The Chronicle 76th Year, No. 122 Duke University, Durham, North Carolina Friday, March 27, 1981 BSA loses referendum; Union, PIRG, bus win By Sam Millstone "I don't know how they went publications don't fail [in Students voted down a about wording the other referendum questions]. We've proposal to increase funding for referendum questions, but they had support and encourage­ the Black Student Alliance in went out of their way to word ment all year from the student yesterday's ASDU referendum, [the BSA question] in such a body," Cohan added. but agreed to increase the way as to get a negative student activities fee for the response," Jones added. "I don't think Tobacco Road. should give up. We'll wait until University Union and supported Jones said he hopes the BSA continued funding for the North next year" to ask for money to will be able to keep up its expand, he said. Carolina Public Interest programming next year on the Research Group. same level as this year, but said Approximately 2,800 stu­ In addition, students rejected he expects to the group to run dents voted in the referendum, a measure to increase funding into a deficit due to the "the highest turnout that for Tobacco Road so that it referendum defeat. anybody can remember," said could be published six times Bill Cohan, Tobacco Road Brad Torgan, a member of the each year. But students did vote editor, was surprised at the ASDU elections commission. to replenish an ASDU defeat of the Tobacco Road Voter turnout at ASDU contingency fund that paid for measure. referendums during the past $10,000 in renovations .to three years has ranged from PHOTO BY SCOTT PICKER "We never had any indication Dean Rusk. . .former Secretary of State. WDUK's studios and to that it would fail . . . usually 1,500 to 1,700 students. increase the student activities fee to cover an increase in ASDU's general revenue fund. Rusk supports aid to El Salvador Students also voted to finance the ASDU Chapel Hill bus By Harsha Murthy prominent during the Johnson and 1964 in which the raised: "It was the first war ever service with the student activity and Beth Hovanec administration as a vocal Organization of American fought on T.V. What would fee, but voted down a question Dean Rusk, former secretary defender of U.S. military States warned Cuba that the have happened if World War II, that would allot a small portion of state under John F. Kennedy involvement in Vietnam. OAS might use military arms if Guadelcanal, the landing at of the fee to charities. A related and Lyndon B. Johnson, said He was at Duke Thursday to Cuba continued adventurist Normandy had been broadcast? non-binding question that Thursday he does not "believe policies in South America. In Vietnam we were forced to asked if students want ASDU to participate in two videotape there is anything wrong with interviews for the Duke Living fight a rational war on give money to charities from the the U.S. stepping up aid to El Referring to Cuba again,. History Program that films Rusk warned the Reagan television while the men on the student activities fee also was Salvador." front were expected to fight a defeated. interviews between prominent administration "to keep in the Rusk admitted, however, that national and international mind the Batista syndrome" if hot war. . . . Congress must Mark Jones, chairman-elect parallels between the situation leaders and Duke faculty the U.S. is going to support give consideration to censor­ of BSA, said he was not in El Salvador and Vietnam members. He spoke with dictatorships. American ship in wartime." surprised at the results of the exist, but added, "The nature of reporters at a press conference support of the right-wing Rusk would not elaborate on BSA funding question, "in light the problems are different." Thursday morning. Batista regime in Cuba had whether he meant Congress ofthe ASDU meeting the other Currently a professor of law "People are using the same paved the way for Fidel Castro's night and the fact that ASDU at the University of Georgia, ascension to power, he said. should consider restricting words to describe them, but the television cameras or other did word the referendum the Rusk served as secretary of situations are different," Rusk way they wanted to." "If there is to be a choice media coverage of future wars. state from 1961-69. He was said, referring to El Salvador between two dictatorships, I and Vietnam. "In El Salvador would support the national one "If Congress takes up the use there are threats from both the that doesn't want to go of arms in any area ofthe world left and the right." anywhere, that doesn't want to in the future, it should consider Referendum results He said he would encourage become part of a world order, censorship. It is up to Congress To increase the student activities fee $1.50 per semester for ASDU's the Reagan administration to because I'm one of these liberals to decide where we go with it," general revenue fund. "associate with other nations in who believes in freedom," Rusk he said. Yes — 1,799, 65.4 percent No — 951, 34.6 percent the hemisphere." added. To increase the student activities fee50 cents per semester for bus service Rusk said he has had many to Chapel Hill. If Cuba actually is supplying Asked what the lessons of opportunities to say "mea Yes — 1,761, 62.7 percent No — 1,047, 37.3 percent arms to left-wing groups in El Vietnam were, Rusk said the culpa" for his role in the To increase the student activities fee $1 per semester to increase the Salvador, he said, the U.S. power of the press — and Vietnam policy of the Johnson Black Student Alliance's funding. should not feel hesitant to whether it should be restricted and Kennedy administrations Yes — 802, 28.9 percent No — 1,973, 71.1 percent provide military support. He in war times — was one ofthe but has not taken them. To eliminate funding for the North Carolina Public Interest Research referred to the Rio Pact of 1962 fundamental issues the war See Rusk on page 4 Group, which currently receives $2 per semester. Yes — 1,214, 43.6 percent No — 1,570, 56.4 percent To increase the student activities fee 15 cents per semester to establish a charity fund from which ASDU could make donations. Yes — 1,384, 49.5 percent No — 1,411, 50.5 percent To increase the student activities fee 50 cents per semester to fund two additional issues of Tobacco Road. Yes — 959, 34.7 percent No — 1,808, 65.3 percent To increase the'student activities fee 43 cents per semester for two years to replenish funds allocated to WDUK. Yes — 1,931, 68.9 percent No — 870, 31.9 percent To increase the student activities fee $1.75 per semester for the University Union. Yes — 2,181, 78.2 percent No — 608, 21.8 percent A non-binding question asking whether students support ASDU in allocating funds to charities. PHOTO COURTESY ENGINEERING SCHOOL Yes — 1,104, 41.0 percent No — 1,590, 59.0 percent ENGINEERING FUTURE — The School of Engineering will begin raising funds to About 2.800 students voted, or 49 percent of the student body. finance a planned library and pavilion. See story on page 2. Page Two The Chronicle Friday, March 27. 1981 OurWorld $12 million drive Kresges donate $275,000 financial needs exceed $6,000 will receive additional scholarship money. kicks off today Stanley and Dorothy Kresge of Detroit have donated The three in-class scholarships awarded to rising approximately $275,000 to the Divinity School to juniors were eliminated this year. By Ranee Cleaveland establish the William K. Quick Endowment Fund, said The official program will end tonight but some The School of Engineering will kick off a three- Jameson Jones, dean ofthe school. finalists will remain on campus through the weekend. year, $12 million fund-raising campaign today at Kresge, retired chairman of K-Mart and honorary 4:30 with the official opening ofthe construction site chairman ofthe board ofthe Kresge Foundation, and for the new engineering library and pavilion. his wife, Dorothy, are members ofthe Rev. William K. Center sponsoring conference The money raised will be used to finance the Quick's Metropolitan United Methodist Church, a The Center for International Studies is sponsoring a construction and maintenance ofthe planned large downtown church in Detroit. two-day conference titled "Perspectives on Power: building, to increase the endowment of the school, Quick is a member ofthe divinity school's advisory Women in Asia, Africa, and Latin America." and to provide program support and annual support' board and received his master's of divinity from Duke The conference, which will be held in the Thomas for the school, said Marion Shepard, associate dean in 1958. The gift is being given by the Kresges Room of the East Campus Library, begins today with of engineering. themselves, not the foundation, to honor Quick for his sessions at 9 a.m. and 1:30 p.m., and continues "The building is our number one priority," said "ministry at the Detroit church, said John Bergland, Saturday'with a 9 a.m. session. Aleksandr Vesic, dean of the school. associate dean for external affairs at the Divinity Topics ofthe conference include "Women and Power The $3 million building will house the engineer­ School. in Africa," "Tea and Power: The Anatomy of ing library and provide additional research space The Kresge Foundation has given large donations to Conflict," "Women and Social Policy: Lessons from as well as space for "faculty-student interaction." Duke in the past for the University Center and the Eye Scandanavia," "Women in the Militarization of Third "The building will relieve the overcrowding Center. _ _^ __ World Politics" and "The Chinese Experience." which we presently have," Vesic said. Jean F. O'Barr, associate professor of political See Engineering on page 4 A.B. Duke finalists arrive science, is the coordinator ofthe conference. Sixty-five Angier B. Duke Scholarship finalists arrived on campus yesterday to compete for 25 merit scholarships of $6,000. All finalists will be interviewed today by committees The Chronicle of professors and current A.B. Duke scholars. The The Chronicle is published Monday through Friday of finalists are staying on campus with student hosts. the academic year, and weekly throuh ten (10) weeks of Scholarship winners also have the opportunity to summer sessions by the Duke University Publications study at the Oxford University in England during the Board. Price for subscriptions: $20 for third class mail; $75 for first class mail. Offers at third floor Flowers summer after their junior years. Building, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina This year, 10 fewer scholarships are being offered to 27706. incoming freshmen, but the stipend has been raised from $1,000 to $6,000. Scholarship winners whose THE WINDM] LL SPRINGTIME RESTAURANT BOOKSAUE 493-3700 On th© Quod TODAY! Summer Session II—June 30-August 13 An Intensive Course in Beginning Swahili will be taught during the Second Summer Session of 1981. For successful completion of thecourse a student will receive 2 courses (6 hours) credit. The student will learn basic Swahili conversation and grammar and upon the successful completion of the course will be qualified to enroll in an Exciting Special Interest Books Intermediate Level Swahili College course. The student will have enough knowledge of 25* to $1.00 spoken and written Swahili to be able to use the language for basic communication in Scientific & Technical Books East Africa. only $1.99 & $2.99 (hard cover) Students are strongly encouraged to plan to have lunch with the instructor 2 or 3 days a week so that the Swahili learned in class And much, much more can be practiced further in a conversational Hundreds of Titles situation. There are daily written assignments and Thousands of Books language lab work required. The learning experience should be quite enjoyable and the greatest reward comes in being able to use one of the most important languages of BIG SWINGS! Africa. For registration information, contact the Duke University Summer Session Office in ON€ DAY ONLY! Allen Building 121. 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. In case of rain sale will be held on Monday Sponsored by the D.U. Bookstore »«s4 Friday, March 27, 1981 The Chronicle f age Three New British party signals shift in two-party system By William Borders The party, allied with neither big business nor the fi 1981 NYT News Service trade union movement, is seeking to get away from LONDON — The Social Democratic Party formally what former Education Secretary Shirley Williams, came into being Thursday, with a promise that it one of its leaders, described as "the politics of class would radically alter "the rigid framework into which confrontation." our political system has fallen." "The point about this new party is that for the first The emergence of the new party, which already has time in Britain it will be breaking with all the major 14 Members of Parliament and a wide measure of interest groups," Williams said at a news conference. public support, was a historic milestone, raising the "So long as you have parties supporting the public possibility of a basic realignment in British politics sector against the private sector, or the private against and a move away from the two-party system. the public, then you cannot move far away from our Staking out a position in the ideological center, existing problems. But our entire approach is between the Labor and Conservative Parties, the different." Social Democrats hope to attract disillusioned Reflecting a widely held view among commentators, supporters from both. They said in a statement the political editor of the sober and conservative Thursday: Financial Times said in a column this morning: "Britain needs a reformed and liberated political "The launching of the party today may well be l_'PI PHOTO system without the pointless conflict, the dogma, the looked back on as the most seminal event in British COED CORPS — For the first time in marine violent lurches of policy and the class antagonisms politics since the Labor Party split in 1931, and corps history woman are receiving instruction that the two old parties have fostered." perhaps since the election of 1922, when Labor made on the use of weapons, setting up a bivouac and The new party, which is headed by four former its breakthrough." searching for booby traps and mines. Labor Party cabinet ministers, outlined a basic political philosophy that included these points: —A firm commitment to the Common Market and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, coupled with Atlanta case: evidence lacking "imaginative generosity" in foreign aid. —A program of job creation, including the ATLANTA (AP) — The discovery of similar dog posed by FBI agents investigating the Atlanta child investment of Britain's oil revenues in new industries hairs on the bodies of three ofthe 20 children found slayings. and in communications, public transport and the slain here in the past 20 months is not sufficient Sam Collins, a Dutchess County public defender, environment. evidence in itself to indicate that all three were killed said the man, 32-year-old Frankie Edmonds, told the —"Positive support for a mixed economy, without by the same' person, authorities say. FBI agents he would not answer any questions constant Conservative sniping at the public sector or But the dog hairs — like the fibrous material without an attorney present. Collins then was repeated Labor threats to private enterprise." reportedly found on the bodies of seven of the slain summoned, and after conferring with Edmonds, he children — could turn out to be significant in linking said Edmonds would not answer questions. some of the slayings once a suspect is arrested, the Atlanta Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown authorities said. said the special task force investigating the slayings Class elections of the 20 children does not consider Edmonds a suspect The New York Daily News first reported the in any ofthe cases. He said no task force members were These are the results from the class elections held discovery of the dog hairs on Thursday, but medical yesterday: being sent to New York to question Edmonds and bis examiners in the Atlanta area downplayed the report, arrest was being treated as just "another lead." Class of 1982 with one saying that "the weight being given to the Edmonds, a black former mental patient, was President: animal hairs right now is totally out of proportion with arrested after he allegedly abducted Bernard the evidence." Howard Altman:~~l<}3. 20 percent Robinson, 9, from a junior high school and put him in Trudy Minnear — 270, 3S percent In Poughkeepsie, N.Y., meanwhile, a man arrested the back of a rented truck, which had Georgia license Jeff Johnson—176, 25 percent V Sunday in connection with the alleged abduction of a plates. Police later said the truck had been rented in DonClark—116, 17 percent "V; 9-year-old black boy has refused to answer questions New York City. There will be a run-off between Minnear and •Johnson on a date to be announced. . Vice-President: •'•'•"•• David C, Goff — 176, 33 percent Jury awards Burnett $1.6 million Lisa Craven — 365, 67 percent . y ' . ' the verdict, said that she would donate the money to • Secretary: By Robert Lindsey • 19S1 NYT News Service unspecified charities. She originally sought $10 Suzanne Boyd (unopposed) LOS ANGELES — A Los Angeles jury ruled million in damages, but at the trial her attorneys Treasurer: Thursday that the National Enquirer libeled actress asked jurors to assess damages of $1.5 million. Mary Jane Fairley — 348, 65 percent Carol Burnett in a 1976 gossip column. It ordered the Burnett's lawsuit has been closely followed in Bill Ballard - 186, 35 percent Florida-based publication to pay her $1.6 million in Hollywood, where almost a dozen other celebrities ., Class of 1983 damages. have lawsuits pending against the weekly tabloid, Greg Mackintosh — 223, 42.2 percent Burnett contended in her lawsuit that the Enquirer which has a circulation of about five million. had fabricated an item depicting her as intoxicated at Johnny Carson, who denounced the Enquirer on his an encounter at a Washington restaurant with television show "Tonight" in the midst of the trial, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. After the subsequently causing two jurors to be dismissed, said verdict, she told reporters: Thursday, "I'm not only delighted for Carol but for all "If they'd given me $1 plus car fare, I'd have been of us in the public eye." happy, because it was the principle." Carson, who was the subject of an Enquirer article "They didn't give a darn about my rights as a saying that he and his third wife, Joanna, were having human being," she continued. "I didn't do a thing to marital problems, added: "I'm not going to sue them. I the National Enquirer; they did it to themselves." made my case on TV and answered their story. And if William Masterson, a lawyer for the Enquirer, said they think I slandered them in any way, I'm he would appeal the decision. available." "The verdict is an affront to the First Amendment The subject of dispute in the Burnett lawsuit was an and on appeal it cannot stand," Masterson asserted. item published in the Enquirer March 2,1976. Under a The 11-member jury deliberated for more than two headline that stated, "Carol Burnett and Henry K. in days after a trial that lasted more than a week. It voted Row," it reported: unanimously to award Burnett $300,000 in general "At a Washington restaurant, a boisterous Carol damages and $1.3 million in punitive damages after Burnett had a loud argument with another diner, ruling that the weekly tabloid had printed false, Henry Kissinger. She traipsed around the place defamatory information about Burnett with the offering everyone a bite of her dessert. But Carol really knowledge that it was false. Under California law, the raised eyebrows when she accidentally knocked a agreement of nine jurors was needed for a decision. glass of wine over one diner and started giggling Masterson said the libel judgment was the first ever instead of apologizing. The guy wasn't amused and against the Enquirer. If the judgment stands after 'accidentally' spilled a glass of water over Carol's appeal, the paper would have to pay the $1.6 million dress." Both Burnett and Kissinger said the report award plus interest at 7 percent a year. was without foundation, and the Enquirer's attorneys Burnett, who broke into a smile and then tears after did not defend its accuracy at the trial Page Four The Chronicle Friday, March 27, 1981 Rusk speaks out on foreign policy Continued from page 1 disillusioned, he said. "This country has administrations] has been on the "If [Vice President George] Bush is "I have said nothing to diminish my acquired a negative attitude because of rhetorical level. Foreign policy is really crisis manager, it doesn't mean role during those years," he said, adding 1.8 hard years, including the more an issue of continuity than anything because in a major crisis, the that he believed the decisions of assassination of President Kennedy, the change," he said. president is in charge under our Kennedy and Johnson were appropriate Vietnamese War, Watergate and our Commenting on Secretary of State constitution. But if this position is for and that the role of the State economic problems." "Alexander Haig's anger at not being other things, a chance to let the Department was to defend the secretary This dissatisfaction is causing named crisis management director amateurs in the White House dabble in of state and the president. Americans to repeal "hope and under Reagan, Rusk said he foreign policy, it's another thing In a speech last night before 250 confidence which are vital to a free sympathized with Haig. "I'm a little entirely." people, Rusk said that a long time will democracy," he said, adding that if biased on this matter because of my pass before the U.S. and Russia can agreements between the U.S. and lurid past. The secretary of state has a Rusk said the Reagan administra­ trust each other, but their distrust Russia are to be made, Americans must five-foot shelf of laws which make him tion's foreign policy is too new to be shouldn't bar the possibility of remain optimistic. the chief foreign policy architect. He's judged yet. "There are so many agreements. "Diplomacy is committed to a the one who testifies before Congress, important things they should be getting He said he doubts full reconciliation measure of optimism," he said. who speaks with citizens, who is our down to and cut these games," Rusk between the free and communist worlds At the press conference, Rusk said the representative to foreign countries. will happen because of ideological Reagan administration will not make differences, but added that he hopes major departures from former President "that in time, these differences may play Jimmy Carter's policies by breaking the a lesser role." Panama Canal Treaty or breaking Rusk said it is easy for Americans to relations with the People's Republic of . Engineering seeks funds be angry at Russia "after all the events China. He said the Reagan Continued from page 2 concerning detente and the Cold War, administration also will try to bring He noted that the current building, The majority of the funds raised, $7 Russia is sending troops into reality to its statements of reducing the designed to accommodate 400 students, Afghanistan and Poland" — actions level of weapons. million, will go toward increasing the now holds 900, and that the current endowment ofthe school. "This will free that are "costly to world relations." "Most of the difference in foreign library, which can hold 40,000 volumes, At the same time, Americans are up more of the general endowment for policy \ between the Carter and now must hold 65,000 books, forcing the departments which have more trouble school to store more than one-third ofthe raising money" than the engineering library's volumes. school, Vesic said. Post's Goshko to hold seminar In addition, a $500,000 maintenance The remainder of the $12 million will Come one, come y'all. Learn more Flowers abode. Come ask questions, endowment for the building will be be used for laboratory maintenance and about reporting from one ofthe nation's listen to stories and learn more about created. the schools operating expenses. best, Washington Post fellow John reporting. Goshko. Everyone is invited — especially The Chronicle will hold a seminar on Chronicle staffers. Call Scott for more reporting Sunday at 6 in its Third Floor information, x-2663. :•

Students interested in PPS 176S— Documentary Photography for fall semester 1981, should sign up to meet with Alex Harris in Room 109 Old Chemistry for Tuesday, March 31, and Wednesday, April 1. Sign-up sheets are posted at 109 Old Chemistry.

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Coupon good for everyone in THE HOME OF party. STEAK LOVERS 20] 1 N. ROXBORO RD. Durham, N.C. Friday, March 27, 1981 The Chronicle Page Five Beer-for-points ban might not be final By Bridget Booher Sanford announced that beer and wine University President Terry Sanford's no longer will be part ofthe board plan recent decision to bar students from next fall, and will be sold only on a cash buying alcohol through the board plan basis. brought several student protests, and Sanford said, "As of today this recently one administrator said the case practice of using points to buy beer and may not be closed yet. wine is stopping." The cut-off date was William Griffith, vice president of later extended to the end of this student affairs, said, "There is no semester. discussion of options at this point; The ASDU legislature approved a however, I am interested in discussing it- statute Tuesday protesting the "way in further." which the matter was handled by the But Griffith supported Sanford's president, without the consultation of decision: "We feel the University should any student officials." not take an active role in the promotion or non-promotion of alcohol." "The Office of Student Affairs, that Griffith added, "Rather than beer branch ofthe University administration being part ofthe solution for burning up designed to handle matters of student points, we need to examine the board interest, was apparently ignored by the plan itself." president, thus undercutting that office Currently alternatives to Sanford's and diminishing its effectiveness," the ban are being discussed by ASDU resolution stated. representatives and University Sanford said he made his decision administrators. after receiving complaints from parents Porter Durham, ASDU president, about students buying alcohol with Special Qroups! said, "One alternative could be to let the board contract points. Sanford said he parents decide if they wanted a did not know about the policy until he percentage of the board plan money to received the parents' complaints. MEN'S SUITS be used for beer." In prior years, students were able to VALUES TO S22S REG.. SHORTS. LONGS & X-LONGS Another possibility would be to have a purchase beer and wine with meal maximum number of points that could tickets. When the University switched to be used per week to purchase beer or a mandatory board plan this year, 69 79 89 wine. dining halls literature stated that In a March 17 interview on Cable 13, alcohol would be sold for points. a HUNDREDSPORS OF VESTET D SUITCOATS IN INVENTORS Y , WOOLS • POL YESTERS .BLAZERS .CHECKS»PAIDS* TWEEDS 49 5969 JUNIORS #£ MEN'S SLACKS Special Class Ring Orders FAMOUS BRANDS UP TO SIZE S3 $1290J A YMAR.$* MAJO14R .CHAMPION90* .BARR$YI7 90 Monday and Tuesday Order Now and Save $$ FAMOUS BRANDS V / C Gold prices and are the lowest since June 1980— therefore, gold ring prices are the lowest they OUTERWEAR 72 have been this school year.

Also, special pricing on Josten's SUITS' New Yellow Lustrium—$10 off White Lustrium-$82.00 90 T s $ 90 isssCM !i 3 Only a $40 deposit is required ot the time of order (Vissa and Mastercard accepted) with the balance due when your ring is delivered to your I SWEATERS SpoRT $W 90 summer adaresss. 90 Alsso, assk about Josten's classs ring ttade-in. :;:;::::: *0 SHIRTS* MM V VALUES TO $25 March 30 and 31 LAMB'S Duke University Store SOUTH SQUARE MALL DURHAM. N.C. Time: 9:00 to 5:00 Page Six The Chronicle Friday, March 27, 1981 Race and society program seeks applicants

ByMikeMcNulty The University administration has provided the An equal number of males and females and blacks The new Duke Race and Society Program has begun program with a $2,000 budget, half of which will be and whites also is a goal ofthe committee, Coieadded. accepting applications for 10 upperclass spots with spent on fall activities. The program participants will Richard L. Cox, dean of residential life, said he hopes of finding "as diverse a mix of people as we can spend the remaining $1,000 next spring on speakers foresees no problems in adapting House I, currently an get. . . because that's the primary idea," said John D. and events of their own choosing. all-male freshman house, for the program, noting that Coie, associate professor of psychology and chairman A series of speakers, films and field trips is being the only necessary change will be to set up a security ofthe Duke Human Relations Committee. arranged now for the program this fall. The series will system to make the house safe for females. "Our main purpose is to make this a quality deal with civil rights issues, race relations, labor Cox added that the University will be expanding the experience for the people in the program and secondari­ movements and other topics. commons room space and providing an alternative ly to have an impact on campus," Coie said, adding that Applications are being accepted'until April 10 from entryway to the laundry room to allow some of the the program should be "a very powerful and rare upperclassmen. Since the new freshman class has not courses to be taught in the house. experience." been determined yet, a deadline on freshman applica­ Resident advisers for the house nextyear will be John Participants in the program, which will focus on tions for the program has not been announced. Ayanian and Tera Hunter, both current juniors in racial and ethnic questions and problems, will live in Coie said the committee hopes 20 of the 30 partici­ Trinity College who were instrumental in implement­ House I and take one semester of specially designed pants are freshmen. Although the program is more ing the Race and Society Program. The Human courses in English, anthropology, history and religion. suited for freshmen, "we want some upperclass Relations Committee, of which both students are Students participating in theprogram are required to persons," said Coie. members, established the program. take at least three ofthe following courses: Elements of Cultural Anthropology with Atwood Gaines; Studies in Minority Literature with Joseph Porter; a special section of English Composition with Judith Dearlove; American History up to 1865 with Peter Wood; and The Black Religious Experience in America with C. Eric E-Systems continues Lincoln. All participating students must take the history course. the tradition of With the exception of English Composition, all the courses are open to the student body. Professors for the program's curriculum are volun­ the world's great problem solvers. teers, but some were asked if they wanted to be on the faculty ofthe program because "we wanted some black Developing the ana­ via computer-designed portunities with E-Systems faculty, or minority faculty," Coie said. lytical theory known by his circuitry. in Texas, Florida, Indiana, name, Joseph Fourier gave E-Systems designs Utah or Virginia, write: the world a basic tool for and produces communica­ Lloyd K. Lauderdale, VR engineering analysis and tions systems, data systems, Research and Engineering, THE MINISTRY OF EDUCATION OF system design. antenna systems, intelli­ E-Systems, Corporate THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA Today, E-Systems gence and reconnaissance Headquarters, PO. Box AND THE U.S.-CHINA EDUCATION FOUNDATION engineers are carrying on systems that are often the 226030, Dallas, TX 75266. his tradition. They're using first-of-a-kind in the world, Announce for the Summer 1981 Fourier's mathematical For a reprint of the and the academic year 81-82 E-SYSTEMS accomplishments to solve Fourier illustration and LANGUAGE COURSES IN CHINA some of the world's tough­ information on career op­ Study places are: est electronics problems Anhui University, Hefei Beijing Normal (Teachers) College, Beijing (Peking) The Central Conservatory of Music, Beijing (Peking) The Central Institute of National Minorities, Beijing (Peking) Nanjing University, Nanjing (Nanking) Nanjing Normal (Teachers) College, Nanjing (Nanking) Shanghai Normal (Teachers) College, Shanghai Wuhan University, Wuhan Central-China Norma! (Teachers) College, Wuhan Xia Men University, Xia Men, Hubei Province DATE: June 1-July 27 June 16-Aug. 10 Fall-Spring thru Summer 82 Each study program iseight weeks induration, with six weeks of instruction (except for those remain­ ing for further study), twenty hours per week, and two weeks of study travel arranged by each institution in China. Graduation certificates will be given by the institutions in China to those who successfully complete the course requirements. Central Washington University wili grant regular university credit to those admitted who satisfactori­ ly complete the program requirements. Cost for summer $2,995 which includes tuition, room and board, all fees in China, health and accident insurance, air travel with west coast departure. Cost for continued study after summer program ranges from $3,000 to $3,600 per year depending on University selected.

For further information and application bro­ chure, call or write: Office of Student Director P.O. Box 5801 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706 919-493-4805

U.S.-China Education Foundation Washington, D.C. 20003 Friday, March 27, 1981 The Chronicle Page Seven Fictitious candidate wins student senate seat By Lisa Regensburg resulted in the students being prosecuted and possibly students feel grading has been "prejudiced or When you voted for your class officers yesterday, did dismissed from GW. capricious," as stated in the student handbook. you know who they were? Ombudsman Polly Nimmer said the institution offers At George Washington University, students A Phoenix in the air a fair system to appeal and that students are within obviously did not. A new approach to campus journalism is the focus their rights to take advantage of it. "However, some Three students have admitted their roles in creating of the Phoenix, University of North Carolina at students feel you can't buck the system," Nimmer said. a fictional student, Morton Shapiro, who ran and was Chapel Hill's new weekly publication. Asked how many appeals are sucessful, Nimmer elected to the senate of the university from GW's The paper will concentrate on investigative and said, "They don't usually tell me when things work out school of engineering. analytical reporting, according to Thomas Jessiman, — they tell me when things don't work out." The students' confession followed a week-long one of the publication's founders. Jessiman added Student reaction to the case revealed that most investigation by the school's elections committee who that, although printed in newspaper form, the paper students did not know how to appeal grades. Many are did not know the candidate was imaginary. The will follow a news magazine format similar to that now asking, "How do you do it?" investigation started when GW's newspaper, The followed by national news weeklies. Hatchet, received an anonymous call from one of the Psi Phi pledge arrested creators who told them Shapiro did not exist. An Omega Psi Phi pledge was arrested at the According to the Hatchet, the students' escapades University of Maryland after allegedly stealing $15 caught the GW community's attention when Shapiro Ivory Towers from a local Seven Eleven store in what police called was found to have a fake social security number, a fake an "initiation dare," the Diamondback reported. phone number and a fake Georgetown address. The pledge was later released on personal Shapiro also "wrote" his name on an election petition, The Phoenix expects to cover costs of the first two recognizance. got his name on the ballot and won one of two seats on issues with advertising revenues and will apply to the According to a campus police detective, Larry Deans the senate. (Shapiro ran uncontested). campus government for further funding. The allegedly took the money because it was a task he had The students involved expressed regret that anyone publication was recently officially recognized by the to perform in order to get accepted into the fraternity. should feel offended that they created Shapiro. "It was university and is distributed for free on campus. "It was a dare, an initiation," detective Thomas never any of our intentions to make any persons look Jessiman was formerly an associate editor and Mauriello told a Diamondback reporter. bad or make the university or any organization look candidate for editor of the Daily Tar Heel. However, he Neither Deans nor members of the fraternity could bad," one of them said. feels the Phoenix will not compete with the Daily Tar be reached for comment. No legal action will be taken against the three Heel since its focus is different. He also said he did not although the chairman ofthe elections committee said consider himself editor of the Phoenix since editorial their actions constituted "definite rules violations," structure had not yet been established. including falsification of records, that could have Students win grade appeal Two University of Nebraska-Omaha students have fought city hall and won. A student-faculty committee that rules on grade appeals cases ruled in favor of two business administration students who challenged a professor's changing ofhis grading scale during final exams. The committee rules on appeals cases where

In Washington; D.C., itislnternational. St. Stephen's Episcopal Church 82 Kimberly Dr. Durham, North Carolina We'll show you the big picture. invites you to a Talk wBh your academic counselor and call or write RECITAL OF ORGAN MUSIC: RENAISSANCE TO THE PRESENT Dr. John Mueller, Organist

Sunday, March 29, 1981 Eight P.M.

Program includes eight Renaissance dances and works by Alain, Bach, Buxtehude, Cottperin, Franck, Kellner, Shaffer. Free COMMENT Anonymous Good morning, today is Friday, March 27, the 136th birthday ofthe German scientist who invented x-rays, Wilhelm Roentgen. A letter to a brother Today in 1884, The Boston Journal reported the first long-distance telephone call, made by managers of the Bell Company in New York and Boston: "The Dear Larry, situation, Larry. What if Duke has been words were heard as perfectly as though the speakers were standing close by A wise adage states: "Men in glass playing Brigham Young and black Duke houses should not throw stones." I think students behind the BYU goal unfurled a In a letter to The New York Times, published on this date in 1954, Lewis that the time has come for you to take this full-length poster of Jayne Kennedy Mumford, prominent writer and critic, made a strong plea for the end of advice to heart. I do not object to your whenever and company experimentation with the H-bomb: "If as a nation we have become mad, it is contention that racial prejudice is a went to the charity stripe. Do you think time for the world to take note of that madness. If we are still humane and sane, problem here at Duke because — I being there would be an uproar? Again, I doubt then it is time for the powerful voice of sanity to be heard once more in our black like you — have experienced it; but I it; for if there is one thing that our fellow land." do object to the manner in which you white students do well, they — for the most The word for today is panicle, a loosely branched, often pyramidal flower have expressed your dissatisfaction with part — do not display racial hate. You cluster. the status quo. know, there is even a chance that they And so it follows that this is your Chronicle, hoping that the weekend will If racism is ever to be alleviated from would have thought the prank funny, as afford all of us the opportunity to turn our attention from issues of scientific these ivy halls and the world, of which this was the intention with the poster at the discovery to the many wonders of the Duke Gardens, panicles and all. University is a distorted microcosm, the Alabama game. problem will have to be approached from Unfortunately I cannot say the same positions of mutual understanding and thing for you. By falsely yelling "racism" goodwill. at every turn, you discredit those people Cut only the fat Larry, the stand you have taken in who have legitimate gripes when they recent days does not reflect such a claim discrimination. President Reagan's proposed revisions to take an about-face, not only making position. It exhibits no effort on your part Furthermore, I listened with much of federal student aid programs are of "need" a requirement for obtaining loans, to understand our white peers. disappointment to your comments on immediate concern to the Duke student but also forcing those needy students to Did it ever cross your mind that the Sunday's Mike Krzyzewski Show. For you body. Students who need federally insured pay more interest as it accrues. students who raised the poster showing a to say that you have been frustrated by the low-interest loans to meet spiraling These proposals make the already fully clothed white model intended no Duke experience is your right which I educational costs may find those funds difficult task of financial planning for racist connotations? Did it ever occur to would defend with all my resources. But, terminated, an act which the Reagan college even more harrowing, and could you that the only reason they showed it for you to state that your fraternity is the administration claims will rid the ultimately result in the demise of small when black Alabama players were only truly black thing at Duke is a program of excessive waste. But by private colleges and the overcrowding of shooting foul shots is that Alabama had personal affront to me. By making such a attempting to clean up a program which is less expensive, state-supported only one white player — and that player statement, you are repudiating the quite obviously abused by some borrowers, institutions. did not shoot any free throws during the members of your fellow black fraternities, the administration is also cutting the lean second half, the half when Alabama's foul the Black Mass Choir and Karamu — to Ideally, the Reagan planners envision a mention just a few of the predominantly with the fat. system, devoid of waste, that allows all shooter's faced the poster? Did it occur to you, Larry, that if your team had played black organizations whose participants If Congress approves the proposals, students equal opportunities to pursue a are not all members of your fraternity. millions of Guaranteed Student Loan college education. But a problem inherent well enough, the white people running the borrowers — including more than 2,000 in any government program that requires white tournament for the white I pride myself on being black; I pride Duke students — may be forced to need-determination is the objective nature fraternities would have given you the myself on the black experience. To reevaluate the worth of a private post- of an analysis that is best determined accolades you deserved? No, I doubt, proclaim that your fraternity — which has secondary education. subjectively. There are factors other than Larry, that any of these things occurred to been known to give performances in which income, assets and family size that are you. Why? Because you, yourself, are the your brotherhood boasted in explicit terms The Reagan plan calls for a significant racist you have labeled our white increase in a parent or guardian's important to a family's overall financial of its sexual exploits (on the Chapel Steps) status, factors that are either not counterparts to be; you, my dear brother, — is the only truly black group at Duke is expected contribution to a student's are throwing stones from a glass house. educational expenses, from 14 to 20 considered or measured imperfectly by the shamefully blasphemous. percent of disposable income for families need-analyzing firm. The GSL program Consider the following hypothetical Larry, someday, you and I will probably with annual incomes less than $25,000. provides additional support for families Families with larger incomes will be whose real financial situation may be expected to pay a higher percentage of bleaker than the computerized report Letters their disposable income, because, in indicates. theory, they can afford to give up more "luxury" items. If the proposals are approved, Congress still must dictate what kind of need- Priorities and poetry By targeting the Guaranteed Student analysis formula will be-used for Loan program for budgetary slashing, the administering federally insured loans. If Department of Education is singling out the legislators opt for a strict formula for To the edit council: at 2 p.m. I'm not expecting the same fast those students who least need greater determining need, like the one used now by The purpose of this letter is not to pass service and attention that the four letters pressures to meet college costs. Both lower the College Scholarship Service, then judgment on Larry Linney's perceptions referred to received, but then again I'm not income families — who qualify for other most, if not all, students who don't qualify of the incident at the Alabama game or on ridiculing a prominent Black athlete or grant, loan and work-study aid funds — for University aid won't qualify for a his personal racial views. Neither I nor defending the good ol' Dukie "spirit." and upper income families — who can guaranteed loan. A less stringent plan anyone else has the right to condemn Editor's note: The Chronicle letters policy more easily pay the entire cost of a which allows more middle-income someone for his opinions, however valid or is as follows: we attempt to print promptly student's private education — are being students to acquire the low interest loans invalid we may think them to be. But all letters we receive. Space and time spared from the fiscal ax. The middle-to- would succeed in both helping deserving consider this: it is well known that the limitations, coupled with a well-meaning upper income families, who do not qualify students defray educational costs and Chronicle has a tremendous backlog of effort to address properly the issues for aid, but are still hard-pressed to meet preventing well-to-do families from using letters to publish. Usually one expects at confronting the Duke community, are the their children's expenses, will find their loan money for outside investments. least a few days span in between when a only criteria in the publication of a letter. budgets even further strained if the letter is submitted and when it is legislation passes. Students whose educational future rides published. However the "rebuttals" to A college education is one of the areas on the pending legislation should join Larry Linney's letter seem to be an A legal brief most hard hit by the economy's double- college administrators and concerned exception to this rule. digit inflation, a fact the budget cutters parents in fighting against the wholesale "Just a step along the way." don't seem to take into account. When the cuts. Congress is now in the midst of a long Never in the two years that I have been What a bitter thing to say. government aid scheme was first hearing process on the matter, and at Duke have I seen a rebuttal to a letter Future tidings not too clear. conceived, the $25,000 income cut-off point Department of Education officials are printed ihe day after that letter appeared Hold the present for one's cheer. was deemed reasonable. When it became confident that the proposals will pass in and three more rebuttals on the day after But the mind meanders on, apparent that even families at that income their present form, probably in a month or that. Of those four "rebuttals," there was Views the present as a con. level were struggling to meet college costs, two. Unless congressmen and federal one pointing-the-finger name calling Searching for some greater truth, Congress moved to ease that burden by administrators are made aware of the letter, one intellectualizing B-S letter, one Living on without much couth. making GSL's available regardless of disastrous impact of the cuts, millions of "How dare you call me and good ol' Duke Time has such a funny way, income. Now, with tuition, room and board middle-income students may soon find a racist" letter and one smart-ass comment. Moving on from yesterday. at major private universities rising as private college education an impossible There was not one valid, logical argument Today's future soon to be, never before, the legislature seems ready dream. addressing Linney's accusations (perhaps Tomorrow's monotony. that is because he is right, but then again Where we stop it I don't know, The Chronicle editorial council will meet Sunday at noon to elect editors for that's not for me to say). Tell me Duke, Holding on — not letting go. next year's staff. All eligible voters are invited to attend. If you have any racist or not, what does this say about Future becomes present too, questions, call x-2663. who's in power? The time will come — it is true. At 7:30 Sunday, after our reporting sem inar, the edit council will meet again to discuss and vote upon editorial statements for the coming week. All Amy Almon '83 David A. Zalph members of the Duke community are invited to attend. P.S. This letter was submitted March 23rd Law '83 er have children. And, as the laws of genetics have it, these kids will have brown skin — like yours and mine. I have the romantic hope that these offspring of ours will live in a world where they are "not judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their characters." (Martin Luther King, Jr.) I want my children to be able to attend Duke University without experiencing exclusion or animosity because of their race! I want them to be able to call a white student "brother," just as easily as they call their black peers by that name! Yes, Larry, I want a lot; and I am willing to work toward that goal. Won't you join me? Won't you strive for understanding, rather than polarization? Won't you WT WlltN I IS LW.W IH i\£ o»< TUKT5 MV I CMUW tut VMV please give my hope a chance? Km, TOHJTOfT «IW RtCOC,- WS. CMS ...DON'T W ON M*- Name withheld by request NUt US.. TO1CU. WKMIT IT.

Barbara Mast/Up the masthead Finding your roots in an old country store Tucked way back in the mountains of dairy products, beef, wool, potatoes and often than not nod and murmur a quick During lunchtime Faye makes sand­ one of the "Lost Provinces," as the hides. A chicken coop was even located low-pitched, "How you do?" John looks wiches in the deli at the back ofthe store, counties of western North Carolina were under the floor (to keep little boys from like a lumberjack, on a smaller scale. He occasionally popping one in the once called, sits a general store much as it playing with them), and the trap door has a reddish beard and wears faded green microwave to heat. Meanwhile, John is did almost a century ago. The place looks through which Howard used to drop the corduroys and a plaid flannel shirt, and he pumping gas outside or answering the like a typical old fashioned store: fake chickens after weighing them is still there. grins when he sells a sack of feed to a phone or helping someone choose a pair of tiered front, white paint flakes peeling off Local residents also brought in their customer and says, "The dust goes with hiking boots. the old wood frame and big windows along crafts: carved chairs, as well as dulcimers, it." side the screened dooor that claps when it banjos, fiddles, bonnets, aprons and dolls. The store's goods are much reduced now, Today Mast Store is listed in the shuts. The green trim around the windows Not only was Howard busy with normal filling only two large rooms, instead of Department of the Interior's National is not a century old, and neither are the gas everyday business, but sometimes he had four rooms and an attic (the Coopers now Register for Historic Places, so I guess you pumps outside, and the cement sidewalk to contend with a bit of danger. Safe live in the attic), but all the necessities could say it's famous. It has been most likely replaces an old wooden porch. crackers hit the store four times, according seem to be there, with many extras to boot. described in feature articles as a "bit of Other than that, the store looks as it is — to legend, once absconding with the safe Mast Store caters to the tourist crowd Americana." But when I visited the store old. itself. Another time, two masked men with almost as much as it does to the locals. which was so much a part of my family's pistols broke into the store, only to be Post cards, ski gloves, imprinted T-shirts, heritage, I was disappointed, sad. There The store used to belong to my family, was something missing, something and it's still called the Mast Store, but my captured single-handedly by Howard. and natural fruit and nut mixes are some ot the "tourist attractions." It also sells wrong. I was surrounded by evidence of only childhood memory of the dilapidated Those were the days when Mast General times past. (An old ad on the wall reads: building is through a blurry backseat Store really was a general store in the true wooden picture frames and woodcut pictures ofthe store, handmade quilts and "Pa looks younger. Ma does too. They window of a car while zipping by in the sense of the phrase. Better roads and drink Crazy Crystals.") rain. "That's Mast Store," my father had better cars left Mast store with declining gingham bonnets, and guide books on the said over his shoulder. "Do we own it?" I'd revenues and a reduced stock. Farmers area. But for the locals the store is What was missing was the social asked, curious. "No, we don't," he'd took their goods to county produce centers, equipped with fishing poles, rakes and atmosphere of a general store, once such answer. "But your cousins do. They're and a funeral home in Boone bought hoes, horse collars, pipe joints, pots and an integral part of it's operation. The local Masts too. All Masts are related, you Howard's caskets. Mast Store stopped pans, canning jars and overalls. color was gone. A checkers set sits on a know," he said. I'd always hoped to go selling appliances, china, clothing, coal Mast Store has charm. It's a mixture of table by the large stove, but no one plays back, but had not until recently when I felt and wallpaper. When Howard Mast, Sr. the old and new. One minute John tosses the game. Mountain folk come in and the sudden urge to trace my roots. retired, he put the place up for sale, and big hunks of coal into the giant pot-bellied purchase their goods and leave. But Mast Store has roots of its own. John Wilson, a professor of business stove in the middle of the main room, and tourists come in and sit by the stove and Mountain pioneer Henry Taylor built the administration at Appalachian State the next minute he is ringing up cast iron talk. Maybe Mast Store caters too much to store in 1882, but sold half-interest in it to University 10 miles away, and Dr. Knox kettles on the computer cash register. Faye the tourists. The local people don't seem to W.W. Mast, also of pioneer stock, in 1898. Kinlaw, an Atlanta brain surgeon, agreed abandons her magazine (which she never feel comfortable there anymore, and the In 1913 Mast bought out his partner, and to buy the place, provided that Howard's has time to read) and rushes to help casual comfort of tbe store for the for the next 60 years the Mast family son, H.W. Jr., would manage it, as he did customers, or to run the small Post Office mountain residents is what I'd like to owned and managed the store. In 1942, until 1973. Business continued to decline, inside the store to the left of the entrance. preserve. W.W. Mast relinquished the store to his however, and in 1977 Mast Store closed its son, Howard W. Mast, Sr., who held the doors. reins until 1970, when poor health forced For two years Wilson refused to sell him to retire. My Grandmother said that Mast Store, hoping he could either reopen Howard Mast is one of those "removed" or get a tax write-off. Finally, he gave in, cousins of mine, either a second cousin selling the place to a Floridian couple in The Chronicle once removed, or a first cousin twice their early 30s, John and Faye Cooper, removed — no one ever seems to know for who had been enchanted with the store Editor: Scott McCartney Night editor Marcie Pachino sure. and with the area for many years. Moving Managing editor/editorial: Lisa Regensburg Wire editor Dave Sorensen Howard Mast, Sr., a medium built, but north three states with their two children, Managing editor/production: Cindy Brister Copy editors: Karen Blumenthal, hardy man had a tough job running Mast they settled in Valle Crusis, and reopened Business manager: Chris Moser Scott McCartney Store in those days, since it was almost Mast Store last summer. Advertising manager: Donna Parks Watchdog: Lisa Regesnburg Ad production manager: Todd Jones Associate news editor: Dave Sorensen Uke a trading post for the entire Valle John and Faye are a cute couple, and Aeolus editor: Annette Tucker Assistant arts editor: Madeline Gartner Crusis community. Paved roads were not they clearly look happy with their work. Arts editors: John Ayers, Katy Bernheim Assistant features editors: Elizabeth Hudson introduced to Watauga County until the Faye scurries around with a train Editorial page editor: Robert Satloff Carol Marquis Great Depression with the WPA projects, engineer's hat on her head (which she Features editor: Margie Meares Assistant edit page editor Hayes Clement so people could not travel to nearby towns refuses to be without), and her short hair News editors: Mark Ayanian, Ranee Cleaveland Assistant sports editor Mike Alix very easily- Mast Store, then, supplied barely sticks out underneath. Faye has a Photography editors: Ben Tromberg, Paste-up: Elen Noto everything, "from cradles to caskets," as strong southern accent, which is most Heather MacKenzie Composition: Delia Adkins. Holly Kingdon, Howard once said. He worked vigorously, pronounced when she greets friends and Sports editors: Dave Fassett, Andy Rosen Beth Macom sometimes for over 14 hours a day. customers. "Heeeeeyyy," she says. Supplements editor: Susan Deaton Ad Salespersons: Melanie Jones, Johnnie Little While he sold coffins, wallpaper, Though she is friendly, her greeting is not Reporters: Bridget Booher, Brendan Daly, Beth Hovanec, Mike McNulty, Sam Millstone, hardware, and Coke, Howard also bought typical of mountain people, who more Hartha Murthy, Bart Pachino, Jon Scher, Sean Schwartz, Dan Willingham Page Ten The Chronicle Friday. March 27, 1981 Modern muzak and old rock and roll

By Dan Willingham fine line between being interesting Airports were records of innocuous national attention. The electric guitar and Sean Schwartz music and being just a queer curiosity. background music, not intended for twangs with that particular sound David Byrne & Brian Eno: My Life in The tribal African rhythms and funk conscious attention. If this new record is familiar to Buddy Holly fans while the the Bush of Ghosts postures debuted on the Talking Head's viewed in this light, My Life in the Bush bass booms out a simple riff. The lyrics The impressive musical histories of last album, Remain in Light, are the of Ghosts sounds like muzak for the are light, harmless and entirely these two attracted us to this album. base of the music. future. appropriate to the music. Byrne is the lead singer, guitarist and Each track is expertly executed as a We are certain of one thing: it is not songwriter of the Talking Heads, rhythmic jam of synthesizers, guitars, pure pop for now people. The record The Kingbees even cover some songs earning the respect of his peers in each basses and percussion. The combination demonstrates Eno's masterful written by early rockers. They do a very role. Eno is currently the producer ofthe creates an interesting groove over which command ofthe recording studio as well nice job of Buddy Holly's "Wishing" and Talking Heads (and has been for their Eno has tape-spliced pieces of voices as Eno and Byrne's creative relation­ Carl Perkins' "Boppin' the Blues." The last three albums), but has come by his from a variety of recorded sources. One ship. But their artistic vision is too band also shows that they are capable of fame through other means. cut features the wails of a Lebanese personal for us to realize at the same writing catchy songs themselves, mountain singer, another features the time, leaving this record to be filed with demonstrated on the title track and on As an avant-garde composer of voice of an exorcist and another uses the the other boring curiosities of rock "She Can't 'Make Up' Her Mind." The electronic music, as a collaborator with sermon of a Baptist preacher. music. band's only attempt at a slower-paced Robert Fripp and David Bowie (the Low This all adds up to some very different song, "How Can I Love You," works well and Heroes Ips) and as a multi-media music. The funkiness of each track too, showing a side to The Kingbees not The Kingbees: The Big Rock often enough revealed. artist, Eno has become a figure of grabs hold of you for about 20 seconds The Kingbees second album, The Big influence in experimental music and art. and the voice loop may push the interest Rock, has the crisp guitar and simple This album has a lot of very enjoyable Obviously, we had no idea what to level of the cut up to about a minute, blues progressions that earmarked early tunes and makes good listening in expect as the result of leaving these two after which the repetition of the rhythm rock. The album has much the same appropriate amounts. alone in a recording studio. becomes boring. sound as the group's first lp, The Hear these albums reviewed on Helter The record is indeed bizarre. It walks a Eno's Music for Films and Music for Kingbees, which brought the band some Skelter, Sunday at 7 p.m. on WDUK.

THE Daily Crosswordb,Do«th«EE

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DOWN 43 Lamb's dad Yesterday s Puzzle Solved: 1 Sweetsop 46 TV's Dan lu u • Gi'Sl Miili-lnM B"]ATL[D 2 Breathe and family IF IATTI 0TARvl AM IF. heavily 49 De Havil- 3 Division land iiii'isii] ana uuinaaa 51 Brigitte 4 Ripening 54 Prevent gnciDiis HQiDBdHija agent 56 Despots 5 "— Rae" 57 Port, e.g. i; A II 1 1 '•• V h 1 • A: 6 Earned 58 Towel words HI A i; s • h It AiN I Is ,: 7 Rushed in 59 Amerind i W N t M E •• 1 .'•,• I) N S H 1 MH I 8 Castle 60 Golf hazard fc K A < I's .,Al ! feature 61 Hitter of Ssll IJ N 1) s 1 A < 4 fill! 9 Glass 359 homers liO li I) t; A;:_ TIN . squares 62 Cruising SHOE by Jeff MocNelly IFF E ^•8 M E s TBs" AJG" 10 Spring 63 Sibyl flower 64 Ms Novak Fill out and D Enclosing payment neturnthe D Mime later. ^^r enclosed card D Bill my hustendJ^F today! 1 2 3 A 1 1 a • u 13 u 1/ 1" . " " m ?e 1"• ^H"' 34 ttttWI I PEANUTS by Charles Schutz " • tt Hi'''' 46 H " a WHAT ARE YOU POING HERE I THOUGHT/ALL WE NEEP " ; M 1 ON THE PLAYERS' BENCH, YOU MI6HT/ YOU F0E,CHUCK, • " 1 CHUCK? YOU'RE SUPPOSE? NEEP A I IS TO SELL 58 61 H 63 TO BE SELLING POPCORN! SPARE 1 THE POPCORN PITCHER . 67 . H ;i 1" 91981 by Chicago Tribune-N.Y. News Synd. Inc. 3/IT/H All Rights Reserved Friday, March 27, 1981 The Chronicle Page Eleven The Fourposter: witty and well presented By Madeline Gartner Playmakers Repretory Company. The minimally from scene to scene, it was from his dance by 4 a.m., the audience "I've never seen a man before — play, directed by Peter Bennett with easy to see the years go by. Small begins to worry along with the parents completely. Never." Jeanne Cullen and Samuel Maupin in changes and great attention to detail and feels the parents' relief when he "Oh well — you haven't missed starring roles, follows the marriage of informed the audience that Agnes and finally arrives home- much." Agnes and Michael from their wedding Michael were getting more settled and The cast of The Fourposter consists of "And you? Have you ever seen a night through 35 years of having established as time went by. only two characters, Agnes and woman before — completely?" children, raising children, marrying The attention to detail carried over to Michael. Jeanne Cullen did a wonderful "Well. . . them off and living through all the the costumes and hairstyles which job portraying the strong-willed and The year is 1890, and it is Agnes and happiness and trouble that accom­ changed with the styles of the times. sensitive wife. Cullen played Agnes as a Michael's wedding night with all the pany these parts of a marriage. Although the play itself and the acting newlywed equally as well as she played appropriate embarrassment. Thus The 35 years are broken up into three are good enough to keep the audience Agnes as a mother of two grown and began both Agnes and Michael's acts, each containing two scenes, with absorbed, the attention to these changes married children. She was disarmingly marriage and a wonderfully sensitive each scene focusing on some crisis or draws the audience even closer and funny as an embarrassed bride and and fun play, The Fourposter. event. makes the presentation that much more touchingly serious as a worried mother. The Fourposter, a comedy by Jan de The entire play takes place in Agnes convincing. Samuel Maupin played Agnes' Hartog, is being presented at the and Michael's bedroom, with the big Even without the costuming and prop husband Michael extraordinarily well. Playmakers Theatre at the University of fourposter bed always dominating the details the play would have rung true, Maupin played his character well from North Carolina in Chapel Hill by the set. Although the set changed partly because ofthe content ofthe play the beginning as a promising young and partly because of the acting. The writer, to middle-age as a well-known crises are common crises that one can but commercial novelist and through laugh at from the outside, but seem very the end as an aging but now serious serious when you are in them. writer. He, like Cullen, handled both the Because of the reality of the content of funny scenes and the serious scenes the play, it is easy to share the with equal facility. characters' feelings with them. When The Fourposter makes for an No Robert, the couple's son, is still not home enjoyable evening. Contest

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keeps. Five new faces in the rogue's gallery of Now A cceptkig Lim K ed rock and roll are meeting their competition Application For Guaranteed head on. FaH Occupancy Avoid The Lottery Blues—App*y How With their debut album, Competition, Tom Dickie and the Desires prove there's no contest Hear Eighties street rock and roll on "You've Apartments Lost", "Downtown Talk", and the title Gut available "Competition". within walking Meet the competition of Tom Dickie and the Desires on their new album on sale now at the distance of Record Bar. Duke University;

«M RECORDS ft TAPES m •« apartment thai s right tot you; 3:15 5:15 7:15 weekends 9:15 from Our wide variety ot locations.I 7:15 weekdays 9:15 plans and rents All modern buildings Record Bar 11. Ordinary People (R) n top areas tor easy accesss to Duke weekends 2:15 4:35 7:0i5 9:20 and all Ihe Durham area Featuring Northgate Mall/South Square Mall weekdays 7:05 9:20 air conditioning carpeting, laundry II. Raging Bull (R) Starts Fri. facilities arid swimming privileges Save gas dollars with our great' weekends 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:30 cations weekdays 7:00 9:30 Phone 493-4509 Wangle Ci)mmuni1se.s Friday and Saturday 1808 Chapel Hill Rd. Ram Late Shows—11:30 Durham The Shining and Fritz the Cat Mon. thru Fris 9-6, Sat. 10-5, Sun. 1-5. Page Twelve The Chronicle Friday, March 27, 1981 Un-thtiught for the week: " 'Radical' farm workers and 'idealistic' civil rights activists are Spectrutnz just communists and threats to democracy." Hey you guys~our house is a very, TODAY VFY Big Sibs - Soccer clinic and WEEKEND Duke Men's Lacrosse - Carnival sSat. Puke Rugby Club - Vs. UNC-G of Del Sat 2 p.m.. Lacrosse very fine house, with a dog and cat Community II - Dinner and on in the closet, a basement full of Women's — One on- Sat. 2 p.m., IM Fields. Celebrate Life - Beh rsal Sun. Comm ghosts, mold in the refrig, a rose in Women's Soccer Club — Optional One entries close Sun. March 3f>. Info: Phi Mu — Carnival Sat. 11 a.m.. meet 5:30 pm., Jordan Center. nity Council — Meetinn the breakfast room.... Hey friend ractice 4 p.m., Upper IM Fields. IM Buildings x-2542. at House CC bench. p.m.. 136 Soc. Sci. who hot my car keys (ahem!>— GENERAL Women's Swim Meet — Entries International Students Associa­ Episcopal Church MONDAY I miss you. Thanks to the Licks Pukes & Duchesses - Sign up for close Tues. Info: E.C. Gym and Card tion - Open House in Chapel Hill Sat. Communion Sun. £16 p.m Zeta Tau Alpha — Meeting I gang, Lilsa, Ellen, Beth /the terviews in ASDU office. Gym x-5574. 7 p.m., International House. Student Center. Mormon), Dave and even Erica. We're out of here, almost. —MLP CLASSIFIEDS Ziggy — Your the best big Apartment Wanted PAINTERS. Summer posi­ LOST: One navy wool blazer SPEND A SUMMER by the Trivia Question sister! Dinner at Godfather's tion. Exterior work on in Gradeli's on 3/4/81. Red pool. Sublet our 2-bedrnom LET ME take over your lease! was great — Breakfast will be If you got yesterday's ques­ condominiums and factories. trim inside. REEWARD Duke Manor Apt. Furniture I'm looking for a reasonably better. Get PSYCHED! Love, tion, then today should be a Rigorous work, full training OFFERED for return. It's my available. Price Negotiable. convenient 2-bedroom apt. YLS (Guess Who) breeze. UNCLE arch-enemy (preferahly in Chapel Towers program. Lakewood Painting uniform! Please call Carole x- Details Call 286-2646. was THRUSH. What does or nearby) to lease from about and Maintenance Contrac- 0162 at night. SUMMER SUBLET: May 1- To The Ladies of Second Floor THRUSH stand for? Aug. 20 thru May. Call Lisa at tors. 489-0660. Lost from ring between 751 July 31 (Aug. Negotiable). Cleland: Meet us on April 3rd Yesterday's Answer x-1582 or x-2663 (leave Found parking lot and Bell Building Duke Manor — Lg. Bedroom; at 8:15 p.m. in Page Auditor­ message). Thanx! Blue Stone with metal rim furnished. Female grad ium — we'll .provide the UNCLE stood for United FOUND: Gold women's watch containing clear stone chips. preferred. $134 rent, Vi GREASE. on 218 Alexander Street on Network Command for Law Help Wanted REWARD. 383-1149. March 21, 1981. If yours, call utilities. 383-4126. Elizabeth and Mary Frances; and Enforcement. Chatham, Mass. on CapeCod. x-7547. For Rent Beautifully furnished apt. We are convinced that you will Cook live in for retired couple available May 1 for summer both be true followers of OUR Announcements June 1-Oct. 17th. Light FOUND - i gold-c Tuxedo Rentals — Present Duke ID Card for 25 percent sublet. Two bedrooms in Duke tri-delta tradition: Cheers! CALL BIRTHCHOICE if you Discount off our regular rental Manor. Please call Erica. 286- Have a tremendous time at Private room with bath. TV, room. Call 684-0671, give are pregnant and need help. prices — not valid with any 3265. pledge formal. Love, Heidi private beach. $135 for two description. Call 683-1133. We care. other specials — Bernard's and Ellie weeks, if satisfactory $150 per SUBLET - Spacious two Rounder Recording Artists For Sale Formal Wear — New conven­ week. 5 days a week, off bedroom townhouse. Colonial Annie S; Welcome to Duke! It NRBQ appearing in concert ient location - 704 Ninth Thursday and Sunday. Ideal Helium Filled Balloon Bou­ Apts. $279/mo. Available took you three years; Now with Fruit Eating Bears, Street — Across from West for graduating nurse or quets Delivered for special immediatly through end of you've finally made it. Hope Sunday, April 12. Plenty of Durham Post Office — Phone graduate between careers. For occasions or just for fun. August. Lease renewable. Call you get to see the sun. Next Beer & Dancing. Tickets at 286-3633. more information call 489- Singing clowns also avail­ 471-3908 after 5:30. stop Jamaica. — Karen, Phil, Regulator, Music Loft and able. Balloons and Tunes, 967- FOR RENT - Charming & Jeannie. 4932 evenings. Summer Sublet: 6/1-8/15; P1FC. Call 286-3572 or 286- 3433, Chapel Hill. Cottage and beautiful Apart- 3572 for details. Wanted: 10 males who will Chapel Tower; Two bedrooms, To the girl who wears tennis Got £ special messa fully furnished, next to pool, shoes — Thanks — The past Democrats! Interested in a donate blood for a marijuana bedroom, living room with someone? Send it with a rent negotiable. Call Dave or few weeks have been too club that promotes politics in study. For details call 684- stone fireplace, bathroom and chocolate chip cookie cake decent. Hope the good times a social atmosphere? Help us 2498 and ask for Dr. Chris- eat-in kitchen. Apartment has Bill at 383-5430. . . ..$3.98. Call the Cookie are just beginning. Here's to revitalize the Young Demo­ Wanted: Non-smoking males two bedrooms, two bath­ Factory, 286-2628. _ Sublease — 1 -bedr., 1-bath apt. you and not having to sleep as crats Club of Duke! Drop by as subjects in paid EPA rooms, kitchen and sitting Rent $225/mo. Available May much. Love, — The Guy Who our study break 7-7:30 p.m. SCREEN PRINTED T- room. Both are 1 xh blocks from experiments on the UNC-CH 1st. Option to renew lease at Wears Sneakers. Monday, March 30 in the campus. Total time commit­ SHIRTS by professionals! E. Campus and have lots of summer's end. Purchase of Alumni Lounge, Union ment is 10-15 hours, including Low prices, superior quality! windows. Must be willing to furniture optional. Call Jim, Happy birthday, Lynn! Now May references from pleased sign 12 month lease starting Building. a free physical examination. 383-4250. Persist! that you're 19, you're a mature Duke customers. T.S. Designs, June 1. Water Furnished, $250 woman and responsible for Pay is $5 per hour. We need Have Duke Manor 2-bedr. to You can make the difference! Inc. Student Rep-: Todd a month for each. Call 688- your own actions. Have a good healthy males, age 18-40 with SUBLET from early May - Be a part of an UFCAS Hadbavny, 684-7039. Other 7571 before 9 p.m. please. day! We'll celebrate tonight — no allergies and no hayfever. Committee or the Publications products also available! July 31. a/c, laundry, pool. paint a few red wagons and Board. Applications are NOW Call Chapel Hill collect for Sublet or Rent Call Steve 383-6318. lots of green-eyed monsters. Furniture for sale: All available for the UFCAS Ad more information, 966-1253. SUMMER SUBLET available Love ya, bunches, A Friend. excellent condition! Sofa and SUBLET: Fully Furnished 2 Hoc Committee on Health Looking for a SUMMER JOB matching chair, $125; kitchen — Duke Manor, One Bedroom, bedroom apt., Duke Manor, Science Education. UFCAS in Durham with FLEXIBLE Sparks — Was it your 21st or table with chairs, $40; five Walk to West and Hospital, available first week in May. Ad Hoc A.B. Duke (Scholar­ HOURS and GOOD PAY? 43rd? How the Yale are vou? drawer dresser, $25; double rent negotiable. Call 286-1754. Call: Ann, 286-3213. ship) Committee, UFCAS Ad You "talk" a Hill of a lot in Alternative Moving Systems dresser, $40; queen-size heated SUBLET: May-August. Large Hoc Women's studies commit­ Personals stairwells. Late night visits is hiring movers for full-time waterbed, $200. Prices and Fully furnished one bedroom tee and Publications Board. SICK OF PERKINS? Duke from "The Man"? Maybe and part-time work beginning pick-up date negotiable. Call Duke Manor apartment. Very Come by theASDUOffice, 104 students know we're the #1 there are 33 more gigglers at in March thru May. Call 682- '. 383-4250. Keep trying. Union, and apply! close to West. $215/mo. 286- getaway to study or unwind. Miami of Ohio. A quarter for 5688 for more information. For Sale 1971 Dodge Dart 1489. Quiet is the fireplace in your your thoughts. Yeah, yeah, good times! Love, The Doors & ADPi's — Pledge formal. Swinger Vinyl Top 6 Cvl. For Sublet: 2 out of 3 bedroom cozy cottage. No interruptions SUMMER JOB OPENINGS except those you want! W.C.U. ADPi-Tri-Delt. and bidnight Good Co id. $600. Pho ie — house; fully furnished; air- Butler proofs are on EAST at 122 G-A for camp counselors at Camp library nearby. $30 for 2 Sea Gull (boys) and Camp Sandy, 383-2039. conditioned — 1 block behind TLee. You are making me until Saturday. Baldwin; $90 and $105. Call people, $35 for 4, nitely. Seafarer (girls). Serving as a RECORD CONVENTION #4. Mountain Brook, U.S. 441 crazy! What must I do to win 286-1435. The place to be on Friday. camp counselor is a challen­ 20 Dealers Selling Albums South, Sylva, N.C, 704-586- your favor? Not-so-busy guy. March 27. at 3 p.m. is the ging and rewarding opportun­ and 45's. Sunday, March 29, Summer Sublet: large 4 4329. Duke Women; My Lord, you Freshman Class "Why Don't ity to work with young people, 10-6. 50 cents Admission. Big hedroom house, living room, know what virgil says — We Get Drunk And ..." Party ages 7-16. Sea Gull and Barn Convention Center, dining room, front and back ATTENTION FEMALES: Woman is various and most at the East Campus Gazebo. Seafarer are health and Daniel Boone Antique Vil­ porches, washer and dryer, Dine Alone No More! Like to 10 kegs and alternative mutable. character development camps lage, Hillsborough. For More nice yard, near West, nice beverages. located on the coast of North Information, Call Durham, neighborhood. Call: 286-4605. interesting? Have extra points Carolina and featuring 682-6880. SUMMER SUBLET - with tospend?Thedininghallswill AU Jabberwocky squads: sailing, motorboating and option to continue lease. One never offer a service like mine. Good work, men. All systems seamanship, plus many usual INFINITY Qb's - 2 months bedroom Duke Manor apart­ Yes, for just the cost of a are go. Countdown imminent. camping activities including a old — 3-way with EMIT All the rest: Beware the ides of ment. Central a/c. 10 minute "meal" in the Oak Room or HffiSSEi i wide variety of major sports. tweeter. $275/pair — call Jeff, April. walk to West. $215/mo.; D.U. (also available for ice Qualifications include a 286-7130 mornings or even- cream & C.I. breaks). You will • Now Accepting Limited : available May 10. Call 286- genuine interest in young have an interesting male : Application For Guaranteed: Services Offered 7902. people, ability to instruct in Ride Needed companion. Full escort to and j Fall Occupsancy Diligent student with one phase of the camps' from "dining facility", J\ void The Lottery Blues—App*y No* Do you know anyone that SUMMER SUBLET-Chapel tafial and computer programs, and excellent Formal/Casual. Wide range needs a ride/rider to Duke Towers. 2-bedroom, furnished I Adjacent to Duke'Campus, and; desires full-time summ references. For further of conversations — your day, from Philadelphia area (and apartment. Short walk to West ; so convenient to all of Durham! information and application, my day, Duke basketball, in Durham area. Call Peg! back) for NEXT weekend Campus. Call 383-7226 • Chapel Hill and Research Triangle! please write a brief resume of sailing, skiing, hang-gliding, training and experience in (April 4th)? If so, please call anytime. ; Park One and two bedroom gar; QUALITY TYPING, IBM area{s) skilled to: Don Cheek. Marc, x-7736. HOME AVAILABLE - ; den plans offer modem kitchen! Self-Correcting typewriter, Director; Camps Sea Gull, House Wanted Lovely 5 bedroom, 3 bath, ocean, beaches, merits of • with dishwassher. carpeting and; reasonable rates, convenient Seafarer; P.O. Box 10976; partially furnished home buying beer w/points, etc. • air conditioning Swimming pool* to Duke, rush jobs accepted; Raleigh, N.C. 27605. Wanted: House to rent August available May 1. Call 688- References available. For land laundry. 1315 Morreene Rd! call Diane at 489-6331 after 5 NEW HAMPSHIRE private 1981 School Year, three or 2852. appt. call KEITH x-0281. 11 ; Phone 383-6677 today1 Model? p.m.-l a.m. please, call soon — summer camps — Boys and more persons. Moving Out? J apartment furnished by Metro* We'll pay you a reasonable SUMMER SUBLET - Duke I'm down to my last 250 Girls — Counselors needed in l NEED TYPING? 40 Years all sports and other areas — finder's fee. Call 383-1931. Court, A way between East points. Thanks. experience locally. One mile All transportation paid. and West Campus. One from Duke. 489-7249. Hours 9- Lost bedroom, A/C. laundry, pool. Bevie - You'r z the best big Located near White Moun­ sister a ZTA ould ask for. 4. Mon-Fri only. Answering tains of 27 Mile Lake. Near LOST - TAILLESS WON­ $205 per mo. plus electricity. service available. DER - Female Berman Optional Metrolease furniture Look for som i good times Maine Coast and 2 hours from nhi'iui: /TA i-ove. C'andi Boston. Camp Winaukee for Shepard, Black and white, $56.78 per mo. Exact dates Roommate Wanted Boys and Camp Robinel for name Shaun, Family Member. negotiable. 489-3280. , I'm looking Girls. Interviews held at the Reward Offered. Call Alex For Summer Sublet: I- forward to using my b-day I'm staying in Durham this Placement Office ONLY on 684-6808. Bill (collect) 301-881- bedroom in large furnished present, if I make it through summer and I need one or two Thurs. Mar. 19th from 10 a.m. 9288. house 1 block from East the final o nflict (but that roommates to share the rent to 1 p.m. See Lillian Lee or just LOST: Walletlostin basement Campus. Color TV. stereo, after the on an apartment at Duke stop by. of Perkins (Carrel A16). Please washer/dryer. $70 per mo. funhouse!). Thanks ___ Manor or Central Campus. everything. Your friend. Lazy AFARTMENTS Call Julie at x-1833. •return — Please! I need the Call BILL after 11 p-m. 688- IDs! Call x-1526. 4714. ___ Lightning Friday, March 27, 1981 The Chronicle Page Thirteen Burton and Corea to jazz up the Gardens Jazz Pianist Chick Corea and precedent for "improvisational" Vibraphonist Gary Burton, two of albums. today's most highly acclaimed jazz Six years passed before the "dynamic artists, will perfrom a free concert today duo" reunited their abilities for another in the Sarah P. Duke Gardens. album. They came together again in The concert, sponsored by Duke Major 1978 and realized the magic that made Attractions, will begin at 2 p.m. Crystal Silence so popular was still there. The album which stemmed from When Corea and Burton combined these sessions, Duet, won a Grammy for their talents for their first duo effort in Best Jazz Performance, Instrumental. 1972, the product was outstanding. This afternoon they will once again Crystal Silence bypassed the conven­ combine efforts amongst the flowers tions of jazz and set somewhat of a and sun for a Spring duet.

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Sign up on the quad any day this jm. week during lunch. UlDID $3 entry fee Dt*e Universitspeciay Union l- cvcnti Page Fourteen The Chronicle Friday, March 27, 1981 Speak of the Devil- Final Four: pick em Bart Pachino I've got a couple of big dilemmas. dominate a game like no player in the collegegame can. In terms of attention here in ACC country, Saturday's As the college basketball season reaches its final, See, it's not so easy to figure this tournament out. first game between Indiana and LSU is simply the climactic weekend, I've got absolutely no idea who's A lot of the "experts" are picking Carolina. "other" semifinal. Don't believe that for a second. going to win the big prize in Philadelphia. Understandably so, too. The Heels are hot. James Everywhere else, writers are previewing this one as Plus, I don't even know who to root for in tomorrow's Worthy, and superfreshman Sam Perkins "the real national championship game." semifinals. make up the nation's best frontline. They have the After watching LSU cruise through the Midwest The problem is the teams involved. There are no real revenge motive going in their favor against Virginia regional and Indiana dismantle Maryland, Alabama- surprises among the Final Four. Carolina, Virginia, after two mid-season losses. The running fued between Birmingham and St. Joe's by an average margin of 27 Indiana, and LSU were all expected to contend for the Holland and Dean Smith — aggravated by the Sports points, it's hard to argue with that theory. Indiana's NCAA crown this year and they obviously haveplayed Illustrated article in which Holland's wife Ann can be a spectacular point guard, up to expectations. shooting well from the outside, penetrating any defense There are no Penn's, no Indiana State's, no UNC- NCAA basketball championships thrown up at him and making miracle passes. Even Charlotte's as in recent years. Without an underdog to The Spectrum, Philadelphia, Pa. when the 6-2 sophomore had an off day, as he did cheer for (and without Duke participating) I just can't (WPTJP, Channel 28) against St. Joe's last Sunday, he managed to dish off 12 get emotionally involved with any of the teams. Semi-finals assists. And have you ever seen two players as big as Monday night's final will be easier. One ACC team is Saturday, March 28 Landon Turner and Ray Tolbert get out on the fast assured of being there. break so well? Their transition-ending dunks may Indiana vs. Louisiana State, 12:45 p.m. break one of Darryl Dawktns' Spectrum backboards. It is harder to pick a team to identify with than it is to Virginia us. North Carolina, 3:15 p-m. pick a winner. All four contenders are playing superb Finals Coach Bobby Knight's team has another big basketball when it counts the most. Oregon State, Monday, March 30 advantage over the Bayou Bengals, too. As N.C. State DePaul and Kentucky, three schools that were ranked Consolation game, 5:45 p.m. coach Jim Valvano has pointed out all week, Knight's No. 1 at different times this season, each played its best Championship game, 8:25 p.m. Hoosiers are capable of playing at two tempos, while ball when it meant the least, — in December, January LSU succeeds "only at 100 miles per hour." and February. Each ofthe Final Four hashad its slump announced to the world that their family dog had been But what a "100 miles per hour" game 's in the past, and bounced back. named "Dean Smith" because it cried often — should LSU Tigers can play. Ethan Martin is the only college Choosing the "least favorite" is easier than picking add fuel to UNC's already flaming-hot play. Whether guard alive who can keep up with Thomas. Howard"Hi the probable champion. That unfortunate designation you like him or not, Smith will be coaching in his sixth C" Carter and LSU's sixth man Willie Sims can direct a goes to Virginia. When you get right down to it, the Final Four. So far he can't claim a national champion­ fast-breaking offense that is second to none. Leonard Cavaliers are just a 7-4 sophomore center and aslow 6-6 ship, but he's due. Mitchell will be an All-America forward before he guard who doesn't play defense. Those two players — Here's the real shocker. Even though we'd never hear graduates three years from now. And we haven't even and , respectively — have the end of it next year if they win it all, I may even root mentioned LSU's best player, Rudy Macklin. been able to carry Virginia to the"Dilly in Philly," but for these guys! You have to love the way the Heels pass Phew, it should be afantasticFinalFour. Interesting­ the Cavs' starters just don't stack up when matched up the ball. They play smart, tenacious defense and they ly, the keys may not involve the superstars like against the talented lineups of their three opponents. hit the open jumper. Sampson and Thomas. Watch guys like LSU's Greg Point guard Jeff Jones and power forward Terry Iknow it sounds impossible tobelievetbatatrueBlue Cook. Not a great scorer, Cook will often be given an Gates don't really belong on the same court as the Isiah Devil could pull for UNC, but if Carolina goes all the open ten-footer. If he hits consistently, watch out. Or Thomas's, James Worthy's and Rudy Macklin's they'll way, we have all summer to tell everyonethat Duke was UNC's Matt Doherty. Playing well, he gives Carolina be facing. Add Lee Raker's unfortunately timed the last team to beat the Tar Heels. Here's my some needed depth. Indiana hopes Ted Kitchel and physical problems and Terry Holland's "I-am-a-Lefty- suggestion: watch the game Saturday afternoon Randy Whitman continue their hot-shooting streaks. Driesell-protege" theories of coaching and Virginia is (Channel 28) on a black-and-white TV. That way you Virginia will need a healthy Raker or a peak pefor- in trouble. won't be reminded by the hideous baby blue uniforms mance from freshman Othell Wilson. So, eliminate the Cavaliers. What the hell's a Wahoo, that you're actually cheering for Carolina. Tune in Saturday. anyway, right? Wrong. Don't underestimate Lamp and Sampson. Lamp has hit more clutch buckets than any ACC play­ knows only one er since Phil Ford. He's got two moves and only two season: moves, to the right baseline and the left, and every defender he faces knows that. But watch, Lamp will SLOWER SEASON score. With his dunks, outside shooting and mere Weddings • New Arrivals • Anniversaries presence in UVa's zone defense, Sampson can Birthdays • Get Well • Sympathy • or just "THINKING OF YOU" . . . FOR BETTER OR WORSE, Through Sickness & Health #IVY ROOM RESTAURANT^ Rain, Snow or Sunshine ^ "Where li's Fun To Be Nice To People" WE WILL DELIVER! DuVal Hackett Florist HOURS: 9 AM-1 AM 1000 W. Main St. 683-2059 107 W. Parrish—Downtown 688-7319 WE'RE ON OUR WAY. HWEEUBB-1 : Now Accepting United : j Application For Guaranteed; I Fait Occupancy You can be, too. By Avoid The Lottery Blues—Apply Not! joining Peace Corps or t See this exciting community with-; OMANO'S DUTG VISTA. Our recruiters • in walking distance ot Duke and ! J the VA Hospital One and two bed-; wilt be on campus soon ; room plans offer great value in; to tell you about • modern apartment living Easy] volunteer opportunities I access to Duke and all of Research ; \ VILLAGE / here at home and in over i JTnangle area Air conditioning.; ;carpeting and equipped kitchen! 60 developing nations. I Plus a complete health club featur-l ; mg sauna exercise machines and; Recruiters on Campus • steam bath. Swimming, tennisi ! courts and laundry, of course. 311 1 March 30-April 3 •South LaSalle. Phone 383-6683; (9 a.m.-5 p.m.) • today! Modelaparlment furnished! tby Metrolease. Rental flours: 9-6 i Sign up now for your inter­ •Mon-Fn 10-5 Sat.. 1-5 Sun. j view at the Office of Place­ ment Services, Flowers I J>ukel i Manor i i AFARTMENTS • Friday, March 27, 1981 The Chronicle Page Fifteen Brower, Brown homers pace Duke Devils win hit parade, 10-2

By Jon Scher thanks to three straight singles. Amaro also tallied A three-run first inning paved the way for the Duke two runs batted in. baseball team to run roughshod over Central "We've been playing under a lot of tension lately, Connecticut State, 10-2, yesterday afternoon at Jack and we played real bad Wednesday," an 8-5 loss to Coombs Field. Princeton, said Duke coach Tom D'Armi. "We really The win enabled tbe Blue Devils to snap both a two- needed to come back and play like we did today." game losing streak and an offensive slump that had The Devils mustered 17 hits against two beleaguered limited the club to five hits in each of its last two Central Connecticut pitchers, Jim Snedicker and Paul outings. Reiman. Joe Seaton, the sole Duke hurler, struck out Leadoff batter Bobby Brower opened the game for six and allowed six hits in cruising to his fourth win in Duke with a home run to right-center field. That blow as many starts. was just the first of four hits in what was a perfect The visitors were playing their first game of the afternoon for Brower, Duke's junior left fielder. year, and it showed. Central committed five errors and Freshman designated hitter Dave Amaro also put three wild pitches, which contributed to all but two of together a spotless performance. Amaro, who has Duke's runs. struggled at the plate throughout the year, saw his The Blue Devils, on the other hand, executed a PHOTO BY DAVE GER9TENFELD batting average climb 53 points (from .186 to .239) successful turnabout from their error-plagued loss to YANKS ROUT HEELS - New York Yankee Princeton. They did not make any mistakes in the slugger Reggie Jackson uncorks a deep sacrifice field, a fact that D'Armi played up after the game. fly in his team's 6-2 exhibition victory against "We really looked good on defense," he said. North Carolina in Chapel Hill yesterday. "[Second baseman] Tom Amidon played a perfect Weekend previews game. I think it was very beneficial to us to have this club in here." Duke's baseball, men's tennis and lacrosse teams Netters win, 7-2 all will see home action this weekend. The Blue Devils, who moved to 15-5 on the season, pushed runs across in the first, third, fourth, fifth, By Jon Scher The baseball team will complete a two-game sixth and eighth innings. Gary Brown contributed in a The Duke men's tennis team celebrated the return of series with Central Connecticut today at 2 p.m. at big way, crashing a colossal shot out ofthe park and three key players in fine style yesterday, trouncing Jack Coombs Field. The Devils, 15-5, easily into the trees beyond left-center field for a two-run Georgia Tech 7-2 on the Blue Devils' home courts. defeated Central yesterday (see above story). The homer in the third. Brown's blast handed Duke a 5-1 Senior Joe Meir, who had been out with a sore Blue Devils will travel to Williamsburg, Va., lead, and put the game out of reach. shoulder, led the returnees, posting a 6-2,6-2 win while Saturday for a doubleheader against William and Shortstop Tom Brassil was near the top of the hit playing in the number two singles position. Meir later Mary. parade for the Devils, going 4 for 5. He raised his team- teamed with Russell Gache for a 6-3, 6-3 doubles The men's tennis team will host Yale Friday, leading batting average to .450. victory. Furman Saturday, and Princeton Sunday. All Amaro was beaming after his best performance as a Junior Ross Dubins, another injury-plagued Devil, matches begin at 2 p.m. collegian. "It felt great to hit the ball normally again," came back from a recurring shoulder injury to struggle The men's lacrosse team hosts Delaware he said. "I had been having problems with my wrists, to a 7-5, 6-4 win. Tom McEvoy, who missed Monday's Saturday at 2 p.m. The Blue Devils are off to an 0-6 but now I'm through with all of that bull." match with Iowa due to a case ofthe chicken pox, also start. Blue Devil notes — Injured first baseman Don stepped back into form against the Yellow Jackets, The women's golf team will participate in the Pruett made a brief, successful return to the Duke pairing with Alan Blankshain for a 6-1, 6-2 win at Lady Paladin tournament in Greenville, S.C, and lineup yesterday after a seven-game absence. Pruett number three doubles. Duke's track team will run in the Atlantic Coast pinch-hit for Amaro in the eighth and doubled to left. Relays in Raleigh Saturday. Marc Flur continued his fine play of late, downing Tech's Chuck Hyder 6-1, 6-2 in number one singles. Flur's doubles partner, John Stauffer, also won on his own, 6-2, 6-2. Together, they took a tough three-set r PATTISHALL'S GARAGE INC. ' doubles match from John Mahorner and Tom Margeson, 7-6, 3-6, 6-4. Specializing in Aulo Repairing The only Devils to lose yesterday were Todd Ryska • American Cars and Service and Gache, the numbers four and five singles players. • Rabbits As a team, Duke improved to 10-4 following its fifth • Dasher

By Brendan Daly The top eight individual performers in each event Miller also expressed hope that sophomore Karen The Duke gymnastics team will face its toughest advance to the finals, held at 1 p.m. on Saturday. Regen will make the finals on the balance beam. competition ofthe season Friday when it puts its 11-2 Miller predicts that Rona Riggs and Karen "She's been doing really well in practice. She could get record on the line in the southern regional ofthe AIAW Schramm will be in the vaulting finals. Riggs herself in the finals," he said: tournament. was confident going in. "I think I'll do well. I'm It appears doubtful that the Devils will be able to striving for the finals, especially the floor exercise and upend Louisville, but that won't stop them from Nine ofthe South's toughest teams will be in Chapel vault." Hill, including Louisville, which has won the meet five trying. In the process, one or two of the gymnasts may years in a row. The Cardinals, with all 10 of their Miller's only real worry was how Judi Cote's foot cop an individual award. gymnasts on full scholarship, will be the favorite will hold up during the meet. "Judi had seven stitches Miller was confident. "The girls have been looking again this year to advance to the nationals. taken in her foot 10 minutes before our last meet and forward to this meet. I think we'll do quite well." she tore them open during the meet. The cut is healed Riggs echoed her coach. "The whole team is really The Louisville squad is not the only talented team in now, but she still has pain when she tries to tumble or psyched for this meet. It's the culmination of our the meet. North Carolina (which handed Duke its two run. If she is able to vault, she'll be in the final." season. We really want to do well against Carolina." losses this year), North Carolina State, and Kentucky all have very good teams. Memphis State, East Tennessee State, Eastern Kentucky, and James ^****************^ Madison round out the field; Duke coach Ken Miller is looking forward to the meet. "A couple of our girls have a real good shot at €WJ going to the finals," he said. I?

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