Down with Duke! The U. Penn student paper blasts Duke in an column written by a former Dukiewhoeharges THE CHRONICLE Duke lacks sensitivity and a social life. See 3. MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1991 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION SAE bench found with Reves takes a big peach of a friend 'interim' out From staff reports SAE bench out by the peach," of chair title The Sigma Alpha Epsilon said Paul Kaplan, a junior at bench, stolen early Wednesday Emory University. From staff reports morning, was sighted in Gaffney, Kaplan saw the bench Friday The Department of Anesthesi­ S.C, near the town's famous while driving to Duke to visit ology has an almost-new chair. peach-shaped water tower. friends during his school's fall Dr. Joseph Reves, professor of "There sure as hell is a big blue break. The bench is clearly vis­ anesthesiology and director ofthe ible from Interstate 85, Kaplan Heart Center at the Medical Cen­ said. It appears to be intact and in ter, was promoted from interim good condition. chair, a position he has held since "They didn't hide it very well if November of 19.90. you happen to live in Gaffney," The announcement was made Kaplan said. by Dr. Ralph Snyderman, chan­ Kaplan mentioned seeing the cellor for health affairs, and Pro­ bench to friends at Duke after vost Thomas Langford. "Dr. Reves seeing The Chronicle's photo­ has steered the department very graph ofthe scale model left in its effectively through this interim place. period," Snyderman said, accord­ Deputy Pat Gantt of Gaffney ing to Duke News Service. Police confirmed the sighting and Reves came to the University condition of the bench late Sun­ in 1984 as professor of anesthesi­ day afternoon. "It did not appear ology and director of to be damaged," she said. cardiothoracic anesthesia. In Gantt said she notified Detec­ 1987, he was also named director tive Charles Nordan of Duke Pub­ PAUL ORSULAK/THE CHRONICLE ofthe Heart Center. lic Safety that the stolen property Block for charity Among his ideas for expanding was found. the department is the possibility SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE "I'll be dammned. Really? . . . That's what these guys are doing during the 11th annual 24 of hiring a neuroscience anesthe­ SAE's bench has taken up new Good Deal. Holy Cow!" said Chip hour volleyball marathon benefiting the Ronald McDonald siologist for researching body re- House, sponsored by the Duke ROTC units. residence in Gaffney, S.C. See BENCH on page 4 • See Reves on page 7 • Recall petition drive launched to oust Brown from council

By KIM WOODARD versity where he teaches public unofficial leader ofthe group. rates, are driving people into group had about 100 volunteers A group called Citizens for In­ administration, as well as run­ The city council is not doing neighboring counties, he said. at 11 polling sites during last tegrity in Government has ning up hundreds of dollars in enough to reprimand Brown for About 78 percent of the voters Tuesday's elections. launched an effort to recall city private phone calls on his city his actions, Strawbridge said. in last Tuesday's election signed The group draws many of its councilman Clarence Brown. credit card. "Clarence Brown has not seen fit the petition during the election, volunteers from the congregation The organization started a pe­ The city council has asked to resign, and city council has not said Woods Watson, a member of ofthe Grace Baptist Church, but tition drive calling for Brown's Brown to submit his resignation seen fit to do more than slap him the group. is not officially affiliated with the removal from the Durham City before a special meeting tonight. on the wrist." "We're not isolated in our opin­ church, Strawbridge said. Council. The group has collected If Brown does not resign before "Durham is a laughing stock ion. We think that what Brown The group was formed within over 5,700 signatures of 18,000 the meeting, Citizens for Integ­ throughout the state of North has done does not reflect well on the last month and is loosely or­ needed to force a recall election. rity in Government plans to work Carolina because of our city Durham. Durham does not need ganized, Watson said. It is a "pull­ Brown has been accused of up until the November 5 elec­ council," he said. Problems in the someone like him a policy-mak­ ing together of citizens who share double billing expenses to the city tions to remove Brown from of­ city, including government insta­ ing position," Watson said. a common concern... good integ­ and North Carolina Central Uni­ fice, saidNelson Strawbridge, the bility and high tax and crime Strawbridge estimates the rity in government," Watson said. Poetic debate descends on campus Festival highlights international flavor of poetry

By ERIC LARSON languages. writer to win a Nobel Prize for "A few months ago my four- Strand, who has published nine Literature and the fifth writer year-old surprised me," said poetry collections, was joined at a whose work was in Russian. former U.S. Poet Laureate Mark readingin Gross Chemistry Build­ The poets gathered Saturday Strand, reading from one of his ing Friday night by three other in the William Griffith Film The­ stories. "He was hunched over, poets: Joseph Brodsky, and win­ ater to debate the nature of po­ polishing my shoes, when he ner of the 1987 Nobel Prize for etry as a common language. Also looked up and said, 'My transla­ Literature, Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill at the panel discussion was tions of Palazzeschi are going and Li-Young Lee. Gerald Barrax, a poet at North poorly.'" The poets in the festival all Carolina State University. "I quickly withdrew my foot. "have experience with more than Brodsky said that as poet lau­ Tour translations? I didn't know one language, all have ties to more reate he is trying to convince pub­ you could translate.'" than one country," said Sally lishers to print more than the The boy poked fun at his fa­ Buckner, a poet and professor at usual 2,000-10,000 copies of a ther. " Tou haven't been paying Peace College in Raleigh. Buckner poetry collection, which limits the much attention to me lately,' he helped coordinate the festival. distribution and availability of said." Brodsky, a native of St. Peters­ poetry. "The whole point is if you Strand's prose-poem, "Trans­ burg who was named Poet Laure­ publish a lot, it forces you to dis­ lation," seemed an appropriate ate by the Library of Congress in tribute." selection for the International May, came to this country in 1972. Brodsky suggested for publish­ Poetry Festival held on campus He had served 18 months in a ers try selling poetry in the check­ this weekend, in which some of Soviet prison for his poetry, which out lines in grocery stores—right LOIS PRICE/THE CHRONICLE the world's biggest name poets Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev next to the National Enquirer. Several well known poets, including Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill, Li- gathered to read and discuss po­ called "social parasitism." At 47, "People buy things in super- Young Lee, and Joseph Brodsky, were on campus this weekend. etry both in English and other Brodsky was the second youngest See POETS on page 6 • PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY. OCTOBER l4,i991 World and National Newsfile Witnesses for both sides testify in hearings Associated Press By JAMES ROWLEY The lie detector test added an element Thomas and Hill aside, the day's drama Ties restored: The Soviet Union Associated Press of controversy. "Ms. Hill is truthful," said demonstrated that sexual harassment is expected to sign an agreement WASHINGTON—Four friends of Anita Paul Minor, administrator ofthe test and knows no favorites. One witness for him this week restoring diplomatic ties Hill solemnly testified Sunday she told head of a private security firm in Virginia, and one for her disclosed that they, too, had with Israel after a 24-year absence, them in the 1980s that Clarence Thomas in comments that sent consternation been victimized. Israel's state radio reported Sunday. had made unwanted sexual advances to­ through the ranks "Being a black ward her. But former associates of the of Thomas' defend­ woman you know Cubans given VOte: Cuban vot­ Supreme Court nominee vouched for him, ers. you have to put up ers were given the right to directly one of them saying, "I know he did no such Sen. , Orrin with a lot," Ellen elect representatives to the National thing." Hatch, R-Utah, Wells told the com­ Assembly, the country's highest leg­ Offstage, a polygraph expert said Hill called the develop­ mittee of 14 white islative body, by members of the had passed a lie detector test, which her ment "highly offen­ male senators. "So fourth Cuban Communist Party con­ supporters said boosted her credibility. sive and highly po­ you grit your teeth gress. And the Senate Judiciary Committee litical, too pat, too and you do it," she made public a statement from Angela slick, exactly what said, adding that she Plan agreed On: The biggest in­ Wright, who worked under Thomas at the a two-bit, slick law- had been "touched in dustrial democracies agreed Sunday Equal Employment Opportunity Commis­ yer" would do. the workplace" more on what they called a historic plan to sion. Wright, who was dismissed by Tho­ Biden, D-Del., who than once. help the Soviet Union build a mar­ mas, said he "constantly pressured" her to chairs the commit­ Hill "said that ket economy, but made no specific go out with him and once asked her about tee, ruled the re­ Clarence Thomas promises of additional financial aid. her breast size and frequently made com­ sults legally inad­ had repeatedly ments on women's anatomy. missible. asked her out," China a nuclear threat?: The The committee ended the extraordinary The Senate is Hoerchner said. demise of Soviet communism leaves hearing early Monday morning after hear­ scheduled to vote "She told me that of China as the only hard-line Marxist ing more than 14 hours of sharply conflict­ Tuesday on con­ course she had re­ state capable of firing long-range ing testimony about Hill and Thomas, ac­ firming Thomas, a fused, but he missiles at the . But cuser and accused in a drama that capti­ 43-year-old black wouldn't take no for experts say the major threat from vated the nation. federal appeals an answer." Beijing is its weapons export policy. Both had been invited back to testimony judge whose nomi­ Hoerchner said on Monday, but committee chairman Sen. nation has turned UPI PHOTO Hill told her that Joe Biden said they had indicated they into a tale of sex Thomas repeated would not appear. and politics unlike Clarence Thomas his entreaties, say­ Weather "He wouldn't take no for an answer," any other. Sen. ing "I'm your type, \ \ \ \ s Susan Hoerchner quoted Hill as saying Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., predicted that I'm your kind of man and you refuse to Tuesday \ \ \ \ \ about Thomas in the early 1980s. Hill most of Thomas' previously announced 13 admit it." High: 70s • Showers added that Thomas said, "You know if you Democratic supporters would stand by More than six hours later came an en­ Low: 50s had witnesses, you'd have a perfect case him unless something "really heavy" came tirely different story, one depicting Tho­ against me," Hoerchner told the panel, up before the end ofthe hearings. mas as a man completely incapable of such It's a deary day, perfect for staying which is probing Hill's allegations of sexual President Bush issued a fresh defense action — and Hill as anything but a meek in bed. Too bad you have your Orgo advances and Thomas' unequivocal deni­ of his embattled nominee. "I believe he victim. midterm today. als. will make it," the president said. See THOMAS on page 15 • f jjjjjjjjjjjj^ lllilllllilllllll JIM ACTUARIAL EXECUTIVE DEVELOPMENT EARLY PROGRAM

THE FORMULA FOR SUCCESS DEADLINE! Prudential's Actuarial Executive Development Program is a fast track to positions of leadership at one of the world's largest insurance and financial services companies. For energetic college graduates with strong math, analytical and communications skills, AEDP offers: • Preparation for examinations leading to the professional Display advertising deadlines for designation of Fellow of the Society of Actuaries, •Periodic job rotations that provide exposure to Prudential's the week of fall break have been diverse operations and the chance to work with people at all levels of the organization, and changed. To advertise between • A special curriculum to aid in the development of management and communications skills. The AEDP experience helps participants build a firm foundation October 23 and 25, orders are for success in their future role as Prudential actuaries and Company leaders. due one week earlier than usual.

To learn more about our program, come to the information session and meet our representatives. Publication Date Ad due by Noon on Wednesday, Oct. 23 Wednesday, Oct 16 October 16, 1991 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 24 Thursday, Oct. 17 Von Cannon Hall B Friday, Oct. 25 Friday, Oct. 18 ThePrudential Additional information may be obtained by writing to: The Chronicle 101 West Union Bldg. Jason Tokuda, The Prudential Insurance Company of America, 213 Washington St., 13th Floor, Newark, NJ 07102-2992. Advertising Department 684-3811 MONDAY, OCTOBER 14. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 3 City may export, burn garbage as solution to landfill woes

By PEGGY KRENDL where they could directly effect drinking Originally the city considered a transfer pyrolysis process which would thermally A city-owned and operated waste trans­ water or in industrial sections ofthe county station that would be owned and managed heat trash until 90 percent of it is con­ fer station that would export garbage out which are trying to encourage business, by the Browning-Ferris Industries of South verted into a low quality natural gas that of Durham may provide an answer to the said Sylvia Kerckhoff, a city council mem­ Atlantic, Inc. Critics such as the People's can be used for energy. landfill problem. ber. Durham's landfill will fill up by 1995. Alliance, a local political group, feared the The remaining 10 percent ofthe garbage The proposal was discussed at the city The city's attempts to find a replacement company would violate environmental laws could be hauled to a landfill. The process is council's solid waste management retreat have suffered from repeated delays and and take jobs away from Durham. not used anywhere else. Total Energy Sys­ on Friday and Saturday. The council will protests. A city-owned and operated company tems, a Los Angeles company, has offered vote on the proposal Oct. 21. If passed, the The proposal considered at the retreat would provide residents with jobs and its to build a plant in Durham without cost to details would be worked out by the city was originally suggested in August by practices would be regulated by the city, the city, Lewis said. The plant would charge manager's office. Jackie Brown, president of the Northeast Brown said. the city for disposing of the waste. Also a method to convert garbage into Neighborhood Association. "I think the majority of the community The council may consider using pyroly­ energy may be considered by the city coun­ Under the proposal, Durham would build will be willing to accept [the city-owned sis in conjunction with the transfer station cil. a transfer station that would be managed transfer station]. It is not a 100 percent and an out-of-county landfill site. "There are no sites in Durham," said by the city. Garbage would be taken to the victory for any one group," Brown said. "I am not completely sold on pyrolysis Oscar Lewis, a city council member ex­ transfer station and where workers could The city council might decide to still use yet. I still see a lot of questions that are plaining why Durham needs to ship its sort through it looking for recyclable trash. either Browning-Ferris' trucks to carry going to have to be answered," Brown said. waste to another county. The remaining waste would be taken to a garbage to a landfill or use a Browning- The city's Environmental Affairs Board The proposed sites for a landfill in landfill in another county, such as Ferris landfill for dumping. will review the pyrolysis system for poten­ Durham are either in watershed areas Kernersville, Lewis said. The city council may also consider a tial problems or hazards, Lewis said. Duke thrashed by disgruntled transfer student in Penn paper

By TINA KIM Ajunior at the University of Pennsylva­ Ivory Towers nia, who attended Duke for a year, bashed the University in a column for The Daily Duke closes the chapel during sorority Pennsylvanian, the school's student-run rush in an article published last spring. daily newspaper. Fitzpatrick described Duke as a "J. Crew Bonnie Fitzpatrick's column, "Quit Your catalog come to life" and a place where Whining Already!!," tells Penn students to comments like "God, you're such a liberal" stop complaining because Duke is worse. are made to students who do not wear Fitzpatrick wrote in her Oct. 1 column preppy attire. that women recieve more respect at Perm "Duke was not a complete disaster," she than at Duke. She alleged that the wrote. "The basketball, weather and cam­ administration's only response to a series pus were great." of rape incidents in 1989 was a letter sent Fitzpatrick is originally from Flushing, home to students' parents. New York. She lived in Aycock dormitory She referred to Phi Kappa Psi fraternity's on East Campus. "Red Light District" party that had en­ couraged women to dress as prostitutes, as CUNTS Vandalize: An anonymous further evidence that Duke discriminates feminist group called CUNTS has been against women.' The party has since been vandalizing fraternity property at Univer­ renamed the "Bourbon Street" party. sity of at Santa Barbara, ac­ Duke also discriminates against minori­ cording to the Daily Nexus, the newspaper ties, wrote Fitzpatrick, citing the alleged serving UC-Santa Barbara. "self-imposed segregation" of black stu­ The Creative Underground Network of dents on Central Campus. "White sopho­ Truthful Sisters has been spray painting mores with low lottery numbers moaned fences, signs and stairways to condemn about being 'stuck on Central with the fraternities, claiming they embody sex­ LOIS PRICE/THE CHRONICLE black people,'" she wrote. ism. Notorious within the greek community, Sing. Sing. Lip Synch. Duke is devoid of culture and entertain­ CUNTS'members have disrupted numer­ The women from Alpha Epsilon Phi do their best Milli Vaniili imitation during ment, according to Fitzpatrick's column. ous fraternity functions trying to promote Sigma Chi's lip synch contest over the weekend. They won't be returning any "Unless you have a car, there is nothing to their claims that the greek system incu­ do except go to fraternity keg parties, Ken­ bates sexism in society. prize money, though, as Kappa Kappa Gamma synched off with the prize. tucky Fried Chicken, or a run down mall." Posters featuring scantily clad women Fraternities and sororities dominate in compromising positions reading "this is found offensive, the paper reported. Bomb defused: A bomb discovered Duke social life, she wrote. "Pressure to how fraternities see you" have been posted Phi Kappa Psi is the only fraternity that in a science building at Florida State Uni­ rush is so bad that very year on Sorority around the university. Other posters pic­ filed a complaint against CUNTS. Mem­ versity was defused, according to the Bid Day the administration locks the ture a body with a penis as its head claim­ bers of Phi Kappa Psi and Phi Delta Theta Florida Flambeau, FSU's newspaper. It Chapel tower so disappointed rushees won't ing "At Phi Delt you might meet people like have said they are concerned about sexism may have been sitting in the building for jump." this." The poster is a satirical reaction to a but they strongly oppose CUNTS' radical as long 20 years. The Chronicle dispelled the myth that Phi Delta Theta rush flyer some students methods. See TOWERS on page 7^

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From staff reports Public Safety has no leads. A senior reported to Public Safety that two men threat­ Crime briefs ened to break his back if he refused to give them a gold Back pack Stolen: A senior reported his red nylon chain he was wearing. Chevrolet Cavalier, he said. back pack stolen from the Devil's Quarters, the gameroom The two suspects threatened the student outside a The student described one suspect as a five-foot-ten- in the Bryan Center, on Friday at 2 p.m. laundry room near 215 Anderson St. on Central Campus inch white male, in his 20s, weighing about 200 pounds, He placed the bag on the ground and when he returned at 1:40 a.m. Friday, said Chief Robert Dean of Duke with a stocky build and short blond hair and goatee. He it was gone. The student told Public Safety the game room Public Safety. was wearing blue jeans and a dark striped shirt. was very crowded and that he could not always see the bag The student refused and ran to a nearby apartment, The student described the other suspect as a six-foot- while he was playing, Dean said. Dean said. The suspects chased the student until he was one-inch white male, in his 20s, with a medium build and The bag contained textbooks, notebooks, two personal inside the apartment, he said. dark hair shaved on the sides. He was also wearing a loop checks that totaled $112 and other school supplies. The The suspects then retreated and drove away in a brown earring and a purple shirt, according to the description. loss in stolen property totaled $140. $3 million gift will establish new research center in SRI

From staff reports surgery department and Bruce Weber, a speech and A three million dollar gift from the W.M. Keck Founda­ News briefs hearing specialist. Lang plans to speak on the surgical tion of Los Angeles will establish an integrative biomedi­ management of Paget's disease and Weber plans to dis­ cal research center at the University. Researchers from the two medical center units will cuss hearing impairments that accompany bone defor­ "With this important gift from the Keck Foundation, emphasize a multidisciplinary approach. By exploring mity in the skull. researchers from diverse fields will aim at understanding the ways cells alter their machinery to become special­ "Duke is the center for metabolic bone disease in the how the mechanisms of the living cell malfunction in ized, the scientists hope to gain new insight into how such Southeast," said Charlene Waldman, executive director human disease," said President Keith Brodie. processes can go awry in disease. ofthe Paget's Disease Foundation in Brooklyn, New York. "By achieving greater understanding of how the living The W. M. Keck Foundation was established in 1954 by cell is constructed, scientists, graduate and medical stu­ the late William Myron Keck, founder ofthe Superior Oil dents working with them can learn to tailor-make new Company. drug molecules to correct the malfunctions that cause Under the leadership of President Howard Keck, the disease." foundation has grown to become one of the nation's SAE bench finds The 16,600 square foot W.M. Keck Center for Integra­ largest charitable organizations. The foundation's pri­ tive Biomedical Research will be part ofthe $77.5-million mary interests are in education, science, engineering and interdisciplinary Science Resource Initiative, said Ralph medical research. new home in S.C. Snyderman, chancellor for health affairs. "Over the last two decades, the public has witnessed Paget's disease conference scheduled: Suf­ • BENCH from page 1 stunning advances in medical treatment through genetic ferers of Paget's disease, a chronic skeletal disorder, are engineering, computer technology, microelectronics and scheduled to gather at the University to learn about the Saye, president ofthe fraternity, when The Chronicle other advanced biomedical research techniques," disease and to offer support to fellow patients and their revealed to him the location ofthe bench. Snyderman said. families. Saye said he plans to send a scouting crew to "However, we are on the threshold of an even more The second annual Paget's disease meeting will be held determine whether it is less expensive to haul the exciting new era that will yield a deep mechanistic under­ Saturday at the Rauch Conference Room in Duke Hospi­ bench back to West Campus or to build a new one. standing Of how the molecules of the cell form living tal South. Although Saye said the perpetrators ofthe prank systems. The conference offers a chance for patients to ask remain unknown, SAE Amir Mehbod, a Trinity "Such understanding will enable us to treat diseases questions and learn about the disease's symptoms, new senior, said Saye has been in contact with one ofthe whose cure is now impossible because of their complex treatment options and exercise therapy programs, ac­ pranksters. and subtle effects" cording to Duke News Service. The pranksters are retrieving the bench and plan "A key to this revolution will be close collaboration by Paget's disease can result in enlarged and deformed to return it to the brothers on Monday, Mehbod said. a range of scientists," Snyderman said. "And the estab­ bones in one or more regions ofthe human skeleton. "[The prank is funny,] but its getting less and less lishment of advanced laboratories such as the Keck Although Paget's is often symptomless, some patients funny every day we want to sit outside and its Center will be a center of gravity for interdisciplinary experience bone deformity or bone pain, especially in the beautiful 70 degree weather." biomedical research programs and will prove absolutely back and joints. Headaches and hearing loss are common critical to fostering these scientific partnerships." symptoms when the disease affects the skull. "Our grant to Duke envisions the kind of collaborative The cause of Paget's disease in yet unknown, but research facility that we hope will be effective in advanc­ management treatments are available. ing medicine," said Max Lents, chair of the foundation's The meeting is scheduled to feature special guests medical research committee. including Dr. Stephen Lang, assistant professor in the LSAT EVERY MONDAY NIGHT IS STUDENT SPECIAL NIGHT From 4 p.m. to 11 p.m. GMAT 9" pizza plus choice of one topping $3.89 COME JOIN US AT MCAT Good only at 5 2710 Erwin Rd. -Hut,® yM&> [ML © Call for Carry Out for Monday Night Football Makiii it great! Makin it great is a registered trademark of Pizza Hut. Inc. I 383-2916 New York vs. Pittsburgh Test Your Best! October 14th from 8-11 pm PIZZA HUT NOW DELIVERS The Best BEER SPECIALS in town! 3518 Westgate pr. 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Wild Burrs Pizza Call us to deliver 609 Trent Dr. pizza for the game! 4fut® 4935000 Delivery >urham 2^590 MONDAY. OCTOBER 14, 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 5 Regional DWI defendants on road awaiting trials Ten counties CHARLOTTE (AP) — Public apathy, with drunken driving quickly return to the "Nothing seems to keep drunk drivers overcrowded prisons and a backlog of cases highways. Authorities say it's easier to get off the road," said Kim DiNubila, director with low rate has kept a significant number of people a DWI charge dismissed or reduced today of N.C. Mothers Against Drunk Driving. charged with drunken driving out of the than it was eight years ago when the Safe District attorneys have the authority to courtrooms and on North Carolina's high­ Roads Act of 1983 was enacted to swiftly dismiss or reduce any criminal charges ways. punish people who drive drunk. without asking or reporting to anyone. of DWI trials At least a quarter of the state's drivers Gaston County District Attorney Mike Here is a list of the 10 counties charged with driving while impaired last Some cases are backed up on court dock­ Lands said his office has more DWI cases with the highest percentage of DWI year are still on the road, according to a ets for as long as two years. than it can handle. Gaston County didn't cases that were not tried in 1990. recent Division of Motor Vehicles report on Col. Wayne Ballard, commander of the try 41 percent—583 — of its DWI cases in The list names the county, followed 1990 DWI cases. North Carolina Highway Patrol, said it's 1990. by the number of cases not tried, the "There is a lot of gamesmanship on the frustrating for officers to make arrests total number of cases and the per­ part of attorneys to keep their clients driv­ that never go to trial. "We reduced a number of charges from centage not tried. ing," said Mecklenburg County District "It's a problem that needs to be ad­ DWI to reckless driving earlier this year to Attorney Peter Gilchrist. "Jail is not an dressed because we can't do the job by clear up some old cases on the docket," — Edgecombe, 380 of 673, 56.5% alternative solution in sentencing drunk ourselves," Ballard said. "As long as the Lands said. — Onslow, 604 of 1,240,48.7% drivers because of overcrowded conditions. public doesn't care, it will continue." District Attorney Caroll Lowder of — Wilson, 320 of 693, 46.2% I don't know what the solution is." Wingate said he has 747 cases on the — Cumberland, 1,255 of 2,837, The DMV study shows that one-fourth Superior Court docket in Union County. 44.2% State law requires DWI suspects to take ofthe 56,583 people arrested in 1990 with His district includes Union, Anson, Stanly, — Gaston, 583 of 1,408, 41.4% Breathalyzer tests or risk losing their Breathalyzer readings of 0.10 percent or Richmond and Moore counties. — Nash, 361 of 847, 42.6% driver's license for 60 days. The law also higher had not been tried by March 31, "I can only schedule so many cases for — Warren, 76 of 218,34.9% provides for stiff fines and jail sentences of 1991. A blood-alcohol level of 0.10 percent each term of court," Lowder said. "In most — Guilford, 979 of 2,933, 33.4% up to 14 days for those convicted, The is legally drunk in North Carolina. cases where DWI charges are dismissed, — Craven, 285 of 856, 33.3% Charlotte Observer reported Sunday. Drivers who haven't gone to trial retain the defendant pleads guilty to reckless — Vance, 243 of 736, 33% Law enforcement officers, judges and driving privileges — and some who have driving, pays a $250 fine and gets insur­ district attorneys all agree people charged been convicted continue to drive. ance points against his license." ATM bandits, plagued by nightmares, turn themselves in

RALEIGH (AP) — Even with hundreds was published in Sunday's editions of The western movie: the Rocky Mountains in Cassandra Smith, 18, and Angelina of thousand of dollars in their pockets, the News & Observer of Raleigh. "Who's to say Colorado. FBI agents tracked Caldwell Sandoval, 22, both of Lakewood, Colo., two so-called "automatic teller bandits" we wouldn't have turned ourselves in? and Hubard to Breckenridge, a ski resort were arrested along with them, but were say life on the run wasn't worth it. "We're not going to try to get out of it," he west of Denver where they were spending soon released without being charged. Eric Michael Caldwell, 21, and John said. "We did it and we're going to face up the weekend with two young women. Miss Smith, who is studying to be a Robert Hubard, Jr., 23, were arrested in to it." In an apartment in nearby Boulder, the dental hygienist and lives with her grand­ Colorado Sept. 27 on charges that they had On Thursday, Caldwell and Hubard, agents found Rolex watches, a big-screen parents, said she had met the young men stolen more than $700,000 from Raleigh- who are first cousins, left the Federal De­ TV, stereo equipment, furniture, jewelry on a blind date arranged by Sandoval. area automatic teller machines. The ar­ tention Center in Littleton, Colo., in the and artwork — signs ofthe good life police They were using the names Kevin Hamrick rest ended a nationwide search for the company of U.S. marshals. They were on say the men had been living. and Vince Hawk. pair, who came to be called the "automatic their way back to Raleigh where they'll Both men had bought flashy sports cars "Honestly, I have never met nicer guys teller bandits." face federal bank larceny charges. The — and paid cash. Yet they had barely in my whole life," she said in a telephone 'The whole time we were on the run, we charges carry a prison sentence of up to 10 made a dent in their stash. Agents carried interview. "I'm from Denver and there are definitely had consciences and bad years and fines as high as $250,000 on away $50,000 in cashier's checks and two not many guys like that out here. Total dreams," Hubard said in a telephone inter­ each count. large suitcases stuffed with $500,000 in gentlemen. Real polite. Opened the car view from a Colorado jail last week that The setting itself was right out of an old small bills. door for you."

.WOMEN'S D."t- • STUDIES AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

(Pu6fic tectum 6y would like to thank the following teams Duke-UNC CROW Humanist-in-Residence for participating in Linda J. Nicholson Dept. of Educational Administration and Policy Studies and Women's Studies Program ANCHORSPLASH State University of New York at Albany 1991 "Reflections on

AEO AAA MffiECOURT Gender" WHEN: Monday, October 14, 4:00 PM AEn AKE

• POETS from page 1 out lines in grocery stores — right next to the National Enquirer. Poets sound off on many topics: pregnancy, chemistry, love "People buy things in supermarkets they don't necessarily need," Brodsky said. By ERIC LARSON guage, the livelier you are, and perhaps appear in court and testify in Irish." Rather than buying unneeded items, con­ "Poetry is about slowing down, re­ the more alive you are." On motherhood: "As a mother, you sumers could buy poetry. The move would reading, playing with language," said cannot stand between your child and its give buyers more choice in what they read, Mark Strand this weekend. Li-Young Lee, a Chinese-American poet destiny... its darkness." he said. He and the other poets at the Interna­ from Illinois, on the humility of writing: "I On pregnancy poetry: "I always won­ Strand said he hoped the efforts to ex­ tional Poetry Festival agreed American listen to myself, and it's not literature that dered why there weren't many poems pand distribution were successful. society should move away from 10-sec- I hear." on pregnancy. Then I was pregnant, "If nothing else, poetry will help us dis­ ond sound bites toward a more substan­ On maintaining individuality: "I can't and I understood . . . psychosis don't trust what we hear from politicians," he tial form of communication. But together be anything but the Other. If my poetry is make poetry." said. "It's politicians who try to speak a these poets produced a variety of quotes common language... and end up speaking themselves, on topics from pregnancy to Joseph Bi ate, to no one," Strand said. death. ires The function of poetry dar. should be "to stay away Sally Buckner, a poet andprofessor at en." from generality" and Peace College in Raleigh, on the appro­ y is pay attention to "a par­ priateness of poetry readings in Gross dto ticular issue, to a par­ Chemistry Building: "Like chemistry, ticular sensibility," he poetry is elementary... and the poet is said. always experimenting." Ni Dhomhnaill, who Strand, on the problem of relating lives and writes in Ire­ modern society to old epics: "Parts ofthe land, agreed poetry op­ J. Brodsky Iliad cannot be translated into modern em poses government. "The weaponry." act of poetry is a rebel On language: 'The richer your lan- act," she said. Poetry communicates common experi­ ence, Barrax said. "What do we mean by individual talking to the individual, a tre­ the trend away from poetic originality. regain the prominence it held before the language in the first place? What we look mendous tete-a-tete." "It's become tyranny. There are very few British suppressed it. for in poetry is to find things recognizable It is individuality, not community, that willing to experiment, to fool around." "We call it Irish, because Gaelic has a as human ... if nothing else, our mortal­ gives poetry its power, Brodsky said. "The The festival's primary theme, "Poetry: A funny connotation," she said. The term ity." main thing about us as people is that we Common Language," was clear Friday Gaelic makes the language sound ancient Lee disagreed with Barrax. He said he are unique," he said. "The value of an night when a thick-accented member of and "shoved in the background, like Chi­ sees poetry as "anything but communica­ individual's existence is precisely the the audience asked Brodsky to read a poem nese restaurant wallpaper... and Muzak," tion." uniqueness of an individual." in his native Russian. she said. Lee, who won the Academy of American Many workshops are beginning to de­ Brodsky first read the poem in English. "Chinese wallpaper? I grew up with that Poets Prize, said he likens poetry to prayer, stroy that poetic individuality, Strand said. He then recited it in Russian, a perfor­ stuff," quipped Lee, whose family fled China which he does not consider a transference Such workshops have poets producing free mance that drew the loudest applause of for the United States when he was very of information but "a way to locate being." verse poems, which ignore rhyme and the night from a crowd of 300, most of them young. Brodsky supported Barrax. "Poetry," he meter merely to achieve "quick results," he English speakers. The festival was co-sponsored by the said, "is far more social than painting or said. Ni Dhomhnaill said she writes in Irish Office of Continuing Education and the the theater or even music. It's the act of an "It's really everywhere," Strand said of because she would like the language to North Carolina Poetry Society.

ATTENTION: NEW FOCUS PROGRAMS FOR FIRST YEAR STUDENTS This fall, Duke inaugurated the FOCUS programs, a series of interrelated IK,' SCREEN / SOCIETY seminars designed around common themes. In spring 1992, two additional and the programs will be added for first year students: Institute of the Arts Evolution and Humankind present: and KB. Twentieth Century Non-Western Culture Participation enables faculty to develop new courses in areas of special interest, while it Beyond Boundaries provides students with opportunities that come from relatively small classes, interrelated Rim and Video of the Black Diaspora and mutually reinforcing courses, and close relationships with professors. Evolution and Humankind - Spring 1992 The Evolution and Humankind cluster will investigate the evolution of human beings and the diversity and similarity of human experience. This Peter Holland (Psychology) - Coordinator Psychology 120S - Comparative Psychology Week: Robert Brandon (Philosophy) Philosophy I96S - Seminar in Philosophy: Human Sociobiology Nicholas Gillham (Zoology) Biology 92S - Social Implications of Genetics BLACK Kenneth Surin (Religion) Religion 72C - Seminar in Evolution and Humankind WOMEN Matt Cartmill (Biological Anthropology and Anatomy) IDC-105D - Symposium in Evolution and Humankind J /'i' 4 %L. DIRECT Twentieth Century Non-Western Culture - Spring 1992 The Twentieth Century Non-Western Culture cluster will examine the social, eco­ nomic, political, and moral aspects of non-Western cultures in the twentieth century. ^E Tonight 8 pin : Tues. 8 pm Bruce Lawrence (Religion) - Coordinator Religion 72A - Islam and Violence Picking Tibes & Black Women Robert Bates (Political Science) Pol Sci 10IS - Issues of Political Development Back Inside Herself of Brazil Fredric Jameson (Literature) d. Saundra Sharp d. Silvana Abrams Literature 25 - Third World Novel and Film Illusions Kiss on the Mouth Satendra Khanna (Asian and African Languages and Literatures) d. Julie Dash IDC 105C - Issues in Twentieth Century Non-Western Cultures d. Jacira Melo Marci Litle (History) Storme: The Women Coffee-Colored History 76S - Third World and the West of the Jewel Box Children Students must take the IDC course and may take 2-4 ofthe other special seminars. The Freshman d. Michelle Parkerson d. Ngozi Onwurah w FOCUS Programs are directed by Professor Richard Watson ofthe Department of History (684- X Griffith (BC) Flfcri Theater BC Video Room 5267), and application materials may be obtained from-the Pre-Major Center. MONDAY, OCTOBER 14. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 7 New chair plans for more specialization

• REVES from page 1 siology, a trend Reves said he wants to A Medical Center researcher was re­ actions to anesthesia. Studying body reac­ continue. cently awarded the first grant in the area tions in extreme circumstances could help He also plans for the department to of geriatric anesthesiology. researchers better understand the body's pioneer the area of geriatric anesthesiol- Reves received his medical degree at the normal processes, Reves said. Medical College of South Carolina and "Anesthesiology is understanding man received his master's in physiology and at the extremes," Reves said in an inter­ When you anesthe­ biophysics from the University of Alabama view. "When you anesthetize a patient, he at Birmingham. He worked nine years at or she is really almost dead." tize a patient, he or Alabama, where he was director of anes­ Reves said he hopes to specialize the she is really almost thesiology research and professor of anes­ anesthesiology department further, a trend thesiology. common in other fields of medicine but just dead. Snyderman actively began reviewing beginning in anesthesiology. department chairs on five year intervals SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE when he became chancellor in 1988. David The department is developing concen­ ogy, in response to an increasing number Watkins, former chairman ofthe depart­ Joseph Reves was named new chair of trations in pediatric and cardiac anesthe­ of elderly patients, he said. ment, stepped down last November. the anesthesiology department. At FSU: forgotten bomb found, homosexual frat grows

• TOWERS from page 3 Florida Flambeau. Dodging the limelight has fueled rumors The fraternity does not have housing for The bomb was an uncovered half-gallon After two years with few incidents of about the fraternity's social integrity. fear of vandalism but reserves "space in jar of dehydrated di-ethyl ether, which has discrimination, Delta Lambda Phi is grow­ "We are perceived as a sex club, but we the [student I union for meetings," Walker an explosive potential equal to one pound ing. Membership remains steady at 15 have rules that forbid any relationships said. of plastique. Less than an ounce of plastique students, said Brad Walker, a founding between members," Walker said. Michael Saul contributed to this article. destroyed Pan Am Flight 103 over member. Lockerbie, Scotland, in December 1989. "We feel the need to be very selective," Rosemary Bottcher, a staff member of Walker said. He said 120 students at­ FSU's Environmental Health and Safety tended the last rush party. department, accidentally discovered the As the only nationally sanctioned homo­ bomb in a second-floor storage closet. "We sexual fraternity, Delta Lambda Phi was then secured the area and notified the established in 1986 at Georgetown Uni­ bomb squad," Bottcher said. versity. Today it has 21 chapters across NOW OPEN The bomb squad first contacted the the country. The FSU chapter is open to manufacturer of the dehydrated di-ethyl progressive men who are bisexual or ho­ ether to find out the age of the material mosexual, said Gage, the fraternity's presi­ and measure its volatility. The bomb squad dent who wishes to use his first name only. safely vaporized the bomb in a cleared site "We do not discriminate on the basis of at Apalachicola National Forest. sexual orientation," Gage said. KiETEWON^O. The fraternity maintains a low profile, Gay frat beats odds: Florida state Gage said. Because of its social isolation, University's sole gay fraternity plans its Delta Lambda Phi is more tolerated than fifth membership rush, according to the accepted by other fraternities, Gage said. A Unique Shop Specializing in Quality MORGAN STANLEY & CO. Leather Accessories for INCORPORATED Men & Women

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First Union Plaza • Erwin Square liii Durham • 286-3355 Letters EDITORIALS Women's Center, Community Service PAGE 8 OCTOBER 14, 1991 Center and Panhel unite for service day To the editor: Center, the Community Service Center There has been a pervasive campus and the Panhellenic Council are sponsor­ wide concern about the lack of interaction ing a Women's Outreach Day on Saturday, Dump in Durham between first year and upperclass women. Oct. 26. We will be working at a variety of When women first arrive on campus, there Durham agencies some of which include Durham should not dump its prob­ Durham officials will cite facts about are few opportunities for them to commu­ the Rape Crisis Center, Planned Parent­ lems in other counties. landfills being located in watershed nicate with anyone besides other first year hood, Women in Action and Crossroads, a But that is exactly what the city areas where the garbage will affect women. Often, the only upperclass stu­ program for Durham Youth. The goals of council is proposing to do with the drinking water. Such sites, right­ dents they know are their male FACs. the day are threefold. First, we want to Durham's garbage. fully, should not be considered. Also, their classes are predominantly com­ offer women an opportunity to get to know On Oct. 21, the city council will vote Officials and business leaders also posed of other first year students. Unfor­ one another while also providing assis­ tunately even in mixed classes, contact is tance to the community. Second, we hope on whether to create a city owned and list facts on why other sites shouldn't rarely established between first year and to generate continued and ongoing inter­ operated transfer station which would be chosen because of their affect on upperclass women. est in working in the community by show­ ship Durham's waste to another local business. One of these sites is the There has also been concern about the ing women what is available. Finally, we county. Research Triangle Park location, Site lack of interaction between the University want to increase the education about The proposal is picture perfect poli­ 12. and the Durham community. In the recent women's issues on this campus as well as tics. This location seems to be the best past, Residential Life, the Community in the larger Durham community. We en­ Elected Durham officials—with a possible site. However, some people Service Center and others have made con­ courage all interested women to sign up in November election breathing down fear that a landfill site in the RTP certed efforts to make first year students the Women's Center or the Community their necks—can slip out of making a would prevent businesses from locat­ more aware of service opportunities in the Service Center by Thursday, Oct. 17. tough decision and not choose a land­ ing there. After all, who wants to be Durham area. Yet many upperclass stu­ fill site within the county. Local politi­ located near a landfill site? dents who may have missed this experi­ Heather Heckel ence their first year may still remain un­ Trinity '91 cal groups that are pushing for certain aware of the many opportunities avail­ sites and local businesses pushing Maybe a landfill in RTP would not able. Catherine Floyd against the same sites get a sweet attract a chicken poultry factory or In light of these concerns, the Women's Trinity '92 compromise: let someone else deal with canning company, but, if one proposal the problem. That way, the city coun­ gains popularity, other businesses may cil could stay upwind ofthe smell of a become interested in locating nearby. Column describing fraternity life inaccurate nasty political decision. The People's Alliance, in one of the To the editor: up what were previously some of my favor­ Durham should not dump its waste more creative solutions proposed thus Jonathan Blinderman's Oct. 9 column ite pastimes. I realize now that lynching on another county that might not have far, has suggested that efforts should is a stroke of blind genius. As I sit in the locals downtown with my brothers was the strong, organized local opposition be made to attract businesses inter­ whirlpool within my luxury duplex apart­ wrong. Proposing that all gays be forced to or the money found in this county. ested in recycling to the RTP area. ment in Wilson House, I can't stop think­ wear a golden phallus on their shirt was Chances are good also that residents Recycling has become very popular ing that this boy knows the nature of my also improper. in other counties would prefer to keep recently. More companies are getting fraternity better than I do. After a few sips I'm also now trying to reshape our little Durham's trash out of their backyards involved with recycling efforts. Instead of beer from my free personal keg of sister program. No more choosing girls on and industrial sections as much as of finding the cowardly way around Heineken, I begin to realize that he has breast size only. And the clause about shown me the error of my ways and the Durham does. Durham's disposal problem, officials them sleeping with three brothers will be path to redemption. omitted from our constitution. I hope there No other counties should have could take a bold step and do some­ I'm selling my Beemer. I think I'll use are still a few Kappa Deltas at Duke to mix Durham's problem dumped on them. thing new and creative by forming an the money to induct Larry Johnson into with. If not, we'll have to try mixing with a When Durham residents created the industrial recycling park around a Treyburn. Having a common person around group of BME majors because I've had it garbage, they created a problem. Now, landfill in Research Triangle. could be entertaining. Just think of the up to here with all those blonde bimbos they seem unwilling to find a solution But Durham seems to prefer dirty humorous little ditties he could tell about who make up the other sororities on cam­ or, at least, to make sure that the city dealing. That needs to change. Durham life in a junior college. Imagine the scare pus. council finds one. needs to deal with its own problems. he could throw into us about life in the inner city. To think that an independent reject (I As for women, those who want to mash can't believe any fraternity would give a with me will now have to apply by applica­ bid to this rube) knows so much about On the record tion. Only those few with outstanding re­ fraternity life is inconceivable. The very sumes will be selected to be jumped on substance of his arguments belies the fact Fridays. From now on, it's Dean's List girls that he might have a brain at all. I really It's become tyranny. There are very few willing to experiment, to fool around. for me! Since freshmen have no academic can't think of an appropriate way to thank Former U.S. Poet Laureate Mark Strand, during the International Poetry record, the myriad of panting novices hang­ Blinderman for his enlightening column. Festival, on poetry workshops which stress free verse poetry and shy away from ing outside my duplex in the waiting/re­ But perhaps in the future, if he gets down poetic originality. covery room will be turned away and sub­ and begs, I'll try to persuade the Old Boy sequently ignored, unless they happen to Network to give him a job. be in my Introduction to the Alphabet class. Then I'll be needing their notes. Ethan Litwin Blinderman has encouraged me to give Trinity '92 THE CHRONICLE established 1905 'Demeaning' ad belittles classical studies Ann Heimberger, Editor Jason Greenwald, Managing Editor To the editor: Ancient Cultures." A far better way to Barry Eriksen, General Manager In the wake of the recent controversy study ancient cultures would be to take a Jonathan Blum, Editorial Page Editor concerning GTE's sexually demeaning and course in Duke's own Department of Clas­ sical Studies. Professors in this highly Matt Steffora, Assoc. News Editor exploitative advertisement for their Call Hannah Kerby, News Editor Waiting program, I was shocked to find yet regarded department teach classes on Kris Olson, Sports Editor Michael Saul, Assoc. News Editor another insensitive and demeaning ad in many aspects of the ancient world from Leya Tseng, Arts Editor Jennifer Greeson, Arts Editor The Chronicle on Oct. 2.1 am certain that Greek archaeology to Roman history and Peggy Krendl, City & State Editor Leigh Dyer, Investigations Editor I am just one of the countless hundreds papyrology to name just a few. In addition, Eric Larson, Features Editor Robin Rosenfeld, Health & Research Editor who have taken offense at this latest ad there are many non-Western ancient cul­ Mark Wasmer, Photography Editor Cliff Burns, Photography Editor and have written to The Chronicle to ex­ ture classes offered by other departments. Steven Heist, Graphics Editor Reva Bhatia, Design Editor press their rage, but I hope that my letter Matt Sclafani, Senior Editor Karl Wiley, Senior Editor Linda Nettles, Production Manager will be sufficiently compelling to warrant When I saw Wednesday's insensitive ad, Adrian Dollard, Senior Editor publication. I write, of course, in regard to I once again asked myself whether The Ronnie Gonzalez, Creative Services Mgr. David Morris, Business Manager the full page Sears Brand Central adver­ Chronicle has any standards for advertis­ Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager Elizabeth Wyatt, Student Advertising Mgr. tisement for a television/VCR which bore ing. How much longer will people try to The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its the shocking headline, "A Good Way to make a buck by degrading a group within students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of Study Ancient Cultures." the community? Please, share in my rage. the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. Although I do not want to discount the Put a stop to the insensitivity that is ram­ Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115: Business role of the excellent BBC television pro­ pant in our society. Be sensitive to women, Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106; FAX: 684-8295. duction, "I, Claudius" or popular films such don't get Call Waiting. And by all means^ Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union as "Spartacus," "Caligula" (for those with respect the classics! Don't by a television/ Building; Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building. more exotic tastes) and "The Trojan VCR, read a book! ©1991The Chronicle, Box4696, Duke Station. Durham. N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Women" in popularizing classics, such Business Office. video depictions ofthe ancient world hardly Darryl Phillips deserve to be called "A Good Way to Study Graduate student in classical studies THE CHRONICLE

WEEKLY PULL-OUT SPORTS SUPPLEMENT MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1991 SPORTSWRAP Men's soccer splits a pair in Dallas, Dunn carded

By BARRY SVRLUGA The call came when Dunn took down Mus­ The men's soccer team travelled to the tang forward Marcus Keane on a Southwest this weekend in hopes of re­ breakaway. Rennie said that he had not gaining their early season form at the seen a red card issued on that type of play Southern Methodist Classic in Dallas. They all season, but that the rulebook leaves it returned to Durham with a win, a loss, and up to the referee to decide the severity of some lingering questions about their the penalty. chances for post-season play. When Pedroso converted the ensuing On Friday night, Duke took on North free kick, Rennie said that the Blue Devils Texas State and came out with a 1-0 win "were too far down in manpower and mo­ despite some sluggish play. Junior for­ mentum to overcome a good team on their ward Scott Hargrove converted a pass from home field." Keane added a goal at the sophomore A.J. Siebeneck about 30 min­ 61:23 mark to account for the final score. utes into the first half for the lone goal of "Our defense came out with a better the game. The Blue Devil defense took mind-set today, determined not to give up over from there, posting the shutout de­ any goals," said SMU coach Schellas spite being outshot 16-9. Hyndman, whose team lost in overtime to "Overall, we were not pleased with our Wisconsin on Friday night. "I was very play, but we came out with a win," said pleased to see our boys come out with as head coach John Rennie, who described much intensity as they did after losing North Texas as a solid club that is not quite such a heart-breaker the other night." top-20 caliber. Sunday brought both a tougher oppo­ Rennie said that the weekend's results nent and a different outcome for Duke. were "not unexpected" for Duke, which The lOth-ranked Southern Methodist now stands at 9-4 on the year. Rennie Mustangs gave the Blue Devils a strong noted that his club made the trip without taste of defense, allowing only five shots in both senior co-captain John Gwin and a 3-0 final. SMU got a pair Of goals from freshman back Richie Dunn, who stayed* senior midfielder Giampaulo Pedroso, and home nursing injuries. the Blue Devils could never get their of­ "We did not play well all weekend and fense to click. we had a lot of trouble on the astroturf," Rennie said that the first half was played Rennie said, referring to the surface at fairly evenly, with the only scoring coming SMU's Ownby Stadium. "Today, [SMU] from Pedroso just over 19 minutes into the was a better team." game. However, Duke suffered a serious Rennie hopes to have both Gwin and CUFF BURNS/THE CHRONICLE loss in personnel as well as in momentum Richie Dunn back practicing on Tuesday when senior co-captain George Dunn was and ready to return to action for Sunday's Juinor forward Scott Hargrove scored the lone goal in the Lone Star State for the issued a red card early in the second half. game against ACC opponent Virginia. Blue Devils on the weekend. It was enough for a 1-0 win over North Texas State. Field hockey loses 7-1 to top-ranked Old Dominion By DAVID ROYSTER half to extend a tenuous 3-1 lead to 6-1. The 14th-ranked field hockey team knew "They are sharp on their corners," said what it was up against Saturday when Silar. "They try to dump the ball into your top-ranked and undefeated Old Dominion feet every time. They have quick stickwork came to town for a showdown at West and we're not as quick as they are." Campus Field. But as hard as Duke fought, Old Dominion's Laura Knorr, normally the Monarchs simply were the better team a defensive player, scored four goals, all on as ODU mechanically plodded to a V -1 win. penalty corners, to lead the Monarchs to "Playing against the number-one team their 22nd-consecutive victory and give is not going to hurt us," said Duke head them a 12-0 record on the year. Senior coach Jacki Silar. "It's just going to help us Maaike Hilbrand from Holland added her in our overall game and in our rankings." 24th goal of the season. The game marked the first time that the 'They were all good goals," said Silar. number one rated team in the nation had "Ritika didn't give up any poor goals and visited Durham, and the Blue Devil play­ she made some great saves, too." ers responded to the challenge by coming Although being outshot 33-6 for the onto the field fired up with emotion, con­ game, Duke trailed just 3-1 at halftime trasted with the emotionless, business­ and did not allow another Old Dominion like Monarchs, who had just two days goal until senior Robin Smith of ODU earlier beaten lOth-ranked Virginia 9-0 in scored on a penalty stroke with 21:44 re­ Charlottesville. maining in the game. The Monarchs have been the dominant The Duke goal, scored unassisted by field hockey team during the last decade, sophomore reserve Lisa Ehrhart, ended a staying on top of their sport by getting streak of 679 consecutive minutes that the European players to come to ODU. Field Monarchs had held their opponents score­ hockey is a national pasttime in Holland, less. and the 1991 ODU team has two Dutch Ehrhart's goal came just 90 seconds af­ players and one German player on its ter ODU had extended its lead to 3-0. roster. Junior Katie Dwyer took a free hit for 'TOld Dominion] has great players at Duke at midfield and Ehrhart picked up every postition and they are fundamen­ the ball about 35 yards out. She beat two tally sound," said Silar. "They have great defenders by going to her left and pushed athletes and don't have any weaknesses, the ball past ODU goalkeeper Kathy Fosina and their Dutch players help." for the score. The Monarchs accumulated 25 penalty The Blue Devils are only the third team corners and six of them led to goals. Blue to score on ODU this year, and Ehrhart's Devil goalkeeper Ritika Bowry recorded a goal was just the fifth overall tallied against CHAD STURGILL/THE CHRONICLE career high 20 saves as she kept the ODU the Monarchs. attack at bay for most ofthe game until the The Atlantic Coast Conference leading While Old Dominion was teeing up 25 penalty corners, the Duke field hockey team Monarchs scored three times during an Blue Devils travel to Boone Tuesday to had to rely on stick handling to create its scoring opportunities in a 7-1 loss. eight-minute stretch late in the second play Appalachian State. PAGE 2/THF CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, OCTOBER 14. 1991 Volleyball splits weekend series, falls to Illinois State

By LEWIS KRAUSKOPF match, halted the team's run and after an Illinois State the team was unable to take advantage of their serve. The This weekend the volleyball team was once again timeout, the Redbirds closed out the game. Redbirds did capitalize and closed out the game 15-13. involved in a game featuring a comeback. Unforunately, In summarizing the outcome, Wilson said, "We played The play was equally close in the final set. For Duke it this time they were on the wrong end. well in the first game, but they played better." was its first five-set match ofthe season, where points can After forging valiant come-from-behind efforts in re­ Duke's excellent play at the end of game one would be scored on the offensive and defensive ends. Neither cent weeks against Kentucky and Wyoming, Duke blew a carry over as the team dominated sets two and three. team had greater than a two-pointlead throughout as the 2-1 set advantage in falling to Illinois State Saturday Duke jumped out to 5-2 and 11-4 leads in game two and match would come down to which squad would play better night. did not look back. Behind great hustle by senior captain in the clutch. Following a straight-set defeat of Southwest Texas Karen Greiner, Duke shut down Illinois State 15-6. Duke seemed to take momentum when Bianchi blocked State, the Blue Devils lost to a strong Redbird squad 15- to make the score 12-11, but, out of a timeout, the Red- 12,6-15,3-15,15-13,15-13. Duke has now dropped four of birds took the next three points. Duke tried to come back its last five matches after starting the season 11-1. We did what we needed to do one last time behind a slam by sophomore Jen Rohrig, but The loss was certainly a devasting one to a Blue Devil Illinois State staved off the Blue Devils for the victory. squad trying to break out of a minor slump. Head coach to win 98 percent of the While he thought the team gave a solid effort, Wilson Jon Wilson still attempted to remain optimistic in the face match, we just have to figure was dismayed with the crucial loss. of defeat. "We did what we needed to do to win 98 percent ofthe "It's one game — it has no linkage to any other," said out what happened to the match, we just have to figure out what happened to the Wilson. other two. other two," said Wilson. Statistically, the Blue Devils outplayed its tough oppo­ Greiner, Wacholder and Verhoeven all shined in defeat nents on Saturday. The team, led by freshman Ashley Jon Wilson, volleyball coach for the Blue Devils. Verhoeven and Wacholder totaled 28 Wacholder's astounding .490 percentage, outhit Illinois and 27 kills, while Wacholder added 29 digs. Greiner St. by .063. Errors and mistakes at crucial points, how­ contributed 74 assists in the match, and added 16 digs. ever, cost Duke the match. The great play continued in game three, as Duke would While the Blue Devils had trouble ending games against "We lost our concentration and tried to do too many capture the third set handily. Nicol registered three more Illinois State, they came through in the clutch in defeat­ things," said Wilson. aces in helping the Blue Devils take a 5-1 advantage. ing a weaker Southwest Texas State squad 15-9,15-12, In game one, the two teams both came out playing well. Taking their lead from Greiner's play, the team would not 17-15. After Illinois State grabbed a 4-0 lead, the Blue Devils give the Redbirds any breathing room. After a Linda The match was highlighted by the play of Verhoeven, would rebound and take eight ofthe next 10 points. After Bianchi slam, Duke had taken game three 15-3 and who had key points for the team down the stretch. She freshman Adrian Nicol nailed one of her six service aces seemed on their way to a relatively easy four-set victory. registered 25 kills for a .417 percentage and played well in the match, Duke led 8-6. In this game of runs, the But it didn't happen. Once again the Blue Devils took defensively. Greiner also added 58 assists in the match Redbirds took the next eight points and were on the an early lead, as Verhoeven and Wacholder contributed along with 12 digs. doorstep of taking game one. kills. The Redbirds, however, would find their second While stating that the team was only in "mid-term But behind Wacholder, the Blue Devils fought back. wind and tied the game at six. flow", Wilson was pleased that"... everyone chipped in She registered five straight kills for the team, two of The teams traded off points numerous times with with good play." which saved game points. Duke regained its composure neither team being able to grab control. When the 5-7 The Blue Devils will end their brief homestand against and got to within 14-12. Yet two key service errors, Greiner blocked a kill attempt by Illinois State, the game N.C. State on Wednesday. This will start an important mistakes in an area that would plague the Blue Devils all was tied at 13. Service errors would do in Duke again, as stretch of six out of seven conference games.

AP FOOTBALL POLL Women's cross country finishes 13th Rank Team Record Last week 1. Florida State (56) 6-0-0 1 By SCOTT ECKEL In fact, the entire team ran very well. Tracy Stevenson 2. Miami (1) 5-0-0 2 The women's cross country team put together a strong finished third for Duke and 82nd overall (18:50). Holly 3. Washington (2) 5-O-0 3 team performance at the Paul Short Invitational at Lehigh Ober crossed the tape in 18:59 (90th), and Andrea Truncali 4. Michigan 4-1-0 5 this weekend. The meet, featuring many of the top pro­ finished in 19:33 (136th). 5. Notre Dame 5-1-0 7 grams from throughout the northeast, was won by The team improved on an 18th-place finish in the same 6. Florida 5-1-0 10 Villanova. Duke, however, more than held its own by meet last year even without its usual fourth runner, 7. California 5-0-0 13 finishing 13th out of a large field of 38 teams. Robin Schretter, who was sick. 8. Tennessee 4-1-0 4 Kris Bucher has consistently been the team's top fin­ This was a solid team performance that coach Mike 9. 4-1-0 14 10. 9 isher all year long. She again came through with a strong Forbes was proud of. 11. 16 run as she finished in 18:23 (54th overall). Vanessa "Everyone on the team finished in twenty minutes or 12. 4-1-0 6 Chartouni was close behind as she also turned in an less," said.Forbes, "It was really an outstanding perfor­ 13. Illinois 4-1-0 20 outstanding time of 18:29 (62nd). mance." 14. Alabama 5-1-0 19 15. 17 16. 8 17. Georgia 5-1-0 22 18. Ohio State 4-1-0 11 Men's cross country dominates field 19. Texas A&M 3-1-0 21 20. Pittsburgh 5-1-0 12 21. Clemson 3-1-1 By SCOTT ECKEL 18 Eric Haag ran an excellent race in capturing the fifth 22. 25 In a tuneup for the state meet next week, the men's overall spot, and Zach Miller rounded out the team's 23. _» cross-country team ran all over a small field at the North scoring in sixth (25:34). 24. 15 Carolina Central Invitational. Duke scored 15 points, St. The team rested its top three runners, Mark Donahue, 25. — Augustine was second with 67, and N.C. A&T tallied 115 Kevin Hilton, and Dale Haver. They are continuing to points in a third-place finish. train for the state championships. But without them, Others r The race was won by Joseph King (unattached) in a assistant coach Dan Coffman still liked what he saw. 47, Fres time of 24:34. Duke then took the next five spots in "With the top guys out, the younger guys really got to Southen Rutgers sweeping away the title. Leading the team was freshman strut their stuff," said Coffman. Pat Kelly in second (24:58). Brian Sydow had a strong race "It was a good experience for Pat to be the team leader," in finishing third (25:10), and James Tierney scored a continued Coffman, "Overall it was a great experience for fourth-place finish (25:21) the younger guys." taking the NEW WWMA STATE DEPARTMENT INTERNSHIPS Great Chinese >d that's SUMMER 1992 . And Fast. LSAT? Delicious. Inexpen Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:30 (Closed Sat. & Sun) Deadline November 1 Dinner nightly 5-9:30 GET FULLY PREPARED WITH THE Sat. & Sun. Closed for Lunch For sophomores, juniors, seniors and graduate students who plan to continue LEGAL PREP LSAT PREPARATION SEMINAB Planning a party? school. A few Bureaus have paid "...fun, challenging, highly effective! Clearly Let us deliver the food! internships but most are unpaid. the best value in LSAT preparation!" Free Delivery to Duke and Surrounding Area Internships are VERY COMPE7T/7VE: 5:30-9 p.m. ($10 minimum) average desirable. FAI L SEMINARS FORMING NOW (Located inside the courtyard of Dutch Village Inn, Political Science Internship Office HOME-STUDY PROGRAMS 2306 Elder St., intersection of Elder & Fulton next to CALL 1-80O654-2385 Duke North & VA Hospitals) 339 Perkins Library 286-2255 • 286-1133 See Mrs. Walker promptly Sponsored by Educational Preparation Services, Inc. MONDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1991 SPORTSWRAP THF. CHRONICI.I- / PAGE 3 Puckett MVP for AL champ Twins ATHLETE OF THE WEEK By TIM BROWN the clutch. N.Y. Times News Service The Twins' bullpen pitched four more scoreless innings Sometimes the numbers don't tell the entire story. TORONTO — Once the visitors' clubhouse had settled and Kirby Puckett and Kent Hrbek each had a two-out, Case in point: Thursday, Oct. 10, Duke versus North into a low whir, a thought settled into Chili Davis. run-scoring single in the eighth inning. Carolina in women's soccer. An hour or so had passed since the Puckett, the American League Championship Series The Blue Devils lost the game 3-1, and by just looking had cut the rug at Sky Dome, the site of their 8-5 victory MVP, drove in a run and Hrbek drove in two. at the score, one would assume that the Duke goal­ Sunday over the Toronto Blue Jays, of their unlikely An inning later, Rick Aguilera pitched a perfect ninth keeper turned in nothing more than an ordinary perfor­ junket to the American League pennant. to save David West's victory and to send the Twins mance. It was an idea of sportsmanship, fair play and all that streaming onto the field. In five games (18 1/3 innings), Guess again. other weepy stuff of champions. Minnesota's bullpen allowed no earned runs. Sophomore netminder Gretchen Young faced a bar­ "I'd like to go over and shake their hands," Davis said. "I'm really happy for the guys," said Twins manager rage of 26 shots. She saved 12, many in spectacular "There are no winners or losers in this." Tom Kelly, who guided Minnesota to an unlikely World fashion, earning the praise of both coaches. He smiled a little at teammate Mike Pagliarulo, who a Series title in 1987. "To win three games in the other guys' Duke head coach Bill Hempen called it "the best moment earlier had been splashing champagne over park and to win the third with a comeback." collegiate game she's ever had," whileUNC coach Anson Davis' shiny head. Puckett, who began the series with one hit in seven at- Dorrance said, "Rarely do we see that kind of perfor­ Pagliarulo looked startled. bats, finished with six hits in his last nine at-bats with two mance out of a goalkeeper." "Yeah there is, Chil," he called after Davis. "Yeah there home runs and four RBI. For her effort in keeping her team within striking is." "Puck seemed to be really focussed for the last two distance ofthe top-ranked Tar Heels, Gretchen Young Davis, like Pagliarulo an off-season addition to a last- days," Kelly said. "He looked like he wanted to get it done. is this week's Chronicle Athlete ofthe Week. place club, wheeled around. His face had broken into a The guy can get nine, 10 hits faster than anybody I've ever classic ear-to-ear and he pumped his fist for emphasis. seen. He really turned it up a notch." An American League pennant is one thing. A pennant The game went into the later innings tied, 5-5, because when your start line is dead last in last year's Western Twins starter Kevin Tapani could not hold the momen­ Tuesday Division is quite something different. tum of a 2-0 lead and because Blue Jays starter Tom "Dave Winfield owes me an apology," Davis said of his Candiotti and reliever Mike Timlin could not hold a 5-2 Field hockey vs. Appalachian State, Boone, 3:30 former Angels teammate. "When we got into first place, lead. p.m. Dave Winfield said this team will be caught. Well, no one's When and Mike Pagliarulo singled off caught us yet. I want that apology, Dave." Candiotti to start the sixth inning, acting manager Gene Perhaps the California Angels' own last-place finish Tenace beckoned Timlin from beyond the left-field fence. Wednesday would be apology enough. Cito Gaston was ejected by plate umpire Mike Reilly after In 1990, the Twins finished 29 games out of first place. the second inning for arguing. Volleyball vs. North Carolina State, Cameron Indoor A year later, they will carry first place into the World Timlin — the same Timlin who gave up Pagliarulo's Stadium, 7:30 p.m. Series, where they will play either the — lOth-inning in Game 3 — induced Greg Gagne baseball's other worst-to-firsts — or the Pittsburgh Pi­ to foul out and then got Dan Gladden to ground to third rates. The Twins spent the entire second half of the season baseman Kelly Gruber. Friday in first place. Mack streaked from third base and was safe when The hearty Twins finished off the Blue Jays with three Gruber's throw was off-line. The play was muddled fur­ Women's Golf at Furman Lady Paladin Invitational consecutive victories here to complete a five-game affair. ther when catcher Pat Borders—with the ball in his glove Furman, S.C. The latest, before 51,425 ofthe least noticeable fans you'll hand — tagged Mack with his bare hand. It was Borders never hear, was a clinic on pitching in relief and hitting in who was given the error. Men's Tennis at Georgia Tech Fall Classic, Atlanta, Ga. Pirates chop away at lead, win in 10th Saturday

By BEN WALKER stadium's ample foul territory down the left-field line that Women's Soccer vs. Central Florida in the Duke Associated Press fell beyond the reach of two Braves. Women's Classic, Duke Soccer Stadium, 7:00 p.m. ATLANTA — Pinch hitter Mike LaValliere singled On the next pitch, LaValliere singled sharply to center home the tie-breaking run with two outs in the 10th field, just the Pirates' second hit in their last 22 at-bats Field Hockey vs. Maryland, College Park, Md., 1:00 inning Sunday night and the Pirates won in Atlanta for with runners in scoring position. Van Slyke breezed home the first time this year, beating the Braves 3-2 to tie the and Buechele was thrown out at the plate trying to follow p.m. NL playoffs at two games each. him. "The odds are a lot better at 2-2 than if we trailed 3-1," "I knew I was facing a hard thrower and I was looking Men's and Women's Cross Country, State Champi­ LaValliere said. "But this team doesn't think like that. We for a ball in the zone I could handle," LaValliere said. "I onships of North Carolina have the best record in baseball, so we weren't worried." just tried to stay focused during the game in case I could After Atlanta got the crazed crowd of 51,109 chanting, help the team." Women's Golf at Furman Lady Paladin Invitational, chopping and cheering with two quick runs in the first Furman, S.C. inning, Pirates pitchers quieted the Braves' bats while Stan Belinda held on for two innings for the victory. He the Pittsburgh hitters silenced the fans. retired pinch-hitter Jerry Willard with a runner on sec­ Men's Tennis at Georgia Tech Fali Classic, Atlanta. Then in the 10th, Andy Van Slyke drew a four-pitch ond to end the ninth and watched Lonnie Smith fly out to walk as the first batter facing reliever Kent Mercker and the right field wall to start the 10th. stole second with two outs. Steve Buechele, who already "I told Spanky to go up there and win it for me," Belinda Sunday had three hits, walked. Mark Wohlers relieved and said, referring to LaValliere. LaValliere batted for Don Slaught. The Pirates, baseball's best road team this season, were Women's Soccervs. American in the Duke Women's "Merk wasn't throwing the ball well," Braves manager 0-7 in Atlanta this year. Now even, they will send Zane Classic, Duke Soccer Stadium, 7:00 p.m. Bobby Cox said. "I thought a fresh arm would be good." Smith against Tom Glavine in Monday's Game 5. Pitts­ LaValliere was hitless in three tries as a pinch hitter burgh ace Doug Drabek, still unable to pitch because of a Men's Soccer vs. Virginia, Duke Soccer Stadium, this season, and it didn't look good for him when he fell hamstring injury, is scheduled for Game 6 back in Pitts­ 2:00 p.m. behind 0-2 in the count. He then lifted a fly into the burgh.

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CLEMSON, S.C—Virginia still hasn't beaten Clemson After receiving an intravenous fluid treatment at Jones hit Anthony Rice on a 26-yard pass on the next in Death Valley, but the Cavaliers came as close as they halftime, Jones returned to lead Tech to a 34-10 Atlantic play and two plays after that Tech had a 7-3 lead after ever had. Coast Conference win over Maryland( 1-4,1-1) Saturday. David Hendrix scored on an 8-yard run. It wasn't close enough for Virginia, which saw the 21st- Jones completed his last four passes for 159 yards in After Hendrix scored with 4:02 left in the half, Tech ranked Tigers rally for 10 points in the final 3:22 to leading the Jackets (3-3 overall, 2-2 ACC) to their 14th stretched the lead to 10-3 at halftime on Scott Sisson's salvage a 20-20 tie Saturday. consecutive victory at home. 37-yard field goal on the half s final play. "They feel better than we do," Virginia quarterback The last three went for touchdowns — one yard to Ali Jones, who threw for 227 yards, then put the game out Matt Blundin said. "We let it slide away. They shouldn't Harris, 49 yards to Jason McGill and the last to Keenan of reach with his three scoring passes in the second half. feel good about their performance. They didn't play all Walker, an 82-yarder that ranks as the third longest Maryland failed to generate much offense after run­ that great. They should feel good about getting out of this scoring pass play in Tech history. ning back Mark Mason, who had 74 yards on 17 carries, with a tie." The failed fake field goal came with five minutes broke his right fibula after receiving a screen pass early The Tigers weren't in the mood to argue that point. remaining in the first half and the Terps leading 3-0. in the third quarter. They knew they had come within a whisker of losing to the Cavaliers for the first time in 17 games at Death Valley. "We were lucky to get out with a tie," linebacker Ashley Sheppard said. "But this team never gave up." The same could be said for the Cavaliers, who were 10- point underdogs and were trying to become only the second team in the last two decades to beat Clemson at homecoming. Duke Community Virginia was confident from the start. Perhaps it was an outgrowth of its 20-7 victory over the Tigers in Charlottesville, Va., a year ago — the first win by the 5KRUN Cavaliers over Clemson in 30 games. The Cavaliers moved the ball Saturday well against the nation's top-ranked defense. Virginia turned third down into first down seven of 10 times in the first half en route Saturday, October 26,1991 to a 17-7 lead while gaining more yards (221) than the Clemson defense had given up on average in a game Race time: 9:00 a.m. coming in (207.5). Virginia finished with 354 yards while Clemson had 511 yards. Parking: 751 parking lot "The most disappointing thing — the really demoraliz­ ing thing at halftime — was that we had Virginia in so Registration: Taken until 8:30 a.m. day ofthe race many third-down situations and they made so many," coach Ken Hatfield said. "It wasn't so much Virginia's run-pass balance that gave us problems on defense. It was their ability to make the big third-down play, especially in the first half." lettuce omivw For the game, Virginia was 11 of 20 on third-down — T * conversions compared to nine of 17 for Clemson. Ofthe M Cavaliers' 11 successful conversions, nine came on passes * A by Blundin, who completed 15 of 35 passes for 241 yards * » START and two touchdowns. 1 In the end, however, two last-minute miscues kept the ^ WALLACE It WADE 1 ' Cavaliers from winning. On third-and-2, Terry Kirby STADIUM / J gained the first down but lost something more important — the ball — after being hit by safety Robert O'Neal. FiNim 1/ TENNIS Kenzil Jackson recovered at the Virginia 49. COURTS It was the first turnover for the Cavaliers, and only the sixth the Tiger defense has come up with this year. In 1990, Clemson's top-ranked defense forced 34 turnovers. "We were saying on the sideline, 'We need an intercep­ tion, a fumble. We need to strip the ball or something. You are invited to participate We've got to get the ball back to the offense or score in Duke's sixth 5K Run, ourselves,'" O'Neal said. Kirby said he couldn't remember the last time he sponsored by fumbled. "I have no clue what happened," he said. "I take pride in holding the ball. I take it very personally." Clemson quickly drove to the Cavalier 22, where the march stalled. On came Nelson Welch, who already had missed three of four field goals. But Welch hit this one, a 40-yarder with 46 seconds left to make it 20-20. "It had been a bad day for me," said Welch, a red-shirt freshman. "I was feeling bad because the time we needed Come watch the race! me I didn't come through. I'm just glad I came through at the end." The Cavaliers weren't through, however. They marched REGISTRATION FORM from their 22 to the Clemson 17, thanks in part to a 15- NAME yard penalty for too many Tigers on the field. Then with five seconds left, Michael Husted trotted on ADDRESS PHONE the field. Husted already had hit two field goals, including a career-best 47 yarder earlier in the fourth quarter. RUN ONLY ($3 - before October 18). RUN AND T-SHIRT ($6 - before October 18). But Husted missed when Wayne Simmons deflected the ball as it climbed skyward. As it fell to the field, so did ($3 - after October 18) . ($8 - after October 18) Virginia's chances of pulling off its second straight victory over Clemson. RACE DIVISIONS (Please check one) Male Female. "I felt relaxed," Husted said. "But I didn't hit the ball as Under 20 20-29 30-39 4049_ 50 and over. solidly and cleanly as I could." It was far from good enough, though, leaving neither The undersigned, in consideration of Duke University's sponsoring of this activity and permitting my participation, hereby releases, discharges, and forever holds harmless Duke University, its officers, agents, or employees from any liability, claims, damages, or loss team with what it wanted most — a victory. from injury to person or property arising out of his/her participation in such activities, including but not limited to travel, incidental to the participation in such actiities. Clemson is now 3-1-1 overall and 1-0-1 in the Atlantic ,19- Coast Conference. Virginia is 3-2-1 and 1-2-1. Signature "I told our team they shouldn't be down after this Please return the form to the Intramural/Recreation Office, 105 Card Gym, 684-3156. game," Virginia coach George Welsh said. "We have had Make checks payable to Duke University. a tough couple of weeks with kids having exams. But we Awards to top three (3) finishers - male & female. Medals to top three (3) finishers in each age category. go home for three games and have a chance to be a good ballclub." THIS FORM MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY THE PROPER RACE FEE TO RESERVE YOUR RACE SPACE. MONDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 9 An inspirational, quiet hero, Miles and his music will live on

Sixteen days ago, Miles Davis died. I'm not sure I'm and the rhythmic superfluity pioneered by Charlie Parker going to be entirely successful in both eulogizing Miles • So what and Dizzy Gillespie could be implied with just two or three and writing a relevant column. It is hard to write upon the notes and a lot of silence. He proved that an economy of death of a hero without slipping into mushy platitudes. Pete Lieberman notes could carry as much impact as a barrage. And I question, after a month when so many of my friends Silence was as powerful as noise. One need not be a jazz and I have been touched by deaths a lot closer to us then In retrospect, right then, when I first listened to "So musician to understand that aspect of Miles Davis' music, Miles', whether it is foolish and a bit insensitive to write What" and I first heard that little bass melody and that although it does help. But I wasn't much of a musician publicly upon the death of a man I didn't know at all. Oh restrained, brilliant trumpet solo, I think Miles passed by when I started seriously listening to Miles Davis (not that well. those rock n' roll idols. I didn't really know it then, but the I am much of one now). If you listen to "*Round Midnight" Growing up, heroes are easy to latch onto. When I was path from listening to "So What" to fingers exploding in and hear those pinched, muted, high notes fade into about nine or ten years old, I used to spend hours in front big red blisters, pulling on double bass strings, was short oblivion and feel the chill run up your spine like it runs up of my mirror mimicking Willie Stargell. My little league and straight. mine, then you understand what it means to listen to years were spent playing first base because he played first That the path was so straight and so direct might seem Miles Davis, completely. base and he was my favorite player. I can still imitate the strange, at least from the perspective of a musician, And if you're an insecure, eighteen year-old college way he windmilled the baseball bat before every pitch. because Miles Davis played the trumpet and I play the freshmen, who always seems to screw up when he talks or In high school, I latched onto Bruce Springsteen. In an bass, and the two instruments don't have a whole lot in plays or writes too much, it's pretty heartening to see attempt to become Bruce, I tried to write songs about common. But within that music is a fundamental simplic­ someone as cool as Miles Davis being cool by being quiet. being frustrated in a small town and taught myself ity that blows the covers off of one's own mediocrity. It is We try to project the fundamental qualities of our heroes enough harmonica to play "Thunder Road." Every time I a simplicity that forces one to shut up and practice or give onto ourselves. That's why they are heroes. got in my car alone, I'd practice singing with a voice like it up. In my case, understanding that simplicity forced me sandpaper on concrete. At that point, I realized I couldn't to put away my amplifier, get back to the roots of my Everybody looks to Michael Jordan to understand how sing, which prompted a brief, but intense, Bob Dylan instrument and learn the upright bass. That fundamen­ to handle success. I looked to Willie Stargell to show me phase. tal simplicity, born from virtuosity, allows Miles Davis' how to be a good first-baseman. I looked to Springsteen to For the last couple of years my one overwhelming hero music to transcend the trumpet and, in reality, transcend learn how to rock n' roll in Greensburg, . I'm has been Miles Davis. When I arrived here three years the idiom of music. still going to look to Miles Davis for the reminder that ago, I had one Miles Davis tape. Considering the amount sometimes it is best to just shut up and listen. of time my roommate spent playing his 10,000 Dead Miles Davis' playing is commonly described as being Miles Davis' passing doesn't mean that he stops being tapes, and the amount of time I spent playing my like "walking on eggshells." He came out of an era charac­ a hero. Unless someone passes a magnet over my tape Springsteen bootlegs, it's surprising that the Miles tape terized by the brash tones and machine-gun note bar­ collection, 1*11 continue to listen to his music as much as I was listened to at all. It was listened to, but just a little. rages of Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. did before he died. The death of a far-off hero should be a Then I learned that my roommate liked a song called What set him apart from Bird and Dizzy was that mandate to examine why the person is a hero and to give "Blue in Green," from a Miles Davis album called "Kind of "walking on eggshells" quality—a round, delicate tone the hero credit where it is due. That's all I'm trying to do. Blue." So on his birthday, I bought him the album and we and phrases that often consisted of just two or three Thanks Miles, for inspiring me to play jazz, for giving this listened to "Blue in Green" and it was beautiful. And then carefully placed notes surrounded by delicious silence. column a name and for teaching the world that quiet is we went back and listened to the first song, called "So That simplicity and silence was the whole point of Miles cool. What." Davis' music. He showed that the harmonic complexities Pete Lieberman is a Trinity senior. 'Parking My Car': a game everyone in New Dorms plays

I've come to the realization that my favorite sport at propeller to his neck. When he landed, he tied the band of this school isn't basketball. A heinous impropriety, I • Monday, Monday cloth around his waist, and his wife said, "That's attrac­ admit. It isn't football, it isn't volleyball, soccer, eggplant tive—what do you call that thing around your waist, a lacrosse, underwater equestrians or any of an endless Dr. NO cummerbund?" Or maybe he just put his loincloth on series of bizarre and sundry activities preceded by the sideways one day. initials I.M. My favorite sport at this school has to be coughing models strutting the latest in disease from I was walking through Bio-Sci the other day when a Parking My Car. The best site: the big New Dorms lot. Armani and Claiborne. You'd go to the department store professor passed me carrying a large vat of chili from The Best time: weeknights. You swoop down the entryway to get your flu shots—not for prevention, mind you, but so Rat. Curious, I followed him down to the sub-sub-sub- from Towerview and blithely ignore the Yield sign, thereby you can contract the disease as soon as possible and show basement. He stopped in front of a large sturdy-looking increasing your chances of taking out some of your com­ off the paisley bumps you get all over your back a few days door and fumbled with six or seven deadbolts. He flung petition (especially if you own a car that you rent out on later. Of course you could customize the color of your open the door, and inside were several grad students who weekends as an airplane hangar). Then you enter the mucus to match your clothes so no one could tell when you t looked like extras from "Planet of the Apes During Ty­ fray—several dozen cars prowling along each aisle, the sneeze all over yourself. phoon Season." They clamored for the food moaning, "I've drivers sticking their heads out of their sunroofs trying to Speaking of design, I saw some guys returning from been collecting data on the social life of hydra for 13 be the first to spot the golden nirvana: a soon to be open getting their senior pictures taken, and I started wonder­ years—they're my friends. Can I please come out and get space. Suddenly, you spot a person walking through the ing: why do guys wear neckties? I mean, social conven­ a new pair of Birkenstocks?" lot—this could be it. You begin tailing them, following tion, sure—but doesn't it seem like a stupid article of "No," yelled the professor, and threw the chili on them their progress along the aisle. Then they begin to cross the clothing? Who thought of this, and how? Did some guy in as they rushed the door. Momentarily distracted, they fell aisle, forcing you to zoom around to that aisle at 130 1066 tie a piece of twine around his neck, and all' his to the feast as he sealed the door again. Another professor m.p.h., going over the cars who gave up looking and friends said, "You know Bill, that's a rather aesthetically walked by and slipped some papers to be graded under the decided to park in a guaranteed-ticket/create-a-space on pleasing piece of string around your neck. It complements door. Now I understand the grade I got on my biology test. the end of the aisle. But you've lost your advantage. The your armor well." Or perhaps the only way women could Under -99.5 was scrawled "Help me pleeeease. I am not an parking lot walker has been spotted, and BMWs and get men to go to social functions was to lasso them around animal—I just shave erratically." Saabs, with missile launchers on top for that offensive the neck as they were running away screaming. But then Dr. NO wants to know if they are going to put Oktoberfest edge, are jockeying for position, cutting you off. All seems why the bow tie? Maybe some guy trying to flyhel d a band on points and flex so Dukies can charge lots of women's lost when abruptly the walker switches directions—he's of cloth above his head like a glider and strapped a jewelry to their parents. forgotten where he parked. You broadside a Beemer, cut off a Lexus and make some gestures you learned at a tractor-trailer pull the week before at an Acura. The walker has found his car. You come face to face with a Porsche who thinks he has priority on the space. Both of you crowd in, trying to assert yourselves, and the cars behind you crowd in further too, just in case your steering column breaks in mid-turn or you become similarly inca­ pacitated. But now the space-exiter has no room to back out, so you get caught trying to get everyone to back up, but not so much that you aren't the closest one to the space. Now—he's backing out. Which way will he turn— yes! He turns into the Porsche, and you make your move. You turn into the space at 273 m.p.h., taking off the front bumper of the car backing out. But hey—you won: you parked. What a rush. I'm just waiting for genetic engineering to get to the point of competency that some Italian designers can get their hands on it and go to work. You could get stylized diseases: "Whata do youa meana, Yellow Fever, Black Plague, anda Red Measles—haven'ta youa people ever hearda ofa pastels?" Be the first on your block to get Fuchsia Fever, Burnt Sienna Plague and Mauve Measles. And of course there would be a whole new variety of poxes: not-so-smallpox, Largepox and Really Hugepox. And why only polka dots (dots that do German dances)? We defi­ nitely need more plaids and florals. The coming of flu season each year would be heralded with sneezing and PAGE 10 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1991 Comics

Market Wise/ Rocco Femia THE Daily Crossword byStephen Fioreck

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THE CHRONICLE

SPORTSWRAP editors: Kris Olson and Mike Robbins Copy editors:...; Blair Boardman, Jay Epping, "OK, crybaby! You want the last soda? Jason Greenwald, Peggy Krendl, Amy Reed Well, let me GET IT READY FOR YOU!" Matt Rueben, Michael Saul Wire editors: Nishan Fernando, Robin Rosenfeld Associate photography editor: Scott Booth Day photographer: .Lois Price Calvin and Hobbes/ Bill Watterson Layout artist: Jay Epping Production assistant: Roily Miller "ADD TWO EGGS THE RECIPE SANS IT MKES NAH, TUATSgpo WELL JUST MAKE ONE BIG Account representatives: Dorothy Gianturco, AND STIR." *rvem PANCAKES, SO MUCW TROUBLE. PANCAKE AND CUT \T IN Peg Palmer N HALF. WE'LL EACUGETTEN Advertising sales staff: Kellie Daniels, Stacy Glass, Roy Jurgens, Alan Mothner, Jen Soninen, Katie Spencer, Jon Wyman Creative services staff: ....Michael Alcorta, Reva Bhatia, Loren Faye, Dan Foy, Steven Heist, Kathy McCue, ^ =s*N Kevin Mahler, Merri Rolfe, Susan Somers-Willett Accounts payable manager: Michelle Kisloff Credit manager: Judy Chambers Classified managers: ..GregCeithaml, e-^-er*, Bob Gilbreath, Linda Markovitz Business staff: ...Jessica Balis, W^POK io-/f Amina Hightower, Janet Johnson, Tim Rich Calendar coordinator: Cindy Cohen Buck Wild / Harris Berenson MONDAY, OCTOBER 14. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 11 Community Calendar

Today "Clarence Thomas: Supreme Court Organ Recital. Duke Chapel. 5 pm. Nomination" Discussion led by Duke Law Tuesday, October 22 Episcopal Student Fellowship Eucharist Spectrum meeting. Mary Lou Williams Ctr. Prof. Christopher Schroeder. House H Taize Evening Prayer Service, Memorial and Dinner. Episcopal Student Center, 505 5:30 pm. Commons. 8 pm. Chapel of Duke Chapel, 5:15 pm. Alexander Ave. 5 pm. Habitat for Humanity. Weekly meeting. "Geomagnetic Orientation By a Marine Male Swimsuit Contest. Sponsored by Lutheran Campus Ministry Fellowship Supper. House D Commons, 9 pm. Mollusc," by Dr. Ken Lohmann. Ill Bio Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Proceeds Kitchen of Chapel Basement. 5:30 pm. Sci. 4 pm. benefit United Negro College Fund. Mary Wesley Fellowship Bible Study (Gospel of Lou Williams Ctr., 8 pm. Encounters with the Music of Our Time, Louis John), Wesley office Chapel basement, 7 pm. "Friends of Bill W." Gathering of recovering Andriessen and Jeffrey Perry, Baldwin Aud. 8 pm. students to discuss the problems of Live Jazz Ensemble at the Coffee House. Carrom Night at the Coffee House. East East Campus. 9-11 pm. staying clean in the campus environment. Campus. 9-11 pm. Monday, October 28 113 House 0 (PICAD office). 3 pm. ECOS Weatherization Project Meeting. Paul Jeffrey Jazz Concert. Hideaway. 9 pm- Speaker: Reynolds Price, author. Alspaugh "Reflections on Gender" by Linda Coffeehouse. 7:30 pm. 12 am. Commons. 8 pm. Nicholson. 226 Perkins. 4 pm. Cancer Support Group for patients and "The New Soviet Union," presented by Prof. family. Family/Patient Lounge, Rm. 05109, Wednesday, October 23 Tuesday, October 29 Lerner. Kappa Sigma section. 7 pm. basement, Morris Bldg. Duke Hospital Lutheran Campus Ministry Worship with Holy "Sex in Advertising" presented by Jean South. 4:30-5:30 pm. Eucharist. Chapel Basement. 9:30 pm. O'Barr. Lancaster Commons Room. 8 pm. Tuesday? October 15 Administrative Women's Network: Kay Amnesty International general meeting. Lutheran Campus Ministry Worship with Holy Sung Morning Prayer. Memorial Chapel. Gresham on the Basics of Investing. 12:10- 201 Flowers 8:30 pm. Eucharist. Chapel Basement. 9:30 pm. 8:30 am. 1:15 pm. 2031 Purple Zone Duke South. Christian Science Organization meeting. ASA General body mtg. 116 Old Chem. 7 pm. Taize Evening Prayer Service, Memorial Sisters report on the "Festival ofthe Rm. 007 Religion Bldg. 8 pm. Chapel of Duke Chapel, 5:15 pm. Irmandade DaBoa Morte," in Bahia, Brazil, Exhibits Mary Lou Williams Ctr. 4 pm. Wesley Fellowship Holy Communion Habitat for Humanity. Weekly meeting. (Eucharist). Wesley Office, 5;30 pm. Art of the 1980's: Selections from the House D Commons, 9 pm. Thursday, October 17 Collection ofthe Eli Broad Family Foundation. Live Jazz Ensemble. Coffee House. 9-11 pm. Duke Museum of Art. 6-9 pm. through Jan. 5. Wesley Fellowship Bible Study (Gospel of John), Duke University Public Safety Dept. will "The Ritual Recreation of the Past in Wesley office Chapel basement, 7 pm. sponsor Operation ID. Hanes House. 1-5 pm. Ancient Greece." Lecture by Rebecca General Public Notices Carrom Night at the Coffee House. East Choral Vespers by candlelight. Memorial Sinos. Art Museum, Room 103. 4:30 pm. October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Campus. 9-11 pm. Chapel of Duke Chapel. 5:15 pm. Cancer Support Group for patients and For info, about early detection of breast cancer, call the American Cancer Society at 1-800-ACS- Paul Jeffrey Jazz Concert. Hideaway. 9 pm- No Boundaries. Coffee House. 9 pm-12 am. family. Family/Patient Lounge, Rm. 05109, basement, Morris Bldg. Duke Hospital 2345. 12 am. "He Who Gets Slapped"Duke Drama. South. 4:30-5:30 pm. Duke University Med. Center, Durham Regional Reynolds Theatre. 8 pm. "He Who Gets Slapped"Duke Drama. Hospital and VA Med. Center need blood Reynolds Theatre. 8 pm. Candidates' Forum for candidates for City "The Colombian Drug Mafia and the Council. Co-sponsored by the Inter- donations to support patient care. All blood Health Professional Advising Center State", by Marco Palacios. Center for Neighborhood Council of Durham and types are needed, esp. 0- and B+. You must Meeting for juniors and seniors applying to International Studies, 5 pm. League of Women Voters of Durham. To be weigh at least 110 lbs. and be at least 17 years old. Contact the Ameican Red Cross. medical or dental school for fall 1993. "Adult Children of Alcoholics" Sponsored held in City Coucil Chambers. 7:30 pm. Med. Ctr. Amphitheatre. Rm 1034 Yellow by Student Health Education. 209 Perkins Join HELP, a confidential support group for Zone. 4:30 pm. Library. 7 pm. Thursday, October 24 people concerned about genital herpes. Duke Recycles Volunteer Meeting. Selec­ Choral Vespers by candlelight. Memorial Sponsored by Planned Parenthood. Call "Sade and the Social Question of Pornogra­ 929-5402 for more info.. tion of representatives to operating board. phy: Tradition and Transgression" by Roger Chapel of Duke Chapel. 5:15 pm. 139 Soc-Sci. 7 pm. Shattuck. Sponsored by Romance Studies. Health Profession Advising Center Meeting. OASIS needs volunteers to carry books to shut- Duke Coalition for Peace and Justice. East 116 Old Chem. 6 pm. Med. Ctr. Amphitheatre. Rm 1034 Yellow in individuals. For more info., call 5600152. Campus Ctr. 8 pm. Zone. Meeting for Juniors and Seniors The American Red Cross needs volunteer Friday, October 18 applying for medical or dental school for drivers to drive needy people to doctors' "Being Rene, buying Atala: Alienated Subjects fall 1993. 4:30 pm. and Decorative Objects in Post-Revolutionary InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. York appointments. Call 489^3541 for more info. Chapel. 7-9 pm. France." by Margaret Waller. Breedlove Room, Discussion on graduate schools for those The AIDS Services Project (TASP) will be Perkins Library. 6-7:30 pm. Eucharist (Episcopalian), Chapel Crypt. interested in graduate work in psychology. holding training sessions beginning Oct. 10:15 am. Led by Dr. Craighead and Dr. Costanzo. 22. Call 286-7475 for more info. "The Chosen". 3rd film in the Jewish Film Room 130 Soc-Psych. 6 pm. Festival. Griffith Theater, Bryan Ctr., 7 and Duke University Gospel Choir Rehearsal. Mary Career Development Services are offered by 9:30 pm. Lou Williams Ctr. All are welcome. &8 pm. "Politics and Perceptions in the Investment the Office of Continuing Education for those Banking Industry" Black MBA Organization of seeking a career change, self-assessment, Lhamo Folk Opera of Tibet.. Institute ofthe Literary Lunch, "First Confessions" by the Fuqua School of Business Annual employment options, and college choices. For Arts. Page Aud. 8 pm. Frank O'Hara, Dean's Conference Room, Investment Banking Seminar. Panel discussion more info., call 6846259. Green Zone, M32, Duke South, 12 noon. will take place 11:30am - 12:45pm. v Wednesday, October 16 Sun Shares, the non-profit organization providing Saturday, October 19 "Marx with Lacan: The Labor Theory of Value recycling services to Durham, has expanded Open Mike Night. Arts Theme House. 10 Without the Subject-Object Distinction," by Prof. collection of milk jugs and clear and green soft pm. Employee Coed Volleyball Tournament to be Teresa Brennan. 108 E. Duke, 4 pm. drink bottles at Lakewood Shopping Center and played at IM Bldg. 3 men and 3 women. Call North Duke Mall. For more info., cail 596-1870. Amnesty International general mtg. 201 684-6973 to register teams. No entry fee. No Boundaries. Coffee House. 9 pm-12 am. Flowers 8:30 pm. Red Cross needs volunteer dispatchers to "Population: An Issue forthe Global Golden Key Initiation. Von Canon. 7 pm. take incoming calls. Training provided. Call Christian Science Organization meeting. Environment" program sponsored by NC 489-6541. Rm. 007 Religion Bldg. 8 pm. Alliance for Conservation Action and NC Friday, October 25 wildlife Federation. Jaycee Community Ctr. Eucharist (Episcopalian), Chapel Crypt. 8:30 am. Durham Community Concert Band member­ "He Who Gets Slapped"Duke Drama. 12 noon. To register, call 856-1581. ship drive in progress. Band rehearses Reynolds Theatre. 8 pm. Information Session on Study Abroad in Israel. Thursdays 7:30-9:30 pm, Royal Performing Duke Jugglers mtg. In front of Chapel. 2-5 pm. Lunchtime Concert. Duke Chapel. 12:30 pm. Representatives from Hebrew University will Arts Center, 120 Morris St. For more Charity Bazaar at Northgate Mall. Non-profit speak. International House. 4 pm. information, call 493-3027. Wesley Fellowship Holy Communion groups show and sell handmade and home­ Duke University Gospel Choir Rehearsal. Mary Stress and Your Methods of coping (Eucharist). Wesley Office, 5;30 pm. made crafts and baked goods. 10 am-9 pm. Lou Williams Ctr. All are welcome. 68 pm. (support group). Orange Co. Women's "Christianity in Africa: What does it look like Sunday, October 20 "I Want to Read You a Poem," Open Center, 210 Henderson St., Chapel Hill. today?" Presentation and discussion. reading with a focus on the "How to" Tuesdays, Oct. 8-29. 7:30-9 pm. To pre- Episcopal Student Center. 505 Alexander "Anger and Spiritual Growth". Discussion poem., Dean's Conference Rm., M34, register, call 968-4610. Ave. 8 pm. in Rm. 211. Old Divinity. 9:45 am. Green Zone, Duke South, 12 noon. Northwood Manor Nursing Home needs Lutheran Campus Ministry Worship with Episcopal Student Fellowship Eucharist. volunteers to visit with, read to, and write Saturday, October 26 letters for patients. People with musical Holy Eucharist. Duke Chapel Basement. Episcopal Student Center, 505 Alexander abilities are encouraged to volunteer, also. If 9:30 pm. Ave., 5 pm. The Barromeo Quartet, Chamber Arts Society. Reynolds Theater. 8 pm. interested, call Pam or Robin at 471-4558. "Mary J: An Update" Sponsored by Student Chapel Services. Duke Chapel. Rev. Dr. William H. Willimon. 11 am. Open House at International House. 7:30 pm. The Raleigh Jaycees are holding their Haunted Health Education. Open lecture ofthe House on Oct. 18, 24, 27, 29, 30. 7-11 pm. House Course, "Getting High in America". Employee Coed Volleyball Tournament to be Call 878-9378 for more information. Windsor Commons Room. 7 pm. played at IM Bldg. 3 men and 3 women. Call Sunday, October 27 6846973 to register teams. No entry fee. "Anger and Spiritual Growth". Discussion Health Profession Advising Center Meeting. Student Notices in Rm. 211. Old Divinity. 9:45 am. Med. Ctr. Amphitheatre. Rm 1034 Yellow Charity Bazaar at Northgate Mall. Non­ "Be a Responsible Server = BARS", Zone. Meeting for Juniors and Seniors profit groups show and sell handmade Chapel Services. Duke Chapel. Rev. Dr. sponsored by Student Health Education applying for medical or dental school for fall and homemade crafts and baked goods. Peter J. Gomes. Bishop W. Kenneth has been rescheduled from Oct. 14 to Nov. 1993. 3:30 pm. 10 am-9 pm. Goodson Guest Preacher* 4, Few Conference Room. 7 pm. PAGE 12 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1991

Announcements HOOPS FOR SOUP *SR GIFT CMTE* ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - fish­ Autos For Sale If You're Funny Sign up on the B.C. Walkway to enter the Remember: Gift brainstorming meet­ eries. Earn $5,000+/month. Free trans­ Submit to Jabberwocky! Deadline is three-on-three basketball tournament, ing. Wednesday. October 16. 7pm - portation! Room & Board! Over 8,000 October 18th for cartoons, articles, HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! Non­ which will be held Oct. 26. Sign up today 139 Soc-Sci. openings. No experience necessary. SEIZED CARS poems, etc. Drop off at BC Info, desk smoking males. 18-26 years old. are through Thursday. Help the Durham MALE or FEMALE. Get the early start that Trucks. boats, 4wheelers .motorhomes, or Call Carie at 684-1257. needed to participate in a study on Soupkitchen! •SENIORS* is necessary. For employment program by FBI. IRS, DEA. Available your area physiological responses to everyday What should our gift be? Submit ideas call Student Employment Services at 1- now. Call (805) 682-7555 Ext. C-2771. Steve Ridley tasks. Participants will be reimbursed PAID JOURNALISM INTERNSHIPS for 206-545^155 ext. 81. to suggestion boxes- CI. Bryan Center Electrical Engineer: to a great "circuit for their time and effort. If interested, sophomores, juniors, and seniors with Info Desk, Perkins Library, Uncle Ford Escort '86.2 door, auto, A/C. AM/ rider" who "conducts" himself well please call 684-8667 and ask for the NEWSDAY in New York. Deadline Nov. Harry's. East Campus Union - until Radiation Oncology lab needs work-study FM, extra clean, one owner, all records. because he knows how to "manage Ambulatory Study. 1. Applications available in Political noon Wednesday. student for lab support and light clerical $2,995. Call (919) 690-1061. the load". Love, Susan and Wingate Science InternshipOffice. 339 Perkins. duties - pay $6.25/hr. 12 hrs. Some Lassiter. CASH FOR BOOKS TRIDELTS prior lab work required. Contact Roxanne GRAD & PROF DAY Misc. For Sale Cash paid for your textbooks. Bring Special meeting Tuesday at 7:30 in 114 Scroggs at 684-6203 for information. Graduate and Professional School Day. COLUMBUS them downstairs to the Textbook Your chance to talk to representatives Physics. Don't miss it. Wanted: Hebrew School Teachers for didn't discover America. He invaded Store. Mon.-Sat.. 8:30-5:00. from BUSINESS, GRADUATE. LAW, MEDI­ Yorkshire Terriers. We are serious breed­ Thursday afternoons. Good wage. Call it. Think about it from a Native Ameri­ CAL, and other PROFESSIONAL ers concerned about the health and can perspective, please. Entertainment 489-7062. ATTENTION SCHOOLS. Oct. 31- Upper Level Bryan welfare of our puppies. Parents on sight, ALL JUNIOR BME. EE. AND ME MA­ Center. 10-3p.m.: Visitations; 3-5p.m.: adorable baby doll faces, blue and gold. Everyone come! JORS! NSF/ERC Undergraduate Fel­ Special Sessions. DON'T MISS IT! $4 All-You-Can-Eat Pizza Buffet and Preschool aide needed 2-5:30p.m. week­ AKC, healthy with good confirmation and lowships are availabe beginning Spring Monday Night Football at Wild Bulls days. $4.25/hour. Experience with chil­ coats, first shots, 5 females. 1 male. Show off your talents at Open Mike Semester. 1992. NSF/ERC Fellows Tales of Desire tonight! dren preferred. 682-4320- leave a mes­ $300-$500. 489-8391. Night on Oct. 16th at 10 p.m. In Arts Dorm. work closely with faculty on exciting Reunion! Come for dinner at the Pits sage. and innovative research projects dur­ or wherever Wednesday, Oct. 16th. HIT THE TRAILS! Help Wanted Market Research LARAB. ing the last three semesters of their Meet in the Alumni Lounge at 6:30. Peugeot mountain bike, 18 speed, 3 undergraduate education and do Questions? Call Blair at 684-1757. Market Researchers needed to conduct years old. Many extras. Regular mainte­ SHOOSH! It's water running. You make Nuerobiology needs work study students fulltime paid research during the sum- Yea Ayn Rand and the Princess Bride! surveys part-time. Individuals will con­ nance. Excellent shape. Asking $200, me laugh. Do think about Parson and for clerical and lab support. Contact merbetween Juniorand Senior years. tact medical professionals across the will negotiate. Call 490-2931. a certain blond Grad. D. Equestrian Team administrative office 684-8981. Contact Martha Absher for informa­ country to obtain market research. Must mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmt'tmmmmmmHmm tion and application in the ERC Office. There will be a meeting Monday. Oct. be articulate. No selling involved. Please Janice Lee 301 Engineering or call 660-5139. 13th at 7 p.m. in House G commons. Be Earn $2500 & Free Trips Selling Spring contact Jill Brown at 732-2100 for inter­ Ride Needed Don't stand so close to me. It's rain­ there! Break Packages To Bahamas, Mexico, view. ing; rm waiting, but where's the car? Jamaica. Florida! Best Trips & Prices! ANCHORSPLASH RIDE NEEDED D. Monday Men's Night. Free pool, $3.50 Spring Break Travel 1-800-638-6786. was great! Thanks to all DG coaches Services Offered Fall Break: Goinganywhere near Amherst, pitchers. See the Giants play on wide and participating teams! Get ready for MA, Oberlin. OH. or Bennington, VT? screen TV. T.J. Hoops at Lakewood, OVERSEAS JOBS. $900-2000 mo. Sum­ Susan Philip next year! TYPING Take me with- share gas. food! Call 493-9251. mer, year round, all countries, all fields. Thanks for listening to my complaints. Need your paper, application, or re­ Hank: 286-0575. ECON JOURNAL Free info. Write IJC. P.O. Box 52-NC02, Get ready to study about Okrolithic S.A.M.S. Corina Del Mar, CA 92625. sume typed now? Accurate and fast. limbs and other "Greeky" cocktail Guaranteed 6-hour turnaround be­ Want to be published? The Economics Old and new members meet at 8:00 in Soviet student desperately wants ride to words. D. tween 8:30 p.m. and 11 p.m., Mon­ Journal is now accepting paper sub­ Clelland Commons. Remember, dinner Fundraiser: We're looking for a top fra­ NY Wed (10/16) or Thursday (10/17). missions. Call Rob at 684-7559 or on Tuesday! ternity, sorority, or student organization day-Saturday. Call 24 noun 942-0030. Will share gas expense. Call Alexei, BME SOCIETY Daveat684-7945.Deadline0ct.16th. 982-1175. that would like to earn $500-$1500 for First meeting Wednesday, Oct. 14th Do you need typing done? Term papers, Cheers a one week on-campus marketing project. at 6:15 in 203 Teer. All classes are dissertations, theses professionally RIVERSIDE RAFFLE The Comedy Club at the Old Heidel­ Must be organized and hard working. welcome. Dean's Hour to follow at typed in my home. Please call Sherry at Lost & Found The Riverside High School Booster berg Village (formerly the Weeping Call JoAnn or Pam at 1-800-592-2121. 7:00. Club is sponsoring $100 per ticket, Radish) presents CHEERS NIGHT Oct. 489-6224 limit 300. tax deductible raffle to com­ 29th. Eachgroupofcontestants picks Full and part time interviewers needed FOUND JOANNIE plete athletic facilities. Prizes include 6 characters for a Cheers Skit. If you for daytime telephone research in RTP. Word Processing Fast Reliable Rates, Pair of glasses inside their case. Please So you're lookin' thru the Classifieds 1991 GEO Metro. 25" color TV, VCR. and your friends think you know the Must be articulate, enthusiastic, and Pick-Up/Delivery. Sheila Banks, 596- call Daniel at 684-3300. ext. 233. for a personal?? Well, we can't let you other goodies. Ticket includes dinner best Cheers lines, enter this hysteri­ dependable. Pay starts at $7/hr. Con­ 9696 anytime. feel forgotten on your Birthday! Happy for two night of drawing. Please sup­ cal contest in hopes of winning great tact Sherri at JZA for details. 544-5448. Personals 21st to one of the specialpeople in port new public high school. Contact prizes and having an awesome time. ANOTHER BYTE WORD PROCESSING. my life. Kendrick. Prof. Ed Shaughnessy 660-5304 or For complete details. Call Clifford at RESEARCH ASST. Fast, accurate, experienced. Term 682-2337. Entry deadline is Oct. 17th. papers, theses, resumes, manu­ 383-6976. Sociologist seeks part-time RA to carry MAIL BOXES ETC: Typing service pa­ scripts, legal, etc. 9a.m.-12p.m. 490- BOSTON TICKET out various tasks including library pers/resumes: UPS packaging/ship­ 5850. searches, wordprocessing, etc. Pay ping; Western Union. Loehmann's Plaza Supersaver price ticket (R218 return) $7


v Cash, check or Duke IR accepted. Computer experience RESUME SERVICE (We cannot make change for cash payments.) helpful (both PC's and & RADIATOR SERVICE, INC. professional • inexpensive Specializing in 24-hour drop off location fast • easy to update Macs). 10-15 hours/wk; $5/hour. Underclass­ • American Cars • Rabbits 3rd floor Rowers Building (near Duke Chapel) Don't wait until the last minute. • Dasher • Scirocco where classifieds forms are available. man preferred. Come in early and find out what • Datsun • Toyota we can do for you. We're located • Honda or mail to: just off East Campus at... • Volvo Chronicle Classifieds Submit resume to: Auto Repairing & Service • Motor Tune-up BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706. 1807AW. Markham Ave. Barry Eriksen General Repairs • Wrecker Service Durham, NC 27705 Call 684-3476 if you have questions about classifieds. The Chronicle 286-2207 No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline. 1 SfOO W. Markham Ave. (located behind Duke Campus) 286-7759 101 West Union Bldg. V. MONDAY, OCTOBER 14. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 13 Euthanasia law on American hostage may be released By NEIL MacFARQUHAR transigence in releasing Arab prisoners. Washington ballot Associated Press "I'm more optimistic than at any time before that one NICOSIA, Cyprus — An influential Iranian news­ Western hostage, maybe an American, will be freed," the newspaper quoted its unidentified correspondent By TIMOTHY EGAN paper reported Sunday that a Western hostage in N.Y. Times News Service Lebanon, possibly an American, maybe freed soon. The as saying. report came as a U.N. envoy began a new mission "Maybe one American will go home soon if no unfore­ SEATTLE — Early next month voters in this state will seeking the hostages' release. seen incidents take place as happened earlier," the decide on an issue that has never appeared on a ballot in The English-language Tehran Times did not say correspondent was quoted as saying. But he added: the United States: Should doctors be allowed to kill which hostage might be freed by pro-Iranian extrem­ "The slightest mistake or provocative statement from terminally ill patients who have asked to die? ists in Lebanon, or when this might occur. any side" could mar U.N. and Iranian efforts to free the The ballot measure, Initiative 119, would make Wash­ The paper, often reflecting the positions of Iranian hostages. ington state the first jurisdiction in the Western World to President Hashemi Rafsanjani, had accurately pre­ The newspaper did not elaborate. legalize euthanasia. And it raises the possibility of over­ dicted two earlier releases of hostages, but incorrectly Hezbollah, considered the umbrella group for Shiite turning a 2,000-year-old tenet of medical tradition. reported that an American might be set free shortly extremists believed to be holding most ofthe hostages, Called the Death with Dignity proposal, Initiative 119 after the release Sept. 24 of Briton Jack Mann. has linked the freedom for the at least nine Westerners earned a spot on the Nov. 5 ballot after more than 223,000 The story, in the form of an interview with one ofthe to Israel's release of up to 300 Lebanese Arabs held by signatures were gathered by people who believe that the newspaper's Lebanon correspondents, said the Shiite the Israelis or their allied militia in southern Lebanon. timing of one's death is a basic right. Muslim Party of God, or Hezbollah, was pushing for a Israel has first demanded information on five Israeli If the initiative passes, terminally ill patients would be release on humanitarian grounds despite Israel's in­ servicemen missing in Lebanon. allowed to commit suicide with the help of their doctors, and it would clarify the conditions under which life- support systems could be withdrawn from patients who have already stated their intentions in a living will. MMBma ITEM NUCV-Each of these advertised items it required to be readily available for (ate in each Kroger Store, except at specifically noted in thie ad. If we do run out of an edvertieed item, we wel offer And, in the most controversial part of the initiative, you your choice of a comparable item, when available, reflecting the same savings or a raincheck which wM entitle you to purchase the edvertieed item et the edvertieed price within 30 days. Only one vendor doctors would be allowed to kill patients who have been coupon will be eccepted per item purchased. told that they have fewer than six months to live and who COPYRIGHT 1981 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. OCT. 13 THROUGH have made a written request to die. SATURDAY, OCT. 19,1991 IN DURHAM. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE Many doctors say that lethal injection is the form of SOLD TO DEALERS. euthanasia that is most likely to be adopted, although specific procedures will have to be worked out later if the initiative passes. The campaign has brought out into the open the private Low Prices. anguish of doctors, some of whom say they wonder whether their role as healers would be compromised if they become agents of death. Other doctors see the initiative as a humane and long-overdue response to patients who want And More. as much control over their own deaths as they have in

I don't understand how you can have a right to be killed. ^ealieM L Dr. Carlos Gomez °ttaee Cheetf 5,m^fa.min. I«g«i** their lives. But no matter which side of the issue they are on, doctors from around the country say voters in Washing­ V2 Price Vi Price ton state would change the nature of American medicine with passage ofthe initiative. All Varieties Country Club 2.5-oz. 24-oz. sealiest "I'm not an alarmist by nature, but I am absolutely terrified of what this could mean," said Dr. Carlos Gomez, Chipped Meats Cottage Cheese a doctor at the University of Virginia Health Sciences Center and the author of a book on euthanasia. "The proponents talk about physician-assisted suicide as a right. But I don't understand how you can have a right to be killed." For the Hemlock Society, whose supporters nationwide are backing Initiative 119 with a flood of donations, the initiative is a chance to put into law what the membership has long believed: a philosophy of death that was once dismissed as a fringe belief.

With the help of "Final Exit," by Derek Humphry (Hemlock Society/Carol, 1991), a suicide-manual that has become a best seller, the society is also trying to make a mainstream concern of a topic that was once taboo. it-ox. 12-Ct. Having failed to place a similar measure on the ballot in Dorltos Assorted Varieties California and Oregon, the society succeeded in Washing­ ton, which has a tradition of creating novel legislation through a vote ofthe people. Tortilla Chips Kroger Donuts Around the state, at gatherings in high school gyms and churches and on television, voters are drawing on images of dying loved ones and quoting scripture as they debate the last act of life. In early private polls, a majority of people backed the initiative. And with more than $1 million raised, the initiative's supporters have a 5-1 fund-raising advantage. But the lead could slip as the euthanasia part ofthe measure is highlighted. The campaign has been high on emotionalism and personal stories and low on sound bites from politicians, most of whom have not taken a position on the initiative. In one television advertisement in favor of the initia­ tive, an unconscious man is shown hooked up to a feeding machine in a hospital. "This isn't what Dad wanted," an 2-Ltr. lb. announcer says, referring to "patients kept alive by ma­ Nonreturnable Bottle, caffeine Free Diet chines against their will." Red or Thompson white Another advertisement, this one against the initiative, Pepsi, caffeine Free Pepsi, Diet Pepsi or features a middle-aged nurse speaking directly to the Seedless Crapes camera. "I'm a hospice nurse," she says. "Initiative 119 Pepsi Cola would let doctors kill my patients." 1 PAGE 14 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY. OCTOBER 14, 1991 Iraq removed nuclear documents before U.N. inspectors arrived

By PAUL LEWIS conceal whatever it can have already forced out the building," Galluci says. "They were nuclear documents center, the same team N.Y. Times News Service the Special Commission's experts to con­ really quite upset at overlooking those was arrested and detained for 92 hours in clude that Baghdad may well have other secret documents" he ads. UNITED NATIONS — Although the a parking lot after it raided the headquar­ unknown nuclear installations hidden United Nations seized conclusive evidence And after examining some of the docu­ ters of another secret operation called Pet­ away in the desert. of President Saddam Hussein's clandes­ ments obtained in that raid, the Special rochemical Project 3, the code name for tine nuclear weapons program during a Its chairman, the Swedish diplomat Rolf Commission asked Iraq to surrender a Iraq's nuclear weapon program. raid in Baghdad last month, Iraq managed Ekeus, says he cannot exclude the possi­ new list of undeclared nuclear-related On Friday the seventh U.N. nuclear to spirit away the bulk of its secret nuclear bility that Iraq may still possess a secret items, including fissile material, docu­ inspection team arrived in Baghdad for an records only hours before inspectors ar­ plutonium factory, as well as clandestine ments and equipment used in the weapons 11-day stay during which it is likely to rived, according to officials involved in the stocks of enriched uranium explosive, or program, officials say. As yet Iraq has not investigate documentary evidence seized case. that it might be experimenting with previ­ replied. by the team last month. ously undisclosed enrichment methods like Nevertheless Iraqi officials still got a Although President Bush asserted in The officials said that the unnamed in­ the nozzle technique. chance to tamper with the material the January that "our pinpoint attacks have telligence agency that located Iraq's top Nevertheless, in their haste to save the inspectors found because they took them put Saddam out ofthe bomb building busi­ secret nuclear design center — presum­ building's secrets, Iraqi nuclear officials back by force for several hours before even­ ness for a long time," it is already clear ably the CIA — pressed the United Na­ accidentally overlooked a rich cache of tually returning them. And the microfiches that allied bombers did not destroy vital tions to make the raid " a matter of the secret material stored in four steel trunks were never given back. nuclear installations during the Persian highest urgency," apparently because it as well as enough other documents to fill Gulf air war. knew Iraq would soon try to move the The day after the Sept. 23 raid on Iraq's several cardboard boxes and plastic bags incriminating material elsewhere. and four cases of microfiches. For the Spe­ But time was needed to assemble the 44- cial Commission and the Vienna-based member team because it included nuclear International Atomic Energy Agency, Ku Klux Klan breaks ground on weapon designers specially borrowed from which shares responsibility for destroying the United States and Britain. And by the Iraq's banned nuclear material, these over­ time it arrived, at dawn on Sept. 23, the looked documents were ofthe utmost value eight-story building opposite Baghdad's because they clinched the case the agen­ Alabama camp and school site luxury Rashid Hotel had been hurriedly cies had been trying to prove for months. stripped of virtually everything it con­ tained, apparently only hours before. The documents established conclusively ZINC, Ark. (AP) — Robed klansmen day, KKK national director Thom Robb that in addition to clandestinely manufac­ "They'd trashed the place inside," said attending a national reunion burned a said the white supremacist group had turing enriched uranium, Iraq had em­ Robert Gallucci, deputy chairman of the cross and chanted white power slogans on stepped up its recruitment efforts in Eu­ barked on a nuclear weapons development Special Commission appointed by the Se­ land their leader vowed would be used to rope in recent months. program and was trying to design nuclear curity Council to locate and destroy Iraq's school "a thousand David Dukes." Robb said the national meeting, the first triggers and other bomb components. most dangerous weapons and one of those A large sign proclaiming "White Pride convened since 1986, will become an an­ They also identified, for the first time, who took part in the raid. "We even found World Wide" greeted about 100 klansmen nual event. The group plans to build its the Al Atheer installations on the a note saying all documents stored there from across the country at the Knights of national headquarters on land deeded to Euphrates south of Baghdad as the nerve were to be removed before any U.N. in­ the Ku Klux Klan National Congress. The Robb's wife. center of this weapons program. And they spection," he added. private gathering began Friday and ended revealed that Iraq was planning to pro­ By removing the bulk of its records be­ Sunday in this rural Ozark Mountain town He said the site would be used as a Bible duce Lithium 6, a material used for boost­ fore the raid, officials say, Iraq may again about 120 miles northwest of Little Rock. camp and for schools to "train a generation ing nuclear explosions up to thermonuclear have deprived the United Nations of the of young people . . . give America a thou­ strength. chance to once and for all get a complete Klan leaders opened the event to report­ sand David Dukes." Duke, a former Klan overview of Saddam's nuclear program. "It was a dream find for us because it ers near dusk Saturday in time for the leader and a maverick Republican, is a The extent of what has been unearthed gave us the smoking gun we wanted al­ cross-burning. state representative running so far as well as Iraq's frenzied efforts to though the Iraqis thought they had cleared During a brief news conference Satur­ for governor.

> HEALTH PROFESSIONS Duke INFORMATION MEETINGS in Spain 2 weeks COSTA DEL SOL JUNIORS AND SENIORS 4 weeks MADRID COURSES: In Spanish language, literature and civilization. Can be applied to 2 of the following areas of knowledge: Civilization, Arts/ Literature, Sponsored by Foreign Languages, Social Sciences.

HEALTH PROFESSIONS ADVISING CENTER ELIGIBILITY: Students who have completed four or more semesters of college Spanish or the equivalent. WHEN? Tuesday, October 15,4:30 p.m. APPLICATION AND INFORMATION: Qualified early applicants Wednesday, October 16, 3:30 p.m. will be given priority. For more information and Thursday, October 24,4:30 p.m. application forms come to the

WHERE? INFORMATION MEETING Medical Center Amphitheater Tuesday, October 15 (Room 1034 Yellow Zone) 5:00 p.m. 211 Languages Building Dr. Kay Singer, Health Professions Advisor, will explain the application Or Contact: Professor Miguel Garci-Gomez, process and HPAC services. All students interested in Fall 1993 matricu­ Dept. of Romance Languages, 684-3706 lation in medical or dental school should attend one of these meetings. MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 15 Numerous witnesses testify in late night Senate session • THOMAS from page 2 Thomas, called Hill opinionated, arrogant romantic interest in Thomas. Fitch said denied all her allegations. "I know he did no such thing," said and aloof, and said her former boss was no; but Myers said yes. Sen. Alan Simpson, As the hearing crawled toward the 12- Nancy Elizabeth Fitch, a former assistant being "mugged in broad daylight." R-Wyo., stressed that although Hill made hour mark, the committee heard from to him at the Equal Employment Opportu­ Said Phyllis Berry Myers, another aide, numerous calls to Thomas after the al­ friends and acquaintances of Thomas about nity Commission. "I trust Judge Thomas "Never has anyone raised allegations such leged harassment, they stopped when she his personal integrity. In the interest of completely." as Anita has." learned in the fall of 1987 that he had time, it accepted a transcript of committee J.C. Alvarez, another former aide to Several senators asked if Hill had a gotten married. staff interview with Wright in place of her The testimony led, as well, to attempts televised testimony. by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, to shield "Clarence Thomas did consistently pres­ Sexual harassment poll Hill from further attack. He said the panel sure me to date him," she said in the should be "sensitive to the attempts of statement. "At one point, Clarence Tho­ ResuIts of a Newsweek polI on sexual harassment. Character assasination of Professor Hill." mas made comments about my anatomy. Here are some questions asked: Later, he and Simpson exchanged barbs Clarence Thomas made comments about about whether supporters of Thomas or women's anatomy quite often." QUESTION QUESTION his opponents were using unethical tac­ She described one scene at a seminar tics. when Thomas commented on the dress she In your opinion, should a man How closely have you Hill has testified that Thomas repeat­ was wearing and asked, "what size are nominated to the Supreme followed news coverage edly pressed her for dates and made graphic your breasts?" Wright used an earthy col­ Court who has sexually of accusations of sexual sexual references in conversation, but loquialism but later said that term was never touched her. Thomas has vehemently hers, not his. harassed a women in the past... harassment made against Supreme Court nominee Never be Should be confirmed Clarence Thomas: depending on the confirmed circumstances to the Court Don't know/ THINK ABOUT IT! Very refused to close y answer DESIGNING YOUR OWN 2% CURRICULUM WITH THE HELP OF FACULTY ADVISORS! SOUND INTERESTING? Should not be Don't know/ Attend the an important refused to consideration answer Somewhat Not PROGRAM II 8% 7% closely closely INFORMATION MEETING Telephone poll of 704 adults interviewed on Oct. 10 and 11 by the Gallup Organization for Newsweek. Margin of error is plus or minus 4%. Wednesday, October 16, 4:00 pm 130 Biological Sciences Building Source: Newsweek AP/Martha P. Hernandez

ATTENTION ALL JUNIOR BME, EE AND ME MAJORS!! &A& ftalian NSF/ERC GARDEN RESTAURANT UNDERGRADUATE ITALIAN AMERICAN CUISINE FELLOWSHIPS CASUAL FRIENDLY ATMOSPHERE MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL available beginning Spring Semester 1992 The Giants vs. The Steelers

NSF/ERC Undergraduate Fellows: 5(K Domestic Draft Beer • have opportunities for integrated research experiences to *s$> 75C Imported Beer enhance their engineering education $1.95 Personal Pizza TUES-SUN • work closely with faculty on exciting and innovative research projects throughout the last three semesters of FREE APPETIZER their undergraduate years (value $5.00 or less) • have full time paid research experience in the summer with this ad between junior and senior years In Lounge Only exp. 11-1 Cocktail Lounge INFORMATION SESSION ON Take-Out Orders TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 4:00 PM Banquet & Party Facilities - Up to 70 People ROOM 132, ENGINEERING BUILDING •ffl ffij ?K* Applications are now available in the ERC office (301 Engineering) 382-3292 For more information, call Martha Absher at 660-5139 3211 Hillsborough Road • Durham PAGE 16 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1991

Career Development Center Newsletter October 14. 1991 CDC Calendar of Events Invited for an interview through On-Campus Recruiting? sponsor several internship programs through­ Tues.. Oct 15. 4:00-5:00PM. Community & You must accept that invitation on CareerSource or you will lose out the year. Write directly to the organization Public Service Job Search Workshop. 03M to receive information on internship programs Page Bldg.; Wed. Oct 16. 6:00-8:00PM, The your spot!! Please R.S.V.P. and application materials. Also check the Prudential. Bryan Ctr.-Von Canon B; Wed, Following are the most recent cancellations but in all aspects of education Tn a residential files in the CDC Resource room and directo­ Oct 16.7:00-9:00PM. Morgan Stanley, Bryan for Fall OCR: BASF, Nov 6; GTE Government school. Fields open to Teaching Fellows are ries in the CDC Library for additional informa­ Ctr-Von Canon A. Next Week: Thurs.. Oct. Systems Corp.. Nov 4. art, English, mathematics, Classics, French, tion about these and other international op­ 24. 7:00-9:00PM. First Chicago, Bryan Ctr- Career Apprenticeship Program German, Spanish, Russian, biology, chemis­ portunities. (LM) Video Screening Rm. Please turn in your Agreement Fonn to Dian try, physics, music, physical education, his­ Health, Medicine & life Sciences Graduate/Professional Schools: Advance Poe or Johnnie Lawrence if you have met with tory, philosophy, and religion. Appointments Juniors and Seniors planning to apply sign-ups are required for individual inter­ your sponsor and agreed on your apprentice­ number around fourteen per year, though not to Medical or Dental School in 1992 for views and group sessions. See the Gradu­ ship for this semester. DP every department necessarily takes on a Teach­ matriculation in 1993 must attend one of ate/Professional Schools sign-up book at Community and Public Service ing Fellow every year. Check CareerSource for the information meetings with Dr. Kay Singer, the desk in 109 Page. Wed. Oct. 23, South­ Job Search Workshop - Hints for searching a complete job description. Descriptive bro­ the Health Professions Advisor. When? Tues., ern Methodist University School of Law; for opportunities in the non-profit sector - chures and applications are available in the Oct. 15. 4:30 pm; Wed., Oct. 16. 3:30 pm; Tues.. Nov. 5. Vanderbilt University School Oct. 15, 4pm. 03 Page Bldg. DP Career Library, 217 Page Building. Thurs.. Oct. 24, 4:30 pm. Where? Medical of Law. Emory University School of Law, Common Cause - Program Operations, Ad­ Government & Law Center South Amphitheater (room 1034 Yel­ and University of Miami School of Law; ministrative Support, Wash., DC. Provide Seniors Apply Now! 250-300 jobs listed every low Zone). Application materials will be dis­ Wed. Nov. 13. Harvard University John F. general support for Issue Development and two weeks in the Federal Job Opportunity tributed. Kennedy School of Government; Fri, Nov. Legislation departments, including: produce List (FJOL). The FJOL, available in the CDC, Clinical Psychology, Social Psychology & 15. Temple University School of Law; Tues., final drafts of policy papers, letters, testi­ includes current and anticipated Federal va­ Personality Graduate School? A meeting Dec 10, University of Virginia, School of mony and investigative studies; proofread cancies in North and South Carolina, as well will be held October 24, 6:00pm in Zener Law. and fact check; assist in the distribution of as selected vacancies in other states and coun­ Auditorium of Soc/Psych Bldg. The program More interview training sessions. Begin Common Cause testimony and letters to tries. It is only a partial listing of Federal jobs will be lead by Dr. Craighead. DGS, and by Dr. preparing for your job interviews by attend­ Capitol Hill; handle information requests from for which applications are being accepted. If Costanzo. Chairman of Psy: Social and Health ing one of the following sessions: Oct. 23, inside and outside the office; maintain de­ you would like to find out about vacancies in Sciences. A general discussion will take place Flowers Lounge 9-10 am. 10:30-11 am; Oct. partment library and files; coordinate work other areas, you may write to the Office of on various graduate schools, clinical, social 28 03M Page 10-11 am. 2-3 pm. of interns and volunteers; schedule and coor­ Personnel Mgmt. (OPM) office(s) servicing the psych and personality programs. The meet­ On Campus Recruiting dinate Hill appointments; assist with cam­ location(s) where you would like to work. A ing will last as long as you have questions! Bidding ends at 11:59 PM tomorrow for paign finance reform coalition efforts and directory of all OPM area offices, including Don't miss out on this program! firms interviewing during the week of Octo­ special projects. Well organized: self-starter; their addresses and the areas they service, is Media & Arts ber 28. Remember, you must bid 1 point to articulate; accurate; demonstrated ability to available in the CDC. The FJOL is published TODAY!! Duke in Hollywood! Interested? RSVP to an invitation. If you do not bid, you work well with a variety of people and to on the first and fifteenth. Entry-level vacan­ Come to a meeting at 136 Social Sciences at will lose your slot on the Invitation Schedule. perform multiple tasks under pressure; good cies on the Oct. 1 listing include Accountant & 5pm and hear about strategies for breaking Keep in mind that every firmwit h an Invita­ phone manner; good word processing skills; Auditor Positions (worldwide); Agricultural into the exciting field of entertainment. All tion Schedule also has some interview slots experience with personal computers; inter­ Engineer (nationwide); Asst. Program Dir/Fam- students welcome. available for competitive bidding (Open slots est in Common Cause issues; previous expe­ ily Child Care Worker (overseas Europe); Bio­ Internships!!! are generally 3:00-5:00PM). Bidding closes rience on Capitol Hill or in a political organi­ logical Science Positions (worldwide); Com­ Internships are absolutely the best way to gain tomorrow on the following schedules: zation helpful. munity Affairs Asst. (San Francisco, CA); Com­ experience and knowledge of new career fields. AT&T; Aetna: Booz, Allen & Hamilton; Cater­ Computer Science, Engineering, munity Planner (Wash., DC); Criminal Investi­ Besides those listed below, you will findinfor ­ pillar; Cigna: Dataflow; Dynetics; General Math & Physical Science gators (worldwide); Education Specialist/ mation on hundreds more in CareerSource Electric (Aerospace. Ericsson GE Mobile Com­ Employer information sessions will con­ Teacher (overseas Europe). Numerous entry- and on the shelves ofthe Career Development munications. Industrial & Power Systems, tinue. Plan to attend as many of them as level jobs are filled in the Federal government Center Library. Come and explore. Make an Infonnation Systems Management Program, possible to learn about various opportunities through ACAWA Administrative Careers with appointment with John Noble at the CDC to Manufacturing Management Program); for permanent or summer employment, get America Exams. The ACAWA program offers put together a plan of action! Hoechst Celanese (Engineers); Kellogg; ideas for cover letters, develop interview ques­ written examinations in six different occupa­ Orchestra Management Fellowship with McMaster-Carr Supply: Merck, Sharp & tions, etc. If you have scheduled an interview tional groups. You may apply to take an exam the American Symphony Orchestra League Dohme; NCR (Workstation Products) Norfolk with that organization, it will definitely be to in any of these general occupational areas: * may be of interest to graduating seniors. Naval Shipyard: PPG Industries: Peace Corps; your advantage to attend the session. Inter­ Business, Finance and Management * Person­ Deadline is Nov. 15th. Check CareerSource for Procter & Gamble (Sales and Manufactur­ view hints: The last session for this semester nel, Administration and Computer * Benefits details. ing); Reichhold Chemicals; Telecommunica­ will be Wednesday, October 16. at 5 pm in Review, Tax and Legal * Law Enforcement and The Winston-Salem Journal has several in­ tions Techniques. 203 Teer. If you are interested in Environ­ Investigation Find out more and sign up now ternships available for those interested in the Free Sign: These firms will be recruiting the mental careers, plan to attend the alumni to take one ofthe exams in the CDC. Based on newspaper business. Applications are ac­ week of October 21. Their schedules are panel on November 1 sponsored by the School your exam rating, your name will be placed on cepted from Oct. 1 to Dec. 31. Get the details currently available for Free Sign. Check to be ofthe Environment. Time, place, and partici­ a list of eligible applicants and referred to in CareerSource. certain you meet the job requirements before pants will be announced later. Federal agencies with vacancies. There are MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour takes interns for signing up: National Instruments; Rohm & current vacancies nationwide for the above winter break! Apply by Nov. 8. Check Career- Education Source for more info. Haas. American Cyanamid. Teach for America is a national teach corps general areas. Brent Publications (NYC), publishers of In­ Free sign schedules for firms recruiting dur­ of dedicated individuals from all ethnic back­ International Opportunities terview. Art in America, and Antiques regu­ ing the week of Oct. 28 will be available at grounds and academic majors. With inten­ Summer Interns need to apply now!! Fall is larly seeks interns in a variety of departments. 5:00PM this Thurs. These firms are: sive training and support, corps members the season to explore summer internships. See CareerSource to find out more. Sumitomo Electric Fiber Optic Co.; AFL-CIO; teach in urban and rural areas that have Many major programs have application dead­ Financial Group: Hoechst Celanese (Chem­ persistent teacher shortages. Alice Criner, lines in late October or early November. Pro­ Graduate Student Concerns ist); U.S. Army Belvoir R&D Center. Free regional recruiter for Teach for America, will grams generally do not include an overseas Virginia Steinmetz, PhD joins the staff of the Sign interview slots are available on any conduct an information session on the pro­ assignment, but offer an opportunity to focus CDC to address the career concerns of gradu­ Open Schedule that has fewer bidders than gram on October 17, at 6:30pm in Zener on international issues within the framework ate students. We welcome her warmly! slots. Check schedules you're interested in Auditorium in the Sociology-Psychology of an international organization. The United Post-prelim and graduate degree candi­ for the week of October 28 after Scheduler Building. Don't miss the opportunity to learn Nations (Internship Coordinator, Recruitment dates: Are you beginning to lay the ground­ runs on October 16. You may be able to get more about a program which is contributing Program Section, Rm. 2475. United Nations, work for your future academic career? Look­ an interview even if you missed the resume so much to areas of urgent need education. New York. NY 10017). the U.S. Dept. of State ing for post-graduate research opportunities? drop and forgot to bid! There will be no Andover - Phillips Academy, Andover is (Intern Coordinator. Dept. of State, PER/CSP. Considering non-academic career options? If change in the access schedule over Fall offering a Teaching Fellowship which pre­ P.O. Box 18657), The CIA (Student Programs you would welcome assistance with the chal­ Break. Students who are planning to leave pares able college graduates for a career in Office, P.O. Box 1925. Washington,' D.C. lenging transition from graduate student to the campus should plan their bidding and teaching, particularly in the secondary inde­ 20013), and the U.S. Agency for International professional, make an appointment with Vir­ free sign activities with the regular access pendent school. It gives a comprehensive Development (Intern Coordinator. PM/CSP. ginia Steinmetz, CDC's new career specialist schedule in mind. experience not only in classroom teaching. U.S.A.I.D.. Washington, D.C. 20523-0105) all for graduate student concerns. The mission ofthe new Career Development Center is to educate the students of Duke University in the arts of self-assessment, careercareer exploration, planning, and job hunting with the goal of helping them develop rewarding and fulfilling careers. The Center primarily serves the students and alumni of Trinity College,of Engineering, the School and the Graduate School.