) and Jane Hawkins four styles of dance currently taught at nic Dance" will be performed by eight danc­ Pittman said. "I go back to the same spot (piano). Duke (African, jazz, ballet and modern), ers to music by Olatunji. many times during the piece. It represents Exhibits according to Duke Dance artist-in-resi­ Wolff is a member of Dance Black, a the place where I grew up—it confines me, dence Carol Childs. This year's concert student dance club that has been active at but it still influences me at the beginning. Art of the —Selections from the will also feature pieces by two professional Later, when I go back to that place, it's Collection of the Eli Broad Family the University since the 1970s. "Dance Foundation choreographers, commissioned by the Duke Black got started to promote traditional more of a struggle. I completely break free, Duke University Museum of Art Dance Club. forms of African dance, because our forms but it becomes hard for me to move. It's Main Gallery Ark Dances consists of two sections, sepa­ of dance and ways of moving were being still a piece in progress." The 32 works selected by DUMA present a rated by an intermission. Eight pieces will largely ignored," said Dionne Gonder, presi­ "Blood shot eyes," will be the first ballet spectrum of 1980s art and will run through be performed. dent of Dance Black. piece ever included in Ark Dances. The January 5. Local artist Tony Johnson choreo­ "Folded Bird," a pit*^ by area choreogra­ piece was choreographed by Trinity first The Dalai Lama - My Tibet graphed two pieces for the first half of the pher Mary Lameka, will finish out the first year student Amy Nickell and Trinity Duke University Museum of Art evening. His first work, "Impulse," will be half of Ark Dances. Five dance students will sophomore Laura Jones. The choreogra­ North Gallery phers pair classical ballet movement with This exhibit by photographer Galen Rowell performed by four Duke Dance members. perform the piece to the music of Ray Lynch. will run through November 17 in honor of Live piano music will accompany the piece, Ark Dances' second half will begin with jazz by Pat Benetar. the Year of Tibet, an international celebra­ as University employee Mary Norton im­ "Prophesy Fulfilled," a piece choreograhed "It's sometimes hard for people to sit tion ofthe ancient cultural heritage of Tibet. provises on Leonard Bernstein's "Psalms." by Dance Black member Thema Bryant, a through classical dance, so we decided to The World as I See It "It's about the subtle impulses of the Trinity first year student. Bryant sets the jazz it up a little," Nickell said. Lilly Library Gallery movement of bodies," Johnson said. "I used piece to the soundtrack of "Chaka Zulu," a The last piece of the evening will be This exhibition by Chapel Hill photographer images offish—how fish travel in schools—to musical which details the life of a legend­ "Calle Luchar," a jazz dance choreographed David Minton will run through November 30. show the subtle ways bodies move," he said. ary African warrior. by local artist Joy Javits to the music of Louisa Tio Johnson's second piece, "Grandfather," "My piece is a message of hope," Bryant West Side Story. "The musical is so inspir­ Perkins Library Gallery Recent Works by Catalina Arocena symbolizes the progression of life from said. "It's a matter of having expectations ing," said Javits, who formerly taught at Institute of the Arts Gallery infancy to very old age. and aspiration. It shows that you can be a UNC and Yale. "I was thinking about vio­ Bivins Building "I wanted to show the regression of old great warrior, too. The dancers work to­ lence—the killing, the street gangs, the Uruguayan artist Arocena's painting is a age," Johnson said. "There's really no dif­ gether at first, showing the value of com­ prejudice and conflict that sill exist—but if fusion of European classicism and New ference between a baby and when the body munity spirit. Then they become more people just look into the eyes of the indi­ York abstract painting. Theexhibition opens is old. I tried to show the spirituality fo the individualistic, looser—when they start vidual, then they can get along. This dance Sunday and runs through November 13. process, to understand the journey of grow­ smiling, you see that they've achieved is about that:—it's a synopsis ofthe play in (See review on page 4.) ing old." Johnson will dance this solo piece greatness," she said. just six minutes!" Javits said. Recent Paintings and Drawings to music by Vivaldi. Duke Dance Club president Kimberly Ark Dances will be presented this Friday Brown Gallery Bryan Center Exhibition by artist Genevieve Cotter. Engineering junior Josianne Wolff cho­ Pittman, a Trinity junior, choreographed and Saturday at 8 p.m. at the Ark on East reographed "Ethnic Dance," another part the program's next piece. "Choices" por­ Campus. Admission is free to the public.

RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS The Healthy Devil by Lindcf Carl, Ph.D. Health Education Coordinator, Duke Family Medicine Center HOW TO PROTECT YOURSELF AGAINST THE AIDS VIRUS Approximately 1 in 500 U.S. college students is infected with HIV. HIV transmis­ sion can occur sexually or nonsexually through the exchange of infected body fluids, primarily blood, semen, or vaginal secretions. HIV is not transmitted through casual contact (sharing drinks, hugging, toilet seats).

Unless you abstain from sexual activity, therisks of contracting HIV can only be reduced, not eliminated. By consistently practicing safer sex and by using a combination of latex condoms or dental dams and spermicidal lubricant containing Nonoxynol 9, the risk of contracting AIDS can be reduced for oral, vaginal or anal intercourse.

When using condoms: 1) Put spermicidal lubricants on the condom before penetration since the virus OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS ON THESE may be present in the pre-ejaculatory fluid. DOORS FIRST. 2) Use only latex condoms since the virus can pass through animal skin condoms. Why? Because Army ROTC helps you develop 3) Throw away all condoms with an old expiration date. management and leadership skills. Builds your self-confidence. And makes you a desirable 4) Use lubricated condoms to reduce breakage. candidate in the job market. There's no obligation until your junior year, 5) Use water based lubricants such as K-Y jelly. Do NOT use vaseline, baby oil or but stick with it and you'll have what it takes to succeed—in college and in life. other oil-based lubricants. Oil based lubricants make the condom fall apart. 6) For vaginal sex, always use additional spermicide on the outside ofthe condom and inside the vagina. 7) Since condoms vary, experiment until you find a comfortable brand. ARMY ROTC 8) Adopt condoms with spermicide forbuth control and for increased protection THE SMARTEST COLLEGE against other sexually transmitted diseases. COURSE YOU CAN TAKE. 9) Compare the low price at Duke University Family Medicine Center for major national brands with prices available elsewhere. For Scholarship and Enrollment Information, Contact Cpt. Hampton Hite For information and counseling or programs on AIDS and Safer Sex, visit the Call toll free 1-800-222-9184 Healthy Devil Health Education Center, 113 House O, next to Phi Kappa Psi, 11 or 919-684-5895 (collect) a.m.-4p.m. M-Th,1 p.m.-4p.m. F, or call 684-3620,325, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m., M-F. PAGE 6 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 15, 1991 Peeper harasses third floor Bassett room; car vandalized

From staff reports said. When Public Safety arrived, the sus­ pus. A senior reported to Duke Public Safety Crime briefs pect could not be found, he said. The visitor reported several items sto­ that she was awakened Thursday by a Public Safety has no leads. len: car battery, license plate, checkbook white man looking through her dormitory The suspect shouted, "Damn, this is a and credit cards. room window at 3:15 a.m. girls' dorm," according to Dean. Bassett Car broken into: A grey '83 Buick The student awoke when she heard a houses both women and men. owned by a visitor to campus was broken The driver's door could not be secured, loud noise outside her window in Bassett The suspect then proceeded to walk into sometime between 5 p.m. Nov. 12 and Dean said. dormitory on East Campus, said Chief across the roof of the archway between 11:45 Nov. 13 while parked on Towerview The loss in stolen property totaled $70. Robert Dean of Public Safety. Bassett and Baldwin Auditorium, Dean Road near Edens parking lot on West Cam­ Public Safety has no leads. Local bank funds experiential leadership program at Fuqua From staff reports team. Futures Markets. He has received several Branch Banking and Trust Co. will do­ News briefs research awards, and has also taught at nate $250,000 to the Fuqua School of Busi­ Whaley of a winner: Fuqua profes­ the Universities of Toronto and Alberta, as ness to support a new leadership program. issues. They are taught using non-tradi­ sor Robert Whaley received the 1991 NCNB well as at Vanderbilt University. The grant will establish the BB&T Lead­ tional methods and will be Fuqua's first Faculty Award November 2, Duke News Whaley was nominated by faculty mem­ ership Assessment Week, a program which integrative learning experience. Designed Service reported. bers and chosen as the winner by the features outdoor physical challenges which to enhance team building and leadership Whaley received the award for his con­ school's Board of Visitors during their are designed to build leadership and team­ abilities, the courses will feature outdoor tribution in educating business and aca­ November 1-2 meeting. A cash stipend is work among new students, according to exercises designed to develop students' demic leaders. The finance professor is awarded with the prize. Duke News Service. ability to work effectively as team mem­ director of the Futures and Options Re­ Whaley is the author of several books, "We are confident that this program also bers, said Keller. search Center. and has published over 20 articles since he will initiate a strong sense of community "I believe that MBA programs can be too "This is an honor bestowed by Bob arrived at Fuqua. Whaley has received among the students that will continue as a mechanical," said John Allison, chairman Whaley's own colleagues for substantial several research awards, includingthe Gra­ solid foundation throughout their two years and chief executive officer of BB&T, in the achievements in research, leadership, ham and Dodd Scroll for excellence in of study at Duke," Thomas Keller, dean of release. "Much of managing is leading teaching and service to the Fuqua School," financial writing, the Canadian Securities Fuqua, said in a press release. people, which requires intellectual and Keller said. "With his leadership, we have Institute Award for Best Paper in Invest­ Among the curriculum changes is the spiritual elements." built one of the top finance groups in the ments in 1989, and the Richard L. introduction of an integrative learning Allison, a 1974 graduate of Fuqua's country." Rosenthal Award for innovation in Invest­ experience at the start of each semester. Evening Executive MBA Program, said Whaley has written several books and ment Management/Corporate Finance. These intensive, one-week courses focus BB&T uses both Outward Bound and self- more than twenty articles since he arrived The NCNB Corporation established the on practical applications of vital business awareness exercises with its management at Fuqua, and is co-editor of The Review of award in 1986.

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Do allGJironicle staff types: Our regular staff meeting is at the regular time (i. e. 3:30J 33e t£ere or Se insulted in QriJCPicJzs (JCO. 's ready J. FRIDAY, -NOVEMBER 15, 1991 THE-CHRONICLE PAGE7 Bush may take punitive action against Libya for bombing

• BOMB from page 2 ism, the bombing of Flight 103 may actually have been in thoroughly before boarding Air Force One. 1986 bombing of a West Berlin discotheque for which the revenge for the American attack on Libya. The indictments were issued against Abdel Basset Ali United States retaliated with a bombing raid on Libya. American officials tried to play down any suggestion Megrahi, 39, and Lamen Khalifa Fhimah, 35. The were American and Libyan warplanes have met in combat at that challenging Gadhafi once again with the indictments identified as officials of Libyan Arab Airlines who were least twice in the last 10 years. could increase the risk of terrorism against American members of Libya's intelligence organization. Fitzwater refused to say what the administration's targets. Neither ofthe men had been mentioned on Wednesday next step would be, but said "all options" were open. The State Department said on Thursday that American by an administration official who said he believed a Officials who spoke on condition of anonymity said that diplomatic outposts worldwide were given advance notice Libyan agent known as Mohammed Naydi would be Washington Was considering a range of responses that ofthe Pan Am indictments. But the government has not among those indicted. included military action but that President Bush's next urged diplomats or American travelers to take any new move was not likely to come immediately. security precautions, nor does it expect to issue such Richard Boucher, a State Department spokesman, said: It was not clear whether Bush was seriously contem­ warnings unless "the threat environment changes," a "The bombers were Libyan government intelligence op­ plating a punitive raid like the one ordered on Libya by department official said. eratives. This was a Libyan government operation from President Reagan in 1986 or was primarily interested in At the same time, however, the Secret Service has start to finish." taking a tough public stand that would leave Gadhafi tightened security aboard the president's plane. Last "The bombing of Pan Am 103 was not a rogue opera­ guessing and, by making an implied threat of military week, during Bush's trip to Rome and the Netherlands, tion," he said. "An operation of this magnitude, involving action, put him on notice against future terrorist actions. the Secret Service conducted a briefing for reporters on people so close to the Libyan leadership, could only have Some investigators believe, however, that although the how to detect devices like the one that destroyed Flight been undertaken with the approval of senior Libyan attack in 1986 slowed down Libyan involvement in terror- 103 and encouraged them to search their hand luggage officials." Fired post office worker kills three AN OPEN LETTER TO THE CHRONICLE Given Christian complicity over the centuries in the destruction of Jews, we cannot By ALAN ALDER remain silent about the controversy over the Tuesday, November 5th advertisement concerning Associated Press the Holocaust. ROYAL OAK, Mich. — A fired postal worker who colleagues said had vowed revenge on his superiors As Christians, we believe it is a mistake to defend such ads by appealing to abstract ideas sprayed his former post office with bullets from a semiau­ like free speech. The Playboy ad, which editors of the Chronicle chose to reject, and the tomatic weapon Thursday, killing three employees and Holocaust ad which the editors chose to run have much more in common that they suppose. wounding six, according to authorities. Neither ad encourages the free exchange of ideas; rather, both ads ultimately legitimate and Employees said Thomas Mcllvane, 31, of Oak Park, promote the degradation and destruction of human bodies. then turned his rifle on himself. He and three of his victims were hospitalized in critical condition, authori­ We call upon the Chronicle to apologize to the Jewish community at Duke for its poor ties said. judgment in running this ad. If such an apology is not forthcoming, we ask our Christian sisters Mcllvane was fired last year for timecard fraud and and brothers to resign their positions at the Chronicle. We realize that this may cause financial had appealed his dismissal, U.S. Postal Service spokes­ hardship; they should know that the undersigned have pledged to offer financial assistance. man Lou Eberhardt said in Washington. An arbitrator upheld the firing Wednesday. Furthermore, if an apology is not issued we ask all Christian campus ministries and Duke "Everybody said if he didn't get his job back, he was Chapel to cease advertising in the Chronicle. going to come in and shoot," postal worker Bob Cibulka said. "Everyone was talking about it." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * The gunman "was crazy. He was a waiting time bomb," said former postal worker Mark Mitchell, who served Faculty, Staff and Students of the Divinity School and the with Mcllvane in the Marine Corps in the early 1980s. Christian Members of the Graduate Program in Religion "He was a kickboxer. He had made previous threats." "One time at Twentynine Palms (Marine base), there was Mark Achtemeier Charles Frost Mary McClintock-Fulkerson a guy he was mad at and he drove a tank over his car," Ebern Allen Meg Gandy Ann McLaughlin Mitchell said. He said Mcllvane was a lance corporal. Karen Trimble Alliaume Lore Blinn Gibson Richard Mercier Post offices have been the scene of several shootings in recent years. Last month, a fired postal worker killed two Keith Anderson Kathy Bennett Gochenour Paul Mickey people in a post office, authorities said. Postal workers F. Walton Avery Douglas Gonzales Stephen Miles also died in attacks in Oklahoma and California. Jeffrey Bach Sandra Gravett Richard Miller Mcllvane's previous threats against supervisors had Rebecca Baer Madeline Gray Wyatt Minton been forwarded to Postal Service authorities, and the suspect's "contemplated homicide" in a dispute with other Richard Bardusch John Grotz Marilyn Mitchell employees led to revocation of his concealed weapons Michael Bartley Beth Hackney Stephen Moroney permit for hunting and target shooting last spring, Oak­ Robert Bauman M. Gail Hamner Ken Morris land County Prosecutor Thompson said. Michael Baxter Stanley Hauerwas Gregory Neal Postal inspector Art Vandeputte said the Postal Ser­ Daniel Bell W.F. Helms Dwight Peterson vice did what it could to prevent the potential for tragedy, short of sealing off the post office. Doors with combination Teresa Berger Michael Henshaw Helen Phillips locks were installed in the loading dock area about three John Berkman Frederick Herzog Kathy Reinger months ago, postal workers said. Charles Birkner Douglas Hicks Amy Rio-Anderson "We simply don't have guards guarding the door," Bruce Bjork Richard Irwin Paula Roane Vandeputte said. "This is a mail-processing facility. There Kamila Blessing Oli Jenkins Eckhard Rohm are so many mail carriers coming i n and so many vehicles, it's impossible to keep the back ofthe post office sealed." Gary Brower Barry Jones Kathy Rudy Thompson said the gunman used a semiautomatic .22- Jason Buchanan Philip Kenneson Marilyn Sanders caliber carbine commonly used for hunting. He said the Ann Burts John Kettle Joel Shuman weapon's barrel had been sawed off, making it illegal. Dean Dennis Campbell James Kieve Nancy Starr Seven people including Mcllvane were being treated at Charles Carter Kay Johnson Jon Stouffer hospitals, Royal Oak Officer Joseph Hill said. Two hospitals in the Detroit suburb listed six people with William Cavanaugh Lucas Lamadrid Randall Styers gunshot wounds and three with unspecified injuries. Hill said Janet Clark Brent Laytham Terry Thompson some postal workers were injured jumping from windows to Laurie Clark Paul Leslie Edward Tigges escape the gunfire that began shortly before 9 a.m. Martha Clark-Boothby James Lewis John Toney The gunman opened in at least three different Suzanne Cloyd Richard Lischer David Toole areas, beginning with a loading dock where at least three Amy Coles Kathy Long James Travis people were shot, fire Chief Bill Crouch said. He then moved to an upstairs office, shooting another Russell Congleton Steve Long Fabian Udoh three people, before walking to the opposite end of the Douglas Currin Paul Longmire John E. Upham building and firing several more rounds, including one at Dale Davidson Beth Gassert Lyon Jose Vila nova himself. Rhonda Davis Trecy Lysaught Randall Wade "I don't think anyone can characterize something like Wyman Fraser Davis Louis T. Manarin Donald Warren this except chaos," Crouch said. "When something like this happens you don't believe it. I don't know what the James Doepken Scott Mann Stacey Watkins world's coming to." Leigh Faircloth Jonathan Marlowe John Westerhoff Letter carrier Rockie McDonald, an acquaintance of Gavle Felton George Marsden Charles Wiley Mcllvane, said he was shot at three times from about 25 Sarah Freedman James Marsh David Youngblood feet away. He fell to the floor and wasn't hurt. Michael Frese David Matzko "I yelled 'No, Tom! No!" McDonald said. "I don't know how many times I yelled it. He turned and went the other way." PAGE 8 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15. 1991 Soviet bureaucrats worried about Russian funding cutoff

By ALAN COOPERMAN workers is uncertain. officials a day earlier. ized" government property after Russia's Associated Press Some of them may simply move into the Many key details ofthe accord are unre­ vice president threatened an economic block­ MOSCOW— The Kremlin was a bastion corresponding ministries of the Russian solved, but it appears to limit the Kremlin's ade. of anxiety today, as bureaucrats worried if Federation. role in the future to foreign affairs, strategic "We take this blockade very seriously," a Russian funding cutoff would leave them Such uncertainty has so sorely burdened nuclear arms and some monetary policies. said Dzhokar Dudayev, leader of the without jobs by quitting time. High officials the 37,000 people potentially effected that It also would replace the old constitution Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Region, were uncertain whether the crucial Ukraine bad news would be better than no news. and rename the Union of Soviet Socialist which borders Georgia. "We know what the would join the new Union Treaty. "To put it bluntly, people want something Republics—dropping the "Soviet Socialist" Russians are capable of. It's a real threat to Meanwhile, trouble continued to roil in to be decided. They don't want to just sit and and inserting "Sovereign" to emphasize the our existence." Russia's far south, where the separatist wait," said Yervgeny Dolotov, the Finance growing power ofthe republics. region of Chechen-Ingushetia faced a pos­ Ministry's deputy director of foreign rela­ Ethnic strife and demands for local sov­ sible economic blockade. tions. A name change had been expected, but ereignty brought violence elsewhere in the Workers in about 80 national ministries The central government's future was fur­ several alternatives had been proposed, country. A policeman was killed in a and agencies were waiting to hear if their ther in doubt Thursday after only seven of including the "Union of Sovereign Soviet gunbattle in Moldavia, a prosecutor was funding was to be eliminated by the Rus­ the 12 Soviet republics reached tentative Republics." kidnapped in Azerbaijan, and students sian government. agreement on a new "Union of Sovereign Gorbachev told reporters after the eight- seized a TV station in the Bashkir region of Russian Federation President Boris States." hour session that the pact envisions "an Russia, according to Soviet news reports. Yeltsin, in his moves to vitiate what's left of The Ukraine, whose agriculture and in­ enormous redistribution of power" from the But Grozny, capital of the Chechen- central control, said earlier month that as of dustry have been critical to the Soviet Union, central government to the republics. Ingush republic, remained the main center today he would cut off his republic's funding refused to back President Mikhail S. The republics will be allowed to introduce of attention. for all central government ministries and Gorbachev in his effort to reform the nation. their own currencies; many already are In declaring independence Nov. 2, departments except for defense, railroads Gorbachev has threatened to resign un­ taking steps to create their own armies. Chechen-Ingushetia became the first eth­ and nuclear energy. less the republics agreed to halt the disinte­ The accord needs the approval of each nic enclave within Russia to challenge Ivan Silayev, head of the interim na­ gration of the Soviet Union and work to­ republic's parliament before it can go into Yeltsin's hold on the fragile federation, tional government, said last week that new gether to create a market economy. An effect. which includes 124 ethnic groups. private enterprises have offered jobs to al­ earlier Union Treaty had been scheduled to In Chechen-Ingushetia, the leader ofthe "We never asked to join Russia and we most all former ministers "at substantial be signed Aug. 20 but was interrupted by breakaway Muslim region on Thursday have been fighting them for 300 years," salaries," while the future of rank-and-file the unsucessful coup staged by hard-line banned the export of all food and "national­ Dudayev told The Asssociated Press. French smokers fuming over campaign by government

By PATRICK MCDOWELL America," said Laone Peralta, 56, puffing there will be a counter-reaction," said Dr. domestic airline flights, in rest areas at Associated Press on a Gauloise, the pungent national favor­ Helene Bost-Hourtecq of the French Na­ private firms, and from waiting lines at PARIS — French smokers, disdainful ite brand, at a haze-filled cafe near the tional League Against Cancer. post offices and other public buildings. of what they regard as an American-style Champs-Elysees. The Health Ministry proposed that: —Fines for multiple violators be levied obsession with clean living, are fuming The Gallic ideal of liberty both —Restaurants reserve 50 percent ofthei r at $445. over government proposals to limit where sides ofthe argument. Non-smokers, who tables for non-smokers until 1995, and 70 The proposals drew the wrath not only they can light up. are increasing in number, demand the percent thereafter. of smokers, but restaurant owners fearful Their grousing, while short of a rush to freedom to breathe clean air. But smokers —Trains be composed of 50 percent no- of losing their smoking clientele. the barricades, has prompted Premier demand the right to their vice. smoking cars, up from 30 percent. Media commentators wondered whether Edith Cresson's already unpopular gov­ At issue are Health Ministry proposals —Smoking be banned completely on police would bother to enforce the law. ernment to retreat from immediate impo­ that are in line with a gradual Europe- sition of the anti-smoking measures. wide trend to curb smoking. "For me, it's an attack on liberty. In "We have to go step-by-step in a country , we have liberty. This isn't like this. It can't be like a police state, or The art of holiday dressing begins at...

Tonight, Freewater Presents *flt l"i?f FlI^TI? JOURNEY OF HOPE 7:00 & 9:30 Griffith Film Theater Mordeccd 1990,110 min., d. Xavier Koller Winning the 1990 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Him, Xavier Koller'» Journey of Hope BRIDAL, FORMAL AND TUXEDO h based on a true story of Immigrant exploitation. A family of Turkish peasants attempt a Journey Into Switzerland. They enlist the aid of Immigrant smugglers, but are exploited and abandoned In • Beautiful selection of beaded and sequined gowns the snow-stormed mountains. Koller depicts a cruel world polarized Into the haves and have-nots, where an arbitrary boundary can mean the difference between dreams attained and shattered. • Accessories and shoes FREE to Dukies with ID, Others - $3.00 • Tuxedo sales and rentals and come back at midnight for THE WALL SPECIAL—10% OFF ANYTHING IN STOCK Pink Floyd's The WaU Is a red-hot wall of despair that will leave you singing Its praises. Never before have music and Imagery, live action and animation, message and medium, been so soaringly with this ad blended as In this defiantly unorthodox pop opera. Thanks to the masterful direction of Alan Parker, (Durham Store Only) the sublimely adult cartooning of Gerald Scarfe, and the pulsating sound of Pink Floyd's music, the RALEIGH DURHAM New brilliant, dialogue-toss scenario penned by Roger Waters Is brought triumphantly to life. 707-09 N Person St Location/4201 University Dr. (2 Blocks from'Peace College) Parkway Plaza II (Behind South Square) FREE TO ALL!!! 919-832-6447 ,„}"*, D> M-F 10-8, Sat!0-5 M-F 10-7, Sat 10-5 Japanese Steak & Seafood House Early Bird Special THE CUTTING \EDGE 5-6 PM Daily HAIR STUDIO KYOTO Steak and Shrimp for Two- $22.95 AWARD WINNING HAIR DESIGNERS Sushi Bar Open 7 Days a Week 286-4151 Sun-Thurs 5-10:30 NEXXUS MON-FRI 10-8 WALK-INS Fri & Sat 5-11:30 PAUL MITCHELL SAT 10-3 WELCOME Reservations 2200 WEST MAIN STREET FIRST UNION PLAZA, ERWIN SQUARE PRESENT THIS AD FOR $5 OFF YOUR NEXT HAIRCUT 489-2669 WITH SELECT STYLIST. EXPIRES 11-30-91. 3644 Chapel Hill Blvd. Durham tftffiA?, WvW6£rTi5:199l THfc"C^kdflicTE vrnte Anti-abortion group plans to blockade a Charlotte clinic

By PAUL NOWELL Charlotte said the activities are not a signal that anti- Long, a church administrator at United Pentecostal Associated Press abortion groups are upping the ante in North Carolina. Church. "I plan to go to Charlotte if I can get away." CHARLOTTE — Operation Rescue, the militant anti- 'They always come where they are welcome. They've Jessie Duff, a spokeswoman for Operation Rescue- abortion group that recently grabbed national headlines been invited," she said. "The fact that they need to bring National in Summerville, S.C, said she had not been for protests in K.msas, has targeted Charlotte and possi­ in people from North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia notified of any activities scheduled in Fayetteville. bly Fayetteville for blockades at abortion clinics. and Virginia to pull off one rescue is a sign of weakness." The Rev. Ronnie Wallace, pastor of Dow Baptist Church As part ofthe national organization's "National Days of It's not clear if a similar rescue will be conducted in in Charlotte, spent a day in jail after being arrested in Rescue," local right-to-life groups in about 50 U.S. cities Fayetteville sometime next week.. Wichita, Kan. He said Operation Rescue has targeted plan activities next week, including "rescues" at abortion During a break in the fraud and conspiracy trial of Charlotte because a clinic here is one of a handful nation­ clinics. Bobby Gray and William Shackleford in New Bern on wide that performs late-term abortions. In Charlotte, the blockade of an unnamed abortion Thursday, U.S. District Judge Malcolm Howard an­ Operation Rescue leaders said the same thing about clinic is planned for Nov. 23, culminating a week of nounced he had received a request for a temporary re­ Wichita when they selected it for the late-summer pro­ speeches, protests and other activities, said Karen Gra­ straining order involving a Fayetteville clinic. tests that results in thousands of arrests. ham, director of Action League For Life. The judge didn't say who requested the court order. He "I think Charlotte is going to be one ofthe major players "Groups from South Carolina and North Carolina will scheduled a hearing for 2 p.m. Friday. in the next two months," Wallace said. join together for a rescue at one of Charlotte's four clinics," An anti-abortion activist from Fayetteville said he Wallace also will speak about his experiences in Wichita she said Thursday. "We expect as many as 100 people to knew of no plans for a blockade at an abortion clinic in that at one of several other events planned during the week. risk arrest." city. On Tuesday, area clergymen will picket outside the local Charlotte Brody of Planned Parenthood of Greater "I don't think there's anything going on here," said Jeff chapter of Planned Parenthood. In Big Easy, black voters are big deal WELCOME By MARY FOSTER Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — Buying votes is illegal. Delivering the voters isn't. For the candidate with money, dozens of black political groups in New Orleans can bring out the MEDICAL ALUMNI voters big-time. They plan to do this Saturday, when former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke takes on former Gov. Edwin Edwards in a racially charged election for governor. The groups, with acronyms such as SOUL, COUP, ROOTS and LIFE, grew out ofthe civil rights struggle of the 1950s and 1960s and are among the best organized in the nation, said Ben Jeffers, the state coordinator for the Browse Through the Latest Edwards campaign. Edwards carried New Orleans with 54 percent of the vote in the Oct. 19 primary, in which the black organiza­ Publications by Duke Authors tions vigorously mobilized the black vote. "We feel that was clearly where the margin of victory came from," Jeffers said. Black groups are campaigning hard for Edwards, a Democrat who topped the primary with 34 percent ofthe vote, compared with 32 percent for Duke. Take Advantage of Great Savings: They have joined with the Democratic Party, religious bodies, Jewish and anti-racism groups in Opposing Duke, a maverick Republican who claims to have disavowed his past as a Klan leader. 25% off Selected DUMC Imprinted Clothing The city probably has more than 100 black political organizations, observers say. "There are the big organizations that are there year round, and there are smaller groups that come and go for 50% off Sale Books certain issues or races," said political consultant Cheron Brylski. "They're able to help candidates in a number of ways, and it can cost from $2,500 to $100,000 or more. I've known campaigns that have set aside triple that amount." The groups don't charge for their endorsements — which alone can be valuable—but almost everything else Refurbish Your Medical Instruments: done for a candidate costs money. In 1983, when Edwards ran for a third term against incumbent Republican Gov. Dave Treen, campaign aides Replacement Parts & New Equipment in Stock estimated they paid $75,000 for the services of SOUL, which stands for Southern Organization for Unified Lead­ ership and is run by state Rep. Sherman Copelin. In his book "The Last Hayride," author John Maginnis quoted sources as putting the cost closer to $750,000. Visit the Medical Center Bookstore "SOUL really doesn't take any money from a candi­ date," Copelin said. "We endorse, then it's up to them to decide how they want to use the organization. We can do everything from phone banking to exit polls." Mailings top the lists of services, both in what it gives a candidate and what it costs. "We are able to target voters Medical Center very precisely, according to race, age, sex, even economic status," said Deslie Isidore White of COUP, or Commu­ nity Organization of Urban Politics. "It may cost $15,000 to $25,000 to print, assemble and mail our ballot, but Bookstore 684-2717* Box 3102 DUMC candidates can be sure of who we are reaching." We are located below "We expect to have poll watchers," White added. "If by the Medical library Ground Floor of the 4 o'clock you haven't voted and you are a black Democrat, next to the Searle Seeley G. Mudd Building you can expect a call asking if you need a ride or help Center on the getting to the polls. If by 6 you still haven't voted, we'll be ground floor of the Visa, Mastercard, American Express, after you again." Seeley G. Mudd Discover, Rex, IRI Poll watchers check off voters as they enter the booth. Building. Their lists are fed into a computer, enabling campaign workers to identify those who haven't voted. Churches also will play an important role in bringing • • Can't take items with you? We will ship them to any out black voters. In 1987, churches rang their bells rang location (via UPS in the Continental U.S.) all day long to remind their black congregations to vote for Democrat John Breaux in the U.S. Senate race. m PAGE 10 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15.1991 Gephardt discusses education, U.S.-Japan trade imbalance

• GEPHARDT from page 1 can companies in Japan, he said. The congressman said Americans need tal aid to industry to help foster develop­ petitiveness. "For 40 years we have been operating to produce goods at the level of the Ger­ ment in key technologies. Foreign compe­ "Trade negotiations are the analogy of under the illusion that we can change mans and the Japanese. His citation of tition uses government to help industries, arms control in the cold war," he said, these countries, that they will be more like gloomy statistics on American industrial the American government should do the "[They consist] of haggling, dealing and us ... . When you hit reality and it's not decline caused dead silence throughout same. The plan would not be like Japan's, fighting over the rules of engagement." that way, you've got to think its time to the audience. Gephardt stressed the need but it would serve the same beneficial Gephardt repeatedly attacked Japan for change," he said. for increased productivity, creativity and purpose. To be a power "you've got to be their closed market. He cited examples of flexibility by American workers. able to do it all, at the same time, to­ American companies that could not enter Sanctions and reciprocal actions may be gether." the Japanese market. The closed Japa­ necessary to change the Japanese ways, If Americans want higher standards of nese system, "kiretsu," halts the trade he said. living than Mexico and China, "we've got "The problem with economics is that activity of American interests in Japan. "Trade is synergistic. If everyone plays to be productive to the point that we're 15 there is no easy answer," Gephardt said. Japan has open access to American on a level field, everyone's pie gets bigger. to 20 times better than them," he said. America will succeed if it concentrates on markets, but it is not the same for Ameri­ We must insist on reciprocity." Gephardt offered a plan of governmen­ the fundamentals of prosperity, he said. Environmental studies major California students strip- approved at council meeting searched by security guard • COUNCIL from page 1 has been looking into the viability of such a and enhancing support services. program for two years. A preliminary ver­ By PEARL STEWART the parents and students involved, who The resolution on priorities was drafted sion of the proposal appeared over a year N.Y. Times News Service were boys 9 and 10 years old, have by the executive committee ofthe Arts and ago and has since benefited from the input OAKLAND, Calif. — Ten elemen­ prompted an investigation by school Sciences Council and will be presented to ofman y faculty members, Christensen said. tary school students were strip-searched administrators. the Board of Trustees for consideration at The new program is designed to stress an by a campus security guard in an at­ their December meeting. interdisciplinary approach, according to the tempt to recover $7 that had been re­ Officials said the security guard, who The council voted to approve a proposal proposal. In addition to nine corequisites, ported to be stolen, school officials ad­ was not identified, has been placed on for a new undergraduate program in Envi­ the suggested curriculum structure for mitted Thursday. leave while the investigation is being ronmental Science and Policy. majors includes: an introductory core course; Complaints about the incident from conducted. "The program bridges environmental and probability and statistics; upper-level social sciences," said Norman Christensen, courses from an approved list; internship, chair ofthe provost's committee on environ­ independent study or field studies and a mental science and policy. The committee

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• • • International Sunday Lunch Buffet with Salad Bar $7.95 • Wedding Rehearsal Dinners and Extensive Banquet Facilities • Courtesy van to chauffeur small groups from nearby hotels/motels. • Open for Lunch on Saturday A Favorite Restaurant of Duke Students *L Employees Marco Polo For reservations call Saturday, November 16 at 7:00 and 9:30 pm Chapel Hill X 933-5565 Sunday, November 17 at 8:00 pm Performance Exit 270 Chev/BMW ALL ABC PERMITS Griffith Film Theater • Admission $3.00' tO minutes from Duke Major credit cards accepted. *Flex Accepted FRIDAY/NOVEMBER 15; 1991' THE CHRONICLE PAGE 11' New attention given to document linking China, Algeria

• REACTOR from page 2 "There was no reason to be alarmed. We don't go rushing to about this at the IAEA," referring to the Vienna-based The American inaction in the early stages of this case people when we learn of their contracts and say, 'Are you going International Atomic Energy Agency that monitors and reflects longstanding disagreements within the U.S. gov­ to live up to your international obligations? inspects nuclear-related installations around the world. ernment over how to interpret intelligence data and how Now, the Bush administration says it is vigorously In recent months, the Bush administration has taken a tough to be on China. working to stop such deals. But congressional critics, number of small but visible steps to confront China's As Secretary of State James Baker arrives in Beijing on independent arms control and China experts, as well as leadership in the areas of trade, human rights and non- Friday, newly disclosed information indicates that Rich­ former administration officials, fault Washington for not proliferation. But, despite criticism, Washington has ard T. Kennedy, the State Department's special ambassa­ dedicating enough intelligence resources to non-prolif­ strenuously supported continuing most-favored-nation dor on non-proliferation matters, received detailed re­ eration issues, for too often giving the Chinese the benefit trade status for China, arguing that the trade privileges ports ofthe Chinese-Algerian deal in late 1988. Included ofthe doubt and for sending mixed signals to Beijing. with Beijing avoid "isolating" China. in that information was the actual text of the contract Frederick Ikle, who was undersecretary of Defense in The proliferation problem is one ofthe main items on between China and Algeria, according to current and the Reagan administration, for example, said Japanese Baker's agenda when he arrives for his first visit to former senior administration officials. officials in Tokyo recently asked him about an apparent Beijing. He is expected to praise the Chinese for their It was only when additional hard intelligence data appeared softening of administration policy on North Korea's recent participation in two sets of multilateral talks on two years later that the Pentagon and much ofthe rest ofthe nuclear-weapons program, an issue in which the United weapons proliferation in the Middle East and nuclear- State Department were informed ofthe suspicious Algerian States has sought Chinese cooperation. weapons programs in the Korean peninsula, while also reactor. "I was startledtolearnthedocumenthadbeeninhands "I said that wasn't the case," he said. "But they told me criticizing them on nuclear cooperation with Algeria and of Kennedy's office for over two years," Henry Rowen, former that your Ambassador Kennedy didn't speak up strongly Iran and missile cooperation with Pakistan and Syria. assistant secretary of Defense for International Security Af­ fairs, saidinaninterview. "Itseemed very important, andl was totally mystified it was not distributed earlier." Even James Lilley, former ambassador to Beijing, said he learned of the initial data only late last year. Since China has stalled other weapons deals after they were uncovered by the United States during the planning stages, this deal might have been stopped if protests had started as soon as the existence of the contract was revealed, senior administration officials said. Kennedy, who has held his current position for nearly a decade, was widely known as a promoter ofthe conten­ tious 1985 agreement to establish nuclear trade between United States and China. Congress froze that agreemeent because of concerns about China's continuing improper nuclear exports to Pakistan and other countries. Kennedy was traveling and unavailable for comment, and the State Department had no offical comment on the issues. One administration official familiar with the issue defended the decision not to publicize the Algerian contract, saying: Retarded man will not be put to death

By AUSTIN WILSON Associated Press ANGOLA, La. — The U.S. Supreme Court granted a stay of execution Thursday to a retarded man who raped and killed his girlfriend's babysitter by beating her and setting her on fire. Robert Wayne Sawyer had been scheduled to die early Friday in Louisiana's first execution by injection. The Supreme Court granted a hearing, but set no immediate date, on arguments that it would be unlaw­ fully cruel to execute Sawyer because he is retarded. The vote ofthe nine-member court wasn't announced. The high court also will consider a new development, involving a juror who said he didn't know Sawyer was retarded, defense lawyer Neal Walker said. The Supreme Court was Sawyer's last hope. Gov. Buddy Roemer had rejected the pardon board's recommendation and refused to commute the sentence to life in prison. Sawyer, 41, had been moved to the Louisiana State Penitentiary death house Thursday morning, and his sister and brother-in-law spent the day with him, said Warden John Whitley said. Louisiana is the 19th state to adopt lethal injection. The state has executed 77 people since 1941, when it changed from the hangman's noose to the electric chair. Sawyer was convicted of killing 23-year-old Frances Arwood of Gretna, who was babysitting for his girlfriend. He and Charles Lane, who is serving a life sentence for murder, raped and beat Arwood, poured scalding water on her, doused her with lighter fluid and ignited it. Arwood was in a coma for two months in 1979 before she died of severe burns and brain damage. University Store Sawyer's attorneys argued that the state shouldn't J (919) 684-2344 execute him because his mind is crippled by retardation Upper Level, Bryan Center IQ^^^A and mental illness and because evidence was withheld from his trial in 1980. CAMERON BLVD. Sawyer has an IQ of 68, compared with the average of Monday - Saturday 100, a defense witness told the Louisiana Pardon Board Science Drive x PAKKMC on Monday. He reads at about a third-grade level and can [UiuveBfySlcre] do simple addition and subtraction at a second-grade 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. level, said University of New Mexico professor Ruth Lukasson. OPEN BEFORE AND AFTER ALL AFTERNOON GAMES But prosecutors said trial testimony showed Sawyer Wallace Wade Stadium knew the difference between right and wrong and that the Wannamaker Drive execution should proceed. FOR A FREE MAIL ORDER CATALOG CALL The board voted 3-2 in favor of commuting Sawyer's death sentence to life in prison. Roemer rejected the 1-800-VIA-DUKE recommendation. Last year, the board tied 2-2, turning DukeUnivesityKoad down a plea for clemency. Letters EDITORIALS Men aren't only ones confused by feminism PAGE 12 NOVEMBER 15, 1991 To the editor: misrepresentation of feminists for last, Something about Jennifer Papenfus' when in the concluding paragraph, she column on Nov. 6 really bothered me. As a states her refusal to "respect 'feminists' male, I was, of course, offended by the who say men are all bad or the only thing statement, "no wonder guys are confused men want is sex or men don't value women." by feminism." (I guess she didn't expect me It really makes me wonder where she got Our turn to read it since she stated that most males her sample of feminists. were probably not reading beyond about The column is not totally without merit. After two weeks of furious debate, it is only as strong as our tolerance for the sixth sentence.) I expect to be mildly She says that she respects "women who is time to clear the air. those ideas which we detest. offended quite often when I read the edito­ research the issues, firmly stand by their The Chronicle wholeheartedly con­ The campus newspaper ought to be rial page. What really bothered me, how­ beliefs and want to change the status of demns the bald-faced lies advertised a vehicle for community discourse and ever, was that the author then launched a women because they see the present situ­ in this publication by Bradley Smith as such, has an even sharper obliga­ negative attack on feminists which had ation as unfair." (I wonder if she also little basis in fact. It appears that us guys respects men who do this.) While her ear­ and the Committee for Open Debate tion not to withhold ideas which are aren't the only ones confused by feminism. lier statements apply to no feminist I've on the Holocaust. The Chronicle does offensive or painful. The moment a The author first tipped me off that she is met, this description applies to all of them. not and will not, however, apologize newspaper censors ideas because of confused about feminism when she said It leaves me wondering why she would for running the ad. the way in which some individuals that she feels pressure to join feminists' attempt to discredit the group she claims Smith is not revising history, he is will react to them, the community is efforts for "absolute equality." This is as to respect. rewriting it. He is a member of a group cheated of its right to judge for itself close as she comes to defining the goals of with an avowed anti-Semitic agenda, which ideas have merit and which are feminism, but it is both inaccurate and Michael Ling and the content of his ad reflects his preposterous. oversimplified. But she saves the worst Trinity '90 agenda rather than a scholarly his­ The mentality that would constrict torical debate. the exchange of ideas is what enabled ASDU members clarify legislation's purpose Nevertheless, the publication of this Hitler's campaign of hatred to flour­ ad has and can continue to raise aware­ ish. The Nazis suppressed first the To the editor: community. ness of the tragedy of the Holocaust. speech, then the rights and ultimately On Nov. 12, ASDU considered a resolu­ We realize that this is a controversial The newspaper never intended to in­ the existence of those who opposed tion concerning The Chronicle's decision issue bringing with it an array of different sult any group or malign the memory them. It is precisely our commitment to print CODOH's advertisement. This opinions. We feel that the new legislation of the victims of the Holocaust. The not to let this happen again which resolution failed by a narrow margin of 28- is simply a statement of fact. The Chronicle newspaper exposed these philosophies compels us to tolerate the morally re­ 26, with four people abstaining. has guidelines which were broken by print­ We feel that it is necessary to clarify the ing the ad. The intent of this ASDU resolu­ of htite in order to subject them to pulsive views of fanatics like Bradley tion is to represent the students on this rigorous public scrutiny and elicit con­ Smith. reason this resolution failed and how it has been reworked to better represent the issue. We strongly encourage anyone and demnation. Many more people are now aware of views and opinions of the University stu­ everyone to come by the ASDU office (in the horror that was Nazi Germany dent community. The resolution that failed the Bryan Center), pick up a copy of the Some have implored the newspaper because of the rally, the torrent of was correct in its intent. However, it failed legislation and share their feelings with to donate the revenues from the ad to letters to the editor and the innumer­ to communicate clearly or emphatically their ASDU legislator and the rest of the Holocaust education. This money and able spontaneous discussions inspired how the students feel on this issue. community. more has already been used to pay for by Smith's ad. All this from an offen­ We feel that our reworked resolution The resolution will be considered on the space The Chronicle has devoted sive idea. does not condemn The Chronicle for exer­ Tuesday, Nov. 19. As always ASDU's meet­ to letters and columns denouncing the In time, the furor surrounding this cising its First Amendment right to print a ing is open to students who want to voice ad and remembering what really hap­ issue will subside. But it is our sincere minority viewpoint. This is not a concern their opinions on this or any resolution or of our resolution and is a matter of judge­ issue. We hope that through this legisla­ pened in Hitler's Germany. belief that the consciousness raised by ment that belongs to the editors of The tion The Chronicle will realize and take In a university community, commit­ this episode will remain with all mem­ Chronicle. However, our legislation repri­ responsibility for their offense to the Uni­ ment to discourse, no matter how odi­ bers of our community for a long time mands The Chronicle for printing the eth­ versity community. We look forward to ous or repugnant, is essential to the to come. We owe as much to all those nically slurring CODOH stance as an ad­ seeing you Tuesday night at 6:30 in 139 pursuit of truth. But this commitment who perished in the Holocaust. vertisement and not in an editorial format. Social Sciences. This was in direct conflict with their own clearly stated guideline, which was veri­ Mark Grazman fied in meetings with members ofthe Uni­ Trinity '94 versity community. Because The Chronicle On the record serves that community, when they make a Kevin Loftus mistake they must answer to that same Trinity '93 / believe that the future of our country can be blight. Richard Gephardt, majority leader of the House of Representatives. Gephardt spoke in Page Auditorium Thursday night. Review inadequate due to lack of knowledge

To the editor: support the claims made. The major flaw Asking questions to expand one's knowl­ in Pittman's "review" is that she tries to edge is a process that I hope most Duke see subject matter in Arocena's abstract students have come to value. It is also a works. She writes, "Small Relief No. 19 procedure I expect a reporter to utilize. looks like a tent, if you turn your head THE CHRONICLE established 1905 Reporter Kimbei'ly Pittman and her arts sideways and stand back a bit." There are editor Jennifer Greeson, however, have not supposed to be images in the works— Ann Heimberger, Editor obviously not caught on to this simple they are ABSTRACT! Arocena's work deals Jason Greenwald, Ma?iaging Editor idea. Pittman's review (Nov. 8) of Catalina with the issues of forms, colors, materials, Barry Eriksen, General Manager Arocena's current exhibit on East Campus textures, techniques and their relation­ Jonathan Blum, Editorial Page Editor was nothing short of disgraceful. If a re­ ships to each other. Even students who porter knows nothing about art, why was sleep through ART 70 could come up with Hannah Kerby, News Editor Matt Steffora, Assoc. News Editor she sent to review an art exhibit? And that much! To liberally paraphrase, Kris Olson, Sports Editor Michael Saul, Assoc. News Editor more importantly, if the first sentence was "Friday's page 4 of The Chronicle looks Leya Tseng, Arts Editor Jennifer Greeson, Arts Editor going to be, "I don't get it," then why did like an art review if you turn your head Peggy Krendl, City & State Editor Leigh Dyer, Investigations Editor she write an entire review without asking sideways and squint until you can't see the Eric Larson, Features Editor Robin Rosenfeld, Health & Research Editor anyone for further information? In the words." Mark Wasmer, Photography Editor Cliff Burns, Photography Editor format of an art review, a reporter is more Steven Heist, Graphics Editor Reva Bhatia, Design Editor than welcome to not like a work or an Brian Denton Matt Sclafani, Senior Editor Karl Wiley, Senior Editor Adrian Dollard, Senior Editor exhibit, but she should at least make the Trinity '90 Ronnie Gonzalez, Creative Services Mgr. effort to get a shred of information to University employee David Morris, Business Manager Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager Elizabeth Wyatt, Student Advertising Manager Letters policy: The Chronicle urges all of its readers to submit letters to the The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its editor. Letters must be typed and double-spaced and must not exceed 300 words. students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of They must be signed, dated and must include the author's class or department, the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. phone number and local address for purposes of verification. Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663: Sports: 684-6115: Business The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106; FAX: 684-8295. promotional in nature. Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters for length, clarity and style, and Building; Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building; ©1991 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No part to withhold letters based on the discretion ofthe editorial page editor. of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Letters should be mailed to Box 4696, Duke Station, or delivered in person to The Business Office. Chronicle offices on the third floor ofthe Flowers Building. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 13 Freedom of speech: hard to live with, harder to live without

Last Sunday we stood together in the cold rain outside send their ads elsewhere and plague us no more. But Duke Chapel, sad and angry at the anti-Semitic bile that • Free lunch there is no reason to choose between evils when you can has bubbled up in our community. It comforted me to have use Nazi money to promote human decency and freedom a place to express my outrage. My thanks to the organiz­ Tim Tyson of speech. ers. What Heimberger has done so far is not adequate. The This was hot my first exposure to Holocaust revision­ vipers now so that we do not have to fight them in the unseemly clamor for her resignation, however, strikes me ism. That came last fall when I infiltrated the national streets later. God forbid it, should the David Dukes of this as unfair and a bit cruel, especially when it comes from convention of the Populist Party, founded in 1984 by world fester into power, should Kristallnacht come to faculty members. It is the duty of teachers to instruct the David Duke, who is about to be elected governor of Trinity Park, His Imperial Wizardness will discover, young, not to break them. And Ms. Heimberger has the Louisiana, and Willis Carto, a Holocaust revisionist. This among other things, that the Tysons know which end of capacity to learn; our only ineducable students are those was not a public gathering; it required some rather the shotgun the buckshot comes out of. too frightened to try, who always do the safe thing. I grow energetic lying to get inside. The "Confederate Even if those shots are fired, the Constitution should weary of cunning young grade-hounds who exercise their Hammerskins" of Dallas guarded the doors, glaring each never become a target. Rabbi Fischer made an interesting minds chiefly to figure out what the teacher might want time I passed. point last Sunday. Ann Heimberger faced two evils, he to hear. Whatever her failures, Ann Heimberger did not The hall bristled with demented flotsam from the sew­ said—the evil of weakening the First Amendment and the merely slip the ad into the trash and pretend that she had ers of American political life; Nazis, Ku Klux Klan, Aryan evil of spreading Nazi lies. Her mistake, he argued, was not seen it. That would have been safer for her, but not for Nations and a host of other right-wing serpents spawned to choose the greater of two evils. It is an elegant moral us. in the spiritual boneyard ofthe Reagan era. David Duke argument but lacks political imagination. Why not use did not attend. His personal emissary assured the faithful the First Amendment as a weapon against the Nazis Heimberger's solicitude for the First Amendment is not that only "practical considerations" kept their hero at rather than a license for them? sufficient to the evils ofthe day, but neither is it trivial. home. Later, when he accrues more power, the speaker For example, Heimberger could have accepted the ad The university, singular in its devotion to ideas, is a implied, Duke would be free to don the white sheet and but on the opposite page given—not sold—the history delicate organism that must live free or die. Not merely ride with his old friends again. department a large space in which to refute the "schol­ free but lively and audacious speech preserves the soul of This new generation of nativist know-nothings evokes arly" pretensions ofthe ad, complete with splashy graph­ this institution. When we trade part of this away, we a pornographic America teeming with "welfare queens," ics. Heimberger's own op-ed piece could have taken the elevate to orthodoxy the spirit of a benumbing caution. In corrupt liberals, filthy homosexuals and conniving Jews. meat axe to these Nazi pigs instead of blandly invoking such an atmosphere, poetry is improbable, religion is Theirs is a world where children who play in the garbage "advertiser's rights." Dr. Kornberg could have been in­ unlikely, and mediocrity masquerades as circumspection. of the South Bronx have been "coddled," where black vited to write a counterpoint arguing that the ad should The prerogatives ofthe powerful are never those imper­ rapists lurk in every shadow, where the AIDS virus is the not have been printed in any case. Rabbi Fischer could iled when we fail to enlarge fi-eedom of speech. The strong voice of an avenging God, where white men have become have been granted space on that day for his eloquence. will always have their say. But there is no editing skill targets of a vast conspiracy. And yet it is a vision distorted A special insert might have offered photographs ofthe that can protect the voice of conscience while it proscribes only a quarter-turn beyond the polished versions peddled mounds of bodies, the piles of hair and eyeglasses, the the voice of contempt. We can only work together toward by Reagan and Bush. endless abominations. The editor could have interspersed a vision of democratic community so fearless and loving There is, of course, a difference. If you have ever heard these pictures with selected transcripts of Holocaust and true that no voice of contempt can diminish us. If we a Nazi speech in person, you know why I felt as though I survivor testimony, perhaps an interview with a local do not quite march in lockstep, let that deepen the had fallen into a vat of poison, why I had nightmares for survivor. confusion of our enemies, whose tiny minds tremble at weeks after the Populist convention. And you understand The point is, it's our paper. If the Nazis don't appreciate such things. Ours do not. why I volunteered to go: we must keep an eye on these our using it to stomp a mudhole in their asses, they can Tim Tyson is a graduate student in history. The redeeming value of Bart: a cartoon fiend's perspective

Author's note: Everyone has by now heard about the ad Cartoons are a universal form of escapism. The reason from the Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust. • Points south we all like them so much is that they're simple. We don't Regardless of your opinion on the subject, you have to have to think about them. The amount of work we do in admit that we've heard more about the Holocaust in a week Hannah Kerby our classes is so great that we need a form of escapism. and a half than we have in the two and a half years I've Kegs, cartoons—they serve essentially the same purpose, been here. People's consciousness has been raised. Anyway, back to what I was saying. On any Thursday and you don't end up with shoes full of beer when you're I liave only one other thing to say about the issue—and night you care to name, it's almost guaranteed that 75 watching Bugs Bunny. The Simpsons are another mat­ it was said much better by Voltaire. "I disapprove of what percent or more of undergrads, and probably a fair amount ter—people tend to drink and watch "The Simpsons" at you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." of graduate students, are going to be watching "The the same time. Peer pressure from Homer is a terrible Think about it. Simpsons." "The Cosby Show" used to be OK, but it's a thing to have to withstand. And now, on to more lighthearted issues. little too close to real life for most of us (and besides, they've run out of new things to do.) I love watching cartoons. I always have, and I always It's amazing how much cartoons are a part of our lives. The Simpsons, on the other hand, are so unlike real life will. Hopefully I'll always have time to stop for Looney You can test this, too. Just go to somewhere where that they allow us a chance to escape our papers and Tunes or the Jetsons or the Simpsons. I value my escap­ there's a large crowd and start humming a popular exams and watch Homer strangle Bart and yell "Doooh!" ism more and more as I have less and less time to spend cartoon theme. I guarantee you people will stop and ask, I know a lot of people for whom "Doooh!" has become a escaping (and more to escape from). "Hey, isn't that the theme from (insert cartoon)?" Of major part of their vocabulary. Several guys I know want Hopefully I'll never get too old to stop watching. course, they might ask, "Why are you standing in a crowd to be Homer when they graduate. (Some of them also want Hannah Kerby is a Trinity junior, news editor of The humming the theme from (insert cartoon)? You crazy or to be Chuck Woolery, but that's another story entirely.) Chronicle. something?" I think this is probably more likely. The point is, whether they call the people from the psychiatric ward to come get you or not, they will recog­ nize the theme because cartoons are part of our cultural consciousness. Case in point: the other day in the office, someone was humming the theme from "He-Man and the Masters ofthe Universe." Everyone recognized the theme, and we all immediately started trying to remember the opening sequence word-for-word. "By the power of Greyskull!", etc. It's possible to do this with any other cartoon as well. I happen to be able to sing the entire theme of "Tiny Toons," a skill which will serve me well in attaining my career goal: becoming one of those people who does the Nielsen ratings. It'd be fun; I watch really strange TV shows, so I could personally determine the fate of some show no one else has ever heard of.

"We're tiny, we're toony/ We're all a little loony/ And in this cartoon-y we're invading your TV./ We're comic dis­ pensers/ We crack up all the censors/ On Tiny Toon Adventures get a dose of comedy!" Sorry about the digres­ sion. The same universality applies in the case of comic strips. Very few professors' doors or bulletin boards are without a Far Side or a Calvin and Hobbes or Doonesbury strip. Very few people will actually read my column before turning this page to read The Far Side, Doonesbury, Calvin and Hobbes or Market Wise. I'm not terribly upset by this; I usually read the comics page before I read my column too. Of course, I have a better reason, because I already know what my column says. PAGE 14 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1991

Market Wise/ Rocco Femia THE Daily Crossword by Betty jorgensen

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THE CHRONICLE

Editorial page editor: Jon Blum 'I lift, you grab ... was that concept just a little too Sports editor: Brian "Five pages?!"Kaufman complex, Carl?" Copy editors: Jon Blum, Elena Broder, Jennifer Greeson, Hannah Kerby, Peggy Krendl Wire editor: , Eric Jones Associate photography editor: Mark Wasmer Calvin and Hobbes/ Bill Watterson Day photographer: Greg Pazianos Account representatives: Dorothy Gianturco, Peg Palmer Advertising sales staff: Kellie Daniels, Stacie Glass, Roy Jurgens, Alan Mothner, Jen Soininen, Katie Spencer, Jon Wyman Creative services staff:....Michael Alcorta, Reva Bhatia, Loren Faye, Dan Foy, Steven Heist, Kathy McCue, Kevin Mahler, Merri Rolfe, Susan Somers-Willett Accounts payable manager: Michelle Kisloff Credit manager: ...Judy Chambers Classified managers: Greg Ceithaml, Bob Gilbreath, Linda Markovitz Business staff: Jessica Balis, Amina Hightower, Janet Johnson, Tim Rich Calendar coordinator: Cindy Cohen

Today Community Calendar Saturday, November 16 InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. York Duke Jugglers mtg. front of Chapel. 2-5 pm. Chapel. 7-9 pm. Three Cuckolds. Sponsored by Duke "Effects of an Ectomycorrhizal Fungus, International House: UN Night Open House, International Coffee Break. Sponsored by Drama. Sheafer Theater. 8 pm. Phosphorus Supply and C02 Enrichment on 7:30 pm. Duke Campus Ministries and area congrega­ Seedlings from Two Populations of Loblolly Broadway at Duke: Song and Dance. Page tions. 12 noon-l:30 pm. Chapel Basement Duke Interact Carnpus-wkte student/faculty/ Pine", by Jim Lewis. 144 Bio Sd. 12:30 pm. Aud. 8 pm. administrator interaction event features "Out Weekly Baptist Student Union meeting. ofthe Blue" performance, remarks by Dean Vigil for Central American Martyrs. Duke Three Cuckolds. Sponsored by Duke Led by Wendy Sapp. Dinner at 6 pm. Richard White, Matt Hammer of Community Chapel Stairs. Afterwards "Romero" and Drama. Sheafer Theater. 8 pm. Program at 7 pm. Chapel basement. "Roses in December" will be shown in Service Center, Dr. Ken Surin. Sponsored by Hoof n Horn auditions forthe Dec. 5 staged tiie Round Table. Von Canon Hall. 5-7 pm. Divinity School. Vigil begins 1 pm. "Measuring Friction in Liquids by Light reading of Iron Mask. Fred Theater. 11 am- Scattering:. Fritz London Lecture Hall Dr. Caskey from Baylor School of Medicine will PRIME TIME. Campus Crusade for Christ. 3 pm. (103) Gross Chem. 3:30 pm. 213 Soc Sci. 7 pm. meet with students to discuss MD, Ph.D. and Employee Tailgate Party preceding the Duke MD/PhD programs at Baylor College of Duke Opera Workshop. Baldwin Aud. 8 pm. Carolina Minority Law Day. Conference for vs. NC State Football Game. Soccer Medicine and the Baylor Summer Medical and minority persons interested in learning more Practice Fields. 11:30 am. Call 6846973 Institute of the Arts: Pat Hall-Smith and Research Training Program. 201 Rowers. about legal career opportunities and the law for more info. Mara Alper, Afro-Haitian Dance, Music Sponsored by HPAC. 911 am. school educational process. UNC School of and Video. Durham Arts Council. 8 pm. Law. 8:30 am. Cail 962-5106 for more info. NC Sane Freeze 1991 Annual State Experience Singapore with Homai McDowell, Conference."From a War Economy to a Stellar Stories. Cultural Services, Novelist Eg'win Sung and Eng Urn. Slide and lecture Concert of Hindustani classical vocal music by Peace Economy; Issues and Strategies for Laurel Golden, Dean's Conference Rm. presentation. Free Oriental lunch. Mary Lou R. Fahimuddin Dagar. Walnut Room. NC State Peace Activists". Meredith College. Cates Green Zone M32, Duke Hopsitaf South. Williams Center. 12:30 pm. Univ. For more info, call 5157952.7:30 pm. Ctr.. For info, call 4690831.9 am-4 pm. PRrDAY, NOVEMBER 15; 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 15

Announcements AEPhi NEW YEARS HIV Testing? DG & LAW SCHOOL Rooms for Rent Garage Sales in November! Fall Semi-formal at the Concerned about the AIDS virus? Ifyou're tailgate is tomorrow!! Come to the Weeping Radish is tonight. Buses leave considering the HIV antibody test, it's Wannamaker patio at noon for good Largest yard sale ever! Quality new & CASH FOR BOOKS WCBS 9p.m., 9:30p.m. important to know what will happen to times and great burgers! Share 3 BR historic furnished home with Cash paid for your textbooks. Bring the result before you get tested. Some 2 Duke students. Large bedroom with 4 used items (holiday furniture, appli­ them downstairs to the Textbook TGIF ances, sporting goods, arts & crafts). FEMALE VOLUNTEERS NEEDED. people who have tested positive have large windows. 2 blocks to East. $265/ Store. Mon.-Sat., 8:30-5:00. experienced discrimination when their GPSC is sponsoring a TGIFtoday from 5- mo + utilities. 419-4421. Durham Omni Convention Center, Fri­ Healthy women 40 and older to fill out day. Nov.22. 5p.m-9p.m. Saturday, a short questionaire and donate 2 to test results have been disclosed. Anony­ 7p.m. at the Hideaway. Pitchers $1.75 The Empty Bowls Project is a national Nov.23. 9a.m.-lp.m. 4 tubes (approximately 2-4 Table­ mous testing is the only way to guaran­ with Grad Student ID. effort to feed hungry people in America Apts. for Rent spoons) of blood for ovarian cancer tee that you control the results; thus, by making bowls and using them for research this Friday, Nov. 15 between the only people who will know the result Wanted to Buy soup and bread dinners to raise money Help Wanted 11:30a.m. and 1:30 p.m., Duke North are those you decide to tell. In a confi­ Carriage House/Furnished studio apt. for hunger organizations. Duke Craft Room 1103. Volunteers will be com­ dential test, the result is protected infor­ Private, spacious (12'x33') room. Coun­ WANTED: 2 tickets to Mandy Patinkin Center will be hosting a weekend open NEEDED pensated $15. Questions? Call Lee mation like other parts of your medical try setting yet 20-25 minutes from Duke- concert Dec. 3rd or 4th. Call 383- studio workshop for all ages to come Anyone who can intertret dreams over Daly at 684-3377. record. However, your result may be UNC. $350/month includes heat. 929- 9295. make bowls to help us feed each disclosed with your permission for insur­ the phone. Good pay. Flexible hours. 2432 evenings. other. Workshop will be held at the FINAL DEADLINE ance or employment screening. Student Call (919) 828-4834 e.s.t. I NEED TICKETS Duke Craft Center in the rear of the Health at Duke Family Medecine Center to change dining plans for spring semes­ Sunny Spacious one Bedroom Apart­ For Song and Dance on Saturday 11/ Southgate Building (corner of Main offers confidential testing, but recom­ Department of Neurobiology needs work ter is Friday, Nov. 15. Visit DukeCard ment, walk to both campuses. Mod. 16. Need eltherone ortwo. Call Steve, and Broad). East Campus, Durham, mends anonymous testing. Durham study student for lab duties. Please call Office, 024 West Union Building. 9a.m.- kitchen/bath. Available Jan. 1. $317/ 684-0461. NC on Nov. 16-17. l-5p.m. For more County Health Department (560-7600) 684-6636. 5p.m. month. Call 419-1660. info, call Krista or Boo at 684-2532. offers free anonymous testing on a walk Ride Offered in basis from 8:30-11 a.m. and 1-4 p.m. Earn $2000 MY STORY BOOKS BIO MAJORS! Monday-Friday. For additional informa­ AND FREE SPRING BREAK TRIPS! North One bedroom apartment convenient to Duke/Lake wood. Stove/refrigera­ PHILADELPHIA Read and draw with your child. High Come to our general meeting to work on tion on HIV/AIDS and testing call Stu­ America's #1 Student Tour Operator tor/water/heat included. $350/ Round trip plane ticket to Philadel­ quality hard cover books. Personal­ a committee or run for office. Monday dent Health Education at 684-3620, seeking motivated students, organi­ month. 489-2644. phia. Leave 11/22 return 11/24. ized books and cassette tapes: for 6:30p.m. 144 Bio-Sci. x325, x282, x242. zations, fraternities and and sorori­ $158 or best offer. information call 477-6115. ties as campus representatives pro­ HEY JUNIORS! PROJECT WILD moting Cancun, Bahamas, Daytona $200 Givaway DEFEND YOURSELF Stop by to pay $10 dues on Walkway Staff who want to be involved with House and Panama City! Call 1-800-724- $200 is yours if you sublet Duke Manor Travel/Vacations 1555! Learn Japanese-style Karate: flexibil­ today! Cheap, cheap shot glasses and T- Course (lead March, experience week­ 2-Br apt.! Avail. Dec. 15-July 31. Option ity, balance, self-defense, self-disci­ shirts! end crew, etc.) MUST come Sunday to extend. Only $370/month. 286-9385. Bahamas 6 day cruise/hotel pack­ Part time sales person needed for 10- pline. No fee for instruction. On East 7:30 p.m.. Ill Soc-Sci. age. Retails $995. Will sacrifice $93 20 hours/wk. at local florist shop. Walk­ Campus: Sundays 4-6:15 p.m., Thurs­ LAST DAY!! Colorful furnished efficiency. 2 blocks to per couple. 876-9603. ing distance from E. Campus. Call 286- days 7:30-8:45 p.m. Call JoAnne Tip­ Can U Sing THIS low? Duke; utilities paid. $475 one mo; $335 No kidding, no excuses. If you need to 5640. pet: 286-7582. change dining plans for spring semes­ Baaa! Out of the Blue needs low female with 6 mo. lease. Big houses available SPRINGBREAK SAILING 8AHAMAS - ter, visit the DukeCard Office by 5p.m. voices! Auditions are Nov. 18th and WORK STUDY for next year. APPLE REALTY. 493-5618. 48 ft Luxury Yachts/ Groups of 6. 19th. Sign up at the Bryan Center Info Seven days barefoot sailing in the Thanksgiving come to the Blue & White TODAY! Changes will not be approved Position available at Asian/Pacific Stud­ after the deadline. Desk! Bahamas. All Inclusive with cabin and Room, Trent Cafeteria, and the East ies Institute, 10 hours/week (including Union on Wednesday. Nov. 20. Its a Autos For Sale meals $488 each. CALL ANYTIME 1- RESEARCH GUIDANCE FOR SCHOLARS Friday afternoon). For more information, 800-999-7245 (SAIL). feast! AYCE $6.50. DID YOU KNOW Trent cafeteria serves AND RETURNING SCHOLARS. Assis­ call 684-2604. deli sandwiches, burgers, and grilled tance with dissertations, term papers, 1981 Mazda 626. 130.000mi. A/C, VIENNESE BALL sandwiches at lunch, and still offers Lost & Found independent studies, grant proposals, $6 to $8 an hour for occasional garden­ reliable. $900. Call daytime 660-7873. entrees and veggies and a great salad Join Duke Wind Symphony for waltzes technical review. L.Vcko, Ph.D. 489- ing help. Close to East Campus. Call bar? Come to Trent for lunch. REWARD and polkas. Nov. 15, 8p.m.. Durham 7711. 286-5141. Elks Lodge. Tickets on Walkway, $10 Misc. For Sale Lost-gold band ring with etchings and with Duke ID. FREE DANCE LESSONS EQUESTRIAN TEAM one small ruby. Please call 684-0177. CHI OMEGA: Delta Sig tailgate mixer Child Care Nov.10, 12.14.10 p.m.. Bivins. Mandatory meeting! Sunday. Nov.17 Plane ticket Nov. 26 evening. RDU to L.I. this Saturday: 11:30a.m. pre-game FOUND: Set of Duke keys on Franklin at 5p.m. in Canterbury commons. Call bonfire, see panhel board for direc­ N.Y. $125 or best offer. Cathy 684- REGULAR BABY-SITTER needed forbright St. Oct. 31st. If they are yours call HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! Non­ Erin at 684-0275 if you can't attend! tions. Post-game BBQ at the Delta 1316. 7-year old. Must have own transporta­ 933-7388. smoking females. 18-26 years old, Lots to discuss, be there or else... Sig section. BEAT STATE! are needed to participate in a study on tion, prior experience. One week night Think Big Speak 0' The Devil and Saturday nights. Call 493-5093 Lost: Thick, silver bracelet sometime physiological responses to laboratory ZETAS Giant 60"x40" rare collectible European tasks. Participants will be reimbursed Come hear Speak of the Devil in Cleland nights or 682-5011 days. Mon. Nov. 11. If found please call White Violet Ball is tonight! Buses leave rock posters. Send $2 for picture cata­ for their time and effort. If interested, commons, Monday, Nov. 18th, at8 p.m. 684-0831. WCBS at 6:45p.m and 7:30p.m. See logue to Poster Holdings. P.O. Box call 684-8667 and ask forthe women's It promises to be a great show! Wanted: mature, experienced motherto you there! 11662, Daytona Beach, FL 32120 or study. stay afternoonsMh two small children call (904) 322-2202. Personals Experience Singapore with Homai EMPTY SHELTERS in my home. 489-3475. McDowell and students Egwin SCUBADIVING: Classes start Nov. There will be an informational session BLACK MEN Sung and Eng Lim Friday, 11/15/ Seeking energetic, loving baby-sit­ PRINTER 23rd. Call Water World at 596-8185. about Empty the Shelters- Sunday 7p.m. It's Friday night and I just got paid. 91 at 12:30 p.m. Mary Lou Wil­ ter for our 3.5 year and llmo. old Apple Imagewriter II for sale. Excellent at the CSC. I'm checking out the fella with the WANT TO RUSH?? liams Center. FREE Oriental Lunch children in our home 2 days/week. condition. Best offer: call for more info: hightop fade. Black Men you are Served. 682-0055. 383-0308. and you missed sign-ups? You can PREZ BRODIE loved and appreciated! sign-up outside the Panhel office until FIRST-YEAR WOMEN Come chat with President Brodie in the DIET PRODUCT AUDITIONS!! Thanksgiving. Don't miss out! Wannamaker One Commons, Monday, Services Offered Do you have questions about sororities? End the YO-YO effect with BIOS LIFE Out of the Blue, an all female a- Unsure about Rush? Come talk with Nov. 18 at 7p.m. cappella group is having auditions for ADVENTURE TRAVEL DIET. Lose weight without pre-pack­ HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! Non­ uppeYclass women, Monday, Nov. 18, aged foods, chemical appetite all voice parts Nov. 18 and 19. Sign up 6:30 p.m. at Trent Cafeteria. UNITED NATIONS smoking males. 18-26 years old. are All air tickets, cheapest assured, holi­ suppressants, or meal substitutions. at the Bryan Center Info Desk! See you needed to participate in a study on Join the International Association days, interviews, going home, groups there! 7:30p.m. this Saturday at International From Rexall Showcase International, physiological responses to everyday FREE Walk-In Flu Shot Clinic extended. 8 and overseas specials. NO SERVICE a member of the Rexall Family of tasks. Participants will be reimbursed House to celebrate UN night. Food and DUKE INTERACT a.m.-12 p.m., Fri, November 15, 22 at CHARGE. Call anytime. 477-9633. Companies. 919-220-6340. for their time and effort. If interested, the Duke Family Medicine Center in the entertainmanet! 2022 Campus Drive. The entire Duke Community is in­ please call 684-8667 and ask forthe Marshall Pickens Building. For flu shots FACIAL MASSAGE vited for food, entertainment, and PROMENADE MEN LETTERMAN! THE SIMPSONS! SATUR­ Ambulatory Study. at other times, call 684-3621. With deep cleaning using Shakiee Prod­ great discussions in a social atmo­ Good luck tonight! We promise not to DAY NIGHT LIVE! Hear them the way they ucts. Lowest price around- $15. For sphere. Guest include Out of the step on your feet, fall, or do anything were meant to be heard with a Dolby Blue. Dean White. Matt Hammer, appointments call Betty, 479-5128. else to make you leave us standing Surround Sound decoder with built in and Dr. Ken Surin. alone on the dance floor. Love, your amp. Inputs for VCR. CD and tape. Excel­ Promenade Women. Do you need typing done? Term papers, lent condition. $75. 493-5102. WANT MONEY? dissertations, theses, legal work Bassett Fund accepting applications DG AND HOUSE CC professionally typed in my home. Please for independently organized lectures, SONY CD PLAYER. 5-disc carousel "my-tie" mixer tonight! Who knew fash­ call Sherry at 489-6224 special projects, and experimental THE CHRONICLE ion could be such fun?!?! Sisters come changer with remote control. Excellent undertakings—apply in Office of Stu­ to the section at 10p.m. to "tie" the knot condition. $150. 493-5102. dent Activities before last Wednesday PC'S TYPING SERVICE - For all your with your mystery match! of every month. typing needs. Professional staff gets classifieds information the job done right! Low rates. 544- S0NYTV(KV-1923), color. 19-inch, cable- GOOD VIBRATIONS ready, good condition. $100.493-5102. basic rates 0259. SENIORS—Reserve WEDNESDAY NOV.20 from 9-l:30a.m.— becuz $3.50 (per day) for the first 15 words or less. TYPING 10$ (per day) for each additional word. WHITE Tickets For Sale we've reserved the POWER COMPANY Need your paper, application, or resume for YOU! Mark your calenders NOW & 3 or 4 consecutive insertions-10% off. typed now? Accurate and fast. Guaran­ get ready to party with fellow SENIORS 5 or more consecutive insertions-20% off. teed 6-hour turnaround between 8:30 PLANE TICKET on WEDS.!! STAR JR. a.m. and 11 p.m., Monday-Sunday. Call Must sell one way ticket to JFK leaving 24 hours: 942-0030. FRANK ESTADT special features RDU Wed. Nov. 27, arriving JFK 4:29 Comer Cole Mill & To our favorite, fabulous, fantastic, p.m. PRICE NEGOTIABLE. For details, (Combinations accepted.) fleet-footed fun FAC, Happy Birthday! Hillsborough Rd. call Fleur, 684-0727. $1.00 extra per day for All Bold Words. Love 6 fab FAClets. $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading The Homestyle NEW CARS! Laundry-mat Offers: BUY MY TICKETS PARTOFHERCHARM (maximum 15 spaces.) Wants to wish the best ass on cam­ LOW RATES! For sale, round trip plane ticket from $2.00 extra per day for a Boxed Ad. • 40 homestyle pus a Happy Birthday. Love Christina. washers & dryers RDU to Fort Lauderdale during Thanks­ deadline •Economy and Luxury Cars giving. Leaves Tue, 11/26 and returns • 4 giant washers •Passenger Vans Sunday. Call 684-0581 if interested. 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 Noon. See page 16 • • 16 double load •Cargo Vans payment washers CALL "N Prepayment is required. • Trained attendant on 688-1147 PATTISHALL'S GARA Cash, check or Duke IR accepted. duty 7 days a week (We cannot make change for cash payments.) & RADIATOR SERVICE, • $.50/lb. wash/dry/ fold Specializing in r 24-hour drop off location • American Cars •babbits 3rd floor Flowers Building (near Duke Chapel) • Color TV • Dasher For reservations in other cities worldwide call • Scirocco where classifieds forms are available. • Video Games 5 1-M0-FOR CARS " (1-800-367-2277) • Datsun • Toyota • Air Conditioned or mail to: 4W Thrifty features quality products of the • Volvo •Honda '** Chrysler Corporation and other fine cars Chronicle Classifieds Now Open- Auto Repairing & Service • Motor Tune-up BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706. White Star Jr. II Lakewood S/C General Repairs • Wrecker Service Call 684-3476 if you have questions about classifieds. M-S 7 AM-10:30 PM 286-2207 No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline. ICarRental Sun 7;30 AM-10:30 PM 1900 W. Markham Ave. (located behind Duke Campus) PAG£f6 ^THEvCHkONli6LE . FrfiDAY/NOVglvlfeffi 15/1331 Cambodian prince returns to homeland after 20 years in exile

By PHILIP SHENONN Phnom Penh were large and affectionate, Thursday'Thursday'ss [ -^MIMM^ ~ •BBBBJ N.Y. Times News Service reception for the former Cambodian ruler was still decid­ PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—A joyous Prince Norodom edly subdued — a reflection of how often Cambodians Sihanouk returned home to Cambodia on Thursday after have seen their hopes for peace dashed over the last 20 spending most of the last 20 years in exile with the years. elusive, perhaps impossible, goal of establishing a perma­ There were broad smiles in the city Thursday, but few nent peace in his shattered nation. spontaneous tears of joy at the return of Sihanouk, who Pressing his hands together in a traditional Cambodian was Cambodia's head of state from 1941 until a 1970 coup, greeting, the 69-year-old prince emerged slowly Thurs­ and who was for a time in the 1970s the titular head ofthe day morning from the Chinese jetliner that had carried Khmer Rouge rebel movement and later became its pris­ him on the final leg of what has been a long journey home, oner. and he bowed gratefully to the thousands of Cambodians There was also palpable apprehension in the city Thurs­ who gathered at Phnom Penh's international airport to day over the imminent return to Phnom Penh of leaders celebrate his arrival. of the Khmer Rouge, which is a participant in the new "I am very happy," Sihanouk said in his soprano- transitional government in Cambodia. register voice, after kneeling at the feet of a delegation of During the four years the Khmer Rouge and its para­ aging, saffron-robed Buddhist monks who had been wait­ mount leader, Pol Pot, held power, from 1975 to 1979, ing for hours in the airport crowd to see him. more than one million Cambodians were either executed The prince returned to Phnom Penh as the leader ofthe or died from ill treatment, hunger and disease. UPl PHOTO Supreme National Council, a coalition group that will Sihanouk, who fled Phnom Penh in 1979 only days take part in running Cambodia until free elections can be ahead of a Vietnamese invasion that ousted the Khmer Norodom Sihanouk held in 1993 under terms of a United Nations peace plan. Rouge from power, is seen by many in the capital as the Sihanouk made no public speeches Thursday and an­ only Cambodian who can reunify the nation. jet, members ofthe dance troupe dropped to their knees swered no substantive questions from reporters, except to It is a view held even by those who believe the prince's and threw white flower petals at the feet ofthe prince and offer an enthusiastic "yes" when asked if peace had finally miscalculations made possible the Khmer Rouge's reign his wife, Princess Monique. arrived in Cambodia. of terror in the late 1970s and the dozen years of civil war Hun Sen, the Vietnamese-installed prime minister, While the flag-waving crowds at the airport and along that followed. was dressed in a spotless white uniform, white hat, and the motorcade to the newly renovated royal palace in Sihanouk has said that his hope is to bring to peace to white gloves, and he beamed as he explained how he was his nation before he dies — and to be permitted to die in "very happy and proud" to be escorting the prince back to Cambodia. his palace. Waiting at the airport Thursday morning to greet As Sihanouk waved and blew kisses to the crowd from From page 15 Sihanouk were some of his oldest friends and some of his a Chevrolet Impala convertible, Cambodians standing oldest adversaries — a few Cambodians fall into both along the motorcade route appeared genuinely delighted ELEPHANT SHOES categories — as well as a troupe of classical Cambodian to see their former ruler, even if for the most part their ACT AND SING Happy 21st Gayle. All the Rolling dancers whose ornate, jewel-encrusted silk costumes glis­ decision to take part in the welcoming festivities Thurs­ in a staged reading of a new musical! Rock you want now. Oh well. Love tened in the autumn sun. day had not been spontaneous. Auditions ll-3p.m. in Fred. Prepare a you. Charles. song. The decision to include classical dancers and a delega­ CHAMELEON tion of Buddhist monks and nuns in the welcoming party HEY JUNIORS! Have the past few days seemed like for the prince was a poignant symbol for many Cambodi­ Stop by to pay $10 dues on B.C. a dream now that you're part of the ans in the airport crowd, since both dancers and religious Walkway today! Cheap, cheap crimson and cream? Congratulations! figures were been singled out for extermination in the shotglasses and t-shirts! Its good to see you smile again, "line belle femme??" 1970s by the Khmer Rouge. The group's leaders believed Trinity ColUge Cafe BRRRR! ancient Khmer dance and religious observance to be 95 Those are his initials. Happy Birthday. TGIF vestiges of Cambodia's "bourgeois" past. $3 Entree Platters Daily French-Meister. Okay, okay whatshould GPSC is sponsoring a TGIF today "We have not known peace for many years," said I do? The team and Nut. AU of our appetizers, soups, salads, and entrees are from 5-7p.m. at the Hideaway. Pitch­ Cheavan, 72, a white-robed Buddhist nun who lost many PROMENADE MEN ers $1.75 with Grad Student ID. friends to the Khmer Rouge and who was at the airport prepared to order at the time of service to ensure the freshest taste possible . So, from Ribeye or Club Good luck tonight! We promise not REDSKINS SUCK! Thursday to get a glimpse of Sihanouk. to step on your feet. fall, or do "The lasttime we remember peace was when Prince Sihanouk Sandwiches to Philly Cheese Steak Subs or Shrimp anything else to make you leave us Platters, you are guaranteed the best! standing alone on the dance floor. 28 DAYS ruled the nation," she said. "We are happy he is home." Love, your Promenade Women. Countdown to Christi. As Sihanouk and his party stepped from the Chinese Drink Specials Mon, HIGH BALLS $1M Ihurx BOTTED IMPORTS SI50 lues, MARGUAR1TAS $2°° FrL $1M DOMESTIC BOTTLES Wed. 50* DOMESTIC DRAFT SlL IMPORT DRAFT $1°° ArWR Normally, we occupy this space with an ad Sun. DOMESTIC PITCHERS $35° TH for our business. However, we find it necessary 10% off food orders for Duke Employees * to express our outrage at the callousness ofthe BUSINESS editors of The Chronicle in accepting Bradley 682-9873 THYME LUNCHEON Smith's ad denying the Holocaust. To say that the ad was accepted to spark debate is pure m^£^^y^^^2ZMMMiP 5oL\p or Salad garbage. What is next, ads from the K.K.K. 10% Discount for Duke Students, claiming there was no slavery? There should be One-Half Pasta no place in our society for hate-mongering or Faculty & Employees Scmdvvick the providing of a platform for it to be ex­ I Specialties pounded - especially at a University with as Coffee, or Tea DURHAM URGENT CARE THE BOTTOM LINE learned a level as Duke. w/ Duke ID Card $4'5 $5« No Appointment Necessary! SCANDIA MOTORCAR Jv\oy\ • Tue. • Wed Visit any of our four offices 109 N. GREGSON ST. DURHAM, NC • (919) 682-5225 4195 Chapel Hill Blvd. 5242 Roxboro Rd. 493-4033 477-0060 r Send Flowers A Old Friends With A New Name M-F 8:30 am - 5:30 pm M-F 8:30 am - 5:30 pm On Campus or 1901 Hillandale Rd. 410 Executive Park 383-0003 544-0003 i M-F 8:00 am - 9:00 pm M-F 8:00 am - 7:00 pm 'Round the World Sat. 9:00 am • 6:00 pm Sun. 1:00 pm - 6:00 pm

ARETE payment is due at time of service frame gallery by cash, check or charge formerly Waterhouse Gallery Custom Picture Framing Prints - Posters «IB; #. We carry original work of regional and local N.C. artists CAMPUS FLORIST 286-7607 717 Iredell St., Durham £f 700 Ninth Street 286-5640 1 block east of Wellspring Grocery V^ i~~^^^^^ wmwwrm FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 17 Alum's book promises cure for stress

• STRESS from page 3 minds, they are just bodies." UUL1 the thing the person did, and we've been trained to blame. "That's where we've let people down today as psycholo­ lnexpenst\ e. And Fas In fact, they may be only partially to blame, or not to gists," Orman said. blame at all." Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:30 (Closed Sat. & Sun) Another misconception people have is that stress is While at the University, Orman majored in chemistry Dinner nightly 5-9-30 caused by things that happen outside of us in life. In fact, and played on the lacrosse team. He received his M.D. in Sat. & Sun. Closed for Lunch most causes of stress are invisible and go completely 1973 from the University of Maryland and in 1980 he ignored by most people. "It's one ofthe main reasons we created the Health Resource Network, a non-profit orga­ Planning a party? still have a stress epidemic in this country," Orman said. nization to promote humanistic competence among health Let us deliver the food! The trick is to accept the idea that "people don't have professionals. Free Delivery to Duke and Surrounding Area 5:30-9 p.m. ($10 minimum) (Located inside the courtyard of Dutch Village Inn, Salvadoran rebels suspend offensive 2306 Elder St., intersection of Elder & Fulton next to Duke North & VA Hospitals) By SHIRLEY CHRISTIAN but our understanding is that the government will ob­ 286-2255 • 286-1133 N.Y. Times News Service serve the truce." EL SALVADOR — With the Salvadoran peace talks The communique by the five guerrilla commanders said approaching their expected successful conclusion, the they had decided to suspend "offensive actions, urban guerrilla front announced on Thursday that it was unilat­ operations, and economic sabotage" in the war, which has erally suspending "offensive actions" after nearly a dozen claimed an estimated 75,000 lives. They promised to years of civil war. make the efforts necessary to prolong the suspension President Alfredo Cristiani immediately responded to until a cease-fire is signed. what he termed a "signal of good will" and said that the "Not one more Salvadoran should die in this war that LONDON government and army would take "corresponding unilat­ has already touched bottom and which only lacks the eral measures" when the rebel measure goes into effect on signing of a final, global accord," the guerrilla radio ROUND TRIP FROM Saturday. station declared in Thursday morning's regular broad­ "We expect that peace will begin in El Salvador on the cast. 16th with the cessation of armed activities," the president Cristiani avoided directly answering questions about said at a news conference minutes after the leaders ofthe whether the army would withdraw elite battalions from Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front made their guerrilla strongholds like the upper parts ofthe depart­ announcement in Mexico. ments of Chalatenango and Morazan, 'The fighting is over," one of the guerrilla leaders, "We would be disposed to order what is necessary in From RALEIGH/DURHAM round trips sortinf at Shafik Handal, said, "although the end ofthe war is more accord with how things are advancing," Cristiani said. MADRID $628 SYDNEY 1202 complicated." The guerrillas, long claiming that some zones are virtu­ CASABLANCA 628 HONGKONG 849 As Handal indicated, some important points remain to ally their liberated territory, say the particularly intense CARACAS 440 TOKYO 779 be negotiated on the agenda ofthe peace talks under way assaults they have made in recent months on electric in Mexico City. They include the organization of a new power plants, bridges, and other economic infrastucture LOS ANGELES-AUCKLAND 699 force with guerrilla participation and the has been in response to the army's increased incursions Taxes & surcharges not included. Fares subject to chanse. changes in the army, including a reduction in its size. into their areas. ••* It's not too late to book your tickets home for Nevertheless, both sides as well as diplomats close to Cristiani's rightist government and the leftist guerril­ the negotiations continued to predict the signing of a las are nearing the end of a peace process that began early the holidays for our LOW fares!!*** formal, monitored cease-fire before the end of the year, last year under the direction of Alvaro de Soto, a Peruvian Also: EURAIL PASSES ISSUED ON THE SPOT! probably at the United Nations in New York. diplomat and aide to Secretary-General Javier Perez de Work & Study Abroad programs, International Student By their separate actions on Thursday, the two sides Cuellar ofthe United Nations. & Teacher I.D. got around a longstanding roadblock to a temporary cease-fire, which was the guerrillas' demand that the Although a member of the strongly anti-communist Restrictions AppJy army agree to stay out of predominantly rebel zones until Nationalist Republican Alliance that is led by Roberto formal peace takes hold. d'Aubuisson, Cristiani made clear after his election in That question was left unaddressed on Thursday. 1989 that he intended to seek peace and to concentrate on Cristiani did not specifically declare a cease-fire or an end the country's economic development. Council Travel to actions by the army, but his reference to corresponding measures and the end to armed activities in general 703 Ninth Street, B-2, Durham, NC 27705 implied that. 919-286-4664 A senior Mexican official who has followed the talks closely said Cristiani's declaration was "not very clear, CELEBRATE OUR MANDARIN HOUSE un PROCTER & GAMBLE ANNIVERSARY CHINESE RESTAURANT November 22,23,24 On Friday, Saturday & Sunday We're Rolling Back the Clock to our 1981 Trices for 3 days only. Lunch Combinations starting from $2.75 3742 Chapel Hill Blvd. (Next to Circuit City Dinner Starting from S5.50 on service Rd.) INTERESTED IN A CAREER Sundav Buffet (12:00-2:30)55.95 *Register for door prires 493^3119 IN SALES MANAGEMENT?

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By NICHOLAS KRISTOF advertised at the fair, Asia Watch said The 16-page document N.Y. Times News Service that several political prisoners were be­ also notes that the United BEIJING — As China prepares to be lieved to be held in the county where the States and other Western the host of James Baker on Friday, it is goods came from. Among them is Chen countries called the 1989 finding that human-rights concerns are Lantao, a 28-year-old marine biologist who demonstrations "a hu­ already clouding its sense of triumph at is serving an 18-year prison sentence for man-rights movement." luring the American secretary of state. distributing leaflets and spreadingrumors According to Reuters, the The latest series of disclosures and alle­ during the 1989 democracy movement. document continues: "Not gations — that China is continuing to Asia Watch also reported that on Oct. only is this ridiculous and export prison-made products, that a Com­ 10, a shipment of prison-made diesel en­ absurd, butit reveals what munist Party document dismisses human- gines arrived in San Diego. Such ship­ kind of garbage their con­ rights concerns as "garbage," and that a ments are against American law. stantly repeated defense group of political prisoners is planning a Asked about the Asia Watch report, Wu of'human rights' really is." hunger strike unless guards stop beating Jianmin, a Foreign Ministry spokesman, Wu, on Thursday denied them — appears to be robbing Beijing of did not respond directly but repeated the that the Communist Party some ofthe glow of international respectabil­ Chinese position that the central govern­ central apparatus had is­ ity that it had hoped to earn from the visit. ment did not authorize exports of prison- sued such a document. Baker will be the most senior American made goods. Earlier, the Foreign official to visit China since the 1989 army Earlier this week, the government was Ministry dismissed re­ crackdown on the Tiananmen democracy embarrassed by reports that a Communist ports that political pris­ movement, killing hundreds and wound­ Party document issued on Oct. 25 criti­ oners in northeast China ing thousands. China has long been eager cized President Bush for trying to subvert were being brutally mis­ for a visit by him. China. The document, stamped secret, is treated and are planning The latest embarrassment came on said to interpret Bush's efforts to maintain a hunger strike beginning UPI PHOTO on Friday unless their con­ Thursday, when Asia Watch, the New York- trade links with China as a plot to destroy James Baker based human-rights group, asserted that socialism in China. ditions improve. The For- prison-made pipes, engines, and tools were According to a dispatch by Reuters, the eign Ministry has denounced the report as whether any further news about the re­ being promoted at a trade fair this week in document complains that Bush's real mo­ "a fabrication concocted for ulterior mo­ ported hunger strike will emerge while San Francisco. Asia Watch said that bro­ tive in pressing for continued "most-fa­ tives" and on Wednesday formally sum­ Baker is in China. chures from the fair even showed photos of vored nation" trade status is to overthrow the moned the journalists who wrote such sto­ While trying to put out those brush fires, the factories in which the Chinese charac­ Communist Party in China. As a result, the ries and criticized them for violating China seems to be trying to set a warm ters "labor reform" — a euphemism for document notes, the dispute in the United jounalistic ethics and Chinese regulations. tone in advance of Baker's visit. China's prison —were visible on the gates. States about policy toward China is simply Correspondents are now not allowed leaders gave a warm welcome early this While it is impossible to know if political about what strategy will be more effective in anywhere in northeast China, let alone in week to two former secretaries of state, prisoners worked on the products being influencing Beijing's actions. the area of the prison, so it is not clear George Shultz and Alexander Haig.

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By ROBERT NAYLOR for not being tougher on toymakers. cooking utensils. U.S. Customs Service, had seized 1.7 Associated Press "The commission obviously needs to Last year, 252 toys were recalled. million toys in the last year. WASHINGTON — Nearly two dozen improve its regulations," said Lucinda None ofthe toys on Swartz's list was Sikes said three-fourths of the toys children suffered fatal injuries last year Sikes ofthe U.S. Public Interest Research recalled; some were no longer in pro­ that her public interest group consid­ from playing with unsafe toys, a federal Group. "They're definitely not doing duction. ered dangerous were made overseas, agency says in warning parents to look for enough." and that foreign manufacturers are "not potential hazards. Jones-Smith said the commission has getting the message that there are these The Consumer Product Safety Commis­ Sikes said the number of toy-related "had to do a lot more digging and a lot safety standards that they must meet." sion said Thursday that at least 23 chil­ accidents increased 11 percent from 1989 more searching" this year to find un­ dren died last year from toy-related inju­ to 1990. She said many injuries involved safe items. Mary Ellen Fise of the Consumer ries and 129,000 were injured. The com­ small balls that met federal standards Debbie Tinsworth of CPSC said the Federation of America said CPSC should mission, which reported 33 deaths the designed to weed out objects that can lodge death figures were an estimate based work with foreign toymakers to im­ year before, issues an annual warning in a child's throat. on reports from consumers, lawyers prove the quality of imported playthings before the Christmas buying season, when CPSC's warning came a day after Bos­ and coroners. She said the injury fig­ because those foreign manufacturers most toys are sold. ton lawyer Edward Swartz, who has spent ures were based on children treated in need to know how to conduct safety "Many parents are not buying the ap­ 20 years searching the country for danger­ hospital emergency rooms nationwide. tests. propriate types of toys for their children's ous playthings, issued his annual list of skills and ages," said commission Chair­ most dangerous toys. Jones-Smith said the commission has Fise said consumer groups would woman Jacqueline Jones-Smith. She said The commission doesn't compile such a increased its efforts to keep foreign- watch CPSC "very carefully" to deter­ youngsters should not be given toys with list, but it noted that it has recalled 165 made toys that don't meet U.S. safety mine if the agency uses its new author­ small removable parts. toys this year, ranging from teddy bears standards from entering the country. ity to fine toymakers whose products Consumer groups criticized the CPSC and dolls to trucks and trains to tools and She said CPSC, cooperating with the don't meet federal safety standards. Tiny British Communist Party Clerics complain of human acknowledges Soviet funding rights violations by Iranians

By CRAIG WHITNEY communist leader of the time, "substan­ By VICTORIA GRAHAM N.Y. Times News Service tial financial assistance." The first pay­ For the first time since 1984, there Associated Press will be no special human-rights report LONDON — The tiny British Commu­ ment he was aware of, Falber said, was on Iran. The Tehran government has nist Party, prodded by leaks of secret files £14,000 in an envelope Gollan asked him UNITED NATIONS — Iranian re­ not approved a visit by a U.N. investi­ in Moscow, acknowledged on Thursday to look after and which he later paid into sistance leaders and human-rights ad­ gator. that it had received hundreds of thou­ party and party newspaper funds. vocates complained of widespread and increasing rights violations in Iran and sands of dollars between 1959 and 1979 in "Thereafter I received substantially urged the United Nations on Thursday secret payments from the Communist larger sums annually," he wrote, "and on The speakers said human rights to condemn abuses there. Party of the Soviet Union. several occasions money for Communist abuses and repression are increasing dramatically in Iran at a time of inter­ Professing "shock and dismay," the Parties working in illegal or semi-legal nal strife and political infighting among party's executive committee said it had conditions. The latter monies I 'laundered' They said that despite President clerics following Khomeini's death in learned that the first payment, (British carefully and handed over to representa­ Hashemi Rafsanjani's moderate image 1989. pounds)14,000, had been received in 1958 tives of the parties visiting London." abroad, repression in Iran is even worse than it was under Ayatollah Ruhollah directly from the party. Bigger payments, After the Soviet-led invasion of Czecho­ Terrorism and political assassination some of them as much as (British slovakia in 1968, he said, he and Gollan Khomeini. abroad and efforts to undermine other pounds)100,000, were received annually "became unhappy about the situation" and Speakers from the People's countries and spread Islamic funda­ throughout the 1960s, but were reduced decided to reduce their dependence on So­ Mujahedeen of Iran, Iranian exiles and mentalism also are increasing, they and finally ended in 1979. viet help. The last payment, he said, was in Felice D. Gaer, board member of the argued. The party's executive said the money 1979. International League for Human Ayatollah Ganjei, a dissident cleric, was paid by Soviet Embassy personnel to "He, and a select handful, dealt with this Rights, addressed a luncheon gather­ said that in the first seven months of Reuben Falber, former assistant secretary cash," the party said in a statement on ing as the U.N. General Assembly be­ 1991, the announced number of execu­ of the party, which now lists only about Thursday. "The rest of the CPGB were gins its annual consideration of human tions was 647, three times those an­ 3,000 members. A party conference has unaware of its existence." rights in various countries. nounced for the same period in 1990. been scheduled for Nov. 22-24 to debate The secret payments during the 1960s how and whether to struggle on. amounted "on at least one occasion," the Most hardline orthodox Communists left party said, to £100,000, the equivalent of the party at the end of the 1980s. The more or less a quarter of a million dollars party's present leaders say that it is "in at that time. transformation" toward a new position on HONG KONG the "democratic left." The party said it had begun investigat­ Restaurant Writing in Changes, the party's journal, ing the payments after a call from a jour­ Falber defended the decision to take So­ nalist with The Sunday Times of London Our customers come from all over the state. viet money. The party needed help badly on Nov. 1 inquiring about a fax purported "At long last we don't have to drive to D.C. in the late 1950s, he said, because the 1956 to be a copy of a document from Soviet Take Outs Soviet invasion of Hungary had driven off Communist Party files, stating that a KGB Welcome or New York for Dim-Sum and authentic most of its support. agent in London had informed Moscow Chinese cuisine." "In the face of this," he said, Soviet party that in 1978 he had made payments of 479-8339 •Lunch Special & Dinner Daily £14,000 and £15,000 to "Comrade Falber." leaders offered John Gollan, the British 3003 Guess Rd. •Dim-Sum - Saturday & Sunday 11 am-3 pm r RENT ONE TAPE & GET 2ND FREE Bring Your Clan for Clams good w/ ad only exp. 11/30/91 Bring Your Bunch for Munches because... Sun.-Thurs. only Bring Your Troop for Soup StUClCIltS

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Open Daily Foster's 6pk bottles 4" JOHNSON 19 6:30 A.M. to Midnight Yuengling Premium/6pk 3 286-4110 Milwaukee's Best Suitcases... 8" Restaurant K. 1 PAGE 20 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY.-NOVEMBER 15. 1991 Sports Football looks for redemption in home finale with Wolfpack

By BARRY SVRLUGA Blue Devils will be able to turn those While many members ofthe 1941 Duke negatives into positives this Saturday football team return to Wallace Wade Sta­ against N.C. State. While he concedes that dium this weekend to reminisce about the the mood ofthe team was understandably Rose Bowl and the glory days of 50 years down during practice early in the week, he ago, the current edition ofthe Blue Devils described Wednesday's workout as "a good, will certainly not be in the mood to think emotional practice that I hope will carry back on their recent past when ihey face into the weekend." 24th-ranked North Carolina State in their But the weekend brings problems other final home game ofthe season. than forgetting about Wake Forest. N.C. Duke must rebound from an extremely State (7-2, 3-2 in the ACC) is also coming disappointing loss to perennial ACC door­ off an embarrassing showing, a 42-10 loss mat Wake Forest, a loss that ranks along to Virginia in Raleigh. The Cavaliers were with last year's 59-0 drubbing at the hands able to pick apart a Wolfpack defense that of Virginia as their most embarrassing is ranked among the best in the nation. loss in recent memory. Wake had lost 17 State had yielded just over 11 points per straight conference games dating back to contest before facing Virginia. 1989, and the Blue Devils were expected to "I'm sure N.C. State is embarrassed and extend that streak. The game was sup­ hurt by their loss to Virginia," Wilson said. posed to be a tuneup for the final three Wilson also believes that the outcome of games of the season. Instead, it turned the Virginia game could be misleading. "I into a nightmare that could be difficult to think their record through the majority of overcome. their games this year would indicate that Head coach Barry Wilson conceded that they're one ofthe better defensive teams in the loss was a frustrating one for everyone the country, certainly in this conference," involved with the program. said Wilson. "They are a team that we will "When you're playing a team that you obviously have to have our best offensive feel you should beat and you don't," Wilson game [against] if we are going to have a said, " then there is an even greater mar­ chance to win." gin of frustration, hurt, embarrassment, State is led by a strong defensive front, all of those things." which includes linebacker Billy Ray SCOn BOOTH/THE CHRONICLE Despite the negative feelings that sur­ Haynes who is among the leading tacklers face immediately after such a disappoint­ in the conference. The secondary is a tal- Senior fullback Chris Brown will face a stingy N.C. State run defense in the final ing loss, Wilson has confidence that the See STATE on page 21 • home game of his career on Saturday. Wrestling team brings positive attitude into upcoming season

BR\Jy ERIPRICP JONElOKIPQS **> _____" *^k • «T\.T~J-T,."Nothin,.,g~ agains„^n,Vo+t 4-V.the^ guysm^rc ™rV>rwhot laaileavme mus,o " or.i/said4 Dukn„lrAe Lenny LoCastro, Duke's top wrestler at 134 pounds, Season Preview head coach Bill Harvey. "But when they go, you've got to senses a different atmosphere in the practice room this fill [their slots] in." fall. LoCastro and Ackerman, bothjuniors. Or they may merely While those graduates — Chris Keene, Keith Karsen, "It's an extra young team," he said. "Most guys don't signal a changing ofthe guard. But they underscore the Keith Girvan and Bradd Weber — combined for an 0-8 remember anything when you're talking about teams of youth and newfound leadership that characterize the record in the ACC tournament, their replacements have the past." 1991-92 Blue Devils. little college experience. For Pete Ackerman, Duke's 190-pounder, change is Duke begins its season this weekend at the Old Domin­ Harvey has slated in sophomore Scott Graham at 118 also apparent. ion Invitational tournament. and junior Eric Nesbit at 150. The pair combined for a 15- "The whole team attitude has switched to the attitude Last year the Blue Devils went 10-5 — 0-5 in the 12 record last season, primarily in tournament matches. ofthe senior class," he said. "They're the hardest-working Atlantic Coast Conference — and finished last in the ACC Freshman Drew Muzslay will start at 177. senior class I've been around since I've been here." tournament. Four starters graduated, leaving holes in Weber, a two-time ACC champ and the recipient of last The observations may represent a rite of passage for the lineup at 118,150,177 and 190 pounds. year's Duke Outstanding Wrestler Award, leaves the largest gap to fill in the 190-pound position. Enter Jeremy Godwin, a 250-pound North Carolina state high school champ. Godwin will wrestle heavy­ weight, allowing Ackerman to move down to 190. "He's strong and he's quick, but he's not a big, big heavyweight," Harvey said of Godwin, alluding to the heavyweight class limit of 275 pounds. Last season, Ackerman — no big heavyweight himself at around 200 pounds—put together a 15-16-1 record and came in fourth place at the ACC tournament in the 275- pound bracket. In dropping to 190, Ackerman said his opponents' size may decrease but the pressure he feels will increase. "Rarely in sports on any level are you in a no-lose position," he said. "Last year I found myself in that position. I could have gone out and wrestled horribly, but no one would know because the guy was 60 pounds heavier. Now there's no excuses." Junior Blayne Diacont, whose 1990-91 season climaxed See WRESTLING on page 24^ Announcement

Season Preview: Get an early look at the Duke men's basketball team this Saturday when it scrimmages against High Five America at 5:30 p.m. in Cameron Indoor Stadium. Doors open immediately following the Duke-N.C. State football game. There will be open seating for the game on the upper level. Tickets will be $5.00 for high school students and $10.00 for adults. Duke students will be admitted at no charge with their Duke Card and should move to the front ofthe line for STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE those awaiting admittance. The High Five team fea­ Senior captain Mike Darlington hopes to improve upon his excellent 25-5-1 record from last season while tures former Purdue star Troy Lewis and has already providing a young Duke team with the leadership it needs to have another successful season. beaten South Carolina and Purdue this fall. FfifOMY.rMOVEMEER: fl35..'iggi" THE-CWRONIGLE PAGEf^f Both teams seek redemption DUKE US. N.C. STATE after embarrassing showings GAME FACTS: • STATE from page 20 Quarterback Dave Brown, who had not TIME: 1:30 P.M. PLACE: Wallace Wade Stadium, Durham ented group that lacks only experience. All taken a snap in practice for two weeks due RADIO: WDNC-620 AM SERIES RECORD: Duke leads. 38-23-5 of this presents problems for a Duke of­ to a painful chest injury, was also able to TELEVISION: NONE LAST MEETING: N.C. State won, 16-0, fense that has struggled in recent weeks, get in some limited work this week. Wilson fast season in Raleigh failing to score more than 17 points in its hopes that the practice time will help re­ last five outings. turn Brown to form. Like Sampson, Brown LINEUPS: "Our offense needs, certainly, to revive," will play until he cannot continue. said Wilson. "If we're going to have a win­ The Wolfpack also has its problems at DUKE OFFENSE: N.C. STATE DEFENSE: ning game against N.C. State we're going quarterback. After losing starter Terry WR 26 Walter Jones (5-11.180, Sr.) OLB 88 Clayton Henry (6-3. 235. Sr.) to have to have major participation from Jordan to a broken arm early in the year, LT 76 Brandon Moore {6-7, 275, Sr.) LT 53 Mark Thomas (6-5. 270, Sr.) our offense." State was forced to turn to redshirt fresh­ LG 66 Pete Petroff (6-3. 285. Sr.) MG 90 Ricky Logo (6-0. 282. Jr.) Complicating matters further is the fact C 64 Stuart Albright (6-2. 260, Sr.) RT 96 John Akins (6-4, 268. So.) man Geoff Bender. Bender filled in admi­ RG 51 Steve Alderfer (6-4, 274. jr.) OLB 48 Keith Battle (6-3. 238. So.) that the Duke sideline seems to resemble rably during a six-game winning streak RT 78 Matt Williams (6-3. 253, So.) ILB 34 David Merritt (6-2, 235. Jr.) a MASH unit more and more every day, as that opened the season, but was injured TE 82 John Farquhar (6-6, 240. Fr.) ILB 50 Billy Ray Haynes (5-10, 215, Sr.) players continue to fall prey to injury. early in last week's game. True freshman QB 7 Dave Brown (6-5. 210. Sr.) CB 28 Wade Burton (5-9.175. Sr.) Added to the list of the walking wounded Terry Harvey then took the helm. Although FB 33 Chris Brown (6-1, 223. Sr.) C8 32 Sebastian Savage (5-11.187, Jr.) this week are outside linebackers Brad Bender could return to action this week, TB 29 Leroy Gallman (5-11,195, Jr.) FS 15 Ricky Turner (6-0.188, Jr.) Sherrod and David Hawkins. These inju­ any early turnovers forced by the Duke WR 81 Stanley Dorsey (6-2.196. So.) SS 3 Mike Reid (6-2. 208, So.) ries will force Kurt Ligos, normally a defense could serve to rattle a young signal backup at inside linebacker, to move out­ caller. side for the first time in his career. Once DUKE DEFENSE: N.C. STATE OFFENSE: Duke currently finds itself in a difficult OLB 99 Duane Marks (6-5, 225. Jr.) SE 7 Charles Davenport (6-4, 208, Sr.) again, the Blue Devils must hope that position. The Blue Devils' bowl hopes are backup players are able to rise to the LT 90 Preston Anderson (6-4. 265, Sr.) LT 79 Scott Woods (6-4. 271. So.) almost non-existent, and a source of moti­ NG 97 Gregg McConneli (6-3. 250. Sr.) LG 64 Brent Bagweii (6-4, 260, So.) occasion and fill in effectively for the in­ vation could be tough to find. However, a RT 75 Warren Scoville (6-5. 245. Jr.) C 54 Todd Ward (6-2, 254. So.) jured starters. strong performance against N.C. State OLB 56 Brad Sherrod (6-3. 210. Jr.) RG 65 Mike See (6-6.292, Jr.) For the first time in recent memory, could carry over into next week's game ILB 48 Mark Allen (6-1. 225, Sr.) RT 71 Scott Adeil (6-5. 284. Sr.) however, the Blue Devils are returning against North Carolina, where no external ILB 45 Darrell Spells (6-1, 210. Jr.) TE 84 Todd Harrison (6-4, 255. Sr.) more players than they are losing. Offen­ motivation is needed. As shown last week, SS 13 Derrick Jackson (6-3.190. Sr.) QB 14 Terry Harvey (6-1,180. Fr.) sive guard P.J. Schunke and wide receiver/ N.C. State's defense is vulnerable, and a FS 25 Erwin Sampson (5-11,180, Sr.) FB 33 Greg Manior (6-2, 241, Jr.) kick returner Brad Breedlove should re­ LCB 22 Wyatt Smith (5-10.176. Sr.) TB 24 Anthony Barbour (5-9.175. Jr.) healthier Brown could make all the differ­ RCB 5 Quinton McCracken (5-8.170, Sr.) FL 6 Ray Griffts (5-10,165. So.) turn to the lineup. ence in the world. The game is also the last Also reappearing for Duke is safety home contest for Duke's seniors, and leav­ Erwin Sampson, whose loss was especially ing Wallace Wade Stadium with a win is DUKE SPECIALISTS: N.C. STATE SPECIALISTS: felt last week when Wake Forest began something they may remember 50 years P 3 Randy Gardner (5-11,190, Jr.) P 37 Tim Kslpatrick (5-11.165. Jr.) running up big yardage on the ground due from now. PK 3 Randy Gardner (5-11,190, Jr.) PK 13 Damon Hartman (6-1.199. Sr.) to poor tackling. Sampson, the Devils' sur­ NOTES: A victory ofthe Wolfpack will PR 26 Brad Breedlove (5-11.170. Jr.) PR 16 LedeS George (6-0, 206, So.) est tackier, was able to practice some this assure Duke a non-losing season... After KOR 5 Quinton McCracken (5-8,170, Sr.) KOR 24 Anthony Barbour (5-9.175. Jr.) week despite the knee sprain that held three consecutive high-scoring affairs, N.C. KOR 18 Brad Breedlove (5-11.170. Jr.) KOR 19 Eddie Goines (6-0.177, Fr.) him out of last week's contest. Wilson said State shutout Duke, 16-0, last season in Note: Lineups subject to change that Sampson will remain on the fielda s Raleigh to end the Blue Devils' hopes at a long as he can take the pain. winning season.

DSG Sports is cleaning house in all 7 locations by consolidating INDOOR merchandise from every depart­ For the best in student television, watch... ment for a STOREWIDE SALE. We're moving out all this top quality merchandise at rock . bottom prices. Nov. 14th-Nov. 17th Savings up to 50% APPAREL DUKE Nike Samples Tennis shorts by Nike & Sea Palm Warm-ups, jackets, windsuits, beach-wear, Shorts by Le Coq Sportif & Umbro wet suits, shorts, aerobic wear, t-shirts. Values up to $200. Up to 50% off! 50% off! Shoes by Nike, Asics, Diadora, Reebok Running/Walking fashions by Moving Many styles and sizes to choose from. vs. Comfort, Nike & Russell Up to 50% off! Up to 50% off! Winter Outerwear by Jansport, Inside Russell Kids sweats Edge, Gerry, Columbia & CB Buy one, get one 1/2 off! Up to 50% off! N.C. STATE EXERCISE EQUIPMENT TENNIS RACKETS .. „. (floor models) Wilson Profile 3.6 T^Coc Wynmor Air Stepper ' reg. $199.95 $129.95 reg. S395.95 £7if57.SfO Prince Thunderstjck 110 a***** ~ Pro Form Aerobic Trainer a reg. $249.95..... $159.95 reg. $349.95 $199.95 Prince Response *fl0 fl_ Wynmor Wynfit Bike reg. $150.00 $99.95

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Wynpro Treadmill Prince Graphite Comp XL *-n __ on Cable 13 reg. $599.95 $299.95 Midplus reg. $64.95 $59.95 Pro Form 2001 EXL Prince Storm +*MI.M reg. $229.95 $149.95 Tomorrow 1:00 pm Treadmill reg. $695.95. $399.95 Donnay WST Apollo Pro & ^ Excel 4550 Stepper/Climber *4aQ fl- Formula Pro reg. $139.95 $99.95 reg. $329.95. ^IJjJJ.JjO Pro Kennex Ceramic Marquis^ . - - _ reg. $79.95 $49.95 D5GZ=SPORTS Oakcreek Village Location ONLY! PAGE 22 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1991 Expect the unexpected: Duke will prevail over Wolfpack

What this Duke football team needs is motivation. A Illogically. little confidence, a good old-fashioned pep talk. So this Seth Davis But there are even better reasons to anticipate a vic­ week, I called my good friend, Senator John Blutarski, tory. In the first place, N.C. State is also hurting. They FaberClassof'64. That's right. You heard me. The Blue Devils are going have now lost two quarterbacks and will start Terry "What can you say to them?" I asked the good Senator. to upset the N.C. State Wolfpack tomorrow afternoon at Harvey, a true freshman, under center. Sure, Harvey is a "I mean, they lost to Wake Forest. Before last weekend, Wallace Wade Stadium. Remember where you heard it young, rising star. So was Shirley Temple. the Deacs had lost 17 straight ACC games. Things got so first. With State mustering a paltry 3.3 yards per rush, the bad they stopped having practices. Just played Nintendo Many of the "Wallace Wade Wackos" out there are Blue Devils can stack up the front line and reasonably Techmo Bowl two hours a day. For Duke, it's like the already gearing up to be "Cameron Crazies." Well, hold off expect to be able to shut down State on the ground. If Duke season's over already." for one more day. This season's not over. As my friend the is going to lose, an 18-year-old QB is going to have to beat "Over?" he asked me incredulously. "Did you say over? Senator put it, "Was it over when the Italians invaded them. Nothing is over until we decide it is." Kuwait?" Perhaps even more significant is the fact that N.C. Where was Bluto when we needed him most? Of course, this prediction defies logic. Then again, this State has lost two very important conference games in a Which brings us to tomorrow. N.C. State. The Wolfpack. season defies logic. row to Clemson and Virginia. Last week's 42-10 drubbing Sans Corchiani and Monroe. Some teams play and add insult to injury. When the to the Cavaliers must have been especially disheartening, State brings in a truly ferocious defense, third-best in Blue Devils play, they add injury to injury. There's going at least as much as Duke's loss to Wake was. A few weeks the ACC. The Wolfpack is particularly effective against to be a special story on the,Duke football team to be aired ago, the Wolfpack was thinking ACC championship, ma­ the run, allowing opponents just 3.6 yards per carry. They next week. On "." jor Bowl, maybe even a national title. Those goals are now are 7-2, ranked 24th in the nation and a Bowl game is Of course, injuries are a part ofthe game, but this year's unattainable. The Pack is down. probably in their future. They are better than a touch­ body count for Duke can't be brushed aside with any Then, of course, there's that old intangible football down favorites. cliche. Coming into the year, two top priorities for Duke edge—motivation. Sen. Bluto's words of wisdom not with­ And Duke is going to beat them. were establishing the run and stopping the run. Within standing, the Blue Devils should take the field tomorrow their first three games, they lost Randy Cuthbert, their with unmitigated ferocity. (I always try to use the word best running back, and Scott Youmans, their best defen­ "unmitigated" at least twice a semester.) Thirty seniors sive lineman, for the season. will be playing for the last time at home. While State Just when they needed to break big plays the most, out comes in frustrated that their title hopes have slipped goes wide receiver Keith Ewell, one of their best deep away, the Blue Devils know the only thing they have left threats. Lately, the plague has been an inexplicable to play for is pride. In this illogical and frustrating season, propensity for dropping passes. Naturally then, tight end that should be enough inspiration. Aaron Shaw, owner and proprietor of the team's most As for scoring against the State defense, well, I can't be reliable paws, jumps on the casualty bandwagon. Punter expected to figure out everything. But if some supernatu­ Tim Davis, who had finally begun to consistently boot the ral force has been working against Duke so far, then long ball, also is gone for the year with a knee injury. hopefully that same force will be watching Florida State- And that is only players lost for the whole season. Hosts Miami like the rest ofthe nation. of others have missed games at a time, including Erwin It can be done. You have to believe it. You have to feel Sampson, Brad Breedlove, Walter Jones, Stuart Albright, it. You have to convince yourself of it. It's called the Power P.J. Schunke and Duane Marks. Before the Wake Forest of Irrational but Positive Thinking. All it takes is a little game, Dave Brown hadn't taken a snap in practice in two motivation, a healthy tablespoon of confidence. weeks. So as the Senator said this week, "When the going gets Who coaches this team, Wile E. Coyote? Not to start a tough, the tough get going!" (Where does he come up with panic, but if you find yourself walking with a Duke these?") So who's with me? Let's get 'em! football player across the quad, I'd keep one eye up to AAAAAAaaaaaahhhhhhhh... SCOn BOOTH/THE CHRONICLE watch out for falling pianos. Seth Davis is a Trinity senior and an assistant sports Senior quarterback Dave Brown will lead Duke to Clearly, then, illogic is the rule for this '91 season. It is editor of The Chronicle (at least he pretends to be). His victory over N.C. State in his Wallace Wade finale. therefore obvious that Duke is going to win tomorrow. column appears every Friday. Duke Interact • Duke Interact D c Memo To: The community of students, 7s faculty, and administrators CD COME SEE of Duke University. 5" From: The Round Table theme dorm. CT CD ~3 WHAT: "Duke Interact/' a social event Q) O for the entire campus, designed c+ to promote interaction. WHEN: Friday, November 15, 1991 D CD 5 to 7 p.m. c CD WHERE: Von Canon Hall CD Lower Level Bryan Center 5" CD CT Opening Performance CD Out of the Blue =5 Q) O Q Keynote Speakers ct Student-to-Student Interaction • Dean Richard White, Dean of Trinity College COACH K! o Community Service D CD Matt Hammer, The Green Dean c Be in the studio audience at the season premiere of c_ Director of the Community Service Center CD "Cameron Corner" CD Student-Faculty Interaction Dr. Ken Surin, Faculty in Residence ofthe Round Table 5" MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 6:45 p.m. professor in the Religion Department ct at the Cable 13 studio "greenhouse" CD CD behind the Bryan Center Interaction Time ~3 Z3 The rest of the time will be spent mingling, CD discussing, and eating! O Q ct loejsiui 8>|nQ • :pej83U| 8>|nQ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15. 1991 'THE'CHRONICLE PAGE 23

Ron Olson Sacks Sclafani Royster Davis Doster HOST GUEST (0-0-0) (142-54-4) (139-57-4) (138-58-4) (138-584) (136-604) DUKE N.C. State 19-29 23-18 9-20 2-5 35-34 21-30 Grid Picks Clemson Maryland Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Registrar's Office-You say you missed registra­ Georgia Tech Wake Forest Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech North Carolina tion? Figure you'll never be able to get into stimu­ South Carolina North Carolina South Carolina North Carolina North Carolina North Carolina North Carolina Florida State Miami Florida State Florida State Florida State Florida State Florida State Florida State lating and challenging courses for the spring se­ Perm State Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame mester? Georgia Auburn Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia Well, think again, because the Grid Picking Illinois Michigan Michigan Michigan Michigan Michigan Michigan Michigan braintrust has assembled a selection of offerings Virginia Tech East Carolina Virginia Tech East Carolina East Carolina East Carolina East Carolina East Carolina LSU Mississippi State Mississippi State LSU Mississippi State LSU LSU LSU that were too cool to be printed in the Official Ohio State Indiana Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State Schedule of Courses. Registration forthese courses Minnesota Wisconsin Wisconsin Minnesota Minnesota Minnesota Wisconsin Minnesota will be conducted through the new ACES (Adopted Purdue Michigan State Michigan State Michigan State Purdue Michigan State Purdue Michigan State to Confuse Experienced Seniors) telephone regis­ UTEP Utah UTEP Utah Utah Utah Utah UTEP Memphis State Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama tration system. Just dial 684-1111 and have your Youngstown State Slippery Rock Youngstown State Youngstown State Youngstown State Youngstown State Youngstown State Youngstown State personalized PINHEAD number ready. Morris Brown 8ethune-Cookman Bethune-Cookman Bethune-Cookman Bethune-Cookman Bethune-Cookman Morris Brown Bethune-Cookman As you will see, the Grid Pickers are only instruct­ Fordham Holy Cross Holy Cross Holy Cross Hoty Cross Holy Cross Holy Cross Holy Cross ing courses in their areas of expertise. For ex­ Northeastern Delaware State Delaware State Delaware State Delaware State Delaware State Northeastern Northeastern Connecticut University Boston Boston Connecticut Connecticut Connecticut Connecticut ample: BIO 1-0, 10 inn.: Bravesology, taught by Marc Robbins Heimberger Jaffe Olson Kaufman Krachon "Orel" Sacks. Dr. Sacks is a leading authority in HOST GUEST (136-604) (132-644) (131-65-4) (130-66-4) (126-704) (0-0-0) the search for a cure for heartbreak, having already DUKE N.C. State 13-27 21-23 61-2 21-17 (-~>~ 9-24 Clemson Maryland Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson developed a balm to soothe "Tomahawk Elbow." Georgia Tech Wake Forest Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech \ Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Guest lecture on baserunning by Lonnie Smith. North Carolina South Carolina North Carolina North Carolina : North Carolina North Carolina North Carotina North Carolina ART 343: Cement Footwear Sculpture, taught by Florida State Miami Florida State Florida State Miami Florida State Florida State Florida State Matt "The Weasel" Sclafani. Learn how to mix Penn State Notre Dame Notre Dame Penn State Penn State Notre Dame Penn State Penn State Georgia Auburn Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia Auburn aethetic beauty with offers you can't refuse. Pre­ Illinois Michigan Michigan Michigan Michigan Michigan Michigan Michigan requisites: Two limbs broken or other mafia expe­ Virginia Tech East Carolina Virginia Tech Virginia Tech East Carolina East Carolina East Carolina East Carolina rience. Permission of Godfather Required. LSU Mississippi State LSU LSU LSU LSU Mississippi State LSU PSY 000: The Superego, taught by Seth "Silent Ohio State Indiana Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State Indiana Sam" Davis (crosslisted as SPE 001). The sole Minnesota Wisconsin Minnesota Minnesota Minnesota Minnesota Wisconsin Wisconsin Purdue Michigan State Purdue Purdue Michigan State Michigan State Purdue Purdue textbook will be Mr. Davis' forthcoming autobiogra­ UTEP Utah Utah UTEP Utah Utah UTEP Utah phy, "Coming to Grips with a Swelled Head." Paper Memphis State Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama required extolling the instructor. Youngstown State Slippery Rock Slippery Rock Slippery Rock Youngstown State Youngstown State Slippery Rock Youngstown State PE 78-61: Mudsliding for Health: instructor, Morris Brown Bethune-Cookman Bethune-Cookman Bethune-Cookm an Morris Brown Morris Brown Bethune-Cookman Bethune-Cookman Fordham Holy Cross Holy Cross Holy Cross Holy Cross Holy Cross Hoiy Cross Holy Cross David "Bionic Man" Royster. Learn the proper Northeastern Delaware State Northeastern Northeastern Northeastern Northeastern Delaware State Northeastern technique from the master himself. (Additional fee Connecticut Boston University Boston Boston Connecticut Connecticut Connecticut Boston of $10,000 required to cover hospital costs). PE 23, crosslisted as PPS 747: Windsurfing for Sally." No commitment required. tor: Kris "Big Daddy" Olson. This semester the tor Mike "Toe Cheese" Krachon will expound on Granolas: head flake: Brian "Waverunner" Doster. PS 101: Constitutional Law: by Ann "Sheepdog" course will focus on misogyny, the Greek system, the theories of the renowned Dr. Scholl and try to Learn to make recreation jibe with political activ­ Heimberger. Focus on the interpretation and prac­ career searches, snobbery, hypocrisy and the pov­ answer the age-old question: "Shoes: A necessity ism. Save dolphins while sailing alongside them. tical application of the first amendment and its erty of student life. Suggested listening/viewing: or an invention of society?" Field trips to Maui, Aruba. The Columbia River application to journalism. "Use Your Illusion I," "Heathers" SOC 22: Juvenile Delinquency: Visiting profes­ Gorge, and Capitol Hill. Prerequisites: birkenstocks, ENG 21S.86: The Lyrical Poetry of Ice-T: taught DRA 0.5: Public Whining: taught by Brian "The sor (from Northeastern): Ron "Big Daddy's Daddy" you're own windsurfer, zinc oxide, and a killer tan. by Mark "The Ghost" Jaffe. Delve into the soul of Fish" Kaufman. Learn how to project incessant Olson. What to do when you've tried everything, but PHL 69: Platonic Relationship Theory: prof: one of America's most underappreciated muses. complaints through steel walls. Prerequisites: an you're kid is still a shmuck. Students are advised Mike "The Boy Wonder" Robbins. Robbins will No past hip-hop experience necessary. Prerequi­ LSAT score above 165 or permission from Brian's to wait at least half an hour before deciding that teach his seven-step method to being every girl's site: MUS 107.7 Introduction to Modern Rap Genre. mom. class has been cancelled. best friend. Film requirement: "When Harry met PHL 1313: Special Topics in Cynicism, instruc­ BAA 12 1/2EEE: Footwear and Society: instruc­ By HARRY DEMIK SCREEN PRINTING A YMCA INVENTION..3^™*1 T-SHIRTS • SWEATSHIRTS • CAPS BASKETBALL COMPETITION GOLF SHIRTS • JACKETS althe Y! 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NEW MENU ITEMS • Ribeye Steak • Fresh Boiled Shrimp SCOGM • Tortilla Chips & Salsa "lAUTO PARTS ,1NC. WIDE SCREEN TV PARTY ROOM FOR SERVING THE AREA SINCE 1969 30-40 QUALITY PARTS • PROMPT SERVICE Open seven days a week Complete Selection of American and Foreign Parts 11am until ^^^— • Brake Drums and Rotors Turned tAb \neCT * Bearings Pressed 1117 Broad Street, Durham* 286-0669 *• • Fly Wheels Reground • Welding Tanks & Supplies Next to Special Flowers 2V2 blks from WE MANUFACTURE A/C & HYD. HOSE East Campus M-F 7-6, Sat 8-4, Sun 10-2 M-F 8-6,Sat 8-4 M-F 8-6, Sat 8-4 764 Ninth St. 4528 Roxboro Rd. Eastgate Shopping Center '<2V fflgigfrbartiggft fflub" All ABC Permits Durham • 286-2237 Durham • 477-7359 Chapel Hill • 968-4437 PAGE 24 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1991 Wrestling opens season at Today Old Dominion Invitational e, Cameron In- Saturday • WRESTLING from page 20 Pritzlaff have led by example during the in a surprising third place finish at ACC's, preseason, Ackerman said. Football vs. North C arolina State, has retained the job at 158. Diacont se­ "In our program, you're going to have to cured the spot last season when teammate do [training] by yourself a lot," Ackerman Wallace Wade Stadiur n, x'.SO p.m. Dan Goffredo suffered an arm injury. said. "They really take responsibility onto Goffredo went 14-3 in his rookie season themselves. They're willing to go running prior to the injury. Diacont defeated him in and lifting, and do extra drilling." a wrestle-off this fall, and Goffredo may In his 26th season as head coach, Harvey 5:: try to challenge for Duke's 167 position, has adopted a new practice schedule to according to Harvey. improve upon weaknesses he perceived in VolIeyb< Returning sophomore Keith Pavlick( 15- the Blue Devils technique last year. For door St; 15 last season) will try to hold off freshman two to three-day periods, practices focus This a picture of Kris Olson: Dan Lilley at 142. on technique work; then two or three days A) Dreaming of the day the Red Sox win the World Series-NOT! B) Dreaming of his 21st birthday so he can drink beers like Norm Mike Darlington (126) and Ode Pritzlaff are devoted mainly to "live wrestling." Peterson (167) are Duke's sole seniors in the start­ "I conceive our goals to be to work hard C) Dreaming of the day he can become thesports editor of a major in the room drilling, technique-wise and college newspaper ing lineup. Darlington earned fourth place D) Praying that if he does becomethe sports editor, no one will honors in the conference tourney and fin­ conditioning-wise," Harvey said. "They're rte discover he still plays with the same Raggedy Ann doll he adored ished 25-5-1 last season. daily goals — they're realistic goals." as a child -Happy birthday, young Kris. Love, Mom. Dad, Raggedy Ann, Andy, 'Over the summer, Pritzlaffs right The Old Dominion tournament marks and Bill Buckner pointer finger was sliced off at the knuckle the first of four such invitationals preced­ in a construction accident. "I thought it ing the Duke's first home dual meet, Janu­ would be a problem with writing and ary 7 against Southern Connecticut. school," said Pritzlaff, who went 18-10 last "We have a lot of faith in the young year, "but with wrestling it hasn't affected guys," Harvey said. "But they could walk me at all." into a match this weekend and meet a fifth Along with non-starting seniors Brett year senior. They may have to grow up a lot Beldner and Mike Wenner, Darlington and faster than they think they want to."

When Octoberfest has come and gone, can you-know-who and you-know-what be far behind? The Autumn weenies haven't even stopped drifting by our window, and already urgent orders for fresh Thanksgiving turkeys are flocking into our butcher shop. Join the crowd. Whether your heart's desire for Thanksgiving is prime beef, lamb, crown roast of pork, pheasant or whatever, call or come in and plan your holiday menu with the butcher, the produce lady, the baker and the wine folks. Gift-giving made easy, fast and affordable by Fowler's Everybody in the whole world wants somebody, please, somebody, some­ where, to give them a gift of food and wine goodness from Fowler's. For guaranteed happiness for everybody on your gift list, call Karen or Joyce Fowler right now at 683-2555 or 1-800-722-8403. Your gifts are as good as wrapped, basketed, shipped, delivered, or ready for pick up. Remember that our gift services are good for more than holidays— birthdays, anniversaries, weddings, you name it. 683-2555 or 1-800-722- 8403. We love doing business or personal gifts. For a copy of the "Fowler's Gift Suggestions List? or to receive the "Fowler's Gourmet Newsletter" call 683-2555 or 1-800-722-8403. Sunday Nov. 17,1-6 OPEN HOUSE at BRIGHTLEAF SQUARE Refreshments everywhere. Register for prizes. Jellybean the Clown / Duke School String Orchestra

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