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¥olum»71. Number 99 s going to snow. Mo it's not. Kriduy. es it is. Well, maybe not. unny and mild today. Pebruarv 20. 1970 Uuku University The Chronicle Durham, Inside today Academic freedom and —New freshman advising system (P-3) tenure policies revised — Religion and By Fred Zipp was short and without major disagreements. symposium today (p. 6) The Academic Council approved by voice vote Watson explained the principle goal of the Ex­ yesterday proposed revisions of appendix IV of the ecutive Committee in revising the document was faculty handbook. "to gain approval and put into writing" certain —The New Hampshire primary is The appendix "embodies an agreement between policies concerning the role and power of the Tuesday (p. 7) the president and the faculty as to policies and pro­ University Hearing Committee. cedures with respect to academic freedom, Upon the request of a faculty member, the Hear­ academic tenure, and certain matters of due pro­ ing Committee may decide cases involving "dis- • cess," according to the new text. missal for misconduct or neglect of duty, termina­ The "now legendary" appendix IV, as Richard L. tion of contract prior to its expiration date, tenure Watson, chairman of the Academic Council, status, alleged violations of academic freedom, or described it, was first discussed at the November violations of due process in decisions not to renew meeting of the council and again in January, with a term appointment, to grant tenure, or to promote members of the council requesting certain changes in rank," according to the new text. in the text each time. Specifically. Watson said, the Executive Commit­ Watson told the council University presidenl tee wished to add the following three provisions Terry Sanford had already given his approval to the not previously included in appendix IV: revised appendix and that if it were not passed —that the Hearing Committee can prescribe re­ yesterday a special session of the Academic Coun­ medial action, such as extension of a termination cil would be called to resolve the matter. date, in cases not involving dismissal where the In other business at the routine 40-minute meet­ faculty member's claim is upheld; ing, C.L. Haslam, the University counsel, discussed —that judgments of the Hearing Committee, in­ the legal status of the faculty handbook as a con­ cluding remedial action, are binding on all parties tractual instrument, and Watson assured the coun­ and cannot be summarily rejected by the ad­ — Artweek(p. 10) cil "it would not be [the executive committee of the ministration; Academic Council] wish" to discuss the future of —that either party to a dispute heard by the Hear­ ing Committee can appeal the judgment of the com­ — Sports (pp. 16-22) the Barchas Collection at a summer meeting of the council. mittee to the Board of Trustees. Short and sweet In addition, Watson said, wording of a section — Maryland-Duke line-ups (p.24) In contrast to earlier discussions of the proposed descrihing how decisions of the Hearing Committee revisions of appendix IV, yesterday's consideration are to he presented to the Board of Trustees for re­ view was clarified to meet objections voiced by the council at its January meeting. Recovering from heart attack Executive privilege Watson said the new wording of the section "cer­ tainly did not" preclude the president of the Sirica may cancel Duke speech University from giving his own recommendation to the Trustees when he presents a case to them. The By |ohn Harwood honorary degree. several weeks ago on the re­ toward .recovery." Ruyacki president presents the case to the board in keeping Watergate Judge John Christine Mimms, i commendation of the com­ said. "He should be re­ with the "normal lines of communication" at Duke, Sirica's heart attack two ecuti ve assistant mencement committee. leased from the hospital in he added. weeks ago may prevent him University President Terry Rep. Barbara Jordan, D.­ another two weeks." Diulo Giannitrapani, a former associate professor Texas, was second on the from speaking at Duke's Sanford. and Pelham Ruvacki added that Sirica of psychology at Highlands Hospital whose con­ list of names presented to commencement May 9. his Wilder, chairman of the expects to return to work on tract was terminated in 1974. suggested to the law clerk said yesterday. Sanford, according to a a light schedule three to commencement committee, council that the revised appendix still did not "It's a question mark refused to comment on member of the commi ttee. four weeks after his release specify clearly enough the power of the Hearing whether lie will be able to whether the University was Sirica collapsed Feb. 5 from the hospital. (Continued on page 4) speak or not." Bob Ruyacki, seeking another speaker in while addressing the Sirica's clerk, said. "At this the event that Sirica cannot George Washington time his doctors are not in a speak, University Law Alumni in Washington. D. C. Ruyacki ASDU supports PIRG position to tell him what to Ruyacki said he had been do." in contact with Sanford's termed the attack "serious." Ruyacki indicated. office this week but had not but said Sirica was taken off however, that doctors have been advised of any de­ the critical list after only voting reform efforts tentatively given Sirica cision by the University. one day. across the state have also been asked to By Jennifer McGovern permission to attenf the Sanford selected Sirica as "Judge Sirica has made ediloralize on the subject, he said. ASDU president Rick Glaser sent a letter ceremony and receive an steady, stable progress According to Deiss. PIRG is trying to get on Feb. 12 to the North Carolina Board of a registrar to come to the Duke campus as Elections stating that ASDU supports the part of the registration effort, but PIRG's' voter registration policv proposed by the main thrust will be "to get the registration North Carolina Public interest Research policv ironed out." Group (NC-PIRG). The six-member Board of Elections must The NC-PIRG proposal alleged that stu­ vote by majority that the present policy dents are denied an equal opportunity to needs to be changed in order for a revision vote in North Carolina and outlined re­ of the state's policy to occur. The board is forms which the group felt would make still considering the brief, but Alex Brock, the registration policy more equitable. a Raleigh lawyer and member of the hoard, Glaser's letter stated "it is our hope that said the board will not vote to change the North Carolina will not lag behind other present policy, in his judgement. states in constitutional and equitabnle re­ Although no statistics are available on gistration procures." and called for pro­ how many students get turned down for mpt action by the board. registration, Deiss expressed the opinion David Deiss. a Trinity College junior that many students would prefer to re­ and a member of the PIRG chapter at Duke, gister in North Carolina. said all student legislatures in North The deadline for registration for the ASOU President Rick Glaser sent a letter to the North Carolina Board of Carolina are being asked to send letters in March 23 presidential primary is this Elections supporting in-state student voter registration. (Photo by Ken support of the proposal. Major newspapers Shapiro) Monday. Feb. 23. Page Two l-'riihu. Kobruarv 20. 197(i SPECTRUM* following the spaghetti suppei In lh.' v, na- Jo TATE ARMSTRONG. TKKKV bridge when you can play duplicate' TODAY Divinity School Lounge at 6:30 pm Ff. . CHJLI. THKBLUEDEV1L |EFF HOWSON in all HILLEL EXECS: There • Sunday night Bl 7 p m .n 209 East Duke i. The subject of the meeting will (head i.heerleader), and ALL THE THIS n open planning meeting ihis Ibe YM-YWCA office |t:ri.<|»l basement) Bhlg. that is. i al 5 p.m. before dinner. concern the work of the Holy Spin CHEEKI.KADERS have in common? WEEKEND They'll all be special guest stars on "THE The DUKE BAHA1 CLUB will have an ASDU University Services Committee GENERAL SOCCER LEAGUE: New nets FLIP SIDE." loin Flip Schaefer and informal discussion this Saturday in will meet Sun.. Feb. 22. at 1 p.m. in room Want to make a cherry pie for B.W.'s ase pay dues now. Games for this weel Is this Flowers Lounge al 4 p.m. Everyone is 102 Union. All members and interested real birthday? Lots of recipes in the East The IFC-PANHEL HAPPY HOURS will Friday 2-11,1-5. Sunday 13-15.12-16, invited, refreshments wil! lie served. students are asked lo allend. Health Campus Library's great collection of cook ctir.-.mence today at 4 p.m. at the id 3-7. 2-14. Monday l-i 1.5-6. Services will be discussed. clocktower quad near Ihp Sig-Ep section. On Sun.. Feb. 22, at 8 p.m. in Baldwin BRIDGE PLAYERS: Why play rubber (Continued on page 8) There will be 3 kegs and 50c buys you all All CREWPERSONS: A new and Auditorium, the Music Department of you can drink. AllGreeks welcome! Duke University will present a concert of nxmmziTi 2:45. SPECIAL FRIDAY AT HILLE Bicentennial Celebration Music for Community It v shirt, 'course we will be serving dinner at your followed bji services al 7 p.m. as Applications Duke?" Come for s ml In but after the service, al around 8 case of rain, regular . Siit. we'll be having another fantastic H usual COFFEEHOUSE complete with d for the position of

SIMPLIFIED LIFESTYLE discus group meet for breakfast this Saturdi EDITOR of 9:30 a.m.. 809 Lancaster St. We wi CLASSIFIEDS THE TEACHER COURSE Addressers wanted IM­ Services Offered Deidre. wit many tl MEDIATELY! Work at Hume Nursery for diildoa attend Ibis meeting. EVALUATION Christopht: lias vacancy —Duke area • INTERNATIONAL CLUB MEMBERS: are available in Dean Griffith's office 489-3927. Write American Service, We are invited to a party held by the 1401 Wilson Blvd.. Suite Committee for Racial Understanding in and must be turned in by Feb. 27. Aycock House (E. Campus) at 9:30 p.m. MCAT REVIEW COURSE 101. Arlington. Va. 22209. Interviews are March 2. OF DURHAM. Qualified on Sat.. Feb. 21. Seeyou there! faculty teach seven 4-hour HUNGER TASK FORCE — The Hurler UTIIHIMTtirttll till IT sessions. Total cost SI 70. COME ENJOY SPRING Lost And Found First session 30 March. WITH US. HORSEBACK Ramada Inn. 1-85, Durham. RIDING. INSTRUCTION & LOST — ON QUAD Gall 477-6253. TRAILR1D1NG DAILY. FOR TUESDAY: BLACK THESIS INFORMATION 471-1959 BINDER NOTEBOOK & AFTER 6:30 P.M. KEEP b Wm.B. EXPERT BICYCLE BLUE BOUND LIBRARY TRYING. THE Daily Crossword d REPAIR. Graduate student BOOK. REWARD. ROBERT Cunningham adjusts, overhauls for less. —806 ONSLOW AVE. ACROSS 44 Suture Selves George Lapennas. 688-8566. Riders Needed 1 Look here! 45 Nelumbo Bails with 6-10 p.m.. weekends. FOUND: Gold Club — on 5 Room 28 Rosettes 46 Logrolling a dipper 10 Famous ten­ 31 Hidden contest Grasp Soccer field near golf nis name bases 50 Reach by Nested 8 seats available on a bus course. Call Karl: 684-5601. 14 French 34 Vegetable effort boxes non-stop to Mardi Gras. airport soup 52 Satiated Ulcers Travel Leaving Friday afternoon. FOUND: Tennis Racquet on 15 S. Am. ro­ 35 Work by 53 — culpa Makes February 27. Returning Pegram bench. Call Jim dents Keats 54 Famous healthy 36 - Domini EUROPE — ISRAEL — Tuesday. March 2. Cost S47. 286-2668. 16 Kind of Speaker Best AFRICA — ASIA. Travel party 37 Stations, 55 Tiler Official Call 684-1065 or 684-3841. in Paris discounts year round. Stu­ 17 City sights 58 Female stamp Roommate Needed 19 Large shark 38 -fide relative Secular dent Air Travel Agency, For Sale 20 Something 39 Elected 59 Efface Karenina Inc. 4288 First Avenue, FOR SALE — Martin .12- 21 — -deucey ones 60 Sanford, Contumelious Tucker. Ga. 30084 (404) 22 Floors: Fr. 40 Samples offstage Trouble string guitar D-12-20. 10 Students with ENORMOUS 934-6662. yrs. old. excellent condi­ 24 Sojourns 41 Ethical 61 Fasteners Baseball 3, "bedroom apartment just 26 Catch in a 42 Puts on tion. Call Ric 682-6920. 62 Italian term off East Campus. Need two trap guard 63 In addition Stadium roommates starting on or Small So. Am. Saturday's Puzzle Solved: FOR SALE: EXXON GAS — anytime after March 1. DOWN monkey Reg. 52.9. Unleaded 54.9. S41 person month (ever­ 1 Homage 41 European 2 — Dunne bird Wanted To Buy: One or two High Test 57.9, 1810 West ything). Call Bob Gentry — Markham Ave. across from 3 Blackthorns 43 Skoal and tickets for Segovia Concert. 682-8349. 4 Thesaurus prosit Kwik Kar Wash #2 (near entry: abbr. 44 Sleek East Campus). BSfflWfl 5 Seasoned 46 Cavity 6 Sheets 47 Actuate Will pay S15 a month (2 7 Uncomfortable48 Necessities Help Wanted 8 Animal 49 En-! months total) to any 9 Perfumes 50 Nipa palm persons interested in rent­ 10 Eritrea 51 Conformable ing out a tape recorder EXPERIENCED town to fact 11 Kind of 52 Lather system with microphone BARTENDERS: APPLY IN E L 0 .'.|K U N T|E R 0 D E that will run at a speed of 1 PERSON. 3-5 P.M. R E N DBS P A SH0I.E T E] R Johnny 56 Spanish gold 12 Cod's cousin 57 Before or SLOWER and is capable WEEKDAYS. FIVE POINT of recording vocalization. RESTAURANT, DURHAM. Phone: 684-7760 OR Send (NEAR BOOK ] ? 3 H 1 6 ? •6 9 ,0 12 13 Name, address, and EXCHANGE). telephone number in Cam­ 11 pus Mail: Box i003. Duke NEED EXTRA INCOME? " ]/ 1 Medical Center. Make S2-S25 each Clipping " news items from your local 70 n 1n „ newspaper. Complete in­ " • Personal 24 I structions. S3.00. Clipping, " 1 Box 24791 D8. Seattle, Wa. 23 30 Happy Anniversai 98124 " 1 jl yi JJ I 35 3fc • " Thinking of Abortion? " r p i3 w Let's talk about Alternatives ar | 1m Assistance and Support Offered Ul I43 688-5153 9:30-11:30 A.M. IT hS Daily . 1 il I • w '" •:h 55 IS•6 w 57 bO charles hopkfns ol chapel hill 5B 59 designer/craftsman 1•? 1 1 custom designed •; 1975 by N .Y. News Synd. Inc. handmade jewelry AN Rights Reserved

phone 942-4788 East Franklin St. Friday. February 20.1976 The Chronicle Page Three Seeks conciliation in Rhodesia Britons pressure 'rebels' By Robert B. Semple Jr. sent if Rhodesia were to accept British sovereignty. [C] 1976 NYTNMVSService But privately officials here do not think that will LONDON — British officials are hoping that the happen: Even if it did, they say, the troops would possibility that African nationalist forces could be used merely to keep peace while new political soon invade Rhodesia — a possibility they take arrangements inside Rhodesia were devised. very seriously —will force the Rhodesian regime to Black power make political concessions that 10 years of What officials are hoping for is that Prime diplomacy have failed to produce. Minister Ian D. Smith of Rhodesia will come to re­ This is the message implicit in a series of public alize that his best defense against invasion is to re­ comments by senior members of the Foreign Office, ach a political settlement giving genuine power to including a major statement of British views Thurs­ the country's majority blacks. Smith leads 250,000 day by the Minister of State, David Ennals. whites who are determined to keep control of a In a luncheon address to the Royal Com­ contry they consider to be theirs as much as do the monwealth Society, Ennals flatly ruled out the use nation's 6 million blacks. of British troops to protect white Rhodesians. He Ennals and spokesmen at the Foreign Office de­ said that some Rhodesians were suffering from a nied Thursday reports that a high-ranking British "serious self-delusion" that such aid would be official — identified only as a "Mr. X" — had re­ forthcoming, but added that Britain was under no cently visited Salisbury and offered Smith a deal "constitutional obligation" to protect a regime that under which his country would receive protection had unilaterally declared its independence in 1965. if he abandoned his rebellious posture. "Let us not forget that the people who are now But they conceded that they have been trying in talking of Britain as the protector of last resort have private channels to alert Smith to what they been in rebellion against the crown for more than a perceive to be a grave situation. They do not know decade. Their claim on Britain's protection is value­ whether the Russian and Cuban-backed forces in less while that rebellion continues." Angola will be satisfied with their success there or Ennals echoed a comment made in the House of whether they might attempt to complete the job Commons Wednesday night by the Foreign President Isabel Peron has decided not to i they have started — the overthrow of Southern re-election, but is determined to remain in office Minister, James Callaghan, that troops might be Africa's minority-ruled regimes. until the end of her present term. (UPI photo) ASDU Candidates Peron will not seek re-election, Campaigning for ASDU offices officially begins today- The candidates are: For President: Todd Atwood, Reggie Howard, and Jim Paulette. but plans to remain president For Vice-president: Kyle Citrynell, Hairston By Juan de On is sisted on finishing her represented in the labor announced the decision (C) 1976 NYT Newi Service after meeting with the Crews, Mark Kaplan, and Dan Tyukody. term, which ends in May. movement, would have to BUENOS AIRES — Presi­ 1977. "seek the defense of their leader of the Opposition The sole candidates for Executive Secretary dent Isabel Martinez de conquests and aspirations Radical Party. Ricardo and Administrative Secretary are Donna Dapcic The announcement by Peron, facing threats of im­ Peron over a national in the Marxist left." Balbin. and Linda Cline, respectively. peachment or a military television network that she "I'm not interested in re­ It was reported that the Absentee ballots for the ASDU elections will overthrow, announced would not be a candidate election, and in this sense I Radical Party, because of be available from Monday through Wednesday Wednesday night that she for re-election eased the will not accept any can­ Peron's decision, had of next week in 104 Union. ^^ wouid not be a candidate crisis created by her de­ didacy in the next constitu­ agreed not to support the for re-election, but she in- cision Monday to cut short tional period." Peron said. move to impeach her. That a special session of Last week, the Peronist move was begun by a con­ Congress, where opposi­ group loyal to Peron began servative legislative group called the Federalists. Freshman advising center tion parties were planning a campaign to proclaim her to declare Peron "unfit" to candidacy for a new term. The key to the political provides closer counseling be President. The Minister of Interior. situation now is the Explaining her decision, Roberto Ares, said Wednes­ military commanders' as­ difficulties of scheduling appoint­ By Barbie Foo she said that if she were re­ day that tiie special session sessment of Peron's de­ The advising system for this year's ments and getting vital information to moved from office. Peronist of Congress would recon­ cision and its effect on the freshman class has provided greater the advisors rendered the system less followers, who are strongly vene next Wednesdav. He conduct of the Government. services and counseling than the efficient, Nathans said. system used in previous years, ac­ Another problem with the previous / cording to Richard Wells, an associate system was the lack of departmental dean of Trinity College. representation by the faculty. Wells This year's system has shown a said, if a student required counseling Symbolic World marked improvement over the old. in in a field where the advisor had insuf­ that the services and information of­ ficient access to information, there IQNYT News Service fered are more available and better was no other resource offered, he ex­ NEW YORK — According to information from World Bank sources. coordinated, he said. plained. Chile's right-wing Government since its coup two and a half years ago has With this year's system, the in­ received some $2 billion in foreign credits, despite extremely adverse a news analysis formation needed is more available economic problems. This contrasts sharply to the situation during the pre­ and can be exchanged among the vious leftist regime of President Salvadore Allende Gossens when loans from international organizations -and private commercial banks virtually Staffed by Elizabeth Nathans, assis­ faculty advisors in the center, Wells tant dean of Trinity College, and said. Lorene Greuling, who is responsible "The strengths of this year's system WASHINGTON —The Senate sustained President Ford's veto of a public for all record keeping involved, the are the interaction and exchange of works bill by a vote of 63 to 35, three votes short of the two-thirds margin center offers academic counseling, re­ ideas." Wells said. needed to override a veto. The House earlier had voted by a large margin, ferral services and general informa­ Another major improvement con­ 319 to 98, to override. The bill was sponsored by Democratic leaders in the tion for the student. cerns the greater ease of the registra­ House. President Ford said afterward that the Senate vote was "commenda­ Several faculty advisors are availa­ tion process. Nathans said. In pre­ ble." Key Democrats and Republicans said that they would try to draft a smaller public works bill that the President might accept. ble every afternoon for appointments vious years, the problems of course re­ gistration and declaration of a major with students who desire counseling. WASHINGTON —Officials at the government's disease control center in Major innovation had caused an overwhelming amount of appointments during tiie last Atlanta believe that it is possible that the virus that caused the worldwide The major innovation of this year's (lu epidemic of 1918-19, the worst in modern history, may have returned, several weeks before registration, slie system involves the pooling of re­ and they have alerted all state health departments and the World Health sources and tht: centralization of said. Organization. The reason for the alert was the discovery of an unusual services provided, Wells,said. No crunch strain of influenza virus in four flu cases at Fort Dix, N.J. One of the four pa­ Previously, freshmen were required •Wilh this year's system, the "big tients died. to schedule appointments with their crunch' is somewhat alleviated." ac- advisors on an individual basis. The (Continued on page 4) Page Four The Chronicle Friday. February 20,1976 Fraternities cite racial 'purity' Black sororities expanding By Karen Ebert at Duke," said Williams, Black and white fraternities and sororities at Duke dif­ Though there are blacks in white sororities. Cooper felt fer in their purpose, membership, and structure, accord­ that all black women have lo make the choice as to ing to black organization presidents. whether they want to be associated with blacks or whites. "We emphasize service projects rather than social ac­ "There is no hostility on either side," she emphasized. tivities," said Lisa Cooper, president of Alpha Kappa "Unlike other sororities, many women join the sorority Alpha. simply because their mother did," said Cooper. "Tradi­ "Pride is the difference between black and white tion is very important." fraternities." added Reche Williams, president of Omega "Fraternities have been segregated from the beginning Psi Phi. "We stand for brotherhood, leadership, and and probably always will be." said Williams. "Our positive effects in the community." fraternities are culturally based and a deeper commit­ "We aren't typically Greek letter-oriented." said Oscar ment is involved," he said. Mayers, president of Alpha Phi Alpha. "A white man would have to meet double demands if Approximately 30 per cent of the black women on cam­ he wanted to join a black fraternity because we would pus join the two black sororities, said Cooper, white question his motives." Williams continued. Mayers estimated that only six or seven per cent of black 'To integrate the fraternities would impurify them, men join the three black fraternities. said Mayers. "If there was too much mixture of cultures A new black fraternity. Kappa Alpha Phi, has been the purpose of the fraternity would be lost." brought to Duke this year. "The sororities' Greek affiliation is the national Pan­ hellenic Council." said Cooper, emphasizing the only dif­ -Academic Council- ference in names was the hyphen in the word Pan­ (Continued from page 1] hellenic. "We are associated members of the Panhellenic Council at Duke," she said. Committee to order remedial action. Black fraternities are also affiliated with the Council "We have tried to make clear the provision for re­ and members of the Inter-Fraternity Council at Duke. medial action," Watson answered. Black sororities and fraternities have always been Giannitrapani, for whom the administration re­ separate from white ones because they were not or­ fused remedial action recommended by the Hear­ ganized until the turn of the century, according to ing Committee after the committee found ir­ Williams. "Blacks didn't go to college before that time," regularities in the process leading to the he said. termination of his appointment, persisted in his ob­ The Pan-hellenic Council is international, and black jection to the revised appendix, citing details of his fraternities and sororities can be found in Africa, Centra! own case. America, and Europe. Their membership is not ex­ clusively black, though no white members are reported at Revision of the appendix was originally begun of freshmen Duke. after the administration denied Giannitrapani the "Puerto Ricans, though, have joined black fraternities remedial action to insure that such a case would not recur. •Freshman advising- (Continued on page 6) (Continued from page 3) cording to Nathans. about using the advising center Students have the opportunity to because they have no specific ques­ seek counseling early in the semester, tions or need for counseling, she said. thus avoiding the last-minute de­ "Both the faculty and students must cision process, she said. be educated as to what questions are Feedback on the merits of this year's pertinent at given points in the system have generally been favorable, semester," Nathans said. "Students Nathans said. Some of the faculty ad­ must take the initiative. There is a re­ visors have expressed their satisfac­ ciprocal relationship between the ad­ tion with the greater opportunities to visor and student, and the student meet their advisees and fellow col­ must take on some of the Sirloin leagues in other departments, she responsibilities by making the ap­ said, while the competent services of pointment," Wells said. kt With Baked Potato, Salad & Texas Toast Greuling and the available resources The advising center is providing the make their job easier. same services for this year's January Reg.'3.19 #1.99 Dana Ripley, associate professor of freshmen. However, learning a lesson Romance Languages, and an advisor for from this year's fall freshmen, ad­ _. no. 12 manv vears, expressed his confidence visors are urging students to set up in the system. early appointments. They also en­ Chopped Steak "Because no' appointments are courage students to stop by the center With Baked Potato & __ necessary. 1 have had the opportunity just to familiarize themselves with the Texas Toast Reg ,,M 79c to meet and talk with more students," resources and to get to know their ad­ he said. visor. Ripley was also coordinator of the Physical improvements Curriculum Reform Committee, Next year. Nathans hopes to make which presented recommendations physical improvements in the advis­ last March to the Undergraduate ing center. Faculty Council of Arts and Sciences "The waiting room needs to be ex­ concerning the need for a new advis­ panded and there is an obvious lack of ing system. privacy. A student in conference System begun in fall with his advisor can be heard in tbe On the basis of these recommenda­ next office," she said. tions, the present system was im­ Nathans hopes to obtain feedback plemented this fall. Despite its brief this semester to help judge the success existence, Nathans nevertheless feels of the new advising system. The assets optimistic about the advising center. of the center, she believes, are its in­ "So far, the system has not been ex­ formality and easy accessibility. ercised to its fullest potentials," she which should encourage greater stu­ said. Some students have felt reticent dent use. (HILLSBOROUGH RD. DURHAM 383-1517 There will be a reporters' meeting at 4 p.m. Sun­ Staff day in The Chronicle offices. Edit council at 4:30 in RIVERVIEW 201 Flowers. STEfiK HOUSE idilv. Kiilirunrv 20. IH7l> THE KENWOOD KX-620. NOT THE FIRST CASSETTE DECK IN THE $200 PRICE RANGE ... BUT MAYBE THE FIRST ONE YOU'LL FIND THAT'S WORTH OWNING.

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The Kenwood KX-620 sets a new low for high quality cassette deck prices. This is an amazingly fine-sounding machine that has an abundance of convenient features and a new drive system that gives rock-steady speed and reliability. And right now Vickers has knocked down to only $200 the price you can pay for truly high-fidelity cassette reproduction. $ KENWOOD KX-620 at 506 E. MAIN, DURHAM (NEAR THE BUS STATION) \lickers FOR DIRECTIONS OR INFORMATION, CALL 688-6311 M-SAT 9 to 5:30 THE PLACE FOR ^ PEOPLE WHO LOVE THEIR MUSIC Page Six The Chronicle Friday, February 20,1976 Ballots sent out today Senior class officers to be elected By Mary Jeffers Alumni Association, he said. Elections for the officers of the class of 1976 will take The secretary-treasurer must handle the finances of place next week from a slate of volunteer nominees, and class reunions, which are funded by the alumni general according to senior Michael Ayrer, chairman of the treasury, which Ayrer said is "stocked by class dues of nominating committee, "interest and motivation" are the S3-5 per year per person." Other duties include class cor­ two primary considerations. respondence for the Alumni Register, he said. Ayrer em­ Simply because Duke students graduate, they do not phasized that the Alumni Office bears full responsibility necessarily want to lose touch completely, Ayrer ex­ for collecting dues, and that any class officer position is plained, and consequently each senior class must elect completely volunteer, without pay. officers to help with reunions, alumni news, and the Interim procedures creation of Duke alumni policy. The nominating and election procedures this year are Lifetime positions interim, pending decision by William Griffith, dean of Lifetime positions of president, vice-president, student affairs, and the Alumni Association on official secretary-treasurer, and national council representative policy, Ayrer said. Last year's president, Whip Lash, was are open, and Ayrer said none of the positions are limited the first elected in many years, as the tradition of class of­ — to one person. Twice a year the national representatives ficers fell out of favor during the 1960's, he added. must return to Duke, when the 200-member National Last January, the seven-member nominating committee Council convenes to discuss matters in which alumni are headed by Ayrer advertised in Spectrum that nomina­ still involved. tions would be accepted until Feb. 6, Nineteen people The president and vice-president are in charge of alum­ were nominated, "which was reaily more than I expect­ ni reunions, which normally occur during graduation ed," Ayrer commented. He expressed fear that the com­ weekend once every five years, Ayrer explained. mittee might have to hold interviews to limit the slate, so Furthermore, they may be asked to conduct polls of the that those who lacked interest and enthusiasm might be Religion symposium members of their particular class if required by the Duke eliminated. 'Popularity contest' planned for today 'This will essentially be a 'popularity contest' among -Academic council- qualified people, said Ayrer, since, inevitably, the qualifications of each nominee will only be known to a {Continued from page 4) few other seniors. He stressed that "the spirit of the elec­ in Divinity School "I'm apologetic, but it has gone through the ap­ tion is meant to be informal, with campaigning kept at a By David Moore pr ipriate channels and the Academic Council can­ minimum." A symposium will be "Li terature and the not discuss your case. I must rule you out of order," Ballots will be mailed out to seniors on or about Feb. held in York Chapel of the Religious Life in the Middle Watson said. 20, and Griffith's office will help with this mailing. All Duke Divinity School Fri­ Ages." Fleming has written Haslam spoke to the council yesterday to answer ballots should be returned by Feb. 27, the following day and Saturday discuss­ The floman de IQ Rose: A questions raised at its January meeting concerning week, to be tabulated by the ad hoc nominating commit- ing the effect which re­ Study in Allegory and ligion has had on literature Iconography, and An In­ the legality of the faculty handbook as a contractual from the middle ages to the troduction to the Fran­ instrument. present. ciscan Literature of the The only parts of the handbook which can be The focus in the sym­ Middle Ages. considered "enforceable contractual agreements" posium, moderated by At 2:30 p.m. Saturday a are those which are "university applicable" for all Barn Drive-In J. Corless, an assis­ panel discussion will be Duke faculty members, Haslam said. "Internally, tant professor of religion at held in the Divinity School we rely upon the handbook in our relations with 1011 W. Main St. Duke, will be broad, ex­ Student Lounge to examine the faculty," he said, although the Board of Trustees Nov. 5,1975 amining "the ways in the trends of religion in reserves the right to revise the handbook at any which religious sentiment literature but not necessari­ time, he added. have surfaced in literature," ly specific literary figures, said Wiliam Finley, Finley said. The panel also Giannitrapani, who brought suit against Duke Dear Students, publicity director. hopes to discover the dif­ after he was refused remedial action, said an at­ torney for Duke had described the section of the Arnold Stein, of Johns ference in religious in­ In previous years you gave me 40% of Hopkins University, will fluence in the past and the handbook covering the Hearing Committee as "ad­ my business, but this year I have seen speak today at 4 p.m. on the influence in contemporary visory" when his suit went to trial. only a few of you. literature, hesaid. poetic voice of Herbert and "I cannot put myself out on a limb," Watson Milton. He has four prin­ Participants in the panel answered, while assuring the council the Executive I need your business to stay in cipal works to his credit discussion will be Wesley Committee did not wish to discuss the collection at thus far and is working now Kort of Duke. Robert business. You will find that I now serve a time when many members would be absent. on a book to be published Detweiller of Emory delicious taco and steak sandwiches in this year entitled The Art of University, and Giles Gunn i|miniin»wi addition to my other foods, such as hot Presence: the Poet and of UNC-Chapel Hill, Graduate Center Cafeteria B-B-Q sandwiches, hamburgers Paradise Lost. The symposium will at­ and fried chicken sandwiches. Tonight at 8 p.m. J. Hillis Super-Suppers tempt to look at all re­ Miller of Yale University Friday's Special ligions, having selected the Please come to see me when you can. will speak on "The speakers and subjects large­ linguistic moment in The ly due to the availability of Wreck of the Deutschland.' speakers, Finley said. It is " Miller is the author of coincidental that the ma­ many books, including jority of the subject matter Poets of Reality and The is British and Christian in Disappearance of God. nature, he added. The symposium will con­ tinue tomorrow with John Fleming of Princeton University speaking on I-'ridiiv. February 20. 197(i The Chronicle Page Seven Ford in New Hampshire campaigning Reagan and Carter are favorites in N.H.race By Jack W. Germond (C) 1976 Wuhingion Star New* MANCHESTER. N.H.—With five days remaining the undecided here have begun deciding, and Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter have been established as clear but uneasy favorites to win the Ii. • y Republican and Democratic Presidential primaries I Tuesday, •m.. There is no convincing visible evidence that r either holds an insurmountable lead, but there is a consensus among political professionals here that H*i the two candidates who are making a virtue out of being from somewhere other than Washington are ahead right now. Whether those predictions are fulfilled depends on several imponderables. I" *| \$ \ Reports of opinion polls race through New Hampshire like a flu virus, but the results of the i ~riwi'* ii most respected are still closely guarded. There is Some of the contenders running in the New Hampshire primary (I to r) Morris Udall, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, and Fred Harris. (Photos by Jay Anderson and UPI) agreement nonetheless that the number of un­ decided voters has been dropping rapidly in the visit two weeks ago showed only a slight, Saturday night. last week or 10 days. statistically insignificant "erosion" of Reagan's New Hampshire primaries usually are held in On the Republican side, strategists for both position. But Ford managers have been encouraged conjunction with town meetings, but this year the Reagan and President Ford report about 15 per cent by the reception he received last week in Florida primary was moved up a week when its status as of the state's 165,000 Republicans still have not and they are persuaded he can improve his position first in the nation was threatened by Massachusetts. made up their minds. This means that a Reagan here in two ways on this trip. The result is expected to be fewer votes cast than lead of, for example, 8 percentage points would be He will give a foreign policy speech obviously the 118,000 who gave Richard Nixon 67 per cent of lost if Ford captured 60 per cent of the undecided designed to point up Reagan's own lack of creden­ the vote against Paul McClosky and )ohn Ashbrook in the final days of the campaign. tials on the subject. And he is expected to stress four years ago. Stewart Spencer, the national There are at least three significant variables in the again the argument that Reagan can't win and thus political director for Ford, expects no more than Ford-Reagan situation today. would be a disaster for the Republican Party in the 90,000 Republicans to vote. President's visit November election, Reagan organization One is the benefit the President may gain from Reagan also planned a late campaign trip. He flies The conventional wisdom in politics is that low his campaign visit here Thursday night and Friday. here Friday for two days of stumping that will be turnout favors incumbents because "regulars" The Reagan agents say their polling after Ford's last culminated with a rally at the Manchester armory always turn up fair weather or foul. SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS But Reagan has organizational superiority here. at least on paper, and also is viewed as the can­ didate more likely to inspire zeal and to have highly motivated supporters. SOUTIDHRUS is Having a j However, Ford manager spencer says his can­ vassers will have identified 27,000 to 30.000 Ford supporters by Tuesday who can be induced by a phone call to go to the poll. NON-SALE on Tapes I On the democratic side the picture is even less c clear, if only because there are five major can­ didates on the ballot — Morris Udall. Birch Bayh, Fred Harris and Sargent Shriver, as well as Carter. Effective immediately SOUTlJHnUS is cutting the price on § And none of them has been able to claim attention tapes to the bone, both reel-to-reel and cassette. I similar to that given Reagan and Ford. Carter is seen as the leader by most politician: THIS IS NOT A SALE. S here because he is the only centrist competing with No limited quantities. No expiration dates. No "hurry-down-while- o four liberals. Mike Ford, a young professional working foi there's-still-time." You can get tapes like these at low prices any § Bavh put it this way: "We've got four people on our time and in any quantity: g side of the party. It's crowded where we live." The failure of the Democrats to establish strong Singles Bulk S individual identities here has meant that their can­ vasses are still showing 30 to 40 per cent un­ maxell Open Reel decided, depending on whose figures you choose to accept. But it is clear that many of those an UD35-90 $5.75 $5.40 Democrats who just won't vote, and most analysts believe the number of real undecided who will go to the poll is in the 15 to 20 per cent range. Udall is believed to be running second and Bayh AuduaOpen Reel third. Harris and Shriver. by most estimates, are ATDK trailing badly and in danger of being written off as LI800 $6.25 serious candidates for the long run after the votes $5.80 are counted Tuesday night. Udall is ranked as the most serious challenger to Cassette Carter largely on the strength of the acknowledged superiority of his organization here. Although all SA90 $3.75 $3.55 the organizations are doing essentially the same thing. Udall's started earlier and lined up several of the most respected quasi-professionals. The Take advantage of these savings Arizona liberal has been spending virtually the last at all three locations: two weeks in personal campaigning here. Bavh. who started late, also is campaigning in­ 1166 Broad St. tensively here, and he lias the backing of most of or­ 113 N. Columbia (next to Somethyme) The Village Subway ganized labor in a state in which unions are not a M2-3162 832-0557 dominant force in politics. Chapel Hill 286-2221 Raleigh Durham There are no clear issues in either party. Instead both campaigns center on the perception the vott make about which candidates are most promisi SOUNOHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS SOUNDHAUS Z presidential material. Page Eight The Chronic Friday, February 20. 1976 -By their measure, Slaughter deserves election- (Continued from page 16) has. all's MUM iwvui a vviml s..id about blackness W.i next year: lie might take voles from ^ bears'a preponderance of players (mm UISIIMIIM.I. isl |MS1 plav.-d luinl against evervbotlv. includin' Slaughter. those cities. Slaughter is unfairly remembered as (lie Brooklyn Hull. Hun [(he New York After 12 years of eligibility. Slaughter Slaughter has watched from his (ami .is man who spiked ).u kn- Robinson in his writers) once claimed lhal I'd pimclxul doesn't have high hopes and remains con­ plavers like Ralph Kiner eked in by one tiist year in tho Majors I spiked till Musial in tin stomal h in (he i lub house sternated and dubious down on tiie farm vote, in his 15th and last year on the Hodges ami nobodx said nothing about ['ruth ".is lit- had appendicitis." in Roxboro. He doesn't follow baseball any ballot, after spending all of his retired that.' I spiked anvlxxU who gol in my vva\ When asked .ibmil phu mg w ith one ol men; at the Major League level, possibly years broadcasting baseball in Xew York. 'cause thiit's (he way 1 played the game (lit! greatest liilters ot all nine. Slan Musial. because lie fuels baseball is no longer in­ He's watched the induction of Monte Ain't notxxh said anything aboul pitchers Slaughter at knowledges * 1 mighta playod terested in him. There was no job available Irvin. a black who played eight years in the Ihrowin' the ball intoiui ba< k." in his shadow." for him after bis playing days. When lit; Majors with a .293 average and who Bat k iln'ii during lite pennanl r.ti es (he Now. after it long wait, there is a glim- signed up for his pension lie lost over worked in (lie Commissioner's front ol lit t: \eu York writers pul anything in the IN.-I ni some breaks whit:h nngiit In' in .>2000 a year, because the front office of after retirement. Irvin is an example m papers to cause us to lend. There was Slaughter's favor In the last Hall ol Fame baseball neglected to inform him that if he vole he received I9t> votes: 2$?. were waited six months a new pension plan. needed to win election No players ol beneficial lo him. would go into effect. mogastar stature will become eligible in No wonder that Enos is disgruntled with SPECTRUMi the next two vears. {Willie Mays i^ a shoe- the baseball establishment. Nevertheless, in in iy~9 1 All tin? players who have GENERAL i •.«>.. .K a Chem. cal Co CniniumH Ciroi he continues to regale his Duke baseball MEN SIGNED UP TO JOIN GILBERT Hospital ol Phumasi traditional!) finished ahead ol Slaughter team with the stories of the endless HOUSE! The meeling of lhe men who Telephonr & r.-legrap t .. in ihe last six vears liave been inducted, number of quirky events that happened in orfdilKHUl . • i . .. • . . Mai save 'in the late (.il Hodges ol ii.e Gilbert house has been rescheduled lo School a.l.,.. i Graduate SrJiool his baseball career. He slill loves baseball. Mon nighl. Feb. 23 al 9:30 p.m. in Ihe *31 Management Brookkn Dodgers. As (he competition Educated and employed in the Major Gilbert commons num. Thura.. ftb. iC Burlington Industi thins. Slaughter's chances are getting a lit­ m try-outs Leagues of the forties and fifties. Enos re­ Inland Sln-IC \ =.K Beach V» i tle better. SOCIOLOGY MApORS: We need your i Tuesday Schools Agriin Chemical Co Slan mains a man from a bygone era — the Ihe Uuke tjir.-uii.mls. IIK .\at.onol Assutiat Hodges' stats are similar to Slaughter's, word is begged — a throwback. He un­ Golf Cour be held for lire Soulhern P.xu Tin M. p..., derstands well enough tiie politics in­ primarily o Interested Hospital Danville Va except that he played in New York nearly golfers are i. Contact iiis entire career (.273 in 18 seasons, career volved with the Hall ot Fame voting, but leader in grand slams with 14. manager of there's little he can do. Unlike Lou Imporlanl SAILING CLUB ollicers RESIDENTIAL STAFF APHl.JCATIU the Mets one year when thev were truly Boudreau, Slaughter is willing to talk are now available in the Office of Stud about his hopes of entering the Hall. Not Plans for Ihe Spring will liediscussed. Affairs. 121 Allen Bldg. fur Graduate a Amazin"). But Hodges will go in before Undergraduate students. "An Eqi enough ol the right people, however, seem IP THIS Slaughter, because he stayed in New York Opportunity Km jikryer.'' and baseball alter his active playing days. (o be listening (or reading) ami Enos' pro­ (He also spent some miserable seasons ud consternation is on the verge of bilter- managing the Washington Senators.] Ernie ness. As he says. "|ust look at the damn book." NEWMAN COMMUNITY: Beer Banks. 'Mr. Chicago Cub', becomes eligible Pa.nl Party continues lonighl and al

are interesled in helping to organize UDALL FOR PRESIDENT campaig commiltee please call lon Couper i The SUB WAY 684-6391. Mo Udall isa liberal candidal

as you debate about y lesliny in a Duke dumi that you de Delivers to DUKE lull? Consider the coed community v. co-cumcular cause! Applications V'ilson House S.H.A.R.E. (The Stud Monday - Thursday louse for Academic and Residen Kw fnr fall, 1976. are 5:30 p.m.-10:00 p.m. Alison House and at tlar cause! App]icalioi n desk. The deadline ouseS.H.A.R.E. (The S iplicationsisFri. Feb. r Academic and Resit Plus the Sub Way's fantastic new service FREE FOOD

ap pi ical ions are due Fri.. Feb. 27. it you can get up $7.00 in orders from your

Duke Botany department's greenhouse I GRADUATE friends, you can get a free half sub. celebrates a 'Spring Renaissance." Assorted flowers and bulhs will be on For $12.00, you get a free whole. display from B-5, Morc-Fri.. and 10-5. Sal. ll 30 to Feb. 36. All (You must tali ahead for this service) and Sun., starting Mon.. Feb. 23. The greenhouse is right behind Bio Sci — a the Office uf Placement Scrvi We want everyone to All UNDERGRADUATE or GRADUATE EAT A BIG ONE STUDENTS interesled in managing Ihe (Manufacturing S Plant Management): DUKE VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM Dow Badischc Co.: Sanger-Harris: N'orlhwcstem Mutual Life Insurance Co. starting immediately, please contact 104 Albemarle St. Coach Lee Moon — 684-2635. Salary Mon.. Feb. 23: Chubb & Son. Inc.: Texas Instruments: National Service Industries: negotiable. Work study approved. ACTION - Peace Carps Vista: Bethlehem CO-REC VOLLEYBALL and WATCH FOR THE OPENING OF THE SOFTBALL —Entries open Wed.. Feb. 18 Tue*.. Feb. IA: U.S. Energy Research a and close Wed.. Feb. 25 at noon. Entry Development Admin.: Greensboro. N.C SUB WAY TAP ROOM blanks and information available at the Cily Schools: Texas Instruments: East Cam pus Gym. (684-3013). ACTKJN-Peace Corps Vista. AFTER SPRING BREAK Wed.. Feb, 25: Department of the Navy: J.A. lones Construction On.: Agricu

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STEREO CARTRIDGES Model Reg. Sale Empire 2002 EEX $80 $24.82 Empire 2001 ZEX $100 $41.82 Empire 4400 DM $150 $54.82 Audio Technica AT26E $60 $20 Audio Technica AT26S $90 $45 TDK, Maxell Tape 25% OFF Print by Lou Stovall OF THE LAND, a print series by LOU STOVALL: Lou Stovall's training CAPITOL TAPE 50% OFF artist has been along formal lines: first at the Rhode Island School ol Desi] MANY UNADVERTISED SPECIALS then nt Howard University. His principle medium is silk-screening. I: knowledge and love of draftsmanship is evident in both his prints a: AT SUPER DIS0UNT PRICES drawings. His Workshop. Inc. has grown -from a very active sludio pri concerned witli community posters into professional prinlmaking iacilit ing artists Irom all over tin* Fast Coast. "Of the land." bis newest portfolio of prints, lias been described as his Atlantis Sound work vet. These dozen images of landscape are more personal than pastoi licato and precise. His detail is fastidious —a remarkable achievement Store Hours: medium. 133Vi E. Franklin St. Mon., Thurs., Fri., 10—9 Tues., Wed., Sat., 10—6 "Of the Land" is a prmlmaker's triumph. 942-8763 Page Ten Tin: Chronicle Ivan Dixon Players effective in Winesellers

By Ralph Barnette directed, set-up and perfoniHul by the girlfriend Mae. played by Tammio !.< an easy play to misinterpret and never un­ The difficulty in convincingly perform­ group. IMMIOIUUS the woman Rico intends f derstand due to prior orientation and ex­ ing a play embossed with cursory ex­ Directed by Jim Aaron, a senior. Ihis Steve to use in pushing him in become perience. pletives is the development of those ex­ first direction effort reeks of ex|Wiriem:e pimp. The ensuing situation is Miluei The production of the Ivan Dixon pletives as a natural, integral part of the rather than an exercise in rookie mistakes. local point for a system of images as Players has its problems: some over acting script's situational flow. The difficulty in The total stage and set is effectively used what "black manhood" should Ix;. in spots s i too slow pace in others. But performance is increased when social throughout lhe play. Some of the cues Tammie Lee's quiet, low-keyed as a first self contained production, it views deem the script content profane or wen: off. hut in lhe second performance portrayal uf Mae builds beneath tin unfit for the stage. Though not totally sub­ such problems an; expected. Fortunately. jected to such views. What the Winesellers Aaron's direction has developed good Buy is chocked full of so-called profane transitions troin scene to scene with thi onlv problem lx?ing slow set chant Owe inmplex. The set has two le kite! THEATER cleaners and street section am on lhe lower level wilh Iwo bedrooms on the up­ content; but the total content of Ron per level. The set complexity hampers Milner's script fits the situation exactly. some scene changes — up and down the The greatly effective performance of the Steps — as was lhe case wilh (he original youthful Ivan Dixon Players is amplified production at the Henry Streei Settle­ by dealing with characterizations which ment's New Federal Theatre. The contrast the bulk of the actors naturally adapt to. in scent; location and lighting makes up With perfonnances to continue through Ior this drawback, as the audience's atten­ Saturday, the North Carolina Central tion is physically redirected lo other loca­ based group should develop a very strong tions on different planes. final performance. The group's members Roosevelt Wiggins effectively develops are mainly freshmen with one sophomore the character of Steve Carlton, the mosl and two seniors. The ability of such a transitional role in the play. At times his young group to convincingly handle technique goes flat bul is saved by the Milner's play is even more admirable slick, persevering spectre of Rico, the . then makes his point. (Photos by Ralph Barnette) when one realizes that it was produced. pimp. Very smoothly played by Preston Foster. Rico produces the domineering im­ age of the play. He immediately becomes a face to Iiecome a powerful emotional out­ Ron Milner's material may be too stiff in character one admires and scorns. burst made more believable by her actual its use of language for some people to sit youthful age and lhe character she' through the whole plau. But for a realistic Sucking in the audience with a bevy of 'portrays. Her performance couples well glimpse of Black people portrayed in this slick responses, street , and a hard- with director Aaron's use of space and area in theatre, it should noi be misses. edged perception of the cemented position isolation in quiet moments. of the black person in America, one sides Note: What the Wine Sellers Buy is What the Wine Sellers Buy is one of the with Milner's views but disagrees with ids playing at the B.N. Duke Auditorium on most successful plays spawned from the methods for survival. In instances ot the campus of North Carolina Central past decade of Black playwrights' work vicious contact between cops on the lake University in Durham. Performances will which seeks to develop all of the charac­ and Rico, we gel glimpses of Rico's real continue through Sat.. Feb. 21. ters fully or to the point where they are chain-link situation as he seeks to pimp more than stereotypes to the audience. For women to other men and himself to cops in the tradilional American theatre the for protection Hj»r*turn. It becomes ob­ roles of Blacks and their lifestyles had vious that he is NivKtgon borrowed time." been interpreted by playwrights almost Steve consequently sees the monetary totally outside of the experience of black solution to his problems in becoming a folk. Consequently, critical reviews were pimp. Rico sets himself up as a trainer as produced from similar perspectives. And Steve wavers in the transition of becoming for the critical theater-goer, Winesellers is a pimp from a street-wise schoolboy. His

The Durham Arts Council in conjunction witli its membership drive presents "A Happening." featuring the Durham Theatre I Guild with exerpts from East Lynne, the Click 'n' Cloggers. the I Durham Savoyard South SquareMall: 7-9 p.m. No admission I charge. I I The Duke University Union country sunshine I Support antiques hearts Presents and minds 1st ANNIVERSARY The All New SALE Gaines Room, 1976 Ends Sat. I 10 - 30% off entire stock The 'New Lome in Featuring: Billiards Sculptured Jewelry Ping-Pong • Specializing in Early American and Specializing in custom work • North Carolina country furniture of original design by Brand New Pinball Machines Carolista and Walter Baum for engagement and wedding AND j .authenticIndianTurquoisejewelry BEER sold 12:30-10:30 p.m. daily | .Handmadequilts Diamonds Emeralds. Rubles. Sapphires |. Brass kerosene lamps and chandeliers GRAND OPENING on Monday, February 23 I jewelry [/Designers The Games Room is located in the basement of Page Willow Park Mall | immediately off the downstairs lobby. 4422 Chapel Hill Blvd. NCNB Plaza (D™**™> The Games Room is part of the Duke University Union. Phone (919) 493-1140 I Chapel HB. N.C. Z75M i. J Fridav. February 20. 1976 The Chronicle Page Eleven

20 25 Freewatef-r presents Monty Python and the Holy f\\bwtdL w Grail. Bio-Sci Auditorium: 7, 9:30, midnight. Ad­ The Duke Music Department presents a Voice mission SI. Recital with Barbara Lister-Sink, soprano, and Jane Duke Players present The Imaginary Invalid. Hawkins, piano. Mary Duke Biddle Music Building: Branson Theatre: 8:15 p.m. Ticket reservations 4:15 p.m. No admission charge. 684-4059,684-3181. Chorale Bicentennial Concert—Premiere of Works. Strike Up The Band. Chapel Hill Public Library: Hot Grog, a new musical. The Ranch House, Assisted by the Ciompi Quartet with brass and 7 p.m. Chapel Hill. 7 and 10 p.m. Tickets available Mon­ percussion and Elizabeth Suderberg, soprano. The Fantasticks. : 8 p.m. day-Saturday at the Zoom Zoom in Chapel Hill-S4, Baldwin Auditorium: 8 p.m. No admission charge. Carolina Union presents Les En/ants Terribles. S4.50.S5. Quad Flix presents The Odessa File. Page Great Hall, UNC: 8 p.m. Admission only as guest of Carolina union presents The Hartford Ballet. Auditorium: 7 and 9:15 p.m. Admission SI. a UNC student, free. Memorial Hall, UNC: 8 p.m. Ticket information The Imaginary Invalid. Branson Theatre: 8 p.m. D. Pohrens Dance Group. Stewart Theatre, NC 933-1161. The Raleigh Chamber Music Guild presents The State: 8 p.m, The Carolina Union presents Bedazzled. Great Festival Winds. Stewart Theatre. NC State: 8 p.m. Hot Grog. Ranch House, Chapel Hill. Hall, UNC: 6:30 and 9 p.m. Admission only as guest The Durham Chamber Music Guild in concert UNC-TV. Great Performances: "Mozart Re­ of UNC student, free. featuring the work of Brahms. Pilgrim United quiem." The Vienna Symphony Orchestra and the The Fantasticks. Raleigh Little Theatre: 8 p.m. Church of Christ: 3 p.m. No admission charge. Vienna State Opera Chorus, 9 p.m. Tickets available at the box of/ice (821-3111) 12-6 Carolina Union presents Virdiana and Simon of p.m. S3.50. the Desert. Great Hall, UNC: 6:30 and 9 p.m. Ad­ The Durham Arts Council presents "A Happen­ mission only as a guest of a UNC student, free. ing." South Square Mall: 7-9 p.m. Featuring the The Fantasticks. Raleigh Little Theatre: 8 p.m. Durham Theatre Guild with experts from East Hot Grog. The Ranch House, Chapel Hill. Lynne, the Click 'n' Cloggers, Durham Savoyards UNC-TV. Masterpiece Theatre: "Upstairs. 26 with excerpts from , and jazz Downstairs," 9 p.m. 11 Duke Chapel presents Sanctuary, a new play. pianist Brother Yussef Salikm. Duke Chapel: 8:15 p.m. Tickets available at Page UNC-TV Masterpiece Theatre: Upstairs, Box Office, donation S2.50. Downstairs. 9 p.m. Freewater presents To Have and Have Not. Bio- Sci Auditorium: 7 and 9:30 p.m. Admission SI. 23 H The Fantasticks. Raleigh Little Theatre: 8 p.m. Hot Grog. The Ranch House, Chapel Hill. $A The Carolina Union presents Truman Capote. 21 Memorial Hall, UNC: 8 p.m. Quad Flix presents The Odessa File. Page The Fantasticks. Raleigh Little Theatre: 8 p.m. Auditorium: 7 and 9:15 p.m. Admission SI. Hot Grog. Ranch House, Chapel Hill. The Hartford Ballet. Stewart Theatre, NC State: 8 UNC-TV, Austin City Limits: "Wheatfield." 10 p.m. Tickets available at the box office or 737-3105 p.m. for information. 27 f Carolina Union presents Faces. Great Hall, UNC: The Duke Dance Group presents The Leap Year 6:30 and 9 p.m. Admission only as guest of UNC Gym Show." East Campus Gvm: 8 p.m. Admission student, free. SI. The Fantasticks. Raleigh Little Theatre: 8 p.m. The DUU Performing Arts Committee presents Tickets available at the box office (821-3111) 12-9 24 Juliana Markova, pianist, in concert with the Duke p.m. S3.50. T Symphony Orchestra. Page Auditorium; 8:15 p.m. The Duke Artists Series presents Andres Segovia. The Imaginary Invalid. Branson Theatre: 8 p.m. Admission S2 (adults) SI.50 (students). guitar. Page Auditorium: 8:15 p.m. Tickets availa­ Hot GrogThe Ranch House: 7 and 10 p.m. ble at Page Box office. S7, 6. 5. Sanctuary. Duke Chapel: 8:15 p.m. UNC-TV. Soundstage: "Kenton, the Freshmen, The Durham Theatre Guild presents East Lynne. Freewater presents The Scarlet Claw. Bio-Sci and Anita." 10 p.m. Chamber Theatre of the Durham Arts Council, 810 Auditorium: 7 and 9:30 p.m. Admission SI. Proctor Street: 8 p.m. Ticket reservations 682-5519. Chapel Hill Public Library presents Strike Up the Freewater presents of the Lake. Bio-Sci Band. 7 p.m. No admission charge, limited seating. Auditorium: 7, 9:30. midnight. Admission SI. 22 The Fantasticks. Raleigh Little Theatre: 8 p.m. $ U4* Hot Grog. Ranch House, Chapel Hill. A Colloquiom with Aaron Copland. Stewart Theatre. NC State: 8 p.m. The Duke Music Department presents the DU UNC-TV: "The Adams Chronicles." 9 p.m. Carolina Union presents La Salamandre. Great Hall, UNC: 6:30 and 9 p.m. Admission only as a The Financial Aid guest of UNC student, free. Duke University Union Office has moved to Hot Grog. The Ranch House. Chapel Hill. 202 Art Building, East UNC-TV. Masterpiece Theatre: "Upstairs, Special Events Committee: Campus. Downstairs." 9 p.m. 1 COFFEE HOUSE | Bathing Suits...Pants...Skirts i Sun Dresses...Tee Shirts Saturday, February 21 Come see our great in the CI I selection of clothes for 8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Spring Break Music by Red Herring I| $1.00 Admission | tlJ^Sfes; THE COLLEGE SHOP beer and pretzels | 1135 West Xi:: S'.ref. rmEAM. N:HTH CASCLISA coffee, tea, and fresh baked goods | One Block from East Campus from Tiffany's Bakery Limited seating so come early! The Chronicle Cable—the greatesi

Today is Friday, February 20,1976. In 1506 today, Christopher CoJombus. died in Spain. The Xina. Pinta. and Santa Maria died a few years later. (Editor's note: Pro). Wood leaches early lions of the Bible, few dared or eared lo write In 1861 on this day. North Carolina voted lo secede from Ihe Union. American fusion al Duke. An article by him for ihemelves and each olher: fewer still Today is also Cuban independence day. In 1902. Cuba became a re­ on "TV as Dream" appeared in Ihe could set type. Bul slowly, as the means public as American occupation under general Leonard IVuod came Io an December. 1975. issue o/American Film. became cheaper and the stakes higher, the end. Al 12 noon, a 45-gun salute in Havana hailed (he new republic and 11 was nisi .i century ago, at the early print monopolies of church and state the Stars and Stripes are lowered, replaced on the government buildings Philadelphia Centennial of 1876. thai Mr. were undercut. by the lone star banner o/ Ihe Republic ot Cuba. Bell demonstrated an early model of his The eighteenth-century colonists of North Noting thai Cuba and the U.S. are getting to be chummy ivliile Puerto telephone. In the intervening one hundred America, in whom f have a particular in­ Rico is still wallowing in inflation. Ihis is the concerned Chronicle, Duke years institutions of learning have remained terest, did more than their share. Think of University's five-day-a-week newspaper, published in Durham. North remarkablx impervious to developments in Peter Zenger. writer and accused libeler. de­ Carolina, where we wish Colombus would have left some rules for govern­ the world of electronic: information ex­ fending his right lo print, as well as to say, ing the New World. Ships: 684-2663. Flags: 684-6588. change. wlial he believed. Of course, residential colleges have "kept Think of Ben Franklin, printer, inventor up." adding centralized phones, campus and Postmaster General, devising the con­ radio stations, computer terminals and TV cept of the lending library so that for the first in academia monitors. But these additions have made no time citizens could have cheap access to world of prinl structural change in the book-and-lecture printed infonnation and ideas on a continu­ Would the; nature of college life. They have simply ing basis. Think of Paul Revere, silversmith stitution like dents a proh Talk back videotape pit Yet we are no slower to take advantage of movable elec­ bryonic Medi trons than our forebearers were to see the implications of earlv 1970s hardly a murr During the next week Duke under­ get a degree, a certification, grades. movable type. grads will witness a blitz of slogans, You're here to get what social life and Dr. Frankli promises, apologies, confessions and jollies you can before going out into Chronicle wr. assaults all related to an acronym the (hackneyed) "real world" and made the traditional structure more flexible and engraver, whose famous 1770 print development Duke. After which rarely attracts so much attention becoming an "adult". As a transient and expansive, much as the addition of elec­ spreading news of the "Bloody Massacre" in throughout — ASDU (Associated Students of Duke population you realize your limited tric lights has allowed libraries, books and Boston throughout the colonies was a far readers' eyelids to remain open longer into greater triumph in communication and con­ Louisville, / University). powers within the stable, tenacious re­ Houston, Dal ign of a far-sighted administration and the night. The fundamental structure of sciousness-raising lhan his more famous The next tew days offer Duke's horseback ride. monplace for l faculty. You consider ASDU mickey Duke in the era of Harold Parker is re­ "silent majority' *he opportunity to tell markably like that of Krakow University in What wouid Franklin. Jefferson and other der common mouse, a mock government which nine candidates for four ASDU offices the days of Copernicus or Harvard College in long-haired radicals of the Revolution (many dynamic edi does not deal with your direct needs or just what it thinks of its representative the age of Colton Mather. of whom were inveterate scientists and know about c what you consider are important issues government. In the most noble Greek Yet we are no slower to lake advantage of educators with a keen interest in electricity) "Cable. Dr. within the community. You see those tradition, each candidate should movable electrons than our forebearers were think of our current use, misuse or non-use Yes. cable, (theoretically) be willing,, to act in the "As-dudes" as merely self-inflated to see the implications of movable type. For of the electronic media? Would they com­ homes or ir best interests of the common citizenry. junior execs, puffing around playing generations, print remained an expansive ment on the fact that while most com­ dwellings of After Thursday, there will be another parliamentarian PTA. communication medium controlled from munication of ideas in the culture, even the the reception improved wl president, vice-president, ad­ above. Even as literacy became widespread dispersal of news, is now electronically based, the intellectual custodians of thought single powei ministrative secretary and executive If you do think ASDU is crap, then its in Europe and gave access to new transla- secretary elected by some to "govern' officers — both present and future — many. We wonder whether anyone need to know why. Playing Mickey cares. Mouse or actually working your ass off We hear a lot of dissatisfaction, indif­ within ASDU takes time and, at the end Sizzlin' letters ference, apathy, etc.. etc., related to or beginning of a whole year at it, a body needs some feedback and cause with two guards presenl. fine tradition ASDU up here in the Chronicle perch, The court's action came as a welcome sur­ both state a for its motions. Like any job, it's a and not entirely because of our tradi­ Prison prise from a judicial system thai has tended callousness t tional adversary role, ASDU's tradi­ helluva lot more pleasant if you feel ap­ to isolate itself from the plight of those it tradition of si preciated. tional bureaucratic role or whatever To the edit sentences to a degrading and dehumanizing the state's rt personal feuds may be brewing at the During the next few days then, in ". . .the cell is reminiscent of the Black existence rather than supportive rehabilita­ those whom moment. ASDU's members themselves dorm commons rooms, through the Hole of Calcutta... no bedding, no light, tion. What is even more surprising (or maybe siding with i get their fair share of flack. newspaper and in statements slapped and no toilet facilities, save a hole in the noi so surprising) is the fact that hardly a attempts to c word was mentioned of this case in the local Are we to c< We have a few hunches and will up on walls, a few people will be telling floor ... it is difficult lo believe that such a media. The lack of public outcry would ference and 1 you why they believe in ASDU. For any condition could exist in our society." throw out a few wild punches as to why seem to indicate that either we don't take sake of those reason at all. why not talk back to The subhuman conditions imposed upon most students apparently don't give a situations of human mislrealmenl very of our society damn about the potentially most effec­ them, shout nasty phrases, engage in inmates at North Carolina's Central Prison in Raleigh finally opened the eyes the Fourth seriously, that we refuse to believe such tive and powerful common voice that discussion, and let them know why practices exist and want to erase any such re­ you re willing to pay them you 31 U.S. District Court of Appeals Iwo weeks students have within the University. ago. After hearing the complaints of "cruel ality from our minds, or that we support dollars in student fees? Be offensive. Catch these: You consider yourself and unusual punishment" filed by the such practices and want to play them down only a four year visitor at Duke, here to We'll all have more fun. prisoners in Central's maximum security so no one with a conscious (sic) will gBl loo area, the court directed a lower court to in­ upset about them. To the edit ct What's just as sad as the lack of public out­ Re: The Ne* "... and »i thai last *hen death opens ihe back door you'll put on your vestigate inmate complaints and stop the cry against these injustices is the possibility Dear Mr. Wa carpet slipper- and snide nut practices. The opinion handed down by former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Tom lhat liltle will become of the court's order. In my artic Clark noted (hat federal courts wen: basical­ Although a similar case last month stem­ imply that oi ly reluctant to interfere in the administration ming from prisoner complaints in Alabama other absoh of prison systems but said that the abuses in led to a federal court order to upgrade thai inguished be (lie N.C. system were so severe that the court state's prison system or shut it clown, no that one was fell compelled load. such directive has been issued yet in the tionary. The N.C. case. James Smith, administrative assis- sides, and a The abuses cited among (lie prisoners' with lhe MP complaintes included lant to the head of the N.C. prison system said tiiat he could not denv the existence of alinginabsu —lhe "Chinese coll" — a ban; room with the "Chinese cell", but that the stale will Furt hemic no bedding. I.ight, or toilet facilities that "absolutely" fight the conclusions reached outside pov some prisoners have been housed in Up to by the appeals court. Equally distressing is lowers sup three months at atiino. the fact that U.S. District Court Judge ]oltn (i.e. the US —hosing inmates with a high pressure Larkins. Jr. (the judge to whom the appeals those "whoi hose; one inmate reported lining hosed for an court returned the case) initially refused to slalus quo,' hour and another 20 minutes For jusl refus­ consider the inmates' complaints: distress­ MPLA (i.e ing to given radio to a guard. ing because the issues in lhe case weren't ex­ change it." —allowing onlv (wo hours of recreation actly hazy. In overruling Larkins. the ap­ interesls of 1 per week. WHERE'S. ALL THIS peals court cited that he acted "pre­ Communist v —inadequate access to personal hygiene maturely . .. since numerous genuine issues dial has $HI7coM/m FMMWS. r> facilities (sharing one razor among :(1 in­ of material fact exist in the case . . . Many of Ihis clear by mates and I lien only once evt;ry tbreedays). the circumstances taken alone reach tin- At rican hisl —inadequate visiting facilities which con­ level of cruel and unusual punishnienl ..." •ttndemnatii sist of an "unhealed converted toilet" where inmates are handcuffed and allowed visits Hence Larkins mav verv well continue the itest invention since Gutenberg?

donaldN subcommittee will hold hearings Peter H. Wood this spring to explore the staff report claim and nobody of any standing in the educa­ that the FCC has been illegally protecting tional field to come in and testify to the use commercial TV from cable competition, and they could make of it and the importance. I these hearings could lead on to was feeling pretty discouraged." Congressional legislation. Durr went on to describe to his in­ terviewers how a number of presidents from As any Policy Science sludent knows, sub- public institutions ("you know, they were cummittee staff reports art! scarcely the ones that had the political power") final­ newsworthy, especially when they are re­ ly testified strongly enough to get fifteen per leased instead of leaked. But this item may cent of FM frequencies set aside for educa­ Ix: an exception. It is the first report in fifteen tional use. only because a Commission staff years concerning cable regulations, an area person named Ed Brecher preached to them where there has been little or no con­ and then wrote their texts. 'I found out a day gressional guidance, and the authors push after the hearing when these land grant col­ the idea that table TV must now be treated as lege presidents had appeared that Ed had got in academia remain firmly wedded to the who provide these clearer pictures at a profit a medium in its own right. Well they might. on a private telephone outside of the Com­ world of print? through ownership of a cable franchise are for this simple and potentially liberating mission and had called all these presidents a Would they wonder that at a first-rate in­ required by law — here is the little-known system has grown like Topsy. Although week before, saying to them. You're about to stitution like Duke it costs teachers and stu­ but intriguing loophole — to provide an growth has been slowed recently as the com­ miss out on the biggest thing for education dents a prohibitive fifty dollars to rent a open access channel on which ive can pro­ mercial dynasties gear up to combat the since Gutenberg and his printing press.' And videotape player, and that the school's em­ duce our own programming: of the people, threat of open access television, there are they would say. "What do you mean?' Then bryonic Media Center was dismantled in the by the people, for the people, so to speak. Or now 3.400 cable systems reaching 7.500 Brecher would explain educational radio to early 1970s and never reassembled, with we could if we knew how. communities across the country and serving them and tell them they had better be at the hardly a murmur from students or faculty? Regrettably, Durham has no cable more than 10 million subscribers (and at hearings. They would say. It sounds good. Dr. Franklin might well ask the lackluster franchise as yet. but in nearby Hillsborough least twice as many viewers). but we'll have to think it over.' Well, don't Chronicle why it has not pushed harder for where I live. Alert Cable TV provides access The implications of open access television think long because the hearings are in five development of the electronic media at to six (soon eight) regional stations and a (I prefer the phrase to "closed circuit TV") days.' Ed told them." Duke. After all, he could note, in cities separate channel with weather data and an­ for new kinds of truly public education are With cable TV hearings coming up in the throughout the south (Greensboro, nouncements for six dollars per month. (For Louisville. Atlanta, Tampa, Little Rock, an extra dollar they will hook your stereo re­ Houston, , and so on) it is now com­ ceiver to the cable antenna as well!) As for Subcommittee staff reports are scarcely newsworthy, monplace for newspapers and TV to be un­ the required access channel, it sits dormant, der common ownership! "And what do you recycling WDBS fm radio and occasionally especially when they are released instead of leaked. dynamic educators and fiery journalists clicking through slide photographs of know about cable?" he might ask. Hillsborough, simply because we citizen- mind-boggling, just as the concept of the spring. I find myself wondering whether "Cable. Dr. Franklin?" subscribers don't know how to make any bet­ lending library must have been two hundred there are any new Ed Brechers in Yes, cable. Whether in remote mountain ter use of it. years ago. The unlimited prospects bring to Washington and whether any current FCC homes or in the steel-and-concrete cliff What does all this have to do with educa­ mind Laslo Moholy-Nagy's comment that members have the insight and grit of Durr. dwellings of an urban apartment complex, tion? Depressingly little at tbe moment. But "the illiterates of the future will be ignorant For the commercial monopolies are already the reception of a household TV set can be that could change. Until recently, tbe word ot both pen and camera." But congressional beefing up their powerful lobby. Last week improved when connected by cable to a "cable" has usually meant a fancy stitch in a discussions of cable also bring to mind a cau­ their National Association of Broadcasters single powerful antenna. And the people tennis sweater, or a message you sent to your tionary tale regarding educators and the spoke bluntly of the possible challenge to Congressperson. Now the people in Congress modern media, related by the late Clifford vested interests behind the recent cable re­ are sending us a different kind of cable Durr in a recent issue of Southern Exposure. port. "We view this." the NAB stated, "as an message, though we may not be ready to re­ Durr, a gifted and independent Alaba- effort ... to replace the great system of over- ceive it unless we tend to our knitting. mian. was appointed to the FCC in 1941 as the-air broadcasting with a wired nation." *rs Two weeks ago the obscure House com­ part of Roosevelt's southern strategy, and he "A wired nation." according to many munications subcommittee on regulating TV became an important member of the Com­ media visionaries, is precisely what we need fine tradition of many North Carolina judges, published a staff report criticizing the mission at a time when it was making crucial and could one day have, but only if both state and federal—the tradition of Federal Communications Commission (FCC) decisions about public access to the new FM educators and regulators rise to the occasion. callousness to the plight of prisoners; the for over-regulation of cable TV and also — air waves. He foresaw tremendous educa­ The prospects of true innovation seem slim tradition of siding with rather than checking the other side of the same coin — for over- tional potential and tried to arouse academic and the odds suggest that educational video the state's repeated attempts to imprison protection of public broadcasting at the ex­ leaders to testify before the FCC. "But who in the public interest will remain as those whom it sees as political threats; of pense of cable. According lo subcommittee was going to come in and make the claim — marginal a tool as educational radio. If so, it siding with rather than stopping the state's chairperson. Torbert H. Macdonald (D) of to testify? Well, the fellows that had been do­ will be back to the lending library for attempts to crush 12.000 people as it sees fit. Mass., The FCC has overregulated cable TV ing the job around the universities were another generation. But at least for a stretch Are we to continue our tradition of indif­ to the extent that it has suppressed the pro­ generally at the associate professor this spring there will be an unusual glimmer ference and looking the other way? For the mise of this new technology. I believe the re- level.. .. and they had no prestige at all. of hope. As Marshall McLuhan once put it: sake of those imprisoned and the well-being gulatorv process must concern itself with the And you couldn't get the administrators in­ "There is absolutely no inevitability as long ot our society, let's hope not. public interest and less with the private in­ terested. They were just completely as there is a willingness to contemplate what WinnHord terests of comnetinu hwltwtriwc " Mm-. apathetic. So here was a hearing coming on. is happening." Duke YM-YWCA Angola Totheeditcouncil: Re: "The New Society in Angola" Dear Mr. Watson, In my article on Angola I did not intend to imply that one side is absolutely bad and the other absolutely good. The way I dist­ inguished between the two sides was to say thai one was reformist and the other revolu­ tionary. The fact that I am willing to take s'des, and as a radical my sympathies lie with the MPLA. does not mean that I am de­ aling in absolutes. Furthermore. I distinguished between the outside powers in the same way. Those powers supporting the FNLA and UNITA 0-e. the US, Zaire, and South Africa) are those "whose interests are served by the staius quo." while those supporting the MPLA (he. the USSR, and Cuba) "want to change it." I happen to think that it is in the interests ol Imth the Angolan people and the Communist powers to change a status quo fiat h.is noi helped Africa. Again, I make •bis clear bv explaining recnnl Angolan and African history, not by resorting to absolute '-oiidumimlitin or glorification of either side. Harry Rigby Radical Academics Union Are you happy here?

(Editor's note: Roger /. Corless is an As­ Garfunkel's Bookends asks the old people. have met thai fascinating Someone, you— Roger J. Corlessmore of Him. sistant Professor of Religion at Duke.) 'Are you happy lien;?' They are not. lor bv do not have any trouble remembering Horizontal Moreness splits reality into Educators are now experimenting with fixing happiness in the future, they can face name major phone, even though work (now) and life (later). Vertical More­ something called Experiential Learning, never reach it. Open and close vour hand. these hits of data are quite arbitrarily relat­ ness puts reality back together again and which is really just an attempt to transfer 'Education.' ten thousand English Head­ ed. Chinese is lejirrit in lhe same way. makes of every situation a joyful alchemy. the guru-disciple relationship to the masters ritually intone to thirty thousand Most people who have not been brought Look! I can open and close my hand, just Megaversity. I hope it works, though I am English schoolboys (and probablv up to,accept Chinese characters as just a by wanting to! What an extraordinary suspicious of the search for a Machine or a schoolgirls too, but we didn't officially way of writing things, explode into uncon­ thing! Classical systems of education did Procedure which will supposedly Teach know about them), 'means leading out, as trollable gigles and fitful cries of 'Impossi­ noi make a sharp distinction between Experience. Duke is fortunate in still being you will observe from its Latin root, "e". ble!' if they happen upon a line of Chinese learning (or working, as we so often call il) fairly small. If you think the Quad looks "out", "ducere". "to lead".' English Head­ innocently silting on a page and minding and living. The Tutor of a Prince lived in jammed during class change, you should masters robe themselves in Latin roots like its own business. But if you allow yourself the Prince's household, or alternatively, see the University of Wisconsin convulsed a matador in his suit of lights. When the to say 'Thou!' to a Chinese character, as if the disciple is the live-in servant of the in a similar operation: nearly forty boys answer too many questions correctly, it were a someone or a tree in winter, it guru. (Note to American disciples of thousand persons, bundled un­ the Head switches into Latin, and few comes alive and you want lo get to know it Failed Indian Gurus: you aren't a disciple recognisably against the vicious winds, there be who then can reply. Interestingly better. We're back to 'education' as leading in the classical sense if you jusl pay dues scurrying over four square miles of neo- enough, lhe same verb produces the noun out. The Buddha said that nibbona lo a distant organisalion.) As soon as Fascist architecture for fifteen minutes. At 'dux, ducis, masc.. "a duke"'. Thus 'educa­ (nirvanaJ. the supreme stale, is ehi education becomes an ideal for the Duke, it is possible to meet one's professor tion' is 'getting away from Duke', and that passiko. 'inviting of inspection', literally, masses, inevitably the teacher student occasionally. And if it isn't, you should is what most people here seem to be in­ 'come-and-see-ish'. ratio goes up. and living and learning are volved in. Happiness is a well-paying job: ask him or her why it isn't. The problem may be the pursuit of hap­ ineluclably separated. A hundred students a well-paying job needs a certain sort of piness. If you pursue il you haven't got it. could probably, if discipled or disciplined Education becomes a machine when major; a certain sort of major needs certain I'll be happy when I go to College.' 'I'll be enough, keep my apartment as neat as a students allow themselves to become courses. One takes the courses as one takes happy when I finish my assignment.' 'I'll pin, but even an Indian might feel that machines, taking their self-images from cough syrup, holding on to one's nose (or be happy when I can cut classes and go to things were a little crowded. Thus I can­ their motor cars at the filling station. How headland hoping it will do one good. En­ Mardi Gras.' 'I'll be happy when I graduate not, like a guru or the Tutor, take an inci­ many pages do I have to get through before joyment is out of the question: even those and have a nice dent from everyday life and use it on the next week?" 'Will it be on the Quiz?' Cars who take cough syrup to get high don't en­ house spouse child car boat Summer spot as a show-and-tell device to speak starve to death unless you take them firm­ joy the taste. House.' I'll he happy when 1 retire.' A cor­ about chemistry, or language, or God. ly by the wheel and pedals and force gas School, as Ivan lliich points out, has down their gullets. Horses, on the other There is an organisation tailed the Sov­ respondent to a recent Lonely Hearts col­ umn signed him or herself. 'A Seeker After become a tool. A human relationship has hand, go out and look for food, and have a iet Institute of General Pedagogy. That been depersonalised into a process for care for the quality of it as well as the doesn't sound like fun at all. Yet its senior Moreness.' The Knowledgeable Psychiatrist berated Moreness as a victim manufacturing Baccalaureate Holders. A quantity. It is one of the functions of research worker. Prof. Leonid V. Zankov, professor (of Sociology, I think) al a major Religion, or the Humanities in general, to has recently said. Education means the of Madison Avenue. But that is Horizontal Moreness. How about Vertical Moreness? Midwestern University used to record all speak of quality. But do not make the mis­ joy of learning.' (Christian Science his lectures and have his Teaching Assis­ take, the endemic, chronic, slowly fatal. Monitor, Feb. 4, 1976.) He does not want Buddha-ness is within, it is only Shiva who worships Shiva and he alone who tant play the tape to the class. One day the Western Mistake of dividing quality from people forced to study, but wishes to professor appeared in person. He found quantity and then imagining that they stimulate 'inquisitiveness' and the 'inner transmigrates. Allah is nearer than one's jugular vein. St. Gregory of Nyssa says we the seats occupied by expectant tape- divded themselves up and are 'really' dif­ urge' to study. This is in fact how we learn recorders. ferent. Distinguish the finger from the about things in everyday life. After you are always full of God and always expand- moon. Take Taoism back to your EGR 5 or whatever, and maybe someday you will he able to build something as functionally Books, Wine and Health beautiful as the Tappan Zee Bridge, to ap­ proach and drive over which is to be Lao then the staff may feel some social decide on its own whose ads will be print­ Tzu mounting the mists. The Tappan Zee Chanticleer responsibility. They call the Chanticleer ed and whose will not. You have no more right to refuse to accept Galio's money and Bridge is come-and-see-ish. It doesn't mat­ Totheeditcouncil: innovative and nostalgic if my print their ads than a restaurant owner has ter that it happens to cross the Hudson at a "Duke is like hitting your head against a memory of Duke has to be so bitter, to refuse to serve blacks. Such dis­ convenient point, but in fact it does, and brick wall—it feels so good when you negative, and filthy. I'd rather not re­ criminatory censorship has no place in a thus it 'actualizes the present in the pre­ stop." And so the 1975 Chanticleer begins member it at all! respectable newspaper. Keep your opi­ sent', as Zen master Dogen said, 'and this its negative espousals and generalizing AnneThornhill'76 nions to the editorial page. and nothing else is Zen.' It is the meeting put-downs of college life, habits, and of opposites. thoughts abounding here. Yes. Duke is a Gallo William Eacho 76 tough and formidable opponent—it does Totheeditcouncil: Opposites aie There and Then: the feel good when the battle is done. But to The edit council's decision not to print SHAC meeting of opposites is Here and Now. me. the ease of pain is not Ihe key—it is Gallo advertisements is not only incredi­ Christian contemplatives have called this the self-sacrifice, the personal strength, ble but very disappointing. I have often Totheeditcouncil: Nunc Stans, The Standing Now'. The Too and the sense of purpose which is reward­ laughed with friends at Chronicle editorial I would like to clarify and correct cer­ Te Ching tells us how to reach it: by cen­ ing. I, for one, am horrified with my comments, and occasionally agreed with tain points mentioned by The Chronicle in tering, letting space time tend to zero to yearbook—its search through Buddah for vou, but I have always believed that the your article of February 18th on the Stu­ approach the extensionless Door of the is utterly unappropos non-edit pages of the newspaper were un- dent Health Advisory Committee's report Mysteries' leading out of the universes of for a college annual. It is not represen­ censored by the editors. Would you sup­ to ASDU. conventional role-playing and Classical tative of the student body! Unfortunately, port a decision by a major TV network to Your article states that the Student Physics. Like a circle escaping from the mistake has been made—the "tradi­ refuse Democratic campaign ads because it Health Advisory Committee, (SHAC) re­ Flatland and becoming a sphere, we ap­ tionalists" of the crowd did not come forth supports Republicans? pear to contract to a point, but we are ac­ commended, ".. . that the student health to do the tasks themselves. Well, I doubt Is the Chronicle a newspaper or a pro­ tually climbing into the new dimension. fee of S81 be listed separately from tui­ they ever will—those who have something paganda rag? As a student who has no (Imagine a path up a mountan represented tion." This is not the recommendation that bad or radical to express always search for choice but to provide funding for The on a map.) From the summit of the new the committee made. We are recommend­ some vehicle for their outlandish ideas. Chronicle. I have a right to expect normal dimension, Euclidean space'time is seen ing lhat it be specifically identified that But at least let's prevent such trash from journalistic ethics. The Chronicle should as a useful too! to be used at will. And. S81 of a student's tuition is being allocated being printed by making the yearbook follow lhe established standards of its although reaching the summit is a long- to Student Health, not thai the S81 be list­ available onlv on subscription—perhaps charter with regard to advertising, and not winded business rarely accomplished ed as a separate "Studenl Health Fee." (Rene Daumal died on the lower slopes of Finally, although this point was men­ Mount Analogue), brief visions of the tioned three separate times at the ASDU heights ("peak experiences', Maslow aptly meeting. I personally would like to again calls them)are not too uncommon, and the slate that if any student has a complaint path is busy with pilgrims and well pro­ about Student Health, please voice that vided with way-stations and maps. complaint. The members of SHAC are available for complaints, which we will Obviously, one cannot resolve to get in­ Fully investigate and report back to the in­ to the Now sometime to-morrow. A holy dividual on. (Our names and phone num­ abbot I knew gave his monks the motto. bers are available at the ASDU office.) The Nunc coepi, 'Now I have begun'. So, like a Office of Student Affairs and Dr. Dorothy pasturing horse, you must take the books, Naumann. Director of Student Health the lectures, the labs, Happy Hour at the Services, an; also very willing to handle CI. and Sad Hour at the Midterm, sunsets, complaints. rain and Quad dogs, and appropriate them to the Now which is you-here. Since the I'm tired of students mumbling aboul Now contains the Then and the Not Yet, Student Health and then doing'nothing. you also may wind up with a degree, a To be blunt, if you have a complaint, piss well-paying job, a nice house spouse, etc., or got off the pot. but you will have enjoyed yourself along NN0 LUCK WITH THE LEftK UP HERE, HENFY- HOW'S IT DCWN THERE?' P. Carlos Schaffenburg 79 the way. The nurse in Simon and ASDU Member of SHAC Reversed Society Steven Petrow (Editor's note: Steven Petrow is a culture except for case studies of the Sophomore in Trinity College, j pathological and patriarchal white Have you ever walked through the CI culture. These whites think to themselves and wondered why the blacks wen; sitting that mon; whites should have been in­ together at their three or four tables? Did cluded in the book collections since vou ever think thai it seems like they are whites have had a great impact on the na­ making no effort to integrate themselves tion's development. into the University, so why should you Suddenly there seems to be a paltern, all make an effort? After all, their "segrega­ black books, a predominantly black stu­ tion" seems awfully counterproductive to dent government, black faculty and so on. the spirit of integration, interaction, un­ A collective of whites go to Allen building ity to explain the seemingly unfair situation. Perhaps it is. But maybe blacks don't The administrators act sympathetic, want to integrate into our (white) society. maybe they will form a committee—a white studies task force. But the whites Maybe they don't want to be like us come away knowing the blacks don't un­ (white), inspite of all the efforts to as­ derstand how they feel. Worse nothing similate them. gets done. Most white Americans thai aren't blatantly racist, believe in tbe theory of in­ are becoming bitter and somewhat hateful tegration (I did not say busing)—bringing toward those blacks in their classes who black and white people and cultures talk about racial equality and then turn together. Both legal and social custom of around and look at whites like they don't Shores of Schizophrenia this cenlury has valued integration as an belong at Duke. end all lo our racial problems. So finally it's dinner time. You get your Sniffles and drips One cannot say definitively whether in­ tray and sit down with the other whites in tegration is "the answer" or not. but lets the CI away from all those black faces, look at a hypothetical case and examine it smiles and comments. Sure you think, "we Ian Abrams can get along with them in class, on the leprosy are not generally considered con­ there. (Editor's note: ion Abrams is a Junior in bus. . .but do we have lo eat wilh them?" Trinity College.) dusive to merriment. But there is Imagine that Duke were six percent white and ninety-four percent black. Add "We want to be with people who are the Duke is a sharing sort of place. We share something in the sight of a man blowing to this the fact that the whites have lived experiences: the Freewater sound system, his inflamed nose into a sodden predominantly with whites all their lives, the Union food, Chris Colford's editorials. handkerchief that seems to induce in even Whites can empathize with residentially segregated from the generally This week a lot of us are sharing a cold. the most sober individuals the desire to more affluent blacks. Now lets say the blacks, but for instance whites Having a cold tan prohahiy never be rat­ giggle. faculty and the administration are all ed as one of the top experiences in the glit­ To paraphrase an earlier writer, a man can never feel oppressed because black except for a token while here and tering panoply of life. Nonetheless, there with a cold is comical: a vain man wilh a they are the oppressors. there. How would you as a white minority are ways in which a cold can be made, if cold is a sneezing Greek tragedy. deal wilh a black institution and a black" not bearable, at least a bit less like a three- I visited Student Health today to see population thai oulnumbers you tremen­ day tour of hell. One of these comes from about some antihistimines or. failing that, same as we are." But the blacks don't un­ dously. (18:1). the old adage about the relationship cyanide. Ever see the waiting room during derstand. They say the whites are segregat­ As whites ride the buses, sit in classes, between misery and company: if you're a cold epidemic or at the height of the flu ing themselves, and blame the whites for walk down the ouad. thev will be sur­ doomed to spend the better part of a week season? It's a symphony of mucuous mem­ not reciprocating gestures. . . rounded by blacks. The professors are feeling like two hundred•• pounds of branes. Sniff-sniff-CHOO-wheeeeze-sniff- black, the Cod worshiped in the chapel is There are differences between whites warmed-over excrement, there is some AK! AK!-sniff. I feel sorry for those who black, and your dorm lias only two or three and blacks. Not genetic differences, nor comfort in the knowledge that many come in to have a cast checked or 1! whiles at most. biological ones, but differences which are others feel just as bad. ' something equally noncontagious. They Since there are only a couple of hundred a result of economic and educational ine­ But then, in every Community the size of may have nothing lo contrihute lo the whites they might want to form an associa­ quities in our schools, institutions and Duke there are bourid'to be a number of in­ general malaise, but by the time they leave tion to promote their cullure—for instance communities. dividuals who, either through luck or col­ thev have an idea of what's in store. None beach boys music and lectures by pro­ I am white: 1 do not and cannot know lusion with the devil, happen to be im­ are left out. Share and share alike. fessionally outstanding bul obscure white how it feels to be black. I can be told and I mune to whatever is going around. "Got a I'm in my second day of misery now. men and women. That would be a natural can experience some of it. but my color cold, eh?" they say, brimming over with and can reasonably except two or three response. limits me. To whites oppression is a good health and a perverse enjoyment of more. Foster is one of those aforemen­ Yet. time goes on and whites are still on­ word—a bad state of existence, to a lot of your suffering. "Never get 'em myself." tioned types who could have gone door to ly six percent of the student population. blacks it is a way of life—it is their ex­ This wouldn't be so bad if they'd leave it door during the Black Plague selling The Black administrators in Allen build­ istence. Whites can empathize with at that, but the more malignant of the toothbrushes and remain unaffected. ing have been promising greater numbers i blacks, but for instance whites can never species insist on explaining why they "Still got that cold?" he remarked at of minority students for more than seven feel oppressed because they are the op­ never get them themselves, or, worse, tell breakfast. "Well don't worry shouldn't last years and still no gains. The whites pressors. you how to get rid of yours. much longer." become angry at the University officials Many whites assume that blacks want to Think about it: here's a character who. "Leeb me alode." I said. for not keeping their word. Wouldn't you? go to their schools. Perhaps blacks want thirty seconds ago, was proclaiming pro­ "Whatever you do, don't use nasal There's a chance Ibe whites might get the best educational and material re­ udly his complete immunity from running sprays—they just make it worse in the upset with those black legislators in sources for their children which are only noses, stiff joints, and a throat that feels long run." ASDU who are trying to cut off the signifi­ available in white schools? We think like it hosted the Rose Bowl parade, telling 1 looked al him through running eyes. "I cant allocation made to the white cultural blacks want to live next door to whites, you how to eliminate these symptoms in hade you." 1 wheezed. association. The whiles try to explain to maybe tliey do. but do they want the yourself. •"Get plenty of rest, drink lots of fluids. them that they are the only white or­ political, social and economic advantages "Cold baths," one such cretin pro­ You'll be better in no time." And off he ganization on tampus—the whites need it. and opportunities that only exist in the claimed to me this afternoon. "Yep. Plenty went, filled with healthful! vigor. Finally after much bargaining they give up white community. of cold baths. Don't dry yourself off with a Tonight 1 intend to sneak into his room the money. Whites cannot know how black skin towel — just stand around in the air for a while he's asleep and break both of his One day in the library a group of whites changes or emphasizes perception, nor while." The idea behind this, presumably. knees with a ball peen hammer. No jury realize that most of the librarv books deal can blacks realize how white skin blinds is that you contract pneumonia — which would ever convict me. At least, not dur­ predominantly with blacks and black or blurs their view. can be cured. ing lhe cold season. About the only good cure for the com­ mon cold I've heard was related to me by a medical student of my acquaintance: "You need an aspirin tablet mu\ a bottle of whiskey." slie told me. "Put the aspirin table) on your bedside table and get into lied with the bottle. Drink imiil you sen two tablets. Take both t>f them, and then go lo sleep." I can vouch for the efficacy ol this advice: 1 mav have had the cold the mottling after I tried (lii.s cure, bul 1 wasn't able lo lell. Another problem with cold'is that you don't even gel any sympathy. No one laughs at an amputee, or a man with an eyepatch. I.uekemia, hemophilia, and Page Sixteen The Chronicle Friday, February 20,1976 Enos Slaughter: Hall of Fame Trials — Jonathan Ingram When the Baseball Hall of Fame was dimmed by age. They seem to say. 'I'm just hitting Country hit clean-up. averaged 36 home runs per year, leading first established in Cooperstown N.Y. as happy to be here folks, enjoyin' myself.' In bis 16 years with St. Louis (not count-, the league seven times, .279). the final resting place of Major League His throaty voice sounds like he's talking ing three vital years in the Air Force Each of these players had prowesses that heroes. Enos 'Country' S'aughter was play­ in a barrel, in an accent picked up 1943-45) he hit better than .300 eight went beyond hitting for a high average. ing outfield for the St. Louis Cardinals. somewhere between here and St. Louis times, his lowest average was .281 and he Catcher Yoggi Berra. for instance, deserves The year was 1939 and Slaughter, only with a grammar probably learned from the averaged 140 games played out of 154 to be in the Hall solely for bis classicly dis­ two years removed from tbe bushes, was likes of Schoolboy Rowe. games per season. When the Cards won turbing chatter to tbe hitters, let alone bis en route to a routinely excellent .320 The man is always genuine and the pennant and series in 1942 Slaughter great clutch hitting (some say tbe greatest) season at the plate. straightforward, maybe too much so for hit .300. In the '46 series with the Boston for all those championship Yankee teams. Now. 38 years later, the unforgettable some folks. And lie profanes the language Red Sox, Slaughter performed a miracle, Jackie Robinson helped revolutionize the name of Enos Slaughter still rings a bell in as much as any one man can. But no mat­ scoring the winning run in the eighth in­ game with his speed, bunting and fielding the heads of many hard-core baseball fans. ter. When he steps into the batting cage at ning of the seventh and deciding game skills as well as with his presence as the But his name won't ring a bell in the heads tbe age of 60, all sideline activity in the from first base on a single to left-center by first black man in the Majors. All of those of those fans who pass through the Hall of ball park gradually comes to a halt, heads Harry Walker. In a way. Slaughter's mira­ players mentioned surely deserve to be in Fame, unless they hang there the yearly turn, and respect is bestowed. Slaughter cle was not unexpected, rather it was a the Hall. And by their measure, so does ballots which constantly show that swinging the bat remains an act of love. typical display of heads-up bustle. During Slaughter. Slaughter is about a hundred votes shy of Still laying on solid wood. Enos hey-ho's that same series Country had four hits in In 1942 Slaughter led the league in hits admittance to immortality. and calls out the field where the next line one game, two singles, a double, and a (188). twice he led the league in triples: in drive is beaded. circuit clout, to tie a series record. The Hall is an uppity place. While the the same year he lost the batting title to a True Grit pages of The Official Encyclopedia of Ask him about the Hall of Fame and man who went to bat 250 times fewer than Little Enos had always been known by Baseball are filled with the careers of more he'll tell you straight away with a dis­ Enos. He led the league in RBI's in '46 with the Cardinal fans for his grit and desire, on than 10,000 players, it takes only two gruntled pride that it's where he belongs. 130. Significantly Slaughter seven times display at ail times. He chased fly balls to pages to list the members of the Hall of "Twelve vears I been voted on and I'm still played on a team with the league's Most the wall as well as anyone (save for Pete Fame. Lou Boudreau. a player-manager not making much progress. My credentials Valuable Player, twice with Mickey Man­ Reiser who ran into walls). And not too from Slaughter's era. was elected to the on paper are better than many of 'em that's tle and three times with 'Stan the Man' many players tried to test his arm and take Hall in 1970. Upon hearing the news, he in now. Hell, there's a lot of guys behind Musial. He bad over 2,383 hits, and 1,304 the extra base on outfielder Slaughter, commented. "It's a dream. It's something me now in the voting who should go in RBI's. always the savvy baserunner himself. you' keep within yourself. You just keep before I do." Runners were especially aware of him ear­ All this brings to the fore the question of hoping, but you never say it to anyone." To be inducted into the Hall, a player ly in his career when he threw out 23 of what is a true Hall of Fame player? The old Enos Slaughter is still hoping. must wait five years after his retirement them in one season. four fingers and a thumb rule still holds. A when he then becomes eligible to be listed player able to do these five things in ex­ As nicknames go, Country is appropriate on the ballot. Each year in January t0-year In 1954 the Cards traded Slaughter to emplary fashion is judged an exceptional enough. "I don't care what they call me. veterans of the baseball writers association the New York Yankees in the American player: hit, hit for power. (Slaughter at 5'5" just as long as they call me on pay day." list their choices on the ballot. A player League. Upon receiving the news, Enos sat, hit 169 home runs) run, field, and throw. laughed Enos one day this spring at a Duke needs to be named on 75 per cent of the down in front of his locker and "cried like Of course the emphasis is on hitting. baseball practice. Despite the fact he's the ballots cast to cross the threshhold of the a baby". Many of his fans who came from Megastars head coach. Slaughter, even with the help Hall. A man stays on the ballot for 15 Oklahoma, Iowa and Kansas, points far re­ On ten fingers and ten toes, a fan can of his baseball cap, doesn't stand much years, giving Slaughter three more moved from Sportsman's Park in St. Louis, name the titans who completely dominat­ taller than most Pony Leaguers. chances. probably felt the same way. Before he was ed the game in their day: Ruth, Gherig, Despite his work on his Roxboro farm, The St. Louis squads of the forties and traded Slaughter was elected to the Na­ Johnson, Cobb, . . . Musial, Williams, the sixty-year-old Slaughter has de­ early fifties were always in the thick of it. tional League All-Star team ten times dur­ Mantle, . .. Aaron. These megastars have veloped a remorseless belly, looking as if seemingly battling the Brooklyn Dodgers ing his ten seasons from 1941-1953 (he an ethereal status undeniably. Room is he's trying to hide a beach ball under the (or the Bums as they were called back in was in the Air Force from 1943-45). also made in the Hall for those who played gray sweat suit he wears at Duke practices. Missouri) every year for the National With the Yankees, Slaughter played on exemplary, nearly flawless, and uniquely On the practice field the little coach looks League pennant. Slaughter, easily one of three series teams, '56. '57, and '58. In the inspiring brands of ball over many con­ like a cross between a leprechaun and San­ the most beloved Cardinals, played the '56 series Sports Illustrated described him secutive seasons. These men could ap­ ta Claus in gray. outfield and was on the 1942 and 1946 thusly: preciate the subtlties of the game and their His blue eyes, made bigger by spectacles World Series winners. Often as not (when Enos Slaughter, as letter-perfect in his own talent well enough to be counted on (as they would have called glasses in his a rightie pitched) Stanley Frank Musial hit performance as a Shakespearean actor to win games for a team day-in, day-out. hey day) have not in the least bit been third in the Birds' lineup and the left-hand playing his 1,000th Hamlet, swung his bat Much more than stalwarts, but not quite with immense assurance of 19 summers of megastars. these ball players through baseball. personal style stepped in and made It's a better movie than 'Blazing Saddles' Against his old nemisis Brooklyn, baseball an art form for those who can ap­ Slaughter finished the series with a .350 preciate their skills. Talk to any or 'Young Frankenstein'. -ROW-IB stone average. (In five series, four of them won knowledgeable St. Louis fan of the forties by his team. Slaughter hit .291. better than and they'll agree that such a competitive most of the series averages of members of ball player was Enos Slaughter. A ball the Hal 1 of Fame, many of whom had more player who should not be forgotten. opportunities. Slaughter knows a man's chances Retirement diminish each time the Hall of Fame vote Finally, in 1959, after 2,380 games and is taken. Every year new names become 19 seasons in the majors. Slaughter retired eligible, forcing Enos into the background. with a career batting average of .300. Because of the expansion of tbe leagues nothing to sneeze at in those davs. and tbe passage of time, many of the three In fact, many of the great names in the Hall of Fame of baseball hit around .300 hundred and sixty odd members of the for careers not as long as Slaughter's: Yogi writers' association never saw Enos play. Berra. (.285): Roy Campanella (.276 for ten Enos knows the rumors, many vears old. seasons, only three times did be bit over that the Hall of Fame voting is plagued by .300): Max Carey (.285); Joe Cronin (who regional biases toward career players From retired in 1945. .302) Gabby Hartnett (who tin: Big Three cities of New York, Chicago, retired in 1941. .298): Jack Robinson (.311 and Philadelphia. Tbe Hall of Fame list in ten seasons] and Ralph Kiner (who (Continued on page 8)

Having a party?

PARTY JIM'S STORE INC. LOW • LOW - PRICES DOMESTIC & IMPORTED BEERS - WINES PARTV SUPPLIES FANCY FOODS SINCE GLASSWARE 1967 PARTY SET-UPS - KEC BEER ICE-CRUSHED*, BLOCK WE SHOWS: OPEN 7 DAYS DELIVER MON.-SAT. 10 A.M. -12 P.M. 286-4500 ,pH>LV©R^IL 7,9:30 & 12 midnite SUN.-1 P.M.-MIDNIGHT TWO BLOCKS FROM DUKE AT TRENT & HILLSBOROUGH RD. OM CINEMA 5 « Friday. February 20,1976 The Chronicle Page Seventeen Devilfish 4-8 in dual meets Wake gets by swimmers

By Bill Collins showed why. "Struggling through a difficult Bishku set a new school record in the schedule." "Swimming well one moment 1000 yard freestyle with a time of 10:10.27 and seeming sunk the next." "Receiving and despile a sub-par time, finished little recognition in comparison to the second in tiie 200 butterfly. great amount of effort put into preparing The Crowder and Shaw combination for a meet." Phrases such as these aptly gives Barton a strong one-two punch in the describe a number of the collegiate swim­ sprints. Against Wake, Crowder took first ming teams in tbe nation today. in the 200 and 100 yard freestyles. and But there is one collegiate swim team to Shaw won tbe 50 free and finished second whom these phrases particularly ring true. to Crowder in tbe 100. Barton commented A team tiiat. although certainly not one of on the two. "I feel that both Crowder and tiie teams in the nation, or in their con­ Shaw swam well Wednesday." ference for that matter, stiil refuses to sur­ Crowder. Shaw, and Bishku combined render its dignity despite a series of up- with sophomore Henry Laviers to win the and-down performances and a final 400 yard freestyle relay in an event that mediocre record of four wins and eight Barton has had trouble putting together a losses. winning quartet this season. Perhaps this line-up will give Barton a needed lift for A little too romantic, perhaps, but non­ the ACC Championships next week. etheless a fairly accurate but far from ade­ Once again Dick Glaser turned in two The swimmers lost their final regular season meet to Wake Forest, as the quate picture of tbe frustration that the strong performances in tbe diving events, team finished its season with a 4-8 record. (Photo by Will Sager) Duke swimming team iias suffered all taking first in both tiie one and three meter year. competitions, Glaser's showing againsl The regular season for the Blue Devils Wake proving just bow valuable he is to ended Wednesday evening with a 59-54 the team. loss to Wake Forest. But it was a victory of Duke was hampered by the loss of |im sorts for tiie Devilfish for they bad expect­ Gordon and Jerry Benson, who were out ed a much more lop-sided score in favor of sick. Barton admired his team's ability to the Demon Deacons. iSckiano's \ recover from the setback by saying. "We The close score was the result of tbe fine did as well as we could without Benson for the best in ^^Q^* efforts bv team leaders. The Blue Devi! and Gordon. I think the way we performed New York-style ojOUllI aquamen have depended on the without them is a credit to our team." /Sicilian and Neopolitan pizza •jCJUurt? performances of a group of individuals for Thus, the Devils proceed to the .ACC. mosl ni their scoring this season. Championships which have been their Freshman Chuck Bishku, captain Don goal all season long. It will be there that Shaw, junior Hob Crowder, .md diver Dick either they or the frustration from which PIZZA Glaser have formed tbe nucleus around they have suffered all year will win, de­ which Duke coach Bill Barton has built termining whether the anguish of a long, this vear's team, and the Wake meet difficult season was worth bearing. For take-out call 489-8632

Devil trackmen look for South Entrance—Fast Food Corner—Second Level high finish in ACC indoors By Michael Underwood maximum potential." MHiiiiimniillliillMiimiimnumT. This Saturday's meet at Maryland will Maryland has lost the conference indoor be the climax of lire indoor season for the title only once in the meet's history, and Duke track team, as the team will be com­ with their unbelievable overall depth peting in the ACC Championships against should be able to score over 100 points the six other conference schools. this year. Tbe Devils' main competition for For the conference, it is THE indoor 2nd place is expected to be with tbe strong meet of the season, deciding the team title N.C. State and UNC contingents. and individual champions in the different Buehler's main strategy in scoring the events. The meet will be held on the Cole most possible points teamwise will be to Fieldhouse. 11 laps to the mile board concentrate on the relay events. He has put track, with early heats and semifinals slat­ his best middle-distance runners together ed to begin in the morning, and most of the on a distance medley team that will liave finals extending into the evening, John Ford run the 440, Mike Larusso the Introduces Buehler realistic 880. Richard Royce the 1320, and Richard Head coach Al Buehler is realistic aboul Schwartz the another mile. his team's chances, admitting the host Ter­ The Devils will also be aiming for vic­ tory in the 2-mile relay (Tom Ricbelo. DUKE NIGHT rapins should once again run away with tiie team title, "We're going up here re­ Reed Mayer. Lee Murray and Jeff. Trout­ alistically, knowing Maryland will take it. man) and in the mile relay with a strong Every Monday Night, BONANZA will be but we will scrap for that number two combination of John Ford, [im Lordeman. spot, and hope each man can achieve his (Continued on page 21) offering the Duke community fantastic steak dinners at unheard-of prices. Watch on Monday for the announcement of the first THE ODESSA FILE. THE STORY IS TRUE. special for the best steak dinner you've ever THE ENDING WILL Quadrangle had. STARTLE YOU. 1 Pictures \^ ShoiipibgCimus presents Duke Night Monday X 7 & 9:15 PM 4:00 p.m. to closing Sat. & Sun. Club Blvd. M Admission $1.00 M» n 5234 N. Roxboro E»«CT— Main SI. Page Auditorium COLUMBIA PICTURES/ A DIVISION OF |pg| 471-1495 |, C01UMBI»PICTIMS!NDUSTRIES.INC «s> - • ••••immimmimm • nrf Page Eighteen h'ritlnv. Fnbruarv 20. I97o

Sale starts Thurs., Feb. 19 MttHU

NOW IN THE TRIANGLE AREA Our beautiful new South Square store opens 10:00 A.M. Thursday ! ^\fo.rd# s Grand Opening Sale.

Oh what we've got in store for you at the new Ward's! We're just minutes away. Hello, Triangle Area! We're proud to be eighbor. We're having a tittle house warming Ward's is conveniently looted in on February 19 Why not drop by and get acquai South Square, just off the 1S-S01 j'II like what . Inside its beautifully modern bypass . . - only minutes away dom P 11 find more than fifty'departliwrns and shops, stocked and serviced the way we "thought you'd anywhere in the Triangle Area. want them to be Fashions for ihe entire family, home furnishings, home improvement equipment, hardware, housewares, sporting goods, major appl.ances. Plus a iawn and garden shop and an automotive center Chapel Hill Phone next door. It's a!) right here at South Square Mall. Hut what's a d. nent .store without services? Custom decorating services, delivery and installation 967-1800 appliance and jewelry repair, a beauty salon, a buffetcria. They're only a few r offer There are credit and lay-away plans, too, to make shopping at Ward's We, And customer satisfaction has been our policy since 1872.

Durham Phone j the beginning of a long. eighbor ly relationship beiwi the Triangle Area and Montgomery Ward! 493-3511 /*! STRETCH YOUR BUDGET—APPLY FORWARDS CREDIT /VtONTOO/YAER spirit of j What's new? Come and see. HLWHI value 76 Fridav. February 20.1976 The Chronicle Page Nineteen

Matmen rout Campbell Season record now 6-7

By David Trevaskis looked extremely tough against In a radical departure from the Campbell. course of recent mat history, the Duke 167 pounder Ford Reynolds and grappling contingent romped to an 190 lb. matman Cliff Seward both easy 27-8 victory over Campbell wrestled extremely well registering College Wednesday night. major decisions. Probably the most The past two meetings of the teams important feature of the midweek con­ had been decided by one point each, test, though, was Duke's ability to win the final verdicts being split. But right the close bouts as well as being able to from the start of this year's match, the blow out opponents in certain weight Devils seemed intent on taking it by a divisions. much more comfortable margin. This ability was demonstrated For the first time since the two schools have faced one another, Duke real­ Freshman John DiMaiolo began the clearly in heavyweight Frank ly put it to Campbell in wrestling Wednesday afternoon. (Photo by Dana Duke onslaught by recording a DeStefano's narrowest of victories in Fields) lopsided 17-5 superior decision in the the final bout of the evening, a 3-2 de­ opening bout at 118 lbs. Campbell cision over an opponent tipping the came back to take the next weight scales at around 300 pounds. Carolina squeaks by fencers division but that was as close as the Other winners for Duke included home wrestlers came all evening, as Steve Weinert at 134 lbs., 142 15-12, Devils look to tourney Duke went 6-1-1 the rest of the match. pounder Kurt Flowers, and John Lam­ By David Trevaskis concentration by ail-ACC fencer Karl "I don't know if they were worse prinakis in the 158 lb. weight class. Although there were only a score or so Meyer in the final bout of the match, after this year than they were last season," One of the rare tight contests the of fans on hand and not a single "go to hell, the contest's outcome was already de­ coach Bill Harvey said after his team's Devils didn't win ended up in a draw, Carolina" chant in the air, Wednesday af­ termined. one-sided win. "But I know we are im­ as Jim Pachetta and a very strong ternoon's fencing matcii-up between Duke Before that final bout Meyer, and indeed proved over last year to be able to beat Campbell grappler wrestled to a tie in and UNC in the intimate confines of Card the entire foil division, had looked ex­ a team like Campbell as badly as we the 177 lb. division. gym had ail the ingredients of a typical tremely strong, fencing perhaps as well as did." Throughout the season Duke has Devil-Tar Heel confrontation. they had at any time during the season. Harvey has been pleased with his been competitive in most of its bouts, A heavy favorite going into the match, Jack Childs put on a tremendous performance, going 3-0. while Meyer and young squad's continued improve­ but until recently the predominantly Carolina found itself having to come from behind to eak out a narrow 15-12 victory Shao Wang went 2-1. ment throughout the season and the freshman Devils had seemed unable over an inspired contingent of Duke Unfortunately. Duke had its troubles in Duke mentor added that if his grap­ to make the right move at the decisive swordsmen. the other two weapons, as the Devils went plers can win Saturday night against moment, losing the close contests as a "There's something about competing 3-6 in sabre and 2-7 in epee. Senior John Georgia Tech it would mean they had result. against Carolina tiiat makes you really Snitzer scored all three wins with the turned their season around and Going into the final regular season want to do well," epee fencer Scott sabre and Sherman recorded both of achieved Harvey's goal of a .500 match with Tech in the Indoor Sherman noted, echoing tiie feelings of Duke's triumphs in the epee division. season. Stadium at 5 p.m. before Saturday's Duke athletes in every sport. "We really In one of the most exciting bouts of a If the 6-7 Devils wrestle anywhere Duke-Maryland hoop contest, the near their performance level Wednes­ Devils recent success in the clutch day night, Tech should easily become bodes well for both a .500 record and a -Duke's fourth straight mat victim respectable conference showing in the since the grapplers from Durham tournament.

K*ii lull &teak i«h Thursday and Friday Nights Only Prime Rib au jus Choice Prime Rib of Beef cooked to perfection your way rare — medium rare — well done Served with our own rich sauce With a hot baked Idaho potato were psyched for them," the junior added. match featuring many close contests. and of course tossed green salad from our Salad Bar. The Devils certainly seemed up at the Snitzer kept the Devils hopes of an upset start of tiie match, cheering each touch alive a while longer in the third round by QUEEN CUT their teammates recorded, Tiiis en­ overcoming a 2-4 deficit to take an excit­ (for the ladies) $5.75 thusiasm carried over onto the strip where ing 5-4 win from his opponent. the underdog Duke squad took a 5-4 lead The loss in Duke's final regular season KING CUT after the first of the three rounds of in­ bout before tiie ACC tournament two (for the male or hearty eater) $6.25 dividual bouts, taking all three contests in weeks from now. lowered the Devils' re­ AND Introducing our Seafood Dinners foil and one of three in the epee and sabre cord to 5-4 overall. 2-3 in the conference. Lobster Tail $8.50 divisions. But despite the defeat, new coach Hank Seafood Platter $5.00 But the Heels swept the second round of Powell was pleased with his squad's effort the epee and managed to register a one- against a Carolina team he was assisting at Butterflied Shrimp Platter $6.50 touch foil win, giving the Carolina fencers the start of the season, before being hired All include, of course, salad from our famous Salad Bar and a free pitcher a two point cushion going into (he third to fill the coaching void here at Duke. of beer with each 2 entrees. round, a spread that proved enough to in­ 'What we are trying to do is get ready for sure the victory. the ACC tournament," Powell said, after The foil team was the strong point of the the final bout was over. And he added thai HOURS: Devil effort Wednesday, recording a 7-2 he thought that Duke's fine performance Located across from the Glen Lunch: Mon.-Fri. 11:30 - 2:00 slate on the afternoon. That mark might Wednesday afternoon was an important Lennox Shopping Center, 1010 Closed Saturday easily have been 8-1 except-for a lapse in step in tiiat preparation. Hamilton Road, Chapel Hill. Phone: 967-2994. Sun. 11:30-3:00 Private Room available for parties. Champagne Brunch 1:00 - 3:00 Dizzie Gillespie will be speaking about the Baha'i Dinner Sun.-Mon. 5:00 - 9:30 faith at 8 p.m.. 2021 Campus Drive (across from In­ Fri. & Sat. 5:00-10:00 ternational House). All are welcome, refreshments will be served. Page Twenty I'Vbruiirv 20. l«7(i Only four games on 1976 Duke home football schedule

By )ohn Feinstein I'd like The 1975 Duke football team played one of lh« rougher „i»: smnt'tii •tin gai in Wall i Wad schedules in the country. The Blue Devils played na­ tionally ranked powers Southern California. Florida. Pit­ Because Huestis felt this way. fames tried in December tsburgh and Georgia Tech on the toad and lost to all four. and January to change the schedule so there would be At home Duke recorded a 2-1-2 record while on ihe five home games in 197ts. road the mark was 2-4. In 1974 the Devils were 5-0 in He attempted to get Ihe University of Miami. Wallace Wade Stadium and 1-5 in enemy territory. scheduled to play Duke on October in Miami, to come to Now with the start of spring practice for the 197b Durham instead. The enticement used was more money season less than two weeks away, it appears likely that and Duke's help in scheduling another home game for the the Blue Devils will play seven of their tl games un the Hurricanes. road in the coming season. But after two months of alternate plans and bargaining, Why? the deal has apparently fallen through. Unless something "It just worked out lhat way this season." Athletic drastic happens in tiie next couple of weeks Duke will Director Carl fames explained. "We switched home only play four home games this fall. games with Virginia and thai left us with four home "It's difficult to make changes in your schedule at this games." late date." Huestis noted. "Bul the idea that we are locked But the situation is not as simple as that. Many people into our schedule for the next ten years is a myth. The Mike McGee must accept the brutal road around Duke, most notably Charles Huestis, University schedule is tentative, we don't have contracts signed that schedule as a "given" again in 1976. (Photo by Vice-President for business and finance, feel strongly far in advance." Will Sager) that playing four home games is something just short of a The fact that James was almost able to make a change in disaster, and that the schedule in coming years should be the schedule ihis late for next vear seems to hear out ing your fans an opportunity to see you play at home are revised to include less superpowers and more teams on important loo." Duke's level of competitiveness. James, who is saddled with the constant headache of "I think its absolutely essential lhat we play at leas! A Sports Analysis trying to come up with a balanced budget, is trying to five home games even,' year." Huestis said. "And I use Hueslis' statement. And while head coach Mike McGee change the future schedule, bul it apparently took some does not complain about the backbreaking schedule his pressure from Huestis to do so. As an Athletic Director teams have played in his five years here, there is little his major responsibility is to balance the budget. If play­ doubt that he would not mind if some changes were ing Penn State and Michigan will do that. James will made. schedule them. Duke opens its 1976 season with five road games in ils •'I'm looking into games wilh schools more our size for first six contests. The first three games are on the road the future." james said, "But 1 think to be a good football against Tennessee. South Carolina and Virginia. \'ot only team we have to win on the road, i think we're going to that, all three uf those games are on artificial lurf. a sur­ have a good team next year and there's no reason why we face that was responsible for a great majority of the in­ can't be 3-0 after those first three games." juries the team suffered in 1975. What kind of shape the This appears to he a rationalization on )ames' part. He leam will be in after the first three weeks is one of the ma­ wants the Duke football program to be a winning one as jor questions McGee and his staff are faced wilh. much as anyone, but also feels the pressures of the finan­ But compared to 1977. the 1976 openers are breathers. cial end of his job. Penn State and Michigan are tiie first two opponents tiiat Huestis is aware of all this, and as a man who has deall year and in 1978 its Penn State. South Carolina and with money all his life he appreciates the problems James Michigan. In addition, the Blue Devils do not have a has to deal with. But he also feels that Ihe line has to be season with more than five home games until 1982 at the drawn somewhere and that al Ihe moment Duke's future moment. schedule steps over the line. "I think we have lo make some changes in our "I think we have a responsibility to die players, to the schedule." Huestis said. "There's no reason why we can't students and to our alumni contributors to put our team play a super-power occasionally but we shouldn't open on its home field as much as possible." Huestis asserted. every season against one. "I think the changes in the schedule that Carl has suggest­ "I think we should try to get more schools on the ed to me recently are good ones and I hope he can make schedule that are like Duke University. Schools like Van­ them," derbilt. Indiana and SMU to name just a couple. There's But while Duke's future schedules may be more re­ Artificial surfaces, like the one at Georgia Tech, more to success in a football program than playing in asonable than the ones of late, next year's schedule pro­ have taken a heavy toll on Duke players. (Staff front of a sold out stadium," he continued. "Wins and mises another rocky road for the Blue Devils. photo) losses, the kind of support you get from alumni, and giv- Literally.

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(Continued from page 17) Three other Duke runners have the Saturday. Among the more oustanding performers Dave Taylor and Paul Swenson. Taylor has potnnlial lo break 9 minutes and score in Ben Clark will be high jumping instead on hand will be N.C. State's Bob Medlin. been running well for a freshman, having this evenl: Bynum Merritt. [im Clayton, of gridiron star Laniel Crawford, who will who has heaved the shotput over 60 feet, posted a time of 1:14 tor 600 yards several and Peter Quance. All three were all-ACC be competing exclusively in the 60-yd. Mike Basciano of Maryland, the ACC's top wgeksago. cross country performers this fall. dash and fiO high hurdles. Crawford sprinter, Keith Witherspoon of Virginia, of should be ready to go despite knee trouble, nalional caliber in the triple jump, and In the individual events ACC cross In the field events, Buehler is counting according to Buehler. miler Ralph King of UNC. country champion Robbie Perkins will be on shotpulters Turn Balliet and John Mac­ Low key season Bul the Duke squad has been pointing back in defend his 2-mile run cham­ Donald, school record holder Larry Burk Until now. the Devils' indoor season has toward this meet ail season, and, as coach pionship, and, if pushed, may qualify tor and senior Mike McGinniss in the pole been fairly low-key, wilh the (earn com­ Buehler puts il. "Our people have been the NCAA's by bettering trie 8:40 qualify­ vault, and Brett Chambers in the triple peting in various invitalionals and several training long and hard, and they will be ing standard. He has clocked 8:50 already jump. Burk has been hampered since set­ dual meets, but Saturday thev will face tough Saturday." litis season, and with a fast pace might ting the record by an ankle injury, but if their toughest competilion vet. come close to the ACC record of 8:36.1. healthy he could improve on that mark »••••»« •«'••«!«•• llllllWllillliWWlHllllllHlWHlllllllllH. So far this year, a small but enthusiastic group of about seven students has represent- ed Duke as i.ts PRICE & PRIDE equestrian team, and has given a good ac­ count of itself in each competition. TOGETHER AGAIN These competitions include exciting and beautiful events like horse shows (English and Western}, com­ bined training work and events, com­ petitive trail rides, and fox hunting. Trying to expand both the number of participants and sup­ porters, the team in­ vites all those with an interest in the equestrian team to look out for more informa- tion in future Chronicles.

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. . . AU You Can Eat Salad Bar... Lakewood BUY QUICK 20 Items: Lettuce with: Mushrooms Grated Cheese Party Store PARTY STORE Cottage Cheese Peaches & Pears Bacon Bits 1906 Chapel Hill Rd. Corner of Fresh Vegetables Peanut Bits At Butler's Shoe Store Erwin Rd. & La Salle Cherry Peppers Olives Corn Relish 489-1493 383-3714 3-Bean Salad Tomatoes open til midnite and others Open 7 days Homemade Sun. - Thurs. Salad Dressings a week 1000 Island. Blue Cheese. til 1 a.m. Also: Italian and French til midnight onli , $2.25 University Square Fri. & Sat. OPE\ 11a.m.—2 a.m. DAILY 929-4868 Page Twenty-two The Clironicie Fridav. February 20. 1976 Try to avenge earlier loss Down Devils face Terps By Jonathan Ingram ble performance during the lasl time out As Lee Dorsey once moaned in a song, with :03 seconds left in the game and the "How long can this go on?" For the Blue Terps comfortably aiiead by 11. Driesell Devil basketball team it goes on for three charged toward Duke assistant coach Lou more tough ACC games and then the Goetz only to be intercepted by Duke's tournament in hostile Landover, Md,. The head coach Foster. Lefty settled for some first of those three games is the Maryland explicit profanity shouted in front of Ihe contest at Cameron Indoor Stadium Satur­ scorer's table. After the game Driesell re­ day night. As far as the Duke team and its fused to comment on the incident. coach are concerned Maryland couldn't Bul junior Mark Crow, said after the happen at a worse time. game. "What happened out then: today is Coach Bill Foster did not come out of going to make a difference, al least for me. the locker room until 30 minutes after when we play Maryland in Durham." Wednesday's devastating 'we played our Crow was also referring lo some of Mo The battle for position is In progress as the bail hangs on the rim, a battle guts out' one-point loss to 12th ranked N. Howard's extra-legal defense on the Devils lost all too often against State. Duke must improve its rebound- C. State in overtime. It hurt that much. The Armstrong. ing considerably to beat Maryland. (Photo by Jay Anderson) Duke team, 2-7 in Conference play, has Jusl how much Saturday's game will be played with resolute confidence the whole affected by the bitterness arising out of the ACC season, against overwhelming odds teams' last meeting remains to be seen. Wolfpack, Tarheels battle and talent. One sportscaster described Buke Duke will definitely need some sort them as "a good team in a great con­ of inspiration to beat a bigger and faster ference." But consider that their losses in­ Terrapin squad. A win over the bigger and for tournament positions clude two overtime games (Clemson and faster State team would have been a great By Paul Honigberg :ion of freshmen Otis Fulton and Steve State) and that their average losing margin inspiration, but a one-point loss will pro­ Only two learns remain witii a shot at Castellan. Although neither Fulton nor is four points. Perhaps a great team in a bably have just the opposite effect. the ACC regular season championship and Castellan carry an awesome scoring or re­ bounding average, together (hey have com­ fabulous conference would be more ap­ But Maryland lias been vulnerable, the trip to the NCAA tournament that goes bined to give Virginia much-needed propriate. especially on the road, as their four losses with it. So that while five of the teams strength at the center position. So the spent Blue Devils will go up indicate. If a team can beat Maryland on playing Saturday will be jockeying to im­ against a 7th-ranked Maryland leam that the boards and out-muscle them on the in­ prove their positions for the ACC tourna­ More importantly, their presence lias sweeps into town with a 19-4 record. The side, the Terps can be beal, as long as their ment. North Carolina and N. C. State will enabled the capable Marc lavaroni to work Terps are 5-4 in the ACC. When Maryland three guards don't shoot the eyes out of the be setting the stage for their show down at the forward slot, where he can take ad­ played Duke Iwo weeks ago in College basket. The Terps love lo fast break, but Tuesday night in Raleigh. vantage of his shooting abilities while still Park, the Terps played the kind of game without the inside rebounding necessary Norman Sloan's Wolfpack has been being around the basket to rebound. At the which has become a pattern for them. to moving the ball up court quickly, chasing the first-place Tar Heels all same time, Virginia's smooth forward Wal­ They were unable to break the game open Maryland has to depend on John Lucas' season, and are currently one game behind ly Walker, currently the ACC's third lead­ until midway through the second period. snowbirds for any easy baskets. the league-leaders with a 7-1 conference ing scorer, can concentrate more on his record. 19-4 overall. State must win at shooting rather than in rebounding. With twelve minutes left Duke led Lucas, a Durham native, remains the Clemson lomorrow in order to remain in Even though Wake Forest is getting a Maryland 64-59. But the Terps, after a con­ scoring leader for the Terps with a 20.5 contention, and should, they win, its break from the conference schedule, the troversial technical foul and near-fight average, followed by 6'5" forward Steve chances are excellent. task they face will be anything but easy, as with the Duke bench, finally turned on the Shepard who bags an average of 17.6 the 16-7 Deacons will visit 18th ranked fast break to overtake the Devils 102-91. points per game. Clemson started off the season in fine fashion, and was among the league leaders Virginia Tech. Willie Hodge remains Duke's second In that game, the ACC's new premier for a time, but inexperience and the loss of Wake had an easy time in disposing of leading scorer with a 17.8 average, guard, Tate Armstrong, began an incredi­ Skip Wise has taken its toll. Once 13-3, Davidson Wednesday night, 104-72, in a followed by Jim Spanarkel (13.9) and ble scoring spree against the team's lasl with victories over Maryland and Wake game where Skip Brown tallied 15 points, Mark Crow (12.0). three ACC opponents. He hit for 37 points Forest, Clemson's record lias fallen to and three other Deacons had 14 points So Duke will again be on the comeback against the Terps, 39 against Virginia and 14-9. Its 3-7 conference mark is only good each. trail Saturday at Cameron. The way tilings 40 Wednesday night against State. Texas enough for sixth place, one-half game The Gobblers from Tech wiil not be look now for the exhausted and dis­ Tate now averages 23.2 points per game, ahead of luckless Duke. such a pushover, especially at home. They couraged Blue Devils another song by Dr. second in the ACC. Needing a win to insure thai it will be in are currently 19-5. and are led by super- John might become lhe summary of the The game in College Park was also sole possession of first place Tuesday sub Duke Thorpe, who averages about 20 Marvland game. "It musta been the right memorable, if (hat's the word, because night. North Carolina wiil host a re­ points per contest, yet does not start since place, but it musta been lhe wrong lime." Maryland coach Lefty DrieseH's despica­ juvenated Virginia team Saturday evening, he responds better coming off the bench. a team much improved over the one the Brown continues to be Wake's team Heels bested earlier this season in Charlot­ leader averaging 21 point per game, and is tesville, 85-82. followed by massive forward Rod Griffin Carolina's last two games have been out who scores at a 17.8 clip. The Deacons are Two-Year of the conference and easy wins, right? still questionable up front, however, and Wrong! Last Saturday, the nation's can never be sure whether Jerry Schellen-' number three team had to go four over­ berg's unique shot selection will result in SCHOLARSHIPS times lo overcome a solid Tulane team. astonishingly successful bombs, or Wednesday night, its task was no easier, frustratingly erranl prayers. but two Phil Ford three throws with four Even though only two teams will go into at seconds left allowed the 20-2 Heels to eek this weekend's action with any hope of out a 77-75 win over Miami of Ohio, the finishing on top, these games will be im­ Duke University class of the Mid-American conference. portant for the others as well, as all seven Virginia, now 14-9 and 4-6 in the con­ are tuning up for ACC tournament. And Includes: Tuition Books ference, has come a long way since its loss for all but the winner of the State-Carolina to Duke in the ACC opener for both teams, game (provided State gets past Clemson). Instructional Fees and the main reason has been the matura- the first round is only two weeks away. plus Whether you are super hungry or normal hungry we il cut the thickness steak you $100.00 Monthly S'S'jf* P" ,he SP01- Hus {he endless Peddler bar. The best of aged beef, a salad JOB Guarantee Upon Graduation that won't quit and a price you can (Starting Salary $10,000 Plus) buy afford-it's your choice. The Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC) offers several programs to prospective juniors which provide Full the steak Scholarships for their remaining two years at Duke. Sophomore applicants are especially encouraged, but some by leddlenij"! juniors may be eligible to apply. steak house /pi [' If you are in good health and have satisfactory grades, you may the ounce. be eligible for one of the NROTC Scholarship Programs. A r\ E For further information contact the Duke NROTC Unit, 407 / LB North Building (Old Computational Science Building) or 2818 Chapel Hill Road phone 684-3841. 5 Minutes from Duke 6-10:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Kriihiv. Kubrunry 21). 197(5 Page Twenty-three

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11 Rick Gomez G 5 John Boyle F 12 Tate Armstrong G 10 Steve Sheppard F 14 Willie Hodge F 15 )ohn Lucas - FG 15 Bruce Bell G 21 Eric Shrader G 20 Dave O'ConneU F 22 James Tillman F 21 Ken Young G 24 Maurice Howard G 22 Paul Fox G 30 Brad Davis G 23 Steve Gray G 32 Larry Gibson C 24 Harold Morrison F 42 Pat Hand F 25 Mark Crow F 43 Lawrence Boston C 34 Jim Spanarkel F 44 Chris Paton C 43 Terry Chili C 45 Brian Magid G 44 Scott Goetsch C 53 George Moses F

The starters Team message The starters Duke Starters Maryland Starters We appreciate the great fan .support and G Tate Armstrong 6-2 |r. enthusiasm given us. However, we are hopeful Brad Davis 6-3 So G Jim Spanarkel 6-5 Fr. that all yells, chants, and signs tonight he in Maurice Howard 6-3 SF. C Willie Hodge 6-9 Sr. good taste and devoid of profanity. Lawrence Boston 6-8 So F George Moses 6-5 Sr. The Ouke Basketball Team John Lucas 6-4 Sr. F Mark Crow 6-7 Ir. Steve Sheppard 6-6 Jr. Willie Hodge: He's never stopped trying By John Feinstein In many ways his senior year has been the most disap­ the tournament. You're not out of that until the final When he walks onto a basketball court it only takes a pointing for Hodge. Unlike his first three years when the buzzer." moment for even the most casual spectator to realize that team was blown off the court on more than one occasion, Like his coach, Hodge is an eternal optimist. He feels before him is someone endowed with great natural abili­ the Blue Devils have been agonizingly close in game after that the future of Duke basketball is bright with Foster in ty. He moves gracefully up and down the court like a game. control and that the future for Willie Hodge is also bright. gazelle, leaps higher than almost anyone around him. 'It's been so close that it hurts," he said. "We've really "When I first came to college my parents told me that it and looks as if his every movement is effortless. taken a lot of abuse, sometimes from opposing players would be the best time of my life," he said smiling. This is the albatross that has hung around Willie and a lot of times from the officials." He shakes his head. 'There have been disappointing times but I've enjoyed Hodge's neck during his four years as a basketball player "I really wish we could take our game and show myself. I wish someone would have told me not to at Duke University. His smoothness gives the impression them at Freewater or something so everybody would see schedule all my hard courses at the same time though, it of effortlessness, and even though no player hustles more some of the calls we've gotten." would have made things a lot easier for me." than he, many think that he has never played as well as The close losses have been a little more painful (his An economics major, Hodge has several options open he could for lack of trying. season for Hodge because he knows it is his last. The fad to him when he graduates in May and he is still unsure if Hodge was not born with such grace, he would be ac­ that his career will soon be over is something he thinks what career he wants to pursue. He has applied to several cepted for what he is, a solid, talented player, the 15th about often. graduate schools, but at the same time he keeps pro leading scorer in Duke history with 1,069 points, and a "I had hoped that this year would be the start of big basketball in Ihe back of his mind. young man who has given 100 per cent for three different things for Duke basketball," he explained. "I would have "Pro ball isn't something I've ever seriously thought coaches during the last four years. liked to go to the NIT, not just for myself but for the guys about." he said. "I really think 1 could play in the pros, it's Perhaps it is easy to eulogize graduating seniors, but who wiil be back so they can set their goals higher. It's re­ just not something I'm sure I'd like to do." Hodge is deserving of praise. Like the seniors of a year ally been a matter of inches so many times. For the moment Hodge is just concentrating on what ago he survived the tail end of the turbulent Bucky "But it's not over," he added quickly. "We still have remains of his college career. He would especially like to Waters era, and the sad interim of Neill McGeachy. three games left and we can win them and then there's beat Maryland tomorrow night to make up for the un­ Sitting in the CI early in the evening the night after one pleasant afternoon he and his teammates spent in College of the toughest defeats of his career, the team's overtime Park two weeks ago. loss to N.C State, Hodge recalled his beginnings at Duke. "I think everyone from the coaches on down feels that "I was almost in a daze when I first came here," he re­ " we owe them something." he said. "We took a lot off their membered. "Whenever we played there were 'Dump players and their coach up there and we really want them Bucky' signs all over and you felt like the students just down here." came out to see the other teams' stars play. And while he will spend tomorrow evening concen­ 'There were problems on the team too," he continued. trating on avoiding the fouls that have plagued him 'To me Coach Waters was an excellent coach, but he throughout his career ("I'm thinking so much about win­ couldn't get along with a lot of the upperclassmen." ning that I stop concentrating on what I'm doing") and Waters left the fall of Hodge's sophomore year and was trying to lead liis team to victory. Hodge thinks of Duke as replaced for one season by Neill McGeachy. Like the rest far more than a basketball experience. of his teammates, Hodge liked McGeachy but was not •For four years Duke has been it — everything for me. that shocked when his contract was not renewed. All my thoughts, all my joy, all my heartaches have been That event proved to be an important one in the life of here. Each game il hits me that my college career is end­ the San Antonio, Texas native because it brought Bill ing — four games three, two. one and it's over. And then Foster to Duke. When Hodge talks about Foster there is soon after that college will be over. definite emotion in his voice and the listener can im­ 'The last four years have meant so many things," he mediately sense how strongly he feels about him. continued. "I've made many close friends, and a lot of "If this school has one thing it should really treasure friends I don't even know on Wednesday and Saturday it's coach Foster," he said quietly. "He looks out for ever­ nights. They feel that they're a part of me and 1 realize yone, players, faculty, students, and alumni. He's worked that I'm part of them too. Then: won't be another time in so hard it's incredible. He works harder than any of us. my life like this. I'll never forget any of it." He's taught me so many things in the last two years, I And those who have been lucky enough to know Willie wish I was a freshman so I could play for him for four No one ever accused Willie Hodge of not hustl­ Hodge — [>erson and basketball player — will certainly more years." ing. (Photo by Jay Anderson) never forget him.