THE CHRONICLE MONDAY. MARCH 16. 1987 ' DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL, 82. NO. 115 New graduation Fourth student plans on order found to have

By MICHAEL MILSTEIN Responding to annual student pleas for deadly disease a morning commencement ceremony, the By SHANNON MULLEN University's commencement committee scheduled this year's May 10 event at 10 A Providence College freshman who visited a friend here a week before spring a.m., shifting forward almost all gradua­ break contracted a dangerous form of tion weekend activities. meningitis, a potentially fatal inflamma­ In past years, baccalaureate services tion of the outer lining of the brain and have been held in the Chapel Saturday spinal cord. and Sunday morning, with the com­ The student is the fourth with ties to mencement exercises at 2 p.m. Sunday in the University to be stricken by a con­ Wallace Wade Stadium. This spring, the tagious bacterial infection, called menin- first baccalaureate service will be Friday gococcemia, and the second to develop at 5 p.m., with the other two at 11 a.m. meningitis. She is in good condition and is and 3 p.m. Saturday. expected to be released from Danbury "Most of us agreed that an earlier cere­ Hospital in Danbury, Conn. Wednesday, mony would be better," said Trinity senior according to her friend, Trinity freshman Bill Lipscomb, a commencement commit­ Lisa Cuccinello, a resident of Southgate. tee member. Retired physics professor Meanwhile, health officials here con­ Harold Lewis, who chaired the committee tinue to hunt for clues that might help last year when it approved the proposal, them link the four cases and explain how said high afternoon temperatures, re­ the disease is being spread. So far, they quests from departments wishing to have have none. student-faculty-parent-get-tbgethers and "We haven't found a good, reliable com­ pressure from families who wanted to mon link," said Dr. Howard Eisenson, di­ begin their travels home Sunday after­ rector of student health, who will speak to noon all contributed to the committee's state health officials again today about decision. the outbreak. The bacteria is transmitted "In the past, the whole weekend was JANE RIBADENEYRA/THE CHRONICLE through sneezing, coughing and intimate compressed," Lewis said. "This spreads it Coach Mike Krzyzewski's exuberant reaction to Duke's win over Xavier was a contact. but." feature in Indianapolis as well as in CBS's tournament highlights Saturday. When the University decided two weeks And while Chapel services on past ago to undertake a mass inoculation of graduation weekends have been undergraduates, who medical officials feel eliminated, the new, but still experimen­ are most at risk, Eisenson stressed that tal, schedule will also free up the Chapel Duke beats Xavier 65-60 the vaccine was • an optional precaution Sunday morning during commencement, that exceeded recommendations by state allowing for a regular worship service at and federal disease control experts. nutes remaining tied the score at 58. 11a.m. Nevertheless, more than 4,000 students The teams traded buckets, and with " "From our point of view, it's kind of a Amaker scores 20; lined up in the Bryan Center March 5 and 1:22 remaining Xavier had a chance to nice idea," said University minister Wil­ 6 to get the vaccine. liam Willimon. "It used to be with the old Krzyzewski, Knight regain the lead. Musketeer guard Stan Kimbrough But in light of the most recent case, commencement schedule that we had to which the University did not hear about say, 'You'll have to find somewhere else to meet in next round drove into an opening in the lane with 58 seconds left, but Blue Devil fresh­ until last Thursday, Eisenson said he is go-' " convinced that students should receive Willimon said the revised schedule will man Robert Brickey made perhaps the By ASHOK REDDY biggest of all his big plays during the the vaccine. allow visitors and people not involved in game. He stepped in front of "I think I'd rest easier if even a greater graduation to attend a regular service. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — Come Kimbrough just in time to draw the number were vaccinated," he said. Stu­ And an earlier commencement should not NCAA tournament time, one would think injuries to key players would be charge. dents can get the meningoccocal polysac­ hinder students' religious plans for the charide shot this week by calling Student weekend, because they will still be able to the kiss of death. But for the second "I was playing in front of their post time in three days, the undermanned Health at 684-6721 and making an ap­ attend the three baccalaureate services, man," said Brickey, who scored 12 Duke basketball team looked to its for­ pointment. About 2,000 doses remain, he said. "In a way, it's kind of opened points on six-of-eight shooting from the gotten man, Kevin Strickland, for sal­ Eisenson said. things up." floor. "I just took a step over and drew vation - and once again, he responded. the charge." The Providence student, who had se­ Some students who attend religious Without Quin Snyder and Danny That set the stage for Strickland's vere cold symptoms while she was here, services off campus are upset, however, tried to get the vaccine in the Bryan Cen­ that this year's commencement will coin­ Ferry at anywhere near full strength, heroics. With the 45-second clock still the 6-5 junior again took matters into in operation, the Blue Devils worked ter March 5 but health officials refused to cide with most churches' regular Sunday innocculate her because she was not a See GRADUATION on page 11 his own hands as he rebounded his the ball around the perimeter and with own miss with 20 seconds remaining, 23 seconds remaining Strickland put Duke student, according to Cuccinello. netted two clinching free throws and up a 14-foot jumper that fell short. But "There were some [non-Duke studentsl then made a key defensive play with for the third time during the contest, who requested the vaccine and were time running out as 16th-ranked and he hustled to grab the rebound of his turned down," said Eisenson. "We even fifth-seeded Duke (24-8) defeated up­ own missed shot, and was fouled in the had some people from UNC come over to set-minded Xavier 65-60 in a second- process. Even a timeout by Xavier get it." Because of limited supplies, health round Midwest Regional game at the coach Pete Gil len could not rattle officials restricted distribution to Duke Hoosier Dome. Strickland. students, he said. The 13th-seeded Musketeers (19-13), "I tried not to think about anything People exposed to the meningococcal champions of the Midwestern Colle­ but the free throws during the time­ bacteria most often do not develop symp­ giate Conference, held a slim lead out," said Strickland."I can't remember toms ofthe disease until 2-10 days later, throughout most of the second half un­ a word Coach [Krzyzewski] said during said Eisenson, who believes the woman til a Billy King steal and subsequent the timeout." was already exposed by the time the Uni­ slam dunk with just under four mi­ See XAVIER on page 1 SPORTSWRAP versity began offering the vaccine. Dan­ bury doctors diagnosed her condition as menin^tis March 8, he said. The vaccine does not take effect until five days after Inside Weather the injection. "In her case [the vaccine] would not Welcome back: Admit it, vaca­ Close the convertible: and have done any good," Eisenson said. take along an umbrella to pick up the Eisenson said health officials do not STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE tion is boring compared to the lines at the real Duke School for Children. scattered pieces of the underside of know how the Providence student con­ Retired physics professor and com­ While you wait catch up on N.C. hap­ your car after taking on the new Sci­ tracted the disease. mencement committee chair Harold penings on pages 6 and 7. ence Dr. speed bumps in the rain. "Presumably she came in contact with a Lewis carrier," Eisenson said. Page 2 THE CHRONICLE Monday, March 16,1987 Our Town State agriculture Man murdered in China Inn robbery

From staff reports takes precedence from the restaurant, where there was only one employ­ An unidentified man was shot in the head and killed ee, who was closing the facility for the evening. The rob­ ByJOHNFLESHER during a robbery at the China Inn sometime between 11 bers left the employee bound and gagged in the China Associated Press and 11:30 p.m. Sunday night, according to Sgt. CD. Inn parking lot. The victim was a passerby who was shot RALEIGH — Gov. Jim Martin gives "agricultural Clark ofthe Durham Police Department. shortly after. The two robbers escaped. No description parks" a prominent place in his legislative program The victim was apparently neither an accomplice to was available ofthe robbers Sunday night. and creates a task force on the North Carolina farm the crime nor an employee ofthe restaurant. Clark said The China Inn employee contacted the police after he economy. the department had no further information on the victim had freed himself. He was questioned by the police at Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan pronounces funding of the at that time. headquarters late Sunday night and was unavailable for Rural Economic Development Center the heart of his The two robbers stole an unknown amount pf money comment. agenda for building the state's economy and creating jobs. In a recent report to Martin, the State Goals and Policy Board warns that tobacco production "as a major enterprise may end in North Carolina" and ur­ Southern poll puts Hart, Bush in lead ges swift action "to erect safety nets," particularly a greater reliance on other crops. ATLANTA (AP) — Democrat Gary Hart and Republi­ Bill Bradley of New Jersey, while 23 percent said no. What do the developments indicate? can George Bush are the front-running presidential The rest were undecided. To perhaps a greater extent than ever, state gov­ hopefuls in a poll of Southerners one year before the Nunn and Bradley have said they are not now run­ ernment is shouldering the burden of helping farmers "Super Tuesday" primaries. ning. and small business people who rely on the agricul­ Eifty-six percent of the potential Democratic voters Among Republicans, former Sen. Howard Baker of tural economy to survive hard times. polled said they would consider voting for Hart, the for­ Tennessee, now White House chief of staff, would be con­ "Agriculture has always had a prominent place at mer senator from Colorado, while 18 percent said no. sidered by 52 percent, while 23 percent would not con­ the Legislature," Rep. Bob Etheridge, D-Harnett, Of the Republican voters, 69 percent said they would sider him. Those results were from a smaller pool of said. "But with all the critical problems confronting consider voting for Bush, with 24 percent against the voters interviewed before Baker accepted his White the rural economy ... things are sort of coming togeth- vice president. House job. The poll was conducted among 5,523 potential voters In third place was Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas, 46 per­ It's been commonplace for state and local officials in 12 Southern or border states for The Atlanta Journal cent yes and 33 percent no, followed by Rep. Jack Kemp to point fingers at the federal government when the and The Atlanta Constitution, which published it in of New York, 36 percent yes and 36 percent no. subject of rebuilding agriculture comes up. Only the their combined Sunday editions. The poll, conducted by In questions involving issues, the poll found heavy feds have the enormous resources needed for crop telephone by the Roper Organization, has a margin of support for a Constitutional amendment permitting subsidies that form the backbone ofthe national agri­ error of plus or minus 2.5 percent. school prayer, and less strong support for affirmative ac­ culture programs, they say. Other Democrats and their results: 40 percent said tion and outlawing abortion. But while the health of the farm economy depends they would consider voting for the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Fifteen states, most in the South, have set their largely on federal programs and economic forces with 47 percent saying no; 32 percent said they would primaries for "Super Tuesday," March 8, 1988. In ad­ beyond anyone's control, the state is far from impo­ consider Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia, while 31 percent dition, South Carolina Democrats will pick convention tent, officials say. said no; and 29 percent said they would consider Sen. delegates in caucuses that week.

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-'•••-•-v. •«'.-•• Monday, March 16,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 3 Stores may sell condoms Officials note pros, cons to open sales By CRAIG WORTMAN Condoms are the most effective protec­ tion against AIDS. U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said it, your doctor said it, TV commercials say it and soon, Duke Stores may reinforce the notion. According to the office of stores opera­ tions, the sale of condoms in Duke stores is under consideration, but no policy has yet been formed. Student Health Director Dr. Howard TAMMI HENKIN/THE CHRONICLE Eisenson said condoms should not be sold Speed bumps surprised the tires of those returning to campus this week. in Duke stores. Although he strongly believes students should, use condoms, he said, "Ethically, people who choose not to be sexually active might find wide avail­ New bumps bother motorists ability of contraceptives to be a subtle TAMMI HENKIN' THE CHRONICLE pressure." Eisenson also said that older Duke Stores may soon begin selling By JOHN WEATHERSPOON generations should not be overlooked. condoms. In response to complaints that the "Alumni and parents might find the idea During spring break, tbe Department of bumps are too high, Campbell said, "As distasteful," he said. said that the number of condom pur­ Public Safety constructed two speed far as I know, there is no such thing as a Eisenson said the current availability of chases were unequal to the number of bumps on Science Dr. to protect pedestri­ standard size bump. They are not any the contraceptives at Pickens Student sexual encounters on campus. ans, but the response has been mixed. higher than the ones on Wannamaker Health offices is adequate. Several other universities have ad­ "A car with 110,000 miles doesn't really Dr." Within the last year, he said, Student dressed this problem, but devised differ­ like them," one driver remarked Sunday Based on the configurations of the road Health has increased efforts to dissemi­ ent solutions. Condoms are not sold in afternoon. and the distance from the top to the bot­ nate information about AIDS and AIDS UNC-Chapel Hill stores, according to Elizabeth Campbell, manager of admin­ tom of the hill, she said that stop signs prevention through dorm presentations, Rutledge Tufts, director of campus mer­ istrative services with the Department of were not a practical solution to the prob­ advertisements and forums. "Frankly, I chandising. Tufts said he thought the idea Public Safety, said the bumps were in­ lem. Speed bumps were considered the don't think there is a need to overpush the should be considered but said the issue stalled to protect pedestrians on the best means of increased safety, according issue. [Condoms] are available now to was potentially controversial. "There are street. She said some type of safety mea­ to surveys done by the North Carolina anyone who makes the least effort to find people here who would get upset if we did sure has been needed at the bottom ofthe Safety Research Group, Campbell said. them." [sell condoms]." hill on Science Dr. for a long time. After a The speed bumps were paid out of the Steve Almond, a pharmacist at Pickens, Student stores at the University of few incidents in which pedestrians were Traffic Office Roadwork fund, Campbell disagreed. "I think that any way that they Pennsylvania recently broke ground and injured, the complaints increased and said. Money collected from parking per­ can be dispensed is good because, at the began not only to sell, but also to display "five to ten students requested [the speed mits goes towards tbe fund, which is used moment, they are the best disease control condoms prominently, according to Chuck bumps]," she said. for traffic work around campus. method we have." Cohen, an editor at The Daily Pennsylva- According to Almond, approximately six nian. The stores are run by a student- boxes of condoms have been sold in the based group which operates "semi-auton- last eight weeks. A year ago sales were omously" from the school's administra­ Co. considering merit funds stable at about one box per month, he tion, Cohen said. said. Almond added that now as many Richard Hayes, merchandise marketing GREENSBORO (AP) — Only three the College Foundation Inc., the state's women as men buy them, in contrast to manager at North Carolina State Univer­ states across the country have statewide main non-profit lender_for a variety of last year's all-male clientele. sity, said condoms are not sold on campus merit scholarship programs and some educational loans. "We're breaking new Almond attributed the increased sales and he did not expect they would be in the financial aid officers are raising questions ground." to greater availability' of information, but near future. about whether such a proposed program CFI, which is based in Raleigh, has in North Carolina is worthy. been making, insuring and collecting loan "It's a bad idea," said Jim Belvin, finan­ and grant programs in North Carolina for cial aid directpr at Duke University. 24 years. "Wbile I support the idea of trying to To have a viable program, Paul said provide resources to students seeking CFI would need to raise $100 million. • The English Department ^ higher education, I would hope they "But if you know somebody who's got $10 would direct that money to needy million, we'll take it," he said. students." The money, which would come from pri­ is pleased to announce Belvin's comments come after officials vate sources, would be placed in an en­ of a private college loan organization said dowment, and the interest would be used they are studying the possibility of raising to fund the scholarships. the continuation of the $100 million to create a statewide merit "We anticipate they would be renew­ scholarship program for North Carolina able for four years of study and would students. probably be in the neighborhood of $4,000 "We want to see if there is a need for to $5,000 a year," Paul said. "We would Editorial Internship such a program, and if there is, how much have to start on a very small basis, and as money we would need and where we the money comes in, we could increase the established in 1984 would get it," said D.L. Paul, director of awards each year." The Department includes within its ranks the editors of American Literature, American Speech, the South Atlantic Quarterly, and the Carlyle correspondence. The intern program will enable a senior English major to learn the fundamentals of editing by working next fall with one or SCHEDULE CHANGE more of these men as well as with various staff of the Duke FOR FALL 1987 University Press. Through the generosity of Barbara Black PPS 55 with Professor Joseph Lipscomb Reitt (B.A. '62), the intership will carry a stipend of $400. has moved from T-Th 9:00-10:15 a.m. The Chairman of the English Department has appointed to M-W 3:25-4:40 p.m., Professors Budd, Butters, Ferguson, Lentricchia, and Ryals 139 Soc. Sci. as a committee to select the intern and to oversee the program. Applications, from rising senior English majors, must be submitted in writing to Professor Oliver 'tt was the right decision" Ferguson, 325 Allen building, by April 3,1987. Page 4 THE CHRONICLE Monday, March 16,1987 World & National Trade talks make progress Reagan policy will charge By CLYDE FARNSWORTH before a legislatively mandated deadline N.Y. Times News Service next Oct. 1. Once a draft is drawn up, it aliens seeking legal status WASHINGTON — After nearly a year will be presented to Congress. Under the of negotiations, the United States and implementing legislation, Congress has By ROBERT PEAR The cumulative total of all absences in Canada are starting to make progress to­ 60 legislative days to voice its opinion. If N.Y. Times News Service that period must not exceed 180 days. ward a trade pact that would eliminate there are no objections by either house, tariffs and non-tariff barriers between the the accord is considered to be ratified. WASHINGTON — The Reagan ad­ Under the proposed rules, there ministration, under rules to be issued would be a $50 fee for any alien who world's two largest trading partners by In a telephone interview from Ottawa, the turn ofthe century. this week, plans to charge a basic ap­ appeals a decision denying legal sta­ a senior Canadian official, who asked not plication fee of $185 for most illegal tus. Aliens would have to obtain medi­ Officials from both countries said the to be identified, said the talks had found a aliens seeking legal status under the cal examinations, which could cost $60 pace of the talks had accelerated to the "new momentum and a new vibrancy, new immigration law. to $75. In addition, many aliens might point where the broad outlines of an largely as a result of forces on your side of have to pay lawyers' fees, although agreement were starting to emerge. the border." However, the fee would be only $50 for children under 18. The government church groups and community organi­ "We have made considerably more This official added: "If we get an will offer legal status to families in a zations will offer assistance at little or progress than most people realize," said agreement, it will be a big one." package deal for $420, according to a no charge. United States Trade Representative The negotiations began after a 1985 ini­ confidential draft of proposed regula­ Under the rules, there would be a Clayton Yeutter. tiative by Canadian Prime Minister Brian tions signed by Alan C. Nelson, the limit of $420 on the application fees Mulroney. Until last January, the Ameri­ "We certainly comprehend the parame­ commissioner of immigration and nat­ payable by a family, defined as hus­ can response had been languid. ters of a final agreement, but there is no uralization. band, wife and children under 18. way for us to know whether our views mix For a family of four illegal aliens, it The rules also list documents that with our Canadian colleagues', and we Now there is a strong push from Wash­ might cost $700 to obtain legal status may be submitted in support of an ap­ won't be able to say whether they do until ington, which analysts say stems from the when the cost of medical examinations plication, such as pay stubs, income much further into the negotiations," Yeut­ rise of trade protectionism as a political and other charges are included. tax withholding forms, utility bills or ter said in an interview. issue and the desire ofthe Reagan admin­ bank statements showing residence in istration to deflect attention from the The fees would be part of a program, But Yeutter noted: "I can be reasonably under which illegal aliens can apply for the United States. optimistic" that a pact will be concluded Iran-contra affair. legal status, or amnesty, that is to The new rules retain many start in seven weeks. Aliens may file provisions that were criticized as un­ applications from May 5, 1987, duly rigid and restrictive by key mem­ through May 4,1988, at any of 100 spe­ bers of Congress, including Reps. Peter" Moslems set to fight Israel cial offices to be established around the W. Rodino Jr., D-N.J., Romano L. Maz- country. zoli, D-Ky., and Jim Wright of Texas, after 7,000 Syrian soldiers deployed in the To qualify, illegal aliens must show the speaker ofthe House. mainly Moslem western part of the cap­ that they entered the United States The administration says the legal­ BEIRUT, Lebanon — Hundreds of Mos­ ital to end fierce factional fighting. before Jan. 1, 1982, and have resided ization program must be financed en­ lem militia fighters who left west Beirut Berri spoke at a news conference in here continuously since then, with no tirely with aliens' application fees, last month after the arrival of Syrian Beirut Saturday, 24 hours after Amal had single absence of more than 45 days. using no money from other sources. troops have moved to southern Lebanon taken responsibility for an attack in to fight against Israel, according to police southern Lebanon in which an Israeli sources and reports in the press here. army officer was killed and another sol­ The leader of the mainstream Shiite dier wounded. The Israeli army command Amal movement, Nabih Berri, announced confirmed the casualties. that from now on his militia would devote The incident occurred inside the Israeli- its energies to "liberating southern Leba­ designated security zone, an area about Do You Play a Wind non" from the Israelis, who have declared six miles deep that extends along the en­ the territory just north ofthe Israeli-Leb­ tire 50-mile stretch ofthe border. The ter­ anese border to be a "security zone." ritory is patrolled by Israeli soldiers aided Instrument? Lebanese newspapers said as many as by a 2,000-man mainly Christian militia 1,000 militiamen were shifting their known as the South Lebanon Army. Interested in traveling to training from urban warfare to hit-and- Berri also held talks here Saturday Munich, Vienna, Budapest, run operations, in an effort to press the with Lt. Gen. Gustav Hagglund, the com­ Israelis to leave Lebanese territory. mander ofthe 5,800-member U.N. force in Prague, Dresden and Venice? The militiamen moved to new locations southern Lebanon. Study abroad next fall with the Duke Wind Symphony!

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For more information and an _ _ application, contact Paul Bryan with every disc or roll of •--><--• (077 Mary Biddle Duke Bldg., 684- color print film brought -^^~~~~~ 5634) or the Study Abroad Office in for processing. j^j^^j^ (2022 Campus Drive, 684-21 74). offer good thru March 30th DUKE UNIVERSITY STORES ^ ^__»______l______f 684-2344 Bryan Center Monday, March 16, 1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 5 Regional Legislature tries to limit lengthy sessions Irish reveling RALEIGH (AP) — A Lincoln County total reworking of the Legislature. Rhyne also has introduced two other legislator has introduced bills to limit the "If we can get out of here by July 4, measures dealing with the length of the early in Ga. length of General Assembly sessions, and considering that we didn't start until up session. One would allow legislators to file Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan says if the Legisla­ in February, I think that is probably as bills before the session begins. The other SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) — Two days ture isn't out of town by July 4, such tight a session as we can have without to­ is a proposed constitutional amendment before the 1,526th anniversary ofthe restrictions may be necessary. tally changing the legislative concept," that would limit sessions to 90 legislative death of St. Patrick, the celebration in "If we're still here this year on July 15 Jordan said. days in odd-numbered years and 25 legis­ his honor began in earnest in Savan­ then this system is not working and we Rep. Johnathan Rhyne, R-Lincoln, has lative days in even-numbered years. nah. should look at something else," Jordan introduced a bill that sets a three-day The General Assembly met for 118 Thousands of revelers flocked to told the Durham Morning Herald. work week. Lawmakers would spend legislative days in the 1985 session, which River Street for an early start of Tues­ While stopping short of endorsing a Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in stretched from Feb. 5 to July 18. Last day's St. Patrick's Day festivities in the constitutional amendment to limit the Raleigh and have Monday and Friday to year, legislators spent 30 working days in coastal Georgia city. Police estimated length of sessions, Jordan said the Gen­ spend on their regular jobs. The General Raleigh. Sunday's crowd at about 100,000. eral Assembly may have to look seriously Assembly now begins its week Monday "Long" legislative sessions are held in Skies were sunny; the beer was green at setting some kind of limit. He warned, night and generally finishes Friday mor­ odd-numbered years, when lawmakers and in demand. however, that such a move could require ning. develop a two-year budget. Last week's fight over who could sell beer along the riverfront apparently has subsided, a transition eased by the demand both from bars and vendors. Supremacists rally in Forsyth County Lt. J.H. Elkins, who is overseeing the police department's St. Patrick's By MARC RICE ness on the quality of life in America. demonstrators were arrested. Day work, said one illegal beer vendor Associated Press Saturday's rally was the latest in a se­ Since then, a biracial committee has was run off Sunday. That was a man CUMMING, Ga. (AP) — Forsyth ries of events that have focused attention been appointed to work toward impriving carrying a keg of beer in a cart without County again was a forum for racial un­ this year on race relations in the virtually race relations in Forsyth County. the proper licenses. rest as a white supremacist organization all-white county 40 miles north of Atlan­ That committee has drawn the ire of Elkins said there were few problems, staged a weekend rally in front of the ta. white supremacist organizations, such as other than traffic jams and a few county courthouse. On Jan. 17, a group of about 75 civil the Forsyth County Defense League, brawls. About 125 people attended the Satur­ rights marchers led by the Rev. Hosea which organized Saturday's rally. One Members of the U.S. Coast Guard, day rally, which was marked by calls for Williams was met by about 400 counter­ speaker at the rally, the league's informa­ who were monitoring boat traffic on the all-white county to resist attempts at demonstrators, including members of the tion director Frank Shirley, charged that the Savannah River, reported no prob­ integration. A counterdemonstration Ku Klux Klan. The marchers were pelted the committee is under the influence of lems on the water. across the street drew about 200, many of with rocks and debris. communists. Sunday's high temperature reached whom carried signs reading, "Go Home." The following weekend, more than "If they want to be with the blacks, let 72 degrees and according to the Na­ The 90-minute rally was peaceful, with 20,000 civil rights marchers converged on them go to Atlanta and stay with them. tional Weather Service the mild only one arrest reported. The crowd the county. The procession was accom­ We consider the city of Atlanta to be a dis­ weather should continue through St. cheered as a series of speakers denounced panied by a large contingent of law enfor­ grace to the state of Georgia and to the Patrick's Day. the influence of minorities and big busi­ cement officers, and dozens of counter­ United States of America," said Shirley.

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Art reproductions, dance, sports, rock and movie stills, laser images, MC. Escher, gallery posters, nostalgic posters. Van Gogh, photography', Rockwell, Monet, wildlife prints, movies, Picasso, Asian art, animal posters. Harvey Edwards, Frazetta, music images, floral grahics, science fiction, Rembrandt, modern & ab­ stract images. Eliot Porter, Rosamond, art deco, art nouveau, Renoir, travel post­ ers, scenic posters, Chagall, astronomy, Dali. humor, cars - and MUCH, MUCH MORE. SHOW AND SALE Page 6 THE CHRONICLE Monday, March 16,1987 While You Were Away Television evangelist's wife treated for drug dependency

FORT MILL, S.C. (AP) — Christian Rancho Mirage, Calif., PTL said. The the extent of damage to nearby buildings Kathryn Felton, were hurt when a door television personality Tammy Faye Bak- Betty Ford Center, a chemical depen­ were indicative of the effects of an ex­ from the van struck their motorcycle. ker is being treated for drug dependency dency recovery hospital named after the plosive. in California and could be away from wife of former President Ford, is in the Harold Little, spokesman for the Cum­ PTL's daily broadcast for up to a year, the Eisenhower complex, but the Bakkers did berland County Sheriffs Department, • RTP explosion: (AP) — Two em­ PTL ministry disclosed. not say if that was where the family was said the gasoline tank of the van was in­ ployees ofthe Research Triangle Institute Mrs. Bakker and her evangelist hus­ receiving treatment. tact. were slightly injured Tuesday when a canister being used to mix chemicals ex­ band, Jim, made the announcement in a On the videotape, made inside a resi­ The van's driver, LaVaughn Harold ploded at a chemical engineering labora­ videotape shown at PTL's studio Friday dence in California and shown to an audi­ Hayes, 48, of Fayetteville, was in critical tory. and scheduled for broadcast nationwide ence of about 1,200 Friday at Heritage condition at a Fayetteville hospital Tues­ Monday. Mrs. Bakker already has been USA, Mrs. Bakker said, "I am so grateful day with multiple injuries. David Green of Chapel Hill and V.D. Mennon of Cary suffered cuts in the head absent from the show for two months. to God for this case of pneumonia that John Britt, 26, of Fayetteville, was and shoulders, said C.X. Larrabee, a com­ On the tape, Bakker said doctors told brought me to this." treated for cuts he received when bits of pany spokesman. him, "Tammy Faye is a very, very sick She said she at first thought she had metal were blown against his pickup woman and if you want her well you're the flu and tried to "doctor" herself. truck when the van exploded. going to have to do something to get her "The sicker I got, the more things I'd Two people on a motorcycle, Wesley and See CATCH-UP on page 7 help." try," she said. "I'd try several different "Today, Tammy has not been on any over-the-counter medications, megadoses medication for four weeks," Bakker said. of aspirins. I would take aspirin when Previously, PTL had said only that Mrs. they (family members) didn't even know I Bakker was recovering from pneumonia would take them." and complications from medicine she took The medicine made her hyperactive after getting sick recently. and she went several days without The Bakkers, who have been married sleeping, she said. 25 years, are synonymous with the TV She said she also began hallucinating ministry headquartered at the Heritage that demons were after her. And on a pri­ USA Christian near Fort Mill. Bakker, vate plane headed to California from a THEY who is PTL president, senior pastor and home the Bakkers own in Gatlinburg, board chairman, is a minister in the As­ Tenn., she said she saw bugs crawling on semblies of God, a Pentecostal denomina­ the floor and people out on the wing ofthe tion. plane. She said she tried to put on her WANT TO TALK Bakker blamed the problem on an over- coat to leave the plane while it was in the the-counter allergy medicine his wife has air. been taking since their daughter was born Bakker said doctors have asked Mrs. 17 years ago and tranquilizers doctors Bakker not to go back on television for a prescribed to reduce nervousness the year, but he said he doubted she would be medication caused. able to stay away that long. Though he Bakker, 47, said he realized his wife said he would stay with his wife, Bakker needed professional help and enrolled her did not say when he planned to return to in a California center. Bakker also said he the show. and his two children are taking part in re­ lated programs for family members. • Van explodes: FAYETTEVILLE "It's taken many weeks of detoxification (AP) — Federal bomb experts looked into to get Tammy free from all of this medica­ the possibility Monday that explosives tion," Bakker said. "Together, we're get­ were in a van that was destroyed in a ting well. It's been one of the greatest ex­ blast Monday night. Four people were in­ periences of my life." jured in the explosion. Bakker said he and his wife have just "No official determination" had been YOU graduated from the program and now made Monday, said Sam Lewis, agent in enter "an after-care situation." charge of the Fayetteville office of the fed­ PTL officials said Friday they didn't eral Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Fire­ know any more than what was on the arms. He said agency investigators were tape. looking at the remains of the van and Dick Dober Tuesday, March 17 Mrs. Bakker, 45, was hospitalized Jan. debris found at the scene. 13 at Eisenhower Medical Center in Lewis said damage to the highway and Director of Dober and Associates

rF^-3 *' HEWLETT i m PACKARD President Brodie Thursday, March 26 1Coupon Specia Sale Price Wilh Phone, Charge Check & Coupon & COD Orders •HP 28-C $179.95 189.95 Jim Belvin Tuesday, March 31 HP-11C $44.95 $49.95 The new HP-28C HP-150 $74.95 $84.95 does things no other calcu­ Director of Financial Aid HP-180 $139.95 $144.95 lator can. Like algebra and HP-41 CV $129.95 $139.95 calculus using variables such HP-41CX $184.95 $199.95 as x, y and zebra. The HP-28C HP-120 $79.95 $84.95 makes it simple with menus, HP-160 $99.95 $104.95 softkeys and the largest num­ HP-71B $381.95 $399.95 ber of built in functions of any 1S& 28 Printer $107.95 $114.95 calculator ever. It's not more We also have battery packs, chargers, of the same, it's the reinven­ ALL at 7:00 pm program books and modules. tion of the calculator. in the Mary Lou Williams ORDERING INSTRUCTIONS: You must enclose your UPS shipping address, a check and this coupon to take advantage of the sale prices. Don't forget to add 5% sales tax. On phone orders, MasterCard and Visa are accepted. There is a $2.00 fee on Cultural Center COD orders and a certified check, cash or money order will be required. Orders of $100 or more shipped free - $3.50 shipping and handling charge on orders less than "On the Road with ASDU..." $100. Mail to Surveyors Supply Co., P.O. Drawer 808, Apex, NC 27502. Thank you for an opportunity to speak with those SURVEYORS SUPPLY CQJ|^| who shape your lives at Duke. Hwy. 64 at Old US 1, Apex, NC • Hrs: 8-5 M-F • 362-7000 Monday, March 16, 1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 7 Piedmont sale may mean another review of RDU hub status CATCH-UP from page 6 Larrabee said oxygen was being mixed with a chemi­ property from the city for 40 years. Because of the cal when the accident occurred at the lab in an RTI an­ • Still a N.C. tradition: WINSTONSALEM

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WiWMWWffWS Letters Expect unexpected CIA view

To the editor: remain largely in the dark. Margot Stone's column ("CIA needs Unlike Stone, however, precisely be­ more scrutiny," March 5) correctly points cause the disclosures surrounding the Don't sever The Link out that, despite the current foreign pol­ "Iran-Contra scandal" have not exposed icy scandal, there appears to be little will­ the most sensitive secrets of U.S. foreign The ASDU legislature considers mendations to the legislature. Recent ingness in Congress to seriously restrict policy, I doubt that the revelations of the the covert activities of the CIA and the CIA's number one dissident, John Stock- The Missing Link's funding request criticisms do not fall within the National Security Council. In fairness, well, will "not be . . . unexpected." He for 1987-88 tonight. Surprisingly, in a guidelines set by the ASDU constitu­ the just-released Tower Commission rejects Stone's view, for example, that year that has seen the alternative tion for review of budget requests. report, showing the same lack of will as "covert operations are a necessary . . . newspaper grow, the proposal before The SOC oversteps its bounds by rec­ Congress, should not be criticized as function ofthe CIA." them would cut The Link's budget by ommending budget cuts based on lit­ harshly. Stockwell's mission is full exposure of over half. The Student Organizations erary criticisms it is not qualified to After all, the commission was appointed U.S. covert operations. The difference be­ Commission (SOC) has recommended make. by the president. Its mission was damage tween damage control and full exposure is the publication receive $2,812, less While the appearance of the young control. No surprise then when the com­ like night and day. Stockwell's lecture to­ than 40 percent of the $7,065 it re­ paper may not be entirely profession­ mission concluded that there was nothing night will raise the tough questions that quested. al, it has improved immensely during basically wrong with the foreign policy the Tower Commission, Congress and the process ofthe Reagan Administration. media have ignored. SOC chair Ellen Weigle has cited the past year. Given the chance, this trend is likely to continue. The 21- The strategy of damage control is not Kevin Kresse waste of space, large type size and primarily to inform but to minimize losses features duplicated by other campus member staff, up from four last fall, and close discussion. We the public Chair, GAIN publications as the basis for sudstan- has demonstrated there are a suffi­ (Graduate students Against Intervention in Nicaragua) tially curtailing The Link's budget. cient number of issues not addressed While these concerns may be legiti­ by other Duke publications to justify mate, they are not cause for reducing the paper's existence. the frequency, circulation and size of Improvements in the paper's ap­ Link budget blow was flea-bitten the paper's issues. pearance are imminent even as the Weigle's criticism would be better SOC and the ASDU legislature are To the editor: my life. addressed to the publications board, poised to seriously weaken the publi­ May the fleas of a thousand camels in­ As a former Link editor, I am amazed at the student group responsible for cation. The staff is in the process of fest the armpits of the members of AS­ the wonderful work this year's staff has DU's Student Organizations Committee. been doing. Only a little more than a year overseeing the editorial quality she mastering a new laser writing sys­ After their recent proposal to cut the bud­ ago The Missing Link was almost dead. seems to be concerned about. tem. And critics concerned with get of The Missing Link by more than Editor Christie Elmer had left in the mid­ A year of poor administration has "large type" might peruse this week's half, the SOC deserves no better. dle of the year and a small group of four resulted in the faltering of several of cover story in Sports Illustrated, The thought-provoking articles and people who knew nothing about running a the board's publications including which employed the same common especially the relevant issues those arti­ newspaper took over. Since that time, the Eruditio, Latent Image and The Ar­ graphic design The Link used effec­ cles address make The Link one of the staff has grown tremendously and The chive. While the board needs to reor­ tively in recent issues. better publications on campus. With the Link has worked up to coming out every ganize, The Link is only a cog within Circulation less than The Link's recent revival of the Duke Gay and Les­ other week. bian Alliance, only The Link explored in Such incredible growth should be en­ it and should not be penalized for the current bi-weekly production would depth homosexuality at Duke. With the failings ofthe organization. restrict development of a faithful couraged and fostered rather than opening of the Shearon Harris nuclear squashed by the SOC. If the ASDU legis­ Whatever problems Weigle identi­ readership and a regular staff. Cut­ plant, only The Link explored the topic of lators continue on the foolish course that fies with the paper — we see few of ting the fledgling publication's bud­ energy in the Triangle. The four- the SOC has charted for them, I can only merit — the SOC's duty is to evaluate get, when the Publications Board has paragraph articles in The Chronicle sim­ say that I hope to see them scratching requests for funds and make recom­ slipped, misses the point. ply cannot provide me with the informa­ away at their armpits too. tion I need to make thoughtful, intelligent decisions about these issues that affect Tiff Davis Trinity '86 PIRG merits It's the principle money To the editor: To the editor: I am not a member of Students for After the very successful campaign Fiscal Responsibility or the College Re­ (2200 signatures in two days) of the publicans, and I believe that PIRGs NCPIRG petition for a referendum, a perform a commendable function. group has been formed named Students However, I do object to a mandatory for Fiscal Responsibility (SFR). Over­ refundable fee. It would serve as an looked was the fact that PIRG is inher­ unfair tax on students, because even if ently concerned with fiscal responsibility students did not wish to contribute to. on a state-wide basis. the organization they would still have to expend the time and effort to As a public interest research group, it is retrieve their own money. For that rea­ PIRG's responsibility to the students of son no organization, no matter how be­ Duke and to the citizens of North nevolent, should have the right to such Carolina to institute programs dealing funding. with such matters as consumer protec­ HE NW BUSES RBSTtWC tion. These programs entail seeking out As a matter of principle, I urge my and eliminating consumer, commercial fellow students to reject the resolution and health fraud now existing within the to increase the student activity fee on THE CHRONICLE community. Even if advantage is not April 2, not to defeat PIRG, but to taken of the well-deserved opportunity of defeat mandatory refundable fees. I Shannon Mullen, Editor gaining an applied education by helping encourage PIRG to find a better way to Michael Milstein, Rocky Rosen, Managing Editors our community through research, public raise funds, but a mandatory refun­ Barry Eriksen, General Manager involvement and fiscal responsibility, a dable fee is not the answer. profit will be realized from the $4 per se­ Read Martin, Editorial Page Editor mester in the benefits that PIRG affects Erik Thomas Laura Allen, News Editor Rick Cendo, News Editor through it programs. Further, PIRG is the Trinity '88 Kathleen Sullivan, City & State Editor Therese Maher, University Editor only group offering a refund, which is Michael Leber, Sports Editor Tammi Henkin, Photography Editor available 40 hours a week for those who Jane Ribadeneyra, Photography Editor Douglas Mays, Senior Editor wish to claim it. On the record Jenny Wright, Senior Editor Ed Farrell, Contributing Editor Hopefully, these misunderstandings Lane Hensley, Production Editor Linda Nettles, Production Manage and others can be resolved so that PIRG Kevin Witte, Business Manager Carolyn Haff, Advertising Production Manager You do the best you can. And then you can accomplish the task for which it is prepare to take flak- Phone numbers: editor: 684-5469, news/features: 684-2663, sports: 684-6115, business of­ created: an opportunity for Duke stu­ fice: 684-3811, advertising office: 684-6106, classifieds: 684-3476. dents, all Duke students, to become in­ University Marshal Pelham Wilder, ' 1987 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. volved in community concerns. explaining his strategy for revising the No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permis­ sion ofthe business office. Jason Gerber 1987 graduation schedule. Trinity'89 Monday, March 16,1987 THE CHRONICLE Page 9 Soviet good guys need U.S. support

WASHINGTON — I once met a Russian reformer. "Alexander Fedorovich," I said — this was 37 years ago, and sassy cub reporters tossed around first names — "tell me about the reforms." The old man with the gray crew cut bristled at my presumption but pointed out that when he had been in charge, steps had been taken toward freedom of speech, religion, even ofthe press. "I had no support from the Allies, however," he com­ plained. "If I had been given the help that Stalin received in World War II, the world would be a different place today." Alexander Kerensky was one of the revolutionary leaders who overthrew the czar early in 1917. He be­ came prime minister of the provisional government pledged to bring freedom to the Russian people. But he made the mistake of releasing Joseph Stalin and other imprisoned Bolsheviks: "I did not think of Stalin as a man with a future," said the man to whom the Old Bolsheviks were the new guys. In October, the Lenin-Trotsky-Stalin crowd threw Kerensky out. He IsPUOfON IN ALABAMA; FUNT*M£NTAUSM 101. died in exile in New York in 1970, a non-person in his homeland, remembered here only as a liberal reformer not ruthless enough to eradicate his opposition. mission's blast. Thus, what otherwise would seem an ig­ Why do I recollect him today? Admittedly, one reason • Essay nominious withdrawal was made to appear to be a gra­ is to impress readers with the length of perspective on cious gesture to a weakened American president. modern Russian history available to regular perusers of William Safire That seems to show how these two fellows need each this space. other to shore up their positions at home. But we should More to the point, the now has entered a given a tad more tolerance, but the opposition with the not think of Reagan as shaky and Gorbachev secure; in period of ostensible ease. Glasnost is in bloom; Andrei real chance of regaining power is the party and army fact, America's ongoing leadership is stable and the So­ Sakharov is free; enemies of Stalin, like Zinoviev of and ethnic leadership being strongly suppressed by Gor­ viet Union's highly volatile. The Russians can assume a "Reds" fame, are rehabilitated. The rewriters of history bachev. four-letter American successor - Hart, Nunn, Robb, in the Kremlin will never look kindly on my friend Alex­ That means we have to allow for the possibility that Kemp, Dole, Haig, Bush - but we have no idea how long ander Fedorovich, who went up against Lenin himself the Gorbachev regime is in serious internal trouble. the Gorbachev regime will last. one memorable day in Petrograd, but another grand Some of the analysts writing our SNIE's — Special Na­ Dealing from the strength of stability, we should be switching of white and black hats is under way. tional Intelligence Estimates — are now suggesting a 30 vigilant about verifiability, with permanent on-site sur­ During this 70th anniversary of the October revolu­ percent chance of Gorbachev's transfer to a power sta­ prise inspection teams, no encryption and a goal of mu­ tion against Kerensky, Mikhail Gorbachev is trying to tion in Novosibirsk. tual testing and deployment of defense shields tied to avoid Kerensky's mistake. To change the system that To satisfy his Ogarkovite supporters in the military; missile reductions. Reagan should take advantage of the cannot feed the people, he must not merely replace but who demand high-tech tactical rather than lower-tech increments of progress "Star Wars" has stimulated, but disgrace and drive out the people who feed on the sys­ strategic weaponry, Gorbachev is under pressure to should be in no rush to conclude a grand compromise in tem. He is publicly castigating, and giving others a fran­ avoid huge new commitments to missile defense. a dangerous grasp for glory called "a place in history." chise to criticize, the power elite resisting his changes. His all-or-nothing demand of President Reagan at Kerensky has a place in history, of a brief interlude The West cannot see the sullen internal resistance, Reykjavik did not succeed. A return to the previous So­ between despotisms. Gorbachev, not Reagan, is the one but the campaign against it suggests its presence. We viet position in Geneva of one-at-a-time treaties would under pressure to avoid becoming a Kerensky. tend to think of the "opposition" in the Soviet Union as show weakness, however; that is why the Soviet leader William Safire's column is syndicated by The New made up of refuseniks and Helsinki Watchers now being timed his retreat to follow the release of the Tower Com­ York Times. L finds a bewitching store name stranger than any mortal

ANDOVER, Md. — Impressed by that dateline? had a heart attack and just keeled right over. "Calling Kind of makes you feel just like you were there, Monday, Monday Dr. Bombay! Calling Dr. Bombay! We need you right L huh. Yeah, this story comes straight from Lan­ away!" dover, so you know you're in the thick of the action. No? "Sam, frankly, I think your mother is just pulling an­ O.K., so you've got the idea. startled by a sudden "THUMP! THUMP!" As the other one of her silly stunts to make mortals like me look Tom Suiter, my second favorite newscaster (the first remains of my car skidded along Science Drive, I cursed stupid." threatened to sue me if I printed her name or photo), those new SPE bumps loudly. "Oh, shut up, Derwood, I'm croaking." traveled with a full crew to Landover to cover the ACC I got out ofthe car, walked back and picked up my ax­ I always wondered what Darrin actually did at that ad tournament, during which Quin Snyder tucked his shirt les, and vowed I'd get even some day. Damn, those agency of his, and I think I figured it out over the week­ in. Tom failed to mention that. The cost of paying Tom's things are big. What if a fire truck had to get through end. A 14-year-old associate of mine was visiting from enormous salary alone must have been staggering, but quickly? home, and started asking me about the stupid names for add to that the pay for a full tech crew, their hotel bills, a the local grocery stores. "What about that Lion Food satellite truck that gets 30 gallons per mile . . .. place?" he asked. That was one heck of a trip. But it was worth it. Be­ NOTE: I am not suggesting that Actually, it's a thought I've had before. Two years ago, cause ACC fans were able to get * LIVE! * coverage via you pour gasoline on the speed I was visiting an associate in Memphis, Tenn., and LiveStar 5°. Live. From the heat ofthe action. bumps. bought some chips and dips at the original Piggly Wiggly From the parking lot. Food Store. What were the founders thinking? How did Hell, if Tom had brought the guys over to my place, we they get hold of crack back then? I try to imagine the could have shot the whole thing from my parking lot, board meeting: split the difference and had a party. Keep it in mind, Now I'd never actually suggest that you do this, be­ "Well, boys, looks like we finally got the financing we Tom. cause it's vandalism and I'd be remiss in my duties to need to open one of America's largest food chains. The suggest vandalism, but have you ever seen what gaso­ inventory arrives tomorrow, all the employees are hired, • Ted Turner at Duke? Living color is great, but line does to asphalt? the cash registers are installed, now all we need is a enough is enough. I'm not one of those "purists" who gets NOTE: I an not suggesting that you pour gasoline on name." upset by the new colorization of old movies. Frankly, I the speed bumps, causing them to shrink drastically and "Big Planet!" never watched them in the first place, and don't espe­ eventually dissolve completely. Dean Sue knows where I "Winn Redneck!" cially care what they do to a movie 111 never see anyway. live, so don't go out, for example, in the middle of the "Food Hippopotamus!" But putting artificial color onto the quads? Isn't that night with a big jug of gasoline and pour it all over the "Piggly Wiggly!" just a little ridiculous? Who's been spray-painting the things. And if you do, don't claim it's because I told you A hush fell over the room. Darrin got a raise, Larry lawn in front of the Chapel? It looks like something we to. Tate was so thrilled he told his stupid wife to take a hike used to do to Greg Martin's yard on Saturday nights in Also, don't blow up the rock outside Public Safety, and and Endora was so stunned she croaked on the set. eighth grade. A little confetti here, a little toilet paper stop calling Dial-A-Menu. I couldn't get through myself there.-. for two days, and you know how important chicken and • Boom! I admit it. I don't like Tom Suiter. "Boom! dumpling day is to me. Now to more high school action! Time to fly in for my • SlOW it down: Last night, as I raced toward my sanctimonious Extra Effort Award! Come on, kids, act plush office, furious because I had agonized with the gas • Oh my Stars! Monday, Monday is the column to excited!" pump to hit exactly $20, only to have Gus the Exxon at­ read for fun "Bewitched" trivia: Did you know that Ag­ tendant hand me 78 pennies "discount for cash," I was nes "Endora" Morehead died on the set? It's true. She L has to fight for his right to paaaaaaaaaaaaarty. Page 10 THE CHRONICLE Monday, March 16,1987 Comics Bloom County/Berke Breathed THE Daily Crossword ^^F

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Nov. 12, 1957: Kevin Wakefield, during THE CHRONICLE snacktime, makes kindergarten history by Peditor: Jessica Lim, John Senft selecting the soda cracker over the graham. Copy editors: Kathleen Sullivan, Ed Boyle, Mil :l Milstein Copy desk: Liz Morgan Associate photography editor: Tammi Henkin Day photographer: Tammi Henkin Layout: Shannon Mullen, Kathleen Sullivan, Lane Hensley Doonesbury/Garry Trudeau Video watchdog: Brenden Kootsey Assistant news editors: Gillian Bruce, Jon Hilsenrath, Kathy Nooney. l'V5 BEEN S0MANYTH/N6S- Charles Rawlings, Laura Trivers you KNOW, &. P., LAfrN/6MT, i m