THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1987 • DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15.000 VOL. 82, NO. 126 Poll: PIRG measure Band on the run? could fail Thursday; Marchers may become pep band Union fee will pass From staff reports Undergraduates will not approve a By MELANIE YOUNG away football games, it served as a pep referendum making NCPIRG an indepen­ The Duke Marching Band may be band for the swim team, soccer team, and dent organization that gets automatic men and women's teams. reduced to a pep band next year, accord­ funding through the student activities ing to athletic director Tom Butters, who "We've had a lot of support from the fee, but they will approve an increase in has doubts about its ability to maintain teams we've played for," said Foy. "In fact, the Union fee, according to a Chronicle high quality and adequate membership. we've had a lot of support from everybody poll of 75 students. "I want to sit down with the band and but Butters." Only 35.3 percent of those surveyed see what they think ought to be done. For the past two years the band has who said they intended to vote in There is the possibility that we could con­ received between $8,000 and $9,000 in Thursday's election approved of the tinue the way we have been or perhaps funding from the athletic department, STAFF PHOTO measure. Nearly 87 percent of those concentrate on just a pep band," said But­ and some band members feel Butters may Band representatives will meet with polled said they would vote. ters, who will meet with band representa­ want to spend some of that money on tives Thursday to discuss the program's other athletic programs, according to Foy. athletic director Tom Butters Thursday The unscientific poll was conducted by future. But Butters said his decision will have to discuss the program's future. telephone over the weekend. The referendum needs a simple Band members plan to tell Butters they nothing to do with money. "I am con­ In addition, band members are writing majority to win, but that majority must want to continue marching. "Despite our cerned with numbers and quality," he letters to incoming freshmen in an effort constitute at least 25 percent of those small size, I think we should be allowed to said. "I don't see us continuing to do some­ to recruit new members. eligible to vote, so a small turnout could remain a marching band," said Leslie thing that we can't do well." "We need at least twice as much money kill the measure. Troxler, band director. "The marching to buy new equipment, instruments and Troxler and band members are optimis­ Forty-nine percent of those who said band is an important part ofthe pagentry uniforms in order to make the band tic about the future ofthe band if support they would vote said they would vote of college football and there will be a lot of visible and attractive to more people," from the athletic department is con­ against NCPIRG and 15.3 percent were disappointed fans if we are reduced to a said Troxler. "But the athletic depart­ tinued. undecided. pep band." "In 1978 the band reportedly had five ment wants to cut the program because In addition. 61.5 percent of those who "Everybody wants to march. To say the members and wore plaid beanies. This they say we aren't very good. It's sort of a said they would vote said they would ap­ least, we won't be thrilled about being year the band had 90 members, per­ Catch-22." prove the $5 increase in tbe annual just a pep band," said Michelle Foy, a formed difficult drills and played chal­ No final decisions will be made at the University Union fee. sophomore clarinet player. lenging music," wrote band member and meeting Thursday, according to Butters. Fifty percent of those questioned said This past year the band had 90 mem­ Trinity sophomore Michael Garrett in a "I would like to have the band members they would collect their refundable fee if bers. In addition to marching at home and letter to the editor. form their own options," he said. the NCPIRG question is approved. If at least 50 percent of students collect their $4 fee during two consecutive semesters, Decision voiding NCPIRG must disband the next semester. Of those students who pay their own student activities fee, only 25 percent ap­ Bressler, Brodie prove of the. NCPIRG measure. Also, 75 percent of those who pay their own fee said they care about the NCPIRG charges is upheld issue, while only 56.1 percent of those By ROCKY ROSEN whose parents pay said they care. GREENSBORO — A judge denied two motions Monday to void an earlier ruling that dismissed a suit against former University psychiatrist Bernard Bressler GhronidePoll and President Keith Brodie. In October Guilford County Superior BLOOD SERVICES Who pays your student activities fee? Court Judge Fetzer Mills dismissed the CWOUNMRKirai B: your parents case, filed by Ralph and Betty Jordan, on TRttsas mm C: other the grounds that a four-year statute of HHHjfie limitations had expired. The complaint, Do you intend to vote this Thursday? which alleges that Bressler prescribed dangerous quantities and combinations of drugs for Mrs. Jordan between 1974 and N: NOT APPLICABLE 1979, was filed in June of 1986. U: UNCERTAIN The complaint also charges that Brodie, then psychiatry department chair, knew of Bressler's alleged abuses but did noth­ ing to stop him. None of the allegations 45.3% were discussed Monday. N: NOT APPLICABLE 1.3% U: UNCERTAIN 17.3% The Jordans' attorney, Max Gardner of X; NO ANSWER 1.3% Shelby, said in court Monday that Mills' TOM LATTIN/THE CHRONICLE dismissal was flawed in two ways. First, Give blood Will you vi n the Union fee? he said. Mills issued the order after the 57 3% week-long court session during which he The American Red Cross is back on campus for the final time this school 29.3% held a hearing in the case had ended, year in search of blood donors. Red Cross personnel will be on hand in Von thereby violating court rules. The hearing Canon Hail in the lower level of the Bryan beginning today. The drive occured Oct. 7 and Mills dismissed the will continue through Friday. Give the gift of life. Give blood. If the NCPIRG question is approved will you col­ case Oct. 27. Gardner said a judge can lect your refundable fee? rule after a session ends only if he or she cording to Gardner, if no one objected to A: yes 50.6 % receives the consent of the parties invol­ the material, Mills would review it per­ ved sonally; otherwise, the judge would hold Weather The second flaw, according to Gardner, another hearing. Gardner then notified involved the way in which attorneys were all the attorneys that he would file ClOUdy iSSUe: Fortunately the Do you care about the NCPIRG Issue? allowed to submit information to Mills. several hundred pages of documents and weather is much less confusing than 58.6% the defense attorneys objected, but Mills B:no 40% After the Oct. 7 hearing, during which the subject of NCPIRG, which goes up U: UNCERTAIN 1.3% both sides presented arguments regard­ never held another hearing. for a vote Thursday. It will be cloudy ing the statute of limitations issue, Samuel Thompson, the Raleigh attor­ and cool today, with highs in the 60s. _ _ random telephone sur Gardner and Mills had arranged a ney representing the Private Diagnostic So enjoy it while you make up your vey of 75 on-campus students. Telephone num procedure by which attorneys could file Clinic, a partnership that included mind. bers are generated by The Chronicle's computer. more documents to support their case. Ac- See SUIT on page 3 Page 2 THE CHRONICLE Tuesday, March 31,1987

Prison guards to be indicted Group seeks NSC inquiry RALEIGH (API — A Wake County failure to discharge their duties and also grand jury Monday asked prosecutors to charge one with obstruction of justice. from North Carolina who was seeking present it with bills of indictments Both men have been investigated in to regain his seat. against two prison guards in connection connection with the death of inmate Wil­ WASHINGTON (AP) — A group Hendon, who worked briefly at the with the November suicide of a Central liam Moye of Grifton, who died of asphyxi­ seeking the return of American prison­ Pentagon in 1983 and had access to Prison inmate. ation Nov. 1 after he hanged himself from ers of war in Southeast Asia asked the classified information about possible After hearing from a State Bureau of his locker by a bed sheet. Moye, 35, was Army and the Justice Department on POWs living in Indochina, has also Investigation officer who investigated the serving 30 years for two counts of armed Monday to investigate a colonel who claimed the government was covering death, the grand jury returned robbery. they say tried to pay off an ex-New up information. He has alleged that "presentments" requesting more evidence York congressman to discredit a critic Childress asked LeBoutillier to "get in the case. It also asked that misde­ A presentment is a rarely used legal of the government's handling of the Hendon, to trash him, to really take meanor indictments against the two mechanism that transfers jurisdiction of POW-MIA issue. him out." guards be submitted for its consideration. misdemeanor cases from district court — But the ex-congressman, John Hopper said Childress double- where they are usually handled •— to su­ The grand jury asked for bills that LeBoutillier of Old Westbury, Long Is­ crossed LeBoutillier, and never paid perior court. would charge both men with willful land, called the allegations absurd, him the money or provided the creden­ said he was never offered money and tials. However, Hopper said, as a that the group is trying to oust Col. result of the offer, LeBoutillier spoke Richard Childress, a member of the at a board meeting of the rival Na­ NCSU accounts in question National Security Council. tional League of Families of American Childress, who heads the NSC's Far Prisoners and Missing in Southeast RALEIGH (AP) — State Bureau of In­ reported Friday that each fall since at East desk, plays a key role in inves­ Asia and "trashed" Hendon. vestigation agents have been asked to in­ least 1983, the NCSU Athletic Depart­ tigating rumors of POWs in Southeast vestigate an unaudited discretionary ac­ But LeBoutillier said Childress ment had sold scores of football tickets it Asia. The POW group, the American count at North Carolina State University never promised him money or creden­ received free for Wolfpack games played League of Families of Prisoners of War from which undocumented travel expen­ tials. He said his group, Skyhook II, elsewhere. in Laos, has charged that Childress is ses were paid, the university counsel said obtained DEA identification from that suppressing information that would agency and used them in Thailand. Monday. The proceeds from the sales of those prove there are scores of American "It had nothing to do with Hendon or "We'll be meeting with them tomorrow," complimentary tickets, totaling $6,916, POWs in Southeast Asia and that the the League of Families or any of that Becky French said. "I wouldn't have any were deposited in a discretionary account government is doing nothing to win stuff," LeBoutillier said. "And now comment outside of that." controlled by the NCSU athletic director, their release. these people are all linking that up and The News and Observer of Raleigh the newspaper reported. Retired Army Col. Earl Hopper attempting to say there was dealing, charged Monday that in 1983, Child­ and there was no dealing here." ress offered LeBoutillier $40,000 a Hendon was re-elected in 1984 but Correction month and Drug Enforcement Admin­ lost another bid for re-election last In last Thursday's story on The Archive's 100th anniversary the literary istration credentials for a POW rescue November. He could not be reached for magazine was incorrectly said to be "faltering." Its circulation this year has gone project if he would discredit Bill Hen­ comment Monday because his office up. The Chronicle regrets the error. don, a former Republican congressman said he was traveling on business.

Want to get involved in Duke's Yearbook? THE CHANTICLEER is looking to fill the following positions on its 1988 EDITORIAL BOARD: -Copy Editor —Layout Editor -Managing Editor -Business Manager Please call 684-2856 or stop by 012 Flowers for more information. Tuesday, March 31,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 3 ASDU OKs bylaw defining requests for independence

By LIZ MORGAN status, currently granted only to The the fee to $32.20 per year. The total stu­ ASDU business manager David Pyle In the shortest meeting ofthe semester, Chronicle and the University Union, to dent activities fee is now $98.70. explained the circumstances surrounding the ASDU legislature approved without request increases in the fee. Judicial Review Board chair Tim his impoundment last week of funds allo­ debate a bylaw that will allow organiza­ Both organizations received indepen­ Walsh, who is overseeing Thursday's elec­ cated to NCPIRG in 1984. Next week the tions to request independent funding sta­ dent status and an increase in the student tion in the absence of an attorney general, legislature wilt be asked to approve the tus and request an increase in the student activities fee in the same election, the said after the meeting that absentee bal­ impoundment and approve Pyle's request activities fee in the same referendum. Union in 1979 and The Chronicle in 1986, lots would be available in the ASDU office that the money be returned to the ASDU The passage of the bylaw allows A second referendum issue on the ballot from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m, on Wednesday for general fund. NCPIRG to ask for both independent sta­ would reinstate a portion ofthe constitu­ students who would not be able to vote in Also passed was a request from Duke tus and a yearly $8 increase in the ac­ tion omitted in its last revision which al­ person on Thursday. Students who vote Amnesty International for $150 to help tivities fee in one of three referendum lowed the allocation of a portion of the by absentee ballot wiil be required to give cover the costs involved with bringing questions on Thursday's ballot. student activities fee to be specifically di­ their social security numbers to ensure Vassar English professor Moses Nkondo The introductory clause of the new rected by student referendum. Because of that they don't vote twice, Walsh said. to campus on April 4. Nkondo was a bylaw, submitted by external affairs com­ the omission, The Chronicle and the IN OTHER BUSINESS, first reading professor in South Africa and did research mittee chair Mike Evans, states, "There Union have technically been receiving was given to a bylaw which would replace on discriminatory education practices in exists uncertainty concerning the status funds unconstitutionally, although ASDU all legislation concerning the funding of that country. of organizations that initially request an has allowed money to be transferred to the University Union. The proposed increase in the student activity fee." the groups in spite ofthe discrepancy. bylaw is the result of a special committee ASDU speaker Dave Markell Before the passage of the new legislation, A third question is a Union request for formed by ASDU president Jan Nolting nominated former ASDU attorney gen­ the bylaw permitted only ASDU and orga­ a $5 increase in the student activities fee, after she vetoed a Union bylaw passed by eral Roy Barquet as an alternate legisla- nizations already possessing independent which would raise the Union portion of the legislature this January. Jordans' appeal in ATO house move cancelled; floor cited By PATRICIA GILFEATHER members had circulated a petition and attended several Greensboro denied At least one ofthe moves planned for next year's hous­ residential life meetings in an attempt to revive the ing shuffle will not occur, housing officials decided housing switch. Residents pointed out that the Univer­ SUIT from page 1 Friday. Alpha Tau Omega fraternity will not move sity would have to renovate both commons rooms. "Our Bressler and Brodie that is also named in the suit, from House I to House C because they would be respon­ commons room was just renovated this summer, and it's said it was Gardner's fault that Mills had to rule after sible for any damage to a wood parquet floor in the pink and green. They would have to redo the commons the session ended. He said the arrangement for sub­ House C commons room, they said. room again." Mayadas said. mitting additional information was not agreed on un­ The Office of Residential Life said the fraternity No one in the residential task force had realized that til Oct. 9, making it impossible for Mills to rule before would have to cover the parquet floor and be responsible the commons room floor would be a problem until Fuller the session ended Oct. 10. for any damages, Randall Fuller, ATO president, said. brought up the issue, said Ella Shore, associate dean of "You can't have it both ways," Thompson told Judge Since the fraternity did not want the responsibility, they residential life. Gordon Battle on Monday. Thompson said Gardner decided not to make the move, he said. Shore also said that arrangements were being made to had tried to force a delay in the ruling and then have The wood parquet floor has been in place for over four accommodate those students who left House C because it voided because of that delay. "He wanted to say, years and originally cost $4,000, said Shawha Lynch- ofthe prospective switch. Barbara Buschman, coordina­ 'Ha! Gotcha, judge,' " Thompson said. "That's not the Sparks, service manager for Craven Quad. "If kegs of tor of student housing, sent a list of the nine affected kind of conduct a lawyer ought to be involved in." beer were put on it, and if liquid was allowed to stand, students to Sabatini. "I think it's fair that we can rely on the procedure the floor would buckle," she said. "Probably with the ex­ According to Sabatini. some House C residents ob­ established by the court," Gardner said. "I'm not tent of abuse the ATO's put a floor through, the floor jected to the move to House I because there are eight trying to sandbag anyone or trap anyone. I'm just would be destroyed and it would cost about $8,000 to singles in their present dormitory and only four in trying to let my client have her day in court." replace. It was my opinion, along with Fuller's, that the House 1. Most ofthe students who decided not to return In denying Gardners' motions, Battle also said it floor would be destroyed." to House C were trying to get singles, she said. was Gardner's fault that Mills did not rule earlier, Despite the new decision, many residents of House C The Alpha Tau Omega fraternity originally asked to and said the issue of the second hearing was ir- are upset with the responses they received from the ad­ be moved to another section on West campus because relevent because Mills had reviewed the additional ministration, according to both Betsy Sabatini. the they did not have enough room space in House I, said material despite defense objections. House C residential advisor, and Flora Garcia, president Trinity senior Jenny Lazewski, co-chair ofthe residen­ After Battle denied the motions, Gardner said he of House C. "We voiced our opinion that it was a bad tial task force. would appeal both Monday's ruling and Mills' earlier decision," Sabatini said. "The response was that the According to Fuller, the ATO fraternity is still inter­ ruling on the statute of limitation to the State Court decision was final." ested in moving to another section. "It's just that there of Appeals, Kristina Mayadas, a House C resident, said dormitory are not that many alternatives." Fuller said.

•••••••••••••••••••••A-**** { 1987 GRADUATE AND PROFESSIONAL -fc STUDENT COUNCIL ELECTIONS ADDITION TO FALL SCHEDULE -fc 6 APRIL 1987 -fc •fc GPSC solicits nominations for these offices and committees: fc GPSC Offices: -fc President • VP • Executive Secretary • Treasurer -fc Corresponding Secretary • Student Life Chairman SOC 23S.01 SOCIAL ORGANIZATION: •fc Trustee Committees: Other Boards and Committees: CHANGING STATUS OF THE CHILD Student Affairs Mr fl| Athletic Council fc Medica] Center Affairs CAPS Advisory Board -fc Business and Finance- ; Commencement -fc Institutional Advancement • Committee C88) The history and changing status of the child in Academic Affairs ^^B^H "•(and others) •fc Buildings and Grounds American society as influenced by changes in family •fc Nominations accepted from March 23 until April 5. and kinship systems, educational institutions, work -fc Forward nominations to Mark Swaim, President, GPSC, and occupations, stratification and mobility •fc Office of Student-Activities, Box KM, Duke Station. processes, laws, values and population. Special •fc Nominees should attend GPSC election meeting Monday, April 6, attention will be given to children of single parent fc at 7 pm in 106 Teer (Engineering Library). For more information families, illegitimate children, and step-children. fc contact your GPSC departmental representative or fc call 383-1019 or 286-1983 fc This is your opportunity to be a voice in the University. MW 3:25-4:40 9.248 SIMPSON fc Take advantage of it now. *•••••••••••••••••••••••• Page 4 THE CHRONICLE Tuesday, March 31,1987 Gorbachev, Thatcher talk Europeans talk with Syria

eral's intelligence agency had been linked about arms, human rights BONN, West Germany — Several to an attempt to blow up an El Al airliner Western European countries have in London and to the bombing of an Arab viet anxiety about American plans for resumed a cautious dialogue with Syria social club in West Berlin. a missile shield in space. only four months after Britain persuaded It was the abundant evidence of a Syr­ MOSCOW — Mikhail Gorbachev ac­ British officials indicated that the the European Community to downgrade ian connection in the EI Al incident that cused the Western allies Monday night Reagan administration knew Thatcher its relations with Damascus because of prompted Britain to break diplomatic of introducing "additional conditions would make the proposal, which they what was called its support for terrorism, relations with Damascus last November and demands" to block an agreement said had been discussed by American France and Belgium have been conspic­ and to persuade most of its European between the United States and the So­ and British officials. uous in the revival of diplomatic contacts Community partners to agree to ban new viet Union to remove their medium- The leaders' remarks, delivered in with Syria, and West Germany appears to arms shipments to Syria and suspend range missiles from Europe. their toasts at the banquet, came after be poised to follow their lead. Bonn has high-level diplomatic contacts. Speaking at a Kremlin banquet for seven hours of private talks that took designated a new ambassador to Damas­ With Greece refusing to go along, the Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher of up most of the second full day of cus, but has not yet sent him to the Syrian community members also agreed to in­ Britain, the Soviet leader also rejected Thatcher's five-day visit. Both sides capital. crease the scrutiny of Syrian diplomatic as "unrealistic" Thatcher's assertion described the talks as blunt and some­ The proponents of resuming high-level missions and Syrian Arab Airlines. The that Soviet progress on human rights times argumentative, but never openly contacts with President Hafez Assad's United States withdrew its ambassador should be used as a standard for mea­ hostile. government say that since Syrian troops from Damascus in solidarity with Britain. suring Moscow's trustworthiness on took control of west Beirut, Damascus has After a West Berlin court determined arms control. This bluntness carried over into the sent out many signals that it wishes to last Nov. 26 that the Syrian embassy in The attack on the western European speeches, as Thatcher and Gorbachev play what one Bonn official called "a con­ East Berlin was implicated in the bomb­ countries underscored Moscow's irrita­ described in unyielding language their structive role." ing of a social club in the western side of tion with Washington's allies for their core disagreements on economics, nu­ "We have the impression," this official the divided city, Bonn expelled three Syr­ determination to make an agreement clear deterrence and human rights. said, "that the Syrians are interested in ian diplomats. At the same time, the on shorter-range nuclear missiles in Despite Thatcher's reputation for lec­ being carriers of good news and in being a Western allies banned most Syrian diplo­ Europe a part of any accord reached on turing her counterparts, Gorbachev constructive element in the Middle East, mats posted in East Berlin from crossing the medium-range missiles. appeared sharper in defining their dif­ When that happens, Europe is ready to to the west. In the past the Soviet Union sought ferences. come in their direction, but it is too soon With Syrian troops now patrolling most to split Western European nations For example, he condemned the in­ to do that now." of west Beirut, both French and West from the United States by trying to ap­ sistence of NATO's European members A senior Western diplomat said that, in German officials are known to be hopeful pear more conciliatory to the allies. that any American-Soviet agreement a move that may have been partly aimed that they may be able to extricate Euro­ But Monday, the Kremlin found itself on medium-range missiles also place at foreign opinion, Assad has demoted pean hostages who are beiieved held in being just'as tough with the European limits on the Soviet superiority in Brig. Gen. Mohammed Kholi, the power­ the southern slums near the Beirut air­ allies. short-range missiles, conventional ful head of air force intelligence. The gen­ port. In her remarks at the two-hour ban­ forces and chemical weapons. Thatcher quet at the Kremlin's Hall of Facets, has demanded, in meetings with Thatcher proposed that the United Western leaders and in her remarks States give the Soviet Union "a timeta­ Monday night, that any accord redress ble" of planned tests for the Strategic the large Soviet advantage in short- Defense Initiative system to relieve So­ range missiles. BETTER: LL mm Better Speakers Better Concerts Better Movies mmsmsm Better Plays Tuesday, + Better Bands April 7, around campus 8 p.m. More Fun Page Auditorium Vote E^YES for thej UNION REFERENDUM j Tickets $2 at Page Box Office This Thursday Q\IJl[j\ Duke UriwMsity Union I Tuesday, March 31,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 5 World & National

Post-Armageddon reactors planned Newsfile By RICHARD HALLORAN Reagan administration's strategy for fighting a nuclear war and to the Air Force, which is charged with develop­ WASHINGTON — The Air Force is exploring the pos­ ing most of the weapons and supporting structure to Jewish rights improve: An increase in Jewish sibility of building several hundred small nuclear reac­ fight such wars. The nuclear industry that would emigration, direct flights through Romania to Israel tors that would generate electrical power in a protracted produce the reactors deemed likely to support the proj­ and an improvement in the ability of Soviet Jews to nuclear war, according to Air Force, Department of ect. study Hebrew and observe their religious traditions Energy, congressional and industry officials. On the other side would most likely be anti-war will soon be permitted by Moscow, two Western Jew­ The reactors, which would be transported by air groups, environmentalists who oppose nuclear power ish spokesmen said they had been told by top Soviet around the country and overseas, would produce emer­ and a variety of people who would say the plan will add officials. gency electrical power for computers, communication to the federal deficit. lines, weapon launching sites, support equipment and Much of the debate will probably go on in the Con­ Van Gogh WOrk SOld: An auction record, $39.9 repair shops, the officials said. They would be used if the gress, which must approve all funds for research, devel­ million, was set for a single painting, one of Van commercial power grid on which the Air Force relies opment and production ofthe nuclear reactors. Gogh's "Sunflowers," in a telephone bid by an uniden­ were destroyed by nuclear attack. tified buyer. The previous auction record was $12.1 The officials estimated that the plan would take five Today, the Air Force depends largely on commercial million paid for Mantegna's "Adoration of the Magi" years to execute and would cost about $20 billion. power grids for electricity to operate everything from gy­ in 1985. The Department of Defense has requested $5.5 million roscopes aboard ballistic missiles standing ready in silos for the project in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1. That to support facilities for bombers armed with nuclear money would be for partial payment of an $11.9 million bombs or cruise missiles. TV ministers are greedy: TV ministers empha­ size money too much , three-fourths ofthe people who contract being negotiated between the government and Air Force officials have testified before Congress that watch them say, a New York Times-CBS News Poll Westinghouse. daily power requirements for bases today range from 5 Six companies in the nuclear industry submitted to 60 megawatts during peak demand and cost $900 mil­ shows. About the same proportion expects more ac­ design concepts, and Westinghouse was selected to sub­ lion last year. The officials have estimated that wartime cusations against evangelists. mit a detailed design for reactors that could produce 10 demands would be double that requirement. megawatts, according to Gary Flora, the Air Force's as­ The electric power grids are highly vulnerable to at­ MurdOCh buys publisher: Rupert Murdoch will sociate director of engineering and services. tack, sabotage and terrorism, Air Force officials said. acquire Harper & Row Publishers for about $300 mil­ The dimensions and weight ofthe reactors and the na­ Only small diesel generators and batteries would be lion, or $65 a share. The bid. which was unanimously ture of containers and other safety devices for trans­ available in emergencies, and many of those would be as recommended by Harper & Row's board, surprised porting them have not yet been decided. vulnerable as the commercial power supply. book industry executives and analysts. If the program goes into production, the Air Force and The generators, moreover, would require oil or gaso­ Department of Energy would probably place the first or­ line, supplies which are certain to be disrupted during a ders in the United States in more than 10 years for nu­ nuclear war. Reagan iS Optimistic: The president sounded clear power plants. Thus, the officials said, the Air Force is seeking sour­ optimistic about the remainder of his term as he told several thousand senior administration officials that Politically, the project, which officials said the Air ces of electricity that could be protected from repeated "we're going to have the greatest fourth quarter in Force had tried to keep out of the public eye, seems nuclear attacks and could continue to provide power to Presidential history." likely to provoke dispute as it proceeds. command posts, communications apparatus and weap­ On one side, the officials said, the project is vital to the ons as American nuclear forces kept firing.

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removing a source of friction between the said to have been involved — Rafael dent from the broader relationship. It is two governments. Eitan, who has been named head of Is­ as if the Americans have been eager to ac­ WASHINGTON — Strains in the Israe­ Nevertheless, administration officials rael's state-owned chemical industry; cept the Israeli story that Pollard was li-American relationship appear to have stressed the need for improved Israeli co­ Yosef Yagur, a former science attache; part of a rogue operation with no connec­ been eased, but not eliminated, by the an­ operation in the American investigation and Irit Erb, an Israeli Embassy secre­ tion to mainstream Israeli intelligence nouncement Sunday that the Israeli air into the case. Concerns reportedly exist in tary. None ofthe three are in the United and high Israeli officials. force colonel accused of recruiting an the Justice Department that Israel may States. American naval intelligence analyst as a have been using other Americans besides Because information from Pollard The credibility of the explanation was spy was resigning as commander of a the naval analyst, Jonathan Jay Pollard, revealed that the three had not been threatened when Sella was promoted to major Israeli air base. who was sentenced on March 4 to life in truthful during questioning, officials said, command the Tel Nof air base, near Tel The boycott ofthe air base by American prison. The Israeli colonel, Aviem Sella, indictments might be sought against Aviv, and when Eitan, supposedly the military and civilian officials, ordered by was indicted on charges of espionage by a them. chief of the unauthorized operation, was the Reagan administration after the colo­ federal grand jury, but is not expected to The entire episode has had a strange given a "golden parachute" as he was nel was placed in command, has been en­ return to the United States. life of its own, as administration policy eased out of his Defense Ministry job and ded, a State Department spokesman said The Justice Department is also moving makers, intent on maintaining close and awarded the directorship of the Israel Monday. Another official added that the to revoke the immunity from prosecution cordial ties with Israel, have made stren­ Chemicals Corp. resignation "does go some way" toward granted to three other Israelis who were uous efforts to isolate the espionage inci­

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EDUCATION EDU a100.0 vita2 l influencContemporare iny educationaour worll d SOMETHING problems and issues Field experience in Durham Schools SPECIAL Carbone/DiBona,MWF 10:20-11:10 WILL HAPPEN EDU 100.03 Contemporary educational problems and issues THIS WEEK... Field experience in Durham Schools Carbone/DiBona,MWF 11:30-12:20 EDU103S American educational theory Carbone,TH 1035-11:50 EDU117S Psychology of personal and social Seed te adjustment Malone, W 3:25-5:30 EDU 118 Educational Psychology: Child and Semiconductor. adolescent learning and development as related to education of Mother Nature's most basic Page, TH 10:35-11:50 EDU 121 Helping infants and toddlers lcam through educational A CABLE TELEVISION SPECIAL programs PRESENTED BY (W\ MOTOROLA INC. Mayesky,H 3:30-6:00 EDU 139 Marxism and Society Roderick, F 1:504:20 April 1 5 EDU149S Exceptional children WEDNESDAY 11:30AM Cable Davis, T3:30-5:30 THURSDAY 2:30PM Television's EDU 189 Teaching English composition, grammar, and literature and 9:30PM Learning ESOLI Page, M 3:25-5:55 SATURDAY 2:30PM Channel Channel! EDU205S Selected Topics: Public and Private SUNDAY 11:00PM Produced and Distributed by MEDIA PEOPLE. INC. Schools MaskeLT 4:30-6:30 EDU 225 Teaching history and social studies Wilson, 16:30-9:00 EDU 236 Teach ing read ing Woods, W3:45-630 EDU 246 Teaching mathematics Staff, TBA CONDUCTOR is a I EDU 276 Teaching high school science and use. This Special program for Universities a Staff, TBA other local classroom or evening viewing periods. For addi FALL • 1987 n by local cable, satellite dish or through a special videotape offer to MOTOROLA UNIVERSITY SUPPORT (602) 244-6777 Tuesday, March 31,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 7

From page 13 Substance improves clotting Now coiiariess and oftic getting DEERFIELD. 111. (AP) — Baxter The substance was administered last Travenol Laboratories Inc. has started Friday to a male hemophiliac at the Uni­ Happy Birthday Kath' Lo the first human tests of genetically engi­ versity of North Carolina School of Medi­ neered Factor VIII, the clotting substance cine, said Baxter Travenol spokesman Les %:z missing from the blood of most hemophili­ Jacobson. $$S$ Do you think the fi ",,„« acs, officials said Monday. The subject, in his late 30s, lives in the system at Duke is FAIR? The substance would be completely free Raleigh, N.C, area, Jacobson said. Reason #11: PIRGS lesser puOli- cired activities have included work­ from blood-borne viruses, including AIDS "At this point we're encouraged," the ing with the Socialist Workers Party and all forms of hepatitis, the company spokesman said, "but keeping in mind and the Institute tor policy Studies, said. Hemophiliacs lacking Factor VIII or there's a lot of study ahead. We'll have to a Marxist (hinktank other clotting agents now are treated with have a bleeding episode and we'll have to V0TF YFS ON APRIL 2' concentrates made from human plasma, track the results in time." which carries risk of disease. Hemophilia is a congenital, hereditary the condition ol the e affectsusall Vote April *—< The genetically engineered Factor VIII bleeding disorder caused by the absence was developed by Genetics Institute of of Factor VIII or another clotting factor in Cambridge, Mass., and financed by Bax­ the blood. It affects one out of 10,000 ter Travenol, a medical health-care prod­ males. Only females carry the defective ucts company based in this north Chicago gene, although they almost never suffer suburb. from the disease. 5th in a series "On the Road with ASDU..." WHEN IS THE RIGHT TIME TO JIM BELVIN

CALL YOUR PARENTS? Director of

a) When you're stuck in your room because someone "pennied" your door. YOUR

b) When you spent all your money playing Financial Aid video games and you still have to buy books for Developmental Psych. meet and talk with those who c) When you just miss hearing their voices and telling them what you've been doing. SHAPE YOUR LIFE AT DUKE M.L.W. Cultural One thing about parents: they love to hear what you've been up to. 7:00 p.m. TONIGHT Center But you should call them anyway. And when they ask where you were last night, tell them that you always call using AT&T Long Distance Service because of AT&T's high quality service and exceptional value. FALL 1987 SPANISH 121 When they ask how your stud­ ies are going, remind them that AT&T gives you immediate credit if you ARIEL DORFMAN dial a wrong number. will teach And when they ask about your plans for the "Latin American Literature weekend, note that you in Translation" can count on AT&T for clear longdistance connections-. Through an introduction to contem­ ^« And when, at last, . 1^ ) thev praise vou for using porary Latin American narratives (novels, ; AT&T, then—and only stories, memoirs, films) the student will i then—you might want to confront some of the urgent political and mention those Psych books. social problems facing Latin America today.

Ariel Dorfman, Visiting Professor of International Studies at Duke, is one of Latin America's most distinguished authors.

Don't miss this unique opportunity tor English speakers to experience the AT&T exciting world of contemporary Latin The right choice American literature. Opinion Letters Page 8 March 31,1987 Coach K deserves it all

To the editor: is clearly not only a superb basketball It would be a real shame to let pass the strategist, but is also (and perhaps even Yes on NCPIRG outstanding season given us by Coach K more importantly! a motivator ofthe first and the basketball team without both rank. Some may think he is too close to The North Carolina Public Interest $45,000 to $50,000, in its first year of congratulations and thanks. his players, but the outstanding results Research Group which will have its existence? ASDU and students The congratulations go first and surely confirm the correctness of that ap­ foremost to the players. They had a proach. fate decided in Thursday's referen­ should look closely when PIRG's first season far beyond what either they or we Coach K richly deserves all the awards dum is a potentially valuable addition budget is published as the group's had any reason to expect, given the he has received, and his relationship with to the community. Admittedly, PIRG, bylaw requires, to see if the money is seniors who graduated last year. They the players could well serve as a model as it is proposed, is not without being efficiently and properly spent. really played their hearts out and, as a throughout our community. problems: its management of funds, Even with these doubts the result, achieved the sterling record they especially, will have to be addressed. proposal deserves passage. PIRG has did. David Caploe Yet problems can be overcome if the ensured it will be reasonably account­ The thanks, in turn, go to Coach K. He Durham ultimate goal shows enough promise, able by helping ASDU draw up as PIRG's does. PIRG's authorizing bylaw, which Thursday's question asks for a places adequate limitations on the PIRG that retains potential for public fledgling organization. The student- Yale's visit hit sour note service and education on a scale that elected, student-run board will amply other student-led groups - DUVS, represent fee-paying members. To the editor: fraternities or APO - cannot match. Likewise, the optional fee refund, morning following the concert, we were And it corrects the major faults ofthe available in cash to anyone who re­ As conductor of the Yale Russian told the total absence of publicity was not pre-1983 PIRG system, which was not quests it, provides an outlet for stu­ Chorus, a 30-member men's a cappella due to oversight, but - even better - to a identical to the funding proposed this dents who vote against PIRG and group based at Yale University here in "lack of emotional attachment" to the year. Back then, refunds were avail­ want their money back. New Haven, I was very dismayed to see event on the part ofthe office personnel. an audience of only 25 people turn out for able just once each semester. Students from the Duke Chorale, who our concert in Duke Chapel on Friday, most graciously hosted members of the This time, semester-long refunds of A student concerned with redress­ March 19. Chorus during our stay at Duke, told us the $4 per person fee and a semi-an­ ing community wants, yet who votes This poor showing is not due to a lack of that they have had similar problems in nual referendum asking students against PIRG, consigns the group to interest at Duke University, which has their dealings with this same office. whether they want to continue PIRG an untimely, dubious fate. For stu­ strong programs in both choral music and This sort of irresponsible, unprofes­ bring the group closer to student and dent voters who approve of PIRG's Russian studies. Instead, the fault lies sional behavior provides a disservice to student government supervision. goals but see some drawbacks, the with the Office of Cultural Affairs, our students and other members of the Duke sole Duke contact in arranging the event, community, and services not to welcome There are potentially serious logical vote on Thursday is yes. who put out absolutely no publicity but to insult outside groups such as our managerial problems for PIRG, While we have the chance to show material for the concert - no posters, no own. though. And should the group win ap­ our support for PIRG's admirable table tents, not even a simple radio an­ proval, it will take all the energy of aims and its means of achieving nouncement or newspaper ad. Michael Schnack the PIRG board and students to meet them, we should do just that, and Speaking to workers in this office the Conductor. Yale Russian Chorus those shortcomings. then work with the group for im­ Specifically, how does a relatively provements. With a watchful and in­ inexperienced group manage such a terested student body, PIRG can only large influx of revenue, an estimated mature with age. Use Falwell analogy for PIRG

To the editor: ganization does not operate in such a www Students, have you heard that Jerry manner anywhere. If you were to sub­ vnm Falwell is trying to organize a chapter of stitute the name Ralph Nader for Jerry ONHJE the Moral Majority at Duke? This group Falwell and NCPIRG for the Moral wants to obtain $8.00 from each student Majority, this seemingly ridiculous every year through a mandatory refun­ scenario unfortunately begins to sound dable fee on your bursar's bill. Students familiar. will automatically become members ofthe Over the last several months, Nader's Moral Majority for at least several weeks PIRG activists have made a major drive and will be able to disassociate themsel­ to try to re-establish funding at Duke -rvis.vmm. ves from the group only by requesting a through a mandatory refundable fee, only SAW- refund of their Moral Majority fee later in HAS INCASED TbKrfeSIK^,*llS«»J three years after it was soundly defeated BEUEVBSHIJTO ANCrvKJOLGNWIN the semester, possibly having to stand in by the student body. Although NCPIRG SUCH M*£ffia-JT... TKBU4.' long lines to get their money back. claims to be a different organization from \0? These funds will go primarily to pay for other PIRGs, the previously mentioned a professional staff that lobbies the state activities are common to all other PIRGs legislature in Raleigh on issues that the around the nation and the former Duke Moral Majority decides are important. PIRG; therefore, there is no reason to Some will be spent to organize chapters at believe that NCPIRG will refrain from other schools around the state or to create such partisan activities as lobbying the a booklet that ranks all members of the state legislature and scoring legislators. general assembly and tallies their votes Beware of special interest political ac­ THE CHRONICLE as either being R(right) or W(wrong) from tion groups like NCPIRG or the Moral the M.M.'s point of view. Nevertheless, it Majority which seek to force their defini­ Shannon Mullen, Editor claims to be a non-partisan organization. tions of the "Public interest" or morality Michael Milstein, Rocky Rosen, Managing Editors Most Duke students would find the idea on others. Vote "no" to mandatory refun­ Barry Eriksen, General Manager of being forced to fund the Moral Majority dable PIRG fees. Read Martin, Editorial Page Editor to be pretty appalling. Fortunately, this is not the case and, to my knowledge, the or­ Warren Olson Laura Allen, News Editor Rick Cendo, News Editor Trinity '89 Kathleen Sullivan, City & State Editor Therese Maher, University Editor Michael Leber, Sports Editor Tammi Henkin, Photography Editor Jane Ribadeneyra, Photography Editor Douglas Mays, Senior Editor Turn to pages 11 and 14 for more letters on NCPIRG. Jenny Wright, Senior Editor Ed Farrell, Contributing Editor Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager Linda Nettles, Production Manager Kevin Witte, Business Manager Carolyn Haff, Advertising Production Manager On the record The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view ofthe editorial board. Signed editorials, columns and cartoons represent the views of / don't believe this. It won't hit me until next week. I've got to sit down and let this their authors. sink in. Phone numbers: editor: 684-5469, news/features: 684-2663, sports: 684-6115, business of­ fice: 684-3811,.advertising office: 684-6106. classifieds: 684-3476. , junior Indiana Hoosier guard, commenting on his 17-foot jumper ' 1987 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. AH rights reserved. with five seconds vemaining which gave his team the game and the national cham­ No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permis­ pionship. sion of the business office. Tuesday, March 31,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 9 PIRG allows for minority dissent

Why should I want to vote to support NCPIRG? Over the past 15 years, PIRGs have developed and refined educational programs that give students con­ crete opportunities to integrate their acedemic learning with their development as responsible citizens, and in the process, to provide important benefits to the general public. While NCPIRG is certainly not the only way to culti­ vate the skills and attitudes of responsible citizenship, it would be difficult to find another idea in the last 15 years that has had as much success among students across the country. Currently there are 124 PIRGs in 24 states. In essence, PIRG serves as a catalyst: It offers stu­ dents the resources and vehicle to channel their concern about problems in the community - homelessness, envi­ ronmental issues, energy issues - into effective action. PIRG students in other states have drafted and helped secure passage of local and state legislation, imple­ mented consumer watch programs, organized massive community service days . . . the list of successes - stu­ dent successes - is remarkable. Why have PIRGs been so effective? continue funding PIRG. This accountability is a critical In part, because they have had the resources to hire aspect of PIRG: PIRG is a student organization and, as professional staff. Run as a private, non-profit cor­ • Guest column such, ought to be accountable to the entire student body. poration, NCPIRG will hire full-time professional staff John Ott What about the argument that if you don't want to sup­ to provide organizational continuity and public action port PIRG. you shouldn't have to give $4 of vour money to expertise to the student in PIRG. it? Once students have identified and developed issues have done so in part because they know that profes­ This is a very important argument and one that we that they want to address - through campus-wide con­ sional staff are essential for effective student action. take very seriously. The right NOT to associate with a versations and perhaps related course work and/or in­ While many professors will be supportive of PIRG ac­ group that one does not support is a very important dependent studies - PIRG staff will work with students tivities, few have the time orthe expertise in "how to get value in our society. That's why any student who does to help implement effective action stategies. things done" that professional staff will have. More im­ not wish to contribute their $4 per semester to PIRG can Who are the leaders in the local community that portantly, faculty and other professionals on campus of­ receive a refund. should be contacted? Who are the groups who are likely ten have different priorities than students. The process of getting a refund is straightforward. to support this proposal? Who will likely oppose it? How The advantage of PIRG is that it recruits staff wholly One obtains the refund on the Bryan Center walkway can we develop a coalition to get our ideas put before the accountable to students. Students decide what PIRG's the second week of school and in the NCPIRG office the City Council? Such questions and others are precisely agenda will be and how its resources will be allocated. remainder ofthe semester. While the right not to asso­ the questions that students rarely have the expertise to Students, as tommorrow's leaders, need to create oppor­ ciate is an important value, it's not the only value. Stu­ address, and are thus prevented from translating their tunities for involvement and develop structures that en­ dents ofthe Duke community also have the right to ef­ creative ideas into adopted solutions. sure students' time and energy is not wasted on mean­ fectively organize so that their voices can be heard, so Professional staff are essential to help teach students ingless tasks or dead-end analysis. that they can effect issues that concern them as citizens. concrete, practical lessons about how to get their voices The PIRG proposal is the most viable structure In our democracy, the right TO associate is vital.-A com­ heard in a democratic polity. created to date that allows students to direct their genu­ munity has the right to act in the decisions of the But why are professional staff needed? Why can't stu­ ine concern on consumer and environmental issues into majority if the minority is protected. The PIRG process - dents make use of tke professors and other resources on responsible, effective action. assessing a $4 per semester student activities fee that campus? How will PIRG be accountable for its money? can be refunded at anytime - is, in my judgement, a fair One of the most powerful advantages of PIRG is that ASDU will review PIRG's budget, just as it does the accomodation of both of these values. it provides a vehicle through which students and profes­ budget of The Chronicle and the Union. More impor­ sors can work together on common concerns. Already, tantly, every other year, students will have a chance to John Ott is an instructor for the Institute of Policy many professors have joined Faculty For NCPIRG, They vote again through a referendum to decide whether to Studies and Public Affairs. Court cases and Nader-style funding still condemn PIRGs On Thursday a referendum to reestablish a PIRG the PIRG." chapter, funded by a mandatory refundable fee charged • Guest column Judge Adams went on to say: "In the absence of such a to all Duke undergraduates, will be held. PIRG should demonstrated interest, a fee used to finance political ac­ not receive the funding because this scheme violates our Lainnie Davis tivity cannot be extracted - even temporarily - from Constitutional rights to freedom of association. those unwilling to pay." PIRG wants automatic funding because ASDU cannot Kevin Taylor Judge Adams concluded: "We have been presented fund a group, like PIRG, which has active political goals. with no convincing reason - besides the obvious motive A 1970 PIRG organizational manual stated that "PIRG to procure additional funding from those students who [should! use its unique ability to prevent one type of gov­ do not wish to join PIRG but who are indifferent enough ernment activity and to force another." And as Judge Ar- Ralph Nader says PIRGs to forego seeking a refund — why PIRG could not obtain lin Adams of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals seeking voluntary funds is a its funding through purely voluntary contributions." states, "these PIRGs are not non-partisan 'public inter­ When in 1986 the courts again decided in favor ofthe est' groups, but rather a political entity devoted to the 'waste'of time. Rutgers students, PIRG appealed to the U.S. Supreme attainment of certain fixed ideological objectives." Court. The highest court in the land refused to review By their own admission, if NCPIRG were funded the case, allowing the decision favoring the students to through ASDU it would have adequate financial resour­ stand. ces, "but would not be able to hire full-time professional favorable result. A 1984 Wall Street Journal article, "Nader's Campus staff to advocate for . . . laws before the North Carolina In his book Action For A Change, Nader advocates the Proteges Mix Coercion and Consumerism" tells what legislature." (From NCPIRG's factsheet #2) In other method NCPIRG is now proposing: a mandatory fee happened when MassPIRG was offered a positive check­ words, PIRG would be a less effective political lobby. with a refund provision. This means that students will off system (i.e. voluntary donations) while trying to es­ Ralph Nader, founder of the PIRG network, attacks automatically be billed the PIRG fee, and if the student tablish a chapter at Boston University. the three methods of funding that give students the does not want to support PIRG he must go to PIRG to John Silber, president of Boston University, wrote: choice of whether or not to give PIRG money. Voluntary get a refund. "Rather than accept our offer to collect dues from every donations are considered to be too sporadic to provide Nader states that it is the right ofthe PIRG "to obtain student who wanted to join, MassPIRG actually enough money for PIRG activities. Nader fears students the total fee collection and hold it. . . during which time preferred to have no chapter at Boston University with will not voluntarily support PIRG , . . PIRG can attempt to win over . . . [those! who oppose its 12,000 undergraduates . . . MassPIRG was under­ Positive check-off, another form of funding, involves it or the apathetic who may ignore it." standably disinclined to set a single precedent for a posi­ the student checking a box on the bursar's bill to indi­ This method of funding violates the Constitution. In tive check-off, or purely voluntary collection of dues." cate that the PIRG fee should be paid. Negative check­ 1981, three students at Rutgers filed suit against the On Nov. 15, 1983, an almost 2-1 margin of voting off is just the opposite, the student must indicate that university and NJPIRG for making the PIRG fee a re­ Duke students opted to end NCPIRG's automatic fun­ the PIRG fee is not paid. quirement for enrollment. Judge Adams ruled in favor of ding. Has the system gotten any better in the last four Nader condemns both methods becasue the budget of the students, stating that the fee "violated students' years? The courts don't think so. the PIRG is in jeopardy twice a year, and the PIRG First and Fourteenth Amendment rights by the extrac­ Lainnie Davis is a Trinity junior and Kevin Taylor is a members must "waste" time campaigning to insure a tion of, from each student, a refundable fee to support Trinity senior. Page 10 THE CHRONICLE Tuesday, March 31, 1987'

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"I hod (hem all removed last week and boy, do I feel great." Copy editors: Doug Mays. Shannon Mullen. Jenny Wright Copydesk: Gillian Bruce Associate photography editor/day photographer: Beth Ann Farley Layout: Lane Hensley. Shannon Mullen Video watchdog: Heather F.liiott Assistant news editors: Gillian Bruce. Maxine Grossman. Jon Hilsenrath. Doonesbury/Garry Trudeau Kathy Nooney. Charles Rawlings, Laura Trivers Assistant editorial page editors: Ect Boyle. Jeff Diamond I HAVE. FOVNPTHB REMAINS OF W Associate production editor: Heather Elliott Staff reporters: Caroline Aiken. John Arundel. Dan Berger. Julie Byrne. GRANGER. THBRESPtaWAPflE-y Matt Churchill. Elizabeth Cohen. Tom Curley. Leslie Davis. Tara ATTEMPT TO HOW TWO THOUtim POKIER WHO Pt$APPtAW> PURINE 1 Dunion. Elizabeth Edwards. Jackie Escano. Suzanne Fajans, Gaye smLwamy. U/HENIAMKE" THE !966 GUBERNATORIAL PACE Forren. Carl Ghattas. James Guitard. Doug Haar. Matt McKenzie. Liz SOMETHING CATCHES MY EYE. Morgan. Laura Meister. John Meclerio. Morey Osteen. Lisa Page. David Schwartz. David Shutley. Nancy Vollmer, John Weatherspoon. Craig Whitlock. Craig Wortman Early production: Lainnie Davis Paste-up: Roily Miller Account representatives: Judy Bartlett. Archie Durham Advertising production: Charles Carson. Chris Klugewicz. Leslie Kovach. Lura Luther. Lars Lyon. Bill McCullough, Ted Rex Business staff: Heather Barnhiil. Kim Blackwell. Deana Gomez, Russ Parker. Steve Ritchie. Gregg Siuciak. Nicki Smart. Craig Stiffler. Lisa Vash, Stephanie White Classified advertising: Li; Ohlrich. Becky Tollefson

TODAY .evin, . Charles i : B\m about Three Mile Island. Stanford biology 6nd pjrector of the X., Warren Lib.. 1201 Fayetteville. St. COMMUNITY CALENDAR Research Center.. Cornell Durham, 7 p.m. n. Scale and Variability: An rspective/'lllBio. Set., 4 Part f of "Shoah." a holocaust film/Page "Why ' a Women's Center at Duke?" Duke. Wind Symphony Spring Concert, Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.. Fee- non-Duke HouseC Commons, 10p.m. Baldwin Auditorium. 8:15 p.m. students, $5 FilmaboutT- . -i. Chapel Hill .Part. II -of •"Shoals,"' a.;:holocaust :fijm,'' Zack Murrel. Dept. of Botany. Tloristics Public Lib., 523 E. Frankiin St,, Chape! Page Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.. Fee: non- Hill,-7 p.m.. "•;'.: and Phytogeography of Big frog Moun­ WEDNESDAY Duke students- $5> tain; Polk County, Tennessee." 144 Bio 'The Lover," "Afternoon Tea," "Laundry- .Sci.., 12:30p.m. • • "Faces of War." Durham County Lib., Mens Crew Meeting, 229 Soc. Sci,, 7 300 N. Roxboro St., 7 p.m. info: 688- and Bourbon" by Duke Drama, Sheafer Worrier .cation and So- .1994 Theater, S:15p.m;,Tickets: $6. : ciai Sci Prof. Lerner,, Dept. of History, "Jewish THURSDAY George. Lamming, Caribbean ..Novelist.: Community at Duke." 136 Soc.. Sci.. 7 Themes in Caribbean Reality." Mary "Honduras: in the Borders of War," 7:15-' YouWiHiams Center, 4 p.m,,.- CAS P: and Goodwyn. 9:15 p.m.. Wesley Foundation, 214 Pit­ "Pro tes- m Poland and Reynolds Price reading from/his new: tsboro St., 'Chapel- Hill. Fee: $l..More Ho Boundaries, .The Coffeehouse;. 9- China./' works. Von. Cannon A, 5 p m. • info: 929-9821, •pm • Chora! Vespers. Memorial Chapel, 5-15 "Why a Women's TiieGood Neighbors. The Coffeehouse,.; Discussion of Feminist Ange , .Mary Lou Hci.se C Commortsj 9p.m. Williams Center, 8 p m Tuesday, March 31,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 11 NCPIRG Letters Stories deliberately mislead thing without being asked first if they want to. With all the hype over the four To the editor: SFRs and CRs dollars per student addition to the Stu­ surrounding the bylaw's passage and fea­ dent Activities Fee for PIRG, I wonder if I respect proper use of editorial pages tured comments by PIRG's opposition. anyone realized that Duke students pay for majority and minority opinions. How­ The article's author herself opposes over half a million dollars ($519,000 ac­ ever, mismanagement at The Chronicle NCPIRG. share members cording to the list in this year's Student trashes objectivity in its news pages by al­ This Monday's paper featured two arti­ To the editor: Guide) for clubs, publications and other lowing hidden opinions and biases to in­ cles concerning PIRG. Chronicle staff fluence unsuspecting students. Unable to prove that PIRG's activities organizations, whether they want them or placed an article about legal opposition to are without merit, the opposition to PIRG not. This mismanagement constitutes active PIRG on page 1 and "buried" another has instead misrepresented what PIRG I am not against all of these groups dishonesty, because students are told that about Friday's Mike on the Quad, which does and the way it uses its money. They being funded, and I know that their an­ news pages are objectively reported, went favorably Cor PIRG, on page 3. say that a lot of money has to be sent nual budgets are subject to scrutiny. But headlined and presented. The front page article spoke only of two away to the national chapter, or that it don't vote against PIRG because of some On Friday, March 19, the lead story court cases which either shut down a will be a great inconvenience to get a principle that no other organization at "ASDU OKs PIRG bylaw without quo­ PIRG chapter or are stilt in process, but refund from PIRG if you so desire. Duke has to face. PIRG is the outlet for rum" contained several errors requiring omitted any mention of a third suit which was decisively thrown out of court. One In fact, every chapter of PIRG decides student activism that so many students correction. They were not, and the correc­ must suspect that the reporter and edi­ for itself how to budget its money, and if here want and deserve, and that Duke tions that ran were printed for emphasis tors only consulted PIRG opposers, since you don't want PIRG to be funded then University so badly needs. against PIRG. any pro-PIRG viewpoint would have in­ you can get your money back quite easily. Furthermore, that story hardly men­ cluded the third case. Or, someone at The A table for refunds will be set up in the Philip Hirschkorn tioned any content of the PIRG bylaw. Chronicle willfully omitted that infor­ Bryan Center during the day during the Trinity '89 Rather, it focused only on the controversy mation, knowing that the only conse­ entire second week of school next fall. quence would be a request for correction. That doesn't sound so sneaky or incon- vienent to me. If you are informed about the issues The opposition to PIRG seems to be led surrounding NCPIRG, you have seen by a small but determined group of Col­ Vote no to coercive PIRG other instances of manipulation, albeit lege Republicans who are masquerading To the editor: subtle, on the part of The Chronicle. as "Students For Fiscal Responsibility." PIRG activists at the information table Please make your observations known to Ironically, PIRG will be the most fiscally I have been shocked over, the past told me that they were "a totally differ­ friends who may have been misled by bi­ responsible organization on campus. Un­ two months to hear the deception with ent group" than the PIRG that existed ased information. like any other organization at Duke, which some of NCPIRG's proponents at Duke in 1983, yet PIRG has been This question transcends any matters PIRG will let every student receive a are trying to fool Duke students. First, using part of the money in the old surrounding PIRG. The Chronicle, as a refund from his or her Student Activities in the petition drive, NCPIRG advo­ PIRG's ASDU account, that is, until well-read daily, wields great power in this Fee if he/she doesn't like what it does. cates propagated falsehoods to me. they were caught by ASDU business community. Since The Chronicle is not Imagine if you could get a refund from Playing on the hope that I would ac­ manager David Pyle. easily bound to objectivity by the law. al) Duke if you didn't like what ASDU does, cept their statements as truth, Becky NCPIRG also attempted to divert we can do is read more critically and try or if you didn't listen to WXDU, or didn't Kohler (NCPIRG steering committee the issue from their unconstitutional to discern invisible deceptions. go to Freewater Films, or didn't see member) claimed that PIRG does not fee implementation to the activities of engage in lobbying activities - a clear the group. I seriously doubt that any­ speakers sponsored by Major Attractions. Truman Semans contradiction of PIRG's own fact one would deny PIRG's right to exist. NCPIRG steering committee People are saying that they don't like sheets. Secondly, Kohler and the other See LETTER on page 14 the idea of having to contribute to some­ Trinity '89

SummerSession 1987 Term I SHOAH May 14-June 27 Termll A FILM BY CLAUDE LANZMANN June 30 - August 13

'AMONG THE GREATEST FILMS EVER MADE., •SHOAH' is the greatest use ol (Mm in motion picture history, taking movies to their highest moral value." —Gene Sukel, Chic; "A monumental documentary., .this is a film that must be seen. - Elie Wfesel, Nobel Peace Prize Winner, 1986 "We read after the war numerous commentaries on the ghettos, on the extermination camps, and we were shaken. But seeing today the extraordinary dim of Claude Lanzmann, we realize tharwe knew nothing. Despite all our knowledge, theawful experience remained at a distance from us. Now, forth e (list time, we live It In our minds, hearts, and flesh. It becomes our experience." - Simone de Beauvoir, Le Monde Tonight, March 31 - Part 16:30-11:15 P.M. Wednesday, April 1 - Part II 6:30-11:15 P.M. Thursday, April 2 - Part 16:30-11:15 P.M. for Friday, April 3 - Part II 6:30-11:15 P.M. Page Auditorium Sponsored by The Center forJudia c Studies, Duke Hillel SUMMERSESSION Community $5.00 forbot h show combined, Students Free There will be a Ho! ocaust Memo rial Service In Duke Chapel. April 9. 5:15 P.M. 121 Allen Building 684-2621 Rabbi Marshall Meyer, Guest Lecturer Page 12 THE CHRONICLE Tuesday, March 31,1987 Classifieds

Fully) Announcements DUKE MODEL UN — Meeting to­ camp located 10 miles nc /2 bath. 1600 Anderson St.. 1 mi night at 7 p.m. in 225 Soc- Sci Mark your Calandar' A representa- leigh, NC. Cabin co off campus, pool, available May program specialists in 15 Call Guy Sol ie 682-0807 Study abroad programs will hold an WANNAMAKER SENIORS all that swimming, athletics, te information session on Thursday. chery. horseback.etc I April 2 from 5 • 7. in Von Canon A PUT TO good use FREE KEGS and For mor. I the PIZZAS SATISFACTION Sun. Apr 5, values and be interested n guiding Sludy Aon idOtfic. boys and girls (ages 6 to 15) in Sublet Spacious 1 BR apt. May- Healthy males. 18 to 26 years old. their physical, mental, and spiri­ Sept. A/C. Pool. Close to Duke THETAS: Chapter meeting tonight LSAT Preparatioi can earn $10 in a Study on physio­ tual growth. For further information or Melanie. 493-2623. Hospital/Univ. $269/ mo. will give at 5:30 in 114 Physics. Call your dividual instructi logical responses to stress. Time write or call: Director. Camp Lost: Silver earing (teardrop $200 Bonus 286-9213 before 11 cosi For more required - 1 1/2 hrs. If interest­ pledge Ifs INSPIRATION WEEK! Kanata, Rt 3. Sox 192, Wake For­ shaped) somewhere on West. 684-7366 ed, call 684- 2941 and ask for SAILING CLUB: est. NC 27587. (919-556-2661) Anita McRae Please call 684-0570 anytime. tonight. We'll be discussing Spring All girls inlerested in trying out for Want i get ii- with tr Cancun for Thanksgiving week. U's the -DANCING DEVILS DRILL TEAM- schedule 7. 129Soc-Psych. CHEERLEADING TRYOUTS! BLUE- sity? The Office of Sped; not too early; its almost too late! Call 383-7712 for further info. for ne«t year sign up at the B.C. In­ DEVIL TRYOUTS! Info, meeting: BEAUFORT ALUMS — come to Events needs awork/study student, 2-br apartment in 5- star hotel on Partially furnished 1 BR summer fo Desk. Tryouts will Be April Thur Apr. 2. 9 p.m. Cameron In­ Bio-Sci. miser Fri. Apt. 3. 4-6. f 8.9.11.12.13. Be a part of Duke's 10 - 15 hours a week for 1987-88. sublet at Bristol Court Apt. $320/ door Stadium. CHEERLEADING TRY­ rine Lab faculty will be here! Flexible schedule, variety of 688-2728 mo. + utilities. Call 286-2387 OUTS! BLUED EVIL TRYOUTS! THETAS: Myrtle money d responsibilities. Call 684-3710 by rj Detro inflation has hit the DUKE UNION. WITHOUT Union concerts, Air! in Wed.. April 1 to schedule an inter- speakers. Broadway plays. "Mike Rooms for Rent ;. Questions call 383-7712. Graduate student to tutor biostatis- Fee to maintain current campus on the Quads," Cable 13. tics. Must know SYSTAT call Judy Freewater films, and bands in the DELTA GAMMAS: Meeting tonight Twin Bed frame with Simmons mat­ Nice Room in 4 br house for sum­ is in PHYSICS to view Options certs, speakers, and more vote C.I.. D.U. and Coffeeouse. life at 732-4618 after6p.m. tress/box springs price cheap/ne­ mer sublet.with option to stay. Program Check Panhel Board for YES for the UNION REFERENDUM Duke would Oe boring indeed. SUMMER LEADERSHIP OPPORTUNI­ gotiable. Call 493-5340. High ceilings, washer/ dryer, THIS THURSDAY other details! Also, bring your more. Only $145 Call Terry 286- Don't take the activities and ser­ TY Applications now being ac­ bylaws so we can review the mend- Autos for Sale 7202. Attention SOPHOMORES: The class vices, like the Info. Desk and Stu­ cepted for summer conference as­ of 1989 announces a design con­ dent Locator, for granted. Help us sistants at Duke. Assist in registra­ '75 OPEL MANTA. runs great, AM/ test for the class mug (to be dis­ JASS! HEY! Don't miss Japanese meet rising costs and improve next tion, coordination of housing and FM/Cass. New battery, tires $650 of 3 bed­ tributed fall 1987) Design the Speaking Society's meeting Wed 6 year's events. Vote YES for the food plans, gathering data. etc. or best offer Call 493-8051. eve- room apt. two blocks from East, emblem for your class mug and Be p.m. in 101G (ne«t to Info. Desk in UNION fee REFERENDUM Good communication skills a must. one from Central. Spacious apt famous long after graduation! Call Bryan Center) Be there or DIE. AOPi's Come to meeting tonight in reasonable rent. Kitchen. AC make Greg 1x13961 or David (.7748) for 1978 0LAS-98 Regency loaded ei­ 111 Bio-Sci. at 615 — fun meet­ West Campus ans $4 75/hour full the hot summer bearable! Call details Designs are due April 17. cellent condition must sell $3,450 ing with pledges in The Spotlight' time Call Laura Dalton at 684- Robert. 286-3755 so hurry! or best offer. 493-1316 after 7 SUMMER SUBLET: Chapel Towers 2 PI PHIS: I G. Exec meeting tonight 5791. pm. Ushers needed for HoofnHorns bdrm apt. 11/2 baths. Rent nego­ >: Important meet- Spend the summer at the finest spring musical Brigadoon April 9- tiable. Call 383-1802 i Alumni Lounge, Country Club in the area. Hope Val­ 1984 Ford LTD. 4 door blue and 11. 16-18 and May 8-9 Interest­ CaiUabeem eree if problem ley Club is seeking mature, experi­ white with vinyl top. AC. Power ed? Call Laura at X-0214 or sign up enced lifeguards and a swim team Steering. AM/FM Stereo. 70.000 Lost and Found at the Bryan Cenier Info Desk tonight THE STAYNE at the coffee coach WSI required. Apply in per­ miles new tires and brakes. Excel­ there! Tues Mar 31 at 7 in South- house 9:30 p m. Free admission son Saturday March 21 and Satur- lent condition. Price, $3800. Call HELP! Lost wallet! I think I left it at Outdoor Adventure Series Outing gate Co-sponsored By Southgate — Come see their first appearance 28 in the Clubhouse 383- 5257 or 383-9854 after 6 the Pub on Sunday night. Please #10 Merchants Millpond Black outside Europe. Presented as part P-m and the Office of Residential life -n 10 a ::l 2 p re­ call x-7321 with any information! Water Outing leaves Duke 2 p.m. of the Baskin Robbins 31 Tour. Friday. April 10 return 8pm Sun­ Visiting Professor and Family seek LOST: One Gucci keychaln on Wed. Baked Scrod. work Study Student wanted to work day April 12 Cost: students $31 - summer sublet — house preferred. Roommate Wanted Mar 25 at kegs If found, please in research lab. 10 hours/ week Faculty/ staff $42 Limited space call 684-0245. Flexible schedule. $6/ hr Please Grad student needs roommates to available so sign up now outside to campus Dates: June and July contact Joe Long at 684-6650. or share beautiful 3-br house close to FOUND: KEYS (Trl-Delt Tower of 205 Flowers. For more information (some flexibility) Call Lucy Haagen. Dr U Schwertschlag at 684-3285 Duke (in Hope Valley). $165/mo.. London chains attached) on W- contact Frank McNutt 684-6313 (W) 684-5302 (H) 489-7311. CHESS CLUB pick a room, any Cent bus. LAST Fri Mar. 27. Call SENIORS - If you want to change room. Tues. 7:30 second floor The director of the Radcliffe Pub­ Dave. 684-7401. the Placement Office — let us Soc-Sci. Officers attend. lishing Course. a six-week know! Comments, suggestions, graduate program in book and Female roommate wanted to share CIRCUS BEZERKUS 1987! See! the large 2-br. apartment for summer. See page 13 complaints - return the Place­ magazine publishing at Harvard Study Abroad Office. 2022 Campus incredible Shrinkrng Krol. Feel! the option to renew. A/C. pool. $172/ ment Office Survey, today! University, will be on Dukes Cam­ Hector, half man. half shrubbery mo. Call 383- 4584. SENIORS: Do you want to get rid of pus on Thursday. Feb. 26. A gen- ADOPTION ACADEMIC COUPLE, Marvel! at Craig, the Fugitive Ihe lines for job interviews1 Com­ e held al Houses for rent ments'* Suggestions? Return the For details and individual interview come infant into loving home Ei- food, games, and the Gungyman appointments, please call Patricia Placement Office Surveys now! Summer Sublet (May-Aug.) 3Br TODAY ON April 2 1987 O'Connor at 684-3813 TONIGHT $S$ Money $$$ Does it 2Ba AC Fully Furnished House on talk to you? Come meet JIM BELVIN The Blackburn Literary Festival American Dr $625/mo Call 383- l for a good fall course? the moneyman at Duke. 7 p.m. in presents Reynolds Price, poet and 7740. author, reading from his new works is Studies offers 25 the MLW Cultural Center ASDU 5 in 12 departments Topics Wednesday. April 1, 5 p.m.. Von Canon A. i floors. 20 mins. in campus work Starting pay is $4 n Duke. 2 fireplaces, no yard If you think REM. Etvis Costello. Help Wanted hr You can begin immediately — nt.! No children/ dogs. 5350/ Leonard Nimoy. Gary Hart. Broad­ :all Sue Carter at 684-2752 after 471-8309. way Bound, the Lyres. Oktoberfest. Call 684- 5683 f Summer lifeguards and swim in­ and Freewater Films were good. cable structors needed at METROSPORT ivenient to Duke Students. 501 Douglas. Durham. Free mem­ ATTENTION: Duke Seniors with i students and professionals P-or astinating? Put a stop to put- with the funding ii bership plus hourly wage. Only in­ background in Biological Sciences. off Come to a workshop of- YES for the UNION fi terested apply. 1-3 yr. research position available ;ome. Contact Rodney Allison at CAPS. For information and THIS THURSDAY in Immunology. Respons 11 Di*e UnivefSity Unwn I regis ration call 684-5100 WORK AT THE BEACH this summer elude: cell culture, biochemical Contact Judy: Kite Kingdom. Bo> Attention All MAXWELL HOUSE separation techniques, and work Apartment for rent SERVICE ORGANIZATION LEADERS. MEMBERS FOR NEXT YEAR: On 1036. Kill Devil Hills. NC 27948 with laboratory animals. Salary: Remember the DUKE Volunteers For Summer: Large 2 br furnished Tues night at 730 we will draw (919! 441- 6235 $6.93/hr. Train at Duke (May- TUESDAY Coordinating Committee discus­ dorm housing numbers for next July). Move to UVA in Aug For inter­ Duke Manor Apt. avail all summer sion meeting Tonight (Thur.) at 7 year Attendance is optional. A view call Dr. James Roche 684- $380 plus 1/2 elec More comfort p.m. in 116 Old Chem Refresh- meeting will follow at 8 p.m and 6087 (days) and 489- 0707 than Central - better Deal Call 383- 2570. 4:00 PM there will Be a study break after Rockworld POOL MGR SWIM TEAM COACH. Need a job? Medical Center Infor­ LIFEGUARDS. INSTRUCTORS Must mation Systems is currently inter­ have Advanced Lifesaving Certifi­ viewing for a student to provide cation for all positions (WSI for in­ 5:00 PM CHRONICLE CLASSH Microcomputer hardware and soft- structors!- Parkwood Swim Club. vwwwv Southern Durham County. Call or Bodyworks INFORMATION throughout the Medical Center A send resume: T. Walker. 918 working knowledge Of the IBM PC Huntsman. Durham. N.C. 27713 - environment is a requirement, al­ 544- 2554 though expert' status is not expec­ $3.00 (per day) ted. Knowledge of PC programming 7:30 PM for the first 15 words or less. Telemarketing Position: Permanent to part-time position in software de­ rt. * For Trie Best In Sports at Duke 10? for each additional word. processing. velopment company 20 hrs/wk. to i plus. The posil RTP area Computer, software and T Balloon Delivery DEADLINE !: V.f =• telemarketing skills knowledge to during the school year Sophoi very helpful. Daytime work at of­ rt. * Run Bv Mama 1 business day prior to publication standing would be ideal Interest­ fice Good job for graduates to 9:30 PM ed? Call Bill Boyarsky or Mike Pick­ Phone interviews — 361- 5717. ji. Cum Fun Alum by 1 p.m. ett at 684-4044 to Fuqua Looks at Duke Field Hockey Club needs a rt. *AskAoouf Our PAYMENT volunteer coach for fall '87. For SUMMER WORK-STUDY POSITIONS to Business Student Specials Prepayment is required. more info call 684-7413. AVAILABLE Interested in an exciting summer job working with a to Cash, check of Duke IR accepted. Individual or Student Organization program to identify exceptionally needed for part-time marketing Bright youth? For details, contact to 10:00 PM DROP CLASSIFIEDS OFF AT: project. Potential to make $6-510/ Judy Jordan at the Talent Identifi­ hr Call 1-800- 592-2121. Ask for cation Program Office, 01 West to Duke Magazine 3rd floor Flowers Building Duke Bldg 684-3847. ASAP. (near Duke Chapel) where {to Pre-printed classified forms are available 'to OR MAIL TO: 10:30 PM BOX 4696 D.S., Durham, NC 27706 der wagen haus IT OPPORTUNITIES _to The Feud QUESTIONS? Fine Japanese & European &We Deliver More Fun!to Auto Repair , A l , Grmr, c c 1 Call 684-3476 after 1 p.m. *ft D ^2!IE««& IIji™ ^i> **" *' " "' 11:00 PM 111 N. Duke St. NO REFUNDS OR CANCELLATIONS AFTER FIRST INSERTION Durham 682-2741 Roomies Tuesday, March 31,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 13

From page 12 PAPERS! EXAMS!! JOB INTER­ HARRIET Hope your BIRTHDAY is VIEWS!!! Too much?!! Don't stay up fantastic!! Love ya! the AEPhi all night typing - Let ProType. "The isn't appetizing to your palate it Chi-0 cen . Thanks for REASON #5: Mandatory fees have pledges Typing Professionals" type your can do great things for your walllet' ELVIS COSTELLO Almost Alone A papers, exams, letters, and Duke Univ. Catering Services is theses Still looking for a job? 24- following a 1982 court decision TRACY KLINGEMAN Have a WILD solitary figure m the spotlight with imes -- "The and CRAZY birthday, you're the his special guest Nu Solo REASON #6: Mandatory fees ex­ sons, bartenders, etc. $4/br start­ greatest! Love. Jill Cameron ploit student apathy and igno ing pay Call Sue Carter at 684- door Stadium Tickets are $14 Does anyone want a ride to Atlanta Fast servii ranee. Vote NO to PIRG s compul­ 2752 after 1 p.m ie. Call 682-4628 sory fees. available at Page Boi Office (6i p.m. return Sun night. 684-0336. today for an appointment, or come TONIGHT $$$ Money $$$ Does it 4059). GOOD SEATS ST Y BIRTHDAY Hope it by our convenient location in talk to you? Come meet JtM BELVIN AV All ABLE1 as wonderful a 8rightieat Square, upstairs near the moneyman at Duke. 7 p.m. in JEWISH COMMUNITY AT DUKE Services Offered Morgan Imports. 9-5 M-F. Other the MLW Cultural Center ASDU wants you to know. AEABMLI. L nity has evolved Wed April 1st a through special appointments. WORQPROCESSING 24 HRS .Dis- ARE YOU A BORN DIPLOMAT'' Like Attention All MAXWELL HOUSE JENNY T!! Gong.it Happy Birthday. 7pm in 136 Soc- Sci Co-spon sored by Alpha Epsil mc JOB APPLICATIONS-GRADUATE to give directions, assist confused MEMBERS FOR NEXT YEAR: On friend and I love you! Doing Tbe Is­ Office of Residential SCHOOL-PASSPORT PHOTOS- 3/ people and solve problems? Are Tues. night at 7:30 we will draw lands with you was wonderful! $5.00-10 or .more $2 00 each. To my favorite Leprechaun I wish (Jeanne adores you!) You really 493-4954 LAMINATED PERSONAL ID'S All year Attendance is optional A you a Happy Birthday' Let's cele­ must learn to shuo Yingguo hua. while you wait 900 W Main. brate together at the end of the MAZDA DATSUN ISU2U PEUGEOT though, before you break any more Free housing on air-conditioned there will k after Rainbow Love D TOYOTA VOLKSWAGON FIAT FOR­ across from Brightleaf 683-2118 West Campus and $4.75/hr Great EIGN AUTO SPECIALISTS 715 E. KIM B! Happy Birthday1 unfor­ Child ; 25 public relations experience! Call Sang Suit More than half a million dollars Geer Durham 682-0514 m/c VISA Laura Dalton at 684- 5791 tunately this has to be accom­ gross can t be wrong. We want to Towing service 10% discounts Stu­ Hey Michael. This could get ul a! panied by Good Luck on your tests! buy SATISFACTION We need inves­ dents and employees all work hand. Can this get out of han 'Oh VOTE NO ON PIRG FUNDING AND tors Interested? Write BAR Box yes! Thanks for a great year SAVE YOURSELF AND FELLOW STU­ 10755 DS. Durham. 27706 for KAPPA ALPHA THETA DENTS OVER $45,000. and Lust. D Pregnant? Need Help? Free preg­ KAPPA ALPHA THETA nancy testing and counseling Call KAPPA ALPHA THETA Singing dan Cing. laughing, guys PSS. 493-0450. 942-7318. All Greek Week Champs 1987 wearing skir LEARN TO SILKSCREEN Make your Hoof n' Ho ns spring musical ABORTION to 20 weeks Private own prints and T-shirts! The Duke Brigadoon and confidential GYN facility with Craft Center will offer a workshop shows on Apr 9. 10. 17 and 18 Sat. and weekday appointments. on Saturday. March 28 from 1-4 BIG FOUR DAY at DUKE' Support Free Pregnancy test Pain medica­ REASON #8: NC Board of Govern­ Band meeting' Thur April 2 at 8:30 p.m.. lower level Bryan Center. Tu­ DUKE Intramural athletes when tion given. Chapel Hill 489-1386 ors refuse to allow PIRG to enact THETAS: little S p m. in the Rehearsal Hall Very ition and Supply fee is $18 Space they compete Wed April 1 against 1 mandatory funding methods at is limited so register now by com­ important' Don t be late UNC NC State, and Wake Tennis. Typing and word process ing. Prof­ ing to the West Craft Center. Call GLENN JAMISON You're way off. Softball Hoops. Golf and much fessional Work, letter quality 684-2532 for more information. cutie I'm not who you think, but I 684- 3156 equipment Editing available, ac­ REASON #9: PIRG is a special in­ 20% OFF! Duke Students. R&R in love you anyways! Hang in there curacy guaranteed. Backround in terest group. The Wall Street Jour­ Da- '. • eflC.i> nal: 'These PIRGs are not non-par-; March. April Get away to Mountain your ; ihe and good luck on Wednesday! technical writing, biology, and Money Money Your n oney tisan 'public interest' groups, but Brook Cottages in the Smokies i. Thelm, Love. YBS. chemistry: 10 yrs experience Call Or. . la ckthereof ?p.m Ji - Bel rattier a political entity devoted to Now. $104 wekend for 2. $130 Jeannie. 586-0310. 7-5 Yo. Flapjack, wnat it is. slap slap' If you see JENNY TENG today be vin The MoneyMan Below the attainment of certain fixed weekend for 4 FIREPLACES 704- Yeeaaahh. I just needed a hat. ana sure to wish her a happy 22nd Room STUDEN PAPERS PROFESSION- 586- 4329 ideological objectives " some sandwiches — for a couple birthday1 (ZHONGWENKE would be ALLY TYPED in the style EUGENF MORRIS JEROME IS BACK! -•DANCING DEVIL TRYOUTS" bucks Ummm ahhh. well, let me bubao without you'l We love you! Triangle Business Services 714 HUMOR EXTRAVAGANZA. Tues. Biloxi B jes April 1 and 12 Page -•DANCING DEVILS TRYOUTS-' get back to you on that You need XXX Kevin and Tami Ninth St 286-5485 April 7 8 p.m. Page And. Tickets an attitude readjustment on top of Audi ton m. Sign up at the Bryan Center Info. Reason #12 Vote for Individual $2 Now at Page Box Office your head Cletus Aacckk! Happy JUST YOUR TYPE Word Processing Desk for more info!! DUKE'S HOT Rights Vote against mandatory Reason #10. PIRG proj- LOST: Silver earring (teardrop Birthday. Glenn, this is almost as Service will type your papers, dis­ NEW PRILL TEAM!! funflmg of NCPIRG ects most of which d off- shaped | somewhere on West long as a PPS memo. Ackl sertations, letters, etc. quickly and and have ttie rei PLEASE call 684-0570 anytime. professionally. Emergency typing students 1 to Duke welcome. 489-8700 (call 24 K K Sat. night was awesome It's TO THF_ TAN GIRL IN THE HOT TUBS my sho Missy See page 7

TRANSFERS PRESS-ON LETTERS AD ST. TICAL

Traditional metal frames available in a variety of colors including tortoiseshell. T-SHIRTS SWEATS BROOKS FINE DESIQNS JACKETS 1309 Christian St. Rec-Specs in Stock C\PS VISORS beside Bojangles 20% Discount PAIMTERSCAPS Hillsborough Road Plan Available OPEN 383-4310 10-6 Mon-Fri Complete Rx Only 286-4347 909 BROAD ST., DURHAM 2 BLOCKS FROM EAST CAMPUS

John and Sue from Duke welcome the community to CHINA INN The Blackburn Literary festival presents:

•SZECHUAN-HUNAN-PEKING-CANTONESE- •SALT, OIL or MSG FREE DISHES- Reynolds Price Daily Luncheon Specials -Mixed Beverages- Fri 11:30-10:30

TO THE CLASS OF NEED IDEAS AND ADVICE 1988 IN PLANNING PRE-REGISTRATION?

THE UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM Juniors are eligible for the Faculty IN HUMAN DEVELOPMENT Scholarship Award for 1987-88, awarded by the Duke faculty in recognition of • offers core and recommended elected courses academic excellence and independent supplementing a variety of disciplinary majors; scholarship beyond regular class work. • is not a major but offers an optional certificate Each department may nominate 1-2 of interest to pre-professional students;

candidates for the Award. If you would • provides a Research Apprenticeship and like to be considered, contact your related Senior Seminar;

department Chairman and/or Director • supplements courses and research experience of Undergraduate Studies as soon as with useful advice for curriculum planning, possible. Completed applications include a seminar series, and related social events; and

a 3-5 page essay concerning your • welcomes inquiries. educational goals and how you have designed your academic program to Read the entry on the Human Development Program in the achieve them (including such activities Undergraduate Bulletin. Request a program brochure from any as independent study, research, field university counseling office, any departmental director of study, creative writing). Completed undergraduate studies; or call 684-6118. applications will be submitted by departments and are due by 3:00 on The core program's first course offered especially for Sophomores, Fall 1987, is: Monday, April 6,1987. "Human Development" -The Faculty Scholarship Committee IDC/Soc/Psy 124, TTh 12:10-1:25 of the Academic Council Maddox (sociology VNels Anderson (physiology) Tuesday, March 31,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 15 Sports

NCAA Basketball Smart leads Indiana to NCAA title Indiana 74, Syracuse 73 By WILLIAM RHODEN N.Y. Times News Service NEW ORLEANS — Indiana, trailing most of the sec­ Today ond half and seemingly headed for an upset loss to Syra­ cuse, made a startling comeback Monday night and won Baseball vs. N.C. State, Jack Coombs Field, 3 the National Collegiate Athletic Association champion p.m. ship in what will go down as a testament to perserverance. Keith Smart hit a 17-foot jumper with five seconds left to give Indiana a 74-73 victory and its third national Wednesday championship under Coach Bobby Knight, who has never lost in a title game. Smart, who was voted the Final Four tournament's Baseball vs. Campbell, Jack Coombs Field, 3 p.m. outstanding player, put on a phenomenal one-man per­ formance in the last four minutes. The 6-1 junior trans­ Women's tennis vs. North Carolina, West Campus fer guard scored 12 of Indiana's last 15 points and fin­ courts, 2 p.m. ished with 21. After Smart hit the jumper, Syracuse inexplicably let Lacrosse vs. Delaware, Duke Lacrosse Field, 3 the clock run down to one second before calling timeout. p.m. Then Smart intercepted Derrick Coleman's full-court pass as time ran out. "I don't believe this," Smart said afterward, "It won't Thursday hit me until next week. I've got to sit down and let this sink in." Men's tennis at North Carolina, Chapel Hill Asked about his second-half performance, Smart said a conversation with Knight during the intermission helped to motivate him. "In the locker room, coach told me I had to get involved in the offense," Smart said, "not Friday just get involved, but penetrate, dish off and score." , who made seven 3-point shots, led the Baseball at Maryland, College Park, Md., 1:30 Hoosiers with 23 points. p.m. Sherman Douglas led Syracuse with 20 points, and had 18. Coleman, the Orangemen's 6-9 Men's golf in Furman Invitational, Greenville, S.C. freshman forward, pulled down a rugged 19 rebounds, two short ofthe championship game record. JANE RIBADENEYRA/THE CHRONICLE Women's golf in Duke Spring Invitational, Duke Indiana, co-champion in the Big Ten Conference with With Indiana's one-point victory over Syracuse Mon­ day night, Bobby Knight won his third national cham­ golf course Purdue, finished with a 30-4 record. Syracuse, which tied for first with Georgetown and Pittsburgh in the Big pionship as the Hoosiers' coach. East, wound up 31-7. Men's track in Colonial Relays, Williamsburg, Va. Indiana trailed, 72-70, with 38 seconds left and In fact, Indiana, which prides itself on controlling pace Howard Triche, a 6-5 forward, on the line for Syracuse. and tempo, was like a fighter trying to fend off a savage Women's track in Davidson Invitational, David­ Triche hit the front end of a one and one but missed attack. son, N.C. the second. Smart raced downcourt and hit a short + The two questions going into the game were: which jumper to make it 73-72 with 32 seconds left. team's front line would control the inside and who, if Smart then fouled Coleman, who missed the front end anyone, on Syracuse could play the kind of defense that Saturday of the one and one. Indiana ran the clock down, then could control Alford? Smart took the ball on the left side of the basket and hit As it turned out, Syracuse conceded the outside shot to Men's tennis vs. South Carolina, West Campus the winning jumper. Alford, occasionally harassing him wih a box and one courts Indiana had trailed by 61-56 with 7:22 left. But the with Triche, Stevie Thompson and Douglas taking turns Hoosiers, capitalizing on Syracuse's cold shooting and doing the shadowing. turnovers, made a 7-2 run to tie the game at 63-63 with Syracuse's major concern was taking away the Women's golf in Duke Spring Invitational, Duke 4:56 left. Hoosiers' inside game of , the 6-10 center, golf course Syracuse took a 70-68 lead, but Smart tied it on a , the 6-7 forward, and , the reverse layup. 6-6 swingman. Lacrosse at Maryland Baltimore County, Bal­ Triche hit an off-balance 3-footer in the lane to give Indiana made up its mind to fight for the inside, but it timore, Md., 2 p.m. Sryacuse a 72-70 lead with 56 seconds left, setting the was a battle that the Hoosiers lost. Seikaly, the Orange's stage for the Hoosiers' final surge. 6-10 center, and Coleman were simply too strong and Baseball at Maryland, College Park, Md., 1:30 Indiana took a 34-33 halftime lead on a 3-point shot by quick. Alford. But despite the lead, Indiana went into the Syracuse outrebounded the Hoosiers, 25-19, in the p.m. locker room with a troubled sense of not having the first half, 9-3 on the offensive boards. Coleman had a game under control. 13 rebounds and 6 points. Ex-Yank Nettles gains new life as Atlanta first baseman

once did. Although he has not signed a contract, he has "The way he's played, he was deserving," Tanner said. WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — There is a little more already said he expected to play for about $200,000. A "He did more than we thought he would. He showed us a gray around the temples, perhaps even a few more lines year ago, he earned $937,000 from the San Diego fast bat from the word go. and we couldn't believe how across the forehead. But Graig Nettles said Monday he Padres, who chose not to re-sign him after three seasons. well he played first. He wasn't Mattingly, but he was could not allow himself to consider retirement. Five Nettles clearly forced the Braves to keep him, learning more than adequate." years after George Steinbrenner said he was in "the twi­ to play first base, then hitting a hot offensive streak. He Nettles found the Braves to his liking, too. They are a light of his career," Nettles, now 42 years old, has won a began the day batting .429 with six home runs but was 7 team burdened with problems — Damaso Garcia, the job with the Atlanta Braves. for 9 in his last three games with five homers, three of second baseman, is out with a knee injury, and Bob The announcement came earlier Monday, before the them coming Sunday against Baltimore. Horner, the regular first baseman, is an unsigned free Yankees lost to the Braves, 6-1, extending their losing "A 42-year-old guy hitting three home runs and get­ agent — but he has given them stability as a reserve. • streak to five straight. Nettles had been called into the ting a curtain call in a spring training game," said his Charles Hudson may have earned himself a ticket to office of the Atlanta manager, Chuck Tanner, unaware teammate, Ted Simmons, recalling the feat. "That was a the Yankee bullpen, pitching five and two-thirds innings that a decision had been made. beautiful thing." and allowing seven hits and three walks. He struck out "I told him that we had traded him to the Yankees," Nettles, who spent 11 seasons at third base with th-i seven, but he seemed to lose control of his fastball in the Tanner said. "He just looked at me, and then he smiled. Yankees and occasionally sparred with Steinbrenner, sixth inning when he allowed four runs and hit a batter. He was happy." the team's owner, had an almost youthful glow about Manager Lou Piniella has said he will announce his fifth It completed a comeback of sorts for Nettles, who was him as he stood near the Atlanta dugout Monday. But it starting pitcher — it will be either Hudson or Joe Niekro invited to the Braves' camp Feb. 25 after failing to was a first baseman's glove that he held, and he under­ — on Wednesday. . . . The Detroit Tigers, who will be receive much response from other teams he had contac­ stands that it is his new-found versatility that makes hosts to the Yankees in the season-opening series April ted, including the Yankees. Nettles said he took an all- him valuable. 6, 8 and 9, said their starters will be Jack Morris, Walt night flight from his home in San Diego, arriving in Flor­ • Nettles will back up Ken Oberkfell at third and Gerald Terrell and Dan Petry. The Yankees' pitchers will be ida an hour before the Braves worked out. Perry at first, but he also will give the Braves a potent Dennis Rasmussen, Tommy John and Bob Tewksbury. "I just didn't want to retire," he said. "I can't think of a bat off the bench. He had 15 home runs last season for . . . Rick Rhoden will pitch in a minor-league game Tues­ better way to make a living than playing baseball." the Padres, the 17th consecutive season he has hit at day in his first start since straining a muscle in his left side two weeks ago. But Nettles will surely not make the kind of money he least that many. Page 16 THE CHRONICLE Tuesday, March 31,1987 From fast food to fast break, Indiana's Smart excels

NEW ORLEANS — Of all the players in the Final "We were playing a big game, and we all got strange Four, only one has talked openly about going out for George Vecsey haircuts," Smart recalled. "Mine had a line going around some crawfish etouffee. His name is Keith Smart, as fit­ my head, with an arrow shaved in the back. Also, I wore ting a last name as you'll ever find in the Final Four. a lot of gold chains. Keith Smart is both the insider and the outsider in "Plus, he was a 3.0 student when he came to us, and we "An hour before the game, some of the guys told me this tournament. He is the "home boy" from Baton found he was a second-year junior, so he had to take 18 Coach Knight was in the locker room. I said, 'What?' I Rouge, who expected to have 40 friends and relatives credits last semester, which is three to five credits more went in there, and at that time, he was not allowed to pulling for him against Syracuse Monday night, but he than normal." talk to you, so he said to my coach, 'Is that the way you is also the player who came the farthest in this jambo­ The "5-6 guy" was Keith Smart going into his senior let your dah-dah players wear their hair?' I said 'I proba­ ree, having been packaging hamburgers at a McDonald's year in high school, having been 5-3 the year before. bly won't go to Indiana.' " as a career three years ago. Smart broke his wrist as a senior.and played in only But Knight must have seen the intelligence along with His odyssey from fast food to crawfish etouffee is all three games, apparently canceling any minute chance to the Jordanesque vertical leaps, and he offered Smart a the more intriguing because he made Bobby Knight play college ball. He grew to be 5-9 by graduation, at scholarship. The hair grew back, and the gold chains reverse some of his tendencies — not liking junior col­ which time his parents gave him a motorcycle, which he and the motorcycle never reached Bloomington. "Nobody lege players, not wanting players from outside the Mid­ promptly crashed, breaking his wrist again. told me," Smart said. "I just knew." west, and not being overly fond of players with eccentric This is not the best way to reach the Final Four. When He and Garrett arrived last summer, after Andre Har­ hair styles and gold chains. the wrist healed, Smart used it at the local McDonald's, ris dropped out of school, leaving a bad first impression If pressed, Knight probably wouldn't like players who playing at the Baton Rouge Sports Academy in his spare of junior-college transfers. Smart admitted, "Dean and I order crawfish etouffee, either. That gristle under time and attracting the attention of Lester Roberts, a got tired about hearing about junior college players, like Knight's bright red brand-name sweater undoubtedly recreation worker, who steered him to Garden City Com­ we were orphans or something." came from good old American food, not from any of that munity Junior College, in Kansas. He has found a home in Bloomington, passing all 18 "ini" stuff so detested by the provincial Indiana father in "Nothing but cows out on the plains," Smart said. "The credits in his first semester. Now he is back in his home the movie "Breaking Away." closest city is Wichita, and that's four hours away. Gar­ state, trying to line up more tickets for his large family. But Smart defied a bunch of Knight's apparent stereo­ den slowed me down.'' His mother never saw him play until the last home types, and Smart also defied the stereotype about play­ After breaking his wrist a third time, playing basket­ game this season. Trying too hard to impress her, he ing for Knight — "that it was like the Army, pushups, ball, Smart became an excellent junior-college player, started hyperventilating, and had to come out of the drills, runs up the stadium steps. Well, I have run up the knowing he would be recruited by some major schools. game until he could regain his breath. His father saw stadium steps a few times." One day he received an envelope from the Indiana bas­ him play for the first time on Saturday, and there were A lithe 6-1 guard with a few Michael Jordan dunks ketball office. no breathing problems, just a solid 14-point game that Knight has ordered him to keep in the can, Smart "I threw it in the wastebasket," Smart said. "I got my despite not much sleep the night before. "The crawfish has provided the missing link for Knight's third trip to idea from other players." etouffee," he said. "It gave me a stomachache and I was the national finals. He has stepped out of junior college, Knight was known for scorning junior-college players, up late on Friday night." along with Dean Garrett, and provided the poise and with their reputation, fair or unfair, for being marginal He got over the stomachache, just as he got over the athletic ability to let Steve Alford shoot his shot. students with poor attitudes. But Knight lives by a mes­ stereotype of playing for Knight. In a statement that "I think Keith is one of the greatest all-time stories sage once handwritten to him by the nearly blind Clair could be a guideline for anybody who wants to be consid­ I've know about," the noted columnist and media critic Bee shortly before that legendary coach died: "Clair Bee ered educated, Smart said Sunday: "I've had to stop peo­ Knight said Sunday, and Bobby Knight do not believe that repetition is gos­ ple from telling me what to think." "There aren't many 5-6 guys dumb enough to ride mo­ pel." So Knight continued to pursue the prospect out on George Vecsey's column is syndicated by The New York torcycles and break their arms," Knight continued. the plains. Times.

NORTHGATE NOTICE: BARBER SHOP TO ALL STUDENT LOAN BORROWERS Full Service Style Shop Mon.-Fri. 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 286-4030 All May, 1987 graduates who have received Northgate Shopping Center, Durham loans through the Duke Student Loan Office should arrange for an Exit Interview. Please call 684-3038 immediately for an appointment.

ANNOUI

COLLEGE NIGHT ^^^1^^ UIKI UNOIKSIII UMtit fOjUlD WEDNESDAY NIGHT 10:00 PM-12:00 MIDNIGHT present $2.50 with COLLEGE ID (INCLUDES SKATE RENTAL) The World of Apu 1410 BUCK JONES ROAD Directed by Satyajit Ray, The World of Apu, the third of the Apu Trilogy, 467-6000 describes how Apu attains his goals, as he makes a livng as a writer. In addition, he conquers superstition as he finally reconciliates with his TAKE I-40 EAST TO THE US 1 SOUTH (SANFORD-PITTSBORO) EXIT. STAY son, whom he rejected at childbirth, because of his wife's sudden IN THE RIGHT HAND LANE AND EXIT death. Music is performed by Ravi Shankar. The cast includes Soumita TO THE RIGHT ONTO BUCK JONES Chatterjee, Alok Chakravarty, and one of India's most acclaimed act­ ROAD. resses, Sarmila Tagore. The movie, which is about two hours long, contains English subtitles. THE ICE HOUSE is LOCATED BETWEEN HELMOLD FORD All showings are at 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. free to ail students with I.D., except Business, AND FARM FRESH. Law and Divinity. All others pay $1.50.