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Tuesday

March 26, 1985 Vol. SOB. No. 121, 16 pages Duke University Durham, North Carolina Free Circulation: 15,000 THE CHRONICLE Newsfile Soviet sentry slays U.S. officer By JAMES M. MARKHAM Chemical warfare: Iraq used NY Times News Service lethal chemical arms in repelling Iran- latest offensive along the • southern STUTTGART, West Germany - A United sector, Reagan administration officials States Army major on a reconnaissance said. Iran flew purported victims of the mission in East Germany was fatally shot latest attacks to Austria and West Sunday by a Soviet guard near a Soviet Germany, where some doctors were military installation, American officials quoted as having said that the wounded said Monday. men showed signs of having been under The 37-year-old officer, identified in attack by mustard gas. See page 2. Washington as Maj. Arthur Nicholson Jr., was shot in the chest near the East German town of Ludwigslust as he was observing MX debate: Debate on the MX Soviet tank sheds, according to various missile began in the House, as President American sources. Reagan pressed members of Congress to Nicholson was a member of the send a clear message to Soviet arms 14-member American military liaison negotiators in Geneva. In the back rooms mission, which has been stationed in the of Capitol Hill backers and opponents of East German town of Potsdam since 1947 the strategic weapon wrestled for the few with a mandate to observe activities in remaining uncommitted votes. Silvio what was once the Soviet zone of occupied Conte, an opponent of the MX, might Germany. have lost an agricultural service office The Soviet Union asserted that the officer for his congressional district. But Rep. had been in a prohibited area and had been Stephen Neal, an MX backer, got the shot after he disregarded warnings to halt. White House to withdraw from a The United States rejected the Soviet campaign against House Depiocrats. See account, calling the shooting "totally un­ page 2. justified." Richard Burt, assistant secretary Roll 'em of state for European affairs, said in a statement in Washington that the major Director Doug Mankoff (r) and his crew put actors Steve Saltzman and Marian Rust Schultz-Walters feud: A Shultz and his partner, a sergeant, had been fired through the motions, as they shoot footage for "Dusk," a student-made film funded Walters conflict has arisen, raising on without warning and that the officer's by Freewater Productions. doubts about whether the newly death was tantamount to "murder." 38-year history of the liaison missions. A U.S. Mission in West Berlin had lodged appointed chief American delegate to Soviet liaison men conduct similar mis­ year ago, a soldier attached to the French what one called "a strong protest" with the the will accept the post, sions in West Germany. Both sides have mission was killed near Halle when his car Soviet Embassy in East Berlin. Several according to administration officials. The long accepted what amounts to sanctioned was rammed head-on by a heavy-duty East American officials familiar with the case dispute arose over Secretary of State espionage in the two Germanys. German military truck. said Nicholson was not in a restricted area George Shultz's opposition to efforts to when he was shot. make the incoming envoy, Lt. Gen. American officers attached to the secret In Washington, Larry Speakes, the White Vernon Walters, a member of the White mission - and their British and French House spokesman, described the shooting In Washington, however, a Soviet diplo­ House National Security Council. The counterparts - often report unpleasant as "unwarranted and unjustified." He said mat, Vladimir Kulagin, issued a statement outgoing delegate, Jeane Kirkpatrick, is confrontations with Soviet and East Ger­ Robert McFarlane, the president's national saying that the American officer had been a member of the council. man units, including car rammings and security adviser, woke President Reagan caught "red-handed" photographing Soviet short detentions. early Monday morning to inform him of the military equipment in a restricted area diplomats said Nicholson- incident. near Schwerin. Weather killing was the most serious one in the In Bonn, American diplomats said the See U.S. on page 5 Mullin-ChOly day: Not only is the ASDU approves Missing Link budget Big East pounding the ACC in basketball but their Northeast weather By ANDREW MAYER make something out of it." is continuing its stronghold. Tbday it will Overturning a recommendation from the The Missing Link funds were part of be sunny, but temperatures will be in the Student Organizations Committee, the $135,112.48 allocated to the Publications high 50s or low 60s. Lows tonight in the ASDU legislature allocated $5,442.58 in Board. In addition to The Missing Link, the upper 30s. the Publications Board budget for The requested funds for the Archive, the Duke Missing Link, which the SOC and some leg­ Journal of Politics, Eruditio, Jabberwocky, islators charged has not lived up to its Vertices, the Teacher-Course Evaluation- Inside intended goals. Book, Tobacco Road, DukEngineer and the Published bi-weekly, The Missing Link is Chanticleer were allocated. Women's studies awards: designed to supplement already existing In other business, the legislature Professors Janet Ewald and John Wilson campus publications and spark inquiry and allocated money to the ASDU programming received $3,000 awards from the debate through the presentation of issues fund and the ASDU legislative contingency Women's Studies Program for future from various perspectives, said Julie Guest, fund. Following the recommendaton of the feminist scholarship. See page 3. chairman of the Student Organizations SOC, it denied subsidies to the Baptist Committee. Student Union. The SOC recommended that ASDU deny The legislature also refused to honor the Home for primates: The Duke funds to the publication this year because WALTER MOZDER/THE CHRONICLE $620 request from the Duke South Africa Primate center is foremost in its field. people "do not feel the newspaper presents Ginny Lewis, editor of The Missing Link. Coalition, which intended to use the money See page 6. a balanced view," Guest said. to bring a reggae band to campus. The "They [staff of The Missing Link] clearly ial staff had never prevented the publica­ purpose of group was to "set a tone and get have not succeeded. The paper has taken tion of an article on political grounds, and a political message" through the musical BelUShi live: on a distinctly liberal character," said had even elicited the input of a conservative group indirectly, not through speakers, said regular Jim Belushi appeared in Page ASDU legislator Hank LeMieux. side to the paper. Richard Supple, president of the Duke Auditorium last night. See page 10. Guest said, "The editorial board, as it is David Hirschman, College Republicans South Africa Coalition. structured now, does not represent the con­ co-chairman, agreed that such attempts "All it's going to be is a band of the quad," servative side." She recommended that The were made, but said they were limited in said opponent Brian Schneiderman, ASDU Missing Link "take a year off and evaluate scope. "I was contacted not once but several attorney general. He also criticized the News Meeting the way [it} is set up." times to get involved . . . [but] they have group for not looking harder for other Supporters of the publication argued that not presented both sides and should not be funding. "They've done very little fund- There will be a mandatory meeting for any perceived bias was not the intentional funded," Hirschman said at the meeting. raising on their own. If it were another news department editors, news result of the paper's editorial board. "The The majority of the legislature, however, group we'd laugh them out of here." associates, news assistants, beat very existence of The Missing Link provides felt the publication was worth publication Because of the lengthy debate on The • reporters and watchdogs today at 5 p.m. an outlet for what The Chronicle [cannot even if it did require improvements. Legis­ Missing Link, the ASDU legislature was in the lounge. This is important. If you print]," said Ginny Lewis, its co-editor. lator Steve Rosen, a trinity sophomore, said unable to vote on The Chronicle and must miss it, please call Elisa, Townsend The co-editors and Publications Board ASDU should not eliminate the paper but University Union budgets, which it will or Kathy. Chairman Abby Marsh asserted the editor- should "talk to the editorial board and consider tonight in a special s U.S. says Iraq using poison gas By BERNARD GWERT2MAN World & N.Y. Times News Service After the session, which had not been previously WASHINGTON - U.S. intelligence analysts have con­ announced, the State Department avoided accusing Iraq cluded that Iraq used lethal chemical weapons in repelling of using chemical weapons, but officials who asked not to Iran's latest offensive in the southern sector, administra­ be quoted said intelligence analysts had no doubt that Iraq National tion officials said Monday. was using the chemical agents again. Iraq was publicly condemned by the United States in Bernard Kalb, the State Department spokesman, said: Page 2 March 26, 1985 March 1984 for using poison gas against Iran. But since "I am not going to get into the specific nature of the then, there had not been any new reports until Iran evidence that is available to the United States at the accused Iraq last week of having resumed use of poison gas. present time. Let me say this, though, that the Iraqi THE CHRONICLE Iran flew purported victims of the attacks to Austria and government is well aware of the fact that the U.S. govern­ West Germany, where some doctors were quoted as having ment strongly condemns the use of lethal chemical Assistant news editor Susan Teitelbaum said that the wounded showed signs of having been under weapons and feels there is no justification for their use Associate sports editors Jim Arges attack by mustard gas, a blistering agent that damages by any country." Charley Scher any tissue it touches. John Turnbull The spokesman said that Shultz, in the meeting with Assistant sports editor David Loomstein An American official said preliminary evidence indicated Aziz, reiterated "the absolute firm opposition of the United Associate features editor . . Jeff Cohen the Iraqis were using mustard gas, known chemically as States to the use of chemical weapons, in violation of inter­ Associate news editor Ann Hardison bis-(2-chloroethyl) sulfide. national conventions, wherever and whenever such use Copy editors Kathy Burkett Iraq's use of chemical weapons, administration officials may occur." Andrew Bagley say, is in violation of the Geneva Protocol of 1925, to which When Aziz was asked by reporters later whether Shultz Copy desk Robert Margolis Iraq agreed to adhere in 1931. had mentioned chemcial weapons, the Iraqi said, "I don't Night editor Susi Hauger Secretary of State George Shultz Monday conferred at recall that." Kristin Stettler the State Department with Tariq al-Aziz, the Iraqi foreign Iraq has denied that it has used chemical weapons ever Sports production Jeff Ryen minister, who had been at the United Nations in New. _brk. since the question was first raised last year. Watchdog Marianne Hagan

Account representatives Judy Bartlett Pat Zollicoffer Advertising production . Judith Cook MX congressional 'bargaining chip' Composition Delia Adkins Judy Mack Elizabeth Majors likely to be very close when the full House votes T WASHINGTON - Silvio Conte, an opponent of the MX President Reagan met with more than 100 members of The Chronicle is published Monday through Friday of the missile, might have lost an agricultural service office for Congress to seek their support. academic year, and weekly through ten (10) weeks of summer his congressional district. "Based on the tradition around here, they are shopping sessions by the Ouke University Chronicle Board. Price of Stephen Neal, an MX supporter, got the White House around," Rep. Trent Lott, the Republican whip, said subscriptions: $40 for third class mail: $100 for first class mail. to withdraw from a Republican advertising effort against Monday. "The ones who gripe me are the ones who come Offices at third floor Flowers Building. Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27706. House Democrats. And Rep. Harold Rogers, another MX in with their dang wish lists." supporter, got the Reagan administration to take note of As the list of undecided congressmen narrowed Monday his tobacco problem. to 10 to 15, Lott said: "I don't think you're going to find Corrections? These were the kinds of political pressures and rewards any deals. The shopping window has not been opened on Questions or complaints about a story that has appeared in facing members of the House of Representatives as it began this one." The Chronicle? Call 684-2663 between 2 and 4 p.m. Sunday debate Monday on the administration's request for 21 new That is not necessarily the case, however. Deals on votes through Thursday. MX missiles. With both sides wrestling for the few remain­ are hard to pin down, and many congressmen avoid brag­ ing uncommitted votes, vote counters said the outcome was ging about them.

New Undergraduate Program BENENSON LECTURES Fall, 1985 Department of Art and Art History Human Development Ernst Kitzinger • A curriculum emphasizing the complimentarity of biological, Professor Emeritus, biomedical, psychological, social and cultural disciplinary will present a series of five illustrated slide lectures entitled perspectives. • A research apprenticeship and senior seminar. THE MOSAICS OF • Advice for curriculum-planning. • Skills in evaluating and communicating ideas. THE NORMAN PERIOD • Optional certificate program. Not a major.

IN SICILY PROGRAM COMMITTEE/ADVISERS

March 26 March 27 Faculty King Roger's The Admiral's Nels C. Anderson, Jr., Ph.D. Palace Chapel Church: A Peter H. Kfopfer. Ph.D. Physiology/Obstetrics & Gynecology Zoology, 684-3991 (concluded) Sanctuary of the 684-6047 Virgin George L. Maddox, Ph.D. Carol O. Eckerman, Ph.D. Sociology/Psychiatry, 684-6118 o Psychology, 684-2047 The Cathedral of Carol B. Stack, Ph.D. Kenneth E. Glander, Ph.D. Cefalu Inst of Policy Sciences & Pub!ic Anthropology, .84-5012 Affairs/Antrhopology, 684-2871

Warren G. "Ted" Hall, Ph.D. Robert j. Thompson, Jr., Ph.D. March 28 March 29 Psychology, 684-2279 Medical Psychology/Psychiatry, 684-5072 Mosaic Styles: The Grand Finale: Imports and Cross Monreale Students

Currents Cathedral Marc Fisher... 684-1123 Holly Lisanby 684-1433 John Khadem . 684-1812 Martin November 684-1725 o Wendy Koppel 684-4164 Stephanie Telesetsky 684-7434 Kathleen Wright 684-7097 Palace Decorations For brochure and more information contact George Maddox, Program 4:30 p.m., Film Theater, Bryan University Center Director, Box 2920, DUMC (684-6118). 'Integrated' scholarship fostered Campus By JENNIFER BOUTWELL Ewald said she will integrate women's history into her Page 3 March 26, 1985 The Women's Studies Program awarded history professor "History of Africa" course (HIST 115, 116). "There are Janet Ewald and sociology professor John Wilson $3,000 always people in the class, usually women, who focus on each to integrate feminist scholarship into their existing gender roles. I think people are asking questions I want Today courses. to answer," she said. The awards were granted March 22, after a five-member Wilson plans "radical revision" of his existing course Women's Studies, Deborah Pope, English, "This Is committee reviewed nine applications for the program's "Sociology of Sport" (SOC 153). "The Women's Studies Not What I Meant at All: Prufrock's Lady as Feminist second annual mainstreaming awards, open to all fields. award made me realize the fact that both genders should Critic," 204 Perkins Library, 3:30 p.m. The funds were provided by Ernestine Friedl, dean of run throughout the whole course," he said. "I [will] seek Trinity College. to critique the study of sport from a feminist view." "Up until the last decade most courses have been Wilson will first teach his reorganized course next Duke-PIRG, Commander W.H. Withrow, U.S. Navy 'womenless,'" said program director Jean O'Barr. "The Spring. Ewald, who will be on leave next year, will teach (retired), Zener Auditorium, Social Psychology awards are meant to help professors rethink what they do the second part of her African history course in the Spring Building, 3:30 p.m. in their course in a more fundamental way. Out of the of 1987. thousands of courses at this University, only a handful do Wilson said his reorganized course will address questions an adequate job on treating women." he raised in his proposal, including those about the Department of Art and Art History, Lecture, Ernst Although there are no guidelines for spending the definition of leisure. Kitzinger, Professor Emeritus, Harvard University, money, both professors plan to use the award as a summer "[Traditionally,] men's leisure is work for women and Bryan Center Film Theater, 4:30 p.m. salary to research and read literature on women. The women are leisure for men," Wilson said in his proposal, award requires however that "the faculty member create adding that women's work in and out of the home makes at least one new course syllabus, which will be taught at Asian/Pacific Studies Lecture, Ming Chan, least three times in the next five years." See WOMEN on page 5 University of Hong Kong, Von Canon Hall, 4:30 p.m.

Freewater film, "Ganga Zumba," Bryan Center Film Ex-dean Vesic library's namesake Theater, 7 and 9:30 p.m. By TIM YOUNG grant from the Teer Family and later donations by Richard The new engineering library was named for the late Webb, Edwin Jones, and Fitzgerald Hudson. Aleksander Vesic, dean of the engineering school from The building was completed last April and dedicated in Music Department, D.U. Wind Symphony, Baldwin 1974-1982, in a ceremony Friday in the Nello L. Teer September. Auditorium, 8:15 p.m. Library Building. "The new library is the key to the future success of the University President Terry Sanford presided over the ceremony, attended by about 175 people. Engineering Dean engineering school. It more than doubles our space," Dowell Earl Dowell, Trustees Page Ives and Edwin Jones, and the said. "It's one of the finest engineering libraries of its size Correction dean's widow, Mia Vesic, spoke in honor of Vesic. in the country." "The dedication of this library honors this scholar and Mia Vesic concluded the ceremony with an emotional A page one cutline in Monday's issue referred to a administrator who inspired this building in his leadership tribute to her late husband. "The name of the library is page three photograph of the Chuck Davis group, which of the engineering school as it was built to one of the best an eloquent expression of the high purpose of the man who performed before the CROP Walk on Sunday. The page in the nation," Sanford said. dreamed it," she said. three cutline referred to the page one photo of an AOPi Vesic first suggested the need for the new library and The dedication of the library was approved by the banner. started a campaign to raise money for the project in 1981. University Board of Trustees in accordance with the The project got off the ground after the initial $1.5 million wishes of the Tfeer Family and the other donors.

The Duke Center PROGRAM for Judaic Studies ON MARXISM presents AND SOCIETY a lecture IDC 139 — Marxism and Society in Biblical Studies Zagarell, W 3:25-6:15 (Also taught as AN 139, ED 139, HST 186, SOC 139 AN 201S — Marxism and Anthropology 'The Dead Sea Scrolls Smith, Tu 3:20-6:15 CL 117 - Film Theory After Thirty-Five Kears" Gaines, MW 1:50-2:40; M 7:00-9:00 PM HST 124S — Slave Society in Colonial Anglo-America: The West Indies, South Carolina, and Virginia Wednesday, March 27 Gaspar, MW 3:25-4:40 at 8:00 p.m. HST 19SS — The Emergence of Industrial Society in Western Europe, 1780-1848 in "fork Chapel Reddy, TuTh 10:35-11:50 PHL 235S - Hegel and Marx Roderick, F 1:50-4:20 by SOC 138 — History of Social Thought Professor Jonas Greenfield Wilson, TuTh 9:00-10:15 Hebrew University, Jerusalem 13 ESQ ___flE___E__ Page 4 THE CHRONICLE Tuesday, March 26, 1985 GPSC candidates speak Pub board elects editors By JULIE KAMIS After a week of interviews, the Pub­ program in history with a concentration The Graduate and Professional Student lications Board has chosen 1985-86 ". studies Council held election speeches for the editors for various campus publications. opening chairmanship and discussed the Trinity juniors Mark Lazarus, Gordon implementation of a graduate honor code Beaufort gets fish: Durham Runte, Karin Schmerler and Ray Zwyce- produce wholesaler Richard Moste at its meeting last night. wicz will head, respectively, the Archive, donated a collection of mounted fish The two candidates for chairman are Tina Eruditio (formerly the Humanities worth an estimated $100,000 to Duke's Alster, a third year medical student, and Review), the Duke Teacher Course marine laboratory in Beaufort. The pri­ Bob Siletzky, an English graduate student. Evaluation Book and Vertices. vate collection, consisting of 187 fish Neither have participated in GPSC species, is one of the largest of its kind previously. Trinity sophomores Ashlea Ebeling, Maria Hallas and Karri Neuschatz will in the country, Moste said. Alster said, "I am aggravated with the run Tobacco Road, the Duke Journal of Moste, whose company provides apathy of the Duke administration towards Politics and Jabberwocky, respectively. produce for Duke dining halls, acquired the graduate students, but also the apathy The Publications Board is still seeking the collection when he operated a of the graduate students themselves. So I an editor for the Chanticleer - if commercial and sport fishing company am compelled to run for [the chairman­ interested, call Abby Marsh, 684-1876. in Florida. Among the mounted species ship]." Having received her undergraduate are sharks, marlin and sailfish, which degree here in 1981, Alster feels "a new BRIAN CHEN/THE CHRONICLE are among the largest fish found in Barry Koster, GPSC chairperson. person with different ties could help the Perkins to open Sundays: American waters. organization." on East Campus would gather more Perkins Library will open at 9 a.m. the graduate students in a more informal Siletzky preferred to use the British term first three Sundays in April, according Semans wins award: Mary Duke "stand [rather than run] for election" situation than the previously-held kegs at to an ASDU press release. The extended the Hideaway. "We should appeal to the hours are being conducted on an experi­ Biddle Trent Semans was awarded the because, "I am not going to hand out North Carolina Distinguished Award for balloons and kiss babies." mass majority," she said. mental basis. If there are increasing numbers of students using the library at Women for "matching her heritage of "Let me get involved," Siletzky said. The elections for the new chairman will this time, the hours will be continued wealth and position with a keen sense "The professional schools have a good be held at the next meeting on April 8. during the second half of each semester. of civic responsibility." Semans, a Duke sense of identity, but the 41 graduate GPSC also discussed the need for an graduate, chairs the board of trustees for schools do not have this," Siletzky said. "Part honor commitment. GPSC member James the Duke Endowment and is secretary of the solution is to get identity from the Longenbrunner said, "(Graduate students] Mellon Fellow named: Trinity to the board of trustees for the N.C. departments themselves." are a part of the Duke community. I do not senior Cathleen Coyle has been named School of the Arts. Alster's main concern is the lack of see a difference between graduate and a 1985 Mellon Fellow in the Humanities. The award, awarded annually by the communication between GPSC and the undergraduate students on this issue." She will receive a stipend of $8,000 in Epsilon Beta chapter of the Chi Omega graduate students. As solutions, Alster GPSC vice chairman Sherry Marts, who addition to payment of tuition and sorority at UNC-Chapel Hill to a North suggested creating a "communications attended the undergraduate honor council standard fees for graduate school. The Carolinian whose life has been dedicated representative" - a new position on the meeting - which Sanford addressed - said, fellowship, awarded to students begin­ to service, was presented March 21. council - and broadening the social "Sanford is adamantly against graduate ning graduate work in preparation for Semans, the holder of honorary degrees activities of GPSC. students serving on this council." a career of teaching and scholarship in from six colleges, was graduation The "communications representative" The discussion of an honor code was humanities, is renewable in following speaker at Duke in 1983. She is the would send out newsletters to the graduate tabled, despite an objection by years on the basis of the recipient's great-niece of University founder -James students, Alster said. She added that Longenbrunner. "This issue will blow up," performance. Coyle will enter a Ph.D. B. Duke. organizing an activity such as a pig-picking he said.

INTERNATIONAL CAREER OPTIONS ROUND TABLE A Taste of What's Available on Science at Home and Abroad and Public Affairs A CAREER WORKSHOP PRESENTS Sponsored by Duke Center for International Studies Kenneth R. Manning SATURDAY, 30 MARCH 1985 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. "Scientific Biography: 2122 CAMPUS DRIVE The Case of E.E. Just" Presentations on: • International Business and Banking • Professor Manning is best known for his biography, Neil Sweeny, Vice President, Chase Manhattan and BLACK APOLLO OF SCIENCE: THE LIFE OF ERNEST Barbara Sweeny, formerly Crocker's, London EVERETT JUST, which won the 1984 Pfizer Award of the • The Government Sector and International Development History of Science Society. In his Round Table address he will Institutions • draw on this study to discuss the role of biography in the history Jan Shinpoch, Staff Director, Congressional International of science. Among the several topics he will address are the Development Institutions Subcommittee research techniques and the literary devices necessary to bring • International Opportunities in Environment and Natural the tragic, human experience of a scientist to a wide audience. Resources • Barbara Bramble, International Program Director, Wednesday, 27 March 1985 National Wildlife Federation 8:15 p.m. Gross Chemical Laboratory Auditorium • International Law Opportunities • Stewart Baker, Law Firm of Steptoe and Johnson Reception Following Informal Discussion by Interest Group Luncheon Included. By Reservation: 684-2765 Sponsored by the Program in Science, Technology, and Human Values Tuesday, March 26, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 5 U.S. major slain in Germany Women studies U.S. from page 1 afternoon an American military ambulance brought the The Soviet diplomat said the American, wearing a body across the Glienicke bridge to nearby West Berlin. camouflage uniform, failed to heed the warning shot and A U.S Army sergeant who was with Nicholson, who was was killed while trying to flee the area. Kulagin said the grant awarded identified as Sgt. Jessie Schatz, was held for a few hours American's driver was apprehended in their vehicle nearby. by the Russians near Ludwigslust and then released, "The Soviet side launched a resolute protest in this according to the American sources. The town lies about WOMEN from page 3 connection," Kulagin said- 25 miles from the West German frontier and 70 miles American diplomats disputed the Soviet account, saying northwest of East Berlin. it possible for men to have leisure time. "Women are Nicholson had been shot without warning. "If you hit The Americans of the elite Potsdam mission speak often treated as a leisure and a sport object for men." someone with a warning shot, they have to be pretty close," Russian and some speak German as well. Their Wilson, who opposes this view, said he wants his said an American envoy involved in the case commanding officer is Col. Roland Lajoie, a former Army students to think about women's perspective on leisure. According to another American, the Russians kept attache in Moscow. Nicholson's body for a day, turning it over at 4:30 p.m. The missions were established in 1947 to coordinate "I want to not only get students to see sports from Monday to the American Mission in Potsdam. Monday activities in the four occupation zones in Germany. a feminist perspective, but also to get feminists to think about sport and the way sports can be used in the liberation movement," he said. The selection committee, which included last year's mainstreaming winner John Tepaske, judged the nine The 1985 Blackburn proposals, assessing how the professor's proposal related to previous work and research, how the material would Literary Festival be integrated into the present curriculum, and how aware the applicant was of the need to revise his or her is pleased to present scholarly vision. George Plimpton Founder and editor of - Author of Wednesday, March 27 8:00 PM __***_*%*** «o*>*?o-« Page Auditorium

All Blackburn Festival events free and open to the public.

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The OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS Duke University Wind Symphony PAUL BRYAN, conductor with FRESHMEN / SOPHOMORES Guest Composer and Conductor As a representative for our company you can earn $1000 _n__no' o even more with no> investment investment. . ForFor more mo information write: Graduate Marketing P. O. Box 2407 Princeton, NJ 08540 Jan Meyerowitz or call us at: (609) 924-5235 Tuesday, March 26 8:15 p.m. Baldwin Auditorium

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I Will II ir •TTJ'"-|iT11*T*Mff—iP* Page 6 THE CHRONICLE Tuesday, March 26, 1985 Primate Center thinks big By SHERRYL HURD mately three-quarters of all the species oi Hidden somewhere in the 8,300-acre prosimians in captivity anywhere. Duke Forest, down a narrow winding dirt The Primate Center, unlike a zoo, is a "liv­ road, through a dense area of tall trees, one ing library" of animals. Its staff are devoted can find the Duke Primate Center. to the conservation, study and care of the Consisting of a one-story but two-level prosimian primates: lemurs, bushbabies (or building surrounded by zoo-type cages, galagos), lorises and tarsiers. bamboo-covered animal enclosures and Some of the animals are housed indoors flower beds, the Primate Center has the and some in large outdoor enclosures, aura of being separate from civilization. depending on the size and space require­ Other than the cry of a lemur, the wind in ments for each family group. The animals the trees or the occasional motor of a truck, kept indoors are kept in specially-designed, the grounds are quiet. environmentally-controlled rooms. Lights Although many Duke students are una­ are set to match the outside light cycle. ware of this research facility located in our The collection of lemurs was started at own back yard, the center is well-known all Yale University in 1958 by a professor who over the world. transferred to Duke to teach in 1966 and "Duke is known abroad for its Primate brought the lemurs with him. The lemurs Center and its basketball team, more than were shipped directly from Madagascar, for its medical research center," said Elwyn which is the only country in the world today Simons, Director of the Primate Center, where lemurs are not extinct. James B. Duke professor and noted pri- Simons, who was at Ttale at the time of the matologist who unearthed the oldest known transfer, became head of the center's staff prehistoric ape while digging for primate in 1966. This exotic creature and his kindred may be found at Duke's very own Primate Center, the fossils in Egypt. "One of the most dramatic changes that world's largest. "Nobody else is attempting to breed and I have made since I've been here is that I study prosimians [lower primates] on the have greatly increased the of kinds colony was organized. "Every 30 minutes, an area of the world's scale that we are," he said. "There is no of prosimians that are here from 10 or 11 The colony is supported partly by a Duke tropical forests the size of Rhode Island is other place like this in the world." to 21," Simons said. budget, but primarily from government being cut down," Simons said. "We're having "The Duke Medical Center is a very im­ By 1968, Duke had over 100 animals, grants for research, Simons said. In addi­ an ecological disaster on a world-wide portant and prominent place and I'm not mostly lemurs and bushbabies. At that time tion, a significant part of the center's basis." going to compare us with that," Simons the center was called the Primate Facility, income comes from donations from indivi­ One of the center's aims is to protect and said. "But the things that they do there are because "it was to facilitate the research of duals and groups interested in conserva­ breed threatened species for eventual rein- done at many other medical centers, where­ various people on campus interested mostly tion. See LEMURS on page 7 as this is without a doubt the best and in different aspects of behavior," Simons principal place in the world that does the kind of research we do here." The 1960s were what Simons called, a Duke has the world's largest collection of "Renaissance in primatology." Important prosimian primates, with almost 700 studies on monkeys and apes, such as Jane animals which include 20 species and Goodall's studies on chimpanzees, began nearly 30 different subspecies, or approxi­ about the same time the Duke research DURHAM NOW OPEN TELEPHONE FOR BUSINESS DIRECTORY The Ifet-to-be-named* PUB DELIVERY SCHEDULE AT CENTRAL CANCELLED! The Pub has joined Uncle Harry's at the Central Campus Enhancement Project just off Anderson Street. The Pub features hot and cold sandwiches, salads, soft drinks and beer. Come enjoy a quiet Due to a delay by GTE in evening at the Pub . . . and bring a friend. printing and delivery, Durham City Telephone Directories will not be available for pick-up by Monday-Friday . / X™ _ p.m.-l a.m. V0 ^^ Duke employees or students Sat. 1 p.m.- the week of March 25th. Tel- 1 a.m. % PUB Sun. 1 p.m. Com will notify you of the new midnite '(/enh* schedule as soon as possible. •Well be holding a name the Pub contest later this semester. Tuesday, March 26, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 7 Lemurs, tarsiers, bushbabies find home at center LEMURS from page 6 anthropology professor, is currently working on studies of center and a zoo is the extent of learning. reproduction in tarsiers. She has recently completed "Every time an animal has died," she said, "I've been traduction into their natural habitat. studies on the vocalization and social behavior of tarsiers there, I've put it into a freezer, and I've gotten on the phone Two opportunities are available to students interested as well. and made contacts with people in England, California, in seeing the Primate Center. Every Wednesday, tours are Before Wright went to Borneo in 1983, the Primate Michigan and all over the academic world, where people conducted by appointment. In addition, the center is Center did not have any tarsiers. Wright went into the are involved with projects on the tarsier. At a zoo, they come starting a new club for undergraduates interested in jungles of Borneo alone and devised a way of setting tarsier in and find the animal dead in the morning. You don't learn working with and discussing the center's primates and traps: using food to lure them, Wright set up several nets anything from the animals; they're there, and that's it." fossils. of thin nylon, similar to hairnets but the size of volleyball Andrea Katz, colony supervisor, makes sure that the Kay Izard, a researcher at the center with a doctorate nets in the tropical forest, on a row of poles. animals are given good care on a day-to-day basis. "At any in reproductive physiology, has received a grant to study "And then the little tarsier comes hopping along and given time, I know the health of the animals and their the factors that influence reproduction in bushbabies. doesn't see the black nylon net and goes right into it, and breeding status," she said. "They're important to study for a couple of reasons," she then I just pick him up," Wright said. For more information about tours of the Primate Center, said. "First, they have primate brains that resemble higher Wright said that one of the differences between the call 489-3364. primate brains and thus are related to us in some way. And second, they're just interesting to study in their own right." Like Izard, Pat Wright, Primate Center researcher and The Duke University High Technology Club presents: The Student Members of The 1986 Commencement Committee The Marriage cordially invite of Business Students of the Class of 1986 to submit nominations for and Biotechnology The 1986 Commencement Speaker a lecture by: Please forward signed nominations co The Office of the University Marshal, 353 Gross Chemistry, by April 3, 1985. Dr. Steven Zuckerman Biotechnology Venture Capitalist Paragon Network, Inc. Tuesday, March 26, "7:DO p.m. Teer Auditorium Refreshments will be served.

The 85's are here. D E C With the purchase of a new The Duke Israel Political Education Committee Fuji and this ad you can get something Is proud to present: JUDGE ISAAC BRAZ * the court FREE! of Justice of Tel Aviv, Israel, and Past President of the Buy an 85 Fuji and RUW^TY bring in this ad Military Court of Justice in Judea and Samaria and we'll give you a free T-shirt. REPAIRS* ACCESSORIES 'Administration of Justice 55 in Jud ea an d saman a

TONIGHT! Tuesday, March 26 8 P.M. 136 Social Sciences Letters Opinion Student interest rises Page 8 March 26, 1985 To the editorial board: than their voting record in the 1984 Two surveys concerning South African presidential elections would suggest. race relations were recently conducted in It is also significant that 35 percent of the the Bryan Center. The questionnaires were students surveyed in February indicated An error in judgement designed to sample levels of general "very much interest" in the issue of race awareness of and opinion towards the relations in South Africa (up from 25 Before the recent Black Student Week­ rode roughshod over the rights of a group continued presence of American companies percent in January). Of the remaining end, admissions office officials "requested" with an important, praiseworthy cause. in South Africa. The two surveys were used students, 59 percent has "some interest," the postponement of two films to be shown One admission officer questioned why to detect changes in responses over the four- with only 15 percent indicating "very little in the Bryan Center about the 1979 black students would come to Duke if they week period between Jan. 29 and Feb. 26 interest." In addition, 55 percent of the un­ Greensboro shootings. The move was an thought things like the Greensboro of this year. dergraduates surveyed on Feb. 26 reported effort to keep prospective black students shootings occurred in the state. As A comparison of the two surveys suggests that their interest in South African race from questioning "their safety and their unpleasant as it may be, these things do a substantial increase in student awareness l'elations had increased in the last month. situation in the South." happen in North Carolina. This state has of this social issue. Of 164 Duke under­ one of the most active Ku Klux Klan graduates surveyed in the second These results were very encouraging to Although the decision move was clearly me, as I am a firm advocate of divestment. motivated with the best of intentions, it chapters in the country, and any black questionnaire, 91 indicated that they knew student considering coming to school here about the University's investments in Unfortunately, I have little hope that the raised serious questions regarding both the Duke administration is prepared to take admission office's perception of potential should be well aware of this. companies that operate in South Africa. This represents 58 percent, up from only 26 this necessary step towards bringing an end black students and censorship, in no matter And even if the potential students had to apartheid. The financial cost of such how gentle a form. seen these films, exactly what would they percent of the 162 students surveyed in January. action would be insignificant, as equally It was an unfortunate coincidence, for have thought? Would they have felt profitable investment stategies are well- admissions officials at least, that these two threatened because people here refuse to Students were also asked whether they documented by institutions that have events were scheduled at the same time. ignore a controversial issue? would support an initiative to have Duke chosen the course of socially responsible But that's what it was and that's how it One admissions official, Roslyn Sullivan, divest the $26 million it currently has investment. should have stayed. By causing the films' said showing the films on Black Student invested in companies that do business in postponement, the admissions office Weekend would be "tantamount to saying South Africa. At the time of the first survey, This type of decision requires both cheated Duke students and potential black 'We don't want you here.'" Had the films' 15 percent of the students favored such courage and progressive thinking. It is applicants: the former of their right to free organizers planned on giving out popcorn action, with 30 percent opposed and 55 unfortunate that the University does not expression and the latter of a realistic and soft drinks with the presentation, or percent uncertain. currently possess the necessary quantities of these to lead a divestment initiative in portrait of the University. making pro-Klan speeches, one can When the same question was addressed the South. Showing graphic films of defenseless understand how black applicants might in the second survey, 33 percent of the people being shot in the street is not every­ receive this message. As it was, the films students indicated that they supported This has left the responsibility of social day campus occurence, but those who had and the literature the group distributed divestment, 17 percent opposed and a leadership to institutions like Harvard and intended to present these films had a valid, were more an attempt at improving black- majority of 55 percent remained unsure Stanford, who have recently demonstrated timely reason for doing so: Two of the killed white relations than anything else. about this issue. their forward-mindedness by deciding to and three of the injured in Greensboro had Potential black students are not mature These figures demonstrate a dramatic withdraw investments from companies that past affiliations with Duke, and the third enough to rationalize the incident, Sullivan swing in student opinion towards support operate in South Africa. attempt by the survivors to obtain said, and would be "scared away" by the for divestment. Clearly, Duke undergradu­ judgments against those responsible had sight of it. But if any of those participating ates are more liberal about social issues Oseeola Refetoff recently begun. in Black Student Weekend had been unable Trinity '85 The screening was geared to heighten to understand the difference between students' awareness and persuade them to support for an action and support for its take an active role by attending the trial. final, just resolution, it was probably a mistake to put them on the list of potential A 'misguided decision' The admissions office, in its effort to present Duke as it thought it should be presented, students in the first place. To the editorial board: 'plus" for the University than We are abhorred by the recent decision of hiding it from prospective students? We the University administration to delay think so. (censor?) the two films regarding the Greensboro massacre. Erik Nicholson Admissions Director Jean Scott argued Darren Pocsik that showing the films would "hurt us in Trinity '88 the recruitment, which is one of our highest priorties." We feel such decisions are Stocking up at Harry's misleading and misguided. To delay the films is in essence denying their existence To the editorial board: to the prospective black students who In response to her March 22 letter "Uncle visited Duke on Black Student Weekend. Harry's lacking," Pauline Vaas, I'm afraid, Yes, present Duke students will be able was a little too quick to point out the to view the films while the 80 black deficiencies she encountered during her students are safely back home. After all, the' first visit to Uncle Harry's, where I work. visiting students were "very young, impres­ It is unfortunate that she did not first speak sionable and wary of coming to North to one of us at Harry's in regards to her Carolina in the first place," according to complaints; I think she would have been Roslyn Sullivan, admissions counselor. satisfied with our plans. Inevitably, some of the black students will It takes some time to gauge the wants and hear about the trial at home. Maybe they'll needs of so many different people, but read the March 18 issue of The Chronicle slowly it is beginning to take shape. Uncle and realize that Duke intentionally delayed Harry's has been open for two weeks, and the showing of the films until they were what we have encountered in terms of safely off campus. business has been nothing short of Some will argue that Duke needs to spectacular. THE CHRONICLE increase its black enrollment. We agree. But While we must initially acknowledge a should this goal be accomplished by lack of certain fresh foods and dairy Joe McHugh, Editor-in-chief "glossing over" Duke, by ignoring major products, it is only because the demand has Larry Kaplow, Associate Editor issues? well exceeded what we were originally Al Bernstein, Kathy Burkett, Managing Editors In delaying the showing of the films, the stocked for. Paul Gaffney, Editorial Page Editor administration hindered the education of So if Vaas just keeps in touch she will soon Elisa Davidson, News Editor Ibwnsend Davis, News Editor the Duke community for the "benefit" of the see many more of the types of foods she and Carrie leegardin, University Editor Andrew Bagley, State & National Editor 80 black students. Sullivan even went so far many others enjoy. In fact, we have had bran Wendy Lane, Sports Editor Jenny Wright, Production Editor as to request that organizers of the film not cereal and whole wheat bread, to name just Peter Ha, Photography Editor Will Hicks, Photography Editor set up a table to distribute information two of the items she had been looking for. Peter Tarasewich, Sports Production Editor Flora Garcia, Entertainment Editor regarding the massacre while the students While the demand remains we will con­ Abbie Baynes, Features Editor Debbie Blum, Features Editor were on campus. Ignorance is bliss. tinue to stock these goods and will be trying Barry Eriksen, Business Manager Gina Columna, Advertising Manager We believe that if the films had been ever harder to keep them stocked at all shown when they were originally sche­ times. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its duled, Duke would have maintained its In the meantime, if there are any other students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view integrity as well as admitting that North products which anyone would like to see at of the editorial board. Signed editorials, columns and cartoons represent the views of their Carolina is not immune to the violent Harry's, do not hesitate to bring it up with authors. actions of the Nazis and Klansmen. one of the employees. We will be more than Phone numbers: editor: 684-5469. news/features: 684-2663, sports: 684-6115, business office: 684-3811, advertising office: 684-6106, classifieds: 684-3476. Wouldn't the fact that Duke has the guts happy to try and obtain it for you. The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. to deal honestly and openly with the Scott Royster problem of racism in North Carolina be a Trinity '87 Tuesday, March 26, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 9 Tax breaks give unequal benefits

SAN DIEGO - "You don't bother them, they don't bother Comptroller of the Currency, who has a lot to answer for, you." is being asked nothing. Low-level bank employees are According to the confession of one of the Mexican William Satire being offered as sacrifices to a grand jury. policemen who helped abduct the U.S. drug enforcement This colossal coverup is not taking place in Guadalajara, - agent later murdered by the "narcomafia," that was the but in Boston, U.S.A. The bank may not have a lion at its advice offered corrupt cops by a chief of police in gates, but the cavalier attitude of its officers, and the Guadalajara. Fortunately for the drug peddlers and their Nobody pays for illegal drugs by apparent lack of zeal in its public overseers, is not that partners in Mexico's government, that particular police much different from what we deplore south of the border. chief "died under interrogation" and cannot testify about check. The worldwide racket lives , Certain questions cry out for answer: Who got what for corruption higher up in the police forces. on cash, and the ability to taking care of the crime family's dirty laundry? Were all To satisfy U.S. demands for a crackdown on the booming the others at the bank who were looking the other way drug trade, Mexican authorities are shooting up low-level launder' ill-gotten cash through merely too busy, or incompetent, or what? suspects and parading poor farm workers arrested in the Where is all the buying support coming from in the marijuana fields in front of foreign journalists. But corrupt or complaisant banks bank's stock, and what makes the "disinvestment" crowd somehow there are never any arrests of the men who have makes it possible for the in Boston so silent? What other banks have been flouting made millions on heroin, cocaine and pot. the law, and why aren't their officers and trustees taken The identity of the families who own the cops is no secret. narcomafia to turn its white on a tour of prisons filled with addicts whose habit turned Most live in luxury in beautiful Guadalajara, private jets powder into gold. them to crime? at the ready, one with a live lion ostentatiously chained The movement and laundering of cash is crime's bottom near his doorway. When the heat was turned up after the line: Unless the money extorted or stolen or skimmed or murder of our agent, $35 million was withdrawn from the Angiulo, reputedly the head of organized Beantown crime, received from drugs is made usable in a bank account, local bank for laundering elsewhere. have for years been carrying paper bags and satchels filled crime doesn't pay. The narcomafia that preys on the American market goes with $20 bills into the Bank of Boston, walking out Step one: pass legislation now before Congress to make untouched because corruption is a way of life in Mexico untraceable cashier's checks in a classic money-laundering laundering a criminal act, with the punishment running (although the $2 billion transfer to overseas banks by a operation. If you or I tried to do this, we would be stopped, to individuals as well as institutions. recent president was considered excessive). Increased according to law, but gangland family had a good Step two: raise the limit on fines to banks that break enforcement in Colombia and south Florida, reports The connection at the bank. the law, thereby penalizing and awakening the stock­ San Diego Union, led traffickers to the path of least The federal investigation of the Angiulo clan led to the holders of the launderers. resistance in Mexico. startling revelation that the Bank of Boston had broken Step three: change the color of U.S. currency, requiring Before our gringo dudgeon at this toleration of evil by federal laws by failing to report over $1 billion in cash an exchange of all the old bills. The hidden cash illegally our closest Latin neighbor gets too high, however, let us shipments to banks in Switzerland and other European socked away will lose much of its value, and the sacks of look to the mote in our own eye. money havens. For this huge assistance to international bills in the laundering pipeline will cost organized crime Nobody pays for illegal drugs by check. The worldwide crime, the staid Boston institution was slapped on the wrist and its unsullied financiers a bundle. racket lives on cash, and the ability to "launder" ill-gotten with a $500,000 fine, the maximum. People have personal privacy rights; a large sum of cash cash through corrupt or complaisant banks makes it Chairman William Brown, who gets $350,000 a year to does not. If we are serious about crippling organized crime, possible for the narcomafia to turn its white powder into manage the bank, brushes off the Angiulo dealings as as the new attorney general says he is, we have to follow gold- "poor judgment." A bank spokesman claims "there weren't the cash trail. Otherwise, as they say in Mexico, "If you In Boston, representatives of the family of Gennaro any broad failures" in the bank's procedures. The U.S. don't bother them, they don't bother you." Page 10 THE CHRONICLE Tuesday, March 26, 1985 Belushi discusses sex, drugs; offers improvisations

By FLORA GARCIA and stuff, marijuana and coke and that kind of s—? Nope. "There's a lot of sexual repression going on in the south Actually I don't even drink. I used to. In some ways I think ... Do they still have sex on campus now? Can you get drugs were a very hip type of thing to do, especially cocaine, it on points? . . . that's kind of like the real world," Jim and especially [in] show business. Now, I think, in the '80s, Belushi told an near-capacity Page Auditorium crowd its much more of drugs as a problem. I know in the indus­ Monday night. try that I work in, it was very prevalent in the late 70s A slice of "Saturday Night Live" in the form of a fre­ and up until my brother died, and after that it was like quently crass, rude and scathing Belushi came to Duke if anybody did drugs, they wouldn't hire you. ... I don't last night. The comic showed clips from "Saturday Night advocate the use of drugs." Live" and offered students the opportunity to do improvisa­ "Now they won't even allow us to do drug jokes on 'Satur­ tions and just talk with him, as he fed the almost full Page day Night.' It's a much more conservative time now," he jokes and lines for responses as well as for laughs. said. "Do you guys have a basketball team?" Belushi con­ On the subject of Bob Woodward's controversial book tinued. "You got your a-- kicked!" about , "Wired," Belushi said, "Boy oh boy, But the laughs weren't all he got, as some lines elicited I didn't know we were going to talk about that s— tonight. hisses and boo's as some students exhibited their low toler- Let's see, what's the quickest way to get out of this one? ence for tastelessness. I didn't read it." Talking about comedy, Belushi said "I stay away from "Do I respect the man? No. Actually I did at one time the political stuff - I leave that to the smarta—-." . . . but what did Nixon really do if you really look at it? After a intentionally awful guitar performance - he said He broke into a hotel room? The thing is, no one liked later he really does play - and a series of improvisations Nixon, and so it was easy to write something about some­ with student volunteers, Belushi continued to field ques­ one no one liked, because people would believe anything tions from the audience that was said. The thing about John is that everybody PETER HA/THE CHRONICLE Asked if he did drugs, Belushi said "You mean like grass liked him and he writes this s— about John. Jim Belushi conversed with and entertained a near- capacity crowd in Page last night.

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53 Begin Protozoan gossip. 10 Franciscan Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 56 Freshet 11 Most compre­ 57 Entwined hensive 8 I A F s R S TJS 56 John — Passes 12 Ancient Asian JL _\_-M 59 Solemn person T A • 1 TT F N D| A fiH ,E A land A J _\ 61 Certain bills 13 Feudal farm I F A sMR r A Shoe/Jeff MacNelly 62 Small land n II T s 1 A N D 1 N.fi • N FjY 19 Skirmish F. K 1 S1T j A N II 63 Mimics 24 Lead performer F I H II • M 1 S 64 Vissid- 25 Wind instru- A MT 1 P E R 1 LIAP T Mr. 65 Ooze H S__R1IV AIL_____.S LIE 66 Irascible 29 Network of 67 Customer nnmni.1 Hi.nr.ui ran™ 30 Villain's aauM ra_H[i]_[i__ni| look HO_annci ana 33 Quito's land: 1 f M 1; V F RisJl n 1 _A_ DOWN 34 Offer tempo­ 1 s M 1! EJSIL F 1 Boat race rarily S H 1) £___• __OIE____.I L A T | F 2 Swamped 38 Practiced 3 Portable light natation 4 Chemical 39 A few suffix 40 Body of a car 46 Fr. poet - 55 Untidy 5 Of birth 41 Aim de Lisle 57 Help with the 6 Poplar 42 Friendly 47 Bureau 7 Sunshade 44 Breaks the 49 Scoff 60 Held a 8 Raisond'— cipher 9 Red or Black 45 Performs Tuesday, March 26, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 11 Klan suit begins; opening arguments heard By TOM MINEHART The Associated Press authorities and the police." statements to a jury of one black and five whites. WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - Plaintiffs' attorneys said Nichols warned jurors that the plaintiffs would try to Sixteen widows and survivors of the Nov. 3, 1979, Monday that Ku Klux Klansmen and Nazis killed five portray the case as a struggle between blacks and whites. incident sued the defendants, claiming they conspired to anti-Klan demonstrators in a "planned escalation" of He noted that five of the Greensboro police defendants are provoke the incident or to allow it to happen. Five violence in 1979, but defense attorneys said the demonstra­ black. Communist Workers' Party members were shot to death tors sought out blacks to "stir up trouble." "But this is a case of the communist party against the during a Communist Workers Party-sponsored "Death to The statements came during opening arguments in a $48 city of Greensboro," Nichols said, adding that the demon­ the Klan" rally in Greensboro. million civil suit filed by the Greensboro Civil Rights strators wanted to keep police away from the march. Six Klansmen and Nazis were found innocent of state Fund, which represents members of the CWP and their Larry Moore, representing five Klan defendants, said the murder charges in 1980 and nine Klansmen and Nazis supporters who were killed, wounded or arrested at the Klansmen and Nazis fired in self-defense after they were were found innocent of civil rights charges in a federal trial rally. attacked first. He said the CWP had conspired for months last year. "The conspiracy lies with the plaintiffs," said Charles to provoke a confrontation with the Klan in an effort to Nichols, an attorney representing 36 Greensboro police and win support among people opposed to racism. The defendants include 20 Ku Klux Klansmen and city defendants named in the suit. "The plaintiffs were out "They went there with full military capability to provoke Nazis, 36 Greensboro city officials and police officers, two to seek people who wanted to redress grievances with the something, to retire to their arsenal and then to complete FBI agents and two officials of the Bureau of Alcohol, government, infiltrate them and stir up trouble with the the task of killing," attorney Lewis Pitts said in opening Tobacco and Firearms.

NORTHGATE PAID INTERNSHIPS The Travel Center BARBER SHOP N.C. CENTER FOR 905 W. Main Street PUBLIC POLICY RESEARCH Full Service Style Shop BRIGHTLEAF SQUARE Mon.-Fri. 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 RALEIGH M-F 9-5 682-9378 286-4030 Deadline March 31. See Louise Walker, Political Science Internship Office, 327 Perkins Library. Northgate Shopping Center, Durham Sat 12-4 683-1512

NEW- • Philosophy 235S: John and Sue from Duke welcome the community to Hegel and Marx CHINA INN A critical study of the writings of Hegel 7 and Marx with special emphasis on the character of, tf HISS'S and the justification for, the transition from philosophy Daily Luncheon Specials ("idealism") to social theory ("materialism"). Readings will - Mixed Beverages - include selection from Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit, Mon-Thu 11:30-10:00 SZECHUAN • HUNAN • Fri 11:30-10:30 • PEKING • Science of Logic, and Philosophy of Right and from Marx's Sat 4:30-10:30 • CANTONESE • Contribution to the Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right, Sun 12:00-10:00 • SALT, OIL or MSG FREE DISHES' Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts, The German Ideol­ Mixed ogy, and Capital. Rick Roderick F 1:50-4:20 Beverages

*£_?-? HOLY WEEK 2701 Hillsborough Road 286-9007 • 286-2444 IN DUKE UNIVERSITY CHAPEL The Alumni Office Match 31 Palm Sunday, 10:55 a.m. The Reverend Dr. William H. Willimon Minister to the University April 4 Maundy Thursday, Service of Tennebrae and Comtnui Needs You This June 7:30 p.m., The Reverend Dr. Gerald Wilson, Assistant Dean, Trinity College, preacher April 5 Good Friday Worship, 12:00 p.m. Bishop Michael McDaniel Two students needed who can Lutheran Church of America, preacher April 6 Easter Vigil 11:00 p.m. to LOO a.m., Sponsored by work June 4-9 during Alumni Duke Campus Ministry and the Divinity School April 7 Easter Sunday Worship 6:30 a.m. Sunrise Service in Duke Gardens Weekend. $4.00 per hour. The Reverend Dr. C.G. Newsome, preacher The Reverend Ms. Nancy A. Ferree, presiding 9:00 a.m. and 10:55 a.m. Chapel Worship Service Interested? Contact Doug The Reverend Dr. William H. Willimon, preacher April 1 Festival Sunday After Easter, 10:55 a.m. Arnold or Julie Cameron at The Reverend Ms. Nancy A. Ferree, Assistant Minister to the University The Durham Community is cordially invited to all of these services | X-5114. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT — A WHOREHOUSE backstage work SUPERIOR P0C0N0 CO-ED has begun. Needing Workers and CAMP is accepting applications Runnning Crew especially Grad NOTICE!n for counselor/specialist in all weekend. Contact Bruce Hyre at sports including gymnastics and 684-0158 or 684-5088 for Second Semester hockey (varsity exper. pref.). scheduling. books are Classifieds A & C, woodshop, photography, waterfront (WSI or boating UNCLE AL'S — A new unique Page 12 March 26, 1985 exper.), windsurfing. 600 acres eatery is now accepting Going of rolling hills on a 100 acre pvt. applications for the following positions: experienced cooks, lake — it's beautifu!. (215) CPS MAJORS: The ACM, your 732-3505 collect. GOING The PUBLICITY committee of the waitresses, bartender, cashier, Announcements majors union, meets this Wed. 8 D.U. Union will hold a mandatory hostess and bus help. We are p.m. 130 North Bldg. meeting today at 5 p.m. in the looking for people-oriented LEARN MORE EFFECTIVE STUDY STUDENTS for PORNOGRAPHY GONE!!! Union offices, Bryan Center. We individuals with a desire to METHODS: Workshop in TEST AWARENESS organizational will work on the upcoming succeed in the food service TAKING, March. 27 or 28. meeting on Wed. Mar. 27. 7 p.m. All Student referendum and the Freshman industry. Apply in person at 905 The Duke Academic Skills Center. W. Duke in Alspaugh Commons. New slide show. Please call 684-2911 W. Main St., Brightleaf Square, Bldg. Call 664-5917. Free. members welcome! ^^_ Organizations if you cannot make it. New daily between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. University Bookstore LOW-COST opportunity to see members always welcome! SAILOR WITH EXPERIENCE for what you think. No one can tell HILLEL SHABBAT DINNER on Fri. Requesting and the George Plimpton, author of Caribbean cruise this summer. you about you. but you. There's at 6:15 in Old Trinity Room. Sign PAPER LION, will speak on Wed. Dates flexible. Share expenses. no obligation for taking an Army up sheet on Hillel office door by ASDU Medical Center in Page Auditorium, 8 p.m., as Jack Preiss, Sociology. ROTC course. Try one on and see Wed. or cal! Meg 684-0180 part of the Blackburn Festival. HELP! PIZZA PALACE needs Bookstore for yourself. In 1974 ROTC was a DONT MISS IT! Funding four-letter word. In 1985 ROTC is PI PHIs — Dont forget the waitress Tues., Wed., & Fri. and a four-star word. Scholarship KAPPA DELTS: Pledge meeting Fireside meeting TONIGHT — for 1985-86 every other Sat. 5-11:30 p.m. and are now returning opportunities — NOW! Visit 06 tonight, 7 pm.. 311 Soc.-Sci. 5:30 at Mrs. Brady . house. If you delivery person Wed., Fri., and unsold texts to the West Duke or call 684-5895 — AOT! need a ride or directions, meet at Note every other Sat, 5-10:30 p.m. TODAY! the C.l. at 5. The directions will Position Available: Immediate publisher. also be posted on Heiene's door the following dates: opening with Raleigh law firm for HILLEL PASSOVER SEDER will — House A 301. PS. We're having paralegal. Job will involve If you have not purchased your take place on Fri., April 5 at 6:30 wine and cheese! • Thursday, providing support in major civil textbooks, please do so. We p.m. in the Beth-El Synagogue ECOS — Meeting tonight, it i. cases with primary responsibility appreciate youi business, located on the corner of Watts quite important. 126(?) Soc- March 28: for organizing documents. Some cooperation, and support. and Markham Streets near East Psych. 7 p.r 5 p.m.-6 p.m. travel and early responsibility. Campus. The cost is $10 for The Marriage Budget Workshop Previous experience not members and $12 for non- PI PHIS - 'lease bring checks necessary. Applicants must have Duke members. Please make reserva­ of Business for pledge formal and Myrtle in Bryan Center (or be about to receive) bache­ tions by Fri., March 29 in the Beach to he fireside tonight. Boardroom lors degree. Salary negotiable. Hillel office and make checks and %, Thanks! Send resume, transcript and University payable to Duke Hillel. Biotechnology Jack of all Trades, George Bookstore There will be a Shabbat dinner on Plimpton, will speak Wed. night in • Friday, Fri., March 29 at 6 p.m. in the Old Page. FREE and open to the March 29: HUNTON & WILLIAMS, C.O David lower level — Bryan Center Trinity Room on West Campus. a lectlare by public as part of the Blackburn Dreifus, RO. Box 109, Raleigh, Please make reservations by Literary Festival. All audit material N.C. 27602. noon Wed. either in Hillel office FRATERNITY BROTHERS Earn Haircuts $5 (Male and Female). Dr. Steven f The ASDU Legislature will meet for currently funded Licensed cosmetologist in home or by calling Nancy Safir at on Tues., Mar. 26 at 6 p.m. in 114 $1,000 or more as our campus 684-0034. Zuckerman groups due in representative. Contact shop adjacent to campus. Duke Physics, for a special session. All Student special — $5 Thursdays Office of Student GRADMAR P.O. Box 2407 Stanley H. Kaplan Educational legislators are required to attend. and Fridays. Call 286-2691 for Center summer and fall class Biotechnology Princeton, NJ 08540 phone about GUATEMALAN Activities schedules are now available. Venture (609)924-5235. DO NOT DELAY! REFUGEES in Florida. CASC Reserve your spot in fall classes Local chemical lawn care "PAPERBUSTERS" ARE BACK! Capita/ia?? meeting in 108A W. Duke Bldg. before you leave for summer Quick and professional typing on 7:30 p.m. • Monday, company needs .ii.i- vacation. Call 489-8720 or management/service personnel. an IBM word processor with a Parage^ April 15: letter-quality printer. Our low 489-2348 for information. ATTENTION CLASS .OF '85 Start at 13K with excellent Ne_ _v_nk. Inc. ENGINEERS. Need a break from price ($1.25/page) includes: free PROJECT WILD: Attention August 1985-86 Funding benefits and 4 weeks paid the books? Come mingle at the pick-up & delivery in the Durham '84 participants. Lost and found requests due in vacation. Send resume to RO. still contains a pair of boots (in Tuesday ENGINEERING SENIOR CLASS — area, proofing, 1-day service and FACULTY COCKTAIL PARTY. Good ASDU Office Box219. Cary, N.C. 27511. free correction of typos. Rough blue duffle) and a Canon camera. March- ._20;;:,:;:i,;, Babysitter wanted. Hours flexible. 493-3027. food and spirited libations. WED, drafts are available. Call Patty at 77.00 p.m. JF MAR. 27 at 6:30 p.m. in the TEER Transportation required. 383-7112 (evenings). 493-2303. Coffeehouse meeting: Past, Teen Auditorium Bldg Lobby. • Those clubs LOSE WEIGHT FAST AND EASY — _-e_ snt and future people THE PUB IS OPENI Mon. — Fri. 4 Counselors: Camp Wayne, Without starving! on a medically involved, please attend This will meeting these ^Refreshments p.n_. — 1 a.m.. Sat. 1 p.m. — 1 Northeastern Penn. Co-ed approved nutritional program. be a very important meeting. deadlines will have a.m.. Sun. 1 p.m. — midnite. children's camp June 22 — Aug. Call Jennifer 683-3200. lues 9 p.m. a the Coftehouse. Come see what Central Campus budgets reviewed 22. Specialists for all sports, New and pre-owned Cadillacs, waterfront, arts, camping and INTERVIEW FOR DUKES and ADPi ORDER OF THE LION! Come is becoming! beginning Sept. 1, Oldsmobiles. other. We finance. DUCHESSES! Act as a student celebrate acceptances/job offers CHI OMEGAs: Composite proofs One-stop shopping. Jack Cook, host/hostess for Duke functions, (or lack thereof) Tues. night. 9, 1985. Sign up for Apr. 3 are in! Come to Windsor between 489-3331. give tours to athletic recruits and Your Place or Mine. BTA! in Placement, Flowers 8-9:30 TONIGHT to choose visiting dignitaries ... a great Hey. all you pre-law nerds — Bldg., Rm. 309. BABY SITTING. I have a 3 year old way to get involved!! Interested Needlessly worrying about • Those waiting to daughter and wish to take care Freshmen or Sophomores MUST LSAT's? Find out what it's really Dr. Jay Hair manages 4.000,000 submit requests Services Offered in the afternoons of child about attend an info session either like! Sit on a jury and learn about people and $40,000,000 for the same age. i would bring child to Mon. in House A Commons or drunkenness, barroom brawls, environment. Thurs., Mar. 28, 8 next fell will be ABORTION TO 20 WEEKS. my Duke Central Campus Apart­ Tues. in G.A. Commons at 7 p.m. and large settlements. One day p.m Zener. delayed into the Private and confidential gyn ment. Have car could pick up TRI DELT PLEDGES: meeting only and spots will be given on a Special Events Committee semester, also facility with Saturday and child. Call 684-1009 7:30-10 Wed. 8 p.m. 229 Soc.-Sci. Miser first-come, first-serve basis. Free meeting Tues. Mar. 26 at 5:30 in weekday appointments available. P-m. to follow. Bring: dues, letters to food. Contact Paula at 489-5906 the Union office. delaying the FREE PREGNANCY TEST. Collect, WORD PROCESSING — Just Your Sisters abroad. or Jane at 383-6547. Thetas: In an attempt to usurp acquisition of 942-0824 Chape! Hill or call Type Word Processing Service THETAS — PLEDGE FORMAL your new Pres, the meeting has 489-1386 in Durham, PPS Majors: Important meeting will type your dissertations, form CHECKS ARE OVERDUE! Get been changed back from 6 to funds. ROTC HAIRCUTS $4.50, JIM'S Tues. 5 p.m. in 116 Old Chem. letters, papers, etc., quickly and money and reservation to Karen Elections, Internships, and other 6:15! See you then in 136 Soc.- BARBER SHOP near Duke and VA professionally. Emergency typing items to be discussed. — 402 Maxwell BEFORE Sci. Rebecca at 614 Trent Drive. Closed Sat., welcome. 489-5470 (24 hours). Sun. and Mon. 286-9558. TYPING??? Will do it FAST! Word KAPPAS: Going to pledge formal? MIDNIGHT TONITE! Help Wanted processing with quality results. Make sure reservation and THETA SENIORS — DITTO CLUB: STUDENT NEEDED 20 hours/ checks are to Cindy in 102 Celebrate at "CELEBRATION'' week for summer job. No Call Lee 684-2137 or nights Canterbury by 4 p.m. Wed. (near the Downtowner Hotel) at 18- TO 30-YEAR-OLD WHITE experience necessary to assist 598-1525. Beverages in to Eaton or Cindy by 4:45. Free food and _\ price MALES WITH RESPIRATORY with research project $4/hour. EYEGLASSES — Benson Optical drinks — a repeat of last Tuesday COLDS AND FLU are needed for Contact Adrienne Lea or Beth in the Duke Eye Center offers perhaps?! Be there! a paid research study at the US. Gunn at 684-5197 or 684-6089. discounts to employees and ZETAS — HAPPY 70th Find out about the environment! Environmental Protection Wanted: Volunteers with students. 684-4012. ANNIVERSARY! Come party with Thurs. at 8, 2ener. your future Agency, Chapel Hill. Subjects Psoriasis to participate in a two our alums and CELEBRATE our depends on it. must be in good genera! health week investigational topical drug 70 EXCITING years at Duke Wed. — no asthma or hayfever. Non- study. Must be available for three Tuesday night 7:30 House A Commons. AEPhi: Informal meeting at 6:15 smokers only. Please call Dr. visits within a two week period. SAVE A BUNDLE — Specialty Pledges and Big Bros are invited in House G. Dont forget fixin. for Chapman or Dr. Voter at Week days only. Volunteers to 4:00 PM Bikes — Touring or Racing. the salad bar. 541-5026 or Dr. Ives at receive $50 on completion of BODY WORKS Ridiculously low prices at Bull 541-5042 (days), or call Dr. study. For more info call Duke City Bicycles. 286-0535. Chapman at 942-3912 (nights). Dermatology Clinical Trials Unit DISCWASHER: Refill your empty Please call as soor at 684-6844. 4:30 PM bottles for less! Static Problems? ROCK WORLD Try a D'stat! Stereo accessories Sales Administrator I: Truckin' at DISCOUNT. Sound Sense Guest Services Representative Movers needs qualified person in 11:30 PM Stereo Service, 712 Ninth Classified Info: and Bellman/Driver positions our sales department. Duties 286-3891. open' for personable, people include giving estimates, filing "NEW SHOW" Rates (per day): $2 for first 15 words BEST DOG IN THE WORLD! oriented applicants. Apply in paperwork, screening call. Please save his life! Yellow lab 10$ each additional word person at the New Radisson Inn Management potential. Call THE MATING retriever. Needs room to run. Durham, or call David Wilkins 682-1838. m. — 5 p.m. Mon.- GAME FREE to affectionate, loving DlSCOlintS: 5% off for 3 consecutive days NEW GRADUATES! Learn about 683-1531. home. Call Barbara 684-1598 or 10% off for 5 or more consecutive days the microcomputer industry 12:00 PM 684-7248 (keep trying). from Durham's longest- openings in: Purchasing; Sales in LATE NITE RERUN Where: Bring to 308 Flowers Bldg. Deposit Box. If you really want to relax . . . all areas; CAD Systems training, Stressbusters Hammocks will -OR- Mail to: Box 4696 D.S.; Durham, NC 27706. sales, set-up; Systems Setup and deliver. 933-9551 (after 5 p.m.). other technical: Management; Fine Japanese European Very Cheap!! Roundtrip ticket on Other???: Call Jacquie or Emily (after 1 p.m.) 684-3476 accounting, secretarial. Send Auto Repair New York Air good anywhere they resume to: Microgiyphics, Inc., fly! Call Laura 684-0721. Deadline: 1 pm, one business day prior to date of insertion 2704 Chapel Hill Blvd. 3411 University Dr., Durham, NC Durham—489-5800 27707. —m_*_m_mm____m_t_m mm MM See CLASSIES on page 14 _ _i_« _Ti ..J,*.'... Sports Page 13 March 26, 1985

Today

Men's tennis vs. Wake Forest, West Campus courts, 2 p.m.

Wednesday

Women's tennis vs. Virginia, West Campus courts, 2 p.m.

Track in Devilirium Meet, Wallace Wade Stadium.

Thursday

Baseball vs. Wake Forest, Jack Coombs Field, 3 p.m. ;7s7.^ ..: •••*"••' '•"•.:. WILL HICKS7THE CHRONICLE Men's tennis vs. UNC-Greensboro, West Campus Duke boosts record courts, 2:15 p.m. Pitching nine innings, Duke's Scott Bromby got credit for bis fourth win in as many outings as the Blue Devils defeated Western Maryland 9-2 Monday at Jack Coombs Field. Bromby, 6-1 for the season, gave up just seven hits en route to Duke's 12th win of the year against four losses. Friday Both Western Maryland's runs were unearned. Blue Devil centerfielder Brad Novak led Duke's offensive effort with two singles, two stolen bases and four runs. Shortstop Al McGimpsey hit a pair of run-scoring singles, while second baseman Erik Albright went 2-5. Baseball vs. High Point, at High Point, 3 p.m. Chip Mathes knocked In a run with a triple. Duke, fn seventh place In the Atlantic Coast conference, will be idle until Thursday when ACC cellardweller Wake Forest comes to Jack Coombs Field for a 3 p.m. matchup. Lacrosse vs. State, Duke soccer stadium, 8:30 p.m.

Men's golf in first round of Iron Duke Classic, Duke Women's tennis improves record golf course. with 5-4 triumph over Nebraska Saturday From staff reports The Duke women's tennis team tallied its seventh win Baseball vs. N.C. State, Jack Coombs Field, 2 p.m. of the season 5-4 over Nebraska Monday on the West Campus courts. Ahead 5-1 after singles competition, Duke coach Charlie Men's golf in second round of Iron Duke Classic, Frangos substituted his less experienced players for his Duke golf course. usual doubles teams and consequently gave up all three matches. "We hadn't really practiced for a few days, so we were Men's tennis vs. Lander, West Campus courts, 1 a little worried," said Frangos of the match, "but we came p.m. on gunning." No. 1 Blue Devil Sue Taylor took a three-set victory from Cornhusker Jamie Pisarcik 6-2, 4-6, 6-3. "She hit the ball Track in Atlantic Coast Relays, at N.C. State. really hard," said Taylor, who raised her spring record to 10-7. "We hadn't practiced in a few days, and I couldn't get any timing at all." Sunday "Sue had a tough match — the girl [from Nebraska] started playing really well. Sue raised the level of her game to meet her." Basebali vs. High Point, Jack Coombs Field, 2 p.m. The team's loss of practice time was due to rainy weather that caused Friday's match with N.C. State to be cancelled. "lb go out and try to play is really hard," said Taylor. Men's golf in third round of Iron Duke Classic, Duke "You get slow and you lose your confidence. It's really golf course. maddening to play tennis for so long and then lose it all in three days." Duke's second seed Lee Shelburne had what Frangos Lacrosse vs. William & Mary, at Guilford, 3 p.m. termed "her best win in about a month," downing Liz Mooney 6-4, 7-5. "Lee hung in tight through the whole match," he said. At No. 3, Megan Foster defeated Jill Pisarcik 6-2, 6-2, while No. 4 Donna Preston fell to Nebraska's Beverly ACC baseball standings Roberts 3-6, 7-6, 6-3, Duke's only loss in singles. (through games of Sunday, March 25) Fifth seed Audrey Solent thrashed Lisa Brooks 6-2, 6-1, while No. 6 Ruth Englander also gave up only three games Conference Overall en route to a straight-set victory over Jenny Mortell. In doubles, Englander and partner Margaret Mayer, W L Pet. W L T Pet. usually Duke's No. 3 team, moved up to the first spot, Clemson 4 0 1.000 16 11 1 .589 falling to Jamie Pisarcik-Mooney 6-4, 6-3. Senior Kirsten North Carolina 4 1 .800 16 10 0 .615 Loft and junior Radha Pandit teamed up to meet Groce- Georgia Tech 2 1 .667 15 4 0 .789 Mortell, but dropped the No. 2 match 6-2, 6-2. Two Blue N.C. State 2 2 .500 16 10 0 .615 Devil freshman walkons, Francie Gottsegen and Shelly Bankston, lost to Jill Pisarcik and Brooks 6-1, 6-2. Virginia 2 2 .500 16 5 0 .762 The Blue Devils meet Atlantic Coast Conference Maryland 1 2 .333 6 10 0 .375 opponent Virginia Wednesday at 2 p.m. on the West Duke 1 3 .250 11 4 0 .733 Campus courts. "Virginia lost to Wake and we beat Wake ST* cp PHOTO Wake Forest 0 5 .000 10 13 1 .438 8-1, so we're hoping Virginia will be a victory," said Sue Taylor took a 6-2,4-6,6-3 match In the Duke women's Frangoa "We should be pretty confident against them." tennis team's 5-4 victory over Nebraska at home Monday. Page 14 THE CHRONICLE Tuesday, March 26, 1985

CLASSIES from page 12 Summersublet —FURNISHED 2 District three coaches Apartment for Rent bdrm., VA bath apt. — Chapel 2 BDRM. Apt. for summmer Towers. We're desperate! sublet. Rent Negotiable. Flying V $89, Strat $99. New and 383-1376 ANYTIME — keep Convenient to West Campus. Call used stuff. GUITAR BAZAAR, ERWIN SQUARE SUMMER trying! _ 383-6276 after 5 p.m. honor Duke's Leonard 2526 Erwin Rd., Durham. SUBLET. Spacious 3 bdrm. a/c 286-2411. apt. available from May — Aug. SUMMER APARTMENT AVAIL­ Summer sublet May — Aug; From staff and wire reports Five year old Azuki 10 speed Call 684-7571. ABLE: 1 Bedroom CHAPLE Furnished 3 br. apt (2nd floor of TOWER at REDUCED RENT house) 1 block off East. Big bicycle. Decent condition. $50. Affordable luxury apt for sublet Duke women's basketball available in May. Includes option breezy living room and great Call 684-1596. May — Aug. Royal Oaks Apts. — coach Debbie Leonard has to keep apartment for 85/86 front porch. Call late 682-3543 CROSS COUNTRY SKI, even in Great pool, gym, volleyball court. school year. Call 383-3081 been voted NCAA District or 684-1350. summer, in your own bedroom. Huge 2 bdrm., 2 bath, big anytime. ITJ coach of the year, making For sale: "Fitness Master" cross kitchen, dining area. Rent same SUBLET: One bedroom Chapel as Chapel Towers and Duke her a finalist for Converse -» ^. • • m country ski machine, sparkling LUXURIOUS LIVING! Completely tower apt Available from May Manor but twice the size! Call furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath 1-August 20. Fully furnished, fully NCAA Division I coach of OpOTtS DCieTS new. Call anytime 929-5922. David or Louie 489-5519. 1975 BMW 2002, Excellent apartment for summer sublet equipped kitchen. $280/month. the ______W-_-_-_-__t_----_-_W_-_-\ Condition, Blaupunkt Stereo. Call from May-August. Located Call Gary, 383-9752 evenings. Leonard was honored by coaches in Duke's district, which early a.m. or 5-7 p.m. 383-7524, Unfurnished Duplex Apartment 6 approximately 2 miles from One bedroom apartment, Duke Duke's West Campus at The TAPES: Maxell UDXLU90's $2.35 blocks from Duke. 2 bdrm. bath Manor, to sublet May-Aug. (both includes all Division I schools in North and South Forest Apartments. All the each. Stereo Accessories at — kitchen (refrig. and stove), summer sessions), $225 per Carolina, Maryland, Virginia and Washington, DC. comforts of home include: discount! Sound Sense Stereo dining area living room comb., month. Call 684-6403 before 5, Converse's coach of the year will be announced later next pvt. back yard. — Couple or 2 lighted tennis courts, swimming Service, 712 Ninth, 286-3891. pool, laundry facilities across the or 286-1390 after 5. week. grad. students preferred. No pets Large 2 bdrm. apartment. or children. $270 per month. Call street next to the clubhouse, student membership to the Walking distance from West Leonard, eighth year Blue Devil coach, led her team to Lost And Found 489-2703 or 489-3298. Campus. Health club and pool. 2 person large summer sublet. Racquet Club, solarium, color TV. a 19-8 record, Duke's best-ever finish. with HBO & Cinemax, stereo, and Furnished. $300 negotiable!! SllO/month plus Vi utilities per LOST: Black leather billfold. Lost every kitchen gadget from an Starting May. Nancy 383-3792. Fri. afternoon. Great sentimental person. May 7 to Aug. 21. Only'A ECU runner killed: An East Carolina runner died expresso machine to an ice Available May 1 — Aug. 25 as value. Please call 684-0841 or block off East' Call Jess at cream maker. Rent is $425/ sublet, after which we'll be Sunday when the van he and other members of the track 684-7386. Reward Offered! 286-4323. month. The apartment is all- moving out. Chapel Towers Apt. and field squad were traveling in flipped. LOST — Gold necklace. Sat. on electric; bills averaged between 1 mi. from campus. 2 bdrm., d/w, SUMMER SUBLET, New, $35-$37/month last summer. a/c, pool, furnished or Erskine Evans, a junior from Greenville, died of massive West Campus. Please, please, please call 684-0850 if found. furnished, 2-bdrm, split-level References required. For more unfurnished. Rent $280/mo, head injuries after the accident, which took place about attached-house at beautiful information phone Beth at REWARD!! negotiable. PLEASE CALL 18 miles west of Wilson as the Pirates were returning from Walden Pond, quiet, convenient, 684-2663 (<_ay).383-89_0 383-9056. comfortable — everything you'll the Georgia Relays in Athens, Ga. LOST: Fresh Water Pear! Bracelet! (evenings) or Cornelia at Tremendous Sentimental Value. need. Rent negotiable. Cal 383-2719 (evenings). Six of the nine athletes in the van also were injured in Ask for Meghan at 684-1920. 383-1211 anytime. See CLASSIES on page 15 the crash, the causes of which were unknown.

STUDENT AND EMPLOYEE Learn m ^ 1 - DISCOUNT WITH I.D. r?H| 1 i j cuba giving B&L Sunglasses We Have Rec-Specs fjBH in Summer School In Stock Good for All 2 Sections: M-F 9:25-10:30 Sporting Activities T^ , ond 10:50-11:55

HE Open Water Certification BRUAD ST. •_!&__ .*P*r7-* , with Dive Trips to Wrecks off N. Carolina or Florida Keys IPTICAL |1 I ENROLLMENT IS LIMITED ANTHONY IM. LINER For further information coll; MONDAY LISCENSED OPTICIAN Dorothy Spongier 684-3013 THRU FRIDAY or 286-4347 909 BROAD ST., DURHAM Wayne Fbllard 732-6017 (evenings) 2 BLOCKS FROM EAST CAMPUS

A New Service to the Duke Community (0WJ CONFIGURATION SESSION ^f^^E^ Keeping You Informed

through Ganga Zumba Demonstrations and Advice 7:00 and 9:00 Hardware and Software Comparisons (d. Carlos Diegues, 1960, 99 mins.) Information Sharing The first feature film by the leading figure of the Cinema Novo movement. A chronicle of politicization of Ant3o, a slave who Join us each week on Wednesday afternoons from _-A escapes from a sugar plantation and establishes an p.m. Call us for additional information, <_33-B4A4. independent state. Based on the creation of Quilombo dos Palmares, a 17th century nation of escaped slaves in the Northeast of Brazil. In Portuguese with English subtitles. "I would like to thank those responsible for the production of Micro this film, the people of Bolivia. I mean Colombia. No, Uruguay. Wait, that is, the people of South America."— A prominent rube.

Glyphics Tonight 3411 University Drive at the Bryan Center Film Theatre Free to undergraduates with 5.E.C. and I.D.'s, Union Privilege Card Durham, N.C. 27707 Holders, selected graduate students, and alagoonos. All others 493-8444 $1.50. ' OPEN 11-6, Mon-Fri Tuesday, March 26, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 15

CLASSIES from page 14 Roommate Wanted Questions or problems regarding Houses for Rent Study Abroad Ride Needed relationships or sexuality? Call or Roommate wanted for May-Aug.; drop by PISCES! Monday — Wanted to Rent Spacious 3 bdrm. house' IMPORTANT: Students planning Ride needed to Columbus, Ohio Friday 10 a.m. — 10 p.m. at 101 available for summer sublet. 2 bdrm. house 5 blocks from N. study abroad fall semester 1985 for reunion this weekend (Mar. Campus, 7 blocks from East. Flowers PISCES HOTLINE HOUSE in Club/Indian Furnished. $375frno., negotiable. or academic year 1985-86 29) or next (April 5). Expenses 684-2618. Call 493-4272. $150/mo. neg. Nice neighbor­ should pick up LEAVE OF shared. Call 684-5059 after 10 Trail.Maryland.Hillandale area hood, front porch, partially ABSENCE PACKETS immediately. If you see ERIN MALONE, give May through Aug. (approximate- HEY MOW! 4 bdrm. in spacious furnished. Call 286-2221. ly). Please call 286-3830. comfortable house of East Study Abroad Office. They must her a hug. She is an ANIMAL Female roommate wanted for 3 or more bdrm. house near (located behind Baldwin and on be COMPLETED AND RETURNED (doctor). Chapel tower 2 bdrm., VA bath campus for next year. Please call Lancaster). Available for summer BEFORE MARCH 27. B — Didn't you know that trie May 1 — Aug. 10. Fully furnished sublet. Give us a call! 688-5061 postman ALWAYS rings twice? 286-2221. _^___ — includes microwave, great or 684-7446. FOR THE LOVERS OF ADVEN­ We knew it. That ole adage Modern 4 bdrm. house for location! Rent negotiable, TURE, NATURE, AND GOOD comes through every time. But summer sublet 4 minutes from 5 bdrm. house for summer security deposit may be Recycle this Chronicle COMPANY! GET INVOLVED WITH what happened to Phil 'Erup? N. Campus. Fully carpeted, sublet. Located on 9th street, required. Call Melissa 383-9846. THE OUTING CLUB. Final Hiawatha! Yours truly, Penelope. furnished, a/c. dishwasher, acre well Kept; a/c. Call 684-7074 or Female lonsmoker needed to meeting on: camping, ENGINEERING SENIOR CLASS — of land attached. Call 493-1799 684-0447. share 3 BR apartment with 2 backpacking and paddling, and FACULTY COCKTAIL PARTY. WED., after 4 p.m. . Summer Sublet: May — Aug. udents. Near West the election of new officers, Mar. 27 at 6:30 p.m. in the lobby Furnished house, central ac — 3 Huge, lovely 2 bdrm. townhouse Campus $131.month plus V% — ticket for sale, (nominations are being accepted of the new TEER Bldg. Find out blocks off East Campus. Call for rent. Very close to Duke. Call Available immediately. one way this Sun. cheap and at the outing club bulletin board) what everyone is doing next year Steve at 688-7222. Craig at 266-9612 or 549-8377. 383-3264. negotiable. Scott 684-0339. Wed. Mar. 27. 7:30 in 136 Soc.- and mingle with your professors. Sci. Fun, food, good drinks, and ASILROD — Happy Bir ... I spirited i forgot. Happy Friendship. I love you. You know who. See CLASSIES on page 16 THE CLEANERS

Looking for a laundromat? Try ours. Clean machines and surroundings EASTER SPECIAL always. Attendant on duty, always. HAIRCUTS Convenient to K-MART, Food Lion, Eckerd Drugs, Milton's Pizza. Soap CALL FOR available for 30', always. Friendly ROBERTA. advice when you need it, always. _yfiait/pme 2720 Chapel Hill Road (Close to Duke) 489-2346 BJSSfc

•5 <" u _\ <_ >. NOTICE! k- 3 o •= QE2 STANDBY FARE To EUROPE-NOW $599. ** o 2? O This standby fare provides a a $75 deposit is required with berth in a room for 4 (we'll your request. For details, see Hi TO 0 -J find traveling companions for your travel agent or write: c a 4-> TH you). Or, for $699, sail in a Cunard, PO. Box 2935, Grand 0) £ minimum grade room for 2 Central Station, New York, o> Q5 _o co people. This limited offer is NY 10163. subject to withdrawal without a> «-> prior notice and may not be % U £ <- combined with any other offer. UEEN O > a Hi. •o X

CLASSIES from page 15 MARA — To the best Big Sis ever. Thanks for all the fixings of a true Deb an. Scott, You guys are AEPhi. I'm so psyched to be a great! From backgammon to member of our "small" family! "ichy" (or worse, "icky-poo") to Love, YLS frisbee on "Trent Beach", never a Dear "Dr. Paul", Can we talk? (Oh dull moment! Do 1 smell . . no, here we go again!) You are my strawberries'*? Lunch and "The favorite psycho(analyst) by far! Kids" tomorrow? — "Machine" Your wit (?), "voice of experience" champ and above all, your ability to listen (not to mention the Steve, Thanks for a great Spring whining) have gotten me through Break. 1 think we learned a lot many tough learning experi­ about each other. Take care. ences. Then again, "that's what Good luck in the future. You'll college is for", right? Are you still always be special to me. Steph speaking to me after my horrible ATTENTION CREATIVE THINK­ behavior? 1 hope so — friends ERS FROM LAST SEMESTER'S like you are hard to find . . . E175 CLASS WITH DR. PEARSALL! Come by 03 Page THE MORAL MAJORITY will be this week and pick up your FREE the subject of . discussion with Spectrum Gamma cassette tape! Dr. Carolyn Conley, Dept. of — The perfect combination of art History, on Wed. Mar. 27 at 8 p.m. and engineering. Thank you for in the Psi U Commons. Dr. Conley will present a critical "inside look" at local fundamentalists. The PUBLICITY committee of the CONGRATULATIONS CIRCLE K D.U. Union will hold a mandatory for winning the Annual meeting today at 5 p.m. in the Achievement Award of the Union offices, Bryan Center. We nation's No. 1 Circle K region! Get will work on the upcoming psyched for an even better referendum and the Freshman '8536!! slide show. Please call 684-2911 if you cannot make it. New Yes, SANIBEL GRAIN JELLO members always welcome! JUNKIES — you know who you KAPPA DELTS: Pledge meeting are — the moment we've all been tonight, 7 p.m., 311 Soc-Sci. waiting for has finally come. AOT! Thurs., 7 p.m., 205 Alexander A you can experience Grain Je No II, the amazing sequel. Wear "Trou," Liz! From "cancer sticks" (we'll bring pictures and tie ravenous quit — tomorrow) to Mom's care for spaghetti. Peg will provide packages (cookies? cake?), you're the best roommate a i- her own very special "primal frosh ever had! — K (But is "true volleyball scream." Save room for love the answer to everything'? dessert . . . Or are "changes'? Hmmm . . .) CONGRATULATIONS to ANN Pitcher. QB. Goalie, Hoops Star. SHEPHERD and the entire Boxer, Bullfighter, Hang glider, 1985-86 Theta cabinet. Best editor, writer, photographer, race- wishes for a super year! Love, ex- car driver. Who? George George f/cGovern on student Plimpton Wed. night. Page, 8 p.m. FREE conservatism: "1 think it's regrettable, but it's obviously A Anne Fitzgerald — Good luck FACT OF LIFE on campus these tonight — your friends are STP RESIDENTIAL ADVISOR POSITIONS rooting for you!! days." Join the revolution. YOUNG CONSERVATIVES. Meeting 6:30 The Office of Minority Affairs (OMA) is seeking five undergraduate students with a 2.5 GPA or better Happy 22nd Tripp! Today will De today in Rat. a day full of surprises. We love ya! to serve as residential advisors for the 1985 Summer Transitional Program (STP). Candidates for the Congrats to the Greek Week Blackburn Literary Festival positions should have good leadership skills, creative talents in planning and organizing with the abilities champions. A keg and a mixer. presents GEORGE PLIMPTON, 8 You AOPis truly are Greek p.m. Wednesday. March 27. Page to follow directions, get along with peers, and work under pressure. goddesses! Auditorium, FREE. Application packets are available in OMA and must be completed and returned by March 2 7, 1985. KAREN YAZ THE TRIDELT, Russ — Congratulations on your Congrats for making Duke's new pot! 1 know you'll do a great An interview with the STP Interview Team is also required. Marching Banc1. Mr. P is soooo job — as always. 1 hope you know proud of you! Don't be nervous I'm behind you in everything you OFFICE OF MINORTTY AFFAIRS for your first day of practice. do. Love you. Stephanie D.U.M.B. is lucky to have you. AWH. One Platypus, Two 107 Union-West Love, Larry the Beta. Platypus. Three Platypus. SST. 684-6756

For the Lovers of Adventure, Nature, and Good Company: Get Involved with the Outing Club! Final meeting on: camping, backpacking and paddling, and the election of new officers (Nominations are being accepted at the Outing Club bulletin board.) Wednesday, March 27 7:30 136 Soc Sci.

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