Student Strips Away Rhetoric About Nudity NCAA Head Discusses

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Student Strips Away Rhetoric About Nudity NCAA Head Discusses GO TO HELL CAROLINA THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1990 © DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15.000 VOL. 85, NO. Ill Student strips away rhetoric about nudity By EDDY ODOM The Trinity sophomore said Duke Public Safety Lt. Michael little minds and someone had to Ian Wickersham bared his the discussion was "missing the Carden said his office had been come along and be the piper. soul, and more, to make his point point" and "we're all scared informed of the incident of in­ That's me." about nudity during a discussion someone is going to ask us to decent exposure, but as of 10:35 Wickersham's open display in a packed Von Canon Hall take our clothes off. That's what p.m. Thursday, no one had filed a was only a diversion in the dis­ Thursday night. it boils down to". complaint against Wickersham. cussion, which was lively before A member of an audience as­ As he spoke, Wickersham com­ "It was basically to open peo­ and after his display. sembled to discuss the "Girls of pletely disrobed, covering only ple's minds like someone opening Arden Clark, a Trinity junior the ACC" issue of Playboy, Wick­ his genitals with his hands. He up a bunch of sardine cans with a who posed nude in the magazine ersham approached the micro­ was then asked to leave by can opener," Wickersham said and a panelist, was asked why phone with a unique view of the Trinity senior Stephen Bam­ early Friday morning. "People she had agreed to appear in Play­ controversy. berger, the discussion moderator. have snuggled up into their cozy boy. She said she thought her ap­ pearance in the magazine was an expression of her sexuality, and that she thought women's sexu­ Point-shaving ality is too often repressed in this country. JIM FLOWERS'THE CHRONICLE scandal hits In response to Clark. Margie the Wolfpack See STRIPPER on page 9 • Ian Wickersham By RICK WARNER NCAA head discusses Associated Press Basketball has long been the pride and passion at North Carolina State. Lately, athletics and big bucks it's also been a source of By MATT STEFFORA shame. members" which includes over First came "Personal The director of the National 800 schools as well as athletic Fouls," a book that featured Collegiate Athletic Association confrences and other associate allegations of drug use, grade (NCAA) discussed the business members. changing and lavish gifts in side of collegiate athletics the basketball program. Thursday afternoon with about Schultz noted the NCAA's 50 people in Fuqua's Geneen Au­ many activities, such as insur­ That was followed by a two- ditorium. ance services, leadership semi­ year probation levied by the Richard Schultz, executive di­ nars and administration of 77 NCAA for improper ticket and national championships. In ad­ sneaker sales. rector of the NCAA first talked about the NCAA's function. dition, he mentioned the associa­ And now, the most serious tion's National Youth Sports charge yet — alleged point- "When people think of the NCAA, they think of a bureau­ Program, which gives under- shaving by Charles Shack­ priveleged children across the leford and three of his N.C. cratic organization that makes these rules that nobody country recreational oppor­ State teammates during the CLIFF BURNS/THE CHRONICLE tunities and "incentives for 1987-88 season. understands and puts schools on probation," he said. learning and academics." Jim Valvano, the wise­ I beg to differ "That's a part of the NCAA cracking, fast-talking coach Coach Mike Krzyzewski is sure to be riled up for Sunday's Instead, "the NCAA is not Dick See SCANDAL on page 8 • game with the arch-rival Tar Heels. Schultz ... the NCAA is its 1,020 See NCAA on page 10 • B.C. barely leads in comics election School for science tries By CRAIG WHITLOCK each other in the unscientific, to kindle student interest B.C., by Johnny Hart, holds a but revealing, poll. ChroniclePoll tenuous lead going into today's B.C. led the way with 17 per­ By HEATHER HEIMAN inovative academic program Which comic strip do you Intend to As interest in the sciences hotly contested Comics Election, cent of those surveyed, followed vote for Friday? and act as a catalyst for according to a poll conducted closely by Antimatter, by student A: Antimatter 14 % declines nationally, the North educational improvement in Thursday night of 100 on-cam­ Rob Hirschfeld, Mother Goose B: B.C. 17 % Carolina School of Science and the state and nation." C: Fred Bassett 3 % pus undergraduates. and Grimm, by Mike Peters, and D: Jump Start 3% Mathematics is attempting to Located behind East Cam­ The poll predicted an ex­ Shoe, by Jeff MacNelly, each E: Kudzu 10 % rekindle interest among local pus on the site of the old tremely tight race among the 10 F: Mother goose 14 % students Watts Hospital, NCSSM was with 14 percent. G: Robotman 4% comics in the running for a per­ Kudzu, by Doug Marlette, H:Shoe 14% Each year several students conceived in the 1970's by manent spot on The Chronicle's came in the fifth spot, followed I: Heathcliff 2 % from NCSSM enroll in the James Hunt, then North J: TheQuigmans 9% comics page. Four strips were all by Buddy Hickerson's The Quig- K: Undecided 10% University and the two Carolina governor. The state within three percentage points of See COMICS on page 11 • schools maintain close ties be­ legislature approved its cre­ Do you approve of Calvin and Hobbes? tween their students and ation in 1978, and the school A: Yes 98 % opened in 1980. Situated on B: No 2_% faculty. The nation's first public res­ 27 acres, NCSSM's campus Inside Weather Do you approve of The Far Side? idential high school for stu­ consists of 15 buildings built A:Yes 98 % B:No 2 % dents with high ability in sci­ between 1908 and 1954. Have a nice day: Lets Cold Streak: Nature will ence and math, NCSSM is in The school was created in tell our friends from UNC bare down on the Carolinas Do you approve of Doonesbury? the process of re-evaluating response to poor showing by A:Yes 77 % what we really think. Burn in this weekend. Highs in the B: No 23 % its stated goals. North Carolina students in the fiery pus-filled lice-ridden 40s and 50s with a 70 percent As expressed in a draft of science skills scum pits of hell! The Chroni­ chance of rain on Friday, with ChroniclePoll is a random telephone the school's new mission The 550 juniors and seniors survey of 100 on-campus students. cle has provided a helpful sign a possibility of showers Satur­ The margin of error is approximately statement, "The NCSSM com­ who attend NCSSM were ad­ for this purpose. Bring it to day. So dress warmly; if not, five percent, or thereabouts. Tele­ munity should offer a com­ mitted through a "stringent" phone numbers are generated by The the game. Pages 14 and 15. Chronicle's computer. prehensive, challenging, and See SCIENCE on page 6 • PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, MARCH , 1990 World & National Newsfile Nicaraguan secret police head willing to resign Associated Press By MARK UHLIG international officials that the Sandinista In recent months, Borge and high-level Aftershocks jolt CA: Small cities N.Y. Times News Service government will abide by its commitment Sandinista military leaders had said that counted the cost of broken windows MANAGUA, Nicaragua — In his first to respect the election results. Sandinista troops would not obey orders and fallen bricks as dozens of after­ public comments since his government's And they focused increased attention from any opposition government that shocks continued to rattle Southern election defeat on Sunday, the hard-line on talks now under way between Sand­ tried to dismiss Sandinista commanders. California near Upland on Thursday, Sandinista who heads Nicaragua's large inista and opposition leaders over the fu­ Borge, in particular, had declared that the day after a strong earthquake security apparatus and secret police has ture of the Sandinista-controlled Nicara­ Nicaragua would become "ungovernable" jolted the region. indicated that he will be willing to step guan army and security forces. under a Chamorro government. down when the opposition takes power on Nuclear plant wins: The April 25. Seabrook, N.H., nuclear power plant "What other alternative do I have?" won federal permission Thursday to said the official, Tomas House Rep. doubts tobacco ban produce commercial electricity after Borge Martinez. two decades of protests and legal "I have other important things to do. from North Carolina, a tobacco-growing struggles that made it a symbol of the For me, being minister of the interior has By ROBERT GREENE Associated Press state. national anti-nuclear movement. As never been a calling." Luken is chairman of a House subcom­ employees rejoiced inside, anti-nuclear Borge said he had ordered Sandinista WASHINGTON — Tobacco should be mittee studying legislation aimed at keep­ protesters scaled the outer fences of militants to tone down their press and outlawed but probably never will be, a ing tobacco companies from directing ad­ the Seabrook nuclear power plant radio campaign against the results of the House subcommittee chairman said vertising campaigns toward women, Thursday. election, which gave a landslide margin of Thursday, as lawmakers studied ways to more than 14 percentage points to the op­ keep people from becoming cigarette ad­ young people and minorities. dicts. Under questioning from Reps. Stephen Clean air bill to pass: Senate position candidate, Violeta Barrios de Chamorro.
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